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                  <text>Children
Saw 1970
Different
BY PAT HOUCK
History, Webster defines as a
chronological record of significant events.
\)
But not so for children. For five
Gallipolis children, history is:
"My grandfather dying."
"My uncle being drafted." Or knowing
of events such as the abortive flight of
Apollo 13. One was deeply interested in,
"the fish and birds having a tough time
getting air pollution."
Jennifer Wilson, 5; Teresa Ford, 7;
Andy Mills, 7; his brother, Jamie Mills, 9,
and David Reimund, 8, looked back over
1970 from their perspectives Wednesday
afternoon at the Gallia County District
Library.
The young folks had surprises in store

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Millions Friday seeing the Rose Bowl Parade in Pasadena,

lf

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for this interviewer and were adept at
asking a few questions themselves.
For adults, the number one story in the
country was the aborted Apollo 13 mission.
Number two was Kent State and Jackson
State- but these were not as important to
the kids as was the eclipse and unfolding
story of pollution endangering wild life.
Little Jennifer has a solution for the
ugliness of pollution, " Well," she said,
"couldn't people paint pictures on the
walls of their houses and make them
prettier?"
Jennifer also remembered "back in
the old days of 1968 when all the people
were poor."
The kids didn't understand the word
"inflation" but were very aware of prices

and put "money" as one of the chief
worried their parents face.
"Making lots of money" is one of the
reasons David Reimund wants to follow in
his father's footsteps and work for an oil
company.
They say that smoking causes lung
cancer and that hippies have long hair, but
they don't think long hair makes you a
hippie because "girls have long hair."
Drugs make you "go dead" Jamie Mills
said and remembered Art Linkletter's
daughter's death last year.
When the subject of mini and maxi
skirts came up, the boys issued one big
"ugh," followed by "stupid!" Another
stupid thing they felt was wigs. With ac(Continued on page 5)

ClllLDREN LOOK BACK AT 1970 - Teresa Ford,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ford; Jennifer Wilson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Buck Wilson; David Reimund, son

[Now YOU KNOWJ
~

~ntintl

The new year began March 25
in England until 1751 when the
Gregorian Calendar was
adopted.

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

Pomeroy-Middleport

i

, Complaint Voided
GALLIPOLIS - Frederick U. Reel,
trial examiner for the National Labor
Relations Board, Washington, D. C.
Saturday ordered an unfair labor relations
complaint against the Evans Packing Co.,
be dismissed m its entirety.
The complaint was filed last July 14 by
Roger Bush, Gallipolis, who was
discharged from the packing firm on Jan.
30, 1970.
Reel ruled that the complaint should
be dismissed for failure of counsel to
sustain Bush's burden of proof.
According to the trial examiner, the

preponderance of the evidence did not
establish that the company engaged in the
unfair labor practice alleged in the
complaint.
Bush contended he was dismissed over
the desirability of being paid at an overtime rate for hours in excess of eight in a
day, and for discussing organization of a
union with fellow employes. The company
said he was discharged for tardiness,
failure to perform his assigned work,
failure to appear for work, and multiple
other reasons.

New Construction
Two Promotions,
'" One Addition to Staff,
Announced by Bank
GALLIPOLIS - Emerson E. Evans,
President of The Ohio Valley Bank here,
Saturday announced two promotions and
an addition to the staff of the bank.
Larry E. Lee was promoted to assistant
cashier and appointed manager of the
bank's Rio Grande Branch, Mr. Lee joined
the bank's staff in 1955 ; Mrs. Jocelyn M.
Barlow, ass1stant cashier, was promotear
to head teller at the main office in
Gallipolis. Mrs. Barlow joined the bank's
staff in 1960.
Marion E . Caldwell, Patriot Star
Route, is joining the bank's staff as
assistant manager of the Consumer Loan
( / Department. Mr. Caldwell has been
associated with the Kaiser Alwninum
Corporatwn at Ravenswood since 1957, I
and is presen ty clerk of Green Township. l
Mr . Evan: . noting that 1970 was one of
the bes t year in the 98 year history of the
bank, satd the bank's assets increased
over $2 mllhon, setting an all time high )
t0tal of over $21 million .

i;

Is Up by $104,469
GALLIPOLIS - Building permits in
this city issued during 1970 indicated
estimated new construction totaling
$314,969, up from $210,500 in building
permits issued in 1969.
City Manager D. Kenneth Morgan said
the 1970 total is broken down in three
groups: garage and shelter construction,
$8,419; business structures, $158,000, and
family homes, $148,550. This is compared
with six housing projects in 1969 totaling,
$104,500; 18 garages and shelters at $26,000
and non-residential buildings, $80,000.
SALES REACH $24,228
POMEROY - Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
Meigs County Volunteer Savings Bonds
Chairman, reported November sales of
Savings Bonds in the County were $24,228.
At the end of November, the County
achieved 84.0 per cent of its annual sales
goal.
OUT THEY GO
RACINE - Racine Village officials
ask that residents have their discarded
Christmas trees along their curbs for an
early Monday morning pickup.

Than JT,OOO

THREE SECTIONS
SUNDAY, JANUARY 3, 1971

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Amnesia's
Curtain Is
Broken

BAlLOONS FOUND - A dozen still-inflated balloons, apparently released at
Oak Park, Michigan, have been found in Gallja County. Robert Smith, Little Kyger
Rd., Cheshire Twp., Friday found the balloons tied to a plastic bowl-shaped dish in
a field near his home. The dish bore the name, "Bruce Robinson, 23041 Forest
Ave., Oak Park, Mich." No date was found in the messages written on the balloons,
although "Detroit Zoological Park" was printed on the balloons and several words
such as Vietnam, Peace, Australia had been written with ink. Smith and his
granddaughters, Lori Swisher, center above, and Gail Swisher of Aberdeen, Ohio,
are shown above with their discovery.

Your Invited (Juest
Reaching More
Families

32 PAGES
VOL. IV NO 49

of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Reimund, and Jamie and Andy
Mills, son&lt;; of Mr. and Mrs. J&lt;tmes Mills.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY - Leo Peter Raub was a
pleasant, well-liked young man. He got
along well with members of his family. His
outgoing personality led to recognition as a
successful door-to-door salesman in
Pomeroy.
However, 48 years ago - in March,
1922- he disappeared, leaving no trace.
Eventually the family believed him dead.
Then -out of the blue -letters began
arriving from a nursing home at Galax,
Va. A patient there is the long lost Leo
Peter Raub.
The years of Raub's absence are
many. Little is known of his activities even
yet uy members of the fami!y whrl hav-:;
visited the Virgim rest home twice to sec
him.
However, it is belie\ed that Raub has
long been an amnesia victim. His memory
apparently only returned some time after
April 9, 1967, when he suffered a stroke.
At the time of the stroke, Raub was
operating a bakery in Galax, under the
name of Charles M. Sparks. He was taken
to the rest home and is still residing there.
He is now 70.
The reunion between Raub and his
relatives in Pomeroy began from a letter
received last July by a brother, Joseph
Raub, Ebenezer St., Pomeroy. Writer of
the letter was Steve Carico, an employe of
the Waddell Nursing Home at Galax.
Carico revealed that a patient, Charles M.
Sparks, believed that he had relatives in
Pomeroy and that Sparks was not his real
name.
At first, Joseph Raub thought the
letter was a hoax and that his brother
could not be alive after all the years of
absence. However, he responded to the
letter, even telephoning the nursing home.
Then a letter dictated by Sparks later identified to be the missing Raub arrived here. The letter asked why he had
left home so suddenly and if he had
quarreled or had any trouble with his
family.
Then another letter - written by Mrs.
::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;:::::::::;:::::;::~.::

12 Killed in Gallia
GALLIPOLIS - According to
figures released by the Gallipolis Post
State Highway Patrol, 744 traffic accidents were investigated during 1970,
of which 569 were in Gallia County, 172
in Meigs County, and one each in
Athens, Ross and Vinton Counties.
Officers investigated nine fatal
accidents in which 12 persons were
killed, all in Gallia County. There were
226 injury accidents in which 349 persons were injured. Officers arrested
2,675 persons; (189 DWI cases) inspected 6,610 motor vehicles; issued
3,969 written warnings; assisted 1,441
motorists; conducted 23 emergency
blood runs and logged 13,008 patrol
hours.
Meigs County Sheriff Robert C.
Hartenbach reported Thursday the
investigation of his department's 301st
traffic accident, none involving fatal
injuries.

License Expired
POMEROY - Minor damages were
reported to two vehicles in an accident on
the parking lot at Five Points Grill
Saturday at 5:55p.m.
Sheriff Robert G. Hartenbach's Dept.
said Theodore D. Conolly, 29, Reedsville,
backed his vehicle into a parked auto
owned by Lloyd G. Swan, Syracuse.
Conolly was cited into county court for
having an expired operator's license.

An

LOST BROTHER FOUND- Members of the Raub family are pictured with a
brother, Leo PeteJ:, who has been missmg from Pomero) 48 years. Recen ly be was
located in a nursing home at Galax, Va., where he was known as Charles M.
Sparks. Leo, seated at left, had particular!:, as ed to see Mrs. Joseph Raub, seated
at right. Standing from the left, are Leo's sister, Louise, Columbus, and his
brothers, Joseph J. and Hobart, both of Pomeroy. No one had heard from Leo
during his 48 year absence from Pomeroy. The family had long considered hun
dead.
•

Nelle Sparks, head nurse of the nursing
home, arrived in Pomeroy again to Joseph
Raub, the eldest of 10 children.
The letter from Mrs. Spinks repeated
facts about the Raub family as told by
Sparks. It recalled the father, Nicholas,
who worked for Guth and Whitlock
Bakery; of his mother, Mrs. Mary Regina
Grueser Raub, who died of influenza in
1918, four years before her son's disappearance; it described the Raub twins,
George, now of Huntington, and Louise,
who lives in Columbus; of other brothers
including Hobart, Pomeroy, the youngest
of the family; Wencelas Henry, a railroad
engineer, now deceased; John who had
worked on the Sacred Heart Church; an
older sister, Florence, and Joseph, who

was a blacksmith for the K. and • 1.
Railroad before Raub disappeared and
wa a railroader at the time of

l Continued on

She's Gran~-=--­
To Young
BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
PORTLAND - Mrs. Esta Housh,
"grandma·• to hundreds of eastern Mci •s
County school children now into adulthood.
is living proof that a busy life accomparu :-;
healthy longevity.
In recent weeks Grand Roush has been
perhaps a wee bit busier than iiHUal. She
has special visitors, her l\ in "rand on:s,
Denny and Danny Housh, su.ls of Btll and
Ilah Roush. They have ··omplctul four
years of service in the Nav. thn•t• yc.trs
and eight months at sea orr the earril'r
Oriskany.
The twins plan to enter rnanp1 wcr
training school in the near futur · wtlrn
there is an opening, and later '0 mlo
business with their Dad at Bill's Auto Bod~
and Fender Shop in Ravenswood W. V 1.
Presently Denny and Pa' ny are
visiting friends and relatives who numb1•r
quite a few, being grand ·ons of ' l.tl und
the late Byron Roush and John ..1 d I tur 1
Wells (deceased) of Long B , 11111. TIH
Roush family had 12 children and,., \\ ll.
family 11. Their broth r, Darrell . 4 u d
ln Racine Jr. High School. fh··u
tly
sister, Diana, (Mrs M1kc Dulil lis ,111 H N,
in Hawaii wilh her Au· Fore hu b.uu1
Denny, Danny, Darrdt and l)wrw
(Co!ltinued on page 5)

K 'I

( (, ll \ 11 I \) l 01

�2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel,Sunday, January 3,1971

Meigs 1971 Budget Comes Out at $1,094,194.35
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of County
Commissioners Thursday
adopted the 1971 appropriations
resolution providing for expenditures of ct
least
$1,094,194.35 for operating
Meigs County during the next
year.
Yet to be appropriated
Thursday was money for the
County Board of Mental
Retardation. Appropriations so
far at least are under the
amount of $1,147,496.63 approved for last year, 1970.
This year's appropriations
include:

General Fund; General
executive, Board of County
Commissioners, salaries, officials, $14,040; salaries of
employes, $3,240; equipment
$2,000; supplies, $1,500; rent for
Health Department, $900;
travel and expenses of Commissioners, $400; advertising
and printing, $100; Commissioners share of engineers
office, $100; other expenses,
$1,200, contract repair, $5,000.
Total $28,480.
County Auditor; General
office, salary, official, $7,320;
salaries, employes, $10,540;
supplies, $4,000; deputy sealer,

$900; advertising and printing,
$100; other expenses, $100. Total
$22,960. Assessing personal
property; salaries employes,
$1,643.16; other expenses, $100.
Total $1,743.16. Appraising real
property; professional services,
$2,500. Total County Auditor,
$27,203.16.
County Treasurer; salary,
official, $7,100; salaries employes, $8,840; supplies $1,500;
advertising and printing, $300;
other expenses, $200. Total,
$17,940.
Prosecuting
Attorney;
salary, official, $6,240; salaries
employes, $2,880; supplies,

$100; allowances, $1,900;
equipment, extra help, $1,000.
Total, $12,120.
Bureau
of
Inspection;
examinations, county offices,
$5,000.
County
Planning
Commission; Buckeye Hills,
$978.53.
Common
Pleas
Court;
salaries, official, $3,159.08;
salaries employes, $6,400;
supplies, $100; attorney fees,
$500; jurors fees, $1,000; witness fees, $500; transcripts,
$100; travel, $50; expenses,
foreign judge, $300; jury
commission salaries, $90. Total,
$12,199.08.

Juvenile Probation Department; salaries, employes,
$4,560; supplies per diem
support, $250; travel, $1,110;
other expenses, $100. Total,
$6,020.
Probate Court; salary official, $3,159.12; salaries employes, $7,440; supplies, $1,200;
jurors fees, $100; other expenses, $80. Total, $11,979.12.
Clerk of Courts; salary official, $7,440; salaries employes, $7,500; supplies, $3,000.
Total $17,940.
Coroner; salary, $2,240; other
expenses, $480. Total, $2,720.

