<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15103" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/15103?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T21:28:13+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47881">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/cd1eb5e589df8fc85e7dfc63d5b972c8.pdf</src>
      <authentication>9339a4d6285b44b2d60c87be214bab51</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="48510">
                  <text>·,

'
I

'''

"

,
'

'

•

'

'. •

·c_j.

•

•
•'

''

''

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Midttlrport-Pumeroy, 0 ., Friday.' Jan . 3, 1975

Minister~ -~ m~~~ Monday

HOSPITAL NEWS

'
Vt.•h•rans
M1•morial Hospital

l1cuiar significance sin~c it

'

' .J-

Holu·r Medical Center
IDischarged, Jao. 2)
Lucy Alderson, Armind a

.
.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - DemoCounty Loses Seals
crats would gain a pair of solid
Swrunit County, now repr e~
1
new congressional distncls sented qy four different ronand a · fi ghting chana to gressmen, would have ordy two
ca pture a third additwrlill seal Wider the Democratic pian.
unde? a partisan redistricting The southeastern portion of the
plan unveiled Thursday.
rounty would be thrOWfL into
The proposal was a product the 16th district now held by
of the House Democratic Rep. Ralph Regula, Rcaucus, which claims it has the Navarre .
:iO votes needed to ram the
Northeastern Stark County
redistricting bill through when would go from Regula's
the lllth General Assembly district to the lllh distnct in
ronvenes next week. Senate the northeast corner of the
support was not immediately state,.
determined .
The western two-thirds of
Democrats now have e1ght of Wayne County, including
the state's 23 congressional
seats. The new plan would give
them an excellent chance oL.
taking 10 and perhaps more in
the 1976 election.
,rwe have enough votes to get
Continues from page I
it through the House," said the fuel cost Clause.
House $peaker-elect Vernal G.
Attending wer e/ Mayo r
Riffe following the closed London, Zwil lin g,~l c kens,
meeting of House Democrats. McCoy", Henry Hill, an d
He said it has not yet been Win gett, council members,
decided whether the propoSal Chief Varian, and Kathryn
will start in the House or Crow, clerk.
Senate when the legislature
The budg.et Is as fol lows.

ADMITTE:D
Freddy
Racan e: Jam es
yhr of ernphasts upon Folden, Rutland ; Charl es Anderson; Dixi e · Barnett
Evangelism both here in Ohw Carr oll , Long Bottom; D~rlene Belinda Barr, James Biggs:
and lilroughou t the world of Ne lso n, Rutland ; Ph illip Warren Campbell, Earl L.
Methodism.
Donovan, Syracuse; Judith Clark, John Dower, Melissa
Elswick, John J. Fry, Faye
Bishop Ensley and some of Bacon, Middleport
Goody,
Mary A Hall, Mildred
the mill islers In lius grou'p of . DISCHA RGED - Emma
,
Adams,
Mary
Baldwin,
Clara
Hamm , Kenneth Imboden
leade rs spent a wee k in
Adams
.
Betty Lane, Stephen L~
•deader of the conferen ce, they November tn Jerusalem at a
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
·
Masters,
Peggy Lcw1s, George
':w1ll study 2nd Isaiah : 40-55 World Method1sl Co uncil
DI SC HARGES - Delores Marlyn , John Milliken, Gladys
und er his leadership to prepare Convocation-Consultar!On on
Duff, Pmnt Pleasant; Wallie Myers, Alva Newe ll, Mrs .
for a church-wtde Lcn(&lt;,n study , Evangelism
of the roots o( Evangelism
THe 90 Will return to their Allen, Point Pleasant; George Mart on P;;trso ns and son
This is the lOth annual Bible d1stn cls to lead preparatory Brammer , Poin t Pleasant : Emma Pullins, Donna Reese:
Roush,
Mark
Study, mauguraled by B~op sess ions w1th some 100 i()('a l Doris Stewart, Point Pleasant · Lewellyn
Ensley to deepen the spiritual church p~stors, to be held Mrs. Junior Gillispie, Point Rutherford, Maria Shinn Chad '
life of the 400,000, Umted between Jan. 13 and Feb. 9. ' Pleasant; Mrs. Roger Roush , Sines, Anna Spaulding, Morgan
Methodists in his juqsd1ction The B&lt;ble Study is officially Pomeroy; Shelley Ann Casto, Turner.
The_ 1975 study IS\ of par· !Hunched Ash Wednesday, the Mason,
first day of Lent, and con tinues
Seldon J, White
to Holy Wee k.
Lakes ide is the Untied
Meli1odist ce nter on Lake Ene, died on Thursday
TONIGHT lhru SAT.
s1tc of numerous re treat s,
JAN 3-4-l
Se ldon J White, 80, formerly
In Meigs County Common
a nnu a l summer cultur al
THE LAST
programs and the annual West of Rt 2, Coolville, dted Thurs- · Pleas Court a suit for support
OF SHEILA
da)" evening al the Crites and one for divorce were filed
(Technicolor )
OhiO Conference. ·
Nursing Home, Stoulsvilte, and one divorce was granted .
Sta r n ng
Ohio.
Barbara Mumaw, -Haines
Raque! Welch
lPG I
Mr . White was preceded tn City, Fla. , filed for support
I~
.. Colorcartoon :
death
by his parents, John E. under r the
Re ciprocal convenes next Monday
ASK TOWED
P1rate Byrd
mayor , perso nal services,
and
Nellie
Biggs
White,
his
Agreement
Act
agai nst
Edward Ray McKinney, 18,
First Week Busy
S400 ; supplies and materia ls,
Democrats w1ll control both 1200 ,
capita l
outlay ,
Vinton, and Pam1 Lt~e . 17, wife, Maude A. Conroy White, Clarence Wolf, Chester, and
Show Starts at 7 p.m.
retirement fund, $500 , other
•
and
one
brother,
Otis
White
.
Donna
Powell,
Long
Bottom,
I ..angsville.
chambers of the General $100. Total. 11.200
He was a past elder of the charging gross neglect of duty Assembly, and they plan to
Cle rk , personal services,
8earwullow Ridge Church of and ex treme cruelly filed for push the redistricting bill and 1300 ; supplies and materials.
other
Christ, a veteran of World War divorce against Ivan Powell, several
maJ·or 1200;· other , $100 Total $600.
Treas urer , personal ser I, and a member of the DAV at Racine .
Dernocraticmeasures through · v1ces, $175 , su pplie s and
Athens .
Dean Lutz was granted a during the rirst week of the mate nal s, $200 , other, $100.
h
. ed b Total._$475.
· to
He is survived by one son, divorce from Yvonne Scally
session ge1 t em stgn
Y Sol icitor , personal ser ... ices,
Robert While, Rl. 2, Coolville, Lutz on charges of gross outgoing Democratic Gov . 150. Total. S50.
one daughter, Mrs. Berkley neglect of duty and extreme John J . Gilligan .
Elections, personal serv1ces ,
Faulkiler J
Rt 4 c· _ cruelly. The former name of
They fear any delay would $200; suppl ies and mater ials.
$200 ; other , StOO. Tota l, $500.
· ' Clyde
"
th e defe ndan t Yvonne Sc a11 y
d eville ; ' one r.,brother,
subject the proposals to vetoes
Counc1l, personal services,
White, Rt. 3, Pomeroy; II " was restored .
by incoming Republican Gov. $400, suppl ies and materia ls,
James A. Rhodes, wbo takes S100 , other , SIOO. Total , S600
grandchildren and sever al
orfrice
Jan. 13 _
Utilities , buildings and
nieces and nephews.
grounds , per sonal ser vices ,
Funeral services will be
The new rongressional map S650. Total. 650.
THREE
FINED
creates
solid Democratic disMa intenance, buildings and
Sunday at 2 p.m. al BearTwo
defen&lt;lants
were
fined
tricts
in
O&gt;lumbus
and
Cincin'
groun
ds, personal services ,
wallow Ridge Church of L'hrist.
$500 ; supplies and materi als,
and
a
thlr&lt;l
forfeited
a
bond
in
Burial will be in Cherry Ridge
nati, where Ulere are now a $500; other, insurance, $750. ,
the
court
of Pomeroy Mayor total of four Republican ron- Total, 11.750.
Cemetery. Friends may call at
Pol 1ce Department, personal
Ewing funeral Home at Dale E. Smith Thursday night. gressmen.
services,
$650 ; supplies and
,Fined $5 and costs each were
anytime.
It also solidifies Democratic materials, $500 ; capital outlay,
Robert J . Hill, 19, Racine, on a territory in Dayton and moves new radar unit, $1,750; other,
charge of running a red light, Rep. Charles Whalen, a back retirement, S750. Total ,
and·Melvin R. Duff, 26, Rt. I,
popular Dayton Republican, $3~~~lic health, person al
Dexter, on an unsafe vehicle into the same . district with services, $600. Tota l, S600.
ch~ rge. Forfe11ing a $30 bond
Rep.-elect Thomas N. KindCorrective institut ions. jails,
posted on an intoxication ness, R-Hamilton .
etc ., personal ser vices. $150 .
Total, $150.
charge was Harold Braden, 26,
The
bill
also
throws
RepubliPark s and playgrounds ,
Continued from_.page I
Henderson, W. Va .
can Reps. Clarence J. Brown personal services, $1;500 ;
Moines, Mason City, Council
Jr. of Urbana and Tennyson supplies and materials, $4,000;
other, $1,000. Total, S6,500.
Bluffs and Spencer each ;
,
GuyerofFindlayintothesame
Planning comm iss ion ,
Pick a car that saves!
reported six inches on the
district and opens up a new one personal serv1ces, $200. Total,
TAKEN
TD
HOSPITALS
ground and more snow was
See us for a low-cost Auto Loan. expeeted
1200.
.RACINE - The Racine E-R north of Dayton.
Additional appropriation
to fall al Burlington
While congressmen do not from the general fund for
Squad , transpor te d Emmett
Quick. Easy to arrange.
and Ottumwa.
have to live in their districts, it contmgencies the sum of 1200.
The storm figured in at least Slelhen, Long Bottom, a appeared clear the Democratic Tota l general fund ap Save: Going and coming.
two other fatal accidents. medical patient to St. Joseph
l on, $17,075 .
1an would force some propriat
p
Street
oav inq, oersonal
Hospital,
Parkersburg
Th~s­
Tenora Schuman, 78, Cresco, .
RepUblicans
to
run in un- serv i ces , contract, $6,500,·
day
at
12:
30
p.m.
At
4:25
a.m.
Iowa, was killed Thursday
familiar territory and perhaps capital outlay, contract paving
when her car struck a today the squad was called to in Democratic districts.
and debt retirement, $6,350.
Total. $12,850.
jackknifed truck at the snow- Long Bottom for Elmer NorRep.
James
T.
Luken,
DStreet repairing, persona l
ville,
a
heart
patient,
who
was
packed intersection of U.s. 63
Cincinnati,
said
the
proposal
services.
$1,000; supplies and
and U.S. 18 near New Ham(&gt;- taken to Veterans Memorial might enable Democrats to materials. $1,000. Total, $2,000.
Hospital.
ton, Iowa .
~
Total for street maintenance
pick up as many as three or and construction, $14,850.
· Robert Cook of Emfour seats in Congress.
Stree t repairing , personal
metsburg, Iowa, was' ldlled
Gerrymandering Denied
services, $500 ; sup pi ies and
Thursday night when his car
materials, $500, Total, $1.000.
Luken denied the plan was a
Fire depa rtment , capital ·
DIVORCE GRANTED
hit
a
truck
on
snow-&lt;."Overed
•
~pomeror
'~gerrymander." He
s~id outlay, new truck and chass is,
SANTA MONICA, Calif. Democrats "just want 11 or"l2 11 5,500 , bther 1500. Total ,
Interstate 80 near Grinnell,
rutland
(UP!) - Mary Rowan, 23,
Iowa . ..
11
~~-ent expense, street
Slick roads plagued the daughter of comedian Dan seats on 52 per cent of the vole
in
Ohio.
I
rould
draw
a
map
lighting
, personal servi ces ,
Olicago area which had more Rowan , was granted a divorce without any trouble giving us $4,000. Total.
$4.000.
tile bank ol
than one inch of snow on the Thursday from ·actor Peter 15 seats/' he said .
•
Revenue
sl1aring
, new fire
the cenlur, I
truck chassis and equipment,
ground in the city and up to Lawford , 51. They were
u&amp;ablllhld 1172
113,500 ;- other. $500. Total,
three inches in some southwest married three years ago, but the"We'rejusttryingtobalance
scales,"
echoed
Rep.
C.J.
$14,000.
1
suburbs. Saurabh Desai, 34, of separated in April , 1973. Miss McUn, D-Dayton , who helped
Wa te r sys tem operations.
water sup ply , personal serSummit, IU., and his wife Rowan asked for no alimony,
vices, 1500 ; supplies and
Nillma, 32, were burned to but was given custody of prepare the map.
All Accounts Insured tQ S40,000.00 by the
Basically,
the
bill
sets
up
materials
, $1 ,000; other, $50.
death Thursday night in a wedding presents from her inner city districts in Colwnbus Total water supply, $1,550.
Federal Deposit ln.,Jrance Corp.
three-car collision on lhe fat~r. including a luxury
Water filtra ti on , personal
an d Cincinnati, dividing Fr~n- services, $350 ; supplies and
autori1obile,
double
bed
and
Stevenson
Expressway.
State
•,
kiln and Hamilton Cllunties into materials. 1350. Total , 5700.
police also reported a flurry of silver setting.
'!bur
nlliglli:»or.
rore and fringe areas instead
Water pumping , persona l
'lfender bender" accidents.
of
the
east
and
west
districts
services
, $500 ; supplies and
•
mate~ials , $800 ; capital outlay,
which
enabled .. two fuel and light, $800 ; other, $50.
Republicans to win in each Total $2,150.
county.
Water distribution service,
other , t ruc k , $4,000. Total ,
Reps. Olalmers Wylie and $4,000
Samuel Devine of Colwnbus
Adm inistration , water ,
would be in the same territory. personal serv ices, clerk and
...+a
board membe rs,
51,260 ,
So would Reps. Donald uancy supplies and materials, S300 ,
AN"Ad
and Willis Gradison of Cincin- capital outlay, office fi xtures
N'inety United Methodist
ministers, representing all 14
districts of the denomination's
West Ohio Conference, will
assemble at Lakes1de Monday
evening, January 6. for a lhreed'!Y Bible Study .
Ciolled together by Bishop F.
Gerald Ens ley , episcopa l

,

S('ts the sptritual .stage for a

Aleshire,

Wingett

Divorce suit

MEIGS THEATRE

•

filed in Meigs

Small

loans

•

SIIC

for
small

Midwest

..

c:..-cnal

nextdoor

NOW

With The Purchase of

Ira/®

r.v.

COLO'YOU CAN BUY THIS
ELECTRONIC CALCULATOR
FOR ONLY

'9"

L

.Super·Solarcolor
100% Solid State

•'

BAKER FURNITURE
I

.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
I'

'
'

' Order By Phone

'

and equipment, $1,000 ; other,

S50 . Total , $2,610.

Bond reti r em ent, trustee

service, $300 ; FHA bond, $400 ;
FHA
in-terest~
·1555. 12;
Provident Bank Bond , $2,000 ;
Provident Bank Inter est,
$3,272.50. Total , $6,537.62. Total
for water fund . $17,537.62. Total
all appropri•tlons. $84.462.62.

Wooster, now m Regula's other bills through during the
district, would move westward ,._first week, including per..into the 17th district now held manent and door-to-door voter
by Rep. John M. Ashbrook, R- registration;
upgrading
Johnstown.
unemployment compensation
Huron County would be benefits; moving tax collection
movell from Ashbrook's functions mto the state
district to the 13th district · treasurer's office; and trans.
under the oemocratic plan .
(erring consum~r frauds
Riffe S.id the Democrats functions to the state attorney
also plan to push a half-dozen general.
.
;:;.;;:::.:·:::~:::-::8::·:::::*:;;;;;:-:_o;:.;:;;;;;;;;;;:;$!~:!:::..::!::::::::::::::::::~=:::w:::::::::::::-":::::!::~:::~::::

"* . ·.

~

them Clark, Wyandot, Marion,
western Crawford and northem Morrow rounties, as well
as Brown's home rounty of
Champaign, an'd southern
Hancock County, including
Findlay, where Guyer lives.
This would open up what
Democrats believe would be a
favorable district of Shelby,
Miami, northern MontgQmery
and western Oark rounties,
including Springfield, and
northwestern Greene County,
including Xenia . No incumbent
lives in the district.
'

•

Insurance
By Bob Hoeflich
MIDDLEPORT - When is a gaso li ne
sfHtion n ot~ g~lsoline station? Well, when
it becomes an insurance agency office. ,

'

That

Middleport, at 1258 Powell St., to be exact,
service station to offices for his Slate
Farm Jnsunmcc Agency.

STEVE SNOWDEN, with some of the awards he has won in his insurance
business, is shown in the interior of his new office quarters at the former C. P.
Williams service station lh Middleport
'
,_ .

for Bethlehem
submitted the best Offer in
response to a request last April
for proposals from industry for
cost-&lt;Sharing participation in
developing the Syntbotl technology.
In the bureau's Syntholl
process, pulverized coal is
mixed with a carrier oil,
· heated and brought into rontact with a catalyst under
pressure and turbulent flow
ronditions to produce more oil.
The plant will convert eight
tons of coal a day into about
1,000 gallons of low..sulphur,
low-ash oil.
It was hoped data obtained
by Bethlehem would lead to
larger pilot and demonstration
plants and ultimately a commercial plant which might
ronvert 20,000 to 30,000 tons of
coal dally into 3 to .4 million
gallons of synthoil.

1

I

J. E. CREMEENS

-

'

'

BRUCE S. STOUT

School doors to close
under present funding

vice-president.

These men•"ltlso act in the same
capacity 11eading the Gallia County Board .
of Education which certifies bus drivers
and administrates supervisory personneL

President Stout appomted Assistant
County Superintendent Dennis Murdock
and board members James C. Mitchell
POMEROY - Funds committed to of this school year.
operate the school for men1ally retarded in
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis, ad· and Dale Rothgeb, Jr. to represent the
Meigs County will run out before the end of minislrator, reported on plans, for the· board in future negotiatwns with nonthe school.
...._
proposed new building, funds for which certified personnel in the county schools.
Earlier, County and Local SuperinIf no provision is made to continue the e were approved by voters in the November
tendent
C. Comer Bradbury appointed a
school, and it is closed, Meigs would be the 1973 election. A thank you note was read
five
man
com mi.ttee to..esta blish board
only county in Ohio not providing training from the Lakin State Hospital for
policies
and
job descriptions . Named to
for its retarded.
clothing donated following a rece nt
that committee were Assis(?nl County
This was theproposi tion being weighed rummage sale.
Superintendent
Dave Campbell, principals
following a meeting of 18 persons ThursNext meeting will be held on Feb. 6,
Lloyd
L.
Myers
and Max Haffelt, and
day night in the courthouse of the Citizens 7:30 p.m. at the Courthouse. All
Committee for Education of the Mentally organizations are invited to send a board members Rothgeb and Bradbury.
When the committee starts working on
Retarded. Mrs. Harold Sauer, Leading representative.
pohcies involving_ teachers, a teacher
Creek Road, a teacher in the Kyger Creek
representative
will be added. Work on
Schools, presided as chairperson.
SHUTDOWN ENDING
board policies will begin immediately.
Mrs. Denver Rice gave her secretaryTEL
AVIV
(UPI
)
The
government
Architect Mel
treasurer's report and Judge Manning
said
Saturday
it
will
end
a
llkfay
shutdown
In
other
matters,
the board mel with
Webster presented a financial report,
of
El
AI,
·
the
national
airline,
following
George Walter, architect from Dayton,
noting that the approximately $38,000
approved by the Meigs County Com- concessions by 600 mechanics whose concerning the new proposed building
missioners as local support for the school wildcat slowdown set off the suspension. program and the appropriate date which
is insufficient to operate for the remainder The announcement followed a meeting be- ' the board should approve placing of a bond
tween officials of the Histadrut labor issue before voters.
federation and representatives of other
The board will meet in special session
airline unions who had pressured the later this month to begin discussions on a
EVEL'S CANE LIFI'EIJ.,
mechanics to end their job action.
building program and on procedures to be
SPARKS, Nev. (UPI) - A thief has
followed .
lifted the glory symbol of daredevil
Mrs. Judy Saunders; secretary and
otorcyclist Evel Knievel. Knievel told
payroll
clerk with the central office, was
THAIS STRIKE
olice his gold-tupped, diamond-studded
BANGKOK (UPI) - A strike by Thai re-classified as assistant to clerk Mrs.
cane was taken from his truck parked workers of Pan American Airways entered Beman. Mrs. Beman has not had an
downtown the day after Cnristmas. The its second day Sat!ll'day, stranding more assistant as such since Mrs. Ruth Evans
cane was described as three feet long, than 100 paSsengers, an airline spokesman resigned in June. Earlier, following school
black, with a top shaped like a motorcycle. said. About 200 workers went on strike consolidation, the former clerks of the
The top was hollow, designed as a liquor Friday seeking higher wages and better consolidated distri cts, Ann Belville ,
flaslt,
Esther Gordon, Doris Roush and Mrs.
benefitS.

"

·I

,.

J'hlllt i2,000
Familie.~

Evans served in that ca pacity, but all four
of those people have left the system .
The board granted Ca rter Phunb111g
and Heatmg Company a contract lo install
the nu·al water system at flannan Trace
Elementary and Hannan Trace fh gh
SchooL In other business:
- Placed Rhonda Borden, secretary
al the centra l office, on fulltime basis
- Approved tl1e employment under a
federal program of two recruiters, Peggy
Hedrick and Mary E. Wallis, for the Adul t
Basic Educatwn Program.
·_ Granted Da vid T. Phillips, in.
strun&gt;ental band director at Kyger c't·eek,
Dw·ing tts reorganizatiOn meeting, a and all coun ly band directors permission
mandatory requireinent of the law despite to attend the Music Educators' Conference
the fa ct the board just ·organized last Feb. 7 in Cincinnali .
- Approved the work study contract
month , Bruce S. Stout of Bidwell was
nam,ed board president and J . E;. (Dick ) with Mrs. Mary Bacon, coordinator from
Cremeans of Rt. I, Crown City, was named

Mare DOT jobs under ·civil service

ELBERFELDS IN POME-ROY

Re11chin'g More

To The Gre11ler Milldle Ohio J '111/ey
.

BOARD OFFICERS ·- Bruce S. Stout and J. E. Cremeens were named
president and vice president of the Gallia County and Gallia Local Boards of
Education Saturday, Both men were also named to represent the board on the
.Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Vocational Board.

.ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'

~n tn~

GALLIPOLIS - Galha County's Local
Board of Education .')ilturday approved its
1975 appropriahons totaling $2,441,000. In
that amount is $1 ,359,000 in local taxes,
$42,000 in bond and $1,040,000 in Stale
Foundalion Funds~
The board , upon the recommendatiOn
of its clerk, Mrs. Naomi Beman, made a
temporary appropriation of $350,000 and
voted to borrow $200,000 lo meet the
payroll and pay bills for the month of
January . The money wtll be borrowed
from the First National Bank, the system's
depository.

a

Bargains In Every Deparbnent On All
Three Floors and At ·our Toy 1

Your Invited Guest

School' budget $2,441,000

.PlllLADELP!llA- PREDICTING A$1 MilLION a day loss
durmg the next three months, Perm Central Railroad announced
Th~sday it would begin dismissing employes and reducing
mamtenance pro\rams if additional federal monies were not
received.
The trust~ said .they also expected worsening losses and
cash defiCienctes rlurmg the first quarter of 1975 and cash
shortage of between $60 million and $'70 million during February.
Acrording to the trustees, the bankrupt railroad has been able to
maintain full operation only because of ·a $30 million g~anl
authorized by the U.S. Department of Transportation under the
Regional Rail Reorganization Act.

.

tmts

'

DETROIT - DESPITE PLANS TO CLOSE two auto
assembly and two truck pllints, Chrysler Corp. will end a virtual
five-week shutdown by building more cars next week than in all
of December.
The fll'tll will begin building cars Monday at three plants in
-the Detroit area and at Belvidere, ill., ending a l!hutdown that
began at Thanksgiving. Olrysler said it will tum oul14,000 cars
next week compared with 12,000in I:lecember. But union sources
said those plants rould expect some dbwntime this month as
Olrysler rontinued efforts to reduce its inventory, which fklocl!il
125 days m mid-December, highest in the slumping auto industry.

·'

+

... .

SAIGON - TANK-LED COMMUNIST TROOPS drove ,
goverrunent forces from the southern half of embattled Pbuoc
Binh today but the outnumbered defenders dug in and reported
beating back an attack on their line oflast defense.
"Communist ground troops were driven off the provincial
capital's defense perimeter," the Saigon mllitary roriunand said
im a communique. Soldiers battled each other from street to
str,eel for the third ronsecutive day today and government
warplanes and troops reportedly killed 161 Communists and
knocked out 11 North Vietnamese tanks, spokesmen said.

Save During O~r Storewide
_
January Clearance Sale

h1gh school there.
Wh o knows' What with the gasoline
lmlf , lS nul a newcomer to Metgs Coun ty.
He formerly li ved tn Rutlantl with his par- shortage always looini ng tn the bacl(- .
cnL&lt; and attended school \here . After al- ground, perhaps, more businesses will be ·
t.ncling the fif th grade at Rutland, he following in Snowden's footsteps to set 'up ·
moved l&lt;~l hpolis ami ~ raduntcd from their businesses i ~ the defunct sta tions.

surance buslllcss here the past year and a

"''. ,

Continued from page 1
paper AI Nahar said today. The newspaper, in a dispatch from
Cairo, quoted "informed Egyptian sources" as saying they saw
"serious developments" within the Kremlin leadership ''with
radicals gainin,g more ground."
Brezhnev, tf1ey said, is faced with "a difficult situation
similar to the one Nikita Krushchev had faced in the wake of the
assassination of President Kermedy" in 1963. The sources
suggested Brezhnev may be under fire from other Soviet leaders
for his policy of detente with the United States.

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8
SHOP SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM

SE ilVI CE station, now an insurance office

_
VOL_ ~ __N_0._4~9_ _ _ _·-=_-- --'GA'-LL...:H_'O_LI_S·P_O_IN_T_PL-:-E_A SA_N_T_ __ _ _ _ _~S_UN_D_A_Y_.~
JAN_ U_A_
RY_S_,_l9_75_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _M
_id_d.....:
lep_ort_·P
_o_me_ro.:..
y~-------P_R_
IC£_2_0_C_EN~TS

News. • • in Briefs

Store in the Middle Block

+

Partly cloudy Sunday and
Sunday night. High in 30s. Low
in middle to upper 20s. Mostly
cloudy Monday with chance of
rain or snow. High middle 30s
to the lower 40s.

Synthoil is new job
WASHINGTON (UP!) Bethlehem Steel Corp. has
been chosen to operate a new
plant to test "Synthoil"
technology for changing roal
into clean burning liquid fuel,
the Bureau of Mines. said
Thursday.
The $14 million plant now is
being designed for construction
at the bureau's energy
research center at Bruceton,
Pa ., in Allegheny County.
The plant is expected to be
ready for shakedo)VII runs in
1976.
Following its completion, the
plant will be operated by
Bethlehem on the mine bureau's behalf for about two
years.
Bethlehem will rontribute
$1.1 million toward the plant's
operating expenses and
$500,000 for research.
The bureau said Bethlehem

ONCE i\
Owned by Bill Lowe, lhe white . brick
structure. throug h the personal effor t or been underw ay s1nce Octo ber and
Snowden, his fa ther, Ca rroll, also in the Snowden moved in to Ius new quarters
insurance busine.ss 111 Ga llipoli s. and a Thursday. Pri or to th1 s time, he has
brother, now has two neat, modern office maintc1ined his offices in 'lus home ltl 553
romTis and restroom facilities.
Russell St. tn Middleport.
The remodeling of the structure has
Snowden, who has been 1n the tn·

Weather~

: ::::::~f:~::~:~::e.~::;~~-===~=~: ::;::;~:;:~::::::::::~:::::::::::::·:·:·::~:;;;;;;;:;::~:::;:;:::::r.:--:=:::::::::::::::::~:·

0

-.

whH t ha s ha ppened m lower

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UP!) - The Teonetsee Valley
Authority reported 'lbunday Ita lint nuclear unit at BroWDII
Ferry operates reliably and economically.
.
From July through November, troll 1 at the nortb
Alabama facfllty produced %blillon kllowatl boon of electricity, and was operational 85 per cent of the Ume, accordblg ,
to TV A's Office of Power.
.
, This was a betler reliability than for eight of TVA'• nine
largest coal-fired steam plots, the ageoey sald.
The cost of fuel at Browns Ferry was equal to about $3
per ton for coal at the Bleam plants. During 1971, the average
cost of coal was $10per ton, with some purclulses"Nrmblng aa

M&amp;R

SHOPPING·
CENTER,
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

IS

Nuclear unit working well

'

CORRECTION
GROUND BEEF Price
Should Have Been aae lb.
' .

.

'

where Steve Snowden has conve rted what
has bee n known as the C. P. Wt!liarns

-·~.

'

I

'

into a huge western Ohio ex- , - - - - - - - - - - - - -...-~----------------..

SANDWICH
992-5432

•

• A quality product. ·
This is the best basis
for any warranty.

·• fJV! year picture
tube prOtection

Home of

And T'ak,• Em Hom•

YOURS FROM ADMIRAL
-COLOR T.V. WARRANTY• 1 yr. free parts and
90 day free LABOR.

•

fomBoy

Adn•lral.
·

.
How ever. R.epu bl lean
districts would be set up in
oorthem suburbs, and the GOP
rongressmen could compete
for those seats.
Guyer's and Brown 's
districts would be combined

~;.·E~~~L:~~~.

LIMITED .TJME· OFFER I
Seeing is
Believing!

$5880()

nati.

the Fobulou.s

from R ocJ.-u,ell lnternlltional
World's Finest Full Feature 8-digit ·Electroni~ Calculator.
Operates on Batteries or A.C. Current

·

CROW'S
STEAK
HOUSE

Gasoline to

·-Partisan scheme shown by Democrats

'f

Meigs County.
- Dtscussed an old crowded classroom s ituation at Hannan Trace
Elcmelllary Sc hool with William Bahr,
President of the Ga llla County Teachers'
Association,

- Employed J ames Sprague and
William J. Meek as substitute bus drivers,
- Discussed a roof lea k at North Ga llla
High School and a transportation problem
in the sa me C:l rca.
- Acknowledged a letter from Kyger
Creek Band Dirc'Ctor Phillips concen1ing
the purchase of band instruments .
- Discussed future plans for o tou1· of
all school buildings 1111d esk1blislunent of a
public news . letter to improve commWlica tton in the county schools.
~
- Approved payment of bills for
December totaling $4,789.68.

Driver of·truck still missing
GALLIPOLIS The mystery
surrounding a U-Haul truck found sub·
merged New Year's Day in the Ohio River
near Crown_ City took on a new twist
Saturday.
Gallia County sheriff 's depu ties
learned Friday night that Larry Spry, 28,
of Stssonville, W. Va ., remalnS missing
and is lhe object of a missing person's
report filed by his wife . Papers containing Spry's name and address were
found in the tru ck he had leased which was
pulled from the river near Double Creek at

noon

Ohio Jr. Miss title
POMEROY - Basheba (Babs) Witte,
representing southeastern Ohio and Meigs
High School, is one of 28 senior high school
girls from 24 counties arriving in Mount
Vern on Jan.ll to practice for the 14th Ohio
Junior Miss Pageant Jan . 17-18.
The pageant, sponsored for the third
consecutive year by the Mount Vernon
Jaycees,
highlights
scholastic
achievement, poise and appearance, youth
fitness as well as creative and performing
arts. A judges' interview covering contributions to the girls ' community and
family also enters into pageant judging.
Miss Witte is the daughter of Mr. a n~
Mrs. William Witte, RD 3 Pomeroy.
SUIT ASKS $2,245
GALLIPOLIS - The First National
Bank of Delaware, Ohio here Friday filed
a suit tn Gallia County Common Pleas
Court against Landis K. Wandling of 1739
Chatham Ave. Plaintiff seeks $2,244.70
plus eight pet. in terest on a promissory
note from Jan . I, 1975.

'i

'

•

~

'

Sheriff Oscar Baird said. "All we can do is
hope the body comes· up if It's in there."
Investigation revealed hair was found
inside the roof of the truck's cab, but its
origin was unknown .
·
Chief Deputy Ivan Fife said Saturday
that what was originally thought to be
blood found in the cab when analyzed was
oil. Windows in the vehicle were also down.

It was learned that Spry's ca r was
bombed Nov. II during the school t;,xtbook
controversy 1n Kanawha County. The
bombing occurred after Spry and his wife,
Barbara, received calls warning them not
to send their three children to school.
The Sp1·ys, wh o llve in Sissonville,
con tinued to send their children to school
but eventually acquired an unlisted phone
number due to numerous calls.
Gallla County Sheriff's deputies
maintained Saturday they did n~t have
ell()ugh rea son to begin searching the river
to see if Spry may have drowned.
The truck was found by Larry Church
of Crown Cit)', who was walking along the
highway and saw part of lt out of the
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, VV. Va. water. The sherif('s department said ther~ Employe earnings at The Gogdyear Tire &amp;
was apparently 'J" wreck.
Rubber Company's ·polyester resin plant
"There is no need to drall: the river," here reached a record $6.2 million during
1974, an increase of more than 6 per cent ·
over 1973's $5.8 million payroll, plant
manager Michael Bucci announced
SMORG;\SBORD SET
Saturday.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport
Average employment for the year was
Fire Department will stage a
smorgasbord at th e Middleport
590, Bucci said.
In addition to employe earnings,
Elementary School beginning al4 p.m.
Goodyear co ntributed to the Point
next Saturday. Cost of dinners- all the
Pleasant area's economy through the
customer can eat - will be $2 lor adults
purchase of $3 .8mlllion worth of goods and
and $1.25 lor children under 12.
services- from 218 firms within a 50-mile
The department Is accepting
radius of the community. The plant paid
donations of food for the event Anyone
$673,000 in local taxes.
'
wishing to contribute Is asked to call
"In these unsettled economic times,
992-3145 after 5 p.m.
we feel that Goodyear'is helping to provide
a steadying influence on the local economy
by the jobs it provides, the purchases it
makes in lbe area , and the taxes it pays,"
Bucci said.
" All this, of course: wouldn't be
possible without the continuing
I
.
RUTLAND - Mark Alan Morns, son cooperation we get from our employes and
•
of Mr. and 'Mrs. Carl E. Morris, will area residents."
\'
receive the highest recognition in scouting,
the Eagle Scout award, Sunday, Jan. 12 at
BOARD TO ORGANIZE
2 p.m. at the Rutland United Methodist
MIDDLEPORT ..,. Tjle organizational
Churc h. .
·
meeti ng of the Meig&amp;Jiofal School District
The ceremony is open lo the public. Board of Education will )Je held at 7 p.m.
Morris , a member of the U.S. Air Force, is on Jan. 14, at the superintendent;s office in
attending Ohio University on a four year Middleport. T~e regular monthly meeting
R.().T.C. scholarship .
of the board will follow at 7:30 p.m.

Goodyear record

· Monis to receive

are

~

VV~dnesday.

Earnings were .

Countdown near for

CHILE HIT BY QUAKE
MARlETT A - Recent endorsements Rhodes Administration which ~ a people of this slate &lt;;;~n see a big advantage
SANTIAGO (UP!) - A moderate
annnounced by area county, Republican wholesale dismissal of many slate em- over the old system. Career slate ~m­ earthquate hit the central region of Chile
organizations for positions in the ployees the Gilliga~ Administration has ployees make a more efficient and sensible Saturday for the third time in less than a
Department of Transportation have come strived to change the insecurity connected use of state·tax dollars. Ultimately the new week. The quake was felt strongest in
under criticism by outgoing District Ten with state employment. I am sure that the. laws will take politics completely out_of Aconcagua province, 80 miles to the north,
Administrative Assistant William G. ~?.:!!"~:~;:::~;;:;::;:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::».::::::::.':::::::::: classified state efi!ploy~ent benef1ttmg east. No major damage was reported. The
Abdella who said he has had a number of
the career men and women of both two previous quakes hil on Sunday and
inquir,ies frol)l state employees concerned
C&amp;SOE hearing_
political parties."
Thursday. ·
about their jobs.
set for January 20th .
"Many of the media · have carried
reports ·indicating several state trans'
•
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The Public
pOrtation jobs, such as the county
utillUes Commission ol Ohio will hold
superintenqents and timekeepers, were in
public hearings beginning Jan. 20
line to be _replaced. However, ilnder the
~oncernlng
the emergency. rate innew Civil Service laws, passed by sound
creases requested by Columbus and -·
majorities of the lloth General Assembly,
Southern
Ohio Eleelrlc Co. · The
many of these empleyees are serving in a
were
expected to lasi one
hearings
classified status and cannot arbitrarily be
week.
removed," said Abdella.
·
The uUiity asked for · increased
" Important to these new laws," exfor c;ustomers In 22 incorporated
rates
r lained Abdella, "is the basic right of slate
communities
lnllide Franklin County
.omployees not to face the Wiemployment
other
than
lbe
city
of Columbus, raising
~i ne every time an administration
lhelr raleo to the level already bemg
changes. While certain posilions always
paid
by Columbus residents. ·
will remain unDJ"otected because of their
II
also asked for a ,1.2 per· cent ·
P.,licy-making nature most of today's state
NEW HOUSING - Work"on the 76-uniL apartment. cOmplex in Spring Valley
einployees
protected under .the new - emergency rate Slll'tbarge 'to nearly all ·
company
blillllgs.
.
Green
&amp;ibdivision loeated just west of _the Holzer Medical Cen,ter oro Rt. 35 is near
state laW!;."
completion . The total 'c901plex includ!is 13· buildings, :iO one-bedroom garden
He CO(ltinued, "Unlike the previous
&gt;l

- Set ils meeting dale for .the first
Saturday of each ntonth following couri ty
board mee ting.
COUNTY BOARD MEETING
Bruce S. Stout and J. E. Cremeens
were elected to represent the Gallia
County Board of Education on the Gallia·
Jackson-Vinton Vocational Board.
Stout was elected, for two years while
Cremeens will serve for bne year.
The board set IL~ regular meeting for
the first Saturday of each month at 9 a.m.
Board member compensation was set at
$20 per regular meeting plus mileage. "
Substitute teachers approved were
Joyce Madry and John T. Griffin . The
board also approved its annual appropriation totalin g $141,248.56 and
discussed truanc~ problems with Donald
Hardes ty, attendance officer,

..

Eagle Scout award

apartments and 26 two !M.droom garden apartment¥. The rol)lplex i.located on the
'old Shah!ln properly. Terry Whaley, Richard !C'osmo, and Max W. Holzer of.
Columb'lfare the developers .• Work beg~n last ISeptember.
'
'
I
'
~· ' ..
. ' •
I 't .
•.
"
~

I \

J

II

�.,

.

..

'.

'

·,

.

vt. '

'•

'

2- The Sunday T~es- Senti~e l, SundaY., Jan. 5. 1975

.'

Economist commentary
repetition of the events of 40 years ago now have the eerie experience that every signal they have been looking for is flashmg
red . At the risk of oversimplification, the Great Depression is
ge nerally blamed on 10 misfortunes :
t I) Reparations and war debts imposed strains on mu.rnational trade and payments afU.r World War I.
t 2) These strains were accentuated by the return of some
countries, such as Britain, to a gQld exchange S)1ltem at ina(&gt;-'
proprtaU.Iy -fixed exchange rates.
(3) Internaltonal capital movements could sustatn maladjustments only for _e time. To the extent that they did, America
became the main source of funds and New York gradually look
London's place at, the cent~r of the international monetary
system. But New York did not work in the same way as Londo n.
14 ) Overproduction after the -war led to an agricwtural and
commodities recession in tbe late 1920s, causing a dramatic fall
in food and commodity prices. The consequent cut in income in
primary producing countries was not compensated either by an
increased now of long-term loans - at a lime when heavy interest burdens from past borrowing had to be met out of reduced
income - or by higher spending in the countries that,gained from
improved terms of trade .
(~)The Wall Street boom from 1927 to 1929 siphoned funds
from the rest of the world. The crash did not release them. Instead, it caused banks to restrict their lending, often under orders from the Federal Reserve; the money supply in American
fell by a third between 1929 and 1933.
(6) Financial strains and falling prices caused industrial
de stocking, fallin g investment (gross investment in America fell
from $16 billion in 1929 to $1 billion in 1932) and a wave of bankruptCies which were met by Mussolini and like-minded dictators ·
with nationalizations into state holding companies.
· (7 ) The financial crisis spread around the world in .. chain
reaction. In Austria the Credit Anstalt collapsed, causing a run of
bank failures in Germany. Britain was pushed off the gold standard, then America, -then France. A round of competitive
devaluations was set off which finally came fu11 circle.
(8) The trade depression added momentum to protectionist
policies. The American Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act,"'930, partly the
response to the agricultural recession, helped to set the pace.
(9) Few countries, even when devaluing and restricting Imports, followed expansionary domestic policies. Most reacted to
recession which balanced budgets and cuts h government expenditure.
(10) The world of President Hoover and Prime Min;ster
Ramsay MacDonald lacked leadership.
·n,e lin1ing, sequence and relative importance of the long
trail of events leading towards 1975 have been different from
those in the years before 1929. But each of those causes of this
ceptury's first slump now 'has its parallel.
Now and then
Oil payments pose similar problems to reparations and war
debts, but have come much later; they also look more ominous
(remember, though, that reparations helped cause the German
inflation of 1922). The Bretton Woods fixed exchange rate
system, repealing many of the mistakes of the gold exchange
standard, came earlier and collapsed; but it has not been
replaced by a properly floating system - instead, some exchange rates are being kept at the Wfllng levels by atlliicial
borrowing. Now, as tben, strong coWJtries are being asked to bail
out the weak with loans which·are commercially bad risks ; now,
as then, American banks do not like this .
'
In place of an agricultural and commodity slump, most
people still think of these sectors as being in boom. But many
commodity prices are now falling sharply and a lot of primary ·
producers are being squeezed . Even in the agrieultural sector,
overproduction has led to a collapse in beef prices analgous in its
severity to price falls between the wars. Other falls will come.

rf elfarism
1

is· accepted
in polity
'

Everybody talks -about the
wclf.a re system, but what do
people really lh1nk about it ?
To find out , the Um vers1ty of
Cal if or ni a 's
R e gi o nal
Kcscarch !llstitulc 1n Socwl

Welfare polled 9,346 persons
ov er ll:l yea rs of age in etght
states llesearet1es conduc ted
home mte n iews in Nebmska ,
Oh1 o.
Ne w
MexJco,

t\
\.A/ 'ill
VJ \1\

W as hin ~ t o n ,

thing.
writes
famed
educat iona l psychologtst
Bruno Betteihe1m in '·Encounter' ' magaz.ine. In fact, he
charges . the Harper &amp; Row·
primers are a major reason
why so many children not only
never learn how to read

DR. LAMB
•

Amen ca n .soc te ty
The avcntg e 1nlerv1ewee was

(

() J1 iII io 11-l't 'St'lll'&lt;'h
eboul 40 , a

dang~r .

•

I've had enough to kilow that
not all professional met) bold
this view. Also, I have heard
personally of cases of cancer

and then the person was ta ken
off hormones. and cases of
blood clots and the._ patient
taken off hormones or their
condition attributed to btrth
control pills.
I would appreciate your view
oo the lise of hormones and
what constitutes , a good
examination .
DEAR READER - First, it
is usually a good idea tti
provide hormone replacement
when the o.varies are removed
at a falrly yaung age. Your
doctor's treatment of you in
this regard is the norm .
During a pelvic examination
if there is a fairly advanced
degr\"! of hormone deficiency,
drying and shrinking of the
tissues can be seen. A few cells
taken with a swab as done in a
Pap test for cancer can also be
stained and ' examined and
examined · · under
the
microscope. The color reaction
to the stain gives information

ye~:~r or two or college , was a
homeownei· in an urban area
and had an annual fam ily m-

come of $9.000
It was found that people
C'learl) recognize the place of
put;llc wl!lf(Jre m the scheme of

thmgs, that their image of
As in t929. collapf~s have come f1rst in precisely the sectors
relief recipients is not negative
where it was thought durmg the IJoom that it was eastest for any
or rejec ting and that they do
1diot to become a millionaire fn early 1972 11 would have been
thought rtdicuiously to say bankruptcy would hit first at beef
not pold the indiv idual entirely
barons, property speculators. sto ckbrokers , wh1zkids ' new sorts
re'spons1ble for h1s pOverty.
of bonks. But stoc k market crashes have now already gone
They clearly believe that
welfare ~c r\'J ces and programs
further than those in 1929.
Property prices have collapsed, transmitting strain to the
for
rehab• lila lion
and
financial sys tem through the fringe banks and towards banks
ass astance arc an appropriate
within the fringe. So far competttive devaluatiOn~ and trade
use of ta x money
restrictions have been avoided. but Italy has been forced to curb
Even so, a surprising
imports and Britain cou ld follow.
,pr opor· t1on of people inParadoxically, the most import&lt;Jnl difference produces the · t.ervicwcd had misconceptions
greatest similarity . lnflation ts doing to the wor ld economy of the about welfare. Fur instance,
1970s what falling prices did in the 1930s - causing unemthat welfare pays more to a
ployment and company fa1lures. The results of inflation cou ld be
mother wa th dependent
more serious . Failure to control huge price rises is frightening
ch•ldren than •t does for an
goverrunents away from restimu lating demand in the face of a
aged. blind or d•sabled adult ;
slwnp.
that the majority of the heads
One big difference with 1929 is that this slump has been of the poor families are usually
stgnalled well in advance. and still a .real crash has not come.
emp loyed rather than unOptimists say that this shows that the wor ld economy is less deremployed or unemployable.
voltile than it was One reason why the downturn of the 1970s has and that the ma jority of people
been slower ts that, after a 31J..year boom, confidence in mdustry
on welfare nre able-bodaed
has held up remarkably well. Th1s could mean that, when the adults.
balloon is p1mctured, the downward accelerator on tnvestment
All of\ these op inions are
will prove the more severe. A m11jor factor is tha t'public sector wrong . say the USC researspending is now much more important everywhere.
chers . .yet the public still
r
The way out
retams a genmne conce rn for
It ts now, however. well ,past the right time to
those in need of help . Among
act. Although it is usually fatuous to call for mternational thear concl uswns :
economic conferences, one is needed now, and wtth a single main
- Altitudes about public
target for discussion : the prionty aun of the 24 largest indu:,tnal
welfare are sen sitive, uncountries should be to get back, between them, to 5 per cent per derstanding and favorable
annwn real economic growth in 1976.
Only &gt; per cent of the pubhc
This does not mean, .14'r a moment, that ali mdustrial could be described as totally
countries can aim to get back to a 5 per cent rise in their stan- rc ~ istant to the pubhc welfare
dards of living in 1976. Some shou ld aim for much less. but some concept
for more.
- People say that taxOne sort of sacrifice should be required from countries like supported welfare programs
Britain which have the lowest pressures of internal demand plus should provide a decentlevet of
the largest balahce of payments deficits and. tbe highest cost hving. not just the bare
inflation - the most awkward conceivable combmation. They necessities
n1ust not restimula te their inU.rnal demand (ie, their standards
- They also say that
of living) by as much as they would like, but must go for export- government, not private enled expansion. This means a wage freeze.
lerprtse or chanties, has the
Another sort of sacrifice should be required from the strong responsibility toJlrovide for the
countries like Germany and the United SLa tes. Their contribution poor .
to saving the world from slwnp should be by mcreasing their
- People beheve welfare
domestic standards of livmg by more than they appear to want, serv1ces should be made
.at the cost of runrung sizeable unport deficits. It is not "sensible . available to the ge neral
recycling" that the strong countries should run up good debts to populalton according to abtlity
the Arabs, and 11\en lend the money as shaky credits to \he
to pay, and 86 per cent -of the
weakest countries. The only good way of recycling petro-&lt;lollars pubhc supports ftnancial aid to
is for the strongest economies to shoulder the largest trade the working poor.
deficits, by buying more goods abroad.
- While all welfare serv ices
At present the strongest countries with the lowest inflation are favored to a substantial
and the least unemployment regard their stronger balances of degree. medical care and
payments as a reward for their virtue . They suppose that a protective services for children
slump would be a punishment only on the weak. 111ey are very rcce•ve the highest priority.
wrong.
r\bortwn counseling and
suic ide preventi on are the
least-fa,·ored services.
These and other major
findtngs of the study, say the
property but are permanently boy enjoys raking or mowing researchers, cou ld play an
turned off fr om boo ks
grass, says Betlelheun, and unportant part m dectswns
For exm11p le, !he first two only a few girls of this age are made about welfare in the
pages show pictures of Janet enam oured of tending tomato future by lawmakers.
and Mark Janet .is t('ndmg a plants Immediately, the young
tomato plant and Mark is potential render 's mtelhgence powefully suggest the school is
raking grass
·is 1nsul ted .
best avoided ·
F.lsewhere. the readers
Now. no normal fi rst .grade
"In the morning you get up.
You get dressed . You gel
breakfast. Even tf you get wet
you go to school on lime. Then
you get out of school and you go
home again. After a day of
gelling up and getting dressed
and gettmg breakfast , and
getting wet. and getting to
school. and ge tting hot and
gettipg home and getting
dinner. )'OU get very tired and
about how much hormone the once a cancer occurs that getinto bed. so that you can get
body is producing.
fem al£. horm ones may in· up the next morning and start
The ur ine c an a lso be rrease its growth and spread. all over again .''
examined for the runount of But. that is much different
A more depressing view of
hormone it contams Your from sa ying it causes cancer. life can hardly be imagined.
doctor ma"y have done morr
Some women do have an says Betlelheim. Nor is there
than you think. Most patients mcreased tendency to have any suggestion that something
make the mistake of thinking blood clots while taking female meanin~ful may go in school.
that all the doctor does is \\'hat hormone or from increases In fatrness lo Janet and Mark,
they see. Actually he often does formation of hormones during things are not much better m
more work when you are not in preg nancy. Otner women have ott~r reE._d~rs~- _ ·his officfltian he does wh1le clots form anywa) without
Why do our ed'ucators do
you are there . All those tests takin g anything. So do men - everything they can to pre\·ent
ha1·e to be studied and the total think about President Nixon's children from entering the
information problem. When a woman has magic world of readtng~
picture . of
evaluated
this,problem with birth control
Female hormones do not pills or horh1ones it can usualll·
cause cancer of the breast or be man aged by small doses of
cervix. There is some c&lt;&gt;nrern medicine used to prevent blood
APPOINTMENT MAOE
about how they are given in clots. conunonlv called blood
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Gov .
n:lation to .cancer of the limng tllinners.
·
'
John J. Gilligan has named
of tlie womb (endometrial
Really. your doctor is doing AgrieuJ ture Qeparlmenl
cancer ),. Thai . is why eyelid the n ght thing for you, Think of Director Gene R. J\bercrombie
bleeding is sometimes induced . it as replacement therapy for to .the Board of Tax Appeals
The shedding of the lining of what your body would ha\'e effcdive Monday to serve the
the uterus. as occ urs in be en doin g ~m yw a y with unexpired term of\ Napnleon
menstru~tion . may be helpful . norinal ovanes.
Bell wh() resigned .
Many doctors do beheve that

I

,.
. '

hl gh sch oo l

grC:Iduutc who may have had ·ll.

Rea(.ler qu.es,tions hormone use
By La\\ renee E. Lamb, M.D.
. DEAR DR. Lamb - I am 46
and had my 01•aries removed
last year . I'm taking Permarin
daily.
My doctor is a firm· believer
in hormones, but I have some
reservations about them. In
your colllDln you stated that a
good examination IS needed to
lind out whether oil' not hormones are needed. What sort of
an' examination? A pelvic
examination would not reveal
this, would it?
I don't believe my doctor
gives any special thought to
whether or ' n·ot his patients
need female hormones. He just
prescribes them. He says they
keep yau yaung. prevent heart
attacks; pr•vent dowagers
hump and .that there is no

York ,

prehcn sl\'e l: t' Oss -sec tton of

\'vr--

'

Ne w

Ge orgia.' • ~·l o rida
cwd
Crt llf or ma to ge t a com-

Magic world of reading is turned off by educators

'
Dick, Jane and' Spot are no
longer on the elementa ry
educa ti onal scene . But hold
your cheers. They have been
replaced by their identical
twins. Jane t and Mark and
"Socks" tSocks?).
And they haven 't learned a

3- The S~day Tf!es -Se.ntm;,l, Sunday, Jan. 5,1975 ._

~30

.

When, and if, world's balloon
goes 'ka-boom!'
By NEA-{.ondon Economist News Servi&lt;e
For a generatiOn the world has enjoyed its greatest boom . It
is now suffering its greatest inflation and cou ld shorll)' ·be
struggling with its greatest slump.
ft does not want to beheve th1s.
The clu~ represenllng the world's 24 r&gt;chest capit.alist
economics. the Organization for Economtc Cooperation and
Development, said last week that countr&gt;es face "a te~c'whlcfi IS
probably unprecedented outside time of war, " but thefi produced
forecasts for 1975 thai are less than horrific.
For the second } ear run rung , It admits, member countries
are likely to notch up less than I per cent growth •n 1975.
Everyvt't1ere spa re capac1ty w1ll mount and unemployment m·
crease. But lt thinks that the world w1ll not slip into anythtng hke
the depression of. the '3lki - when, over thret• years, industrtal
counU"tes· output was cut by one-thi rd .
.
Then and now
111is would be a comfier holiday If one could share the
OECD's confidence. But those who fear that there cou ld be a

'

Made ; 3 order for this man

Senate's
. firsi Black· leader
thrives on tough situatio~s
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State Sen. M. Morris
Ja ckson , D.Cleye land, the first black leader in _
the hlSto rv oi the Ohio Senate has made a
lifelong c~reer of survtvmg lo~gh situations
and. he ~elieves his new role m the !11th
Genera l Assembly i~ made to .order for him."
Jackson , a ~().year old jack-&lt;&gt;f-all.trades in
private hfe, has served for eight yea rs in
relative obscurity in the Senate. l)emocrals
were 1n the mmorily and Jackson was not a
party spokesman.
When the leg aslature convenes Monday,
however, Ja ckson wlll be named assistant
prestdenl pro tempor~ as · Democrats l&lt;lk~
control of t11e Senate.
He will he the highest-ranking black
la,.nwker tn Ohto, earnmg $22,500 a year $5,000 more than rank-and-file legislators.
Jackson also will be vice chairman of the
powerful Senate Rules Committee, and
chairman of the Educa tton and Welfare
Comnullee, which 1s likely to see some of the
session 's most important action in the area of
school financing reform .
"Low Key"
"I thtnk I can function in aU those
capactties. " srud Jackson, a self-&lt;lescribed
"low key " individual ''My past demonstrates
that. "
Jackson got where he Is by being durable, not
flashy. He has survived:
- Astnctfatherless upbringmg m the ghellos
of New York and Cleveland .
- Bemg forced out of the Jewelry business at
age 21 and losmg $7,~00 .
- Representing the poorest and richest
sections in OhiD at the same lime. The tough
Glenville-Hough area and plush Bratenhal are
both in his Senate district.
Now, Jackson feels the pressure and looks
forw ard to the challenge of being the topranked black legisla tor.
.
"I'm not UrlJTlindfu l that this ·is the hi!l"est
position a black man has ever held in these
legrslat1ve halls of the Ohio state capitol,"
Jackson said, "and I'll do my best to honor this
position . Many people will be looking at me and
judgmg other blacks by the standards I set."
"I'm gomg to always look out for my
district,'' the senator continu ed, 11 but I'm here
to assist each and every one of the ·Democratic
senators to help represent their people."
Jackson's upbringing is reflected in what
seem ~o be mcons1stencies in his legislative
statem ents and actions ----he is strong on
welfare and inner c1ty programs, but he ts a
law and order advocate. Actually, he is an
independent and free lhmker.
Not Provincial
Jackson is not likely to be a provinctalleader,
and the s,tandards he sets are apt to be high,
just like those his mother set while trying to
raise eight children durmg the Depression.
Jackson 's father had died when he was three,
and his mother moved from ghetto to ghetto in
Jamestown, N.Y.; Brooklyn; and Meadville,
Pa.; working as a domestic.
"I had stx -brothers and a sister, and we
stayed in one room until she got home from
'"ork, " .Jackson recalls. "She set standards for
us as we ·grew up. She taught us to respect
adults and author ities wherever we went -in·
schools and in churches. If we did something
wrong, she would whip us within an inch of our
lives.

look hack; it's well
that some things are _gone

•

GALLIPOLI~. - A change
occurred 1n the business
community of Galltpolis on
January I when the ownership
of the Knight's Department
Store changed and a new era of
se rvice ·to the community
began.
Bette Null and Juanita Niday
purchased the merchandtse

GALLIPOLIS - The Galha Meigs Post, Ohio H1ghway
Patrol, probed three auto
accidents Friday.
AI 1:21 p.m., Erma! R.
Woodyard, Patriot Star Rt.,
w~s northbound on M.itchell
Rd. south of US 3~, when she
tried to avoid a collision with.
another -vehicle on a bridge.
Woodyard lost control of her
vehicle, striking a railing and
endi~g up in a small creek.
Woodyard was reportedly
injured but was not immediately treated .
The Woodyard vehicle was
severely . damaged but no
citation was issu~d .
William R. Bahr, 33, Bidwell,
was northboUnd on Bidwell Rodney Rd. at 6: 1Qp.m. Friday
when he lost control of his auto,
with the vehicle going off the
left _side of the road and
strlking a fence.
The Bahr vehicle suffered
moderate damage while no
injuries were reported and no
citations were issued. ,
Ronald L. Twyman, 26,

COLO\) ·
·

,

11wu/r,

..

'

children sang and rang small
sleigh bells.
. The choir sang and with it
were the guests, the Willers of
California and the Jordans of
Columbus, daughters of the
Clarence Bradfords.
Readings were by Russell
Radcliff, Anna Cornell and
Mike Proffitt, the latler one of
his own compositions. Bill
Potluck supper was served Roush's composition he wrote
and Joan Proffitt gave a Bible himself and Eula Proffitt wrote
quiz. Music and the songs of the the words to the song she sang.
Christmas program on Sunday
The words of these blended In
evening was conducted by with Christmas .time, the
Mercedes Condon. Sharon church's beliefs, . and memRussell's class of small bers' thankfulness ior past
blessings and hopes for the
future.
--------------------------~
Letters ol opinion are welromed. They should be less
I On Sunday morning, Dec. 29,
than 300 words long (or be subjert to reduction by the
l children exchlmged gifts and
editor ) and must be signed with the signee's address.
received a treat . Services
Names may be withheld upon publication. However, on
afterward were in charge of
request, names will be disclosed. Letters should be In good
Joe Stobart, with Bill Roush,
taste, addressing issues, not personalldes .
. branch president, the speaker.
Following this was a potluck
dinner in the social room, and
fellowship into the ~~n . It
seemed a fitting way for an old
year to end. ·
.J.,:.,.
There is illne~ and maily
What l;irul of personality?
were missed. !I'he' Herb Whiles
January 2, 1975 ar~ visiting in another state;
Gallipolis, Ohio Ray Proffitts of Racine just
Dear Sir :
returned from Florida, and •
I'd like to tell the people of this area of a terrible experience Roy w. Proffltts of Portland .,
we have had - and perhaps find people who have run into this just left for Florida.
also, and know what to do about it.
The 'ole world Is in sort of a •,
•
· Four days before Christmas my husband chased off six mess, but it keeps oo turning.
hunters who were shooting up our woods (the land is posted).
Perhaps it's easier for 111 •
·:
They waited until we went to town later in the day, then came older ones to cope with, havlq
'.
back and shot my son's ¥.!-Arab mare. She suffered for two days known much of the same, and
before finally dyq.g .
'·
'•
worse.
•
• Our son, eight, had raised her from a foal and helped train her.
Because Th~vlq and
She was a beautiful, affectionate animal and a good friend. He O!ristmas and the old year are
•
watched her die inch by inch.
'•
gone, we needn' slop "countin'
The sheriff informed us that this sort of "spite work" is not our blesslns," ·as Don Alban
uncommon in this part of the country. We are new in the area, used to say. But we need to IIi!
••
and appalled ! What do you do? What kind of "!'ari&gt;ed personallty more aware of God's goodnesll '
•
would il\llict this kind of "revenge" on a helpless animal? W'ill to us and try to pass it alalg. It
hi's next viclin1 be a person?
always cornea back, like bRad
'•
What with the necessity of "clues," "Witnesses." etc., is on water.
there a chance of bringing this person to justiCe? Worse- if we
••
The clrurcb. Is spoll80ring a
••
pursue this , what are the chances of his relurningcfor more course in Leadership startln8
revenge ? 1
"
Jan. 6 at 7 p.m. at the cliurcb
.,
We would appreciate any information or advice. There must with eight weekly sesslcin (two
be someuiliJg we could do other than sit in fear lest we "offend" hours) based ·on public
••
someone else and they take out their rev-enge .
spe~g ·conducted · by Jim · '•
Cleland of the Oblo Feilo11rshlp
Mrs. Ursula Garone organization at Racine.

i)-tat;_ ' •

... ?Jtt.li:/ltit:

Th~fTr-ial

Bill~ Jack
Slarrmg

DELORES TAYLOR
and

TOM LAUGHLIN

...........................
CARTOON

Ilpscomb, Hemloc Grove . $10
'md costs each-;left o
ler ;
Charles Ma~cinko, Minersville,
Rt. 1, $25 and costs, permitting
unlicensed owner to operate a
car; Jack Stegal, Gallipolis, $5
and costs, illegal parking;
Charles lee Lewis, Gallipolis ·
Ferry, $8 and costs, speeding:
Herman C. Michael, Pomeroy, .
Rl. 2, $150and costs, three days
co nfinement , license
suspended for three months,
restricted driving P..lvileges,
drivipg while intoxicated; ·
David Young, Pomeroy, Rt. I,
$150 ·and costs, five days
confinement, license
suspended for thr.,.: month•,

from the estate of Jack Knight
and plan to continue the store
featuring clothing for the
working man and his family
;md including fashions for the
career girl and misses and
half-sizes for the lady at home.
Knight's Depariment Store
be~an serving the needs of the

:·
.
:·..

.
.'
:.
.
::
:~

.,

Ewington, was cited for failure
to keep an assured clear
distance following an accident
on SR 160, three miles north of

us 3~.

According to the patrol ,
Virgil F. Caldwell, 3~ . .Kerr,
had stopped to make a left turn
when the Twyman vehicle,
behind the Caldwell truck,
failed to stop. No injuries were
reported, while the Caldwell
truck suffered slight damage
and Twyman's auto •was
moderately damaged.

area 35 years ago. Its owner,
Jack Knight, who came from a
family of merchants, moved to
Gallipolis to manage the old
Galhpoli~ Department Store
and opened his own business
several years later in the
building at 48 Court Street.
This building, owned by the
Halliday family, has housed a
dry goods establishment since
late 189,0. Attorney John
Halliday's father was located
there. The store has followed
the growth and needs of the
area throughout the years.
The business has been
contmued since the death of
Mr. Knight tn February 1974 by
Mrs . Knight with the
assistance of Mrs. Nell George
who has been a part of Knight's
for over 20 years. Mrs. Knight
said she is pleased that the
business will remain intact and
wishes the new owners success
and satisfaction in their enterprise.

restricted driving privileges.•
dnving whil~ ·intoxicated;
Steve Dunfee, Middleport, $19
and costs, speefling; William
E. Eakin, Racine, Rt. 2, $5 and
costs,
un su re r vehicle;
Raymond Uttie, Racine, $25
and costs, no operators
license; Kei th Searles, Mid-.
~rt, $100 and costs, hunting
license suspended for one year,
spotlighting deer with a· gun.
Forfeiting bonds were Kevin
A. Morris, South Point, $22,
speeding; Jackie L. Harrison,
Parkersburg, Jimmie Lee.
Bailey, Reedsville, Rl. 1, Larry
R. Phillips, San Born, N. Y.,
Jerry ,Sno~en, Norcross, Ga.,
SEES NO CONFUCf
COLUMBUS t UP!) -A key
aide to Gov ,..,lect James A.
Rhodes said Saturday he sees
no conflict of interest in the
appointment of Harry Jump,
who owns an insurance agency
in Willard, as state Insurance
Director.
EARNS 4.0 MARKS
TUPPEDJ; PLAINS - Mrs
Bea DougT.ls. principal of the
Tuppers Plains Elementary
School. received a four point
grade average in post graduate
work in educatiOnal admmistraliol),at Ohio University
for the autwnn quarter.

$25 damag~ to
--

auto' reported

by Lester Cox .uf HI. 2, •n the day to Knight 's
and driven by Department Store on Court St.
Dun altl H C11x .
where an. adding machine had
Firemen WOfc ca lled earlier ·a damaged plug whi~h shorted

causing an arcing in the cord.
The alarms were the first'
and second of the·year for local
fire fighters.

G~ lhp u li s

,I

GAL LIPOLIS - Damage
was estimated at $25 in an auto
fire Friday atl930 Chestnut St.
According to Gallipolis Fire'
Chief James A. Northup, a
backfire in _a carburetor was
blamed for the blaze in a t962
Chevrolet station ,~ wagon owned

Larry Hopkins, Marietta ,
Donald ' Deskins, Marietta,
Harry E. Stewart, Middleport,
Rt. 1, Robert Griffith, Johnstown, Pa., Charles H. Wright,
Pomeroy, Jimmie Chapman,
Huntington, Evelyn· Young,
Gallipolis, Rise E. Ward,
Proctorville, and Phyliss Coy,
Chillicothe, $27 .50 each,
speeding; Earl Johnson ,
Mason, $357.50, driving while
intoxicated; Tracy Norris,
New Haven, $17.50, illegal
parking ; Columbus Doolin,
Pedro, Ohio, $27.50, left of
center; Leroy Burchett,
Pomeroy, and Okey VanMeter,
Mason, $27.50 each, failure to
stop within assured clear
distance; Wayne E. Millhoan,
Shade, Rt. I, $27.50, failure to
stop for car turning .

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
JANUARY 5th THRU JANUARY 11th

LUNCH TIME GOODIE.

•HOT DOG
(Regular Size)

eFRENCH FRIES
eDRINK
(Small Size)
of your choice

~~
· ··---·

89~

TO GO OR EAT HERE

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
SUNDAY, JAN . S

IMBODEN HOME
MIDDLEPORT - Kenneth
Imboden, Middleport fireman
who was injured in the R. H.
Rawlings and Sons Garage fire
last SWlday morning, has been
returned to his home from the
Holzer Medical Center where
he has been confined with head
and back injuries.

No Sub!.
No Coupons - No Limit

For Easy Pickup Call 446-2682
Your Order Will Be Waiting

~4akt ~4nppr

THE LAST
OF SHEILA
I Technicolor)
Starnng
Raquel Welch

••

"THAT OLD, FASHIONED GOODNESS"
tPG)

Co Iorca rtoon:

2nd &amp; OLIVE ST.

Pirate Byrd

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .

Show Starts at 7 p.m.

L

Firemen go

148 times
,
d unng
1974
0

/o

0

11&gt;

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Volunteer Fire Fighters an•swered 148 alarms in areas
served by the department
during 1974 according to the
unit's annual report released
Saturday by Chief Jim Northup.
Total estimated - propetrty
dampge, as a result of fires
during the past 12 rrionths was
$120,243 according to Northup.
The department spent 2,181 'h
man hours fighting fires in the
ctty of Gallipolis, Galhpolis,
Green, Addison and Clay
Townships.
Northup said the department
serves approximately 13,790
residents and that a total of 961
square miles are covered by
the department in all areas. He
added total real estate
protected in all areas was .
estimated around $270,3~0,000
and that total estimated
property saved in all areas was
$973,801.
The report ~tated there was
no major fire losses ($5,000 or
more) in the city dliring the
.past 12 months, but added
there were three major fires in
Gallipolis Twp . and one each in
Green, Addison and Clay
Townships. The complete 1974
report is on file in the
MWJicipal Bldg.

•

I

'

I.

'
$1,000 minimum deposit for 6 years . Interest is guaranteed for 6 years.
You can select your interest p,ayments on a monthly, quarterly or annual basis~

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
shoUld come to us
for income tax ~p.
Reason 5. It the IRS should call you
in for an audit, H &amp; R Block will go

with you at no additional cost. Not
as a legal representative .. . but we
can answer all questions about how
your taxes were p;epared.

.·..

'

Eugene S. Morrison, Sr .,
Rutll!nd, Rl. 1, Brenda S. Fry.
Sidney, Larry Harmon, Rt. I,
Ru,IIB11d and Jackie Smith,
Lahgsville, Rl. 1, $10 and costs
each, speedinjl; Russell H.
Leifheit, Pomeroy, Rt. 2, $10
and costs, passing at in'terseclion; Virginia R. Cuber,
Toledo, $13 and costs.
speeding;: Franklin M. Rizer,
Pomeroy, John F. Baird,
Cheshire, and James E.
William, Coolville, $11 and
co~ls each, speeding; Nick C.
Lagaras, Gallipolis, and Gary
A. Pope, Vinton, $5 and costs
each, illegal parking; Max E.
_, Hill, Racine .' and t ~~"r~'~""'" 'R .

Two vehicles leave road

cause us to feel a great loss;
others we're glad to have seen
go.
The Emma Smith Circle met
for the last time in 1974 with a
shor.t devotion and business
program, 24 attending. Secret
sisters were made known by
receiving gifts and names were
drawn for new ones.

•

,

Knight's store to continue

Learns Compromlle
Jackson knows other lawmakers do not
share his sensitivity for urban problems and
the dilemma of blacks. Bot he has learned to
"compromise and respect other people's
p&gt;sitions."
'
· In fact, Jackson is able to get along with
lawmakers. whose viewpoints are the euct
opposite of his own. For example, he has a high
regard for Sen. Oakley C. Collins, R-lronton,
who has few blacks in his district and is constantly fighting to get more money for rural
schools at the expense of urban areas.
"Oakley is a good man," Jackson oold.
"You can talk to him, and he always teUa you
what's on his mind."
As chairman of the Education Conunittee;
Jackson will finally gain the upper hand over
Collins, who chaired the conunlttee untlll973.
Jackson feels this assignment will take up
most of his time, and enacting a new, equitable
school financing formula is at the top of the llst
of priorities.
Jackson's wife, Minnie, is a school teacher.
One son, John, is a graduate of Miami
University and a banker in Cleveland. The
other, Dennis, is a senior at Bowling Green
State University Law School.

Don~t

· By Golde! Clendenin
PORTLAND- Looking back
on 1974 members of the
Reorgaruzed Church of Jesus
Christ of La Iter Day Saints see
a busy, well spent year behind
them.
Many mistakes and some
problems that were shared
,with
the
congreg atio n
somehow seemed lighter. We
are lookin g ahead to the
fulfillment of new plans and
hopes in the year ahead.
And at this·milestone in life.
humbly and thankfully we look
back on the many already past.
Some things that ore gone

r

"We got so we wouldn't assoctale wtth kids
who stole and broke windows," the senator
continued. "If it hadn 't been Jor her firm
discipline, we would have ended up in the
penitentiary. I appreciate it today. I didn't
then."
. •·
,
Jackson grew up m such poyerty he dldn I
always have lhe17 cents required to buy lunch
in schoo l. "I had lunch every other day," he
said. "The other days I went to a place where
you could buy two-&lt;lay old doughnuts for a
nickel."
'
Repaired Watches
Jackson went to Cleveland East Tech High
School which also produced Olympic track
stars Jesse Owens and Dave Albritton. He aiBo
went to Cleveland College, later to become
Case Western Reserve University, and to
Bradley Technical Institute in Peoria, Ill.,
where he learned to repair watches, timers and
clocks.
Aside from owning a jewelry store and
teaching watchmaking in school, Jackson has
been a heating contractor, installing and
repairing forced air furnaces, and a real estate
broker since 1950.
He also was a public relations man for the
Fisher-Faziofood chain, and now is community
relations director and assistant director of
personnel for Pick-n-Pay Soper Markets Inc.
Pr1or to his election to the Senate in 19116, he
was a Cleveland city councilman for four
years.
How does Jackson accoWlt for his elevation
from poverty to one of the highest governmental posts in Ohio? His own persistence and
changing times.
'l' "I bave always tried to do the best job
possible without being ambitious or tryllig to
push anybody .out of the way," Jackson said.
"Conditions and times hltve changed. Blacks
are being elevated to publlc office In states tbat
don't necessarily have a lot of blacks. People
around the country are beginning to cast aside
their old prejudices and realize that all people
are the same.''

•
j

Thirty persons were fined and 2Q others
forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Robert E.
Buck were Ellis E. Myers,
LangsviUe, $10 and costs
failure to keep on right half oi
roadway; Frederick L.
Brumbaugh, Parkersburg, and
Timothy L. Woltz, Ray, Ohio,
$7 and costs each, sPeeding;
Gary M. Smith, Middleport,
Stuart W. Pullin, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, and Wayne v.
Barnett, Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $5 and
costs each, oo muffler; Walter
Loveday, Bidwell, Clarence
Rodermond , Lodi, N. J ..

