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. 10- The Daily Senlicel, Middl~ri-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 19, 1973

Petitioners show
great gullibility
ORLANDO, Fla. ' (UPI)
Orlando Sentinel reporter
Davi~ Wilkening wanll!d to see
how diligently Americans
exercise their right of petition.
· Wilkening drew up a nonsensical petition, . set up a card
table in the Winter Park Mall
and asked passersby to sign the
doctument.
The petition began: "Prices
go up daily ! Corrupt politicians
do nothing but force busing and
. C&lt;&gt;mmunls!S reach sex educa. lion in the scbools and college
radicals U!ach free love. We
demand action."
It called upon unidentified
officials to "do whaoover Is
necessary, irnmediaU!ly" to
correct the situations, including repealing the right to
vore for women, setting ex-

,

Three deer ·· ·Contests ·to aid ·Heart ·F11nd ·
.
-(
•
H. Werry of Pomeroy, Princess C&lt;&gt;ntest to all junior Fund. The conU!stant in each
hit by cars
County Heart Fund ' high girls, grades seven and group with the most votes will

cessive bail for criminals and
the initiation of "much-needed
marital (sic) law."
Wilkening said quiU! a few
pa~sersby stopped at his table.
About ooe-third of those who
read the petition signed it,
although they weren 'I sure
wha! it meant. A good many
others signed 1t without
reading it.
"Very few questioned what
the petition meant," Wilkening
wroU! in Thursday's Sentinel,
"and even fewer saw it as a
joke."

chairman, . today announced
plans for. the.annuai "Queeq of
Heart," "Prmcess of Hearts"
and . "Junior Princess of
Hearts" contests.
Mrs. James Soulsby and
MISS SuSJe Soulsby of Pomeroy
will head this year's con.rests.
The Queen's conU!st is open
to all high school girls, freshman through' senior years, ,the

eight, and the Junloi' Princess ·
Contest to. fourth, ·'fifth and
sixth graders. Contestants
must attend school in Meigs
C&lt;&gt;Wlty.
Each contestant is to place .
containers in buainess houses
and other locations to invite
votes by one cent donations.
Each conU!stant is to turn ali
collections into the Heart

be nalned the winner
.of her.
group at a co~restants' benefit
party in March.
All girls inU!reall!d in en·
tering the contests shoul,d
notify Mrs. Soulsby at 992-2377
or write to her at ·117 Union
Ave;, Pomeroy. Entries should
be in Mrs: Sonlsby's hands by
Jan. 27. The.conU!sls officially
open on Feb. 1.

State's band to
admit girls

Open House

Marines draw
blood in

MEIGS

tmts

· Pair of thrillers won here

'

News

from now on

'

~::II.Som:II.X . ;.; m~=~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:~

area.
Buckeye Rw-al Electric C&lt;&gt;. hooked up
686 new patrons· in lts entire district in
1972, Including 256 In Gallla C&lt;&gt;unty.
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric C&lt;&gt;.
totaled 321 new customers during the past
12 months in the ·Gallipolis District.
The Gallia County Rural Water
Association began service in March, 1972,
with 995 customers. In the past 10 months
an additional 305 residents hooked on
according to association officials.
City Miulager D. Kenneth Morgan said
'll building permits were issued in the city
proper in fiscal 1972 for construction
valued at $386,450.
The present county tax duplicate
according to Auditor Mort Dickey is approximately $122,500,000. When Dickey
assumed dulles u Gayta C&lt;&gt;Wlty auditor.in
the ml~-19508, the cOWlty valuation was
around $48,000,000.
"The full impact Is yet to come," sald
Dickey. He estimated Gallla 's ' tax
valuation In the nelghbofhood of t360 to
$400 miUion by 1975~
,
Ow-Ing the past year, Dickey said
Gallia showed an approximate net galn of
$112 milllon in valuation. Dickey also
polnll!d out that Gallia still has the lowest
average tu rate of any of Ohio's 88
coWllies (20 mills, nearest is 25 mills)
Total usell of lour Gallla County
ballkl ud "two loao com)llloln jumped

HOSPITAL
NEWS

You deserve it.
1

IBuilding 1Morgan accept~
N

;&lt;:

Firm
Ohio Valley
Commercial &amp; Savings
First National
Buckeye Loan
Galllpolis Loan

•

Total Assets
$29,254,971.76
20,936,382.01
15,990,553.19
6,721,856.18
4,610,000.00

'

\

'\'

1 \

\ \

J

'
j

I

I

10 til 2

Special Sale l'rlcas Now During
The Stqrewlde January Sale

Bruce Stalnaker
and

The Aristocrats

The
Meigs -Inn
.

.ELBERF lOS IN POMEROY

:;1

·:·:
GALLIPOLIS - Two major builders
have been busier than ever before the past
year in Gallia County.
Carter &amp; Evans, General Contractors,
completed projects with a total value
estimated just under $2 million in 1972.
Dean Circle, 40, proprietor of Circle's
Restaw-ant, has complered 10 homes and a
24-unit apartment complex known as the
West 35 Apartments, all near the new
Holzer Medical Center.
Circle's energies this year will be
dlrecll!d to openlng a 45-acre subdivision
upon ,which 80 modern homes will he built.
The subdivision is on picturesque, ideally
situated land rising gently west from
Route 35 near the West 35 Apartments.
Tony Barr, 35, Georges Creek Rd., of
the Barr Construction Co., has been Circle's builder and is awaiting cQJllpletion of
engineering work to begin the big subdivision project. Barr is the son of
Raymond Barr, foWlder of the firm Wlder
his name, now retired.
Barr and Circle also are the principals
in the Barr and Circle Development Co.,
organized in 1972. This firm is planning to
build a 20-apartment low rent building on
North First Ave. in Middleport and has
other property in Middleport under option
for future development.
Carter &amp; Evans spokesmen said their
$2 million worth of construction in 1972 was ..
in approximately 200 jobs. They Indicated"
they have that many more already
scheduled In the tri~ounty area for 1973.
The firm added approximarely 30 employes last year, as l;lusiness doubled.
Twenty-five new homes, five or six
major remodeling or addition projects,
and construction of a 40-Wlit trailer park
were among the firm's chief activities last
year.

post

GALLIPOLIS - D. Kenneth Morgan, 1

Medical Service (SEOEMS). The anno"uncement was made jointly by Jack E.
Farrington, executive .director of the Ohio
Valley Health Services Foundation
(OVHSF ), and Gallipolis city commissioners. Morgan has been Galllpolis
city manager the past five years.
As SEOEMS director, Morgan will he
responsible for the organization and
supervision of the project, which is
currently under the program management
of OVHSF. Additionally, he will be
responsible for liaison, planning and
coordination activities with area health
planning agencies, governmental units,
area health providers and educational
institutions.
In conjunction with his current
position as Gallipolis city manager,
Morgan has served a~ Gallipolis city
health commissioner, president of the
Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport Authority,
a member of the Galiia CoWlty Civil
Defense executive board and as a Gallia
County deputy sheriff.
Morgan attended Ohio Wesleyan
University, Pittsburgh Institute of Mortuary Science and Rio Grande College. He
is a member of Pi Sigma Epsilon
scholastic honorary and of Delta Tau Delta
social fraternity .
Active in many community and
regional activities Morgan has been
president of the Gallipolis Chamber of
Commerce, the Gallipolis Recreation
Board and the GaiUpolis Shrine Club. He is
a member of the executive committee of
the Ohio Valley Regional Development
Commission. Other Affiliations include the
International
City
Managementl
Association, Elks Lodge, Masonic Lodge
and various activities of the Grace United
Methodist Church.
Morgan and his wife, Barbara, are the
parents of three children, John, Tom, and

D. Keoneth Morgan

Jane.
The SEOE!11&amp; region'*' emerge~cy
health care project is one of five demonstration areas in the Unill!d States as
determined by the Department of HEW.
The $5.3-mlllion dollar program will
.Provide compleU! emergency care to some
213,000 Ohioans in the 3,000-square-mile
project area.
Morgan's letrer of resignation to the
city conunission said, in part: "I take this
opportWlity to thank all of you for yow- full
and sincere cooperation dw-ing my tenw-e
as Gallipolis City Manager. II has been a·
meaningful association and I am certain
Gallipolis is a better city as a result of yowunselfish dedication of service to yowcommunity. I am vitally lnrerested in the
continued planned growth of OW' community and pledge myself to its success."
Morgan will divide his time between
the management of the city and SEOEMS
until sometime in March of this year, then
be full time with SEOE~S.
SEOEMS has locall!d U!mporary offices in Athens. The headquarU!rs will be
permanently located in the Gallipolis area
during early summer of 1973. Morgan will
not move from here.
Richard Carter, president of 1the
Gallipolis City Commission, is accePrting
applications for city manager.

THROWER ARRESTED
GALLIPOLIS - Rex Roberts, 35, a
resident of 1730 Chatham Ave ., was
arresll!d Friday by city police on charges
of throwing a brick at a motor vehicle and
POMEROY - Hugh Cusrer has been berger, M.D.; ·G. H. Abels, M.D.; J. A.
carrying a concealed weapon. He will
appear in MWlicipal C&lt;&gt;urt Monday. Don elecll!d chairman of the Board of Trustees Kemp, M.D.; G. E. Vallee, M.D.; R. P.
of Veterans Memorial Hospital for 1973. Daniels, M.D.; A. Boonsue, M.D.; M.
Baird signed the warrant.
Others elecll!d were George Hackett, Simon,M.D.; K. Riggs, D.D.S.; C. Ingels,
Jr., vice chairman, and Russell Brown, D.D.S.; H. B. Davidson, M.D.
secretary. Harold Sauer, Ass Hoskins,
The medical staff reelected Dr.
Earl Clark, Andrew .Cross and Early Pickens its chief, Dr. J. H. Ridgway vice
Roush also are members of the board.
chief, and Dr. T. B. McGowan, secretary.
Medical staff members approved for
Names deparlqlent chiefs were Dr.
1973 by the board are R. R. Pickens, D.O.; Ridgway, medicine; Dr. Telle, sw-gery;
J. H. Ridgway, D.O.; T. B. McGowan, .Dr. ~hompson, x-ray; Dr. Davidson,
POMEROY- Lee W. McComas, clerk D.O.; C. W. Thompson, -M.D.; L. D. Telle, pathology and labor, and Dr . Boonsue,
of the Meigs Local School District and a M.D.; H. D. Brown, D.D.S.; J. Wein- anesthesia.
retired superintendent of Middleport
Schools, purchased the first ticket to the
March 3 concert by the 19-piece Stan
Kenton orchestra at the Meigs High
School. Dwight Goins, left, Meigs band
director, arranged for Kenton and his
orchestra to conduct a clinic beginning at 2
' an evenlng
p.m. in the afternoon and
concert, open to the public, at 8 p.m.
The clinic ls open to ,area students at $1
each. The evening concert is . $2.50 for
'
students and $3 for adults.Persons wishing to make reservations
may send the money and a stamped retw-n
enve.lope to Goins at the hlgh school,
Pomeroy Route 3. Meantime, evening
concert advance sale tick~ts have beeli
placed on sale at Swisher and Lohse Drug
Store, Nelson 's Drugs, New York Clothing
'
House, ali in Pomeroy; Bahr Clothiers,
'
Dutton Drugs, Village Pharmacy, ali in
Middleport; Rutland · Fw-nnitw-e Store,
Dwiglit Goins, l!!ft, and
Lee~ McComas
and at 'Brunicardi's in Galllpolls.
·
.
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..

Hugh Custer in chair

Open Friday and Saturday Nights
Until 9 P.M.

e

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ELBERFELDS IN· POMEROY

NIGHT

N

!activities 1-SEOEMS
k
1qu1c en 1~~~~:;~:~~·~~~~~:~~ 0~~~~:~;:~

Wolfpen
News, Notes

SATURDAY

operaled mining tool costs in the area of ~150,000. Mines Noa.
1 and 2 in Meigs C&lt;&gt;Wlty will supply coal to the huge Gavin
·Power Plant in Gallia County which is giving impetus to
economic resurgence In Gallia C&lt;&gt;Wlty,
·

CONTINUOUS MINER - Charles Zirkles of Albany will
operate one of the continuous miner machines in Meigs Mine
No. 1 near Point Rock. Above, Zirkles stands beside the
control panel and seat of the operator. This electrically

Accord

meet

·'"' .

in _Briefs

Saturday study

SCOPS

.-

.,

.[ ~ ·.

Divine media
is theme of

two fire fights

THE

Your Invited Guest
Rea~hing More
Than 11,500
Pamilijs

The

12.
Meigs' two eighth-grade being hit in the head.
In the B game·Meigs got the
basketball squads each won In addition to Browning's 24
...
thrillers Thursday evening points, Mark Haggerty ball on a turnover l'lith one .
NEW OPERATOR - Carol Wooeyard, Syracuse, forwhen they hosll!d Jackson.
· dumped in 8, Alan Stewart 7, second remaining. The ball
merly of Denver, Colo., Is now assoclall!d with the Kut N'
The 8-A squad, behind a 24 Soove Randolph 5, and Dale was thrown to Scites who
Kurl
Beauty Shop, Union Ave., Pomeroy, owned. by E~
point performance ,by Greg Browning and Tom Walters swished a l().footer at the
Russell. Miss Woo~ard has UcensJS from three beauty
Browning, won 48 to 45 while II- each 2. Davis led Jackson with buzzer to win the game.
schools,
having gtaduall!d in Denver, WIDnington, Delaware, .
B scored a 22 to 21 victory over
Brinley Seth provided the
(Continued from page I)
and Valley Beauty , School at Marietta. She resides in :
Jackson's B team. A · last
scoring pWlch as he poured in
ing a mass march and rally
Syracuse
with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Milia.
second shot by Tim 'Scites won
12 points before fouling out in
that is expecll!d to draw "rens
the final period. Lonnie Taylor
that one.
of thoui!ands" of prorestors.
The A game was a har.d
had 6, Scites had 3 and Ronald
· The demonstrators called a
Coats 1. ·
fought battle which saw
(Continued from page 1)
The tidal current in San press conference outside the
Francisco Bay reaches a
numerous
fouls
and
injw-ies,
Meigs 7th and 8th B squads
The 18-week mass production
e • e
peak of 10 million cubic Jeet White House today before cow-se which is rWl in con- including one of Jackson's
travel
to
Bidwell-Porter
next
a second, half again the flow attempting to present petitions
(Continued from p'age 1)
players having to be taken to.
Tuesday while 7-A and II-A
of the Amazon River.
with thousands of signatures junction with the use of basic
WAsinNGTON - SEVEN PERSONS, including five
demanding that Nixon sign the plastics, wood lamination, Holzer Medical Center after COLUMBUS (UPI)-The enrertain Federal-Hocking on
Thursday
at
Meigs
JWlior
High
woodcarving
and
wood
tw-ning
Ohio
State
University
marchildren,
were methodically slain Thursday at an expensive
nine-point peace agreement
in
Middleport.
Is
begun
by
discussing
the
ching band, all-male during its
Waahington house purchased by basketball suPerstar Kareem
negotiated with the North
THEATR~ Vietnamese
materials
used.
At
this
time
94
years
of
existence,
will
be
Abdul.Jabbar as a spiritual cenrer for his Muallm sect.
last October.
students
get
six
weeks
of
inTonlghlthru Tuesday
opened to women.
Three children were foWld drowned in an upstairs bathtub.
And while the Inaugural
January 19-23
struction
on
the
use
of
hand
The
change
will
take
place
Two
other children and two adults were shot to death in·an ap.
Committee puts on three
tools,
machines
and
wood
Walt Disney's
this faD, band director Paul
parent execution, police said.
concerts tonight, Leonard
DUMBO .
joints,
One
of
the
principles
Drosre,
announced
Thursday,
In addition, police said. two women in their 2011 were wounBernstein will conduct an anti!Technicolor)
involves
is
that
every
student
ded. Bib! Khaalls waalisll!d in critical condition at Freedmen's
inaugural concert at WsshingSAIGON (UPI) _ South but ''this is no implication or
All -cartoon feature about a
not
only
builds
the
project
but
flying elephant.
Hospital while ..utne Khaalis was in satisfactory condition. Both
ton's National Cathedral.
Vietnamese marines trying to starement that standards of
THE LEGEND
understands
its
entire
. had been shot several times, pollee said. At least four men seen
The protest activity is expush CommWlist troops back marching or playing will be
OF LOBO
ooeration.
fleeing Jrom the home were being sought. Both the victims and
pected to culminare with the
into the Demilitarized Zone lowered as a result of this
!•Technlcolor)
Each
student
is
resred
and
mass
march
·
and
rally
IGI
prior to a cease-fire, fought two · policy change."
In a day when citizens of the suspects were black.
Admission :
checked
on
the
proper
and
safe
Saturday, timed to coincide
inrense battles today north of
DroaU! said time and change, some cOWltries spend as much
Adults: Sl.50 Children: 75c
GRANDIN, MO~- SOORES OF FEDERAL, stale and local
with the f&gt;resldent 's Swearing- operation of each machine Quang Tri City' field reports specificaily in the form of fed- as 75 pet. of their time in some
before
he
begins
work
and
the
law
enforcement
agents continue their search for evidence today
in ceremony.
Show Storts 7 p.m.
said, and allied aircraft Thurs- era! anti-discrimipalion
sequence of the manufactw-ing day bombarded a Communist legislation, have caught up form of communication, in connection with the slaylngs of a banker, his wife and their 17·
members of the Pomeroy
operations are explained to
with the band's tradition.
year-old daughrer, whom extortionlsis tied to trees in the Ozark
"When it became apparent Seventh-&lt;l•y Adventist church hilla'and shot to death.
him. On the manufactw-ing line suppiy buildup in the Saigon
are studying the Christian and
the student becomes qualified area.
Ripley County SheriH Lewis Dawes said two men picked up
The U. S. command said that legal .principles were in- communication. "Effective
to do any of the 100 operations
volved, the (OSU). legal staff
in
the
area and questioned regarding the case remained ''prime
required rather than learn only warplanes, no longer in action (were of the opinion) the pres- conunWlication is the most suspects" and were being held on marijuana charges whlle the
over North Vietnam became entmernbership requirements dUficult of all human arts," investigation continued:
certain specific processes.
The public is invited to at- stepped-up peace prospects, of the b,and are clearly in con- said Rita Wright, superinrend tomorrow. evening's Open flew 325 raids against Com- filet with the Higher Education U!ndent of the Pomeroy SabLOS ANGEL&amp;'!- TIMOTHY LEARY, the LSD messiah who
bath School, "and a Christian
House. There will be refresh- munist positions in 24 how-s. Act of 1972,.. Drosre said.
escaped from prison and hWlted unsuccessfully in Eilrope and
Marine A4 Skyhawk jets
"In all probabllity, the who fails to join in com- Asia for 28 months for a refuge, I'llturned smiling and laughing to
men ts and a door prize.
destroyed more than 13 North band's
appearance
at munication with fellow a CalHornia jail cell. He laces his old prison lenn and a hoet of
Vieinamse trucks Thw-sday ( pres ide n'l Nix 0 n , 8 ) Christians soon loses strength new drug charges.
northwest of An Loc, a battered inauguration will be its last in his spiritual tile."
Leary was accompanied from Afghanistan by the U. S.
This week's discussion at 2
provincial capital 60 miles with all-male membership."
narcotics
agent who sighted him there, and by a pretty blonde,
north of Saigon.
p.m. Satw-day at the church on
(Continued from page 11
apparently In her mid 2011, who identified herself only as Joanna
Mulberry. Hts. focuses on the
Kissinger-Tho meetings. Apart
divine media - God's Harcourt-Smith of London, "I am Timothy's love," she said,
vowing to "stay here and light for Leary." She said she had been
rrom a suspension dw-ing th~
to
speaking to man. The public is
llving
with Leaxy for two months and had~ hepatitis, which
December bombing of Hanm
.
welcome. "•
a
doctorwhocheCkedherboard
the Plane ccillnt-lned.
· and Haiphong, diplomatS have
The January meeting of
Although aome question the
been meeting continually in SCOPS, the South Central Ohio
"inspiration" of the Bible,
LUCASVILLE, OHIO _ FURTY·TWO GUARDS called In
Paris, spending long hours on Preservation Society, Inc. will
I
Adventists believe it is an
the protocols which will ac- be held Sunday, Jan. 28 at 2
authentic conununication from sick today at the Southern Ohio Correctillf\81 Facility, Indicating
Holzer Medical Center
company
an
eventual p.m. in Bainbridge. The
Divinity. They do not look on the work stoppage is beginning to want, upokefllli8D for the Ohio
(Discharged)
Department of C&lt;&gt;rrectiona and Rehabilitation said.
agreement.
business meeting will be at the
the prophets as srenographers
Fifty 1 ht
Jack
Kipton,
Jr.,
Charles
Neither side has specified Bainbridge Ubrary, located on
receiving dictation but believe
-e 8 guards stayed off the job Wednesday and the
Barnett, Donald Lanhart,
. nw-nber waa cut to 52 en Thursday, said John Linta, news
exactly what the experts are U.S. Rt. SO.
Irene Crabtree, Judy Hale, that God inspired their secretary for the department. Unla said the lasue atlll Is
working on . .
You can get that new car you deserve.
Awalking tour of the historic Gail Argabright, Edna Mc- thoughts to record what men seniority in that guards here feel they should have seniority over
And save some m0 QBY too. With a low·cost bank Auto Loan .
The Thai Premier in report- houses and buildings of the
guards at the Ohio Penirentiary in C&lt;&gt;lumbus, who will move here
Your dealer (or One of our loan officers) can arrange it.
ing that a cease.fire would be village will follow the meeting, Manis, Mrs. Dana Smith and needed to know·
daughter;
Mrs.
Thomas
Quickly. Easi ly. Without a lot ol fu ss.
when the pen Is closed, even though the OP guards have been
exU!nded to Laos and Cam- and will include a visit to the
Tucker
and
daughter;
Vema
with the-department longer.
·
bodia about 10 days alrer it first dental school.
Slagle,
Hazel
Trapp,
Delbert
goes lnto effect lri South
DIVORCES ASKED
Chairmen for the meeting
WASJUNGTON -111E NOMINATION of New .York conVietnam said he was con- will be Mrs. Joseph Femeau Garnes; Oma Tomacelli, Mary
Three suits for divorce have
Kiser,
.James
Hoover,
Otis
struction union leader PeU!r J . Brennan to be secretary of labor
cerned about the time lapse. and Miss Ellzabetli Black.
Perry, Melinda Taylor, Tessie been filed in Meigs C&lt;&gt;unty was appalled today by critics both to the left and right of ,BrenHe said in recent days North
Conunon ·Pleas Cow-t, each
Presiding will be SCOPS new
Vietnamese troops have moved president, Mrs. Richard Wells, Walker Whire, Rev. charging gross neglect of duty nan. In testimony prepared for the ~ond day of a Senare Labor
cloae to the borders of Rankin of Washington Court John W. Rockhold, Mrs. and extreme cruelty. They are C&lt;&gt;mmltree hearing on Brennan's confirmation today:
pomeroy pomeroy
Richard Patton and son, and
- The National Right to Work Committee, which opposes
Thailand, especially in Laos. House.
by Anna Jean Shields, Rt. 2;
outland national
Charles
W. Hannon, Jr.
compulsory
unionism, said Brennan has devoted himself Ill' 15
Announcement of , the
Coolville, vs Russell Shields,
bank
(Birth)
Kissinger meeting with Tho
same address; Gloria Milliron, years to the "destruetion ol job opportunities" for persona uri!he bank of
Mrs.
Daniel
Vance, Middleport, a minor, by willing or unable to join Wllons.
and
chief
Hanoi
negotiator
the century
Gallipolis, a son.
- A group called the National Coordinatliig Committee for
Xuan Thuy came from Whire
estabfished 1872
Thomas Sarver, Sr., vs James
Trade
Union Action and Democracy, llased in Chicago, aCCIIIed
House Press Secretary Ronald
Milliron, · and Fred C.
A. Ziegler in Key Biscayne,
Kesterson, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, vs. Brennan of being "one of the moat ardent supporters of racism In
Pleasant VaHey Hospllal
Member
· F1a ., and from the Hanoi Mrs. Nora.JohllSon returned
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Albert Mary V. Kesterson, same the labor movement." Desp!U! opposition by about a d(Un
groups, Brennan's approval by the Senate appeared sure.
FDIC
delegation in Paris on Thw-s- recently to her home in Grove Frosch, Mason; Mrs. Harold address .
day.
City afrer spending two weeks Smithson, Proctor, W. Va.;
with Mrs. Helen Johnson, Mr. Mark Barton, Mason; Howard
and Mrs. Lee Roush and family Brown, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
and other relatives.
Charles ·Kinniard, Apple
Mr. and Mrs. William Grove; Lottie Buck, Gallipolis;
Russell of Minersville were Mrs. George Roe, Pomeroy,
SWlday visitors of Mr. and and Raymond Robbins,
Mrs. Howard Russell.
Henderson.
PLACE TOGO
Miss Karen Gllkey, Mrs.
Harold Gillogly and family of
Albany and Mr. and Mrs.
Walrer Jordan of Gallipolis
were SWlday visitors of Mr. HORSES FRIGHTENED •
LONDON (UPI) -Question:
and Mrs. Uncoln Russell.
Why
are some London )l08t
Mr, and Mrs. Robert Reeves
and Bryan of Racine vlslll!d office trucks olive green?
Answer : Because yellow
Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves
•
and Unda. Bryan was an frightens horses,
And that, a post office
overnight guest of his grandspokesman said ThW'sday, is
parents.
Mr.·and Ml'l!. Ronnie Russell, why officials dropped the idea
Mandy and Mr. and Mrs. Sreve of painting trucks used aa
\
Haggy of Akron were weekend mobile broadcast units
Live Entertainment Featuring The SoWlds Of
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert yellow- the same color as the
rest of the )l08t office fleet.
_
e Womens Dres_ses ·a select group 112 price- Sale of Womens Slacks_
Russell.
"We cover a lot of races,"
Gtrl~ Wear- Jun1or and Womens Size Jeans- Cape Cod Curtains_ Log
Mr, and Mrs. Charles Sayre
Cabm
Rugs - Dress Fabrics.
.
'
and family were Sunday, the spokesman said, "and we
visitors of his parents, Mr. and were told the horses do not like ·
the look of us. Our shiny yellow
e Mens Knit Slac~s- Mens and Boys Sweaters- Childrens books on
Mrs. Charles Sayre.
sale
- January whtte sale of sheets • towels • domestics • handb · •
vehicles
upset
them."
Mr. Roy Smith, Donald and
~~Mm~~
·
·
·
•
Mike, .were Sunday morning
visitors of Mr. lind Mrs.
e Be sure to see the m'any special values in RCA Console TV color sets.
Charley Smith.
Portable TV Sets· Black an,!l White and Color. RCA Stereos. .
.
HURT IN FALL
Mr •.and Mrs.. H~rley Pauley
The Middleport E-R squad
of McConnelsville and Mrs.
• ,• Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic StrHt have special sa~ f
'
0-.
'
linoleum • Whirlpool washers and dryers •. West· Bend hu
Lena Knapp of Langsville were answered a caU at 8:45 p.m ..
POMEROY,O.
storage cabinets· carpeting· trash mashers. used TV sets
mldifiers •
Saitirday evening visitors of Thw-sday to Roitsh Road ·in
Sav~
all
your
sales
slipsthey
are
valuable.
•
·
. Mr, and Mrs . .Doyle Knapp. · Cheshire Twp. for Mrs. Marie
PH. 992-3629
Kail, Charles and Kevin Edwards who fell at home. It ,
Knapp were Fri~y night and was thought that Mrs. EdSaturday visitors of. their wards possi~ly suffered a hip
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. fracture. She was taken to
Holzer Medical Cenrer.
Charley Sml th and Jo.

Inaugural

+

SWlday. Hljh in the 10\Ver 4011.
· Moatly cloudy . and warmer
SWlday nlght and Monday,
chance of showers Sunday
night and 'showers llkely
Devoted To
Crealer Middle Ohio Valley
Monday. Low SWlday night IIi
ttie30s.Higi1Mondayupper40s
34 PAGES ,
THREE SECTIONS
_to lower~~~~--------~----------------------------------------------------------------------------~------------------------------------------~
Pomeroy-Middleport
Gallipolis-Point Pleasant
15 CENTS
SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 1973
VOL VII NO . .51

~ph
Me~gs

Two deer have been killed
and a third struck but apparently not injw-ed in three
accidents the Meigs C&lt;&gt;Wlty
sheriff's department reporll!d
today.
T.hw-sday at 6:45a.m. on U.
S. Rt. 33 in Salisbw-y Twp.,
Richard D. · Fink, Rt. 2,
Cheshire, driving a truck
belonging to the Coca C&lt;&gt;la
Bottling Co. ,. Parkersburg,
struck and killed a buck deer
when it ran Into his path. At
!2:20p.m. on SR 2481n Chesrer
Twp., a doe was killed when it
ran into the path of a car driven
by Ronald W. Cowdery, Rt. 1,
Long Bottom. Wednesday at 10
p.m. a buck was hit by a car on
SR 248 driven bY Dorothy M.
Wells, Long Bottom.
There was heavy damage to
the fronts of all the vehicles.

.· . '

· We8th~r
Partly cloudy, not as cold

'

HUGE TREE - Lomle J!oaa, left, and John Paul
HoOey stand beside abuge log cut from a tree taken out of the
Centenary Cemetery four mlles 110uthwest of Gallipolls. The
men said it was one of the largest they had ever seen, being

five feet In diameter, 12 feet long and weighing approx:imarely five ton. They used equipment owned by the
Holley Brothers Construction(;()., Gailipolls, to get the lree
out of the cemeU!ry from where it was taken to Salmons Mill
at Hobson.

Patrons urged fo Write Miller
POMEROY - "Only the patrons who
use our .ervice can tell ow- story," Mrs.
Vilina Pikkoja, supervisor of the Meigs
County bookmobile service said.
Mrs. Ptkkoja is inviting patrons o( the
bookmobile to write Congressman
Clare~ce Miller iil Washingtog, D. C., of

the services provided 'through "Mr. Eddy," the bookmobile whlch.served Meigs,
Vinton and Jackson Counties.
·"Pomeroy and Middleport are not just
small towns in Southern Ohio. They
became witnesses to be heard in the
rearrangement of Health, Education

Loss from fire set at $35,000
LETART FALLS - The ,home of ·, ·AsSisting the Racine firemen were
James Ray Hill here was destroyed by fire uni!" from SyraC)Uie and Bashan. Firemen
&lt;l.undelenninedoriglnFrldayat4:26p.m.. ·fought the blaze· nearly fow- how-s .. Hill
Dave Cleland, Racine lire chief, &amp;aid was npt at home when the fire ~iarted .
financial loas of the property and its Cleland reporll!d the house was completed
conrenll hal been set at $35,000. In addition engulfed in flames h th d
tm t .
·. to the two ·story frame home a she&lt;!
w en e epar e)'l
· lalning f In
ui
'
a!
arrived. There was insw-ance on the
con
111'!1! g eq. pmen1 was so , ptoperty.
dealroyec!.
.
'
:

and Welfare fWlds," Mrs. Pikkoja said in
referring to the visit of two represenlatives from the U. S. General Account
Office, Detroit, Mich., to Pomeroy Thw-sday to study the "impact'.' of the bookmobile service . .
"The .new Congress has to take a stand ·
on money spending and in which areas it is
to be spent. Do not let ow- bookmobile
service become the victim of an oversight
and be missed by lack of funds because no
qne cared to tell the authorities' that we
really need It," Mrs. Pikkoja said.
Mrs. Pikkoja said the staff of the unit
wnr be happy to provide any statistics
needed on the operation of the bookmobile
lri writing to CongreSsman Miller by
calllng the unit headquarters, 992-3745.
"Please speak up~ " Mrs. Pikkoja
w-ged.

First ticket to
clerk of district

.
0

'-..._

'

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.

2-'!be Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday; Jan. 21,1973

&amp;:l'RIKES A BLQW

s8id the department has received complaints from
customers who " made a
special trip to the store and
then foulld that the discounts
wouldn't be available for
another week.
"This rule wtU end that
source of aggravation," she

NEW YORK (UP!) ..,. The
Department of .Consumer AI·
fain atruck a blow for the
bargain hunter· Wedneaday
with ·a proposal · to require
.advertlsera to specify opening
and cloalng datel of sales.
Cornmlllioner Bess Myerson

said.

g
WHITE ALUM. GUTIER
10 &amp;20 FT. LENGTHS

COMPLETE
LINE OF
MEDICINE

BIRD
SEAL DOWN

SHINGLES
$}()85

'•

CAROLINA·
LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
PHONE 675-1160

I

Glen Brummage

~

.

.

GUYSVILLE - Glen G.
Brwnmage, 62, Rt. I, Guysville, died Friday afternoon in
Bethesda Hospital, Zanesville,
following an extended iUness.
Mr. Brummage was preceded
in death by his father , Leslie G.
Brwnmage, and a son, Leslie,
in i965. .
Mr. Brun\mage worked. on
highway C'lnstruction the
greater part of his life. He was
a member of Riverhill
Methodist Church, Parkersburg, and Ohio Operating
Engineers Union, Local 18,
Colwnbus . .
He is survived by his wife,
Mrs. Armour Bailey Brum·
mage; two daughters, Mrs. C.
H. (Frances) Levy, Hayward,
Calif., and Mrs. Don (Jean)
Meeks, Johnstown; his mother,
Mrs. Lillie Davis Folden,
Guysville; two grandchildren,
Karla and Don Meeks, Johns·
town, and several cousins,
aunts and uncles.
Funeral services will be held
Monday at 2 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with
the Rev . Roy Deeter of·
ficiating, assisted by the Rev.
Cecil A. Monison. Burial will
be in the Coolviile Cemetery.
Friends may call after noon
today.

PT. PLEASANT- James B.
Dabney, 89, 1426 Kanawha
Street, Point Pleasant, died
Friday in Holzer Medical
Center. He was retired from
th e Gallion Ironworkers,
Gallion, Ohio. He was born
June 26, 1883, in Mason County,
a son of the late James C. and
Mary Wallace Dabney.
He is survived by two sons,
Orville and Anderson Dabney,
both Gallion, 0.; three
daughters, Mrs. Mary Rensch
and Mrs. Margaret Seevers,
both Gallion; and Mrs. Mabel
Robinson, Talmadge; 0.; 14
grandchildren and seven great·
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
today at ·2 p.m. from the
Stevens .Funeral Home. John
Steele, Jr., will conduct . the
services and burial will follow
in Concord Cemetery.

Mrs. Nell Fox
MARION - Nell Fox, 81, of
550 &amp;outh Prospect St., Marion,
Ohio, died at2:2ll p.m., Friday
in Community Memorial
Hospital. &amp;he was born Sept.

Rule tightened
on 61ing
of statements

Saturday

COLUMBUS - Secretary of
Slate Ted W. Brown has announced that a recent Ohio
~upreme Court decision makes .
1t necessary to require that all
future election statementa of
expenses and reee!Pta be filed
no later than 4 o'clock p.m. ol
the 4Sih day ·following an
election, regardlesS of whether
they are delivered in person or
by mail.
Tbe amendment of the fllihg
deadline for statements will
affect all candidates and
conunittees lilcludlng th011e on
the local, county, district, state
and federal levels, cautioned
the Chief Election Officer.
"This means that neither
Boards of Elections nor the
Secretary of State will be able
to accept as •timely ffied ' those
statements of expenses anc!
receipts wl)lch have not .been
physically received by the
appropriate election official by
the 4 p.m.' filing deadline' ·
Statements which have been
postmarked prior to the
deadline ~ut not.recelved unW:
later will no .longer meet the
qualifications of a 'timely
filing' ." warned ~lary Ted
Brown.

'0

VALUE ~ VALUE
STAMPS .

~ ~ ,,.
•

44%
TO .

47% -.
Manufacturer's
Close-outs
We made a special purchas!! and we're passing
on the savings to you. Pant Coats and Boot
Length Coats. Some hooded with fleece lining,
sing le or do"uble breasted, belted and unbelted.
Four styles and in beautiful cotors, the coat of
the season, suede s;loth, now at fantastic savings.
Sizes 6 to 16.
"

Values "to

m .oo

PANT OOATS
NOW ONLY
BOOT LENGTH . Values To SSO.OO

apparatus and customer movement In the
. area.
Another $16,000 w!U go for telephc!ne
swi!cl!lng equipment to handle the
growing nwnber of calla being•made here
andaboul$20,000wiUbespentfor.toollland
general .equlpment"Used 'In rilalntenance
and installation of customer telephone
equipment.
"
.
In 197~, Ohlo Bell lilvealed approximately ~.ooo Iii COIIItrucl!on alld
expansion of telephone servicel .in the
GalHjlolls area: The major pordon o1 umonlea went for network !levelopmel\1 and .
for telephone equipment to ~e new
customers
and. for customer movement.
.

ere We Pay
Daily ·Interest

:

l

,f

$}888

I

Passbook Savings

t~tn1n9

o·..

'

·into hands
of conunission
~JuvWJe

·,Court Judge Wray
,;sevens ~f Pll!,e .county. Friday
placed two juvemles m custody
of the Ohio Youth Commission.
Tbe youths, one 17 and the
other 16 years of age, had been
transferred to Gallia County
from Lawrence County. The u;.
year old was charged with theft
and destruction of property· He
had previously been placed on
probation.
The 17-year old was also
charged with theft and
; destruction of property. He
: was placed on probation.
A 17-year old girl charged
: witll shoplifting was fined $50
: and costs and a 17-year old boy
: charged with DWI was fined
' $50 and costs and his driver's
· license was suspended for
three months.

.

.

.

NOW ONLY

Comparable savings on all women's .
coats in stock.

.

Pollee speculated Ausley
would try to hitchhike to North
Carolina.
Ausley was convicted of a
similar offense in 1961, served
10 years of a 20-year prison
term and was released in 1971,
police said.
After the youth was freed
from the box he was taken to a
hospital Iii nearby Suffolk for
treatment, was released, then

RUMORS DYING
SEATTLE, Wash. (UPI) The Seattle Rumor Center is
closing at the end of this
month, not because of a lack of
money, but because of a lack of

(Gl

Admission :"

"There's a general apathy by
change in the times ," said day the public about what's going
coordinator' Gregg Nigg. on."

Children : 75c

Adults: $1.50

Show Starts 7 p.m.

Tonightthru

Wednesday
,....._ _:......_...:.......__..

ACADf.MY
AWARD
RJ
WINNE

at au Mwl

""wn"

a'"" ""u

ana

1110

olilittd

1111

Iotti

·'

!t

.'

\

ASAM I
FMNKUN J.
SCHAFFNER
PRODUCTION

'•''

Nlcliolas
•nd
Alexandra

~

·~

SHOP EARLY WHILE

i;

QUANTITIES LAST

'l

,

i
I•'

SPLIT .

99
·YARD

FRYERS

Fashion your .wardrobe ouaund
these 56./60" wide machine wtsh.-

lb. 33~

able ~nih of I00~. texturited poly·
ester yarn. Choose· easy-to-sew
solid color weaves and fancy jacquards. N e "'t r neeed ironin-g.
Guaranteed to ret4in shape dnd
color. Perfect for dren and casual feshioas. San todey!

--------

GROUND
CHUCK

3 LB. OR MORE

lb. 98 ~

--

1
I

SCOOP THEM UP ATTHIS SAVING!

I

WASH &amp; WEAR SHirrS

AT

n~tu~~~.:~

$1

poli,hod

ptl&lt;h podtl. Bri9hl
binding or piping
'

57

Look pretty •t home in • c.omfOrt.blt,
sleeveless shift of crisp wash and wear or

ONCE

prinh

trim. Sizes

90-Day

OPEN
MONDAYS
.AND
FRIDAYS

SMALL DRINK OF
YOUR CHO.ICE WITH
PURCHASE OF A

ROLL &amp; POTAl'OES

TILL
GENEROUS 40x72" SURFACE

j~akt

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MEN'S AND

CUTTING BOARD

BOYS'

1''

MURPHY'S

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

A.ND MANY OTHERS

SPORT
OR PlAY

MONDAYS

8

SAVE ON

·WERE 14.99

·2-

PAIR '

. '"1"HAT OLD FASHIQNED GOObNESS"

2nd &amp; OLIVE St

PH. 446-2682

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
;

BOtH STORES IN GALLIPoLIS - THE PLACE TO SHOP
'

"I 09 YEARS QF SERVICE". ·
•

l'QfY.WSI!&amp;' •

Ll'I'EX FLAT WILL PAINT

OXFORDS

OPEN
TILL

~

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LAY-AWAY

$

2 PIECES CHICKEN

il

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'~

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Protects tables. , Folds
for compact $tora(;e.

·..'

Cartoon
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"THE OLD BANK .WITH NEW IDEAS"

'

~~~u11~tm

l....... r~l.UUS""-'-UN · tlomt.t~ftlnU~J SCU!Fm

POLYESTER
DOUBLE

Marked in 1". squares
with true bios lines.

'•
~,

SHIPMENT!

more for vou in 1973. Stop in.

'

,

AHOR~D' FlM 1om COLUMBIA PICTURES

BIG NEW

Offer
Does Not
Include
Milk

•!'"·

~------------------J

I

...

.

••

llt•t

l·

Best Art DirectiOn ·
Best Costume Design

The friendly one that can do

~JUl .

to '"''

i

I

Sunday· Monday~ Tuesday- Wednesday

•

lhnllt ·

'~
j'

0

I

•

MEIGS THEATRE

rwnors. "I think there's a

Nobody cited
cited In two minor tr•llle \"or:
cidents i'rIVe,slig.E•tellFriday·: h~"
flle city police department.
The first occurred on State
St., at tlle Ohio Valley Laundry
where an auto driven by Kathy
1. Evans, 17, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
backed into an auto driven by
Randall o. Will, 18, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis. There was minor
damage.
A second accident occurred
on Pine St. and Vinton Ave .,
where an auto driven by Paul
J. Butler, 17, Rl. 2, Crown City,
failed to negotiate a curve. The
car went out of control, ran off
the roadway striking a high·
way marker and shrubbery.
Miss Butler sustained minor
injuries but was not im·
mediately treated. There was
minor damage to her car.

COLO\' ·

MAil 51J ISCR 1P l1Q/II' ltATU ,

1 PYir' itllfll "rrr ;n

'

altd very dangerous."

.

Rotary

Simplicity P.tt.,n~ in th1 letatt IMII 1 tnd worn1n'1 1tyl11, yo~tfhf~tl
ban l1uhion1 •nd rug91d toddltrs' •11r. No• ill yo11r ••w ing dtpartmt"t et M11rphy'1!

,.,ttpl

I ' Tlot !)#lllp.,ut T rltJ~nr "' O~ l o onCI w-.1
I Virtln it . ont ~ur 11] ,00 . t l• ''"'"'~' \P ,
mOI"'tnt J• SO . ttnwlterr, on1 yl«
I ''""
ll), 1i•' montl&gt;l 17 thru montl&gt;l u .OCI.
.I Tilt polly StnlllltL 0111 ' " ' llf.Dt: tlo
montM U 1S . IMff montFit St. M.
·
I TFit lJIIo iHI Prtu ln!trlllhOfltl •I to
1 Clvt.••tlr I lilt! li-d to lilt uu tor l)t,)blo(ll....

I

~'armed

LAUNCH DELAYED
CAPE KENNEDY (UP!)The launch of the Skylab space
station on. America's next
manned space mission has
been delayed from April 30 to
sometime in May because of
testing problems. Project
Director WilHam C. Schneider
reported Friday that tests on
the complex, house-sized orbiting laboratory were two
weeks behind schedule.

35, Racine. Johnson was cited
oo charg"es assured clear
'distance.
,
There were no injuries, Qllt
heavy damage to both irehicle5 ..

Film shown· to

EASY-TO-SEW SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

'

o S.hlldh , Enltrtd" 14'&lt;\llld tl,.,. on tHing
j ' mll l., " ll'om tro~ . O~ lo , POll OUit t .
I . TERM~ OF SUUC R IPTIO!rf .
8 'i urr ;,, Cltol v ana ~un«tr . JOe per
I WHk '

I

densely wooded rural area of
the city just off a logging access road, Nansemond police
said.
The box had a tiny door in the
top, through which the youth's
abductor Jlpparently passed
water and bits of food, officers
said.
The suspectwas identified by
the youth as Richard Alvin
Ausley, 32, after looking at
police photographs.
Authorities said Ausley, lllst
seen In Por.tsmouth, was

•;.&gt;;;.
,...,..,
.........v_.o,,:-:--..-.:•;.';•:•; •:-:-:-:-:·:·~:•:•',•!•; •;·!~·;•; .;•!•:
• ,or.v,•,•,-, o·o o'o"" o o o "o o o-. o o o" o o o o o o o"

to the right and struck a· utility
pole. Mrs. Simpson stated that
the ligllts frorri the station
blinded her.
'
She was arrested on charges
of driving while intoxicated.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Investigating officer where she
was admitted for a laceration
to her face. There was heavy
damage to the car.
·
The department also inmemhersvesligated an accident that
occurred WedneSday at 8:05
MIDDLEPORT - A film, a.m. on Pomeroy's East Main
"How to Heat your Home for Street.
·
Less," was shown to the
Tom Weaver, 26, Syracuse,
Middleport · Pomeroy Rotary whO was traveling west
club Friday evening at Heath stopped in line or"traffic and his
United Methodist Church car was struck in the rear by a
following dinner served at 6 car driven by Robert Johnson,
p.m. by ladies of the church.
· Tom Cas8ell, manager of the
Middleport division of the
Columbia Gas System, and
Tonight thru Tuesday
Allen Leonard, now of Athens,
January 21·23
who preceded Cassell at
Walt Disney's
Middleport, presented the film.
DUMBO
John Will, program chairman,
(Technicolorl
presented the visitors.
All-cartoon feature about a
flying elephant.
President Gene Riggs
THE LEGEND
presided. The Rev. Edward
OF LOBO
Fischer, Racine, was a guest.
(Technicolor I

POM,F.ROY - The Pomeroy
Police ·Department in· .
vestigated "an a'ccident Qn
· Pomeroy's East Main Slreel
Friday at 8:36 p.m .
Isabel S'mpson,. 61, Racine,
was traveling ' east on Main
near the Landmark service
Station when she went too far

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

I
Ill Courl St . P!Jmt•9'/ r
1 PubiiJI)t d ' " ' ' ' 'wte~IIIJ u•~•ntl t• t iNII

·

'

I G~!AP9WS..,..'*1 A~&amp; n,,.,G~LJS•\J.I!No~ ,, ..,.,..

THERE'S NO SERVICE
CHARGE ·oN YOUR
CHECKING ACCOUNT .

·~vndl1 by 1111 O~la
~~~~~~~. . r~~~~t~t ~~ 'l ' 11U8UHE
ns ln lrcr llvt . Gllilpo+ll. O"lo .

Juveniles put

AND

TIM ES,~ENTIN EL

Putll l"'ta IYff·Y wlt~fliV

'

'

past few weeka the squad has ported to a hospital. Tbe local
receiVed numerous calla from 'squad would also like to refrain
people who requested the transporting patients to
emergency squad· for non- ~vale doctor's officeS. Tliis
emergency. Jllll'P08eS.
takes up a great amount of
Such calls are classified as time and at times the"area is
either •~xi nlns" or invalid congested at tbq, doctor's of.
service. The squadmen would 1 fice.
Persons wishing "·invalid
like for the would-be caller ask
himself the question, "ls the service should call"one of the
emergency · squad really local funerSl homes who offer
necessary?" The squadmen such service. The dispatcher at
po11tted out that they could be the sl)eriff's department has
out on a non-emergency call . been given questions to ask _the
and then receive · a real caller to ascertalil i( the sqilad
emergency call. In this case, is really necessary: The squad
the person involved in the real would greatly appreciate it if
emergency would . be in the caller would use good
jeopardy. Sq11admen would judgment before calling . H the
also like to remind the would- situation is an emergency, the
be caller to be sure that the squad will respond i"m·
patient .wants medical "BI· medlat~y. Please don 'I call f~r
tentlon. ·
-"
the squad .unless it is really
Tbe squad has answered necessary.
several calla and when they
The squad thanka Larry's
arrived at the· residence the Wayside Furniture Co. for
patient refused to be trans- donating and installing the
carpet on the new 1973
emergency vehicle. The squad
members would also like to
thank everyone who has
donated to the squad thus far .
All donations 'were greatly
later was taken to a Portmouth appreciated. Everyone is
hospital -about 30 miles from welcome to view and inspect
Nansemond - lor further the new vehicle at the Court
House.
treatment.
Police said the youth's
parents apparenUy never received an extortion note during
the eight days he was held
captive and, assuming he
might have drowned, the Coast
Guard dragged nearby
waterways for his body.
In a similar lilcldent in 1968,
a Miami area heiress, Barbara
Jane Mackie, was abducted
and buried in a coffin-like box
. outside AUanla for 83 hours
before being discovered.
The box in which she was
buried was completely covered
by earth and was equipped
with a periscope~ike breathing
apparatus.

"volunleer emergency squad
.answered two calls Friday
afternoon. · Squadmen wer.,.
callj\d to 105G Second Av,e,,
where EliZl!beth Hlll was
taken to the Medical Plaza
,. as a medical patient. Alma
Pqrter, 64, Eureka Star Rt.,
was transferred to the
Holzer Medical Center from
the "Medical' Plaza after
suffering an apparent heart
attack.

and Thursday Only!

Pubill"td .,,;,

1 ~~Wt:~~r\. ~':,:~~d~~~n . Pam~· "•Ill
I
THE; O.I.ILY · SENTI ~EL
'

into a: rescue vehlcl~ . The local
squad will also answer
emergency rescue calla In the
county. At the present time
there is no other rescue unit"In
Galli&amp; County . The ·CadiDac
ambulance Wnf serve as a
backup unit for tlRff!ew Dodge.
There "has been several oc,
casions when there have been
two squad calla minute. apart.
On several traffic accidents
both Squads are needed in the
case of multiple Injuries. All
three squads are presently
stationed at the Court House in
GalUpolis.
The · emergency squad
receives its calla from the
sheriff's department. Anyone
requesting the squad simply
call the Sheriff's Department.
of Gallia County at 446-1221.
Members of the local sqw.d
again ask for cooperation of all
people wbo may in the 'future
call for the squad. Within the

Kidnap suspect sought
NANSEMOND, Va. (UPI)Pollee searched the Tidewater
area of Virginia Saturday for a
Portsmouth man wanted for
the apparent kidnap-assault of
a 13-yearo(Jld boy held captive
eight days in an underground
plywood hox.
The yuuth, not identified by
police, was found chained in
the four-by-eight-by.four.foot
box Friday by a group of local
rabbit hunters.
Officers said the youth was
beaten and repeatedly assaulted sexuaUy by his captor. He
received bead and face injuries. Both eyes were
blackened.
The box in which the boy was
held captive was burled with
·its top flush to the ground in a

.

"'''':l?E~I.~:::=* Accidents blame~ on lights

•

on

,------------------·
SUNDAl'
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•

New vehicle in service·
GAIJLIPOUS - The Gallia
County Emergency Squad's
new 1973. Dodge emergency
vehicle went "Into service
Friday nlglrt, fully equipped to
handle all emergency ambulance calls in Gallipolis and
Gallia County.
'
' The all-white van with a
"Omaha Orange"·safety stripe"
around It, Is also radio
equipped 'for instant radio
communications with the
. sheriff's department and police
department The vehicle is also
equipped with the · essential
audio-visual warning devices.
. With the addition of the 1973
vehicle, the local emergerlcy
squad now owns "three
emergency vehicles. The other
two vehicles are a 1967 CadiUac
ambulance and a 1954
Chevrolet Industrial am·
bulance.
' The 1954 industrial am.
bulance has been converted

..

/

"

I

·'

"expects "to take on at lesi · 500 new bus)hess day last year than they did during
cus.tomers this year. In order IO'keep up 1971. Dally calla lncre4aed from 34,627 i,n
with current demands, C&amp;SOE has also 1971 to 35,343 in 1972, and long dlstan~
called qn outside contractors during the calls went from 2,627 in 1971 to 3,2431n-1972.
Otbei' major expenditures in the
past year.
"
Ohio Bell estimate. it will need to Gallipolis area"in 1973 will be about S95,000
spend about $545,000 in the Gallipolis area for additions to the telephone cable net.
durlilg 1973 to keep · up with growing work, and some $240,000 for telephone
demands for telephone service.
· Commercial Manager Richard
Roderick said plans for 1973 .Include U11licensed beer taken
starting an addition to the telephone ex·
change building on Locust St. Estimated
expenditure to start the project wiU be by sheriffs ra.iders
about $172,000 this year. The building
VINTON - A sheriff's department
.addition is expected to be completed in
raid
here Friday night resulted In two ·
1974.
"Need for the extra space which the arrests for Illegal sale of unllcensed beer.
MONEY RECEIVED
Eyrie M. Steele, 64, and Jerry
"addition will provide becomes obvious
POMEROY
- Meigs County vlllages
when you look at telephone growth figures Morrison, 24, both of Rt. I, Vinton, were
for Gallipolis over the past yearJI," charged with posaesslon of four cases of received a total of $4,838 as the · final
Roderick noted. "Normally about 600 unlicensed beef .and sli bottles of wine. distribution In ga.soline lues, S\ate
phones are added to our network here each The raid was made by Investigator Kenny Auditor Josepn Ferguson reports. "
Grace Porter
year. Last year, however, more than 1,300 Deckard, Bob ~w and Jay Cremeans of Amounts received of the total by the
GALLIPOLIS - Grace were put in," he added.
the Gallla County sheriff's department. cpmmunities include Middleport, $1,951;
Porter, 64, Eureka Star Route,
Telephone usage in the Gallipolla area . The pair wiU appear In Municipal Court Pomeroy, $1,714; Racine, $1115; Rutland,
$313, and Syracuse, $583.
died about 3p.m. Friday in the is al$o on the upsurge. Subscribers made Wednesday,
Holzer Medical Center. &amp;he
was born Nov. 23, 1900, at
Cheshire, daughter of the late
Elza and Ether Fife &amp;colt.
Mrs. Porter is survived by
her husband, Curtis Porter,
whom she married on Jan. 11,
1930, at Pt. Pleasant; these
children, Harold Curtis Porter,
Evergreen, Colo.; Bill Porter,
Pt. Pleasant; Mrs . Steve
(Joann) Downs, New · York,
N.Y., and John Paul Porter,
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio ; five
grandchildren ; these brothers
and sisters, Vaughn &amp;colt,
Columbus;
Mrs.
Alva
(Marguerite) Kale, Cheshire;
Wesley Scott, Gallipolis;
William &amp;colt, Cheshire; Paul
Scott, Middleport; Mrs.
Charles (Dorothy) Roush,
Cheshire , and Mrs . Tom
(Gertrude) Hysell, Addison.
One sister preceded ber in
CHORAL DIRECTOR Ivan Trusler of Bo~Ung Green State University uses expressions as well as hl1 baton to
death.
direct the school's Collegl~te Chor
.
She spent all her life jp Gallia
DEGREE AWARDED
County. She was a member of
POMEROY - Naomi Jo
Elizabeth Chapel Church.
Smith, Pomeroy, received a
Funeral services will be held bachelor of science degree In
1 p.m. Monday at the Waugh· education on Jan: 19 at Concord
Halley-Wood Funeral Home College at Athens, W. Va.
with Rev. Chester Lemley
officiating. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery.
her parents, Robert and Katie
Friends may call at the Young Stobart; two siaters,
funeral home between 2-'1 and Monola Grueser and Hilda
7-9 p.m. Sunday.
Stobart, and a brother, Robed , '! l
Stobart.
She i~ S"!"'ived bY.a neph~1
Miss Stobart
Robert J. Grueser, Columbus.
•
Miss Stobart was a member
POMEROY
Miss
Genevieve Stobart,
66, of the Enterprise United
Pomeroy, Rl. 3, died Friday Methodist Church, Delta
night at Holzer Medical Center. Kappa Gamma SocietY and the
She was a retired school Retired Teachers Assn.
Funeral services will be
teacher, having taught in
Monday
at I p.m. at Ewing
Meigs County 28· years.
She was preceded in deaib by Chapel with the Rev. Stan ten
Smith officiating. Burial wiU
be in Pine Grove Cemetery.
Friendsmay call at the funeral
home any time.
·daughter of the late WIU 0. and
Mary Kyre Evans.
Mrs. Fox was a member of
the Rio Grande Baptist
Church.' She resided in Marion
the past 50 years.
She is survived by her
husband, John F. Fox, whom
she married in Mansfield on
Dec.IJ. 1927; four daughters, a
son, one sister, 13 grand·
children and eight great •.
grandchildren survive.
Funeral services will be held
11 a.m., Monday at the Boyd
Funeral Home in Marion.
Burial will be in the Marion
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home after 1 p.m.
today.

10a.m . til6p .m.

COATS

.

.

!'!, 1891, in Rio Grande, 439 total electric homes). The company about 600 more calls on an average

Mon. fhru Fri .
10 a .m . til9 p.m.

~

•

! ·Area Deaths lGallia Economy leapi.Dg forw~d.

Cox's in the New
Silver
Bridge
Shopping
Plaza.

llTAMPS

•

3- The SlindayTime$ -Sentlnel,Sullday,Jail. 21,1973

''

"·

r-------------------------

]ames Dabney

CABINETS

'

..

III.U.-

2. . 55
SJ.Il BAL.

�'

.

2-'!be Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday; Jan. 21,1973

&amp;:l'RIKES A BLQW

s8id the department has received complaints from
customers who " made a
special trip to the store and
then foulld that the discounts
wouldn't be available for
another week.
"This rule wtU end that
source of aggravation," she

NEW YORK (UP!) ..,. The
Department of .Consumer AI·
fain atruck a blow for the
bargain hunter· Wedneaday
with ·a proposal · to require
.advertlsera to specify opening
and cloalng datel of sales.
Cornmlllioner Bess Myerson

said.

g
WHITE ALUM. GUTIER
10 &amp;20 FT. LENGTHS

COMPLETE
LINE OF
MEDICINE

BIRD
SEAL DOWN

SHINGLES
$}()85

'•

CAROLINA·
LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
PHONE 675-1160

I

Glen Brummage

~

.

.

GUYSVILLE - Glen G.
Brwnmage, 62, Rt. I, Guysville, died Friday afternoon in
Bethesda Hospital, Zanesville,
following an extended iUness.
Mr. Brummage was preceded
in death by his father , Leslie G.
Brwnmage, and a son, Leslie,
in i965. .
Mr. Brun\mage worked. on
highway C'lnstruction the
greater part of his life. He was
a member of Riverhill
Methodist Church, Parkersburg, and Ohio Operating
Engineers Union, Local 18,
Colwnbus . .
He is survived by his wife,
Mrs. Armour Bailey Brum·
mage; two daughters, Mrs. C.
H. (Frances) Levy, Hayward,
Calif., and Mrs. Don (Jean)
Meeks, Johnstown; his mother,
Mrs. Lillie Davis Folden,
Guysville; two grandchildren,
Karla and Don Meeks, Johns·
town, and several cousins,
aunts and uncles.
Funeral services will be held
Monday at 2 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with
the Rev . Roy Deeter of·
ficiating, assisted by the Rev.
Cecil A. Monison. Burial will
be in the Coolviile Cemetery.
Friends may call after noon
today.

PT. PLEASANT- James B.
Dabney, 89, 1426 Kanawha
Street, Point Pleasant, died
Friday in Holzer Medical
Center. He was retired from
th e Gallion Ironworkers,
Gallion, Ohio. He was born
June 26, 1883, in Mason County,
a son of the late James C. and
Mary Wallace Dabney.
He is survived by two sons,
Orville and Anderson Dabney,
both Gallion, 0.; three
daughters, Mrs. Mary Rensch
and Mrs. Margaret Seevers,
both Gallion; and Mrs. Mabel
Robinson, Talmadge; 0.; 14
grandchildren and seven great·
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
today at ·2 p.m. from the
Stevens .Funeral Home. John
Steele, Jr., will conduct . the
services and burial will follow
in Concord Cemetery.

Mrs. Nell Fox
MARION - Nell Fox, 81, of
550 &amp;outh Prospect St., Marion,
Ohio, died at2:2ll p.m., Friday
in Community Memorial
Hospital. &amp;he was born Sept.

Rule tightened
on 61ing
of statements

Saturday

COLUMBUS - Secretary of
Slate Ted W. Brown has announced that a recent Ohio
~upreme Court decision makes .
1t necessary to require that all
future election statementa of
expenses and reee!Pta be filed
no later than 4 o'clock p.m. ol
the 4Sih day ·following an
election, regardlesS of whether
they are delivered in person or
by mail.
Tbe amendment of the fllihg
deadline for statements will
affect all candidates and
conunittees lilcludlng th011e on
the local, county, district, state
and federal levels, cautioned
the Chief Election Officer.
"This means that neither
Boards of Elections nor the
Secretary of State will be able
to accept as •timely ffied ' those
statements of expenses anc!
receipts wl)lch have not .been
physically received by the
appropriate election official by
the 4 p.m.' filing deadline' ·
Statements which have been
postmarked prior to the
deadline ~ut not.recelved unW:
later will no .longer meet the
qualifications of a 'timely
filing' ." warned ~lary Ted
Brown.

'0

VALUE ~ VALUE
STAMPS .

~ ~ ,,.
•

44%
TO .

47% -.
Manufacturer's
Close-outs
We made a special purchas!! and we're passing
on the savings to you. Pant Coats and Boot
Length Coats. Some hooded with fleece lining,
sing le or do"uble breasted, belted and unbelted.
Four styles and in beautiful cotors, the coat of
the season, suede s;loth, now at fantastic savings.
Sizes 6 to 16.
"

Values "to

m .oo

PANT OOATS
NOW ONLY
BOOT LENGTH . Values To SSO.OO

apparatus and customer movement In the
. area.
Another $16,000 w!U go for telephc!ne
swi!cl!lng equipment to handle the
growing nwnber of calla being•made here
andaboul$20,000wiUbespentfor.toollland
general .equlpment"Used 'In rilalntenance
and installation of customer telephone
equipment.
"
.
In 197~, Ohlo Bell lilvealed approximately ~.ooo Iii COIIItrucl!on alld
expansion of telephone servicel .in the
GalHjlolls area: The major pordon o1 umonlea went for network !levelopmel\1 and .
for telephone equipment to ~e new
customers
and. for customer movement.
.

ere We Pay
Daily ·Interest

:

l

,f

$}888

I

Passbook Savings

t~tn1n9

o·..

'

·into hands
of conunission
~JuvWJe

·,Court Judge Wray
,;sevens ~f Pll!,e .county. Friday
placed two juvemles m custody
of the Ohio Youth Commission.
Tbe youths, one 17 and the
other 16 years of age, had been
transferred to Gallia County
from Lawrence County. The u;.
year old was charged with theft
and destruction of property· He
had previously been placed on
probation.
The 17-year old was also
charged with theft and
; destruction of property. He
: was placed on probation.
A 17-year old girl charged
: witll shoplifting was fined $50
: and costs and a 17-year old boy
: charged with DWI was fined
' $50 and costs and his driver's
· license was suspended for
three months.

.

.

.

NOW ONLY

Comparable savings on all women's .
coats in stock.

.

Pollee speculated Ausley
would try to hitchhike to North
Carolina.
Ausley was convicted of a
similar offense in 1961, served
10 years of a 20-year prison
term and was released in 1971,
police said.
After the youth was freed
from the box he was taken to a
hospital Iii nearby Suffolk for
treatment, was released, then

RUMORS DYING
SEATTLE, Wash. (UPI) The Seattle Rumor Center is
closing at the end of this
month, not because of a lack of
money, but because of a lack of

(Gl

Admission :"

"There's a general apathy by
change in the times ," said day the public about what's going
coordinator' Gregg Nigg. on."

Children : 75c

Adults: $1.50

Show Starts 7 p.m.

Tonightthru

Wednesday
,....._ _:......_...:.......__..

ACADf.MY
AWARD
RJ
WINNE

at au Mwl

""wn"

a'"" ""u

ana

1110

olilittd

1111

Iotti

·'

!t

.'

\

ASAM I
FMNKUN J.
SCHAFFNER
PRODUCTION

'•''

Nlcliolas
•nd
Alexandra

~

·~

SHOP EARLY WHILE

i;

QUANTITIES LAST

'l

,

i
I•'

SPLIT .

99
·YARD

FRYERS

Fashion your .wardrobe ouaund
these 56./60" wide machine wtsh.-

lb. 33~

able ~nih of I00~. texturited poly·
ester yarn. Choose· easy-to-sew
solid color weaves and fancy jacquards. N e "'t r neeed ironin-g.
Guaranteed to ret4in shape dnd
color. Perfect for dren and casual feshioas. San todey!

--------

GROUND
CHUCK

3 LB. OR MORE

lb. 98 ~

--

1
I

SCOOP THEM UP ATTHIS SAVING!

I

WASH &amp; WEAR SHirrS

AT

n~tu~~~.:~

$1

poli,hod

ptl&lt;h podtl. Bri9hl
binding or piping
'

57

Look pretty •t home in • c.omfOrt.blt,
sleeveless shift of crisp wash and wear or

ONCE

prinh

trim. Sizes

90-Day

OPEN
MONDAYS
.AND
FRIDAYS

SMALL DRINK OF
YOUR CHO.ICE WITH
PURCHASE OF A

ROLL &amp; POTAl'OES

TILL
GENEROUS 40x72" SURFACE

j~akt

i4nppr

MEN'S AND

CUTTING BOARD

BOYS'

1''

MURPHY'S

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

A.ND MANY OTHERS

SPORT
OR PlAY

MONDAYS

8

SAVE ON

·WERE 14.99

·2-

PAIR '

. '"1"HAT OLD FASHIQNED GOObNESS"

2nd &amp; OLIVE St

PH. 446-2682

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
;

BOtH STORES IN GALLIPoLIS - THE PLACE TO SHOP
'

"I 09 YEARS QF SERVICE". ·
•

l'QfY.WSI!&amp;' •

Ll'I'EX FLAT WILL PAINT

OXFORDS

OPEN
TILL

~

•~

LAY-AWAY

$

2 PIECES CHICKEN

il

••~
'~

REG. 13.44 YARD

Protects tables. , Folds
for compact $tora(;e.

·..'

Cartoon
L_______________
__j !,

CASH, CHARGE,

Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr
Back

SNACK BOX

;

1

-

tGP

KNIS'S

"THE OLD BANK .WITH NEW IDEAS"

'

~~~u11~tm

l....... r~l.UUS""-'-UN · tlomt.t~ftlnU~J SCU!Fm

POLYESTER
DOUBLE

Marked in 1". squares
with true bios lines.

'•
~,

SHIPMENT!

more for vou in 1973. Stop in.

'

,

AHOR~D' FlM 1om COLUMBIA PICTURES

BIG NEW

Offer
Does Not
Include
Milk

•!'"·

~------------------J

I

...

.

••

llt•t

l·

Best Art DirectiOn ·
Best Costume Design

The friendly one that can do

~JUl .

to '"''

i

I

Sunday· Monday~ Tuesday- Wednesday

•

lhnllt ·

'~
j'

0

I

•

MEIGS THEATRE

rwnors. "I think there's a

Nobody cited
cited In two minor tr•llle \"or:
cidents i'rIVe,slig.E•tellFriday·: h~"
flle city police department.
The first occurred on State
St., at tlle Ohio Valley Laundry
where an auto driven by Kathy
1. Evans, 17, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
backed into an auto driven by
Randall o. Will, 18, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis. There was minor
damage.
A second accident occurred
on Pine St. and Vinton Ave .,
where an auto driven by Paul
J. Butler, 17, Rl. 2, Crown City,
failed to negotiate a curve. The
car went out of control, ran off
the roadway striking a high·
way marker and shrubbery.
Miss Butler sustained minor
injuries but was not im·
mediately treated. There was
minor damage to her car.

COLO\' ·

MAil 51J ISCR 1P l1Q/II' ltATU ,

1 PYir' itllfll "rrr ;n

'

altd very dangerous."

.

Rotary

Simplicity P.tt.,n~ in th1 letatt IMII 1 tnd worn1n'1 1tyl11, yo~tfhf~tl
ban l1uhion1 •nd rug91d toddltrs' •11r. No• ill yo11r ••w ing dtpartmt"t et M11rphy'1!

,.,ttpl

I ' Tlot !)#lllp.,ut T rltJ~nr "' O~ l o onCI w-.1
I Virtln it . ont ~ur 11] ,00 . t l• ''"'"'~' \P ,
mOI"'tnt J• SO . ttnwlterr, on1 yl«
I ''""
ll), 1i•' montl&gt;l 17 thru montl&gt;l u .OCI.
.I Tilt polly StnlllltL 0111 ' " ' llf.Dt: tlo
montM U 1S . IMff montFit St. M.
·
I TFit lJIIo iHI Prtu ln!trlllhOfltl •I to
1 Clvt.••tlr I lilt! li-d to lilt uu tor l)t,)blo(ll....

I

~'armed

LAUNCH DELAYED
CAPE KENNEDY (UP!)The launch of the Skylab space
station on. America's next
manned space mission has
been delayed from April 30 to
sometime in May because of
testing problems. Project
Director WilHam C. Schneider
reported Friday that tests on
the complex, house-sized orbiting laboratory were two
weeks behind schedule.

35, Racine. Johnson was cited
oo charg"es assured clear
'distance.
,
There were no injuries, Qllt
heavy damage to both irehicle5 ..

Film shown· to

EASY-TO-SEW SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

'

o S.hlldh , Enltrtd" 14'&lt;\llld tl,.,. on tHing
j ' mll l., " ll'om tro~ . O~ lo , POll OUit t .
I . TERM~ OF SUUC R IPTIO!rf .
8 'i urr ;,, Cltol v ana ~un«tr . JOe per
I WHk '

I

densely wooded rural area of
the city just off a logging access road, Nansemond police
said.
The box had a tiny door in the
top, through which the youth's
abductor Jlpparently passed
water and bits of food, officers
said.
The suspectwas identified by
the youth as Richard Alvin
Ausley, 32, after looking at
police photographs.
Authorities said Ausley, lllst
seen In Por.tsmouth, was

•;.&gt;;;.
,...,..,
.........v_.o,,:-:--..-.:•;.';•:•; •:-:-:-:-:·:·~:•:•',•!•; •;·!~·;•; .;•!•:
• ,or.v,•,•,-, o·o o'o"" o o o "o o o-. o o o" o o o o o o o"

to the right and struck a· utility
pole. Mrs. Simpson stated that
the ligllts frorri the station
blinded her.
'
She was arrested on charges
of driving while intoxicated.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Investigating officer where she
was admitted for a laceration
to her face. There was heavy
damage to the car.
·
The department also inmemhersvesligated an accident that
occurred WedneSday at 8:05
MIDDLEPORT - A film, a.m. on Pomeroy's East Main
"How to Heat your Home for Street.
·
Less," was shown to the
Tom Weaver, 26, Syracuse,
Middleport · Pomeroy Rotary whO was traveling west
club Friday evening at Heath stopped in line or"traffic and his
United Methodist Church car was struck in the rear by a
following dinner served at 6 car driven by Robert Johnson,
p.m. by ladies of the church.
· Tom Cas8ell, manager of the
Middleport division of the
Columbia Gas System, and
Tonight thru Tuesday
Allen Leonard, now of Athens,
January 21·23
who preceded Cassell at
Walt Disney's
Middleport, presented the film.
DUMBO
John Will, program chairman,
(Technicolorl
presented the visitors.
All-cartoon feature about a
flying elephant.
President Gene Riggs
THE LEGEND
presided. The Rev. Edward
OF LOBO
Fischer, Racine, was a guest.
(Technicolor I

POM,F.ROY - The Pomeroy
Police ·Department in· .
vestigated "an a'ccident Qn
· Pomeroy's East Main Slreel
Friday at 8:36 p.m .
Isabel S'mpson,. 61, Racine,
was traveling ' east on Main
near the Landmark service
Station when she went too far

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

I
Ill Courl St . P!Jmt•9'/ r
1 PubiiJI)t d ' " ' ' ' 'wte~IIIJ u•~•ntl t• t iNII

·

'

I G~!AP9WS..,..'*1 A~&amp; n,,.,G~LJS•\J.I!No~ ,, ..,.,..

THERE'S NO SERVICE
CHARGE ·oN YOUR
CHECKING ACCOUNT .

·~vndl1 by 1111 O~la
~~~~~~~. . r~~~~t~t ~~ 'l ' 11U8UHE
ns ln lrcr llvt . Gllilpo+ll. O"lo .

Juveniles put

AND

TIM ES,~ENTIN EL

Putll l"'ta IYff·Y wlt~fliV

'

'

past few weeka the squad has ported to a hospital. Tbe local
receiVed numerous calla from 'squad would also like to refrain
people who requested the transporting patients to
emergency squad· for non- ~vale doctor's officeS. Tliis
emergency. Jllll'P08eS.
takes up a great amount of
Such calls are classified as time and at times the"area is
either •~xi nlns" or invalid congested at tbq, doctor's of.
service. The squadmen would 1 fice.
Persons wishing "·invalid
like for the would-be caller ask
himself the question, "ls the service should call"one of the
emergency · squad really local funerSl homes who offer
necessary?" The squadmen such service. The dispatcher at
po11tted out that they could be the sl)eriff's department has
out on a non-emergency call . been given questions to ask _the
and then receive · a real caller to ascertalil i( the sqilad
emergency call. In this case, is really necessary: The squad
the person involved in the real would greatly appreciate it if
emergency would . be in the caller would use good
jeopardy. Sq11admen would judgment before calling . H the
also like to remind the would- situation is an emergency, the
be caller to be sure that the squad will respond i"m·
patient .wants medical "BI· medlat~y. Please don 'I call f~r
tentlon. ·
-"
the squad .unless it is really
Tbe squad has answered necessary.
several calla and when they
The squad thanka Larry's
arrived at the· residence the Wayside Furniture Co. for
patient refused to be trans- donating and installing the
carpet on the new 1973
emergency vehicle. The squad
members would also like to
thank everyone who has
donated to the squad thus far .
All donations 'were greatly
later was taken to a Portmouth appreciated. Everyone is
hospital -about 30 miles from welcome to view and inspect
Nansemond - lor further the new vehicle at the Court
House.
treatment.
Police said the youth's
parents apparenUy never received an extortion note during
the eight days he was held
captive and, assuming he
might have drowned, the Coast
Guard dragged nearby
waterways for his body.
In a similar lilcldent in 1968,
a Miami area heiress, Barbara
Jane Mackie, was abducted
and buried in a coffin-like box
. outside AUanla for 83 hours
before being discovered.
The box in which she was
buried was completely covered
by earth and was equipped
with a periscope~ike breathing
apparatus.

"volunleer emergency squad
.answered two calls Friday
afternoon. · Squadmen wer.,.
callj\d to 105G Second Av,e,,
where EliZl!beth Hlll was
taken to the Medical Plaza
,. as a medical patient. Alma
Pqrter, 64, Eureka Star Rt.,
was transferred to the
Holzer Medical Center from
the "Medical' Plaza after
suffering an apparent heart
attack.

and Thursday Only!

Pubill"td .,,;,

1 ~~Wt:~~r\. ~':,:~~d~~~n . Pam~· "•Ill
I
THE; O.I.ILY · SENTI ~EL
'

into a: rescue vehlcl~ . The local
squad will also answer
emergency rescue calla In the
county. At the present time
there is no other rescue unit"In
Galli&amp; County . The ·CadiDac
ambulance Wnf serve as a
backup unit for tlRff!ew Dodge.
There "has been several oc,
casions when there have been
two squad calla minute. apart.
On several traffic accidents
both Squads are needed in the
case of multiple Injuries. All
three squads are presently
stationed at the Court House in
GalUpolis.
The · emergency squad
receives its calla from the
sheriff's department. Anyone
requesting the squad simply
call the Sheriff's Department.
of Gallia County at 446-1221.
Members of the local sqw.d
again ask for cooperation of all
people wbo may in the 'future
call for the squad. Within the

Kidnap suspect sought
NANSEMOND, Va. (UPI)Pollee searched the Tidewater
area of Virginia Saturday for a
Portsmouth man wanted for
the apparent kidnap-assault of
a 13-yearo(Jld boy held captive
eight days in an underground
plywood hox.
The yuuth, not identified by
police, was found chained in
the four-by-eight-by.four.foot
box Friday by a group of local
rabbit hunters.
Officers said the youth was
beaten and repeatedly assaulted sexuaUy by his captor. He
received bead and face injuries. Both eyes were
blackened.
The box in which the boy was
held captive was burled with
·its top flush to the ground in a

.

"'''':l?E~I.~:::=* Accidents blame~ on lights

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on

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SUNDAl'
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New vehicle in service·
GAIJLIPOUS - The Gallia
County Emergency Squad's
new 1973. Dodge emergency
vehicle went "Into service
Friday nlglrt, fully equipped to
handle all emergency ambulance calls in Gallipolis and
Gallia County.
'
' The all-white van with a
"Omaha Orange"·safety stripe"
around It, Is also radio
equipped 'for instant radio
communications with the
. sheriff's department and police
department The vehicle is also
equipped with the · essential
audio-visual warning devices.
. With the addition of the 1973
vehicle, the local emergerlcy
squad now owns "three
emergency vehicles. The other
two vehicles are a 1967 CadiUac
ambulance and a 1954
Chevrolet Industrial am·
bulance.
' The 1954 industrial am.
bulance has been converted

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"expects "to take on at lesi · 500 new bus)hess day last year than they did during
cus.tomers this year. In order IO'keep up 1971. Dally calla lncre4aed from 34,627 i,n
with current demands, C&amp;SOE has also 1971 to 35,343 in 1972, and long dlstan~
called qn outside contractors during the calls went from 2,627 in 1971 to 3,2431n-1972.
Otbei' major expenditures in the
past year.
"
Ohio Bell estimate. it will need to Gallipolis area"in 1973 will be about S95,000
spend about $545,000 in the Gallipolis area for additions to the telephone cable net.
durlilg 1973 to keep · up with growing work, and some $240,000 for telephone
demands for telephone service.
· Commercial Manager Richard
Roderick said plans for 1973 .Include U11licensed beer taken
starting an addition to the telephone ex·
change building on Locust St. Estimated
expenditure to start the project wiU be by sheriffs ra.iders
about $172,000 this year. The building
VINTON - A sheriff's department
.addition is expected to be completed in
raid
here Friday night resulted In two ·
1974.
"Need for the extra space which the arrests for Illegal sale of unllcensed beer.
MONEY RECEIVED
Eyrie M. Steele, 64, and Jerry
"addition will provide becomes obvious
POMEROY
- Meigs County vlllages
when you look at telephone growth figures Morrison, 24, both of Rt. I, Vinton, were
for Gallipolis over the past yearJI," charged with posaesslon of four cases of received a total of $4,838 as the · final
Roderick noted. "Normally about 600 unlicensed beef .and sli bottles of wine. distribution In ga.soline lues, S\ate
phones are added to our network here each The raid was made by Investigator Kenny Auditor Josepn Ferguson reports. "
Grace Porter
year. Last year, however, more than 1,300 Deckard, Bob ~w and Jay Cremeans of Amounts received of the total by the
GALLIPOLIS - Grace were put in," he added.
the Gallla County sheriff's department. cpmmunities include Middleport, $1,951;
Porter, 64, Eureka Star Route,
Telephone usage in the Gallipolla area . The pair wiU appear In Municipal Court Pomeroy, $1,714; Racine, $1115; Rutland,
$313, and Syracuse, $583.
died about 3p.m. Friday in the is al$o on the upsurge. Subscribers made Wednesday,
Holzer Medical Center. &amp;he
was born Nov. 23, 1900, at
Cheshire, daughter of the late
Elza and Ether Fife &amp;colt.
Mrs. Porter is survived by
her husband, Curtis Porter,
whom she married on Jan. 11,
1930, at Pt. Pleasant; these
children, Harold Curtis Porter,
Evergreen, Colo.; Bill Porter,
Pt. Pleasant; Mrs . Steve
(Joann) Downs, New · York,
N.Y., and John Paul Porter,
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio ; five
grandchildren ; these brothers
and sisters, Vaughn &amp;colt,
Columbus;
Mrs.
Alva
(Marguerite) Kale, Cheshire;
Wesley Scott, Gallipolis;
William &amp;colt, Cheshire; Paul
Scott, Middleport; Mrs.
Charles (Dorothy) Roush,
Cheshire , and Mrs . Tom
(Gertrude) Hysell, Addison.
One sister preceded ber in
CHORAL DIRECTOR Ivan Trusler of Bo~Ung Green State University uses expressions as well as hl1 baton to
death.
direct the school's Collegl~te Chor
.
She spent all her life jp Gallia
DEGREE AWARDED
County. She was a member of
POMEROY - Naomi Jo
Elizabeth Chapel Church.
Smith, Pomeroy, received a
Funeral services will be held bachelor of science degree In
1 p.m. Monday at the Waugh· education on Jan: 19 at Concord
Halley-Wood Funeral Home College at Athens, W. Va.
with Rev. Chester Lemley
officiating. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery.
her parents, Robert and Katie
Friends may call at the Young Stobart; two siaters,
funeral home between 2-'1 and Monola Grueser and Hilda
7-9 p.m. Sunday.
Stobart, and a brother, Robed , '! l
Stobart.
She i~ S"!"'ived bY.a neph~1
Miss Stobart
Robert J. Grueser, Columbus.
•
Miss Stobart was a member
POMEROY
Miss
Genevieve Stobart,
66, of the Enterprise United
Pomeroy, Rl. 3, died Friday Methodist Church, Delta
night at Holzer Medical Center. Kappa Gamma SocietY and the
She was a retired school Retired Teachers Assn.
Funeral services will be
teacher, having taught in
Monday
at I p.m. at Ewing
Meigs County 28· years.
She was preceded in deaib by Chapel with the Rev. Stan ten
Smith officiating. Burial wiU
be in Pine Grove Cemetery.
Friendsmay call at the funeral
home any time.
·daughter of the late WIU 0. and
Mary Kyre Evans.
Mrs. Fox was a member of
the Rio Grande Baptist
Church.' She resided in Marion
the past 50 years.
She is survived by her
husband, John F. Fox, whom
she married in Mansfield on
Dec.IJ. 1927; four daughters, a
son, one sister, 13 grand·
children and eight great •.
grandchildren survive.
Funeral services will be held
11 a.m., Monday at the Boyd
Funeral Home in Marion.
Burial will be in the Marion
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home after 1 p.m.
today.

10a.m . til6p .m.

COATS

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!'!, 1891, in Rio Grande, 439 total electric homes). The company about 600 more calls on an average

Mon. fhru Fri .
10 a .m . til9 p.m.

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! ·Area Deaths lGallia Economy leapi.Dg forw~d.

Cox's in the New
Silver
Bridge
Shopping
Plaza.

llTAMPS

•

3- The SlindayTime$ -Sentlnel,Sullday,Jail. 21,1973

''

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]ames Dabney

CABINETS

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III.U.-

2. . 55
SJ.Il BAL.

�• &lt;

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Mr~.

Brandeberry
·bQsts mothers club

FAC has new
instructor
GALLIPOLIS - The French '
Art Colony is pleased· and
fortunate to have Thomas
'Crawford Lillick added to the
winter faculty. Mr. Lillick will
teach a ceramics class on
Monday evenings from 7:309:30. His education includes a
Bachelor of Fine Arts degree
and a Master of Fine Arts · t.;',:~
deg~e from Ohio University,
Athens .
Mr. Lillick has had highly
successful exhibits at Butler
Art Institute , Youngstown;
Battelle Memorial Institute,
Columbus; Columbus Gallery
of Fipe Arts where he designed
the Craftsman's Show of 1970;
Ohio University, Athens;
Pytman St. Gallery, Athens;
University of Wisconsin, Platt:
ville, Wis.; and French Art
Colony, Gallipolis.
Mr. Lillick; a native of

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CHESHIRE - TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Rankin,
Roush Lane, are happy to announce the engagement of their
daughter, Dreama, to Brendon Berg, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Berg of York, Pa.
The double-ring ceremony will be performed May 19 at
Williamsburg, Ky.
Miss Rankin's only sister,Mrs. Gregg (Patti) Gibbs will
be matron of honor and the groom's twin brother, Paul, will
serve as best man.
Miss Rankin is a 1970 graduate of Kyger Creek High
School and is presently a junior at Cumberland College.
Mr. Berg graduated from high school in York, Pa.,
served four years in the U.S. Navy, and is also a junior at
Cumberland College in Williamsburg, Ky.

NEW

PIANO
SPE.CIALS

\

SAVE

$200

ON ONE OF THESE
FINE PIANOS THIS WEEK.

BENQi TO MATQi INCLUDED
TERMS TO SUIT UP TO

5 YEARS TO PAY
See Us For All Your

.MUSICAL NEEDS
eBAND INSTRUMENTS •ACCESSORIES
•SALES and RENTAL
.MUSIC REPAIR SERVICE

,_~
~

··
.

·

Events

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SUNDAY
JAYT. WILL, 19720hioKarate
Champion and OU instructor,
will lecture ; and give ,;a
demonstration at Paule Lyne
Center, Rio Grande College, 1
.. ''
'" ' " \ '
' .
p.m. Admission is1 free.
Everyone welcome.

MONDAY
REG . MEETING, Gallia
Chapter of Ohio Civil Service
Employees Assoc., Grand
Squares Ball Room, 1622
Eastern AVe., 7 p.m.
SPECIAL combined meeting of
the Gallia County Association
for Retarded Children and the
169 Boai-d, in the M &amp; S
Classroom._ at the Gallipolis
An Old Process
State Institute, 7 p.m.
Dehydrated potatoes sustained people m the Andes GALLIPOIJS Chapter No. 283
long before the first Euro· OES Initiation 7:30 p.m.
· pean had ever tasted the
tubers. Potatoes were pre- CREATIVE Writers wU! meet
served by repeatedly squeez- with Mrs. Susan Clarke, 108
ing out the water and expos- Spruce Knoll, alB p.m. Anyone
ing them to the sun and interested is invited to attend
frost.
with or without a manuscript.
TUESDAY
PEMBROKE Club with Mrs.
John Evans at 8 p:m.

HOUSE OF MUSIC

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS
.
AND .LOAN co.

'
MISS MARILYN CB!lJ)ERS

. GALIJPOL!S- ENGAGEMENT AN:'&lt;OUNCEO- Mr.
ll"d Mrs. Frank W. Childers, Gallipolis, are proud to anrounce the engagement of their daughter Marilyn Louise to
William Lee Kuhn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Kuhn N'or·
lhup
'
•
, I '
Miss Childers, a 1972 graduate ol Gallia Academy High
~hool, is employed by the Holzer Medical Center Clinic.
· 1,.. Mr~ Kuhn, also a 1972 graduate of Gallia Academy, is
prll8ently employed by Kuhn and Saunders Heating of
Gallipolls.
·
Wedding plans are incomplete.

••••
2 Year, Savings
Certificates

5,000
..

5%%

TUESDAY
ANN JUDSON Bible class iif
the First Baptist Church will .
meet in the fellowship room at
6:30p.m. Everyone is asked to
bring a covered dish and table
service.
THURSDAY
GALIJA County Council on
Aging monthly meeting, Paint
Creek Baptist Church, 7:30
p.m. Atty. John E. Halliday
guest speaker.
FRIDAY
KYGER CREEK Band
Boosters ·will sponsor a chili
supper in the school cafeteria
at 5 p.m .

-

Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
1 Year

Passbook Savings Accounts
Save Any Amount Any Time
mteresfplrld quarterly 'On'lill ceftifirntes
, ' ' "' ... ,
Deposit 'by -the'lOth of the month and earn from the first . . ·
Interest available monthly on accounts of $1,000 or more

THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
and LOAN COMPANY

BASIC COMPLETED
PORTLAND
Army
Private Charles M. Fitch, 21,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H.
Fitch, Route I, Portland,
recently cmpleted eight weeks
of basic training at the U. S.
Army Training Center, Armor,
Ft. Knox, Ky. He is a 19tl9
graduate of Southern High
School. His wife, Brenda, lives
on Route 3, Pomeroy.

Carel Jane Hanson

Carel fane Hanson to
wed james B. Blank

"Sufe Sar1iflg• Si11ce I 886"

•

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

OPPOSITE POST OFFICE
PHONE 446-3832

IWOTOROLA

GALUPOLIS - MR. AND MRS. JAMES H. HANSON, 19
Edgemont Dr., are announcing the engagement and forthcoming wedding of their daughter, Carel Jane to James B.
Blank, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester J . Blank, 581 Old
Clairton Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Miss Hanson is a 1970 graduate of Gallla Academy High
School and Huntington College of Business .
· Mr. Blank Is a graduate iif Thomas Jefferson High School
In Pittsburgh and a graduate of University of Pittsburgh. He
Is employed as Test Engineer at O.V.!!:.C.
The wedding will be an event iif Saturday, March 3, 7
p.m. at the St. Peter's Episcopal Church.
The gracious custom of open church will be oh&lt;!erved.

Quasar. H coNsotrcoion rv

DAN THOMAS
AND SON

GOLDEN Circle, Grace United
Methodist Church, will meet
with potluck luncheon at noon.
Everyone welcome.

Mrs. H Wils-on
hosts CIC Club

since 1936"
Ohio

446-0687

GALLIPOLIS - CIC met
Thursday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs . Hobart Wilson Sr.,
with 10 membes and one guest,
Helen Walker, attending. Mrs.
Walker was welcomed back as
a member.
In the absence of the
president, vice-president Ethel
Steele presided . Secretary
Pina Ward and treasurer
Evelyn Rothgeb's reports were
read and approved.
Games were under the
di,reclion ol Mrs. Wilson.
Pi-izes went to !\Irs. Walker and
Elizabeth White. Birthdays of
Pina Ward and Evelyn
Rothgeb were observed.
The nextmeeUng will be with
Ethel Steele Feb. 15, 7:30p.m.
A social hour followed. ·

IT'S

.K&amp;K's
MOBILE HOME

ELEGANT EARLY AMERICAN STYLING
· Current Distributor's Suggested List
Price, optional with dealer.

'635

ALL MOBilE HOMES ON DISPLAY!
.Many Sizes and Mod,els To

Modet•etectlo.n and availability art optional with dellter.
I

.,

WE SERVICE .WHAT WE SELL

CHIU SUPPER
CHESHIRE - The Kyger
Creek Band Boosters will
sponsor a chill supper J1'riday'
evening at 5 In the school
.cafeteria. 1be menu will include chill, hqtdogs, pie, cake,
coffee, tea and pop. This
p-ojeet is to obtain money for
new uniforms for the band.

K - K O B I L E HOME SALE;
PAUL 8c MADGE NO•R.THUP •
OWNERS

Choose From. Two &amp; Three Bedroom
Homes. Available In Fuel Oil,
.
Gas or Electric ·

Picture and Sound. lnsta-Matlc Color Tuning. Lighted
Channel Numbers. Concealed Caatars. Rustle Maple
finish on tempered hardboard and select solids wkh
accenll of limulated
material.~- wide
cabinet.

wood

SAVE• '50

Six All Electric
Homes To D1oose From!

· Model WU11JB. Plug-In circuit modul81.lnlllant

'

Pf10NC

304/67S · 3 UO O

q ·I IIIIIII.I V
POINT PL E,A~ ANT , WEST VIIIIQ-INIA 2~5 ! 0

Schult Mobile Homes

LARRY'S WAYSIDE FURNITURE ·

3rd· &amp; Olive

Gallipolis, Ohio
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; MONDAY 'TIL 8 PM

Thursday Club met
GALIJPOUS - Thursday
Club met at the home of Mrs.
James Orr on Jan. 18. Mrs.
John Cornett had charge of the
program.
Mrs. Cornett reviewed the
book "The Boys of Summer"
written by Roger Kahn. The
book tells the story of the
Brooklyn Dodgers of. the early ,
·1950s and what has happened to
the players since that time.
Some of the players discussed
were Billy Cox, Pee Wee
Reese, Roy Campanella and·
Carl Erskine . Mrs. Cornett also
told of the early life and career
of the author, Roger Kahn, who
covered the Dodger team ior
the New York Herald Tribune.

MISS DEBRA K. HOU.AND

MISS EUZABETH ANN SANDERS

GALIJPOIJS - ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Baker Sa~.nders are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Elizabeth Ann, to Patrick
Allen Canaday, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Canaday, Rio ·
Grande.
Miss·Saunders, a 1972 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School, is presently attending Rio Grande College majoring
in Medical Laboratory Technology.
· Mr. Canaday, also a 1972 graduate of Gallia Academy
High School, is employed at Lynch Sohio Station, Rib Grande.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

Mrs. Lakshmi Priyanath
sp~aks for local group

1

m1mmum

..

A CCey•hted at R.tO

And
'
wedding bells.

.

RIVERSIDE Study Club at 1
p.m. with Mrs . Donald
Warehime hostess.

BRUNICARDI
54 State St., Gallipolis

c0m•Ing

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SAVINGS

MISS DREAMA RANKIN

AT BRUNICARDI'S

,rn-

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COMPLETES BABIC '
REEDSVILLE - , Army
RIO GRANDE _ Dean S. Private Clarence J. Stewart,
Brown, direCtor o1 admissions son of Mr. and. Mrs. Clarence
8nd records at $o Grande . M. Stewart, Reedsville,
College, announced Friday recently completed eight
that Miss Kathy Ctouse, Miss . weeks of basic. training at the
Pam Mead and Miss Jackie U. S. Army TralDing. Center,
Burnett, have been a~cepted Armor, Ft. Kn01&lt;, Ky.
for enrollment .at Rio Grande
for the fall quarter of ma.
Miss Crouse, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Francis Crouse, of
Gallipolis, plans to major in•
Elementary Education. She is
a graduate of Gallla Academy
High School.
·
Miss Mead; daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert ·Mead of
Gallipolis, 'also plans to major.
in Elementary Education. She
is a graduate of Gallla
Academy High School.
Miss Burnett, daughter of
And ArtCarved wedding
rings are right In tune wHh
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Burnett
these
two happy evenfll.
of Addison, plans to major in
Medical Laboratory
OUr sparkling colledlon
captures the spirit and
Technician. She is a graduate
your enduring love. With
of Kyger Creek High School.
tasle, quality and expert
craftsmanship.

e

THE
SIGN
OF
.SAFE

Kansas, presently re$ides ·in

Athens where he maintains a
i
studio and shop.
,
MISS
LINDA
K.
BAKER
Other classes being offered
I
beginning Feb. 5 are: Mon''
dars, Leathercraft and Clay
I
GALIJPOIJS - FORMER RESIDENT ENGAGED Sculpture ; Tuesday, Painting
!·, Mrs. Theodore Baker of Columbiana, OJ;Uo is announcing the
for beginners and inengagement of her daughter, Linda Kay, to LeRoy F. Parks,
termediates; Wednesday,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Parks of New Waterford, Ohio.
Lettering, Drawing and
Linda is a Senior at Crestview High School from which
Watercolor; Thursday, Inher fiance graduated in 1971. LeRoy is now employed at the
terior Design and advanced
Amoco Truck stop· in North Lima, Ohio.
painting. An enameling
Miss Baker's father was the late Theodore T. Baker,
workshop is also planned for
former resident of the Gallipolis area·and her grandmother is
Mrs. Hearl (Ora) Brown of Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
Feb. 13. The instructor asks
Wedding plans are indefinite.
that students meet at Riverby
Fe.b, 6 to choose their work for
the enam~ling workshop, as
Coal supplies about oneIn heavy rain, a 50-foot t!1~se must be ordered.
The cost of the workshop is $2
fifth of the power and heat saguaro cactus may soak up
plus materials. The cost of the
used in the United States.
a ton of water. ·
interior design class is $16 for
French Art Colony members
and $21 to non-members. It is
an eight-week course. The cost
. of all other classes is $30 with a
discount to French Art Colony
members of $6.
Membership is open to
everyone at the rate o( $10 per
individual or m per family.
Materials for the leathercraft
class are available at Riverby.
Clay for the clay sculpture
class and the ceramics class
may be obtained through the
instructors and all other art
materials are available at
A rare opportunity to own a fine piano
White's Wallpaper and
at TREMENDOUS SAVINGS. Full 88
P.aint. For more information
nol!e keybde~~ ·tflree Jworking pedals,
call 446-1903 or 446-0953.
13 ply lamin~ted p,ln block, fine Spru.;:e
..,.,,
soJnd board;:'''fOII factory warranty.
CIRCLE TO MEET
The Golden Circle of the
Grace United Methodist
Church will have its regular
monthly meeting Tuesday.
Potluck luncheon will be
AS MUCH AS
served at noon. Claude Miller
will have charge of the
program and Mrs. Aldeth
Robinson will give the
meditation. Everyone is.
welcome.

'

OCCL ·District President, Mrs.
Carol Rupe. Business lor ihe
evening included plans- for
husbands night, and a bowling
party for the older children.
The group also discussed
methods of supplementing· tile
treasury.
Cer~inties. "
The meeting was dismissed
Roll Call was answered by 14
by
the president leading the
members revealing their
secret sister. Secretary and group i·n the Lord's Prayer.
treasurer reports were read Jlefreshments' were served by
Sue Brandeberry and Janet
and approved.
Mrs. Delores Shockey read a Merry.
New Year's letter from the
RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande
Mothers League met Tuesday,
Jan. 16, at the home of Mrs.
Robert Brandeberry. The
meeting was opened with Jo
Ann Nibert presenting a
reading entitled "The Big

WIREMAN NOW
LONG BOTTOM - Army
Private Gary L. Wolf, son ·9f
Ml&gt;. and Mrs. George A. W?lf,
Rt. 1, Long- Bottom;"reeenlly
completed .a eight-week field
wireman collrse at ·the 'IC S.
Army Training Cellll!r;·
fantry, Ft. Jac~n. S. C. The
24-rear-old soldier was
graduated in 1966frlllil Ea,item
High School, and received his
B. s. degree in 1972 froni Ohio
State University at 'Columbus.
His wife, ·Patricia, lives . on
Route 3, Pomeroy. .
, ·l
Wellare New? , _1 ·
The ancient Incas hild we_llorganized welfare,.programs.
Orphans, the . aged and the
sick drew generous food. sUp·
plies from government storehouses. . ·

.

GALLIPOLIS
The was In charge of devotions with
January meeting of the Grace poems "He Cares" and
United Methodist Women's "L~gene or Apostle ." She
.Society of Christian Service · closed wltlt "Prayer for
was held in the church chapel Strength," a prayer for school
with Mrs. Earl Durham hoys translated from an lndiari
presiding. She opened the lyric by Mahatma Gandhi, and
meeting with prayer aiid a is for use by boys in a "Youth
warm welcome. Acting as Place of Worship."
secretary-treasurer, Mrs .
Mrs. Howell Edwards,
Frank Childers gave reports chairman of Missionary
for December. Committee Education, was in charge of the
reportS were given and it was program. India has been
announced that Virginia. chosen as the special interest
Pickarts, a missionary from ' country for the year's study
Sierra Leone will be guest with the society missionary
apealter Feb.l9·at 7:30p.m. All! money being sent to belp the'.
surrounding church people are people of India. It was noted
Invited.
&gt;•
there is a necessity of knowing
It was also an')ounced that one another 1n depth and living
"Day of Prayer and Sell together in grace, fruitfulness
Uenlal" will be held Jan. 25 and mutuality in every sphere.
from 1-3 p.m. The service,
The dining room tables were
which will be held in the beautifully decorated in
chapel, will be a continuance keeping with the Indian topic.
type of prayer and one may Each setting was decorated
attend any time during the two- with an India puzzlernat, the
hour period.
Lord's Prayer in Hindi, and an
The annual meeting of the India " Mapkin " which is
Church Women United will he a map of India, with
held at 2 p.m., Jan. 28, at the locations of many UnitPresbyterian Church. The ed
Methodist
mission
Membership Committee urged areas in India . Numerous
that all WSCS questionnaires pieces of handmade materials
he returned to Mrs. George and articles added to the
Grace or the church office.
Twenty-six members and
three guests were present with
a total of 108 members at circle
meetings and 244 sick calls
reported for December. It was
decided to purchase 15 rocking
chair pads for the pediatrics
section at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs. James Gilliam, vicepresident, announced there
will be general meetings held
every two months, with the
neXt meeting to be March 21.
This meeting will be the Easter
program of the Tenebrae
Service with Rev. Piilll HawkS
as speaker. Mrs. Keith Thomas

colorful setting.
Guest speaker was Mrs.
Lakshmi Priyanath, a charming Gallipolis resident who
has been in the United Sates for
a year and a half. Mr.
Priyanath is a mining engineer
and they are the parents of two
daughters, ages 2 and 4. A
music major, Lakshmi comes
from Bangalore, capital city of
India. She spoke on the history
of India, Including. religion,
languages, marriage
ceremonies, ethnic groups and
contrasting regions and
climate which all affect the
values and approach to life &lt;;If

•

-Beau'!}
O'l_, tJte fio
Offer ·

Debra Kay Holi£Jnd to
wed Larry A. Howell

1

TAWNEY
JlWELERS
422 Second Ave.
Phone44&lt;1-1615
.Gallipolis. Ohio

Gallia County

Distri-.ct Library' News
Standard &amp; Poor's Industry
Surveys is now available at
the Gallia County District
Library along with "Standard
&amp; Poor's Register of Corporations
Directors
&amp;

the lndian people.
The weather of South _Ind~
and the Bangalore reg10n IS
always s_pring-like . and
pleasant. W1~. a population of
over 550 milli~n pe?ple, the
present population w1ll _double
to more than one billion by
ye~. 2~.
.
M1ss1on has ach1_eved . a
commendable record m India.
The church exten~ mto ~very
~tate and the B1ble IS available
mlanguages spoke~ by over 90
pet. of the population.
The program closed as the
~est demonstrated how on_e
w aps and wears . a sari,
follo':"ed by an mformal
question and answer period.
Delicious refreshments were
served by Circle 1.

Executives. In the "Industry
Suryeys" various fields, such
as Recreation, or automollves,
are examined as to their past
performance, as well as
projections as to their potentials. This is a good tool to give
an overall view for an area as
well as some statistics concerning recent performance of,
specific companies .
A nilinber of companies with
operations in the Gallipolis
area, are mentioned including
Federal Mogul, Chris Craft,
and Columbia Gas.
' This is an interesting tOol
with a wealth of information. ·
New books released Thursday include:
FICTION
A Choice of Enemies, by Ted
Allbeury; A Time for Loving,
by Herbert Tarr and All My
Enemies, by Rosemary Harris.
NON-FICTION
The ·Adventure of Birth, by
Elisabeth D. Bing; The Sinal
Myth, by Andrew M. Greeley;
Sand in a Whirlwind,'by Ferol

,.------------------.

GIFTS
~ --0~

FOR THE

BABY

~J~--~:-STRETCH 13.89
PREFOLDED

~ c(':~

Diaper Stackers- - - - - - $3.00-$5.50
Crib Blankets
$4 ..00-$12.00
Diaper Bags
$8.00-$10.00
Take Me Home Sets
$5.00-$9.00
---~---

Hooded Towel S e t s - - -- - $2.50-$4.50
Swea.ter &amp; Bootie Sets
$4.00-$10.00
Gowns &amp; Ki.monos
$1.89
Diaper Pai Is
$5 .00
Baby Books
$4.00-$4.50-$5 .00
lnfanseats
$9.00
Crib Sheets
$2.00-$2.50
Boxed Sleepers
$3.00-$5.00

eCOSCO HIGH aiAIRS w-Q
eCAR SEATS
•STROLLERS
~-

$3.75

LUCKY SIZE SAI.E
FREE SHffiT &amp; TIE
Free Shirt .and Tie with every Sl,llt sold this
week. Beautiful 100 percent Polyester double
knit suits, wide lapels, flare legs, plus a
beautiful Van Heusen Shirt and Wembley Tie
FREE!! Regular Values to $108.50 all this
week for on Iy. .•

Invited to a shower? Let
Jack &amp; Jill's help you
select the right gift from
our . Baby Dept.

When you purchase Merle Norman's special ,$26.00
"Beauty on the Go" package ·of cosmetics, you get
everything you need for day-and-night complexion care.
Plus you receive a $15.95 Amelia ~arhart travel tote for
only $3.75. A$41.95 value for only $29 .75. Afabu lous
saving. H~rry, th is offer is limited. The tote .Is available
Inavocado, light blue, reo and melon .

ffiERL£ nORmAn COSmETIC STUDIO
JUANITA'S BEAUlY SHOPPE '

.A.!! Carved

GALIJPOIJS- MR. ,!\NO MRS. CECIL VINSON, 510 A
Jackson Pike, are aMouncing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Debra Kay Holland, to
Larry A. Howell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Howell, Bidwell.
Miss Holland is a senior at Gallia Academy.High School
and part time employee of the Kroger Company.
Mr. Howell, a 1971 graduate of North Gallia High School,
is presently employed at the Gallipolis State Institute.
The wedding will be an event of April 28 at 6:30p.m. at
the Gallipolis Christian Church, Magnolia Dr.

WITH SPECIAL $26 COSMETIC PURCHASE
OCSEA TO MEET
GALIJPOLIS -The regular
meeting of the Galiia Chapter
of the Ohio Civil Service
Employees Association will be
held Monday at 7 p.m. In the
Grand squa~es Ball Room, 1622
Eastern
Ave. . Field
representative Walt Sheets will
he the , guest speaker. Entertainment and refreshments
will follow the meeting. '

Egan; Miller's High Life, by
Ann . Miller; The Greatest
Jewish City in the World, by
Harry Golden; Seattle, by
Nard Jones; Code Number 72,
by Cecil B: Currey; The
Wounded Healer, by Henri J .
M. Nouwen; If the Church is to
Survive, by' Louis Evely and
Isles of the Carlbees, by
Carleton Mitchell.

. •FREE GIF,T WRAPPING

JACk&amp; JILL'S
''fosbi&lt;Jtufo, tho

12 Belmont Dr.

. . Galllpolls, O.
Mrs. Loan Saunders-Owner

Operotori: Becky Lakin EllloH &amp; Christi Keisling Spears

Goltipolls

ro.., ..

38 39 40 41
Shorts
5 4 1
:Regulars 4 4 11 7
Longs
1 4

42 ~ 44 46
.
l I 2
9 1 10 2
3 1 3 I

Monday thru f:riday 10:00 a.m. til9:00 p.m .
Saturdav 10:00 a.m. til6:00 P·m·

..

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'

�• &lt;

•

Mr~.

Brandeberry
·bQsts mothers club

FAC has new
instructor
GALLIPOLIS - The French '
Art Colony is pleased· and
fortunate to have Thomas
'Crawford Lillick added to the
winter faculty. Mr. Lillick will
teach a ceramics class on
Monday evenings from 7:309:30. His education includes a
Bachelor of Fine Arts degree
and a Master of Fine Arts · t.;',:~
deg~e from Ohio University,
Athens .
Mr. Lillick has had highly
successful exhibits at Butler
Art Institute , Youngstown;
Battelle Memorial Institute,
Columbus; Columbus Gallery
of Fipe Arts where he designed
the Craftsman's Show of 1970;
Ohio University, Athens;
Pytman St. Gallery, Athens;
University of Wisconsin, Platt:
ville, Wis.; and French Art
Colony, Gallipolis.
Mr. Lillick; a native of

~

!f
f
f,

t

I
I.
I

t
j

i

I

.

CHESHIRE - TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Rankin,
Roush Lane, are happy to announce the engagement of their
daughter, Dreama, to Brendon Berg, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Berg of York, Pa.
The double-ring ceremony will be performed May 19 at
Williamsburg, Ky.
Miss Rankin's only sister,Mrs. Gregg (Patti) Gibbs will
be matron of honor and the groom's twin brother, Paul, will
serve as best man.
Miss Rankin is a 1970 graduate of Kyger Creek High
School and is presently a junior at Cumberland College.
Mr. Berg graduated from high school in York, Pa.,
served four years in the U.S. Navy, and is also a junior at
Cumberland College in Williamsburg, Ky.

NEW

PIANO
SPE.CIALS

\

SAVE

$200

ON ONE OF THESE
FINE PIANOS THIS WEEK.

BENQi TO MATQi INCLUDED
TERMS TO SUIT UP TO

5 YEARS TO PAY
See Us For All Your

.MUSICAL NEEDS
eBAND INSTRUMENTS •ACCESSORIES
•SALES and RENTAL
.MUSIC REPAIR SERVICE

,_~
~

··
.

·

Events

~

·
SUNDAY
JAYT. WILL, 19720hioKarate
Champion and OU instructor,
will lecture ; and give ,;a
demonstration at Paule Lyne
Center, Rio Grande College, 1
.. ''
'" ' " \ '
' .
p.m. Admission is1 free.
Everyone welcome.

MONDAY
REG . MEETING, Gallia
Chapter of Ohio Civil Service
Employees Assoc., Grand
Squares Ball Room, 1622
Eastern AVe., 7 p.m.
SPECIAL combined meeting of
the Gallia County Association
for Retarded Children and the
169 Boai-d, in the M &amp; S
Classroom._ at the Gallipolis
An Old Process
State Institute, 7 p.m.
Dehydrated potatoes sustained people m the Andes GALLIPOIJS Chapter No. 283
long before the first Euro· OES Initiation 7:30 p.m.
· pean had ever tasted the
tubers. Potatoes were pre- CREATIVE Writers wU! meet
served by repeatedly squeez- with Mrs. Susan Clarke, 108
ing out the water and expos- Spruce Knoll, alB p.m. Anyone
ing them to the sun and interested is invited to attend
frost.
with or without a manuscript.
TUESDAY
PEMBROKE Club with Mrs.
John Evans at 8 p:m.

HOUSE OF MUSIC

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS
.
AND .LOAN co.

'
MISS MARILYN CB!lJ)ERS

. GALIJPOL!S- ENGAGEMENT AN:'&lt;OUNCEO- Mr.
ll"d Mrs. Frank W. Childers, Gallipolis, are proud to anrounce the engagement of their daughter Marilyn Louise to
William Lee Kuhn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Kuhn N'or·
lhup
'
•
, I '
Miss Childers, a 1972 graduate ol Gallia Academy High
~hool, is employed by the Holzer Medical Center Clinic.
· 1,.. Mr~ Kuhn, also a 1972 graduate of Gallia Academy, is
prll8ently employed by Kuhn and Saunders Heating of
Gallipolls.
·
Wedding plans are incomplete.

••••
2 Year, Savings
Certificates

5,000
..

5%%

TUESDAY
ANN JUDSON Bible class iif
the First Baptist Church will .
meet in the fellowship room at
6:30p.m. Everyone is asked to
bring a covered dish and table
service.
THURSDAY
GALIJA County Council on
Aging monthly meeting, Paint
Creek Baptist Church, 7:30
p.m. Atty. John E. Halliday
guest speaker.
FRIDAY
KYGER CREEK Band
Boosters ·will sponsor a chili
supper in the school cafeteria
at 5 p.m .

-

Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
1 Year

Passbook Savings Accounts
Save Any Amount Any Time
mteresfplrld quarterly 'On'lill ceftifirntes
, ' ' "' ... ,
Deposit 'by -the'lOth of the month and earn from the first . . ·
Interest available monthly on accounts of $1,000 or more

THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
and LOAN COMPANY

BASIC COMPLETED
PORTLAND
Army
Private Charles M. Fitch, 21,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H.
Fitch, Route I, Portland,
recently cmpleted eight weeks
of basic training at the U. S.
Army Training Center, Armor,
Ft. Knox, Ky. He is a 19tl9
graduate of Southern High
School. His wife, Brenda, lives
on Route 3, Pomeroy.

