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10 - The Dailv.Sentmel, Mlddlcpor t-Pomeroy, 0 .. Jan.l. 1974

Small family
'
COLUMBUS l UP! I -

f~rgotten

farm conservation im.'cn tives

·n~e

. White House impoundment of

bv Co ngress wt·rr impountif'd

funds l'or farm conservation
pract ices shows the Nixon Ad-

l&lt;;s t week SlJid Abt&gt;l'lTt, lllbit:· .
" Wc ' rt• gnin~ toUt:· (kprh:t•d
of
fund :-;
f1 ·r d1 ,ii nagt•

ministration •·continues to ne-

1Continued frorn

Administration ha s a ll'e:ldy
askt•cl fnr an inen·use of
produd ion this ;'tar in Oh io of

2.6 million acres .
' 'Now the Whill' fluust• is di:-;eoura}-!in t~

farme rs from using
Ll!t• nl'w Jcmd, must of which
con~cn· atJon
pr oj t'ct.s, .. wa::; pn·vi\JLL•:J y held as set
aside acres, " sa id AberAbrrcrombie sa id .
Abercrombie said the Nixon cromb ie.
"The iLnpoundment is very
typical of the big farmer , cor .purate-or ient ed att itud e of
Washi ngton during the past
coup le of years," he S;aid.

pr0J.:,ran1 s, sod waterway s,
bedding furrow ~ ancl ot her

glect the small famil y." st~1 t c

Agriculture Dirrctor 'Gene H..
· Abercrombie sa id Thursday

Over 40 per cen t of the $17&gt;
rn iiHon voted for this year S
1

. S~hools

More :relief

Most larmers probably will
nol be ab le to a!'ford necessary
conservation work for th eir
new acreagt•, sa id Aber crombie. He sa id tonservatiop
efforts wer e needed if farme~
are to T('ceive high yields and
ma ke
their
inc reased

production efforL' profitable.
Abercrombie said the im-

poundment of funds, along with
the lack of available new farm
machinery , the high cost of
fue ls a nd the scarci ty of nitroge n and other fertilizers , were
working aga inst farmers in the

page 1)

of shipments .
An ICC spo kesman in Pittsburgh said, howt•vt•r , Hill's
suggf'stim• ·w&lt;}.uld provide less

. DAMAGE HEAVY
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
46 natural disasters that struck
the nation in 1973 caused more
than $1.2 billion worth of
damage in 31 states, the
Federal Disaster Assistance

state as they try to meet lower
food costs and higher produc-

end report today , About 75,000

tion expectations of the conswning public this year.

s tri cke n families received
federal assistance.

Administration said in a year-

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battle a fire at a Columbus res- the cold side, averaging some
five to 10 degrees below norid ence.
Most of the rain was r.eporf- mal for early Jan¥ary. Readed in the FrankHn County ings today were expected to
reach the mid or upper 20s unarea.
der
partly cloudy skies.
"We had a' little bit yesterLows
tonight will be mostly
day !Thursday) afternoon but I
don't believe we have had any in the teens, along with clear
more," said Montgomery C:oun: skies and light winds:
For Saturday, the forecast is
ty Deputy Sheriff Ron Gabbard.
for increasing cloudiness and
"Everything is clear now .
"It's pretty fair now but you slightly moderating temperahave to drive wiUl cauti.Qn," tures, with afternoon highs in
said Steve Hell, dispatcher in the 30s .
The extended outlook for Sunthe Delaware County sheriff's
day
through Tuesday calls for
office. "We had a little bit of

a

a chance of snow or rain Sun-

the ice."

The National Weather Service day and Monday clearing Tuesd
said today should bring drier day.
High temperatw-es are exinters tates but said there were weather.
A high pressw-e area, accom- pected in the 30s or lower 40s
no serious injuries.
Sunday and Monday dropping
A frozen fire hydrant ham· panied by fair weather, was lopered firemen altemp.ting to ca ted over Missow-i today and to the 20s on Tuesday.
Lows are expected to be in
was sc heduled to reach Ohio
EDITOR DIES
tonight and continue eastward. the upper 20s and lower 30s falTUCSON, Ariz. (UP!)
Temperatures will continue on ling into the teens Tuesday.
Earl J . Johnson, the vice
president and editor of United
Press and United Press International for more than 30
Y'i"rs, died Thursday at his
home near here.
(Continued from page I)
announced here today will uphold Ohio election laws that have
barred state Sen. Donald Lukens, R-Middletown, from rurming
for statewide office for five years, the Dayton JoW'IUll Herald
reported. The newspaper, in a copyright story, said a thr.ee·judge
panel would hold that as long as state election ~w r~uirements
enforcement action.
are the same for all candidates, " ... diScrunmation between.
As for the Health Depart- candidates cannot be cl~imed."
'
ment's Environmental Health
Lukens was ordered ineligible to seek sta.tewide office for the
unit, she charged it is a "con- five·year period by Secretary of State Ted W. Brown after
stant source of irritation to the Lukens was !:Mays late in filing his personal campaign expens~
public, to other city officials after a successful bid for state Senate in 1972. Lul&lt;,eas today sa1d
and certainly to us.
the rejection of his appeal by the three-jUdge panel "killed a
" Problems drag on for political career." He had sai~ he would run for the U. S. Sena~
months only to be dropped by seat being vacated by Sen. William B. Saxbe, R-Oh1o, if today s
the complainant out of sheer decision was favorable .
frustration," she said.
CLEVELAND - REP. CHARLES A. \{AljiK, D-Ohio,
declaring that "money contaminates the pol !(cal process,"
vowed Thw-sday to accept no contributions in his campaign f~r
THREE FINED
an
11th term in Congress. "Candidates should use more of the!l'
Three defendants were fined
in Middleport Mayor John own energy and less of other people's money. Money conZerkle's cow-t Thw-sday night. taminates the political process," he said.
"Even small contributions can lay tbeir claims to rewards of
They were · Bw-well (Buddy)
McKinney, 56, Middleport, $10 indiscretion and favors dispensed to those who helped. If the
and costs for disturbing the events of the last year are to have any meaning at all, it should be
peace, and $10 and cost., in- that the American people will never again permit public office to
toxication and distw-bing the be bought" Vanik said his campaign would accept no conpeace; Herbert U. Dunn, :;o, tributions and spend no funds other than his own. "No signs - no
Vinton, $10 anc costs, failw-e to campaign cards- no advertising~ no purchase of time or space
have vehicle under "ontrol; in the media."
Roger Howard, 24, Guysville,
SAIGON - SOUTH VIETNAM AND THE Viet Cong broke a
$1&gt;0 and costs, three days
six-month
old deadlock over til!! release of military and civilian '
confinement, for driving while
personnel,
a South VIetnamese spokesman said today. But a Viet
intoxicated.
Cong spokesman was more cautious. ·
. .
South Vietnamese President Nguyen.Van Tlueu, m another
.
development, offered to halt all government military activities in
exchange for full compliance by Communist forces of the ceaseLIOlifS TO DINE
Howard Hoshar, Hebron, fire agreement of last Jan. 28. In Cambodia, seven persons w~e
district governor, wlll be killed and five injured when a government warplane returrung
speaker at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday from a bombing mission crashed Thw-sday night into a refugee
when the 25th anniversary of te camp '!/ miles southwest of Phnom Penh.
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
COLUMBUS-RALf'H BAKER, EXTENSION Poul_try
Club is observed with a dinner
at the Meigs Inn . En- economist at Ohio State University, said today egg prices which
tertainment will be by the Rio averaged higher in 1973 than in any recent years, are due to drop
Grande College Chorale and soon. Baker said tbe high 1973 prices resulted partly from higher
some local residents. Reser- feed costs but recently egg prices have betln profitable enough
vations are to be made no later so that the number of chicks hatched for flock replacement has,
than Satw-day with Wendell been increasing.
He said prices during January, February and March should
Hoover, president, or C. J.
average
about 10 cents a dozen lower than December prizes, and
Struble, secretary .
during the second quarter of the year they are likely to be seven
to 10 cents a dozen lower than the first quarter.

News. • • in Briefs

Moody unhappy and rightly .so
Drop in today.
Let u s spoil you.

pome.ay
&gt;ullond

POI!Ieroy
national
bank

policeman off the fprce.
. Mrs., Henniger ' called the
Health Department "pig headed" for failing to tw-n over repeat environmental code violagovernment. 'When he got her tors to the Housing Division for
answer he released it - but reluctantly.
She called the ci ty Health
Department "pig headed, "
said th e department's environmental Health section "is
the worst age ncy in ci ty
gove rnment and the one least
likely to change" and weeds
COLUMBUS I UP!) - Mayor
Tom Moody last year asked
Ombudsman Nod ine Henniger
for a report on the problems
she had encount ered in city

Benefits
up by .ll%

of

are ''a horrendous problem .' '

the ce ntury

Mrs. Henniger also said the
public is less than happy with
the police department.
"To say that some Colwnbusites are unhappy with the
police deparln)en t is making
the year's greatest understate-

bon~

the

('5\obll she d 1872

•
Member

FDIC
MAIN OFF I CE
Mon , Tue s . W ed. Thurs . 9a . m . 3p .m

F r iday 9 am to 7 p .m
Saturoay 9 a .m . to 12 Noon

ment,' ' she said.

Mrs. Henniger said two
~majo r

police
RUTLAND BR A NCH
Mon ., Tues.. Wed . , S&lt;J t , 9 a .m. 3 p .m .
Thursday 9 a .m to 12 Noon
F riday9 a .m . t o 7 p .m .

areas involving the

department

need

''substantia l exa mination .''

One of them is the method of
reg istering

a

co mplaint

aga inst the police and the other
is " job protecting procedures"

A hometown friend.

which make it "nearly impossible" to ge t a bad

BA~D at THE MEIGS
,. , .... . •.· ··-··• . . • .,. -· --· · • "• .•.,.·•· ., •.., ., •.•' •..• , .•..• •.,.,,. m
•·•'• •r•w·
,••••••••••, •·• li.,itl i1 I ·-· i iii ii i: •• 'I , ii J i,. ,,.
• i, , . ,a !f, -, . •, ,

NEW

. .... ... ...,.".'....•.••... •. . ..
,

Presenting .

in new hill

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UP!) - President Nixon has
signed into law an 11 per cent
increase in social security

benefits, which he said will
g ive

in creased

sec urity

to

fin ancial

millions

of

Americans.

Thirty million retired or
disabled workers, widows and
dependent children will receive
the increased benefits, the first
7 per cent in April and 4 per
centin July.
The higher benefits will be
paid for by workers who earn
more than $10,800 a year and
by their employers.
The income level at which
social security tax is collected
rises from $10,800 last year to
$13,200. Tbe tax rate ot 5.85 per
cent- paid by both worker and
their employers - remains the
same. That means workers
earning under $10,800 will pay
no more than they did last
year ; those earning more than

that pay $5.85 for every $100
above$10,800.

• •

·~]

PLEASANT VALLEY
HAD HIS DAY
DISCHARGES - Lucille
COLUMBUS (UPI)
·Moreland , Point Pleasant;
Richard Roach , II, Point Republican gubernatorial
Pleasant; Harry Simpkins, candidate Norman Mw-dock
Thursday
former
Point Plea~ant; Mrs. Ronald said
Miller, West Coliunbia; Robert governor James A, Rhodes
Nowlin, Southside, and Mrs. "has had his day" and it is time
for some new faces. Murdock
Oscar Click, Cottageville.
told the Cap City Young
Republican Club at Upper
Arlington that "half the parTAKEN TO HOSPITAL
ty
is captw-ed in fear" even
RACINE - The Racine E-R
though
some GOP leaders fear
squad was called Thw-sday at
6:45 p,m. to Ralph Brewer's Rhodes can't win but are afraid
home, Portland, for Billy to voice their opinion publicly.

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C-ROW'S
STEAK
HOUSE

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Home of
the Fabulous

NIGHT

Continued cold and high th)s
afternoon from mid 20s to low
30s . Low tonight mostly in the
teens. Saturday increasing
cloudiness and high in tte low
andmid30s.

1continued from page 1)
million, The BLS said most of the
increased jobless ness was
among white collar workers:
The unemployment rate in 'that
category jumped from 2. 7 to 3.2
per cent. A large part of these ·
were women, particularly in
the 18 to 24 age bracket
Government officials said one
possible indication of the
impact of the fuel shortage was
an increase in the number of
persons employed parttime as
opposed to fulltime jobs for

Exemption declined

economic reasons - " that is,

those persons who wanted
fulltime jobs, but were forced
to work shorter hours, due to
such factors as slack work,
material shortages, or the
inability to find fulltime work."
The number of parttime
workers increased by 160,000
last month to 2.6 million. These
did not include workers temporarily laid off since they
would be considered unem·
ployed dw-ing their layoffs.
The BLS report was based on
the Census Bureau's monthly
survey of litl,OOO American
households selected by random
sampling.
This data normally is
released simultaneously with
additional inlormatlon, called

Weather

Order By Phone
And .Take

e".;;

992·5432

Home

Fri.- Sat.-Sun.
Ja n. 4-S-6
NEPllUNE .FACTOR
" Ben Gi!zarro
Y~e tt e Mimeaux
Show Starts 7 p .m.

,....
•
MIDDLEPORT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE officers, 1r, are Alwil&lt;!a Werner, treasurer; Jim Rickman, president;

BOARD TO MEET
The Meigs County F~ir
Board will meet at the
secretary's office on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds at 7:30
Monday.

MIDDLEPORT - Jim Rickman was
elected president of the Middleport ·
Chamber 'of Commerce at its annual
organizationalmeetingFridaynightat the
Columl&gt;us and Southern Ohio Electric Co. ,
meeting rooms.
. Other. office~s elected were Don
Wilson, v1ce preSident; Alw1lda Werner,
treasurer, and Edna Wilson, secretary.
Rickman is owner and manager of the

v.f11e, Carpenter and Dyesville , Dec . 28, 3 beagle
hounds , 2 black and while
spotted males, 1 black and tan
female , identification on

collar is H: E . Hudson,
Charleston, W. Va. If seen.
call local 74'2 -6.471.

1·4·2tc

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Elberfelds In .Pomeroy

,.

PRICE 20 CENfS

Pomeroy-Middleport

M&amp;R Foodliner and Bargainland, Locust
and Pearl St., Mr. and Mrs. Wilson own
and manage the Western Auto Store, North
Second Ave., and Mrs. Werner asi!ists her
husband, John Werner, at their Werner
Radio Service business, North Second Ave.
George Ingles, outgoing president,
presided at the meeting and installed the
new officers. In other business the
treasurer reported on the recent Christ-

,.

GALLIPOLIS - Fire losses in the
·area served by the Gallipolis Volunteer
Fire Department totaled $98,125,000 dw-ing
1973 according to the department's annual
report released Satw-day by Fire Chief
James f&lt;, Northup.
Gallipolis' department serves an area
covering 96 square miles with real estate
valued at $260 million. The department
saved an estimated $5,677,50&gt; worth of
property in 1973.
'
The largest fire losses in the city limits
occurred Jan. 6, May 16, and Sept. 28.
On Jan. 6, damages were estimated at
$40,000 in a fire at the apartment building
of Glenn and Faye Thompson, 322 Third
Ave. A $7,000 fire occurred May 16 at the
Orville · Facemire residence, 12ll Portsmouth Rd. and on Sept. 28, fire caused
$5,725 at Radio Station WJEH.
The biggest fire loss in Gallipolis Twp.
occurred Aug. 31, a $5,500 blaze at the
Gypsy Wogan home, 400 Pike St.,
Kanauga. A $5,000 fire heavily damaged
the Jerry Dean Calley home Dec. 18
located on Rt 141 in Green Twp.
A $6,000 fire on property owned by
Miles Epling in Galllpolis was the largest
!&lt;ills in Addison Twp. There were no major
fires in Clay Twp.
The .fire department answered 36
alarms in the Clty of Gallipolis. There
WNDON ON ALERT
WNDON (UPI) - Troops and tanks
guarded Loqdon's Heathrow airport
Saturday for the first time since World
War n In what poliqe described as a show
of strength against possible Arab guerrilla
reprisals for the arrest of four young
persons from the United States as
suspected gun runners. Pollee sources said
.. the troop movement,was ordered after a
wlll'llin&amp; that Arab. guerrillas armed with
SOviet-made SAM ground-to-air rockets.
planned to shoot down an llifliner at
Heathrow or another European airport.

GALLIPOLI-S - According to an
annual report re leased Saturday by
Mun icipal Court Judge Robert S. Bctz
$174,529.81, an increase of $19,711.31 over
the 1972 total, was collected in fines during
the 1973 court sessions. There were 944
more cases than in 1972.
Judge ·Betz said the following
disburse ments were made : City of
Gallipolis, $94,341.32; Ohio Treasurer,
$4Q,977. 97; Galli a County Treasurer ,
$32:264.07; Gallla County Sheriff, $743.85;
Gallia County Law Library, $4,000; Ohio
Department of Natw-al Resow-ces, $2,190,
and State Liquor Department, $12.50.
The cow-l heard 4,030 cases in its
criminal division . Cases terminated were
Ohio Highway Patrol, 2,782; City Police,
756; Gallia County Sheriff, 442; Wildlife
Division, 38; Liquor Department, two;
PUCO, nine and Department of
Agriculture, one.

In the Municipal Cow-l's Small 'Claims
Division, $3,183.98 was collected from 61
cases filed. Disbursements were 'City of
mas promotion · which was termed a Gallipolis, $583.35; Gallia County Sheriff,
success.
$140.59; judgments paid, $2,368.99; cos t
The chamber's annual dues fee was deposits retw-ned, $88.05 and stenographer
increased from $20 to $25. Letters inviting fees, $3. The court's Civil Division handled
meml&gt;ership' will be mailed soon.
45 cases during the year Involving
$1,808.37, '

Teenage girl
hit by auto

$5lh million saved

Mens and Young · Mens·

.

Edna Wilson, secretary, and Don Wilson, vice-president. The
new officers were installed by outgoing president George
Ingels Friday eveping.

Rickman heads C of C

Lost
LOST BETWEEN Harrison -

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-~-

SUNDAY, JANUARY 6, 1974

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

'

Excelleflt savings, too, on womeos coats - dresses - coordinate sportswear. dresses. Big sale 'on girls dr:esses -girls '
coats · preteen sportswear.
.

"

3 SECTIONS

•

TRACWRMEN TO MEET
There will be a meeting of
the Southeastern Ohio TractorPullers Assn., at 8 p.m .
Tuesday at the fail' board office
on the Rock
Springs
Fairgrounds. All members and
prospective members are
asked to attend.

Save on mens slacks -mens and boys shirts . mens and boys
. .
·
jackets - bath towels. .

•

30 PAGES

based on reports of payroll
employment, how-s worked, and
earnings supplied by busi~ess
and industry,
However, the establislunent
survey data will not be released
until next week.
The BLS said it was unable to
determine from the household
survey whether the increase in
joblessness was caused by the
fuel shortage. Bu~ it said the
establishment survey data due
for release next week should
give more indications of any
such possible cause .

SALE PRICES

Fum iii;;.~

Business
of court
•
JUmps up

Special sale prices all over the store during the January
Clearance Sale.

SALE PRICES

Tlliln I 2, 000

ne;,oted To The Greater Middle Ohio Vallev

"establishment survey,"

FASHION JEANS
Sizes 29' to 38 waist. Solid colors .
plaids. A good selection .

Your In vited Gue.~t
R euclting More

tmts

VOL b NO. ' 49

· Open Saturday 9:30 to 9 PM

Includes our entire stock of Mens
Ties - Rea.dy Tied and Four·inhand Ties, Solid colors and pat~rns .
·

WW BIDDERS - Bids for the Gallia County Rural Water Association
projects were ope ned Friday at the association office. Apparent low bidders for the
project are (left to right ), s-ding, Ashley ~lderman and Bobby Alderman of AADA-RR Construction ,Compa4, and Delmas Philpot of Philpot Welding. Seated arc
Milton Roush, Farmer's Home Administration, Gerald Hendrick s, Sieco, Inc., and
Ishmael Gillespie, president of the water association.

+

'·

Sunday cloudy with rain
likely, beginning as snow north
portion in the morning. High
' Sunday in the 40s. Chance of
snow Monday north, rain
south. High temperatures
Monday in the 30s.

Open Tonight Til 9 O'Clock

MENS NECKTIES

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KANAUGA- A Morehead, Ky. firm, the 40 mile second phase p~dject to the plant here.
the Farme r 's Home Adm ana s tratwn
AA·DA-RR Construction, ··was apparent Gallia County Rw-al Water System. Bids
Of eight bids submitted on the new Ger~ ld Hendricks of S1eco Inc.; Ishmael'
low bidder on the general construction of were opened Friday afternoon at the watei" project, the AA-DA-RR firm of Ashley Gillespie, president of the Gallia County
Alderman and Bobby Alderrnan was'-- ..Rural Water Association, and employes of
$353,521.76.
the association.
Other bidders were Carter and Evans,
500 Will Be Added
Inc., Gallipolis, $432,098; Virginia Western
Phase 11 of the Gallia County Rw-al
Contrac ti ng , Parkersburg , W. Va . Water Association consists of 40 miles
COLUMBUS
( UP! )- De claring
$530,47&gt;;
Everett L. Harper and Son o( which extends from Mercerville to Eureka
"Many school superintendents inOhioans would r.ather suffer minor in· dicated to u,s that they might consider Parkersburg, W. Va. $661,284 ; L. R. and small sections of the Wood's Mill Rd.
convenience than being sw-rounded by changing the starting times or schools so Skelton and Company of Columbus, Ohio, and the Kerr-Harrisburg area.
states on daylight saving time, Gov. John that children will not be required to go to $508,930; Decker Construction Company,
In all, &gt;OO customers will be .added to
J. Gilligan said Friday he would not ask school in darkness, 'but they did not favor Colwnbus, $514,492; Bob Chaffin an&lt;t Son the main line. Included in that total will be
for a federa l exemption from · daylight keeping the entire sta te on standard Construction $518,560 and Hall Pipeline Clay Elementary School and the Hannan
saving time for Ohio.
Company of Danville, Ky. $431,26&gt;.
'Q'ace Elementa ry and Hannan Trace
time," the governor sa id.
The state, therefore, joined most of the
Philpot Welding Company of Kentu cky High School.
"If school districts feel they have a .
nation in advancing !rom eastern ~ standard problem because of the switch, I would was low bidder for division B of the
Gal lia's initial 114 mile rural water
time to dayligH~aving time at 2 a.m. recommend they consider starting school project. The bid was $114,060.
system began opera tioQ in November,
Sunday. All clocks trNbe. state had to be later in the day," Gilligan added. "I
The low bids must now be tabulated 1971. It was constructed on a $2,113,000
moved shead one hour at that time .
and
certified by the water association 's loan from the Farmer's Home Ad·
believe most Ohioans would prefer lhat
-. Gllligan said he discussed the matter method to the inconvenience of making engineering firm, Sieco Inc. of Columbus, ministration. The systefn now serves 1,400
with civic and school officials and found Ohio a standard time island surrounded by Ind.
customers incl4ding three school districts,
little support for an exemption for the states on daylight saving time. "
Attending the bid opening in add ition Kyger Creek, Nor th Ga llia and South·
state.
to the contractors were Milton Roush of
(Continued on page 2)

l9ble~s

. Visit every department - Shop every floor _;.: and at the ·warehouse on
Mechanic Street and take advantage of the mimy bargains during the
January Clearance Sale.
· '
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MEIGS THEATRE

SANDWICH
·POMEROY
•

Weather

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Elberfelds In Pomeroy

,

10 TIL 2

PH. 992-3629

~

WCALTEMPS
, The temperatw-e in downtown Pomeroy at II a.m. today
was 32 degrees with light, wet
snow falling .

SAT.

THE MEIGS INN.

SENATOR SWORN
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Howard Metzenbaum, a
Cleveland Democrat who lost a
Senate bid in 1970, was sworn in
today to fill the unexpired term
of Sen. William B. Saxbbe, ROhio. Saxbe is scheduled to be
sworn in as tl1e nation's new
Attorney General later in the
day.

'.

of 40-nlile rural water addition

Brewer, 25, a medical patient,

who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and admitted.

jI

$353~522 is · best bid otiPhase 2 ·

. ' ' ON THE AI~
WJEH-FM, 101.25 on the
dial, wlll broadcast the
Eastern Eagles at Southwestern H·iglanders'
basketball game beginning
at 7:45 p.m. Saturday with
Blll Gray at the mil&lt;~.

the

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closed by freezing
•
razn; report·minor mishaps

relief fur private haulers. '
By United Press International
Most of the nation's
F reeZing raih swept across
estimated 100,000 independent parts of so uth ce ntral Ohi o
truekcrs work on a 75-25 per- Thursday, causing
numer·
ernlagc basis with hauHng ous a uto accidents, mostly mifirms and assume all overhead nor in nature, and forced the
from their 75 per cent cut, he early closing of some schools.
explained. ·
Fi re emergency squads took
" Hill 's suggestitm seems to eight people to Columbus area
mean that the sw-charge will hospitals ·in one five hour pealso be split 7$-25, thereby riod for injurles received in
deny ing the driver full reim· falls on icy sidewalks.
bursement for his costs," the
At least three schQOls were
spokesman said .
closed in the Columbus area an
"The fCC ruling was aimed hour to an hour and a hall beat reimbursing the payee for cause of icy road conditions.
specific cost
increases,
The Ohio State Highway Pa·
whether it be the company or trol reported numerous minor
the driver.' )
accidents ori state highways and

-

POMEROY - Martie Krawsczyn, 14,
of Middleport, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad at 11 :09 p.m . Friday
were low- smoke scares,' II emergency
where she was treated for injw-ies suffered
calls, low- alarms due. to mallunctions in
when she was-struck by a car on Main St.
alarm systems, two false alarms, and low- Pomeroy, Police said Miss Krawsczyn
alarms made through honest mistakes:
Twenty alarms were made in walked into the path of a westbound car
Gallipolis Twp. where property losses driven b)' Janice Couch, 21, Pomeroy. No
charge was !iled against the driver.
totaled $10,410.
The Pomeroy Squad was called for
Sixteen alarms were answered in
HerbertMiUer, Route 124, at 9:32 Saturday
Green Twp. where fire loss totaled $6,77&gt;; morning. He was taken to the Holzer
!ow-teen were sounded in Addison Twp. '
(Continued on page 2)
wbere losses totaled $14,475 and .Ltsalls
were received from Clay Twp. where fire
loss was set at $2,485.
In addition, the department made two
assists to the Vinton Fire Department and
one to the Point Ple~sant and Middleport

...

Committee
to organize

FURNACE BLAMED
GALLIPOLIS - An overheated furnace was blamed for a fire Friday night at
the residence of Dr. and Mrs. R. D.
Thomas on Halliday Heights. Gallipolis
POMEROY - The Meigs County
volunteer firemen made a silent run to the Commissioners acted Sa turday to
home and used two exhaust fans to remove establish a program for the observance of
the excess smoke. There was no major the 200th anniversary of the United States.
damage.
A public meeting is being ca lled by the
commissioners for 1:30 p.m. on Tuesday,
Jan. I&gt;, at the Rock Springs Grange Hall
on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds. At that
CLASSES TO RESUME
GALLIPOLIS - It was announced time action will be started to form a
Satw-day that all classes in the Gallla committee to determine Meigs' role in the
County and Gallipolis City Schools will be observance of the bicentennial.
A representative of the Ohio Bicenresumed Monday on Eastern Daylight
· Savings time.
tennial Commission is expected to attend
the Jan. 15 meeting to indica te directions
county and state groups are moving, The
meeting ls scheduled for adjournment at 3
p.m.
The com missioners a r e inviting

residents to participate in the new
organization which is designed to encourage Meigs Countians to renew their
intere~t ip the principles on which the
counlry was ·founded, to provide some
measw-e of participation during the next
thtee years in the observance or the
bicentennial, and to develop permanent as
well as temporary ideas, events and
structures in commemoration of this

Departm~nts.

In conciusion, Chief Northup stated
that due to the fine fire prevention
measures by Gallipolis area residents,
there has been only a 20 percept increase
in fires in the community during the past
eight years despite a tremendous
population growth.

event.

DST knocks program

FILM WINS MEDAL
GALLIPOLiS - Bob Evans Farm
Sallll(lges was awarded a bronze medal in
the 16th International Film &amp; TV Festiv~l
of New York in completion with more.than
2,000 entries. The same film was also
honored by tbe U. S. Television Commercials Festival. It was a 61)-second
commercial produced by Byer &amp;Bowman
Advertising Agency.

off air temporarily
GALLIPOLIS- "Echoes of Joy," the
oldest religious program aired on a
regular daily schedule over WJEH will be
temporarily off the air due to Ute change in
daylight savings · time. The program, ·
which has been heard each week day at
7:45a.m. for the past 20 years will resume
.its regular time spot just as soon as WJEH
can resume its AM broadcasting at an
early h®r.
The program is sponsored and conduc!M by the First Baptist Church of
Galllpolis. Meanwhile, the 10:30 Sunday
morning ' worship service of the First
Baptist Church will continue 10· be'
broadcast and may. be heard over WJEH.

MARCH OF DIME CANISTERS such as tbese displayed here by'Kim Adams
B;eth Gloeckner, and Todd Adams, children of Mrs. Carol Jean Adams, campaigr;
director fo~ th~ National Foundation-March of Dimes fund drive in Meigs County,
and Mrs. Vildn Gloecker, her assistant, will be placed this week on store counters
of business houses around the county. Change dropped into the coin colleetors will
he used in the fight against birth defects.
•

W. VERNON DEWEESE
SILVER ANNIV~ARY - W.
Vernon Deweese, advertising manager
for the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, wlll
observe his 25th all}llversary with the
local paper TUesday. Deweese joined
the Tribune's display advertising stall
on Jan. 8, 1949, He has. served the paper
under 'lhree different publisbers,
Harold.Wetherholt, J. Albert Dear; and
Richard S. Owen. Deweese's first ·
contact with the paper was on Satur·
day, Jon. 5, 1949, wbeo be was · " shown

the ropes" by Jim Danner, tben ad·
vertlslng manager and now advertising ·
direct~r of the Oblo VaUey Publishing
Company. Danner has served the local
papers for 43 years.

BOMBS BLOW UP
STRONG SuPPORT - Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, righ t, of Apple Grove, mother of •
ANY QUESTIONS!
LONDON
(UP! ) - Bombs believed •
Southern High School head basketball coach Carl Wolfe, and Jane Hill, of Florida,
POMEROY - A representative from
planted by the Irish Republican Army · Congressman Clarence E. Miller's office
sister of Coach Wolfe, gave support to the home team Frfday night in their 67-54
exploded in Madam Tussaud's waxworks will conduct an open door session from.9-11
defeat of Symmes Valley. The mother and sister of Coach Wolfe follow his teams
and at the Earls Cow-t International Boat a.m. at the Common Pleas Courtroom
easier this season. Wolfe se t and' still holds many scoring recordS at old Racine
Show
in London Saturday, forcing here. Everyone with questions concerning
High School before district consolidation , then set more reeo~ds at Marietta
evacuation of thousands of visitors. There the Federal Government are invited to
College, Now, after 10 years coaching first at Middleport, then at Meigs Local High
were no injuries.
School, Wolfe '"is home" again with the Sopthern Tornados in Racine.
stop by.to discuss them~ .,

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2- The Sunday Tunes· Sentmel,Sunday, Jan, 6, 1974

Metzenbaum
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - 1 The
executive eomm•ttee of the
Ohw Democrallc part) Saturday vpted U.S Sen . Howard M
Metzenbawn of Cleveland an
overwhelming endorsement m
his btd for the DemocratiC
Senate nominatwn next May
Metzenbaum defeated former astronaut John H Glenn
Jr ., 51-27, m secret ballot111g by
the comrmttee. Glenn already
has declared h1s candidacy and
said the outcome wol,lld not
eliminate him from the race.
The comm•ttee, m a 2\:! hour
meeting, aiso endorsed state
Rep. Rtchard F _ Celeste, DCieveland, for the party's heutenant governor nommatwn.
Celeste won handily over
seven other candidates, ~nclud-

is·fa,y9red h~avily

· ing Senate Mmor&lt;ty Leader
Anthony 0 Calabl'ese, D·
Cleveland, the party's nominee
m !970.
The selectwn of Celeste was
Vlewcd as a v1ctory for Gov.
John J Gtlbgan, who has
sought an attractive running
mate for his own campa1gn for
re-electton
Calabrese said he fell the
governor 's office engineered
Celeste's win, and sa1d he IS in
the a race for lieutenant
governor anyway.
The executive committee
issued rouhne endorsements of
the governor and other Democrallc incumbent state office
holders - Attorney General
Wilham J. Brown and state
Treasurer Gertr&amp;de W. Donahey
Deputy Audttor Thomas E.

Television Log

'

SUNDAY, JAN

6,

1974

6 00 - Tra ve logu e d
6 30 - Th1 s Week 4 Newsmak.er '7 3 13, I' m Gonna S1ng 10
7 00 - T1me for T1nlothv J , Jerry Falwell 13, Communtque 6.
"
How Many Ltfeftmes"' 10.
7 30 - Fatth for Today 8 , Rev1val Ftres 6. Herald of Truth 3,
You r s for the Asktng 4 Camera Three 10
8 00 - Gospel Caravan 6 , Church Serv tce 13. Billy James
Harg1s &amp; H1s All Amen can Ktd s 10 . Mormon Choir 3, Day of
Dt scover y 4. Rev Leonard Repa ss B
8 30 - Ora l Robert s 3. Your Hea lth 4, Kathryn Kuhlman 6 , Day
of Discov ery B. Get Together 10 . Rex Humbard 13. Rev tval
F tres 15
8 55 - Black Cameo 4
9 00 - Singmg Jubi lee 3. Cadle Chapel4 Ora l Robert s 10 Rex
Hurnbard 6, 15 , Hatr Bea r Bunch 8
9 30 - Churc h by Side of Road 4; Chn st ts the An swer 13 ,
Amazing Chan 8, Church Serv1ce 10.
10 00 - Church Servtces 4 Thts IS the Ltle 3, Fatth for Today 15 .
Ktd Power 6. 13. Thtnk tng tn the Black
M 9..,v ie " The Last
Safari " 10
10 30 - Vision On 6 ; lnstght 4; Osmonds 13 ; Captam Noah 3 , Th1s
I S The Ltfe 15 ; Viewpoint
11 00 - Po tnt of Vtew 6 ; TV Chapel 3; Focus on Columbus 4,
Across the Fence 15 ; H R Pufnstuf 13 , Talking Hands8
11 30 - Th ts ts The Answer 3; Make Wtsh 6, 13, ln stght 15 , Face
the Nation B.
12 00 - At Issue 3; Bowl1ng 6, Rev Calvm Evans 13 , Sacred
Heart 15 ; Col umbus Town Meel tng 10; Fred Taylor 4;J Rex
Humbard 8.

a,

a

12 I5

~

Open B1ble I5

12 30 - fv\eet T he Press 3, 4, 15 . Rev tval Ftres 13
1 00 - Lower Light house 13 ; Amertcan BowlS , Mov1 e "Prtnce
of P1rates" 10, Perry Mason 3, Holy Land A, Samt 15
1 30 - Issues &amp; Answers 13 , Revtval F tre Crusade 6
2 00 ~ Wagon Train 3; NFL Hockey 4, 15 , World of Survtvat 13
l 30 ~ Cosell at Large6, 13 ; NBA Basketba iiiO
3: 30 - Jimm y Dean Show 13 , Green Acres J ; Wtde Wor ld of
Sports 6
4 00 - French Che f 33: It Takes A T h1ef 3, T BA 8· Revtval F1res
Cru sade 13
&lt;1 30 - Virgtntan 8; Primus 4· TBA 15 , Can cer Life or Death 33
5. 00 - Umbrella 33, Eternal Llght3 ; Btng Crosby Pro Am 6, 13,
Lawrence We lk 4 , An 1mal World 10
5 15 - Maktng Thtngs Work 33
5 30 - T Ai ch• Ch ' uan 33 , Real People, Real Jobs 10 , Rev1val
Fires Crusade 15
6 00- New Datmg Game 3, News 4 , 60 Mmutes 8, 10, Audubon
W1ld l tfe Theatr e 33
6 30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15 , Commg of a Comet 33
7 00 - Zoom 20 ; Wtld K1ngdom 15 , Ctrcus 4, Lasste 8 , In the
Know 10 , Untamed World 13 ; Safan to Adventure 3 , Let's
Make A Deal 6
7 30 - Mountatn Scene 33 , Perry Ma son 8; FBI 6, 13, French
Chef 20, War ld of Disney 3, .4, 15 , Perry Mason 8, 6
B oo ~ MiSSIOn I 28 Days In Space 33, Ftve Days In Moorefield

I

8 30 ~ Manntx 8, 10 , McMillan and Wtfe 3, 4, 15; Mov1e "lndtcf
and Conv~tl" 6, 13 , Re ltgtous Amenca 20, 33
9 00 - Masterptece Thea ter 33, 20.
9 30 - Barnaby Jones 8, 10
10 00 - Ftrtng Line 20, 33
10 30 - News 6, 8, High Road to Adventure 10 , Newsmaker '73
13 , Johnny Mann's Stand Up &amp; Cheer 4, Pol1ce Surgeon 15.
We Thmk You Should Know 3
11 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
II. 1"5 - Poli ce Surgeon 6, News 10, 13 , Mov1e " Hollywood
Cavalcad e" 8
11 30 - Face the Nat ton 10 , Johnny Carson 4, 15, Mov te "Stx
Lesson s from Madame La Zanga" 3, In Concert 13
11 45 - Good News 6
'
12 00 - Urban League 10.
12 30 - Movte " Murders tn the Rue Morgue" 10
1 00 - News 4, 13 .

MONDAY, JANUARY7, 1974

6 45 -

7 00 - Today J.

4,

4.

8 55 ~ News I3.

9 00 - Paul D1xon 4; Friencny Junction 10; A.M. 3; Phil
Donahue 15 ; Abbott &amp; Costello (I; Wild, Wtld West 6, Mov ie
" The Young Rebel" 13.

9. 30 - To Tell The Truth 3; Secret Storm 8
9· 55 ~ C~uck Wh&lt;te Reports 10.

10:00 - Dinah Shore3, 15; Joker's Wtld 8, 10; Company 6

10: 30 ~ $10,000 Pyramid 8, 10, Jeopardy 3, 4, I5

11 00 - Gambit 8, 10; Password 13 ; Wizard of Odds 3, 4, 15,· Mike
Douglas 6, Unto the Hills 33.
11.30 - H-ollywood Squares 3, J, 15, Love of Ltfe 8, 10 ; Brady
Bunch 13 , Bow l tng 6; Sesame St 33
11 : 55 - CBS News 8; Dan Imel's World 10
12 : 00 - Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4, Password 6; News 8, 10, 13,

Jack Pool 3, 15.

12 . 30 - Split Second 6, Search For Tomorrow

12:45 - Electnc Company 33
12 55 ~ News 3, 15.

a,

10; Baffle 3, 15

1 00 - News 3; All My Children 6, 13 , Not For Women Only 15 ,
Concentration 8, What' s My Line 10
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; The World Turns a, 10, Let's Make

A Oeal 6, 13

2 00 - Daysofour L1ves3, 4, 15, Guidtng LtghtB, 10; Newlywed
Game 6, 13
'2 30 - Edge of Ntght8, 10; G1rlln My Ltfe6, l3 How To Surv1ve
A Marrtage 3, 15 ; Perry Mason A.
3 00 - General Hospttal6, 13, Pnce Is Right 8, 10, Antiques 20.
3 30 - One Ltfe to Live 13, 6, Secret Storm 10; Phil OQnahue 4,
French Chef 20 ; Match Game 8
4 00 - Mr. Cartoon 3, Somerset 15, Sesame St 33 ; Speed Racer
6; Sesame St 20 , Love, American Style 13; Lucy Show 8,
Movie "The Adventures of Ha111 Baba" 10.
4 30 - I Love Lucy~ 6, Green Acres 3, Gil l tgan ' s Island 13,
Bonanza 15 , TBA 4, Hazel 8
·
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20, 33; Bonanza 3, Merv Gnfftn 4. Andy
Grtfftfh 8, I Dream of Jeannie IJ ; · M tsston Impossible 6;
Bonanza 15 , Washington Debates 5
5 30 - Beverly Htllb1llles 8, Elec. Co. 33 ; Gomer Pyle 13;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Trat ls West 15.
5 55 - Earl Nightrngale 15

6 00 - News 3, 4, 6, a, 10, 15. Sesame St. 20 ; ABC News 13;
Personal tty and Behavioral Development 33

6 30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Hogan's Heroes 13.
7. 00- Truth or Consequences 3, 6. What's My Ltne? 8, Electr ic
Company 20 , Beat the Clock 4; News 10; Ctrcus 13; W1ld
Kingdom 15 ; Reading for the Classroom Tedcher 33 ·

7. 30 - Bobby Goldsboro 3, To Tell The Truth 6; Buck Owens a,

Lock, Stock. and Barrel 20 ; Mumctpal Court 10, Beat The
Clockl i : Wacky World of Jonathan Wmters 15 , Episode

Action 33; College Basketball 4

8: 00 - Gunsmoke 8, 10 ; Lotsa Luck' 3, 15, Rooktes 13 , Nat1onal
Geogr.aphic 6, Growmg Up a Female 20, 33
8: 30 - Dtana 3, 15.

9·00 - Here's Lucy 8. 10; ABC Theatre 6, 13 . Mov1es "The
Def tant Ones" 3, 15, " My Favonte Spy " 4.

9:30 - D1ck Van Dyke 10. Book Beal20, 33

Medi cal Center 8, 10. Paul Nuchims 33. TBA 13 ; News

20.
.
II : 00 - News 3, 4, 6. 8. 10, 13. 15 ; Janaki 33
...

5

.74

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WEST

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EAST
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• 85

A4

+ to 74 2

.. 963

SOUTH

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11 : 30 - Johnny Carson J, 4, 15, Once The K1tling Starts 6, Movies
"Don't Onnk The Water" 8; "Wildcats on the Beach" 10,

"The Angry Breed" 13

1: 00 - Tomorrow 3. 4; Once the Ktlltng Starts 13
2· 00 - News 4.

2·30 - News 13

for long, cold

Northern deer bigger

Second B&amp;E

is investigated .

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

'

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Wanda
Guinther, Syracuse.
DISCHARGED - Mayme
Custer, Eunice Halsey, Julius
t ..... o aces
TOOI\Y'SQUESTION
- Chancey, Okla Walker, Lelah
Instead of btdd tng lwo heart'S Hendrix, Roger Winebrenner,
;our p&lt;trtner has btd two spades Rosa Ball, Michelle Soltis,
over your twod 1amonds What do Melissa
Clay, Clarence
you do now'1
Spurrier, Edward Bailey.

What do you do now ')
"A - \\te recommend a pass.
but tt you are ambit1ous you
mtght btd rour notrump, mlending to bid a slam if partner holds

Pass

3N T

vulnerable
East

Pass

South
IN T

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

18 Rages

74 Temporary
shelter

134 Mo c casm
136 Mun1c1pahty

t9 Rent

76 Woolen fabrtc

137 Saucy

20 Thai Wh iCh IS
unpatd
21 Peaks of wa~es
23 Depresston
24 A month (abbr f

79 Gem we1ght
81 Golf mound

Stnke
139 tml•als of 26th
Prest dent
140 Greek letter

door

104

North

.

winter months

• J 97 3
.. A K.l

15 , CBS News a, 10 , Romper Room 6; Far-

mer's Daughter 13.
7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwink le 13 , New Zoo Revue6
8: 00 - Capt KangarooS, 10 , New Zoo Revue 13 , Sesame St 33,
Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
B 30 - Dtck Van Dyke 13 ; Brady Bunchii

10: 00 -

NORTH

Teenage girl

$353,522 best

·Britons dig in

.KJ65 92 +AQ to6 5 .K 43

Pass
Openuig lead- Q•

Farmtime 10 ; Morntng Report 3.

'I'W_ENTY MILES? YES
An Israeli mtlilary analyst said
Saturday Israel is w&lt;lling to withdraw &lt;Is
[Continued from page 1I
(Continued lrorn pa~e 1I
army back mside the Stnat nearly 20 mtles
'
__
western, and the S1lver Bridge ShOppmg from the Suez Canal if Egypt thins out its Med1cal Center.
AI
11
3
~a
.
m
.
Fr1day,
the squad went
for :]:, years and could bnng Plaza,- Holiday Inn and numerous other forces on the east bank of the waterway.
to
the
Me1gs
-H1gh
School
for
M1ke Pierce,
untty to the party .
businesses.
Detailed plans for the withdrawal were not
a
student,
who
had
a
lacerated
leg, apIn 1973, the system collected $225,000 revea led, but Israeli Defense Minister
"I have a proven H'l'ord," he
sa1d ''I'm not a Johnny-come- for lts services and is operating in the · Moshe Dayan left Washington Saturday parently cut by a kn1fe. He was treated and
lately_"
black.
;.Iter \\'Iiddle East talks w1th Secretary of released The lnoident occurred durmg a
Celeste, now m his second
The Galha County Rural Water State Henry Kissinger and told the UP! he lunch break outs1de of the high school
term m the OhiO House, pre· System extends from Kanauga to~ was gomg directly to the Israeli cabinet to build111g School off1ctals said Pierce was
sented a low-key plea for en- Cheshire, over to Bidwell-Porter , and work out a "concrete prop&lt;iSal" for Arab unable to tell exactly what had happened
except that he and several other youths ,
dorsement and sa1d 11 would be surrounding areas mcludmg Georges negotiators at the Geneva peace talks
were "horsing" around when he was cut.
"a sign of vttality of the par- Creek and Mill Creek Roads, across to
ty,"
LAW BAD ON ITS FACE
Rodney, northwest to Thurman, southwest
After the results were an- to Rt. 218 and east to Patriot
MONTGOMERY, Ala . (UPI) - A The three judge panel dtd not, VIeW !he
nounced, Calabrese sa1d "the
Since the system began operatwns, federal court ruled Alabama 's an- film, saymg 1.t was unnecessary ~ ru!e on
cards were stacked against more housmg projects, additional industry tiobscenity law unconstitutional Saturday the possible ' obscenity of the him Itself
me. The governor was workmg and vastly improved resources have made in a_suit filed by the producers of the becaus e (he state law was , unagamst me."
the area a more promising place to live. motion picture. "Last Tango in Paris" conslltutional on 1Ls fa ce."
Glenn, m presenting h1s can-~
didacy, sa1d the mam issue was
'
"the trust people have in public
offiCI a Is."
'
"We must have honesty, and
•
I guarantee that my background w1ll bear any searchmg
By DAVE BOWRING
latwn averages 2-4 deer per season results smce 1971 have
scrutmy you care to give 1it,
Dayton Daily News
square m1le, w1th an over dll made poss&lt;ble district herd in·
past or present," he said.
Written for
district herd numbermg about creases, and s1milar growl~ IS
expected for the 1974 season
Later, he repeated the phase,
LONDON (UPI) - With no United Press lotematlonal
1,400 animals.
"past or present "
But for all the numerous ~nd
end to the1r troubles in sight, FINDLAY, Oh10 (UPI) -You
This doesn't compare too
Asked for the meaning, Britons Saturday dug in for are what you eat, nutritioniSts favorably with southeastern good-siZed deer in Williams
Glenn responded "Just what what looked like a long cold say, and so are deer.
Ohio's District Four w1th more county , tt's mter.Stmg to note
we've seen commg out m the wmter of chilly homes and
The size and general health than l!!)'ce that number of deer. the deer hunting signs
papers. My past ts clean. Can offices, chaotic railroad ser- of Ohw's wh1teta1l deer are
Yet relative quality may erected by the state Highway
other people say the same vices and three-day work determmed by the type and more than compensate for Department on the Ohto
thing?"
amount of foods most readily quantity, if 1973 deer -gun Turnptke through this trdphy
weeks.
Metzenbaum
recently
Government officl81s said available to them, says Wild- season results are any .area.
deposited $118,000 with _tire talks designed to end cnppling life Distnct Two Game Super· criteriOn.
The s1gns, although probably
federal government when he slowdowns in both coal mines VIsor Howard Hothem.
placed
in the correct locations,
Some w06 deer were taken by
was questwned about mcome and railroads appeared
"Deer in our northwest re- gun hunters in Hothem's bear the stlhouette likenesses
taxes due for that amount He deadlocked.
gion of Ohio (Williams, Defi- district during the 1973 season of ... bull elk.
satd• the deposit was a
London commuters, already ance, Fulton, Lucas, Paulding Of these, 129 were bucks and 77
JUDGE NAMED
precaution and he expects it to hit for a month by a loeomotive and Henry counties) grow fast- were doos.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
be refunded.
Among the deer killed by John J Gilligan Saturday
drivers' slowdown, showed er and reach heavier weights
than m otber regions studied," hunters, the largest was an 11- announced the appointment of
s1gns of rebelling.
Hothem
said.
pointer estimated to w~1gh 215 James Drennen, a Waverly
Extra police were drafted
The
game
chief said deer in field dressed pounds. Actually attorney, as a judge of the Pike
-' into big railroad stations to
protect motormen from angry his area, traditionally the larg- weighed were Ill deer; their County Court of Common
est by average of any deer in weights ranged up to 205
commuters.
Pleas .
Ohio,
feed on corn and soy- pounds dressed.
"We have had to move in
Public hunting land in the
once or twice to stop trouble," beans, wild crabapples, sumac
twigs
and
seeds.
district's most producllve
said Chief Inspector Arthur
He said the diet parallels this county (Williams) is rather
Hammond of the railroad
GALLIPOLIS - For the pohce. Prime MiniSter Edward area's mtensi~e ~gncultural scarce. The Beave• ::reek
second time th1s week, c1ty Heath's governmenl sum- use as cultivated farm crops Wildlife Area covers just 160
pollee Friday night in- moned parliament from its were found most often in the acres.
stomachs of sampled deer.
The most popular hunting re' veshgated ,an attempted Christmas recess to debate the
In
a
state
which
increased
its
giOn
is the county's northern
Dreaking and entering in the deepening national cnsis, overall deer population by
haif because that, says Hothem
which he has called the gravest
800 block of Th~rd Ave.
nearly
40
per
cent
in
one
year
is
where the deer are concenOfficers said someone tried Britain has known since World (50,000 in 1972, 69,000 in 1973),
"
trated,
although "good numto enter the Gallla County War IL
District Two's share of the bers" are present throughout
Welfare Department by prying
herd is relatively smalL
the county.
the rear door open. Their atPLEASANT VALLEY
Hothem said h1s area's popuHothem said similar hunting
·NOI.lfriOS n
tempt was unsuccessful.
DISCHARGES: Emmanuel
Wednesday night, someone Callas, Columbia, S. C., Mrs.
tried to enter Larry's Wayside William
Holcomb, son,
Furniture which is located next Gallipolis Ferry; Dorsel
door to the Weifare Depart- McClung, Sr., Newport, 0.;
SUNDAY, JANUARY 6, 1974
ment.
Mrs. Riley Swartz, Gallipolis
88 S1gn of zod1ac
22 Aems late
12 7 K 1te
66 Int ell ec t
ACRO SS
Ferry; Elva Westfall, Vinton,
89 Rodents
23 Tran sac 110n
129 Trapped
67 Ustens lo
.0.; Andrew Hall, Apple Grove, 1 Map
90 Hebrew letter
25 Abstra c t be•ng
131 Pari of camera
69 Roman offtc•al
91 Symbol lor nlton
27 Stnk es out
132 W1ngs
and Thornton Wood, Point 6 Bakers product
7 1 In muSIC , high
~4 Boundanes
Sows
agam
28
133
Gul
s
mckname
73
Bnghter
11
Open1ng
abo...-e
Pleasant

Change made with new leads

West

Ftve Minutes To L tve By 4. News 6. Bible Answers 8;

Good News 13.
6·35 - Columbus Today

The executive comm1ttee
voted to delay an endorsement
for secretary of state, an office
sought by at least three Democrats.
Metzenbaum, who had been
sworn m Friday to replace
William B. Saxbe as a U.S.
senator, sa1d he was "delighted
and gratified" by the vote. He
needed 60 per cent oMhe 78
ballots cast,.and he got 69 per
cent. No committee membzr
favored neautrality,
Glenn said he was not surprised by the outcome He sa1d
he felt 1t might be somewhat of
a victory to get more than a
quarter of the votes cast
"! am solidly committed to
the Senate race, and am confident of victory," Glenn said.
"On with the campaign."
Celeste got 50 votes, five
more than he needed for the 60
per ce'!t constitutmg endorsement.
Trailing were Calabrese with
15, former Public Utilities
Corrunission ch;lirman Henry
W. Eckhart wiu\ 14, Akron city
councihnan James Williams
with 6, and A. W. Sweeney and
Lucille Huston with on&lt;&gt;aplece.
Fife committee members
favored no endorsement.
The committee endorsed
Judge Joseph P. O'Neill of the
Seventh District APpeals Court
in Youngstown for chief jushce
of the Ohio Supreme Court.
Judge Clifford F. Brown of
the Sixth District Court of Appeals, Toledo, was endorsed for
justice of the Supreme Court.
Calabrese told the committee he had been a Democrat

North-South

Sunnse Semtnar 4, Sacred Heart 10

6 15 - School Scene 10
6 20 - Farm Report 13.
6 25 ~ Paul Harvey 13.

~ . 30 -

endorsement.

WIN AT BRIDGE

20

6 00 -

•

Ferguson, seeking the post now
held by his father, state Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson, won,
73-1, the endorsem~nt of the
committee.
The panel followed to the
letter the recommcndatwns of
a special 27~nerhber candidate,
screening comm&lt;ttee , which
mel for four hours Saturday
mommg, considenng mainly
whether to endorse and what
procedures to follow ,
Commtttee members were
g1ven a chmce on thetr secret
ballots of endorsmg one or
more candidates for U.S. Sen·
ate, auditor and lieutenant
governor, or votiOg for no

'

The Ue That Wouldn't Die
Rap:
My sister, being older, was always putting me down, So one
day I decided I'd show her twasn't such a "little baby" after all.
I had my friend Tina wnte a letter saying a lot of boyfriend and
love stuff, and signing it 1 1ireg.,'

26 "··~
'
21 Phys•c •an (abbr I

29
30
31
32

_.

82 Goddess of
heal1ng

84 Defender of Troy

141 Poem

142 Per1a1mng to the

87 Former Auss1an

ruler

Care for

143

90 Sham

B111 ollare
Phthppme
negnlo
33 Female run
34 Actual betnQ
35 Trmket

92
93
95
97
98

36 Conlempttble
(slang I

99 Symbol for

38 Hostelnes
40 De ... oured
41 R1ver duck
42 Warm
43 Roman bronze

45 Hmdu queen
46 Prepos1110n

47 EngliSh streetcar
48 Throng

49 Dec lare51 Open 1~ g m fence
52 ConJunct iOn
53 Cut of meat

Every book on play gl'les a
I knew my sister would read it, as she snoops a lot. Then I let
table to show what card her catch me writing a letter back to "Greg." She aiso read the 54 Opemngs
should be led from various
55 UnproduCit'i&amp;
lngh -card comb1nat1ons lie I put in my diary, about thmgs I wouldn't really dare do, or 57 Conducted
58 Aequtle
These tables are just about even want to.
She told her girlfriend and the girlfriend told someone else 60 Rabb1l
(he s~me as you would have
61 Resort
round in auctiOn books 50 and it spread all over.
Sk td
years ago, but that doesn't
Now I've got a bad reputation and it's my own fault. If my 62
64 Steamsh1p
mean that modern experts folks hear even half of thts, I'm in bad trouble! Please tell me
(abbr)
have not been experomentmg what to do when you're known as the 11-year-old superwoman ! - 65 Near
w1th new leads. Most of these
new leads have both advan· LIAR IN THE FIRE
tages and disadvantages and
the difference IS not enough LITF:
to warrant changmg
Best antidote for lies Is - the truth. You may feel silly,
Today's hand shows one ex- confess111g to your sister, but it's better than be111g hung with a
ceptwn. The book lead from reputation that could land you in a peck of trouble. - HELEN
the West hand •s the kmg of
+++
spades The modermsts lead
LIn
the
F:
the queen. He would a lso lead
... And if your SISler is a half-way nice guy, she'll remember
the queen from queen -Jackten or nme, but the confuswn how SHE has often lied to make berseif seem more Importantis not going to worry hts and cut the kidding as she helps you out of this mess. - SUE
partner It East doesn't hold
+++
the ace or jack his play won't Dear Helen and Sue:
matter If he holds the ace he
I am a 19-year-old college student. My girlfriend is pregnant
can put &lt;t up, lead the suit
and
I don't know how to tell ber that I can't marry her. I just
back and pick up declarer's
don't love her enough to take the finalst.P.I thought at tbe time jack
Th1s time East holds the it was the greatest just being with her, but now I know t•m not '
jack. He knows that h1s ready for parenthood or the economic pressures of a family, (We
partner has led from king· _ never talked ahout marriage except as something in the distant
queen-10 and drops the jack future, maybe,)
whereupon West has no prob·
I won't make excuses, and I know this ~ haU my responlem, contmues thr su1t; sets it
sibility. Sbe is totally against abortion. When I mention it she
up and defeats the contract.
Of course, he could get the breaks into tears. I don't want to hurt her, but marriage would
same resu lt with the ktng hurt us both,
lead East mtght play the
I can't tell my father as be would blow his top. He's so oldjack any way Or if East pia~· fashioned he thinks guys and gals just shake hands.
ed the three, West mtght sttll
I've done wrong and we're in a tough spot. What can we do?
continue spades.
-EXPECTANT
, TROUBLE
If you want to use tillS eorrventlon make sure that your
partner wtll understand tt·
Dear E,T.:
also have e1ther a s1x·card
Since your girifriend is against abortion, and you are against
sutt or the nme spot so your marriage, the logical solution is: adoption. However, young
partner can afford to get nd ,
people can't be-logical when they're first hit with trouble that
,of the jack 1fhe has 11.
seems
too big for them to handle,
•
I:O.: I:."WSPAPEH E.".,.TERPRI SE A SS~ ~
I'd suggest you wa1t a while before you make a final decision.
You
two may grow closer in the coming months, or you may grow
Ll¢ij:!:~1!Mitl!l entirely
apart. After the initial shock wears off, you may even
The btddmghas been
decjde for marriage, though the posllibility here is dim, At any
5
rate, you must discuss finan~ial arrangemenis, placement of the
West
North
East
South
baby, your future plans, how to break th~ news to your Jolk$ , ,
19
Pass 2&lt;
Pass
2•
Pass
z.
A college counselor will help- for she (or he) has faced this
Pass
Pi.ISS
problem many times before. Make an appointment - for both of
\ ou. ~outh holtt-"-,. · '
you. - HELEN AND SUE '

Compass po•nt

Sta•r post

31 Flesh
33 Pertam• ng to the
ktdneys

138

85 Garden tool

Lasso

30 Alh1 e!IC group

dawn
Rocks

144 Game at cards
146 Mo...-mg part of

mol or

35 Ra y
36 Army meat
37 Pertods
39 Labe l

of t 1me

41 Ser\ler
42 Fond deSire

44 Set of stecs over

a wall
47 Pronoun
48 Mos t ro bust

Barter

148 Fash1on

Absorbed

149 Beg

49 Look fi xedly
50 Om• I from

Hypotheltc at

150 Long for
151 Assessed

54 large s ea b1rd

force
dysproSIUm
101 Forg1ve

t03 Sufltx follower
ol
104 Ftsh l•mbs

105 Fed1le spoti(J
desert
108 And so
(abbr I

forth

pronu nc •a l•on

55 Qua rrel
DOWN

56 Prepared for
prtnl

I Fold

2 Hurry

3 Ptlasler
4 R1ght s (abbr I
5 Tenstle strength
(abbr)

59 Sponsor
60 Clue.
6 1 Compass po •nt
63 Ver~ e
66 Greek lett er
67

6 Mtx

Penod oll•me
(abbr l

1 10 G1~es

7 Tear

6 8 Sco lf1ng

t \2 Humes

8 01ne

70 Correc ts
71 Perf orm
72 Mal ay g 1bbon

1 \J

Emmet

t\4 Symbol lor

tellunum
115 Persontf1cat1 0n

117 E\hiOptan !11\e
116 Zesl
1ltJ Marrow
120 Lahn conjunct•on
121 Luctd
123 Prehx beyond
124 Dry
125 Yugoslav leader
126 Sk tll

9 Con)LJnc t• on
10 L o ss
11 Arrange m
co l'umns
12 R~tlroad (abbr )
13 Alms bo.o;
14 Below (poet)
15 The Redeemer
16 Natt~e metal
17 Manuscnpt
..., (abbr)
21 One who
or~gmat e s

73

Cooked slo wly

75 Powerful
persons

77 Scott• shlor
John
78 New South
Wale s labbr J

80 P1tcher
83 Cord ed c lo th
(pi I

86 Ctlrus hu11

96
98
99
100

PrefiX down
Sol emn vow
Dec11vtty
Pertatmng to the
stars•
102 R•'ler 1n Spatn
105 Preposthon
106 REpeat

IQT Solos
109 Ttdy
111 Deserter
112 Foray
113 R•ver Islands
116 Cooling dev•ce
118 Playmg card
119 L•qutd measure
122 Feel regrel
124 Any great
~

125 GuiHtke b trd
126 Placed 1n line
128 Follower ol
Genghts Khan
130 Succor
131 Become aware
ol

MAGGIE BRAGG
HA~TFORD .:_ Maggie
Bragg, 83, Hartford, died
Friday evening at Pleasant
Valley Hosp1taL
Mrs. Bragg was born Apnl
23, 1890 m Clay County, w. Va ,
the daughter of the late Shelton
and Elizabeth Hanna Henderson. Her husband, Huling,
preceded her in death in 1966.
Mrs. Bragg was a member of
the Church of God.
She is survived by three
daugh~rs, Mrs. Ralph (Rosa)
Greene and Mrs. Darrell
( Virgima) McCoy, both of
Hartford, Mrs. Bruce (Anne)
lsom, Carson City, Neveda,
two sons, S.M. Sgt. Eddie Joe
Bragg, Las Vegas, Nevada,
Vodra Bragg, Tioga, W. Va.,
one sister, Mrs . Nancy
Clemens, Hillsboro, W. Va., 12
grandchildren and 12 greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Monday at 10 a.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. Dave Fields, Jr., and
tbe Rev. Bill Campbell officiating. Graveside serv~ces
will be held Monday at 3 p.m.
at Walnut Grove Cemetery,
Strange Creek, W. Va. Friends
may call at the funeral home
today from 2 to 4and 7 to 9.

Rawlins Amngton, one son,
Do_uglas Arrmgton, Fa~rborn;
one daughter, Betty Jo Murphy, Columbus; three grandchildren and one greatgrandchild. Two sisters, Mrs.
Elizabeth Thornton and Mrs.
Esther Sheets, both of
Gallipolis, and one brother,
Robert ~nngton, Kansas City,
Mo.
Mr, Arnngton was employed
by Foote Mmeral Co., New
Haven, W. Va. , for over 211&gt;
years. He has continuously
held first place on the Plant
Semority list.
Funeral services wtll be
held at 2 p.m. Tuesday
at
Miller's
Funeral Home in Gallipolis
with the Rev. Allred Holley
offie~atmg _

Bunal will be in Lone Oak
Cemetery, Pt. Pleasant, W. Va
Fnends may call at the funeral
home Monday 2-4 in the afternoon and 7-9 in the evemng.
MRS. WAYNE BROWN
MIDDLEPORT .,.. Mrs.
Wayne E. Brown, wife of the
founder and President of Big
Bear Stores, died Thursday
after a bnef illness at their
winter home in Boca Raton,
Fla.
Mrs, Brown IS survived by
her husband; a daughter, Mrs
Manlyn Kellough, Columbus;
three grandchildren, and a
b&lt;;,other, Paul DaviS, of Middleport
Funeral arrangements are
being completed by the
Schoedinger North West
Chapel, Columbus, with
funeral services at 2 p.m.
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Davis and
son Wayne plan to attend.

2 O.arges face driver
Mumc1pal Court for fatlure· to
stop wit)un the ass ured clear
d1s tance followm g an accid ent
at 2 30 p m. Froday on Second
Ave
Officers sa&lt;d Clonch 's car
struck the rea ~. of a ca r
operated by ~ e w e ll Ann
Wolford , 31, of Gallipohs

GALLIPOLIS
Jessie
Penmngton , 61, Galhpoi!S, was
charged with DWI and no
operator's license followmg a
three car acc1dent Fnday on
Th1rd Ave. and Cedar
City pollee sa1d Pennington
lost control of hiS car wh1ch
struck a parked car .owned by
Catherine Sigler of Gallipohs
forcing 11 mto another parked
vehicle owned by George Y
Gtlmore of Gallipohs.
Buster B Clonch, 50, Rt I,
Gallipolis , was ciled to

••
••

CHICAGO I UP!) - Checks
totaling more than $10 mtllion
were matled Friday to about
4,000 reta1l and wholesal e
pharmacies around the !
country as their shar e irl-a ·
settlement of a 1969 class action suit agamst five of the
natiOn 's
larges t
dru g
manufacturers for
prl cefixmg
The
wholesalers
and
retailers were the last of four
groups of plamtiffs to rece&lt;ve
their portion of a $130 million
settlement Other plainhffs
were pnvate hospitals, government-lunded hospitals and
consumers
Defendants were Bnstol Myrs Co., E R. Squibb and
Sons Inc., The Upjolm Co.,
Amencan Cyanamid Co , and
Charles Pfizer and Co.

Cemetery for Rtetta Rust
Taylor, formerly of Gallipolis,
who died at Plattsburg, N Y.
Rev. Timothy Heaton wtll
officiate. Burial will be under
the direction of the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home.

·MURPHY'S
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

•

Ben Gazarro
Yvette Mtmeaux
Show Starfs 7 p.m.

..

llwat,,

Tue~day

CHRIST
SUPERSfAR"

BREAD
16 oz.
4

$ 49

NOODLES
. DINNER
$}39

\

LOAVES

67¢

.. '" ' .. " .
~ fritd &amp;ltlela.
'~~

BOB EV!IIS

We prefer the way we do thmgs at Oh1o Valley Bank. Taking the
t1me to give calm , constructive, person-to-person advice on current financial developments - and their rmpact on your personal
sav1ngs program .

PASSBOOK SAVINGS

1-YEAR CERTIFICATE

/o

0

ANNUAL
RATE

YIELD

• Payable Quarterly
• Minimum $1 ,000.00

ANNUAL
RATE

• Payable Quarterly
• M1n1mum $1 ,000.00

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE
ANNUAL

RATE

-2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

/o

0

ANNUAL
RATE

• Payable Qu arterly
• Minimum $1,000.00

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE'

%Dfo

and rn addrtion to all th1s.
monthly and quarterly 1ncome 1

Fe de ral la w a nd regul.1t&lt; on pro h1b11 !h e pay1Ti1&gt;n l ol a l&lt; me depo s1t
lorl e1 led a nd 1nl eres1 on lh &lt;· am ou nt Withd rawn 1s redu ced to th e

011

A

Bun

SUBMARINE
SANDWICH

4 FOR

$}25

'._,•

r

•
/•

'

ANNUAL
RATE

• Payable Qu arterly
• Mm 1mum $1,000 00

SI.LYER BRIDGE' PLAZA ONLY
' r

..

Visit the Colonel

pass boo k rat e

ePOTATO SALAD

CHOICE
lb.

g.,.,.., '"""' •.,..""' ot&lt;&gt;ul '",

"' ~"""t •IJO&lt;:

p r 1o r to m a tur1ty u nless thr ee m ont h s ol th e 1nt e res t th e reo n 1s;

Meal

eCOLE SLAW

C~&lt; • oo

PAID ON ONE, TWO, AND THREE-YEAR CERTIFICATES.
, INTEREST PAYABLE MONTHLY tF YOU DESIRE 0 ,11{
CERTIFICATES WITH FACE AMOUNT OF $5,000.00 OR MORE.

lb.
eMACARONI

oru,.,.w•llo"""-1' •"'''"'

Secunties and bank savings accounts are vastly different fmanCial mstruments. And choosrng the securit1es route can be full of
prtfalls for the unwary.
'

%0/o

SPICED HAM - SALAMI - AMER. CHEESE

~JESUS

~ ""' .. &gt;&lt;l• anl&gt;

\

• Payabl e Qu arlerly
• M1 n1mum $1 000 00

FRESH SLICED

...... ' .... ("'"""'"' .....,...". . . ...... ~ . ...
~"'"""'''"""'Of"' ""'" ~,.....
- " ttoe ~ .. a., '"'"' «r1f ... . ,.., ...
"""' ~ .. ''¥'' '&lt;' "' a- ~ onluo: O)'f .,.

It' s as 1f some banks were becommg " secuntres cleanng houses. "

GOLD.EN PASSBOOK

0

I

plementatwn of leg1slatwn to
deal With constitutwnal
amendments passed by - the
voters last November as one of
the first respons1billt&lt;es of the
second session of the l!Oth
General Assembly
Other maJOr legtslatwn
expected by House Minority
Leader · Charles Kurfess · [ RBowhng Green ), Ohw, has
mdtcated Repubhcans tn the
House wtll push for btlls m the
area of publl c employeremployee relatwns, tax relief
and tax reform, and welfare
reform-The House leader also
believes that some sort of
campatgn financmg b11l will be
adopted by the Leg1sla lure
BQth Kurfess and Gray agree
that there probably wtll be

It's become almost commonplace fo r bank headlines to scream
about rates , y1elds, term certificat es with f1xed maturitieS.

%0/o

1(

some sort of leg•stat10n
necessary at the &gt;i'ate level to
deal wtth the energy cnsos

ANNUAL

YOUR CHOICE

and now
the film ...

TWO RUNS MADE
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
E-R squad made two runs
Saturday, at 9:32 a.m. takmg
Herbert Miller, SR 124, to
Holzer Medtcal Center, and at
1:20 p.m., James Hawk, Wolfe
What manv du with the Pen Rd , to Veterans Memonal
gill of laughter is appreciate HospitaL
it too little.

'

•,

• Compounded Daily

Old fashioned Chicken
and Noodles. mashed
potatoes, chicken
gravy,
buttered
vegetable, warm roll a

Tonight thru

•

ANNUAL
RATE

COLO\) ·
.

' I

.12°/o

Large serving of home
style meat loaf. mashed
potatoes. brown gravy,
buttered
vegetab l e.
warm roll and butter.

NEPTUNE FACTOR

t

part or the country. It said tt
discovered the problem durmg
1ts natwnwide check of mushrooms which began last fall
wh en 11 found productiOn
def1c1encles m the mushroom
canmng industry

DINING ROOM SPECIALS

DINNER

Tonight, Jan 6

••
•
••

, &lt;

The new legislative sesswn
that began lasl Wednesday
wtth little fanfare appears to
· have many tough Issues
commg before the General
Assembly m 1974, according to
State Rep Oakley C Colhns
IR·Ironton )
Rep. Colhns satd Senate
Prestdent Pro Tern Ted Gray
( R-Columbus ) sees &lt;m·

DINING ROOM OPEN
12 PM TIL 5 PM

MEAT LOAF

MEIGS THEATRE

I

Pharmacies get
$10 million in
drug payback

Veal Parmesan served
with spaghetti and meat
sauce, tossed salad,
choice of dressing.
warm roll and butter _

~

1

bee n distributed m the eastern

I,

VEAL PARMESAN DINNER

4.

•

because or contammatton thal. Mount Laurel brand as well as
could lead to botuli sm 17 pnvate labels
pmsoning.
;,
The FDA sa&lt; d &lt;I does not
The mushrooms mvolved are kn ow how many cans of the
all of those m four-ounce (¥I ns suspec t mushrooms reac hed
packed before last Oct I by the the market
Mount Laurel Canmng Corp .
The FDA sa&lt;d most of the
and dt strobu te d under th e mushrooms appear to have

WASHINGTON tUPI) - The
Food and Drug Adnumstratwn
(FDA) said Friday thousands
of four-ounc e cans of
mushrooms from a Temple,
Pa ., packm~ form and
distributed 'under ' 18 brand
~am e s are be1n g reca lled

Murp~~s

Surviving are his wife, Erma

I

.
.
Hard Issues commg up

Temple-made mushrooms
could be· s::ontaminated

MRS. CRAWFORD
PT. PLEASANT - Mrs
Allie
Rebecca
Neville
Crawlord, 66, Apple Grove,
GOWIE FELLIJRE
died Friday evening at 7 m St.
GALLIPOLIS
- Pallbearers
Mary's Hospital in Huntington
were named Saturday for
after an eight month illneS&amp;o•
today's 1 p.m. funeral of Goldte
She was born June 15, 1!107 at
Fellure,
69, Texas Rd. who died
Hogsett a daughter of the late
Thursday
, Rev Alfred Holley
Oliver Neville and Mary Jane
will officiate at the servtces m
Foul Neville. She attended the
the Waugh · Halley . Wood
Ashton Baptist Church. Her
Funeral
Chapel Caskethusband, William Wesley
bearers w1ll be Melburn
Crawlord, died in 1969 and two
RIETTA
TAYLOR
Tackett,
Charles Carter, Larry
sisters and four brothers also
GALLIPOLIS
Gravestde
Cromllsh,
Woodrow Saunders,
preceded her in death.
will
be
held
at
10:30
services
Frank Knox, and Bob DucksSurvivmg
are
three
daughters, Mrs. Barbara Jean a.m. Monday at Mound Hill worth.
Harbour of Apple Grove1 Mrs.
Marjorie Wieser of &lt;;mcmnati,
0. and Mrs. Dorothy Irene
Plantz, of Covington, 0.; three
sons, William Wayne Crawlord
of Apple Grove, Howard Lee
Crawlord of Point Pleasant
and John Wesley Crawlord of
Burlington, 0.; five SISters,
Mrs. Adeline Sayre and Mrs.
Edith Redman, both of Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Mamie Harmon of Gallipolis; 0 .; Mrs.
Mary Esther Knott of Newark,
0 ,, and Mrs. Nannie Miller of
Lithopolis, 0.; one brother,
Waldo Neville of Springfield,
0.; 21 grandchildren, and 10
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be at 2
Grilled ham steak with
p.m. Monday at the Ashton
ra1sm sauce, candied
Baptist Church with the Rev.
sweet potatoes. cole
William (Bud) Hatfield and the
slaw, warm roll and
Rev. Max Spurlock officiating.
butter.
Burial will follow in Beale
Cemetery at Apple Grove.
Tbe body will be taken to the
church one hour before service. Friends may call at the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home after 2
p.m. Sunday.

S~NDAY

'

t

son.

cenum

148 Sam! (abbr )

! Area Deaths !

E. P. ARRINGTON
GALLIPOLIS - Edmond P.
Arrington, 62, Cheshire, died
Saturday at 3:15p.m. in Holzer
Medical Center after a
tingenng illness.
He was born ~uly 8, 1911 at
Pt. Pleasant, son of the late
Edward P. and Ida Mayes
Arrington. Besides his parents,
be was preceded in death by a

132 Soap plant
135 C rat e
137 lndtgenl
138 Atver m Hades
140 Prohtbll
14 2 Greek teller
143 Mu s•c as wnllen
144 Symbol lor
145 Symbol lor
tanlalum
14 7 Faroe 1stands
wl"l•rlwtnd

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2- The Sunday Tunes· Sentmel,Sunday, Jan, 6, 1974

Metzenbaum
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - 1 The
executive eomm•ttee of the
Ohw Democrallc part) Saturday vpted U.S Sen . Howard M
Metzenbawn of Cleveland an
overwhelming endorsement m
his btd for the DemocratiC
Senate nominatwn next May
Metzenbaum defeated former astronaut John H Glenn
Jr ., 51-27, m secret ballot111g by
the comrmttee. Glenn already
has declared h1s candidacy and
said the outcome wol,lld not
eliminate him from the race.
The comm•ttee, m a 2\:! hour
meeting, aiso endorsed state
Rep. Rtchard F _ Celeste, DCieveland, for the party's heutenant governor nommatwn.
Celeste won handily over
seven other candidates, ~nclud-

is·fa,y9red h~avily

· ing Senate Mmor&lt;ty Leader
Anthony 0 Calabl'ese, D·
Cleveland, the party's nominee
m !970.
The selectwn of Celeste was
Vlewcd as a v1ctory for Gov.
John J Gtlbgan, who has
sought an attractive running
mate for his own campa1gn for
re-electton
Calabrese said he fell the
governor 's office engineered
Celeste's win, and sa1d he IS in
the a race for lieutenant
governor anyway.
The executive committee
issued rouhne endorsements of
the governor and other Democrallc incumbent state office
holders - Attorney General
Wilham J. Brown and state
Treasurer Gertr&amp;de W. Donahey
Deputy Audttor Thomas E.

Television Log

'

SUNDAY, JAN

6,

1974

6 00 - Tra ve logu e d
6 30 - Th1 s Week 4 Newsmak.er '7 3 13, I' m Gonna S1ng 10
7 00 - T1me for T1nlothv J , Jerry Falwell 13, Communtque 6.
"
How Many Ltfeftmes"' 10.
7 30 - Fatth for Today 8 , Rev1val Ftres 6. Herald of Truth 3,
You r s for the Asktng 4 Camera Three 10
8 00 - Gospel Caravan 6 , Church Serv tce 13. Billy James
Harg1s &amp; H1s All Amen can Ktd s 10 . Mormon Choir 3, Day of
Dt scover y 4. Rev Leonard Repa ss B
8 30 - Ora l Robert s 3. Your Hea lth 4, Kathryn Kuhlman 6 , Day
of Discov ery B. Get Together 10 . Rex Humbard 13. Rev tval
F tres 15
8 55 - Black Cameo 4
9 00 - Singmg Jubi lee 3. Cadle Chapel4 Ora l Robert s 10 Rex
Hurnbard 6, 15 , Hatr Bea r Bunch 8
9 30 - Churc h by Side of Road 4; Chn st ts the An swer 13 ,
Amazing Chan 8, Church Serv1ce 10.
10 00 - Church Servtces 4 Thts IS the Ltle 3, Fatth for Today 15 .
Ktd Power 6. 13. Thtnk tng tn the Black
M 9..,v ie " The Last
Safari " 10
10 30 - Vision On 6 ; lnstght 4; Osmonds 13 ; Captam Noah 3 , Th1s
I S The Ltfe 15 ; Viewpoint
11 00 - Po tnt of Vtew 6 ; TV Chapel 3; Focus on Columbus 4,
Across the Fence 15 ; H R Pufnstuf 13 , Talking Hands8
11 30 - Th ts ts The Answer 3; Make Wtsh 6, 13, ln stght 15 , Face
the Nation B.
12 00 - At Issue 3; Bowl1ng 6, Rev Calvm Evans 13 , Sacred
Heart 15 ; Col umbus Town Meel tng 10; Fred Taylor 4;J Rex
Humbard 8.

a,

a

12 I5

~

Open B1ble I5

12 30 - fv\eet T he Press 3, 4, 15 . Rev tval Ftres 13
1 00 - Lower Light house 13 ; Amertcan BowlS , Mov1 e "Prtnce
of P1rates" 10, Perry Mason 3, Holy Land A, Samt 15
1 30 - Issues &amp; Answers 13 , Revtval F tre Crusade 6
2 00 ~ Wagon Train 3; NFL Hockey 4, 15 , World of Survtvat 13
l 30 ~ Cosell at Large6, 13 ; NBA Basketba iiiO
3: 30 - Jimm y Dean Show 13 , Green Acres J ; Wtde Wor ld of
Sports 6
4 00 - French Che f 33: It Takes A T h1ef 3, T BA 8· Revtval F1res
Cru sade 13
&lt;1 30 - Virgtntan 8; Primus 4· TBA 15 , Can cer Life or Death 33
5. 00 - Umbrella 33, Eternal Llght3 ; Btng Crosby Pro Am 6, 13,
Lawrence We lk 4 , An 1mal World 10
5 15 - Maktng Thtngs Work 33
5 30 - T Ai ch• Ch ' uan 33 , Real People, Real Jobs 10 , Rev1val
Fires Crusade 15
6 00- New Datmg Game 3, News 4 , 60 Mmutes 8, 10, Audubon
W1ld l tfe Theatr e 33
6 30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15 , Commg of a Comet 33
7 00 - Zoom 20 ; Wtld K1ngdom 15 , Ctrcus 4, Lasste 8 , In the
Know 10 , Untamed World 13 ; Safan to Adventure 3 , Let's
Make A Deal 6
7 30 - Mountatn Scene 33 , Perry Ma son 8; FBI 6, 13, French
Chef 20, War ld of Disney 3, .4, 15 , Perry Mason 8, 6
B oo ~ MiSSIOn I 28 Days In Space 33, Ftve Days In Moorefield

I

8 30 ~ Manntx 8, 10 , McMillan and Wtfe 3, 4, 15; Mov1e "lndtcf
and Conv~tl" 6, 13 , Re ltgtous Amenca 20, 33
9 00 - Masterptece Thea ter 33, 20.
9 30 - Barnaby Jones 8, 10
10 00 - Ftrtng Line 20, 33
10 30 - News 6, 8, High Road to Adventure 10 , Newsmaker '73
13 , Johnny Mann's Stand Up &amp; Cheer 4, Pol1ce Surgeon 15.
We Thmk You Should Know 3
11 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
II. 1"5 - Poli ce Surgeon 6, News 10, 13 , Mov1e " Hollywood
Cavalcad e" 8
11 30 - Face the Nat ton 10 , Johnny Carson 4, 15, Mov te "Stx
Lesson s from Madame La Zanga" 3, In Concert 13
11 45 - Good News 6
'
12 00 - Urban League 10.
12 30 - Movte " Murders tn the Rue Morgue" 10
1 00 - News 4, 13 .

MONDAY, JANUARY7, 1974

6 45 -

7 00 - Today J.

4,

4.

8 55 ~ News I3.

9 00 - Paul D1xon 4; Friencny Junction 10; A.M. 3; Phil
Donahue 15 ; Abbott &amp; Costello (I; Wild, Wtld West 6, Mov ie
" The Young Rebel" 13.

9. 30 - To Tell The Truth 3; Secret Storm 8
9· 55 ~ C~uck Wh&lt;te Reports 10.

10:00 - Dinah Shore3, 15; Joker's Wtld 8, 10; Company 6

10: 30 ~ $10,000 Pyramid 8, 10, Jeopardy 3, 4, I5

11 00 - Gambit 8, 10; Password 13 ; Wizard of Odds 3, 4, 15,· Mike
Douglas 6, Unto the Hills 33.
11.30 - H-ollywood Squares 3, J, 15, Love of Ltfe 8, 10 ; Brady
Bunch 13 , Bow l tng 6; Sesame St 33
11 : 55 - CBS News 8; Dan Imel's World 10
12 : 00 - Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4, Password 6; News 8, 10, 13,

Jack Pool 3, 15.

12 . 30 - Split Second 6, Search For Tomorrow

12:45 - Electnc Company 33
12 55 ~ News 3, 15.

a,

10; Baffle 3, 15

1 00 - News 3; All My Children 6, 13 , Not For Women Only 15 ,
Concentration 8, What' s My Line 10
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; The World Turns a, 10, Let's Make

A Oeal 6, 13

2 00 - Daysofour L1ves3, 4, 15, Guidtng LtghtB, 10; Newlywed
Game 6, 13
'2 30 - Edge of Ntght8, 10; G1rlln My Ltfe6, l3 How To Surv1ve
A Marrtage 3, 15 ; Perry Mason A.
3 00 - General Hospttal6, 13, Pnce Is Right 8, 10, Antiques 20.
3 30 - One Ltfe to Live 13, 6, Secret Storm 10; Phil OQnahue 4,
French Chef 20 ; Match Game 8
4 00 - Mr. Cartoon 3, Somerset 15, Sesame St 33 ; Speed Racer
6; Sesame St 20 , Love, American Style 13; Lucy Show 8,
Movie "The Adventures of Ha111 Baba" 10.
4 30 - I Love Lucy~ 6, Green Acres 3, Gil l tgan ' s Island 13,
Bonanza 15 , TBA 4, Hazel 8
·
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20, 33; Bonanza 3, Merv Gnfftn 4. Andy
Grtfftfh 8, I Dream of Jeannie IJ ; · M tsston Impossible 6;
Bonanza 15 , Washington Debates 5
5 30 - Beverly Htllb1llles 8, Elec. Co. 33 ; Gomer Pyle 13;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Trat ls West 15.
5 55 - Earl Nightrngale 15

6 00 - News 3, 4, 6, a, 10, 15. Sesame St. 20 ; ABC News 13;
Personal tty and Behavioral Development 33

6 30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Hogan's Heroes 13.
7. 00- Truth or Consequences 3, 6. What's My Ltne? 8, Electr ic
Company 20 , Beat the Clock 4; News 10; Ctrcus 13; W1ld
Kingdom 15 ; Reading for the Classroom Tedcher 33 ·

7. 30 - Bobby Goldsboro 3, To Tell The Truth 6; Buck Owens a,

Lock, Stock. and Barrel 20 ; Mumctpal Court 10, Beat The
Clockl i : Wacky World of Jonathan Wmters 15 , Episode

Action 33; College Basketball 4

8: 00 - Gunsmoke 8, 10 ; Lotsa Luck' 3, 15, Rooktes 13 , Nat1onal
Geogr.aphic 6, Growmg Up a Female 20, 33
8: 30 - Dtana 3, 15.

9·00 - Here's Lucy 8. 10; ABC Theatre 6, 13 . Mov1es "The
Def tant Ones" 3, 15, " My Favonte Spy " 4.

9:30 - D1ck Van Dyke 10. Book Beal20, 33

Medi cal Center 8, 10. Paul Nuchims 33. TBA 13 ; News

20.
.
II : 00 - News 3, 4, 6. 8. 10, 13. 15 ; Janaki 33
...

5

.74

'I A83

+ KQ1062

.. Q85
WEST

• KQ1095
'J7

3

EAST
• J 32

'Q96 5 2
• 85

A4

+ to 74 2

.. 963

SOUTH

'K

• A86

11 : 30 - Johnny Carson J, 4, 15, Once The K1tling Starts 6, Movies
"Don't Onnk The Water" 8; "Wildcats on the Beach" 10,

"The Angry Breed" 13

1: 00 - Tomorrow 3. 4; Once the Ktlltng Starts 13
2· 00 - News 4.

2·30 - News 13

for long, cold

Northern deer bigger

Second B&amp;E

is investigated .

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

'

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Wanda
Guinther, Syracuse.
DISCHARGED - Mayme
Custer, Eunice Halsey, Julius
t ..... o aces
TOOI\Y'SQUESTION
- Chancey, Okla Walker, Lelah
Instead of btdd tng lwo heart'S Hendrix, Roger Winebrenner,
;our p&lt;trtner has btd two spades Rosa Ball, Michelle Soltis,
over your twod 1amonds What do Melissa
Clay, Clarence
you do now'1
Spurrier, Edward Bailey.

What do you do now ')
"A - \\te recommend a pass.
but tt you are ambit1ous you
mtght btd rour notrump, mlending to bid a slam if partner holds

Pass

3N T

vulnerable
East

Pass

South
IN T

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

18 Rages

74 Temporary
shelter

134 Mo c casm
136 Mun1c1pahty

t9 Rent

76 Woolen fabrtc

137 Saucy

20 Thai Wh iCh IS
unpatd
21 Peaks of wa~es
23 Depresston
24 A month (abbr f

79 Gem we1ght
81 Golf mound

Stnke
139 tml•als of 26th
Prest dent
140 Greek letter

door

104

North

.

winter months

• J 97 3
.. A K.l

15 , CBS News a, 10 , Romper Room 6; Far-

mer's Daughter 13.
7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwink le 13 , New Zoo Revue6
8: 00 - Capt KangarooS, 10 , New Zoo Revue 13 , Sesame St 33,
Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
B 30 - Dtck Van Dyke 13 ; Brady Bunchii

10: 00 -

NORTH

Teenage girl

$353,522 best

·Britons dig in

.KJ65 92 +AQ to6 5 .K 43

Pass
Openuig lead- Q•

Farmtime 10 ; Morntng Report 3.