•

./

fined, ,- 20 b,o nds tako:n up by]udge

~J'OMEWJY -

'

I, '

'

..

An.nual
. inteiestrate.
.

Get the most·oqt of

3 LOCATIONS TO
SERVE YOU.!

your savings dollar.u

'

Federal regulations prohibit the payment of a
• time deposit prior to maturity unless 90, days of
interest is forfeited and interest on the amount
withdrawn is reduced to the passbook rate.

).

6t8 E. Main

27 Sycamore St.
· Gallipolis
· Ph. 446-0303

_,.

Pomeroy
992-3m

P~ .

'1open 9 to 6 Week.days. 9-·s Saturda\(_
No Appointment Necessary
'

.

I

'

t

'

eMAIN OFFICE • SEOOND AVE
I

aAUTO BANK •. THIRD AVE.

All accounts are insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance CQrporation to $40,000. Husbands and
wives' . accounts, through . single . and joint .
relationships, may be insur-ed up to · $200,000.

eVINTON BRANDl_" VINTO~, _OHIO
\'

. _,

'

' .

..

\

'.

·. ·
'•

'

.•.

�.,

.

..

'.

'

·,

.

vt. '

'•

'

2- The Sunday T~es- Senti~e l, SundaY., Jan. 5. 1975

.'

Economist commentary
repetition of the events of 40 years ago now have the eerie experience that every signal they have been looking for is flashmg
red . At the risk of oversimplification, the Great Depression is
ge nerally blamed on 10 misfortunes :
t I) Reparations and war debts imposed strains on mu.rnational trade and payments afU.r World War I.
t 2) These strains were accentuated by the return of some
countries, such as Britain, to a gQld exchange S)1ltem at ina(&gt;-'
proprtaU.Iy -fixed exchange rates.
(3) Internaltonal capital movements could sustatn maladjustments only for _e time. To the extent that they did, America
became the main source of funds and New York gradually look
London's place at, the cent~r of the international monetary
system. But New York did not work in the same way as Londo n.
14 ) Overproduction after the -war led to an agricwtural and
commodities recession in tbe late 1920s, causing a dramatic fall
in food and commodity prices. The consequent cut in income in
primary producing countries was not compensated either by an
increased now of long-term loans - at a lime when heavy interest burdens from past borrowing had to be met out of reduced
income - or by higher spending in the countries that,gained from
improved terms of trade .
(~)The Wall Street boom from 1927 to 1929 siphoned funds
from the rest of the world. The crash did not release them. Instead, it caused banks to restrict their lending, often under orders from the Federal Reserve; the money supply in American
fell by a third between 1929 and 1933.
(6) Financial strains and falling prices caused industrial
de stocking, fallin g investment (gross investment in America fell
from $16 billion in 1929 to $1 billion in 1932) and a wave of bankruptCies which were met by Mussolini and like-minded dictators ·
with nationalizations into state holding companies.
· (7 ) The financial crisis spread around the world in .. chain
reaction. In Austria the Credit Anstalt collapsed, causing a run of
bank failures in Germany. Britain was pushed off the gold standard, then America, -then France. A round of competitive
devaluations was set off which finally came fu11 circle.
(8) The trade depression added momentum to protectionist
policies. The American Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act,"'930, partly the
response to the agricultural recession, helped to set the pace.
(9) Few countries, even when devaluing and restricting Imports, followed expansionary domestic policies. Most reacted to
recession which balanced budgets and cuts h government expenditure.
(10) The world of President Hoover and Prime Min;ster
Ramsay MacDonald lacked leadership.
·n,e lin1ing, sequence and relative importance of the long
trail of events leading towards 1975 have been different from
those in the years before 1929. But each of those causes of this
ceptury's first slump now 'has its parallel.
Now and then
Oil payments pose similar problems to reparations and war
debts, but have come much later; they also look more ominous
(remember, though, that reparations helped cause the German
inflation of 1922). The Bretton Woods fixed exchange rate
system, repealing many of the mistakes of the gold exchange
standard, came earlier and collapsed; but it has not been
replaced by a properly floating system - instead, some exchange rates are being kept at the Wfllng levels by atlliicial
borrowing. Now, as tben, strong coWJtries are being asked to bail
out the weak with loans which·are commercially bad risks ; now,
as then, American banks do not like this .
'
In place of an agricultural and commodity slump, most
people still think of these sectors as being in boom. But many
commodity prices are now falling sharply and a lot of primary ·
producers are being squeezed . Even in the agrieultural sector,
overproduction has led to a collapse in beef prices analgous in its
severity to price falls between the wars. Other falls will come.

rf elfarism
1

is· accepted
in polity
'

Everybody talks -about the
wclf.a re system, but what do
people really lh1nk about it ?
To find out , the Um vers1ty of
Cal if or ni a 's
R e gi o nal
Kcscarch !llstitulc 1n Socwl

Welfare polled 9,346 persons
ov er ll:l yea rs of age in etght
states llesearet1es conduc ted
home mte n iews in Nebmska ,
Oh1 o.
Ne w
MexJco,

t\
\.A/ 'ill
VJ \1\

W as hin ~ t o n ,

thing.
writes
famed
educat iona l psychologtst
Bruno Betteihe1m in '·Encounter' ' magaz.ine. In fact, he
charges . the Harper &amp; Row·
primers are a major reason
why so many children not only
never learn how to read

DR. LAMB
•

Amen ca n .soc te ty
The avcntg e 1nlerv1ewee was

(

() J1 iII io 11-l't 'St'lll'&lt;'h
eboul 40 , a

dang~r .

•

I've had enough to kilow that
not all professional met) bold
this view. Also, I have heard
personally of cases of cancer

and then the person was ta ken
off hormones. and cases of
blood clots and the._ patient
taken off hormones or their
condition attributed to btrth
control pills.
I would appreciate your view
oo the lise of hormones and
what constitutes , a good
examination .
DEAR READER - First, it
is usually a good idea tti
provide hormone replacement
when the o.varies are removed
at a falrly yaung age. Your
doctor's treatment of you in
this regard is the norm .
During a pelvic examination
if there is a fairly advanced
degr\"! of hormone deficiency,
drying and shrinking of the
tissues can be seen. A few cells
taken with a swab as done in a
Pap test for cancer can also be
stained and ' examined and
examined · · under
the
microscope. The color reaction
to the stain gives information

ye~:~r or two or college , was a
homeownei· in an urban area
and had an annual fam ily m-

come of $9.000
It was found that people
C'learl) recognize the place of
put;llc wl!lf(Jre m the scheme of

thmgs, that their image of
As in t929. collapf~s have come f1rst in precisely the sectors
relief recipients is not negative
where it was thought durmg the IJoom that it was eastest for any
or rejec ting and that they do
1diot to become a millionaire fn early 1972 11 would have been
thought rtdicuiously to say bankruptcy would hit first at beef
not pold the indiv idual entirely
barons, property speculators. sto ckbrokers , wh1zkids ' new sorts
re'spons1ble for h1s pOverty.
of bonks. But stoc k market crashes have now already gone
They clearly believe that
welfare ~c r\'J ces and programs
further than those in 1929.
Property prices have collapsed, transmitting strain to the
for
rehab• lila lion
and
financial sys tem through the fringe banks and towards banks
ass astance arc an appropriate
within the fringe. So far competttive devaluatiOn~ and trade
use of ta x money
restrictions have been avoided. but Italy has been forced to curb
Even so, a surprising
imports and Britain cou ld follow.
,pr opor· t1on of people inParadoxically, the most import&lt;Jnl difference produces the · t.ervicwcd had misconceptions
greatest similarity . lnflation ts doing to the wor ld economy of the about welfare. Fur instance,
1970s what falling prices did in the 1930s - causing unemthat welfare pays more to a
ployment and company fa1lures. The results of inflation cou ld be
mother wa th dependent
more serious . Failure to control huge price rises is frightening
ch•ldren than •t does for an
goverrunents away from restimu lating demand in the face of a
aged. blind or d•sabled adult ;
slwnp.
that the majority of the heads
One big difference with 1929 is that this slump has been of the poor families are usually
stgnalled well in advance. and still a .real crash has not come.
emp loyed rather than unOptimists say that this shows that the wor ld economy is less deremployed or unemployable.
voltile than it was One reason why the downturn of the 1970s has and that the ma jority of people
been slower ts that, after a 31J..year boom, confidence in mdustry
on welfare nre able-bodaed
has held up remarkably well. Th1s could mean that, when the adults.
balloon is p1mctured, the downward accelerator on tnvestment
All of\ these op inions are
will prove the more severe. A m11jor factor is tha t'public sector wrong . say the USC researspending is now much more important everywhere.
chers . .yet the public still
r
The way out
retams a genmne conce rn for
It ts now, however. well ,past the right time to
those in need of help . Among
act. Although it is usually fatuous to call for mternational thear concl uswns :
economic conferences, one is needed now, and wtth a single main
- Altitudes about public
target for discussion : the prionty aun of the 24 largest indu:,tnal
welfare are sen sitive, uncountries should be to get back, between them, to 5 per cent per derstanding and favorable
annwn real economic growth in 1976.
Only &gt; per cent of the pubhc
This does not mean, .14'r a moment, that ali mdustrial could be described as totally
countries can aim to get back to a 5 per cent rise in their stan- rc ~ istant to the pubhc welfare
dards of living in 1976. Some shou ld aim for much less. but some concept
for more.
- People say that taxOne sort of sacrifice should be required from countries like supported welfare programs
Britain which have the lowest pressures of internal demand plus should provide a decentlevet of
the largest balahce of payments deficits and. tbe highest cost hving. not just the bare
inflation - the most awkward conceivable combmation. They necessities
n1ust not restimula te their inU.rnal demand (ie, their standards
- They also say that
of living) by as much as they would like, but must go for export- government, not private enled expansion. This means a wage freeze.
lerprtse or chanties, has the
Another sort of sacrifice should be required from the strong responsibility toJlrovide for the
countries like Germany and the United SLa tes. Their contribution poor .
to saving the world from slwnp should be by mcreasing their
- People beheve welfare
domestic standards of livmg by more than they appear to want, serv1ces should be made
.at the cost of runrung sizeable unport deficits. It is not "sensible . available to the ge neral
recycling" that the strong countries should run up good debts to populalton according to abtlity
the Arabs, and 11\en lend the money as shaky credits to \he
to pay, and 86 per cent -of the
weakest countries. The only good way of recycling petro-&lt;lollars pubhc supports ftnancial aid to
is for the strongest economies to shoulder the largest trade the working poor.
deficits, by buying more goods abroad.
- While all welfare serv ices
At present the strongest countries with the lowest inflation are favored to a substantial
and the least unemployment regard their stronger balances of degree. medical care and
payments as a reward for their virtue . They suppose that a protective services for children
slump would be a punishment only on the weak. 111ey are very rcce•ve the highest priority.
wrong.
r\bortwn counseling and
suic ide preventi on are the
least-fa,·ored services.
These and other major
findtngs of the study, say the
property but are permanently boy enjoys raking or mowing researchers, cou ld play an
turned off fr om boo ks
grass, says Betlelheun, and unportant part m dectswns
For exm11p le, !he first two only a few girls of this age are made about welfare in the
pages show pictures of Janet enam oured of tending tomato future by lawmakers.
and Mark Janet .is t('ndmg a plants Immediately, the young
tomato plant and Mark is potential render 's mtelhgence powefully suggest the school is
raking grass
·is 1nsul ted .
best avoided ·
F.lsewhere. the readers
Now. no normal fi rst .grade
"In the morning you get up.
You get dressed . You gel
breakfast. Even tf you get wet
you go to school on lime. Then
you get out of school and you go
home again. After a day of
gelling up and getting dressed
and gettmg breakfast , and
getting wet. and getting to
school. and ge tting hot and
gettipg home and getting
dinner. )'OU get very tired and
about how much hormone the once a cancer occurs that getinto bed. so that you can get
body is producing.
fem al£. horm ones may in· up the next morning and start
The ur ine c an a lso be rrease its growth and spread. all over again .''
examined for the runount of But. that is much different
A more depressing view of
hormone it contams Your from sa ying it causes cancer. life can hardly be imagined.
doctor ma"y have done morr
Some women do have an says Betlelheim. Nor is there
than you think. Most patients mcreased tendency to have any suggestion that something
make the mistake of thinking blood clots while taking female meanin~ful may go in school.
that all the doctor does is \\'hat hormone or from increases In fatrness lo Janet and Mark,
they see. Actually he often does formation of hormones during things are not much better m
more work when you are not in preg nancy. Otner women have ott~r reE._d~rs~- _ ·his officfltian he does wh1le clots form anywa) without
Why do our ed'ucators do
you are there . All those tests takin g anything. So do men - everything they can to pre\·ent
ha1·e to be studied and the total think about President Nixon's children from entering the
information problem. When a woman has magic world of readtng~
picture . of
evaluated
this,problem with birth control
Female hormones do not pills or horh1ones it can usualll·
cause cancer of the breast or be man aged by small doses of
cervix. There is some c&lt;&gt;nrern medicine used to prevent blood
APPOINTMENT MAOE
about how they are given in clots. conunonlv called blood
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Gov .
n:lation to .cancer of the limng tllinners.
·
'
John J. Gilligan has named
of tlie womb (endometrial
Really. your doctor is doing AgrieuJ ture Qeparlmenl
cancer ),. Thai . is why eyelid the n ght thing for you, Think of Director Gene R. J\bercrombie
bleeding is sometimes induced . it as replacement therapy for to .the Board of Tax Appeals
The shedding of the lining of what your body would ha\'e effcdive Monday to serve the
the uterus. as occ urs in be en doin g ~m yw a y with unexpired term of\ Napnleon
menstru~tion . may be helpful . norinal ovanes.
Bell wh() resigned .
Many doctors do beheve that

I

,.
. '

hl gh sch oo l

grC:Iduutc who may have had ·ll.

Rea(.ler qu.es,tions hormone use
By La\\ renee E. Lamb, M.D.
. DEAR DR. Lamb - I am 46
and had my 01•aries removed
last year . I'm taking Permarin
daily.
My doctor is a firm· believer
in hormones, but I have some
reservations about them. In
your colllDln you stated that a
good examination IS needed to
lind out whether oil' not hormones are needed. What sort of
an' examination? A pelvic
examination would not reveal
this, would it?
I don't believe my doctor
gives any special thought to
whether or ' n·ot his patients
need female hormones. He just
prescribes them. He says they
keep yau yaung. prevent heart
attacks; pr•vent dowagers
hump and .that there is no

York ,

prehcn sl\'e l: t' Oss -sec tton of

\'vr--

'

Ne w

Ge orgia.' • ~·l o rida
cwd
Crt llf or ma to ge t a com-

Magic world of reading is turned off by educators

'
Dick, Jane and' Spot are no
longer on the elementa ry
educa ti onal scene . But hold
your cheers. They have been
replaced by their identical
twins. Jane t and Mark and
"Socks" tSocks?).
And they haven 't learned a

3- The S~day Tf!es -Se.ntm;,l, Sunday, Jan. 5,1975 ._

~30

.

When, and if, world's balloon
goes 'ka-boom!'
By NEA-{.ondon Economist News Servi&lt;e
For a generatiOn the world has enjoyed its greatest boom . It
is now suffering its greatest inflation and cou ld shorll)' ·be
struggling with its greatest slump.
ft does not want to beheve th1s.
The clu~ represenllng the world's 24 r&gt;chest capit.alist
economics. the Organization for Economtc Cooperation and
Development, said last week that countr&gt;es face "a te~c'whlcfi IS
probably unprecedented outside time of war, " but thefi produced
forecasts for 1975 thai are less than horrific.
For the second } ear run rung , It admits, member countries
are likely to notch up less than I per cent growth •n 1975.
Everyvt't1ere spa re capac1ty w1ll mount and unemployment m·
crease. But lt thinks that the world w1ll not slip into anythtng hke
the depression of. the '3lki - when, over thret• years, industrtal
counU"tes· output was cut by one-thi rd .
.
Then and now
111is would be a comfier holiday If one could share the
OECD's confidence. But those who fear that there cou ld be a

'

Made ; 3 order for this man

Senate's
. firsi Black· leader
thrives on tough situatio~s
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State Sen. M. Morris
Ja ckson , D.Cleye land, the first black leader in _
the hlSto rv oi the Ohio Senate has made a
lifelong c~reer of survtvmg lo~gh situations
and. he ~elieves his new role m the !11th
Genera l Assembly i~ made to .order for him."
Jackson , a ~().year old jack-&lt;&gt;f-all.trades in
private hfe, has served for eight yea rs in
relative obscurity in the Senate. l)emocrals
were 1n the mmorily and Jackson was not a
party spokesman.
When the leg aslature convenes Monday,
however, Ja ckson wlll be named assistant
prestdenl pro tempor~ as · Democrats l&lt;lk~
control of t11e Senate.
He will he the highest-ranking black
la,.nwker tn Ohto, earnmg $22,500 a year $5,000 more than rank-and-file legislators.
Jackson also will be vice chairman of the
powerful Senate Rules Committee, and
chairman of the Educa tton and Welfare
Comnullee, which 1s likely to see some of the
session 's most important action in the area of
school financing reform .
"Low Key"
"I thtnk I can function in aU those
capactties. " srud Jackson, a self-&lt;lescribed
"low key " individual ''My past demonstrates
that. "
Jackson got where he Is by being durable, not
flashy. He has survived:
- Astnctfatherless upbringmg m the ghellos
of New York and Cleveland .
- Bemg forced out of the Jewelry business at
age 21 and losmg $7,~00 .
- Representing the poorest and richest
sections in OhiD at the same lime. The tough
Glenville-Hough area and plush Bratenhal are
both in his Senate district.
Now, Jackson feels the pressure and looks
forw ard to the challenge of being the topranked black legisla tor.
.
"I'm not UrlJTlindfu l that this ·is the hi!l"est
position a black man has ever held in these
legrslat1ve halls of the Ohio state capitol,"
Jackson said, "and I'll do my best to honor this
position . Many people will be looking at me and
judgmg other blacks by the standards I set."
"I'm gomg to always look out for my
district,'' the senator continu ed, 11 but I'm here
to assist each and every one of the ·Democratic
senators to help represent their people."
Jackson's upbringing is reflected in what
seem ~o be mcons1stencies in his legislative
statem ents and actions ----he is strong on
welfare and inner c1ty programs, but he ts a
law and order advocate. Actually, he is an
independent and free lhmker.
Not Provincial
Jackson is not likely to be a provinctalleader,
and the s,tandards he sets are apt to be high,
just like those his mother set while trying to
raise eight children durmg the Depression.
Jackson 's father had died when he was three,
and his mother moved from ghetto to ghetto in
Jamestown, N.Y.; Brooklyn; and Meadville,
Pa.; working as a domestic.
"I had stx -brothers and a sister, and we
stayed in one room until she got home from
'"ork, " .Jackson recalls. "She set standards for
us as we ·grew up. She taught us to respect
adults and author ities wherever we went -in·
schools and in churches. If we did something
wrong, she would whip us within an inch of our
lives.

look hack; it's well
that some things are _gone

•

GALLIPOLI~. - A change
occurred 1n the business
community of Galltpolis on
January I when the ownership
of the Knight's Department
Store changed and a new era of
se rvice ·to the community
began.
Bette Null and Juanita Niday
purchased the merchandtse

GALLIPOLIS - The Galha Meigs Post, Ohio H1ghway
Patrol, probed three auto
accidents Friday.
AI 1:21 p.m., Erma! R.
Woodyard, Patriot Star Rt.,
w~s northbound on M.itchell
Rd. south of US 3~, when she
tried to avoid a collision with.
another -vehicle on a bridge.
Woodyard lost control of her
vehicle, striking a railing and
endi~g up in a small creek.
Woodyard was reportedly
injured but was not immediately treated .
The Woodyard vehicle was
severely . damaged but no
citation was issu~d .
William R. Bahr, 33, Bidwell,
was northboUnd on Bidwell Rodney Rd. at 6: 1Qp.m. Friday
when he lost control of his auto,
with the vehicle going off the
left _side of the road and
strlking a fence.
The Bahr vehicle suffered
moderate damage while no
injuries were reported and no
citations were issued. ,
Ronald L. Twyman, 26,

COLO\) ·
·

,

11wu/r,

..

'

children sang and rang small
sleigh bells.
. The choir sang and with it
were the guests, the Willers of
California and the Jordans of
Columbus, daughters of the
Clarence Bradfords.
Readings were by Russell
Radcliff, Anna Cornell and
Mike Proffitt, the latler one of
his own compositions. Bill
Potluck supper was served Roush's composition he wrote
and Joan Proffitt gave a Bible himself and Eula Proffitt wrote
quiz. Music and the songs of the the words to the song she sang.
Christmas program on Sunday
The words of these blended In
evening was conducted by with Christmas .time, the
Mercedes Condon. Sharon church's beliefs, . and memRussell's class of small bers' thankfulness ior past
blessings and hopes for the
future.
--------------------------~
Letters ol opinion are welromed. They should be less
I On Sunday morning, Dec. 29,
than 300 words long (or be subjert to reduction by the
l children exchlmged gifts and
editor ) and must be signed with the signee's address.
received a treat . Services
Names may be withheld upon publication. However, on
afterward were in charge of
request, names will be disclosed. Letters should be In good
Joe Stobart, with Bill Roush,
taste, addressing issues, not personalldes .
. branch president, the speaker.
Following this was a potluck
dinner in the social room, and
fellowship into the ~~n . It
seemed a fitting way for an old
year to end. ·
.J.,:.,.
There is illne~ and maily
What l;irul of personality?
were missed. !I'he' Herb Whiles
January 2, 1975 ar~ visiting in another state;
Gallipolis, Ohio Ray Proffitts of Racine just
Dear Sir :
returned from Florida, and •
I'd like to tell the people of this area of a terrible experience Roy w. Proffltts of Portland .,
we have had - and perhaps find people who have run into this just left for Florida.
also, and know what to do about it.
The 'ole world Is in sort of a •,
•
· Four days before Christmas my husband chased off six mess, but it keeps oo turning.
hunters who were shooting up our woods (the land is posted).
Perhaps it's easier for 111 •
·:
They waited until we went to town later in the day, then came older ones to cope with, havlq
'.
back and shot my son's ¥.!-Arab mare. She suffered for two days known much of the same, and
before finally dyq.g .
'·
'•
worse.
•
• Our son, eight, had raised her from a foal and helped train her.
Because Th~vlq and
She was a beautiful, affectionate animal and a good friend. He O!ristmas and the old year are
•
watched her die inch by inch.
'•
gone, we needn' slop "countin'
The sheriff informed us that this sort of "spite work" is not our blesslns," ·as Don Alban
uncommon in this part of the country. We are new in the area, used to say. But we need to IIi!
••
and appalled ! What do you do? What kind of "!'ari&gt;ed personallty more aware of God's goodnesll '
•
would il\llict this kind of "revenge" on a helpless animal? W'ill to us and try to pass it alalg. It
hi's next viclin1 be a person?
always cornea back, like bRad
'•
What with the necessity of "clues," "Witnesses." etc., is on water.
there a chance of bringing this person to justiCe? Worse- if we
••
The clrurcb. Is spoll80ring a
••
pursue this , what are the chances of his relurningcfor more course in Leadership startln8
revenge ? 1
"
Jan. 6 at 7 p.m. at the cliurcb
.,
We would appreciate any information or advice. There must with eight weekly sesslcin (two
be someuiliJg we could do other than sit in fear lest we "offend" hours) based ·on public
••
someone else and they take out their rev-enge .
spe~g ·conducted · by Jim · '•
Cleland of the Oblo Feilo11rshlp
Mrs. Ursula Garone organization at Racine.

i)-tat;_ ' •

... ?Jtt.li:/ltit:

Th~fTr-ial

Bill~ Jack
Slarrmg

DELORES TAYLOR
and

TOM LAUGHLIN

...........................
CARTOON

Ilpscomb, Hemloc Grove . $10
'md costs each-;left o
ler ;
Charles Ma~cinko, Minersville,
Rt. 1, $25 and costs, permitting
unlicensed owner to operate a
car; Jack Stegal, Gallipolis, $5
and costs, illegal parking;
Charles lee Lewis, Gallipolis ·
Ferry, $8 and costs, speeding:
Herman C. Michael, Pomeroy, .
Rl. 2, $150and costs, three days
co nfinement , license
suspended for three months,
restricted driving P..lvileges,
drivipg while intoxicated; ·
David Young, Pomeroy, Rt. I,
$150 ·and costs, five days
confinement, license
suspended for thr.,.: month•,

from the estate of Jack Knight
and plan to continue the store
featuring clothing for the
working man and his family
;md including fashions for the
career girl and misses and
half-sizes for the lady at home.
Knight's Depariment Store
be~an serving the needs of the

:·
.
:·..

.
.'
:.
.
::
:~

.,

Ewington, was cited for failure
to keep an assured clear
distance following an accident
on SR 160, three miles north of

us 3~.

According to the patrol ,
Virgil F. Caldwell, 3~ . .Kerr,
had stopped to make a left turn
when the Twyman vehicle,
behind the Caldwell truck,
failed to stop. No injuries were
reported, while the Caldwell
truck suffered slight damage
and Twyman's auto •was
moderately damaged.

area 35 years ago. Its owner,
Jack Knight, who came from a
family of merchants, moved to
Gallipolis to manage the old
Galhpoli~ Department Store
and opened his own business
several years later in the
building at 48 Court Street.
This building, owned by the
Halliday family, has housed a
dry goods establishment since
late 189,0. Attorney John
Halliday's father was located
there. The store has followed
the growth and needs of the
area throughout the years.
The business has been
contmued since the death of
Mr. Knight tn February 1974 by
Mrs . Knight with the
assistance of Mrs. Nell George
who has been a part of Knight's
for over 20 years. Mrs. Knight
said she is pleased that the
business will remain intact and
wishes the new owners success
and satisfaction in their enterprise.

restricted driving privileges.•
dnving whil~ ·intoxicated;
Steve Dunfee, Middleport, $19
and costs, speefling; William
E. Eakin, Racine, Rt. 2, $5 and
costs,
un su re r vehicle;
Raymond Uttie, Racine, $25
and costs, no operators
license; Kei th Searles, Mid-.
~rt, $100 and costs, hunting
license suspended for one year,
spotlighting deer with a· gun.
Forfeiting bonds were Kevin
A. Morris, South Point, $22,
speeding; Jackie L. Harrison,
Parkersburg, Jimmie Lee.
Bailey, Reedsville, Rl. 1, Larry
R. Phillips, San Born, N. Y.,
Jerry ,Sno~en, Norcross, Ga.,
SEES NO CONFUCf
COLUMBUS t UP!) -A key
aide to Gov ,..,lect James A.
Rhodes said Saturday he sees
no conflict of interest in the
appointment of Harry Jump,
who owns an insurance agency
in Willard, as state Insurance
Director.
EARNS 4.0 MARKS
TUPPEDJ; PLAINS - Mrs
Bea DougT.ls. principal of the
Tuppers Plains Elementary
School. received a four point
grade average in post graduate
work in educatiOnal admmistraliol),at Ohio University
for the autwnn quarter.

$25 damag~ to
--

auto' reported

by Lester Cox .uf HI. 2, •n the day to Knight 's
and driven by Department Store on Court St.
Dun altl H C11x .
where an. adding machine had
Firemen WOfc ca lled earlier ·a damaged plug whi~h shorted

causing an arcing in the cord.
The alarms were the first'
and second of the·year for local
fire fighters.

G~ lhp u li s

,I

GAL LIPOLIS - Damage
was estimated at $25 in an auto
fire Friday atl930 Chestnut St.
According to Gallipolis Fire'
Chief James A. Northup, a
backfire in _a carburetor was
blamed for the blaze in a t962
Chevrolet station ,~ wagon owned

Larry Hopkins, Marietta ,
Donald ' Deskins, Marietta,
Harry E. Stewart, Middleport,
Rt. 1, Robert Griffith, Johnstown, Pa., Charles H. Wright,
Pomeroy, Jimmie Chapman,
Huntington, Evelyn· Young,
Gallipolis, Rise E. Ward,
Proctorville, and Phyliss Coy,
Chillicothe, $27 .50 each,
speeding; Earl Johnson ,
Mason, $357.50, driving while
intoxicated; Tracy Norris,
New Haven, $17.50, illegal
parking ; Columbus Doolin,
Pedro, Ohio, $27.50, left of
center; Leroy Burchett,
Pomeroy, and Okey VanMeter,
Mason, $27.50 each, failure to
stop within assured clear
distance; Wayne E. Millhoan,
Shade, Rt. I, $27.50, failure to
stop for car turning .

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
JANUARY 5th THRU JANUARY 11th

LUNCH TIME GOODIE.

•HOT DOG
(Regular Size)

eFRENCH FRIES
eDRINK
(Small Size)
of your choice

~~
· ··---·

89~

TO GO OR EAT HERE

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
SUNDAY, JAN . S

IMBODEN HOME
MIDDLEPORT - Kenneth
Imboden, Middleport fireman
who was injured in the R. H.
Rawlings and Sons Garage fire
last SWlday morning, has been
returned to his home from the
Holzer Medical Center where
he has been confined with head
and back injuries.

No Sub!.
No Coupons - No Limit

For Easy Pickup Call 446-2682
Your Order Will Be Waiting

~4akt ~4nppr

THE LAST
OF SHEILA
I Technicolor)
Starnng
Raquel Welch

••

"THAT OLD, FASHIONED GOODNESS"
tPG)

Co Iorca rtoon:

2nd &amp; OLIVE ST.

Pirate Byrd

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .

Show Starts at 7 p.m.

L

Firemen go

148 times
,
d unng
1974
0

/o

0

11&gt;

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Volunteer Fire Fighters an•swered 148 alarms in areas
served by the department
during 1974 according to the
unit's annual report released
Saturday by Chief Jim Northup.
Total estimated - propetrty
dampge, as a result of fires
during the past 12 rrionths was
$120,243 according to Northup.
The department spent 2,181 'h
man hours fighting fires in the
ctty of Gallipolis, Galhpolis,
Green, Addison and Clay
Townships.
Northup said the department
serves approximately 13,790
residents and that a total of 961
square miles are covered by
the department in all areas. He
added total real estate
protected in all areas was .
estimated around $270,3~0,000
and that total estimated
property saved in all areas was
$973,801.
The report ~tated there was
no major fire losses ($5,000 or
more) in the city dliring the
.past 12 months, but added
there were three major fires in
Gallipolis Twp . and one each in
Green, Addison and Clay
Townships. The complete 1974
report is on file in the
MWJicipal Bldg.

•

I

'

I.

'
$1,000 minimum deposit for 6 years . Interest is guaranteed for 6 years.
You can select your interest p,ayments on a monthly, quarterly or annual basis~

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
shoUld come to us
for income tax ~p.
Reason 5. It the IRS should call you
in for an audit, H &amp; R Block will go

with you at no additional cost. Not
as a legal representative .. . but we
can answer all questions about how
your taxes were p;epared.

.·..

'

Eugene S. Morrison, Sr .,
Rutll!nd, Rl. 1, Brenda S. Fry.
Sidney, Larry Harmon, Rt. I,
Ru,IIB11d and Jackie Smith,
Lahgsville, Rl. 1, $10 and costs
each, speedinjl; Russell H.
Leifheit, Pomeroy, Rt. 2, $10
and costs, passing at in'terseclion; Virginia R. Cuber,
Toledo, $13 and costs.
speeding;: Franklin M. Rizer,
Pomeroy, John F. Baird,
Cheshire, and James E.
William, Coolville, $11 and
co~ls each, speeding; Nick C.
Lagaras, Gallipolis, and Gary
A. Pope, Vinton, $5 and costs
each, illegal parking; Max E.
_, Hill, Racine .' and t ~~"r~'~""'" 'R .

Two vehicles leave road

cause us to feel a great loss;
others we're glad to have seen
go.
The Emma Smith Circle met
for the last time in 1974 with a
shor.t devotion and business
program, 24 attending. Secret
sisters were made known by
receiving gifts and names were
drawn for new ones.

•

,

Knight's store to continue

Learns Compromlle
Jackson knows other lawmakers do not
share his sensitivity for urban problems and
the dilemma of blacks. Bot he has learned to
"compromise and respect other people's
p&gt;sitions."
'
· In fact, Jackson is able to get along with
lawmakers. whose viewpoints are the euct
opposite of his own. For example, he has a high
regard for Sen. Oakley C. Collins, R-lronton,
who has few blacks in his district and is constantly fighting to get more money for rural
schools at the expense of urban areas.
"Oakley is a good man," Jackson oold.
"You can talk to him, and he always teUa you
what's on his mind."
As chairman of the Education Conunittee;
Jackson will finally gain the upper hand over
Collins, who chaired the conunlttee untlll973.
Jackson feels this assignment will take up
most of his time, and enacting a new, equitable
school financing formula is at the top of the llst
of priorities.
Jackson's wife, Minnie, is a school teacher.
One son, John, is a graduate of Miami
University and a banker in Cleveland. The
other, Dennis, is a senior at Bowling Green
State University Law School.

Don~t

· By Golde! Clendenin
PORTLAND- Looking back
on 1974 members of the
Reorgaruzed Church of Jesus
Christ of La Iter Day Saints see
a busy, well spent year behind
them.
Many mistakes and some
problems that were shared
,with
the
congreg atio n
somehow seemed lighter. We
are lookin g ahead to the
fulfillment of new plans and
hopes in the year ahead.
And at this·milestone in life.
humbly and thankfully we look
back on the many already past.
Some things that ore gone

r

"We got so we wouldn't assoctale wtth kids
who stole and broke windows," the senator
continued. "If it hadn 't been Jor her firm
discipline, we would have ended up in the
penitentiary. I appreciate it today. I didn't
then."
. •·
,
Jackson grew up m such poyerty he dldn I
always have lhe17 cents required to buy lunch
in schoo l. "I had lunch every other day," he
said. "The other days I went to a place where
you could buy two-&lt;lay old doughnuts for a
nickel."
'
Repaired Watches
Jackson went to Cleveland East Tech High
School which also produced Olympic track
stars Jesse Owens and Dave Albritton. He aiBo
went to Cleveland College, later to become
Case Western Reserve University, and to
Bradley Technical Institute in Peoria, Ill.,
where he learned to repair watches, timers and
clocks.
Aside from owning a jewelry store and
teaching watchmaking in school, Jackson has
been a heating contractor, installing and
repairing forced air furnaces, and a real estate
broker since 1950.
He also was a public relations man for the
Fisher-Faziofood chain, and now is community
relations director and assistant director of
personnel for Pick-n-Pay Soper Markets Inc.
Pr1or to his election to the Senate in 19116, he
was a Cleveland city councilman for four
years.
How does Jackson accoWlt for his elevation
from poverty to one of the highest governmental posts in Ohio? His own persistence and
changing times.
'l' "I bave always tried to do the best job
possible without being ambitious or tryllig to
push anybody .out of the way," Jackson said.
"Conditions and times hltve changed. Blacks
are being elevated to publlc office In states tbat
don't necessarily have a lot of blacks. People
around the country are beginning to cast aside
their old prejudices and realize that all people
are the same.''

•
j

Thirty persons were fined and 2Q others
forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Robert E.
Buck were Ellis E. Myers,
LangsviUe, $10 and costs
failure to keep on right half oi
roadway; Frederick L.
Brumbaugh, Parkersburg, and
Timothy L. Woltz, Ray, Ohio,
$7 and costs each, sPeeding;
Gary M. Smith, Middleport,
Stuart W. Pullin, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, and Wayne v.
Barnett, Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $5 and
costs each, oo muffler; Walter
Loveday, Bidwell, Clarence
Rodermond , Lodi, N. J ..

•

./

fined, ,- 20 b,o nds tako:n up by]udge

~J'OMEWJY -

'

I, '

'

..

An.nual
. inteiestrate.
.

Get the most·oqt of

3 LOCATIONS TO
SERVE YOU.!

your savings dollar.u

'

Federal regulations prohibit the payment of a
• time deposit prior to maturity unless 90, days of
interest is forfeited and interest on the amount
withdrawn is reduced to the passbook rate.

).

6t8 E. Main

27 Sycamore St.
· Gallipolis
· Ph. 446-0303

_,.

Pomeroy
992-3m

P~ .

'1open 9 to 6 Week.days. 9-·s Saturda\(_
No Appointment Necessary
'

.

I

'

t

'

eMAIN OFFICE • SEOOND AVE
I

aAUTO BANK •. THIRD AVE.

All accounts are insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance CQrporation to $40,000. Husbands and
wives' . accounts, through . single . and joint .
relationships, may be insur-ed up to · $200,000.

eVINTON BRANDl_" VINTO~, _OHIO
\'

. _,

'

' .

..

\

'.

·. ·
'•

'

.•.

�. I

·j ,

· II .

,.

1

•I

,.

~

.. I '

I

.. '
I

1

'

Miss Paula Morris

Miss Cindy Lawson

Miss Sandra Jo ~llington

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Lawson, Racine, are announcing the engagement and ap·
proaching marriage of their daughter, Cindy, to Rick Morris,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morris, Rt. I, Middleport. The
bride-elect is a senior at Southern High School. Her fiance, a
1969 graduate of Meigs High School,. is employed by the
Kyger Creek Power Plant. Wedding plans are Incomplete.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Wellington, Bidwell, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Sandra Jo, to Pvt.
Steve F. Eddy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Eddy, Kerr.
Miss Wellington is a junior at North Gallia High School and
Eddy is a private in the US Army stationed at Ft. Knox, Ky. A
February wedding is being planned.

Miss Connie Brumfield
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. Clyne
Brumfield, 'r14 Ga rfield Ave., Gallipolis, announce the
engagemen t of their daughter, Connie Sue, to Lel&lt;md Eugene
Byrd . Byrd is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Byrd, Miller, and
is employed qy Proctorville Gateway. The bride-elect is a
senior at Gallla Academy High School. Wedding plans are
li&gt;complete.
·

Woman -'s World

..
••
••
o

•••

.

•

r;"

Dorothy Countryman

Charlene Hoeflich

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Pomerov-Middleport
992-~156

446·2342

' GALLIPOUS - St. Peter's
Episcopal Churc h was the
S~&gt;t~ng April 20 for the wedding
o1~. Miss Eliza beth Ann 1Betsy J
· Saunders, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard B. Saunders, 609
Secwfd Ave., Gallipolis. and
Patrick Allen Canaday, son or
Mr. and Mrs . Marshall
Canaday, 648 Richards St. ,
Gallipolis .
.-.
Father Albert MacKenzie
perfonned the double ring
ceremony at 3: 30 p.m. before
'\ an altar of daisies and car~·
'oialions in soft spring colors
flanked by cande labra.
Preceding the ceremony Mrs.
Anne Fischer , organist,
presented a program of nuptial
music.
Given in marriage by her
parents, the bride was attired
in a gown of white sata peau
with natural waistline and full
· skirt, flowin g to a caihedral
train . The long bishop sleeves
and split neckline were
!rimmed with venice lace and
pearls.
The maid of honor and at·
tendants wore gowns fashioned
of flowered voile, with each
gown accented in a different
pastel
shade.
The
predominating color was
carried out in spring bouquets
and large brimmed hats. Maid
of honor was Miss Marilyn
Childers, and attendants were
Miss Joyce Canaday, sister of
the groom, Miss Debby
Saunders and Mrs. Del Russ.
Miss Patty Tour! was a junior
bridesmaid.
Jlel Russ served as best man,
:.,. ....

Ma.rshall regist-ration sch,eduled

while Dow and John Sa Wlders,
brothers of the bride, and Mark
Canaday, brother of the groom,
were ushers.
The mother of the bride wore
a mint green gown and the
mother of the groom selected a
rose gown. They both had
corsages of white daisies.
A reception was held in the
social room of the churc h
immediately following the

HUN TI NGTON, W. Va . -

Gp.111. on .htn . 7 for the benefit !loom 100 before registration
of cvcnin..: students ) to have· or during any part of the
Mursliall University will be · identifi l:ution eards made.
process. Eddins said.
conductt'd Tuesday, Jcm . 7, :md
- · , FcJllowing J.he ID Card
Tile cenl.cr will be ·oppn fr om
Wcdn(•sthty. Jrm . 8, front81i .lll. proced\l"c, stud ents should go
. lu noop and 1 to :1 p.m.
to the Registrar's Office for
Re~i s trulion for evening re~--ti s trafion permits t time
stude11ts will be Tuesday, Jun . tickets ). The student then can
Spring

eereniony . Serving were Miss

Martha Chiklders. Gallipolis,
Miss Peggy Saunders, cousin
of the bride, Ca tlettsburg, Ky .,
Mrs. Susan Smith , Point
Pleasant, and · Miss Katherine
Brown. Gal lipolis. Mrs. Jan
Bragg registered the guests.
Out-of-town guests were Mrs.
Elizabeth Tourt, grandmother
of the bride, Mrs. Marion
Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Tourl, Robbie,Patty, Malt and
Jason, Columbus; Miss Sue
Carlson, Mike Yaziac, Akron ;
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Donahue,
and Mr . and ·Mrs. Tom Hyrne,
Springfield.

Firs t-time Marsha ll
students need to be adnutted to
the
university
before
registration. The Admissions

VISITORS LISTED
- PORTLAND_ Visiting over
the holidays wi th Mr. and Mrs.
Hubert Price, Portland, were
their son and wife, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Price, Hamilton,
Ohio ; their daughter, Beverly
Price, Fort ·Lauderdale, Fla.;
Mrs. Ray Larkin, and Mr. and
Mrs. Herman aoede, Paw
Paw, w. va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Noel, Cumberland,
Md., and Mr. and Mrs. Miles
Kusic, Columbus.

Missionary Rally set
MIDDLEPORT
The
Bradford Church of Chirst will
be holding its Third Annual
Fai.th Promise Missionary
Rally Jan. 11-12, at 7:30 p.m.

daily. Roderick Huron w1ll be
the guest missionary speaker.
Rod is a missionary with

Toronto Chri sti an Mission ,
Toro nto, Canada, writin g

is having a

4·20. 40·52

White.and Color Pantsuits- Sizes 4-20

Half Size Panlsuits and Uniforms- 141!~ .

24 1/ 2

Group of Lab Coats - 20 Pet. Off
Blazer Jac kets, Were $25 .00 -

Now 515.00

Smock Tops - Save Up To 50 Pet .

MATERNITIES
Fall and Winter Maternity Slacks, Tops and Pa ntsuiis
ONLy

The Inflation Fighter

Shower is water-saver
SHOWER IS WATER.SAVER
Showers tend to use less water than b!lths. The average tub
bath uses 10 to IIi gallons of hot water while the average shower
uses only 8 to 12 gallons. You can save ewn more -both w~ter
and the energy to heat it-by turning off the water while soaping
yourself .
If you want the shower just a bit hotter, don't turn up the hot
water, but tum down the cold. Yoo gel the same effect without
escalating your water use. - P. J ., Pittsburgh.
• A LITTLE HUMIDITY

•

ijeat and humidity are valuable ccmmodites during the ccld
season . Avoid wasting these by leaving your clothes dryer
hooked up to discharge outside your house. Simply disconnect the
hose and plug the outside hole.
The humiditl' added to the air w~n your dryer is In use will
add to the comfort level In your house. The air duct should be
cleaned periodically, eXperts at General Electric suggest. - J.
G., Madison, Wis.

KNOW 'l1fY EGG
-'
When you're using eggs In recipes ~here they won't be on
display, such as In cakes, you might benefit from using Grade B
'eggs. They are probably just as nutritious as Grade A eggs, but
their whites are thinner and their yolks may be flatter,
marke\ing specialists at the U. S. Department of Agriculture
S!'Y ·

SinaUer~ized

eggs can \also be .bargains. If the price difference is more than sev011 cents, you get more for your money
by buying the smaller sizes. - R. L., Cinncinnall .
SWEET TREAT
Most of us ha've become accustomed to sugar in our diets,
and 'the yen for sweets won't subside just .because of high sugar
!rices.
So try replacing sweetened snacks and desserts wit)l natural
substi~utes such as fresh !roils in ~son, These haw the added
advantage of Increased nutrillonal value.- C. D.;Houstoo . .

Gospel sing
·scheduled

'

POMEROY - A gos pel
concert songfest will be held at
7:30p.m. Friday at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church on
\he SR 7 bypass.
: Co-sponsored by the church
and the Southeastern Ohio ·
Gospel Music Assn ., the
songfest will feature The
Gospel Messengers · from
Gallipolis. The Christian Five
from Point Pleasant, the
Shaffer· Family from Crown
City and others. Rev. Floyd fShook , pastor, exte nds an
invitation to the public. A
freewill offering will be taken .

DAR TO MEET
.MIDDLEPORT - Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
DO YOllRSELF .
Daughters
of the American
O.eck the clothing you're accustoined. to sending to the dry
Revolution
,
will.meet
at 2 p.m.
cleaners .. Much of it rould be washed by baild fairly easily, and
Fridav
at
the
home
of Mrs.
for 01uch less expenSe.
Look at the fiber content lag in the garment to make certain Dale · o.;tton in Middleport.
Mrs. Vemoo ·Weber wm·review
that it is washable -whether by hand or machine. If the fiber
"The Battle of Point Pleasant"
content tag isn't permanently sewn In the article, write the name
by. Patricia Burton . .,.here will ·
of the item on the tag and file it for future reference. - D. H.,
be
a discussion of the meaning
New York.,
·
and use of the DAR Insignia
(Have you a clever way tO'save energy •r fight inflation' . and delegates to the stale
Send your idea to The Inflalioo Fighler in care of !his newspaper. confere nce March 17-19 in
The best ideas will be used in future colwnns, and their authors • Clev.eland will be chosen:-Mrs. '
will be rewarded with a free copy of the $1.50 copy "Save Money· Charles McDaniel ls· assisting
. ..1 .
hostess for the me•ting.
Sa ve Gas. ")

rr

·...

SLEEPWEAR
WINTER ROBE S- REDUCED 20 PCT.
COFFEE COATS- NOW ONLY $5.00

Community
Corner ·By Charlene .Hoeflich
POMEROY- George Doolittle, son-in.Jaw of Gle!UJ and Mae
Lambert, Middleport, will be off In a week or so for South
America.
George is purchasing agent for Glidden Paints In Northern
Ohio, and will be joining a group of Glidden executives for the
two week trip. They' ll be traveling to Brazil, Costa Rica and
Nicaragua, visiting paint manufacturing companies and stores.
The Doolitlles'live in Berea and were here over Christmas
with Mr. and Mrs. Lambert.
. AND speaking of happy Iravelers, Carl and Betty Norton
have returned from a month's vacation in Hawaii with their son
and daughter-in-law, S.Sgt. and Mrs. James 0. Norton , and their
children, 0\rislina and Paulette.
While they were in Hawaii, Lieir son took a leave and took
them to many p-J!nts of interest on the Island of Oahu ·which they
had missed on their trip there In July. 1973. Jim and his family
will be returning tO the Mainland In 1976.
Incidentally, Paulette has completely recovered from the
open heart surgery which.she underwent in July of this year at
the Letterman Hospital in San Francisco.
f,
MRS. RALPH Spencer advises that her brother Edward
Mcintosh, Dayton, who spent many years in the Bend area, is
confined to the Grandview Hospital at 4ll5 West Grand Ave.,
Dayton, for treatment of a back ailment. His'birthday is Monday
and, he, like others, enjoys cards.
•
MRS. MAE Moore, Middleport, is another of those observing
birthdays on 0\rlstmas. This year she celebrated her 75th birth.
day anniversary with a family gathering. In the groop were Mrs.
Dorothy Collins, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hoowr and David, Mrs.
Joyce Grover, Terri and Todd Grover, Mrs. Gerri Mowery and
Colena, aU of Pomeroy. Cake and ice cream were served.
A SENIOR citi%ens rental housing survey is underway In
Meigs County In conjunction with some tentatiw plans for a nonprofit re!llal housing prejeet here. !leading up ~investigation
to detennine the need, just how much Meigs Countians might be
able to pay, and whether they would be willing to move If comfortable housing were providild is the staff at the Senior Citizens
Center.
•
,
The staff stl-esses that filling out the form does not in any
way obligate senior citi%ens.
'
·
DID YOU know that 0\ristmas dinners were delivered to 40
senior citizens, either shut-in or alone, on the day before. Ham
for the dinners was donated by the Yoong Wives Club of Chester
and the remainder of the food was purchased with donations
from several Individuals.
·
· Then for the shut-Ins, Je·anne Morgan, craftS director at the
senior Citizens Center, assisted by I&gt;" isy Blakeslee, Clara Wells,
Elvira Barr, Vvna Gillenwater, Laura Bye!'$, Eliza~th Lohse
and qll,ian Moore, m"de 12 holiday wreaths. These, too, were
delivered the. day befun• "h(istmas.
·
\

AWARD WINNERS ..:.. Awards for six months or more of dancing went to most improved
students of Gillian Moore 's dance studio at the recent Christmas recital. Winners were, 1 to r ,
front row, Mary Skaggs, Rowena Verion , Crystal Ritchie, Kimberly Coronel ; back row, Beth
Jeffers and Paula Covert.
·
.·

I

. •.

.

I

"""~

One Group
Women's

~

JANUARY
~

CLEARANCE

EE-EEE

Thom MeAn
Miss Wonderful

SLIPPERS

Infant thru 14

All Seasonal
Merchandise.
REDUCED 20% TO
50%

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE' MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

'

LADIES' FUR TRIM

COATS
REDUCED30%
MEN'S SUITS
Knits &amp; Wool Blends
Sizes 36to 50

REDUCED

E GROUP
NAME BRAND
WOMEN'S

SHOES

Sizes

STARTS MONDAY, JANUARY 6,

30%

30%
30%

.REDUCED

WOMI;
WIDE WIDTH

By Connie.

Lined &amp; Ui&gt;lined

Values To 53.00
Sale Price

Catalina. Jantzen
&amp; Coddington

MEN'S ALL WEATHER COATS
.REDUCED

30%

$}00

I

Values
to $17.99

·. Men's Colored

Values to $13.99

DRESS SHIRTS

GROUP

I

BOYS'

Storewide

HIKING
BOOTS
'

B.ROKEN
SIZES

Select Group
Boys &amp; Girls

Poll Parrot
Active Age

On All

&gt;uede or Leather

h ·Pri.ce

ON SALE
For Men &amp; Women

1

MerChandise

20% off

MANY OTHER ITEMS
IN STORE

MEN'S SPORTSHIRTS
Knits, Flannels
Dacron &amp; Colton

-

One Group

ALL OTHER

. .

RUBBER .·
FOOTWEAR

MEN'S

•

SHOES
Valueslo$17.99

Dilfgo

2Q%OFF

\

steel

Several Styles

30%

4,

5

I.

. REDUCED ·

SADDLE·
OXFORDS

Connies ,

Buc:ky ,

20%

All Merchapdise
from our regular
Name Brand
$tock

Thom

MeAn . Black·white , navy.
white, na vy . tan. brown .
.. lan. •
'

. DRESS PANTS •
DRESS 'CASUALS

COATS

30%

2001
. . 10

REDUCED

buckl~

30%

REDUCED

by Lll(ly Manhattan,

Sizes 35 to 50

Cat.alina, Jantzen

, LADIES SLACKS

20%

REDUCED20%

MEN'S WORK UNIFORMS

LADIES WINTER. COATS

REDUCEP

PRICE

f:!ritage house
Your Thom ·MeAn Store Middleport, Ohio

...

i
I.

LADIES'

LADIES

SUBURBAN COATS

DRESSES

Y2

20%

·REDUCED

· Sizes 6 to 20
MEN'S

PRICE

11ATS &amp; CAPS
Dress &amp; Casual

KNITS, WOOL BLENDS
&amp; COTTONS

20 o/o

REDUCE~

1 Lot Ladies' Flexnit

All sales final
NO APPROVALS

-- GIRDLES
REDUCED 50%

'

NO LAYAWAY$

'

9:15 to 5:00
MC)N.-FRI.
'

'

'

.

.

'

.

9:15 TO 8:00

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SAT.

I

..

I.

.

20%

Bahr Clo.t hiers

arctics .

I
'

I

'I

MEN'S SPORT COATS

BLOUSES

1f2

30%

REDUCED

30% OFF

toe boots, insulated

boots and 2,

BOots

20%.0FF .

Includes men 's miners

PRICE

Girls'

,W!n's &amp; Boys'

- Cardigan, Pullovers
&amp; Sleeveless

Ladies' All Weather

30% to .50%

· Thom
SHOES
MeAn

20% :off ··

MEN'S SWEATERS

Wools. Corduroy &amp;
Leather

REDUCED from

'

30%ro

COATS &amp;JACKETS

REDUCED

"·

LADIES PANT ~SUITS
REDUCED

MEN'S CARCOATS, STADIUM

REDUCED

30%

R.EDUCED

d

REDUCED

~975

LADIES SWEATERS
AND CAPES

lADIES OPAQUE HOSE

Sizes 36 to '48.

·3o% ·off

I

Gallipolis, Ohio

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

LADIES KNIT SUITS

SHOES

HIKING BOOTS

1-:tc.

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

.

Men's &amp; Women's
· Suede

l. /

~ ·-..

1

Starts Friday,
Jan. 3
.

Puppetry workshop slated

\

~

Sizes 30 to 42
.

330 Second Avenurl

See .Our Bright and·
Sparkling ''Cruise Into
Spring' ' Lines

GAI.L!POLIS - The Seru01·
Citizens
Center, located at 220
hours 1Ba.m. to 4::10 p.m.) and
Jac
kson
Pike in the County
Monday and Tuesday Jan . 6
Home
Buildi
ng, is open
and 7. from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. It
also will be open evening hoW's Monday through Friday from 9
dm·ing the late registration a.m . to 3 p.m.
The schedule of events for
per iod - J1m. t:l, 14 and 15 this week is as follows:
from 5:30 to 7 p.m.
Monday , Jan . 6 Chorus
- With admission papers in
Practice,
1:ao p.m.
hand, lhe student should go to
Tuesday,
Jan. 7, Quilting and
Old Main i\uditori lml (open at
Visiting, 9 a .m .·3 p.m:; Blood
Pressure Check, 1·2 p.m .
Wednesday, .Jan. 8, Movies
NEW ARRIVAL
about Art, J-3 p.m .
ADDISON - Mr. and Mrs.
Thursday, Jan . 9, Lunch
Richard Neal, Addison, an- served by Seni or Citizens
nounce the bi rth of their Center at Co unty Ga ra ge
daughter, Jennifer Jo. She was Auction; Potluck Supper, 6:30
born Dec . 13 and weig hed 7 p.m.
lbs., 12 ozs., and is welcomed at
Friday, Jan . JO, Art Class, 1-3
home by a brother. Richie, age p.m. ; Ce nt er Cha irpersons'
7. Maternal grandparents are Meeting, 1·3 p.m.; Center is
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Hall, Sr .. open for Card Games, 7 p.m.
Cheshire. Paterna l grand·
Meals are se•·ved daily at the
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Center at noon by the Senior
Ernest Qui llen, Addison .
Nutrition Program.

· REDUCED

herit_a ge house, Middleport

project. The others are two Je.fferson , Meigs, Monroe ,
districts of the Appalachian 'Morgan , Muskingtun, Nobie,
Regiona l Commissio n: the · Perry, Tusc·a rawas and
Buckeye Hills· Hocking Valley Washington. Of the 17, 10 also.
Regional Development District are currently BTC members.
in
Marietta
and
the Those are Belmont, carroll,
Tuscarawas Valley Regional Coshocton, Guernsey , Hoimes,
Advisory Committee in Mon#, Muskingwn, Noble,
Tuscarawas and Washington .
Cambridge.
The one-year Buckeye
As part of the major ad·
vertising effort to increase Travel · Tour Project was
tourism in Southeastern Ohio, establi shed to demonstrate
the Buckeye Tourist Council that adequate and ·effective
will expand from its current 13 promotion and adver tising
counl!es to 20 counties. ·This could increase the ntunber of
"ill encompass all counties in tourists stopping in this area ,
the ARC districts plus three preserve and en hance the
counties (Coltunbi'anu. Knox,. . quality of attractions and
and Stark) which' are curren tlv services available to tourists
Buckeye Tourist Council and thereby boost the general
members and border the economy of the region.
Smith has aesi~ned special
TVRAC. The 17 ARC counties
tradert)arks
and jingles that all
involved are Athens, Belmont
Carroll, Coshocton, Guernsey: Buckeye Tourist ·council
Harrison, Hocking, Holmes, members will use in their local
proJIIotion"·and advertising to
identify their facili ties as part
of the. broader regional ad·
vertising campaign. The
Irademarks and jingles will be
revealed for the first lime at
·up 1. adults, and teachers who the Jan . 17 meeting. Also to be
are interested in developing shown for the ftrst time at the
new ways of presenting meeting will be proposed high· ..
, material and getting across way signs based on the cam·
ideas are especially en· paign 's four th emes: Ohio
couraged to participate.
River Highway, Musltingum
The fee of $8 covers cost of River Scenic Parkway, the
lnslruction. building of screen, National Road .Historic Highand use of audio-visual way, J"'d the Hocking Valley
equipment .. Each participant Scenic Area.
'
will be responsible for the cost
Anyone interested in the
of his or her own puppets ·and promOtion · of touriSm in
scenery prepared during the Southeastern Ohio is urged to
workshop.
attend the Jan. 17 meeting.
The class will meet in Room Requests for · further in ·
403. Seigfred Hall , Ohio fonnation . should be diricled
University, from 9:30 to 11:30 to : ·Buckeye Travel • Tour
a.m, Further information may Project office, 853 Wheeling
be obtained II¥ calling 59+4907. Ave., Cambridge, 43725, phOJ!e
614-139-44118.

evening registran ts.

suggests-

""

...~............

CORDUROY PANTS

Tourist plan for SE Ohio ready

ATHENS - A Saturday
morning Shad,aw Puppetry
Workshop will be held at Ohio
Univer5ity Jan . 1l to March 8.
Participants will be bound
only ~)'the limits of their own
imagination, crea!ivity and
ability. The workshop will be
experimental in that the old
elements of shadow puppetry
as handed · down from
generation to generation in
counlries such ·as Indonesia.
Malaysia, and Thailand will be
; integrated with instrwnents of
modem technology : color slide
projectors, tape recorders ,
electronic sQund devices, and
so on .
Children (8 years oJd &lt;md

~;cnw. '"

40'%

•

CAMBRIDGE - A major
advertising plan to increase
tourism in Southeastern Ohio
will be unveiled at a special
public meeti!'g__at 7 p.m.
Friday . Jan . · 17, at the
Old
Shen ando ah - Inn ,
Washington (1-70 ;md SR 285).
J. Greg Smith, Uncoln, Neb.,
consultant to the federally .
funded Buckeye Travel · Tour
Project, will given an audiovisua l
presentation
of
suggested trademark s,
slogans, jingles, billboard
designs and magazine ads. He
also will discuss .the re·
organization of the Buckeye
Tourist Council, a private, nonprofit organization, which will
have th.e responsibility of
raising funds to implement the
advertising program .
· The Buckeye Tourist Council
is one of three organizations
coopera ti ng in the federal

·~.........

1 RACK OF KNIT
TOPS &amp; SLACKS
REDUCED

:.-.~-:..~-:;..;~::.::::-:.-:;...~~~~-=;8:~~-=~~~:(Ill
, ~----

.'

.'

Reg.

begin Jan. Sand all.new and old Mrs. Moore at 446-3632, as soon
students must register with as possible.

'

1..

edited by John K. ·Huk . This
magazine, a mon thly , is circulated in 2S countries.
Huron has traveled in the
Soviet
Uni on,
Poland,
Hungary, and Czechoslovakia
and will report on .visits made
among Christians in . these
countrles. Everyone is cordially invited to attend this
• missionary rally.

COAT SWEATERS_.z..l.f..EL~~~---H5

.

the past year. Award winners
must have taken six months or
more. but were not necessarily
the most talented.
Awards went to Beth Jeffers,
Paula Covert, Kimberly
Coronel.' Crys tal Ritchie,
Rowena Verion and Mary
Skaggs.
Santa was on hand to hear
the childr en's Christmas
wishes and pictures of the
group were ta ken by Max
Tawney.
To conclude the prllgr8lll the
students presented Mrs. Moore
with 1 2 long~tenuned red roses
and a four rose corsage. Mrs.
Moore thanks all the folk who
attended and supported the
children.
The winter semester will

magazine, " The Christian,"

REDUCED 20%

The Gillian Moore Dancers

dances.
Awards were presented to
the dancers by Rio Grande
College Coach Art Lanham.
·These went to the students who
made the most progress during

rad i o

Huron is associated with John
K. Huk, a Russian· American,
and George Repetski, a
Russian - Canadian .
Toronto Christian Mission,
under the leadership of Gene
Dulin, director, broadcasts in
the Russian language four
hours and 30 minutes each
week fr om sta tions in Manila,
Ph ilippine Islands; · Monte
Carlo, Monaco ; Bo nai re,
Netherlands Antilles; San
Francisco, caM., and the
medium wave station on Cheju
Island, South Korea.
Huron is a curriculum wri ter
for Standard Publish'ing,
Cincinnati. In addition to his
radi o work with the misson, he
is a conlributor to the Russian

Reductions of 20% to 50% on

GALLIPOLIS - Gillian
Moore's dan&lt;'e students per·
formed
at
Washington
Elementary School Dec, 21 to
end the fall semester . The
program included 18 different

ror

Sovie t Union via shortwave .

Unifor m s~ Size

8 a.m'. to noon and 1 to 3 p.m.,
Jan . 7 and Jan . 8, and from 6:30
to 8:30 p.m., . J~n . 7 to aid

nornud university bus in ess

UNIFORMS

Moore dancers present recital

Office is located in the east end
of Old Main in Room 123,
telephone t304) 696·3136. The
office "'Will be open during

Mrs. Patrick A. Canackzy

manuscripts

Wh ite and Color

ftl

and tnition lllust be paid at the proceed with registration . The
time of. re,.;istration accordi ng ent ire pruecss can be done in
.to Robert H: Eddins, r~gish]tr. ntxlllt 20 minutes, Eddins said.
Regislration will be con.
Arrangeme nt s 'ror late
ductc'&lt;l in Gldli ckson Hall 118ih registrfltion ca n be made wi 1t1
Str el't , and Viq~ inia Ave .). U.ie Registrar 's Offiec, he said .
Hegist ratiu n permit s t ti m ~ Lat e regis tration pf'rmit s
tickets) will be i:IVailablc after (lime tiekets .I will be ave.~i lablc
8 t-1. 111 . Jan . 7 in the Registrar's at the Reg.istrar's Offirc after 8
Office !n Old Main Room 105. a .m., J an . 9.
Eddins sa id the registration
For the first time, students
proeedun~ is not a' problem if unfamiliHr
with
tht'
the st~clent will follow registration process or iri need
established proce.dures. He of cwHdemic advice ca n ~o to
outlined
Lhe
step.s
of the new Registrntion Assistrcgistrution as follows :
an ce Ccn ler in Gu!li,~ k son Hall

broadcasts beamed in to the

'

re~i~tratim)

lenn

7 !rom 6::10 to 8:30p.m . Fees go to Gullickson H11ll and

SALE

.

'I

Couple ·married in April

.'·························'······ · ····· ······ · ······ ·' ·········· ··~·· ······· ··············· · ·
•
••

.

'

_5 -The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. s, 197S.

~

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Ervin
Morris, Bidwell, announce the engagement of their daughter,
Paula Jean, to Steven Eugene Wellington, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Wellington, Belpre. Wellington is a senior at North
Gallia High School and Miss Morris is a senior at Gallia
Academy High School. Wedding plans are ip~mplete .

'

'·

I .

'

I•

,.

, ··

4- The Sunday Times • Sentinel. Sunday .Jan. s. !975

'-

.I

I

••

'

(

I'

•
I

•

·.

'"

.'

�. I

·j ,

· II .

,.

1

•I

,.

~

.. I '

I

.. '
I

1

'

Miss Paula Morris

Miss Cindy Lawson

Miss Sandra Jo ~llington

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Lawson, Racine, are announcing the engagement and ap·
proaching marriage of their daughter, Cindy, to Rick Morris,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morris, Rt. I, Middleport. The
bride-elect is a senior at Southern High School. Her fiance, a
1969 graduate of Meigs High School,. is employed by the
Kyger Creek Power Plant. Wedding plans are Incomplete.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Wellington, Bidwell, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Sandra Jo, to Pvt.
Steve F. Eddy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Eddy, Kerr.
Miss Wellington is a junior at North Gallia High School and
Eddy is a private in the US Army stationed at Ft. Knox, Ky. A
February wedding is being planned.

Miss Connie Brumfield
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. Clyne
Brumfield, 'r14 Ga rfield Ave., Gallipolis, announce the
engagemen t of their daughter, Connie Sue, to Lel&lt;md Eugene
Byrd . Byrd is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Byrd, Miller, and
is employed qy Proctorville Gateway. The bride-elect is a
senior at Gallla Academy High School. Wedding plans are
li&gt;complete.
·

Woman -'s World

..
••
••
o

•••

.

•

r;"

Dorothy Countryman

Charlene Hoeflich

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Pomerov-Middleport
992-~156

446·2342

' GALLIPOUS - St. Peter's
Episcopal Churc h was the
S~&gt;t~ng April 20 for the wedding
o1~. Miss Eliza beth Ann 1Betsy J
· Saunders, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard B. Saunders, 609
Secwfd Ave., Gallipolis. and
Patrick Allen Canaday, son or
Mr. and Mrs . Marshall
Canaday, 648 Richards St. ,
Gallipolis .
.-.
Father Albert MacKenzie
perfonned the double ring
ceremony at 3: 30 p.m. before
'\ an altar of daisies and car~·
'oialions in soft spring colors
flanked by cande labra.
Preceding the ceremony Mrs.
Anne Fischer , organist,
presented a program of nuptial
music.
Given in marriage by her
parents, the bride was attired
in a gown of white sata peau
with natural waistline and full
· skirt, flowin g to a caihedral
train . The long bishop sleeves
and split neckline were
!rimmed with venice lace and
pearls.
The maid of honor and at·
tendants wore gowns fashioned
of flowered voile, with each
gown accented in a different
pastel
shade.
The
predominating color was
carried out in spring bouquets
and large brimmed hats. Maid
of honor was Miss Marilyn
Childers, and attendants were
Miss Joyce Canaday, sister of
the groom, Miss Debby
Saunders and Mrs. Del Russ.
Miss Patty Tour! was a junior
bridesmaid.
Jlel Russ served as best man,
:.,. ....

Ma.rshall regist-ration sch,eduled

while Dow and John Sa Wlders,
brothers of the bride, and Mark
Canaday, brother of the groom,
were ushers.
The mother of the bride wore
a mint green gown and the
mother of the groom selected a
rose gown. They both had
corsages of white daisies.
A reception was held in the
social room of the churc h
immediately following the

HUN TI NGTON, W. Va . -

Gp.111. on .htn . 7 for the benefit !loom 100 before registration
of cvcnin..: students ) to have· or during any part of the
Mursliall University will be · identifi l:ution eards made.
process. Eddins said.
conductt'd Tuesday, Jcm . 7, :md
- · , FcJllowing J.he ID Card
Tile cenl.cr will be ·oppn fr om
Wcdn(•sthty. Jrm . 8, front81i .lll. proced\l"c, stud ents should go
. lu noop and 1 to :1 p.m.
to the Registrar's Office for
Re~i s trulion for evening re~--ti s trafion permits t time
stude11ts will be Tuesday, Jun . tickets ). The student then can
Spring

eereniony . Serving were Miss

Martha Chiklders. Gallipolis,
Miss Peggy Saunders, cousin
of the bride, Ca tlettsburg, Ky .,
Mrs. Susan Smith , Point
Pleasant, and · Miss Katherine
Brown. Gal lipolis. Mrs. Jan
Bragg registered the guests.
Out-of-town guests were Mrs.
Elizabeth Tourt, grandmother
of the bride, Mrs. Marion
Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Tourl, Robbie,Patty, Malt and
Jason, Columbus; Miss Sue
Carlson, Mike Yaziac, Akron ;
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Donahue,
and Mr . and ·Mrs. Tom Hyrne,
Springfield.

Firs t-time Marsha ll
students need to be adnutted to
the
university
before
registration. The Admissions

VISITORS LISTED
- PORTLAND_ Visiting over
the holidays wi th Mr. and Mrs.
Hubert Price, Portland, were
their son and wife, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Price, Hamilton,
Ohio ; their daughter, Beverly
Price, Fort ·Lauderdale, Fla.;
Mrs. Ray Larkin, and Mr. and
Mrs. Herman aoede, Paw
Paw, w. va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Noel, Cumberland,
Md., and Mr. and Mrs. Miles
Kusic, Columbus.

Missionary Rally set
MIDDLEPORT
The
Bradford Church of Chirst will
be holding its Third Annual
Fai.th Promise Missionary
Rally Jan. 11-12, at 7:30 p.m.

daily. Roderick Huron w1ll be
the guest missionary speaker.
Rod is a missionary with

Toronto Chri sti an Mission ,
Toro nto, Canada, writin g

is having a

4·20. 40·52

White.and Color Pantsuits- Sizes 4-20

Half Size Panlsuits and Uniforms- 141!~ .

24 1/ 2

Group of Lab Coats - 20 Pet. Off
Blazer Jac kets, Were $25 .00 -

Now 515.00

Smock Tops - Save Up To 50 Pet .

MATERNITIES
Fall and Winter Maternity Slacks, Tops and Pa ntsuiis
ONLy

The Inflation Fighter

Shower is water-saver
SHOWER IS WATER.SAVER
Showers tend to use less water than b!lths. The average tub
bath uses 10 to IIi gallons of hot water while the average shower
uses only 8 to 12 gallons. You can save ewn more -both w~ter
and the energy to heat it-by turning off the water while soaping
yourself .
If you want the shower just a bit hotter, don't turn up the hot
water, but tum down the cold. Yoo gel the same effect without
escalating your water use. - P. J ., Pittsburgh.
• A LITTLE HUMIDITY

•

ijeat and humidity are valuable ccmmodites during the ccld
season . Avoid wasting these by leaving your clothes dryer
hooked up to discharge outside your house. Simply disconnect the
hose and plug the outside hole.
The humiditl' added to the air w~n your dryer is In use will
add to the comfort level In your house. The air duct should be
cleaned periodically, eXperts at General Electric suggest. - J.
G., Madison, Wis.

KNOW 'l1fY EGG
-'
When you're using eggs In recipes ~here they won't be on
display, such as In cakes, you might benefit from using Grade B
'eggs. They are probably just as nutritious as Grade A eggs, but
their whites are thinner and their yolks may be flatter,
marke\ing specialists at the U. S. Department of Agriculture
S!'Y ·

SinaUer~ized

eggs can \also be .bargains. If the price difference is more than sev011 cents, you get more for your money
by buying the smaller sizes. - R. L., Cinncinnall .
SWEET TREAT
Most of us ha've become accustomed to sugar in our diets,
and 'the yen for sweets won't subside just .because of high sugar
!rices.
So try replacing sweetened snacks and desserts wit)l natural
substi~utes such as fresh !roils in ~son, These haw the added
advantage of Increased nutrillonal value.- C. D.;Houstoo . .

Gospel sing
·scheduled

'

POMEROY - A gos pel
concert songfest will be held at
7:30p.m. Friday at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church on
\he SR 7 bypass.
: Co-sponsored by the church
and the Southeastern Ohio ·
Gospel Music Assn ., the
songfest will feature The
Gospel Messengers · from
Gallipolis. The Christian Five
from Point Pleasant, the
Shaffer· Family from Crown
City and others. Rev. Floyd fShook , pastor, exte nds an
invitation to the public. A
freewill offering will be taken .

DAR TO MEET
.MIDDLEPORT - Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
DO YOllRSELF .
Daughters
of the American
O.eck the clothing you're accustoined. to sending to the dry
Revolution
,
will.meet
at 2 p.m.
cleaners .. Much of it rould be washed by baild fairly easily, and
Fridav
at
the
home
of Mrs.
for 01uch less expenSe.
Look at the fiber content lag in the garment to make certain Dale · o.;tton in Middleport.
Mrs. Vemoo ·Weber wm·review
that it is washable -whether by hand or machine. If the fiber
"The Battle of Point Pleasant"
content tag isn't permanently sewn In the article, write the name
by. Patricia Burton . .,.here will ·
of the item on the tag and file it for future reference. - D. H.,
be
a discussion of the meaning
New York.,
·
and use of the DAR Insignia
(Have you a clever way tO'save energy •r fight inflation' . and delegates to the stale
Send your idea to The Inflalioo Fighler in care of !his newspaper. confere nce March 17-19 in
The best ideas will be used in future colwnns, and their authors • Clev.eland will be chosen:-Mrs. '
will be rewarded with a free copy of the $1.50 copy "Save Money· Charles McDaniel ls· assisting
. ..1 .
hostess for the me•ting.
Sa ve Gas. ")

rr

·...