Collision Victim in Critical Condition
GALLIPOLIS - Handlin
Farley, 33, Columbus, remains
in critical condition at the
Holzer Medical Center where he
was admitted Thursday night

following a head-on collision on
Rt. 93, seven miles south of
Jackson.
Farley reportedly underwent
surgery twice at the hospital

No Deadline Seen
In Negotiations
DETROIT (UPI) -The United Auto Workers and Chrysler
Corp. resume contract bargaining Monday after a ChristmasNew Year recess, and it
appeared almost certain the
union would decide against
setting a strike deadline.
Chrysler was the last of the
Big Three auto companies to
face settlement negotiations
based on the pattern agreement
reached by General Motors last
November after a 67-day strike.
Ford settled early in December
on the eve of a strike deadline.
Financially troubled Chrysler
was not faced with a deadline
during mid-December negotiations, which were recessed
before Christmas week.
Lagging sales during the late
months of 1970 prompted
Chrysler to shut down many of
its plants during Christmas
week and all its plants except
one during the New Year week.
With the start of the new

year, Chrysler was reopening
many of its plants, but the
union learned that some Chrysler plants, employing nearly
26,000 workers, would remain
closed during the coming week
in a continuing adjustment of
inventories. The outlook for
mid-January also was uncertain.
Against this background, with
so many workers idled and
eligible for unemployment compensation and supplemental
unemployment benefits, it appeared that the UAW would be
unwilling to set a strike
deadline. If a strike were
called, the workers would lose
eligibility to collect benefits.
UAW spokesmen were unwilling to predict flatly there would
be no strike deadline, but one
spokesman said the layoff
picture " undoubtedly will have
an impact" on the union's
decision.

-2 AutOs ··n~aged
POMEROY
Hea vy
damages were reported to two
cars and one man was cited to
Meigs County Court following
the investigation of two accidents Friday by Sheriff
Robert
C.
Hartenbach's
Department.
Friday at 3 a.m. Edward B.
Hlad, 23, Columbus, traveling
southeast on township road 58
lost control of his car which
went off the highway and
through a fence onto the Charles
Eads property in Rutland.
There were no injuries or
arrests but heavy damage to the
car.

Friday at 5 p.m. on SR 124 in
Olive Township, Richard
Thomas Friley, 36, Pomeroy,
traveling east, went off the
highway a t the crest of hill and ·
missed his planned turn off.
Friley put his car in reverse and
was backing U:p the hill when
Roxie Elizabeth Ford, 36,
Hockingport, traveling east,
came over the hill and
sideswiped 'Friley's car.
Friley was cited to county
court on charges of improper
backing . There was heavy
damage to the Ford and
medium to Friley's car. There
wer e no injuries.

and has received 27 pints of
blood after suffering chest and
internal injuries.
According to the Jackson Post
State Highway Patrol, Farley's
car collided head-on with a car
driven by Edward P. Michael,
56, Jackson. Also injured were
Helen Toner, 61, Oak Hill, a
passenger in the Michael auto,
and Michael, who received
painful injuries.
Three passengers in the
Farley auto, Delmas Nelson, 28,
Columbus, Russell H. Farley,
12, Columbus, and Diane J .
Farley, 10, Columbus, were all
taken to the Oak Hill Hospital
for treatment of minor injuries.
Damage was estimated at
$2,400.
Slippery and snow covered
highways were blamed for a
rash of traffic accidents
Thursday in Gallia County.
The first occurred on Rt. 218,
one and five tenths miles south
of Rt. 7 where Hilda L. Dennison, 57, Rt. 1, Crown City, lost
control of her auto on wet
pavement and struck a guard
rail. Damage was moderate. No
citation was issued.
Richard E. Haskins , 18,
Gallipolis, was cited for excess
speed for conditions following a
mishap at 7:25 p.m. Thursday
on Rt. 588, five tenths miles

Accident Caused
1

By Slick

,~treet

SYRACUSE ...:.. A minot accident
was
investigated
Thursday evening in the village
of Syracuse by Syracuse
Marshall Milton Varian. Varian
said a car on Water St. driven
by Clyde Sayre, Syracuse, slid
into a parked car owned by
James Teaford.
There were no injuries and
only minor damage to both
vehicles . No citations were
issued.
Joseph William White, Jr.,
Minersville, was fined $10 and
costs on charges of speeding
when he appeared in Syracuse
Court Thursday evening before
acting Mayor Allan Lipscomb.

Does your school
have all the tools
it needs?
Few people would consider going to
a hospital today that did not have
the latest medical equipment. The
same is true in many other areas.
But - does your public scnool system have the latest educational
equipment?
Just as tremendous strides have
been made in the fields of medicine,
engineering and many other endeavors of mankind, educators can
now empl0y new. concepts to prepare today's youth for our complex
and fast-changing world.
For instance, does your school
have enough guidance counselors to
help your child choose his best

course of study? Does your school
have the latest equipment to teach
about the nuclear and space ages?
Docs your school have access to a
computer so that youngsters can be
trained to provide the technical
knowledge demanded in today's
engineering world? Does your school
have up-to-date textbooks wi!h the
latest world developments?
Unfortunately, not many schools
in Ohio- if, indeed, any - have
all the new educational tools available to teach today's youngsters. The
main reason is a lack of money.
Ohio's professional educators believe that Ohio's schools can get

Gale A. Bonar, 26, Coal Grove,
lost control of her car on west
pavement. A similar accident
occurred on Swan Creek Rd.,
two and six tenths miles north of
Rt. 7 where Merrill R. Waugh,
25, Rt. 2, Crown City, lost
control on the snow covered
roadway, and slid off into a
fence. There was minor
damage.

$7,000 Danlage is
Reported in Fire
frame home and $2,000 to its
contents.
Meanwhile, Gallipolis
Volunteer Firemen answered
the first alarm of 1971 at 3:33
a.m. Friday to the roadside
park at Kanauga where a 1964
Ford owned by · J ames Mon tgomery, Patriot Star Rt.,
Gallipolis,
was
heavily
damaged.
R ifes Take Over
The blaze burned the entire
engine area, electrical wiring
B &amp; B Pizzeria
~nd interior of the car. Damage
GALLIPOLIS - The B &amp; B was set at $400. Four men and
p lZZena,
.
· 463 second Ave., was one truck responded to the
under new ownership Friday. emergency call.

BIDWELL - Damage was
estimated at $7,000 in a fire
Thursday evening at the
residence here of Sammy
Morris. According to Vinton
Fire Chief Jim Myers, the fire
was caused by a stove pipe
which fell on a rug. The loss was
set at $5,000 to the three room

Mr.
and Mrs. purchased
Merch Rife, Rt.the
1,
Cheshire,
establishment from Sam
Hamilton.
Change of ownership became
effective Friday, Jan. 1. Mr.
Rife, a native of Gallia County,
moved to Columbus in 1954.
Before returning to Gallipolis,
he was a driver - salesman in
the Columbus area.
Mr. Rife said he plans to
retain the establishment's
present name.

Child
Welfare
Board:
Salar ies, employes , $2,100;
other child care services,
$2,000; other expenses, $700.
Total, $4,800.
Children's Home: Salary,
official, $4,872; salaries, employes, $6,840; supplies, $6,000;
equipment, $200; contracts, fuel
and light, $2,000; contracts,
service physician, $500; other
expenses, $200. Total, $25,412.
Soldiers Relief: Salary, officials, $1,200; salaries, employes, $5,125; equipment,
grave markers, $550; relief
allowances, $2,800; expenses
memorial, $400; travel, burials,
$300; other expenses, $1,400.
Total, $11,775.
Public Assistance: Grants,
$4,463; Workhouse; contracts
services, $4,000; Insurance,
Pensions and taxes; County
buildings, $3,500; workman 's
compensation, county and
disabled workmen 's relief,
$4,000; official bonds, $1,000;
public employes retirement,
$17,000. Total, $25,500.
Contingencies: Unanticipated
Emergencies, $15,000. Total
General Fund Appropriations:
$376,544.35.
Dog Kennel Fund -Auditor
clerk hire and supplies, $445;
salaries, employes, $1,680;
supplies, $555; equipment
mileage, $1,263; claims and
witness fees, $1,500; public
employes retirement, $200;
Workmen's Compensation and
Disabled Workmen's Relief,
$65. Total, $5,708.
Motor Vehicle Gas Fund,
Engineer, salary , official ,

MEIGS niEATRE
Tonight· Mon.- Tues.

Jan. 3-4-5
KELLY'S HEROES
(Technicolor)
Clint Eastwood
Don Rickles

'

C()J.JO:\ \ .
Tlwal re
Tonight thru Wednesday

,. .

'-~-·-lr.I-II:Pilllll

AMIKE NICHOLS FILM
AlAN ARKIN ,~

-

~l'l\-~'­

l~~ ~m!rtau
JOSEPtlllllill

MMnN BALSAM, RIC1!ARD BEN.W&amp;~. ARTIIJR &amp;mtiiiiB;
JACK llll.FORD, BUCM IIE.NRY, BOBr«W!WWT, AKIIIJNT PBIIIl
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PIIOOUCIDBY JOHNCALUY&amp;MARIWIWiSOUf
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DIRECT98YMIKEMCHOlS - • - -lUll
IRMa.~ PMI•~•l,.,.,_,PII.
r - 1 1 -t MIIl•llll-

Cartoon
GP

Admission: Adults Sl.OO
Children 60c
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

$12,672;
supplies,
$200;
equipment, bridge inspection,
$5,000; expenses, $3,000. Total,
$20,872.
Roads, Labor, $165,000;
materials, $100,000; equipment,
$40,000; contracts, services,
$260,000; land, emergency{p
funds, $10,000; compensation
and damages, $3,000; Public
Employes Retirement, $15,000;
Workmen's Compensation and
D.llabled Workmen's Relief,
$3,500; other expense, $200;
bridge and culverts - labor,
$16,000; materials, $40,000;
contracts, projects, $20,000.
Tof?l,_!?93,572.
....

:ft:

~

:

f

Rating ( R) No one under
17 years of age admitted.
Admission $1.50

WS ANGELES (UPI) - A
ruling of death due to
s trangulation was returned
Saturday in the death of
Shannon
Caprola,
23,
Talmadge, Ohio, in the Wilshire
District here.
Miss Caprola, who moved
here a few weeks ago from
Ohio, had been badly bea ten.
The body was found Thursday
by a gardener a few blocks
away from where she had been
staying with friends.
Investigation by homicide
detectives was to resume
Monday.

•
•
One of these rare coins

sells for $22 in Moscow.
We're giving them all as a gift.

Since 1859

FOR OHIO'S FUTURE

:

Strangulation
Was Death Cause

·-=========:;1

•1i!5._...,
II IIC:.

0

••••••••••••••••111!~•-••••lli•••••••••E.!-•••••••••••.a,
•

SQUAD CALLED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Emergency Squad was called
Saturday at 7: 09 a.m . to the
, Ralph VanCooney residence,
Baily Run Road for Mrs.
; Van Cooney who was transferred to Ewing ambulance
l
and taken to Holzer Medical
these necessary materials and per- C ter
sonnel if there is a change in the 1 en ·
tax structure to permit the sta\e to
contribute
to theyour
cosf'of
cation. If more
you want
childc:duto .
have these needed advantages~ as
well as modernize Ohio's out-ofdate tax structure- tell your elected
legislators about it.

'"Tax Reform for Improved Education

MEIGS COUNTY EDUCATION ASSOCIATION

west of Gallipolis. Officers said
Haskins lost control of his auto
on a curve, spun around in the
highway and struck a parked
car owned by William Miller of
Gallipolis. Minor damage
resulted.
Another mishap occurred at
4:15p.m. on Rt. 7, two and five
tenths miles south of Rt. 218.

County and Municipal Courts;
County Court, salary official,
$5,220.46; salaries employes,
$3,810; supplies, $600;,other fees
and extra help, $2,940. Total,
$12,570.46.
Elections: Board of Elections, salaries officials, $5,000;
salaries employes, $4,980;
supplies, $4,000; judges and
clerks compensation and
mileage, $5,500; other expenses,
$3,000. Total, $22,480.
BuildinJ?; and Grounds:
Capital improvements; construction, $3,500; maintenance
and operation salaries, employes, $6,720; supplies, $500;
contracts, repair, $3,000;
contracts, fuel , light, telephone,
$6,500. Total, $20,220.
Protection to Property and
Persons: Sheriff, salary, official, $7,320; salaries, employes, $15,000; jail matron,
$3,140; equipment, $6,800;
supplies,
jail,
$4,000;
allowances, $200; advertising
and printing, $200; other expenses, $200. Total, $36,860.
Recorder: salary, official,
$7,200; salaries, employes,
$3,600; supplies, $2,500; other
expenses, $75. Total, $13,375.
Agricuttur~: Grants Fair
Board, $2,800; state extension
fund, $11,335; soil conservation,
$700; apiary inspection, $200;
cattle disease prevention, $700.
Total, $15,735.
Health
and
Welfare:
registration, vital statistics,
$100; other health claims,
hydrophobia, $200; crippled
children aid, $2,334. Total,
2
$ •634 ·
Tuberculosis Hospital Claims
and Care : fees and costs,
$1B,OOO; other expenses, $1,000.
Total, $19,000.
Charities and Correction:
County Home, Salary, official,
$3,360; salaries, employes,
$7 , 500 ;
$9,120;
supp1·1es,
equipment, physician fees,
$500; contracts services, fuel
and light, $3,000; contingency
fund, janitor, $260; other expense, $200. Total , $23 ,940.
$23,940.

Everyt ng 1s
Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Mone Back

EIGHT O'CLOC

COFFEE

e

Open a new savings account of $200
or add $200 to your present balance,
and we'll give you the 1964 United
States Silver Coin Set as a gift. It ineludes the 90 percent fine-Silver
Kennedy halfdollar, perhaps the last
coin of its kind minted.

The collection comes mounted in a
handsome case for protection. The
coins are all brand new. Uncirculated.
It's a gift that grows in value. It's a gift
that's historic and valuable, even if
you never get to Russia.