'I'W_ENTY MILES? YES
An Israeli mtlilary analyst said
Saturday Israel is w&lt;lling to withdraw &lt;Is
[Continued from page 1I
(Continued lrorn pa~e 1I
army back mside the Stnat nearly 20 mtles
'
__
western, and the S1lver Bridge ShOppmg from the Suez Canal if Egypt thins out its Med1cal Center.
AI
11
3
~a
.
m
.
Fr1day,
the squad went
for :]:, years and could bnng Plaza,- Holiday Inn and numerous other forces on the east bank of the waterway.
to
the
Me1gs
-H1gh
School
for
M1ke Pierce,
untty to the party .
businesses.
Detailed plans for the withdrawal were not
a
student,
who
had
a
lacerated
leg, apIn 1973, the system collected $225,000 revea led, but Israeli Defense Minister
"I have a proven H'l'ord," he
sa1d ''I'm not a Johnny-come- for lts services and is operating in the · Moshe Dayan left Washington Saturday parently cut by a kn1fe. He was treated and
lately_"
black.
;.Iter \\'Iiddle East talks w1th Secretary of released The lnoident occurred durmg a
Celeste, now m his second
The Galha County Rural Water State Henry Kissinger and told the UP! he lunch break outs1de of the high school
term m the OhiO House, pre· System extends from Kanauga to~ was gomg directly to the Israeli cabinet to build111g School off1ctals said Pierce was
sented a low-key plea for en- Cheshire, over to Bidwell-Porter , and work out a "concrete prop&lt;iSal" for Arab unable to tell exactly what had happened
except that he and several other youths ,
dorsement and sa1d 11 would be surrounding areas mcludmg Georges negotiators at the Geneva peace talks
were "horsing" around when he was cut.
"a sign of vttality of the par- Creek and Mill Creek Roads, across to
ty,"
LAW BAD ON ITS FACE
Rodney, northwest to Thurman, southwest
After the results were an- to Rt. 218 and east to Patriot
MONTGOMERY, Ala . (UPI) - A The three judge panel dtd not, VIeW !he
nounced, Calabrese sa1d "the
Since the system began operatwns, federal court ruled Alabama 's an- film, saymg 1.t was unnecessary ~ ru!e on
cards were stacked against more housmg projects, additional industry tiobscenity law unconstitutional Saturday the possible ' obscenity of the him Itself
me. The governor was workmg and vastly improved resources have made in a_suit filed by the producers of the becaus e (he state law was , unagamst me."
the area a more promising place to live. motion picture. "Last Tango in Paris" conslltutional on 1Ls fa ce."
Glenn, m presenting h1s can-~
didacy, sa1d the mam issue was
'
"the trust people have in public
offiCI a Is."
'
"We must have honesty, and
•
I guarantee that my background w1ll bear any searchmg
By DAVE BOWRING
latwn averages 2-4 deer per season results smce 1971 have
scrutmy you care to give 1it,
Dayton Daily News
square m1le, w1th an over dll made poss&lt;ble district herd in·
past or present," he said.
Written for
district herd numbermg about creases, and s1milar growl~ IS
expected for the 1974 season
Later, he repeated the phase,
LONDON (UPI) - With no United Press lotematlonal
1,400 animals.
"past or present "
But for all the numerous ~nd
end to the1r troubles in sight, FINDLAY, Oh10 (UPI) -You
This doesn't compare too
Asked for the meaning, Britons Saturday dug in for are what you eat, nutritioniSts favorably with southeastern good-siZed deer in Williams
Glenn responded "Just what what looked like a long cold say, and so are deer.
Ohio's District Four w1th more county , tt's mter.Stmg to note
we've seen commg out m the wmter of chilly homes and
The size and general health than l!!)'ce that number of deer. the deer hunting signs
papers. My past ts clean. Can offices, chaotic railroad ser- of Ohw's wh1teta1l deer are
Yet relative quality may erected by the state Highway
other people say the same vices and three-day work determmed by the type and more than compensate for Department on the Ohto
thing?"
amount of foods most readily quantity, if 1973 deer -gun Turnptke through this trdphy
weeks.
Metzenbaum
recently
Government officl81s said available to them, says Wild- season results are any .area.
deposited $118,000 with _tire talks designed to end cnppling life Distnct Two Game Super· criteriOn.
The s1gns, although probably
federal government when he slowdowns in both coal mines VIsor Howard Hothem.
placed
in the correct locations,
Some w06 deer were taken by
was questwned about mcome and railroads appeared
"Deer in our northwest re- gun hunters in Hothem's bear the stlhouette likenesses
taxes due for that amount He deadlocked.
gion of Ohio (Williams, Defi- district during the 1973 season of ... bull elk.
satd• the deposit was a
London commuters, already ance, Fulton, Lucas, Paulding Of these, 129 were bucks and 77
JUDGE NAMED
precaution and he expects it to hit for a month by a loeomotive and Henry counties) grow fast- were doos.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
be refunded.
Among the deer killed by John J Gilligan Saturday
drivers' slowdown, showed er and reach heavier weights
than m otber regions studied," hunters, the largest was an 11- announced the appointment of
s1gns of rebelling.
Hothem
said.
pointer estimated to w~1gh 215 James Drennen, a Waverly
Extra police were drafted
The
game
chief said deer in field dressed pounds. Actually attorney, as a judge of the Pike
-' into big railroad stations to
protect motormen from angry his area, traditionally the larg- weighed were Ill deer; their County Court of Common
est by average of any deer in weights ranged up to 205
commuters.
Pleas .
Ohio,
feed on corn and soy- pounds dressed.
"We have had to move in
Public hunting land in the
once or twice to stop trouble," beans, wild crabapples, sumac
twigs
and
seeds.
district's most producllve
said Chief Inspector Arthur
He said the diet parallels this county (Williams) is rather
Hammond of the railroad
GALLIPOLIS - For the pohce. Prime MiniSter Edward area's mtensi~e ~gncultural scarce. The Beave• ::reek
second time th1s week, c1ty Heath's governmenl sum- use as cultivated farm crops Wildlife Area covers just 160
pollee Friday night in- moned parliament from its were found most often in the acres.
stomachs of sampled deer.
The most popular hunting re' veshgated ,an attempted Christmas recess to debate the
In
a
state
which
increased
its
giOn
is the county's northern
Dreaking and entering in the deepening national cnsis, overall deer population by
haif because that, says Hothem
which he has called the gravest
800 block of Th~rd Ave.
nearly
40
per
cent
in
one
year
is
where the deer are concenOfficers said someone tried Britain has known since World (50,000 in 1972, 69,000 in 1973),
"
trated,
although "good numto enter the Gallla County War IL
District Two's share of the bers" are present throughout
Welfare Department by prying
herd is relatively smalL
the county.
the rear door open. Their atPLEASANT VALLEY
Hothem said h1s area's popuHothem said similar hunting
·NOI.lfriOS n
tempt was unsuccessful.
DISCHARGES: Emmanuel
Wednesday night, someone Callas, Columbia, S. C., Mrs.
tried to enter Larry's Wayside William
Holcomb, son,
Furniture which is located next Gallipolis Ferry; Dorsel
door to the Weifare Depart- McClung, Sr., Newport, 0.;
SUNDAY, JANUARY 6, 1974
ment.
Mrs. Riley Swartz, Gallipolis
88 S1gn of zod1ac
22 Aems late
12 7 K 1te
66 Int ell ec t
ACRO SS
Ferry; Elva Westfall, Vinton,
89 Rodents
23 Tran sac 110n
129 Trapped
67 Ustens lo
.0.; Andrew Hall, Apple Grove, 1 Map
90 Hebrew letter
25 Abstra c t be•ng
131 Pari of camera
69 Roman offtc•al
91 Symbol lor nlton
27 Stnk es out
132 W1ngs
and Thornton Wood, Point 6 Bakers product
7 1 In muSIC , high
~4 Boundanes
Sows
agam
28
133
Gul
s
mckname
73
Bnghter
11
Open1ng
abo...-e
Pleasant

Change made with new leads

West

Ftve Minutes To L tve By 4. News 6. Bible Answers 8;

Good News 13.
6·35 - Columbus Today

The executive comm1ttee
voted to delay an endorsement
for secretary of state, an office
sought by at least three Democrats.
Metzenbaum, who had been
sworn m Friday to replace
William B. Saxbe as a U.S.
senator, sa1d he was "delighted
and gratified" by the vote. He
needed 60 per cent oMhe 78
ballots cast,.and he got 69 per
cent. No committee membzr
favored neautrality,
Glenn said he was not surprised by the outcome He sa1d
he felt 1t might be somewhat of
a victory to get more than a
quarter of the votes cast
"! am solidly committed to
the Senate race, and am confident of victory," Glenn said.
"On with the campaign."
Celeste got 50 votes, five
more than he needed for the 60
per ce'!t constitutmg endorsement.
Trailing were Calabrese with
15, former Public Utilities
Corrunission ch;lirman Henry
W. Eckhart wiu\ 14, Akron city
councihnan James Williams
with 6, and A. W. Sweeney and
Lucille Huston with on&lt;&gt;aplece.
Fife committee members
favored no endorsement.
The committee endorsed
Judge Joseph P. O'Neill of the
Seventh District APpeals Court
in Youngstown for chief jushce
of the Ohio Supreme Court.
Judge Clifford F. Brown of
the Sixth District Court of Appeals, Toledo, was endorsed for
justice of the Supreme Court.
Calabrese told the committee he had been a Democrat

North-South

Sunnse Semtnar 4, Sacred Heart 10

6 15 - School Scene 10
6 20 - Farm Report 13.
6 25 ~ Paul Harvey 13.

~ . 30 -

endorsement.

WIN AT BRIDGE

20

6 00 -

•

Ferguson, seeking the post now
held by his father, state Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson, won,
73-1, the endorsem~nt of the
committee.
The panel followed to the
letter the recommcndatwns of
a special 27~nerhber candidate,
screening comm&lt;ttee , which
mel for four hours Saturday
mommg, considenng mainly
whether to endorse and what
procedures to follow ,
Commtttee members were
g1ven a chmce on thetr secret
ballots of endorsmg one or
more candidates for U.S. Sen·
ate, auditor and lieutenant
governor, or votiOg for no

'

The Ue That Wouldn't Die
Rap:
My sister, being older, was always putting me down, So one
day I decided I'd show her twasn't such a "little baby" after all.
I had my friend Tina wnte a letter saying a lot of boyfriend and
love stuff, and signing it 1 1ireg.,'

26 "··~
'
21 Phys•c •an (abbr I

29
30
31
32

_.

82 Goddess of
heal1ng

84 Defender of Troy

141 Poem

142 Per1a1mng to the

87 Former Auss1an

ruler

Care for

143

90 Sham

B111 ollare
Phthppme
negnlo
33 Female run
34 Actual betnQ
35 Trmket

92
93
95
97
98

36 Conlempttble
(slang I

99 Symbol for

38 Hostelnes
40 De ... oured
41 R1ver duck
42 Warm
43 Roman bronze

45 Hmdu queen
46 Prepos1110n

47 EngliSh streetcar
48 Throng

49 Dec lare51 Open 1~ g m fence
52 ConJunct iOn
53 Cut of meat

Every book on play gl'les a
I knew my sister would read it, as she snoops a lot. Then I let
table to show what card her catch me writing a letter back to "Greg." She aiso read the 54 Opemngs
should be led from various
55 UnproduCit'i&amp;
lngh -card comb1nat1ons lie I put in my diary, about thmgs I wouldn't really dare do, or 57 Conducted
58 Aequtle
These tables are just about even want to.
She told her girlfriend and the girlfriend told someone else 60 Rabb1l
(he s~me as you would have
61 Resort
round in auctiOn books 50 and it spread all over.
Sk td
years ago, but that doesn't
Now I've got a bad reputation and it's my own fault. If my 62
64 Steamsh1p
mean that modern experts folks hear even half of thts, I'm in bad trouble! Please tell me
(abbr)
have not been experomentmg what to do when you're known as the 11-year-old superwoman ! - 65 Near
w1th new leads. Most of these
new leads have both advan· LIAR IN THE FIRE
tages and disadvantages and
the difference IS not enough LITF:
to warrant changmg
Best antidote for lies Is - the truth. You may feel silly,
Today's hand shows one ex- confess111g to your sister, but it's better than be111g hung with a
ceptwn. The book lead from reputation that could land you in a peck of trouble. - HELEN
the West hand •s the kmg of
+++
spades The modermsts lead
LIn
the
F:
the queen. He would a lso lead
... And if your SISler is a half-way nice guy, she'll remember
the queen from queen -Jackten or nme, but the confuswn how SHE has often lied to make berseif seem more Importantis not going to worry hts and cut the kidding as she helps you out of this mess. - SUE
partner It East doesn't hold
+++
the ace or jack his play won't Dear Helen and Sue:
matter If he holds the ace he
I am a 19-year-old college student. My girlfriend is pregnant
can put &lt;t up, lead the suit
and
I don't know how to tell ber that I can't marry her. I just
back and pick up declarer's
don't love her enough to take the finalst.P.I thought at tbe time jack
Th1s time East holds the it was the greatest just being with her, but now I know t•m not '
jack. He knows that h1s ready for parenthood or the economic pressures of a family, (We
partner has led from king· _ never talked ahout marriage except as something in the distant
queen-10 and drops the jack future, maybe,)
whereupon West has no prob·
I won't make excuses, and I know this ~ haU my responlem, contmues thr su1t; sets it
sibility. Sbe is totally against abortion. When I mention it she
up and defeats the contract.
Of course, he could get the breaks into tears. I don't want to hurt her, but marriage would
same resu lt with the ktng hurt us both,
lead East mtght play the
I can't tell my father as be would blow his top. He's so oldjack any way Or if East pia~· fashioned he thinks guys and gals just shake hands.
ed the three, West mtght sttll
I've done wrong and we're in a tough spot. What can we do?
continue spades.
-EXPECTANT
, TROUBLE
If you want to use tillS eorrventlon make sure that your
partner wtll understand tt·
Dear E,T.:
also have e1ther a s1x·card
Since your girifriend is against abortion, and you are against
sutt or the nme spot so your marriage, the logical solution is: adoption. However, young
partner can afford to get nd ,
people can't be-logical when they're first hit with trouble that
,of the jack 1fhe has 11.
seems
too big for them to handle,
•
I:O.: I:."WSPAPEH E.".,.TERPRI SE A SS~ ~
I'd suggest you wa1t a while before you make a final decision.
You
two may grow closer in the coming months, or you may grow
Ll¢ij:!:~1!Mitl!l entirely
apart. After the initial shock wears off, you may even
The btddmghas been
decjde for marriage, though the posllibility here is dim, At any
5
rate, you must discuss finan~ial arrangemenis, placement of the
West
North
East
South
baby, your future plans, how to break th~ news to your Jolk$ , ,
19
Pass 2&lt;
Pass
2•
Pass
z.
A college counselor will help- for she (or he) has faced this
Pass
Pi.ISS
problem many times before. Make an appointment - for both of
\ ou. ~outh holtt-"-,. · '
you. - HELEN AND SUE '

Compass po•nt

Sta•r post

31 Flesh
33 Pertam• ng to the
ktdneys

138

85 Garden tool

Lasso

30 Alh1 e!IC group

dawn
Rocks

144 Game at cards
146 Mo...-mg part of

mol or

35 Ra y
36 Army meat
37 Pertods
39 Labe l

of t 1me

41 Ser\ler
42 Fond deSire

44 Set of stecs over

a wall
47 Pronoun
48 Mos t ro bust

Barter

148 Fash1on

Absorbed

149 Beg

49 Look fi xedly
50 Om• I from

Hypotheltc at

150 Long for
151 Assessed

54 large s ea b1rd

force
dysproSIUm
101 Forg1ve

t03 Sufltx follower
ol
104 Ftsh l•mbs

105 Fed1le spoti(J
desert
108 And so
(abbr I

forth

pronu nc •a l•on

55 Qua rrel
DOWN

56 Prepared for
prtnl

I Fold

2 Hurry

3 Ptlasler
4 R1ght s (abbr I
5 Tenstle strength
(abbr)

59 Sponsor
60 Clue.
6 1 Compass po •nt
63 Ver~ e
66 Greek lett er
67

6 Mtx

Penod oll•me
(abbr l

1 10 G1~es

7 Tear

6 8 Sco lf1ng

t \2 Humes

8 01ne

70 Correc ts
71 Perf orm
72 Mal ay g 1bbon

1 \J

Emmet

t\4 Symbol lor

tellunum
115 Persontf1cat1 0n

117 E\hiOptan !11\e
116 Zesl
1ltJ Marrow
120 Lahn conjunct•on
121 Luctd
123 Prehx beyond
124 Dry
125 Yugoslav leader
126 Sk tll

9 Con)LJnc t• on
10 L o ss
11 Arrange m
co l'umns
12 R~tlroad (abbr )
13 Alms bo.o;
14 Below (poet)
15 The Redeemer
16 Natt~e metal
17 Manuscnpt
..., (abbr)
21 One who
or~gmat e s

73

Cooked slo wly

75 Powerful
persons

77 Scott• shlor
John
78 New South
Wale s labbr J

80 P1tcher
83 Cord ed c lo th
(pi I

86 Ctlrus hu11

96
98
99
100

PrefiX down
Sol emn vow
Dec11vtty
Pertatmng to the
stars•
102 R•'ler 1n Spatn
105 Preposthon
106 REpeat

IQT Solos
109 Ttdy
111 Deserter
112 Foray
113 R•ver Islands
116 Cooling dev•ce
118 Playmg card
119 L•qutd measure
122 Feel regrel
124 Any great
~

125 GuiHtke b trd
126 Placed 1n line
128 Follower ol
Genghts Khan
130 Succor
131 Become aware
ol

MAGGIE BRAGG
HA~TFORD .:_ Maggie
Bragg, 83, Hartford, died
Friday evening at Pleasant
Valley Hosp1taL
Mrs. Bragg was born Apnl
23, 1890 m Clay County, w. Va ,
the daughter of the late Shelton
and Elizabeth Hanna Henderson. Her husband, Huling,
preceded her in death in 1966.
Mrs. Bragg was a member of
the Church of God.
She is survived by three
daugh~rs, Mrs. Ralph (Rosa)
Greene and Mrs. Darrell
( Virgima) McCoy, both of
Hartford, Mrs. Bruce (Anne)
lsom, Carson City, Neveda,
two sons, S.M. Sgt. Eddie Joe
Bragg, Las Vegas, Nevada,
Vodra Bragg, Tioga, W. Va.,
one sister, Mrs . Nancy
Clemens, Hillsboro, W. Va., 12
grandchildren and 12 greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Monday at 10 a.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. Dave Fields, Jr., and
tbe Rev. Bill Campbell officiating. Graveside serv~ces
will be held Monday at 3 p.m.
at Walnut Grove Cemetery,
Strange Creek, W. Va. Friends
may call at the funeral home
today from 2 to 4and 7 to 9.

Rawlins Amngton, one son,
Do_uglas Arrmgton, Fa~rborn;
one daughter, Betty Jo Murphy, Columbus; three grandchildren and one greatgrandchild. Two sisters, Mrs.
Elizabeth Thornton and Mrs.
Esther Sheets, both of
Gallipolis, and one brother,
Robert ~nngton, Kansas City,
Mo.
Mr, Arnngton was employed
by Foote Mmeral Co., New
Haven, W. Va. , for over 211&gt;
years. He has continuously
held first place on the Plant
Semority list.
Funeral services wtll be
held at 2 p.m. Tuesday
at
Miller's
Funeral Home in Gallipolis
with the Rev. Allred Holley
offie~atmg _

Bunal will be in Lone Oak
Cemetery, Pt. Pleasant, W. Va
Fnends may call at the funeral
home Monday 2-4 in the afternoon and 7-9 in the evemng.
MRS. WAYNE BROWN
MIDDLEPORT .,.. Mrs.
Wayne E. Brown, wife of the
founder and President of Big
Bear Stores, died Thursday
after a bnef illness at their
winter home in Boca Raton,
Fla.
Mrs, Brown IS survived by
her husband; a daughter, Mrs
Manlyn Kellough, Columbus;
three grandchildren, and a
b&lt;;,other, Paul DaviS, of Middleport
Funeral arrangements are
being completed by the
Schoedinger North West
Chapel, Columbus, with
funeral services at 2 p.m.
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Davis and
son Wayne plan to attend.

2 O.arges face driver
Mumc1pal Court for fatlure· to
stop wit)un the ass ured clear
d1s tance followm g an accid ent
at 2 30 p m. Froday on Second
Ave
Officers sa&lt;d Clonch 's car
struck the rea ~. of a ca r
operated by ~ e w e ll Ann
Wolford , 31, of Gallipohs

GALLIPOLIS
Jessie
Penmngton , 61, Galhpoi!S, was
charged with DWI and no
operator's license followmg a
three car acc1dent Fnday on
Th1rd Ave. and Cedar
City pollee sa1d Pennington
lost control of hiS car wh1ch
struck a parked car .owned by
Catherine Sigler of Gallipohs
forcing 11 mto another parked
vehicle owned by George Y
Gtlmore of Gallipohs.
Buster B Clonch, 50, Rt I,
Gallipolis , was ciled to

••
••

CHICAGO I UP!) - Checks
totaling more than $10 mtllion
were matled Friday to about
4,000 reta1l and wholesal e
pharmacies around the !
country as their shar e irl-a ·
settlement of a 1969 class action suit agamst five of the
natiOn 's
larges t
dru g
manufacturers for
prl cefixmg
The
wholesalers
and
retailers were the last of four
groups of plamtiffs to rece&lt;ve
their portion of a $130 million
settlement Other plainhffs
were pnvate hospitals, government-lunded hospitals and
consumers
Defendants were Bnstol Myrs Co., E R. Squibb and
Sons Inc., The Upjolm Co.,
Amencan Cyanamid Co , and
Charles Pfizer and Co.

Cemetery for Rtetta Rust
Taylor, formerly of Gallipolis,
who died at Plattsburg, N Y.
Rev. Timothy Heaton wtll
officiate. Burial will be under
the direction of the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home.

·MURPHY'S
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

•

Ben Gazarro
Yvette Mtmeaux
Show Starfs 7 p.m.

..

llwat,,

Tue~day

CHRIST
SUPERSfAR"

BREAD
16 oz.
4

$ 49

NOODLES
. DINNER
$}39

\

LOAVES

67¢

.. '" ' .. " .
~ fritd &amp;ltlela.
'~~

BOB EV!IIS

We prefer the way we do thmgs at Oh1o Valley Bank. Taking the
t1me to give calm , constructive, person-to-person advice on current financial developments - and their rmpact on your personal
sav1ngs program .

PASSBOOK SAVINGS

1-YEAR CERTIFICATE

/o

0

ANNUAL
RATE

YIELD

• Payable Quarterly
• Minimum $1 ,000.00

ANNUAL
RATE

• Payable Quarterly
• M1n1mum $1 ,000.00

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE
ANNUAL

RATE

-2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

/o

0

ANNUAL
RATE

• Payable Qu arterly
• Minimum $1,000.00

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE'

%Dfo

and rn addrtion to all th1s.
monthly and quarterly 1ncome 1

Fe de ral la w a nd regul.1t&lt; on pro h1b11 !h e pay1Ti1&gt;n l ol a l&lt; me depo s1t
lorl e1 led a nd 1nl eres1 on lh &lt;· am ou nt Withd rawn 1s redu ced to th e

011

A

Bun

SUBMARINE
SANDWICH

4 FOR

$}25

'._,•

r

•
/•

'

ANNUAL
RATE

• Payable Qu arterly
• Mm 1mum $1,000 00

SI.LYER BRIDGE' PLAZA ONLY
' r

..

Visit the Colonel

pass boo k rat e

ePOTATO SALAD

CHOICE
lb.

g.,.,.., '"""' •.,..""' ot&lt;&gt;ul '",

"' ~"""t •IJO&lt;:

p r 1o r to m a tur1ty u nless thr ee m ont h s ol th e 1nt e res t th e reo n 1s;

Meal

eCOLE SLAW

C~&lt; • oo

PAID ON ONE, TWO, AND THREE-YEAR CERTIFICATES.
, INTEREST PAYABLE MONTHLY tF YOU DESIRE 0 ,11{
CERTIFICATES WITH FACE AMOUNT OF $5,000.00 OR MORE.

lb.
eMACARONI

oru,.,.w•llo"""-1' •"'''"'

Secunties and bank savings accounts are vastly different fmanCial mstruments. And choosrng the securit1es route can be full of
prtfalls for the unwary.
'

%0/o

SPICED HAM - SALAMI - AMER. CHEESE

~JESUS

~ ""' .. &gt;&lt;l• anl&gt;

\

• Payabl e Qu arlerly
• M1 n1mum $1 000 00

FRESH SLICED

...... ' .... ("'"""'"' .....,...". . . ...... ~ . ...
~"'"""'''"""'Of"' ""'" ~,.....
- " ttoe ~ .. a., '"'"' «r1f ... . ,.., ...
"""' ~ .. ''¥'' '&lt;' "' a- ~ onluo: O)'f .,.

It' s as 1f some banks were becommg " secuntres cleanng houses. "

GOLD.EN PASSBOOK

0

I

plementatwn of leg1slatwn to
deal With constitutwnal
amendments passed by - the
voters last November as one of
the first respons1billt&lt;es of the
second session of the l!Oth
General Assembly
Other maJOr legtslatwn
expected by House Minority
Leader · Charles Kurfess · [ RBowhng Green ), Ohw, has
mdtcated Repubhcans tn the
House wtll push for btlls m the
area of publl c employeremployee relatwns, tax relief
and tax reform, and welfare
reform-The House leader also
believes that some sort of
campatgn financmg b11l will be
adopted by the Leg1sla lure
BQth Kurfess and Gray agree
that there probably wtll be

It's become almost commonplace fo r bank headlines to scream
about rates , y1elds, term certificat es with f1xed maturitieS.

%0/o

1(

some sort of leg•stat10n
necessary at the &gt;i'ate level to
deal wtth the energy cnsos

ANNUAL

YOUR CHOICE

and now
the film ...

TWO RUNS MADE
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
E-R squad made two runs
Saturday, at 9:32 a.m. takmg
Herbert Miller, SR 124, to
Holzer Medtcal Center, and at
1:20 p.m., James Hawk, Wolfe
What manv du with the Pen Rd , to Veterans Memonal
gill of laughter is appreciate HospitaL
it too little.

'

•,

• Compounded Daily

Old fashioned Chicken
and Noodles. mashed
potatoes, chicken
gravy,
buttered
vegetable, warm roll a

Tonight thru

•

ANNUAL
RATE

COLO\) ·
.

' I

.12°/o

Large serving of home
style meat loaf. mashed
potatoes. brown gravy,
buttered
vegetab l e.
warm roll and butter.

NEPTUNE FACTOR

t

part or the country. It said tt
discovered the problem durmg
1ts natwnwide check of mushrooms which began last fall
wh en 11 found productiOn
def1c1encles m the mushroom
canmng industry

DINING ROOM SPECIALS

DINNER

Tonight, Jan 6

••
•
••

, &lt;

The new legislative sesswn
that began lasl Wednesday
wtth little fanfare appears to
· have many tough Issues
commg before the General
Assembly m 1974, according to
State Rep Oakley C Colhns
IR·Ironton )
Rep. Colhns satd Senate
Prestdent Pro Tern Ted Gray
( R-Columbus ) sees &lt;m·

DINING ROOM OPEN
12 PM TIL 5 PM

MEAT LOAF

MEIGS THEATRE

I

Pharmacies get
$10 million in
drug payback

Veal Parmesan served
with spaghetti and meat
sauce, tossed salad,
choice of dressing.
warm roll and butter _

~

1

bee n distributed m the eastern

I,

VEAL PARMESAN DINNER

4.

•

because or contammatton thal. Mount Laurel brand as well as
could lead to botuli sm 17 pnvate labels
pmsoning.
;,
The FDA sa&lt; d &lt;I does not
The mushrooms mvolved are kn ow how many cans of the
all of those m four-ounce (¥I ns suspec t mushrooms reac hed
packed before last Oct I by the the market
Mount Laurel Canmng Corp .
The FDA sa&lt;d most of the
and dt strobu te d under th e mushrooms appear to have

WASHINGTON tUPI) - The
Food and Drug Adnumstratwn
(FDA) said Friday thousands
of four-ounc e cans of
mushrooms from a Temple,
Pa ., packm~ form and
distributed 'under ' 18 brand
~am e s are be1n g reca lled

Murp~~s

Surviving are his wife, Erma

I

.
.
Hard Issues commg up

Temple-made mushrooms
could be· s::ontaminated

MRS. CRAWFORD
PT. PLEASANT - Mrs
Allie
Rebecca
Neville
Crawlord, 66, Apple Grove,
GOWIE FELLIJRE
died Friday evening at 7 m St.
GALLIPOLIS
- Pallbearers
Mary's Hospital in Huntington
were named Saturday for
after an eight month illneS&amp;o•
today's 1 p.m. funeral of Goldte
She was born June 15, 1!107 at
Fellure,
69, Texas Rd. who died
Hogsett a daughter of the late
Thursday
, Rev Alfred Holley
Oliver Neville and Mary Jane
will officiate at the servtces m
Foul Neville. She attended the
the Waugh · Halley . Wood
Ashton Baptist Church. Her
Funeral
Chapel Caskethusband, William Wesley
bearers w1ll be Melburn
Crawlord, died in 1969 and two
RIETTA
TAYLOR
Tackett,
Charles Carter, Larry
sisters and four brothers also
GALLIPOLIS
Gravestde
Cromllsh,
Woodrow Saunders,
preceded her in death.
will
be
held
at
10:30
services
Frank Knox, and Bob DucksSurvivmg
are
three
daughters, Mrs. Barbara Jean a.m. Monday at Mound Hill worth.
Harbour of Apple Grove1 Mrs.
Marjorie Wieser of &lt;;mcmnati,
0. and Mrs. Dorothy Irene
Plantz, of Covington, 0.; three
sons, William Wayne Crawlord
of Apple Grove, Howard Lee
Crawlord of Point Pleasant
and John Wesley Crawlord of
Burlington, 0.; five SISters,
Mrs. Adeline Sayre and Mrs.
Edith Redman, both of Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Mamie Harmon of Gallipolis; 0 .; Mrs.
Mary Esther Knott of Newark,
0 ,, and Mrs. Nannie Miller of
Lithopolis, 0.; one brother,
Waldo Neville of Springfield,
0.; 21 grandchildren, and 10
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be at 2
Grilled ham steak with
p.m. Monday at the Ashton
ra1sm sauce, candied
Baptist Church with the Rev.
sweet potatoes. cole
William (Bud) Hatfield and the
slaw, warm roll and
Rev. Max Spurlock officiating.
butter.
Burial will follow in Beale
Cemetery at Apple Grove.
Tbe body will be taken to the
church one hour before service. Friends may call at the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home after 2
p.m. Sunday.

S~NDAY

'

t

son.

cenum

148 Sam! (abbr )

! Area Deaths !

E. P. ARRINGTON
GALLIPOLIS - Edmond P.
Arrington, 62, Cheshire, died
Saturday at 3:15p.m. in Holzer
Medical Center after a
tingenng illness.
He was born ~uly 8, 1911 at
Pt. Pleasant, son of the late
Edward P. and Ida Mayes
Arrington. Besides his parents,
be was preceded in death by a

132 Soap plant
135 C rat e
137 lndtgenl
138 Atver m Hades
140 Prohtbll
14 2 Greek teller
143 Mu s•c as wnllen
144 Symbol lor
145 Symbol lor
tanlalum
14 7 Faroe 1stands
wl"l•rlwtnd

r=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~!~---

'

'

-HAM STEAK DINNER

and Portugal
104 Cap1lal

channe l

.

.

f
"·

DIIIVE~N

�..-..

.
4-

/

,,

The Sun~a\'\io{,cs : Somtinel.Sw1day. Jan . 6,

tnW'·, .

·.

:

Your Wayne National ForesJ

1/!

f
N

.

I

"

in ~ on the problem six years ago . .The

By T. A. Wolh'r

•

,

f

a multitu9e of other obst• cles which Onre NASA has developed the system,"
:;:: mtlst be oyercomc in proceeding from contra et was worked out with RCA to
~;~; one point to another point . For a survey design and build th e ··laser range pole ."

inillal estimate pr~ved wrong and the

I!i
&gt;.O:·

• WASHiNGTON (UP!) - A
$155,000 tax deduction claimed
by comedian · Jack Benny for
donation o! his radio scripts.
and other memorabilia to i
California university has been
disallowed by the Internal
Reven~e Service, government
records show.

*-

:.·.·..::
:;::

··

t..

rrglstrrcd civil engmt•rr an sur·
·
f
\'t'\'Or Rick Hann , zone rngmet&gt;r or

lh~ Wayne Nallonal forest, to ex·

::;:
:.::.:

plain the revolutionary laser sur·

veylng sysl&lt;·m whlc h appareu II. l'
'II b
d · d'ff' It terrain
soon wt e use m 1 tcu
d·
The savings in lime, energy
an
·
d'

:·:·
':,:·:.:'
::::
....

r

costs will be obvious upon rea mg

.;.:

Hann's report. Furthermore. ac;:;c curacy
within 3 Inches per mile )
:i:; will be greatly Improved.
::: "If I could only see that next biankety-

(lo

:;:: blank corner !' '

:

:.:,~.

..,
:;~
::::
;:::

Of course, thai "nex t corner" is only
tl~ree ridges away and at the bottom of a
hollow. However, I must\ot have been
the only surveyor fac ing tlli,s problem,
beca use &gt;t has been solved 1

{

The U.S. Forest Service began work-

::::

,

I he 187 molhoQ acres o! NatiOnal

@

Forest System land m 44 States and
P~e:to Ri~o adjoin· three~uarter s o~ a
rm lh on nerghbo_rs . Th~ For~st Serv1ce
lands are ~ften mte~mm_gled tn compl_ex
patt_erns w1th lands m pnvate ownership.
A brg percentage of .the forest system

::~;
- ~~
~}:

property lines have not been located
adequately
and marked on the groWld.
The ··laser · range pole" system
allows ~ired projection of straight 1·mes Many· surveys controlling properly lines
are as much as 175 years old. Many miles

;,:::
:.·,
· ..·.·.

:i:~ party using conventional equipment such
The prototype model worked .so well
;;:: as transi t, tape , range pole. etc., in Forest Servi ce surveys that plans are
~:~; proceeding from point to point can be being um de to purchase production
:;:: quite difficult . Many times I l-::1vr sa id. models.

Ed. Nolr : District Ran ger T. A.
d upon
Wulter has prevnilt•
·
d

How It Works

b~tween

two poin ts
This mean s that terrain and dense
fore st cover no long~r stand in the way of
d.tree1 Slg
. 11
.
b
.
po·operl)'
1 mgs e1ween 1w0

corners . A beam is pulsed straight up
from the sending unit at one point. From

the second point. the rece&gt;ver detects lhe
beam . The sight~ng device is then
lowered to ground level and
the line extended by conventional
methods. The system is accurate to
within 3inchesoveraone milecourse.
Previously, Forest Servic e survevors had to estimate where the next
adjacent property corner was. thep
project a straoght lone to 1t that :night
require cultong trees and underbrush,
sightmg up one s1de of a moun tam, and

~~
;~
~~

:.:.: .
;::::·
••
of line ami" their controlling property :;:;:

corners have been oblo'teraled or lost.
· ·::.·.··:.
ANDY STEWART
Less than one.tenth of Forest ~.:::
MASON,
Va. - Wayne
property lines and corner are located an :::.:
A.
Stewart,
a junior at
marked well enough so that landowners ·.···:. .·:.·
High
Sehool,
wfll be
Wahama
c"" n manage •land up to the lines with ·.·:.·.·:.
complete confidence. It has also been ~;~; listed In the Eighth Annual
estimated thai the rate o! survey by ;:;; Edition of Who's Who Among
present methods, about 2,000 miles a ;:;: American High School
year. would require as much as 24 years ;:~ Students. He Is the son of Mr.
to bring surveys up to date - between;;~ aud Mrs. George Jl. Stewart
corners already established- and cost ~;~:: of Mason. He Is active In
more than $100 million. With the new ;:;: Mason Dolled Methodist
and
Youth
system, the job may be done in 12 years ;~~ Church
Fellowship.
at about a third the cost. More than 200 ~~
years would be needed, at the pre~~nt
pace, to complete all corner and line

w:

then dovwn the other If the surveyors ' surveys.

:;·::~:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:; :::::::;:::::::::~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;::.

WILL MEET ·
GALIJPOLIS - The Gallia

Benny loses ·tax claim

District Rangt·r
laser wa s prop osed as a so lution. 1ht• pi_oJec.ted l ~ne d1dn t meet up .with the
::::
IRONTON - .Surveyors have always For~ s t ScrYiet' thC'n turned to NASi\ fm es tablished property corl)er, 1t meant ::-:
~~ been plagued by roughtern1 in , trees. and help in developing a practical systl'fll . goin.~ back to s~r~ all over again! .
~~:

i*

;:;:
:.:.·:.:.

: ·.;.;.:-:·:·:·:::::~:::; ...:·: :·:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·.·=·:·:··::;.:.;:;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::~::::::-.::-

As a result, the lax agency

says Benny and his wife, Mary,
owe · back taxes totallng
$109,000. The Bcnnys have
C&lt;lntested .the finding in U.S.
Tax Court.
The case· goes back to 1967
when Benny donated the "Jack
Benny Archive" to the Univer·
sily of California at Los
Angeles (UCLA) .
GRANT ANNOUNCED
The collection, with an apCOLUMBUS (UP!) - The praised value o! about $141,000
Gealiga ' CoWJty Health and contained radio and television
Welfare CoWJcil will receive a scripts, television files and
$10,494 federal grant to expand tapes, and misce llaneous
its senior information and souvenirs of the entertainer 's
referral center, it was an- career. The Bennys claimed
nOWlced today. The one-year the lull amount as an income
grant will permit the hiring of a tax deduction according to Tax
full-time director, according to Court records.
the Ohio Commission on Aging.
The following year, Benny
gave UCLA a collection of
- BRIGHT NAMEI,l
photographs, plaques and
COLUMBUS (UPI)- AHr.~d awards with an appraised
L. Bright, art professor at value of $14,000 and claimed
Youngstown State University, this as a deduction on his 1969
will serve a live-year term on return.
the Ohio Arts CoWJcil, Gov.
But the IRS told Benny it
John J. Gilligan annoWJced would not approve the deductoday. Bright, 31, also dif:ector tion because "it has not been
of the YU black studies established thai you owned the
program, succeeds Hariette E. material ... "
Williams: whose term expired:
Even i! the C&lt;lmedian can

County

show, !or tax purposes, that
items belonged to him
than networks
., and others,
IRS said 11 would,
deductions to ~~fair ma.rk•
value" whiclt it placed
$21,000 for archive and $713
the photos and awards.
determining the value
noncash gifts, the IRS , •••an

noon . Lesson on the metric

system al I p.m. taught by
Professor Charles Withee 1 Rio

Grande

UPI Business Writer

NEW YORK ( UPI)
Americans generally resigned
themselves this week to paying
55 to 60 cents a gallon for
gasoline- if they can find itand to a national 55 mile-per-·
hour speed limit.
While there were some signs

the gasoline sho rta ge was
easing a lillie and even charges
that the whol e energy crisis

Week in Business
had been masterminded by the
major oil companies out of

greed, it dominated the
nation's thoughts and news. It
became probable thai it marks
permanent and sign ificant
social change.
For
example,
the
automakers prepared to lay off
around 290,000 workers and

those nine-passenger station
wagons . In some sta tes officia ls reported a number of
suspiciotLS burnings of big cars

apparently by owners who
couldn't get enough fuel for
them and could not find a
dealer willing to take them in
trade . January auto output is
targeted 27 per cent below a
year ago.
• L'onvcrslon to Small Cars
One purpose of the big auto
la y-offs generally was described as to pave the way for
conversion of the whole industry to small cars.
In predicting that present
gasoline prices may go up by 9
to II cents a gallon by March,
federal officials also pointed
out that it is not easy to tell
·whether a local retailer is
gouging on prices unless he
demands more than 60 cents a

gallon.
If th e station is totally
dependent on foreign gasoline,
a 60-cent price may be
justified, they said.
Nevertheless, the Internal

industry experts said as many
as 47,ooil of these may never
work in lhe auto plants again.
II was predictad the fuel
shortage has ended the era o!
the big automobile, especially Revenue Service and local

Anarchy coming
By DONALD HAMBRO
WASHINGTON (UP!z - Attorney General William B.
Saxbe says Americans have so
lost respect for the law that
unless things change the
country will drill into anarchy.
Calling himself a "law and
order. man," Saxbe delivered
his warning as he was sworn in

Friday as President Nixon's
fourth allorney general.
The 57-year-{)ld former Ohio
Republican serrator piedged to
rllillhe Justice Department "lo
bring credit on the law ."
Although he never mentioned
Watergate, Saxbe said, "We

have lost a great deal of
respect for the law, " and
warned : " Unless · it is
respected there is no way you

can keep a society from drifting into anarchy."
Saxbe said America needed
both "law and order" if
Americans were to remain free
to
express
themselves

Robert M. Duncan, now a U.S.
Military Court o! Appeals
judge. Saxbe's wife Dolly held
the Bible on which he swore to
uphold the Constitution.
Saxbe resigned !rom · his
Senate seat Thurday with one
year remaining in his first
term. Cleveland millionaire
Howard Metzenbaum, a Democrat, who was appointed to fill

workers

officials cracked down on the

\

more obvious price gougers,

those demanding $1 a gallon or
insisting on tie-in sales with

purchase of gasoline.

A

number of such station were

padlocked and the owners
prosecuted. One in Chicago
was accused of selling gasoline
for $2 a gallon. Price gouging
on home heat1ng oil appeared
to be at least as prevalent as in
gasoline and even some of the
rnajor companies were ac-

cused by public officials o!
gouging.
Federal officials said hea ting
oil might go up as much as 33
per cent by March.
E.Pand Domestic Oil Output
Federal officials said limits
o! 10 gallons or less to a
customer at the lilling station
are going to be with us !or a
long lime to . come. Other
federal officials said the United
States cannot hope to become
sell-sufficient in energy again
before 1985 even with the
greatest efforts to produce oil
and gas from coal, expa nd
nuclear power production and

expand domestic oil and gas
output.
Venezuela raised the price of
its crude oil as anticipated by
82 per cent. Libya raised the
posted price of its crude to
$18.76 a barrel.
The Pentagon demanded
that military fuel allocations
be raised by 15 per cent and
en~rgy Czar

Miss Christine M. Young
•
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. William
K. Mollohan , South Third St. , Cheshire, annoWJce the
engagement of their daughter, Christine M. Young, to DaVJd
M. Ball, son of Mr. and Mrs. David A. Ball, Rt. I, Vinton.
Miss Young is a 1973 graduate o! Kyger Creek High School
and is employed by Krodellnc .. Point Pleasant. Ball is a 196ll
graduate o! North Gallia High School and is employed at the
Gavin Power Plant . Wedding p\ans are incomplete.

,;

DAN THOMAS
- AND SON

'·'

"Se.-ving you since 1936"

•

Ohio

"
"

after a tumultuous 12 months
which saw both Kleindienst
and Richardson leave office in
connection ,with tbe Watergate
controversy.
Robert H. Bork, who has
served as acting attorney
general since Oct. 20, 1973,

when Richardson resigned,
resumed his former position as
U.S. solicitor general.

"without the threat of Big
Brother laking over and interfering in .. . private life."
Two of S"''be's predecessors

Britain's crisis v.:orsl(petl

'

GALUPOUS - A lot of people couldn't belive that the

JOINS FIRM- Donald B.
· Harden, Syracuse, has
joined the (:arroll Norris
Dodge Company ol GalllpoUs
as a salesman. Harden Is a
graduate . of Southern High
School at Racine. He and hfs
wife, Angela, have one son,

sharply as o!!icials turned
down the coal miners' latest
wage bid. The three.&lt;Jay work
week continued and Britons

generally suffered !rom a lack
of heat, light and power.
Thousands of Britons had to
stand in line to collect WJemploymehl benefits .
U.S. Farm prices were
disclosed to have climbed 1.5
per cent seasonally in December, reversing the drop followin g the autumn harvests.
Building construction awards
were disclosed to have risen 11
per cent in November.

SAVE

William Simon lost

The airlines were guaran-

D. J., age two.

BROWN ENGAGED
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)- Jim
Brown, former Cleveland
Browns pro football great
turned movie actor, announced
Friday he is engaged to Diane
Stanely of Philadelphia. He
said he and Miss Stanely, a
student at Clark University in
Atlanta, will marry "some
time this year." Brown and his
first wife, Sue, were divorced
two years ago.

30% ro s·o%

FRENCK CITY FABRIC

SHO~ .

SINGER APPROVED DEALER
58 COURT
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

WARM UP NOW WITH

SOUP&amp;
SANDWICHES

TWO APPOINTED
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Frank
J. Ryan, of suburoan
Whitehall, has been named
deputy director o! the Highway
Safely Department's occupational' safety and health
program, it was· annOWlced
today. James 11. Paie was
nam.ed manager of the
program , and will implement
the equal employment opportunity and minori ty
recruitment projects . Both
men

have

he\d

various

positions in the department
.before these appointm~nls ,
according to Acting Depart.
merit Director Frederick
Vi erow.

.

ENTIRE STOCK! NOTHING WILL
BE HELD BACK!
THOUSANDS OF YARDS OF POLYESTER

DOUBLE KNITS
OPEN MONDAY
MORNI.NG 9:30
AM SHARP
.All RILL BOLTS
eALL FIRST QUALITY
eALL ONE PRICE
eALL YARN DYES

..

IF YOU UKE songbirds as well as I do, you're probably

•

:: enjoying their antics at your backyard feeder just now.
The ground feeding birds are doves, juncos and towhees. For
..! a mixture of birds, you need an above-the.groWld feeding station.
';
What you create yourfeeder from is up to you. Some intrepid
' person made one of a bleach bottle at our apartment. c;nass jars
,. and metal cans are also usable and there are many styles of
•
• C&lt;lnunercially made feeders.
·
Chickadees, wrens, nuthatches and woodpeckers love suet
:
:~ which can be placed in large chunks in a mesh bag, such as
.vegetables come in.
;, ,;
Birds are finicky eaters (just like Morris the Cat) and you
·' · ·!Jave to cater to each of their particular tastes if you expect them
i: ~ to stay with you through the winter. Nutmeats are favorite foods
:;:,,of cardinals, catbirds, chickadees, crossbills, goldfinches and

PICK FROM ..•
Polyester Double knits
Polyester &amp; Wool Double Knits

100 Pet.

Polyester, Wool &amp; Silk Double

Sweater Knits Double Knits
Color Co-Ordinated Double
5oi ids· Pliiids-Checks· Si ripes- Pr lr&gt;ts.fa rrci e
All '0 . 66 inch widths

FOR THIS EVENT ONLY!
SPECIALLY SELECTED

DRESS DESIGNER FABRICS

..

· Dry seeds such·as corn, weeds and grasses are eaten by bob-

;;; .,:;

THOUSANDS OF YARDS OF DRESS LENGTHS!
ALL
POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS .

Sinte 1859

daughter-of a service station manager would run out of gas, but
yes, it happened.
Returning from a visit with my friends in Hillsboro on New
Year's Day, I reached Jackson with the gauge, which has always
been more pessimistic than I have, sitting squarely on empty.
I remained cheerful.
After aU, I reasoned, my gas gauge has not worked properly
for 3 years, I only had 33 miles of relatively straight road to go
and the truckers were out in force, which meant! could probably
get help if I did run out.
So I kept coming and the old p.,,;tiacfinally coughed to a stop
just south o! Foster's Coal Company, a mere three blocks !rom
home.
She was still sitting there at noon Wednesday, while I
rounded up some gasoline to get her to a service station.
..
By the way, Dad got a tankload of gasoline Wednesday
': mornirtg after two weeks without any.

·.: ~ titmice.

IN ONE AND TWO YARD LENGTHS

- former :' Attorneys General

Richard G. Kleindienst and
Elliot L. Richardson-,o;tood by
him as he was administered
the oath of office by former
Ohio Supreme Court .Justice

Dorothy ]. Countryman

'
DONAW HARDEN

,~J• ··whites ' grackles I J'ays I pheasants, siskins, redpolls, sparrows of
" all kinds and thrashers.
:i · Surprisingly enough, birds enjoy "people-food," too. Apples,
~ AmeriCan cheese, cornbread, dried currants, raisins, peanuts
:: and peanut butter are among their !avo:ttes and these supply
: energy which helps keep our feathered !nends warm durmg the
~ C&lt;lld days.
.
. :
For more information about birds, wrote to the Publications
:
~ Center Ohio Department o! Natural Resources, Fountain
• Sq,uare' Columbus 43224and ask lor "Attracting Birds in Ohio."
"'
Thi~ little bo;klet tells about Ohio's native birds and has
.: diagrams to help you with construction o! feeders and houses for
«
•. our feathered friends.

.

·•..,

Miss Vicki Powell

Miss Rebecca A. Wil*ins
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED- Mr . and Mrs . Robert
F . Burnell, Upper River Rd ., are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Rebecca A. Wilkins, to J.
David Swain 11, son o! Mr. and Mrs. James D. Swain ,
Columbus. Miss Wilkins, a graduate of Gallia Academy High
School, is presently employed by the Holzer Medical Center.
Swain, also a graduate of Gallia Academy, all ends Miami
University, Oxford, and is a p'arl-lime employe of Ruth's
Floral. Swain is the b'l'a ndson of Mrs. Lillian Conley, Lower
River Rd., and Mrs. Mildred Swain, Vinton Crt., Gallipolis.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

Dance registration set

by

FABRIC
s·PECIALS
..

his bid for full control over
military fuel consumption.

jan's Side

soon.

SEW AND SAVEl
.'

teed more fuel but industry
leaders intimated they would
stick to their reduced flight
Saxbe's unexpired term, also schedules and would not call
attended the swearing:in.
"" back laid off pilot's and other
The blunt-speaking former
Ohio attorney general takes
over the department's reins

anytime

Miss Bosworth
girl of month

•

American and TWA alone have
groWJded 12big 747s because of
the flight cuts.
The stock market soared as
the Federal Reserve Board
reduced the margin requirement from 65 to 50 per cent.
Sales o! the major retail chains
showed excellent gains !or
December, indicating that the
recent Christmas shopping
sales were better than the
weekly Commerce Department reports had suggested.

CAROL BOSWORTH

I

•

60c for gas, driving 55 mph

GALLIPOLIS - Tuesday,
Jan . 8 is the day all new
.students interested in laking
dancing lessons must register
for the coming semester at the
French Art Colony. Mrs.
Gillian Moore is the instructor.
Scheduled classes arc,
Tuesday, 3 to .4 p.m., beginners, ages four to six, and 4:30
to 5:30p.m., advance dancing,

UMW meets
in Beegle home
KANAUGA - Kanauga
UMW mel Thursday, evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Beagle
for the regular session .
"We 'll Work Till Jesus
Comes" was the opening

hymn , fo llowed by prayer by
Mrs. Berkley Wright. Roll call
was answered with a scripture
verse beginning with a "J."

Mrs. Carl Roush gave the
scripture reading !rom
Galatians 6:1-9 and Mrs. Pina
Ward read "Time Marches
On" !rom "Our Daily Bread."
Mrs. Florence Allen read
~'Encouragement

for the New

Year" also !rom "Our Daily
Bread." Miss Evelyn Rothgeb
gave "A New Year Prayer.''

Bible questions were asked
by Mrs. Beagle and the study
was on II Timothy 4. Mrs.
Clyde Shamblin gave the
benediction, and the birthday
of Miss Rothegeb was observed. The ladies reported 39
sick calls for the month .

ages six to 10; Wednesday, 4:30
to 5:30p.m., advance dancing,
agessjx lo 10,5:30 to 6:30p.m.,
teenage classic ballet; 6:30 to
7: 30 p.m. teenage modern
dancing; Thursday, 71o 9 p.m.,
''Slimnastiks''.
Interested new students
must call Mrs . Gabby Sattler
between 12 and 3 p.m . Tuesday
to register. Her phone nwnber

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Delbert
Powell , 1740 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, announce the
engagement of their daughter Vicki to Zat Salmons, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Salmons, Tom Woods Rd. Vicki is a
student at Gallia Academy High School and Zal ~employed
by Master Mix . AJWJe wedding is being planned.

Ladies meet

is 446-4985. Cost for one
se mester, Jan . 8 to May 30, is
$34. Private or semi-private
lessons are $3 per half-hour, $6
per hour .
Snowmen tray favors for the
Students who are already
registered and taking _lessons pediatrics wao:.d at the Holzer
do not need to call Mrs. Saltier, Medical Center were made.
The meeting dismissed with ~ !:::
but must mail a check for $34
z
no later than Jan. 30. Checks
:..::
should be made to the Frenc~ -~
Arl Colony and se nt to Mrs . G.
GOLDWYN RESTING
Sattler, Rt. 3, Box 399,
SANTA MONICA, Cali!.
GaJlipolis. 45631.
( UPJ) - Sam Goldwyn, 91, one
The new "Slimnastiks" o! the most successful and
class, taught by Mrs. Moore, is influentia l movie producers in
excercise to music. Classes Hollywood history, was
will be Thursdays !rom 7 to 8 r~ported " resting comfortably,
p . m .~ in two eight-week in satisfactory condltion"
sessions. The fttst--.,runs from Saturday by a spokesman for
Jan. 10 to Feb. 28 and the St. John's Hospital. ·"
second is !rom March 7 to April
25.
1:3
Cl)
Cost for the classes is $12 per
:::::1
eig ht-w ee k session.
9
Registration procedure for the
Ill
"Slimnastiks" course is the
I Dish Gardens com -1
sarne as for the dance classes.
I plete with cut flowers. 1
MEETING DELA YEO
I
MIDDLEPORT - A meeting
of the Middleport Literary Club I Daily Hospital Qelivervl
scheduled for Wednesday has
been postponed until Jan. 16 at SUSIE'S GREENHOUSE
the home of Mrs. Ben Philson,
I St. Rt . 588
446-4610 1.
Racine .

•

0

r-Dis'iiGARDENs·1
1 •3.5o up 1 •
~

'6.50

.

I.. _________ I

330 SEOOND AVENUE

WHILE EVERYONE else in Ohio (almosl ! &gt;yas sitting glued

to a TV set New Year's Day, cheering hysterically lor the Bucks,

I was in the compgny of two very che~rful OSU Grads who were
rooting you guessed it, for USC. Obv10usly our Side lost, which
only go~s to show that we probably cheered for the right learn. II
we had been !or Ohio, they would have lost by a landslide.

:':
••
"
;.
•·
'

has -

~·lS.d

...... .

SEIKO .
WATCHES·

'

,-,1 •

yjH{III [{.!l~OM l O~I(.INm ) .

Everything Is
Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Money Batk

• Pure Ground ~ef
Hamburgers

• Bean Soup

YUKON CLUB
SODA,
GINGER ALE,
.

~ • Homemade Chili

MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY
9:30 TIL 9:00 PM

....• o;z
" 1/a'W

.
*".

TUES., WED., THURS. &amp; SAT.
9:30 TIL 5:00 PM

~qak.r

HALF &amp;.HALF

~

Thursday;

"~ Broomstick

iqnppr

Jan.

·'

I

I·

1:

. I

I.

•

at:!

~

Sbjk

::till

li
~
m

CE NTE R

(;)

GALLIPOLIS

SHOP NOW AND SAVE
AT OUR

STOREWIDE
'CLEARANCE

SALE
LOW SALE .PRICES
ON HUNDREDS OF

ATS
•

at:!

6c:
~
en

10,

·Afghan,

Monday Store Hours 9:30 AM to 8 PM

--

.
No ACOO IM - t ?J
sell -wm£11n g, 96 '21 1. wa ter te sted'
dav -dat9 c al!lnd ar stam less st eel:
wh rte d li)l $&lt;19 50

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
--

'

eRAIN COATS

RUSH IN TODAY

·-~~
;:.;·.

f

.

: ~ Crocheting, etc. lessons, 1·3
! : p.m. Teacher, Clara Fisher.
::: : PoUuck supper 6:30 p.m. This
:: ""'wfll be lhe night oi the White
:: ::EleplJantSale.
.
422 Secona Ave ,
"' - Friday' Jim. 11, Ali craft. 9 J.,___
Gallipolis·,
Ohio
..
.N______
..,
:;:a.m. ·3p.m,
~

"Home of That Old Fashioned Goodness"
CQm~LOf Second &amp;Olive
·
Gallipolis, 0.

ePANT COATS

•

'~&lt;White.

_:!:

Expires Feb . 1. 1974

•
A Sale You Can't Afford To Miss

Monday, Jan. 7, Kmtting
Class 1-3 p.m.
'['eacher, Anne
.

Tuesday, Jan. 8, Physical
Fitness 1~11 a.m. Decoupage
~ Class,l-3 p.m, Bring woOd and
' pictures.
:;:
Wednesday, Jan 9, Small
;, NCrafts Lesson 1-3 p.m. Teacher
. : ,';Elizabeth Evans . .

CLOSED SUNDAY

This coupon is worth 25
pet. off at list price for
carpel or furniture
cleaning done in your
home by Kiesling's .

IN EVERY DEPARTMENT

:
:

• Footlong Hot Dogs

~-

u

•

Gallipolis, Ohio

TERRIFIC SAVINGS

GALUPOLIS - The Senior
~ Citizen Center, located in the
·~ .old Holzer Hospital Building,
:~ .;,Cedar St. entrance. is open
,;: Z :Monday through Friday from 9
~~..; a .m . .to 3 p.m. and one night
· ~...each week. The -schedule !or
.~ this week is as follows :

NEW STORE HOURS

~

KIESLING'S
CARPET CLEANING
SERVICE

FEATURES

~"'

Sr. Citizens
..."
.. Calendar

LENGTH COATS

Serving all of Gallia .
Mason and Meigs
counties.
Phone 446·4408

STOREWIDE
·
EVENT
..

Sizes 6-18

•

HUMPHREY ILL
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Sen. Hwnbert H. Hwnphrey,
D-Minn., suffering !rom what
his doctor called a "pinhead"
twnor of the bladder has been
hospitalized at Bethesda Naval
hospital !or tests.

Carpets and furniture
la st
longer ,
stay
brighter and fresher
when
c leaned,
sanitized, deodorized,
static -controlled
and
anti - resoiled
by
Kiesling's. All this for
one low price. Carpels
are ready for use the
same day. For a free
estimate measure your
carpets then call 446·
4408 in Gallipolis. If no
answer call after 5
p.m .

THIS SENSATIONAL .. BIG

~ A fine fine for cruise and sportswear.

HAVE A NICE WEEK.

~

GALLIPOLIS
Carol
Bosworth, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. S. R. Bosworth, was
named December girl o! the
month by the members of the
GAHS Future Homemakers.
Miss Bosworth is 16, and a
sophomore. She has been in
f .H.A. !or two years, and is
now serving as district vice
president.
·
Miss Bosworth is also active
in the school newspaper, she
serves as a Gallia Script salesman.
Her hobbies include hiking,
horseback riding, singing and
painting.

BIDWELL - The United prayer led by Wanda Atha and
Methodist Women mel at the refreshments were served by
church Wednesday evening Beatrice Stanley.
with six members present . .
The meeting was called to
eFUR LIKE COATS eBOOT
order by the president, and the
Lord's prayer was given in
...
Wlison. Scripture !rom Luke
6:1-19 was re~d by Elizabeth
Donnell. The progra m was a
discussion
on
"Human
Relations Day and Sell
Denial," led by Joan Roberts.
A collection for human
relations day was taken and
the April meeting was set as
the deadline lor turning in self
denial boxes.

,;

I

Every

25% OFF

makes its own appraisal as

Ju;,_~o lis .

College.

· homemaker welcome .

check against any alliora.&gt;sa
obtained by the donor.
Because of the disputed
the IRS says the Bennys
back taxes of $99,546 lor
and $10,535 lor 1968. The
Tax Court will issue a
ruling ·in the case. fY

-

' Extension

Homemak er's will me et
Wednesday, Jan . 9, at Grace
United Methodist Church at
10:30 a.m: Pot.uck ~unch at

Americans (resignedly?) paying
By LEROY POPE

'

.

::::::::::::=~~::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~~::::::::: ::: :: ::: ::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::~:~~=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::...::::-:::::::::~·~····:f.~'

1

"

,,

•

_...__ &amp;.tc.

GAWPOUS, OHIO

~

!~

''THE STORE WITH MORE"