SLEEPWEAR
WINTER ROBE S- REDUCED 20 PCT.
COFFEE COATS- NOW ONLY $5.00

Community
Corner ·By Charlene .Hoeflich
POMEROY- George Doolittle, son-in.Jaw of Gle!UJ and Mae
Lambert, Middleport, will be off In a week or so for South
America.
George is purchasing agent for Glidden Paints In Northern
Ohio, and will be joining a group of Glidden executives for the
two week trip. They' ll be traveling to Brazil, Costa Rica and
Nicaragua, visiting paint manufacturing companies and stores.
The Doolitlles'live in Berea and were here over Christmas
with Mr. and Mrs. Lambert.
. AND speaking of happy Iravelers, Carl and Betty Norton
have returned from a month's vacation in Hawaii with their son
and daughter-in-law, S.Sgt. and Mrs. James 0. Norton , and their
children, 0\rislina and Paulette.
While they were in Hawaii, Lieir son took a leave and took
them to many p-J!nts of interest on the Island of Oahu ·which they
had missed on their trip there In July. 1973. Jim and his family
will be returning tO the Mainland In 1976.
Incidentally, Paulette has completely recovered from the
open heart surgery which.she underwent in July of this year at
the Letterman Hospital in San Francisco.
f,
MRS. RALPH Spencer advises that her brother Edward
Mcintosh, Dayton, who spent many years in the Bend area, is
confined to the Grandview Hospital at 4ll5 West Grand Ave.,
Dayton, for treatment of a back ailment. His'birthday is Monday
and, he, like others, enjoys cards.
•
MRS. MAE Moore, Middleport, is another of those observing
birthdays on 0\rlstmas. This year she celebrated her 75th birth.
day anniversary with a family gathering. In the groop were Mrs.
Dorothy Collins, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hoowr and David, Mrs.
Joyce Grover, Terri and Todd Grover, Mrs. Gerri Mowery and
Colena, aU of Pomeroy. Cake and ice cream were served.
A SENIOR citi%ens rental housing survey is underway In
Meigs County In conjunction with some tentatiw plans for a nonprofit re!llal housing prejeet here. !leading up ~investigation
to detennine the need, just how much Meigs Countians might be
able to pay, and whether they would be willing to move If comfortable housing were providild is the staff at the Senior Citizens
Center.
•
,
The staff stl-esses that filling out the form does not in any
way obligate senior citi%ens.
'
·
DID YOU know that 0\ristmas dinners were delivered to 40
senior citizens, either shut-in or alone, on the day before. Ham
for the dinners was donated by the Yoong Wives Club of Chester
and the remainder of the food was purchased with donations
from several Individuals.
·
· Then for the shut-Ins, Je·anne Morgan, craftS director at the
senior Citizens Center, assisted by I&gt;" isy Blakeslee, Clara Wells,
Elvira Barr, Vvna Gillenwater, Laura Bye!'$, Eliza~th Lohse
and qll,ian Moore, m"de 12 holiday wreaths. These, too, were
delivered the. day befun• "h(istmas.
·
\

AWARD WINNERS ..:.. Awards for six months or more of dancing went to most improved
students of Gillian Moore 's dance studio at the recent Christmas recital. Winners were, 1 to r ,
front row, Mary Skaggs, Rowena Verion , Crystal Ritchie, Kimberly Coronel ; back row, Beth
Jeffers and Paula Covert.
·
.·

I

. •.

.

I

"""~

One Group
Women's

~

JANUARY
~

CLEARANCE

EE-EEE

Thom MeAn
Miss Wonderful

SLIPPERS

Infant thru 14

All Seasonal
Merchandise.
REDUCED 20% TO
50%

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE' MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

'

LADIES' FUR TRIM

COATS
REDUCED30%
MEN'S SUITS
Knits &amp; Wool Blends
Sizes 36to 50

REDUCED

E GROUP
NAME BRAND
WOMEN'S

SHOES

Sizes

STARTS MONDAY, JANUARY 6,

30%

30%
30%

.REDUCED

WOMI;
WIDE WIDTH

By Connie.

Lined &amp; Ui&gt;lined

Values To 53.00
Sale Price

Catalina. Jantzen
&amp; Coddington

MEN'S ALL WEATHER COATS
.REDUCED

30%

$}00

I

Values
to $17.99

·. Men's Colored

Values to $13.99

DRESS SHIRTS

GROUP

I

BOYS'

Storewide

HIKING
BOOTS
'

B.ROKEN
SIZES

Select Group
Boys &amp; Girls

Poll Parrot
Active Age

On All

&gt;uede or Leather

h ·Pri.ce

ON SALE
For Men &amp; Women

1

MerChandise

20% off

MANY OTHER ITEMS
IN STORE

MEN'S SPORTSHIRTS
Knits, Flannels
Dacron &amp; Colton

-

One Group

ALL OTHER

. .

RUBBER .·
FOOTWEAR

MEN'S

•

SHOES
Valueslo$17.99

Dilfgo

2Q%OFF

\

steel

Several Styles

30%

4,

5

I.

. REDUCED ·

SADDLE·
OXFORDS

Connies ,

Buc:ky ,

20%

All Merchapdise
from our regular
Name Brand
$tock

Thom

MeAn . Black·white , navy.
white, na vy . tan. brown .
.. lan. •
'

. DRESS PANTS •
DRESS 'CASUALS

COATS

30%

2001
. . 10

REDUCED

buckl~

30%

REDUCED

by Lll(ly Manhattan,

Sizes 35 to 50

Cat.alina, Jantzen

, LADIES SLACKS

20%

REDUCED20%

MEN'S WORK UNIFORMS

LADIES WINTER. COATS

REDUCEP

PRICE

f:!ritage house
Your Thom ·MeAn Store Middleport, Ohio

...

i
I.

LADIES'

LADIES

SUBURBAN COATS

DRESSES

Y2

20%

·REDUCED

· Sizes 6 to 20
MEN'S

PRICE

11ATS &amp; CAPS
Dress &amp; Casual

KNITS, WOOL BLENDS
&amp; COTTONS

20 o/o

REDUCE~

1 Lot Ladies' Flexnit

All sales final
NO APPROVALS

-- GIRDLES
REDUCED 50%

'

NO LAYAWAY$

'

9:15 to 5:00
MC)N.-FRI.
'

'

'

.

.

'

.

9:15 TO 8:00

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SAT.

I

..

I.

.

20%

Bahr Clo.t hiers

arctics .

I
'

I

'I

MEN'S SPORT COATS

BLOUSES

1f2

30%

REDUCED

30% OFF

toe boots, insulated

boots and 2,

BOots

20%.0FF .

Includes men 's miners

PRICE

Girls'

,W!n's &amp; Boys'

- Cardigan, Pullovers
&amp; Sleeveless

Ladies' All Weather

30% to .50%

· Thom
SHOES
MeAn

20% :off ··

MEN'S SWEATERS

Wools. Corduroy &amp;
Leather

REDUCED from

'

30%ro

COATS &amp;JACKETS

REDUCED

"·

LADIES PANT ~SUITS
REDUCED

MEN'S CARCOATS, STADIUM

REDUCED

30%

R.EDUCED

d

REDUCED

~975

LADIES SWEATERS
AND CAPES

lADIES OPAQUE HOSE

Sizes 36 to '48.

·3o% ·off

I

Gallipolis, Ohio

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

LADIES KNIT SUITS

SHOES

HIKING BOOTS

1-:tc.

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

.

Men's &amp; Women's
· Suede

l. /

~ ·-..

1

Starts Friday,
Jan. 3
.

Puppetry workshop slated

\

~

Sizes 30 to 42
.

330 Second Avenurl

See .Our Bright and·
Sparkling ''Cruise Into
Spring' ' Lines

GAI.L!POLIS - The Seru01·
Citizens
Center, located at 220
hours 1Ba.m. to 4::10 p.m.) and
Jac
kson
Pike in the County
Monday and Tuesday Jan . 6
Home
Buildi
ng, is open
and 7. from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. It
also will be open evening hoW's Monday through Friday from 9
dm·ing the late registration a.m . to 3 p.m.
The schedule of events for
per iod - J1m. t:l, 14 and 15 this week is as follows:
from 5:30 to 7 p.m.
Monday , Jan . 6 Chorus
- With admission papers in
Practice,
1:ao p.m.
hand, lhe student should go to
Tuesday,
Jan. 7, Quilting and
Old Main i\uditori lml (open at
Visiting, 9 a .m .·3 p.m:; Blood
Pressure Check, 1·2 p.m .
Wednesday, .Jan. 8, Movies
NEW ARRIVAL
about Art, J-3 p.m .
ADDISON - Mr. and Mrs.
Thursday, Jan . 9, Lunch
Richard Neal, Addison, an- served by Seni or Citizens
nounce the bi rth of their Center at Co unty Ga ra ge
daughter, Jennifer Jo. She was Auction; Potluck Supper, 6:30
born Dec . 13 and weig hed 7 p.m.
lbs., 12 ozs., and is welcomed at
Friday, Jan . JO, Art Class, 1-3
home by a brother. Richie, age p.m. ; Ce nt er Cha irpersons'
7. Maternal grandparents are Meeting, 1·3 p.m.; Center is
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Hall, Sr .. open for Card Games, 7 p.m.
Cheshire. Paterna l grand·
Meals are se•·ved daily at the
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Center at noon by the Senior
Ernest Qui llen, Addison .
Nutrition Program.

· REDUCED

herit_a ge house, Middleport

project. The others are two Je.fferson , Meigs, Monroe ,
districts of the Appalachian 'Morgan , Muskingtun, Nobie,
Regiona l Commissio n: the · Perry, Tusc·a rawas and
Buckeye Hills· Hocking Valley Washington. Of the 17, 10 also.
Regional Development District are currently BTC members.
in
Marietta
and
the Those are Belmont, carroll,
Tuscarawas Valley Regional Coshocton, Guernsey , Hoimes,
Advisory Committee in Mon#, Muskingwn, Noble,
Tuscarawas and Washington .
Cambridge.
The one-year Buckeye
As part of the major ad·
vertising effort to increase Travel · Tour Project was
tourism in Southeastern Ohio, establi shed to demonstrate
the Buckeye Tourist Council that adequate and ·effective
will expand from its current 13 promotion and adver tising
counl!es to 20 counties. ·This could increase the ntunber of
"ill encompass all counties in tourists stopping in this area ,
the ARC districts plus three preserve and en hance the
counties (Coltunbi'anu. Knox,. . quality of attractions and
and Stark) which' are curren tlv services available to tourists
Buckeye Tourist Council and thereby boost the general
members and border the economy of the region.
Smith has aesi~ned special
TVRAC. The 17 ARC counties
tradert)arks
and jingles that all
involved are Athens, Belmont
Carroll, Coshocton, Guernsey: Buckeye Tourist ·council
Harrison, Hocking, Holmes, members will use in their local
proJIIotion"·and advertising to
identify their facili ties as part
of the. broader regional ad·
vertising campaign. The
Irademarks and jingles will be
revealed for the first lime at
·up 1. adults, and teachers who the Jan . 17 meeting. Also to be
are interested in developing shown for the ftrst time at the
new ways of presenting meeting will be proposed high· ..
, material and getting across way signs based on the cam·
ideas are especially en· paign 's four th emes: Ohio
couraged to participate.
River Highway, Musltingum
The fee of $8 covers cost of River Scenic Parkway, the
lnslruction. building of screen, National Road .Historic Highand use of audio-visual way, J"'d the Hocking Valley
equipment .. Each participant Scenic Area.
'
will be responsible for the cost
Anyone interested in the
of his or her own puppets ·and promOtion · of touriSm in
scenery prepared during the Southeastern Ohio is urged to
workshop.
attend the Jan. 17 meeting.
The class will meet in Room Requests for · further in ·
403. Seigfred Hall , Ohio fonnation . should be diricled
University, from 9:30 to 11:30 to : ·Buckeye Travel • Tour
a.m, Further information may Project office, 853 Wheeling
be obtained II¥ calling 59+4907. Ave., Cambridge, 43725, phOJ!e
614-139-44118.

evening registran ts.

suggests-

""

...~............

CORDUROY PANTS

Tourist plan for SE Ohio ready

ATHENS - A Saturday
morning Shad,aw Puppetry
Workshop will be held at Ohio
Univer5ity Jan . 1l to March 8.
Participants will be bound
only ~)'the limits of their own
imagination, crea!ivity and
ability. The workshop will be
experimental in that the old
elements of shadow puppetry
as handed · down from
generation to generation in
counlries such ·as Indonesia.
Malaysia, and Thailand will be
; integrated with instrwnents of
modem technology : color slide
projectors, tape recorders ,
electronic sQund devices, and
so on .
Children (8 years oJd &lt;md

~;cnw. '"

40'%

•

CAMBRIDGE - A major
advertising plan to increase
tourism in Southeastern Ohio
will be unveiled at a special
public meeti!'g__at 7 p.m.
Friday . Jan . · 17, at the
Old
Shen ando ah - Inn ,
Washington (1-70 ;md SR 285).
J. Greg Smith, Uncoln, Neb.,
consultant to the federally .
funded Buckeye Travel · Tour
Project, will given an audiovisua l
presentation
of
suggested trademark s,
slogans, jingles, billboard
designs and magazine ads. He
also will discuss .the re·
organization of the Buckeye
Tourist Council, a private, nonprofit organization, which will
have th.e responsibility of
raising funds to implement the
advertising program .
· The Buckeye Tourist Council
is one of three organizations
coopera ti ng in the federal

·~.........

1 RACK OF KNIT
TOPS &amp; SLACKS
REDUCED

:.-.~-:..~-:;..;~::.::::-:.-:;...~~~~-=;8:~~-=~~~:(Ill
, ~----

.'

.'

Reg.

begin Jan. Sand all.new and old Mrs. Moore at 446-3632, as soon
students must register with as possible.

'

1..

edited by John K. ·Huk . This
magazine, a mon thly , is circulated in 2S countries.
Huron has traveled in the
Soviet
Uni on,
Poland,
Hungary, and Czechoslovakia
and will report on .visits made
among Christians in . these
countrles. Everyone is cordially invited to attend this
• missionary rally.

COAT SWEATERS_.z..l.f..EL~~~---H5

.

the past year. Award winners
must have taken six months or
more. but were not necessarily
the most talented.
Awards went to Beth Jeffers,
Paula Covert, Kimberly
Coronel.' Crys tal Ritchie,
Rowena Verion and Mary
Skaggs.
Santa was on hand to hear
the childr en's Christmas
wishes and pictures of the
group were ta ken by Max
Tawney.
To conclude the prllgr8lll the
students presented Mrs. Moore
with 1 2 long~tenuned red roses
and a four rose corsage. Mrs.
Moore thanks all the folk who
attended and supported the
children.
The winter semester will

magazine, " The Christian,"

REDUCED 20%

The Gillian Moore Dancers

dances.
Awards were presented to
the dancers by Rio Grande
College Coach Art Lanham.
·These went to the students who
made the most progress during

rad i o

Huron is associated with John
K. Huk, a Russian· American,
and George Repetski, a
Russian - Canadian .
Toronto Christian Mission,
under the leadership of Gene
Dulin, director, broadcasts in
the Russian language four
hours and 30 minutes each
week fr om sta tions in Manila,
Ph ilippine Islands; · Monte
Carlo, Monaco ; Bo nai re,
Netherlands Antilles; San
Francisco, caM., and the
medium wave station on Cheju
Island, South Korea.
Huron is a curriculum wri ter
for Standard Publish'ing,
Cincinnati. In addition to his
radi o work with the misson, he
is a conlributor to the Russian

Reductions of 20% to 50% on

GALLIPOLIS - Gillian
Moore's dan&lt;'e students per·
formed
at
Washington
Elementary School Dec, 21 to
end the fall semester . The
program included 18 different

ror

Sovie t Union via shortwave .

Unifor m s~ Size

8 a.m'. to noon and 1 to 3 p.m.,
Jan . 7 and Jan . 8, and from 6:30
to 8:30 p.m., . J~n . 7 to aid

nornud university bus in ess

UNIFORMS

Moore dancers present recital

Office is located in the east end
of Old Main in Room 123,
telephone t304) 696·3136. The
office "'Will be open during

Mrs. Patrick A. Canackzy

manuscripts

Wh ite and Color

ftl

and tnition lllust be paid at the proceed with registration . The
time of. re,.;istration accordi ng ent ire pruecss can be done in
.to Robert H: Eddins, r~gish]tr. ntxlllt 20 minutes, Eddins said.
Regislration will be con.
Arrangeme nt s 'ror late
ductc'&lt;l in Gldli ckson Hall 118ih registrfltion ca n be made wi 1t1
Str el't , and Viq~ inia Ave .). U.ie Registrar 's Offiec, he said .
Hegist ratiu n permit s t ti m ~ Lat e regis tration pf'rmit s
tickets) will be i:IVailablc after (lime tiekets .I will be ave.~i lablc
8 t-1. 111 . Jan . 7 in the Registrar's at the Reg.istrar's Offirc after 8
Office !n Old Main Room 105. a .m., J an . 9.
Eddins sa id the registration
For the first time, students
proeedun~ is not a' problem if unfamiliHr
with
tht'
the st~clent will follow registration process or iri need
established proce.dures. He of cwHdemic advice ca n ~o to
outlined
Lhe
step.s
of the new Registrntion Assistrcgistrution as follows :
an ce Ccn ler in Gu!li,~ k son Hall

broadcasts beamed in to the

'

re~i~tratim)

lenn

7 !rom 6::10 to 8:30p.m . Fees go to Gullickson H11ll and

SALE

.

'I

Couple ·married in April

.'·························'······ · ····· ······ · ······ ·' ·········· ··~·· ······· ··············· · ·
•
••

.

'

_5 -The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. s, 197S.

~

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Ervin
Morris, Bidwell, announce the engagement of their daughter,
Paula Jean, to Steven Eugene Wellington, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Wellington, Belpre. Wellington is a senior at North
Gallia High School and Miss Morris is a senior at Gallia
Academy High School. Wedding plans are ip~mplete .

'

'·

I .

'

I•

,.

, ··

4- The Sunday Times • Sentinel. Sunday .Jan. s. !975

'-

.I

I

••

'

(

I'

•
I

•

·.

'"

.'

�.,

'

I

•.

·'

..

. I!

•

..
~

I .•

.

'

'

'

•

&gt;Virtlo~

I

'

'

.'

'

·'·'••

M qthers club has ·meeting

i

•

BARBARA GAY

ONE YEAR OLD - The
fir sl bir thd ay of Rya n

••

Cnwan. son of Mr. and Mrs.

FHA selects

Ron Cowan. Vine St.. Mid·
dle port. was observed with a

party Christmas Day. Ice

Miss Me/odie
Ann Hash

·girl of month

Estil Ray
Gillman

GAI.l. !POLIS -

&lt;· ream

•••
•
••

•
I

Joy&lt;;c Dou gla s, Jill Moore,

Bar bara

GHy has been selec ted January

Mary Beth Brewer. Belly

Gi rl of lhe Month by the Future

Gilmore ,

-

Both

!he

to par ticipate in the Film·
maki ng Workshop schedul ed
for Tuesday and Thursday
eve nings beg inning Jan. 7 at

Ohio Untversily. .
The workshop will · cover
such subject s as

ca m er a

operati on. film stocks and
exposure, filming and editing.
The workshop is sponsored

'

community projects she sold
Christmas tags for the handicapped. She attended the
stat e conv ention. last April in
Columbus.
In addition to her school
ac tiviti es, her hobbi es a rc

is

Chris tmas

Whit s tine,

grandm oth e r ;

Sheila Reeves, Mike Miller,
all of Columbus; and Rolland
Terrell, Pomeroy. Gifts were

presented to Ryan by Mr.
and Mrs. Guy · Cowen',

for the childr en in the
pCjiiatrjc&amp;. wara of the. Holzer
Medica!' Center.
•1

The

gr ou p

di sc usse d .a

Smi th at the home of Mrs. Am y mee ting on drugs which they
Vinson,
will sponsor at North Gallia
Roll call was answered with High School at 7: 30p.m. Jan .
a good deed for the day and 16. Everyone is 'in vited to atclub . members enjoyed the tend the session, in the school
observance of game night.
cafeteria, when Jerry Walke
Joan Pitchford and Mary will be the gu~s t speaker . A
Lookadoo were appoin ted to a question and answer period
committee to make tray favors · will follow his presentation.
•

DAN THOMAS
AND SON
" Servi
·

since 1936"
Ohio

grandparents; Mr. and Mrs.
1.. M. Brewer, great grandparents. Mr. and Mrs .
Ted Ril ey, Jr. , and Brent

367-0300

accompany Barbara to" r.an-

Addison, Ohio
MON. - SAT. 10-6

easter Jan . 18 to di splny the
chap ter sc rapbook.

$
I

You never have bought this low in many years! We really mean to reduce our inventory.
.
It's the largest in the 2_5 year history of our st~re.
I

•

.

DINETTE SETS

UP .TO

'100°

,,

0

BEDROOM SUITES
Basset:t, Singer, Kemp

ALL CHAIRS

REDUCED
A BIG
,.

MARKED DOWN
UPTO

•sooo

NOW IS THE TIME

Margaret Keels

00

'

·COUJMBiA

HAss·oc·Ks

'

· M ASON F-URNITURE CO.

E 77
•

'.

.I

~

'

..

.

.

HERMAN ·GRAT'r •

.

-

'

•

'

I

IN THE . '
,
SILVER ·
BRIDGE PLAZA

OUR OOLORFUL JANUARY

.

NOW GOING
'

ON

.

'Off Per

..

51.95-$4.95-$5.95 Fabrics

Compare $8.95

BARGAINS
·it .

'"

'

.J,JtwilJ •

412..41~

Seeon.d AVe:

Gallipolisj
'

ER .

n.

&gt;

'
. I

I
'

.

.

-

\

.'

,·

I

I

Yard

Qn Entire Stock Of
Our Reg. Low Mill PricJ

RE!DUCED TO

MANY-MANY_;_MANY
.,

0\ .· . . .

WHITE SALE

.

SWEATER
KNITS ·

IN .PRObRESS
NOW
.
.

'

CLOSED TODAY
\

. '·Jk ', '

.

'

.

.

~

·.

,

We re Making -Th.is
Ouf Greatest
.January Sale· Ever
.,,

E,.TIRE STOCK ,

Sears.

1

EXTRA. LARGE ONES

'•

.

'

OF BUSI:NESS ·

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

MANY OTHER ITEMS .
ON SALE. WE COULDN'T
LIST. THEM.. ALL .

'

AS MARKED!

-

GO-ING.~OUT
.

ONE GROUP

I.

.PECIAL GROUP!

DOUBLE KNitS

UPRITE FREEZER

1.·

~

________________________ _________________ ____________ _
..

Favorite Lady

18 CUBIC FEET

ALL 1975 MODELS

Calend4r

DRASTIC. SAVINGS!

Birthday

To Our -

.

SAVE$

f

Hippy

". 1 ONLY

T.V.

ilton

ONE WEEK

oFF

PONTIAC, BERKLINE, NORWALKS,
MODERN, TELL CITY, SAWYERS

TO SAVE

Other Famous Names

SPECIAL PRICES
ON
ZENITH COLOR

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

25o/o

DISCOUNT ON ALL

Gilbert and Mona H

.College
News

'

\

Smith,. wi th -children Nancy ,

I! Sr. Citizens ~

Wedding vow_s exchanged

Moore.

Mrs.

Elizabeth Kendall , wh o will

The

Mr. and Mrs. William Broyks

THE COTTON GINNY

horseback riding, bowling and
swimming.
a dvisor

p3rty

night in celebration of his
birthday were Mrs. Belly

GALLIPOLIS

de~c'e ndants of John Austin and Mark ; Matthew and Jay, Steve with children, Shirley, Cathy
Helena C. Hill gathered at th~ · and Rita Roa'ch wtlh children and Joe of James town; Bill and
hQme of To in and Rene Tammy and ·rriclu, TOm and · De nise Broyl e~; ·n oger and

....·
'
Adam, Mary Shaw Bioks,
Mike and Chuck Broyles.
The. next Christmas tllUhlon
. Is to be held at the Ma~lln
home.

Broyles, 1600 Riverview Dr., Mory Broyles of Columbus; Tu mmy Broyles an d so n.
·
for
their annual Christmas
POMEROY - Mrs. George (Oirk) f'olmer, Forest. Run
Road, is .forever making things, 'Ibis holi4ay season she made a re~mion .
Rev. Carl Martin offered a
doZESl roses from ~ · white pulp .Qf 8fapefrults.
·
prayer
of thanksgiving alter
'Ibis Is how sM elqlfained she acComPlished lhe art'of making
which
the
group enjoyed a
roses. First you take a knife and cut the peeling off as thin as
dinner
.
consisting
of .ham,
. possible: '!ben you CU\ the white pulp that lies between the
1 peeling a~ the frul. t, without breaking, just as you would an turkey, dressing, green beans,
scalloped potatoes, macaroni
·'
/ , apple peeling. .
·.
·
. You then take the white IJillp, using scissors, and scallop the and potato salads, deviled
top only. Then starting from the bottom you roll the white pulp lrr eggs, chil&gt;s, punch, 'coffee and
cake.
one piece and out comes a rose.
The highlight of the evening
You hold the roses together wii!Uoothpicks and let them dry .
I
was
the surprise arrival of
After tbey become very firm yoil spray paint them and place a
Santa Claus with a treat for
wire in the center and the rose is complete.
U you would like to see tbe' cOmpleted product'' or wish to each child. Little mouths
know more about them just give Mrs. Folmer a call and slie wiU opened wide and small fa ces
glowed as Santa visited with
be delighted to explain .
each one. Before Santa 's
NEW YEAR'S Day proveo:l to be:,dlsheartening for young Phil departure, little AmyBroyles,
Ohlinger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Phil O)Uinger, Rose Hill, Pomeroy. daughter of Mr, and Mrs.
Phil underwent an appendectomy at Holzer Medical Cent,er James Broyles, Hillsboro,
on the flrst ,day of 19'75. What a w&amp;Ji to start the year. On top of presented '' him " with a
~· ·
that he missed all the football games that he would have enjoyed. present.
Others
enjoying
the
festive
We're glad to report !hat he is doing fine.
evening were Lucy ( Hi!l"i
THE IDGHEST award in scouUng will be awarded to Mark Martin, Bill and Mary I Will I
Alan Morris, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Mortis, Rutland, when Barcus, Tom and Mickey Hill 1
('
.
he will be presented the Eagle Scour award on Sunday, Jari. 12at ::::::::::::::~::::::::::.":::."*:.:::~~:::::."*'~
2 p.m. at tbe Rutland United Methodist Churcl).
Mark is a member of the·u. S. Air Force and ·ls attending
Ohio University on a four year R:O.T.C. schOlarship. The public
is cordially invited to ·a-ttend the ceremony .
·
ros~s,
white
carnations,
white
GALLIPOLIS - Miss Emily
CONGRATULATIONS!
POMEROY - The Meigs
Denise Wright, daughter of Mr. mwns and baby's breath .
Attendants
were
Miss
Jayne
Senior
Citizens Center in the
.REMEMBER
when
we
used
to
have
snowfalls
Uta!
would
and Mrs . Edmond L. Wright,
Wigglesworth,
Gallipolis,
Miss
cover the ground so children 311d adults could go sleigh riding. Pomeroy Junior High School is
Rt. 2, Crown City, and William
open 9- a.m.-4 p.m. Monday
It has been so long aince we have had such a snowfall, one
David Broyles,. son of Mr. and Patrice Wright, Crown City,
Mrs. Thomas H. Broyles, 1000 and Mrs . Diana Rainey, really would enjoy a little accwnulaUon ....: just enough to get the through Friday.
Activities this .week Include :
Riverview Dr., GallipoHs, Toledo . Their floral printed rusty sleds out and enjoy a real winter.
chiffon
gowns
were
of
yellow,
Wouldn't It be full .
Monday , Jan . 6, Crafts ,
exchanged wedding vows in a
Square Dancing, 1-3 p.m.
ceremony at Providence green a'nd apricot . The gowns
Tuesday, Jan . 7, .Chair
ACCORDING to the U. S. Conswner Product Safety ColDMissionary Baptist Church, were fashioned with ·a vneckline,
fitted
bodices,
emmission
television
sets
are
a
dangerous
piece
of
furniture.
.
Caning,
Cards and Games,
Sept. 6 at 8:30 p.m. Rev.
pire
waistlines
and
short
fitted
Jn.(]epth invesligaUons conducted by the Col1Ufllssion give .Chorus 12:31).2 p.m ..
Richard Graham officiated at
sleeves. Miss Wigglesworth's information not only about fire, electric shbck, and plciure tube .... Wednesday, Jan. 8 - Crafts,
the double ring ceremony.
Pianist was Miss Debbie gown was underlaid with implosion but also abou~ the frequently more teported diagnoses Quilting.
Thursday,
Jan .
9,
Northup , whose selections green; Miss Wright's with of lacerations and contusions and abrasions, etc.
Of 35 in-depth investigations, 18 involved fires starting_in TV Decoupage, Cards and Games.
included "Theme from.Romeo yellow; and Mrs. Rain'ey's with
Friday, Jan. 10, Bowling, 1-3
I,
and Juliet" and "Brian's apricot . Each . at~endant sets. Several resulted in ignition of surroundings, causing excarried
a
long-stemmed
yellow
tensive
property
danoage
in
addition
to
inJI!I'Y
or
death.
Six
sets
p.m.
Song." Miss Kathy Crouse,
.
were on when the fire started and six had been turoed off, usually
Senior Citizens . lunch
soloist~ sang ~"One Love," "The rose.
Miss
Shirley
Hamilton and only a few minutes before the fire started or was discovered. program, 11:30 a.m. - 12:30
Lord's Prayer" and "The
Wedding Song." She sang Miss Cathy Hamilton, n'ieces of Thirteen of Ute 18 inve8tigations speclfled lhe type of television p.m., Monday through Friday.
Donation basis. ·
..Sometimes" as the mothers the groom, were flower girls. involved in fires : 9 sets were color receivers and 4 were black
They
wore
identical
mint
green
and white.
were being seated and "The
1
Most of the victims were actually burned by flames. There
Wedding Prayer" during the gowns which were accented
wi·th white lace and a darker were four cases of electrieal shock. T)lree victims (including two
ceremony.
Two potted palm trees, an green ribbon around the em- families) received electrical shock upon contact' with the anarch decorated with greener.y pire waistline , and fitted · tenna o~ anwnna pole and one ~n was shocked as he reached
and white flowers, topped with sleeves. Each girl carried a into the baCk of a malfunctiorung television,
The Commission has identified problem areas associated
two doves, two seven branch . yellow basket of yellow
with
(ire, shock, picture tube Implosion and the TV exterior.
candelabra, arrangements of rosebuds.
Jack
Williams
served
as
best
There were 710 television..-elated injuries reported during
greenery and white flowers
man
and
ushers
were
Tom
.
lisclli'year
1974 which translates to a riationwide injury e~tlmate
and yellow pew bows decorated
the church.
Broyles, Columbus ; James of 14,000 cases treated in emergency rooms. ·
-·
.
After
all
this
information
the
report
does
not
tell
us
what
we
During the processional the . Broyles, Hillsboro, brothe:s of
·
bride presented her mother the groom. Joseph Wnght, cando about it. Just trullt f o luck -more or less.
' with a long:stemmed yellow brother of the brtde, was rmgroses and then presented one to bear~r.
,
.
the groom's mother following
For her daughter s _weddmg, · . Jll!l!ill!l!ill!l!ill!l!ill!l!ill!l!ill!l!illl!llllllll'ft
PARENTS VISITED
th
Mrs. Wnght was atllred m. a
e ceremony.
. "
t
k
.
dr
POMEI;iOY
- Mr. and Mrs.
Given in marriage -by her pm,.._ P0 1yes _er m1
ess
Dana Turner, Jr., Naples, Fla.,
father, the bride's gown (which fashiOned wtth a scooped
have spent the. past week here
was fashioned by Charlene ruffled necklme and long full
visiting her parents, Mr . and
Batey of the . French City sleeves. She wore black patent
Mrs. Dale Kesterson. From
Fabric Shoppe) was a white accessones and a white orchid
here they \vent to Hamilton for
satin peau de soie, featuring a corsage. !&gt;Irs. Broyles chose a
a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Earl
fitted bodice overlaid with yellow an~ w_htte go~
Kesterson .ind family.
alencon lace. ·The lace was fashtoned Wtth htgh necklme
MARIETTA - Students
sculptured to the bodice lor- and long lull sleeves. She also named to the dean's Hst at
ming a high bertha neckline had a whtle orchtd corsage.
Marietta College for the fall
and wide bands of alencon lace
Followmg the ceremony a semester include Nancy' B.
accented the wrists and hem. A receptwn was held m the Clay Smith, Chester, who is a senior Eugene Brown, 164 N. Third
"' chapel . length train fell in Elementary School gym- ·'!I'd a 1971 graduate of Eastern Ave., Middleport, with a
- g th r from the. natural nastwn. The weddmg table was High School with a 4.0 average · master of science and Richard
~~ w~ls~l~e of the gown. Her floor covered with a white croc~eted and Christine · C. Wetherholt, paul Werner, 142 Uncoln Rd.,
.::: length veil was topped by cloth and the three-hered 1026 First Ave., Gallipolis, a Pomeroy with a bachelor of
::; baby's breath and she carried wedding cak~ was surrounded senior, 1971 graduate oi Gallla science· in. aeronaUtical and
d bo
t of ellow by two nme-mch heart-shaped Academy, and Da~ia G. Smith, astrona:uticai engliie.ering.
cases e uque
Y
cakes inscribed with the names
Long Bottom, also a seniov and
of the bridal couple .and edged a 197l graduate of Eastern.
In roses. Wedding bells and the
traditional figurines were,used
CEDARVILLE--.1\Iiss Judy
betl'leen the tiers of the wed- Cole, daughter of Rev. and
_.:.
..,.
ding cake, which was topped Mrs. ~arty E. Cole, Gallipolis,
with a dove and . flanked by was named .to tbe fall _quarter
ENTIRE STOCK
stairway arrangements of dean's list of Cedarville
REDUCED ON EVERY BOLT OF FAI!IRIC IN TH.E. STORE.
, small lighted candles. A single College with a 3.7 grade
taper at each side completed average. Miss Cole Is a freshthe appointments.
man majoring in science.
eSOLIDS.PLAIDs-cHECKS.PRINTS
Miss Vicky Tomlinson,
'
. Bidwell, registered the guests.
DRESS DESIG~ER FABRICS
'COLUMBUS - Fall quarter
Presiding at the reception graduates ' of Ohio State
1Don and Deidra
THOUSANDS
One To Two Yard Lengths
table wexe Mrs. Charles University included Leland
'
IDUR MARRIAGE Grubbs, Barboursville, W.Va.;
Thousands of Yards to Select From!
•ALL FULL BOLTS
"l,'
SHOULD HAVE . Mrs. Loren Rowley, Crown
-ALL ·
eALI,
Fl
RST
QUALITY
City,
ll!ld
Mrs.
Thomas
Wright,
DOUBLE KNITS
AWTOF
Crown City, both aunts of the.
.ALL
YARN
DYES
BEAUTIFUL
bride. · Miss T9mlinson also
eALL 6~" WIDE
FACETSTOI'I
assisted at the table.
.
After a wedding trip . to the
eUiQ%. POLYESTER
Smoky Mountains, the couple
ePOLY &amp;. WOOL .
Columbi• diamOnds from $150 .
resides at ~'h Second Ave., ·
Gallipolis.
ePOLY &amp; SILK
The new Mrs. Broyles is a
tiCOLOR COORDiNATED .
1973 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and a
eMEN'S WEAR IMCWDED
junior at the Holzer Medical .
School of Nursing. The groom,
also a 1973 graduate Qf Gallia
422 Second·Ave.
Academy, is empleyed at
Ohio
..

Wishes to thank you for your
patronage in 1974. Our pledge to you in
1975 is to offer you first quality
fashionable fabriCs at sensible prices.
We invite you t~ compare our every
day low prices with any other store. ·
We ·also give you the Best Deal on
Sewing Machines and Vacuum
Cleaners . Sales and Service.

historian for the FHA. She is

He r

dinner

'

'

.By Katie Crow:

THE COTTON GINNY

curr entl y wor kin g on her

by th e university' s f' ilm
Department in coo Peration
with !he Offi ce of Workshops,
Gonferences and Insti tutes.
Pe rsons may en roll in the
workshop for three hours of
und ergraduate credit by
paying the reg ul ar tuiti on fee or may participate in the program on a
non-credit basis (or a reduced
fee. Further information may
be obtained by calling the
Workshops Office al 594-4907.

Newe ll,

grandparents. Mr . and Mrs.
James Brewer. Atte nding~ a

jWli or degr ee . As one of her

. ATH ENS

Mike

Jimm y Brewer and his

re por ter and is now se rving as

begin ner and the experienced
home mO\•ic maker are in·,,itcd

Claus

sc rvl'd to Kell y Douglas.

She has been assistant news

Course in film-making offered

Santa

rt•plicas, cake and pop were

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Announcement is made
Homemakers of America of
of the engagement of Miss Melodic Ann Hash, daughter of
Ga llia Academy High School.
Mr. and Mrs. Cla rence Hash, Rt. 1, Bidwell, and Estil Ray
She
is the daug ht('r of Mr . and
Gillman , Logan, W. ViJ&gt;, The prospective groom is the son of
M".
Mark G. Gay. 102 Kmeon
Mrs. Hauld a BroWn , Lariat Dr., Gallipolis, and Estil
Dr
.,
Gallipolis
.
Gillman , Logan , W. Va. John Hersman will officiate al the
open church ce remony Feb. I at Morgan Center Pilgrim .. Miss Gay is a jun ior &lt;:Jt G.:JIIia
Academy where :she is enrolled
Holiness Church. Pre-ouptial music will begin at 5 :30 with
in
the general prog ra m. Her
the ceremony at6 :30 and a reception immediately following
etc
ti
viti es includ e Futu r-e
at the home of the bride's;arents. Miss Hash is a gradua te 9f
Nurses of Am erica, Science
North Galli u High School and is employed by Jeans 'n
Cl
ub, Future Homemakers of
Things. Gillman also attended North Galli a and is employed
Ameri
ca and Candyslripers.
by El-Kay Mines , Logan .

•

in

session by vice president Carol

s(.'minar .

'

Mr . and Mrs . Max Barnes,
and Mrs . Oscar C!w1mberhtin
Mr. and Mrs. James Gn&gt;v.,
and three c hildren, Mrs.
Higgins, Mary Ann Mct::Orl.el
and gues t, Hom~r Curry,
the hostess, Pearl George.
eveni ng was spent .remrem.
bering days gone by and
fe llowship together .

#

Hill-Austin familie · gath~r

Katie's Korner

.

Higgins. gave. grace before
dlnner. ·
Nine members and their
families were present. They
were Mr .. and Mrs. John
Downard and daughter, Mr."
and Mrs. James Bush and son,

I

'

Friendship/gardeners
meet
.
.

.

I

•

'

VI NTON - ;rhe, Vin ton recently for th eir annual
Friendship . Ga rden Club met · Christmas potluck dinner at
I
the home of Mrs. Pearl George.
I
Mrs. G~or ge had decorated
her
ho me
with
many
VISIT PARENTS .
.POMEROY - Dr . and Mrs. arrangements and decorations
William E. Gibbs and children (or the occasion. Mrs. Anna
Sarah Be th a n ~ Greg, Orangeburg, S. C., and Mr. and Mrs.
Jeffrey A. Gibbs: Columbus,
were holiday guests of their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Gib bs. Sarah Beth and Greg
remain ed here with the ir · RIO GRANDE - Cradle to
grandparents while Dr. and Co ll ege Mothers Club .was
Mrs. Gib ~ attended a four day called to order for the Janu ary

"'

I .

..

..

.

'

6- The Snn~ay :riines -Sentinel, Sur&gt;.day, J an. 5, 1975'

•.•,
••

.

7"- The Smday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 5:~975

•

·'•
•••
•••

•,

•I

• I

·I

,

'

I

�.,

'

I

•.

·'

..

. I!

•

..
~

I .•

.

'

'

'

•

&gt;Virtlo~

I

'

'

.'

'

·'·'••

M qthers club has ·meeting

i

•

BARBARA GAY

ONE YEAR OLD - The
fir sl bir thd ay of Rya n

••

Cnwan. son of Mr. and Mrs.

FHA selects

Ron Cowan. Vine St.. Mid·
dle port. was observed with a

party Christmas Day. Ice

Miss Me/odie
Ann Hash

·girl of month

Estil Ray
Gillman

GAI.l. !POLIS -

&lt;· ream

•••
•
••

•
I

Joy&lt;;c Dou gla s, Jill Moore,

Bar bara

GHy has been selec ted January

Mary Beth Brewer. Belly

Gi rl of lhe Month by the Future

Gilmore ,

-

Both

!he

to par ticipate in the Film·
maki ng Workshop schedul ed
for Tuesday and Thursday
eve nings beg inning Jan. 7 at

Ohio Untversily. .
The workshop will · cover
such subject s as

ca m er a

operati on. film stocks and
exposure, filming and editing.
The workshop is sponsored

'

community projects she sold
Christmas tags for the handicapped. She attended the
stat e conv ention. last April in
Columbus.
In addition to her school
ac tiviti es, her hobbi es a rc

is

Chris tmas

Whit s tine,

grandm oth e r ;

Sheila Reeves, Mike Miller,
all of Columbus; and Rolland
Terrell, Pomeroy. Gifts were

presented to Ryan by Mr.
and Mrs. Guy · Cowen',

for the childr en in the
pCjiiatrjc&amp;. wara of the. Holzer
Medica!' Center.
•1

The

gr ou p

di sc usse d .a

Smi th at the home of Mrs. Am y mee ting on drugs which they
Vinson,
will sponsor at North Gallia
Roll call was answered with High School at 7: 30p.m. Jan .
a good deed for the day and 16. Everyone is 'in vited to atclub . members enjoyed the tend the session, in the school
observance of game night.
cafeteria, when Jerry Walke
Joan Pitchford and Mary will be the gu~s t speaker . A
Lookadoo were appoin ted to a question and answer period
committee to make tray favors · will follow his presentation.
•

DAN THOMAS
AND SON
" Servi
·

since 1936"
Ohio

grandparents; Mr. and Mrs.
1.. M. Brewer, great grandparents. Mr. and Mrs .
Ted Ril ey, Jr. , and Brent

367-0300

accompany Barbara to" r.an-

Addison, Ohio
MON. - SAT. 10-6

easter Jan . 18 to di splny the
chap ter sc rapbook.

$
I

You never have bought this low in many years! We really mean to reduce our inventory.
.
It's the largest in the 2_5 year history of our st~re.
I

•

.

DINETTE SETS

UP .TO

'100°

,,

0

BEDROOM SUITES
Basset:t, Singer, Kemp

ALL CHAIRS

REDUCED
A BIG
,.

MARKED DOWN
UPTO

•sooo

NOW IS THE TIME

Margaret Keels

00

'

·COUJMBiA

HAss·oc·Ks

'

· M ASON F-URNITURE CO.

E 77
•

'.

.I

~

'

..

.

.

HERMAN ·GRAT'r •

.

-

'

•

'

I

IN THE . '
,
SILVER ·
BRIDGE PLAZA

OUR OOLORFUL JANUARY

.

NOW GOING
'

ON

.

'Off Per

..

51.95-$4.95-$5.95 Fabrics

Compare $8.95

BARGAINS
·it .

'"

'

.J,JtwilJ •

412..41~

Seeon.d AVe:

Gallipolisj
'

ER .

n.

&gt;

'
. I

I
'

.

.

-

\

.'

,·

I

I

Yard

Qn Entire Stock Of
Our Reg. Low Mill PricJ

RE!DUCED TO

MANY-MANY_;_MANY
.,

0\ .· . . .

WHITE SALE

.

SWEATER
KNITS ·

IN .PRObRESS
NOW
.
.

'

CLOSED TODAY
\

. '·Jk ', '

.

'

.

.

~

·.

,

We re Making -Th.is
Ouf Greatest
.January Sale· Ever
.,,

E,.TIRE STOCK ,

Sears.

1

EXTRA. LARGE ONES

'•

.

'

OF BUSI:NESS ·

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

MANY OTHER ITEMS .
ON SALE. WE COULDN'T
LIST. THEM.. ALL .

'

AS MARKED!

-

GO-ING.~OUT
.

ONE GROUP

I.

.PECIAL GROUP!

DOUBLE KNitS

UPRITE FREEZER

1.·

~

________________________ _________________ ____________ _
..

Favorite Lady

18 CUBIC FEET

ALL 1975 MODELS

Calend4r

DRASTIC. SAVINGS!

Birthday

To Our -

.

SAVE$

f

Hippy

". 1 ONLY

T.V.

ilton

ONE WEEK

oFF

PONTIAC, BERKLINE, NORWALKS,
MODERN, TELL CITY, SAWYERS

TO SAVE

Other Famous Names

SPECIAL PRICES
ON
ZENITH COLOR

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

25o/o

DISCOUNT ON ALL

Gilbert and Mona H

.College
News

'

\

Smith,. wi th -children Nancy ,

I! Sr. Citizens ~

Wedding vow_s exchanged

Moore.

Mrs.

Elizabeth Kendall , wh o will

The

Mr. and Mrs. William Broyks

THE COTTON GINNY

horseback riding, bowling and
swimming.
a dvisor

p3rty

night in celebration of his
birthday were Mrs. Belly

GALLIPOLIS

de~c'e ndants of John Austin and Mark ; Matthew and Jay, Steve with children, Shirley, Cathy
Helena C. Hill gathered at th~ · and Rita Roa'ch wtlh children and Joe of James town; Bill and
hQme of To in and Rene Tammy and ·rriclu, TOm and · De nise Broyl e~; ·n oger and

....·
'
Adam, Mary Shaw Bioks,
Mike and Chuck Broyles.
The. next Christmas tllUhlon
. Is to be held at the Ma~lln
home.

Broyles, 1600 Riverview Dr., Mory Broyles of Columbus; Tu mmy Broyles an d so n.
·
for
their annual Christmas
POMEROY - Mrs. George (Oirk) f'olmer, Forest. Run
Road, is .forever making things, 'Ibis holi4ay season she made a re~mion .
Rev. Carl Martin offered a
doZESl roses from ~ · white pulp .Qf 8fapefrults.
·
prayer
of thanksgiving alter
'Ibis Is how sM elqlfained she acComPlished lhe art'of making
which
the
group enjoyed a
roses. First you take a knife and cut the peeling off as thin as
dinner
.
consisting
of .ham,
. possible: '!ben you CU\ the white pulp that lies between the
1 peeling a~ the frul. t, without breaking, just as you would an turkey, dressing, green beans,
scalloped potatoes, macaroni
·'
/ , apple peeling. .
·.
·
. You then take the white IJillp, using scissors, and scallop the and potato salads, deviled
top only. Then starting from the bottom you roll the white pulp lrr eggs, chil&gt;s, punch, 'coffee and
cake.
one piece and out comes a rose.
The highlight of the evening
You hold the roses together wii!Uoothpicks and let them dry .
I
was
the surprise arrival of
After tbey become very firm yoil spray paint them and place a
Santa Claus with a treat for
wire in the center and the rose is complete.
U you would like to see tbe' cOmpleted product'' or wish to each child. Little mouths
know more about them just give Mrs. Folmer a call and slie wiU opened wide and small fa ces
glowed as Santa visited with
be delighted to explain .
each one. Before Santa 's
NEW YEAR'S Day proveo:l to be:,dlsheartening for young Phil departure, little AmyBroyles,
Ohlinger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Phil O)Uinger, Rose Hill, Pomeroy. daughter of Mr, and Mrs.
Phil underwent an appendectomy at Holzer Medical Cent,er James Broyles, Hillsboro,
on the flrst ,day of 19'75. What a w&amp;Ji to start the year. On top of presented '' him " with a
~· ·
that he missed all the football games that he would have enjoyed. present.
Others
enjoying
the
festive
We're glad to report !hat he is doing fine.
evening were Lucy ( Hi!l"i
THE IDGHEST award in scouUng will be awarded to Mark Martin, Bill and Mary I Will I
Alan Morris, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Mortis, Rutland, when Barcus, Tom and Mickey Hill 1
('
.
he will be presented the Eagle Scour award on Sunday, Jari. 12at ::::::::::::::~::::::::::.":::."*:.:::~~:::::."*'~
2 p.m. at tbe Rutland United Methodist Churcl).
Mark is a member of the·u. S. Air Force and ·ls attending
Ohio University on a four year R:O.T.C. schOlarship. The public
is cordially invited to ·a-ttend the ceremony .
·
ros~s,
white
carnations,
white
GALLIPOLIS - Miss Emily
CONGRATULATIONS!
POMEROY - The Meigs
Denise Wright, daughter of Mr. mwns and baby's breath .
Attendants
were
Miss
Jayne
Senior
Citizens Center in the
.REMEMBER
when
we
used
to
have
snowfalls
Uta!
would
and Mrs . Edmond L. Wright,
Wigglesworth,
Gallipolis,
Miss
cover the ground so children 311d adults could go sleigh riding. Pomeroy Junior High School is
Rt. 2, Crown City, and William
open 9- a.m.-4 p.m. Monday
It has been so long aince we have had such a snowfall, one
David Broyles,. son of Mr. and Patrice Wright, Crown City,
Mrs. Thomas H. Broyles, 1000 and Mrs . Diana Rainey, really would enjoy a little accwnulaUon ....: just enough to get the through Friday.
Activities this .week Include :
Riverview Dr., GallipoHs, Toledo . Their floral printed rusty sleds out and enjoy a real winter.
chiffon
gowns
were
of
yellow,
Wouldn't It be full .
Monday , Jan . 6, Crafts ,
exchanged wedding vows in a
Square Dancing, 1-3 p.m.
ceremony at Providence green a'nd apricot . The gowns
Tuesday, Jan . 7, .Chair
ACCORDING to the U. S. Conswner Product Safety ColDMissionary Baptist Church, were fashioned with ·a vneckline,
fitted
bodices,
emmission
television
sets
are
a
dangerous
piece
of
furniture.
.
Caning,
Cards and Games,
Sept. 6 at 8:30 p.m. Rev.
pire
waistlines
and
short
fitted
Jn.(]epth invesligaUons conducted by the Col1Ufllssion give .Chorus 12:31).2 p.m ..
Richard Graham officiated at
sleeves. Miss Wigglesworth's information not only about fire, electric shbck, and plciure tube .... Wednesday, Jan. 8 - Crafts,
the double ring ceremony.
Pianist was Miss Debbie gown was underlaid with implosion but also abou~ the frequently more teported diagnoses Quilting.
Thursday,
Jan .
9,
Northup , whose selections green; Miss Wright's with of lacerations and contusions and abrasions, etc.
Of 35 in-depth investigations, 18 involved fires starting_in TV Decoupage, Cards and Games.
included "Theme from.Romeo yellow; and Mrs. Rain'ey's with
Friday, Jan. 10, Bowling, 1-3
I,
and Juliet" and "Brian's apricot . Each . at~endant sets. Several resulted in ignition of surroundings, causing excarried
a
long-stemmed
yellow
tensive
property
danoage
in
addition
to
inJI!I'Y
or
death.
Six
sets
p.m.
Song." Miss Kathy Crouse,
.
were on when the fire started and six had been turoed off, usually
Senior Citizens . lunch
soloist~ sang ~"One Love," "The rose.
Miss
Shirley
Hamilton and only a few minutes before the fire started or was discovered. program, 11:30 a.m. - 12:30
Lord's Prayer" and "The
Wedding Song." She sang Miss Cathy Hamilton, n'ieces of Thirteen of Ute 18 inve8tigations speclfled lhe type of television p.m., Monday through Friday.
Donation basis. ·
..Sometimes" as the mothers the groom, were flower girls. involved in fires : 9 sets were color receivers and 4 were black
They
wore
identical
mint
green
and white.
were being seated and "The
1
Most of the victims were actually burned by flames. There
Wedding Prayer" during the gowns which were accented
wi·th white lace and a darker were four cases of electrieal shock. T)lree victims (including two
ceremony.
Two potted palm trees, an green ribbon around the em- families) received electrical shock upon contact' with the anarch decorated with greener.y pire waistline , and fitted · tenna o~ anwnna pole and one ~n was shocked as he reached
and white flowers, topped with sleeves. Each girl carried a into the baCk of a malfunctiorung television,
The Commission has identified problem areas associated
two doves, two seven branch . yellow basket of yellow
with
(ire, shock, picture tube Implosion and the TV exterior.
candelabra, arrangements of rosebuds.
Jack
Williams
served
as
best
There were 710 television..-elated injuries reported during
greenery and white flowers
man
and
ushers
were
Tom
.
lisclli'year
1974 which translates to a riationwide injury e~tlmate
and yellow pew bows decorated
the church.
Broyles, Columbus ; James of 14,000 cases treated in emergency rooms. ·
-·
.
After
all
this
information
the
report
does
not
tell
us
what
we
During the processional the . Broyles, Hillsboro, brothe:s of
·
bride presented her mother the groom. Joseph Wnght, cando about it. Just trullt f o luck -more or less.
' with a long:stemmed yellow brother of the brtde, was rmgroses and then presented one to bear~r.
,
.
the groom's mother following
For her daughter s _weddmg, · . Jll!l!ill!l!ill!l!ill!l!ill!l!ill!l!ill!l!illl!llllllll'ft
PARENTS VISITED
th
Mrs. Wnght was atllred m. a
e ceremony.
. "
t
k
.
dr
POMEI;iOY
- Mr. and Mrs.
Given in marriage -by her pm,.._ P0 1yes _er m1
ess
Dana Turner, Jr., Naples, Fla.,
father, the bride's gown (which fashiOned wtth a scooped
have spent the. past week here
was fashioned by Charlene ruffled necklme and long full
visiting her parents, Mr . and
Batey of the . French City sleeves. She wore black patent
Mrs. Dale Kesterson. From
Fabric Shoppe) was a white accessones and a white orchid
here they \vent to Hamilton for
satin peau de soie, featuring a corsage. !&gt;Irs. Broyles chose a
a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Earl
fitted bodice overlaid with yellow an~ w_htte go~
Kesterson .ind family.
alencon lace. ·The lace was fashtoned Wtth htgh necklme
MARIETTA - Students
sculptured to the bodice lor- and long lull sleeves. She also named to the dean's Hst at
ming a high bertha neckline had a whtle orchtd corsage.
Marietta College for the fall
and wide bands of alencon lace
Followmg the ceremony a semester include Nancy' B.
accented the wrists and hem. A receptwn was held m the Clay Smith, Chester, who is a senior Eugene Brown, 164 N. Third
"' chapel . length train fell in Elementary School gym- ·'!I'd a 1971 graduate of Eastern Ave., Middleport, with a
- g th r from the. natural nastwn. The weddmg table was High School with a 4.0 average · master of science and Richard
~~ w~ls~l~e of the gown. Her floor covered with a white croc~eted and Christine · C. Wetherholt, paul Werner, 142 Uncoln Rd.,
.::: length veil was topped by cloth and the three-hered 1026 First Ave., Gallipolis, a Pomeroy with a bachelor of
::; baby's breath and she carried wedding cak~ was surrounded senior, 1971 graduate oi Gallla science· in. aeronaUtical and
d bo
t of ellow by two nme-mch heart-shaped Academy, and Da~ia G. Smith, astrona:uticai engliie.ering.
cases e uque
Y
cakes inscribed with the names
Long Bottom, also a seniov and
of the bridal couple .and edged a 197l graduate of Eastern.
In roses. Wedding bells and the
traditional figurines were,used
CEDARVILLE--.1\Iiss Judy
betl'leen the tiers of the wed- Cole, daughter of Rev. and
_.:.
..,.
ding cake, which was topped Mrs. ~arty E. Cole, Gallipolis,
with a dove and . flanked by was named .to tbe fall _quarter
ENTIRE STOCK
stairway arrangements of dean's list of Cedarville
REDUCED ON EVERY BOLT OF FAI!IRIC IN TH.E. STORE.
, small lighted candles. A single College with a 3.7 grade
taper at each side completed average. Miss Cole Is a freshthe appointments.
man majoring in science.
eSOLIDS.PLAIDs-cHECKS.PRINTS
Miss Vicky Tomlinson,
'
. Bidwell, registered the guests.
DRESS DESIG~ER FABRICS
'COLUMBUS - Fall quarter
Presiding at the reception graduates ' of Ohio State
1Don and Deidra
THOUSANDS
One To Two Yard Lengths
table wexe Mrs. Charles University included Leland
'
IDUR MARRIAGE Grubbs, Barboursville, W.Va.;
Thousands of Yards to Select From!
•ALL FULL BOLTS
"l,'
SHOULD HAVE . Mrs. Loren Rowley, Crown
-ALL ·
eALI,
Fl
RST
QUALITY
City,
ll!ld
Mrs.
Thomas
Wright,
DOUBLE KNITS
AWTOF
Crown City, both aunts of the.
.ALL
YARN
DYES
BEAUTIFUL
bride. · Miss T9mlinson also
eALL 6~" WIDE
FACETSTOI'I
assisted at the table.
.
After a wedding trip . to the
eUiQ%. POLYESTER
Smoky Mountains, the couple
ePOLY &amp;. WOOL .
Columbi• diamOnds from $150 .
resides at ~'h Second Ave., ·
Gallipolis.
ePOLY &amp; SILK
The new Mrs. Broyles is a
tiCOLOR COORDiNATED .
1973 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and a
eMEN'S WEAR IMCWDED
junior at the Holzer Medical .
School of Nursing. The groom,
also a 1973 graduate Qf Gallia
422 Second·Ave.
Academy, is empleyed at
Ohio
..

Wishes to thank you for your
patronage in 1974. Our pledge to you in
1975 is to offer you first quality
fashionable fabriCs at sensible prices.
We invite you t~ compare our every
day low prices with any other store. ·
We ·also give you the Best Deal on
Sewing Machines and Vacuum
Cleaners . Sales and Service.

historian for the FHA. She is

He r

dinner

'

'

.By Katie Crow:

THE COTTON GINNY

curr entl y wor kin g on her

by th e university' s f' ilm
Department in coo Peration
with !he Offi ce of Workshops,
Gonferences and Insti tutes.
Pe rsons may en roll in the
workshop for three hours of
und ergraduate credit by
paying the reg ul ar tuiti on fee or may participate in the program on a
non-credit basis (or a reduced
fee. Further information may
be obtained by calling the
Workshops Office al 594-4907.

Newe ll,

grandparents. Mr . and Mrs.
James Brewer. Atte nding~ a

jWli or degr ee . As one of her

. ATH ENS

Mike

Jimm y Brewer and his

re por ter and is now se rving as

begin ner and the experienced
home mO\•ic maker are in·,,itcd

Claus

sc rvl'd to Kell y Douglas.

She has been assistant news

Course in film-making offered

Santa

rt•plicas, cake and pop were

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Announcement is made
Homemakers of America of
of the engagement of Miss Melodic Ann Hash, daughter of
Ga llia Academy High School.
Mr. and Mrs. Cla rence Hash, Rt. 1, Bidwell, and Estil Ray
She
is the daug ht('r of Mr . and
Gillman , Logan, W. ViJ&gt;, The prospective groom is the son of
M".
Mark G. Gay. 102 Kmeon
Mrs. Hauld a BroWn , Lariat Dr., Gallipolis, and Estil
Dr
.,
Gallipolis
.
Gillman , Logan , W. Va. John Hersman will officiate al the
open church ce remony Feb. I at Morgan Center Pilgrim .. Miss Gay is a jun ior &lt;:Jt G.:JIIia
Academy where :she is enrolled
Holiness Church. Pre-ouptial music will begin at 5 :30 with
in
the general prog ra m. Her
the ceremony at6 :30 and a reception immediately following
etc
ti
viti es includ e Futu r-e
at the home of the bride's;arents. Miss Hash is a gradua te 9f
Nurses of Am erica, Science
North Galli u High School and is employed by Jeans 'n
Cl
ub, Future Homemakers of
Things. Gillman also attended North Galli a and is employed
Ameri
ca and Candyslripers.
by El-Kay Mines , Logan .

•

in

session by vice president Carol

s(.'minar .

'

Mr . and Mrs . Max Barnes,
and Mrs . Oscar C!w1mberhtin
Mr. and Mrs. James Gn&gt;v.,
and three c hildren, Mrs.
Higgins, Mary Ann Mct::Orl.el
and gues t, Hom~r Curry,
the hostess, Pearl George.
eveni ng was spent .remrem.
bering days gone by and
fe llowship together .

#

Hill-Austin familie · gath~r

Katie's Korner

.

Higgins. gave. grace before
dlnner. ·
Nine members and their
families were present. They
were Mr .. and Mrs. John
Downard and daughter, Mr."
and Mrs. James Bush and son,

I

'

Friendship/gardeners
meet
.
.

.

I

•

'

VI NTON - ;rhe, Vin ton recently for th eir annual
Friendship . Ga rden Club met · Christmas potluck dinner at
I
the home of Mrs. Pearl George.
I
Mrs. G~or ge had decorated
her
ho me
with
many
VISIT PARENTS .
.POMEROY - Dr . and Mrs. arrangements and decorations
William E. Gibbs and children (or the occasion. Mrs. Anna
Sarah Be th a n ~ Greg, Orangeburg, S. C., and Mr. and Mrs.
Jeffrey A. Gibbs: Columbus,
were holiday guests of their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Gib bs. Sarah Beth and Greg
remain ed here with the ir · RIO GRANDE - Cradle to
grandparents while Dr. and Co ll ege Mothers Club .was
Mrs. Gib ~ attended a four day called to order for the Janu ary

"'

I .

..

..

.

'

6- The Snn~ay :riines -Sentinel, Sur&gt;.day, J an. 5, 1975'

•.•,
••

.

7"- The Smday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 5:~975

•

·'•
•••
•••

•,

•I

• I

·I

,

'

I

�....... .
'

I

'

'

'.

I,

•

..

. I
·,, •.

.

. •'

~·

.

I·

.

•

~

'I

.. I

•

'

•'

.

'

'

..U-·

.

Hughes family has.gathering
'
.

KANAUGi - The January
meettng of the Kanauga United
Methodist Women was held
with Florence Allen at her
home in Pt. Pleasant~
Theme of the session was
''Prayer and Self Denia l" witl1
group singing of " Th e
Beautiful Garden of Prayer" to
open the meeting. Marv
Shamblin had the open in g
prayer and roll call was answered with a scriptufe verse
beginning with the Jetter "J "
or a prayer. ~
Program presentati ons
included "The New Year's
Resolution"
by
Emma
Spencer; " The Covenant
Prayer" used by John Wesley

.

ever!

s:

with carrying

cuse or cab ine t

GOD'S LOOKING GLASS - A quartet from Morehead
State Un iversity is pictured here. From left are Rhonda
Cooper, Chuck Cooper, Donna Clark and Steve Jones. The
.. quartet will be holding a revival, the weekend of Jan. 10, II
•
,. and 12, at the .Christ United Methodist Church . Services will
•.
begin each evening at 7:iJO, Evangelist Chuck Cooper; a
member of the group, bringing the messages. TI1ere will also
be special services Sunday morning, Jan . 12 startine "\.,!0 :45

Bowman-Byru$ vows read

MONDAY
SOUTHERN Athletic
Boosters 7:30p.m. at Southern
High school. Installation of new
officers.
RACINE Chapter 134, OES
regular session, 8 p.m. at the
Masonic Temple. Obligation
Night will be observed.

PORTER '--- Virgil Byus, carnations.
The mother of the bride
Point Pleasant, and Mts.
920
chose
a gown with a pink
Harold Look ado, Porter , are
announcing the marriage of corsage and the groom's
their daughl&lt;&gt;r, Brenda Gail mother wore an orchid suit
Byus, to Willie Delano with a yellow cor$age. The
Bowman , son of Mr. and Mrs. other two sisters of the bride
Willie
Bowman ,
Poinl were dressed like the maid of .
honor and all of the dresses
Pleasant.
.
ca lendar in t l1_e__!lu.~~!!!:)ape r __ The wedding took place were made by the mother of
for 11pcunungeven1S. Jf you are. Saturday, Nov. 23, at Hickory the bride .
Following the ceremony a
a member yo u should receive Chapel Church at 11 a.m .
reception
was held at the
one of our newsletters but if
The bride was attend ed by
·.
F
.O
.P
.
building
at Krodel
you hav en' t ca ll the center and her sister, Mi'Ss Tammy Byus,
give your nume and address and the groom's best 'man was Park.
The bride and groom 's table
~md you will get one.
his brother, George Bowman.
was
centered with a thfee·tier
You might be inter:ested in
The bride's flowers were
cake'and
other cakes, made by
gmn es such ;1s bowling and white carnations and baby's
c·oma sl&lt;t.
breath and she appeared in a the mother of the bride, and
There IS a trip sc hedul ed for white polyester empire waist · served by her grandmother,
the "Celebr;1t ion" of the Ice ljne dress with mutton sleeves, Mrs. Ubby Hill, Gallipolis. The ,
C11pades at Coliseum at State and a waist line veil of white punch bowl was presided over
MANY. MANY
Fai rg rounds in Columbus , Jan . lat-€. Her attelidant wore a by Mrs. Marge Gillespie and
2t Don 't wait too long to sign gown of tight blue with white sister of the bride, Mrs. Cathy
up . There will be only one bus trim made identical to the lfhaxton. Other assistants were
of Senior citizens going .
bride's with a blue corsage of Mrs. Barbara Bowman, and
Mrs. Harold Lookado Mrs.
Cathy Thaxton registered ·the
guests.
Out-of-to)Vn guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Lookado and ·
Simplicity, McCal)s,
Bill, Charlie and Susan
Butterick, Vogue Patterns
GALJ.JPOJ.JS - Twenty- six Health Dept.; Mary Jeanne Lookado, Porter; Mrs. JoAnn
We~ Custo(n Dress Making
persons i1ttPnded a HSVP Walker of the Holzer Medical McDonald, Mrs. Elizabeth Hill,
Smger Sales &amp; Service
Center
Volunteer
Services
with
t. Retired Persons Volynteer
Mrs.
Virginia
Stickler ,
Phone 446-9255
Bessie
Sheets
representing
the
Program l mee ting recently at
58 Court. St.
Gallipolis
Gallipolis, Mr. Willie Bowman,
the Groce United Methodist Senior c'itizens Center.
Coffee, homemade donuts Fairmont, W. Va.
Church.
Gallia County Coord inator, and banana nut bread were
Maye ',Roush introdu ced ser ved to Mary Kathryn
several repr ese nta tives of Smalley, RSVP Director of
various work stations to the Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and
group : Virginia Killen of the Vinton counties; Lawrence
City Health Dept. ; Carol Davis McQuaid, Sadie Jones, Marie
of the American Red Cross: Van Gilder, Jla Artus, Alvalee
Pearl Pope of the County Cook, Florence Willis, Mae
PARTS
Lawre nce, Cora Rupe, Nellie
AND
Ford , Goldie Rice, . Ethel LA BOR
Robinson, Florence Wickline,
Glen Roush, Annie Galloway,
ON 100% SOLID STAT£ ~ILCO® COLOR TV CONSOLE.
OMITTED
Mary Sisson, Melinda BradRIO GRANDE - Mr . and bury, Elias Sisson and Ella
Mrs. 'I'im Bickers and Craig Condee.
were unintentionally omitted
A total of 826 miles was
from the list of those attending driven by van driver, Rene
the Cradle to College Mothers Broyles, to transport 94
Club Chrisimas party Dec. 14 volunteers that donated 806
at the Springfield Gran ge Hall. hours to the community.

Rev. Larry Poling , The HI..ooking Glass" program consists of

song and testimony of the saving love of Jesus Chr ist.

TIIESDA-l
GIRLS ATHLETIC Booster
meeting, 7:30p.m. at Southern
High School.

Gallia se·niors welcome new year
BY RUTH MILLER
, GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizens Center of · Gallia
~unty held a New Year's Eve
·party to welcome the new year
in.
A lot of Senior Citizens
probably would have been
home alone, so a party was
. ~nned especially- for them
liut anyone wishing to come
Y;ould have been welcome.
., There was entertainment for
all: Downstairs there was a
Bingo game in one room with
prizes for the winners. In
another room there was musiC'

and sin ging and upstairs we ·
had four tables of rook. There
is always something to do.
We had refreshments, coffee
and punch any time we wanted
them. At 12 o'clock midniglll,
we wished everyone a huppy
new yeur. I think everyone
reutl y enjoyed the party . I'm
sure I did .

1\eno Hidg('

\-

During this new year we are
hoping to have more ini&lt;&gt;resting things to do. If you
are Senior citizen and do not
belong, come Jo.in up and help
make some one feel happy and
needed. We all need someone
some time.
Be sure to check our

Cnlumbus visited with her
parents . Mr. a nd Mr s.
Maynard Bahr, one day last

SON BORN
RUTLAND - Mr . and Mrs.
~ar1es E. Carson. ilnnouncc
the birth of a son, Richa1·d
David, Friday at Holze r
Medical Center. The infant
\l{eigh ed 8\V lbs. Maternal
grandmothe~;is Maxine Owens,
Pomeroy, paternal grandfather is Charles W. Carson, ·
Rutland,
and
great·
~randmother Is Freda Casto,
Pomeroy. They are also the
parents of a son, Chad, age
three.

HOSPITALIZED
POMEROY - NelUe Eblin,
Mulben-y Ave., is confined to
Holzer Medical Center. Her
toom number is 413 .
l

A diamond i$ forevet

Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan'
and family atte nded the Smith
fa mil y get-together a t the
home of Mr. Hnd Mr s. Philip
Smith on the Sunday before
Cltrist!llas. Thl' rt were 25 in
;1! \t.•ndanec.

r.·tr. omd Mrs . J.cuTy Cur tis
and famil y entertained with H
family ge t-IOge thcr on Sunday.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Curtis and family of
Charleston, Mrs . Mary Pierce
of Long Botlom, Mr . and Mrs.
Hobart Newell and family of
Chester and Mr . and Mrs. John
Newell and sons of Keno.
A family get-together at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Erroll
Conroy 811d Mrs. Alice Dodson
included Mr: an d Mrs. Robert
Hutchinson of Omaha , Neb.,
Mr. and Mrs. George Conroy
Jr. and Kim of Akron. Hugh
Conro.y and friend, Carol Essex
of Akron, who ca me for
Christmas.
Mrs.
-Alice
Ferguson of Huntington came
for a few days, then left to go to
Cohunbus to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Conroy .
Mr . and Mrs. i\rt Caspe r of

week.
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
Farley and fami ly of Grove
Ci ty visited with her mother
a nd sislc r."MJ·. and Mrs. Albert

Rhinehart anil Mr . and Mrs.
Lc'l rfy Farley und Laura .
Mrs. Glenna Milhoan attended H famil y get-toge-ther On
Christmas at the home or Mr .
and Mrs. Dwight Milhoa n.
Those ultending were Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Moore and Randy,
Mr . and Mrs . Tom Ewing and
Rhett Milhoan .
Rhett Milhoan spent three
&lt;lays with Mr. and Mrs. Blaine
Milhoan and family during
Ch ristmas vacation.
Mr . and Mrs. E . Althouse
moved into the home formerly
owned by the late Mrs. Edith
Osborne.
Mr . and Mrs . Robert Wyatt
of Parkersbw'l} called on Mrs.
Mary Pierce and then Mr.
Wyatt called on Mrs. Glenna
Nlilhoan and Bernard.
Earl Hunt is improving after
his accicent.
Mrs . Glenna Milhoan and
Bernard were dj,nner guests of
Mr . and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan .

REGULAR
meeting
Southeastern Ohio Gospel
Music Association, potluck 6
p,m., meeting, 7:30 · p.m.
Springfield Grange Hall .
· Everyone welcome.
. REGULAR meeting,
Pomeroy · Chapter 186, OES,
7:45 p.m. Obligation night will
be observed. All members
in vi ted to attend; refreshments.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sdrority, 7:30
p.m. Colurilbia Gas Co. office.
Cultural report by Karen
McGraw. Demonstration by
Gas Co. economist.
CHESTER
Council,
Daughters of America, 7:30
p.m. at the hall. Flagbearers
and officers to wear white.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Middl811Q[I
Uons Club, regular meeting at
noon, Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Roy81 · Arch Masons, stated
conclave 7:30 p.m., Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
stated assembly, 8:30p.m.
WHITE Rose Lodge 1:30
p.m. ·at Legion Hall in Middleport.

SALE FABRICS
FRENCH CITY
FABRIC SHOPPE

26 attend RSVP meeting

-

"For two years after delivery, _
we'll fix anything that's our fault."

Published every Sunda)· by The Ohi o

i

(1.

.-

1

'lfiE DAIL:l' SEI':iTINEL

·Big

P\lbUshfrd tvery wtfld.ay t\'ening nC"ept
Wurday. Enten!4onRCmd class mallin«
matter at Pu"net'tly, Ohio Poat Offk-e.
By caJTler daily and Sund..)' lilt- per

N~me

Brands at1 BIG Savings
~

week . Motor rout• A.60 pt1' moo.lfl.
MAlL
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Thr Galllpol.b TlibuM In Ohio and Weal •

1

I

Virj!lnia one month 12.50; 001' year 11_1.00:
1 siJ month! t:9.50; three montti'! 113.00.
~ E.latwht!tt Qlper')·~r ; sb. mooh llUO; .
three monll'd ·t!iJO; motor route fi.CO 1

. ~· .
&gt;.