OR YOU MAY HAVE YOUR CHOICE·OF A LINCOLN ME ORIA SET OF PENNIES
IN A BEAUTIFUL \\OODEN FRAME. WHILE THEY LAST!

Gallipolis Savi gs
441 SECOND AVE.

OPP. POST OFFIC

o.
PHONE 446-3832

�3-The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, January 3, 1971

Dilley-Aitizer Vows
Read

Miss Nancy Faye Roush

•

Candlelit
Service

Ashtabula

GALLIPOLIS - Christmas
poinsettias provided the setting
for the marriage of Miss Zee Vi
Dilley and David Rickey Altizer
on Sunday, December 27, at 1:30
p.m. in the First Presbyterian
Church of Ashtabula, Ohio.
The closed, double-ring
ceremony was solemnized by
the Rev. Dr. George Johnson.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Dilley of
Ashtabula, and Mr. Altizer is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. David
M. Altizer of Rio Grande.
Pre-nuptial music was
pre sen ted by Mr. Howard
Johnson, organist. The soloist
was Mrs. Brian Gaines,
Ashtabula, who sang the Lord's
Prayer during the ceremony.
Christmas red poinsettias
decorated the alcove of the
chancel and the altar, which
was centered with an open Bible

Conducted

illuminated by candlelight.
The bride was given in
marriage by her father, and she
appeared in an ivory gown of
peau-de-soie, with matching
slippers. A chapel train fell
gracefully from the watteau
panel at the back. Imported reembroidered alencon lace
accentuated the bodice and
skirt of the gown, as well as the
ruffle of the trumpet sleeves.
Her long veil of silk illusion fell
from a bonnet of matching
peau-de-soie, trimmed with
alencon lace and pearls. The
bride carried a French Colonial
bouquet of white roses and
carnations.
Miss Polly Searcy of Jefferson was maid of honor, and
she wore a floor length gown of
burgundy velvet adorned
with a pink satin bow.
Her headpiece was of Christ-

BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
PORTLAND - A candlelit
service at the Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints was r.eld Wednesday
evening, Dec. 23, in charge of
Maxine Diddle and Nancy
Adams who lighted the candles
and read scripture alternately.
Brenda Bradford was at the
piano as Eula Proffitt, Jane
Johnson and Janice Lee sang
Christmas carols and for
several Christmas songs by the
congregation. All neighborhood
children received bags of treas,
oranges, nuts, and candy, and
those who attended Sunday
School exchanged gifts. We
were also favored with a solo by
Brenda Bradford, who has a
beautiful voice .
On Sunday evening, Dec. Zl, a
Christmas program was well
attended. Janice Lee and others
had worked hard to get the
children to practice.
Because of illness and
transportation (the children are
scattered, living six or seven
miles away in different
directions), some could not
attend. But the choir loft was
filled and these took part:
daughter of Janice Lee, twin
sons of Mattie Teaford, Darrel
Roush, Kathy Walker, Amanda
Roush, some Cain children, I
believe, and others.

ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Lesley F. Roush of New
Haven are announcing the engagement of their daughter,
Nancy Faye, to Robert Clark Freeman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert J. Freeman, Cheshire. Miss Roush is a senior at
Wahama. Mr. Freeman is a 1969 graduate of Kyger Creek,
and is present employed at Heck's in Point Pleasant. Wedding plans are incomplete.

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

(

• Just Between
Us
By Pat Houck
•

Too bad about the Bucks! Like a lot of other people, I watched
football all day on Jan. 1. Maybe that's why I can't seem to get
started. I'm not used to loafing that much. In fact, right now we
have had more days off than we will have again for a long time.

I

I SAW A CARTOON that expressed my feeling about starting
a new year. It showed someone tearing off the calendar for Dec.
1970 and Jan. 1, 1971 on the next page with, "A New Chance"
Written on it.

l

I'M GLAD WE HAVE this division of time, because I, for one,
need it. There are many things I should have done last year. I tell
myself I'll do them lliis year, but I've lived long enough to know I
probably won't.

I SHOULD HAVE BEEN a better housekeeper last year. I
should have done more sewing for my daughter. I should have
baked bread more often .... so I resolve in 1971 to count every
minute of my days as pr ~ciollf minutP.s to be used as wisely as I
can. And too, I want to try to pass along some of the good that
comes my way.
WHEN I WAS DIGGING around for column material
someone said the number one subject was "Weight." Oh my. H
that'sashopeless for you as it is for me, we won't go in to it!
LOOKING AROUND TOWN it seems the little girls are the
ones who have gone in for the maxi coats. I'll bet they feel good
when it is about 10 degrees and the wind is blowing.

•

•

I READ WHERE PANTS SUITS are out. It seems to me many
women buy the wrong fit in a pants suit and therefore are not
flattered by the style. Nothing is more comfortable than a pants
suit, too bad they make some of us look like tubs of lard.
Midge Harris looked pretty in hers though.
HAD YOU HEARD IT was good luck to make a pillowslip on
New Year's Day? I guess I'm behind times because I hadn't. I
was in the fabric shop the other day when Hazel Edgington was
buying pale blue satin to make one of those pillowslips that keep
your hair nice. She told me about the legend. That blue satin just
matched Hazel's eyes and will be a perfect compliment to her
attractive gray hair.

•

MY SON HAS HELPED OUT here on one of our motor routes
through the holidays. He has delivered papers up around the
Cheshire area. As you know he is a Ohio University student, and
he has long hair. We were afraid folks would object to a "long
. haired" fellow collecting for their papers, but he ·said everyone
was very nice. It made me proud of my fellow Gallia Countians.
Could it be we are all getting more tolerant ? Any way thanks,
from me for him.
ONE THING I MIGHT do this year is paint a litt.e I've
always been interested in painting and drawing, but tried to
forget it and concentrate on writing. My fine arts class with Miss
Shirly Mason of pt_ Pleasant at Rio Grande College has revived
my interest.
BE SURE TO READ Betty Kratz's letters from Australia.
The first two (printed on Mondays) were excellent. They made
me feel like I was right there .
WANT TO REMIND the voters in Harrison, Ohio, and Guyan
Townships to vote in Tuesday's special election for a five-mill
renewal school levy. Failure to approve the measure means
Hannan Trace school district will be forced to close.

Couple is Honored
,

f

PT. PLEASANT- Mr. and
Mrs. Chester A. Roush were
honored on their Golden
Wedding Anniversary by their
children, Chester and Dot
Roush, Okey and Martha Roush
and Alice Anne and Ray Andrews, on Sunday afternoon,
December 27th, with a reception in the social hall of Trinity
United Methodist Church. This
~ was followed by a dinner for
family and relatives at the
Moo~P H:dl.
~OmlJlt:.....,
":t "'~re
their grandchildren a nd all
present. They are Jan and Alex
Roush of Carrollton, Georgia;

Dean, Peter, Elizabeth (Buffy)
and Charl~s Okey Roush of
Westerville, Ohio, and John and
Tom Andrews of Charleston.
Among tile many local friends
and relatives attending were
the following out of town guests:
Mr. and Mrs. J. E . Howard,
Mount Hope, W. Va.; Mrs.
James Alexander, A ~lan ta,
Georgia; Dean M. Kerr, Sun
City, Arizona; Christopher
Pyles, Baltimore, Md. ; Mrs. E.
N. Roush, St. Petersburg,
•
Everett Roush,
Lvgan.
Mr . and Mrs. Jonn P. Harper
and children, Charleston; Mr.

Mrs. David R. Altizer
mas
greens
and
red
carnations. Miss Searcy
carried a white velvet
Mr. Gary Altizer, the
bridegroom's brother, was the
best man, and the ushers were
the bridegroom's cousin,
Timothy Blazer of Fairborn,
and the bride's brother, Daniel
Dilley of Ashtabula.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Dilley selected a lacetrimmed street length dress of
ice blue with matching accessories. Mrs. Altizer wore a
crepe dress of pastel green with
matching shoes and bone accessories. Both wore corsages
of red carnations. Others
MR. AND MRS. George E. Carson of New Haven are
receiving corsages were Mrs.
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Angela Marie
Amer H. Queale, Kinsman, and
to Lawrence Randolph Smith Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. George DiUey, Cortland,
Lawrence Smith of Clifton. Wedding plans are incomplete.
both grandmothers of the bride.
Miss Carson is a senior at Wahama High School and Mr.
A reception and catered
Smith has returned from a tour of duty in Vietnam with the
dinner was held in the social
U S. Marine COrps.
room of the church immediately
following the ceremony. A
three-tiered wedding cake,
baked by the bride's aunt, Mrs.
Leonard Osborn of Johnston,
centered the table.
The bride changed to a white
knit pants suit trimmed in red
Holzer ' Medical Center, First Long, Jr., James Lundy, Mrs. and added a red coat with red
Ave. and Cedar St. General Cecil Matheny, Earl Sheets, and blue accessories for a
visiting hours 2-4 and 7~ p.m. Mrs. Ezra Staley, Leo Taylor, wedding trip into the Smoky
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Mrs. C. Raymond Wyant and
4:30 p.m. Parents only on son, Don McDade, Miss Sally
Pediatrics Ward.
Darst, W. Vernon Deweese,
Births
John Dutton, Mrs. Erma
Mr. and Mrs. Wendell E. Chapman, Mrs . Lora Cox,
Craig, Grimms Landing, a son; Grover Waugh , and Tanja
Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Sattler.
Blackson, Rt. 1, Ewington, a
son; and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Willard Sisson, Eureka Star Rt.,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Gallipolis, a daughter.
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS Discharges
Alice Russell, Pomeroy;
Aaron Allen , Russell Bailey, Clarence Neutzling, Columbus.
Luther Boles, John Campbell,
THURSDAY DISCHARGES
Roy Campbell, Mrs. Nelson - Bessie Vaughan, Lelia
Click,
Mrs .
Preston Howett, James Scott, Robert
Coughenour, Mrs. Pearle Cook, Vivian Arnott, Christy
Edwards and infant daughter, Davis, John Freeman, Joseph
Mrs. Preston Eusnaugle, Mrs. Bissell.
James French and infant son,
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS Nancy Goble, Miss Connie John Joachim, Middleport;
Grueser, John Haislop, Mrs. Wyatt South, Racine; Shirley
Wilma Halfhill, Mrs. Hubert Richmond, Middleport.
Hinson, Katherine King,
FRIDAY DISCHARGES Richard Miller, William Miller, Maude Crow, Carroll Grim,
Mrs. Lillian Noe, Margaret Orr, Clayton Tippie.
Mrs. William Parsons, Mrs.
John Rake, Jr., Mrs. Xylpha
Saunders, Mrs. Ora Shaver,
Judy Kay Wilcoxen, Mrs .
James Wills and son, Mrs.
William Winter, Jr., Mrs. Paul
Shirley, Bonnie Wolford,
Forrest Jones, Mrs. Charles

Angela Carson Betrothed

Mountains.
The new Mrs. Altizer is a
graduate of Grand Valley High
School of Orwell, and Mr.
Altizer is a graduate of Southwestern High School. Both are
students at Rio Grande College.
The couple will reside in Rio
Grande, and will be at home to
their friends at their apartment
at 1H2 Main Street.
Guests traveling to Ashtabula
for the ceremony included Mrs.
William Heissenbuttel, and
daughters Iris and Lili,
Washington, D. C.; Mr. and
Mrs. Victor Niday, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. John Blazer,
Cedarville, and Mrs. Timothy
Blazer, Fairborn.

DIAMOND

RINGS

When You Know It's For Keeps
It's t1me to choose your d1amond engagement ring If the
name. Keepsake is in the ring and on the tag you'Ve got
perfect quality for a lifetime

r---------------------------,
l HOSPITAL NEWS !

and Mrs. Edward Lietwiler and
son Mark, Sewickley, Pa.; Mrs.
John Lietwiler, Pomeroy, Ohio;
Mrs. D. A. Smith, Hartford; Mr .
and Mrs. R. K. Wilson and
daughters, Debbie and Jan,
Mason .
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth L.
Dodds, BarboursviUe; Mr. and
Mrs . Robert Dodds and
daughter, Huntington; Miss
Margaret Dodds, Baltimore,
Md. ; Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Layne, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Layne, Mrs. Ottie Roush, all of
New Haven.
Mrs. Larry Ebersbach,
Syracuse, Ohio; Mr . a nd Mrs .
Smith McCausland, Pliny; Mr.
and Mrs. James Shadle,
Southside; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
W. Johnson, Columbus, Ohio;
Mrs. Una M. Saunders, Prince ton ; Mrs. Ada L. Hyer,
Sutton; Mrs . Richard Startzman, Athens, Ohio; Mr. and
Mr~..
"~', McLean, Va .

~12sake
REGISTERED

HIBISCUS S3:!i0 TO 1250
WEDDING RING 200

SORITA 1 300
ALSO 1~0 TO 2600

Clark's Jewelry Store
userving you since 1936"
C.ollipolis, Ohio

342 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

REGULAR

~a.r--- FUR TRIMMED

COATS- -..

coATs_______ WERE $38 NOW s2s.
COATS------WERE

NOW $32 .

COATS ______ WERE m Now$38•
COATS------WERE

LOOK W

$46

$60

NOW $42•

COATS------ WERE $70 NOW $48.
COATS------WERE $85 NOW
CAR COATS
.----FUN FURS------t
CAR COATS __ WERE $26 NOW $}8.

$39.50
WILL BUY

CAR COATS---WERE $30 NOW $21•
CAR COATS___ WERE Sl6 NOW $25•

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
Gal lipolis

nd Ave.