,L...............
~~~~~~~--~~~K~E~CO~A~TS~~
eRAIN COATS
eBOOT LENGtH COATS
eFUR
Ll . ·
'

•·

�..-..

.
4-

/

,,

The Sun~a\'\io{,cs : Somtinel.Sw1day. Jan . 6,

tnW'·, .

·.

:

Your Wayne National ForesJ

1/!

f
N

.

I

"

in ~ on the problem six years ago . .The

By T. A. Wolh'r

•

,

f

a multitu9e of other obst• cles which Onre NASA has developed the system,"
:;:: mtlst be oyercomc in proceeding from contra et was worked out with RCA to
~;~; one point to another point . For a survey design and build th e ··laser range pole ."

inillal estimate pr~ved wrong and the

I!i
&gt;.O:·

• WASHiNGTON (UP!) - A
$155,000 tax deduction claimed
by comedian · Jack Benny for
donation o! his radio scripts.
and other memorabilia to i
California university has been
disallowed by the Internal
Reven~e Service, government
records show.

*-

:.·.·..::
:;::

··

t..

rrglstrrcd civil engmt•rr an sur·
·
f
\'t'\'Or Rick Hann , zone rngmet&gt;r or

lh~ Wayne Nallonal forest, to ex·

::;:
:.::.:

plain the revolutionary laser sur·

veylng sysl&lt;·m whlc h appareu II. l'
'II b
d · d'ff' It terrain
soon wt e use m 1 tcu
d·
The savings in lime, energy
an
·
d'

:·:·
':,:·:.:'
::::
....

r

costs will be obvious upon rea mg

.;.:

Hann's report. Furthermore. ac;:;c curacy
within 3 Inches per mile )
:i:; will be greatly Improved.
::: "If I could only see that next biankety-

(lo

:;:: blank corner !' '

:

:.:,~.

..,
:;~
::::
;:::

Of course, thai "nex t corner" is only
tl~ree ridges away and at the bottom of a
hollow. However, I must\ot have been
the only surveyor fac ing tlli,s problem,
beca use &gt;t has been solved 1

{

The U.S. Forest Service began work-

::::

,

I he 187 molhoQ acres o! NatiOnal

@

Forest System land m 44 States and
P~e:to Ri~o adjoin· three~uarter s o~ a
rm lh on nerghbo_rs . Th~ For~st Serv1ce
lands are ~ften mte~mm_gled tn compl_ex
patt_erns w1th lands m pnvate ownership.
A brg percentage of .the forest system

::~;
- ~~
~}:

property lines have not been located
adequately
and marked on the groWld.
The ··laser · range pole" system
allows ~ired projection of straight 1·mes Many· surveys controlling properly lines
are as much as 175 years old. Many miles

;,:::
:.·,
· ..·.·.

:i:~ party using conventional equipment such
The prototype model worked .so well
;;:: as transi t, tape , range pole. etc., in Forest Servi ce surveys that plans are
~:~; proceeding from point to point can be being um de to purchase production
:;:: quite difficult . Many times I l-::1vr sa id. models.

Ed. Nolr : District Ran ger T. A.
d upon
Wulter has prevnilt•
·
d

How It Works

b~tween

two poin ts
This mean s that terrain and dense
fore st cover no long~r stand in the way of
d.tree1 Slg
. 11
.
b
.
po·operl)'
1 mgs e1ween 1w0

corners . A beam is pulsed straight up
from the sending unit at one point. From

the second point. the rece&gt;ver detects lhe
beam . The sight~ng device is then
lowered to ground level and
the line extended by conventional
methods. The system is accurate to
within 3inchesoveraone milecourse.
Previously, Forest Servic e survevors had to estimate where the next
adjacent property corner was. thep
project a straoght lone to 1t that :night
require cultong trees and underbrush,
sightmg up one s1de of a moun tam, and

~~
;~
~~

:.:.: .
;::::·
••
of line ami" their controlling property :;:;:

corners have been oblo'teraled or lost.
· ·::.·.··:.
ANDY STEWART
Less than one.tenth of Forest ~.:::
MASON,
Va. - Wayne
property lines and corner are located an :::.:
A.
Stewart,
a junior at
marked well enough so that landowners ·.···:. .·:.·
High
Sehool,
wfll be
Wahama
c"" n manage •land up to the lines with ·.·:.·.·:.
complete confidence. It has also been ~;~; listed In the Eighth Annual
estimated thai the rate o! survey by ;:;; Edition of Who's Who Among
present methods, about 2,000 miles a ;:;: American High School
year. would require as much as 24 years ;:~ Students. He Is the son of Mr.
to bring surveys up to date - between;;~ aud Mrs. George Jl. Stewart
corners already established- and cost ~;~:: of Mason. He Is active In
more than $100 million. With the new ;:;: Mason Dolled Methodist
and
Youth
system, the job may be done in 12 years ;~~ Church
Fellowship.
at about a third the cost. More than 200 ~~
years would be needed, at the pre~~nt
pace, to complete all corner and line

w:

then dovwn the other If the surveyors ' surveys.

:;·::~:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:; :::::::;:::::::::~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;::.

WILL MEET ·
GALIJPOLIS - The Gallia

Benny loses ·tax claim

District Rangt·r
laser wa s prop osed as a so lution. 1ht• pi_oJec.ted l ~ne d1dn t meet up .with the
::::
IRONTON - .Surveyors have always For~ s t ScrYiet' thC'n turned to NASi\ fm es tablished property corl)er, 1t meant ::-:
~~ been plagued by roughtern1 in , trees. and help in developing a practical systl'fll . goin.~ back to s~r~ all over again! .
~~:

i*

;:;:
:.:.·:.:.

: ·.;.;.:-:·:·:·:::::~:::; ...:·: :·:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·.·=·:·:··::;.:.;:;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::~::::::-.::-

As a result, the lax agency

says Benny and his wife, Mary,
owe · back taxes totallng
$109,000. The Bcnnys have
C&lt;lntested .the finding in U.S.
Tax Court.
The case· goes back to 1967
when Benny donated the "Jack
Benny Archive" to the Univer·
sily of California at Los
Angeles (UCLA) .
GRANT ANNOUNCED
The collection, with an apCOLUMBUS (UP!) - The praised value o! about $141,000
Gealiga ' CoWJty Health and contained radio and television
Welfare CoWJcil will receive a scripts, television files and
$10,494 federal grant to expand tapes, and misce llaneous
its senior information and souvenirs of the entertainer 's
referral center, it was an- career. The Bennys claimed
nOWlced today. The one-year the lull amount as an income
grant will permit the hiring of a tax deduction according to Tax
full-time director, according to Court records.
the Ohio Commission on Aging.
The following year, Benny
gave UCLA a collection of
- BRIGHT NAMEI,l
photographs, plaques and
COLUMBUS (UPI)- AHr.~d awards with an appraised
L. Bright, art professor at value of $14,000 and claimed
Youngstown State University, this as a deduction on his 1969
will serve a live-year term on return.
the Ohio Arts CoWJcil, Gov.
But the IRS told Benny it
John J. Gilligan annoWJced would not approve the deductoday. Bright, 31, also dif:ector tion because "it has not been
of the YU black studies established thai you owned the
program, succeeds Hariette E. material ... "
Williams: whose term expired:
Even i! the C&lt;lmedian can

County

show, !or tax purposes, that
items belonged to him
than networks
., and others,
IRS said 11 would,
deductions to ~~fair ma.rk•
value" whiclt it placed
$21,000 for archive and $713
the photos and awards.
determining the value
noncash gifts, the IRS , •••an

noon . Lesson on the metric

system al I p.m. taught by
Professor Charles Withee 1 Rio

Grande

UPI Business Writer

NEW YORK ( UPI)
Americans generally resigned
themselves this week to paying
55 to 60 cents a gallon for
gasoline- if they can find itand to a national 55 mile-per-·
hour speed limit.
While there were some signs

the gasoline sho rta ge was
easing a lillie and even charges
that the whol e energy crisis

Week in Business
had been masterminded by the
major oil companies out of

greed, it dominated the
nation's thoughts and news. It
became probable thai it marks
permanent and sign ificant
social change.
For
example,
the
automakers prepared to lay off
around 290,000 workers and

those nine-passenger station
wagons . In some sta tes officia ls reported a number of
suspiciotLS burnings of big cars

apparently by owners who
couldn't get enough fuel for
them and could not find a
dealer willing to take them in
trade . January auto output is
targeted 27 per cent below a
year ago.
• L'onvcrslon to Small Cars
One purpose of the big auto
la y-offs generally was described as to pave the way for
conversion of the whole industry to small cars.
In predicting that present
gasoline prices may go up by 9
to II cents a gallon by March,
federal officials also pointed
out that it is not easy to tell
·whether a local retailer is
gouging on prices unless he
demands more than 60 cents a

gallon.
If th e station is totally
dependent on foreign gasoline,
a 60-cent price may be
justified, they said.
Nevertheless, the Internal

industry experts said as many
as 47,ooil of these may never
work in lhe auto plants again.
II was predictad the fuel
shortage has ended the era o!
the big automobile, especially Revenue Service and local

Anarchy coming
By DONALD HAMBRO
WASHINGTON (UP!z - Attorney General William B.
Saxbe says Americans have so
lost respect for the law that
unless things change the
country will drill into anarchy.
Calling himself a "law and
order. man," Saxbe delivered
his warning as he was sworn in

Friday as President Nixon's
fourth allorney general.
The 57-year-{)ld former Ohio
Republican serrator piedged to
rllillhe Justice Department "lo
bring credit on the law ."
Although he never mentioned
Watergate, Saxbe said, "We

have lost a great deal of
respect for the law, " and
warned : " Unless · it is
respected there is no way you

can keep a society from drifting into anarchy."
Saxbe said America needed
both "law and order" if
Americans were to remain free
to
express
themselves

Robert M. Duncan, now a U.S.
Military Court o! Appeals
judge. Saxbe's wife Dolly held
the Bible on which he swore to
uphold the Constitution.
Saxbe resigned !rom · his
Senate seat Thurday with one
year remaining in his first
term. Cleveland millionaire
Howard Metzenbaum, a Democrat, who was appointed to fill

workers

officials cracked down on the

\

more obvious price gougers,

those demanding $1 a gallon or
insisting on tie-in sales with

purchase of gasoline.

A

number of such station were

padlocked and the owners
prosecuted. One in Chicago
was accused of selling gasoline
for $2 a gallon. Price gouging
on home heat1ng oil appeared
to be at least as prevalent as in
gasoline and even some of the
rnajor companies were ac-

cused by public officials o!
gouging.
Federal officials said hea ting
oil might go up as much as 33
per cent by March.
E.Pand Domestic Oil Output
Federal officials said limits
o! 10 gallons or less to a
customer at the lilling station
are going to be with us !or a
long lime to . come. Other
federal officials said the United
States cannot hope to become
sell-sufficient in energy again
before 1985 even with the
greatest efforts to produce oil
and gas from coal, expa nd
nuclear power production and

expand domestic oil and gas
output.
Venezuela raised the price of
its crude oil as anticipated by
82 per cent. Libya raised the
posted price of its crude to
$18.76 a barrel.
The Pentagon demanded
that military fuel allocations
be raised by 15 per cent and
en~rgy Czar

Miss Christine M. Young
•
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. William
K. Mollohan , South Third St. , Cheshire, annoWJce the
engagement of their daughter, Christine M. Young, to DaVJd
M. Ball, son of Mr. and Mrs. David A. Ball, Rt. I, Vinton.
Miss Young is a 1973 graduate o! Kyger Creek High School
and is employed by Krodellnc .. Point Pleasant. Ball is a 196ll
graduate o! North Gallia High School and is employed at the
Gavin Power Plant . Wedding p\ans are incomplete.

,;

DAN THOMAS
- AND SON

'·'

"Se.-ving you since 1936"

•

Ohio

"
"

after a tumultuous 12 months
which saw both Kleindienst
and Richardson leave office in
connection ,with tbe Watergate
controversy.
Robert H. Bork, who has
served as acting attorney
general since Oct. 20, 1973,

when Richardson resigned,
resumed his former position as
U.S. solicitor general.

"without the threat of Big
Brother laking over and interfering in .. . private life."
Two of S"''be's predecessors

Britain's crisis v.:orsl(petl

'

GALUPOUS - A lot of people couldn't belive that the

JOINS FIRM- Donald B.
· Harden, Syracuse, has
joined the (:arroll Norris
Dodge Company ol GalllpoUs
as a salesman. Harden Is a
graduate . of Southern High
School at Racine. He and hfs
wife, Angela, have one son,

sharply as o!!icials turned
down the coal miners' latest
wage bid. The three.&lt;Jay work
week continued and Britons

generally suffered !rom a lack
of heat, light and power.
Thousands of Britons had to
stand in line to collect WJemploymehl benefits .
U.S. Farm prices were
disclosed to have climbed 1.5
per cent seasonally in December, reversing the drop followin g the autumn harvests.
Building construction awards
were disclosed to have risen 11
per cent in November.

SAVE

William Simon lost

The airlines were guaran-

D. J., age two.

BROWN ENGAGED
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)- Jim
Brown, former Cleveland
Browns pro football great
turned movie actor, announced
Friday he is engaged to Diane
Stanely of Philadelphia. He
said he and Miss Stanely, a
student at Clark University in
Atlanta, will marry "some
time this year." Brown and his
first wife, Sue, were divorced
two years ago.

30% ro s·o%

FRENCK CITY FABRIC

SHO~ .

SINGER APPROVED DEALER
58 COURT
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

WARM UP NOW WITH

SOUP&amp;
SANDWICHES

TWO APPOINTED
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Frank
J. Ryan, of suburoan
Whitehall, has been named
deputy director o! the Highway
Safely Department's occupational' safety and health
program, it was· annOWlced
today. James 11. Paie was
nam.ed manager of the
program , and will implement
the equal employment opportunity and minori ty
recruitment projects . Both
men

have

he\d

various

positions in the department
.before these appointm~nls ,
according to Acting Depart.
merit Director Frederick
Vi erow.

.

ENTIRE STOCK! NOTHING WILL
BE HELD BACK!
THOUSANDS OF YARDS OF POLYESTER

DOUBLE KNITS
OPEN MONDAY
MORNI.NG 9:30
AM SHARP
.All RILL BOLTS
eALL FIRST QUALITY
eALL ONE PRICE
eALL YARN DYES

..

IF YOU UKE songbirds as well as I do, you're probably

•

:: enjoying their antics at your backyard feeder just now.
The ground feeding birds are doves, juncos and towhees. For
..! a mixture of birds, you need an above-the.groWld feeding station.
';
What you create yourfeeder from is up to you. Some intrepid
' person made one of a bleach bottle at our apartment. c;nass jars
,. and metal cans are also usable and there are many styles of
•
• C&lt;lnunercially made feeders.
·
Chickadees, wrens, nuthatches and woodpeckers love suet
:
:~ which can be placed in large chunks in a mesh bag, such as
.vegetables come in.
;, ,;
Birds are finicky eaters (just like Morris the Cat) and you
·' · ·!Jave to cater to each of their particular tastes if you expect them
i: ~ to stay with you through the winter. Nutmeats are favorite foods
:;:,,of cardinals, catbirds, chickadees, crossbills, goldfinches and

PICK FROM ..•
Polyester Double knits
Polyester &amp; Wool Double Knits

100 Pet.

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Color Co-Ordinated Double
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All '0 . 66 inch widths

FOR THIS EVENT ONLY!
SPECIALLY SELECTED

DRESS DESIGNER FABRICS

..

· Dry seeds such·as corn, weeds and grasses are eaten by bob-

;;; .,:;

THOUSANDS OF YARDS OF DRESS LENGTHS!
ALL
POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS .

Sinte 1859

daughter-of a service station manager would run out of gas, but
yes, it happened.
Returning from a visit with my friends in Hillsboro on New
Year's Day, I reached Jackson with the gauge, which has always
been more pessimistic than I have, sitting squarely on empty.
I remained cheerful.
After aU, I reasoned, my gas gauge has not worked properly
for 3 years, I only had 33 miles of relatively straight road to go
and the truckers were out in force, which meant! could probably
get help if I did run out.
So I kept coming and the old p.,,;tiacfinally coughed to a stop
just south o! Foster's Coal Company, a mere three blocks !rom
home.
She was still sitting there at noon Wednesday, while I
rounded up some gasoline to get her to a service station.
..
By the way, Dad got a tankload of gasoline Wednesday
': mornirtg after two weeks without any.

·.: ~ titmice.

IN ONE AND TWO YARD LENGTHS

- former :' Attorneys General

Richard G. Kleindienst and
Elliot L. Richardson-,o;tood by
him as he was administered
the oath of office by former
Ohio Supreme Court .Justice

Dorothy ]. Countryman

'
DONAW HARDEN

,~J• ··whites ' grackles I J'ays I pheasants, siskins, redpolls, sparrows of
" all kinds and thrashers.
:i · Surprisingly enough, birds enjoy "people-food," too. Apples,
~ AmeriCan cheese, cornbread, dried currants, raisins, peanuts
:: and peanut butter are among their !avo:ttes and these supply
: energy which helps keep our feathered !nends warm durmg the
~ C&lt;lld days.
.
. :
For more information about birds, wrote to the Publications
:
~ Center Ohio Department o! Natural Resources, Fountain
• Sq,uare' Columbus 43224and ask lor "Attracting Birds in Ohio."
"'
Thi~ little bo;klet tells about Ohio's native birds and has
.: diagrams to help you with construction o! feeders and houses for
«
•. our feathered friends.

.

·•..,

Miss Vicki Powell

Miss Rebecca A. Wil*ins
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED- Mr . and Mrs . Robert
F . Burnell, Upper River Rd ., are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Rebecca A. Wilkins, to J.
David Swain 11, son o! Mr. and Mrs. James D. Swain ,
Columbus. Miss Wilkins, a graduate of Gallia Academy High
School, is presently employed by the Holzer Medical Center.
Swain, also a graduate of Gallia Academy, all ends Miami
University, Oxford, and is a p'arl-lime employe of Ruth's
Floral. Swain is the b'l'a ndson of Mrs. Lillian Conley, Lower
River Rd., and Mrs. Mildred Swain, Vinton Crt., Gallipolis.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

Dance registration set

by

FABRIC
s·PECIALS
..

his bid for full control over
military fuel consumption.

jan's Side

soon.

SEW AND SAVEl
.'

teed more fuel but industry
leaders intimated they would
stick to their reduced flight
Saxbe's unexpired term, also schedules and would not call
attended the swearing:in.
"" back laid off pilot's and other
The blunt-speaking former
Ohio attorney general takes
over the department's reins

anytime

Miss Bosworth
girl of month

•

American and TWA alone have
groWJded 12big 747s because of
the flight cuts.
The stock market soared as
the Federal Reserve Board
reduced the margin requirement from 65 to 50 per cent.
Sales o! the major retail chains
showed excellent gains !or
December, indicating that the
recent Christmas shopping
sales were better than the
weekly Commerce Department reports had suggested.

CAROL BOSWORTH

I

•

60c for gas, driving 55 mph

GALLIPOLIS - Tuesday,
Jan . 8 is the day all new
.students interested in laking
dancing lessons must register
for the coming semester at the
French Art Colony. Mrs.
Gillian Moore is the instructor.
Scheduled classes arc,
Tuesday, 3 to .4 p.m., beginners, ages four to six, and 4:30
to 5:30p.m., advance dancing,

UMW meets
in Beegle home
KANAUGA - Kanauga
UMW mel Thursday, evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Beagle
for the regular session .
"We 'll Work Till Jesus
Comes" was the opening

hymn , fo llowed by prayer by
Mrs. Berkley Wright. Roll call
was answered with a scripture
verse beginning with a "J."

Mrs. Carl Roush gave the
scripture reading !rom
Galatians 6:1-9 and Mrs. Pina
Ward read "Time Marches
On" !rom "Our Daily Bread."
Mrs. Florence Allen read
~'Encouragement

for the New

Year" also !rom "Our Daily
Bread." Miss Evelyn Rothgeb
gave "A New Year Prayer.''

Bible questions were asked
by Mrs. Beagle and the study
was on II Timothy 4. Mrs.
Clyde Shamblin gave the
benediction, and the birthday
of Miss Rothegeb was observed. The ladies reported 39
sick calls for the month .

ages six to 10; Wednesday, 4:30
to 5:30p.m., advance dancing,
agessjx lo 10,5:30 to 6:30p.m.,
teenage classic ballet; 6:30 to
7: 30 p.m. teenage modern
dancing; Thursday, 71o 9 p.m.,
''Slimnastiks''.
Interested new students
must call Mrs . Gabby Sattler
between 12 and 3 p.m . Tuesday
to register. Her phone nwnber

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Delbert
Powell , 1740 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, announce the
engagement of their daughter Vicki to Zat Salmons, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Salmons, Tom Woods Rd. Vicki is a
student at Gallia Academy High School and Zal ~employed
by Master Mix . AJWJe wedding is being planned.

Ladies meet

is 446-4985. Cost for one
se mester, Jan . 8 to May 30, is
$34. Private or semi-private
lessons are $3 per half-hour, $6
per hour .
Snowmen tray favors for the
Students who are already
registered and taking _lessons pediatrics wao:.d at the Holzer
do not need to call Mrs. Saltier, Medical Center were made.
The meeting dismissed with ~ !:::
but must mail a check for $34
z
no later than Jan. 30. Checks
:..::
should be made to the Frenc~ -~
Arl Colony and se nt to Mrs . G.
GOLDWYN RESTING
Sattler, Rt. 3, Box 399,
SANTA MONICA, Cali!.
GaJlipolis. 45631.
( UPJ) - Sam Goldwyn, 91, one
The new "Slimnastiks" o! the most successful and
class, taught by Mrs. Moore, is influentia l movie producers in
excercise to music. Classes Hollywood history, was
will be Thursdays !rom 7 to 8 r~ported " resting comfortably,
p . m .~ in two eight-week in satisfactory condltion"
sessions. The fttst--.,runs from Saturday by a spokesman for
Jan. 10 to Feb. 28 and the St. John's Hospital. ·"
second is !rom March 7 to April
25.
1:3
Cl)
Cost for the classes is $12 per
:::::1
eig ht-w ee k session.
9
Registration procedure for the
Ill
"Slimnastiks" course is the
I Dish Gardens com -1
sarne as for the dance classes.
I plete with cut flowers. 1
MEETING DELA YEO
I
MIDDLEPORT - A meeting
of the Middleport Literary Club I Daily Hospital Qelivervl
scheduled for Wednesday has
been postponed until Jan. 16 at SUSIE'S GREENHOUSE
the home of Mrs. Ben Philson,
I St. Rt . 588
446-4610 1.
Racine .

•

0

r-Dis'iiGARDENs·1
1 •3.5o up 1 •
~

'6.50

.

I.. _________ I

330 SEOOND AVENUE

WHILE EVERYONE else in Ohio (almosl ! &gt;yas sitting glued

to a TV set New Year's Day, cheering hysterically lor the Bucks,

I was in the compgny of two very che~rful OSU Grads who were
rooting you guessed it, for USC. Obv10usly our Side lost, which
only go~s to show that we probably cheered for the right learn. II
we had been !or Ohio, they would have lost by a landslide.

:':
••
"
;.
•·
'

has -

~·lS.d

...... .

SEIKO .
WATCHES·

'

,-,1 •

yjH{III [{.!l~OM l O~I(.INm ) .

Everything Is
Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Money Batk

• Pure Ground ~ef
Hamburgers

• Bean Soup

YUKON CLUB
SODA,
GINGER ALE,
.

~ • Homemade Chili

MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY
9:30 TIL 9:00 PM

....• o;z
" 1/a'W

.
*".

TUES., WED., THURS. &amp; SAT.
9:30 TIL 5:00 PM

~qak.r

HALF &amp;.HALF

~

Thursday;

"~ Broomstick

iqnppr

Jan.

·'

I

I·

1:

. I

I.

•

at:!

~

Sbjk

::till

li
~
m

CE NTE R

(;)

GALLIPOLIS

SHOP NOW AND SAVE
AT OUR

STOREWIDE
'CLEARANCE

SALE
LOW SALE .PRICES
ON HUNDREDS OF

ATS
•

at:!

6c:
~
en

10,

·Afghan,

Monday Store Hours 9:30 AM to 8 PM

--

.
No ACOO IM - t ?J
sell -wm£11n g, 96 '21 1. wa ter te sted'
dav -dat9 c al!lnd ar stam less st eel:
wh rte d li)l $&lt;19 50

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
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eRAIN COATS

RUSH IN TODAY

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: ~ Crocheting, etc. lessons, 1·3
! : p.m. Teacher, Clara Fisher.
::: : PoUuck supper 6:30 p.m. This
:: ""'wfll be lhe night oi the White
:: ::EleplJantSale.
.
422 Secona Ave ,
"' - Friday' Jim. 11, Ali craft. 9 J.,___
Gallipolis·,
Ohio
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:;:a.m. ·3p.m,
~

"Home of That Old Fashioned Goodness"
CQm~LOf Second &amp;Olive
·
Gallipolis, 0.

ePANT COATS

•

'~&lt;White.

_:!:

Expires Feb . 1. 1974

•
A Sale You Can't Afford To Miss

Monday, Jan. 7, Kmtting
Class 1-3 p.m.
'['eacher, Anne
.

Tuesday, Jan. 8, Physical
Fitness 1~11 a.m. Decoupage
~ Class,l-3 p.m, Bring woOd and
' pictures.
:;:
Wednesday, Jan 9, Small
;, NCrafts Lesson 1-3 p.m. Teacher
. : ,';Elizabeth Evans . .

CLOSED SUNDAY

This coupon is worth 25
pet. off at list price for
carpel or furniture
cleaning done in your
home by Kiesling's .

IN EVERY DEPARTMENT

:
:

• Footlong Hot Dogs

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Gallipolis, Ohio

TERRIFIC SAVINGS

GALUPOLIS - The Senior
~ Citizen Center, located in the
·~ .old Holzer Hospital Building,
:~ .;,Cedar St. entrance. is open
,;: Z :Monday through Friday from 9
~~..; a .m . .to 3 p.m. and one night
· ~...each week. The -schedule !or
.~ this week is as follows :

NEW STORE HOURS

~

KIESLING'S
CARPET CLEANING
SERVICE

FEATURES

~"'

Sr. Citizens
..."
.. Calendar

LENGTH COATS

Serving all of Gallia .
Mason and Meigs
counties.
Phone 446·4408

STOREWIDE
·
EVENT
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Sizes 6-18

•

HUMPHREY ILL
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Sen. Hwnbert H. Hwnphrey,
D-Minn., suffering !rom what
his doctor called a "pinhead"
twnor of the bladder has been
hospitalized at Bethesda Naval
hospital !or tests.

Carpets and furniture
la st
longer ,
stay
brighter and fresher
when
c leaned,
sanitized, deodorized,
static -controlled
and
anti - resoiled
by
Kiesling's. All this for
one low price. Carpels
are ready for use the
same day. For a free
estimate measure your
carpets then call 446·
4408 in Gallipolis. If no
answer call after 5
p.m .

THIS SENSATIONAL .. BIG

~ A fine fine for cruise and sportswear.

HAVE A NICE WEEK.

~

GALLIPOLIS
Carol
Bosworth, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. S. R. Bosworth, was
named December girl o! the
month by the members of the
GAHS Future Homemakers.
Miss Bosworth is 16, and a
sophomore. She has been in
f .H.A. !or two years, and is
now serving as district vice
president.
·
Miss Bosworth is also active
in the school newspaper, she
serves as a Gallia Script salesman.
Her hobbies include hiking,
horseback riding, singing and
painting.

BIDWELL - The United prayer led by Wanda Atha and
Methodist Women mel at the refreshments were served by
church Wednesday evening Beatrice Stanley.
with six members present . .
The meeting was called to
eFUR LIKE COATS eBOOT
order by the president, and the
Lord's prayer was given in
...
Wlison. Scripture !rom Luke
6:1-19 was re~d by Elizabeth
Donnell. The progra m was a
discussion
on
"Human
Relations Day and Sell
Denial," led by Joan Roberts.
A collection for human
relations day was taken and
the April meeting was set as
the deadline lor turning in self
denial boxes.

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Every

25% OFF

makes its own appraisal as

Ju;,_~o lis .

College.

· homemaker welcome .

check against any alliora.&gt;sa
obtained by the donor.
Because of the disputed
the IRS says the Bennys
back taxes of $99,546 lor
and $10,535 lor 1968. The
Tax Court will issue a
ruling ·in the case. fY

-

' Extension

Homemak er's will me et
Wednesday, Jan . 9, at Grace
United Methodist Church at
10:30 a.m: Pot.uck ~unch at

Americans (resignedly?) paying
By LEROY POPE

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GAWPOUS, OHIO

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''THE STORE WITH MORE"

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~~~~~~~--~~~K~E~CO~A~TS~~
eRAIN COATS
eBOOT LENGtH COATS
eFUR
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6 - The Sw1da):
Times. Sentiilc l. Sunday, Jan. ~i. 1~7 4

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Invitation to help
Rodney, Ohio, Jan. 3, 1974.

Dear Editor:
In Thursday's edition the 1974 Gallia Couney budget showed
$7,380 for the Dog and Kennel Fund. This is a small matter in a
$2.5 million budget, m fact , too small 1 A county of our size should
be able to afford a decent and attended fa cility f~r the protection
and welfare for our animals .
Dogs and cats, lost or abandoned , will continue to be at least
a nuisance and at worst a' health hazard, until this eommunilv
decides to maintain this facility properly. Placing animals in a~
unattended, unsanitary building indefinitely, or lruckmg them
out to places unknown, or even selling them to research
laboratories fo r experimental purposes is definitely not the
answer. I'm sure no one with any feelings could live with him or
herself after placing any animal in a building such as this pound .
Proper care, such as clean pens, regular , daily meals, an
ava ilable vetennartan, some attention to the animals are
things I'm sure all of us are capable of understanding .
'
In the past, an attempt made to establish a humane society
was met With apathy. Surely if enough of us care and are willing
to donate some tlme and funds, we ca n finally accomplish this
goal.
If you are willing to contribute your attention to this matter,
please contact (Sip!ed: J. Webb 446-0231, J. Belville 446-2656, or .
B. Rohach 245-5138.

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JOHN P. McKEAN
GALLIPOLIS - Navy
Fireman John P. McKean.
son of Mr. and Mrs. John A.
McKean of 50 Chillicothe
Road, ha S gradua ted from
recruit training at the Naval
Training Center al Orlando,
Fla.
·

33 cases
settled

POMEROY - Seventeen
defendant.s were fined and 16
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
1 County Court Friday.
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·
I Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Glen M. Fulton,
Marietta, Donald C. Fowler,
Pomeroy, Mark Beegle ,
Racine, Rt. 2, and Rodney D.
Fitzwater,
Parkersburg, $10
By Bob Hoeflich
•
•
and cest.s each, speeding; Gary
Lee Simpson, Middleport, $5
, POMEROY - Although 1974 is moving right along, we are
and costs, unsafe vehicle;
still receiving accounts of family get-togethers over the ChristGeraldS. Mason, Parkersburg,
mas holiday season and that's well and good. The season is a
$5 and cost.s, speeding ; Harold
busy one and it's hard to settle down to getting us the word.
White , Pomeroy, Rt. 2, $5 and
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker enjoyed having all of their
cost.s, parked on roadway ;
children at home for the first ti!ne in live years during the ChristKenneth Johnson , Pomeroy,
mas season so it was an especially joyfu l time for the couple.
Rt. 4, $15 and costs, speeding;
Their daughter, Mrs. Martha Poole and son, Will, are staying
Ralph E. Rose, Racine, Rt. 1,
with the Parkers while S-Sgt. Poole is in Thailand. The Parkers'
$17 and cos ts , speeding ;
son, Edward, spend his Christmas vacation at home. He's atCharles McCloud, Middleport,
tending the Ohio Institute of Technology in Columbus.
costs only, 10 days conOecember 26-29, the Parkers' son, Mr, and Mrs. Eric Parker
finement, license suspended
and Randy of Plano, Dl., were visitors. They all attellded the 65th
for one year, driving while
wedding anniversary dinner of Mrs. Wilber Parker's parents,
intoxicated; Drury Harper ,
Mr. and Mrs. Gurney L. Michael on Dec. 27 near Chester.
Tuppers Plains, $10 and cost.s,
On Dec. 30, the Parkers hosted the Christmas reunion of the
passing without assured clear
Pearl Parker families. A basket dinner was held and highlighting
distance; Richard Davis ,
the reunion were the decorations including a lighted tree, a
Middleport, $10 and costs, no
manger scene, a big Sapia Claus and reindeer led by Rudolph, all
operators license ; Stephen S.
hand-painted by Mrs. Poole. Attending the reunion were Mr. and
King, Evans, W. Va., $100 and
Mrs. Herbert Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
cost.s, $5() suspended, taking
Howard Parker, April and Aaron, Mr. and Mrs . Jim Carpenter
illegal deer; Roger Schuler,
and Jay, Mr~. Poole and Will, and Edward Parker.
Everette Schuler and 'Thomas
And on Dec. 31, S-Sgt. Poole arrived from U-Tapao Air Force
Cleland,
all of Middleport, RD,
Base in Thailand for a month 1S leave with his wife ·and son, So, as
$25 and cost.s, 10 days cohyou can see, the Wilbfr Parker home has been a mighty busy
finement,
three months
place during the holiday season.
prob'!ltion, pay school for
gasoline stolen, petty larceny;
IF YOU'D LIKE A NEW ACTIVITY lor 1974, perhaps you'd
Fred Scott, Jr., Pomeroy, $10
like to join the Shade River Belles and Beaus Square Dance Club
and cost.s, left of center.
'
which is extending .an invitation io all interested couples to atForfeiting bonds were Tom
tend the western style square dance class which gets underway
Arthur, Wellston, $50, no valid
at 7;30 p.m. Thursday. Sessions will be held at the Royal Oak
hunting license ; Edward
Park recreation building each Thur~day and instruction will be
Frecker, Minersville, Rt. I,
by Cecil Sayre of Letart, W.Va. Anyone wishing any further iitfo
and Daniel Jeffers, Pomeroy,
on the matter may call 614-~115-J945 or 304-773-5910. By the way,
$357.50 each, driving while
dress is quite casual and club members are hoping for a lot of
intoxicated ; John M. Powell,
interest Thursday night.
Racine, Rt. 2, and Brady
Gilbert, Cheshire, Rt. 1, $32.50
ILL IS MRS. VIRGINIA WALTON of Reedsville who has
each, speeding; Clair Boso,
undergone surgery at Camden.Qark Hospital in Parkersburg.
Portland, RD, $50, assault and
Cards would be apprecia,ted and may be sent to room 331.
battery; Terry D. Phalin,

•Beat

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MEIGS COUNTY STUDENTS continue to do well as they
move ahead in higher education.
Robert Grossnickle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Grossnickle, Reedsville Route 1, was named to the dean's list of
the Ohio Institute of Technology for the first quarter.
Marietta College students named to the dean's list lor the fall
semester include Jo Ellen Diehl, a sophomore, of Pomeroy, and
Nancy B. Smith, a junior, and Richard J . Stettler, a freshman, of
the Chester area.
AMONG THE OFFICIALS on the job at Wednesda/s ac/ cident fatality at Danville was faithful deputy sheriff, Steve
Hartenbach, who never seems to mind the long hours he puts in
so that he can be on hand to help any way he can.
AND, AGAIN CAN WE REMIND writers of letters to our
paper that we must have a signature on them. The signature
doesn't necessarily have to be published in the paper but it must
be on y01.r original letter. Unless it is, we cannot publish it.
RESIDENTS OF THE MEIGS County Infirmary again

Natural Heat
More than 3.500 homes in
Reyk.iavik , capital of Iceland,
are heated by natural steam
piped ·from _the ISland's ·
reserves of thermal u
ground water.

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Acrording to a Appaht chian
Rt'gional Comn1i~~ion 1ARC ;
population study, preliminary
results revea l· Mason. Gallia
and Meigs counties all showed
gains during the past '27
monlhs .
The ARC study revealed
Mason picked up 94 residents,
increasfng that county's
•
population to 24,400. Gallia
showed tfie biggest MGM increase, 1,261, pushing that
county's population to 26,500
while Meigs gained 901, increasing its total to 20,700.
The ARC study began in 1970. ·
It revealed the mas::;ive
migration away from the
mowttains of West Virginia,
Ohio and Kentucky may be a
thing of the past .
The study, conducted by Dr .
J . P. Pickard of ARC, included
population trends in all of West
Virginia and the mountaiqous
areas of 12 other states. While
the entire study will not be

Collins sees
wide support
for HB1032
COLUMBUS
State
Repre se ntative pakley C.
Collins (R-Ironton ) announced
Saturday that in the initial
days of the 1974 session of the
llOth General Assembly
"support came from all
directions" for the public
employe pay bill which hi cosponsored in the House of
Representatives.
"I am most encouraged by
the amount of support this bill
is getting from Legislators on
both sides of the aisle," Collins
explained, "and look forward
to it being moved quickly
through the Legislature."
The bill (House Bill 1032 )
calls lor a 31 cent across-theboard pay raise lor over 80,000
state, state university, and
county welfare employes. In
addition to Representative
Collins, the bill has been
sponsored in the House
by eleven other Representatives . A similar bill has also
been introduced into the Ohio
Senate. Both measures have
the l,ull support of the 34,000member Ohio Civil Service
Employees Association
(OCSEA).

Pomeroy, Donald D. Cooper,
Minerva, Ohio; Glenn Hum·
mel, Hart.sville, Ohio, Oran D.
Goff, Ellensboro, W. Va.,
Ricky Goldiron, Barbersville,
W. Va ., Richard Seyler,
Pomeroy, John E. Goff,
Young,
Toledo,
Harold
Gallipolis,
Edward
D.
Williams, Akron, and William
A. Lee, Catlettsburg, Ky.,
$27.50 each, sp.:euing.

c·umpicted until spring of 1974,
the preliminary report' was
prepared last month.
Between 1960 and 1970,
ear li er population studies
found , more than 1.1 million
persons left Appalachia . Brtween 1970 and 1972, the
Pickard report found the trend
reversed with an estimated
179,000 persons migrating into
the region .
"It appears the region is
turning the corner and it will no
longer have the out.migration
it had in the past," Dr. Pickard
said .
He
termed
the
development, particularly in
poor areas or southern West
Virginia and eastern Kentucky
as "extraordinary. "
The depression - like atmosphere of West Virginia
during the 1950s prompted
enough migration from the
state to prune the population
figures from more than 2
million to 1.8 million in 1960.
The next 10 years saw the state
lose another 100,000 in total
population.
But between 1970 and 1972,
the state ha s netted about
37,000 persons.
The 20 so uthern Ohio
counties considered part of the
Appalachian Region had shown
a population growth of only
9,000 between 1960 and 1970. In
the next two years the
population increased 33,000.
Eastern Kentucky, which
lost about 46,000 persons in 26
mountain counties during the
1960s, gained about 38,000 in
population between 1970 and
1972, according to the reporl.
The finding seems more
extraordinary in the face of
la s~ year's report by the
Kentucky Social Sciences
Advisory Committee which
predicted population losses by
most of eastern Kentucky's
counties through the year 2020.
Why the dramatic turn? Is
the encouraging trend to
continue?
Pickard admit.s he is puzzled
by the report, which shows
Appalachia's growth rate of
2.44 pel. only slightly ·behind
the national rate of 2.46 pel.,
but offers some possible
reasons.
Pickard estima ted that
· 75,000 former servicemen have
returned home to Appalachia
during the two-year period
under study, swellin g the
region's population.
The ARC report li st.s the
"direct and indirect" results of
its parent commission 1 s
programs which have poured
$1.6 billion into the area since
1966 to build hospitals, roads

and other services.
Black lung paymenl&gt; fur
disabled coal miners and in creased socia l security
benefit.s may have helped stem
the population flow , it surmised.
The shift in the balance of
employment
rate s
1n
metropolitan and mountain
areas
was
cons idered
significant. The cities which
have traditionally attracted
Appalachians now suffer
higher unemployment rates
and housing shortages, it was
_ pointed out . Meanwhile , with
the rising fortunes of coal and
other industry in the region,
the Appalachian labor force
has grown.
A county-by-county breakdown of population trends in
the Tri-State included in the
ARC study reveals Cabell
County's population increased
1,682 to 108,600 during the 27month sample period.
In other West Virginia
counties, Wayne County was up
219 to 37,800; Mason up 94 to
24,400; Lincoln up 588 to 19,500;
Jackson up 197 to 21,100;
Putnam up 675 to 28,300; Mingo
up 1,420 to 34,200 and Logan up

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rc~;~i~~"l
SUNDAY
REV. Bruce Unrue will preach
at Bailey Chapel, 7 p.m. Public
is invited .
MONDAY
GRACE Guil d meets promptly
at 6:15 p.m ., at the church·
bring t3 ble service.
·
POMONA Grange meet.s at 7
p.m. at the Springfield Grange
Hall. Potluck. Dues are
payable.
GAHS Band Boosters, 7:30
p.m., band room.
SOUTHEAS':\'.EilN Ohio Gospel
Music Assoc., 7:30p.m. Allen
Hall, Rio Grande College.
AMERICAN' Red Cross Grey
Ladies lun cheon, 12:30 p,m. in
the Holzer Medical Center
cafeteria.
DAUGHTERS of America 114
at the home of Pribble Wilson ,
7 p.m. Bring white elephants.
Refreshments.

In The
Silver Bridge - Plaza
~

WE ARE NOW
CLOSED ON
SUNDAYS

Department Store

Store Hours
Mon. Thru Fri. 10 AM-9 PM
Saturda 10 AM-6 PM

, Miss judith Roberts
•

COLUMBUS - The lmmaculat~ - Conception Church,
414 E. N. Broadway, Columbus, was the setting for the
wedding of Miss Lee Ann
McCoy, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John A. McCoy, Sr.,
Columbus, to Stephen Ray
Hoffman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dana E. Hoffman, Jr .,
Rutland.
,
The double ring ceremony
was an event of Nov. 24, at 2
p.m. Rev. Robert R.- Schmidt
performed the ceremony.
Organ music was provided by
Larry Curry with Mrs. Barbara McGree, soloist.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a
princess style gown of venice
lace with chapel train accented
with satin ribbon down the
front, iyory covered buttons
and a stand-up lace .collar. Her

Infants
Toddlers
Girls and
Boys
Thru
Size 14

MASON - The Mason Busy
Bees 4-H Club met January I
with devotions by Jill Taylor
and Angie Johnson. Julie Gibbs
told about officers training

Gallrpolis, Ohio

ON DEAN'S LIST
MIDDLEPORT - Glenna
Sprague, a junior in the Conservatory of Music at Capital
University, made the dean's
listfor the fall semester. To be
eligible for the · dean's lt.st,
students must earn at least a
3.4 average. Miss Sprague is a
music major and the daughter
of Mr, and Mrs. William
Sprague, Middleport.

SWEEP UP THESE SAVINGS 'AT

Carl's Annual Trade-In

$588.

enjoyed a great Christmas - thanks to the generosity of many
mdividuals and groups.
Making it such a pleasant happening were Mrs. Alma White,
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, Laurel Cliff Better Health Club,
Minersville United Methodist Church, Mrs. Maxine Coals
Gaskill, Letart Falls United Methodist Church, Pomeroy Church
of the Nazarene, Knights Templar, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karr,
Sr., Middleport Church of Christ, Mrs. Mary · Martin, FeeneyBennett Post 128, American Legion, women of Apple Grove
Methodist Church, Rock Springs Better Health Club, Royal
Crown Bottling Co., Pomeroy Baptist Church women, Pomeroy
Chapter, OES; Salisbury Grade School, Pomeroy National Bank,
Middleport Baptist Church, Eagles Club, MI. Moriah Missionary
Society, Mrs.lnez Pooler ,Mr. and Mrs. Don Rea, Mrs. Margaret
Douglas, Sl. John Lutheran Church, Meigs High FF A, Trinity
Choir, Happy Harvesters Class, Trinity Church; Meili County
Avon representatives, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer, Columbus;
junior unit, Middleport's Feeney-Bennett Post, Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

Sale

CECIL WINS HONORS
POMEROY - Howard E.
Cecil, son of Mrs. Howard C.
Cecil, 800 W. Main, graduated
Summa Cum Laude from Park
College, suburban Kansas City,
Mo. on December 16. Other
hon..-s included Dean's Honor
List and Presidential Scholar .
Park College is a lour-year
liberal arts co-educational
college.

YOUR OLD SHOES ARE
t¥0RTH THEIR WEIGHT IN GOlD!

'4

IF YOU WEAR
THEM IN

00

OFF
IF YOU BRING
•3~ OFF THEM IN

i

GROUP_OF WOMEN'S STYLE BOOTS

MAll

REDUCED 1/
lO
/2 PRICE

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ne. uHimate~ in beauty' and bril·
llanct ·. • . t&lt;eepsake Solitaires,
guaranteed, . regiStered, perlect.

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t!Mifllllly """ ......
1ZI Sttand Aft,
C:aillfiOIII,_O.

NO TRAD_HNS_ON THIS

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-NO LAYAWAYs-

CLARK'S
JEWELH-· -··
$TORE
342 second Ave .

'1 .

G~llipolis,

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Knit Slacks

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Susie's Greenhouse

Kings ridge
Reston
See Our
Nice Selection ,of
Sport Coats!

Farrah
H.I.S.
· McGregor

Store Hours

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OPEN
MON. &amp; FRI.
TIL 8 P.M •
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Colorful
January

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SUNDAYS

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10 AM · 9 PM

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SATURDAY
10 AM • 6 PM

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

CANNON® ROYAL FAMILY
Versailles No-Iron Print
in Featherlite Muslin

By
TERRY

From 190Bto l9 15was th e
age of Brass. During !fli s

decor,

Keepsaki Diamond Solitaires

&amp;tc.

large Selection

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

.1.

Twin fl at
o r Filled

chrome ,

f'i

tttted

4'~-9

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Pillow
case~

CANNON®ROYAL FAMILY

bras s,

wrought iron , wood and
other metals and materials
are utilized in the struc' ture. furnish ings and or .
name ntations of mobil e•

homes today.
For
extra

Full Flat

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Connon Feotherlite no-iron mu slin Versailles sheets ore a blend of cotton and polyester
with over 130 threads per squora inch . Duroble · Press fini sh eliminates ironing, stays
wrinkle free ,w':ors longer and dries fo ster . Pink, Blue, Melon .

miscel la neous brackets. It
took about·2 hours to po lish
and shine all these bra ss
thingamabobs and do
i iggers on the car .
Depending on sty le and

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caps, speedometer tubes,
brass
, horns ·
and

mas1f'l, ll&lt;~ft l •'
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FRENCH City Garden Club •
meets at tlie home or Mrs. '
Grace Bradbury· with Mrs.
Jewell Moore conducting a

Any Size for Any Need. Each

school and Lynne Oliver was
elected historian. Diane Dillon
and Melloney White are to give
devotions next month, Lynne
Oliver and Teresa Dillon will
give demonstrations and talks
will be by John Dillon, Angie
Johnson, Sherri Russell and
Jill Taylor. Susie Dillon and
Jill Taylor will be responsible
for refreshments.
Sherri Russell, Melanie
Sisson, Larry Roach and
Tammy Cook gave demon. stra lions. Talks were by
Melloney White. Games were
led by Tanowa Hill. Refreshment.s were by Carla Hood and
Angie Proffitt. - Melloney
White, reporter.

~-J:!!B TRADE Jt! 2! ~
PAIR

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Peddler 's Pantry

ON ANY PAIR OF SHOES
.$15.99-OR OVER IN

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SALE/bD.

with as much brass as
paint. The polished brass
lobk was provided by
head lamps. tail and side
lamps, windshield frame
and braces, rails around
th e body. door t1and les, hub

Monday &amp; Friday 9:301ill p.m.
Tues. Wed. S..t. 9;JOiil s·p.m .
Thursday9 : )01il11noon

330 Second Avenu~

Terrariums

10% TO 50% OFF
ON SOME ITEMS/

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are Mr. and Mrs. · Grover ·
SON BORN
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs . Forbes, Wirtz, Va. Mr. and
. Larry Rupe, Seffner,.Fla ., are Mrs. Rupe have two other ;
annoimcing !he bitth of an 8 children, Jason Alan, 3, .and
lbs., 11 ozs. son, Jeremy Waid, Aimee Cher,' 15 months.
Dec. 27 . in Flortda . ' Paternal
grandparents are Mr . and ~rs .
Lawrence Rupe, Langsville,
IS IN HOSPITAL
~nd materrral grandparents
LONG }:!OTI'OM - Mrs. E.
M. Harrah is a medical patient
at St. Joseph Hospital · in
workshop, "Flowers of Sa tin Parkersb urg . Her room
Ribbon and Burlap."
number is 210.

Daily Hospital Delivery

Well
Established
Deco rated .

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the church, 7::!0 p.m.
ENGLISH Club meel• at the
home of June Cantrell, cohostess Ruby Bossard, 7 p.m.
PROGRESSIVE Mothers
League meets at the home of
Mrs. Charles Gatewood, 7::!0
p.m, Guest speaker, Janet
Stebbins.
MARTHA Circle meets at
Grace · United Methodist
Church, 9;30 a.m. Nursery
open.
ABIGAIL Circle meets at the
Grace United Methodis t
Church, 1 p.m. Nursery open.
PEMBROKE Club meets with
Mrs. C. L. Mastwrs , 8 p.m.
WAYSIDE Garden Club meets
at the home of Mrs. Philip
Bailey, 7:30p.m.
KYGER Creek Band Boosters
meet early, 6 p.m., in the band
room, due to basketball game.
RIVERSIDE Study Club meets
with Mrs. Donald Warehime, I
p.m.

TUESDAY
AMERICAN Baptist Women of
Calvary Baptist Church will
meet in the fellowship room at

in navy blue tuxedues with Columbus, in June, and is
light blue ruffled shirt.s. The employed part-time as a
assistant
at
groom's tuxedo was navy blue teaching
the school.
with starburst.s.
Rt . 588
446 -4610
Several from the Bend area
The mother of the bride wore
a blue polyester gown with high attended the wedding.
mwns.
Miss Nancy Lewis, maid of neckline and long sleeves. She
honor, was attired in a hot pink wore matching accessories and
polyester gown witn an empire a _ cymbidium orchid. Mrs.
waist and a high neck trimmed Hoffman wore a · hot pink
in satin ribbon . She wore a polyester gown with a long
matching headpiece of flower sleeved pink lace jacket. She
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petals and netting. She carried also wore a cymbid ium orchid.
The reception followed in the
a nosegay of blue and pink
Immaculate - Concept ion
baby mums,
The attendants were Miss Auditorium .
The couple is res idin~ at 4092
Wendy Olsen and Mrs. Sheila
James. Their dresses were Larry Place, Columbus, after a
identica l to the maid of honor's short wedding trip.
The bride is employed at
in blue polyester .
Charles V. Christman, . Atlantic- Centennial Insurance
Columbus, served as best man . Company, · Columbus . The
Ushers were Richard Baldwin bridegroom will graduate from
STATE &amp; THIRD· ~_ _ _ _ _ GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
and
Steven
Schilling, Ohio lnstitu,te of Techn ;'ogy,
Columbus. They were attired

era . cars were adorned

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SUBSCR IPTION RATES
The Gallipolis Tribune in
Ohio and wut Virg inia one
year SIS, Sll( month s sa, threemonths IS, elsewhere 117 per
year , t il( months 19, tttree
fTII)nths SS .SD.
rhe Deily Sentinel, one
year 116.00 , six months sa.so,
three montj'1s u .oo.
' The United Press In ·
ternatlonal IS exclusively
entitled to the us• fo,_
Publlcatiw,· or all news
dispatches tredlti!d to this
newspaper and also tt.e loc•l
news pubiiSht~ d l'lereln .

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr, and Mrs. Robert L.
Roberts, Rt. 2, Racine, ·are announcing the engageme nt of
their daughter, Judith. to Robert J . Hill, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Robert C. Hill, Racine. The bride-€1ect and her fiance are
both 1973 graduates of Southern High School. Ste is employed
in the law offices of Bridgewater , Robe and Stimme l in
Athens. He completed his studies at the Career Academy at
Columbus last month . Weddin g plans are incomplete.

matching headpiece was attached to a satin bow and
caught with seed pearls. She
carried a cascade of red and
white roses with white baby

Busy Bee 4-H Club met jan. 1
412-414' Second Ave.

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Wedding vows read ·

.CHILDRENS SHOES
NOW

Boyd County was up 124 to
52,500; Greenup up 1,308 to
34,500; Carter up 950 to 20,800;
Rown up 890 to 17,900; Morgan
up 18J.to 10,200; Pike up 3,741 to
64,800; Floyd up 2,711 to 38,600;
Johnson up 1,261 to 18,800 ;
Magoffin up 157 to 10 600·
Martin up 723 to 10,100 'and
Lawrence up 374 to 11,100, the
r~port showed.
·
Pickard said the finished
study will include complete
population ligures lor 1970, 1971
and 1972. Complete figures for
.1972 weren't available for the
preliminary report.

), 404 to. 47,700.
Lawrence County, Ohio,
enjoyed the Tri-State's largest
single county population in crease during the study period,
from 56,868 to 59,200.
Other Ohio counties included
Scioto , up 1,149 to 78,100;
Jack son up 426 to 27,600;
Gallia, up 1,261 to 26,500; and
Meigs , up 901 to 20,700, according to the report.
In eastern Kentucky, Elliott
Coun ly was one of the lew
which suffered a population
decrease, down 33 persons to
5,900.

Mrs. Stephen Ray Hoffman

·GROUP OF BETTER

Published every Sunday
by
Tt1t
Oh io,
Valley
Putllist1 ing Co.
GALL I POLIS
~
DA ILY TRIBUNE
n~ Th ird Ave ,, Gallipolis,
Ohio •sn1.
PubHstted every weekday
evening e110cept Saturday .
Second Class PoSfage Paid
at Ga l lipolis , Ohio d631 .
THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 Court· St., Pomeroy, 0 .
45169. Pubilstled e\lerv week ·
day evening ex,ept Satur ·
d.ay . Entered as second clan
mailing matltr at Pomeroy ,
Ohio PoSf Offlce .
By carrier dally and
iunday, 55c per week .

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7- Th.e Sunday ,Times -Sentiriel, Sunday, Uan. 6, 1974 1

SUNDAY
TJMES.SENTINEL

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Tri-C.;unty population rising

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Letters of opinion are welcom•d. Thty ;hould I&gt;&lt; less
thaD 300 words long tor be subject to reduction by the
editor! aud must be signed with the slguee's address.
Names llljly be withheld upon publication. However, on
request, names wlll bf disclosed, Leiters should be in good
taote, addressing lssu~s . not penoitallties.

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••\Vatt·n·olnr Ro~.t'., &amp; "Ho~· al Bouqut't'•
\n-lr·(m Pt'n·alt' Print
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beauty,

Twin Flat
or Fitted

modern convenien ces and
l asting li ving pleasure ,
make your next .home a
mobile hom·e. We can
provide you with the
.mobile home to com fortably accommodate you
' and your fam ily and all th e
d etai ls and i11formation
a~out modern mob ile home
living .
~·

Full Flat
or Fitted

Pillow
Cases

A lovely , muted print on li~ quality polyester and cotton perc~le. The colors ore

b·eautilul, predommantly blu e, pw ', r r gold . Durobl~ Press finish lor that stay-fresh look.
They need no ironing .

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JOHNSON'S MOBILE
HOME SALES

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: -~~-

2110 Easte1rn Avenue

Ga lhpoli~. Ohio
Phone 614-446-3547

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6 - The Sw1da):
Times. Sentiilc l. Sunday, Jan. ~i. 1~7 4

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Invitation to help
Rodney, Ohio, Jan. 3, 1974.

Dear Editor:
In Thursday's edition the 1974 Gallia Couney budget showed
$7,380 for the Dog and Kennel Fund. This is a small matter in a
$2.5 million budget, m fact , too small 1 A county of our size should
be able to afford a decent and attended fa cility f~r the protection
and welfare for our animals .
Dogs and cats, lost or abandoned , will continue to be at least
a nuisance and at worst a' health hazard, until this eommunilv
decides to maintain this facility properly. Placing animals in a~
unattended, unsanitary building indefinitely, or lruckmg them
out to places unknown, or even selling them to research
laboratories fo r experimental purposes is definitely not the
answer. I'm sure no one with any feelings could live with him or
herself after placing any animal in a building such as this pound .
Proper care, such as clean pens, regular , daily meals, an
ava ilable vetennartan, some attention to the animals are
things I'm sure all of us are capable of understanding .
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In the past, an attempt made to establish a humane society
was met With apathy. Surely if enough of us care and are willing
to donate some tlme and funds, we ca n finally accomplish this
goal.
If you are willing to contribute your attention to this matter,
please contact (Sip!ed: J. Webb 446-0231, J. Belville 446-2656, or .
B. Rohach 245-5138.

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JOHN P. McKEAN
GALLIPOLIS - Navy
Fireman John P. McKean.
son of Mr. and Mrs. John A.
McKean of 50 Chillicothe
Road, ha S gradua ted from
recruit training at the Naval
Training Center al Orlando,
Fla.
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33 cases
settled

POMEROY - Seventeen
defendant.s were fined and 16
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
1 County Court Friday.
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I Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Glen M. Fulton,
Marietta, Donald C. Fowler,
Pomeroy, Mark Beegle ,
Racine, Rt. 2, and Rodney D.
Fitzwater,
Parkersburg, $10
By Bob Hoeflich
•
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and cest.s each, speeding; Gary
Lee Simpson, Middleport, $5
, POMEROY - Although 1974 is moving right along, we are
and costs, unsafe vehicle;
still receiving accounts of family get-togethers over the ChristGeraldS. Mason, Parkersburg,
mas holiday season and that's well and good. The season is a
$5 and cost.s, speeding ; Harold
busy one and it's hard to settle down to getting us the word.
White , Pomeroy, Rt. 2, $5 and
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker enjoyed having all of their
cost.s, parked on roadway ;
children at home for the first ti!ne in live years during the ChristKenneth Johnson , Pomeroy,
mas season so it was an especially joyfu l time for the couple.
Rt. 4, $15 and costs, speeding;
Their daughter, Mrs. Martha Poole and son, Will, are staying
Ralph E. Rose, Racine, Rt. 1,
with the Parkers while S-Sgt. Poole is in Thailand. The Parkers'
$17 and cos ts , speeding ;
son, Edward, spend his Christmas vacation at home. He's atCharles McCloud, Middleport,
tending the Ohio Institute of Technology in Columbus.
costs only, 10 days conOecember 26-29, the Parkers' son, Mr, and Mrs. Eric Parker
finement, license suspended
and Randy of Plano, Dl., were visitors. They all attellded the 65th
for one year, driving while
wedding anniversary dinner of Mrs. Wilber Parker's parents,
intoxicated; Drury Harper ,
Mr. and Mrs. Gurney L. Michael on Dec. 27 near Chester.
Tuppers Plains, $10 and cost.s,
On Dec. 30, the Parkers hosted the Christmas reunion of the
passing without assured clear
Pearl Parker families. A basket dinner was held and highlighting
distance; Richard Davis ,
the reunion were the decorations including a lighted tree, a
Middleport, $10 and costs, no
manger scene, a big Sapia Claus and reindeer led by Rudolph, all
operators license ; Stephen S.
hand-painted by Mrs. Poole. Attending the reunion were Mr. and
King, Evans, W. Va., $100 and
Mrs. Herbert Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
cost.s, $5() suspended, taking
Howard Parker, April and Aaron, Mr. and Mrs . Jim Carpenter
illegal deer; Roger Schuler,
and Jay, Mr~. Poole and Will, and Edward Parker.
Everette Schuler and 'Thomas
And on Dec. 31, S-Sgt. Poole arrived from U-Tapao Air Force
Cleland,
all of Middleport, RD,
Base in Thailand for a month 1S leave with his wife ·and son, So, as
$25 and cost.s, 10 days cohyou can see, the Wilbfr Parker home has been a mighty busy
finement,
three months
place during the holiday season.
prob'!ltion, pay school for
gasoline stolen, petty larceny;
IF YOU'D LIKE A NEW ACTIVITY lor 1974, perhaps you'd
Fred Scott, Jr., Pomeroy, $10
like to join the Shade River Belles and Beaus Square Dance Club
and cost.s, left of center.
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which is extending .an invitation io all interested couples to atForfeiting bonds were Tom
tend the western style square dance class which gets underway
Arthur, Wellston, $50, no valid
at 7;30 p.m. Thursday. Sessions will be held at the Royal Oak
hunting license ; Edward
Park recreation building each Thur~day and instruction will be
Frecker, Minersville, Rt. I,
by Cecil Sayre of Letart, W.Va. Anyone wishing any further iitfo
and Daniel Jeffers, Pomeroy,
on the matter may call 614-~115-J945 or 304-773-5910. By the way,
$357.50 each, driving while
dress is quite casual and club members are hoping for a lot of
intoxicated ; John M. Powell,
interest Thursday night.
Racine, Rt. 2, and Brady
Gilbert, Cheshire, Rt. 1, $32.50
ILL IS MRS. VIRGINIA WALTON of Reedsville who has
each, speeding; Clair Boso,
undergone surgery at Camden.Qark Hospital in Parkersburg.
Portland, RD, $50, assault and
Cards would be apprecia,ted and may be sent to room 331.
battery; Terry D. Phalin,

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MEIGS COUNTY STUDENTS continue to do well as they
move ahead in higher education.
Robert Grossnickle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Grossnickle, Reedsville Route 1, was named to the dean's list of
the Ohio Institute of Technology for the first quarter.
Marietta College students named to the dean's list lor the fall
semester include Jo Ellen Diehl, a sophomore, of Pomeroy, and
Nancy B. Smith, a junior, and Richard J . Stettler, a freshman, of
the Chester area.
AMONG THE OFFICIALS on the job at Wednesda/s ac/ cident fatality at Danville was faithful deputy sheriff, Steve
Hartenbach, who never seems to mind the long hours he puts in
so that he can be on hand to help any way he can.
AND, AGAIN CAN WE REMIND writers of letters to our
paper that we must have a signature on them. The signature
doesn't necessarily have to be published in the paper but it must
be on y01.r original letter. Unless it is, we cannot publish it.
RESIDENTS OF THE MEIGS County Infirmary again

Natural Heat
More than 3.500 homes in
Reyk.iavik , capital of Iceland,
are heated by natural steam
piped ·from _the ISland's ·
reserves of thermal u
ground water.

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Acrording to a Appaht chian
Rt'gional Comn1i~~ion 1ARC ;
population study, preliminary
results revea l· Mason. Gallia
and Meigs counties all showed
gains during the past '27
monlhs .
The ARC study revealed
Mason picked up 94 residents,
increasfng that county's
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population to 24,400. Gallia
showed tfie biggest MGM increase, 1,261, pushing that
county's population to 26,500
while Meigs gained 901, increasing its total to 20,700.
The ARC study began in 1970. ·
It revealed the mas::;ive
migration away from the
mowttains of West Virginia,
Ohio and Kentucky may be a
thing of the past .
The study, conducted by Dr .
J . P. Pickard of ARC, included
population trends in all of West
Virginia and the mountaiqous
areas of 12 other states. While
the entire study will not be

Collins sees
wide support
for HB1032
COLUMBUS
State
Repre se ntative pakley C.
Collins (R-Ironton ) announced
Saturday that in the initial
days of the 1974 session of the
llOth General Assembly
"support came from all
directions" for the public
employe pay bill which hi cosponsored in the House of
Representatives.
"I am most encouraged by
the amount of support this bill
is getting from Legislators on
both sides of the aisle," Collins
explained, "and look forward
to it being moved quickly
through the Legislature."
The bill (House Bill 1032 )
calls lor a 31 cent across-theboard pay raise lor over 80,000
state, state university, and
county welfare employes. In
addition to Representative
Collins, the bill has been
sponsored in the House
by eleven other Representatives . A similar bill has also
been introduced into the Ohio
Senate. Both measures have
the l,ull support of the 34,000member Ohio Civil Service
Employees Association
(OCSEA).

Pomeroy, Donald D. Cooper,
Minerva, Ohio; Glenn Hum·
mel, Hart.sville, Ohio, Oran D.
Goff, Ellensboro, W. Va.,
Ricky Goldiron, Barbersville,
W. Va ., Richard Seyler,
Pomeroy, John E. Goff,
Young,
Toledo,
Harold
Gallipolis,
Edward
D.
Williams, Akron, and William
A. Lee, Catlettsburg, Ky.,
$27.50 each, sp.:euing.

c·umpicted until spring of 1974,
the preliminary report' was
prepared last month.
Between 1960 and 1970,
ear li er population studies
found , more than 1.1 million
persons left Appalachia . Brtween 1970 and 1972, the
Pickard report found the trend
reversed with an estimated
179,000 persons migrating into
the region .
"It appears the region is
turning the corner and it will no
longer have the out.migration
it had in the past," Dr. Pickard
said .
He
termed
the
development, particularly in
poor areas or southern West
Virginia and eastern Kentucky
as "extraordinary. "
The depression - like atmosphere of West Virginia
during the 1950s prompted
enough migration from the
state to prune the population
figures from more than 2
million to 1.8 million in 1960.
The next 10 years saw the state
lose another 100,000 in total
population.
But between 1970 and 1972,
the state ha s netted about
37,000 persons.
The 20 so uthern Ohio
counties considered part of the
Appalachian Region had shown
a population growth of only
9,000 between 1960 and 1970. In
the next two years the
population increased 33,000.
Eastern Kentucky, which
lost about 46,000 persons in 26
mountain counties during the
1960s, gained about 38,000 in
population between 1970 and
1972, according to the reporl.
The finding seems more
extraordinary in the face of
la s~ year's report by the
Kentucky Social Sciences
Advisory Committee which
predicted population losses by
most of eastern Kentucky's
counties through the year 2020.
Why the dramatic turn? Is
the encouraging trend to
continue?
Pickard admit.s he is puzzled
by the report, which shows
Appalachia's growth rate of
2.44 pel. only slightly ·behind
the national rate of 2.46 pel.,
but offers some possible
reasons.
Pickard estima ted that
· 75,000 former servicemen have
returned home to Appalachia
during the two-year period
under study, swellin g the
region's population.
The ARC report li st.s the
"direct and indirect" results of
its parent commission 1 s
programs which have poured
$1.6 billion into the area since
1966 to build hospitals, roads

and other services.
Black lung paymenl&gt; fur
disabled coal miners and in creased socia l security
benefit.s may have helped stem
the population flow , it surmised.
The shift in the balance of
employment
rate s
1n
metropolitan and mountain
areas
was
cons idered
significant. The cities which
have traditionally attracted
Appalachians now suffer
higher unemployment rates
and housing shortages, it was
_ pointed out . Meanwhile , with
the rising fortunes of coal and
other industry in the region,
the Appalachian labor force
has grown.
A county-by-county breakdown of population trends in
the Tri-State included in the
ARC study reveals Cabell
County's population increased
1,682 to 108,600 during the 27month sample period.
In other West Virginia
counties, Wayne County was up
219 to 37,800; Mason up 94 to
24,400; Lincoln up 588 to 19,500;
Jackson up 197 to 21,100;
Putnam up 675 to 28,300; Mingo
up 1,420 to 34,200 and Logan up

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SUNDAY
REV. Bruce Unrue will preach
at Bailey Chapel, 7 p.m. Public
is invited .
MONDAY
GRACE Guil d meets promptly
at 6:15 p.m ., at the church·
bring t3 ble service.
·
POMONA Grange meet.s at 7
p.m. at the Springfield Grange
Hall. Potluck. Dues are
payable.
GAHS Band Boosters, 7:30
p.m., band room.
SOUTHEAS':\'.EilN Ohio Gospel
Music Assoc., 7:30p.m. Allen
Hall, Rio Grande College.
AMERICAN' Red Cross Grey
Ladies lun cheon, 12:30 p,m. in
the Holzer Medical Center
cafeteria.
DAUGHTERS of America 114
at the home of Pribble Wilson ,
7 p.m. Bring white elephants.
Refreshments.

In The
Silver Bridge - Plaza
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WE ARE NOW
CLOSED ON
SUNDAYS

Department Store

Store Hours
Mon. Thru Fri. 10 AM-9 PM
Saturda 10 AM-6 PM

, Miss judith Roberts
•

COLUMBUS - The lmmaculat~ - Conception Church,
414 E. N. Broadway, Columbus, was the setting for the
wedding of Miss Lee Ann
McCoy, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John A. McCoy, Sr.,
Columbus, to Stephen Ray
Hoffman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dana E. Hoffman, Jr .,
Rutland.
,
The double ring ceremony
was an event of Nov. 24, at 2
p.m. Rev. Robert R.- Schmidt
performed the ceremony.
Organ music was provided by
Larry Curry with Mrs. Barbara McGree, soloist.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a
princess style gown of venice
lace with chapel train accented
with satin ribbon down the
front, iyory covered buttons
and a stand-up lace .collar. Her

Infants
Toddlers
Girls and
Boys
Thru
Size 14

MASON - The Mason Busy
Bees 4-H Club met January I
with devotions by Jill Taylor
and Angie Johnson. Julie Gibbs
told about officers training

Gallrpolis, Ohio

ON DEAN'S LIST
MIDDLEPORT - Glenna
Sprague, a junior in the Conservatory of Music at Capital
University, made the dean's
listfor the fall semester. To be
eligible for the · dean's lt.st,
students must earn at least a
3.4 average. Miss Sprague is a
music major and the daughter
of Mr, and Mrs. William
Sprague, Middleport.

SWEEP UP THESE SAVINGS 'AT

Carl's Annual Trade-In

$588.

enjoyed a great Christmas - thanks to the generosity of many
mdividuals and groups.
Making it such a pleasant happening were Mrs. Alma White,
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, Laurel Cliff Better Health Club,
Minersville United Methodist Church, Mrs. Maxine Coals
Gaskill, Letart Falls United Methodist Church, Pomeroy Church
of the Nazarene, Knights Templar, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karr,
Sr., Middleport Church of Christ, Mrs. Mary · Martin, FeeneyBennett Post 128, American Legion, women of Apple Grove
Methodist Church, Rock Springs Better Health Club, Royal
Crown Bottling Co., Pomeroy Baptist Church women, Pomeroy
Chapter, OES; Salisbury Grade School, Pomeroy National Bank,
Middleport Baptist Church, Eagles Club, MI. Moriah Missionary
Society, Mrs.lnez Pooler ,Mr. and Mrs. Don Rea, Mrs. Margaret
Douglas, Sl. John Lutheran Church, Meigs High FF A, Trinity
Choir, Happy Harvesters Class, Trinity Church; Meili County
Avon representatives, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer, Columbus;
junior unit, Middleport's Feeney-Bennett Post, Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

Sale

CECIL WINS HONORS
POMEROY - Howard E.
Cecil, son of Mrs. Howard C.
Cecil, 800 W. Main, graduated
Summa Cum Laude from Park
College, suburban Kansas City,
Mo. on December 16. Other
hon..-s included Dean's Honor
List and Presidential Scholar .
Park College is a lour-year
liberal arts co-educational
college.

YOUR OLD SHOES ARE
t¥0RTH THEIR WEIGHT IN GOlD!

'4

IF YOU WEAR
THEM IN

00

OFF
IF YOU BRING
•3~ OFF THEM IN

i

GROUP_OF WOMEN'S STYLE BOOTS

MAll

REDUCED 1/
lO
/2 PRICE

.

ne. uHimate~ in beauty' and bril·
llanct ·. • . t&lt;eepsake Solitaires,
guaranteed, . regiStered, perlect.

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''*'

t!Mifllllly """ ......
1ZI Sttand Aft,
C:aillfiOIII,_O.

NO TRAD_HNS_ON THIS

'

-NO LAYAWAYs-

CLARK'S
JEWELH-· -··
$TORE
342 second Ave .

'1 .

G~llipolis,

•••

...

&lt;

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of

Knit Slacks

S~

and

by'

Susie's Greenhouse

Kings ridge
Reston
See Our
Nice Selection ,of
Sport Coats!

Farrah
H.I.S.
· McGregor

Store Hours

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OPEN
MON. &amp; FRI.
TIL 8 P.M •
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Colorful
January

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CLOSED
SUNDAYS

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MON.-FRI.
10 AM · 9 PM

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SATURDAY
10 AM • 6 PM

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

CANNON® ROYAL FAMILY
Versailles No-Iron Print
in Featherlite Muslin

By
TERRY

From 190Bto l9 15was th e
age of Brass. During !fli s

decor,

Keepsaki Diamond Solitaires

&amp;tc.

large Selection

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

.1.

Twin fl at
o r Filled

chrome ,

f'i

tttted

4'~-9

.•
"

.."•
~

·'·

Pillow
case~

CANNON®ROYAL FAMILY

bras s,

wrought iron , wood and
other metals and materials
are utilized in the struc' ture. furnish ings and or .
name ntations of mobil e•

homes today.
For
extra

Full Flat

.•.•

Connon Feotherlite no-iron mu slin Versailles sheets ore a blend of cotton and polyester
with over 130 threads per squora inch . Duroble · Press fini sh eliminates ironing, stays
wrinkle free ,w':ors longer and dries fo ster . Pink, Blue, Melon .

miscel la neous brackets. It
took about·2 hours to po lish
and shine all these bra ss
thingamabobs and do
i iggers on the car .
Depending on sty le and

..... .

_,._

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caps, speedometer tubes,
brass
, horns ·
and

mas1f'l, ll&lt;~ft l •'
' "

--

FRENCH City Garden Club •
meets at tlie home or Mrs. '
Grace Bradbury· with Mrs.
Jewell Moore conducting a

Any Size for Any Need. Each

school and Lynne Oliver was
elected historian. Diane Dillon
and Melloney White are to give
devotions next month, Lynne
Oliver and Teresa Dillon will
give demonstrations and talks
will be by John Dillon, Angie
Johnson, Sherri Russell and
Jill Taylor. Susie Dillon and
Jill Taylor will be responsible
for refreshments.
Sherri Russell, Melanie
Sisson, Larry Roach and
Tammy Cook gave demon. stra lions. Talks were by
Melloney White. Games were
led by Tanowa Hill. Refreshment.s were by Carla Hood and
Angie Proffitt. - Melloney
White, reporter.

~-J:!!B TRADE Jt! 2! ~
PAIR

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-----------• ssoo . ssoo . Sl()OO

Peddler 's Pantry

ON ANY PAIR OF SHOES
.$15.99-OR OVER IN

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SALE/bD.

with as much brass as
paint. The polished brass
lobk was provided by
head lamps. tail and side
lamps, windshield frame
and braces, rails around
th e body. door t1and les, hub

Monday &amp; Friday 9:301ill p.m.
Tues. Wed. S..t. 9;JOiil s·p.m .
Thursday9 : )01il11noon

330 Second Avenu~

Terrariums

10% TO 50% OFF
ON SOME ITEMS/

•.

are Mr. and Mrs. · Grover ·
SON BORN
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs . Forbes, Wirtz, Va. Mr. and
. Larry Rupe, Seffner,.Fla ., are Mrs. Rupe have two other ;
annoimcing !he bitth of an 8 children, Jason Alan, 3, .and
lbs., 11 ozs. son, Jeremy Waid, Aimee Cher,' 15 months.
Dec. 27 . in Flortda . ' Paternal
grandparents are Mr . and ~rs .
Lawrence Rupe, Langsville,
IS IN HOSPITAL
~nd materrral grandparents
LONG }:!OTI'OM - Mrs. E.
M. Harrah is a medical patient
at St. Joseph Hospital · in
workshop, "Flowers of Sa tin Parkersb urg . Her room
Ribbon and Burlap."
number is 210.

Daily Hospital Delivery

Well
Established
Deco rated .

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the church, 7::!0 p.m.
ENGLISH Club meel• at the
home of June Cantrell, cohostess Ruby Bossard, 7 p.m.
PROGRESSIVE Mothers
League meets at the home of
Mrs. Charles Gatewood, 7::!0
p.m, Guest speaker, Janet
Stebbins.
MARTHA Circle meets at
Grace · United Methodist
Church, 9;30 a.m. Nursery
open.
ABIGAIL Circle meets at the
Grace United Methodis t
Church, 1 p.m. Nursery open.
PEMBROKE Club meets with
Mrs. C. L. Mastwrs , 8 p.m.
WAYSIDE Garden Club meets
at the home of Mrs. Philip
Bailey, 7:30p.m.
KYGER Creek Band Boosters
meet early, 6 p.m., in the band
room, due to basketball game.
RIVERSIDE Study Club meets
with Mrs. Donald Warehime, I
p.m.

TUESDAY
AMERICAN Baptist Women of
Calvary Baptist Church will
meet in the fellowship room at

in navy blue tuxedues with Columbus, in June, and is
light blue ruffled shirt.s. The employed part-time as a
assistant
at
groom's tuxedo was navy blue teaching
the school.
with starburst.s.
Rt . 588
446 -4610
Several from the Bend area
The mother of the bride wore
a blue polyester gown with high attended the wedding.
mwns.
Miss Nancy Lewis, maid of neckline and long sleeves. She
honor, was attired in a hot pink wore matching accessories and
polyester gown witn an empire a _ cymbidium orchid. Mrs.
waist and a high neck trimmed Hoffman wore a · hot pink
in satin ribbon . She wore a polyester gown with a long
matching headpiece of flower sleeved pink lace jacket. She
I
petals and netting. She carried also wore a cymbid ium orchid.
The reception followed in the
a nosegay of blue and pink
Immaculate - Concept ion
baby mums,
The attendants were Miss Auditorium .
The couple is res idin~ at 4092
Wendy Olsen and Mrs. Sheila
James. Their dresses were Larry Place, Columbus, after a
identica l to the maid of honor's short wedding trip.
The bride is employed at
in blue polyester .
Charles V. Christman, . Atlantic- Centennial Insurance
Columbus, served as best man . Company, · Columbus . The
Ushers were Richard Baldwin bridegroom will graduate from
STATE &amp; THIRD· ~_ _ _ _ _ GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
and
Steven
Schilling, Ohio lnstitu,te of Techn ;'ogy,
Columbus. They were attired

era . cars were adorned

-

SUBSCR IPTION RATES
The Gallipolis Tribune in
Ohio and wut Virg inia one
year SIS, Sll( month s sa, threemonths IS, elsewhere 117 per
year , t il( months 19, tttree
fTII)nths SS .SD.
rhe Deily Sentinel, one
year 116.00 , six months sa.so,
three montj'1s u .oo.
' The United Press In ·
ternatlonal IS exclusively
entitled to the us• fo,_
Publlcatiw,· or all news
dispatches tredlti!d to this
newspaper and also tt.e loc•l
news pubiiSht~ d l'lereln .

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr, and Mrs. Robert L.
Roberts, Rt. 2, Racine, ·are announcing the engageme nt of
their daughter, Judith. to Robert J . Hill, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Robert C. Hill, Racine. The bride-€1ect and her fiance are
both 1973 graduates of Southern High School. Ste is employed
in the law offices of Bridgewater , Robe and Stimme l in
Athens. He completed his studies at the Career Academy at
Columbus last month . Weddin g plans are incomplete.

matching headpiece was attached to a satin bow and
caught with seed pearls. She
carried a cascade of red and
white roses with white baby

Busy Bee 4-H Club met jan. 1
412-414' Second Ave.

Events · !I

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Wedding vows read ·

.CHILDRENS SHOES
NOW

Boyd County was up 124 to
52,500; Greenup up 1,308 to
34,500; Carter up 950 to 20,800;
Rown up 890 to 17,900; Morgan
up 18J.to 10,200; Pike up 3,741 to
64,800; Floyd up 2,711 to 38,600;
Johnson up 1,261 to 18,800 ;
Magoffin up 157 to 10 600·
Martin up 723 to 10,100 'and
Lawrence up 374 to 11,100, the
r~port showed.
·
Pickard said the finished
study will include complete
population ligures lor 1970, 1971
and 1972. Complete figures for
.1972 weren't available for the
preliminary report.

), 404 to. 47,700.
Lawrence County, Ohio,
enjoyed the Tri-State's largest
single county population in crease during the study period,
from 56,868 to 59,200.
Other Ohio counties included
Scioto , up 1,149 to 78,100;
Jack son up 426 to 27,600;
Gallia, up 1,261 to 26,500; and
Meigs , up 901 to 20,700, according to the report.
In eastern Kentucky, Elliott
Coun ly was one of the lew
which suffered a population
decrease, down 33 persons to
5,900.

Mrs. Stephen Ray Hoffman

·GROUP OF BETTER

Published every Sunday
by
Tt1t
Oh io,
Valley
Putllist1 ing Co.
GALL I POLIS
~
DA ILY TRIBUNE
n~ Th ird Ave ,, Gallipolis,
Ohio •sn1.
PubHstted every weekday
evening e110cept Saturday .
Second Class PoSfage Paid
at Ga l lipolis , Ohio d631 .
THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 Court· St., Pomeroy, 0 .
45169. Pubilstled e\lerv week ·
day evening ex,ept Satur ·
d.ay . Entered as second clan
mailing matltr at Pomeroy ,
Ohio PoSf Offlce .
By carrier dally and
iunday, 55c per week .

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7- Th.e Sunday ,Times -Sentiriel, Sunday, Uan. 6, 1974 1

SUNDAY
TJMES.SENTINEL

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Tri-C.;unty population rising

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Letters of opinion are welcom•d. Thty ;hould I&gt;&lt; less
thaD 300 words long tor be subject to reduction by the
editor! aud must be signed with the slguee's address.
Names llljly be withheld upon publication. However, on
request, names wlll bf disclosed, Leiters should be in good
taote, addressing lssu~s . not penoitallties.

.....,,

;

••\Vatt·n·olnr Ro~.t'., &amp; "Ho~· al Bouqut't'•
\n-lr·(m Pt'n·alt' Print
'

beauty,

Twin Flat
or Fitted

modern convenien ces and
l asting li ving pleasure ,
make your next .home a
mobile hom·e. We can
provide you with the
.mobile home to com fortably accommodate you
' and your fam ily and all th e
d etai ls and i11formation
a~out modern mob ile home
living .
~·

Full Flat
or Fitted

Pillow
Cases

A lovely , muted print on li~ quality polyester and cotton perc~le. The colors ore

b·eautilul, predommantly blu e, pw ', r r gold . Durobl~ Press finish lor that stay-fresh look.
They need no ironing .

.,, .
· If'

JOHNSON'S MOBILE
HOME SALES

I .

~ . ~· I

: -~~-

2110 Easte1rn Avenue

Ga lhpoli~. Ohio
Phone 614-446-3547

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- ···--.. . .-- - - - - · - -- - --- -·· ... ~. --.uo..____.,,.........,..#,.,..,_ _*_,,.. t...:l~'""'-'~"·l,·r'"'-'''"'u_·: -.o·.;,··-..n::..·.. - - -....

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Gallia

Wil.~tm

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1111111 ~

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residents .

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.
. TilE article, which appeared in the 1973-74 wmter edition of
.·. The Royal J\rch Mason, a quarterly publication of the General
Grand Chapter, Royal Arch Ma sons, InternatiOnal. was com·
piled on a spur of the moment by Gordon Sinclair, a Ca nadian
: . radio and TV conunentator . Sincla ir 's ed itoria l, written in less
than 20 minutes time, was broadtast from Toronto · early last
spring . Many persons in this country heard it and now it is bei ng

widely in newspapers in th'\_"\)nited SUites. Here's the
• article :
·
·
:,
AFRIEND ACROSS THE BORDER
;
"This Canadian thinks it is time to speak up for the

~ . reprinted

~ Americans as the most generous and possibly tile least a p~ preciated people on all the earth.
•· ' "Germany Japan • and to a lesser extent, Britam and IU!ty
•"' •' were lifted out' of the debris of war by the Americans who poured
: · in billions of dollars and forgave other billions in debts. None of
~ these countries is today paying even th ~ interest on its remaining
; debts to the United SUites.
"When the franc was in danger of collapsing in 1956, it was
••' the Americans
who propped it up, and their reward was to be
•' insulted and swindled on the streets of Paris.
:,
"[ was there. I saw it.
;·
"When distant cities are hit by earthquakes, it is the United
~ States that hurries in to help ... This spring, 59 American com• munities (were) fla ttened by tornadoes. Nobody helped.
•'
"The Marshall plan and the Truman Policy pumped billions
~ upon billions of dollars into ·discouraged countries. Now news·
~ papers in those countries are writing about the decadent, war·
: mongering Americans.
•
"I'd like to see just one of those countries that is gloating
: over the erosion of the United States dollar build its own air 1' planes.
,.
"Come on, let 's hear it!
~·
" Does any other country in the world have a plane to equal
• • the Boeing Jumbo Jet, the Lockheed Ttistar or the Douglas 10?
: ':
"If so, why don't they fly them? Why do all the international
lines except Russia fly American planes '
"Why does no other land on earth even consider putting a
: man or woman on the moon ?
~
"You U!lk about Japanese technocracy, and you get radios.
You talk about German technocracy, and you get automobiles.
-'
"You talk about American technocracy. and you find men on
the moon - not once but several times - and safely home again.
"You talk about scandals, and the Americans put theirs right
in the store window for everybody to look at.
r
"Even their draft dodgers are not pursued and hounded.
~ They are here on our streets, and most of them _- unless they are
~ breaking Canadian laws - are gettmg Ameman dollars from
" Ma and Pa at home to spend here .
:;
"When the railways of France, Germany and India were
~ breaking down through age, it was the Americans who rebuilt
•• them. When the Pennsylvania Railroad and the New York
;'( Central went broke, nobody loaned them an old caboose. Both are
~ still broke.
~
"I can name you 5,000 times when the Americans raced to
~ the help of other people in trouble. Can Y?U nru:ne me even one
;.o • • time when someone else raced to the Americans tn trouble'
"! don't think there was outside help even during the San
~ ~ Francisco earthquake.
:) ,
"Our neighbors have faced it alone, and I'm one Canadian
, : who is damned tired of hearing them kicked around.
~
''They will come out of this thing with their flag high. And
C•· when they ao, they are entiUed to thumb their nose at the lands
1: l that are gloating over their present troubles.
!-' ;
I Hope Canada is not one of these. "

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TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times ... "Jim Bill" Robinson builds new
brick structure at 57 Pine St., to bouse expanding electrical
service business ... Gallia County's 1954 March of Dimes goal set
at $16,000 ... John Morgan named city commission president ...
County O~'s record $278,497.20 budget ... Mrs. M. T. Epling
named Gallipolis City School Board president ... T. F. Comer to
bead Gallipolis K of P Lodge ... Rio slams Butler 81~ after
losing 100.96 to Salem quintet ... GAHS thumps Jackson 81-43,
remains unbreaten in SEOAL.

£" •,!
ill ;

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BUENOS AIRES (UP!) Gunmen kidnapped the
Argentine director of the
"' • Pepsi-Cola company as he left
:: : home to drive to work Thurs·
._~ · day, police. said Friday. The
) abduction brought to· six the
~ number of business executives
~ : now be~ng held by kidnapers in
n ~ Argentina.

......" ..
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· Attention

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D~g

Ohioans spend $20 million
for conservation in 1973
COLUMBUS - Ohioans
invested over $20 mifiion the
past year in soil and water
co nse rvation
and
enviro:lmental improvement
work, according to Robert E.
Quilliam, state conservationist
for the U. S. Soil Conservation
Service ( SCS) in Ohio.
"The last fiscal year was the
top year in the environment
conscious 1970s for the sUite's
people both in receiving
technical assistance and in
applying conservation practices to their land," s_aid
Quilliam .
During the year. over 39,000
la ndowners or land users
requested and received
technical assistance from the
SCS through their local soil and
water conservation districts.
Nearly 20,000 of these people
applied one or more resource
conservation measures on the
land .
Quilliam noted that th e
percentage of people applying
conse~ation practices when

separate land units. Also State in resource conservation
during the year. over 1,200 work .
Quilliam noted that the goal
units of government were
of
most conservation practices
assisted in land use planning .
is
to
hold water on the land, but
1 "Assistance to groups, where
numerous landowners join some are designed to remove
together to solve a common excess \tater safely from the
land use problem, is continuing land without flooding or
at a high level," sid Quilliam. erosion an~ the resulting
Last year nearly 1,000 such sediment damage.
A few of the conservation
groups were provided guidance
and planning assistance by SCS practices installed during the
year include: 819 ponds for
people.
many
and varied uses; 461
Nearly 3,800 new 'individuals,
springs
developed for livestock
groups, and orga nizations
signed cooperative agreements water; and over 4,000 acres of
with their local SWCD's last stripcropping were applied to
year showing increased in- the land.
Nearly 60,000 feet of diverterest throughout the Buckeye

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assistance is growing each
year, showing an increased
awareness of the environment
and its needs. "People are
making better land use
decisions based on the
potential of different soils," he
said.
Complete conservation
plans, which help Ohio's people
to plan the proper use of the
land, were prepared for 1,794

try to stop further publica tion
in other languages, Perard
said.
The book, which demands
Soviet officials be arrested for
the imprisorunent' of millions
between the Bolshevik Revolution and 1956 is scheduled to be
published in F.rance, the
United States, England,
Sweden, Germany and other
countries during 1974.
Boris D. Pankin, head of the
new Sov(et copyright agency,
said Dec. 25 any Soviet author
who goes directly to a
publisher abroad is violating
Soviet law. He declined to say

AUTOS COLLIDE
GALLIPOLIS- No one was
injured or cited in a rear end
collision at 7:15a.m. Friday on
Bob McCormick Rd . where an
auto driven by Julia Owen, 28,
of Rodney. skidded on the icy
pavement striking the rear end
of an auto operated by Ethel F.
Beller, 30, o! Point Pleasant.

Owners

Spayed Female $2.00 ' Female $2 .00

...••"••..
~:

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PRICED FROM 12l9
LOOK at the new Litton
Mlnutemastert' microwave oven.,the most advanced microwave oven

you can buy. .

COOK .. . come in and ask for a
demonstration .
DlSCOVER the complete microwave

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buy now. Come in now!

coo~lng

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utton

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vFOREMAN &amp;.ABBOTT
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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ANCHOR HOCKING

OVEN WARE

15 OZ. PLASTIC BOTTLE

'

LOAF PAN, MIXING
BOWL, BAKE PA~S

NORWICH
ASPIRIN

,

EACH
VALUE

89~

()

-R
LADIES

NYLON
HOS.E

PLAYING
CARD.S

FLASH LITE

Know~

Pa 1d

I

SURE
SUPER DRY
DEODORANT

TOOTHBRUSHES
ONLY

~

James E. Roush

Cour,~ty Auditor of Meigs ·county

License mUst be obtained not later than Jan . 19, 1974 to avoid paying penalty . After this date
penalty will be $2.00 for single tag and $5.00 for kennellicense .

ST., JOSEPH
.

CHILDREN'S
ASPIRIN

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POMEilOY - Holiday surprises are especially nice and for
Mrs. Arthur Evans, her special surprise came by telephone. It
was a ~all from her son, Arnold, who lives in Wellington, New
Zealand. A~nold married a girl from New Zealand and 'it has
been eight years since he's been baok to the SUites. He works as a
reporter on "The Dominion ."
And for Alice Globokar, her surprise came in a small
package under the Christmas tree. Just a week bfforeChtistma.S
Alice lost the beautiful Iinde star ring her daughter, Sally , and
husband, Greg had given her a couple of years ago. Alice's
husband, Phil, cleaning tbe car, found it just in time to wrap it up
and tuck it under the tree.
And Phyllis Hackett got her dulcimer although for a while
there it looked like Old SanU! missed the hints given days before.
The packages just weren't the right size or shape. However,
inside one of the packages was a picture of a Christmas tree with
a dulcimer beneath it. Yep, you guessed it. That dulcimer pic·
tured beneath the tree in the house next door was (or Phyllis.

FOR THE FIRST time in eight years, the chjldren and
grandchildren of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Little were all home for
. Christmas. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Harris, Tina and Scott, came from
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Rusty and his family, Valerie and Matt
were in from Columbus, and Howard a.Id Marie Birchfield,
James, Robert and Kimberly were there from Rutland. The
family was 'also joined by friends of the Birchfield boys, Sheila
Conkle, Cheshire, and Brenda Rupe, Langsville .
But perhaps the excitement of the day was too much for Mr.
Little, for the day after Christmas he suffered a hea rt attack and
_,v
remains in serious condition at the Holzer Medical Center.
Incidentally. Mr. and Mrs. Little are proudly displaying a
certificate from the House of Representatives congratulating
them on their many years of work with the RuUand Fire
Department's
turkey dinner. Oakley Collins had arranged for the
POMEROY - In a double Lynn . Pigott, Long Bottom,
ring ceremony at the United served as the maid of honor certificate to be sent after reading the story about the couple in
Faith Church near Pomeroy, and wore a red, white and blue The Sentinel.
Miss Sharon Elizabeth Drake, cotton print gown. She had a
MAE LAMBERT is among those who have established the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. corsage of red , white and blue
tradition of serving a birthday cake on Christmas Day in •·
Melvin G. Drake, Rt. 1, carnations.
·
celebration
of the birth of Christ. One of U1e bakeries reports
Serving as best man was
Pomeroy, and BTFN Terry
several
decorated
cakes inscribed "Happy Birthday. Jesus"
Lance Reiber, son of Mr. and BTFN Eldridge, L. Gross, who
Mrs. Robert D. Reiber, Rt. I, serves on the U.S.S. Saratoga. being ordered.
Racine, exchanged wedding Usher was Darrell J. Drake,
LUOLLE AND Nolan Swackhamer keep it all together, year
vows.
Rt. 1, Long Bottom.
after
year ... their Christmas tree . that is!
The Rev. Robert E. Smith
FDr her daughter's wedding,
They just move it, decorations and all, into the basement and
officiated at the 2:30 p.m. Mrs. Drake wore a black and
then
blow off the dust when the holidays roll around. Now that's
wedding , Sept. 23, with Mrs. brown print nylon gown with a
real
energy conservation, wouldn 't you say.
Archie
Rose,
pianist, black knit vest. Mrs. Reiber
presenting the nuptial music was in a brown and beige floral
ALWAYS SO appreciative are the shut-ins remembered
including "The Wedding print gown. Both mothers had
during
the holidays and especially so this year is Lawrence
Prayer," "More," ~' ..'Til There white carnation corsages.
Harrison,
Middleport, whose outings are now lifl"\ited to trips to
Was You" and "Always."
A reception honoring the
Arrangements of red, white couple was held immediately the doctor.
and blue carnations and following the wedding at the
ENTERING UNIVERSITY Hospital today for surgery are
candelabra decorated the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
two
Middleport women. Pearl Reynolds will undergo eye
altar.
L. Smith, Middleport. The
Given in marriage by her bride's table featured a three surgery, and Audrey Theobald will have arm surgery this week. ·
Recuperating nicely from surgery Thursday is young Bob
• father the bride wore a white tiered cake with the miniature
Crow.
He will spend the next 'few days at Union Hospital in
: polyester double knit gown bride and groom on top . Green
" trimmed with blue velvet and yellow streamers and Dover; and .his room number is 31160.
: ribbon interwoven in white white bells were used in the
UP PORTLAND ·way, the Rev. Steve Wilson .got a royal
: lace. She carried a white Bible decorations. Presiding, at the .
: top~·ed with white roses table were Mrs. · Pauline welcome into the United Methodist Church which he is now
: surrorinded with baby's breath Primmer, Logan, and Mrs . pastoring . There was a potluck dinner and then an old-fashioned
• and red and blue ribbon. Iris Shelia Curtis, Dayton. Guests "pot~nd" party .
•• :-;•WoW.O!o~il
~........-;o?*."m* ··-:·:·-.:-·.- .•.
.
.uu '-' •••• n u .. ....·.&lt;;·~·
were registered by Miss Con me
TIJERE WASN 'T much celebrating at the home of George
and
Alice Freeland on New Year's Eve. Both were sick with the
!!!!
trip
flu .
·
~l
0
i)ii to Norfolk, va., the bride
• ::(
~~
changed into a green and white
AND FROM THE humor gazette, this timely message: "The
: ;~;
~l knit pant suit. They will reside
idea for daylight saving time came from an old Indian chlef who
f~
~ at Norfolk when the bride· cutoff one end of his blanket and had it sewed on the other end to
:
GALLIPOLIS _ Mitzi G. groom returns from sea duty. make the blanket longer.""
The new Mrs. Reiber is a
: Leedy, . daughter of Mr: and graduate of Southern High
: Mrs .. Willard Leedy, Gallipolis, School an'd the Atlantic Airline
·
: received a perfect 4_ pomt . School Kansas City Reiber 7\ T
: average for the fai_I quarter at gradu~ted from South~rn High
V
: Ohio Wesleyan Umvers1ty.
School in 1969 _
:
HUNT I NGT0 N
Attending the wedding and
: Registration for the second reception were Mr. and Mrs.
'1/
• semester
at
Marshall Willard Pigott, Long Bottom;
..I"
: University will begin Tuesday Rachel Uppole, Chester; Mr.
'
: and continue Wednesday.
and Mrs. Randall Reiber and
POMEROY _ A midnight the New Year were given by
:
Registration packets will be Rachel, Ra~ine; the Rev. and communion
service Mrs. Karl Kloes, Mrs. Clifford
• available and time card Mrs. Robert E. Smith, Sr., highlighted the New Year's Phillips, Miss Marcia Karr,
:: distributed in the Old Cafeteria· Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs . .John service at the Minersville Mrs, Alfred Yeauger, Richard
: on 18th St., and registration w. Adams and Tony, Colum- United MethQdist Church with Thomas, Mrs. Ann Watson and
: will be conducted across the bus ; Mrs. James d . Swain, members of the Forest Run, Mrs. Lillian Napper . Mrs .
: . street -in Gullickson Hall. Reedsville; Mrs. Jill Holter, Minersville, Asbury' and . Lillian Henderson quoted
: Hours are 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. both Reedsville; Miss Barbara Kay Syracuse churches par- scripture from John and
•• days, and 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Fisher, Minersville; Mr. and ticipating.
Matthew, and Vernon Nease
: , Tuesday
evening . Late Mrs. Daniel G. Drake and
The Rev . . Richard Jarvis gave a testimony of what the
••
· a t 10 p.m. cross means to him.
·
- registration an d sc heduIe Sabrina, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. opened the service
: adjustment is set for Monday' Ernest L. Smith, David and with a prayer and there was
Men of the congregation sang
: Jan . 14, through Friday, Jan. Jason, Middleport; Mr. and group singing of "Count Your "God Will Take Care of You,"
.., 18.
Mrs. James Primmer and Blessings" and th~ "Old while the
women sang
::: Classes begin Thursday, Jan. Pam, Logan; Miss Debbie Rug~ed Cross." Readings on "Stepping In the Ught." There
".. 10.
was a duet, "Something Got
Burns, Long Bottom ; Roy
:
Persons planning to attend Smith, Portland; Mr. and Mrs.
~ Hold of Me" by Kenny Wiggins
: Marshall for the first time this David R. Drake, Sr., Tanuny
HOST DINNER •
and Mary Bentz. Allen Dill
: semester should contact the and David, Dayton; Mrs .
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. sang "I am Too Far Home to
• admissions office, Old Main "David L. Decker, Torch ; lilr. w,·ll,·am Ohlinger hosted the . Turn Back Now."
•"' 123, as soon as poss1"ble.
Asocial hour was held in the
and Mrs. Paul R. Curtis, Gary, trad1·t1·onal New Year's. Day
~
·
church basement with cookies
:;
MOREHEAD,
Ky .
Do~na and Alban, Dayton; family gathering at their Rt. J, and coffee being served. Just
~: Registration for Morehead Helen Hubbard, Syracuse; Pomeroy, home . Attending before midnight . the group
• State University's spring Roger T. Holter, Racme; Mr. were Mr. and "Mrs. !-Ierman returnedtothesanctuaryfora
: semester starts Monday and' and Mrs. Ronald Holter and Ohlinger,
Mr. and Ml'!h' Phil · ttonununion service
· at mld •.
·
: classes will hegin Thursday, daughters, Racine; Mr. and Ohlinger, Laura, Annie and night. To welcome in the New
:: . Jan. 10.
Mrs: Leo Hill ·and Shar~n, Phil, Pomeroy; and Mr. and Year the members sang
:
Graduate students and Racme; and ·Kathy McDaniel, Mrs. Terry Ohlinger, Jay and "America, the Beautiful."
John_, Philo .
• seniors enroll from Monday. 8 Racine.
:" a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Laughlin
: Health Bldg. Juniors and
: sophomores register Tuesday
.freshmen sign up Wed·
•"• .and
nesday. ·
'
:
An orientation program for
: entering freshmen and trans·
: fer students is scheduled
::. Monday at 8:30a .m. at Baird
Hall.
••• • Music
Registration· of part-time
: students for night and Satur·
::: day classes will be Saturday,
: Jan . 12. from 8 a.m. to noon.
: ' MARlETTA - The Dean's
• Ust for the fall semester has
• been releasejl for Marietta
: · College. To be n~ed a student
: must attain a B average in 12
: or more .Hours of coufse work .
•
Those named to the list frol!l
· : Gallipolis are Kristy L. ~lazer,
: Rt. 1; Dana H. Cleland, 960 . 1
: First Ave. ;'Connie Coonen, 440
: Hedgewood Dr.; Christine C. ·
: ·wetherholt, 1026 First Ave.;
'
: Mary Ellen Wetherholt, 1026
• First Ave.; Lori Ann Wiseman,
- 30 Oakwood Qr .

:

c. l',tege

:

News

"36

TABLETS

dinner .

ln the group were Mr . and
Mrs. Phil Ohlinger, Annk, Phil
and Laura , Jim, Becky.
Brenda, Beverly, and Brian
Will, Elizabeth , Helen, Emll1j
Lou and Jol"yce Davis, the Rev.
William Sydenstricker, Mrs.
Arthur Evans, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Warth, David, Darifl,

D~~?"~h~~~p~e~~t:~dding

··

R SHOPPING CENTER - MIDDLEPORT OHIO

~

·CLEARANCE SALE

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Wolfe. Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, are announcing the
engagement of her daughter, Jeanie Schneider, to Donald E.
Wood , New Haven . The bride-elect is the dau ~ hter of Robert
Schneider, Lawrenceburg, Ind . Mr. and Mrs. Don Wood,
formerly of Point Pleasant and now residing in Alabama, are
the parents of Wood, and his gra ndparents are Mr . and Mrs.
Russell McMillan, Mason, W. Va. Miss Schneider is a senior
at Meigs High School. Her fiance is employed at Fc'lleral
Mogul. A June wedding is being planned.

CONTINUES
GREAT SAVINGS FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY

ANNUAL JANUARY
OPEN

earance

9:15 TO 5:00
MON. THRU FRI.
9:15 TO 8:00
SATURDAY

SALE STARTS TOMORROW, JAN. 7

~::---........_-::::::::

FOR HER
LADlES DRESS COATS .

FOR HIM
MEN'S ·SUITS
Double knit &amp; wool blends .

30%

REDUCED

REDUCED

30%
MEN'S SWEATERS
Cardigan &amp; Pu l lover &amp; Sleeveless.
REDUCED . 30%

LADIES SLACKS
REDUCED 20%
LADIES
DRESSES
Jr s. - Missy - •12 Sizes.
REDUCED 40%

Men's Colored
Dress Shirts
Lang Sleeve.
20% to 30%

LADIES' ALL WEATHER

MEN'S

STADIUM COATS, CAR COATS &amp;JACKETS
Wool. Leather,
Corduroy, Nylon s. REDUCED 30%

COATS &amp; JACKETS
Polyester Knits REDUCED
30 %.

MEN'S KNIT SPORT SHIRTS

LADIES PANT" SUITS

o

'

f

•

.

.

30%

REDUCED

30% .

REDUCED

MEN'S DACRON &amp; COTTON

Ladies Sweaters &amp; Capes

SPORT SHIRTS
REDUCED
20%

30%

REDUCED

1 LOT OF SCARFS &amp; MITTENS SETS,
KNIT CAPS, FUR HATS
REDUCED Y2 PRICE

MEN'S
SPORTwools.
COATS
Double knils
&amp;

20%
MEN'S PANTS
Dress &amp; Casua l
20%
REDUCED
REDUCED

FLEXNET GIRDLES &amp; BRAS
40%

REDUCED
1-RACK OF

MEN'S HATS &amp; CAPS

LADIES BLOUSES
·REDUCED 30%

REDUCED
MEN'S HEAVYWEIGHT

SKIRTS &amp; KNIT TOPS

CORDUROY PANTS
REDUCED
20% .

1 RACK REDUCED

30%

I

'

LADIES .KNIT SUITS

ALL MERCHANDISE FROM OUR
REGULAR NAME BRAND STOCK

REDUCED

~

30% .

•

ALL SALES FINAL- NO APPROVALS - NO LAY-AWAYS

BAHR CLOTHIERS
0. .
,
. .

POINT PLEASANT

MIDDLEPORT.

•

-.--

20%

REDUCED

REDUCED

REDUCED

30 o/o to 50 o/o

LADIES SUBURBAN COATS

MEN'S ALL WEATHER COATS

PHONE 675·1160

312. 6T.H ST;

SHOE

Miss jeanie Schneider

CHECK WITH-US!
Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply Co.

2'3¢

POSTPONE SESSION
MIDDLEPORT
The
meeting of the Middleport
Garden Club announced for
Monday night has been pOst·
poned with a time and place to
be announced Ia ter.

STOREWIDE

-

..

SIZE

and Amy, and Mr . and Mr~ .
Don Hunnel and Artie. Ther"
were gifts for the children
sick and shut-ins a few days under the tree and favors 'for
belore Christmas · and then the adults . Mrs. Davis aLSo
went to the home of Mr . and se rved homemade cookies and
~
Mrs. Dale Davis, son , Chris, punch.
Wolf Pen, for a spaghetti
POMEf\OY - A group from
the
Enterprise
United
Methodist Church caroled the

d
eW year we lC0 me
·
b communton
. • hour

BATTERIES

:

Caroling party enjoyed -"

Nuptials solemnized

--------------------------- ..
----------------------------I

I'J

1

Kennel License $10

Yr . Mo M ; F ! BUc. White J'G ray : Brindle[ Tan I Brown1Yellow Long Short [ n

)

~~

500 TABLETS

~g~u ~;.~T---------col:oR"-- r_-T-~;;T;;e;;l;;:;

'

Mr. and Mrs. Terry L Reiber

Owners Name

.,

.

g ....: Th~ Sllndav Times- Sentinel; Sunday. Jan. 6. 1974

whether this would apply to
future
publication
of
Solzhenitsyn's books. All but
one of his books never have
been printed in the Soviet
Union.
•
"Solzhenitsyn said, 'Pankin
will take action against me,"
according to Perard.
Perw:d, 27. Elisabeth Pius·
san, 23, and Eric Delcroix, _30, .
spent 12 days in Moscow askmg
intellectuals to sign a petition
to the Soviet government
demanding "free circulation of
men ideas and information
betw'ei\n the West and the
Soviet Union. "

The most outstanding
microwave oven offer
we've ever made

'i

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:~

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sions and over 2,000 acres of
grassed waterways were built
to carry excess rainfall to safe
exit areas. Over 4,600 miles of
subsurface drains were installed along with 4,775 acres of
tree plantings and over 21,000
acres of land managed for
w~ldlife habitat.
"Increases in requests for
SCS technical assistance and
larger numbers of individuals,
groups, and organizations
signing
cooperator
agreeuments with local
SWCD's' show a very real intere~t in our natural resources
and in their use," said
Quilliam.

YAR

Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope and price' of license .

Township .

.•

compared with those receiving

To obtain license by maiL fill in and mail thi s farm to JAMES E.
ROUSH. COUNTY AUDITOR, Meigs County , Porneroy. Ohio .

Address

'-'.

.

""(#

••

J

KNITTING

DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1974 DOG LICENSE IS
JM'UARY 19TH. TWO DOLLAR ($2.00) PENALTY IF LICENSE IS
PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE
THIS HANDY. APPLICATION BLANK AND MAIL TO THE COUNTY
AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE TWO DOLLARS
($2.00) FOR EACH DOG. MALE OR FEMALE.

Male Dog $2.00

I

SA YELLE OR DAWN

#

1

' t

&gt;

By AUNE MOSBVQ
PARIS (UPI) - Alexander
Solzhenitsyn awaits without
fear what he thinks is likely
arrest for his new book condemning the Soviet secret
police and prison sys tem,
according to three French
lawyers.
· .
In Moocow, the Soviet press
finally informed the Sovjet
public about the book, "The
Gulag Archipelago," after two
days"of attacking Solzhenitsyn
in foreign news dispatches.
Tens of millions of viewers of
Vremya, an evening news
program, Friday were told for
the first time of the
publication . It was called, "a
libelous defamation ·of the
Socialist system" by commenwtor Anatoly Potapov.
The Paris attorneys visited
the Nobel Prize-winning author
Monday in Moscow and found
"lie is not afraid of a trial,"
lawyer Jean-Michel Perard
said Friday.
"Solzhenitsyn told us, •r v.:ill
be tried. I don't know when, I
am waiting. I am not afraid. I
knew the risks. But I've lived a
lot. I was in prison for nine
years. I will carr; on ," 1 the
lawyer said.
Perard said Solzhenitsyn appeared "c-ontent" that his book
was published in Paris in
Russian Dec. 28. But Solzhenit·
syn expects the Soviet Union to

HAMPOO

·Police sour(es said Douglas
G. Roberts, 46, an Argentine
citizen, left his home in the
suburb of Martinez at 8:15
a.m., Thursday but before he
haddrivenoneblock,a pickup
truck blocked his path and
three men with sawed off shotguns forced him into another
car.

~

I

OHIO DIRECTOR OF Agriculture Gene R. Abercrombie, right, presented the Meigs
County Agriculture Society with a certificate of achievement at the 49th annual Ohio Fair
Managers convention in Columbus this week. At the yearly breakfast, Gov. John J. Gilligan
and Director Abercrombie addressed a crowd of 450 delegates commending thein for their
work in staging the 95 county and independent fairs during the 1973 season. Accepting the
award for the Meigs county group was Wallace Bradford, fair board president, who was accompanied to the conve ntion by Mrs. Bradford.

Pepsi executive said kidnaped

!
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r

SolzhenitsyJl: ·fearless

JOHNS. Foster, 12!i River St.. Kanauga. of the Foster 'Sign
Co., and a member of the Gallipolis Masonic Lodge, submitted an
article to Dateline recently whi ch may be of intere!:lt lo most area

I) :

•

'

8- The Sunday Times.- Sentinel, Sunday. Jan. 6,1974

By Hobart

.I

,(

/,

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- -

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�.~. ·

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'I
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!I Dateline ·. •.

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Gallia

Wil.~tm

./r..

1111111 ~

I

residents .

++ -+
.
. TilE article, which appeared in the 1973-74 wmter edition of
.·. The Royal J\rch Mason, a quarterly publication of the General
Grand Chapter, Royal Arch Ma sons, InternatiOnal. was com·
piled on a spur of the moment by Gordon Sinclair, a Ca nadian
: . radio and TV conunentator . Sincla ir 's ed itoria l, written in less
than 20 minutes time, was broadtast from Toronto · early last
spring . Many persons in this country heard it and now it is bei ng

widely in newspapers in th'\_"\)nited SUites. Here's the
• article :
·
·
:,
AFRIEND ACROSS THE BORDER
;
"This Canadian thinks it is time to speak up for the

~ . reprinted

~ Americans as the most generous and possibly tile least a p~ preciated people on all the earth.
•· ' "Germany Japan • and to a lesser extent, Britam and IU!ty
•"' •' were lifted out' of the debris of war by the Americans who poured
: · in billions of dollars and forgave other billions in debts. None of
~ these countries is today paying even th ~ interest on its remaining
; debts to the United SUites.
"When the franc was in danger of collapsing in 1956, it was
••' the Americans
who propped it up, and their reward was to be
•' insulted and swindled on the streets of Paris.
:,
"[ was there. I saw it.
;·
"When distant cities are hit by earthquakes, it is the United
~ States that hurries in to help ... This spring, 59 American com• munities (were) fla ttened by tornadoes. Nobody helped.
•'
"The Marshall plan and the Truman Policy pumped billions
~ upon billions of dollars into ·discouraged countries. Now news·
~ papers in those countries are writing about the decadent, war·
: mongering Americans.
•
"I'd like to see just one of those countries that is gloating
: over the erosion of the United States dollar build its own air 1' planes.
,.
"Come on, let 's hear it!
~·
" Does any other country in the world have a plane to equal
• • the Boeing Jumbo Jet, the Lockheed Ttistar or the Douglas 10?
: ':
"If so, why don't they fly them? Why do all the international
lines except Russia fly American planes '
"Why does no other land on earth even consider putting a
: man or woman on the moon ?
~
"You U!lk about Japanese technocracy, and you get radios.
You talk about German technocracy, and you get automobiles.
-'
"You talk about American technocracy. and you find men on
the moon - not once but several times - and safely home again.
"You talk about scandals, and the Americans put theirs right
in the store window for everybody to look at.
r
"Even their draft dodgers are not pursued and hounded.
~ They are here on our streets, and most of them _- unless they are
~ breaking Canadian laws - are gettmg Ameman dollars from
" Ma and Pa at home to spend here .
:;
"When the railways of France, Germany and India were
~ breaking down through age, it was the Americans who rebuilt
•• them. When the Pennsylvania Railroad and the New York
;'( Central went broke, nobody loaned them an old caboose. Both are
~ still broke.
~
"I can name you 5,000 times when the Americans raced to
~ the help of other people in trouble. Can Y?U nru:ne me even one
;.o • • time when someone else raced to the Americans tn trouble'
"! don't think there was outside help even during the San
~ ~ Francisco earthquake.
:) ,
"Our neighbors have faced it alone, and I'm one Canadian
, : who is damned tired of hearing them kicked around.
~
''They will come out of this thing with their flag high. And
C•· when they ao, they are entiUed to thumb their nose at the lands
1: l that are gloating over their present troubles.
!-' ;
I Hope Canada is not one of these. "

.

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c:

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+++

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times ... "Jim Bill" Robinson builds new
brick structure at 57 Pine St., to bouse expanding electrical
service business ... Gallia County's 1954 March of Dimes goal set
at $16,000 ... John Morgan named city commission president ...
County O~'s record $278,497.20 budget ... Mrs. M. T. Epling
named Gallipolis City School Board president ... T. F. Comer to
bead Gallipolis K of P Lodge ... Rio slams Butler 81~ after
losing 100.96 to Salem quintet ... GAHS thumps Jackson 81-43,
remains unbreaten in SEOAL.

£" •,!
ill ;

~;

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"... ''

l&amp;.

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BUENOS AIRES (UP!) Gunmen kidnapped the
Argentine director of the
"' • Pepsi-Cola company as he left
:: : home to drive to work Thurs·
._~ · day, police. said Friday. The
) abduction brought to· six the
~ number of business executives
~ : now be~ng held by kidnapers in
n ~ Argentina.

......" ..
••

· Attention

'"•

lc

'•
••

n

ll..
••

D~g

Ohioans spend $20 million
for conservation in 1973
COLUMBUS - Ohioans
invested over $20 mifiion the
past year in soil and water
co nse rvation
and
enviro:lmental improvement
work, according to Robert E.
Quilliam, state conservationist
for the U. S. Soil Conservation
Service ( SCS) in Ohio.
"The last fiscal year was the
top year in the environment
conscious 1970s for the sUite's
people both in receiving
technical assistance and in
applying conservation practices to their land," s_aid
Quilliam .
During the year. over 39,000
la ndowners or land users
requested and received
technical assistance from the
SCS through their local soil and
water conservation districts.
Nearly 20,000 of these people
applied one or more resource
conservation measures on the
land .
Quilliam noted that th e
percentage of people applying
conse~ation practices when

separate land units. Also State in resource conservation
during the year. over 1,200 work .
Quilliam noted that the goal
units of government were
of
most conservation practices
assisted in land use planning .
is
to
hold water on the land, but
1 "Assistance to groups, where
numerous landowners join some are designed to remove
together to solve a common excess \tater safely from the
land use problem, is continuing land without flooding or
at a high level," sid Quilliam. erosion an~ the resulting
Last year nearly 1,000 such sediment damage.
A few of the conservation
groups were provided guidance
and planning assistance by SCS practices installed during the
year include: 819 ponds for
people.
many
and varied uses; 461
Nearly 3,800 new 'individuals,
springs
developed for livestock
groups, and orga nizations
signed cooperative agreements water; and over 4,000 acres of
with their local SWCD's last stripcropping were applied to
year showing increased in- the land.
Nearly 60,000 feet of diverterest throughout the Buckeye

••

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11 •

assistance is growing each
year, showing an increased
awareness of the environment
and its needs. "People are
making better land use
decisions based on the
potential of different soils," he
said.
Complete conservation
plans, which help Ohio's people
to plan the proper use of the
land, were prepared for 1,794

try to stop further publica tion
in other languages, Perard
said.
The book, which demands
Soviet officials be arrested for
the imprisorunent' of millions
between the Bolshevik Revolution and 1956 is scheduled to be
published in F.rance, the
United States, England,
Sweden, Germany and other
countries during 1974.
Boris D. Pankin, head of the
new Sov(et copyright agency,
said Dec. 25 any Soviet author
who goes directly to a
publisher abroad is violating
Soviet law. He declined to say

AUTOS COLLIDE
GALLIPOLIS- No one was
injured or cited in a rear end
collision at 7:15a.m. Friday on
Bob McCormick Rd . where an
auto driven by Julia Owen, 28,
of Rodney. skidded on the icy
pavement striking the rear end
of an auto operated by Ethel F.
Beller, 30, o! Point Pleasant.

Owners

Spayed Female $2.00 ' Female $2 .00

...••"••..
~:

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u

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PRICED FROM 12l9
LOOK at the new Litton
Mlnutemastert' microwave oven.,the most advanced microwave oven

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15 OZ. PLASTIC BOTTLE

'

LOAF PAN, MIXING
BOWL, BAKE PA~S

NORWICH
ASPIRIN

,

EACH
VALUE

89~

()

-R
LADIES

NYLON
HOS.E

PLAYING
CARD.S

FLASH LITE

Know~

Pa 1d

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SURE
SUPER DRY
DEODORANT

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~

James E. Roush

Cour,~ty Auditor of Meigs ·county

License mUst be obtained not later than Jan . 19, 1974 to avoid paying penalty . After this date
penalty will be $2.00 for single tag and $5.00 for kennellicense .

ST., JOSEPH
.

CHILDREN'S
ASPIRIN

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POMEilOY - Holiday surprises are especially nice and for
Mrs. Arthur Evans, her special surprise came by telephone. It
was a ~all from her son, Arnold, who lives in Wellington, New
Zealand. A~nold married a girl from New Zealand and 'it has
been eight years since he's been baok to the SUites. He works as a
reporter on "The Dominion ."
And for Alice Globokar, her surprise came in a small
package under the Christmas tree. Just a week bfforeChtistma.S
Alice lost the beautiful Iinde star ring her daughter, Sally , and
husband, Greg had given her a couple of years ago. Alice's
husband, Phil, cleaning tbe car, found it just in time to wrap it up
and tuck it under the tree.
And Phyllis Hackett got her dulcimer although for a while
there it looked like Old SanU! missed the hints given days before.
The packages just weren't the right size or shape. However,
inside one of the packages was a picture of a Christmas tree with
a dulcimer beneath it. Yep, you guessed it. That dulcimer pic·
tured beneath the tree in the house next door was (or Phyllis.

FOR THE FIRST time in eight years, the chjldren and
grandchildren of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Little were all home for
. Christmas. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Harris, Tina and Scott, came from
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Rusty and his family, Valerie and Matt
were in from Columbus, and Howard a.Id Marie Birchfield,
James, Robert and Kimberly were there from Rutland. The
family was 'also joined by friends of the Birchfield boys, Sheila
Conkle, Cheshire, and Brenda Rupe, Langsville .
But perhaps the excitement of the day was too much for Mr.
Little, for the day after Christmas he suffered a hea rt attack and
_,v
remains in serious condition at the Holzer Medical Center.
Incidentally. Mr. and Mrs. Little are proudly displaying a
certificate from the House of Representatives congratulating
them on their many years of work with the RuUand Fire
Department's
turkey dinner. Oakley Collins had arranged for the
POMEROY - In a double Lynn . Pigott, Long Bottom,
ring ceremony at the United served as the maid of honor certificate to be sent after reading the story about the couple in
Faith Church near Pomeroy, and wore a red, white and blue The Sentinel.
Miss Sharon Elizabeth Drake, cotton print gown. She had a
MAE LAMBERT is among those who have established the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. corsage of red , white and blue
tradition of serving a birthday cake on Christmas Day in •·
Melvin G. Drake, Rt. 1, carnations.
·
celebration
of the birth of Christ. One of U1e bakeries reports
Serving as best man was
Pomeroy, and BTFN Terry
several
decorated
cakes inscribed "Happy Birthday. Jesus"
Lance Reiber, son of Mr. and BTFN Eldridge, L. Gross, who
Mrs. Robert D. Reiber, Rt. I, serves on the U.S.S. Saratoga. being ordered.
Racine, exchanged wedding Usher was Darrell J. Drake,
LUOLLE AND Nolan Swackhamer keep it all together, year
vows.
Rt. 1, Long Bottom.
after
year ... their Christmas tree . that is!
The Rev. Robert E. Smith
FDr her daughter's wedding,
They just move it, decorations and all, into the basement and
officiated at the 2:30 p.m. Mrs. Drake wore a black and
then
blow off the dust when the holidays roll around. Now that's
wedding , Sept. 23, with Mrs. brown print nylon gown with a
real
energy conservation, wouldn 't you say.
Archie
Rose,
pianist, black knit vest. Mrs. Reiber
presenting the nuptial music was in a brown and beige floral
ALWAYS SO appreciative are the shut-ins remembered
including "The Wedding print gown. Both mothers had
during
the holidays and especially so this year is Lawrence
Prayer," "More," ~' ..'Til There white carnation corsages.
Harrison,
Middleport, whose outings are now lifl"\ited to trips to
Was You" and "Always."
A reception honoring the
Arrangements of red, white couple was held immediately the doctor.
and blue carnations and following the wedding at the
ENTERING UNIVERSITY Hospital today for surgery are
candelabra decorated the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
two
Middleport women. Pearl Reynolds will undergo eye
altar.
L. Smith, Middleport. The
Given in marriage by her bride's table featured a three surgery, and Audrey Theobald will have arm surgery this week. ·
Recuperating nicely from surgery Thursday is young Bob
• father the bride wore a white tiered cake with the miniature
Crow.
He will spend the next 'few days at Union Hospital in
: polyester double knit gown bride and groom on top . Green
" trimmed with blue velvet and yellow streamers and Dover; and .his room number is 31160.
: ribbon interwoven in white white bells were used in the
UP PORTLAND ·way, the Rev. Steve Wilson .got a royal
: lace. She carried a white Bible decorations. Presiding, at the .
: top~·ed with white roses table were Mrs. · Pauline welcome into the United Methodist Church which he is now
: surrorinded with baby's breath Primmer, Logan, and Mrs . pastoring . There was a potluck dinner and then an old-fashioned
• and red and blue ribbon. Iris Shelia Curtis, Dayton. Guests "pot~nd" party .
•• :-;•WoW.O!o~il
~........-;o?*."m* ··-:·:·-.:-·.- .•.
.
.uu '-' •••• n u .. ....·.&lt;;·~·
were registered by Miss Con me
TIJERE WASN 'T much celebrating at the home of George
and
Alice Freeland on New Year's Eve. Both were sick with the
!!!!
trip
flu .
·
~l
0
i)ii to Norfolk, va., the bride
• ::(
~~
changed into a green and white
AND FROM THE humor gazette, this timely message: "The
: ;~;
~l knit pant suit. They will reside
idea for daylight saving time came from an old Indian chlef who
f~
~ at Norfolk when the bride· cutoff one end of his blanket and had it sewed on the other end to
:
GALLIPOLIS _ Mitzi G. groom returns from sea duty. make the blanket longer.""
The new Mrs. Reiber is a
: Leedy, . daughter of Mr: and graduate of Southern High
: Mrs .. Willard Leedy, Gallipolis, School an'd the Atlantic Airline
·
: received a perfect 4_ pomt . School Kansas City Reiber 7\ T
: average for the fai_I quarter at gradu~ted from South~rn High
V
: Ohio Wesleyan Umvers1ty.
School in 1969 _
:
HUNT I NGT0 N
Attending the wedding and
: Registration for the second reception were Mr. and Mrs.
'1/
• semester
at
Marshall Willard Pigott, Long Bottom;
..I"
: University will begin Tuesday Rachel Uppole, Chester; Mr.
'
: and continue Wednesday.
and Mrs. Randall Reiber and
POMEROY _ A midnight the New Year were given by
:
Registration packets will be Rachel, Ra~ine; the Rev. and communion
service Mrs. Karl Kloes, Mrs. Clifford
• available and time card Mrs. Robert E. Smith, Sr., highlighted the New Year's Phillips, Miss Marcia Karr,
:: distributed in the Old Cafeteria· Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs . .John service at the Minersville Mrs, Alfred Yeauger, Richard
: on 18th St., and registration w. Adams and Tony, Colum- United MethQdist Church with Thomas, Mrs. Ann Watson and
: will be conducted across the bus ; Mrs. James d . Swain, members of the Forest Run, Mrs. Lillian Napper . Mrs .
: . street -in Gullickson Hall. Reedsville; Mrs. Jill Holter, Minersville, Asbury' and . Lillian Henderson quoted
: Hours are 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. both Reedsville; Miss Barbara Kay Syracuse churches par- scripture from John and
•• days, and 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Fisher, Minersville; Mr. and ticipating.
Matthew, and Vernon Nease
: , Tuesday
evening . Late Mrs. Daniel G. Drake and
The Rev . . Richard Jarvis gave a testimony of what the
••
· a t 10 p.m. cross means to him.
·
- registration an d sc heduIe Sabrina, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. opened the service
: adjustment is set for Monday' Ernest L. Smith, David and with a prayer and there was
Men of the congregation sang
: Jan . 14, through Friday, Jan. Jason, Middleport; Mr. and group singing of "Count Your "God Will Take Care of You,"
.., 18.
Mrs. James Primmer and Blessings" and th~ "Old while the
women sang
::: Classes begin Thursday, Jan. Pam, Logan; Miss Debbie Rug~ed Cross." Readings on "Stepping In the Ught." There
".. 10.
was a duet, "Something Got
Burns, Long Bottom ; Roy
:
Persons planning to attend Smith, Portland; Mr. and Mrs.
~ Hold of Me" by Kenny Wiggins
: Marshall for the first time this David R. Drake, Sr., Tanuny
HOST DINNER •
and Mary Bentz. Allen Dill
: semester should contact the and David, Dayton; Mrs .
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. sang "I am Too Far Home to
• admissions office, Old Main "David L. Decker, Torch ; lilr. w,·ll,·am Ohlinger hosted the . Turn Back Now."
•"' 123, as soon as poss1"ble.
Asocial hour was held in the
and Mrs. Paul R. Curtis, Gary, trad1·t1·onal New Year's. Day
~
·
church basement with cookies
:;
MOREHEAD,
Ky .
Do~na and Alban, Dayton; family gathering at their Rt. J, and coffee being served. Just
~: Registration for Morehead Helen Hubbard, Syracuse; Pomeroy, home . Attending before midnight . the group
• State University's spring Roger T. Holter, Racme; Mr. were Mr. and "Mrs. !-Ierman returnedtothesanctuaryfora
: semester starts Monday and' and Mrs. Ronald Holter and Ohlinger,
Mr. and Ml'!h' Phil · ttonununion service
· at mld •.
·
: classes will hegin Thursday, daughters, Racine; Mr. and Ohlinger, Laura, Annie and night. To welcome in the New
:: . Jan. 10.
Mrs: Leo Hill ·and Shar~n, Phil, Pomeroy; and Mr. and Year the members sang
:
Graduate students and Racme; and ·Kathy McDaniel, Mrs. Terry Ohlinger, Jay and "America, the Beautiful."
John_, Philo .
• seniors enroll from Monday. 8 Racine.
:" a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Laughlin
: Health Bldg. Juniors and
: sophomores register Tuesday
.freshmen sign up Wed·
•"• .and
nesday. ·
'
:
An orientation program for
: entering freshmen and trans·
: fer students is scheduled
::. Monday at 8:30a .m. at Baird
Hall.
••• • Music
Registration· of part-time
: students for night and Satur·
::: day classes will be Saturday,
: Jan . 12. from 8 a.m. to noon.
: ' MARlETTA - The Dean's
• Ust for the fall semester has
• been releasejl for Marietta
: · College. To be n~ed a student
: must attain a B average in 12
: or more .Hours of coufse work .
•
Those named to the list frol!l
· : Gallipolis are Kristy L. ~lazer,
: Rt. 1; Dana H. Cleland, 960 . 1
: First Ave. ;'Connie Coonen, 440
: Hedgewood Dr.; Christine C. ·
: ·wetherholt, 1026 First Ave.;
'
: Mary Ellen Wetherholt, 1026
• First Ave.; Lori Ann Wiseman,
- 30 Oakwood Qr .

:

c. l',tege

:

News

"36

TABLETS

dinner .

ln the group were Mr . and
Mrs. Phil Ohlinger, Annk, Phil
and Laura , Jim, Becky.
Brenda, Beverly, and Brian
Will, Elizabeth , Helen, Emll1j
Lou and Jol"yce Davis, the Rev.
William Sydenstricker, Mrs.
Arthur Evans, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Warth, David, Darifl,

D~~?"~h~~~p~e~~t:~dding

··

R SHOPPING CENTER - MIDDLEPORT OHIO

~

·CLEARANCE SALE

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Wolfe. Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, are announcing the
engagement of her daughter, Jeanie Schneider, to Donald E.
Wood , New Haven . The bride-elect is the dau ~ hter of Robert
Schneider, Lawrenceburg, Ind . Mr. and Mrs. Don Wood,
formerly of Point Pleasant and now residing in Alabama, are
the parents of Wood, and his gra ndparents are Mr . and Mrs.
Russell McMillan, Mason, W. Va. Miss Schneider is a senior
at Meigs High School. Her fiance is employed at Fc'lleral
Mogul. A June wedding is being planned.

CONTINUES
GREAT SAVINGS FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY

ANNUAL JANUARY
OPEN

earance

9:15 TO 5:00
MON. THRU FRI.
9:15 TO 8:00
SATURDAY

SALE STARTS TOMORROW, JAN. 7

~::---........_-::::::::

FOR HER
LADlES DRESS COATS .

FOR HIM
MEN'S ·SUITS
Double knit &amp; wool blends .

30%

REDUCED

REDUCED

30%
MEN'S SWEATERS
Cardigan &amp; Pu l lover &amp; Sleeveless.
REDUCED . 30%

LADIES SLACKS
REDUCED 20%
LADIES
DRESSES
Jr s. - Missy - •12 Sizes.
REDUCED 40%

Men's Colored
Dress Shirts
Lang Sleeve.
20% to 30%

LADIES' ALL WEATHER

MEN'S

STADIUM COATS, CAR COATS &amp;JACKETS
Wool. Leather,
Corduroy, Nylon s. REDUCED 30%

COATS &amp; JACKETS
Polyester Knits REDUCED
30 %.

MEN'S KNIT SPORT SHIRTS

LADIES PANT" SUITS

o

'

f

•

.

.

30%

REDUCED

30% .

REDUCED

MEN'S DACRON &amp; COTTON

Ladies Sweaters &amp; Capes

SPORT SHIRTS
REDUCED
20%

30%

REDUCED

1 LOT OF SCARFS &amp; MITTENS SETS,
KNIT CAPS, FUR HATS
REDUCED Y2 PRICE

MEN'S
SPORTwools.
COATS
Double knils
&amp;

20%
MEN'S PANTS
Dress &amp; Casua l
20%
REDUCED
REDUCED

FLEXNET GIRDLES &amp; BRAS
40%

REDUCED
1-RACK OF

MEN'S HATS &amp; CAPS

LADIES BLOUSES
·REDUCED 30%

REDUCED
MEN'S HEAVYWEIGHT

SKIRTS &amp; KNIT TOPS

CORDUROY PANTS
REDUCED
20% .

1 RACK REDUCED

30%

I

'

LADIES .KNIT SUITS

ALL MERCHANDISE FROM OUR
REGULAR NAME BRAND STOCK

REDUCED

~

30% .

•

ALL SALES FINAL- NO APPROVALS - NO LAY-AWAYS

BAHR CLOTHIERS
0. .
,
. .

POINT PLEASANT

MIDDLEPORT.

•

-.--

20%

REDUCED

REDUCED

REDUCED

30 o/o to 50 o/o

LADIES SUBURBAN COATS

MEN'S ALL WEATHER COATS

PHONE 675·1160

312. 6T.H ST;

SHOE

Miss jeanie Schneider

CHECK WITH-US!
Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply Co.

2'3¢

POSTPONE SESSION
MIDDLEPORT
The
meeting of the Middleport
Garden Club announced for
Monday night has been pOst·
poned with a time and place to
be announced Ia ter.

STOREWIDE

-

..

SIZE

and Amy, and Mr . and Mr~ .
Don Hunnel and Artie. Ther"
were gifts for the children
sick and shut-ins a few days under the tree and favors 'for
belore Christmas · and then the adults . Mrs. Davis aLSo
went to the home of Mr . and se rved homemade cookies and
~
Mrs. Dale Davis, son , Chris, punch.
Wolf Pen, for a spaghetti
POMEf\OY - A group from
the
Enterprise
United
Methodist Church caroled the

d
eW year we lC0 me
·
b communton
. • hour

BATTERIES

:

Caroling party enjoyed -"

Nuptials solemnized

--------------------------- ..
----------------------------I

I'J

1

Kennel License $10

Yr . Mo M ; F ! BUc. White J'G ray : Brindle[ Tan I Brown1Yellow Long Short [ n

)

~~

500 TABLETS

~g~u ~;.~T---------col:oR"-- r_-T-~;;T;;e;;l;;:;

'

Mr. and Mrs. Terry L Reiber

Owners Name

.,

.

g ....: Th~ Sllndav Times- Sentinel; Sunday. Jan. 6. 1974

whether this would apply to
future
publication
of
Solzhenitsyn's books. All but
one of his books never have
been printed in the Soviet
Union.
•
"Solzhenitsyn said, 'Pankin
will take action against me,"
according to Perard.
Perw:d, 27. Elisabeth Pius·
san, 23, and Eric Delcroix, _30, .
spent 12 days in Moscow askmg
intellectuals to sign a petition
to the Soviet government
demanding "free circulation of
men ideas and information
betw'ei\n the West and the
Soviet Union. "

The most outstanding
microwave oven offer
we've ever made

'i

n ..

.··I

:~

'

sions and over 2,000 acres of
grassed waterways were built
to carry excess rainfall to safe
exit areas. Over 4,600 miles of
subsurface drains were installed along with 4,775 acres of
tree plantings and over 21,000
acres of land managed for
w~ldlife habitat.
"Increases in requests for
SCS technical assistance and
larger numbers of individuals,
groups, and organizations
signing
cooperator
agreeuments with local
SWCD's' show a very real intere~t in our natural resources
and in their use," said
Quilliam.

YAR

Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope and price' of license .

Township .

.•

compared with those receiving

To obtain license by maiL fill in and mail thi s farm to JAMES E.
ROUSH. COUNTY AUDITOR, Meigs County , Porneroy. Ohio .

Address

'-'.

.

""(#

••

J

KNITTING

DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1974 DOG LICENSE IS
JM'UARY 19TH. TWO DOLLAR ($2.00) PENALTY IF LICENSE IS
PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE
THIS HANDY. APPLICATION BLANK AND MAIL TO THE COUNTY
AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE TWO DOLLARS
($2.00) FOR EACH DOG. MALE OR FEMALE.

Male Dog $2.00

I

SA YELLE OR DAWN

#

1

' t

&gt;

By AUNE MOSBVQ
PARIS (UPI) - Alexander
Solzhenitsyn awaits without
fear what he thinks is likely
arrest for his new book condemning the Soviet secret
police and prison sys tem,
according to three French
lawyers.
· .
In Moocow, the Soviet press
finally informed the Sovjet
public about the book, "The
Gulag Archipelago," after two
days"of attacking Solzhenitsyn
in foreign news dispatches.
Tens of millions of viewers of
Vremya, an evening news
program, Friday were told for
the first time of the
publication . It was called, "a
libelous defamation ·of the
Socialist system" by commenwtor Anatoly Potapov.
The Paris attorneys visited
the Nobel Prize-winning author
Monday in Moscow and found
"lie is not afraid of a trial,"
lawyer Jean-Michel Perard
said Friday.
"Solzhenitsyn told us, •r v.:ill
be tried. I don't know when, I
am waiting. I am not afraid. I
knew the risks. But I've lived a
lot. I was in prison for nine
years. I will carr; on ," 1 the
lawyer said.
Perard said Solzhenitsyn appeared "c-ontent" that his book
was published in Paris in
Russian Dec. 28. But Solzhenit·
syn expects the Soviet Union to

HAMPOO

·Police sour(es said Douglas
G. Roberts, 46, an Argentine
citizen, left his home in the
suburb of Martinez at 8:15
a.m., Thursday but before he
haddrivenoneblock,a pickup
truck blocked his path and
three men with sawed off shotguns forced him into another
car.

~

I

OHIO DIRECTOR OF Agriculture Gene R. Abercrombie, right, presented the Meigs
County Agriculture Society with a certificate of achievement at the 49th annual Ohio Fair
Managers convention in Columbus this week. At the yearly breakfast, Gov. John J. Gilligan
and Director Abercrombie addressed a crowd of 450 delegates commending thein for their
work in staging the 95 county and independent fairs during the 1973 season. Accepting the
award for the Meigs county group was Wallace Bradford, fair board president, who was accompanied to the conve ntion by Mrs. Bradford.

Pepsi executive said kidnaped

!
~ ;
~ !

r

SolzhenitsyJl: ·fearless

JOHNS. Foster, 12!i River St.. Kanauga. of the Foster 'Sign
Co., and a member of the Gallipolis Masonic Lodge, submitted an
article to Dateline recently whi ch may be of intere!:lt lo most area

I) :

•

'

8- The Sunday Times.- Sentinel, Sunday. Jan. 6,1974

By Hobart

.I

,(

/,

'

.

\.

- -

.

�.

' '
'

.'

I

'I'll!!Sllmd:a) Times- Sentinel, Slmday, Jan. 6, 1974

TUESDAY
SOUTHEASTERN ' Ohio
Trac tor Pullers meeting, 8
p.m . at sec retary 's office on
Roc~

·~

Springs

All

. :,

members and prospective Hall, Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
members invited.
Ga rdeners, 6:30 p.m. at the
WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE, 1:30 Meigs Inn ; dinner meeting
p,m. at the ·American . Legion with program to follow.

"

•

Ohio

t!l'

Gospel Mus ic Assuc. 7::10

College.
conduded . by

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stateho110e Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, has gone to war.
against Big Brother.
· In this case •. Big Brother is

gobble up names, ranks and
seri~l numbers of thousands of
unaware Ohioans, and spew
forth personal information to
anyone who asks.
Aronoff, a public member of
the federal Committee on the
Invasion of Privacy, became
alarmed a\ the potential harm
whoch could be done by exchanges of computer information, some of it outdated, some

Nurs er y wi ll be provided.

Public invited.
SALEM CENTER PTA, 7:30

.'

FOR CHILDREN
INFANTS THRU SIZE 14

Boy Scouts.
·
Hi\CINE MEMORIAL VFW
Post 65 meeting, 8 p.m. ~ t
Racine American Legion Hall .
RACINE CHAPTER 134 OES
regularmeeting,at the temple.
Obligation night will be observed.
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, 7:30p. m. at

20%

Spring Ave., Pomeroy .

Mr. and Mrs. Harley D. Godfrey

Miss Rita Catherine Ryan
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mr. and Mrs. Edward
A. Ry an, Mason, W.Va., are announcing the engagement of
their daughter, Rita Catherine, to Edward Allen Hayes,
son of Mrs. Mildred Hayes, Pomeroy . Miss Ryan will
graduate from Wahama High School in May . Her fiance, a
1973 graduate of Meigs High School is employe'(] at Kaiser
Aluminum. WC!Iding plans are incomplete.

Godreys to celebrate
anniversary jan. 13

Johnsons entertain
PORTLAND - Mr . and Mrs.
Don Johnson entertained with
a dinner on Christmas Day.
Their guests were Mr. and
Mrs. William A. McKelvey,
Bruce McKelvey,

Kathy, Sciotoville. Mr. and
Mrs. Thereon Johnson, Racine,
and Dr . Kathryn Philson , also
of Racine.
Other callers at the Johnson
home during the holidays were
Mr. and Mrs. David Hysell,
Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Euler, Charleston, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Sterrett,
Gallipolis, and Mrs . Frankie
Fosrer, Delaware.

Portland ;

and Paula Jones, Athens.
Dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Johnson and their two
sons on the Thursday after
Christmas were Mr. and Mrs.
Scott Wheeler, Mary and

Grangers enjoy party
LETART FALLS - The Ohio
Valley Grange 2612, Letart
Falls, held iIs annual Christmas party at the Community
Hall, Dec. 13, with a chicken
dinner with all the trimmings.
Dinner was enjoyed at a
table covered with a Christmas
tablecloth decorated by
poinsettias. The centerpiece
was ·furnished by the lecturer,
Mrs. Florence Smith. A gift
exchange was held around a
decorated Christmas tre e
provide&lt;) by Mrs. Erma
Wilson. Mrs. Bertha Robinson
asked the blessing .
The lecturer had charge of
the program whoch oncluded
scripture readings from Isaiah
and Luke by Mrs. Robinson ;
"Chris~asis for Joy" by ;;rrs.
Srnoth; Chrtsim~s Spont . by·
Herbert Shtelds ; Joy of Little
~ings" by Mrs: Alice Balser ;
Sto~r of the Forst Ch~ostmas
Tree by Mrs. Erma Wolson. A
game was played and the

Meigs chapter
DAR will meet
'·' ·

POMEROY
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution will meet at 2 p.m.
Sunday at the home of Mrs.
Clarence J. Struble, West Main
St., Pomeroy.
The program will be a
continua~ion on "Research of
the His \Dry of Local Churches"
by Mrs . Pearl Mora, bicentennial chairwoman.
Election of delegates to the
slate conference will be held.
Other hostesses include Mrs .
Dwight Millhone, Mrs. 0 . P.
Klein and Mrs, John Rose.

program concluded with the
singing of Christmas carols.

BELPRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Harley D. Godfrey, (Alma) ,
will celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary Jan. 13,
with an open house from 2 to 4
p.m. at their home, 722 Third
St., Belpre .
·
The couPle was married at
Stumpton , W. Va . by the Rev.
Frame Bennett, Jan . 12,
1924, at the home of
her patents, Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Vannoy . Godfrey
retired from the Baltimore and
Ohio Railroad in 1946, and .was
a member of the Washington
County School Board until1968.
He is a member of the Belpre
Lodge 609, F and AM of Ohio.
Mrs. Godfrey is a retired

:B;======::::::::::::~-:::=:~=:::=:::=~~:::::=:=:=:::::::==~=~=====;~