•AUDITIONS eF ANF ARES
• NATURAL
•JOLENE
BRIDGE eNAJ'URALIZERS(;
•FASHION CRAFT
. l

, monthly.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE

'l'tle Dlil,y Stntintl, ~month $i.!IO: one
)'t¥ SllOO'!" sb. months 19.50: thrft
oaths ts.oo. Elsewhere i:p« )-tar: six
mun ttw .SIUO; three month, ts.SO: motQl'
route $:.&amp;0 monthly.
, nw.· Unitrd ~ Intemational i.'l f'.I·
dusi,-ely enti Ufd to U'le use for publication
' r:i all news displtehts credited to th.l.! \
newsptP« and a~ tiJf local newa

342 Second /l,ve.
Gallipolis, Ohio

pu~hmin,

..,•

I·

VALUES TO •22.00

•8" 10

QIEST FREEZERS

'

8-10-15-20-25
Cu. Ft.

ONE GROUP

UPRIGHTS

LADIES'

13-1 S-16-14

SHOES

r

APPLIANCES
RIDENOUR'S . TV &amp;Gas
Service
'

I

I

$

5

,_ .__ _ __;O~N_;L•Y--~

_ALL IN STOCK NOW

..

MAIN ST.

' Chester, Ohio

.,

'
'

J

by Helen Swisher : " The ·
Teinptations of Jesus in the
Wilderness" wi th sc ripture
from Luke 4:1-14 by Dessie
Holcomb; '.'The Ca ll to a New
Birth " .with snipture fr om
John 3: l-t7 by Pina Ward: ·'A
New Heaven and a New EartJ1"
with scripture from Rev. 21 :1
by Virginia Rous h. The latter
three - were par"'t of · the
presentation gea red to self
denial.
·
Evelyn Rothgeb asked the
Bible ques tions and the group
st udied Hebr ews 5 wi th
Florence Allen giving the
benediction .

·

Members reported 72 sick
calls and the birthday
of Evelyn Rothteb was observed. F:ig ht members · and
two guests. Dessie Holcomb
and Margaret Smith, ,.,.,ere
seated at the table for refreshments of sandwiches, sala~ .
cheese-its, candy, · ~uts and
coffee. Ethel Wright asked
grace. Assistin g Mrs . Allen

w1tr1 lhe

The ne.xt mt•cling will be :.111-

s ervin~ wer~ [}(&gt;s~ le

Hoh::omV (llld Murga rlft -Smith. nomH.·ed .

Class 12 gives Christmas gifts ·MIDDLEPORT - Gifts for
the residents of the Meigs
County Infirmfl,ry a nd the
children at the M e igs-G.~ lli a
County Children's Home were
provided by Class 12 of !he
Heat h United Methodi st
Church.
Arran gement s for
the
projecls were carried out at a
' recent meeting of the , class at
the Heath United Methodist
parsonage. Contributing to the
money sent for the children at
the cqun ty home were members or the Eleanor Circle . A
girt or mon ey was also
prese nted that night to Rev .
and Mrs. Robert Bwngarner
from the church circles.
To o.pen the meeting, Mrs.
Robert Rinehart, president,
rea d a greeting which she had
received from a friend teHing

of the losS of her tn'asband und

how she had found solace by
turmng to Ct1ris.t. The Christn.las program wus given by
Hl~\' . Bumgarner who told the
story oY the pilgrinwge to
Be thlehe m on the first Christmas as written by Lee Wallaee.
He also read a story about
"Tinse l &lt;Jnd Hay'' comparing
th e beauty or the fir st
Chri:stmas wil.h the uglin e_~s
presen t in the word then and
ye t today where people forget
the real mea ning of Chris tmas.
Prayer and group singing or
" Li ttle Town o( Bethlehem"
concluded the meeting:.
Members co mmented on
Chri stmas customs and
tr~ditions and Mrs. Charles
Me Daniel gave · the benedictio n. Refre shments were
se rved by the hostesses.

5 12~

ONE GROUP

Children's
SHOES

ONLY

MAROUERITE'S
SHOES
'
Betty Ohlinger

'

$4

'

T

'

~I C~511EMA. Early Americdn. Fin ished to match Plan k Mapfe.

P,HILCOMATICT~ Ill COLOR TV
with "~ands~Off" AutOmaticTuning
Truly automatic 1 "Hands-on·: tuning Jocks In
8115 vital" elements of a goOd color picturecolor, tint, brightness, contraat and automatic.
fine tuning:
·
· • 100% solid state chassis with 14 Jeplaceable
plug-in r...:.~ules, 8Jr.teg.atlld Circuits
• Super Black Ma.lrix picture tube ·
• Philco~ Picture Guard System
• 70-positlon "Channel-Set" UHF setector
•' 75-ohm coaxilil cable TV' antenna
jack
'

\

·

,
25

\

diagonal picture

,,

'"
·"

ONLY

$650
WQH TRIDE

11.1

...
I·'

PO.ME ROY, 0.

.

I

I

QUANTITY RIGHTS ARE RESERVED
NO SALES TO DEALERS

••

STdRE HOURS

PRICES GOOD
THRU 1/11/75

OPErt 8 AM · 10 PM MON.-SAT.
10 AM · 10 PM SUNDAYS

-·

\

WOMEN'S
(ioimies, AuditiOns,
Naturalizer, Cobblers,
Audition_s. Miss Wonderful
OFF
Jacqueline, Johansen
All from
stock. REG. PRICE

$700

WOMEN'S
NOW
HANDBAGS . lL Price

MENS WORK SHOES
AND WORK BOOTS

72

All Colors ·

$3000FF
.
Regular Price

Group of Women's

GROUP OF BOYS'

.BETTER SHOES

RUBBER BOOTS

$500BROKEN SIZES

$

G. RQUN·D BEE. F.•••••••••••••••••••6- 9~
GROUND· CHUCK.....;.......~~~99~
31bs.ormore

•

GROUP of MEN'S

Setter Shoes

lb..

•

$,. ·700 BROKEN SIZI
'

-

lie MCDfiiO AVQt\M

I e.-UJPOI N1 OHtO

"Open Monday Til 8 pm

' ''

'

.

t
.
lb.
3·9e
Tom a oes................. ...........
.
.
.
Celery.........................-... ~~~.J 9' ·.
.

GALLIA County OAPSE
Chapter 682 meets at 7:30p.m.
at the Hannan Trace High
School.
Thlolocly really had no right to be famo\JI. She was
GAHS Band Boosters meets at
the
wife
of a oubotant,at Aorentlne merchant named Blocondo
7:25p.m. at the band room .
when, .In t499, Da V1ncl'o portrait made her-Immortal. The
CATECHISM I Class resumes
mysterious Mono Ll~ smile? Perhaps she was thinking al&gt;out?3
going shopping: 01 co~rae, if she'd had Muter Qhorge,
at: New Ufe Lutheran Chrn:ch,
like you do now, she'd be grinnlna fro"! oar to oar.
4:30 to 5:30p.m.
TIJESDAY
,
CATECHISM II Class resumes
at New Life Lutheran Church 4
to 5 p.m.
'
. ·
REGULAR
meet1ng
Southeastern Ohio Gospel
Music Association; potluck, 6
p.m., meeting at 7:30. Springfield Grange Hall. Eyeryone
welcome.
WAYSIDE Garden Club meets
wi,!h Mrs: Philip Bailey, 7":30
p.m.
BETTY Starn Bible Class
meets at 7:30 p.m. in the
fellowship room of the First
BaptiSt Church . All members
urged to come.
. .
HOST YULE GUESTS
MIDDLEPOR:r - Mr. and
MrS. Millard Wildermuth, Mrs .
FlOssie AllensworUt 8l!d Mr.
and Mrs. Jitn Wildermuth were
Christmas guests of Mr. and
Mii. John Allensworth, and
childr· !{rlstiit and Courtney, .
.
MC C· t. New Y~'s day
Mr. ana Mrs . Mlllard
' .
· w-ddennuth had as guests all of
the a ])ave except Mr. and Mrs. .
JimWildennuth.
1.....~..........~..............-.............~............1

.

,.
'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

Coming
Events

..

.

.

COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS·
. BANK

. ~·

...

'

'

-

111 Court St.. P'urOOvy. 6. 4$119.

' of its lasting
Because
. beauty and ·value, a diamond
ring is the perfect symb ol of
love. And .. . there is no finer
diamond ring than a Keepsake .

•

MONDAY
GALLIA County Pomona
Grange, 8 p.m., Springfield
Grange Hall. Potluck refreshments.
DAR meets at I: 30 p.m. with
Mrs. Howard Brannon.

SUN,IMY TIMES-SENTINEL

01 GaWpqllo, Ohio llO!l.

-

SUNDAY
REVIVAL begins at Prospect
Baptist Church at 7:30 p.m.
with Rev. John Jeffrey ,
evangelist, and the Gospel
Messengers. Special singing
throughout "the week. Rev. Ted
Glassburn, pastor. Everyone
welcome.

Now Save Y3 to Y2 and MORE
Valley Pllbllshing Co.
GAl.LJPOJ_.tS
Q~ILV TRJBdNE
l P Third :Cve., GalliJ:Iol,b, ()hio 46631.
PubU.ahed evtry weekc.ky eve nlr\i ta- 1
rtpt Saturday. Second Clua Posta11e Paid

Ill

JCalendarl

The fabulous Futura II sew- ·
ing machine is the world's
only instant convertible '
With an exclusive 2-way~
sewing surface. Just flip
a panel to change
from flat to in-theround sewing.

Mr. and Mrs. Willie Bowman

. -~~:=*~::::~::~~

I Social

reg. price

· On the Futura ll 'sewing machine during the Singer
"It pars to sew" sale. Buy now. It pars.

a.m. A potluck fellowship dinner will be held at '12 noon.
Chuck Cooper is a sophomore this year at Morehead State
University in Morehead, Ky . He plans a life of full-time
Christian -service as an evangelist. Everyone is welcome to
attend any and all services, by the pastor of Christ Church,

'

. l

UMW meets -in Allen_.home

GALLIP,OLIS - · Mr . and Hughes, Sue and Barbara , Mr ..
Mrs. Lewis Hughes entertained and Mrs. Mike · Hughes and
Dec. 22 with a family dinnr and Jennifer, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Goble Rita and
Rob, all of
'
. gift exchange.
Gallipolis.
Those attending were Mr.
The fo llowing week they
and Mrs. Marion Rainey ,
David and Danny, Nitro, W. hosted Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Va.; Mr . and Mrs .. Paul Burks, Huntington, .W. Va. ,
Jo.pling, Kimberly and Jen- alUltand uncle of Mrs. Hughes;
nifer, Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Hughes,
and Mrs. Cecil Hill, Cross- Middleport, and Mrs. Opa(
lands, W. Va.; Mrs . Marion Mink, Gallipolis.
Rainey ,'Sr., Mr. and Mrs . Ra y

...··

.

' 9 .-.; TheSulidayTime~·, Sentinel, SWJd~v . Jan. 5. 1975•

'

$6 5' off

J'

..

..r

I

, I

'·

'

•

"

·! .

I

�....... .
'

I

'

'

'.

I,

•

..

. I
·,, •.

.

. •'

~·

.

I·

.

•

~

'I

.. I

•

'

•'

.

'

'

..U-·

.

Hughes family has.gathering
'
.

KANAUGi - The January
meettng of the Kanauga United
Methodist Women was held
with Florence Allen at her
home in Pt. Pleasant~
Theme of the session was
''Prayer and Self Denia l" witl1
group singing of " Th e
Beautiful Garden of Prayer" to
open the meeting. Marv
Shamblin had the open in g
prayer and roll call was answered with a scriptufe verse
beginning with the Jetter "J "
or a prayer. ~
Program presentati ons
included "The New Year's
Resolution"
by
Emma
Spencer; " The Covenant
Prayer" used by John Wesley

.

ever!

s:

with carrying

cuse or cab ine t

GOD'S LOOKING GLASS - A quartet from Morehead
State Un iversity is pictured here. From left are Rhonda
Cooper, Chuck Cooper, Donna Clark and Steve Jones. The
.. quartet will be holding a revival, the weekend of Jan. 10, II
•
,. and 12, at the .Christ United Methodist Church . Services will
•.
begin each evening at 7:iJO, Evangelist Chuck Cooper; a
member of the group, bringing the messages. TI1ere will also
be special services Sunday morning, Jan . 12 startine "\.,!0 :45

Bowman-Byru$ vows read

MONDAY
SOUTHERN Athletic
Boosters 7:30p.m. at Southern
High school. Installation of new
officers.
RACINE Chapter 134, OES
regular session, 8 p.m. at the
Masonic Temple. Obligation
Night will be observed.

PORTER '--- Virgil Byus, carnations.
The mother of the bride
Point Pleasant, and Mts.
920
chose
a gown with a pink
Harold Look ado, Porter , are
announcing the marriage of corsage and the groom's
their daughl&lt;&gt;r, Brenda Gail mother wore an orchid suit
Byus, to Willie Delano with a yellow cor$age. The
Bowman , son of Mr. and Mrs. other two sisters of the bride
Willie
Bowman ,
Poinl were dressed like the maid of .
honor and all of the dresses
Pleasant.
.
ca lendar in t l1_e__!lu.~~!!!:)ape r __ The wedding took place were made by the mother of
for 11pcunungeven1S. Jf you are. Saturday, Nov. 23, at Hickory the bride .
Following the ceremony a
a member yo u should receive Chapel Church at 11 a.m .
reception
was held at the
one of our newsletters but if
The bride was attend ed by
·.
F
.O
.P
.
building
at Krodel
you hav en' t ca ll the center and her sister, Mi'Ss Tammy Byus,
give your nume and address and the groom's best 'man was Park.
The bride and groom 's table
~md you will get one.
his brother, George Bowman.
was
centered with a thfee·tier
You might be inter:ested in
The bride's flowers were
cake'and
other cakes, made by
gmn es such ;1s bowling and white carnations and baby's
c·oma sl&lt;t.
breath and she appeared in a the mother of the bride, and
There IS a trip sc hedul ed for white polyester empire waist · served by her grandmother,
the "Celebr;1t ion" of the Ice ljne dress with mutton sleeves, Mrs. Ubby Hill, Gallipolis. The ,
C11pades at Coliseum at State and a waist line veil of white punch bowl was presided over
MANY. MANY
Fai rg rounds in Columbus , Jan . lat-€. Her attelidant wore a by Mrs. Marge Gillespie and
2t Don 't wait too long to sign gown of tight blue with white sister of the bride, Mrs. Cathy
up . There will be only one bus trim made identical to the lfhaxton. Other assistants were
of Senior citizens going .
bride's with a blue corsage of Mrs. Barbara Bowman, and
Mrs. Harold Lookado Mrs.
Cathy Thaxton registered ·the
guests.
Out-of-to)Vn guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Lookado and ·
Simplicity, McCal)s,
Bill, Charlie and Susan
Butterick, Vogue Patterns
GALJ.JPOJ.JS - Twenty- six Health Dept.; Mary Jeanne Lookado, Porter; Mrs. JoAnn
We~ Custo(n Dress Making
persons i1ttPnded a HSVP Walker of the Holzer Medical McDonald, Mrs. Elizabeth Hill,
Smger Sales &amp; Service
Center
Volunteer
Services
with
t. Retired Persons Volynteer
Mrs.
Virginia
Stickler ,
Phone 446-9255
Bessie
Sheets
representing
the
Program l mee ting recently at
58 Court. St.
Gallipolis
Gallipolis, Mr. Willie Bowman,
the Groce United Methodist Senior c'itizens Center.
Coffee, homemade donuts Fairmont, W. Va.
Church.
Gallia County Coord inator, and banana nut bread were
Maye ',Roush introdu ced ser ved to Mary Kathryn
several repr ese nta tives of Smalley, RSVP Director of
various work stations to the Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and
group : Virginia Killen of the Vinton counties; Lawrence
City Health Dept. ; Carol Davis McQuaid, Sadie Jones, Marie
of the American Red Cross: Van Gilder, Jla Artus, Alvalee
Pearl Pope of the County Cook, Florence Willis, Mae
PARTS
Lawre nce, Cora Rupe, Nellie
AND
Ford , Goldie Rice, . Ethel LA BOR
Robinson, Florence Wickline,
Glen Roush, Annie Galloway,
ON 100% SOLID STAT£ ~ILCO® COLOR TV CONSOLE.
OMITTED
Mary Sisson, Melinda BradRIO GRANDE - Mr . and bury, Elias Sisson and Ella
Mrs. 'I'im Bickers and Craig Condee.
were unintentionally omitted
A total of 826 miles was
from the list of those attending driven by van driver, Rene
the Cradle to College Mothers Broyles, to transport 94
Club Chrisimas party Dec. 14 volunteers that donated 806
at the Springfield Gran ge Hall. hours to the community.

Rev. Larry Poling , The HI..ooking Glass" program consists of

song and testimony of the saving love of Jesus Chr ist.

TIIESDA-l
GIRLS ATHLETIC Booster
meeting, 7:30p.m. at Southern
High School.

Gallia se·niors welcome new year
BY RUTH MILLER
, GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizens Center of · Gallia
~unty held a New Year's Eve
·party to welcome the new year
in.
A lot of Senior Citizens
probably would have been
home alone, so a party was
. ~nned especially- for them
liut anyone wishing to come
Y;ould have been welcome.
., There was entertainment for
all: Downstairs there was a
Bingo game in one room with
prizes for the winners. In
another room there was musiC'

and sin ging and upstairs we ·
had four tables of rook. There
is always something to do.
We had refreshments, coffee
and punch any time we wanted
them. At 12 o'clock midniglll,
we wished everyone a huppy
new yeur. I think everyone
reutl y enjoyed the party . I'm
sure I did .

1\eno Hidg('

\-

During this new year we are
hoping to have more ini&lt;&gt;resting things to do. If you
are Senior citizen and do not
belong, come Jo.in up and help
make some one feel happy and
needed. We all need someone
some time.
Be sure to check our

Cnlumbus visited with her
parents . Mr. a nd Mr s.
Maynard Bahr, one day last

SON BORN
RUTLAND - Mr . and Mrs.
~ar1es E. Carson. ilnnouncc
the birth of a son, Richa1·d
David, Friday at Holze r
Medical Center. The infant
\l{eigh ed 8\V lbs. Maternal
grandmothe~;is Maxine Owens,
Pomeroy, paternal grandfather is Charles W. Carson, ·
Rutland,
and
great·
~randmother Is Freda Casto,
Pomeroy. They are also the
parents of a son, Chad, age
three.

HOSPITALIZED
POMEROY - NelUe Eblin,
Mulben-y Ave., is confined to
Holzer Medical Center. Her
toom number is 413 .
l

A diamond i$ forevet

Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan'
and family atte nded the Smith
fa mil y get-together a t the
home of Mr. Hnd Mr s. Philip
Smith on the Sunday before
Cltrist!llas. Thl' rt were 25 in
;1! \t.•ndanec.

r.·tr. omd Mrs . J.cuTy Cur tis
and famil y entertained with H
family ge t-IOge thcr on Sunday.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Curtis and family of
Charleston, Mrs . Mary Pierce
of Long Botlom, Mr . and Mrs.
Hobart Newell and family of
Chester and Mr . and Mrs. John
Newell and sons of Keno.
A family get-together at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Erroll
Conroy 811d Mrs. Alice Dodson
included Mr: an d Mrs. Robert
Hutchinson of Omaha , Neb.,
Mr. and Mrs. George Conroy
Jr. and Kim of Akron. Hugh
Conro.y and friend, Carol Essex
of Akron, who ca me for
Christmas.
Mrs.
-Alice
Ferguson of Huntington came
for a few days, then left to go to
Cohunbus to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Conroy .
Mr . and Mrs. i\rt Caspe r of

week.
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
Farley and fami ly of Grove
Ci ty visited with her mother
a nd sislc r."MJ·. and Mrs. Albert

Rhinehart anil Mr . and Mrs.
Lc'l rfy Farley und Laura .
Mrs. Glenna Milhoan attended H famil y get-toge-ther On
Christmas at the home or Mr .
and Mrs. Dwight Milhoa n.
Those ultending were Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Moore and Randy,
Mr . and Mrs . Tom Ewing and
Rhett Milhoan .
Rhett Milhoan spent three
&lt;lays with Mr. and Mrs. Blaine
Milhoan and family during
Ch ristmas vacation.
Mr . and Mrs. E . Althouse
moved into the home formerly
owned by the late Mrs. Edith
Osborne.
Mr . and Mrs . Robert Wyatt
of Parkersbw'l} called on Mrs.
Mary Pierce and then Mr.
Wyatt called on Mrs. Glenna
Nlilhoan and Bernard.
Earl Hunt is improving after
his accicent.
Mrs . Glenna Milhoan and
Bernard were dj,nner guests of
Mr . and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan .

REGULAR
meeting
Southeastern Ohio Gospel
Music Association, potluck 6
p,m., meeting, 7:30 · p.m.
Springfield Grange Hall .
· Everyone welcome.
. REGULAR meeting,
Pomeroy · Chapter 186, OES,
7:45 p.m. Obligation night will
be observed. All members
in vi ted to attend; refreshments.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sdrority, 7:30
p.m. Colurilbia Gas Co. office.
Cultural report by Karen
McGraw. Demonstration by
Gas Co. economist.
CHESTER
Council,
Daughters of America, 7:30
p.m. at the hall. Flagbearers
and officers to wear white.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Middl811Q[I
Uons Club, regular meeting at
noon, Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Roy81 · Arch Masons, stated
conclave 7:30 p.m., Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
stated assembly, 8:30p.m.
WHITE Rose Lodge 1:30
p.m. ·at Legion Hall in Middleport.

SALE FABRICS
FRENCH CITY
FABRIC SHOPPE

26 attend RSVP meeting

-

"For two years after delivery, _
we'll fix anything that's our fault."

Published every Sunda)· by The Ohi o

i

(1.

.-

1

'lfiE DAIL:l' SEI':iTINEL

·Big

P\lbUshfrd tvery wtfld.ay t\'ening nC"ept
Wurday. Enten!4onRCmd class mallin«
matter at Pu"net'tly, Ohio Poat Offk-e.
By caJTler daily and Sund..)' lilt- per

N~me

Brands at1 BIG Savings
~

week . Motor rout• A.60 pt1' moo.lfl.
MAlL
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Thr Galllpol.b TlibuM In Ohio and Weal •

1

I

Virj!lnia one month 12.50; 001' year 11_1.00:
1 siJ month! t:9.50; three montti'! 113.00.
~ E.latwht!tt Qlper')·~r ; sb. mooh llUO; .
three monll'd ·t!iJO; motor route fi.CO 1

. ~· .
&gt;.

•AUDITIONS eF ANF ARES
• NATURAL
•JOLENE
BRIDGE eNAJ'URALIZERS(;
•FASHION CRAFT
. l

, monthly.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE

'l'tle Dlil,y Stntintl, ~month $i.!IO: one
)'t¥ SllOO'!" sb. months 19.50: thrft
oaths ts.oo. Elsewhere i:p« )-tar: six
mun ttw .SIUO; three month, ts.SO: motQl'
route $:.&amp;0 monthly.
, nw.· Unitrd ~ Intemational i.'l f'.I·
dusi,-ely enti Ufd to U'le use for publication
' r:i all news displtehts credited to th.l.! \
newsptP« and a~ tiJf local newa

342 Second /l,ve.
Gallipolis, Ohio

pu~hmin,

..,•

I·

VALUES TO •22.00

•8" 10

QIEST FREEZERS

'

8-10-15-20-25
Cu. Ft.

ONE GROUP

UPRIGHTS

LADIES'

13-1 S-16-14

SHOES

r

APPLIANCES
RIDENOUR'S . TV &amp;Gas
Service
'

I

I

$

5

,_ .__ _ __;O~N_;L•Y--~

_ALL IN STOCK NOW

..

MAIN ST.

' Chester, Ohio

.,

'
'

J

by Helen Swisher : " The ·
Teinptations of Jesus in the
Wilderness" wi th sc ripture
from Luke 4:1-14 by Dessie
Holcomb; '.'The Ca ll to a New
Birth " .with snipture fr om
John 3: l-t7 by Pina Ward: ·'A
New Heaven and a New EartJ1"
with scripture from Rev. 21 :1
by Virginia Rous h. The latter
three - were par"'t of · the
presentation gea red to self
denial.
·
Evelyn Rothgeb asked the
Bible ques tions and the group
st udied Hebr ews 5 wi th
Florence Allen giving the
benediction .

·

Members reported 72 sick
calls and the birthday
of Evelyn Rothteb was observed. F:ig ht members · and
two guests. Dessie Holcomb
and Margaret Smith, ,.,.,ere
seated at the table for refreshments of sandwiches, sala~ .
cheese-its, candy, · ~uts and
coffee. Ethel Wright asked
grace. Assistin g Mrs . Allen

w1tr1 lhe

The ne.xt mt•cling will be :.111-

s ervin~ wer~ [}(&gt;s~ le

Hoh::omV (llld Murga rlft -Smith. nomH.·ed .

Class 12 gives Christmas gifts ·MIDDLEPORT - Gifts for
the residents of the Meigs
County Infirmfl,ry a nd the
children at the M e igs-G.~ lli a
County Children's Home were
provided by Class 12 of !he
Heat h United Methodi st
Church.
Arran gement s for
the
projecls were carried out at a
' recent meeting of the , class at
the Heath United Methodist
parsonage. Contributing to the
money sent for the children at
the cqun ty home were members or the Eleanor Circle . A
girt or mon ey was also
prese nted that night to Rev .
and Mrs. Robert Bwngarner
from the church circles.
To o.pen the meeting, Mrs.
Robert Rinehart, president,
rea d a greeting which she had
received from a friend teHing

of the losS of her tn'asband und

how she had found solace by
turmng to Ct1ris.t. The Christn.las program wus given by
Hl~\' . Bumgarner who told the
story oY the pilgrinwge to
Be thlehe m on the first Christmas as written by Lee Wallaee.
He also read a story about
"Tinse l &lt;Jnd Hay'' comparing
th e beauty or the fir st
Chri:stmas wil.h the uglin e_~s
presen t in the word then and
ye t today where people forget
the real mea ning of Chris tmas.
Prayer and group singing or
" Li ttle Town o( Bethlehem"
concluded the meeting:.
Members co mmented on
Chri stmas customs and
tr~ditions and Mrs. Charles
Me Daniel gave · the benedictio n. Refre shments were
se rved by the hostesses.

5 12~

ONE GROUP

Children's
SHOES

ONLY

MAROUERITE'S
SHOES
'
Betty Ohlinger

'

$4

'

T

'

~I C~511EMA. Early Americdn. Fin ished to match Plan k Mapfe.

P,HILCOMATICT~ Ill COLOR TV
with "~ands~Off" AutOmaticTuning
Truly automatic 1 "Hands-on·: tuning Jocks In
8115 vital" elements of a goOd color picturecolor, tint, brightness, contraat and automatic.
fine tuning:
·
· • 100% solid state chassis with 14 Jeplaceable
plug-in r...:.~ules, 8Jr.teg.atlld Circuits
• Super Black Ma.lrix picture tube ·
• Philco~ Picture Guard System
• 70-positlon "Channel-Set" UHF setector
•' 75-ohm coaxilil cable TV' antenna
jack
'

\

·

,
25

\

diagonal picture

,,

'"
·"

ONLY

$650
WQH TRIDE

11.1

...
I·'

PO.ME ROY, 0.

.

I

I

QUANTITY RIGHTS ARE RESERVED
NO SALES TO DEALERS

••

STdRE HOURS

PRICES GOOD
THRU 1/11/75

OPErt 8 AM · 10 PM MON.-SAT.
10 AM · 10 PM SUNDAYS

-·

\

WOMEN'S
(ioimies, AuditiOns,
Naturalizer, Cobblers,
Audition_s. Miss Wonderful
OFF
Jacqueline, Johansen
All from
stock. REG. PRICE

$700

WOMEN'S
NOW
HANDBAGS . lL Price

MENS WORK SHOES
AND WORK BOOTS

72

All Colors ·

$3000FF
.
Regular Price

Group of Women's

GROUP OF BOYS'

.BETTER SHOES

RUBBER BOOTS

$500BROKEN SIZES

$

G. RQUN·D BEE. F.•••••••••••••••••••6- 9~
GROUND· CHUCK.....;.......~~~99~
31bs.ormore

•

GROUP of MEN'S

Setter Shoes

lb..

•

$,. ·700 BROKEN SIZI
'

-

lie MCDfiiO AVQt\M

I e.-UJPOI N1 OHtO

"Open Monday Til 8 pm

' ''

'

.

t
.
lb.
3·9e
Tom a oes................. ...........
.
.
.
Celery.........................-... ~~~.J 9' ·.
.

GALLIA County OAPSE
Chapter 682 meets at 7:30p.m.
at the Hannan Trace High
School.
Thlolocly really had no right to be famo\JI. She was
GAHS Band Boosters meets at
the
wife
of a oubotant,at Aorentlne merchant named Blocondo
7:25p.m. at the band room .
when, .In t499, Da V1ncl'o portrait made her-Immortal. The
CATECHISM I Class resumes
mysterious Mono Ll~ smile? Perhaps she was thinking al&gt;out?3
going shopping: 01 co~rae, if she'd had Muter Qhorge,
at: New Ufe Lutheran Chrn:ch,
like you do now, she'd be grinnlna fro"! oar to oar.
4:30 to 5:30p.m.
TIJESDAY
,
CATECHISM II Class resumes
at New Life Lutheran Church 4
to 5 p.m.
'
. ·
REGULAR
meet1ng
Southeastern Ohio Gospel
Music Association; potluck, 6
p.m., meeting at 7:30. Springfield Grange Hall. Eyeryone
welcome.
WAYSIDE Garden Club meets
wi,!h Mrs: Philip Bailey, 7":30
p.m.
BETTY Starn Bible Class
meets at 7:30 p.m. in the
fellowship room of the First
BaptiSt Church . All members
urged to come.
. .
HOST YULE GUESTS
MIDDLEPOR:r - Mr. and
MrS. Millard Wildermuth, Mrs .
FlOssie AllensworUt 8l!d Mr.
and Mrs. Jitn Wildermuth were
Christmas guests of Mr. and
Mii. John Allensworth, and
childr· !{rlstiit and Courtney, .
.
MC C· t. New Y~'s day
Mr. ana Mrs . Mlllard
' .
· w-ddennuth had as guests all of
the a ])ave except Mr. and Mrs. .
JimWildennuth.
1.....~..........~..............-.............~............1

.

,.
'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

Coming
Events

..

.

.

COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS·
. BANK

. ~·

...

'

'

-

111 Court St.. P'urOOvy. 6. 4$119.

' of its lasting
Because
. beauty and ·value, a diamond
ring is the perfect symb ol of
love. And .. . there is no finer
diamond ring than a Keepsake .

•

MONDAY
GALLIA County Pomona
Grange, 8 p.m., Springfield
Grange Hall. Potluck refreshments.
DAR meets at I: 30 p.m. with
Mrs. Howard Brannon.

SUN,IMY TIMES-SENTINEL

01 GaWpqllo, Ohio llO!l.

-

SUNDAY
REVIVAL begins at Prospect
Baptist Church at 7:30 p.m.
with Rev. John Jeffrey ,
evangelist, and the Gospel
Messengers. Special singing
throughout "the week. Rev. Ted
Glassburn, pastor. Everyone
welcome.

Now Save Y3 to Y2 and MORE
Valley Pllbllshing Co.
GAl.LJPOJ_.tS
Q~ILV TRJBdNE
l P Third :Cve., GalliJ:Iol,b, ()hio 46631.
PubU.ahed evtry weekc.ky eve nlr\i ta- 1
rtpt Saturday. Second Clua Posta11e Paid

Ill

JCalendarl

The fabulous Futura II sew- ·
ing machine is the world's
only instant convertible '
With an exclusive 2-way~
sewing surface. Just flip
a panel to change
from flat to in-theround sewing.

Mr. and Mrs. Willie Bowman

. -~~:=*~::::~::~~

I Social

reg. price

· On the Futura ll 'sewing machine during the Singer
"It pars to sew" sale. Buy now. It pars.

a.m. A potluck fellowship dinner will be held at '12 noon.
Chuck Cooper is a sophomore this year at Morehead State
University in Morehead, Ky . He plans a life of full-time
Christian -service as an evangelist. Everyone is welcome to
attend any and all services, by the pastor of Christ Church,

'

. l

UMW meets -in Allen_.home

GALLIP,OLIS - · Mr . and Hughes, Sue and Barbara , Mr ..
Mrs. Lewis Hughes entertained and Mrs. Mike · Hughes and
Dec. 22 with a family dinnr and Jennifer, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Goble Rita and
Rob, all of
'
. gift exchange.
Gallipolis.
Those attending were Mr.
The fo llowing week they
and Mrs. Marion Rainey ,
David and Danny, Nitro, W. hosted Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Va.; Mr . and Mrs .. Paul Burks, Huntington, .W. Va. ,
Jo.pling, Kimberly and Jen- alUltand uncle of Mrs. Hughes;
nifer, Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Hughes,
and Mrs. Cecil Hill, Cross- Middleport, and Mrs. Opa(
lands, W. Va.; Mrs . Marion Mink, Gallipolis.
Rainey ,'Sr., Mr. and Mrs . Ra y

...··

.

' 9 .-.; TheSulidayTime~·, Sentinel, SWJd~v . Jan. 5. 1975•

'

$6 5' off

J'

..

..r

I

, I

'·

'

•

"

·! .

I

�...... '

.
'

..

.

. ·•'

..

-'

'

..

.

.,
,•

.I

'
•

I

'

•'

10- The SWlday Times. Sentinel, SWlday , Jan.'S, 1975
,i::::::::=~::.-=::::..'*~~~~~"-'»~~~':o'%.'=-':~~~:::::::»"!-'*~"!-.'*«!~W..-...~~~-.:_..&gt;.~::~:~::~:~

•

· reaChing zn
POME ROY -

A real ap·

preciation .of the Ameri can

""'' of life and all those ta ken-

I Ed'#ciJtion
·a.nd I&amp;
.

in :\ ust ralia ·l he pets! six

Australia last ~ prip g, bega n

tn c:u mpl c te her two-year minimwn ; The Ch J!dren,, wiJO .. Whil~ they ar rived' in J uly, it
cuntrac· t.
ottc r1d school a.tti r ed in
was winter , .:md they described
The two have lea rned to cope un iform, have nu textbooks but
their fu·s t days as "cold. cold,
i~ a ·t lassr oom whe re in- only exerci!'&gt;e notebooks, &lt;lnd
cold" as they adjusted to the
structi onal materials are .:J l a ttl e te~che rs ure expected to temperature c hange. Both
fltrnish their 0\.\' 11 resources.
Wendy and Teresa have si nce
'
rrtu.·rc are no ca feteri as in the moved . Wendy is now residing
schools alt hough mos t have in a modern flat 111 Granvi lle,
canteens whe r e sa ndwiche s
and Teresa lives in a modern
and t&lt;-l nd y C&lt;Jn be purchased, home in Wentwor thv il le with
and Te resa says that m any uf
an Au stra lian girl.
the d 1ildrcn go withuut lun ch at f'l The two have done lots of
the Merryla ncls School where sights ee ing and enjoyed it

months.
~~~ ar h ing there in Jul v. Teresa
Teres.1 Casci, Middleport. .will be re turni ng in ·May, but
an d We·ncty Carper , of near

have been gained by -two Meigs

Pomer oy, who signed on with

Coun ty yourig women tettching

the Education Depaf tment in

Wendy . whose mother is a
na tivt' Austr&lt;:J iian, will remo:J in

she teaches the fifth grad e.

lhorou~ h ly.

The children are inte nsely
interested in lire in the U11itect
Sta les and Teresa rwted in a
rece nt letter tha t she uses " The

In t\ ug ust. Wendy went to
Ta smania and in October both
she and Ten•sa toflk severa l
one-day rail tours - one lo
Jenolon Caves. one to the Tu li p
Fes ti ve~ !
in Bowra l, and
another to the vineyards of

Dai ly Sen tin el" - se nt to her

by her pa rents , Mr. and Mrs.
Pa ul Casci, and arri ving about

two months aft er pu1Jli ca t1un in the class roo m .

the Pa rliament House .
And the two have many
.the coun try as beautiful and frie nds. Their closest has
ma rked / with
change, per haps been Mrs .. Har ry
bus h Ia n d , -mount a i ns , Davis whom they met their
ocea nside, ci ty.
first day there on a bus. Teresa
Teresa also wen t to Horden ljtayed with Mr. and Mrs.
Pavilhon to see Torn T. Hall, a Davis for several days at one
country . western singer fr om ti me and they also ,entertained
Ke ntucky, who performed with a surprise dinner par ty
·there wi th some Aus trli an honoring Wendy on her birthmu s ic ia ns . She visited a ·' ~y .
conve nt and was given some · Te'resa wiU return to the
as.sis tance by the nun teachers Un ited Slates in May, . Wendy
there in settin g up her school will remain un til mid-1976.
program.
Their experiences as teachers
There have also been trips to in a foreign land have been
the zoo in Sydney to see the many and varied, but for both , ·
kangaroos and koala bears, a time away has kindled a real
ha rb or crui se arou nd th e apprec iation of all the good
shores of Sydney and a visit to things of home.

'

.. "

company
plans gala show
BY FREDERICK M. WINSHIP the American premiere of Glen

and Wendy Carper,d~ughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Carper,
Pomeroy , R. D., fo urth from left . MissCasci and Miss Ca rper
are elementary school teachers in Austra lia.

City camping club. begins new year
State wide, May 9, 10, II at
&amp;ioto Downs race track, nea r
Colwnbus.
Wilford F. va ns. chapter
deleJ.(a te, reported on state
"end of the year" business, and
suggesti ons given by ca mpers
ror fu tur e programs and activities for state meetings. He

what a traffic jam: a lady's
Refreshments of homemade
electric beate r stopped in pie and coffee were served by
the
midd le
uf
mak- Rosina and Merrill Saunders to
ing a ca ke, the ra'nge and the 21 members and one gues t.
washer s tf'i)ped : refri gera tor Visit ors· ar e ...welcome to our
nnd

f ur n ace~

too.

X-ra y meetings.

machine, etc . in hospitals: in a
ba rn 100 milkers turned off .:..
cows had to be milked by hand.
Almost everythi ng in the city
stopped. All this proved how
much every thing depends on

also said more people are
becoming in teres ted in CB
J im Kin g, conservat ion units - they are a great help in
cha irman, repor ted the pa rk time of-trouble on the road .
electricity a nd thCJ t a power
com mission had given the Harland Sanders, Distric t curtailment can be a disaster .
Campers permission to plan t a Field Director, read parts of a People will not beli eve the need
buckeye tree in the city park to letter from the Ohio Sta te for power wi ll outdo the supply.
replace a tree that died. He NCH A . P ci'SOil s having car The dema nd for e lectricity
also sa id merit stripes earned tr ouble on the ro ad have never s tops gr owing - the
by the Campers for building wri tten expressing their ap~ need for power increases with
. bird houses and feeders this . preci ~ti on fqr the NCHA Hot the growth of the population .
.fall. had been applied for . He Line telephone nun1ber. The
Mr. Reece said the electric
also announ ced the an nual legis la ture wi ll consider a companies have been trying to
winter hike at Old Man's Cave suggestion brought up by the prevent air poll uti on fr om
\\'Ould be Jan. II. Anyone in- NCHA for more and be tter these plants by installing very
terested in participating is to restrooms on state routes; the ta ll smokes tacks to he lp
conta ct him for transportation Campe rs ma gaz ine Smoke di ssipate th e fly ash: by
arrangements. Thousands of Signa ls is asking for ad - building cooling towers and
persons fr om all over Ohlo vertisin g rna teri al to help perdpator - hOwever it costs
defray the cost of publishing - $9 •, million to build ON E
attend th is event each year.
Harla nd Sa nd ers , distric t cos t of subscription is sti ll $1. percipator . The cos ts for
fi eld director, installed the new
Marion Will iams, treasurer. clean up or preventi on are so
officers for the year 1975, He reminde9 the Campers that tremendous !hat many times it
read a poem "Cultivating Our NOW is the time to pay dues for · would be simpler to close down
Garden," whi ch told about the 1975.
than to meet the requi rements
goOd things campers should
Program for the evening was - but elec.tric- power is a
plant to make eve rything count given by J ohn Reece of the MUST. He said utility stocks
for somethi ng good and Ohio Power Co. on air have been going dow n and
wonderfu l. In th e NCHA pollution. The film shown was dow n during the last three
couples serve together as of- called " What Time Is the years and stockholders are
ficers; those installed were: Power On Today." Reece said losing money. The pic tures in
president, Bill and Mildred he hoped the things shown the film were taken at the
Seyfried ; vice president, Hoke would never happen. At 10:30 Gavin plan I. A question ancl
an d·
Ethel
Robinson; ' a.m. the elec trici ty was shu t answer period followed the
secretary, Jim and Goldie off - no traffic lights - and program ..
Ki ng : treasurer. Marion and
Anna Williams .
Th e new president , Bill
Sey!ried, appointed corn _millees: membership. Rosina
GA LLIPOJJS - Th&lt;' G11llia l••ssort will be "The Mark of a
Saunders, Ruth Wroblewski. Co u nty
E x tens i on
and Elsie Saunders: ca mping Homem1tkers Club will mce l Ct't-'a li\'r Woman in her
sites. Glenna Sl!eets, Merrill · wednesda y, J11n. 8, at tO ·:w Home." After lunch the lesson
Sa tmd ers and Ar t Wroblewski : ~1.111 . at Gr~cr United wi ll b&lt;• "Tile . Mark of a
conservation and hiki ng. Jim Method ist Church with p&lt;&gt;tluck l'n•a tive Woman in He r
Communi ty "
King; te lephoning. Dot Sheets: lun ch at noon.
Devot ions and crafts of the
chapter delegate and C. B •• Miss Pat Glus.s. arcEt ExCen tenar y area will be in
Wilford Eva ns: chaplain. tension
Age nt
Home ehargc of Tresa Ward and
Harland Sa nders: publicity. Economi cs will be teuehing
Rosina Smmders cmd Blanche (('ader tra ining lessons on thP Rob.,rla Fisher a nd the
Gallipolis people wi ll be the
Miller. •
Creative Woman'. The mor ni ng ho.&lt;tesses wit h 'Ethel Robi nson
The Campers were grieved
and Gladys Amsbary acting as
at the dea th of the ou t-going
co~c h a irw o m e . u .
E ve n '
vice president. Wald o Brown . ·
hompmaker is welcome. ·
A book will be placed in the

Homemakers will meet

The next meeting will be
Feb. 6. Charles "!foxy" Gran t
wi ll tell the group about the
operation of and the advantage
of havin g a Citizens Band radio
in a car .

and the thtrd tn Septe mber. A
six week vacati on began the
middle of December , and both
Wendy and Teresa ·are taking ""
the lime to do some sig htseeing
and visiling. Wendy went' to
Melbourne to spend Christmas
with some of her relatives
there, and Teresa flew .there
Dec. 29 to visit relatives of one
of her cousins.
Color television sets are just
nov,: coming out in Au strali a
and hot run nin g wHter and
cen tral heating are a luxury of
the la nd.
Whe n Teresa and Wendy
first arr ived there, they joined
tw o other teachers and rented
a flat at Harris Park , which
was heated by one small fl oor
gas heater in the li ving r oo m.
There wa s no hot running
water from a tap but ins te ad
they had to light a gas hea ter
every time they wanted to have
hot water.

jan's Side

They stand for Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and it .
means every penny on deposit in any individual savings account or savings certificate is insured up to 40 thousand dol·
Iars by an agency of the federal government.

by

Dorothy f. Countryman

'

GALUPOU*
In the new year my resolutton is to attack
issues of a public service nature in a way in which I hope will
help and enlighten all of our readers.
.
We have just concluded a series of rape prevention articles
.which I hope many of our female readers have found both timely
and helpful. If indeed , we can prevent rape, the work do ne on the
series by the writers of the Newspaper Enterprise Assoc . and the
effort I have made to present it to you were more than worth it.
As my next project I want to share with you a series of ar-·
ticles on the r-revention of uterine cancer ·- in fact of all cancer
- and the importance of the pap test.
Thus with the aid of the American Cancer Society, and any
mediCal people I r.an get tv assiSt me I hope tj) begin presenting
this information to you next week.
We often think of cancer as something that always happens
tv the other guy. And yet, too many of us have friends or relatives
who have died of the disease and there are no answers for our
questions.
It is with this purpose - to answer the questions you haven't
yet thought to ask - that I intend tv probe U1e possibilities. I hope
you w11l belp me. In variably the story is more real, the statistics
more effective, when we can 'talk ahoui them in terms of real
people. In tel1IIS of fr ie nds and·neighbors4111d fa mily.
As we begin this series, I hope)'ou will a ll realize that it can
happen•to you. That it can heppen to your parents, .Your children
and your friends. We must find the answer and it will take
thousands of dedicated world-residents to do it. Please come join
.us in our fight.

SIDE DOOR

20% 50%

You want a fair return , the highest legally possible, with a guarantee
· of safety for yo ur funds, and accessibility lo these funds on reason ab le notice of~wit h drawal. This is exactly what Ohio Valley Bank
wa nts and pro~ i ses th ei r deposi tors. No wonder our savings depos its ar e at an all-li me high.

·-·

....

Stonn The
Bastille

EVER

...

-·
.......

MENS SUITS

..... ...

S ~,s· 1~%
• Payabl e Qu art erly

• M+nlmum $1 ,000.00

"

...'"'
...

---.-......

1·YEAR CERTIFICATE

5~.%

6 ~L

.-...
...
....

RATE

• Payable Quarterly '·· Minimum $1.,000.00

• Pay able Quarterl y

• M ini mum $1 ,000.00

....

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE

~

•

RATE

• Payable Quar terly

• Minirryum $1 ,000.00

• Paya ble Qua rterly • Minimum S1,000.00
ANNUAL

RATE

4-YEAR CERTIFICATE

• Payable Ouartertr

• Minimum -$5,000.00

..

~

An d in1addition to all .1h is .•. monthly or ·quarterly income ..• paid in one·

th!~e. or fo~ r~yea r certificates. Interest payable monthly it
on cert1f1ca te s. w1!h face a mo unt ·ot $5,000.00 or more. ·

two,

you desirl

Feder~l. R~gu ta tions requi re a ~ubst8nti al penalty for prernature -withdrawal

of cert1f1 cate fund·s.

•

· ·· ·

·

·

lf3

lf.1

20% OFF

·5
1/2 · PRICE
_.,._
...
...

20%-3311.1%·50%

. lf2

SWEATERS

20%

·lh

33¥.1%

JEANS

Y2 PRICE

1h m:

IA {)ff ·

LEISURE SUITS
PRICE

OFF

...
·-.....

----.-..
----

DRESSES
OFF

TOP COATS &amp; •
,ALL-WEATHER COATS

~

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

COATS
~OFF

20%
33 1/3%
50%

.........

YIELD

• Compounded Dai ly!

6 ~L

JACK &amp; JILL'S

....

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

¥.1

lf2

.,

... .

.,

~·

DRESSES

%OFF
lf2

_SLEEPWEAR
NOW

OFF

MATERNITY .

%OFF

PLAYWEAR

%oFF

·SPORTSWEAR

PLAY WEAR

JACK _&amp; Jl.Ll'S

I ..

·,

•

'
' I

PRICE

. BOYS COATS

'24'

'1

.

•.

. '.

---·
-.-....,

But what do you really want?

RATE

Jack Benny

UP TO 50% OFF

You read adve rtising that offers gigantic high-percentage interest
rates. PROVIDED ... get gl amorous and gl ittering premiums when
you ope n a savings account, PROVIDED . .. receive promises of
ann ual yie lds to stagger the imaginat ion, PROVIDED .. .

.,

'

Actress released by hospital

GREAT SALE

Look around and see wha t's b ei ng offered today!

PASSBOOK SAYINGS

Forest planned
in honor Of

Peddler's Pantry

It mea ns your hard-earn ed dollars on deposit with !he Ohio Valley
Bank, fo r ex a!"ple, a re safe and insu red . .. and you don't have
.to deposit 10 or 20 thousand do llars to get this kind of protection.
Its yours regard less of th e size of your savings account.

3-MON TH CERTIFICATE

THE

Starts Jan. 7
in Gallipolis
and in Jackson -

I

-·

LATER in the year we 're going to talk some about birth
defects and family planning: we'll talk more about alcohol and
drug abuse ; hopefully we 'll talk about conswner education and
thrift. I fiope we can do 'much of this on a very personal. very
local leveL Again we'll need your help . .
Tips do not come easily tv the newspaper reporter . While
legend
has it that they materialize from the walls of the office or
Gallia Coun ty Dis trict Library
HOST FAMILY
are carried on the air of rwnor, we often have to dig very deep to
in ·his me·mory.
SEEN AND HEARD
find them .
Seyfried announceJi future
POM EROY
Holiduy
GM.L!POLIS - Last week
In essence we would be typewriters without stories and thus
events to mark on our calen- guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hughes
. Vaug han and son, Loring.'ha,;e
reporters
without jobs if you weren 't out. there : buyin g our
dar. Spring Seminar, April 18.
spent four davs with their
19, 20 at Wood Co. Fairgrounds been their daughter, Thurma. daughter and ion-in-law, Mr. · papers, telling us your stories, so that we may share them with
a research associate at the
other people.
at Bowlin g . Gree n; Spr~n~ University of Roches ter in New and Mrs. Mar ian Rainey .
As always, we'd like to know what you like or don't like about
York : Robert and Hilah Layne Ni tro, W. Va ,
the paper. What you'd like to see more or less of and..what you
and their twin daughters. Ta ra
think we should cover that we don'1. These are thi!Jgs that only
and Ami ty. Richlands. Va .:
GALLIPOLIS - Holiday you can tell us and ·the walls around here don't tell us much of
Mr . .{nd Mrs. E' M. Harrah, ''isi tors of Mr . and Mrs. Wayne public opinion exeept what we find in our letters tv the editor. , ·
Ches ter ; Tony Va ughan, Amsbary were th eir family, . . As I try tv do each new year, I'd like to invite you all to come
.I
~
.
Gallipolis; and Jlfr. and Mrs . Dr . and Mrs. Harry Arnsbary tn durmg the afternoon and tell me about your likes and dislikes.
Ever ything
.. ' tn the Store Roy Vaughan, Langsville. Mr. and son. Wayne, Cleveland: I'm also glad to see the children who come to visit and I'd be
and Mrs. Layne, botli teachers, Dr. and Mrs. Gordon Amshary . delighted to take them through the plant in the afternoons
came
here from Virginia. ilew and chilpren , Laura and Tuesday through Friday and on Saturday mornings . Our~
To.
Off
to New Jersey for a vis it with Randy, Gallipolis; Mr. and here is tv educate and to,share. ! hope you'llhelp us do it.
his parents. and then return ed . Mrs. Kenneth Amsb-. ry.
One Da y Only
· here for apolher visit..
Washington C. ·H., and Mr. and
WE SHALL contin ue to endeavor to bring you features about ·
Mrs. Ja ck Amsba ry. Hun- area people and events. We'll share with you green ideas From J.r
tington. W. Va .
TUESDAY, JAN. 7TH
Our Garden, r_ecipes frorr. t!'" Cook 's Nook, scribblings from the
Gtrl Scout Scrtbes and goodies from the Childhood Center.
HOLIDAYGUESTS .
PTA TO MEET
9.AM TIL 9 PM
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and · SALEM CENTER - The
I'M SURE Polly Cramer 61 !;'oily's Pointers is delighted with
Mrs. Charles Edwards have siuem Center PTA will meet at )'Our response to her column . Hardly a week goes by when we .
Rodney.- Cora Rd.
ha~ ~.s their holitlay guests, 7:30p.m. Monda y ~a t the school don't have a hint or pointer come in to be transferred on to her .
Beside Qua il. Creek
Mr. and Mrs . Pat Edwards. with the Boy . uts in charge Keep it up, gals .
• J'
· PaHy Jqt:~~s- Owner
Rochester, N. Y., and Miss of th~ progr'am. Al l parents are
Brenda Edwards, Columbus. invited. 1
HAVE a ~ wr-e~.

'

UPI Senior Editor .
Tetley 's "Gemini" and it is ·
NEW YORK (UP!) - The reviving KeMeth MacMillan's
America n Ballet Thea ter, the "Concerto ," Roland Petit 's
only major American ballet ~~Le Jeune Honune et la Mort ,"
company which annually tours and Anton Dolin's " Pas de
the United Sta tes, is Quatre," which was premiered
TilE SPAN OF WORLDS is represented by this pre-Hispanic idol from the New World and
celebrating its 35th birthday in by the company in 1941. Also
the book behind it, "The Ascent of Man." The latter is based on a 13-part television series.the strongest ar tisti c and scheduled is tbe first American
.bearing the same title - that relates m\ n•s develipment through his achievements in science.
fin
a
ncial
condition
in
its
dance
classic,
Jerome
RobCo.-prod uced by Time-Life Films Inc. and British Broadcasting Corp., this scintilla ling series is
VISIT CANJNF3 - Members of the Meigs County Humane Society visited the Meigs
history.
bins'
''Fancy
Free,''
which
was
the busts for an off-eam pus course given by Rio Grande Community College. The programs
County Dog Pound on th~ Rock Springs Fairgrounds SWlday to feed 52 dogs _confined there.
· TI1e highlight of tbe 71}. created for ABT IN 1944.
l)egin Jan. 7 at 8 p.m.
·
_ M~ Carolyn Smith, active SOCiety member, is pictured. The food and beat lamps for the
dancer ABT company's
anunals were provtded through a contribution by the E. H. Carpenter Family, Portland.
curr~t anniversary season at
the New York City Center will
be a gala performance Jan. II
featuring its dancing stars of
the present and past. The
program will underscore the
company 's eclectic repertoire
~of 19th Century European
classics, the cream of early
20th Century works, and a
•
.
RIO GRAN DE - The latest author , is author and narra tor . thlS ser1es and other wor ks was understanding of nature has as
representa tive spectrum of
This series follows in the to create a philosophy for the its goal the Wlderstanding of
ballets by contemporary open college cours e bein g
tradition
of two earlier BBC twentieth century that woul d hwnan nature, and of the
by
Rio
Grande
Comoffered
choreographers.
hum an condition within
pr
odue
li
ons:
' 1 Civiii sa tio n'' be more hum anistic:
ABT has stressed the theater munity College has been calle~
'' ... This series presents a nature ."
aspect of the dance -dance as a "blockbuster" by a leading with Kenne th Cla rk, and
The course, presented by Rio
drama --ever since it was English critic. The course , " Amer ica" wi th Ali stair- philosoph y r at h ~ r than a
Grande
CommWlity College,
Cooke.
history,
and
a
philosophy
of
"The
Ascent
of
Man
,"
is
a
13founded by a young hallet
wlll
mee
t
at Lick Elementary
Miami
Dade
Comm
unity
nature rather than of science.
enthusiast, the late Richard par t television series plus
Sc
ho
ol
in
Jackson , and
Pleasant, in 1940 with the aid of instructional material that cost College, Miami , Fla., and the Its subject is a contemporary
dancer-heiress Lucia Chase.. more than $4 million and 3'.&gt; University of California at San version of what used to be Was hin g ton ~l e mentary
·Miss Chase and stage designer years to bring to An1erican Diego designed the co urse to called Natural Philosophy. In School in Galllpolis at 8:10p.m.
gi ve the student not only the my view, we are in a better each Tuesday, beginning
Oliver Smith became co- students.
The seri es starts Jan. '7 on value of Dr . Bronowski 's frame of mind today to con- January 7 and continuing 13
directors of the company in
1945 and still are in charge with both the Jackson and the thinkin g, presented both in the ceivea natural philosophy than weeks.
Registration for the course
an assist from a new associate Gallipolis Cable Television's te levision series and his book, at any time in the last three
will
be all day Monday,
but supplemental aids that hundred years. This is because
director, choreographer and PBS Channel at 8 p.m .
January
8 at the Rio Grande
Dr. Herman L. Koby. offer individual opportunities the -recent findin gs in hwnan
form er
dancer
Antony
biology have given a new Campus and from 6:30 p.m.
executive vice president, said for research.
Tudor.
11
''This
course,''
sa
id
Dr.
Koby
direction to scientific though, a until class tlme at the two
The unusual continuity of ~~"llle Ascent of Man was c o~
direction ---matched only by prod uced by the British "covers two million years of shift from the general to the locations on January 7.
Cost of the course for 3 hours
OOMPLETE FUND RAISING PROJECT- Hannan Trace Future Farmers of America
that of New York City Ballet's Broadcasting Corp. and Time- development, from man's fi rst individual , for the first time
credit
wlll be $39 and for
?'embers recently completed another citrus fruit sale as a fWld-raising project . The sale began
use
of
a
slmple
tool
to
today
's
Life
Films.
The
late
Dr.
Jacob
si
nee
the
Renaissance
opened
George Balanchine-Lincoln
continuing
l!ducatlon with no
m Novei?ber. Members. sold approximately 700 boxes of Florida oranges, tangerines and
Bronowski, who until his death compl ex mac hin ery an d th e doo r in to th e natural ·
Kerstein combination
credit,
$15.
Instructor• for the
grapefrwt. Proceeds will be used in nwnerous chapter, community area and national
,
probably is the chief coil- last August was internationally energy sources. But more than world ."
projects. Left to right in ab?ve photo are Allan Clark, who sold 75 boxes; 'Greg Hurst, 25 ; Tim
Further commenting on the 13-week course \viii be Dr.
tributor to the company's honored for his work as a just a cut and dried series of
Waugh, 761&gt;, and Jeff Demuson. Bill Hall, center, chapter president, presen ted Waugh a check .
talks
on
science,
it
relates
that
seri
es, he stat ed: " There Lawrence Butcher ln Galltpolts
survival and artistic success. scientist, mathematician and
for capturmg top honors .
subject to the effect.it has on cannot be a philosophy, there and Dr. Charlotte Carver, Mr.
~T has never had a real New
man.' '
ca nn ot even be a decent Paul Uoyd, and Ms. l.Jnda
York theater home, although it
When church dogma in the science, with out humanity. I · Bauer in Jackson.
does maintain a first rate
For furth er Information,
17th
century held thot the earth hope that sense of affi rmation
training school and · rehearsal
WESTMOR~ND ILL
contact
the Rio Grande College
was the center' of the universe, is manifest" in this book
PALM DESERT, Calif. studio a few blocks from
Office
of
Admissions.
the ' disastrous and harsh (television·series ). For me, the
(UP!) - Gen. William C. Lincoln Center for the Pertreatment of Galileo Galilei is
::,: PROVIDENCE, R.I. _(UP!) bombshell" worked as a cook Westmoreland, 60, has suffered forming Arts .
shown
(which had a stiflin g
When the Center was built
"" - Actress Betty Hutton, who in the rectory for _J1 months . a mild heart attack but was
effect on scientific discovery).
:~ suffered an emotional break- While at St. Anthony's she was reported resting comfortably nearly a decade ago, the New
_
Galileo's crime was support of
York
SUite
Theater
was
desigSaturday at Eisenhower
::; down three weeks ago, has baptized a·eatholic :··
WS
ANGELES
jUPI)
A
a
theory that stated the sun is
Medical Center, . a hospital nated the home of the City
::;- been released from a
spokesman
said .
The Ballet, and ABT was offered Jack Benny Memorial Forest th~ center of the universe.
"'"' psychiatric facility.
To recreate the trial of
spokesman
said
West- only awkwardly-timed rental wtll be planted in Israel in
:: "She's fine," said the Rev.
TWO WIN DEGREES
honor
of
the
late
comedian,
a
Galileo
a television first was
dates.
The
company
still
does
::: James Hamilton, assistant
POMEROY - Two Meigs moreland, former commander inost of its dancing at the lifetime sifpporter of the _ recorded as filming took place
:' pastor of St. Anthony's cliurch. Countians received .their of U.S. Army forces in the
is having a
;::·"She sounds good. Right now degrees from Ohio State Vietnam War, suffered chest undesirable City Center and at Jewish National Fund, two of in the secret archives of the
his friends said Friday.
Vatican, a place heretofore
the'
John
F.
Kennedy
Center
in
pains
early
Friday
evening
and
~.::' her plans are Wlcertain. She is University at the Dec. 13
George Burns and George never shown to a mass
considering several alter- commencement with Chief was admitted to the hospital Washington, where it has been
the official ballet company Jessel, who had joined Benny audience.
~ natives."
Justice C. William O'Neill of for "what appeared to be a since 1971 and without local In support of the JNF, made
Dr. Bronowskipoints out that
"
:':~ Miss Hutton, 53, best known the Ohio Supreme Court as mild heart attack ."
the
announcement.
The
JNF
man
has great technical skills
competition
since
last
June.
.;;,..for her lead role in the 1950 film speaker. They are Lela nd
plants
trees
and
performs
today
where "man has the_sun
Washington 's other com·
::,: "Annie Get Your Qun," sought Eugene Brown , son of Mr. and
· ·-.the help of several friendly Mrs . Leland E. Brown, Mid- Paul Werner, Pomeroy, a pany , t~e National Ballet, other land reClamation in his hand ~. " Ignoran ce ,
projects in Israel, they said. arrogan ce and do gma,
:=Priests in a rural Portsmouth, dleport, a master of science bachelor of science in directed by Frederic Franklin,
The forest ls tv be planted however, are threats to all of
suspended
operations
in
June
::;:R.I . , Catholic
Church. degree, and Richard Paul aeronautical and astronautical
State Street -~-- Gallipolis, Ohio within
the existing ''Los us , An aim of Dr. Bronowski in after a futile attempt to cut.its
· :~Hollywood's fonner 11 blonde Werner, son of Mr. and Mrs. engineering.
~ -mounting defiCit. ABT was Angeles Forest," in an area not
.threatened by bankruptcy only far from Jerusalem . Benny
""'
a
few years ago when Miss had been active in its creation
M&lt;
Chase began to cut tiack on her and support.
.... .
. critical financial support, but it
Benny often appeared at the
· has since been bailed out by a annual Hanukkah banquets of
. ..J.
' 'I million matching fund grant the JNF and was credited with
from the Ford Foundation and having helped raised millions
fWlds from th~ National En- of dollars for land reclamation,
Nnw Is The Tim e To Save ·
dowment for the Arts and the Fred Kahan, west executive
"'
Vn Quality Men 's Wear During
•••·
New York State Council on the vice president of the JNF said. ·
NOW IS THE TIME TO SAVE ON
The Bastille Winter Cleanmce
Arts. The company's budget is
more than f2.5 milli011 a year.
TOP QUALITY
WEAR
Spiralling costs and inflation
GIR~S
i continue to squeeze all the $5,000 brochure
1nation's ballet companies, rut ' ill b
, d
ABT has the advantage of W
e pnnte
almost 100 per cent sale of
tickets wherever it has danced
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
in America and on 15 interna- Dep~!f tment of Natural
Infa nts to s ize 14
lntanfs to size 16
,
tiona!
tours.
Small
wonder,
Resources
said
today
it
has
set
•···
GIR~S '
~·
1co~sidering that no other astde $5,000 t~ publish a
BOYS
•company is currently offering brochure on Ohto s end~gered
&amp; KNIT SHIRTS
as many stars in a program- sp~tes . Department Dtrectvr
AND MORE
malic ~ange that is 11111nl!tched Wtlllam B. Nye satd the
%To
OFF
""",
in all the world, especially by currentendanger~d species list
siu 14
\th~ major Russian companies mcludes 71 spectes a~d _sub••
"IIOse repertoire is extremely species of manunals, btrds,
llritited. ·
reptiles, fish, crustaceans and
SPORTSWEAR
""'
E!-~TIRE STOCK
This season ABT is offering {Jiollusks.
.. .
· i~ans ·such talents as Russian
The endangered species hst
w•
' lltllector Mikhail Baryshnikov, 1 was initiated in 1974 to ins~e
4-6x &amp; 1· 14
.,
-ftlo
appears to be fonmn
. · g a future protection of those wtld
"~
8ujs &amp; Gilts
II!Jemorable dance team with animals considered in danger
ENTIRE STOCK'
~ ...,.:CwO' ,..,...
-~
~g
American
star
Gelsey
of
statewide\.,~:xti~cti~n.
The
ENTIRE STOCK
.kland defector Natalia Department s dtvts!On of
'"
YOUNG MENS BAGGIES JIP,arov~, Bernando Bujones wildlife will prepare the
CLOTHES
..
Large Group
SPORT COATS
Ill pbenUDe, corda, wovta bitt. ' . just won the gold medal broch':l"e and· have it ready by
lARGE GROOP
GIRLS
~
HOPSACK &amp; CORD JEANS
REDUCED
INFANT &amp; TODD~ E RS '
lln'Jiulgarla's prestigious Inter- the mtddle of the year.
R.EDUCED .
.ilillional Dance Competition),
HALF
~
·Eleanor D'_Antuono, Ted Klvitt,
SIZES
~hia Gregory, Michael De~.lEN'S
ENTIRE STOCK
tilrdoftheParisOperaBallet,
COLUMBUS (UP! )
FANT
TURTLE NECK,
1~·
·GIRLS ' 7-14
·,YOUNG MEN'S
St:EEVHESS.
SPEC lA~
CARDIGAN
SWEATERS
GIRlS'
&amp; TODDlER
""'
• many others. Erik Bruhn, ' Funeral services will be held ·
CREW NECK,
GROUP .
SWEATER SHIRTS
SWEATERS
'tit gt:eat Dane woo· retired here today for Sannuel 0 .
"'~
&amp; JEAN SHIRTS
~fl:6m the company in 1971, will Linzell, 75, former slate highReg . S7 .SO
Values To
Values to.S14.00
Off
'~ to dance for the bir-. way direc tor an"d sUite ·public
NOW
4·14
ENTt
#CD
.....
O":O'~
516.00
NOW
.....
tllilay gala.
. works direc tor , who died here ,
. EXTRA SPEC lA~!
JACKETS &amp; COATS
· ,pn Jan . 23, ABT will present Thursday. Former Governor
GroYP You'!! Men's
99
99
99
·
·
·
'
Frank
Lausche
named
Linzell
WFFEDrANTS
CED
Values To
~
''
head of tbe Public Works
0
Depar tment in 1949, a position
he held through August, 1952,
when · he was appointed by
·
"fJshions fur the IIIUn(
·
La usche as head of the Hi g~­
'
32&amp; SecGnd flit. .
Phorie 446&lt;134l
·
Gdipalis, 0. ·
'
way Department. He resig ned
in February, 1 ~ . ·
·.
' )
I
·\

TV series 'Ascent of Man'
has rare educational input

.Janua ry. the seeond in Ma v

TUUP FESTIVAL - Pictured here with some of their
Australian friends at the Bowral Tulip Festiva l are Teresa
Casci, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pa ul Casci, Middleport, left,

.

'

"centre '· und color, ·'colour ."
School is div ided into three
te rms of 14 weeks each with the
first te rm sU!r ting at the end of

-·

'

~allet

pronoun ced differently. F or
example. cen ter is spell ed

.

.

r~·

~~,,we_f!!f-r!qif!!!1s~-!!l~,~J

Hunter 'Valley ' fo r a wine-

I&lt;! sting_tour . They de~cr ibed

Eve n
though
the
Australians spea k English. the
teachers have found that there
&lt;:~ r e many wo rd s in th ei r
vocabulary that mean differen t
thin gs , and tha t many words
are
both spelled and

'

'

'

~

for-gran ted l'Oillforts of home

BY ETHEL ROBINSON
GALLIPOLIS- The FrenchCity Campers held their firs t
meeting of the new year at U1e
Buckeye Ru ra l Electric_
building Jan. 2 wi th president
Art Wroblewski presiding . The
opening prayer was given by
Garland Sa nders ; the pledge to
the fla g was led by Blanche
Miller.

'

.... ..

'
~'.

.. '
•

'

�...... '

.
'

..

.

. ·•'

..

-'

'

..

.

.,
,•

.I

'
•

I

'

•'

10- The SWlday Times. Sentinel, SWlday , Jan.'S, 1975
,i::::::::=~::.-=::::..'*~~~~~"-'»~~~':o'%.'=-':~~~:::::::»"!-'*~"!-.'*«!~W..-...~~~-.:_..&gt;.~::~:~::~:~

•

· reaChing zn
POME ROY -

A real ap·

preciation .of the Ameri can

""'' of life and all those ta ken-

I Ed'#ciJtion
·a.nd I&amp;
.

in :\ ust ralia ·l he pets! six

Australia last ~ prip g, bega n

tn c:u mpl c te her two-year minimwn ; The Ch J!dren,, wiJO .. Whil~ they ar rived' in J uly, it
cuntrac· t.
ottc r1d school a.tti r ed in
was winter , .:md they described
The two have lea rned to cope un iform, have nu textbooks but
their fu·s t days as "cold. cold,
i~ a ·t lassr oom whe re in- only exerci!'&gt;e notebooks, &lt;lnd
cold" as they adjusted to the
structi onal materials are .:J l a ttl e te~che rs ure expected to temperature c hange. Both
fltrnish their 0\.\' 11 resources.
Wendy and Teresa have si nce
'
rrtu.·rc are no ca feteri as in the moved . Wendy is now residing
schools alt hough mos t have in a modern flat 111 Granvi lle,
canteens whe r e sa ndwiche s
and Teresa lives in a modern
and t&lt;-l nd y C&lt;Jn be purchased, home in Wentwor thv il le with
and Te resa says that m any uf
an Au stra lian girl.
the d 1ildrcn go withuut lun ch at f'l The two have done lots of
the Merryla ncls School where sights ee ing and enjoyed it

months.
~~~ ar h ing there in Jul v. Teresa
Teres.1 Casci, Middleport. .will be re turni ng in ·May, but
an d We·ncty Carper , of near

have been gained by -two Meigs

Pomer oy, who signed on with

Coun ty yourig women tettching

the Education Depaf tment in

Wendy . whose mother is a
na tivt' Austr&lt;:J iian, will remo:J in

she teaches the fifth grad e.

lhorou~ h ly.

The children are inte nsely
interested in lire in the U11itect
Sta les and Teresa rwted in a
rece nt letter tha t she uses " The

In t\ ug ust. Wendy went to
Ta smania and in October both
she and Ten•sa toflk severa l
one-day rail tours - one lo
Jenolon Caves. one to the Tu li p
Fes ti ve~ !
in Bowra l, and
another to the vineyards of

Dai ly Sen tin el" - se nt to her

by her pa rents , Mr. and Mrs.
Pa ul Casci, and arri ving about

two months aft er pu1Jli ca t1un in the class roo m .

the Pa rliament House .
And the two have many
.the coun try as beautiful and frie nds. Their closest has
ma rked / with
change, per haps been Mrs .. Har ry
bus h Ia n d , -mount a i ns , Davis whom they met their
ocea nside, ci ty.
first day there on a bus. Teresa
Teresa also wen t to Horden ljtayed with Mr. and Mrs.
Pavilhon to see Torn T. Hall, a Davis for several days at one
country . western singer fr om ti me and they also ,entertained
Ke ntucky, who performed with a surprise dinner par ty
·there wi th some Aus trli an honoring Wendy on her birthmu s ic ia ns . She visited a ·' ~y .
conve nt and was given some · Te'resa wiU return to the
as.sis tance by the nun teachers Un ited Slates in May, . Wendy
there in settin g up her school will remain un til mid-1976.
program.
Their experiences as teachers
There have also been trips to in a foreign land have been
the zoo in Sydney to see the many and varied, but for both , ·
kangaroos and koala bears, a time away has kindled a real
ha rb or crui se arou nd th e apprec iation of all the good
shores of Sydney and a visit to things of home.

'

.. "

company
plans gala show
BY FREDERICK M. WINSHIP the American premiere of Glen

and Wendy Carper,d~ughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Carper,
Pomeroy , R. D., fo urth from left . MissCasci and Miss Ca rper
are elementary school teachers in Austra lia.

City camping club. begins new year
State wide, May 9, 10, II at
&amp;ioto Downs race track, nea r
Colwnbus.
Wilford F. va ns. chapter
deleJ.(a te, reported on state
"end of the year" business, and
suggesti ons given by ca mpers
ror fu tur e programs and activities for state meetings. He

what a traffic jam: a lady's
Refreshments of homemade
electric beate r stopped in pie and coffee were served by
the
midd le
uf
mak- Rosina and Merrill Saunders to
ing a ca ke, the ra'nge and the 21 members and one gues t.
washer s tf'i)ped : refri gera tor Visit ors· ar e ...welcome to our
nnd

f ur n ace~

too.