OPEN

CAR COATs ___WERE $40 NOW s2s·

MONDAY
TIL

CAR COATS___ WERE $50 NOW $35·
CAR OOATS__ .WERE $58 NOW $4 •

8 P.M.

• Charge It On BankAmericard

•

�4- The SWlday Times- Sentinel, SWlday, January 3, 1971
Old Expri!SSiiJn
The expresSJIJn, "il&gt; eat
humble pif•," dates bad: tt1
the Middle Ages, when rtJy&amp;lty dined on the best of ft1vds
and servants werf~ left with
"skin, head and umbl(:s,"
~hesc last being the animal's
CHESHIRE - The Cheshire mnards, which were mad~
Woman's Society of Christian mto "umble pie."
Service met at the parsonage
with the Rev. and Mrs. Frank
Cheesebrew for a potluck
SUNDAY
Christmas dinner. Ten members and six guests were
TIMES-SENTINEL
Publtth.ct tvtrv Sund•t by the Oh•o
present.
Va lley Publfl hing Co
GALLIPOLIS DAI L Y TRIBUNE
The
parsonage
was
US Third Ave ., Galllpolla,
...
beautifully decorated for the !!~~~~g :.uc~1 1 f~~urJ:;'l.c!~'~?:.~
Postage Pa/ifa t Ga llipo l J , Ot-o •O, 4SUl.
Christmas season. An in THE DAILY SEHTI .. EL
ll\ Court St., Po,tro;-. 0. 4J7"'
P ublhhed tvtry 'Wtt11::&lt;Jet tvtnl111
teresting and inspiring program exctpt
Saturday . Enttrfod ... MGOnd
ma •flng ma tt•r at Pof!'l t roy, Ofol•o,
was presented by the Rev. and cta11
Post Office
TERMS
OF SUBSC~IPT 1 01j
Mrs. Cheesebrew.
By c.a rrle r daily a nd 1.\mdey,
Pfl'
Scripture was read from
MAIL SUBSCIU PTIOH lUTES
Ma tthew and following the
w~iv~::~r.~·:,,T;~~";",·.l~s~~",;,oc:;;.~
; thrH mortt'tll SA : th.•....mtrt, Ot'le
program a gift exchange was Uyear
t 13, s lx mont1n· $7 , tttrH month a
s-uo
Tht Daily Stnt•nt l, ont y•ar $12; I¥.
held.
montha U
three mon!tts s...
Tnt United PrHI lnterna t·ona1 s
The January meeting is to be
exc.luslvety ent itled to tt'le va.c ltH
p
ubllce
tion
of
a ll n rws cf tiP•fchn
at the church with Mrs. George
crtdlt.O to this ne*spepeor •nd 1.1..0 t?t•
l ou' I ntws f1Yblishe4 ..,.,, n.
Moody and daughter, Ka thy, as
hostesses.

Georgena Lemley Weds

Cheese brews
Host WSCS

William J. Harrison
GALLIPOLIS - In a doublering ceremony at 6:30 p.m. on
Nov. 25 at the Grace United
Methodist
Church,
Miss
Georgena Lemley, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . George N.
Lemley, became the bride of
Mr. William J. Harrison, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Lynas Harrison.
Officiating at the ceremony
was the Rev. Chester J. Lemley
of Vinton .
Baskets of white chrysanthemums and gladiolus along
with seven-branch candelabra
decorated the altar. A hall-hour
of nuptial music was presented
by Mrs. Merlyn Ross.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore an a-lone
gown of brocade and Venice
lace with ribbon trim, long
fitted sleeves, high neckline and
chapel train. The veil was
topped with a headpiece of satin
ribbons. She carried a bouquet
of white carnations and a white
Bible which belonged to her
aunt, and had been in the family

Phyllis Elaine Caldwell
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED- Mr. and Mrs. Robert
L. Caldwell, Rt. 1, Gallipolis are annoWlcing the engagement
of their daughter, Phyllis Elaine, to Pete Newman, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Newman, Rock Camp, Ohio.
Miss Caldwell is a 1970 graduate of Kyger Creek High
School and is presently attending Preston Beauty College,
Chesapeake.
Mr. Newman graduated from Dawson-Bryant High
School with the class of 1966, and attended Ohio University,
Ironton Branch, for two years. He is presently employed at
Fairfield Engineering, Marion, Ohio.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

Birth of Son
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd F. (Frank) Clary, Jr. of
Proctorville announce the birth
of a son on Dec. 14 at 3:06p.m.
The baby weighed six pounds
and five ounces and has been
named Chad Franklin.
Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Clary of Rt.
'i, Crown City. Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Bickers of Racine.
Great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Pete Parsons of Crown
City and Mrs. Norma Bickers
Brannon of Bidwell and the
Rev. and Mrs. Daniel Pauley of
Madison, W. Va.

~.

·~

.. .
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Harrison

the bride, served as ringbearer. John Born, Circleville ; Mr.
Spending the Christmas
For her daughter's wedding, Larry Shaffer, Hilliard; Mr.
holiday weekend with their
Mrs. Lemley wore a gold and Dave Gray, Woodsfield; Mr.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
brown knit tunic top ensemble, David Hitchcock, Paulding, and
Hoffman, State St., were their
with brown accessories. She Mrs. Elsie McCoy, Vinton.
daughters and families, Dr. and
wore a corsage of gold
Mrs. Ben V. Smith and
chrysanthemums . Mrs.
daughter, Lisa, of Sewickley,
Harrison chose a two-piece gray
Pa.; Mr. and Mrs . Dale
wool suit, with matching acLauener, and son, Matthew of
cessories. She wore a corsage of
Akron , and Mr. and Mrs.
yellow chrysanthemums.
Bernard Murphy of Rio Grande.
Miss Becky Lakin registered
One son, Sgt. Jack Hoffman, ~
the guests.
stationed at K. I. Sawyer
A reception was held in the
A.F.B. , Mich., was unable to be (
church dining room imhome.
MONDAY
mediately after the ceremony.
AMERICAN
Red
Cross
The bride's table was
Luther Brumfield returned to
Volunteer Gray Ladies lWl- decorated with candles and a
Columbus after spending the
cheon, 12:30 p. m ., Holzer fo~. tiered c~ke topped with a
holiday with his mother, Mrs.
Medical Center Cafeteria. AU . Inlmat~: bnde and groom.
Marie Brumfield.
members urged to attend.
Prest~mg at the r:ception
were Miss Becky Lakin Miss
Mrs. Hazel Carter has GRACE Guil? dinner mee~g Margaret Tracy and' Miss
LO RELEI $ 250
returned home to Circleville 6:15p.m. Brmg table serVice. Sherri Finney.
WEDDING RING 29.75
after spending the holiday with POMONA GRANGE at Vinton For a wedding trip to points of
Exciting Keepsake stylesher mother, Mrs. Pearl Grange Hall 8 p.m. AU mem- interest in Kentucky, the bride
from classically simple to intricately carved. Each with a
Graham, Northup, and brother, bers urged to attend. Bring wore a three piece tunic brown
flawless center diamond.
'Glenn Graham and family, and potluck refreshments and table and white suit with brown acsister, Mrs. Bernice Wood of service.
cessories.
Gage. She was accompanied by BAND Boosters executive The bride is a 1969 graduate of
her son, Larry.
meeting, 7:30 p.in. in the band Galli~ Academy High School
room.
and 1s a sophomore at Rio
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stage, J r. TUESDAY
Grande College. Her new
and daughters, Deborah BETTY STAM Class to meet at husband is a 1968 graduate of
Elizabeth and Jennifer Lynn of 7:30p.m.
Gallia Academy High School,
Pittsburgh spent the holidays PATRIOT GRANGE 7:30 p.m. and is presently a student at the
with his mother, Mrs. Wavaline Potluck lunch.
University of Cincinnati.
Stage of Cheshire. Spending ENGLISH CLUB will meet with Out of town guests at the
342 Second Ave.
Christmas day with Mrs. Stage Mrs. Max Tawney at 7:30p.m. we~ding ~ere Miss Connie
Phone 446-2961
were her mother, Mrs. Ethel Mrs. June Cantrell is co- Smith, Manetta; Mr. and Mrs.
Primmer of Logan, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Kitchen and hostess.

Va. ; John Bagshaw, Jerry
Eutsler, Mary Beth Fischer,
and Dr. and Mrs. J. R. Schirmer, all of Gallipolis.
Members present were
Wilford and Gertrude Evans
Farrell and Marlene Houck and
children, Mona and Cherie
Merrill and Rosina Saunders'
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Knotts and
children, Donna and David;
Harland and Emogene Sanders,
Art and Ruth Wroblewski , Bill
and Mill Seyfried, Mr. and Mrs.
Waldo F. Brown, Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Jolin, Wayne and
Gladys Amsbary and James
and Goldie King.

Board Family
Special Yule

CLARK'S
JEWEtRY
STORE

daughters, Crystal, Loretta,
and Jane Ellen of Logan; Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jack
Stage,
Couple Announces
daughters, Deborah and Jennifer and Mr. and Mrs. James
Birth of Son
GALLIPOLIS - Christmas Compston and sons, Steve,
CHESHIRE - Lt. and Mrs.
was a very enjoyable day at the Larry and daughter, Jennifer,
James A. French, Jr . of
home of Mr. and Mrs. William of Belmont.
Cheshire are announcing the
C. Board. A bountiful dinner
Attending Christmas dinner birth of their first child, a son,
was served.
A beautiful birthday cake was at the home of Mr. and Mrs. on Dec. 26 at the Holzer Medical
in the center of table in honor of Otho Wolfe were Mr. and Mrs. Center, First Ave.
The baby weighed seven
Clarence Burns, Mrs. Frank
Billy Board's birthday.
Present were the Board Daft, Debra, Kim, and Teresa pounds and 15lh ounces and has
family, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Daft, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. been named James Lance.
Lt. French is presently serPurdy and children, Alicia and Herbert Harrington, Jr., Bill
Ricky of Roanoke, Va.; Mr. and Joe, Eddie , Brenda, Zyna ving with the u. s. Army in
Mrs. Billy Board and children, Harrington, Mr . and Mrs. Vietnam. Mrs. French is the
Brenda Sue and Melinda, of Robert Sayre, of Lebanon; Mr. former Sandra Kail.
and Mrs. James Kinder, Becky
Maternal grandparents are
Gallipolis.
Kinder, Jim Burns, Mark . Mr. and Mrs. J. o. Kail of
Burns, Joyce Boggas, Mr. and Cheshire . Paternal grandMrs. Marshall Wolfe, Shannan parents are Mr. and Mrs. J . A.
Wolfe, Mike and Cliff Wolfe.
French of Addison. Maternal
Calling in the evening were great-grandparents are Mrs.
A bridegroom's attendants
in the primitive days of mar- Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burns, of Alva Kail of Cheshire, Dale
riage by capture were called Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Allensworth of Cheshire, and
upon by the groom to help Chaney, Jamie Chaney of M
r. an d Mrs. 0 . E. F reneh , of
"lift" the bride, according to Peebles, Ohio.
Gallipolis.
Encyclopaedia Britannica.

&amp;~akt

,~~a--o--_,•-----·---·--~1

Other Styles
By Gladstone
All $7.99

•
Gallipo lis, 0.

412-414 Second Ave.

IA'A'AY't~
YOUR OLD SHOES ARE

Sale
~~
~

IF YOU WEAR

~

THEM IN
IF YOU BRING
THEM IN

~

~

4+
A

1!8!!!

llj

~

SALE
STARTS

,

JAN. 4th, 1971

137 Pine Street

I

Sizes 10-20
141/2-201/2

!!!1 !:!!!! TRADE !! \! ~

JONES BOYS'

Favorite Sandwich!
Hamburger Never Tasted
Better Than It Does At

You will never iron
Shaker Square's fabulous Shirt Skimmer
of exclusive permanent
press fabric.

Carl's Annual Trade-In

tht

The Wor1d's

"THAT OLD FASHIONED GOODNESS"

Never Needs
Ironing

ON ANY PAIR OF SHOES
~.95 OR OVER IN STOCK

Narcelles, of Pt. Pleasant, W.
Va .; Dr. Jerry Dimaculangan
and parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vic
Dimaculangan of Pomeroy; Dr.
and Mrs. E.duardo Sison and
host and hostess of Gallipolis.
Unable to attend were the
Drs. Ed and Pilar Sayoc and
mother, Mrs. Arcelia Evora,
Dr. Antonio Sola and Dr. Rene
Arceno.

61Jnppr
-·-•-•,. ,,__,. ,___,_____,___

SHIRT
SKIMMER

SWEEP UP THESE SAVINGS AT

Celebration

Coronels Host Party
GALLIPOLIS - Close friends
gathered at the home of Dr. and
Mrs . Marcel Coronel to
welcome in the new year .
Filipino delicacies and music
were enjoyed by Dr. and Mrs.
Adelaido Gonzales, Dr. and
Mrs. Hernane Restar, of Lakin,
W. Va.; Dr. and Mrs. Pete
Obregon, Dr. and Mrs. Nestor

4~

Wte~ .

0 I

Holiday Party Held

Clarys Announce

0~

_ _ _. _ _ _..
m ng
l\ eEvents

French City Campers
GALLIPOLIS - The French
City Campers Club met in the
Grande Squares square dance
club building on Eastern
Avenue for their Christmas
party. The club building was
beautifully decorated for this
time of the year, from the
Christmas tree to · all the
trimmings.
, Mr. J. Wilford Evans was in
charge of the evening, and did
an outstanding job. Everyone
seemed to have a wonderful
time, from the fellowship part
of the program, and especially
the part where everyone
grabbed his, or her, plate and
headed for the food.
After the dinner a gift exchange was held with Mr.
Farrell Houck in charge.
President, Wayne Amsbary,
led the group in returning
thanks for the food and
fellowship. Visitors were Monk
and Jerry Jordan , Helen
Thompson, all of the 0-Kan
Wanderers, Pt. Pleasant, W.

for many years.
Miss Janet DeVault was maid
of honor. She wore a floor length
gown of aqua blue chiffon over
taffeta. Her matching mini veil
was held with an aqua blue bow.
She carried a bouquet of white
carnations with aqua lace and
matching ribbons.
Misses Jerri and Kathy
Payne were bridesmaids. They
wore identical floor length
gowns of apricot chiffon over
taffeta . Their matching mini
veils were held with an apricot
bow. They carried a bouquet of
white carnations with apricot
lace and varigated ribbons.
The junior bridesmaid was
Miss Beth Harrison, sister of
the bridegroom. Her gown and
headpiece were identical to the
bride's, and she carried a
bouquet of white carnations
with apricot lace and varigated
ribbons.
Miss Traci Hill, cousin of the
bride, served as flower girl. Her
gown and headpiece were
identical to the other attendants' and she carried a
basket of aqua and apricot
daisies.
Mr. David Hitchcock of
Paulding, a college roommate,
served as best man. Ushers
were Mr. Michael Elliott, Mr.
James Harrison, brother of the
bridegroom, and Mr . Keith
DeVault.
Master Robbie Hill, cousin of

Gallipolis, Ohio

YES IT'S TRADE
IN TIME AT

..-(£
~w

Second Ave.