~~~:

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Pomeroy
Personal Notes

~~:

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Middleport
Personal Notes

POMEROY _ Mr . and Mrs.
Roger Wright, Murray City,
MIDDLEPORT - Sue Rue
and Mrs. Tina , Jeffers and
has
returned to Jacksonville,
family, Athens, were holiday
Fla.,
after spending the
visitors of ·their parents, Mr.
holidays here with her parents,
and Mrs. Norman Baxter.
Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Rue.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert WarMrs. Dwight Zavilz is a
ner, Jr., and daughters, Ruth,
patient
at the Holzer Medical
Margaret, Debbie and Beth,
Center
for observation and
• Oberlin, spent Chrislmas here
treatment.
with Mrs Robert warner Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Wallace
. John Prentice . Louis~ille
and
son, Buck, have moved
has been the hollday guest of
from
Middleport to First Ave.,
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Zahl.
Annie Ohlinger has returned Gallipolis. Wallace is with the
to Otterbein College following a State Highway Patrol Post,
Gallipolis .
holiday vish here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Phil
Ohlinger.
Mrs. Andrea Owens and
daughter, Shari, and Miss
FIRST CHILD BORN
Leanne Zephro , Marshall,
NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- Mr.
Mich ., returned home Monday
and Mrs. Albert Lee Weaver,
after visiting here several days
New Haven, are announcing
with Mrs. Owens' mother, Mrs.
the birth of their first child, a
Arthur Evans, Mr. and Jilrs. son, Dec. 22, at Holzer Medical
Don Hunnel, and olher Center. The infant weighed 7
relatives.
lbs., 14 ms., and has been.
Mr. and Mrs. George Maurer named Keith Allen. Grandand grandson have returned to
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Pittsburgh, Pa., after spending
Kenneth Davis, Long Bottom,
the holidays here with Mr. and
and Mrs. Daisy Weaver, New
Mrs. Jack Miller and Goldie
Haven.
Craigo.

Chester plans
jitney supper
CHESTER - A jitney supper
will be held at the Chester
Elementary School Saturday,
Jan. 12 from 5:30 to 7 p.m.
sponsored by the PTA.
Following the supper a
country show will be presented
beginning at 7:30 p.m. which
will feature variety acts by
students. Duane Wolfe and
"The Wolfe Pack" will. provide
music for the show and accompany all vocalists.
Admission is $1 for adults
and 50 cents for .children.

minister having worked in
numerou s ch urches in the

Sturnptown, W. Va. and Belpre
areas.

The couple has two sons,
Bernard, Belpre, and Robert,
Little Hoc kin g, six grand children and two greatgrandchildren. They also had a
daughrer, Pauline who died in
infancy .
Relatives and friends of the
couple, well known in the Bend
area, are invired to call during
the open house hours.

TO

REGULAR MONTHLY
me eting of Meigs County
Agricultural Society, Bp.m. at
secretary's office on Rock
Springs Firgrounds.
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
DeMolay meeting 7:30p.m. at
Middleport Masonic Temple.
TRUSTEES OF Syracuse Racine Regional Sewage
District, Racine Village Hall, 8
p.m. Purpose to choose site for
treatment plant.
TUESDAY
POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, 25th anniversary
dinner, 6:30 p.in. at the Meigs
Inn. Howard Hoshar, Hebron,
district governor, will be the
speaker. Entertainment by the
Rio Grande Chorale and local
talent.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
Bela Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
p.m. , at the Columbia Gas of ,
Ohio office in Middleport.
Demonstration titled "Galaxy
of Food Ideas."

50%0FF

11&lt;•• I

'" ...
"

pp
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

plqs for him as he runs for
· So last week he introduced a lieutenant governor during a
SO-&lt;!alled "Code of Fair Infor- pt·riod wlu' n public distrust of
mation Practices" which will Big Brother runs high.
impose strict requirements on
"Compurer technology and
computer operators to 'protect the need for information has
the rights of individuals whose developed so fast that the inpersonal records are involved. dividual citizen is virtually
Bill Could Be Big Plus
powerless to .protect himself
Aronoff's bill may be a big from a variety of private in~

WAIT NO LONGER

.
ENJOY IT NOW AND YEARS
TO COME

Beautiful room groups
from Flexsteelnew style and comfort
for your living.

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Flexsteel's patented construction and all are available in carefree, long-wearing DuPont Nylon. ·•
Sofa and love seat only

By JOSEPH FLEMING
BERLIN (UPI) - A semenscreening technique used successfully to breed only male
rabbits may be adapted to
·humans to enable parents to
have boys rather than girls,
according to a technique
developed by an American
scientist at a West German
laboratory .
A )\'Oman wanting a boy
could be given a simple,
inexpensive injection of her
husband's sperm by a nur~ to .
artificially inseminate her if
further research proves the
technique feasible. So far the
experimenters have not used
human beings.
A , spokesman for the
Schering
pharmaceutical
laboratory in West Berlin said
the technique was developed
by a team of scientists directed
. by American physiologist
Ronald J. Ericsson. He added
similar work is going on

$799*

Sofa and pair-of-chairs only $849.

JANUARY SALE PRICES

pro~ded by 17 donors, in-

creased the percentage of
male-producing sperm from
roughly 50 to 85 per cent.
The basis for the experiments is the knowledge
that a father's sperm decides
whether the mother gives birth
to a boy or a girl.
Each males sperm carries
male "y" chromosome and the

"

SWEETWATER. TENN.; STRATFORD, ONT.; VANC 0 UVEA, B.C.

..

'·'

8246 GROUP

7362 GROUP

Therefore it swims more

a research center in Tehran,

the spokesman said .

The semen is p1:H'Pd in an

Welcomes The New Tenants
To Our Building

• -T wo water-level selections.

Just 1 Floor Up From Our Lobby

• Only 21" wide, 21 " deep .
36" high over-all ,
DLP 1050P ELECTRIC DRYER
FEATURES

• No external exhausting needed.
• Three cycle selections permanent press. normal and

fluff dry.

.I

Meigs County Soil Conservation Service

• Separate start switch.

Reid Young, Technician

David Parry, District Conservationist

• Casters provided for ease in
portability.

MODELS WLP IOION
DLP 1050P

Meigs County Soil &amp; Water Conservatio:Q ·District
Leota Y ong, District Secretllry

....·-

8 to 5 Monday-Friday

Phone 992·3628

~I«

...WI'

-....

Farmers Home Administration

~~~~

.......

;v

·~

-~·­

Milton Roush, District Director 4
Archie R. Stegall, County SuperVisor
0. Dale Lea, A~sistant County Supervisor

··*'·

House Trailer

...

Georgene C. Childers, County Office Clerk

Tax

.-.

WONDERFUL FOR MOBD.E HOMES

v

'

••..

....
"
....
...
.........
.,.
."•

House trailer tax can be paid beginning Jan. 2 as per section 4505.06 Ohio
Code . This tax is figured on purchase
price of your trailer depreciated down
according to age . OwAeFS must bring
title or bill of sale to pay tax. No tax
can be paid for less than $36. You have
until Feb. 1 to pay this tax. After that
deadline a penalty of $5 or 10 percent
of the tax will be invoked .

~

y

I

IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

Phone 992-7603

8 • 4:45 Monday·Friday

Gene Riggs Insurance
.

I

.

Representing John Hancock Insurance
Phone 992-5869

•'

f24·Hour Answering Servicej

4

~

A

"...

THE TAX IS PAYABLE AT THE OFFICE
OF MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR
JAMES
. E. ROUSH AT THE
.
COURTHOUSE IN POMEROY

albumin solution. Since the
male chromosome swims fas.
fertilizes the female egg, a boy ter, the female chromosome
is born. If the "x" chromosome can be screened · out. The
fertilizes it, a girl is born.
remaining male sperm is then
The Schering technique is used for ar tificial inbssed on the fact that the semination. Ericsson worked
female chromosome is heavier two years at Schering and left
and fatter than the male. last August for Iran to work in
fema le "x" t~.
If the ' 'y" thromosome

The Farmers

.......
......

NOTICE!

in -

I

•
•.,
••
".,
'"

'

an

\

• Up-front lint filter.
DUBUQUE, lOW~ ; WAXAHACHIE. TEX .: LANCASTER, PA.; SALT LAKE
C'.ITY, UTAH ; HARRISON, ARK .; RiSING SUN, IN0.· EVANSVILLE, IND.;

ceedings and lawsuits.

ab.out

.,
.
..';

• Timed control- more than two
hours of drying time.

FLEX
STEEL
ANE UPHOLSTEREirFURNTURE

nate the computer or the ser-

two sex chromosomes - the slowly.

unable to isolate the female
chromosome in a male's sperm
for similar use.
Ericsson and his team used
rabbits for their experiments.
Atotal of 184 male rabbits were
born without a single ll!male.
There wereJlO miscarriages.
The team, using semen

regular, properly grounded, 115volt household current O.K.

• No special plumbing needed.

..

pose of this bill is not to elimi-

dividual's . vital statistics,
criminal record, tax records,
relatives, adoption
pro-

Only boys could be chosen.

• No special wiring needed - J.

"•

.."••
"
•••
."•

formation

tc1 tm gitt consrquencl's
such as distribution of incorrect criminal records . The pur-

As yet, the scientists have been

• Stack Rack puts dryer at
convenient height over washer .

• Portable - rolls to sink when you
want to wash. rolls back when
washing is done.

v

m:.~il

elsewhere.

• A complete home laundry center
in only 23" of floor space!

....,
• n"

exchanges may include in-

•

WLP 1010N WASHER FEATURES

•

The senator said computer

simple annoyani;C such as junk

VVLP1010N/DLP1050P

'

"
'

GROUP

~·

tbc right to privacy ."

I

• Big capacity- l-IP to 5 pounds
of mixed fabrics.

'.

vices it provides. Rlliher it is to
balance the need to know with

Aronoff's bill would require and eliminate them when no
, .
operators of . automated per- longer li!Pely.
Prior
consent
would
hllve
·tO ·
sonal data systems, whether
be
obtained
frotn
an
indiVidual
governmental or private, to
inform an individual upon ·ror the use of the data , or it.S .
request whether his records transfer to another computer
are involved and make this operation . No &amp;cia! Security
data ava ilable to the in- numbers could be used unless
required by federal law. ·
dividual.
Individuals would be able to
' Any individual would be enget
a court injunction againSt
titled to know how the data is
use
of the data, and system
being used, and to correct it if
it is wrong. The indiVidual also operators would be held liable
would be able to contest the ac- for any damages caused by
curacy, completeness, per- misuse .
Penalty for failure to file antmence and timeliness of the
nual public notice with the
data, and to prohibit its use.
state
would be a maximum
Data system operators would
$10,000
fine for each violation.
have to file an annual report
..
Violators
of the other proViwith the state about the
characteristics of the system sions would be subject to a
and all safeguards taken to $1,000 fine, six-month jail wrm
or both - and an organiza lion
protect individuals.
could
be fined up to $5,000.
They would'have to take reaAronoff
has the backing of
sonable precautions against
unauthorized use of the data, the National Association of
set
forth
dis ciplinary State Information Systems, a
measurers for improper use, group of data system
appoint a single person to be operators, and he hopes his
responsible for security, proposal will become a model
maintain accuracy of records for the other 49 states.

Bank and Savings Co.

'··

~

vasions, someumcs intended
and sometimes not," Aronoff
said.
''The results range from

Breeding for males made possible

COMPACT
WASHER &amp; DRYER
IN STACK RACK

~

'.

Jermings said the nation need
a Democratic Congress.
"Democrats who understand
the problems of the people," he
said.
"Nixon is using, as experts,
·as ''tragic-.''
the guys who ~ us into this
"This society needs jobs and (energy crisis) bmd," he said.
this administration is conunit- "AI the moment we see Gented to built-in unemployment eral Motors, where we have
wilt-in inflation through the about 35,000 or 36,000 members
rest of the year," he told a being phased out in a couple of
news conference here. ~~we plants, and we see that over the
need the kind of Congress that next couple of months as
dOes what has to be done in developing problem."
termS' of an economy, in tenns
GM's Packard Electric DiViof jobs, in terms of the prob- sion at Warren, Ohio, anlems of the cities, in terms of nounced Friday it would layoff
realizing that this administra- . 3,900 workers for one week.
tion has absolutely, almost, destroyed the country's ecoIN ANGUS GROUP
GALUPOUS - Victor R.
Niday, · Gallipolis, has been
issued a junior membership in
RALSTON HONORED
the American Angus Assn. at
NEW YORK (UP!) - John St. Joseph, Mo. which entitles
Raison, who brought the him to register purebred Angus
Denver Broncos their first at regular membership rates
winning season ever and to and to the privileges of the
within a shadow of a playoff American Angus Assn. until
berth, today was named United the age of 21 . There were 99
Press International's young people in the U. S. who
American Conference Coach of received junior memberships
the Year.
last month.

just plam wrong.

..

u

132 HORSES CONSIGNED
, SUNBURY, Ohio(UPI) - A·
vendue of 132 thoroughbreds
has been consigned to the
auction at the Ohio Thoroughbred Center here on Saturday,
Jan . 19, ccording ' to Bob
Gulick, sale manager . The
auction is sponsored by the
Ohio Breeders' Sales Co. , and
begins at ! .p.m..

nomy."

a

GIRLS: WINTER WEIGHT SLACKS
BOYS: CORDUROY SLACKS, SUITS
BOYS AND GIRLS CRIB SETS
INFANT, TODDLER. AND GIRLS TO SIZE 14 KNIT SHIRTS
GIRLS' SLACK SETS

THE

Jobless. increase cited
COLUMBUS \UP!) - The
president of the International
Union of Electrical Workers,
Paul Jennings, said here Friday he viewed the jump in the
nation's unemployment rate
from 2.7per cent to 3.2 per cent

DRESSES, BLOUSES, CAPES, COATS,
JACKETS, SNOWSUITS.

the home of Mrs. Harry Davis,

. '·

Sen. Aronoff going up .against Big Brother

the network of federal, slate
and private electronic data
processing systems which

Pastor Waiter Cloud, 7:30p .m.,
through Friday at Maso n First
Southern Baptist Church. A

..

11 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 6. 1974

Ohio politics

BIBLE STUDY on Book of

p.m., school with program by

.i

..

p.m., Allen Hall, Rio Grande
Colo ssians

,.

-·. '

STARTS MONDAY, JANUARY 7

~ MONDAY

WUJ'Hlci\S'l'EHN

fai rg~ou~ds.

'

FREE
DELIVERY

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

""'."'
CONVEtJIENT
tERMS

•

,

POMEROY
.

.."•
....••

...•
.."•
y

A

-

•

.

Semog
•'

I

WE .,
SERVICE!

Meigs,

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings -Co.

Gallia
and
Mason
Counties

u

r
'

WE
DELIVER!

WE
FINANCE!
Jack

w. Carsey, Mgr.

POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal De~t Insurance Qxporation

Phone 992-2181

:·

'

.,

�.

' '
'

.'

I

'I'll!!Sllmd:a) Times- Sentinel, Slmday, Jan. 6, 1974

TUESDAY
SOUTHEASTERN ' Ohio
Trac tor Pullers meeting, 8
p.m . at sec retary 's office on
Roc~

·~

Springs

All

. :,

members and prospective Hall, Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
members invited.
Ga rdeners, 6:30 p.m. at the
WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE, 1:30 Meigs Inn ; dinner meeting
p,m. at the ·American . Legion with program to follow.

"

•

Ohio

t!l'

Gospel Mus ic Assuc. 7::10

College.
conduded . by

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stateho110e Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, has gone to war.
against Big Brother.
· In this case •. Big Brother is

gobble up names, ranks and
seri~l numbers of thousands of
unaware Ohioans, and spew
forth personal information to
anyone who asks.
Aronoff, a public member of
the federal Committee on the
Invasion of Privacy, became
alarmed a\ the potential harm
whoch could be done by exchanges of computer information, some of it outdated, some

Nurs er y wi ll be provided.

Public invited.
SALEM CENTER PTA, 7:30

.'

FOR CHILDREN
INFANTS THRU SIZE 14

Boy Scouts.
·
Hi\CINE MEMORIAL VFW
Post 65 meeting, 8 p.m. ~ t
Racine American Legion Hall .
RACINE CHAPTER 134 OES
regularmeeting,at the temple.
Obligation night will be observed.
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, 7:30p. m. at

20%

Spring Ave., Pomeroy .

Mr. and Mrs. Harley D. Godfrey

Miss Rita Catherine Ryan
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mr. and Mrs. Edward
A. Ry an, Mason, W.Va., are announcing the engagement of
their daughter, Rita Catherine, to Edward Allen Hayes,
son of Mrs. Mildred Hayes, Pomeroy . Miss Ryan will
graduate from Wahama High School in May . Her fiance, a
1973 graduate of Meigs High School is employe'(] at Kaiser
Aluminum. WC!Iding plans are incomplete.

Godreys to celebrate
anniversary jan. 13

Johnsons entertain
PORTLAND - Mr . and Mrs.
Don Johnson entertained with
a dinner on Christmas Day.
Their guests were Mr. and
Mrs. William A. McKelvey,
Bruce McKelvey,

Kathy, Sciotoville. Mr. and
Mrs. Thereon Johnson, Racine,
and Dr . Kathryn Philson , also
of Racine.
Other callers at the Johnson
home during the holidays were
Mr. and Mrs. David Hysell,
Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Euler, Charleston, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Sterrett,
Gallipolis, and Mrs . Frankie
Fosrer, Delaware.

Portland ;

and Paula Jones, Athens.
Dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Johnson and their two
sons on the Thursday after
Christmas were Mr. and Mrs.
Scott Wheeler, Mary and

Grangers enjoy party
LETART FALLS - The Ohio
Valley Grange 2612, Letart
Falls, held iIs annual Christmas party at the Community
Hall, Dec. 13, with a chicken
dinner with all the trimmings.
Dinner was enjoyed at a
table covered with a Christmas
tablecloth decorated by
poinsettias. The centerpiece
was ·furnished by the lecturer,
Mrs. Florence Smith. A gift
exchange was held around a
decorated Christmas tre e
provide&lt;) by Mrs. Erma
Wilson. Mrs. Bertha Robinson
asked the blessing .
The lecturer had charge of
the program whoch oncluded
scripture readings from Isaiah
and Luke by Mrs. Robinson ;
"Chris~asis for Joy" by ;;rrs.
Srnoth; Chrtsim~s Spont . by·
Herbert Shtelds ; Joy of Little
~ings" by Mrs: Alice Balser ;
Sto~r of the Forst Ch~ostmas
Tree by Mrs. Erma Wolson. A
game was played and the

Meigs chapter
DAR will meet
'·' ·

POMEROY
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution will meet at 2 p.m.
Sunday at the home of Mrs.
Clarence J. Struble, West Main
St., Pomeroy.
The program will be a
continua~ion on "Research of
the His \Dry of Local Churches"
by Mrs . Pearl Mora, bicentennial chairwoman.
Election of delegates to the
slate conference will be held.
Other hostesses include Mrs .
Dwight Millhone, Mrs. 0 . P.
Klein and Mrs, John Rose.

program concluded with the
singing of Christmas carols.

BELPRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Harley D. Godfrey, (Alma) ,
will celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary Jan. 13,
with an open house from 2 to 4
p.m. at their home, 722 Third
St., Belpre .
·
The couPle was married at
Stumpton , W. Va . by the Rev.
Frame Bennett, Jan . 12,
1924, at the home of
her patents, Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Vannoy . Godfrey
retired from the Baltimore and
Ohio Railroad in 1946, and .was
a member of the Washington
County School Board until1968.
He is a member of the Belpre
Lodge 609, F and AM of Ohio.
Mrs. Godfrey is a retired

:B;======::::::::::::~-:::=:~=:::=:::=~~:::::=:=:=:::::::==~=~=====;~

~~~:

~'

Pomeroy
Personal Notes

~~:

'\~

Middleport
Personal Notes

POMEROY _ Mr . and Mrs.
Roger Wright, Murray City,
MIDDLEPORT - Sue Rue
and Mrs. Tina , Jeffers and
has
returned to Jacksonville,
family, Athens, were holiday
Fla.,
after spending the
visitors of ·their parents, Mr.
holidays here with her parents,
and Mrs. Norman Baxter.
Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Rue.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert WarMrs. Dwight Zavilz is a
ner, Jr., and daughters, Ruth,
patient
at the Holzer Medical
Margaret, Debbie and Beth,
Center
for observation and
• Oberlin, spent Chrislmas here
treatment.
with Mrs Robert warner Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Wallace
. John Prentice . Louis~ille
and
son, Buck, have moved
has been the hollday guest of
from
Middleport to First Ave.,
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Zahl.
Annie Ohlinger has returned Gallipolis. Wallace is with the
to Otterbein College following a State Highway Patrol Post,
Gallipolis .
holiday vish here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Phil
Ohlinger.
Mrs. Andrea Owens and
daughter, Shari, and Miss
FIRST CHILD BORN
Leanne Zephro , Marshall,
NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- Mr.
Mich ., returned home Monday
and Mrs. Albert Lee Weaver,
after visiting here several days
New Haven, are announcing
with Mrs. Owens' mother, Mrs.
the birth of their first child, a
Arthur Evans, Mr. and Jilrs. son, Dec. 22, at Holzer Medical
Don Hunnel, and olher Center. The infant weighed 7
relatives.
lbs., 14 ms., and has been.
Mr. and Mrs. George Maurer named Keith Allen. Grandand grandson have returned to
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Pittsburgh, Pa., after spending
Kenneth Davis, Long Bottom,
the holidays here with Mr. and
and Mrs. Daisy Weaver, New
Mrs. Jack Miller and Goldie
Haven.
Craigo.

Chester plans
jitney supper
CHESTER - A jitney supper
will be held at the Chester
Elementary School Saturday,
Jan. 12 from 5:30 to 7 p.m.
sponsored by the PTA.
Following the supper a
country show will be presented
beginning at 7:30 p.m. which
will feature variety acts by
students. Duane Wolfe and
"The Wolfe Pack" will. provide
music for the show and accompany all vocalists.
Admission is $1 for adults
and 50 cents for .children.

minister having worked in
numerou s ch urches in the

Sturnptown, W. Va. and Belpre
areas.

The couple has two sons,
Bernard, Belpre, and Robert,
Little Hoc kin g, six grand children and two greatgrandchildren. They also had a
daughrer, Pauline who died in
infancy .
Relatives and friends of the
couple, well known in the Bend
area, are invired to call during
the open house hours.

TO

REGULAR MONTHLY
me eting of Meigs County
Agricultural Society, Bp.m. at
secretary's office on Rock
Springs Firgrounds.
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
DeMolay meeting 7:30p.m. at
Middleport Masonic Temple.
TRUSTEES OF Syracuse Racine Regional Sewage
District, Racine Village Hall, 8
p.m. Purpose to choose site for
treatment plant.
TUESDAY
POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, 25th anniversary
dinner, 6:30 p.in. at the Meigs
Inn. Howard Hoshar, Hebron,
district governor, will be the
speaker. Entertainment by the
Rio Grande Chorale and local
talent.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
Bela Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
p.m. , at the Columbia Gas of ,
Ohio office in Middleport.
Demonstration titled "Galaxy
of Food Ideas."

50%0FF

11&lt;•• I

'" ...
"

pp
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

plqs for him as he runs for
· So last week he introduced a lieutenant governor during a
SO-&lt;!alled "Code of Fair Infor- pt·riod wlu' n public distrust of
mation Practices" which will Big Brother runs high.
impose strict requirements on
"Compurer technology and
computer operators to 'protect the need for information has
the rights of individuals whose developed so fast that the inpersonal records are involved. dividual citizen is virtually
Bill Could Be Big Plus
powerless to .protect himself
Aronoff's bill may be a big from a variety of private in~

WAIT NO LONGER

.
ENJOY IT NOW AND YEARS
TO COME

Beautiful room groups
from Flexsteelnew style and comfort
for your living.

r.:-:-- - --

-....,

..•
~'

.-•.'
"

-.
A

v

'.

..'
~157

Put new luxury in your living with these Flexsleel
room groups. At! feature the unequalled comfort of
Flexsteel's patented construction and all are available in carefree, long-wearing DuPont Nylon. ·•
Sofa and love seat only

By JOSEPH FLEMING
BERLIN (UPI) - A semenscreening technique used successfully to breed only male
rabbits may be adapted to
·humans to enable parents to
have boys rather than girls,
according to a technique
developed by an American
scientist at a West German
laboratory .
A )\'Oman wanting a boy
could be given a simple,
inexpensive injection of her
husband's sperm by a nur~ to .
artificially inseminate her if
further research proves the
technique feasible. So far the
experimenters have not used
human beings.
A , spokesman for the
Schering
pharmaceutical
laboratory in West Berlin said
the technique was developed
by a team of scientists directed
. by American physiologist
Ronald J. Ericsson. He added
similar work is going on

$799*

Sofa and pair-of-chairs only $849.

JANUARY SALE PRICES

pro~ded by 17 donors, in-

creased the percentage of
male-producing sperm from
roughly 50 to 85 per cent.
The basis for the experiments is the knowledge
that a father's sperm decides
whether the mother gives birth
to a boy or a girl.
Each males sperm carries
male "y" chromosome and the

"

SWEETWATER. TENN.; STRATFORD, ONT.; VANC 0 UVEA, B.C.

..

'·'

8246 GROUP

7362 GROUP

Therefore it swims more

a research center in Tehran,

the spokesman said .

The semen is p1:H'Pd in an

Welcomes The New Tenants
To Our Building

• -T wo water-level selections.

Just 1 Floor Up From Our Lobby

• Only 21" wide, 21 " deep .
36" high over-all ,
DLP 1050P ELECTRIC DRYER
FEATURES

• No external exhausting needed.
• Three cycle selections permanent press. normal and

fluff dry.

.I

Meigs County Soil Conservation Service

• Separate start switch.

Reid Young, Technician

David Parry, District Conservationist

• Casters provided for ease in
portability.

MODELS WLP IOION
DLP 1050P

Meigs County Soil &amp; Water Conservatio:Q ·District
Leota Y ong, District Secretllry

....·-

8 to 5 Monday-Friday

Phone 992·3628

~I«

...WI'

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Farmers Home Administration

~~~~

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-~·­

Milton Roush, District Director 4
Archie R. Stegall, County SuperVisor
0. Dale Lea, A~sistant County Supervisor

··*'·

House Trailer

...

Georgene C. Childers, County Office Clerk

Tax

.-.

WONDERFUL FOR MOBD.E HOMES

v

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."•

House trailer tax can be paid beginning Jan. 2 as per section 4505.06 Ohio
Code . This tax is figured on purchase
price of your trailer depreciated down
according to age . OwAeFS must bring
title or bill of sale to pay tax. No tax
can be paid for less than $36. You have
until Feb. 1 to pay this tax. After that
deadline a penalty of $5 or 10 percent
of the tax will be invoked .

~

y

I

IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

Phone 992-7603

8 • 4:45 Monday·Friday

Gene Riggs Insurance
.

I

.

Representing John Hancock Insurance
Phone 992-5869

•'

f24·Hour Answering Servicej

4

~

A

"...

THE TAX IS PAYABLE AT THE OFFICE
OF MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR
JAMES
. E. ROUSH AT THE
.
COURTHOUSE IN POMEROY

albumin solution. Since the
male chromosome swims fas.
fertilizes the female egg, a boy ter, the female chromosome
is born. If the "x" chromosome can be screened · out. The
fertilizes it, a girl is born.
remaining male sperm is then
The Schering technique is used for ar tificial inbssed on the fact that the semination. Ericsson worked
female chromosome is heavier two years at Schering and left
and fatter than the male. last August for Iran to work in
fema le "x" t~.
If the ' 'y" thromosome

The Farmers

.......
......

NOTICE!

in -

I

•
•.,
••
".,
'"

'

an

\

• Up-front lint filter.
DUBUQUE, lOW~ ; WAXAHACHIE. TEX .: LANCASTER, PA.; SALT LAKE
C'.ITY, UTAH ; HARRISON, ARK .; RiSING SUN, IN0.· EVANSVILLE, IND.;

ceedings and lawsuits.

ab.out

.,
.
..';

• Timed control- more than two
hours of drying time.

FLEX
STEEL
ANE UPHOLSTEREirFURNTURE

nate the computer or the ser-

two sex chromosomes - the slowly.

unable to isolate the female
chromosome in a male's sperm
for similar use.
Ericsson and his team used
rabbits for their experiments.
Atotal of 184 male rabbits were
born without a single ll!male.
There wereJlO miscarriages.
The team, using semen

regular, properly grounded, 115volt household current O.K.

• No special plumbing needed.

..

pose of this bill is not to elimi-

dividual's . vital statistics,
criminal record, tax records,
relatives, adoption
pro-

Only boys could be chosen.

• No special wiring needed - J.

"•

.."••
"
•••
."•

formation

tc1 tm gitt consrquencl's
such as distribution of incorrect criminal records . The pur-

As yet, the scientists have been

• Stack Rack puts dryer at
convenient height over washer .

• Portable - rolls to sink when you
want to wash. rolls back when
washing is done.

v

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elsewhere.

• A complete home laundry center
in only 23" of floor space!

....,
• n"

exchanges may include in-

•

WLP 1010N WASHER FEATURES

•

The senator said computer

simple annoyani;C such as junk

VVLP1010N/DLP1050P

'

"
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GROUP

~·

tbc right to privacy ."

I

• Big capacity- l-IP to 5 pounds
of mixed fabrics.

'.

vices it provides. Rlliher it is to
balance the need to know with

Aronoff's bill would require and eliminate them when no
, .
operators of . automated per- longer li!Pely.
Prior
consent
would
hllve
·tO ·
sonal data systems, whether
be
obtained
frotn
an
indiVidual
governmental or private, to
inform an individual upon ·ror the use of the data , or it.S .
request whether his records transfer to another computer
are involved and make this operation . No &amp;cia! Security
data ava ilable to the in- numbers could be used unless
required by federal law. ·
dividual.
Individuals would be able to
' Any individual would be enget
a court injunction againSt
titled to know how the data is
use
of the data, and system
being used, and to correct it if
it is wrong. The indiVidual also operators would be held liable
would be able to contest the ac- for any damages caused by
curacy, completeness, per- misuse .
Penalty for failure to file antmence and timeliness of the
nual public notice with the
data, and to prohibit its use.
state
would be a maximum
Data system operators would
$10,000
fine for each violation.
have to file an annual report
..
Violators
of the other proViwith the state about the
characteristics of the system sions would be subject to a
and all safeguards taken to $1,000 fine, six-month jail wrm
or both - and an organiza lion
protect individuals.
could
be fined up to $5,000.
They would'have to take reaAronoff
has the backing of
sonable precautions against
unauthorized use of the data, the National Association of
set
forth
dis ciplinary State Information Systems, a
measurers for improper use, group of data system
appoint a single person to be operators, and he hopes his
responsible for security, proposal will become a model
maintain accuracy of records for the other 49 states.

Bank and Savings Co.

'··

~

vasions, someumcs intended
and sometimes not," Aronoff
said.
''The results range from

Breeding for males made possible

COMPACT
WASHER &amp; DRYER
IN STACK RACK

~

'.

Jermings said the nation need
a Democratic Congress.
"Democrats who understand
the problems of the people," he
said.
"Nixon is using, as experts,
·as ''tragic-.''
the guys who ~ us into this
"This society needs jobs and (energy crisis) bmd," he said.
this administration is conunit- "AI the moment we see Gented to built-in unemployment eral Motors, where we have
wilt-in inflation through the about 35,000 or 36,000 members
rest of the year," he told a being phased out in a couple of
news conference here. ~~we plants, and we see that over the
need the kind of Congress that next couple of months as
dOes what has to be done in developing problem."
termS' of an economy, in tenns
GM's Packard Electric DiViof jobs, in terms of the prob- sion at Warren, Ohio, anlems of the cities, in terms of nounced Friday it would layoff
realizing that this administra- . 3,900 workers for one week.
tion has absolutely, almost, destroyed the country's ecoIN ANGUS GROUP
GALUPOUS - Victor R.
Niday, · Gallipolis, has been
issued a junior membership in
RALSTON HONORED
the American Angus Assn. at
NEW YORK (UP!) - John St. Joseph, Mo. which entitles
Raison, who brought the him to register purebred Angus
Denver Broncos their first at regular membership rates
winning season ever and to and to the privileges of the
within a shadow of a playoff American Angus Assn. until
berth, today was named United the age of 21 . There were 99
Press International's young people in the U. S. who
American Conference Coach of received junior memberships
the Year.
last month.

just plam wrong.

..

u

132 HORSES CONSIGNED
, SUNBURY, Ohio(UPI) - A·
vendue of 132 thoroughbreds
has been consigned to the
auction at the Ohio Thoroughbred Center here on Saturday,
Jan . 19, ccording ' to Bob
Gulick, sale manager . The
auction is sponsored by the
Ohio Breeders' Sales Co. , and
begins at ! .p.m..

nomy."

a

GIRLS: WINTER WEIGHT SLACKS
BOYS: CORDUROY SLACKS, SUITS
BOYS AND GIRLS CRIB SETS
INFANT, TODDLER. AND GIRLS TO SIZE 14 KNIT SHIRTS
GIRLS' SLACK SETS

THE

Jobless. increase cited
COLUMBUS \UP!) - The
president of the International
Union of Electrical Workers,
Paul Jennings, said here Friday he viewed the jump in the
nation's unemployment rate
from 2.7per cent to 3.2 per cent

DRESSES, BLOUSES, CAPES, COATS,
JACKETS, SNOWSUITS.

the home of Mrs. Harry Davis,

. '·

Sen. Aronoff going up .against Big Brother

the network of federal, slate
and private electronic data
processing systems which

Pastor Waiter Cloud, 7:30p .m.,
through Friday at Maso n First
Southern Baptist Church. A

..

11 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 6. 1974

Ohio politics

BIBLE STUDY on Book of

p.m., school with program by

.i

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p.m., Allen Hall, Rio Grande
Colo ssians

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STARTS MONDAY, JANUARY 7

~ MONDAY

WUJ'Hlci\S'l'EHN

fai rg~ou~ds.

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FREE
DELIVERY

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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Semog
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SERVICE!

Meigs,

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings -Co.

Gallia
and
Mason
Counties

u

r
'

WE
DELIVER!

WE
FINANCE!
Jack

w. Carsey, Mgr.

POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal De~t Insurance Qxporation

Phone 992-2181

:·

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,_..sen·saiiOnal Clearance· Jo Give You Bar ains!

STARTS
MON., JAN. 7

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;;A:ut • . . . u u u ~

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IMPEACHMENT Issue Is
now In tbe bands of John M.
Doar, .newly named cblef
counsel of tbe House
Judiciary Committee which
Is exploring possible grounds
for Invoking the constitutional provisions for
trying a president. A
Republican, Doar was In the
JusUce Department during
tbe Kennedy and Johnson
'administrations and active
In Implementing civil rights
legislation.

Detroit

liP¥"...,_. •

-~

SEALY
SOFA -BEDS
Plenty to Select From

......

DETROIT (UPI)- Despite a
third consecutive record sales
year, U.S. automakers finished
the first week of 1974 with litUe
to cheer about.
Ford Motor Co. said it would
layoff another 4,600 workers in
the Detroit area and in Los
Angeles next week, raising the
total number idled by the "Big
Three" to more than 57,000.
The layoffs--and industry
sources said more could c.omewere caused by the energy
crisis and its subsequent effect
on big car sales. Conswners
switched from big cars in the
face of soaring gasoline prices
and fears of rationing.
The "Big Three" automakers
--General Motors Ford and
Chrysler-had planned to release their 1973 sales figures on
Friday. But they held off
because the long ChrislmasNew Years holiday delayed the
paper work.
Estimates among analysts,
however, were that the industry
suffered its worst December
since 1970.
The automakers, when they
release their figures Monday,
are expected to confirm estimates of a 20 per cent drop
from December of 1972, marking the third straight monthly
sales decline. Sales will be
below the 600,000 mark, the
worst since the industry delivered just 425,352 in the
recession of December, 1970, it
was predicted.
The three-month slump
wasn't enough to keep the
automakers from setting their
third straight year record with
just over 9.6 million sales ..
Together with an estimated 1.76
million imports--about 120,000
more than in 1972---total new
car sales in· the United States
last year were about 11.4
mlllion cars, almost one-halfmillion below estimates of just
six months ago.
Volkswagen remained the
top-selling Import despite a 1.9
per cent decrease. Toyota at
289,000 and Datsun 235,449 were
No.2 and No. 3.
American Motors did report
sales figures that showed a 28
per cent boost in December and
a yearly figllfe that is '1:1 per
cent ahead of 1972 to give the
automaker the best year in the
last 10 years.

mittee's investigation .

Talmadge told a reporter in
Georgia that Nixon "is mal\fug
great mistake in refusing to
comply with the subpoen~s. " It
indicates to the public he has
something to hide and affects
his credibility," he said.

a

"It doesn't come as any
surprise,,. Weicker said .*~'The

President and..,r his aides
continue to duck the hard one.
Candor has been a word, it has
not been a deed , in the White
House for a considerabl e
period of time."
The three subpoenas asked

Jury. still out
on Mr. Nixon
WASHINGTON (UP! )- The
deepening energy crisis has
diverted some attention from
the Watergate scandals but the
shell-&lt;;hocked American public
is still divided .on the question
of whether President Nixon
can or should lead the nation
for three more years.
The credibility of the President and his administration
has been so deeply eroded by
Watergate that many question
whether an energy crisis really
exists and some wonder whether Nixon has not contrived the
shortage of gasoline and the
lack of heat at. home.
Two weeks after the adjournment of the first session of the
93rd Congress, members of the
Senate and House have gotten
an idea what their constituents
think.
A nationwide sampling by
United Press International
fails to give · a verdict on
Nixon's future, in light of the
Watergate scandals.
Underlining the vagueness of
public opinion are the remarks
of Speaker Carl Albert.
" I haven't heard many
comments !, tell you the truth
but of course this isn't Nixon
country,'' the congressman
from Oklahoma said. "I hear a
lot more about the price of gas
and butane than I do about
Watergate.
"It hasn't been a subject
brought up too much. I have
heard a lot of criticism of the
President- they're down on
him."
Adding to the impossibility of
finding a consensus ar~ .~e
soulidmgs of Rep. Will131ll

Hungate, a Democrat from a
basically conservative district
in northeast Missouri .
"There are certain members
of the Democratic Party that, I
think, would have impeached
him a year ago without hearing
anything ," Hungate said. "And
I think there are some
Republicans who wouldn't impeach him if you caught him in
a bank at midnight."
But the UP! survey of
senators and congressmen
from every region of the
country indicates that the
American public:

- Believes that Nixon 's ability to govern has been impaired
by Watergate although there is
no agreement on just how
much .
- Would like to see an end to
the Watergate affair - by
vindication, impeachment or

resignation- so that the
country can turn to oth'1[
matters.
- Is becoming increasingly
more concerned with the
Impact of the energy crisis,
including shortages, unemployment, and inflation .

President has
.final look at
spending plans
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (UPI I - President
Nixon Saturday began a final review of federal
spending plans for the coming fiscal year which
were expected to reach a total of $300 billion for the
first time.
Nixon was said to be considering an additional
package of contingency spending programs if the
energy crisis weakens the economy beyond administration expectations and drives unemployment
up sharply. All decisions on the fiscal 1975 IJudget
covering the business year starting next July I will
be made by mid-week so that the budget can be
printed and sent to Congress late this month or early
in February.

Roy L. Ash, director of the derstood to be studying a
Office of Management and variety of "stand-by" plans to
Budget, flew here from Wash- stimulate the economy quickly
ington at Nixon's request if needed .
Friday night and the White
Among the possible "standHouse acknowledged that . by"
measures
which
umajor policy decisions" were Nixon
was
. believbeing inade.
ed to be studying to
A presidential spokesman stimulate the economy in an
refused to go into detail, but he emergency were steps to exsaid Nixon and Ash were pand public service emconcentrating on programs ployment, to increase defense
By United Press International Jlealing with energy research spending in areas with many
Snow fell on deserts in and development, housing and people out of work and to inSouthern California, Utah and health care.
crease spending· for public
Arizona Saturday, stranding
Ash already has said the new works projects, especially
motorists and blanketing Palm budget will project expendi- environmental programs.
Springs goU courses for the turesat slightly more than $300
In addition to the budget,
first time in 25 years.
billion -breaking a symbolic
Nixon
was expected to focus in
Up to four feet of snowfall barrier --and that it will be
acC1Jillulated in the mountains geared to expected revenues of coming days on the State of the
arolmd Los Angeles and an between $292 billion and $294 Union address scheduled for
delivery to Congress about
estimated 1,000 persons were billion.
marooned in their cars trying
That would anticipate a Jan. 22. At that time, the
to get through snow·dogged deficit of about $7 billion, President probably will spell
passes.
compared with one of between out some of his budget plans.
White House aides meanSnow covered Palm Springs, $4 billion and $6 billion which
desert resort and winter home · the administration · now is while provioed no further inof many wealtl)y retired in- projecting for the current formap on Nixon 's plans for
dividuals, for the first time in a . fiscal year --a year in which Feturmng to . Washington and
quarter century.
Nixon had hoped for a balanced indicated he might remain at
Twenty..,ne inches of snow budget.
his oceanside villa beyond next
piled up at Victorville, Calif.,
Wednesday
, which will be his
But Ash and other adminisand 16 inches were reported on tration economic officials cau- Gist birthday.
the ground at Palmdale on the tioned that their estimates
Since coming to California
high desert.
could be off subst'Bntially the day after Christmas, Nixon
Snow was reported at Fur- because of the many un- has been seen by reporters only
nace Creek in Death Valley certaipties created by the fuel once - when he attended his
Friday, for the first time since shortage. Many experts out- persanal physician's wedding
- 1968 and only the third time side tbe government maintain in La Joll!! ;-&lt;~nd aides said he
TAFT RECOVER·ING
since the National Park Serhas stayed close to his home,
CINCINNATI (UP! )- U.S. vice began keeping records in that &gt;the · administration's taking walks along the beach
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R-Ohio, Death Valley 15 years ago. forecasting is unrealistically with his wife, Pat, and his cloS.
was in good condition at Christ Temperature dropped to 33 ·optimistic .
Accordingly, Nixon wa• un- friend, C.G. " Bebe" Rebozo.
Hospital here today following. degrees.
the removal of a cataract from
Six inches of snow fell by
his eye Thursday night. Gerald daybreak at Las Vegas and
Minnety,
Taft's
press highway travel from St. Georsecrejary, said the senator ge, Utah, into the gambling
entered the hospital without city was banned unless autos
alerting anyone. Minnery Said were equipped with chains or
WASHINGTON ( UPIJ - tained.
even be was not aware Taft snow tires. All other roads into
Secretary
of State Henry
Dayan, who left directly for
was having eye trouble. Las Vegas were reported
Kissinger said today there was Andrews Air Force 'Base and a
"Apparently," said Minnery, hazardous.
All highways in Utah, except "not only no confrontation but return flight to Israel after his
"he just decided to have the
operation
during
the for the Salt Lake City area, nli significant difference" be- secon~ day of bilks with
tween the U. S. and Israeli Kissinger, said he was going
Congressional recess."
w~re snowbound, but all but
U.S. 89 into Arizona were positions on disengagement of straight to the Israeli cabinet to
hammer out a "concrete
sanded and open for at least Arab and Israeli forces.
17,52e DWI CASES
Kissinger
held
a
four
and
one
proposal
" to take to the Arab
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio limited travel. St. George got a
haU
hour
session
with
Israeli
negotiators
at Geneva. "I
State
Highway
Patrol foot of snow.
F1agstaff, in northern Ari:ro- Defense Minister Moshe Dayan personally am very happy with
Superintendent Robert M.
ria
's mountains, got four inches in an atmosphere, both here ·these talks," Dayan said.
Chiaramonte said Saturday the
patrol arrested 17,520 dri.vers of n~w snow and the storm, and abroad, of cautious opti- Kissinger and Dayan spent a
for driving while under the moving inland across the West, mism that the .delicate Egyp- total of 712 hours in discussions
Influence of alcohol during dumped two inches at Pocatel- !ian-Israeli ceasefire along the h~re during Day~,.. tw&lt;Kiay
Suez Canal could be main- tr1p to Washington .
lo, Idaho, during the night.
1973.
·- .

Snows in
unusual
places

Kissinge~,

l•

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cheering

AND RANGES

LIVING ROOM CLEARANCE

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By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
and "a fishing ~ii.pedition."
WASHINGTON (UPIJ · Weicker said in Greenwich,
Members .of the Senate Water- Conn., that the committee's
gate Committee Saturday long.,;tanding request for an
sharply criticized President informal meeting with Nixon
Nixon's refusal to comply )'lith had gone unanswered. "We
their subpoenas. One of them, haven 't even had a yes·or no to
Sen. Herman E. Talmadge, D- that very simple, direct ,
Ga., said it indicated "he has . forthright request, " he said.
something to hide."
Dash told reporters Friday
Sen. Lowell P. Weick!,. Jr., the oommittee had gotten even
R-Conn ., and counsel Sam less cooperation £rom the
Dash defended tfie committee . White House during Nixon's
against administration "Operation Candor." He said
charges that the sweeping each one of the several hunsubpoenas were excessive, •·a dred tapes and documents
blatant act of irresponsibility" were · relevant to the com-

isn't

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Subpoenas issue points to hidden guilt

STARTS
MON., JAN. 7

WE'RE GOING TO CLEAN OUT THIS STORE AND THE
SAVINGS ARE YOURSMANY ITEMS NOT LISTED! I
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Nixon said : · "To produce the
material you now seek would
unquestionably des troy any
vestige of confidentiality of
presidential communications,
th ereby irrepara bly impa iring
the constitutional functions Of
th e office of the presidency."
. Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. ,
R-Tenn., committee vice chairman , said " it was a mistake ...
lo attempt lo subpoena a great
volume of docume nts which
may not be relevant to the
investigation.''
" I was not c.:ommlt ~i wht•n

for . 5110 tapes and several
hundred documents coVering
roughly three iss ues: the
breakin at the Democratic
offices in th e Watergate
complex .Jun e 17 , 1972;
allegations that the 1971 increase in f~deral price supporl&gt; for raw milk was lied to
$527,000 in campaig n contriiJul!ons fr om three major dairy
cooperatives, and possible ties
betw ee n billiona ire Howard
Hughes and Nixon's brothers.
In his letter to Chairman
Sam J. Ervin, D-N.C .. Friday,

these tapes and documents
were subpoenaed . I knew
nothing about it," Baker sa ict. ·
"I think the committee should ·
reconsider the entire matter
and while I hope the committee
should have any relevant tapes
we should also avoid a fishing
expedition."
Even though Ervin said th~
committee would sue to fo rce
Nixon to comply, it appeared a
court confrontation on the new
issue was several weeks away.
Dash said the committee
would fil e Monday an amended

complaint and brief in its
origi nal suit asking for tapes of
fiv e . co nversations that the
President had with former
Whit e House counsel John W.
Dean fll about Watergate. The
White House wi ll have 10 days
to reply .

Da'h said that rather tha n
file a new suit over Nixon's
Friday refusal 1 the committee
would wait until U. S. Distr ict
Judge John J . Sirica rules on
the original suit to set a
precedent.

Junh~ ~imts .. ~tntintl
~-

_S UNDAY, JAN UARY 6, 1974

VOL. .8 NO. 49

PAGE 13

•

atzon on
WASHINGTON (UPI) Most of the nation goes on
Daylight Saving Time (DST)
Sunday to conserve energy, but
for many people it will mean
going to work and school in
darkness as late as 9 a.m.
Under an act of Congress,
people in all but a few stales,
counties and other jurisdictions at 2 a .m. local time were
to move their clocks ahead to 3
a.m. Designed to reap an
estimated 3 per cent savings in
the nation's energy consumption by reducing the need for
evening lighting, it was the
first time the nation has gone
on Daylight Saving Time in the
winter since World War II .
The advance time will mean
late sunrises in th e northwest. ern portions of each time zone
and in some cases the SWl will
nol rise until 9 a.m. But the
inconvenience raised objections in only a few isolated
locations.
The primary objection was
that children would have to
wait for their school buses in
the dark and some local school
boards sought to ease the fears
of parents by delaying the
start of classes each day .
In Knoxville, Tenn ., and
Pinellas County, Fla ., for
example, schools will open and
close half an hour later. Plans
for opening schools later were
under consideration in other
sections of the country from
Utah to Boston.
In Raleigh, N.C.. where the
school starting time was set
back by an hour, protesting
working parents complained
that such a plan would leave
children at horne a lone in the
morning .

Only two full states were
exempted from the advanced
tim e- Arizona ah,d Hawaii .
Congress specifically exempted Hawa ii because there is
little differenc-e in the' anwunt
of daylight during ils seasons.
Arizona was exempted by
Transportation Sec retary
Oaude S. Brinegar at the
request of Gov. Jack Williams.
The law allowed Brinegar to
exempt states or change time
boundaries at.UK\ request of a
governor before Sunday.
Brinegar also changed Kentucky time boundaries and
change , which will remain in exempted counties of Oregon
effect year-round through two and Idaho which lie in the
winters until April 1975 when Mountain time zone. Brinegar
most of the country would said the Idaho and Oregon
normally go on summertime exemptions were temporary
w1lil the state legislatures
DST as usual.

St. Francis, Kan ., a prairie
town which was not exempted
from the DST law, de cided to
defy Congress and the Presi- .
dent and remain on Central
Standard Tin1e regardless of
the energlhsituation .
"The (City ) council fell it
was time w put our foot down
and stop this monk ey
business," Mayor Robert .Yost
said. "We're going to stay put.
The only way we'll change is if
legal action is taken."
Most other parts of the
country seemed willin g to
comply with the mandatory

could permanently exempt
them, placing those counties on
the Pacific Time Zone with the
rest of the counties in the two
states .

The law does not allow any
other state to exempt itself
from DST , although some
states which lie within two
time zones may exempt the
half of the stale in one time
zone in order to make it
uniform statewide.
Indiana, which previously
had exempted part of its state
from the old Uniform ,Time
Act,
was
allowed
to
automatically continue that
· exemption. Most of the state
will remain oh Central Standard Time while 12 counties in
the western portion of the state
will go on Central Daylight
Time.
:~r=====================:===:====::;:;:;::===~========:=======:======:::=::::====:=:=:=:=:==============:========::======:::::::~:======:======:=:====w
The request which Brinegar
granted
Kentucky was to
:[[j
~ =~ redraw itsforboundaries
leaving
Kentucky in the central time
zone except for 12 counties
WASHINGTON iUPii - .Rep. William H. Harsha, Rnear Cincinnati, Ohio, and
Ohio, Saturday demanded an Immediate halt to the InHuntington, W.Va., which will
creasing price of gasoline and home heating oil and said
remain on eastern time.
Investigators from his ofll~e have loWJd one large oil
The only other exemptions
company with 100mllllon gallons hidden away.
under the law are for Puerto
Harsha also said the Nixon administration had been
Rico and the Virgin Islands,
"grossly ineffective" in Its handllug of the energy crisis.
which will remain on standard
The Portsmouth congres$man, In a letter to Energy Czar
time.
:;: William Simon and Chairman John P. DWJiop of the Cost ::-&lt;
of Living Council, said he wanted the government to ch""k
reports of Industry hoarding of jet fuel.
"In addition to .the jet fuel stockpiling, my Investigations have revealed one of the largest companies
has at least one hundred million gallons of refined
gasoline In undergroWJd storage at .only one refinery
location," Harsha said.
Harsha did not name the refinery or the oil company.
MANILA (UPI ) - tfunost
"H this is the kind of free market activity which Is sup100 persons were feared
posed to get us through the energy shortage, I want no
drown ed Saturday in th e
:·:· part of It," he said. 111 want it stopped."
:~j
sinking of the ferry Tagbilaran
~~~::~:=~=~=~=~:::i:i:i:i:~:i:i :i :i::::::::::::;:::::::::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::;;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;::::::::::::;:~:;:;:;;;.;)~ in strong winds and high seas
in the central Philippines
shortly after midnight.
At least 37 bodies were
recovered, including those of II
children. Still missing were 45
Lions said Saturday that compii- supply after a heavy run on others. A coast guard spokesance has been so good to supplies during the Chrislmas- man said earlier that 135
President Nixon 's request to New Year holiday period. A survivors out of the 212
close down gas stations Satur- gasoline retailers association passengers and five crewmen
day night through Sunday to official said most filling sta- aboard were picked out of the
conserve fuel that they were no tions planned to close up water by rescue ships.
The 100-ton Tagbilaran sank
longer conducting surveys.
Sunday.
A Maryland Auto Club
Fewer than five per cent of at 12:30 a.m. Saturday off
spokesman s aid that most .gas Texas gas stations were expect- Bagacay Point in Cebu provinstations were to shut early ed lo open, but a service station ce, 330 miles south of Manila,
Saturday and that 95 per cent spokesman said more than that on the return trip from Baybay
town in Leyte province to Cebu
would stay closed until Monday. may open in Louisiana.
city.
.
An Auto Club spokesman in
UP!
correspondent
Buddy
Delaware said that 90 per cent American held
Quintana
in
Cebu
said
about
.of stations should be closed
LONDON (UPI) - British half of the bodies are unidenthere Sunday.
authorities
today arraigned tified, including the II
Long lines formed outside
Allison
Thompson,
18, an children. He said most of the
Florida service stations where
American
,
and
two
other ' passengers were residents of
gasoline was still in short
persons on charges of con- Leyte province returning home
spiring to possess . guns and from Christmas holidays in
ammunition she is accused of Cebu City .
FLUE ARRIVES
Resc ue ships from the
smuggling into London for a
ATLANTA(UPIJ - The first possible guerrilla attack.
Philippine navy, coast guard,
laboratory-confirmed cases of
Police,
meanwhil e, national and local police
a new type Hong Kong in- questioned a second woman combed the area where the
fluenza have api&gt;eared in t!Jis a tall, dark-haired American in ship went down as well as
country, the National Center her .early 20s described as a nearby .islands in a search for
for Disease . Control (NCDC) "known associate!'. of the survivors.
said Saturday.
· Official:; said the inter-island
others - who was arrested by
The confirmed cases oc- counter-.,spionageagents when ship, built in 1945, was
curred in California and she arrived at London's Heath- authorized to carry 220 passenGeorgia, and involved the B- row airport from New York gers and was not overloaded.
Hong Kong-72 virus , a str3in Friday morning. The identity Captain Heriberto Buto, 51 ,
different from the Asian and A- of the second American girl survived and is being treated in
Hong·Kong types.
a Cebu hospital.
was not disclosed .

100 Mdhon gallons of oil
~:1 foWid hidden by Harsha men ~\ \

100 Lost
•
m ocean

Nation aliJlost gasless
By United Press International
Only about 10 per cent of
gasoline stations are expected
to be open in most states for
the first gasless Sunday of 1974,
according to spot checks across
the nation.
Indications were that after
four gasless Sundays, American
motorists had become used to
the problems of filling up on
weekends and were changing
their driving habits accordingly.
Several motorists organiza:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;::9-;:::::;r.:::;:;:;::~::::::=x:

QUAKE HITS PERU
LIMA, Peru IUPI) - A
powerful earthquake rocked
the Lima area early
Saturday destroying homes
..and spreading panic among
some live million persons.
Peruvian civil defense
officials said two persons
were killed around Lima,
two others In the town of
Yauyos east of Lima where
ihe .quake was most Intense
and two others In smaller
towns. He said fragmentary
information received from
Yauyos tDdlcated at least 100
homes were destroyed.

Dayan reach agreement on pullback ·
Dayan and Kissinger had
talked for three hours Friday
before the Israeli defense
minister went to see Defense
Secretary James R. Schlesinger
to_ discuss how his country
would use a $2.2 billion emergency arms aid appropriatipn
from the Unite States,
1
' 0ur
two positions ap.
proached each other substantially ... we are talking tactics
and nuances,'' Kissinger said
when he and Dayan met with
newsmen briefly after their
session concluaM. "There was

no confrontation between us. long time. "

Not only was there no
confrontation, but there was no
significant difference between
us and the Israelis."
Dayan added : " I personally
was very happy with these
talks. Now I am going home
and I hope our cabinet will be
in a position to formulate
something concrete to propose
to the Arabs. Whether we shall
reach agreement with Egypt, l
can't say now. But I think we
can have a concrete proposal,
and I don 't think it will take a

•

Neither Kissinger nor Dayan
disclosed any of the details of·
their agreement.
An Israeli military analyst
meanwhile said in an Army
radio commentary in Tel Aviv
that Israel is .willing to
withdraw its Army back inside
the Siani nearly 20 miles from
the Suez-canal if Egypt thins
out its forces of the east bank
of the waterway.
Dayan cautioned against over
optimism about the peace
ne go tiations . · "Everybody

'•

should realize that after such a
long time of fighting and
confrontation it is very difficult
to make even the first step
toward an agreement," he said ,
Kissinger said he remained
hopeful about the prospec" for
a peace settlement, despite
reports of sproadic heavy
fighting between the Israelis
and Egyptians. The two sides
fought a two hour battle
Saturday on the outskirts of
Suez City that included artillery
and mor tar barrages.

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IMPEACHMENT Issue Is
now In tbe bands of John M.
Doar, .newly named cblef
counsel of tbe House
Judiciary Committee which
Is exploring possible grounds
for Invoking the constitutional provisions for
trying a president. A
Republican, Doar was In the
JusUce Department during
tbe Kennedy and Johnson
'administrations and active
In Implementing civil rights
legislation.

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DETROIT (UPI)- Despite a
third consecutive record sales
year, U.S. automakers finished
the first week of 1974 with litUe
to cheer about.
Ford Motor Co. said it would
layoff another 4,600 workers in
the Detroit area and in Los
Angeles next week, raising the
total number idled by the "Big
Three" to more than 57,000.
The layoffs--and industry
sources said more could c.omewere caused by the energy
crisis and its subsequent effect
on big car sales. Conswners
switched from big cars in the
face of soaring gasoline prices
and fears of rationing.
The "Big Three" automakers
--General Motors Ford and
Chrysler-had planned to release their 1973 sales figures on
Friday. But they held off
because the long ChrislmasNew Years holiday delayed the
paper work.
Estimates among analysts,
however, were that the industry
suffered its worst December
since 1970.
The automakers, when they
release their figures Monday,
are expected to confirm estimates of a 20 per cent drop
from December of 1972, marking the third straight monthly
sales decline. Sales will be
below the 600,000 mark, the
worst since the industry delivered just 425,352 in the
recession of December, 1970, it
was predicted.
The three-month slump
wasn't enough to keep the
automakers from setting their
third straight year record with
just over 9.6 million sales ..
Together with an estimated 1.76
million imports--about 120,000
more than in 1972---total new
car sales in· the United States
last year were about 11.4
mlllion cars, almost one-halfmillion below estimates of just
six months ago.
Volkswagen remained the
top-selling Import despite a 1.9
per cent decrease. Toyota at
289,000 and Datsun 235,449 were
No.2 and No. 3.
American Motors did report
sales figures that showed a 28
per cent boost in December and
a yearly figllfe that is '1:1 per
cent ahead of 1972 to give the
automaker the best year in the
last 10 years.

mittee's investigation .

Talmadge told a reporter in
Georgia that Nixon "is mal\fug
great mistake in refusing to
comply with the subpoen~s. " It
indicates to the public he has
something to hide and affects
his credibility," he said.

a

"It doesn't come as any
surprise,,. Weicker said .*~'The

President and..,r his aides
continue to duck the hard one.
Candor has been a word, it has
not been a deed , in the White
House for a considerabl e
period of time."
The three subpoenas asked

Jury. still out
on Mr. Nixon
WASHINGTON (UP! )- The
deepening energy crisis has
diverted some attention from
the Watergate scandals but the
shell-&lt;;hocked American public
is still divided .on the question
of whether President Nixon
can or should lead the nation
for three more years.
The credibility of the President and his administration
has been so deeply eroded by
Watergate that many question
whether an energy crisis really
exists and some wonder whether Nixon has not contrived the
shortage of gasoline and the
lack of heat at. home.
Two weeks after the adjournment of the first session of the
93rd Congress, members of the
Senate and House have gotten
an idea what their constituents
think.
A nationwide sampling by
United Press International
fails to give · a verdict on
Nixon's future, in light of the
Watergate scandals.
Underlining the vagueness of
public opinion are the remarks
of Speaker Carl Albert.
" I haven't heard many
comments !, tell you the truth
but of course this isn't Nixon
country,'' the congressman
from Oklahoma said. "I hear a
lot more about the price of gas
and butane than I do about
Watergate.
"It hasn't been a subject
brought up too much. I have
heard a lot of criticism of the
President- they're down on
him."
Adding to the impossibility of
finding a consensus ar~ .~e
soulidmgs of Rep. Will131ll

Hungate, a Democrat from a
basically conservative district
in northeast Missouri .
"There are certain members
of the Democratic Party that, I
think, would have impeached
him a year ago without hearing
anything ," Hungate said. "And
I think there are some
Republicans who wouldn't impeach him if you caught him in
a bank at midnight."
But the UP! survey of
senators and congressmen
from every region of the
country indicates that the
American public:

- Believes that Nixon 's ability to govern has been impaired
by Watergate although there is
no agreement on just how
much .
- Would like to see an end to
the Watergate affair - by
vindication, impeachment or

resignation- so that the
country can turn to oth'1[
matters.
- Is becoming increasingly
more concerned with the
Impact of the energy crisis,
including shortages, unemployment, and inflation .

President has
.final look at
spending plans
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (UPI I - President
Nixon Saturday began a final review of federal
spending plans for the coming fiscal year which
were expected to reach a total of $300 billion for the
first time.
Nixon was said to be considering an additional
package of contingency spending programs if the
energy crisis weakens the economy beyond administration expectations and drives unemployment
up sharply. All decisions on the fiscal 1975 IJudget
covering the business year starting next July I will
be made by mid-week so that the budget can be
printed and sent to Congress late this month or early
in February.

Roy L. Ash, director of the derstood to be studying a
Office of Management and variety of "stand-by" plans to
Budget, flew here from Wash- stimulate the economy quickly
ington at Nixon's request if needed .
Friday night and the White
Among the possible "standHouse acknowledged that . by"
measures
which
umajor policy decisions" were Nixon
was
. believbeing inade.
ed to be studying to
A presidential spokesman stimulate the economy in an
refused to go into detail, but he emergency were steps to exsaid Nixon and Ash were pand public service emconcentrating on programs ployment, to increase defense
By United Press International Jlealing with energy research spending in areas with many
Snow fell on deserts in and development, housing and people out of work and to inSouthern California, Utah and health care.
crease spending· for public
Arizona Saturday, stranding
Ash already has said the new works projects, especially
motorists and blanketing Palm budget will project expendi- environmental programs.
Springs goU courses for the turesat slightly more than $300
In addition to the budget,
first time in 25 years.
billion -breaking a symbolic
Nixon
was expected to focus in
Up to four feet of snowfall barrier --and that it will be
acC1Jillulated in the mountains geared to expected revenues of coming days on the State of the
arolmd Los Angeles and an between $292 billion and $294 Union address scheduled for
delivery to Congress about
estimated 1,000 persons were billion.
marooned in their cars trying
That would anticipate a Jan. 22. At that time, the
to get through snow·dogged deficit of about $7 billion, President probably will spell
passes.
compared with one of between out some of his budget plans.
White House aides meanSnow covered Palm Springs, $4 billion and $6 billion which
desert resort and winter home · the administration · now is while provioed no further inof many wealtl)y retired in- projecting for the current formap on Nixon 's plans for
dividuals, for the first time in a . fiscal year --a year in which Feturmng to . Washington and
quarter century.
Nixon had hoped for a balanced indicated he might remain at
Twenty..,ne inches of snow budget.
his oceanside villa beyond next
piled up at Victorville, Calif.,
Wednesday
, which will be his
But Ash and other adminisand 16 inches were reported on tration economic officials cau- Gist birthday.
the ground at Palmdale on the tioned that their estimates
Since coming to California
high desert.
could be off subst'Bntially the day after Christmas, Nixon
Snow was reported at Fur- because of the many un- has been seen by reporters only
nace Creek in Death Valley certaipties created by the fuel once - when he attended his
Friday, for the first time since shortage. Many experts out- persanal physician's wedding
- 1968 and only the third time side tbe government maintain in La Joll!! ;-&lt;~nd aides said he
TAFT RECOVER·ING
since the National Park Serhas stayed close to his home,
CINCINNATI (UP! )- U.S. vice began keeping records in that &gt;the · administration's taking walks along the beach
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R-Ohio, Death Valley 15 years ago. forecasting is unrealistically with his wife, Pat, and his cloS.
was in good condition at Christ Temperature dropped to 33 ·optimistic .
Accordingly, Nixon wa• un- friend, C.G. " Bebe" Rebozo.
Hospital here today following. degrees.
the removal of a cataract from
Six inches of snow fell by
his eye Thursday night. Gerald daybreak at Las Vegas and
Minnety,
Taft's
press highway travel from St. Georsecrejary, said the senator ge, Utah, into the gambling
entered the hospital without city was banned unless autos
alerting anyone. Minnery Said were equipped with chains or
WASHINGTON ( UPIJ - tained.
even be was not aware Taft snow tires. All other roads into
Secretary
of State Henry
Dayan, who left directly for
was having eye trouble. Las Vegas were reported
Kissinger said today there was Andrews Air Force 'Base and a
"Apparently," said Minnery, hazardous.
All highways in Utah, except "not only no confrontation but return flight to Israel after his
"he just decided to have the
operation
during
the for the Salt Lake City area, nli significant difference" be- secon~ day of bilks with
tween the U. S. and Israeli Kissinger, said he was going
Congressional recess."
w~re snowbound, but all but
U.S. 89 into Arizona were positions on disengagement of straight to the Israeli cabinet to
hammer out a "concrete
sanded and open for at least Arab and Israeli forces.
17,52e DWI CASES
Kissinger
held
a
four
and
one
proposal
" to take to the Arab
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio limited travel. St. George got a
haU
hour
session
with
Israeli
negotiators
at Geneva. "I
State
Highway
Patrol foot of snow.
F1agstaff, in northern Ari:ro- Defense Minister Moshe Dayan personally am very happy with
Superintendent Robert M.
ria
's mountains, got four inches in an atmosphere, both here ·these talks," Dayan said.
Chiaramonte said Saturday the
patrol arrested 17,520 dri.vers of n~w snow and the storm, and abroad, of cautious opti- Kissinger and Dayan spent a
for driving while under the moving inland across the West, mism that the .delicate Egyp- total of 712 hours in discussions
Influence of alcohol during dumped two inches at Pocatel- !ian-Israeli ceasefire along the h~re during Day~,.. tw&lt;Kiay
Suez Canal could be main- tr1p to Washington .
lo, Idaho, during the night.
1973.
·- .

Snows in
unusual
places

Kissinge~,

l•

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AND RANGES

LIVING ROOM CLEARANCE

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By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
and "a fishing ~ii.pedition."
WASHINGTON (UPIJ · Weicker said in Greenwich,
Members .of the Senate Water- Conn., that the committee's
gate Committee Saturday long.,;tanding request for an
sharply criticized President informal meeting with Nixon
Nixon's refusal to comply )'lith had gone unanswered. "We
their subpoenas. One of them, haven 't even had a yes·or no to
Sen. Herman E. Talmadge, D- that very simple, direct ,
Ga., said it indicated "he has . forthright request, " he said.
something to hide."
Dash told reporters Friday
Sen. Lowell P. Weick!,. Jr., the oommittee had gotten even
R-Conn ., and counsel Sam less cooperation £rom the
Dash defended tfie committee . White House during Nixon's
against administration "Operation Candor." He said
charges that the sweeping each one of the several hunsubpoenas were excessive, •·a dred tapes and documents
blatant act of irresponsibility" were · relevant to the com-

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Subpoenas issue points to hidden guilt

STARTS
MON., JAN. 7

WE'RE GOING TO CLEAN OUT THIS STORE AND THE
SAVINGS ARE YOURSMANY ITEMS NOT LISTED! I
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Nixon said : · "To produce the
material you now seek would
unquestionably des troy any
vestige of confidentiality of
presidential communications,
th ereby irrepara bly impa iring
the constitutional functions Of
th e office of the presidency."
. Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. ,
R-Tenn., committee vice chairman , said " it was a mistake ...
lo attempt lo subpoena a great
volume of docume nts which
may not be relevant to the
investigation.''
" I was not c.:ommlt ~i wht•n

for . 5110 tapes and several
hundred documents coVering
roughly three iss ues: the
breakin at the Democratic
offices in th e Watergate
complex .Jun e 17 , 1972;
allegations that the 1971 increase in f~deral price supporl&gt; for raw milk was lied to
$527,000 in campaig n contriiJul!ons fr om three major dairy
cooperatives, and possible ties
betw ee n billiona ire Howard
Hughes and Nixon's brothers.
In his letter to Chairman
Sam J. Ervin, D-N.C .. Friday,

these tapes and documents
were subpoenaed . I knew
nothing about it," Baker sa ict. ·
"I think the committee should ·
reconsider the entire matter
and while I hope the committee
should have any relevant tapes
we should also avoid a fishing
expedition."
Even though Ervin said th~
committee would sue to fo rce
Nixon to comply, it appeared a
court confrontation on the new
issue was several weeks away.
Dash said the committee
would fil e Monday an amended

complaint and brief in its
origi nal suit asking for tapes of
fiv e . co nversations that the
President had with former
Whit e House counsel John W.
Dean fll about Watergate. The
White House wi ll have 10 days
to reply .

Da'h said that rather tha n
file a new suit over Nixon's
Friday refusal 1 the committee
would wait until U. S. Distr ict
Judge John J . Sirica rules on
the original suit to set a
precedent.

Junh~ ~imts .. ~tntintl
~-

_S UNDAY, JAN UARY 6, 1974

VOL. .8 NO. 49

PAGE 13

•

atzon on
WASHINGTON (UPI) Most of the nation goes on
Daylight Saving Time (DST)
Sunday to conserve energy, but
for many people it will mean
going to work and school in
darkness as late as 9 a.m.
Under an act of Congress,
people in all but a few stales,
counties and other jurisdictions at 2 a .m. local time were
to move their clocks ahead to 3
a.m. Designed to reap an
estimated 3 per cent savings in
the nation's energy consumption by reducing the need for
evening lighting, it was the
first time the nation has gone
on Daylight Saving Time in the
winter since World War II .
The advance time will mean
late sunrises in th e northwest. ern portions of each time zone
and in some cases the SWl will
nol rise until 9 a.m. But the
inconvenience raised objections in only a few isolated
locations.
The primary objection was
that children would have to
wait for their school buses in
the dark and some local school
boards sought to ease the fears
of parents by delaying the
start of classes each day .
In Knoxville, Tenn ., and
Pinellas County, Fla ., for
example, schools will open and
close half an hour later. Plans
for opening schools later were
under consideration in other
sections of the country from
Utah to Boston.
In Raleigh, N.C.. where the
school starting time was set
back by an hour, protesting
working parents complained
that such a plan would leave
children at horne a lone in the
morning .

Only two full states were
exempted from the advanced
tim e- Arizona ah,d Hawaii .
Congress specifically exempted Hawa ii because there is
little differenc-e in the' anwunt
of daylight during ils seasons.
Arizona was exempted by
Transportation Sec retary
Oaude S. Brinegar at the
request of Gov. Jack Williams.
The law allowed Brinegar to
exempt states or change time
boundaries at.UK\ request of a
governor before Sunday.
Brinegar also changed Kentucky time boundaries and
change , which will remain in exempted counties of Oregon
effect year-round through two and Idaho which lie in the
winters until April 1975 when Mountain time zone. Brinegar
most of the country would said the Idaho and Oregon
normally go on summertime exemptions were temporary
w1lil the state legislatures
DST as usual.

St. Francis, Kan ., a prairie
town which was not exempted
from the DST law, de cided to
defy Congress and the Presi- .
dent and remain on Central
Standard Tin1e regardless of
the energlhsituation .
"The (City ) council fell it
was time w put our foot down
and stop this monk ey
business," Mayor Robert .Yost
said. "We're going to stay put.
The only way we'll change is if
legal action is taken."
Most other parts of the
country seemed willin g to
comply with the mandatory

could permanently exempt
them, placing those counties on
the Pacific Time Zone with the
rest of the counties in the two
states .