Carel Jane Hanson

Carel fane Hanson to
wed james B. Blank

"Sufe Sar1iflg• Si11ce I 886"

•

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

OPPOSITE POST OFFICE
PHONE 446-3832

IWOTOROLA

GALUPOLIS - MR. AND MRS. JAMES H. HANSON, 19
Edgemont Dr., are announcing the engagement and forthcoming wedding of their daughter, Carel Jane to James B.
Blank, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester J . Blank, 581 Old
Clairton Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Miss Hanson is a 1970 graduate of Gallla Academy High
School and Huntington College of Business .
· Mr. Blank Is a graduate iif Thomas Jefferson High School
In Pittsburgh and a graduate of University of Pittsburgh. He
Is employed as Test Engineer at O.V.!!:.C.
The wedding will be an event iif Saturday, March 3, 7
p.m. at the St. Peter's Episcopal Church.
The gracious custom of open church will be oh&lt;!erved.

Quasar. H coNsotrcoion rv

DAN THOMAS
AND SON

GOLDEN Circle, Grace United
Methodist Church, will meet
with potluck luncheon at noon.
Everyone welcome.

Mrs. H Wils-on
hosts CIC Club

since 1936"
Ohio

446-0687

GALLIPOLIS - CIC met
Thursday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs . Hobart Wilson Sr.,
with 10 membes and one guest,
Helen Walker, attending. Mrs.
Walker was welcomed back as
a member.
In the absence of the
president, vice-president Ethel
Steele presided . Secretary
Pina Ward and treasurer
Evelyn Rothgeb's reports were
read and approved.
Games were under the
di,reclion ol Mrs. Wilson.
Pi-izes went to !\Irs. Walker and
Elizabeth White. Birthdays of
Pina Ward and Evelyn
Rothgeb were observed.
The nextmeeUng will be with
Ethel Steele Feb. 15, 7:30p.m.
A social hour followed. ·

IT'S

.K&amp;K's
MOBILE HOME

ELEGANT EARLY AMERICAN STYLING
· Current Distributor's Suggested List
Price, optional with dealer.

'635

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.Many Sizes and Mod,els To

Modet•etectlo.n and availability art optional with dellter.
I

.,

WE SERVICE .WHAT WE SELL

CHIU SUPPER
CHESHIRE - The Kyger
Creek Band Boosters will
sponsor a chill supper J1'riday'
evening at 5 In the school
.cafeteria. 1be menu will include chill, hqtdogs, pie, cake,
coffee, tea and pop. This
p-ojeet is to obtain money for
new uniforms for the band.

K - K O B I L E HOME SALE;
PAUL 8c MADGE NO•R.THUP •
OWNERS

Choose From. Two &amp; Three Bedroom
Homes. Available In Fuel Oil,
.
Gas or Electric ·

Picture and Sound. lnsta-Matlc Color Tuning. Lighted
Channel Numbers. Concealed Caatars. Rustle Maple
finish on tempered hardboard and select solids wkh
accenll of limulated
material.~- wide
cabinet.

wood

SAVE• '50

Six All Electric
Homes To D1oose From!

· Model WU11JB. Plug-In circuit modul81.lnlllant

'

Pf10NC

304/67S · 3 UO O

q ·I IIIIIII.I V
POINT PL E,A~ ANT , WEST VIIIIQ-INIA 2~5 ! 0

Schult Mobile Homes

LARRY'S WAYSIDE FURNITURE ·

3rd· &amp; Olive

Gallipolis, Ohio
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; MONDAY 'TIL 8 PM

Thursday Club met
GALIJPOUS - Thursday
Club met at the home of Mrs.
James Orr on Jan. 18. Mrs.
John Cornett had charge of the
program.
Mrs. Cornett reviewed the
book "The Boys of Summer"
written by Roger Kahn. The
book tells the story of the
Brooklyn Dodgers of. the early ,
·1950s and what has happened to
the players since that time.
Some of the players discussed
were Billy Cox, Pee Wee
Reese, Roy Campanella and·
Carl Erskine . Mrs. Cornett also
told of the early life and career
of the author, Roger Kahn, who
covered the Dodger team ior
the New York Herald Tribune.

MISS DEBRA K. HOU.AND

MISS EUZABETH ANN SANDERS

GALIJPOIJS - ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Baker Sa~.nders are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Elizabeth Ann, to Patrick
Allen Canaday, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Canaday, Rio ·
Grande.
Miss·Saunders, a 1972 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School, is presently attending Rio Grande College majoring
in Medical Laboratory Technology.
· Mr. Canaday, also a 1972 graduate of Gallia Academy
High School, is employed at Lynch Sohio Station, Rib Grande.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

Mrs. Lakshmi Priyanath
sp~aks for local group

1

m1mmum

..

A CCey•hted at R.tO

And
'
wedding bells.

.

RIVERSIDE Study Club at 1
p.m. with Mrs . Donald
Warehime hostess.

BRUNICARDI
54 State St., Gallipolis

c0m•Ing

~

,.

SAVINGS

MISS DREAMA RANKIN

AT BRUNICARDI'S

,rn-

~

~-

;

COMPLETES BABIC '
REEDSVILLE - , Army
RIO GRANDE _ Dean S. Private Clarence J. Stewart,
Brown, direCtor o1 admissions son of Mr. and. Mrs. Clarence
8nd records at $o Grande . M. Stewart, Reedsville,
College, announced Friday recently completed eight
that Miss Kathy Ctouse, Miss . weeks of basic. training at the
Pam Mead and Miss Jackie U. S. Army TralDing. Center,
Burnett, have been a~cepted Armor, Ft. Kn01&lt;, Ky.
for enrollment .at Rio Grande
for the fall quarter of ma.
Miss Crouse, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Francis Crouse, of
Gallipolis, plans to major in•
Elementary Education. She is
a graduate of Gallla Academy
High School.
·
Miss Mead; daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert ·Mead of
Gallipolis, 'also plans to major.
in Elementary Education. She
is a graduate of Gallla
Academy High School.
Miss Burnett, daughter of
And ArtCarved wedding
rings are right In tune wHh
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Burnett
these
two happy evenfll.
of Addison, plans to major in
Medical Laboratory
OUr sparkling colledlon
captures the spirit and
Technician. She is a graduate
your enduring love. With
of Kyger Creek High School.
tasle, quality and expert
craftsmanship.

e

THE
SIGN
OF
.SAFE

Kansas, presently re$ides ·in

Athens where he maintains a
i
studio and shop.
,
MISS
LINDA
K.
BAKER
Other classes being offered
I
beginning Feb. 5 are: Mon''
dars, Leathercraft and Clay
I
GALIJPOIJS - FORMER RESIDENT ENGAGED Sculpture ; Tuesday, Painting
!·, Mrs. Theodore Baker of Columbiana, OJ;Uo is announcing the
for beginners and inengagement of her daughter, Linda Kay, to LeRoy F. Parks,
termediates; Wednesday,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Parks of New Waterford, Ohio.
Lettering, Drawing and
Linda is a Senior at Crestview High School from which
Watercolor; Thursday, Inher fiance graduated in 1971. LeRoy is now employed at the
terior Design and advanced
Amoco Truck stop· in North Lima, Ohio.
painting. An enameling
Miss Baker's father was the late Theodore T. Baker,
workshop is also planned for
former resident of the Gallipolis area·and her grandmother is
Mrs. Hearl (Ora) Brown of Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
Feb. 13. The instructor asks
Wedding plans are indefinite.
that students meet at Riverby
Fe.b, 6 to choose their work for
the enam~ling workshop, as
Coal supplies about oneIn heavy rain, a 50-foot t!1~se must be ordered.
The cost of the workshop is $2
fifth of the power and heat saguaro cactus may soak up
plus materials. The cost of the
used in the United States.
a ton of water. ·
interior design class is $16 for
French Art Colony members
and $21 to non-members. It is
an eight-week course. The cost
. of all other classes is $30 with a
discount to French Art Colony
members of $6.
Membership is open to
everyone at the rate o( $10 per
individual or m per family.
Materials for the leathercraft
class are available at Riverby.
Clay for the clay sculpture
class and the ceramics class
may be obtained through the
instructors and all other art
materials are available at
A rare opportunity to own a fine piano
White's Wallpaper and
at TREMENDOUS SAVINGS. Full 88
P.aint. For more information
nol!e keybde~~ ·tflree Jworking pedals,
call 446-1903 or 446-0953.
13 ply lamin~ted p,ln block, fine Spru.;:e
..,.,,
soJnd board;:'''fOII factory warranty.
CIRCLE TO MEET
The Golden Circle of the
Grace United Methodist
Church will have its regular
monthly meeting Tuesday.
Potluck luncheon will be
AS MUCH AS
served at noon. Claude Miller
will have charge of the
program and Mrs. Aldeth
Robinson will give the
meditation. Everyone is.
welcome.

'

OCCL ·District President, Mrs.
Carol Rupe. Business lor ihe
evening included plans- for
husbands night, and a bowling
party for the older children.
The group also discussed
methods of supplementing· tile
treasury.
Cer~inties. "
The meeting was dismissed
Roll Call was answered by 14
by
the president leading the
members revealing their
secret sister. Secretary and group i·n the Lord's Prayer.
treasurer reports were read Jlefreshments' were served by
Sue Brandeberry and Janet
and approved.
Mrs. Delores Shockey read a Merry.
New Year's letter from the
RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande
Mothers League met Tuesday,
Jan. 16, at the home of Mrs.
Robert Brandeberry. The
meeting was opened with Jo
Ann Nibert presenting a
reading entitled "The Big

WIREMAN NOW
LONG BOTTOM - Army
Private Gary L. Wolf, son ·9f
Ml&gt;. and Mrs. George A. W?lf,
Rt. 1, Long- Bottom;"reeenlly
completed .a eight-week field
wireman collrse at ·the 'IC S.
Army Training Cellll!r;·
fantry, Ft. Jac~n. S. C. The
24-rear-old soldier was
graduated in 1966frlllil Ea,item
High School, and received his
B. s. degree in 1972 froni Ohio
State University at 'Columbus.
His wife, ·Patricia, lives . on
Route 3, Pomeroy. .
, ·l
Wellare New? , _1 ·
The ancient Incas hild we_llorganized welfare,.programs.
Orphans, the . aged and the
sick drew generous food. sUp·
plies from government storehouses. . ·

.

GALLIPOLIS
The was In charge of devotions with
January meeting of the Grace poems "He Cares" and
United Methodist Women's "L~gene or Apostle ." She
.Society of Christian Service · closed wltlt "Prayer for
was held in the church chapel Strength," a prayer for school
with Mrs. Earl Durham hoys translated from an lndiari
presiding. She opened the lyric by Mahatma Gandhi, and
meeting with prayer aiid a is for use by boys in a "Youth
warm welcome. Acting as Place of Worship."
secretary-treasurer, Mrs .
Mrs. Howell Edwards,
Frank Childers gave reports chairman of Missionary
for December. Committee Education, was in charge of the
reportS were given and it was program. India has been
announced that Virginia. chosen as the special interest
Pickarts, a missionary from ' country for the year's study
Sierra Leone will be guest with the society missionary
apealter Feb.l9·at 7:30p.m. All! money being sent to belp the'.
surrounding church people are people of India. It was noted
Invited.
&gt;•
there is a necessity of knowing
It was also an')ounced that one another 1n depth and living
"Day of Prayer and Sell together in grace, fruitfulness
Uenlal" will be held Jan. 25 and mutuality in every sphere.
from 1-3 p.m. The service,
The dining room tables were
which will be held in the beautifully decorated in
chapel, will be a continuance keeping with the Indian topic.
type of prayer and one may Each setting was decorated
attend any time during the two- with an India puzzlernat, the
hour period.
Lord's Prayer in Hindi, and an
The annual meeting of the India " Mapkin " which is
Church Women United will he a map of India, with
held at 2 p.m., Jan. 28, at the locations of many UnitPresbyterian Church. The ed
Methodist
mission
Membership Committee urged areas in India . Numerous
that all WSCS questionnaires pieces of handmade materials
he returned to Mrs. George and articles added to the
Grace or the church office.
Twenty-six members and
three guests were present with
a total of 108 members at circle
meetings and 244 sick calls
reported for December. It was
decided to purchase 15 rocking
chair pads for the pediatrics
section at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs. James Gilliam, vicepresident, announced there
will be general meetings held
every two months, with the
neXt meeting to be March 21.
This meeting will be the Easter
program of the Tenebrae
Service with Rev. Piilll HawkS
as speaker. Mrs. Keith Thomas

colorful setting.
Guest speaker was Mrs.
Lakshmi Priyanath, a charming Gallipolis resident who
has been in the United Sates for
a year and a half. Mr.
Priyanath is a mining engineer
and they are the parents of two
daughters, ages 2 and 4. A
music major, Lakshmi comes
from Bangalore, capital city of
India. She spoke on the history
of India, Including. religion,
languages, marriage
ceremonies, ethnic groups and
contrasting regions and
climate which all affect the
values and approach to life &lt;;If

•

-Beau'!}
O'l_, tJte fio
Offer ·

Debra Kay Holi£Jnd to
wed Larry A. Howell

1

TAWNEY
JlWELERS
422 Second Ave.
Phone44&lt;1-1615
.Gallipolis. Ohio

Gallia County

Distri-.ct Library' News
Standard &amp; Poor's Industry
Surveys is now available at
the Gallia County District
Library along with "Standard
&amp; Poor's Register of Corporations
Directors
&amp;

the lndian people.
The weather of South _Ind~
and the Bangalore reg10n IS
always s_pring-like . and
pleasant. W1~. a population of
over 550 milli~n pe?ple, the
present population w1ll _double
to more than one billion by
ye~. 2~.
.
M1ss1on has ach1_eved . a
commendable record m India.
The church exten~ mto ~very
~tate and the B1ble IS available
mlanguages spoke~ by over 90
pet. of the population.
The program closed as the
~est demonstrated how on_e
w aps and wears . a sari,
follo':"ed by an mformal
question and answer period.
Delicious refreshments were
served by Circle 1.

Executives. In the "Industry
Suryeys" various fields, such
as Recreation, or automollves,
are examined as to their past
performance, as well as
projections as to their potentials. This is a good tool to give
an overall view for an area as
well as some statistics concerning recent performance of,
specific companies .
A nilinber of companies with
operations in the Gallipolis
area, are mentioned including
Federal Mogul, Chris Craft,
and Columbia Gas.
' This is an interesting tOol
with a wealth of information. ·
New books released Thursday include:
FICTION
A Choice of Enemies, by Ted
Allbeury; A Time for Loving,
by Herbert Tarr and All My
Enemies, by Rosemary Harris.
NON-FICTION
The ·Adventure of Birth, by
Elisabeth D. Bing; The Sinal
Myth, by Andrew M. Greeley;
Sand in a Whirlwind,'by Ferol

,.------------------.

GIFTS
~ --0~

FOR THE

BABY

~J~--~:-STRETCH 13.89
PREFOLDED

~ c(':~

Diaper Stackers- - - - - - $3.00-$5.50
Crib Blankets
$4 ..00-$12.00
Diaper Bags
$8.00-$10.00
Take Me Home Sets
$5.00-$9.00
---~---

Hooded Towel S e t s - - -- - $2.50-$4.50
Swea.ter &amp; Bootie Sets
$4.00-$10.00
Gowns &amp; Ki.monos
$1.89
Diaper Pai Is
$5 .00
Baby Books
$4.00-$4.50-$5 .00
lnfanseats
$9.00
Crib Sheets
$2.00-$2.50
Boxed Sleepers
$3.00-$5.00

eCOSCO HIGH aiAIRS w-Q
eCAR SEATS
•STROLLERS
~-

$3.75

LUCKY SIZE SAI.E
FREE SHffiT &amp; TIE
Free Shirt .and Tie with every Sl,llt sold this
week. Beautiful 100 percent Polyester double
knit suits, wide lapels, flare legs, plus a
beautiful Van Heusen Shirt and Wembley Tie
FREE!! Regular Values to $108.50 all this
week for on Iy. .•

Invited to a shower? Let
Jack &amp; Jill's help you
select the right gift from
our . Baby Dept.

When you purchase Merle Norman's special ,$26.00
"Beauty on the Go" package ·of cosmetics, you get
everything you need for day-and-night complexion care.
Plus you receive a $15.95 Amelia ~arhart travel tote for
only $3.75. A$41.95 value for only $29 .75. Afabu lous
saving. H~rry, th is offer is limited. The tote .Is available
Inavocado, light blue, reo and melon .

ffiERL£ nORmAn COSmETIC STUDIO
JUANITA'S BEAUlY SHOPPE '

.A.!! Carved

GALIJPOIJS- MR. ,!\NO MRS. CECIL VINSON, 510 A
Jackson Pike, are aMouncing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Debra Kay Holland, to
Larry A. Howell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Howell, Bidwell.
Miss Holland is a senior at Gallia Academy.High School
and part time employee of the Kroger Company.
Mr. Howell, a 1971 graduate of North Gallia High School,
is presently employed at the Gallipolis State Institute.
The wedding will be an event of April 28 at 6:30p.m. at
the Gallipolis Christian Church, Magnolia Dr.

WITH SPECIAL $26 COSMETIC PURCHASE
OCSEA TO MEET
GALIJPOLIS -The regular
meeting of the Galiia Chapter
of the Ohio Civil Service
Employees Association will be
held Monday at 7 p.m. In the
Grand squa~es Ball Room, 1622
Eastern
Ave. . Field
representative Walt Sheets will
he the , guest speaker. Entertainment and refreshments
will follow the meeting. '

Egan; Miller's High Life, by
Ann . Miller; The Greatest
Jewish City in the World, by
Harry Golden; Seattle, by
Nard Jones; Code Number 72,
by Cecil B: Currey; The
Wounded Healer, by Henri J .
M. Nouwen; If the Church is to
Survive, by' Louis Evely and
Isles of the Carlbees, by
Carleton Mitchell.

. •FREE GIF,T WRAPPING

JACk&amp; JILL'S
''fosbi&lt;Jtufo, tho

12 Belmont Dr.

. . Galllpolls, O.
Mrs. Loan Saunders-Owner

Operotori: Becky Lakin EllloH &amp; Christi Keisling Spears

Goltipolls

ro.., ..

38 39 40 41
Shorts
5 4 1
:Regulars 4 4 11 7
Longs
1 4

42 ~ 44 46
.
l I 2
9 1 10 2
3 1 3 I

Monday thru f:riday 10:00 a.m. til9:00 p.m .
Saturdav 10:00 a.m. til6:00 P·m·

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~~TheSundayTimes-Sentinel,Swulav. Jan. ~~
~

.

10'71

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Wright -flack
wed in December

'Bryan - Melvin
wed in Maryland

~

9
~~

H
Q)

GALUPOLIS - The 2mmanuel Episcopal Church in
Chestertown, Md. was the
setting on Jan. 1, for the
wedding unltlrig Miss Margl
Bryan and Jeff Melvin. The
Rev. Robert Kurtz performed
the 11:30 a.m. ceremony. The
wedding was attended by the
immediate families of the
couple.
The bride is the daughter of
Mrs. Jean Bryan and Jerry
Bryan of Ga!llpoiis. She is a
g• 1duate of Gallla Academy
High School and attended the

Ohio University at Athens.
The bridegroom is the son of
Mrs. Ethel Hall, Middletown,
Del., and the late George
Melvin . He Is a graduate of a
liigh school in Middletown and
attended Rio Grande College.
He is presently employed in
Delaware.
Miss Linda Mel vi , sister of
the groom, was maid of honor.
Rick Pleaseton served as best
man .
The couple is now residing in
Smyrna, Del.

~

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...

If ~

.-

• \.1 •

'.
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•&gt;''

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I Cl .

VINTON - On Thursday
evening, Jan. 11, Mrs. David
Hart and Mrs. Harold Skidmore honored Mrs. Bill Ratliff
with a surprise baby shower at
Mrs. Skidmore's home.
Games were played with
prizes being won by Mrs, Bill
. Ralliff, Mrs. George Ehman
and Mrs. Opal Payne. The door
prize went to Mrs. Pheneous
Layne.
~ . Mrs . Ratliff opened and
acknowledged many lovely
gifts.
Present were Mrs. Gypsy
Ratliff, Mrs. Gaylord Salmons,
Mrs. Jack Ratliff, Mrs. Roger

•

[

FISHING V.EST
$ ' 66'

Place Setting

Ha.wks celebrate
golden anniversary

Sale!

~

-·•

MISS DEBBIE NORm

Here 's an unusual oppor tunity lor e&gt;tcep tional sa ~lng s on carelree
solid stainl es5. Buy now! Limited-time !.ale ends January 31, 1973.

$6 99 '

~ • •vul o~~

Ill

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. · and
The table was· beautifully
Mrs. Fred Hawk, Rt. 2, were
with
an
honored SundayJ Jan. 14, by a decorated
arrangement
of
assorted
surprise Golden Wedding
onniversary celebration. The yellow cut flowers with gold
couple was honored by their candles on each side. Also on
children at the home of Mr. and the table was the traditional
three-tier wedding cake topped
Mrs. Jerry R. Evans.
Mr. and Mrs. Hawk are the with a miniature golden anparents of four children, niversary ornament.
Mrs. Raymond Hawk, Mrs.
Robert of Columbus; Mrs. Ray
Ray
Haskins and Mrs. Jerry
(Naomi) Haskins, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis ; Raymond, Fourth Evans pres;ded at the table.
Ave., and Mrs. Jerry (Ruth Miss Sharon Haskins of ·
•
Ann) Evans of Lower River Columbus registered guests.
The afternoon was enjoyed
Rd. Theeouple .also has seven visiting with many friends apd
.
grandchifdren and one great- relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Hawk
grandchild.
·
appreciated all who attended
Boster, Mrs. Pheneous Layne,
Mrs. Hawk wore a corsage of and acknowledged the lovely
Miss Melody Shaver, Mrs. yellow carnations with accents
gifts and cards.
John McMillin, Mrs . George of gold.
342 Second Alenue
Ehman, Mrs. Opal Payne, Mrs.
Ward Smith, Mrs. Estle Dee!,
Mrs. Ray Ratliff, Mrs. Powell
Clay and Beverly.
Also sending gifts were Mrs.
Verle Smith, Mrs. Wayne
Shaver, Mrs. John Gilliam,
Mrs. Jim Snyder, Mrs. Mary
Childers, Mrs. Irene Raines
and Becky, and Mrs. Katy
Evans.
Mrs. Ratliff expressed
Haskins-Tanner Semi-Annual Clearance · saie
thanks to everyone for a
now in progress with big reductions on hundreds
wonderful surprise.

..,..;.

$4~~

~51

GALLIPOUS - MR. AND
MRS. J. D. NORm, JR., 18
Edgemont Dr., are announcing
the engagement of their
daughter, Deborah Louise, to
~ster Jay Casto, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Lester Junior Cesto,
2413 Mt. Vernon Ave., Point
Pleasant, W. Va.
MJsa North is a 1968 graduate
of Gallia Academy High School
and a 1972 honor graduate of
Rio Grande College in

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"

DA

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE. rib·
Gallipol5 ,

Annual

~ " 9X il
1
' ' ',.1 I

:

of winter wearables.

MENS SUITS

'48,00
Reg. $80.00 SUITS ..................... '64,00
Reg . $115.00 SUITS .................... '92.00

Reg. $59.95 SUITS ......................

MR. AND MRS. REMO ROCCHI

Rocchi 's celebrate
Silver Anniversary

GROUP NO. 2

Reg .

$59.95~U~:~ ~~.~!~. .•39,9Q

..
Reg. $85.00 SUITS .....................

•56,60

\,..

MENS SPORT COATS
Reg .. $39.95 ........ ................ .'... •32.00
Reg. $60.00 .......... : ................. '48.00

1

_........... .~ ~

:

=

BOX OF 50 ...•

ASSORTED .ARTISTS

. ,·

PACQUIN .

control forwlrd • f/3.5 focualng
..n1 • SOO·Witt brllll111nc1 • Sttf.
contalntd ceny•

$8750
~

t
t

• Automatic slide focusing
• Shorp 4" f/2.81ens • 500wttt quortz hiloaen lomp
• Automotlc sllde-ehangln&amp;
timer • Room tllht outlet
autom~ttcally tllfns room
t.,ap on and oft • Exclusive
Aliico&lt;iome.. ~r

Here's a rich twill fabric in the
traditional trench with wrap-around
belt ·and stand-up military collar.
Colors : Navy and Corns ilk . .
Junior &amp; Petite Sizes $$5.00

.

$15gso ·.

' .

TAWNEY STU~IQ ·
421 SECOND AVE.

SHOES

"JANE"

GALLIPOLIS .
· ~.

~-

412-4i4 Second Ave.

13
REG. Si6.9S
REG. $19.95

Gallipolis, 0 . .

Group of Flare

Jeans &amp; Cords.
Reg. $7.00 ·•• .. • • • '5.50
Reg . $11.00 •••••• , '8.10
Reg . $13.00 ·~···'10.30

.OFF
$11.30
$13.30

SJOR.M l~WJ"DOWS

330

4 PACK

LADIES' BILLFOLDS
HECK'S REG. 15.10 TO '10.89

OFF
HECK'S REG. PRICE

POND'S

HAND. CREAM
oz.

56~

CREAMY·LEMON

76e

'

BOYS,WEAR·
'

Sport Shirts From s2.40
Knit Shirts from s2.40
· Jackets from '8.70 ·
,.
. Soort ~ts from '7.80
Bows Suits
'
from 519;00

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; MONDAY NITES UNTIL

'

e PM

LIPTON FUN FOOD
· NO HEAT PAKING .

--:- ••
"

eiCE CREAM
eTEA
•SURPRISE PARTY

$100
HECK'S REG.
.

MOUTHWASH

48 e·

HECK'S REG. 11.28

&lt;lliil!h%1r:m~;;;;.ce;cw;

DEAR POLLY- I would appreciate it if ~ orne .:
reader could tell me how to remove ~ wax bmldup
f
the good quality vinyl tile floor m my kitchen i!
:nod" family room. I have tried everythi~g I know :f
. . but with no success.- MRS. J . M. B. .·.. . .. . ... 1
'
-.~.• 'ill•. , , _ , ~"!&lt;-&gt;X~\ll:~~· ;&lt;M,'II!I&lt;~~~~~~.)(ii;;iffiJ:i::_;,::tt§}m!:;.;,:
~ ; ~.~~-1 t~IVmKR'~M+r,m»;~a
·
· R POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with the news.paper
PEA zine mailing lallels marked with an .un~ec1pher·
:~re ~~£! instead of showing ~ readable exp1rat1on date.
·
- MARGARET
DEAR POLLY-I am answering B. M. K. whtoh ha~ ~
b · her backyard baroecue. My mo er a
sw&amp;rlll of ~~~;:m and she cliHe&lt;l a local bee keeper who
this sam~~ook awav the queen bee. Soon after, all th~
came
f' " the
others anle ft . to. _mu
.. queen and never returned.
.
&lt;

HECK'
. S REG. s112:

'

OPEN
SUNDAY
1 P.M. TO
7 P.M.

FOAM FUN
FOOTBAL~
'

HECK'S
REG. 52.77

-LINDA H.

EAR READERS-M~st of the answers received for
D K ave methods for cor,tng wltti bees Indoors.
B. M. iuivfled that the remed es used , indoors where
I was
retained are lost when u&amp;ed outdoors. Hoi\ ·
, fumes are IU geltlo~ given me wa1 to leave them .alont
ever, one I~ free~e during the winter mouths: Also, If
and they d~'s Pointer the bee keeper should take awa)·
' h
POLLY
· '
using Un
all th• bees while he Is t ere.- .

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MCW.CIIU

Cleanses!
Softens!
Refreshens!

-

MICRIN
18 FL OZ.

CmlmglaRon

/ 5.25
. FL OZ.

.

•

'New! POND'S

HECK'S -REG. 11.14

BED_SPRINGS SUPPORlS
METAL OR
$
22
WOOD

J

controlt at projector • Remote .

li'ANSCORAMAs
980

HECK'S REG. 112.99

HECK'S REG. '4.88

~RAMER

Polly's Problem

· $9.00 To $,25.00 ......... ., ••••••••

(

$600

00

$

·se:

Group Of Men's

FOOTBALL
UNIFORMS

HECK'S REG. 55'.

4S TA.PES

DEAR POLLY- When I buy material for a dress I
·get enough extra so 1 can make tw? sets of sleeve~ . Th1~
is es ecially good with double kmts. For the summe1
I
in the pair of short sleeves and whe~ fall con~es
they are ripped out and the long ones set m. I get .twlc~
the wear out of a dress when it has the two pau·s o
shieves.-MRS. Jo. W. H.

More &amp;how for less money • Great new styllnQ'

lniCI"'GAFIOO·
llldt ~rtiCII trly,

'1''

POLLY'S POINTERS

'

• Forw•rd/rtvene puth-button

$"2 '' '"'

HECK'S REG. 84'

MAKE YOU I! SltDESTHE
BEST SHOW IN .TOWN

MENS SWEATERS

HOUSE SLIPPERS

HECK'S REG. '3.88

5.75

By POLLY

K111o .
•
Slide 1Pro.,r

LADIES' COUNTESS

PLASTIC

20 GAL

... Jl~k ~~~s8\~~~~~~r~~tu~~~~Js~~~J~'i'he

. SLIDE PROJECTORS

'

•9''

22
$}

TRAS.H BAGS

Sleeves for a Dress

'

PELLET PISTOL

LEAKPROOF '...,,I

How About Two Sets of

'

MODEL

HECK'S REG. 51.99

o~J·b~:~~

l:LOSEOUT

OKLAHOMA

HECK'S REG. 12.88

HECK'S REG. PRICE

TENNIS RACKET
PRESS

1 m son's naine belongs in the Guinness Book
of SR~lrds,Y as the titleholder of one who has taken the
longest shower.
.
ft th
1 grew a bit frightened when he was gomg a frd e
record. we w~re staying 1;1t a hotel a~d he shnvede hu~
like a prune I ~Dd, !iU because he doesn t underst~~. ~. 8
I tell him . ·
"U
11 th hot
To him, "Take a shower," means,
se a
e
.
water."
.
.
H can underStand complicated instructions w~~n he IS
help~ng a repairman adjust controls on a ~eler:,slOnbJ;t.
He can understand chemical formulas and as e a . ' Y
fnlsh off the other side of a debate team on questions
~bo~t the Intricate workings of international law. It's the
simple stuff he doesn't understand.
,
.. ·
For example when I say, "Go to bed, I mean, G~!
lrito bed betwelm the smooth, clean sh~~.i pull up t
blanket, snuggle down cozily, dream a · ..
.
He inter rets "Go to bed" as meaning, Begm your
ework Pdrink 26 gallons of water, bnker WI\~ the tape
hf~er and spend 15 minutes on the telephone.
P It's ~s if we sometimes speak different languages . .
When I say "Clothes' in the hamper!" I mean a~ d•rY
1 thes Why 'does he think I mean five dirty soc, s, IS
~o~tbali pads and some parts from a race car set. ,
When I say "Clean the garage!" whlf does he mm~
I mean, "Move everything into the dr .veway un
?' '
.
, snows.
1 h tod y" ash d0 he interpret "Fix your own unc
a •
m:clng should leave' the refrigerator d:r
six pieces of burnt toast and turn over a pou
dog food?
od " und l'o
Why does, "Fix your own brea~fast t ay, so
· l'k "Eat pizza?"
h1m ' e
·
" translates
chest?" '
That's what I keep asking him. Why, WHY, W-H-Y?

250/
FAMOUS BRAND LUGGAGE ..... ~........ to

%OFF

----~KI~NG~S

Sons Shine Only
In· Certain Places

"

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Reg. $100.00 SU1Ts ............... ~···'67,00

.....
--""..,,X·.

5

By BE'ITY CANARY

Semi

-

BOWLING BAGS

elementary education. She Is
presently employtid by Mason
County and Gallipolis City
School Systems.
Mr. Cesto is a 1968'graduate
of Point Pleasant High School
and served two yeats with the
U.' S. Army. He is presenUy
employed with the Pennyfare
Divlaion of Thorofare in Point
Pleasant, W. Va.
.A spring wedding is being
planned.

•

HECK'S REG. 111.88

HECK'S REG. '3.88

BETTY CANARY

'

GROUP NO. 1

GALUPOUS- Mr. and Mrs. Remo Rocchi celebrated
their sUver wedding anniversary Sunday, Jan. 14, ~ith a
famUy dinner at the Holiday Inn. The couple was roamed on
Jan. 12, UM8 at Saint Louis Catholic Church, GalllpoUs ..
They are the parents of ten children, Charlene, Timmy,
Sandi, Keilh, Lll, Theresa, Marlo, Jeff, Robbie and John.
Attending the dinner were Mr. and Mrs. ShortJ Rocchi;
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Skidmore and daughter, MlscheUe; Mr.
and Mrs. Warren Skidmore and daughters, Penny and
Becky; Bobby Ralllff, David Grant, I_VIIUe Darnbrough,
Ernie Metzgee; Charlene, Sandi, Lli,Mano, Jeff, Robbie and
John Rocchi.

North - Casto to
wed in spring

ONEIDA• OELU)(E STAIN~ESS

COMMUNITY• STAINLESS

h
h
·
Uonolll'od wtt s ower
11

,.

; ~~!1· i

MR. &amp; MRS. FRED HAWK

GALLIPOLIS- THE DECEMBER WEDDING of·Patty
Ann Wright and Jerry Lee Flack took place at the home of the
bride's parents, lolr. and Mrs. Charles Wright, Rt. 1. The
double-ring·ceremony was performed by the Rev. Richard
Graham.
.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Errue Flack,
Rt. 1, Patriot . ·
The bride wore a white satin dress trimmed in lace with a
white lace veil and white satin slippers. She carried a white
lace Bible with red rosebuds and blue and white streamers
tied in love knots. Unda Micheal was maid of honor and Dave
;.!rummond served as best man.
Only the immediate families of the bride and groo.m. were
in attendance for the wedding. ·The couple Is now res1d1ng at
Fort CempbeU, Ky., where he is serving with the United
States Army.
·

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WORLD FAMOUS SANFORIZED
b!fONEIDA

MRS. JEFF MELVIN

21 - 1 P.M. TO 7 P

SUNDAY.

ICES

SA VE I on Solid Stalnl"'

f:i

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rf!ior~n~

MR. AND MRS. JERRY FLACK

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. .UPOLIS _ The Qallia believe. this is a most \lme!Y,
· GAL
· .
.
d subject and hopes for a large
County Councll qn · Agmg an attendance f. social hour will
its Committees· have been .
,
· ling
.
.
Ianning for its ..follow the mee .
active m P .
Special committees on
coming meetmg of Senior
.
Sl'te •or a Seru'or
C'tiz
securmg
a
,.
.•
1
Thens. tilly meeting will be Citizens•s ·eenter, funding, a~ .
25 t the transportation are meeting .
.
e mon
c:urch, . regularly and will be
. the Daily Tribune at the county-wide meetm~;
1 led
ocald.
·
neat
r7'30
Pm ·
There are nearly 5,600 people
b
u1mga
·
·
·
John J:lalliday will be the .m Gil'
a Ia countywhoare55
·
guest speaker. His subject'will years old and over; 2,879 are ~
be "'Wills" their' importance, ·. 01 ' ov~r.
'
;'
The federal ·~ and
·
·slat.
·how
, · they' are wn'tte' n; and
· . t . ~
. roblems that people haye. governments are , Y,ery 1" '
· ~ter his talk there will be a terested In the elderly,.and are
·
·
wanting to prol'lde
. and ' answer
question
sesswn.
d f dfacllllles,
, hen
. The officers of the Council programs, ap un s w
groups qualify •

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·Gallia .Senior
'citizens to meet

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~~TheSundayTimes-Sentinel,Swulav. Jan. ~~
~

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10'71

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Wright -flack
wed in December

'Bryan - Melvin
wed in Maryland

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H
Q)

GALUPOLIS - The 2mmanuel Episcopal Church in
Chestertown, Md. was the
setting on Jan. 1, for the
wedding unltlrig Miss Margl
Bryan and Jeff Melvin. The
Rev. Robert Kurtz performed
the 11:30 a.m. ceremony. The
wedding was attended by the
immediate families of the
couple.
The bride is the daughter of
Mrs. Jean Bryan and Jerry
Bryan of Ga!llpoiis. She is a
g• 1duate of Gallla Academy
High School and attended the

Ohio University at Athens.
The bridegroom is the son of
Mrs. Ethel Hall, Middletown,
Del., and the late George
Melvin . He Is a graduate of a
liigh school in Middletown and
attended Rio Grande College.
He is presently employed in
Delaware.
Miss Linda Mel vi , sister of
the groom, was maid of honor.
Rick Pleaseton served as best
man .
The couple is now residing in
Smyrna, Del.

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VINTON - On Thursday
evening, Jan. 11, Mrs. David
Hart and Mrs. Harold Skidmore honored Mrs. Bill Ratliff
with a surprise baby shower at
Mrs. Skidmore's home.
Games were played with
prizes being won by Mrs, Bill
. Ralliff, Mrs. George Ehman
and Mrs. Opal Payne. The door
prize went to Mrs. Pheneous
Layne.
~ . Mrs . Ratliff opened and
acknowledged many lovely
gifts.
Present were Mrs. Gypsy
Ratliff, Mrs. Gaylord Salmons,
Mrs. Jack Ratliff, Mrs. Roger

•

[

FISHING V.EST
$ ' 66'

Place Setting

Ha.wks celebrate
golden anniversary

Sale!

~

-·•

MISS DEBBIE NORm

Here 's an unusual oppor tunity lor e&gt;tcep tional sa ~lng s on carelree
solid stainl es5. Buy now! Limited-time !.ale ends January 31, 1973.

$6 99 '

~ • •vul o~~

Ill

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. · and
The table was· beautifully
Mrs. Fred Hawk, Rt. 2, were
with
an
honored SundayJ Jan. 14, by a decorated
arrangement
of
assorted
surprise Golden Wedding
onniversary celebration. The yellow cut flowers with gold
couple was honored by their candles on each side. Also on
children at the home of Mr. and the table was the traditional
three-tier wedding cake topped
Mrs. Jerry R. Evans.
Mr. and Mrs. Hawk are the with a miniature golden anparents of four children, niversary ornament.
Mrs. Raymond Hawk, Mrs.
Robert of Columbus; Mrs. Ray
Ray
Haskins and Mrs. Jerry
(Naomi) Haskins, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis ; Raymond, Fourth Evans pres;ded at the table.
Ave., and Mrs. Jerry (Ruth Miss Sharon Haskins of ·
•
Ann) Evans of Lower River Columbus registered guests.
The afternoon was enjoyed
Rd. Theeouple .also has seven visiting with many friends apd
.
grandchifdren and one great- relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Hawk
grandchild.
·
appreciated all who attended
Boster, Mrs. Pheneous Layne,
Mrs. Hawk wore a corsage of and acknowledged the lovely
Miss Melody Shaver, Mrs. yellow carnations with accents
gifts and cards.
John McMillin, Mrs . George of gold.
342 Second Alenue
Ehman, Mrs. Opal Payne, Mrs.
Ward Smith, Mrs. Estle Dee!,
Mrs. Ray Ratliff, Mrs. Powell
Clay and Beverly.
Also sending gifts were Mrs.
Verle Smith, Mrs. Wayne
Shaver, Mrs. John Gilliam,
Mrs. Jim Snyder, Mrs. Mary
Childers, Mrs. Irene Raines
and Becky, and Mrs. Katy
Evans.
Mrs. Ratliff expressed
Haskins-Tanner Semi-Annual Clearance · saie
thanks to everyone for a
now in progress with big reductions on hundreds
wonderful surprise.

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$4~~

~51

GALLIPOUS - MR. AND
MRS. J. D. NORm, JR., 18
Edgemont Dr., are announcing
the engagement of their
daughter, Deborah Louise, to
~ster Jay Casto, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Lester Junior Cesto,
2413 Mt. Vernon Ave., Point
Pleasant, W. Va.
MJsa North is a 1968 graduate
of Gallia Academy High School
and a 1972 honor graduate of
Rio Grande College in

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DA

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE. rib·
Gallipol5 ,

Annual

~ " 9X il
1
' ' ',.1 I

:

of winter wearables.

MENS SUITS

'48,00
Reg. $80.00 SUITS ..................... '64,00
Reg . $115.00 SUITS .................... '92.00

Reg. $59.95 SUITS ......................

MR. AND MRS. REMO ROCCHI

Rocchi 's celebrate
Silver Anniversary

GROUP NO. 2

Reg .

$59.95~U~:~ ~~.~!~. .•39,9Q

..
Reg. $85.00 SUITS .....................

•56,60

\,..

MENS SPORT COATS
Reg .. $39.95 ........ ................ .'... •32.00
Reg. $60.00 .......... : ................. '48.00

1

_........... .~ ~

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BOX OF 50 ...•

ASSORTED .ARTISTS

. ,·

PACQUIN .

control forwlrd • f/3.5 focualng
..n1 • SOO·Witt brllll111nc1 • Sttf.
contalntd ceny•

$8750
~

t
t

• Automatic slide focusing
• Shorp 4" f/2.81ens • 500wttt quortz hiloaen lomp
• Automotlc sllde-ehangln&amp;
timer • Room tllht outlet
autom~ttcally tllfns room
t.,ap on and oft • Exclusive
Aliico&lt;iome.. ~r

Here's a rich twill fabric in the
traditional trench with wrap-around
belt ·and stand-up military collar.
Colors : Navy and Corns ilk . .
Junior &amp; Petite Sizes $$5.00

.

$15gso ·.

' .

TAWNEY STU~IQ ·
421 SECOND AVE.

SHOES

"JANE"

GALLIPOLIS .
· ~.

~-

412-4i4 Second Ave.

13
REG. Si6.9S
REG. $19.95

Gallipolis, 0 . .

Group of Flare

Jeans &amp; Cords.
Reg. $7.00 ·•• .. • • • '5.50
Reg . $11.00 •••••• , '8.10
Reg . $13.00 ·~···'10.30

.OFF
$11.30
$13.30

SJOR.M l~WJ"DOWS

330

4 PACK

LADIES' BILLFOLDS
HECK'S REG. 15.10 TO '10.89

OFF
HECK'S REG. PRICE

POND'S

HAND. CREAM
oz.

56~

CREAMY·LEMON

76e

'

BOYS,WEAR·
'

Sport Shirts From s2.40
Knit Shirts from s2.40
· Jackets from '8.70 ·
,.
. Soort ~ts from '7.80
Bows Suits
'
from 519;00

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; MONDAY NITES UNTIL

'

e PM

LIPTON FUN FOOD
· NO HEAT PAKING .

--:- ••
"

eiCE CREAM
eTEA
•SURPRISE PARTY

$100
HECK'S REG.
.

MOUTHWASH

48 e·

HECK'S REG. 11.28

&lt;lliil!h%1r:m~;;;;.ce;cw;

DEAR POLLY- I would appreciate it if ~ orne .:
reader could tell me how to remove ~ wax bmldup
f
the good quality vinyl tile floor m my kitchen i!
:nod" family room. I have tried everythi~g I know :f
. . but with no success.- MRS. J . M. B. .·.. . .. . ... 1
'
-.~.• 'ill•. , , _ , ~"!&lt;-&gt;X~\ll:~~· ;&lt;M,'II!I&lt;~~~~~~.)(ii;;iffiJ:i::_;,::tt§}m!:;.;,:
~ ; ~.~~-1 t~IVmKR'~M+r,m»;~a
·
· R POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with the news.paper
PEA zine mailing lallels marked with an .un~ec1pher·
:~re ~~£! instead of showing ~ readable exp1rat1on date.
·
- MARGARET
DEAR POLLY-I am answering B. M. K. whtoh ha~ ~
b · her backyard baroecue. My mo er a
sw&amp;rlll of ~~~;:m and she cliHe&lt;l a local bee keeper who
this sam~~ook awav the queen bee. Soon after, all th~
came
f' " the
others anle ft . to. _mu
.. queen and never returned.
.
&lt;

HECK'
. S REG. s112:

'

OPEN
SUNDAY
1 P.M. TO
7 P.M.

FOAM FUN
FOOTBAL~
'

HECK'S
REG. 52.77

-LINDA H.

EAR READERS-M~st of the answers received for
D K ave methods for cor,tng wltti bees Indoors.
B. M. iuivfled that the remed es used , indoors where
I was
retained are lost when u&amp;ed outdoors. Hoi\ ·
, fumes are IU geltlo~ given me wa1 to leave them .alont
ever, one I~ free~e during the winter mouths: Also, If
and they d~'s Pointer the bee keeper should take awa)·
' h
POLLY
· '
using Un
all th• bees while he Is t ere.- .

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MCW.CIIU

Cleanses!
Softens!
Refreshens!

-

MICRIN
18 FL OZ.

CmlmglaRon

/ 5.25
. FL OZ.

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'New! POND'S

HECK'S -REG. 11.14

BED_SPRINGS SUPPORlS
METAL OR
$
22
WOOD

J

controlt at projector • Remote .

li'ANSCORAMAs
980

HECK'S REG. 112.99

HECK'S REG. '4.88

~RAMER

Polly's Problem

· $9.00 To $,25.00 ......... ., ••••••••

(

$600

00

$

·se:

Group Of Men's

FOOTBALL
UNIFORMS

HECK'S REG. 55'.

4S TA.PES

DEAR POLLY- When I buy material for a dress I
·get enough extra so 1 can make tw? sets of sleeve~ . Th1~
is es ecially good with double kmts. For the summe1
I
in the pair of short sleeves and whe~ fall con~es
they are ripped out and the long ones set m. I get .twlc~
the wear out of a dress when it has the two pau·s o
shieves.-MRS. Jo. W. H.

More &amp;how for less money • Great new styllnQ'

lniCI"'GAFIOO·
llldt ~rtiCII trly,

'1''

POLLY'S POINTERS

'

• Forw•rd/rtvene puth-button

$"2 '' '"'

HECK'S REG. 84'

MAKE YOU I! SltDESTHE
BEST SHOW IN .TOWN

MENS SWEATERS

HOUSE SLIPPERS

HECK'S REG. '3.88

5.75

By POLLY

K111o .
•
Slide 1Pro.,r

LADIES' COUNTESS

PLASTIC

20 GAL

... Jl~k ~~~s8\~~~~~~r~~tu~~~~Js~~~J~'i'he

. SLIDE PROJECTORS

'

•9''

22
$}

TRAS.H BAGS

Sleeves for a Dress

'

PELLET PISTOL

LEAKPROOF '...,,I

How About Two Sets of

'

MODEL

HECK'S REG. 51.99

o~J·b~:~~

l:LOSEOUT

OKLAHOMA

HECK'S REG. 12.88

HECK'S REG. PRICE

TENNIS RACKET
PRESS

1 m son's naine belongs in the Guinness Book
of SR~lrds,Y as the titleholder of one who has taken the
longest shower.
.
ft th
1 grew a bit frightened when he was gomg a frd e
record. we w~re staying 1;1t a hotel a~d he shnvede hu~
like a prune I ~Dd, !iU because he doesn t underst~~. ~. 8
I tell him . ·
"U
11 th hot
To him, "Take a shower," means,
se a
e
.
water."
.
.
H can underStand complicated instructions w~~n he IS
help~ng a repairman adjust controls on a ~eler:,slOnbJ;t.
He can understand chemical formulas and as e a . ' Y
fnlsh off the other side of a debate team on questions
~bo~t the Intricate workings of international law. It's the
simple stuff he doesn't understand.
,
.. ·
For example when I say, "Go to bed, I mean, G~!
lrito bed betwelm the smooth, clean sh~~.i pull up t
blanket, snuggle down cozily, dream a · ..
.
He inter rets "Go to bed" as meaning, Begm your
ework Pdrink 26 gallons of water, bnker WI\~ the tape
hf~er and spend 15 minutes on the telephone.
P It's ~s if we sometimes speak different languages . .
When I say "Clothes' in the hamper!" I mean a~ d•rY
1 thes Why 'does he think I mean five dirty soc, s, IS
~o~tbali pads and some parts from a race car set. ,
When I say "Clean the garage!" whlf does he mm~
I mean, "Move everything into the dr .veway un
?' '
.
, snows.
1 h tod y" ash d0 he interpret "Fix your own unc
a •
m:clng should leave' the refrigerator d:r
six pieces of burnt toast and turn over a pou
dog food?
od " und l'o
Why does, "Fix your own brea~fast t ay, so
· l'k "Eat pizza?"
h1m ' e
·
" translates
chest?" '
That's what I keep asking him. Why, WHY, W-H-Y?

250/
FAMOUS BRAND LUGGAGE ..... ~........ to

%OFF

----~KI~NG~S

Sons Shine Only
In· Certain Places

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Reg. $100.00 SU1Ts ............... ~···'67,00

.....
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By BE'ITY CANARY

Semi

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BOWLING BAGS

elementary education. She Is
presently employtid by Mason
County and Gallipolis City
School Systems.
Mr. Cesto is a 1968'graduate
of Point Pleasant High School
and served two yeats with the
U.' S. Army. He is presenUy
employed with the Pennyfare
Divlaion of Thorofare in Point
Pleasant, W. Va.
.A spring wedding is being
planned.

•

HECK'S REG. 111.88

HECK'S REG. '3.88

BETTY CANARY

'

GROUP NO. 1

GALUPOUS- Mr. and Mrs. Remo Rocchi celebrated
their sUver wedding anniversary Sunday, Jan. 14, ~ith a
famUy dinner at the Holiday Inn. The couple was roamed on
Jan. 12, UM8 at Saint Louis Catholic Church, GalllpoUs ..
They are the parents of ten children, Charlene, Timmy,
Sandi, Keilh, Lll, Theresa, Marlo, Jeff, Robbie and John.
Attending the dinner were Mr. and Mrs. ShortJ Rocchi;
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Skidmore and daughter, MlscheUe; Mr.
and Mrs. Warren Skidmore and daughters, Penny and
Becky; Bobby Ralllff, David Grant, I_VIIUe Darnbrough,
Ernie Metzgee; Charlene, Sandi, Lli,Mano, Jeff, Robbie and
John Rocchi.

North - Casto to
wed in spring

ONEIDA• OELU)(E STAIN~ESS

COMMUNITY• STAINLESS

h
h
·
Uonolll'od wtt s ower
11

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MR. &amp; MRS. FRED HAWK

GALLIPOLIS- THE DECEMBER WEDDING of·Patty
Ann Wright and Jerry Lee Flack took place at the home of the
bride's parents, lolr. and Mrs. Charles Wright, Rt. 1. The
double-ring·ceremony was performed by the Rev. Richard
Graham.
.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Errue Flack,
Rt. 1, Patriot . ·
The bride wore a white satin dress trimmed in lace with a
white lace veil and white satin slippers. She carried a white
lace Bible with red rosebuds and blue and white streamers
tied in love knots. Unda Micheal was maid of honor and Dave
;.!rummond served as best man.
Only the immediate families of the bride and groo.m. were
in attendance for the wedding. ·The couple Is now res1d1ng at
Fort CempbeU, Ky., where he is serving with the United
States Army.
·

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WORLD FAMOUS SANFORIZED
b!fONEIDA

MRS. JEFF MELVIN

21 - 1 P.M. TO 7 P

SUNDAY.

ICES

SA VE I on Solid Stalnl"'

f:i

~

rf!ior~n~

MR. AND MRS. JERRY FLACK

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. .UPOLIS _ The Qallia believe. this is a most \lme!Y,
· GAL
· .
.
d subject and hopes for a large
County Councll qn · Agmg an attendance f. social hour will
its Committees· have been .
,
· ling
.
.
Ianning for its ..follow the mee .
active m P .
Special committees on
coming meetmg of Senior
.
Sl'te •or a Seru'or
C'tiz
securmg
a
,.
.•
1
Thens. tilly meeting will be Citizens•s ·eenter, funding, a~ .
25 t the transportation are meeting .
.
e mon
c:urch, . regularly and will be
. the Daily Tribune at the county-wide meetm~;
1 led
ocald.
·
neat
r7'30
Pm ·
There are nearly 5,600 people
b
u1mga
·
·
·
John J:lalliday will be the .m Gil'
a Ia countywhoare55
·
guest speaker. His subject'will years old and over; 2,879 are ~
be "'Wills" their' importance, ·. 01 ' ov~r.
'
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The federal ·~ and
·
·slat.
·how
, · they' are wn'tte' n; and
· . t . ~
. roblems that people haye. governments are , Y,ery 1" '
· ~ter his talk there will be a terested In the elderly,.and are
·
·
wanting to prol'lde
. and ' answer
question
sesswn.
d f dfacllllles,
, hen
. The officers of the Council programs, ap un s w
groups qualify •

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·Gallia .Senior
'citizens to meet

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a.,... The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 21

)973

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set
Mor~ hearings
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By Kali Meek
Artisl-ln•resideoce
GALUPOUS -I want to offer my
apology to everyone who was in·
convenienced by the change in studio
hours last weekend.
"
Sometimes solving one problem,
cteates others. If we could trust this
last week's balminess to stay with US,
heat in the-...studio would be no·problem.
It doesn't pay to .trust the weather
however, so we'd best stick with
Monday open, Saturday closed till
.
March when the. thermometers
should
be tired of flirting with Zero Degrees
Fahrenheit.
THE RECENT tropical sunnses
' and afternoon springs, nch food for my
spirit, have added to the excitement of
-:-~ meeting new people and situations,

wool, my enth~s1asm for sharmg and some more and spin yarn with fin~ers,
drove up the Oh1o RIVer to Kyger Creek spindles and w
_heel. Also shared some
High School,
simp_le weaving .devices with the art
During the day, I talked abOut and classes. Trying to jam a week's worth '
· 1
fb f
demonstrated the handing of i ers or of e~perience into two days, as I am
hand-spinning- to six classes. ·I tried to now, is hard work, but the rewards are
give each group a thorough coverage of great.
the subject. I do all my talking off the
Like everyone, I thrive on praise
"top of my head" and by afternoon I and teachers and administrators who
was certam that I had shown and ex- tell me it is gpod that their students can
piained everythi~g to everyone who watch and listen to what I'm about, and
could.possibly want to know what I was s_tudents who decide lo build a spinning
doing. (The next day proved that notion wheel after seeing one work, are the
wrong).
things that let me beljeve that what I'm
When I am sharing my working doing as your artist-in-residence is
techniques, I would like to simply wor'th doing,
answer questions so I would have some
For two months I will be at Kyger
assurance that what I explain is what · Creek on Tuesdays and Wednesdays.
needs to be explained, but there seems Anyone is welcome to drop in during th~
always to be the problem that one school day. The mini-studio is in the art
doesn 't know what to ask when room. This next week there will be
presented with something very new. I some experimenting with vegetable
ended school day Toesday certain tha_t I dyes on fibers - some spun, some dyedhad broken all non-stop-talkmg in-the-wool.

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COLmJBUS (UPI) _ The
~~~.: House Finance CQmrnlttee has
&lt; scheduled three more hearings
~;: · this . week 'on Gov. John J.
:;!.

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measure, introduced in the
· House last week, spends more
on education but limits spending to this area, plus hospital
care payments and Interest
f
0
payments on the new state •
lice building in Columbus.
Once the revenue-sharing
measure Is out of. the. way,
Shoemaker's committee will
became a batUegrouJid for

&lt;
:.~.~ hopeful' of passing out for a

Gilligan's budget.
Republicans will be eager to
carve it up, while higher
education, state employe

:;:;
&gt;=&lt;~''
:•.•.
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vote of the full House next~ week.
:;:; Gilligan's revenue-sharing
:;:;
.. bill would spend $38.1 million
;!l for education and related pro;_:.~_:.
milli
grams, $22.5 · 'on 1or parks
;( and recreation, and . varying
•~:~w:::::~:·:-:-:;:-:~:::·:::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::=:--::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::.:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:·:·:=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::wm~:i».:· amounts for environmental

::
1

,..otectlon, law enforcement,
,..
transportation and mental
retardation.
An alternate Republican

Gilligan's proposal to 'spend
$92.3 million in federal
revenuO:.sharing funds in hopes
of clearing the decks for
consideration of the giant $9.8
k
1
billion budget nex wee ·
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, DBournevil'e, has set hearings
for Toesday, Wednesday and
Thursday morlling on the revenue-oharlng bill, which he is

i!;

groups and othe_r lobby
organizations will ·be after
extra money.
Heavy committee work also

·Ohio medical education challenged
By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The
DQrmal nostrums for problems
in government are studies, to
see what can be done, and
money, to do II.
So It was no surprise last
week when the Ohio Board of
Regents received a report from
, a special task force which had
been assigned to recommend
.ays to expand physician
manpower through medical
·education.
The problem, as the committee on expanded medical
education viewed it, is that
Ohio is not competing ef,
fectlvely with other states for
pt ISicians.
"A major responsibility,
then ,Is placed upon the quality
and attractiveness of graduate
medical education programs
because this is the most infiuential factor in attracting
physjclans to an area," the
committee report said.
. "This also challenges Ohio to
Improve the social and profes.
slonal factors conducive to
physician recruilment in order
to compete effectively with

over the state to work with
health . care
providers,
universities and health planning agencies io develop health
education programs related to
each region.
Second, a new vice chancellor for health affairs on the
Board of Regents to oversee
tlle health education program
at an annual salary of $45,000,
which is more than the
governor of Ohio makes.
Third, a health r-~anpower information system to monitor
the "health manpower arena"
continuously and feed back in·
formation to the vice chancellor at his request.
The".cost of this setup was
estimated at $3.5 million for
two years.
As the regents scanned the
report, one of them asked Dr.
Edgar Lee, associate dean of
the Case Western Reserve
medical school, head of the
conunittee, what states lure
the most physicians from Ohio.

to abolish winter."
As it turned out , California
and Fiorida had some other attractions for young, ambitious
physicians, and the regents
lapsed into a discussion of the
possibility of requiring Ohio
medical students to practice
for a CP.rtain length of time in
Ohio to repay the state for the
cost of their education before
they are "turned rree. n

~

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is scheduled on a series of
constitutional
amendments aimed at the May
ballot.
.
The ~House Judiciary
Committee may vote Wed·
nesday on a proposed Vietnam
era servicemen's bonus plan,
plus ·a · legislative procedures
·amendment-and a proposal to
allow. legislators "reasonable
and necessary" expenses.·
Those three resolutions, plus
a proposal to can a u.s,Coristltutional Convention io consider
a proper lorm of aid to nonpublic 51ihools, will be heard in
judiciary subsections late
Toesday and in the full committee Wednesday morning.
The . Vietnam
bonus,
proposed by House Speaker
Pro Tempore Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Jloslon, Includes $10
to $15 payments to Ohio servicemen for each month on.

p~o!losed

good, strong prayer to the sun
god might do more to attract
physicians to Ohio. than all the
district health education
programs and $45,000-a-year
vice chancellors that might be
proposed by a group of medical
college professors who spent
six months studying the
problem.

John H. Barker, 52, Henderson,
pulled in to the path of a
Gallipolis City School Bus
driven by Garland Saunders,
53, Rt. 2, Gallipolis. There was
minor dama ge to both vehicles.

ASKS GUARD MONEY

SACRAMENTO, Ca lif.
(UPI)- Gov. Ronald Reagan
today asked for $874,000 to
guard the National Guard.
Reagan 's proposed state
budget included the item for
increased security around
guard armories because of
"major losses" to thieves of
guns, ammunition and "other
se'fisltive items" last year.

MOSCOW (UP!) - The
Lunokhod 2 moon robot lurched
for almost a mile across the
luna r landsca pe testing
moonsoil composi tion and its
own electronic systems, the
Tass news agency said
Saturday.
•
Tass said that during six
hours of comm unication
Friday· the eight-ll!heeled,
1,850-pound mooncar moved
more than 1,100 yards away
from the descent sta~e of the

financed by a!l 0.~ sUitewide property tax.
·
'the Holll!l! State Governnient
Committee will hold a hem;ing .
Toesday evening on a _llroposed .
constitut!OI)al amendment to
requite joint eleetlon of the
·governor and lie,uten~nt
governor.
.....
Still another constitutional
amendment, which W!Juld give
fanners a tax brel}k 01) the
val11e at t!Jelr land, wiiJ be
heard WednesdaY. morning by
.the House Ways and ·Means
Comrnlttee. '
,
The. Agriculture•·&lt;lonujlerce -~:
and Labor Commi!lee W!ll hold
a hearing on tbe firSt I;\emocratlc bill introduced ·~ the
House to fiber• the .Unemployment comperl!BtlolfTaw by
allowing benefits to thilse Idled
becaUS" of a work stoppage
elsewhere.
.· ,
Both, the House and Senate
have scheduled noor sessions
for 1:30 p.m. To.y. .

Luna 21 mothership that
landed it on the moon Jan. 16.
In the course of its jaunt, the
tub-sh.ape d Lunokhod
discovered layers of loose soil
intermingled with firm soil
sections, Tass said. It also
televised new views of the Sea
of Serenity back to earth.
"In the pictures one can
clearly see mountains and
details of the lunar surface as
well as the track of the selfpropelled vehicle,'' Tass said.
All the moon robOt's systems
were working normally, it
added.

TWO KIL LED
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio (UPI)
- An unidentified woman and
a teenaged youth were shot and
killed Saturday in a shooting
incident in a trailer home at
Col)lmercial Point, northwest
of here , Pickaway County
sheriff's deputies report ed.
Offic ials said they were
holding ~ 4 a man" in connection
with the incident, but refused
I
to release further details.

In making plans for the New Year, you will
· find no better partner for exploring the fu-

Several career courses
available. All are approved
for Veteran·s.

ture than

a friendly bank going your way.

w,;,. or call446-4367 for free

lclolalo&gt;g of courses and next
starting date.

. Gallipolis

"the now bank that appreelatea your bu•ineN"
Member: Federal Deposit insu""""' Corpol'ltlcn

Business

ye~ r s .

,, ,

,

.,.J,

••.•

, • ,

.1 ~· • • ~lr

I Jl .. '• • .JV'•"~•·"'·

.J, '!ti N

" Ji l!il&gt;

420 Third Ave. , Golllpotls , Ohio

State Reg. No. 7·1·02-00318'

Country Style, Butter--Top Table Bread.
The"'ayyoureiDeiDber it is the way \Ve brought it back.
We've taken a taste from days g"one by and baked
it into every slice of new Betsy Ross Country Style
Table Bread.
Yo)l can tell it's something_special just by
looking at it. The old-fashionedbuttered top, the
hearty thicker slices tell you this bread is ba~ed.
the right way. So you can be proud to serve 1t wtth
any meal, from breakfasts to family banquets.
Betsy Ross Country Style Table Bread. It has
the taste you remember when you think.back to
those good, hot, home-baked breads that marked
those special meals.
And the way you remember it is the way
we've brought it back. . ............................. .. . .

.•...

.

r/]ooq iron··~.
.......-:_..

•...•..,

.·"·"·"·"·"·"·"·"·"·•·•·•·•·•·.

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

110~

10~1

I .
. :1,.0 Cents Off
I on one 1'1:z.lb.loafof Betsy Ross
I Country Style Table Biead
I
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Tn the Grocer:

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Y1,;~1

authorized to act as our
.:'l~cnt in · rcdccmin~ th is coupon'.
) 0•.1 will bl' pil id 10¢ plus .3¢ han ·
dlinf; for eou;h coupon providrd vou
and the cu~ tomcr have compliL...-1
w ir h the tcm1~ ur this offer: ilnvotht·r
J!'l'

imud: Pro~1f
of Sllfficicnt stocks l,f
Bct~v RossCm1n try Style, Butter-Top

application

(I( pu rcht~ s c

co n~titutcs

T;-hf~ Bn~.1d t(l cover coupons pre-

sen ted mu!'t be lumi~ hed on req uest.
Customer must p.1y s.1 l~s tax._if any.
Rt•dl'L'm th rot1~ h uur ro ut e salesman.

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OffL·r l'Xpires M.ud1 .3 , 1',17.3 .
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ONE of Gallia Academy High School's initial Scholarahlp
Key wlnneni Is still capturing honors 35 yearil after receiving her
diploma bere.

+++
' MRS. Donald (Marian AleiBnder) .Spencer, Cincinnati,
diughter of the late Hllrry aoo Rosana Alexander, was named
'one of Cincinnati'~ 10 Outstanding Women of 1972 by the Cincinnati Enquirer on Dec, 31.

.·•

++ +

MRS. SpeQ,CI!I" aDd her twin sister, Mildred Alexaooer,
shared Gallla ·Academy's third Scholarabip Key baCk in 1938.
They !ltill hold the distinction 0! being the onl~ two Individuals
from one family to share an honorary key In the same category in
one academic year.

+++

MRS. SpenCI!I" has spent the past 25 years doing civic work
while running a household for her husband and two sons. During
the · recent "Women of the Year" event In Cincinnati, the
GaWpolis native was chosen from 273 nominees In the Queen
City,
'

+++
THE 1938 GAHS SchOlarabip co-\vlnner credits ber husband's
.. car.eer with helping her achieve the status of an outStanding
woman. In a recent article in The Enquirer, Mrs. Spencer said It
takes time. to be effective In conlinulng civic rrojects. Her
huaband, Donald, an educator who ~ to real estate, freed
her to become Involved in community betterment.

. '-t .

: -

B_y Bob HOfijlirh . •. . .~

a

POMEROY - A wonderful project Is just getting off the
ground at the Middleport Church of Christ.
The chureh is starting a clothing bank in order to provide
good used clothing for the underprivileged and those whose
homes are destroyed by fire or some similar fate .
It lsn 't just a single church project. Designed to help
everyone, all contributions are welcome. Already the word of the
project is getting arouild. Ftldiy; when a picture was taken for
this newspaper In relation to the project, a call was received at ·
the church for clothing urgenUj' needed for two six-year old boys.
The request could!l't be filled because everything Is just ·
beginning and there have been no children's cloth€\S received.
If you can help out with the request, do let Flo Grueser,
Grace Hawley or Mildred Hawley, committee members, or the
Rev. Ra; Moyer, pastor, !mow. ·
lncid
Uy, contributions can be left at the new addition
from 9:30 11:30 a.m. each Toesday and Thursday. In order to
avoid just creating a h~ap of nothing, however, do give just
clean, fairly good condition clothing.

"

·EARLY WEEK SPECIALS
I

9 T0 .9 DAILY

Mining course to
begin 011 Monday

el2 TO.8 SUNDAY

137 PINE STREET
.'
GAlliPOUS, OlfiO
700 WEST MAIN STREET
I

~~~?~~:!_~PO~EROY, OHIO

SP-4 SHERIDAN~- RUSSELL III, hill wife, VickY, and
daughter, ·Angela, are here for a 31J.day leave from Heidelberg,
Germany.
Mrs. Russell and Angela arrived on Dec. 20 for the Christmas
holidays and were joined by Mr. Russell later. They are visiting
theirparenta, Mr.andMrs.'Norman Van Maire, Middleport, and
Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan Russeil, Jr., Mason. The Russells will
leave on their return to Heidelberg on Feb. 8. They will"reside ·
there for the next two years. They've also visited her aunt, Mrs.
·Jack Ambrose, during their vacation home.

IIF.RE'S what Mary Linn White of The Enquirer had to say
about Mra. Spencer, a University of Cincinnati' graduate, In a
recent article:
What d~s the president of two women's clubs do for an
YOU'LL BE HEARING in tbe near future the recording of a
encore?
group of Racine young men who made a trip to Nashville to
She gets rHiected.
produce the recoi'd now on sale in several local bUsiness houses.
That's the flrst-18dy status of Marian (Mrs. Donald) Spencer
The songs on the 45·rpm are by Duane Wolfe, ~cine teacher
In both the )l'estlgious Woman's City Club aoo the service- and choir leader, who does the lead vocal work on the record;
oriented Links Inc., whose 28 members have pushed projects Steve Cleland, lead guitar; Steve Badgley, bass; Dave Spencer,
desiped to motivate back youth toward higher goals In the arts,
drums, and Pete Simpson, organ. The group was joined in NashIn academic areas and in career opportunities.
ville by a professional piano player and steel guitar man.
JUGGLING THE TWO garels may Involve a morning callMaking the recording in Nashville, certainly a music center ·
for-help from a Uganda girl about scholarship money for studies of the United States these days, was quite an experience for the .
at the Univet'llty of Cincinnati aoo an afternoon appearance at local group. The title of the songs on the recording, by the way,
City Councti, she grins warmly. But It still isn't as exhausting as are "My Dream Girl" and "Broken Hearted."
the summer, four years ago, when both sons married out-of-town
&amp;iris (Buffalo, N. Y., and Atlanta, Ga.) with a follow-up of two
MRS. G. H. (MARGERY) MARTIN of Fort Lauderdale,
"at-homes" for the new brides, daughters-in~aw whom she Fla., has sent a copy of the Martin genealogy to ·Pomeroy for the
)lizes.
Meigs County Historical Society. Mrs. Martin worked long boors
One aon, with a master's degree In library science and a job on the volume which includes allied families. It's entitled,
at the main Public Ubrary, Is married to a realtor and Is working "Looking Backward."
on a law degree; the other. Is studying toward a doctorate In
psychology while his wife will get bers in microbiology.
LARGE PHOTOGRAPHS OF each director of The Fanners
She's the kind of mother (and mother~n-law) who will · Bank and Savlligs Co., aU in matching frames, !lfe featured on
welcome the young home at Thanksgiving (the menu was long- the paneled walisof the Impressive director's meeting room.
planned) but knQws that they're.not likely to stay in Cincinnati
Ted Reed, Jr., president of tbe bank who was Meigs chairforeyer. She's happUy'resigned to having "a place to visit" when man of the reelect Nixon campaign, received not one, but two,
the kids do move.
invitations to the inauguration. He forwarded one to Mrs. C. H.
. Meantime abe's busy enough with the two clubs to appreciate (Sis) Wise,now Jiving in Waverly, who has so much Interest In, it
thl),.fact that "I'm an extremely healthy person."
seems, about everything.
Marian spent her girlhood In Gallipolis, where her mother
W811 active In church and PTA, and where they look cooking
PH~S EVANS GIVENS, FORMERLY of Pomeroy, who
classes and Red Cross fir&amp;W!Id classes together during World bas
quite active in West Vil'ginia political circles, will ap; War II. "Whalever there was to be done,'~she recalls, ''mothef , Jllllll',on e Debbie Thomas ",AM" abow at 9 u.m. Monday. Mrs.
1
·
~ did it."
,;.,n
m~
'
Givens Is the daughter of Mrs. Ray Evans, Pomeroy, and the late
MARIAN IS CUT frQm the same cloth and, as abe !'Q\11141! out Mr. Evans.
2-1 years of volunteer work, she considers the "batUe of whether
the Women's C(ty Club is a social club. It's anything BUT! Other
iii'Oups can.be social. We're civic. It's a very liberal group, an
oula In the whole club spec_
trum. Our volunteeriBm Is as the
watchdog on the civic frmt. We feel It's a prelude to action. II
we're not alert to what Is going on, we can't act,"
She cites the studies on probation and parole done by the club
(~ Mrs. Woody Garber) which have begun to produce
aclilll and credits wee members Edwina Gantz and Emily Slutz
PT. PLEASANT - An adult portunities have never been as
with changes In teaching techniques at the college level and with evening course in General great as they are now. There
helping bring Dr. Warren ilennis and Dr. Donald Waldrip to Mine Technology · will begin are three major coal mining
Cincinnati.
6:30p.m. Monday at the Mason firms In eastern Ohio, the
"And as for our environment committee, we give Sylvia County Vocational Center newest of these as close as
Miller credit for getting rid of the SST single-handed! Our club according to center director Ed Meigs Coun~'
wrote
letter and later she leltified both locally aoo in Sonun
·
· Sommer In cated the coal
er.
Waablngton, D. C. she went into"lt with such a will !bat when she
The 100-hour classroom mining indus ry's statistics
tatlfled, they listened."
Instruction was made available show that it.s manpower needs
Mlrlanfeela that ''there Is a certain amount of responsibility recently because the deep mine are estimated to be 1n,ooo men
that gOes with what has come to us because aotnebody before us coal Industry is growing in . per year, and growing. He
hu warted harder. There are no utopias yet. In fact, we're southeastern Ohio and West pointed out that through the
nowberecJo.e. When UIDpla comes, we.can all sit down. But until Virginia.
cooperation
of
labor,
then I can't ~e MY time to sit and drink tea I" .
"With the annual wage for management and federal state
Marian's worry' now Is that "I won't'be young enough long the lowest paying job in the agencies, the coal mining inenOU8h to do all the thlntls I want to do... I hope I never feel coal mining industry figured to dustry Is becoming one of the .
thel'e'soothq !Qdo. When you feel that way, you die before your be in excess of $1n,ooo, we want safest industries.
time. Youseeyoungpeople Ukethat. Wemaydle of a tired heart, to be one of the first vilcational
oot not a tired mind."
centers to offer this program,"
THE wee PRIDES Itself on being ' 'with it," and adapts Its Sommer stated. "Job opoommlttees and strengths to tbe challenge at hand. Just this
mooth, the board voted to change the women's address to Ms.
FIVE HONORED
Sbe llllilel that it may stir up a tempest.
MASON - Five Mason
Marriage Licenses
· Alleut the new term won'tapply to the 125 male (associate)
County students attending
POMEROY - Frederick F. Glenville State College were
members of the wee. ''They're being e)lll06t!d to a liberal
ediiCatlon," Marian comments. Well-bown speakers with ex- Newlun, 76, Long Bottom, and named to the dean 's list for the
pertise In every field (hopefully controversial) are brought in to Betty Lou Lovett, 34, Reeds- first semester. Making a 3.2
talk at the weekly civic lunche0118 and the autumn meetings are ville; Jack Eugene Hall, 19, Rt. average or more .on 12
I, Cheshire, and M,ilry Louise semester hours were Penny S.
always opened to poHIIcal candidates.
·
.
"When they're reluctant .to come, THIS tells us something," Pro£fitt, 20, RD Portland; Burris, Mason; Mary L. ·
lhe remarks. "We want the community t,o be aw~e of this too." .Mark Stephen Moyer , 19, Chattin, Leon; Gary L. Fields,
Mlrlan, happy with the calibre of the membership_of both Newport News, Va ., and Hartford; Glynn . T. Haynes,
her constituencies, feels that "clubwork takes wotnen away from Pamela Ruth .Dodson , 17, Point Pleasant, and Gary B.
their own ~letnll . We tend to look iilward when we don't look Middleport.
Mitchell, Mason.
~round. There's so MUCH to be done."
,
While wee bas hit at mass transit problems, poverty, school
lui.ches1 ma• media and minorities, Unka haa forged ahead,
through work of Carolyn Carter and Cathryn Buford, In the fight
lll•inlt sickle cellanemta.
·
MARIAN SMILES that tbe local Unka chapter is one of the
best in the country - '!and I'm not being provincial."
IJnka hal prepared a bi..U.t on "Ita local leader" which Is
filled (alrigled.spaced) with memberships aoo honors.- If the
other groilpl wait their turn, perhaps she 'II be lhe!J' first lady too ..

TASTEE BRAND

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REMINGTON
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..

''

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a

DRAPES
CU~M and
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by:
SPECIAL ORDER

+++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the fUes of the DaUy Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times • . . Mary Skinner named Gallia .
County's Sesqulcentemlal Queen ..• Jack C. Davis appointed .to
board of Gallipolis Building and Loan cO. , . . Flu epidemic
forcel CldmUI adloollto close • .. Polio benefit basketball game
between Rio Grande College and Wrillbt.Patteraon AFB 4raws
!,ZOO penon1 .in Washinaton gym. Rio wins Wt 113-«i. Francis
ta1Hel51 points as Redmei! win 18th in row without a lOIS. Rio ace
..tton's top scorer with 1,072 points In 18 pmes . .. Athell8
contlnuel hex over l:!icl: Shrider's GAHS Blue Devlla, GS-53.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
RACINE - The Racine ER
squad was called Saturday at 6
a.m . . for ~ymond Hartley,

•

1

.
d
·
I~ ,,
of t he .Ben . . ~~ - /

- +++

For A Belter Job,
• Sooner-Go To
Business College

Great Shakes
The estimated 5.7 billion
tons of salt in Great Salt
Lake could supply the total
industrial and domestic re('A)~Jege
quirements of the United
States for more 1 than · 200 ' I IJ•·•.oc•••• St. ,,'" " GI'IIipolli

&amp;~at...

mamum
$500.
.'
Its $300 million ~ ·WO~ be

Lunokhod 2 goes a mile~---------.
But it seemed strange that a

Young driver is cited

GALLIPOLIS - Jeffery
Brumfield, 19, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
was cited to Municipal Court
for failura to stop within the
assured clear distance Friday
following a traffic accident at
4:40p.m . on Neighborhood Rd. ,
nine tenths of a mile south of
Rt. 141.
The state highway patrol
said Brumfield's car slid into
the rear of an auto backing out
~~ca liforni a," he replied,
of
a private driveway operated
"and Florida."
"What kind of climates do by Carol M. Kemper, '2.'1,
There
was
they have in those states to Gallipolis .
other states .''
attract physicians?" asked the moderate damage to both cars.
As a remedy, the committee regent.
A second accident occurred
prescribed three things.
"Warm," answered Lee.
at 2:45 p.m. on Rt. 588 at the
First, a dozen district health . "Good Lord," muttered a junction of Bob McCormick
ieducatlon organizations-spread new~:~~~ybe Ohio ought Rd., where an auto dtiv~n bv

,

active duty durl~ the VIetnam
era starting ln. 1961, up 10 a

Racine, who waa having dlf.
llculty breathing. He was laken
lo Veterans Memorl~ Hospital
and admitted .

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fabrics and colors to
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�•

a.,... The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 21

)973

..

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set
Mor~ hearings
·

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~

. the studro .
, .

0

···: ..:
·

By Kali Meek
Artisl-ln•resideoce
GALUPOUS -I want to offer my
apology to everyone who was in·
convenienced by the change in studio
hours last weekend.
"
Sometimes solving one problem,
cteates others. If we could trust this
last week's balminess to stay with US,
heat in the-...studio would be no·problem.
It doesn't pay to .trust the weather
however, so we'd best stick with
Monday open, Saturday closed till
.
March when the. thermometers
should
be tired of flirting with Zero Degrees
Fahrenheit.
THE RECENT tropical sunnses
' and afternoon springs, nch food for my
spirit, have added to the excitement of
-:-~ meeting new people and situations,

wool, my enth~s1asm for sharmg and some more and spin yarn with fin~ers,
drove up the Oh1o RIVer to Kyger Creek spindles and w
_heel. Also shared some
High School,
simp_le weaving .devices with the art
During the day, I talked abOut and classes. Trying to jam a week's worth '
· 1
fb f
demonstrated the handing of i ers or of e~perience into two days, as I am
hand-spinning- to six classes. ·I tried to now, is hard work, but the rewards are
give each group a thorough coverage of great.
the subject. I do all my talking off the
Like everyone, I thrive on praise
"top of my head" and by afternoon I and teachers and administrators who
was certam that I had shown and ex- tell me it is gpod that their students can
piained everythi~g to everyone who watch and listen to what I'm about, and
could.possibly want to know what I was s_tudents who decide lo build a spinning
doing. (The next day proved that notion wheel after seeing one work, are the
wrong).
things that let me beljeve that what I'm
When I am sharing my working doing as your artist-in-residence is
techniques, I would like to simply wor'th doing,
answer questions so I would have some
For two months I will be at Kyger
assurance that what I explain is what · Creek on Tuesdays and Wednesdays.
needs to be explained, but there seems Anyone is welcome to drop in during th~
always to be the problem that one school day. The mini-studio is in the art
doesn 't know what to ask when room. This next week there will be
presented with something very new. I some experimenting with vegetable
ended school day Toesday certain tha_t I dyes on fibers - some spun, some dyedhad broken all non-stop-talkmg in-the-wool.

;

,

·I.·

COLmJBUS (UPI) _ The
~~~.: House Finance CQmrnlttee has
&lt; scheduled three more hearings
~;: · this . week 'on Gov. John J.
:;!.

:.~.
~
~:

·

measure, introduced in the
· House last week, spends more
on education but limits spending to this area, plus hospital
care payments and Interest
f
0
payments on the new state •
lice building in Columbus.
Once the revenue-sharing
measure Is out of. the. way,
Shoemaker's committee will
became a batUegrouJid for

&lt;
:.~.~ hopeful' of passing out for a

Gilligan's budget.
Republicans will be eager to
carve it up, while higher
education, state employe

:;:;
&gt;=&lt;~''
:•.•.
,,~l.:
~·

~~:

ij
:~:

vote of the full House next~ week.
:;:; Gilligan's revenue-sharing
:;:;
.. bill would spend $38.1 million
;!l for education and related pro;_:.~_:.
milli
grams, $22.5 · 'on 1or parks
;( and recreation, and . varying
•~:~w:::::~:·:-:-:;:-:~:::·:::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::=:--::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::.:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:·:·:=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::wm~:i».:· amounts for environmental

::
1

,..otectlon, law enforcement,
,..
transportation and mental
retardation.
An alternate Republican

Gilligan's proposal to 'spend
$92.3 million in federal
revenuO:.sharing funds in hopes
of clearing the decks for
consideration of the giant $9.8
k
1
billion budget nex wee ·
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, DBournevil'e, has set hearings
for Toesday, Wednesday and
Thursday morlling on the revenue-oharlng bill, which he is

i!;

groups and othe_r lobby
organizations will ·be after
extra money.
Heavy committee work also

·Ohio medical education challenged
By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The
DQrmal nostrums for problems
in government are studies, to
see what can be done, and
money, to do II.
So It was no surprise last
week when the Ohio Board of
Regents received a report from
, a special task force which had
been assigned to recommend
.ays to expand physician
manpower through medical
·education.
The problem, as the committee on expanded medical
education viewed it, is that
Ohio is not competing ef,
fectlvely with other states for
pt ISicians.
"A major responsibility,
then ,Is placed upon the quality
and attractiveness of graduate
medical education programs
because this is the most infiuential factor in attracting
physjclans to an area," the
committee report said.
. "This also challenges Ohio to
Improve the social and profes.
slonal factors conducive to
physician recruilment in order
to compete effectively with

over the state to work with
health . care
providers,
universities and health planning agencies io develop health
education programs related to
each region.
Second, a new vice chancellor for health affairs on the
Board of Regents to oversee
tlle health education program
at an annual salary of $45,000,
which is more than the
governor of Ohio makes.
Third, a health r-~anpower information system to monitor
the "health manpower arena"
continuously and feed back in·
formation to the vice chancellor at his request.
The".cost of this setup was
estimated at $3.5 million for
two years.
As the regents scanned the
report, one of them asked Dr.
Edgar Lee, associate dean of
the Case Western Reserve
medical school, head of the
conunittee, what states lure
the most physicians from Ohio.

to abolish winter."
As it turned out , California
and Fiorida had some other attractions for young, ambitious
physicians, and the regents
lapsed into a discussion of the
possibility of requiring Ohio
medical students to practice
for a CP.rtain length of time in
Ohio to repay the state for the
cost of their education before
they are "turned rree. n

~

.

is scheduled on a series of
constitutional
amendments aimed at the May
ballot.
.
The ~House Judiciary
Committee may vote Wed·
nesday on a proposed Vietnam
era servicemen's bonus plan,
plus ·a · legislative procedures
·amendment-and a proposal to
allow. legislators "reasonable
and necessary" expenses.·
Those three resolutions, plus
a proposal to can a u.s,Coristltutional Convention io consider
a proper lorm of aid to nonpublic 51ihools, will be heard in
judiciary subsections late
Toesday and in the full committee Wednesday morning.
The . Vietnam
bonus,
proposed by House Speaker
Pro Tempore Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Jloslon, Includes $10
to $15 payments to Ohio servicemen for each month on.

p~o!losed

good, strong prayer to the sun
god might do more to attract
physicians to Ohio. than all the
district health education
programs and $45,000-a-year
vice chancellors that might be
proposed by a group of medical
college professors who spent
six months studying the
problem.

John H. Barker, 52, Henderson,
pulled in to the path of a
Gallipolis City School Bus
driven by Garland Saunders,
53, Rt. 2, Gallipolis. There was
minor dama ge to both vehicles.

ASKS GUARD MONEY

SACRAMENTO, Ca lif.
(UPI)- Gov. Ronald Reagan
today asked for $874,000 to
guard the National Guard.
Reagan 's proposed state
budget included the item for
increased security around
guard armories because of
"major losses" to thieves of
guns, ammunition and "other
se'fisltive items" last year.

MOSCOW (UP!) - The
Lunokhod 2 moon robot lurched
for almost a mile across the
luna r landsca pe testing
moonsoil composi tion and its
own electronic systems, the
Tass news agency said
Saturday.
•
Tass said that during six
hours of comm unication
Friday· the eight-ll!heeled,
1,850-pound mooncar moved
more than 1,100 yards away
from the descent sta~e of the

financed by a!l 0.~ sUitewide property tax.
·
'the Holll!l! State Governnient
Committee will hold a hem;ing .
Toesday evening on a _llroposed .
constitut!OI)al amendment to
requite joint eleetlon of the
·governor and lie,uten~nt
governor.
.....
Still another constitutional
amendment, which W!Juld give
fanners a tax brel}k 01) the
val11e at t!Jelr land, wiiJ be
heard WednesdaY. morning by
.the House Ways and ·Means
Comrnlttee. '
,
The. Agriculture•·&lt;lonujlerce -~:
and Labor Commi!lee W!ll hold
a hearing on tbe firSt I;\emocratlc bill introduced ·~ the
House to fiber• the .Unemployment comperl!BtlolfTaw by
allowing benefits to thilse Idled
becaUS" of a work stoppage
elsewhere.
.· ,
Both, the House and Senate
have scheduled noor sessions
for 1:30 p.m. To.y. .

Luna 21 mothership that
landed it on the moon Jan. 16.
In the course of its jaunt, the
tub-sh.ape d Lunokhod
discovered layers of loose soil
intermingled with firm soil
sections, Tass said. It also
televised new views of the Sea
of Serenity back to earth.
"In the pictures one can
clearly see mountains and
details of the lunar surface as
well as the track of the selfpropelled vehicle,'' Tass said.
All the moon robOt's systems
were working normally, it
added.

TWO KIL LED
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio (UPI)
- An unidentified woman and
a teenaged youth were shot and
killed Saturday in a shooting
incident in a trailer home at
Col)lmercial Point, northwest
of here , Pickaway County
sheriff's deputies report ed.
Offic ials said they were
holding ~ 4 a man" in connection
with the incident, but refused
I
to release further details.

In making plans for the New Year, you will
· find no better partner for exploring the fu-

Several career courses
available. All are approved
for Veteran·s.

ture than

a friendly bank going your way.

w,;,. or call446-4367 for free

lclolalo&gt;g of courses and next
starting date.

. Gallipolis

"the now bank that appreelatea your bu•ineN"
Member: Federal Deposit insu""""' Corpol'ltlcn

Business

ye~ r s .

,, ,

,

.,.J,

••.•

, • ,

.1 ~· • • ~lr

I Jl .. '• • .JV'•"~•·"'·

.J, '!ti N

" Ji l!il&gt;

420 Third Ave. , Golllpotls , Ohio

State Reg. No. 7·1·02-00318'

Country Style, Butter--Top Table Bread.
The"'ayyoureiDeiDber it is the way \Ve brought it back.
We've taken a taste from days g"one by and baked
it into every slice of new Betsy Ross Country Style
Table Bread.
Yo)l can tell it's something_special just by
looking at it. The old-fashionedbuttered top, the
hearty thicker slices tell you this bread is ba~ed.
the right way. So you can be proud to serve 1t wtth
any meal, from breakfasts to family banquets.
Betsy Ross Country Style Table Bread. It has
the taste you remember when you think.back to
those good, hot, home-baked breads that marked
those special meals.
And the way you remember it is the way
we've brought it back. . ............................. .. . .

.•...

.

r/]ooq iron··~.
.......-:_..

•...•..,

.·"·"·"·"·"·"·"·"·"·•·•·•·•·•·.

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

110~

10~1

I .
. :1,.0 Cents Off
I on one 1'1:z.lb.loafof Betsy Ross
I Country Style Table Biead
I
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I
Tn the Grocer:

I
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Y1,;~1

authorized to act as our
.:'l~cnt in · rcdccmin~ th is coupon'.
) 0•.1 will bl' pil id 10¢ plus .3¢ han ·
dlinf; for eou;h coupon providrd vou
and the cu~ tomcr have compliL...-1
w ir h the tcm1~ ur this offer: ilnvotht·r
J!'l'

imud: Pro~1f
of Sllfficicnt stocks l,f
Bct~v RossCm1n try Style, Butter-Top

application

(I( pu rcht~ s c

co n~titutcs

T;-hf~ Bn~.1d t(l cover coupons pre-

sen ted mu!'t be lumi~ hed on req uest.
Customer must p.1y s.1 l~s tax._if any.
Rt•dl'L'm th rot1~ h uur ro ut e salesman.

. .· .

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1

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OffL·r l'Xpires M.ud1 .3 , 1',17.3 .
I
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. .
ONE of Gallia Academy High School's initial Scholarahlp
Key wlnneni Is still capturing honors 35 yearil after receiving her
diploma bere.

+++
' MRS. Donald (Marian AleiBnder) .Spencer, Cincinnati,
diughter of the late Hllrry aoo Rosana Alexander, was named
'one of Cincinnati'~ 10 Outstanding Women of 1972 by the Cincinnati Enquirer on Dec, 31.

.·•

++ +

MRS. SpeQ,CI!I" aDd her twin sister, Mildred Alexaooer,
shared Gallla ·Academy's third Scholarabip Key baCk in 1938.
They !ltill hold the distinction 0! being the onl~ two Individuals
from one family to share an honorary key In the same category in
one academic year.

+++

MRS. SpenCI!I" has spent the past 25 years doing civic work
while running a household for her husband and two sons. During
the · recent "Women of the Year" event In Cincinnati, the
GaWpolis native was chosen from 273 nominees In the Queen
City,
'

+++
THE 1938 GAHS SchOlarabip co-\vlnner credits ber husband's
.. car.eer with helping her achieve the status of an outStanding
woman. In a recent article in The Enquirer, Mrs. Spencer said It
takes time. to be effective In conlinulng civic rrojects. Her
huaband, Donald, an educator who ~ to real estate, freed
her to become Involved in community betterment.

. '-t .

: -

B_y Bob HOfijlirh . •. . .~

a

POMEROY - A wonderful project Is just getting off the
ground at the Middleport Church of Christ.
The chureh is starting a clothing bank in order to provide
good used clothing for the underprivileged and those whose
homes are destroyed by fire or some similar fate .
It lsn 't just a single church project. Designed to help
everyone, all contributions are welcome. Already the word of the
project is getting arouild. Ftldiy; when a picture was taken for
this newspaper In relation to the project, a call was received at ·
the church for clothing urgenUj' needed for two six-year old boys.
The request could!l't be filled because everything Is just ·
beginning and there have been no children's cloth€\S received.
If you can help out with the request, do let Flo Grueser,
Grace Hawley or Mildred Hawley, committee members, or the
Rev. Ra; Moyer, pastor, !mow. ·
lncid
Uy, contributions can be left at the new addition
from 9:30 11:30 a.m. each Toesday and Thursday. In order to
avoid just creating a h~ap of nothing, however, do give just
clean, fairly good condition clothing.

"

·EARLY WEEK SPECIALS
I

9 T0 .9 DAILY

Mining course to
begin 011 Monday

el2 TO.8 SUNDAY

137 PINE STREET
.'
GAlliPOUS, OlfiO
700 WEST MAIN STREET
I

~~~?~~:!_~PO~EROY, OHIO

SP-4 SHERIDAN~- RUSSELL III, hill wife, VickY, and
daughter, ·Angela, are here for a 31J.day leave from Heidelberg,
Germany.
Mrs. Russell and Angela arrived on Dec. 20 for the Christmas
holidays and were joined by Mr. Russell later. They are visiting
theirparenta, Mr.andMrs.'Norman Van Maire, Middleport, and
Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan Russeil, Jr., Mason. The Russells will
leave on their return to Heidelberg on Feb. 8. They will"reside ·
there for the next two years. They've also visited her aunt, Mrs.
·Jack Ambrose, during their vacation home.

IIF.RE'S what Mary Linn White of The Enquirer had to say
about Mra. Spencer, a University of Cincinnati' graduate, In a
recent article:
What d~s the president of two women's clubs do for an
YOU'LL BE HEARING in tbe near future the recording of a
encore?
group of Racine young men who made a trip to Nashville to
She gets rHiected.
produce the recoi'd now on sale in several local bUsiness houses.
That's the flrst-18dy status of Marian (Mrs. Donald) Spencer
The songs on the 45·rpm are by Duane Wolfe, ~cine teacher
In both the )l'estlgious Woman's City Club aoo the service- and choir leader, who does the lead vocal work on the record;
oriented Links Inc., whose 28 members have pushed projects Steve Cleland, lead guitar; Steve Badgley, bass; Dave Spencer,
desiped to motivate back youth toward higher goals In the arts,
drums, and Pete Simpson, organ. The group was joined in NashIn academic areas and in career opportunities.
ville by a professional piano player and steel guitar man.
JUGGLING THE TWO garels may Involve a morning callMaking the recording in Nashville, certainly a music center ·
for-help from a Uganda girl about scholarship money for studies of the United States these days, was quite an experience for the .
at the Univet'llty of Cincinnati aoo an afternoon appearance at local group. The title of the songs on the recording, by the way,
City Councti, she grins warmly. But It still isn't as exhausting as are "My Dream Girl" and "Broken Hearted."
the summer, four years ago, when both sons married out-of-town
&amp;iris (Buffalo, N. Y., and Atlanta, Ga.) with a follow-up of two
MRS. G. H. (MARGERY) MARTIN of Fort Lauderdale,
"at-homes" for the new brides, daughters-in~aw whom she Fla., has sent a copy of the Martin genealogy to ·Pomeroy for the
)lizes.
Meigs County Historical Society. Mrs. Martin worked long boors
One aon, with a master's degree In library science and a job on the volume which includes allied families. It's entitled,
at the main Public Ubrary, Is married to a realtor and Is working "Looking Backward."
on a law degree; the other. Is studying toward a doctorate In
psychology while his wife will get bers in microbiology.
LARGE PHOTOGRAPHS OF each director of The Fanners
She's the kind of mother (and mother~n-law) who will · Bank and Savlligs Co., aU in matching frames, !lfe featured on
welcome the young home at Thanksgiving (the menu was long- the paneled walisof the Impressive director's meeting room.
planned) but knQws that they're.not likely to stay in Cincinnati
Ted Reed, Jr., president of tbe bank who was Meigs chairforeyer. She's happUy'resigned to having "a place to visit" when man of the reelect Nixon campaign, received not one, but two,
the kids do move.
invitations to the inauguration. He forwarded one to Mrs. C. H.
. Meantime abe's busy enough with the two clubs to appreciate (Sis) Wise,now Jiving in Waverly, who has so much Interest In, it
thl),.fact that "I'm an extremely healthy person."
seems, about everything.
Marian spent her girlhood In Gallipolis, where her mother
W811 active In church and PTA, and where they look cooking
PH~S EVANS GIVENS, FORMERLY of Pomeroy, who
classes and Red Cross fir&amp;W!Id classes together during World bas
quite active in West Vil'ginia political circles, will ap; War II. "Whalever there was to be done,'~she recalls, ''mothef , Jllllll',on e Debbie Thomas ",AM" abow at 9 u.m. Monday. Mrs.
1
·
~ did it."
,;.,n
m~
'
Givens Is the daughter of Mrs. Ray Evans, Pomeroy, and the late
MARIAN IS CUT frQm the same cloth and, as abe !'Q\11141! out Mr. Evans.
2-1 years of volunteer work, she considers the "batUe of whether
the Women's C(ty Club is a social club. It's anything BUT! Other
iii'Oups can.be social. We're civic. It's a very liberal group, an
oula In the whole club spec_
trum. Our volunteeriBm Is as the
watchdog on the civic frmt. We feel It's a prelude to action. II
we're not alert to what Is going on, we can't act,"
She cites the studies on probation and parole done by the club
(~ Mrs. Woody Garber) which have begun to produce
aclilll and credits wee members Edwina Gantz and Emily Slutz
PT. PLEASANT - An adult portunities have never been as
with changes In teaching techniques at the college level and with evening course in General great as they are now. There
helping bring Dr. Warren ilennis and Dr. Donald Waldrip to Mine Technology · will begin are three major coal mining
Cincinnati.
6:30p.m. Monday at the Mason firms In eastern Ohio, the
"And as for our environment committee, we give Sylvia County Vocational Center newest of these as close as
Miller credit for getting rid of the SST single-handed! Our club according to center director Ed Meigs Coun~'
wrote
letter and later she leltified both locally aoo in Sonun
·
· Sommer In cated the coal
er.
Waablngton, D. C. she went into"lt with such a will !bat when she
The 100-hour classroom mining indus ry's statistics
tatlfled, they listened."
Instruction was made available show that it.s manpower needs
Mlrlanfeela that ''there Is a certain amount of responsibility recently because the deep mine are estimated to be 1n,ooo men
that gOes with what has come to us because aotnebody before us coal Industry is growing in . per year, and growing. He
hu warted harder. There are no utopias yet. In fact, we're southeastern Ohio and West pointed out that through the
nowberecJo.e. When UIDpla comes, we.can all sit down. But until Virginia.
cooperation
of
labor,
then I can't ~e MY time to sit and drink tea I" .
"With the annual wage for management and federal state
Marian's worry' now Is that "I won't'be young enough long the lowest paying job in the agencies, the coal mining inenOU8h to do all the thlntls I want to do... I hope I never feel coal mining industry figured to dustry Is becoming one of the .
thel'e'soothq !Qdo. When you feel that way, you die before your be in excess of $1n,ooo, we want safest industries.
time. Youseeyoungpeople Ukethat. Wemaydle of a tired heart, to be one of the first vilcational
oot not a tired mind."
centers to offer this program,"
THE wee PRIDES Itself on being ' 'with it," and adapts Its Sommer stated. "Job opoommlttees and strengths to tbe challenge at hand. Just this
mooth, the board voted to change the women's address to Ms.
FIVE HONORED
Sbe llllilel that it may stir up a tempest.
MASON - Five Mason
Marriage Licenses
· Alleut the new term won'tapply to the 125 male (associate)
County students attending
POMEROY - Frederick F. Glenville State College were
members of the wee. ''They're being e)lll06t!d to a liberal
ediiCatlon," Marian comments. Well-bown speakers with ex- Newlun, 76, Long Bottom, and named to the dean 's list for the
pertise In every field (hopefully controversial) are brought in to Betty Lou Lovett, 34, Reeds- first semester. Making a 3.2
talk at the weekly civic lunche0118 and the autumn meetings are ville; Jack Eugene Hall, 19, Rt. average or more .on 12
I, Cheshire, and M,ilry Louise semester hours were Penny S.
always opened to poHIIcal candidates.
·
.
"When they're reluctant .to come, THIS tells us something," Pro£fitt, 20, RD Portland; Burris, Mason; Mary L. ·
lhe remarks. "We want the community t,o be aw~e of this too." .Mark Stephen Moyer , 19, Chattin, Leon; Gary L. Fields,
Mlrlan, happy with the calibre of the membership_of both Newport News, Va ., and Hartford; Glynn . T. Haynes,
her constituencies, feels that "clubwork takes wotnen away from Pamela Ruth .Dodson , 17, Point Pleasant, and Gary B.
their own ~letnll . We tend to look iilward when we don't look Middleport.
Mitchell, Mason.
~round. There's so MUCH to be done."
,
While wee bas hit at mass transit problems, poverty, school
lui.ches1 ma• media and minorities, Unka haa forged ahead,
through work of Carolyn Carter and Cathryn Buford, In the fight
lll•inlt sickle cellanemta.
·
MARIAN SMILES that tbe local Unka chapter is one of the
best in the country - '!and I'm not being provincial."
IJnka hal prepared a bi..U.t on "Ita local leader" which Is
filled (alrigled.spaced) with memberships aoo honors.- If the
other groilpl wait their turn, perhaps she 'II be lhe!J' first lady too ..

TASTEE BRAND

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+++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the fUes of the DaUy Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times • . . Mary Skinner named Gallia .
County's Sesqulcentemlal Queen ..• Jack C. Davis appointed .to
board of Gallipolis Building and Loan cO. , . . Flu epidemic
forcel CldmUI adloollto close • .. Polio benefit basketball game
between Rio Grande College and Wrillbt.Patteraon AFB 4raws
!,ZOO penon1 .in Washinaton gym. Rio wins Wt 113-«i. Francis
ta1Hel51 points as Redmei! win 18th in row without a lOIS. Rio ace
..tton's top scorer with 1,072 points In 18 pmes . .. Athell8
contlnuel hex over l:!icl: Shrider's GAHS Blue Devlla, GS-53.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
RACINE - The Racine ER
squad was called Saturday at 6
a.m . . for ~ymond Hartley,

•

1

.
d
·
I~ ,,
of t he .Ben . . ~~ - /

- +++

For A Belter Job,
• Sooner-Go To
Business College

Great Shakes
The estimated 5.7 billion
tons of salt in Great Salt
Lake could supply the total
industrial and domestic re('A)~Jege
quirements of the United
States for more 1 than · 200 ' I IJ•·•.oc•••• St. ,,'" " GI'IIipolli

&amp;~at...

mamum
$500.
.'
Its $300 million ~ ·WO~ be

Lunokhod 2 goes a mile~---------.
But it seemed strange that a

Young driver is cited

GALLIPOLIS - Jeffery
Brumfield, 19, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
was cited to Municipal Court
for failura to stop within the
assured clear distance Friday
following a traffic accident at
4:40p.m . on Neighborhood Rd. ,
nine tenths of a mile south of
Rt. 141.
The state highway patrol
said Brumfield's car slid into
the rear of an auto backing out
~~ca liforni a," he replied,
of
a private driveway operated
"and Florida."
"What kind of climates do by Carol M. Kemper, '2.'1,
There
was
they have in those states to Gallipolis .
other states .''
attract physicians?" asked the moderate damage to both cars.
As a remedy, the committee regent.
A second accident occurred
prescribed three things.
"Warm," answered Lee.
at 2:45 p.m. on Rt. 588 at the
First, a dozen district health . "Good Lord," muttered a junction of Bob McCormick
ieducatlon organizations-spread new~:~~~ybe Ohio ought Rd., where an auto dtiv~n bv

,

active duty durl~ the VIetnam
era starting ln. 1961, up 10 a

Racine, who waa having dlf.
llculty breathing. He was laken
lo Veterans Memorl~ Hospital
and admitted .

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�•

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10-The S\lnday Times- Sentinel, Sundliv. Jan. 21. 1973
'

.

5Oth Wedding anniversary ce~ebrated

.

RUTLAND - The , golden·
wedding anniversary of 1\fr.
and Mrs. Dale B2chner .was
observoo on Jan. 14 with a
reception attended by more
than 80retatives and friends of
the couple.
· Numerous gifts and cards
were presented to the couple,
and cake, coffee, tea, mints
and nuts were served. On the
Saturday preceding the
celebration, Mr . and Mrs.
Bachner were guests at the
Bob Evans Farm Sausage Shop
for a luncheon in their honor.

:··

POMEROY- We'll aU agree that money is hard to come by
and even harder to keep. But the key to how well you ·live might
very well be in whether you are an alert and conscientious
consumer, says Jennifer Sheets, Meigs County extension agent.
To help consumers get the most for their money- and who
couldn't use a tiportwo-Jenniferhas set up a public mee~g at
Uie Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. social room in
Middleport for 1::1.1 p.m. on Friday,
Coming in from Ohio State to talk on the subject 'will be
Norlene Ackerman, family and consumer economics specialist.
She will discuss door-to-door selling and the new Ohio law on
cancellation rights, how to exchange, refund and complain,
direct mail selling, unrequested merchandise, and advertising
giminicks.
·

Mr. and Mrs. Dak E Nelson
POMEROY- Betty Jane Kennedy, Columbus, formerly
of Pomeroy, and Dale E. Nelson, Springfield, m. formerly of
Rutland, were united in marriage on Dec. 24 at the Indianola
Church of Christ in Columbus. The double ring ceremony was
performed by Dr. Harold W. Scott.
Given in marriage by her cousin, Ralph B. Bush, the
'ride wore a street length dress of white velvet. Her bouquet
was of pink sweetheart roses, white mums and pink baby's
breath, accented with pink velvet streamers an~ white bells.
Mrs. John A. Dickson served as matron of honor. She wore
green velvet and carried pink poinsettias and holly. John A.
Dickson was best man for the bridegroom.
The couple resides in Springfield where Mr. Nelson Is a
vocational instructor.

Roberts showed slides on
conservation and of scenic
places around and in Pomeroy.
The question discussed was,
"What Should we conserve the
most?''
Refreshments were served
by the hostesa, Helen Smith.
Other members present
MINERSVILLE - A Call to
besides those named were: Prayer and Self-Denial
Daisy Blakeslee, Eileen Buck, program was observed when
Ida Diehl, Firn Gaul, June Lee, the WSCS of the Forest Run
Ji11ma Louk!~lir'ces ~erts, United Methodist Church met
Ruth . Stesrll's:
. and Goldie at the church Tuejday evening.
Story. ,
Mrs. Alfred Yeauger had

Three-Part program

Matinee plan to be tried
winner and $5 to the second
place winner in the future.
Refreshments were served.
The Feb. 19 meeting will
feature Mrs. Jennifer Sheets,
Meigs County Extension
Agent; speaking on the topic
"Children's Nutrition and
Household Safety" .

YOlJNG ORIGINALS - - - -

The Cape Women Like ...
Faultlessly tailored, this
swinging cape con be mode
with or without top-stitching to accent the paneling I
Make the shorter length in
camel knit with black binding; the longer one, in a
favor ite color with binding
to match . . either way,
you'll enjoy wearing it. Add
pants for a leisure-time
outfit.
Consult the Fashion Coordinator included in each
Young Original for "fabric,
color and accessory suggestions.

'

''

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is in Sizes Small , Medium
or Lorge Medium ( 12- 14)
. short cape, 234 yards
54-inth; pants, 134 yards .
/Modi om
· Send $1.25 for this smart
Young Original pattern de.
signed for women who sew. 10018. Print full name, adWrite (nome of your news- dress with zip code, pattern
paper), Box 438, Midtown number and size.
Station, New York, N:Y.
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RACINE -The Firat Baptlat Forward Program. Prior to
ChUrch here wiD hold a revival this, he served as paator in
from February 4 through Ohio ·and Kanlucky. He . has
February 11 at the church with been a member of a .college
Or, Russell Jones of Urbana, staff in the capacity of dean of
as speaker;
students, Instructor In the field
Jot\es Is the director of of Philosophy and Rellgioo. Dr.
the Ohio Baptlat Convention · Jones is a native of Kenton, and
holds a B.A. degree from
Campbellsville College, Ky.,
the M.R.E. degree from Southern Seminary, Louisville and a
Ph,.D. degree from ·Ohio State
University.
ASK TOWED
Duane Wolfe will serve as
GAIJ..JPOIJS - Clayton ltAlleQ,
35,
Columbus, song leader and there will be
mlllwrlght, ~d Anna B. ' speclal music each evening.
Johnson, 47, Crown City, ap- There will also be a misery
plied for 11 marriage · license provided ln the chijrch
Friday in Gallla ·county basement. Services will begin
each evening _at 7:30p.m.
Probate Court.

Dr:

·-.-.•.•,•,•,•,-,.~.·

Xo!o}:~p~

Club ladies to make. quilt

1,_

CLEARANCE
WOMEN'S S"'OES
1 GROUP

VALUES TO 117.00
'
SPORT &amp; DRESS STYLES
1 GROUP

VAWES TO 110.00
DRESS STYLES

GROUP OF CHILDREN'S
ODD SIZES
VALUES TO 18.00·

$200

GROUP
OF LADIES
ORIG. 115.95 TO 118.95 .
NOW

By Katie Crow

Knits Shimmer
By HELEN HENNESSY
NEA Women's Editor
NEW YORK-(NEA)-Designers in Hong Kong are
now completing their fashion
·collections for the Sixth Annual Ready-to-Wear Festival
to be held in the colony this
March.
Knitwear, a big part of this
fashion extravaganza, will
take on · a fresh look this
time, featuring shimmering,
luxurious Lurex.
Lurex hit the world when
Internationally renowned designers like Yves Saint Laurent and ' other Paris and
New York fashion greats
used the fabric in everything

.
from sweater~ ~o evemng
gowns - for 11 ts cool and
soft for day wear •. elegant
and sensuous for mght hfe.
Hong Kong designers are
fashioning Lure~ in skinny,
nbbed tops! kntt cardigans
Wlth l!latchmg pants, palazzo smts for loungmg . and
forll!al gowns - all m a
kaletdoscope of colors.
One new fashion tri~k is
to use Lurex m an mterwoven pattern on the ~uff.s
and necklines of kmtted
tops. Another design has It
woven as elbow patches and
pockets.
Children's wear is also ex-

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

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MIWPORT

peeled to get a strong showing at the 1973 festival.
Over the past few years
fashion has become a very
important factor in the design of children's wear. No
longer is demand geared predominantly to monocolored
jeans or plain cotton dresses.
And it is expected that
in this year's festival appliques, embrQideries and a
pia~ of P.rints and acces·
sones will add cheerful
notes to simple basic cuts.
The enthusiasm and el
citeme·nt generated at the
ret-a-porter showings by the
~ong Kong designers Is ex·
pected to carry over into the
Ready-to-Wear Festival-the
major fashion show held m
Asia.

$895

AND

$} 095

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
Main St.