,uy shops ,oget.
Gal lipolis, 0.

I I

�I

r----1
I

5-The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, January 3, 1971

Border
Shelling
Goes On

Grandma Roush
•

•

(Continued from page 1)
have spent most of their lives in the Byron
Roush home on Route 124 here with their
only living grandmother, Esta (Grandma)
Roush, a most remarkable person.
A retired cook at Portland School,
living on borrowed time (past 70, as the
saying goes) she's lost her husband, a son,
and a daughter in death. But she continues
to live alone, still very active and enjoying
her grandchildren and great-grands to the
fullest.
She has another set of twin grandsons
the children of Burt and Joe Roush.
Besides her own nwnerous grandchildren, many pupils at Portland school
called her grandma Roush, especially
Georgia Deem Smith and Taddy Durst
Wilkenson, who are first cousins of Dil¥Ja.
Since they had the same Grandma Wells,
they claimed Diana's other grandmt too,
and often ask their mothers, "WhY/ don't
you cook good like Grandma Rou!'jl?"
Besides cooking and helping serve
ine and
their meals, she kept their
cocoa syrup because they di 't like
"white milk."
Esta Roush still quilts a
makes
comforters and embroiders p ow-cases
as gifts for the family; burn coal in a
grate fireplace, carries out a es, brings
the coal in, does her wash n Monday
morning, and bakes her ow break part
time.
She always has plent of food on
Sundays, baked chicken,
roast with
dressing, homemade noodl s, vegetables,
salad and homemade pie for the times
when some of the family c me in. And she
plays games with the ch" dren.
This year she baked cookies for servicemen of her church r overseas, and
"did over" a picture fr e for a granddaughter's gift. She al ays has a quilt in

mei·

.j

'

•

DANNY ROUSH

DENNY ROUSH

progress or some pick-up work to do. Her
beautiful rugs are made of rags she has
sewn and hired woven.
What amazes me most is her alertness, rarely failing to work the day's
crossword puzzles mornings while her
coffee makes!
Grandma Roush must be a living
example of the significance of a recent
study showing that folk who start work
early in life, usually in rural areas, and
continue after retirement, live longer.
Also, moderation in living habits, proper
motivation and creative interests, were
concluded to be important. Work, which
includes physical exercise, is a blessing,
not a curse, the study showed.
Other factors, linked to healthy
longevity were elderly folks' positive
appraisals of themselves, including
physical well-being and financial position;
more body weight than non-survivors;
greater personal happiness and
satisfaction in their work: better

edueation; fewer changes in life style and
range of contacts over the years, and less
tendency to be heavy cigaret smokers.
From the Eighth International
Congress in Gerontology, in Washington,
D. C. comes:
"Many elderly tend to be wealthier,
smarter and maybe even sexier." Longer
lived ones score nigher than many younger
ones, and show no significant decline in
their intellectual powers.
Also, on psychological tests evaluating
moral and mental health, healthy elderly
had fewer signs of cerebral deterioration.
Marrieds live longer than singles,
divorced or even widowed.
It all reminds me of a colored woman's
answer when asked, "To what do you
attribute your longevity?" She replied,
"When ah sets, ah sets loose."

Otildren
(Continued from page 1)

•

•

transported by Jos h's son, Jack.
There they fo d that Charles M.
Sparks was ac
y their long lost
brother. Sparks or Leo Peter Raub was so overjoyed wept at seeing his two
Pomeroy brother .
The two Rau brothers learned a little
of Leo's past.
He had joine a carnival upon leaving
Pomeroy. He a arently had chosen the
name of Spark during his year with the
carnival. The surmise that he was
electrician, known as
working as
"Sparks" in e carney world.
Needing a arne, he adopted Sparks as
his last name The two learned that their
brother had s rved six years in the army,
enlisting wh the canival disbanded in
the West. , arks - or Raub - had
married an his wife died in 1952. There
· dren. He had learned the
·ness while working with his
olas, in Pomeroy .:nd thus was
able to o rate his own shop in Galax.
On Nov 23, a sec,md visit was made to
the nursi g home. This time, Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph ub, a sister of the missuig man,

Louise, and the youngest brother, Hobart,
accompanied by Jack Raub, made the
trip. Since the visit the family members
have been advised that their brother is
"like a new man" as a result of the
reunion. Leo had asked especially to see
Mrs. Joseph Raub who was formerly
Gertrude Keeling.
There are still many questions about
the disappearance of Leo.
However, doctors at the nursing home
feel that he was an amnesia victim.
Members of the family recall that Leo had
suffered from typhoid fever in 1922, just
before his disappearance. Doctors here
had given up his living. He did recover, but
after his disappearance, members of the
family recalled that Leo "did not seem
himself" after his fever subsided just
shortly before his disappearance in
March, 1922.
In the spring, when the weather breaks,
another trip will be made to the Galax
nursing home by the Raub family for
another visit.
Perhaps more of the 48-year-old
mystery then will be cleared up.

Handicapped Child

•
•
I

•

U.S. Is Offering
Help to Parents
By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON (NEA)
All t o often, we as parents don't realize we have a
handic pped child until crucial years are lost, and our
youngster builds up a sense of failure and a loss of selfresp~t from which he may find it exceedingly difficult
tore over.
A ew examples will suffice:
ln a newc;paper recently a mother wrote, ·:My son .
is having awful troubles. He seems bright enough in most
ways but just not able to keep up in school. As he gets
older, he falls farther and farther behind. He used to be
a nice, cheerful boy, but now he seems always angry and
misbehaves a lot .. ."'
Joey, a second grader, is always in motion, kicking over
chairs and lamps at home. He chases around the dining
room table on his toes, yells like a banshee, never runs
out of energy, doesn't react when told to stop. Joey's
teacher says he's smart but she cafl't get through to him
when he acts up in class. He's unmanageable.
Ruth has perfect hearing "b if I tell her something.
she can't tel! me what I said.'
Ask Mike to pick up a penci and draw a circle and he
can't do it. The words don't d up to him.
Jimmy's teacher said he as very bright. The doctors
found his eyesight excellent. et he couldn't master math.
He couldn't see geometric £" ures as others see them. He
couldn't handle addition an subtraction. The diagnosisminimal brain damage.
The Department of H lth. Education and Welfare's
Bureau of Education for 1e Handicapped is right now in
the throes of a campaig to get all parents, even those
who believe their childr are "normal," to look at them
very closely.
Parents wh.J have c ildren with known handicaps, or
with unexplained prob ms at school (a bright lad doing
poor work ; a "norm " child who is always behind in
reading or arithmetic · a boy or girl who is always cutting
up in school or at me) are being urged to write to
Closer Look, Box 149 . Washington, D.C. 20013, listing the
child's age, his sch I and whatever it is that is causing
worry at school.
At the Washingto end of the line a computer will print
out the addresses f the nearest places to go for advice
and will list thos local schools or centers which might
provide special e cation or training.
The Closer Lo computers have been answering 1,000
letters a week.
What Closer ok will do, of course, is open the door for
some parents d their children. But many more will be
frustrated. In oo many cases the worried parer.ts Nill
find their co munities' special schools 'Jr classes lor
teacher) over rowded !or overworked), or far teo expensive. In man localities there will be no facilities for their
child's parti Jar handicap.
(Special t chers and special facilities are needed, even
when-as i often advised-the children are put in regular school asses for most of their work.)
The plai and simple fact also is that there are not
nearly en gh specialized teachers. There are 90,000 now
Eo Martin, head of HEW's Bureau for the
in practi
Educatio of the Handicapped, says there should be
400,000. 'hough fedPral funds &lt;.Jrl' available for helpmg
tram ne teachers and tho•!&lt;~h il nat· 'In wide search is now
under a\. Jt wil! IJL: a long t lint lwfor&lt;' thE' sum&gt;ly
catches up w1th the need .

curacy, they surmised this reporter was
not wearing one.
Two things kids pay attention to on TV
are the weather and Chiller Theatre.
Monsters, they say, don't scare the boys
but that "girls are chicken."
Jennifer just covered her eyes when
the subject of monsters came up.
They would rather watch TV than read
a book and David Reiman explained why,
''I don't know all the words in a book."
They were reminded they d:ctn•t know
all the words in a book since they had not
known what a national guardsman was
and at least one of them thought the
Vietnam war was war between Americans
and the Germans.
In spite of Kent State, riots, drugs, inflation and the like, the kids wouldn't
change this old globe much. They like it as
it is (with the exception' of school) and
most of all they (the boys) like going
hunting with their Dads.
Maybe we adults in 1971 should be wise
to look at our world "from the eyes of a
child." It might encourage us during these
difficult times.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
1971 New Year's wish of
Governor-elect John J.
Gilligan is "the restoration of
peace and the earliest
possible end to the Southeast
Asia war."
Gilligan, who will be sworn
in Jan. 11 as Ohio's 62nd
governor, also hopes for
"development of the enormous resources of this
country and this state so all
Americans, all Ohioans can
share some measure of those
resources .. "
"We can certainly bend
every ounce of energy and
intelligence God gave us to
make this a better society,"
he said.

JUDGE NAMED
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Jack F.
Young of Coshocton, an attorney since 1943, was named by
Gov. James A. Rhodes as a
Coshocton County Common
Pleas Court judge. He will
succeed Judge Aubrey Wendt,
who retired.

By United Press International
Arab guerrillas shelled an
Israeli position on the Golan
Heights and two settlements
near the Lebanese border early
Saturday. In the occupied Gaza
Strip, a grenade explosion killed
two children in an Israeli car
and wounded their mother, Tel
Aviv spokesmen said.
Israeli
military
An
spokesman said one Israeli
soldier was wounded in the
three night bazooka and mortar
attacks climaxing a week in
which there was an upsurge of
guerrilla attacks.
Gunnar V. Jarring, United
Nations special mediator, flew
to New York meanwhile for a
new round of peace talks
expected to begin some time
next week.
In Cairo, President Anwar
Sadat conferred with his U.N.
Ambassador, Dr. Mohammed
Hassan al Zayyat, preparing for
the reswnption of talks broken
off four months ago by Israel.
The Israelis announced early
this week they would reenter
the negotiations.
Sadat said Saturday that
Egypt would not abide by
another cease-fire if Israel tried
to make the truce permanent
and refused to implement U.N.
resolutions calling for its
withdrawal from occupied territory. The current Suez Canal
cease-fire is scheduled to expire
Feb. 5.
In Amman, a spokesman for
the general command of the
Palestinian Revolution said
Arab guerrillas had carried out
31 operations against Israel
between Nov. 11 and Dec. 31.
In Tel Aviv, an Israeli
spokesman said at least 17
Arab guerrillas were killed this
week in clashes with Israeli
forces while Israel lost two
men killed and eight wounded.
He said seven Arab civilians
also were killed in guerrilla
attacks in the Gaza Strip and
Sinai.
The spokesman said Saturday's attacks were staged by
guerrillas based in Syria and
Lebanon. He said Israeli forces
returned the fire but gave no
details.
He said the two Israeli
settlements hit were located in
the upper Galilee above the Sea
of Galilee .
In the Gaza Strip, the
spokesman said, an Arab
guerrilla threw a grenade into
an Israeli civilian vehicle as it
was heading toward Tel Aviv.
The grenade exploded in the
back seat, killing an 8-year-old
boy, and a girl, 10. Their
mother was wounded and their
father went into shock, the
spokesman said .

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

SCHEDULE OF EVENING CLASSES
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE

Second Semester 1970-71
Days Credit
Dept.- Class
w 3
Econ.- 233 Money &amp; Banking
3
MWF
Econ.- 303 Public Finance
3
Econ.- 313 Wages, Employment, Labor T-Th
Educ. - 422 Teaching Social Studies in
2
T-Th
Secondary Education
MWF
3
Eng.- 233 Children's Literature
MWF
3
Eng.- 443 Comparative Novel
1
T-Th
HPE -1410 Life Saving
Phil. &amp;
MWF
3
Rei.- 413 Comparative Religions
P.S. - 105 - Introduction to American
5
M-F
Government
P.S. - 105 Introduction to American
5
T-Th
Government
3
M
Psych.- 313 Human Growth &amp; Development
w 3
Psych.- 403 Educational Psychology
3
M
Soc. Sci.- 203 Principles of Geography
Th.
3
Soc.- 213 Sociology of Education
5
M-F
Speech -105 Fundamentals of Speech

Time
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•

•
ALLISON ELECTRIC CO.

You Can Buy Better For Less At

CLASSES BEGIN WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1971
Registration For Evening Classes Is
Tuesday, January 12, 1971
6:30-8:00 P.M. Community Hall

Phone 446-0987

218 Third Avenue
II

I"

�-

I

6 -The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, January 3, 1971

··.-

PORK LOIN
RIB END

...

CENTER
CUT

ROAST .

PORK
CHOP

FRENCH CITY
WIENERS

LB.

LOIN
CHOPS

PO RK

STEAK

c ..

79frlA

LB.

K.F. 1

OIL_·
FILTER
SUPER SIZE
SCOPE

POPULAR
SLICED
BACON

.

49CLB.

PORK LOIN
Loin

FRENCH CITY

Liver

End

I.G.A.
CRACKERS
.

VAN CAMP

VIENNA
SAUSAG

1-LB.

4 oz.

BOXES

CANS

Carnation
Coffee Mate
50 LB.

WI

OOF

16

oz.

c

"

CIGA

TE

LIGHTERS

&amp;

QUAKER
c STATE

lOCT.