The law does not allow any
other state to exempt itself
from DST , although some
states which lie within two
time zones may exempt the
half of the stale in one time
zone in order to make it
uniform statewide.
Indiana, which previously
had exempted part of its state
from the old Uniform ,Time
Act,
was
allowed
to
automatically continue that
· exemption. Most of the state
will remain oh Central Standard Time while 12 counties in
the western portion of the state
will go on Central Daylight
Time.
:~r=====================:===:====::;:;:;::===~========:=======:======:::=::::====:=:=:=:=:==============:========::======:::::::~:======:======:=:====w
The request which Brinegar
granted
Kentucky was to
:[[j
~ =~ redraw itsforboundaries
leaving
Kentucky in the central time
zone except for 12 counties
WASHINGTON iUPii - .Rep. William H. Harsha, Rnear Cincinnati, Ohio, and
Ohio, Saturday demanded an Immediate halt to the InHuntington, W.Va., which will
creasing price of gasoline and home heating oil and said
remain on eastern time.
Investigators from his ofll~e have loWJd one large oil
The only other exemptions
company with 100mllllon gallons hidden away.
under the law are for Puerto
Harsha also said the Nixon administration had been
Rico and the Virgin Islands,
"grossly ineffective" in Its handllug of the energy crisis.
which will remain on standard
The Portsmouth congres$man, In a letter to Energy Czar
time.
:;: William Simon and Chairman John P. DWJiop of the Cost ::-&lt;
of Living Council, said he wanted the government to ch""k
reports of Industry hoarding of jet fuel.
"In addition to .the jet fuel stockpiling, my Investigations have revealed one of the largest companies
has at least one hundred million gallons of refined
gasoline In undergroWJd storage at .only one refinery
location," Harsha said.
Harsha did not name the refinery or the oil company.
MANILA (UPI ) - tfunost
"H this is the kind of free market activity which Is sup100 persons were feared
posed to get us through the energy shortage, I want no
drown ed Saturday in th e
:·:· part of It," he said. 111 want it stopped."
:~j
sinking of the ferry Tagbilaran
~~~::~:=~=~=~=~:::i:i:i:i:~:i:i :i :i::::::::::::;:::::::::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::;;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;::::::::::::;:~:;:;:;;;.;)~ in strong winds and high seas
in the central Philippines
shortly after midnight.
At least 37 bodies were
recovered, including those of II
children. Still missing were 45
Lions said Saturday that compii- supply after a heavy run on others. A coast guard spokesance has been so good to supplies during the Chrislmas- man said earlier that 135
President Nixon 's request to New Year holiday period. A survivors out of the 212
close down gas stations Satur- gasoline retailers association passengers and five crewmen
day night through Sunday to official said most filling sta- aboard were picked out of the
conserve fuel that they were no tions planned to close up water by rescue ships.
The 100-ton Tagbilaran sank
longer conducting surveys.
Sunday.
A Maryland Auto Club
Fewer than five per cent of at 12:30 a.m. Saturday off
spokesman s aid that most .gas Texas gas stations were expect- Bagacay Point in Cebu provinstations were to shut early ed lo open, but a service station ce, 330 miles south of Manila,
Saturday and that 95 per cent spokesman said more than that on the return trip from Baybay
town in Leyte province to Cebu
would stay closed until Monday. may open in Louisiana.
city.
.
An Auto Club spokesman in
UP!
correspondent
Buddy
Delaware said that 90 per cent American held
Quintana
in
Cebu
said
about
.of stations should be closed
LONDON (UPI) - British half of the bodies are unidenthere Sunday.
authorities
today arraigned tified, including the II
Long lines formed outside
Allison
Thompson,
18, an children. He said most of the
Florida service stations where
American
,
and
two
other ' passengers were residents of
gasoline was still in short
persons on charges of con- Leyte province returning home
spiring to possess . guns and from Christmas holidays in
ammunition she is accused of Cebu City .
FLUE ARRIVES
Resc ue ships from the
smuggling into London for a
ATLANTA(UPIJ - The first possible guerrilla attack.
Philippine navy, coast guard,
laboratory-confirmed cases of
Police,
meanwhil e, national and local police
a new type Hong Kong in- questioned a second woman combed the area where the
fluenza have api&gt;eared in t!Jis a tall, dark-haired American in ship went down as well as
country, the National Center her .early 20s described as a nearby .islands in a search for
for Disease . Control (NCDC) "known associate!'. of the survivors.
said Saturday.
· Official:; said the inter-island
others - who was arrested by
The confirmed cases oc- counter-.,spionageagents when ship, built in 1945, was
curred in California and she arrived at London's Heath- authorized to carry 220 passenGeorgia, and involved the B- row airport from New York gers and was not overloaded.
Hong Kong-72 virus , a str3in Friday morning. The identity Captain Heriberto Buto, 51 ,
different from the Asian and A- of the second American girl survived and is being treated in
Hong·Kong types.
a Cebu hospital.
was not disclosed .

100 Mdhon gallons of oil
~:1 foWid hidden by Harsha men ~\ \

100 Lost
•
m ocean

Nation aliJlost gasless
By United Press International
Only about 10 per cent of
gasoline stations are expected
to be open in most states for
the first gasless Sunday of 1974,
according to spot checks across
the nation.
Indications were that after
four gasless Sundays, American
motorists had become used to
the problems of filling up on
weekends and were changing
their driving habits accordingly.
Several motorists organiza:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;::9-;:::::;r.:::;:;:;::~::::::=x:

QUAKE HITS PERU
LIMA, Peru IUPI) - A
powerful earthquake rocked
the Lima area early
Saturday destroying homes
..and spreading panic among
some live million persons.
Peruvian civil defense
officials said two persons
were killed around Lima,
two others In the town of
Yauyos east of Lima where
ihe .quake was most Intense
and two others In smaller
towns. He said fragmentary
information received from
Yauyos tDdlcated at least 100
homes were destroyed.

Dayan reach agreement on pullback ·
Dayan and Kissinger had
talked for three hours Friday
before the Israeli defense
minister went to see Defense
Secretary James R. Schlesinger
to_ discuss how his country
would use a $2.2 billion emergency arms aid appropriatipn
from the Unite States,
1
' 0ur
two positions ap.
proached each other substantially ... we are talking tactics
and nuances,'' Kissinger said
when he and Dayan met with
newsmen briefly after their
session concluaM. "There was

no confrontation between us. long time. "

Not only was there no
confrontation, but there was no
significant difference between
us and the Israelis."
Dayan added : " I personally
was very happy with these
talks. Now I am going home
and I hope our cabinet will be
in a position to formulate
something concrete to propose
to the Arabs. Whether we shall
reach agreement with Egypt, l
can't say now. But I think we
can have a concrete proposal,
and I don 't think it will take a

•

Neither Kissinger nor Dayan
disclosed any of the details of·
their agreement.
An Israeli military analyst
meanwhile said in an Army
radio commentary in Tel Aviv
that Israel is .willing to
withdraw its Army back inside
the Siani nearly 20 miles from
the Suez-canal if Egypt thins
out its forces of the east bank
of the waterway.
Dayan cautioned against over
optimism about the peace
ne go tiations . · "Everybody

'•

should realize that after such a
long time of fighting and
confrontation it is very difficult
to make even the first step
toward an agreement," he said ,
Kissinger said he remained
hopeful about the prospec" for
a peace settlement, despite
reports of sproadic heavy
fighting between the Israelis
and Egyptians. The two sides
fought a two hour battle
Saturday on the outskirts of
Suez City that included artillery
and mor tar barrages.

�'

' '

'

'

'

B~.~ge;s,
MADISON, Wis. i UPl i Wisconsin 's towering twins 6-foot·ll Kim and ~rry
Htig_hes--controlled the back- .
boaras Saturday and scored 41
points between them to lead the
Badgers to an 67-53 Big Ten
victory over Northwestern .
The 16th ranked Badgers led
all the way and at one point in
the first half oul';cored 1\'orthwes tern 14-4 to take a 47 ·28
halftime lead .
Wiseonsin rambled to a 31 poin t lead late in the second
half
and
even
wh en
Coach
J ohn
Powless
cleared his bench , Northwestern
had
d&gt;ff&gt; culty
penetrating' the Badgers'

1&gt; - The Sunday Times- 8entinei,Sunday, Jan. 6, 1974

replated lluckner, was called
. Saturday.
sticky defense .
•
for
travelin g with thret&gt;
Michigan led only four times
It was th• Big Ten opener for
both tea ms. Wisconsin is 8-1 - all in the final eight minutes seconcis left . and lhal was the
overal l a~d the Wildcats are ~ - in the Big Ten opener for game.
Campy Russell , who fouled
both learns · and trailed the
5.
out with 3:23 to play, led
Kerry Hughes led all scerers HOOsiers 41-26 at halftime .
Michigan with 2il points and
·
An
over-and-back
call
on
the
with 21 points and his brother
Johnson
added 16. Steve Green
K1m got 20 while three other Hoosie rs' Tim Crews 10
Badgets finished in double · seconds after Worrell hit his led the Hoosiers with 2J points,
figures . Bryan -Ashbaugh led tie-breaker enabled Michigan 14 of them m the first half,
Norlhwestern with 14 points . w run down the clock until while Laskowski came off the
Indiana's Quinn Buckner bench to score 20.
ANN ARBOR, Mich ( UPI I fouled out, and gave Johnson , Michigan raised its season
- Freshman Liortell Worell the opportunity to sink his two record to 9-2 and Indiana fell to
sank a seven-fool jump shot to free throws, which made it 73- 7-3.
break a 69.,9 tie and junior Joe 69.
IOWA CITY, Iowa iUPli John Laskowski hit a bucket
Johnson sank two free throws
Iowa
sco red nine straight
with 46 seconds to play to give lor Indiana with 22 seconds left
points
nudway through the
Michi gan a 73-71 victory over and Indiana had a chance to lie
eighth
rank ed
Indiana when Mic higan Sophomore second half to break open . a
Chuck Rogers missed a free close game and whip Minthrow . But Steve Ahlfeld, who nesota 66-55 in the Big Ten

York Mels manager Yogi
Berra, Clint Hasselerig of
Michigan and Garvin RIJberson
of lllinois.
North running backs include
Isaac Jackson of Kansas Stale,
Charles Davis of Colorado, and
Ken Grandberry of Washington
State.
Joining Cook as a wide
receiver will be Mark
Wakefield of Tampa and Joel
Parker of F1orida, while the
South will have Nat Moore of
F1orida, Haske! Stanback of
Tennessee, Bob Burns of
Georgia, and Cliff Taylor of
Memphis State. ·
A crowd of about 20,000 is
expected for the I p.m . (EDT)
kickoff. The game will be
televised by the Mizlpu Sports
Network.
The North, leading 4-1 in the
series , is rated a slight
favorite, primarily because of
its size.

BLOOMINGTON , Minn
1UP! ) - The Minneso ta
Vikings, carrying an unusual'
underdog tag, ended a weeklong rest Saturday and packed
for a flight to Houston to meet
the Miami Dolphins in Super
Bowl Vlll .
·
Coach Bud Grant gave his
team the week off after last
Sunday's 27-10 defeat of Dallas
for the National Football
ConferenCe Title.
"We'll have a regular week
of practice in Houston," Grant
said. The team was scheduled
to fly there Sunday night.
urm n·ot interested in other
teams," Grant said when it
was noted the Dolphins have
been practicing in Miami while
the Vikings took their break.
Temperatures here have
been below zero all week - 30
below one night - and Grant
commented that trying to
practice in that kind of weather
is "an exercise in futility."
He said most of the players
worked out on their own during

opener for both teams Saturday .
Freshman John Hairston.
who led the Hawks with a
season high 20 points, scored
four baskets in the streak as
1ow·a upped its record to 4-5.
Minnesota slipped to &amp;-4.
Minnesota, which was led by
Rick McCutcheon's 22 points
·came back from a 23-14 deficit
w trail by three, 33-30, at halftime. They closed the gap to 4240 midway in the final period
bef9re Iowa spurted to a 51-42
lead. The Gophers got no closer
than seven poll)ts in the finallO
minutes.
Candy Laprince, Iowa 's
leading scorer, added 14 points
and Nate Washingwn had 13,
including 8 in the second hall.

KENT, Ohio (UP! I '.:.. Ohio
University's. Wal!A!r Luckett
pdured in a game-high 24 points
here Saturday to pace the
Bobcats to an 61-75 MidAmerican . Basketball Co nference victory over Kent
State.
Larry Slappy added 19, ffiice
Payne 14 and Denny Rusch 11

Sun Devil coach
Former Syracuse
'not interested'

Local Bowling
Thursday Atternoon
Bowling League

w.

L.
61
63
64

Royal Crown
67
Team 1
65
Team 4
64
Pullins Excavat i ng
60 68
Team H i gh Se ri es - F'ullin s
Excavating 168 1; Team 4. 1654.
Team High Game - T ea m 4.
577; Team 4, 559
Ind . High Series - Marlene
Wilson 575, Betty Whitlat ch
486, Lois Hawley 441.
Ind. High Game - Marl ene
Wilson 210, Betty Wh i tla tc h
194, Marlene Wilson 184.

College Basketball Results
By United P.-ess International
Tou.-naments
{lsi Round)
Big Four
N.C. St . 78 North Car . 77
Wake Forest 64 Duke 61
Bluebonnet Classic
Houston 96 Denve.- 79
Fla . St. 99 Texas A&amp;M 79
Presidential Classic
Am . U 82 East Car . 75
Geo. Wash. 80 Leh i gh 44
Shepherd Holiday
Shepherd 110 Castleton 58
Salisbury 87 wash ., Md . 78
Washington &amp; Lee
St . Mry's , Md . 69 Susquhana 67

East

Pace 60 Adelphi 57
Brckpt St . 81 Cent St . 72
G..W . Po st 48 Oakland 47
Bro wn 86 Cornell 65
Yale 59 Columbia 54
S(luth
Ga. Tech 73 UW -Lac ros se 69
Mercer 90 Va. Cmmnwllh 89
Miles 79Ft . Vally St 78
Carroll 85 Augusta 69
Ersk i ne 55 Mor r is 49
Midwest
Hanover 80 DePauw 63
lnd . Sf .. T .H . 85 Vlprai so 79
..
S(luthwest
New Mexico 98 Utah 91

They call it "gum" because you're stuck with the
price or two nickel packages
oJ five ~ticks each and get
only eight sticks.

Daylight Saving
Time

HONOLULU . (UP! )
Arizona Stale Coa~h Frank
Kush, coaching the West IA!am
in Saturday's Hula Bowl, has
denied that he would consider
an offer from the University of
Colorado.
At the Hula Bowl banquet
Friday nigh~ Kush said, "I'm
· just not interested."
II had been reported that
Kush was given the coaching
offer and that the school
wanted an answer by Saturday,

REEVES MAY RETURN
SHERMAN, Tex. (UP!)
Danny Reeves, a former
Dallas Cowboys player and
coach who retired last season
and went into business in
Dallas, said Friday he was
considering getting back into
professional footbalL
"I've been talking to the
Kansas City Chiefs and one or
two other clubs, but nothing
definite has been settled,"
Reeves said about his willing· ·
ness to take an assistant
coaching job. "l haven't had
any college offers, but I won't
rule out any that come along."

coach to Tampa
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!)
Syracuse University football
coach Ben Schwartzwalder has
applied for the job of athletic
director of the University of
Tampa. it was reported
Saturday.
TamQB Times sports editor
Frank Klein said Schwartz·
walder told him he had
discussed the job with Ed
Ward, an assistant to
University President Dr. B. D.
Owens.
Schwartzwalder is In town as
coach of the north team in
Sunday's American Bowl
football game.

u

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Family Pak Chicken Pa
3 Brea st quarter s with
wings &amp; back s, 3 Leg quarters with .
back s, 2 Pkg s. Giblet s &amp; 2 Necks.
Includes :

!.Duls Cardinals said Saturday
that in an effort to conserve
energy and comply with the
wishes of the team's fans about
70 per cent of their games in
the 1974 season will start
earlier than corresponding
games did last season .
General manager Bing
Devine said Saturday night
games will begin at 6 p.m.
rather than 7 pm. and week
night games will begin at 7:30
rather than 8, with the exCeption of some nationally
televised Monday night games
which will begin at 7:15.
"We experimented last year
by starting 16 night games in
April, May and September at
7:30p.m.," Devine said, "and
the favorable response to this
indicawd that our fans have no
objections to, and in many
cases desire, the earlier
starting times.
· "With t his background and
the lnwntion of the Cardinals to
participate in the program for
conservation of energy as
outlined by the commissioner
of baseball, we feel that these ·
changes are desirable and in
line with that program."

-

with SF ·

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Bobby Bonds, the national
league leader in runs scored
and total bases last season,
Saturday signed his 1974
contract with the San Francisco Giants.
Terms of the pact were not
revealed but a Giants spokesman said it" was "for a substantial raise."
Bonds, 27, scored 131 runs
and had 341 total bases in 1973
and also came within one home
run of becoming the first
player in baseball history to hit
40 homers and s!A!al 40 bases in
the same season.
Over the last five years,
Bonds has averaged 122 runs,
41 stolen bases, 31 homers and
89 RBls per se~son.

Limit
l

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MRS. FILBERT'S

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Tom's Carry Out
8
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Phone : 446-06t9 'o r

INSTANT COFFEE

to close Jan. 14
COLUMBUS - Entries for
the 70th Annual Ohio Stare
Bowling Association tournament to be held in Colwnbus
will close Jan. 14.
The tournament will open
March 2 and run on weekends
through May 5. There will be no
-bowling on Easrer weekend,
Aprill3-14.
Team event will be roUed at
Western Lanes, Doubles and
singles are scheduled for
Lincoln Village Lanes.
Despi!A! the threat of gas
rationing, advance reservations and early entries are
running ahead of the 1973
tournament in Warren which
had 1294 IA!ams.
The central location of the
tournament site Is expected to
ease gasoline problems ,

NABISCO COOKIES

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Matan new SIU

grid assistant

CARBONDALE, Ill. (UP!)Bill Ma tan, 30, tormer
High SeriPS - ~ ....\lie
defensive end with the New
Wipp le 576, Jr . Phelps 557,
Marlene Wilson 570, \ Betty York Giants and assistant
Sftiith 488 .
., Ind . High Game Larry coach at the University of
Dugan 211. Jr. Phelps 204;
Colorado, has been named
Marlene Wilson 215, Marlene
defensive line coach at
Wilson 192.
Southern Illinois University, it
•
'" Early Sunday Mixed
was announced Sa lurday.
"
December 23,1973
Malan was twice an all Big
•
W. L.
~It i ns Excavating
8
0 Eight defensive end at Kansas
T4)m ' sCarryOut ·
6
2 Slate University and, af!A!r two
SWiShEtrs &amp; Lohse Pharm . 4
4
iend IV Tavern
.4
4 years with the Giants, he was
seberry Pennzoil
2
2 an aS!IiStaijl coach at Raytown,
glesCiub
0 ,a
• "Team High ·Game - .Toms Mo., South High School, Washa.rry Out 1972 , F'nendly burn University of Kansas and
"')vern 1922.
e Team High GP,ME - Tom 's New Mexico Slate.

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Housewares Dept.

Housewares

SUNSET CASSETTE

FESCO
SWING
-. TOP WASTE

Recording Tape

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sa~

Fesco No. 8954

DISH PAN

sse

Heck's Reg.

'1.99

HECK'S REG. '1.44
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Laundry Basket

'1''

C-60

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'1.49

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No. C4315

$2211

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$2699

•31.96
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STEAM IRON
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Heck's

'777

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bcJ I1 on p revenh O{(identolly

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who ! you ho ve !!!'COrded.

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c .,

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Ind . Games eet
R.oseberry 206, B i ll Wilfo.-d
:zp1 ; Ma xine Dugan 200. Betty
Smith 192 .

26e

west
Boise. St . M Mont. St . 74
dregon 48 Stal'lfOrd 47
Gonzaga 66 weber St. 58
Idaho st . 67 Montana 62

992-2590,
1 "

G tt•u t ~ ole ty tle m

OVEN BAKER-BROILER

ftoyles 581, Jr . Phelps 5~2;
~axine Dugan 539. Betty Sm 1th

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Interest payable morfthly on any acc_o unt of $1,000 or more.

•

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0 8
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MARGARINE

DRAIN OPENER

Automatic

12 GA.

row for the Gamecocks at
home, with Marquelw the last
sehool to defeat them in 1972.
The
triumph
boosted
Carolina's mark to 7-2 while
Marquette lost for the first
time in 11 games.
Winters, a guard from New
York City, fired in 17 points to
lead the Gamecocks, while
Earl Tatum, a smooth 6-4
sophomore paced Coach AI
McGuire's Warriors with 21
points. ''
The Gamecocks led 32-35 at
the halftime of the regionally
televised contest and opened a
nine-point lead early in the
final half before Marquette
began a comeback on the
outside shooting of Marcus
Washington and Tatwn.

early sunday Mixed
Oet. 30,1 973

IN THIS AREAl

I

TIMBER SPLITTERS
Wednesday, Jan . 2 bowl ing
results.
Farmer's Har dware and H .
Stump's 242 ·640, 8 pts ., Foster's
Store and C. Queen's 212 -580, 0
pts.
,French City Mobile Homes
and J . Yankuns' 193-577,8 pts.,
City Ice &amp; Fuel and c. Perry's
215 -llO, 0 pts .
Dock Inn end C. Lupton's 243·
596,8 pts ., Moose Lodge and L .
Casto's 191 ·534, 0 pts.
Falls City and R . Mitchell's
223-607 , 6 pts ., Tawney's Studio
an:d T. ~ose's 19'9 ·587, 2 pts .
Larry's Wayside and C .
Meadows' 199 · 582, 6 pts .•.
McKnight &amp; Davies Hdwr. and
M. Thompson's 201 -53, 2 pts .
Marchi ' s carry Out and E
F'etrie's 207 -584, 6 pts ., Ashland
Oil and H. Hannan's 186-497, 2
pts .
'
Standings:
F~rmer ' s Hardware
8 0
Fr:encl'l City Homes
8 0
Dock Inn
8 0
Falls City
6 ~
L4rry's wayside
6 2
Mar chi's Ca.-ry Out
6 2
Ashland O il
2 6
McKnight &amp; Davies
2 6
Tawney ' s Studio
2 6
Foster's Store

LIQUID PLUMR

Beretta

32

'

to
•.,,o;o;., right
on •11

January 11, 1974
~old fa deafen .

'"U''-

HECK'S
"D" BATTERIES

half, but then Lucas scored
seven points and Maryland
went in with a 46·34 lead at
intermission,
The Terps scored the first 12
poi)&gt; ts in the second half, then
held the Tigers -scoreless for
seven minutes in the middle of
the second half while scoring 14
straight to stretch their lead.
Clemson's 7·1 freshman ,
Wayne Rollins, scored 12 and
had 14 rebounds to pace
Clemson, now 7-3.

Tourney ,entries

Local Bowling

c

5

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY-JANUARY 6th &amp; 7th

Housewares Dept.

G~llon Pkg.

CERTIFICA TE.S OF DEPOSIT

DAYLIGHT TIME.

COLLEGE -PARK, Md.
(UP!)
Third-ranked
Maryland erupted for 21 points
in the five minutes surroW,Jding
halftime to waltz to an 89.,0
victory over Clemson Saturday.
John Lucas scored 17 points
while Len Elmore had 16 points
and 17 rebounds to lead the
Terps, now 8-1, in their first
Atlantic Coast Conference
match.
Clemson was within three
points with 2:33left in the first

WHITE MEAT ONLY

BRADLEY ROMPS
DENTON, Tex. (UP!)
Bradley ran through North.
Texas' full court press
Saturday to thoroughly
dominate the cold-shooting
Eagles 95-71 in a Missouri
Valley Conference basketball
'
game.

on···

SUNOAY
1·7 .

Clemson five

COLUMBIA, S. C. (UP!) Senior Brian Winters hit a
jwnper with three seconds
remaining to spark sevenIA!enth • ranked South Carolina
to a 60-58 upset victory over
sixth-ranked and previouslyundefeated Marquette
Saturday afternoon in a battle
of highly rated independent
collegiate basketball powers.
The two teams battled the
final three minutes of the IA!nse
struggle 'to a 58-88 deadlock
, before Carolina got the ball
with 29 seconds left following a
Marquette
(oul.
The
Gamecocks counted the clock
down to three seconds when
Winters look his 20-foot jwnp
shot.
The victory was the 28th in a

FLORIDA SEEDLESS

ICE
CREAM

Give
t~e gift
thatkeepl
on giving ••

OPEN

Warriors are
upset, 60-58

.lb.

THOROFARE
VANILLA

and

- Set clocks ahead
one hour on Jan. 6
for energy-saving

",,

'

THE GALLIPOLIS SA VI~GS
and LOAN COMPANY
Pays The

SAVIN.GS ACCOUNTS

DON'T BE A LOSER

'

early start

Bonds signs '74
.~ontraet

••••

Cards plan
ST. WUIS (UP!) - The St.

for !be Bobcats, who held a 4334 intermission advantage. OU
took the lead for good with 8:29
left in the first half.
KSU, now 5-5 and 0-1, was led
by Ricky Gates with 19 points.
OU is now ~ for the season
and 1-0 in the loop.

Terps humble
OPEN DAILY 9 'TIL 9-CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS

bumps and bruises collected
against Dallas a chance to
heal.
A large contingent of Minnesota · fans is traveling to the
Super Bowl. The Vikings had
11,:1.50 tickets for the game and
they were bought up im·
mediately by season ticket
holders, leaving none for
counter sale .

the rest period. There were a
couple of team meetings, including one Saturday.
Miami is favored in the Jan.
13 game, making the Vikings
underdogs in a season which
brought them 19 victories in 21
games including exhibitions
and playoffs.
The Vikings, who average
nearly 28 years in age, haven't
put much stock this season in
such things as labels, jinxes,
types of turf, trends and other
things talked about prior to
football games.
"We'll be there and we'll be
ready," defensive tackle Gary
Larsen said after Minnesota
thumped Dallas .
" You can't hold back
anything now," said Bob
Berry, the backup quarterback
to Fran Tar kenton .
The Vikings had no serious
injuries and the long rest gave

''

'

OUtrips
Kent-State

W_olverines, Hawkey~s win

Marangi to get
Vikes end week of rest
call for North
TAMPA , Fla. iUPl) - Gary
Marangi of Boston College and
Joe Pisarcik of New Mexico
State are expected to gel the
s tartin g quarterback
assignments for today's sixth
Bowl
annual American
Football game.
North head coach Ben Schwartzwalder of Syracuse said
he will start Mar'lllgi with
Mark Harmon of UCLA as
back -up quarterback.
South head coach Frank
Broyles of Arkansas said
Saturday he had not made a
final decision . But other bowl
officials indicated Pisarcik
wq,uld start with Jesse Freitas
of San Diego Slate in reserve.
A possible deciding factor in
that tlecision may be thaI
Pisarcik will have in the.lineup
his favorite receiver from New
Mexico Slate, Hank Cook, who
was third in the nation last
season in receptions.
Wide receivers for the Norlh
are
Tim
Berra
of
Massachusetts, son of New

I

I

•

14 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel. Sunday, Jan . 6, 19H

I

'

RUSSIA OUSTED
FRANKFURT, Germany
(UP() - The jnternational
Football Federation (FIFA)
Saturday kicked the Soviet
Union out·of the 197- World Cup
with an overwhelming vote of
confidence in favor of Chile.

.,

•

•
I '

I

\

I

•

I

.

"

.

\

)
I

I

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' '

'

'

'

B~.~ge;s,
MADISON, Wis. i UPl i Wisconsin 's towering twins 6-foot·ll Kim and ~rry
Htig_hes--controlled the back- .
boaras Saturday and scored 41
points between them to lead the
Badgers to an 67-53 Big Ten
victory over Northwestern .
The 16th ranked Badgers led
all the way and at one point in
the first half oul';cored 1\'orthwes tern 14-4 to take a 47 ·28
halftime lead .
Wiseonsin rambled to a 31 poin t lead late in the second
half
and
even
wh en
Coach
J ohn
Powless
cleared his bench , Northwestern
had
d&gt;ff&gt; culty
penetrating' the Badgers'

1&gt; - The Sunday Times- 8entinei,Sunday, Jan. 6, 1974

replated lluckner, was called
. Saturday.
sticky defense .
•
for
travelin g with thret&gt;
Michigan led only four times
It was th• Big Ten opener for
both tea ms. Wisconsin is 8-1 - all in the final eight minutes seconcis left . and lhal was the
overal l a~d the Wildcats are ~ - in the Big Ten opener for game.
Campy Russell , who fouled
both learns · and trailed the
5.
out with 3:23 to play, led
Kerry Hughes led all scerers HOOsiers 41-26 at halftime .
Michigan with 2il points and
·
An
over-and-back
call
on
the
with 21 points and his brother
Johnson
added 16. Steve Green
K1m got 20 while three other Hoosie rs' Tim Crews 10
Badgets finished in double · seconds after Worrell hit his led the Hoosiers with 2J points,
figures . Bryan -Ashbaugh led tie-breaker enabled Michigan 14 of them m the first half,
Norlhwestern with 14 points . w run down the clock until while Laskowski came off the
Indiana's Quinn Buckner bench to score 20.
ANN ARBOR, Mich ( UPI I fouled out, and gave Johnson , Michigan raised its season
- Freshman Liortell Worell the opportunity to sink his two record to 9-2 and Indiana fell to
sank a seven-fool jump shot to free throws, which made it 73- 7-3.
break a 69.,9 tie and junior Joe 69.
IOWA CITY, Iowa iUPli John Laskowski hit a bucket
Johnson sank two free throws
Iowa
sco red nine straight
with 46 seconds to play to give lor Indiana with 22 seconds left
points
nudway through the
Michi gan a 73-71 victory over and Indiana had a chance to lie
eighth
rank ed
Indiana when Mic higan Sophomore second half to break open . a
Chuck Rogers missed a free close game and whip Minthrow . But Steve Ahlfeld, who nesota 66-55 in the Big Ten

York Mels manager Yogi
Berra, Clint Hasselerig of
Michigan and Garvin RIJberson
of lllinois.
North running backs include
Isaac Jackson of Kansas Stale,
Charles Davis of Colorado, and
Ken Grandberry of Washington
State.
Joining Cook as a wide
receiver will be Mark
Wakefield of Tampa and Joel
Parker of F1orida, while the
South will have Nat Moore of
F1orida, Haske! Stanback of
Tennessee, Bob Burns of
Georgia, and Cliff Taylor of
Memphis State. ·
A crowd of about 20,000 is
expected for the I p.m . (EDT)
kickoff. The game will be
televised by the Mizlpu Sports
Network.
The North, leading 4-1 in the
series , is rated a slight
favorite, primarily because of
its size.

BLOOMINGTON , Minn
1UP! ) - The Minneso ta
Vikings, carrying an unusual'
underdog tag, ended a weeklong rest Saturday and packed
for a flight to Houston to meet
the Miami Dolphins in Super
Bowl Vlll .
·
Coach Bud Grant gave his
team the week off after last
Sunday's 27-10 defeat of Dallas
for the National Football
ConferenCe Title.
"We'll have a regular week
of practice in Houston," Grant
said. The team was scheduled
to fly there Sunday night.
urm n·ot interested in other
teams," Grant said when it
was noted the Dolphins have
been practicing in Miami while
the Vikings took their break.
Temperatures here have
been below zero all week - 30
below one night - and Grant
commented that trying to
practice in that kind of weather
is "an exercise in futility."
He said most of the players
worked out on their own during

opener for both teams Saturday .
Freshman John Hairston.
who led the Hawks with a
season high 20 points, scored
four baskets in the streak as
1ow·a upped its record to 4-5.
Minnesota slipped to &amp;-4.
Minnesota, which was led by
Rick McCutcheon's 22 points
·came back from a 23-14 deficit
w trail by three, 33-30, at halftime. They closed the gap to 4240 midway in the final period
bef9re Iowa spurted to a 51-42
lead. The Gophers got no closer
than seven poll)ts in the finallO
minutes.
Candy Laprince, Iowa 's
leading scorer, added 14 points
and Nate Washingwn had 13,
including 8 in the second hall.

KENT, Ohio (UP! I '.:.. Ohio
University's. Wal!A!r Luckett
pdured in a game-high 24 points
here Saturday to pace the
Bobcats to an 61-75 MidAmerican . Basketball Co nference victory over Kent
State.
Larry Slappy added 19, ffiice
Payne 14 and Denny Rusch 11

Sun Devil coach
Former Syracuse
'not interested'

Local Bowling
Thursday Atternoon
Bowling League

w.

L.
61
63
64

Royal Crown
67
Team 1
65
Team 4
64
Pullins Excavat i ng
60 68
Team H i gh Se ri es - F'ullin s
Excavating 168 1; Team 4. 1654.
Team High Game - T ea m 4.
577; Team 4, 559
Ind . High Series - Marlene
Wilson 575, Betty Whitlat ch
486, Lois Hawley 441.
Ind. High Game - Marl ene
Wilson 210, Betty Wh i tla tc h
194, Marlene Wilson 184.

College Basketball Results
By United P.-ess International
Tou.-naments
{lsi Round)
Big Four
N.C. St . 78 North Car . 77
Wake Forest 64 Duke 61
Bluebonnet Classic
Houston 96 Denve.- 79
Fla . St. 99 Texas A&amp;M 79
Presidential Classic
Am . U 82 East Car . 75
Geo. Wash. 80 Leh i gh 44
Shepherd Holiday
Shepherd 110 Castleton 58
Salisbury 87 wash ., Md . 78
Washington &amp; Lee
St . Mry's , Md . 69 Susquhana 67

East

Pace 60 Adelphi 57
Brckpt St . 81 Cent St . 72
G..W . Po st 48 Oakland 47
Bro wn 86 Cornell 65
Yale 59 Columbia 54
S(luth
Ga. Tech 73 UW -Lac ros se 69
Mercer 90 Va. Cmmnwllh 89
Miles 79Ft . Vally St 78
Carroll 85 Augusta 69
Ersk i ne 55 Mor r is 49
Midwest
Hanover 80 DePauw 63
lnd . Sf .. T .H . 85 Vlprai so 79
..
S(luthwest
New Mexico 98 Utah 91

They call it "gum" because you're stuck with the
price or two nickel packages
oJ five ~ticks each and get
only eight sticks.

Daylight Saving
Time

HONOLULU . (UP! )
Arizona Stale Coa~h Frank
Kush, coaching the West IA!am
in Saturday's Hula Bowl, has
denied that he would consider
an offer from the University of
Colorado.
At the Hula Bowl banquet
Friday nigh~ Kush said, "I'm
· just not interested."
II had been reported that
Kush was given the coaching
offer and that the school
wanted an answer by Saturday,

REEVES MAY RETURN
SHERMAN, Tex. (UP!)
Danny Reeves, a former
Dallas Cowboys player and
coach who retired last season
and went into business in
Dallas, said Friday he was
considering getting back into
professional footbalL
"I've been talking to the
Kansas City Chiefs and one or
two other clubs, but nothing
definite has been settled,"
Reeves said about his willing· ·
ness to take an assistant
coaching job. "l haven't had
any college offers, but I won't
rule out any that come along."

coach to Tampa
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!)
Syracuse University football
coach Ben Schwartzwalder has
applied for the job of athletic
director of the University of
Tampa. it was reported
Saturday.
TamQB Times sports editor
Frank Klein said Schwartz·
walder told him he had
discussed the job with Ed
Ward, an assistant to
University President Dr. B. D.
Owens.
Schwartzwalder is In town as
coach of the north team in
Sunday's American Bowl
football game.

u

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Family Pak Chicken Pa
3 Brea st quarter s with
wings &amp; back s, 3 Leg quarters with .
back s, 2 Pkg s. Giblet s &amp; 2 Necks.
Includes :

!.Duls Cardinals said Saturday
that in an effort to conserve
energy and comply with the
wishes of the team's fans about
70 per cent of their games in
the 1974 season will start
earlier than corresponding
games did last season .
General manager Bing
Devine said Saturday night
games will begin at 6 p.m.
rather than 7 pm. and week
night games will begin at 7:30
rather than 8, with the exCeption of some nationally
televised Monday night games
which will begin at 7:15.
"We experimented last year
by starting 16 night games in
April, May and September at
7:30p.m.," Devine said, "and
the favorable response to this
indicawd that our fans have no
objections to, and in many
cases desire, the earlier
starting times.
· "With t his background and
the lnwntion of the Cardinals to
participate in the program for
conservation of energy as
outlined by the commissioner
of baseball, we feel that these ·
changes are desirable and in
line with that program."

-

with SF ·

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Bobby Bonds, the national
league leader in runs scored
and total bases last season,
Saturday signed his 1974
contract with the San Francisco Giants.
Terms of the pact were not
revealed but a Giants spokesman said it" was "for a substantial raise."
Bonds, 27, scored 131 runs
and had 341 total bases in 1973
and also came within one home
run of becoming the first
player in baseball history to hit
40 homers and s!A!al 40 bases in
the same season.
Over the last five years,
Bonds has averaged 122 runs,
41 stolen bases, 31 homers and
89 RBls per se~son.

Limit
l

Fresh Frying Chickens wHOII
Bocko
Best 0 .Ch•1cken . . No ..Nodoo,
o;w•••
Fresh Chicken Legs wHOII •

45&lt;
• llo. 65&lt;
.II. 79&lt;

,

GRAPEFRUIT

v

I

5-lb.

Bag

items

Prices

this ad .

effe(five lhru Saturda',l ,
None

STATE FARE
SLICED

WHITE
_B READ·

'·,

Loaves

Moose Lodge
Ci.ly Ice &amp; Fuel

MRS. FILBERT'S

w.

L.

10
10
8

6
6
8

Fr iendly"Tavern

E.agles Club
Tom's Carry Out
8
8
Roseberry Pennzoll
8
8
Swisher &amp; LohSe Pharm 4 12
PHigh Game Se.-ies - Eagles
Ciub 199~ 1 Roseberry Pennzoil

1-lb. Quarters

•;,-Gal.
Bot.

ZESTA
SALTINE
CRACKERS

$159

1.-lb. Pkg.

FOLGER'S
COFFEE

CRISCO

SHORTENING

'

3-lb.
~an

$129

JENO'S
SINGLE SliE

'

3-lb.
Can

CHEESE PIZZA

sse

$319

14'1...... .
Pkg:

·

FOLGER'S ··'

THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
and lOAN COMPANY

Call or visit . . .

AUtO Q.UBOF
SOU1HER" OHIO

Opposit41 Post Office

33 Court .St., Gallipolis

Phone 446-3832

Phone : 446-06t9 'o r

INSTANT COFFEE

to close Jan. 14
COLUMBUS - Entries for
the 70th Annual Ohio Stare
Bowling Association tournament to be held in Colwnbus
will close Jan. 14.
The tournament will open
March 2 and run on weekends
through May 5. There will be no
-bowling on Easrer weekend,
Aprill3-14.
Team event will be roUed at
Western Lanes, Doubles and
singles are scheduled for
Lincoln Village Lanes.
Despi!A! the threat of gas
rationing, advance reservations and early entries are
running ahead of the 1973
tournament in Warren which
had 1294 IA!ams.
The central location of the
tournament site Is expected to
ease gasoline problems ,

NABISCO COOKIES

21-oL79•

AHOY
CHIP . , , . Pkg,

1'-''u'•·

BO PEEP
,AMMONIA

~·;.

HECWS REG .

16'

SJ99

HECK'S
REG .

SPORTS
DEPT.

$155

ptevenh outde nt al

SPORTS DEPT.

$5 .88

Matan new SIU

grid assistant

CARBONDALE, Ill. (UP!)Bill Ma tan, 30, tormer
High SeriPS - ~ ....\lie
defensive end with the New
Wipp le 576, Jr . Phelps 557,
Marlene Wilson 570, \ Betty York Giants and assistant
Sftiith 488 .
., Ind . High Game Larry coach at the University of
Dugan 211. Jr. Phelps 204;
Colorado, has been named
Marlene Wilson 215, Marlene
defensive line coach at
Wilson 192.
Southern Illinois University, it
•
'" Early Sunday Mixed
was announced Sa lurday.
"
December 23,1973
Malan was twice an all Big
•
W. L.
~It i ns Excavating
8
0 Eight defensive end at Kansas
T4)m ' sCarryOut ·
6
2 Slate University and, af!A!r two
SWiShEtrs &amp; Lohse Pharm . 4
4
iend IV Tavern
.4
4 years with the Giants, he was
seberry Pennzoil
2
2 an aS!IiStaijl coach at Raytown,
glesCiub
0 ,a
• "Team High ·Game - .Toms Mo., South High School, Washa.rry Out 1972 , F'nendly burn University of Kansas and
"')vern 1922.
e Team High GP,ME - Tom 's New Mexico Slate.

SPORTS DEPT.

oz.
STEP
SAVER

Sports Dept.

3 TIER

SPATTER LID

UTILITY TABLE

¢

¢

12" BALLERINA

LAMP SHADES
66~

Heck's Reg.

HECK'S REG. $1 .09

HECK'S REG. •1.37
Housewares Dept.

Housewares Dept.

--

Fesco 20 Gal. Plastic

TRASH CAN
DIET SCALES

'5.33

HECK'S REG.
99&lt;
Housewares Dept.

Housewares Dept.

ALADDIN
PLASTIC WASTE

- - --,Basket
45 PC. MELMAC
SET

I

..

Heck's Reg.

.'l

•3.99

/

HECK'S REG. •2.69

HECK'S
REG. 114.88

Heck's Reg.

.........,

$888

99&lt;
Housewares Dept.

Housewares

SUNSET CASSETTE

FESCO
SWING
-. TOP WASTE

Recording Tape

Basket

sa~

Fesco No. 8954

DISH PAN

sse

Heck's Reg.

'1.99

HECK'S REG. '1.44
Housewares

Housewares Dept. -

Laundry Basket

'1''

C-60

Heck's Reg.

'1.49

Heck's Reg. •2.77

Munsey

Heck's Reg.

•29.88

No. C4315

$2211

G.E. AM-FM

DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO
Heck's Reg.

$2699

•31.96
Jewelry Dept.

Jewelry Dept.

STEAM IRON
Heck'5 Reg.

'10.88

CASSETTE

RECORDER

Heck's

'777

4500

Jewelry Dept.
SOUNDESIGN

G. E.

5-BAND .PORTABLE
.RADIO
./

No.

87197

Vo1ue pme ~. volue potked Gf
ble Coul!!lle Ret arder feolu res
mo tic end·of· tope r.hul off ond
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(Onl ro l. Tl1e bor ~e~lorote
bcJ I1 on p revenh O{(identolly

Hamilton Beach

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Mixette

who ! you ho ve !!!'COrded.

Heck's Reg.

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Jewelry Dept.

99e

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HEAT MASSAGER

BT-6~00~---'

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Gerry Out 678 , Rose.berry
P-ennzoil 675 .
" High Ind . Series Bill

Heck's Reg. '225

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$27.96

$699

•9.96
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c .,

5'1.7 .

~ High

Ind . Games eet
R.oseberry 206, B i ll Wilfo.-d
:zp1 ; Ma xine Dugan 200. Betty
Smith 192 .

26e

west
Boise. St . M Mont. St . 74
dregon 48 Stal'lfOrd 47
Gonzaga 66 weber St. 58
Idaho st . 67 Montana 62

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G tt•u t ~ ole ty tle m

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ftoyles 581, Jr . Phelps 5~2;
~axine Dugan 539. Betty Sm 1th

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Gallipolis, Qhio

GUN LOCK

EACH

•High Team Game .,..- Eagles
Club 74.i, ,Pull i ns Excavat ing

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Interest payable morfthly on any acc_o unt of $1,000 or more.

•

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MARGARINE

DRAIN OPENER

Automatic

12 GA.

row for the Gamecocks at
home, with Marquelw the last
sehool to defeat them in 1972.
The
triumph
boosted
Carolina's mark to 7-2 while
Marquette lost for the first
time in 11 games.
Winters, a guard from New
York City, fired in 17 points to
lead the Gamecocks, while
Earl Tatum, a smooth 6-4
sophomore paced Coach AI
McGuire's Warriors with 21
points. ''
The Gamecocks led 32-35 at
the halftime of the regionally
televised contest and opened a
nine-point lead early in the
final half before Marquette
began a comeback on the
outside shooting of Marcus
Washington and Tatwn.

early sunday Mixed
Oet. 30,1 973

IN THIS AREAl

I

TIMBER SPLITTERS
Wednesday, Jan . 2 bowl ing
results.
Farmer's Har dware and H .
Stump's 242 ·640, 8 pts ., Foster's
Store and C. Queen's 212 -580, 0
pts.
,French City Mobile Homes
and J . Yankuns' 193-577,8 pts.,
City Ice &amp; Fuel and c. Perry's
215 -llO, 0 pts .
Dock Inn end C. Lupton's 243·
596,8 pts ., Moose Lodge and L .
Casto's 191 ·534, 0 pts.
Falls City and R . Mitchell's
223-607 , 6 pts ., Tawney's Studio
an:d T. ~ose's 19'9 ·587, 2 pts .
Larry's Wayside and C .
Meadows' 199 · 582, 6 pts .•.
McKnight &amp; Davies Hdwr. and
M. Thompson's 201 -53, 2 pts .
Marchi ' s carry Out and E
F'etrie's 207 -584, 6 pts ., Ashland
Oil and H. Hannan's 186-497, 2
pts .
'
Standings:
F~rmer ' s Hardware
8 0
Fr:encl'l City Homes
8 0
Dock Inn
8 0
Falls City
6 ~
L4rry's wayside
6 2
Mar chi's Ca.-ry Out
6 2
Ashland O il
2 6
McKnight &amp; Davies
2 6
Tawney ' s Studio
2 6
Foster's Store

LIQUID PLUMR

Beretta

32

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to
•.,,o;o;., right
on •11

January 11, 1974
~old fa deafen .

'"U''-

HECK'S
"D" BATTERIES

half, but then Lucas scored
seven points and Maryland
went in with a 46·34 lead at
intermission,
The Terps scored the first 12
poi)&gt; ts in the second half, then
held the Tigers -scoreless for
seven minutes in the middle of
the second half while scoring 14
straight to stretch their lead.
Clemson's 7·1 freshman ,
Wayne Rollins, scored 12 and
had 14 rebounds to pace
Clemson, now 7-3.

Tourney ,entries

Local Bowling

c

5

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY-JANUARY 6th &amp; 7th

Housewares Dept.

G~llon Pkg.

CERTIFICA TE.S OF DEPOSIT

DAYLIGHT TIME.

COLLEGE -PARK, Md.
(UP!)
Third-ranked
Maryland erupted for 21 points
in the five minutes surroW,Jding
halftime to waltz to an 89.,0
victory over Clemson Saturday.
John Lucas scored 17 points
while Len Elmore had 16 points
and 17 rebounds to lead the
Terps, now 8-1, in their first
Atlantic Coast Conference
match.
Clemson was within three
points with 2:33left in the first

WHITE MEAT ONLY

BRADLEY ROMPS
DENTON, Tex. (UP!)
Bradley ran through North.
Texas' full court press
Saturday to thoroughly
dominate the cold-shooting
Eagles 95-71 in a Missouri
Valley Conference basketball
'
game.

on···

SUNOAY
1·7 .

Clemson five

COLUMBIA, S. C. (UP!) Senior Brian Winters hit a
jwnper with three seconds
remaining to spark sevenIA!enth • ranked South Carolina
to a 60-58 upset victory over
sixth-ranked and previouslyundefeated Marquette
Saturday afternoon in a battle
of highly rated independent
collegiate basketball powers.
The two teams battled the
final three minutes of the IA!nse
struggle 'to a 58-88 deadlock
, before Carolina got the ball
with 29 seconds left following a
Marquette
(oul.
The
Gamecocks counted the clock
down to three seconds when
Winters look his 20-foot jwnp
shot.
The victory was the 28th in a

FLORIDA SEEDLESS

ICE
CREAM

Give
t~e gift
thatkeepl
on giving ••

OPEN

Warriors are
upset, 60-58

.lb.

THOROFARE
VANILLA

and

- Set clocks ahead
one hour on Jan. 6
for energy-saving

",,

'

THE GALLIPOLIS SA VI~GS
and LOAN COMPANY
Pays The

SAVIN.GS ACCOUNTS

DON'T BE A LOSER

'

early start

Bonds signs '74
.~ontraet

••••

Cards plan
ST. WUIS (UP!) - The St.

for !be Bobcats, who held a 4334 intermission advantage. OU
took the lead for good with 8:29
left in the first half.
KSU, now 5-5 and 0-1, was led
by Ricky Gates with 19 points.
OU is now ~ for the season
and 1-0 in the loop.

Terps humble
OPEN DAILY 9 'TIL 9-CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS

bumps and bruises collected
against Dallas a chance to
heal.
A large contingent of Minnesota · fans is traveling to the
Super Bowl. The Vikings had
11,:1.50 tickets for the game and
they were bought up im·
mediately by season ticket
holders, leaving none for
counter sale .

the rest period. There were a
couple of team meetings, including one Saturday.
Miami is favored in the Jan.
13 game, making the Vikings
underdogs in a season which
brought them 19 victories in 21
games including exhibitions
and playoffs.
The Vikings, who average
nearly 28 years in age, haven't
put much stock this season in
such things as labels, jinxes,
types of turf, trends and other
things talked about prior to
football games.
"We'll be there and we'll be
ready," defensive tackle Gary
Larsen said after Minnesota
thumped Dallas .
" You can't hold back
anything now," said Bob
Berry, the backup quarterback
to Fran Tar kenton .
The Vikings had no serious
injuries and the long rest gave

''

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OUtrips
Kent-State

W_olverines, Hawkey~s win

Marangi to get
Vikes end week of rest
call for North
TAMPA , Fla. iUPl) - Gary
Marangi of Boston College and
Joe Pisarcik of New Mexico
State are expected to gel the
s tartin g quarterback
assignments for today's sixth
Bowl
annual American
Football game.
North head coach Ben Schwartzwalder of Syracuse said
he will start Mar'lllgi with
Mark Harmon of UCLA as
back -up quarterback.
South head coach Frank
Broyles of Arkansas said
Saturday he had not made a
final decision . But other bowl
officials indicated Pisarcik
wq,uld start with Jesse Freitas
of San Diego Slate in reserve.
A possible deciding factor in
that tlecision may be thaI
Pisarcik will have in the.lineup
his favorite receiver from New
Mexico Slate, Hank Cook, who
was third in the nation last
season in receptions.
Wide receivers for the Norlh
are
Tim
Berra
of
Massachusetts, son of New

I

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•

14 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel. Sunday, Jan . 6, 19H

I

'

RUSSIA OUSTED
FRANKFURT, Germany
(UP() - The jnternational
Football Federation (FIFA)
Saturday kicked the Soviet
Union out·of the 197- World Cup
with an overwhelming vote of
confidence in favor of Chile.

.,

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16 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 6, 1974

-

'

fortablc lead dunng t)1c third
~ 4inza . Dewhurst wa s onee
again the leading scorer for the

made a jump shot at the foul

line to put the White Falcons in
the lead for keeps. Wahama led
by six after the first eight
Dewhurst

PIRE'S

85 points on the game )Yhich 18
the highest output so far this
Team slcllistics show the

Whi(., Falcons making 32, of 65
Buzzard all chipped in ' with in the field goal department for
four poi nts each in plunging up a fine 49.2 percent. From the
2.1 points . The defensive stand- free throw line they were 21 off
vul : :. vl LhL· pcriOO were J ohn 28 for a 75 percent showing.
Ferguson and Da nny Harmon . They grabbed a total of 49
Wahama held a wide 60-33 lead rebounds. Wahama showed a
going into !he final turn .
vast improve[\len~ over their
The fourth quarter turned fi rst two games in the turnover
out to be the most productive deoartment.
Southwestern c 45J - L ewis ,
period this season forth White 2 04
; Wh it t ,3 -5 11: Walker , 3-2

and

......".

season .

Falcons with seven points.
Lewi s, Larry Keefer, and

ritinutes, 16-10 score .

Danny

,-

I

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Falcons blitz SW quintet
MASON - SU&gt;ve Buzzard
paced the Wahama Whil e
Falcons to their firs't win of the
young sea&amp;on over the Southwe s tern Hi ghlanders, 85-45
, here Fnday night.
Buzzard got 23 point~ while
Danny Dewhurs t and Mike
Lewis chipped in with 19 and 10

•

- !

, I

'' .

,,

'

Chuc k
J ohn so n
helped
Wahama blow the ga me wide
open in tte second ca nto by
points respecti\·e iy.
outscoring Southwe-stern 21 to 7
The Whi te Falcons shot 49. 2 in th e quart er . Dewhurs t
pel. from te fl oor and 75 pet. connected on four of six fi eld
!rom the charity stripe whi ch goal tri es for eight poin ts while
turned out to be thei r key to Johnson· co ntributed seven
success . ,
points to the Whit&lt;&gt; Falcon
The lead changed hands five cause . Wahama led by twenty Fal cons . Buzzard hit for
times in the early g&amp;ing before at the half-way mark 37-17.
almost half of the 25 points for
Wahama pulled away for good .
The Whi te Falcons continued Wahama with 12, Marty
Hh the score Lied 8-8, BulUlrd to add to their already com- Holbrook go t two buckets while
Dewhurst had three points,
Terry Tucker two, and Ray
Tucker two . Southwestern
managed twelve points 1n the
quarter to give them a total of
45 for the game . Wahama had

Outstanding defensive effort
•
earn·s GAHS 55-49 SEOL wm

'

~

.."""
.'••"

'

•••
~

••

HAVE FOUND MANY MORE ITEMS !FTER INVENTORY
THAT WE' ARE REDUCING TO ·•••

8, Wood . 4 · 4 12; Walker , 3-2 8;
Carter , 3-0-6and Fra sher. 1 2 4
Totals 16-13-45 .
Wahama ( 85) - Bu11ard . 9
5 23 , F ergu son , 204, Keef er ,
1 4 6; Lew is , 4-2 10 : Kern , 2-4
8 ; D ewhur st . !I J 19 ; Jonnson ,
3 1 7 ; Holbrook . 2 0 4 ; Tu c ker .
1 0 2 ; T . Tu c ker , 0 2 '1 Totals
J:Z -21 -B.'i .
Bv Quarters :
10 1 16 12- 45
Sou t hwes tern
Wahama
16 11" '13 25- 85
Reserve Score Wa hama
38,•SW 28 .

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•

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:Wilson,
Johnson
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Imps
"'

.SOFAS • OOIRS el.OVE SEATS

BEDROOM
FURNITURE

:' LOGAN - A driving layup
::; by 5-8 sophomore Brett Wilson
::: with I :31 left in the game, plus
;:• ·a free throw by the scrappy
"'
guard with . nine seconds
A
,
, re mainin g
ca rried .,the
~ Gallipolis Blue [mps to a
: thrilling 43·41 Southeastern
:;: Ohio Reserve League victory
::;: over the Logan Papooses here
~ Friday night.
~ It was the Imps ' third con~ secutlve two point victory , The
:: win left Coach Willard (Buddy)
;: Moore's crew in undisputed
., third place in· the reserve
!; standings with a 3-2 mark.
; Overall, the Imps are 4-2.
~ Coach Jack Elgin's Papooses
', dropped to 4-4 on the year, and
" 2-3 inside the league,
~~ After ·trailing briefly in the
-~ initial period, the Imps held a
:, 11-8 first quar(.,r advantage.
: GAHS led 26-20 during the
:, halftime intermission.
"' The Imps built up their
••• largest lead of the game, 34-26,
:; with 2:14 left in the third
:: period. It was 3&amp;-30 in favor of

END TABLES
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COLEMAN MODERN
S PIECE WALNUT

GOING FOR TWO - Southern senior center Norman
Curfman drives for two points in Friday night's 67-54 victory over Symmes Valley. Moving in too late are Vikings
Jaye Myers (55) and Paul Brown (53).

I

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Symmes Valley defenders Don Quesenberry (21) an
Paul Brown (53) and fires away in Friday night's 67-54
triumph over the Vikings, The win kept the Tornados just one
game behind league-leading Hannan Trace who tripped
Eastern.

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The Sweeper That Takes
The WorkOul of Sweeping

Gallipolis, Ohio

SEOAL RESERVES
., TEAM
W L P
"' Jac kson
5 () 247
,., Ironton
5 0 25 1
II'
Gallipolis
3 2 22 1
~· Logan
2 3 234
Athens
2 3 169
.. M eig s
2 3 192
Waver l y
1 A 176
... Wellston
6 5 165
" TOTALS
20 20 1655
~
Friday's Results:
Gall ipolis .43 Logan 41
, .,. Athens J5 Waverly 22
.~
Jackson 72 Wellston 23
, • {_ yon t on ·57 Meios 141
·~ ' Tuesday 's Gam~s:
·• Log an a t Athens •
J ac k.~on at Gallipol is
'
'• Waver(y at Ironton
~ We ll stCin at MeJg!
.
::
SEOAL FROSH
.~
TEAM ..
W L P
,i, Logan
4 0 224
...,J
Gall i polis
4 0 167

,;
N

~~~~~~n

~ ~

Ironton
Meigs

2
2

~ ~=~~:;~~
TOTALS

.,
"&lt;~&lt;~

~~,,.

:
•
..,

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-·

.,.
:;

3
3

g:

199
167

OP
181
191
200
224
176
20 1
170
312
165S

OP ·110
114

l~:

195
179

ri : ~~~ fl!~

19 19 1358 1358
Thursday's Re suns :
Iron ton 51 Meigs .42
Jackson- 37 We l lston 24
Ga ll ipOlis -Logan,_ ppnd, r eset
Jan. u .
Athens 32 Waverly 25
Monday's Games :
Athens at Logan
Gallipolis at Jackson
Ironton at Waverly
Meigs at We llston

"' F1VE CARDS SIGN
:_; _ ST .WUIS (UPI) -St. Louis
~ Cardinal pitcher Bob Gibson, ·
:; 12-IOin 1973and the club leader
• with a 2. 77 ERA although
~ missing 55 days after undergo,:~ ing knee surgery for an injury,
C was among five Cardinals
:,: Friday to become the first to
:;_ sign' contracts lor 1974.

ir

. . ,.~~·,~·····'!~&lt;\! ~~··~·········. . •••
...

Blu e Imps ( 43 1 - Owens 3 17 ; John son 4-3-11 ; Saun d er s 2-4·
8; Folden 2-l -5.; W i lson 5-2-12.
Totals 16 -.Jl -43.
Papooses (41) - M eadows 10 2:
Mu l ho ll and
1-0 2 ;
Robine tt e 4-0 -8 ; Seet 4-0-8;
Mara 4 5- 13; Unge r 2-04 ;
Flower s 0-0 -0 ; L anning 2-0-4;
Ha r den o 0-0 ;· Cl ar k o o a.
Miller 0-0·0. Tolal s 18-S-4 1.
Score by quarters:
Blu e Imps
11 15 10 7- 43
Papooses
8 12 10 11 - 41

sinkin g 24 of 47 attempts [or
51.6 pet. GAHS also l1ad its best
nig ht of the yea r at the charity
stripe, sinking: seven of eight
for 87.5 pet. The Devils had 15
personals, and picked off 34
reboun&lt;ls. GAHS commit(.,d 16
turnq,vers, 10 in the first half,
none in the third pe riod .
Logan entered the contest
as the lop shooting learn in
the conference (53 pet.) ,
After the final horn sounded,
the Chiefs had connected on
21 of 61 field goal attempts
for 34.4 pet., their lowest
shooting performa nce of
the 1973
74 camChiefs
paign.
The
hit seven or 12 free throw
attempts for 58.3 pet. ,
committed only nine personal fouls, and collected 27
rebounds. Jim Kemper
picked off II snags lor the
losers. Logan had 12 turnovers.
GAHS held 4-(J and 10-4 leads

early in the first stanza. Lugan
tallied seven straight markers
to take its first lead, 11-10, with
1:25 left in the first period . Gil
Price and Jefl Campbell
traded buckets as the first
period ended with Logan on
top, 13-12.
Two quick goals by Jim
Niday gave GAHS a 16-13 lead
in the se~nd period. After Jim
Pierce and Tom Valentine
traded goals, GAHS ripped off
fi ve straight points for a 23-17
advantage with 4:33 left in the
ha lf.
Logan then blanked the
Gallians for two minutes and
fifty.nine seconds, scor in g
eight Wlanswered points for a
25-23 lead at the 1:49 mark.
Price's short jumper broke
the dry spell fo r GAHS with
1:34 left in the half. Pierce's
long jumper gave Logan a 27-25
lead with 41 seconds left. Niday
count.&gt;red with a long jumpe;
with four seconds left in the

half and it was 27-all at halftime.
The game's turning point
came dur ing the first 2:35 of
the third period. Niday, Price
and Snowden learned up to
tally eight straight points for
GAHS while the Chiefs failed to
score. That made · it 35-21,
Gallipolis, wi th 5:28left in the
third s Ianza .
At this point, Tom Valentine
returned to the lineup. The
jWJior forward hit two long
jumpers, enabhng GAHS to
maintain an eight point spread,
39-31, with 3:12 left in the

INVENTORS OF
NO WAX
SHINYL" VINYL

FLOOR FOR

Gil Price.

c

Jim Nida Y. g
Jim Sinoer , o

'-~

Gallipolis IS now 5-I on the
year. GAHS is in undisputed
second place inside the SEOAL
with a 4-1 mark, Logan is s-i
overall, and 3-2 inside the loop.
Tuesday, GAHS will host a
scrappy Jackson quintet.
Game time is 7:30p.m. Logan
visits Athens .

7- 16

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2

14

9-14

A-A

2
4
IS

3
2
l4

4

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STRUCTIDN AVAILABLE
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0-0
2&lt; ·47
7-8
LOGAN CHIEFTAINS (49)
FG-A FT-A PF
Q.J

TOTALS
PLAYER-Pos .
Jim Pierce, g
Mi te~ Wright. I
Don Young , I
Jim Kemper . f
Jeff Campbell. I
Bill Ha r we ll. I

RB

TO

TP

34

2

2

2

17

J.8

Q. Q

2

2

6

J.9
5· 15

2-2
2·5

0
2

J.8
00
0-0
0·0

0·0
0· 1

no

Del Lindsey, g
Scotl Gosnell. g

o. I
21 -61

Dave Krebs. f
TOTALS

o

e

4

II

2

12

00

1
0
0
0

4
0
0
0

4
0
1
0

•
0
0
0

0 0
7-12

0
9

0
27

1
12

0
49

o.o

Score bv Qua r t ers :
Ga l l i polis Blue Dey its

12
13

Logan Ch iefta i n ~

15
14

e

14
8

14
1.4 --

446-3362

"A ll New AMF Equipment"
Upper Rt, 7 Kanauga, Ohio

55
49

•

--'--

~-=:­

..

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Point Pleasant
Building
&amp; Loan

~ .

Association

PHONE (304) 675-2500
612 Viand St.
Point Pleasant
There have been more words printed and spoken about savings accounts in the last few
months then we've ever heard before. You have been bombarded with claims and advice. If
you aren't confused, it's a miracle . Here are the facts which you should know .
Present law allows us to pay at least one, quarter percent more interest on our savings p lans
than any bank . We now pay these top rates.
Some institutions pay interest semi-annually or annually - WE PAY QUARTERLY . We also
can work out a monthly income plan on certificates with a term of two years or more,
$10,000.00 minimum, and mail your check monthly.
'

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available . . . . to suit you .

•
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WE GIVE ESTIMATES
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AND INSTALL AT...

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48 MONTHS

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All savings certificates automatically renewable.

GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERI"G
Gallipolis

Pn. 446:1995

The federal l;~w states "if a withdrawal is made before maturity, all earnings must be
reduced to the curren.t passbook rate plus an additional 90 days interest" on all "savings
certificates.

--·

-•
'

advantage .

GALliPOLIS BLUE DEVILS ISS!
PLAYER - Pos.
FG·A FT-A PF RB TO TP
M ike Si ckles, I
1·2
1-2
4
4
5
3
Tom Va lentin e. I
6-9
2-2
J
4
o
14
Ga r y S(lowden . f ·9
l -3
0-0
'1
o 1 'l

1974?

749 Third Ave. ·

period . GAHS led 41-35 after
three periods. Logan managed
only eight points in this can to.
During the final period,
GAHS maintained anywhere
from a four to eight point

SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP

ANY AMOUNT ANYTIME. NO NOTICE
FOR WITHDRAWAL HIGHEST LEGAL
RATE PAID.

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•

'

64

SEO standings

~

·.~

"Wf m THi OLDEST MOll! I NO'I'I DIAIIR IN U OHIO."

66

River View 5 4 Zanesvi ll e
Rosecrans 39
West .Holmes 71 Orrville 33
Woos t er 49 Dover 44
Por t smouth N D 63 Portsmouth
East 53
Miami Centra l Ca tt10t i c 68
Shawnee 57
Man sfi el d Senior 74 Sandus ky
46
Mans fi el d St . P eters 100 Tiffin
Ca l vert 69
W illar d 66 BtJcyrus 43
Ontario 69 Crest l ine 49
Zanesville 65 Upper Ar l ington

fourth quarter to cut the Imps'
lead to two, .40-311, with 1:49
remaining.
Wilaon made it 42-38 with a
layup at the 1:31 mark. Mike
Mara, 6-4 sophomore ·cent&lt;&gt;r,
hit a free throw with 1:14 left,
a nd 5-9 sophomore guard
Chuck Clark scored a twinpointer on a steal with 38
seconds left to cut the Imps'
margin to one, 42-41.
The teams exc hanged
missed three throws with 12
and 11 seconds left. Wilson then
canned a free throw wi th nine
seconds left. A desperation
shot by Logan at the buzzer
was off target.
The Imps hit 16 of 40 field
att.&gt;mpl• for 40 pet. At the foul
circles, the Mooremen were 11
of 21 for 52 pet. The Imps
committed only 11 personals
and hauled down 24 r~bounds.
David Owens, 6-2 soph omore
ce n(.,r, picked off nine caroms
for the winners. The Imps had
10 turnovers.
Wilson paced the Imps'
scoring attack with l2 points.
Brent Johnson , 5-7 freshman
guard, added II. Mara was the
only Papoose in double figures
with 13 markers.
The Imps will host co-league
leader Jackson in a 6 p.m.
gam e Tuesday, The Ironboys
are 7-1 overall, losing only to
Chillicothe, 62-38, in a nonleague outin g · over the
holidays. Inside the SEOAL,
the Ironboys are tied for first
place with Ironton with a :Hl '
mark .
Friday's box :

"

~

Carter &amp; Evans Inc.
Olive St.

Ohio High School
Baske tball Scores
By United Press International
N ew Philade lph ia 70 Cosho c ton

.,

ON ALL STYLES OF

ONlY (I) On Display
CANNOT RE·ORDER

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eSWVAGS •POLES. •TREES
eTRAYS •TABLES
SOME TABLE LAMPS IN PAIRS

GAHS aft&lt;&gt;r three periods.
Logan, behind John Lanning,
6-2 sophomore forward, Bill
See!, 6-2 sophomore forward,
and Tim Mulholland , 5-8
sophomore guard, rallied in the

Sh eridan 62 Tri -Va t ley 60
West Musk.ingum 70 New
L eKin gton 6-4
F indla y 72 Marion Ha rd in g 61
Danvi lle 56 Co lumbu s H ard ing
61
.
Find lay 72 Marion Hardin g 61
Danv i l l e
56 Columbus
Aca dem y 55
Miami T r ace 72 Mad i son
Pla ines 59
Sou th Poin t 66 Coa l Gro ve 55
Spr i ngfield
Shawnee
58
Tecum seh 53
Mar ietta 72 La r.... ste r 71
Can ton Linco ln 52 Cleve Est 40
.,
ALL GAMES
Can ton Lehman 61 Cuyahoga
., TEAM
W L P OP
Faits 60
t~~ Waver l y
7 1 515 409
Massil lon 58 A l lia n ce 46
"" Gallipolis
5 1 375 286
Ma rl i"ng ton 61 Can t on Sou t h 59
~ Po r tsmouth
8 2 739 624
Canton CC 55 Akro n Buchte l 53
• w. South Point
a 2 698 562
CQIS Wa ln ut R idge 72 Cols
.~ L ogan
6 2 573 .460
Marion Frank 58
'"' Wheelersburg
S J 489 416
Col s South 95 Co ls Nor th 81
:;. Athens
5 4 505 482
Col s Cen tra l 85 Co ls Eas t 80
110')
Chesapeak e
J 4 370 423
(otl
'~ Ironton
J 5 478 563
Co ts Whetstone 63 Co ls West 61
wl Jackson
3 s 49 2 544
Worth ington 50 De l awa r e 37
:; Wellston
1 6 275 494
Whitehal l 82 Reynoldsburg 65
$'1
Meigs
1 7 451 523
C61s Wa tt er son 60 Co ls Hartley
..,.
Non- L ea gu e R es ults:
57
otol
So uth Point 66 coal Grove 55 Cots St . Charles 61 Co ls Desale s
., Wheel er sbu rg 62 Green 28
49
:r.._Porlsmouth 73 Spr ingfield
Cots Ready 72 Co ts Wehrle 46
,.. So ut h 66
Groveport 60 Hi l li ard .45
~·
SEOAL VARSITY
Grove City 50 Bexfey 47
TEAM
W l P OP
Dublin 54 Oten tan gy &lt;13
;:: Waver l y
s 0 3111 230 · T eays Valley 79 Frank li n
4 1 302 238
, Ga l l i polis
Heights 75
~· Iron t on
3 2 300 291
Ma r ietta 72 Lan caster 71
.,.. Athens
3 2 294 258
Cols
No rthl and
7'1
Co l s
~. Logan
3 2 341 28 1
Brookhaven 60
... Jackson
2 3 322 337
Cols Eas tm oor 60 Co ts L inden
Me ig s
0 5 279 335
McK inley 58
(' Wel l ston
0 5 169 378
Cols Mohawk 75 Cols Mifflin 66
.... TOTALS
:ZO 20 2348 2348
Westervitte 65 Wes tl and 61
"'"
Friday's Re sults :
M t . ver non 50 Gahanna 48
..... Ga llipolis 55 Log'an 49
Urb ana 63 London 60
&gt;11;1
Waverly 47 Athens 44
Gr andview 77 west Jeffer son
~ Ironton 65 Meigs 62
.... Ja ck son 73 Wel l ston 35

..'"

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WRIGHT FLOORED- Logan's Mitch Wright (on rioor, in whit&lt;&gt; uniform ) is tied up by
llallla'sTom Valentine (23) and Jim Niday ( 11 ) dur ing Friday night's SEOAL battle at Logan.
Looking over the situation on left is GAHS cen(.,r Gil Price (25 ). Gallia 's Mike Sickles 131)
closes' in on play. (Steve Wilson photo ).

LOGAN - Sparked, by, 6;~
junior guard Jirri Niday 's 22
points and
outs tanding
defensive play, Coach Jim
Osborne's Ga llipolis Blue
Devils surprised the powerful
Logan Chieftains 50-49 before a
packed house here Friday
night.
Coach Scott Fitzgerald's
Chieftains en(.,red the contes t
with an impressive 6-1 record
and was unbeaten in four starts
on their Hilltop cour t prior to
Friday's big battle. Too, the·
Chieftains were averag ing 74.8
points per game before the
Important Southeastern Ohio
League hardwood clash.
Favored to captur e this
year's league champions hip by
loop newsmen, the veU&gt;ran
Chieftains led the Gallipolitans
only fo ur times, all in the first
half, never more than two
poin ts. The score was tied four
times during the fi rst half.
"Our defense did the job,"
remarked Coach Osbo rne
following the Gallians' hardfought victory. "Niday was
boWJd to burn somebody. He's
a darn good shooU&gt;r. They just
had to. sta rt falling in, and
ton ight was the ni gh t," continued Osborne . Pri or to the
game, Niday was 17 of 63 from
the field for 27 pet. He connected on nine of 14 attempts
against LHS, and wasH at the
fo ul circles to finish the night
with a game high 22 points : '
Niday was named player of the
week by Coach Osborne .
"Niday's defensive pla y
was really something In the
second half," Os bor ne
· contloued. After Jtm Singer
picked· up his third personal
foul midway In the second
period (Singer was guarding
th.;, Chiefs' high-scoring
playmaker Jim Pierce )
Niday took on Pierce, and
limited the Chieftain ace to
only two buckets th e
remainder of th e game.
Pie,rce finish ed the game
with 17 points, two below his
season average.
"We proved something else
ton ight,' \ Osborne said . "Gil
Price doesn't have to score lots
' of points ln order for us .to
win.'"Osborne was referri ng to
~ice's· 21 reboWJds, a season
high, his almost flawless floor
play, and at leas t 10 blocked
Logan shots. Price ta llied 14
points for the winners.
Tom Valentine, in foul
trouble ear ly in the game, hung
in there to finish with 14 points.
Mike Sickles, off-form early in
the contes t, ca me back strong
in the final period, hauling
down three key reboWJds afwr
the Chiefs narrowed the ga p to
four points. Too, Sickl es' lone
bucket of the night, a double
clutching layup with 58 seconds
left, all but ass ured the
Gallians of a victory ,
Gary Snowden came off the
bench to fill in at both guard
positions.
and · forward
Snowden's lone g'oal ·with 5:28
left in the third period gave the
Gallians their first eight point
advantage. GAHS led by eight
points on three occasions in the
last half.
Besides turning in the best
defensive effort of the season,
GAHS also enjoyed its best
night from the field this wint&lt;&gt;r,

,

.,

\

�'

'

I

16 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 6, 1974

-

'

fortablc lead dunng t)1c third
~ 4inza . Dewhurst wa s onee
again the leading scorer for the

made a jump shot at the foul

line to put the White Falcons in
the lead for keeps. Wahama led
by six after the first eight
Dewhurst

PIRE'S

85 points on the game )Yhich 18
the highest output so far this
Team slcllistics show the

Whi(., Falcons making 32, of 65
Buzzard all chipped in ' with in the field goal department for
four poi nts each in plunging up a fine 49.2 percent. From the
2.1 points . The defensive stand- free throw line they were 21 off
vul : :. vl LhL· pcriOO were J ohn 28 for a 75 percent showing.
Ferguson and Da nny Harmon . They grabbed a total of 49
Wahama held a wide 60-33 lead rebounds. Wahama showed a
going into !he final turn .
vast improve[\len~ over their
The fourth quarter turned fi rst two games in the turnover
out to be the most productive deoartment.
Southwestern c 45J - L ewis ,
period this season forth White 2 04
; Wh it t ,3 -5 11: Walker , 3-2

and

......".

season .

Falcons with seven points.
Lewi s, Larry Keefer, and

ritinutes, 16-10 score .

Danny

,-

I

' "

Falcons blitz SW quintet
MASON - SU&gt;ve Buzzard
paced the Wahama Whil e
Falcons to their firs't win of the
young sea&amp;on over the Southwe s tern Hi ghlanders, 85-45
, here Fnday night.
Buzzard got 23 point~ while
Danny Dewhurs t and Mike
Lewis chipped in with 19 and 10

•

- !

, I

'' .

,,

'

Chuc k
J ohn so n
helped
Wahama blow the ga me wide
open in tte second ca nto by
points respecti\·e iy.
outscoring Southwe-stern 21 to 7
The Whi te Falcons shot 49. 2 in th e quart er . Dewhurs t
pel. from te fl oor and 75 pet. connected on four of six fi eld
!rom the charity stripe whi ch goal tri es for eight poin ts while
turned out to be thei r key to Johnson· co ntributed seven
success . ,
points to the Whit&lt;&gt; Falcon
The lead changed hands five cause . Wahama led by twenty Fal cons . Buzzard hit for
times in the early g&amp;ing before at the half-way mark 37-17.
almost half of the 25 points for
Wahama pulled away for good .
The Whi te Falcons continued Wahama with 12, Marty
Hh the score Lied 8-8, BulUlrd to add to their already com- Holbrook go t two buckets while
Dewhurst had three points,
Terry Tucker two, and Ray
Tucker two . Southwestern
managed twelve points 1n the
quarter to give them a total of
45 for the game . Wahama had

Outstanding defensive effort
•
earn·s GAHS 55-49 SEOL wm

'

~

.."""
.'••"

'

•••
~

••

HAVE FOUND MANY MORE ITEMS !FTER INVENTORY
THAT WE' ARE REDUCING TO ·•••

8, Wood . 4 · 4 12; Walker , 3-2 8;
Carter , 3-0-6and Fra sher. 1 2 4
Totals 16-13-45 .
Wahama ( 85) - Bu11ard . 9
5 23 , F ergu son , 204, Keef er ,
1 4 6; Lew is , 4-2 10 : Kern , 2-4
8 ; D ewhur st . !I J 19 ; Jonnson ,
3 1 7 ; Holbrook . 2 0 4 ; Tu c ker .
1 0 2 ; T . Tu c ker , 0 2 '1 Totals
J:Z -21 -B.'i .
Bv Quarters :
10 1 16 12- 45
Sou t hwes tern
Wahama
16 11" '13 25- 85
Reserve Score Wa hama
38,•SW 28 .

'
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Imps
"'

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FURNITURE

:' LOGAN - A driving layup
::; by 5-8 sophomore Brett Wilson
::: with I :31 left in the game, plus
;:• ·a free throw by the scrappy
"'
guard with . nine seconds
A
,
, re mainin g
ca rried .,the
~ Gallipolis Blue [mps to a
: thrilling 43·41 Southeastern
:;: Ohio Reserve League victory
::;: over the Logan Papooses here
~ Friday night.
~ It was the Imps ' third con~ secutlve two point victory , The
:: win left Coach Willard (Buddy)
;: Moore's crew in undisputed
., third place in· the reserve
!; standings with a 3-2 mark.
; Overall, the Imps are 4-2.
~ Coach Jack Elgin's Papooses
', dropped to 4-4 on the year, and
" 2-3 inside the league,
~~ After ·trailing briefly in the
-~ initial period, the Imps held a
:, 11-8 first quar(.,r advantage.
: GAHS led 26-20 during the
:, halftime intermission.
"' The Imps built up their
••• largest lead of the game, 34-26,
:; with 2:14 left in the third
:: period. It was 3&amp;-30 in favor of

END TABLES
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COLEMAN MODERN
S PIECE WALNUT

GOING FOR TWO - Southern senior center Norman
Curfman drives for two points in Friday night's 67-54 victory over Symmes Valley. Moving in too late are Vikings
Jaye Myers (55) and Paul Brown (53).

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COMIN' THROUGH - Southern Tornado. guard Bob
Miller , who ripped the nets for 21 points, drives through
Symmes Valley defenders Don Quesenberry (21) an
Paul Brown (53) and fires away in Friday night's 67-54
triumph over the Vikings, The win kept the Tornados just one
game behind league-leading Hannan Trace who tripped
Eastern.

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The Sweeper That Takes
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Gallipolis, Ohio

SEOAL RESERVES
., TEAM
W L P
"' Jac kson
5 () 247
,., Ironton
5 0 25 1
II'
Gallipolis
3 2 22 1
~· Logan
2 3 234
Athens
2 3 169
.. M eig s
2 3 192
Waver l y
1 A 176
... Wellston
6 5 165
" TOTALS
20 20 1655
~
Friday's Results:
Gall ipolis .43 Logan 41
, .,. Athens J5 Waverly 22
.~
Jackson 72 Wellston 23
, • {_ yon t on ·57 Meios 141
·~ ' Tuesday 's Gam~s:
·• Log an a t Athens •
J ac k.~on at Gallipol is
'
'• Waver(y at Ironton
~ We ll stCin at MeJg!
.
::
SEOAL FROSH
.~
TEAM ..
W L P
,i, Logan
4 0 224
...,J
Gall i polis
4 0 167