X-ra y meetings.

machine, etc . in hospitals: in a
ba rn 100 milkers turned off .:..
cows had to be milked by hand.
Almost everythi ng in the city
stopped. All this proved how
much every thing depends on

also said more people are
becoming in teres ted in CB
J im Kin g, conservat ion units - they are a great help in
cha irman, repor ted the pa rk time of-trouble on the road .
electricity a nd thCJ t a power
com mission had given the Harland Sanders, Distric t curtailment can be a disaster .
Campers permission to plan t a Field Director, read parts of a People will not beli eve the need
buckeye tree in the city park to letter from the Ohio Sta te for power wi ll outdo the supply.
replace a tree that died. He NCH A . P ci'SOil s having car The dema nd for e lectricity
also sa id merit stripes earned tr ouble on the ro ad have never s tops gr owing - the
by the Campers for building wri tten expressing their ap~ need for power increases with
. bird houses and feeders this . preci ~ti on fqr the NCHA Hot the growth of the population .
.fall. had been applied for . He Line telephone nun1ber. The
Mr. Reece said the electric
also announ ced the an nual legis la ture wi ll consider a companies have been trying to
winter hike at Old Man's Cave suggestion brought up by the prevent air poll uti on fr om
\\'Ould be Jan. II. Anyone in- NCHA for more and be tter these plants by installing very
terested in participating is to restrooms on state routes; the ta ll smokes tacks to he lp
conta ct him for transportation Campe rs ma gaz ine Smoke di ssipate th e fly ash: by
arrangements. Thousands of Signa ls is asking for ad - building cooling towers and
persons fr om all over Ohlo vertisin g rna teri al to help perdpator - hOwever it costs
defray the cost of publishing - $9 •, million to build ON E
attend th is event each year.
Harla nd Sa nd ers , distric t cos t of subscription is sti ll $1. percipator . The cos ts for
fi eld director, installed the new
Marion Will iams, treasurer. clean up or preventi on are so
officers for the year 1975, He reminde9 the Campers that tremendous !hat many times it
read a poem "Cultivating Our NOW is the time to pay dues for · would be simpler to close down
Garden," whi ch told about the 1975.
than to meet the requi rements
goOd things campers should
Program for the evening was - but elec.tric- power is a
plant to make eve rything count given by J ohn Reece of the MUST. He said utility stocks
for somethi ng good and Ohio Power Co. on air have been going dow n and
wonderfu l. In th e NCHA pollution. The film shown was dow n during the last three
couples serve together as of- called " What Time Is the years and stockholders are
ficers; those installed were: Power On Today." Reece said losing money. The pic tures in
president, Bill and Mildred he hoped the things shown the film were taken at the
Seyfried ; vice president, Hoke would never happen. At 10:30 Gavin plan I. A question ancl
an d·
Ethel
Robinson; ' a.m. the elec trici ty was shu t answer period followed the
secretary, Jim and Goldie off - no traffic lights - and program ..
Ki ng : treasurer. Marion and
Anna Williams .
Th e new president , Bill
Sey!ried, appointed corn _millees: membership. Rosina
GA LLIPOJJS - Th&lt;' G11llia l••ssort will be "The Mark of a
Saunders, Ruth Wroblewski. Co u nty
E x tens i on
and Elsie Saunders: ca mping Homem1tkers Club will mce l Ct't-'a li\'r Woman in her
sites. Glenna Sl!eets, Merrill · wednesda y, J11n. 8, at tO ·:w Home." After lunch the lesson
Sa tmd ers and Ar t Wroblewski : ~1.111 . at Gr~cr United wi ll b&lt;• "Tile . Mark of a
conservation and hiki ng. Jim Method ist Church with p&lt;&gt;tluck l'n•a tive Woman in He r
Communi ty "
King; te lephoning. Dot Sheets: lun ch at noon.
Devot ions and crafts of the
chapter delegate and C. B •• Miss Pat Glus.s. arcEt ExCen tenar y area will be in
Wilford Eva ns: chaplain. tension
Age nt
Home ehargc of Tresa Ward and
Harland Sa nders: publicity. Economi cs will be teuehing
Rosina Smmders cmd Blanche (('ader tra ining lessons on thP Rob.,rla Fisher a nd the
Gallipolis people wi ll be the
Miller. •
Creative Woman'. The mor ni ng ho.&lt;tesses wit h 'Ethel Robi nson
The Campers were grieved
and Gladys Amsbary acting as
at the dea th of the ou t-going
co~c h a irw o m e . u .
E ve n '
vice president. Wald o Brown . ·
hompmaker is welcome. ·
A book will be placed in the

Homemakers will meet

The next meeting will be
Feb. 6. Charles "!foxy" Gran t
wi ll tell the group about the
operation of and the advantage
of havin g a Citizens Band radio
in a car .

and the thtrd tn Septe mber. A
six week vacati on began the
middle of December , and both
Wendy and Teresa ·are taking ""
the lime to do some sig htseeing
and visiling. Wendy went' to
Melbourne to spend Christmas
with some of her relatives
there, and Teresa flew .there
Dec. 29 to visit relatives of one
of her cousins.
Color television sets are just
nov,: coming out in Au strali a
and hot run nin g wHter and
cen tral heating are a luxury of
the la nd.
Whe n Teresa and Wendy
first arr ived there, they joined
tw o other teachers and rented
a flat at Harris Park , which
was heated by one small fl oor
gas heater in the li ving r oo m.
There wa s no hot running
water from a tap but ins te ad
they had to light a gas hea ter
every time they wanted to have
hot water.

jan's Side

They stand for Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and it .
means every penny on deposit in any individual savings account or savings certificate is insured up to 40 thousand dol·
Iars by an agency of the federal government.

by

Dorothy f. Countryman

'

GALUPOU*
In the new year my resolutton is to attack
issues of a public service nature in a way in which I hope will
help and enlighten all of our readers.
.
We have just concluded a series of rape prevention articles
.which I hope many of our female readers have found both timely
and helpful. If indeed , we can prevent rape, the work do ne on the
series by the writers of the Newspaper Enterprise Assoc . and the
effort I have made to present it to you were more than worth it.
As my next project I want to share with you a series of ar-·
ticles on the r-revention of uterine cancer ·- in fact of all cancer
- and the importance of the pap test.
Thus with the aid of the American Cancer Society, and any
mediCal people I r.an get tv assiSt me I hope tj) begin presenting
this information to you next week.
We often think of cancer as something that always happens
tv the other guy. And yet, too many of us have friends or relatives
who have died of the disease and there are no answers for our
questions.
It is with this purpose - to answer the questions you haven't
yet thought to ask - that I intend tv probe U1e possibilities. I hope
you w11l belp me. In variably the story is more real, the statistics
more effective, when we can 'talk ahoui them in terms of real
people. In tel1IIS of fr ie nds and·neighbors4111d fa mily.
As we begin this series, I hope)'ou will a ll realize that it can
happen•to you. That it can heppen to your parents, .Your children
and your friends. We must find the answer and it will take
thousands of dedicated world-residents to do it. Please come join
.us in our fight.

SIDE DOOR

20% 50%

You want a fair return , the highest legally possible, with a guarantee
· of safety for yo ur funds, and accessibility lo these funds on reason ab le notice of~wit h drawal. This is exactly what Ohio Valley Bank
wa nts and pro~ i ses th ei r deposi tors. No wonder our savings depos its ar e at an all-li me high.

·-·

....

Stonn The
Bastille

EVER

...

-·
.......

MENS SUITS

..... ...

S ~,s· 1~%
• Payabl e Qu art erly

• M+nlmum $1 ,000.00

"

...'"'
...

---.-......

1·YEAR CERTIFICATE

5~.%

6 ~L

.-...
...
....

RATE

• Payable Quarterly '·· Minimum $1.,000.00

• Pay able Quarterl y

• M ini mum $1 ,000.00

....

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE

~

•

RATE

• Payable Quar terly

• Minirryum $1 ,000.00

• Paya ble Qua rterly • Minimum S1,000.00
ANNUAL

RATE

4-YEAR CERTIFICATE

• Payable Ouartertr

• Minimum -$5,000.00

..

~

An d in1addition to all .1h is .•. monthly or ·quarterly income ..• paid in one·

th!~e. or fo~ r~yea r certificates. Interest payable monthly it
on cert1f1ca te s. w1!h face a mo unt ·ot $5,000.00 or more. ·

two,

you desirl

Feder~l. R~gu ta tions requi re a ~ubst8nti al penalty for prernature -withdrawal

of cert1f1 cate fund·s.

•

· ·· ·

·

·

lf3

lf.1

20% OFF

·5
1/2 · PRICE
_.,._
...
...

20%-3311.1%·50%

. lf2

SWEATERS

20%

·lh

33¥.1%

JEANS

Y2 PRICE

1h m:

IA {)ff ·

LEISURE SUITS
PRICE

OFF

...
·-.....

----.-..
----

DRESSES
OFF

TOP COATS &amp; •
,ALL-WEATHER COATS

~

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

COATS
~OFF

20%
33 1/3%
50%

.........

YIELD

• Compounded Dai ly!

6 ~L

JACK &amp; JILL'S

....

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

¥.1

lf2

.,

... .

.,

~·

DRESSES

%OFF
lf2

_SLEEPWEAR
NOW

OFF

MATERNITY .

%OFF

PLAYWEAR

%oFF

·SPORTSWEAR

PLAY WEAR

JACK _&amp; Jl.Ll'S

I ..

·,

•

'
' I

PRICE

. BOYS COATS

'24'

'1

.

•.

. '.

---·
-.-....,

But what do you really want?

RATE

Jack Benny

UP TO 50% OFF

You read adve rtising that offers gigantic high-percentage interest
rates. PROVIDED ... get gl amorous and gl ittering premiums when
you ope n a savings account, PROVIDED . .. receive promises of
ann ual yie lds to stagger the imaginat ion, PROVIDED .. .

.,

'

Actress released by hospital

GREAT SALE

Look around and see wha t's b ei ng offered today!

PASSBOOK SAYINGS

Forest planned
in honor Of

Peddler's Pantry

It mea ns your hard-earn ed dollars on deposit with !he Ohio Valley
Bank, fo r ex a!"ple, a re safe and insu red . .. and you don't have
.to deposit 10 or 20 thousand do llars to get this kind of protection.
Its yours regard less of th e size of your savings account.

3-MON TH CERTIFICATE

THE

Starts Jan. 7
in Gallipolis
and in Jackson -

I

-·

LATER in the year we 're going to talk some about birth
defects and family planning: we'll talk more about alcohol and
drug abuse ; hopefully we 'll talk about conswner education and
thrift. I fiope we can do 'much of this on a very personal. very
local leveL Again we'll need your help . .
Tips do not come easily tv the newspaper reporter . While
legend
has it that they materialize from the walls of the office or
Gallia Coun ty Dis trict Library
HOST FAMILY
are carried on the air of rwnor, we often have to dig very deep to
in ·his me·mory.
SEEN AND HEARD
find them .
Seyfried announceJi future
POM EROY
Holiduy
GM.L!POLIS - Last week
In essence we would be typewriters without stories and thus
events to mark on our calen- guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hughes
. Vaug han and son, Loring.'ha,;e
reporters
without jobs if you weren 't out. there : buyin g our
dar. Spring Seminar, April 18.
spent four davs with their
19, 20 at Wood Co. Fairgrounds been their daughter, Thurma. daughter and ion-in-law, Mr. · papers, telling us your stories, so that we may share them with
a research associate at the
other people.
at Bowlin g . Gree n; Spr~n~ University of Roches ter in New and Mrs. Mar ian Rainey .
As always, we'd like to know what you like or don't like about
York : Robert and Hilah Layne Ni tro, W. Va ,
the paper. What you'd like to see more or less of and..what you
and their twin daughters. Ta ra
think we should cover that we don'1. These are thi!Jgs that only
and Ami ty. Richlands. Va .:
GALLIPOLIS - Holiday you can tell us and ·the walls around here don't tell us much of
Mr . .{nd Mrs. E' M. Harrah, ''isi tors of Mr . and Mrs. Wayne public opinion exeept what we find in our letters tv the editor. , ·
Ches ter ; Tony Va ughan, Amsbary were th eir family, . . As I try tv do each new year, I'd like to invite you all to come
.I
~
.
Gallipolis; and Jlfr. and Mrs . Dr . and Mrs. Harry Arnsbary tn durmg the afternoon and tell me about your likes and dislikes.
Ever ything
.. ' tn the Store Roy Vaughan, Langsville. Mr. and son. Wayne, Cleveland: I'm also glad to see the children who come to visit and I'd be
and Mrs. Layne, botli teachers, Dr. and Mrs. Gordon Amshary . delighted to take them through the plant in the afternoons
came
here from Virginia. ilew and chilpren , Laura and Tuesday through Friday and on Saturday mornings . Our~
To.
Off
to New Jersey for a vis it with Randy, Gallipolis; Mr. and here is tv educate and to,share. ! hope you'llhelp us do it.
his parents. and then return ed . Mrs. Kenneth Amsb-. ry.
One Da y Only
· here for apolher visit..
Washington C. ·H., and Mr. and
WE SHALL contin ue to endeavor to bring you features about ·
Mrs. Ja ck Amsba ry. Hun- area people and events. We'll share with you green ideas From J.r
tington. W. Va .
TUESDAY, JAN. 7TH
Our Garden, r_ecipes frorr. t!'" Cook 's Nook, scribblings from the
Gtrl Scout Scrtbes and goodies from the Childhood Center.
HOLIDAYGUESTS .
PTA TO MEET
9.AM TIL 9 PM
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and · SALEM CENTER - The
I'M SURE Polly Cramer 61 !;'oily's Pointers is delighted with
Mrs. Charles Edwards have siuem Center PTA will meet at )'Our response to her column . Hardly a week goes by when we .
Rodney.- Cora Rd.
ha~ ~.s their holitlay guests, 7:30p.m. Monda y ~a t the school don't have a hint or pointer come in to be transferred on to her .
Beside Qua il. Creek
Mr. and Mrs . Pat Edwards. with the Boy . uts in charge Keep it up, gals .
• J'
· PaHy Jqt:~~s- Owner
Rochester, N. Y., and Miss of th~ progr'am. Al l parents are
Brenda Edwards, Columbus. invited. 1
HAVE a ~ wr-e~.

'

UPI Senior Editor .
Tetley 's "Gemini" and it is ·
NEW YORK (UP!) - The reviving KeMeth MacMillan's
America n Ballet Thea ter, the "Concerto ," Roland Petit 's
only major American ballet ~~Le Jeune Honune et la Mort ,"
company which annually tours and Anton Dolin's " Pas de
the United Sta tes, is Quatre," which was premiered
TilE SPAN OF WORLDS is represented by this pre-Hispanic idol from the New World and
celebrating its 35th birthday in by the company in 1941. Also
the book behind it, "The Ascent of Man." The latter is based on a 13-part television series.the strongest ar tisti c and scheduled is tbe first American
.bearing the same title - that relates m\ n•s develipment through his achievements in science.
fin
a
ncial
condition
in
its
dance
classic,
Jerome
RobCo.-prod uced by Time-Life Films Inc. and British Broadcasting Corp., this scintilla ling series is
VISIT CANJNF3 - Members of the Meigs County Humane Society visited the Meigs
history.
bins'
''Fancy
Free,''
which
was
the busts for an off-eam pus course given by Rio Grande Community College. The programs
County Dog Pound on th~ Rock Springs Fairgrounds SWlday to feed 52 dogs _confined there.
· TI1e highlight of tbe 71}. created for ABT IN 1944.
l)egin Jan. 7 at 8 p.m.
·
_ M~ Carolyn Smith, active SOCiety member, is pictured. The food and beat lamps for the
dancer ABT company's
anunals were provtded through a contribution by the E. H. Carpenter Family, Portland.
curr~t anniversary season at
the New York City Center will
be a gala performance Jan. II
featuring its dancing stars of
the present and past. The
program will underscore the
company 's eclectic repertoire
~of 19th Century European
classics, the cream of early
20th Century works, and a
•
.
RIO GRAN DE - The latest author , is author and narra tor . thlS ser1es and other wor ks was understanding of nature has as
representa tive spectrum of
This series follows in the to create a philosophy for the its goal the Wlderstanding of
ballets by contemporary open college cours e bein g
tradition
of two earlier BBC twentieth century that woul d hwnan nature, and of the
by
Rio
Grande
Comoffered
choreographers.
hum an condition within
pr
odue
li
ons:
' 1 Civiii sa tio n'' be more hum anistic:
ABT has stressed the theater munity College has been calle~
'' ... This series presents a nature ."
aspect of the dance -dance as a "blockbuster" by a leading with Kenne th Cla rk, and
The course, presented by Rio
drama --ever since it was English critic. The course , " Amer ica" wi th Ali stair- philosoph y r at h ~ r than a
Grande
CommWlity College,
Cooke.
history,
and
a
philosophy
of
"The
Ascent
of
Man
,"
is
a
13founded by a young hallet
wlll
mee
t
at Lick Elementary
Miami
Dade
Comm
unity
nature rather than of science.
enthusiast, the late Richard par t television series plus
Sc
ho
ol
in
Jackson , and
Pleasant, in 1940 with the aid of instructional material that cost College, Miami , Fla., and the Its subject is a contemporary
dancer-heiress Lucia Chase.. more than $4 million and 3'.&gt; University of California at San version of what used to be Was hin g ton ~l e mentary
·Miss Chase and stage designer years to bring to An1erican Diego designed the co urse to called Natural Philosophy. In School in Galllpolis at 8:10p.m.
gi ve the student not only the my view, we are in a better each Tuesday, beginning
Oliver Smith became co- students.
The seri es starts Jan. '7 on value of Dr . Bronowski 's frame of mind today to con- January 7 and continuing 13
directors of the company in
1945 and still are in charge with both the Jackson and the thinkin g, presented both in the ceivea natural philosophy than weeks.
Registration for the course
an assist from a new associate Gallipolis Cable Television's te levision series and his book, at any time in the last three
will
be all day Monday,
but supplemental aids that hundred years. This is because
director, choreographer and PBS Channel at 8 p.m .
January
8 at the Rio Grande
Dr. Herman L. Koby. offer individual opportunities the -recent findin gs in hwnan
form er
dancer
Antony
biology have given a new Campus and from 6:30 p.m.
executive vice president, said for research.
Tudor.
11
''This
course,''
sa
id
Dr.
Koby
direction to scientific though, a until class tlme at the two
The unusual continuity of ~~"llle Ascent of Man was c o~
direction ---matched only by prod uced by the British "covers two million years of shift from the general to the locations on January 7.
Cost of the course for 3 hours
OOMPLETE FUND RAISING PROJECT- Hannan Trace Future Farmers of America
that of New York City Ballet's Broadcasting Corp. and Time- development, from man's fi rst individual , for the first time
credit
wlll be $39 and for
?'embers recently completed another citrus fruit sale as a fWld-raising project . The sale began
use
of
a
slmple
tool
to
today
's
Life
Films.
The
late
Dr.
Jacob
si
nee
the
Renaissance
opened
George Balanchine-Lincoln
continuing
l!ducatlon with no
m Novei?ber. Members. sold approximately 700 boxes of Florida oranges, tangerines and
Bronowski, who until his death compl ex mac hin ery an d th e doo r in to th e natural ·
Kerstein combination
credit,
$15.
Instructor• for the
grapefrwt. Proceeds will be used in nwnerous chapter, community area and national
,
probably is the chief coil- last August was internationally energy sources. But more than world ."
projects. Left to right in ab?ve photo are Allan Clark, who sold 75 boxes; 'Greg Hurst, 25 ; Tim
Further commenting on the 13-week course \viii be Dr.
tributor to the company's honored for his work as a just a cut and dried series of
Waugh, 761&gt;, and Jeff Demuson. Bill Hall, center, chapter president, presen ted Waugh a check .
talks
on
science,
it
relates
that
seri
es, he stat ed: " There Lawrence Butcher ln Galltpolts
survival and artistic success. scientist, mathematician and
for capturmg top honors .
subject to the effect.it has on cannot be a philosophy, there and Dr. Charlotte Carver, Mr.
~T has never had a real New
man.' '
ca nn ot even be a decent Paul Uoyd, and Ms. l.Jnda
York theater home, although it
When church dogma in the science, with out humanity. I · Bauer in Jackson.
does maintain a first rate
For furth er Information,
17th
century held thot the earth hope that sense of affi rmation
training school and · rehearsal
WESTMOR~ND ILL
contact
the Rio Grande College
was the center' of the universe, is manifest" in this book
PALM DESERT, Calif. studio a few blocks from
Office
of
Admissions.
the ' disastrous and harsh (television·series ). For me, the
(UP!) - Gen. William C. Lincoln Center for the Pertreatment of Galileo Galilei is
::,: PROVIDENCE, R.I. _(UP!) bombshell" worked as a cook Westmoreland, 60, has suffered forming Arts .
shown
(which had a stiflin g
When the Center was built
"" - Actress Betty Hutton, who in the rectory for _J1 months . a mild heart attack but was
effect on scientific discovery).
:~ suffered an emotional break- While at St. Anthony's she was reported resting comfortably nearly a decade ago, the New
_
Galileo's crime was support of
York
SUite
Theater
was
desigSaturday at Eisenhower
::; down three weeks ago, has baptized a·eatholic :··
WS
ANGELES
jUPI)
A
a
theory that stated the sun is
Medical Center, . a hospital nated the home of the City
::;- been released from a
spokesman
said .
The Ballet, and ABT was offered Jack Benny Memorial Forest th~ center of the universe.
"'"' psychiatric facility.
To recreate the trial of
spokesman
said
West- only awkwardly-timed rental wtll be planted in Israel in
:: "She's fine," said the Rev.
TWO WIN DEGREES
honor
of
the
late
comedian,
a
Galileo
a television first was
dates.
The
company
still
does
::: James Hamilton, assistant
POMEROY - Two Meigs moreland, former commander inost of its dancing at the lifetime sifpporter of the _ recorded as filming took place
:' pastor of St. Anthony's cliurch. Countians received .their of U.S. Army forces in the
is having a
;::·"She sounds good. Right now degrees from Ohio State Vietnam War, suffered chest undesirable City Center and at Jewish National Fund, two of in the secret archives of the
his friends said Friday.
Vatican, a place heretofore
the'
John
F.
Kennedy
Center
in
pains
early
Friday
evening
and
~.::' her plans are Wlcertain. She is University at the Dec. 13
George Burns and George never shown to a mass
considering several alter- commencement with Chief was admitted to the hospital Washington, where it has been
the official ballet company Jessel, who had joined Benny audience.
~ natives."
Justice C. William O'Neill of for "what appeared to be a since 1971 and without local In support of the JNF, made
Dr. Bronowskipoints out that
"
:':~ Miss Hutton, 53, best known the Ohio Supreme Court as mild heart attack ."
the
announcement.
The
JNF
man
has great technical skills
competition
since
last
June.
.;;,..for her lead role in the 1950 film speaker. They are Lela nd
plants
trees
and
performs
today
where "man has the_sun
Washington 's other com·
::,: "Annie Get Your Qun," sought Eugene Brown , son of Mr. and
· ·-.the help of several friendly Mrs . Leland E. Brown, Mid- Paul Werner, Pomeroy, a pany , t~e National Ballet, other land reClamation in his hand ~. " Ignoran ce ,
projects in Israel, they said. arrogan ce and do gma,
:=Priests in a rural Portsmouth, dleport, a master of science bachelor of science in directed by Frederic Franklin,
The forest ls tv be planted however, are threats to all of
suspended
operations
in
June
::;:R.I . , Catholic
Church. degree, and Richard Paul aeronautical and astronautical
State Street -~-- Gallipolis, Ohio within
the existing ''Los us , An aim of Dr. Bronowski in after a futile attempt to cut.its
· :~Hollywood's fonner 11 blonde Werner, son of Mr. and Mrs. engineering.
~ -mounting defiCit. ABT was Angeles Forest," in an area not
.threatened by bankruptcy only far from Jerusalem . Benny
""'
a
few years ago when Miss had been active in its creation
M&lt;
Chase began to cut tiack on her and support.
.... .
. critical financial support, but it
Benny often appeared at the
· has since been bailed out by a annual Hanukkah banquets of
. ..J.
' 'I million matching fund grant the JNF and was credited with
from the Ford Foundation and having helped raised millions
fWlds from th~ National En- of dollars for land reclamation,
Nnw Is The Tim e To Save ·
dowment for the Arts and the Fred Kahan, west executive
"'
Vn Quality Men 's Wear During
•••·
New York State Council on the vice president of the JNF said. ·
NOW IS THE TIME TO SAVE ON
The Bastille Winter Cleanmce
Arts. The company's budget is
more than f2.5 milli011 a year.
TOP QUALITY
WEAR
Spiralling costs and inflation
GIR~S
i continue to squeeze all the $5,000 brochure
1nation's ballet companies, rut ' ill b
, d
ABT has the advantage of W
e pnnte
almost 100 per cent sale of
tickets wherever it has danced
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
in America and on 15 interna- Dep~!f tment of Natural
Infa nts to s ize 14
lntanfs to size 16
,
tiona!
tours.
Small
wonder,
Resources
said
today
it
has
set
•···
GIR~S '
~·
1co~sidering that no other astde $5,000 t~ publish a
BOYS
•company is currently offering brochure on Ohto s end~gered
&amp; KNIT SHIRTS
as many stars in a program- sp~tes . Department Dtrectvr
AND MORE
malic ~ange that is 11111nl!tched Wtlllam B. Nye satd the
%To
OFF
""",
in all the world, especially by currentendanger~d species list
siu 14
\th~ major Russian companies mcludes 71 spectes a~d _sub••
"IIOse repertoire is extremely species of manunals, btrds,
llritited. ·
reptiles, fish, crustaceans and
SPORTSWEAR
""'
E!-~TIRE STOCK
This season ABT is offering {Jiollusks.
.. .
· i~ans ·such talents as Russian
The endangered species hst
w•
' lltllector Mikhail Baryshnikov, 1 was initiated in 1974 to ins~e
4-6x &amp; 1· 14
.,
-ftlo
appears to be fonmn
. · g a future protection of those wtld
"~
8ujs &amp; Gilts
II!Jemorable dance team with animals considered in danger
ENTIRE STOCK'
~ ...,.:CwO' ,..,...
-~
~g
American
star
Gelsey
of
statewide\.,~:xti~cti~n.
The
ENTIRE STOCK
.kland defector Natalia Department s dtvts!On of
'"
YOUNG MENS BAGGIES JIP,arov~, Bernando Bujones wildlife will prepare the
CLOTHES
..
Large Group
SPORT COATS
Ill pbenUDe, corda, wovta bitt. ' . just won the gold medal broch':l"e and· have it ready by
lARGE GROOP
GIRLS
~
HOPSACK &amp; CORD JEANS
REDUCED
INFANT &amp; TODD~ E RS '
lln'Jiulgarla's prestigious Inter- the mtddle of the year.
R.EDUCED .
.ilillional Dance Competition),
HALF
~
·Eleanor D'_Antuono, Ted Klvitt,
SIZES
~hia Gregory, Michael De~.lEN'S
ENTIRE STOCK
tilrdoftheParisOperaBallet,
COLUMBUS (UP! )
FANT
TURTLE NECK,
1~·
·GIRLS ' 7-14
·,YOUNG MEN'S
St:EEVHESS.
SPEC lA~
CARDIGAN
SWEATERS
GIRlS'
&amp; TODDlER
""'
• many others. Erik Bruhn, ' Funeral services will be held ·
CREW NECK,
GROUP .
SWEATER SHIRTS
SWEATERS
'tit gt:eat Dane woo· retired here today for Sannuel 0 .
"'~
&amp; JEAN SHIRTS
~fl:6m the company in 1971, will Linzell, 75, former slate highReg . S7 .SO
Values To
Values to.S14.00
Off
'~ to dance for the bir-. way direc tor an"d sUite ·public
NOW
4·14
ENTt
#CD
.....
O":O'~
516.00
NOW
.....
tllilay gala.
. works direc tor , who died here ,
. EXTRA SPEC lA~!
JACKETS &amp; COATS
· ,pn Jan . 23, ABT will present Thursday. Former Governor
GroYP You'!! Men's
99
99
99
·
·
·
'
Frank
Lausche
named
Linzell
WFFEDrANTS
CED
Values To
~
''
head of tbe Public Works
0
Depar tment in 1949, a position
he held through August, 1952,
when · he was appointed by
·
"fJshions fur the IIIUn(
·
La usche as head of the Hi g~­
'
32&amp; SecGnd flit. .
Phorie 446&lt;134l
·
Gdipalis, 0. ·
'
way Department. He resig ned
in February, 1 ~ . ·
·.
' )
I
·\

TV series 'Ascent of Man'
has rare educational input

.Janua ry. the seeond in Ma v

TUUP FESTIVAL - Pictured here with some of their
Australian friends at the Bowral Tulip Festiva l are Teresa
Casci, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pa ul Casci, Middleport, left,

.

'

"centre '· und color, ·'colour ."
School is div ided into three
te rms of 14 weeks each with the
first te rm sU!r ting at the end of

-·

'

~allet

pronoun ced differently. F or
example. cen ter is spell ed

.

.

r~·

~~,,we_f!!f-r!qif!!!1s~-!!l~,~J

Hunter 'Valley ' fo r a wine-

I&lt;! sting_tour . They de~cr ibed

Eve n
though
the
Australians spea k English. the
teachers have found that there
&lt;:~ r e many wo rd s in th ei r
vocabulary that mean differen t
thin gs , and tha t many words
are
both spelled and

'

'

'

~

for-gran ted l'Oillforts of home

BY ETHEL ROBINSON
GALLIPOLIS- The FrenchCity Campers held their firs t
meeting of the new year at U1e
Buckeye Ru ra l Electric_
building Jan. 2 wi th president
Art Wroblewski presiding . The
opening prayer was given by
Garland Sa nders ; the pledge to
the fla g was led by Blanche
Miller.

'

.... ..

'
~'.

.. '
•

'

�.,

'

I •.

I •

..,

.

I

..

.I

'

'

/

'

I•·

12 - Tl)e Smday IJ'imes- Sentinel. Sunday, Jan. 5, 1975

..

~'~~'*''*'~~":!:-':-.'.
"-::::..
-.:.~:~~"\.,':!,.~~....:.:·:~:; :;:;.;:;;::;:;::::::·.:;:;:;:;&gt;·:;:~;:;.;:;:·.;. ;:;:;:;:•.;:;:;:;:,.; ;:;:;.;.: ;:;: •. ;:;:; ' ..;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::: \·:::

I

You': Wayne National ~orest

~

. ByT.AllaoWolter

~

.

'

Et All thmgs bcan g eqtwL rnur c

IRONTON - With a multitude of

~

conservation issues facmg th~ nahan , 1t

~ istmportant that the pubhc be informed

~

of a vanety of coqserv'ahon subjects

~

How well mlormed are you • Try
~ taking the followmg cons~rvation qu1z
%and lind out. Most are true-fal se
~ questions For adults, a score of 10 IS
~ about average. Fifteen or more correct

i

lS excellent. (To his utter shock. the

® editor
~

nunked it mtserably .)

1. Conservation and preservation

~ mean the same thmg.

~

2

Wood IS a non-renewab le

::1~ resource

3 Trees absorb oxygen
~
~ man ufacture carbon dtoxide.
~

and

4 Theworld 's popu1alionis nearly 2

$:
~

btlhon, 3 bilhon, 4 btlhon ?

~ for?

~

pnsed ol &lt;(ecaylll~ 'egetatwn

harm WJidiJfc

District Ranger

~

·, :=: ,:;:;:;:;::·::::: ;:;:;:: •• ;.;:;:: ;-:=::: ;.;:;:;.;.;:;:::::::::;.;:;:;:;;;:;:.:::!=::

erosiOn results from horse lrmls than
motorbike tratls.
20, Forest ltres destroy more trees

12. 'i'RUF:- Thelr gnaw1n g leeth 1n.rk

than do msecls

I J TRUE- Known reser ve s w1ll ldsl
anothc1 :150 ye.u s

\

ANSWERS ·
I FALSE- They ;ge ofteu used tnterchangca bly but really have qwte
different meamn gs ConservatiO n
mean s the w1se use of natura l

6 The world's reserves of coal

~ should last another 2,000 years .

I

7. An acre of )and ts al:~lUt the s1ze
of a football fteld
~
8. Average per ca pita (personal,
~ industry, etc. ) consumptiOn of water m
~ the Umled States Js 50 gallons per day

them bo th

dS

mcmUcr ~of the roder1 t

huml y
14. TRU F:- There ts a lumt ho\\ evcr
AcJChty JS measw ed on a PH scale of

::,.:,.!,.

hts

and not to use
2 F A L S E - U n d e r prop e r
managemen t, a forest IS capable uf

expire much .sooner Wh en the pH uf ,1
stream drops beh1w (i , louk uut lt s
possible tu pr edH.t the aquatic ltfe m ct

::~:

producmg " crop of trees fo rever

stream or lake lf the pflls known . the

•_

3 FALSE- It s the ot}1cr way around
"

II 1t ~&gt; ere not, we could nut ex1st lor
lack of oxygen
alarm1ng rat e
The \\ot'ld' s
popul atum m !967was34 bJ!llon F1ve
years late1 m 1972, wh en the last
esiJmatcs were made, there were
another 360 rrullion mou ths to feed

l'cverse 1s also true

15 FALSE - A pound or coal w11l
produce about t wo dnd o n e~halfti me ::;
as much heat as

&lt;.Ill

equal lliOunt uf

wond
16. FALSE- Must of 11 tomes f1om
abandoned under~roLmd/L'Oa l nunl'S
17 TRUE- Central Hardwood spccJCo

the multitude of envt t on mental
problems racmg th~ nat iO n toda)
6 TRUE- Energy J'cserves are bcmg

tu protrct the so il Most sotl f•roswn
resul ts from tmpr ope1ly de:ltgncd
logg mg 1 oods tmd skid trm ls.

consta ntl y

~~'~

members ol the same animal famil y.

13 . Iron 1s a non -renewa bl e

« resource.

§

14 Ftsh and other aquallc life can
live in acid water.
15. Pound lor pound, coal and wood
produce about the same amotm t of heat
when bW'ned

r cv1sed

18 VALSE..,- Pcn od Jc harv eslln g of
trees act u..tl ly bencf1ts \\. tlt.! ltfc The

Alaska have res ul ted m upward

heavy reg t owth fo llo\\ Jn g cleaJ·
cutt mg not only prov1des essen hdl
food but escape and offspnn g 1 ear1ng
cover as welL When used propet II ,
the chamsa w and axe c~re shll
wJldhfcs best lnend
19 TRU E- Tratl btkcs and scoolet s,

7 TRUE- The US ha s th e equtv llent

of 187 mllhon footba ll fields 111
NatiOnal F01ests

8. FALSE- Average per cap1ta consumpt1on (includes all uses) 1s 2110
ga llons per person per day Heav1ly
tndustrahzed stales such as Oh1o
actually use more, about 250 gallons
per day for OhiOans

•

1

16. The llijltn source of acid water m
S. E Ohio coal mlnlng areas is from
strt p mmmg.
~
17. Soil erosion from a logg ing

~

opera tum is about the same regardless
~ ol how many trees are cut.

~

Recent

dtsc ovcn es of vctst coal deposits m
revisiOns

12 The beaver and sqwrrel are

18. In general, harvesting trees

=
=.='_.=..
·=:_

toletale a pH ol 4 5 wlulc olht•IS

million hunters and ftsh ermen 1n the
~ Umted States.
~
10 Each mile of interstate fr eeway

S:

S! dle:-;, LhP nl&lt;tn who controlled

:::: .1ccess to H1chard M.' Ntxon
·:._' :~'
'I od.J) he ts a conv1cted fl"lon,
nppt•.1hng a gwlty verdtct pf

kecptng from hHrm , to protect. save

addJlJon al vegetatwn has sp1 outed up

~ ground .

:::~ IXIIVCIful man 1n the Umted
.

~:~

PleservCJhon

created 1n 1970 to ove1·see and correct

~ ta kes about 40 acres ol land

Press International
:·
'l'wo IC,tr' :tgo, II R Halde;:: mc~n \\-as the secon d most

means

r eso urces.

9. There are approximately 28

§:
11 The hwnus layer m forest sotls
~ 1s usually found aboul6 tnches below

nv UuHerl

bemg most alkalme , 7 IS neutrdl
Somespeelesoffl sh suchCJstat p t:an

CW'rent wor ld population 1s m excess
of 3.7 btlhon By th e year 2000,
popldatwn wtll double I
5. Environmcntul Protection Agchl'y -

~

=~:
:;:

1 to 14 \\t th 1 belllg must acid and 14

that we have m Ohw have ~m mterestmg charaC'lensttc So il bmcltn g
routs contmue tu live undergroun d
after the tree 1s cut , oftf' n sendmg up
stmnp sprouts In a ycm Ol two.

S:

from
_
power
.
J to disgrace
in two years

conspli.I C'L 9bstruclion or JUSru.: c dlld lymg tu Wa tergate
lllvesli ga tors

4 FOUR BILLION cmd g1owmg at an

5. What do the mitials EPA . stand

IS

ah\a~'!:i fo lmd on top of the ground

Hald~man ·£eli

9 FA!l&gt;E- Double that 28 ml llton and
you' ll be closer There are 55 mlilion
hlUl lers and fishermen m the U.S
10 TRUE- That's wh y one coast to
coast free way will gobble up over
100,000 acres of real estate.
II FALSE- The h1tn1us layer, com-

when used C.I.S moderate ::;pccds and on

reasonable g1ades normally cause
less 1m pact on tra lis than hor ses
Nei ther w11l cause slglllflcan t e1oswn
problcmds Jf the ltrmls are dcstgned
.md use propel \
20 FALSE- Insects c.t u:;e t\.\' lcc th e
d&gt;Jma gc that fu·cs do and dtseasl's
accotm t for more than both fu e and
mseets combmcd

'f':p
verey rPSreOstlld,on~tJeety
d&gt;

'

-&lt;md controlled all commuru- didn't trust his children .
catwns w the Oval Of!tce 'He
Now NIXon has resigned m
sa1d he auned for " zero error." disgrace and sertously til on
Once he ca:led an atde at 4 a.m. the West Coast. Haldeman
w mqutre about a projec t.
laces 25 years tn Jail and a
Those who liked Haldeman $21,000 !me.
satd hls was a necessary
On April · 30, 1973, Nixon
funcuon. Tbose who disliked accepted the restgnations of
Haldeman sa td he ca used Haldeman and hts UCLA
Ntxon woperate from an tvory roommate, John D. EhrlichLOwer and run the country as a man, and caUed them "two of
benevolent patruarch who the finest public servants tt has

..

·:·:

c;

spot.

The measures were not as

drasUc as those by Chrysler
Corp. in late December when
the cost·ol·living allowance

was elimjnated lor about 18,000
non-umon white collar work ers
after a $265.20 . payment m
December.
AMC sa id tts salaned
workers received that amoun t
in December and wtll continue
w receive tfl~e paymen t
every three months un ttl there
is some improvement m the

SEOEMS zn full
operation for '75
...

EDITOR'S NOTE· - Wtth
.the begmntng of the new year ,
1t's tune to take a fresh look at
programs affectm g our area
and evaluate the1r needs and
unpact on the future. One of the
mos t

man. ''

o lJ . t~rl u1 I'm

t

TWO MORE HATS go offtcially mto the Democrahc rmg
of presidential contenders when former Sen. Fred Harris of
Oklahoma (left) and Sen. Henry M Jackson of Washin gwn
formally announce thetr candidacy some tune early thts
month .

Ntxon 's,"

H;tldeman w&gt;Js fond of saying

:;·
Il ls detractors, nnd they
::: see ml'ci leg tun, t:o mplawed
,_!·..':.:_ :

tha i he w&gt;Js too pluperfect an
, 0 !J

STEA.~lt HOUSE~

Hts supporters, andr they

ofte n seemed few, satd tha t if
If elf! Y Hobbins Ha lde man

Brando~s

·present
has aprice tag

Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

didn 't eXIst Richard Nixon

&lt;~ nd the pests.

ll e mcHtaged Ntxon's time,

··

person.tlly rlcaJed everyone
h
d
h

:~: ~;.t~lr~~: r:!Jeer~~~~ean~e~~~~

·.':._

.::_
.=:_:

_________ _

..,.

spo kesmen satd. Thfe cost:&lt;&gt;!·
1IVJng a 1owa nce or umon
:~: wot kers to help keep thetr
w&gt;Jges !rom bemg eroded by

.:_
f.:

nflatJon have not been af-

'.::_, :_, fecwte,tdh t!Je exceptton of 15,000
·.· howl y workc1;s who w1ll be
::~ uff the JOb lor one week
:~_,-~_~.:' sta 1t1 ng
Mond ay
at

assembly operations, AMC has
. not tdled any workers mdefinttely

GM , Ford and Chrysler have
e1ther tdled or plan to lay off
nearly 300,000 workers lll the
f1rst three months of 1975 fmanc1al picture at the auto about 40 per cent or the mco mpany AMC had been dustry 's work Ioree
The economy measures
headtng lor a good yea r in 1974
affect
AM Csalan ed workers at
unttl the economrc slump
automo
ltve oper atiOns m
knocked U1e ~ottum out of the
Detrmt, Wiscunstn and Canada
entire ~w to market
as
well as non.uruon sular1ed
Ne1thet Ford nor Genend
Jeep
employes m Toledo, Ohto,
Motors have any plans to end
cost-&lt;Jf·hvtn g allowances for and at the At'o!C general subth etr white collar workers , stdiary

We'd Rather
Do It Ourselves!
Here at the 'sob Evans Steak House,
we cut our own steaks, grind our own
beef .and bake all our own rolls and
pastries! Come 1n and enjoy a great
steak, char-broiled to your liktng, or
another of our appetite-pleasin' menu
suggestions. And always bnng the
family . . . for breakfast, lunch or dinner.

\

"\ .
'

.

\

\.

I

THERErS SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE •••

In

'"

Pomeroy 42 years, was

fcrmtrly the operator of fhe
Blue Diamond Coal Co. AI one
time he had an tnferest m the

All the current events ... the

Green Lantern tavern .
Surviving are a son, Kimble,

Findlay, a Sisler, Jenny
Lemon of Parkersburg, a
brother, Elmer of Can ton ;
three grandchildren. and two
great-grandchi ldren.

latest in fashions ... what's
happenin~i

on the sports scene ...
you'll find the information you'.r e ·

Funeral services will be held

"'

Riverview Cemetery. The Rev

Dale Wise officiated.
Out-of-county relatives here

.v

for the service included Miss

Madeline

Sauer,

M1ss

Margaret Sauer, and M1ss

Vlralnla Sauer, all of Davtcn ;
Mrs. John Walters, Colerain·
Brian McCann and Christine

lNI

"

Davis, Gahanna , Miss Ei leen
Welker, Columbus. and Ttm

Welker, Athens

EVERETT RUSSELL
VINTON - Rev . Everett

Russell , 57, a resident of

Lancaster, Ohio, formerly of
Rt. 1 Vinton , d1ed In Lancaster
Hospital around •· 30 P m.

.....
")
n

.

~

"' )

,,u

Fr~ay.

•

•

•

He was born OCt 30, I917, 1n
Morgan Twp. , son of the late
Charier. and ~file Wiggins
Russel .
.
He was tw ice married , f1rst
to Elsie Mollahan , who
preceded him In deqth In 1939 .
One son and one daughter Irom
this union precedea him 1n
death.
His second

marr iage was to

Grace Hampton In 1940 at
Pomeroy, who survives, as do

three sons, Waller Lee Russell.
Mont Clair, Calif.. David
RuSHtl, New NvJrshfleld. Onio,
and Earl Russell , Baltimore,
Ollie ; one brother. Harold

-Russell, and one sister, Mrs.
'

(

""'

'...-:.'1

'"

r

~

••

•9&gt;1

ietitinel

1" ~

To The·Greater Middle Ohio Valley

..

•

•

ll.)'tl

'"T

v.: )
niv

Daisy ·Holllnbaugh, both of Rt.
1, VInton.
I fh
He was a rrlember o
e
Woshlnatcn Ave . Wesleyan
Church, Lancaster. He was a
World war II veteran and a
member of the Disabled
Veterans.
·
Funeral services will be held
1 p.m. Monday at the Morgan
tenter Wesleyan Church with
Rev. John Mlnsher off icrat.ng .

Burial will be In Morgan
Cemetery ..
fh
Friends may call a1· •
lk.Coy-II«Jre Funeral Home
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
The body '(VIII lie In stale at the
church one hour prier to ser·
vice.
ROLLAND McANGUS
POMEROY Reiland

'

..
•

...-·
1'2..J

~

\

... • • ~ ..

j

Nov . 20. 1974

He is Survtved by- hts wtfe,
Bertha ; two sons , Rol land, Jr.,
and John, and a daughter , El la
Ma~, all at home ; a s1ster, Mrs
Irene Bai ley, Rt. 4, Pomeroy , a

half ~rother . Leroy Brechtel ,
North Ft Mye rs, Fla , and

Welker of Columbus were

conducted Tuesday af the

,,

'

late George and Jennie Starkey
McAnqu s, was also preceded 1n
death by a brother, Martin , on

nteces, nephews and
af 2 p.m. today at the Powell several
COUSinS
Church In Findlay. The body JS
Funeral services will be he ld
at the Trautman Funeral Monda y at 1 30 p m al the
Heme, NvJm St, Findlay .
Delong and Bakers Funeral
Home tn Zanesvil le Bunal will
DELBERT W. WELKER
also be tn Zanesv1lle
MIDDLEPORT - Gravestde
rites for Delbert William (Bill)

looking for right in your local paper!

-De~ted

seven-co unty reg10n Thts
se ri es of artJdes will attempt
to evaluate the sys tem's
~rese nt and future value 1n
meeting the emergency health
needs of the people

I· Area Deaths I

'"

'

bulance statwns scrv mg the

granted Friday

"Where only the best food Is good enough"
/

prQ]ects

Four divorces

CHILDRE-N LOVE
OUR MENU
--r- - ----:"-(

dramahc

developed m rece nt years 1s Ute
Southeast Oh1o Eme rge ncy
Medtcal Serv1ce "SEOEMS,"
as tl 1s called, has now reached
full operation w1th 17 am·

The National Safety Counc1l
reports that last year, more
than 145,000 Amertcans lost
their lives in acctdents. Ftve
hundred thousand more were
perman ently dtsabled and t2
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A princtpal comes due m Decem- tmllion were temporarily
40-acre plot of land in Agoura, ber of 1975 if the mone y has not diSa bl ed . The Ambulance
Calif., which Marlon Brando been paid
Assoc1ation of America
gave to the Indians cames a
John Hamtlton, 30, ol Rancho es timates that 55,000 persons
'-118,000 mortgage, a television Palos Verdes, cahr., satd the are permanently tnjurcd or
newsman said Friday.
family members acquired a dtsabled annually by untramed
A deed signed .by Brando and first trust deed on the land ambulance attendants. Adds a
recorded Friday turns over the from thetr lather about 10 1epor t by the National
land to the Survival of years ago
Research Counctl " More than
American Indians Assoctation
"I'd JUst as soon have the one-thtrd or the acc td~ nt
Brando's
attorney, land as the money ," he said.
fatahhes m the U. S occur at
Lawrence Kartengainer, satd
He said he talked to his the scene, m the ambulance, or
be believed the movie star was brother, James, 21, of Denver, w1thm minutes after arrival m
aware of lbe big morlgitge on and his stsler, Janet, 27, of El the emergency room. Yet for
the property. He satd also that Segundo, and th_;,y agreed with · decades, the general public
Brando could qualify for a him the lanll'· would ._,e and the medtcal professiOn
large tax write:&lt;&gt;ff as a result or valuable.
have pass1vely accepted
the gift.
"Mr. Brando has been very ambul ances sufficient only for
A spokesman for the Indian prompt in paymg the taxes and transportmg the_mJured w1th
group said tbe association was the mterest on the land,"
aware , of lbe debt, but they Hamilton satd
believed the money to pay the
The County Assessor's olftce
mortgage would be dona ted to has placed a market value on
the property , )lear the rural
them.
Dick Carlson, KABC-TV suburb of Liberty Canyon, or
reporter, said Brando had patd $112,000. But Hamtlton satd tt
GALLIPOLIS - Common
nothing on the princtpal smce could be worth as much as
Pleas
Court Judge Ronald R.
he purchased the property .$500,000 in the fu ture.
several years ago. The uutial
Brando satd also he would Calhoun Fnday granted four
payment was for prepaid in- giVe the Indian Group an d1vurces and dtsmissed two
terest on the mortgage.
apartment complex in Ana- oth er divorce petitions.
Brando was not avatlable for heim, and htsshare or a 40-acre Granted divorces were Wilma
May Dtllon from Darwm A.
comment.
farm at Muncelein , DL
The mortgage is held by John
The actor refused to accept Dillon on grounds ol gross
Hamilton, his brother James an Academy Award he won for neglect of duty.
Helen I.ou1se Kteshng from
and hiS sister Janet, Carlson his role in "The Godfather" m
Robert
Lee Ki es hn g on
1972 and charged Hollywood
said.
grounds
of
gross negle~t- of
They said they plan to had portrayed Indians m a
duly
and
extreme
cruelty;
repossess tbe land when the derogatory manner over the
Robert Sheldon Warren from
years.
Clara Ann Warren on grounds
r-~-------------------~---, or gross neglect or duty and
Terry Wayne Lloyd from
Rosemary Lloyd on grounds ol
gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty
Peh ttons dismissed were
McAngus , 50, Zanesville,
JOHN W. HITE
of
Pomeroy,
d1ed
those
of Sara Plants vs Gtlbert
formerly
POMEROY- John W,. H1te. Thursday at · th e Good , R. Plants
and Carolyn Evans
82, Ftndlay, former Pomeroy
Samaritan
Hosp
ita
l
m
Zanes
vs
Dean
Evans.
businessman , died Friday m vi lle
Findlay. Mr. Hile who reSided
Mr McAngus, the son of the

wou ld hc~ ve had to mvent hun.
fl. tldeman cared neither for
his detractors nor his suppor·
tel s lle saw as Ius JOb the
protection uf the Prestdent, to
shield hun from the favor
seekers ilml the powet lJrokers

Non-Union salaries frozen by ~merlcan Motors
major automakers also m- ·
eluded a delay in implementing
a dental plan for safan ed
employes and a halt to any
merit pay Increases until
further notice

•

ligh

,·.=',:!
_ '·,:;_
,=_.

:&amp;.'=&gt;-'-~~"~~"'%"-;:~~~)'».~:~o;."*~""'m!~~»:.~:·~&gt;:·:::::::;~:::::::::::::::::::::.:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:=:::::.:·:·::::::·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=:·:···:·:=:::.;.;. ;.;:;:;.;.;.;. ;.;:::·.:·:=:·:·:·:·:=~=:·:·:·:·:=:=:·:·:·:·:·:···:·:·:=:=:~·

DETROIT (UP!) - In an
attempt to cut costs wtthoul
laying off workers, American
Motors Corp. said Friday it
was freezing cost-Ill-living
raises at current levels for
about 7,500 non-union salaried
employes.
The economic measures
taken by the smallest of the

been my pnvUege to know."
Haldeman, 48, began ap
assoctation with NIXon in 1006,
m the vice presidential reelection campatgn.
Four years later, Haldeman
helped direct Nixon's losing
·presidential race to John F.
Kennedy. He was campatgn
manager of Nixon's unsuccessful 1962 Cahlornia guberlldtorial campaign, alter which
both men were cited by a state
judge lor condUcting a phony
Democrallc postcard poU.
As Los Angeles vice
pres ident for J. Walter
Thompson Inc., he was constdered the prototy pe "ad

Gourmets reli sh th e sptcy
honey dertved from thyme
growmg on the slopes ol Mount
fl ymettus in Greece Tradition
says thts honey was the ongmal
food or the gods

little Il l' 11 0 equipment £01 l'&lt;H e,
llldnncd by Inade quately
tram ed drivers or attendants ,.
NO f1gures are avatlable on
the ntUnber of death s cccurrmg
fro m Illness es suddenl y
worsening a nd beconnn g
medica l emergenctes outside

uf the hospJial, but }he
Research Council estnnates
tw1ce as many amlmlance 1 uns
me for Sickness than aretdental mjm·v
Southea st Oluo seems to be
kc epmg up WIth the natwnal

trend Sta!JstJcs gathered b)
SEOEMS shows that of 1\s
12, 138 runs, 4,670 were m
1 esponse to m'(' ldent.al InJury
and 7, 468 involved 1llness of an
emergency nature

SEOF.MS began operallng
tv. enty months ago am1dst a
cris is Sttuat!on as form er

providet'S of ambulance se rvice gave nohcc of

rilsctm ~

Southeast Ohio

Jmmllel with
IUition in need
for se,rvices
,..

those ope l ato1 s prov1dmg 80

pet of the servl('f wanted out
of Ow bl!slness Nc \\ .s t, il l' cmd
~ li.lllddl d~.

as wt.'ll CJ:-i
losses, WCH' re&lt;tSUHs
giVen b) hm e1 al dn Pdm s fm
endmg the costly sc1vu.:e. In
medutgs wtth count, offlll.lls.
fun era l
dJreclol s
g. Wl'
examples or payments hom
Medicare of $2 or $3 on ambulance b1lls of $60 or more
co~t or havmg pe rsonnel
avm lable lo an~\\ CI call s, num
telephones, as \\ ell as--expenses
£cdc1al

of

.~ c tu all y

opel c~t mg m1 dill·

tmuing operatiOn. At that t1me bulan ce were tngh t' llOugh to
33 fun eral homes, 9 volunteer the small busmesses le t nlonc
and tuo muntclpal squads were new costs of rneetmg suon-to!bc
ac hve

tn

the ambulance 1mposed standards on velucle
size , eqw pment :md att endant
tra 1mn g Such cos ts were

business, a total of 75 veh1cles
serving the counhes of Athens,
Hock1n g, Metgs, Vmton,
Jackson, Galha and Lawrence
Accm dmg to a 1971 State
Department ol Health survey,

\ .

ope r~ l111g

pred icted to be $60,000

01

more

for one vehicle annually

Sta iJstJt•s gat hered by
SEOF:MS 'enfy lh1s h1gh cost

SURROUNDED BY TIRES, an employee at the Goodyear Tire Company 's Akron, Ohto
plant superv1ses an assembly hne where steel-belted radials are turiie&lt;l out at a record pace.
'The plant is c11pable or producing as much as one-third of all the radial tires purchased m the
C'O untry

,.

uf UJWrutwn J:o 'm example:
vt' hu lcs c~v t•ragc d 44 7 mHes
prr emc1ge ne!' 1un m 1974. an d
pmd :-l n average of 52.9c a
~;.~ li o n for gasolin e
Tota l
mi leage logged for the sevencoun t) system IS 308,775.5 m
1974

Anothe1 nH.I JOr expense is
salm y of tectmi cnws, yet

F.MTs bcgm at only $2 10 an

'--..

hour whtch JS minimum wage
for the State ol Ohto. Moderate
raises equal levels or tralnmg .
Tnday, the area is serviced
by 17 SEOEMS stations using
26 fully - equipped ambulances
manned around-the-clock ,
seven days a week There are
also lour volunteer squads, one
muntcipal squad and three
funeral homes st1II providing

emerg ency ambulance serVICe .

What tmpact has SEOEMS
had on the actual provtston of
emergency health care In the
region• In th1s settes or articles, we'll look at the dtfference tn quality of care , cost
of the Je«ional ~tern and 1ts
future Tomorro · , 1 'The ex-

pense of EMS and

Stock market shows solid gain going into
UPI Business Writer
volun1e totaled 20 mtlhon or
NEW YORK (UP!) - The more shares.
.
stock market, btdtiing good
1n the process or t uesday's
riddance to the old year, en· ·rally, PreSident ~'ord formally
tered the first week of 1975 with scrapped plans lor a 5 per cent
a solld gam as the trading tax surcharge and there was
tempo picked up on the New speculatwn he mtght call for a
York Stock Exchange.
tax cut m an attack on the
One of the reasons was that deepemng recession. While minvestors this week began natton hurt the stock market
anticipahng Washtngton would last year, mvestors were more
take some concrete steps to concerned about a severe
remedy the nation 's economic recessiOn- which the natton ts
ills. This played a part in a New now tn.
Year's eve rally that carried
"I think Wall Street beheves
through the end of the holiday- Ford wlll come up wtth a
shortened week.
strong program and 1 thmk
The Dow Jones tndustrial that's one of the reasons lor the
average, whose performance uphlt the market got th1s
last year was tts worst smce week," Monte Gordon, analyst
1937, gamed 32.38 pomts to for Dreyfus Corp , satd .
634.54for the week. Standard &amp; "An awful lot depends on
Poor's !iOO-&lt;;tock index, which ho'l\ he acts. The market 1s
also had a dtsastrous 1974, ready to explnde if he hves up
gained 3.57 to 70.71. The NYSE to hopes," Gordon said. The
common stock index added 1.99 market staged the best rally m
to 37,35.
tis history in early October
Advances lopped declines, when Ford announced his l~rst
1,688 to 206, among the 2,012 economtc program.
issues cro.Smg the tape. ObThe momentum of the rally
servers were pleased wtth this allowed the market · to overdevelopment because it come some negative news
showed the week's advance developments late in the week
was broad-based .
Trendse tting First Natwnal
Volume during the four-day City Bank of New York raised
week totaled 69,555,700 shares, to 10 v, from 10 per cent the
compared with 52,448,256 a prtme lending rate tt charges
week ago and 82,088,600 the key corporate customers. Most
same week a year ago. The other banks have a prtme rate
trading this week included a of 10 ~. or 10 1'.! per cent. High
turnover of 20,970,000 shares mterest rates have bothered
Tuesday. Last year, there were mvestors lor months.
only nine sesstons m which The Federal Reserve Board

'

late 11ntrsday reported loan
demands at New York hanks
remained heavy in the latest
reportm g period, while the
nation's money
supply
declined, so the mcrease by
Cillbank was not too surpn smg
Late Friday, the Fed allowed
six of tis banks to lower the
dts count rate th ey charge
members banks for borrowing
to 7 v, from 7 % per cent. This
eduld help U1e market next
week A lowermg of the
dtscount 1ate helped the
market out ul tis 1937 slide .
In another disturbing
development this week, the
Labor Department said the
nalton's unemployment rate
rose to a 13-year high of 7.1 per
cent Ln Dece mber. 'Flus report
generally had been anficipa ted, however
Tax selling and portfolio
ad justments made it difficOit
to detem1ine a pattern much of
the week There was some
buymg m the blue chtps, the
otis and chemicals, all of which
took theu· lumpa last year.
Gold mmmg stocks dtd little,
wh1ch is just about what the
nation d1d when buy)ng gold
became legal Tuesday for the
l~rst time tn 41 years. Observers found this encouraging for
the stoek market beca use there
had been fears of heavy selling
of securtties by stockholders to
put the proceeds inw gold.
ASA I.td lost 4 'h, Homes-

take Mining 2 '(,,Dome Mines I
:y, and Campbell Red Lake 7/a
for the week.
Texaco ·was tbe most active
issue lor the week, up 2 liJ to 23
on 911,500 shares. The company reported a discovery ln
the Gulf of Mexico off
Louisiana. Other oll and
related issues were mlxetl.
Schlumberger and J. Ray
McDermott gained 4 'll apiece,
Joy Manufacturing 3 v,, Ohio
Standard 3 l'.t and Halliburton,
Atlantic Richfield, Natomas,
Cltles Service, Amerada Hess
and Indiana Standard a point
or more each.
Getty lost 4 l'.t. Analysts said
Getty came under profit taking
pressure alter registering
strong gains recently .•
Wllllams Cos. warrants
plunged 7 % and WlliJams Cos.
common 7 %. Spokesmen for
the fertilizer producer Friday
said they could find no reason
for the decUne in the issues.
One analyst noted farm prices
declined 3 per cent In ·December.
Chemicals were strong. DuPont gained 4 1'.!, Eastman
Kodak 3 Y•, Monsanto 2 % and
Allied Chemical I v•.
J.C. Penney gained 5 %and
Sears, Roebuck 4 1'.!. Things
brightened a bll for the retail
group which experienced a
dismal 1974. RetaU sales inereased In December and
during the last week, according
to ROvernment reports.

"

~75 ·

Westinghouse Electric was
the second most active issue
last week, gaining I l'.t to 9 % on
745,600 shares. Among the
others in the group, IBM
gained 5 y,, Hewlett-Packard 2
'(,, RCA, Control Data,
Motorola anjl Texas Instruments all around a point.
But Digital Equipment plunged
4 'Is, Burroughs 3 'h.
ffiM is expected to introduce
a new smaU-ecale computer
next week . On tbe negative
side, a federal judge in New
York allowed the Justice
Department to arnendexpand - its longstanding
antitrust suit against the
computer gianl. The trial geta
underway Feb. 18.
• American Telephone &amp; Telegraph warrants were third on
the active list, tip 0..32 to 9-16 on
658,600 traded. Tba common~
stock was'ln ninth place, up 2 to
46 liJ on 394,200 shares . AT&amp;T
flled for a $717 mUllon. rate
increase this week and also
resubmtfbed a $600 mllllon debt
financing plan lt had postponed
last November after the
Justice Department flled an
antitrust suit.
Coca-Cola gained 5 %. The
issue took a beaUng last year in
the wake of huge increases in
sugar .prices. Sugar ISsues
advanced. Holly Sugar gained
3 l'.t and Amstar 2 %.
SteelS and ljlotors rebounded. General Motors added 2%
and U. S. Steel I 'ill.

By BERNARD BRENNER
nutrition specialist said today
UPI Farm Editor
an unpublished calculation
WASHINGTON (UP!) shows that at November
Government nutritionists have prices, dry beans provided 20completed new calculations gram servings or protein at a
showing that dry beans, tradi- cost of 14 cents apiece. Stmtlar
prime rate for busmess loans twnally a cost-c\!tting standby , 20-gram porhons for other
from 10 per cent to 10'14 per for low income families, have foods ranged from 15 cents lor
cent. It was a temporary reclaimed their place as th~ peanut butter to 22 cents lor
setback for efforts to shmulate cheapest ol the protein substi- hamburger, 39 cents for frozen
perch filets, 40 cents lor pork
the economy by making credtt tutes for meat.
An Agriculture Department lorn roast, 71 cents for por.
easler for busmess expansion
terhonse steak and 75 eents lor
bacon.
Beans.had long been ranked
at or near the bottom of the
protein-cost list. In August of
1972, a 20-flram serving of
beans cost 6 cents compared
with 12 cents for peanut butter,
19 cents lor hamburger and 64
cents for porterhouse steaK.
Last year, a dramatic boom
in bean prices sent costs
s&lt;&gt;aring much faster than other
foods. By August, the cost of 20
grams of protein in beans rose
to 18 cents, triple the level of
two years earlier compared
with an increase of 21 per cent
for hamburger and 16 per cent
for porlerhrmse steak. An
Agriculture Department food
cost table for •August showed
peanut butter had taken over
from beans as the cheapest or
the common protein replacements for meat.
Recent cuts in bean prices,
produced by the harvesting ofa
record 1974 crop, reduced the
cost of a 20-gram protein
pdrtion of beans from 18 cents
last August to 14 cents in
November ~ack at the bot"He 's as old as the Watergate coverup trial!"
tom of' tbe list although sWl
'
t
closer to the price of highercost foods than UJ: most past

Berrys World

)v -

.

years.
Nutrition expers say conswnerswhowant tomaketheJr
own protein cost compansons
using local prices for various
foods can do so by using a
"market
umt" · fac tor
calculated by the Agrtculture
Department It works th1s
way:
The market unit of hamburger, for example, ts one pound
The factor - meaning the
amount ol the umt needed to
give the consumer 20 grams of
protein - ts .24 for hamburger
If the price of hamburger is 90
cents a unit (one pound) ,
multtplying that cost by the
factor of .24 gives the cost of 20
grams of protem as 22 cents
To calculate 20 gram protein
costs lor other foods, consumers can use the following
market urut and factor figures:
Peanut butter - 12 ounce
unit, .23 factor; large eggs one dozen unit, .25 factor; '
whole chicken I pound untt, .37·
factor ; hamburger I pound
· unit, .241actor; white bread - 'i
pound unit, .51 factor ; Whole
mtlk -half-gallon unit, .29
factor; canned tun a 6.5 oui!ce
unit, .44 factor; American
process cheese --8 ounce unit,
.38 factot ; lrankfutters - I
pound unit, .56 factor; salami
--8 ounce unit, .50 factor ; pork
loin roast ·- 1 pound unit, .33
factor; rwnp roast of beef - 1
pound urJ!t, .26 factor; pork
sausage - 1 PQund untl, .52
factor; sirloin steak - I pound
un1t, .211 !actor; bologna--8
ounce unit, .73 factor ; !om
lamb choi'S - 1 pound una, .31
factor .

~

'
~

r

*'

'
;·
~·

it:
~;
~.

~:
~:
~·

~*:

S
~
~:
,.
•

Dry beans proved again as
best protein sub for :meats

TREND REVERSED
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Ftrst
National Ctly Bank of New
York Fnday reversed a threemonth trend toward lower
mterest rates and raised tis

•
~
(

~-

300 SECONQ AVE.

~

"'•

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

~.

i

STORE WIDE

CLEARANCE SALE
~OMPLETE

~

~II

..!!
!

STOCK

eWOOL COATS
ALL LENGTHS ·

~

SAVE

•DRESSES
•ENSEMBLES
•PANT SUITS
·-•SPORTSWEAR
•ROBES
•HANDBAGS
'

j
i=

j

OFF REGULAR
PRICE

...

=
,.,.:

ii

i'

SPECIAL
GROUP OF FAMOUS NAME BRAND

eBRAS
ePANTIES
eSLIP

.

/3

ALL $ALES

FINAL,I

I

,' I

i

SAVE 1/ OFF ·REG.

~

i

RETAIL

ma': 1t

.

r' f1l. 1JI

"

.

I

�.,

'

I •.

I •

..,

.

I

..

.I

'

'

/

'

I•·

12 - Tl)e Smday IJ'imes- Sentinel. Sunday, Jan. 5, 1975

..

~'~~'*''*'~~":!:-':-.'.
"-::::..
-.:.~:~~"\.,':!,.~~....:.:·:~:; :;:;.;:;;::;:;::::::·.:;:;:;:;&gt;·:;:~;:;.;:;:·.;. ;:;:;:;:•.;:;:;:;:,.; ;:;:;.;.: ;:;: •. ;:;:; ' ..;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::: \·:::

I

You': Wayne National ~orest

~

. ByT.AllaoWolter

~

.

'

Et All thmgs bcan g eqtwL rnur c

IRONTON - With a multitude of

~

conservation issues facmg th~ nahan , 1t

~ istmportant that the pubhc be informed

~

of a vanety of coqserv'ahon subjects

~

How well mlormed are you • Try
~ taking the followmg cons~rvation qu1z
%and lind out. Most are true-fal se
~ questions For adults, a score of 10 IS
~ about average. Fifteen or more correct

i

lS excellent. (To his utter shock. the

® editor
~

nunked it mtserably .)

1. Conservation and preservation

~ mean the same thmg.

~

2

Wood IS a non-renewab le

::1~ resource

3 Trees absorb oxygen
~
~ man ufacture carbon dtoxide.
~

and

4 Theworld 's popu1alionis nearly 2

$:
~

btlhon, 3 bilhon, 4 btlhon ?

~ for?

~

pnsed ol &lt;(ecaylll~ 'egetatwn

harm WJidiJfc

District Ranger

~

·, :=: ,:;:;:;:;::·::::: ;:;:;:: •• ;.;:;:: ;-:=::: ;.;:;:;.;.;:;:::::::::;.;:;:;:;;;:;:.:::!=::

erosiOn results from horse lrmls than
motorbike tratls.
20, Forest ltres destroy more trees

12. 'i'RUF:- Thelr gnaw1n g leeth 1n.rk

than do msecls

I J TRUE- Known reser ve s w1ll ldsl
anothc1 :150 ye.u s

\

ANSWERS ·
I FALSE- They ;ge ofteu used tnterchangca bly but really have qwte
different meamn gs ConservatiO n
mean s the w1se use of natura l

6 The world's reserves of coal

~ should last another 2,000 years .

I

7. An acre of )and ts al:~lUt the s1ze
of a football fteld
~
8. Average per ca pita (personal,
~ industry, etc. ) consumptiOn of water m
~ the Umled States Js 50 gallons per day

them bo th

dS

mcmUcr ~of the roder1 t

huml y
14. TRU F:- There ts a lumt ho\\ evcr
AcJChty JS measw ed on a PH scale of

::,.:,.!,.

hts

and not to use
2 F A L S E - U n d e r prop e r
managemen t, a forest IS capable uf

expire much .sooner Wh en the pH uf ,1
stream drops beh1w (i , louk uut lt s
possible tu pr edH.t the aquatic ltfe m ct

::~:

producmg " crop of trees fo rever

stream or lake lf the pflls known . the

•_

3 FALSE- It s the ot}1cr way around
"

II 1t ~&gt; ere not, we could nut ex1st lor
lack of oxygen
alarm1ng rat e
The \\ot'ld' s
popul atum m !967was34 bJ!llon F1ve
years late1 m 1972, wh en the last
esiJmatcs were made, there were
another 360 rrullion mou ths to feed

l'cverse 1s also true

15 FALSE - A pound or coal w11l
produce about t wo dnd o n e~halfti me ::;
as much heat as

&lt;.Ill

equal lliOunt uf

wond
16. FALSE- Must of 11 tomes f1om
abandoned under~roLmd/L'Oa l nunl'S
17 TRUE- Central Hardwood spccJCo

the multitude of envt t on mental
problems racmg th~ nat iO n toda)
6 TRUE- Energy J'cserves are bcmg

tu protrct the so il Most sotl f•roswn
resul ts from tmpr ope1ly de:ltgncd
logg mg 1 oods tmd skid trm ls.

consta ntl y

~~'~

members ol the same animal famil y.

13 . Iron 1s a non -renewa bl e

« resource.

§

14 Ftsh and other aquallc life can
live in acid water.
15. Pound lor pound, coal and wood
produce about the same amotm t of heat
when bW'ned

r cv1sed

18 VALSE..,- Pcn od Jc harv eslln g of
trees act u..tl ly bencf1ts \\. tlt.! ltfc The

Alaska have res ul ted m upward

heavy reg t owth fo llo\\ Jn g cleaJ·
cutt mg not only prov1des essen hdl
food but escape and offspnn g 1 ear1ng
cover as welL When used propet II ,
the chamsa w and axe c~re shll
wJldhfcs best lnend
19 TRU E- Tratl btkcs and scoolet s,

7 TRUE- The US ha s th e equtv llent

of 187 mllhon footba ll fields 111
NatiOnal F01ests

8. FALSE- Average per cap1ta consumpt1on (includes all uses) 1s 2110
ga llons per person per day Heav1ly
tndustrahzed stales such as Oh1o
actually use more, about 250 gallons
per day for OhiOans

•

1

16. The llijltn source of acid water m
S. E Ohio coal mlnlng areas is from
strt p mmmg.
~
17. Soil erosion from a logg ing

~

opera tum is about the same regardless
~ ol how many trees are cut.

~

Recent

dtsc ovcn es of vctst coal deposits m
revisiOns

12 The beaver and sqwrrel are

18. In general, harvesting trees

=
=.='_.=..
·=:_

toletale a pH ol 4 5 wlulc olht•IS

million hunters and ftsh ermen 1n the
~ Umted States.
~
10 Each mile of interstate fr eeway

S:

S! dle:-;, LhP nl&lt;tn who controlled

:::: .1ccess to H1chard M.' Ntxon
·:._' :~'
'I od.J) he ts a conv1cted fl"lon,
nppt•.1hng a gwlty verdtct pf

kecptng from hHrm , to protect. save

addJlJon al vegetatwn has sp1 outed up

~ ground .

:::~ IXIIVCIful man 1n the Umted
.

~:~

PleservCJhon

created 1n 1970 to ove1·see and correct

~ ta kes about 40 acres ol land

Press International
:·
'l'wo IC,tr' :tgo, II R Halde;:: mc~n \\-as the secon d most

means

r eso urces.

9. There are approximately 28

§:
11 The hwnus layer m forest sotls
~ 1s usually found aboul6 tnches below

nv UuHerl

bemg most alkalme , 7 IS neutrdl
Somespeelesoffl sh suchCJstat p t:an

CW'rent wor ld population 1s m excess
of 3.7 btlhon By th e year 2000,
popldatwn wtll double I
5. Environmcntul Protection Agchl'y -

~

=~:
:;:

1 to 14 \\t th 1 belllg must acid and 14

that we have m Ohw have ~m mterestmg charaC'lensttc So il bmcltn g
routs contmue tu live undergroun d
after the tree 1s cut , oftf' n sendmg up
stmnp sprouts In a ycm Ol two.

S:

from
_
power
.
J to disgrace
in two years

conspli.I C'L 9bstruclion or JUSru.: c dlld lymg tu Wa tergate
lllvesli ga tors

4 FOUR BILLION cmd g1owmg at an

5. What do the mitials EPA . stand

IS

ah\a~'!:i fo lmd on top of the ground

Hald~man ·£eli

9 FA!l&gt;E- Double that 28 ml llton and
you' ll be closer There are 55 mlilion
hlUl lers and fishermen m the U.S
10 TRUE- That's wh y one coast to
coast free way will gobble up over
100,000 acres of real estate.
II FALSE- The h1tn1us layer, com-

when used C.I.S moderate ::;pccds and on

reasonable g1ades normally cause
less 1m pact on tra lis than hor ses
Nei ther w11l cause slglllflcan t e1oswn
problcmds Jf the ltrmls are dcstgned
.md use propel \
20 FALSE- Insects c.t u:;e t\.\' lcc th e
d&gt;Jma gc that fu·cs do and dtseasl's
accotm t for more than both fu e and
mseets combmcd

'f':p
verey rPSreOstlld,on~tJeety
d&gt;

'

-&lt;md controlled all commuru- didn't trust his children .
catwns w the Oval Of!tce 'He
Now NIXon has resigned m
sa1d he auned for " zero error." disgrace and sertously til on
Once he ca:led an atde at 4 a.m. the West Coast. Haldeman
w mqutre about a projec t.
laces 25 years tn Jail and a
Those who liked Haldeman $21,000 !me.
satd hls was a necessary
On April · 30, 1973, Nixon
funcuon. Tbose who disliked accepted the restgnations of
Haldeman sa td he ca used Haldeman and hts UCLA
Ntxon woperate from an tvory roommate, John D. EhrlichLOwer and run the country as a man, and caUed them "two of
benevolent patruarch who the finest public servants tt has

..