BAG

•.

�7- The Sunday Times- Sentmel, Sunday, January 3, 1971

~

GOLDEN RIPE

ANANAS
ONLY

Pardon us for being smug. High prices?
Not here. We've got savihgs worth singing about.
All through the store. You don't have to skimp. You
don't have to have ho-hum menus, either. You can
please the family and the budget at the same time .

••

LB.

Another thing. We serve up quality foods
right along with value. That means you get the best.
Hard to believe? Come in. See for yourself. Then,
when you plan the family meals and check the family budget ... well, you'll feel a little bit smug, too.

A NQUET

T.V.
INN ERS

EACH

4 VARIETIES

KOBEY
SHOESTRING
• PO TA TOES

CHARM IN
NAPKINS

211
.• CAN

160 CT.

A

· CAN

c

FURNACE FILTERS

a--------....._-- ------. 25x.25x1
VAN CAMP'S

STOKELY'S

12x25x1

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

JPORK &amp; BEANS TOMATO

JUICE
c 46 oz.
CAN

QT.

'

16x20x2
-

c

20x20x2

.

Aluminum
95
Dinner
Pails WITH THERMos ·

�8-The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, January 3, 1971

r---------------------------1

Fourth Restaurant Opened
COLUMBUS - A new Bob
Evans Farms Restaurant
serving hearty farm meals
opened December 15 at the
corner of Hamilton Road and
Groves Road, just south of the
East Freeway (I-7C).
This is the fourth Bob Evans
Farms Restaurant. The others
are located at Route 161 just
west of the North Freeway in
Columbus, and in Chillicothe
and Rio Grande, Ohio.
Bob Evans Farms is a
country-born and country-run
company
dedicated
to
preserving the traditions of
quality
and
wholesome
freshness so long associated
'with rural American food.
The Bob Evans Homestead
Farm at Rio Grande stands
today as a symbol of the
company's humble beginnings
and as practical example of the
country way of living and doing.
In these days of giant in-

Rt. 1 Letart; Maxine L. Fields,
Hartford; Randall Stover,
Ashton.
William H. Lambert, Ashton;
Earl Deal, Point Pleasant;
George W. Burdette, Rt. 2,
Point Pleasant; Uoyd Cline,
Neal Road, Point Pleasant;
Hazel A. Bissell, Rt. 1, Point
Pleasant; Charles Pickens, Rt.
3, Leon; Donald Foglesong,
Mason; Shirley A. Sullivan,
West Columbia.

CHEESEBURGER
· Pickle or Onion

I

~

Caucuses
Planned

Court Terms on Monday

HAMBURGER
Pickle or Onion

I

find a variety of sausage sandwiches, platters, and dinners,
plus breakfast items which are
served all day long.
Other special ties include,
country ham, fried mush, ham
hock bean soup, Bob Evans'
own hot biscuits with honey, and
blackberry shortcake.
According to Bob Evans the
country hospitality in his
restaurants matches the
country cooking. " Drop in and
sit a spell." he says, "We'll see
to it you feel right at home."

dustrial firms and multi-billion
dollar food processors, this one
small company is proving you
can compete successfully for
the consumer's loyalty if you
make a quality product and sell
it honestly.
Hewing to this honest country
philosophy has resulted in
surprising growth of the Bob
Evans Farms sausage business.
From virtually a one-man
operation in southern Ohio, the
company has grown to include
three farm plants and 40
delivery trucks covering Ohio,
Michigan, Northern Indiana,
Chicago and parts of Pennsylvania, West Virginia and
Kentucky.
Recently, the company took
the experience gained in
operating a Sausage Shop at Rio
Grande since 1961 and opened
new restaurants in Chillicothe
and Columbus. Visitors to the
•Bob Evans Farms Restaurants

PT. PLEASANT The
January term of Mason County
Circuit Court opens Monday
with grand jurors advised to
report to Judge James Lee
Thompson at 9:30a.m.
·Grand jurors previously
appointed to serve include the
following:
Nellie R. Akers, Southside;
Bonnie Nutter, Tina 0. Casto,
Henderson; Mr. Gail Jones, Rt.
1 Leon; Floyd E. Rayburn, Rt.
2, Point Pleasant; Rufus H. Hill,

!Helen Help Us! .

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
109th Ohio General Assembly
convenes Monday, but the day
will be devoted to oath taking,
electing leaders, adopting rules,
appointing committees and introducing some of the bills
promised in the last campaign.
Both parties will have to caucus to name someone to fill
vacant seats.
Senate Democrats will have
to have a replacement for William Nye of Akron, newly
named natural resources director.
Senate Republicans will have
to have a replacement to fill
the seat vacated by Walter
Powell who resigned when he
was elected to the U.S. House
of Representatives.
However, activity in the legislature will be short lived. Leg-

KENNETH PROBASCO (LEFT), EXECUTIVE vice president and general manager of
Landmark, Inc., joins Bob Evans in ceremonies opening the new Bob Evans Farms Restaurant
at the corner of Hamilton and Groves Roads, Columbus, Ohio. Land for the new restaurant was
purchased from Landmark and adjoins the Landmark grain storage and warehousing
facilities.

islative leaders plan to recess
floor action in mid-January to
give John Gilligan a chance to
put together his legislative
package.
During the recess, the 15member Campus Unrest Committee will be visiting state colleges and universities again.
Major issues facing this session include the 1971-72 budget,
tax reform, redistricting, wel-

Still Digging
fare, education, environments,
TOENDER, Denmark ( UPI)
insurance, public employes,
transportationandgarnishment. - Archaeological finds are still
being made at a 12-year-old
digging site, ll""OVPring a
Scored First Point
Germanic township dating from
The first point in basket- 400 to 500 A.D.
ball history was scored by
Over the last 12 years, diggers
William R. Chase in Decem- have found 50 to 60 long houses,
ber, 1891, from mid-court to 150 cinder mines for extracting
win the game for his team
by a score of 1-0, according iron, about 25 mine houses
to Encyclopaedia Britannica. which served as workers' huts,
and 32 wooden wells.

I

By Helen Bottel

THE GHOST BETWEEN
Dear Helen:
I went with this guy three
years. I'll soon be 18 and he 21.
We were always trying to find a
way we could get married, but
my parents wouldn't sign. So we
finally took the last chance and
I got pregnant.
Donerful - I thought! But it
didn't turn out that way. Too
many pressures, I guess. So we
didn 't get married. I went
away, had a beautiful little girl
and gave her up, because 1
couldn't possibly provide for
her. I'm sorry now, but there's
no way to get her back.
After I came home, the father
said he still loves me and wants
us to get married. He wasn't
ready for responsibility then. Is
he now? I feel something for
him, but I'm not sure if it's love
or because I had his baby. _
HELP
Dear Help:
I think there are too many
bad memories for this
marriage (if it actually happens) to ever be successful. I'm
sure you agree, or you wouldn't
have asked me. -H.
Dear Helen:
Many kids who don't go in for
sports think coaches are cruel.
There's even a book out now
that makes football coaches out
to be pretty inhuman.l'd like to
give you the other side of the
picture.
WHAT IS A COACH?
During high school and
college, there are men in the
physical education department
known as coaches. These men

combine all their knowledge
and skill with other men, to turn
a bunch of awkward kids into a
good team.
A coach is the man who, in the
beginning of the season, works
you and never lets you have a
rest. When he says something (~
he means it, and if it is not
carried out, he yells for hours.
He is the slavedriver tc "''&gt;me,
the "old man" to others. Yet
after the season is over, he is
the nicest guy in school.
He can also be the best friend
you ever had. He is the allknowing one, the one who takes
you from depression to success . •
Yet deep down inside, he is
the softest, most compassionate
man you'll ever meet. He cares
for each player and knows what
to do or say when you've got
troubles. He's always there,
ready to listen.
I know!-MEMBER OF THE
FOOTBALL TEAM
Dear Helen :
...
A reader asked how the "G" _...
string got its name. Here's what
I read recently:
An early stripteaser named
Carrie Finell whose gimmick
was to gyrate her torso and
cause a tassle to revolve in time
to music, once dropped her
scanty wardrobe on the
dressing room table. Because it
formed the letter "G", she •
called it "G-string" and it's
been that ever since.
HELPFUL READER
Dear Reader:
Thanks friend. My readers
always come through!-H.

That Delicious Grilled

40r

45c

STEAK

45c

fiOc

6~c

TASTY DELUX
FISH SANDWICH

BEEF - BAR - B - 0

HOT DOGS
Fit for a King
With Meat Sauce

SANDWICH
DeLux
DeLux
Lettuce, Tomato, Pickle Lettuce, Tomato, Pickle Lettuce, Tomato, Pickle

45c

35r

With Tortar Sauce
WHOPPER FISH
SANDWICH

CHICKEN BAR - 0

40r

50c
SEA

GR ILL ED
HAM and CHEESE

DOG

Two Fish Sticks
On A Hot Dog Bun
With Tartar Sauce

-.

•
·
•

+
•

•

•
•

LITTLE DUTCHBURGER ...

Our Popular

ChoiCe of Garnish

A Honey OF A SANDWICH!
On a Doub le-Decker Bun Consisting
OF 1(4 tb. FRESH GROUND BEEF
With Shredded Lettuce, Dutch Boy Sauce,
Melted Cheese, Pickle and Tomato and aTouch of Onion

GOLDEN BROWN
FRENCH FRIED ONIONS RINGS
GOLDEN BROWN
FRENCH FRIED POTATOES ........ ........ .

35 C

t:J/oi

Fresh Coffee 10c
• Hot Tea 15c

,n~ c-J~~,eaid,

Coca Cola .. .... . .. .... ...... .
Sprite ............ ............ .. .... ...
Root Beer . . ......................
Orange .. .... ... .......... ........ .

15,
15,
15,
15,

B~Hot
Chocola .... 1Sc

•

25
25
25
25

We sell Cole Slaw, Baked Beans, Potato Salad, Macaroni Salad,
by the Pint, Quart, 1h GaMons, or any amount you need

Rea 1G00d 5 pagh e tt•I - Meat Sauce - 90c
Parmesan Cheese, Choice of Crocker, Rye or White Bread
Chef's Combination Salad Bowl
With Juliene Ham and Cheese, Hot Rolls or Crackers
We Sell

C

Sa•nka 1Sc

nr

A(.·ll 61/ _ 1 .
UJI. c&gt;~

Lemonade ........ ... ........ 115
&amp; 30
5 &amp;
30
Ice Tea ..
Reg.ular R:ot Bee~ :toot
~~
Wh1te or utterm1 - .. .. · .... ....
Chocolate Milk ............. ......... 15
SLUSHY - FREEZES 15 &amp; 30

1

25

DUTCH 8 0 Y

75c

50c

Just right for the kids .. .. ........... .........35c

.,,.

i

BOB EVANS FARM

75c

60c

HAM

SAUSAGE SANDWICH

Regu lar-59c
Sauces : Horse Radish,
Bar-B-Que, Mustard

•

•

BAKED

50c

BOB'S BIG TIME
ROAST BEEF
SANDWICH

•
•

45c

50c

CHEESE

HAM &amp; SWISS
CHEESE ON RYE
Lettuce, Tomato, Pickle

•

Foot Long

With Sweet Pickle,
Lettuce and Tomato

GRILLED HAM
Sweet Pickle

30c

•

30c

HOT or COLD

55c

30c
GRILLED

Regular

Thick Milk Shakes .. .. .......... .. .. 35c
Thick Malts ...... .... .................... 40c
Strawberry Fruit - Cherry Fruit
Pineapple Fruit
Vanilla - Chocolate
- Orange
Raspberry
- Butterscot
ch - Banana
SUNDAES ........ ..... ........... ..... JSc

Newf

DUTCH G I R L

. A Very Tasty Sandwich With
lf.. lb. OF OUR FRESH GROUND BEEF
On a Sesame Seed Bun Garn shed With
Our Special Sacue, Shredded Lettuce,
Tomato, Onion and Pickle

/J)11e4/,

~~

65C

gal.t:.uJtJ.