,;
N

~~~~~~n

~ ~

Ironton
Meigs

2
2

~ ~=~~:;~~
TOTALS

.,
"&lt;~&lt;~

~~,,.

:
•
..,

h!"
-·

.,.
:;

3
3

g:

199
167

OP
181
191
200
224
176
20 1
170
312
165S

OP ·110
114

l~:

195
179

ri : ~~~ fl!~

19 19 1358 1358
Thursday's Re suns :
Iron ton 51 Meigs .42
Jackson- 37 We l lston 24
Ga ll ipOlis -Logan,_ ppnd, r eset
Jan. u .
Athens 32 Waverly 25
Monday's Games :
Athens at Logan
Gallipolis at Jackson
Ironton at Waverly
Meigs at We llston

"' F1VE CARDS SIGN
:_; _ ST .WUIS (UPI) -St. Louis
~ Cardinal pitcher Bob Gibson, ·
:; 12-IOin 1973and the club leader
• with a 2. 77 ERA although
~ missing 55 days after undergo,:~ ing knee surgery for an injury,
C was among five Cardinals
:,: Friday to become the first to
:;_ sign' contracts lor 1974.

ir

. . ,.~~·,~·····'!~&lt;\! ~~··~·········. . •••
...

Blu e Imps ( 43 1 - Owens 3 17 ; John son 4-3-11 ; Saun d er s 2-4·
8; Folden 2-l -5.; W i lson 5-2-12.
Totals 16 -.Jl -43.
Papooses (41) - M eadows 10 2:
Mu l ho ll and
1-0 2 ;
Robine tt e 4-0 -8 ; Seet 4-0-8;
Mara 4 5- 13; Unge r 2-04 ;
Flower s 0-0 -0 ; L anning 2-0-4;
Ha r den o 0-0 ;· Cl ar k o o a.
Miller 0-0·0. Tolal s 18-S-4 1.
Score by quarters:
Blu e Imps
11 15 10 7- 43
Papooses
8 12 10 11 - 41

sinkin g 24 of 47 attempts [or
51.6 pet. GAHS also l1ad its best
nig ht of the yea r at the charity
stripe, sinking: seven of eight
for 87.5 pet. The Devils had 15
personals, and picked off 34
reboun&lt;ls. GAHS commit(.,d 16
turnq,vers, 10 in the first half,
none in the third pe riod .
Logan entered the contest
as the lop shooting learn in
the conference (53 pet.) ,
After the final horn sounded,
the Chiefs had connected on
21 of 61 field goal attempts
for 34.4 pet., their lowest
shooting performa nce of
the 1973
74 camChiefs
paign.
The
hit seven or 12 free throw
attempts for 58.3 pet. ,
committed only nine personal fouls, and collected 27
rebounds. Jim Kemper
picked off II snags lor the
losers. Logan had 12 turnovers.
GAHS held 4-(J and 10-4 leads

early in the first stanza. Lugan
tallied seven straight markers
to take its first lead, 11-10, with
1:25 left in the first period . Gil
Price and Jefl Campbell
traded buckets as the first
period ended with Logan on
top, 13-12.
Two quick goals by Jim
Niday gave GAHS a 16-13 lead
in the se~nd period. After Jim
Pierce and Tom Valentine
traded goals, GAHS ripped off
fi ve straight points for a 23-17
advantage with 4:33 left in the
ha lf.
Logan then blanked the
Gallians for two minutes and
fifty.nine seconds, scor in g
eight Wlanswered points for a
25-23 lead at the 1:49 mark.
Price's short jumper broke
the dry spell fo r GAHS with
1:34 left in the half. Pierce's
long jumper gave Logan a 27-25
lead with 41 seconds left. Niday
count.&gt;red with a long jumpe;
with four seconds left in the

half and it was 27-all at halftime.
The game's turning point
came dur ing the first 2:35 of
the third period. Niday, Price
and Snowden learned up to
tally eight straight points for
GAHS while the Chiefs failed to
score. That made · it 35-21,
Gallipolis, wi th 5:28left in the
third s Ianza .
At this point, Tom Valentine
returned to the lineup. The
jWJior forward hit two long
jumpers, enabhng GAHS to
maintain an eight point spread,
39-31, with 3:12 left in the

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Gallipolis IS now 5-I on the
year. GAHS is in undisputed
second place inside the SEOAL
with a 4-1 mark, Logan is s-i
overall, and 3-2 inside the loop.
Tuesday, GAHS will host a
scrappy Jackson quintet.
Game time is 7:30p.m. Logan
visits Athens .

7- 16

o.o

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SPEC IAL RATES TO,
CHURCH GROUPS,
PARTIES, STUDENTS .

0-0
2&lt; ·47
7-8
LOGAN CHIEFTAINS (49)
FG-A FT-A PF
Q.J

TOTALS
PLAYER-Pos .
Jim Pierce, g
Mi te~ Wright. I
Don Young , I
Jim Kemper . f
Jeff Campbell. I
Bill Ha r we ll. I

RB

TO

TP

34

2

2

2

17

J.8

Q. Q

2

2

6

J.9
5· 15

2-2
2·5

0
2

J.8
00
0-0
0·0

0·0
0· 1

no

Del Lindsey, g
Scotl Gosnell. g

o. I
21 -61

Dave Krebs. f
TOTALS

o

e

4

II

2

12

00

1
0
0
0

4
0
0
0

4
0
1
0

•
0
0
0

0 0
7-12

0
9

0
27

1
12

0
49

o.o

Score bv Qua r t ers :
Ga l l i polis Blue Dey its

12
13

Logan Ch iefta i n ~

15
14

e

14
8

14
1.4 --

446-3362

"A ll New AMF Equipment"
Upper Rt, 7 Kanauga, Ohio

55
49

•

--'--

~-=:­

..

--

Point Pleasant
Building
&amp; Loan

~ .

Association

PHONE (304) 675-2500
612 Viand St.
Point Pleasant
There have been more words printed and spoken about savings accounts in the last few
months then we've ever heard before. You have been bombarded with claims and advice. If
you aren't confused, it's a miracle . Here are the facts which you should know .
Present law allows us to pay at least one, quarter percent more interest on our savings p lans
than any bank . We now pay these top rates.
Some institutions pay interest semi-annually or annually - WE PAY QUARTERLY . We also
can work out a monthly income plan on certificates with a term of two years or more,
$10,000.00 minimum, and mail your check monthly.
'

As specialists in savings investments we list below the many types of accounts which are
available . . . . to suit you .

•
'1,000.00 MINIMUM

•
PASSBOOK ACCOUNTS DEPOSIT

6 MONTHS

•
'1,000.00 MINIMUM

•
ss,OOO.OO MINIMUM

l2 .MONTHS

24 MONTHS

J

SEE THE LATEST
PATIERNS
OF
.,

•
'5,000.00 MINIMUM

.

CONGOLEUM

30 MONTHS

THE NO WARP •..SHINYL VINYL.
WE GIVE ESTIMATES
,
AND INSTALL AT...

•
ss,OOO.OO MINIMUM
48 MONTHS

•
All savings certificates automatically renewable.

GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERI"G
Gallipolis

Pn. 446:1995

The federal l;~w states "if a withdrawal is made before maturity, all earnings must be
reduced to the curren.t passbook rate plus an additional 90 days interest" on all "savings
certificates.

--·

-•
'

advantage .

GALliPOLIS BLUE DEVILS ISS!
PLAYER - Pos.
FG·A FT-A PF RB TO TP
M ike Si ckles, I
1·2
1-2
4
4
5
3
Tom Va lentin e. I
6-9
2-2
J
4
o
14
Ga r y S(lowden . f ·9
l -3
0-0
'1
o 1 'l

1974?

749 Third Ave. ·

period . GAHS led 41-35 after
three periods. Logan managed
only eight points in this can to.
During the final period,
GAHS maintained anywhere
from a four to eight point

SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP

ANY AMOUNT ANYTIME. NO NOTICE
FOR WITHDRAWAL HIGHEST LEGAL
RATE PAID.

NEED ANEW

•

'

64

SEO standings

~

·.~

"Wf m THi OLDEST MOll! I NO'I'I DIAIIR IN U OHIO."

66

River View 5 4 Zanesvi ll e
Rosecrans 39
West .Holmes 71 Orrville 33
Woos t er 49 Dover 44
Por t smouth N D 63 Portsmouth
East 53
Miami Centra l Ca tt10t i c 68
Shawnee 57
Man sfi el d Senior 74 Sandus ky
46
Mans fi el d St . P eters 100 Tiffin
Ca l vert 69
W illar d 66 BtJcyrus 43
Ontario 69 Crest l ine 49
Zanesville 65 Upper Ar l ington

fourth quarter to cut the Imps'
lead to two, .40-311, with 1:49
remaining.
Wilaon made it 42-38 with a
layup at the 1:31 mark. Mike
Mara, 6-4 sophomore ·cent&lt;&gt;r,
hit a free throw with 1:14 left,
a nd 5-9 sophomore guard
Chuck Clark scored a twinpointer on a steal with 38
seconds left to cut the Imps'
margin to one, 42-41.
The teams exc hanged
missed three throws with 12
and 11 seconds left. Wilson then
canned a free throw wi th nine
seconds left. A desperation
shot by Logan at the buzzer
was off target.
The Imps hit 16 of 40 field
att.&gt;mpl• for 40 pet. At the foul
circles, the Mooremen were 11
of 21 for 52 pet. The Imps
committed only 11 personals
and hauled down 24 r~bounds.
David Owens, 6-2 soph omore
ce n(.,r, picked off nine caroms
for the winners. The Imps had
10 turnovers.
Wilson paced the Imps'
scoring attack with l2 points.
Brent Johnson , 5-7 freshman
guard, added II. Mara was the
only Papoose in double figures
with 13 markers.
The Imps will host co-league
leader Jackson in a 6 p.m.
gam e Tuesday, The Ironboys
are 7-1 overall, losing only to
Chillicothe, 62-38, in a nonleague outin g · over the
holidays. Inside the SEOAL,
the Ironboys are tied for first
place with Ironton with a :Hl '
mark .
Friday's box :

"

~

Carter &amp; Evans Inc.
Olive St.

Ohio High School
Baske tball Scores
By United Press International
N ew Philade lph ia 70 Cosho c ton

.,

ON ALL STYLES OF

ONlY (I) On Display
CANNOT RE·ORDER

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. (2) KIRKWOOD MOBILES

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-il • CARPETED THROUGHOUT
• A REAl BEAUTYI

..

eSWVAGS •POLES. •TREES
eTRAYS •TABLES
SOME TABLE LAMPS IN PAIRS

GAHS aft&lt;&gt;r three periods.
Logan, behind John Lanning,
6-2 sophomore forward, Bill
See!, 6-2 sophomore forward,
and Tim Mulholland , 5-8
sophomore guard, rallied in the

Sh eridan 62 Tri -Va t ley 60
West Musk.ingum 70 New
L eKin gton 6-4
F indla y 72 Marion Ha rd in g 61
Danvi lle 56 Co lumbu s H ard ing
61
.
Find lay 72 Marion Hardin g 61
Danv i l l e
56 Columbus
Aca dem y 55
Miami T r ace 72 Mad i son
Pla ines 59
Sou th Poin t 66 Coa l Gro ve 55
Spr i ngfield
Shawnee
58
Tecum seh 53
Mar ietta 72 La r.... ste r 71
Can ton Linco ln 52 Cleve Est 40
.,
ALL GAMES
Can ton Lehman 61 Cuyahoga
., TEAM
W L P OP
Faits 60
t~~ Waver l y
7 1 515 409
Massil lon 58 A l lia n ce 46
"" Gallipolis
5 1 375 286
Ma rl i"ng ton 61 Can t on Sou t h 59
~ Po r tsmouth
8 2 739 624
Canton CC 55 Akro n Buchte l 53
• w. South Point
a 2 698 562
CQIS Wa ln ut R idge 72 Cols
.~ L ogan
6 2 573 .460
Marion Frank 58
'"' Wheelersburg
S J 489 416
Col s South 95 Co ls Nor th 81
:;. Athens
5 4 505 482
Col s Cen tra l 85 Co ls Eas t 80
110')
Chesapeak e
J 4 370 423
(otl
'~ Ironton
J 5 478 563
Co ts Whetstone 63 Co ls West 61
wl Jackson
3 s 49 2 544
Worth ington 50 De l awa r e 37
:; Wellston
1 6 275 494
Whitehal l 82 Reynoldsburg 65
$'1
Meigs
1 7 451 523
C61s Wa tt er son 60 Co ls Hartley
..,.
Non- L ea gu e R es ults:
57
otol
So uth Point 66 coal Grove 55 Cots St . Charles 61 Co ls Desale s
., Wheel er sbu rg 62 Green 28
49
:r.._Porlsmouth 73 Spr ingfield
Cots Ready 72 Co ts Wehrle 46
,.. So ut h 66
Groveport 60 Hi l li ard .45
~·
SEOAL VARSITY
Grove City 50 Bexfey 47
TEAM
W l P OP
Dublin 54 Oten tan gy &lt;13
;:: Waver l y
s 0 3111 230 · T eays Valley 79 Frank li n
4 1 302 238
, Ga l l i polis
Heights 75
~· Iron t on
3 2 300 291
Ma r ietta 72 Lan caster 71
.,.. Athens
3 2 294 258
Cols
No rthl and
7'1
Co l s
~. Logan
3 2 341 28 1
Brookhaven 60
... Jackson
2 3 322 337
Cols Eas tm oor 60 Co ts L inden
Me ig s
0 5 279 335
McK inley 58
(' Wel l ston
0 5 169 378
Cols Mohawk 75 Cols Mifflin 66
.... TOTALS
:ZO 20 2348 2348
Westervitte 65 Wes tl and 61
"'"
Friday's Re sults :
M t . ver non 50 Gahanna 48
..... Ga llipolis 55 Log'an 49
Urb ana 63 London 60
&gt;11;1
Waverly 47 Athens 44
Gr andview 77 west Jeffer son
~ Ironton 65 Meigs 62
.... Ja ck son 73 Wel l ston 35

..'"

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An Economical,
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WRIGHT FLOORED- Logan's Mitch Wright (on rioor, in whit&lt;&gt; uniform ) is tied up by
llallla'sTom Valentine (23) and Jim Niday ( 11 ) dur ing Friday night's SEOAL battle at Logan.
Looking over the situation on left is GAHS cen(.,r Gil Price (25 ). Gallia 's Mike Sickles 131)
closes' in on play. (Steve Wilson photo ).

LOGAN - Sparked, by, 6;~
junior guard Jirri Niday 's 22
points and
outs tanding
defensive play, Coach Jim
Osborne's Ga llipolis Blue
Devils surprised the powerful
Logan Chieftains 50-49 before a
packed house here Friday
night.
Coach Scott Fitzgerald's
Chieftains en(.,red the contes t
with an impressive 6-1 record
and was unbeaten in four starts
on their Hilltop cour t prior to
Friday's big battle. Too, the·
Chieftains were averag ing 74.8
points per game before the
Important Southeastern Ohio
League hardwood clash.
Favored to captur e this
year's league champions hip by
loop newsmen, the veU&gt;ran
Chieftains led the Gallipolitans
only fo ur times, all in the first
half, never more than two
poin ts. The score was tied four
times during the fi rst half.
"Our defense did the job,"
remarked Coach Osbo rne
following the Gallians' hardfought victory. "Niday was
boWJd to burn somebody. He's
a darn good shooU&gt;r. They just
had to. sta rt falling in, and
ton ight was the ni gh t," continued Osborne . Pri or to the
game, Niday was 17 of 63 from
the field for 27 pet. He connected on nine of 14 attempts
against LHS, and wasH at the
fo ul circles to finish the night
with a game high 22 points : '
Niday was named player of the
week by Coach Osborne .
"Niday's defensive pla y
was really something In the
second half," Os bor ne
· contloued. After Jtm Singer
picked· up his third personal
foul midway In the second
period (Singer was guarding
th.;, Chiefs' high-scoring
playmaker Jim Pierce )
Niday took on Pierce, and
limited the Chieftain ace to
only two buckets th e
remainder of th e game.
Pie,rce finish ed the game
with 17 points, two below his
season average.
"We proved something else
ton ight,' \ Osborne said . "Gil
Price doesn't have to score lots
' of points ln order for us .to
win.'"Osborne was referri ng to
~ice's· 21 reboWJds, a season
high, his almost flawless floor
play, and at leas t 10 blocked
Logan shots. Price ta llied 14
points for the winners.
Tom Valentine, in foul
trouble ear ly in the game, hung
in there to finish with 14 points.
Mike Sickles, off-form early in
the contes t, ca me back strong
in the final period, hauling
down three key reboWJds afwr
the Chiefs narrowed the ga p to
four points. Too, Sickl es' lone
bucket of the night, a double
clutching layup with 58 seconds
left, all but ass ured the
Gallians of a victory ,
Gary Snowden came off the
bench to fill in at both guard
positions.
and · forward
Snowden's lone g'oal ·with 5:28
left in the third period gave the
Gallians their first eight point
advantage. GAHS led by eight
points on three occasions in the
last half.
Besides turning in the best
defensive effort of the season,
GAHS also enjoyed its best
night from the field this wint&lt;&gt;r,

,

.,

\

�•

..

I•
•

,

•

. •J

'

18 - The Sunday Times , Sentinel, Sunday, J••1. 6: 1974

19 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday. Jan. !;, 1974

SUIT FU,ED
CHICAGO (UP! J - Therese
Halas, wife of George .Halas
Jr., president of t.he Chicago
Bears football team and t.he
, son of George Halas, founder
and owner of the Bears, filed
for divorce Friday on grounds
of mental cruelty.
Mr s. Halas, 33, asked
custody of the couple's two
children as well as a "fair
property settlement."

.Waverly colneback _It ips Athens, -4 ~7:-4!:,.. ,. , _. .,....,
,/

WAVERLY .,.. Arter trailing
the Athens Bulldogs for three
quart ers Friday ' night the
Waverly Tigers came back' in
.the final period to edge past
Athens 47-H .
The wm kept the Waverly
quintet undefeated in league
com petiti on while Athens
dropped into a tie with Logan
for third place.
Playing before a packed
house in "Hawhee 's Palace"
Coach Cha rli e McAfee 's
Bulldogs blew a W-point third
period lead. traded points
throughout the hectic fourth

period, and finally lost out irl
the final two mmutes to 1newell executed Waverly stalling
game.
The two SEOAL powers
played to a !4-H deadlock in
the first period but Athens

IRONTON - The Ironton
Tigers. pulling out to a 13 point
lead in the fourth quarter, hung

•.

y

,.•

'~

t

••
•
••
••

.,
...•
•

'l

'

·'

'

.,•
•

v

NEW YORK (UPIJ - 0 . J. Ye~r Award for the second
Simpson, No. I in the National straight year. He set a single
Football League 's record game rushing record of 250
books, is also No. I in the minds yards against New England in
the season opener, carried a
of the voters.
Simpson, who esl&lt;lblished a record 39 times in another
single-season rushing record of game against Kansas City and
2,003 yards this season, then capped a bnlliant season
Saturday
was
selected with a 203-yard performance
unanimously as United Press against the New York Jets in
International 's
American the season finale to go over the
2,000-yard mark.
Conference Player of th Year.
Simpson's 2,003 yards easily
Simpson, who helped the
Buffalo Bills to their best surpassed the previous record,·
record ( 9-5) since !966, was l,863 set by Jim Brown and
named by all 39 sports writers esl&lt;lblished Simpson as the
- three from each conference dominant runner in the game
dty - who participated in tte today. But while records fell all
voting,
around him, the congenial
The former Heisman Trophy Simpson always managed to
'
winner
from
Southern give credit to his linemen.
"They're the guys who do it
California, who had his
problems during his first few for me," he said. "Without
seasons, put it all together this them, I'm nothing back there. I
year to earn the Player of the don 't go anywhere unless they
open up the holes for me."

Pro Standings
NBA Standir~gs
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
w . 1. pet. g.b.
Boston
New York

29
8 . 784
25 17 .595
18 22 .450

6 ~
12' ''
1

Buffalo
Ph ilade lphia
12 28 .300 18 1' J
Cenlral Division
w. 1. pel. g.b .
Cap ital
21 16 .568
Atlanta
19 20 .487
3
14 27 .3dl
9
Houston
Cleveland
14 26 .3 33
9 1/ •

Western Conferer1ce
Midwest Division

'.

..
.,

I

·.'i
,,

·'•••'

...,•
••
"

.."' .

..,.

w . I. pet. g .b.
31
9 .775

Milwaukee
Chicago
Detroi t

29 13 .690 3
26 16 .619 6
KC -Omaha
16 28 .364 17
Pacific Division
w. 1. pet . g .b .
LosAngeles
23 18 .561
Gol denSiate
17 19 472
J'11
Portland
17 23 .425
5' 1z
seattle
18 28 .391
7' ·~
Phoenix
16 25 .390 7
Friday's Result~
Phila 78 New York 75
Capital 94 Cle11e l and 91
Detroit 106 Boston 10 1
KC -Omaha 122 Phoenix 97
Los Ang 114 Golden St . 111
Houston 119 Portlancf 113
Seattle 103 Chicago 101, ot
(On ly games scheduled)

'~

••
••
,.''
"••

••••
.,
•,
•

I~ !

ABA Standings
By United Pre~s lnlernational

East

w. L
25 14
26 16
25 16
11 25
11 31
west

Kentucky
Carolina
New York
Virginia
Memphis .

pet. g .b.
.641
.619
.610
.306

'lz
1
12 '12

.262 15 1h

w. I. pet . g .b.

Utah
Ind ian a
San Antonio
Denver
San Diego

23
22
21
11!
18

Friday ~ s

15 .605
HI .550
21 .500
20 .474
24 .429

2
4
5
7

Results

Kentucky 125 Memphis 102
New York 109 Den11er 92
San Antonio 112 San Diego 105
(On ly games sch~duled l

on against a late M~igs rally to
top the Marauders. 6:;.&lt;)2, here
Friday night.
The cagers of Ruger Brauer
were down o:J-50 witl1 llme
ticking away in the fina l period
when the Marauders rallied
behind the shooting of junior
guard Lonnie Coats to pull
within 3 at the buzzer, outscoring the Tigers 12·2 in the
final minutes.
The Tigers'llad pulled out to
a 13-9 first quarter lead before
Meigs, behind the scoring of
sophomore forward Terry
Qualls who tol&lt;lled 16 points on
the night, hit for 21 second
period points to knot the score
30-30 at intermission

IJ ; Romig 3 ·0 -0 ; Chon' ko 6-1-T3;
4 2 - 10 .

the Tigers had J·ust two, and . Locke 1-0 2 : Ma ce
TOTALS 19-6-44 .
this proved to be important.
WAVERLY {47) ~

Following Shoemaker's goal,

.
d
Marau e·r s

5-1 0
8-75
4-7
1-2

TOTALS

3-8
J 4
2-2
0-0

0-0

o.o
o.o

27 -71

11 -22

0-0

Tom Dilly

17
9
3
1

0

0
46

3
'
2
0

0
0
16

13
18
10
2

0
0
6S

MEIGS (62)

Player
Terfy Qual! s
Bi ll Myers
Dan Dodson
Jerry Cremean s
Steve Price
Lonnie Coats
Orr ion Blan chard
(h ip Brauer

FG-A FT-A Reb . PF Pts .
7-13
2·3
4
'
16
1-7

2-3

I1

4

6-21

4·5

13

37
1-9
57

2-2
00

B
0

1
t
4

B
2

01

0

1

10

0 1

0-0

1

I

36

0-0

3

0
6

26-71

10-14

40

2
tB

Score by quarters :
Iront on
Meigs

Thomas
5-0 10 : Tracy 2-1-5 ; Dudu_1t 5-0-

lO: Shoemaker 6 .o 12; Swmdter

s.o.JO TOT Ats 23 · 1·".
Score lly quarten :

Athens

14 lJ 13'

Wave'rly
Re!&gt; erves:
Waverly 22 .

14 12 10 11 - 47
Athens
35,

13
9

17 15
21 12

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.

16'

62

Reason 8. H &amp; R Block is a
year-round service. We do
not disappear after
April 15th.

65
62

20
20

Toron to
20
Cleveland 17

18

3 43 154 131

16

4

Quebec
Chicago

18
16

3 37 140 128
2 36 119 123

17
17

Jer se y

)5 20 2 32 99
West
w. 1. t . ~:~ts gf
Houston
19 12
4 42 137
Edmonton 20 17 0 40 129
Winnipeg II! 19 4 4.0 135
Minnesota 19 17
1 39 f 34
Vancouver 15 23 0 30 131
LosAng
14 24 0 28 114
Friday's Results
N ew England 4 Winnipeg 3
Los Ange les 4 Edmon1on 3
(Only game scheduled)

128

ga

102
11a
142
130
15)
151

,annan

VETERANS I

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AVAILABLrNOW!
NO DOWN PAYMENT·
12 -YRS. to pay.
CHOICE LOTS AVAILABLE WITH APPROVED WATER
&amp; SEWER, GALLIPOLIS SCHOOL .DISTRICT
PURCHASE LOT AND MOBILE HOME
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WHY PAY LOT RENT?
STOP IN TODAY AND LET US SHOW YOU HOW
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l YNE CENTER SCHEDULE- Rio Grande College

DATE - GYMNASIUM
Mon. - 8-10 Col lege Recreation
Tues .- 8-10 Col lege Recrealion
Wed. - 8-10 Col lege Recreation
Thurs . -Ciosed, Jun . Var s. Basketbal l
Riovs. Ky. Chr istian -8:00p .m .
Fri.- 8-10 Open Recrea tion
Sat.- Ciosed, Women' s Basketball
Rio vs . Wright State-2:00p.m.
Sun . -2·-4 Open Recreation
8-10 Open Recreation

POOL
e.q College Sw im
8-9 Open Swim
8 -9 College Swirp
Closed

8-9 Open Swim
Closed
2-4 Open Swim
8·9 Open Sw im

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
304 E. Main
991-3795 Pomeroy

NHL Standings

27 Sycamore
Gallipolis, Ohio

Open9til5
Mon . lhru

By United Pre ss International

Sat.

Open 9til6
Weekdays
9loSSal .

No Appointment Necessary

East

c71W1(1{, W'~·

OOIIE.BLOCM

Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-9340
Galli!)olis. Ohio

w. I. t . Jlls gl ga
Boston

25

6

4

Montreal 20
Toronto
18
NY Rangrs 17

9
13
13

1
9

54 161

94

6 46 123 97
43 136 109
43 136 121

Buffalo
18
Detro it
14
NY istandrs 8
Vancouver a

15 4 40 126 120
20 4 32 120 156
18 11 27 87 115
21
7 23 95 136
West
w. 1. t. pts gf ga
Phila
n 8 4 48 108 60
Chicago
17 a 11 45 122 73
Atlanta
16 14 1 39 94 100
St. Louis
16 12 6 38 99 87
Minnesota 12 16 a 32 1Q8 119
Los Ang
11 19 6 28 10 1 12 1
Pittsburgh 9 23
5 23 93 142
California 8 24 5 21 90148
Friday' s Results
Boston 4 NY Rangers 2
{ On IX gam~ s.chedu l ed l

our
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for all your deposits, checking

CARAVAN'S COMING!

as ~ell as savings, for all
loans, safe deposit box or
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HO·W ABOUT YOU?
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&lt;

new

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We operate on an allocation of so many cars a

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month. We HAVE cars in stock at the
PRESENT. Be smart - ~ct NOW. Please
don't wait until you have to be put on a waiting
list to purchase a car clhat you can afford to
drive. as well as get you where you have to go
on a gasoline alloci)tion.

lis. 0.

BY DENNY FOBES
49, but Southern canned 20 for
C
TUPPRRS
PLAINS - Class A powerhouse
41 pet., while the Wkes made 19
for 37 pet.
Hannan Trace . behind the work of junior guard
The Tornados hit a good 75
Mark Swai n. thumped the Eastern Eagles Rl -53 here
pet. from the charity stripe or.
Friday night. all but eliminating the Meigs Coun?:i o( 36, while Symmes Valley
lians f~om the SVAC title race .
put in only 16 of 28.
The loss was the third for Bill Phillips' crew in
Senior Vern Ore led Southern
loop play . leaving them a full three games behind
rebounders, harnessing 13
the Wildcats who remain undefeated at 6·0 in the
lnissed slots. Team rebounding
SVAC.
sl&lt;lts were close, with the
Tornados garnering 40 and the
Swain. bringing !he ball up court against the
Vikes 38.
Eastern press and moving excell ently without the
In the preliminary battle, the
ball. ripped the cords [or 3~l points on 16 field goa ls
Tornados made it 2-0 for the
and-a free throw,
night, topping the Synunes
the yea r," Dillon said, citing
Valley junior varsity, 46·34.
The Eagles, down by 18, 40the fi.5senior's 15 rebounds and
Shultz, Danny Brown and
22, at Intermission, were still
17 points.
in the· game until the third
Roberts ted the Southern ofLusher also garnered 15
period when Swain ripped
fense, hitting for 13, 10 and 10
caroms for the Wildcats.
points respectively.
the nets for 18 ol the Wild·
In the preliminary game ~ the
Estep's markers topped the
cats' 22 third stanza points
Symmes Valley scorers.
for a 27 point bulge at 62-35. .. Wildcats made it a perfect
Seorlngbyquarters:
The Eagles drew first blood night, rallymg past the Eastern
Southern
18 17 17 15--67 at the 1:42 mark of the initial reserves, 42-34.
The Eagles led 22-18 at .ins. Valley
6 17 16 15--!i4 quar ter on a layup by senior
te
rmi ssion, before Hannan
Southern (67) _ Curfman 3- center Steve Dill, but that was
1-7, Sayre 7-4-18, Theiss 2-0-4, the last time Eastern was on Trace came back to take a 29·
271ead after three periods.
Ord 2-3-7, Miller 4-13-21, top.
J . D. McG uire led the
Warner 2-5-9, Nease 0-1-1.
Senior center Don Wells, who
Symmes Valley (54) _ scored 17 points and pulled in Wildcat atl&lt;lck , hitting for 12
Brown 0-1-1, Bennett 1-0-2, 15 rebounds.' knotted the count points.
John Blake and Don
Jaye Myers 5-2-12, Burcham 2· at 2-all, smkmg a patr of
7-ll, Jim Myers ~-1·11, Jones 4• chanty tosses, followed by a Eichinger led the Eagle of2·11
Que·senberry J-2· 4 • Swam layup at the 5:50mark to fense , scoring 20 and II points
respectively for Duane Wolfe's
Br.dnmer ~-I 3.
' give the Wildcats a 4·21ead.
Eastern
guard
Steve
Goebel
reserves.
Reserve scoring by quar·
entered
the
game
at
the
2:50
Scoring by quarters:
ters:
mark
and
proceeded
to
steal
·
Hannan
Trace 16 24 'l2 19--81
Southern
13 12 II la..-46
the
ball twice in a row , scoring Eastern
10 12 13 18--53
S. Valley
7 5 14 8--34
on
a
layup
the
first
time
and
Hannan
Trace
t811 - Lusher.
Southern (46) - Shultz 6-1·
setting
up
a
Dill
tip
on
the
6-4-16,
Hesson
5-1-11,
Hall 0-2-2,
13; Bass 1-0-2, Cross l.fl-2,
tied
the
score
second
theft
that
Wells
7-3-17,
Swain
16-1·33,
Brown 3-4-10, Dunning 2.().4,
for
the
last
time
at
10-10
with
Sanders 0.().{), Halley 1-0-2,
Roberts 5-0-10, Huffman 1-0-2,
2:32
remaining
in
the
first
Montgomery 0-tHl.
Curfman 1-J-3.
quarter
.
Eastern (53) - Dill 6-0-12,
Symmes Valley (34) But
Wildcat
forward
John
Spencer
2-2-J;, Sheets 3-0-6,
Brammer 2-2-J;, Lester 0-1-1,
Lusher
canned
a
sweeping
Baum
0-1-1,
Atherton 1-0-2,
Miller 4-0·8, Estep 5·0·10,
hook
a
minute
later
to
.
put
Goebel 3-0-6, Milhoan 2-0-4,
Schaffer 2-0-4, Robinson 1-0-2,
Hannan
Trace
on
top
for
good
Hollon 1·1·3, Weber 1·1·3, Orr 0Saunders 1·1·3.
at 12·10.
1-1, Bailey 3-3-9.
Twenty-four second period
Reserve scoring by quar·
points gave the Wildcats that ters:
HI-point halftime bulg•, setting H. Trace
7 II II 13--42
ui&gt; Swain's spurt tha t put the Eastern
Consignment Sales of Farm Machinery
13 9 5 7- 34
game completely out of reach.
LPNDON, OHIO
Hannan Trace (42) Swain, of course, with his 33 Cremeans 2'6-10, Sheets 0-1·1,
SALE DATES FOR 1974
points, was the game's top McGuire 4-1·12, Wells 3-2-8,
scorer. He got excellent Shaffer 4-0-8, Petrie 1-1·3 ,
balanced help from Wells with Halley 0-0-0.
SAVE THIS AD-SAVE THIS AD
17 points and Lusher with 16.
Eastern (34) - Blake 7'6-20,
The
Eagle
atl&lt;lck,
meanJAN. 2-16 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ JUL Y 3
Eichinger 4-3-11, Harris 0-0-0,
while, was led by Dill who got Nelson 0-0-0, Bowen 0-0-0, Good
12 points on six field goa ls.
Feb. 6 - 20---------~-Aug. 7
0-0-0, Barber 0-1-1, Fick 0-0-0,
Hannan Trace mentor Paul Holter 0-0-0, Conde 0-0-0,
Mar. 6-2 0 -- - - - - - - - St!pt.4-18
Dillon, whose cagers are rated Hannum J-0-2.
17th in Ohio in the recent UPI
Aprill-17- - - -- -- - - - 0ct. 2-16
board of coaches poll, called
the
Wildcat effort "The . best
May 1-15- - - - - - - - , -- -Nov.6-20
defensive game of the year for
us."
June 5-19 - - - - - - - - - - Dec . 4-18
" It was just an overall good
team effort," continued the
young coach who is in his
PT. PLEASANT - Before
fourth year at the Mercerv ill e the largest crowd here in a half
school.
dozen years or so. Coach Stan
PHONE 614-852-1887
"The
kids
worked
real
hard
Bucklew's · visiting l"a•,kersSALE TIME 11 A.M.
over the Christmas break. It burg South Pirates defeated
was Don Wells' best game of the Point Pleasant Big Blacks,
74~. Friday night.
South's 6-8 AII-SI&lt;lte senior
Sam Foggin, caged 21 points
and pulled down 18 rebounds.
Big Black Matt Waldie
banged in 20 counters and was
the top rebounder of the. game
with 19 despite fouling out with
fo: 04left in the fourth quarter.
Pointer Joey Given nailed 19
markers and gra bbed 14
rebounds.
The win was the Patriots'
first of the young season. They
have lot three. For the Big
Blacks, who showed lots of
oomph and stamina against a
major foe, the loss left them at
0-2.
The Patriots had the most
accurate pirepower, hitting 56
pet. from the field on 30 of 54.
The Big Blacks put 75 in the
See and hear the
.
air, sinking 26 for 37 pet.
inside story on tbe
In rebounding, South had a
slight edge over their smaller
John Deere Generation][
foe, pulling down 45 caroms to
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McLead 3·1·7, Crislip 3·
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Houser Q..O-O.
_____
Pt. Pleasanti66) - Waldie fl.
•
4-20, Tatterson 4.().8, Given 8-319, Gerlach 3-2-8, Wilson 1-1-3,
Kayser 2·0·4, Jewell · 1·0·2,
Perry 0-0-0. Cottrill!-1).2.

•

I bbe red the Wellston Golden
co
ROckets 73~35.
Itwas strictIY no contest as

JACKSON - Mike Me·
Donald and Tom Conroy
combined for 35 points Friday
night as the Jackson Ironmen

thelronmenracedoffto a20-il

Arno ld 1 o 'l; watts o '1 2 .
Derrow 1-0-7. TOTALS 14-7-H .
JACKSON (JJJ _ Wh-ite J 1
9, Conroy 7-5 19 ; o esre ph en ,1
1_9 ,. McDonald 8 0 16 . Jenk in !'.
2-0-4, Gr illow022 ; Ridge 10
2

F

·

o

0

c

..

Bl!Chanan 2 tJ .4; Gentil 0 -2 2
TOTALS 3111 -73 .
Score by quarters ~
Wel lston
8 4 l2 11 - 35
Ja ckso l't
20 18 14 21 - l l '
ReHrves :
Jackson
72,
Well ston 23 .

first period lead, upped it to 38- i~:-';.;,";;,",;;'";.,;.',jj
. .,;'~·..o;"~in~n~7°.;',;,·- - - - - - - - - - ,
12 at halftime, and entered the
fourth quarter with a 52-24
buldge.
It was reJ&gt;Orted that Coach
Dick McKinzie of Wellston
benched all of his seniors and
went wiUl lhe underclassmen
IRONTON - It was a run the entire conte$1. '
and shoo t iype battle here in
Sl&lt;ltistics of the contest tend
the preliminary to the varsity to lend truth to this as the
battle, as the Ironton reserves Rockets hit just 14 of 57 shots
outran and outshot the Meigs for 25 pet. and made good on
Marauder reserves or coach seven of 12 free throws.
Ron Logan, 57-41 Friday night.
They also picked off 43
for healthy cows and
The Tiger cubs took an 11-7 rebounds with Roger Long
good production
lead after the first quarter, grabbing 13.
increasing it to 29-17 at the half
Long also led the Wellston
and 46-29 after three periods. scorers with nine points with
Purina Da iry M i neral contains a one -to-one calcium .
phosphorus ra tio, plu s a balance ot zinc, copper , organic
Leading the Ironton atl&lt;lck Randy Peoples adding eight
iodine, magnes ium, manganese, cobalt, sulphur and other
were Royal with 20 points and markers.
essent ia l trace mineral s. It has been scientif ical ly for Howard with 12.
mulated to hel p th e milking cow replace those essential
The Ironmen enjoyed a good
minerals th at she may be losing rapidly dur i ng lactation.
Freshman Greg Browning night as they ripped in 31 of 74
Dairy Mineral also is recommended for dry cows and
was the only Marauder to get shots for 42 pet. and converted
heifers . Purina Dairy Mineral is easy to fee~: 1ust provide
into double figures, hitting four '· II of 28 free throws.
i t fr ee ·choice in weather -protected mineral feed ers. Since
this high -quality m.ineral supple ment con tain s n~ salt,
from the field and four at the
Conroy's 19 points led the
fee d plain sa il free ·c hoice in nearby fe eders.. Drop 1n soon
line for 12 points. Sophomore attack with McDonald adding
and let u s show you how l i ttle it costs to Ql\le your cows
Jim Anderson added 8 points . 16.
extra minera l fortifica tion with Purina Dairy Mineral.
Scoring by quarters:
Mark Buchanan picked off
II 18 19 9--57 nine of Jackson's 45 rebounds
Ironton
Meigs
7 10 12 12--41 to pace his team under the
Ironton (47)-Thomas 3-W, boards.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Vine Street
Howard 6-0-12, Atkinson 1-1-3,
The box score :
Crockrell 2-2-J;, C. Brown 3-0-6,
WELLSTON OS) - Sci tes 2
Bartram 1-0·2, Ford 0-0-0, 0-4; Peoples 3·2-8 : Long .4 -1-9.
Royal 10-0-20, M. Brown 1-0-2, McKinnis 2 -2 -6 ; G i ll 1-0-2;
Black 0-0-0, Houston 0-0-0.
Meigs ( 41 ) - Anderson 3-2-a,
Davenport 3-0-6, Browning 4+
12, Marshall 2-1-5, Magnotta I·
0-2, Lewis 0-0-0, Chapman 0-2-2,
Van Meter 0-0-0, Meadows 0-00, Blake 1-0-2, Walburn 2-0-4.
1

Tiger reserves
down Marauders

PURINA
DAIRY MINERAL

J. D. North Produce Co.

ORDER YOUR TOBACCO
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· WUYCIK LOST
GREENSBORO, N.C. iUPl)
- Carolina Cougars' forward
Dennis Wuycik will be lost to
the team indefinitely after
straining ligaments in his right
ankle in a game with Memphis
Thursday night, the Cougars
said Friday,
A team spokesman said
Wuycik's ankle was placed in a
cast Friday morning and will
remain there for at least two
weeks. A second-year pro from
North Carolina, Wuycik has
averaged 5.2 points for 39
games this season.

eBROMOGAS
•FUMIGATION COVERS
,.,
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CENTRAL SOY A
HEAD COACH

OF OHIO

CLINTON, N.Y. (UP!)
Robert J. King, 50, acting head
coach aLHamilton College in
1973, was appointed as head
football coach for the 1974
season, the college announced
Friday.

3rd &amp; Sycamore Streets
Gallipolis. Ohio
"Your Farm Supply Super Mkt.''

CURTIS C. HOWARD &amp; SONS

Californ ia 61 Ore. St. 54
Arizona St . 91 Wyoming 69
Wshbrn 57 So. Colo.' St . 56
0 . Roberts 87 Ppprdine 74

Galli

McDonald,- Conroy pace ]B;cksoti win

·period points; Wells,
Lusher control boards

tops Blacks

'

Upper Rt. 7

Swain hits for 18 third

Parkersburg

•

DON WATTS VOLKSWAGEN

•

as·ts ~

race

LONDON IMPLEMENT AUCTION

MOBILE
HOME SALES
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles

..•

·'

RACINE - The Southern
Tornados, the only team with
a chance of catching leagueleading Hannan 1'race, kept
!hell- 'one game back' pace,
topping the Synunes Valley
Vikings, 67-54, here Friday
night.
Southern's SVAC recoril now
stands at 5-!, just one game
behind the Wildcats at 6-0.
The Purple and Gold 's lead
was never in jeopardy, as the
Tornados jumped out to an 1~
first quarter lead. They held
that 12 point margin 'at intermission , 35-23, before upping the count to 13 at 52-39
after three periods.
Southern mentor Carl Wolfe
was pleased with the Tornado
effort in the first stanza
saying, "We got off to a good
stah. We played as well in that
first period as we have all
year."
uBut then, " continued the
first-year mentor, "we sl&lt;lrted
standing around. II was the
worst defensive game we've
played all year. They must
have gotten the baseline on us
about 10 times."
The Southern offense was led
by ilenior guard Bob Miller who
poured in 21 points, putting on
an excellent free throw show,
sinking !3 in 14 attempts.
He was followed by senior
forward Pete Sayre who
pumped in 18 markers despite
getting in early foul trouble
and not seeing much action.
The Vikings, with a balanced
attack, were led by Jaye Myers
wit.h 12 points, Mike Burcham
and Jim Myers with II each
and Paul Jones with 10.
Synunes Valley got off two
more shots from the field, 51·

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overs in the final quarter while

the Tigers went into a stall; but ·
Still miss.ed the front end of two
one and one situations as
Athens fouled in an attempt to
·
get the ball.
F inally with 20 . seconds
remainin g Tim Duduit stole the
ball and raced m for a layup
shot that sealed the victory for
Waverly.
Ironton, who was led by Dave
Qualls' 16 points were
In a supreme effort to
Rann 's 18 pomts, then pushed complemented by junior center remain und~feated in league
the bulge to 3 pointS, 45-42 at Dan Dodson 's 16, while Coats play the Tigers hit 23of 46 shots
the end of three quarters, chipped in with 10 and soph· for a sizzling 48 pet. and con:
before spurti ng to that 13 point omore Jerry Cremeans added verted one of fiv e free throws.
6 •
lead in the final sl&lt;lnza .
Waverly had 28 rebounds
The lead changed hands and
Fitzpatrick led the Ironton with Shoemaker grabbing nine
the game was t&gt;ed a total of 26 boardmen with 17 caroms, and Wade Thomas seven.
times, with Ironton going out in followed by Rann with 9 and
Athens played well also as
front for good at 37-36 in the Ken Green and Neal with 6 they canned 19 of 45 shots for 42
third period.
each.
pet . and added six of eight free
Meigs last held the lead at 32·
Dodson led . Meigs missed throws.
30 early in the third frame ,
shot sweepers with 13, followed
The Bulldogs netted 22
Helping Rann out in the by senior forward Bill Myers rebounds with Arnie Chonko
scoring column for the Tigers with II and 5-11 Cremeans with grabbing eight to lead in that
were Dean Fitzpatrick with 13 6.
sl&lt;ltistic.
points and Gary Neal and Scott
The Tigers now share the
Waverly will face another
Wylie with 12 and 10 points third spot in the SEOAL with crucial test Tuesday night
respectively .
Athens and Logan at 3-2, while when they travel to Ironton to
the Marauders remain in the fa ce the fast-improving Tigers
league ce llar ·with Wellston, while Athens entertains Logan.
both teams at 0-5 in loop play.
The box score :

IRONTON 16Sl
FG-A FT-A Reb . PF Pts .
4-12
1-3
8
2
9
5 15, 2-5
B
5 12

Player
Ken Green
Gary Nea l
Dean Fitzpatri ck
Da11e Rann
Scott Wylie
Brian Brown
Mark Fairchild

VOLKSWAGEN

~~·

five poin ts of the fourth period ·
to grab a 41-40 lead, whi ch then
saw the lead change four times
until a goal by John Shoemaker
at the 2:19 mark put the Tigers
on top 45-44 .
Athens committed five turn·

.

•
••
•
•

Wildcats still unbeaten

Meigs-Ironton box

TOTALS

WHA Standings
By United Press International

attl'tlll)t to hold thC lead.
Th1s permitted the Tigers tn
tally three S!Ji.aig ht b,.ckets.
two coming off steals , and
.reduced the Athens' lead to 4036 after three quarters.
Wav erly ticked off the first

~rips

Ironton

Simpson named
AFC Player of Year
•,

emerged v.·ith a 27-2\i lmlftime
lead.
In the . third quarter the
Bulldogs gradually tncrea"ed
their lead to 40-:10 with 2:24left •
but appeared to quit moving
toward the basket in a ~a utious

,.

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''FARMING FRONTIER DAYS" .
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JAMES SIGNS
LDU!SVILLE, Ky. ( UPI J Bill James, former Marshall
University sl&lt;lr, Friday signed
as a free agent with the Kentu cky Colonels of the American
Basketba ll Association.

Central Operating Company's
·

Philip Sporn Plant
New Haven, W.Va.

Has Job Openings For Permanent Employment In The Following
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·
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These Jobs Provide Excellent Wages And A Benefits Program Which Includes
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Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate

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\

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•

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18 - The Sunday Times , Sentinel, Sunday, J••1. 6: 1974

19 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday. Jan. !;, 1974

SUIT FU,ED
CHICAGO (UP! J - Therese
Halas, wife of George .Halas
Jr., president of t.he Chicago
Bears football team and t.he
, son of George Halas, founder
and owner of the Bears, filed
for divorce Friday on grounds
of mental cruelty.
Mr s. Halas, 33, asked
custody of the couple's two
children as well as a "fair
property settlement."

.Waverly colneback _It ips Athens, -4 ~7:-4!:,.. ,. , _. .,....,
,/

WAVERLY .,.. Arter trailing
the Athens Bulldogs for three
quart ers Friday ' night the
Waverly Tigers came back' in
.the final period to edge past
Athens 47-H .
The wm kept the Waverly
quintet undefeated in league
com petiti on while Athens
dropped into a tie with Logan
for third place.
Playing before a packed
house in "Hawhee 's Palace"
Coach Cha rli e McAfee 's
Bulldogs blew a W-point third
period lead. traded points
throughout the hectic fourth

period, and finally lost out irl
the final two mmutes to 1newell executed Waverly stalling
game.
The two SEOAL powers
played to a !4-H deadlock in
the first period but Athens

IRONTON - The Ironton
Tigers. pulling out to a 13 point
lead in the fourth quarter, hung

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•
••
••

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v

NEW YORK (UPIJ - 0 . J. Ye~r Award for the second
Simpson, No. I in the National straight year. He set a single
Football League 's record game rushing record of 250
books, is also No. I in the minds yards against New England in
the season opener, carried a
of the voters.
Simpson, who esl&lt;lblished a record 39 times in another
single-season rushing record of game against Kansas City and
2,003 yards this season, then capped a bnlliant season
Saturday
was
selected with a 203-yard performance
unanimously as United Press against the New York Jets in
International 's
American the season finale to go over the
2,000-yard mark.
Conference Player of th Year.
Simpson's 2,003 yards easily
Simpson, who helped the
Buffalo Bills to their best surpassed the previous record,·
record ( 9-5) since !966, was l,863 set by Jim Brown and
named by all 39 sports writers esl&lt;lblished Simpson as the
- three from each conference dominant runner in the game
dty - who participated in tte today. But while records fell all
voting,
around him, the congenial
The former Heisman Trophy Simpson always managed to
'
winner
from
Southern give credit to his linemen.
"They're the guys who do it
California, who had his
problems during his first few for me," he said. "Without
seasons, put it all together this them, I'm nothing back there. I
year to earn the Player of the don 't go anywhere unless they
open up the holes for me."

Pro Standings
NBA Standir~gs
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
w . 1. pet. g.b.
Boston
New York

29
8 . 784
25 17 .595
18 22 .450

6 ~
12' ''
1

Buffalo
Ph ilade lphia
12 28 .300 18 1' J
Cenlral Division
w. 1. pel. g.b .
Cap ital
21 16 .568
Atlanta
19 20 .487
3
14 27 .3dl
9
Houston
Cleveland
14 26 .3 33
9 1/ •

Western Conferer1ce
Midwest Division

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·.'i
,,

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w . I. pet. g .b.
31
9 .775

Milwaukee
Chicago
Detroi t

29 13 .690 3
26 16 .619 6
KC -Omaha
16 28 .364 17
Pacific Division
w. 1. pet . g .b .
LosAngeles
23 18 .561
Gol denSiate
17 19 472
J'11
Portland
17 23 .425
5' 1z
seattle
18 28 .391
7' ·~
Phoenix
16 25 .390 7
Friday's Result~
Phila 78 New York 75
Capital 94 Cle11e l and 91
Detroit 106 Boston 10 1
KC -Omaha 122 Phoenix 97
Los Ang 114 Golden St . 111
Houston 119 Portlancf 113
Seattle 103 Chicago 101, ot
(On ly games scheduled)

'~

••
••
,.''
"••

••••
.,
•,
•

I~ !

ABA Standings
By United Pre~s lnlernational

East

w. L
25 14
26 16
25 16
11 25
11 31
west

Kentucky
Carolina
New York
Virginia
Memphis .

pet. g .b.
.641
.619
.610
.306

'lz
1
12 '12

.262 15 1h

w. I. pet . g .b.

Utah
Ind ian a
San Antonio
Denver
San Diego

23
22
21
11!
18

Friday ~ s

15 .605
HI .550
21 .500
20 .474
24 .429

2
4
5
7

Results

Kentucky 125 Memphis 102
New York 109 Den11er 92
San Antonio 112 San Diego 105
(On ly games sch~duled l

on against a late M~igs rally to
top the Marauders. 6:;.&lt;)2, here
Friday night.
The cagers of Ruger Brauer
were down o:J-50 witl1 llme
ticking away in the fina l period
when the Marauders rallied
behind the shooting of junior
guard Lonnie Coats to pull
within 3 at the buzzer, outscoring the Tigers 12·2 in the
final minutes.
The Tigers'llad pulled out to
a 13-9 first quarter lead before
Meigs, behind the scoring of
sophomore forward Terry
Qualls who tol&lt;lled 16 points on
the night, hit for 21 second
period points to knot the score
30-30 at intermission

IJ ; Romig 3 ·0 -0 ; Chon' ko 6-1-T3;
4 2 - 10 .

the Tigers had J·ust two, and . Locke 1-0 2 : Ma ce
TOTALS 19-6-44 .
this proved to be important.
WAVERLY {47) ~

Following Shoemaker's goal,

.
d
Marau e·r s

5-1 0
8-75
4-7
1-2

TOTALS

3-8
J 4
2-2
0-0

0-0

o.o
o.o

27 -71

11 -22

0-0

Tom Dilly

17
9
3
1

0

0
46

3
'
2
0

0
0
16

13
18
10
2

0
0
6S

MEIGS (62)

Player
Terfy Qual! s
Bi ll Myers
Dan Dodson
Jerry Cremean s
Steve Price
Lonnie Coats
Orr ion Blan chard
(h ip Brauer

FG-A FT-A Reb . PF Pts .
7-13
2·3
4
'
16
1-7

2-3

I1

4

6-21

4·5

13

37
1-9
57

2-2
00

B
0

1
t
4

B
2

01

0

1

10

0 1

0-0

1

I

36

0-0

3

0
6

26-71

10-14

40

2
tB

Score by quarters :
Iront on
Meigs

Thomas
5-0 10 : Tracy 2-1-5 ; Dudu_1t 5-0-

lO: Shoemaker 6 .o 12; Swmdter

s.o.JO TOT Ats 23 · 1·".
Score lly quarten :

Athens

14 lJ 13'

Wave'rly
Re!&gt; erves:
Waverly 22 .

14 12 10 11 - 47
Athens
35,

13
9

17 15
21 12

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.

16'

62

Reason 8. H &amp; R Block is a
year-round service. We do
not disappear after
April 15th.

65
62

20
20

Toron to
20
Cleveland 17

18

3 43 154 131

16

4

Quebec
Chicago

18
16

3 37 140 128
2 36 119 123

17
17

Jer se y

)5 20 2 32 99
West
w. 1. t . ~:~ts gf
Houston
19 12
4 42 137
Edmonton 20 17 0 40 129
Winnipeg II! 19 4 4.0 135
Minnesota 19 17
1 39 f 34
Vancouver 15 23 0 30 131
LosAng
14 24 0 28 114
Friday's Results
N ew England 4 Winnipeg 3
Los Ange les 4 Edmon1on 3
(Only game scheduled)

128

ga

102
11a
142
130
15)
151

,annan

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DATE - GYMNASIUM
Mon. - 8-10 Col lege Recreation
Tues .- 8-10 Col lege Recrealion
Wed. - 8-10 Col lege Recreation
Thurs . -Ciosed, Jun . Var s. Basketbal l
Riovs. Ky. Chr istian -8:00p .m .
Fri.- 8-10 Open Recrea tion
Sat.- Ciosed, Women' s Basketball
Rio vs . Wright State-2:00p.m.
Sun . -2·-4 Open Recreation
8-10 Open Recreation

POOL
e.q College Sw im
8-9 Open Swim
8 -9 College Swirp
Closed

8-9 Open Swim
Closed
2-4 Open Swim
8·9 Open Sw im

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
304 E. Main
991-3795 Pomeroy

NHL Standings

27 Sycamore
Gallipolis, Ohio

Open9til5
Mon . lhru

By United Pre ss International

Sat.

Open 9til6
Weekdays
9loSSal .

No Appointment Necessary

East

c71W1(1{, W'~·

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Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-9340
Galli!)olis. Ohio

w. I. t . Jlls gl ga
Boston

25

6

4

Montreal 20
Toronto
18
NY Rangrs 17

9
13
13

1
9

54 161

94

6 46 123 97
43 136 109
43 136 121

Buffalo
18
Detro it
14
NY istandrs 8
Vancouver a

15 4 40 126 120
20 4 32 120 156
18 11 27 87 115
21
7 23 95 136
West
w. 1. t. pts gf ga
Phila
n 8 4 48 108 60
Chicago
17 a 11 45 122 73
Atlanta
16 14 1 39 94 100
St. Louis
16 12 6 38 99 87
Minnesota 12 16 a 32 1Q8 119
Los Ang
11 19 6 28 10 1 12 1
Pittsburgh 9 23
5 23 93 142
California 8 24 5 21 90148
Friday' s Results
Boston 4 NY Rangers 2
{ On IX gam~ s.chedu l ed l

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lis. 0.

BY DENNY FOBES
49, but Southern canned 20 for
C
TUPPRRS
PLAINS - Class A powerhouse
41 pet., while the Wkes made 19
for 37 pet.
Hannan Trace . behind the work of junior guard
The Tornados hit a good 75
Mark Swai n. thumped the Eastern Eagles Rl -53 here
pet. from the charity stripe or.
Friday night. all but eliminating the Meigs Coun?:i o( 36, while Symmes Valley
lians f~om the SVAC title race .
put in only 16 of 28.
The loss was the third for Bill Phillips' crew in
Senior Vern Ore led Southern
loop play . leaving them a full three games behind
rebounders, harnessing 13
the Wildcats who remain undefeated at 6·0 in the
lnissed slots. Team rebounding
SVAC.
sl&lt;lts were close, with the
Tornados garnering 40 and the
Swain. bringing !he ball up court against the
Vikes 38.
Eastern press and moving excell ently without the
In the preliminary battle, the
ball. ripped the cords [or 3~l points on 16 field goa ls
Tornados made it 2-0 for the
and-a free throw,
night, topping the Synunes
the yea r," Dillon said, citing
Valley junior varsity, 46·34.
The Eagles, down by 18, 40the fi.5senior's 15 rebounds and
Shultz, Danny Brown and
22, at Intermission, were still
17 points.
in the· game until the third
Roberts ted the Southern ofLusher also garnered 15
period when Swain ripped
fense, hitting for 13, 10 and 10
caroms for the Wildcats.
points respectively.
the nets for 18 ol the Wild·
In the preliminary game ~ the
Estep's markers topped the
cats' 22 third stanza points
Symmes Valley scorers.
for a 27 point bulge at 62-35. .. Wildcats made it a perfect
Seorlngbyquarters:
The Eagles drew first blood night, rallymg past the Eastern
Southern
18 17 17 15--67 at the 1:42 mark of the initial reserves, 42-34.
The Eagles led 22-18 at .ins. Valley
6 17 16 15--!i4 quar ter on a layup by senior
te
rmi ssion, before Hannan
Southern (67) _ Curfman 3- center Steve Dill, but that was
1-7, Sayre 7-4-18, Theiss 2-0-4, the last time Eastern was on Trace came back to take a 29·
271ead after three periods.
Ord 2-3-7, Miller 4-13-21, top.
J . D. McG uire led the
Warner 2-5-9, Nease 0-1-1.
Senior center Don Wells, who
Symmes Valley (54) _ scored 17 points and pulled in Wildcat atl&lt;lck , hitting for 12
Brown 0-1-1, Bennett 1-0-2, 15 rebounds.' knotted the count points.
John Blake and Don
Jaye Myers 5-2-12, Burcham 2· at 2-all, smkmg a patr of
7-ll, Jim Myers ~-1·11, Jones 4• chanty tosses, followed by a Eichinger led the Eagle of2·11
Que·senberry J-2· 4 • Swam layup at the 5:50mark to fense , scoring 20 and II points
respectively for Duane Wolfe's
Br.dnmer ~-I 3.
' give the Wildcats a 4·21ead.
Eastern
guard
Steve
Goebel
reserves.
Reserve scoring by quar·
entered
the
game
at
the
2:50
Scoring by quarters:
ters:
mark
and
proceeded
to
steal
·
Hannan
Trace 16 24 'l2 19--81
Southern
13 12 II la..-46
the
ball twice in a row , scoring Eastern
10 12 13 18--53
S. Valley
7 5 14 8--34
on
a
layup
the
first
time
and
Hannan
Trace
t811 - Lusher.
Southern (46) - Shultz 6-1·
setting
up
a
Dill
tip
on
the
6-4-16,
Hesson
5-1-11,
Hall 0-2-2,
13; Bass 1-0-2, Cross l.fl-2,
tied
the
score
second
theft
that
Wells
7-3-17,
Swain
16-1·33,
Brown 3-4-10, Dunning 2.().4,
for
the
last
time
at
10-10
with
Sanders 0.().{), Halley 1-0-2,
Roberts 5-0-10, Huffman 1-0-2,
2:32
remaining
in
the
first
Montgomery 0-tHl.
Curfman 1-J-3.
quarter
.
Eastern (53) - Dill 6-0-12,
Symmes Valley (34) But
Wildcat
forward
John
Spencer
2-2-J;, Sheets 3-0-6,
Brammer 2-2-J;, Lester 0-1-1,
Lusher
canned
a
sweeping
Baum
0-1-1,
Atherton 1-0-2,
Miller 4-0·8, Estep 5·0·10,
hook
a
minute
later
to
.
put
Goebel 3-0-6, Milhoan 2-0-4,
Schaffer 2-0-4, Robinson 1-0-2,
Hannan
Trace
on
top
for
good
Hollon 1·1·3, Weber 1·1·3, Orr 0Saunders 1·1·3.
at 12·10.
1-1, Bailey 3-3-9.
Twenty-four second period
Reserve scoring by quar·
points gave the Wildcats that ters:
HI-point halftime bulg•, setting H. Trace
7 II II 13--42
ui&gt; Swain's spurt tha t put the Eastern
Consignment Sales of Farm Machinery
13 9 5 7- 34
game completely out of reach.
LPNDON, OHIO
Hannan Trace (42) Swain, of course, with his 33 Cremeans 2'6-10, Sheets 0-1·1,
SALE DATES FOR 1974
points, was the game's top McGuire 4-1·12, Wells 3-2-8,
scorer. He got excellent Shaffer 4-0-8, Petrie 1-1·3 ,
balanced help from Wells with Halley 0-0-0.
SAVE THIS AD-SAVE THIS AD
17 points and Lusher with 16.
Eastern (34) - Blake 7'6-20,
The
Eagle
atl&lt;lck,
meanJAN. 2-16 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ JUL Y 3
Eichinger 4-3-11, Harris 0-0-0,
while, was led by Dill who got Nelson 0-0-0, Bowen 0-0-0, Good
12 points on six field goa ls.
Feb. 6 - 20---------~-Aug. 7
0-0-0, Barber 0-1-1, Fick 0-0-0,
Hannan Trace mentor Paul Holter 0-0-0, Conde 0-0-0,
Mar. 6-2 0 -- - - - - - - - St!pt.4-18
Dillon, whose cagers are rated Hannum J-0-2.
17th in Ohio in the recent UPI
Aprill-17- - - -- -- - - - 0ct. 2-16
board of coaches poll, called
the
Wildcat effort "The . best
May 1-15- - - - - - - - , -- -Nov.6-20
defensive game of the year for
us."
June 5-19 - - - - - - - - - - Dec . 4-18
" It was just an overall good
team effort," continued the
young coach who is in his
PT. PLEASANT - Before
fourth year at the Mercerv ill e the largest crowd here in a half
school.
dozen years or so. Coach Stan
PHONE 614-852-1887
"The
kids
worked
real
hard
Bucklew's · visiting l"a•,kersSALE TIME 11 A.M.
over the Christmas break. It burg South Pirates defeated
was Don Wells' best game of the Point Pleasant Big Blacks,
74~. Friday night.
South's 6-8 AII-SI&lt;lte senior
Sam Foggin, caged 21 points
and pulled down 18 rebounds.
Big Black Matt Waldie
banged in 20 counters and was
the top rebounder of the. game
with 19 despite fouling out with
fo: 04left in the fourth quarter.
Pointer Joey Given nailed 19
markers and gra bbed 14
rebounds.
The win was the Patriots'
first of the young season. They
have lot three. For the Big
Blacks, who showed lots of
oomph and stamina against a
major foe, the loss left them at
0-2.
The Patriots had the most
accurate pirepower, hitting 56
pet. from the field on 30 of 54.
The Big Blacks put 75 in the
See and hear the
.
air, sinking 26 for 37 pet.
inside story on tbe
In rebounding, South had a
slight edge over their smaller
John Deere Generation][
foe, pulling down 45 caroms to
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Greathouse
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McLead 3·1·7, Crislip 3·
0-6, Drain 1-0-2, Fries 2-0-4,
Houser Q..O-O.
_____
Pt. Pleasanti66) - Waldie fl.
•
4-20, Tatterson 4.().8, Given 8-319, Gerlach 3-2-8, Wilson 1-1-3,
Kayser 2·0·4, Jewell · 1·0·2,
Perry 0-0-0. Cottrill!-1).2.

•

I bbe red the Wellston Golden
co
ROckets 73~35.
Itwas strictIY no contest as

JACKSON - Mike Me·
Donald and Tom Conroy
combined for 35 points Friday
night as the Jackson Ironmen

thelronmenracedoffto a20-il

Arno ld 1 o 'l; watts o '1 2 .
Derrow 1-0-7. TOTALS 14-7-H .
JACKSON (JJJ _ Wh-ite J 1
9, Conroy 7-5 19 ; o esre ph en ,1
1_9 ,. McDonald 8 0 16 . Jenk in !'.
2-0-4, Gr illow022 ; Ridge 10
2

F

·

o

0

c

..

Bl!Chanan 2 tJ .4; Gentil 0 -2 2
TOTALS 3111 -73 .
Score by quarters ~
Wel lston
8 4 l2 11 - 35
Ja ckso l't
20 18 14 21 - l l '
ReHrves :
Jackson
72,
Well ston 23 .

first period lead, upped it to 38- i~:-';.;,";;,",;;'";.,;.',jj
. .,;'~·..o;"~in~n~7°.;',;,·- - - - - - - - - - ,
12 at halftime, and entered the
fourth quarter with a 52-24
buldge.
It was reJ&gt;Orted that Coach
Dick McKinzie of Wellston
benched all of his seniors and
went wiUl lhe underclassmen
IRONTON - It was a run the entire conte$1. '
and shoo t iype battle here in
Sl&lt;ltistics of the contest tend
the preliminary to the varsity to lend truth to this as the
battle, as the Ironton reserves Rockets hit just 14 of 57 shots
outran and outshot the Meigs for 25 pet. and made good on
Marauder reserves or coach seven of 12 free throws.
Ron Logan, 57-41 Friday night.
They also picked off 43
for healthy cows and
The Tiger cubs took an 11-7 rebounds with Roger Long
good production
lead after the first quarter, grabbing 13.
increasing it to 29-17 at the half
Long also led the Wellston
and 46-29 after three periods. scorers with nine points with
Purina Da iry M i neral contains a one -to-one calcium .
phosphorus ra tio, plu s a balance ot zinc, copper , organic
Leading the Ironton atl&lt;lck Randy Peoples adding eight
iodine, magnes ium, manganese, cobalt, sulphur and other
were Royal with 20 points and markers.
essent ia l trace mineral s. It has been scientif ical ly for Howard with 12.
mulated to hel p th e milking cow replace those essential
The Ironmen enjoyed a good
minerals th at she may be losing rapidly dur i ng lactation.
Freshman Greg Browning night as they ripped in 31 of 74
Dairy Mineral also is recommended for dry cows and
was the only Marauder to get shots for 42 pet. and converted
heifers . Purina Dairy Mineral is easy to fee~: 1ust provide
into double figures, hitting four '· II of 28 free throws.
i t fr ee ·choice in weather -protected mineral feed ers. Since
this high -quality m.ineral supple ment con tain s n~ salt,
from the field and four at the
Conroy's 19 points led the
fee d plain sa il free ·c hoice in nearby fe eders.. Drop 1n soon
line for 12 points. Sophomore attack with McDonald adding
and let u s show you how l i ttle it costs to Ql\le your cows
Jim Anderson added 8 points . 16.
extra minera l fortifica tion with Purina Dairy Mineral.
Scoring by quarters:
Mark Buchanan picked off
II 18 19 9--57 nine of Jackson's 45 rebounds
Ironton
Meigs
7 10 12 12--41 to pace his team under the
Ironton (47)-Thomas 3-W, boards.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Vine Street
Howard 6-0-12, Atkinson 1-1-3,
The box score :
Crockrell 2-2-J;, C. Brown 3-0-6,
WELLSTON OS) - Sci tes 2
Bartram 1-0·2, Ford 0-0-0, 0-4; Peoples 3·2-8 : Long .4 -1-9.
Royal 10-0-20, M. Brown 1-0-2, McKinnis 2 -2 -6 ; G i ll 1-0-2;
Black 0-0-0, Houston 0-0-0.
Meigs ( 41 ) - Anderson 3-2-a,
Davenport 3-0-6, Browning 4+
12, Marshall 2-1-5, Magnotta I·
0-2, Lewis 0-0-0, Chapman 0-2-2,
Van Meter 0-0-0, Meadows 0-00, Blake 1-0-2, Walburn 2-0-4.
1

Tiger reserves
down Marauders

PURINA
DAIRY MINERAL

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ORDER YOUR TOBACCO
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· WUYCIK LOST
GREENSBORO, N.C. iUPl)
- Carolina Cougars' forward
Dennis Wuycik will be lost to
the team indefinitely after
straining ligaments in his right
ankle in a game with Memphis
Thursday night, the Cougars
said Friday,
A team spokesman said
Wuycik's ankle was placed in a
cast Friday morning and will
remain there for at least two
weeks. A second-year pro from
North Carolina, Wuycik has
averaged 5.2 points for 39
games this season.

eBROMOGAS
•FUMIGATION COVERS
,.,
•PLANT BED CANVAS
eENIDE
eSEED

c.

CENTRAL SOY A
HEAD COACH

OF OHIO

CLINTON, N.Y. (UP!)
Robert J. King, 50, acting head
coach aLHamilton College in
1973, was appointed as head
football coach for the 1974
season, the college announced
Friday.

3rd &amp; Sycamore Streets
Gallipolis. Ohio
"Your Farm Supply Super Mkt.''

CURTIS C. HOWARD &amp; SONS

Californ ia 61 Ore. St. 54
Arizona St . 91 Wyoming 69
Wshbrn 57 So. Colo.' St . 56
0 . Roberts 87 Ppprdine 74

Galli

McDonald,- Conroy pace ]B;cksoti win

·period points; Wells,
Lusher control boards

tops Blacks

'

Upper Rt. 7

Swain hits for 18 third

Parkersburg

•

DON WATTS VOLKSWAGEN

•

as·ts ~

race

LONDON IMPLEMENT AUCTION

MOBILE
HOME SALES
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles

..•

·'

RACINE - The Southern
Tornados, the only team with
a chance of catching leagueleading Hannan 1'race, kept
!hell- 'one game back' pace,
topping the Synunes Valley
Vikings, 67-54, here Friday
night.
Southern's SVAC recoril now
stands at 5-!, just one game
behind the Wildcats at 6-0.
The Purple and Gold 's lead
was never in jeopardy, as the
Tornados jumped out to an 1~
first quarter lead. They held
that 12 point margin 'at intermission , 35-23, before upping the count to 13 at 52-39
after three periods.
Southern mentor Carl Wolfe
was pleased with the Tornado
effort in the first stanza
saying, "We got off to a good
stah. We played as well in that
first period as we have all
year."
uBut then, " continued the
first-year mentor, "we sl&lt;lrted
standing around. II was the
worst defensive game we've
played all year. They must
have gotten the baseline on us
about 10 times."
The Southern offense was led
by ilenior guard Bob Miller who
poured in 21 points, putting on
an excellent free throw show,
sinking !3 in 14 attempts.
He was followed by senior
forward Pete Sayre who
pumped in 18 markers despite
getting in early foul trouble
and not seeing much action.
The Vikings, with a balanced
attack, were led by Jaye Myers
wit.h 12 points, Mike Burcham
and Jim Myers with II each
and Paul Jones with 10.
Synunes Valley got off two
more shots from the field, 51·

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38112118

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23 14
\ .47 14 2 111

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FOR FUTURE GAS PRICES?

'

overs in the final quarter while

the Tigers went into a stall; but ·
Still miss.ed the front end of two
one and one situations as
Athens fouled in an attempt to
·
get the ball.
F inally with 20 . seconds
remainin g Tim Duduit stole the
ball and raced m for a layup
shot that sealed the victory for
Waverly.
Ironton, who was led by Dave
Qualls' 16 points were
In a supreme effort to
Rann 's 18 pomts, then pushed complemented by junior center remain und~feated in league
the bulge to 3 pointS, 45-42 at Dan Dodson 's 16, while Coats play the Tigers hit 23of 46 shots
the end of three quarters, chipped in with 10 and soph· for a sizzling 48 pet. and con:
before spurti ng to that 13 point omore Jerry Cremeans added verted one of fiv e free throws.
6 •
lead in the final sl&lt;lnza .
Waverly had 28 rebounds
The lead changed hands and
Fitzpatrick led the Ironton with Shoemaker grabbing nine
the game was t&gt;ed a total of 26 boardmen with 17 caroms, and Wade Thomas seven.
times, with Ironton going out in followed by Rann with 9 and
Athens played well also as
front for good at 37-36 in the Ken Green and Neal with 6 they canned 19 of 45 shots for 42
third period.
each.
pet . and added six of eight free
Meigs last held the lead at 32·
Dodson led . Meigs missed throws.
30 early in the third frame ,
shot sweepers with 13, followed
The Bulldogs netted 22
Helping Rann out in the by senior forward Bill Myers rebounds with Arnie Chonko
scoring column for the Tigers with II and 5-11 Cremeans with grabbing eight to lead in that
were Dean Fitzpatrick with 13 6.
sl&lt;ltistic.
points and Gary Neal and Scott
The Tigers now share the
Waverly will face another
Wylie with 12 and 10 points third spot in the SEOAL with crucial test Tuesday night
respectively .
Athens and Logan at 3-2, while when they travel to Ironton to
the Marauders remain in the fa ce the fast-improving Tigers
league ce llar ·with Wellston, while Athens entertains Logan.
both teams at 0-5 in loop play.
The box score :

IRONTON 16Sl
FG-A FT-A Reb . PF Pts .
4-12
1-3
8
2
9
5 15, 2-5
B
5 12

Player
Ken Green
Gary Nea l
Dean Fitzpatri ck
Da11e Rann
Scott Wylie
Brian Brown
Mark Fairchild

VOLKSWAGEN

~~·

five poin ts of the fourth period ·
to grab a 41-40 lead, whi ch then
saw the lead change four times
until a goal by John Shoemaker
at the 2:19 mark put the Tigers
on top 45-44 .
Athens committed five turn·

.

•
••
•
•

Wildcats still unbeaten

Meigs-Ironton box

TOTALS

WHA Standings
By United Press International

attl'tlll)t to hold thC lead.
Th1s permitted the Tigers tn
tally three S!Ji.aig ht b,.ckets.
two coming off steals , and
.reduced the Athens' lead to 4036 after three quarters.
Wav erly ticked off the first

~rips

Ironton

Simpson named
AFC Player of Year
•,

emerged v.·ith a 27-2\i lmlftime
lead.
In the . third quarter the
Bulldogs gradually tncrea"ed
their lead to 40-:10 with 2:24left •
but appeared to quit moving
toward the basket in a ~a utious

,.

.

--·~

AUTO BANK
THIRD AVE.

..

SWISHER IMPLEMENT CO.

~

I

"UO YEARS OF 'SERVICE"

VINTON BRANCH
VINTON, OHIO .

TUESDAY, JANUARY 8th
lO:OO -AM- EVERYONE WELCOME

•

UPPER RT. 7

G.ALLIPOLIS, OHIO

''FARMING FRONTIER DAYS" .
•

•

JAMES SIGNS
LDU!SVILLE, Ky. ( UPI J Bill James, former Marshall
University sl&lt;lr, Friday signed
as a free agent with the Kentu cky Colonels of the American
Basketba ll Association.

Central Operating Company's
·

Philip Sporn Plant
New Haven, W.Va.

Has Job Openings For Permanent Employment In The Following
Skills
·
MECHANICAL MAINTENANCE
(ONLY EXPERIENCED PEOPLE NEED APPLY)

These Jobs Provide Excellent Wages And A Benefits Program Which Includes
Ufe Insurance, Medical Insurance, Disabillity Insurance Sick Leavei Vacations,
Holiday, And Retirement.
Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate

the Plant.

882~212.6 (collect) ,
BEtWEEN ·THE HOURS OF 7:30 ~M TO 4:00 PM

APPLICANTS MAY CALL ( 304)

. TO ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW

~L

DI'ERATIIII etnfi'AIIF

PHILIP SPORN PLAI'IT
PostOfficelax~ut.

New HIYtn. WestVI.rvinil 2J26S
• Ttltphont: •rea code 304--t12·l111

An Equal Opportunity EmploJer

'
••
•"..

I •

'

'

'

\

.

�I
20 - The Sunday Ttmes Se ntmel Sund \ Ja

1

6 1971

•

21

For Fast Results Use The s ·u nday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Business
Services
I
'
•

Card of Thanks

In Memorv
N

memo y o

LOV N G

husband

Hom eli

who passed away

e

My 1 ps ca n no

con

Hawk. ns
Q 1
h(\W ;.n.. s_:;

food

say

canna

e

'I

wha

God a one know s how

hm

n a home

ha

P ANO
q
du a
co se

an 6

hom

My hea r

Notice

ny

s

c

n ss

Sad y m ssed by h s w

c

~

'd

o

any Cleb

anyone o h e
s gned Ray a

e

Louse Hawk ns
6

p

AAA 0

beg
n o m a on
a 991 5618

Be

a sses
9
o

S aw

e

6

WANT o ha k hem n s er s
e a es ne qhbo
ends
and
h
hes f o
he
p ayers
a ds
and q I s
11 s t s made wh e was n he
oseph s
Hosp a
St
Pa ke sbu g and home Fo
he wonde
uns e sh
deeds done by a o me May
God b es eo
a d eve Yo e
M s Rona d Osbo n e
6 c

Card of Thanks
~E

w SH o hank he B ado d
Ch u ch of Ch st and Sun d ay
'Schoo c ass a so th e
ends
and ne ghbo s of M s Hom e
Hawk ns and Leo Reu e
s ster and broth e
fo
he
beaut fu f ewers nat were
sen tor our s s e s vne a l
M !) Ge t ude Neutz l ng o
A hel\1 Oh o Many hanks to
a of"' you God bess you a
Her s s er and b o h e Mrs
Home Hawk ns and brothe
Leo Reu er

t

OST

BE WE E N Ha
so
Ca pen e and Oy 5
v e
De
28
3 beag e
hound S 2 b a k and wh e
5po ed ma es
back a!ld an
ema e
den
~
on o
a a
s H
E
Hudson
Cha es on W Va
see
ca
oca
426

e

I 4

TARA

p

6

c

s

gu

on y Sunday

hok ed
an ua y_ 6

33
NG Ma Ch Fo ked Run
ma
Cl ub noon Sun
Fa o y
hoked guns

SHO O
Spo

day

on y

s

p

rn

dX)CVCf'
D&lt;~ y ex ep

am

0

Sunday
appo n men
22 o lf R

Unscmmblf' lhf' se four Jumhlf's

DEVELOPMENT
CORP.

IMIEPEIJ

[J

FAT:;/f.

I

B u 1ld ng
~ t es
Ava Iable K ngsberry
Hon es bu It to f t any
spec f cat 1on s
All
Underground Utlitt1 es
Prov ded
------------~

I I

n

For lnformat1on
Or Appomtment
&gt;;o• arrang•l h• c rcl•d •llers
to form the surpr se ansv.er a.s

I
~=!:========='~~::::~~;_'_:_~"~"::
"::•:_:st~ed by the
i

L__~Prilt::::tlle:,:::SUIIPftiSI~lNSWER;::::.:::;c=.chm
~~l 0
J
NOISY DUMPY BEHOLD
Jo

I

"" .. rr You be 1

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abo\e c11rtoon

KI I I J

CANINE

HO U SE for en
Phone 99l 5693

mens o
ghway
n
Reyno ds
1 7 3 5 47
36 p

n Ch esh e

PHONE
367-7250
Add1son,

I POUNDS

0

J ANG
ROOM
ununshed
Phone 992 563

urn sh ed and
apa men s

N G Ma en Ho
Gun c ub Svnda
an
noon Fac o y
hoked

2

w L L be t ak ng se w ng order s
aqan
n
r ede ck

anuay
Be t y
ba h
Phone 985 3860 ? BEDROOM hom e
basemen and g&lt;~ age Phone
2 30 6 p
Q9') 20 2
4 3 p

Pets For Sale

? COO N dogs one b ue cK an d i BEDROOM u n shed ap No
eyhound c ossed 0 he
ed
pe s $ 5 pe
mon t h p us
u
t es Robe t H
Rae n e
bone shephe d se as pa
gua an eed Phone 992 6258
Y 9 313
1 4 8 p
4 p

Employment Wanted
EXt-'tR

n er o
9!15 3~

E N CEO
pa n e
and CK e o
Phone

I"=UR NI SH ED
2
bed r oom
apa r menf
M dd epo
Phone 99? 38 4
2 28 tr c

Residence commeretal or
mob le hom es Save on parts
&amp; labor
215 N 2nd Ave
Middleport

Pa1nt1ng A Spec1alty

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
N1ght992 3S2S
or 992 5232

Area s Most
Rea sonable Pnces

All work guaranteed

Dick's
Hoard House

WOOD TRUSSES

STRIPPERS
We Sir p Pa nt Varn1s h es
etc from Furntture
Ant ques Modern Meta Is
We buy Anttques
Collec
t bles etc
Ptck up Servtce Ava lable

DICK SEYLER Owner
Phone 992 1798
Kerr Street
Pomeroy Oh1o

Sad!','
c h d en

From the arges T u ck or
Bu ldozer .Had ator to I he
smallest Hl!a ler Core

Nathan 8 ggs

rl?"\&gt;
Bu1lt to Your Specs

•

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

For Rent or Sale

INSTALLING
AND

23
J ORDAN S Gas Ser v ce o R o
G an de s mov ng to Doxo
Panl
at
50? Easen
Ave nue Ga
po s Off ce
hours 8 5 Monday F r day P h
4~6 1264
36

..

CU ST OM
sew ng
a nd
al erat ons on a I ypes of
clo h ng
Fu r s
a so
Reweav nq
of
dam aged
mater a Ph 446 7520 o 44ll
177
985 4th Ave

Del vered to JobS te

18

REO s Barbe Shop
p m 6 days

MATERIALS CO
773 5554
Mason W Va

992 2094
Pomeroy

Residence and
Mobtle Homes

-----·-

973 SUZUKI T 500 $800
ke
new s
unde
war an ty
Phone 949 3833

Wanted To Buy

FARM 50ac eso mo e good
24 p
gh s
house and wate Coa
PhOne 992 5 52
FOAM o f 1 you old couch and
I 6 p
cha r cush ons as ow as
s 0 95 Upho st ery books on y
4 nch covered foa m
SOc
CAS H pad fo a 1 makes and
ma res ses fo s andard s ze
mode s of mob l e hom es
bed
$29 95
Pome oy
Phon e a ea ode 614 423 953
R ecove y
62 2 E
Man
4 3 fc
Pom e oy Phon e 992 7554
2 23 26 c
NO
COP PER 65c ad a o s
32c ed brass J5c ba te es
UPHOLSTERY Fabr cs by he
S 0 M A Ha
Reedsv l e
ya d 54 nch es w de as ow as
Oh o P hone J 8 6149
$ 95 pe ya d ve ve s as ow
6 f
as $3 J!i
m po led v el ve s
$9 95 We a so have nylon
O LD u n u e oak
ab es
He c u on
co on p n s
cocks ce bo )(,es brass beds
v nyls and rem nan s by he
dshes
o
ompee
ya d or by he p ece Pomeroy
househo ds
Wr te M
o
Recove y
622 Eas
Man
M I e R 4 Pom e oy Oh o
S r ee f Pom e oy Phone 992
ca 992 62
7554
5 13
2 23 26 c

6 4 p

SALT FOR I CE A ND SNOW
Rock sa t fo
town sh p s
owns and bu s nesses n
bu lk s and bat s for ce and
snow Exce s b Sa t Wo ks
Phone 992 389

ELEC TR OLUX Sweeper d e uxe
mode
Comp l et e w h a I
c l ean ng a a ch ments and
uses pape bags 51 ght v u se d
but c eans and looks 1 ke new
W I se
fo $37 25 cash or
fe m s ava abe Phone 992
2984

TEXAS REF N ERY COR P
offers P ENTY OF MONE Y
p us cash bonuses
fr ng e
benef s o matu e nd v dua
n M dd epo
Pome oy
a ea
Rega d ess of e)(,
pe ence a ma H
Pate
P es Texas Ref ne y Co p
Box 7
Ft
Worlh
Tex
H &amp; N DA Y o d o s a rt ed
6 0
Leghorn pu l e s Bolh floor or
65p
c age
grown
ava ab e
- - - - ·- Poul y
hous ng
&amp;
KOSCO T KOSMETICS &amp; W GS
au om a on Mode n Pou ry
We have he p oduc f on hand
399 W Man Pome oy 992
and we de ver to you pe
2 64
sona l y H e en Jan e Brown
6 I c
992 51 3
2 JO tf c
CLOSE OU T on new Z g Zag
Se w ng Mach nes F o se w ng
stre t ch tabr cs buttonholes
fan cy des gns e c Pan
sl gh ly b em shed Cho ce of
c ar y ng cas e ~ r sew ng
sand $,J9 80 casti or te ms
ava lab e Phone 992 2984
12Stfc

PHONE 843·2341

Mowrey s Upho ster ng
J PROFE SS ONAL men to
serve vou better and fa s ler
Sa v e on off season p ces now
llrough Februa y 974 For
free es rna es phone 675
4 54 Shop oca ed at Mason
Co ~a rgrounds

WANTED IN
POMEROY
PHONE 992-2156

lHE
DAILY SENTINEL

SEW NG mach nes brand new
z g zag n n ce walnut able n
o g na ca ton s Never u sed
C earance on 73 models On y
a few ava able $63 40 cash or
terms ava abe Phorle 992
2984
ASS I STA NT MANAGER
A
12 23tfc
person who can qu ck y
dev elop
no
he ass sian EXCELS OR Sa I Works E
manager of our off ce Mus
Man St Pomeroy A 1 k nds
be at
eas
h gh sc hoo
ol sa lt wa er pel e s water
graduate and have a car
nugge s bock salt and own
Phone Mr Busk k a 99 2
Oil o R ver Sa l
Phone 992
211
Cap tal
F nanc a
3a91
Se rv ces
an
equa l
op
6 5 tfc
po un y em p oye
- - -- -------------3 3
AM FM ste eo ado 8 tack
ape comb na on 4 speak er
WAN EO exper enced
ru c k
so und
system
Ba ance
ou
eq u pmen
S 03 98 or use ou
budget
d vers fo
B okers
w h
Tandem
erms Ca I 992 3'&gt;'65
Tracto s and 40. f
F at
2 9 fc
a er s
A so
Tandem
4
ac o s w th we t nes o pu
F R E wpoo
cord hard
our Dump
a e s A
fo
wood 'le u
2 or 3 teet
ong hau
Con act c
L
Del ve ed $25 00 Phon e 6'16
Wyatt New Haven W Va
I 61
(304 862 2138
3 .. t c

POMEROY, 0
L---~---'

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

'6 c

EARNS5000pe
and
moe
drvng
Tacor
Tra e s
No
ex pe ence
necessa y
Fo
nforma on
wr e Th e Da ly Sent nel aox
729 R Pl ease nc ude name
add ess and pt1on e numbe

2 7t c

- - -----'----- ----...:

me

SOME O N E o lv e n f pass be
1 ght hoi.Jsew o k ake ca e of
ch ld en ag e J and
2 sma
age 8 5 days a wee k Ca I 992
286 or nqu rea 674 L nco n
Hgfs even ng s
2 30 6 c

-----------

You
Favor te
Country
Mus1c Stars V s1t On

lHE RALPH
EMERY SHOW
4 30 TO 5 30
Monday thru Fr day

On

WMPO-FM

STEREO. 92.1
M ddleport PoiT:erov

WOOD COAL cook stove U S
been u sed
Surp us N eve
de ve ed S250 00 Phone 696
1161
1 3 4fc
1973 KAWASAKI 75 Enduro
1957 Mob le Home 8x 48 96'1
Mer cury Comet Phone 949
2788
33 p
AM FM Rad o stereo 8 rack
ape comb nat on
A way
s peaker
sound
sys em
Balan ce $ 14 53 or terms
ava I able Ca 1 99~ 3965

3 fc

PA NT

DAMAGE

1973

Bill Wade Auct oneer

SALE EVERY
SATURDAY
NIGHT 7 PM
Consignments
ac
cepled lOa m to 6 p m
da1ly or wtll pay cash
for your household
tlems

PHONE 593-5035
COLLECT

ZIG

ZAG SEW NG MACH NES
S I n o ig na carton s No
aJtachments needed as ou
Sews
con rol s are bu I n
w th 1 or 2 need es makes
buffonho es sew on buttons
monograms and b nd hem
st tch Fu cash p ce $38 50
or budge
plan a11a abe
Phone 992 2984
2 18 tf c
S NGER Au omat c Z g Zag
Sew ng Mach nes n sewing
ab e Makes buttonholes
se ws on buttons btlnd hems
e c Top notch cond ton Pay
$51 or te ms ava lab e Phone
9'12 2984
12 18 tf c
GROCERY busness for sae
Bui d ng for sa e or ease
Phone 3 56 8 f om 8 30 p m
o 0 p m tor appo ntment
3 20 fi e
sew ng mach nes 1972
mode
n beaut fut walnut
cab net Makes des gn st t
buttonhot es
c hes z g zag
b nd hems etc L ke new
On y $89 95 Ca 1 Ravenswood
273 9521 o 273 98'13 after S 00
12 7 li e

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dtsplay

Open BT I 5

608 E
MAIN

POMEROY

969 VOLKSWAGEN
good
cond f on
A so
185 Suzuk
Enduro Motorcycle Good
cond f on Phone '149 J452
1 6 1tc

Ce lar w th storage over
lmmed ate po5sess on

JUST OFF RT 33 - 17
acr es Home s 2 yrs ad 3
bedrooms dovble coset'S)
Colored bath W showe
K tchen has 29 ft cab net s
Range &amp; Ref Large d n ng
area Ut ty Garage barn

sto age bldg $22 500 00
NEW RT 7 1 2 acre 2
we ll s E ectr c Approved fo
Sept c Tank Blacktop road

n Bu ld ngs $4 500 00
POMEROY 2 story frame
3 bedroom s New colored
bath
New furna ce
New

H W lank Pane rng &amp; T le
$6 500 00
REEDSVILLE - 77 acres
$9 000 00
THE ANSWER TO YOUR
HOME HUNTING CAN BE
FOUND WIT&gt;' US CALL
TODAY
'I&gt;
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
If no an swer 992 2568

TEAFORD

3 31

Pus

sale of bu ld ng $25 000 00 or
what would you otter

Res dence

of 9 rooms 4 bedrooms bath
a ge ot of one acre pus 1
bedroom rental vn t Only

$750000

Cozy S ooms

bath ba5emenl and sma
garden J u sf $5 000 00

heat n both

On

Route 7 About one acre

DO YOU NEED ONE OF THE
ABOVE INV EST N A HOME
Mobile Homes
Sale
AND FEEL SECURE RENT
ADD A ROOMS BY VEMCO MONEY HELPS THE LANO
SA VE YOU MONEY
WHY LORD
PAY
OFF
THE
TRADE?
ADO
EXTRA MORTGAG
BEDROOMS
BATH
FAMtLY ROOM
6 FLOOR
PLAN S &amp; S ZES ONE DAY
IN STALLAT ON
YOUNG 5

M H SALES RT 7 &amp; 35
BELOW
S L VER
MEMOR AL

GALL POL S

BRIDGE
1 6 tc

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

,.1

~ ~~~

f, lh ~.

'f:l1•hll'
t'· , ,
I ' 1: i

{, ', , I)\

,

2 11 fc
DOZER wo k and c ear ng by
the acre hour y or cont ac
fa m ponds roads etc La ge
dozer and operata w th over
20 years exper en ce Pu ns
Ex cava ng Pomeroy Oh o
Phone 992 2478
2 19 fc

, ; I

992 3325 or
992 -3615

FUTURE IN THE NUCLEAR
NAVY

0 DE LL A n em entwork canbe

305 6

done by appo nfment on y at
ness n
p esen t me due to
fam ly
Phone
for
ap
po ntment 742 3232
1 25 fc

WANTED e pe ienced tru c k
dr vers for our equ pment
Brokers w th tandem f a c or s
and 40 f fla I al ers A so
and em tractors w th wet
nes to pul
our dump
I ra l er s A I for ong hau
Con tact L
Wyatt
New
Haven W Va 1 304 882 2138
6

CONCRETE

del vered righ t to
pro1ecl Fast and ea~y
est mat es Phone 992
Goegle n Ready M x
M ddleport Oh o
6

your
Free
3284
Co

Electrical Drattsman
PREPARAT ON of work ng
Draw ngs for Heat ng and
vent at ng System~ Sa ary
commensurate
w th
ex
per ence and capab ty
Contact E s I man P M
Oelfa Jackson P 0 Box 401
Gal pol s Oh o 6 4 367 7363
I 5

30 fc

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE ra tes Ph 4J6
4782 Ga pols John Russe 1
Owner and Operator
5 12 tc

SEPT C

TANKS

S EWAGE

SYSTE MS

CLEANED

REPA RED

M LLER

IMMEDIATE INCOME
D STR BUTOR - part or fut
t me o Supp ly Company
estab shed accounts w th
RCA CBS D sney
Reco ds
ncome poss b t es up to
S1 000 per month w th on y
SJ 500 reQv red fo
nv en ory
and
anng
Ca l
COLLECT fo
M
Ja mes
8 7 461 696 1

AROB C

SA N TAT ON
PH 662

STEWAR T OH 0
3035

1() 4 fc

---------c eaned
SE PT C
TAN KS

Modern San taf on 992 3954 or
992 7349

4s

AN OH 0 O IL CO
offers
PLENTY OF MONEY pus
cash bon su e!. fr nge benet fs
o mature
nd v dual
n
Gal pol sa ea Regardless of
exper ence airma I H
I
Read
Pres
Amer cat"\
L ubricants Co
Box 696
Dayton Oh o 45401

ELNA and White Se w ng
Mach nes
Se v ce on al
makes Reasonable rates
The Sew ng Center
M d
d eport Oh o
1 16 ttc

PRICE

CON S TRUCTION

00

Virgil B.

TEAfORD

Sr.

R1 •&lt;1l E sl,lff' Brok e r
)17 Sp(n n d AvP .

Ga lll pol rs. Ohro

RT 35 WEST
Up to 800 fl frontage plus 3
bedroom modern home

gas

heal

sq

3 52

ft

bu s ness bu ld ng n an up
&amp; com ng area adaptab e

fo r

types

of

bu s n esses
Shown
appo ntment only

many

by

MEAOOWGREEN
ESTATE

a

Spac ous
rooms
3
bedroom s
2
bat h s
f eplace Ia ge andscaped

ot Whte brck Coona
pr ce reduced fo
qu ck
sal e Ca I for appo ntment
anyt me

4 BEDROOM
Approx
2 acres
large
modern k tchen bath &amp;
shower
gas
furna ce

24 x24 base ment paneled
Lots of shade trees garden
space A sleal at s a 900

1NO AVE
One block from busmess
sect on of Ga po s 3
bedroom f a me gas for ced
a r furnac e
ha dwood

floors In good shape See I
now
3 BEDROOM
n Ga l pol s modern
frame
gas forc ed a r
furnace hardwood f oors
t s n ce See t must se ll

MADISON AVE
3 Bed oom home n ce of
JOx 3

Ask ngon y$5500

SO OF EUREKA
29 , Ac r e farm 4 bedroom
home tobac co base barn
See t

1 -4 Acre 2 bedroom frame
on Rt
7 lots of out
bu d ng s n ce p cture v ew
of the Oh o R ver Pr ced
on y $14 VOO

VACANT LAND
47 Acre s
m e off Rt 35
West 3m les f rom hosp tal
8 A cres on
Porter

Rt

60 n ear

5 Acres nea V nton
wei sept c tank barn

has

The word s largest bus transportal on
company s growmg and nterv ew ng for ca
reers as drvers - and needs you TOP PAY
SCALES I beral benet Is pa1 d pen s on plan 9.
pad hoi da ys pa1d vacat on after one year
stock purcha se plan cost 1ot I vmg al owance
free travel benef Is etc Prev ous heavy duty
dr v ng ex per ence s not requ red Profess ona
Greyhound nstru ctors w leach yo u f you
meet the qua l f catrons

QUALIFICATIONS ARE
Herght-M n mum 5 7 Max mum 6 4
We ght-Proport onate to he ghl
V s on-20/30 both eyes corrected 20/ 20
Mu st pass Greyhound phys ca l exam nat on
and successfu lly complete prescrrbed
Drrver Tra mng Program

WILL tr m or cut trees and
Shrubbe y Also c ean ou
ba sements att cs ere Cal
949 3221 or 7&lt;1 2 44J
2 26t c

Real Estate For Sale
DESIRABLE two b ed oom
house n M ddleport ready to
occ upy Call 992 53 0
2 30 261 c
A LOVELY new Home , m le
from Me gs H gh Schoo
Three bedrooms two baths
tul basement with two car
garage Large ot
S27 soo
Also recent y remodeled
three bedroom older home n
Pomeroy
Pr ce of S15 000
n c udesfurnlture Owner WII
help f n11n ce e ther of hese
two properties Ca
593 5667
Athens
12 2 30tc

INTERVIEWS AT
u

Larg~st

THE LEADER ~INCE 1•00 IN
SERVING THE NATIONS
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0008

a

g

GREYHOUND LINES EAST
1 00 PM-7 00 PM
JANUARY 9 1974
HOLIDAY INN
HUNTINGTON • W VA

Greyhound
A change for the better.

AN EQUAl OrttQR UN Y MPl OYEII:

EDGE OF TOWN - M ODER N
SPL T FOYER Yt fh featu es
such as a arge d n ng area
w h pat o door s
m odern
k tchen ca peted LR 3 BR 2
baths arge fam ly m w h
WB f rep ace
aundry rm
ga age and cent a r Owne
w I trade to
a farm o
cheape p ece of p ope t y
FOR SA LE OR TRADE
Mod ern ranch w h over an
T he g ound
ac e of and
f oo conta ns a 2 ca ga age
3 BR ex tra arge LR a
cond and a bu t n k t chen
The fu basem ent has a den
or 4 h BR
aund y rm
shower and a tam l y rm w h
a beaut ful s fone f r epla ce
bar and pat o doors Loca ted
n Ga I pol s schoo d st

s a
con a n s a ba h and 4 a
p et ed BRs Th e k tc hen s
ode
and you
t am l y
wou d ave the f ep lace n he
LR and
he
arge to na l
d n ng m The e s a so a u I
basement and ga rage oca ed
o a Ia ge tl a o on Rou e
Sou h

VACANT LAND
STATE ROUTE 60
3 aces
w h 495 ft front age Co
water lap pad Pa k you
mob .e home
bu d o
deve lop
LAND CON TRA CT
JO A w th
25 A bo om and
000 f
cree k fron age and spr n g
developmen
m off sa e

rd

MAKE US AN OF F ER
45 A
fat and
o l ng
an d
n
Ga po s sch ool d st w th a
Ia e mo de
4 x 70 mob e
hom e
P-R I CE REDUCED TO $ 0 000
28 Ac r es
Par of h s
and s n Ga a Co and pa 1
n ackson Co Don 1 m ss an
nves m en Ik e h s one
NEAR ADD SON
25 A w h
co wale ava abe Th s an d
~ m os t y wooded and se s t o
on y $4 000

STATE ROUTE 60

NEAR V NT ON
"'94 A
$20 000
m os t y r ac to and

y

od

ota e ectr c br ck s s uated
on 4:1 acres of o ng and
and offers your fam y
tea Ures ke 1 34" sq ft of
11 ng area pus a lull
ba se men w h lam ly rm
workshop and garage Shown
by appo ntmenl
BELIEVE I T OR NOT We have
a modern 5 yr o d 3 BR home
w th a fu 1 basement 15 x 20
L R 2 x 20 k tchen and d n ng
rm and HW f oors for on y
$23 000 Loca ec;l on SR 554 an
easy d ive o fawn or the new
m nes
ELDERLY BEAUTY WITH
R VER V EW
You w I
)"lave fo see the ns de of th s
c omple el y remodel ed 2 story

!li!I1JIIIIIJIL
REALTY
25 Locust St
Howard Brannon Broker
Off 446 2674
Luc l e Brannon
Eve 446 1226 or 446 2674
COUNTRY HOME
SAC RES two story hom e 4 BR
batll d n ng room
arg e
k tchen ful y carpe ed par
basement w th o I furnace
porches and ove ook ng the
Oh o R ver
0
led wei
coun y w a e due n sp ng
400
rver
fron age
d e tached
wo kshop
and
carpor l
ree s and shrubs
sm al pony ba n Just 10 m
down Lower R ve Rd

STOCK FARM

EXCELLENT or hi.Jn ng o
r ec ea on 42 A wood and n
Ha r so n Twp lo $6 700

AGENCY

s

On e Look Is
Worth 1 ooo Words

ST R T 3:,
NEW 5 m
ba hs fu base 2 ca ga
arge a o Th s house 5 no t
boug h as s f o
I n shed
$2 500 F nanc ng a a abe
0 d 5
br c k a
a ed on a
e $30 000

W HI TE RD
ms
bah a
ca pe a el ec o
arge
a o
P

y

CROWN C TV
8
H w 1 oo s 5 rns
l Ar ge
o agt:! b
oc a ed on
A
s 12 500

y s 0 d
and ba h
dg
and
o
On y

RO UT E
So uth a b
k
ms '1
bans a
a pe
FPs swmmngpoo r ve
II ew and
A 0 LU)(U y p US
MT Z O N Rd 6 m
ca pe
F P and
$3 500

b

CRO U SE BECK RD
T
Leve 6 r ms
ba h s 2
A of
yr s o d H w oo s
Th s sa good hou e and cou d
nol b e bu 1 to th e ask ng
p ce oday $32 000
B UHL MORTON RD
od l amebck r m.S
I
bath a
a pe a
pa t o
cove ed
Th s
beau y 0 y $?6 900

s a

DOWN R V E R
'1 s o y
br ck base al ca r pe
11
rm
5 )(, 36 w h F P A so
has 1ndhou scw h4 m s 2A
R ve v ew o $45 000

EV ERGREE N
ea
ba h u
000
w n 'L

ms and
s or m d s and
5

6M OOW N R T
b a t1 2 ou b dgs
I eve o $ 2 800

5m
on

nd
A

ST RT 35
6 m
arn e a ch
par
w h base H W f r s
pe F P
a ga
w h
p cc
e ec d
La q e at
$28 500
CHA HAM AVE
5 ms and
ba h w h n e w
u n u e
$
500 w hou
u n u e
$ 6 000
COUNTRY A R E STA ES
y odb r ckanda l um 3bg
hd m
ba s a ca p e
huge 2 ca gar and a a ge
c1
0
$36 900

O WNER
W LL
H ELP
F IN A N CE
30 A n Raccoon
Twp w lh 2 600 ft
d f on

6
TI
WOODL AND DR
s
ame8ysod H W
equ pped k c hen A ba r ga n
a $20 000

HUNT NGTON TWP
t4 A
27 A Raccoon c r ee k bp om
and w th
he ba ance
n
pasture and woods Lo s o
pu p wood Can b e f nan c cd

GARF I E L D AVE
S
m
ame w h base
A um
s d ng s o m dr s and w n
Nea
new gas
u
Pr ce
S I 500

LAWRENCE COUNTY
35 A
w h abol.lf 40 A c op and
Good ba n we and ar ge ob
base
Ranny Blackburn
B anch Manager

FARVEW
SU BDV
B
k 3 bd n
has cen a r
qua ty
beau t y
ca pe
o a on and oca ed on a
ar ge o S3 500

age

RUSSELL
WOOD
REAlTOR
446-1066

N VESTMEN
m house
w h base
mo de n an d 3
m ap
u n sh ed $ 8 0{)0
R
2Awh2
hou ses and a ba n $ 6 000

ST

RT

775

SM TH R D
s 0 000

SO A $5 500
A

a

and

80 .oA. STOCK Fa m on S R
l ab c ba
n
5 40 A
pa s u e
Ba n 60 x 74
Conc r e e s 10 6 x 50 w fh
un oad er Good 8 m house
and o th e ou b dgs Th s a;m
s c ea n has good f en es
NO S PEN SABLE
A
pond and ha s been med and
r efr gera or s a place where
fe
zed A good buy o
you s ore l eflove s un 1 hey
S4J 000
a e o d enough to lh ow ou

FO RGOTTEN So many su b 26 A ON Wood M
Rd 4 m
hou se w 11'1 ba t1 and dr we
s u es hav e been d scove ed
On y $8 500
by sc en s s ha t
s d ff cu
to r emembe wha
was we
Any h 446 19'il8
needed n the f s p ace
MOD ERN
anch t ype frame
home on 2
ac r es
11 ng
oom 30 x 15 2 b ed ooms
located a h e JUn e on of '} 8
and 553

WISEMAN

Tel 446 1998

0

OHIO RIVER
Realty

Neal Realty

THE

Realty 32 State Sl

9 !1.

PR CE REDUCED TO S 3 500
Th s ovely country home s
cea led nea Ty coon Lake and
o ffers 3 BR n ce k tchen HW
loo s ful basemen and 3
ac res of p nes

I

MASSIE

o app ec a e
The
foy er open s o a w nd ng
way
The
upsla s

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

home

Real Estate For Sale

•

SEW NG MACHINES Repa
serv ce all makes 992 228,J
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Author zed S nger Sa les and
Serv ce We Sha rpen Sc ssors
3 29 fc

World s

Wor d s Larges t
THE LEADER SINCE 900 N
SE RV NG THE NATIONS
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0008
OVE LY CO UNT RY HOME
Th s 4 BR br ck ran c h olfers PO ME ROY
PR CE
4 f
o s o good v ng fo some
REDUCED
TH S MONEY
l u ky fam ly Sp ec aJ ea tu es
MAKE R ca n make your
WO WAY Rados Sa es &amp;
a e a 5 x 23 L R w th a W B
e r emen a c n c h w h 2
5e v ce New and used DB s
r r epla e HW f oor s kno y
bu s n ess r ent a s and 2 a ge
po ce mon o s a nt en~;as
p ne cab ne s and a ru 1
apa ! mens
Loca t ed
et c Bob s C zen Band Rad o
basement nes l ed on a 4 A
down own on a co ne o
Equ p Geo ges C eek Rd
wooded l o 0 m
rom own
FARMS
Ga po s Oh o 4.46 45 7
CL OSE TO R 0
163 a r es o f
2 2
BABY
FARM
W TH
A
beau fu I a and r o ng and
MODERN BR CK HOME
w h f on age on 3 d s 80
SWEE P ER Re p a rs
parts
Tn s be a u y s ocated 2 m
ac es t ab e w lh he ba an e
5up p es 446 0194 10 .a m
S
f
om
HMC
and
conta
ns
4 BR
n pa s u e 0 he
tea u es
p n Dav s vacuum C eane r
mode n
k chen
fu
nc ude a good
m home
so e Geo ges C eek Road
Ia ge da y barn s lo pond
nex t o Bobs CB R ad o Sa l es ba se menl ga ag e 2 s tori"e
f ep l aces and
7 acr es
and seve a o he
sma e
293 I
Owne s hav-e purchased
bu d ngs
a
a ger f a rm and are
DEAD STOCK
WOU LD
YOU
BE
N
W LL emove a a ea sonab e an)(, ous o sel a o par
Don t m ss th s one
TE RES TEO N A MODERN
ha r ge Ca I 45 55 4
DA IR Y w lh a m k pa o
2 2
I C TY
T H S BARGA N
s 10 w h
p pe ne m kers
PR CEO
s ory home s
unload er au om a c f eede s
va cant and needs an owne A
barn co n c b
f ee sfa
sma down paymen w I le
equ pm ent shed pond and a
you en 10Y the 4 BRs ca pefed
r emod el ed home')
so sop
LR and DR fu
b ase m en
n an see us We nave 2
w h fam y rm laundry r m
BY OWNER J bed oom b c k
and workshop
NEARV N TON
83A pasure
fu ly equ p ped k chen
ta m has n ew ences a
he
balh
cen t a
a
wood
Th s
way pond arge barn and
bu n ng f r epl ace w al o wa I NEW BRIC K &amp; FRAME
al elec r c b eau y s ocated
rms and ba t1 Ask ng 53 000
carpet ng
c ty wa e
and
m off U S 35 and offers a
sewer
533 H da Dr v e
comp e e k c hen
fo rna
RACCOON C R EE K FRO N
Fa v ew Subd v son lm
d n ng rm
u
y
m
2
TAG E
3 ac r es bo om and
med ate po ssess on
Phone
ba h s WW ca pe garage 14
w t1 a larg e b arn co n c r b
2J5 53 2
x 23 LR and 25 f frontage on
and w ei
P a a f n anc n g
' 3
a BT d Move n any me
a11a abe

211

AUTOMOBIL E nsu an ce been
canceled'
Lost
your
opera o s I cense Ca
'192
7428
6 5 fc

STROUT REALTY

cemed by S a e o f Oh o 1
m es west o new hasp a
S7 Su n 'Va l ev 0
Ph 446
J65
Day ca r e ha says we
a e
MaDge Hau l dren
Owne
Lo ed h and John
H au d en Opera o s

EXPERIENCED mechan c
Con ac t Haro d Oav s at
Ga pols Moor Company
446 3672

NEED A new ce ng o
oom
pane ed or n er or pant ng?
ca 1 R chard w t 992 2889
12 1a 26fC

I

DA
:-,Y
·,-C:-:A-:RC
E -,
SU N VALLEY Nu se y Sc hool s

45

Roof ng spout ng
k chens
and bathrooms Complete
remodel ng Phone 742 6273
12 3 tf c

32

GLASS
needs
he ds
m r ors
ass r esc r een 704 P ne
andc 245 5048

12 20 26tc

Slack and f xtures go w lh lhe

For

ENERGY CR SI S DEMANDS
Nucear
Tanng
tor
Qua t ed lnd v dual s The U
S Na11y offe s the best
nuc ea powe t a n ng n the
wo ld for t hose who qua l fy
Open ng s ava abe fo both
off cer
and
en I sted
p ograms
Fu
pay
al owances wh e you tra n
Fo more nformat on cat to I
I ee 800 84 8000 any me
TAKE CO MMAND OF YO UR

5132

READY M X

mmed a tely
Phone 446 2649
4 6

4

RU SS S
for a
w nd
p e)(. g
Ro G

bu ld ng hOuses
cabnes Cal
Ra e ne Oh o

res dence of 6 rooms and bath

MOBILE HOME LOT -

NEEDED
babys Iter

CO LL EY S E ec t ca l Ser v ce
24 hou ca
245 5033 or 446
487 1

9 1 tfc

V1rcpl B. I,.JhJtd St
Bt-ok.'
II,~! ~-Ar•( hd ill ( Sltt f't
Pom c•roy. Oll!D : ·1l fl'1

INCOME - Bus ness bu ld ng
1969 BUICK La Sabre 4 door and 6 room apartment Steam
hardtop
good cond t on
ask ng saoo 7 or 8 m 1es per
ga lon Phone 985 J179
12 2a 7tp

load er
and backhoe wo k
sep c
anks nsfal ed dump trucks
and o boy s fo h e w I haul
f
d rt top so
I mestone
and grave Cal Bob o Roger
Jeffers day ptlone 992 7089
n gilt phon e 992 3525 o '192

Real Estate For Sale

992 386 t

POMER'OY 2 bedroom
fram e home w th some fur
966 PLYMOUTH w th a 1969 n ture bath ga s furnace and
motor and transm SJ on
967
K t c hen and
Dodge S af on Wagon Phone love y porch
d n ng Basement w th washer
247 279
I 4 6t c dryer hookups $15 000 00
sa le

MAN &amp; WIFE o wo k on smat
Pant farm
P efer m ddle
age
or
e ed
m an
Reference requ red have
fu n shed ap for r g tlt man
w 1 ng to work on y ex
pe enced needed Phon e J46
799 or 446 2906
3 6

C BRAOFOR D Au c oneer
Comp le e Se v ce
Phone 9.t9 38 2
Ra e ne Oh o
Cr tt Bradfo d
5 1 ftc

DOZER and back hoe work
ponds and sep c tanks d t
f
ch ng serv ce top so
mestone
B&amp;K Ex
d rt
cava l ng Phone 992 5367 or

:-::cc-_-c- --------

for

FOR YOUR new home o
comp le e rem ode ng
Con
tac
Greg Roush
Roush
Cons rucl on Phone 992 5039
16 1c

1 30 26tp

Rl 114-LANGSVILLE
2 2 acres 2 bedroom Mob le
Hom e t l e garage 4 x 8

POMEROY -

OLAN M L LS needs seve al
persons for fe ephone work n
Ga pol s off ce
No ex
per ence necessary Sa lary or
bonus Hou s '1 am
p m 5
m
p m 9 p m App y o
Knouff at W I am Ann Mofe
Monday Jan 7 9 a m to 1
p m and 5 p m o 9 p m
4

Monday thru Saturday
606 E Ma1n Pomeroy 0

0

COUNTRY STORE -

Help Wanted

Phone
G &amp; E Appl a nee R epa
a he shop 992 3802 or 949
J25,J

REALTY

MIDDLEPORT -

Auto Sales

B&amp;G AUCTION
14 R1vers1de Dr
Athens Ohto

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

- - - -- --

VACUUM Cleane s new 1'173
Model
Compete w th al
clean ng tools Sma t pant
damage n sh pp ng Wil tak e
$27 cash or budget p an
a\la abl e Phone 992 298,J
12 18 tfc

BEAUT FUL wa ln u st er eo
rad o AM FM tap e c om
b nat on 8 t ack ape deck
Ba ance S101 93
or terms
ava abe Ca 992 3965
12 23 tf c

FURNITURE

Real Estate For Sale

PAPER CARRIER

JWANTED

'5.55
-GU ARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

5 M O NTH o d bu
3 quare
Charo a s quarter brown
Sw ss bolh paren t s r eg $350
NEW 3 bed oom al elec c
Phone 742 4 7
home one car ga age w th
4 3t c
one ac e of g ound on Fla
woods Road Phone 992 2735
STORA GE bu d ngs pr ced for
63p
QU ck
sa l e
one
8x3 6
hOuset a e
one Ox 2 used ---- - -·car off ce bu d ng one 12 K 22 TWO STORY br ck apartment
meta~
ga age
one
41
bu d ng two apartments
S udebake body w th Chevy
South Th d St
M ddleport
ea
end and Chevv front
Shown
by
appo n menf
axle
one
63 Bro c kway
Rodney Down ng Rea Estate
tractor one 65 Infernal onal
Broker Phone 992 373
12 6 c
ac o one 66 Me c u y 2 D
HT one 68 Pont ac F reb rd
one off ce desk one serv ce 1 ROOM hoi.Jse
ex tra n ce
stat on cash reg s er lo s of
ocat on on new bypass Rf 7
m see aneous ems May be
15 m nu e dr ve to Gav n
seen a Pau s Auto Parts R
Plan
0 m nu e d ve o
7 bypass or phone 446 97 4
Pomeroy
E x t a a ge o
6 6tp
Can be v acant at once Can
see t by appo ntmenl Ca
97 3
Z G ZAG
SEW IN G
any t me after 3 p m
247
MACH N ES eff n layaWay
2 63
A I bu 1 n to buttonhole do
44C
st etch sew ng and fancy
st c h ng Pay ust $48 75 cash
or erms ava lab e Trad e n s
accep ed Phone 992 2984
12 30 fc

WE HAVE a I your uphols e y
needs
Bu ap
den m
camb r c foam g ue~ ppe s
ac k ng s r p spr ng s and
c l ps
ch pboard
button
tw ne sewing th ead l egs
upho ste y books da c ron
webb ng spr ng tw ne tacks
wet cord
cotton
sw ve
bases and foam foam foam
Pomeroy Recovery 622 East
Man S reel Pome oy Phone
992 7554
122J26c

302 26

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

and

For Sale

ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
C eaners complete w h a
t ac h mens cordw nder and
pa nf spray Used but n I ke
new c ond on
Pay $34 45
cash or budge I plan ava able
Phone 992 2984
12 30 tfc

7

On Most Amer1can Cars

OFFICE SUPPLIES

REPAIR

10 a m

If

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

606 E Mam

he

w 1 not be respons be fo any
debts othe han my own as o f
toda y
anuary J 974
S gned W I am Sha o

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Pomeroy

Ph 9'12 2 74

by

NotiCe

Rad a tor Spec1al st

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

m ssed

4

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

EXPERIENCED

A&amp;A HEATING

2 6 26 C F R EWOO O $ 2 pe
p cku p
l oad any day a t e r 2 00
Go don Proff t Gr eat Bend
Sandy Oeser Rd
Po and
Oh o R
97
AL
E ec
W n dso
2 28 2 c
Mob e Home
2x65
3
cond one
3 BASS gu a
bedro om 1:1
Ep phone w h
e)( pando I ac e g roun d 0 d
Vox Su pe Bee tl e amp and
R 33 No h of Rock Sp r ngs
J B L Spea ke Compe t e for
Phone 992 5677
$300 Phon e 667 33 72
12 23 c
I 2 4 p

------=------

EXAMINED

L ncoln H II Pomeroy 0

love dear

5 26 p

..1

~

GAS and OIL
SALES&amp; SERVICE

8 961 Fo herb hday J an
6
You are spend ng your b r hday
n heaven
We are su e ha you w I hear
Ev e y me we wh spe sot ly
Happy B
hd ay
w h a

Water Ltnes and Power
Ltnes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and sept c tanks n
stalled

Ph 992 5271

Notice

N LOVING memory of ou
motil e
Ade ne L Coope
who passed away Nov em be

DITCHING SERVICE

on

BEAUT C AN
pa tl me
He l ens B A Beau ty ShOp
Tupp er s Pi a n s Oh o Phon e
667 396ll

' ms··~~

P&amp;J HEATING
AND COOLING

Phone 991 3509

Help Wanted

E~ N ES T

Gene's
Body Shop

2 3 li e

For Sale

HOMES
FOR SALE

I I

FUR N SH E D apa
en ! on rn a n h
Mason
w Va
F owe Sh op o ca

SHOO

4

In Memory

7 JO 6 t

even n gs bY
4 2 I
on y Co Rd
bypass Phon e Wanda Eb n
PR VATE mee ng
oom
o
qq';&gt; 22 '}
any o gan a on phone 992
? 30 c

NEW
one letter tu each quare to
form four ord nary "o d s

R~nt

J 3c

NCOM~

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

ARGE un f ur n Shed 3d
oo
apt t o
en
n down t own
I orne oy Ca 992 2 119

39 '

losI

6

'

e

w

ORV LL E
ake
Gau
Janua y 6 973 Deep n o
hear s you w
a ways sa
Loved an d
emem b e ed
every day
W e h dren
and g andch d en

espons be
on a ed by
ha ou se vcs
d Go d e
e
6 p

c

r-.

Fac o y

and

P m

oe

E " n o
an
Wed

e

Ru

3

WE W L L NO T

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toda y

SHOO T NG
MATCH
Con
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Jll1S

o

For

Not1ce

The Sunday Tunes Sentmel Sunday Jan 6 1974

220ACRES
60A t labe 100 3 BEDROOM br ck and fam e
a
house on Bu la v 1 e Rd
A n good f mber balance n
Oscar Ba rd
garage comp le e y ca p eed
pas u e Fa fen ce 2
two
Doug Wettlerholl
Owne moved ou of sl a e and
story hOmes w h ba hs 3 and
B ok ers
anx ous o se
4 BR fo ced a hea homes
Off ce 446 3434
n good cond to n 3 Ia ge
Yo u can have
o ACRES on sa e route w h CENTE N ARY
barns p enty water 2 000 ft
mmed ate po ssess on on th s
arge ba n ob
u a wa e
on coun y road Cl ose to fown
ove y h ee bedroom hom
base P ced a $6 000
schoo s efc
P ce S5 7 SOO
s fu y q p e l ed n ce ba 1'1
L ow n tod ay s ma ket
w h shov ~
u bascm n
ON
SECO
ND
Ave
3
bedrooms
HILL VIEW
one a ga age na ura gas
b
a
h
s
new
k
chen
new
EN OY
t1e
beauf ful
heat c l y wa e and s hool
fu n ace and a
ond on ng
pan or am c v ew from
he
d s
cl
Owne
w I he p
Compl ete y ca rp e ed P e
w ndow of h s beaut fu LR
nan ce o se I on land con
$24
500
and pat o doo s n d n ng
ac
area Carpet throughout 3
a
ACR
E
S
w
h
4
ro
om
house
an
d
a ached garage
n ce BR
WOODLAND D R I VE
Ths
turn l ure
2 sma
o ut
We I
andsca ped
awn
ove y hree bed r oom home
bu d ng s Sma pond P ce
$24 500
h as had ex ce l en care N e
$10 000
BRICK &amp; FRAME
n
ba h k chen w h bu
F YOU Ike he coun ry
ange and oven fu ly
a
3
ACRES
Mod
e
n
J
bed
oom
th s beaut ful k tchen w h a
pe ed na ur a gas hea w h
the bu
ns shaggy ca pet n
cen t a a r one a ga r age
llOm e gas fur nace hardwood
w h wo r ks hop Loca t ed on
LR and 2 BRs deep ot 100 x
f oo S h ouse n exce ll en
wo ot s n c ty sc hoo d s r cf
85 w h storage bu d ng
co nd on Vacan r eady lo
c ose to
own
m med a e
car garage 522 000
move n Pr ce S2 000
possess on
VACANT LAND
THE PRICE IS RIGHT'
NEW home on 0 J Wh e Road EUREKA
Loveyvewor he
SPAC OUS tam v room w th
Lot 00 x 200 frame and
ve r w th h s hree b ed oom
f rep ace and paf o doors
b ck
v ng room A x 25 2
home n ce ba h fo ce d a r
s ze k tch en w h
ban que
baths and 2 showe s ca rpe ed
u na ce love y d n ng and
arge laundry room a ached
w h e ec r c h ea
P
ed a
v ng oom w h
ep ace
garage Ia ge c orner of w h
$27 000
ga age and a b g o t P
e
storage bu td ngs
educed
l
o
S C 300
GARDEN SPOT
3 BEDROOM
home w th
2 AC RES 1 m from town 0 a
pano am c v ew of th e Oh o WE: HAVE o h e p oper y for
your own weathe n fh s gas
oom ca peted
R ve f on
sa l e
to s
va ant g ound
hea ed hom e w h cen ra a
modern
k t chen
u I
a ms and homes ca l fo
for
summer
comfo
basement P ced a $23 000
nfo mat on
Beaut ful k I chen and d n ng
garage S21 000
AT Rodney on
ac e fram e 4 WE NE ED L ST NGS
f you
IDEAL LOCATION
bedroom c-a pe ed
e ec r c
have a hom e o ac eage l ose
A TWO FER
heat storm doo
and w n
or
rade ca I Oh o R ve
FIRST CLASS I vlng for two
dows cemen block ga rage
Realty today we
b e g lad o
fam es at a budget pr ce
Pr ce reduced to $ 9 500
you
he
p
F rsf floor has 6 room s and
F nanc ng a va abe w h
Even ngs Call446 4244
ba h second f oor has 7 rooms
sm a down pa ymen
Steven Beh 446 9583
and batn
Ful
d 11 d ed
OFFICE 446 1066
John M Fuller446 4327
basemen w th two near new
EVENINGS
furnac es Off sl ee par k ng
Russel Wood 446 46 8
Shown by appo n fme n
Ran Canaday 446 36 36
ANY TIME IS
John I R ella ds 446 0280
A GOOD TIME
TO L ST"(our home for sa e We
need good p oper es n al
RE FOR SALE
s zes Our fee s f ree un ess we
FLOR OA Lo
Teh
Ac r e
Mart n Onve 3 bedroom s
se I Ca I loday
T W LL
p esen va ue SA 995 Make
1 1 bath cer am c t le bu It
PAY
me an offer ca 4 6 4672
a nge d spo sal
3 n k tchen
d s hwa sh e r
wall to wall
carpet central a r two car
HOUSE 2
ac es
3 o
4
garage electr c door opener
bed ooms
c y
sc hoo
Galhpolrs
C ty
School
d s c t 2 m es out R
4
0 s1r cf Ph 446 1171 or 446
446 1323
247 f
4305

How About 79 Acres
W1th Small Lake

AT EDGE OF TOWN ON 2
ACRE LOT W T H FA N
T AST C V ~W OF T HE
RVER
HR EE LARGE
BE D ROOMS
W FE
AP PR OVED
K TC H EN
FORMA
0 N NG
LV N G AND FAM LV
ROOMS
ARE
CAR
PETED
EVERY T H N G
S CL EA N AND N M N
CONO T I O N N S DE A ND
OUT
YOU L Ffl.
N
LOVE W TH TH E AND
THE
TREE S
THE
PEACE
AND
Q U ET
OW N ER TRAN SFERRED
OU
OF STATE MUST
SELL BELOW MARKET
VAL U E

6 M LES OUT OF TO WN
N
C TV
SC HOO L
DANDY
O SRCT
OLDER
H OME
W TH
MODER N
K TCHEN
CEN T RAL HEA T AND
BAT H
LARGE
TOBACCO BASE
ARGE
BARN
20
0 30 A
C E AR
BALANCE
N
WOOD
AND
BRUSH
R GH T NOW S T ME T O
BUY
BEFORE
N
TEREST GOES UP WE
W L SP IT TH S FA RM
F DES I RED

Excellent
Farm Property

Economy Group
OLDER HOM E NEN LY
DECORA T ED N S DE AND
OU T N C UDIN G STORM
W NOOW S AND DOG R S
NEW F OOR COVER NG
THRO UGHO U T TH S
BE DR OOM HOME H AS
PAR
AL
BA SE MENT
LOCATED ON A SPAC OU S
TREE SHADED L O W TH
C T Y WATER
EN OY
AL
H S
W
H
A
REGU AT O N S ZE PQO
T ABLE AS
A
BO NU S
PR CE $17 900
2
CH LL CO HE R D
SPE C A L
OWE
NG
N C UO N G GAS RA N GE
REFR G
A N D OT H ER
F URN T UR E
GOOD
N
VESTMENT
U ST R I G H T
FOR N EWLYWEDS OR
RE T RED COUPLE
3 RU T A ND
S ORY
HOMES O N A LARGE
F LAT
OT W T H LARGE
K TCHEN 3 BEDROOMS
BA TH
N EW
F LOOR
COVER N G A ND CAR PE
A LUM N UM
S 0 NG
STORAGE
BU
D NG
OWNER VERY A N X OUS
~ EL
A ND
H AS
TO
P R CE 0
T
BE OW
MARKE T
VA UE
AT
$ 3 500

Lookmg For QuahtyAtlhe R1ght Pnce
Tt"iSVERYWE L L BU T J
BEDROOM
HOME
N
CL UDE S
EXPE N SI VE
CA RPET
IN
LARGE
V NG ROOM AND 2
BEDROOMS
THE K T
CHEN
S EXTRA N CE
W T H LOTS OF CAB NET S
A ND BU L T N RA NGE
D N NG.
AREA
OR
F AM Y ROOM
ARGE
CAR GARAGE A LL ON A
LARGE
FLA
LA ND
SCAPED COUN T RY LOT
THI S SA N EXCEP T ON AL
HOME BE SURE AND SEE
T
BEFORE
B UY N G
ELSEW HER E

JO ACRES A L CLEA N AS
H OU ND S TOOTH W TH
VERY GOO D~ BEDROOM
H OME
N CE MODERN
K TCHEN
NEW 5 D NG
NEW ROOF
MODERN
FUR NACE
BA H S
REAL Y A VERY COM
FO RTAB E HOM E
A

Large 3 Bedroom
Woodland Dr
EX CE
ENT LOCA TI ON
M L E FROM TOWN
LARGE
N CLUOES
L V NG ROOM
0 N NG
AND
FA M
Y
ROOM
LAR GE
OT
PR CE O
$24 900 00

,.

Panoramic
V1ew of
The OhtD Valley

tn ves tm ent Propert y
4 F AM L Y dwe l ng oca ted on c1
a ge o
on Second Ave
P ope ty s n good con d on
an
ap
Ca
t oday for
po n men t
Ofc Phone 446 694
Even ng s
Cha l es M Nea 446 1546
J M chae Nea 446 503
Sa m Nea 446 7358

Serv1ces Offered
ROOF N G and guller wo k
A so bu
up oof ng 388 8507
22011
P ANO un ng and r epa r ng
ane Da n e s 259 B oadway
M dd epo t Phone 9Q? 2082
277 30

0

J&amp;WMDUNT
CLEAN NG SERVICE
GE NER AL house c ean ng we
supp y a l
he c ean ng sup
p es 388 8875 at er 6 p m c al
388 8865 Week y or mon h y
c ean ng by appo n men
9
sha p en ng
saws
sc ssors sh ea s home and
ga den
oo s
Sharp Shop
A ey ea
47 Second
CAB NET Shop
0
wood work
Ph 446 7745

N CE

Excellent Buy
In Country
LARC: E 0 DER HOME
COM P LETE L Y
REMODELED ON 6 ACRE
LOT O N RT 325 BETWEE N
RIO GRA ND E AND V N

T H S BRA ND
N EW
3
BEDROOM
HOME
IS
COMPLETE Y
CA R
NCL UD ES
P E ED AND
RANGE
D SHWAS HE R
CEN TR AL A R
BAT H S
STORM W ND OWS ARGE
LIVIN G
ROOM
A ND
DNING
W FE
AP
P ROVED K TCHEN 2 CA R
GARAGE AND L ARGE L OT
N
C TY
SCHOOL
D STR CT

N GLE o u be IS 44 6 000 o
appo n men
o see modern
wo bed oom home w l h ha rd
wood f o o s
a ge
11 n g
oom p c fu e w ndow and
u I y oom Capo andb g
ol for
ha
ga den n ex t
sp r n g C y gas and wa er
Just off U S 35 P ce d unde
ma r ke n h e eens
S the season o be o l y an d
by go y
wou d be a c n h n
t1 s bea u
b ck home
h ee o ou bed oom s wo
ba hs
f ep ace
doubl e
ga r age A cond on ng Pus
oun y s e l o
Qua fy
cus om bu
hom e
G v E some h ng b g for Chr s
mas Fo examp e 4 ooms
hree ba h s
arg e o on
Second Avenue P ced $6 000
und e ma k e
RACCOON Creek f arm ove
200 ac es
Ea sy 90 head
pas u e New ba r n Mode n
home w h f ep ace
THREEa esSR325souho
R o Grande Mob e nome
B ock ee l a We and sep t c

'146·0001
Jay Sh!!-ppa d
Broker Auct oneer

AUCTION
SERVICf
' SELL THE AUCTION
WAY

JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

PH. 44&amp;:3444

PROTECT your mob e home
w th T E D OW N A NCHORS
Ca I Ron Sk dmore 446 17 56
af e 3 ij m

S T
N
TH S LARGE
CARPETED LV N G ROOM
AND BE H PNO ZED BY
THE V EW
YO U LL
ALSO ENJOY A COZ Y
FAM LV
ROOM
3
BEDROOM S
LARGE
SPAC OUS
K TCHE N
WOOD
BURN I N G
F- I REPLACE AN D ON E OF
THE
BEST
N E GH
BORHOOOS N T OW N ALL
T H S ON A LARGE LOT
FOR LES S T HAN $50 000 00

New 3 Bedroom
Bnck
W T H FU L ~BASEME N T
OVELY
K I TCHEN
QUA I TY CO N STRUCT ON
T HR O U G H OUT
N CIT Y
SC HOOL 0 STR CT $35 900

Best Older Home
For Sale
In Galhpohs

·-- - - -- - - -- -

T HOMAS Fan E)( e m nat ng
Co Te r m te and Pesf Control
W hee e sbu g Oh o
233 f

M &amp; S CONSTRUCTION

EXCAVAT O N and genera
emode ng
Bac kho e dozer
and r ench ng Sep c anks
and oo e s A
phases of
n ew
n
p I.Jm b n g w ng
s a a t on Ca 388 9986

2 7 tf
ROOF NG AND SPOUT NG
Sh ng l es s d ng and bu dup
ho roof s F ee E s mates 26
yea s expe r en ce
James
Ma c um
V nton
Oh o 388
9940
247 f

M&amp;M

ROOF N G &amp; Spout ng Sh ng le
&amp; Bu ldup root Hot &amp; Cold
process Home mprov emen
n
gene a
For
free
es rn a es
phone Robert
Meade 388 8 4 B dwe

Oh o

FUL BR CK
N
CO ND TO N
N
CL U DES 3 BEDROOMS
L ARGE FORMA L D N NG
ROOM
COMPLETE Y
MODERN
K TCHE N
L A R GES T FAM L Y ROO M
IN TOWN P L U S A FU L
BASEMENT
BAT H S
AND 2 CAR GARAGE W TH
W ORK SHOP
A N EX
CE LENT H OME
M ID
FOR T ES

HOLLEY B os Con slruct on
bu doz ng back hoe work.
d ch ng under roads bor ng
Phone 245 50 a 0 2.45 5006 I

B E AU

M NT

Brand New
Spit! Entry
HI\S

3 BEDROOMS
BATH
ARGE FAM L Y
2 CAR GARAGE
RO OM
A N D A L T HE EXTRAS N
T HE K TCHE N $2890000

Ga 1 a Co s Largest R eal
E stat e Sa es Ag ehcy
Off ce 446 3643
Even ngs Call
E M
ke w seman
446 3796
E N w seman 446 4500
Bud McGhee 446 255

RE FOR SALE
NEW 3 BE DROOM b u ck
home
bath fu y ca
pel ed
Ia ge k chen and
d n ng area di s hwa s h er
e ec r c r ange 2 ca ga age
w h e ec door op en er N ce
l eve lo Wou ld se on and
co nt ac
sm a
down
paym en Lo ca ed 6 m e l.IP
R
Co un y A r e Es ates
Phone 446 17 or 446 2573
at er
p m

230 tf

18

'

f

144"
TERM TE PEST CONTROL
FREE n spe c on Ca 446 3245
Me r I 0 De I Opera or by
Exte m na l Term te Se v ce
0 Be men Or

267 tf

s

EWART E lec tr cal Serv ce
Repa r
house w r ng
e ec f c heat ng Phone JA6
4561
27 1 If
SEPT IC TANKS
Cl eaned and ns al ed
Ru sse l s P umb ng 446 4782
2'17 tf

GILLENWATER S SEPTIC
TANK
C LEANING AND
REPA IR
ALSO
HOU SE
WREC K ING Ph 4J69499
Est a b she d n 940
69 tf
ALBERT EHMAN
Wate Del very Serv ce
Pa o Sla R Gal pol s
Ph 379 2133
243 tf
BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE esmaes l ab tv n
su ran ce P un ng
r mm ng
and cav y wo k
ree and
s ump em ova Pll 446 4953

73

f

MOTOR ST MUTUAL
INSURANCE
THEbes n su ance a he bes
pr ce
Fo
auto
home
bus ness and fe Ray Hawk
agen
446 2300 54 4th Ave
150 If

PUBLIC
AUCTION
SATURbAY
JANUARY 12, 1974
AT 10:00 A.M.
Localton From Galhpohs lake Stale Route
141 for appro'lomalely 6 m1les
The to l ow ng w I be offered Two 1951 0 1 ve
70
ow
crop tractor s 197-4 Ford Ferguson tractor garden roto
tiler pul typed sc 5 ft Bu sh hog w th extra bade 2 14
mch p ows 2 12 nch p ows w I f t a Ford or F erguson pul
type plow corn e evator Dear Borne front end oader
(heavy dul y) pu l t yped sc 3p corn p anter 1 nch post
ho e auge r ce tong s 2 horse cut vato s 3 horse drawn
mow ng mach n es f e II zer spreader on rubber one 3
too th and one 5 tooth ho se cult vato corn planter gran
d I ho r se drawn h ay ake sed wagon 3 Lands de
p ow s 2 horse drawn d s.c b ass bed and other
m see laneous ems

James L. Davison and
Francis Northup, Owners
AUCTIONEER LEE JOHNSON
Crown C ly Ohlo-256 6740

I

I

f

22 1 f

TO N

Lovely New
Sphl Level

87

WASHER
dryer
and
e f ge r a to r
epa r
No
f we
cha ge for se v ce ca
can
)(, you appl a n ee Ph
6 5 4242
25 4 f

Excellent
3 Bedroom
H OME
NCL U OES CAR
PETING
TH ROUG HOUT
O N L ARGE L O T W TH
GARAGE
PR CEO A T
$1? 900 00
VE RY VER Y

p
n &amp; Son Water
De
Se v e
You r
pa r onage
w
be
ap
p ec a ed Ph 446 0463
2 I

�I
20 - The Sunday Ttmes Se ntmel Sund \ Ja

1

6 1971

•

21

For Fast Results Use The s ·u nday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Business
Services
I
'
•

Card of Thanks

In Memorv
N

memo y o

LOV N G

husband

Hom eli

who passed away

e

My 1 ps ca n no

con

Hawk. ns
Q 1
h(\W ;.n.. s_:;

food

say

canna

e

'I

wha

God a one know s how

hm

n a home

ha

P ANO
q
du a
co se

an 6

hom

My hea r

Notice

ny

s

c

n ss

Sad y m ssed by h s w

c

~

'd

o

any Cleb

anyone o h e
s gned Ray a

e

Louse Hawk ns
6

p

AAA 0

beg
n o m a on
a 991 5618

Be

a sses
9
o

S aw

e

6

WANT o ha k hem n s er s
e a es ne qhbo
ends
and
h
hes f o
he
p ayers
a ds
and q I s
11 s t s made wh e was n he
oseph s
Hosp a
St
Pa ke sbu g and home Fo
he wonde
uns e sh
deeds done by a o me May
God b es eo
a d eve Yo e
M s Rona d Osbo n e
6 c

Card of Thanks
~E

w SH o hank he B ado d
Ch u ch of Ch st and Sun d ay
'Schoo c ass a so th e
ends
and ne ghbo s of M s Hom e
Hawk ns and Leo Reu e
s ster and broth e
fo
he
beaut fu f ewers nat were
sen tor our s s e s vne a l
M !) Ge t ude Neutz l ng o
A hel\1 Oh o Many hanks to
a of"' you God bess you a
Her s s er and b o h e Mrs
Home Hawk ns and brothe
Leo Reu er

t

OST

BE WE E N Ha
so
Ca pen e and Oy 5
v e
De
28
3 beag e
hound S 2 b a k and wh e
5po ed ma es
back a!ld an
ema e
den
~
on o
a a
s H
E
Hudson
Cha es on W Va
see
ca
oca
426

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TARA

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hok ed
an ua y_ 6

33
NG Ma Ch Fo ked Run
ma
Cl ub noon Sun
Fa o y
hoked guns

SHO O
Spo

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dX)CVCf'
D&lt;~ y ex ep

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Sunday
appo n men
22 o lf R

Unscmmblf' lhf' se four Jumhlf's

DEVELOPMENT
CORP.

IMIEPEIJ

[J

FAT:;/f.

I

B u 1ld ng
~ t es
Ava Iable K ngsberry
Hon es bu It to f t any
spec f cat 1on s
All
Underground Utlitt1 es
Prov ded
------------~

I I

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For lnformat1on
Or Appomtment
&gt;;o• arrang•l h• c rcl•d •llers
to form the surpr se ansv.er a.s

I
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NOISY DUMPY BEHOLD
Jo

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KI I I J

CANINE

HO U SE for en
Phone 99l 5693

mens o
ghway
n
Reyno ds
1 7 3 5 47
36 p

n Ch esh e

PHONE
367-7250
Add1son,

I POUNDS

0

J ANG
ROOM
ununshed
Phone 992 563

urn sh ed and
apa men s

N G Ma en Ho
Gun c ub Svnda
an
noon Fac o y
hoked

2

w L L be t ak ng se w ng order s
aqan
n
r ede ck

anuay
Be t y
ba h
Phone 985 3860 ? BEDROOM hom e
basemen and g&lt;~ age Phone
2 30 6 p
Q9') 20 2
4 3 p

Pets For Sale

? COO N dogs one b ue cK an d i BEDROOM u n shed ap No
eyhound c ossed 0 he
ed
pe s $ 5 pe
mon t h p us
u
t es Robe t H
Rae n e
bone shephe d se as pa
gua an eed Phone 992 6258
Y 9 313
1 4 8 p
4 p

Employment Wanted
EXt-'tR

n er o
9!15 3~

E N CEO
pa n e
and CK e o
Phone

I"=UR NI SH ED
2
bed r oom
apa r menf
M dd epo
Phone 99? 38 4
2 28 tr c

Residence commeretal or
mob le hom es Save on parts
&amp; labor
215 N 2nd Ave
Middleport

Pa1nt1ng A Spec1alty

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
N1ght992 3S2S
or 992 5232

Area s Most
Rea sonable Pnces

All work guaranteed

Dick's
Hoard House

WOOD TRUSSES

STRIPPERS
We Sir p Pa nt Varn1s h es
etc from Furntture
Ant ques Modern Meta Is
We buy Anttques
Collec
t bles etc
Ptck up Servtce Ava lable

DICK SEYLER Owner
Phone 992 1798
Kerr Street
Pomeroy Oh1o

Sad!','
c h d en

From the arges T u ck or
Bu ldozer .Had ator to I he
smallest Hl!a ler Core

Nathan 8 ggs

rl?"\&gt;
Bu1lt to Your Specs

•

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

For Rent or Sale

INSTALLING
AND

23
J ORDAN S Gas Ser v ce o R o
G an de s mov ng to Doxo
Panl
at
50? Easen
Ave nue Ga
po s Off ce
hours 8 5 Monday F r day P h
4~6 1264
36

..

CU ST OM
sew ng
a nd
al erat ons on a I ypes of
clo h ng
Fu r s
a so
Reweav nq
of
dam aged
mater a Ph 446 7520 o 44ll
177
985 4th Ave

Del vered to JobS te

18

REO s Barbe Shop
p m 6 days

MATERIALS CO
773 5554
Mason W Va

992 2094
Pomeroy

Residence and
Mobtle Homes

-----·-

973 SUZUKI T 500 $800
ke
new s
unde
war an ty
Phone 949 3833

Wanted To Buy

FARM 50ac eso mo e good
24 p
gh s
house and wate Coa
PhOne 992 5 52
FOAM o f 1 you old couch and
I 6 p
cha r cush ons as ow as
s 0 95 Upho st ery books on y
4 nch covered foa m
SOc
CAS H pad fo a 1 makes and
ma res ses fo s andard s ze
mode s of mob l e hom es
bed
$29 95
Pome oy
Phon e a ea ode 614 423 953
R ecove y
62 2 E
Man
4 3 fc
Pom e oy Phon e 992 7554
2 23 26 c
NO
COP PER 65c ad a o s
32c ed brass J5c ba te es
UPHOLSTERY Fabr cs by he
S 0 M A Ha
Reedsv l e
ya d 54 nch es w de as ow as
Oh o P hone J 8 6149
$ 95 pe ya d ve ve s as ow
6 f
as $3 J!i
m po led v el ve s
$9 95 We a so have nylon
O LD u n u e oak
ab es
He c u on
co on p n s
cocks ce bo )(,es brass beds
v nyls and rem nan s by he
dshes
o
ompee
ya d or by he p ece Pomeroy
househo ds
Wr te M
o
Recove y
622 Eas
Man
M I e R 4 Pom e oy Oh o
S r ee f Pom e oy Phone 992
ca 992 62
7554
5 13
2 23 26 c

6 4 p

SALT FOR I CE A ND SNOW
Rock sa t fo
town sh p s
owns and bu s nesses n
bu lk s and bat s for ce and
snow Exce s b Sa t Wo ks
Phone 992 389

ELEC TR OLUX Sweeper d e uxe
mode
Comp l et e w h a I
c l ean ng a a ch ments and
uses pape bags 51 ght v u se d
but c eans and looks 1 ke new
W I se
fo $37 25 cash or
fe m s ava abe Phone 992
2984

TEXAS REF N ERY COR P
offers P ENTY OF MONE Y
p us cash bonuses
fr ng e
benef s o matu e nd v dua
n M dd epo
Pome oy
a ea
Rega d ess of e)(,
pe ence a ma H
Pate
P es Texas Ref ne y Co p
Box 7
Ft
Worlh
Tex
H &amp; N DA Y o d o s a rt ed
6 0
Leghorn pu l e s Bolh floor or
65p
c age
grown
ava ab e
- - - - ·- Poul y
hous ng
&amp;
KOSCO T KOSMETICS &amp; W GS
au om a on Mode n Pou ry
We have he p oduc f on hand
399 W Man Pome oy 992
and we de ver to you pe
2 64
sona l y H e en Jan e Brown
6 I c
992 51 3
2 JO tf c
CLOSE OU T on new Z g Zag
Se w ng Mach nes F o se w ng
stre t ch tabr cs buttonholes
fan cy des gns e c Pan
sl gh ly b em shed Cho ce of
c ar y ng cas e ~ r sew ng
sand $,J9 80 casti or te ms
ava lab e Phone 992 2984
12Stfc

PHONE 843·2341

Mowrey s Upho ster ng
J PROFE SS ONAL men to
serve vou better and fa s ler
Sa v e on off season p ces now
llrough Februa y 974 For
free es rna es phone 675
4 54 Shop oca ed at Mason
Co ~a rgrounds

WANTED IN
POMEROY
PHONE 992-2156

lHE
DAILY SENTINEL

SEW NG mach nes brand new
z g zag n n ce walnut able n
o g na ca ton s Never u sed
C earance on 73 models On y
a few ava able $63 40 cash or
terms ava abe Phorle 992
2984
ASS I STA NT MANAGER
A
12 23tfc
person who can qu ck y
dev elop
no
he ass sian EXCELS OR Sa I Works E
manager of our off ce Mus
Man St Pomeroy A 1 k nds
be at
eas
h gh sc hoo
ol sa lt wa er pel e s water
graduate and have a car
nugge s bock salt and own
Phone Mr Busk k a 99 2
Oil o R ver Sa l
Phone 992
211
Cap tal
F nanc a
3a91
Se rv ces
an
equa l
op
6 5 tfc
po un y em p oye
- - -- -------------3 3
AM FM ste eo ado 8 tack
ape comb na on 4 speak er
WAN EO exper enced
ru c k
so und
system
Ba ance
ou
eq u pmen
S 03 98 or use ou
budget
d vers fo
B okers
w h
Tandem
erms Ca I 992 3'&gt;'65
Tracto s and 40. f
F at
2 9 fc
a er s
A so
Tandem
4
ac o s w th we t nes o pu
F R E wpoo
cord hard
our Dump
a e s A
fo
wood 'le u
2 or 3 teet
ong hau
Con act c
L
Del ve ed $25 00 Phon e 6'16
Wyatt New Haven W Va
I 61
(304 862 2138
3 .. t c

POMEROY, 0
L---~---'

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

'6 c

EARNS5000pe
and
moe
drvng
Tacor
Tra e s
No
ex pe ence
necessa y
Fo
nforma on
wr e Th e Da ly Sent nel aox
729 R Pl ease nc ude name
add ess and pt1on e numbe

2 7t c

- - -----'----- ----...:

me

SOME O N E o lv e n f pass be
1 ght hoi.Jsew o k ake ca e of
ch ld en ag e J and
2 sma
age 8 5 days a wee k Ca I 992
286 or nqu rea 674 L nco n
Hgfs even ng s
2 30 6 c

-----------

You
Favor te
Country
Mus1c Stars V s1t On

lHE RALPH
EMERY SHOW
4 30 TO 5 30
Monday thru Fr day

On

WMPO-FM

STEREO. 92.1
M ddleport PoiT:erov

WOOD COAL cook stove U S
been u sed
Surp us N eve
de ve ed S250 00 Phone 696
1161
1 3 4fc
1973 KAWASAKI 75 Enduro
1957 Mob le Home 8x 48 96'1
Mer cury Comet Phone 949
2788
33 p
AM FM Rad o stereo 8 rack
ape comb nat on
A way
s peaker
sound
sys em
Balan ce $ 14 53 or terms
ava I able Ca 1 99~ 3965

3 fc

PA NT

DAMAGE

1973

Bill Wade Auct oneer

SALE EVERY
SATURDAY
NIGHT 7 PM
Consignments
ac
cepled lOa m to 6 p m
da1ly or wtll pay cash
for your household
tlems

PHONE 593-5035
COLLECT

ZIG

ZAG SEW NG MACH NES
S I n o ig na carton s No
aJtachments needed as ou
Sews
con rol s are bu I n
w th 1 or 2 need es makes
buffonho es sew on buttons
monograms and b nd hem
st tch Fu cash p ce $38 50
or budge
plan a11a abe
Phone 992 2984
2 18 tf c
S NGER Au omat c Z g Zag
Sew ng Mach nes n sewing
ab e Makes buttonholes
se ws on buttons btlnd hems
e c Top notch cond ton Pay
$51 or te ms ava lab e Phone
9'12 2984
12 18 tf c
GROCERY busness for sae
Bui d ng for sa e or ease
Phone 3 56 8 f om 8 30 p m
o 0 p m tor appo ntment
3 20 fi e
sew ng mach nes 1972
mode
n beaut fut walnut
cab net Makes des gn st t
buttonhot es
c hes z g zag
b nd hems etc L ke new
On y $89 95 Ca 1 Ravenswood
273 9521 o 273 98'13 after S 00
12 7 li e

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dtsplay

Open BT I 5

608 E
MAIN

POMEROY

969 VOLKSWAGEN
good
cond f on
A so
185 Suzuk
Enduro Motorcycle Good
cond f on Phone '149 J452
1 6 1tc

Ce lar w th storage over
lmmed ate po5sess on

JUST OFF RT 33 - 17
acr es Home s 2 yrs ad 3
bedrooms dovble coset'S)
Colored bath W showe
K tchen has 29 ft cab net s
Range &amp; Ref Large d n ng
area Ut ty Garage barn

sto age bldg $22 500 00
NEW RT 7 1 2 acre 2
we ll s E ectr c Approved fo
Sept c Tank Blacktop road

n Bu ld ngs $4 500 00
POMEROY 2 story frame
3 bedroom s New colored
bath
New furna ce
New

H W lank Pane rng &amp; T le
$6 500 00
REEDSVILLE - 77 acres
$9 000 00
THE ANSWER TO YOUR
HOME HUNTING CAN BE
FOUND WIT&gt;' US CALL
TODAY
'I&gt;
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
If no an swer 992 2568

TEAFORD

3 31

Pus

sale of bu ld ng $25 000 00 or
what would you otter

Res dence

of 9 rooms 4 bedrooms bath
a ge ot of one acre pus 1
bedroom rental vn t Only

$750000

Cozy S ooms

bath ba5emenl and sma
garden J u sf $5 000 00

heat n both

On

Route 7 About one acre

DO YOU NEED ONE OF THE
ABOVE INV EST N A HOME
Mobile Homes
Sale
AND FEEL SECURE RENT
ADD A ROOMS BY VEMCO MONEY HELPS THE LANO
SA VE YOU MONEY
WHY LORD
PAY
OFF
THE
TRADE?
ADO
EXTRA MORTGAG
BEDROOMS
BATH
FAMtLY ROOM
6 FLOOR
PLAN S &amp; S ZES ONE DAY
IN STALLAT ON
YOUNG 5

M H SALES RT 7 &amp; 35
BELOW
S L VER
MEMOR AL

GALL POL S

BRIDGE
1 6 tc

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

,.1

~ ~~~

f, lh ~.

'f:l1•hll'
t'· , ,
I ' 1: i

{, ', , I)\

,

2 11 fc
DOZER wo k and c ear ng by
the acre hour y or cont ac
fa m ponds roads etc La ge
dozer and operata w th over
20 years exper en ce Pu ns
Ex cava ng Pomeroy Oh o
Phone 992 2478
2 19 fc

, ; I

992 3325 or
992 -3615

FUTURE IN THE NUCLEAR
NAVY

0 DE LL A n em entwork canbe

305 6

done by appo nfment on y at
ness n
p esen t me due to
fam ly
Phone
for
ap
po ntment 742 3232
1 25 fc

WANTED e pe ienced tru c k
dr vers for our equ pment
Brokers w th tandem f a c or s
and 40 f fla I al ers A so
and em tractors w th wet
nes to pul
our dump
I ra l er s A I for ong hau
Con tact L
Wyatt
New
Haven W Va 1 304 882 2138
6

CONCRETE

del vered righ t to
pro1ecl Fast and ea~y
est mat es Phone 992
Goegle n Ready M x
M ddleport Oh o
6

your
Free
3284
Co

Electrical Drattsman
PREPARAT ON of work ng
Draw ngs for Heat ng and
vent at ng System~ Sa ary
commensurate
w th
ex
per ence and capab ty
Contact E s I man P M
Oelfa Jackson P 0 Box 401
Gal pol s Oh o 6 4 367 7363
I 5

30 fc

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE ra tes Ph 4J6
4782 Ga pols John Russe 1
Owner and Operator
5 12 tc

SEPT C

TANKS

S EWAGE

SYSTE MS

CLEANED

REPA RED

M LLER

IMMEDIATE INCOME
D STR BUTOR - part or fut
t me o Supp ly Company
estab shed accounts w th
RCA CBS D sney
Reco ds
ncome poss b t es up to
S1 000 per month w th on y
SJ 500 reQv red fo
nv en ory
and
anng
Ca l
COLLECT fo
M
Ja mes
8 7 461 696 1

AROB C

SA N TAT ON
PH 662

STEWAR T OH 0
3035

1() 4 fc

---------c eaned
SE PT C
TAN KS

Modern San taf on 992 3954 or
992 7349

4s

AN OH 0 O IL CO
offers
PLENTY OF MONEY pus
cash bon su e!. fr nge benet fs
o mature
nd v dual
n
Gal pol sa ea Regardless of
exper ence airma I H
I
Read
Pres
Amer cat"\
L ubricants Co
Box 696
Dayton Oh o 45401

ELNA and White Se w ng
Mach nes
Se v ce on al
makes Reasonable rates
The Sew ng Center
M d
d eport Oh o
1 16 ttc

PRICE

CON S TRUCTION

00

Virgil B.

TEAfORD

Sr.

R1 •&lt;1l E sl,lff' Brok e r
)17 Sp(n n d AvP .

Ga lll pol rs. Ohro

RT 35 WEST
Up to 800 fl frontage plus 3
bedroom modern home

gas

heal

sq

3 52

ft

bu s ness bu ld ng n an up
&amp; com ng area adaptab e

fo r

types

of

bu s n esses
Shown
appo ntment only

many

by

MEAOOWGREEN
ESTATE

a

Spac ous
rooms
3
bedroom s
2
bat h s
f eplace Ia ge andscaped

ot Whte brck Coona
pr ce reduced fo
qu ck
sal e Ca I for appo ntment
anyt me

4 BEDROOM
Approx
2 acres
large
modern k tchen bath &amp;
shower
gas
furna ce

24 x24 base ment paneled
Lots of shade trees garden
space A sleal at s a 900

1NO AVE
One block from busmess
sect on of Ga po s 3
bedroom f a me gas for ced
a r furnac e
ha dwood

floors In good shape See I
now
3 BEDROOM
n Ga l pol s modern
frame
gas forc ed a r
furnace hardwood f oors
t s n ce See t must se ll

MADISON AVE
3 Bed oom home n ce of
JOx 3

Ask ngon y$5500

SO OF EUREKA
29 , Ac r e farm 4 bedroom
home tobac co base barn
See t

1 -4 Acre 2 bedroom frame
on Rt
7 lots of out
bu d ng s n ce p cture v ew
of the Oh o R ver Pr ced
on y $14 VOO

VACANT LAND
47 Acre s
m e off Rt 35
West 3m les f rom hosp tal
8 A cres on
Porter

Rt

60 n ear

5 Acres nea V nton
wei sept c tank barn

has

The word s largest bus transportal on
company s growmg and nterv ew ng for ca
reers as drvers - and needs you TOP PAY
SCALES I beral benet Is pa1 d pen s on plan 9.
pad hoi da ys pa1d vacat on after one year
stock purcha se plan cost 1ot I vmg al owance
free travel benef Is etc Prev ous heavy duty
dr v ng ex per ence s not requ red Profess ona
Greyhound nstru ctors w leach yo u f you
meet the qua l f catrons

QUALIFICATIONS ARE
Herght-M n mum 5 7 Max mum 6 4
We ght-Proport onate to he ghl
V s on-20/30 both eyes corrected 20/ 20
Mu st pass Greyhound phys ca l exam nat on
and successfu lly complete prescrrbed
Drrver Tra mng Program

WILL tr m or cut trees and
Shrubbe y Also c ean ou
ba sements att cs ere Cal
949 3221 or 7&lt;1 2 44J
2 26t c

Real Estate For Sale
DESIRABLE two b ed oom
house n M ddleport ready to
occ upy Call 992 53 0
2 30 261 c
A LOVELY new Home , m le
from Me gs H gh Schoo
Three bedrooms two baths
tul basement with two car
garage Large ot
S27 soo
Also recent y remodeled
three bedroom older home n
Pomeroy
Pr ce of S15 000
n c udesfurnlture Owner WII
help f n11n ce e ther of hese
two properties Ca
593 5667
Athens
12 2 30tc

INTERVIEWS AT
u

Larg~st

THE LEADER ~INCE 1•00 IN
SERVING THE NATIONS
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0008

a

g

GREYHOUND LINES EAST
1 00 PM-7 00 PM
JANUARY 9 1974
HOLIDAY INN
HUNTINGTON • W VA

Greyhound
A change for the better.

AN EQUAl OrttQR UN Y MPl OYEII:

EDGE OF TOWN - M ODER N
SPL T FOYER Yt fh featu es
such as a arge d n ng area
w h pat o door s
m odern
k tchen ca peted LR 3 BR 2
baths arge fam ly m w h
WB f rep ace
aundry rm
ga age and cent a r Owne
w I trade to
a farm o
cheape p ece of p ope t y
FOR SA LE OR TRADE
Mod ern ranch w h over an
T he g ound
ac e of and
f oo conta ns a 2 ca ga age
3 BR ex tra arge LR a
cond and a bu t n k t chen
The fu basem ent has a den
or 4 h BR
aund y rm
shower and a tam l y rm w h
a beaut ful s fone f r epla ce
bar and pat o doors Loca ted
n Ga I pol s schoo d st

s a
con a n s a ba h and 4 a
p et ed BRs Th e k tc hen s
ode
and you
t am l y
wou d ave the f ep lace n he
LR and
he
arge to na l
d n ng m The e s a so a u I
basement and ga rage oca ed
o a Ia ge tl a o on Rou e
Sou h

VACANT LAND
STATE ROUTE 60
3 aces
w h 495 ft front age Co
water lap pad Pa k you
mob .e home
bu d o
deve lop
LAND CON TRA CT
JO A w th
25 A bo om and
000 f
cree k fron age and spr n g
developmen
m off sa e

rd

MAKE US AN OF F ER
45 A
fat and
o l ng
an d
n
Ga po s sch ool d st w th a
Ia e mo de
4 x 70 mob e
hom e
P-R I CE REDUCED TO $ 0 000
28 Ac r es
Par of h s
and s n Ga a Co and pa 1
n ackson Co Don 1 m ss an
nves m en Ik e h s one
NEAR ADD SON
25 A w h
co wale ava abe Th s an d
~ m os t y wooded and se s t o
on y $4 000

STATE ROUTE 60

NEAR V NT ON
"'94 A
$20 000
m os t y r ac to and

y

od

ota e ectr c br ck s s uated
on 4:1 acres of o ng and
and offers your fam y
tea Ures ke 1 34" sq ft of
11 ng area pus a lull
ba se men w h lam ly rm
workshop and garage Shown
by appo ntmenl
BELIEVE I T OR NOT We have
a modern 5 yr o d 3 BR home
w th a fu 1 basement 15 x 20
L R 2 x 20 k tchen and d n ng
rm and HW f oors for on y
$23 000 Loca ec;l on SR 554 an
easy d ive o fawn or the new
m nes
ELDERLY BEAUTY WITH
R VER V EW
You w I
)"lave fo see the ns de of th s
c omple el y remodel ed 2 story

!li!I1JIIIIIJIL
REALTY
25 Locust St
Howard Brannon Broker
Off 446 2674
Luc l e Brannon
Eve 446 1226 or 446 2674
COUNTRY HOME
SAC RES two story hom e 4 BR
batll d n ng room
arg e
k tchen ful y carpe ed par
basement w th o I furnace
porches and ove ook ng the
Oh o R ver
0
led wei
coun y w a e due n sp ng
400
rver
fron age
d e tached
wo kshop
and
carpor l
ree s and shrubs
sm al pony ba n Just 10 m
down Lower R ve Rd

STOCK FARM

EXCELLENT or hi.Jn ng o
r ec ea on 42 A wood and n
Ha r so n Twp lo $6 700

AGENCY

s

On e Look Is
Worth 1 ooo Words

ST R T 3:,
NEW 5 m
ba hs fu base 2 ca ga
arge a o Th s house 5 no t
boug h as s f o
I n shed
$2 500 F nanc ng a a abe
0 d 5
br c k a
a ed on a
e $30 000

W HI TE RD
ms
bah a
ca pe a el ec o
arge
a o
P

y

CROWN C TV
8
H w 1 oo s 5 rns
l Ar ge
o agt:! b
oc a ed on
A
s 12 500

y s 0 d
and ba h
dg
and
o
On y

RO UT E
So uth a b
k
ms '1
bans a
a pe
FPs swmmngpoo r ve
II ew and
A 0 LU)(U y p US
MT Z O N Rd 6 m
ca pe
F P and
$3 500

b

CRO U SE BECK RD
T
Leve 6 r ms
ba h s 2
A of
yr s o d H w oo s
Th s sa good hou e and cou d
nol b e bu 1 to th e ask ng
p ce oday $32 000
B UHL MORTON RD
od l amebck r m.S
I
bath a
a pe a
pa t o
cove ed
Th s
beau y 0 y $?6 900

s a

DOWN R V E R
'1 s o y
br ck base al ca r pe
11
rm
5 )(, 36 w h F P A so
has 1ndhou scw h4 m s 2A
R ve v ew o $45 000

EV ERGREE N
ea
ba h u
000
w n 'L

ms and
s or m d s and
5

6M OOW N R T
b a t1 2 ou b dgs
I eve o $ 2 800

5m
on

nd
A

ST RT 35
6 m
arn e a ch
par
w h base H W f r s
pe F P
a ga
w h
p cc
e ec d
La q e at
$28 500
CHA HAM AVE
5 ms and
ba h w h n e w
u n u e
$
500 w hou
u n u e
$ 6 000
COUNTRY A R E STA ES
y odb r ckanda l um 3bg
hd m
ba s a ca p e
huge 2 ca gar and a a ge
c1
0
$36 900

O WNER
W LL
H ELP
F IN A N CE
30 A n Raccoon
Twp w lh 2 600 ft
d f on

6
TI
WOODL AND DR
s
ame8ysod H W
equ pped k c hen A ba r ga n
a $20 000

HUNT NGTON TWP
t4 A
27 A Raccoon c r ee k bp om
and w th
he ba ance
n
pasture and woods Lo s o
pu p wood Can b e f nan c cd

GARF I E L D AVE
S
m
ame w h base
A um
s d ng s o m dr s and w n
Nea
new gas
u
Pr ce
S I 500

LAWRENCE COUNTY
35 A
w h abol.lf 40 A c op and
Good ba n we and ar ge ob
base
Ranny Blackburn
B anch Manager

FARVEW
SU BDV
B
k 3 bd n
has cen a r
qua ty
beau t y
ca pe
o a on and oca ed on a
ar ge o S3 500

age

RUSSELL
WOOD
REAlTOR
446-1066

N VESTMEN
m house
w h base
mo de n an d 3
m ap
u n sh ed $ 8 0{)0
R
2Awh2
hou ses and a ba n $ 6 000

ST

RT

775

SM TH R D
s 0 000

SO A $5 500
A

a

and

80 .oA. STOCK Fa m on S R
l ab c ba
n
5 40 A
pa s u e
Ba n 60 x 74
Conc r e e s 10 6 x 50 w fh
un oad er Good 8 m house
and o th e ou b dgs Th s a;m
s c ea n has good f en es
NO S PEN SABLE
A
pond and ha s been med and
r efr gera or s a place where
fe
zed A good buy o
you s ore l eflove s un 1 hey
S4J 000
a e o d enough to lh ow ou

FO RGOTTEN So many su b 26 A ON Wood M
Rd 4 m
hou se w 11'1 ba t1 and dr we
s u es hav e been d scove ed
On y $8 500
by sc en s s ha t
s d ff cu
to r emembe wha
was we
Any h 446 19'il8
needed n the f s p ace
MOD ERN
anch t ype frame
home on 2
ac r es
11 ng
oom 30 x 15 2 b ed ooms
located a h e JUn e on of '} 8
and 553

WISEMAN

Tel 446 1998

0

OHIO RIVER
Realty

Neal Realty

THE

Realty 32 State Sl

9 !1.

PR CE REDUCED TO S 3 500
Th s ovely country home s
cea led nea Ty coon Lake and
o ffers 3 BR n ce k tchen HW
loo s ful basemen and 3
ac res of p nes

I

MASSIE

o app ec a e
The
foy er open s o a w nd ng
way
The
upsla s

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

home

Real Estate For Sale

•

SEW NG MACHINES Repa
serv ce all makes 992 228,J
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Author zed S nger Sa les and
Serv ce We Sha rpen Sc ssors
3 29 fc

World s

Wor d s Larges t
THE LEADER SINCE 900 N
SE RV NG THE NATIONS
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0008
OVE LY CO UNT RY HOME
Th s 4 BR br ck ran c h olfers PO ME ROY
PR CE
4 f
o s o good v ng fo some
REDUCED
TH S MONEY
l u ky fam ly Sp ec aJ ea tu es
MAKE R ca n make your
WO WAY Rados Sa es &amp;
a e a 5 x 23 L R w th a W B
e r emen a c n c h w h 2
5e v ce New and used DB s
r r epla e HW f oor s kno y
bu s n ess r ent a s and 2 a ge
po ce mon o s a nt en~;as
p ne cab ne s and a ru 1
apa ! mens
Loca t ed
et c Bob s C zen Band Rad o
basement nes l ed on a 4 A
down own on a co ne o
Equ p Geo ges C eek Rd
wooded l o 0 m
rom own
FARMS
Ga po s Oh o 4.46 45 7
CL OSE TO R 0
163 a r es o f
2 2
BABY
FARM
W TH
A
beau fu I a and r o ng and
MODERN BR CK HOME
w h f on age on 3 d s 80
SWEE P ER Re p a rs
parts
Tn s be a u y s ocated 2 m
ac es t ab e w lh he ba an e
5up p es 446 0194 10 .a m
S
f
om
HMC
and
conta
ns
4 BR
n pa s u e 0 he
tea u es
p n Dav s vacuum C eane r
mode n
k chen
fu
nc ude a good
m home
so e Geo ges C eek Road
Ia ge da y barn s lo pond
nex t o Bobs CB R ad o Sa l es ba se menl ga ag e 2 s tori"e
f ep l aces and
7 acr es
and seve a o he
sma e
293 I
Owne s hav-e purchased
bu d ngs
a
a ger f a rm and are
DEAD STOCK
WOU LD
YOU
BE
N
W LL emove a a ea sonab e an)(, ous o sel a o par
Don t m ss th s one
TE RES TEO N A MODERN
ha r ge Ca I 45 55 4
DA IR Y w lh a m k pa o
2 2
I C TY
T H S BARGA N
s 10 w h
p pe ne m kers
PR CEO
s ory home s
unload er au om a c f eede s
va cant and needs an owne A
barn co n c b
f ee sfa
sma down paymen w I le
equ pm ent shed pond and a
you en 10Y the 4 BRs ca pefed
r emod el ed home')
so sop
LR and DR fu
b ase m en
n an see us We nave 2
w h fam y rm laundry r m
BY OWNER J bed oom b c k
and workshop
NEARV N TON
83A pasure
fu ly equ p ped k chen
ta m has n ew ences a
he
balh
cen t a
a
wood
Th s
way pond arge barn and
bu n ng f r epl ace w al o wa I NEW BRIC K &amp; FRAME
al elec r c b eau y s ocated
rms and ba t1 Ask ng 53 000
carpet ng
c ty wa e
and
m off U S 35 and offers a
sewer
533 H da Dr v e
comp e e k c hen
fo rna
RACCOON C R EE K FRO N
Fa v ew Subd v son lm
d n ng rm
u
y
m
2
TAG E
3 ac r es bo om and
med ate po ssess on
Phone
ba h s WW ca pe garage 14
w t1 a larg e b arn co n c r b
2J5 53 2
x 23 LR and 25 f frontage on
and w ei
P a a f n anc n g
' 3
a BT d Move n any me
a11a abe

211

AUTOMOBIL E nsu an ce been
canceled'
Lost
your
opera o s I cense Ca
'192
7428
6 5 fc

STROUT REALTY

cemed by S a e o f Oh o 1
m es west o new hasp a
S7 Su n 'Va l ev 0
Ph 446
J65
Day ca r e ha says we
a e
MaDge Hau l dren
Owne
Lo ed h and John
H au d en Opera o s

EXPERIENCED mechan c
Con ac t Haro d Oav s at
Ga pols Moor Company
446 3672

NEED A new ce ng o
oom
pane ed or n er or pant ng?
ca 1 R chard w t 992 2889
12 1a 26fC

I

DA
:-,Y
·,-C:-:A-:RC
E -,
SU N VALLEY Nu se y Sc hool s

45

Roof ng spout ng
k chens
and bathrooms Complete
remodel ng Phone 742 6273
12 3 tf c

32

GLASS
needs
he ds
m r ors
ass r esc r een 704 P ne
andc 245 5048

12 20 26tc

Slack and f xtures go w lh lhe

For

ENERGY CR SI S DEMANDS
Nucear
Tanng
tor
Qua t ed lnd v dual s The U
S Na11y offe s the best
nuc ea powe t a n ng n the
wo ld for t hose who qua l fy
Open ng s ava abe fo both
off cer
and
en I sted
p ograms
Fu
pay
al owances wh e you tra n
Fo more nformat on cat to I
I ee 800 84 8000 any me
TAKE CO MMAND OF YO UR

5132

READY M X

mmed a tely
Phone 446 2649
4 6

4

RU SS S
for a
w nd
p e)(. g
Ro G

bu ld ng hOuses
cabnes Cal
Ra e ne Oh o

res dence of 6 rooms and bath

MOBILE HOME LOT -

NEEDED
babys Iter

CO LL EY S E ec t ca l Ser v ce
24 hou ca
245 5033 or 446
487 1

9 1 tfc

V1rcpl B. I,.JhJtd St
Bt-ok.'
II,~! ~-Ar•( hd ill ( Sltt f't
Pom c•roy. Oll!D : ·1l fl'1

INCOME - Bus ness bu ld ng
1969 BUICK La Sabre 4 door and 6 room apartment Steam
hardtop
good cond t on
ask ng saoo 7 or 8 m 1es per
ga lon Phone 985 J179
12 2a 7tp

load er
and backhoe wo k
sep c
anks nsfal ed dump trucks
and o boy s fo h e w I haul
f
d rt top so
I mestone
and grave Cal Bob o Roger
Jeffers day ptlone 992 7089
n gilt phon e 992 3525 o '192

Real Estate For Sale

992 386 t

POMER'OY 2 bedroom
fram e home w th some fur
966 PLYMOUTH w th a 1969 n ture bath ga s furnace and
motor and transm SJ on
967
K t c hen and
Dodge S af on Wagon Phone love y porch
d n ng Basement w th washer
247 279
I 4 6t c dryer hookups $15 000 00
sa le

MAN &amp; WIFE o wo k on smat
Pant farm
P efer m ddle
age
or
e ed
m an
Reference requ red have
fu n shed ap for r g tlt man
w 1 ng to work on y ex
pe enced needed Phon e J46
799 or 446 2906
3 6

C BRAOFOR D Au c oneer
Comp le e Se v ce
Phone 9.t9 38 2
Ra e ne Oh o
Cr tt Bradfo d
5 1 ftc

DOZER and back hoe work
ponds and sep c tanks d t
f
ch ng serv ce top so
mestone
B&amp;K Ex
d rt
cava l ng Phone 992 5367 or

:-::cc-_-c- --------

for

FOR YOUR new home o
comp le e rem ode ng
Con
tac
Greg Roush
Roush
Cons rucl on Phone 992 5039
16 1c

1 30 26tp

Rl 114-LANGSVILLE
2 2 acres 2 bedroom Mob le
Hom e t l e garage 4 x 8

POMEROY -

OLAN M L LS needs seve al
persons for fe ephone work n
Ga pol s off ce
No ex
per ence necessary Sa lary or
bonus Hou s '1 am
p m 5
m
p m 9 p m App y o
Knouff at W I am Ann Mofe
Monday Jan 7 9 a m to 1
p m and 5 p m o 9 p m
4

Monday thru Saturday
606 E Ma1n Pomeroy 0

0

COUNTRY STORE -

Help Wanted

Phone
G &amp; E Appl a nee R epa
a he shop 992 3802 or 949
J25,J

REALTY

MIDDLEPORT -

Auto Sales

B&amp;G AUCTION
14 R1vers1de Dr
Athens Ohto

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

- - - -- --

VACUUM Cleane s new 1'173
Model
Compete w th al
clean ng tools Sma t pant
damage n sh pp ng Wil tak e
$27 cash or budget p an
a\la abl e Phone 992 298,J
12 18 tfc

BEAUT FUL wa ln u st er eo
rad o AM FM tap e c om
b nat on 8 t ack ape deck
Ba ance S101 93
or terms
ava abe Ca 992 3965
12 23 tf c

FURNITURE

Real Estate For Sale

PAPER CARRIER

JWANTED

'5.55
-GU ARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

5 M O NTH o d bu
3 quare
Charo a s quarter brown
Sw ss bolh paren t s r eg $350
NEW 3 bed oom al elec c
Phone 742 4 7
home one car ga age w th
4 3t c
one ac e of g ound on Fla
woods Road Phone 992 2735
STORA GE bu d ngs pr ced for
63p
QU ck
sa l e
one
8x3 6
hOuset a e
one Ox 2 used ---- - -·car off ce bu d ng one 12 K 22 TWO STORY br ck apartment
meta~
ga age
one
41
bu d ng two apartments
S udebake body w th Chevy
South Th d St
M ddleport
ea
end and Chevv front
Shown
by
appo n menf
axle
one
63 Bro c kway
Rodney Down ng Rea Estate
tractor one 65 Infernal onal
Broker Phone 992 373
12 6 c
ac o one 66 Me c u y 2 D
HT one 68 Pont ac F reb rd
one off ce desk one serv ce 1 ROOM hoi.Jse
ex tra n ce
stat on cash reg s er lo s of
ocat on on new bypass Rf 7
m see aneous ems May be
15 m nu e dr ve to Gav n
seen a Pau s Auto Parts R
Plan
0 m nu e d ve o
7 bypass or phone 446 97 4
Pomeroy
E x t a a ge o
6 6tp
Can be v acant at once Can
see t by appo ntmenl Ca
97 3
Z G ZAG
SEW IN G
any t me after 3 p m
247
MACH N ES eff n layaWay
2 63
A I bu 1 n to buttonhole do
44C
st etch sew ng and fancy
st c h ng Pay ust $48 75 cash
or erms ava lab e Trad e n s
accep ed Phone 992 2984
12 30 fc

WE HAVE a I your uphols e y
needs
Bu ap
den m
camb r c foam g ue~ ppe s
ac k ng s r p spr ng s and
c l ps
ch pboard
button
tw ne sewing th ead l egs
upho ste y books da c ron
webb ng spr ng tw ne tacks
wet cord
cotton
sw ve
bases and foam foam foam
Pomeroy Recovery 622 East
Man S reel Pome oy Phone
992 7554
122J26c

302 26

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

and

For Sale

ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
C eaners complete w h a
t ac h mens cordw nder and
pa nf spray Used but n I ke
new c ond on
Pay $34 45
cash or budge I plan ava able
Phone 992 2984
12 30 tfc

7

On Most Amer1can Cars

OFFICE SUPPLIES

REPAIR

10 a m

If

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

606 E Mam

he

w 1 not be respons be fo any
debts othe han my own as o f
toda y
anuary J 974
S gned W I am Sha o

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Pomeroy

Ph 9'12 2 74

by

NotiCe

Rad a tor Spec1al st

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

m ssed

4

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

EXPERIENCED

A&amp;A HEATING

2 6 26 C F R EWOO O $ 2 pe
p cku p
l oad any day a t e r 2 00
Go don Proff t Gr eat Bend
Sandy Oeser Rd
Po and
Oh o R
97
AL
E ec
W n dso
2 28 2 c
Mob e Home
2x65
3
cond one
3 BASS gu a
bedro om 1:1
Ep phone w h
e)( pando I ac e g roun d 0 d
Vox Su pe Bee tl e amp and
R 33 No h of Rock Sp r ngs
J B L Spea ke Compe t e for
Phone 992 5677
$300 Phon e 667 33 72
12 23 c
I 2 4 p

------=------

EXAMINED

L ncoln H II Pomeroy 0

love dear

5 26 p

..1

~

GAS and OIL
SALES&amp; SERVICE

8 961 Fo herb hday J an
6
You are spend ng your b r hday
n heaven
We are su e ha you w I hear
Ev e y me we wh spe sot ly
Happy B
hd ay
w h a

Water Ltnes and Power
Ltnes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and sept c tanks n
stalled

Ph 992 5271

Notice

N LOVING memory of ou
motil e
Ade ne L Coope
who passed away Nov em be

DITCHING SERVICE

on

BEAUT C AN
pa tl me
He l ens B A Beau ty ShOp
Tupp er s Pi a n s Oh o Phon e
667 396ll

' ms··~~

P&amp;J HEATING
AND COOLING

Phone 991 3509

Help Wanted

E~ N ES T

Gene's
Body Shop

2 3 li e

For Sale

HOMES
FOR SALE

I I

FUR N SH E D apa
en ! on rn a n h
Mason
w Va
F owe Sh op o ca

SHOO

4

In Memory

7 JO 6 t

even n gs bY
4 2 I
on y Co Rd
bypass Phon e Wanda Eb n
PR VATE mee ng
oom
o
qq';&gt; 22 '}
any o gan a on phone 992
? 30 c

NEW
one letter tu each quare to
form four ord nary "o d s

R~nt

J 3c

NCOM~

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

ARGE un f ur n Shed 3d
oo
apt t o
en
n down t own
I orne oy Ca 992 2 119

39 '

losI

6

'

e

w

ORV LL E
ake
Gau
Janua y 6 973 Deep n o
hear s you w
a ways sa
Loved an d
emem b e ed
every day
W e h dren
and g andch d en

espons be
on a ed by
ha ou se vcs
d Go d e
e
6 p

c

r-.

Fac o y

and

P m

oe

E " n o
an
Wed

e

Ru

3

WE W L L NO T

oncsomc

toda y

SHOO T NG
MATCH
Con
1--1
ow Gun ~ ub
u n

Jll1S

o

For

Not1ce

The Sunday Tunes Sentmel Sunday Jan 6 1974

220ACRES
60A t labe 100 3 BEDROOM br ck and fam e
a
house on Bu la v 1 e Rd
A n good f mber balance n
Oscar Ba rd
garage comp le e y ca p eed
pas u e Fa fen ce 2
two
Doug Wettlerholl
Owne moved ou of sl a e and
story hOmes w h ba hs 3 and
B ok ers
anx ous o se
4 BR fo ced a hea homes
Off ce 446 3434
n good cond to n 3 Ia ge
Yo u can have
o ACRES on sa e route w h CENTE N ARY
barns p enty water 2 000 ft
mmed ate po ssess on on th s
arge ba n ob
u a wa e
on coun y road Cl ose to fown
ove y h ee bedroom hom
base P ced a $6 000
schoo s efc
P ce S5 7 SOO
s fu y q p e l ed n ce ba 1'1
L ow n tod ay s ma ket
w h shov ~
u bascm n
ON
SECO
ND
Ave
3
bedrooms
HILL VIEW
one a ga age na ura gas
b
a
h
s
new
k
chen
new
EN OY
t1e
beauf ful
heat c l y wa e and s hool
fu n ace and a
ond on ng
pan or am c v ew from
he
d s
cl
Owne
w I he p
Compl ete y ca rp e ed P e
w ndow of h s beaut fu LR
nan ce o se I on land con
$24
500
and pat o doo s n d n ng
ac
area Carpet throughout 3
a
ACR
E
S
w
h
4
ro
om
house
an
d
a ached garage
n ce BR
WOODLAND D R I VE
Ths
turn l ure
2 sma
o ut
We I
andsca ped
awn
ove y hree bed r oom home
bu d ng s Sma pond P ce
$24 500
h as had ex ce l en care N e
$10 000
BRICK &amp; FRAME
n
ba h k chen w h bu
F YOU Ike he coun ry
ange and oven fu ly
a
3
ACRES
Mod
e
n
J
bed
oom
th s beaut ful k tchen w h a
pe ed na ur a gas hea w h
the bu
ns shaggy ca pet n
cen t a a r one a ga r age
llOm e gas fur nace hardwood
w h wo r ks hop Loca t ed on
LR and 2 BRs deep ot 100 x
f oo S h ouse n exce ll en
wo ot s n c ty sc hoo d s r cf
85 w h storage bu d ng
co nd on Vacan r eady lo
c ose to
own
m med a e
car garage 522 000
move n Pr ce S2 000
possess on
VACANT LAND
THE PRICE IS RIGHT'
NEW home on 0 J Wh e Road EUREKA
Loveyvewor he
SPAC OUS tam v room w th
Lot 00 x 200 frame and
ve r w th h s hree b ed oom
f rep ace and paf o doors
b ck
v ng room A x 25 2
home n ce ba h fo ce d a r
s ze k tch en w h
ban que
baths and 2 showe s ca rpe ed
u na ce love y d n ng and
arge laundry room a ached
w h e ec r c h ea
P
ed a
v ng oom w h
ep ace
garage Ia ge c orner of w h
$27 000
ga age and a b g o t P
e
storage bu td ngs
educed
l
o
S C 300
GARDEN SPOT
3 BEDROOM
home w th
2 AC RES 1 m from town 0 a
pano am c v ew of th e Oh o WE: HAVE o h e p oper y for
your own weathe n fh s gas
oom ca peted
R ve f on
sa l e
to s
va ant g ound
hea ed hom e w h cen ra a
modern
k t chen
u I
a ms and homes ca l fo
for
summer
comfo
basement P ced a $23 000
nfo mat on
Beaut ful k I chen and d n ng
garage S21 000
AT Rodney on
ac e fram e 4 WE NE ED L ST NGS
f you
IDEAL LOCATION
bedroom c-a pe ed
e ec r c
have a hom e o ac eage l ose
A TWO FER
heat storm doo
and w n
or
rade ca I Oh o R ve
FIRST CLASS I vlng for two
dows cemen block ga rage
Realty today we
b e g lad o
fam es at a budget pr ce
Pr ce reduced to $ 9 500
you
he
p
F rsf floor has 6 room s and
F nanc ng a va abe w h
Even ngs Call446 4244
ba h second f oor has 7 rooms
sm a down pa ymen
Steven Beh 446 9583
and batn
Ful
d 11 d ed
OFFICE 446 1066
John M Fuller446 4327
basemen w th two near new
EVENINGS
furnac es Off sl ee par k ng
Russel Wood 446 46 8
Shown by appo n fme n
Ran Canaday 446 36 36
ANY TIME IS
John I R ella ds 446 0280
A GOOD TIME
TO L ST"(our home for sa e We
need good p oper es n al
RE FOR SALE
s zes Our fee s f ree un ess we
FLOR OA Lo
Teh
Ac r e
Mart n Onve 3 bedroom s
se I Ca I loday
T W LL
p esen va ue SA 995 Make
1 1 bath cer am c t le bu It
PAY
me an offer ca 4 6 4672
a nge d spo sal
3 n k tchen
d s hwa sh e r
wall to wall
carpet central a r two car
HOUSE 2
ac es
3 o
4
garage electr c door opener
bed ooms
c y
sc hoo
Galhpolrs
C ty
School
d s c t 2 m es out R
4
0 s1r cf Ph 446 1171 or 446
446 1323
247 f
4305

How About 79 Acres
W1th Small Lake

AT EDGE OF TOWN ON 2
ACRE LOT W T H FA N
T AST C V ~W OF T HE
RVER
HR EE LARGE
BE D ROOMS
W FE
AP PR OVED
K TC H EN
FORMA
0 N NG
LV N G AND FAM LV
ROOMS
ARE
CAR
PETED
EVERY T H N G
S CL EA N AND N M N
CONO T I O N N S DE A ND
OUT
YOU L Ffl.
N
LOVE W TH TH E AND
THE
TREE S
THE
PEACE
AND
Q U ET
OW N ER TRAN SFERRED
OU
OF STATE MUST
SELL BELOW MARKET
VAL U E

6 M LES OUT OF TO WN
N
C TV
SC HOO L
DANDY
O SRCT
OLDER
H OME
W TH
MODER N
K TCHEN
CEN T RAL HEA T AND
BAT H
LARGE
TOBACCO BASE
ARGE
BARN
20
0 30 A
C E AR
BALANCE
N
WOOD
AND
BRUSH
R GH T NOW S T ME T O
BUY
BEFORE
N
TEREST GOES UP WE
W L SP IT TH S FA RM
F DES I RED

Excellent
Farm Property

Economy Group
OLDER HOM E NEN LY
DECORA T ED N S DE AND
OU T N C UDIN G STORM
W NOOW S AND DOG R S
NEW F OOR COVER NG
THRO UGHO U T TH S
BE DR OOM HOME H AS
PAR
AL
BA SE MENT
LOCATED ON A SPAC OU S
TREE SHADED L O W TH
C T Y WATER
EN OY
AL
H S
W
H
A
REGU AT O N S ZE PQO
T ABLE AS
A
BO NU S
PR CE $17 900
2
CH LL CO HE R D
SPE C A L
OWE
NG
N C UO N G GAS RA N GE
REFR G
A N D OT H ER
F URN T UR E
GOOD
N
VESTMENT
U ST R I G H T
FOR N EWLYWEDS OR
RE T RED COUPLE
3 RU T A ND
S ORY
HOMES O N A LARGE
F LAT
OT W T H LARGE
K TCHEN 3 BEDROOMS
BA TH
N EW
F LOOR
COVER N G A ND CAR PE
A LUM N UM
S 0 NG
STORAGE
BU
D NG
OWNER VERY A N X OUS
~ EL
A ND
H AS
TO
P R CE 0
T
BE OW
MARKE T
VA UE
AT
$ 3 500

Lookmg For QuahtyAtlhe R1ght Pnce
Tt"iSVERYWE L L BU T J
BEDROOM
HOME
N
CL UDE S
EXPE N SI VE
CA RPET
IN
LARGE
V NG ROOM AND 2
BEDROOMS
THE K T
CHEN
S EXTRA N CE
W T H LOTS OF CAB NET S
A ND BU L T N RA NGE
D N NG.
AREA
OR
F AM Y ROOM
ARGE
CAR GARAGE A LL ON A
LARGE
FLA
LA ND
SCAPED COUN T RY LOT
THI S SA N EXCEP T ON AL
HOME BE SURE AND SEE
T
BEFORE
B UY N G
ELSEW HER E

JO ACRES A L CLEA N AS
H OU ND S TOOTH W TH
VERY GOO D~ BEDROOM
H OME
N CE MODERN
K TCHEN
NEW 5 D NG
NEW ROOF
MODERN
FUR NACE
BA H S
REAL Y A VERY COM
FO RTAB E HOM E
A

Large 3 Bedroom
Woodland Dr
EX CE
ENT LOCA TI ON
M L E FROM TOWN
LARGE
N CLUOES
L V NG ROOM
0 N NG
AND
FA M
Y
ROOM
LAR GE
OT
PR CE O
$24 900 00

,.

Panoramic
V1ew of
The OhtD Valley

tn ves tm ent Propert y
4 F AM L Y dwe l ng oca ted on c1
a ge o
on Second Ave
P ope ty s n good con d on
an
ap
Ca
t oday for
po n men t
Ofc Phone 446 694
Even ng s
Cha l es M Nea 446 1546
J M chae Nea 446 503
Sa m Nea 446 7358

Serv1ces Offered
ROOF N G and guller wo k
A so bu
up oof ng 388 8507
22011
P ANO un ng and r epa r ng
ane Da n e s 259 B oadway
M dd epo t Phone 9Q? 2082
277 30

0

J&amp;WMDUNT
CLEAN NG SERVICE
GE NER AL house c ean ng we
supp y a l
he c ean ng sup
p es 388 8875 at er 6 p m c al
388 8865 Week y or mon h y
c ean ng by appo n men
9
sha p en ng
saws
sc ssors sh ea s home and
ga den
oo s
Sharp Shop
A ey ea
47 Second
CAB NET Shop
0
wood work
Ph 446 7745

N CE

Excellent Buy
In Country
LARC: E 0 DER HOME
COM P LETE L Y
REMODELED ON 6 ACRE
LOT O N RT 325 BETWEE N
RIO GRA ND E AND V N

T H S BRA ND
N EW
3
BEDROOM
HOME
IS
COMPLETE Y
CA R
NCL UD ES
P E ED AND
RANGE
D SHWAS HE R
CEN TR AL A R
BAT H S
STORM W ND OWS ARGE
LIVIN G
ROOM
A ND
DNING
W FE
AP
P ROVED K TCHEN 2 CA R
GARAGE AND L ARGE L OT
N
C TY
SCHOOL
D STR CT

N GLE o u be IS 44 6 000 o
appo n men
o see modern
wo bed oom home w l h ha rd
wood f o o s
a ge
11 n g
oom p c fu e w ndow and
u I y oom Capo andb g
ol for
ha
ga den n ex t
sp r n g C y gas and wa er
Just off U S 35 P ce d unde
ma r ke n h e eens
S the season o be o l y an d
by go y
wou d be a c n h n
t1 s bea u
b ck home
h ee o ou bed oom s wo
ba hs
f ep ace
doubl e
ga r age A cond on ng Pus
oun y s e l o
Qua fy
cus om bu
hom e
G v E some h ng b g for Chr s
mas Fo examp e 4 ooms
hree ba h s
arg e o on
Second Avenue P ced $6 000
und e ma k e
RACCOON Creek f arm ove
200 ac es
Ea sy 90 head
pas u e New ba r n Mode n
home w h f ep ace
THREEa esSR325souho
R o Grande Mob e nome
B ock ee l a We and sep t c

'146·0001
Jay Sh!!-ppa d
Broker Auct oneer

AUCTION
SERVICf
' SELL THE AUCTION
WAY

JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

PH. 44&amp;:3444

PROTECT your mob e home
w th T E D OW N A NCHORS
Ca I Ron Sk dmore 446 17 56
af e 3 ij m

S T
N
TH S LARGE
CARPETED LV N G ROOM
AND BE H PNO ZED BY
THE V EW
YO U LL
ALSO ENJOY A COZ Y
FAM LV
ROOM
3
BEDROOM S
LARGE
SPAC OUS
K TCHE N
WOOD
BURN I N G
F- I REPLACE AN D ON E OF
THE
BEST
N E GH
BORHOOOS N T OW N ALL
T H S ON A LARGE LOT
FOR LES S T HAN $50 000 00

New 3 Bedroom
Bnck
W T H FU L ~BASEME N T
OVELY
K I TCHEN
QUA I TY CO N STRUCT ON
T HR O U G H OUT
N CIT Y
SC HOOL 0 STR CT $35 900

Best Older Home
For Sale
In Galhpohs

·-- - - -- - - -- -

T HOMAS Fan E)( e m nat ng
Co Te r m te and Pesf Control
W hee e sbu g Oh o
233 f

M &amp; S CONSTRUCTION

EXCAVAT O N and genera
emode ng
Bac kho e dozer
and r ench ng Sep c anks
and oo e s A
phases of
n ew
n
p I.Jm b n g w ng
s a a t on Ca 388 9986

2 7 tf
ROOF NG AND SPOUT NG
Sh ng l es s d ng and bu dup
ho roof s F ee E s mates 26
yea s expe r en ce
James
Ma c um
V nton
Oh o 388
9940
247 f

M&amp;M

ROOF N G &amp; Spout ng Sh ng le
&amp; Bu ldup root Hot &amp; Cold
process Home mprov emen
n
gene a
For
free
es rn a es
phone Robert
Meade 388 8 4 B dwe

Oh o

FUL BR CK
N
CO ND TO N
N
CL U DES 3 BEDROOMS
L ARGE FORMA L D N NG
ROOM
COMPLETE Y
MODERN
K TCHE N
L A R GES T FAM L Y ROO M
IN TOWN P L U S A FU L
BASEMENT
BAT H S
AND 2 CAR GARAGE W TH
W ORK SHOP
A N EX
CE LENT H OME
M ID
FOR T ES

HOLLEY B os Con slruct on
bu doz ng back hoe work.
d ch ng under roads bor ng
Phone 245 50 a 0 2.45 5006 I

B E AU

M NT

Brand New
Spit! Entry
HI\S

3 BEDROOMS
BATH
ARGE FAM L Y
2 CAR GARAGE
RO OM
A N D A L T HE EXTRAS N
T HE K TCHE N $2890000

Ga 1 a Co s Largest R eal
E stat e Sa es Ag ehcy
Off ce 446 3643
Even ngs Call
E M
ke w seman
446 3796
E N w seman 446 4500
Bud McGhee 446 255

RE FOR SALE
NEW 3 BE DROOM b u ck
home
bath fu y ca
pel ed
Ia ge k chen and
d n ng area di s hwa s h er
e ec r c r ange 2 ca ga age
w h e ec door op en er N ce
l eve lo Wou ld se on and
co nt ac
sm a
down
paym en Lo ca ed 6 m e l.IP
R
Co un y A r e Es ates
Phone 446 17 or 446 2573
at er
p m

230 tf

18

'

f

144"
TERM TE PEST CONTROL
FREE n spe c on Ca 446 3245
Me r I 0 De I Opera or by
Exte m na l Term te Se v ce
0 Be men Or

267 tf

s

EWART E lec tr cal Serv ce
Repa r
house w r ng
e ec f c heat ng Phone JA6
4561
27 1 If
SEPT IC TANKS
Cl eaned and ns al ed
Ru sse l s P umb ng 446 4782
2'17 tf

GILLENWATER S SEPTIC
TANK
C LEANING AND
REPA IR
ALSO
HOU SE
WREC K ING Ph 4J69499
Est a b she d n 940
69 tf
ALBERT EHMAN
Wate Del very Serv ce
Pa o Sla R Gal pol s
Ph 379 2133
243 tf
BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE esmaes l ab tv n
su ran ce P un ng
r mm ng
and cav y wo k
ree and
s ump em ova Pll 446 4953

73

f

MOTOR ST MUTUAL
INSURANCE
THEbes n su ance a he bes
pr ce
Fo
auto
home
bus ness and fe Ray Hawk
agen
446 2300 54 4th Ave
150 If

PUBLIC
AUCTION
SATURbAY
JANUARY 12, 1974
AT 10:00 A.M.
Localton From Galhpohs lake Stale Route
141 for appro'lomalely 6 m1les
The to l ow ng w I be offered Two 1951 0 1 ve
70
ow
crop tractor s 197-4 Ford Ferguson tractor garden roto
tiler pul typed sc 5 ft Bu sh hog w th extra bade 2 14
mch p ows 2 12 nch p ows w I f t a Ford or F erguson pul
type plow corn e evator Dear Borne front end oader
(heavy dul y) pu l t yped sc 3p corn p anter 1 nch post
ho e auge r ce tong s 2 horse cut vato s 3 horse drawn
mow ng mach n es f e II zer spreader on rubber one 3
too th and one 5 tooth ho se cult vato corn planter gran
d I ho r se drawn h ay ake sed wagon 3 Lands de
p ow s 2 horse drawn d s.c b ass bed and other
m see laneous ems

James L. Davison and
Francis Northup, Owners
AUCTIONEER LEE JOHNSON
Crown C ly Ohlo-256 6740

I

I

f

22 1 f

TO N

Lovely New
Sphl Level

87

WASHER
dryer
and
e f ge r a to r
epa r
No
f we
cha ge for se v ce ca
can
)(, you appl a n ee Ph
6 5 4242
25 4 f

Excellent
3 Bedroom
H OME
NCL U OES CAR
PETING
TH ROUG HOUT
O N L ARGE L O T W TH
GARAGE
PR CEO A T
$1? 900 00
VE RY VER Y

p
n &amp; Son Water
De
Se v e
You r
pa r onage
w
be
ap
p ec a ed Ph 446 0463
2 I

�.,

,.

,•·

~

' -

•,

I

...

I•

;

"

.•

I

I

.

. . . . ·, . .

I

22 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel. Suml•"

.l•n

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLERP.LYMOUTH

••
••

get
· at tkesefirst oPU1eyear

Bill Joe Johnson

We have 75 New Buicks.

DOC
SMITH
SAYS

•

and Pontiacs in Stock.
All going at

·used car specials

•"•
"

Hugh Discounts!· !

72

Lemans 2 Dr. Hdtp .

FORD GRAN TORINO 2 DR HDTP
11 ,000 miles, air cond . Like new.

4

1973 CHEVELLE
DR
Air con d., vinyl top. 16,000 mil es, sharp.

72 DODGE, MONAC04 DR. SEDAN
72 DODGE, MONAC02 DR. HARDTOP
72 PONTIAC, CATALINA4 DR. SEDAN
71 DODGE, MONAC04 DR. HARDTOP
71 DODGE, MONAC04 DR. SEDAN
71 DODGE , F'OLARA STATION WAGON
71 DODGE, POLARA2 DR. HARDTOP
71 PONTIAC, GRAN PRIX
70 FORD, GALAX IE 4 DR. SEDAN
69 DODGE, MONAC04 DR. SEDAN

Only 5.000 mile s. air

Air, ster eo , 22 .000 miles

197~

AT PRICES THAT YOU WANT TO PAY

73 PONTIAC

SCAMP
2 Door Hdtp.

Malibu 2 Dr . Hdtp .

Brand New .