Pomeroy

Betty Ohlinger

EDGE

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A LOVE lEl'TER to our new granddaughter, Lori Ann, for
her to have,"and perhaps enjoy reading when old enough to ap)ftclate.
We were delighted when we heard the news of your arrival
and we could hardly wait unW it was time for you to arrive home
from the hospital. You are the fourth generatloo on both yilur
mother's and father's side.
You have given your parenta, grandparents and great- .
grandparents a new inaplratlooln Ufe. From your small bed you
cared not who held you, your only Interest was being taken care
of and your wants fulfilled.
·
You are a joy to behold and only wW you reaUze how great a
joy you were Ia when you some day become a parent. ·
AI wrltlilg letters I am very poor but we are far enough away
from yOU tlu!tl mig your J!!!!~l11e plnli face,
Forgive me for writing to you In public like thla but you are
the first gfandchlld and I wanted to make sure you received a
note from me.
Your mother and father are struggling along learning as
they go, none of It Is easy.
.
We hope to see you as often as paaslble and If you say the
word we will come running. I am waiting for the day that Instead
of me crying because I have to leave you, you will cry because I
have ·to leiiVe.
Love, Grandma. ·

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Job Security

'

booknhich will be given wid~
dlstrlbudon thla year among
youth cl the county:
Mrs. Harold George and
MIDDL!JPORT - Rachel Smith's
Former plant manager of Imperial
Mrs. L. W. McComas were
home is where her heart. is. ·
Electric, "Set" Smith Is an exeCutive
· leaders for the program with
Her gentle manner midst the bustle . with Presollte Co. of Canada, a position
Mrs. George reading First
of her children's activities, ,the ex- offering fine fulu("e prospects.
Corkithlans 4. Mrs. McComas
pressed unhappiness at being
The spacious. and comfortable
discussed the origin of Key 73 .
separated from her husband, Selwyn, · SmithbomeatthecornerofHookerand
pointing out that it got Its name
now employed in Canada, !he very wall · Fouith St. ln Middleport Is for sale In
from the first meeting which
decorations, affirm Mrs. Smith's . preparation for the move to Sarnla.
was held at the Sir
Frances
•
..
I
~.-.; dedication to her home and devotion to Whether the family 1eaves before the
Scott Key bridge in Arlington,
her family.
end of the school term will be_deterVa.
,
An attractive family tree in crewel, mined by the sale. In eiiber event,
Mrs. McComas stated the
a colorful collage of the letters in their Connie, the oldest, will finish her senior
purpose of Key 73 as ·a ' given names, framed coins in dates or year at Meigs High. The other children,
movement to bring back the
their birihs- these things tell a story of Jill, a junior;.Judy, a freslunan; Dan, a
old-time rellglon and to reach
an extremely close-knit family, soon to sixth grader at Bradbury, and Sarah,
every·non-Otrlsllan. She ctted
move to Sarnia, Ontario.
four, and· two-year-old Rebecca- will
statistics to show that tbret out
RACHEL SMITH
Talk of leaving Middleport brings go when the move is made.
'of four homes In neighborhoods
mixed emotions to Rachel, hut she lives
Anative of Augusta, Maine, Rachel
are non-Christian, and
by the philosophy that only the scene met her husband while .. both were time for hobbies. She loves to sew, \~
cautioned that the responand
the sounds change, people are students at Antioch College near "mostly for the babies now," and to ~
MIDDLEPORT - Sp. 4 and slbWty for reaching people for
aboilt the same everywhere.
Dayton, Ohio. He was from Chicago. "read anything and everything." Her !!:'
Mrs. H. Frank EWott are Christ cannot rest on the ·
Here
three
years,
Rachel
describes
Rachel
later graduatetl from the only collection is of old napkin rings ~
announcing the birth of their shoulders of ministers but
Middleport as a "friendly, warm and Katherine Gibbs Business College and which she diSplays in a type-setoor 's ~;
first child, a daughter, must be a church-wide effort.
welcoming town," a right place for worlied at a variety of jobs before drawer hung on the dining room wall. :~:
Catherine Amanda born . on
To conclude the program,
rearing chllilren. But while she ex- settling down to have a family. For 12
The family attends Heath United !~
Jan . 12 at the McMfee Army Mrs. George led the group in a.
presses
regret
at
leaving
her
friends
years
the
family
lived
in
Milwaukee,
Methodist
Church. Mrs. Smith is an ~!
Hospital In White Sands, N. M. Utany of prayer.
and neighbors, Rachel always returns Wis.; from there they went to Milford, .officer of the Middleport Amateur ~
The baby weighed six pounds,
Mrs. Mary Rinehart
to the thought of her eagerness to be Conn., and then to Middleport in 1969. Gardeners Club, and hospitality · ?1:
six ounces.
presided at the meeting which
With six children Rachel finds little chairman for the Bradbury PTA.
~
Mrs. Ellloti Is 1hz former she opened with a plano . with her husband.
. . . ..
..........
• .,.,.,.,.._...,,., ,.,.,•,·,·..;.;o'.-.----.
o'o"o"•:•'•:•'N&gt;''O:
....... • '• • • • - ·
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.......
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.·,w.·,··;•;"~·w~......-..._.-'f.;:;:;s;:;~_,&lt;«o&gt;'......-.•.
.•&gt;•'•'•"•"•"•=':'.•.•.wv•.-.-.-.-,•.-.-••
,,,_.,.,.,.,.,~
• •
Cathy Manley of Mlddlejiclrt. prelude. Appointed were Mrs. ~;o;&gt;;o;o;o..,...:....-:"«,'.'!•X•:•X•:•!•~•:O:•'•~•!•!•!•!•&gt;!•X«.'!•!•!•~'•'•!o'o •.:.:0:• • ,..............N
Grandparenta are Mr. and Norman Wayland and Mrs.
~- Cllfford Manley, SOuth Nan Moore to the cheer
Second St., Middleport, and committee, and Mrs. Freda
Mrs. Thelma V. E!Uott, Mitch and Mrs. Lorena Davis
Madison Ave., Point Pleasant, to the food committee.
POMEROY- Plans to make Mrs. Lenora McKnight, Mrs.
, W. Va. Mrs. Bertha Mariley,
a quilt to be. used for a fund Joan Hoffman, flowers; Mrs.
Refreshments were served
SUNDAY
and senior units of Drew
Middleport, and Mrs. Zula Fry, by Mrs. Rinehart, Mrs. McCOUNTY-WIDE class Webster Post 39, American raising project were made Flo Strickl~nd and · Mrs.
West Columbia, are great- Comas, Mrs. Elizabeth flibbs, meeting, 2 p. m. Sunday at
during a recent meeting of the Mildred Wells, cards; and Mrs.
Legion Auxiliary, 7&gt;30 p.m.
grandmothers.
and Mrs. Mae Lambert.
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness Tuesday at . post home . Sew-Rite-Sewing Club held at Shirley Baity and Mrs. Martha
the home of Mrs. Mildred Wells Hoffman, gifts.
Church; Okey Ahart, leader ; National
security
and
Mrs. Collins . and Mrs.
Pas'tor O'Dell Manley invites legislative programs with with Mrs. Martha Hoffman as
Strickland will be hostess for
the co-hostess.
the public.
guest speakers . .
Mrs. Judy Potter presided at the next meeting. A report was
SIJDES OF Egypt shown at
JUNIOR American Legion
7:30p.m. Sunday at Pomeroy Auxiliary, 7 p.IJI. Tuesday at the meeting with Mrs. Pandora given on the Christmas visit to
Collins giving the treasurer's the Elmwood Rest Home
Church of the Nazarene with . the Middleport 'hall.
report and Mrs. Evelyn where gifts and goodies were
Dr. Howard Esep narrating.
Gil!nore the secretary's report. presented to the residents.
WEDNESDAY
The Rev. Clyde W. Henderson,
AMERICAN
Legion New committees appointed Attending the meeting besides
pastor, extends invitation to
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett included Mrs. Lucy White, those named were Mrs.
public.
POMEROY -The Marion Hawk family of MinerSville obPost 128, 6:30 p.m. potluck Mrs. Nellie Boyer, Mrs. Donna Carolyn McDaniel, Mrs. Janice
MONDAY
served five birthday• since Nov. 5.
REGULAR MEETING, supper with both auxiliary and Handley, and Mrs. Betty Neutzling, Mrs. Barbara
'lbeir son, Ileluda, obeerved bls 1'1111 on Nov. 5, their daughter Meigs lzaak Walton League of legion members. Meetmgs of Wehrung, ways and means; Mullen, and Mrs. Ann
Mary's 18th on Clriltmas day, Mrs. Hawk's mother, Sylvia
Browning.
America, 7 p.m. Monday at both groups at 7:30p.m.
Badgley, Middleport, whowas82on Dec. 31; Mrs. Hawk and her
POMEROY - Middleport
farm near Chesler.
sister, Ferne Roush of Middleport, celebrated Jan. 11, and in
Lions Club, 12 noon Wednesday
POMEROY . Chamber of at the Meigs Inn.
March Mr. Hawk's birthday wiD be observed.
Dry Skin Help
Ail were observed with a family dinner e:rcept Mrs. Hawk's. Commerce Monday at noon at
OHIO VALLEY ComHeated
apartments, winter
'lbls Is an abundance of birthdays In a short period of time. Meigs Inn.
man dry, Knights Templar, winds and extreme cold all
.Jat,..,~·~'
TUESDAY
7:30 p.m. Wednesday stated tend to make skin dry and
AMERICAN LEGION conclave at the Pomeroy flakey. A llght molsturber
SPE~AKI!NGOF 'BDrrHDIAYS Mrs. Edith Hood, Minersville, Auxi.liary, Racine Post 602, Masonic Temple . Potluck can help. Buy one that's light
celelrated her 88th birthday 1aat Tuelday and Mrs. 'I'. H. Q-ow, Tuesday, 7:30p.m . at the hall. dinner for members, wives and enough to wear under makeup, but one that works all by
wiD o!Berve her 88th thla coming Tuesday.
Itself overnight to keep skin
JOINT~ETING, junior children, 6:30p.m.
Both Mrs. Hood and Mrs. ()-ow, my beloved mother-in-law,
soft and smooth.
are very active people and a lOt can be learned from each of
theln. Mrs. a-ow ·is presently battling the flu bug which ts certainly plaguing residents of lhe trl-cOunty area.
"CERTAINLY WISH the best for Mrs. Woodrow T. (Sylvia)
Zwllllng, SyraCUIC, who underwent major surgery at Veterans
Memorial Hospital Friday morning.

2

Gain Prestige, Big Income,

.

HOEFLICH

The _Hong Kong Look

consisting of prayer in unison
and the song, " Open My
Eyes," followed by a Litany of

orlumber.

Personality
•
, .zn profile
'

Qy C~LENE

...

"Future: Vision and Hope",

ACCIDENT
INVESTICATORS

MIDDLEPORT- '.'Ke.Y 731',
how the project ·originated and
whal's ¥nc dqne to carry It
Otjt, was the program ll)eme at
'lbunclay night's meeting of
Clau 12, Heath United
Methodist Church.
· Chris Miller, a COjlllty youth
representative on the Project
Key 73 coii!D11ttee; was ~t
speaker. Emphasis of the
~ project
li · .the
lnterdemonlnatlonal effort to
make e:very person In North
America aware of the savlilg
grace of Jesus Christ. Miss
Miller, daughter · of the Rev.
and Mrs. Audrey Millen,
Middleport, . displayed two

Church .revival planned

Katie's Korner

XL2
CHAIN

We Tra in Men to Work' As

Class 12 ladies
hear.youth speak

Social Calendar

HOMELITE'

REAR TRIGGER

11-~SundayTimes-Sentlnel,~,Jan.
.,
' 21, 19'13

.

Daughter hom

NEW1973

ATTEND SCHOOL
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Chesher, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert King, Allen
Hughes and Evelyn Lewis of
Evangeline Chapter, Order of
the Eastern Star, were in
Hamden Thursday for a
meeting of the 24th District and
a school of instruction.

'Makes faster work
of cuHing firewood

'

·~~-..

wsc~

APPL-Y NOW

'

~~

cun1Na

from the board.
Leg!slatlon Introduced
A round-table session was THIRD FATALITY
NEW YORK (UP!) - Legisheld following the business
SEA'JTLE, Wash. (UPI) - lation to rename the lntersecsession. Topics discussed in- The county Health Department lion&lt;&gt;! Third Ave. and !49th St.
eluded an adult program in reported Thursday that Harold in the Bronx "Roberto Clenew math, library facilities, D. Metz, 47, of Springfield, mente Plaza" was introduced
and improvements in the first Ore., has died from dlptherfa, Thursday by City Councilman
through third grade programs. the third fatality from the Bar"ry Salman
Mrs. Pat Thoma~ and Mrs. dlse~ since last summer. . · Cleinente, ~ star of the
Grant Smucker were appointed
Offlcla)s said survelllsnce . Pittsburgh Pirates, was killed
to .a library committee .
has uncovered 36 cases and in a plane crash off of PUerto
Mrs. Kathryn Windon carriers since the first death ,Rico Dec. 31 en route to help
reported that there is still was reported. A vacclnBtion earthquake victims lri Nicarariavorlog available for sale at program Is under way In the gua, Tiie intersection is located
$1 a .l!otUe. The Rev. Robert · city's Skid Row section, they in an area of birgely SpanishShook opened the meetihg wlth said.
speaking reaidenls,
~

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Laurence Bush will celebrate
their ·silver wedding anniversary on Suhday: Jan. 28
with an open house from I to 5
p.m. at their Racine home.
Mr. and Mrs. Bush were
married on Jan. 31, 1948 at the
Mount Moriah parsonage by
the Rev. P. P. Carpenter. Mr.
Bush has been employed with
Landmark in Pomeroy for the
past 23 years. The couple has
one daughter, Mrs. Connle
Bush
Tucker,
Racine.
Relatives and friends of · the
couple are invited to call
during the open house.

SAW

'

JANUARY \SIZZLER

AN
INGELS'

CLUB TO MEET
The Friendly Neighbors Club
will meet Tuesday, January 23,
at 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
devotions entitled, "A New Robert Arnold.
Beginning," followed by
prayer. Thank-you notes were
read from those receiving Hope by the leader and group.
Christmas remembrances; 23 The program closed with the
sick calls were reported by benediction by the leader, a
members during December. prayer in ur.ison and the song,
Mrs. Denver Holter gave a "Dismiss Us With Thy Blessing
special reading, "What is a Lord."
Christian? "
In attendance were Mrs.
Mrs . Russ Watson was John Scott, Mrs . Olan
program leader on the topic Genheirrier, Mrs. Harry Wyatt,
taken from the Prayer and Mrs. Alfred Yeauger, Mrs.
Sell-Denial program entitled, Vernon Nease, Mrs. Henry
"Our Life Together: A Salser, Mrs. Fred Nease, Mrs.
Pilgrimage". It was divided Edison Hollon, Mrs. Uswin
into three parts. The first part Nease, Mrs. Denver Holter,
was "The Past: History and Mrs. Edith Sisson, Rev. and
Heritage." The lives of four Mrs. Merrill Floyd, Mrs.
women in the past who con- Hanson Holter and Mrs. Russ ,
tributed greatly to our heritage Watson.
were : Sojourner Truth, who
was a slave abolitionist and
women's rights advocate, by..
Mrs. Uswin Nease ; Isabella
Thoburn, a teacher and
missionary to India, by Mrs.
John Scott; Elizabeth Blackwell, who was the first woman
doctor in the United States, by
Mrs. Olan Genheimer, and
Mary McLeod Bethune,
educator, peacemaker, and
fighoor for justice, by Mrs.
Fred Nease.
A prayer in unison followed.
The second part ol the program
was entitled "The Present Con£usion , Confession and
Commtmity." This was observed by all p!lrtaking of an
"Agape Meal." The song·,
"Break Thou the Bread of
Life" was sung before the meal
.,
FRONTTRIGGER .
and a prayer repeated in
For easier control In
Wlison.
ctose quarters and
tricky angles.
During the meal sentence
prayers were given by each
member with moments of
meditation .
The third part of the
program · was entitled the

presented to

a parent-ooacher prayer. The
secretary's report was given
by Mrs. Henry "Thomas and
Mrs. Donna Nelson, treasurer,
reported a balance of $827.59.
The atoondance award was
won by the kindergarten i.
group with the first grade
placing second. It was voted to
give $10 to the first place

Guests included Mr. · and
Mrs. RObert Weider, ·Mr. and
Mrs, JoiiD Holl, Mr. and Mrs.
E. P: Halley, Springfield; Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Weygandt,
Connie Weygandt,
Lee
Weygandt, Dean Weygandt,
Mrs. c . B. Weygandt, Toledo;
Wayne Chase, , Mrs. Wilbur
Baughman, Albany; Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Will, Mr. and
Mrs. Clair' Taylor., Paul Rice,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rice, Mr.
and Mrs. Seth NIC)lo!Bon, Mrs.
Ruth Erlewine, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Molden, Ellen Rice,
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, RuUand.

·set ]anwry 28_

SARA A. MOORE OF Pomeroy R. D. more than a half·
century a·go penned her sentlliients about the county newspaper.
The poem which she wrote those many years ago was discovered
by her namesake, Sarah Gibbs, in papers of her late mother,
Georgia Williamson, a sister of Mrs. Moore. For your enjoyment:
''THE COUNTY PAPER"
Oh, The dear old county paper, It tells us what the people said
I reod It o'er with care
And many things beside.
I notice every Item
And everything that's there.
H you want to give a present
.To a friend that's far away,
When you Uve olit ~ack
Just send him tile paper
~ely like and blue
That was printed down this way.
Nothing gives you comfort
Uke the county papers do.
Then when we die and leave It,
This thought Is wortby note
It tens us all about the town
You ne'er woald ·reeognlze us
The county and the state,
By what some fellow wrote.
For election news and aU
You never have to walt.
They wiD land 111 up in heaven
Wltb all theli- pllff and praise
It tells wbo has married
But never give us credit
It tells wbo ha• died
ID our Uving days!

Conservation is discussed

'

Mrs. Grace : Colwell, Mrs. Atkins, Miss Ruby Diehl,
John Colwell, Danvill~; Don E . . Harrisonville; Mrs. Frances
Mullen, George Meinhart, Paul Minor, Mr, and Mrs. Lawrence
Gerard, the Rev. and Mrs. r;:hapman, . Dexter; Mr. and
Robert Baumgarner, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Bur99n, Shade; Mr.
Mrs:.Jack1lacbner and Sklven, and Mrs. David Rice, South
Mrs. Carrie Kennedy, Mr. and Webster; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mrs . Robert McElhinny, Smeltzer, Mr. and Mrs.
Middleport; Mr.andMrs. C.H. Thurman Boggs, Mr. and Mrs: ·
Murray, Mr. and · Mrs. Paul Earl D. Logan~ Mrs. Jacob
Wino, Bradbury; Mrs. Dorothy Trobrldge, aalllpolls; Mr. and
Will, Mrs. Marcus Roush, Miss Mrs. Gordon Swisher ,and son,
Kathy Abbott, Mr. and Mrs. Kanauga; Mrs. Lucille Swartz,
Mason, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Lorrain Sterrett, Pomeroy.
John
·Standley and son,
.Mr. ani) Mrs. James COukl~,
Mrs. Jack Minor, Cheshire; Glouster, and Mr. lind Mrs.
Mrs. Mary Diehl, Mrs. Stella Don Sanders, Athens.

Open House is

INTERESTED IN LEARNING how to cane chairs?
~ Mrs. Sheets advises us that Clara Lochary will teach another
class in caning if there's enough interest. Just contact the Ex·
tension Office if you'd like to learn this art.

CHESTER - A Saturday
matinee will he presented at
the Chester Elementary
School, according to plans
mad• at Monday night's
mee;.ng of the Chester P.T.A.
It was voted to explore this
new avenue of enoortainment
for the children, and to offer it
on a boial basis several weeks.
U response is adequate, the
noatinee will he continued. The
IIU!tinee will feature movies
especially made for children to
rwtapproximately an hour and
a half.
A small admission charge
will be made and popcorn,
candy, and soft drinks will be
for sale. Date of the first show
will be announced later.
During the meeting conducted by Mrs. Virginia
Klrkharl, president, it was
decided to purchase a merrygo-round and new handles for
the teeter-totters . Herbert
Matheny was requested to
check lnto what additonal
recreational equipment is
needed by the older children, It
waS'reported that two loads of
gravel have been ordered for
the playground. .
The Eastern Local School
Board has approved the purchase of paint for three
classrooms it was reported,
and the rooms to be painted ln
the near future will he the third
grade, the eighth grade, and
the kindergarten.
Kindergarten parents were
reminded to return the letter
which they received from the
school board. If the letter has
.been lost then the parents are
asked to request another one

.

'

·mer ·By Charlene Hoeflich ,

MIDDLEPORT - The Alpha
Epsilon Chapter of Alpha Delta
Kappa met at the library at
Meigs fligh School Tuesday,
Jan, 16th, with Helen Smith,
president presiding.
Lucille Swackhamer,
·Chaplain, read an article,
"Whose Land Is It?", quoting
scripture to substantiate our
BtbUcal responsibility of man
to the earth.
After the business. session,
Jean Alkire and Nonga

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before a p pI yin g regular women with full figures.
foundation !
Pantsuit Dress Up
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A simple pantsuit with
Healthy Ha1r
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Electric rollers are not hot dressed up for evenings by
-enough to damage hair, es- wearing the jacket open and
peclally healthy hair. But If adding a silvery top underthey're used too fr~quently, neath .
the hair will become dry and
brittle. Tbo.e with already
dimaged hair ah:ould use the
Shampoo Plus
conditioner lotion that ·goes
A mild lhampoo formuwlth these setlen.
. lated lor dry hair wlll heir.
Improve dry, dull ha!r. Fo •
low the shlmpoo with a
Make-up Removal
cream rinse or conditioner.
' All make-up should be
carefully removed at night in
order to a v o l d skin probGlitter Bag
lema. A clean~ing cream reA drawstring glitter bag is
moves most make-up and the perfect evening acskin freshener and a thin cessory whether you're.sparmolsturuer helpa keep the kling in metallic fabrics or
skin In good condition.
wearing basic black.

Effective
Jan, 18-31

•

Reynolds, Armstrong, Ol~s and BuHett

Sale!

Gibson Guitars
Gibson Amplifiers

ICf'W'ACT

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'

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111 Second St.

Former BRW Hdwe t Room

. POMEROY, OHIO
'

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i .

.OOMPI.ETE

B

MIDDLEPORT,

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mmuntty·

10-The S\lnday Times- Sentinel, Sundliv. Jan. 21. 1973
'

.

5Oth Wedding anniversary ce~ebrated

.

RUTLAND - The , golden·
wedding anniversary of 1\fr.
and Mrs. Dale B2chner .was
observoo on Jan. 14 with a
reception attended by more
than 80retatives and friends of
the couple.
· Numerous gifts and cards
were presented to the couple,
and cake, coffee, tea, mints
and nuts were served. On the
Saturday preceding the
celebration, Mr . and Mrs.
Bachner were guests at the
Bob Evans Farm Sausage Shop
for a luncheon in their honor.

:··

POMEROY- We'll aU agree that money is hard to come by
and even harder to keep. But the key to how well you ·live might
very well be in whether you are an alert and conscientious
consumer, says Jennifer Sheets, Meigs County extension agent.
To help consumers get the most for their money- and who
couldn't use a tiportwo-Jenniferhas set up a public mee~g at
Uie Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. social room in
Middleport for 1::1.1 p.m. on Friday,
Coming in from Ohio State to talk on the subject 'will be
Norlene Ackerman, family and consumer economics specialist.
She will discuss door-to-door selling and the new Ohio law on
cancellation rights, how to exchange, refund and complain,
direct mail selling, unrequested merchandise, and advertising
giminicks.
·

Mr. and Mrs. Dak E Nelson
POMEROY- Betty Jane Kennedy, Columbus, formerly
of Pomeroy, and Dale E. Nelson, Springfield, m. formerly of
Rutland, were united in marriage on Dec. 24 at the Indianola
Church of Christ in Columbus. The double ring ceremony was
performed by Dr. Harold W. Scott.
Given in marriage by her cousin, Ralph B. Bush, the
'ride wore a street length dress of white velvet. Her bouquet
was of pink sweetheart roses, white mums and pink baby's
breath, accented with pink velvet streamers an~ white bells.
Mrs. John A. Dickson served as matron of honor. She wore
green velvet and carried pink poinsettias and holly. John A.
Dickson was best man for the bridegroom.
The couple resides in Springfield where Mr. Nelson Is a
vocational instructor.

Roberts showed slides on
conservation and of scenic
places around and in Pomeroy.
The question discussed was,
"What Should we conserve the
most?''
Refreshments were served
by the hostesa, Helen Smith.
Other members present
MINERSVILLE - A Call to
besides those named were: Prayer and Self-Denial
Daisy Blakeslee, Eileen Buck, program was observed when
Ida Diehl, Firn Gaul, June Lee, the WSCS of the Forest Run
Ji11ma Louk!~lir'ces ~erts, United Methodist Church met
Ruth . Stesrll's:
. and Goldie at the church Tuejday evening.
Story. ,
Mrs. Alfred Yeauger had

Three-Part program

Matinee plan to be tried
winner and $5 to the second
place winner in the future.
Refreshments were served.
The Feb. 19 meeting will
feature Mrs. Jennifer Sheets,
Meigs County Extension
Agent; speaking on the topic
"Children's Nutrition and
Household Safety" .

YOlJNG ORIGINALS - - - -

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Faultlessly tailored, this
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with or without top-stitching to accent the paneling I
Make the shorter length in
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to match . . either way,
you'll enjoy wearing it. Add
pants for a leisure-time
outfit.
Consult the Fashion Coordinator included in each
Young Original for "fabric,
color and accessory suggestions.

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54-inth; pants, 134 yards .
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RACINE -The Firat Baptlat Forward Program. Prior to
ChUrch here wiD hold a revival this, he served as paator in
from February 4 through Ohio ·and Kanlucky. He . has
February 11 at the church with been a member of a .college
Or, Russell Jones of Urbana, staff in the capacity of dean of
as speaker;
students, Instructor In the field
Jot\es Is the director of of Philosophy and Rellgioo. Dr.
the Ohio Baptlat Convention · Jones is a native of Kenton, and
holds a B.A. degree from
Campbellsville College, Ky.,
the M.R.E. degree from Southern Seminary, Louisville and a
Ph,.D. degree from ·Ohio State
University.
ASK TOWED
Duane Wolfe will serve as
GAIJ..JPOIJS - Clayton ltAlleQ,
35,
Columbus, song leader and there will be
mlllwrlght, ~d Anna B. ' speclal music each evening.
Johnson, 47, Crown City, ap- There will also be a misery
plied for 11 marriage · license provided ln the chijrch
Friday in Gallla ·county basement. Services will begin
each evening _at 7:30p.m.
Probate Court.

Dr:

·-.-.•.•,•,•,•,-,.~.·

Xo!o}:~p~

Club ladies to make. quilt

1,_

CLEARANCE
WOMEN'S S"'OES
1 GROUP

VALUES TO 117.00
'
SPORT &amp; DRESS STYLES
1 GROUP

VAWES TO 110.00
DRESS STYLES

GROUP OF CHILDREN'S
ODD SIZES
VALUES TO 18.00·

$200

GROUP
OF LADIES
ORIG. 115.95 TO 118.95 .
NOW

By Katie Crow

Knits Shimmer
By HELEN HENNESSY
NEA Women's Editor
NEW YORK-(NEA)-Designers in Hong Kong are
now completing their fashion
·collections for the Sixth Annual Ready-to-Wear Festival
to be held in the colony this
March.
Knitwear, a big part of this
fashion extravaganza, will
take on · a fresh look this
time, featuring shimmering,
luxurious Lurex.
Lurex hit the world when
Internationally renowned designers like Yves Saint Laurent and ' other Paris and
New York fashion greats
used the fabric in everything

.
from sweater~ ~o evemng
gowns - for 11 ts cool and
soft for day wear •. elegant
and sensuous for mght hfe.
Hong Kong designers are
fashioning Lure~ in skinny,
nbbed tops! kntt cardigans
Wlth l!latchmg pants, palazzo smts for loungmg . and
forll!al gowns - all m a
kaletdoscope of colors.
One new fashion tri~k is
to use Lurex m an mterwoven pattern on the ~uff.s
and necklines of kmtted
tops. Another design has It
woven as elbow patches and
pockets.
Children's wear is also ex-

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

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MIWPORT

peeled to get a strong showing at the 1973 festival.
Over the past few years
fashion has become a very
important factor in the design of children's wear. No
longer is demand geared predominantly to monocolored
jeans or plain cotton dresses.
And it is expected that
in this year's festival appliques, embrQideries and a
pia~ of P.rints and acces·
sones will add cheerful
notes to simple basic cuts.
The enthusiasm and el
citeme·nt generated at the
ret-a-porter showings by the
~ong Kong designers Is ex·
pected to carry over into the
Ready-to-Wear Festival-the
major fashion show held m
Asia.

$895

AND

$} 095

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
Main St.

Pomeroy

Betty Ohlinger

EDGE

wnb the purchase ·of this HOOVER!
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A LOVE lEl'TER to our new granddaughter, Lori Ann, for
her to have,"and perhaps enjoy reading when old enough to ap)ftclate.
We were delighted when we heard the news of your arrival
and we could hardly wait unW it was time for you to arrive home
from the hospital. You are the fourth generatloo on both yilur
mother's and father's side.
You have given your parenta, grandparents and great- .
grandparents a new inaplratlooln Ufe. From your small bed you
cared not who held you, your only Interest was being taken care
of and your wants fulfilled.
·
You are a joy to behold and only wW you reaUze how great a
joy you were Ia when you some day become a parent. ·
AI wrltlilg letters I am very poor but we are far enough away
from yOU tlu!tl mig your J!!!!~l11e plnli face,
Forgive me for writing to you In public like thla but you are
the first gfandchlld and I wanted to make sure you received a
note from me.
Your mother and father are struggling along learning as
they go, none of It Is easy.
.
We hope to see you as often as paaslble and If you say the
word we will come running. I am waiting for the day that Instead
of me crying because I have to leave you, you will cry because I
have ·to leiiVe.
Love, Grandma. ·

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Job Security

'

booknhich will be given wid~
dlstrlbudon thla year among
youth cl the county:
Mrs. Harold George and
MIDDL!JPORT - Rachel Smith's
Former plant manager of Imperial
Mrs. L. W. McComas were
home is where her heart. is. ·
Electric, "Set" Smith Is an exeCutive
· leaders for the program with
Her gentle manner midst the bustle . with Presollte Co. of Canada, a position
Mrs. George reading First
of her children's activities, ,the ex- offering fine fulu("e prospects.
Corkithlans 4. Mrs. McComas
pressed unhappiness at being
The spacious. and comfortable
discussed the origin of Key 73 .
separated from her husband, Selwyn, · SmithbomeatthecornerofHookerand
pointing out that it got Its name
now employed in Canada, !he very wall · Fouith St. ln Middleport Is for sale In
from the first meeting which
decorations, affirm Mrs. Smith's . preparation for the move to Sarnla.
was held at the Sir
Frances
•
..
I
~.-.; dedication to her home and devotion to Whether the family 1eaves before the
Scott Key bridge in Arlington,
her family.
end of the school term will be_deterVa.
,
An attractive family tree in crewel, mined by the sale. In eiiber event,
Mrs. McComas stated the
a colorful collage of the letters in their Connie, the oldest, will finish her senior
purpose of Key 73 as ·a ' given names, framed coins in dates or year at Meigs High. The other children,
movement to bring back the
their birihs- these things tell a story of Jill, a junior;.Judy, a freslunan; Dan, a
old-time rellglon and to reach
an extremely close-knit family, soon to sixth grader at Bradbury, and Sarah,
every·non-Otrlsllan. She ctted
move to Sarnia, Ontario.
four, and· two-year-old Rebecca- will
statistics to show that tbret out
RACHEL SMITH
Talk of leaving Middleport brings go when the move is made.
'of four homes In neighborhoods
mixed emotions to Rachel, hut she lives
Anative of Augusta, Maine, Rachel
are non-Christian, and
by the philosophy that only the scene met her husband while .. both were time for hobbies. She loves to sew, \~
cautioned that the responand
the sounds change, people are students at Antioch College near "mostly for the babies now," and to ~
MIDDLEPORT - Sp. 4 and slbWty for reaching people for
aboilt the same everywhere.
Dayton, Ohio. He was from Chicago. "read anything and everything." Her !!:'
Mrs. H. Frank EWott are Christ cannot rest on the ·
Here
three
years,
Rachel
describes
Rachel
later graduatetl from the only collection is of old napkin rings ~
announcing the birth of their shoulders of ministers but
Middleport as a "friendly, warm and Katherine Gibbs Business College and which she diSplays in a type-setoor 's ~;
first child, a daughter, must be a church-wide effort.
welcoming town," a right place for worlied at a variety of jobs before drawer hung on the dining room wall. :~:
Catherine Amanda born . on
To conclude the program,
rearing chllilren. But while she ex- settling down to have a family. For 12
The family attends Heath United !~
Jan . 12 at the McMfee Army Mrs. George led the group in a.
presses
regret
at
leaving
her
friends
years
the
family
lived
in
Milwaukee,
Methodist
Church. Mrs. Smith is an ~!
Hospital In White Sands, N. M. Utany of prayer.
and neighbors, Rachel always returns Wis.; from there they went to Milford, .officer of the Middleport Amateur ~
The baby weighed six pounds,
Mrs. Mary Rinehart
to the thought of her eagerness to be Conn., and then to Middleport in 1969. Gardeners Club, and hospitality · ?1:
six ounces.
presided at the meeting which
With six children Rachel finds little chairman for the Bradbury PTA.
~
Mrs. Ellloti Is 1hz former she opened with a plano . with her husband.
. . . ..
..........
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• •
Cathy Manley of Mlddlejiclrt. prelude. Appointed were Mrs. ~;o;&gt;;o;o;o..,...:....-:"«,'.'!•X•:•X•:•!•~•:O:•'•~•!•!•!•!•&gt;!•X«.'!•!•!•~'•'•!o'o •.:.:0:• • ,..............N
Grandparenta are Mr. and Norman Wayland and Mrs.
~- Cllfford Manley, SOuth Nan Moore to the cheer
Second St., Middleport, and committee, and Mrs. Freda
Mrs. Thelma V. E!Uott, Mitch and Mrs. Lorena Davis
Madison Ave., Point Pleasant, to the food committee.
POMEROY- Plans to make Mrs. Lenora McKnight, Mrs.
, W. Va. Mrs. Bertha Mariley,
a quilt to be. used for a fund Joan Hoffman, flowers; Mrs.
Refreshments were served
SUNDAY
and senior units of Drew
Middleport, and Mrs. Zula Fry, by Mrs. Rinehart, Mrs. McCOUNTY-WIDE class Webster Post 39, American raising project were made Flo Strickl~nd and · Mrs.
West Columbia, are great- Comas, Mrs. Elizabeth flibbs, meeting, 2 p. m. Sunday at
during a recent meeting of the Mildred Wells, cards; and Mrs.
Legion Auxiliary, 7&gt;30 p.m.
grandmothers.
and Mrs. Mae Lambert.
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness Tuesday at . post home . Sew-Rite-Sewing Club held at Shirley Baity and Mrs. Martha
the home of Mrs. Mildred Wells Hoffman, gifts.
Church; Okey Ahart, leader ; National
security
and
Mrs. Collins . and Mrs.
Pas'tor O'Dell Manley invites legislative programs with with Mrs. Martha Hoffman as
Strickland will be hostess for
the co-hostess.
the public.
guest speakers . .
Mrs. Judy Potter presided at the next meeting. A report was
SIJDES OF Egypt shown at
JUNIOR American Legion
7:30p.m. Sunday at Pomeroy Auxiliary, 7 p.IJI. Tuesday at the meeting with Mrs. Pandora given on the Christmas visit to
Collins giving the treasurer's the Elmwood Rest Home
Church of the Nazarene with . the Middleport 'hall.
report and Mrs. Evelyn where gifts and goodies were
Dr. Howard Esep narrating.
Gil!nore the secretary's report. presented to the residents.
WEDNESDAY
The Rev. Clyde W. Henderson,
AMERICAN
Legion New committees appointed Attending the meeting besides
pastor, extends invitation to
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett included Mrs. Lucy White, those named were Mrs.
public.
POMEROY -The Marion Hawk family of MinerSville obPost 128, 6:30 p.m. potluck Mrs. Nellie Boyer, Mrs. Donna Carolyn McDaniel, Mrs. Janice
MONDAY
served five birthday• since Nov. 5.
REGULAR MEETING, supper with both auxiliary and Handley, and Mrs. Betty Neutzling, Mrs. Barbara
'lbeir son, Ileluda, obeerved bls 1'1111 on Nov. 5, their daughter Meigs lzaak Walton League of legion members. Meetmgs of Wehrung, ways and means; Mullen, and Mrs. Ann
Mary's 18th on Clriltmas day, Mrs. Hawk's mother, Sylvia
Browning.
America, 7 p.m. Monday at both groups at 7:30p.m.
Badgley, Middleport, whowas82on Dec. 31; Mrs. Hawk and her
POMEROY - Middleport
farm near Chesler.
sister, Ferne Roush of Middleport, celebrated Jan. 11, and in
Lions Club, 12 noon Wednesday
POMEROY . Chamber of at the Meigs Inn.
March Mr. Hawk's birthday wiD be observed.
Dry Skin Help
Ail were observed with a family dinner e:rcept Mrs. Hawk's. Commerce Monday at noon at
OHIO VALLEY ComHeated
apartments, winter
'lbls Is an abundance of birthdays In a short period of time. Meigs Inn.
man dry, Knights Templar, winds and extreme cold all
.Jat,..,~·~'
TUESDAY
7:30 p.m. Wednesday stated tend to make skin dry and
AMERICAN LEGION conclave at the Pomeroy flakey. A llght molsturber
SPE~AKI!NGOF 'BDrrHDIAYS Mrs. Edith Hood, Minersville, Auxi.liary, Racine Post 602, Masonic Temple . Potluck can help. Buy one that's light
celelrated her 88th birthday 1aat Tuelday and Mrs. 'I'. H. Q-ow, Tuesday, 7:30p.m . at the hall. dinner for members, wives and enough to wear under makeup, but one that works all by
wiD o!Berve her 88th thla coming Tuesday.
Itself overnight to keep skin
JOINT~ETING, junior children, 6:30p.m.
Both Mrs. Hood and Mrs. ()-ow, my beloved mother-in-law,
soft and smooth.
are very active people and a lOt can be learned from each of
theln. Mrs. a-ow ·is presently battling the flu bug which ts certainly plaguing residents of lhe trl-cOunty area.
"CERTAINLY WISH the best for Mrs. Woodrow T. (Sylvia)
Zwllllng, SyraCUIC, who underwent major surgery at Veterans
Memorial Hospital Friday morning.

2

Gain Prestige, Big Income,

.

HOEFLICH

The _Hong Kong Look

consisting of prayer in unison
and the song, " Open My
Eyes," followed by a Litany of

orlumber.

Personality
•
, .zn profile
'

Qy C~LENE

...

"Future: Vision and Hope",

ACCIDENT
INVESTICATORS

MIDDLEPORT- '.'Ke.Y 731',
how the project ·originated and
whal's ¥nc dqne to carry It
Otjt, was the program ll)eme at
'lbunclay night's meeting of
Clau 12, Heath United
Methodist Church.
· Chris Miller, a COjlllty youth
representative on the Project
Key 73 coii!D11ttee; was ~t
speaker. Emphasis of the
~ project
li · .the
lnterdemonlnatlonal effort to
make e:very person In North
America aware of the savlilg
grace of Jesus Christ. Miss
Miller, daughter · of the Rev.
and Mrs. Audrey Millen,
Middleport, . displayed two

Church .revival planned

Katie's Korner

XL2
CHAIN

We Tra in Men to Work' As

Class 12 ladies
hear.youth speak

Social Calendar

HOMELITE'

REAR TRIGGER

11-~SundayTimes-Sentlnel,~,Jan.
.,
' 21, 19'13

.

Daughter hom

NEW1973

ATTEND SCHOOL
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Chesher, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert King, Allen
Hughes and Evelyn Lewis of
Evangeline Chapter, Order of
the Eastern Star, were in
Hamden Thursday for a
meeting of the 24th District and
a school of instruction.

'Makes faster work
of cuHing firewood

'

·~~-..

wsc~

APPL-Y NOW

'

~~

cun1Na

from the board.
Leg!slatlon Introduced
A round-table session was THIRD FATALITY
NEW YORK (UP!) - Legisheld following the business
SEA'JTLE, Wash. (UPI) - lation to rename the lntersecsession. Topics discussed in- The county Health Department lion&lt;&gt;! Third Ave. and !49th St.
eluded an adult program in reported Thursday that Harold in the Bronx "Roberto Clenew math, library facilities, D. Metz, 47, of Springfield, mente Plaza" was introduced
and improvements in the first Ore., has died from dlptherfa, Thursday by City Councilman
through third grade programs. the third fatality from the Bar"ry Salman
Mrs. Pat Thoma~ and Mrs. dlse~ since last summer. . · Cleinente, ~ star of the
Grant Smucker were appointed
Offlcla)s said survelllsnce . Pittsburgh Pirates, was killed
to .a library committee .
has uncovered 36 cases and in a plane crash off of PUerto
Mrs. Kathryn Windon carriers since the first death ,Rico Dec. 31 en route to help
reported that there is still was reported. A vacclnBtion earthquake victims lri Nicarariavorlog available for sale at program Is under way In the gua, Tiie intersection is located
$1 a .l!otUe. The Rev. Robert · city's Skid Row section, they in an area of birgely SpanishShook opened the meetihg wlth said.
speaking reaidenls,
~

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Laurence Bush will celebrate
their ·silver wedding anniversary on Suhday: Jan. 28
with an open house from I to 5
p.m. at their Racine home.
Mr. and Mrs. Bush were
married on Jan. 31, 1948 at the
Mount Moriah parsonage by
the Rev. P. P. Carpenter. Mr.
Bush has been employed with
Landmark in Pomeroy for the
past 23 years. The couple has
one daughter, Mrs. Connle
Bush
Tucker,
Racine.
Relatives and friends of · the
couple are invited to call
during the open house.

SAW

'

JANUARY \SIZZLER

AN
INGELS'

CLUB TO MEET
The Friendly Neighbors Club
will meet Tuesday, January 23,
at 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
devotions entitled, "A New Robert Arnold.
Beginning," followed by
prayer. Thank-you notes were
read from those receiving Hope by the leader and group.
Christmas remembrances; 23 The program closed with the
sick calls were reported by benediction by the leader, a
members during December. prayer in ur.ison and the song,
Mrs. Denver Holter gave a "Dismiss Us With Thy Blessing
special reading, "What is a Lord."
Christian? "
In attendance were Mrs.
Mrs . Russ Watson was John Scott, Mrs . Olan
program leader on the topic Genheirrier, Mrs. Harry Wyatt,
taken from the Prayer and Mrs. Alfred Yeauger, Mrs.
Sell-Denial program entitled, Vernon Nease, Mrs. Henry
"Our Life Together: A Salser, Mrs. Fred Nease, Mrs.
Pilgrimage". It was divided Edison Hollon, Mrs. Uswin
into three parts. The first part Nease, Mrs. Denver Holter,
was "The Past: History and Mrs. Edith Sisson, Rev. and
Heritage." The lives of four Mrs. Merrill Floyd, Mrs.
women in the past who con- Hanson Holter and Mrs. Russ ,
tributed greatly to our heritage Watson.
were : Sojourner Truth, who
was a slave abolitionist and
women's rights advocate, by..
Mrs. Uswin Nease ; Isabella
Thoburn, a teacher and
missionary to India, by Mrs.
John Scott; Elizabeth Blackwell, who was the first woman
doctor in the United States, by
Mrs. Olan Genheimer, and
Mary McLeod Bethune,
educator, peacemaker, and
fighoor for justice, by Mrs.
Fred Nease.
A prayer in unison followed.
The second part ol the program
was entitled "The Present Con£usion , Confession and
Commtmity." This was observed by all p!lrtaking of an
"Agape Meal." The song·,
"Break Thou the Bread of
Life" was sung before the meal
.,
FRONTTRIGGER .
and a prayer repeated in
For easier control In
Wlison.
ctose quarters and
tricky angles.
During the meal sentence
prayers were given by each
member with moments of
meditation .
The third part of the
program · was entitled the

presented to

a parent-ooacher prayer. The
secretary's report was given
by Mrs. Henry "Thomas and
Mrs. Donna Nelson, treasurer,
reported a balance of $827.59.
The atoondance award was
won by the kindergarten i.
group with the first grade
placing second. It was voted to
give $10 to the first place

Guests included Mr. · and
Mrs. RObert Weider, ·Mr. and
Mrs, JoiiD Holl, Mr. and Mrs.
E. P: Halley, Springfield; Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Weygandt,
Connie Weygandt,
Lee
Weygandt, Dean Weygandt,
Mrs. c . B. Weygandt, Toledo;
Wayne Chase, , Mrs. Wilbur
Baughman, Albany; Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Will, Mr. and
Mrs. Clair' Taylor., Paul Rice,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rice, Mr.
and Mrs. Seth NIC)lo!Bon, Mrs.
Ruth Erlewine, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Molden, Ellen Rice,
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, RuUand.

·set ]anwry 28_

SARA A. MOORE OF Pomeroy R. D. more than a half·
century a·go penned her sentlliients about the county newspaper.
The poem which she wrote those many years ago was discovered
by her namesake, Sarah Gibbs, in papers of her late mother,
Georgia Williamson, a sister of Mrs. Moore. For your enjoyment:
''THE COUNTY PAPER"
Oh, The dear old county paper, It tells us what the people said
I reod It o'er with care
And many things beside.
I notice every Item
And everything that's there.
H you want to give a present
.To a friend that's far away,
When you Uve olit ~ack
Just send him tile paper
~ely like and blue
That was printed down this way.
Nothing gives you comfort
Uke the county papers do.
Then when we die and leave It,
This thought Is wortby note
It tens us all about the town
You ne'er woald ·reeognlze us
The county and the state,
By what some fellow wrote.
For election news and aU
You never have to walt.
They wiD land 111 up in heaven
Wltb all theli- pllff and praise
It tells wbo has married
But never give us credit
It tells wbo ha• died
ID our Uving days!

Conservation is discussed

'

Mrs. Grace : Colwell, Mrs. Atkins, Miss Ruby Diehl,
John Colwell, Danvill~; Don E . . Harrisonville; Mrs. Frances
Mullen, George Meinhart, Paul Minor, Mr, and Mrs. Lawrence
Gerard, the Rev. and Mrs. r;:hapman, . Dexter; Mr. and
Robert Baumgarner, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Bur99n, Shade; Mr.
Mrs:.Jack1lacbner and Sklven, and Mrs. David Rice, South
Mrs. Carrie Kennedy, Mr. and Webster; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mrs . Robert McElhinny, Smeltzer, Mr. and Mrs.
Middleport; Mr.andMrs. C.H. Thurman Boggs, Mr. and Mrs: ·
Murray, Mr. and · Mrs. Paul Earl D. Logan~ Mrs. Jacob
Wino, Bradbury; Mrs. Dorothy Trobrldge, aalllpolls; Mr. and
Will, Mrs. Marcus Roush, Miss Mrs. Gordon Swisher ,and son,
Kathy Abbott, Mr. and Mrs. Kanauga; Mrs. Lucille Swartz,
Mason, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Lorrain Sterrett, Pomeroy.
John
·Standley and son,
.Mr. ani) Mrs. James COukl~,
Mrs. Jack Minor, Cheshire; Glouster, and Mr. lind Mrs.
Mrs. Mary Diehl, Mrs. Stella Don Sanders, Athens.

Open House is

INTERESTED IN LEARNING how to cane chairs?
~ Mrs. Sheets advises us that Clara Lochary will teach another
class in caning if there's enough interest. Just contact the Ex·
tension Office if you'd like to learn this art.

CHESTER - A Saturday
matinee will he presented at
the Chester Elementary
School, according to plans
mad• at Monday night's
mee;.ng of the Chester P.T.A.
It was voted to explore this
new avenue of enoortainment
for the children, and to offer it
on a boial basis several weeks.
U response is adequate, the
noatinee will he continued. The
IIU!tinee will feature movies
especially made for children to
rwtapproximately an hour and
a half.
A small admission charge
will be made and popcorn,
candy, and soft drinks will be
for sale. Date of the first show
will be announced later.
During the meeting conducted by Mrs. Virginia
Klrkharl, president, it was
decided to purchase a merrygo-round and new handles for
the teeter-totters . Herbert
Matheny was requested to
check lnto what additonal
recreational equipment is
needed by the older children, It
waS'reported that two loads of
gravel have been ordered for
the playground. .
The Eastern Local School
Board has approved the purchase of paint for three
classrooms it was reported,
and the rooms to be painted ln
the near future will he the third
grade, the eighth grade, and
the kindergarten.
Kindergarten parents were
reminded to return the letter
which they received from the
school board. If the letter has
.been lost then the parents are
asked to request another one

.

'

·mer ·By Charlene Hoeflich ,

MIDDLEPORT - The Alpha
Epsilon Chapter of Alpha Delta
Kappa met at the library at
Meigs fligh School Tuesday,
Jan, 16th, with Helen Smith,
president presiding.
Lucille Swackhamer,
·Chaplain, read an article,
"Whose Land Is It?", quoting
scripture to substantiate our
BtbUcal responsibility of man
to the earth.
After the business. session,
Jean Alkire and Nonga

0

HI-POWER PORTABLE

\

Instruments

COMPLETE WITH

TEllSCOt'ING WANO
• • TOOlS

,.

%

Complexion Concealed
For Full Figures
To conceal a ruddy com- Shlrtdreuea with tfl:awplexion, use a greenish-col- string walslllnes and !Jiouson
oted. u n de r-make-up-toner tops· are a good style for
before a p pI yin g regular women with full figures.
foundation !
Pantsuit Dress Up
.
A simple pantsuit with
Healthy Ha1r
·short waist jacket can be .
Electric rollers are not hot dressed up for evenings by
-enough to damage hair, es- wearing the jacket open and
peclally healthy hair. But If adding a silvery top underthey're used too fr~quently, neath .
the hair will become dry and
brittle. Tbo.e with already
dimaged hair ah:ould use the
Shampoo Plus
conditioner lotion that ·goes
A mild lhampoo formuwlth these setlen.
. lated lor dry hair wlll heir.
Improve dry, dull ha!r. Fo •
low the shlmpoo with a
Make-up Removal
cream rinse or conditioner.
' All make-up should be
carefully removed at night in
order to a v o l d skin probGlitter Bag
lema. A clean~ing cream reA drawstring glitter bag is
moves most make-up and the perfect evening acskin freshener and a thin cessory whether you're.sparmolsturuer helpa keep the kling in metallic fabrics or
skin In good condition.
wearing basic black.

Effective
Jan, 18-31

•

Reynolds, Armstrong, Ol~s and BuHett

Sale!

Gibson Guitars
Gibson Amplifiers

ICf'W'ACT

.$2988

'

· BiU &amp;. Le.e's Music Center
111 Second St.

Former BRW Hdwe t Room

. POMEROY, OHIO
'

'

LlaHTWEIOHT

·

992-3680

i .

.OOMPI.ETE

B

MIDDLEPORT,

-

. '

~ .
I·

,.

'

HI

..

II

�•

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•

Demonstration giv~n
~

i

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MIDDLEPOR( - How to
stage ''four star" parties· was
the topic of a demonstration by
the home serviee representative of the Columbus Gas eo.
of Ohio Thursdlly nlgbt at a
meeting of the Middleport
.Child Conservation League.
Miss Betty Newton used
slides and also gave a cooking
demonstration -~ party foods,
P9intlng out · themes, appropriate
fo9ds,
and
preparation tips. Members

'C' J J

and

MARVIN MOSS is clamping freshly glued cutting
boards.
·Christmas Vacation by the
Occupational \l'ork Experience
LOIS HARMON PRESENTS the llrst llbare olllock to
(OWE) Laboratory students of
Judy Sopher as Mike WoodaU looks on. Miss Sopher Is from
Gallia
Academy under the
Meigs High School.
direction of OWE Coordinator
Ray Goodman.
The OWE student-workers
mass produce wood products
for sale on a scale that closely
simulates an actual company.
Although the company has
been functioning less than a
month already it is operating in
the black.
The first project • product,
cutting boards, was produced
very successfully, and, at the
same time, the sale of stock in
the company was well-received
BY MARGARET GOODMAN common interest in the PAW by the community. Three
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia PAW Manufacturing Com· hundred shares of stock were
Academy and Meigs High pany.
grabbed up at $1 per share.
School, arch-competitors in the
The
company
was
Members of tl)e OWE class cif
sports arenas, have found a established one week prior to Mdgs High School, taught by

Meigs students
· share stock in
o·wE company

IN HOSPIT~ . '
DARWIN - Mary J(athryn
Bricldes, 19, a sophomore at
Ohio State University,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Brlcldes, Darwin, was
rushed to University Hospital
Wednesday morning with a
kidney obstruction. She will
undergo surgery Monday
morning.

James Conkle read "Vitamin E
- the Better Treatment for
Angina". Other articles on
health were "Sheil Fish, Dirty
and Dangerous" by Mrs. W. A.
Morgan; "Diabetics: Save
Your Feet" by Mrs. George
Skinner; and "Our Polluted
Waterways", by Mrs. William
Radford.
The contest by Mrs. Scott
Folmer was won by Mrs.
Clifford Leifheit and Mrs .
William Folmer.
Thank-you notes were read
by Mrs. William. Gr.ueser ·from '
I

· -

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I

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VISIT ENDED
POMEROY - R. L. Gotthardt returned to Columbus
Thursday after · spending
several days in Meigs County
hun ling and as the guest of his
mother-in-law, Mrs. W. A.
Morgan.

lA A J

SCr.NUU

/e

POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator's • &amp;hedule for the
week of January 22 • 26 in
Meigs County:
Monday - Harrisonv!lie
Ele., 9. 10:15;.
Tuesday- Bradbury Ele., 910:15; Rutland· Ele., 10:45 •
II :30; Rutland Ele., 12-2; Cash
&amp; Carry, 2:30 • 3:20; Silver
Run ,'3:30 · 3:45; Gravel Hili, 44:15; s&amp;W, 4:30 • 5; Skating
Rink, 5:30-5:45; Chester, S.
6:30; Tuppers Plains, 6:45 •
7:30.
Wednellday .:.. Langsville,
7:45 • 8 p.m.
Thursday - Salem Center
Ele., 9:30. noon.
Friday - Southern School, 9-

.,,

sampled the -foOds prepared by
Miss Newton.
. During the meeting plans
were made for the olis'ervanee
of husbalid's night and it was
decided that huSband.'! wW be
guests of their wives for -~
Ohio Universit'y basketball
· game. A white elephant sale
was planned.. for the, !lfatch
meeting.
·

· VISITING CtiRTAILED
PT. PLE,N!A;NT - Due to
the impact tllat influenza ~
having In the jll'ea, officials at
Pleasant Valley Hospi~ have
requested a curtailment in
visiting prlvileges. One
member of each family will be
permitted brief visits, in
particular, to seriously HI
. patients.

Goodman 's wife, Margaret,
•
showed their interest and
support by purchasing the first present, four projects are worker
and
company
shares of stock. Every member being manufactured. These representative, believes that
of the class purchases at least. include napkin holders, solid the
fireplace
bellows,
one share; others as many as walnut coffee tables, fireplace scheduled for completion In
Clearance! ·
fiv"e.
bellows and a "secret in· mid-February, will he one of
A delegation from the Meigs vention" that will soon be the more Outstanding projects
class was given a guided tour announced to the public.
of the year. ·
of the OWE Lab by officers of
Ali inquiries and orders
Charles Marcum, a studentthe company. The Mejgs
should be directed to Ray
students watched as the first
Goodman at Gallla Academy.
project was assembled and
The number to call is 446-,'1763.
prepared for the consumers.
Goodman · and the students
Lois Harmon, company
encourage all interested
treasurer, noted that orders
parties to visit the OWE lab.
11 :50.
POMEROY, OHIO
exceeded sales 2 to I. She
predicted that handsome
....
dividends are anticipated
upon completion of a few more
FLU SPREADING
projects.
ATLANTA
(UP!) - In·
The company plans to
RACINE
Parent
.
teacher
fluenza
deaths
remain on the
produce at least 20 projects conferences to he held on Jan.
upswing in the United States, ·
during the school year. At 29 12 30
• ' to 3' 15 p.m., were theNationalCenterforDisease
announced at the Monday night · Control (CDC) said Friday,
meeting of the Racine P.T.A. while extensive flu outbreaks
It was noted that on that day
students will be dismissed at continue throu~hout the world.
at the CDC said the
12 ' 30 p.m. It was noted that in Officials
number of deaths attributed to
March the cultural arts
flu and pneumonia was 'J!J7
several
who
received · Goeglein to present the
program
will
be
held
with
above
normal this week, and
Christmas remembrances program and Mrs. William
Wolfe as chairman. The most occurred among the
from the club. Mrs. William Folmer to give the contest. The Duane
theme this year is ''Responsive
Radford and Mrs. Welby hostess served a salad course. Deliaht". The nominating elderly and the chronically ill,
•
Whaley. were appointed to the Attending besides those named committee
will be named at the Last week influenza deaths
were 84 above normal for this
sick conunittee for the next were Mrs. Arlee Abbott, Mrs . March meeting also.
three months .
Opha Offutt, Mrs . Harold
A meeting of the Meigs time of year·
The Lord's Prayer in unison Blackston, Mrs . Lewis County Council of Parents and
and the pledge to the flag Grueser.
Teachers was announced for
opened the meeting conducted
Feb. 8 at the Syracuse Veterans Memorial Hospllal
by Mrs. Scott Folmer,
Elementary Sc-hool. Plans
DISCHARGES - Cindy
president. Mrs. Whaley gave
were made for a soup supper to Perry, Freda Buchanan ,
devotions using scripture from
be held at the school, Feb. 16, Margaret ·Johnson, Eulah
Proverbs 15. She read "The
Q1oose
with serving to begin at 5 p.m. Francis, Emma Jean Walker,
Twisted ~ewording of the 23rd
W C
Mrs. Karen Werry is general Jack Frederick, Pamela
Psalm.'
chairman.
· ''
'
Smith, Unda .Ne!ilin1 : . ~
I\
Mrs. Leifh~it will host ihe
Carl Hysell was present at
February meeting with Mrs.
.'
the meeting and showed. the
MARIETTA - On October film, "The Invisible Child",
ON DEAN.'S LIST
30, 1972, President Nixon about the Boys Industrial
MASON
- Howard Johnson
I
'
signed into law the Social School at Lancaster . It
of
Mason
has
been
named
to
Security Amendments of 1972. stressed that delinquents need
the dean's list of West Virginia
There are many changes in the care , love , comfort in· lnstitute·llf 'l'echnology for the
M41ra .... - fiRIIIIIr 'M J
volvement
and
concern,
and
M. . . .Oil, oHIO .
system - social security cash
fall semester.
benefits; social security taxes; that encouragement needs to
Medicare; Medicaid; and be given towards cultivating a
Welfare programs for the work interest.
POMEROY - Tentative aged, blind, and disabled.
Mrs. Edna Price w!ll have
programs and service projects Among these chan·ges are charge of the Founders Day
for 1973 were reviewed by provisions affecting about 3'h program in February. The
members of the American million widows. .
fourth grade won the at.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Lutheran Church Women of St.
But contrary to what many tehdimc~ award, and the· fifth
Paul's Church at a recent people seem to think, not all of grade served refreshmenis.
meeting.
these widows who are drawing
An invitation was extended social security benefits will
to St. John's Lutheran Church receive 100 pet. of their
Women to attend services at husband 's social security WORST IS OVER
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
the Meigs County Infirmary on benefits .
( UPI) - Although \IIIIOg is still
Feb. II at 2:30 p.m. A
Widows were notified of the
devotional service will be amount they will receive in a a severe problem in southern
followed by sharing of light letter sent during the week of California, "the worst is over,"
refreshments and valentine January 15. The amounts have says a state air pollution ofremembrances with residents been automatically refigured ficial.
John Kinosian, acting chief
of the home.
· 1
and wiD be reflected in the of technical services for th~
A mother-daughter banquet February 3 check .
California Air Resources
was tentatively set for May 8 in
If a grolij) or organization Board, said air In the Los
the fellowship hall. Topics for would like to have a speaker
speakers to be engaged for explain these and other new Angeles area is the cleanest it
April and October will center provisions of the Social has been since the mld-1960s.
''There wiU still be plant
on community awareness and Security Act, call the Marietta
AN EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FAMOUS
®mage
and health effects, but
family living. Bible studies are office at 1_.282-9711 (toll
It is not as bad now as a few
slated for other meetings, free ).
NAME BRANDS
years ago," said Kinosian, who
along with craft demonALL SALES CASH
. "
said air qusllty also had Imstrations to be held in
.
HOME WST
STORE HOURS
proved in the San Francisco
ALL SALES FINAL
preparation for the Christmas
NEW HAVEN - Twelve Bay area.
9:15tos:oo
baiaar which was set for Nov. volunteer firemen of New
Mon. thru Fri •.
But he admitted there were
NO APPROVALS
30 and Dec. I. Haven answered a call at 3 stm problems, particularly in
9:15To8:00
Mrs . William Holt read a.m. Saturday morning to the
NO LAY·A·WAYS
SATURDAY
the Inland cities of southern
poetry entitled "Faith" and Sarah Dawn trailer park on
California.
her devotions were taken from Fifth Street in New Haven
·- ----'----·
Romans. Mrs. "Arthur Lund led where the mobile home ocin the Bible study using the cupied by ihe Lee Staats family
New Testament parable of the of four caught fire apparently
vine and the branches. Agroup from the furnace.
discussion evolved comparing
Luckily for the family the
The New
· members ' lives in the parable furnace made a loud noise and
to those of the disciples, shook the trailer wh'en it
relafing to things that lay caught fire, awakening them in
ahead and the relationship with time to escape 'unharmed. ·
Christ on the night of the last Damage was estimated at
supper.
$2,poo.
/J

Conferences
scheduled on
January 29th

Junior
Drauas
V2 price

lOLA'S

NEW RAGE•••

Platform

'Clogs ·

Health topics reviewed by ladies of club
POMEROY - Several health
topics, including the use of
tranquilizers and Vitamin E,
were explored in a program
presented by Mrs. William
Folmer at Th.ursday afternoon's meeting of the Rock
Springs Better Health Club
held at L~e home of Mrs. Fred
Goeglein.
"How Much Tranquilizer
Can You Take" was the topic of
Mrs. Amos Leonard, and Mrs.

'

.cc.ulJ S

LOIS HARMON
Mike WoodaU apply the final fini8h.
Each student had many jobs he was responsible for.

•

Mfss

Aaa
Shoes

Many Styles

1

and Colors
To
From

Social Security .
/a hanges
are explained

1

M\ )'!

•

•

....

SHOE 101

'73 Projects
are reviewed

1

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Philco-Ford

IDIA .

JANUARY Q.EARANCE SALE

.IGifP
PHILCOMATIC'MmCOLOR TV
100% Solid State Modular Chassis,
"Hands-Off" Tuning

..

,~ ~~

DHtS$4: ,

EARLY AMERICAN

All you do is :
Select the channel
See the light•
"Hands-Off' '-the picture's
right. automatically ·
"If you are out of range, Iurn the line
tu ning knob until you see the ligtit;

" hand s-oll "-'the plctwe's rig ht.
Thai's all you do for a bea utifu l crisp
lifelike color piclure. No bunon to pus h

- it's locked -in automatically. With !h e
Phllcomatic Master Conlrol Su lton in
" Automatic", you just selecl any one

of 12 VHF or 70 UHF channels. When
you see the Ph ilcomatic Color Control
light come " On ", just take your hand
olf-lhe picture 's rig ht automa!lca/ly,

FR-EE ONE EXTRA
YEAR WARRANTY
FOR A FULL 2- YEAR PARTS
&amp; LABOR PROTECTION

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
0.

#
~.,.~

CONTINUES

.t

~~.~-

-tJ,-6

~~.~-

SAVE
·20%
to
50%
~~ '
. l.t:t&amp;.r

MEIGS
INN

POMEROY, OHIO .
PH. 992-3629

DUANE WOLFE'S
NEW RECORD,
"Broken Hearted"
and
"My Dream Girl"

~he

SATuRDAY NIGHT
10 P.M. • 2 A.M.

(Buffet Luncheon ll: 00 tQ 1; 30, Monday thrv $at-urday J '

. 37 GUEsT ROOMS '- .NEW, MODERN, BY DAY OR WEEK
PARTY AND BANQUET ROOMS ... BY RESERVAnOtt

'
"&lt;Jiio state government has
been weak, ·d!aoriented 8lld in. active for a vecy' long time,"
Gilligan said In a recent Inter.
vie\'1'. "J.ocal governments
ledions.for the current blennl· liave had problems thrUJI upoll
wn, ilnd appears ,to be low on · them because o( dei'ellcUon on ·
its projeCtions of \he Income the part of the state.
. tax yield, despite the gover!llo Problem AIIUelpated
nor's contention that the
"l dcin't think we'U nm into
figures have been ''right on the the New York or PeiUIB)'lvanla
button."
or Dlinols .or Micbigan situaThe state Finance Depart- tions because we have eight
ment now reveals there wlll be major urban commU!Iitie,s In
$180 million left iii the till next Ohio," the governor continued.
June 3() to speod right away, "No one clty dominates, like
ancl anlither $155 mUlion sur- New :York, or 'PbUadelphia or
·plus June 30! 1974.
Plttsl)urg, or Qricago, or De-

Ohio
c~tching
in
-business
of
spending
'
.

'

.

.

.

.

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go~ ependlng. '
· blllloll &amp;pending in&lt;:re10e twq taxes between now and i~75.
A Jaaard.among the majcr years ago. Last week, he pro.. , Mouey To Be Plowed

By LEE LEONARD
·UPI - · - Reptrter
COLUM~.U8 ( UPJ )'l'llrouah ' careless error or
dellberate. design, the ad-

Industrial states for many
yean,Ohlolsnowchl!slngNew
York,Pimsylvanla,Callfomia
and lUinoll in speadlllg outlay.
Ohio politics
It Ia cateblng up not only in
services, but in concomitant
of Gov. JCII!n J. waste.
Gllllg8ii has placed Ohio on an
'!be gaapa.were loud ·ei.ougb
Irreversible course of big . when Gilligan proposed a $2.1

m1m.tr~

posed a ,1.6 bliUon increase in
i ·"bold-the-line"- budget
tequ!rlng'DO new tues.
'lbeiiiODey had to come from
somewhere, 111d
frOOI
federal funds, f/00 million is
derived from growth in the
pei'aonal lnconie and sales

ulde

Voice along Br'Way ·.
· · -BY JACK. O'BRIAN
· LIZA AND LORNAAN'L' OF A SISTER Acr
NEW YORK (KFS) - That nice pussycat
Joan Q'awfard's sltli clttntpping the toms at M:
lbe Pepsi.generatloner'a getting the romantic
bulineu fnln businessman AI Verten ;.. Uza
•' ·MlnnelllliStened to Miami Beach's Eden Roc
(: owner MoiTls t.nsbaugb rave about her great
•' showbiz lllstincts. Wwld Mori1a therefore book
t: another youngater if Llu assured him she 11 be
~ a star? she's booked now, Morris explained;
.: wbo Is she: · ~y sister I.Dma Luft,".and that's
:- bow I.Dma got the prize Chriatmaa • th1'ough •
;; New - Year Eden Roe booking ... Champ Bobby
Fischer's manager Sian Rlider said at the
f. Verona spot his chessty charge picks up •$50,000
., in Dutch guilders, his first '73 score for a
weekend tournament Iii Amsterdam.
Jwinita. Polt!er whimpers to \he court she
. can't pay·her Income tax until S1J1r ex-husband
Sidney pay! up the alimony and child support
for their four (11 to ?AI)) kids ... Another mag
folded: the hard-cover ''Audience."
McCall's mag quolel Jolumy Carson's exwife Joanne sighing how much his bride Joanna
looks Uke her. Says be met ber for the first time
at a party, and ''He went up to her thinking she
WBI me." Nope. Carson was with couturiere
Mollie Parnls in "21" several tables away from
oun; Carson . took one lool\ and vlrtUaUy
twanged. Moille then cornered the gal (turned
out to be Joanna) and set up the date with
Carson ... Carson'• ex Is doing the radio-TV
intervlew-Wcult In a continuing wallow ol
bathos, bmlstlng Carson was her once-and-only;
gets s!cken!ng-eweet about It; don't listen if you
have diabetes.
. Amarvelous gentleman died while we were
on vacation, Milt Kaplan, president of our King
Features, a fine man, good boes, a quiet
l!l:ecutlve rt taste, diplomacy and deep Jn.
telllgence. Had a heart attack ·after 62athletlc,
busy years with no sign of a cardiac problem.
Our prayers and gylilpa~ to his widow, Doris,
a colleague of ours on the late Journal-

~mo
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·

American. And to all of our compatriots wbo
loved the guy.
Old ~~ executive and real estate
mlJiionalre Ben Marden's in love again in his
8lzzting 70s : she's Arlene Altman, pretty blonde
decoraior. Tile press photos of Henry Klas-Kiss
sitting dtn~urely at the Redaklns-Packers game
with·Mrs. George ADen should've kept _his wild·
looking blonde sitting on his other side ... 'l!blllle
of us who can' ldck the Stage DeU habit burped '
with relief when the looming deU-workerl strike
waa awrted by a three-year walters-kitchen

DUBLIN (UP!) - A bombladen car exploded In a
downtown Du.blin shopping
street Saturday, cawdng deatll
llld injuey and lending thouSIItds ol aboppera lleelng in

terror.

"

PoUce said one iDan waa
ldlled and 12 perao111 were
hospitalized with Injuries, one
~ them a man who lost a leg.
Others were hit by flying glus.
Two men were arrested

Most realistic romance of the year-end:
model-exec Cancly Jones wed aircaster Long
John Nebel Dec. 30. John proposed 011 the air
and Cancly said yes, "In a few weeks." ''None of
that," interrupted the eager Long John, wbo
confessed, ''] can use the tax deduction."
Jimmy Weston promises us he'll book Into
his stesk-41nd-jazzerie the great Bobby Hackef;t
... When! ... Way clown upom the Swami River:
Joe Levine's filming his "Gandhi" flick along
G&amp;nges ... Fine EngUsh actor Jack Hawkins lost
his volce-boz, beat the cancer rap'but can't use
that marvelous diction again, so he's shifted to
producing Jllma; ~ter O'Toole's "The Ruling
Clus" is his latest. Now Jack's deep into his
auto!Bog, "Anything for a Quiet Time," a subtle
self..aimed smsll joke, much like Jack Himself,
always the marvelously understated star.
Latest top-charts song delighting Teen Pan
Alley also is easy on adult ears: "Claire" ...
Frank Sinatra seems ·calmer at 3:30a.m. than
earlier: at 3:30 in the Stage Dell be ordered five
sandwiches ''to go." Whlle waiting he sign~
autograplis for 15 minutes 011 Stage postcarda.
No direct descendants of the Shubert lrothers is
living (son Jolm Shubert's widow Ecky Is the
closest aside from nephew Larry Lawrence but
the battle to control the Shubert foundation's
$100,000,000 irks on and on. It does seem
however that the long-moribund Slllbert finn
has generated more progressive energy and
imagination In the last year than in the prevlOUB·
15.

shortly afterwards and were
being held for questioning In
connection with the blast, a
poUce apollllllllBII aald.
Tile car, containing an
estimated 50 pounds of geUg.
nile, carried Nortbeni Ireland
reglttratlon and had been
hijacked in .Belfast earlier
. Saturday. Ita owner had been .
held hO!Itage for several boura,
the spokesman said.
'"!be bombing was obviously

Helpful meetings set up
. for overweight people
Weight Watchers will conduct a series of free open
meetlnga the week of Monday,
· Jan. 29 through Saturday, Feb.
: 3, where ladles, teens and men
' with a weight problem are
· invited to visit. Although
' registration will be open in
· classes "'tiurlng Open House
· Week (persons with at least 10
· pounds to lose niay join a
· "Weight Wa~rs" class at
: any time), visitors to Open
. House are under no obligation
to Join. ' .
This special Open House Is
c!es!gned to permit proapectlve
--menibers to gain Insight into
· the highly successful "Weight
Watchers" group approach to
p;rmanent weight control.

It mlghl appear to be poor
planning tiiat .the Mw l;lx
structure, enacted late in 1971
with Republican help In the
legislature, furnished so much
money that it can be plowed
into. · e1tra government
programs.
After a!!, the Gilligan administration was $115 mlllion off on
its' estimates of sales tax ~1-

Area locations free to
visitors that week are,
Pomeroy, St. Paul Latheran
Church, 231 E. 2nd Sir, Monday, Jan. 29, 8 p.m. and
Tuesday, Jan. 30, 10 a.m.; and
Gallipolis, •Grace United
Methodist Church, 2nd at
Cedar, Wednesday, Jan. 31, 10
a.m. and St. Louis CathoDe
Church, 81 State St., Tuesday,
Jan. 30, 8 p.m.

Improve cbecb e~~lbe ~
"We can look at our system. He cded lot IecW•
problema before they reach the tiCII wbldl 0011 praetlcally no .
dlmensionr Of those In the big rnmey, and be polillvely llow·
cities," he Ald. "We can lltlll ed when calling attentlan to the
do It in Ohio,' and we can !lo it ''no new tax" tine.
with our own resources.
It w!U be cHflleodl, even lot
"We have •in the jlast .let Republfcan leglllaton, to
IOirie o1 th~· probleins iet stiave the ·&amp;CMII'tiGI''a bud8et
away from us. And It bas cost when It reqUirei no new tax
us, into the bllllOnaof dollara. A 81Jl1Ctmenbl.
.
classiCal eDIIIlpie is the polBy aRJI'Ovlnl the hlgb-pmf·
lutklll of Lake Erie, which we . 4nll tax package ill 19'11, .the
are beginning to clean up."
.'lawmakers clolecl the door on
Aa GIWgan· addressed the Ohio's traditional thrift in Illite
legislature last' week, he · government, and the voters ·
pointed with prtde to advances sealed It with ratification o1 the
1n educaull!l and promised to tax in November.
trolt.

r

ANEW 1973 MODEL

SUNRAY .RANGE

•23900 ·sunray Range
Will Be Given· Away January 31 at 4:00 P.M.
All we want you to do is come in and see the new JD.:te.
Register free, no purchase .is ~~ssary. You do not
need to he present to win. Come in and visit the
country store, you are weloome.
If you buy a new Sunray range, and win one, you
can have the same value in any other merchandise of your choice. ·
Ask about our SPECIAL BONUS plan when you
buy your new Sunray gas or electric range
during this special sale.

Gas and
..

Electric
Models

,, 1 '

the work of extremists from .
the north but It's too early to
say If they · were Protestant
ellremists or the Irish
Reppbllcan Army (lRA)," he

said.
Tile Belfaat-based Protestant ·
n:UitaDt Ulater Defense Aa·
soclatlon, which baa claimed
responslbl!Uty for some past
violence in the lrlah Republic,
denied any role In the blast.
Tbe car exploded in Slickville .
place, outside Egan's bar-a
gathering place of IRA Provlslonals -behind a department
store on a street of shops and
puba, the same place where the
explosion of another bomJ&gt;.
laden car Dec. 1 k1Ued two
buadrlvers.
Tile man who died was one of
many who ran from a.belting
shop. He was hurled back
through tile shop window,
witnesses said.
· "It's a miracle more people
weren't ldlled. It would bllve
been worse if a man coming out
of the betting shop hadn't seen
smoke coming fnln the car
and yelled a warning," the
spokesman said. "Everyone
atarted running." .

* 30" Electrics with
Living Features
* 30" Free Standing Electric

•

Modem

..•

Ranges

* Riviera Eye Level

Elecbic

Ranges ·
*36" Fabulous Feature Gas
Ranges
.
30" Fashion Accef# Gas Ranges
Riviera Gas Eye .Levels
.
..
30". Continuous . Clean Gas
I

*
*
*

CECIL-·ROSEBERRY,'S

Prices Start At

. --s-1-59

•

SERVICE·

WITH
·TRADE

\

JAGGER BARRED

TOKYO ('(JPI) - . The

. Japanese government refused
an entry visa to leader Mick
Jieaer Frl&amp;IY, forcing cancelbitlon of a tour of Japan by
the Rolliilg Stone~~ rock group.
'!'he Mlniatry o1 Justice denied
· Jagser a vlea under a
Japanese law barring aliens
who bllve been convicted of
narcotics offailael In foreign
cliunlrles.
·
"Ret.... Caaile~;, .
YORK (UP!)- M~ .

NEW

toua~ 811)'· Lawrence

Tierney.
. wbo wu holplflliled 'l'lulraday
wltb a linlft wound, waa
· reported '•resting com·
fortably" at ·. St. Clare's
· Hotpttll. Tierney ••~
allepdly atabbed by Robert
~ oulllde • blr;

Formerly .Good's
.. Pennzoil

SPECIAL CLOSEOUT!

ANNOUNCING
.
.

3 Sunray Double oven.

GRAND OPENING

ELECTRIC RANGES
WERE
S399.95

We Are Featuring:

·Tqpe Ups : Brake Service · Oil Change
• Compiete One Stop Car Care Service
- Before You Buy Tires or Batteries ·
compare Our Prices.

ROSEBERRY'S PENNZOIL
·'SERVICE STATION.·

Delivery &amp; Installation Free!

•260'
.
.

·Two gold, 1 green. One with Constant
Clean oven.·

•

'

.'
'

1.,

'
''

Rutland Furniture's Special Sunray ·Range Pro~otion!

pact.

-iiiaae -mlo~ killer·· ·

•

Amber Lounge Open• At 11100 A.M.
. LUNCHES 11 A.M. TO 2 P.M., DINNERS 5 ~C? 10 P.M.

With Music By The Great B.~nd Bitnd
Ar.e Now On Sale At
Bill &amp; Lee's In Pomeroy
Rliclne Dept. Store in Racine
Sadie's Market h'l

13 -TbeSunday_~-Sentinel,Sunday; Jan. 21,1973

..

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�•

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•

Demonstration giv~n
~

i

•

MIDDLEPOR( - How to
stage ''four star" parties· was
the topic of a demonstration by
the home serviee representative of the Columbus Gas eo.
of Ohio Thursdlly nlgbt at a
meeting of the Middleport
.Child Conservation League.
Miss Betty Newton used
slides and also gave a cooking
demonstration -~ party foods,
P9intlng out · themes, appropriate
fo9ds,
and
preparation tips. Members

'C' J J

and

MARVIN MOSS is clamping freshly glued cutting
boards.
·Christmas Vacation by the
Occupational \l'ork Experience
LOIS HARMON PRESENTS the llrst llbare olllock to
(OWE) Laboratory students of
Judy Sopher as Mike WoodaU looks on. Miss Sopher Is from
Gallia
Academy under the
Meigs High School.
direction of OWE Coordinator
Ray Goodman.
The OWE student-workers
mass produce wood products
for sale on a scale that closely
simulates an actual company.
Although the company has
been functioning less than a
month already it is operating in
the black.
The first project • product,
cutting boards, was produced
very successfully, and, at the
same time, the sale of stock in
the company was well-received
BY MARGARET GOODMAN common interest in the PAW by the community. Three
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia PAW Manufacturing Com· hundred shares of stock were
Academy and Meigs High pany.
grabbed up at $1 per share.
School, arch-competitors in the
The
company
was
Members of tl)e OWE class cif
sports arenas, have found a established one week prior to Mdgs High School, taught by

Meigs students
· share stock in
o·wE company

IN HOSPIT~ . '
DARWIN - Mary J(athryn
Bricldes, 19, a sophomore at
Ohio State University,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Brlcldes, Darwin, was
rushed to University Hospital
Wednesday morning with a
kidney obstruction. She will
undergo surgery Monday
morning.

James Conkle read "Vitamin E
- the Better Treatment for
Angina". Other articles on
health were "Sheil Fish, Dirty
and Dangerous" by Mrs. W. A.
Morgan; "Diabetics: Save
Your Feet" by Mrs. George
Skinner; and "Our Polluted
Waterways", by Mrs. William
Radford.
The contest by Mrs. Scott
Folmer was won by Mrs.
Clifford Leifheit and Mrs .
William Folmer.
Thank-you notes were read
by Mrs. William. Gr.ueser ·from '
I

· -

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I

'

VISIT ENDED
POMEROY - R. L. Gotthardt returned to Columbus
Thursday after · spending
several days in Meigs County
hun ling and as the guest of his
mother-in-law, Mrs. W. A.
Morgan.

lA A J

SCr.NUU

/e

POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator's • &amp;hedule for the
week of January 22 • 26 in
Meigs County:
Monday - Harrisonv!lie
Ele., 9. 10:15;.
Tuesday- Bradbury Ele., 910:15; Rutland· Ele., 10:45 •
II :30; Rutland Ele., 12-2; Cash
&amp; Carry, 2:30 • 3:20; Silver
Run ,'3:30 · 3:45; Gravel Hili, 44:15; s&amp;W, 4:30 • 5; Skating
Rink, 5:30-5:45; Chester, S.
6:30; Tuppers Plains, 6:45 •
7:30.
Wednellday .:.. Langsville,
7:45 • 8 p.m.
Thursday - Salem Center
Ele., 9:30. noon.
Friday - Southern School, 9-

.,,

sampled the -foOds prepared by
Miss Newton.
. During the meeting plans
were made for the olis'ervanee
of husbalid's night and it was
decided that huSband.'! wW be
guests of their wives for -~
Ohio Universit'y basketball
· game. A white elephant sale
was planned.. for the, !lfatch
meeting.
·

· VISITING CtiRTAILED
PT. PLE,N!A;NT - Due to
the impact tllat influenza ~
having In the jll'ea, officials at
Pleasant Valley Hospi~ have
requested a curtailment in
visiting prlvileges. One
member of each family will be
permitted brief visits, in
particular, to seriously HI
. patients.

Goodman 's wife, Margaret,
•
showed their interest and
support by purchasing the first present, four projects are worker
and
company
shares of stock. Every member being manufactured. These representative, believes that
of the class purchases at least. include napkin holders, solid the
fireplace
bellows,
one share; others as many as walnut coffee tables, fireplace scheduled for completion In
Clearance! ·
fiv"e.
bellows and a "secret in· mid-February, will he one of
A delegation from the Meigs vention" that will soon be the more Outstanding projects
class was given a guided tour announced to the public.
of the year. ·
of the OWE Lab by officers of
Ali inquiries and orders
Charles Marcum, a studentthe company. The Mejgs
should be directed to Ray
students watched as the first
Goodman at Gallla Academy.
project was assembled and
The number to call is 446-,'1763.
prepared for the consumers.
Goodman · and the students
Lois Harmon, company
encourage all interested
treasurer, noted that orders
parties to visit the OWE lab.
11 :50.
POMEROY, OHIO
exceeded sales 2 to I. She
predicted that handsome
....
dividends are anticipated
upon completion of a few more
FLU SPREADING
projects.
ATLANTA
(UP!) - In·
The company plans to
RACINE
Parent
.
teacher
fluenza
deaths
remain on the
produce at least 20 projects conferences to he held on Jan.
upswing in the United States, ·
during the school year. At 29 12 30
• ' to 3' 15 p.m., were theNationalCenterforDisease
announced at the Monday night · Control (CDC) said Friday,
meeting of the Racine P.T.A. while extensive flu outbreaks
It was noted that on that day
students will be dismissed at continue throu~hout the world.
at the CDC said the
12 ' 30 p.m. It was noted that in Officials
number of deaths attributed to
March the cultural arts
flu and pneumonia was 'J!J7
several
who
received · Goeglein to present the
program
will
be
held
with
above
normal this week, and
Christmas remembrances program and Mrs. William
Wolfe as chairman. The most occurred among the
from the club. Mrs. William Folmer to give the contest. The Duane
theme this year is ''Responsive
Radford and Mrs. Welby hostess served a salad course. Deliaht". The nominating elderly and the chronically ill,
•
Whaley. were appointed to the Attending besides those named committee
will be named at the Last week influenza deaths
were 84 above normal for this
sick conunittee for the next were Mrs. Arlee Abbott, Mrs . March meeting also.
three months .
Opha Offutt, Mrs . Harold
A meeting of the Meigs time of year·
The Lord's Prayer in unison Blackston, Mrs . Lewis County Council of Parents and
and the pledge to the flag Grueser.
Teachers was announced for
opened the meeting conducted
Feb. 8 at the Syracuse Veterans Memorial Hospllal
by Mrs. Scott Folmer,
Elementary Sc-hool. Plans
DISCHARGES - Cindy
president. Mrs. Whaley gave
were made for a soup supper to Perry, Freda Buchanan ,
devotions using scripture from
be held at the school, Feb. 16, Margaret ·Johnson, Eulah
Proverbs 15. She read "The
Q1oose
with serving to begin at 5 p.m. Francis, Emma Jean Walker,
Twisted ~ewording of the 23rd
W C
Mrs. Karen Werry is general Jack Frederick, Pamela
Psalm.'
chairman.
· ''
'
Smith, Unda .Ne!ilin1 : . ~
I\
Mrs. Leifh~it will host ihe
Carl Hysell was present at
February meeting with Mrs.
.'
the meeting and showed. the
MARIETTA - On October film, "The Invisible Child",
ON DEAN.'S LIST
30, 1972, President Nixon about the Boys Industrial
MASON
- Howard Johnson
I
'
signed into law the Social School at Lancaster . It
of
Mason
has
been
named
to
Security Amendments of 1972. stressed that delinquents need
the dean's list of West Virginia
There are many changes in the care , love , comfort in· lnstitute·llf 'l'echnology for the
M41ra .... - fiRIIIIIr 'M J
volvement
and
concern,
and
M. . . .Oil, oHIO .
system - social security cash
fall semester.
benefits; social security taxes; that encouragement needs to
Medicare; Medicaid; and be given towards cultivating a
Welfare programs for the work interest.
POMEROY - Tentative aged, blind, and disabled.
Mrs. Edna Price w!ll have
programs and service projects Among these chan·ges are charge of the Founders Day
for 1973 were reviewed by provisions affecting about 3'h program in February. The
members of the American million widows. .
fourth grade won the at.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Lutheran Church Women of St.
But contrary to what many tehdimc~ award, and the· fifth
Paul's Church at a recent people seem to think, not all of grade served refreshmenis.
meeting.
these widows who are drawing
An invitation was extended social security benefits will
to St. John's Lutheran Church receive 100 pet. of their
Women to attend services at husband 's social security WORST IS OVER
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
the Meigs County Infirmary on benefits .
( UPI) - Although \IIIIOg is still
Feb. II at 2:30 p.m. A
Widows were notified of the
devotional service will be amount they will receive in a a severe problem in southern
followed by sharing of light letter sent during the week of California, "the worst is over,"
refreshments and valentine January 15. The amounts have says a state air pollution ofremembrances with residents been automatically refigured ficial.
John Kinosian, acting chief
of the home.
· 1
and wiD be reflected in the of technical services for th~
A mother-daughter banquet February 3 check .
California Air Resources
was tentatively set for May 8 in
If a grolij) or organization Board, said air In the Los
the fellowship hall. Topics for would like to have a speaker
speakers to be engaged for explain these and other new Angeles area is the cleanest it
April and October will center provisions of the Social has been since the mld-1960s.
''There wiU still be plant
on community awareness and Security Act, call the Marietta
AN EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FAMOUS
®mage
and health effects, but
family living. Bible studies are office at 1_.282-9711 (toll
It is not as bad now as a few
slated for other meetings, free ).
NAME BRANDS
years ago," said Kinosian, who
along with craft demonALL SALES CASH
. "
said air qusllty also had Imstrations to be held in
.
HOME WST
STORE HOURS
proved in the San Francisco
ALL SALES FINAL
preparation for the Christmas
NEW HAVEN - Twelve Bay area.
9:15tos:oo
baiaar which was set for Nov. volunteer firemen of New
Mon. thru Fri •.
But he admitted there were
NO APPROVALS
30 and Dec. I. Haven answered a call at 3 stm problems, particularly in
9:15To8:00
Mrs . William Holt read a.m. Saturday morning to the
NO LAY·A·WAYS
SATURDAY
the Inland cities of southern
poetry entitled "Faith" and Sarah Dawn trailer park on
California.
her devotions were taken from Fifth Street in New Haven
·- ----'----·
Romans. Mrs. "Arthur Lund led where the mobile home ocin the Bible study using the cupied by ihe Lee Staats family
New Testament parable of the of four caught fire apparently
vine and the branches. Agroup from the furnace.
discussion evolved comparing
Luckily for the family the
The New
· members ' lives in the parable furnace made a loud noise and
to those of the disciples, shook the trailer wh'en it
relafing to things that lay caught fire, awakening them in
ahead and the relationship with time to escape 'unharmed. ·
Christ on the night of the last Damage was estimated at
supper.
$2,poo.
/J

Conferences
scheduled on
January 29th

Junior
Drauas
V2 price

lOLA'S

NEW RAGE•••

Platform

'Clogs ·

Health topics reviewed by ladies of club
POMEROY - Several health
topics, including the use of
tranquilizers and Vitamin E,
were explored in a program
presented by Mrs. William
Folmer at Th.ursday afternoon's meeting of the Rock
Springs Better Health Club
held at L~e home of Mrs. Fred
Goeglein.
"How Much Tranquilizer
Can You Take" was the topic of
Mrs. Amos Leonard, and Mrs.

'

.cc.ulJ S

LOIS HARMON
Mike WoodaU apply the final fini8h.
Each student had many jobs he was responsible for.

•

Mfss

Aaa
Shoes

Many Styles

1

and Colors
To
From

Social Security .
/a hanges
are explained

1

M\ )'!

•

•

....

SHOE 101

'73 Projects
are reviewed

1

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Philco-Ford

IDIA .

JANUARY Q.EARANCE SALE

.IGifP
PHILCOMATIC'MmCOLOR TV
100% Solid State Modular Chassis,
"Hands-Off" Tuning

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All you do is :
Select the channel
See the light•
"Hands-Off' '-the picture's
right. automatically ·
"If you are out of range, Iurn the line
tu ning knob until you see the ligtit;

" hand s-oll "-'the plctwe's rig ht.
Thai's all you do for a bea utifu l crisp
lifelike color piclure. No bunon to pus h

- it's locked -in automatically. With !h e
Phllcomatic Master Conlrol Su lton in
" Automatic", you just selecl any one

of 12 VHF or 70 UHF channels. When
you see the Ph ilcomatic Color Control
light come " On ", just take your hand
olf-lhe picture 's rig ht automa!lca/ly,

FR-EE ONE EXTRA
YEAR WARRANTY
FOR A FULL 2- YEAR PARTS
&amp; LABOR PROTECTION

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
0.

#
~.,.~

CONTINUES

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SAVE
·20%
to
50%
~~ '
. l.t:t&amp;.r

MEIGS
INN

POMEROY, OHIO .
PH. 992-3629

DUANE WOLFE'S
NEW RECORD,
"Broken Hearted"
and
"My Dream Girl"

~he

SATuRDAY NIGHT
10 P.M. • 2 A.M.

(Buffet Luncheon ll: 00 tQ 1; 30, Monday thrv $at-urday J '

. 37 GUEsT ROOMS '- .NEW, MODERN, BY DAY OR WEEK
PARTY AND BANQUET ROOMS ... BY RESERVAnOtt

'
"&lt;Jiio state government has
been weak, ·d!aoriented 8lld in. active for a vecy' long time,"
Gilligan said In a recent Inter.
vie\'1'. "J.ocal governments
ledions.for the current blennl· liave had problems thrUJI upoll
wn, ilnd appears ,to be low on · them because o( dei'ellcUon on ·
its projeCtions of \he Income the part of the state.
. tax yield, despite the gover!llo Problem AIIUelpated
nor's contention that the
"l dcin't think we'U nm into
figures have been ''right on the the New York or PeiUIB)'lvanla
button."
or Dlinols .or Micbigan situaThe state Finance Depart- tions because we have eight
ment now reveals there wlll be major urban commU!Iitie,s In
$180 million left iii the till next Ohio," the governor continued.
June 3() to speod right away, "No one clty dominates, like
ancl anlither $155 mUlion sur- New :York, or 'PbUadelphia or
·plus June 30! 1974.
Plttsl)urg, or Qricago, or De-

Ohio
c~tching
in
-business
of
spending
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go~ ependlng. '
· blllloll &amp;pending in&lt;:re10e twq taxes between now and i~75.
A Jaaard.among the majcr years ago. Last week, he pro.. , Mouey To Be Plowed

By LEE LEONARD
·UPI - · - Reptrter
COLUM~.U8 ( UPJ )'l'llrouah ' careless error or
dellberate. design, the ad-

Industrial states for many
yean,Ohlolsnowchl!slngNew
York,Pimsylvanla,Callfomia
and lUinoll in speadlllg outlay.
Ohio politics
It Ia cateblng up not only in
services, but in concomitant
of Gov. JCII!n J. waste.
Gllllg8ii has placed Ohio on an
'!be gaapa.were loud ·ei.ougb
Irreversible course of big . when Gilligan proposed a $2.1

m1m.tr~

posed a ,1.6 bliUon increase in
i ·"bold-the-line"- budget
tequ!rlng'DO new tues.
'lbeiiiODey had to come from
somewhere, 111d
frOOI
federal funds, f/00 million is
derived from growth in the
pei'aonal lnconie and sales

ulde

Voice along Br'Way ·.
· · -BY JACK. O'BRIAN
· LIZA AND LORNAAN'L' OF A SISTER Acr
NEW YORK (KFS) - That nice pussycat
Joan Q'awfard's sltli clttntpping the toms at M:
lbe Pepsi.generatloner'a getting the romantic
bulineu fnln businessman AI Verten ;.. Uza
•' ·MlnnelllliStened to Miami Beach's Eden Roc
(: owner MoiTls t.nsbaugb rave about her great
•' showbiz lllstincts. Wwld Mori1a therefore book
t: another youngater if Llu assured him she 11 be
~ a star? she's booked now, Morris explained;
.: wbo Is she: · ~y sister I.Dma Luft,".and that's
:- bow I.Dma got the prize Chriatmaa • th1'ough •
;; New - Year Eden Roe booking ... Champ Bobby
Fischer's manager Sian Rlider said at the
f. Verona spot his chessty charge picks up •$50,000
., in Dutch guilders, his first '73 score for a
weekend tournament Iii Amsterdam.
Jwinita. Polt!er whimpers to \he court she
. can't pay·her Income tax until S1J1r ex-husband
Sidney pay! up the alimony and child support
for their four (11 to ?AI)) kids ... Another mag
folded: the hard-cover ''Audience."
McCall's mag quolel Jolumy Carson's exwife Joanne sighing how much his bride Joanna
looks Uke her. Says be met ber for the first time
at a party, and ''He went up to her thinking she
WBI me." Nope. Carson was with couturiere
Mollie Parnls in "21" several tables away from
oun; Carson . took one lool\ and vlrtUaUy
twanged. Moille then cornered the gal (turned
out to be Joanna) and set up the date with
Carson ... Carson'• ex Is doing the radio-TV
intervlew-Wcult In a continuing wallow ol
bathos, bmlstlng Carson was her once-and-only;
gets s!cken!ng-eweet about It; don't listen if you
have diabetes.
. Amarvelous gentleman died while we were
on vacation, Milt Kaplan, president of our King
Features, a fine man, good boes, a quiet
l!l:ecutlve rt taste, diplomacy and deep Jn.
telllgence. Had a heart attack ·after 62athletlc,
busy years with no sign of a cardiac problem.
Our prayers and gylilpa~ to his widow, Doris,
a colleague of ours on the late Journal-

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American. And to all of our compatriots wbo
loved the guy.
Old ~~ executive and real estate
mlJiionalre Ben Marden's in love again in his
8lzzting 70s : she's Arlene Altman, pretty blonde
decoraior. Tile press photos of Henry Klas-Kiss
sitting dtn~urely at the Redaklns-Packers game
with·Mrs. George ADen should've kept _his wild·
looking blonde sitting on his other side ... 'l!blllle
of us who can' ldck the Stage DeU habit burped '
with relief when the looming deU-workerl strike
waa awrted by a three-year walters-kitchen

DUBLIN (UP!) - A bombladen car exploded In a
downtown Du.blin shopping
street Saturday, cawdng deatll
llld injuey and lending thouSIItds ol aboppera lleelng in

terror.

"

PoUce said one iDan waa
ldlled and 12 perao111 were
hospitalized with Injuries, one
~ them a man who lost a leg.
Others were hit by flying glus.
Two men were arrested

Most realistic romance of the year-end:
model-exec Cancly Jones wed aircaster Long
John Nebel Dec. 30. John proposed 011 the air
and Cancly said yes, "In a few weeks." ''None of
that," interrupted the eager Long John, wbo
confessed, ''] can use the tax deduction."
Jimmy Weston promises us he'll book Into
his stesk-41nd-jazzerie the great Bobby Hackef;t
... When! ... Way clown upom the Swami River:
Joe Levine's filming his "Gandhi" flick along
G&amp;nges ... Fine EngUsh actor Jack Hawkins lost
his volce-boz, beat the cancer rap'but can't use
that marvelous diction again, so he's shifted to
producing Jllma; ~ter O'Toole's "The Ruling
Clus" is his latest. Now Jack's deep into his
auto!Bog, "Anything for a Quiet Time," a subtle
self..aimed smsll joke, much like Jack Himself,
always the marvelously understated star.
Latest top-charts song delighting Teen Pan
Alley also is easy on adult ears: "Claire" ...
Frank Sinatra seems ·calmer at 3:30a.m. than
earlier: at 3:30 in the Stage Dell be ordered five
sandwiches ''to go." Whlle waiting he sign~
autograplis for 15 minutes 011 Stage postcarda.
No direct descendants of the Shubert lrothers is
living (son Jolm Shubert's widow Ecky Is the
closest aside from nephew Larry Lawrence but
the battle to control the Shubert foundation's
$100,000,000 irks on and on. It does seem
however that the long-moribund Slllbert finn
has generated more progressive energy and
imagination In the last year than in the prevlOUB·
15.

shortly afterwards and were
being held for questioning In
connection with the blast, a
poUce apollllllllBII aald.
Tile car, containing an
estimated 50 pounds of geUg.
nile, carried Nortbeni Ireland
reglttratlon and had been
hijacked in .Belfast earlier
. Saturday. Ita owner had been .
held hO!Itage for several boura,
the spokesman said.
'"!be bombing was obviously

Helpful meetings set up
. for overweight people
Weight Watchers will conduct a series of free open
meetlnga the week of Monday,
· Jan. 29 through Saturday, Feb.
: 3, where ladles, teens and men
' with a weight problem are
· invited to visit. Although
' registration will be open in
· classes "'tiurlng Open House
· Week (persons with at least 10
· pounds to lose niay join a
· "Weight Wa~rs" class at
: any time), visitors to Open
. House are under no obligation
to Join. ' .
This special Open House Is
c!es!gned to permit proapectlve
--menibers to gain Insight into
· the highly successful "Weight
Watchers" group approach to
p;rmanent weight control.

It mlghl appear to be poor
planning tiiat .the Mw l;lx
structure, enacted late in 1971
with Republican help In the
legislature, furnished so much
money that it can be plowed
into. · e1tra government
programs.
After a!!, the Gilligan administration was $115 mlllion off on
its' estimates of sales tax ~1-

Area locations free to
visitors that week are,
Pomeroy, St. Paul Latheran
Church, 231 E. 2nd Sir, Monday, Jan. 29, 8 p.m. and
Tuesday, Jan. 30, 10 a.m.; and
Gallipolis, •Grace United
Methodist Church, 2nd at
Cedar, Wednesday, Jan. 31, 10
a.m. and St. Louis CathoDe
Church, 81 State St., Tuesday,
Jan. 30, 8 p.m.

Improve cbecb e~~lbe ~
"We can look at our system. He cded lot IecW•
problema before they reach the tiCII wbldl 0011 praetlcally no .
dlmensionr Of those In the big rnmey, and be polillvely llow·
cities," he Ald. "We can lltlll ed when calling attentlan to the
do It in Ohio,' and we can !lo it ''no new tax" tine.
with our own resources.
It w!U be cHflleodl, even lot
"We have •in the jlast .let Republfcan leglllaton, to
IOirie o1 th~· probleins iet stiave the ·&amp;CMII'tiGI''a bud8et
away from us. And It bas cost when It reqUirei no new tax
us, into the bllllOnaof dollara. A 81Jl1Ctmenbl.
.
classiCal eDIIIlpie is the polBy aRJI'Ovlnl the hlgb-pmf·
lutklll of Lake Erie, which we . 4nll tax package ill 19'11, .the
are beginning to clean up."
.'lawmakers clolecl the door on
Aa GIWgan· addressed the Ohio's traditional thrift in Illite
legislature last' week, he · government, and the voters ·
pointed with prtde to advances sealed It with ratification o1 the
1n educaull!l and promised to tax in November.
trolt.

r

ANEW 1973 MODEL

SUNRAY .RANGE

•23900 ·sunray Range
Will Be Given· Away January 31 at 4:00 P.M.
All we want you to do is come in and see the new JD.:te.
Register free, no purchase .is ~~ssary. You do not
need to he present to win. Come in and visit the
country store, you are weloome.
If you buy a new Sunray range, and win one, you
can have the same value in any other merchandise of your choice. ·
Ask about our SPECIAL BONUS plan when you
buy your new Sunray gas or electric range
during this special sale.

Gas and
..

Electric
Models

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the work of extremists from .
the north but It's too early to
say If they · were Protestant
ellremists or the Irish
Reppbllcan Army (lRA)," he

said.
Tile Belfaat-based Protestant ·
n:UitaDt Ulater Defense Aa·
soclatlon, which baa claimed
responslbl!Uty for some past
violence in the lrlah Republic,
denied any role In the blast.
Tbe car exploded in Slickville .
place, outside Egan's bar-a
gathering place of IRA Provlslonals -behind a department
store on a street of shops and
puba, the same place where the
explosion of another bomJ&gt;.
laden car Dec. 1 k1Ued two
buadrlvers.
Tile man who died was one of
many who ran from a.belting
shop. He was hurled back
through tile shop window,
witnesses said.
· "It's a miracle more people
weren't ldlled. It would bllve
been worse if a man coming out
of the betting shop hadn't seen
smoke coming fnln the car
and yelled a warning," the
spokesman said. "Everyone
atarted running." .

* 30" Electrics with
Living Features
* 30" Free Standing Electric

•

Modem

..•

Ranges

* Riviera Eye Level

Elecbic

Ranges ·
*36" Fabulous Feature Gas
Ranges
.
30" Fashion Accef# Gas Ranges
Riviera Gas Eye .Levels
.
..
30". Continuous . Clean Gas
I

*
*
*

CECIL-·ROSEBERRY,'S

Prices Start At

. --s-1-59

•

SERVICE·

WITH
·TRADE

\

JAGGER BARRED

TOKYO ('(JPI) - . The

. Japanese government refused
an entry visa to leader Mick
Jieaer Frl&amp;IY, forcing cancelbitlon of a tour of Japan by
the Rolliilg Stone~~ rock group.
'!'he Mlniatry o1 Justice denied
· Jagser a vlea under a
Japanese law barring aliens
who bllve been convicted of
narcotics offailael In foreign
cliunlrles.
·
"Ret.... Caaile~;, .
YORK (UP!)- M~ .

NEW

toua~ 811)'· Lawrence

Tierney.
. wbo wu holplflliled 'l'lulraday
wltb a linlft wound, waa
· reported '•resting com·
fortably" at ·. St. Clare's
· Hotpttll. Tierney ••~
allepdly atabbed by Robert
~ oulllde • blr;

Formerly .Good's
.. Pennzoil

SPECIAL CLOSEOUT!

ANNOUNCING
.
.

3 Sunray Double oven.

GRAND OPENING

ELECTRIC RANGES
WERE
S399.95

We Are Featuring:

·Tqpe Ups : Brake Service · Oil Change
• Compiete One Stop Car Care Service
- Before You Buy Tires or Batteries ·
compare Our Prices.

ROSEBERRY'S PENNZOIL
·'SERVICE STATION.·

Delivery &amp; Installation Free!

•260'
.
.

·Two gold, 1 green. One with Constant
Clean oven.·

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Rutland Furniture's Special Sunray ·Range Pro~otion!

pact.

-iiiaae -mlo~ killer·· ·

•

Amber Lounge Open• At 11100 A.M.
. LUNCHES 11 A.M. TO 2 P.M., DINNERS 5 ~C? 10 P.M.

With Music By The Great B.~nd Bitnd
Ar.e Now On Sale At
Bill &amp; Lee's In Pomeroy
Rliclne Dept. Store in Racine
Sadie's Market h'l

13 -TbeSunday_~-Sentinel,Sunday; Jan. 21,1973

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�14- The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 21, 1973

" A th~ght (or the day : "The responsibility of the great
President Harry Trwnan said, slates is t.o ~rve · ~~. not
. .
, ·--- • domil)llte the worlcj." .P$
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Foti:ridation elects
Sheets . ,as chairman

I

. LEFTTORIGHT .,- R.C.Johnson-PlantEngineer;'· L. R.Fofd, Jr., Plant~ger ; S, Y.
Scruggs, Operating Idea author; !'1. E. Thomas, Operating Idel author; R. H. .Blowers, .lr.; ·
·. Assistant Plant Manager : I. o:!lliwk, Vice President, Operations; R. D, Briggs,M.Intenance
Supervisor. Operating idea authors G. 1). Logan and E.G. Ash were unable to attend.
·
. S. Y. SCRUGGS, a!left, is receiving a $300 check from OVEC Vice President-Operations I.
0. Hawk for having his work improvement idea judged best in the OVEC-IKEC System in 1972.

''

OVEC men are honore·d
9 Fined by court
POMEROY - Nine defendants wera fined and five
forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Alfred D. Ramsey,
Jr., ,SOuth Webster, $183 and
costs, $83 suspended, overload;
Gerald Taylor, Jackson, $5 and
cosls, defective lights ; Gilbert
Sellers, Letart, Ohio, Rt. 2, $10
and costs, failure to display
registration; John P. Hensler,
Athens, $15 and costs,
speeding; Archie C. Rose,
Long Bottom, Rt. I, and Harry
L. Parker, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $10
INGEU&gt; PROMOTED
POMEROY - Earl F.
Ingels, Jr., Branch Manager
of lbe Pomeroy olflce, has
been appointed Assistant
' 'Ice President and Assistant
to the President of the
Athens County Savings and
Loan. He wlll remain branch
manager with a vareity ol
new dulles. Ingels and his
wile, Sarah A. Mora Ingels
and son, Briau, reside at 510
South Second Avenue,
Middleport.

•-.. OJESHIRE - The Ohio
Valley Electric Corporation
(OVEC) honored Kyger Creek
personnel at a dinner Tuesday
who authored work im·
provement articles published
during . the year in - the
American Electric Power

and costs each, speeding; Fred
Unson , Jr., Ironton, $5 and
costs , speeding; Gregory
Riddle, Wellston, Rt. 2, $10 and
costs, stop sign violation ; Jack
Hall, Cheshire, RD, $50 and
costs, excessive speed.
Forfeiting bonds were Duane
L. Sidders, Alban y, $32.50
posted, speeding ; Albert
Barker, Gallipolis, Thomas
Mrs. Bertha Schrieber of
Meinert, Pittsburgh, and Mason, W. Va ., visited Wed·
Marvin K. Gardner, Langs· nesday wi th Mrs. Bess
ville, Rt. I, $27.50 each, Lar~ins.
speeding; Russell Tucker,
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Walls of
Lexington , Ky., $27.50, expired Lancaster spent Saturday
operators license.
evening with her mother, Mrs.
Flossie Petty.
Dale Bos ton, student at
U.E.L, of Charleston, W. Va.,
spent several days with his
parents, Mr . and Mrs. M. L.
Boston and family .
Barbara Henderson spent
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee
the weekend with her grandduring the weekend.
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Ralph
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
Henderson, at Portland.
visited with Mrs. Roy Byers of
Visiting at the Williams·
Tanners Run recently.
Baldersoo home over the
Ralph Harden of Morning
weekend was Mrs . Hazel
Star spent Saturday night with
Balderson of Vienna, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle,
Jean Whitehead, student at
Verna and Wavie.
Ohio State University,
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest Clark of
Colwnbus, spent the weekend
Racine, Patrick Johnson, local,
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
called at the borne of Mrs.
Ernes t Whitehead and family .
Eunie Brinker oh a Sunday
- Mrs. Lyle Balderson
afternoon.

Reedsville

Carmel News, By the Day

Florence Circle visited Mrs.
Olive Ullom of Belpre recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hudson
and Joy, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Hudson and Toni, all of Racine
and Mr. and Mrs. Shelby
Pickens and family of
Syracuse visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Allan Taylor on Sunday:
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of
In 1968, a U.S. Air Force B52 New Haven visited with Mrs.
carrying four reportedly non· Mary Circle a recent Sunday.
explosive hydrogen bombs Mr: and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
crashed off Greenland.
Chester
. ' called at the home of

Reduce Unit Outage Costs"; E.
G. Ash's, "Temporary Tank
Collects Metal from Fly As~";
H. E. Thomas', "Finds Better
Way to Clean Exciter Filters ,"
and G. B. Logan's, "Temporary Drive for Plugged Air
Preheaters."
Each. mail was presented a
monetary award for his efforts
The Almanac
to develop ways and means to
By United Press International improve pbint operation and
Today)s Sunday, Jan. 21, the help reduce costs, not only for
21st day of 1972 with 34&lt;1 to OVEC but for the ·industry in
follow.
general.
.
The moon is between its full In addition, 1. 0. Hawk, Vice
phase and last quarter.
President • Operations at·
The morning stars are tended to present a special
Mercury' Venus, Mars and award toScruggs whose article
Jupiter·
was judged to be the best
The evening star is Saturn.
published by the entire OVEC·
Those born on this date are IKEC system.
under the sign of Aquarius.
In recognition of this honor
Civil War Gen . Thomas Scruggs was presented a check
Jonathan Jackson, known as in the amcunt of $300. Mr :
"Stonewall Jackson," was born Hawk slated that he was
Jan. 21, 1824.
delighted , not only to see so
On this day in history :
many cost saving items
In 1861, Jelferson Davis developed on the OVEC·IKEC
resigned from the United States system, but also to see them
Senate, 12 days before Missis- · published for the benefit of the
sippi seceded from the Union. industry in general.
In 1908, New York City Hawk observed that one of
enacted the Suliivari Ordinance the main reasons OVEC hilS
which held smoking by women been able to stay compeUUve
illegal.
in this rapidly changing in·
In 1954, the first atomic dustry is through the efforts of
powered submarine , the its highly competent personnel
"Nautilus," was launched at such as the men honored.
Groton ;Conn.
Corporation's "Openating
Ideas" publication. L. R. Ford,
Jr., Plant Manager, presided
at the dinner at the Holiday Inn
at Kanauga.
Honored were S. Y. Scruggs
for his article, "Some Ways to

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f . l))l tlA TC II~CK

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C0\!1'!:

Vent•ra . Ventura Custom , LeMans · Lu xury
LeMans . G.and AM Hardtop · Flrblrds · Catallnas ·
Safari Statton .Wagons . Bonnevllles · Grand,Safari
Station .Wagons, Grande Ville and the beautiful new
styled GRAND PRIX.
Yes, we can put you behind Ihe wheelofa New Wide

ea:

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Track Pontiac.

ALL USED CARS MUST
BE S.OLD!
All are local trade-Ins, all have bHn cleaned. tuned
and ready.to-go. Come '•· look them over. Make u•
an offer. NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED.
'

Dodge Charger _2Jlr. Hardt~P·Jree n with black
vinyl top, like new.
1970 Volkswagen Fastback Sedan, .J lght bl ue, clean
&amp; nice.
1970 Ford ·Galaxie 500·V8 2 dr. Hardtop, maroon ·
1971

real clean ca r.

Pontiac . G.rand Prix Hardtop Cpe., green &amp;
black top. A real beauty. ·
1969 Pontiac LeMans 2 dr. Sport Coupe, R&amp;H. Looks
like new inside &amp; out. (Sharpl
1968 Pontiac Tempest 2 dr. Hardtop, green.
1968 Ford Custom 500 4 dr. Sedan, clean &amp; nice.
1966 Pontiac Bonu.ville 4 dr. Hardtop, green &amp;
wh ite.
1966 Ford CuStom 500 4 dr. Se~n .
1966 Olds Custom Vista Cruiser Wagon.
1966 Chev. Impala 4 dr. Sedan.
1966 Chevelle 2 dr .. Hardtop.

1969

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BOB REES
PONTIAC, INC.

- 'lbla lOg q!lbln on the grounda of the mansion af Mr. and
Union Ave ., Pomeroy, has been nicknamed "Lincoln's
by the
of Pomeroy school cllildren who W\!fe permitted to viait
through the years by the late Mra. Fay J;lawtings, owner of the property
her death. Sbe was the grandmother of Mr. Rawlings, the present owner.
and Mrs. Rawlings will continue the tradition of permitting Pomeroy school
rlJdr,en to visit the cabin on sjJeclal outings. It was constructed on the grounds In
1927when the Rawlings home was built. Mrs. Rawlings, an admirer of Lincoln, at
one time decorated the inside of the cabin with materialsre)ating to the Civil War
president. Pictured cleaning up around the outside of the cabin are sons of Mr. and
Mrs. Rawlings, Todd, left, seventh grader, and Tbn, right, eighth grader. They are
students at the Meigs Junior High School in Middleport.