·:·:

c;

spot.

The measures were not as

drasUc as those by Chrysler
Corp. in late December when
the cost·ol·living allowance

was elimjnated lor about 18,000
non-umon white collar work ers
after a $265.20 . payment m
December.
AMC sa id tts salaned
workers received that amoun t
in December and wtll continue
w receive tfl~e paymen t
every three months un ttl there
is some improvement m the

SEOEMS zn full
operation for '75
...

EDITOR'S NOTE· - Wtth
.the begmntng of the new year ,
1t's tune to take a fresh look at
programs affectm g our area
and evaluate the1r needs and
unpact on the future. One of the
mos t

man. ''

o lJ . t~rl u1 I'm

t

TWO MORE HATS go offtcially mto the Democrahc rmg
of presidential contenders when former Sen. Fred Harris of
Oklahoma (left) and Sen. Henry M Jackson of Washin gwn
formally announce thetr candidacy some tune early thts
month .

Ntxon 's,"

H;tldeman w&gt;Js fond of saying

:;·
Il ls detractors, nnd they
::: see ml'ci leg tun, t:o mplawed
,_!·..':.:_ :

tha i he w&gt;Js too pluperfect an
, 0 !J

STEA.~lt HOUSE~

Hts supporters, andr they

ofte n seemed few, satd tha t if
If elf! Y Hobbins Ha lde man

Brando~s

·present
has aprice tag

Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

didn 't eXIst Richard Nixon

&lt;~ nd the pests.

ll e mcHtaged Ntxon's time,

··

person.tlly rlcaJed everyone
h
d
h

:~: ~;.t~lr~~: r:!Jeer~~~~ean~e~~~~

·.':._

.::_
.=:_:

_________ _

..,.

spo kesmen satd. Thfe cost:&lt;&gt;!·
1IVJng a 1owa nce or umon
:~: wot kers to help keep thetr
w&gt;Jges !rom bemg eroded by

.:_
f.:

nflatJon have not been af-

'.::_, :_, fecwte,tdh t!Je exceptton of 15,000
·.· howl y workc1;s who w1ll be
::~ uff the JOb lor one week
:~_,-~_~.:' sta 1t1 ng
Mond ay
at

assembly operations, AMC has
. not tdled any workers mdefinttely

GM , Ford and Chrysler have
e1ther tdled or plan to lay off
nearly 300,000 workers lll the
f1rst three months of 1975 fmanc1al picture at the auto about 40 per cent or the mco mpany AMC had been dustry 's work Ioree
The economy measures
headtng lor a good yea r in 1974
affect
AM Csalan ed workers at
unttl the economrc slump
automo
ltve oper atiOns m
knocked U1e ~ottum out of the
Detrmt, Wiscunstn and Canada
entire ~w to market
as
well as non.uruon sular1ed
Ne1thet Ford nor Genend
Jeep
employes m Toledo, Ohto,
Motors have any plans to end
cost-&lt;Jf·hvtn g allowances for and at the At'o!C general subth etr white collar workers , stdiary

We'd Rather
Do It Ourselves!
Here at the 'sob Evans Steak House,
we cut our own steaks, grind our own
beef .and bake all our own rolls and
pastries! Come 1n and enjoy a great
steak, char-broiled to your liktng, or
another of our appetite-pleasin' menu
suggestions. And always bnng the
family . . . for breakfast, lunch or dinner.

\

"\ .
'

.

\

\.

I

THERErS SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE •••

In

'"

Pomeroy 42 years, was

fcrmtrly the operator of fhe
Blue Diamond Coal Co. AI one
time he had an tnferest m the

All the current events ... the

Green Lantern tavern .
Surviving are a son, Kimble,

Findlay, a Sisler, Jenny
Lemon of Parkersburg, a
brother, Elmer of Can ton ;
three grandchildren. and two
great-grandchi ldren.

latest in fashions ... what's
happenin~i

on the sports scene ...
you'll find the information you'.r e ·

Funeral services will be held

"'

Riverview Cemetery. The Rev

Dale Wise officiated.
Out-of-county relatives here

.v

for the service included Miss

Madeline

Sauer,

M1ss

Margaret Sauer, and M1ss

Vlralnla Sauer, all of Davtcn ;
Mrs. John Walters, Colerain·
Brian McCann and Christine

lNI

"

Davis, Gahanna , Miss Ei leen
Welker, Columbus. and Ttm

Welker, Athens

EVERETT RUSSELL
VINTON - Rev . Everett

Russell , 57, a resident of

Lancaster, Ohio, formerly of
Rt. 1 Vinton , d1ed In Lancaster
Hospital around •· 30 P m.

.....
")
n

.

~

"' )

,,u

Fr~ay.

•

•

•

He was born OCt 30, I917, 1n
Morgan Twp. , son of the late
Charier. and ~file Wiggins
Russel .
.
He was tw ice married , f1rst
to Elsie Mollahan , who
preceded him In deqth In 1939 .
One son and one daughter Irom
this union precedea him 1n
death.
His second

marr iage was to

Grace Hampton In 1940 at
Pomeroy, who survives, as do

three sons, Waller Lee Russell.
Mont Clair, Calif.. David
RuSHtl, New NvJrshfleld. Onio,
and Earl Russell , Baltimore,
Ollie ; one brother. Harold

-Russell, and one sister, Mrs.
'

(

""'

'...-:.'1

'"

r

~

••

•9&gt;1

ietitinel

1" ~

To The·Greater Middle Ohio Valley

..

•

•

ll.)'tl

'"T

v.: )
niv

Daisy ·Holllnbaugh, both of Rt.
1, VInton.
I fh
He was a rrlember o
e
Woshlnatcn Ave . Wesleyan
Church, Lancaster. He was a
World war II veteran and a
member of the Disabled
Veterans.
·
Funeral services will be held
1 p.m. Monday at the Morgan
tenter Wesleyan Church with
Rev. John Mlnsher off icrat.ng .

Burial will be In Morgan
Cemetery ..
fh
Friends may call a1· •
lk.Coy-II«Jre Funeral Home
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
The body '(VIII lie In stale at the
church one hour prier to ser·
vice.
ROLLAND McANGUS
POMEROY Reiland

'

..
•

...-·
1'2..J

~

\

... • • ~ ..

j

Nov . 20. 1974

He is Survtved by- hts wtfe,
Bertha ; two sons , Rol land, Jr.,
and John, and a daughter , El la
Ma~, all at home ; a s1ster, Mrs
Irene Bai ley, Rt. 4, Pomeroy , a

half ~rother . Leroy Brechtel ,
North Ft Mye rs, Fla , and

Welker of Columbus were

conducted Tuesday af the

,,

'

late George and Jennie Starkey
McAnqu s, was also preceded 1n
death by a brother, Martin , on

nteces, nephews and
af 2 p.m. today at the Powell several
COUSinS
Church In Findlay. The body JS
Funeral services will be he ld
at the Trautman Funeral Monda y at 1 30 p m al the
Heme, NvJm St, Findlay .
Delong and Bakers Funeral
Home tn Zanesvil le Bunal will
DELBERT W. WELKER
also be tn Zanesv1lle
MIDDLEPORT - Gravestde
rites for Delbert William (Bill)

looking for right in your local paper!

-De~ted

seven-co unty reg10n Thts
se ri es of artJdes will attempt
to evaluate the sys tem's
~rese nt and future value 1n
meeting the emergency health
needs of the people

I· Area Deaths I

'"

'

bulance statwns scrv mg the

granted Friday

"Where only the best food Is good enough"
/

prQ]ects

Four divorces

CHILDRE-N LOVE
OUR MENU
--r- - ----:"-(

dramahc

developed m rece nt years 1s Ute
Southeast Oh1o Eme rge ncy
Medtcal Serv1ce "SEOEMS,"
as tl 1s called, has now reached
full operation w1th 17 am·

The National Safety Counc1l
reports that last year, more
than 145,000 Amertcans lost
their lives in acctdents. Ftve
hundred thousand more were
perman ently dtsabled and t2
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A princtpal comes due m Decem- tmllion were temporarily
40-acre plot of land in Agoura, ber of 1975 if the mone y has not diSa bl ed . The Ambulance
Calif., which Marlon Brando been paid
Assoc1ation of America
gave to the Indians cames a
John Hamtlton, 30, ol Rancho es timates that 55,000 persons
'-118,000 mortgage, a television Palos Verdes, cahr., satd the are permanently tnjurcd or
newsman said Friday.
family members acquired a dtsabled annually by untramed
A deed signed .by Brando and first trust deed on the land ambulance attendants. Adds a
recorded Friday turns over the from thetr lather about 10 1epor t by the National
land to the Survival of years ago
Research Counctl " More than
American Indians Assoctation
"I'd JUst as soon have the one-thtrd or the acc td~ nt
Brando's
attorney, land as the money ," he said.
fatahhes m the U. S occur at
Lawrence Kartengainer, satd
He said he talked to his the scene, m the ambulance, or
be believed the movie star was brother, James, 21, of Denver, w1thm minutes after arrival m
aware of lbe big morlgitge on and his stsler, Janet, 27, of El the emergency room. Yet for
the property. He satd also that Segundo, and th_;,y agreed with · decades, the general public
Brando could qualify for a him the lanll'· would ._,e and the medtcal professiOn
large tax write:&lt;&gt;ff as a result or valuable.
have pass1vely accepted
the gift.
"Mr. Brando has been very ambul ances sufficient only for
A spokesman for the Indian prompt in paymg the taxes and transportmg the_mJured w1th
group said tbe association was the mterest on the land,"
aware , of lbe debt, but they Hamilton satd
believed the money to pay the
The County Assessor's olftce
mortgage would be dona ted to has placed a market value on
the property , )lear the rural
them.
Dick Carlson, KABC-TV suburb of Liberty Canyon, or
reporter, said Brando had patd $112,000. But Hamtlton satd tt
GALLIPOLIS - Common
nothing on the princtpal smce could be worth as much as
Pleas
Court Judge Ronald R.
he purchased the property .$500,000 in the fu ture.
several years ago. The uutial
Brando satd also he would Calhoun Fnday granted four
payment was for prepaid in- giVe the Indian Group an d1vurces and dtsmissed two
terest on the mortgage.
apartment complex in Ana- oth er divorce petitions.
Brando was not avatlable for heim, and htsshare or a 40-acre Granted divorces were Wilma
May Dtllon from Darwm A.
comment.
farm at Muncelein , DL
The mortgage is held by John
The actor refused to accept Dillon on grounds ol gross
Hamilton, his brother James an Academy Award he won for neglect of duty.
Helen I.ou1se Kteshng from
and hiS sister Janet, Carlson his role in "The Godfather" m
Robert
Lee Ki es hn g on
1972 and charged Hollywood
said.
grounds
of
gross negle~t- of
They said they plan to had portrayed Indians m a
duly
and
extreme
cruelty;
repossess tbe land when the derogatory manner over the
Robert Sheldon Warren from
years.
Clara Ann Warren on grounds
r-~-------------------~---, or gross neglect or duty and
Terry Wayne Lloyd from
Rosemary Lloyd on grounds ol
gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty
Peh ttons dismissed were
McAngus , 50, Zanesville,
JOHN W. HITE
of
Pomeroy,
d1ed
those
of Sara Plants vs Gtlbert
formerly
POMEROY- John W,. H1te. Thursday at · th e Good , R. Plants
and Carolyn Evans
82, Ftndlay, former Pomeroy
Samaritan
Hosp
ita
l
m
Zanes
vs
Dean
Evans.
businessman , died Friday m vi lle
Findlay. Mr. Hile who reSided
Mr McAngus, the son of the

wou ld hc~ ve had to mvent hun.
fl. tldeman cared neither for
his detractors nor his suppor·
tel s lle saw as Ius JOb the
protection uf the Prestdent, to
shield hun from the favor
seekers ilml the powet lJrokers

Non-Union salaries frozen by ~merlcan Motors
major automakers also m- ·
eluded a delay in implementing
a dental plan for safan ed
employes and a halt to any
merit pay Increases until
further notice

•

ligh

,·.=',:!
_ '·,:;_
,=_.

:&amp;.'=&gt;-'-~~"~~"'%"-;:~~~)'».~:~o;."*~""'m!~~»:.~:·~&gt;:·:::::::;~:::::::::::::::::::::.:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:=:::::.:·:·::::::·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=:·:···:·:=:::.;.;. ;.;:;:;.;.;.;. ;.;:::·.:·:=:·:·:·:·:=~=:·:·:·:·:=:=:·:·:·:·:·:···:·:·:=:=:~·

DETROIT (UP!) - In an
attempt to cut costs wtthoul
laying off workers, American
Motors Corp. said Friday it
was freezing cost-Ill-living
raises at current levels for
about 7,500 non-union salaried
employes.
The economic measures
taken by the smallest of the

been my pnvUege to know."
Haldeman, 48, began ap
assoctation with NIXon in 1006,
m the vice presidential reelection campatgn.
Four years later, Haldeman
helped direct Nixon's losing
·presidential race to John F.
Kennedy. He was campatgn
manager of Nixon's unsuccessful 1962 Cahlornia guberlldtorial campaign, alter which
both men were cited by a state
judge lor condUcting a phony
Democrallc postcard poU.
As Los Angeles vice
pres ident for J. Walter
Thompson Inc., he was constdered the prototy pe "ad

Gourmets reli sh th e sptcy
honey dertved from thyme
growmg on the slopes ol Mount
fl ymettus in Greece Tradition
says thts honey was the ongmal
food or the gods

little Il l' 11 0 equipment £01 l'&lt;H e,
llldnncd by Inade quately
tram ed drivers or attendants ,.
NO f1gures are avatlable on
the ntUnber of death s cccurrmg
fro m Illness es suddenl y
worsening a nd beconnn g
medica l emergenctes outside

uf the hospJial, but }he
Research Council estnnates
tw1ce as many amlmlance 1 uns
me for Sickness than aretdental mjm·v
Southea st Oluo seems to be
kc epmg up WIth the natwnal

trend Sta!JstJcs gathered b)
SEOEMS shows that of 1\s
12, 138 runs, 4,670 were m
1 esponse to m'(' ldent.al InJury
and 7, 468 involved 1llness of an
emergency nature

SEOF.MS began operallng
tv. enty months ago am1dst a
cris is Sttuat!on as form er

providet'S of ambulance se rvice gave nohcc of

rilsctm ~

Southeast Ohio

Jmmllel with
IUition in need
for se,rvices
,..

those ope l ato1 s prov1dmg 80

pet of the servl('f wanted out
of Ow bl!slness Nc \\ .s t, il l' cmd
~ li.lllddl d~.

as wt.'ll CJ:-i
losses, WCH' re&lt;tSUHs
giVen b) hm e1 al dn Pdm s fm
endmg the costly sc1vu.:e. In
medutgs wtth count, offlll.lls.
fun era l
dJreclol s
g. Wl'
examples or payments hom
Medicare of $2 or $3 on ambulance b1lls of $60 or more
co~t or havmg pe rsonnel
avm lable lo an~\\ CI call s, num
telephones, as \\ ell as--expenses
£cdc1al

of

.~ c tu all y

opel c~t mg m1 dill·

tmuing operatiOn. At that t1me bulan ce were tngh t' llOugh to
33 fun eral homes, 9 volunteer the small busmesses le t nlonc
and tuo muntclpal squads were new costs of rneetmg suon-to!bc
ac hve

tn

the ambulance 1mposed standards on velucle
size , eqw pment :md att endant
tra 1mn g Such cos ts were

business, a total of 75 veh1cles
serving the counhes of Athens,
Hock1n g, Metgs, Vmton,
Jackson, Galha and Lawrence
Accm dmg to a 1971 State
Department ol Health survey,

\ .

ope r~ l111g

pred icted to be $60,000

01

more

for one vehicle annually

Sta iJstJt•s gat hered by
SEOF:MS 'enfy lh1s h1gh cost

SURROUNDED BY TIRES, an employee at the Goodyear Tire Company 's Akron, Ohto
plant superv1ses an assembly hne where steel-belted radials are turiie&lt;l out at a record pace.
'The plant is c11pable or producing as much as one-third of all the radial tires purchased m the
C'O untry

,.

uf UJWrutwn J:o 'm example:
vt' hu lcs c~v t•ragc d 44 7 mHes
prr emc1ge ne!' 1un m 1974. an d
pmd :-l n average of 52.9c a
~;.~ li o n for gasolin e
Tota l
mi leage logged for the sevencoun t) system IS 308,775.5 m
1974

Anothe1 nH.I JOr expense is
salm y of tectmi cnws, yet

F.MTs bcgm at only $2 10 an

'--..

hour whtch JS minimum wage
for the State ol Ohto. Moderate
raises equal levels or tralnmg .
Tnday, the area is serviced
by 17 SEOEMS stations using
26 fully - equipped ambulances
manned around-the-clock ,
seven days a week There are
also lour volunteer squads, one
muntcipal squad and three
funeral homes st1II providing

emerg ency ambulance serVICe .

What tmpact has SEOEMS
had on the actual provtston of
emergency health care In the
region• In th1s settes or articles, we'll look at the dtfference tn quality of care , cost
of the Je«ional ~tern and 1ts
future Tomorro · , 1 'The ex-

pense of EMS and

Stock market shows solid gain going into
UPI Business Writer
volun1e totaled 20 mtlhon or
NEW YORK (UP!) - The more shares.
.
stock market, btdtiing good
1n the process or t uesday's
riddance to the old year, en· ·rally, PreSident ~'ord formally
tered the first week of 1975 with scrapped plans lor a 5 per cent
a solld gam as the trading tax surcharge and there was
tempo picked up on the New speculatwn he mtght call for a
York Stock Exchange.
tax cut m an attack on the
One of the reasons was that deepemng recession. While minvestors this week began natton hurt the stock market
anticipahng Washtngton would last year, mvestors were more
take some concrete steps to concerned about a severe
remedy the nation 's economic recessiOn- which the natton ts
ills. This played a part in a New now tn.
Year's eve rally that carried
"I think Wall Street beheves
through the end of the holiday- Ford wlll come up wtth a
shortened week.
strong program and 1 thmk
The Dow Jones tndustrial that's one of the reasons lor the
average, whose performance uphlt the market got th1s
last year was tts worst smce week," Monte Gordon, analyst
1937, gamed 32.38 pomts to for Dreyfus Corp , satd .
634.54for the week. Standard &amp; "An awful lot depends on
Poor's !iOO-&lt;;tock index, which ho'l\ he acts. The market 1s
also had a dtsastrous 1974, ready to explnde if he hves up
gained 3.57 to 70.71. The NYSE to hopes," Gordon said. The
common stock index added 1.99 market staged the best rally m
to 37,35.
tis history in early October
Advances lopped declines, when Ford announced his l~rst
1,688 to 206, among the 2,012 economtc program.
issues cro.Smg the tape. ObThe momentum of the rally
servers were pleased wtth this allowed the market · to overdevelopment because it come some negative news
showed the week's advance developments late in the week
was broad-based .
Trendse tting First Natwnal
Volume during the four-day City Bank of New York raised
week totaled 69,555,700 shares, to 10 v, from 10 per cent the
compared with 52,448,256 a prtme lending rate tt charges
week ago and 82,088,600 the key corporate customers. Most
same week a year ago. The other banks have a prtme rate
trading this week included a of 10 ~. or 10 1'.! per cent. High
turnover of 20,970,000 shares mterest rates have bothered
Tuesday. Last year, there were mvestors lor months.
only nine sesstons m which The Federal Reserve Board

'

late 11ntrsday reported loan
demands at New York hanks
remained heavy in the latest
reportm g period, while the
nation's money
supply
declined, so the mcrease by
Cillbank was not too surpn smg
Late Friday, the Fed allowed
six of tis banks to lower the
dts count rate th ey charge
members banks for borrowing
to 7 v, from 7 % per cent. This
eduld help U1e market next
week A lowermg of the
dtscount 1ate helped the
market out ul tis 1937 slide .
In another disturbing
development this week, the
Labor Department said the
nalton's unemployment rate
rose to a 13-year high of 7.1 per
cent Ln Dece mber. 'Flus report
generally had been anficipa ted, however
Tax selling and portfolio
ad justments made it difficOit
to detem1ine a pattern much of
the week There was some
buymg m the blue chtps, the
otis and chemicals, all of which
took theu· lumpa last year.
Gold mmmg stocks dtd little,
wh1ch is just about what the
nation d1d when buy)ng gold
became legal Tuesday for the
l~rst time tn 41 years. Observers found this encouraging for
the stoek market beca use there
had been fears of heavy selling
of securtties by stockholders to
put the proceeds inw gold.
ASA I.td lost 4 'h, Homes-

take Mining 2 '(,,Dome Mines I
:y, and Campbell Red Lake 7/a
for the week.
Texaco ·was tbe most active
issue lor the week, up 2 liJ to 23
on 911,500 shares. The company reported a discovery ln
the Gulf of Mexico off
Louisiana. Other oll and
related issues were mlxetl.
Schlumberger and J. Ray
McDermott gained 4 'll apiece,
Joy Manufacturing 3 v,, Ohio
Standard 3 l'.t and Halliburton,
Atlantic Richfield, Natomas,
Cltles Service, Amerada Hess
and Indiana Standard a point
or more each.
Getty lost 4 l'.t. Analysts said
Getty came under profit taking
pressure alter registering
strong gains recently .•
Wllllams Cos. warrants
plunged 7 % and WlliJams Cos.
common 7 %. Spokesmen for
the fertilizer producer Friday
said they could find no reason
for the decUne in the issues.
One analyst noted farm prices
declined 3 per cent In ·December.
Chemicals were strong. DuPont gained 4 1'.!, Eastman
Kodak 3 Y•, Monsanto 2 % and
Allied Chemical I v•.
J.C. Penney gained 5 %and
Sears, Roebuck 4 1'.!. Things
brightened a bll for the retail
group which experienced a
dismal 1974. RetaU sales inereased In December and
during the last week, according
to ROvernment reports.

"

~75 ·

Westinghouse Electric was
the second most active issue
last week, gaining I l'.t to 9 % on
745,600 shares. Among the
others in the group, IBM
gained 5 y,, Hewlett-Packard 2
'(,, RCA, Control Data,
Motorola anjl Texas Instruments all around a point.
But Digital Equipment plunged
4 'Is, Burroughs 3 'h.
ffiM is expected to introduce
a new smaU-ecale computer
next week . On tbe negative
side, a federal judge in New
York allowed the Justice
Department to arnendexpand - its longstanding
antitrust suit against the
computer gianl. The trial geta
underway Feb. 18.
• American Telephone &amp; Telegraph warrants were third on
the active list, tip 0..32 to 9-16 on
658,600 traded. Tba common~
stock was'ln ninth place, up 2 to
46 liJ on 394,200 shares . AT&amp;T
flled for a $717 mUllon. rate
increase this week and also
resubmtfbed a $600 mllllon debt
financing plan lt had postponed
last November after the
Justice Department flled an
antitrust suit.
Coca-Cola gained 5 %. The
issue took a beaUng last year in
the wake of huge increases in
sugar .prices. Sugar ISsues
advanced. Holly Sugar gained
3 l'.t and Amstar 2 %.
SteelS and ljlotors rebounded. General Motors added 2%
and U. S. Steel I 'ill.

By BERNARD BRENNER
nutrition specialist said today
UPI Farm Editor
an unpublished calculation
WASHINGTON (UP!) shows that at November
Government nutritionists have prices, dry beans provided 20completed new calculations gram servings or protein at a
showing that dry beans, tradi- cost of 14 cents apiece. Stmtlar
prime rate for busmess loans twnally a cost-c\!tting standby , 20-gram porhons for other
from 10 per cent to 10'14 per for low income families, have foods ranged from 15 cents lor
cent. It was a temporary reclaimed their place as th~ peanut butter to 22 cents lor
setback for efforts to shmulate cheapest ol the protein substi- hamburger, 39 cents for frozen
perch filets, 40 cents lor pork
the economy by making credtt tutes for meat.
An Agriculture Department lorn roast, 71 cents for por.
easler for busmess expansion
terhonse steak and 75 eents lor
bacon.
Beans.had long been ranked
at or near the bottom of the
protein-cost list. In August of
1972, a 20-flram serving of
beans cost 6 cents compared
with 12 cents for peanut butter,
19 cents lor hamburger and 64
cents for porterhouse steaK.
Last year, a dramatic boom
in bean prices sent costs
s&lt;&gt;aring much faster than other
foods. By August, the cost of 20
grams of protein in beans rose
to 18 cents, triple the level of
two years earlier compared
with an increase of 21 per cent
for hamburger and 16 per cent
for porlerhrmse steak. An
Agriculture Department food
cost table for •August showed
peanut butter had taken over
from beans as the cheapest or
the common protein replacements for meat.
Recent cuts in bean prices,
produced by the harvesting ofa
record 1974 crop, reduced the
cost of a 20-gram protein
pdrtion of beans from 18 cents
last August to 14 cents in
November ~ack at the bot"He 's as old as the Watergate coverup trial!"
tom of' tbe list although sWl
'
t
closer to the price of highercost foods than UJ: most past

Berrys World

)v -

.

years.
Nutrition expers say conswnerswhowant tomaketheJr
own protein cost compansons
using local prices for various
foods can do so by using a
"market
umt" · fac tor
calculated by the Agrtculture
Department It works th1s
way:
The market unit of hamburger, for example, ts one pound
The factor - meaning the
amount ol the umt needed to
give the consumer 20 grams of
protein - ts .24 for hamburger
If the price of hamburger is 90
cents a unit (one pound) ,
multtplying that cost by the
factor of .24 gives the cost of 20
grams of protem as 22 cents
To calculate 20 gram protein
costs lor other foods, consumers can use the following
market urut and factor figures:
Peanut butter - 12 ounce
unit, .23 factor; large eggs one dozen unit, .25 factor; '
whole chicken I pound untt, .37·
factor ; hamburger I pound
· unit, .241actor; white bread - 'i
pound unit, .51 factor ; Whole
mtlk -half-gallon unit, .29
factor; canned tun a 6.5 oui!ce
unit, .44 factor; American
process cheese --8 ounce unit,
.38 factot ; lrankfutters - I
pound unit, .56 factor; salami
--8 ounce unit, .50 factor ; pork
loin roast ·- 1 pound unit, .33
factor; rwnp roast of beef - 1
pound urJ!t, .26 factor; pork
sausage - 1 PQund untl, .52
factor; sirloin steak - I pound
un1t, .211 !actor; bologna--8
ounce unit, .73 factor ; !om
lamb choi'S - 1 pound una, .31
factor .

~

'
~

r

*'

'
;·
~·

it:
~;
~.

~:
~:
~·

~*:

S
~
~:
,.
•

Dry beans proved again as
best protein sub for :meats

TREND REVERSED
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Ftrst
National Ctly Bank of New
York Fnday reversed a threemonth trend toward lower
mterest rates and raised tis

•
~
(

~-

300 SECONQ AVE.

~

"'•

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

~.

i

STORE WIDE

CLEARANCE SALE
~OMPLETE

~

~II

..!!
!

STOCK

eWOOL COATS
ALL LENGTHS ·

~

SAVE

•DRESSES
•ENSEMBLES
•PANT SUITS
·-•SPORTSWEAR
•ROBES
•HANDBAGS
'

j
i=

j

OFF REGULAR
PRICE

...

=
,.,.:

ii

i'

SPECIAL
GROUP OF FAMOUS NAME BRAND

eBRAS
ePANTIES
eSLIP

.

/3

ALL $ALES

FINAL,I

I

,' I

i

SAVE 1/ OFF ·REG.

~

i

RETAIL

ma': 1t

.

r' f1l. 1JI

"

.

I

�.,
.

1,,

'

'

.

Beat

·'

\.
'

•

IGeneral Assembly ready for gala performance this Week I

1975

• ••
1

'

~

.•

Of the Bend

~::

~
~

THE COMMUNITY WILL MISS Mr. and Mrs. Donald Diener
who have been in Pomeroy the past six years. Both took such
active roles in activities at Veterans Memorial Hospital ·where
Don has been administrator.
Tile Dieners will be moving to Waverly early this month. They
have fit beautifully into the community and you could always
count on them to be on hand to support about every activity
going.
Very likeable people, the Dieners, and, of course, so is Scott
Lucas, the mayor of Oteshire, who will be stepping into the
administrative post after having been assistan t to Diener for the
past five years.
MIDDLEPORT'S WILIJAM A. SNYDER, 176 Beech St.,
w1derwent lung surgery recently at Veterans Administration
Hospil&lt;ll in Huntington .
With hint during the period of surgery were his immediate
family, Mrs. Snyder and ·children, Dixie and Jim, Terrence
Jolmson of Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson of
Ru5hville.
'111E SOUTHEASTERN OHIO GOSPEL ASSN. of which
Chester A. Sexton of Middleport Is president will be presenting a
t'Oncert each month at various churches. H you're interested in
one of Utese gospel sings for your church -from March on--do
contact Sexton at 992-3089, or the director, Larry McGraw, GaiUa
County, 446-1502, after 5 p.m.
ROY 0 . SMITH, Rt. 3 Pomeroy, suffered a heart attack
recently at home. Card• may' be sent to him at Ute Holzer
Medical Center, Room 423.
·•·

~
~}
~

~

l$
~

·~··

,

S:

'111E MEIGS COUNTY BICENTENNIAL COMMISSION haS
had a quiet sununer after a number of meetings earlier during
which steps were taken toward observing the 200th birthday of
our nRtion.
The commission, ready to get going again, is requesting
organizations to send a repr,esentative to the next meeting at 7:30
p.m. on Jan . 28 in the courtroom at the COW'thouse.
At this meeting, by-laws will be amended possibly and a
nominating committee will be selected from the floor to present a
slate of officers for the following session.
One of the goals of the commission Is to reach every citizen
and to encourage various types of special evenls for observing
Ute 200th birthday .
Jennifer Sh,eets is currently commission president.
INCIDENTALLY, THE 18TH ANNUAL Mid-America Boat
Show will e staged Jan. 17-26 at the Cleveland Convention
Center.
.
Cleveland is ·quite a distance to travel for a boat show.
However, the show averages a yearly attendPnce of 120,000, so
apparently boaters do make the effort. The display area of Ute
show requires seven acres.
DELMAR A. CANADAY RETURNED to his Lincoln HiU
Road home Friday from the Holzer Hospital where he had been
unexpectedly confined since Dec. 23. Mr. and Mrs. Canaday were
joined Friday evening by their daughter, Mrs. Annie Chapman
and children, Jenny and MitCh, for a post Christmas gift opening
party.

Pomeroy.
Discharged
Sally
Gloeckner, Oris Hubbard,
Agnes Isaacs, Donna Pierce,
'l'.acy Reed, Emily Kuhn ,
Jerry Ferguson, Albert Hill.

DAILY
10 TO 9

:§
:~

ij

FIRST BABY - Donald Jonathan Lambert, weight
seven pounds, eight ounces, was Gallia County's frrst bah'· of
1975 born at Holzer Medical Center. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. (above) Ronald Lambert of Rio Grande. Donald arrived
at 12:55 p.m . Jan. 1.

COLEMAN

2~BURNER

STOVE
Tfte economy and

obility

COLEMAN

d ove

this
for

,__.---'

•

3
99
1
$1711
$

Heck's Reg.
'15.88

Sports Dept.

mo•"'

the light.trovelin~
camper .

SLEEPING BAG
Heck's Reg. •27.99

port-

"POpular

Model413
Heck's Reg. •21.88
Dept.

TORCH

GLUE GUN

$

488 .

77¢

t=:-;:

HECK'S REG $7 .88

NAIIIWAIE

Heck's Reg.

DEPT.

HRK'SIIG.
$13.16

lempest Tanks

Hardware Dept.

Heck's Reg. 1119 88~
FESCO PLASTIC

KOTEX
Box of 12

94~

ANCHOR HOCKING

CONTAINERS

10" FOOTED

Choo••• from

Coal Scvl·
tie , 2 pc. Milk Con. Asst. Colors .

CAKE

CHOICE

PLATE
Heck's Reg.

Heck's Reg.

69~

HECK'S REG. '4.99 EA.

/

Housewares Dept.

Housewares

26"-10 SPEED
BICYLES

,

Comp'-'- wilt! rocillij ~cldk ..,.,o f-o:l l•ba" &amp;nd
lloocled """~ brok.H. Fat.tory odju&amp;t.ll l(kpftd
d.rGill.ur with cki&lt;:IU•..., c;..,t.col 011 top 'roM. All ~I
chr- rat.t,..op pedah •itil G"'bto ..1'-c.tcn. U "

NOW YOU CAN SAVE

·

$3.29

;..c..,.o..t . .,_

WOOD TAIU &amp; CHAIR SO

oz.

24
COLGATE 100
MOUTHWASH

c.lw&gt;ie• of Mit or giri'\ otyle

CHOICE

Oolt· oroined pressed-wood table top a nd choir ~oil . 0o• choir
bock ~ a"d leg. ooloble a nd cho •r s. Nolvrol ... omi~h lirush. Scre-ened
desi~j~n 011 choir b oc~s and table tCip , Tobie Top 24"• 18" Hght · 18 "
Cho •• Hght .: 2J 1 1 " Seo t S~r~ · 11 '1" ~ 11 '1' Seot Hght : I :i'" Table

K.D. Choir~ S.U. Pluil ·

Sunray

HECK'S REG.

Heck's Reg. '1.44

$11,99
TO'fDI,,

RIVIERA
CUSTOM

Heck's Reg. $89 .88

USI YOUI HICK'S qiAI(i.I.A.U.IO

•

TOY DEPT.

. COsmetic Dept.

settle on the size of any
reduction he does endorse . But
according to unofficial estimates the President might
choose a Olan .that could free as
muchas$20bi1Uonayearfrom
taxation.
In addition to the economic
strategy meeting, Ford signed
more than 30 pending bills into
law. The measures included
one to fight recession by
providing $4.5 biiiion in
unemployment benefits and
new
government
job
programs.
Vice President Nelson A.
Rockefeller, assuming a full
working role in Ute Ford administration, joined Treasury
Secretary William Simon and
the other top ecOnomic advisers at Ute meeting of the
Eeonomic.-Policy Board.

Wind-ow
• Cto&lt;k and lntervol

Timer • Su.rfoee
light • lower Owen
Wtndow and ' light
• Deep
Re«utd
Cooking Surfcict

BAND-AIDS

•lift · up ~ange Top
• Spoc ., Width 30",
Htigfott 6-1&amp;", Otpth

28"

Box of

G.E.
Steam-Dry

70's

IRON

Riverio

Cutrom
tf&lt; .

REG. 1439.95

~··""·P'"'""

NOW

$339

95

. . . W-T

69~

Heck's. Reg. 99'
"
Cosmetic

Rutlafld Furniture
'ARNOLD GRATE
RUTLAND,O.

.

RESAL 36 CUP

PARTY
PERK
F6J

I

I

Heck's Reg.

$10.96

$J77
•11.99

Jewelry Dept.

.

·'

Jewelry Dept.

••

By GORDON F. JOSELOFF
MOSCOW (UP! ) - The
Communist party Central Committee said Saturday Ute Soviet
Union has no econ()Jilic crisis,
unemployment or inflation but
it is plague&lt;: with - bad
managem~nt, wastefUlness and
inefficiency in industry.·
A 2,500-word New Year call
to workers filled Ute entire
front page· of Ute party .
newspaper · Pravda. It urged
them not to close their eyes to
'existing drawbacks in the
economy.
, The appeal S&lt;Iid an aU-out
effort must be made to attain
and exceed the planned targets
in 19'15, the last year of the
current five-year plan, and
Cariy out · the slogan, "More
produl:ts of .better quality at.

''

\

1. I

•

J.

enac ted .

.

j§

~

~~
l:o.~il
:;:;
;:;:
:;:;
\13

:;;

·t;
i~

It would seem foolish of the Democrats to try to act out the
script Utey have written during the last week, including a
s&lt;'Cretivc rewriting of legislative rules.

~mw~;:~~db:~s~!7~~~v~e~~tt~e~~~~e~~=~·:~yo:h~h~l ~:~·:

:r~~~~e~,;~~r years before the Democrats get the governor's m\

stitulion and rules, and to determine if proper procedures
were followed in .passing them.

You never find out if the glass slipper fits unless you try it
on. ·

..

~

PAGE 15

SUNDAY, JANUARY 5L 1975

VOL. 9 NO. 49

·-----------------------

Calling world hunger a
challenge
"greater
than
anyt~ing
previously
experienced in history," the
executive council of the
EpiScopal Church has urged the
familiej- of its three million
.
membe~s · each to g1ve one
dollar a month to feed the
starving.
The council said " the short
term imperative" before the
church was "!() interrupt the
process of certain starvation
for as many. as possible of .the
hundreds of thousands of
human beings who will die in
the coming months."
"The long term necessity,"
it said, "is redistribution of the
world's available resources so
that all peoples are able not
only to sustain life, but to
achieve with dignity the highest
possible quality of life."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:i:::::~:i:i::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-;;::::::::;:::::.

.cussed· a proposal that the
Ji'resident seek a tax on both
imported and domestic oil in
order to enforce energy conservalion.
Ford faced a ml'dnt'ght
Saturday deadline to act on the
stack of pendmg' congressional
bills. One of Ute most im·
,
portant among those he signed
was tbe $4.5 billion measure to
aid Ute unemployed.
The new law extends the .·
time 1·obless persons can
receive federal benefits and
creates 100,000 jobs for Ute
unemployed. Ford signed the
bill even though under
'
pressure from Congress, he
has dropped his plan lor a oper
cent income tax surcharge to
pay the costs.
Another bill Ute President
signed made the nationwide 55
mile per hour speed limit
permanent.
On
another
issue,
presidential Press Secretary
Ron Nessen said Ford supports
Secretary of State HeQry A.
Kissinger's statement in a
magazine interview that U.S...
military action against Arab
oil suppliers, while not considered in any way likely now,
· out if the·
has not been ruled
petroleum pipelines 1o the
world's industrial consuming
nations are shut off.
"Kissinger's interview did
reflect the President's views,"
Nessen said. •

They will only end up in court, perhaps incurring the wrath
of the voters who · have begun to show contempt for
manipulated government.
But they may feel it's worth a calculated gamble. After all,
the next election is almost two years away, and it may be

:::;

;:j:
;:;:
::::
l\lj

!;!:
::::
:;::

m:

?i
:~

Hawks heading
annual drive
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County
Chapter of ,the American Red Cross announ ced Saturday the chairm an for its
Februarv Fund Drive is the Rev. Paul
Hawks , 'Senior Pastor of Grace United
Methodist Church.
,
Rev. Hawks, a native of Michigan,
came to Gallipolis in 1970 from Toledo.
He is married and the father of three
children: Paul II, a student at Rio Grande
College; 'Mark. a sophomore at Gallia
Academy High·&amp;hool, and Kim, a seventh
grader at Gallia Academy Junior High .
He is a member of Rotary 1 on

numerous boards of the Di strict and
Conference of the Methodist Church: a
world traveler, having recently returned

from a trip to the Holy Land·, and soon
leaving on his annual trip to Grace
Hospital in Port au Prince, Haiti.
He ·'§pent one year in the Navy, four
years in •the Marine Corps and was a

Captain in the Air Force. The Chapter is
certain the Rev. Hawks is "an excellen t

Gun cocked
for Indians

GRESHAM, Wis. (UP!) Shawano County Sheriff
Robert Montour said SatW'day
a group of militant Indians had
pinned several of his men down
by "heavy gunfire" earlier In
the day. He said he issued
orders to his men to return fire
if they are fired upon again.
"At this point, my direct
orders to my men have been ~
hold fire,': Montour told a
hostile rally outside his office
in Shawano .
"They've been pinned down
for the best part of the morning
by fire from people from inside
of the abbey. My orders to my
men as of 3:15p.m. is to flre If
they are fired upol\.';
The Indians took over an
abandoned monastery near
here New Year's Day and they
are demanding the religious
THE REV. PAUL HAWKS
order which owns it turn Ute ·
land over to them.
choice'' for this year's drive chairman ,
The rally outside MontoW''s
knowing, as he does, the workings of the office was organized by sup.
American Red Cross.
porters of the miU.tants, who
urged the sheriff to pull back
the lines he has surrounding
Ute facility .

Wa_terP"iJte ]. ust basic politics

Jo!m Teller, Keshena, who
led Ute rally, told Montour Ute
Indians wanted the lines pulled
back "just a little way, 100
yards. Out of Ute line of fire:"
"We want peaceful negolia·
tions, not a war .out there,"
Teller said. "We don't want
killing. We want peaceful
negotiations. And by having
your men within shooting
range, that's provoking."
The protesters had first
marched to a roadblock a lew
miles from the monastery and
demanded to ~ allowed to
move to another checkpoint a
bit closer. They shouted "Pull
Back the Cops" as they
marched and carried signs
supporting those inside.
Most of tlie protesters were
Indians, but there were some
whites in the crowd.
The rally was called lor
Friday night after those inside
had turned down the. latest
offer from the Alexian Brothers, who own the vast
complex that has been unused
•siltce 1968.

Defense to
COSt over ,
$}()(}
. billi"
_
On

~'

RENO STYI ~ HOOKEY
prostitutes.
~
~
·~
" ... H Watergate is as It's
RENO, Neva. (UPI) alleged to be, it was an in·
The Reno school system is
teiligence gathering operation
missing
about4,000
but official•
have students,
a hunch
of one group of persons who
WASH.INGTON. -(U-P!- ) _ The
.
t0
they'r
e
at
an
"obvious
were seeking power • or
k 1
Of
Ford adrnin1'stration plans to
· ano th er
place" - the s I s opes.
retain power' agamst
ask the new De~ocratt'c Conh
31,000 enrollees, about 8pcr
'"
group of persons w o were
ce nt of the elementary gress to approve a record $95
seeking'' to acquire power.
school students and 18 per billion for defense spending in
That's all it was.
cent of the high school
the new fiscal year starting
"It's like brushing your
July I, Pentaaon sources sat'd
students fulled to return to
o
teeth, Michael. It's basic."
.
Saturday.
class after the Christmas
Other Watergate conSources said the admt'nistra· ·.
'dd
vacation. 14 We're not so
spirators testified Lt y
nalve as to lhlnk all olthis is
tion also would ask the
carried out his campaign · inlawmakers
to approve addition- :
al
due to Illness," School
telligence duties with fanatiC
al billions in obligations to be .·
d ·
d
Superintendent Marvin
devotion, rawmg up gran
Plcollo said Friday.
spent in future years lor such .
schemes for sabotaging the :::::::::::::;&lt;~:::;;::::::::::::::::$~~:~~~;::;:~:::::-&lt;:::::;;:::&gt;. long-lead weapons as ships and
Democrats and organizing the
planes, resulting ln an overall
Watergate break-in ·
total of about $103 billion and
' Liddy wa" convicted of
breachingthe$100blllionmark
conspiracy in the 1971 burglary
for the first time.
of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiaThe request is expected to
trist's office and served an Isspark a sharp outcry in the 94th
WASHINGTON (UP!) House domestic affairs chief;
month contempt:&lt;tf-&lt;:ourt sent·
J.l
Congress, which g~ined a
·
ence lor refusing to talk about
number of potential riew_d
Richard M. Nixon's most and Robert C. Mardian, once
powerful aides were convicted Ute assistant attorney general
Ct Watergate.
defense critics in Ute Novembet"
in Ute Watergate cover-up trial in charge of the Jqstice
On one of the presidential
elections.
under the very laws they Department's lnte~nal
' Ulpes, Nixon called Uddy "a
Defense officials cited inflathemselves often used as a Security Division- guilty of
little hit nuts. " Liddy said he
COLUMBUS !UP!) _ Gov .- tionary pressures as the .priweapon againhst adrnin.ist~alion their own conspiracy.
alleged conspiracy becomes took no offense at the remark John J , Gilligan has been mary reason behind the large
enemies - ! e consptracy
Conspiracy, as U.S. District responsible for the actions of and remains loyal to NIXon .
boost t'n th"e Pen.tagon's request
·-J
d
J
h
J
s·
.
t
ld
th
b
h
th
'
'd
tl
.
k
offered
an
ill-month
fellowship
tat
s u~.
. u ge o n . tnca o
e every other mem er, w e er
"He s evt en y a very stc
.
for Fiscal Year 1976, which
During John N. Mitchell's \varergate J·ury several times, or no t they ever met · ·
man," Liddy sru·d. "And I lnll!rnational
with the Woodrow
Wilson
Center for Schol- starts July 1. They said the
tenure as attorney general, Ute is simply two or more persons ' -One member of the con- regret that. I think he has
.
ld 1
1
Justice Department invoked acting together in the further- spiracy may testify to what demonstrated towards the end ars in Washington after he . ~~cre~set ;ou no represen
the conspiracy laws to ance of a crime.
another member of the con- of his presidency that he was leaves office, it was learned
e s r . any vast new arms
prosecute Dr. Benjamin Spock,
The Watergate convictions spiracy · told him- testimony insufficiently ruthless, in that Satur~ay.
programs.
the Chicago Seven, the raised anew some se rious which would be inadmissable these domestic difficulties in
A spokesman for the goverThe defense budget . request
·g
broth
the
t'
bo
t
th
f
.
.
f
.
th
t
.
f
t
'als
wht'ch
he
was
engaged,
he
dt'd
nor
refused
to
confirm
the
for
current rftscal year
Berrt an
ers,
ques 10ns a u e atrness o hearsay m o er ypes o rt .
$92 6theb'll'
c was
Gainesville Eight and Daniel the nation's conspiracy laws.
- Hearsay evidence against not act ruthlessly."
report although some of Gil. . ' ton, a tgure ongress
Ellsberg in what were referred
Melvin L. Wulf, legal one member of the conspiracy . . Liddy said Nixon should have ligan's associates said he is tnmmed by about 4 per ~ent.
to as the "New Left trials."
director of the American Civil may be used as evidence destroyed the Ulpes.
. . . expected to begin independent .Pentag~n offtetals satd the .,
On New Year's~ Day the Liberties Union, told UP! in an against all other members.
Asked what he thought of study in the general area of weapons 10du~:i;. ts ~ffer:~g
Watergate jury found Mitchell interview that he finds those
-Only one act is necessary John w. Dean JII, the former local and state. governments at even more m · ton an . e
and three others- H.R. Hal- laws and trials conducted to prove the conspiracy presidential counsel who was the center sometime next general eFonomy. ihey ctted
'
deman, the former White under them objec.tionable
isted
the star witness for the rnonib
shipbuilding as one of Ute worst
House chief ol staff; John D. because:
exWulf: howe ver' defended Watergate prosecution, Uddy . Gilliga~ has been consulting areas, with inflation in that
-Each member of the
11 r
f the
sat'd: "You'd have to put him with staff members and trus- industry rWlning about 25 per
Ehrlichrnan, the former White
some app ca tons o . contees of Ute center for several cenl,....double the Consumer
Trumpeting improved stand·
·
spiracy laws.
right up there with Judas
,
Pri .1 d
"There's nothing wrong with Jscariot."
weeks, sources said, and has
ce n ex.
ardsfortheworllingm.ansince
Ol
1
'thf
·
1
·
acy
law,
particularly
He
said
Dean's
motivation
met
at
eas
once
WI
ormer
a conspll'
1971, the ·message satd: "The
.
.
m·
increase of living standards of
.
if persons are conspiring to ,.-as simply "to save his ass." Attorn,ey General Elliott Rhich·
. comm1't murder, rob a bank or
Liddy also called Jeb Stuart ardson about the fellows ip.
Ute Soviet peoplot.is contrary to
WASHING TON ( Up! ) - agree d wt'th Ki ss10ger.
Ute situation of workers in the Sen. John Glenn, . (D.Qhio·),
"History shows us that obstruct justice," he said . Magruder, who was his boss at Richardson .. is currenlly a
capitalist'world:
said Friday the possibility of almost every war was started "You just have to be careful Ute Nixon re-election com· fellow at the center but will be
· reasons
·
I nu·t•·e and who also testifi'ed leaving soon to become ambasNEW YORK (UP!) _ The
"We do not have an economic using U.S. military force ror economtc
- when how you use 1·t." .
~
·-~
·
ded
wulf
·
sat
'
d
the
Nixon
adrntnlS'
·
and
wenf
to
pr!SO
·
n,
acsador
to
Great
Britain.
Amerl·can
Telephone &amp;
.
·
crisis, we have no imem- against oil-producing na Itons one country \Vanocu or nee
ployment, no inflation . We are : was "frighll!ning ."
what another had," said Glenn·: tration used the conspiracy complished, skillful liar."
, . Some. 30 sc holar. are engaged Telegraph Co., citing inS\D'e in our future."
Glenn commented on a
Glenn also criticized the laws to stop persons from
Liddy said he would refuse to 10 stugtes at the center at any flationary pressure, Frid·ay
rem&amp;k made by Secretary or Ford administration for saying things to which the testify even if his prison term one ·ttme. The · cenil!r was submitted a proposal to Ute
But it said: "We should not . State 11enry Kissinger in a "wasting a year and ·a half" on .administration objected. In were reduced to one year ·In established in 1968 by Congress Federal
Communications
close . our eyes to existing year-end interview in Business moving to solve the energy almost every case, Ute defend- exchange for his.testimony.
with the purpose of bringing . Commission for a 7.2 per cent
drawbacks. We have some in Week Magazine. Kissi~ger said crisis. "We've been subject to ants were acquitted or the U.S.
H hill aJipeal fails and he together scholars and nlen of · rate lttc~ase· on .interstate
heavy industry, in the, produc· . the use of militar,y' pressure in this ,blackmail increases in Court of APPt"ls set the con- must return to prison, Liddy public affairs . ' in order . to calls tb go into 'effeCt March 4.
lion · of consumer goods, . in Ute .oil crisis would be con- crude oil 'prices .by the Arab · victions aside. ·
·hopes there .will be no stimula~e th10klflg and wnUng
Tfte At&amp;T proposal would
building and in-agriculture. .• sidered "only in the· gravest natio115 that long , yet nothing
Speck was accused of con• Watergate informers in that ., in the area of federal, state and reduce the existing three:
"There are delays in putting emergency." ,,
really has been done," said spiring to violate the Selective prison.
local government problems.
minute initial period on which
iitdustrial capacity into operaIn Washington Friday, Glenn.
Service laws by W'ging young
"! don't want to be in any
The center has 10 Ute past charges cUrrently are based to
lion ancfrnastering l.etihniques. Kissinger said he was
:·As a result, we're playing men 10 evade the draft iii ap- bird.eagelorstooipigeons,''he altempted to match a fellow's one minute for all CUiltol"er ·
.
·
"
t
·
F
d'
R
·
· 1c tt e wt'th our . pos1't1'on t~u ·the Vietnam War. S8l' d. " .. .l.'d rather have a~ previous salary . Gilligan d.ialed station caDs arid would
We are not always up o reflectlng. Prestdent or s
uss tan
rou
!Jlodern demands in quality and rviews but ·the Whit/, House nation's futur e," Glenn sa;"
The Chicago Seven were. honest bank robber any day ·in earned' $40,000 per· year ·as establish a lower minimum
variety.
.
refused to say whetltcr ")•-ord
-(Continued on page 28) . •.he .week as cellrnate."
governQr.
. •t
. ,rat' for ' such
calls.
· ' n.l :
'
9 I
I
. ~.. .
.,..

Soviet economy
has its oWn ills

less cost."
j

'.

an?~~H~:o:~~s::!F~s~

MoudayQeadUne
By M,onday , tillligan will be gone and Rhodes will be
governor. The'bills would probably be vetoed, so Democrats
are expected to have them certified by Semite President P.ro
Tempore Oliver Ocasek, D·Akron, and sent to Gllligan irnmediately for signature.
·
If the bills get signed, Republicans can then offer their last
line of defense ~ Secretary of State Ted W. Brown; a veteran
Republican who must certify all Ohio laws. There is nothing
to prevent Brown from refusing to sign. Democrats would
then be required to sHow a court that their bills were lawfully

Chances are, the GOP will catch its Democratic friends in
some legal miscues, especially in the Senate, which Republi·
cans have operated sint"e 1960 and where the Democrats are
sending a completely gree n team into the clerk 's office.
Lt . Gov. John W. Brown, the outgoing presiding officer of
the Senate, is a major roadblock on whi ch the Republicans
are depending. He is required by the Constitution to certify
all bills clearing both chambers.
If Umt point is reached sometime late next F'riday on U1e

junbatr ~imes. • ientintl

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford reviewed antirecession proposals with Vice
President
Nelson
A.
Rockefeller and his chief
economic advisers Saturday
and adrninstration sources said
the suggestions included
possible · income tax cui.&lt;; for
low and middle income
Americans.
Then, shifting his attention to
another major issue on a hard·
working day, Ford announced
he Is creating a "blue ribbon
panel " of citizens to investigate charges the CIA
spied on American citizens at
home in violation of its charter.
Ford also disclosed that Ute
Justice Department already
has started investigating
whether the CIA broke the law.
He said the citizens' panel .
would report to the attorney
general on any criminal activity it finds.
A White House spokesman
said Ford would name five to
seven persons, none of whom
will be congressmen or govern·
ment employes, to his citizens'
commission. The spokesman
said Ford· expected to receive
Ute panel's report in three
months.
..., have today established a.
commission to ascertain and
evaluate any facts relating to
actlvities conducted within Ute
United 3tates by the Central
Intelligence Agency that give
rise to questions as to whether
the agency has exceeded its
statutory authority ... ," Ford
said in a statement.
"It is essential in this
republic that we meet our
security ·requirements and at
Ute same time avoid impairing
QUr democratic institutions and
fundamental freedoms."
The CIA announcement
came at the end of a busy day
in which Ford and Rockefeller
discussed anti-recession
strategy with Ute ·executive
committee of the President's
Economi~ Polley Board.
Administration sources .said
the economists had recom·
mended a tax break for low and
middle-income workers as an
effective way to stimulate
spending and create more jobs.
Ford has not yet decided
firmly whether to propose a tax
cut, sources said, and must still

passi ng bills in the legislature, and the charter was brought
up to date justthree yea rs ago on legislative procedures.
During a normal session, legislative leaders from _both
pnrties sometimes agree lo " wink" al constitutional re· quirements and rules in order to get things done.
. This tinte, however, Republicans will want to get nothing
done for at least a week Wllil Rhodes takes office. They will
try anything, including filibustering, to achieve their goa l.
Moreover, they will be watching like hawks to see that
Democrats comply with every technicnl rule and
requirement in speeding the bills through .

;lt::::::::::::::;;:::~::i:;:·::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::: ::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::·:::::::::·:·:·:;::;.;:;:;;;:;:;;;:::: ;;;:::::::::;:;::;;:;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:: : :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: : :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::;:::::::*:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;:::::::::::~:::::~::&amp;::: : :~:. :.:::::::::;~=

D'~'~''''''~'wt~m~&amp;M1:t''':tt!'tl:;:,,,,.,.,,,.,,,

• Fvll · V.-w U~r

0¥tn

h::: ~:n~~:~:~l:; ~::r~:~r~:~~;.~

~ be red for a power play that backfired . Here's why :
~
Ohio's Constitution sets forth specific requirements for

No decision
0
made yet
•
tax actions
By RICHARD H. GROWALD

TREATMENT

burne r om:mbly.

The 207 Electric Glue Gun Kit lea·
turet eaiy loading and is trigger con·
trolled for fast glue application
Bonds in 60 seconds. No clamping
The 207 Electric Glue Gun Kit lea·

NAIIIWAIE
DE/IT.

Heck's Reg. '13.32

lodvd~~ fuel cylinder , ond tfle
new , 1'1 ol ~ton dord pencil point

·ELECTRIC

glue gun, all-purpose glue sticks one
one instruction booklet.

TENNIS SHOES

OIL

KIT ·

THERMOGRIP

CONVERSE

S. T. P.

TEMPEST

&lt;\'\\

\

Sports Dept.

TURNER

electric

Statehouse annals as the ·"Cinderella" Demucra,tic legislators try to Ioree through a half-dozen partisan btlls before ·
the governor 's office turns into a pumpkin Jan. l3. ,
The .~gic package includes a c:ongressional redistricting
plan gmng Democrats an ex tra two or three congressmen in
1976; hberalized electton and unemployme,nt compensatiOn
laws; and a patr of agency trar.sfers to save \ip to 400 state
jobs for Democrats.
.•. .
. .
The Democrats, hungry for thetr hrst donunatton of both.
legtslattve chambers m 15 years, are certain to get mosl of
the btlls through. They have the maJOrity: U1ey make the
rules.
But when the chaotic week ends and incoming Republican
Gov:-elect James A. Rhodes replaces Democratic Gov. John
J. Gtlhgan, the party wtll be over and the hurry -up laws wtll
be taken to court.
Laws Challenged

r le~:ia~~~~c·~:e.m:iJ.

~-----PL-EN_TY_o_F_FR-EE P.ARKI.NG-PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY JAN. 5 &amp; 6

MURRAY

$100°0

~

.

Housewares Dept.

FROM THURS. JAN. 2 SENTINE·.L

~

7

T&gt;Ho:&gt; ... or.o:u.,

. 742-42li ' ,•

UPI State~use'Reporter
.
.
COLUMBUS I UPI ) - .1 he upconun~ week m ~he Ohw
General ·Assembly promtH'S to be one of the w1ldest 111

~:

TJ.l· lloh llm'.flirh
..

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Elmer Norvell,
Long Bottom ; Harold Hudnall,
Pomeroy; Clarence Nichols,
~iddl e port; Stella Hayes,
Middleport; Charles Collins,
Reedsville ; Lydia Ebersbach,

By LEE,LEONARD

t

POMEROY - I take it you are either in the process of .
making the transition from the holiday season to every day living
or, perhaps, you're one of those fortunate people who alre.•dy
have made the transition.
•
At any rate, the house does look a bit drab with the beautiful
Otristmas ornaments and decorations disappearing doesn't it.
Eac~ar - as I grow older - I wonder if I will be around ne~t
yea
unpack the boxes. Having made a similar comment last
yea , I was asked if I felt that I was going to die within the year.
Well - ! don't think so bullong ago !learned that none of us come
with a• 70 year guarantee.

.

··:::;.-:~:::;~;,~.;:;:;.&gt;;:~\.-.:~'!.~;::~~~~:i:::.~:::~::: :::::::::~':::~..:.. :::::::::-::::::::::-:::::~:::::-::::::....::::~~:::::::::::~::::::~:::::::·:·:·:·:·:·: ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·:·::::::::~;:::::::::;;.:;:;.;.:·:-::;.;:::::;::::::.;.;;;:::::;::.;-:::::::::::;;::::::,::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::...:::::o;.::'!l,:.'!i-:";:;:'W:;:::::~».".$~·W;"XQT/.«&lt;&lt;'//.h;Y~m

I

Jan.

..

.,

'.

'I

I ;...-·• '

..

.,

•

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Con vic I ed Watergate
mastermind G. Gordon Liddy
views the events of the
.
Waterga\e scan dais as ba stc
1 e b rus bing your
polI't'lCS- "l'k
•··th"
d
""" -an says R'tc ha rd M.
N'
h ld h
d
IXOn s ou
ave covere
the'!' up more ruthlessly..
Liddy, the former NIXon
campatgn finance counsel whQ
th · t 11 '
drew .•P 1e tn eh tgence
1d
gathermg Pans t at e
1
th w t
t
dire~t y to
e . a erga .e
bu.ggmg, relaxed hl.s tvow tof
Wa erga e
st 1ence
on
h t·
· te ·
'th
somew a man m rvtew WI
Mtke Wallace scheduled for

broadcastSundayonCBS.TV's
"60 Minutes ."
Sporting a beard he grew
since leaving prison, Uddy is
free on bond pending an appeal
. term he
or the •u-20 year pnson
·
d
recetve for conspiracy' burg1
ill 1 ·
ary and . ega wrretapping
in the 1972 break-in at
Democratic nation a l
headquarters.
Liddypasseshistirne writing
and minding his five children
while Mrs. Liddy works as a
school teacher. Mrs. Liddy said
she regards her husband as a
he
lik ed hi
ro and . en
m to a
prlsoner:Of-war. ·
;If

Unrepententandproudofhis
Watergate service to Nixon,
Liddy still refuses to discuss
"substantive" Watergate mat·
ters. But he gave Wallace his
views on political morality and
scathing
· assessments. of the
"stool pigeons" who served
Nixon and later provided ' Ute
government with evidence.
"Power exists to be used,"
Liddy said in defending the
morality of the Watergate
break-in, which he planned,
and other aborted 1972 cam·
~lgn schemes to kidnap anti~
Republican radicals and entice
Democratic politicians with

* * *.* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
A l.des co'nvz·cted on o·w n' laws

Fellowshi"p
·
of£ered to

Mitchell .used

A

Gilli"gan

cgnspiracy
to nail SjKJck

•
"[ war
enn·
·
o
v_p·
o
szng
Gl

.

R ate

creases
·'asked by AT&amp;T

"an

'.

a

'·

�.,
.

1,,

'

'

.

Beat

·'

\.
'

•

IGeneral Assembly ready for gala performance this Week I

1975

• ••
1

'

~

.•

Of the Bend

~::

~
~

THE COMMUNITY WILL MISS Mr. and Mrs. Donald Diener
who have been in Pomeroy the past six years. Both took such
active roles in activities at Veterans Memorial Hospital ·where
Don has been administrator.
Tile Dieners will be moving to Waverly early this month. They
have fit beautifully into the community and you could always
count on them to be on hand to support about every activity
going.
Very likeable people, the Dieners, and, of course, so is Scott
Lucas, the mayor of Oteshire, who will be stepping into the
administrative post after having been assistan t to Diener for the
past five years.
MIDDLEPORT'S WILIJAM A. SNYDER, 176 Beech St.,
w1derwent lung surgery recently at Veterans Administration
Hospil&lt;ll in Huntington .
With hint during the period of surgery were his immediate
family, Mrs. Snyder and ·children, Dixie and Jim, Terrence
Jolmson of Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson of
Ru5hville.
'111E SOUTHEASTERN OHIO GOSPEL ASSN. of which
Chester A. Sexton of Middleport Is president will be presenting a
t'Oncert each month at various churches. H you're interested in
one of Utese gospel sings for your church -from March on--do
contact Sexton at 992-3089, or the director, Larry McGraw, GaiUa
County, 446-1502, after 5 p.m.
ROY 0 . SMITH, Rt. 3 Pomeroy, suffered a heart attack
recently at home. Card• may' be sent to him at Ute Holzer
Medical Center, Room 423.
·•·

~
~}
~

~

l$
~

·~··

,

S:

'111E MEIGS COUNTY BICENTENNIAL COMMISSION haS
had a quiet sununer after a number of meetings earlier during
which steps were taken toward observing the 200th birthday of
our nRtion.
The commission, ready to get going again, is requesting
organizations to send a repr,esentative to the next meeting at 7:30
p.m. on Jan . 28 in the courtroom at the COW'thouse.
At this meeting, by-laws will be amended possibly and a
nominating committee will be selected from the floor to present a
slate of officers for the following session.
One of the goals of the commission Is to reach every citizen
and to encourage various types of special evenls for observing
Ute 200th birthday .
Jennifer Sh,eets is currently commission president.
INCIDENTALLY, THE 18TH ANNUAL Mid-America Boat
Show will e staged Jan. 17-26 at the Cleveland Convention
Center.
.
Cleveland is ·quite a distance to travel for a boat show.
However, the show averages a yearly attendPnce of 120,000, so
apparently boaters do make the effort. The display area of Ute
show requires seven acres.
DELMAR A. CANADAY RETURNED to his Lincoln HiU
Road home Friday from the Holzer Hospital where he had been
unexpectedly confined since Dec. 23. Mr. and Mrs. Canaday were
joined Friday evening by their daughter, Mrs. Annie Chapman
and children, Jenny and MitCh, for a post Christmas gift opening
party.

Pomeroy.
Discharged
Sally
Gloeckner, Oris Hubbard,
Agnes Isaacs, Donna Pierce,
'l'.acy Reed, Emily Kuhn ,
Jerry Ferguson, Albert Hill.

DAILY
10 TO 9

:§
:~

ij

FIRST BABY - Donald Jonathan Lambert, weight
seven pounds, eight ounces, was Gallia County's frrst bah'· of
1975 born at Holzer Medical Center. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. (above) Ronald Lambert of Rio Grande. Donald arrived
at 12:55 p.m . Jan. 1.

COLEMAN

2~BURNER

STOVE
Tfte economy and

obility

COLEMAN

d ove

this
for

,__.---'

•

3
99
1
$1711
$

Heck's Reg.
'15.88

Sports Dept.

mo•"'

the light.trovelin~
camper .

SLEEPING BAG
Heck's Reg. •27.99

port-

"POpular

Model413
Heck's Reg. •21.88
Dept.

TORCH

GLUE GUN

$

488 .

77¢

t=:-;:

HECK'S REG $7 .88

NAIIIWAIE

Heck's Reg.

DEPT.

HRK'SIIG.
$13.16

lempest Tanks

Hardware Dept.

Heck's Reg. 1119 88~
FESCO PLASTIC

KOTEX
Box of 12

94~

ANCHOR HOCKING

CONTAINERS

10" FOOTED

Choo••• from

Coal Scvl·
tie , 2 pc. Milk Con. Asst. Colors .

CAKE

CHOICE

PLATE
Heck's Reg.

Heck's Reg.

69~

HECK'S REG. '4.99 EA.

/

Housewares Dept.

Housewares

26"-10 SPEED
BICYLES

,

Comp'-'- wilt! rocillij ~cldk ..,.,o f-o:l l•ba" &amp;nd
lloocled """~ brok.H. Fat.tory odju&amp;t.ll l(kpftd
d.rGill.ur with cki&lt;:IU•..., c;..,t.col 011 top 'roM. All ~I
chr- rat.t,..op pedah •itil G"'bto ..1'-c.tcn. U "

NOW YOU CAN SAVE

·

$3.29

;..c..,.o..t . .,_

WOOD TAIU &amp; CHAIR SO

oz.

24
COLGATE 100
MOUTHWASH

c.lw&gt;ie• of Mit or giri'\ otyle

CHOICE

Oolt· oroined pressed-wood table top a nd choir ~oil . 0o• choir
bock ~ a"d leg. ooloble a nd cho •r s. Nolvrol ... omi~h lirush. Scre-ened
desi~j~n 011 choir b oc~s and table tCip , Tobie Top 24"• 18" Hght · 18 "
Cho •• Hght .: 2J 1 1 " Seo t S~r~ · 11 '1" ~ 11 '1' Seot Hght : I :i'" Table

K.D. Choir~ S.U. Pluil ·

Sunray

HECK'S REG.

Heck's Reg. '1.44

$11,99
TO'fDI,,

RIVIERA
CUSTOM

Heck's Reg. $89 .88

USI YOUI HICK'S qiAI(i.I.A.U.IO

•

TOY DEPT.

. COsmetic Dept.

settle on the size of any
reduction he does endorse . But
according to unofficial estimates the President might
choose a Olan .that could free as
muchas$20bi1Uonayearfrom
taxation.
In addition to the economic
strategy meeting, Ford signed
more than 30 pending bills into
law. The measures included
one to fight recession by
providing $4.5 biiiion in
unemployment benefits and
new
government
job
programs.
Vice President Nelson A.
Rockefeller, assuming a full
working role in Ute Ford administration, joined Treasury
Secretary William Simon and
the other top ecOnomic advisers at Ute meeting of the
Eeonomic.-Policy Board.

Wind-ow
• Cto&lt;k and lntervol

Timer • Su.rfoee
light • lower Owen
Wtndow and ' light
• Deep
Re«utd
Cooking Surfcict

BAND-AIDS

•lift · up ~ange Top
• Spoc ., Width 30",
Htigfott 6-1&amp;", Otpth

28"

Box of

G.E.
Steam-Dry

70's

IRON

Riverio

Cutrom
tf&lt; .

REG. 1439.95

~··""·P'"'""

NOW

$339

95

. . . W-T

69~

Heck's. Reg. 99'
"
Cosmetic

Rutlafld Furniture
'ARNOLD GRATE
RUTLAND,O.

.

RESAL 36 CUP

PARTY
PERK
F6J

I

I

Heck's Reg.

$10.96

$J77
•11.99

Jewelry Dept.

.

·'

Jewelry Dept.

••

By GORDON F. JOSELOFF
MOSCOW (UP! ) - The
Communist party Central Committee said Saturday Ute Soviet
Union has no econ()Jilic crisis,
unemployment or inflation but
it is plague&lt;: with - bad
managem~nt, wastefUlness and
inefficiency in industry.·
A 2,500-word New Year call
to workers filled Ute entire
front page· of Ute party .
newspaper · Pravda. It urged
them not to close their eyes to
'existing drawbacks in the
economy.
, The appeal S&lt;Iid an aU-out
effort must be made to attain
and exceed the planned targets
in 19'15, the last year of the
current five-year plan, and
Cariy out · the slogan, "More
produl:ts of .better quality at.

''

\

1. I

•

J.

enac ted .

.

j§

~

~~
l:o.~il
:;:;
;:;:
:;:;
\13

:;;

·t;
i~

It would seem foolish of the Democrats to try to act out the
script Utey have written during the last week, including a
s&lt;'Cretivc rewriting of legislative rules.

~mw~;:~~db:~s~!7~~~v~e~~tt~e~~~~e~~=~·:~yo:h~h~l ~:~·:

:r~~~~e~,;~~r years before the Democrats get the governor's m\

stitulion and rules, and to determine if proper procedures
were followed in .passing them.

You never find out if the glass slipper fits unless you try it
on. ·

..

~

PAGE 15

SUNDAY, JANUARY 5L 1975

VOL. 9 NO. 49

·-----------------------

Calling world hunger a
challenge
"greater
than
anyt~ing
previously
experienced in history," the
executive council of the
EpiScopal Church has urged the
familiej- of its three million
.
membe~s · each to g1ve one
dollar a month to feed the
starving.
The council said " the short
term imperative" before the
church was "!() interrupt the
process of certain starvation
for as many. as possible of .the
hundreds of thousands of
human beings who will die in
the coming months."
"The long term necessity,"
it said, "is redistribution of the
world's available resources so
that all peoples are able not
only to sustain life, but to
achieve with dignity the highest
possible quality of life."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:i:::::~:i:i::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-;;::::::::;:::::.

.cussed· a proposal that the
Ji'resident seek a tax on both
imported and domestic oil in
order to enforce energy conservalion.
Ford faced a ml'dnt'ght
Saturday deadline to act on the
stack of pendmg' congressional
bills. One of Ute most im·
,
portant among those he signed
was tbe $4.5 billion measure to
aid Ute unemployed.
The new law extends the .·
time 1·obless persons can
receive federal benefits and
creates 100,000 jobs for Ute
unemployed. Ford signed the
bill even though under
'
pressure from Congress, he
has dropped his plan lor a oper
cent income tax surcharge to
pay the costs.
Another bill Ute President
signed made the nationwide 55
mile per hour speed limit
permanent.
On
another
issue,
presidential Press Secretary
Ron Nessen said Ford supports
Secretary of State HeQry A.
Kissinger's statement in a
magazine interview that U.S...
military action against Arab
oil suppliers, while not considered in any way likely now,
· out if the·
has not been ruled
petroleum pipelines 1o the
world's industrial consuming
nations are shut off.
"Kissinger's interview did
reflect the President's views,"
Nessen said. •

They will only end up in court, perhaps incurring the wrath
of the voters who · have begun to show contempt for
manipulated government.
But they may feel it's worth a calculated gamble. After all,
the next election is almost two years away, and it may be

:::;

;:j:
;:;:
::::
l\lj

!;!:
::::
:;::

m:

?i
:~

Hawks heading
annual drive
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County
Chapter of ,the American Red Cross announ ced Saturday the chairm an for its
Februarv Fund Drive is the Rev. Paul
Hawks , 'Senior Pastor of Grace United
Methodist Church.
,
Rev. Hawks, a native of Michigan,
came to Gallipolis in 1970 from Toledo.
He is married and the father of three
children: Paul II, a student at Rio Grande
College; 'Mark. a sophomore at Gallia
Academy High·&amp;hool, and Kim, a seventh
grader at Gallia Academy Junior High .
He is a member of Rotary 1 on

numerous boards of the Di strict and
Conference of the Methodist Church: a
world traveler, having recently returned

from a trip to the Holy Land·, and soon
leaving on his annual trip to Grace
Hospital in Port au Prince, Haiti.
He ·'§pent one year in the Navy, four
years in •the Marine Corps and was a

Captain in the Air Force. The Chapter is
certain the Rev. Hawks is "an excellen t

Gun cocked
for Indians

GRESHAM, Wis. (UP!) Shawano County Sheriff
Robert Montour said SatW'day
a group of militant Indians had
pinned several of his men down
by "heavy gunfire" earlier In
the day. He said he issued
orders to his men to return fire
if they are fired upon again.
"At this point, my direct
orders to my men have been ~
hold fire,': Montour told a
hostile rally outside his office
in Shawano .
"They've been pinned down
for the best part of the morning
by fire from people from inside
of the abbey. My orders to my
men as of 3:15p.m. is to flre If
they are fired upol\.';
The Indians took over an
abandoned monastery near
here New Year's Day and they
are demanding the religious
THE REV. PAUL HAWKS
order which owns it turn Ute ·
land over to them.
choice'' for this year's drive chairman ,
The rally outside MontoW''s
knowing, as he does, the workings of the office was organized by sup.
American Red Cross.
porters of the miU.tants, who
urged the sheriff to pull back
the lines he has surrounding
Ute facility .