~~~!m~~~e~~nelocal~~:~.

6 cyl., ~S..
52,000 miles

automa t ic,

$1195
71 PLYMOUTH
Satellite 4 Dr .
32,000 miles, P .S.

$1695

50 State Street

Ai r . P.S., 51.000 miles .

NEED A SMAL For Sale
CAR? WE HAVE Corbin &amp; Snyder
I'
18 IN S~ocK
Come in and look them
over .

446-3273

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.
ATHENS, OHIO
YOUR DEALER FOR
•LINCOLN CONTINENTAL eMARK IV
•MERCURY MONTEGO eCOMET
eCAPRI eDATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR

NO HUN TI N G , no t respassing
signs. Signs of all kinds.
Simmon s Pig. and Office
Equipmen t .

L&amp; M Phone 592-4491

~06 - tf

DATSON Phone 592-4463

I F YOU are building a new
nome or remodeling, see us
We are builder s. Distributor
for Hotpo int Appliance5 ,
A lli son E l ectric
154 -tf
FILE CABINETS, f ile folders ,
ledgers, columnar pads
Si mmon s Printing and Office
Sup pl ies.
305 -tf

'72 PONTIAC CATALINA

-·-·------ - - - -- .,!J..-

2 Dr. hardtop, P. steering, P. brakes , auto.

1966 FORD Galaxie 500 conv .,
390, 4 speed . Phone 446 -0876 or
446 -265 l.
294 -tf

transmission, Fac. air cond., cinnamon
bronze finish with matching vinyl roof &amp; in terior, radio, w-s-w tires. Like new inside &amp;
- out. ·

NEW and used instrumertts.
Brunicardi House of Mus ic , 54
State St r ee t . Phone 446 -0687 .
190 -tf

$2,695 ·

BU Y dire c t from owner. lot s in
th e city or county or acreage .
L oolt at th e r es ! +llpn buy th E'
best·. Robert A. Queen . 1026
Second Ave. 446 -0168.
210 If

WOOD MOTOR SALES
For Sale

USED FURNITURE
1 AUTO . Elec. c lothes dryecs II
Whi r lpool , 1 Hotpoin! l. 1 ga s
range, 2 pc . LR su rt e, sofa
bed , coffee tabte, portable
r ecord player wit/'1 stand, set
ot tabl e lamps .
9SS Second Ave.
446 - 1171
Open Fridays 9 to 8
Plertty Free Par king

New GMC
Truck Headquart ers
1968 l 1 ton GMC pickup
19tl3 2 Ton F ord
1967 J -4 T GMC PU
1969 l ·1 T . GMC PU
1969 Chevro let 12 ton pi c kup
1967 11 ton Chev.
1969 1 1~ T. Ford PU
1969 DO'dge Station Wagon
1959 For:d Ga la x ie
1967 1'7 ton Chevy pickup
1966 • 1 ton GMC p ickup
1969 1 ~ ev . PU
1969 ~i-:- GMC PU
1968 17 T . GMC PU
1961 1 7 T GMC PU
1967 1 1 T. GMC PU
1969 11 Ton GMC PU
1968 1 T. Ford
197 1 J ..r T. Ford PU
1967 l 1 Ton GMC pickup
1968 "1 ton GMC pickup
1968 r..7 Ton Chevy P i ckup
1968 2 Ton GMC Truck
1969 117 ton GMC Pickup
1972 11 2 ton Ford Pickup
1969 3;~ ton GMC P ickup
1971 GMC Subur ban
NEW !ir es Winter tread · Sizes
7.75&gt;&lt;14. 8.25Xl4, 8.55X 14, $18
eacll . Casll and carry whi le
supply lasts .
SOMMERS G.M.C.
TRUCKS, INC .
133 Pine St.
446 ·2532
254 -tf

-DALE R. SANDERS. INC.

EASTERN AVE .

1969 BUICK l.eSABRE

4 DR.

HDTP

ADVERT I SING novelt ies, book.
matclles, pens and pen c i ls
impr i nted with your ad.
Simmons Ptg . &amp; Office
Supplies.
244 If

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

STAR CRAFT
WINTER sa le on new and used
trai l ers and fold downs .
Financ iflg arranged .
CAMP CONLEY
STARCRAFT SALES
Rt. 62 N . of Pt. Pleasant behind
Red Carpet Inn . 675 -5384 .
2-tf

For Sale

1971 FOR "p 1h ton P u ., Plock, 4 TWIN needle sewing mach i nes
new tires •. 6 ply
rear .
1973 model in walnut stand .
automat i c trans ., 27 , 000
All features built -in to make
miles . Real sharp . Call after 4
fancy des igns and do stre t ch
Tri-State Mobil e
p .m . 256 -1181!
sewing. Also butlo nllo l es ,
Hom e Sa l es
·1 -3
bl ind h ems, etc. S43 :JS. cash
Ph. 446-7572
price or terms ava ilabl e.
1965 CHEVROLET 4 door,
Phone PI Pleasant 675 -2225 . 12x50 1966 Libe r ty
Belair sedan , 283. ~ sp. , R &amp; H,
4 6 12x50 1963 Lakewood
12XS2 1970 Fleetwood
needs tranS . work first. $50. -------------8x35 1957 Marlette
Ph . 669 -4642 .
VACUUM
CLEANERS ·4- l
Electro
Hygiene
New 10xS4 195~ Elcar
Demonstrators
has
al l 10x ~O 1965 Sta r All Elec·t ric
8x45 1954 Vagabond
CLEAN rugs like new , so easy
cleaning attacllments p l us the
to do with Blue Lust re. Rent
new
Electro . Suds
tor 10x45 1960 Magnolia
Sx27 1953 Trotwood
electric
shampooer
S.l .
shampooing carpeL Only
248 -tf
Centra l Supp l y.
S27 .50 cash price or terms
available . Phone Pt . Pleasant
GOOD C L EAN LUMP and
r- - - - - - - - - - - - - 675 -2225.
stoker coal. Car l W inters. Rio
4 6
JUST taken in 197 4 Zig Zag
Grande . Pllone 245 -5115
Sewing
Macl'11ne.
Tl'1is
machine darns, embroider s,
overcasts , all wlttlout at .
tach ments. Pay balance or D -4 END load er, new rails, good L UMP Coal , Jaymar Coa l Co .,
Me igs and Gallia line , St. Rt . 7
U6 .50'0r pay $5.10 per month .
condilion. Phone 675 -3182
al Chesl'1ire , 7 a .m . to 6: 30
Phone 446 ·0255.
36
p·.m . 5 days a week . 992 -569 3.
4-6 .---------- - ~-..-272 -tf
1973 GRANDE Prix, S.J .. green,
1914 STEREO, 8 track in walnut
white v inyl top and inter ior .
finish . Pay balance of $109 .55
A i r , P .W , P _S, P .B . FM
portable
or payments can be arranged .
stereo. Ral l y wh eel s. radial s. P E NN C RE S T
washe r . Phone 446 3235.
446 -0255.
Ph 388 -8615 .

on

1

] ]

FOR BETTER cleaning , IO ' REDUCING
Kennel
keep colors gleaming. use
Yorkshire . T.erriers-. Broods
Blue Lus tr e carpet cleaner .
s t uds , puppies , cllamp i on
Rent electric shanvpooer. S1 .
sired . S75 and up Pll . 61J J46
G . C . Mur plly Co
0548
3J

33

COPPER TONE l arge and frost free refria er.ator tor sale .
S265 Excel l ent condit ion 4.46·
7448.