~

Under New Management

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Corner Third &amp; Court St.
GalliPOlis, Ohio

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~ !'ARTS - SERVICE-PARTS- SERVICE- PARTS ~ :::

By RICHARD SISK
NEW YORK (UPI ) - Four
desperate gunmen holed up
with 10 hostages in a sporting
goods store in Brooklyn's
"French Connection" district
Saturday ·withstood a police
siege that stretched into Its
second day.
One policeman was killed and
two were wounded in the early
hours of the siege Friday night.
The store was heavily stocked
with guns and ammunition, and
survival kits containing emer·
gency rations also were avalla·
ble.
Two hostages were freed
during the night.
Police wearing helmets and
buJJ~t-proof vests ringed the
·r ill!lll..,dld. lt¥"to ...tmn
•llli!" stOre, apparently out of

concern for the seven men and
three women held captive by
the gunmen.
An armored car was nioved
in and a police helicopter
hovered overhead. Sharpshooters from a sniper squad sighted
in on the store from elevated
subway tracks nearby.
One gunman and a hostage
were believed to be wounded.
The gunmen called for a
doctor. Police replied that the
gunmen could have food and
immediate medical attentionas soon as they are ready to
come out with their hands up.
The trouble started when the
gunmen held up the John and
AI Sporting Goods store about
5:30 p.m .. Friday. The store is
IA·IIM~urg ~ctjon

Brooklyn; a ~~!ct
. ,. , ... ..

of

useil as a

· · ···· ···::::~1

By United PreiS International

LONDON -SEN. GEORGES. McGOVERN, D-S.D., made
himself scarce Saturday whUe Richard Nixon, the man who
defeated him for the American presidency, was inaugurated.
McGovern, who arrived in Britain with his wife Wednesday
on a private visit, scheduled no public appearance unlll Sunday,
the day after the Inauguration. Then he Ia scheduled to deliver a
lecture at Oxford University on "American Politics: a Personal
Vlew." A U. S. Embassy spokesman said Saturday that
McGovern had requested his whereabouts in I.Dndon and activities prior to the Inauguration not be disclosed.
DIOUSANDS OF ANTI-AMERICAN DEMONSTRATORS
clashed with a phalanx of riot police in Paris Saturday.
Protestera there and elsewhere in Europe and Asia denounced
President Nixon's inauguration and U. S. policies in Viatnam.
left-wiilg students; screaming "Nixon Fascist assassin," rioted
in front of the U. S. embassy in Paris' Place de Ia Concorde.
Rioting spread through the downtown area, bringing traffic to a
halt on the ctuunps Elysee,.
· A unit of speciaJJy trained CRS riot police, armed with long
batons and carbines equipped to fire tear gas grenades, herded
the students down the mlle-l.ong Champs Elysees boulevard to
the Arc de Triomphe.
WI!SI'ERN PLAINS AND MOUNTAINS TOOK

the
weekend'sheaviestatrokesofweather Saturday, snow falling In
a belt ,from the southern and central Rolfldes across parts of
Eastern Colorado and Wyoming and into Nebraska.
More waa expected as the snow move~ into aouthwestern
Kansali and western Oklahoma, and freezing rain threatened
travelers In northeast Colorado, northwest Kansas, al\d to north·
east Nelraska. Coastal regions of the nation braced for heavy
winds.

•

1973 PINTO RUNABOUT
Front Bumper Guard, Fold-down rear seat,all vinyl bucket seats , metallic paint, cut pile
. carpet, Rally Shift knob, dual paint .
strip, body side molding, wheel covers,
1600cc engine, 4 speed transmission, A78xl3 .
W-S-W tires, radio, Deluxe bumper group.

•2,347~

1973 FORD
.
GRAND·TORINO
2 Dr. Hardtop, 351 V-8 ~ngine, power
steering, power brakes, vinyl roof, vinyl
interior, W-S-W tires, wheel covers, body
side molding, fac. air cond ., tinted glass,
rear Deluxe bumper group.

00
'3
'651
. I

Slltunlay VIce President Spiro Agnew may fly to Saigon Jan. 28,

1973 FORD LTD

'

•

.

SOtriJI VIETNAMESE GOVERNMENT SOURCES said

•

4 Dr. Pillared hardtop, Stock No. 324, 400 2V . V-8 engine,
tires, front and rear bumper guards, air
H-78x15
ccind ., radio, remote control mirror ;'tinted glass, wheel
covers, vinyl roof, power disc brakes, power steering,
Cruise-o-Matlc trans., body side moldlog. All the . Fine
L 1u Standard Equip.

w.s.w

.
CHAIRS SWITCHED -Harland Martin, semi-retired Gallipolis businessman,

left, congratulates Gallia Atty. Warren F. Sheets upon Sheets' liaving been elected
to succeed him a!l'l\halrman of the hoard of trustees of the Holzer Hospital Foundation.
·

~tntintl
VOL. VII NO. 51
::::::::::::::::: m .. u ··

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PAGE 15

SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 1973
:::.;

WASHINGTON IYPI) i.ll
W - His hand on a family !~
;!:: Bible held by his wife, :~
;~: VIce Preside at Spiro T. ~
:;:: Agnew look the oath of ~

Nixon vows to

t.:.

ews .. in BriefS!

FORD

. trustees.
Mr. Sl\eets was chairman of the beard
of the Medical Memorial Foundation at the
time of the merger with the Holzer
Hospital Foundation . Following the
merger In 1968, Sheets became a member
of the board of trustee's of the Holzer
Hospital Foundation, and has been active
in that capacity .
. A practicing attorney in Gallipolis
since ·1002, ,Sheets was prosecuting attorney of Ga'ilia County three terms, i952
until 1964. He has maintained a vital interest in the development of hospital
facilities at the new Holzer Medical Center
and has been much involved in education
through Gallia Academy High School and
its related·athletic pograms.
Following Sheets' election as chair·
man, his first official act was to ask for a
standing ovation of the boarc) members in
(Continued on pagb 16)

Gunmen hold 'Off police l~==~:1~:::be::~~~:!: ~

,:::w-;::-;tu;:~:x~w;

Yes, .Thats What Folks Are Saying About The Uttle Automobile "Super Market" In Downtown Gallipolis.
No Salesman To High Pres5ure You Into ADeal, And For That Inconvenience You Get Lower Prices And We
Mean Lower Than Any Body - Seeing Is Believing - Match .These·Any Where!

GALUPOUS - The board of trustees
of Holzer Hospital Foundation has named
Gallla Atty. Warren F. Sheets as its new
chaitman, succeeding Harland Martin
who retirild after serving on the Board
since,Apri1'28,1950. He will continue on the
board.
. Martin said in a formal statement:
"Mter22year~ of service, it's time for
me to enjoy :my ,retiremef!t, both from
business responsibilities and Uie required
attention necessary to serve as chairman
of this very, .imporlar)t board. It's a
pleasure to turn this position over to
W.arren SheetS. We are fortunate to have
such a man on our board who can give the
necessary time and attention to the vital
activities of this great mediCal facility ."
Njlllled 'to the Temporary Building
Committee for the 1950 addition . to the
Cedar Street facility just eight months
after being elected to the board of trustees
. In 1950, Martin became a member of the
Permanent Building Committee in May of
1951.
'
When the merger of the Gallipolis
Medical Center and Holzer Hospital took
place in 1968, Mr, Martin was a member of
the special committee to achieve this goal.
Since August of 1968 he has served as
chairman of the Executive Committee. In
January, 1970 he was elected first vice
president of the board, and on May 18, 1971
was named chairman of the board of

'

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(Continued on page 16)

·:·: officer of the Nixon ad· %
.
.... minlstratloa.
·ru;:&lt;
location for the film "The a policeman said Miss Malave! !:!:
told him. "They will fight it out ;:~ Taller thaD aay of tlte :, .
French Connection."
.. other principals in the :;:l
One scene in the picture was to the end. "
:~
w
filmed in a bar across the
Police Lt. Edward Haddican, i:i( Inaugural ceremony, the ;:,;
street from the sporting goOds one of the first officers on the . 1~ 54-year~ld vice president ~
'" took the oath- as did the :::1
store, and the film 's chase scene, said "there was ...a mess :~ President eight minutes i:i~
scene was shot under the of gunfire coming from the :~ later _ from Chief :::;
elevated tracks which pass the store. They were shooting
Justice Warren E. :!:j
store.
everything at us-shotguns, ~
..
During the long hours of the h'gh
po
ered
rifles
..
,
·Burger.
Agnew's
part
of
:~ WASHINGTON (UPI) 1
• w
..
·
~.
!
the
ceremony
began
at
?:&lt;,
siege , two ministers and three
.
.;o;. President Nixon, looking post
Black Muslims wearing Arab- "I was crouching behind my ~~ 11:50 a.m. F.ST and was ;:~ Vietnam to a new era of world
style headdresses approached patrol car, an officer was next ~ over In two minutes.
~ peace, took the presidential
the store in a tank-like armored to me-and all of a sudden a
The vice president, ;.•. oath for a second term
rsonnel
carrier
and
made
bullet
from
nowhere
came
out
:·~
dressed
in a semi-formal :~ Saturday and promised to
pe
:!::
gray
"club
coal" and ::;~~ substitute stern self-reliance
surrender appeals by bullhorn. of this blaze and hit hbn right i.j
The gunmen-all of whom in the head. He slwnped over i.j striped pants and halless, ~l for the govermnent's "conwere said to be black-fired dead."
~:;: stood at the center of the ~l descending policies of pater·
three shots to indicat.e they
The dead officer, Patrolman j lnaug.ural podium and :~
. nalism" at home and abroad.
wanted the carrier to pull Steve Gilroy; 29, had been ~:;: Burger to one side for the ·
Federal troops and police
away. No one was hurt.
wearing a bullet-proof vest but ;:; brief ceremony. The day · kept thousands of antiwar
A bull!¥'n left ori tlH! street. ~~heim,t.
··, . '
~ belli&amp; the. l'reslde.nl's, ' protesters ~er · strlct, guard
was taken into the store and '", Passengers on a subway train ~ Agnew had no more lo say
throughout Washington as
the gunmen used it to that passed through the area ~·: than to repeat the words
Nixon, standing coatiess in a
communicate with police. soon after the shooting started :@ of the oath read to him by • : chill north wind on the Capitol
Later, a walkie-talkie was sent were ordered by police to "hit ~ Burger.
. ' steps, delivered a spartan
in.
the deck." They Jay on the floor kmw:l:::~:::::::::::::l::::::::::l::::::::::;,;,~, inaugural prescription of hard
The hostages released by the of the ca rs until the train was
work, pride in country and oldgunmen were Judy Mala vet clear of the danger zone.
fashioned individualism for the
and Michael Zayres, both 20. Later, service on the elevated
next four years.
Miss Malavet was lreed shortly subway tracks was suspended.
The .President drew the
before 8 p.m. Friday and Police darkened the street SOD
loudest applause from the
Z&amp;yres about 1 a.m. Saturday. lights to avoid giving the
· shivering crowd when he
NEW YORK (UP!) - A declared that "Amer1·ca was
"These men are desperate," gunmen a ta rget .
woman who believes her son to built not by government, but by
be one of 10 hostages held by people -not by welfare, but by
four gunmen in a Brooklyn work -not by shirking respon.
sporting-goods store sat sibility, but by seeking respon·
'
·
·
weeping Saturday in a sibility."
.
· restaurant a block and a half
Nixon mentioned Vietnam
from the scene.
only in passing and without any
"I pray to God that my chlld reference to White House
will come out alive," said Mrs. adviser Henry A. Kissinger's
Maggie Smith of Brooklyn, who new negotiating session in
had been waiting at . the ·El Paris next Tuesday with
Pilon restaurant since II p.m. Hanoi's Le Due Tho. He said at
WASHINGTON (UPI)- De· ceremonies there. Two Friday.
one point that " America's
spite signs that peace is near, demonstrato rs shouted
Mrs. Smith said that when longest and most difficult war"
an estimated 60,000 persons "killer" three times while her son, Dennis, a 25-year~ld
was drawiilg to a close.
rallied at the Washington Chief Justice Warren E. student at New York City
He dec~ed ''we stand on the
Monwnent Saturday to con- Burger administered the oath Community College
in threshold of a new era of peace
demn President Nixon's Viet- of office ~ Nixon and some Brooklyn, did not appear for
In the world" in which the
nam policy on his second others · hoisted banners dinner last night, she called his
inauguration . It was the denouncing the President as girl friend . She was told that United States' would bring on
biggest antiwar sllowing here "The Mad . Bomber." Police her son had gone to the spor- its new relations with the
Soviei Union and China but
generally
ignored
the
in almost two years.
ting goods store to pick up would "expect others to do
No incidents of seriou1 · protesters although one group some fishing equipment.
their 'share" in defense of their
violence were reported and was asked to leave when they
District of Colwnbia police, shouted "stop the war"
backed by about 1,900 military following the prayer after Vice
troops plus other security President Spiro T. Agnew took
forces, said only a few arrests the oath.
Although the President gave
were made.
WASHINGTON (UPI) _ tecting an adjacent small park.
A relatively small number in no Indication that he noticed
America'senduring
Jove affair
After the Nixon limousine
the predominantly young, the actions at the Capitol, he
white crowd also carried the could not help but see other with parades was sorely tested had cruised the two-mile
protest to the u._.§.: Capitol· protesters who stood along the Saturday by capricious and parade route, things calmed
during the Inauguration Penn.Ylvania Avenue parad~ windy January weather. But down. Most of the demonstrators dispersed without
route later. Chants of "Stop the love triumphed.
police prodding, carrying away
War" could be heard repeatedLargely unprepared for the such signs as "Let Me Make
ly and at one point a volley of
bitingly cold wind because of One Thing Perfectly Dead"
apples, ·oranges and other
weather reports predictirog and "Drop Nixon on Hanoi"
objects ciune from the crowd,
continued temperatures in the and "I Have Been Coming to
Hanoi's Le Due Tho back to the almost forcing him and Mrs: 60s, tens of thousands of Washington Since 1965 to
Nixon ro duck inside their
bargaining table.
spectators shivered .and Protest This Immoral War.
black
limousine .
..
. Kubisch represented . the
huddled along Pennsylvania Please, Mr. Nixon,I'm Tired."
•As the last unit of the parade
United States at the sessions
Avenue for the traditional
and North. VIetnam was was about two blocks from the Inaugural Parade foJJowlng
The protesters had come
usually represented by Vo Van White House, a group ·of Prellident Nixon's swearing-ln only to shout at the President,
Sung; the Hanoi delegate several hundred demon- at the capitoL An estimated 100 but the great majority of
general to France. French strators fell in behind !hem. A million others watched on spectators stayed to the end
officials have said the contingent of police quickly tele\ision·.
and proved once again that
meetings played a key part in herded them to the sidewalk
Amo~ the spectators were nothing ~an work up an
IX'iglng the two sides together with nightsticks and \he threat antiwar protesters who tossed American like a good, old·
again for talks that started of. a violent confrontation bottles, rocks and fruit at fashioned, down-home parade.
Jan. 2 between . teebnlcal ex· subsided as scores more police President and Mrs. Nixon, who
There were 143 units in the
cleared the street, with one led the parade in their bub- .paratie. From the tlu'ee men in
pertS. '
David Lambertson, the U.S. struggling youth In ctmtody. bletop tlmouslne. They .were Colonial garb .In the frpnt rank
A short ~ later, milny of .not hit.
delegation spokesman, refused
.
to three other ~ ·similarly
these
demonstrators headed
to comment on the Statement
Police quioklr broke through dressed who brought up the
lly a French Foreign Mlnlatry toward the White House chant- the ranks of t1ie largest con· rear, every band, float, rnal'Ch·
spokesman that Kublsch aDd ing obscenities about ·Nixon, tingent of demonstrators :- at 1ng unit and ~uestrlim Wllt
Scbumann diacul8ed the Viet- the war, and the pollee. They Perms)'lvanla and 14th Street drew spontaneous and pronam situation at Saturday's were headed off by poli&lt;;e -ihovlng them backwards and longed cheers.
(Coniinued on page 16)
bleting.
splintering a sn~ fence pro- It was the only event of the

government

!
i

1I

Mother certain

is hostage

d
60 000 co-n ·emn
Vietnam policy

~I

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phant ride down Pennsylvania
Avenue to the White House at'
the head of the inaugural
parade, about 100 jeering
protesters massed at an inter·
section a bl~ away from the
Treasury and tossed apples,
oranges and other debris in the
direction of the President's
limousine.
Nixon, standing alongside his
wife through the open roof of
, the . c!"' 1 l!mied ~~irtl!•
demonstrators, ~alsed ' llil!h
arms in a "V" sign and half.
way lunged for some passing
fruit that fell wide of Its mark.
The limousine was never hit 88
Secret Service
ag~nts
scrambled to intercept the
flying delris.
A similar incident occurred
at the sam• int.....,tlon during
Nixon's 1988 inauguratl'on,
when his limousine was actually struck even though it
accelerated for half a block.
This .time, Nixon's car
maintamed its steady pace,
and the President and his wife
(Continued on page 16)

Beattie promoted
of the agriculture experiment
station .and director of
cooperative extension service
and professor of horticulture.
He will assume the new posts
as soon as arrangements can
be made lor the transfer of his
responsibiliUes in Wooster, but
no later than July !st.
He will 'succeed Dr. Russell
E. Larson, who now is provost
of the university.

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa .
(UP!) - Dr. James N. Beattie,
associate director and chief
executive officer of the Ohio
Agriculture Resear ch and
Development Center at
Wooster, Saturday was named
dean of the College of
Agriculture at Pennsylvania
State University.
Beattie also was appointed to
the additional nosts of director

Thousands shivered. for p,arade

Semantics of peace ·settled
PARIS (UPI) ..., American arrived in the Chinese capital
and North Vletnameae legal Thursday from Hanoi.)
an~ la~uage expertS bald
· Charge d'Aflatres Jack Ku·
another seqion Saturday to blsch, who is acting as the top
work 011t details for use In the American. representative in
event a peace agreement for France dlll'ini the absence of
VIetnam Ia signed, a U.S. , an Ambuaador, di.scusaed the
spoknman said.
. .
status af lbe Vlelllam negotla'fi!e meeting waa held at the tionJ 8aturday With French
SaJnt.Nom-4-Breteche home Foreign Minister Maurice
fl. U.S. lndustriBlis~ 'Milton Schumam, a French Foreign
Berzln.
~ spokesman said.
The meeting .laited five
During the December deacf..
holp. A ~ for the lqck In the peaee talka, which
U.S. · peace delegation aald ( led lo U.S. bombing of North
aflet'lnrd tben' were DO plans VIetnam; Schumann ilnd othel'
for a SW111a7 meeting.
French officials held aeveral
(Mn. NIIU)'III Thl Qlnh, VIet separate meetings with U.S.
Coni ,cn~p Mlnlater; left and Communllt offlclabi in an
Ptlline laba'day fot the Plrla attempt to brine President
. peace ljllb, ICCllrdlnll 1o the NIJon's natiol1alaecurity advl·
New Q11na News .Agency. !lie ·10r Henry A. Klalnger and

freedom .
Domestically, the ·President
paraphrased a line from John
F. Kennedy's inaUgural address of 1960 when be said:
"Let each of us ask -not just
what will government do for
me, but what can 1 do for
myself?" · He promised to
transfer more · responsibility
from the government to the
people.
· A couple of demOI)_itrators
shouted : \ "Killer! Killer!"
when Nixon, his left hand
resting on two family Bibles,
repeated the 35-word oath to
"protect and defend the
Constitution" after Chief
Justice Warren E. Burger at
one minute past noon .·
Someone yelled "stop the
war !" after Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew was sworn in.
Both outbursts were clearly
audible in the midst of the
throng jamming the East
Plaza of the Capitol, but
neither Nixon nor Agnew gave
any sign of noticing.
Later, during Nixon's triwn-

majorettes from Wolfson High
School wrapped themselves
like mwrunies in sheets of
clear plastic, trying un successfully to ward off the
kind of weather they rarely see
in Jacksonville, Fla.

four-day, $3.5million inaugural
for which you didn't need an
invitlltion and a ticket. And the
crowd loved it.
They stood and cheered
Apollo 17 astronauts Gene
Cernan, , Ronald Evans and
Jack Schmitt, and the replica
of the lunar rover that
preceded tbe astronauts' car.
They clapped their apprecialion for beautiful, pranclhg
while Lippizzan stallions from
the Tempel .Farrns in illinois.
They applauded long and
loud for the University of
T
M h' B d
ennessee arc mg an ,
which strolled the route
playing "Columbia the Gem of
. the Ocean."
·

The parade was an artistic
success, but the sale of reserve
seat tickets flopped . The
tickets, priced from $5 to $50
depending on ~ proximity to
the presidential reviewing box
In front of the White Ho~.
went begging.
Boy Scouts, who served 88
ushers, gave away what they
called "compllmentary"
tickets so the stands cOuld be
filled . But they warned that if
the regular tic)letholder
showed up, the 8Quatters would
be ejected.
,
A teacher from . suburban
Montgomery County, Md., said
t11at two days before the
inaugural she waa offered a $50
1\Cket free if she would take
four of her students ~ that
· the empty standi wouldn't be
noticeable on telnlalon.
·
' .

The parade was scheduled to
last two hours, but that, as
usual, was optimistic. The lead
group began the long trek from
lhe Capitol to llie White House
45mlnutes18te. The time never
was made up and ·the parade
ended at 4 p.m..
AI each intersection, a band
not marching in the parade
-entertained during Julia. Eight

•

·.

'

'

"

�14- The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 21, 1973

" A th~ght (or the day : "The responsibility of the great
President Harry Trwnan said, slates is t.o ~rve · ~~. not
. .
, ·--- • domil)llte the worlcj." .P$
~·

•.

.

Foti:ridation elects
Sheets . ,as chairman

I

. LEFTTORIGHT .,- R.C.Johnson-PlantEngineer;'· L. R.Fofd, Jr., Plant~ger ; S, Y.
Scruggs, Operating Idea author; !'1. E. Thomas, Operating Idel author; R. H. .Blowers, .lr.; ·
·. Assistant Plant Manager : I. o:!lliwk, Vice President, Operations; R. D, Briggs,M.Intenance
Supervisor. Operating idea authors G. 1). Logan and E.G. Ash were unable to attend.
·
. S. Y. SCRUGGS, a!left, is receiving a $300 check from OVEC Vice President-Operations I.
0. Hawk for having his work improvement idea judged best in the OVEC-IKEC System in 1972.

''

OVEC men are honore·d
9 Fined by court
POMEROY - Nine defendants wera fined and five
forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Alfred D. Ramsey,
Jr., ,SOuth Webster, $183 and
costs, $83 suspended, overload;
Gerald Taylor, Jackson, $5 and
cosls, defective lights ; Gilbert
Sellers, Letart, Ohio, Rt. 2, $10
and costs, failure to display
registration; John P. Hensler,
Athens, $15 and costs,
speeding; Archie C. Rose,
Long Bottom, Rt. I, and Harry
L. Parker, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $10
INGEU&gt; PROMOTED
POMEROY - Earl F.
Ingels, Jr., Branch Manager
of lbe Pomeroy olflce, has
been appointed Assistant
' 'Ice President and Assistant
to the President of the
Athens County Savings and
Loan. He wlll remain branch
manager with a vareity ol
new dulles. Ingels and his
wile, Sarah A. Mora Ingels
and son, Briau, reside at 510
South Second Avenue,
Middleport.

•-.. OJESHIRE - The Ohio
Valley Electric Corporation
(OVEC) honored Kyger Creek
personnel at a dinner Tuesday
who authored work im·
provement articles published
during . the year in - the
American Electric Power

and costs each, speeding; Fred
Unson , Jr., Ironton, $5 and
costs , speeding; Gregory
Riddle, Wellston, Rt. 2, $10 and
costs, stop sign violation ; Jack
Hall, Cheshire, RD, $50 and
costs, excessive speed.
Forfeiting bonds were Duane
L. Sidders, Alban y, $32.50
posted, speeding ; Albert
Barker, Gallipolis, Thomas
Mrs. Bertha Schrieber of
Meinert, Pittsburgh, and Mason, W. Va ., visited Wed·
Marvin K. Gardner, Langs· nesday wi th Mrs. Bess
ville, Rt. I, $27.50 each, Lar~ins.
speeding; Russell Tucker,
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Walls of
Lexington , Ky., $27.50, expired Lancaster spent Saturday
operators license.
evening with her mother, Mrs.
Flossie Petty.
Dale Bos ton, student at
U.E.L, of Charleston, W. Va.,
spent several days with his
parents, Mr . and Mrs. M. L.
Boston and family .
Barbara Henderson spent
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee
the weekend with her grandduring the weekend.
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Ralph
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
Henderson, at Portland.
visited with Mrs. Roy Byers of
Visiting at the Williams·
Tanners Run recently.
Baldersoo home over the
Ralph Harden of Morning
weekend was Mrs . Hazel
Star spent Saturday night with
Balderson of Vienna, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle,
Jean Whitehead, student at
Verna and Wavie.
Ohio State University,
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest Clark of
Colwnbus, spent the weekend
Racine, Patrick Johnson, local,
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
called at the borne of Mrs.
Ernes t Whitehead and family .
Eunie Brinker oh a Sunday
- Mrs. Lyle Balderson
afternoon.

Reedsville

Carmel News, By the Day

Florence Circle visited Mrs.
Olive Ullom of Belpre recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hudson
and Joy, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Hudson and Toni, all of Racine
and Mr. and Mrs. Shelby
Pickens and family of
Syracuse visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Allan Taylor on Sunday:
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of
In 1968, a U.S. Air Force B52 New Haven visited with Mrs.
carrying four reportedly non· Mary Circle a recent Sunday.
explosive hydrogen bombs Mr: and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
crashed off Greenland.
Chester
. ' called at the home of

Reduce Unit Outage Costs"; E.
G. Ash's, "Temporary Tank
Collects Metal from Fly As~";
H. E. Thomas', "Finds Better
Way to Clean Exciter Filters ,"
and G. B. Logan's, "Temporary Drive for Plugged Air
Preheaters."
Each. mail was presented a
monetary award for his efforts
The Almanac
to develop ways and means to
By United Press International improve pbint operation and
Today)s Sunday, Jan. 21, the help reduce costs, not only for
21st day of 1972 with 34&lt;1 to OVEC but for the ·industry in
follow.
general.
.
The moon is between its full In addition, 1. 0. Hawk, Vice
phase and last quarter.
President • Operations at·
The morning stars are tended to present a special
Mercury' Venus, Mars and award toScruggs whose article
Jupiter·
was judged to be the best
The evening star is Saturn.
published by the entire OVEC·
Those born on this date are IKEC system.
under the sign of Aquarius.
In recognition of this honor
Civil War Gen . Thomas Scruggs was presented a check
Jonathan Jackson, known as in the amcunt of $300. Mr :
"Stonewall Jackson," was born Hawk slated that he was
Jan. 21, 1824.
delighted , not only to see so
On this day in history :
many cost saving items
In 1861, Jelferson Davis developed on the OVEC·IKEC
resigned from the United States system, but also to see them
Senate, 12 days before Missis- · published for the benefit of the
sippi seceded from the Union. industry in general.
In 1908, New York City Hawk observed that one of
enacted the Suliivari Ordinance the main reasons OVEC hilS
which held smoking by women been able to stay compeUUve
illegal.
in this rapidly changing in·
In 1954, the first atomic dustry is through the efforts of
powered submarine , the its highly competent personnel
"Nautilus," was launched at such as the men honored.
Groton ;Conn.
Corporation's "Openating
Ideas" publication. L. R. Ford,
Jr., Plant Manager, presided
at the dinner at the Holiday Inn
at Kanauga.
Honored were S. Y. Scruggs
for his article, "Some Ways to

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C0\!1'!:

Vent•ra . Ventura Custom , LeMans · Lu xury
LeMans . G.and AM Hardtop · Flrblrds · Catallnas ·
Safari Statton .Wagons . Bonnevllles · Grand,Safari
Station .Wagons, Grande Ville and the beautiful new
styled GRAND PRIX.
Yes, we can put you behind Ihe wheelofa New Wide

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Track Pontiac.

ALL USED CARS MUST
BE S.OLD!
All are local trade-Ins, all have bHn cleaned. tuned
and ready.to-go. Come '•· look them over. Make u•
an offer. NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED.
'

Dodge Charger _2Jlr. Hardt~P·Jree n with black
vinyl top, like new.
1970 Volkswagen Fastback Sedan, .J lght bl ue, clean
&amp; nice.
1970 Ford ·Galaxie 500·V8 2 dr. Hardtop, maroon ·
1971

real clean ca r.

Pontiac . G.rand Prix Hardtop Cpe., green &amp;
black top. A real beauty. ·
1969 Pontiac LeMans 2 dr. Sport Coupe, R&amp;H. Looks
like new inside &amp; out. (Sharpl
1968 Pontiac Tempest 2 dr. Hardtop, green.
1968 Ford Custom 500 4 dr. Sedan, clean &amp; nice.
1966 Pontiac Bonu.ville 4 dr. Hardtop, green &amp;
wh ite.
1966 Ford CuStom 500 4 dr. Se~n .
1966 Olds Custom Vista Cruiser Wagon.
1966 Chev. Impala 4 dr. Sedan.
1966 Chevelle 2 dr .. Hardtop.

1969

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BOB REES
PONTIAC, INC.

- 'lbla lOg q!lbln on the grounda of the mansion af Mr. and
Union Ave ., Pomeroy, has been nicknamed "Lincoln's
by the
of Pomeroy school cllildren who W\!fe permitted to viait
through the years by the late Mra. Fay J;lawtings, owner of the property
her death. Sbe was the grandmother of Mr. Rawlings, the present owner.
and Mrs. Rawlings will continue the tradition of permitting Pomeroy school
rlJdr,en to visit the cabin on sjJeclal outings. It was constructed on the grounds In
1927when the Rawlings home was built. Mrs. Rawlings, an admirer of Lincoln, at
one time decorated the inside of the cabin with materialsre)ating to the Civil War
president. Pictured cleaning up around the outside of the cabin are sons of Mr. and
Mrs. Rawlings, Todd, left, seventh grader, and Tbn, right, eighth grader. They are
students at the Meigs Junior High School in Middleport.

~

Under New Management

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Corner Third &amp; Court St.
GalliPOlis, Ohio

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~ !'ARTS - SERVICE-PARTS- SERVICE- PARTS ~ :::

By RICHARD SISK
NEW YORK (UPI ) - Four
desperate gunmen holed up
with 10 hostages in a sporting
goods store in Brooklyn's
"French Connection" district
Saturday ·withstood a police
siege that stretched into Its
second day.
One policeman was killed and
two were wounded in the early
hours of the siege Friday night.
The store was heavily stocked
with guns and ammunition, and
survival kits containing emer·
gency rations also were avalla·
ble.
Two hostages were freed
during the night.
Police wearing helmets and
buJJ~t-proof vests ringed the
·r ill!lll..,dld. lt¥"to ...tmn
•llli!" stOre, apparently out of

concern for the seven men and
three women held captive by
the gunmen.
An armored car was nioved
in and a police helicopter
hovered overhead. Sharpshooters from a sniper squad sighted
in on the store from elevated
subway tracks nearby.
One gunman and a hostage
were believed to be wounded.
The gunmen called for a
doctor. Police replied that the
gunmen could have food and
immediate medical attentionas soon as they are ready to
come out with their hands up.
The trouble started when the
gunmen held up the John and
AI Sporting Goods store about
5:30 p.m .. Friday. The store is
IA·IIM~urg ~ctjon

Brooklyn; a ~~!ct
. ,. , ... ..

of

useil as a

· · ···· ···::::~1

By United PreiS International

LONDON -SEN. GEORGES. McGOVERN, D-S.D., made
himself scarce Saturday whUe Richard Nixon, the man who
defeated him for the American presidency, was inaugurated.
McGovern, who arrived in Britain with his wife Wednesday
on a private visit, scheduled no public appearance unlll Sunday,
the day after the Inauguration. Then he Ia scheduled to deliver a
lecture at Oxford University on "American Politics: a Personal
Vlew." A U. S. Embassy spokesman said Saturday that
McGovern had requested his whereabouts in I.Dndon and activities prior to the Inauguration not be disclosed.
DIOUSANDS OF ANTI-AMERICAN DEMONSTRATORS
clashed with a phalanx of riot police in Paris Saturday.
Protestera there and elsewhere in Europe and Asia denounced
President Nixon's inauguration and U. S. policies in Viatnam.
left-wiilg students; screaming "Nixon Fascist assassin," rioted
in front of the U. S. embassy in Paris' Place de Ia Concorde.
Rioting spread through the downtown area, bringing traffic to a
halt on the ctuunps Elysee,.
· A unit of speciaJJy trained CRS riot police, armed with long
batons and carbines equipped to fire tear gas grenades, herded
the students down the mlle-l.ong Champs Elysees boulevard to
the Arc de Triomphe.
WI!SI'ERN PLAINS AND MOUNTAINS TOOK

the
weekend'sheaviestatrokesofweather Saturday, snow falling In
a belt ,from the southern and central Rolfldes across parts of
Eastern Colorado and Wyoming and into Nebraska.
More waa expected as the snow move~ into aouthwestern
Kansali and western Oklahoma, and freezing rain threatened
travelers In northeast Colorado, northwest Kansas, al\d to north·
east Nelraska. Coastal regions of the nation braced for heavy
winds.

•

1973 PINTO RUNABOUT
Front Bumper Guard, Fold-down rear seat,all vinyl bucket seats , metallic paint, cut pile
. carpet, Rally Shift knob, dual paint .
strip, body side molding, wheel covers,
1600cc engine, 4 speed transmission, A78xl3 .
W-S-W tires, radio, Deluxe bumper group.

•2,347~

1973 FORD
.
GRAND·TORINO
2 Dr. Hardtop, 351 V-8 ~ngine, power
steering, power brakes, vinyl roof, vinyl
interior, W-S-W tires, wheel covers, body
side molding, fac. air cond ., tinted glass,
rear Deluxe bumper group.

00
'3
'651
. I

Slltunlay VIce President Spiro Agnew may fly to Saigon Jan. 28,

1973 FORD LTD

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SOtriJI VIETNAMESE GOVERNMENT SOURCES said

•

4 Dr. Pillared hardtop, Stock No. 324, 400 2V . V-8 engine,
tires, front and rear bumper guards, air
H-78x15
ccind ., radio, remote control mirror ;'tinted glass, wheel
covers, vinyl roof, power disc brakes, power steering,
Cruise-o-Matlc trans., body side moldlog. All the . Fine
L 1u Standard Equip.

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CHAIRS SWITCHED -Harland Martin, semi-retired Gallipolis businessman,

left, congratulates Gallia Atty. Warren F. Sheets upon Sheets' liaving been elected
to succeed him a!l'l\halrman of the hoard of trustees of the Holzer Hospital Foundation.
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VOL. VII NO. 51
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PAGE 15

SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 1973
:::.;

WASHINGTON IYPI) i.ll
W - His hand on a family !~
;!:: Bible held by his wife, :~
;~: VIce Preside at Spiro T. ~
:;:: Agnew look the oath of ~

Nixon vows to

t.:.

ews .. in BriefS!

FORD

. trustees.
Mr. Sl\eets was chairman of the beard
of the Medical Memorial Foundation at the
time of the merger with the Holzer
Hospital Foundation . Following the
merger In 1968, Sheets became a member
of the board of trustee's of the Holzer
Hospital Foundation, and has been active
in that capacity .
. A practicing attorney in Gallipolis
since ·1002, ,Sheets was prosecuting attorney of Ga'ilia County three terms, i952
until 1964. He has maintained a vital interest in the development of hospital
facilities at the new Holzer Medical Center
and has been much involved in education
through Gallia Academy High School and
its related·athletic pograms.
Following Sheets' election as chair·
man, his first official act was to ask for a
standing ovation of the boarc) members in
(Continued on pagb 16)

Gunmen hold 'Off police l~==~:1~:::be::~~~:!: ~

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Yes, .Thats What Folks Are Saying About The Uttle Automobile "Super Market" In Downtown Gallipolis.
No Salesman To High Pres5ure You Into ADeal, And For That Inconvenience You Get Lower Prices And We
Mean Lower Than Any Body - Seeing Is Believing - Match .These·Any Where!

GALUPOUS - The board of trustees
of Holzer Hospital Foundation has named
Gallla Atty. Warren F. Sheets as its new
chaitman, succeeding Harland Martin
who retirild after serving on the Board
since,Apri1'28,1950. He will continue on the
board.
. Martin said in a formal statement:
"Mter22year~ of service, it's time for
me to enjoy :my ,retiremef!t, both from
business responsibilities and Uie required
attention necessary to serve as chairman
of this very, .imporlar)t board. It's a
pleasure to turn this position over to
W.arren SheetS. We are fortunate to have
such a man on our board who can give the
necessary time and attention to the vital
activities of this great mediCal facility ."
Njlllled 'to the Temporary Building
Committee for the 1950 addition . to the
Cedar Street facility just eight months
after being elected to the board of trustees
. In 1950, Martin became a member of the
Permanent Building Committee in May of
1951.
'
When the merger of the Gallipolis
Medical Center and Holzer Hospital took
place in 1968, Mr, Martin was a member of
the special committee to achieve this goal.
Since August of 1968 he has served as
chairman of the Executive Committee. In
January, 1970 he was elected first vice
president of the board, and on May 18, 1971
was named chairman of the board of

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(Continued on page 16)

·:·: officer of the Nixon ad· %
.
.... minlstratloa.
·ru;:&lt;
location for the film "The a policeman said Miss Malave! !:!:
told him. "They will fight it out ;:~ Taller thaD aay of tlte :, .
French Connection."
.. other principals in the :;:l
One scene in the picture was to the end. "
:~
w
filmed in a bar across the
Police Lt. Edward Haddican, i:i( Inaugural ceremony, the ;:,;
street from the sporting goOds one of the first officers on the . 1~ 54-year~ld vice president ~
'" took the oath- as did the :::1
store, and the film 's chase scene, said "there was ...a mess :~ President eight minutes i:i~
scene was shot under the of gunfire coming from the :~ later _ from Chief :::;
elevated tracks which pass the store. They were shooting
Justice Warren E. :!:j
store.
everything at us-shotguns, ~
..
During the long hours of the h'gh
po
ered
rifles
..
,
·Burger.
Agnew's
part
of
:~ WASHINGTON (UPI) 1
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the
ceremony
began
at
?:&lt;,
siege , two ministers and three
.
.;o;. President Nixon, looking post
Black Muslims wearing Arab- "I was crouching behind my ~~ 11:50 a.m. F.ST and was ;:~ Vietnam to a new era of world
style headdresses approached patrol car, an officer was next ~ over In two minutes.
~ peace, took the presidential
the store in a tank-like armored to me-and all of a sudden a
The vice president, ;.•. oath for a second term
rsonnel
carrier
and
made
bullet
from
nowhere
came
out
:·~
dressed
in a semi-formal :~ Saturday and promised to
pe
:!::
gray
"club
coal" and ::;~~ substitute stern self-reliance
surrender appeals by bullhorn. of this blaze and hit hbn right i.j
The gunmen-all of whom in the head. He slwnped over i.j striped pants and halless, ~l for the govermnent's "conwere said to be black-fired dead."
~:;: stood at the center of the ~l descending policies of pater·
three shots to indicat.e they
The dead officer, Patrolman j lnaug.ural podium and :~
. nalism" at home and abroad.
wanted the carrier to pull Steve Gilroy; 29, had been ~:;: Burger to one side for the ·
Federal troops and police
away. No one was hurt.
wearing a bullet-proof vest but ;:; brief ceremony. The day · kept thousands of antiwar
A bull!¥'n left ori tlH! street. ~~heim,t.
··, . '
~ belli&amp; the. l'reslde.nl's, ' protesters ~er · strlct, guard
was taken into the store and '", Passengers on a subway train ~ Agnew had no more lo say
throughout Washington as
the gunmen used it to that passed through the area ~·: than to repeat the words
Nixon, standing coatiess in a
communicate with police. soon after the shooting started :@ of the oath read to him by • : chill north wind on the Capitol
Later, a walkie-talkie was sent were ordered by police to "hit ~ Burger.
. ' steps, delivered a spartan
in.
the deck." They Jay on the floor kmw:l:::~:::::::::::::l::::::::::l::::::::::;,;,~, inaugural prescription of hard
The hostages released by the of the ca rs until the train was
work, pride in country and oldgunmen were Judy Mala vet clear of the danger zone.
fashioned individualism for the
and Michael Zayres, both 20. Later, service on the elevated
next four years.
Miss Malavet was lreed shortly subway tracks was suspended.
The .President drew the
before 8 p.m. Friday and Police darkened the street SOD
loudest applause from the
Z&amp;yres about 1 a.m. Saturday. lights to avoid giving the
· shivering crowd when he
NEW YORK (UP!) - A declared that "Amer1·ca was
"These men are desperate," gunmen a ta rget .
woman who believes her son to built not by government, but by
be one of 10 hostages held by people -not by welfare, but by
four gunmen in a Brooklyn work -not by shirking respon.
sporting-goods store sat sibility, but by seeking respon·
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·
weeping Saturday in a sibility."
.
· restaurant a block and a half
Nixon mentioned Vietnam
from the scene.
only in passing and without any
"I pray to God that my chlld reference to White House
will come out alive," said Mrs. adviser Henry A. Kissinger's
Maggie Smith of Brooklyn, who new negotiating session in
had been waiting at . the ·El Paris next Tuesday with
Pilon restaurant since II p.m. Hanoi's Le Due Tho. He said at
WASHINGTON (UPI)- De· ceremonies there. Two Friday.
one point that " America's
spite signs that peace is near, demonstrato rs shouted
Mrs. Smith said that when longest and most difficult war"
an estimated 60,000 persons "killer" three times while her son, Dennis, a 25-year~ld
was drawiilg to a close.
rallied at the Washington Chief Justice Warren E. student at New York City
He dec~ed ''we stand on the
Monwnent Saturday to con- Burger administered the oath Community College
in threshold of a new era of peace
demn President Nixon's Viet- of office ~ Nixon and some Brooklyn, did not appear for
In the world" in which the
nam policy on his second others · hoisted banners dinner last night, she called his
inauguration . It was the denouncing the President as girl friend . She was told that United States' would bring on
biggest antiwar sllowing here "The Mad . Bomber." Police her son had gone to the spor- its new relations with the
Soviei Union and China but
generally
ignored
the
in almost two years.
ting goods store to pick up would "expect others to do
No incidents of seriou1 · protesters although one group some fishing equipment.
their 'share" in defense of their
violence were reported and was asked to leave when they
District of Colwnbia police, shouted "stop the war"
backed by about 1,900 military following the prayer after Vice
troops plus other security President Spiro T. Agnew took
forces, said only a few arrests the oath.
Although the President gave
were made.
WASHINGTON (UPI) _ tecting an adjacent small park.
A relatively small number in no Indication that he noticed
America'senduring
Jove affair
After the Nixon limousine
the predominantly young, the actions at the Capitol, he
white crowd also carried the could not help but see other with parades was sorely tested had cruised the two-mile
protest to the u._.§.: Capitol· protesters who stood along the Saturday by capricious and parade route, things calmed
during the Inauguration Penn.Ylvania Avenue parad~ windy January weather. But down. Most of the demonstrators dispersed without
route later. Chants of "Stop the love triumphed.
police prodding, carrying away
War" could be heard repeatedLargely unprepared for the such signs as "Let Me Make
ly and at one point a volley of
bitingly cold wind because of One Thing Perfectly Dead"
apples, ·oranges and other
weather reports predictirog and "Drop Nixon on Hanoi"
objects ciune from the crowd,
continued temperatures in the and "I Have Been Coming to
Hanoi's Le Due Tho back to the almost forcing him and Mrs: 60s, tens of thousands of Washington Since 1965 to
Nixon ro duck inside their
bargaining table.
spectators shivered .and Protest This Immoral War.
black
limousine .
..
. Kubisch represented . the
huddled along Pennsylvania Please, Mr. Nixon,I'm Tired."
•As the last unit of the parade
United States at the sessions
Avenue for the traditional
and North. VIetnam was was about two blocks from the Inaugural Parade foJJowlng
The protesters had come
usually represented by Vo Van White House, a group ·of Prellident Nixon's swearing-ln only to shout at the President,
Sung; the Hanoi delegate several hundred demon- at the capitoL An estimated 100 but the great majority of
general to France. French strators fell in behind !hem. A million others watched on spectators stayed to the end
officials have said the contingent of police quickly tele\ision·.
and proved once again that
meetings played a key part in herded them to the sidewalk
Amo~ the spectators were nothing ~an work up an
IX'iglng the two sides together with nightsticks and \he threat antiwar protesters who tossed American like a good, old·
again for talks that started of. a violent confrontation bottles, rocks and fruit at fashioned, down-home parade.
Jan. 2 between . teebnlcal ex· subsided as scores more police President and Mrs. Nixon, who
There were 143 units in the
cleared the street, with one led the parade in their bub- .paratie. From the tlu'ee men in
pertS. '
David Lambertson, the U.S. struggling youth In ctmtody. bletop tlmouslne. They .were Colonial garb .In the frpnt rank
A short ~ later, milny of .not hit.
delegation spokesman, refused
.
to three other ~ ·similarly
these
demonstrators headed
to comment on the Statement
Police quioklr broke through dressed who brought up the
lly a French Foreign Mlnlatry toward the White House chant- the ranks of t1ie largest con· rear, every band, float, rnal'Ch·
spokesman that Kublsch aDd ing obscenities about ·Nixon, tingent of demonstrators :- at 1ng unit and ~uestrlim Wllt
Scbumann diacul8ed the Viet- the war, and the pollee. They Perms)'lvanla and 14th Street drew spontaneous and pronam situation at Saturday's were headed off by poli&lt;;e -ihovlng them backwards and longed cheers.
(Coniinued on page 16)
bleting.
splintering a sn~ fence pro- It was the only event of the

government

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is hostage

d
60 000 co-n ·emn
Vietnam policy

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phant ride down Pennsylvania
Avenue to the White House at'
the head of the inaugural
parade, about 100 jeering
protesters massed at an inter·
section a bl~ away from the
Treasury and tossed apples,
oranges and other debris in the
direction of the President's
limousine.
Nixon, standing alongside his
wife through the open roof of
, the . c!"' 1 l!mied ~~irtl!•
demonstrators, ~alsed ' llil!h
arms in a "V" sign and half.
way lunged for some passing
fruit that fell wide of Its mark.
The limousine was never hit 88
Secret Service
ag~nts
scrambled to intercept the
flying delris.
A similar incident occurred
at the sam• int.....,tlon during
Nixon's 1988 inauguratl'on,
when his limousine was actually struck even though it
accelerated for half a block.
This .time, Nixon's car
maintamed its steady pace,
and the President and his wife
(Continued on page 16)

Beattie promoted
of the agriculture experiment
station .and director of
cooperative extension service
and professor of horticulture.
He will assume the new posts
as soon as arrangements can
be made lor the transfer of his
responsibiliUes in Wooster, but
no later than July !st.
He will 'succeed Dr. Russell
E. Larson, who now is provost
of the university.

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa .
(UP!) - Dr. James N. Beattie,
associate director and chief
executive officer of the Ohio
Agriculture Resear ch and
Development Center at
Wooster, Saturday was named
dean of the College of
Agriculture at Pennsylvania
State University.
Beattie also was appointed to
the additional nosts of director

Thousands shivered. for p,arade

Semantics of peace ·settled
PARIS (UPI) ..., American arrived in the Chinese capital
and North Vletnameae legal Thursday from Hanoi.)
an~ la~uage expertS bald
· Charge d'Aflatres Jack Ku·
another seqion Saturday to blsch, who is acting as the top
work 011t details for use In the American. representative in
event a peace agreement for France dlll'ini the absence of
VIetnam Ia signed, a U.S. , an Ambuaador, di.scusaed the
spoknman said.
. .
status af lbe Vlelllam negotla'fi!e meeting waa held at the tionJ 8aturday With French
SaJnt.Nom-4-Breteche home Foreign Minister Maurice
fl. U.S. lndustriBlis~ 'Milton Schumam, a French Foreign
Berzln.
~ spokesman said.
The meeting .laited five
During the December deacf..
holp. A ~ for the lqck In the peaee talka, which
U.S. · peace delegation aald ( led lo U.S. bombing of North
aflet'lnrd tben' were DO plans VIetnam; Schumann ilnd othel'
for a SW111a7 meeting.
French officials held aeveral
(Mn. NIIU)'III Thl Qlnh, VIet separate meetings with U.S.
Coni ,cn~p Mlnlater; left and Communllt offlclabi in an
Ptlline laba'day fot the Plrla attempt to brine President
. peace ljllb, ICCllrdlnll 1o the NIJon's natiol1alaecurity advl·
New Q11na News .Agency. !lie ·10r Henry A. Klalnger and

freedom .
Domestically, the ·President
paraphrased a line from John
F. Kennedy's inaUgural address of 1960 when be said:
"Let each of us ask -not just
what will government do for
me, but what can 1 do for
myself?" · He promised to
transfer more · responsibility
from the government to the
people.
· A couple of demOI)_itrators
shouted : \ "Killer! Killer!"
when Nixon, his left hand
resting on two family Bibles,
repeated the 35-word oath to
"protect and defend the
Constitution" after Chief
Justice Warren E. Burger at
one minute past noon .·
Someone yelled "stop the
war !" after Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew was sworn in.
Both outbursts were clearly
audible in the midst of the
throng jamming the East
Plaza of the Capitol, but
neither Nixon nor Agnew gave
any sign of noticing.
Later, during Nixon's triwn-

majorettes from Wolfson High
School wrapped themselves
like mwrunies in sheets of
clear plastic, trying un successfully to ward off the
kind of weather they rarely see
in Jacksonville, Fla.

four-day, $3.5million inaugural
for which you didn't need an
invitlltion and a ticket. And the
crowd loved it.
They stood and cheered
Apollo 17 astronauts Gene
Cernan, , Ronald Evans and
Jack Schmitt, and the replica
of the lunar rover that
preceded tbe astronauts' car.
They clapped their apprecialion for beautiful, pranclhg
while Lippizzan stallions from
the Tempel .Farrns in illinois.
They applauded long and
loud for the University of
T
M h' B d
ennessee arc mg an ,
which strolled the route
playing "Columbia the Gem of
. the Ocean."
·

The parade was an artistic
success, but the sale of reserve
seat tickets flopped . The
tickets, priced from $5 to $50
depending on ~ proximity to
the presidential reviewing box
In front of the White Ho~.
went begging.
Boy Scouts, who served 88
ushers, gave away what they
called "compllmentary"
tickets so the stands cOuld be
filled . But they warned that if
the regular tic)letholder
showed up, the 8Quatters would
be ejected.
,
A teacher from . suburban
Montgomery County, Md., said
t11at two days before the
inaugural she waa offered a $50
1\Cket free if she would take
four of her students ~ that
· the empty standi wouldn't be
noticeable on telnlalon.
·
' .

The parade was scheduled to
last two hours, but that, as
usual, was optimistic. The lead
group began the long trek from
lhe Capitol to llie White House
45mlnutes18te. The time never
was made up and ·the parade
ended at 4 p.m..
AI each intersection, a band
not marching in the parade
-entertained during Julia. Eight

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, 117 ~The &amp;mday Times· Sentinel, 'Sunday, Jan. 21, i973.

le-The,SiindayTifn!!s-Sentinel,Sunday, Jan. 21,111'13

Television Log··.

60,000 .

SHOP

totJnr.~~

·

.

~

NEW YORK (UP!) Economic llllCertainlies and
the probability of higher interest rates in the near future
lowered prices last week on the
New York Stock Exchange.
Even the brightened prospects
for a Vielnam ceasefire were
Wlabie to halt the price erosion.
The ·widely followed Dow
Jones average of 30 blue chip
il!dustrials declined 13.17 to
1,026.19, Standard &amp; Poor's 500
Stock Index lost 0.52 to 118.78
and the NYSE Common Stock
Index declined 0.44 to 64 .51.
The President's decision to
implement ~hase lii of his
economic policy was broughl
under closer scrutiny in Wall
Street this week. According to
one analyst, S;lul Smerling of
Standard &amp; Poor's, "there is
some con~ern the loosening up
In Phase Ill will release inflationary pressures." Some
tightening up by .the Federal
Reserve Bank brought on
additional concern that interest rates will head higher.
Of 1,951 issues on the tape,
1,234 declined, 516 advanced,
Turnover totaled 93,206,990

'

News • • • in lJriefs

..

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

Vehicles
damaged

•••

POMEROY ~ Sheriff Robert
C. Hartenbach 's Dept. in·
vestigated two accidents
Friday, both involving heavy.
damages.
At 8:15a.m. on SR 338, two
and nine tenths of a mile south
of Racine, Robert L. Lawson·,
Jr., 16, Racine, Rt. 2, driving
north attempted to pass but
met a car coming in the opposite direction. He pulled
back Into his line of traffic and
struck a car driven by Mary L.
Proffitt, Rt. I, Porlland, spun
around, and hit a guardrail.
Lawson was cited to juvenile
court for improper passing.
There were no injuries. '
At 10:15p.m. on SR 681, three
miles east of Tuppers Plains,
Joe Congo, 18, Racine, Rt. I,
was traveling east when a· rear
tire went fiat causing him to
lose control in a curve. His car
turned over; landing on its
wheels , Bill Buchanan, 16,
Reedsville, a passenger, ,was
taken to a Parkersburg
hospital, treated and released.
. No citation was issued.

Alice Halley

died Saturday

Your Jfayne National' Forest

.,
:

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IIU- flle ltu&amp;tr to .

G:uo~alitJ

Ri1llts Ruern•
lttMI 1111 hirtli te ..

Chuck •-••

(o,,po,ce ttle C.t and vlllut os
I as t ~e price. You'll find
Center Cut Chuck
offer you a for better
I
than any Blade of End
sold locally . You get mort

Exchange refiectec;l big doubts

Foundation

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!IHII 111. ZJ 111J
Ntne SGhl t1 Duleu

VETS LEGISLATION- Veterans Administration Administrator Donald Johnson and loth
District Representative Clarence Miller discuss legislation aimed at veterans' needs which has
'been introduced in the 93rd Congress. Miller's package of vets legislation Included a bill to
increase.monthly benefits to V.terans to reflectlncrea8es.in the cost of living. One billlllllJild
· ·,.,ake cerialn that recipients of veterans' pension and comj)ensation will not have the am~unt .
of such benefits reduced because of the 20 pet. social security Increase enacted by Congress
last year or any subsequent cost-of-living increase also authorized under the new' law. Another
would ln.crease monthly veterans benefits.to reflect Increases in the cost-of-living and a tldrd
bill would extend the period in which veterans may take advantage of the G.!. bill from eight to
twelve years from his date of dis~harge.

are

'

THIS·WEEK FOR • • •

1

1

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'

.Inaugural

$UNDAV, JAN. 21, 1973
(Continued from page 15)
(Continued from page 15)
6:00 - Film •·
.
.
.
barricadeS. ,
refused to duck bac~ down to
6:30 - This W~k • 4; N~wsmak~r '13 13; Bob Harrington 6;
Lamp Unto My Feet iO.
'!be rally on the Washlr!4!ton · the.ir seats. ·
7:00- Communique 6: 01~ Time Gospel Hour 13 : This Is The
Monumen\ grounds, which
Tbe. U.S. Park Pollee
Answer3 ; Time For Tlmot~y 4: Look Up&amp; Llve10.
·
7:30'- Faltll F01: Today 8; Revival Fires 6: Herald of Truth 3; · began In early afternoon as the . estim&amp;led that the bulk of the
Devey &amp; Goliath ., Cam••• Three 10.
Inaugural parade was In demonstrators · -80,000 or
1:00- Leonard Repass 8; Gospel Caravan 6: Church .Service
progreu,
was the culmination more·-ereafewbloc;ksaway
13; Morman Cholr3; Day of Dlscoyery 4: Billy James Hargis
and His AII-Amerltan Kids 10.
of 'three separate demonstrll· at the time, attendlpg counter8:30- Oral Roberts 3; Vour Health 4; Day of Discovery 8: Rex tiOllB held earlier at the Uniqn inaqgtll'al actlvlllei between
Humbird )3; 'Revival Fires 15; Kathryn Kuhlan 6; Don ·
,.
Station Plaza a few bi!ICks the lincoln Memorial and tile
•,
Young 10,
·
·
:. 9:00 - Singing.Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel •: Rex Humbard 15, 6;
from till! Capitol, Arlington Washington Monument.
~
Oral Ro&amp;erls 10 : Archie's Fun House 8. ·
Helicopters clattered over·
9:30 - Church by Side of the Road 4; Campus Crusade 10; National Cemetery and the
Lillcoln Memorial.
head, and police were stationed
~
GlobatroltlirJ 8; Good news 13.
~
IO:DO-Church S~vlce 4; Failh For Today IS; Curiosity Shop 6,
ti .S. Park Pollee esllmsted ai Intersections, alleys; and
•,
13; Thls,ls nie i.ite 3; Old Time Gospel :Hour 8; Movie "Annie
that
at least 60,000 protesters rooltops. A Secret SerVIce
Get Your Gun' 10.
. ·
· ·
~
10:30 - lnslaht 4: Caotaln Noah 3; Cosumer Report 15; were between !he Lincoln agent rode an auto mechanic's
~
VIewpoint 8.
·
and the Washington trolleyonhisstomacbdownthe
.~
' 11 :00 .L TV Chapel3; Foc:UsOn Columbus4; Bullwlnkle 13; Point Memorial
monument at 1:30 p.m., parade route, searching uridet
~
of View 6; lnslaht 15.
·
~ II : 30-Make A Wish 6; Outreach 15; This Is The Answer 3; Face
making it ibe largest t)11'11011t the stands with a Dashlight.
~
the Nation ·8; Faith In Action 13.
, 12:00 - Calvin Evans 13; At Issue 3; Rex Humbard 8; NHL for an antiwar demonsb'atlon MailboxeS were wired shut as a
,
Hockey 4, 15; Urban League Presents 10. ,
in Washington since one April precaution against bombs.
~ 12:30- Revival Fires 13; Craft. wllh Kaly 3; Face the Nation 10.
24, 1971, when pollee put the R 1 ott r a 1ned . Army
~
1:00- Wally's WD~:kshop 3; Old Time Gospel Hour 8; Lower
crowd
at 250,000 or more.
' paratroopers stood by In an
1.1
Lighthouse 13; Columbus Town Meeting 10.
!o\
1: 30- Roller Derby 3; Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13.
Sizeable antiwar protests underground subway on
~ 2:00- NBA Basketball6, 13; To Be Announced 8; Dealh Valley
also took place Saturday In Capitol Hill.
"
Deys 15.
some
European cities and in
A red-coated Colonial fUe
;
2:30- Golt Tournament 3, 4, 15; Movie "SI~plng Beauty" 8;
0
Lassie 1ft . .
Asia. Among the biggest were .. and drum corps from Con:.: 3:00 - Animal World 10.
those
In Paris, where nectlcut led the nearly two:~
3:30 - .Pro Bawl Pre-Game 8, 10.
.
NEW PROJECT -Molt ellei')'OIIII can belp In the new
-~
4:00 - Marshall Sporh '12; Fred Taylor 4; Pro Bowl 8, 10; thousands of studenls clashed , hour Inaugural parade, which
!Ice are aJao acceptable. Howewr, It Ia requested ibat all
:.: . Sacrad Heart 15; Washington Week In Review 33.
jrojectof the Middleport Church of ClliBt whldl will attempt
with police, and In Stockholffi, Nixon. and Agnew and their
contrlbullonabe.clean m! In relatively good condition: Other.
·'
4:15 - Cornnierclal Film 3; Ooen Bible 15.
to
provide
clothing
{or
Me~
CoiDllianl.
Tine
WCIIleR
of
the
Wlllllen of the cburch wDJ assist In Ironing and mending.
where about 5,000 marched- families viewed from a heated,
S, .oi:3D-World of Survlval6. 13; ,Sports Chollenge 3; Legacy A, 15;
church, Mildred Hawley, Grace Hawley and Flo Qrueser will
•··
Audubon Wildlife Theatre 33.
Metal rods haw been Installed In the basement of the ad·
through downtown streets.
bulletproof stand in front of the
~ 5:00- Ripples 33; Wild, Wild West 6; LloY,d Bridges' Water
be at the new addition of the cburdt from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m.
dillon so·that clothbig can be bW18 once It l8 ready to be
The Washington demonstra- While House. Among the
•
World 3; Movie "A Girl Named Tomlko' 3. ,
each
Tuellday
and
Thursday
to
receive
contributions
of
good
lions
were
organized
by
dignitaries
in
the
VIP
stands
dlatrlbuted. Here Is the Rev. Raullln Moyer, pa,Mor of the
•,: 5:30- Sesame Str~l 33; II Takes AThief 3; Sports Challenge 4;
used
clothing,
They
will
size
and
prepare
the
clotblng
for
.,
Roller Derby 15.
several groups, including the . was Kissinger, whose companchurch who l8 beading the project, with some of the clolhln8
'
6:00 - News 4.
distrlbulion
to
the
undel'(livlleged.
Bedding,
curtains
and
already
contributed.
Nallonal
Peace
Action
ion
was
New
York
soclallte
~
6; 30 - Untamed World 6 ; Human Dimension 33; NBC News 3, 4,
similar
items
which
families
whose
homes
deatroyed
by
•.
15.
Coalition (NPAC), the People's Nancy McGinnis.
: 7:00 - Lawrence Welk 13; Safarllo Adventure 3; This Is Your Coalition for Peace and Justice
Nixon borrowed a topcoat
·'•
Life~; Wild Kingdom 15; UFO 8; In The Know 10; Zojom 20,.
seUish and UDB.Iinling servlce·to the board ward to his 'Continuing advice and colUisel
(PCPJ), the VIetnam Veterans from Secret Service agent Bob
::
33; Wall Till Vour Father Gets Home 6.
.and
to the community.
as an active board membe~."
•. 7 : 30 ~ World of Disney 3, A,15; Let's Moke A Deal6; Dick Van Agalrist the War (VVAW), the Taylor for the ride doWn the
~
Dyke 10;, Eveni1,At Pops 33, 20.
' Sheets said, "Harland Martin has give
Other officers elected by the board
Ylppiea and Students for a "Avenue of the Presidents" In
~
8:00- FBI 6, 13;
sh a, 10.
Col bo
of
his
time
and
efforta
continuously
for
the
were
the first vice chairman, Mu
Democratic Society (SDS). the 40-degree chill under gray
(Continued from page is)
•. 8:30- French Chel20, 33 r Mannl ~ a. 10; urn 3, 4, 15.
past 22 years. During his term as chair· Morro.w; second vice chairman, Neal
i 9:00 '- Master piece Thealre 20, 33 ; Movie " liow the West Was The protestS were Intended as skies.
attendance, to express gratitude and man of the board we saw the new Holzer Taylor; ttaasurer, Emerson E. Evans, ·
~
• Won" 6, 13.
the highlight of a three-day
Tbe tradilionai parade, with
~
9:30- Dick Van Dyke &amp; The Olher Woman 8, 10.
appreciation to Mr. Martin. for hjs IDl· Medical Center COQ!pleled. We look !01'. and secretary, John F, Stlffier; Jr.
' 10;00- NlghtGallery3, 4,15; Firing Llne20, 33.
demonstration called an the "Spirit of '76" as Its theme,
:: 10:30- Relurn to Peyton Place .3; 4, 15; Firing Line 20, 33.
."Inauguration of Conscience." featured 55 bands, 35 floets, 14
,, 11 :00- News 3, 4, 8, 1(), 15.
·
AI th~ Washington Monwnent, equestrian units and other
~ 11 : 15 - CBS News 8, 10.
•. 11 : 30 - Movies 11 1t's ·A Gutu 3i 11 The Hanged Man" 4; 11 Cona Qone-dlllllng wind swept marching units depleting
:
fldenllal Agenl" 8; "The De vii's 8. 10; In Concert (3: Film 15.
across the wet and soggy American history from Ply- DomestlcaUy, he said, this
l 11 :45 - Here Comes the Brides 6.
•· 1:00 - News 13.
gr01mds as various speakers, . mouth Rock to the Apollo moon means "government must
} 1:30 - News 4.
including Rep. Bella Abzug, D- landing miBsions.
learn to take less from people,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
MONDAV, JAN. 22, 1973
)
N.Y.,
Sen.
Philip
A.
Hart,
DNixon's
big
day
closed
with
people
can
do
more
for
Variable eloudlneaa aud
, :00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
80
I
(Continued from page 15)
Mich.,
and
PCPJ
!'lalional
mit
one
butfive
Inaugural
balls
themselves."
6:
15
Farm
lime
10;
.
English
3.
i
mUd clllriDg the period with a
• 6:25- Paul Harvey 13.
· Corrdlnator Sidney Peck de- aroWid town In his honor -the
cbance af raJa Tuelday aud possibly with a copy of VIetnam peace,agreement for Bignlng by
Saying It wlls time "for all
6:30- Columbus Today ~ ; Bible Answers 8; Good News 13;
manded
immediate
action
by
last
major
event
In
the
threeAmericans
to
renew
our
faith
School Scene 10.
agaia aboot Thonday. Dally President Nguyen Van Thleu. In Washington, President Nixon
6:45 - Corncob Report 3.
Nixon to end the VIetnam day extravaganza now In ourselves," the Presidentblgb temperalllrea In upper said ''we stand on the threshold of a new era of peace."
7:00- Today3, 4, 15; News, Wealher, Sports 6; CBS News8, 10;
conruct.
estimated
to
cost
$3.5
million,
perhaps
mindful
of
the
demonThe Saigon sources said plans for Agnew's trip are tentative,
30s and low COs north and In
FllnfstonH 13.
7:30 - Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwinkle
the
most
expensive strators in town to !X'Otest his
COs to low 50a south portion. depending on whether a final agreement l8 reached between
13; Popeye 10.
Inauguration In history.
Vlelnam policies -criticized LoWI al lllgbt 30 1o 35.
Henry A. Kissinger and tile North Vietnameae in Paris
8:00- Capt. Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33 ;
In
his
address,
the
President
~~
.....
find
•""'"'•n
negotiations
resuming Tuesday. The White House refused to
Lassie 6.
.
Timken to triple
,.. ,
set the wne for his second term • woose ....o
ev~, ........
1:30-Jack LaLanne 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Rev lew6.
comment on the Agnew report.
• 8:55- Local News 13.
when he said that "abroad and wrong with America ,and very
Utile right with It".
I 9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Capt. Kangaroo 8; Canton forgings
at home, the time has come to
Said Nixon: "Let us be proud
•
Concenfratlan6; Friendly Juncllon 10; A.M. 3; Ben Casey 13,
·i 9:30- To Tell The Truth 3;'Jeopardy6. ·
CANTON. Ohio (UP!)- The turn away from the conde- that in each of the four wars In
) . 10:00 - Columbus Six Calling 6; Dick· Von Dyke 13; Dinah Shore
Timken
Co. announced scending policies of pater- which we have been engaged,
I
3, 1,5; Joker's Wild B, 10.
Saturday it will spend $7.9 nall.sm .,.of 'Washington knows including the one we are liow
10:30 - Split Second 13; Concentcatlon 3, 15; Phil Oonahu&lt; A;
:.,;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
million to triple its Canton best."'
!ringing to an end, we have
•; 11:00- Password 13; Mr. Rogers 6; Sole of Century 3, 15; Love
SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 1973
steel operation's forging
In foreign affairs, be said, fought not for the Je1flsb ad~·
AmerlcanSiyle6; GambitS, 10; Elec. Cd. 20.
1
I•
_
,q
-~
I I
• 11 :30- Bewltched6, 13; 'Hollywood Squareo3, 4, 15; Love of Lire
capacity.
the United States will honor its vantage but to belp others
;J
. 8, 10; Sesame St. 20.
ACROSS
37,: _Rtnown
72-Kind
138-Lubrfettt
96-Sontitnd·dtnce
Included in the program is treaty commitments, oppose resist aggression,"
74-Downy duck
139-Grain Cpl.)
• 12:00- Password 6; News 10, 13; Contact 8; Bob Brown 50-50
39-ln addition
1-stt of balls
76--lona of body . 140-Rocky hill
addition of a new, highly effo~ by any country to im·
Nixon, who sat by a roaring
:
C!ub 4.
4G-Sptnlah Htle
97-Lonc for
6-Sum
77-&amp;caped
141 - Flsh 1111
41-HI&amp;hllnder
99-0penwork
12; 25 - CBS News 8.
118
sophisticated fast-opei'atlng ' pose
will on another by fire In the Uncoln Room of the
11- Unlt of alactrlcal 7a-cantury pltnl
142-cooiad lav•
"42-Rtply
ftbrtc
·, 12:30- Split Second 6; Who, What, Where 3, 15; Search tor
ClptCity
7'-BitCktnl
143-Parer1t (colloq.) U-Locttt
3000-ton forge press; in- force, work for nuclear arms White House until well put
101 -Aboun~d
Tomwrow 8, 10.
16-'fha underworld 82--5ta nymph
144-PIIasltr
44-Batkttl:ltll
105-Food proJrtm
1:00- All My Children 6, 13; News 3; Jackie Oblinger 8; Gr~n
stallatlon of up to 10 new curb! and "do our share in midnight making persona.!
21-Supply of
84-lncllna
145-VentllatH
teem .
106--Fiylnl crttturt
.t.cres
10;
Not
For
Women
Onlv
15.
fmh man
85-God!Mst of
147-ftosttrs
4~Ftrot lalands
107-Mwsl~al
forging pre-heat furnaces, delendi.'lg ~ce and freedom changes In his speech,
·: 1:30 - Let's Make A Deal6, 13; Thr~ on A Match 3, 4, 15; As
22-Turtdah Mcm
dl&amp;c:ord
149-Pronoun
whirlwind
lnetrument
departed from the test at the
additional forge handling In the world.
i
The World Turns 8, 10.
23-Wfpe out ,
86-Faotleaa
150-Qid·womanlsh .
48-Abovt and
111-Ftll In drops
:&lt;,
2:00 - Days of Our Lives 3, ~. 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
24-Apllthtdc
~uncturt
1!12-Pfa~::q of
·touchln1
112-Wild hOI
equipment and enlargement of
But, said Nixon, "the time end Saturday to deUver what
2'5--Ewryona
89-RIII tttllt map
baked clay
· Douglas 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
·
49-Part ol toot
113-KIIIed
the forge shop facilities.
has passed when America Will he called a private jrayer.
26-Ardtnt
90-Stlrch.. for
1&amp;4-Girl't name
50-Soli
115-Group
· 2:30 - Doling Game 13; DociD~:s 3, 4, 15; Edgeol Night&amp;, 10.
28-Yislon
92-clnslflet
1!16-Gat up
51-Enthutlnllc
116-Barracuda
~ 3:00 - Generei ·Hospital 6, 13; Another World 3, 4, 15; Love
make every other nation's
Pausing a moment and IU3o--coln
9-4-Wrltlnl paJMr
US-Loads
5~-Romtn official
118-Ceudtl
Splendored Thing 8, 10; 30 Minutes With 20.
A BeautUul Itch
confllct our own, or make ling his eyes, Nlzon Bald, "As I
32-Nota of scala
9a-croftlts
n9-0mlt from
53-Potttltlvt
apptndap
' 3:30- Return to Peyton Place 4, 15; 33; One Life to Live 6, 13;
33-A
atatt
(tbbr.)
,(colloq.)
pronunciation
pronoun
119-Crln llkadovt
every
other
nation's
future
our·
stand
in
this
place
so
hallowed
Poison ivy's handsome red
·,
Secret Storm 8, 10; French Chef 20.
34--Footllka Plrt
99-ntla of respect 160-Ratldua
55-Clans
121-Ear ornament
and yellow autumn colors responsibility, or jlrestDne to by history 1 think of others who
4:01'· - Mr. Cartopn 3; Fllntstones 6; Sesame St. 20. 33; Love
35--Cfoth mtiiUI'I VI 10G-Encounttrtd
161- Nitl~
!16-Lifalut
123-Pronoun
i Aonerlcan Style 13; Merv Griffin 4; Somersel 15; Movie have deceived many an un- tell the people of other nations Jitood here before me.! think of 31-Fiock
102-Dtclttt
£ayptl1ns
57-Pitct of cutlery 125-Spln
•
"Louisa" 1o.
37-PrtPotltlon
103--Bishoprlc
DOWN
58-Count~ of Atla 125-Chtllenp ·
suspecting flower arranger.
how to manage. their own a!- the dreams of A,!nerlca.
at-Music:
1~Ponattlvt
' 5:00- Take FiveS; Bonanza 3, 4; Daniel Boone 6; Merv Griffin
61-optra by Verdi 127-Loops
Nearly
an
entire
college
is writt.n
PfQnoun
63- l,.llnd
1-Stuffl
;
8; Mr. Rogers20, JJ; Dick Van Dyke 15.
129-Rttin
campus once was incapaci- fairs."
"Each one recognized he
40--Arrows
105-0bstructt
64-Ltln·to
2-SIIvt
130-CIIm:Jinl plant
; 5:30- Elec. Co. 33 ; Gomer Pyle 13; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
F1ags at the Capitol w~ still needed help far beyood himself
42-a...st of burdtln 106-Rtmlllvtd
tated when the leaves were
3-Sick
68-Halda back
131-$ttokt
•,
Marshell Dillon 15.
43-Comel)'
bonH from
4-Ptl'tnt (colloq,)
704tmosphtrlc
132"'-Quadruped
used to decorate a
:: 6:00- News3, 4, 8, 10; Truth or llon5eq. 6: News 13, 15; Around
flying at haH-61aff in memory to make these dreams CCIIle
44-Joume)' farth
1o.-Dint
condlt~nt
134-0penworlc
5--0I'IIn of tllht
nasium for a h~rvest
'
the Bend 33; Sesame St. 20.
of Harry S Truman, who was
k
In
.f.$-Gama at cardt 1()9.......A atatt (lbbr.)
15-Sirlptd tnlmtls 71-Wrltlnc ttblets
fabric
:: 6:30 - ABC News 6 ; CBS News 8, 10; lnslghl 33; I Dream of
President when Nixon began true. I as your jrayers
47--cuttlnl In two
110-Symbol for
73-Raatt on
7-Son of
136-Biouu •
JeaMie 13; News 3, 4, 15.
·
getting God's help In mak\ng
4~
tallurfum
Altmtmnon
137- Fertlla apota
tht """'
~ 7:00- Tr\Jth 01: Con•eq. 3; Beat the Cloc~ 4; News 6, 10; Circus
his political career as a these dreams come true, and
111--Gtmlnl cuba
!S()....4bscure
74-Shltld
8-Sallor (colloq.)
In dttart
•.
13; Whet's My Line 8; Saint 15. ·
51-fttllndlln•nt ai1124Jquor
9-P•Id notice
75-RtcompanM
139-Unltt
staunchanti-Communlst;. lnhls that together we may be
5-4-Drunk•rd•
114--Limb
77--At::t::&lt;~mplish ·
~ 1, 30 - To Tell lhe Truth 6; Young Dr. Kildare 8; Hollywood
Jo-condueted
140-Bound
55-Care for
116-Pttflx: tbova
11-Stn..l
menta
144-S.Vtl'llt
speech Saturday • a quarter· worthy of our task."
•
Squares.4; Traffic Court 10; Beat the Clack 13; Bobby Golds56 Despoil
117-M•In dish
78-V(olfhound
·12-Sa• In Asia
14.5 --Mohammldan
bore 3; Hodgepodge Lodge 201 Episode Action 33.
::
century later, the President •
5D-Fun
119-Ctnttr
13-MIIt sheep
80-lrrltlltl
ntmt
. ~ 8:00 ~ Rowan &amp; Marlin's Laugh· in J, 4, 15; Gunsmoke 8, 10;
dedicated his second term to a
60-Excl•matlon
120-SIIpplr
IU.-Turt
l~nJunctlon .
146--Ptt'farmtd
Jane Goodall6, 13; Net Qoera Theatre 20. 33,
'
62--8oartd
122-Moltttn
15-Frlud
8~Thlnlt, In ltw 147--co.-....
world of peace in which "each
i 9:00 - Here's Lucy 10, 8; Movies " I Love My Wife" 3, 15;
64-WIIhtred
124-ltl..,.r llltnd
16-r..tr part
84-Piumllkt fruit
ltiMII'III
,
"Lonely Are the Brave" 4; Skating Spectacular 20, 33.
re!lpects the right of the other
65-Qrtft IMtar
12~11hWI)'
17- Emrntt
87- Lowar In rtnk
148-At.,nqulan
) 9; 30 - Doris Day 10.
66-Prwffx:: twice
126-Bahaw
18-Prefhc d~n
89--Mitchtd
Indian
to live by a different system."
; 10:00 - News 20; Bill Cosby 8, 10; An American Family 33. •
61-0ocldll• of
1211-lom
19-Mlstlka
90--M•IIt::e
149-l'•rt ol body
Nixon said he would "enhtillnj
129-cut
:; 10:30 - What About Tomorrow? 6, 13.
·
20-Cublc mtttr ll 91-Dined
15l~yp~nold lhh
69-Dinctr
131-lncUpnt
27-Tht
wtllaba
92--cantut
' 11 :00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
153-Heaatl~ prefix
courage Individuals at home
7D-Short
U2-Pos1ttltd
29-Rtmilndar
93-Ditpatch.t
1!15-R ..Iroad (tbbr.)
) 11 :30 - Johnny Carson 3, ~. 15; Dick Cavett 6; 13; Movies "The
GALUPOUS - Mrs. Alice
convemtion
133-lncorrtct
and nations abroad to do more
31 ~ 1Ja mlst1kan
95-South Afrlctn
157-Artlflclal
"
Man Who Knew Too Much," 8; "The Member of the Wedn-c,.
US-Pair
36--Worttmtn
dl&amp;ltct
W
.
Halley,
85,
Gallipolis
Rt.
2,
ltniUIIt
for themselves and decide
'
ding" 10.
'
~ 1:00 - Focus On Columbus 4; New• 13.
more· for themselves." passed away Saturday at I : 45
ATOI.I..Ll'IOS
; 1:30 - News~p.m. at the Holzer Medical
•,
.,•
·Center after an extended
..
illness.
''·•,
She was the daughter of the
'
late Lorenzo D. Williams and
'•
Phoeba Hazlett of Ohio Twp,,
and the widow of the late
By T. ·Allan Wolter
propOsed action. Tbis Is true whether or stand on theli- own and pDPr projects
••
Robert A. Halley, Rt: 2,
•,
Dlatrlel Ranger
not the action is minor or major. will be dropped. An outstanding
Gallipolis.
'
IRONTON Environmental Perhaps lhe most widely known provision of, the National En·
Survivors are
these
impact statements are becoming a way example of this is the controversy over ~ironmental Act affords the public an
••.
daughters, Mrs. Floyd (Anna)
of life for fC!deral agencies engaged in the Alaska pipeline. Right in our own opportWJity to participate in Federal
'••
Cox, Mrs. Clayton (Elsie)
actions that may affect the quality of back yard Is the dispute over the Pine discussion affecting the environment.
•
Clagg, and Mrs. Donavan
the environment. State agencies as well Creek Watershed Poject.
Each draft statement must be
' ~
'
(Weltha)
Clagg; two iwns,
are learning to live with environmental .
Federal officials charged with the made, public by the responsible agency
'
· Emmell. and W&amp;I'IJI!r, all of
provisions of th e National En- responsibility of determining whether not less than 90 days before the
•• vlronmental
Gallipolis; 24 grandchildren,
Policy Act (NEPA ) of environmental statements are needed proposed project can begin. The final
and,
it Is believed, 35 great1970.
or not are faced with a difficult task. statement must Include a discussion of
·=
:.
grandchildren, and a sister,
' The actions for which agencies Limited budgets and the availability of the objections and problems raised by
~
~
Mrs .
Elma
Williams,
must prepare impact statements must trained personnel to perfonn field in- . the public. To' further strengthen the
be "major'' and , "environmentally vestigations and write the statement process, the final statement must be ~ Gallipolis:
.~
•
significant." Unfortunately the act does are daily facts of life he must face. Most made public at least 30 days before the , Two brothers, four sisters ·
and a son preceded ~er In
not define these two terms very welL As federal administrators have been
project or action begins .
••• a consequence, there have already been around long enough to feel the very real proposed
death.
Public impact on an environmental
. She was a member of the
many disputes
between en- pressure of various · groups and in, statemenlmay take the form of'written
~
,
Mercerville Baptist Church
vlronmentallsis and va rious federal dividuals who make it their business to comments to the responsible agency or
•
where funeral services will be
agendes over just w~at constitutes a closely scrutinize government ac- verbal statements at a public listening
held Tueaday at 2 p.m. with the
ma)or federal action. Many of these tivities.of ali kinds. Generally, tl!is is a session (announced alid well publiclred
'•• disputes
Rev. Bruce Unroe. olllclallnc .
result in court cases.
very healthy situation ; some federal by the responsible agency) or both.
Burial will be in Men:en1lle
11!0 U. S. Forest Service is one of projects that could only be classed as
When viewed from afar, the whole
Cemetery.
Friends may CIID at
many agencies that bears the sears of "boondoggles" or "pork barrel" have process·seerns cwnbersome, extremely
~
•
the .F. L. Stevera Funeral
111ch ·court battles. Tbe courts so far been stopped because of an outcry by expensive and even unnecessary by
Home,
In Mercerville Monday
• have usually rined !hal an en- the citizenry. Conversely' )VOrthwhile some, What can't be Ignored however,
:,'
after 4 p.in.
vironmenlal statement should be projects have been stopped, delayed or
the jam this cauntry finds itseU In
' prepared because the act provides lhat cancelled because : of special interest , isbecause
of too. many short cuts In the
,a statement must be prepared if there group action .
past. There is no easy way out and.WJtil
is significant controversy over the
In the long rWJ, tl1e democratic , a better "mousetrap" cornea · along
S c h o o l In Greenland l8
process will prevail. Good projects will NEPA wiD have to carry the ball.
compulsory until the age of
14. Course$ include kayak
handling and fur sewing.

3

."

..

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Ralph Brewer, Vlolel Brewer

to Frances Hewitt, . George

Moore. 1 A.. Lebanor.
c. F. Betzlng, Edith Seizing
to Robert L. Dl•on, Beu lah C.
Dl•on. 205.15 A., Orange.
•' Mary Amos to te onard
' Amos. 17.43 A.. Orange.
· Bertha L. Baum to Delmar ·
G: Bourn, Kathryn I. Baum,
Parcels, Chester.
Joe M. Bolin, Janet Bolin lo
Joe M. Bolin, Janel Bolin,
Parcels, Rutland .
Eugene 'F. Imbrogno. Asso.,
to Ohio Power Co.. R-W,
Salisbury.
·
Robert C. Hartenbach, Shlf.,
Martha Price. eta! .. lo J. B.
, O'Brien, Roberta C. O' Brien,
r 40 A., otlve.

!

SundaY Creek Coal Co. to·
• ·Jaymar coal Co.. Coal,
~ Salisbury.
.
·
,. Clarab811e Landers. Char 1es
, · Otho Landers to James L,
.l. Conley, .,lea~ s. Conley,' Lots.
; PomeroY· ·
. b . d·~ · to
Dee Wit! Rothge • .c·.•
' Rome c, Rolhgeb, Cert. for
trans .• Middlef?Orl·
Jean E. Mann, George V.
Mann, M.D., to Hansford C.
~ Franz, Carolyn M..Franz. Lot,
&gt; f&gt;9meroy:
•

shares compared to 101,839,960
shares a weel&lt; before and
94,766,720 sha"es a year
.earlier.
One analyst noted during the
week "investor's hopes have
been dashed so many times on
the Vietnam agreement, thai
most people will just wait for
Kissinger to have the
agreement in his hands,
signed."
Oil issues and airlines ran

meat, much len Hilt

and your roo st goes
farther t han with o Blade
End Cut. Try a Kroger

against the market. The oil
issues benefitted from
President Nixon's lifting the oil
import quotas, and airline
issues were the recommended
"buy" of a major brokerage
house.
Gulf Oil was the most active
issue, up 2V. at 28% on 1,270,00Q
shares. The company recently
annoWJced plans to purchase
up to 3 million shares of its own
stock.

Center-Cut Chuck Roost soon.
GVIra"teed far total Slltisfac·
or your ·money btJtk .

Kroger First Cui

Coordinator

Washington's

appointed to

great elm was

seven counties

327 years old

'

Boston
Roll

9tJ
Rome · 4 59
AppI

' ?ork Loin Sliced Into
Hall

Florida

All Meat
Bologna

100 Size

Temple Doz7.
Oranges

U.S . 'Gov l. Groded Choice
People's Choice Bon eless

ATHENS - Appointment of
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Mrs. Mary Badger as coor- great American elm that
dinator for a seven county area sheltered George Washington
of Southeastern Ohio, · United during the Battle of Long
Cerebral Palsy of Ohio, Inc. Island was 327 years old when
( U~C. P. ) has been announced
It was blown down by a storm
by Edward Lippirt, Ohio in November, it was revealed
U.C.P. executive director.
Friday.
Mrs. Badger, a 1972 graduate
Donald Simon, curator of
of Ohio University, will be Prospect Park in Brooklyn
working with cerebral palsied where the tree was located,
and with commWJity agencies said sctentlflc analysis of the
in Hocking, Gallia, Athens, wood from the · 102-foot giant
Meigs. Lawre nce, Jackson , indicated !hat the core wood
and Vinton counties. She will dated to 1645, two decades after
provide consultative services New York was settled by the
for cerebral palsy families, Dutch.
.
assist in the establishment and
Polished cross sections of the
malntalnance of special elm will be placed on penna·
education programs and help nent display in area musewns
to coordinate the efforts of and some of limbs will be used
communily agencies ·working in the park as benches,
with cerebral palsy families . gu)deways and barriers. ·
The U.C.P. office for South'
The tree cracked at Its
eastern Ohio is located on the shallow, fungus-ridden roots
first floor o£ the Ohio Nov. 9 and fell in a meadow irf
University Administrative the park. ln a hollow Inside was
Annex, Smith and W. Union ~ound a bee's nest with a
Streets, Athens. To obtain production of at least 30 years
cerebral palsy services or to of wax.
refer clients, Mrs. Badger may
A memorial will be erected
be contacted at 614-li94-2562. near the stump of the etm.