Wa_terP"iJte ]. ust basic politics

Jo!m Teller, Keshena, who
led Ute rally, told Montour Ute
Indians wanted the lines pulled
back "just a little way, 100
yards. Out of Ute line of fire:"
"We want peaceful negolia·
tions, not a war .out there,"
Teller said. "We don't want
killing. We want peaceful
negotiations. And by having
your men within shooting
range, that's provoking."
The protesters had first
marched to a roadblock a lew
miles from the monastery and
demanded to ~ allowed to
move to another checkpoint a
bit closer. They shouted "Pull
Back the Cops" as they
marched and carried signs
supporting those inside.
Most of tlie protesters were
Indians, but there were some
whites in the crowd.
The rally was called lor
Friday night after those inside
had turned down the. latest
offer from the Alexian Brothers, who own the vast
complex that has been unused
•siltce 1968.

Defense to
COSt over ,
$}()(}
. billi"
_
On

~'

RENO STYI ~ HOOKEY
prostitutes.
~
~
·~
" ... H Watergate is as It's
RENO, Neva. (UPI) alleged to be, it was an in·
The Reno school system is
teiligence gathering operation
missing
about4,000
but official•
have students,
a hunch
of one group of persons who
WASH.INGTON. -(U-P!- ) _ The
.
t0
they'r
e
at
an
"obvious
were seeking power • or
k 1
Of
Ford adrnin1'stration plans to
· ano th er
place" - the s I s opes.
retain power' agamst
ask the new De~ocratt'c Conh
31,000 enrollees, about 8pcr
'"
group of persons w o were
ce nt of the elementary gress to approve a record $95
seeking'' to acquire power.
school students and 18 per billion for defense spending in
That's all it was.
cent of the high school
the new fiscal year starting
"It's like brushing your
July I, Pentaaon sources sat'd
students fulled to return to
o
teeth, Michael. It's basic."
.
Saturday.
class after the Christmas
Other Watergate conSources said the admt'nistra· ·.
'dd
vacation. 14 We're not so
spirators testified Lt y
nalve as to lhlnk all olthis is
tion also would ask the
carried out his campaign · inlawmakers
to approve addition- :
al
due to Illness," School
telligence duties with fanatiC
al billions in obligations to be .·
d ·
d
Superintendent Marvin
devotion, rawmg up gran
Plcollo said Friday.
spent in future years lor such .
schemes for sabotaging the :::::::::::::;&lt;~:::;;::::::::::::::::$~~:~~~;::;:~:::::-&lt;:::::;;:::&gt;. long-lead weapons as ships and
Democrats and organizing the
planes, resulting ln an overall
Watergate break-in ·
total of about $103 billion and
' Liddy wa" convicted of
breachingthe$100blllionmark
conspiracy in the 1971 burglary
for the first time.
of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiaThe request is expected to
trist's office and served an Isspark a sharp outcry in the 94th
WASHINGTON (UP!) House domestic affairs chief;
month contempt:&lt;tf-&lt;:ourt sent·
J.l
Congress, which g~ined a
·
ence lor refusing to talk about
number of potential riew_d
Richard M. Nixon's most and Robert C. Mardian, once
powerful aides were convicted Ute assistant attorney general
Ct Watergate.
defense critics in Ute Novembet"
in Ute Watergate cover-up trial in charge of the Jqstice
On one of the presidential
elections.
under the very laws they Department's lnte~nal
' Ulpes, Nixon called Uddy "a
Defense officials cited inflathemselves often used as a Security Division- guilty of
little hit nuts. " Liddy said he
COLUMBUS !UP!) _ Gov .- tionary pressures as the .priweapon againhst adrnin.ist~alion their own conspiracy.
alleged conspiracy becomes took no offense at the remark John J , Gilligan has been mary reason behind the large
enemies - ! e consptracy
Conspiracy, as U.S. District responsible for the actions of and remains loyal to NIXon .
boost t'n th"e Pen.tagon's request
·-J
d
J
h
J
s·
.
t
ld
th
b
h
th
'
'd
tl
.
k
offered
an
ill-month
fellowship
tat
s u~.
. u ge o n . tnca o
e every other mem er, w e er
"He s evt en y a very stc
.
for Fiscal Year 1976, which
During John N. Mitchell's \varergate J·ury several times, or no t they ever met · ·
man," Liddy sru·d. "And I lnll!rnational
with the Woodrow
Wilson
Center for Schol- starts July 1. They said the
tenure as attorney general, Ute is simply two or more persons ' -One member of the con- regret that. I think he has
.
ld 1
1
Justice Department invoked acting together in the further- spiracy may testify to what demonstrated towards the end ars in Washington after he . ~~cre~set ;ou no represen
the conspiracy laws to ance of a crime.
another member of the con- of his presidency that he was leaves office, it was learned
e s r . any vast new arms
prosecute Dr. Benjamin Spock,
The Watergate convictions spiracy · told him- testimony insufficiently ruthless, in that Satur~ay.
programs.
the Chicago Seven, the raised anew some se rious which would be inadmissable these domestic difficulties in
A spokesman for the goverThe defense budget . request
·g
broth
the
t'
bo
t
th
f
.
.
f
.
th
t
.
f
t
'als
wht'ch
he
was
engaged,
he
dt'd
nor
refused
to
confirm
the
for
current rftscal year
Berrt an
ers,
ques 10ns a u e atrness o hearsay m o er ypes o rt .
$92 6theb'll'
c was
Gainesville Eight and Daniel the nation's conspiracy laws.
- Hearsay evidence against not act ruthlessly."
report although some of Gil. . ' ton, a tgure ongress
Ellsberg in what were referred
Melvin L. Wulf, legal one member of the conspiracy . . Liddy said Nixon should have ligan's associates said he is tnmmed by about 4 per ~ent.
to as the "New Left trials."
director of the American Civil may be used as evidence destroyed the Ulpes.
. . . expected to begin independent .Pentag~n offtetals satd the .,
On New Year's~ Day the Liberties Union, told UP! in an against all other members.
Asked what he thought of study in the general area of weapons 10du~:i;. ts ~ffer:~g
Watergate jury found Mitchell interview that he finds those
-Only one act is necessary John w. Dean JII, the former local and state. governments at even more m · ton an . e
and three others- H.R. Hal- laws and trials conducted to prove the conspiracy presidential counsel who was the center sometime next general eFonomy. ihey ctted
'
deman, the former White under them objec.tionable
isted
the star witness for the rnonib
shipbuilding as one of Ute worst
House chief ol staff; John D. because:
exWulf: howe ver' defended Watergate prosecution, Uddy . Gilliga~ has been consulting areas, with inflation in that
-Each member of the
11 r
f the
sat'd: "You'd have to put him with staff members and trus- industry rWlning about 25 per
Ehrlichrnan, the former White
some app ca tons o . contees of Ute center for several cenl,....double the Consumer
Trumpeting improved stand·
·
spiracy laws.
right up there with Judas
,
Pri .1 d
"There's nothing wrong with Jscariot."
weeks, sources said, and has
ce n ex.
ardsfortheworllingm.ansince
Ol
1
'thf
·
1
·
acy
law,
particularly
He
said
Dean's
motivation
met
at
eas
once
WI
ormer
a conspll'
1971, the ·message satd: "The
.
.
m·
increase of living standards of
.
if persons are conspiring to ,.-as simply "to save his ass." Attorn,ey General Elliott Rhich·
. comm1't murder, rob a bank or
Liddy also called Jeb Stuart ardson about the fellows ip.
Ute Soviet peoplot.is contrary to
WASHING TON ( Up! ) - agree d wt'th Ki ss10ger.
Ute situation of workers in the Sen. John Glenn, . (D.Qhio·),
"History shows us that obstruct justice," he said . Magruder, who was his boss at Richardson .. is currenlly a
capitalist'world:
said Friday the possibility of almost every war was started "You just have to be careful Ute Nixon re-election com· fellow at the center but will be
· reasons
·
I nu·t•·e and who also testifi'ed leaving soon to become ambasNEW YORK (UP!) _ The
"We do not have an economic using U.S. military force ror economtc
- when how you use 1·t." .
~
·-~
·
ded
wulf
·
sat
'
d
the
Nixon
adrntnlS'
·
and
wenf
to
pr!SO
·
n,
acsador
to
Great
Britain.
Amerl·can
Telephone &amp;
.
·
crisis, we have no imem- against oil-producing na Itons one country \Vanocu or nee
ployment, no inflation . We are : was "frighll!ning ."
what another had," said Glenn·: tration used the conspiracy complished, skillful liar."
, . Some. 30 sc holar. are engaged Telegraph Co., citing inS\D'e in our future."
Glenn commented on a
Glenn also criticized the laws to stop persons from
Liddy said he would refuse to 10 stugtes at the center at any flationary pressure, Frid·ay
rem&amp;k made by Secretary or Ford administration for saying things to which the testify even if his prison term one ·ttme. The · cenil!r was submitted a proposal to Ute
But it said: "We should not . State 11enry Kissinger in a "wasting a year and ·a half" on .administration objected. In were reduced to one year ·In established in 1968 by Congress Federal
Communications
close . our eyes to existing year-end interview in Business moving to solve the energy almost every case, Ute defend- exchange for his.testimony.
with the purpose of bringing . Commission for a 7.2 per cent
drawbacks. We have some in Week Magazine. Kissi~ger said crisis. "We've been subject to ants were acquitted or the U.S.
H hill aJipeal fails and he together scholars and nlen of · rate lttc~ase· on .interstate
heavy industry, in the, produc· . the use of militar,y' pressure in this ,blackmail increases in Court of APPt"ls set the con- must return to prison, Liddy public affairs . ' in order . to calls tb go into 'effeCt March 4.
lion · of consumer goods, . in Ute .oil crisis would be con- crude oil 'prices .by the Arab · victions aside. ·
·hopes there .will be no stimula~e th10klflg and wnUng
Tfte At&amp;T proposal would
building and in-agriculture. .• sidered "only in the· gravest natio115 that long , yet nothing
Speck was accused of con• Watergate informers in that ., in the area of federal, state and reduce the existing three:
"There are delays in putting emergency." ,,
really has been done," said spiring to violate the Selective prison.
local government problems.
minute initial period on which
iitdustrial capacity into operaIn Washington Friday, Glenn.
Service laws by W'ging young
"! don't want to be in any
The center has 10 Ute past charges cUrrently are based to
lion ancfrnastering l.etihniques. Kissinger said he was
:·As a result, we're playing men 10 evade the draft iii ap- bird.eagelorstooipigeons,''he altempted to match a fellow's one minute for all CUiltol"er ·
.
·
"
t
·
F
d'
R
·
· 1c tt e wt'th our . pos1't1'on t~u ·the Vietnam War. S8l' d. " .. .l.'d rather have a~ previous salary . Gilligan d.ialed station caDs arid would
We are not always up o reflectlng. Prestdent or s
uss tan
rou
!Jlodern demands in quality and rviews but ·the Whit/, House nation's futur e," Glenn sa;"
The Chicago Seven were. honest bank robber any day ·in earned' $40,000 per· year ·as establish a lower minimum
variety.
.
refused to say whetltcr ")•-ord
-(Continued on page 28) . •.he .week as cellrnate."
governQr.
. •t
. ,rat' for ' such
calls.
· ' n.l :
'
9 I
I
. ~.. .
.,..

Soviet economy
has its oWn ills

less cost."
j

'.

an?~~H~:o:~~s::!F~s~

MoudayQeadUne
By M,onday , tillligan will be gone and Rhodes will be
governor. The'bills would probably be vetoed, so Democrats
are expected to have them certified by Semite President P.ro
Tempore Oliver Ocasek, D·Akron, and sent to Gllligan irnmediately for signature.
·
If the bills get signed, Republicans can then offer their last
line of defense ~ Secretary of State Ted W. Brown; a veteran
Republican who must certify all Ohio laws. There is nothing
to prevent Brown from refusing to sign. Democrats would
then be required to sHow a court that their bills were lawfully

Chances are, the GOP will catch its Democratic friends in
some legal miscues, especially in the Senate, which Republi·
cans have operated sint"e 1960 and where the Democrats are
sending a completely gree n team into the clerk 's office.
Lt . Gov. John W. Brown, the outgoing presiding officer of
the Senate, is a major roadblock on whi ch the Republicans
are depending. He is required by the Constitution to certify
all bills clearing both chambers.
If Umt point is reached sometime late next F'riday on U1e

junbatr ~imes. • ientintl

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford reviewed antirecession proposals with Vice
President
Nelson
A.
Rockefeller and his chief
economic advisers Saturday
and adrninstration sources said
the suggestions included
possible · income tax cui.&lt;; for
low and middle income
Americans.
Then, shifting his attention to
another major issue on a hard·
working day, Ford announced
he Is creating a "blue ribbon
panel " of citizens to investigate charges the CIA
spied on American citizens at
home in violation of its charter.
Ford also disclosed that Ute
Justice Department already
has started investigating
whether the CIA broke the law.
He said the citizens' panel .
would report to the attorney
general on any criminal activity it finds.
A White House spokesman
said Ford would name five to
seven persons, none of whom
will be congressmen or govern·
ment employes, to his citizens'
commission. The spokesman
said Ford· expected to receive
Ute panel's report in three
months.
..., have today established a.
commission to ascertain and
evaluate any facts relating to
actlvities conducted within Ute
United 3tates by the Central
Intelligence Agency that give
rise to questions as to whether
the agency has exceeded its
statutory authority ... ," Ford
said in a statement.
"It is essential in this
republic that we meet our
security ·requirements and at
Ute same time avoid impairing
QUr democratic institutions and
fundamental freedoms."
The CIA announcement
came at the end of a busy day
in which Ford and Rockefeller
discussed anti-recession
strategy with Ute ·executive
committee of the President's
Economi~ Polley Board.
Administration sources .said
the economists had recom·
mended a tax break for low and
middle-income workers as an
effective way to stimulate
spending and create more jobs.
Ford has not yet decided
firmly whether to propose a tax
cut, sources said, and must still

passi ng bills in the legislature, and the charter was brought
up to date justthree yea rs ago on legislative procedures.
During a normal session, legislative leaders from _both
pnrties sometimes agree lo " wink" al constitutional re· quirements and rules in order to get things done.
. This tinte, however, Republicans will want to get nothing
done for at least a week Wllil Rhodes takes office. They will
try anything, including filibustering, to achieve their goa l.
Moreover, they will be watching like hawks to see that
Democrats comply with every technicnl rule and
requirement in speeding the bills through .

;lt::::::::::::::;;:::~::i:;:·::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::: ::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::·:::::::::·:·:·:;::;.;:;:;;;:;:;;;:::: ;;;:::::::::;:;::;;:;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:: : :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: : :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::;:::::::*:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;:::::::::::~:::::~::&amp;::: : :~:. :.:::::::::;~=

D'~'~''''''~'wt~m~&amp;M1:t''':tt!'tl:;:,,,,.,.,,,.,,,

• Fvll · V.-w U~r

0¥tn

h::: ~:n~~:~:~l:; ~::r~:~r~:~~;.~

~ be red for a power play that backfired . Here's why :
~
Ohio's Constitution sets forth specific requirements for

No decision
0
made yet
•
tax actions
By RICHARD H. GROWALD

TREATMENT

burne r om:mbly.

The 207 Electric Glue Gun Kit lea·
turet eaiy loading and is trigger con·
trolled for fast glue application
Bonds in 60 seconds. No clamping
The 207 Electric Glue Gun Kit lea·

NAIIIWAIE
DE/IT.

Heck's Reg. '13.32

lodvd~~ fuel cylinder , ond tfle
new , 1'1 ol ~ton dord pencil point

·ELECTRIC

glue gun, all-purpose glue sticks one
one instruction booklet.

TENNIS SHOES

OIL

KIT ·

THERMOGRIP

CONVERSE

S. T. P.

TEMPEST

&lt;\'\\

\

Sports Dept.

TURNER

electric

Statehouse annals as the ·"Cinderella" Demucra,tic legislators try to Ioree through a half-dozen partisan btlls before ·
the governor 's office turns into a pumpkin Jan. l3. ,
The .~gic package includes a c:ongressional redistricting
plan gmng Democrats an ex tra two or three congressmen in
1976; hberalized electton and unemployme,nt compensatiOn
laws; and a patr of agency trar.sfers to save \ip to 400 state
jobs for Democrats.
.•. .
. .
The Democrats, hungry for thetr hrst donunatton of both.
legtslattve chambers m 15 years, are certain to get mosl of
the btlls through. They have the maJOrity: U1ey make the
rules.
But when the chaotic week ends and incoming Republican
Gov:-elect James A. Rhodes replaces Democratic Gov. John
J. Gtlhgan, the party wtll be over and the hurry -up laws wtll
be taken to court.
Laws Challenged

r le~:ia~~~~c·~:e.m:iJ.

~-----PL-EN_TY_o_F_FR-EE P.ARKI.NG-PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY JAN. 5 &amp; 6

MURRAY

$100°0

~

.

Housewares Dept.

FROM THURS. JAN. 2 SENTINE·.L

~

7

T&gt;Ho:&gt; ... or.o:u.,

. 742-42li ' ,•

UPI State~use'Reporter
.
.
COLUMBUS I UPI ) - .1 he upconun~ week m ~he Ohw
General ·Assembly promtH'S to be one of the w1ldest 111

~:

TJ.l· lloh llm'.flirh
..

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Elmer Norvell,
Long Bottom ; Harold Hudnall,
Pomeroy; Clarence Nichols,
~iddl e port; Stella Hayes,
Middleport; Charles Collins,
Reedsville ; Lydia Ebersbach,

By LEE,LEONARD

t

POMEROY - I take it you are either in the process of .
making the transition from the holiday season to every day living
or, perhaps, you're one of those fortunate people who alre.•dy
have made the transition.
•
At any rate, the house does look a bit drab with the beautiful
Otristmas ornaments and decorations disappearing doesn't it.
Eac~ar - as I grow older - I wonder if I will be around ne~t
yea
unpack the boxes. Having made a similar comment last
yea , I was asked if I felt that I was going to die within the year.
Well - ! don't think so bullong ago !learned that none of us come
with a• 70 year guarantee.

.

··:::;.-:~:::;~;,~.;:;:;.&gt;;:~\.-.:~'!.~;::~~~~:i:::.~:::~::: :::::::::~':::~..:.. :::::::::-::::::::::-:::::~:::::-::::::....::::~~:::::::::::~::::::~:::::::·:·:·:·:·:·: ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·:·::::::::~;:::::::::;;.:;:;.;.:·:-::;.;:::::;::::::.;.;;;:::::;::.;-:::::::::::;;::::::,::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::...:::::o;.::'!l,:.'!i-:";:;:'W:;:::::~».".$~·W;"XQT/.«&lt;&lt;'//.h;Y~m

I

Jan.

..

.,

'.

'I

I ;...-·• '

..

.,

•

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Con vic I ed Watergate
mastermind G. Gordon Liddy
views the events of the
.
Waterga\e scan dais as ba stc
1 e b rus bing your
polI't'lCS- "l'k
•··th"
d
""" -an says R'tc ha rd M.
N'
h ld h
d
IXOn s ou
ave covere
the'!' up more ruthlessly..
Liddy, the former NIXon
campatgn finance counsel whQ
th · t 11 '
drew .•P 1e tn eh tgence
1d
gathermg Pans t at e
1
th w t
t
dire~t y to
e . a erga .e
bu.ggmg, relaxed hl.s tvow tof
Wa erga e
st 1ence
on
h t·
· te ·
'th
somew a man m rvtew WI
Mtke Wallace scheduled for

broadcastSundayonCBS.TV's
"60 Minutes ."
Sporting a beard he grew
since leaving prison, Uddy is
free on bond pending an appeal
. term he
or the •u-20 year pnson
·
d
recetve for conspiracy' burg1
ill 1 ·
ary and . ega wrretapping
in the 1972 break-in at
Democratic nation a l
headquarters.
Liddypasseshistirne writing
and minding his five children
while Mrs. Liddy works as a
school teacher. Mrs. Liddy said
she regards her husband as a
he
lik ed hi
ro and . en
m to a
prlsoner:Of-war. ·
;If

Unrepententandproudofhis
Watergate service to Nixon,
Liddy still refuses to discuss
"substantive" Watergate mat·
ters. But he gave Wallace his
views on political morality and
scathing
· assessments. of the
"stool pigeons" who served
Nixon and later provided ' Ute
government with evidence.
"Power exists to be used,"
Liddy said in defending the
morality of the Watergate
break-in, which he planned,
and other aborted 1972 cam·
~lgn schemes to kidnap anti~
Republican radicals and entice
Democratic politicians with

* * *.* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
A l.des co'nvz·cted on o·w n' laws

Fellowshi"p
·
of£ered to

Mitchell .used

A

Gilli"gan

cgnspiracy
to nail SjKJck

•
"[ war
enn·
·
o
v_p·
o
szng
Gl

.

R ate

creases
·'asked by AT&amp;T

"an

'.

a

'·

�'

.'

'.

. I
•

•

)

Tigers take command with win over Blue DevilS
Wav erly
WAVERLY
out scored \' ! S ttm~=: Ga ll! polls 2111 dun ng the fmal 5 30 of play
l1ere Fnday mght to break up a
d\lse ga me and ttlr result was
a 64-53 hard\\ond vtc lor) for

Coac h
T1gers

Carr oll

Ha11 hee's

Sout lwash•rn Oh10
Lra gut• trtumph. Wa\ t•rly's
Th('

~

fifth "ithout a ddcat. left tht•
Tigrrs• '''~' gar~H's 111 front , of
GallipOliS, Iront on, .J ac·kstm
a nd Lo~an
Before Waverly's la te surge.
the lead exchanged hand s t~t ght

tunes and the St'OJ c was deadlocked on rune dtfferPnl oc casions
Dunng the ftn :t f f1v e und

Ull C-

ha lf IIHnut eS, Waverl y sank 14
of Hi free llll o w~ whtl e rlaymg
' ke ep-H\\H y" HfiC'f ,J..',l-llllUIJ:: &lt;.Jn
UJ.'Pt'l

Your

[)( I\

s

~; 1 \e

us

}J

rl';d

Martella 65 Upper Arlington 63
Perry 4Y LOU ISVI lle 43
Cuy6hog a Fa ll s 59 Can'ton L eh
m a n 57 [oil
Can t on M cK1nley 71 Lrma
Sc n•or 70
Ca nto n So ulti 73 Marti ng ton 58
All ra,uce 61 M ass illon 50
Jack~on 51 Gle nwood 49
Fatrles s 55 North Canto n
Hoover 51
St
Thomas
Aq u 1n as
74
Mrn e rva 66
Nor t hw es t 68 East Canton 62
Tuslaw 69 San dy Valley 42
Cuy
Chr is tian Academy 46
Brunn erdale &lt;~ 5
Ak ro n But chel 74 A kr on South

63

AKron Ce nt r al Hower 60 Akron
Garf ie ld 59
BtHb ert on 71 Sa lem 55
Woo s ter 59 Do"' er 54
Nordonta 50 Ke nt Roosevelt .j ]
Da l t on 60 Waynedale J4
l:&gt;ay Dunbar 83 Day Kt ser 44
Center&gt;.JII \e b1 Fat rb orn Baker

45

T al\awa nd a 66 Lebanon 54
Defrance 79 Wapakoneta 67
Ha mrlton Gar tt eld 53 H~m rlton
Badin 50
Gr a h etm 64 Mtamt Ea st 63
F r ank\1n Monroe 78 Twtn
Valley North o1
Shertdan 71 Phtlo 53
West Muskrngum 67 Morgan 64
N ew L exmg ton 76 Tr \ va l ley 52
Caldwell 61 Skyv ue JB
Fo rt Fr ye 59 Frontier 40
Ste uben v•l le 68 Wetrlon w Va

64

Shad yside 81 Union Local 58
M tn go Jun c l tO n 55 Steubenvill e

cc 50

Toro nto 6Y Bucke ye Nort h 55
Carrollton 70 Clay mont 55
R tdgewood 7'J Newc om erst own

' .

58

Mans
St
Pet er s 6J Trll rn
Calvert 42
Ontario 70 Cr es tl in e 39
Hamilton C arft eld 53 H ~mt lt on
Badm 50
Far rvt ew 73 Pau ldll\g 48
Patr1 c k Henry 71 Napol eo n 57
H am11ton Town ship 74 Teays
Valley 41
Re.,-noldsburg 70 Westervr ll e 65
Whitehall 68 Mount Vernon 48
Worthtngton 54 Hilliard 51
Gro &gt;.J eporr 7Y Oetaw~r e n D

oil

Cots Ready 55 Cots Wenrle 52
Co ts
Watterson v11 1 Cols
Hartley 67
fl
Franldin His 109 Dublin 42
Wes t Je ff erson 57 Olenta ngy 50
· Gra n v il le 77 MarySVIlle 59
Danvi l le 97 Cols Academy 51

High School
Basketball
Standings
'

TEAM

All GAMES

wl

P

N ew Ph rla 65 Coshoc ton SJ
IV South 58 Ga raway 51
West Holmes 58 Orrvtlle 45
Anthony Way n e 55 Rossf ord 54
Gtrclrd 60 Ca mpbell 58
Yg South 75 Yg Cha ney 51
SEOAL VARSITY
Yg
Mooney 55 Austmtown
TEAM
W L
P
Ft tCh 5J
Waverly
5 0 J ll
Yg Ursul tn e Bl Struthers 48
1ron ton
3 2 317
Sebr tng 5-i Un ti ed .J1
Galltpo
lis
3 2 295
Warren J F K 58 Poland 56
Logan
3 ~ 305
W&lt;~rrE:•n wesr
Res 53 N iles 51
Jackson
J 2 21 1
Boardman 76 Hubbard 66
Ath ens
1 3 297
Champron 66 Matthews 51
Me tgS
1 .J 296
Howl and 58 Caniteld 57
Wellston
a
5 236
Spf l d
Loc cl l
n
western
TOTALS
20 20 1318
Reser ve 36
Frtday ' s. results.
Warren Ha rd tng 66 Ea s t
waver l y 64 Galltpolis 53
Lt verpoo l 63
Logan 82 Me1gs 52
Co l umbiana 74 Ltsbon 64
Ja c kson 55 1ron ton 42
Shaker H eights 65 Euclid 57 Parma 70 Ga rt re ld He1ghts 50 . Athens 78 Wel ts ton .JO
Ea s t Clevela n d Shaw 61
SEOAL R~SERVES
No rmand y 56
TEAM
W l
,
Berea 55 Midpar"' 47
Athens
4 1 262
Olm ste d F alls 70 North 0\m
Logan
4 I 232
sJ.ed 62
Me to S
3 2 19 5
Cle St Jose pll 69 Par ma Pad u a
wa Ve rly
3 1 176
62
Ga l ltPOI1s
3 2 191
Brecksv ttle 52 warrensv tll e 47
J a c kson
1 J 231
Indep en dence 51 N Royalton
Ironton
1 J 111
46
Wellston
0 5 \ 46
E lyna 78 Lorarn 53
TOTALS
20 20 1004
Par ma B y zantrne 53 Cle Holy
Friday ' s resu lh :
Na me 50
waverly 52 Ga llrpo1 ts 24
Cl e St. E d wa rd 64 Cle West
Logan 60 Me igs -1.5
Tech 61
Jt'CkS00 50 l ronfon 16
Un 111 ers t ty Sch oo l 76 Centr,al
Athen~ 67 Wellston 2J
Cath olic 66 \
Tu es da y ' s games
Elyr i a Cathol rc 65 Lorain
Ironton at Gal lt polis
Southv tew 61
Athens at Metgs
Elyr ta West 57 Sa ndu sky
Wellston at Logan
- ~erkins 47
Jackson at Waver l y
Gahanna SJ Westland 48
Rock Hill at South Po tnt
Col s. St. Chart~s 107 Cots
Tr rmble at Hannttn Tra ce
OeSales 78
Newark 59 Chtlltcothe 113
SEOAL FRESHMEN
Zanesville 13 Lancaster 52
Tea m
WL P
Canal ·
W rnct1es ter
85 Gallipolis
4
1 2~
F&gt; i cker tngton 49
Logan
4
1
210
Logan E l m 81 Lancas t er
Athens
4 1 1f4
Ft sher .s7
·
Me1gs
2 3 18'f
Circle11 i l !e 7\ H illsboro 40
Nelsonv ille York 71 Alexander
Waverly
2 3 175

60
Ross Zane
53

Trac e 71 Hunt .ngton

S~rtngf 1 e l d

South

76 Port -

smouth 59
Spfld
Shawne e 65 Cl ark
N 'western 32
Wheelersburg 70 Green 117
Valley 86 South Webster 64
New Boston s.c Portsmouth
' West 47
St Marys 78 Cet1na 70
Sf Henry 56 Fl Recov-ery 44
Lima Bath 96 Van Wert 94
,
Sidney Lehman 73 Ind ian Lake

67

'

.

Ironton
Jackson
Wellston
TOTALS

Thu,rsday's

2 3 162
2 3 178
0 5 117
20' 20 1454

iesults !

Gallipolis 44 Wa;;erly 36
Jackson 40 Ironton 39
Logan 38 Meigs 34
Athens 40 Wollston 26
Monday's games :
Gall•polis at Ironton
Waverly a t Jackson

Meigs at Athens
Logan at Wellst,on
,.

were the only B lu e De v il s tn

C ·HI S let

prOX IIIJHie l\

2,200 spt'l 1-&lt;.JtOJ S

M rl l t k e n \ 0 2 LO IHl I 0 2
TOTALS 16 ·8-40
AT H ENS{18)
BI,1 Ck ford 0
J J. Bu t ne r 2 1 6. Chonko 8 5 1 1
Oatley J I ?, Ellwood s 0 10
Faul kn er 1 'J 6, Gr een 'l 0 1
Gr('er 2 0 J , Petty 1 0 7 H orn 5
5 15 TOTALS J O 18 78

lll l'lllbf'! s of

Jl;!lf

1he cu&lt;:1 c h cs

'('11o

lll~ln\ '

Wave~

buckets

casr

felt

lj have lou
un -

dernc;;lh On the other hand ,
Wa\'l' ri l 's Iough defense kept
(;1\HS shoot ers (J Uts•de mus t of
the ga lrl P dlld the T1ge rs
l unt1Dlkd
IJ oth baekbn&lt;~ nl.s

\H'

had to

wr~ s

It

GARS-Waverly box.

• •

.
.
GA HS BLUE OEVILS (53)

PLAYER- Pos.
Mtke S1ckl es f
Tom Va lentm e, c
Jtm N1day . g
Brent John son , g
Tony F oldE"n , f
Gary Snowden g
Brent Saunde r s, I
Jtm Wa rren , c
Brett Wil son , g

TOTALS
PLAYER- Pos.
oOOg Tra cy, I
Joe Hol land . I
Ttm Dud Jt t. c
Tom Pf e1f er, g
Pe l e Laswel l, g
Jtm Whal ey, g
Robb1 e Scagg s, c

FG.A FT·A PF RB TO TP
OJ

OJ

4

1

1

0

1).
1 20
0 I

22

0
1
I

5
1
0

0
J
I

4

2
5
0

7
5
I

2
1
0

7

aa
I 1
22
22

11

39
00
II

00

22
I

16
8
0

01
3
8
I
2
00
00
I 0 0 0
19-51 15·20 21 30 10 53
WAVERLY TIGERS 1641
FG-A FT A PF RB TO TP
59
55
3
5
2
15
5 15 2 2
I
5
2
12
7 13 I 3
1
ta
I
15
4· 12 7-9
2
2
3
15
28
00
5
2
2
4

TOTALS

02

3· 4

3

I

3

0 0

00
18-23

0

0

0

0

19

36

II

64

IS 14 24 -

23-59

'

Score by quar ters :

GA HS Blue Dev1ls

12 16 10

53

Waverly T1gers
Off1c1als chap ter

16

64

J•m

10

Detillton &amp; Scotty Gr ies he 1mer, Chillic oth e
_ __..

. "'

LOGAN
The Logan
Chteftams of Scott Fitzgerald
fired a bhstering 58 pet. from
the floor enroule ln an easy 82·
52 triumph over the Metgs
Marauders here Fnday mght
The Mara uders, in dropping
thetr fifth game m SIX starts,
hi t a respectable 48 pet. from
the held, but were outrebounded by the Chiefta ins 29·
13.
However, a Logan fa stbreak
broke the game wide open in
.the second quarter as the
Ch iefta ms outsc ored the
Marauders 24-8 after taking a
19-14 lead m the first penod.
Logan continued to outscore
the Marauders in the third
period, 16-13, before rolling for
23 potnts m the fina l stanza to
17 for Meigs.
Mitch Wnght, sinkmg II of 18
from the fl oor, led all scorers
w1th 24 pomts as the Ch1eftatns
placed 5 players m double
ftgW'es. Other Indians in lwtn
figW'es were Jtm Kemper with
II points, and Jan Myers. Scott
Gosnell and M1ke McBroom

with 10 e~
Mitch Jlteadows led the

Marauders both on the boards
and in the scoring colu mn,

Meigs-Logan box. ..
MEIGS (52 )
FG-A FT-A RB PF TP

PLAYER
Brauer
Browntng

I 7

Meadows

7

Randolph

44
6 10

00
24

19
10

Da venport
Wa l burn
Coa ts
Blan chard
Cremeans

23
23

02
02
0 I

0-1
1I

•

Wh1tlatch
Dod son

TOTALS

3

2

a

4
I
I

0
0

0

10
16
10
12

4

I

I

I

0

0

I

2

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0-0

00

0

0-0

0 0•

0-1

oo'

0
0

0-4

00
6-ll

I

17
23-47
9
52
LOGAN (821
FG.A FT·A RB PF TP
56 . 0 0
J
2 10
45
22
2
2 10

PLAYER
M ye r s
Gosn ell

Kemp er

5· 14

48
11 ·18

Young
Wr 1ght
Fu ll er
M cBroo m
M ara

22

5-7
23
02
0-0
3a-65

See I
Thrush

TOTALS
MEIG S
LOGAN

5

I 2
11

1
4

II

5

22

7

3

24

00
0-0
00

3
I
2

0
0
• I

4
10
4

00
00

I
0
29

0
0
13

0
0

6-7

8 IJ

17
19 24 16 23

14

9

82
52

82

hitting for I~ pomL• and hauling
m 8 missed shots to lead both
teams Three other Marauders
hit double figuges, with junior
Mick Davenport getting 12 and
sophomores Steve Randolph
and Greg Browning 10 points
apiece.
Logan COtiDected on 38 of 65
floor shots while htl\ing 6 of 7 at
the chanty stripe. Metgs hit 23
of 47 field goal attempts and
just 6 of IS at the foul line.
While Meadows was far and
away the top rebounder for'
Metgs, Wright led• Chteftam
boardwork with 7 rebounds,
followed by Don Young and
Kemper wtth 5 each.
Wtth the win the Chieftains
move mto a share of second
place in the SEOAL standings
wtth a 3-2 mark, whtle Fitz.
gerald 's qwntet ts 6-2 overall.
The tads of Roger Brauer, on
the other hand, drop to 14 in
league actiOn, l..S overa ll.
Both squads resume league
action Tuesday as Meigs hosts
Athens and the Chieft ains
entertain the Wellston Ro ckets.

After one quarter the
W1ldcat s held a slim 11-10 lead.
Htgh scorer for H.T m the first
stanza was Mark Swain wtth 6
pomts Greg Batley pumped 111
6 for Ute Eagles m the fir st
penod
The game contmued close as
U1e 'Cats could only manage to
outsore the Eagles 12-10. For
the two-tune chan1ps m the
second penod, Wayne Hesson

added l pomts Mtke Harris
pumped m 5 for the Eagle
cause.
The half time score stood at
OP
23-20 m favor of HTilS.
2 ~':1
Hannan Trace slowly started
287
266
pulling away from the Eagles
~87
m the thtrd penod as !hey
253
258
outscored EHS 12-ll. For the
35 1
Wtldca\s in the third stanza
363
2128
Swam added 6. Greg Bailey
pumped in 6 points for the
Eagles in the third penod. The
score after three periods stood
at 3:&gt;-28, HatiDan Trace.
Hannan Trace outscored
OP
170.
Eastern agam m the fourth
203
period , 16-10. For the 'Cats tn
l JS
F a rrfr eld Un1on 13 Mo\tersport
Monroe Jtl L 1n Walnut H tl1~ 46'
the final period Swain pwnped
157
Ham tlfon Tt\ft 77 Lakota 51
58
'105
C1'1t \ l tcothe Fl a gel n
P tk e
Madtson 6J Mtdd l e Fenwtck 60
in
I0 points Tim Spencer had 4
23 1
Un tolo 86 Wilm ington 49
Weslern 53
for the Eagles in Ute
points
211
Sou th eas tern 76 Pi' '"' Va l ley 65
Peebles 93 Man c.hester 65
282
Buckeye Valley 52 North Un ron
Mar ton Cath 49 Cardrn g ton J5
stanza.
~,
final
1604
38
Mt G1lead 73 H tghla nd 53
Hannan Trace sank 25 of 60
Valley Forg(' 69 Bbrush 58
Mohawk. 69 Ctvde 60
61 MCir l Ot1 Hardmg 50 F tndla y 49 floor attempts for 42 pet. The
Cl!ve l a nd
H e tghts
( oil
Lakewood 57
Wildcats hit only I of 13 foul ·
Mayf teld 52 Be&gt;d ford J8 ' ot l
Bowl tng Gr een 73 Fostona 36
East l a~e No r th 80 W tll Sou t h
To! Central 73 Tol L tbbey 69
shots.
66
.
To l St F ranC IS 11 Tot Start 46
The Eagles htt 16 of 62 shots
Mentor 68 MCJple He ights 63
Yg Card tnal St r ttc h 53 To t
A von Lake 67 M edm a JJ
for 25 pet. and 6 of 13 fo\ll shots.
Rogers 72 •
Bay 78 Fatrvtew 7J
,
To l Bowsher 62 Tot Woodwa rd
Hannan Trace grabbed 32
westlaKe 63 RocKy R tver 56
61
Chardon 65 Au rora 61
To l Dt&gt;Vrl b tSS 66 To\ Waite 29
rebounds on Ute night, led by
Wes t&gt; Geauga 55 Kens ton :.t 7
Tol Wh rtme r 55 Tol Sl John 52
Swain
with 16.
Orange 51 So lon 56
To t Scott . 56 Tot Macom b er 49
Perr
y
68
P
ym
at
un
lng
V
a
lley
6?
With
the win, Hannan Trace
M
a
ume-e
75
La
k
e
59
OP
tab ula
Ed gewood
60
Perrysburg 63 Springf teld 58
upped
its
record to 7-2 overall
193 Ash
Sylv an ra 65 Por t Cl rnton 46
Ashtabu la. SJ
154 Mad
and 6·0 in SVAC actton.
ison 71 Asht St John 55
Elmwood 80 Woodmere 68
170 Conn~a u r 57 P~J ines R tvers id e Genoa 66 Otsego 41
Eastern dropped to 1·7 overall
190
Oak Harbor 76 G ibsonburg 71
53
and
14 in the SV AC.
Brooks
1
de
19
Oberl
tn
77
180
162 C\eai- 1J 1ew 51 M rdv ie w 55
CAGER SUSPENDED
·The Wildcat reserves upped
208 Avon 70 idighland 58
HOUSTON
( UP!)
their
SVAC record to 4-2 as
F
tr
elands
66
South
Amherst
Jl
197 Cha g r tn Falls 49 TW !hSburg JJ
University
of
Hawaii
they
posted
a 2!1-19 victory over
1454 ' Lalo.e c~tholic 74 W t ck.l ~ ff e 71
Coach
Bruce
O'Neil
Basketball
the
Eagl~
.
Tr, wa y 60 Cloverle af 32
Cin . Bacon 62 Ci n . Woodward
Saturday suspended starting
The .difference in Ute game
52
center Tommy Barker for an came in· the second and third
Ctn . Taft 68'\·.( :ln . Atken 65
C1n Sf X av •er 77 Cin Moel le r , indefmite
' period
for periods. The Wildcats held the
56
.
"disc
ipli
nary
.
reasons"
U ttle Eagles scoreless m the
Cin Purcell 68 C:m La Salle 50
Cin Hughes 58 Cm w H il ls 56
following the Rainbows' losS to S&lt;:rond stanza and aUowed onlv
• Cotera•n ao Forest Park 70
the University of Houston • 2 pomts m the third perioe •
lnd tan H ill 81 Mad ei ra 7J
Love land 6 ~ D eer Park 30
High scorers for the wi{Ule't ,, ·
F~1da y nigh t.

High school results.

'

••

t

_j

I

Terps top Irish
COLLEGE PARK, Md.
(UP!)- John Lucas and Owen
Brown scored 23 and 22 pomts,
respectively, to lead the
seve nth-ran ked Maryla nd
Terrapins to a 91).82 victory
over Notre Dame Saturday in a
homecomm g spo iler for
Wa shin gton, D. C. nattve
Adri an Dantley, who led j the
Irish with 29 pomts.
The Terps pulled out in front
mid-way through the fir st half,
took a 46-37lead mto the locker
room at halftime, and stayed
ahead for the rest of the game.

••

LOG AN - . The Meigs
Marauder reserves, playing
without the services of Greg
Browmng wh o was moved up to
the var ~tty, fell to 3-2 in the
SEOAL reserve race here
Fn day night, droppiog a 60-45
decisiOn to the Logan reserves.
Metgs jumped out to an ~
lead after one period, before
the Chteftatns exploded for 21
pomts m th e second frame
whil e ltmiting Meigs to just 6.
The Ch teftains , like their
varsity coWt terparts, htt a

Introducing

.MIKASA

r.&gt;
-~~
•••

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS AND LOAN
COMPANY

Currently Being Displayed In Our Windows .

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
404 Second Av~:

Gallipolis, Ohio

~500

SAVE

to $900

( ON ALL

MOBILE HOMES
ITS OUR

WINTER SPEC·IAL

"' .

-

I

Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan

GET ALITTON MICROWAVE OVEN

FR.EE•I

•

::
.,
•,

•
•

.

s;.
.•.

'

:..
.,

..•
..
.' .•
••
•

.••.•
·.•••••
.
••

· WEEKDAYS 10 TIL 9

.-

~ PER YEAR ON A 4 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
" $1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT- INTEREST PAID
.QUARTERLY.

72 "'

lL 07
12. /0
'

PER YEAR ON A 30 MONTH CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
$1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT- INTEREST PAID
QUART ERLY.
PER YEAR ON A 1 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
$1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT- INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY .
PER YEAR ON A 90 DAY CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT
$1.000 .00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT- INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY.

POOL

PAID ON ALL SAVINGS ACCOUNTS, INTEREST PAID
FROM DATE OF DEPOSIT TO DATE OF WITHDRAWAL, AS LONG AS ACCOUNT REMAtNS OPEN.
NO MfN1MUM OR MAXIMUM DEPOSITS NEEDED.

Closed
6·8p m. Scu ba Div ing
8-9 30 p m Open Swim

Closed
6-8p m. Scuba D1v1ng
8 9 30 p m _Qpen Swim
CLOSED
2-4p m. Open Swim
2·4 p, m. Open Swim
7 ~9 p.m Open Sw im

"For That Personal &amp; Profession~! Toucn"
FEATURING

JOHNSON'S MOBILE HOMES JNC.

...

I

"lARGE ENOUGH TO SERVE YOO, YET SMAI! ENOUGH TO KNOW YOU."

't

I
THE ·ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS AND LOAN
COMPANY

. 446-3362

2'6

w.Second Sl.

Petit~. Oltio

' Uri f. lapis, Jr. Viet PilL

.,

i

I

Kdnaugc., Ohio

"'
.

ALL ACCOUNTS INSURED BY THE F.S.L.I.C., AN AGENCY OF ·
THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, UP TO S40,000.00. REMEM·
BER, NO ONE HAS EVER LOST BY DEPOSITING IN AN INSURED SAVINGS AND LOAN COMPANY. · ALL FUNDS
DEPOSITED WITH US ARE USED TO PROVIDE GOOD HOMES
FOR THE PEOPLE IN TollE AREAS WE SERVICE . SEE US
FIRST.

"All New AMF Equipment"

RT. 7 446-3547 GALLIPOLIS 0
WE ARE THE OLDEST MOBILE HOME DEALER INS f OHIO

.

BY FEDERAL REGULATIONS, A SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY IS
INVOKE 0 ON ALL CE RTl F ICATE ACCOUNTS WITHDRAWALS
PRIOR TO THE DATE OF MATURITY.

t

PROFESSIONAL BALL FITTING,
DR I LUNG &amp; INSTRU(:TION
AVAILABLE
SPECIAL .RATES TO:
CHURCH GROUPS
PARTIES, STU_oENTS.

We hllve a full line of VINDALE MOBILES. 60x24'- as well as 14' wides.
Wide selection and p·rice range with many floor plans to choOie from. •

.. •

NOTICE:

Specillizmg in AMF &amp;
Columbia Bowling Balls.

Our Fi.n e Quality Homesl

"';

SUNDAY I Til 5

!L

PER YEAR ON A NEW 6 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF
DE POSIT .
St,ooo.oo MINIMUM DEPOSIT- INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY.

e24 New AMF Lanes
· eSnack Bar and
Captain's Lounge

With Purchase Of Any Of

.• •

r.

7
7
6

3~07
74 /0

oPen Swim

SKYLINE LANES
and PR'O-SHOP

\

'

MORE SPECIALS IN TilE STORE

••

5:45p.m JV 's vs. Cedarville
8. 00 p.m VarSity vs. Cedarville
9- 4 8 p.m. Athletics
8-9· 30p m Open Rec.
ID-CLOSEO. &lt;'
11-2·4p.m . Open Recreation
12-2 4 p.m . Operi RecreM•on
7-9 p m . Open Recreation

'

97

ANEW HIGHER RATE OF RETURN ON YOUR SAVINGS

Jan 8- 4·6 p m Community Dance

'
',,•
'
','

VALUES TO 12.99

• I

1-9 p m .

,'

1

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

five 85-73

'

BOYS &amp; GIRLS

$

eight shots.
The only shots the youngster
missed in the second half came
when he was fouled and he
sank four free throws.
Michigan's pattern offense
put the 15th-ranked Wolvennes
ahead at halftime, 4!&gt;-35, but
every time they had a chance
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPl) to put !be game away, they
- Sophomore John Robinson made enough mistakes to let
scored a career high 28 points, the Buckeyes pull back into
mostly on layups, Saturday contention,
and m1ssed only one field goal
Bill Andreas led Ohio State
attempt tn leading Michigan to wtth 24 points and Andy
an 85-73 ,.,..., 'JJd Uhio State. Stiegemeyer added 18.
The Wolverines ·are now 2..0
Senior ce nter C. J. Kupec
in the Big Ten and 9-1 overall. scored 16 for Michigan while
Ohw State, 6-5, was playing its Joe Johnson and Wayman Bntt
first Big Ten game.
chipped in 14 aptece.
Robinson, a 6-foot-6 forward,
Robinson ended with 12 shots
scored 14 of Michigan 's first 19 out of 13 attempts and four out
points with seven layups out of of five free throws.

8:00pm Red men vs. Central State
Jan 7- 4-8 p.m. Ath letics
8-9· 30 p.m. Open Rec.

TOTAL5l3·t4-60 . ·,

SHOES

t

Michigan
tops OSU

Jan 5-7 9 p m Open Recreation
Jan 6--4-6 p.m Community Dance

LOGAN (60) - Hawk 7·4·18,
Davtdson 4 1 9, La nmg 1·0· 2,
Mulholland 1'0 2, Russell 2 0-.4,
Wright 2 S-9, Call3 1-7, Smith 0·
3 3, Peppers 3 0-6, Dollison 0-0·

. GROUP OF

~

Has a Special New Year's Announcement:

LYNE CENTER GYM &amp; POOL SCHEDULE
OATE- GYMNAStUM

TOTALS 16·13-45.

JANUARY 5TH

'.

MEIGS BRANCH

STONE MANOR DINNERWARE
AT REASONABLE PRICES

MEIGS (45) - Browning 2.0
4, Dod son 52 12. Stewar t 0 2·2,
Martm J 4 10, Marshall 3·4-10,
Scttes 3 1 7, Walt ers 0·0 O,
Ham tlton 0 0 0, Hutton 0 0-0

SUNDAY ONLY

PLAYERS SUSPENDED
EAST LANSING, Mich.
( UPI ) - Michiga n State
basketball coach Gus Ganakas
Saturday suspended 10 of 11
members of hts varsity team,
just hours before the Spartans
were to meet No. 2-ranked and
undefeated Indiana.
Ganakas announced shortly
before the game that the
playe rs were sus~ended
because they wal~ed out of a
team meeting Saturday
morning 111 an apparent protest
over !he starting lineup against
lndtana.

•

'"-----------------···;. -.1

County Jeague fonning

'

~l

,

South stops Big Blacks
Coac h Lenme Barnette and·
h1 s new edthon of Potn\
Pleasant Big Blacks must wait
sltll. another day for that
elustve firs t vtctory of the
season
Last mght, in the beautiful
new gym at Parkersburg
South, the locals seemed to be
well on the way when they led
by etgh t at halfltme. But they
turned stone cold in the third
quarter, fell behind by nine,
and finally had to se ttle for a
nine poin t defea t at lhe hands
of the dnvmg Patriots, 82-73.

coach Preece repelled South·
western 's B team 47 to 27.
-,
Wahama wlll host Kyger
Creek for its next game on
Tuesday
~
Scori ng for Wahama :
WAHAMA: 17· 16-16-11-60.
Jeff Gil l ~nd, 24; Dan Harmon,
8; Roy Tucker, 3; Chuck
Johnson , 13 ; Terry Tucker, 2;
Marty Holbrook, 6; Steve
Yow1g, 2; &amp;ott Roush, 2.
SOUTHWESTERN - 16-9-1811- 54. Kevm Walker, 6; Loyd
Wood, 27: Terry Carter, 4;
Chris Lewts, 2; Keith Grate, 10,
Rtck Crouse, 5.

The Automobile Club of Southern Ohio

blistering percentage from the
fteld, sinking 23 of 41 floor shots
for 56 pet. The Marauders of
Ron Logan hit 16 of 42 for' 38
pet.
Hawk led the Logan attack
with 18 points, while three
Marauders hit double figures,
led by Allen Dodson with 12
potnts. Jeff Martin and Charlie
Mar shall added 10 points
apiece .
,
The Marauder reserves, in a
J.way tie for third place with
Gallipolis and Waverly, will try
to pick up some groWtd on
league-leader Athens when the
Marauders host the Bulldogs •
Tuesday night.
The Chieftain reserves will
entertain the Wellston reserves
Tuesday.
Metgs
8 6 12 17-45
Logan
6 21 16 17-60

0, Clark 0·0 0

\V;ihama.

I

Ch uck John son also hit
double figures w1th 13 and Dan
llannon tallied etgh l.
Sat1shcs for Wahama tm·
proved
greatly fr om Thursday
WARREN LOOKS FOR BALL - GallipouS' Calvin (Jim) Warren, 6-4 senior center (in
night's
game . Besides a high
center ) looks for the ball during Friday's Gallipolis·Waverly basketba ll gttme at Waverly .
shoolmg percenwge the White
Warre n came off the bench for the injured Mike Sickles and picked off eight rebounds for GARS
Falcons shot ten of 13 from the
Friday. On rtght is the lad who almost single-bandedly destroyed the Blue Devils, Tim Dudu it
fl'l!C
throw hne for u 76 per cent
(SO). Tom Pfeifer (20) left, looks on. Waverly won, 64-53, to remain unbeaten m SEOAJ , play
fiS well as nabbmg 24 rebounds .
Turnovers were held to a
Hurricane, Tuesday , JuH . 7
BIG BLACKS 173 ) _ Tim nuninumt of 17 On Thursday
Cottrill 7 ( 2•2) 16 . Jim Tal· ntght Wahama lltlhed 30 tur·
'
novers
terson 7 ( (1.0 ) 14 , Larry Hess 10,
.
1he B·Team under assistant
( 4-6) 24; Btll RardinG (O·li 12;
In the final analysts, the swts hed 14, bestdes draggmg 12 out-rebow1ded PPHS, 49 to 39,
locals' IJ..5lh Larry Hess led the . caroms off the boards before and had three fewer turnovers, Andy W1lson I ( 1-2) 3; John . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
Gerlach 2 ??+?! '". Chiton ·
Did Santa Leave A Gift of Money
hit parade from the floor with foulmg out wtth 1:12 left on the 17 to 20.
Browning 0 (!&gt;-0) 0; Bret Me·
The wmners also held a Cormtck 0 (IJ.O) Tolltls :!3 (7·
24 points and was the top clock .
Under Your Tree?
reboWtder of the game with 16.
Bill Rardm, the perpetual slight edge in marksmans hip 11 ) 73.
Hess turned 111 perhaps his best motion guy, spun home 12 and from the floor . They look 82
PARK. SOUTH (82) - Jack
perforamance as a Red and turned in another harrassing pops, hit37, for 45 per cent. The Greathouse 8 (2-il ) 16; Scott
Turn if tnto a year-around
Black, with 20 of hts pomts ball-haw km g effor t . John Btg Blacks put 77 in the air, H1ll 7( 3-l!) 17; Jue Cnslip 6 ( 2·3)
AAA Membership. tt'J the
o~ly way to get ~uperb travel
commg 111 the first half. His tip· Ge rlac h added 4 and the Blue saw 33 sink, for 43 per cent.
14 ; Randy Mcl .ead 9 (1·2) 19;
a1ds and planntng services
ms during that stretch were . Moon, Andy W1lson, pt\ched m
The prelim contest was a Mike Daugherty 3 (0·1) 6;
and prole~! yourself on the
short of sensational.
3. ·
pistol too, going mto 'overtime, Chester Hoover 4 (0·0) 8;
road C Emergency Road
Service, Bail Bond and PerBut Hess was only one of four
The well-balanced and sw1ft which delayed the start of the Baker Neal 0 (0.0) 0 Totals 37
sonal
Travel Accident InBig Blacks 111 double figures as Patnot attack found 6.() Randy varstty lilt.
(11-16) 82 '
surance).
the locals saw thetr record dip Me Lead with 19, Jack
The Little Blacks and the
22 24 6 21- 7:!
to o and 2
Greathouse 16, Scot Htll17, and Ltttle Patrwts fought to a 4848 Big Blacks
18 20 23 21-82
South
Prk
.
Call or vi •~
Ttm Coltrtll knocked the Joe Crislip 14.
deadlock at the end of four
Fouls:
South 18,
Personal
bot\omoutofthe bucketwtth 16
Wh en the statisltcs were periods and Coac h Wa lt
talhes and burly Jtm Ta\terson fin ally comptled, South had Hensler's youngsters finally PPHS 17.
Fouled Out . Joe Crislip,
pulled it out, 56·50 tn an extra
-:::::::::::::::::·:·:::·:-:·:·:~::;;:~;;;:;:;:;;::;;:;;::::::::::*:•:•:::~·:::;:.:;:-;;:.;.;::.:-:·:·~:o:~:·:~;s:~~~==*~==::::::::o::::::.-::::: mnmg.
Larry Hess.
33 Court Street, Gattlpotls
Phone 446-0699
Offlctals·
Dave
Smi
th,
'J'ob:._,
Pomeroy
Phone 992-2590
The wm moved the Ltttlc
Patrtots record to 2 imd 4, the Offenbarger .
Little Blacks to 1 and I.
Next outing for the Big
CHESHIRE -Forrest (Sonny) smith, head coach of the
Blacks wtll again be on the
Cheshire Midget Foolballleam, bas announced that anyone
r
oad wh en they head for
In the county Interested In forming a county midget league
next fall should contact h'im. U enough lnlerestls shown, a
meeting will be held In the near lulure.
Smltb said communities planning to have midget football
REDSKINS TRIUMPH
teams next fall should begin working toward their goal now
OXFORD,
Ohio (UP!)
since many hoW's of hard work and planning Is involved In
Greg
Olson
h1t
a late free throw
such a program.
•
and Rod Dieringer popped in
Ills boped midget football learns In tbe county will help
f1ve free throws in the last 1:45
strengthen the high school programs p~rtlcularly since no
to boost Miami to a 67-S9 Mtd·
eouoty high school bas a junior blgh team. Any lnlerested
296 W. SECOND STREET
American Conference win over
POMEROY, 'OHIO
coach or parent Is urged to call Smith at 367·7723.
Western Mtchigan Saturday.

Papooses triumph

Eastern (3 8) - B lake 2 0-4,
were Kevin Petrie and David
Bailey 7 0 1 ~ . Spencer 3 3 9.
Swam with 9 and 8 points Harr1s 3 I 7 Good 0 2 2. Conde
respectively. Bobby Rtffle had I 0 2. E1chinger 0-0 0, Bowen o
0 0. J ackson 0 0 0, N els on 0 0 0,
7 points for the losers.
Holden 0 0 0 , F rck
0 0 0
,Hann an Trace entertains TOTALS 16·6·38.
Hannan Tran (Sl) - Hall 1.
Ute Trimble Tomcats Tuesday I 3, Hesson 5 0 10, Hmeman 0 o
night. wh1le the Eagles host o. swatn 12 a 24, Cremeans l 0
2. Halley 5 0· 10, Jones 0 o o,
North Gallia Friday night.
P et ri e 0 0 0, Shaffe r 1 0 2,
Eastern
10 10 8 10-38 Shee ts 0 0 0 TOTALS 25 -1-51.
Reserves- Hannan Trace 29
H. Trace
12 12 12 16-!il Eastern 19

.

·•

""'

lronmen to move into a four- effort was backed by Mark
way t1e with Ir onton , Buchanan who tallied 14 points
Ga llipo lis, and Logan for and led Jackson in rebounds
se cond place m the SEOAL w1th 12.
Dean Fitzpatrick led the
behind
league
Jead1n g
Tigers as· he talliealol.l points
Waverly
Coach Buddy Bell's Tigers, and snagged II rebounds , hut
one uf the strong pre-season none of his teammates scored
tttle co ntender s, suffere d m double figures.
The fronmen, who now
through an agaonizing evening
prep~re
for a visit to Waverly
as they hi t just 16 of 69 at·
Tuesday
night, led all the way
tempts for a miserable 23 pet.
The stronger Tigers, behtnd by quarter scores of 13-11, 23the reboWtding of Dean Fitz. 20, and 4(1.34 enroute to their
patnck, owned the boards as bi g victory.
II 9 14 8-42
they pulled down .53 rebounds Ironton
13 10 17 1fl..-.55
while Jackson snagged just 37. Jackson
However the Ironmen , who
IRONTON (421 FifZ ·
_previously upset Gallipolis, pa trick 2 7 1\ , E Howard 3 0 6,
Royal 2 0 4, Crockrell 1 1 31
were hot from the floor as they •Fairchtld
2 0 4, C Brown 1 0 2.
connected on 25 of 59 for 42 pet. M Brown 2 1 6, R Howa r d 3 O·
TOTJILS 16·10-42.
Jackson added '5 of 18 free 6 JACKSON
(lll - McDonald
throws whtle Ironton popped in 13 0 26 , Conroy 2 1-5, Morrow 2
1 5, Buchanan 6 2 14, Fannin 1
10 of 18 charily throws.
I 3, Sw ing le 1 0 2. TOTALS 25McDonald 's htgh sc ortn g 5-S S

HT pulls away fro:t:n Eagles
By GARY PHIU..lPS
MERCERVILLE - The
Hannan Trace W1ldcats ron·
tinued thetr domioonce m the
SV AC here Friday night as
they handed the Eastern
Eagles a 51-38 setback
The win was the 29th in a row
for the Wildcats on their home
court as well as their 21st
stra1ght SV AC wm II also
marked the 97th win of his
career for coa(lh Paul D1Uon.

Redmen cage stats.

'

lronmen rip Ironton

.

Jimmy Noe, wtth 63 caroms, is
Rio 's top rebounder after six
outmgs.

..

·.!J

J!\ CKSON - Mtke Me·
D&lt;mald pow·ed in 26 potn\s
Fnday n tgh t m leadm g the
J ackso n lr onm en past the
vts1 ltng Ironton T1gers 5542.
Th e v1ctu 1y e nc~bl ed the

Rumors around Wahama are
that the Win(&lt;) Falcons master,
Coach Bill Buckley , chewed hts
team out royally followmg its
85-76 loss Thursday night to
Buffa lo
If that ts the cftse then it
reully helped as Wahama
sonndly se nt the Highlanders
back to Southwestern Ga lli a
County F'nday evenmg, 60-54
Percentage shooting tltey hit
54 perkcent avernge from the
fi eld, wh1ch meant h1ttmg 25 of
4ti held go,als.
Behind Guard Jeff Gilland
tallymg seven points 111 the first
period, Wahama took the lead
one quurter of the way through,
17-16 Gilland wen t on to h msh
the game wtlh 24 pmnts to top

RIO GRANDE
Grande, showmg much im·
Dan Bollinger, wtth a 15.3
provement in the Marietta average, lS Rio's top scorer.
Shrine Tournament, is looking
•J
to 1975 for hopes of increasing
,I
the w.inning side of· its 2-4
season's showing.
The Central State Marauders
RIO GRANDE CAGE STATS
go against Rio Grande whe~
(S IX GAME TOTALS)
they visit Lyne Center Monday,,... G- PLAYER
FG-A FT-A RB TO A TP AVG.
night, bringing with them a !&gt;-2
6-Botl inger
40·86 12-t5 46 13
4
92 15 3
b-Barbee
record (losses tp College of
35-69
6· t1 21 IS
8 76 12" 7
6- Noe
29 74 18-24 63 19 13 76 12 7
Steubenville
and
Shaw
6-- Da vemport 31 79
9-13 20 17
7
71 II 8
College) .
6- Price
2J.43
7-9
25
9
2
49 82
Other games tlus week will
6--St ewar t
16-46
l · ll
36
6
I
37 62
6-Ai banese
see Rio Grande hos ting
9·26
5·11
2
7
7 23 3.7
5- WIIson
5 16
0J • 6
I
0 10 2.0
Cedarville Wednesday mght
l - V1ckroy
1-2
o.o
0
1
I
2 2.0
while the Redmen travel to
4-Ca ldwell
35
1-J
2
I
I
7
1.8
Canton to meet Malone College
3- Pope
2-3
0-0
I
5
I
4
1.3
Saturo;lay afternoon.
3-Swmet'lart
15
0~ 1
4
8
6
2
.7
2- Morgan
o.o
o.o
0 0 0
0
.0
Cent.ral State's starting five
6-TOTALS
193-454.
63-101
226
101
Sl
449
74.8
includes Lennis Timmons,
SEASON RECORO
Steve Bayliss, Bobby Brown,
Rio 76 Walsh 67
Harry Jackson and Kenny
R 10 47 Mad etta 67
R1o 81 Wilmington 83
&amp;nith. Brown and Jackson are
R1o 102 Dyke 104 (OTI
' top scorers with 90 points
R1o 72 Un1 v. of South 70
apiece. Jackson, a 6-6 senior, is
R1o 70 Marietta 81
' the Marauders' top rebounder.
Jan 6-Cen tra l State, home
Jan a- Cedarv ille, ho m e
Central State is being guided
Ja n ll ~ Malone, away
this year by ftrst year coach

Warren cut Waverly's lead to
doubh• figures N1day, w1th a w1th the bonus rule in effect three, 43-40, with · 6:06
spark ltng first half ( 16 pomts 1 and Wav erly nursm g a one, two remaining, but missed a free
f1r11shed the game w1th 22 or three pmnt lea ds.
The Blue Devtls had 21 throw after being fouled on the
po1n ts before foulmg out wtth
play.
I 35 left tn the game Folden personals, :lO rebounds and 10
Niday's two free throws cut
added 16 Gary Sr1owden , turnovers.
Waverly
's [ej!d to one, 43-42,
After J 1m Niday 's two free
mak1n g l11s fu· st start · of the
with
5:46
showing on the clock.
season, tossed tn etght pmnts throws gave GARS first blood ,
After
Duduit's
tip-in (5:30)
for GAllS before fouling out Waverly c 1pped off eight Mtke Sickles missed a one-and.
stra1 ght pointS during the ned
w1th 29 sectmds rcmommg
one effort and Pietfer scored on
Big Jim Warren. S.4 senior, four mmules and was on top 16- a fast break to give WHSa 47-42
('a me uff the bench early in the t2 at the fir st whistle break
During the second canto, the advantage.
first period for GAHS to
GAHS stayed w,ithin range
replace Mike Sit kles. Sickles lead exchanged hand s three although the Tigers sank six
started de spite an :mklr mjury ti mes a nd the sco re was
deadlocked three limes before consecu!tve free throws to take .
~ uffc red iu drills last Tuesday
a 53-46 lead with 3:32
afternoon Warren did a ~ood Niday's two free throws gave remaining.
,
job on the boards \lith eight big GAHS a 28-26 halltinte ad·
G
AHS
missl!d
two
more
onerehmmds 111 the second and \'a nta ge.
Action was tornd m the thtrd and.()ne attempts at the charity
third quarters.
period. The lead exchanged lme durtng the next 4!i seconds,
WdVl'l ly cullnected on 23 of
then cut Waverly's lead to
59 field goal attempts for 36 9 hands twi ce and the score was
seven,
57-50, on Folden's layup
percent All he foul circles, the !ted f1ve ttmes Galha enJoyed
wi \h I : 25 left.
T1 gers were 78.2 w1th t6 of 2:1 1ts biggest lead of the night
A layup for Dudult and two
a ttemp ts Wav erly had 19 wlt~3·58rematntng tnthe third
free
throws by Joe Holland
person.ds, Josmg Pete La swell ' pen od, 36-32 At this point:
with
54
seconds left wrapped It
and Dudml. The Tt gers ptcked Gary Snowden picked up hts
off 36 rebounds and had 11 fourth foul and left the game. up for the Tlge~s .
The victory left Waverly 8-1
turn overs.
With the score !ted 38-all,
on
the year. GAHS dropped to
Galhpohs Jut t9 of 51 fteld GAHS worked for the final shot
4-3
overall and 3-2 inside the
goal attempts for 37 2 percent of the third penod, but missed
The Gallians had their best w1th six seconds left. Tom SEOAL.
Tuesday, GAHS will host
mght of the season at the foul Pfeifer's desperation shot at
Ironton
while Waverly takes on
circle. st nk1ng 15 of 20 for 75 the buzzer gave Wa verly a 4(1.
percen t !-'our of Gallta's five :18 advantage going into the a dangerous Jackson qwi)St on
the Tiger boards.
rn1sses came m the ftnal penod ftnal pertod

Logan
blasts
Marauders
..

I'

'

I

OP

8 I 543 45.J
Wa&gt;.Jerlv
7 I 570 J6J
South Po1nt
Hannan Tra ce
7 2 513 4B I
L og an
6 2 49 2 &lt;~56
6 2 463 37 4
W h ee le rsburg
5 2 )9 7 347
Jac kson
Portsmout h
5 3 495 459
-100 368
Gallipolts
'
3 515 J85
1ron ton
'
4
Athens
J 6 531 514
M ei gs
I 5 342 .J07
0 6 27 b J 10
We llston
Area results
Hannan Tra ce 51 East ern 38
Spnngfie ld S 76 Portsmout h 59
Wheelersburg 10 Green J7

uppn hand Th{· n

\\JJI'th ·

mandged jtL~t 16 of 52 tn es for
31 pet .
Randy Horn added 15 pmn t.s
and 10 rebounds for the wm.
ners wh tle Todd Ellwo od
garnered 10 markers.
Wellston 's Randy Peoples,
who entered the contest as the
SEGAL's leading scorer w1th a
19 point avera ge, was lun1ted
W Jllqt 10 pomts by the
tenacious Bulldog defense
Terry G1 fl tuok sco nn g
honors lor the Rockets wtth 11
potnts wlule Terry McKtnruss
led in rebounding wtth 6
The foul shooting by both
IS reboWtdS - Epltng had SIX
teams
left somethtng to be
- and committed 17 costly
destred
as Athens converted
turnovers. At the foul circles,
GARS was four of mne (seven just 16 of :n wile Wellston
personals ) while Waverly was made 8 of 16 fr shots.
Well•ton
13 4 11&gt;-40
four of sue (nine personals ).
Athens
20
20
15 23- 76
· The loss knocked GARS out
Rese
rv
es
Athens
67
of a four-way lie for first place
and left them 4.J on the year Wellston 24.
WELLSTON (~0)
Sc !IC S '1
and 3-2 inside the league
1 s People s ~ 0 10 Me K 1t1ntSC.
3 17 Arnold 11 ] Gr\ 1 35 11
Box score :

Fridays Basketball Results

"W(· had the mom entum
~u in ~ for us iu lht• third period.
tn ~ h'ad of &lt;'arrying
that
mnml'ntum into th ~· fina l
pt'rtnd . \H' let lhem get the

d iH!

l11 s sl.t ff sa1d the 13luc De \ll s
not execute I hen uffens1ve
p,tll('l'lb \\ l' il dunn~ the second

m ont') 's

Ap·

ro:1cl , ·· ()sbilrne continued.

6-Sl cnter Tun Dudmt
who d1 d most of th e damH ~e
ag;uns t GAHS Fnday alth ough
the '1'1 ge rs di spl ayed a
lml;~n ced sconn g atta ck
Af ter ptck1ng off seven f1rst
ha lf rebounds , Oudutt came
back tn the second half wtth 11
b1 g snags , four uf them un tipms He wilted t5 pomts before
fo ulm K out wtlh 45 secon ds
1 cmamm g 1n the game
Doug Tr acy and Tom P!e1fer
each added 15 pmnts wh1le J oe
Holland pltnlped tn 12 for the
leCJ g uc l eade1 s
J1m t\1day and Tony Folden

d1d

back as they led by quarter
score s of 2!&gt;-13, 4!&gt;-26, and 5!&gt;-30.
wlule permtttmg the Golden
Rockets a total of 14 potnts tn
the second ball
Paced by b1g Arn ie Chonko's
21 pmnts and 12 rebounds the
Bulldogs scorched the nets to
UJC tune of 52 pet as they sank
30 of 56 .shots whtle Wellston

BLUE IMPS (24) Kt
H ck son . o o a. Kv Jac kson , o
0 0 . Wade , 0 1 1. Sw arn ] 0 6,
Ep lmg , 4 0 8 . Dresse l !, 1 3 5
IS aa cs. 0 o o. Bush . 1 o 2,
Skaggs. , 0 0 0 Wa rr en . 0 0 O,
W rseman , 1 0 2 , Hav crafl . 0 0
. 0 T0TALS104 ~ 24
CUBS (51) - Shoemaker J
0 6. Crace , 1 0 2 B Fy ffe , 5]
13 , Stayton 0 0 0 Brow 11. o o
0 , Ja c kson , 2 1 5. Jones , o o o.
Davena , J 0 6
Ka li s . 0 0 0 .
Towler . 0 0 0. Keg l ey 0 0 0. C
F yffe , I 0 2. Thomp son 9 0 !8
TOTAlS 24· 4-52
Score by quar rers
Blue I mps
1 7 6 .. 24
16 18 12 6- 52
Cubs

ln h:O., a dejected 0Jcil'h

g1md S('f ap uu t t!JPrt:' lum g h l,
saJcl Co&lt;H:h Hem !Ire Ill' adr h•d,
· !he f.m s r e&lt;~ll\· gu t llwrr

Blue Imps downed
WAVERLY
Chuck
Th ompson , 5-11 fresh man
guard, tall1ed 18 points and
ptcked off rune rebounds to
pace Coach Ga ry Jenkins
Waverly Cubs to a convincing
52-24 triumph over Coach
Wtllard ( Buddy) Moore's
Gallipolis Blue Imps here
Friday mght.
Bob Fyffe added 13 markers
as the Cubs held quarter leads
of 16-7, 34-14 and 46-20.
Waverly hit 24 of 42 field goal
at tempts for a sizzlmg 57
pen-en!, picked off 27 rebounds
and commttted 16 turi10vers
enroute to its Uurd reserve
league victory against two
setbacks.
Kent Ephng paced the Blue
Imps with eight pomts. Gary
Swam added six. The Imps hit
10 of 40 field goal attempts for a
cool 25 percent.· The Imps had

M1 · . HI\1

.! 1111 Os holll l'

han rl

Athens crushes Rockets
ATHENS - After batlling
through three heartbreaking
losses the Athens Bulldogs
fmally htt a breather Friday
night as they rolled to an easy
78-40 vtrtory over wmless
Wellston with 10 pla y'ers
contrtbu tmg to the Bulldog
scoring.
The Bulldogs ra ced to a
quick 9-0 lead and never looked

11 llnl'SSe&lt;l I he SEOA I. 's featui· e play &lt;·al&lt;:hup. It's hard to play
l' a trhup. t•spt·cially on the
ut lnl l'llon

- ·.Rio' Dr. Lu Wtms .