,,

WE NEED A

1973 Buick Electra

1973 Buick Riviera

Custom 4 dr . Hdtp.
Brand New
List Price $6858.00

Demo, Orig . Price
$7200.00

1973 Buick

•

Cust. 4dr.
Hdtp., Demo
List Price $5580.00

BODYMAN • PAINTER
SUNDAY SHOPPERS WELCOME,
COME IN AN BROWSE AROUND

•PAID HOLIDAYS
•PAID HOSPITALIZATION

1nOCHEVROLETMONTECARLO

~

Loca l I owner new car trad e, 350 V-8 engine, au tomat ic,
power steering &amp; brakes, factory air , radio, spo tless clean
blue interior with s i lv er grey finish , vinyl roof. A nice one .

COMMUNITY

&amp;SALES

Rodney.(ora Rd.

Rodney, Ohio
~..,., .. ~: 9 _
,

n-: . ~':' Q p.m.

Monday thru Saturday
Ph. 245 -9374-245-5021

TARA
Townhouse
Apartments
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
1% Baths

•••

••
•••
•
••
••
•••
•••
••
•••
•

-------For Information
Call Shirley Adkins

................
367-7250

SEVERA L mob i le homes, to tal
elec tri c at Kerr, Ohio . $125
per mo. Ciil l 446 -01 75 or 446 ·
193 4.
273 -tf
TWO trailer lots. Adults . Ph.
446 380S.
1,
264 -tf

.70 Olds_Delta 88$1295
69 Plymouth FuiY 111----.:$795

Plumbing &amp; Heating

On~

AFew New

'73

Pass. Cars Left!

Upper Rilw Rd.

GSpalla, 0.

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

HOUSE for rent . Pl'1one ·446 -3642
for more information .
60

X 12 HO USETRAILER .
lo ca ted on 218, 2 miles
fromBanes ' filling station.
Ph . 256-6216.
4·3

MODERN ., five room house in
courttrv . Ca rpet. fuel oil
furna ce, full basement and
garage. Ph . 446 - 222~.
4 3

CLEAN. 2 bedroom, fully
· furnished
mobile
home .
Ut i lrties paid . Private lot
Pllone 256-1291.
4J

297 ·"
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HE ATING :
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446-2735
187 .tf
STA ND ARD
Plumbing &amp; Heating
214 Third Ave ., 446 -3782
187 .tf

Wanted To Buy

ONLY

Wanted To Buy

BABYSITTING in my
Pllone 256 -6793 .

home.

Bilsiness Opportunities

Wanted
HOMES
for
, housebroken .

two
Call

kittens ,
446-2825.
3-3

v.a,

auto.

1971 Ford

71 Dodge

LTD 4 dr . H.T., while,
black vinyl top, factory
air, P.S., P.B ., AM &amp; FM
. radio. Real nice car.

Polaro 2 dr. H.T., auto.,
P.S., P. B., radio. Real nice
car.

Priced Only

$1995

$495

WAGON

Skylark 2 dr . H.T. , a uto .,
P .S . , P'. B . , local one
owner.
Sale Price

•

•
•

••'

•

For Sale or Trade

••

1969 MERCURY Marauder,
good cond., 1962 Rambler
sta tion wagon. ' W i ll sell
reasonable. Call day 675-3950,
or evenings 446 -7476 .
3-6

""
•
,

crocheted mitten~,
HOME MADE Quilts . Write to GREEN
senlimental
value ,
lost
Mrs . J. A . Sct1riner, 249 3
Commercia
l
Bank
parking
Lenol'a ,Rd ., Cinnaminson ,
lot . Reward 4411 -08&lt;11.
New Jersey 08077 .
4·3
35

PUBLIC
NOTIQ
We sell anything for
~"ybody. Bring your
tlem~ to Knotts COR'Imuntty Auction Barn.
Corner Third &amp; Olive.
For appointment call
· 256-6967 after s p.m.
Sale . every Saturday
eve n1ng at 7 O'Clock.

A Lot Cheaper

'1995

ONLY

Ton, long bed , red , 6
cyl. , std. tr ans.
1/ 1

Great Price

WE WANT YOU BACK (:AUSE THE JOB WAS DONE RIGHT
NOT BECAUSE THE JOB WAS DONE WRON'G

67 Chev. lmpala-----$395
.
69 Olds Cutlass--$895
4

See Ceward Calvert, R01i Hester or Bill Nelson

Dr. H.T.

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
985-4 100
Chester, 0.

Located on Sl. Rt. 7

Pomeroy

For Sale

For Sale
MOBILE HOMES

FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED

MOBILE HOMES

1953 Pra irie Schooner - l!x 36, 1
bdrm .
1953 Peerless Bx35, 1 B R
1959 Cast le 8x35, 2 B R
Ro llahome 10x56, 3 BR
1965 Buddy 12x50, 2 BR
1970 West Brook 12x5 0, 2 BR
1969 Richardson 12&gt;&lt;60, 2 BR
1968 Catalina t2x60, 2 BR
1967 PMC 12x60, 3 BR ·'
197 0 Monarch 12x60, 2 BR
B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES
second &amp; Viand St .
Pt. Pleasant
(next to Heck 's)
27S·If

REMEMBER
We Service
WhJit We Sell
OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

TWO
SLIGHTLY
U SED
General snow tires, size H ·
7Bx 15". Both for S25 . Call 446·
2341 ..
1J

~~,r'0 FURNITURE
854 Second Ave. 446·9523

Our new show
room is now open.
USED FURNITURE

For Sale

For Sale

For Sale

RIC.E'S

Open Evenings
'Til 7 p.ni. -&amp;
Sat. 'ijl 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12
On Saturday

500 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON ·PLEAS
FRANKLIN COUNTY, OHIO
OHIO
A IR
QUALITY
DEVELOPMENT
AU THO RITY ,
Pl aintiff,

JANUARY
CLEARANCE
MAJOR SALE
All new 1973 models offered at
below our cost.

HIGH cMair sofa bed - liScouches - 9xl2 woo l rug - 2
real nice desk s - 2 full l ength JOSEPH T . FERGUSO N, et al .
Defendants
mirrors . Por tab l e T V '} or 3
CASE NO . 73CV·12·429J
years old.
JUDGE WRIGHT
TYPEWRITER S, portable and
DODGE Picltup with catt le
ORDER AND NOTICE TO
office models, new and used, "1968
racks, prac tical ly new ti res , T HE STATE OF OHIO AND TO
f i l es , desks, c hairs, signs.
Will sell for $695, 256-6540.
ALL PROPERTY OW N ERS.
bookmatches, pen, penc ils,
3 3 TAXPAYE.RS.
CITIZEN S,
adv.
noveltie s,
bump er
AND OTHERS HAVING OR
stickers. printing. P/'1 . 446 ·
HAY for sa te. Phone 256 -6670 CLAIMING
ANY
RIGHT.
1397. Simmons Pig .
after 6 p.m.
TITLE , OR
INTEREST IN
Jtf A NY PROPERTY OR FUNDS
- -- .TO BE AFFECTED BY THE
1965 PLYMOUTH wagon, S275;
ISS UANCE OF AIR QUALITY
1965 Caprice C1'1evy $500; 1968
NE.N : Serta and Bem co mat REVE NUE BONDS TO BE
Plyillouth Fury $550. A46 .0952
,tress and boy springs. Large
AKC Reg .
ISSUED BY THE OHIO AIR
after 5 p .m .
selection in stock firm
QUALITY
DEVELOPMENT
27.7 -tf
mattresses starting at $39.00.
St. Bernard Puppies
A U THOR ITY OR AFFECTED
955 Second Avenue
IN A NY WAY THEREBY .
Centenary Woods
A LL
TYPE S of
build i ng
446 · 1171
On this lOth day of December,
materials, block, br i ck, sewer
176 -lf
Kennel
1973, a "Petition for Validation
--- - -~-------pipes, windows, l in tels , etc.
of Air Quality Revenue Bonds"
Ph. 446-0231
~·
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
lla ving been fi led in thiS Court
FIREWOOD . Phone 446 - 46.!Js:;,._~ o . Phone 245 ·5121 after -5.
by the Ohio Air Quality
2-6
123 -tf
Livestock for sale
Deve l opment Authority · and
I STERED Poll ed Hereford said Petition hav ing tl'1is day
PIPES, Pipes, Pipes , GBD. REG
He ifers and Bulls . Edw in been presented to the Court;
Clleratan, BBB o Jobey , Hilson
Sc l'1ater &amp; Sons, Aid, 01'1io,
IT IS HEREB Y ORDERED ,
1962 FORD pickup , parts truck
and others . Tawn ey's Pipe
Lawre
nq
County,
State
Rf. pursuant to Ohio Revised Code
w ith 6feet utility bed . S75. 245 ·
and Trophy House, 422 Second
141, 33 miles from Gallipolis . Section 133.73, that the State of
5050.
Ave.
Pl'1one: Ironton 643 -2435 .
Ohio, through its Aftorney
2·3
Middleport, Ohio
199.tf
3-3 Gene ral , and a ll property
owners, tax -payers. cit i zens.
and oThers having or claim ing
any rig hL ti tle or interest in any
Property or funds to be· affected
by tile issuance of tne secu riti es
hereinafter descr ibed , or af .
Goble
l ected in any way th ereby . be,
and they hereby are, required to
appear and be heard before tillS
Cour t at 9 o'clock AM . on the
NOTICE OF
NOTICE OF
18tll day ot January, 1974 then
' APPOINTMENT
APPOINTMENT
and there to show cause why 11'1e
Case No . 1-',074
case No. 11,747
prayer of the aforesaid Petition Estate 01 Ruby Coleman, aka Estate of Harrison N. Stice
should not be granted, and why
Deceased.
this Court sho uld not validate Ruble Coleman Deceased .
Not i ce is hereby given that
and con f i rm the proceedings for
Noti ce is hereby given that
Rosevelt Coleman of V inton , Herber t H Moore of Vinton,
,
tile issuance of air qua I 1fy Ohio •. has been duly appointed Ohio, has been duly appointed
revenue bonds in ttle maximum Administrator of the ·E state of Administrator de bonis n'on of
amollnt oQf $210l,OOOD,OOO I by tl'1et Ruby Coleman. aka Rubie tl'1e Estate of Harrison N . St ice.
Ohio Air
ua • Y
eve opmen
Coleman, deceased, l ate of deceased, la t e of Bidwell, Gallia
Clean Sweep!
Au thority and adjudicate tl'1e Vinton , Gall ia Cou nt y, 01'1io .
County, Oil io.
autllority o f the said 01'1io A ir
Creditors are requ·i red to t ile
Credi tor s are reqiJired to fil e
Quality Development Autllority lh'eir claims wit/'1 sai d fiduciary tllelr c la i ms with said fiduciary
VAN DYKE
to issue said securities for th e
months.
four months .
d th·s
purpose of paying the cost of witl'1in four
l7tl'1 day of within
Dated this 1711'1 day of •
acquiring, by purcl'1ase and · 0 a 1e
1
December 1973 .
' con struct ion, real and personal · December 1973.
60X12- 2 BR
property coris t ituting an a ir
R . Will i am Jenkins
R . William Jenkins
quality project for lease• and
Ju dg e
Judge
Glass fr-ont, patio doors,
sale thereat to Union Carbide
Cour t of Commo n Pleas •
Court of Common Pleas,
Corporat ion as prayed for in
front kitchen,
fu lly
Probate Div i sion
Probate Division
said Peti tion .
carp.e ted ,
Spanish
Front living room, 21x1 4 ;
Dec . 23, 30, Jan . 6.
(S) Craig Wright Dec. 23 , 30, Jan . 6.
decor,
all
deluxe
Judge
fully carpeted, all deluxe
f ea tur es . Gas h eat.
features. Delivered and set
Delivered · and set up.

SO MEONE
to
tak e over
payments on 69 Ca mara , 4
Mag wneels. Ph. 446 -2829 or
see at 39 Smithers .

26
CHEVY VAN, 6 cy linder , 446·
2627 after 5 p . m .
2 3
MUS T SELL new Amana Radar
Range and new Hotpoint
portable d ishwas her Best
offer Ca ll 446 -0918 after 5 p .

m.

2-6

19 73 STEREO -RADIO com bination with 8-l ra ck built -in.
Tcike over paym ents of $7 .55
per monlh or pay S101.50. Call
446 -0255.
269-tf
WE CARRY comple t e line of
P roje ction bulbs . Tawney
Studio , 474 Secon d Ave .
224 -tf
67 VALIANT 6 cyl . Auto. Radio
and w w tires . 446 -1615 after
6, 446 -1244 .
260 -tf

All new 1974 model full sized
cars offered at sacrifice prices.

~

(
,
•

••

~

•

••
'

price you wJmt to pay at

Blue fire mist paint. matching blue interior,
full power equipment, AM-FM radio, steel
radial tires, Climate Control air conditioning .

Keith Goble Ford, Inc.

*6500

VAN DYKE

68X14 -

73 CADILLAC
Sedan DeVIlle

All Used Cars priced for quick sale.

Mobile Homes

January Price Break

73 CADILLAC
Co~pe PeVille

*6500
73 CADILLAC
Sedan DeVille

WAS $6995

$7995
ATTE&lt;NTION
VETERANS

Goble Mobile Homes

Gl

Loans available, no
down payment with
approved credit.

I

586 Locust St.
992-7004
Middleport
Open a. to 6 Mon. thru Sat.

'Jp to 12 Year Financing
- we · Service What We ·

Sell.

r
·..

Open Daily a to 6, (Closed Sundays) . Open Anytime bv

•

.

,

12x65 3 bedrm., ll/2 bath, Total electric Kirkwood
.. . DO-uble lrsulation, House type door, storms
&amp; screens, Bay front window, 2 dr . frost-free
refrig., carpet throughout. Delivered &amp; set up
1974 model.
·
' ·

'6995

Dark green, black vinyl top, green interior, :till
&amp; tel. wheel. AM-FM radio, full power eqUip ..

Climate Lontrol air. 10,000 miles.

*5500
72 CADILLAC
Sedan DeVille
*5500

KARR &amp;VA.NZANDT
Cadillac - Oldsmobile
992-5342

GMAC Financing Availabte

'
'

I

..-,'
'I

._,'

White with blue vinyl top, blue interior, full
power , Climate Control air. 18,000 miles .

Low January Prlcel

.I

•I

*6500
72 CADILLAC
Sedan OeVille

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK

JANUARY SPECIAL .

-.-'-I

'I
"\

Dark brown, beige vinyl lop, beige leather
interior, tilt &amp; tel. wheel. AM-FM radio, full
power equip., Climate Control air. 18,000
miles.

3 BEDROOM

up .

-,

'I
•!

Light grey finish, matching leather interior,
full power equipment. AM-FM stereo, Climate
Control air, steel radial tires. new Cadill.ac
trade, 16,000 miles.

TOTAL ELECTRIC

lost
$10 REWARD . 4 mont/'1 old
Beagle, white stocking feet ,
wl'1 ite tip on taiL black body
with white underside. brown
streaks , brown ,.,ead , long
ears . crippled . Answers to · the
nam e " Junior ." House pet .
Lost in the Rock Fork area.
Ph . 256 -1407 . /
I
_,
3.6

one.

69 Ford

Dart Demon, 6 cyl., std .
trans ., local one owner . A
big gas saver .
Priced To Sell

2 Dr. H.T .

Open Eves Till 8

Cat . 2 dr. auto., P.S., P.B.,
air . Just as clean as a new

$1595

70 Buick

2 Dr . H.T.• fac . air. v inyl top.

WE SEll &amp; SERVICE CHEVROlET CARS &amp; TRUCKS •

992·2126

Sale Price

71 Pontiac

71 Dodge

69 Chev. lmpala- -$895

-----.=--=
--=----,

:
,
..
"

23" PHILCO color console TV .
446 -0692
305-6

$2195

A II Demonstrators. offered at
unreslstable prices.

EAR N s : 5,!lOO per year and
more
dr ivin g
Tra ctor
Trailers.
No
experience
necessary . For information
·Write, BOK 300, C·O Dally
Tribune, Ga llipo lis, Ohio
45631. Please include n•me,
address and phone number .
l -6

- -=-.-. ----------,,

$4195'

Sed. , 6 ~yl.,
lo ca l one
car .
Right

2 Dr: H.T .

.

~

................................... :

'---~

Cornett 4 Dr.
auto., P. S.,
owner. Sharp
Priced

T Bird, blue &amp; while top.
This car is loaded. low
mileage.

66 MercuiJ Matador _$495

Check Our Cose:Out Prices.
~
.
"We run avery simple busmess"

"Your Chevy Dealer"

•
•

BABYS IT TING in my 1'10me.
446-0708.
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
4-3
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMBING - He ating - Air - - - - - - - - - - - - - Conditioning , 300 Four th Ave. POODLE
grooming.
Call
Ph. 446 -1637 .
anytime, 446 -7059.
48 ·1f 2-12
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth &amp; Pine
Pllone 446 -3888 or 446 -4477
165-H

G.P., Burg .. P. S., P.B.,
factory air, one owner .
Priced To Sell

You can find what you want at the

Smith Honda Sales

1972 Dodge

1972 Ford

.4 Dr., Fac . a i r, P.S., P.B .

Runs the best .

•
"

HUGE STOCK IN OUR SHOWROOM

Wanted To Do

Gallipolis. H6-4782

-----,- -------

2 Or .. H.T., P.S. , P.B., viny l top .

66 Plymouth 4 Dr.

;

'74 HONDA

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

-

71 Ford Galaxie 500- . $1195

4 Or ., 318

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

SEE THE ALL NEW

2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM apt . $150 2 BEDROOM twin single house,
deposit and 6 months lease .
with kit chen appliances and OLD tOy t"ra i n s, pa~ts or
446 -1397 .
anything connected With toy
automatic dishwasher . Ni ce
292-tf
trains. Call 446 -i1843 after 4 :30
size rooms and yard Ph 446 -.
p .m and weekends.
4570 .
SLEEP I NG ROOMS. weekly
4 I
J-6
ra tes . Park Ce n tral Hotel.
306 .lf
ON Geor.ges Creek
Road,
spacious 4 bedroom nome.
Secu rity 9eposit refund $165
mo. 446-0785. I
.29, .lf

$1295

-4 Dr . wagon, 3 seater , w -r/J..

owner.

&amp; Snyder
Furniture·

LIKE NEW , 2 bedroom trai ler
on Bethel Road . Phone 446 3371 .
2·3
ONE trailer Jo t . A du l ts . Phone - - - - - - -- - - - -- - - 446-3805 .
•
HOUSE in Ches hire See Melvin
307 -tf ' Little.
2-lf
SLEEP IN G rooms weekly
rates, .fr ee garage parking . 50X24 DOUBLE WIDE in town ,
Libby Hotel.
$185 month furnished, al l
utili ties paid, except el ec tri c,
241 -l f'
446 -3547 .
VERY CLEA N 2bedroom home
in town . Just like new, no
2 BEDROOM honie,
6- 10x50 pets. Sl25 per month . Ca ll 44_
secur ity
deposit
2356 or 446-9145.
and
references required. Phone
300 -tf
446 -0865 .
COAC HM AN Travel Trailer,
2-3
Motor Homes. 5th WlleeL - -- -- -·--- - - - - - Truck Campers, App l e City 4 ROOMS and baih, call 446 ·
fi-t1fo Sales, Rt. :\"iN. Jackson,
0293
C:lio . Phone 286 -5701J
110 -lf
I BEDROOM atJ&lt;II i.n ~ .o ~ •n ::. :.:
SLEEP I NG rooms , Ga llia
Grande, utilities paid . SHIIJ
Hot el.
per montll . Ph 245 -5535 .
33

Addison, Ohio

$895

4 wh. dr ive. 350 V-8 engine, loc ki ng
frt . hubs, automatic trans ., power
steeriflg &amp; brake s, radio, vehic le of
many uses, custom trim, sharp 1

COr~in

ONE NICE sleeping room in Rio
Grande. Private bath. $45
month . Utili ties paid. Pnone
245 -5142 '

P.S., P. B .• vinyl top .

70 Ford LTD

I

Moving sale at Parsons in
Kanauga will continue until
Jan . 31. All items in stock
reduced.

4 3

Pay Only One
Utility

4 Dr. H.T:, f actory ai r .

1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER

For Rent

MOBILE

69 Dodge Monaco ______$895

4 Door, V-8 engine, automatic trans ., power steering.
fa ctory ait, radio, good t ires. clean interior, blue finish .

Apply at:

QUAIL CREEK

$1495

1968 CHEVROLET BELAIR

Parson's

195 Upper River Rd .
Gallipolis, Ohio ,
Ph. 446-9800

1973 Pontiac

-4 Dr . H.T : Loaded .

eng ine, automa t ic tran s., good
l si line tires, clean interior, dark blue fini sh. Dodge
popular model.

Must be able to do first class work . on
new &amp; late model cars. This is a
ground floor opportunity · that could
lead to foremen's position.

Looking for a mobile home
lot or a quality mof1ile home?
We have both a"t

69 MerCUIV Marquis _$995
68 Buick Skylark _ _$595

~~ · Door , 1 owner , small V:8

EXPERIENCE MANDATORY

FURNISHED
apartm ept.
Inquire at 6.31 Fo urth AVe.
Re ferences .
4-lf

H. T., V-8, P.S., P. 8 ., f actory a ir , vinyl t op.

USED C_ARS

ON

Bubbl e top , 4 dr wagon wilh rack.

ePAlD LIFE INSURANCE

DON WATTS V.W., INC.

PH. '9 92-2174

•

72 Ford Galaxie 50()____!1695
4 Dr .

POMEROY, OHIO

OP,ERA liON SAVINGS

FlOO wilh topper . Ha s couch &amp; hookup for 110 elec . and
l igh t s. V-8 au t o.; factory air. P.S., P . B., 80 gal. gas
capacity, 18,000rn i., lik e new

$229.5

1971 DODGE CORONET

For Sale

For Rent

SOO E. MAIN
!

$2295

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.................L~--------------~----------------1 :

•PAID VACATION
'

SM:ITH.,NELSON 'MOTORS, INC•

72 ford Explorer........ ~2855

••
••
••
•

eSALARY OR % -OPEN

For Rent

$2495

city prices.

~---~~~~~~~~-4 :
1
!~~on~~~~~-~~n~~!~w~~~. 4 DR HDTP $2695
~

Gallipolis, Ohio

~§~@ ©&amp;rm aul'e:

•

•
••
••
•"
••

$2080

.

3~7 V-8 engine , automatic w ith power steering , good w -w
hres. Rally wheels, body mldgs. , radio, white finish &amp;
spo,tless ci1Mn inte rior . A real stopper&amp;: priced way below

••

$2995

~ELAIR

19.12 NOVA2 DOOR

•
••
•

$2995

Air cond., new prem tires, 350eng.

$1695

Gallipolis

••

Air con d., vinyl top, one owner.

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
1639 Eastern Ave.

.."
"•
..
•

1972 ·BUICK SPORTSWAGON

.
0
ININTER
L....~-.~
PLEASiftl

. 4_d?Or, loca l _l owner car with l.ess than 15, 000 m"iles, beige
f1n1sh, blk . v 1nyl top, good w -w t ire s. standard V-8 eng in e .
auromat!c . ~wer st eer ing &amp; brakes , rad io . spotless clean
int er ior . Want a s'ha rp car at the pri ce of average car?

$2680 ~
..........~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..................1t............ :
~9~~- ~~~~~~~ ~~:U.R~-~M!~~~ape.
~2995 $2680 ~

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.

CHEVELLE
4 Door Hdtp.

s3695

$3190
$3090
$2990

Thru '74,

1972 CHEVROLET

~~~--~~------~-+---1 :

3.0 OTHER SMALL CARS

70

$3495
'
$3395

1972 BUICK · ESTATE WAGON
Custom interior, air cond . ."6 pass .

From 1966 thru 1972 Models
"A II Econo~:~~ y Gas Savers"
69 DART
4 Door Sedan

' . .

SPECJAL OF WEEK

•

IS

"AU, UTI' II AIR CONDJTJONJNG"

NEW '73

CHEVELLE

.

Great Used Car Values

'I

10 LUXURY USED CARS

FIRST OF YEAR BUYS
Local owner. air . lik e new

I

COMING YOUR WAY

'•

CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

Supreme 2 Dr. Hdtp.

Agai~

••
••
••

·SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST

CUTLASS

.

• 23'- 'J!he Swlday Times- Sentinel, Si&amp;nday: Jan: 6, 1974

6. 1914

.

73 OLDS

I

.•.

"

.

Pomeroy

Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.
" You ' ll L ike Our Quality Wily of Doing Business'

· See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

Appointment . Contact ThompsQn or _Tom lavender.

. i

�.,

,.

,•·

~

' -

•,

I

...

I•

;

"

.•

I

I

.

. . . . ·, . .

I

22 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel. Suml•"

.l•n

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLERP.LYMOUTH

••
••

get
· at tkesefirst oPU1eyear

Bill Joe Johnson

We have 75 New Buicks.

DOC
SMITH
SAYS

•

and Pontiacs in Stock.
All going at

·used car specials

•"•
"

Hugh Discounts!· !

72

Lemans 2 Dr. Hdtp .

FORD GRAN TORINO 2 DR HDTP
11 ,000 miles, air cond . Like new.

4

1973 CHEVELLE
DR
Air con d., vinyl top. 16,000 mil es, sharp.

72 DODGE, MONAC04 DR. SEDAN
72 DODGE, MONAC02 DR. HARDTOP
72 PONTIAC, CATALINA4 DR. SEDAN
71 DODGE, MONAC04 DR. HARDTOP
71 DODGE, MONAC04 DR. SEDAN
71 DODGE , F'OLARA STATION WAGON
71 DODGE, POLARA2 DR. HARDTOP
71 PONTIAC, GRAN PRIX
70 FORD, GALAX IE 4 DR. SEDAN
69 DODGE, MONAC04 DR. SEDAN

Only 5.000 mile s. air

Air, ster eo , 22 .000 miles

197~

AT PRICES THAT YOU WANT TO PAY

73 PONTIAC

SCAMP
2 Door Hdtp.

Malibu 2 Dr . Hdtp .

Brand New .

~~~!m~~~e~~nelocal~~:~.

6 cyl., ~S..
52,000 miles

automa t ic,

$1195
71 PLYMOUTH
Satellite 4 Dr .
32,000 miles, P .S.

$1695

50 State Street

Ai r . P.S., 51.000 miles .

NEED A SMAL For Sale
CAR? WE HAVE Corbin &amp; Snyder
I'
18 IN S~ocK
Come in and look them
over .

446-3273

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.
ATHENS, OHIO
YOUR DEALER FOR
•LINCOLN CONTINENTAL eMARK IV
•MERCURY MONTEGO eCOMET
eCAPRI eDATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR

NO HUN TI N G , no t respassing
signs. Signs of all kinds.
Simmon s Pig. and Office
Equipmen t .

L&amp; M Phone 592-4491

~06 - tf

DATSON Phone 592-4463

I F YOU are building a new
nome or remodeling, see us
We are builder s. Distributor
for Hotpo int Appliance5 ,
A lli son E l ectric
154 -tf
FILE CABINETS, f ile folders ,
ledgers, columnar pads
Si mmon s Printing and Office
Sup pl ies.
305 -tf

'72 PONTIAC CATALINA

-·-·------ - - - -- .,!J..-

2 Dr. hardtop, P. steering, P. brakes , auto.

1966 FORD Galaxie 500 conv .,
390, 4 speed . Phone 446 -0876 or
446 -265 l.
294 -tf

transmission, Fac. air cond., cinnamon
bronze finish with matching vinyl roof &amp; in terior, radio, w-s-w tires. Like new inside &amp;
- out. ·

NEW and used instrumertts.
Brunicardi House of Mus ic , 54
State St r ee t . Phone 446 -0687 .
190 -tf

$2,695 ·

BU Y dire c t from owner. lot s in
th e city or county or acreage .
L oolt at th e r es ! +llpn buy th E'
best·. Robert A. Queen . 1026
Second Ave. 446 -0168.
210 If

WOOD MOTOR SALES
For Sale

USED FURNITURE
1 AUTO . Elec. c lothes dryecs II
Whi r lpool , 1 Hotpoin! l. 1 ga s
range, 2 pc . LR su rt e, sofa
bed , coffee tabte, portable
r ecord player wit/'1 stand, set
ot tabl e lamps .
9SS Second Ave.
446 - 1171
Open Fridays 9 to 8
Plertty Free Par king

New GMC
Truck Headquart ers
1968 l 1 ton GMC pickup
19tl3 2 Ton F ord
1967 J -4 T GMC PU
1969 l ·1 T . GMC PU
1969 Chevro let 12 ton pi c kup
1967 11 ton Chev.
1969 1 1~ T. Ford PU
1969 DO'dge Station Wagon
1959 For:d Ga la x ie
1967 1'7 ton Chevy pickup
1966 • 1 ton GMC p ickup
1969 1 ~ ev . PU
1969 ~i-:- GMC PU
1968 17 T . GMC PU
1961 1 7 T GMC PU
1967 1 1 T. GMC PU
1969 11 Ton GMC PU
1968 1 T. Ford
197 1 J ..r T. Ford PU
1967 l 1 Ton GMC pickup
1968 "1 ton GMC pickup
1968 r..7 Ton Chevy P i ckup
1968 2 Ton GMC Truck
1969 117 ton GMC Pickup
1972 11 2 ton Ford Pickup
1969 3;~ ton GMC P ickup
1971 GMC Subur ban
NEW !ir es Winter tread · Sizes
7.75&gt;&lt;14. 8.25Xl4, 8.55X 14, $18
eacll . Casll and carry whi le
supply lasts .
SOMMERS G.M.C.
TRUCKS, INC .
133 Pine St.
446 ·2532
254 -tf

-DALE R. SANDERS. INC.

EASTERN AVE .

1969 BUICK l.eSABRE

4 DR.

HDTP

ADVERT I SING novelt ies, book.
matclles, pens and pen c i ls
impr i nted with your ad.
Simmons Ptg . &amp; Office
Supplies.
244 If

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

STAR CRAFT
WINTER sa le on new and used
trai l ers and fold downs .
Financ iflg arranged .
CAMP CONLEY
STARCRAFT SALES
Rt. 62 N . of Pt. Pleasant behind
Red Carpet Inn . 675 -5384 .
2-tf

For Sale

1971 FOR "p 1h ton P u ., Plock, 4 TWIN needle sewing mach i nes
new tires •. 6 ply
rear .
1973 model in walnut stand .
automat i c trans ., 27 , 000
All features built -in to make
miles . Real sharp . Call after 4
fancy des igns and do stre t ch
Tri-State Mobil e
p .m . 256 -1181!
sewing. Also butlo nllo l es ,
Hom e Sa l es
·1 -3
bl ind h ems, etc. S43 :JS. cash
Ph. 446-7572
price or terms ava ilabl e.
1965 CHEVROLET 4 door,
Phone PI Pleasant 675 -2225 . 12x50 1966 Libe r ty
Belair sedan , 283. ~ sp. , R &amp; H,
4 6 12x50 1963 Lakewood
12XS2 1970 Fleetwood
needs tranS . work first. $50. -------------8x35 1957 Marlette
Ph . 669 -4642 .
VACUUM
CLEANERS ·4- l
Electro
Hygiene
New 10xS4 195~ Elcar
Demonstrators
has
al l 10x ~O 1965 Sta r All Elec·t ric
8x45 1954 Vagabond
CLEAN rugs like new , so easy
cleaning attacllments p l us the
to do with Blue Lust re. Rent
new
Electro . Suds
tor 10x45 1960 Magnolia
Sx27 1953 Trotwood
electric
shampooer
S.l .
shampooing carpeL Only
248 -tf
Centra l Supp l y.
S27 .50 cash price or terms
available . Phone Pt . Pleasant
GOOD C L EAN LUMP and
r- - - - - - - - - - - - - 675 -2225.
stoker coal. Car l W inters. Rio
4 6
JUST taken in 197 4 Zig Zag
Grande . Pllone 245 -5115
Sewing
Macl'11ne.
Tl'1is
machine darns, embroider s,
overcasts , all wlttlout at .
tach ments. Pay balance or D -4 END load er, new rails, good L UMP Coal , Jaymar Coa l Co .,
Me igs and Gallia line , St. Rt . 7
U6 .50'0r pay $5.10 per month .
condilion. Phone 675 -3182
al Chesl'1ire , 7 a .m . to 6: 30
Phone 446 ·0255.
36
p·.m . 5 days a week . 992 -569 3.
4-6 .---------- - ~-..-272 -tf
1973 GRANDE Prix, S.J .. green,
1914 STEREO, 8 track in walnut
white v inyl top and inter ior .
finish . Pay balance of $109 .55
A i r , P .W , P _S, P .B . FM
portable
or payments can be arranged .
stereo. Ral l y wh eel s. radial s. P E NN C RE S T
washe r . Phone 446 3235.
446 -0255.
Ph 388 -8615 .

on

1

] ]

FOR BETTER cleaning , IO ' REDUCING
Kennel
keep colors gleaming. use
Yorkshire . T.erriers-. Broods
Blue Lus tr e carpet cleaner .
s t uds , puppies , cllamp i on
Rent electric shanvpooer. S1 .
sired . S75 and up Pll . 61J J46
G . C . Mur plly Co
0548
3J

33

COPPER TONE l arge and frost free refria er.ator tor sale .
S265 Excel l ent condit ion 4.46·
7448.

,,

WE NEED A

1973 Buick Electra

1973 Buick Riviera

Custom 4 dr . Hdtp.
Brand New
List Price $6858.00

Demo, Orig . Price
$7200.00

1973 Buick

•

Cust. 4dr.
Hdtp., Demo
List Price $5580.00

BODYMAN • PAINTER
SUNDAY SHOPPERS WELCOME,
COME IN AN BROWSE AROUND

•PAID HOLIDAYS
•PAID HOSPITALIZATION

1nOCHEVROLETMONTECARLO

~

Loca l I owner new car trad e, 350 V-8 engine, au tomat ic,
power steering &amp; brakes, factory air , radio, spo tless clean
blue interior with s i lv er grey finish , vinyl roof. A nice one .

COMMUNITY

&amp;SALES

Rodney.(ora Rd.

Rodney, Ohio
~..,., .. ~: 9 _
,

n-: . ~':' Q p.m.

Monday thru Saturday
Ph. 245 -9374-245-5021

TARA
Townhouse
Apartments
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
1% Baths

•••

••
•••
•
••
••
•••
•••
••
•••
•

-------For Information
Call Shirley Adkins

................
367-7250

SEVERA L mob i le homes, to tal
elec tri c at Kerr, Ohio . $125
per mo. Ciil l 446 -01 75 or 446 ·
193 4.
273 -tf
TWO trailer lots. Adults . Ph.
446 380S.
1,
264 -tf

.70 Olds_Delta 88$1295
69 Plymouth FuiY 111----.:$795

Plumbing &amp; Heating

On~

AFew New

'73

Pass. Cars Left!

Upper Rilw Rd.

GSpalla, 0.

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

HOUSE for rent . Pl'1one ·446 -3642
for more information .
60

X 12 HO USETRAILER .
lo ca ted on 218, 2 miles
fromBanes ' filling station.
Ph . 256-6216.
4·3

MODERN ., five room house in
courttrv . Ca rpet. fuel oil
furna ce, full basement and
garage. Ph . 446 - 222~.
4 3

CLEAN. 2 bedroom, fully
· furnished
mobile
home .
Ut i lrties paid . Private lot
Pllone 256-1291.
4J

297 ·"
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HE ATING :
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446-2735
187 .tf
STA ND ARD
Plumbing &amp; Heating
214 Third Ave ., 446 -3782
187 .tf

Wanted To Buy

ONLY

Wanted To Buy

BABYSITTING in my
Pllone 256 -6793 .

home.

Bilsiness Opportunities

Wanted
HOMES
for
, housebroken .

two
Call

kittens ,
446-2825.
3-3

v.a,

auto.

1971 Ford

71 Dodge

LTD 4 dr . H.T., while,
black vinyl top, factory
air, P.S., P.B ., AM &amp; FM
. radio. Real nice car.

Polaro 2 dr. H.T., auto.,
P.S., P. B., radio. Real nice
car.

Priced Only

$1995

$495

WAGON

Skylark 2 dr . H.T. , a uto .,
P .S . , P'. B . , local one
owner.
Sale Price

•

•
•

••'

•

For Sale or Trade

••

1969 MERCURY Marauder,
good cond., 1962 Rambler
sta tion wagon. ' W i ll sell
reasonable. Call day 675-3950,
or evenings 446 -7476 .
3-6

""
•
,

crocheted mitten~,
HOME MADE Quilts . Write to GREEN
senlimental
value ,
lost
Mrs . J. A . Sct1riner, 249 3
Commercia
l
Bank
parking
Lenol'a ,Rd ., Cinnaminson ,
lot . Reward 4411 -08&lt;11.
New Jersey 08077 .
4·3
35

PUBLIC
NOTIQ
We sell anything for
~"ybody. Bring your
tlem~ to Knotts COR'Imuntty Auction Barn.
Corner Third &amp; Olive.
For appointment call
· 256-6967 after s p.m.
Sale . every Saturday
eve n1ng at 7 O'Clock.

A Lot Cheaper

'1995

ONLY

Ton, long bed , red , 6
cyl. , std. tr ans.
1/ 1

Great Price

WE WANT YOU BACK (:AUSE THE JOB WAS DONE RIGHT
NOT BECAUSE THE JOB WAS DONE WRON'G

67 Chev. lmpala-----$395
.
69 Olds Cutlass--$895
4

See Ceward Calvert, R01i Hester or Bill Nelson

Dr. H.T.

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
985-4 100
Chester, 0.

Located on Sl. Rt. 7

Pomeroy

For Sale

For Sale
MOBILE HOMES

FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED

MOBILE HOMES

1953 Pra irie Schooner - l!x 36, 1
bdrm .
1953 Peerless Bx35, 1 B R
1959 Cast le 8x35, 2 B R
Ro llahome 10x56, 3 BR
1965 Buddy 12x50, 2 BR
1970 West Brook 12x5 0, 2 BR
1969 Richardson 12&gt;&lt;60, 2 BR
1968 Catalina t2x60, 2 BR
1967 PMC 12x60, 3 BR ·'
197 0 Monarch 12x60, 2 BR
B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES
second &amp; Viand St .
Pt. Pleasant
(next to Heck 's)
27S·If

REMEMBER
We Service
WhJit We Sell
OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

TWO
SLIGHTLY
U SED
General snow tires, size H ·
7Bx 15". Both for S25 . Call 446·
2341 ..
1J

~~,r'0 FURNITURE
854 Second Ave. 446·9523

Our new show
room is now open.
USED FURNITURE

For Sale

For Sale

For Sale

RIC.E'S

Open Evenings
'Til 7 p.ni. -&amp;
Sat. 'ijl 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12
On Saturday

500 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON ·PLEAS
FRANKLIN COUNTY, OHIO
OHIO
A IR
QUALITY
DEVELOPMENT
AU THO RITY ,
Pl aintiff,

JANUARY
CLEARANCE
MAJOR SALE
All new 1973 models offered at
below our cost.

HIGH cMair sofa bed - liScouches - 9xl2 woo l rug - 2
real nice desk s - 2 full l ength JOSEPH T . FERGUSO N, et al .
Defendants
mirrors . Por tab l e T V '} or 3
CASE NO . 73CV·12·429J
years old.
JUDGE WRIGHT
TYPEWRITER S, portable and
DODGE Picltup with catt le
ORDER AND NOTICE TO
office models, new and used, "1968
racks, prac tical ly new ti res , T HE STATE OF OHIO AND TO
f i l es , desks, c hairs, signs.
Will sell for $695, 256-6540.
ALL PROPERTY OW N ERS.
bookmatches, pen, penc ils,
3 3 TAXPAYE.RS.
CITIZEN S,
adv.
noveltie s,
bump er
AND OTHERS HAVING OR
stickers. printing. P/'1 . 446 ·
HAY for sa te. Phone 256 -6670 CLAIMING
ANY
RIGHT.
1397. Simmons Pig .
after 6 p.m.
TITLE , OR
INTEREST IN
Jtf A NY PROPERTY OR FUNDS
- -- .TO BE AFFECTED BY THE
1965 PLYMOUTH wagon, S275;
ISS UANCE OF AIR QUALITY
1965 Caprice C1'1evy $500; 1968
NE.N : Serta and Bem co mat REVE NUE BONDS TO BE
Plyillouth Fury $550. A46 .0952
,tress and boy springs. Large
AKC Reg .
ISSUED BY THE OHIO AIR
after 5 p .m .
selection in stock firm
QUALITY
DEVELOPMENT
27.7 -tf
mattresses starting at $39.00.
St. Bernard Puppies
A U THOR ITY OR AFFECTED
955 Second Avenue
IN A NY WAY THEREBY .
Centenary Woods
A LL
TYPE S of
build i ng
446 · 1171
On this lOth day of December,
materials, block, br i ck, sewer
176 -lf
Kennel
1973, a "Petition for Validation
--- - -~-------pipes, windows, l in tels , etc.
of Air Quality Revenue Bonds"
Ph. 446-0231
~·
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
lla ving been fi led in thiS Court
FIREWOOD . Phone 446 - 46.!Js:;,._~ o . Phone 245 ·5121 after -5.
by the Ohio Air Quality
2-6
123 -tf
Livestock for sale
Deve l opment Authority · and
I STERED Poll ed Hereford said Petition hav ing tl'1is day
PIPES, Pipes, Pipes , GBD. REG
He ifers and Bulls . Edw in been presented to the Court;
Clleratan, BBB o Jobey , Hilson
Sc l'1ater &amp; Sons, Aid, 01'1io,
IT IS HEREB Y ORDERED ,
1962 FORD pickup , parts truck
and others . Tawn ey's Pipe
Lawre
nq
County,
State
Rf. pursuant to Ohio Revised Code
w ith 6feet utility bed . S75. 245 ·
and Trophy House, 422 Second
141, 33 miles from Gallipolis . Section 133.73, that the State of
5050.
Ave.
Pl'1one: Ironton 643 -2435 .
Ohio, through its Aftorney
2·3
Middleport, Ohio
199.tf
3-3 Gene ral , and a ll property
owners, tax -payers. cit i zens.
and oThers having or claim ing
any rig hL ti tle or interest in any
Property or funds to be· affected
by tile issuance of tne secu riti es
hereinafter descr ibed , or af .
Goble
l ected in any way th ereby . be,
and they hereby are, required to
appear and be heard before tillS
Cour t at 9 o'clock AM . on the
NOTICE OF
NOTICE OF
18tll day ot January, 1974 then
' APPOINTMENT
APPOINTMENT
and there to show cause why 11'1e
Case No . 1-',074
case No. 11,747
prayer of the aforesaid Petition Estate 01 Ruby Coleman, aka Estate of Harrison N. Stice
should not be granted, and why
Deceased.
this Court sho uld not validate Ruble Coleman Deceased .
Not i ce is hereby given that
and con f i rm the proceedings for
Noti ce is hereby given that
Rosevelt Coleman of V inton , Herber t H Moore of Vinton,
,
tile issuance of air qua I 1fy Ohio •. has been duly appointed Ohio, has been duly appointed
revenue bonds in ttle maximum Administrator of the ·E state of Administrator de bonis n'on of
amollnt oQf $210l,OOOD,OOO I by tl'1et Ruby Coleman. aka Rubie tl'1e Estate of Harrison N . St ice.
Ohio Air
ua • Y
eve opmen
Coleman, deceased, l ate of deceased, la t e of Bidwell, Gallia
Clean Sweep!
Au thority and adjudicate tl'1e Vinton , Gall ia Cou nt y, 01'1io .
County, Oil io.
autllority o f the said 01'1io A ir
Creditors are requ·i red to t ile
Credi tor s are reqiJired to fil e
Quality Development Autllority lh'eir claims wit/'1 sai d fiduciary tllelr c la i ms with said fiduciary
VAN DYKE
to issue said securities for th e
months.
four months .
d th·s
purpose of paying the cost of witl'1in four
l7tl'1 day of within
Dated this 1711'1 day of •
acquiring, by purcl'1ase and · 0 a 1e
1
December 1973 .
' con struct ion, real and personal · December 1973.
60X12- 2 BR
property coris t ituting an a ir
R . Will i am Jenkins
R . William Jenkins
quality project for lease• and
Ju dg e
Judge
Glass fr-ont, patio doors,
sale thereat to Union Carbide
Cour t of Commo n Pleas •
Court of Common Pleas,
Corporat ion as prayed for in
front kitchen,
fu lly
Probate Div i sion
Probate Division
said Peti tion .
carp.e ted ,
Spanish
Front living room, 21x1 4 ;
Dec . 23, 30, Jan . 6.
(S) Craig Wright Dec. 23 , 30, Jan . 6.
decor,
all
deluxe
Judge
fully carpeted, all deluxe
f ea tur es . Gas h eat.
features. Delivered and set
Delivered · and set up.

SO MEONE
to
tak e over
payments on 69 Ca mara , 4
Mag wneels. Ph. 446 -2829 or
see at 39 Smithers .

26
CHEVY VAN, 6 cy linder , 446·
2627 after 5 p . m .
2 3
MUS T SELL new Amana Radar
Range and new Hotpoint
portable d ishwas her Best
offer Ca ll 446 -0918 after 5 p .

m.

2-6

19 73 STEREO -RADIO com bination with 8-l ra ck built -in.
Tcike over paym ents of $7 .55
per monlh or pay S101.50. Call
446 -0255.
269-tf
WE CARRY comple t e line of
P roje ction bulbs . Tawney
Studio , 474 Secon d Ave .
224 -tf
67 VALIANT 6 cyl . Auto. Radio
and w w tires . 446 -1615 after
6, 446 -1244 .
260 -tf

All new 1974 model full sized
cars offered at sacrifice prices.

~

(
,
•

••

~

•

••
'

price you wJmt to pay at

Blue fire mist paint. matching blue interior,
full power equipment, AM-FM radio, steel
radial tires, Climate Control air conditioning .

Keith Goble Ford, Inc.

*6500

VAN DYKE

68X14 -

73 CADILLAC
Sedan DeVIlle

All Used Cars priced for quick sale.

Mobile Homes

January Price Break

73 CADILLAC
Co~pe PeVille

*6500
73 CADILLAC
Sedan DeVille

WAS $6995

$7995
ATTE&lt;NTION
VETERANS

Goble Mobile Homes

Gl

Loans available, no
down payment with
approved credit.

I

586 Locust St.
992-7004
Middleport
Open a. to 6 Mon. thru Sat.

'Jp to 12 Year Financing
- we · Service What We ·

Sell.

r
·..

Open Daily a to 6, (Closed Sundays) . Open Anytime bv

•

.

,

12x65 3 bedrm., ll/2 bath, Total electric Kirkwood
.. . DO-uble lrsulation, House type door, storms
&amp; screens, Bay front window, 2 dr . frost-free
refrig., carpet throughout. Delivered &amp; set up
1974 model.
·
' ·

'6995

Dark green, black vinyl top, green interior, :till
&amp; tel. wheel. AM-FM radio, full power eqUip ..

Climate Lontrol air. 10,000 miles.

*5500
72 CADILLAC
Sedan DeVille
*5500

KARR &amp;VA.NZANDT
Cadillac - Oldsmobile
992-5342

GMAC Financing Availabte

'
'

I

..-,'
'I

._,'

White with blue vinyl top, blue interior, full
power , Climate Control air. 18,000 miles .

Low January Prlcel

.I

•I

*6500
72 CADILLAC
Sedan OeVille

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK

JANUARY SPECIAL .

-.-'-I

'I
"\

Dark brown, beige vinyl lop, beige leather
interior, tilt &amp; tel. wheel. AM-FM radio, full
power equip., Climate Control air. 18,000
miles.

3 BEDROOM

up .

-,

'I
•!

Light grey finish, matching leather interior,
full power equipment. AM-FM stereo, Climate
Control air, steel radial tires. new Cadill.ac
trade, 16,000 miles.

TOTAL ELECTRIC

lost
$10 REWARD . 4 mont/'1 old
Beagle, white stocking feet ,
wl'1 ite tip on taiL black body
with white underside. brown
streaks , brown ,.,ead , long
ears . crippled . Answers to · the
nam e " Junior ." House pet .
Lost in the Rock Fork area.
Ph . 256 -1407 . /
I
_,
3.6

one.

69 Ford

Dart Demon, 6 cyl., std .
trans ., local one owner . A
big gas saver .
Priced To Sell

2 Dr. H.T .

Open Eves Till 8

Cat . 2 dr. auto., P.S., P.B.,
air . Just as clean as a new

$1595

70 Buick

2 Dr . H.T.• fac . air. v inyl top.

WE SEll &amp; SERVICE CHEVROlET CARS &amp; TRUCKS •

992·2126

Sale Price

71 Pontiac

71 Dodge

69 Chev. lmpala- -$895

-----.=--=
--=----,

:
,
..
"

23" PHILCO color console TV .
446 -0692
305-6

$2195

A II Demonstrators. offered at
unreslstable prices.

EAR N s : 5,!lOO per year and
more
dr ivin g
Tra ctor
Trailers.
No
experience
necessary . For information
·Write, BOK 300, C·O Dally
Tribune, Ga llipo lis, Ohio
45631. Please include n•me,
address and phone number .
l -6

- -=-.-. ----------,,

$4195'

Sed. , 6 ~yl.,
lo ca l one
car .
Right

2 Dr: H.T .

.

~

................................... :

'---~

Cornett 4 Dr.
auto., P. S.,
owner. Sharp
Priced

T Bird, blue &amp; while top.
This car is loaded. low
mileage.

66 MercuiJ Matador _$495

Check Our Cose:Out Prices.
~
.
"We run avery simple busmess"

"Your Chevy Dealer"

•
•

BABYS IT TING in my 1'10me.
446-0708.
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
4-3
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMBING - He ating - Air - - - - - - - - - - - - - Conditioning , 300 Four th Ave. POODLE
grooming.
Call
Ph. 446 -1637 .
anytime, 446 -7059.
48 ·1f 2-12
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth &amp; Pine
Pllone 446 -3888 or 446 -4477
165-H

G.P., Burg .. P. S., P.B.,
factory air, one owner .
Priced To Sell

You can find what you want at the

Smith Honda Sales

1972 Dodge

1972 Ford

.4 Dr., Fac . a i r, P.S., P.B .

Runs the best .

•
"

HUGE STOCK IN OUR SHOWROOM

Wanted To Do

Gallipolis. H6-4782

-----,- -------

2 Or .. H.T., P.S. , P.B., viny l top .

66 Plymouth 4 Dr.

;

'74 HONDA

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

-

71 Ford Galaxie 500- . $1195

4 Or ., 318

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

SEE THE ALL NEW

2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM apt . $150 2 BEDROOM twin single house,
deposit and 6 months lease .
with kit chen appliances and OLD tOy t"ra i n s, pa~ts or
446 -1397 .
anything connected With toy
automatic dishwasher . Ni ce
292-tf
trains. Call 446 -i1843 after 4 :30
size rooms and yard Ph 446 -.
p .m and weekends.
4570 .
SLEEP I NG ROOMS. weekly
4 I
J-6
ra tes . Park Ce n tral Hotel.
306 .lf
ON Geor.ges Creek
Road,
spacious 4 bedroom nome.
Secu rity 9eposit refund $165
mo. 446-0785. I
.29, .lf

$1295

-4 Dr . wagon, 3 seater , w -r/J..

owner.

&amp; Snyder
Furniture·

LIKE NEW , 2 bedroom trai ler
on Bethel Road . Phone 446 3371 .
2·3
ONE trailer Jo t . A du l ts . Phone - - - - - - -- - - - -- - - 446-3805 .
•
HOUSE in Ches hire See Melvin
307 -tf ' Little.
2-lf
SLEEP IN G rooms weekly
rates, .fr ee garage parking . 50X24 DOUBLE WIDE in town ,
Libby Hotel.
$185 month furnished, al l
utili ties paid, except el ec tri c,
241 -l f'
446 -3547 .
VERY CLEA N 2bedroom home
in town . Just like new, no
2 BEDROOM honie,
6- 10x50 pets. Sl25 per month . Ca ll 44_
secur ity
deposit
2356 or 446-9145.
and
references required. Phone
300 -tf
446 -0865 .
COAC HM AN Travel Trailer,
2-3
Motor Homes. 5th WlleeL - -- -- -·--- - - - - - Truck Campers, App l e City 4 ROOMS and baih, call 446 ·
fi-t1fo Sales, Rt. :\"iN. Jackson,
0293
C:lio . Phone 286 -5701J
110 -lf
I BEDROOM atJ&lt;II i.n ~ .o ~ •n ::. :.:
SLEEP I NG rooms , Ga llia
Grande, utilities paid . SHIIJ
Hot el.
per montll . Ph 245 -5535 .
33

Addison, Ohio

$895

4 wh. dr ive. 350 V-8 engine, loc ki ng
frt . hubs, automatic trans ., power
steeriflg &amp; brake s, radio, vehic le of
many uses, custom trim, sharp 1

COr~in

ONE NICE sleeping room in Rio
Grande. Private bath. $45
month . Utili ties paid. Pnone
245 -5142 '

P.S., P. B .• vinyl top .

70 Ford LTD

I

Moving sale at Parsons in
Kanauga will continue until
Jan . 31. All items in stock
reduced.

4 3

Pay Only One
Utility

4 Dr. H.T:, f actory ai r .

1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER

For Rent

MOBILE

69 Dodge Monaco ______$895

4 Door, V-8 engine, automatic trans ., power steering.
fa ctory ait, radio, good t ires. clean interior, blue finish .

Apply at:

QUAIL CREEK

$1495

1968 CHEVROLET BELAIR

Parson's

195 Upper River Rd .
Gallipolis, Ohio ,
Ph. 446-9800

1973 Pontiac

-4 Dr . H.T : Loaded .

eng ine, automa t ic tran s., good
l si line tires, clean interior, dark blue fini sh. Dodge
popular model.

Must be able to do first class work . on
new &amp; late model cars. This is a
ground floor opportunity · that could
lead to foremen's position.

Looking for a mobile home
lot or a quality mof1ile home?
We have both a"t

69 MerCUIV Marquis _$995
68 Buick Skylark _ _$595

~~ · Door , 1 owner , small V:8

EXPERIENCE MANDATORY

FURNISHED
apartm ept.
Inquire at 6.31 Fo urth AVe.
Re ferences .
4-lf

H. T., V-8, P.S., P. 8 ., f actory a ir , vinyl t op.

USED C_ARS

ON

Bubbl e top , 4 dr wagon wilh rack.

ePAlD LIFE INSURANCE

DON WATTS V.W., INC.

PH. '9 92-2174

•

72 Ford Galaxie 50()____!1695
4 Dr .

POMEROY, OHIO

OP,ERA liON SAVINGS

FlOO wilh topper . Ha s couch &amp; hookup for 110 elec . and
l igh t s. V-8 au t o.; factory air. P.S., P . B., 80 gal. gas
capacity, 18,000rn i., lik e new

$229.5

1971 DODGE CORONET

For Sale

For Rent

SOO E. MAIN
!

$2295

•
"

.................L~--------------~----------------1 :

•PAID VACATION
'

SM:ITH.,NELSON 'MOTORS, INC•

72 ford Explorer........ ~2855

••
••
••
•

eSALARY OR % -OPEN

For Rent

$2495

city prices.

~---~~~~~~~~-4 :
1
!~~on~~~~~-~~n~~!~w~~~. 4 DR HDTP $2695
~

Gallipolis, Ohio

~§~@ ©&amp;rm aul'e:

•

•
••
••
•"
••

$2080

.

3~7 V-8 engine , automatic w ith power steering , good w -w
hres. Rally wheels, body mldgs. , radio, white finish &amp;
spo,tless ci1Mn inte rior . A real stopper&amp;: priced way below

••

$2995

~ELAIR

19.12 NOVA2 DOOR

•
••
•

$2995

Air cond., new prem tires, 350eng.

$1695

Gallipolis

••

Air con d., vinyl top, one owner.

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
1639 Eastern Ave.

.."
"•
..
•

1972 ·BUICK SPORTSWAGON

.
0
ININTER
L....~-.~
PLEASiftl

. 4_d?Or, loca l _l owner car with l.ess than 15, 000 m"iles, beige
f1n1sh, blk . v 1nyl top, good w -w t ire s. standard V-8 eng in e .
auromat!c . ~wer st eer ing &amp; brakes , rad io . spotless clean
int er ior . Want a s'ha rp car at the pri ce of average car?

$2680 ~
..........~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..................1t............ :
~9~~- ~~~~~~~ ~~:U.R~-~M!~~~ape.
~2995 $2680 ~

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.

CHEVELLE
4 Door Hdtp.

s3695

$3190
$3090
$2990

Thru '74,

1972 CHEVROLET

~~~--~~------~-+---1 :

3.0 OTHER SMALL CARS

70

$3495
'
$3395

1972 BUICK · ESTATE WAGON
Custom interior, air cond . ."6 pass .

From 1966 thru 1972 Models
"A II Econo~:~~ y Gas Savers"
69 DART
4 Door Sedan

' . .

SPECJAL OF WEEK

•

IS

"AU, UTI' II AIR CONDJTJONJNG"

NEW '73

CHEVELLE

.

Great Used Car Values

'I

10 LUXURY USED CARS

FIRST OF YEAR BUYS
Local owner. air . lik e new

I

COMING YOUR WAY

'•

CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

Supreme 2 Dr. Hdtp.

Agai~

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·SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST

CUTLASS

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• 23'- 'J!he Swlday Times- Sentinel, Si&amp;nday: Jan: 6, 1974

6. 1914

.

73 OLDS

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"

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Pomeroy

Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.
" You ' ll L ike Our Quality Wily of Doing Business'

· See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

Appointment . Contact ThompsQn or _Tom lavender.

. i

�·I ,••'\ ,. ,.

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24 - The SWJday Times -SenNnel, SWJday , Jan. 6. 1974

Farm Bureal! important factor
in s,uccess of early extension
,..-

····-

CoWJty Extension Agenl, Agriculture
POMEROY - Following publication of last week's article on
the early history of Extension work in Meigs County, I received a
call from Mrs. Theodore (Stella) Grueser who said: "I want you
to know that some of us are still alive that made dress forms back
in the early 20s ."
l'v'rs. Grueser recalled that in those ea rly days her husband
used mostly manure for fertilizer because there was so much
"filler" in the low analysis commercial fertilizer. She also
mentioned Mrs . Everett Colwell as one of the early Extension
Fa!1Il Bureau cooperators.
In those days the Farm Bureau Board was the Extension
Advisory Ccmmittee. During the 20s Farm Bureau was lurnmg

more towards the commercial buying of supplies, pooling orders,
selling cooperatively and legislation.
Throughout the early history of Extension continued mention
was made ·of the cooperatiOn between Granges and Farm
Bureau . Grange leaders and Grange masters served as project
leaders in many communities.
The "official program" group was the Farm Bureau Board.
In 192!i the fact that Farm Bureau provided the Extension Office
and the secretary was shared was recorded . The Farm Bureau
hired a service manager to ship livestock in 1924.
In 1927 the first public appropria lions were made to cover the
extension agent's salary. Total appriation was $2,500. The county
commissioners had contributed to office expense in 1925. By 1929
The Fann Bureau no longer called on the Extension agent to
secure memberships. G. G. Smith was the Fann Bureau Service
Manager that year.
Poultry was the leading enterprise in the county during most
of the 20s. In 1924 Vernon Nease built the first "Ohio Type"
poultry house. All the neighbors came in for the "raising ." Other
early cooperators in poultry demonstrations were R. S. Blackwood, Mrs. G. L. Michael, Mrs. George Clark, Dale Dye, E. V.
Atkins, Millard ~ivey, H. Easbnan, Porter Midkiff, M. L.
Parker, J. Barnhart, H. Warren, Opal Armstrong, G. W.
Davidson, E. Chapman, Will Cannen and Homer Ashworth.
Broilers were first mentioned in 1926. W. S. Finlaw, manager
of Pomeroy Cement Block Company in.l927, reported, "We have
sold the material for more than 50 Ohio Type brooder houses in
the past year." Considering the other sources of supply, probably
over 200 were built.
The early agent apparently spent most of his time in the
field. He didn't have many reports and outside activities.
Home mixing of fertilizer and higher·analysis fertilizer were
the main topics. In 1926 agent Kreitler said :
·
"Worn' out pastw-es in this county have been the cause of a
decline in the livestock industry. The problem is exceedingly
difficult of solution. Lime and acid phosphate applied to the
pastures will restore the pasture. The difficulty has been that the
pasture land has always been the steepest parts of the farm and

Corn yields higher last year
season was a good growing
season for most crops in Mason
CcWlty . We have been talking
with several farmers and find
that their production per acre
exceeded previous years.
· George McCausland on
Route 35 reportea that his
average for corn production

lay of the land
was 100 bJshels per acre and
that he had a 31Hiore field that
produced 160 bushels per &lt;~ere .
W. A. Barker and son Sydney
said that their average yield of
corn was between liS and 12!i
bushels per acre and that in
previous years the average
yield had been 100 or less. Mr.
To see for all your
Barker also mentioned that
family insu'rlince needs. part of his corn yielded 30 tons
of ensilage per acre and this
CARROL K. SNOWDEN
was a greater yield than in
Park Central Hotel Bldg.
Second Ave ., Gallipolis
previous years.
Phone 446-4290
WE WERE TAKING with
Home 446:4518
Mrs. Charles Wedge, the adult
iiA11 IAIM
STATE FARM
conservation advisor to the
Busy Fours 4-H Club with
Home Otfic eo;:
headquarters at Mt. Flower
Bloo,.in;{lon, llllnoi5
p 7304
. School. Mrs. Wedge said that
-----~ ·the club was again entering the

--A ...

ST'ARTS MONDAY AT 9:30 A.M.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

Devoted To The Inrere~t. Of The MeigJ-Mawn Area
MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1974

f

~ale!

Kroehler Living Room Suites
LOVE SEATS • SOFAS • CHAIRS
,. ', f

Reg. 279 .00 Love Seat
Herculon-Green
Reg. 198.00 Love Seat
Herculon-Grey - - Reg . 269 .00 Love Seat
Herculon-Gold - - Reg. 767.00 3 pc. Sectional
Nylon- Rust - - - - - - - - - Req . 369.00 Sofa, Herculon-Green-- Reg . 179.00 Chair, Herculon -Green

- 179.00
Sale 129.00
Sale 174.00
Sale 467.00
Sale 238.00
Sale 116.00

Reg. 369.00 Sofa, Herculon-Gold -- - Sale 238.00
Reg. 179.00 Chair, Herculon-Gold --- Sale 116.00
Reg. 449 .00 2 pc . Suite
Nylon, Gold and Green - - - - - - Sale 288.00
Reg. 319 .00 Sola
Nylon, Black and White - - - - - - Sale 192.00
Reg . 298 .00 Sofa, Nylon - Blue-Green - - Sale 199.00
Req . 485.00 2 pc. Suite, Blue Velvet
Sale 299.00
Reg. 249.00 Love Seat
Herculon- Green - - - - - - - - - - Sale 164.00
Reg . 319.00 Love Seat, Nylon Print
Sale 219.00
Reg. 269.00 Love Seat
Herculon-Gold - - - - - - - - - - Sale 174.00

Reg . 249.00 Sola, Herculon- Grey ---- Sale 169.00
Reg. 199.00 Chair Bed
Frieze Velvet, Gold-Green - - Sale 99.00
Reg. 169.00 Swivel Rocker
Herculon-Grey• - - - - - - - Sale 111.00
Reg. 169.00 Recliner
H!lrculon-Grey - - - - - - - Sale 111.00
Reg. 129.00 Recliner, Vinyl-Gold- - - Sale 84.00
Reg. 129.00 Recliner, Vinyl-Red - - - Sale 84.00
Reg. 129.00 Swivel Rocker
Nylon, Beige, Brown, Gold - - - Sale 84 ,00
Reg. 159.00 Wing Back Chair
Nylon-Blue-Green-Beige Print--- Sale 108.00
Reg. 159.00 Wing Back Chair
Nylon- Rust-Beige Print
Sale 108.00
Reg. 159.00 Wing Back Chair
Nylon-Gold-Beige print
Sale 108.00
Reg. 139.00 Swivel Rocker
Nylon-Blue - - - - - - - ~ -Sale 92.00
Reg. 179.00 Lounge Chair
Green and White - - - - - Sale 118.00
Reg . 119.00 Occasional Chair
Herculon-Gold, Brown, White - - - S.le 12.00
Reg'. 189.00 Swivel Rocker
Herculon- Red, gold, rust - - S.le 121M
Reg. 159.00 Rocker Recliner
Herculon, Green and Brown
s.•Reg. 129.00 Occasi&lt;»nal Chair
Nylon- Brown, gold ~ white
S.le .....

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GOINS WINNER - Dwight Goins, Meigs ingh School band director al'ld member of the
Meigs COW1ty Jaycees, WOII the Jaycee District 93 Spealrup competition Sunday at the district
meeting in the Meigs Inn. Pictured abo•!e with Goins (center) are Ric Abel, district vicepresident, left, and Darrell Ccok, Jaycee programming vice-president of Ohio. Goins will go on
to the state Jaycee Speakup competition in Cincinnati on January ~ .

roNTESTANTS - Dwight Goins, center, and the other
two contestants in SWlday's Speakup competition, were, left,

Dwight Goins, Meigs High
School band director and
member of the Meigs CoWJty
Jaycees, was judged winner of
the . Jaycees' District 93
"Speakup" Sunday afternoon
at a district meeting at the
Meigs Inn in Pomeroy.
Goins, speaking on the line of

WASHINGTON (UP!)
·Howard Metzenbaum, sworn in
as U. S. Senator Friday,
reserved judgment on whetller
President Nixon should be
Impeached, but admitted
Nixon i~ not his f.avorite.
. Metzen~aum, who in the past
has called for Nixbn to resign,
said he preferred lo wait WJtil
tlle matter reaches the Senate
and formal testimony on
charges is heard. He said he
would "not judge the matter on
the basis of newspaper reports
or polls."
"He is not my favorite

Master Charge, the card used to help manage your
money and keep track of purchases with one
itemized monthly statement. If you've got it, you've
probably got Master Charge, too. So .. . use it!

Court St.
Gallipolis

Bank

::~l~~~~::~:::~~i

· Silver Bridge
Shopping Plaz"

facts of Wa!"rgate."

Sale 94.00

129.00 OVal Table
4 Side Chairs - - 69.00 Rectangular Table
4 Side Chairs - - -

249.00 Large 42"x60" with 2- 12" leaves
Table and 6 side chairs - - - Sale 199.00
129.00 Round Drop-leaf Table &amp; 4 chairs
(Damaged) - - - - - - - Sale 75.00
289,00 Octagonal Table &amp; 4 side chairs
Spanish - - - - - - - - Sale 232.00

79.00 Round Early American
4 Side Chairs - - - -

Sale 64.00

-.

169.00 Rectangular Table and 6 chairs
Lightgreen - - - - - - - Sale136.00
Sale 104.00

159.00 Round Table and 6 side chairs
Light green - - : - - - - Sale 128.00

79.00 Drop' leaf Table &amp; 2 chairs--- Sale 64.00

229.00 Mediterranean Table &amp; 4 chairs Sale 184.00

102.00 Fruitwood Cocktail Tables
Sale 49.00
149.00 Walnut 'Doored
Cocktail Tables - - - - - Sale 75.00
89.00 Walnut Doored ·
Cocktail Tables - - - - - Sale 49.00
89.95 Oak Doored Cocktail Tables
Sale 49.00
69.95 Walnut Cocktail Tables - - · · Sale 39.00
42.00' Maple Cocktail Tables ·
Sale 29.00

•

SHOP. WEEKDAYS
9:30 TO 5 PM - OPEN FRIDAY AftD SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9
.

ELBERFE DS I

MEROY

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Martin on "The brotherhood of
man
transcends
the
sovereignty of nations," and
Marietta Jaycee Charlie
Paugh on, "Faith in God gives
meaning and purpose to human
life."
Four of the six chapters in
District 93 were represented in
Pomeroy . Joining Meigs
COW1ty, the host chapter, were
the Marietta, Belpre and
Athens chapters.
Ed Wllliams of the Athens
chapter announced the
"Jaycee Week 11 television
special to be aired on WOUl!
TV in Athens can be seen
Monday , Jan . 21, at 7:30p.m.
and Friday, Jan. 25, at 3 p.m.
The televi·sion program,
according to Williams, will be
aired over 20 counties

throughout eastern and
southeastern Ohio.
In other action Sunday,
Belpre won the bid to hold the
nexl
district
meeting
scheduled March 3 at I p.m.
Each of the four chap"'rs
also presented progress
reports on iIll growing membership and on projects that
either are now under way or
scheduled to begin soon.
Darrell Cook, progtamming
vice-president of Ohio, . gave
the invocation and Meigs
CoWJty Jaycee Rick Collins led
the pledge of allegiance. Ric
Abel, district 93 vice-president,
presided.
The local Jaycees will next
meet Wednesday, Jan. 9, at 8
p.m. at Pomeroy city hall.

Elderly woman dies of
accidental asphyxiation

preceded in death by her
parents, a .sister, and her
husband, Howard Hysell .
Surviving
are
four
daughters, . Mrs . Dwight
(Mildred) Hysell , of near
Pomeroy ; Mrs . · Rich~d
(Marjorie) Wilt, and Mrs .
Robert (Elenor) Hoover, both
,. •wnY ••
of Middleport, and MrS'. Paul
wm~&gt;.·:•,,•,-:-:&lt;•//&amp;,•:•:•,m,•,·,&lt;·,.~.~--:-Ym&gt;:·:«=·&gt;&gt;:·:~.
( Donna) Blomack, Bedford ;
three sons, Gale and Noel, both
of Cclumbus, and Norman of
Dlinois; a brother, Norman
Russell of Atlanta, Ga.; 15
By United Press International
grandchildren,
.and several
CLEVELAND-U.S. SEN. HOWARD M. Metzenbaum, Dgreati:l'andchildren.
Ohio, today began a two-week "Listening and Learning" jaWlt
Funeral services will ile held
through the Buckeye state .
at 2 p.m. Tuesday at . the
"The purpose of the trip is to meet witll and listen to the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
people of the state In order to take with me to Washington their
with
the Rev. George Glaze
current thinking on matters of concern to them," said Me"
officiating.
Burial will be in
zenbaurn, who last Friday was sworn in to fill the unexpired terrri
Middleport Hill Cemetery·
of William B. Sax be -the new U.S. Attorney General.,
Oil ministers in
Friends may call at the funeral
home
any time·
TOKYO-JAPAN, ROCKED BY SOARING inflation an~ , dialogue openers
crippling fuel shortages, slashed the value of the yen today for
JUDGMENT RULED
the third time since the start of Arab oil cutbacks Oct 17. The
GENEVA (UP!) -Ministers
Fred S. Blaettnar of
Bank of Japan gave up its .losing battle to hold the yen a\.280 a . of the w~ld's largest oil exAuto Co., 500 E. Main
dollar and said It would let the currency's value fall to aroWJd porting nations met informally Blaettnar
s.,
Pomeroy,
has been awardtoday to discuss possibilities of
d
t of .....48 plus
300
..,.,. •
' The national bank had poured inillions of dollars from it;! starting -a dialogue with the ed a ju g~en
reserves Into money markets in an abortive attempt to support major- consuming nations of interest smce JWJe 25, 1971
from Elizabeth Howell ,'
tile yen at the 280 level, whiCh had been in effect since l)lid- the West.
·
. Meigs CoWJty
November. The govermnent carried out its de facto devaluation
The ministers from the 12- Syracuse, m
Common
Pleas
Court.
.hY refusing to support' the yen whell\ forelgn exchange markets member Organization of
opened this morning. The Japanese currency promptly fell to Petroleum . Exporting CounALARM FALSE
299.70adollar andatonepointin tlle afternoon it was down to 301 tries were scheduled to begin
A
fire
call to the Fred
a 'dollar.
formal talks at S p.m. OPEC
members, who supply 85 pet. of Hudson's residence on old
DETRoiT - INDEFINffE LAYOFFS BEGAN today for tlle world 'S' oU imports, have Chester Road SWJday at 4:26
almost doubled prices in recent p.m. proved to be a false alarm
for the Pomeroy Fire Dept.
(Contlnuedonpage2)
weeks .
I

\

said that 17 million poWlds of
marijuana and 500,000 pounds
of hashish were consumed in
this cOW1try last year. The
preview ~:eport was released
over the weekCf1d.
11
We have been concentrating on the heroin
epidemic for the past two
years, and there seems IP be
some solid evidence of
progress in dealing with this
affliction," Eastland said.
"But .it is imposSible to
escape the conclusion tbat,
while our attention was focused
on heroin, there has been a
rWJawa~ escalation of the use
of other drugs, primarily
marijuana and hashish."

.

ews•. in ·Briefsl

OCCASIONAL .TABLES
109.00 Square (Qmmode- Pir\e
Sale 59.00
109.00 .Cocktaii-Doored-Pine Sale 59.00
149.00 Glass Top
Mediterranean End Tables - - Sale 75.00
249 .oo Glass Top
,Mediterranean-octagonal - - - - Sale 125.00
92.50 Marble Top
Cherry Cocktail Tables - - - - - Sale 52 .00
119.95 Marble Top French Provincial '
- End Tables - : - - - - - - - - - .Sale 69.00

the Jaycee creed which says,
"Service to humanity is tllll,
best work - of life," will'
represent his district at the
state Jaycee convention in
Cincinnati Jan. 25-27.
Others competing in the
district Speakup Sunday were
Belpre Jaycee member Tom

~~----~·-··-,···--··..,-~.,w.~w~=···w·

'

Sale 56.00

up wmner

5 Billion smokes
smuggled in 1973
'WASHINGTON (UP!) Enough marijuana and hashish
entered' ihe United States in
1973 to make about 5 billion
individual cigarettes, according to a Senate report.
Sen. James 0 . Eastland, DMiss., said in a preview of an
annual report by the Senate
internal
security
subcommittee that the estimate
was based on seizures for tlle
first nine months of 1973,
projections of seizures for the
last three months and
estimates that only one-tenth of ·
the marijuana and hasish
brought ·into the COWllry is
seized.
Using this fonnula, Eastland

Tom Martin, Belpre chapter, and Charlie f1ugh , Marietla
chapter.

•

Goins Spe

SPECIAL SALE PRICES ·
.DINETTE SETS
139.00 Flaminco Oak Table
4 Side Chairs - - -

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A chance of snow Wednesday and snow flurries
mainly northeast Thursday
and Friday. Highs In the !!Gs
and 40s Wednesday lowering
lo 20s by Friday. Lows In the
20s Wednesday lowering lo
lbe teens Friday.

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Mrs. Verna C. Hysell, 82,
foWJd dead at her residence on
Maple St. in Middleport Sunday 'morning, apparently of
accidental asphyxiation,
probably from 'a gas atove.
Mrs. Hysell was dead on tlle
arrival of the Middleport E-R
squad which was called at 9:36 .
a.m. Officials believed that she
had been dead approximately
12 hours. Middleport police
said death was ruled by
'ecroner R. R. Pickens as
accidental aspbyxiation.
Born Dec. 18, 1891 in Middleport, the daughter of the .
late James and Althea Dyke
Russell, Mrs. Hysell was · a
member of the Bradford
Church of Christ. She was

quested greater flexibility" by
- Leaving the Cairo-Suez
both sides.
Highway and thus liberating
Day an discussed the propos- the trapped Egyptian Jrd
als Sunday with the Israeli Army.
- Withdrawing from the west
cabinet after conferring with
Kissinger in Washing ton bank of the Suez Canal.
Fri&lt;jay and Saturday . The Tel
- Withdrawing 18 miles back
Aviv newspaper Ha 'aretz said into the Sinai Peninsula.
Kissinger may visit the Middle
After each stage the newspaEast soon to brief Arab leaders per reported that U.N. troops
on his Washington talks with would move in to set up a
Dayan.
buffer zone inside the freed
Yedioth Ahronoth reported territory.
the Ia test Israeli plan consists
Another Tel Aviv newspaper,
of three stages:
Ma'ariv said the initial disen-

, TEN CENTS

gagement could be carried out
in a matter of weeks if cairo
does not demand an inunediate
Israeli commitment to an
overall withdrawal plan.
Egypt meanwhile urged the
Palestinian guerrilla leadershiip to fonn a new government in exile before the second
stage of the peace talks start
after an agreement on troop
disengagement. Such a state
would attempt to create permanent borders in the Middle
East. ·

~

Hunger for power
led to Watergate
TUCSON, Ariz. (UP! ) Abuses of power such as
Watergate came about because
President Nixon's "inner circle'' was unconcerned with the
"substance" of government

.come to call Watergate was
that nearly all the dominant
members of the inner circle
about President Nixon had no
knowledge of or interest in the
substance of government poli-

and instead was involved in cies/' he said.

building a power structure,
form er Watergate prosecutor
Archibald Cox said Saturday
night.
Ccx made the remarks in a
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Lt.
Gov. John Brown was speech prepared for delivery at
scheduled to hold a news a testimonial dinner for Rep.
conference here · today, Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz. II was
presumably to annoWJce his · the first public address by Ccx
withdrawal from the U.S. since he was fired last October
Senatorial race in favor of run- by President Nixon.
"One cause of the corruption
ning for re-election to his curand abuse of power we have
rent post.
The
withdral. at
wa~
reportedly prompted by a
meeting of top state GOP
leaders in Washington last
Friday,
during
which
Republican Cleveland Mayor
Ralph J . Perk was tapped to
seek the Senate seat being held
by Sen. Howard Metzenbaum,
GARRETTSVILLE, Ohio
D.Qhio.
(UP!) - Three men abducted
Metzenbaum was appointed an assistant bank manager and
to an interim tenn by Gov. his wife at their Mantua TownJohn J . Gilligan to succeed ship home this morning and
William B. Saxbe, named held the woman hostage while
United States
Attorney taking the man to the branch
General.
office of the Porlage National
Perk, according to infonned
Cleveland sources, will announce his Senatorial candidacy shortly.
Former state representative
Keith McNamara, a Cclumbus
Republican, said SWJday he
would withdraw from the lieutenant governor race when
Br~wn officially makes his annoWJcement.
WASIDNGTON (UPI)- The
ulf/' said McNamara, ..for
Supreme Court denied a bearany reason the entry of Mayor ing today to operators of inPerk into the Senatorial race ... dependent service stations who
might influence him and he claim they are being ruined by
(Brown) would decide to seek the government's price conre-election to the office of lieu- trols on gasoline.
tenant governor, then he cerThe Court acted in a brief
tainly would have my support. order, without comment.
"- withheld making any anUnder regulations issued last
noWJcement of my plans W1til August by the Cost of Uving
he annoWJced he w6uld be a Council, the ceiling price
candidate for the United States allowed independent retailers
Senate, and I made my plans is the cost of gasoline as of Aug.
on that assumption," added I, plus the markup in effect on
McNamara . " If he now Jan. 10 or 7 cents a gallon,
changes his mind and decides whichever is h(gher.
to rWJ for re-election, he can
In late 1973, an additional one
count on my help."
cent a gallon increase was
allowed . Mea'1,time, the
Salser elected .
Ccuncil is considering a formula based on current supply
board president
Grover Salser Jr. was curtailments.
Outlets owned and operated
elected president and Der ,ie
by oil companies themselves
Evans, vice president when Jle are subject to an entirely
SoutheiJI Local School District
different pricing .mechanism.
Board of Education met for its · The test case was brought hY
organizational session ThursMurray Anderson, a Texaco
day night.
station operator in Waycross,
The bOard voted to jpin the
Ohio School Boards Asan. and
regular meetings were set for' Atlanta's first
the second Thursday night of
each mon th at 7:30 p.m. sub- black sworn in
•ject to change due to tlle work.
ATLANTA
(UPI)
schedule of board members.
Maynard Jackson will be
The first regular meeting of the inaugurated as the 47th mayor
new year was set for Jan. 17. of Atlanta toda the first black
Clerk Nancy Carnahan gave ·
Y'
·
th
th of off' to
bo rd man ever to hold the offace.
e oabe
Eace newd Ja k
His swearing-ln at the Civic
mem
rs,
vans
an
ac
Ce
B ti k
nter -'w ill be a "people's"
os c ·
ceremony of pageantry and
TRUSTEES TO MEET
song, foregoing for the first
SYRACUSE - Trustees of time the traditional ceremony
the Syracuse- Racine Regional at City Hall. The :~:&gt;-year-Old
Sewage District will meet Jackson, a native of Dallas,
today at Racine village.hall at 8 Tex.', defeated Mayor . Sam
p.m. to select a site for a treat- Masse II in a rWJoff last October
ment lplant.
with 59.2 pet. of the vote .

out of race

SIMMONS GOLDEN VALUE
DELUXE MATTRESSES

Sale 144.00

.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

up to how

SALE I

219.00 Oval-Cutting Board Table
4 Swivel Chairs - -

Brig . Gen. Tahal el Magdoub of
Egypt and Brig. Gen . Mordechai Gur of Israel, Israeli officiills said they are oow in a
position to put forward concrete proposals to Egypt on the
pull back of its troops on the
Suez.
The newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported that U.S. officials have had some reservations about the plan, saying
Egypt may not accept it. The
paper said Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger has "re-

Brown lines

years old.

-..

The Commercial

.

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Bedroom Furniture

(USE IT.)

Israeli
and Egyptian
·negotiators met today for the
fifth ti.me in Geneva to try to
break the deadlock on the withdrawal of troops along the Suez
Canal' front. There were no
reports of progress and Israeli
newspapers said the United
States feared the Egyptians
might not accept the latest
Israeli withdrawal plans .
An Egyptian official said
only that "no new propoals
were made." A communique
issued after the · 21&gt; hour
meeting said only that the two
sides met and would meet
again on Wednesday. Recent
communiques have spoken of
progress but today's ga ve no
cause for optimism.
Before the meeting between

-..

Open Stock

yodve gOt it.

PHONE 992-2 156

Troop withdrawal still
Geneva stumbling block
By United Press International

SALE!

GALLIPOLIS - Larry ·
Marr, Vo-Ag Instructor at .
Gall Ia Academy, said
Saturday Don Melhorn,
district sales manager for
Hesston haymaklng
equipment, wiD conduct a
special two-hour session on
the full line of Hession
equipment, glvlag special
attention to tlle new concept
in harvesting hay with the
"stack hand" equipment in
·lhe
Gallla
Academy
Vocational Agriculture Dept.
on Jan. 8, at 7:30 p.m.

en tine

O~sters that produce 'irue
pearls are not edible.

--~--~~~--~------~-=--~~~
, ~~----------~~~~----------

Marvin Roush bought the
New Haven orchard from
Raymond Barnette after
Appalachian Power Company
bought his home location to be ll-CO!:X:l-CO!:X:~-c&lt;:X:l-CO!:X:l-CO!:X:-&gt;C&lt;:X:l-COCXIOOCXIOOC:IC.c-I:X:l-CO!:H::ICIOOCN•M. . .M ..
used for a power line right-ofway. Mr. Roush has a small lc:--c&lt;:X:l-CC&lt;:H:~-c&lt;:x:l-CC&lt;=cl-COCXIOOCX.c-illlq-=O:H::IC.c-i:H:-O=cl-CC&lt;:H:XIOOC:ICOMMIO!t(jl
herd of purebred Hereford,
cattle and is interested in
improving-the grass on the new
farm so that he can expand his .
herd . His cattle have placed
well at various shows and sales
in the past few years.
CLEON CADLE on the LeonBaden Road is as enthusiastic
Extra firm for extra support. Exclusive Simas ever about his farm
mons Cover, formerly used on a famous Sim MAPLE FINISH
operation. Mr. Cadle reported
mons 69.95 mattress.
that he had fertilizyd .2!i acres .
Handsome rayon satin quilted to 100 pet. felt.
79.00 Single
of meadow and that he had
Chemically
treated cover and - Comfortex
Sale 64.00
Dressers and Mirrors already bought his baling twine
cushioning to guard against mildew. bacteria,
109.00 Double
odor.
·
and was looking forward to a
Sale 88.00
Dressers
and
Mirrors
good hay crop next year.
Sturdy slim guard edge. keeps mattress edges
49.00 Twin and Full Size
Mr. Cadle has been a
firm,
resists saqqinq .
Bookcase Headboard Beds - - - - - Sale 40.00
Exclusive adj usto- Rest innerspring construction
cooperator of the Western Soil
Sale 48.00
59.00 5 Drawer Chests - - Conservation District for many
gives firm comfortable support from head to toe.
Sale 40.00
49.00
4
Drawer
Chests
years and has carried out a
'
Sale 32.00
39.00 3 Drawer Chests - - - good conservation program.
Sale 32.00
Sale Priced
39.00 2 Drawer Nile Stands
We do not know Mr. Cadle's
Sale 40.00
Twin size mattress or box springs - - - - 44.00
49.00
Student
Desks
age fqr sure, but two or three
Sale 18.00
- 49.00
Full size mattress or box sprin·g
22.00 Desk Chairs - - - - years. ago we remember 'his
Sale
32.00
169.00
Queen
size
set
39.00 Bookcases - - - - telling us tha:f he was 74 or 75

Youth Conservation Program
sponsored by the W. Va.
Department of Natural
Resources and Sears-Roebuck
FoWJdation. We have worked
very closely with the Busy
Four Club in planning projects, and we are pleased that
they are again entering this
state-wide .comp_etltion. In the
seven years that we have been
working with that club it has
been a {"inner each year and
has won every position except
number one in the state.
WE HAVE HELPED Mrs.
Lorena Edwards on the west
end of Cain Ridge and Marvin
Roush on the old New Haven
Orchard with conservation
plans for their farms .
Mrs. Edwards bought the
family Interest in their home
farm and also some additional
acreage from her brother.
Denver Yoho of SCS worked
out the plan with Mr. Edwards
and Bert Hess, a brother-inlaw. They plan to develop the
farm to produce hay and
pasture in order to have feed
for livestock .

Now You Know

at y

VOL XXV NO. 185

be demonstrated

Sav

•

Partly cloudy and colder·
· tonight with I &gt;ws eight to 18.
Fair Tuesday and not quite so ,
cold. Highs Tuesday in the ·
upper 20s to lowe~ .30s north
.alld in the 30s south.

JANUARY FURNITURE SALE

Equipment will

·a

"

Weather

Soybeans (both for seed and hay), sweet clover, green
manure crops, and the use of lime and fertilizer were encouraged
to improve the soil and provide livestock feed. Early cooperators
mentioned m 192!i were J . B. Bradford, Ed Taylor, •A. D. McCcrmick, Clyde Calver t, W. G. Nease, U.S. Nease, J . H. Pryor,
E. K. Carpenter, H. E. Guthrie, J . McBride, B. Ha•vley, W. G.
McKelvey , Arthur Johnson, J. W. Lee, Beg Salser, George
Frecker, P. Betzing, A. Crew, E. J . Tracey, L. V. Reuter, Bert
Carson, and L. B. Thompson.
Earlier, in 1924, the agent worked with the New York Central
Railroad when a lime demonstration car ma&lt;fe five stops in the
county. Soil tests showing need of one to six tons of lime were
made on hWJdreds of samples broughtm by farmers.
In 1927 the agent reported : &lt;;An unusually good crop of both
Ccunty. This in the past has been a section of the country from
which feeder cattle have been shipped. This year the low market
price of hay has made it a feeder buying section .
"This movement should result in better fertility on owfarms . Many farms in the very section where most of these
feeders were purchased have looked to the sale of hay as a large
part of their cash incomes.
"The hay market has disappeared, and now the farm grown
feeds must be fed on the farms ."
Buyers of the first carload of cooperatively purchased \
feeders were W. E. Robinson, W. H. Follrod, and C. D. Bentz
assisted by Sevice Manager, H. L. French . Ten carloads were
shipped in .
Alfalfa growing was first mentioned in 1927 with J. E. Stobart
wanting alfalfa instead of timothy. Dairying was now the leading
income producing enterprise.
The year 1927 marked the first of a five-year "Grow More
Clover" campaign. Kreitler later received national recognition
for this program . In this year four men and the agent went into
Ohio's good dairy section to purchase cattle. The first MeigsGallia cow testing association was formed in 1927 and the same
year U. S. Nease built a dairy bam according to recommended
plans.
.
In 1928 Harold Carnahan, then a young, ambitious dairyman,
grew alfalfa according to recommendations calling for a good
deal more fertilizer than he had been in the habit of applying.
Apparently the same year the Southeastern Ohio Guernsey
Breeders Association was organized with Harold as president, as
the report for 1929 indicated the Guernsey breeders had
orgaoized one year earlier. In 1929 there were both Jersey and
Guernsey Breeders Associations. That year also dairymen had
the dairy marketing problem of fitting barns and other milk
handling equipment to fit sanitary requirelnents of the market to
which the milk was going.
'
"This will soon necessitate the testing of the cattle in the
county for tuberculosis. Fortunately that disease is not very
prevalent In this coWJty, and an eradication campaign should be
a very ordinary affair," according to Mr. Kreitler.
More next week

I

•· r

hay and grain have cre&lt;ttt.&gt;d an unusual condition in Meigs

the NEW in FARMING

By John Cooper
SoU Com. Service
PT. PLEASANT -This past

-ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

tlJUs more difficult to treat."

By C. E. Blakeslee

'

~

grounds for impeachment,
"The constitutional phrase
'high crimes and misdemeanors' almost sw-ely was
intended to include some kinds
of misfeasance or nonfeasance
in office which are impeachable wrongs against the
people, even though not
technically indictable offenses," Cox said.

. Cox also cited "the will to
build and retain power for the
sake of power including the
acquisition, covertly and In
cash if possible, of the financial
resources thought necessary to
building and holding power."
In addition to finding facts,
He said that in taking up the the Judiciary Committee
question of impeachment "must articulate standards
proceedings, the House Judlci- defining morally WJacceptable
ary Ccmmittee will be faced political and offical behavior in
with the problem of attempting the conduct of the presidency,"
to define constitutional he said.

Robbers kidnap couple,
then escape with .cash
Bank where they escaped with
an undetermined amoWJt of
money, police said.
RobertG.Smith was taken at
gunpoint to the bank by two of
the men while one remained
behind with Smith's wife, said
Capt. Hichard Spencer of the

Hearing denied
to .independents
Ga. , and Joseph J . Grish, who
handleJ Marathon products in
Sterling Heights, Mich. They
Said they brought the challenge
on behalf of 165,000 other independents.
·
Their complaint said
gasoline dealers had been
singled out from other small
businessmen for unfair
discrimination by arbitrary
methods.
U.S. District Judge Barrington D. Parker barred enforcement of the regulations temporarily on the ground that
they were discriminatory and
violated the Ccnstltutlon's guaranteeof"dueprocessoflaw."
But the temporary emergency court of appeals, established
to hear price stabilization
cases, ruled that the plaintiffs
had not exha"sted the
available administrative
methods for obtaining . relief
from the Cost of Living
Ccuncil.
The operators said this
placed appeals power witll the
same individuals who had
rejected tlleir earlier arguments and argued that further

Garrettsville pollee .
Frank Smeach, the bank
manager, was already at the
bank when Smith and the gunman arrived. After taking the
money, the thief forced Smith
and Smeach to go with him to a
Nelson Township "location
where the other two men later
brought Smith's wife, said police.
None of the hostages was
banned.
The three hostages were
boWld and gagged and left in
Smith's car at the Nelson
Township location. The thieves
then drove off in a light colored
van, pollee said.
The hostages freed themselves and called the Portage
CcWlty Sheriff shortly before 9
a.m.

Berger's
•
court m
trouble

WASHINGTON (UP!) Chief Justiqe Warren E.
Bul-ger says ' the backlog of
cases in the federal courts has
stopped Increasing for the first
Ume in a dozen years.
But Burger said the Supreme
Court is in trouble and that
Wlless something is done to
stem its incoming flow of
cases, the justices by 1980 will
confront a new case every
hour, including weekends.
In a y,ear-end report released
Sunday, Burger repo!\ed that
all federal judges are working
"harder than ever before" to
admlnl~trative pro~edures keep afloat ir) the "sea of
would unpose financaal bur- litigation." He said U.S.
dens from which no recovery as . district judges between 1968
possible.
and 1973 increased the number
of cases handled from an
average of 285 to 349. The
comparable figures for appeals
judges are 85 and 156. ·
AUTO. ON FIRE
The Ra~ Ftre Dept.. was
In five years, the length of
called to Letart Falls SWlday Ume required for a case to
at 11:25 p.m. where a car, work up from Its beginning in
owned by Harry Shane, caught the district court through
fire alter a backfire causing disposition in a higher court
the carbw-etor to catch fire. has beeh cut by onHifth, he
There was medium danulge. said. He reported a current
Eleven men and two 'trucks backlog of 125,QOO caSes in
federal district courts.
answered the call.

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