Pork
~~~.P~

Tprt- Sweat

85

., &gt;I

'

,

.

Selec t Va rie t ie~

I

Country Oven
Donuts

Regular or Mint Flavored

Country Club
Ice Cream

Crest
Toothpaste

M~;t;~vi).i;·n~r's ~~k~Z- 39;
l·lb,
Pkg.

3

29-'

;lb.
Bag

1'

$199
With Coupon
Anti Per~pi rant-S .az , Can

Yellow, Devil's Food, German Chocolate, Milk Chocolate;Velvet, Sour Cream White, Sour Cre9 m Fudge Chaco lore,=

Seaet
Deodorant

·BettY~CFOcker i

NEW HOMES FOR SALE

SPLIT LEVEL

A BR, 2 baths, F~&gt;(' ' ~'nm, tota\ electrlc with Wmian\son

0 L' D

Healing and c~..J
""nnlng. General Eleclrlc
appliances, full ;
:aped, concr.le drive &amp;
slreets, 2'12 car garagt, • .
lcony, lot 15x115, county
water, Tara sewer system.

s;,;.9771

Cake Mixes §
$ ~

BI-LEVF.L

a•

c..,,. b•ina Juurr u 1171
" S1IIj1ct tl IJIIIiCJIIII tllta
liCit
Slltl ......

IB'h"'L

bedroom, diQ ioig balcony.

lOIII

SQUTHERN COLONIAL

o£'

3 llR. 211, balhs. 1,$
. "v room. basement, total electric'
with Williamson r
·•ntral air condlllonlng,
General Electric&lt;
D :arpeted, landscaped,
concrete drive &amp; street&gt;. •
~rage, dining balcony, ·
. lot' 95x 175,. county water,
Tara
~'"Ner
system
. .• . ..
.
. .

..

Ch0Riot.

Fudge,
Vanilla,
lonana, Choeolot., Choe&amp;&gt;late
Molt, Fruit Cup, Chocolate
Mint, lutttrscolth &amp; Toploca ..

FIVE LEVELS·
3' Bedrooms, 21f1 baths( 2 car garage, 12x24 l lvin9 room .

s Sn.Ck Padc

room , firepla ce.

367-7250

Fabric Softener

C:•n•

Zest

99;

1'

any

WIIIIC..poo

Compl..ion Bor Soap

Rain Barrel

5-oz.49J

We do all in our pow~r
to have all ou r Adverfi.U
POLICY Special• on our shtlwes
when you &amp;nop far fh•M..
Some-tif!Ms, d~o~t to ~ndi.
ti0111 beyond our Rntrol
w~ run out of an ad&gt;~tr·
ti.-d speci al. ' II thl1
should hopp•n to you.
ask Cit tl.e Ito'• office for
o RAIN CHECK which tn·
tiff•s )IOiol to tM IOfN'
ad'terttMd ip.ciol ot the
· 10m• tpt(iol price OA'f
lime withln 2 wee~s.

KROGER RAIN

CHIECK

3 Bedroom, 3 bath rooms, 2 car garage, electric forced air
f vrnace and· air conditioner. family room , 14'x26' master

'

16-oz. ltl.

,

3.9-oz.39

..~:.

Pride

GreenSII.poo

79'38

.

Size

..,u....

'

''

'

... '"'' . ,.. til"

'

'---.:..,--~-....,.-'------~

-

....

'

''

\

'.

'
'
'

•

;

, c''''"'
11111 ,
'blllttt
.. - . 21,dati

AO'llSON, OHIO

·t:ll' .f

Pillows 2.~.)99
P~tato Chips ~~::· 79

DEVELOPMENT CORP.

FOR INfORMATION OR APPOINTMENT

·;.-~ ·.~.

A~~o rtc d (ol ors witk Lipper
Covers- 19"x25" American Foam

'

Building Sites Available.
Ki ngsberry H·omes buiiJ to lit
specifications.
.
.. Afl Undergro11n~ 'Utilities Provided.

•

l·oz,
Tube
$1.13
Size ·

Spo1ligh1

f a~ lly

'.

Vanill,a. Chocolole, Strawberry,
Fudge Marble or Neapolllan

IO·oz.$
13-oz.
Pkgs,

Saltines
Bean Coffee

hAal electric

·~·.t~1

· nr"

Kroger

'

Bag

Celery Pko. 49t~
)H~~rts . . · .. . ,

lb.
:,

·lb.

t ''

... -

·--··-.-

-- ·- ..

�t'.' .....

.:

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.....
'

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•

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"

.

li.

"I

, 117 ~The &amp;mday Times· Sentinel, 'Sunday, Jan. 21, i973.

le-The,SiindayTifn!!s-Sentinel,Sunday, Jan. 21,111'13

Television Log··.

60,000 .

SHOP

totJnr.~~

·

.

~

NEW YORK (UP!) Economic llllCertainlies and
the probability of higher interest rates in the near future
lowered prices last week on the
New York Stock Exchange.
Even the brightened prospects
for a Vielnam ceasefire were
Wlabie to halt the price erosion.
The ·widely followed Dow
Jones average of 30 blue chip
il!dustrials declined 13.17 to
1,026.19, Standard &amp; Poor's 500
Stock Index lost 0.52 to 118.78
and the NYSE Common Stock
Index declined 0.44 to 64 .51.
The President's decision to
implement ~hase lii of his
economic policy was broughl
under closer scrutiny in Wall
Street this week. According to
one analyst, S;lul Smerling of
Standard &amp; Poor's, "there is
some con~ern the loosening up
In Phase Ill will release inflationary pressures." Some
tightening up by .the Federal
Reserve Bank brought on
additional concern that interest rates will head higher.
Of 1,951 issues on the tape,
1,234 declined, 516 advanced,
Turnover totaled 93,206,990

'

News • • • in lJriefs

..

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

Vehicles
damaged

•••

POMEROY ~ Sheriff Robert
C. Hartenbach 's Dept. in·
vestigated two accidents
Friday, both involving heavy.
damages.
At 8:15a.m. on SR 338, two
and nine tenths of a mile south
of Racine, Robert L. Lawson·,
Jr., 16, Racine, Rt. 2, driving
north attempted to pass but
met a car coming in the opposite direction. He pulled
back Into his line of traffic and
struck a car driven by Mary L.
Proffitt, Rt. I, Porlland, spun
around, and hit a guardrail.
Lawson was cited to juvenile
court for improper passing.
There were no injuries. '
At 10:15p.m. on SR 681, three
miles east of Tuppers Plains,
Joe Congo, 18, Racine, Rt. I,
was traveling east when a· rear
tire went fiat causing him to
lose control in a curve. His car
turned over; landing on its
wheels , Bill Buchanan, 16,
Reedsville, a passenger, ,was
taken to a Parkersburg
hospital, treated and released.
. No citation was issued.

Alice Halley

died Saturday

Your Jfayne National' Forest

.,
:

'. .

,
'

••

!
'

l

IIU- flle ltu&amp;tr to .

G:uo~alitJ

Ri1llts Ruern•
lttMI 1111 hirtli te ..

Chuck •-••

(o,,po,ce ttle C.t and vlllut os
I as t ~e price. You'll find
Center Cut Chuck
offer you a for better
I
than any Blade of End
sold locally . You get mort

Exchange refiectec;l big doubts

Foundation

,.'..

.

!IHII 111. ZJ 111J
Ntne SGhl t1 Duleu

VETS LEGISLATION- Veterans Administration Administrator Donald Johnson and loth
District Representative Clarence Miller discuss legislation aimed at veterans' needs which has
'been introduced in the 93rd Congress. Miller's package of vets legislation Included a bill to
increase.monthly benefits to V.terans to reflectlncrea8es.in the cost of living. One billlllllJild
· ·,.,ake cerialn that recipients of veterans' pension and comj)ensation will not have the am~unt .
of such benefits reduced because of the 20 pet. social security Increase enacted by Congress
last year or any subsequent cost-of-living increase also authorized under the new' law. Another
would ln.crease monthly veterans benefits.to reflect Increases in the cost-of-living and a tldrd
bill would extend the period in which veterans may take advantage of the G.!. bill from eight to
twelve years from his date of dis~harge.

are

'

THIS·WEEK FOR • • •

1

1

'

'

.Inaugural

$UNDAV, JAN. 21, 1973
(Continued from page 15)
(Continued from page 15)
6:00 - Film •·
.
.
.
barricadeS. ,
refused to duck bac~ down to
6:30 - This W~k • 4; N~wsmak~r '13 13; Bob Harrington 6;
Lamp Unto My Feet iO.
'!be rally on the Washlr!4!ton · the.ir seats. ·
7:00- Communique 6: 01~ Time Gospel Hour 13 : This Is The
Monumen\ grounds, which
Tbe. U.S. Park Pollee
Answer3 ; Time For Tlmot~y 4: Look Up&amp; Llve10.
·
7:30'- Faltll F01: Today 8; Revival Fires 6: Herald of Truth 3; · began In early afternoon as the . estim&amp;led that the bulk of the
Devey &amp; Goliath ., Cam••• Three 10.
Inaugural parade was In demonstrators · -80,000 or
1:00- Leonard Repass 8; Gospel Caravan 6: Church .Service
progreu,
was the culmination more·-ereafewbloc;ksaway
13; Morman Cholr3; Day of Dlscoyery 4: Billy James Hargis
and His AII-Amerltan Kids 10.
of 'three separate demonstrll· at the time, attendlpg counter8:30- Oral Roberts 3; Vour Health 4; Day of Discovery 8: Rex tiOllB held earlier at the Uniqn inaqgtll'al actlvlllei between
Humbird )3; 'Revival Fires 15; Kathryn Kuhlan 6; Don ·
,.
Station Plaza a few bi!ICks the lincoln Memorial and tile
•,
Young 10,
·
·
:. 9:00 - Singing.Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel •: Rex Humbard 15, 6;
from till! Capitol, Arlington Washington Monument.
~
Oral Ro&amp;erls 10 : Archie's Fun House 8. ·
Helicopters clattered over·
9:30 - Church by Side of the Road 4; Campus Crusade 10; National Cemetery and the
Lillcoln Memorial.
head, and police were stationed
~
GlobatroltlirJ 8; Good news 13.
~
IO:DO-Church S~vlce 4; Failh For Today IS; Curiosity Shop 6,
ti .S. Park Pollee esllmsted ai Intersections, alleys; and
•,
13; Thls,ls nie i.ite 3; Old Time Gospel :Hour 8; Movie "Annie
that
at least 60,000 protesters rooltops. A Secret SerVIce
Get Your Gun' 10.
. ·
· ·
~
10:30 - lnslaht 4: Caotaln Noah 3; Cosumer Report 15; were between !he Lincoln agent rode an auto mechanic's
~
VIewpoint 8.
·
and the Washington trolleyonhisstomacbdownthe
.~
' 11 :00 .L TV Chapel3; Foc:UsOn Columbus4; Bullwlnkle 13; Point Memorial
monument at 1:30 p.m., parade route, searching uridet
~
of View 6; lnslaht 15.
·
~ II : 30-Make A Wish 6; Outreach 15; This Is The Answer 3; Face
making it ibe largest t)11'11011t the stands with a Dashlight.
~
the Nation ·8; Faith In Action 13.
, 12:00 - Calvin Evans 13; At Issue 3; Rex Humbard 8; NHL for an antiwar demonsb'atlon MailboxeS were wired shut as a
,
Hockey 4, 15; Urban League Presents 10. ,
in Washington since one April precaution against bombs.
~ 12:30- Revival Fires 13; Craft. wllh Kaly 3; Face the Nation 10.
24, 1971, when pollee put the R 1 ott r a 1ned . Army
~
1:00- Wally's WD~:kshop 3; Old Time Gospel Hour 8; Lower
crowd
at 250,000 or more.
' paratroopers stood by In an
1.1
Lighthouse 13; Columbus Town Meeting 10.
!o\
1: 30- Roller Derby 3; Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13.
Sizeable antiwar protests underground subway on
~ 2:00- NBA Basketball6, 13; To Be Announced 8; Dealh Valley
also took place Saturday In Capitol Hill.
"
Deys 15.
some
European cities and in
A red-coated Colonial fUe
;
2:30- Golt Tournament 3, 4, 15; Movie "SI~plng Beauty" 8;
0
Lassie 1ft . .
Asia. Among the biggest were .. and drum corps from Con:.: 3:00 - Animal World 10.
those
In Paris, where nectlcut led the nearly two:~
3:30 - .Pro Bawl Pre-Game 8, 10.
.
NEW PROJECT -Molt ellei')'OIIII can belp In the new
-~
4:00 - Marshall Sporh '12; Fred Taylor 4; Pro Bowl 8, 10; thousands of studenls clashed , hour Inaugural parade, which
!Ice are aJao acceptable. Howewr, It Ia requested ibat all
:.: . Sacrad Heart 15; Washington Week In Review 33.
jrojectof the Middleport Church of ClliBt whldl will attempt
with police, and In Stockholffi, Nixon. and Agnew and their
contrlbullonabe.clean m! In relatively good condition: Other.
·'
4:15 - Cornnierclal Film 3; Ooen Bible 15.
to
provide
clothing
{or
Me~
CoiDllianl.
Tine
WCIIleR
of
the
Wlllllen of the cburch wDJ assist In Ironing and mending.
where about 5,000 marched- families viewed from a heated,
S, .oi:3D-World of Survlval6. 13; ,Sports Chollenge 3; Legacy A, 15;
church, Mildred Hawley, Grace Hawley and Flo Qrueser will
•··
Audubon Wildlife Theatre 33.
Metal rods haw been Installed In the basement of the ad·
through downtown streets.
bulletproof stand in front of the
~ 5:00- Ripples 33; Wild, Wild West 6; LloY,d Bridges' Water
be at the new addition of the cburdt from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m.
dillon so·that clothbig can be bW18 once It l8 ready to be
The Washington demonstra- While House. Among the
•
World 3; Movie "A Girl Named Tomlko' 3. ,
each
Tuellday
and
Thursday
to
receive
contributions
of
good
lions
were
organized
by
dignitaries
in
the
VIP
stands
dlatrlbuted. Here Is the Rev. Raullln Moyer, pa,Mor of the
•,: 5:30- Sesame Str~l 33; II Takes AThief 3; Sports Challenge 4;
used
clothing,
They
will
size
and
prepare
the
clotblng
for
.,
Roller Derby 15.
several groups, including the . was Kissinger, whose companchurch who l8 beading the project, with some of the clolhln8
'
6:00 - News 4.
distrlbulion
to
the
undel'(livlleged.
Bedding,
curtains
and
already
contributed.
Nallonal
Peace
Action
ion
was
New
York
soclallte
~
6; 30 - Untamed World 6 ; Human Dimension 33; NBC News 3, 4,
similar
items
which
families
whose
homes
deatroyed
by
•.
15.
Coalition (NPAC), the People's Nancy McGinnis.
: 7:00 - Lawrence Welk 13; Safarllo Adventure 3; This Is Your Coalition for Peace and Justice
Nixon borrowed a topcoat
·'•
Life~; Wild Kingdom 15; UFO 8; In The Know 10; Zojom 20,.
seUish and UDB.Iinling servlce·to the board ward to his 'Continuing advice and colUisel
(PCPJ), the VIetnam Veterans from Secret Service agent Bob
::
33; Wall Till Vour Father Gets Home 6.
.and
to the community.
as an active board membe~."
•. 7 : 30 ~ World of Disney 3, A,15; Let's Moke A Deal6; Dick Van Agalrist the War (VVAW), the Taylor for the ride doWn the
~
Dyke 10;, Eveni1,At Pops 33, 20.
' Sheets said, "Harland Martin has give
Other officers elected by the board
Ylppiea and Students for a "Avenue of the Presidents" In
~
8:00- FBI 6, 13;
sh a, 10.
Col bo
of
his
time
and
efforta
continuously
for
the
were
the first vice chairman, Mu
Democratic Society (SDS). the 40-degree chill under gray
(Continued from page is)
•. 8:30- French Chel20, 33 r Mannl ~ a. 10; urn 3, 4, 15.
past 22 years. During his term as chair· Morro.w; second vice chairman, Neal
i 9:00 '- Master piece Thealre 20, 33 ; Movie " liow the West Was The protestS were Intended as skies.
attendance, to express gratitude and man of the board we saw the new Holzer Taylor; ttaasurer, Emerson E. Evans, ·
~
• Won" 6, 13.
the highlight of a three-day
Tbe tradilionai parade, with
~
9:30- Dick Van Dyke &amp; The Olher Woman 8, 10.
appreciation to Mr. Martin. for hjs IDl· Medical Center COQ!pleled. We look !01'. and secretary, John F, Stlffier; Jr.
' 10;00- NlghtGallery3, 4,15; Firing Llne20, 33.
demonstration called an the "Spirit of '76" as Its theme,
:: 10:30- Relurn to Peyton Place .3; 4, 15; Firing Line 20, 33.
."Inauguration of Conscience." featured 55 bands, 35 floets, 14
,, 11 :00- News 3, 4, 8, 1(), 15.
·
AI th~ Washington Monwnent, equestrian units and other
~ 11 : 15 - CBS News 8, 10.
•. 11 : 30 - Movies 11 1t's ·A Gutu 3i 11 The Hanged Man" 4; 11 Cona Qone-dlllllng wind swept marching units depleting
:
fldenllal Agenl" 8; "The De vii's 8. 10; In Concert (3: Film 15.
across the wet and soggy American history from Ply- DomestlcaUy, he said, this
l 11 :45 - Here Comes the Brides 6.
•· 1:00 - News 13.
gr01mds as various speakers, . mouth Rock to the Apollo moon means "government must
} 1:30 - News 4.
including Rep. Bella Abzug, D- landing miBsions.
learn to take less from people,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
MONDAV, JAN. 22, 1973
)
N.Y.,
Sen.
Philip
A.
Hart,
DNixon's
big
day
closed
with
people
can
do
more
for
Variable eloudlneaa aud
, :00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
80
I
(Continued from page 15)
Mich.,
and
PCPJ
!'lalional
mit
one
butfive
Inaugural
balls
themselves."
6:
15
Farm
lime
10;
.
English
3.
i
mUd clllriDg the period with a
• 6:25- Paul Harvey 13.
· Corrdlnator Sidney Peck de- aroWid town In his honor -the
cbance af raJa Tuelday aud possibly with a copy of VIetnam peace,agreement for Bignlng by
Saying It wlls time "for all
6:30- Columbus Today ~ ; Bible Answers 8; Good News 13;
manded
immediate
action
by
last
major
event
In
the
threeAmericans
to
renew
our
faith
School Scene 10.
agaia aboot Thonday. Dally President Nguyen Van Thleu. In Washington, President Nixon
6:45 - Corncob Report 3.
Nixon to end the VIetnam day extravaganza now In ourselves," the Presidentblgb temperalllrea In upper said ''we stand on the threshold of a new era of peace."
7:00- Today3, 4, 15; News, Wealher, Sports 6; CBS News8, 10;
conruct.
estimated
to
cost
$3.5
million,
perhaps
mindful
of
the
demonThe Saigon sources said plans for Agnew's trip are tentative,
30s and low COs north and In
FllnfstonH 13.
7:30 - Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwinkle
the
most
expensive strators in town to !X'Otest his
COs to low 50a south portion. depending on whether a final agreement l8 reached between
13; Popeye 10.
Inauguration In history.
Vlelnam policies -criticized LoWI al lllgbt 30 1o 35.
Henry A. Kissinger and tile North Vietnameae in Paris
8:00- Capt. Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33 ;
In
his
address,
the
President
~~
.....
find
•""'"'•n
negotiations
resuming Tuesday. The White House refused to
Lassie 6.
.
Timken to triple
,.. ,
set the wne for his second term • woose ....o
ev~, ........
1:30-Jack LaLanne 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Rev lew6.
comment on the Agnew report.
• 8:55- Local News 13.
when he said that "abroad and wrong with America ,and very
Utile right with It".
I 9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Capt. Kangaroo 8; Canton forgings
at home, the time has come to
Said Nixon: "Let us be proud
•
Concenfratlan6; Friendly Juncllon 10; A.M. 3; Ben Casey 13,
·i 9:30- To Tell The Truth 3;'Jeopardy6. ·
CANTON. Ohio (UP!)- The turn away from the conde- that in each of the four wars In
) . 10:00 - Columbus Six Calling 6; Dick· Von Dyke 13; Dinah Shore
Timken
Co. announced scending policies of pater- which we have been engaged,
I
3, 1,5; Joker's Wild B, 10.
Saturday it will spend $7.9 nall.sm .,.of 'Washington knows including the one we are liow
10:30 - Split Second 13; Concentcatlon 3, 15; Phil Oonahu&lt; A;
:.,;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
million to triple its Canton best."'
!ringing to an end, we have
•; 11:00- Password 13; Mr. Rogers 6; Sole of Century 3, 15; Love
SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 1973
steel operation's forging
In foreign affairs, be said, fought not for the Je1flsb ad~·
AmerlcanSiyle6; GambitS, 10; Elec. Cd. 20.
1
I•
_
,q
-~
I I
• 11 :30- Bewltched6, 13; 'Hollywood Squareo3, 4, 15; Love of Lire
capacity.
the United States will honor its vantage but to belp others
;J
. 8, 10; Sesame St. 20.
ACROSS
37,: _Rtnown
72-Kind
138-Lubrfettt
96-Sontitnd·dtnce
Included in the program is treaty commitments, oppose resist aggression,"
74-Downy duck
139-Grain Cpl.)
• 12:00- Password 6; News 10, 13; Contact 8; Bob Brown 50-50
39-ln addition
1-stt of balls
76--lona of body . 140-Rocky hill
addition of a new, highly effo~ by any country to im·
Nixon, who sat by a roaring
:
C!ub 4.
4G-Sptnlah Htle
97-Lonc for
6-Sum
77-&amp;caped
141 - Flsh 1111
41-HI&amp;hllnder
99-0penwork
12; 25 - CBS News 8.
118
sophisticated fast-opei'atlng ' pose
will on another by fire In the Uncoln Room of the
11- Unlt of alactrlcal 7a-cantury pltnl
142-cooiad lav•
"42-Rtply
ftbrtc
·, 12:30- Split Second 6; Who, What, Where 3, 15; Search tor
ClptCity
7'-BitCktnl
143-Parer1t (colloq.) U-Locttt
3000-ton forge press; in- force, work for nuclear arms White House until well put
101 -Aboun~d
Tomwrow 8, 10.
16-'fha underworld 82--5ta nymph
144-PIIasltr
44-Batkttl:ltll
105-Food proJrtm
1:00- All My Children 6, 13; News 3; Jackie Oblinger 8; Gr~n
stallatlon of up to 10 new curb! and "do our share in midnight making persona.!
21-Supply of
84-lncllna
145-VentllatH
teem .
106--Fiylnl crttturt
.t.cres
10;
Not
For
Women
Onlv
15.
fmh man
85-God!Mst of
147-ftosttrs
4~Ftrot lalands
107-Mwsl~al
forging pre-heat furnaces, delendi.'lg ~ce and freedom changes In his speech,
·: 1:30 - Let's Make A Deal6, 13; Thr~ on A Match 3, 4, 15; As
22-Turtdah Mcm
dl&amp;c:ord
149-Pronoun
whirlwind
lnetrument
departed from the test at the
additional forge handling In the world.
i
The World Turns 8, 10.
23-Wfpe out ,
86-Faotleaa
150-Qid·womanlsh .
48-Abovt and
111-Ftll In drops
:&lt;,
2:00 - Days of Our Lives 3, ~. 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
24-Apllthtdc
~uncturt
1!12-Pfa~::q of
·touchln1
112-Wild hOI
equipment and enlargement of
But, said Nixon, "the time end Saturday to deUver what
2'5--Ewryona
89-RIII tttllt map
baked clay
· Douglas 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
·
49-Part ol toot
113-KIIIed
the forge shop facilities.
has passed when America Will he called a private jrayer.
26-Ardtnt
90-Stlrch.. for
1&amp;4-Girl't name
50-Soli
115-Group
· 2:30 - Doling Game 13; DociD~:s 3, 4, 15; Edgeol Night&amp;, 10.
28-Yislon
92-clnslflet
1!16-Gat up
51-Enthutlnllc
116-Barracuda
~ 3:00 - Generei ·Hospital 6, 13; Another World 3, 4, 15; Love
make every other nation's
Pausing a moment and IU3o--coln
9-4-Wrltlnl paJMr
US-Loads
5~-Romtn official
118-Ceudtl
Splendored Thing 8, 10; 30 Minutes With 20.
A BeautUul Itch
confllct our own, or make ling his eyes, Nlzon Bald, "As I
32-Nota of scala
9a-croftlts
n9-0mlt from
53-Potttltlvt
apptndap
' 3:30- Return to Peyton Place 4, 15; 33; One Life to Live 6, 13;
33-A
atatt
(tbbr.)
,(colloq.)
pronunciation
pronoun
119-Crln llkadovt
every
other
nation's
future
our·
stand
in
this
place
so
hallowed
Poison ivy's handsome red
·,
Secret Storm 8, 10; French Chef 20.
34--Footllka Plrt
99-ntla of respect 160-Ratldua
55-Clans
121-Ear ornament
and yellow autumn colors responsibility, or jlrestDne to by history 1 think of others who
4:01'· - Mr. Cartopn 3; Fllntstones 6; Sesame St. 20. 33; Love
35--Cfoth mtiiUI'I VI 10G-Encounttrtd
161- Nitl~
!16-Lifalut
123-Pronoun
i Aonerlcan Style 13; Merv Griffin 4; Somersel 15; Movie have deceived many an un- tell the people of other nations Jitood here before me.! think of 31-Fiock
102-Dtclttt
£ayptl1ns
57-Pitct of cutlery 125-Spln
•
"Louisa" 1o.
37-PrtPotltlon
103--Bishoprlc
DOWN
58-Count~ of Atla 125-Chtllenp ·
suspecting flower arranger.
how to manage. their own a!- the dreams of A,!nerlca.
at-Music:
1~Ponattlvt
' 5:00- Take FiveS; Bonanza 3, 4; Daniel Boone 6; Merv Griffin
61-optra by Verdi 127-Loops
Nearly
an
entire
college
is writt.n
PfQnoun
63- l,.llnd
1-Stuffl
;
8; Mr. Rogers20, JJ; Dick Van Dyke 15.
129-Rttin
campus once was incapaci- fairs."
"Each one recognized he
40--Arrows
105-0bstructt
64-Ltln·to
2-SIIvt
130-CIIm:Jinl plant
; 5:30- Elec. Co. 33 ; Gomer Pyle 13; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
F1ags at the Capitol w~ still needed help far beyood himself
42-a...st of burdtln 106-Rtmlllvtd
tated when the leaves were
3-Sick
68-Halda back
131-$ttokt
•,
Marshell Dillon 15.
43-Comel)'
bonH from
4-Ptl'tnt (colloq,)
704tmosphtrlc
132"'-Quadruped
used to decorate a
:: 6:00- News3, 4, 8, 10; Truth or llon5eq. 6: News 13, 15; Around
flying at haH-61aff in memory to make these dreams CCIIle
44-Joume)' farth
1o.-Dint
condlt~nt
134-0penworlc
5--0I'IIn of tllht
nasium for a h~rvest
'
the Bend 33; Sesame St. 20.
of Harry S Truman, who was
k
In
.f.$-Gama at cardt 1()9.......A atatt (lbbr.)
15-Sirlptd tnlmtls 71-Wrltlnc ttblets
fabric
:: 6:30 - ABC News 6 ; CBS News 8, 10; lnslghl 33; I Dream of
President when Nixon began true. I as your jrayers
47--cuttlnl In two
110-Symbol for
73-Raatt on
7-Son of
136-Biouu •
JeaMie 13; News 3, 4, 15.
·
getting God's help In mak\ng
4~
tallurfum
Altmtmnon
137- Fertlla apota
tht """'
~ 7:00- Tr\Jth 01: Con•eq. 3; Beat the Cloc~ 4; News 6, 10; Circus
his political career as a these dreams come true, and
111--Gtmlnl cuba
!S()....4bscure
74-Shltld
8-Sallor (colloq.)
In dttart
•.
13; Whet's My Line 8; Saint 15. ·
51-fttllndlln•nt ai1124Jquor
9-P•Id notice
75-RtcompanM
139-Unltt
staunchanti-Communlst;. lnhls that together we may be
5-4-Drunk•rd•
114--Limb
77--At::t::&lt;~mplish ·
~ 1, 30 - To Tell lhe Truth 6; Young Dr. Kildare 8; Hollywood
Jo-condueted
140-Bound
55-Care for
116-Pttflx: tbova
11-Stn..l
menta
144-S.Vtl'llt
speech Saturday • a quarter· worthy of our task."
•
Squares.4; Traffic Court 10; Beat the Clack 13; Bobby Golds56 Despoil
117-M•In dish
78-V(olfhound
·12-Sa• In Asia
14.5 --Mohammldan
bore 3; Hodgepodge Lodge 201 Episode Action 33.
::
century later, the President •
5D-Fun
119-Ctnttr
13-MIIt sheep
80-lrrltlltl
ntmt
. ~ 8:00 ~ Rowan &amp; Marlin's Laugh· in J, 4, 15; Gunsmoke 8, 10;
dedicated his second term to a
60-Excl•matlon
120-SIIpplr
IU.-Turt
l~nJunctlon .
146--Ptt'farmtd
Jane Goodall6, 13; Net Qoera Theatre 20. 33,
'
62--8oartd
122-Moltttn
15-Frlud
8~Thlnlt, In ltw 147--co.-....
world of peace in which "each
i 9:00 - Here's Lucy 10, 8; Movies " I Love My Wife" 3, 15;
64-WIIhtred
124-ltl..,.r llltnd
16-r..tr part
84-Piumllkt fruit
ltiMII'III
,
"Lonely Are the Brave" 4; Skating Spectacular 20, 33.
re!lpects the right of the other
65-Qrtft IMtar
12~11hWI)'
17- Emrntt
87- Lowar In rtnk
148-At.,nqulan
) 9; 30 - Doris Day 10.
66-Prwffx:: twice
126-Bahaw
18-Prefhc d~n
89--Mitchtd
Indian
to live by a different system."
; 10:00 - News 20; Bill Cosby 8, 10; An American Family 33. •
61-0ocldll• of
1211-lom
19-Mlstlka
90--M•IIt::e
149-l'•rt ol body
Nixon said he would "enhtillnj
129-cut
:; 10:30 - What About Tomorrow? 6, 13.
·
20-Cublc mtttr ll 91-Dined
15l~yp~nold lhh
69-Dinctr
131-lncUpnt
27-Tht
wtllaba
92--cantut
' 11 :00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
153-Heaatl~ prefix
courage Individuals at home
7D-Short
U2-Pos1ttltd
29-Rtmilndar
93-Ditpatch.t
1!15-R ..Iroad (tbbr.)
) 11 :30 - Johnny Carson 3, ~. 15; Dick Cavett 6; 13; Movies "The
GALUPOUS - Mrs. Alice
convemtion
133-lncorrtct
and nations abroad to do more
31 ~ 1Ja mlst1kan
95-South Afrlctn
157-Artlflclal
"
Man Who Knew Too Much," 8; "The Member of the Wedn-c,.
US-Pair
36--Worttmtn
dl&amp;ltct
W
.
Halley,
85,
Gallipolis
Rt.
2,
ltniUIIt
for themselves and decide
'
ding" 10.
'
~ 1:00 - Focus On Columbus 4; New• 13.
more· for themselves." passed away Saturday at I : 45
ATOI.I..Ll'IOS
; 1:30 - News~p.m. at the Holzer Medical
•,
.,•
·Center after an extended
..
illness.
''·•,
She was the daughter of the
'
late Lorenzo D. Williams and
'•
Phoeba Hazlett of Ohio Twp,,
and the widow of the late
By T. ·Allan Wolter
propOsed action. Tbis Is true whether or stand on theli- own and pDPr projects
••
Robert A. Halley, Rt: 2,
•,
Dlatrlel Ranger
not the action is minor or major. will be dropped. An outstanding
Gallipolis.
'
IRONTON Environmental Perhaps lhe most widely known provision of, the National En·
Survivors are
these
impact statements are becoming a way example of this is the controversy over ~ironmental Act affords the public an
••.
daughters, Mrs. Floyd (Anna)
of life for fC!deral agencies engaged in the Alaska pipeline. Right in our own opportWJity to participate in Federal
'••
Cox, Mrs. Clayton (Elsie)
actions that may affect the quality of back yard Is the dispute over the Pine discussion affecting the environment.
•
Clagg, and Mrs. Donavan
the environment. State agencies as well Creek Watershed Poject.
Each draft statement must be
' ~
'
(Weltha)
Clagg; two iwns,
are learning to live with environmental .
Federal officials charged with the made, public by the responsible agency
'
· Emmell. and W&amp;I'IJI!r, all of
provisions of th e National En- responsibility of determining whether not less than 90 days before the
•• vlronmental
Gallipolis; 24 grandchildren,
Policy Act (NEPA ) of environmental statements are needed proposed project can begin. The final
and,
it Is believed, 35 great1970.
or not are faced with a difficult task. statement must Include a discussion of
·=
:.
grandchildren, and a sister,
' The actions for which agencies Limited budgets and the availability of the objections and problems raised by
~
~
Mrs .
Elma
Williams,
must prepare impact statements must trained personnel to perfonn field in- . the public. To' further strengthen the
be "major'' and , "environmentally vestigations and write the statement process, the final statement must be ~ Gallipolis:
.~
•
significant." Unfortunately the act does are daily facts of life he must face. Most made public at least 30 days before the , Two brothers, four sisters ·
and a son preceded ~er In
not define these two terms very welL As federal administrators have been
project or action begins .
••• a consequence, there have already been around long enough to feel the very real proposed
death.
Public impact on an environmental
. She was a member of the
many disputes
between en- pressure of various · groups and in, statemenlmay take the form of'written
~
,
Mercerville Baptist Church
vlronmentallsis and va rious federal dividuals who make it their business to comments to the responsible agency or
•
where funeral services will be
agendes over just w~at constitutes a closely scrutinize government ac- verbal statements at a public listening
held Tueaday at 2 p.m. with the
ma)or federal action. Many of these tivities.of ali kinds. Generally, tl!is is a session (announced alid well publiclred
'•• disputes
Rev. Bruce Unroe. olllclallnc .
result in court cases.
very healthy situation ; some federal by the responsible agency) or both.
Burial will be in Men:en1lle
11!0 U. S. Forest Service is one of projects that could only be classed as
When viewed from afar, the whole
Cemetery.
Friends may CIID at
many agencies that bears the sears of "boondoggles" or "pork barrel" have process·seerns cwnbersome, extremely
~
•
the .F. L. Stevera Funeral
111ch ·court battles. Tbe courts so far been stopped because of an outcry by expensive and even unnecessary by
Home,
In Mercerville Monday
• have usually rined !hal an en- the citizenry. Conversely' )VOrthwhile some, What can't be Ignored however,
:,'
after 4 p.in.
vironmenlal statement should be projects have been stopped, delayed or
the jam this cauntry finds itseU In
' prepared because the act provides lhat cancelled because : of special interest , isbecause
of too. many short cuts In the
,a statement must be prepared if there group action .
past. There is no easy way out and.WJtil
is significant controversy over the
In the long rWJ, tl1e democratic , a better "mousetrap" cornea · along
S c h o o l In Greenland l8
process will prevail. Good projects will NEPA wiD have to carry the ball.
compulsory until the age of
14. Course$ include kayak
handling and fur sewing.

3

."

..

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Ralph Brewer, Vlolel Brewer

to Frances Hewitt, . George

Moore. 1 A.. Lebanor.
c. F. Betzlng, Edith Seizing
to Robert L. Dl•on, Beu lah C.
Dl•on. 205.15 A., Orange.
•' Mary Amos to te onard
' Amos. 17.43 A.. Orange.
· Bertha L. Baum to Delmar ·
G: Bourn, Kathryn I. Baum,
Parcels, Chester.
Joe M. Bolin, Janet Bolin lo
Joe M. Bolin, Janel Bolin,
Parcels, Rutland .
Eugene 'F. Imbrogno. Asso.,
to Ohio Power Co.. R-W,
Salisbury.
·
Robert C. Hartenbach, Shlf.,
Martha Price. eta! .. lo J. B.
, O'Brien, Roberta C. O' Brien,
r 40 A., otlve.

!

SundaY Creek Coal Co. to·
• ·Jaymar coal Co.. Coal,
~ Salisbury.
.
·
,. Clarab811e Landers. Char 1es
, · Otho Landers to James L,
.l. Conley, .,lea~ s. Conley,' Lots.
; PomeroY· ·
. b . d·~ · to
Dee Wit! Rothge • .c·.•
' Rome c, Rolhgeb, Cert. for
trans .• Middlef?Orl·
Jean E. Mann, George V.
Mann, M.D., to Hansford C.
~ Franz, Carolyn M..Franz. Lot,
&gt; f&gt;9meroy:
•

shares compared to 101,839,960
shares a weel&lt; before and
94,766,720 sha"es a year
.earlier.
One analyst noted during the
week "investor's hopes have
been dashed so many times on
the Vietnam agreement, thai
most people will just wait for
Kissinger to have the
agreement in his hands,
signed."
Oil issues and airlines ran

meat, much len Hilt

and your roo st goes
farther t han with o Blade
End Cut. Try a Kroger

against the market. The oil
issues benefitted from
President Nixon's lifting the oil
import quotas, and airline
issues were the recommended
"buy" of a major brokerage
house.
Gulf Oil was the most active
issue, up 2V. at 28% on 1,270,00Q
shares. The company recently
annoWJced plans to purchase
up to 3 million shares of its own
stock.

Center-Cut Chuck Roost soon.
GVIra"teed far total Slltisfac·
or your ·money btJtk .

Kroger First Cui

Coordinator

Washington's

appointed to

great elm was

seven counties

327 years old

'

Boston
Roll

9tJ
Rome · 4 59
AppI

' ?ork Loin Sliced Into
Hall

Florida

All Meat
Bologna

100 Size

Temple Doz7.
Oranges

U.S . 'Gov l. Groded Choice
People's Choice Bon eless

ATHENS - Appointment of
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Mrs. Mary Badger as coor- great American elm that
dinator for a seven county area sheltered George Washington
of Southeastern Ohio, · United during the Battle of Long
Cerebral Palsy of Ohio, Inc. Island was 327 years old when
( U~C. P. ) has been announced
It was blown down by a storm
by Edward Lippirt, Ohio in November, it was revealed
U.C.P. executive director.
Friday.
Mrs. Badger, a 1972 graduate
Donald Simon, curator of
of Ohio University, will be Prospect Park in Brooklyn
working with cerebral palsied where the tree was located,
and with commWJity agencies said sctentlflc analysis of the
in Hocking, Gallia, Athens, wood from the · 102-foot giant
Meigs. Lawre nce, Jackson , indicated !hat the core wood
and Vinton counties. She will dated to 1645, two decades after
provide consultative services New York was settled by the
for cerebral palsy families, Dutch.
.
assist in the establishment and
Polished cross sections of the
malntalnance of special elm will be placed on penna·
education programs and help nent display in area musewns
to coordinate the efforts of and some of limbs will be used
communily agencies ·working in the park as benches,
with cerebral palsy families . gu)deways and barriers. ·
The U.C.P. office for South'
The tree cracked at Its
eastern Ohio is located on the shallow, fungus-ridden roots
first floor o£ the Ohio Nov. 9 and fell in a meadow irf
University Administrative the park. ln a hollow Inside was
Annex, Smith and W. Union ~ound a bee's nest with a
Streets, Athens. To obtain production of at least 30 years
cerebral palsy services or to of wax.
refer clients, Mrs. Badger may
A memorial will be erected
be contacted at 614-li94-2562. near the stump of the etm.

Pork
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Regular or Mint Flavored

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Crest
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M~;t;~vi).i;·n~r's ~~k~Z- 39;
l·lb,
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3

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With Coupon
Anti Per~pi rant-S .az , Can

Yellow, Devil's Food, German Chocolate, Milk Chocolate;Velvet, Sour Cream White, Sour Cre9 m Fudge Chaco lore,=

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SPLIT LEVEL

A BR, 2 baths, F~&gt;(' ' ~'nm, tota\ electrlc with Wmian\son

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appliances, full ;
:aped, concr.le drive &amp;
slreets, 2'12 car garagt, • .
lcony, lot 15x115, county
water, Tara sewer system.

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$ ~

BI-LEVF.L

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with Williamson r
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D :arpeted, landscaped,
concrete drive &amp; street&gt;. •
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ask Cit tl.e Ito'• office for
o RAIN CHECK which tn·
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ad'terttMd ip.ciol ot the
· 10m• tpt(iol price OA'f
lime withln 2 wee~s.

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3 Bedroom, 3 bath rooms, 2 car garage, electric forced air
f vrnace and· air conditioner. family room , 14'x26' master

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FOR INfORMATION OR APPOINTMENT

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Bean Coffee

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I Names may be withheld upon pubUcatlon. However,

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·~ request, names wUI be disclosed. ~lters should be In good · 1

I taste, addressillg Issues, nol personalities.
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•

·Rebuttal dire~ted to Portland
·

Middleport, Ohio
1973
Jal). 15•

Dear Editor :
In response to the Ietter bY Mrs. Clenden.111 in· Your "'naper
frotn .up Portland way: .
,. .
· Th e way· You trY to mak e us believe about
the
on•
· ·
· • com"
missioner, made me think of a woman whose h~band died. ~e
preacher was preaching the funeral; be was saying such mce
·
words about
her husband she th ou ght 1"t wasn 't her hushand's
·
a1
he
k
' ed WI"th h"un - .I
·
funer . S new. Sh.e 1tv
1 had 20 different people eall on the phone thanking me for
that Jetter. I had even a letter from Reynoldsburg, Ohio,
The people know I was telling the truth abuut that home!
They know that 1f the commissioner would look after it the w~y
~
lace like t"t IS. ·
he should, wewo uldn•t have a run-..ownp
the
hospital just to te ll me
II
! even had a woman ca me fr om
til t I told th truth
a
e
·
IsupposeMr.Ourswoitldlikeitthatpeop~nextdoor told me
· nd when I"t was real cold with
th ey saw the children runn ing arou
·
•
sh
no "'s on.
"
No matter' if you get with the right crowd you can get
elected. we all know it was awful hard work at the Locks. Go to
the Peacock Coal or Swisher Coal Co. to get my record about
working. Your fri end would Iearn what work is ·
I will give yOu 20 different people that talked to me on the
phone. They talked with sense, and the dog didn't ha.ve to ru~.
But don't worry' if any way in the world you trted to kill my
, influence, bull don't think'"· I have forgiven you! I won't haye
other women to boast about me. I have a dear woman I am not
ashamed to have testify about, me ·
May God bless you and your neighbor. In your eye he is a real
moral man, but to me he is a man that doe~n·t really care about
rph
our o ans.
Yourstruly,BenBatey,AloverofChildren.
.'

Also opposes consolidRtion ·
Dear Sir:
· I get the distinct impression that the people of the Kyger
Creek School (by way of Letters to the Editor) feel everyone else
·Is ·•urely for Consolidation of our Schools. Well, here's one from
So~thwestern who isn't completely sold on the idea.
.We are told "Consolidate." OK consolidate for "what." I
ha~e reared nine children, all of them graduating from Southwestern but two. Those two are now at Cadmus Grade School and
will go on to Southwestern.
.
When my earlier ones were at •Gallia Grade School we'
t were told "Consolida~." We did. We are now at Cadmus, and I
~ believe my children have top rated teachers and are receiving a
\ goi)d education, but does that mean they didn't at the four room
building at Gallia,? No indeed it doesn't.
. . ,
l I believe they received just as good an education as the
; students at Cadmus do now.
So now they say Consolidate again, but for what? Is it to be
: better? Is whatwehavenownotgood enough? From where !live.
at Gallia to any centralized building in this county would be an
• a1Vfuliot of mU~s every day. Must our. ~ttle. childr~n trayel ~~
tfa~t, liil·~~catioq..? ~t..epout th,, e~!lil~~'i\\!Jjlj. a
'closer·fufi~age ;range1;ci~ufd our chil&amp;Nl"gftit'ill'lih .n\t\out ,
t paying tuition if they choose? I now live six miles from Cadmus.
~ My children travel over large hills to get there: To Southweste~n
· it Is aboul'l5 miles. Now, to my north Is Oak Hill School, only SlX
·miles away. No big hills, all good road . They also have a high
school. Now just why can't my children and my share of the tax
money be transferred there so that my children won 't have to
"travel all these miles? I believe you should go to the closest
existing school no matter where it is or what county it's in.
. I'm sure th~e must be other people at .Gallia and Centerville
who feel the same way. So come on let's hear from others how
'you really feel about consolidation.
Mrs. John Lewis, Rl. 2, Patriot, Ohio.
..

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.· Pra~e for Jim Saunders
Jan.l2, 1973
Dear Sir:
.
t 1 am addressing this letter to you in regard to some of the
&amp;puties in the Gallla County's Sheriff's office. I say the deputies,
because I have nothing but praise for James SaWlders.
. I was serving a 10 day .$100 fine in jail. I have a bleeding
ulcer. One night after eating the grease Infested food which. is
served here, I began to spit-up blood, and suffer extreme pam.
The other guys banged on the door lor over two hours before
anyone came back. It was the dispatcher . ·They .told him. what
was wrong and he said he would get someone on the radio, He
then came back and told me that Roger Watson called in and said
he would be there in five minutes. An hour o. so later Mr. ytatson
came back and told me he would take me to the ~spital at 4:30
a.m. because there were no doctors there then. At five o'clock, he
hadstill ·not come back. Finally I passed out. When I awoke, .Tun
Saunders was there and he made an appointment to go to Doctor
Warehime. After that I only had problems off &amp;nd on, until !he
:day before I was to get out. I then told Jim Ssunders and he asked
me if I would be all right Wltil the morning when I was supposed
to get out. The next morning I asked Jim Crace to release ~e .
. He said he had .talked to my father an~ he srud, Not to
release me until h~ got there." I then tried t.o explain to him that I
am oflegal age arid my father has no say-oo over me, because I
have not lived wil/' him for over two year.s. He still refused to
· ,- release me. I'm asking you to prmt this m your paper so the.
people of Gallla County will know what is going o~ in their county,
jail.
Thank you sincere1y, Keith Sanders.

, "\ !Employment hardship noted
~

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·SAIGON (UP!) _ South
Vietnamese .infantrymen covered by U.S. warplanes stalled
a major Communist push into
the Saigon area Ssturday in
he'vy figllting .in the tarigJed
jungles of a rubber plantation,
military sources said.
Fighting · pontlnued Into
Saturday night but the sources
· •North Vietnamese
said two
·
·
l"egim
, ents are pulling back
deeper into , the overgrown.
rubber grove.s of the Michelin
plantation 00 escape air and
artillery attack.
"We have them stopped," a
South Vietnamese officer said.
But he added, "The fighting is
close- very close."
It was one of the biggest
battles since the Communists'
1972 Easter offensive. In the
first 24 hours of fighting, ending at 4p.m., casualties were
high. Military sources said 325
Communist soldiers were
killed and South Vietnamese
losses were a steep 4fi killed
and 116 wounded.
About 1,600 soldiers of the
North Vietnamese 7th Division 's 209th and !41st
regiments were moving toward
the Saigon area under jungle
cover when they were
discovered. Military .sources
said captured documents in·
dicate the Communists were
under orders to avoid contact
and work close into the capital
area prior to a ceasefire.
At least two South Vietnamese infantry battalionsabout 1,000 men- were locked
in the plantation fighting .
Another five battalions of

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. ~traig'ht

.Fred Taylor
hospitalized

BACK TO SOAP
DALLAS
(UP!)
Gridiron widows, rejoice!
Tbe football season ends this
weekend.
With AFC-NFC Pro Bowl
game Sunday - which wlll
feature the all-stars of both
conferences
the
behemoths of the gridiron
can hang up their cleats and
helmets, and television sets
can be tuned back to soap
operas.

NETS 46 IN WIN
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ken
Charles equalled the single
game Fordham scoring
record with 46 points Saturday
as the RamS defeated St.
Peter's, 108-98, in ·front of a
family day crowd of 2,506 at the
Rose Hill Gym.
The 6-2 guard amazed the
crowd and the Peacocks with a
dazzling shooting display. His
4fi points tied the record set two · ;;:;:::;:~~:?.::i:w.;:i:~=~=~z::::::::;:::::~::::=:::o:::::::::::::
years ago by Charlie Yelverton
against Rochester in the Kodak
PADRES SIGN THREE •
Cla~{C.r o~. 4'" · "'\ ·;.~· ~·
SAN
DIEGO (UP! ) ·- The
The high scorer for the
Peacocks was senior Harry San Deigo Padres announced
Ssturday the signing of three
Anderson with 37 points.
players for the 1973 season and
said veteran utility man Curt
Blelary had been released. ,
DRAFT JAN. 30
Signed were infielder Dave
DALLAS (UPI) - National Campbell, rookie outfielder
Football League owners John Grubb and pitcher Steve
Saturday finalized plan; for the Simpson.
1973 Collegiate Player Draft
with St. Louis, Denver, Min1 •

•

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nesota,

j

'

Cincinnati,

Dolphins upset ·
. a, 70.·.-66 .
F.·.·l.o ri.d

Pro Bowl Game, was
hospitalized Saturday with the
flu.
Dallas Coach Tom Landry,
who will lead the NFC stars,
said he did not know if Renfro
could be ready In time for the
game, and indicated that If
Renfro ~ould not play it was too
late to replace him.
Without Renfro the NFC
would have only two cor.nerbacks - Lem Barney of
Detroit and Jim Johnson of San
Francisco.

when tht! Hoosiers reeled off
their 12 straig~t riiarkers.
. Petty ~oulejl· 'Jacksohvilrg
The Gophers managed to get . JACKSONVILLE ," Fla ·
with 2 19
within · four pointS, 75-71, but (UPI)
_
Unranked center Butch Taylor
:
Indiana pulled ,away again. ' ~acksonville o~ercame afive-. ' left ruid the Dolphins on_tOp 61 ;
Minnesota's a!tack began point deficit in the final four 60. The little ~ ~ISO · w~s
spuiteringwhenguard.BobNilJ: minutes behind clutch f?ui · lagged with ~tee~~:
fouled out with. 10 minutes to shooting by Leon Benbow lind . and the. Dolp~ san . , 0 '·
1
play. Nix got only four PQints Henry Williams Saturda)' lb ·throY's an: reta~ ~
but was credited wi~ guiding . edge 181!! ranked Florida ~tate, of the ba ~ ~l:'awa c~~
the Gopher floor· game.
70-66, in ll rugged, sp1r1ted
Jacksonv1 e P .
Y
John Ritter Jed indiana With contest.
24-13 lead with 7.58 ~ft in.the
22 pnints, John l..skowski had 17
Benbow hit three straight first half. Then Ro~allj canned
and Steve Green 14. Clyde , long jumpers to · give the .live free lhr?ws ana !~link 8 25Turner hit 30 points for ·Min, ' Dolphins, now 13-2, a 61~ lead looter to bnng the ·~:,"!~~.
nesota and Jim Brewer added wiih '3:10 left · after the back ~0 24-22 "d ed ~:
23
Seminoles had grabbed their Jacksonville agam WI. en
Both teams are now 11-2 · biggest lead of the afternoon at margin to 311-31 at halftitne:
overall.
so:.55.
three . long . jumpers
Y
The Dolphins wrapped up the sophomore Iqck COleman.,··
game at the foul'lllie with seven
Flor;da State took the lead a~­
free throws as the taller 46-44 midway thr~ugh' the
Seminoles fouled repeatedly to · second half · after Jacksontry to get the ball.
ville,'s two big men - Taylor
Benbow scored 23 points to and 6~ Abe Steward ·- both
pace the ·Jacksonville attack picked up lour fouls and the
while Williams added 15. teams traded basketS until the
. MADISON, W"IS. (UP!)
Florida
Slate ( 11-4) was led by Seminoles spurted to the so:.55
Wisconsin outscored Michigan
State 22-4 in a stretch in the 6-10 Reggie Royals with 23 and margin with 4124 'left.
second half and went on to whip Benny_Ciyde with 15.
the Spartans, 93-aO, in a Big The contest between the two
Ten game Saturday, It was the bitter intrastate rival infirst conference victory in four dependents was marred by
games for the Badgers, who three technical fouls - two on
were led by Leon Howard's 29 Williams imd ohe on Florida
points. MSU has a 2-2 Big Ten State's playmaking guard, Otto
Petty.
record.
.
Michigan State jumped off to
an early lead but Wisconsin '75 bowl sites to
came back quickly to post a 46- be made in April
36 halftime advantage .
COLUMBUS (UP! )- UCLA
DALLAS (UP!) - Pro
The Spartans got to within
Athletic Director J. D. Morgan
three points at 52-49 shortly football Commissioner Pete and Dayton (Ohio) Daily Ne.ws
after the Intermission and tben Rozelle said Saturday sites for Sports Editor Si Burick wiU be
Wisconsin went on its 22-4 the 1975 Super Bowl and Pro honored during the 18th annual
jlowl would be selected next
scoring rampage.
April
at an NFL meeting In awards banquet of the TouchSpartan s::oring leader Mike
down Club of Columbus here
Robinson was held to just six Arizona and that he saw no Jan. 26.
points in the first half and reason why the games would
Morgan, athletic director at
finished with 14 before fouling be played anywhere but a UCLA since !963, will receive
out with nearly nine minutes warm .weather city.
"We could always have rain an "award of distinction.'!
left in the game. He shared
While he has been at'UCLA, the
scoring honors with team- ot cold weather In places like Bruins have won 18 NCM
tes All Smith and Lindsay New Orleans, Los Angeles or
ma t enh0 !so had 14
· Dallas," Rozelle said. "But you championships, more than any
Halrs
·
won 'I have a blizza rd in c1"ties other school in the nation.
. on, w. aCoach John
W1sconsm
lik that ,
Burick, to receive the
Powless put in his substitutes
e
·
late in the game but was forced
.Next year the Super Bowl "Sportswriter of the Year"
to put back his first string when w!ll be played at Houston at award, is president of the
Football Writers Association of
Michigan State cut the margin ~Stadium II~ the Pro Bowl
America. He has been with the
to 86-76 with 2:20 left to play. ~=s City s Arrowhead newspaper for 43 years.

0

NAMED CHAIRMAN
MONROE, N. C. (UP!)
Lefty Gomez, a Hall of Fame
pitcher, was elected Saturday
as chairman of the Board of
Babe Ruth Baseball International. The election was
conducted by the group's board
of directors.

Badgers
triumph

Will honor

Morgan and
Si Burick

~irl ····

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So in the meantime,what? I've looked for a jpb. But no one is
interested in ltlrbig 1\ mother of two: So why nol"'do an une~­
P.J.oyed survey. You might find if you gtve the Jobs to fellow Metgs
County people; this commurdty won't be growing as m~ch as you
thlilk. .
.. thbe· ld
Thank you, (Name WI
)

.
p,
N CARE to p
cycJ~~u~e ironing drud;ess fabrics
r ermanent
PRess ~twns include: N~~j.,ras 2 wash and 2 .
rinse; ..;a so features 3. Water I AL, GENTLE an~'n speeds, Three
Buill-in
~~~ash With warm ri~:P sel«:tioos: Cold ~E~MANENT
er and super SVRGILand hoi Wash W'lhas WUh COld
Hel

·

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s

·- ri~.

;;~-~

Your local -1-H Rtpl~stnlativet
H M,YLAA
sopeakt, Ohio 45619

.

r- ·F·REE exciting
68 ·pap
h

·I

EVRrJS , \
lnTERnRTIQnRL

M7·5234 -.

lnltrnltlonll Hom
I Ev1n1
Boll. 400, Chesa peake, Oh
5619
· I 1own a lot .o I plan tq· b~Hd n 0
l1 can assist with tinlshinl work 0

.

I' Please have an E· I·H representative contact me

I
1 Na m~.

Homes ·
" 11M•1on o,: (jj)

~~~·•rn

I State
I Telep hone Number

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0

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1

Zip__
,

By Chet Tannehill .

&gt;

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Desk

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Puraue ·sUrpfises~
'

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M
. ·.· ic.·..h
.· _·.: la.an
e · .. ·,··'63-.62.

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. ..TO. Pa.Y·m
ore
•.
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YDuR
DOllAR!
·WE 1RY

GivE MORE FOR

FOOD

STORE HOURS:

DAILY 9 10 9-Q.OSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVE., GALLIPOLIS
'

A~OUR*STAR

BEEF

U.S.D.A. GRADED ·CHOICE-U.S. son. IISPECTED
BONELESS

ROASTS
FLAT CUTS

Frazier, Foreman
set for big bout

'

ReeJ?eS gives up grid
·sport for real estate .

lb.
We r-.erve the right to limit qHntlll" on all itetns in this ad. Prices effecllve tllru Sat., January J7, 1973. None solei to dtaltrs.

CUBE STEAKS ANY SIZE PACKA~E

• • • • • ••

$1 A9

SOUND RIPE

lb.
F&amp;P

DALLAS (UP!) - Danny portunit)' to coach. I was ralsed
Reeves, whose halfback passes in the south and I wanted to
became a major weapon in the stay in the south. ·
repertoire of the Dallas
"This Is not a decision I
Co1'boysand who later became reached In the past week. I
the ,youngest coach in the NFL, have'been thinking about It all
retired from football Saturday. season. Coach (Tom) Landry
"It's a great business," he has been patient with me.''
said. "I'm sorry to be getting .
oufiil( it."
~eves said he w~s going to McCovey first
WOfk .for a real estate agency .
"Quality and Reliability Is
and that although his Giant to sian
our motto"
retirement decision was not
. ,••
irrEli.ocable, he did not foresee
eCOMPLETE LINE
rettlfning to football.
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) "I'm' ·young enough to get Willie
McCovey,
the
OF USED AND
back In coaching if 1 want to," acknowledged team leader,
Reeves said. "! was only 29 Satll!"day became the first
REBUILT AUTO
· yes~y. But I hope this member .of the San Francisco
and
, • decWon ·I'm making Is the ,Giarts to agree to te.rms for ...
· ri ~~,one.'' ,
1973 when he ~alked into the
TRUcK PARTS
~vee said he decided to club's offices at candlestick
it because there were - Park· and signed his contract.
· Henry and·Donaid
~~ d head coaching op, "Really feel we have the
Baird, Owners
· mtun
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'

.:, ; · Larcy ~ortillon Of P'll"eroy died' J&amp;n. 14 at' the' age of 38 in
,Uiliverslty, Hqspilal after a long illlless, He was ~ assistant
·
' · ·· ' ' '
··
·
·'
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (uP!) f wetit off, allowing Purdue io makers : tooll the . lea~ wbim
, ~te~t·of Meigs Loc81 Dlatrict since its inception in 1966.
~ high SChoo! years were spent at Jacksonville-Trimble in -: Frank •Kendrick p\lt a !lve- protect its oneiloint. final Jet1Y Nichols hit a shOt ~th ·
Athe~ county; his college years at Ohio Unive~t)'. He began foot jumper over the out. '..margin. The 17th , rated 8:!19 to play to make It ~.
~clili)g basketba)l and
at old Racine (now Southern) stretched hands of · Arnie ,Wolverines slipped to 3-!ln th,e Nicl)o!s had 14 points and ~ight
. .~ SchOOl. He moved.on 'lb Bellview, Ohio HJ(Ih School .for a Johilson with three seconds to . Big Ten and 10-4 overall, The of them were in the·last 10: II of ·
year: then returned to, Meigs count)', as .superintendent of . play Saturayto enable.Purdue BOUermakers·now have a 3-0 the second half . .
Eastern Local School District iintU his appotntrnent as assistant ' to upset Big Ten leader conference mark in their 1~ · Sophomore c8mpy Russell
to George ,Hargraves Jr. ," of'Meigs Local. •
Michigan, 63-62.
record.
.
led Michigan with 22 points bu~
Mr. Morrison was buried Tuesday in Letart Falls Cemetery.
A desperation hook shot by
Kendrick storec! 13 of his 15 ' had the ball stolen away from ·
Larry Morrison was a great 1!1811. It Is appropriate to state Ken Brady went in from near- paints In the SOC!&gt;nd half lb him .\nth 44 seconds left and
this ·fact in a sports column, but perhaps not for the reasons the midcourt but the ball hadn't Iring Purdue·back from a 39-&lt;lO Purdue made its whining
reader will think of first,
left his halld when the buzzer halftime deficit.· The .BOiler- basket off that turnover.
It is true that he was a great high school and college athlete.
Hjs playing records show for thelilselves. It is true that he was a
great hasketbsU coach with a vast knowledge of the sport. He
made basketball p!ayers with ordinary skills Into winners. He
W&amp;zl a hard loser,
,
But records are made to be broken. His greatness in the
athletic field Is a record which may be tied, but never lroktm.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) - .starters scored in double. win output of all last season.
That "record was his remarkable success making citizens of
"l believe Notre Dame is
his basketbaU player. A boy could be sevflll feet tall, average 30 Notre Dame raced to its fifth figures, with Junior guard
better
than their 6-6 record
points and 30 rebounds per game, but he would not be a member consecutive basketball victory Jerry Brokaw leading t11e way
shows " said Dayton Coach
'
.
of Larry's squad If he were not a good citizen. Some started as and evened its season slate at with 2tl points. J. D. Grigsby
Don
Donoher
after
the contest.
by
trouncing
was
high
for
,Dayton
with
16.
6-6
Saturday
good citizens while others ended that way If they became perDayton, 94-58, in a game that
Holding an 11-point halftime "Once they got the momentum
manent members of his teams.
they kept coming at us and
Larry spent many hours with his players; no! only in the was never in doubt from the lead, the Irish came back in the
second half to outscore the didn't let up. Notre ·Dame
gym, but at his home after practices and games. Tbey,suffered opening minutes.
The Irish built their effort Flyers in the first 10 minutes Coach Digger ·phelps said
togetherafter·a loss (which, fortunately, was not very often). His
"This game gave us great
aroWld a tough defense that by 25-6..
.
teams were a family.
The victory for Notre Dame confidence."
What form of greatness could exceed this, after games are held Dayton's C&lt;K!aptain, Don
played and playing records are forgotten? Boys and their Smith, who has been averaging enabled the Irish to equal their
26 points a game, to six points.
parents will always remember.
Meanwhile, all Notre Dame
THE LOS ANGELES DODGERS already are stirring into
spring training and other clubs - including tbe beloved (?) Reds
- are putting their pitchers through first drills.
Notes from the big leagues Saturday mentioned righthander
Billy Wilson of Pomeroy, the short relief specialist of the Phillies,
had signed his 1973 contract. ·Recovering from yrly season
surgery most of last season, Wilson got in some wor'k in August
KIN&lt;;STON, Jamaica (UPI) restaurant. "! just wanted to
and ~ptember .
-Both Joe Frazier and George come by and say hello," said
Meanwhile, Jim Spencer, father of ex-Gallip&lt;ills athlete
Foreman did their early Frazier, "but I've got to get
ToliUily Spencer, drove to Columbus Saturday to pick up Tommy
morning roadwork Saturday back and hit the sack.''
who has been vacationing in Canada the past month. Tommy,
CLEVELAND (UP!) - After and then holed up in their
who played in a wipter Instructional league in Florida last fall, 10 years of split-second headquarters here with
The champion, who seems
expects to report for spring training with the Reds in February. decision making on the nothing milch else to do but more relaxed than ever before,
professional football field, It think about their heavyweight despite the big fight drawing
Yes, it's baseball talk time. And time to fuss around ahout the took a doctor make one of the championship fight on Monday closer and closer, left for. his
composition of the 1973 Melgs-Gallla Pony League (13-15 year biggest decisions Cleveland night.
botel at 11 p.m. (EST). He was
olds) , Last summer It included Pomeroy, Racine, Middleport A, Browns' quarterback Bill
Frazier got to bed a litUe up at dawn and on the road.
Middleport B, Cheshire, Southwestern, Bidwell, and Vinton.
Nelsen had ever faced - to get later than usual Friday night
Foreman, who thrives on
Woody Call of Pomeroy would like to open the doors to out o( the game while he could when he went to watch the
work,
did his running, too, and
Coolville, Tuppers Plains, Harrisonville, Rutland, Syracuse and still walk.
opening of his band at a local there was a chance that he ,
points in between, if any, some of which have shown interest in a
Nelsen, 32, announced his
might go to the gym in the
larger ''mostly Meigs Count)' League.''
retirement as a player
afternoon to limber up. The
This observer (who managed the Middleport A team) had Saturday and at the same time
ring at the National Arena has .
excellent relations with all tbe other clubs. Middleport A took its severed his relations with the
been taken down as both
lumps early, but came back with a fine second half to finish third Browns. He said he would seek
fighiers completed their
behind Pomeroy and Bidwell. Travel, however, was a problem to employment as a coach with
boXing on Friday .
us and likewise to the more distant Gallia teams who had to come another club. He ia !ea][iltg the
CH~RLO'n'E, N. C: (UP!)
into Meigs County. From Racine to Southwestern, for example, game on the advice of team
Frazier and Foreman apBilly Cunningham, Dennis
roughly is a IMknlle round trip. That's traveling; maybe," should physician Dr. Vic Ippolito.
Wuyick and Ted McClain peared fit as they sweated
such trips be required in the future, charter jets are the answer.
"! listened to what Dr. Ip- sparked a come-from-behind through their final full-5eale
The point is that Call and others in Pomeroy would like to see polito had to say and he
workouts yesterday. Frazier,
more Meigs teams in basically a Meigs League, but including suggested that I quit," Nelsen fourth quarter rally as mirius the belly fat that was
Carolina defeated Dallas, 124Cheshire because it is close. However, interest - and com- said. "I guess I've kind of been
present three wej!ks ago, exmitment - will have to be made early, say before April!, by hoping someone would say . lll, in an ABA game Saturday pects to weigh in Monday
afternoon.
Tuppers Plainset. al., If such a league ia to be organized.
some(hlng . I wanted the
Down ~2 at the half and 92- morning at 10 a. m. (EST)' at
All for myself, I'd like to see the Gallia teams continue in the decision made for me, I sup68at the end of the third period, arOWld 210 pounds.
association, perhaps as a southern division, with limited cross- pose."
the Cougars gradually drew up
division PJay. Part of the object of Pony play is to widen the
to a 109-109 tie in the fourth
horizons of the boys playing the game.
·
·
Bowling
Green
period and then exploded in the
TEMP . CERT . NO , Oll7aH
If interested, call Woody or .this reporter.
final 21'. minutes, outscoring
the Chaparrals 15-2.
slips by Kent
We ·Train M~n to Work As
Cunningham and McClain
LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
-KENT,
Ohio
.
(UP!)
Brian
each had nine points in the final
. ACCIDENT
DATE- GYMNASIUM
POOL
Jan. 22- 7-9'12 gym.Judo Class
7: 30·8: 30 College Swim
Scanlan and Cornelius Cash period and Wuyciin:ontributed
' 1NVESTICATORS
7-9 '12 •gym.College Rec .
.
combined
for
36
points
to
pace
six.
Gain Prestige, Big Income,
7· 10 Teaching Heallh·203
Cunningham topped all
Green
Stale
Job Security
9· t0:30 Women's Intramural Badminton Tourney
, Bowling
Bl " A
Jan. 23-6: 30·9:30 Psych . Basls·203
7: 30·8:30 C&amp;C Swim
UniversitY to a 67-64 Mid scorers with 24 points and
•
SPARE
Tlt.ll
7:30·11 Men's Intramural Basketball
American Conference victory added seven assists, seven
INVESTICATOR
Jan. 24-5:4S JV's vs Ohio Dominican
Closed
• COMPANY STAFf
over Kent State here Saturday. rebounds ,and five steals ;
8:00 Varsltv vs Ohio Dominican
INVESTICATOR
7-10 First Aid Class·203
Bowling Green, which took Wuyclk and McClain, who both
• AN INDEPENDENT
Jan. 25-7:50-8:30 College Rec.
7-10 WSI Class
· the lead for the first time at 62- came off the bench, had -18 and
INVESTICATOR
8:30-10:30 Co-ed Volleyball
We will train you if you qualify !
Jan. 26-7 :30-9:30 C&amp;C Rec.
B·9: 30a.m.-GSI Swim
60 with 2: IS left in the game, Is 17 points repsectlvely.
Write for local Interview giving
7:30-8: 30 C&amp;C Swim
full name, complete addrus,
It was the lith straight home
now
3-1
in
the
loop
and
7"'
phone number, education and
t-3 C&amp;C Swim
Ja'n. 27-1 ·3 C&amp;C Rec.
overall. Kent evened its con- court victory for the Cougars, . previous work experience.
5:45 JV' s vs Urbana
Liberty
8:00 Varsity vs Urbana
ference standing 2-2 and who are in first place In the School of Cl1im
lnv••tilatina
2-4 C&amp;C Swim
Jan. 28-2-4 C&amp;C Recreation
pushed its overall losses to nine Eastern division . .Rich Jones
4420 M&amp;dlson
7-9 C&amp;C Swim
.,
7·9 C&amp;C Recreation
_
Kanus City, Mhsot.~rl 1411 I
led Dallas with 20 points and
over five wins.
C&amp;C - College and Communily.
·High for Kent was Rick James Silas added 17.
:;;;:;-;:::::::.~~~:::::::::::~~:&gt;~~.m:;::~:;:;:.J;.o:;~;;:::::::;m.:'(:~~
Gates with · 20 . points and
Dwight Kenner added 16.
Scanlan dropped in 20 for the
Falcons while Cash, wpo pulled
down game-high 18, shot ·J6
points.

·

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•

trips Dallas

.

ii'licles. One was the survey taken and the loss of 500 people. The
ather was the very next day, 6,000 new jobs being created. ,
~· May I ask to. whom are . these jobs be~ created for?
~ntly, my husband, along will! sever~ other community
ipen, received a job with a COI!Structio? company at tbe ~e
iinJy.to work fi-;eweeks and then was latd off. We doubt if he IS
p iled back, nor the other fellows, because they have now .called
J)t an out of town company tq do the wo~k. These men qwt jobs
Gliriklng they would w0rk longer than ftve weeks. So, now they
ilre out of two jobS in a short periO!I of five weeks. They can't go
back because they quit.So what's left? The long job hu~t.
.
4.. · Someilne tell me where for him to start first. ,Phillip Sporn IS
Jut due to his father be\118 employed and Kyger Creek Is out due
fp my father. Impeiiai, Federal Mogul, .Gjlodyear, Pantasote,
)Is* aren't iurtng and If they are, you have to have some kind of
pun. J:le's taking the mining course but it will be May before he

'

Carolina rally

AEROS TRIUMPH
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)
Four second period goals, two
by Murray Hall, powered the
Houston Aeros to a 4-3 victory
over the Philadelphia Blazers
Saturday in a World Hockey
Association game. ·

an Evans
International Home ··

)

sidelines

.,

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Nelsen is
forced to

'•

@~ ·Editor:

'

Flyers ripped by Irish

San

Francisco and Dallas winning
coin tosses lor favorable
drafting positions.
The draft will open Jan. 30 in
New York with the Houston
Oilers, owners of a 1-13 record,
getting first chance at the
wealth of college talent
available this year.

.

(

.ball

'rl

•
. SCORES TRilJMPH
PHILADELPHIA (j.JPI)
Aloysius Henwood's Grey
Dawn Girl scored a half-length
triumph in the third running of
the $32,725 Heirloom Handicap
at Liberty Bell Saturday before
20,242 fans.
The long shot in the field of
eight three-year-old fillies,
Gr~y Dawn Girl returned
$42.60, $17.40 and $7.80.

.

the .Spor1s

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ground troops- and armored
BLOOMINGTON; Ind. (UPI)
units had moved up as rein• . - Indiana erupted' (or 12
forcements, the sources said.
points midway
In the Central Highlands, through til€ ~ood luilf to pest
about230milesnorthofSaigon, · an~71vic:OryoverM!nnesota
Communist troops forced a Saturday and extend the
government ranger battalion Hoosi~rs· Big Ten record to 3-0.
to make a '1actical withMinnesota, now 1-2 in the
drawal" from Positions about league, Jed at .the half, 36-35,
18 miles west of tbe capital of and the game was still close
Plelku province, military with Indlilna leading at 58-S6
sources repor••d. There was no
"
report on casualties.
The United States stepped up
air activity over South Vietnam to its highest level in
almost three months. Nearly
450 warplanes were overhead
during tbe 24 bours ending at 8
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) a.m., the U.S. command said.
Ohio
Stat.e University
Fighter-bombers flew 353 sorties the most since Nov. 6, basketball coach Fred Taylor,
wtre'n 355 strikes were made. In 48, who was admitted. to
addition, 30wavesof B52heavy Riverside Hospital here Friday
bombers-Jlome 90 planes- after complaining of chest
pains, remained in ugood."
were reported over the country condition Satorday.
during the hours.
24
Aspokesman for the hospital
Ninety-four !;•bier-bomber
...
said the dii.gnosis of Taylor's
missioos were in the Saigon
region. Planes have been illness had not been completed.
pasting the Michelin area-a Doctors earlier said Taylor had
long-tun·e Communist strong- not suffered a heart attack.
Tayior, in his 14th season as
hold-for a week to stop a
head coach at OSU, will be kept
supply buildup.
at
the hospital for observation
Radio Hanoi Saturday
broadcast a Viet Cong for an indefinite time.
statement condemning con- Assistant Coach Bob
tinued American bombing in Burkholder will coach the
South Vietnam, Laos and Bucks during Taylor's abCambodia . The ·united Stall&gt;s sence.
halted bombing of North
Vietnam Monday. The ComRENFRO ILL
munist broadcast denoWlced
DALLAS (UP!) - Melthe bombing as "horri- Renfro, scheduled to play a
ble .. .race extermination cornerback position for the
crimes."
NFC All-Stars Sunday in the

. ·•) r have.recently reail in the Sentinel a couple of interesting

!lnWhe&amp; it.

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'

. ) 9-:- The Sunday TlrnOJI- sentinel, SUnday,Jan. 21,1973 .

. .o.ffensiv.e ·. Hoosiers defeat
II Saiaon
.a.e
'
·
·
·d
I 'b
' y.Re'ds stoppe
.Minnesota five

be

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·.

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r•-;:;::;:;;;~,:-u-:;;-;::.-;d~T~;;;:i;;;;-1

1
words lllilg (or subject to redu~tl~n by the ·
I editor) lind must be signed with tbe signee's address.

.. • ··.

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.,

18-,- The Sunday Times\ Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 21; 1973

,
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than 300

I Names may be withheld upon pubUcatlon. However,

ml

·~ request, names wUI be disclosed. ~lters should be In good · 1

I taste, addressillg Issues, nol personalities.
I
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·Rebuttal dire~ted to Portland
·

Middleport, Ohio
1973
Jal). 15•

Dear Editor :
In response to the Ietter bY Mrs. Clenden.111 in· Your "'naper
frotn .up Portland way: .
,. .
· Th e way· You trY to mak e us believe about
the
on•
· ·
· • com"
missioner, made me think of a woman whose h~band died. ~e
preacher was preaching the funeral; be was saying such mce
·
words about
her husband she th ou ght 1"t wasn 't her hushand's
·
a1
he
k
' ed WI"th h"un - .I
·
funer . S new. Sh.e 1tv
1 had 20 different people eall on the phone thanking me for
that Jetter. I had even a letter from Reynoldsburg, Ohio,
The people know I was telling the truth abuut that home!
They know that 1f the commissioner would look after it the w~y
~
lace like t"t IS. ·
he should, wewo uldn•t have a run-..ownp
the
hospital just to te ll me
II
! even had a woman ca me fr om
til t I told th truth
a
e
·
IsupposeMr.Ourswoitldlikeitthatpeop~nextdoor told me
· nd when I"t was real cold with
th ey saw the children runn ing arou
·
•
sh
no "'s on.
"
No matter' if you get with the right crowd you can get
elected. we all know it was awful hard work at the Locks. Go to
the Peacock Coal or Swisher Coal Co. to get my record about
working. Your fri end would Iearn what work is ·
I will give yOu 20 different people that talked to me on the
phone. They talked with sense, and the dog didn't ha.ve to ru~.
But don't worry' if any way in the world you trted to kill my
, influence, bull don't think'"· I have forgiven you! I won't haye
other women to boast about me. I have a dear woman I am not
ashamed to have testify about, me ·
May God bless you and your neighbor. In your eye he is a real
moral man, but to me he is a man that doe~n·t really care about
rph
our o ans.
Yourstruly,BenBatey,AloverofChildren.
.'

Also opposes consolidRtion ·
Dear Sir:
· I get the distinct impression that the people of the Kyger
Creek School (by way of Letters to the Editor) feel everyone else
·Is ·•urely for Consolidation of our Schools. Well, here's one from
So~thwestern who isn't completely sold on the idea.
.We are told "Consolidate." OK consolidate for "what." I
ha~e reared nine children, all of them graduating from Southwestern but two. Those two are now at Cadmus Grade School and
will go on to Southwestern.
.
When my earlier ones were at •Gallia Grade School we'
t were told "Consolida~." We did. We are now at Cadmus, and I
~ believe my children have top rated teachers and are receiving a
\ goi)d education, but does that mean they didn't at the four room
building at Gallia,? No indeed it doesn't.
. . ,
l I believe they received just as good an education as the
; students at Cadmus do now.
So now they say Consolidate again, but for what? Is it to be
: better? Is whatwehavenownotgood enough? From where !live.
at Gallia to any centralized building in this county would be an
• a1Vfuliot of mU~s every day. Must our. ~ttle. childr~n trayel ~~
tfa~t, liil·~~catioq..? ~t..epout th,, e~!lil~~'i\\!Jjlj. a
'closer·fufi~age ;range1;ci~ufd our chil&amp;Nl"gftit'ill'lih .n\t\out ,
t paying tuition if they choose? I now live six miles from Cadmus.
~ My children travel over large hills to get there: To Southweste~n
· it Is aboul'l5 miles. Now, to my north Is Oak Hill School, only SlX
·miles away. No big hills, all good road . They also have a high
school. Now just why can't my children and my share of the tax
money be transferred there so that my children won 't have to
"travel all these miles? I believe you should go to the closest
existing school no matter where it is or what county it's in.
. I'm sure th~e must be other people at .Gallia and Centerville
who feel the same way. So come on let's hear from others how
'you really feel about consolidation.
Mrs. John Lewis, Rl. 2, Patriot, Ohio.
..

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.· Pra~e for Jim Saunders
Jan.l2, 1973
Dear Sir:
.
t 1 am addressing this letter to you in regard to some of the
&amp;puties in the Gallla County's Sheriff's office. I say the deputies,
because I have nothing but praise for James SaWlders.
. I was serving a 10 day .$100 fine in jail. I have a bleeding
ulcer. One night after eating the grease Infested food which. is
served here, I began to spit-up blood, and suffer extreme pam.
The other guys banged on the door lor over two hours before
anyone came back. It was the dispatcher . ·They .told him. what
was wrong and he said he would get someone on the radio, He
then came back and told me that Roger Watson called in and said
he would be there in five minutes. An hour o. so later Mr. ytatson
came back and told me he would take me to the ~spital at 4:30
a.m. because there were no doctors there then. At five o'clock, he
hadstill ·not come back. Finally I passed out. When I awoke, .Tun
Saunders was there and he made an appointment to go to Doctor
Warehime. After that I only had problems off &amp;nd on, until !he
:day before I was to get out. I then told Jim Ssunders and he asked
me if I would be all right Wltil the morning when I was supposed
to get out. The next morning I asked Jim Crace to release ~e .
. He said he had .talked to my father an~ he srud, Not to
release me until h~ got there." I then tried t.o explain to him that I
am oflegal age arid my father has no say-oo over me, because I
have not lived wil/' him for over two year.s. He still refused to
· ,- release me. I'm asking you to prmt this m your paper so the.
people of Gallla County will know what is going o~ in their county,
jail.
Thank you sincere1y, Keith Sanders.

, "\ !Employment hardship noted
~

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·SAIGON (UP!) _ South
Vietnamese .infantrymen covered by U.S. warplanes stalled
a major Communist push into
the Saigon area Ssturday in
he'vy figllting .in the tarigJed
jungles of a rubber plantation,
military sources said.
Fighting · pontlnued Into
Saturday night but the sources
· •North Vietnamese
said two
·
·
l"egim
, ents are pulling back
deeper into , the overgrown.
rubber grove.s of the Michelin
plantation 00 escape air and
artillery attack.
"We have them stopped," a
South Vietnamese officer said.
But he added, "The fighting is
close- very close."
It was one of the biggest
battles since the Communists'
1972 Easter offensive. In the
first 24 hours of fighting, ending at 4p.m., casualties were
high. Military sources said 325
Communist soldiers were
killed and South Vietnamese
losses were a steep 4fi killed
and 116 wounded.
About 1,600 soldiers of the
North Vietnamese 7th Division 's 209th and !41st
regiments were moving toward
the Saigon area under jungle
cover when they were
discovered. Military .sources
said captured documents in·
dicate the Communists were
under orders to avoid contact
and work close into the capital
area prior to a ceasefire.
At least two South Vietnamese infantry battalionsabout 1,000 men- were locked
in the plantation fighting .
Another five battalions of

,

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• •

. ~traig'ht

.Fred Taylor
hospitalized

BACK TO SOAP
DALLAS
(UP!)
Gridiron widows, rejoice!
Tbe football season ends this
weekend.
With AFC-NFC Pro Bowl
game Sunday - which wlll
feature the all-stars of both
conferences
the
behemoths of the gridiron
can hang up their cleats and
helmets, and television sets
can be tuned back to soap
operas.

NETS 46 IN WIN
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ken
Charles equalled the single
game Fordham scoring
record with 46 points Saturday
as the RamS defeated St.
Peter's, 108-98, in ·front of a
family day crowd of 2,506 at the
Rose Hill Gym.
The 6-2 guard amazed the
crowd and the Peacocks with a
dazzling shooting display. His
4fi points tied the record set two · ;;:;:::;:~~:?.::i:w.;:i:~=~=~z::::::::;:::::~::::=:::o:::::::::::::
years ago by Charlie Yelverton
against Rochester in the Kodak
PADRES SIGN THREE •
Cla~{C.r o~. 4'" · "'\ ·;.~· ~·
SAN
DIEGO (UP! ) ·- The
The high scorer for the
Peacocks was senior Harry San Deigo Padres announced
Ssturday the signing of three
Anderson with 37 points.
players for the 1973 season and
said veteran utility man Curt
Blelary had been released. ,
DRAFT JAN. 30
Signed were infielder Dave
DALLAS (UPI) - National Campbell, rookie outfielder
Football League owners John Grubb and pitcher Steve
Saturday finalized plan; for the Simpson.
1973 Collegiate Player Draft
with St. Louis, Denver, Min1 •

•

' ',

nesota,

j

'

Cincinnati,

Dolphins upset ·
. a, 70.·.-66 .
F.·.·l.o ri.d

Pro Bowl Game, was
hospitalized Saturday with the
flu.
Dallas Coach Tom Landry,
who will lead the NFC stars,
said he did not know if Renfro
could be ready In time for the
game, and indicated that If
Renfro ~ould not play it was too
late to replace him.
Without Renfro the NFC
would have only two cor.nerbacks - Lem Barney of
Detroit and Jim Johnson of San
Francisco.

when tht! Hoosiers reeled off
their 12 straig~t riiarkers.
. Petty ~oulejl· 'Jacksohvilrg
The Gophers managed to get . JACKSONVILLE ," Fla ·
with 2 19
within · four pointS, 75-71, but (UPI)
_
Unranked center Butch Taylor
:
Indiana pulled ,away again. ' ~acksonville o~ercame afive-. ' left ruid the Dolphins on_tOp 61 ;
Minnesota's a!tack began point deficit in the final four 60. The little ~ ~ISO · w~s
spuiteringwhenguard.BobNilJ: minutes behind clutch f?ui · lagged with ~tee~~:
fouled out with. 10 minutes to shooting by Leon Benbow lind . and the. Dolp~ san . , 0 '·
1
play. Nix got only four PQints Henry Williams Saturda)' lb ·throY's an: reta~ ~
but was credited wi~ guiding . edge 181!! ranked Florida ~tate, of the ba ~ ~l:'awa c~~
the Gopher floor· game.
70-66, in ll rugged, sp1r1ted
Jacksonv1 e P .
Y
John Ritter Jed indiana With contest.
24-13 lead with 7.58 ~ft in.the
22 pnints, John l..skowski had 17
Benbow hit three straight first half. Then Ro~allj canned
and Steve Green 14. Clyde , long jumpers to · give the .live free lhr?ws ana !~link 8 25Turner hit 30 points for ·Min, ' Dolphins, now 13-2, a 61~ lead looter to bnng the ·~:,"!~~.
nesota and Jim Brewer added wiih '3:10 left · after the back ~0 24-22 "d ed ~:
23
Seminoles had grabbed their Jacksonville agam WI. en
Both teams are now 11-2 · biggest lead of the afternoon at margin to 311-31 at halftitne:
overall.
so:.55.
three . long . jumpers
Y
The Dolphins wrapped up the sophomore Iqck COleman.,··
game at the foul'lllie with seven
Flor;da State took the lead a~­
free throws as the taller 46-44 midway thr~ugh' the
Seminoles fouled repeatedly to · second half · after Jacksontry to get the ball.
ville,'s two big men - Taylor
Benbow scored 23 points to and 6~ Abe Steward ·- both
pace the ·Jacksonville attack picked up lour fouls and the
while Williams added 15. teams traded basketS until the
. MADISON, W"IS. (UP!)
Florida
Slate ( 11-4) was led by Seminoles spurted to the so:.55
Wisconsin outscored Michigan
State 22-4 in a stretch in the 6-10 Reggie Royals with 23 and margin with 4124 'left.
second half and went on to whip Benny_Ciyde with 15.
the Spartans, 93-aO, in a Big The contest between the two
Ten game Saturday, It was the bitter intrastate rival infirst conference victory in four dependents was marred by
games for the Badgers, who three technical fouls - two on
were led by Leon Howard's 29 Williams imd ohe on Florida
points. MSU has a 2-2 Big Ten State's playmaking guard, Otto
Petty.
record.
.
Michigan State jumped off to
an early lead but Wisconsin '75 bowl sites to
came back quickly to post a 46- be made in April
36 halftime advantage .
COLUMBUS (UP! )- UCLA
DALLAS (UP!) - Pro
The Spartans got to within
Athletic Director J. D. Morgan
three points at 52-49 shortly football Commissioner Pete and Dayton (Ohio) Daily Ne.ws
after the Intermission and tben Rozelle said Saturday sites for Sports Editor Si Burick wiU be
Wisconsin went on its 22-4 the 1975 Super Bowl and Pro honored during the 18th annual
jlowl would be selected next
scoring rampage.
April
at an NFL meeting In awards banquet of the TouchSpartan s::oring leader Mike
down Club of Columbus here
Robinson was held to just six Arizona and that he saw no Jan. 26.
points in the first half and reason why the games would
Morgan, athletic director at
finished with 14 before fouling be played anywhere but a UCLA since !963, will receive
out with nearly nine minutes warm .weather city.
"We could always have rain an "award of distinction.'!
left in the game. He shared
While he has been at'UCLA, the
scoring honors with team- ot cold weather In places like Bruins have won 18 NCM
tes All Smith and Lindsay New Orleans, Los Angeles or
ma t enh0 !so had 14
· Dallas," Rozelle said. "But you championships, more than any
Halrs
·
won 'I have a blizza rd in c1"ties other school in the nation.
. on, w. aCoach John
W1sconsm
lik that ,
Burick, to receive the
Powless put in his substitutes
e
·
late in the game but was forced
.Next year the Super Bowl "Sportswriter of the Year"
to put back his first string when w!ll be played at Houston at award, is president of the
Football Writers Association of
Michigan State cut the margin ~Stadium II~ the Pro Bowl
America. He has been with the
to 86-76 with 2:20 left to play. ~=s City s Arrowhead newspaper for 43 years.

0

NAMED CHAIRMAN
MONROE, N. C. (UP!)
Lefty Gomez, a Hall of Fame
pitcher, was elected Saturday
as chairman of the Board of
Babe Ruth Baseball International. The election was
conducted by the group's board
of directors.

Badgers
triumph

Will honor

Morgan and
Si Burick

~irl ····

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So in the meantime,what? I've looked for a jpb. But no one is
interested in ltlrbig 1\ mother of two: So why nol"'do an une~­
P.J.oyed survey. You might find if you gtve the Jobs to fellow Metgs
County people; this commurdty won't be growing as m~ch as you
thlilk. .
.. thbe· ld
Thank you, (Name WI
)

.
p,
N CARE to p
cycJ~~u~e ironing drud;ess fabrics
r ermanent
PRess ~twns include: N~~j.,ras 2 wash and 2 .
rinse; ..;a so features 3. Water I AL, GENTLE an~'n speeds, Three
Buill-in
~~~ash With warm ri~:P sel«:tioos: Cold ~E~MANENT
er and super SVRGILand hoi Wash W'lhas WUh COld
Hel

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s

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;;~-~

Your local -1-H Rtpl~stnlativet
H M,YLAA
sopeakt, Ohio 45619

.

r- ·F·REE exciting
68 ·pap
h

·I

EVRrJS , \
lnTERnRTIQnRL

M7·5234 -.

lnltrnltlonll Hom
I Ev1n1
Boll. 400, Chesa peake, Oh
5619
· I 1own a lot .o I plan tq· b~Hd n 0
l1 can assist with tinlshinl work 0

.

I' Please have an E· I·H representative contact me

I
1 Na m~.