Real, Honest to Goodness

HOME MADE

c HI LI
S0 Up

Chdi

By

1 20

the

Qu-:1rt~~olf
k

~~~lo~e;-a~d?to~l~:~~us;oT~~r~~:ome

~~ths~~;c~~rs

40c

Loaded W1th High Quahty Fresh Ground BEEF
Home Made Vegetable
(Seasonal)
30
Cream of Chicken or Tomato . .
. . 30
Home Made Bean
(Seasonall. .
30
~e4U/liJ.

Crea my C0 Ie Sf aw .. .. .. .. .. ...... .. . 30 Fresh Potato Salad .. ............ . 30
Tossed Green Salad .......... ....... .30 Cottage Cheese ... ............. 25
Chilt.d Apple Sauce .......... ...... 25
Choice of Dressings
French, 1000 Island, Mayonnaise, Italian
Roquefort Cheese 15c Extra ·

FRESH BAKED CREAM PIE
Flavors of the Day.
CHERRY, BERRY, PECAN .
PEACH - APPLE- Every Day .
FRESH STRAWBERRY PIE
WE do mean Fresh
BOB EVANS HEAVENLY CHEESE CAKE .
PIE ALA-MODE

30
35
30
45
. 35
Add 15

W E ARE DELIGHTED TO WARM YOUR BABY'S BOTILE FREE OF

We bake our Pies Fresh Each Morning. If you have any occasion for
whole Pies just give us your order and we wd l bake them for you.

••

+
+
•

•
•
•

··"A
•
•
•

•
• •
•

i
••
i1
BOB EVANS DRIV -1
:
,...........................................................................
Grape--Orange-Lime

•

All flavors as Milk Shakes
Bonal'\a Split ·.... ...................... 50

HOT FUDGE ........... .......... ......... 30

DAIRY CREME CONEs-1G-1S--20

EASTERN AVENUE

CHARGE. THANK YOUI

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO :

�~--~·A~~~·~n~=~h~--l ~;~~~~::~:~.:::Proud Sioux ~-IJIKE HOME SAVINGS
.. .
~.Eoo~nlliy f~.t.eB~·l .lelybt'nRock~~.~~- ~~H. Need H e Ip ~~,~~~~~~~~~J~~~~-=·~==5~~~~~~~~~~
I
1

I •

'th th

COOLVILLE Funeral
Servl·ces for Mrs. Evelyn Day,
47, Coolville Route 2, who died
Thursday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital were held at
1 p.m. Saturday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev .
Bill Perrin officiating.
Surviving are her mother,
Mrs. Icy Hoover, 515 East North
St., McArthur; her step-father,
Harold Hoover, McArthur; two
sisters, Mrs. Beatrice Young,
Ashland, and Mrs. Berdena
Morgan, McArthur, and several
nieces and nephews. Her
husband, Albert, died last
March.
Mrs. Day was a member of
the New Plymouth Methodist
Church. Burial was in the

R

Ok

W. MacKmght; two daughters,
Cart of- Miss Addie MacKnight, Hun-

una
wtF.
. mg.Cerne
tery.
Stcta
prmgs
neendsmay
call at the funeral home
anytime.

Fred Harper
POMEROY- Fred Harper,
77, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, died Friday
afternoon in Veterans Hospital
at Chillicothe. Mr. Harper was a
member of Drew Webster Post
No. 39 of the American Legion.
He is survived by a son, Fred,

Jr., Chillicothe; two daughters,
Audrey Powell, Cuyahoga
Falls, Ohio, and Margaret
Spencer, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, one
sister, Mrs . Lydia Hope,
•
Athens, nine grandchildren, and
nine great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
Cherry Ridge Cemetery.
Monday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home. Burial will be in
Keebaugh
Cemetery at Sumner.
Nellie Eblin
Friends may call at the Funeral
POMEROY - Nellie Eblin, Home anytime.
Pomeroy, received word of the
death of her brother, Henry T.
W. McKnight Sr.
Williams, 76, at Veterans
Hospital in Chillicothe Friday.
HARTFORD, W. Va.
Mr. Williams was preceded in William MacKnight, Sr., 86,
death by his wife, Eva; his Hartford, died early Saturday
parents, and six brothers and at
his
residence.
Mr.
three sisters.
MacKnight was a retired coal
He is survived by a brother, miner and janitor of Hartford
Luther Williams, Chester, W. Elementary School. He was a
Va.; two sisters, Elizabeth member of Hartford United
Brock, canton, and Mrs. Eblin, Methodist Church.
Pomeroy, and several nieces
He was born here May 16,
..._ and nephews.
1884, the son of the late William
•
Services will be Monday at 3 and Elizabeth Holt MacKnight.
p .m. at Ewing Funeral Home He was also preceded in death

•

I WILL BE ABSENT FROM MY OFFICE
FROM JANUARY 10, 1971 TO
FEBRUARY 25, 1971.
A nurse will be present in the office until
January 16, 1971. The office will be closed
thereafter until my return.

J. J. DAVIS, M.D.
306 N. Second Ave.

Middleport, 0.

Ill): '· 1

· -

'th , HarM
tf or dK; a· son,
(Ne11.te) Smt
Ad
ht
Geor?e
am
ac mg '
Huntmgton; seven grandchildren, and 11 greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be
PINE RIDGE, S.D. (UPI)Monday at 1:30 p.m. at the
"The
Indians are a proud
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. Bernice Winkler of- people," Virgil Kills Straight
ficiating. Burial will be in said Saturday, "but when
Graham Cemetery. Friends things are going bad you have
may call at the funeral home to have help."
Things have been going bad
today from 2-4 and 7-9.
for the Oglala Sioux at the Pine
Ridge Indian reservation on the
bleak plains of southwestern
Audrey A. Watson South Dakota.
A drought and unemployment
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Audrey have compounded the miseries
Adele Watson, 35, Rt. 1, Nor- of the reservation's 13,000
thup, died at 7:35p.m. Friday at inhabitants, Kills Straight, the
University
Hospital
in Oglala Sioux tribal president,
Columbus. She had been a said.
patient there four days. She had
But help has been reaching
been ill two weeks following the the beleaguered Sioux-help
birth of her third child. She was from a 14-year-old Boy Scout in
an employe at the Gallipolis St. Louis, Mo., three ninth
State Institute before resigning grade girls in Westport, Conn.,
last July.
well-wishers in California. Even
Mrs. Watson was born on July President Nixon offered a
30, 1935, in Ohio Twp., daughter helping hand.
of Lawrence Mooney and
"It's needed and appreciatMartha Saul Mooney.
ed," Kills Straight said.
She married Bobby Watson on
Last summer a drought
Jan. 22, 1955. He survives, as do parched outlying rural areas of
three children, Timothy Gerald the sprawling reservation southWatson, Kimberley Faye east of the Black Hills. Trucks
Watson, and Marchell Renea of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
Watson; a brother and two still haul water to several small
sisters, Clarence M. Mooney, communities .
Lower River Rd.; Mrs. Robert
Lack of jobs makes poverty
(Anna) Ross, Gallipolis, and acute for many. Kills Straight
Mrs. Lee (Luella) Holcomb of said some 2,200 adults are
Lower River Rd.
unemployed. In fact, only 1,500
She was a member of the Mt. persons on the reservation do
Zion Baptist Church at Swan have employment.
Creek. She was a member of the
This winter-as in winters
Gallipolis Order of Eastern past-several families band
Star.
together and live in one small
Funeral services will be held dwelling. Many of the homes
2 p.m . Monday at the Waugh- are wooden shacks with dirt
Halley-Wood Funeral Home
with Rev. Paul Jones and Jack Eastern Star Service will be
Rankin and Rev. Bruce Unroe held 7:30 p.m., Sunday at the
funeral home.
officiating.
Pallbearers will be Charles
Burial will be in Ohio Valley
Bailey, Bobby Bailey, Larry
Memory Gardens.
Friends may call the funeral Sheets, Marion Caldwell, Phil
home after 2 p.m., Sunday. An Sanders, and James Albright.

•

The Same Englander Mattresses
Used In Ramada Inns
All Over America!!
Now, thanks to our bargain-hunting buyer, you can get
Englander's Presidential and Executive mattresses at tremendous
savings.

•

These are the same type mattresses used by Ramada Inns all
over the country. Ramada Inns offers these mattresses to
76,000 people every night. They're built to withstand years of
use, yet they're luxuriously comfortable.

How Can We
Innerspring

Offer Englander's
C•

• Sturdy 312 coil innerspring
• Matching mattress foundation .
• Beautiful cover quilted both

Best

(jrlp~

Hotel Mattresses

WAS
Ul9.ttr
NOW

At Such

$12900

Low

• Firm innerspring coils cushioned in urethane foam.

Innerspring

Prices?

Complete ensemble

Maybe some big hotel chain decided not to go ahead with a
~new resort. Maybe the factory over- produced. Englander isn 't
talking, but they gave us a whale of a deal on their finest heavy
duty hotel mattresses and box s pnngs and we'rp passi ng the
savmqs on to yo u.

r

floors, one or two rooms, no
plumbing. Outdoor toilets are a
way of life.
So far, four shipments of
food, clothing and other goods
have reached Pine Ridge.
The first-15,000 pounds of
food, clothing and toys-arrived
from California about a month
before Christmas.
The second shipment-nine
tons of food and clothing-also
came from California . The
California Air National Guard
delivered it in three giant
Hercules transport planes. It
was the Pine Ridge Reservation's share of several tons of
goods, distributed between Indian reservations in the state.
Then came 42,000 pounds of
canned foods, cooking utensils
and clothing gathered from
donors in the St. Louis area.
Boy Scout Greg Markowski of
St. Louis sparked the drive.
When Greg ran into problems
arranging transportation, President Nixon stepped in and
offered government assistance
and praise for the boy's efforts.
More than one tim of used
clothing - spelling holiday
warmth for the Indian children
-was gathered in Westport,
Conn., by Kathy Grayson, 15,
Jane Crosby, 14, and Torsen
Bodecker, 14.
When the girls ran into
trouble . getting the clothes to
Pine Ridge, Sen.-elect Lowell P.
Weicker Jr., R-Conn., and
Americans for Children's Relief
stepped in. They talked Connecticut Air National Guard
officials to run a " mercy
mission" flight to Rapid City,
S.D., from where the goods
were trucked to Pine Ridge .

3 Wrecks
Probed by
City Police

a

•

..

Baker Furniture
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

./
Seethe
ENGLANDER Tension Ease;·
the firm mattress made comfortable.

PT. PLEASANT - Two
persons complained of injuries
received in one of three roadway mishaps investigated by
area law enforcement officers
in the last 72 hours .
Verna Parker , 36, and
Virginia Ruth Parker, 16,
complained of neck injuries and
were checked for these at
Pleasant Valley Hospital and
then released Point Pleasant
City Police disclosed.
They were passengers in a
car driven by Leon R. Parker,
35 403 24th Street, Point
Pl~asant, which was involved in
a collision at the intersection of
26th and Jackson at 5:15 p.m. ,
Thursday.
Police said it was during a
heavy wet snow storm and that
Parker had stopped in a line of
traffic when his vehicle was
struck from behind by another
driven by David Michael Biggs,
19, 2923 Meadowbrook Drive.
Property damages were
estimated at $500 and Biggs was
cited for failure to have his
vehicle under control.
Three cars were involved in a
freakish mishap at 1:20 p.m.,
Thursday near Krodel Park,
also during the storm which
resulted in $500 damages, but no
injuries.
Point Pleasant City Police
iden tified drivers as Gary
Hoight Peck, 18, Leon; Terry E.
Rollins , 16, Route 2, Leon and
Anna Lee Stevens, 32, Leon.
Police explained that Stevens
was coming south on State
Route 2 and 62 on the snowy, icy
road and skidded across the
road. Rollins was headed north
and he managed to stop without
hitting her car. Peck, who was
also traveling north, failed to
get his car under control,
striking the one being driven by
Rollins .
Peck was cited for failure to
have his vehicle under control
and damages were estimated to
be $500.
Property damages of $400
were estimated in a two-vehicle
collision investigated by Sheriff
Troy Huffman Thursday at 11
a.m. at the Burton Service
Station on U.S. Route 33 on the
outskirts of Mason.
Drivers were Betty R.
Wallace, 37, Pomeroy, 0. , and
Andres M. Burton, 59, Mason.
Burton told police he did not see
Wallace and pulled out in front
of her car. No injuries were
reported.

252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OH
ARMOUR."t..\ U.S. D. A. Choice Beef ~~..~:;·

CHUCK ROASTS
B~DE

ARMOUR*STAR - U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

JUMBO BOLOGNA

lb.

~-------------------,

SOUND Rl'~

BANANAS
At A Special

Low

Price

PAL

Peanut Butter
2-lb. 8-oz. Jar
N·I~BLETS
WHOLE KERNEL

CORN
12-oz. Vac Pak Can
THOROFARE
GRADE A-MED.

WHITE
EGGS
Dozen
TIDE
DET ERGENT
1

3-lb. 1-ox.
Pkg.

79c

IVORY LIQUID
DETERGENT
1-Pt. 6-oz.
Bot.

57C

SPAGHETII 8-ox.
Krall Tangy ltaHan DINNER Pkg. 35c
CHICKEN 7-oz.
Krall Noodles With DINNER Pkg. 45c
Krall MI~~+~RE Marshmallows ~~~%·27c
~~~~~R~ Instant Coffee
~~ :· $1.79
1-lb.
Premium Saltine Crackers Pkg. 41c
15-ox.
Pkg.
49c
Nabisco Oreo Cremes
10

1

0

BEECH-NUT
STRAINED

NU MAID

BABY FOOD

MARGARINE

4

Ceres was the first asteroid to be discovered. Discovered in 1801, it is still the
largest asteroid that has
ever been found.

By The
Piec.e '