Homes ·
" 11M•1on o,: (jj)

~~~·•rn

I State
I Telep hone Number

.

.I

'
0

I
1

Zip__
,

By Chet Tannehill .

&gt;

'

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·•

Desk

.

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,.

...

.

Puraue ·sUrpfises~
'

,.

M
. ·.· ic.·..h
.· _·.: la.an
e · .. ·,··'63-.62.

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•.

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. ..TO. Pa.Y·m
ore
•.
.
YDuR
DOllAR!
·WE 1RY

GivE MORE FOR

FOOD

STORE HOURS:

DAILY 9 10 9-Q.OSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVE., GALLIPOLIS
'

A~OUR*STAR

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BONELESS

ROASTS
FLAT CUTS

Frazier, Foreman
set for big bout

'

ReeJ?eS gives up grid
·sport for real estate .

lb.
We r-.erve the right to limit qHntlll" on all itetns in this ad. Prices effecllve tllru Sat., January J7, 1973. None solei to dtaltrs.

CUBE STEAKS ANY SIZE PACKA~E

• • • • • ••

$1 A9

SOUND RIPE

lb.
F&amp;P

DALLAS (UP!) - Danny portunit)' to coach. I was ralsed
Reeves, whose halfback passes in the south and I wanted to
became a major weapon in the stay in the south. ·
repertoire of the Dallas
"This Is not a decision I
Co1'boysand who later became reached In the past week. I
the ,youngest coach in the NFL, have'been thinking about It all
retired from football Saturday. season. Coach (Tom) Landry
"It's a great business," he has been patient with me.''
said. "I'm sorry to be getting .
oufiil( it."
~eves said he w~s going to McCovey first
WOfk .for a real estate agency .
"Quality and Reliability Is
and that although his Giant to sian
our motto"
retirement decision was not
. ,••
irrEli.ocable, he did not foresee
eCOMPLETE LINE
rettlfning to football.
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) "I'm' ·young enough to get Willie
McCovey,
the
OF USED AND
back In coaching if 1 want to," acknowledged team leader,
Reeves said. "! was only 29 Satll!"day became the first
REBUILT AUTO
· yes~y. But I hope this member .of the San Francisco
and
, • decWon ·I'm making Is the ,Giarts to agree to te.rms for ...
· ri ~~,one.'' ,
1973 when he ~alked into the
TRUcK PARTS
~vee said he decided to club's offices at candlestick
it because there were - Park· and signed his contract.
· Henry and·Donaid
~~ d head coaching op, "Really feel we have the
Baird, Owners
· mtun
' elti. in the south where talent in this club to win and
pores
,
' ' intot
I
he , ts lb stay and raise hia I m try g se an examp e
~;m
for the young players," the 3$AHer5 P·lll· Cal1444·127f
f~ Y~as looking abea~ 00 Y&lt;l)r-&lt;&gt;id slugger told Je~
..- ' ' 5'!11! ~. ,. ~
bel .. h d'coachsomedaYt'' Donovarl, assistant to. cluti
Ntit to Old Sliver Brlaae
.. ng ~ eat• #ahd the "laees preslderlt Horace stdtletlimi!il!
'
~Hauga. Olilb
Reeves sa u,
~
. L• ,., ,_.. , ) In '"-' l &gt;&lt; ,,.h . I
\rhere I ri\lg t ~ave.. tb &amp;p. ''" qwCII.Iy s&lt;en"" rna ""'111'8C '

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Henry Block has ·
17 reasons why you
should .come ·t o us
·. for income tax help.
Reason 11. Our average fee for
over seven and a half million
customers last year was only
about 12 dollars.

HUNrS

PORK &amp;BEANS
KEEBLER FEATURES·
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.•'

'

.:, ; · Larcy ~ortillon Of P'll"eroy died' J&amp;n. 14 at' the' age of 38 in
,Uiliverslty, Hqspilal after a long illlless, He was ~ assistant
·
' · ·· ' ' '
··
·
·'
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (uP!) f wetit off, allowing Purdue io makers : tooll the . lea~ wbim
, ~te~t·of Meigs Loc81 Dlatrict since its inception in 1966.
~ high SChoo! years were spent at Jacksonville-Trimble in -: Frank •Kendrick p\lt a !lve- protect its oneiloint. final Jet1Y Nichols hit a shOt ~th ·
Athe~ county; his college years at Ohio Unive~t)'. He began foot jumper over the out. '..margin. The 17th , rated 8:!19 to play to make It ~.
~clili)g basketba)l and
at old Racine (now Southern) stretched hands of · Arnie ,Wolverines slipped to 3-!ln th,e Nicl)o!s had 14 points and ~ight
. .~ SchOOl. He moved.on 'lb Bellview, Ohio HJ(Ih School .for a Johilson with three seconds to . Big Ten and 10-4 overall, The of them were in the·last 10: II of ·
year: then returned to, Meigs count)', as .superintendent of . play Saturayto enable.Purdue BOUermakers·now have a 3-0 the second half . .
Eastern Local School District iintU his appotntrnent as assistant ' to upset Big Ten leader conference mark in their 1~ · Sophomore c8mpy Russell
to George ,Hargraves Jr. ," of'Meigs Local. •
Michigan, 63-62.
record.
.
led Michigan with 22 points bu~
Mr. Morrison was buried Tuesday in Letart Falls Cemetery.
A desperation hook shot by
Kendrick storec! 13 of his 15 ' had the ball stolen away from ·
Larry Morrison was a great 1!1811. It Is appropriate to state Ken Brady went in from near- paints In the SOC!&gt;nd half lb him .\nth 44 seconds left and
this ·fact in a sports column, but perhaps not for the reasons the midcourt but the ball hadn't Iring Purdue·back from a 39-&lt;lO Purdue made its whining
reader will think of first,
left his halld when the buzzer halftime deficit.· The .BOiler- basket off that turnover.
It is true that he was a great high school and college athlete.
Hjs playing records show for thelilselves. It is true that he was a
great hasketbsU coach with a vast knowledge of the sport. He
made basketball p!ayers with ordinary skills Into winners. He
W&amp;zl a hard loser,
,
But records are made to be broken. His greatness in the
athletic field Is a record which may be tied, but never lroktm.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) - .starters scored in double. win output of all last season.
That "record was his remarkable success making citizens of
"l believe Notre Dame is
his basketbaU player. A boy could be sevflll feet tall, average 30 Notre Dame raced to its fifth figures, with Junior guard
better
than their 6-6 record
points and 30 rebounds per game, but he would not be a member consecutive basketball victory Jerry Brokaw leading t11e way
shows " said Dayton Coach
'
.
of Larry's squad If he were not a good citizen. Some started as and evened its season slate at with 2tl points. J. D. Grigsby
Don
Donoher
after
the contest.
by
trouncing
was
high
for
,Dayton
with
16.
6-6
Saturday
good citizens while others ended that way If they became perDayton, 94-58, in a game that
Holding an 11-point halftime "Once they got the momentum
manent members of his teams.
they kept coming at us and
Larry spent many hours with his players; no! only in the was never in doubt from the lead, the Irish came back in the
second half to outscore the didn't let up. Notre ·Dame
gym, but at his home after practices and games. Tbey,suffered opening minutes.
The Irish built their effort Flyers in the first 10 minutes Coach Digger ·phelps said
togetherafter·a loss (which, fortunately, was not very often). His
"This game gave us great
aroWld a tough defense that by 25-6..
.
teams were a family.
The victory for Notre Dame confidence."
What form of greatness could exceed this, after games are held Dayton's C&lt;K!aptain, Don
played and playing records are forgotten? Boys and their Smith, who has been averaging enabled the Irish to equal their
26 points a game, to six points.
parents will always remember.
Meanwhile, all Notre Dame
THE LOS ANGELES DODGERS already are stirring into
spring training and other clubs - including tbe beloved (?) Reds
- are putting their pitchers through first drills.
Notes from the big leagues Saturday mentioned righthander
Billy Wilson of Pomeroy, the short relief specialist of the Phillies,
had signed his 1973 contract. ·Recovering from yrly season
surgery most of last season, Wilson got in some wor'k in August
KIN&lt;;STON, Jamaica (UPI) restaurant. "! just wanted to
and ~ptember .
-Both Joe Frazier and George come by and say hello," said
Meanwhile, Jim Spencer, father of ex-Gallip&lt;ills athlete
Foreman did their early Frazier, "but I've got to get
ToliUily Spencer, drove to Columbus Saturday to pick up Tommy
morning roadwork Saturday back and hit the sack.''
who has been vacationing in Canada the past month. Tommy,
CLEVELAND (UP!) - After and then holed up in their
who played in a wipter Instructional league in Florida last fall, 10 years of split-second headquarters here with
The champion, who seems
expects to report for spring training with the Reds in February. decision making on the nothing milch else to do but more relaxed than ever before,
professional football field, It think about their heavyweight despite the big fight drawing
Yes, it's baseball talk time. And time to fuss around ahout the took a doctor make one of the championship fight on Monday closer and closer, left for. his
composition of the 1973 Melgs-Gallla Pony League (13-15 year biggest decisions Cleveland night.
botel at 11 p.m. (EST). He was
olds) , Last summer It included Pomeroy, Racine, Middleport A, Browns' quarterback Bill
Frazier got to bed a litUe up at dawn and on the road.
Middleport B, Cheshire, Southwestern, Bidwell, and Vinton.
Nelsen had ever faced - to get later than usual Friday night
Foreman, who thrives on
Woody Call of Pomeroy would like to open the doors to out o( the game while he could when he went to watch the
work,
did his running, too, and
Coolville, Tuppers Plains, Harrisonville, Rutland, Syracuse and still walk.
opening of his band at a local there was a chance that he ,
points in between, if any, some of which have shown interest in a
Nelsen, 32, announced his
might go to the gym in the
larger ''mostly Meigs Count)' League.''
retirement as a player
afternoon to limber up. The
This observer (who managed the Middleport A team) had Saturday and at the same time
ring at the National Arena has .
excellent relations with all tbe other clubs. Middleport A took its severed his relations with the
been taken down as both
lumps early, but came back with a fine second half to finish third Browns. He said he would seek
fighiers completed their
behind Pomeroy and Bidwell. Travel, however, was a problem to employment as a coach with
boXing on Friday .
us and likewise to the more distant Gallia teams who had to come another club. He ia !ea][iltg the
CH~RLO'n'E, N. C: (UP!)
into Meigs County. From Racine to Southwestern, for example, game on the advice of team
Frazier and Foreman apBilly Cunningham, Dennis
roughly is a IMknlle round trip. That's traveling; maybe," should physician Dr. Vic Ippolito.
Wuyick and Ted McClain peared fit as they sweated
such trips be required in the future, charter jets are the answer.
"! listened to what Dr. Ip- sparked a come-from-behind through their final full-5eale
The point is that Call and others in Pomeroy would like to see polito had to say and he
workouts yesterday. Frazier,
more Meigs teams in basically a Meigs League, but including suggested that I quit," Nelsen fourth quarter rally as mirius the belly fat that was
Carolina defeated Dallas, 124Cheshire because it is close. However, interest - and com- said. "I guess I've kind of been
present three wej!ks ago, exmitment - will have to be made early, say before April!, by hoping someone would say . lll, in an ABA game Saturday pects to weigh in Monday
afternoon.
Tuppers Plainset. al., If such a league ia to be organized.
some(hlng . I wanted the
Down ~2 at the half and 92- morning at 10 a. m. (EST)' at
All for myself, I'd like to see the Gallia teams continue in the decision made for me, I sup68at the end of the third period, arOWld 210 pounds.
association, perhaps as a southern division, with limited cross- pose."
the Cougars gradually drew up
division PJay. Part of the object of Pony play is to widen the
to a 109-109 tie in the fourth
horizons of the boys playing the game.
·
·
Bowling
Green
period and then exploded in the
TEMP . CERT . NO , Oll7aH
If interested, call Woody or .this reporter.
final 21'. minutes, outscoring
the Chaparrals 15-2.
slips by Kent
We ·Train M~n to Work As
Cunningham and McClain
LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
-KENT,
Ohio
.
(UP!)
Brian
each had nine points in the final
. ACCIDENT
DATE- GYMNASIUM
POOL
Jan. 22- 7-9'12 gym.Judo Class
7: 30·8: 30 College Swim
Scanlan and Cornelius Cash period and Wuyciin:ontributed
' 1NVESTICATORS
7-9 '12 •gym.College Rec .
.
combined
for
36
points
to
pace
six.
Gain Prestige, Big Income,
7· 10 Teaching Heallh·203
Cunningham topped all
Green
Stale
Job Security
9· t0:30 Women's Intramural Badminton Tourney
, Bowling
Bl " A
Jan. 23-6: 30·9:30 Psych . Basls·203
7: 30·8:30 C&amp;C Swim
UniversitY to a 67-64 Mid scorers with 24 points and
•
SPARE
Tlt.ll
7:30·11 Men's Intramural Basketball
American Conference victory added seven assists, seven
INVESTICATOR
Jan. 24-5:4S JV's vs Ohio Dominican
Closed
• COMPANY STAFf
over Kent State here Saturday. rebounds ,and five steals ;
8:00 Varsltv vs Ohio Dominican
INVESTICATOR
7-10 First Aid Class·203
Bowling Green, which took Wuyclk and McClain, who both
• AN INDEPENDENT
Jan. 25-7:50-8:30 College Rec.
7-10 WSI Class
· the lead for the first time at 62- came off the bench, had -18 and
INVESTICATOR
8:30-10:30 Co-ed Volleyball
We will train you if you qualify !
Jan. 26-7 :30-9:30 C&amp;C Rec.
B·9: 30a.m.-GSI Swim
60 with 2: IS left in the game, Is 17 points repsectlvely.
Write for local Interview giving
7:30-8: 30 C&amp;C Swim
full name, complete addrus,
It was the lith straight home
now
3-1
in
the
loop
and
7"'
phone number, education and
t-3 C&amp;C Swim
Ja'n. 27-1 ·3 C&amp;C Rec.
overall. Kent evened its con- court victory for the Cougars, . previous work experience.
5:45 JV' s vs Urbana
Liberty
8:00 Varsity vs Urbana
ference standing 2-2 and who are in first place In the School of Cl1im
lnv••tilatina
2-4 C&amp;C Swim
Jan. 28-2-4 C&amp;C Recreation
pushed its overall losses to nine Eastern division . .Rich Jones
4420 M&amp;dlson
7-9 C&amp;C Swim
.,
7·9 C&amp;C Recreation
_
Kanus City, Mhsot.~rl 1411 I
led Dallas with 20 points and
over five wins.
C&amp;C - College and Communily.
·High for Kent was Rick James Silas added 17.
:;;;:;-;:::::::.~~~:::::::::::~~:&gt;~~.m:;::~:;:;:.J;.o:;~;;:::::::;m.:'(:~~
Gates with · 20 . points and
Dwight Kenner added 16.
Scanlan dropped in 20 for the
Falcons while Cash, wpo pulled
down game-high 18, shot ·J6
points.

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1 Address

•wtm PltOQUCTs COIIUI''""' •

Model LCA 520o

&lt;&gt;~.""•dwithhundr•d••' -.,

e ttylltand floor plan. ld. .s
Del)t. 1·48

•

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Whirlpoo'
automatic:
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l .Washer

~..

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APPLY NOW

'*&gt;·

,You 'll build it right the first time, because
you'll help build it. And you 'll save up to
one-lhird the co~t on a custom designed, .
custom built home. Receive FREE plans
sa~&gt;~lce and low co 11/nanclng. Build II rlghtl
Build II with pride Evans Jntemational Homes.

•

trips Dallas

.

ii'licles. One was the survey taken and the loss of 500 people. The
ather was the very next day, 6,000 new jobs being created. ,
~· May I ask to. whom are . these jobs be~ created for?
~ntly, my husband, along will! sever~ other community
ipen, received a job with a COI!Structio? company at tbe ~e
iinJy.to work fi-;eweeks and then was latd off. We doubt if he IS
p iled back, nor the other fellows, because they have now .called
J)t an out of town company tq do the wo~k. These men qwt jobs
Gliriklng they would w0rk longer than ftve weeks. So, now they
ilre out of two jobS in a short periO!I of five weeks. They can't go
back because they quit.So what's left? The long job hu~t.
.
4.. · Someilne tell me where for him to start first. ,Phillip Sporn IS
Jut due to his father be\118 employed and Kyger Creek Is out due
fp my father. Impeiiai, Federal Mogul, .Gjlodyear, Pantasote,
)Is* aren't iurtng and If they are, you have to have some kind of
pun. J:le's taking the mining course but it will be May before he

'

Carolina rally

AEROS TRIUMPH
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)
Four second period goals, two
by Murray Hall, powered the
Houston Aeros to a 4-3 victory
over the Philadelphia Blazers
Saturday in a World Hockey
Association game. ·

an Evans
International Home ··

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sidelines

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Nelsen is
forced to

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@~ ·Editor:

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Flyers ripped by Irish

San

Francisco and Dallas winning
coin tosses lor favorable
drafting positions.
The draft will open Jan. 30 in
New York with the Houston
Oilers, owners of a 1-13 record,
getting first chance at the
wealth of college talent
available this year.

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.ball

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. SCORES TRilJMPH
PHILADELPHIA (j.JPI)
Aloysius Henwood's Grey
Dawn Girl scored a half-length
triumph in the third running of
the $32,725 Heirloom Handicap
at Liberty Bell Saturday before
20,242 fans.
The long shot in the field of
eight three-year-old fillies,
Gr~y Dawn Girl returned
$42.60, $17.40 and $7.80.

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the .Spor1s

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ground troops- and armored
BLOOMINGTON; Ind. (UPI)
units had moved up as rein• . - Indiana erupted' (or 12
forcements, the sources said.
points midway
In the Central Highlands, through til€ ~ood luilf to pest
about230milesnorthofSaigon, · an~71vic:OryoverM!nnesota
Communist troops forced a Saturday and extend the
government ranger battalion Hoosi~rs· Big Ten record to 3-0.
to make a '1actical withMinnesota, now 1-2 in the
drawal" from Positions about league, Jed at .the half, 36-35,
18 miles west of tbe capital of and the game was still close
Plelku province, military with Indlilna leading at 58-S6
sources repor••d. There was no
"
report on casualties.
The United States stepped up
air activity over South Vietnam to its highest level in
almost three months. Nearly
450 warplanes were overhead
during tbe 24 bours ending at 8
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) a.m., the U.S. command said.
Ohio
Stat.e University
Fighter-bombers flew 353 sorties the most since Nov. 6, basketball coach Fred Taylor,
wtre'n 355 strikes were made. In 48, who was admitted. to
addition, 30wavesof B52heavy Riverside Hospital here Friday
bombers-Jlome 90 planes- after complaining of chest
pains, remained in ugood."
were reported over the country condition Satorday.
during the hours.
24
Aspokesman for the hospital
Ninety-four !;•bier-bomber
...
said the dii.gnosis of Taylor's
missioos were in the Saigon
region. Planes have been illness had not been completed.
pasting the Michelin area-a Doctors earlier said Taylor had
long-tun·e Communist strong- not suffered a heart attack.
Tayior, in his 14th season as
hold-for a week to stop a
head coach at OSU, will be kept
supply buildup.
at
the hospital for observation
Radio Hanoi Saturday
broadcast a Viet Cong for an indefinite time.
statement condemning con- Assistant Coach Bob
tinued American bombing in Burkholder will coach the
South Vietnam, Laos and Bucks during Taylor's abCambodia . The ·united Stall&gt;s sence.
halted bombing of North
Vietnam Monday. The ComRENFRO ILL
munist broadcast denoWlced
DALLAS (UP!) - Melthe bombing as "horri- Renfro, scheduled to play a
ble .. .race extermination cornerback position for the
crimes."
NFC All-Stars Sunday in the

. ·•) r have.recently reail in the Sentinel a couple of interesting

!lnWhe&amp; it.

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. ) 9-:- The Sunday TlrnOJI- sentinel, SUnday,Jan. 21,1973 .

. .o.ffensiv.e ·. Hoosiers defeat
II Saiaon
.a.e
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·d
I 'b
' y.Re'ds stoppe
.Minnesota five

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r•-;:;::;:;;;~,:-u-:;;-;::.-;d~T~;;;:i;;;;-1

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words lllilg (or subject to redu~tl~n by the ·
I editor) lind must be signed with tbe signee's address.

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18-,- The Sunday Times\ Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 21; 1973

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-.ol.- ~'"'"'" ,..•.• v-_ .. _..... ....... &lt;4~-

1·Pt.

8-i&gt;z.

Bolito

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i- •·.'• •• •, ~''t."'(~'T''i! ,' '(''"'\"\:""'!

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21-The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 21, 1973

' 211- The SnndayTlmes.Sentinel,Swulay,Jan. 21,1973 ·

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GallipoliS

62 u.s,· tntl 61
. Whlfmn 81 Wrnr-Pac 74
Whllwr.th 87_Coll .. of Ida. 69 .
.. E: Wash, IT· Ore.- Col!. 46 . .
San Diego 76 Cal Poly-SCO 62
UC-Riv. 56 ·OC-Davis SO ,
uc, lrvlne 69 uc-s:o . 63
Hywr.d St. 73 San · fran St.,~

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. GALLIPOLIS - Hitting 60.4 pet. of .their shots
trom the field, Coach Jim Osborne's Gallipolis Blue .
Devils rolled over visiting Athens 62·34 before a
packed hollse here Frid~y ni~t to remain in ~- ·
disputed second place m the Southeastern Ohio
League basketball standings.
·
· GAHS was never headed as the Blue Devils
chalked up their lOth win in 11 starts. Coach Charles
McAfee's Bulldogs dropped to 7-5 on the year.
Inside the SEOAL, Gallipolis
upped its mark to 7-1. Athens outolde along with Kev
now shares third place with Sheeto, paced GARS to a %7Meigs In conference play with 16 halftime advantage.
a 5-3 record.
Athens faDed to ~core the
GU Price, 11-4 junior center,
final 2:13 of the first hall.
and Jimmy Noe, ~ oenlor
Topper Orr, Noe and Price
forward, combined efforts to ted Gallia's third period drive
score 44 of Gallla Academy's as the Blue Devils piled up a 41lolal output against the 23 lead. The Blue Devils held
· · Bulldogs. ·
Athens scoreless four minutes
Price hit nine of 12 field goal and 25 seconds in the third
attempts and five of six free stanza, moving from a 34-22 to
Utrow attempts for 23 points. 41-22 lead.
Noe was 9-13 from the field and
Topper Orr picked up his
JIMMY NOE (22) GallipoliS' outstanding 6-3 serilor forward, scores against visiting Athens
3-5 at the charity line for 21 fourth foul with 6:15 left in the
In Frldny's sEOALcage battle at Gallipolis. Steve Inbody (14) and Gil Price (24) watch Noe
pointa. '
• game. He was replaced by 6-0
glide t,hrough the air before ~king'a left-handed layup. (Steve Wilson photos) .
Athens failed to place a man junior forward Mike Berridge.
in double figures. Guard Steve
GAHS led anywhere from 20
Inbody led the Bulldogs' attack to 28 points throughout the
Clark top scorer
with eight points,
fourth stanza. Coach Osborne
Mark Mace, 6-1' junior for· cleared his bench with 2:47
MARIETTA - After 13
ward, and the loop's leading remaining and GAHS on top,
games,
Art Clark, former
scorer going into Friday's 55-29.
North Gallia High School eager
battle with a 20.3 point
Gallia's Bill Lemley, 6-0
leads the Marietta Pioneers in
average, was limited to four junior forward, completed the
scoring and rebounds. Clark
pnints by Gallia 's defensive game's scoring with two long
has scored 175 points for a 13.5
a.e Jimmy Noe. Mace, jumpers from the corner to
average, and has 120 rebounds,
however, was sidelined most of make the final count read 6:1-34.
an average of 9.2 per game.
the week due to illness, and
Friday, GAHS plays at
Tbe Pioneers were 4-9 going
was not up to par for the Wellston. Athens will host
into weekend action against
contest
Ironton.
Kenypn College.
The Blue Devils hit 26 of 43
In 12 games, Dennis
field goal attempts for 60.4 pet.,
BLUE DEVIL NOTES
~ichinger, former Eastern
and sank 10 of 15 free Utrow Friday's GAHS victory over
star in · Meigs County, has
attempts for 66.6 pet. GAHS Atheno kept the Blue Devils'
scored 43 points (3.6 J and has
conunltted 19 personals, pulled 1972-73 SEOAL title hopes
26 rebounds (2.2) for the
down 29. rebounds, and had 1:i alive .. Tbe Osbomemen trail
Pioneers
.
turnovers, · none In the first league-leading Waverly by one
period.
full game with six loop tilts
Besides tumlng In another remaining on their conference
Midwest
oulltandlng offensive and schedule. The loss, worst of the
Butler 61 Air Force 56
delwlve game, Noe at.o year for Athens, dropped the
Greenvl83 Rockfrd 76
Augstna 100 Crthge 64
plc:ked D~ , ·1~ rebounds lor McAieemen . three games
Trinity
Chris. 80 Trinity 52
r
"~ .ba~ at least four behind Waverly.
Cncrdia 95 Bnediclne-111. as
steals.
Principia 8? Wright St. 80
For their outstanding
Wstmnstr 82 Rse-Hulmn 60
Price clogged up the middle defensive efforts against
all night and snagged five Chesapeake on Tuesday aad
rebounds for the winners . Athena on Friday, Coach
Topper Orr also had five Osborne Saturday named lbe
rebounds. Kev Sheets tallied _ entire starling five (Price,
six points. Sheets and Mark Noe, Klesllug, Sbeets ·IDd
Kiesling worked the ball Inside Orr) as "Players of the
to the big men without too Week." Said Osborne: "Our .
much difficulty from Bulldog boys played tremendous
defenders.
defensive ball in those two
The Bulldogs, like GAHS, games, best I've seen since
wor,:·!d for percentage shots, I've been here."
but were limited to 13 field
The Blue Devil mentor
goals In 36 attempts for 36.1 credits "team competition" to
pet. AHS entered the game this year's su~ess thus far.
shooUng 47.5 from the field In "We feel we can play any one
seven conference outings.
of our boys at any given time,
Athens hit eight of 15 free and get the job done," he adGALUA'S GU Price (24) lays In two polnta from close
throws for .. 53.3 pet. The" ded. "The second and third
range enroute ·to Blue Devils 62-34 victory over Athens
Bulldllfl&amp; committed 15 per- units work hard against the
Friday. Andy Chonko (54) left, tries to stop the 11-4 junior
!IOnals; snagged 15 rebounds first unit in practice. The first
GAHS center. Mark Handley (32) and Mark Kiesling (30)
aild had 12 turnovers, four In unit must go all out against
right, look on.
the second period.
their teammates in order to
Ted Essex, 6-0 senior guard make things work. This is good
and a jwnper on the Athens for both the starters, mostly now 4-4 against McAfeetrack squad, picked off four seniors, and the second and coached teams. Prior to the CSONKA WINS TROPHY
rebounds as did Steve Inbody. third units, mosUy juniors who 1971-72 campaign, GAHS had
MIAMI ( UPI) - Miami
Essex outjwnped 11-4 GU Price will he back next year.''
lost 24 consecutive games to Dolphins running back Larry
for the game's opening tip.
Friday's 34 points by Athens Athens over a 12 year period. Csonka, battered nose and all,
Mark Kiesling's long jwnper was the lowest Bulldog output In the series dating back to will be presented a trophy
(7:27) put GAHS on the board against GAHS in 19 years. The 1925-26, Athens has won 63
Saturday for being "the most
In the first period. Price got a 1954-55 SEOAL Blue Devil games, GAHS 23. Gallipolis' beautiful player in the NFL."
tip.in with 6:56 to go and GAHS champs downed Athens 61).31 at longest winning streak ovet
Tbe trophy will he bestowed
was on its way.
Atheno in 1954. Friday's 28 Athens Is seven, between the by the Miami based Bryna
Andy Chonko's hooker un- point margin of victory is not 195.1-1956 campaigns. The Blue
Cosmetic Co.
derneath the hoop put Athens the greatest ·ever for GAHS Devils won four in a ·row from
Tbe finn lL'IUally gives the
on the board with 6:07 showing over Athens. In that ·same 1954- ll)e Athenians back in 1936-39 trophy to one .of ils female '
on the clock. GAHS led by 55 season, the Galllans · and 1939-40.
consultants, but by a unani•
seven, liHI, after ihe first walloped Athens 35 poinls, 77mous vote 'of employes it will
break.
42, on the old Washington
go this year to Csonka, who has
We$1
Noe, · hitting underneath,
school hardwood.
broken his nose nine times In
UCLA 92 USF 64
and Price, firing from the
Osborne-coached teams are Wash . SL 78 Idaho 61
his football playing career.

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Defense sparkles
as Gallians hit
60.4.from field
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~~m~ams. A

ATHENS BULLDOGS (34)
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
3-S 0-0 4 1 3 6
2-6 2 -~ 3 4 I '6
2-S 0-0 · 2 1 o 4
2-7 0-1 0 0 4 4
0-0 2-2 2 o o 2
3-8 2-2 2 4 • 8
0-1 0-0 o o o 0
1-2 1-2 1 4 0 3
0-1 • 1-3 1 1 0 I ·
0·0 0-0 0 0 0 o

u~~ ~:\5 ~~ 1~ ~~ 3~

GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS (62)
PLAYER-Po5. .
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Gil Prlt41 c
9-12 5-6 2 5 2 23
. Jimmy NM,f
9-13 3-5· 3 13 2 21
Mark Kiesling; g
1-S 0-0 1 5 4 2
Topper Orr, I
1-4 1-2 · 4 3 0 3
Kev Sheets, g
3-4 0-0 3 0 I 6
Jim Niday, g . ·
0-0 1-2 0 ) I I
SklpperJOhnson,c
1-1 0-0 1 0 0 .2
·Jim Singer. g .
0-0 0·0 o 1 o o
'Mikt.Berrlage, f
0-1 . 0-0 1 o 2 o
lloter O.lly. f
0-0 0-0 . 1 1 o. •o
.Sill Lemley. f'
2-2 0-0 o o 1 4
Oavl~ arown. c
0-0 0-0 0 0 o o
Steve Lee, g ·
O-o o-o 1 o o o
0-1 0-Q 2 0 o o
K-Wlll g
TOTALS.
26-43 10-15, 19 29 . 13 62
Score By Quarters:
Athens Bull~
8 8 7 11 - 34
GallipOlis Blue Devils
!S 12 14 21 - 62
· Ollie,. Is - Grleshelmer &amp; Christian. ~hllllcolhe Chapter ..

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SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP
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~ch Jlm Foster's Pirates

attempls and 11 of 13 at the free
dtoppe&lt;i their ninth game In Utrow line. Hannan Tr.a.ce held
succeSBion. North Gallia i~ 2-9 a 51-38 rebounding ~ge.
MODERN DANCE?- It aPPears GallipoUs and Athens
game at Gallipolis. left to right waiting for Uie bail to come
In all games and 2-6 In the
North Gallia's reserves
basketball
players
are
engaged
in
a
modern
dance
in
this
down are Steve Inbody (14); Kim Snyder (52); Jiminy Noe
league.
continued to be the top reserve
action photo taken during Friday night's SEOAL hardwood
(22) and MarkiK!esting (30). That's Mike Berridge (tO) on
Hannan Trace, shooting over club In !be SVAC by posting a
left
In background.
·
611 ·pet., in the first quarter 44-30 victory.
moved into a quick 22-12 lead.
Greg James, a 6-1 freslunan,
The Wildcats led 48-22 at the led the Uttle Bucs with 20
half and 67-36 moving into the points and 11 rebOJI!IdS. Mike
final canto.
" Camden, 6-3 sophomore, had 10 .
Mark Swain, 5-10 sophomore points and 19 rebounds. George
guard, was the big gun for the Garnes added seven points.
· winners with 24 points on 11
Bill Hall paced the
haskets and tWo free Utrows. Wildkittens with seven points.
John Lusher, 6-0 junior forNorth Gallia 's reserves are
ward, had one of the best nights 7-1 In the league and 7-2
of this season scoring 22 points overall.
on 10 field goals and two . North Gallia traveled to
charity tosses. Mike Caldwell, Fairland Saturday night.
the Wildcats' big center, had 15 Hannan Trace hosted the Coal
MASON - The Wahama
~nts.
· Grove Horne~.
White Falcons, behind 6-5
Dave ·Robinette, S-2 junior,
Hannan Trace (861 Roger Dingey, broke the game
the Pirate,s.' leading· scorer and Caldwell. 6·3-15; Wells, 0-2-2 ;
Lusher, 10-2-22; Dunfee, 1-4-6; wide open in the second period
fourth best point-producer in Swain. 11 -2-24; Shaffer. 2-2-6; Friday night to snap a two
the SVAC, had 14 points as did Hesson, 0-2-2 and Halley, 4-1-9. game losing streak, and take a
Da
Totals 34-18-86.
•
5-8 junior Tim Stout.
nny
North Gal!ia (591 - Wed- 67 to 43 decision over the
Miller, 5-9 junior guard, was dlngton, 2-2-6; Smith. 0-0-0; Southern Purple Tornadoes.
the only other Pirate in double Robinette, S-4-14; Miller, 4-2Pingey ripped the Nets for 28
!lgljJ'es with 10 points.
10; Stout, 7-0-14; Robinson. 2-26; Logan, 4-0-8; Camden. 0-1-1 points to up his season scoring
Shooting-wise , Hannan and Payne, 0-0-0. Totals 24-11- average to 23.8 points per
Trace hit 34 of 65 field goals for 59·
game. He also had a game high
By Quarters:
53 pet. and 18 of 31 free Utrows. H. Trace
22 26 19 19- 86 17 rebounds to add to his season
North Gallia sank 24 of 69 floor N. Gallla
12 10 14 23-59 total of 151.
KEV SHEETS (34) 5-9 senior GallipoUs guard, turned in another well-rounded . perWahama jwnped out to an
formance for Coach Jim Osborne's GAHS Blue Devils Friday night. Here, Sheets drives around
early 4-0 lead but it was quickly
Bulldog defender Pat Mcinturf (44). GAHS won 62-34 to post its lOth win In 11 sl!U'\s.
erased as Southern scored

SECTIONAL HOME

(Varsity I
Gallipolis 62 Alhens 34
Waverly 94 Wellston 31

F'tal cons

1 Floor Joint on 16" Center with% T&amp;G-Fioor
I

Meigs 54 Jackson. 41

Logan 62 Ironton 58

2x4 Studding with Plywood Storm Siding

t Trussed Roof with Plywood Rool Sheathing

(Reserves)

Athens 44 Gallipolis 21
Waverly 56 Wellston 23
Meigs Sl Jackson 43
Logan 42 Ironton 32
(Non-League)
Chesapeake 71 Oak Hill 44
Portsmouth 77 Springfield
South 69
South Point 68 Rock Hill 57
Fed-Hocking 52 Warren Local
49

.t opple

t 235 lb. Asphalt Roof Shin' les (Seal Down)
·
1 Anadized Aluminum Window with Insulated Glass and

Screens

e 4 Picture Windows

1 Double l~oulaled Throughout
e Premium 11•" Paneling~ Birch and Elm

SHS5

I Birch Doors and Hardwood 'irim ·

Delux.e Kitchen Cabinets and Name Brand Aoallances .
't The Quiet Heating System is Another Marlette Feature.
Gas, Fuel Oil or Total Eleclrlc
·
•I Deluxe Nylon Carpet, Very Good Quality
.
tThis Marlette ·secllonal Home Fealures A .V.ery Large
Living Room, Dining Room. 2 Large Bedrooms, and a ·
Masler Bedroom &amp; Dressing Area that will Appeal to thz
Most Discriminati ng Lady . Large Family Room ana a
Deluxe Kitchen that Makes Living A Pleasure. I'll. Baths
and Utility Area .
·
TRADE-INS ACCEPTEI)-FtNANCINGAVAILABLE
I

Jan. 26 Games:

Gallipolis at Wellston
Jackson at Logan
Ironton at Athens

Meigs at Waverly

OP
335
257
280
305
264
300
332
476
2549

-Sold and erected by the area's most experienced de1ler or
builder of sectiona l'homes.
THE "LOUiSE!' NOW ON DISPLAY.
STOP IN TODAY.

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HOURS: 9 ltJ 8 Monday lhru Friday, 9 to 5 .SaturdayClosed Sunday.
·

Jackson 58 Meigs 38
Logan .as Ironton 45

Waver ly 61 Wellston 21
Jan. 25 Games :
Logan at Jackson

'

We!lslon at Gallipolis

Kyger Creek

67-~~

Athens at Ironton

Meigs at Waverly

MOBILE HOME SALES

Beloit 81 Carleton 60
Coe ~0 St . Olaf 70
Ripon 98 Grinnell 79
Millikn 88 Carrll -76·
0 . Roberts 95 L.A. St. 86
Cal Poly-Pom 102 Chapman 51
W. Wash . 94 Sou. Ore. 77

~ wins

•24 New AMF Lanes

•Snack Bar and

Captain's Lounge

Specializing In AMF. &amp;
Columbia Bowling Balls.

.

'.

New, impact-absorbing front and rear bumper ,
system. New, illuminated ins.tru ment panel
wllh lockable glove box and wood grain effect .
Even the steering wheel is new! New, 2,000-cc
engine, ~stindard. V-6 model is also available.

I

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sexy Is the right word for the 1973 Capri.
Sexier than eyer with lOng hood an( short deck.
Sculptured lines give true European styling.
Imported for MercufY. Seals four comfortably.

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Capri: ·Sexier tha~ ever!
Test drive the better imp~r~ today!

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DRILLING&amp; IN.
STRUCTION AVAILABLE
SPECIAL RATES .TO:
CHURCH GROUPS.
PARTIES, STUDENTS.

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446-3362

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DALE LINCOLN-MERCURY
R. SANDERS,
INC.
CAPRI

Upper Rt. 7 Kanauga, Ohio

600 E. STATE ST• .

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ATHENS. OHIO 45701 ·
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fourth

PATRIOT - Visiting Kyger Creek blew a ninepoint halftime lead then fought back to outscore
Southwestern 20-14 in the final quarter here FrJday
night to capture a hard-fought, 56-52 Southern Valley
Athletic Conference victory.
Trailing ~-36 going into the final stanza, Coach
Jim Arledge's Bobcats played inspiring teamwork
to overcome the hustling Highlanders.
In the ·20 point period, David
·

"Now! Meet the '73 Capri
authentically European·
with a ~:~~ price·tag!"

"For That Personal &amp; Professional Touch"
FEATURING

I

.VINTON- Hannan Trace continued to roll over
its Southern Valley Athletic Conference opponents
V.:ith ease here Friday night with a convincing, 86-59
VICtory over North Gallia.
··
.The win; the Wildcats' 12th ill a row, pushed
their ov~rall record to 12·1 and 8·1 in the SVAC,
Coach Paul Dillon's quintet ar.e the pacesetters in
the league.
·

FridaV 1 S Results :

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DALE R. SAN.,ERS, INC. says:

PLAYER- Pos.
Andy Chonko. f-c
Ted Esilexit-g
Mark Handley, g
Mark Mace, 1
· Don Skinner, f
Steve ln.body, g
John Lod&lt;e, g
Pal Mcinturf, f
Alex Topping, c
- Kim Snyder, g

.

12th wzn
86 to 59

tALL GAMES)
Team
W L P OP
Waverly
10 0 766 536
Gallipolis,
10 1 719 512
South Pomt
9 4 947 757
Meigs
8 4 756 721 ·
Chesapeake
7 4 69S 609
Fed-Hocking
7 4 613 653
Portsmouth
8 S 892 887
Athens
7 s '683 631
Logan
S 6 690 67)
Ironton
3 8 656 665
Jackson
2 9 537 724
Wellston
o 10 492 842
tSEOAL ONLY)
Team
W l P OP
Waverjy
8 0 615 402
Gallipolis
7 1 519 370
Athens
S' 3 463 415
Meigs
S 3 479 494
Logan
4 4 491 -490
Ironton
2 6 452 461
Jackson
1 7 398 531
Wellston
0, 8 388 642
TOTALS
32 32 3805' 3805
(SEOAL RESERVES)
Team
W L P OP
Waverly
7 1 335 246
Logan
7 1 365 281
Athens
5 3 342 26~
Meigs
5 3 353 313
Gallipolis
4 4 268 260
Ironton
3 S 303 328
Jackson
1 7 310 372
Wellston
0 8 213 423
TOTALS ·
32 32 2489 2489

SEOAL FROSH
Team
W L P
Jackson
a. 1 484
Athens
S 3 304
Logan
S 3 308
Gallipolis
5 4 363
Waverly
4 4 355
Meigs
3 5 280
Ironton
3 5 276
Wellston
0 8 179
TOTALS
33 33 2549
Thursday's Results:
Athens 34 Gallipolis _27

Ch!efs
nip
Tigers
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Wise, 1).8 sophomore guard,
came off the bench to can 10
points. His last basket with leSB
than a minute remaining,
sealed the victory.
Orland Cremeans, 5-10
senior, enjoyed one of the best
games of his high school
career. Cremeans scored 11
points overall, five In the last
· bile
·quarler w
co11 ec11ng 16
rebounds. He was also forced
to move into the ' lmportant
guard position af14 handled It
adequately.
Clay Hudson, 5-10 junior
forward, also finished with 1,1
points on the evening . He
added three points in the period
including the tying basket.
1 George Curry, 6-0 senior
!center, came off the bench to
· lscore a clutch pocket and aid
1
the • Bobcat rebounders. He
replaced sophomore Joe
Stidham who was in foul
trouble.
' The Highlanders kept pace
IJehind the jump ·shooting of
Uoyd .Wood, 6-2 sophomore
,_
ts
center. Wood had s... po1n
during the fqurth quarter and
13 on the night. Terry Bush, 1H1
senior. guard, the game's
leading polnliJroducer canned
four points in the final eight
minute~~. Jfe scored 18 points
overall on nine baskets.
Kyge~ Creek · led 29-20
moving Into the third peri od •
when · Coach
Richard
Hamilton's Highlanders began
hitting. ·
Buah had six points, PhilLewis, (1.1 junior, added four;
Wood, Ibm and Terry Carter,
f&gt;.IO 1opholnore added three
fret throira. KC's only scoring
output cain'e · !tom John'
Rumley, 8.() junior ~nd David
Clay, S..2 junior.
led 14-10 at th.e
Tbe. Boca••
..
end of the first period. Hud!IOn
had eight points before getting
W
Into foul trouble. Buah led S 's
Clmeback with three ~ets.
· cond period South
In
the
ae
• ·the•
wes..tern moved back Into

game but the Bobcats forged
ahead by sinking nine of 16 foul
shots.
.
Kyger Creek sank 21 of 69
floor attempts for 30.1 pet..
while the Highlanders hit 23 of
73 for 31.5 pet. The Bobcats hit
14 pf 25 free throws. SW converted six of 11 at the charity
stripe. The Bobcats held a 55-48
rebounding advantage.
Kyger Creek alSo won the

three straight buckets to take
11-4leact. Terry Smith' then hit
on one of two free throws to
bring the Falcons to within one·
but Southern hit for another
two-pointer to give them their
t 1 d 0f the ni•ht • &lt;
.
b•gges
• - ,. """·
ea
Dingey then scored two quick
baskets to put the Falcons back
out on top. The quar te r ended
with Wahama leading by a sllm
one point.

Frltli:JY
•J 's h zn
• h sch00 l scores
e'

6

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is something yoq
don't hm with Rer-Sitin'
latex WallPsintf

Ironton broke a 50-50
deadloCk midway in the fourth
period and went on top 57-56
with four minutes left
Jim Pierce then put the
Chiefs on top for good with a
layup at the 2:20 mark and
followed this with another
layup steal for a 60-57lead with
two min~tes left
Ironton's · Vince McCreary
then made one free throw for
60-58, was fouled again with 30
seconds left, · and missed two
free throws.
Wright the,, followed with his
pair of critical charity tosses
that made it 62-58 and evened
Logan's league record at 4-4.
Pierce, who slammed in 18
poinls the second half, led all
scorers with 24 while Wright
added 16 for the winners.
Vince McCreary's 16 points
paced Ironton with Jeff
Hannon adding 13.
Statistics show Logan hitting
28 of 59 field goals and six of
eight free t11rows while Ironton
made good on 26 of 55 shots but
converted just six of 16 free
throws.
Logan also ·led in rebounds
28-26 with Randy Norris and
Jim Campbell grabbing seven

~

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OHIO tltGH..SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
By United Press International
Elyria 61 Findlay 35 ,
Cloverleaf 66' Bruhswlck Sl
Alexander 59 Vinton County 37
Portsmouth 77 Springfield
South 69
Portsmoulh West 89 Wheelersburg 58
Portsmouth Notre Dame 69
New Boston 59
Portsmouth East 12 Valley 65
Clay 87 Minford so
South Webster 70 Northwest 49
Lima Shawnee 54 Springfield
catholic 51
Lima Central Catholic 61
~~g~; sf!. John 75 Coldwater
67 .
Celina 82 Kento~ 50
Wapakoneta St. Joseph 74 New
Bremen 57
Columbus Grove 76 Crestview

58
Mansfield
Chri stian
87
Bratenahl 44
.
!'ish land· 63 Maiaba' ~2 .' .. '•'. ·
Lexington 78 Clear Fork 57
Bellevue Sl Shelby 49
MI. Gilead 64 Marion Catholic
63
Fredericktown 60 Creslline 50
Chillicothe 54 Zanesville 43
Newark 59 Marietta 47
Wesl Musklngum ' 75 Sheridan
Sll

Maysville 75 New Concord J.G.
sa
·
New lexington 58 Philo 57
Morgan 102 Crooksville 98 (oil
Shenandoah 72 Frontier 68
Skyvve 66 Caldwell 63
Miller 63 Starr-Washington 46
Wellsville 71 Beaver Local 52
Barberton 83 East Liverpool 65
Wooster 74 Coshocton 47
Claymont 52 Riverview 51
Ridgewood 70 Indian Valley
North 67
Garaway 76 Newcomerstown .
61
Indian Valley South sa Malvern
37

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•lrwiiiiL flg lltn ll11lckly CIIM
'R Wtttt

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Northmont 78 Greenville 56

West Helmers 53 Triway SO
Mansfield ~adison 53 New
Philadelphia 52
, , .
North 63
r
· ~ r ! ,· ~ '
Cleve. John ·Adan'fs B9' ·Cleve.
Cols. Central 91 Cols. West 71
Glenville 81 •
Canton South 68 Oakwood 34 Cols. Linden 91 Cols. Whetsto~e
41
Akron East 73 Canton Tomken
67
Canton lehman 64 Canton
Central Cath. 42
Massillon 74 Louisville 54
Steubenville 69 Wheeling (W.
Va.l Central 43
Steubenville Central 76
Guernsey Cath. 43
Madison 89 Jewett-Scio 66
Stanton 73 Jefferson Un ion 32
Buckeye Soulh 81 Zane Trace
63
Springfield Local 52 Buckeye
North Sl
·Barnesville 82 Meadowbrook 48
-Dayton Dunbar 104 Dayton
Kiser 73
Dayton
Roosevell
87
Meadowdale 65
·
Dayton Roth 81 Oayton Wilbur
Wright 60
Wayne 74 ,Beavercreek 59

au·ILDING
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Oakwo.od 60 West Carrollton 49
Vandalia 68 Trotwood 53
Cols. Easlmoor 88 Cols.
Brookhaven
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Marion Franklin
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~

Wahama came to, life in the
second canto by outscoring the
Tornadoes 18. to 8, Dingey still
carried the majority of the
srorlng load but he had con·
siderable help from .his teammate in Mark Mitchell. ·Mitchell controlled both boards
andtip.pedln three buckels, the
White Falcons · held a com- ·
fortable lead at intennisslon 31
to 20.
Southern
12 8 12 11- 43
The Falcons won the battle of
Reserve Score: Wahama 37.
Southern 29. .
third quarter 17 to 12.
Dingey hit f9r 10 more points
In the last eight minutes 1
Wahama came out on top for
its fifth victory of the season, 67
to 43.
Wahaina
grabbed
rebounds, led by Dingey with
17 and Mitchell with 16. The
White Falcons committed 17
turnovers, blocked four
Southern shots and had eight
steals led by Mike Lewis with
lour steals.
Ia

reserve · game, 35-28 - David
Rife paced the wi~ners with 12
polnta while Marc Lawhon
added IO. Banks topped the
Highlanders with nine points.
The win pushed !be Bobcats'
record to :1-S In the league and
4-3 overall. The four victories ' fa~~~~~!xr~~:n ~;s ;;:~
are the-most Kyger Creek has Falcons. They hit on 32 of 64
won In the paot three years.
shots for 50 pet from the floor.
Southwestern dropped to tJ.? At the charity strip, they
In the SVAC and 3-8 oyerall.
managed to connect on
' The Highlanders hosted three of seven attempts' for 43
Southern Saturday night.sd
. KC pet. Behind Dingey's 28 points
wUI host Wahama Tue ay were Mitchell with 16 :
night.
Lambert with 12. For So~thern
Kyger Creek (56) - Curry, 1-,rnrer'
0_2; Hudson, 4-J-11 ; Rumley, 3- Sayre was the leading sc
2-8; Stidham. 2-2-6; Clay, 1-4-6; with 16 while Curfman chipped
Wl•e. s-0-10; Tabor, 0-2-2 and
·
. Cremeans, 5-J -1L Totals 21-14- in with 12.
Wahama
_ll!ok
45
Southweotern (52l - Di!lon, preliminary game 37 to 29.
0·2-2; Walker. 2-0-4; Lewis, 4•0- ,
•
a: Wood. 6.1.13; carter. 2-3,7; . LeQding the charges
for
Bush. 9-0-18. Totals 2~-6-52.
Little Falcons were
K:Jer~:~~rs: 16 13 7 2o-56 Brabham with 10
s•western
10 10 18 14-52 Dewhurst with nine .
Southern, Dunning and N•i •... ~
'
hit tn double figofes with 1:i
Cottage BKB Results ·
By United Press International 11 points respectively.
'
East ·
.
Wahama's next test will be
NY Tech 70 York 64 •
Tuesday night when they
72
. ¢!r.'f1':.:~~~b~
travel to Cl)esh!re where
G. Milson 72 Bowie St. 68
will tangle with the Bobcats
E. Nazrne 9l Gordon 83
Kyger Creek High School.
Nrtheastrn 64 Rider ..a
Lowell 66 Wrcster 64
Wahama won the
·
Bentley 79 Marls! 72
meeting between the two
Bllo St, 76 AI bany St. 73
Brckprt st. 106 New Hven so
schools back on Dec. 12. Game
SoW1hmptn 87 R. Wslyn 63
times are 6:30 and· 8 p.m.
56
60
Colgate Bui!':t~l
Wahama (671 :_ Dlngey, 14-0Qgtlhrpe $!1 st.Leo 72
28; Mitchell, 7-2-16; Lamberl,
GrdnrWbll·111 M. Brown 82
6·0-12 ; Glllano. 2-0-4; S(Tlll.h, 1AI H 1 170
1-3; Johnson, 1-0-2; Buzzard, l 82
Miss. Colt.
a.· n sv
0-2. Tote II 32-3-67.
Elon 64 Gulllord 63
•
ArJT&gt;strng St 79 St.Jno-Minn. 51
Southern (43) - Sayre, 8-0" ·
16; Curfman, 6-0-12; Hill, 3-1.7;
·W. Mllrylarid 77 Frostburg 57 · Nease, 1-0-2 :' !hie, 1-0·2; Miller • .
Shphrd 77 Davls&amp;Eiklns 68 . 1-2-4. Toto Is 20-3-43.
L b 61 c
d 59
By Quarters:
West
I
·
oncor
Wahama
13 18 17 19-&lt;57·
York 95 Shenandoah 74
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IRONTON- Jim Pi~rc~ and each while McCrearY l!lilled .
Mitch Wright combined for 42 down 11 lor. the Tigers.
points Frid~y night as the
LOGAN {621 - Pierce 12-024;
Culbertson 3-D.6; Norris 2-0Logan Chieftains scored their
4; Wright 7-4-18; Campbell 2-2first victory at..Ironton since 6; Whilcrafl 2-0-4. TOTALS 21the Tigers rejoined the SEOAL 6-62.
IRONTON tSIJ - McCre1ry
five years ago by a score of 62- 7-2-16;
Green 5-2 - 1~; Howard3·
58.
0·6; Ferguson 4-0-8; Hannon 6The win at.o snapped a five- 1-13; Spence 1-0-2; S. Carter 01-1. TOTALS 26.6-51. .
game losing streak for the
Score bv au.rters:
14 16 14,1 Chiefs but it was not easy as Logan
lronlon
11 16 20 11-51
·the score was tied six times
Reserve score: Logan 42,
- and the lead changed hands 10 lronton 32.
times before Logan's Mitch
Wright p~t it away with 13
seconds left in the contest.
Logan took a 14-11 first
·period lead and still held a 31).27
halftime lead.
However, : with
4:15
remaining in the !Jlird period
and Logan on top 42-35, the
Tigers ticked off 12 ·straight
points to take a 47-42 lead
before the quarter ended at'47-

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21-The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 21, 1973

' 211- The SnndayTlmes.Sentinel,Swulay,Jan. 21,1973 ·

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GallipoliS

62 u.s,· tntl 61
. Whlfmn 81 Wrnr-Pac 74
Whllwr.th 87_Coll .. of Ida. 69 .
.. E: Wash, IT· Ore.- Col!. 46 . .
San Diego 76 Cal Poly-SCO 62
UC-Riv. 56 ·OC-Davis SO ,
uc, lrvlne 69 uc-s:o . 63
Hywr.d St. 73 San · fran St.,~

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. GALLIPOLIS - Hitting 60.4 pet. of .their shots
trom the field, Coach Jim Osborne's Gallipolis Blue .
Devils rolled over visiting Athens 62·34 before a
packed hollse here Frid~y ni~t to remain in ~- ·
disputed second place m the Southeastern Ohio
League basketball standings.
·
· GAHS was never headed as the Blue Devils
chalked up their lOth win in 11 starts. Coach Charles
McAfee's Bulldogs dropped to 7-5 on the year.
Inside the SEOAL, Gallipolis
upped its mark to 7-1. Athens outolde along with Kev
now shares third place with Sheeto, paced GARS to a %7Meigs In conference play with 16 halftime advantage.
a 5-3 record.
Athens faDed to ~core the
GU Price, 11-4 junior center,
final 2:13 of the first hall.
and Jimmy Noe, ~ oenlor
Topper Orr, Noe and Price
forward, combined efforts to ted Gallia's third period drive
score 44 of Gallla Academy's as the Blue Devils piled up a 41lolal output against the 23 lead. The Blue Devils held
· · Bulldogs. ·
Athens scoreless four minutes
Price hit nine of 12 field goal and 25 seconds in the third
attempts and five of six free stanza, moving from a 34-22 to
Utrow attempts for 23 points. 41-22 lead.
Noe was 9-13 from the field and
Topper Orr picked up his
JIMMY NOE (22) GallipoliS' outstanding 6-3 serilor forward, scores against visiting Athens
3-5 at the charity line for 21 fourth foul with 6:15 left in the
In Frldny's sEOALcage battle at Gallipolis. Steve Inbody (14) and Gil Price (24) watch Noe
pointa. '
• game. He was replaced by 6-0
glide t,hrough the air before ~king'a left-handed layup. (Steve Wilson photos) .
Athens failed to place a man junior forward Mike Berridge.
in double figures. Guard Steve
GAHS led anywhere from 20
Inbody led the Bulldogs' attack to 28 points throughout the
Clark top scorer
with eight points,
fourth stanza. Coach Osborne
Mark Mace, 6-1' junior for· cleared his bench with 2:47
MARIETTA - After 13
ward, and the loop's leading remaining and GAHS on top,
games,
Art Clark, former
scorer going into Friday's 55-29.
North Gallia High School eager
battle with a 20.3 point
Gallia's Bill Lemley, 6-0
leads the Marietta Pioneers in
average, was limited to four junior forward, completed the
scoring and rebounds. Clark
pnints by Gallia 's defensive game's scoring with two long
has scored 175 points for a 13.5
a.e Jimmy Noe. Mace, jumpers from the corner to
average, and has 120 rebounds,
however, was sidelined most of make the final count read 6:1-34.
an average of 9.2 per game.
the week due to illness, and
Friday, GAHS plays at
Tbe Pioneers were 4-9 going
was not up to par for the Wellston. Athens will host
into weekend action against
contest
Ironton.
Kenypn College.
The Blue Devils hit 26 of 43
In 12 games, Dennis
field goal attempts for 60.4 pet.,
BLUE DEVIL NOTES
~ichinger, former Eastern
and sank 10 of 15 free Utrow Friday's GAHS victory over
star in · Meigs County, has
attempts for 66.6 pet. GAHS Atheno kept the Blue Devils'
scored 43 points (3.6 J and has
conunltted 19 personals, pulled 1972-73 SEOAL title hopes
26 rebounds (2.2) for the
down 29. rebounds, and had 1:i alive .. Tbe Osbomemen trail
Pioneers
.
turnovers, · none In the first league-leading Waverly by one
period.
full game with six loop tilts
Besides tumlng In another remaining on their conference
Midwest
oulltandlng offensive and schedule. The loss, worst of the
Butler 61 Air Force 56
delwlve game, Noe at.o year for Athens, dropped the
Greenvl83 Rockfrd 76
Augstna 100 Crthge 64
plc:ked D~ , ·1~ rebounds lor McAieemen . three games
Trinity
Chris. 80 Trinity 52
r
"~ .ba~ at least four behind Waverly.
Cncrdia 95 Bnediclne-111. as
steals.
Principia 8? Wright St. 80
For their outstanding
Wstmnstr 82 Rse-Hulmn 60
Price clogged up the middle defensive efforts against
all night and snagged five Chesapeake on Tuesday aad
rebounds for the winners . Athena on Friday, Coach
Topper Orr also had five Osborne Saturday named lbe
rebounds. Kev Sheets tallied _ entire starling five (Price,
six points. Sheets and Mark Noe, Klesllug, Sbeets ·IDd
Kiesling worked the ball Inside Orr) as "Players of the
to the big men without too Week." Said Osborne: "Our .
much difficulty from Bulldog boys played tremendous
defenders.
defensive ball in those two
The Bulldogs, like GAHS, games, best I've seen since
wor,:·!d for percentage shots, I've been here."
but were limited to 13 field
The Blue Devil mentor
goals In 36 attempts for 36.1 credits "team competition" to
pet. AHS entered the game this year's su~ess thus far.
shooUng 47.5 from the field In "We feel we can play any one
seven conference outings.
of our boys at any given time,
Athens hit eight of 15 free and get the job done," he adGALUA'S GU Price (24) lays In two polnta from close
throws for .. 53.3 pet. The" ded. "The second and third
range enroute ·to Blue Devils 62-34 victory over Athens
Bulldllfl&amp; committed 15 per- units work hard against the
Friday. Andy Chonko (54) left, tries to stop the 11-4 junior
!IOnals; snagged 15 rebounds first unit in practice. The first
GAHS center. Mark Handley (32) and Mark Kiesling (30)
aild had 12 turnovers, four In unit must go all out against
right, look on.
the second period.
their teammates in order to
Ted Essex, 6-0 senior guard make things work. This is good
and a jwnper on the Athens for both the starters, mostly now 4-4 against McAfeetrack squad, picked off four seniors, and the second and coached teams. Prior to the CSONKA WINS TROPHY
rebounds as did Steve Inbody. third units, mosUy juniors who 1971-72 campaign, GAHS had
MIAMI ( UPI) - Miami
Essex outjwnped 11-4 GU Price will he back next year.''
lost 24 consecutive games to Dolphins running back Larry
for the game's opening tip.
Friday's 34 points by Athens Athens over a 12 year period. Csonka, battered nose and all,
Mark Kiesling's long jwnper was the lowest Bulldog output In the series dating back to will be presented a trophy
(7:27) put GAHS on the board against GAHS in 19 years. The 1925-26, Athens has won 63
Saturday for being "the most
In the first period. Price got a 1954-55 SEOAL Blue Devil games, GAHS 23. Gallipolis' beautiful player in the NFL."
tip.in with 6:56 to go and GAHS champs downed Athens 61).31 at longest winning streak ovet
Tbe trophy will he bestowed
was on its way.
Atheno in 1954. Friday's 28 Athens Is seven, between the by the Miami based Bryna
Andy Chonko's hooker un- point margin of victory is not 195.1-1956 campaigns. The Blue
Cosmetic Co.
derneath the hoop put Athens the greatest ·ever for GAHS Devils won four in a ·row from
Tbe finn lL'IUally gives the
on the board with 6:07 showing over Athens. In that ·same 1954- ll)e Athenians back in 1936-39 trophy to one .of ils female '
on the clock. GAHS led by 55 season, the Galllans · and 1939-40.
consultants, but by a unani•
seven, liHI, after ihe first walloped Athens 35 poinls, 77mous vote 'of employes it will
break.
42, on the old Washington
go this year to Csonka, who has
We$1
Noe, · hitting underneath,
school hardwood.
broken his nose nine times In
UCLA 92 USF 64
and Price, firing from the
Osborne-coached teams are Wash . SL 78 Idaho 61
his football playing career.

abm;

,1

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seo $taiulj.ngs

Defense sparkles
as Gallians hit
60.4.from field
l \

.. - ·•lR
·...'C· ats

. a.m. luth.

•·

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~~m~ams. A

ATHENS BULLDOGS (34)
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
3-S 0-0 4 1 3 6
2-6 2 -~ 3 4 I '6
2-S 0-0 · 2 1 o 4
2-7 0-1 0 0 4 4
0-0 2-2 2 o o 2
3-8 2-2 2 4 • 8
0-1 0-0 o o o 0
1-2 1-2 1 4 0 3
0-1 • 1-3 1 1 0 I ·
0·0 0-0 0 0 0 o

u~~ ~:\5 ~~ 1~ ~~ 3~

GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS (62)
PLAYER-Po5. .
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Gil Prlt41 c
9-12 5-6 2 5 2 23
. Jimmy NM,f
9-13 3-5· 3 13 2 21
Mark Kiesling; g
1-S 0-0 1 5 4 2
Topper Orr, I
1-4 1-2 · 4 3 0 3
Kev Sheets, g
3-4 0-0 3 0 I 6
Jim Niday, g . ·
0-0 1-2 0 ) I I
SklpperJOhnson,c
1-1 0-0 1 0 0 .2
·Jim Singer. g .
0-0 0·0 o 1 o o
'Mikt.Berrlage, f
0-1 . 0-0 1 o 2 o
lloter O.lly. f
0-0 0-0 . 1 1 o. •o
.Sill Lemley. f'
2-2 0-0 o o 1 4
Oavl~ arown. c
0-0 0-0 0 0 o o
Steve Lee, g ·
O-o o-o 1 o o o
0-1 0-Q 2 0 o o
K-Wlll g
TOTALS.
26-43 10-15, 19 29 . 13 62
Score By Quarters:
Athens Bull~
8 8 7 11 - 34
GallipOlis Blue Devils
!S 12 14 21 - 62
· Ollie,. Is - Grleshelmer &amp; Christian. ~hllllcolhe Chapter ..

-. '

SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP
. .
.

'

I

~ch Jlm Foster's Pirates

attempls and 11 of 13 at the free
dtoppe&lt;i their ninth game In Utrow line. Hannan Tr.a.ce held
succeSBion. North Gallia i~ 2-9 a 51-38 rebounding ~ge.
MODERN DANCE?- It aPPears GallipoUs and Athens
game at Gallipolis. left to right waiting for Uie bail to come
In all games and 2-6 In the
North Gallia's reserves
basketball
players
are
engaged
in
a
modern
dance
in
this
down are Steve Inbody (14); Kim Snyder (52); Jiminy Noe
league.
continued to be the top reserve
action photo taken during Friday night's SEOAL hardwood
(22) and MarkiK!esting (30). That's Mike Berridge (tO) on
Hannan Trace, shooting over club In !be SVAC by posting a
left
In background.
·
611 ·pet., in the first quarter 44-30 victory.
moved into a quick 22-12 lead.
Greg James, a 6-1 freslunan,
The Wildcats led 48-22 at the led the Uttle Bucs with 20
half and 67-36 moving into the points and 11 rebOJI!IdS. Mike
final canto.
" Camden, 6-3 sophomore, had 10 .
Mark Swain, 5-10 sophomore points and 19 rebounds. George
guard, was the big gun for the Garnes added seven points.
· winners with 24 points on 11
Bill Hall paced the
haskets and tWo free Utrows. Wildkittens with seven points.
John Lusher, 6-0 junior forNorth Gallia 's reserves are
ward, had one of the best nights 7-1 In the league and 7-2
of this season scoring 22 points overall.
on 10 field goals and two . North Gallia traveled to
charity tosses. Mike Caldwell, Fairland Saturday night.
the Wildcats' big center, had 15 Hannan Trace hosted the Coal
MASON - The Wahama
~nts.
· Grove Horne~.
White Falcons, behind 6-5
Dave ·Robinette, S-2 junior,
Hannan Trace (861 Roger Dingey, broke the game
the Pirate,s.' leading· scorer and Caldwell. 6·3-15; Wells, 0-2-2 ;
Lusher, 10-2-22; Dunfee, 1-4-6; wide open in the second period
fourth best point-producer in Swain. 11 -2-24; Shaffer. 2-2-6; Friday night to snap a two
the SVAC, had 14 points as did Hesson, 0-2-2 and Halley, 4-1-9. game losing streak, and take a
Da
Totals 34-18-86.
•
5-8 junior Tim Stout.
nny
North Gal!ia (591 - Wed- 67 to 43 decision over the
Miller, 5-9 junior guard, was dlngton, 2-2-6; Smith. 0-0-0; Southern Purple Tornadoes.
the only other Pirate in double Robinette, S-4-14; Miller, 4-2Pingey ripped the Nets for 28
!lgljJ'es with 10 points.
10; Stout, 7-0-14; Robinson. 2-26; Logan, 4-0-8; Camden. 0-1-1 points to up his season scoring
Shooting-wise , Hannan and Payne, 0-0-0. Totals 24-11- average to 23.8 points per
Trace hit 34 of 65 field goals for 59·
game. He also had a game high
By Quarters:
53 pet. and 18 of 31 free Utrows. H. Trace
22 26 19 19- 86 17 rebounds to add to his season
North Gallia sank 24 of 69 floor N. Gallla
12 10 14 23-59 total of 151.
KEV SHEETS (34) 5-9 senior GallipoUs guard, turned in another well-rounded . perWahama jwnped out to an
formance for Coach Jim Osborne's GAHS Blue Devils Friday night. Here, Sheets drives around
early 4-0 lead but it was quickly
Bulldog defender Pat Mcinturf (44). GAHS won 62-34 to post its lOth win In 11 sl!U'\s.
erased as Southern scored

SECTIONAL HOME

(Varsity I
Gallipolis 62 Alhens 34
Waverly 94 Wellston 31

F'tal cons

1 Floor Joint on 16" Center with% T&amp;G-Fioor
I

Meigs 54 Jackson. 41

Logan 62 Ironton 58

2x4 Studding with Plywood Storm Siding

t Trussed Roof with Plywood Rool Sheathing

(Reserves)

Athens 44 Gallipolis 21
Waverly 56 Wellston 23
Meigs Sl Jackson 43
Logan 42 Ironton 32
(Non-League)
Chesapeake 71 Oak Hill 44
Portsmouth 77 Springfield
South 69
South Point 68 Rock Hill 57
Fed-Hocking 52 Warren Local
49

.t opple

t 235 lb. Asphalt Roof Shin' les (Seal Down)
·
1 Anadized Aluminum Window with Insulated Glass and

Screens

e 4 Picture Windows

1 Double l~oulaled Throughout
e Premium 11•" Paneling~ Birch and Elm

SHS5

I Birch Doors and Hardwood 'irim ·

Delux.e Kitchen Cabinets and Name Brand Aoallances .
't The Quiet Heating System is Another Marlette Feature.
Gas, Fuel Oil or Total Eleclrlc
·
•I Deluxe Nylon Carpet, Very Good Quality
.
tThis Marlette ·secllonal Home Fealures A .V.ery Large
Living Room, Dining Room. 2 Large Bedrooms, and a ·
Masler Bedroom &amp; Dressing Area that will Appeal to thz
Most Discriminati ng Lady . Large Family Room ana a
Deluxe Kitchen that Makes Living A Pleasure. I'll. Baths
and Utility Area .
·
TRADE-INS ACCEPTEI)-FtNANCINGAVAILABLE
I

Jan. 26 Games:

Gallipolis at Wellston
Jackson at Logan
Ironton at Athens

Meigs at Waverly

OP
335
257
280
305
264
300
332
476
2549

-Sold and erected by the area's most experienced de1ler or
builder of sectiona l'homes.
THE "LOUiSE!' NOW ON DISPLAY.
STOP IN TODAY.

-

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HOURS: 9 ltJ 8 Monday lhru Friday, 9 to 5 .SaturdayClosed Sunday.
·

Jackson 58 Meigs 38
Logan .as Ironton 45

Waver ly 61 Wellston 21
Jan. 25 Games :
Logan at Jackson

'

We!lslon at Gallipolis

Kyger Creek

67-~~

Athens at Ironton

Meigs at Waverly

MOBILE HOME SALES

Beloit 81 Carleton 60
Coe ~0 St . Olaf 70
Ripon 98 Grinnell 79
Millikn 88 Carrll -76·
0 . Roberts 95 L.A. St. 86
Cal Poly-Pom 102 Chapman 51
W. Wash . 94 Sou. Ore. 77

~ wins

•24 New AMF Lanes

•Snack Bar and

Captain's Lounge

Specializing In AMF. &amp;
Columbia Bowling Balls.

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New, impact-absorbing front and rear bumper ,
system. New, illuminated ins.tru ment panel
wllh lockable glove box and wood grain effect .
Even the steering wheel is new! New, 2,000-cc
engine, ~stindard. V-6 model is also available.

I

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sexy Is the right word for the 1973 Capri.
Sexier than eyer with lOng hood an( short deck.
Sculptured lines give true European styling.
Imported for MercufY. Seals four comfortably.

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Test drive the better imp~r~ today!

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STRUCTION AVAILABLE
SPECIAL RATES .TO:
CHURCH GROUPS.
PARTIES, STUDENTS.

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While Sidewalls. Bumper Rub Strip, Optional. ·

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DALE LINCOLN-MERCURY
R. SANDERS,
INC.
CAPRI

Upper Rt. 7 Kanauga, Ohio

600 E. STATE ST• .

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ATHENS. OHIO 45701 ·
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fourth

PATRIOT - Visiting Kyger Creek blew a ninepoint halftime lead then fought back to outscore
Southwestern 20-14 in the final quarter here FrJday
night to capture a hard-fought, 56-52 Southern Valley
Athletic Conference victory.
Trailing ~-36 going into the final stanza, Coach
Jim Arledge's Bobcats played inspiring teamwork
to overcome the hustling Highlanders.
In the ·20 point period, David
·

"Now! Meet the '73 Capri
authentically European·
with a ~:~~ price·tag!"

"For That Personal &amp; Professional Touch"
FEATURING

I

.VINTON- Hannan Trace continued to roll over
its Southern Valley Athletic Conference opponents
V.:ith ease here Friday night with a convincing, 86-59
VICtory over North Gallia.
··
.The win; the Wildcats' 12th ill a row, pushed
their ov~rall record to 12·1 and 8·1 in the SVAC,
Coach Paul Dillon's quintet ar.e the pacesetters in
the league.
·

FridaV 1 S Results :

.

.._

,

DALE R. SAN.,ERS, INC. says:

PLAYER- Pos.
Andy Chonko. f-c
Ted Esilexit-g
Mark Handley, g
Mark Mace, 1
· Don Skinner, f
Steve ln.body, g
John Lod&lt;e, g
Pal Mcinturf, f
Alex Topping, c
- Kim Snyder, g

.

12th wzn
86 to 59

tALL GAMES)
Team
W L P OP
Waverly
10 0 766 536
Gallipolis,
10 1 719 512
South Pomt
9 4 947 757
Meigs
8 4 756 721 ·
Chesapeake
7 4 69S 609
Fed-Hocking
7 4 613 653
Portsmouth
8 S 892 887
Athens
7 s '683 631
Logan
S 6 690 67)
Ironton
3 8 656 665
Jackson
2 9 537 724
Wellston
o 10 492 842
tSEOAL ONLY)
Team
W l P OP
Waverjy
8 0 615 402
Gallipolis
7 1 519 370
Athens
S' 3 463 415
Meigs
S 3 479 494
Logan
4 4 491 -490
Ironton
2 6 452 461
Jackson
1 7 398 531
Wellston
0, 8 388 642
TOTALS
32 32 3805' 3805
(SEOAL RESERVES)
Team
W L P OP
Waverly
7 1 335 246
Logan
7 1 365 281
Athens
5 3 342 26~
Meigs
5 3 353 313
Gallipolis
4 4 268 260
Ironton
3 S 303 328
Jackson
1 7 310 372
Wellston
0 8 213 423
TOTALS ·
32 32 2489 2489

SEOAL FROSH
Team
W L P
Jackson
a. 1 484
Athens
S 3 304
Logan
S 3 308
Gallipolis
5 4 363
Waverly
4 4 355
Meigs
3 5 280
Ironton
3 5 276
Wellston
0 8 179
TOTALS
33 33 2549
Thursday's Results:
Athens 34 Gallipolis _27

Ch!efs
nip
Tigers
,
.
,

'•

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...

--

Wise, 1).8 sophomore guard,
came off the bench to can 10
points. His last basket with leSB
than a minute remaining,
sealed the victory.
Orland Cremeans, 5-10
senior, enjoyed one of the best
games of his high school
career. Cremeans scored 11
points overall, five In the last
· bile
·quarler w
co11 ec11ng 16
rebounds. He was also forced
to move into the ' lmportant
guard position af14 handled It
adequately.
Clay Hudson, 5-10 junior
forward, also finished with 1,1
points on the evening . He
added three points in the period
including the tying basket.
1 George Curry, 6-0 senior
!center, came off the bench to
· lscore a clutch pocket and aid
1
the • Bobcat rebounders. He
replaced sophomore Joe
Stidham who was in foul
trouble.
' The Highlanders kept pace
IJehind the jump ·shooting of
Uoyd .Wood, 6-2 sophomore
,_
ts
center. Wood had s... po1n
during the fqurth quarter and
13 on the night. Terry Bush, 1H1
senior. guard, the game's
leading polnliJroducer canned
four points in the final eight
minute~~. Jfe scored 18 points
overall on nine baskets.
Kyge~ Creek · led 29-20
moving Into the third peri od •
when · Coach
Richard
Hamilton's Highlanders began
hitting. ·
Buah had six points, PhilLewis, (1.1 junior, added four;
Wood, Ibm and Terry Carter,
f&gt;.IO 1opholnore added three
fret throira. KC's only scoring
output cain'e · !tom John'
Rumley, 8.() junior ~nd David
Clay, S..2 junior.
led 14-10 at th.e
Tbe. Boca••
..
end of the first period. Hud!IOn
had eight points before getting
W
Into foul trouble. Buah led S 's
Clmeback with three ~ets.
· cond period South
In
the
ae
• ·the•
wes..tern moved back Into

game but the Bobcats forged
ahead by sinking nine of 16 foul
shots.
.
Kyger Creek sank 21 of 69
floor attempts for 30.1 pet..
while the Highlanders hit 23 of
73 for 31.5 pet. The Bobcats hit
14 pf 25 free throws. SW converted six of 11 at the charity
stripe. The Bobcats held a 55-48
rebounding advantage.
Kyger Creek alSo won the

three straight buckets to take
11-4leact. Terry Smith' then hit
on one of two free throws to
bring the Falcons to within one·
but Southern hit for another
two-pointer to give them their
t 1 d 0f the ni•ht • &lt;
.
b•gges
• - ,. """·
ea
Dingey then scored two quick
baskets to put the Falcons back
out on top. The quar te r ended
with Wahama leading by a sllm
one point.

Frltli:JY
•J 's h zn
• h sch00 l scores
e'

6

t4.

is something yoq
don't hm with Rer-Sitin'
latex WallPsintf

Ironton broke a 50-50
deadloCk midway in the fourth
period and went on top 57-56
with four minutes left
Jim Pierce then put the
Chiefs on top for good with a
layup at the 2:20 mark and
followed this with another
layup steal for a 60-57lead with
two min~tes left
Ironton's · Vince McCreary
then made one free throw for
60-58, was fouled again with 30
seconds left, · and missed two
free throws.
Wright the,, followed with his
pair of critical charity tosses
that made it 62-58 and evened
Logan's league record at 4-4.
Pierce, who slammed in 18
poinls the second half, led all
scorers with 24 while Wright
added 16 for the winners.
Vince McCreary's 16 points
paced Ironton with Jeff
Hannon adding 13.
Statistics show Logan hitting
28 of 59 field goals and six of
eight free t11rows while Ironton
made good on 26 of 55 shots but
converted just six of 16 free
throws.
Logan also ·led in rebounds
28-26 with Randy Norris and
Jim Campbell grabbing seven

~

.'!'-!

OHIO tltGH..SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
By United Press International
Elyria 61 Findlay 35 ,
Cloverleaf 66' Bruhswlck Sl
Alexander 59 Vinton County 37
Portsmouth 77 Springfield
South 69
Portsmoulh West 89 Wheelersburg 58
Portsmouth Notre Dame 69
New Boston 59
Portsmouth East 12 Valley 65
Clay 87 Minford so
South Webster 70 Northwest 49
Lima Shawnee 54 Springfield
catholic 51
Lima Central Catholic 61
~~g~; sf!. John 75 Coldwater
67 .
Celina 82 Kento~ 50
Wapakoneta St. Joseph 74 New
Bremen 57
Columbus Grove 76 Crestview

58
Mansfield
Chri stian
87
Bratenahl 44
.
!'ish land· 63 Maiaba' ~2 .' .. '•'. ·
Lexington 78 Clear Fork 57
Bellevue Sl Shelby 49
MI. Gilead 64 Marion Catholic
63
Fredericktown 60 Creslline 50
Chillicothe 54 Zanesville 43
Newark 59 Marietta 47
Wesl Musklngum ' 75 Sheridan
Sll

Maysville 75 New Concord J.G.
sa
·
New lexington 58 Philo 57
Morgan 102 Crooksville 98 (oil
Shenandoah 72 Frontier 68
Skyvve 66 Caldwell 63
Miller 63 Starr-Washington 46
Wellsville 71 Beaver Local 52
Barberton 83 East Liverpool 65
Wooster 74 Coshocton 47
Claymont 52 Riverview 51
Ridgewood 70 Indian Valley
North 67
Garaway 76 Newcomerstown .
61
Indian Valley South sa Malvern
37

-! -•'
•

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•~

Anl1h
•lrwiiiiL flg lltn ll11lckly CIIM
'R Wtttt

f•

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.... ·

T

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Northmont 78 Greenville 56

West Helmers 53 Triway SO
Mansfield ~adison 53 New
Philadelphia 52
, , .
North 63
r
· ~ r ! ,· ~ '
Cleve. John ·Adan'fs B9' ·Cleve.
Cols. Central 91 Cols. West 71
Glenville 81 •
Canton South 68 Oakwood 34 Cols. Linden 91 Cols. Whetsto~e
41
Akron East 73 Canton Tomken
67
Canton lehman 64 Canton
Central Cath. 42
Massillon 74 Louisville 54
Steubenville 69 Wheeling (W.
Va.l Central 43
Steubenville Central 76
Guernsey Cath. 43
Madison 89 Jewett-Scio 66
Stanton 73 Jefferson Un ion 32
Buckeye Soulh 81 Zane Trace
63
Springfield Local 52 Buckeye
North Sl
·Barnesville 82 Meadowbrook 48
-Dayton Dunbar 104 Dayton
Kiser 73
Dayton
Roosevell
87
Meadowdale 65
·
Dayton Roth 81 Oayton Wilbur
Wright 60
Wayne 74 ,Beavercreek 59

au·ILDING
_

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1'1 ' 1 "'

•

~IPtU~·"
~
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60x24' SECTIONAL

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Break Special

Avtl"'lt·

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lMIIIOIOII

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9

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15 pieces Chicken · 2 pts. Salad
1 pt. Potatoes . 1 pt. Gravy · 6 Rolls

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FRONT DINING ROOM o CENTRAL KntHEH
FAMILY ROOM o SIDE LIYI"!G ROOM o 3
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$399

PACK

Chicken - 1 pt. Salad

1 pt. Potatoes. 1 pt. Gravy.- 4 Rolls

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-EVANS

Oakwo.od 60 West Carrollton 49
Vandalia 68 Trotwood 53
Cols. Easlmoor 88 Cols.
Brookhaven
72
Cols.
Marion Franklin
67 Cols. ·

.w-Ith the Bucket

10 pieces

"

haiut t~ 1ppl,. Drlu In llifi!MI IIHttl I'll
~rulh 11 liP m1rb. Hu IIPIIWIIIIHHI~. F•l
aalp 'n WIIIF el1n up, H~MI'IIII tl ctllfl,
"h1p 11 Uu ... Orin in Ml1111t11 wllll N•

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8ru111, hi Mer~1
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FntiA't
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~

Wahama came to, life in the
second canto by outscoring the
Tornadoes 18. to 8, Dingey still
carried the majority of the
srorlng load but he had con·
siderable help from .his teammate in Mark Mitchell. ·Mitchell controlled both boards
andtip.pedln three buckels, the
White Falcons · held a com- ·
fortable lead at intennisslon 31
to 20.
Southern
12 8 12 11- 43
The Falcons won the battle of
Reserve Score: Wahama 37.
Southern 29. .
third quarter 17 to 12.
Dingey hit f9r 10 more points
In the last eight minutes 1
Wahama came out on top for
its fifth victory of the season, 67
to 43.
Wahaina
grabbed
rebounds, led by Dingey with
17 and Mitchell with 16. The
White Falcons committed 17
turnovers, blocked four
Southern shots and had eight
steals led by Mike Lewis with
lour steals.
Ia

reserve · game, 35-28 - David
Rife paced the wi~ners with 12
polnta while Marc Lawhon
added IO. Banks topped the
Highlanders with nine points.
The win pushed !be Bobcats'
record to :1-S In the league and
4-3 overall. The four victories ' fa~~~~~!xr~~:n ~;s ;;:~
are the-most Kyger Creek has Falcons. They hit on 32 of 64
won In the paot three years.
shots for 50 pet from the floor.
Southwestern dropped to tJ.? At the charity strip, they
In the SVAC and 3-8 oyerall.
managed to connect on
' The Highlanders hosted three of seven attempts' for 43
Southern Saturday night.sd
. KC pet. Behind Dingey's 28 points
wUI host Wahama Tue ay were Mitchell with 16 :
night.
Lambert with 12. For So~thern
Kyger Creek (56) - Curry, 1-,rnrer'
0_2; Hudson, 4-J-11 ; Rumley, 3- Sayre was the leading sc
2-8; Stidham. 2-2-6; Clay, 1-4-6; with 16 while Curfman chipped
Wl•e. s-0-10; Tabor, 0-2-2 and
·
. Cremeans, 5-J -1L Totals 21-14- in with 12.
Wahama
_ll!ok
45
Southweotern (52l - Di!lon, preliminary game 37 to 29.
0·2-2; Walker. 2-0-4; Lewis, 4•0- ,
•
a: Wood. 6.1.13; carter. 2-3,7; . LeQding the charges
for
Bush. 9-0-18. Totals 2~-6-52.
Little Falcons were
K:Jer~:~~rs: 16 13 7 2o-56 Brabham with 10
s•western
10 10 18 14-52 Dewhurst with nine .
Southern, Dunning and N•i •... ~
'
hit tn double figofes with 1:i
Cottage BKB Results ·
By United Press International 11 points respectively.
'
East ·
.
Wahama's next test will be
NY Tech 70 York 64 •
Tuesday night when they
72
. ¢!r.'f1':.:~~~b~
travel to Cl)esh!re where
G. Milson 72 Bowie St. 68
will tangle with the Bobcats
E. Nazrne 9l Gordon 83
Kyger Creek High School.
Nrtheastrn 64 Rider ..a
Lowell 66 Wrcster 64
Wahama won the
·
Bentley 79 Marls! 72
meeting between the two
Bllo St, 76 AI bany St. 73
Brckprt st. 106 New Hven so
schools back on Dec. 12. Game
SoW1hmptn 87 R. Wslyn 63
times are 6:30 and· 8 p.m.
56
60
Colgate Bui!':t~l
Wahama (671 :_ Dlngey, 14-0Qgtlhrpe $!1 st.Leo 72
28; Mitchell, 7-2-16; Lamberl,
GrdnrWbll·111 M. Brown 82
6·0-12 ; Glllano. 2-0-4; S(Tlll.h, 1AI H 1 170
1-3; Johnson, 1-0-2; Buzzard, l 82
Miss. Colt.
a.· n sv
0-2. Tote II 32-3-67.
Elon 64 Gulllord 63
•
ArJT&gt;strng St 79 St.Jno-Minn. 51
Southern (43) - Sayre, 8-0" ·
16; Curfman, 6-0-12; Hill, 3-1.7;
·W. Mllrylarid 77 Frostburg 57 · Nease, 1-0-2 :' !hie, 1-0·2; Miller • .
Shphrd 77 Davls&amp;Eiklns 68 . 1-2-4. Toto Is 20-3-43.
L b 61 c
d 59
By Quarters:
West
I
·
oncor
Wahama
13 18 17 19-&lt;57·
York 95 Shenandoah 74
'
.

IRONTON- Jim Pi~rc~ and each while McCrearY l!lilled .
Mitch Wright combined for 42 down 11 lor. the Tigers.
points Frid~y night as the
LOGAN {621 - Pierce 12-024;
Culbertson 3-D.6; Norris 2-0Logan Chieftains scored their
4; Wright 7-4-18; Campbell 2-2first victory at..Ironton since 6; Whilcrafl 2-0-4. TOTALS 21the Tigers rejoined the SEOAL 6-62.
IRONTON tSIJ - McCre1ry
five years ago by a score of 62- 7-2-16;
Green 5-2 - 1~; Howard3·
58.
0·6; Ferguson 4-0-8; Hannon 6The win at.o snapped a five- 1-13; Spence 1-0-2; S. Carter 01-1. TOTALS 26.6-51. .
game losing streak for the
Score bv au.rters:
14 16 14,1 Chiefs but it was not easy as Logan
lronlon
11 16 20 11-51
·the score was tied six times
Reserve score: Logan 42,
- and the lead changed hands 10 lronton 32.
times before Logan's Mitch
Wright p~t it away with 13
seconds left in the contest.
Logan took a 14-11 first
·period lead and still held a 31).27
halftime lead.
However, : with
4:15
remaining in the !Jlird period
and Logan on top 42-35, the
Tigers ticked off 12 ·straight
points to take a 47-42 lead
before the quarter ended at'47-

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:!:! - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday,Jan. 21, 1913

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Meigs rutis win string to

1 • •

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Then three baske ts, two by
senior guard Bill Vaughan, Understand abl y, both were
made the score 11-8 fa voring given an ovation upon leavin g
Jackson at the end of the first the fl oor.
quarter. ·
The Marauders had three
Bill Vaughan 's ball stealing playe rs in doubl e figures,
opening the second quarter Boggs with 12, Andy Vaughan
helped the Marauders ge t on "had 10, and cousin Bill 11.
top at)3-12 when senior guard
The boards told the story ,
Jim Boggs hit one of his Meigs, wi th 44 offensive and
patented 25 footers. Jackson, defensive rebounds, dominated
however,led by Art DeStephan lhe ciose.in shooting areas, as
and Martin, led ·a. cot.n- Jackson had only 19. Bill
terattack that mome'ntariiy Chaney, who has been coming
kepr the game tight At half- on like gangbusters the past
time the count was 27,19, wilh two weeks, led Meigs with 8
Meigs pulling away. Bill catches. Going into the game,
Vaughan's 20-footer had put Chaney was third among the
Meigs ahead to stay at 6:10 left league's rebounders. · ..
in the quarter at 15-13. • ·
Meigs got itK foul trouble
Jackson never got closer early. Chaney, Mike Sayre and
than six in the second half and ·lhe Vaughans sat out chunks of
for the third straight game time through the second, third
Coach Carl Wolfe was able to and even the fourlh quarter.
err .lty his bench near the end . With 3:11 remaining in the
The game was rough. With game each had four fouls each,
5:56 left in the first half, but none of them got the all·
Jackson's Rick Bilbnan was important fifth .
knocked down and had to leave
Randy Warrington's 10
the game in a groggy state. In points led the losers.
the final minutes of the third
Friday Meigs goes to
quarter Jackson's captain Dan Waverly's new gym for the
Morrow took a nasty gash over second round match with Mr.
his left eye. He was removed to Carroll Hawhee's undefeated
an area hospital for stitches. No. I AA club in Ohio.
MEIGS VARSITY
FGA·M FTA-M RB PF TP
PLAYER
Boggs
13-4 4-4 2 3 12
s .3
2-2 4 4 8
Sayre
Chaney
S-0
0-0 8 4 .0
A. Vaughan
5-5
J.o 1 . 4 10
B. Vaughan
8·3
6-5
4 4 II
Bailey
9-3 7 ·3 2 I 9
2-1 J.o . 4 2 2
Meyers
• "'";
... I '
·0 : 'b-2 ~ .---3 •tO·· 2
!Werry
·o.o o-o o o o
Price
May
0·0 0·0 0 0 0
Fred Burney
0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Fl. Burney
0·0 0-0 0 0 0
TOTALS
49-19 23·16 34 22 54
JACKSON VARSITY
.
PLAYER
FGA·M FTA·M PF TP
Momm
S-4
1-0 I 8
While
9-3 0-0 2 6
Martin
s.J
4·1 2 7
Deslephen
2·0 7·4 3 4
Conr·oy..
7-2 J.o 4 4
Jenkins
0-0 0-0 0 0
McDonald
5·1 1-0 2 2
Warrington
n .;
n
• 10
Henderson
0·0 0-0 0 0
Blllr. on
0-0 0-0 0 0
Chlr1:.
0
0-0 0-0 I
Fannin
0-0 o.o 0 0
TOTALS
44-17 18-7 19 II '
By Quarters:
Meigs ,
8 27 36 54
Jackson
11 19 29 AI

Marauder reserves
top·JHS, 51 to 43

goals for a total of eight points.
At the half, the mini
Marauders were behind 17-24.
'With 2:0B remaining in the
third quarter, Dodson sank a

who will play their remaining
eight . gam es' th ere after
playing the first nine on the
road . .
No official dedication
ceremony. w~s conducted
Friday night as ihe formal
dedication is scheduled for
Sunday, Jan. ZS , at 2 p.m.
with the public invited for
the open house.
Coach C. D. Hawhee saw six
of his talented Tigers score in

double figures Friday as they''
rolled up·quarter leads ·of 11·2, .
41-16, and 71·29.
Wellston's Charlie Snare .hit
the first goal of the game to put
the Rockets on top,2-ll with·7:04
left in ·the first pedod b~t
before another Golden Rockel
poinl·was scored Waverly had
raced to a 17-i first period lead
and increased. ,it to 26-2 with
5:06 remaining in the seconcf
period before the Rockets hit

again.
'flave Salyers led the Tigers
with 20 points wilh Biil Maloy
adding 17,.John Shoemaker 16,
Mike.Oyer 14, and Ed Thomp'
son and j)oug Pfeifer each
getting 12.
.
·
Charlie Snare~s 13 .pOints
topped the Rocket scoring.
Wellston's Dave Sou~ers;
.who entered the contest
ranked as the SEOAL's
second leadil!g scorer with a
.

19.6 average, was llmjted to
just four po!nll; and charged
with Zl lurn.overs by the
tenacious Tiger defense.
Waverly canned 39 of 74.field
goals for .a blistering 53 pet.
and dropped in 16 of 25 free
throws. ·
They also hauled down 47
rebounds with Mike Oyer
grabbing 13.
The Rockets hit ·on 13 of 32
shots for a 40 pet. average and

Glouster .spills·Eas~er~ five, 66-52

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern's Eagles had a cold
night with not too much
working right Friday with tfie ·
Glouster Tomcats on the
Eastern hardwood, losing their
third non-league game of the
season, 66-52.
Eastern, now 6-3 overall and
still 6-1 in Southern Valley
Conference play, got in big
trouble right away, trailing 16-

6 after the first eight minutes.

They never caught up.
Although three Eagles hit in
double fi gure s, with Tim
Spencer ·leading Eastern with
15 points, they couldn't match
the hot hands of the visitors
who were' led by Craw's 22
points on six fielders and 10
free throws.
.
Eastern's average from the
field was not available, but

they were only 50 pet. at the
free line :_ 14 for 28 - while
Glouster was 20 for 25 for 80
pet.
By ljaUtime Eastern had
pulled up to trail by only 7 at 3124. The rest period cured none
of the losers' shooting troubles,
as they had fallen behind after
three quarters by 15 at 47-32.
Eastern's .Randy.' Boring ,
third in the SVAC scoring

Bruins roll on,.92-64
By VITO STELLINO
UP! Sports Writer
It was a typical story Friday
night. The UCLA Bruins, who
had won 57 straight, were
meeting the University of San
Francisco. Yes, the same USF
team · that set the collegiate
record of 60 straight during the
Bill Russell era in the mid '50s.
And the Dons came in with a
respectable team ranked 13th
in the nation with a 12-1 record.
It had all the ingredients of a
great drama wilh the Dons
obviously trying to protect
their record.
But, alas, UCLA didn 't let
much drama build. The score
was 6-0 after two minutes; 42-25
at halftime and 78-40 midway

· nullpups

,,

be too much for Jackson as the
two combined for 26 points.
Danny Dodson sank four field

WAVERLY - A re cord
Southeastern Ohio League
crowd of 2,800 fa~s paid their
way into the glistening new
Waverly Field House Friday
night to watch their undefeated
Tigers .romp over winless
We Us ton by a 94-31 score .
It was not only the first ..
varsity contest ever played in
the new structure but · it
marked the first home contest
·of the season for the Tigers,

roll over

in the second half when Coach expected to go for No. 61 at
John Wooden took the subs out. South Bend in a nationally
The final score was 92-64 and televised game next Saturday.
the Bruins had their 58th
The veteran UCLA' coach
straight victory tucked away . . said that Walton played "his ·
The victory wasn't surprising best game of the year conbut the margin of victory was. sidering the lenglh of time he
Breaking that record of 60 played." Walton was lifted
straight is about ali the Bruins midway in the second half.
and Coach Wooden have left to
In one of those Wooden un·
do. They've won six con- derstatements, he added, "it's
secutive
NCAA
titles going to take a fine team lo
(remember when two straight beat us. "
was considered a real fea t?)
Walton had· 22 points and 22
and eight in the last nine years. rebounds while forward Larry
But they haven't been able to Farmer added 15 and Keith
win 60 straight.
Wilkes 12. Kevin Restani led
Now , with Bill Walton the losers wilh 19.
leading the way in his junior
UCLA and San Francisco
year , the streak seems were the only top-ranked
destined to go on indefinitely if teams in action Friday night.
he doesn't suffer any injuries. In other games, Washington
The Bruins haven 't lost since State beat Idaho, 78-61, Oral
January of 1971 when Notre Roberts downed Los Angeles
Dame and Austin Carr upset State, 95-86, Butler topped Air
the Bruins at South Bend . ·
Force, 61-56, and Yale beat
Ironically, the Bruins are Wesleyan , 76-46.

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landowners in Nfa~on (:ounty
By Joha Cooper
Soli Conservation Service
PT. PLEASANT - The
Western Soil Conservation
District had a plan of work
meeting to discuss items which
would be promoted by landowners in Mason County and
also by other groups to further
the cause of conservation in
general. Edward Bumgarner,

WAS NOW
1971 Comet 4 dr., Blue, auto., small V-8, a real sharp car.
$2295 $2088
1971 Chev. Nova 2 dr. Gold, 6 cyl., std. shift.
$1995 . . 51850
1971 Datsun 510,2 Dr., maroon, automatic.
$17.95 .. $1645
1971 V. W. Super Bug, dark blue, 4 speed, 24,000 miles
$1895 .. $1788
1971 VW Sug, orange, real sharp, low mileage.
51895 . . $1688
·J97D Fiat 850,2 dr., blue. A real nice work car.
$1095 $888
1970 Maverick 2 dr. Blue 6 cyl., auto., air cond.
$1695 51488
1970 Toyota Corona 4 dr. auto., air cond. Sharp.
$1795 $1688
1970 VW Sq. Back Sta. Wgn., 4 speed, air cond.
52195 51988
1969 VW Sq. Back Stil. Wgn., 4 speed, sharp car, (red).
$1695 $1488
1969 VW Fast Back. Beige, automatic-.
$1595 $1388
1968 VW Sta. Wgn. 7 pass. (Bus), red &amp; white, a nice unit for the large
$1795 $1588
family.
1967 VW Bug, light blue, 4 speed.
$995 $888

beautification and with some to
be used as .Chrisimas trees.
WARD D. O'DELL, whose
farm is on the head of Big
Buzzard Creek, became a
cool!'!rator of lhe district and
asked for planning assistance.
In talking wilh Mr. O'Dell,
Denver Yoho of SCS foulld out
that he had formerly lived in
Jefferson County on a farm and
had a district conservation
plan on his farm In lhat cbunty.
He was well pleased with lhe
services provided and wanted
to develop his Mason County
farm by means of 'a con. servation plan and district
assistance:
AN INTERESTJNG
cooperate' of the soil conservation district is the
Southern West Virginia Beagle
Club. Its 175 acres is located off
the Pliney Road at the head of

16 Mile Creek. One hundred
acres of this land is enclosed
with a chainJ!nk fence four feet
tall with barbed wire on top.
The purpose of lhe club is to
develop the land so as to
produce the largest possible
rabbit population. Members
hold many beagle field trials on
this land and people come from
all over this and adjacent
states to their trials.
We were on lheir land about
a year ago with the SCS
Wildlife Biologist Edward
Gaskins and Department of
Natural Resources Biologist
Paul Matthews to help them
wilh a revised . plan. They
asked for this new plan. so that
they would be able to carry out
new practices which would
,increa~ the rabbit population.
As we went over the land we
jumped
rabbits
very

one of lhe supervisors of lhe
district in Mason County,
presided at the meeting.
One item which we are
making note of at this time is
acceleration of the tree
planting program which, it is
hoped, will come about. It was
pointed out that P!lople plant
trees for · ~arious purposes.
Some
of
these
are
beautification, erosion control,
Christmas tree production and
reforestation.
Westvaco Corporation is
making
Virginia
Pine
seedlings avallable to land·
r•wners at a cost of $4 per
COLUMBUS - Candidates
f•1ousand. Jim Lemaster, local for public office during this
· t·•Jilresentative of Westvaco, year's local elections, In many
: tdd · us lhat this was con- cases, must have their
siderably be)ow the cost of Declaration of Candidacy or
tpuction of seedlings. '
· v~ominatlng 9 .,Ji'~II:\I!Jn filed
''The Western District "!ill before the February 7, 1973
huve a tree planting crew deadline .at 4 p.m., announced
available to landowners who
wish to use lhis service.
HAROLD EDWARDS, )Vhose
farm is on Greer Road, is in·
terested in building a pond for
winter time use by his
livestock. Denver Yoho of SCS
POMEROY - Meigs County
made a preliminary in·
vestigation and gave him in· dairymen are in\lited to attend
formation concerning lhe soils a meeting Thursday afternoon,
and the' suitabillty of a pond in Jan. 25, from 12:30 to 2:30p.m.
lhe location which ·Mr. Ed· in .ihe vocational agricultural
room of the Meigs High School
• wards chose.
arranged
through
the
· : Mr. Edwards has been a
of
Robert
• cooperator of the Western· Soil cooperation
Spurlock,
V
o-Ag
teacher
at
! Cooservat!on Distrlct and has
: bad a plan on his farm since Southern High School; Everett
·l 1948. When he bought ad· Holcomb, Vo-Ag teacher at
• dit!onal land, Lionel Smith of Meigs High School, and C. E.
•
; SCS helped him with a plan Blakeslee, County Extension
Agent, Agriculture.
: revision in 1964. . •
Dr. John Staubus, l):xtension
: The record shows that he has
( carried out many practices on Dairyman from Ohio State
~ his farm. These include U~iversity; will discuss some
~ clearing and reseeding of land, . of the alternatives in' feeding
: building a farm pond and the dairy cattle for maximum
~ planting of several trees. His production in 1973 including
~ - purpese In planting trees was consideration of protein costs
for
erosion
control, and alternatives.

DON WATTS VOLKSWAGEN, INC.
195 Upper River Rd. (Ohio Rt. 7), Gallipolis. Ohio.
Phone (614) 446-9800
· ··

·'"n"" 9'" 1" ' """'"'"

Monll\iy 12 Noon tll9 P.M.
Tues:, Wed., Fri. 8 A.M. lol P.M.
Thur. 8 A.M. to 9 P.M.-Sat. 8 A.M. to 12 Noon

Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown.
Elections will be held next
. November 6 for municipal and
township oflicers, members
of boards ,q!~u~atlon, judges
and clerks of police and
municipal courts . Chief
Election Officer Ted Brown
said that all ~andidates for
these offices, except the
municipal judges, will have to
file their declarations by the
deadline, if they plan to seek
nomination at the May 8

D ,
will
rurynten

meet Thursday

f

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Jim Walter builds a better buy!

OHIO 45619 ..

Old Hwy . 52
P. 0. Box 250
· Ph : 867-3153

'

(T\ OPEN 8 'tU i
~. Weekdays
.

.. . . OPEN. 8'tll6
.Sat.·&amp; Sun.

CD

.

.. ·

..... Jim Waller#Jllhf
(Moll to ·n.•arast offlcel
I would likt to hove mor•
Information ond •the cott
building on my property . I
understand there would be
no abll;!ltlon · to buy' and
that you would give me these

I :~:••
I CITY
I
(Dr

of charge.

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$TAt,
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I I OWI\JINpiriy I"
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•Cal.f Nipple Bottles

•Grass Tdany Blocks •Water Softener Salt

Pet Food Supplies

Service Center

1. D.·North·Pr~duce ·Co•.

CENTRAL SOYA."

Gallipolis, 0.

Vine Street

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OF OHIO

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• ,_,ilk Filters

Supp~

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•Mastitis Treatment • Protein Blocks

Your Farm

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• Poultry Equipment • Gloves

IN 4 • 25 LB. BAG ~TS.

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Anywav You Spell It, Backwards, Sideways.
Up or Down It Still Speels the Best Milk
Replacer.

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LEAVES HOSPITAL BED
LOS ANGELES (UP!) Singer Vikki Carr. under
treatment at Baylor Center in
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (UP!) , Houston for an undetermined
- A work stoppage by guards respiratory aibne~t. left her
at the Southern Ohio Correc- hospital bed against doctors'
tional Facility has apparently orders Friday ·to keep an
ended at the urging of engagement with President
Teamsters Union officials who Nixon's inaugural committee,
represent the striking guards, a spokesman here said. "It had
officials said Saturday.
nolhing to do with politics, but
James Scholten, an assistant . a girl doesn't stand up the
superintendent
at
the President of her country,"
correctional institution, said Miss Carr said. "If he can put
only 13 called in sick for the 10 up·with.a frog in my throat, so
p.m. shift Friday and 15 for the can 1." ·
early shift today. There had
been about 50 calling in sick
earlier lhis week. Herman
THE DUKE RELEASED
Ball, chief · steward and
LOS ANGELES (UP!) business manager L. 0. Henry, Bandleader Duke Ellington
issued a joint statement late was releas.ed from St. Vin·
Friday urging all corrections cent's Hospital Friday
officers to ·return to their next !~!lowing an eight-day stay for
regular shift.
treatment of influenza.

i

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Call 6r write your l~al Jim .Walter H01111s' manager
today. He'll give you complete lnfDI'IIIItiOII and the !
low cost of building a leur-bedroom. two-bath· h111111
for· you .. . or. any other ho111t you want ar nnd c;.;, '
and uplain how qualifild prapany owntrs can .get
INSTANT MORTGAGE FI~ANCING. Isn't it fillll Yl!l'
mavttl up ,to a "IJetltr illy" by Jim Waltw? Sure it is.

so. CHARLESTON, w. VA. 25303 I
P. 0. Box 836i
60&amp; 1st Ave. SOuth
U. S. Hwy. 25 (Nitro, W. Va.}
Ph: 727:2296

l

• OVER 20 "BETTER BUY". MOI;)ELS
• ~UILT 'ON YOUR PROPERTY

.

Primary Election this spring.
There are exceptions to this
rule when the candidate is
filing for township offices,
member of a board of
educQtion or municipal offices
- except municipal judge - in
a municipality of less lhan
2,000 population and in some
instances where the population
exceeds 2,000. Nominating
petitions fqr these latter offices
must be filed no later than 4
p.m. of August 8, 1973.

TIME TO BUY

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Policewoman subdues Gl

pCH:!CIOCIIIICI!I:DCIOt:IC:M:ICH:ICIOt:IC~t:IC:IC~t:IC~

\

even furnish the n111erials and includo the .cost in
your mertgage if you like. . ·

I JIM WALTER HOMES
of
I

CHESAPEA~.j:,

I

'3rd &amp; $Jtlm011

Pro-L81• flo~ freely, even In zero weather.

•
...

Pro·LII• blending proce,. locks In all lngre·
dients, prevent&amp; separation or breakdown
during storage.

threatened to blow up the plane
at 6 a.m. if his demands were
Pro-i.aa repels summer Illes and Insects.
not met.
Pro·t.n'is easy to teed, particularly with freeHe was subdued about 3 a.m.
choice ayslems.
EST when he emerged from
All US AIOUT I'IUI-W AID IIIW IT CAll m
ForSMop
INTO
YOUR fWIIItl OPUAnDI.
the aircraft's cockpit and was
. wrestled to the ground by
Policewoman Marty Green,
assigned to the Louisville
narcotics squad. Policewoman
Green, a petite former airlines
hostess, had been negotiating
with the would-be skyjacker
for more than four hours and
had offered herself for the
hostage mechanic.
The s.oldier, identified as
Dennis V. Durkin, 17, of PittsServing Mei!ls, Gdllia
burgh, Pa., was hustled ·off the
and Mason Counties
.
field by law enforcement
Ph. 992-2181
agents and taken into custody
Jack
.W. Carsey, Mgr.
by the FBI. Thomas W. Kit·
chens, special agent in cliarge·
of the FBI's Louisville office
Look for the Big "L" on Route i &amp; ll at the
said he would be charged with
· Upper End of POmeroy
committing a crime aboard an
aircraft: The FBI said Durkin
, OPEN DAILY UNTIL 6:00 PM
RACINE - At the · annual has been AWOL from Ft. Knox
business meeting of the Racine since Jan. 6.
Baptist Church,' The Rev.
Edward B. Fischer of Piqua
was unanimously called to
serve as intorim pastor of the
Racine .Baptist-Bethlehem
Baptist pastorate. Rev.
Fischer will perform and
extend aU the pastoral services
of the two churches\
Rev. Fischer has served as
imterim pastor since 1965 when
he resigned as pastor of lhe
Piqua Baptist Church after 14
years there to becom~
superintendent of the new
Baptist Home of Upper Miami
facility for the aged. He has
been a minister of Christ since
1932. Durinv the war years
from 1942·1946, he served as a
Chaplain.
·
Racine Baptist has a revival
scheduled for lhe first full week
In February, beginning on the
~th and ending the lith wilh the
morning service, when Dr.
Russell Jon~s . director of lhe
upholstery colors, and 3 different
This one has the other look, the
Baptist Forward Program, will
interiors? Power tor '73 can be
other features, the othef points
deliVer meSSjlges and work
six, a 345 V-8 or a 392 V-8,
of value. It's the only pickup with
closely wilh The Rev. Fischer.
teamed with 3-speed automatic
collapsible steering column as
transmission or 3, 4 and 5-speed
standard equipment, the one with
manuals. See the '73 list of lux·
the gas tank mountE~d out's ide the
uries, too-air conditioning,
·"
cab. And who else offers you e
~ STARTS BLAZE
stereo, the works! ·
choice of 13 ·b.o dy co.l ors, 4
SEVIlLE, Spain (UP!)- An
Compare International®••• The Other Pickup.
unidentWed man emptying a
can of gasoline in a night club
m!
started a blaze that kille4
seven persons Friday ·night.
Police arrested the man, who
walked into La Vaquita night·
club, pro.duced a can of
gasoline a11d tipped it ·over a
gas fire causing. fiamei which
engulfed the bar in seconds.
Six barmaids and a bill'·
tender were k!lled. Two
customers were serious)y
Injured in . the blaze, which
burned out lhe interior oi the
establishmeut. An undisclosed
liWnber escaped .

LOUISVILLE, Ky . (UP!) Apolicewoman early Saturday
subdued a young AWOL soldier
who sprayed a crowded airport
terminal with shotgun pellets
and then tried to hijack a
jetliner for a transatlantic
flight.
The husky young soldier,
garbed in Army fatigues and
carrying his shotgun in a duffel
bag, claimed he was dying of
cancer, shot up the Standiford
Field terminal, then seized lhe
Ozark Airlines DC9 and held an
airline mechanic hostage for
nearly six hours . He

POMEROY

Piqua minister

called here as

interim pastor

INTERNATIONAL
PICKUP·

The Other· Pickup

a

----~~-TRADE. NOW I-~---

Meigs ..Equipment CO.
,

' Ph. 992-2176

.G.pa!IS, UhlO

c

I·

'·'

LIQUID

Protein Supplement

Stoppage ended

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

time anjoying ylllir home and your family while yeur
neighbors are filing up and painting. That"s because.
we usa building materials thsl are especially selected
tor long lifo .. . aluminum windows, hardboard'
"wood made better" siding thai holds paigt yurs
longer than ordinary siding and hiavy duly 11101ing,
to mention a law.
Now, to keep the cost of your home evan' lowar,
'Jim Walter will build on your property, campletely
finishing the outside- dawn to the last nail, the
shutters and the paint - but stop at almost any stage
of insida completion ... you do the rest and save
money. The handier you are with tools and the IIIOrt
interior wllik you do, tho mare you'll save. We'll

.

Some petitions filed early

We Also Haye Sever.al Big Cars at Reduced Prices

.

ForleefCIIUI

=·

Some families need a four-bedroom home ... others
just~ one. Some don' I!!!!!! or want a home quite
. that large . But, at Jim Walter Homes it doesn't
matter whal!!!!!!! or" ~ you have ... we build
them all .. . lour bedrooms . . . three . . . two or just
one. Whmver you wan1. Jim Walter "'better buy"'
homes are custo111 built on your property in a wide
variety ot sizes and models ... and thay all accent
comfort and funclional beauly with spacial emphasis
on LOW ~· What do you· want? We'll build it
for you .
·
And thesa custom built homes conform to high stand·
ards of quality 10 give you years and years ·of low
maintenance upkeep. You'll spsnd more of your spare

frequently, so that the
population now is at a high
leveL
W. R. Dolan, a r,epresentative of their group, was
recently talking wilh us about
carrying out some of the
planned practices. He ordered
200 Norway spruce from the
Western District to be planted
at strategic places on lheir
property.
Some of. the other practices
they are carrying out are
managed clipping of strips
with a three,year clipping
rotation, reseeding some areas
with ladino clover and lhe use
of lime and fertilizer to in·
crease forage for use by
rabbits in the winter. They also
feed prepared rabbit food at
many locations inside the
enclosure.

'

functioning but in 1971 only 24. ·
.
_ .
tlfan the non-A. t. sired herds for every breeil1- Ayrshire. 561
These 24 organizations owned or controlled an average of 96 · polinds; &amp;own Swiss, 2,053 pounds ; Guernsey, 1,244 Pou!)&lt;~a;
sires, with each sire averaging 3,620 cows bred per year. Sixty· Holstein, 958 pounc!s; Jersey, 2,086 pounds; and 1\lilklg Shortlhree perceni of all sires in A. L were Holstein and 14 pet. of sires horn, 1,328 pounds. :... . .
.
·
.
·
were beef.bulls. The significance ot the Information to the dairy
if vie u8e'herd slle of 52 cows and a milk price of $6.25 per
industry is that the ge.,etic improvement In &lt;lairy replacements hundred pounds, the A. L sired Holstein herda, for example,
should be enhanced by the il\creased use.of A. L and decreased . produced $3,068 more per lactation on the average than the nonuse of beef 'sires on dairy cows.
A.I. sired Holstein hetll,. In the nineofltate area studied .
Probably the biggest reason fpr the A. L Increase is the · The recently comPleted Iowa study also shows that pifdevelopment of more genetically superior bulls lhrough sound ferences were greater than earlier studies made in New York
young sire sampling programs. Dr. Taylor says the results of and ~iclligan; says Taylor.
using good A. 1. proven bulls show there is a big dollar advantage ·
The key to the young sire sampling program is to locate the
in this method of breeding.
.·
top nnlrtuils and produce offspring that are genetically superior.
Several research studies have ~.een conducted using official Then progeny test these young sires and retain only the best ones ·
DHIA dairy production records to compare production of A.L for heavy' duty in A.I.
•
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sired cows with natural service sired cows. The .latest study was
In the regional study, all ~Y lactation records from a'll
conducted at Iowa State University using data (rom nine mid·
states .were sent to U.S.D.A. every four months. The U.S,D.A.
'western states.
rank.id
the
cows
for · superior
production. ·
Results show lhat herds sires by A. L bulls averaged more Then; a list of the top two percent of the cows for
each breed was prepared and ihe sires of all the cows ranked on
the basis of their daughters' production reCOI'ds.
Next, A. I. organizations made selected matings to.produce
young siras which were mated to produce at least 50,daughters
. ..
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.
with production recorda. Following this the young sires were
rllllked, and those with the highest producing daughters were put
into heavy ser\lice. ,About 9ne young sire out of 5 ranks good
enoogh to be placed In the. stud . .
COLuMBUS- "We're 'over 100 exhlbllors," said Bill
Davidson of the up~omlng Power Show Ohio, to be tield at
the Ohio State Fairgrounds, Columbus, on Saturday and
Sunday, Febru8ry 3 and 4.
Davidson, Executive Director of the Oblo Alsoctatt011
of Power Equipment Retallers, the Show's spllliBor, said
lhat exhibit participaat slgnoupo still being processed may
tax the capacity of the Hc:re·Multi-Purpose building ibat
is to beusedforlhe Showddsyear.
Power Sbow exhibits will Include equipment and
related accessories for agriculture, construction, In·
dustry, recreation, gardening, lawn care, home and
business services, and public facillty management
"There will be ev~lng from g!H!arts and snowmoblles
to giant tractors and earthmovers," Qjlvidson said.
Special program features during the two-day Show,
which will be open eadh day from 9 to 5, will include home
management and arls demoustratio111 fbr the ladles,
Pro Lila Is a protein supplement. Use ProLas and you buy only what you can't grow.
movies, tours of lhe famous Ohio State Historical
Pro-uia provides low cost proleln, reduces
Museum, continuous cafeteria service, and valuable prize
teed cash ouliay.
drawings every hour on the hour, Complimentary tickets
Pro-Ln Is vllamln/mlneral tortltled (espeare available from ·bUDdreds of equipment salea and
cially phosphorus) 10 give well-balanced
ration mixed wllh grain.
· service firms throughout Ohio and neighboring states.
l'fo•LIIalmproves feed palatability, sllmulates
for llairy Cattle
rumen action. Improves digestive process for
·..;~:::::::::::&lt;::~:::::::::~::::,::&lt;:::,:::::::::::;::::~:::::::::$:~::::--.&gt;.::::::&gt;.":::~:=~~:::::=:~wl::;:;:;:::=::r~18?.l:::::f:;:;~)
more complele, ettlclent utllizallon ot low·
protein leeds.
Pro-LII•ImpriJves herd heallh. aids in ketosis
control In dairy cattle.

Over 100 .exhibitors signed
for big Power Show Ohio

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lay ofthe land

'"Sel'tilte'WPa~I'S~Office

.

The rate of Increase hlis been about 2 pet,' per year,.During
·
. ' this period there has ni!Ver been a periOd of rapid growth, but in
.
POMEROY - Many changes bave OCCUlTed in the dairy only one year has there failed to~ anY Increase .
... buainess In the last 25 years. No change perballS bas been more
Ohio is slightly above the United states average with 52.6 pet
siiP!lftcant.tharl .the Cj)Dii!med Increase In ihe nwnber of cows of dairy cows bred A. (b~t falls short of lhe top seven states. The
bred by artificial insemination (A.L)
top seven states are Hawaii wUh 96.6 pet; Alaska 91.8 pet.;
According to Dr. Wallace Taylor, Extension Dairy Specialist Fjqrida 77.4 pet. ; California 69.7 pet; Washington 64.4 pet.;
Connecticut 64 pet.; ~nd PenJl!lylvania 64 pet.
·
the NEW in'FARMING
BEEF SIRES HAVE CONTINUED to be used for about lhe
at Ohio State University, over 51 pet of. the dajry cows and same number of services qver the pa~t decade but are now being
heifers ane about ~0 pet. of the beef t:ows In Ohio are bred by used more on beef cows and less on dail'y cows.
In 1964, appro~imately one million dairy ~s were bred to
artW~linsemlnation; Each year there is an Increase both In
Qhlo and on a natlo!181 basis In the u!le ofA.I.
·
· · beef sires, and ill the S8IIIE1 y~ar only one-half million beef cows
· Dr. Harry L. Barr and Phllllp Holdaway reporting in the' were bred io beef sires. ·In 1971, the figures were reversed with
recent Issue of The Ohio Herd Improvement Observer listed the dairy breedings to lle!!f sires cut in half-to one-half million and
Increase in the perceJitage of dairy cows and heifers b~ by A·. L approximately one million beef cows were bred to beef sires. The
by year. Starting with 1.1 pet. in 1945 each year bas seen a · per~tage of beef cows bred A. I. wasat 3.4pct. in 1971.
Organizations offering A.l. servire continue to merge or
s!IP!Wcant percentage increase so that by 1950 the figure was 9. 7
retire
from the Industry. In 1953, lhere were 96 organizations
pet; 10years later 31.8pet.; and in 19704Upet.

All Of These EconoJ11y Cars
Have Been Reduced

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C. E. BIUealee
CoDDty Exteuloa Ageat,. Agri&lt;UIIure .

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Conservation goals reviewed by

a· low cost
4 bedroom home ?

GALLIPOLIS - Coach Fred
Gibson's Athens Bullpups
knocked the Gallipolis Blue
Imps out of a tie for third place
in the SEO reserve standings
Friday by thumping Coach Ed
Pauley's quintet, 44-21.
The Bullpups are now 5-:J in
league play . The Imps are 4-4
in conference play, and 7-4 on
the year.
Todd Ellwood, fr es hman
guard, paced the winners with
16 points: Arnie Chonko added
14. Mike Sickles led the Imps
with eight points. David Brown

field goal to put them on top for
the rest of the game.
Mar k Buchanan, Greg
Fannin, and Mark Lewis paced
the Jackson reserves with 10
points apiece. They are now 1-7
on lhe year .
· Meigs reserves have a 5-3
record. They will fa ce the
·
Waverly reserves next Friday,
RIO GRANDE - A new
MEIGS - Coates n .18 ,
program for intramural ac· Dodson 4·0-8: Au II 2 H : s.
Wal burn 2·2·6; Qualls 4·0·8;
tlvity has been slated for lhe Cremeans
2-1.5, Tolals 22-1.s1.
spring semester at Rio Grande
JACKSON - Fannin 5·0-10 ;
Bucha na n 5·0·10; Ridge n . JO ;
College.
Gr
ill o 2·0·4: Jose ph 2-3-7;
Currently, three men's Lewis
1·0·2. Totals 19-5-43.
I
programs, and one women 's
By Quarters
Meigs
5 17 39 51
program,
and
one Jackson
12 24 33 43 CONTRACfS SIGNED
coeducational program has
NEW YORK •(UP!) - Jon
been initiated. In the men's
Matlack, National League
Friday's Result s
division, a team basketball
Rookie of lhe Year, celebrated
tournament
has
been So. Col o. 86 Kan .. Pilsbg 77
his 23rd birthday Friday by
scheduled for each Tuesday No. Colo. 91 Kan. Tchrs 85
· putting Ills name to a 1973
Colo . Mines 95 Ft. Lewis 7A
contract ·calling "for a better
and Wednesday evenin,. from Cornell
82 Lawrence 55
8-11 p.m. at Lyne Center. Also, No. Oak. 69 Rl ver .Fa lls 57
lhan 50 per cent raise. "
a men's racketball tournament St. Cloud St. 71 Mich. Tech 65
Matlack, who pitched for
Winona
St.
66 Morrs.Minn. 56
Is being proyided during Bemid!i St. 102 SW Sf. 59
"slightly over the rookie
minimum of $13,500," last
recreation time within lhe
year, will be paid about $22,500.
same facility while a men's
intr~mural ·wrestling tour, coedu.c ational volleyball
Shortstop Bud Harrelson also
signed
his 1973 contract, but his
namen t wlll be held on tournament
is
being
February 2 and 3.·. ·
establjs~ed every Thursday called for a cut from $65,000 to
$60,000. Harrelson said he
The women's program will evening at 8:30p.m. . ·
begin with a singles badminton
Over 30 intramural acti.vities accepted a cu,t "because I
··
tournament which is scheduled have been proposed for the .deserved it."
Harrelson batted only .215
eath Monday evening from 9- current semester. Most acbut
did lead the team in stolen
10:30 p.m. Iti addition, an open tivities encourage both faculty
bases with 12 in 16 attempts.
taeultr • staff • studen't and student participation. ·
•

converted five• of 1l free
throws.
· ~.
They also ha~led 'doWrl 47
rebounds · with Mike ~y~r ·
grabbing 13.
The Rockets hit o~ 13·of 32
shots for a 40.pet. average"and
converted five of 11 bee
throws.
Randy Peoples had four of
Wellston's.J2 rebounds.
The victory left Waverly with
a season mark of 10.0 and il.j) in
the SE0AL while WeUsi&lt;lrl is at;·
lhe other extreme with arl·o.lif'
season slate and 11.8 in the
league.
,
WHLSTON (31) - Snare 5.
3-13; Souders 2·0-4; Gilliland J•
0-2; Arnold H· 10; Peoples )·0·
2. TOTALS 13·5·31.
WAVERLY (94)- Maloy 6·
5-17; Oyer 5·4·14; Pfeifer. H·
12;
T~ompson
6-0·12 ;
Shoemaker 8·0· 16; Salyers 9·2·
20; Tracy 0·1·1; Young J . p.~
TOTALS Jr-16·94.
'.
Score by quorters:
Wellston
2 12 13 4-31
Waverly
17 24' 30 23-94
.Reserve· score: · Waverly 56.
Wellston 23.
·

What do ·you want ...

Blue Imps

added seven .
Athens led 6-4 after one
period. It was tied !7-ali at
halftime. Athens outscored the
Gallian s 16 _4 in the third
period , th en blanked the
l;'auiey mcn 11-ll in the fin al
stanza to win going away.
Box score:
BULL PUPS (441 _ Ellwood,
S-6-16; Gardner, 0-0·0; Stem.
pel , 1·0·2; Heady. 1·0·2; Butner,
0·0·0; Faulkner. 1·0·2; Horn, 00·0; Sm ith, 1·0-2; Chonko, 3-8·
14; Hicks. 1·0·2: Dailey, 2-0-4;
Green. 0·0·0. TOTALS 15-14-44.
BLUE IMPS (21) - Groth, J0-2; 'Niday, 1-2-4; Brown, 3-1-7;
. Valentine, 0-0.0 ; Slcltles, 4-0-8;
Watson, o.o.o; Burris, 0-0-0; T.
Myers, 0·0-0; Johnson, 0-0·0;
Warren, 0-0·0; J. Myers, o.o.o;
Watts , 0-0-0; Chang , 0-0-0;
Schopis, 0-0-0. TOTALS 9-3-21 .
By Quarters :
8 II 16 11 - 44
Bullpups
4 13 4 Q-21
Blue Imps

VARSITY
parade with a 16.1 average,
Eastern
6 24 32 52
was held to 12. John Sheets put Glouster
16 31 47 66
Eastern - Dill 2·0·4, Boring
13 on the board on four fielders
6-0-12,
Spencer 5-5-JS; Atherton
and five free lhrows.
1-2·4, ~ross 1'1·3, Sheeti4·S-13,
Eastern's reserves lost their Baum·O·l·l. Totals 19-14-52.
Glouster . - Severs 2-S-9,
game 40-26 in the preliminary
Cardaras J.S-11. Crow 6-10·22,
rriatch.
.
Gillott 4-0-8, 'Slkoriski 8-0·16.
Eastern was to play at Totals 27-20-66.
RESERVES
Symmes Valley Saturda)&lt;: njght
Eas·lern
4 17 19 26
in an important league contest.
10 24 29 40

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Nation's dairy industry a~ceptiitg A. I. rapidly ,

~p i'

... ....,
; ..

JACKSON - When you're hot you're hot , as the
Meigs High basketball team proved by whipping the
Jackson Ironmen 54-41 here Friday night. It wps the
· sixth win in ' 3 row for the Marauders. Jackson
slipped farther into no-man's land of the
Southeastern Ohio League race, at 1-7,
Meigs jumped out to an early 2-0 lead, but the
lronmen caught up on a free throw and baskels by
·Rocky Martin and Tom Conroy. The Marauders
· failed to score again until less than four minutPs
were left in the first quarter.

'

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·,

Jackson falls to
Marauders
in SEO battle

Rio plans
programs
for spring

54·41.

SIX,

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Rer:ord SEO crowd sees Waverly wzn·

•

JACKSON - AMeigs rally in
lhe third quarter gave the
Marauder reserves a 51-43
victory 'over the Jackson
lronbays here Friday night.
The combination of Lonnie
Coates and Perk Ault proved to

23-The slmdayTimes-Sentlnel,Sunday, Jan. 21, 1973

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Pomeq, Ohio

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'I'.'

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f• i ' '
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"'-¥ '1 ~ .,. ~ .. .,~ .

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:!:! - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday,Jan. 21, 1913

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Meigs rutis win string to

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Then three baske ts, two by
senior guard Bill Vaughan, Understand abl y, both were
made the score 11-8 fa voring given an ovation upon leavin g
Jackson at the end of the first the fl oor.
quarter. ·
The Marauders had three
Bill Vaughan 's ball stealing playe rs in doubl e figures,
opening the second quarter Boggs with 12, Andy Vaughan
helped the Marauders ge t on "had 10, and cousin Bill 11.
top at)3-12 when senior guard
The boards told the story ,
Jim Boggs hit one of his Meigs, wi th 44 offensive and
patented 25 footers. Jackson, defensive rebounds, dominated
however,led by Art DeStephan lhe ciose.in shooting areas, as
and Martin, led ·a. cot.n- Jackson had only 19. Bill
terattack that mome'ntariiy Chaney, who has been coming
kepr the game tight At half- on like gangbusters the past
time the count was 27,19, wilh two weeks, led Meigs with 8
Meigs pulling away. Bill catches. Going into the game,
Vaughan's 20-footer had put Chaney was third among the
Meigs ahead to stay at 6:10 left league's rebounders. · ..
in the quarter at 15-13. • ·
Meigs got itK foul trouble
Jackson never got closer early. Chaney, Mike Sayre and
than six in the second half and ·lhe Vaughans sat out chunks of
for the third straight game time through the second, third
Coach Carl Wolfe was able to and even the fourlh quarter.
err .lty his bench near the end . With 3:11 remaining in the
The game was rough. With game each had four fouls each,
5:56 left in the first half, but none of them got the all·
Jackson's Rick Bilbnan was important fifth .
knocked down and had to leave
Randy Warrington's 10
the game in a groggy state. In points led the losers.
the final minutes of the third
Friday Meigs goes to
quarter Jackson's captain Dan Waverly's new gym for the
Morrow took a nasty gash over second round match with Mr.
his left eye. He was removed to Carroll Hawhee's undefeated
an area hospital for stitches. No. I AA club in Ohio.
MEIGS VARSITY
FGA·M FTA-M RB PF TP
PLAYER
Boggs
13-4 4-4 2 3 12
s .3
2-2 4 4 8
Sayre
Chaney
S-0
0-0 8 4 .0
A. Vaughan
5-5
J.o 1 . 4 10
B. Vaughan
8·3
6-5
4 4 II
Bailey
9-3 7 ·3 2 I 9
2-1 J.o . 4 2 2
Meyers
• "'";
... I '
·0 : 'b-2 ~ .---3 •tO·· 2
!Werry
·o.o o-o o o o
Price
May
0·0 0·0 0 0 0
Fred Burney
0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Fl. Burney
0·0 0-0 0 0 0
TOTALS
49-19 23·16 34 22 54
JACKSON VARSITY
.
PLAYER
FGA·M FTA·M PF TP
Momm
S-4
1-0 I 8
While
9-3 0-0 2 6
Martin
s.J
4·1 2 7
Deslephen
2·0 7·4 3 4
Conr·oy..
7-2 J.o 4 4
Jenkins
0-0 0-0 0 0
McDonald
5·1 1-0 2 2
Warrington
n .;
n
• 10
Henderson
0·0 0-0 0 0
Blllr. on
0-0 0-0 0 0
Chlr1:.
0
0-0 0-0 I
Fannin
0-0 o.o 0 0
TOTALS
44-17 18-7 19 II '
By Quarters:
Meigs ,
8 27 36 54
Jackson
11 19 29 AI

Marauder reserves
top·JHS, 51 to 43

goals for a total of eight points.
At the half, the mini
Marauders were behind 17-24.
'With 2:0B remaining in the
third quarter, Dodson sank a

who will play their remaining
eight . gam es' th ere after
playing the first nine on the
road . .
No official dedication
ceremony. w~s conducted
Friday night as ihe formal
dedication is scheduled for
Sunday, Jan. ZS , at 2 p.m.
with the public invited for
the open house.
Coach C. D. Hawhee saw six
of his talented Tigers score in

double figures Friday as they''
rolled up·quarter leads ·of 11·2, .
41-16, and 71·29.
Wellston's Charlie Snare .hit
the first goal of the game to put
the Rockets on top,2-ll with·7:04
left in ·the first pedod b~t
before another Golden Rockel
poinl·was scored Waverly had
raced to a 17-i first period lead
and increased. ,it to 26-2 with
5:06 remaining in the seconcf
period before the Rockets hit

again.
'flave Salyers led the Tigers
with 20 points wilh Biil Maloy
adding 17,.John Shoemaker 16,
Mike.Oyer 14, and Ed Thomp'
son and j)oug Pfeifer each
getting 12.
.
·
Charlie Snare~s 13 .pOints
topped the Rocket scoring.
Wellston's Dave Sou~ers;
.who entered the contest
ranked as the SEOAL's
second leadil!g scorer with a
.

19.6 average, was llmjted to
just four po!nll; and charged
with Zl lurn.overs by the
tenacious Tiger defense.
Waverly canned 39 of 74.field
goals for .a blistering 53 pet.
and dropped in 16 of 25 free
throws. ·
They also hauled down 47
rebounds with Mike Oyer
grabbing 13.
The Rockets hit ·on 13 of 32
shots for a 40 pet. average and

Glouster .spills·Eas~er~ five, 66-52

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern's Eagles had a cold
night with not too much
working right Friday with tfie ·
Glouster Tomcats on the
Eastern hardwood, losing their
third non-league game of the
season, 66-52.
Eastern, now 6-3 overall and
still 6-1 in Southern Valley
Conference play, got in big
trouble right away, trailing 16-

6 after the first eight minutes.

They never caught up.
Although three Eagles hit in
double fi gure s, with Tim
Spencer ·leading Eastern with
15 points, they couldn't match
the hot hands of the visitors
who were' led by Craw's 22
points on six fielders and 10
free throws.
.
Eastern's average from the
field was not available, but

they were only 50 pet. at the
free line :_ 14 for 28 - while
Glouster was 20 for 25 for 80
pet.
By ljaUtime Eastern had
pulled up to trail by only 7 at 3124. The rest period cured none
of the losers' shooting troubles,
as they had fallen behind after
three quarters by 15 at 47-32.
Eastern's .Randy.' Boring ,
third in the SVAC scoring

Bruins roll on,.92-64
By VITO STELLINO
UP! Sports Writer
It was a typical story Friday
night. The UCLA Bruins, who
had won 57 straight, were
meeting the University of San
Francisco. Yes, the same USF
team · that set the collegiate
record of 60 straight during the
Bill Russell era in the mid '50s.
And the Dons came in with a
respectable team ranked 13th
in the nation with a 12-1 record.
It had all the ingredients of a
great drama wilh the Dons
obviously trying to protect
their record.
But, alas, UCLA didn 't let
much drama build. The score
was 6-0 after two minutes; 42-25
at halftime and 78-40 midway

· nullpups

,,

be too much for Jackson as the
two combined for 26 points.
Danny Dodson sank four field

WAVERLY - A re cord
Southeastern Ohio League
crowd of 2,800 fa~s paid their
way into the glistening new
Waverly Field House Friday
night to watch their undefeated
Tigers .romp over winless
We Us ton by a 94-31 score .
It was not only the first ..
varsity contest ever played in
the new structure but · it
marked the first home contest
·of the season for the Tigers,

roll over

in the second half when Coach expected to go for No. 61 at
John Wooden took the subs out. South Bend in a nationally
The final score was 92-64 and televised game next Saturday.
the Bruins had their 58th
The veteran UCLA' coach
straight victory tucked away . . said that Walton played "his ·
The victory wasn't surprising best game of the year conbut the margin of victory was. sidering the lenglh of time he
Breaking that record of 60 played." Walton was lifted
straight is about ali the Bruins midway in the second half.
and Coach Wooden have left to
In one of those Wooden un·
do. They've won six con- derstatements, he added, "it's
secutive
NCAA
titles going to take a fine team lo
(remember when two straight beat us. "
was considered a real fea t?)
Walton had· 22 points and 22
and eight in the last nine years. rebounds while forward Larry
But they haven't been able to Farmer added 15 and Keith
win 60 straight.
Wilkes 12. Kevin Restani led
Now , with Bill Walton the losers wilh 19.
leading the way in his junior
UCLA and San Francisco
year , the streak seems were the only top-ranked
destined to go on indefinitely if teams in action Friday night.
he doesn't suffer any injuries. In other games, Washington
The Bruins haven 't lost since State beat Idaho, 78-61, Oral
January of 1971 when Notre Roberts downed Los Angeles
Dame and Austin Carr upset State, 95-86, Butler topped Air
the Bruins at South Bend . ·
Force, 61-56, and Yale beat
Ironically, the Bruins are Wesleyan , 76-46.

.. ' ...,

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landowners in Nfa~on (:ounty
By Joha Cooper
Soli Conservation Service
PT. PLEASANT - The
Western Soil Conservation
District had a plan of work
meeting to discuss items which
would be promoted by landowners in Mason County and
also by other groups to further
the cause of conservation in
general. Edward Bumgarner,

WAS NOW
1971 Comet 4 dr., Blue, auto., small V-8, a real sharp car.
$2295 $2088
1971 Chev. Nova 2 dr. Gold, 6 cyl., std. shift.
$1995 . . 51850
1971 Datsun 510,2 Dr., maroon, automatic.
$17.95 .. $1645
1971 V. W. Super Bug, dark blue, 4 speed, 24,000 miles
$1895 .. $1788
1971 VW Sug, orange, real sharp, low mileage.
51895 . . $1688
·J97D Fiat 850,2 dr., blue. A real nice work car.
$1095 $888
1970 Maverick 2 dr. Blue 6 cyl., auto., air cond.
$1695 51488
1970 Toyota Corona 4 dr. auto., air cond. Sharp.
$1795 $1688
1970 VW Sq. Back Sta. Wgn., 4 speed, air cond.
52195 51988
1969 VW Sq. Back Stil. Wgn., 4 speed, sharp car, (red).
$1695 $1488
1969 VW Fast Back. Beige, automatic-.
$1595 $1388
1968 VW Sta. Wgn. 7 pass. (Bus), red &amp; white, a nice unit for the large
$1795 $1588
family.
1967 VW Bug, light blue, 4 speed.
$995 $888

beautification and with some to
be used as .Chrisimas trees.
WARD D. O'DELL, whose
farm is on the head of Big
Buzzard Creek, became a
cool!'!rator of lhe district and
asked for planning assistance.
In talking wilh Mr. O'Dell,
Denver Yoho of SCS foulld out
that he had formerly lived in
Jefferson County on a farm and
had a district conservation
plan on his farm In lhat cbunty.
He was well pleased with lhe
services provided and wanted
to develop his Mason County
farm by means of 'a con. servation plan and district
assistance:
AN INTERESTJNG
cooperate' of the soil conservation district is the
Southern West Virginia Beagle
Club. Its 175 acres is located off
the Pliney Road at the head of

16 Mile Creek. One hundred
acres of this land is enclosed
with a chainJ!nk fence four feet
tall with barbed wire on top.
The purpose of lhe club is to
develop the land so as to
produce the largest possible
rabbit population. Members
hold many beagle field trials on
this land and people come from
all over this and adjacent
states to their trials.
We were on lheir land about
a year ago with the SCS
Wildlife Biologist Edward
Gaskins and Department of
Natural Resources Biologist
Paul Matthews to help them
wilh a revised . plan. They
asked for this new plan. so that
they would be able to carry out
new practices which would
,increa~ the rabbit population.
As we went over the land we
jumped
rabbits
very

one of lhe supervisors of lhe
district in Mason County,
presided at the meeting.
One item which we are
making note of at this time is
acceleration of the tree
planting program which, it is
hoped, will come about. It was
pointed out that P!lople plant
trees for · ~arious purposes.
Some
of
these
are
beautification, erosion control,
Christmas tree production and
reforestation.
Westvaco Corporation is
making
Virginia
Pine
seedlings avallable to land·
r•wners at a cost of $4 per
COLUMBUS - Candidates
f•1ousand. Jim Lemaster, local for public office during this
· t·•Jilresentative of Westvaco, year's local elections, In many
: tdd · us lhat this was con- cases, must have their
siderably be)ow the cost of Declaration of Candidacy or
tpuction of seedlings. '
· v~ominatlng 9 .,Ji'~II:\I!Jn filed
''The Western District "!ill before the February 7, 1973
huve a tree planting crew deadline .at 4 p.m., announced
available to landowners who
wish to use lhis service.
HAROLD EDWARDS, )Vhose
farm is on Greer Road, is in·
terested in building a pond for
winter time use by his
livestock. Denver Yoho of SCS
POMEROY - Meigs County
made a preliminary in·
vestigation and gave him in· dairymen are in\lited to attend
formation concerning lhe soils a meeting Thursday afternoon,
and the' suitabillty of a pond in Jan. 25, from 12:30 to 2:30p.m.
lhe location which ·Mr. Ed· in .ihe vocational agricultural
room of the Meigs High School
• wards chose.
arranged
through
the
· : Mr. Edwards has been a
of
Robert
• cooperator of the Western· Soil cooperation
Spurlock,
V
o-Ag
teacher
at
! Cooservat!on Distrlct and has
: bad a plan on his farm since Southern High School; Everett
·l 1948. When he bought ad· Holcomb, Vo-Ag teacher at
• dit!onal land, Lionel Smith of Meigs High School, and C. E.
•
; SCS helped him with a plan Blakeslee, County Extension
Agent, Agriculture.
: revision in 1964. . •
Dr. John Staubus, l):xtension
: The record shows that he has
( carried out many practices on Dairyman from Ohio State
~ his farm. These include U~iversity; will discuss some
~ clearing and reseeding of land, . of the alternatives in' feeding
: building a farm pond and the dairy cattle for maximum
~ planting of several trees. His production in 1973 including
~ - purpese In planting trees was consideration of protein costs
for
erosion
control, and alternatives.

DON WATTS VOLKSWAGEN, INC.
195 Upper River Rd. (Ohio Rt. 7), Gallipolis. Ohio.
Phone (614) 446-9800
· ··

·'"n"" 9'" 1" ' """'"'"

Monll\iy 12 Noon tll9 P.M.
Tues:, Wed., Fri. 8 A.M. lol P.M.
Thur. 8 A.M. to 9 P.M.-Sat. 8 A.M. to 12 Noon

Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown.
Elections will be held next
. November 6 for municipal and
township oflicers, members
of boards ,q!~u~atlon, judges
and clerks of police and
municipal courts . Chief
Election Officer Ted Brown
said that all ~andidates for
these offices, except the
municipal judges, will have to
file their declarations by the
deadline, if they plan to seek
nomination at the May 8

D ,
will
rurynten

meet Thursday

f

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Jim Walter builds a better buy!

OHIO 45619 ..

Old Hwy . 52
P. 0. Box 250
· Ph : 867-3153

'

(T\ OPEN 8 'tU i
~. Weekdays
.

.. . . OPEN. 8'tll6
.Sat.·&amp; Sun.

CD

.

.. ·

..... Jim Waller#Jllhf
(Moll to ·n.•arast offlcel
I would likt to hove mor•
Information ond •the cott
building on my property . I
understand there would be
no abll;!ltlon · to buy' and
that you would give me these

I :~:••
I CITY
I
(Dr

of charge.

~

,

.
.

•ir

$TAt,
.

I I OWI\JINpiriy I"
. '
' ~~ .................. .- " " " - i -

.~
'

. ~.......;.

...... _

I

I

I

I

.

•Cal.f Nipple Bottles

•Grass Tdany Blocks •Water Softener Salt

Pet Food Supplies

Service Center

1. D.·North·Pr~duce ·Co•.

CENTRAL SOYA."

Gallipolis, 0.

Vine Street

.

OF OHIO

1

,J

• ,_,ilk Filters

Supp~

·I

I

• Calf Nipple .Pails

•Mastitis Treatment • Protein Blocks

Your Farm

' I

• Milk Replacer '

• Poultry Equipment • Gloves

IN 4 • 25 LB. BAG ~TS.

I

.• '
""l1hbon)

Anywav You Spell It, Backwards, Sideways.
Up or Down It Still Speels the Best Milk
Replacer.

I·.

ADDIISI

Ttlt.,ho"'

'·

I

1, 11 ,.;~i r.ut~ ~~~,. li•o ~lmt!e"'

..

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LEAVES HOSPITAL BED
LOS ANGELES (UP!) Singer Vikki Carr. under
treatment at Baylor Center in
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (UP!) , Houston for an undetermined
- A work stoppage by guards respiratory aibne~t. left her
at the Southern Ohio Correc- hospital bed against doctors'
tional Facility has apparently orders Friday ·to keep an
ended at the urging of engagement with President
Teamsters Union officials who Nixon's inaugural committee,
represent the striking guards, a spokesman here said. "It had
officials said Saturday.
nolhing to do with politics, but
James Scholten, an assistant . a girl doesn't stand up the
superintendent
at
the President of her country,"
correctional institution, said Miss Carr said. "If he can put
only 13 called in sick for the 10 up·with.a frog in my throat, so
p.m. shift Friday and 15 for the can 1." ·
early shift today. There had
been about 50 calling in sick
earlier lhis week. Herman
THE DUKE RELEASED
Ball, chief · steward and
LOS ANGELES (UP!) business manager L. 0. Henry, Bandleader Duke Ellington
issued a joint statement late was releas.ed from St. Vin·
Friday urging all corrections cent's Hospital Friday
officers to ·return to their next !~!lowing an eight-day stay for
regular shift.
treatment of influenza.

i

\

Call 6r write your l~al Jim .Walter H01111s' manager
today. He'll give you complete lnfDI'IIIItiOII and the !
low cost of building a leur-bedroom. two-bath· h111111
for· you .. . or. any other ho111t you want ar nnd c;.;, '
and uplain how qualifild prapany owntrs can .get
INSTANT MORTGAGE FI~ANCING. Isn't it fillll Yl!l'
mavttl up ,to a "IJetltr illy" by Jim Waltw? Sure it is.

so. CHARLESTON, w. VA. 25303 I
P. 0. Box 836i
60&amp; 1st Ave. SOuth
U. S. Hwy. 25 (Nitro, W. Va.}
Ph: 727:2296

l

• OVER 20 "BETTER BUY". MOI;)ELS
• ~UILT 'ON YOUR PROPERTY

.

Primary Election this spring.
There are exceptions to this
rule when the candidate is
filing for township offices,
member of a board of
educQtion or municipal offices
- except municipal judge - in
a municipality of less lhan
2,000 population and in some
instances where the population
exceeds 2,000. Nominating
petitions fqr these latter offices
must be filed no later than 4
p.m. of August 8, 1973.

TIME TO BUY

I

'

.\

Policewoman subdues Gl

pCH:!CIOCIIIICI!I:DCIOt:IC:M:ICH:ICIOt:IC~t:IC:IC~t:IC~

\

even furnish the n111erials and includo the .cost in
your mertgage if you like. . ·

I JIM WALTER HOMES
of
I

CHESAPEA~.j:,

I

'3rd &amp; $Jtlm011

Pro-L81• flo~ freely, even In zero weather.

•
...

Pro·LII• blending proce,. locks In all lngre·
dients, prevent&amp; separation or breakdown
during storage.

threatened to blow up the plane
at 6 a.m. if his demands were
Pro-i.aa repels summer Illes and Insects.
not met.
Pro·t.n'is easy to teed, particularly with freeHe was subdued about 3 a.m.
choice ayslems.
EST when he emerged from
All US AIOUT I'IUI-W AID IIIW IT CAll m
ForSMop
INTO
YOUR fWIIItl OPUAnDI.
the aircraft's cockpit and was
. wrestled to the ground by
Policewoman Marty Green,
assigned to the Louisville
narcotics squad. Policewoman
Green, a petite former airlines
hostess, had been negotiating
with the would-be skyjacker
for more than four hours and
had offered herself for the
hostage mechanic.
The s.oldier, identified as
Dennis V. Durkin, 17, of PittsServing Mei!ls, Gdllia
burgh, Pa., was hustled ·off the
and Mason Counties
.
field by law enforcement
Ph. 992-2181
agents and taken into custody
Jack
.W. Carsey, Mgr.
by the FBI. Thomas W. Kit·
chens, special agent in cliarge·
of the FBI's Louisville office
Look for the Big "L" on Route i &amp; ll at the
said he would be charged with
· Upper End of POmeroy
committing a crime aboard an
aircraft: The FBI said Durkin
, OPEN DAILY UNTIL 6:00 PM
RACINE - At the · annual has been AWOL from Ft. Knox
business meeting of the Racine since Jan. 6.
Baptist Church,' The Rev.
Edward B. Fischer of Piqua
was unanimously called to
serve as intorim pastor of the
Racine .Baptist-Bethlehem
Baptist pastorate. Rev.
Fischer will perform and
extend aU the pastoral services
of the two churches\
Rev. Fischer has served as
imterim pastor since 1965 when
he resigned as pastor of lhe
Piqua Baptist Church after 14
years there to becom~
superintendent of the new
Baptist Home of Upper Miami
facility for the aged. He has
been a minister of Christ since
1932. Durinv the war years
from 1942·1946, he served as a
Chaplain.
·
Racine Baptist has a revival
scheduled for lhe first full week
In February, beginning on the
~th and ending the lith wilh the
morning service, when Dr.
Russell Jon~s . director of lhe
upholstery colors, and 3 different
This one has the other look, the
Baptist Forward Program, will
interiors? Power tor '73 can be
other features, the othef points
deliVer meSSjlges and work
six, a 345 V-8 or a 392 V-8,
of value. It's the only pickup with
closely wilh The Rev. Fischer.
teamed with 3-speed automatic
collapsible steering column as
transmission or 3, 4 and 5-speed
standard equipment, the one with
manuals. See the '73 list of lux·
the gas tank mountE~d out's ide the
uries, too-air conditioning,
·"
cab. And who else offers you e
~ STARTS BLAZE
stereo, the works! ·
choice of 13 ·b.o dy co.l ors, 4
SEVIlLE, Spain (UP!)- An
Compare International®••• The Other Pickup.
unidentWed man emptying a
can of gasoline in a night club
m!
started a blaze that kille4
seven persons Friday ·night.
Police arrested the man, who
walked into La Vaquita night·
club, pro.duced a can of
gasoline a11d tipped it ·over a
gas fire causing. fiamei which
engulfed the bar in seconds.
Six barmaids and a bill'·
tender were k!lled. Two
customers were serious)y
Injured in . the blaze, which
burned out lhe interior oi the
establishmeut. An undisclosed
liWnber escaped .

LOUISVILLE, Ky . (UP!) Apolicewoman early Saturday
subdued a young AWOL soldier
who sprayed a crowded airport
terminal with shotgun pellets
and then tried to hijack a
jetliner for a transatlantic
flight.
The husky young soldier,
garbed in Army fatigues and
carrying his shotgun in a duffel
bag, claimed he was dying of
cancer, shot up the Standiford
Field terminal, then seized lhe
Ozark Airlines DC9 and held an
airline mechanic hostage for
nearly six hours . He

POMEROY

Piqua minister

called here as

interim pastor

INTERNATIONAL
PICKUP·

The Other· Pickup

a

----~~-TRADE. NOW I-~---

Meigs ..Equipment CO.
,

' Ph. 992-2176

.G.pa!IS, UhlO

c

I·

'·'

LIQUID

Protein Supplement

Stoppage ended

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

time anjoying ylllir home and your family while yeur
neighbors are filing up and painting. That"s because.
we usa building materials thsl are especially selected
tor long lifo .. . aluminum windows, hardboard'
"wood made better" siding thai holds paigt yurs
longer than ordinary siding and hiavy duly 11101ing,
to mention a law.
Now, to keep the cost of your home evan' lowar,
'Jim Walter will build on your property, campletely
finishing the outside- dawn to the last nail, the
shutters and the paint - but stop at almost any stage
of insida completion ... you do the rest and save
money. The handier you are with tools and the IIIOrt
interior wllik you do, tho mare you'll save. We'll

.

Some petitions filed early

We Also Haye Sever.al Big Cars at Reduced Prices

.

ForleefCIIUI

=·

Some families need a four-bedroom home ... others
just~ one. Some don' I!!!!!! or want a home quite
. that large . But, at Jim Walter Homes it doesn't
matter whal!!!!!!! or" ~ you have ... we build
them all .. . lour bedrooms . . . three . . . two or just
one. Whmver you wan1. Jim Walter "'better buy"'
homes are custo111 built on your property in a wide
variety ot sizes and models ... and thay all accent
comfort and funclional beauly with spacial emphasis
on LOW ~· What do you· want? We'll build it
for you .
·
And thesa custom built homes conform to high stand·
ards of quality 10 give you years and years ·of low
maintenance upkeep. You'll spsnd more of your spare

frequently, so that the
population now is at a high
leveL
W. R. Dolan, a r,epresentative of their group, was
recently talking wilh us about
carrying out some of the
planned practices. He ordered
200 Norway spruce from the
Western District to be planted
at strategic places on lheir
property.
Some of. the other practices
they are carrying out are
managed clipping of strips
with a three,year clipping
rotation, reseeding some areas
with ladino clover and lhe use
of lime and fertilizer to in·
crease forage for use by
rabbits in the winter. They also
feed prepared rabbit food at
many locations inside the
enclosure.

'

functioning but in 1971 only 24. ·
.
_ .
tlfan the non-A. t. sired herds for every breeil1- Ayrshire. 561
These 24 organizations owned or controlled an average of 96 · polinds; &amp;own Swiss, 2,053 pounds ; Guernsey, 1,244 Pou!)&lt;~a;
sires, with each sire averaging 3,620 cows bred per year. Sixty· Holstein, 958 pounc!s; Jersey, 2,086 pounds; and 1\lilklg Shortlhree perceni of all sires in A. L were Holstein and 14 pet. of sires horn, 1,328 pounds. :... . .
.
·
.
·
were beef.bulls. The significance ot the Information to the dairy
if vie u8e'herd slle of 52 cows and a milk price of $6.25 per
industry is that the ge.,etic improvement In &lt;lairy replacements hundred pounds, the A. L sired Holstein herda, for example,
should be enhanced by the il\creased use.of A. L and decreased . produced $3,068 more per lactation on the average than the nonuse of beef 'sires on dairy cows.
A.I. sired Holstein hetll,. In the nineofltate area studied .
Probably the biggest reason fpr the A. L Increase is the · The recently comPleted Iowa study also shows that pifdevelopment of more genetically superior bulls lhrough sound ferences were greater than earlier studies made in New York
young sire sampling programs. Dr. Taylor says the results of and ~iclligan; says Taylor.
using good A. 1. proven bulls show there is a big dollar advantage ·
The key to the young sire sampling program is to locate the
in this method of breeding.
.·
top nnlrtuils and produce offspring that are genetically superior.
Several research studies have ~.een conducted using official Then progeny test these young sires and retain only the best ones ·
DHIA dairy production records to compare production of A.L for heavy' duty in A.I.
•
·
sired cows with natural service sired cows. The .latest study was
In the regional study, all ~Y lactation records from a'll
conducted at Iowa State University using data (rom nine mid·
states .were sent to U.S.D.A. every four months. The U.S,D.A.
'western states.
rank.id
the
cows
for · superior
production. ·
Results show lhat herds sires by A. L bulls averaged more Then; a list of the top two percent of the cows for
each breed was prepared and ihe sires of all the cows ranked on
the basis of their daughters' production reCOI'ds.
Next, A. I. organizations made selected matings to.produce
young siras which were mated to produce at least 50,daughters
. ..
.
.
with production recorda. Following this the young sires were
rllllked, and those with the highest producing daughters were put
into heavy ser\lice. ,About 9ne young sire out of 5 ranks good
enoogh to be placed In the. stud . .
COLuMBUS- "We're 'over 100 exhlbllors," said Bill
Davidson of the up~omlng Power Show Ohio, to be tield at
the Ohio State Fairgrounds, Columbus, on Saturday and
Sunday, Febru8ry 3 and 4.
Davidson, Executive Director of the Oblo Alsoctatt011
of Power Equipment Retallers, the Show's spllliBor, said
lhat exhibit participaat slgnoupo still being processed may
tax the capacity of the Hc:re·Multi-Purpose building ibat
is to beusedforlhe Showddsyear.
Power Sbow exhibits will Include equipment and
related accessories for agriculture, construction, In·
dustry, recreation, gardening, lawn care, home and
business services, and public facillty management
"There will be ev~lng from g!H!arts and snowmoblles
to giant tractors and earthmovers," Qjlvidson said.
Special program features during the two-day Show,
which will be open eadh day from 9 to 5, will include home
management and arls demoustratio111 fbr the ladles,
Pro Lila Is a protein supplement. Use ProLas and you buy only what you can't grow.
movies, tours of lhe famous Ohio State Historical
Pro-uia provides low cost proleln, reduces
Museum, continuous cafeteria service, and valuable prize
teed cash ouliay.
drawings every hour on the hour, Complimentary tickets
Pro-Ln Is vllamln/mlneral tortltled (espeare available from ·bUDdreds of equipment salea and
cially phosphorus) 10 give well-balanced
ration mixed wllh grain.
· service firms throughout Ohio and neighboring states.
l'fo•LIIalmproves feed palatability, sllmulates
for llairy Cattle
rumen action. Improves digestive process for
·..;~:::::::::::&lt;::~:::::::::~::::,::&lt;:::,:::::::::::;::::~:::::::::$:~::::--.&gt;.::::::&gt;.":::~:=~~:::::=:~wl::;:;:;:::=::r~18?.l:::::f:;:;~)
more complele, ettlclent utllizallon ot low·
protein leeds.
Pro-LII•ImpriJves herd heallh. aids in ketosis
control In dairy cattle.

Over 100 .exhibitors signed
for big Power Show Ohio

'

lay ofthe land

'"Sel'tilte'WPa~I'S~Office

.

The rate of Increase hlis been about 2 pet,' per year,.During
·
. ' this period there has ni!Ver been a periOd of rapid growth, but in
.
POMEROY - Many changes bave OCCUlTed in the dairy only one year has there failed to~ anY Increase .
... buainess In the last 25 years. No change perballS bas been more
Ohio is slightly above the United states average with 52.6 pet
siiP!lftcant.tharl .the Cj)Dii!med Increase In ihe nwnber of cows of dairy cows bred A. (b~t falls short of lhe top seven states. The
bred by artificial insemination (A.L)
top seven states are Hawaii wUh 96.6 pet; Alaska 91.8 pet.;
According to Dr. Wallace Taylor, Extension Dairy Specialist Fjqrida 77.4 pet. ; California 69.7 pet; Washington 64.4 pet.;
Connecticut 64 pet.; ~nd PenJl!lylvania 64 pet.
·
the NEW in'FARMING
BEEF SIRES HAVE CONTINUED to be used for about lhe
at Ohio State University, over 51 pet of. the dajry cows and same number of services qver the pa~t decade but are now being
heifers ane about ~0 pet. of the beef t:ows In Ohio are bred by used more on beef cows and less on dail'y cows.
In 1964, appro~imately one million dairy ~s were bred to
artW~linsemlnation; Each year there is an Increase both In
Qhlo and on a natlo!181 basis In the u!le ofA.I.
·
· · beef sires, and ill the S8IIIE1 y~ar only one-half million beef cows
· Dr. Harry L. Barr and Phllllp Holdaway reporting in the' were bred io beef sires. ·In 1971, the figures were reversed with
recent Issue of The Ohio Herd Improvement Observer listed the dairy breedings to lle!!f sires cut in half-to one-half million and
Increase in the perceJitage of dairy cows and heifers b~ by A·. L approximately one million beef cows were bred to beef sires. The
by year. Starting with 1.1 pet. in 1945 each year bas seen a · per~tage of beef cows bred A. I. wasat 3.4pct. in 1971.
Organizations offering A.l. servire continue to merge or
s!IP!Wcant percentage increase so that by 1950 the figure was 9. 7
retire
from the Industry. In 1953, lhere were 96 organizations
pet; 10years later 31.8pet.; and in 19704Upet.

All Of These EconoJ11y Cars
Have Been Reduced

". i ,,

C. E. BIUealee
CoDDty Exteuloa Ageat,. Agri&lt;UIIure .

.

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Conservation goals reviewed by

a· low cost
4 bedroom home ?

GALLIPOLIS - Coach Fred
Gibson's Athens Bullpups
knocked the Gallipolis Blue
Imps out of a tie for third place
in the SEO reserve standings
Friday by thumping Coach Ed
Pauley's quintet, 44-21.
The Bullpups are now 5-:J in
league play . The Imps are 4-4
in conference play, and 7-4 on
the year.
Todd Ellwood, fr es hman
guard, paced the winners with
16 points: Arnie Chonko added
14. Mike Sickles led the Imps
with eight points. David Brown

field goal to put them on top for
the rest of the game.
Mar k Buchanan, Greg
Fannin, and Mark Lewis paced
the Jackson reserves with 10
points apiece. They are now 1-7
on lhe year .
· Meigs reserves have a 5-3
record. They will fa ce the
·
Waverly reserves next Friday,
RIO GRANDE - A new
MEIGS - Coates n .18 ,
program for intramural ac· Dodson 4·0-8: Au II 2 H : s.
Wal burn 2·2·6; Qualls 4·0·8;
tlvity has been slated for lhe Cremeans
2-1.5, Tolals 22-1.s1.
spring semester at Rio Grande
JACKSON - Fannin 5·0-10 ;
Bucha na n 5·0·10; Ridge n . JO ;
College.
Gr
ill o 2·0·4: Jose ph 2-3-7;
Currently, three men's Lewis
1·0·2. Totals 19-5-43.
I
programs, and one women 's
By Quarters
Meigs
5 17 39 51
program,
and
one Jackson
12 24 33 43 CONTRACfS SIGNED
coeducational program has
NEW YORK •(UP!) - Jon
been initiated. In the men's
Matlack, National League
Friday's Result s
division, a team basketball
Rookie of lhe Year, celebrated
tournament
has
been So. Col o. 86 Kan .. Pilsbg 77
his 23rd birthday Friday by
scheduled for each Tuesday No. Colo. 91 Kan. Tchrs 85
· putting Ills name to a 1973
Colo . Mines 95 Ft. Lewis 7A
contract ·calling "for a better
and Wednesday evenin,. from Cornell
82 Lawrence 55
8-11 p.m. at Lyne Center. Also, No. Oak. 69 Rl ver .Fa lls 57
lhan 50 per cent raise. "
a men's racketball tournament St. Cloud St. 71 Mich. Tech 65
Matlack, who pitched for
Winona
St.
66 Morrs.Minn. 56
Is being proyided during Bemid!i St. 102 SW Sf. 59
"slightly over the rookie
minimum of $13,500," last
recreation time within lhe
year, will be paid about $22,500.
same facility while a men's
intr~mural ·wrestling tour, coedu.c ational volleyball
Shortstop Bud Harrelson also
signed
his 1973 contract, but his
namen t wlll be held on tournament
is
being
February 2 and 3.·. ·
establjs~ed every Thursday called for a cut from $65,000 to
$60,000. Harrelson said he
The women's program will evening at 8:30p.m. . ·
begin with a singles badminton
Over 30 intramural acti.vities accepted a cu,t "because I
··
tournament which is scheduled have been proposed for the .deserved it."
Harrelson batted only .215
eath Monday evening from 9- current semester. Most acbut
did lead the team in stolen
10:30 p.m. Iti addition, an open tivities encourage both faculty
bases with 12 in 16 attempts.
taeultr • staff • studen't and student participation. ·
•

converted five• of 1l free
throws.
· ~.
They also ha~led 'doWrl 47
rebounds · with Mike ~y~r ·
grabbing 13.
The Rockets hit o~ 13·of 32
shots for a 40.pet. average"and
converted five of 11 bee
throws.
Randy Peoples had four of
Wellston's.J2 rebounds.
The victory left Waverly with
a season mark of 10.0 and il.j) in
the SE0AL while WeUsi&lt;lrl is at;·
lhe other extreme with arl·o.lif'
season slate and 11.8 in the
league.
,
WHLSTON (31) - Snare 5.
3-13; Souders 2·0-4; Gilliland J•
0-2; Arnold H· 10; Peoples )·0·
2. TOTALS 13·5·31.
WAVERLY (94)- Maloy 6·
5-17; Oyer 5·4·14; Pfeifer. H·
12;
T~ompson
6-0·12 ;
Shoemaker 8·0· 16; Salyers 9·2·
20; Tracy 0·1·1; Young J . p.~
TOTALS Jr-16·94.
'.
Score by quorters:
Wellston
2 12 13 4-31
Waverly
17 24' 30 23-94
.Reserve· score: · Waverly 56.
Wellston 23.
·

What do ·you want ...

Blue Imps

added seven .
Athens led 6-4 after one
period. It was tied !7-ali at
halftime. Athens outscored the
Gallian s 16 _4 in the third
period , th en blanked the
l;'auiey mcn 11-ll in the fin al
stanza to win going away.
Box score:
BULL PUPS (441 _ Ellwood,
S-6-16; Gardner, 0-0·0; Stem.
pel , 1·0·2; Heady. 1·0·2; Butner,
0·0·0; Faulkner. 1·0·2; Horn, 00·0; Sm ith, 1·0-2; Chonko, 3-8·
14; Hicks. 1·0·2: Dailey, 2-0-4;
Green. 0·0·0. TOTALS 15-14-44.
BLUE IMPS (21) - Groth, J0-2; 'Niday, 1-2-4; Brown, 3-1-7;
. Valentine, 0-0.0 ; Slcltles, 4-0-8;
Watson, o.o.o; Burris, 0-0-0; T.
Myers, 0·0-0; Johnson, 0-0·0;
Warren, 0-0·0; J. Myers, o.o.o;
Watts , 0-0-0; Chang , 0-0-0;
Schopis, 0-0-0. TOTALS 9-3-21 .
By Quarters :
8 II 16 11 - 44
Bullpups
4 13 4 Q-21
Blue Imps

VARSITY
parade with a 16.1 average,
Eastern
6 24 32 52
was held to 12. John Sheets put Glouster
16 31 47 66
Eastern - Dill 2·0·4, Boring
13 on the board on four fielders
6-0-12,
Spencer 5-5-JS; Atherton
and five free lhrows.
1-2·4, ~ross 1'1·3, Sheeti4·S-13,
Eastern's reserves lost their Baum·O·l·l. Totals 19-14-52.
Glouster . - Severs 2-S-9,
game 40-26 in the preliminary
Cardaras J.S-11. Crow 6-10·22,
rriatch.
.
Gillott 4-0-8, 'Slkoriski 8-0·16.
Eastern was to play at Totals 27-20-66.
RESERVES
Symmes Valley Saturda)&lt;: njght
Eas·lern
4 17 19 26
in an important league contest.
10 24 29 40

'

Nation's dairy industry a~ceptiitg A. I. rapidly ,

~p i'

... ....,
; ..

JACKSON - When you're hot you're hot , as the
Meigs High basketball team proved by whipping the
Jackson Ironmen 54-41 here Friday night. It wps the
· sixth win in ' 3 row for the Marauders. Jackson
slipped farther into no-man's land of the
Southeastern Ohio League race, at 1-7,
Meigs jumped out to an early 2-0 lead, but the
lronmen caught up on a free throw and baskels by
·Rocky Martin and Tom Conroy. The Marauders
· failed to score again until less than four minutPs
were left in the first quarter.

'

I

·,

Jackson falls to
Marauders
in SEO battle

Rio plans
programs
for spring

54·41.

SIX,

.

.
Rer:ord SEO crowd sees Waverly wzn·

•

JACKSON - AMeigs rally in
lhe third quarter gave the
Marauder reserves a 51-43
victory 'over the Jackson
lronbays here Friday night.
The combination of Lonnie
Coates and Perk Ault proved to

23-The slmdayTimes-Sentlnel,Sunday, Jan. 21, 1973

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I,

Pomeq, Ohio

�... ..... ,,

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... . .. .

' ~

~

..',·• .
'

' "'-

r

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· ',' " " ,

',.

...

T,

j

....

\ . ,·

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"'...

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\; ~·~ .. ;•.;: ,.. .~·~~~!' ,,:.~l~.-::'41)

•

24 - The Sundlll' Times- Sentinel, Sunday ,Jan. 21,1973

~For

Notice

For Rent

For· Rent

l-17-5tc

. For wa~~~~s Service
21st, 1 p. m . FactOry choked
5 (:ents per word one im.e rtlon
guns only . Seeond place
M in imum Charge 75C
shooters get free shot in next
11 cen.ts per word three
match. Assorted meals .
c~n!lec ufive insertions.
.
Racine Gun Club.
\8 cen t,s per word six con.
l-18-31c
·secutlve 'i nsertions .
·25 Per Cerit Discount on paldi
a,ds and ads paid within 10 da ys. WILL Tfi'E party thai picked up
my male Beagle , dog In
·
CARD OF THANKS '
Langsvi lle, Saturday, Jan.
.
&amp; OBITUARY
13th. please br ing him back to
Sl. 50 for SO word minim1.1m'.
Each add it ion al word 2c. ·
Langsville and turn him .
,
BLIND ADS
loose, day or night and he will
Addltiorra l 2Sc Char'ge per
lind his way home ; family
Advertisement .
pet ; had over 12 years ; Jim
,
OFFIC,E HOURS
Eads, Langsvil le, Oh io.
8:30a.m . to 5:00p .m. Dally ,
l -18·31C
8: 30 · a .m . to 12: 00 Noon
Saturday ,

WISH to express our heartfelt
thank·s to all th e relat ives and

· friends who came to the
"Open House" on Sunda ,

January 14th and helped

ro

make our 50th Anniv ersary

such a wonderful day . Also
special thanks to th e nieces
and nephews and ali who

·helped in any way to make
this possible. Mr. and Mrs.

Bulldozer Radiator to

,

awer...

Help Wanted
Cl lllllo_ ....

BAR MAID, apply In person ;
Hi -Ho Bar. Middleplrl ; equal

,..,

opportunity employer.

1-2 1-Jic
NEED MONEY? SEL~ KNAPP
SHOES ... Part time or full
time. Nq investment. Send for

tree se lling kit. High commissions plu s bonus. Wl"ite to

E. M. Bistow, Knapp Shoes,
Br ockton, Massachusetts
02401.
1-21 -ltc

-,....-- - - - -

Business Qpportuniti es

B,USINES S Opportunity .for
m~n. and women . Inquire by
wrol1ng : R. D. 2, Box 73,

Dale Bachner or. Dale and

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of our
dear

husband, father

and

Dalton

A.

Grover who was· kil led In a

coa l mine, Jan . 20, 1967 ,
' Deep In our heart lies a picture
of our loved one laid to rest.
In memory 's frame we shall
keep It, Because he wa s one of

the best.
To your grave we often wander,
flower s we place with tender
care,
Seems we ca n fee l your
presence near us1As we sa dly

linger there.
A&gt; times goes by we miss you

Racine, Oh io.

BE YOUR
OWN·
BUSINESS
MAN

1·21 -llp

l-19-6lp

Pets For Sale
JU ST ARRIVED, direct from
Florida, tropi cal fish by the
hundreds, at Showalter's Wet
Pet, Chester, Oh fo.
l-10-19tp

,

PAR KVIEW Kennels going out
of busi ness. Big price
reduction on all dog s. All AKC. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
Streets. Middleport, Ohio.
12-13-lfc

SERVICE STATION
DEALERSHIP AVAILABLE
IN MIDDLEPORT, 0.

For Sale
· 1950 CHRVSLER lor

fuel pump, $35. Can be seen at
895 Brownell Ave .. Middleport
orcall992-2718 after 5; 30 p, m.
l-18-6tc

Financial
Ass.istance
Available

gentle face,
No one can fill your vacant

place.
Sadly missed by his wife,
Myrtle, children. grand·
1·2l · IIC

Good Career
Opportunity

- - - - - ----:-

IN LOlliNG memory ol our
deiJr mother, Lucy V. Justis,
who passed away two years

ago. January 21st.
It doesn ' t matter where we .go
and no matter what we do,

CONTACT

There will always be some
things to make us think ot

374-827-9

''""'--IIIII'""'!____.

No matter how the years go by,
Our love Is with ybu yel .
Sadly missed by the Wanted To Buy
chi ldren, Mary, Eli za beth. OLD f.urnlture, oak tables ,
Btlly, Paul and Dorothy ,
' organ~;, dishes, clocks, brass &lt;'
..... ,,
1-21-ltc
beds or complete households.
--------Write M. D. Miller. Rl. 4,
Notice
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992·
'6271.
DUANE Wolfe's New Record
1·7·1fc
"Broken Hearted" and " My
Dream Girl " with music by WOULD like to buy ap·
Great Bend Bond Is now on
proximately 125 acre~ of
sale al Bill &amp; Lee's in
ISolated land ; must have 25
' Pomeroy , Racine Dept. Store,
acres
cleared;
price
Racine and Sadie's Markel,
$20,000.00 ; Robert Berardj,
Syracuse.
2121 luka Ave., Columbus,
1·19-6tc
Ohio.
l-19-6tc
t WILL not be making out In·
come Taxes thiS · year ; GOOD used ·International A
H•. ·bert L. Sayre, Rt . 2,
Tractor ; Phone 992-2008.
Ro&lt;lne, Ohio.
1-21-Jip
l-19-31p - - - - - - - - -

- - -- - -

speaker so und system, .4
speed aut omat ic chan ger.

Wanted To Do

-

clerical work in my home ; SEW IN G In my home. P~one

phone 742-6085.

742-3295.

1-1 9-61c

TAX Service, Federal and State
Income Taxes ; daily except

1-18-Jtp

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Martin Genealogy
Price $2.50
Contains allied tamilies of
Bailey, Foster, Jenk i nson ,
Saul. and many more.

Mrs. G. Harold Martin
1611 S. E. 2nd St.
Ft. Lauderdale. F!ori~a .
33301

and one

992-2780 or 992-3432.

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448
Pomeroy. o.

'

P&lt;&gt;R SALE

three bedroom house; phone !

Furnace Controlr;
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

'

~bedroom

1-21 -tfc

Buy For Youl

TWO BEDROOM mobile home,
util ities paid. Phone m-7384
or 992-71j3,
l-IB-3tc

1970 FORD

Custom
Station Wagon
Auto. trans ., P.S., 351 -V-8

TWO BEDROOM furnished
apartment , ground floor .
Robert Hill. Racine. Phone
949-3811.
1· 18·61p
'h

engine, 4 new tires, (snow

tires on rear). 35,000 actual
miles, excellent condition.

Meigs
Equipment Co. •

DUPLE X wall -to-wall carpeting, small yard ; avai lable
nf!N ; phone 992·2780 or 99'2.
3432,
1·18·1fc

Ph. 992·2'176

You

.EXPERT
'Wheel Alignment
'5.55

Have your home built by
Custom . Builders. Our,
carrnnters have 20 years

experience In building
homes .In Meigs County.

On Most Ari1erican Cars

ALL WEAlltER
ROOFING AND

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

·.I'

Pomeroy..Home &amp; Auto

'

CONSTRUCTION
. .

0pen8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy,O.

PHONE: 992-2550

SEWING ,MACHINES . Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
2 PIECE bedroom suite, book·
Authorized Singer Sales and
case bed. double dresser with
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
8 drawers. no mirror ; call i
3-29-lfc
evenings 992·3163.
1-17-6tc
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
600 BALES of Timothy hay ;
ED', REPAIRED. MILLER
phone 992 -6214.
SANITATION,
STEWART,
1-17-6tc
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
10·4-lfc
1972 APACHE Eagle Fold-up
camper ; includes spare tire,
ca nopy and plastic storm .AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled ?
Lost
your
window . Trailer has been
ope(ator's license? Call 992wired tor electric, 3 outlets.
2966,
· Excellent condit ion ,.$675, cal l
6·15·1fc
992-5815 after 5 p.m.
l-17·41c G&amp;E APPLIANCE Repair :
Repair of all laundry ,
PAINT Damage. 1972 Zig-Zag
equipment, refrigeration
Sewing Machines. Still In
equipment and house wir ing,
original carto ns. No at ·
Call 614-m ·60SO.
tachments needed as our
12-31-JOip
control s are bul)t-l n. Sews

For Sale

with 1 or 2 needles. makes
CONC~ETE
buttonholes, sew on buttons, READY -MIX
delivered
right
to your
monograms, and blind hem ·

. Pomeroy

st ereo

tape

dec k

and

ELNA and White Sewing
Machines .. , service on all
makes . Reasonable rates.
The Sewing Center, Mid ·
dleport, Ohio,
11 -16-lfc

speakers; AKC Collie pups.
$50; phone 77J.5758.
l·l6-51c
DUE to divorce; 1972 8 track

stereo consOle; mu~t ~ell at

once ; nice walnut fin ish. This
setsold much higher, must let ·uoZE R and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, ditgo lor S89.60 or $7 .47 a month.
ching service; top soli, fill
Try it In your home. Call 992dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex5331 .
cavating . Phone 992-5367,
· 1-16-tfc
Di ck Karr, Jr .
9·1-tlc
JUST taken in, deluxe zig·zag
sewin g machine.
Th is
machine

darns.

------

em -

· bro lderles , overcasts. buttonholes, Pay balance 536.50

For Rent qr Sale

or payments c:an be arranged.

Call 992-5331.
1·16-lfc
BANNER Camper; sleeps six ;
sell -conta i ned ; very
reasonable ; phone 992-3757.
1-21-Jtc
1.72 ACRE lot; phone 742-3656.
l-21 -21p
H &amp; N day old or started
Leghorn pullets. Both floor or
cage grown available.
Poultry . housing
&amp;
automation. Modern Poultry,
399 W. Main. Pomeroy, 992·
. 2164,.
'
1·21-llc

7 ROOM block home located on
Route 124 In Syracuse, Ohio ;
large kitchen with lots of
built-In birch cabinets, dining
room. livi ng room, 4
bedroom s
and
bath,
recreation room In baseme~t ,
garage, concrete driveway;
large yard, approximately ]I;,
acre ; l~ts of shade trees ; for.
appointment, phone 446-9539.
l -2J.61c

We talk to ,00·

like a person,

FUEL oi l furnace, .120,000 BTU r
ha s lh ermo~al, registers and
some pipe; phone 985·3979.
l·l6·61c

'

WMP0/1390

HOMECLEANING products ;
phone 992·2579 or 247-2193.

_____

_,_
1 ~5-JOtp

ON YOUR DIAL ·

Completely modernized 10-roo·m
house, two full baths, nil ~uilt-in kitchen, 1st floor . wall-to-wall cafpets;
gas cen.t ral heat. Oo two town lots in .
good Middleport neighborhood. Owner
leaving townt See by appointment by
calling 992-3486.

.

• . 2YEARS OLD
MIDDLEPORT. - 1 story
frame, 6 rooms, 24 fl. L, R., 3
large B.R.s with double
closets. Dining R., utility R.,
wondertul
kitchen,.
basement, love! lot 100x120.
,Carpeted. $23,000.00.
·. '&lt; RUTLAND BUSINESS
'Saie.n ~treet . - · S!Qck &amp;
Eq~lpment goes. · Lovely
apartment over, 3 bedrooms,
bath, large L.R.; ulility R., 2
gloss enclosed Jl!)rches, gas
F . F. heat, H:w.. floors ,
$17,900.00. '
' M'tDDLEPORT
BRICK HOME - 2 B.R,
bath, dining R. NEW gas
F.A. furnace, level lot,
garage, porches, fenced .
Storm doors &amp; windows.
$8,500.00,
CORNER LOT
l'h ·Story frame, 3 B.R. Nice
'kitchen and din!ng. Bath,
,utility R, gu P.A. ' heal.
Cellar. Garage. Lots of work
done on this home. $10,000.00.
HOMES
TO
OTHE!t
CHOOSE FROM - BEAT
THE BOOM, BUY TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
3 ASSOCIATES
TO SERVE YOU

6-11 -tfc

'37
500 .
, I

- ~ ·~ -

.

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Contact:
'
Theodore Reed.'Jk.
.farmers Bank,' Pomeroy
, or Dale Dutton at Dutton
Drug, Middleport, o.

l·77S/J.4
l•tl2S'/14
l•64S'/14
2-H78/l5

GOODYEI\R Black
GOODYE
...:AR Black..
GOOD~R Black
(JOODYEAR ,W/S/W

REGULAR
H!l~TEST

,3a,9 t!;al
lt 2 u7 gal

~

ALL RECAPS IN STOCK

ROOuLAR 6R m1BuRBANTTE
YOUR CHOICE $8,00 EACH

pumps

.

32.6 gal

36.6 gal

PILES OF GOOD USED TIRES

nt s:IDs ....Yd!JR CHOICE
$3,0!&gt; EACH

$1.9$

R. H~ RAWLINGS .SONS CO.
992-2151

For Sale
Aluminum

MIDDLEPORT,

Want Price?
Want Quality?

36"x23"x.009

1969 CHEV. NOVA; 6 cyl., auto., 2 dr. ·
sed., real nice small car. Priced to
sell.
$1195

0.

Better Buys

Sheets

1969 MERCURY Montego 4 dr. sed.,
low mileage, factory air, sharp car.
Was $1695.
NOW $1495

On The Best

8 for Sl.OO

1972 DIEVR(UtT MONTE CARLO

The
Court St.

Don't Forget

Pomeroy

Auto Sales

We Service What We Sell

1963 FORD Fairlane 500, V-8, 4
door, automatic, $275. Phone
992-7374,
1-11 -lfc

.

Our Word Is Our Bond

12 cadillac Coupe DeVille
Dark grey flnlshWlfh red leather Int., full power'
equipment, AM-FM stereo, Climate Control air
conditioning, 5 new whitewall tires ..

Spring green finish, white vinyl lop, Jl!)wer windows, door
locks &amp; seat. lilt st. wheel, 400 CIQ engine, turbo
hydramatic, p. steering &amp; disc brakes, Posllractlon
custom equipment. F&amp;R bumper guards, Premium tire•.
.stereo tape &amp; radio, factory air, It's loaded, new car title.

Daily Sentinel

67 &amp; 66 Models. We have 4 &amp; 5 66-67 to
sell, All of them priced to sell.

. '6100

Retail 55447 Now s4200
1972 atEVROLET....... ~ ....... :... }3995

72 Olck Ra(clle 88 H.T. Sed.

Caprice 4·door, new car title &amp; balance of .warranty,
covert with brown vinyl roof, tinted glass, factory air,

Gold fin ., black vinyl roar:· full po'w. equip. Including
6-way seat, factory air, 13,000 mi., just like new.

front &amp; rear guards, radio &amp; rear speaker, white-wall

'4200

tires. Nice a~d clean. Reta il $4860. Priced to move.

Open Evenings Til 7 p.m. &amp; Sat. Till S p.m.
Service Til 12 noon on Saturday.

1970 1 TON Ford. dual wheels,
long wheel base. power
brakes, 12\1:1 ft. bed, less than ·

'

23,000 miles; clean as new;

phone 985 -3554, Harold '
Brewer, Long Bottom.

NELSON MOTORS,' 'INC.

,Jo, -.''f'·.,l.·

1967 CHEVY Impala, 283, V-8
phone 992-5530.

E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

l-21·31p

zo

•s

.Q876 5
t9642
.753

WIST

EAST

.KQ102
.94
tQ105 '.
.A862

.9764
.J3
tJ73
.QJI04

SOUTH (D)

.AJ53
• AK102
tAKB

•!&lt;9

None vulner:able

Eut

,.

South
2N.T,

Pass
POlS

3t
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead- • K

By Olwald &amp; James Jacoby
We hope you haven't been
bored with our discussion of
the Jacoby transfer. ·You
,
don t need the bid and yo.u
shouldn't · even try to use tt
unless you and your partners
are willing to study it and
familiarize yourselves with
1't ·

The bid is not really complicated and it does get results. It must, otherwise you
wouldn't find most of our
top playe~s using it.
You can use it with any
strength no-trump but it
works . be s t opposite the
standard 16 to IR. Also it
should only be used opposite
openmg no-trumps when the
next player has passed. If he
acts, forget about transfers .
Today 's hand shows the
transfer opposite a two notrump opening. South
jumped right to four hearts
because his hand was maximum for hearts.
He managed' fil make an
overtrick. He started win·
ning the spade lead ; cash·
ing the ace· and king of
hearts; ruffing a spade In
dummy ; leading a diamond
and sticking in the eightspot.
West made his best return
of a diamond . South cashed
the
and king; ruffed another spade; discarded a
club on the 13th diamond and
wound up losing just one

CASH paid for all makes and '
models of mobile homes.
Phone area code 614·423-9531 .
4-13-lfc

aee

··Air Condition·erS: ,
· • Awnings

.

·:Underpirmi_~g ·

' !'

\~

; ~omplete mQblie ham•; ,
:s.ervl&lt;e ~ plus gigantic!
: a Isplay of mobile homes ' '
; ~~ways .avallable•al ...

. ;MILLER
,_ - .,_ ...

I,

I

MO.IJI~E H~ME~
,,

1220 Washington Blvd.
BELPRE,O..

: ~4~3·7521

'

Caprice Sport Sedan. Less than 15,000 miles &amp; spotless
. ln~ lde. ~out. 5 new j".~lte:wall tires tr•nslerr~ lr,O 'l\c'J~ •
new t ar. Comforlron air. 400 V-8 engine, with powe ralsc
front brakes. steering &amp;automa tic, power windows &amp; door