CUTS

~~~%.

11c

SOFT

1-lb. Reusable49C
Bowl

GAIN
·DETERGENT
5-lb. 4-ox.
Pkg.

$1 • 39

KRAn
DRESSINGS
Low Cal French
Low Cal Italian
Thousand Island
1

8-ox. Bottles

41ceach
BLUE BONNET
DIET

·MARGARINE
4c Off Label
1-lb.
Pkg.

43c

I

�10-The SWlday Times- Sentinel, SWlday, January 3. 1971

Party for Students

Jo Ann Manuel to Wed
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Max Manuel, Jr., Racine, are
announcing the approaching marriage of their daughter, Jo
Ann, to Mr. Gary Keith Willford, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry
L. Willford, Racine.
Miss Manuel is a 1969 graduate of Southern High School
and a recent graduate of Nationwide Beauty Academy
Columbus. Her fiance graduated from Southern High School
in 1966 and just recently completed a tour of duty in the U.S.
Navy. The wedding will be an event of Jan. 9 at the Racine
Methodist Church.

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Albert Spencer
POMEROY- Miss Geneva Elaine Strickland, daughter
of Mrs. Paul E . Sharp, Jackson, was married on Saturday,
Nov.14, to Mr. Michael Albert Spencer, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Sidney A. Spencer, Pomeroy.
The Rev. Clifford B. Thomas solemnized the 2 p.m. vows in
the First Christian Church of Jackson. Miss Wanda Kay
Kinnison served as the maid of honor. Bridesmaids were
Miss Sedonia Ann Spencer of Pomeroy, sister of the groom,
and Mrs. Mary Ann Toth of Dayton, the bride's sister.
Mr. Donald Lee Spencer of Marietta served as best man
for his brother. Ushers were Mr. Nelson Mills and Mr. James
Hackett, both of Cohnnbus.
The bride is employed in the law offices of Larrimer and
Larrimer, Columbus. Mr. Spencer is a barber at the Central
Point Barber Shop, Columbus. Following a honeymoon, the
couple now reside at North Starr Road, Columbus.

Miss Carla Jean Will

Wedding Day is Set

------~l

Community
Corner By

charlene Hoeflich

l
\

FOMEROY- Happiness so often comes through Wlexpected
channels. Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Milhoan and family, describing
their 1970 Christmas a s the "happiest ever," attribute it all to a
yoWlg Filippino.
A complete stranger to the Milhoans, 22-year old Celso Garcia
of Manila, aU. S. Navyman on the U. S. S. Dupont docked at
Norfolk, arrived in Pomeroy by bus on the Tuesday before
Christmas. He was clean-cut, genial, intelligent, and entertaining.
Celso has been a pen pal of Peggy Milhoan, daughter of
Dwight and Betty Milhoan, although the two hadn't corresponded
for several months before his visit here. They started writing
through the urging of David Michael of Pomeroy, also in the U. S.
Navy, and at that time stationed with Celso in California.
Anyway, Celso telephoned the Milhoans from Norfolk when
his ship docked there, told them that he had no place to spend
Christmas and asked if he might come. He arrived on Tuesday
before Christmas.
Christmas Day the young Filipino saw his first snow and took
his first sleigh ride. Neighbors and friends brought in gifts, and
Celso as well as the Milhoans had a Christmas they'll long
remember. Celso, a Catholic, asked to attend Mass and the
Milhoans joined him for the midnight service.
Saturday the family took him to Parkersburg from where he
took a bus back to Norfolk.
ERNEST HAGGY, STATIONED with the U. S. Army at Fort
Sill, Okla., is home on a three week furlough to recuperate from
injuries suffered in an auto accident.
Ernie and Brenda Gilmore were married on Dec. 8 and just a
week after that he returned to Fort Sill. He was there three days
when he was involved in the accident. The driver of the vehicle
was killed and two other soldiers were injured . Tuesday he was
discharged from the hospital and flew into Columbus where he
was met by his wife.
'
He suffered a fractured ankle and shoulder, and other more
minor injuries, but is able now to get around fairly 'well on crutches.

.-

BEAUTIFUL GIF TS WERE presented to each of the children
at the Meigs CoWlty Home by a well-to-do former resident of
Middleport in the memory of the Rev. Howard Ruppelt, long-time
pastor of the Middleport First United Presbyterian Church. The
R ev. Mr. Ruppelt was always interested in the welfare and
happiness of the children there and through the years took them
hither and yon to swim, to church events, to parties.
The donor gave watches and radios to the teenagers at the
home, and educational toys and stuffed animals to the younger
ones.

POMEROY - Plans have
been completed for the wedding
of Miss Carla Jean Will,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
E. Will, Pomeroy, to Mr.
Charles Michael Werry, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Werry,
Pomeroy.
The wedding will be an event
of Jan. 16, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Grace Episcopal Church. The
Rev. Arthur Lund, pastor of St.
Paul's Lutheran Church, will
officiate. A half-hour of nuptial
music will be presented by Mrs.
Margaret Blaettnar, godmother
of the bride-elect, preceding the
ceremony.
Mrs. Linda Ann Gilkey,
Pomeroy, will serve as matron
of honor for her sister. The
bridesmaids will be Mrs. Ann
Tucker, Parkersburg; Mrs .
Sharon Jones, Morgantown;
Miss Martha Hall, Morgantown,
and Mrs. Carolyn Stokes,
Belpre. Miss Kathy Werry,
sister of the bridegroom, will
serve as a junior bridesmaid.

Miss Retta Brown of Belpre
will be the flower girl, and
Master Brian Spencer, the
ringbearer. Guests will be
registered by Miss Jennie Lou
Berry, Belpre.
Mr. Richard Werry of Hundred, W. Va. will be best man
for his brother. Ushers will be
Mr. William Young, Columbus;
Mr. Wes Gilkey, Mr. Robert
Werry, Mr. Richard Knight,
and Mr. James Werry,
Pomeroy.
A reception will be held immediately
following
the
ceremony in the Parish House.
Miss Will is a 1965 graduate of
Pomeroy High School, and a
1968 graduate of the St. Joseph
School of Nursing. She is employed in the Pediatrics
Department of St. Joseph
Hospital.
A graduate of Pomeroy High
School in 1962, Mr. Werry
served four years in the U. S.
Navy . He is employed at
Kroger's in Pomeroy.

Prayer Clinic Coming
MIDDLEPORT - A prayer
clinic will be held by Meigs
County Christian Churches Jan.
3-8 at the Bradbury Church of
Christ.
Services will be held at 7:30
each evening and the public is
invited to attend.
Speakers will include Sunday,
Jan. 3, John Webster with
Charles Russell as song leader
and music by Middleport choir;
Monday,
Charles
(Skip)
Domigan with music by the

Bradbury choir; Tuesday,
Charles Russell with Gene
Underwood as song leader and
music by the Pomeroy choir;
Wednesday, Ron Moyer with
Bill Carter as song leader and
music by the Zion choir;
Thursday, speaker, Bill Carter,
Don Moyer as song leader and
music by the Orange choir;
Friday, Hoyt Allen speaking
and music by the Rutland choir.
Young people will take
special roles in the clinic services .

DINNER GIVEN
POMEROY - Mrs. Lucy
Gaul entertained with a family
dinner Tuesday evening. Her
guests were Doris Spencer,
Maxene Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Caldwell, Jr., Howie,
Bobby and Martie, Barbara
Sargent, Steve Hoffman,
Barbara Barr, Mrs. Janet
Chafin, Reva, Tommy and
Scotty, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs. Nat
Carpenter, Julia Ann and
David, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Murphy and Pamela.

CHESTER - The Riggs
Royal Kad-ette Baton Corps
was entertained recently with a
Christmas party at the home of
their instructor, Mrs. Judy
Riggs.
Officers elected for the new
year were Jan Holter
president; Louann Newell, vice:
president; Debbie Windon
secretary; Mandie Rose'
treasurer; Rhonda Soval:
assistant secretary - treasurer;
Trudy Roach, sargeant-atArms; Barbara Douglas, news
reporter, and Kathy Follrod,
assistant news reporter.
The "Most Improved Twirler
of the Year" award was announced, and the lovely trophy
was presented by Mrs. Riggs to
Julia Carpenter, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Nat Carpenter of
Long Bottom.
Games were played with all
the prizes being twirling
material. Assisting with the
games was Miss Diana Guthrie.
Prizes were won' by Rayanna
Cole, Nancy Bailey, and Mandie
Rose. Door prizes were a hoop
baton to Becky Windon; a new
flag baton to Barbara Douglas,
and a new ABC baton to
Rachael Hunter.
A gift exchange was held, the
gifts being placed arOWld a
lighted tree. After the gifts were
opened, Miss Jan Holter
presented Mrs. Riggs with a
surprise package containing a
gift certificate on behalf of the
entire baton corps and twirling
team.
Assisting at the refreshment
table were Mrs. Daisy Patterson and Mrs. Twila

Strausbaugh. Refreshment~
were served to Kathy Follrod
Becky Windon, Susie Goebel;
Nancy Bailey' Cheryl Kuhn
Debbie Windon, Barbar~
Douglas, Joann Fick, Rachael
Hunter, Sonya Beaver, Betsy
Amsberry, Sonya Adams, Janet
Ambrose, Julia Carpenter
Kathy
Newell,
Kare~
Strausbaugh, Brenda Boyles,I J
Trudy Roach, Rhonda Soval
Karen Fick, Cindy Patterson'
S~nd~ Curtis, Sonia Carr, Cind~
Ritchie, Pam Kautz, Marcia
Carr, Mandie Rose, Louann
Newell, Jan Holter, Rayanna
Cole, and Teresia Carr.

Your New Ye ar's
Resolution Should
Be To Earn

4%%
Interest Per Year on
Passbook Savings. Compounded quarterly from date
of deposit to date of withdrawal, as long as you
maintain an open account.
No minimum or maximum
amount to qualify. Withdrawals can be made at any
time.

Meigs Co. Branch

@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
All Accounts lnsure':J
$20,000.00 by FSLI C.

To

The developing eggs of the
common lobster are carried
attached to the appendages
beneath its tail for 10 to 11
months.

Chapman's

•

POMEROY, 0.

TWICE YEARLY•• •

•

Birthday is Observed
POMEROY - The birthday
of Jackie Duffy was observed
Wednesday with a party at his
home in Syracuse. Games were
played with prizes going to
Diana Nease, Joanie Woods,
Vicki Roush, Kevin Dugan and
Andy Patterson.
Refreshments of ice cream,
cupcakes, and Kool-Aid were
served to those named and
Gregory Nease, Darin Roush,
John and Mike Roush, Bobby
Roush, Ricky and Angelia
Baker, Kim and Richard
Dugan, Beth Ann Huffman, Bub
Patterson,
Angelia
and
VISIT MRS. DODSON
CHESTER - Spending the
Christmas holiday with Mrs. B.
A. Dodson of Chester were her
son and family , Mr. and Mrs.
Erroll Conroy and son Hugh of
Akron. Sunday dinner guests
were Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wolfe,
Chester and Mr. and Mrs .
Edgar Reynolds of Middleport.

Stephanie Houchins, the
honored guest's brothers, Eddie
and David, Mrs. Jo Ellen
Roush, Mrs. Charlotte Nease,
Mrs. Icy Miller, Mrs. Norma
Baker, Mrs. Lillian Duffy, Mrs.
Shirley Dugan, and Mrs.
Jeannette Duffy.
Sending gifts were Joey
Miller, Robert, Jimmy and
Danny Roush, and Mr. and Mrs.
Forrest Neigler.
SON BORN JAN. 1
MIDDLEPORT - A son was
born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Custer, Jr., of Belle, W.Va., on
New Year's Day. Mrs. Custer is
the former Dianna Criswell of
Middleport. The six pound, 14
ounce infant was born at 2:45
a.m . at the Charleston
Memorial Hospital. Mr _ and
Mrs. James Criswell of
Fairlane Drive, Middleport,
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Custer, Sr., Belle, W. Va., are
the grandparents.

VISIT ENDED
MIDDLEPORT
Mrs.
Kathleen Braxton has returned
to Cincinnati after spending a
week here with her sister, Mrs.
Con Young. During her visit,
Mrs. William Smith entertained
with a tea in her honor. Sunday
guests of Mrs. Young were Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Jackson and
John Johnson, Rendville, and
Mrs. Mildred Dailey of
Columbus.

'

Starts Tomorrow, Jan. 4 at 9:00 a. m.

REG. 14.99

•

REG. 11.99

For A Better Job, Sooner Go To Business College.
Several c a r eer cour ses
available. All are approved
for vet erans.

rrr:;:::;:;:;:;::\:':::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;:;:;::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::::,::;:::;:::;::::;:;:::;:::::;:;:;:;:;~:;~:::;:::;:;::;::~

MEN'S DRESS &amp;
WORK SHOES

F or
free
information
bulletin, write, v isit, or call
446-4367.

Gallipolis
Business College

Reg. $15 9aa
~L::: : : : : : : : : : :~;:;:;:,;:;:;:= = '=' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ':'=': : : =: :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: :: : : m: : : : ;:;},l~

36 Locust Sf.
State Reg. No. 0032 B

PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE!

WITH THE NEW YEAR (what ever happened to 1970?) came
birthdays for Ken McCullough, his sixth, and Mrs . J. K. Smith,
her 86th ; trips to the Rose Bowl for Kathy Morgan, Nancy Harris,
Ray Karr, L. W. McComas , Edward McComas; a new job for
James Durham , son-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. William Folmer, and
a move from Cutler to Buffalo, N. Y., and a trip to Weston , Conn.
for Chuck Downie to visit Miss Donna Smith and her family . '

Service held Dec. 23
MIDDLEPORT - Funeral
services for Mrs. Hazel Morris
were conducted Dec. 23 a t the
Ra wlings-Coa ts F uneral Home.
The Rev. Raullin Moyer and
the Rev. Audrey Miller officiated a t the ser vices. Burial
was m the Middlepor t Hill
as
Ceme ter y.
Serving
pallbearers were legionnaires
of Middleport Post 128.
Coming from out of the county
we r e Mr . a nd Mrs . Clyde
Kessinger , Sr., and s on, David,
Cl)de Kessinger, J r. a nd sons,
Akron ; William Darst Harem
Ohio; Mr . and Mr s. Raymond
Thomas, Mrs. E thel Neighbors,
Mrs . Lena Reynolds, Columbus; Mrs . Nora Neighbors , Mrs .
John Ma rcello, Lancaster ; Mrs.
Mild re d
Ro d en h ave n
Chauncey; Mrs. Sha ula Roush:

Carr oll; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Williams and children, and Joe
Morris, Greenville.
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
BUCYRUS - Mr . and Mrs.
Larry Fetty, Bucyrus, formerly
of Pomeroy, announce the birth
of a son Saturday morning in
Community Hospital. Pater nal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Richard F etty , Sr., Langsville;
m a terna l grandparents, Mr .
and Mrs. Ernest Flanagan,
Vienna , W. Va.; paternal great.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
June Cr em eans , Rutland ;
pa ternal great-grandmother,
Mrs. Ella Fe tty, Lancaster, and
ma ternal great-grandmother ,
Mrs . Abe Lemey of Vienna . The
infant was the first baby of 1971
born in Bucyrus.

•

SAVE

SAVE

-

]'''''''''''''SfiECTED''"SALE"'GRO'U'PS~m~~~
I
I
r::
ON DISPLAY
~~
I' CHECK THE BARGAIN PRICES l .
'•li ., , , , , :,;: ;: ;: : ;: ;: ;: ;: ;: ;: : ;: : ;: ;: ;: :; : ;: ;: ;: ;: ;: ;: ;: ;: ;: : ;: ;: : :; :; :; :; :; :; : :; :; :; :; :; ,:; :; :; :;: :;,:; :; :; : ;: ;: ;: : : : : : :~ ;: ;: ;: ;: ;: ;: : ;: ;: i;: i: ;: ;~. ~

,j% 40%
TO

~

DRESSES
COATS
SWEATERS
JACKETS-SLACKS
SKIRTS-BLOUSES
ROBES &amp; DUSTERS

0

Shoes On Display For Quick Selection!

lola'S
DRESS SHOP ·~
&amp; BEAUTY SALON
;
Cor. Main &amp; Sycamore
Pomeroy, Ohio

f

SHOES

1

.)

Main St

..

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