lock~ , Dark green irlnyl roof with medium green In color.
Radoo &amp; rear speaker. S-H-A-R-P.

1966 SKYLINE mobile home,
lOxso. Phone 9?2·J954. 1·18·31c

f
I

·.I [ ) I I I

IZEEMAC ,.

I I

Sport Sedan, local I owner car, beautiful turquoise finish
with spotless match ing Interior trim. black vinyl top,
factory air, V-8 engine, turbo hydramatic, pf!Ner steering
and brakes. radio, good w-w tires, deluxe bumper guards,
nice and clean.

1970 DODGE POI.ARA 4 DOOR .•.s1695
Factory air, V-B engine, automatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, good w-w tires, radio, clean Interior, white finish
with vinyl top.

HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick
· Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
house, -J bedroo.ms, excellent

· location, close to school and
city; contact Lou Osborne or
call ·992-5898.
11 ·26-lfc

,...

The bidding hu been:
West North
Eut

II I ........I - - .I.,.·ltor-thtI m.......[ 'I I J
Now III'IIIP the clrdtd 1ttteb

IIIIWtr, . .

. 1q111ttd bp lbubom artoon.

L-...:.:.,..::==:.:-===--....J

•I!•.•.....~.~...
&gt;

I'
-

.

.

l A - .......,,
·. 11 • Nln' oc~ CAMPVI · KIMONO

.,.,=-for!IJU
.

,.. .

...-I-·

"

' ,.It

J,

'

,

. Open Eves. Til 6--TII 5 P.M. Sat.:
; 'You'll Lll&lt;l! O·,. ~tltyWay111;Doll19-iuslnes~i'

,•

Generation R'a p
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Don't BeUeve All You Hear
Rap:
Amarried man at work says he and his wife have a perfect
relationship. '11ley go out with whomever they please, just so lt;s
on a ''friends" basis. When she Ia working evenings he dates

1969 QIEVROLET IMPALA. ........s1895

other girls, and now he wants that girl to be me.
I wouldn't inlnd dinner and a show with a guy who doesn't
expect the goodnight kiss to BEGIN the evening, but could a wife
really be that unjealous? ...;. LANIE

St. Wagon. local I owner new ca r trade-In, vinyl interior;
white finish, 1/-8 engine, automatic trans., power steering
&amp; brakes, radio &amp; many other ex tras .

Dear Lanle:

·1968 CAMARO CONV.............. ;.. 51695
Locall owner, ff!N mileage car, beaut iful cream fin . with
black top, bucket seal$ &amp; console, new w-s-w tires. radio, ·
P.S., auto. trans. One of the scarce ones and as nice as

they come.

St. Wagon, \'.a engine, std. trans., radio, good tires, vinyl
Interior, green finish, radio,

Real Estate For.Sale

l

1966 NOVA 4 DOOR .................. 5695
6 cyl. engine, automatic trans , radio, good tires, clean
Interior, green over white finish.

Wby don't you Insist on asking her-tefore you accept the
dale? - HELEN AND SUE

+++

Rap :
To put It bluntly, this girl took my boyfriend away and
married him. For two years, she kept sending me letters about
how happy they were and why didn't I c®e to visit them.
(Rubbwg it in I)
I haven't heard from her in siJ; months, but I'm going up that
way In the aprlng. Now that I'm over him, I'd kind of Uke to see
old friends. again. Besides, I've lost weight and people say I look
better than ever- and I hear llhe Ia getting pretty tubby. It's only
htman to mix a alight case of "get even" with curlllllity about old
friends. Isn't It? - REOOVERED BUT STILL SMARTING
'

Dear R But S.S. :

1965 QIEV. NOVA WAGON ...........
s450
•
out good. Plenty of space lor the family ,

Yes, It's only hwnan - but what, really, will a visit ac-

_compllsh? You don't want the guy any more, and the girl was
never yolD' friend. When you sUr up an old ketUe of fish, you're
llaflle to make a bigger stink than you can handle. - HELEN

+++

R. But S.S.:

1971 DODGE lh TON PICKUP.... !1995
8' wide bOdy, local trade-In \Yith 34,000 miles 6 eyl
engine. std. trans ., H. duly tires, white ove~ gr...;
finish, deluxe mldgs., rear bumper, radio.

1969 DIEVROLET ·2 JON TRUCK $2095
102" Cab to axle, 292 cu. ln. engine, 15,000 lb., 2
speed rear axle, 825x20 tires, foam seat mirrors
solid cab. ready to go to work .
'
'

Be honest: you'd be going back to show this felia wllat he

· mF• and make his wife as jeal~ of you as you'llnce were of

HER. It's a ·great temptatiOn wt "gettlngeven"ta banlly ever as
much run u you expect It to be.
If· you're not out' to break up a marriage, then wby iake
chancea?You dw.'t really want him back, do you? - SUE

Dear Helen and Sue:
! like thla poem Ill)' slater brought hmte from school. Ma:rbe
yOur readers wlll Uke It too:

, (HIWSPAPER EHTIIPIUSI ASSN.)

t] I

NIPICC ~ )~

•

' ... ' · " ' Cad"loc. Oldsmobile' ' ' ' ·
· '··· f
'
'
992-5342
GMAC Fina~~~tlng .Availlble
Pomer6'

2-door, local 1-owner, low mileage, good tires, clean Interior, green finish , radio. 2000cc engine, 4-speed. WAS
$1799,

1968 QIEV. BEL AIR.~ ...............51095

club and one diamond.
This hand doesn't show
any transfer bid magic. Or
does it?
People who don't use
transfers play all r esponses
to two no-trump as forces
and North JDight decide to
just pass two no·trump rather than get to game with
just one queen. After all,
South might well have only
two hearts for his no-trump
opening.

llaleramblethele teurJuinblea.

KARR ·&amp; VANZANDT .·

1971 FORD PINTO ................. )1599

6 cylinder, aut6matlc transmission, radio, good tires, runs '

Jl!JMmllJ£;!,;!,,:::!.!::! ~c

• No Payments Until After Feb. 15, 1973

1971 QIEVROLET................... }3500

1970 QIEVROlET CAPRICE ........ 52495

Mobile Homes. For Sale'

Not to Use Transfer

North

1·7•tfC

automatic transmission, p.s.,
extra set snow tires, $550 ;

NOR'DI

West

~

:-:---::-:::::-::-:----

WIN AT BRIDGE

When

~

1968 DODGE pickup, good
condition, Sl •.WO; phone 992·
7378.
1-21 -ltp

. 992-2174
·soo

1f

2()4

' l

~TH

~
USED CARS

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

to

7ROOMhol.se, utilityroom,l'l&gt;
baths, buill-In cabinets,
.carpet, double garage, city
water, 1 acre level ground.
cl01t to school, Rou" 681,
Tms · Plalni; ph0¥10 371·
6 4, Robert llllrber.
• 1-17-6tp

a¢~

OIL FILTERS(Mopsr replaces
Fraro PH8)

...

.

'

r·

-"?s r

7 ~OOM-iilodi hcime l.ocated on · lett.r ~ ueh oquare,
Slate Rt. 124 In Syracuse, f•r• four onllnarJ wonlu.
Ohio. Large kltcftln wllh lots·
of built-In birch cabinets.
CQ
Dining room. living room, 4 L..:HA:;:;;;R~::.....f.,.·.;;=-:;"'l::::'";;:.'i::::;*::J-..,
bedrooms
and
bath. '
(
~l~$
Recrealloh
room
In
' blisement, garage, concrete · -~::=~~"---1-.J
driveway, large . yand, 1\1:1 ~
acre, lots ol shade trees. For
JMCA.G ·:
appointment ph. 446'9~!1-6tc
COMFORTABLE, 2 stor,~
home,' full basement, af.
!ached glrage, extra tot.
Double oven, gas range,
lreezer.refrlgerator com·
.blnatlon. bath'&amp; 112; phone 992·
7384 or 992-71JJ.
· •
·
. 1·18-61c

ASHLAND GASOLINE(while
al'e full

muffler claro~S(all sizes)

1970 BUICK Lesabre 4 dr. sed., color
yellow with brown top, factory air.
Was $2695.
NOW $2495

1'92·3325

Lpng Bottom, phone

WJDp's products,tune up,
sprt11re,friction proofing, ·
l!llllti-purpoae concentrate,
transm:tssi on cond. ,p/st. cond.
50 'f, oft" list price
'

hd

1970. CI:IEV. CAPRICE 2 dr. H.T. Gray
with black vinyl top, factory air. Was
$2795.
NOW$2595

.

1'1/sl'!l
3-G78/.l5 GOODRICH W/S/!1
l·F70/J.4 . GOODYEAR W/S/!1
1•775/14 GENFRAL W/S/!1
l-8lS'/l5 .GOODYF...AR W/S/!1
l-69S'/l4 GOODYF.A.R W/S/w

$21 •• 7115

z•P/8/;1.4

$"2:)5

1970 PONTIAC · Grand Prix. One
owner, all black with black vinyl in~
terior, air. This is one sharp car.
Priced to move.
$2995

·Pomorey, Ollla &lt;U76f

985-3529.

J!l o23

Jlio)8 -

11,0 Mechanic Street

HOUS~ ln

.

.

thermostats for all cars

1971 PONTIAC Bonneville 4 dr; H.T.
'Factory air, gold with brown vinyl top,
.one owner. Was $3995. Now you can
buy this beauty,
FOR ONLY $3695

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

1 ~OOM hou5e· and beth, nice
large lot, natural gas, bulll·ln
cabinets In kitchen, close to
radio station In Bradbury,
phone 992-2602.
l-16-12fp '

AC hesdli~ht units
small dua tYp,e $2.e~ .
large single '
~.~(

line antifr,eeze

¢ - 5 5 ¢ ·.

motor oil l~fo and
M qt.
qt.

.

f%
. oUR dHof c~ ~ EACH

55. tt

'-

1971 PONTIAC Grandville 2 dr. H.T.,
.factory air, AM &amp; FM &amp; Tape Player.
One local owner. SALE PRICE $3995

Virgil B.

HOUSE BY OWNER: 3 or 4
bedrooms, lflrge rec. room.
large patio, mOdern kitchen.
tully carpeted ; call 992-5248
until 3 p.m. or 992-3436 otter 3
·
p.m,; No sunday Calls.
·
·
1·21·12fc

k

,1971 BU,ICK Lesabre 4 dr. Sed., color
gold with beige vinyl top, factory air.
Only 13,341 mll.es on this ~eauty . Show
room clean..
SALE $3695

1'92·22S.
If 1!0 answer
1'92·2568 or 915-4219

NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - 6 rooms
and bath, 3 bedrooms, 2
porches and level lot. ,Asking
$7500.00.
TRAILER SPOT
1 ACRE - With water and
electricity, 52500, and 97
acres with producing gas
well. $)4,000.00.
NEW !lOUSE
OUTSTANDING .:... A fine
home that you ' ll be proud Ia
fiNn . Has 5 bedrooms, rec .
·room, garage and I'll baths .
All electric on a large lot. In
an approved subdivision~
real towel of a house.
HOT WATER HEAT
WARM - 3 nice' size
bedrooms · with double
windows and large closets.
Large living, dining and
modern kitchen. Car!M!ting
and fenced' lawn, 1A. neat
plllte lor $20,000.00.
NEW HOME
BRICK FRONT . 3
bedrooms, baseboard heat,
nice kitchen. garage, and
front porch. On Ohio Power.
Large lot. Want $20,500.00.
NEW HOME '
STOVE
AND
REFRIGERATOR
Beautiful kitchen with bar,
·dining, and large !lvlng. 3
nice size bedrooms with
large closets . Now only
$16,000.00.
•
• MOBILE HOME SITE
HAS 2 mobile homes now A 1972 Fleetwood goes with
the land of 3.JJ acres. Drilled
well and motor boat.
Overlooking the Ohio. River.
NEARLY NEW
RETIREMENT HOME With 2 bedrooms, nice bath,
and utility. Beautiful kit,
chen, natural pas furnace
and carpeting In living .
Large lot on hard rood. Only
$14,000.00.
WE HAVE 7 NEW HOMES,
23 other homes , 8 with
acreage, 22 building lots and
several pieces of land with
no bui Idings. Invest now for
your future . We are· loaded
with properties, may have
what you want.
HELEN L. TEAFO!tD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

*'

.

.

TIRES
'NEW TIRES IN STOCK

windshield washel' solvent

JANUARY SALE .

i

l/2J

. SALE STAJUS 1/22 AND CONTINUES THROUGH

·. 1

11 Room House. lot83 ft. x
189ft.,.4 baths upstairs, IVa
bath down, addltion;W '
land, ~3 ft. river trontaue·
at 216 W. Matn St-.,
Pomeroy, o.

For Sale By Owner

•

.

FOR $ALE

.'

,.

'

,,

------

.

Stop II! and See Our
Floor

- - - - --

HOOD'S AQUARIUMS ; fis h 2
BEDROOM
furnished
and supplies; new location, apartment, 114 Mulberry,.na.
dogs or cats; adu lt s;
Ash Street. Middleport near
references; phone 992-6698.
park; phone 992·5443.
1·10-lfc
1-7-tfc

' '

--'-----:-

Balan ce $65 .89. Use our
budget term s. Call 992-7085.
l-18-6t c

Sunday , 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., 1968 FORD Fairlane 500 wagon,
luggage rack, V-8. power
Mrs, Sleven {Wanda) Eblin, steering, power brakes, at
Rt . 2, Pomeroy {laurel Clill 34,000 actual miles ; like new
Rd. off Rl. 7 By-Pass) ; phone condit ion; will ·trade for
992-2272.
pickup truck of near equal
1-3-30-tc value , give or lake dlf ·
--..,.-----terence ; Robert Hill, 949-3811.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp;WIGS.
l-18-6tp
SPECIALS MONTHLY. - - - - - - - - - - - ----PHONE HELEN JANE
BROWN. MIDDLEPORT, Wanted To Rent
OH 10 992-5113. ·
WOULD Ll KE to rent a 3 or 4
12-3-tfc
bedroom modern home : have
.
references; preferably Meigs
Coun ly ; phone 992-3062.
1-14-lBic

ONE two

-

speaker sovnd system. 4
speed automat ic c hanger.

For Sale 9r Trade

For Rent

Balance $77 .69 . Use our
budg et term s. Call 992-7085.
l-18-61c

MODERN wal nut style stereo·
radio . AM-FM radio , 4

evening S by appointment ;

..HEll"

• FURNITUR~

SPINET-CONSOLE PIANO.
Wanted responsible party to
pro/'ect. Fast and easy. Free
stitch. Full cash pri ce $38.50
est
take over spinet plano. Easy
males. Phone 992-3284.
or budget plan available.
terms. Can be seen locally.
Goegleln Ready-Mi x Co .,
Phone 992-7755.
Write Credit Manager. P. 0 .
Middleport, Ohio.
1. 11 .6tc
Box 276, Shelbyville, Ind iana
6·30·1fC
46176.
Cleaner new 1972
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _1_-19-21p VACUUM
Model , Complete with all
cleaning tools. Small paint REASONABLE rates. Ph. &lt;146·
SPECIAL PURCHASE
damage in shipping . Will take
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
. GIRLS' SHOE S. crepe-soled.
$27 cash or budget plan
Owner &amp; Operator .
sizes 4 1!~- 6, 99c pr. Great buys
available. Phone 992-7755.
5·12-ttc
on man{. other NEW items: 3' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,_
. 17'61c - C-._B_R_A_D_F_
O_R_D_,-A-u-ct-Ion
-eer
x 6'
r inged area .·ugs ,
pil lows. bl ank ets, bed · 1971 CAMARO , speed vs
Complete Service
spr eads , comi c strip bed
Bu cket · Seats. Reasonable.
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
sheets, fabr ic-covered sofa
Ca II aft er 5, 992·7201.
I
Crill
Bradford
beds. vinyl reclin ers, r ocker S
...-•y•.- "'' ·5-l-tf¢1 i
&amp; MU &lt;iH MORE ii; AhWAi'f'S, ' -? r j -rp ; ,} Jrjii :$ :'~ t· pf,~' t':
avail able, our usual selection ·coAL. um'e!l~ne , Excel sioo - --_- - - of value -pr iced used fur Sail Works; E. Main St., SEE US FOR : Awnings , storm
niture, appliances, KUHL'S . ·Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
doors and windows, carports,
BARGAIN CENTER , " at
marquees. aluminum sldlnv
4-12-lfc
caut io n li gh t," Tuppers ----,--=-- - - and railing. A. Jacob, sales
Pla ins. Ohio. Closed Mondays SIN GER au-tomatic sewing
representative. For free
only ; open to 6. ·
machine; like new in walnut
estimates, phone Charles
1·19-7tc
cabinet. Makes design slitLisle, Syracuse, V, V.
-----ches. zig-zags, butfonholes.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
1948 CHEVROLET. new ly
blind hems, overcasts, etc.,
3·2-lfc
overhauled eng ine; phone 992· S85. Call . Ravenswood , 273·
7897.
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
1-19-3tc 9S21 or 273-9893.
Septic tanks Installed. George
1-11 -tfc
{BIIII Pull ins . Phone 992·2418.
EAR L Y Amer ica n ster eo-ra dio
4-25-lfc
1965
FORD
Station
Wagon
i'
combination, AM-F M radio, .4

children, sisters and brother .

I WILL do bookkeeping and

parts,

rebuilt carburetor and new

nore, your lovmg sm ile, your

you ;
Your face and voice are fresh In
mi nd, we never shall forget,

and

. SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph,. 99l'2174
Pomeroy

HAYMAN 'S Auction - a good
place to go each Friday
evening , 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff
on old Rl. 7, 1 mile west of
Rock Springs Fairground.
·,
· 10-10-lfc

Garnet Ba chner.

.• PoMeroy

From the largest

:RAWLINGS DISCOUNT CITY STRJKES AGAIN

Januaty is a bad month for
Used Cats so we are
·going to. make a good

· 101 E. Main

·Business·Services
Smallest Heater Core.
' Nathan Biggs ·
Radiator Specialist

.,.llitilliiiiiiiiiiii------~-

QILAND·
RIALTY

For · Rent

Meigs Care Line, 992- 7502

RIFLE MATCH , Rutland Gun
Club, Sunday, 1 p, m.
1-18-Jtc

Card of Thanks

grandf at her,

Rt~al Estate For Sale

Fast Results Use The Sunday .Ti-mes-Sentinel .·Cla$s.ifieds ·

wANl Ao.S.
INFORMAT) ON
'h DOUBLE, 2 bedroom ,. fur .
I'EADLINES
GU N SHOOT, Sunda y, Jan . 2 BEDROOM mobile home on UN FURN ISHED 3-room
ol d Rl. 33, adults only :· phone . apartment, adul ts only . 1No nished; phone 992-2749.
5 P.M . Day Before Publica'tlon . 21st, .,1 p: m . Side Hil l Gun
991.6294 or 992-6385 after 8
pets. 406 Spri ng Ave..
1·14-lfc
Monday Deadl il)e 9 a.m .
Club ; no al coholic beverages
p.m.
Pomeroy.
cancellation - CorreCtions • allowed; factory choked QUns
1-17·101&lt;
1-7-lfc
Wilt be accepted until 9 a .m . tor
only ; assorted meats; soft
Day of Publica tion
drinks will be sold ; free
-'---------cR EGULA:rtONS
..
The Publisher reserves the · co ff ee; troph ies for High MOB ILE home, 12 x 65, ·13 ft .· 3 AND '4 ROOM furnished and
ex pando : partia ll y furnished ;
. r ig ht to edit or r elect any ads
Poi nt Cards ; not responsi ble
unfu r nis~ e d
apartments.
air
-conditioned;
ni ce
deeme d
oblett lonal . The
far acci den ts.
Phone 992.5434,
location
;
S140
a
mon
t
h
;
publisher wil l not be responsible.
l-1 8-Jtc
4-12-tfc
for more than on~ incorrec t _ _ _.;__ _ _ __
depo sit requi red; need
-.
·
-references
;
phone
992-6615.
;nserlion .
GUN SHOOT, · Sunday, Jan.
~·

2&amp; ~Tbe SUnday Tlmea -SentlneUunday, Ja~. 21,1973

.

,

.

' to please you • . . you'll like our
We are here
appral~als &amp; trading plicyl

3t
Pass
'"'
Pass
You, South, hold:
,
•AQ9875 tA3Z ... KQ7

•z

What do you· do now?

A-Builneoo ;;. lookblr lip. Bid ·
four diamonds to obow tile oeo.
. TODAY'S QUES110N
You bid four diamonds and
your partner bic!J lour spades.
What do you do now7-:·

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
.992-2126 ·

"Your Chevy O.o/tr"
·Open EVes. TillS .

Pomeroy

Happlne18
Can't be defil)ed.
It's a certain mood,
A tlate of mind.
It'a a~~arq
Everyday ·aftatrs
With one who !pldentands
And
!h a tender looll
C)' I geaUe touch
'l1lal ..,.., "I love. you

c-.

:, Very mudr ..."

It's a smile of we1ccme
When )'OU're blue,
A dream U.t'a lbared,
A dream for two.
And ba[llllaea It'a more titan llila:

It's a Wllnll embrace
And

aIIIICic t~as.

It's a apedai ·blesalng
From above:
!t'a what you bave

'·

I

'
.I
"l'

I

1·

When yoo•re In love! DOROTHY

)
I

�... ..... ,,

~ '
·

~

... . .. .

' ~

~

..',·• .
'

' "'-

r

'

' '

~

"

.

•

· ',' " " ,

',.

...

T,

j

....

\ . ,·

.

~

"'...

.

.

\; ~·~ .. ;•.;: ,.. .~·~~~!' ,,:.~l~.-::'41)

•

24 - The Sundlll' Times- Sentinel, Sunday ,Jan. 21,1973

~For

Notice

For Rent

For· Rent

l-17-5tc

. For wa~~~~s Service
21st, 1 p. m . FactOry choked
5 (:ents per word one im.e rtlon
guns only . Seeond place
M in imum Charge 75C
shooters get free shot in next
11 cen.ts per word three
match. Assorted meals .
c~n!lec ufive insertions.
.
Racine Gun Club.
\8 cen t,s per word six con.
l-18-31c
·secutlve 'i nsertions .
·25 Per Cerit Discount on paldi
a,ds and ads paid within 10 da ys. WILL Tfi'E party thai picked up
my male Beagle , dog In
·
CARD OF THANKS '
Langsvi lle, Saturday, Jan.
.
&amp; OBITUARY
13th. please br ing him back to
Sl. 50 for SO word minim1.1m'.
Each add it ion al word 2c. ·
Langsville and turn him .
,
BLIND ADS
loose, day or night and he will
Addltiorra l 2Sc Char'ge per
lind his way home ; family
Advertisement .
pet ; had over 12 years ; Jim
,
OFFIC,E HOURS
Eads, Langsvil le, Oh io.
8:30a.m . to 5:00p .m. Dally ,
l -18·31C
8: 30 · a .m . to 12: 00 Noon
Saturday ,

WISH to express our heartfelt
thank·s to all th e relat ives and

· friends who came to the
"Open House" on Sunda ,

January 14th and helped

ro

make our 50th Anniv ersary

such a wonderful day . Also
special thanks to th e nieces
and nephews and ali who

·helped in any way to make
this possible. Mr. and Mrs.

Bulldozer Radiator to

,

awer...

Help Wanted
Cl lllllo_ ....

BAR MAID, apply In person ;
Hi -Ho Bar. Middleplrl ; equal

,..,

opportunity employer.

1-2 1-Jic
NEED MONEY? SEL~ KNAPP
SHOES ... Part time or full
time. Nq investment. Send for

tree se lling kit. High commissions plu s bonus. Wl"ite to

E. M. Bistow, Knapp Shoes,
Br ockton, Massachusetts
02401.
1-21 -ltc

-,....-- - - - -

Business Qpportuniti es

B,USINES S Opportunity .for
m~n. and women . Inquire by
wrol1ng : R. D. 2, Box 73,

Dale Bachner or. Dale and

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of our
dear

husband, father

and

Dalton

A.

Grover who was· kil led In a

coa l mine, Jan . 20, 1967 ,
' Deep In our heart lies a picture
of our loved one laid to rest.
In memory 's frame we shall
keep It, Because he wa s one of

the best.
To your grave we often wander,
flower s we place with tender
care,
Seems we ca n fee l your
presence near us1As we sa dly

linger there.
A&gt; times goes by we miss you

Racine, Oh io.

BE YOUR
OWN·
BUSINESS
MAN

1·21 -llp

l-19-6lp

Pets For Sale
JU ST ARRIVED, direct from
Florida, tropi cal fish by the
hundreds, at Showalter's Wet
Pet, Chester, Oh fo.
l-10-19tp

,

PAR KVIEW Kennels going out
of busi ness. Big price
reduction on all dog s. All AKC. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
Streets. Middleport, Ohio.
12-13-lfc

SERVICE STATION
DEALERSHIP AVAILABLE
IN MIDDLEPORT, 0.

For Sale
· 1950 CHRVSLER lor

fuel pump, $35. Can be seen at
895 Brownell Ave .. Middleport
orcall992-2718 after 5; 30 p, m.
l-18-6tc

Financial
Ass.istance
Available

gentle face,
No one can fill your vacant

place.
Sadly missed by his wife,
Myrtle, children. grand·
1·2l · IIC

Good Career
Opportunity

- - - - - ----:-

IN LOlliNG memory ol our
deiJr mother, Lucy V. Justis,
who passed away two years

ago. January 21st.
It doesn ' t matter where we .go
and no matter what we do,

CONTACT

There will always be some
things to make us think ot

374-827-9

''""'--IIIII'""'!____.

No matter how the years go by,
Our love Is with ybu yel .
Sadly missed by the Wanted To Buy
chi ldren, Mary, Eli za beth. OLD f.urnlture, oak tables ,
Btlly, Paul and Dorothy ,
' organ~;, dishes, clocks, brass &lt;'
..... ,,
1-21-ltc
beds or complete households.
--------Write M. D. Miller. Rl. 4,
Notice
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992·
'6271.
DUANE Wolfe's New Record
1·7·1fc
"Broken Hearted" and " My
Dream Girl " with music by WOULD like to buy ap·
Great Bend Bond Is now on
proximately 125 acre~ of
sale al Bill &amp; Lee's in
ISolated land ; must have 25
' Pomeroy , Racine Dept. Store,
acres
cleared;
price
Racine and Sadie's Markel,
$20,000.00 ; Robert Berardj,
Syracuse.
2121 luka Ave., Columbus,
1·19-6tc
Ohio.
l-19-6tc
t WILL not be making out In·
come Taxes thiS · year ; GOOD used ·International A
H•. ·bert L. Sayre, Rt . 2,
Tractor ; Phone 992-2008.
Ro&lt;lne, Ohio.
1-21-Jip
l-19-31p - - - - - - - - -

- - -- - -

speaker so und system, .4
speed aut omat ic chan ger.

Wanted To Do

-

clerical work in my home ; SEW IN G In my home. P~one

phone 742-6085.

742-3295.

1-1 9-61c

TAX Service, Federal and State
Income Taxes ; daily except

1-18-Jtp

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Martin Genealogy
Price $2.50
Contains allied tamilies of
Bailey, Foster, Jenk i nson ,
Saul. and many more.

Mrs. G. Harold Martin
1611 S. E. 2nd St.
Ft. Lauderdale. F!ori~a .
33301

and one

992-2780 or 992-3432.

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448
Pomeroy. o.

'

P&lt;&gt;R SALE

three bedroom house; phone !

Furnace Controlr;
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

'

~bedroom

1-21 -tfc

Buy For Youl

TWO BEDROOM mobile home,
util ities paid. Phone m-7384
or 992-71j3,
l-IB-3tc

1970 FORD

Custom
Station Wagon
Auto. trans ., P.S., 351 -V-8

TWO BEDROOM furnished
apartment , ground floor .
Robert Hill. Racine. Phone
949-3811.
1· 18·61p
'h

engine, 4 new tires, (snow

tires on rear). 35,000 actual
miles, excellent condition.

Meigs
Equipment Co. •

DUPLE X wall -to-wall carpeting, small yard ; avai lable
nf!N ; phone 992·2780 or 99'2.
3432,
1·18·1fc

Ph. 992·2'176

You

.EXPERT
'Wheel Alignment
'5.55

Have your home built by
Custom . Builders. Our,
carrnnters have 20 years

experience In building
homes .In Meigs County.

On Most Ari1erican Cars

ALL WEAlltER
ROOFING AND

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

·.I'

Pomeroy..Home &amp; Auto

'

CONSTRUCTION
. .

0pen8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy,O.

PHONE: 992-2550

SEWING ,MACHINES . Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
2 PIECE bedroom suite, book·
Authorized Singer Sales and
case bed. double dresser with
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
8 drawers. no mirror ; call i
3-29-lfc
evenings 992·3163.
1-17-6tc
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
600 BALES of Timothy hay ;
ED', REPAIRED. MILLER
phone 992 -6214.
SANITATION,
STEWART,
1-17-6tc
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
10·4-lfc
1972 APACHE Eagle Fold-up
camper ; includes spare tire,
ca nopy and plastic storm .AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled ?
Lost
your
window . Trailer has been
ope(ator's license? Call 992wired tor electric, 3 outlets.
2966,
· Excellent condit ion ,.$675, cal l
6·15·1fc
992-5815 after 5 p.m.
l-17·41c G&amp;E APPLIANCE Repair :
Repair of all laundry ,
PAINT Damage. 1972 Zig-Zag
equipment, refrigeration
Sewing Machines. Still In
equipment and house wir ing,
original carto ns. No at ·
Call 614-m ·60SO.
tachments needed as our
12-31-JOip
control s are bul)t-l n. Sews

For Sale

with 1 or 2 needles. makes
CONC~ETE
buttonholes, sew on buttons, READY -MIX
delivered
right
to your
monograms, and blind hem ·

. Pomeroy

st ereo

tape

dec k

and

ELNA and White Sewing
Machines .. , service on all
makes . Reasonable rates.
The Sewing Center, Mid ·
dleport, Ohio,
11 -16-lfc

speakers; AKC Collie pups.
$50; phone 77J.5758.
l·l6-51c
DUE to divorce; 1972 8 track

stereo consOle; mu~t ~ell at

once ; nice walnut fin ish. This
setsold much higher, must let ·uoZE R and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, ditgo lor S89.60 or $7 .47 a month.
ching service; top soli, fill
Try it In your home. Call 992dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex5331 .
cavating . Phone 992-5367,
· 1-16-tfc
Di ck Karr, Jr .
9·1-tlc
JUST taken in, deluxe zig·zag
sewin g machine.
Th is
machine

darns.

------

em -

· bro lderles , overcasts. buttonholes, Pay balance 536.50

For Rent qr Sale

or payments c:an be arranged.

Call 992-5331.
1·16-lfc
BANNER Camper; sleeps six ;
sell -conta i ned ; very
reasonable ; phone 992-3757.
1-21-Jtc
1.72 ACRE lot; phone 742-3656.
l-21 -21p
H &amp; N day old or started
Leghorn pullets. Both floor or
cage grown available.
Poultry . housing
&amp;
automation. Modern Poultry,
399 W. Main. Pomeroy, 992·
. 2164,.
'
1·21-llc

7 ROOM block home located on
Route 124 In Syracuse, Ohio ;
large kitchen with lots of
built-In birch cabinets, dining
room. livi ng room, 4
bedroom s
and
bath,
recreation room In baseme~t ,
garage, concrete driveway;
large yard, approximately ]I;,
acre ; l~ts of shade trees ; for.
appointment, phone 446-9539.
l -2J.61c

We talk to ,00·

like a person,

FUEL oi l furnace, .120,000 BTU r
ha s lh ermo~al, registers and
some pipe; phone 985·3979.
l·l6·61c

'

WMP0/1390

HOMECLEANING products ;
phone 992·2579 or 247-2193.

_____

_,_
1 ~5-JOtp

ON YOUR DIAL ·

Completely modernized 10-roo·m
house, two full baths, nil ~uilt-in kitchen, 1st floor . wall-to-wall cafpets;
gas cen.t ral heat. Oo two town lots in .
good Middleport neighborhood. Owner
leaving townt See by appointment by
calling 992-3486.

.

• . 2YEARS OLD
MIDDLEPORT. - 1 story
frame, 6 rooms, 24 fl. L, R., 3
large B.R.s with double
closets. Dining R., utility R.,
wondertul
kitchen,.
basement, love! lot 100x120.
,Carpeted. $23,000.00.
·. '&lt; RUTLAND BUSINESS
'Saie.n ~treet . - · S!Qck &amp;
Eq~lpment goes. · Lovely
apartment over, 3 bedrooms,
bath, large L.R.; ulility R., 2
gloss enclosed Jl!)rches, gas
F . F. heat, H:w.. floors ,
$17,900.00. '
' M'tDDLEPORT
BRICK HOME - 2 B.R,
bath, dining R. NEW gas
F.A. furnace, level lot,
garage, porches, fenced .
Storm doors &amp; windows.
$8,500.00,
CORNER LOT
l'h ·Story frame, 3 B.R. Nice
'kitchen and din!ng. Bath,
,utility R, gu P.A. ' heal.
Cellar. Garage. Lots of work
done on this home. $10,000.00.
HOMES
TO
OTHE!t
CHOOSE FROM - BEAT
THE BOOM, BUY TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
3 ASSOCIATES
TO SERVE YOU

6-11 -tfc

'37
500 .
, I

- ~ ·~ -

.

'

• '

..

I

Contact:
'
Theodore Reed.'Jk.
.farmers Bank,' Pomeroy
, or Dale Dutton at Dutton
Drug, Middleport, o.

l·77S/J.4
l•tl2S'/14
l•64S'/14
2-H78/l5

GOODYEI\R Black
GOODYE
...:AR Black..
GOOD~R Black
(JOODYEAR ,W/S/W

REGULAR
H!l~TEST

,3a,9 t!;al
lt 2 u7 gal

~

ALL RECAPS IN STOCK

ROOuLAR 6R m1BuRBANTTE
YOUR CHOICE $8,00 EACH

pumps

.

32.6 gal

36.6 gal

PILES OF GOOD USED TIRES

nt s:IDs ....Yd!JR CHOICE
$3,0!&gt; EACH

$1.9$

R. H~ RAWLINGS .SONS CO.
992-2151

For Sale
Aluminum

MIDDLEPORT,

Want Price?
Want Quality?

36"x23"x.009

1969 CHEV. NOVA; 6 cyl., auto., 2 dr. ·
sed., real nice small car. Priced to
sell.
$1195

0.

Better Buys

Sheets

1969 MERCURY Montego 4 dr. sed.,
low mileage, factory air, sharp car.
Was $1695.
NOW $1495

On The Best

8 for Sl.OO

1972 DIEVR(UtT MONTE CARLO

The
Court St.

Don't Forget

Pomeroy

Auto Sales

We Service What We Sell

1963 FORD Fairlane 500, V-8, 4
door, automatic, $275. Phone
992-7374,
1-11 -lfc

.

Our Word Is Our Bond

12 cadillac Coupe DeVille
Dark grey flnlshWlfh red leather Int., full power'
equipment, AM-FM stereo, Climate Control air
conditioning, 5 new whitewall tires ..

Spring green finish, white vinyl lop, Jl!)wer windows, door
locks &amp; seat. lilt st. wheel, 400 CIQ engine, turbo
hydramatic, p. steering &amp; disc brakes, Posllractlon
custom equipment. F&amp;R bumper guards, Premium tire•.
.stereo tape &amp; radio, factory air, It's loaded, new car title.

Daily Sentinel

67 &amp; 66 Models. We have 4 &amp; 5 66-67 to
sell, All of them priced to sell.

. '6100

Retail 55447 Now s4200
1972 atEVROLET....... ~ ....... :... }3995

72 Olck Ra(clle 88 H.T. Sed.

Caprice 4·door, new car title &amp; balance of .warranty,
covert with brown vinyl roof, tinted glass, factory air,

Gold fin ., black vinyl roar:· full po'w. equip. Including
6-way seat, factory air, 13,000 mi., just like new.

front &amp; rear guards, radio &amp; rear speaker, white-wall

'4200

tires. Nice a~d clean. Reta il $4860. Priced to move.

Open Evenings Til 7 p.m. &amp; Sat. Till S p.m.
Service Til 12 noon on Saturday.

1970 1 TON Ford. dual wheels,
long wheel base. power
brakes, 12\1:1 ft. bed, less than ·

'

23,000 miles; clean as new;

phone 985 -3554, Harold '
Brewer, Long Bottom.

NELSON MOTORS,' 'INC.

,Jo, -.''f'·.,l.·

1967 CHEVY Impala, 283, V-8
phone 992-5530.

E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

l-21·31p

zo

•s

.Q876 5
t9642
.753

WIST

EAST

.KQ102
.94
tQ105 '.
.A862

.9764
.J3
tJ73
.QJI04

SOUTH (D)

.AJ53
• AK102
tAKB

•!&lt;9

None vulner:able

Eut

,.

South
2N.T,

Pass
POlS

3t
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead- • K

By Olwald &amp; James Jacoby
We hope you haven't been
bored with our discussion of
the Jacoby transfer. ·You
,
don t need the bid and yo.u
shouldn't · even try to use tt
unless you and your partners
are willing to study it and
familiarize yourselves with
1't ·

The bid is not really complicated and it does get results. It must, otherwise you
wouldn't find most of our
top playe~s using it.
You can use it with any
strength no-trump but it
works . be s t opposite the
standard 16 to IR. Also it
should only be used opposite
openmg no-trumps when the
next player has passed. If he
acts, forget about transfers .
Today 's hand shows the
transfer opposite a two notrump opening. South
jumped right to four hearts
because his hand was maximum for hearts.
He managed' fil make an
overtrick. He started win·
ning the spade lead ; cash·
ing the ace· and king of
hearts; ruffing a spade In
dummy ; leading a diamond
and sticking in the eightspot.
West made his best return
of a diamond . South cashed
the
and king; ruffed another spade; discarded a
club on the 13th diamond and
wound up losing just one

CASH paid for all makes and '
models of mobile homes.
Phone area code 614·423-9531 .
4-13-lfc

aee

··Air Condition·erS: ,
· • Awnings

.

·:Underpirmi_~g ·

' !'

\~

; ~omplete mQblie ham•; ,
:s.ervl&lt;e ~ plus gigantic!
: a Isplay of mobile homes ' '
; ~~ways .avallable•al ...

. ;MILLER
,_ - .,_ ...

I,

I

MO.IJI~E H~ME~
,,

1220 Washington Blvd.
BELPRE,O..

: ~4~3·7521

'

Caprice Sport Sedan. Less than 15,000 miles &amp; spotless
. ln~ lde. ~out. 5 new j".~lte:wall tires tr•nslerr~ lr,O 'l\c'J~ •
new t ar. Comforlron air. 400 V-8 engine, with powe ralsc
front brakes. steering &amp;automa tic, power windows &amp; door
lock~ , Dark green irlnyl roof with medium green In color.
Radoo &amp; rear speaker. S-H-A-R-P.

1966 SKYLINE mobile home,
lOxso. Phone 9?2·J954. 1·18·31c

f
I

·.I [ ) I I I

IZEEMAC ,.

I I

Sport Sedan, local I owner car, beautiful turquoise finish
with spotless match ing Interior trim. black vinyl top,
factory air, V-8 engine, turbo hydramatic, pf!Ner steering
and brakes. radio, good w-w tires, deluxe bumper guards,
nice and clean.

1970 DODGE POI.ARA 4 DOOR .•.s1695
Factory air, V-B engine, automatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, good w-w tires, radio, clean Interior, white finish
with vinyl top.

HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick
· Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
house, -J bedroo.ms, excellent

· location, close to school and
city; contact Lou Osborne or
call ·992-5898.
11 ·26-lfc

,...

The bidding hu been:
West North
Eut

II I ........I - - .I.,.·ltor-thtI m.......[ 'I I J
Now III'IIIP the clrdtd 1ttteb

IIIIWtr, . .

. 1q111ttd bp lbubom artoon.

L-...:.:.,..::==:.:-===--....J

•I!•.•.....~.~...
&gt;

I'
-

.

.

l A - .......,,
·. 11 • Nln' oc~ CAMPVI · KIMONO

.,.,=-for!IJU
.

,.. .

...-I-·

"

' ,.It

J,

'

,

. Open Eves. Til 6--TII 5 P.M. Sat.:
; 'You'll Lll&lt;l! O·,. ~tltyWay111;Doll19-iuslnes~i'

,•

Generation R'a p
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Don't BeUeve All You Hear
Rap:
Amarried man at work says he and his wife have a perfect
relationship. '11ley go out with whomever they please, just so lt;s
on a ''friends" basis. When she Ia working evenings he dates

1969 QIEVROLET IMPALA. ........s1895

other girls, and now he wants that girl to be me.
I wouldn't inlnd dinner and a show with a guy who doesn't
expect the goodnight kiss to BEGIN the evening, but could a wife
really be that unjealous? ...;. LANIE

St. Wagon. local I owner new ca r trade-In, vinyl interior;
white finish, 1/-8 engine, automatic trans., power steering
&amp; brakes, radio &amp; many other ex tras .

Dear Lanle:

·1968 CAMARO CONV.............. ;.. 51695
Locall owner, ff!N mileage car, beaut iful cream fin . with
black top, bucket seal$ &amp; console, new w-s-w tires. radio, ·
P.S., auto. trans. One of the scarce ones and as nice as

they come.

St. Wagon, \'.a engine, std. trans., radio, good tires, vinyl
Interior, green finish, radio,

Real Estate For.Sale

l

1966 NOVA 4 DOOR .................. 5695
6 cyl. engine, automatic trans , radio, good tires, clean
Interior, green over white finish.

Wby don't you Insist on asking her-tefore you accept the
dale? - HELEN AND SUE

+++

Rap :
To put It bluntly, this girl took my boyfriend away and
married him. For two years, she kept sending me letters about
how happy they were and why didn't I c®e to visit them.
(Rubbwg it in I)
I haven't heard from her in siJ; months, but I'm going up that
way In the aprlng. Now that I'm over him, I'd kind of Uke to see
old friends. again. Besides, I've lost weight and people say I look
better than ever- and I hear llhe Ia getting pretty tubby. It's only
htman to mix a alight case of "get even" with curlllllity about old
friends. Isn't It? - REOOVERED BUT STILL SMARTING
'

Dear R But S.S. :

1965 QIEV. NOVA WAGON ...........
s450
•
out good. Plenty of space lor the family ,

Yes, It's only hwnan - but what, really, will a visit ac-

_compllsh? You don't want the guy any more, and the girl was
never yolD' friend. When you sUr up an old ketUe of fish, you're
llaflle to make a bigger stink than you can handle. - HELEN

+++

R. But S.S.:

1971 DODGE lh TON PICKUP.... !1995
8' wide bOdy, local trade-In \Yith 34,000 miles 6 eyl
engine. std. trans ., H. duly tires, white ove~ gr...;
finish, deluxe mldgs., rear bumper, radio.

1969 DIEVROLET ·2 JON TRUCK $2095
102" Cab to axle, 292 cu. ln. engine, 15,000 lb., 2
speed rear axle, 825x20 tires, foam seat mirrors
solid cab. ready to go to work .
'
'

Be honest: you'd be going back to show this felia wllat he

· mF• and make his wife as jeal~ of you as you'llnce were of

HER. It's a ·great temptatiOn wt "gettlngeven"ta banlly ever as
much run u you expect It to be.
If· you're not out' to break up a marriage, then wby iake
chancea?You dw.'t really want him back, do you? - SUE

Dear Helen and Sue:
! like thla poem Ill)' slater brought hmte from school. Ma:rbe
yOur readers wlll Uke It too:

, (HIWSPAPER EHTIIPIUSI ASSN.)

t] I

NIPICC ~ )~

•

' ... ' · " ' Cad"loc. Oldsmobile' ' ' ' ·
· '··· f
'
'
992-5342
GMAC Fina~~~tlng .Availlble
Pomer6'

2-door, local 1-owner, low mileage, good tires, clean Interior, green finish , radio. 2000cc engine, 4-speed. WAS
$1799,

1968 QIEV. BEL AIR.~ ...............51095

club and one diamond.
This hand doesn't show
any transfer bid magic. Or
does it?
People who don't use
transfers play all r esponses
to two no-trump as forces
and North JDight decide to
just pass two no·trump rather than get to game with
just one queen. After all,
South might well have only
two hearts for his no-trump
opening.

llaleramblethele teurJuinblea.

KARR ·&amp; VANZANDT .·

1971 FORD PINTO ................. )1599

6 cylinder, aut6matlc transmission, radio, good tires, runs '

Jl!JMmllJ£;!,;!,,:::!.!::! ~c

• No Payments Until After Feb. 15, 1973

1971 QIEVROLET................... }3500

1970 QIEVROlET CAPRICE ........ 52495

Mobile Homes. For Sale'

Not to Use Transfer

North

1·7•tfC

automatic transmission, p.s.,
extra set snow tires, $550 ;

NOR'DI

West

~

:-:---::-:::::-::-:----

WIN AT BRIDGE

When

~

1968 DODGE pickup, good
condition, Sl •.WO; phone 992·
7378.
1-21 -ltp

. 992-2174
·soo

1f

2()4

' l

~TH

~
USED CARS

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

to

7ROOMhol.se, utilityroom,l'l&gt;
baths, buill-In cabinets,
.carpet, double garage, city
water, 1 acre level ground.
cl01t to school, Rou" 681,
Tms · Plalni; ph0¥10 371·
6 4, Robert llllrber.
• 1-17-6tp

a¢~

OIL FILTERS(Mopsr replaces
Fraro PH8)

...

.

'

r·

-"?s r

7 ~OOM-iilodi hcime l.ocated on · lett.r ~ ueh oquare,
Slate Rt. 124 In Syracuse, f•r• four onllnarJ wonlu.
Ohio. Large kltcftln wllh lots·
of built-In birch cabinets.
CQ
Dining room. living room, 4 L..:HA:;:;;;R~::.....f.,.·.;;=-:;"'l::::'";;:.'i::::;*::J-..,
bedrooms
and
bath. '
(
~l~$
Recrealloh
room
In
' blisement, garage, concrete · -~::=~~"---1-.J
driveway, large . yand, 1\1:1 ~
acre, lots ol shade trees. For
JMCA.G ·:
appointment ph. 446'9~!1-6tc
COMFORTABLE, 2 stor,~
home,' full basement, af.
!ached glrage, extra tot.
Double oven, gas range,
lreezer.refrlgerator com·
.blnatlon. bath'&amp; 112; phone 992·
7384 or 992-71JJ.
· •
·
. 1·18-61c

ASHLAND GASOLINE(while
al'e full

muffler claro~S(all sizes)

1970 BUICK Lesabre 4 dr. sed., color
yellow with brown top, factory air.
Was $2695.
NOW $2495

1'92·3325

Lpng Bottom, phone

WJDp's products,tune up,
sprt11re,friction proofing, ·
l!llllti-purpoae concentrate,
transm:tssi on cond. ,p/st. cond.
50 'f, oft" list price
'

hd

1970. CI:IEV. CAPRICE 2 dr. H.T. Gray
with black vinyl top, factory air. Was
$2795.
NOW$2595

.

1'1/sl'!l
3-G78/.l5 GOODRICH W/S/!1
l·F70/J.4 . GOODYEAR W/S/!1
1•775/14 GENFRAL W/S/!1
l-8lS'/l5 .GOODYF...AR W/S/!1
l-69S'/l4 GOODYF.A.R W/S/w

$21 •• 7115

z•P/8/;1.4

$"2:)5

1970 PONTIAC · Grand Prix. One
owner, all black with black vinyl in~
terior, air. This is one sharp car.
Priced to move.
$2995

·Pomorey, Ollla &lt;U76f

985-3529.

J!l o23

Jlio)8 -

11,0 Mechanic Street

HOUS~ ln

.

.

thermostats for all cars

1971 PONTIAC Bonneville 4 dr; H.T.
'Factory air, gold with brown vinyl top,
.one owner. Was $3995. Now you can
buy this beauty,
FOR ONLY $3695

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

1 ~OOM hou5e· and beth, nice
large lot, natural gas, bulll·ln
cabinets In kitchen, close to
radio station In Bradbury,
phone 992-2602.
l-16-12fp '

AC hesdli~ht units
small dua tYp,e $2.e~ .
large single '
~.~(

line antifr,eeze

¢ - 5 5 ¢ ·.

motor oil l~fo and
M qt.
qt.

.

f%
. oUR dHof c~ ~ EACH

55. tt

'-

1971 PONTIAC Grandville 2 dr. H.T.,
.factory air, AM &amp; FM &amp; Tape Player.
One local owner. SALE PRICE $3995

Virgil B.

HOUSE BY OWNER: 3 or 4
bedrooms, lflrge rec. room.
large patio, mOdern kitchen.
tully carpeted ; call 992-5248
until 3 p.m. or 992-3436 otter 3
·
p.m,; No sunday Calls.
·
·
1·21·12fc

k

,1971 BU,ICK Lesabre 4 dr. Sed., color
gold with beige vinyl top, factory air.
Only 13,341 mll.es on this ~eauty . Show
room clean..
SALE $3695

1'92·22S.
If 1!0 answer
1'92·2568 or 915-4219

NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - 6 rooms
and bath, 3 bedrooms, 2
porches and level lot. ,Asking
$7500.00.
TRAILER SPOT
1 ACRE - With water and
electricity, 52500, and 97
acres with producing gas
well. $)4,000.00.
NEW !lOUSE
OUTSTANDING .:... A fine
home that you ' ll be proud Ia
fiNn . Has 5 bedrooms, rec .
·room, garage and I'll baths .
All electric on a large lot. In
an approved subdivision~
real towel of a house.
HOT WATER HEAT
WARM - 3 nice' size
bedrooms · with double
windows and large closets.
Large living, dining and
modern kitchen. Car!M!ting
and fenced' lawn, 1A. neat
plllte lor $20,000.00.
NEW HOME
BRICK FRONT . 3
bedrooms, baseboard heat,
nice kitchen. garage, and
front porch. On Ohio Power.
Large lot. Want $20,500.00.
NEW HOME '
STOVE
AND
REFRIGERATOR
Beautiful kitchen with bar,
·dining, and large !lvlng. 3
nice size bedrooms with
large closets . Now only
$16,000.00.
•
• MOBILE HOME SITE
HAS 2 mobile homes now A 1972 Fleetwood goes with
the land of 3.JJ acres. Drilled
well and motor boat.
Overlooking the Ohio. River.
NEARLY NEW
RETIREMENT HOME With 2 bedrooms, nice bath,
and utility. Beautiful kit,
chen, natural pas furnace
and carpeting In living .
Large lot on hard rood. Only
$14,000.00.
WE HAVE 7 NEW HOMES,
23 other homes , 8 with
acreage, 22 building lots and
several pieces of land with
no bui Idings. Invest now for
your future . We are· loaded
with properties, may have
what you want.
HELEN L. TEAFO!tD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

*'

.

.

TIRES
'NEW TIRES IN STOCK

windshield washel' solvent

JANUARY SALE .

i

l/2J

. SALE STAJUS 1/22 AND CONTINUES THROUGH

·. 1

11 Room House. lot83 ft. x
189ft.,.4 baths upstairs, IVa
bath down, addltion;W '
land, ~3 ft. river trontaue·
at 216 W. Matn St-.,
Pomeroy, o.

For Sale By Owner

•

.

FOR $ALE

.'

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.

Stop II! and See Our
Floor

- - - - --

HOOD'S AQUARIUMS ; fis h 2
BEDROOM
furnished
and supplies; new location, apartment, 114 Mulberry,.na.
dogs or cats; adu lt s;
Ash Street. Middleport near
references; phone 992-6698.
park; phone 992·5443.
1·10-lfc
1-7-tfc

' '

--'-----:-

Balan ce $65 .89. Use our
budget term s. Call 992-7085.
l-18-6t c

Sunday , 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., 1968 FORD Fairlane 500 wagon,
luggage rack, V-8. power
Mrs, Sleven {Wanda) Eblin, steering, power brakes, at
Rt . 2, Pomeroy {laurel Clill 34,000 actual miles ; like new
Rd. off Rl. 7 By-Pass) ; phone condit ion; will ·trade for
992-2272.
pickup truck of near equal
1-3-30-tc value , give or lake dlf ·
--..,.-----terence ; Robert Hill, 949-3811.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp;WIGS.
l-18-6tp
SPECIALS MONTHLY. - - - - - - - - - - - ----PHONE HELEN JANE
BROWN. MIDDLEPORT, Wanted To Rent
OH 10 992-5113. ·
WOULD Ll KE to rent a 3 or 4
12-3-tfc
bedroom modern home : have
.
references; preferably Meigs
Coun ly ; phone 992-3062.
1-14-lBic

ONE two

-

speaker sovnd system. 4
speed automat ic c hanger.

For Sale 9r Trade

For Rent

Balance $77 .69 . Use our
budg et term s. Call 992-7085.
l-18-61c

MODERN wal nut style stereo·
radio . AM-FM radio , 4

evening S by appointment ;

..HEll"

• FURNITUR~

SPINET-CONSOLE PIANO.
Wanted responsible party to
pro/'ect. Fast and easy. Free
stitch. Full cash pri ce $38.50
est
take over spinet plano. Easy
males. Phone 992-3284.
or budget plan available.
terms. Can be seen locally.
Goegleln Ready-Mi x Co .,
Phone 992-7755.
Write Credit Manager. P. 0 .
Middleport, Ohio.
1. 11 .6tc
Box 276, Shelbyville, Ind iana
6·30·1fC
46176.
Cleaner new 1972
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _1_-19-21p VACUUM
Model , Complete with all
cleaning tools. Small paint REASONABLE rates. Ph. &lt;146·
SPECIAL PURCHASE
damage in shipping . Will take
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
. GIRLS' SHOE S. crepe-soled.
$27 cash or budget plan
Owner &amp; Operator .
sizes 4 1!~- 6, 99c pr. Great buys
available. Phone 992-7755.
5·12-ttc
on man{. other NEW items: 3' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,_
. 17'61c - C-._B_R_A_D_F_
O_R_D_,-A-u-ct-Ion
-eer
x 6'
r inged area .·ugs ,
pil lows. bl ank ets, bed · 1971 CAMARO , speed vs
Complete Service
spr eads , comi c strip bed
Bu cket · Seats. Reasonable.
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
sheets, fabr ic-covered sofa
Ca II aft er 5, 992·7201.
I
Crill
Bradford
beds. vinyl reclin ers, r ocker S
...-•y•.- "'' ·5-l-tf¢1 i
&amp; MU &lt;iH MORE ii; AhWAi'f'S, ' -? r j -rp ; ,} Jrjii :$ :'~ t· pf,~' t':
avail able, our usual selection ·coAL. um'e!l~ne , Excel sioo - --_- - - of value -pr iced used fur Sail Works; E. Main St., SEE US FOR : Awnings , storm
niture, appliances, KUHL'S . ·Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
doors and windows, carports,
BARGAIN CENTER , " at
marquees. aluminum sldlnv
4-12-lfc
caut io n li gh t," Tuppers ----,--=-- - - and railing. A. Jacob, sales
Pla ins. Ohio. Closed Mondays SIN GER au-tomatic sewing
representative. For free
only ; open to 6. ·
machine; like new in walnut
estimates, phone Charles
1·19-7tc
cabinet. Makes design slitLisle, Syracuse, V, V.
-----ches. zig-zags, butfonholes.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
1948 CHEVROLET. new ly
blind hems, overcasts, etc.,
3·2-lfc
overhauled eng ine; phone 992· S85. Call . Ravenswood , 273·
7897.
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
1-19-3tc 9S21 or 273-9893.
Septic tanks Installed. George
1-11 -tfc
{BIIII Pull ins . Phone 992·2418.
EAR L Y Amer ica n ster eo-ra dio
4-25-lfc
1965
FORD
Station
Wagon
i'
combination, AM-F M radio, .4

children, sisters and brother .

I WILL do bookkeeping and

parts,

rebuilt carburetor and new

nore, your lovmg sm ile, your

you ;
Your face and voice are fresh In
mi nd, we never shall forget,

and

. SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph,. 99l'2174
Pomeroy

HAYMAN 'S Auction - a good
place to go each Friday
evening , 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff
on old Rl. 7, 1 mile west of
Rock Springs Fairground.
·,
· 10-10-lfc

Garnet Ba chner.

.• PoMeroy

From the largest

:RAWLINGS DISCOUNT CITY STRJKES AGAIN

Januaty is a bad month for
Used Cats so we are
·going to. make a good

· 101 E. Main

·Business·Services
Smallest Heater Core.
' Nathan Biggs ·
Radiator Specialist

.,.llitilliiiiiiiiiiii------~-

QILAND·
RIALTY

For · Rent

Meigs Care Line, 992- 7502

RIFLE MATCH , Rutland Gun
Club, Sunday, 1 p, m.
1-18-Jtc

Card of Thanks

grandf at her,

Rt~al Estate For Sale

Fast Results Use The Sunday .Ti-mes-Sentinel .·Cla$s.ifieds ·

wANl Ao.S.
INFORMAT) ON
'h DOUBLE, 2 bedroom ,. fur .
I'EADLINES
GU N SHOOT, Sunda y, Jan . 2 BEDROOM mobile home on UN FURN ISHED 3-room
ol d Rl. 33, adults only :· phone . apartment, adul ts only . 1No nished; phone 992-2749.
5 P.M . Day Before Publica'tlon . 21st, .,1 p: m . Side Hil l Gun
991.6294 or 992-6385 after 8
pets. 406 Spri ng Ave..
1·14-lfc
Monday Deadl il)e 9 a.m .
Club ; no al coholic beverages
p.m.
Pomeroy.
cancellation - CorreCtions • allowed; factory choked QUns
1-17·101&lt;
1-7-lfc
Wilt be accepted until 9 a .m . tor
only ; assorted meats; soft
Day of Publica tion
drinks will be sold ; free
-'---------cR EGULA:rtONS
..
The Publisher reserves the · co ff ee; troph ies for High MOB ILE home, 12 x 65, ·13 ft .· 3 AND '4 ROOM furnished and
ex pando : partia ll y furnished ;
. r ig ht to edit or r elect any ads
Poi nt Cards ; not responsi ble
unfu r nis~ e d
apartments.
air
-conditioned;
ni ce
deeme d
oblett lonal . The
far acci den ts.
Phone 992.5434,
location
;
S140
a
mon
t
h
;
publisher wil l not be responsible.
l-1 8-Jtc
4-12-tfc
for more than on~ incorrec t _ _ _.;__ _ _ __
depo sit requi red; need
-.
·
-references
;
phone
992-6615.
;nserlion .
GUN SHOOT, · Sunday, Jan.
~·

2&amp; ~Tbe SUnday Tlmea -SentlneUunday, Ja~. 21,1973

.

,

.

' to please you • . . you'll like our
We are here
appral~als &amp; trading plicyl

3t
Pass
'"'
Pass
You, South, hold:
,
•AQ9875 tA3Z ... KQ7

•z

What do you· do now?

A-Builneoo ;;. lookblr lip. Bid ·
four diamonds to obow tile oeo.
. TODAY'S QUES110N
You bid four diamonds and
your partner bic!J lour spades.
What do you do now7-:·

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
.992-2126 ·

"Your Chevy O.o/tr"
·Open EVes. TillS .

Pomeroy

Happlne18
Can't be defil)ed.
It's a certain mood,
A tlate of mind.
It'a a~~arq
Everyday ·aftatrs
With one who !pldentands
And
!h a tender looll
C)' I geaUe touch
'l1lal ..,.., "I love. you

c-.

:, Very mudr ..."

It's a smile of we1ccme
When )'OU're blue,
A dream U.t'a lbared,
A dream for two.
And ba[llllaea It'a more titan llila:

It's a Wllnll embrace
And

aIIIICic t~as.

It's a apedai ·blesalng
From above:
!t'a what you bave

'·

I

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.I
"l'

I

1·

When yoo•re In love! DOROTHY

)
I

�:.

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26- The Stmday.Times- Sentinel, Sunday. Jan. 21. 1973

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1:·
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1•

~

•

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',.'
..'·
'·
",.,."

:··

:
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·For·Fast ·Results Use· The Sunday·Tim~s-Sentinel · Classifiet}s
.

'

Card· of Thanks

Real Estate For Sale

For Rent

STROUT
REALTY

1 WISH to thank all my friends ,; - - - - - - - - - - . ,

and relat ives for their many ' Looking for a mobile home
cards a·n d prayers and good
lol or &lt;l qua lity mobile home?
wisheSinmyre,:enttriptothe · 1Wc h.wc both at·
hospital. Also during con·
valescence · at home with a
brok en limb. I am now
wa lking without "lY walker
· most of the time. Than ~ you
all. With love and may God
bless you al l. Mrs. George'W.
Keith, 1351 Stri ngtown Road .
•
Grove City, Ohio 43123.
17-1
Rodney-Cora Rd .
· Rodney , Ohio
Hours 9 a.m . to 9 p.m.
Monday lhru Saturday
TWO-WAY Radios Sales &amp;
Ph. 245-9374- 245-5021
'----:---"--'-------:-"'
B
Ser vice. New and used C 's,
·,n
.
It s antennas 2 BEDROOM trai l er
po I 1ce mon
Qr
'
·
Band
Cheshire, 367-7329.
t c. Bob , s c ·t,·zens
1
eRadio
Equip., G~orges Creek
306-lf
Rd ., Gallipolis, Ohio 4&lt;16-45 17.
.
212-ff SLEEPING rooms for r ent .
•
Ga llia Hotel, 446-9715.
1
RALPH 'S Carpel &amp; Upholstery
181 -lf
Cleaning Service . Free
estimates. Ph . 446~ 0294 . Ralph 12 X 50 trailer . adults only,
Cheshire, 367-7512.
A. Da'V is, owner .
lH
. 9-tf

QUA'll CREEK

MOBIL£
COMMUNITY
&amp; SAL£S

f' Notice

'•
'

'

_

World's Largestr
THE LEADER .5'1NCE 1900 tN
SERVING THE NATION 'S
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
Ph. 446-0008
THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SERVING THE NATION'S
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
Ph. 44~·000a
_
THIS NEARLY NEW 3 BR
br 'ock offers~ood living with
1111 baths,
carpet, cent.
k 't h
d bl
air, dream ' c en . ou e
garage and pat io. Owner has
been tran sferred and is
anxious to sell.
ADDISON - Lovely 3 BR home
with brick . front , carport,
ut ility rm. , and cent . air. E-Z
financing on $2 1,000.

. 10 X 50 TRAILER in Cheshire,

LiKE CITY LIVING? We have 4
hom es in town priced from
$7,000
to $15,000.
' 13-6

completely .furn ish ed . Phone

FREE 6 ·months rent .
FREE washer and dryer.
Your choice with each
mobile homt! purchased at
Quai I Creek Mobile Com·
munity and Sales before
March IS, 1973! Contact
Nowt Jonos, Rodney-Cora
Road, Rodney, Ohio. HRS. : 9
a.m .. 9 p.m. Ph . 245-5021 or
24S-9374 Mon. thru Sat.

367 -7539.

ROOFING and gutter work.
William Mitchell , 38~ · 8S07.
.
67-tf
DAY CARE
SUN VALLE•Y Nur:;ery SchooL
licensed by· State of Ohio, 1'12
miles west of new hospital.
577 Sun Valley Dr. Ph . 446·
3657. Day care that says "we
care." Madge Hauldren,
Owner; Loredlth &amp; John
• Hauldren, Operator s.
114-tf
RUSS 'S Glass Service. Gl" "·
al l needs, we sell windshie lo::..,
storm 'Windows and doors,
awn ings and mirrors. 704
rine St.. Rio Grande. 245-50-18.
295-tf
GOT a junk problem? We pic k
up 1 unk car bodies. Buy scrap
iron and metals. Phone 388·
8583.
12 _12
-'---

113
SLEEPING ROOMS. weekly L-0 -A-C-A· T- 1-0 -N
SECOND AVE . Elderly 2
ra les . park Centra l· Hotel.
story man sion could be used
'
308-tf
as a 3, 4 or 5 BR home. Dining
rm . and family rm . each have
APARTMENT for construction
fireplaces. New cabinets in
men . Ph . 446-0756.
kitchen , llf-z baths, garage,
267-tf
patio and part basement .
Don'l wai t too long to see this
SL EEPING rooms, week ly
one .- because it probab l y
r ates, free garage park ing,
won't be on the market long .
Libby Hotel.
241-tf
· k
CHARMIN G HOUSE 0 f bn c
and frame construction Is just
APARTMENT lor lease. un for you . Formal dln lnd rm ., 2
furni shed, SIOO per month, 2
firepl aces, pan ele
den ,
bedrooms , secllnd floor ,
garage and screened porch
opposi te city park, central
are on l y a few of the many
heat and air conditioning, 446·
highlights of this attractive
2325 or 446-4425 .
hillside home.
J.tf
LIVE &amp; . COLLECT RENT. 2
UNFURNISHED •partment, 6
b•and new mobile homes on a
rooms and bath , Inquire at
tn:tt tot 2 ml. from new
Cedar Street Market, or Ph.
hospital. Only $13,900.
4&lt;16-1703. After 5, 4&lt;16-1522 .
15-3
MIDDLEPORT- Lovely 6 rm .
modern home with 3 BR,
HOUSE, 4 rooms and bath . Call
built -In ki tchen, 7 fireplaces
4&lt;16-4286.
PLU S 4 rental units renting
15-3
for· $555 per month .

---,--------

Local Bowling

MONDAY BUSINESS
Monday, Jan. 15 bowling
results are as follows:
Stewart ' s Hdwr . and C.
Queen's 205-602-8 pts., Hart's
Used Cars and D. Dunca n's
'IN THE vici nity of Vinton 1 205-567 - 0 pis.
female black and tan coon
Gallo Wine and E. Petrie1 S
hound . Reward offered . 228-603 - 8 pfs., Moose Lodge
• P.hone 367-7520 or 367-7784.
and E. Thomas' la5-530- opts.
.
I~
Blue Fountain Motel and B.
Tillis'
212-551 - 6 pis ., JohnA MUFFLER off a '70 Ford, on son's Market
and A. Gabriell i's
Teons Run Road Thursday.
167-493
2
fts
.
Jon. 11 . If found call 446-1213
Chris
Cra
f
and
R. Johnson's
or 446-4285.
191 -512 6 pis., Jenki ns'
15·3 Concrete and C. Roberts' 184·
_ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _
- 2 pts .
D ACHSHUND-BEAGLE lost In 485The
Feds and R. Hall' s 189vlclnlly: of -Stale Street. Call 54 5 _ 6 pts., C_q rbln s, s~~.cjer
... 446-1927 ,
" a nd 'l&lt; ~ 'P-f~nei'!'135-606 '~'2 ~ts:
15·3
O'Dell Lumber and M.
- - -- - - - - - Ja rrell's 213-561 4 pts.,
Firestone and R. McEl hinney's
203-566 - 4 pts.
Ga llipolis Parts Whse . and
TAPE recorder that will hold 7
Inch reels. 446-9328 .
R. Barnes' l64-4a2 - 4 pts., C.
17-6 &amp; P. Telephone and R. Brown's
- ------,---and B. Gilpin 's 512 ser ies - 4
JUNK autos and scrap metal , pts .
388-8776.
Standings:
245-78 Team
W. L
0
-----------:---:Stewart's Hdwr.
WANTED to buy, sell or trade, Gallo Wine
8 0
toy electric tra in, 446-4843.
Blue Fountain Motel
6 2
240-ff Chris Crall
6 2
Feds
6 2
4
CAT'. •.E. will buy from one to CYDell Lumber
4
100. Call 446-3792.
Firestone
4 4
13-6 Gallipolis Parts
4
4
4
4
--------C. &amp; P. Telephone
Corbin &amp; Snyder
2 6
2 6
Johnson 's Market
Jenkins' Concrete
2 6
CLEAN rugs, like new. so easy Hart's Used Cars
0 8
to do with Blue Lustre. Rent Moose Lodge
0
elect r ic shampooer $1 at
POMEROY LANES
Central Supply Co.
Wod . Early Bird League
17-6
January 17, 1973
Won Lost
A GOOD buy ... give it a try.
Evelyn's
Grocery
26
6
Blue Lustre . America ' s
favori te ca rpet shampoo $1 at King Bu ilders' Supply 22 10
Dorothy's Plnnettes
18 14
G. C. Murphy's.
14 18
17-6 Bertha s Grocery
R. H. Rawlings
12 20
4 28
MOBILE home in Gallipolis, 2 Royal Crown
High Ind. Game - Flossie
adults only . Ph. 4&lt;16-0338.
'
17-11 Maxson 211. Lou ise Gilmore
181.
High Ser ies Flossie
FURNISHED apartment . Call
al 631 Fourth Avenue . Maxson 507. Jon Jenkins 461.
Team High Game and Ser l e~
References.
17-ff - King Builders' Supply, 775
-----..,.---and 2232 .'
2 BEDROOM home with
ba se me~t
gas
furnace.
carpeted throughout. Adults MRS. TRUDEAU BURIED
only. Ph one 446-0958 or 446·
MONTREAL (UP!) - Prime
3553.
Minister
Pierre Elliott Tru17-3
deau 's mother was burled
- - - ' - -- HOUSE located on Buiaville- ThW'sday following a simple
Addlson Road . Call367 -7438or
service at St. Rem! chW'cb 30
446-3879.
17-lf miles south of Montreal.
The late Mrs. Grace Elliott
NEW 12 x 65 mobile home, large
Trudeau
died '!Uesday night
lot, utilities pa id. close to
Gavin Plant . 446-3611 .
after a lengthy illness. She was
17-6 83 Y!!"rs old. '

·Lost

Wanteti To Buy

MIDDLEPORT- ELEGANT 2
story bri ck con I ains l 2 rms .
This Is the home of the late
Dr . Cluff and can be bought
far below replaceme nt.

a

•

PAY ONLY ONE UTILITY

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES

TARA
For

lnform~tion· Call

1112 BATHS

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS

Shirley Adkins-J67-7250

·

Real Estate F9r Sa!e ·

r-~-----.~IH=
· =E------~~

Realty

'FOR/SALE
BY·OWNER

WISEMAN

452 Second Ave.
446-3434
Oscar Baird
Doug Wetherholl
TOWN APARTMENTS - Two
·apartment buildings on large
lot in ci t y.

AGENCY

Praclic;olly new7 rQGm brick
ranch style home, total
electrjc &amp;' air conditioning,
t 'II tile bath &amp; shower, 6
roomy closets, plus walk-In
cedar cloisei. Wall to wall
carpet, the vory best In
paneling, a dream kitchen
with 30 11. of beautiful.
cabinets,
large ·stone '
fireplace in living room,
built~ in Vi!ICUum· system ~ 2·
car t~rlg~, plus· milnV extra
features . Outside cookout &amp;
patio. One 2 bedroom fur·
nished apt. and new trailer.
Both rented . Two large
barns, large pond, 30 1cres in
all with new fences. One
·large cistern and rural
water. Will accept small
place on. trade in or near
Gallipolis. Located on St. Rt.
·160, five, miles from new
hospital. One of the better
built homes In the county.
Reason lor-selling, ill h_ealth.
Phone 446-4170.

TOP BEEF FARM - One of
SEO's fi nest farms . Call us
for appointment .
LI STINGS NEEDED - Now Is
the l ime to li st with us for fast
action on your rroperty.
Evening Cat 446·4244
Steven Bell, 446·9583

MASSIE

Here's A Beauty For $17 ;900.00

_Really, 32 State St.
Tel. 446-1998

Th is one won't be on the market long so don't wall tor it to
warm up before looking . It Includes 3 bedrooms, very nice
kitchen w ith range built In, wall to wall carpet throughout, .
all electric heat. One car garage, large flat lot. Call up for
an appointment right now.
·
'

NEAR CLAY SC. - 4 Bdrms.,
li v. rm . 13' x 28' with F.P.,
formal din. rm .. modern
kitchen, H.W. floors . walnut
trim , full base. and dry. Gar.
20'x20' (block). '12 A. lot wit~
plenty shrubbery. This house
has quality hard to find In
foday 's construction . Only
$27,500.
'
SPRING VALLE.Y - Bi -Level,
3 large bdrms. with deep and
wide closets , all factory
ki tchen with dishwasher and
disposal. Large llv . rm . with
carpet, lcirge rec . rm . with
ca rpet and bar, 2 car gar,
wi th elec . dr. This house has
cen . air, is only 4 yrs. old, weU
constructed and located on a
large lot . Price reduced.
d b t•
VINTON - 7 rm s. an
a.,
carpeted, has alum . siding,
storm drs. and windows, new
roof and ci ty wa ter . Located
on 1.25 A. good garden land ;
has berries, grapes, p~a _r,
cherry and apple trees .
Reduced to $13;000.
NEAR K .C. H. Sc . -

Beautiful

Colonial, a big rms .. 3 baths.
all carpeted, lull finished
base ., SIS per mo., Nat. gas
heat. Located on a 3 A. tot.
Also has a metal barn 30'x60'
and ' storage bldg . Asking
$40,000 . ·
•GA RFIE L D AVE . _ Extra
ni ce, 5 rooms on first floor,

Want

A

LOT 67' • 112' located at 54
Garf ield Ave~ue. $1,000.
I'IEW LISTING
3 .BEDROOM home at 1809
Chestnut Street. Just recently
pain ted inside and out. Carpet
in liv ing room and three
bedrooms. Would make a
gnod in\lestment.
Office Phone 446-169•··
Evenings
Charles M. Neal 446. 1546
J. Michaol Neal 446·1503

Real Bargain

Large well bui lt 3 bedroom home with full basement.
You ' ll approve of the beautiful built-In kitchen (range &amp;
oven ), ceramic bath and garage. Loca ted in an exce llent
neighborhood on a large flat lot.
Here's A Beauty

Brand New
Ready To
Move Into
THI S LOVELY NEW 4
BEDROOM
IN CLUDE S
FAMILY ROOM , CEN TRAL
A IR ,
DI SH -

With Fireplace

&amp; Basement
MO"DERN IN DESIGN
WI TH 3 NICE SIZED
BED ROOMS , CARPETED
LIVI N G

ROOM,

TH•S

MAY

BE

Need 5 Bedrooms?
We Have 2 Dandies
Monarch mobile home,
1970, 12x47, located in
Rio Grande. Phone 2455580 .

oR .

fjJhJ]JINJIL

CENTENARY - Good 3 or 4
bdrm . Ranch. It has H.W.
floors with carpet in liv. rm.
and hall. Some paneling .
Large kitchen with plenty
cabinets . City water and nat.
gas. A good buy at $23,500.
FARMS
25 Locust St.
95 /!&lt;. Woods Mill Rd.
Howard .Brannon, Broker
92. ~ A. Pleasant Hill Rd.
Off. 446-2674
40 A. Near Rio Grande.
Lucille Brannon
49 A. King Rd . $16,500.
Eve. ~46-1226 or 446·2674
163 A. Ward Rd ., vaca nt land.
NEW LISTING
Finan ci ng available.
KANAUGA, 5th .Ave. 3 BR and
30 A. Bidwell r good hou se .
bath , eat -In kitc hen , HW
ANY HR. 446-1998
floors, gas F.A. furnace,
enclose:j porch , full basement
above
ground,
garage.
$15,000. A near acre lot.
RIVER VIEW FARM
ALL ELECTRIC brick home
located on Rt. 7, 6 rooms and
bath , stonefirj&gt;place in family
room , carpet throughout, a
luxury kitchen, patio, brick
garage, large rolling lawn,
fruit trees , tobacco base. 96
acres level to hili land and
woods.
RETIREMENT SPECIAL
MY Friend's daughter has 16 ACRES, ail electr ic home,
absolutely nothing to wear. beautiful LR with fireplace,
which fills 3 closets.
eat in kitchen with range and
' ref ., 'h basemont, well
SHE drives as though she has stocked
pond .
30'x60'
fenders she hasn't even begun building . Quick pos:;ession .
to use.
VALUE P PACKEDI
BEAUTIFULLY cared for 4 BR
1722 CHATHAM Avenue, lot size home, stone fireplace In LR,
40 x ISO. Five rooms In good all electric kitchen and DR
condition, has gas heat, oatn. large family room, l'/2 bath:
Pri ced to soil at $8,000.
car port and extra large
workshop, ali copper plum ·
68 MILL CREEK, completely bing, a well built home .
painted Inside and out, new
C·O·M·F-0-R-T.
stove. prlc.ed $5,800 on land HERE is a charmfng home,
contract with small down easy to care for , newly
payment.
painted inside. Large paneled
LR, 3 BR, lorgeeat In kitchen,
5 ACRES. adiacenl to City, low upkeep and modestly
$7,500.
taxes, deep lot with garage
and work shop, All for only
1968 TRAILER, 12 x 45 on 'h $13,000.
. Acre lot at Thurman, plus
RANCHER
outbuilding , $5,000 .
ONE -THIRD acre lot well
landscaped . 7 rooms, 3 BR. 2
FIVE room home on, Evans baths, family room , all
Heights, In excellent- condl· electric .·kitchen in color .
tlon, vacant, S15 ,000.
carport ,
laundry
and
workshop.
SEVERAL new homes between
4 BEDROOM
S19, IOOand $32 ,900, all close fo 1'12 LOT well landscaped. Well
town .
cared for 2 story home, large
Office 446-1066
eat-In kitchen, formal DR,
Evenings
laundry, gas FA furnace,
Ron Canaday 446-3636
aluminum siding and stone
Russell Wood 446-4618
. front, garage. Very quick
possession.
S81f2 ACRES of land, Gallla
MIDDLEPORT
County, Walnut toWnship . No LARG~ 2 story, 4 BR, 2 baths,
buildings . Write Box 2-18, c-o spacoous kitchen with plenty
Tribune.
counter top , DR, part
17. 6 basement, gas FA furnace,
-------~corner lot. Quick possossion .

REALTY

FOR SALE BY OWNER, YOUR
CHANCE TO BUY DIRECT.
Due to the fact that we want to
retire and spend the winters
In Florida, we are offering for
sale severa l hou ses Ia the City
of Gallipolis, Including from
fou r to seven room houses all
with fu ll baths, good In ve stm ent properties . Also
lots, you pick location and size
in th e city and adjoining all on
improved streets, and r..oads.
Also lot by Berger Chef open
on three sides, corner lot,
probably best
business
lo,at lon In town . Wou l d
cons ider
so me
trades .
Financi ng available . From
S4,950 to $15,000. Phone 446·
Ol68afler 2:30p .m . Robert A.
Queen. 1026 Second Ave.
10-tf
HOME FOR SALE - 7 rooms, 3
bedrOoms, large kitchen and
I lvlng room, w to w carpet,
.large patio with cover, l lf•
baths, under $18,000 available
15th of February . 131 Portsmouth Rd. For appointment
to see, call A46- 1425. •
16-tf

Wanted To Rent
MOTHER and 2 small children
would like to rent a two
bedroom furnished apart ment, house or,- mobile home,
close to or In town .
Reasonable r ent. Ph. 446-2867.
15-6

RUSSELL
· wooD ·
REALTOR
446-1066'

FOR :SALE

SERVICE .

1967 CHEVY

.WAY"

JIMME SAYRE
. AUCTIONEER

. PH. 446-3444

SPORTS VAN.
In exceliont condition,
equipped for camping .

R. E. KNOnS
H6-2917

PUBLIC
NOTICE

'

NEW CUSTOM BRICK on one
acre in the country. Large
rooms , fireplace , buill -In
bookcases . two car garage.
NEW FRAME HOME, good
location close to town. City
schools.
NICE HOME on Jackson Ave.
in Vinton . Large lot with
garden.

Jn

Shepp~!'!! 446·0001 .

Denver K, Hoghtey 446·0002
3 BR house, wall to wall car·
petlrtg, large kitchen, full
bMement, attached garage,
ext~ a ·lot. Ph. 4&lt;16-0028.
6-12

1971 BUICK Skylark, air cond.,
low mileage, 4&lt;16-3732.
16-6

GREAT LAKES 10 x 55 double
expando m.oblle home. ~hone
675-2463 .
13•6

19&lt;14 FALCON A·1new paint job,
new tires, will trade for
pickup truck. 446-2911,
16·3

Southern Auto
Sales

----~-

AKC GERMAN Shepher d pups,
champion blood lines. Ph . 446- ·

V-8, auto. trans., P.S., &amp;
P. B.,
automatic
tem ·
perature controL Sathon
green with white vinyl fop,
plush interior.
·
Ph. 388-9975

69

67
66
65
64
60
54

. ST A"iiCRAFT
Christmas Sale
24' 7" WS .$4,892 for $3,892
22' 7" WS $4,475 for $3,579
20' 7" WS $3,954 for $3 ,165
18' 7" WS $3,499 for $2,799
SELF -CONTAINED sleeps 6,
with con verter, some high
discount on fold downs, some
used units. Camp Conley :
Starcrott Sale•. Route 62 N•.of
Pl . RIOIIII!I"t· behl.fl11) tll.•ll
. Carpet inn . .Ph. 675-5384 . "'''
289 -tf

1966

1970
19&lt;19
1967
19&lt;17
1966

NtwGMC
Truck Htadquarttrs
GMC 'h ton PU
Chevrolet
ton PU
GMC lh ton PU
FORD 'h ton PU
'h ton Chev.
GMC 'II ton P U

lim GMC•¥r IOII'Ptt••~

Sporting pnce.

•~

1967 Chevrolet 'h Ibn Pl:l
1966 lf2 Ton GMC Pickup
1969 Otds 118
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
1971 3 ton Chevrolet Truck
1970 lf2 ton Cllevroief Pickup
1969 '12 ton Cllevrolet Pickup
196t 3 ton GMC
.
1968 1/2 T. GMC PU
1968 111 T. GMC PU
New 11 II. camper
1964 111 T. GMC PU
. 1966 '12 T. Ford PU
1971 lf2 ton Chev .
1969 lh T. GMC PU
1968 lf2 T. GMC PU
19&lt;17''h T. GMC Plckuo
i967 'v, T. GMC PU
1966 '!&gt; T. GMC PU
1967 '12 T. GMC-Pickup
1968 '12 T. GMC Pickup
1967 '12 T. GMC Pickup
SOMMERS G.M.C•.
TRUCKS, INC.
133 PinoS!.
446-2532
267-tf

----~-

SATURDAY, JAN. 27
10:00-A.M. ·
ATHENS, OHIO

:siNGER Sewing Machine Sates
· 1 Service. All models In
' stock . Free delivery. Service
guaranteed. Models priced
from S69 .95 . French City
Fabric Shoppe. Singer ar.·
proved dealer, 58 Court S .•
Ph . 4&lt;16-9255.

1 N. Shaf, r St., turn N. off At. 561n westside of Allltns. · •·
"ONE TIME LISTING"
'
PLUMBING, ELECTRIC&amp; HEATING SUPPLIES
Boxes of Galv. &amp; Black plumbing flttlngs.f rom 'Ill" to 1'12''.
brass valves, assortment of copper high pressure flare
nuts, refrigeration dryers, strainers, sight glosses, ail
types electric fittings &amp; clamps, Sl!verol clrcult breaker.s,
100 &amp; 200 AMP weather proof fuse boxes, approx. 200
assorted registers, hot water baseboard, Armoflex Air
Conditioning Insulation, furnace fltfl~s (register boots,
• take qffs, reducers &amp; elbows). 6" &amp; 7' type B vent pipe,
No. 2 coppar wire. Many other supplies. Ail now mer.
chandlse &amp; good. quality.
TOOLS, Ol'FICE EQUIP. &amp; MISC. CABINET
MATERIAL: 2 propane soldering outfits w-tanks, Lincoln
por table ore welder , Acetylene welding outfit, conduit
benders, pipe&amp; die sets, bar folder, cleat bender, assorted
hand sheet metal fools, many good motors from one-sixth
hp to 1'12 hp, pipe cutter, few hand tools, 2 llo!avy duly
Dolly Carls, shelving boards &amp; racks, Standard billing
machine &amp; cash drawer, 3 accts. rec. files, 4 metal tile
cabinets, 6 office desks 12 wooden, 3 metal, 1 Formica
top), parts cabinet, full sheets of Formica &amp; many small
pieces, molding, ceramic lifo, grout &amp; adhesive, bunoles
of oak wood trim, 1 lot plywood pieces, many other Items
too numerous to mention.
,
Terms: Cash
Not responsible for accidents.
,.
Rtllaurant near by
• R. H. GUNTER &amp; RAY CON.BOY, OWNERS .
ATHENS, OHI0-'- 441·2233

308-tf

Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture
~jEW ; Serlo
Bemco mal·
" ' " and box springs. Large
selection In stock - twin, full,
· queen size. Save up to $40 a

\set."
·

•

"5 Second Avenue
446-1172 '
. 27,6-tf

TYPEWRITERS,
Smith ,
Corona, Royal, Olivetti ,
Under.wood , manual . and
electric. Simmon• Pr(ntlng
· and Qlflce Equipment.

C. E. SHERIDAN, AUCT. AMESVIL1E. 0.
448-2833

.•

..

235·11

PIPES, PI~. , Pipes. GBO,
Cheraten, BBB, Jobey, Hilson
end others. Tawney's Pipe
and Trophy House, 422 Second
Ave.
··

BOYS

TREMENDOUS EARNINGS·

199-11

· Nitd Another Bldg.?

~

Ales

SEE our aluminum bldgs.
Heavy duty, with flooring,
wired tor electric . Also West
Virginia chunk coal, drain
tile, bell tile, cement end
mortar. Gallipolis Block &amp;
Olaf Co 123'12 Pine, 446-2783.
207·11
'·'

MR. ROUSH AT
4 P.M. Sharp!

Sporti~ lux~ry.

v,

AKC Toy poodle pup~, $75, $85
Siamese kittens SlO ""ch. 256·
, 6247.
'
3-30

•'

I ,
~·

''

and

Tuesday,J•n.23 --/
(Parents Welcome)

GooD"'ClEAN LUMP
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio
Granda. Phone 245-5115. 6-lf

,/,

'

•

I ,

l

I'

I

•

'

•

j

'

1971 BUICK

Catilina 2 dr. hdtp. Brougham .
'gold with dark brown vinyl top •
air cond ., low miles.

Electra 4dr. hardtop, air cond ..
24,500 miles, local doctor's
trade . Like new co'nd.

- •3695

1972·PONTIAC

1971 CHEVROLET

, Ventura II, air cond ., red, black .
vinyl top. Sprint packag~.
12,000 miles. Sharp.

Impala 2 dr . hdtop., air cond •• ·
vinyl top. 22,000 miles, like new
con d .

.

AT THE COST PRICE AND
MAKE US AN OFFER.
EXAMPLE:
1973 CHRYSLER 4 DOOR SEDAN

SMITH AUTO SALES

STICKER PRICE $5 ~ 127.60
· ._ ,
FACTORY INVOICE PRICE OR OUR
COST $3,993.40.

KANAUGA, OHIO .

.Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth

DUE TO divorce, 1972 8 track
stereo console; must sell at
once, nice walnut finish . This
setsold much higher, must let
go for $89.60 or $7 .471 month.
Try II In your home. Call 4&lt;16·
0255.
13-11
JUST taken In, deluxe zig zag
sewing
machine.
This
machine
darns,
embroideries, overcasts, buttonholes, pay balance $36.50
or payments can ~arranged .
446·0255.
•
13-tf

Business Opportunities
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNILY
MAN OR WOMAN
RELIABLE person from this
area to service and collect
from automatic dispensers.
No experience needed ... we
: establish accounts for you.
Car, references and $995 to
$1.995cas~ capital necessary.
4 to 12 hours weekly could net
good part-time Income. Full·
time more. For local in·
tervlew, write , Include
telephone number, Eagle
Industries, Di!partment BV,
3938 M!tadowbrook Road, St.
Louis Pork, Minnesota 55426.
'
17-1

Music@l

ln~truments

for Sale

1639 Easterlt Ave.

Services Offered

Ga

Services Offered

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
HAFFELT'S CARPETING
FREE Inspection . Call 446-3245.
·IF YOU are building a new
Merrill CYDell, Operator by
home or need new carpet,
Exterminal Termlle Service,
phone Jerry Haffelt, 446-1158
19 Belmont Dr.
for free estimates .
267-lf

---------:--------~275-lf ~::::::::::::::::,
DRY WALL service by con tract . Willard Bosley, 4464954.
282-tf
-::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:::::::;~;

t

DEAD STOCK
$5.00 Service Charge

Will remove your dead_
horse and cows
Ca II Jackson 286-4.531

INCOME TAX
· SERVICE
WILSON RUSK
Anyti~e

Plumbing &amp;. Heating

Aluminum
·· Sheats

. Gallipolis .
Dai~ 1ribune

___ _

Services Offered

Instruction

lielp Wanted

~I

Skylark 2 Dr. hdtp.; air cond. vlnyl top, one' owner. Extra
nice.

'2595 '

UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY'

IF YOU have a background In
convenient food store or
supermarket work or have a
desire to enter this field, we
have opportunities due to
expansion for: Store 5uparvlsors; Store managers; Full
or portlime ~tore personnel.
We ore an es.tabl.lshe.d
Radio, p . steer.lng, P.. .brakes', auto.• J~an!l-•
company offering sta.ble
fac. air cond. , 19,000 act. miles, red finish with
employment
opportunities.
Opportunities exist tn Pl.
blk. vinyl interior, blk. vinyl top. Looks &amp; runs
Pleasant area and the
like new.
Charleston area . Plene
submit a complete r1sume to
P. 0 . Box 247, c-o Tribune. Ali
replies strictly confidential.
14-12
~E:::~::-.A7_N-:0-f N-G--:
. T-:E-XA-S---,MF-It
NEEDS SALES REP. Enjoy
splendid income . No experlen ca nlll'c:essary. You
'
supply desire. We surply
EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, 0.
training. Limited trave in
Gallipolis area . Air mall C. H.
Dickerson, Pres., South 0
western Petroleum Corp.; Ft.
Worth , Tex.
17-l
WALLPAPERING and pain·
ling. Phone 446-9865 or 379. - - - - - - - - 2471.
17-1
"'
T"o"'
o"'L""·-.,...
h-ar-p-e-n,..-1n-g-,-sa ws, Waitress lor ID P.M. to 6
scissors, shears, home and A.M. $hill. Good working
garden tools. Sharp Shop, condition, pild vocation ,
Alley rear 147 Second.
also bokery-cook for f A.M.
216-11 to 2:30 P.M. Apply In parson
~-:--:.,----­
REMODELING, building new only Bob Evans SINk House.
rooms, cement, roofing,
sidlny, furnace ins. J. Ft .
Good Mechanical
Queen &amp; Son. 4&lt;16·9271.
SEMI-DRIVERS NEEDED
68-tf LOCAL companies need (:er·
Condltl~;m
II fled Semi - Drivers~· . Earn
;;R:;;oo=F-:-:1N
:::G
:--a:-n-:d-:-spo
- ut:-ln_g_, ex$300-$400 per week . No ex·
perienced roofers. P~. 388·
peri ence necessary, will
8114, James Marcum .
train. For application call 317·
15-30
636·2675, or write Coastway
.American Systems. P. 0 . Box
HOUSEWORK, small paint
11125, Indianapolis, Indiana
lobs, babysitting, etc. Call
46201.
446-4917.
Upper Rt. 7
298-30 .
15-3
Gallipolis,

71 .CH.EV. IMPALA
CUSTOM COUPE

' •2695

WOOD MOTOR SALES
Wanted T Do

1965

VOLKSWAGEN
Station Wagoo
(Bus)

$79500

1m Watts V.W.
o:

llelo Wanted ·

Wanted

NE~C&gt;S LPN

USED backhoe, Case or John
Deere, C. U. Miller. Ph . 245·
5535.
.
17·1

MATURE babysitter to come to
house for boys 21h and 4 years
old, 2 to 3 days o week and
occasional evenings. 4&lt;16-4736
after 5 p.m .
13-6

or

retired RN to
work In nursing home. can
live ln. Write Box 313, Ironton,
Ohio Route l.
2-ff

280 State Street
Phone 446-2476

. MUSICAL
.INSTRUMENTS
ATTENTION
ALL
Roto Rooter
,.,.,x23"1.009
MUSICIANS, SINGERS AND SEWER and l)raln Cleaning,
GENE 'PLANTS &amp; SONS
SONGWRITERS! Interested
National
Service
now PLUMBING - Healing &amp; Air_
In cutting a record in a new · available locally. For any
Conditioning . 300 Fourth Ave.
professional
record,lng
Ph . 446-1637 .
·
kind of stopped-up dra in. ca ll
studio? We are now accepting
675-5195, 24 hour Serv.
-18-tl
recording
~ppolntmenfs.
307-lf
· Records pressed by Capitol
USED OFFSET PLATES
CARTER'S PLUMBING
RI!COrds. For allPOintments or•
HAVE
AND HEATING .
Central Air Conditioning
more lnformiollon contact
Cor . Fourth &amp; Pine
MANY USES
&amp; Heating
Appalachia Sound · Recording
Phone 446·388a or 446-4477
Free E'slimates
Studio, Route a, Box 525,
165-tf
Stewart:s Hardware
Chillicothe, Ohio 45601 . Ph.
Vinton, Ohio
(614) 663-2544.
144-lf
STANDARD
13-4
8 for Sl.OO
___;_
Plumbing &amp; Healing
214Third Ave ., 446-3782
" HOT-SHOT" Wash mobile .
Wash
,
wax
and
degreasing
-·- -- - -- '-'87_- ti
·
with mobile unit. 446-4441 .
RUSS.ELL'S
210 11
'
. PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
STEWART Electrical Service &amp; ·
21 Gallia A~e .• 446-4782
ALBERT
EllMAN
Repair, house wiring, eledrlc
297-tf
125 Third Ave. ' ·
Water Delivery Service
heating. Phone ~46-4561.
O.llfpolls,O.
Patriot Star Rt.,, Gallipolis
'
271-tf
DEWITT' S PLUMBING
Ph . 379-2133
·
AND HEATING
243-11
SEPTIC TANKS
Route 160 at Evergreen
Cleaned and Installed
Phone 446-2735
BOB
LANE 1S ·Complete
t&gt;R ESTON Beauty College
Russell's Plumbing . 4&lt;16-4782
187-lf
Bookkeeping
and
Tax
Ser·
announces 1 new class will
·
• 297-11
vice , 424 112 Fourth Ave ., ~·-----begin February 5. Enroll now GILLENWATER'S septic tank
Kanauga . ." Business by ap ~nd have a ~ profeutonai
cleaning aryd , rdpa lr , alsa
pointment. Ph . 446 -.1049.
career that will offer you ' house wre.cklng. Ph. 446-9499 •
Please call after 6 p.m.
and . an
·
Independence,
40
278-tf
'
excellent Income, gcivorn· , Established In 19 ,
169·11
Now taking application: lor
lull and parlllme em .
menl guaranteed loans. lll'e -=-::-=-==~:-;:--;::::;­
BANKS TREE SERVICE
ployment. Male or female.
available, Weare a 111t1onafly D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water, FREE estimates, l iability in·
Pleasant working conditions.
accredited achaol. Call collect
Delivery Service. You &lt;
surance. Pruning, trn11ming
Paid vacations. Apply In
867-8512, Houra8; 30a.m : to 10
patronage will be apand cavity work, tree and
p.m . Preston B..uty College.
predated . Ph . 4&lt;16.0463.
person
at Sob Evans Drive
stump removal. Ph. 446-4953.
Chesapeake, Ohio.
_
. 2-tt
ln. ·
7HI
17 6

2fr

'

~2995

-STICKER PRICE•.
·NO·GUESS~WORK FOR YOU
THE CUSTOMER. JUST LOOK

Own a(!!!mOriginaL

CHEVY, 4 sp. trans., and Chevy
427 engine. Call 245-5237:
12·6

'

Air, Radial tires, vinyl. top. AMFM radio, like new .
·

WILL BE ON THE WINDOW
NEXT TO THE RETAIL

•

For Sale

1970 BUICK

.

When you 're shopping for a hardtop, the object
is robe a sport ... not the last of the big spenders.
So lake a look at the new Datsun 610 2- Door Hardtop. ll's a luxury car with a Da1Sun price that includes a lot of no-cost extras :
• 1800 cc overhead cam engine
• Power·assisl brakes -discs in front
• Independent rear suspension
• Sports Interior
•. . ·- ..
• Rear window defroster
• Sports console
• Power-flow ventilalion
• And loiS more ... all standard equipmen1!
Tes1 drive the new Datsun 610 2-Door H ardtop
at your nearby Datsun dealer's and discover why
we call it a Oa1Sun Original. Drive a Datsun ...
then decide.

••
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'4195

•

.1970 T. BIRD

'------::-----'

' '

.•3795

1972 PONTIAC

IS TAKING THE GUESS WORK
OUT OF BUYING A NEW CAR.
OUR INVOICE COST PRICE

P.M.C.

l2x60 town &amp; Country
12.SO Shultz ·
12x55 Richardson
10x51 Roy Craft
lO.SO New Milan
8x27 Castle
B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
Second &amp; Viand St.
Pt. PINsant
I Nextto Heck's )

9-11

AUCTION SALE

918 Second Ave.

'

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
12x60 Holly Park
121&lt;60 Klngswood
t2x60 Peerless
12x60 Sylvan
12x65 Winston
12&gt;&lt;60 Holly Park
12&gt;&lt;60 Hallmark
12x60 Statesman

~ l~x60

COMPLETE line of Starcraft
travel trailers and fold down
campers, Quality and service,
highest discount in Tri-State.
Camp Conley ·starcrafl Sales ,.
t&lt;oute 62 north of PI ..
Pleasant , behind Red Carpel
Inn. Phone 675-538~.
5-lf

'

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH

------

--::--:---:-:::--

DODGE~

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•369~

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

Datsun610.

1970GMC '!&gt;ton pickup V.B, tool
boxes on side, automatic
transmission, $2,195. Call 4&lt;16·
3746.
13-6

73
73
73
71
70
70
70

Gi-an Prix, red, white _v inyl top,
white bucket seats, 3,200 miles.

'

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'

'2995

13-6

1972 SKYLINE Hometfe, 12 x 65,
3 bedroom . Ph . 245· 5~42 .
14·6

WILLIAM ANN MOTEL

50 STATE ST.

.

d r ive, 4 speed.
350 eng., 13,000 miles • . Never
been off hard road •

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CARROLL NORRIS

~-~---

ANTIQUE pump .. organ. alf
original except new bellows.
Over 80 vears old . Made bY
Taylor and Fraley Organ Co.,
Worcester, Mass. One bel lows
type .
Phone . 992 ·3904,
Syracuse, 0 .

.

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1972 PONTIAC

Bla~e~.' 4 wheel

SEE US·Fl RST - ·BEFORE YOU BUY!

! I :•

16-3'
::,9:::67:-:J::E::E::P--4:-wh-:--ee-:-1. d-:-rlve,
. newly painted, very good
condition, $1,895. Call 4&lt;16·
3746,

Sharp .1969
Chevrolet CapriGe .

BOYS

'

LIBERAL DISCOUNTS
·
..
ON ALL NEW CARS
NOW IN STOCKI

1029.

'.

BOYS

.

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::::-::-:-:::-:-:----16-3

p 11-12

-------

HANERSVILLE, two homes,
live In one and put your
busi ness in the other.

.

GUARANTEED border Collie
pups . Call 614·286-2496.

- - - - -- -

HOMES
HILL TOP SUB., nice 4 bedroom
home, carpor( and two lots.

.

.

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1972 CHEVROLET

'

RANCHO RE~LTOR-~

104 ACRES, beef or da iry farm,
very good barn , pond,
livestock available.

WE NEED GOOD USED CARS/1 ·

E FLAT saxOphone, Leblanc,
$175, good condition, call Bill
Salj'anek, 388-8577.

television . good condition,
movi,g , 446·0611.
J

' HAIIDTQP
POLA!IA l·DOOR

NEW .I ·. U$ED FURNITURE
· 15:4 Second 446-9523

M
=o=
To=R=o
=L~A;--::co::n::so::;le::--21"
•

.

.~.

Dodge .
.

RICE'S

' '
ELECTROLUX Sweepers
. deluxe model. Complete ·wifh
all cleaning attachm
_ enfs and
uses paper bags . Slightly used
but cleans and !ooks like new.
Will sell for $37.25 cash or
terms available. Electro
Hygiene Co . Phone ~46-4312.
17-6

.ALL CARS liAVE rO GO! ! ! 1

SAYS

· REAL ·, N IC,E lour piece
Wdroom suite, two dinette
sets, two piece living room
suite In · good condition, two
rockers.

0" NOW, ·

GQING

.SMITH -

FU~NJTURE .

USED

1971 CADILLAC Sedan Deville,
low mileage . Excellent
condition
. Ph. 675-15U after 4
NEW3bedroom house. Caii446p.m .
LAND
1900 or 446-2890.
a.12
9 ACRES, Rt. 141. Lot of (ron'17·11
tage , development land.
TRI -STATE Mobile Homes PRE -USE D Mobile homes lor
•ale. bank financing, low
25 ACRES vacan t land. spring,
Sales, Kanauga , Ohio, across
down payment, como and lopk
some fences :
.
from HI- Way Inn, Kanouga,
around at Tri-State Mobile
Used Mobile Homes .
Homes Soles, Kanaugo , Ohio.
311&gt; ACRES, Addison Twp. Good 10 x 50 Frontier
Phone 448-0al6.
bldg. lot or t railer lot.
10 x 48 Richardson
B-26
I 0 x 46 Amerl can
LOTS , Rt . 141 and Mitchell Rd . 10 x 50 New Moon
1F YOU are building a new
FARMS
.
10 x 46 Peerless
home or remodeling, see us.
53 ACRES. Large 8 room home, 8 x 45 Now Moon
We are builders. Di stributor
barn , outbldgs . Harrison 12 x 70 Klngswood
Twp .
for
Hotpoint Appl ia nces,
10 x 35 Atlantic Mobile Office
Allison Electric.
11·11
39 ACRES , 7 room home with
154-lf
bath, barn, fenced. good
pasture .
·

SEE

W1 seit •nilllllng for
anybody . Bring, your
Items to Knotts Community Auction Barn.
Corner Third &amp; Olivo.
For apPointment call
446-2917 . Salt tvery
Saturday evonlng at 7

]).If

CLOSE out on 1972 full ~lze zig·
zag sewing machines. For
sewing stretch fabrics ,
buttonholes, fancy ·designs,
etc. Paint slightly bleml5hed.
Choice If carrying case or
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or
terms available. !!lectrlc
Hygiene Co. Phone ~-4312 .
"
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17-6

High School and Junior High School

.AUCTION ·
."SELL ntE AUCTION

'

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JUST

WIFE

AKC Registered St .
Bernard
puppies .
Phone 446-0231. Ready
for Valentine ' s Day.

EASY TO FINANCE .

Very Well Kept
3 Bedroom
W HA T · THE

For Sale

WA SHER , 2 BATHS , AN D

SCREE NED POR CH, ONE
CAR GARAGE , CLOSE TO
TOWN ON FLAT LA ND SCAPED LOT .

FOR SALE ·

2 story 3 bedroom all elect.
brick, carpet throughout,
disposal, new cabinets in
kitchen. dining room and
fireplace, 1'12 bat.!)s, deep lot,
10s2 Second Ave. Call 4461997 after s p.m. daily, on
Sundays anytime.

1969 CHEVY ao series' dump ,
truck, 14 fool bed · with new
tires 'brakes, etc. 245-5048.

._19th ANNIVERSARY .SAL£ -

DOC

. ALL TYPES' of .building
-: materiels_
, bi!JCk, brick, sewer
~rpes , wlndQws, · lintels, eac.
Cleude Winters,· Rio Grande,
0. Phone 245·5121 alter 5.
.
123-lf

For Sale

Neal Realty

~

ELECTRICITY
We furn i$h Water. Sewago . G~rblge Colltclion - Ample
Parking • TV Antenlll • Wall-to-Wall Carpeting •
Drapet iu . Rangu . Rolrlger1tors • Air Conditioning •
O.rbage Disposals . Olahwashtn . Haat Lampo· Privati
Patios • Swlmmt,. Pool - Clubllo4lst.

Real Estate For Sale

DERE D
VERY
INVESTMENT - Looklngfora
with rec. rm . and cooking
PRE TTY
KITCHEN ,
HERE'S ONE ON EDGE
storebuildlng?Well,wehave
fa cil i ties in base . Thi s house
CARPETED
LIV IN G
OF TOW N ON LAR:GE
one in Vinton with 2 apartha s
carpet,
tile
cel l- ROOM, NICE LOCAT ION
SEC LUDED LOT . LARGE
mentsupstairs.2400sq . ft. on
ing s, 'paneling, and awn · AT EDGE OF TOWN IN
L IV ING A ND DINING
ings on windows. Loca ted
AN EXCELLENT NEIGH ROOM , BUILT -I N K IT ·
000
each floor . SIS, '
on a .4 A. lot with plenty nice
BORHOOD.
CHEN ON ONE ~LOOR
CHESHIRE
TRAI LER
shrubbery. Lot is 42'&lt;410' and .
WIT H A FA NT AS TIC
GIBSON
c ombination
PAR K - 19 slalis, 7mobile
goeslolheriver. Gar. 20'x 24'
IF YOU ' RE THI NKING
VI EW
QF
THE
re frigerator
freeter ,
homes ~O with sale .
pius a new metal bldg . Pr ice
OF SELLING _ THINK ·
SURROUNDING
HILL S
Kelvlnator coppertone gas
ReducedfoS22.500.
OF
TH E
WISE M A N
AND VA LUE S.
range1 dinette set and 6.
LOOK NG FOR A LOT?
- THE SECOND ONE IS
chairs, utility cabinet, 3 piece
WE HAVE lots and vacant
D
AGE NCY . WE
SE L L
OUT NEA R THE NEW
round in different parts of NEIGHBORHOOD R ·
MORE PR OPE RTY THAN
sectional with coffee and end
Sectional, 24' X 55' , same as
ANYBODY -EL SE AND
HOSPITAL
AND
IN th
I
M
I
f
tables, 2 twin beds. Allin good
hecouny. oso
emcan
new, doublelavoratory balh
CLUDES
A
HUGE
condition, reason for selling,
be financed.
NOW HAVE A N URGENT
' F AMILY ROOM , 2 BATHS ,
RANNYBLACKBURN
withshower.Lol85'xl25' .
NEED
FOR
NEW
GARAGE,
LOVELY
leaving town . 367-788Z.
B
, RA_"'
.. CH ,MA
, N
_,,AGER
$14,500 . .· ,·
,_,
'-LI STING S. . RE SIDEN KI TCHEN AND ~ARGE
o ), 1 I t! ' " I'V'1 ) II
17-~
''' '
1~
l TIAL
IN OR , ·:OIJ.TII~:oOF f.'ll
F LAT LOT . PRI CED AT
RODNEY 1972 Schultz
T 0 WN ·
FARM S
$24.900
AND
$32,900
ANTIQUE ~ urniture , china,
Mobile home, 14' X 68', all
ANY WHE RE IN THE
RESPECTIVELY!
glass, miscellaneous Items.
elec . cen. air and located on
AREA. GI VE us A CALL .
3a8-8350.
.89 A. lot. Price $14,900.
1---------------------...l
17-6

a

For Rent

Real Estate For Sale
OHIO RIVE~

For Sale

WANTED
...
·SAW MILL LOGS AND
'

STANDIN~

'·

".

TIMBER

HINCHCLIFF PRODUCTS CO.
Wellston, Ohio
Junctkln of 346 and

CounfJ Road 78

Fonnl!lty Koppel$ Co. MiD

PHONE -384 6481

•

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26- The Stmday.Times- Sentinel, Sunday. Jan. 21. 1973

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·For·Fast ·Results Use· The Sunday·Tim~s-Sentinel · Classifiet}s
.

'

Card· of Thanks

Real Estate For Sale

For Rent

STROUT
REALTY

1 WISH to thank all my friends ,; - - - - - - - - - - . ,

and relat ives for their many ' Looking for a mobile home
cards a·n d prayers and good
lol or &lt;l qua lity mobile home?
wisheSinmyre,:enttriptothe · 1Wc h.wc both at·
hospital. Also during con·
valescence · at home with a
brok en limb. I am now
wa lking without "lY walker
· most of the time. Than ~ you
all. With love and may God
bless you al l. Mrs. George'W.
Keith, 1351 Stri ngtown Road .
•
Grove City, Ohio 43123.
17-1
Rodney-Cora Rd .
· Rodney , Ohio
Hours 9 a.m . to 9 p.m.
Monday lhru Saturday
TWO-WAY Radios Sales &amp;
Ph. 245-9374- 245-5021
'----:---"--'-------:-"'
B
Ser vice. New and used C 's,
·,n
.
It s antennas 2 BEDROOM trai l er
po I 1ce mon
Qr
'
·
Band
Cheshire, 367-7329.
t c. Bob , s c ·t,·zens
1
eRadio
Equip., G~orges Creek
306-lf
Rd ., Gallipolis, Ohio 4&lt;16-45 17.
.
212-ff SLEEPING rooms for r ent .
•
Ga llia Hotel, 446-9715.
1
RALPH 'S Carpel &amp; Upholstery
181 -lf
Cleaning Service . Free
estimates. Ph . 446~ 0294 . Ralph 12 X 50 trailer . adults only,
Cheshire, 367-7512.
A. Da'V is, owner .
lH
. 9-tf

QUA'll CREEK

MOBIL£
COMMUNITY
&amp; SAL£S

f' Notice

'•
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'

_

World's Largestr
THE LEADER .5'1NCE 1900 tN
SERVING THE NATION 'S
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
Ph. 446-0008
THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SERVING THE NATION'S
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
Ph. 44~·000a
_
THIS NEARLY NEW 3 BR
br 'ock offers~ood living with
1111 baths,
carpet, cent.
k 't h
d bl
air, dream ' c en . ou e
garage and pat io. Owner has
been tran sferred and is
anxious to sell.
ADDISON - Lovely 3 BR home
with brick . front , carport,
ut ility rm. , and cent . air. E-Z
financing on $2 1,000.

. 10 X 50 TRAILER in Cheshire,

LiKE CITY LIVING? We have 4
hom es in town priced from
$7,000
to $15,000.
' 13-6

completely .furn ish ed . Phone

FREE 6 ·months rent .
FREE washer and dryer.
Your choice with each
mobile homt! purchased at
Quai I Creek Mobile Com·
munity and Sales before
March IS, 1973! Contact
Nowt Jonos, Rodney-Cora
Road, Rodney, Ohio. HRS. : 9
a.m .. 9 p.m. Ph . 245-5021 or
24S-9374 Mon. thru Sat.

367 -7539.

ROOFING and gutter work.
William Mitchell , 38~ · 8S07.
.
67-tf
DAY CARE
SUN VALLE•Y Nur:;ery SchooL
licensed by· State of Ohio, 1'12
miles west of new hospital.
577 Sun Valley Dr. Ph . 446·
3657. Day care that says "we
care." Madge Hauldren,
Owner; Loredlth &amp; John
• Hauldren, Operator s.
114-tf
RUSS 'S Glass Service. Gl" "·
al l needs, we sell windshie lo::..,
storm 'Windows and doors,
awn ings and mirrors. 704
rine St.. Rio Grande. 245-50-18.
295-tf
GOT a junk problem? We pic k
up 1 unk car bodies. Buy scrap
iron and metals. Phone 388·
8583.
12 _12
-'---

113
SLEEPING ROOMS. weekly L-0 -A-C-A· T- 1-0 -N
SECOND AVE . Elderly 2
ra les . park Centra l· Hotel.
story man sion could be used
'
308-tf
as a 3, 4 or 5 BR home. Dining
rm . and family rm . each have
APARTMENT for construction
fireplaces. New cabinets in
men . Ph . 446-0756.
kitchen , llf-z baths, garage,
267-tf
patio and part basement .
Don'l wai t too long to see this
SL EEPING rooms, week ly
one .- because it probab l y
r ates, free garage park ing,
won't be on the market long .
Libby Hotel.
241-tf
· k
CHARMIN G HOUSE 0 f bn c
and frame construction Is just
APARTMENT lor lease. un for you . Formal dln lnd rm ., 2
furni shed, SIOO per month, 2
firepl aces, pan ele
den ,
bedrooms , secllnd floor ,
garage and screened porch
opposi te city park, central
are on l y a few of the many
heat and air conditioning, 446·
highlights of this attractive
2325 or 446-4425 .
hillside home.
J.tf
LIVE &amp; . COLLECT RENT. 2
UNFURNISHED •partment, 6
b•and new mobile homes on a
rooms and bath , Inquire at
tn:tt tot 2 ml. from new
Cedar Street Market, or Ph.
hospital. Only $13,900.
4&lt;16-1703. After 5, 4&lt;16-1522 .
15-3
MIDDLEPORT- Lovely 6 rm .
modern home with 3 BR,
HOUSE, 4 rooms and bath . Call
built -In ki tchen, 7 fireplaces
4&lt;16-4286.
PLU S 4 rental units renting
15-3
for· $555 per month .

---,--------

Local Bowling

MONDAY BUSINESS
Monday, Jan. 15 bowling
results are as follows:
Stewart ' s Hdwr . and C.
Queen's 205-602-8 pts., Hart's
Used Cars and D. Dunca n's
'IN THE vici nity of Vinton 1 205-567 - 0 pis.
female black and tan coon
Gallo Wine and E. Petrie1 S
hound . Reward offered . 228-603 - 8 pfs., Moose Lodge
• P.hone 367-7520 or 367-7784.
and E. Thomas' la5-530- opts.
.
I~
Blue Fountain Motel and B.
Tillis'
212-551 - 6 pis ., JohnA MUFFLER off a '70 Ford, on son's Market
and A. Gabriell i's
Teons Run Road Thursday.
167-493
2
fts
.
Jon. 11 . If found call 446-1213
Chris
Cra
f
and
R. Johnson's
or 446-4285.
191 -512 6 pis., Jenki ns'
15·3 Concrete and C. Roberts' 184·
_ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _
- 2 pts .
D ACHSHUND-BEAGLE lost In 485The
Feds and R. Hall' s 189vlclnlly: of -Stale Street. Call 54 5 _ 6 pts., C_q rbln s, s~~.cjer
... 446-1927 ,
" a nd 'l&lt; ~ 'P-f~nei'!'135-606 '~'2 ~ts:
15·3
O'Dell Lumber and M.
- - -- - - - - - Ja rrell's 213-561 4 pts.,
Firestone and R. McEl hinney's
203-566 - 4 pts.
Ga llipolis Parts Whse . and
TAPE recorder that will hold 7
Inch reels. 446-9328 .
R. Barnes' l64-4a2 - 4 pts., C.
17-6 &amp; P. Telephone and R. Brown's
- ------,---and B. Gilpin 's 512 ser ies - 4
JUNK autos and scrap metal , pts .
388-8776.
Standings:
245-78 Team
W. L
0
-----------:---:Stewart's Hdwr.
WANTED to buy, sell or trade, Gallo Wine
8 0
toy electric tra in, 446-4843.
Blue Fountain Motel
6 2
240-ff Chris Crall
6 2
Feds
6 2
4
CAT'. •.E. will buy from one to CYDell Lumber
4
100. Call 446-3792.
Firestone
4 4
13-6 Gallipolis Parts
4
4
4
4
--------C. &amp; P. Telephone
Corbin &amp; Snyder
2 6
2 6
Johnson 's Market
Jenkins' Concrete
2 6
CLEAN rugs, like new. so easy Hart's Used Cars
0 8
to do with Blue Lustre. Rent Moose Lodge
0
elect r ic shampooer $1 at
POMEROY LANES
Central Supply Co.
Wod . Early Bird League
17-6
January 17, 1973
Won Lost
A GOOD buy ... give it a try.
Evelyn's
Grocery
26
6
Blue Lustre . America ' s
favori te ca rpet shampoo $1 at King Bu ilders' Supply 22 10
Dorothy's Plnnettes
18 14
G. C. Murphy's.
14 18
17-6 Bertha s Grocery
R. H. Rawlings
12 20
4 28
MOBILE home in Gallipolis, 2 Royal Crown
High Ind. Game - Flossie
adults only . Ph. 4&lt;16-0338.
'
17-11 Maxson 211. Lou ise Gilmore
181.
High Ser ies Flossie
FURNISHED apartment . Call
al 631 Fourth Avenue . Maxson 507. Jon Jenkins 461.
Team High Game and Ser l e~
References.
17-ff - King Builders' Supply, 775
-----..,.---and 2232 .'
2 BEDROOM home with
ba se me~t
gas
furnace.
carpeted throughout. Adults MRS. TRUDEAU BURIED
only. Ph one 446-0958 or 446·
MONTREAL (UP!) - Prime
3553.
Minister
Pierre Elliott Tru17-3
deau 's mother was burled
- - - ' - -- HOUSE located on Buiaville- ThW'sday following a simple
Addlson Road . Call367 -7438or
service at St. Rem! chW'cb 30
446-3879.
17-lf miles south of Montreal.
The late Mrs. Grace Elliott
NEW 12 x 65 mobile home, large
Trudeau
died '!Uesday night
lot, utilities pa id. close to
Gavin Plant . 446-3611 .
after a lengthy illness. She was
17-6 83 Y!!"rs old. '

·Lost

Wanteti To Buy

MIDDLEPORT- ELEGANT 2
story bri ck con I ains l 2 rms .
This Is the home of the late
Dr . Cluff and can be bought
far below replaceme nt.

a

•

PAY ONLY ONE UTILITY

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES

TARA
For

lnform~tion· Call

1112 BATHS

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS

Shirley Adkins-J67-7250

·

Real Estate F9r Sa!e ·

r-~-----.~IH=
· =E------~~

Realty

'FOR/SALE
BY·OWNER

WISEMAN

452 Second Ave.
446-3434
Oscar Baird
Doug Wetherholl
TOWN APARTMENTS - Two
·apartment buildings on large
lot in ci t y.

AGENCY

Praclic;olly new7 rQGm brick
ranch style home, total
electrjc &amp;' air conditioning,
t 'II tile bath &amp; shower, 6
roomy closets, plus walk-In
cedar cloisei. Wall to wall
carpet, the vory best In
paneling, a dream kitchen
with 30 11. of beautiful.
cabinets,
large ·stone '
fireplace in living room,
built~ in Vi!ICUum· system ~ 2·
car t~rlg~, plus· milnV extra
features . Outside cookout &amp;
patio. One 2 bedroom fur·
nished apt. and new trailer.
Both rented . Two large
barns, large pond, 30 1cres in
all with new fences. One
·large cistern and rural
water. Will accept small
place on. trade in or near
Gallipolis. Located on St. Rt.
·160, five, miles from new
hospital. One of the better
built homes In the county.
Reason lor-selling, ill h_ealth.
Phone 446-4170.

TOP BEEF FARM - One of
SEO's fi nest farms . Call us
for appointment .
LI STINGS NEEDED - Now Is
the l ime to li st with us for fast
action on your rroperty.
Evening Cat 446·4244
Steven Bell, 446·9583

MASSIE

Here's A Beauty For $17 ;900.00

_Really, 32 State St.
Tel. 446-1998

Th is one won't be on the market long so don't wall tor it to
warm up before looking . It Includes 3 bedrooms, very nice
kitchen w ith range built In, wall to wall carpet throughout, .
all electric heat. One car garage, large flat lot. Call up for
an appointment right now.
·
'

NEAR CLAY SC. - 4 Bdrms.,
li v. rm . 13' x 28' with F.P.,
formal din. rm .. modern
kitchen, H.W. floors . walnut
trim , full base. and dry. Gar.
20'x20' (block). '12 A. lot wit~
plenty shrubbery. This house
has quality hard to find In
foday 's construction . Only
$27,500.
'
SPRING VALLE.Y - Bi -Level,
3 large bdrms. with deep and
wide closets , all factory
ki tchen with dishwasher and
disposal. Large llv . rm . with
carpet, lcirge rec . rm . with
ca rpet and bar, 2 car gar,
wi th elec . dr. This house has
cen . air, is only 4 yrs. old, weU
constructed and located on a
large lot . Price reduced.
d b t•
VINTON - 7 rm s. an
a.,
carpeted, has alum . siding,
storm drs. and windows, new
roof and ci ty wa ter . Located
on 1.25 A. good garden land ;
has berries, grapes, p~a _r,
cherry and apple trees .
Reduced to $13;000.
NEAR K .C. H. Sc . -

Beautiful

Colonial, a big rms .. 3 baths.
all carpeted, lull finished
base ., SIS per mo., Nat. gas
heat. Located on a 3 A. tot.
Also has a metal barn 30'x60'
and ' storage bldg . Asking
$40,000 . ·
•GA RFIE L D AVE . _ Extra
ni ce, 5 rooms on first floor,

Want

A

LOT 67' • 112' located at 54
Garf ield Ave~ue. $1,000.
I'IEW LISTING
3 .BEDROOM home at 1809
Chestnut Street. Just recently
pain ted inside and out. Carpet
in liv ing room and three
bedrooms. Would make a
gnod in\lestment.
Office Phone 446-169•··
Evenings
Charles M. Neal 446. 1546
J. Michaol Neal 446·1503

Real Bargain

Large well bui lt 3 bedroom home with full basement.
You ' ll approve of the beautiful built-In kitchen (range &amp;
oven ), ceramic bath and garage. Loca ted in an exce llent
neighborhood on a large flat lot.
Here's A Beauty

Brand New
Ready To
Move Into
THI S LOVELY NEW 4
BEDROOM
IN CLUDE S
FAMILY ROOM , CEN TRAL
A IR ,
DI SH -

With Fireplace

&amp; Basement
MO"DERN IN DESIGN
WI TH 3 NICE SIZED
BED ROOMS , CARPETED
LIVI N G

ROOM,

TH•S

MAY

BE

Need 5 Bedrooms?
We Have 2 Dandies
Monarch mobile home,
1970, 12x47, located in
Rio Grande. Phone 2455580 .

oR .

fjJhJ]JINJIL

CENTENARY - Good 3 or 4
bdrm . Ranch. It has H.W.
floors with carpet in liv. rm.
and hall. Some paneling .
Large kitchen with plenty
cabinets . City water and nat.
gas. A good buy at $23,500.
FARMS
25 Locust St.
95 /!&lt;. Woods Mill Rd.
Howard .Brannon, Broker
92. ~ A. Pleasant Hill Rd.
Off. 446-2674
40 A. Near Rio Grande.
Lucille Brannon
49 A. King Rd . $16,500.
Eve. ~46-1226 or 446·2674
163 A. Ward Rd ., vaca nt land.
NEW LISTING
Finan ci ng available.
KANAUGA, 5th .Ave. 3 BR and
30 A. Bidwell r good hou se .
bath , eat -In kitc hen , HW
ANY HR. 446-1998
floors, gas F.A. furnace,
enclose:j porch , full basement
above
ground,
garage.
$15,000. A near acre lot.
RIVER VIEW FARM
ALL ELECTRIC brick home
located on Rt. 7, 6 rooms and
bath , stonefirj&gt;place in family
room , carpet throughout, a
luxury kitchen, patio, brick
garage, large rolling lawn,
fruit trees , tobacco base. 96
acres level to hili land and
woods.
RETIREMENT SPECIAL
MY Friend's daughter has 16 ACRES, ail electr ic home,
absolutely nothing to wear. beautiful LR with fireplace,
which fills 3 closets.
eat in kitchen with range and
' ref ., 'h basemont, well
SHE drives as though she has stocked
pond .
30'x60'
fenders she hasn't even begun building . Quick pos:;ession .
to use.
VALUE P PACKEDI
BEAUTIFULLY cared for 4 BR
1722 CHATHAM Avenue, lot size home, stone fireplace In LR,
40 x ISO. Five rooms In good all electric kitchen and DR
condition, has gas heat, oatn. large family room, l'/2 bath:
Pri ced to soil at $8,000.
car port and extra large
workshop, ali copper plum ·
68 MILL CREEK, completely bing, a well built home .
painted Inside and out, new
C·O·M·F-0-R-T.
stove. prlc.ed $5,800 on land HERE is a charmfng home,
contract with small down easy to care for , newly
payment.
painted inside. Large paneled
LR, 3 BR, lorgeeat In kitchen,
5 ACRES. adiacenl to City, low upkeep and modestly
$7,500.
taxes, deep lot with garage
and work shop, All for only
1968 TRAILER, 12 x 45 on 'h $13,000.
. Acre lot at Thurman, plus
RANCHER
outbuilding , $5,000 .
ONE -THIRD acre lot well
landscaped . 7 rooms, 3 BR. 2
FIVE room home on, Evans baths, family room , all
Heights, In excellent- condl· electric .·kitchen in color .
tlon, vacant, S15 ,000.
carport ,
laundry
and
workshop.
SEVERAL new homes between
4 BEDROOM
S19, IOOand $32 ,900, all close fo 1'12 LOT well landscaped. Well
town .
cared for 2 story home, large
Office 446-1066
eat-In kitchen, formal DR,
Evenings
laundry, gas FA furnace,
Ron Canaday 446-3636
aluminum siding and stone
Russell Wood 446-4618
. front, garage. Very quick
possession.
S81f2 ACRES of land, Gallla
MIDDLEPORT
County, Walnut toWnship . No LARG~ 2 story, 4 BR, 2 baths,
buildings . Write Box 2-18, c-o spacoous kitchen with plenty
Tribune.
counter top , DR, part
17. 6 basement, gas FA furnace,
-------~corner lot. Quick possossion .

REALTY

FOR SALE BY OWNER, YOUR
CHANCE TO BUY DIRECT.
Due to the fact that we want to
retire and spend the winters
In Florida, we are offering for
sale severa l hou ses Ia the City
of Gallipolis, Including from
fou r to seven room houses all
with fu ll baths, good In ve stm ent properties . Also
lots, you pick location and size
in th e city and adjoining all on
improved streets, and r..oads.
Also lot by Berger Chef open
on three sides, corner lot,
probably best
business
lo,at lon In town . Wou l d
cons ider
so me
trades .
Financi ng available . From
S4,950 to $15,000. Phone 446·
Ol68afler 2:30p .m . Robert A.
Queen. 1026 Second Ave.
10-tf
HOME FOR SALE - 7 rooms, 3
bedrOoms, large kitchen and
I lvlng room, w to w carpet,
.large patio with cover, l lf•
baths, under $18,000 available
15th of February . 131 Portsmouth Rd. For appointment
to see, call A46- 1425. •
16-tf

Wanted To Rent
MOTHER and 2 small children
would like to rent a two
bedroom furnished apart ment, house or,- mobile home,
close to or In town .
Reasonable r ent. Ph. 446-2867.
15-6

RUSSELL
· wooD ·
REALTOR
446-1066'

FOR :SALE

SERVICE .

1967 CHEVY

.WAY"

JIMME SAYRE
. AUCTIONEER

. PH. 446-3444

SPORTS VAN.
In exceliont condition,
equipped for camping .

R. E. KNOnS
H6-2917

PUBLIC
NOTICE

'

NEW CUSTOM BRICK on one
acre in the country. Large
rooms , fireplace , buill -In
bookcases . two car garage.
NEW FRAME HOME, good
location close to town. City
schools.
NICE HOME on Jackson Ave.
in Vinton . Large lot with
garden.

Jn

Shepp~!'!! 446·0001 .

Denver K, Hoghtey 446·0002
3 BR house, wall to wall car·
petlrtg, large kitchen, full
bMement, attached garage,
ext~ a ·lot. Ph. 4&lt;16-0028.
6-12

1971 BUICK Skylark, air cond.,
low mileage, 4&lt;16-3732.
16-6

GREAT LAKES 10 x 55 double
expando m.oblle home. ~hone
675-2463 .
13•6

19&lt;14 FALCON A·1new paint job,
new tires, will trade for
pickup truck. 446-2911,
16·3

Southern Auto
Sales

----~-

AKC GERMAN Shepher d pups,
champion blood lines. Ph . 446- ·

V-8, auto. trans., P.S., &amp;
P. B.,
automatic
tem ·
perature controL Sathon
green with white vinyl fop,
plush interior.
·
Ph. 388-9975

69

67
66
65
64
60
54

. ST A"iiCRAFT
Christmas Sale
24' 7" WS .$4,892 for $3,892
22' 7" WS $4,475 for $3,579
20' 7" WS $3,954 for $3 ,165
18' 7" WS $3,499 for $2,799
SELF -CONTAINED sleeps 6,
with con verter, some high
discount on fold downs, some
used units. Camp Conley :
Starcrott Sale•. Route 62 N•.of
Pl . RIOIIII!I"t· behl.fl11) tll.•ll
. Carpet inn . .Ph. 675-5384 . "'''
289 -tf

1966

1970
19&lt;19
1967
19&lt;17
1966

NtwGMC
Truck Htadquarttrs
GMC 'h ton PU
Chevrolet
ton PU
GMC lh ton PU
FORD 'h ton PU
'h ton Chev.
GMC 'II ton P U

lim GMC•¥r IOII'Ptt••~

Sporting pnce.

•~

1967 Chevrolet 'h Ibn Pl:l
1966 lf2 Ton GMC Pickup
1969 Otds 118
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
1971 3 ton Chevrolet Truck
1970 lf2 ton Cllevroief Pickup
1969 '12 ton Cllevrolet Pickup
196t 3 ton GMC
.
1968 1/2 T. GMC PU
1968 111 T. GMC PU
New 11 II. camper
1964 111 T. GMC PU
. 1966 '12 T. Ford PU
1971 lf2 ton Chev .
1969 lh T. GMC PU
1968 lf2 T. GMC PU
19&lt;17''h T. GMC Plckuo
i967 'v, T. GMC PU
1966 '!&gt; T. GMC PU
1967 '12 T. GMC-Pickup
1968 '12 T. GMC Pickup
1967 '12 T. GMC Pickup
SOMMERS G.M.C•.
TRUCKS, INC.
133 PinoS!.
446-2532
267-tf

----~-

SATURDAY, JAN. 27
10:00-A.M. ·
ATHENS, OHIO

:siNGER Sewing Machine Sates
· 1 Service. All models In
' stock . Free delivery. Service
guaranteed. Models priced
from S69 .95 . French City
Fabric Shoppe. Singer ar.·
proved dealer, 58 Court S .•
Ph . 4&lt;16-9255.

1 N. Shaf, r St., turn N. off At. 561n westside of Allltns. · •·
"ONE TIME LISTING"
'
PLUMBING, ELECTRIC&amp; HEATING SUPPLIES
Boxes of Galv. &amp; Black plumbing flttlngs.f rom 'Ill" to 1'12''.
brass valves, assortment of copper high pressure flare
nuts, refrigeration dryers, strainers, sight glosses, ail
types electric fittings &amp; clamps, Sl!verol clrcult breaker.s,
100 &amp; 200 AMP weather proof fuse boxes, approx. 200
assorted registers, hot water baseboard, Armoflex Air
Conditioning Insulation, furnace fltfl~s (register boots,
• take qffs, reducers &amp; elbows). 6" &amp; 7' type B vent pipe,
No. 2 coppar wire. Many other supplies. Ail now mer.
chandlse &amp; good. quality.
TOOLS, Ol'FICE EQUIP. &amp; MISC. CABINET
MATERIAL: 2 propane soldering outfits w-tanks, Lincoln
por table ore welder , Acetylene welding outfit, conduit
benders, pipe&amp; die sets, bar folder, cleat bender, assorted
hand sheet metal fools, many good motors from one-sixth
hp to 1'12 hp, pipe cutter, few hand tools, 2 llo!avy duly
Dolly Carls, shelving boards &amp; racks, Standard billing
machine &amp; cash drawer, 3 accts. rec. files, 4 metal tile
cabinets, 6 office desks 12 wooden, 3 metal, 1 Formica
top), parts cabinet, full sheets of Formica &amp; many small
pieces, molding, ceramic lifo, grout &amp; adhesive, bunoles
of oak wood trim, 1 lot plywood pieces, many other Items
too numerous to mention.
,
Terms: Cash
Not responsible for accidents.
,.
Rtllaurant near by
• R. H. GUNTER &amp; RAY CON.BOY, OWNERS .
ATHENS, OHI0-'- 441·2233

308-tf

Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture
~jEW ; Serlo
Bemco mal·
" ' " and box springs. Large
selection In stock - twin, full,
· queen size. Save up to $40 a

\set."
·

•

"5 Second Avenue
446-1172 '
. 27,6-tf

TYPEWRITERS,
Smith ,
Corona, Royal, Olivetti ,
Under.wood , manual . and
electric. Simmon• Pr(ntlng
· and Qlflce Equipment.

C. E. SHERIDAN, AUCT. AMESVIL1E. 0.
448-2833

.•

..

235·11

PIPES, PI~. , Pipes. GBO,
Cheraten, BBB, Jobey, Hilson
end others. Tawney's Pipe
and Trophy House, 422 Second
Ave.
··

BOYS

TREMENDOUS EARNINGS·

199-11

· Nitd Another Bldg.?

~

Ales

SEE our aluminum bldgs.
Heavy duty, with flooring,
wired tor electric . Also West
Virginia chunk coal, drain
tile, bell tile, cement end
mortar. Gallipolis Block &amp;
Olaf Co 123'12 Pine, 446-2783.
207·11
'·'

MR. ROUSH AT
4 P.M. Sharp!

Sporti~ lux~ry.

v,

AKC Toy poodle pup~, $75, $85
Siamese kittens SlO ""ch. 256·
, 6247.
'
3-30

•'

I ,
~·

''

and

Tuesday,J•n.23 --/
(Parents Welcome)

GooD"'ClEAN LUMP
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio
Granda. Phone 245-5115. 6-lf

,/,

'

•

I ,

l

I'

I

•

'

•

j

'

1971 BUICK

Catilina 2 dr. hdtp. Brougham .
'gold with dark brown vinyl top •
air cond ., low miles.

Electra 4dr. hardtop, air cond ..
24,500 miles, local doctor's
trade . Like new co'nd.

- •3695

1972·PONTIAC

1971 CHEVROLET

, Ventura II, air cond ., red, black .
vinyl top. Sprint packag~.
12,000 miles. Sharp.

Impala 2 dr . hdtop., air cond •• ·
vinyl top. 22,000 miles, like new
con d .

.

AT THE COST PRICE AND
MAKE US AN OFFER.
EXAMPLE:
1973 CHRYSLER 4 DOOR SEDAN

SMITH AUTO SALES

STICKER PRICE $5 ~ 127.60
· ._ ,
FACTORY INVOICE PRICE OR OUR
COST $3,993.40.

KANAUGA, OHIO .

.Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth

DUE TO divorce, 1972 8 track
stereo console; must sell at
once, nice walnut finish . This
setsold much higher, must let
go for $89.60 or $7 .471 month.
Try II In your home. Call 4&lt;16·
0255.
13-11
JUST taken In, deluxe zig zag
sewing
machine.
This
machine
darns,
embroideries, overcasts, buttonholes, pay balance $36.50
or payments can ~arranged .
446·0255.
•
13-tf

Business Opportunities
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNILY
MAN OR WOMAN
RELIABLE person from this
area to service and collect
from automatic dispensers.
No experience needed ... we
: establish accounts for you.
Car, references and $995 to
$1.995cas~ capital necessary.
4 to 12 hours weekly could net
good part-time Income. Full·
time more. For local in·
tervlew, write , Include
telephone number, Eagle
Industries, Di!partment BV,
3938 M!tadowbrook Road, St.
Louis Pork, Minnesota 55426.
'
17-1

Music@l

ln~truments

for Sale

1639 Easterlt Ave.

Services Offered

Ga

Services Offered

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
HAFFELT'S CARPETING
FREE Inspection . Call 446-3245.
·IF YOU are building a new
Merrill CYDell, Operator by
home or need new carpet,
Exterminal Termlle Service,
phone Jerry Haffelt, 446-1158
19 Belmont Dr.
for free estimates .
267-lf

---------:--------~275-lf ~::::::::::::::::,
DRY WALL service by con tract . Willard Bosley, 4464954.
282-tf
-::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:::::::;~;

t

DEAD STOCK
$5.00 Service Charge

Will remove your dead_
horse and cows
Ca II Jackson 286-4.531

INCOME TAX
· SERVICE
WILSON RUSK
Anyti~e

Plumbing &amp;. Heating

Aluminum
·· Sheats

. Gallipolis .
Dai~ 1ribune

___ _

Services Offered

Instruction

lielp Wanted

~I

Skylark 2 Dr. hdtp.; air cond. vlnyl top, one' owner. Extra
nice.

'2595 '

UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY'

IF YOU have a background In
convenient food store or
supermarket work or have a
desire to enter this field, we
have opportunities due to
expansion for: Store 5uparvlsors; Store managers; Full
or portlime ~tore personnel.
We ore an es.tabl.lshe.d
Radio, p . steer.lng, P.. .brakes', auto.• J~an!l-•
company offering sta.ble
fac. air cond. , 19,000 act. miles, red finish with
employment
opportunities.
Opportunities exist tn Pl.
blk. vinyl interior, blk. vinyl top. Looks &amp; runs
Pleasant area and the
like new.
Charleston area . Plene
submit a complete r1sume to
P. 0 . Box 247, c-o Tribune. Ali
replies strictly confidential.
14-12
~E:::~::-.A7_N-:0-f N-G--:
. T-:E-XA-S---,MF-It
NEEDS SALES REP. Enjoy
splendid income . No experlen ca nlll'c:essary. You
'
supply desire. We surply
EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, 0.
training. Limited trave in
Gallipolis area . Air mall C. H.
Dickerson, Pres., South 0
western Petroleum Corp.; Ft.
Worth , Tex.
17-l
WALLPAPERING and pain·
ling. Phone 446-9865 or 379. - - - - - - - - 2471.
17-1
"'
T"o"'
o"'L""·-.,...
h-ar-p-e-n,..-1n-g-,-sa ws, Waitress lor ID P.M. to 6
scissors, shears, home and A.M. $hill. Good working
garden tools. Sharp Shop, condition, pild vocation ,
Alley rear 147 Second.
also bokery-cook for f A.M.
216-11 to 2:30 P.M. Apply In parson
~-:--:.,----­
REMODELING, building new only Bob Evans SINk House.
rooms, cement, roofing,
sidlny, furnace ins. J. Ft .
Good Mechanical
Queen &amp; Son. 4&lt;16·9271.
SEMI-DRIVERS NEEDED
68-tf LOCAL companies need (:er·
Condltl~;m
II fled Semi - Drivers~· . Earn
;;R:;;oo=F-:-:1N
:::G
:--a:-n-:d-:-spo
- ut:-ln_g_, ex$300-$400 per week . No ex·
perienced roofers. P~. 388·
peri ence necessary, will
8114, James Marcum .
train. For application call 317·
15-30
636·2675, or write Coastway
.American Systems. P. 0 . Box
HOUSEWORK, small paint
11125, Indianapolis, Indiana
lobs, babysitting, etc. Call
46201.
446-4917.
Upper Rt. 7
298-30 .
15-3
Gallipolis,

71 .CH.EV. IMPALA
CUSTOM COUPE

' •2695

WOOD MOTOR SALES
Wanted T Do

1965

VOLKSWAGEN
Station Wagoo
(Bus)

$79500

1m Watts V.W.
o:

llelo Wanted ·

Wanted

NE~C&gt;S LPN

USED backhoe, Case or John
Deere, C. U. Miller. Ph . 245·
5535.
.
17·1

MATURE babysitter to come to
house for boys 21h and 4 years
old, 2 to 3 days o week and
occasional evenings. 4&lt;16-4736
after 5 p.m .
13-6

or

retired RN to
work In nursing home. can
live ln. Write Box 313, Ironton,
Ohio Route l.
2-ff

280 State Street
Phone 446-2476

. MUSICAL
.INSTRUMENTS
ATTENTION
ALL
Roto Rooter
,.,.,x23"1.009
MUSICIANS, SINGERS AND SEWER and l)raln Cleaning,
GENE 'PLANTS &amp; SONS
SONGWRITERS! Interested
National
Service
now PLUMBING - Healing &amp; Air_
In cutting a record in a new · available locally. For any
Conditioning . 300 Fourth Ave.
professional
record,lng
Ph . 446-1637 .
·
kind of stopped-up dra in. ca ll
studio? We are now accepting
675-5195, 24 hour Serv.
-18-tl
recording
~ppolntmenfs.
307-lf
· Records pressed by Capitol
USED OFFSET PLATES
CARTER'S PLUMBING
RI!COrds. For allPOintments or•
HAVE
AND HEATING .
Central Air Conditioning
more lnformiollon contact
Cor . Fourth &amp; Pine
MANY USES
&amp; Heating
Appalachia Sound · Recording
Phone 446·388a or 446-4477
Free E'slimates
Studio, Route a, Box 525,
165-tf
Stewart:s Hardware
Chillicothe, Ohio 45601 . Ph.
Vinton, Ohio
(614) 663-2544.
144-lf
STANDARD
13-4
8 for Sl.OO
___;_
Plumbing &amp; Healing
214Third Ave ., 446-3782
" HOT-SHOT" Wash mobile .
Wash
,
wax
and
degreasing
-·- -- - -- '-'87_- ti
·
with mobile unit. 446-4441 .
RUSS.ELL'S
210 11
'
. PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
STEWART Electrical Service &amp; ·
21 Gallia A~e .• 446-4782
ALBERT
EllMAN
Repair, house wiring, eledrlc
297-tf
125 Third Ave. ' ·
Water Delivery Service
heating. Phone ~46-4561.
O.llfpolls,O.
Patriot Star Rt.,, Gallipolis
'
271-tf
DEWITT' S PLUMBING
Ph . 379-2133
·
AND HEATING
243-11
SEPTIC TANKS
Route 160 at Evergreen
Cleaned and Installed
Phone 446-2735
BOB
LANE 1S ·Complete
t&gt;R ESTON Beauty College
Russell's Plumbing . 4&lt;16-4782
187-lf
Bookkeeping
and
Tax
Ser·
announces 1 new class will
·
• 297-11
vice , 424 112 Fourth Ave ., ~·-----begin February 5. Enroll now GILLENWATER'S septic tank
Kanauga . ." Business by ap ~nd have a ~ profeutonai
cleaning aryd , rdpa lr , alsa
pointment. Ph . 446 -.1049.
career that will offer you ' house wre.cklng. Ph. 446-9499 •
Please call after 6 p.m.
and . an
·
Independence,
40
278-tf
'
excellent Income, gcivorn· , Established In 19 ,
169·11
Now taking application: lor
lull and parlllme em .
menl guaranteed loans. lll'e -=-::-=-==~:-;:--;::::;­
BANKS TREE SERVICE
ployment. Male or female.
available, Weare a 111t1onafly D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water, FREE estimates, l iability in·
Pleasant working conditions.
accredited achaol. Call collect
Delivery Service. You &lt;
surance. Pruning, trn11ming
Paid vacations. Apply In
867-8512, Houra8; 30a.m : to 10
patronage will be apand cavity work, tree and
p.m . Preston B..uty College.
predated . Ph . 4&lt;16.0463.
person
at Sob Evans Drive
stump removal. Ph. 446-4953.
Chesapeake, Ohio.
_
. 2-tt
ln. ·
7HI
17 6

2fr

'

~2995

-STICKER PRICE•.
·NO·GUESS~WORK FOR YOU
THE CUSTOMER. JUST LOOK

Own a(!!!mOriginaL

CHEVY, 4 sp. trans., and Chevy
427 engine. Call 245-5237:
12·6

'

Air, Radial tires, vinyl. top. AMFM radio, like new .
·

WILL BE ON THE WINDOW
NEXT TO THE RETAIL

•

For Sale

1970 BUICK

.

When you 're shopping for a hardtop, the object
is robe a sport ... not the last of the big spenders.
So lake a look at the new Datsun 610 2- Door Hardtop. ll's a luxury car with a Da1Sun price that includes a lot of no-cost extras :
• 1800 cc overhead cam engine
• Power·assisl brakes -discs in front
• Independent rear suspension
• Sports Interior
•. . ·- ..
• Rear window defroster
• Sports console
• Power-flow ventilalion
• And loiS more ... all standard equipmen1!
Tes1 drive the new Datsun 610 2-Door H ardtop
at your nearby Datsun dealer's and discover why
we call it a Oa1Sun Original. Drive a Datsun ...
then decide.

••
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'4195

•

.1970 T. BIRD

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.•3795

1972 PONTIAC

IS TAKING THE GUESS WORK
OUT OF BUYING A NEW CAR.
OUR INVOICE COST PRICE

P.M.C.

l2x60 town &amp; Country
12.SO Shultz ·
12x55 Richardson
10x51 Roy Craft
lO.SO New Milan
8x27 Castle
B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
Second &amp; Viand St.
Pt. PINsant
I Nextto Heck's )

9-11

AUCTION SALE

918 Second Ave.

'

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
12x60 Holly Park
121&lt;60 Klngswood
t2x60 Peerless
12x60 Sylvan
12x65 Winston
12&gt;&lt;60 Holly Park
12&gt;&lt;60 Hallmark
12x60 Statesman

~ l~x60

COMPLETE line of Starcraft
travel trailers and fold down
campers, Quality and service,
highest discount in Tri-State.
Camp Conley ·starcrafl Sales ,.
t&lt;oute 62 north of PI ..
Pleasant , behind Red Carpel
Inn. Phone 675-538~.
5-lf

'

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH

------

--::--:---:-:::--

DODGE~

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•369~

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

Datsun610.

1970GMC '!&gt;ton pickup V.B, tool
boxes on side, automatic
transmission, $2,195. Call 4&lt;16·
3746.
13-6

73
73
73
71
70
70
70

Gi-an Prix, red, white _v inyl top,
white bucket seats, 3,200 miles.

'

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'2995

13-6

1972 SKYLINE Hometfe, 12 x 65,
3 bedroom . Ph . 245· 5~42 .
14·6

WILLIAM ANN MOTEL

50 STATE ST.

.

d r ive, 4 speed.
350 eng., 13,000 miles • . Never
been off hard road •

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CARROLL NORRIS

~-~---

ANTIQUE pump .. organ. alf
original except new bellows.
Over 80 vears old . Made bY
Taylor and Fraley Organ Co.,
Worcester, Mass. One bel lows
type .
Phone . 992 ·3904,
Syracuse, 0 .

.

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1972 PONTIAC

Bla~e~.' 4 wheel

SEE US·Fl RST - ·BEFORE YOU BUY!

! I :•

16-3'
::,9:::67:-:J::E::E::P--4:-wh-:--ee-:-1. d-:-rlve,
. newly painted, very good
condition, $1,895. Call 4&lt;16·
3746,

Sharp .1969
Chevrolet CapriGe .

BOYS

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LIBERAL DISCOUNTS
·
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ON ALL NEW CARS
NOW IN STOCKI

1029.

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BOYS

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p 11-12

-------

HANERSVILLE, two homes,
live In one and put your
busi ness in the other.

.

GUARANTEED border Collie
pups . Call 614·286-2496.

- - - - -- -

HOMES
HILL TOP SUB., nice 4 bedroom
home, carpor( and two lots.

.

.

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1972 CHEVROLET

'

RANCHO RE~LTOR-~

104 ACRES, beef or da iry farm,
very good barn , pond,
livestock available.

WE NEED GOOD USED CARS/1 ·

E FLAT saxOphone, Leblanc,
$175, good condition, call Bill
Salj'anek, 388-8577.

television . good condition,
movi,g , 446·0611.
J

' HAIIDTQP
POLA!IA l·DOOR

NEW .I ·. U$ED FURNITURE
· 15:4 Second 446-9523

M
=o=
To=R=o
=L~A;--::co::n::so::;le::--21"
•

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.~.

Dodge .
.

RICE'S

' '
ELECTROLUX Sweepers
. deluxe model. Complete ·wifh
all cleaning attachm
_ enfs and
uses paper bags . Slightly used
but cleans and !ooks like new.
Will sell for $37.25 cash or
terms available. Electro
Hygiene Co . Phone ~46-4312.
17-6

.ALL CARS liAVE rO GO! ! ! 1

SAYS

· REAL ·, N IC,E lour piece
Wdroom suite, two dinette
sets, two piece living room
suite In · good condition, two
rockers.

0" NOW, ·

GQING

.SMITH -

FU~NJTURE .

USED

1971 CADILLAC Sedan Deville,
low mileage . Excellent
condition
. Ph. 675-15U after 4
NEW3bedroom house. Caii446p.m .
LAND
1900 or 446-2890.
a.12
9 ACRES, Rt. 141. Lot of (ron'17·11
tage , development land.
TRI -STATE Mobile Homes PRE -USE D Mobile homes lor
•ale. bank financing, low
25 ACRES vacan t land. spring,
Sales, Kanauga , Ohio, across
down payment, como and lopk
some fences :
.
from HI- Way Inn, Kanouga,
around at Tri-State Mobile
Used Mobile Homes .
Homes Soles, Kanaugo , Ohio.
311&gt; ACRES, Addison Twp. Good 10 x 50 Frontier
Phone 448-0al6.
bldg. lot or t railer lot.
10 x 48 Richardson
B-26
I 0 x 46 Amerl can
LOTS , Rt . 141 and Mitchell Rd . 10 x 50 New Moon
1F YOU are building a new
FARMS
.
10 x 46 Peerless
home or remodeling, see us.
53 ACRES. Large 8 room home, 8 x 45 Now Moon
We are builders. Di stributor
barn , outbldgs . Harrison 12 x 70 Klngswood
Twp .
for
Hotpoint Appl ia nces,
10 x 35 Atlantic Mobile Office
Allison Electric.
11·11
39 ACRES , 7 room home with
154-lf
bath, barn, fenced. good
pasture .
·

SEE

W1 seit •nilllllng for
anybody . Bring, your
Items to Knotts Community Auction Barn.
Corner Third &amp; Olivo.
For apPointment call
446-2917 . Salt tvery
Saturday evonlng at 7

]).If

CLOSE out on 1972 full ~lze zig·
zag sewing machines. For
sewing stretch fabrics ,
buttonholes, fancy ·designs,
etc. Paint slightly bleml5hed.
Choice If carrying case or
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or
terms available. !!lectrlc
Hygiene Co. Phone ~-4312 .
"
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17-6

High School and Junior High School

.AUCTION ·
."SELL ntE AUCTION

'

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JUST

WIFE

AKC Registered St .
Bernard
puppies .
Phone 446-0231. Ready
for Valentine ' s Day.

EASY TO FINANCE .

Very Well Kept
3 Bedroom
W HA T · THE

For Sale

WA SHER , 2 BATHS , AN D

SCREE NED POR CH, ONE
CAR GARAGE , CLOSE TO
TOWN ON FLAT LA ND SCAPED LOT .

FOR SALE ·

2 story 3 bedroom all elect.
brick, carpet throughout,
disposal, new cabinets in
kitchen. dining room and
fireplace, 1'12 bat.!)s, deep lot,
10s2 Second Ave. Call 4461997 after s p.m. daily, on
Sundays anytime.

1969 CHEVY ao series' dump ,
truck, 14 fool bed · with new
tires 'brakes, etc. 245-5048.

._19th ANNIVERSARY .SAL£ -

DOC

. ALL TYPES' of .building
-: materiels_
, bi!JCk, brick, sewer
~rpes , wlndQws, · lintels, eac.
Cleude Winters,· Rio Grande,
0. Phone 245·5121 alter 5.
.
123-lf

For Sale

Neal Realty

~

ELECTRICITY
We furn i$h Water. Sewago . G~rblge Colltclion - Ample
Parking • TV Antenlll • Wall-to-Wall Carpeting •
Drapet iu . Rangu . Rolrlger1tors • Air Conditioning •
O.rbage Disposals . Olahwashtn . Haat Lampo· Privati
Patios • Swlmmt,. Pool - Clubllo4lst.

Real Estate For Sale

DERE D
VERY
INVESTMENT - Looklngfora
with rec. rm . and cooking
PRE TTY
KITCHEN ,
HERE'S ONE ON EDGE
storebuildlng?Well,wehave
fa cil i ties in base . Thi s house
CARPETED
LIV IN G
OF TOW N ON LAR:GE
one in Vinton with 2 apartha s
carpet,
tile
cel l- ROOM, NICE LOCAT ION
SEC LUDED LOT . LARGE
mentsupstairs.2400sq . ft. on
ing s, 'paneling, and awn · AT EDGE OF TOWN IN
L IV ING A ND DINING
ings on windows. Loca ted
AN EXCELLENT NEIGH ROOM , BUILT -I N K IT ·
000
each floor . SIS, '
on a .4 A. lot with plenty nice
BORHOOD.
CHEN ON ONE ~LOOR
CHESHIRE
TRAI LER
shrubbery. Lot is 42'&lt;410' and .
WIT H A FA NT AS TIC
GIBSON
c ombination
PAR K - 19 slalis, 7mobile
goeslolheriver. Gar. 20'x 24'
IF YOU ' RE THI NKING
VI EW
QF
THE
re frigerator
freeter ,
homes ~O with sale .
pius a new metal bldg . Pr ice
OF SELLING _ THINK ·
SURROUNDING
HILL S
Kelvlnator coppertone gas
ReducedfoS22.500.
OF
TH E
WISE M A N
AND VA LUE S.
range1 dinette set and 6.
LOOK NG FOR A LOT?
- THE SECOND ONE IS
chairs, utility cabinet, 3 piece
WE HAVE lots and vacant
D
AGE NCY . WE
SE L L
OUT NEA R THE NEW
round in different parts of NEIGHBORHOOD R ·
MORE PR OPE RTY THAN
sectional with coffee and end
Sectional, 24' X 55' , same as
ANYBODY -EL SE AND
HOSPITAL
AND
IN th
I
M
I
f
tables, 2 twin beds. Allin good
hecouny. oso
emcan
new, doublelavoratory balh
CLUDES
A
HUGE
condition, reason for selling,
be financed.
NOW HAVE A N URGENT
' F AMILY ROOM , 2 BATHS ,
RANNYBLACKBURN
withshower.Lol85'xl25' .
NEED
FOR
NEW
GARAGE,
LOVELY
leaving town . 367-788Z.
B
, RA_"'
.. CH ,MA
, N
_,,AGER
$14,500 . .· ,·
,_,
'-LI STING S. . RE SIDEN KI TCHEN AND ~ARGE
o ), 1 I t! ' " I'V'1 ) II
17-~
''' '
1~
l TIAL
IN OR , ·:OIJ.TII~:oOF f.'ll
F LAT LOT . PRI CED AT
RODNEY 1972 Schultz
T 0 WN ·
FARM S
$24.900
AND
$32,900
ANTIQUE ~ urniture , china,
Mobile home, 14' X 68', all
ANY WHE RE IN THE
RESPECTIVELY!
glass, miscellaneous Items.
elec . cen. air and located on
AREA. GI VE us A CALL .
3a8-8350.
.89 A. lot. Price $14,900.
1---------------------...l
17-6

a

For Rent

Real Estate For Sale
OHIO RIVE~

For Sale

WANTED
...
·SAW MILL LOGS AND
'

STANDIN~

'·

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TIMBER

HINCHCLIFF PRODUCTS CO.
Wellston, Ohio
Junctkln of 346 and

CounfJ Road 78

Fonnl!lty Koppel$ Co. MiD

PHONE -384 6481

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-':::_·r:_:&gt;_:·::_:::_:_.,;::::::~.'.;
...-...--._

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28- The Sunday Times-Se.ntinel,Sunday, Jan. 21,1973
9%4 DEATIIS
NEW YORK (UP!) - New
York City h;td 924 deaths
. directly related to narcotics
addiction in 1972, ~n increase of . -"THENS ·- The· Southe~st
eight .from the previo\IS year, Ohio · Emergency Medical
· according to preliminary fig- Services (SOEMS) has anures released Friday..
nounced graduation Of a class
But Gordon Chase, city of EMT instructors who . will
health services administra~r, teach futu re emergency
said that while there had been ffi'edical technicians in the
a alight rise ln. the number of seven-county SEOEMS project
drug deaths, fatalities dirtc!lY area. The new instructors are
attributable to narcotics ad· certilied by the Department of
dicition appeared to be leveling Education, State of Ohio. they
off.
will be instructing the 60-hour
course based on the 354-page
manual on Emergency Victim .
Care.
A dinner, held at the Sports..
rna~ Inn in Athens, recognized
the graduates, their wives, and
· representatives from the State
Department of Vocational
Education, Ohio Valley Health
Services
Foundation and
av
SEOEMS staff members .
., TERRY
Speakers were Dr. John Cashman, director of the Ohio
Department of Health; Jack

13 EMT instructors honored ·

The ·combination of'
simplicity and grandeur
plus
an ·
almost
Inexhaustible wealth of
materials · and methods,
now ,

availl!1ble

are

adequately shown to advantage In the outer COI'l struction · and

inter ior

deslgning·of structures and

:r,:.o~~e~dthe

homes today, In the United
States.
These

materials and

methods are beautifully
harmoni zed In architecture
and In interior style and

designed to create the
elegant look of beauty and
comply with tastes and
demands of the public
today. Both period and
modern furniture styles
are also artistj ca ll y uti I ized

In the modern hom e today.
For a home that is ar-

tistic, In style and design.
spac:e engineered. for ·more

room ar;~d comfort, co lorcoordinated and furnished
In the style of your choice,
'he mobile home meets all
ihe,tastes and~em ands of

the home buyer. and a
great variety of these

magnificent structures can

be seer\ here. You will
appreciate th e man y
convenien ces,

superior

constructi on and regal
beauty that a mobile home
has to offer, as well as the

II can help pay soaring
haspllal and surgical
bills.
A State Farm Hospital/Surgical policy can help pay for
your hospital roo m, the medIcal services you receive in
, the hospital , med ic ine and
even for the operation itself.

Call me about it.

Caroll K. Snowden ·
Park Central
Hotel Building
Second Avenue

Gallipolis

low cost and easy f inancing

Phone 446-4290
Home 446-4518

term s.

Johnson's Mobile Home
Sales
ttotl OHIO

2110 Eastern Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3547

Farrington, executive ~!rector
of. OVHSF and .Willis Troy,
co nsultant to the Ohio
Department of Education...
Farrington spoke of the need
for an emergency health
serv~ces effort in rural Appalachia .
"The EMS will serve as
Portal of Entry to complete
health ca_re for hundreds. of
people in southeast Ohio who
have had little available to
them in the health field."
Farrington recognized each of
th~ instructors as being the
"most important representative" from the project to the
people of the area, through the
approximately 300 persons who
l'!ill e-:entually .take the EMT
course.
"Absolutely the most vital
connection between the suddenly injured and sick, . the
potential suddenly. injured and
sick , and proper hospital care,
is that highly-trained EM
te c hni cia n . Fir s t -rate
medicine, equipment and
Iran sport
vehicles
are
secondary, to the treatment
given by these • paraprofessionals at the scene, and

STAT.E FA RP/ MUTUi&amp;.l
I~I~UNC ~

our J ··~

·' .·,

,,.,q co"'''" '

~ ""' ' Dr"&lt;" 8 '"""' ~ ' "" • •o •

medical cen-

Dr . Cashman, instrumental
in forming th e first Ohio
Emergency Health Services
Advisory Council, was the
honored guest and addressed
the instructors on the Increasingly important role the
para-professionals and paramedics play in the future of
. hcllth care in America.
"The experience from this
demonstration project will
·eventually benefit all communities throughou t th e
state," Cashman .said: "This
unique system demonstrates
the worth of the highly trained
pa ra -professional,
by
providing
a
complete
emergency medical service for
the first time to some 213,000
Ohioans In these sparsely
populated counties. What
yo u'-re sta rting here in
southeast Ohio will open one
excellent route to getting good
care to all of our people. Good
health care in which no Ohio
citizen would be denied entry
in to the finest health system

available in this state," .he
said.
Eleven of the 13 instructors
graduated fr.om the school in
Wellston heard praise for
dedicating themselves to EMT
training and for the emergency
medical service project they
have become a&gt;;SoCiated with.
"This pro ject is exciting not
only because it will aid . in
preventing crippling injury
and death, but it will develop
the mechanism to deliver
primary care. You have much
to take pride in," said Cashman.
Cashman, who has ·written
many health publications, has
served as a_ssistant surgeon
general, public health service
director and is an authority in
the community health field .
Willis Troy added his
congratulations to . thos e
already given to the graduates.
He said that the entire EMT
training sector of vocational
education would be citing as
example ' the number of high
quality instructors in use in the

countjes .o{ Athens, Hoc~ing,
Vinton. Meigs, Gallia, Jackson
. and . Lawrence. "We expect
inariy inquiries about the· efiicient timely program that .
produced top notch ii!Structors
for southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Service and the Ohip
Dep~rtrnent of Education."
Nam~ of the graduates Who
attended the dinner were:
William Taylor, AI Pierce, Joe
Struble, Clyde Baker; Larry ·
Baker, '!ill Stumph, David
Harkins, Bob Conley, Carroll
Thornton, Royce Cooley and .
Louis Trego. Jack Davis and
Earl James were absent. The
men were assigned classes
which begin in January.
SEOEMS is a $5.3 million
dollar project funded by
federal , state and ·local
governments. Local share Is
approximately three and onehalf per cent. In full operatiop,
SEOEMS· will have 2o ·ambulances serving 17 stations
within the 3,500 square mile
region in its first year.

oh·10 L egiOll
. . COD.1erence
· £
-

in Columbus January 28
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
American Legion will hold its
annual Mid-Winter Conference
in the Rhodes Center, Ohio
Exposition Grounds, Colurnbus, Sunday, Jan. 28, with
nearly 1,500 Legionnaires
representing the 692 Ohio Posts
expected to attend.
A highlight of the all-day
meeting, which will open at 10
a.m., will be tho official visit to
Ohio of American Legion
National Commander Joe L.
Matthews of Fort Worth,
'i'exas. He returned from a trip
to Russia and Poland in late
December where he conferred
with war veterans' group and
government offjcials and is
expected to make a report of
his trip .
He will also brief the
representatives of the 127,000member Ohio American
Legion on progra ms anq
policies of The America n
Legion which have national
significance.
Commander Matthews is a

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EtBERFELDS IN · poMEROV ·
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· ,save:,on

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R~A' Color . 'fv Console Sets.
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.~ltntli-' . .

~' ·-~lll'lf·, T~• Th.~ f.r~t,t! tfr

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!lliddf.i O,hio Vr(lfPV .
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The Contemporary Look
The popularity of Contempoquy is well deserved. Blends beautifully
with any room setting!
,

638

veteran of two tours of duty
with the U. S. Navy, the first
from 1932 to 1936, and the
second re-enlisting as a
m~mber of the 'Navy's famous
Sea bees in 1943 with service in
the Marshall Islands, Okinawa,
and Hawaii. In private life he
owns and operates Linemen's
Equipment Company in Fort
Worth.,
During his term of office, the
National Commander is
placing emphasis on a ·continuing effortto assistveterans
of the Vietnam era, especially
in the field of employment
through the Legion's "Jobs for .
Veterans" program.

'.~ .

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~?Ji)
Di~l

biTLo~@Q)

100% Solid State

~'ITW

Premiere
showing

DO Lf'OU WANT IO

Tilt OSLO
Modtl GR129
25~' dl•1an11pleturt

· TAI(E ME To TI-lE
SENI.O~ P~OM?

~:;;v:&lt;

Choose color TV
with style!
All three are
RCA XL·100
100% solid state.

Jan. 11th

THAT WON'T 6E I JU5T WANTED TO GIVE
4(0U A BREAK ... IN TEN '(EM? I
FO~ AN01HER
T£N "I(EAR5
PLAN 10 6E T~E MOST GOU6HT~
AFTE({ 61~1. IN SCHOOL !

'

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The charm of Early
American cabinetry Is
exquisitely expressed in
this handsome model.

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lhtO!MOVTH
Mode
3t

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25• dl an11 plchm

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The Spanish Look
Bold Spanish styling has
a massive look and
·massive appeal.

'648

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ALL ¥0DELS SHOWN HAVE THESE QUALITY FEATURI!S
,..__..._."'"":._,· ).II·chassis tubes - a major
Flddlo-froo tun ing.
cause of TV repal rs~ aro out.
AccuMatlc• color
RCA plug-In AccuCircul~
monitor (ACM)·and
modules control most set .
. Automatic Fine
functions. Should an
.
Tuning (AFT) buttons
AccuCircult module failure'
aro adjacent. ACM
occur, technician tlmply
locka color within 1
111aps In a roplacemant.
normal range Instantly.
'
Built -In connection
VIvid, lifeli ke color from
lor direct-line cable
RCA's finest picture tuba.
and opartmant house
Rod(ant phosphors are
antenna systems, plus
surrounded by a black
RCA'a CabloGuard
matrl• for sp~rkllng color.
lhioldad tuner.
·

Come '" and see these
RCA masterpieces •••

ROll .

ELBERfEtDS IN POMEROY
.
.Open Everr JJ:'eekdayU~t# 5 PM and on
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Fridays and Satu~ys " 'Til9.PM
.

'

' '

'

' .

'

...

l HAVE NO INTENTION
TO GEEK AFTER '1'0V ..

'

,

Tm. Reg. U.s'. PJt. Off.-AII rig:hts reserved
C 1973 by United feature Syndicate. Inc.

WELL, IF YOU DO, I'LL SE-STANDIN~ .
8'{ T"E DRINKING FOUNTAIN AT THE
NORTH END OF THE .8Ul\.DlN6!!

'648

'

'·

.

"

-;;·,

Use our own sensible credit service.

Just received another shipment - Mens ·s2'9.95 All
. Weather Coats. Sizes 36 ·to 46 in shorts • regulars •
longs on .s•le $19.90.

'

'

'

CAPITAL AND LIABILITIES

\

'

' .
· Choose the set yol(Want now during this spectacular sale.

CERTIFICATE OF THREE DIRECTORS OR AUDITING COMMITTEE

,

~

-\'·'·

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•

' '

-'

.....

'

h

AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS DECEMBER 31, 1972

We, the undersigned Directors: of the Athens County Savings and · Loan
Company of Athens, Ohio 4570.1do hereby certify that the foregoing , to the best of
ou rknow ledge ·and belief, is a true stat~ m ent and C~r rectly Sh9WS the financial
~ondition of said institution at the·close of business December 31. 1972.

'

Port~ble Color

The Colonial Look

STATE OF OHIO, ATHENS COUNTY, ss :
.
Dale E. Shultz being duly sworn, deposes and says that he is th e Managing
Officer of the Athens County Savings and .Loan Company of At hens, Ohio 45701
-and that to the best oi his knowledge and belief the foregoing is a true sta tement
and correctly shows the financial condition of said institution at th e close of
business December 31, 1972.
•
Dale E. Shultz, President
Subscribed and sworn to before me , this 8t h day of January , 1973.
Earl F. Ingels, Jr., Notary Public
'
In and for Meig s County, Ohiq.
My Commission Expir.es Feb. 15, 1976.

,

"

RCA.

·'

'

\

OF ·ATHENS, OHIO 45701

$8,130.61

\

.,

BARGAIN DAYS

ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS AND LOAN COMPANY

Interest Due and Uncollected on Mortgage Loans

..

''.

•: !.,

Console
Stereos
.with
tape players - built-in.
\
'
l 8 track
.
.

OF THE

First Mortgage Loans
$11,058,830.43
Loans on all Other Security 381,869.33
U.S. Government Obligations
904,578.31
Stock in F.H.L.B.
76,600.00
OtHer Investment Securities 481,295.39
Cash on Hand and in Banks 153,736.51
Office Building {less Depr . ) 101,481.57
Furniture, Fixtures &amp;
Equipment {less depr.)
14,785.19
1,263.23
Deferred Charges
579,342.69
Other Assets
$13,753,782.65
TOT A.L ASSETS

'

•

TV ·sets : B.l ack . and White .· Portable TV's and RCA.

STATEMENT OF CONDITION

11,999,597.60
Deposits
141,408.38
Loans in Process
1,086.31
Accrued Taxes
Other Liabilities
536,161.32
Reserved for Uncollected In. 8,130.61
terest
Credits
for
Future
Deferred
105,224.85
Operations
250,000.00
Permanent Stock
Federal Insurance Reserve 458,390.37
253,783.21
Undivided Profits
TOTAL CAPITAL
$13,753,782.65
&amp; LIA.B I LIT I ES

'

;stop,ln the ~~sic ~partment on the 2nd floqr and really

_,

-ASSETS

.•..

I
I

.;

~.
'

I

'. I

'

l

.'

THERE'~

NO ~EN~E TO BEING G0!16HT
AFTeR IF 'iOU CAN'T 6E I=OUND!

..
'

.'

.

�.

'

.,.,.

'
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.

28- The Sunday Times-Se.ntinel,Sunday, Jan. 21,1973
9%4 DEATIIS
NEW YORK (UP!) - New
York City h;td 924 deaths
. directly related to narcotics
addiction in 1972, ~n increase of . -"THENS ·- The· Southe~st
eight .from the previo\IS year, Ohio · Emergency Medical
· according to preliminary fig- Services (SOEMS) has anures released Friday..
nounced graduation Of a class
But Gordon Chase, city of EMT instructors who . will
health services administra~r, teach futu re emergency
said that while there had been ffi'edical technicians in the
a alight rise ln. the number of seven-county SEOEMS project
drug deaths, fatalities dirtc!lY area. The new instructors are
attributable to narcotics ad· certilied by the Department of
dicition appeared to be leveling Education, State of Ohio. they
off.
will be instructing the 60-hour
course based on the 354-page
manual on Emergency Victim .
Care.
A dinner, held at the Sports..
rna~ Inn in Athens, recognized
the graduates, their wives, and
· representatives from the State
Department of Vocational
Education, Ohio Valley Health
Services
Foundation and
av
SEOEMS staff members .
., TERRY
Speakers were Dr. John Cashman, director of the Ohio
Department of Health; Jack

13 EMT instructors honored ·

The ·combination of'
simplicity and grandeur
plus
an ·
almost
Inexhaustible wealth of
materials · and methods,
now ,

availl!1ble

are

adequately shown to advantage In the outer COI'l struction · and

inter ior

deslgning·of structures and

:r,:.o~~e~dthe

homes today, In the United
States.
These

materials and

methods are beautifully
harmoni zed In architecture
and In interior style and

designed to create the
elegant look of beauty and
comply with tastes and
demands of the public
today. Both period and
modern furniture styles
are also artistj ca ll y uti I ized

In the modern hom e today.
For a home that is ar-

tistic, In style and design.
spac:e engineered. for ·more

room ar;~d comfort, co lorcoordinated and furnished
In the style of your choice,
'he mobile home meets all
ihe,tastes and~em ands of

the home buyer. and a
great variety of these

magnificent structures can

be seer\ here. You will
appreciate th e man y
convenien ces,

superior

constructi on and regal
beauty that a mobile home
has to offer, as well as the

II can help pay soaring
haspllal and surgical
bills.
A State Farm Hospital/Surgical policy can help pay for
your hospital roo m, the medIcal services you receive in
, the hospital , med ic ine and
even for the operation itself.

Call me about it.

Caroll K. Snowden ·
Park Central
Hotel Building
Second Avenue

Gallipolis

low cost and easy f inancing

Phone 446-4290
Home 446-4518

term s.

Johnson's Mobile Home
Sales
ttotl OHIO

2110 Eastern Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3547

Farrington, executive ~!rector
of. OVHSF and .Willis Troy,
co nsultant to the Ohio
Department of Education...
Farrington spoke of the need
for an emergency health
serv~ces effort in rural Appalachia .
"The EMS will serve as
Portal of Entry to complete
health ca_re for hundreds. of
people in southeast Ohio who
have had little available to
them in the health field."
Farrington recognized each of
th~ instructors as being the
"most important representative" from the project to the
people of the area, through the
approximately 300 persons who
l'!ill e-:entually .take the EMT
course.
"Absolutely the most vital
connection between the suddenly injured and sick, . the
potential suddenly. injured and
sick , and proper hospital care,
is that highly-trained EM
te c hni cia n . Fir s t -rate
medicine, equipment and
Iran sport
vehicles
are
secondary, to the treatment
given by these • paraprofessionals at the scene, and

STAT.E FA RP/ MUTUi&amp;.l
I~I~UNC ~

our J ··~

·' .·,

,,.,q co"'''" '

~ ""' ' Dr"&lt;" 8 '"""' ~ ' "" • •o •

medical cen-

Dr . Cashman, instrumental
in forming th e first Ohio
Emergency Health Services
Advisory Council, was the
honored guest and addressed
the instructors on the Increasingly important role the
para-professionals and paramedics play in the future of
. hcllth care in America.
"The experience from this
demonstration project will
·eventually benefit all communities throughou t th e
state," Cashman .said: "This
unique system demonstrates
the worth of the highly trained
pa ra -professional,
by
providing
a
complete
emergency medical service for
the first time to some 213,000
Ohioans In these sparsely
populated counties. What
yo u'-re sta rting here in
southeast Ohio will open one
excellent route to getting good
care to all of our people. Good
health care in which no Ohio
citizen would be denied entry
in to the finest health system

available in this state," .he
said.
Eleven of the 13 instructors
graduated fr.om the school in
Wellston heard praise for
dedicating themselves to EMT
training and for the emergency
medical service project they
have become a&gt;;SoCiated with.
"This pro ject is exciting not
only because it will aid . in
preventing crippling injury
and death, but it will develop
the mechanism to deliver
primary care. You have much
to take pride in," said Cashman.
Cashman, who has ·written
many health publications, has
served as a_ssistant surgeon
general, public health service
director and is an authority in
the community health field .
Willis Troy added his
congratulations to . thos e
already given to the graduates.
He said that the entire EMT
training sector of vocational
education would be citing as
example ' the number of high
quality instructors in use in the

countjes .o{ Athens, Hoc~ing,
Vinton. Meigs, Gallia, Jackson
. and . Lawrence. "We expect
inariy inquiries about the· efiicient timely program that .
produced top notch ii!Structors
for southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Service and the Ohip
Dep~rtrnent of Education."
Nam~ of the graduates Who
attended the dinner were:
William Taylor, AI Pierce, Joe
Struble, Clyde Baker; Larry ·
Baker, '!ill Stumph, David
Harkins, Bob Conley, Carroll
Thornton, Royce Cooley and .
Louis Trego. Jack Davis and
Earl James were absent. The
men were assigned classes
which begin in January.
SEOEMS is a $5.3 million
dollar project funded by
federal , state and ·local
governments. Local share Is
approximately three and onehalf per cent. In full operatiop,
SEOEMS· will have 2o ·ambulances serving 17 stations
within the 3,500 square mile
region in its first year.

oh·10 L egiOll
. . COD.1erence
· £
-

in Columbus January 28
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
American Legion will hold its
annual Mid-Winter Conference
in the Rhodes Center, Ohio
Exposition Grounds, Colurnbus, Sunday, Jan. 28, with
nearly 1,500 Legionnaires
representing the 692 Ohio Posts
expected to attend.
A highlight of the all-day
meeting, which will open at 10
a.m., will be tho official visit to
Ohio of American Legion
National Commander Joe L.
Matthews of Fort Worth,
'i'exas. He returned from a trip
to Russia and Poland in late
December where he conferred
with war veterans' group and
government offjcials and is
expected to make a report of
his trip .
He will also brief the
representatives of the 127,000member Ohio American
Legion on progra ms anq
policies of The America n
Legion which have national
significance.
Commander Matthews is a

.
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EtBERFELDS IN · poMEROV ·
. ·'

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.

· ,save:,on

.

.. .

~

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R~A' Color . 'fv Console Sets.
~'

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'

'.

The Contemporary Look
The popularity of Contempoquy is well deserved. Blends beautifully
with any room setting!
,

638

veteran of two tours of duty
with the U. S. Navy, the first
from 1932 to 1936, and the
second re-enlisting as a
m~mber of the 'Navy's famous
Sea bees in 1943 with service in
the Marshall Islands, Okinawa,
and Hawaii. In private life he
owns and operates Linemen's
Equipment Company in Fort
Worth.,
During his term of office, the
National Commander is
placing emphasis on a ·continuing effortto assistveterans
of the Vietnam era, especially
in the field of employment
through the Legion's "Jobs for .
Veterans" program.

'.~ .

\

',•

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Di~l

biTLo~@Q)

100% Solid State

~'ITW

Premiere
showing

DO Lf'OU WANT IO

Tilt OSLO
Modtl GR129
25~' dl•1an11pleturt

· TAI(E ME To TI-lE
SENI.O~ P~OM?

~:;;v:&lt;

Choose color TV
with style!
All three are
RCA XL·100
100% solid state.

Jan. 11th

THAT WON'T 6E I JU5T WANTED TO GIVE
4(0U A BREAK ... IN TEN '(EM? I
FO~ AN01HER
T£N "I(EAR5
PLAN 10 6E T~E MOST GOU6HT~
AFTE({ 61~1. IN SCHOOL !

'

'

The charm of Early
American cabinetry Is
exquisitely expressed in
this handsome model.

..

•

lhtO!MOVTH
Mode
3t

'

'

25• dl an11 plchm

.~

r.

'

·'

The Spanish Look
Bold Spanish styling has
a massive look and
·massive appeal.

'648

'
ALL ¥0DELS SHOWN HAVE THESE QUALITY FEATURI!S
,..__..._."'"":._,· ).II·chassis tubes - a major
Flddlo-froo tun ing.
cause of TV repal rs~ aro out.
AccuMatlc• color
RCA plug-In AccuCircul~
monitor (ACM)·and
modules control most set .
. Automatic Fine
functions. Should an
.
Tuning (AFT) buttons
AccuCircult module failure'
aro adjacent. ACM
occur, technician tlmply
locka color within 1
111aps In a roplacemant.
normal range Instantly.
'
Built -In connection
VIvid, lifeli ke color from
lor direct-line cable
RCA's finest picture tuba.
and opartmant house
Rod(ant phosphors are
antenna systems, plus
surrounded by a black
RCA'a CabloGuard
matrl• for sp~rkllng color.
lhioldad tuner.
·

Come '" and see these
RCA masterpieces •••

ROll .

ELBERfEtDS IN POMEROY
.
.Open Everr JJ:'eekdayU~t# 5 PM and on
'

· · .·
'

j

'.

Fridays and Satu~ys " 'Til9.PM
.

'

' '

'

' .

'

...

l HAVE NO INTENTION
TO GEEK AFTER '1'0V ..

'

,

Tm. Reg. U.s'. PJt. Off.-AII rig:hts reserved
C 1973 by United feature Syndicate. Inc.

WELL, IF YOU DO, I'LL SE-STANDIN~ .
8'{ T"E DRINKING FOUNTAIN AT THE
NORTH END OF THE .8Ul\.DlN6!!

'648

'

'·

.

"

-;;·,

Use our own sensible credit service.

Just received another shipment - Mens ·s2'9.95 All
. Weather Coats. Sizes 36 ·to 46 in shorts • regulars •
longs on .s•le $19.90.

'

'

'

CAPITAL AND LIABILITIES

\

'

' .
· Choose the set yol(Want now during this spectacular sale.

CERTIFICATE OF THREE DIRECTORS OR AUDITING COMMITTEE

,

~

-\'·'·

'

'

•

' '

-'

.....

'

h

AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS DECEMBER 31, 1972

We, the undersigned Directors: of the Athens County Savings and · Loan
Company of Athens, Ohio 4570.1do hereby certify that the foregoing , to the best of
ou rknow ledge ·and belief, is a true stat~ m ent and C~r rectly Sh9WS the financial
~ondition of said institution at the·close of business December 31. 1972.

'

Port~ble Color

The Colonial Look

STATE OF OHIO, ATHENS COUNTY, ss :
.
Dale E. Shultz being duly sworn, deposes and says that he is th e Managing
Officer of the Athens County Savings and .Loan Company of At hens, Ohio 45701
-and that to the best oi his knowledge and belief the foregoing is a true sta tement
and correctly shows the financial condition of said institution at th e close of
business December 31, 1972.
•
Dale E. Shultz, President
Subscribed and sworn to before me , this 8t h day of January , 1973.
Earl F. Ingels, Jr., Notary Public
'
In and for Meig s County, Ohiq.
My Commission Expir.es Feb. 15, 1976.

,

"

RCA.

·'

'

\

OF ·ATHENS, OHIO 45701

$8,130.61

\

.,

BARGAIN DAYS

ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS AND LOAN COMPANY

Interest Due and Uncollected on Mortgage Loans

..

''.

•: !.,

Console
Stereos
.with
tape players - built-in.
\
'
l 8 track
.
.

OF THE

First Mortgage Loans
$11,058,830.43
Loans on all Other Security 381,869.33
U.S. Government Obligations
904,578.31
Stock in F.H.L.B.
76,600.00
OtHer Investment Securities 481,295.39
Cash on Hand and in Banks 153,736.51
Office Building {less Depr . ) 101,481.57
Furniture, Fixtures &amp;
Equipment {less depr.)
14,785.19
1,263.23
Deferred Charges
579,342.69
Other Assets
$13,753,782.65
TOT A.L ASSETS

'

•

TV ·sets : B.l ack . and White .· Portable TV's and RCA.

STATEMENT OF CONDITION

11,999,597.60
Deposits
141,408.38
Loans in Process
1,086.31
Accrued Taxes
Other Liabilities
536,161.32
Reserved for Uncollected In. 8,130.61
terest
Credits
for
Future
Deferred
105,224.85
Operations
250,000.00
Permanent Stock
Federal Insurance Reserve 458,390.37
253,783.21
Undivided Profits
TOTAL CAPITAL
$13,753,782.65
&amp; LIA.B I LIT I ES

'

;stop,ln the ~~sic ~partment on the 2nd floqr and really

_,

-ASSETS

.•..

I
I

.;

~.
'

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'

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.'

THERE'~

NO ~EN~E TO BEING G0!16HT
AFTeR IF 'iOU CAN'T 6E I=OUND!

..
'

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.

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.

'

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.

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'

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tH' SAME·SPOT l-IE
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EG,._D! HE.H·HEHA SPACE•AGE
61...ED!

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1H"I 6ET~ YOU
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OF IH15
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COUN'!'St'
ONI•.Y '!'Hi! HOUR5
01= 'I'HEi DAY.
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01= 'I'HEi DAY.
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1\0vJ 9lt~ ,1(00 l-IKE
i~e, t'R..ESll?E:t-tTS

A~PRESS, ~EST~RQAV?

.

... 1600 P~NNS'fLVANIA 1\V~NU~, .
1 D.l:.
,,..,.WASHI~ON
......

STR/&gt;.~T lHIN(t.... THe ~RLS

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AT BRI~ L.LUB N,t; J1l.T~D
50 a:.a,;. THIS AFTEROOON...

fl..LIKi§l A'S lHOllCPH

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T~E~ tJI::V~R

FEOeV~O OUR LHR1STMJ6 OR~!
~OIJ

Mf\1~ 1HW, ~ID~'T., "

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BUGS BUNNY

fRANK.
I

ON~Al-

I. PLAY iBE Fl.\.lTE!

I HEARD YOU

A IU:JMAIJ MY f&gt;.GE C&lt;JGI.IT
1l&gt; tiAVf: A MM.l !

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PeaCe accord· ,predicted by .Thursday
.

•

I

.

,

•

'

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I

•

By United Press lnleruatloaal

·

~'

President Nixon is sending Henry Kissinger back to Paris
today prepared to sign a Vietnam peace treaty that already
has the approval of President Nguyen Van Thleu of South
Vlelruun, White House sources said Sunday.
'·
In Paris, U.S. and Hanoi technical experts worklns on
cease-lire detalla to accompany a peace agreement held an
W)precedented SWiday sessioo and met again .today In a
Paris suburb. They ha-ve he en meeting.six days a week since
Jan. 2 and the Sunday session indicated an a·greement would
be signed soon . ·
·
The White Houae sources said Kissinger would see Nixon
again today before flying to Paris-for li meeting Tuesday with
North Vietnam's chief peace negotiator, !.A! Due Tho. The

AMANDA PANDA

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1

.

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ClARINETS,

-VIOLINS, CELLOS •••

.,

Tran

•

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Inter~~&amp;

Referring to Lam's departure, aU .S. source in Saigon who
~ 11}1 expert on international protocol pointed out that any
cease-lire would bave to be signed or initialled by a chief of
state of cabinet minister in order to be internationally legal.
None of the South Vietnamese in the Paris negotiations has
ministerial rank.

Weather

enttne

OJ' The'Meig--Mason Area

MQNDAY, JANUARY 22, 1973

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Parliament, said In Bangkok en route home from a visit to
Hanoi the North Vietnamese told him they have reached
tentative agreement with the United states on a cease-lire.
"We think they have arrived at a tentative agreement,"
Brtwln said~ "But they are being careful and vigilant. They
thought they had an agreement before and were disap.
pointed, but this timelthinktheslgnsare good."

•

at y
Devoted To The

NO, 195

ters: "I come back to Paris with lhtHnstrilctions of our
goverrunent to deploy all our efforts with ihe aim of signing
the agreement on ending the war and the re-establishment of
peace In Vletni!)II."
FiDal Phase
South Vietnamese Foreign Minister
Van Lam left
Saigon for Paris for what hl8 government called "the final
phase of the negotiations" for a settlement. ASaigon governf!letlt ~~ said as Lam left: "Well, it . (the peace
agreement) will be signed on the 29th (of January); at least
that's what I'm told. That's If everything goes according to
schedule."
'
Andrew Brewin, foreign affairs specialist in the Canadian ·.

Xuan Thuy, head of the North Vietnamese peace talks
delegation In Paris, said he expected the Vietnamese lunar
new year Feb. 3 to be ''hapPier !han usuai" 'this year.
Reports from Saigon last week said Feb·. 3 would be the date
a cease-fire gaes into effect.
Madame N8Jiyen Thl Blnh, chief Viet·Cong negotiator in

Death Valley is the hottest
place in the United States.

VOL. XXIV

Par~, returned to the French capita! SUnday_and told repor-

SOijrces said the ppc~ would be signed Thursday barring a
last minute hitch.
·· . BOth Hanoi and ·Washington said last week the Tuesday
session was arranged to compJete the text qf an agreement
to end the war.
Other reports · from Cominunist ail~! non-Conununist
sources Indicated a peace accord was near.

Now You·Know

\

.

High in .the upper 4lls and
lower 50s. Cloudy and colder ·
tonight and Tuesday. Lows
tonight 25 to 30. Highs Tuesday
in the upper 30s to the lower
40s.

PHONE 992-2156

TEN- -.. CENTS ..

.

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now

.j
•

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WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon, reading a
mandate for spartan selfreliance in his re-election, is
setting out at once to reduce
the reach and the grasp of
goverrunent.
Nixon will within the next 10
days tum to domestic refonn
and spell -out the detalla of hl8
Inaugural prescription for a
goverrunent that promises lesa
and performs less, at home and
abroad.
He is apparently convinced
.,. that the goal of his first term·~acewithhonor" In VIetnam
-4s all but achieved and he can
now concentrate on breaking
Washington of the habits of
paternialism and permissiveness.
Nixon's philosophical message Saturday left his political
enemies in Con~ress uneasy.
He offered no word of recon-

·fLUtES, OBoES •••

HONORED ON RETlREMENT '-Mary Kunzelmall, left, and Olga Pierotti, were honored

IIJlOI1 retirement from The Farmers Bank and Savings Compe.ny Saturday 'with dinner at the

,..lga Im. Cenlel: ls.Thereon Johnson,'ex~tlve..vice president. Mts. Kunzehnan' has been
with the bank nine years and Miss Pierotti eight. Both ladles were employed In the bookkeeping
depe.rtment.
.
• ·
·

Abortion laws are
unconstitUtional

I'M

MAD .....,..._..,........, ..........

~

AISOUT

WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ The
Supreme Court ruled today
that the abortion laws of
Georgia and Texas are unconstitutional because they
restrict medical practices
needed to protect a prospective
mother's health.

necessary to save the mother's
life. Thirty other states have
similar laws.
Blackman said for the stage
prior to about the end of the
first three months of
pregnancy, the. abortion
decision and its effectuation
must he left to the medical
The Court struck down the judgment of the woman's
laws In two lengthy opinions by doctor.
Justice Harry A. Blackmun ·
But after that, the state in
The Texas statute made promoting its interest in the
abortion a crime unless mother 's health may regulate

"'IU!!

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abortion procedures, the
opinion stated.
For the stage "subsequent to
viability," the state may
regulate and even forbid
abortion except where
necessary in appropriate
medical judgment, for the
preservation of the life or
health of the mother, the Court
held. .
Georgia is among 16 states
· which allow abortions only for
a few specific exceptions suc)l

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CAPTAIN EASY
AH,HERE

WEARE! ... '~IF

TRAP FAIL'S 'TO '
OPEN·· LOCK MAY

e.e- ?P~UNG ·BY
TR'AP•

P!=P CVI:.PRI1'" I

. BLOW!

NEW YORK (UPI) - Four
Musllm gWJmen who.wanted to
Wille the world against "op.
presslve infidels" surrendered
&amp;mday after · nine hostages
they held barricaded In a
Brooklyn sporting goods store
for two days sneaked away
through a hidden staircase.
The drama of terror began
Friday afternoon with an atteinpted robbery of John and
Al's sporting goods storestocked with guns and ammiDiitlon--by five blaCk inen,
one the driver of a getaway
air. 'lbe drlver-l!till1at largefled when pollee appeared.
Before It epded Sunday af·
tarnoon, one policeman had
been killed In a shootout and
two poiicelnen wounded. One of
tbe four gunmeil also was
erltlcally wounded.
Jn 1 atatelllellt released to a

f)/4/MJNPITE STEEL~·

UTTERLY·IMPEJI:V/01)~

.

,,.UNLE~G­
PERHAP~ A

CIJTTINfiTORCH

OR /.MER IEifltt
MIGHT-

.'

seat on key
committee
WASHINGTON, D. C. Cong. Clarence Miller, · (R·
lOD,
Ohio,
announced
today
he
has
been
elected to serve on the
powerful House Appropriations
Commltlee, considered one of
the three most important
committees in the House.
Elected to the post by the
House Republican Committee
on Committees, Miller
becomes the first U. S.
Representative from Ohio's
lOth Congressional District in
nearly a century to serve on the
Appropriations Committee.
The Committee has jurisdiction over all matters pertaining
to the. spending of federal
money.
' "My first prioritY In my new
assignment," he explained,
"will be to help stop excessive
government spending in order
to prevent higher taxes and
inflation. I will further endeavor · to see that the taxpayers receive a dollar's value
for every tax dollar spent,"
Miller said.

NEW FIREHOUSE NEEDED- Surveys Unlimited, the
planning firm of Meigs County's Planning Commission, has

.

Rutland marked to grow
RUTLAND - Construction
of a new lire station, establishment of a community park and
sewage collection and treatment are principal improvements reconunended for
Rutl.and by Surveys Unlimited,
Cable, Ohio, the county's
planning firm.
The firm recommended that
a new fire station be built
between 1975 and 1980, to serve

Rutland and Rutland Township
and suggests· a fully equipped
community park of from two to
five acres he developed in the
near lutilre.
About sewage collection and
treatmen~ the firm suggests
that a'collection system should
he constructed to meet state
and federal standards and
recommends the effluent be
pumped to Middleport for

ASSigDment exp runed
.
0

}

•

explanation.
The fact is that Judge
Calhoun will preside at one
jury trial set for Feb. 20. The
last jury trial requiring
assignment of a non-resident
judge was about 11 years ago,
Judge Bacon said . The
necessity for such assignments
to Meigs CoWJty rarely arises,
the judge added.

.

assumed the stance of holy
•
crusaders.
fTIVe
COLUMBUS(UPI)-Atele• 1'This Is the end. · Thla Is
e
gram was sent. to· President
glory·. We'll go out In a hall of
Nixon during the weekend by
builets," the physician, Dr.
Meigs County residents are brought to oilr attention by the the Governor's Housing and
Thomas Matthew, quoted .one urged -to pay particular at-· Internal Revenue Service that . Cornmunity Developmeni , Ad·
of the gunmen as saying.
tention when filling out their based on · early returns visory Commission, urging a
Express Solidarity
income tax. forms for 1972, received in the Internal "speedy end" to Nixon's reuY ordere,d federa1 moraIn a twnJ&gt;age handwritten Meigs County l\udltor Gordon Revenue centers, many of our
•
•
cen
letter released through the Caldwell said today.
citizens in Ohio are falling to torium on new -housing prophysician, the gunmen said:
Caldwell said that · on the ":properly Identify the taxing
"We are •"'Pressing solidarity back of Form 1040 taxpayers districts,in which they reside. gr~~ the , freeze ''tragic,"
With all M\lslimB 811d op. are to write in the coWJty and
!tis of utmost importance for commission chalnnan James
·ptessed peoples of the wilrld: ' towiiJbip· where they reside. us to see that ·the taxing · 1. Houston said in the
Oh Muslims! Unite against ihe Thla. Is ilhperatlve, Caldwell districts he properlY listed telegram:
oppressiVe infidels whose aim advised, . because federal since Federal Reve)lue Sharing
"While we recognize the ob- ·.
is the destruction of lalam. We revenue. sharing will be will be calculated accordinS to vious shcn;CO!Jiinga In present
are taking firm stepe. In the c~lculated 'according lo 'a a formula based on residency federal ho~lng programs and
and defense of formula based on residency In In ilul' taxing distriCts. Also, 'of support approprlate refonn,
es'"blislunent
,...
the one true religion (Islam). a taxing district, according to course, any Incorrect or · we bellev~ dealh Is too drastic
"The patrolmsn that was Joseph T. Ferguson, state' missing infomiation Will result 'a reform.
.
·ldlled was ldlled as a result of aUdi)or.
Ina delay of'any refunds due to "The · commission ·is well a(Continued on Page 41
His le.tter safd: "It has been the applicants.'' , , '
ware of the need for state 1n-

. ·c ounty
·
'

4

'

suggested .that Ibis cement block headquarlerll ~ the
Rutland Fire Pepartment be replaced by a new fire station
between 1975 and 1980.
·
.

.

lwp
· .

·,

\

said, "the time has come to
turn away from the condescending policies of paternalism --4 'Washington kilows
best."'
Crowd Applauds
The President addressed a
(Continued on Page 4)

.'

En d. ·.0 f.. h ou.smg
•

e...

health and In joyful spirit and
at the peak of his presidential
powers, laid down his goals for
the next four years In the
Inaugural address over which
he had worked in isolation on
and off for eight days.
"Abroad and at -home," he

Miller has

The Georgia. law provided
Judge John C. Bacori said
that abortions could be obtoday that inquiries following a
tained lor three reasons :
r.ecent report · that Judge
danger to the life or serious
Calhoun of Gallia County, "has
impairment of the health of the
been assigned to preside
motiler; possibility of mental
temporarily in the Court of
or physical defect; or instances
Common Pleas of Meigs
of rape.
CoWJty beginning Jan. 16 and
BlackmWJ's opinion said the
coi'ltinuing WJtil court business
state may define the term
he enters is completed/'
LOCAL TEMPS
physician to mean only one
makes necessary the following
currenUy licensed and may bar
Temperature .in downtown
._any abodion by a person .who Pomeroy Monwiy at 11 a.m.
does . not
meet
the :sny56s~~ees iinder parUy
•
qualifications.

UNHAPPII.Vr rHI7
TRAP. 17 MAPF: OF

"rE.E:TH!

later would judge him right.
The detalla are to go to
Capitol Hill soon in a sparse
budget and In a state of the
Union address that he will send
up by messenger rather than
deliver In person.
Nixon, at 60 in excellent

Gunmen ·quit .
~~~~~~ng~:~at~e~~:df!~~Taxpayers sh~uld
freeze
urged
rJ:, .

A ?HifRP

TO HAC!&lt;,AW

!$

By United Press lnleruatloaal
FAmFIELD, CAIJF. -A WOMAN JUROR who held out for
four days before joining her fellow jurors in convicting Juan V.
Corona of 25 murders said Sunday If she had it to do over she
would vote not guilty. "My doubts were never answered, never
explained by the evidence - and my reasonable doubt remains,
.even now," ssld Mrs. Naomi Underwood, a 63-year-old widow
from Vallejo, Calif.
Corona's attorneys said he would ask for a new trial because
of a "confidential chat" between a sheriff's matron and Mrs.
(Continued on Page 8)

?TRONGFOOi! I.'M GIVI~G YOLJ
s;)(.ACTI.V 30 .'35COND5-TO GET ME'
OUT OF TH~ MORIJNIC SO·CALLI:'D
PLANT PROTECTIOW PEVIC!::~ ...-.....

DeAl.l~er

~

• •
·

ciliation or compromise and
made no Johnsoniaij bid to
reason together.
History Will Judge
Instead he emphasized his
differences In outlook with the
liberals and said he was sure
that the people now and hlatory

r''

'

volvementlnthehouslngfleld.

treatment.
While Rutland Village
declined in population by 24
between 1960 and 1970, Surveys
Unlimited predicts that the
Meigs Mines will exert a
positive Influence to reverse
this trend and growth will
occur during the 19aos.
Residential land use will
need to he expanded to accommodate
Increased
population and commercial
growth should be concentrated
in the existing commercial
area.
•Rutland has 222 housing
WJits, of which the planning
firm foWJd 30 pet. In poor
condition. It recommended
minor rehabilitation efforts to
drastically reduce this figure .
No provisions are available for
mobile homes In the community and a mobile home
park will he needed and should
he provided, the firm concludes.
The firm inspected the
Rutland school and judged the
facility adequate. The high

school site and building, It
suggested, should he held In
reserve until the impact of the
development of the' mine
creates the need lo; Its use.
The Leading Creek Conservancy District,
headquartered in Rutland,
should be utilized liS a source of
water since the village wella,
although presently adequate,
are ·expected to fill with sand
soon, Surveys Unlimited
states.
No industry has existed In
the village. For a balancing of
the tax structure, and for
nearby employmen~ Industrial
development is suggested on
the sooth side of Route 124 at
the east entrance to the village.
State Route 124 is the main
route in the village. Through
traffic constitutes most of this
highway traffic . For the
benefit of the village and speed
and safety of the through
traffic, a bypass should he
constructed south of the
village , the plannipg firm
concludes .

190 Dead m·
.

We have proposed state legislalion to begin to bridge Ohio's
housing gap, and G\)V. John J.
Gilligan wlll submit it to the
Ohio General Assembly soon.
"However Ohio and other
LAGOS, Nigeria (UPI) -A Jordanian airliner
states cannot' solve their hous·
[ng problems without con- c~rrring Nigerian Mosle~s home fr~m .a
tinued federal support. Each pllgr1mage to Mecca crashed m northern N1gena
day of .the freeze ·results in . today, killing most of the 202 persons aboard in the
Irrevocable damage to Ohio's worst single air disaster in history, airpQrt officials
housing needl!.
said.
"We respectfully urge you to
. Initial reports said four creWmen and eight
bring this tragic 111orat0rlum to · plissengers escaped through an emergency.hatch,
a speed)' end."
.
but that the other 190 persons aboard perished. The
Th
tel
1so
t
· e egram was a sen officials said the Boeing 7(!/ jet spun off the -runway
to James T. Lynn, secretary- in high winds as it was landing at Kano Airnnrt arid
designate of the Department of burst into names.
-..Housing and Urban Development.
·
'(Continued on Page I)

wor.st 'crash

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