.

'

White Falcons
trip Highland~rs

R .io to host Central State
Marauders Monday ~v.ening

•

Waverly a full 2 games up in le.a gue race

'

17- The SWiday Ttmes ·Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 5, 1975

'

16 - The Sunday Tunes -Sent mel , Sunda), Jan. 5. 1975

.

.

I

II

�'

.'

'.

. I
•

•

)

Tigers take command with win over Blue DevilS
Wav erly
WAVERLY
out scored \' ! S ttm~=: Ga ll! polls 2111 dun ng the fmal 5 30 of play
l1ere Fnday mght to break up a
d\lse ga me and ttlr result was
a 64-53 hard\\ond vtc lor) for

Coac h
T1gers

Carr oll

Ha11 hee's

Sout lwash•rn Oh10
Lra gut• trtumph. Wa\ t•rly's
Th('

~

fifth "ithout a ddcat. left tht•
Tigrrs• '''~' gar~H's 111 front , of
GallipOliS, Iront on, .J ac·kstm
a nd Lo~an
Before Waverly's la te surge.
the lead exchanged hand s t~t ght

tunes and the St'OJ c was deadlocked on rune dtfferPnl oc casions
Dunng the ftn :t f f1v e und

Ull C-

ha lf IIHnut eS, Waverl y sank 14
of Hi free llll o w~ whtl e rlaymg
' ke ep-H\\H y" HfiC'f ,J..',l-llllUIJ:: &lt;.Jn
UJ.'Pt'l

Your

[)( I\

s

~; 1 \e

us

}J

rl';d

Martella 65 Upper Arlington 63
Perry 4Y LOU ISVI lle 43
Cuy6hog a Fa ll s 59 Can'ton L eh
m a n 57 [oil
Can t on M cK1nley 71 Lrma
Sc n•or 70
Ca nto n So ulti 73 Marti ng ton 58
All ra,uce 61 M ass illon 50
Jack~on 51 Gle nwood 49
Fatrles s 55 North Canto n
Hoover 51
St
Thomas
Aq u 1n as
74
Mrn e rva 66
Nor t hw es t 68 East Canton 62
Tuslaw 69 San dy Valley 42
Cuy
Chr is tian Academy 46
Brunn erdale &lt;~ 5
Ak ro n But chel 74 A kr on South

63

AKron Ce nt r al Hower 60 Akron
Garf ie ld 59
BtHb ert on 71 Sa lem 55
Woo s ter 59 Do"' er 54
Nordonta 50 Ke nt Roosevelt .j ]
Da l t on 60 Waynedale J4
l:&gt;ay Dunbar 83 Day Kt ser 44
Center&gt;.JII \e b1 Fat rb orn Baker

45

T al\awa nd a 66 Lebanon 54
Defrance 79 Wapakoneta 67
Ha mrlton Gar tt eld 53 H~m rlton
Badin 50
Gr a h etm 64 Mtamt Ea st 63
F r ank\1n Monroe 78 Twtn
Valley North o1
Shertdan 71 Phtlo 53
West Muskrngum 67 Morgan 64
N ew L exmg ton 76 Tr \ va l ley 52
Caldwell 61 Skyv ue JB
Fo rt Fr ye 59 Frontier 40
Ste uben v•l le 68 Wetrlon w Va

64

Shad yside 81 Union Local 58
M tn go Jun c l tO n 55 Steubenvill e

cc 50

Toro nto 6Y Bucke ye Nort h 55
Carrollton 70 Clay mont 55
R tdgewood 7'J Newc om erst own

' .

58

Mans
St
Pet er s 6J Trll rn
Calvert 42
Ontario 70 Cr es tl in e 39
Hamilton C arft eld 53 H ~mt lt on
Badm 50
Far rvt ew 73 Pau ldll\g 48
Patr1 c k Henry 71 Napol eo n 57
H am11ton Town ship 74 Teays
Valley 41
Re.,-noldsburg 70 Westervr ll e 65
Whitehall 68 Mount Vernon 48
Worthtngton 54 Hilliard 51
Gro &gt;.J eporr 7Y Oetaw~r e n D

oil

Cots Ready 55 Cots Wenrle 52
Co ts
Watterson v11 1 Cols
Hartley 67
fl
Franldin His 109 Dublin 42
Wes t Je ff erson 57 Olenta ngy 50
· Gra n v il le 77 MarySVIlle 59
Danvi l le 97 Cols Academy 51

High School
Basketball
Standings
'

TEAM

All GAMES

wl

P

N ew Ph rla 65 Coshoc ton SJ
IV South 58 Ga raway 51
West Holmes 58 Orrvtlle 45
Anthony Way n e 55 Rossf ord 54
Gtrclrd 60 Ca mpbell 58
Yg South 75 Yg Cha ney 51
SEOAL VARSITY
Yg
Mooney 55 Austmtown
TEAM
W L
P
Ft tCh 5J
Waverly
5 0 J ll
Yg Ursul tn e Bl Struthers 48
1ron ton
3 2 317
Sebr tng 5-i Un ti ed .J1
Galltpo
lis
3 2 295
Warren J F K 58 Poland 56
Logan
3 ~ 305
W&lt;~rrE:•n wesr
Res 53 N iles 51
Jackson
J 2 21 1
Boardman 76 Hubbard 66
Ath ens
1 3 297
Champron 66 Matthews 51
Me tgS
1 .J 296
Howl and 58 Caniteld 57
Wellston
a
5 236
Spf l d
Loc cl l
n
western
TOTALS
20 20 1318
Reser ve 36
Frtday ' s. results.
Warren Ha rd tng 66 Ea s t
waver l y 64 Galltpolis 53
Lt verpoo l 63
Logan 82 Me1gs 52
Co l umbiana 74 Ltsbon 64
Ja c kson 55 1ron ton 42
Shaker H eights 65 Euclid 57 Parma 70 Ga rt re ld He1ghts 50 . Athens 78 Wel ts ton .JO
Ea s t Clevela n d Shaw 61
SEOAL R~SERVES
No rmand y 56
TEAM
W l
,
Berea 55 Midpar"' 47
Athens
4 1 262
Olm ste d F alls 70 North 0\m
Logan
4 I 232
sJ.ed 62
Me to S
3 2 19 5
Cle St Jose pll 69 Par ma Pad u a
wa Ve rly
3 1 176
62
Ga l ltPOI1s
3 2 191
Brecksv ttle 52 warrensv tll e 47
J a c kson
1 J 231
Indep en dence 51 N Royalton
Ironton
1 J 111
46
Wellston
0 5 \ 46
E lyna 78 Lorarn 53
TOTALS
20 20 1004
Par ma B y zantrne 53 Cle Holy
Friday ' s resu lh :
Na me 50
waverly 52 Ga llrpo1 ts 24
Cl e St. E d wa rd 64 Cle West
Logan 60 Me igs -1.5
Tech 61
Jt'CkS00 50 l ronfon 16
Un 111 ers t ty Sch oo l 76 Centr,al
Athen~ 67 Wellston 2J
Cath olic 66 \
Tu es da y ' s games
Elyr i a Cathol rc 65 Lorain
Ironton at Gal lt polis
Southv tew 61
Athens at Metgs
Elyr ta West 57 Sa ndu sky
Wellston at Logan
- ~erkins 47
Jackson at Waver l y
Gahanna SJ Westland 48
Rock Hill at South Po tnt
Col s. St. Chart~s 107 Cots
Tr rmble at Hannttn Tra ce
OeSales 78
Newark 59 Chtlltcothe 113
SEOAL FRESHMEN
Zanesville 13 Lancaster 52
Tea m
WL P
Canal ·
W rnct1es ter
85 Gallipolis
4
1 2~
F&gt; i cker tngton 49
Logan
4
1
210
Logan E l m 81 Lancas t er
Athens
4 1 1f4
Ft sher .s7
·
Me1gs
2 3 18'f
Circle11 i l !e 7\ H illsboro 40
Nelsonv ille York 71 Alexander
Waverly
2 3 175

60
Ross Zane
53

Trac e 71 Hunt .ngton

S~rtngf 1 e l d

South

76 Port -

smouth 59
Spfld
Shawne e 65 Cl ark
N 'western 32
Wheelersburg 70 Green 117
Valley 86 South Webster 64
New Boston s.c Portsmouth
' West 47
St Marys 78 Cet1na 70
Sf Henry 56 Fl Recov-ery 44
Lima Bath 96 Van Wert 94
,
Sidney Lehman 73 Ind ian Lake

67

'

.

Ironton
Jackson
Wellston
TOTALS

Thu,rsday's

2 3 162
2 3 178
0 5 117
20' 20 1454

iesults !

Gallipolis 44 Wa;;erly 36
Jackson 40 Ironton 39
Logan 38 Meigs 34
Athens 40 Wollston 26
Monday's games :
Gall•polis at Ironton
Waverly a t Jackson

Meigs at Athens
Logan at Wellst,on
,.

were the only B lu e De v il s tn

C ·HI S let

prOX IIIJHie l\

2,200 spt'l 1-&lt;.JtOJ S

M rl l t k e n \ 0 2 LO IHl I 0 2
TOTALS 16 ·8-40
AT H ENS{18)
BI,1 Ck ford 0
J J. Bu t ne r 2 1 6. Chonko 8 5 1 1
Oatley J I ?, Ellwood s 0 10
Faul kn er 1 'J 6, Gr een 'l 0 1
Gr('er 2 0 J , Petty 1 0 7 H orn 5
5 15 TOTALS J O 18 78

lll l'lllbf'! s of

Jl;!lf

1he cu&lt;:1 c h cs

'('11o

lll~ln\ '

Wave~

buckets

casr

felt

lj have lou
un -

dernc;;lh On the other hand ,
Wa\'l' ri l 's Iough defense kept
(;1\HS shoot ers (J Uts•de mus t of
the ga lrl P dlld the T1ge rs
l unt1Dlkd
IJ oth baekbn&lt;~ nl.s

\H'

had to

wr~ s

It

GARS-Waverly box.

• •

.
.
GA HS BLUE OEVILS (53)

PLAYER- Pos.
Mtke S1ckl es f
Tom Va lentm e, c
Jtm N1day . g
Brent John son , g
Tony F oldE"n , f
Gary Snowden g
Brent Saunde r s, I
Jtm Wa rren , c
Brett Wil son , g

TOTALS
PLAYER- Pos.
oOOg Tra cy, I
Joe Hol land . I
Ttm Dud Jt t. c
Tom Pf e1f er, g
Pe l e Laswel l, g
Jtm Whal ey, g
Robb1 e Scagg s, c

FG.A FT·A PF RB TO TP
OJ

OJ

4

1

1

0

1).
1 20
0 I

22

0
1
I

5
1
0

0
J
I

4

2
5
0

7
5
I

2
1
0

7

aa
I 1
22
22

11

39
00
II

00

22
I

16
8
0

01
3
8
I
2
00
00
I 0 0 0
19-51 15·20 21 30 10 53
WAVERLY TIGERS 1641
FG-A FT A PF RB TO TP
59
55
3
5
2
15
5 15 2 2
I
5
2
12
7 13 I 3
1
ta
I
15
4· 12 7-9
2
2
3
15
28
00
5
2
2
4

TOTALS

02

3· 4

3

I

3

0 0

00
18-23

0

0

0

0

19

36

II

64

IS 14 24 -

23-59

'

Score by quar ters :

GA HS Blue Dev1ls

12 16 10

53

Waverly T1gers
Off1c1als chap ter

16

64

J•m

10

Detillton &amp; Scotty Gr ies he 1mer, Chillic oth e
_ __..

. "'

LOGAN
The Logan
Chteftams of Scott Fitzgerald
fired a bhstering 58 pet. from
the floor enroule ln an easy 82·
52 triumph over the Metgs
Marauders here Fnday mght
The Mara uders, in dropping
thetr fifth game m SIX starts,
hi t a respectable 48 pet. from
the held, but were outrebounded by the Chiefta ins 29·
13.
However, a Logan fa stbreak
broke the game wide open in
.the second quarter as the
Ch iefta ms outsc ored the
Marauders 24-8 after taking a
19-14 lead m the first penod.
Logan continued to outscore
the Marauders in the third
period, 16-13, before rolling for
23 potnts m the fina l stanza to
17 for Meigs.
Mitch Wnght, sinkmg II of 18
from the fl oor, led all scorers
w1th 24 pomts as the Ch1eftatns
placed 5 players m double
ftgW'es. Other Indians in lwtn
figW'es were Jtm Kemper with
II points, and Jan Myers. Scott
Gosnell and M1ke McBroom

with 10 e~
Mitch Jlteadows led the

Marauders both on the boards
and in the scoring colu mn,

Meigs-Logan box. ..
MEIGS (52 )
FG-A FT-A RB PF TP

PLAYER
Brauer
Browntng

I 7

Meadows

7

Randolph

44
6 10

00
24

19
10

Da venport
Wa l burn
Coa ts
Blan chard
Cremeans

23
23

02
02
0 I

0-1
1I

•

Wh1tlatch
Dod son

TOTALS

3

2

a

4
I
I

0
0

0

10
16
10
12

4

I

I

I

0

0

I

2

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0-0

00

0

0-0

0 0•

0-1

oo'

0
0

0-4

00
6-ll

I

17
23-47
9
52
LOGAN (821
FG.A FT·A RB PF TP
56 . 0 0
J
2 10
45
22
2
2 10

PLAYER
M ye r s
Gosn ell

Kemp er

5· 14

48
11 ·18

Young
Wr 1ght
Fu ll er
M cBroo m
M ara

22

5-7
23
02
0-0
3a-65

See I
Thrush

TOTALS
MEIG S
LOGAN

5

I 2
11

1
4

II

5

22

7

3

24

00
0-0
00

3
I
2

0
0
• I

4
10
4

00
00

I
0
29

0
0
13

0
0

6-7

8 IJ

17
19 24 16 23

14

9

82
52

82

hitting for I~ pomL• and hauling
m 8 missed shots to lead both
teams Three other Marauders
hit double figuges, with junior
Mick Davenport getting 12 and
sophomores Steve Randolph
and Greg Browning 10 points
apiece.
Logan COtiDected on 38 of 65
floor shots while htl\ing 6 of 7 at
the chanty stripe. Metgs hit 23
of 47 field goal attempts and
just 6 of IS at the foul line.
While Meadows was far and
away the top rebounder for'
Metgs, Wright led• Chteftam
boardwork with 7 rebounds,
followed by Don Young and
Kemper wtth 5 each.
Wtth the win the Chieftains
move mto a share of second
place in the SEOAL standings
wtth a 3-2 mark, whtle Fitz.
gerald 's qwntet ts 6-2 overall.
The tads of Roger Brauer, on
the other hand, drop to 14 in
league actiOn, l..S overa ll.
Both squads resume league
action Tuesday as Meigs hosts
Athens and the Chieft ains
entertain the Wellston Ro ckets.

After one quarter the
W1ldcat s held a slim 11-10 lead.
Htgh scorer for H.T m the first
stanza was Mark Swain wtth 6
pomts Greg Batley pumped 111
6 for Ute Eagles m the fir st
penod
The game contmued close as
U1e 'Cats could only manage to
outsore the Eagles 12-10. For
the two-tune chan1ps m the
second penod, Wayne Hesson

added l pomts Mtke Harris
pumped m 5 for the Eagle
cause.
The half time score stood at
OP
23-20 m favor of HTilS.
2 ~':1
Hannan Trace slowly started
287
266
pulling away from the Eagles
~87
m the thtrd penod as !hey
253
258
outscored EHS 12-ll. For the
35 1
Wtldca\s in the third stanza
363
2128
Swam added 6. Greg Bailey
pumped in 6 points for the
Eagles in the third penod. The
score after three periods stood
at 3:&gt;-28, HatiDan Trace.
Hannan Trace outscored
OP
170.
Eastern agam m the fourth
203
period , 16-10. For the 'Cats tn
l JS
F a rrfr eld Un1on 13 Mo\tersport
Monroe Jtl L 1n Walnut H tl1~ 46'
the final period Swain pwnped
157
Ham tlfon Tt\ft 77 Lakota 51
58
'105
C1'1t \ l tcothe Fl a gel n
P tk e
Madtson 6J Mtdd l e Fenwtck 60
in
I0 points Tim Spencer had 4
23 1
Un tolo 86 Wilm ington 49
Weslern 53
for the Eagles in Ute
points
211
Sou th eas tern 76 Pi' '"' Va l ley 65
Peebles 93 Man c.hester 65
282
Buckeye Valley 52 North Un ron
Mar ton Cath 49 Cardrn g ton J5
stanza.
~,
final
1604
38
Mt G1lead 73 H tghla nd 53
Hannan Trace sank 25 of 60
Valley Forg(' 69 Bbrush 58
Mohawk. 69 Ctvde 60
61 MCir l Ot1 Hardmg 50 F tndla y 49 floor attempts for 42 pet. The
Cl!ve l a nd
H e tghts
( oil
Lakewood 57
Wildcats hit only I of 13 foul ·
Mayf teld 52 Be&gt;d ford J8 ' ot l
Bowl tng Gr een 73 Fostona 36
East l a~e No r th 80 W tll Sou t h
To! Central 73 Tol L tbbey 69
shots.
66
.
To l St F ranC IS 11 Tot Start 46
The Eagles htt 16 of 62 shots
Mentor 68 MCJple He ights 63
Yg Card tnal St r ttc h 53 To t
A von Lake 67 M edm a JJ
for 25 pet. and 6 of 13 fo\ll shots.
Rogers 72 •
Bay 78 Fatrvtew 7J
,
To l Bowsher 62 Tot Woodwa rd
Hannan Trace grabbed 32
westlaKe 63 RocKy R tver 56
61
Chardon 65 Au rora 61
To l Dt&gt;Vrl b tSS 66 To\ Waite 29
rebounds on Ute night, led by
Wes t&gt; Geauga 55 Kens ton :.t 7
Tol Wh rtme r 55 Tol Sl John 52
Swain
with 16.
Orange 51 So lon 56
To t Scott . 56 Tot Macom b er 49
Perr
y
68
P
ym
at
un
lng
V
a
lley
6?
With
the win, Hannan Trace
M
a
ume-e
75
La
k
e
59
OP
tab ula
Ed gewood
60
Perrysburg 63 Springf teld 58
upped
its
record to 7-2 overall
193 Ash
Sylv an ra 65 Por t Cl rnton 46
Ashtabu la. SJ
154 Mad
and 6·0 in SVAC actton.
ison 71 Asht St John 55
Elmwood 80 Woodmere 68
170 Conn~a u r 57 P~J ines R tvers id e Genoa 66 Otsego 41
Eastern dropped to 1·7 overall
190
Oak Harbor 76 G ibsonburg 71
53
and
14 in the SV AC.
Brooks
1
de
19
Oberl
tn
77
180
162 C\eai- 1J 1ew 51 M rdv ie w 55
CAGER SUSPENDED
·The Wildcat reserves upped
208 Avon 70 idighland 58
HOUSTON
( UP!)
their
SVAC record to 4-2 as
F
tr
elands
66
South
Amherst
Jl
197 Cha g r tn Falls 49 TW !hSburg JJ
University
of
Hawaii
they
posted
a 2!1-19 victory over
1454 ' Lalo.e c~tholic 74 W t ck.l ~ ff e 71
Coach
Bruce
O'Neil
Basketball
the
Eagl~
.
Tr, wa y 60 Cloverle af 32
Cin . Bacon 62 Ci n . Woodward
Saturday suspended starting
The .difference in Ute game
52
center Tommy Barker for an came in· the second and third
Ctn . Taft 68'\·.( :ln . Atken 65
C1n Sf X av •er 77 Cin Moel le r , indefmite
' period
for periods. The Wildcats held the
56
.
"disc
ipli
nary
.
reasons"
U ttle Eagles scoreless m the
Cin Purcell 68 C:m La Salle 50
Cin Hughes 58 Cm w H il ls 56
following the Rainbows' losS to S&lt;:rond stanza and aUowed onlv
• Cotera•n ao Forest Park 70
the University of Houston • 2 pomts m the third perioe •
lnd tan H ill 81 Mad ei ra 7J
Love land 6 ~ D eer Park 30
High scorers for the wi{Ule't ,, ·
F~1da y nigh t.

High school results.

'

••

t

_j

I

Terps top Irish
COLLEGE PARK, Md.
(UP!)- John Lucas and Owen
Brown scored 23 and 22 pomts,
respectively, to lead the
seve nth-ran ked Maryla nd
Terrapins to a 91).82 victory
over Notre Dame Saturday in a
homecomm g spo iler for
Wa shin gton, D. C. nattve
Adri an Dantley, who led j the
Irish with 29 pomts.
The Terps pulled out in front
mid-way through the fir st half,
took a 46-37lead mto the locker
room at halftime, and stayed
ahead for the rest of the game.

••

LOG AN - . The Meigs
Marauder reserves, playing
without the services of Greg
Browmng wh o was moved up to
the var ~tty, fell to 3-2 in the
SEOAL reserve race here
Fn day night, droppiog a 60-45
decisiOn to the Logan reserves.
Metgs jumped out to an ~
lead after one period, before
the Chteftatns exploded for 21
pomts m th e second frame
whil e ltmiting Meigs to just 6.
The Ch teftains , like their
varsity coWt terparts, htt a

Introducing

.MIKASA

r.&gt;
-~~
•••

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS AND LOAN
COMPANY

Currently Being Displayed In Our Windows .

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
404 Second Av~:

Gallipolis, Ohio

~500

SAVE

to $900

( ON ALL

MOBILE HOMES
ITS OUR

WINTER SPEC·IAL

"' .

-

I

Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan

GET ALITTON MICROWAVE OVEN

FR.EE•I

•

::
.,
•,

•
•

.

s;.
.•.

'

:..
.,

..•
..
.' .•
••
•

.••.•
·.•••••
.
••

· WEEKDAYS 10 TIL 9

.-

~ PER YEAR ON A 4 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
" $1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT- INTEREST PAID
.QUARTERLY.

72 "'

lL 07
12. /0
'

PER YEAR ON A 30 MONTH CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
$1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT- INTEREST PAID
QUART ERLY.
PER YEAR ON A 1 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
$1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT- INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY .
PER YEAR ON A 90 DAY CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT
$1.000 .00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT- INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY.

POOL

PAID ON ALL SAVINGS ACCOUNTS, INTEREST PAID
FROM DATE OF DEPOSIT TO DATE OF WITHDRAWAL, AS LONG AS ACCOUNT REMAtNS OPEN.
NO MfN1MUM OR MAXIMUM DEPOSITS NEEDED.

Closed
6·8p m. Scu ba Div ing
8-9 30 p m Open Swim

Closed
6-8p m. Scuba D1v1ng
8 9 30 p m _Qpen Swim
CLOSED
2-4p m. Open Swim
2·4 p, m. Open Swim
7 ~9 p.m Open Sw im

"For That Personal &amp; Profession~! Toucn"
FEATURING

JOHNSON'S MOBILE HOMES JNC.

...

I

"lARGE ENOUGH TO SERVE YOO, YET SMAI! ENOUGH TO KNOW YOU."

't

I
THE ·ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS AND LOAN
COMPANY

. 446-3362

2'6

w.Second Sl.

Petit~. Oltio

' Uri f. lapis, Jr. Viet PilL

.,

i

I

Kdnaugc., Ohio

"'
.

ALL ACCOUNTS INSURED BY THE F.S.L.I.C., AN AGENCY OF ·
THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, UP TO S40,000.00. REMEM·
BER, NO ONE HAS EVER LOST BY DEPOSITING IN AN INSURED SAVINGS AND LOAN COMPANY. · ALL FUNDS
DEPOSITED WITH US ARE USED TO PROVIDE GOOD HOMES
FOR THE PEOPLE IN TollE AREAS WE SERVICE . SEE US
FIRST.

"All New AMF Equipment"

RT. 7 446-3547 GALLIPOLIS 0
WE ARE THE OLDEST MOBILE HOME DEALER INS f OHIO

.

BY FEDERAL REGULATIONS, A SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY IS
INVOKE 0 ON ALL CE RTl F ICATE ACCOUNTS WITHDRAWALS
PRIOR TO THE DATE OF MATURITY.

t

PROFESSIONAL BALL FITTING,
DR I LUNG &amp; INSTRU(:TION
AVAILABLE
SPECIAL .RATES TO:
CHURCH GROUPS
PARTIES, STU_oENTS.

We hllve a full line of VINDALE MOBILES. 60x24'- as well as 14' wides.
Wide selection and p·rice range with many floor plans to choOie from. •

.. •

NOTICE:

Specillizmg in AMF &amp;
Columbia Bowling Balls.

Our Fi.n e Quality Homesl

"';

SUNDAY I Til 5

!L

PER YEAR ON A NEW 6 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF
DE POSIT .
St,ooo.oo MINIMUM DEPOSIT- INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY.

e24 New AMF Lanes
· eSnack Bar and
Captain's Lounge

With Purchase Of Any Of

.• •

r.

7
7
6

3~07
74 /0

oPen Swim

SKYLINE LANES
and PR'O-SHOP

\

'

MORE SPECIALS IN TilE STORE

••

5:45p.m JV 's vs. Cedarville
8. 00 p.m VarSity vs. Cedarville
9- 4 8 p.m. Athletics
8-9· 30p m Open Rec.
ID-CLOSEO. &lt;'
11-2·4p.m . Open Recreation
12-2 4 p.m . Operi RecreM•on
7-9 p m . Open Recreation

'

97

ANEW HIGHER RATE OF RETURN ON YOUR SAVINGS

Jan 8- 4·6 p m Community Dance

'
',,•
'
','

VALUES TO 12.99

• I

1-9 p m .

,'

1

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

five 85-73

'

BOYS &amp; GIRLS

$

eight shots.
The only shots the youngster
missed in the second half came
when he was fouled and he
sank four free throws.
Michigan's pattern offense
put the 15th-ranked Wolvennes
ahead at halftime, 4!&gt;-35, but
every time they had a chance
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPl) to put !be game away, they
- Sophomore John Robinson made enough mistakes to let
scored a career high 28 points, the Buckeyes pull back into
mostly on layups, Saturday contention,
and m1ssed only one field goal
Bill Andreas led Ohio State
attempt tn leading Michigan to wtth 24 points and Andy
an 85-73 ,.,..., 'JJd Uhio State. Stiegemeyer added 18.
The Wolverines ·are now 2..0
Senior ce nter C. J. Kupec
in the Big Ten and 9-1 overall. scored 16 for Michigan while
Ohw State, 6-5, was playing its Joe Johnson and Wayman Bntt
first Big Ten game.
chipped in 14 aptece.
Robinson, a 6-foot-6 forward,
Robinson ended with 12 shots
scored 14 of Michigan 's first 19 out of 13 attempts and four out
points with seven layups out of of five free throws.

8:00pm Red men vs. Central State
Jan 7- 4-8 p.m. Ath letics
8-9· 30 p.m. Open Rec.

TOTAL5l3·t4-60 . ·,

SHOES

t

Michigan
tops OSU

Jan 5-7 9 p m Open Recreation
Jan 6--4-6 p.m Community Dance

LOGAN (60) - Hawk 7·4·18,
Davtdson 4 1 9, La nmg 1·0· 2,
Mulholland 1'0 2, Russell 2 0-.4,
Wright 2 S-9, Call3 1-7, Smith 0·
3 3, Peppers 3 0-6, Dollison 0-0·

. GROUP OF

~

Has a Special New Year's Announcement:

LYNE CENTER GYM &amp; POOL SCHEDULE
OATE- GYMNAStUM

TOTALS 16·13-45.

JANUARY 5TH

'.

MEIGS BRANCH

STONE MANOR DINNERWARE
AT REASONABLE PRICES

MEIGS (45) - Browning 2.0
4, Dod son 52 12. Stewar t 0 2·2,
Martm J 4 10, Marshall 3·4-10,
Scttes 3 1 7, Walt ers 0·0 O,
Ham tlton 0 0 0, Hutton 0 0-0

SUNDAY ONLY

PLAYERS SUSPENDED
EAST LANSING, Mich.
( UPI ) - Michiga n State
basketball coach Gus Ganakas
Saturday suspended 10 of 11
members of hts varsity team,
just hours before the Spartans
were to meet No. 2-ranked and
undefeated Indiana.
Ganakas announced shortly
before the game that the
playe rs were sus~ended
because they wal~ed out of a
team meeting Saturday
morning 111 an apparent protest
over !he starting lineup against
lndtana.

•

'"-----------------···;. -.1

County Jeague fonning

'

~l

,

South stops Big Blacks
Coac h Lenme Barnette and·
h1 s new edthon of Potn\
Pleasant Big Blacks must wait
sltll. another day for that
elustve firs t vtctory of the
season
Last mght, in the beautiful
new gym at Parkersburg
South, the locals seemed to be
well on the way when they led
by etgh t at halfltme. But they
turned stone cold in the third
quarter, fell behind by nine,
and finally had to se ttle for a
nine poin t defea t at lhe hands
of the dnvmg Patriots, 82-73.

coach Preece repelled South·
western 's B team 47 to 27.
-,
Wahama wlll host Kyger
Creek for its next game on
Tuesday
~
Scori ng for Wahama :
WAHAMA: 17· 16-16-11-60.
Jeff Gil l ~nd, 24; Dan Harmon,
8; Roy Tucker, 3; Chuck
Johnson , 13 ; Terry Tucker, 2;
Marty Holbrook, 6; Steve
Yow1g, 2; &amp;ott Roush, 2.
SOUTHWESTERN - 16-9-1811- 54. Kevm Walker, 6; Loyd
Wood, 27: Terry Carter, 4;
Chris Lewts, 2; Keith Grate, 10,
Rtck Crouse, 5.

The Automobile Club of Southern Ohio

blistering percentage from the
fteld, sinking 23 of 41 floor shots
for 56 pet. The Marauders of
Ron Logan hit 16 of 42 for' 38
pet.
Hawk led the Logan attack
with 18 points, while three
Marauders hit double figures,
led by Allen Dodson with 12
potnts. Jeff Martin and Charlie
Mar shall added 10 points
apiece .
,
The Marauder reserves, in a
J.way tie for third place with
Gallipolis and Waverly, will try
to pick up some groWtd on
league-leader Athens when the
Marauders host the Bulldogs •
Tuesday night.
The Chieftain reserves will
entertain the Wellston reserves
Tuesday.
Metgs
8 6 12 17-45
Logan
6 21 16 17-60

0, Clark 0·0 0

\V;ihama.

I

Ch uck John son also hit
double figures w1th 13 and Dan
llannon tallied etgh l.
Sat1shcs for Wahama tm·
proved
greatly fr om Thursday
WARREN LOOKS FOR BALL - GallipouS' Calvin (Jim) Warren, 6-4 senior center (in
night's
game . Besides a high
center ) looks for the ball during Friday's Gallipolis·Waverly basketba ll gttme at Waverly .
shoolmg percenwge the White
Warre n came off the bench for the injured Mike Sickles and picked off eight rebounds for GARS
Falcons shot ten of 13 from the
Friday. On rtght is the lad who almost single-bandedly destroyed the Blue Devils, Tim Dudu it
fl'l!C
throw hne for u 76 per cent
(SO). Tom Pfeifer (20) left, looks on. Waverly won, 64-53, to remain unbeaten m SEOAJ , play
fiS well as nabbmg 24 rebounds .
Turnovers were held to a
Hurricane, Tuesday , JuH . 7
BIG BLACKS 173 ) _ Tim nuninumt of 17 On Thursday
Cottrill 7 ( 2•2) 16 . Jim Tal· ntght Wahama lltlhed 30 tur·
'
novers
terson 7 ( (1.0 ) 14 , Larry Hess 10,
.
1he B·Team under assistant
( 4-6) 24; Btll RardinG (O·li 12;
In the final analysts, the swts hed 14, bestdes draggmg 12 out-rebow1ded PPHS, 49 to 39,
locals' IJ..5lh Larry Hess led the . caroms off the boards before and had three fewer turnovers, Andy W1lson I ( 1-2) 3; John . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
Gerlach 2 ??+?! '". Chiton ·
Did Santa Leave A Gift of Money
hit parade from the floor with foulmg out wtth 1:12 left on the 17 to 20.
Browning 0 (!&gt;-0) 0; Bret Me·
The wmners also held a Cormtck 0 (IJ.O) Tolltls :!3 (7·
24 points and was the top clock .
Under Your Tree?
reboWtder of the game with 16.
Bill Rardm, the perpetual slight edge in marksmans hip 11 ) 73.
Hess turned 111 perhaps his best motion guy, spun home 12 and from the floor . They look 82
PARK. SOUTH (82) - Jack
perforamance as a Red and turned in another harrassing pops, hit37, for 45 per cent. The Greathouse 8 (2-il ) 16; Scott
Turn if tnto a year-around
Black, with 20 of hts pomts ball-haw km g effor t . John Btg Blacks put 77 in the air, H1ll 7( 3-l!) 17; Jue Cnslip 6 ( 2·3)
AAA Membership. tt'J the
o~ly way to get ~uperb travel
commg 111 the first half. His tip· Ge rlac h added 4 and the Blue saw 33 sink, for 43 per cent.
14 ; Randy Mcl .ead 9 (1·2) 19;
a1ds and planntng services
ms during that stretch were . Moon, Andy W1lson, pt\ched m
The prelim contest was a Mike Daugherty 3 (0·1) 6;
and prole~! yourself on the
short of sensational.
3. ·
pistol too, going mto 'overtime, Chester Hoover 4 (0·0) 8;
road C Emergency Road
Service, Bail Bond and PerBut Hess was only one of four
The well-balanced and sw1ft which delayed the start of the Baker Neal 0 (0.0) 0 Totals 37
sonal
Travel Accident InBig Blacks 111 double figures as Patnot attack found 6.() Randy varstty lilt.
(11-16) 82 '
surance).
the locals saw thetr record dip Me Lead with 19, Jack
The Little Blacks and the
22 24 6 21- 7:!
to o and 2
Greathouse 16, Scot Htll17, and Ltttle Patrwts fought to a 4848 Big Blacks
18 20 23 21-82
South
Prk
.
Call or vi •~
Ttm Coltrtll knocked the Joe Crislip 14.
deadlock at the end of four
Fouls:
South 18,
Personal
bot\omoutofthe bucketwtth 16
Wh en the statisltcs were periods and Coac h Wa lt
talhes and burly Jtm Ta\terson fin ally comptled, South had Hensler's youngsters finally PPHS 17.
Fouled Out . Joe Crislip,
pulled it out, 56·50 tn an extra
-:::::::::::::::::·:·:::·:-:·:·:~::;;:~;;;:;:;:;;::;;:;;::::::::::*:•:•:::~·:::;:.:;:-;;:.;.;::.:-:·:·~:o:~:·:~;s:~~~==*~==::::::::o::::::.-::::: mnmg.
Larry Hess.
33 Court Street, Gattlpotls
Phone 446-0699
Offlctals·
Dave
Smi
th,
'J'ob:._,
Pomeroy
Phone 992-2590
The wm moved the Ltttlc
Patrtots record to 2 imd 4, the Offenbarger .
Little Blacks to 1 and I.
Next outing for the Big
CHESHIRE -Forrest (Sonny) smith, head coach of the
Blacks wtll again be on the
Cheshire Midget Foolballleam, bas announced that anyone
r
oad wh en they head for
In the county Interested In forming a county midget league
next fall should contact h'im. U enough lnlerestls shown, a
meeting will be held In the near lulure.
Smltb said communities planning to have midget football
REDSKINS TRIUMPH
teams next fall should begin working toward their goal now
OXFORD,
Ohio (UP!)
since many hoW's of hard work and planning Is involved In
Greg
Olson
h1t
a late free throw
such a program.
•
and Rod Dieringer popped in
Ills boped midget football learns In tbe county will help
f1ve free throws in the last 1:45
strengthen the high school programs p~rtlcularly since no
to boost Miami to a 67-S9 Mtd·
eouoty high school bas a junior blgh team. Any lnlerested
296 W. SECOND STREET
American Conference win over
POMEROY, 'OHIO
coach or parent Is urged to call Smith at 367·7723.
Western Mtchigan Saturday.

Papooses triumph

Eastern (3 8) - B lake 2 0-4,
were Kevin Petrie and David
Bailey 7 0 1 ~ . Spencer 3 3 9.
Swam with 9 and 8 points Harr1s 3 I 7 Good 0 2 2. Conde
respectively. Bobby Rtffle had I 0 2. E1chinger 0-0 0, Bowen o
0 0. J ackson 0 0 0, N els on 0 0 0,
7 points for the losers.
Holden 0 0 0 , F rck
0 0 0
,Hann an Trace entertains TOTALS 16·6·38.
Hannan Tran (Sl) - Hall 1.
Ute Trimble Tomcats Tuesday I 3, Hesson 5 0 10, Hmeman 0 o
night. wh1le the Eagles host o. swatn 12 a 24, Cremeans l 0
2. Halley 5 0· 10, Jones 0 o o,
North Gallia Friday night.
P et ri e 0 0 0, Shaffe r 1 0 2,
Eastern
10 10 8 10-38 Shee ts 0 0 0 TOTALS 25 -1-51.
Reserves- Hannan Trace 29
H. Trace
12 12 12 16-!il Eastern 19

.

·•

""'

lronmen to move into a four- effort was backed by Mark
way t1e with Ir onton , Buchanan who tallied 14 points
Ga llipo lis, and Logan for and led Jackson in rebounds
se cond place m the SEOAL w1th 12.
Dean Fitzpatrick led the
behind
league
Jead1n g
Tigers as· he talliealol.l points
Waverly
Coach Buddy Bell's Tigers, and snagged II rebounds , hut
one uf the strong pre-season none of his teammates scored
tttle co ntender s, suffere d m double figures.
The fronmen, who now
through an agaonizing evening
prep~re
for a visit to Waverly
as they hi t just 16 of 69 at·
Tuesday
night, led all the way
tempts for a miserable 23 pet.
The stronger Tigers, behtnd by quarter scores of 13-11, 23the reboWtding of Dean Fitz. 20, and 4(1.34 enroute to their
patnck, owned the boards as bi g victory.
II 9 14 8-42
they pulled down .53 rebounds Ironton
13 10 17 1fl..-.55
while Jackson snagged just 37. Jackson
However the Ironmen , who
IRONTON (421 FifZ ·
_previously upset Gallipolis, pa trick 2 7 1\ , E Howard 3 0 6,
Royal 2 0 4, Crockrell 1 1 31
were hot from the floor as they •Fairchtld
2 0 4, C Brown 1 0 2.
connected on 25 of 59 for 42 pet. M Brown 2 1 6, R Howa r d 3 O·
TOTJILS 16·10-42.
Jackson added '5 of 18 free 6 JACKSON
(lll - McDonald
throws whtle Ironton popped in 13 0 26 , Conroy 2 1-5, Morrow 2
1 5, Buchanan 6 2 14, Fannin 1
10 of 18 charily throws.
I 3, Sw ing le 1 0 2. TOTALS 25McDonald 's htgh sc ortn g 5-S S

HT pulls away fro:t:n Eagles
By GARY PHIU..lPS
MERCERVILLE - The
Hannan Trace W1ldcats ron·
tinued thetr domioonce m the
SV AC here Friday night as
they handed the Eastern
Eagles a 51-38 setback
The win was the 29th in a row
for the Wildcats on their home
court as well as their 21st
stra1ght SV AC wm II also
marked the 97th win of his
career for coa(lh Paul D1Uon.

Redmen cage stats.

'

lronmen rip Ironton

.

Jimmy Noe, wtth 63 caroms, is
Rio 's top rebounder after six
outmgs.

..

·.!J

J!\ CKSON - Mtke Me·
D&lt;mald pow·ed in 26 potn\s
Fnday n tgh t m leadm g the
J ackso n lr onm en past the
vts1 ltng Ironton T1gers 5542.
Th e v1ctu 1y e nc~bl ed the

Rumors around Wahama are
that the Win(&lt;) Falcons master,
Coach Bill Buckley , chewed hts
team out royally followmg its
85-76 loss Thursday night to
Buffa lo
If that ts the cftse then it
reully helped as Wahama
sonndly se nt the Highlanders
back to Southwestern Ga lli a
County F'nday evenmg, 60-54
Percentage shooting tltey hit
54 perkcent avernge from the
fi eld, wh1ch meant h1ttmg 25 of
4ti held go,als.
Behind Guard Jeff Gilland
tallymg seven points 111 the first
period, Wahama took the lead
one quurter of the way through,
17-16 Gilland wen t on to h msh
the game wtlh 24 pmnts to top

RIO GRANDE
Grande, showmg much im·
Dan Bollinger, wtth a 15.3
provement in the Marietta average, lS Rio's top scorer.
Shrine Tournament, is looking
•J
to 1975 for hopes of increasing
,I
the w.inning side of· its 2-4
season's showing.
The Central State Marauders
RIO GRANDE CAGE STATS
go against Rio Grande whe~
(S IX GAME TOTALS)
they visit Lyne Center Monday,,... G- PLAYER
FG-A FT-A RB TO A TP AVG.
night, bringing with them a !&gt;-2
6-Botl inger
40·86 12-t5 46 13
4
92 15 3
b-Barbee
record (losses tp College of
35-69
6· t1 21 IS
8 76 12" 7
6- Noe
29 74 18-24 63 19 13 76 12 7
Steubenville
and
Shaw
6-- Da vemport 31 79
9-13 20 17
7
71 II 8
College) .
6- Price
2J.43
7-9
25
9
2
49 82
Other games tlus week will
6--St ewar t
16-46
l · ll
36
6
I
37 62
6-Ai banese
see Rio Grande hos ting
9·26
5·11
2
7
7 23 3.7
5- WIIson
5 16
0J • 6
I
0 10 2.0
Cedarville Wednesday mght
l - V1ckroy
1-2
o.o
0
1
I
2 2.0
while the Redmen travel to
4-Ca ldwell
35
1-J
2
I
I
7
1.8
Canton to meet Malone College
3- Pope
2-3
0-0
I
5
I
4
1.3
Saturo;lay afternoon.
3-Swmet'lart
15
0~ 1
4
8
6
2
.7
2- Morgan
o.o
o.o
0 0 0
0
.0
Cent.ral State's starting five
6-TOTALS
193-454.
63-101
226
101
Sl
449
74.8
includes Lennis Timmons,
SEASON RECORO
Steve Bayliss, Bobby Brown,
Rio 76 Walsh 67
Harry Jackson and Kenny
R 10 47 Mad etta 67
R1o 81 Wilmington 83
&amp;nith. Brown and Jackson are
R1o 102 Dyke 104 (OTI
' top scorers with 90 points
R1o 72 Un1 v. of South 70
apiece. Jackson, a 6-6 senior, is
R1o 70 Marietta 81
' the Marauders' top rebounder.
Jan 6-Cen tra l State, home
Jan a- Cedarv ille, ho m e
Central State is being guided
Ja n ll ~ Malone, away
this year by ftrst year coach

Warren cut Waverly's lead to
doubh• figures N1day, w1th a w1th the bonus rule in effect three, 43-40, with · 6:06
spark ltng first half ( 16 pomts 1 and Wav erly nursm g a one, two remaining, but missed a free
f1r11shed the game w1th 22 or three pmnt lea ds.
The Blue Devtls had 21 throw after being fouled on the
po1n ts before foulmg out wtth
play.
I 35 left tn the game Folden personals, :lO rebounds and 10
Niday's two free throws cut
added 16 Gary Sr1owden , turnovers.
Waverly
's [ej!d to one, 43-42,
After J 1m Niday 's two free
mak1n g l11s fu· st start · of the
with
5:46
showing on the clock.
season, tossed tn etght pmnts throws gave GARS first blood ,
After
Duduit's
tip-in (5:30)
for GAllS before fouling out Waverly c 1pped off eight Mtke Sickles missed a one-and.
stra1 ght pointS during the ned
w1th 29 sectmds rcmommg
one effort and Pietfer scored on
Big Jim Warren. S.4 senior, four mmules and was on top 16- a fast break to give WHSa 47-42
('a me uff the bench early in the t2 at the fir st whistle break
During the second canto, the advantage.
first period for GAHS to
GAHS stayed w,ithin range
replace Mike Sit kles. Sickles lead exchanged hand s three although the Tigers sank six
started de spite an :mklr mjury ti mes a nd the sco re was
deadlocked three limes before consecu!tve free throws to take .
~ uffc red iu drills last Tuesday
a 53-46 lead with 3:32
afternoon Warren did a ~ood Niday's two free throws gave remaining.
,
job on the boards \lith eight big GAHS a 28-26 halltinte ad·
G
AHS
missl!d
two
more
onerehmmds 111 the second and \'a nta ge.
Action was tornd m the thtrd and.()ne attempts at the charity
third quarters.
period. The lead exchanged lme durtng the next 4!i seconds,
WdVl'l ly cullnected on 23 of
then cut Waverly's lead to
59 field goal attempts for 36 9 hands twi ce and the score was
seven,
57-50, on Folden's layup
percent All he foul circles, the !ted f1ve ttmes Galha enJoyed
wi \h I : 25 left.
T1 gers were 78.2 w1th t6 of 2:1 1ts biggest lead of the night
A layup for Dudult and two
a ttemp ts Wav erly had 19 wlt~3·58rematntng tnthe third
free
throws by Joe Holland
person.ds, Josmg Pete La swell ' pen od, 36-32 At this point:
with
54
seconds left wrapped It
and Dudml. The Tt gers ptcked Gary Snowden picked up hts
off 36 rebounds and had 11 fourth foul and left the game. up for the Tlge~s .
The victory left Waverly 8-1
turn overs.
With the score !ted 38-all,
on
the year. GAHS dropped to
Galhpohs Jut t9 of 51 fteld GAHS worked for the final shot
4-3
overall and 3-2 inside the
goal attempts for 37 2 percent of the third penod, but missed
The Gallians had their best w1th six seconds left. Tom SEOAL.
Tuesday, GAHS will host
mght of the season at the foul Pfeifer's desperation shot at
Ironton
while Waverly takes on
circle. st nk1ng 15 of 20 for 75 the buzzer gave Wa verly a 4(1.
percen t !-'our of Gallta's five :18 advantage going into the a dangerous Jackson qwi)St on
the Tiger boards.
rn1sses came m the ftnal penod ftnal pertod

Logan
blasts
Marauders
..

I'

'

I

OP

8 I 543 45.J
Wa&gt;.Jerlv
7 I 570 J6J
South Po1nt
Hannan Tra ce
7 2 513 4B I
L og an
6 2 49 2 &lt;~56
6 2 463 37 4
W h ee le rsburg
5 2 )9 7 347
Jac kson
Portsmout h
5 3 495 459
-100 368
Gallipolts
'
3 515 J85
1ron ton
'
4
Athens
J 6 531 514
M ei gs
I 5 342 .J07
0 6 27 b J 10
We llston
Area results
Hannan Tra ce 51 East ern 38
Spnngfie ld S 76 Portsmout h 59
Wheelersburg 10 Green J7

uppn hand Th{· n

\\JJI'th ·

mandged jtL~t 16 of 52 tn es for
31 pet .
Randy Horn added 15 pmn t.s
and 10 rebounds for the wm.
ners wh tle Todd Ellwo od
garnered 10 markers.
Wellston 's Randy Peoples,
who entered the contest as the
SEGAL's leading scorer w1th a
19 point avera ge, was lun1ted
W Jllqt 10 pomts by the
tenacious Bulldog defense
Terry G1 fl tuok sco nn g
honors lor the Rockets wtth 11
potnts wlule Terry McKtnruss
led in rebounding wtth 6
The foul shooting by both
IS reboWtdS - Epltng had SIX
teams
left somethtng to be
- and committed 17 costly
destred
as Athens converted
turnovers. At the foul circles,
GARS was four of mne (seven just 16 of :n wile Wellston
personals ) while Waverly was made 8 of 16 fr shots.
Well•ton
13 4 11&gt;-40
four of sue (nine personals ).
Athens
20
20
15 23- 76
· The loss knocked GARS out
Rese
rv
es
Athens
67
of a four-way lie for first place
and left them 4.J on the year Wellston 24.
WELLSTON (~0)
Sc !IC S '1
and 3-2 inside the league
1 s People s ~ 0 10 Me K 1t1ntSC.
3 17 Arnold 11 ] Gr\ 1 35 11
Box score :

Fridays Basketball Results

"W(· had the mom entum
~u in ~ for us iu lht• third period.
tn ~ h'ad of &lt;'arrying
that
mnml'ntum into th ~· fina l
pt'rtnd . \H' let lhem get the

d iH!

l11 s sl.t ff sa1d the 13luc De \ll s
not execute I hen uffens1ve
p,tll('l'lb \\ l' il dunn~ the second

m ont') 's

Ap·

ro:1cl , ·· ()sbilrne continued.

6-Sl cnter Tun Dudmt
who d1 d most of th e damH ~e
ag;uns t GAHS Fnday alth ough
the '1'1 ge rs di spl ayed a
lml;~n ced sconn g atta ck
Af ter ptck1ng off seven f1rst
ha lf rebounds , Oudutt came
back tn the second half wtth 11
b1 g snags , four uf them un tipms He wilted t5 pomts before
fo ulm K out wtlh 45 secon ds
1 cmamm g 1n the game
Doug Tr acy and Tom P!e1fer
each added 15 pmnts wh1le J oe
Holland pltnlped tn 12 for the
leCJ g uc l eade1 s
J1m t\1day and Tony Folden

d1d

back as they led by quarter
score s of 2!&gt;-13, 4!&gt;-26, and 5!&gt;-30.
wlule permtttmg the Golden
Rockets a total of 14 potnts tn
the second ball
Paced by b1g Arn ie Chonko's
21 pmnts and 12 rebounds the
Bulldogs scorched the nets to
UJC tune of 52 pet as they sank
30 of 56 .shots whtle Wellston

BLUE IMPS (24) Kt
H ck son . o o a. Kv Jac kson , o
0 0 . Wade , 0 1 1. Sw arn ] 0 6,
Ep lmg , 4 0 8 . Dresse l !, 1 3 5
IS aa cs. 0 o o. Bush . 1 o 2,
Skaggs. , 0 0 0 Wa rr en . 0 0 O,
W rseman , 1 0 2 , Hav crafl . 0 0
. 0 T0TALS104 ~ 24
CUBS (51) - Shoemaker J
0 6. Crace , 1 0 2 B Fy ffe , 5]
13 , Stayton 0 0 0 Brow 11. o o
0 , Ja c kson , 2 1 5. Jones , o o o.
Davena , J 0 6
Ka li s . 0 0 0 .
Towler . 0 0 0. Keg l ey 0 0 0. C
F yffe , I 0 2. Thomp son 9 0 !8
TOTAlS 24· 4-52
Score by quar rers
Blue I mps
1 7 6 .. 24
16 18 12 6- 52
Cubs

ln h:O., a dejected 0Jcil'h

g1md S('f ap uu t t!JPrt:' lum g h l,
saJcl Co&lt;H:h Hem !Ire Ill' adr h•d,
· !he f.m s r e&lt;~ll\· gu t llwrr

Blue Imps downed
WAVERLY
Chuck
Th ompson , 5-11 fresh man
guard, tall1ed 18 points and
ptcked off rune rebounds to
pace Coach Ga ry Jenkins
Waverly Cubs to a convincing
52-24 triumph over Coach
Wtllard ( Buddy) Moore's
Gallipolis Blue Imps here
Friday mght.
Bob Fyffe added 13 markers
as the Cubs held quarter leads
of 16-7, 34-14 and 46-20.
Waverly hit 24 of 42 field goal
at tempts for a sizzlmg 57
pen-en!, picked off 27 rebounds
and commttted 16 turi10vers
enroute to its Uurd reserve
league victory against two
setbacks.
Kent Ephng paced the Blue
Imps with eight pomts. Gary
Swam added six. The Imps hit
10 of 40 field goal attempts for a
cool 25 percent.· The Imps had

M1 · . HI\1

.! 1111 Os holll l'

han rl

Athens crushes Rockets
ATHENS - After batlling
through three heartbreaking
losses the Athens Bulldogs
fmally htt a breather Friday
night as they rolled to an easy
78-40 vtrtory over wmless
Wellston with 10 pla y'ers
contrtbu tmg to the Bulldog
scoring.
The Bulldogs ra ced to a
quick 9-0 lead and never looked

11 llnl'SSe&lt;l I he SEOA I. 's featui· e play &lt;·al&lt;:hup. It's hard to play
l' a trhup. t•spt·cially on the
ut lnl l'llon

- ·.Rio' Dr. Lu Wtms .

.

'

White Falcons
trip Highland~rs

R .io to host Central State
Marauders Monday ~v.ening

•

Waverly a full 2 games up in le.a gue race

'

17- The SWiday Ttmes ·Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 5, 1975

'

16 - The Sunday Tunes -Sent mel , Sunda), Jan. 5. 1975

.

.

I

II

�•

'

'

19 _;_ The SundayTimes -Sentinel, sunday ,.Jan. 5, 1975

BY DAt E ROTHGEB, JR.

"
'

VINTON - r&gt;orth Gallia
"·ent into a zone press midway
Frida~·

in the first period here

night. breaking a Kyger Creek
4.!.t·orner sU1ll then liJe .Pirates

rolled to an easy. i0-11 victory .
Coach Keith Ca rter's Bob:
cats began· their s~11l following

WiLLOW WOOD -

The

some sha ky performance at

the foul line , held on in the
closing minute to edge past

S)·mmes. Valley 58-56 in an
SVAC game here Friday night.
The win UPI'"d the 'l'ornados'
season mark l o 4-( :t-:J ins1de
the SVAC.
The loss drops the Vik tngs , a
pre-season pick by the league's
coaches to finish wt th a sha re
of lhe SVAC lolle, lo 0-4 in
league play, 0-7 overall.
II was a see-sa w battle all the
way , as the quin tet of Carl
Wolfe moved out to a 16- 14 first
period lead. The Vi ki ngs ,
howevrr, stormed back to take
a 31-29 intermission lead before

Southern retaliated in the third
period lo lead 44-41 goi ng into
the fin al hectic stanza.
Southern , building its largest
margin of lhe night at 6 points,
58-52, went into a sta ll with I
minute re ma ining, and the
Vikings had to foul in an attempt to get the ball back.
But the Torn ados, who · hit
just 6 ol l7 free throws, froze al
the chari ty stripe, missing 3
consecutive one-an d-&lt;me op-

portuniti es whil e Symmes
Vall ey respond ed wi th 4

a baske t on the tip by- Doug Cottrell cut the lead to 3-2 . Bob&lt;:a !S.
had eight points and Cottre ll
sophomore Fred Logan. Logan. befor e senior Gene Payne
Within
seconds,
.KC added lour .
. •·as fouled on the play and his put the Pirates ahead once proceeded to turn the ba ll over
Nort h Galli a hit 31 of 65 floor
free lhro•· made it :i-ll.
and eventuall y abandoned the attempts for 4!'pct. and 8 ol 17
a~ain , :\-2. M other goal by
The Bobcats ' used the ir Cottrell cut the lead to :H.
sl&lt;!ll ing offense .
at the' chari ty stripe. Kyger
discipli ned offense looki ng for
The
fi
rst
quarter
ended
with
Creek
connected on seven of 12
At that point, Pirate mentor
lhe open man whii.P attemp,lin~
Jtm Foster called time to set NG on top, !:Hi. Payne and at the free throw line.
to upset thr Pir ates' running
Logan led NG 's offense while
The Pirates also held a 28-20
up hi s zone press, a decision
ga me. A jwnper by 6-2 s~n.i&gt;Jr which proved cos tly for the Cottrell's six points kept the reb&lt;lunding edge .
The P~ra tes finished with
Bobcats in the ga me
North Gallia's offense began three players in double figures.
mov in g in the second penod as · Logan and Camden-led the way
the Pirates collected 18 points with.18 points. James dwnped ,
to ta ke a command ing, 31-14 in 16. KC also had three players
lead at the half.
in double fi gures. Cottrell had
Logan, big Bruce Runyon · 12 po ints; Wtse 11 and Metzner
and
Payne were the btg guns in 10.
.
.
, .
hit for 14 points.
straigh t free throws to pull to
the
quar
ter
with
six
and
four
.
The
wm
was
the
Pi~a
.
t
es
fifth
Symmes Valley held a 44-37
within 2 ~~ 58-56, before time
rebounding edge, whi le lite points res pec ti vely. Dave lll st x games thtsseasoh. NG ts
ran out.
Wise 1HJ senior forward led 111 second place 111 the Southern
"II was just a matter of Tornados commttled just 12
the Bobcat attack wtth' six Va ll ey Athlet ic Conferen ce
shooting, " said Wolfe wh o was turnovers .
behind Hannan Trace. Kyger
Junior Danny Brown led poi nts.
pleased wit h the victory,
Creek
dropped to 1-5 overa ll
The taller Pirates made it a
althoug h much disdained over Southern re bounders wtlh l4 to
go wi th Shultz's 10. Brammer run away in the third period and 0-4 in the SV AC.
h i~ squad's lack of free throw
Coach Mike Mulford 's Little
picked off 15 missed shots fo r rackin g up 31 points to lead 62proficiency.
Bucs
remained atop the SV AC
28 going into the final stanza.
The Tornados' 6 of 17 per- the Vikings .
Rese
rve
s tandings' with a Jl-22
Three Pira tes were par·
The Tornados hit 26 of 64
formance at .lhe 1:\-fool mark
ticul ariy hot during the third vic tory. Ric hard Eg gleton
was good for a freezing 34 pet., noor attempts for 11 pet.
pa ced the winners with nine
Southern travels to Water- peri od. 6&lt;i se nior cen ter Mike
while 75 pd . ts usually conpoin ts.
side red average fo r foul ford to face the Wi ldca ts Camden had 10 points; Greg
Ra lph Baylor led the
Tuesday while Symmes Va lley James, 6-4 jun ior guard, the
shooting.
Bobkit tens with nine points .
The Vikings also had charity is off un til Friday when it P ir a tes' lea di ng scorer wlw
Kyger Creek played Buffalo,
ha d just two baskets in the firs t·
stripe problems, canning jusl 6 travels to Roc k Hil l.
Va . Saturday night. North
W.
In Friday's reserve game. hal f, canned 12 poin ts on fi ve
of 11.
Galli
a tra vels to Eastern
baskets and two free throws
It was the shooting and b&lt;lard Ri chard Teaford and Dave
Friday night.
work of Tornado Paul Shultz Roush pumped in 14 and 10 and Logan, who played a KC
6 8 l4 13-41
that spelled the difference as poin ts respec ti vely to pace the cons is tent ga me. had fiv e North Galli a 13 18 31 8-70
the senior forw ard tossed in 22 Tornado jWJ ior varsitv to a 52· points .
Rese rv es - NG 31 KC 22.
Kyger Creek's third period
win.
Th e Tornado
poin ts and grab be d 10 31
er Cr eek (41)
Cort r ell
re bounds. Othe r Tor nados -rese rves a re now 3-5. scorin g wa s led by junior 4 4Kyg
12, Metzner 4 2 10, Wise 5 1
forward
Bill
Metzner.
Metzner
16 13 15 14- 58
I I. Stidh a m 0 0-0 , Ke rn 2 0 4.
turning in solid pe rformances Southern
Lucas 1-0-2, Sm i th 1-0-2. Total s
were Buddy Ervin and Mtke Symmes Val. 14 17 io 1:&gt;-56
17 -7·41.
SOUTHERN (58) - Ervi n 7
N orth Gallia {70 ) - L oga n 8 ·
Roberts wilh. 14 points apiece.
0 14 , Robe r ts 6· 2 14 . Br own 1 7
2 18, R unyo n 3 1 7. Ca m den 8 2
Three Vikings hit double ..t . Shu l tz 10 ·2 22 , Dun n ing 2 0 &lt;i ,
Breaking tbe Banco
18 . James 7 2 16, Pay n e 4·0·8,
Q_ 0 0 TOTAL $ 26-6· 58
D enny 1· 1-3_ Total s 31-8-70 .
ligures, led by Jaye Myers with H ill
Originall
y
meaning
"
bench"
SYMMES VALLEY (561 ·19. Jim Myers added 16, while Jaye Myers 8 J 19, Jim Mye r s or "shelf " in Italian, the word
7 2 16 .
B r ammer
7 0 14 .
banco was applied specially to a
Larry Brammer , who did mos t Quis
enberr y 2 1 5, Es tep , 1 0 '1
trademan'
s counter, and hence
of his damage in the fi rst hall. TOTALS 2 S+ S6 .
See Our Large
to a money-changer 's bench or
Selection of
table , from which th e modern
word bank is derived. In Italy,

Pro Standings
NBA Stand ing s
B y Unit ed Pr ess Int ern a ti on a l
Eu t er n c onf er enc e
... Atlanti c D I Vi SIO n
w . I. p et .
g .b .
13 I) .639
Boston
21 14 611 1
Bu ff alo
New York
20 IS .571 2 1 ~
Ph ita
15 21 . .117 8
Ce ntral D ivision
w . 1. pet . g .tl .
wa shi ngton
76 10 721
Cleveland
19 14 .576 S1 1
Houslon
19 16 .543 6 1 7
A tl ~n l a
16 27 42 1 11
New Orlean53 3 1 088 22
w es t ern Cont ere nce
M i dwes t Oiv i, hm
q . 1. pet . g . b.
De tr oit
7 1 17 553
Ch ic aoo
18 17 .514 11 7
KC .Qmana
20 :?0 .500 :?
Mlt w a u ~ee

I S 1'1 .441

4

Pacific D iv ision
w . 1. per . g .b .
Gold en Slate
13 17 .657
Sea lll c
18 19 ,&lt;186 6
Ph oe n ix
15 20 .J29 8
Por tla nd
15 21 4 17 8 1 1
Los Angeles
15 72 405 9
Frida y's Res ults
Detroit II I Bu ff a lo 92
Cleveland 95 Hous ton 83
Chicago 126 PMoe n ix 99
Ph iladelph ia 107 Kansas C i ty

Om aha 95
Bos ton 127 Los Ange les 1 0~
Seattle 98 Portland 9:1 ·
Sa tu r day ' s Gam es
Cl eveland ar New York
Buffa lo at Atlanta ~Kansas Ci ty Omaha a 1 Chicago
Ph iladelphia at Detroit
Houston at Milwaukee
WaSh ing ton a t Golden StAte
A B A Stand ln g s
By Un it£&gt; d Pr tts!. lnft' r national
E ast
w . 1. p e l . g . b .
Kentucky
24 10 106
New York.
26 11 703
5 1. L OU I
15 15 375 11
MemptHS
10 16 27 8 IS
Virgin 1a
9 27 -150 16
Wes t
w. I. p et. g . b.
Denver
32
5 865
San Anlon
12 18 550 1 ll 1
Utah
19 :?1 .H5 IJ ' •
I nd i ana
IJ 20 . J 17 16 1 ~
San D iego
lo1 12
389 ·17 1 ,
Fr iday ' s R es ul ts
Ke n tucky 113 Virginia 19
New York 130 St Louis 113
Denver 120 Indiana 111

B~

WH A St and ings
Un ited Press Inter national
Ea ~ t

w.

p rs gf
New Englnd20 13 1 J 1 125
Cleveland
1J 18 I :?9 n
Ch icago
11 70 o 7J 10J
lnd ianapl s 6 30 1 13 SO
Wes t
w I. t. pts gf
Houston
25 11 0 SO 165
P-hoen iJC
11 14 J 38 117
Minnesota 17 16 0 3J I JO
San Diego
Mich igan

1.

1.

16 I! I
11 13 ]
Ca na di a n

w. I.

ga

115
107
I ?J
161
ga
102
11.4
119

33110118
25 9215.9

Toronto

10

14

pt s gf ga
1 " ' 15 3 130

Que bec
Edmonton

70

15

0 .&amp;0

t.

us

123

181013711193

W i nn ipeg , 11 1 ~ 1 35 118 101
Vancouv er 16 IJ 2 J4 100 99
F ri day ' s Res u l h
N~ng:land S Toron to J
Sa
i eqo 1 Minnesota 1
Pho i x 3 Edmonlon l , o t

N H l S I ~Ht d 1 rt9 5
B v Unit ed Press lnfern ltionii l
D ivision 1
w . I . f . Ph g f 9•
Ph i ladelph 2S 7
_s ss ll9 14
NY Rangf!'r~ 17 11 .8 42 U0118
Atlanta
16' .15 · 1 J9 105 t09
NYUII!Indr'$ 15 14 9 39 127 IO.S

Divhi on 2
w I. t . pt s gf gii

V ancouver 22 11
Chicaoo
11 t6
S1 . L Ouis
16 15
M in n esota 11 11
Ka nsas- City 5 27
D ivis ion

5 49 139 111
4 38 126 !OJ
6 38 117 IJO
27 103 159
4 14 BS 161

s

By United Press International

It figured North earouna
State would play North Carolina tonight -but not in the
consolation game of the Big
Four tournament at Greens!
boro, N.C.
N.C. Sta~ saw its J&amp;ilame
winning streak snapped Friday
night when the top ranked
Wolfpack dropped an 83-78
decision to tmheralded Wake
Forest in the opener of tbe Big
Four tourney . The 'Iightcap
saw Duke spring an upset of its
own by downing eighth ranked
North Carolina 99-96 in over-

SAVE
NOW
LB.

hi s bench or counter was
broken up. and he was spoken of
as bancorotto - bankrupt .

'

and

SECTIONAL
HOMES

NO.1 OHI·O

20 lb

•MARLETTE
•ELCONA
•ARLINGTON
eGRANVlLLE
•SPRINGBROOK

Bag

owe service what we sell"

FRENCH CITY
MOBILE HOMES, IN£..

Even Hondo , who

first

gained pro fame as the sixth
man during the Celtic dynasty·,
had lo be a ware of the irony
involved Friday night whe~ he
. moved into fifth place on the
all-time National Basketball
Association scoring list .
Havlicek scored 22 points as
Boston crushed the Lakers,
127-106, at Los Angeles to run
his point total for 13 years to
21,586. This moved him ahead
of Hal Greer and onto the first
team which also consists of
Wilt Chamberlain, Oscar Robertson, Jerry West and Elgin
Baylor.
A Forum crowd of 16,995
treated Havlicek to a standing
ovation when he reached the
milestone, and the 34-year-old
Celtic captain then sat out the
linal15 minutes of the contest.
The victory also had special
significance to the defending
champion Celtics. It was their
fourth in a row on a West Coast
trip and pushed . them into
undisputed possession of first
place in the Atlantic Division
for the first time this season.
Buffalo, as the result of a 111-92
setback to the Detroit Pistons,
fell a full game back of the
leaders.
·
Jo Jo White led the Celtics
with 28 points and Dave
Cowens had 17 points and 13
rebotmds. Los Angeles center
Elmore Smith outplayed
Cowe~s. however, with a
season-ltigh 30 points and 12
rebounds,
Boston, which shot a torrid 60
per cent from the floor in
running up a 101-71 lead after
three periods, has won 16 of 19

road contests.
In other NBA action, Chicago
defea ted PhoeniK 126-99,
Sea ttle beat Portland 98-93,
Philadelphia beat Kansa s CityOmaha 107·95, and Cleveland
beat Houston 95-81.
Pistons 111, Braves 92
Bob Lanier led Detroit in
scoring with 23 points and also
go t involved in a scuffle with
Dale Schlueter· late in the
game. They argued near the
Braves' bench and Lanier took
a swing at the Buffalo center
but apparently missed. Detroit
players rushed over and Coach
Ray Scott had words with
Schlueter.
With six seconds left in the
game, Schlueter was J,ripped
by rookie Eric M011ey near the

De troit bench and the Pistons·
J im

na vi.s

jumped

on

Schlu eter . Scl1lu eter , who
made l wo fr ee throws on the
foul by Mon ey , and Davis w~re
ejected. Buffalo's Bob McAdoo
topped all scorers with 29
points before fouling out.
Bulls 126, Suns 99
Chicilgo hit on 17 of 21 field
goal attempts in the second
quarter Lo set o tea m reco rd
with 47 points and when the
rout was complete, Phoenix
Coach John Ma cLeod said of
the Bulls, "They just broke 11'
down . Tha t wa s the bes t
basketball I've ever seen a
team play."
Bob Love led th e Bulls with
20 points, a figure matched by
Mike Banlom of Phoenix.

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

with ~aior Hoople
HIS ONLY
t.VI&gt;.LUI&gt;.TION
TKI~ NE.W
YEI&gt;.R5 WA~
Wl-tETHER
HIS HEAD
ALREI'DY
HURT MORE - !
Tt&lt;I'.N HIS
HEMD
STOMACH !
HIM
Sr&gt;.Y

ON 2 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSITS
e'S,OOO MINIMUM

Ml d Wt'\f

Marauerte 61 OrPt!u l 60

lh l1 St 88 Manc-hester 67
Hanover 82 DePat~w H
Greern 8ev U Sl Ambrou .U
So . III · E&lt;twrdsv lll t' 71 Grand

valley 69
Carlton 59 Corne ll 57
Carthage 66 111 Bened ict ine b..&amp;
Oshkosh 100 St Norbert 82
SO Springf i eld 83 Chadron St.
73

SUBSTANTIAL INTEREST PENALTY IS REQUIRED FOR EARLY
WITHDRAWAL ON CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS

THE .GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
A.ND ·LOAN .COMPANY
·

-

.· ·

PHONE 446-3832

·

.

irrational" in h i~ decision.
P &lt;~p i a n o and Fi nl ey an nounce d they will fil e an appeal
wi th th e Cillifornia Stat e
Di, trict Court of Appeals.
"This is only the beginning,"
said Finley. "I will go all the
way to the U.S, Supreme Court
if I have to."
Pa pi ano pointed out· that the
U.S. Supreme Caurt had upheld
baseball 's reserve clause three
times over the years.

DUCATS ON SALE
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - The
Un iversit y of Da yton said
Friday that lickels for the
NC AA Mid-Eas t Regional
Basketbal l tournament March
20 and 22 will go on sale to the
public Monday.
A UD spokesman said mail
orders would be accepted on a
lit·st come fir st served basis
with a limit of four tickets per

•
'

I
I .

order .

GWBSTRADED
BLOOMINGTON ,' Minn.
( UPI) - The Minnesota North
Stars Saturday traded veteran
defensemiln Barry Gibbs to
AtlWlta for two rookies, Dean
Talafous of Duluth, Minn., and
Dwight Bialowas. • ·

··woRK":

USE OUR
LOW COST
PAYMENT
PLAN

rJH£
WORLD

!&gt;COFFS
AT !&gt;E.LF·

WINTER
SPECIALS

IMPROVEMENT•

WRITE US
ABOUT
THESE
"SPECIALS
AND OTHER
SPECIALS

..u..;..,~

1·¥

.

and Carving . Order now. We are holding the price line as long as supplies last !_ .

VINE RIPE
TOMATOES
40 OZ. TRAY
CHlf-BOY-ARDEE ·

'

I

I

,.

CHEES'E PIZZA

MIX

c

Double

I

Now you can achM
a beautiful coordinated
decorative ~ect In_your
home, wlth Amerocii'•
Carriage House Collection.

a

Regular Price

~

. "Safe Savings Since 1886"
OHIO

I , '

..I

•
..

Special pric"· tncludes
lettering shown. design,
and delivery to your
cemetery plot.

. Whether your project li ~orating,
ram6dellng or bul!dlng a neW home, you can
select tftelndlvldual hardware accents
you need from over 75 items, .. In
Antique English or Antique Silver finishes.
Corne In . .. See beautiful Carriage Hou~ display
. and..receive the Free Oeooratlng Idea
Brochure, with Handy Shoppers Guide.

.

$35 down, $15 per month

FROZEN
FRENCH FRIED

Potatoes

THE

'

LEAD£~

IH

~INE

Simply mail the Convenient Coupon ... Call ...
Write ... or come in. Transportation gladly
furnished to and from any of our showrooms,
without obligation.

OECOMIIVE . . _ , E .

,

·

CARTER and
EVANS :INC.
..

'

2 LB. BAG

"Cash &amp; Carry"

.

.

.

.

.

MIDD.LEPORT, OHI~
'
I

!

&gt;

..
,,

\

I,

'

I

. .
0 Please send .me FREE booklets

I'

showing memorials printOd in full colqr
wilh sizes and prices listed . .
0 Kindly have an authorized Logan Monu-

II.

Display Yard
Display Yard near .
I·
on W. Main Street POI'THiroy-Mason Bridge
James 0, Bush, -Mgr. Leo L. Vaughan, Mgr. . 1
8;·8-60_3......r.e.le·p·h·o-n.e-99·2--2·5-88_.. I,
L...r.e.le.;.p.ho_n_e_3_8..

...

:\

I

~~

::::;

Ma"soleurns without obligation.
-Name
'
strfftorRout;e__ _ _ _ __
City or Town _ _;..__ __
tlhone
· •
-~----·--- --"'!'--~----·.

.- .-.. ..

' '
,

I

I

· ~allip()lis, Ohio

I

r--------~-----------'
r.OIIPON
Logan Monumenl Company. POmeroy,

VI NTON, OHIO POMEROY, OHI0 : ~e;~~:s:ep:::et~:e :·;~t:~~:y

I

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER

(Additional lettering and
other style carvings may
be
used
on
above
memorial at a nominal
additional charge .)

If family name is desired
on pack of monument.
· there will' be an additional
charge .

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.

~

, ~;ock •.,

.

$'3 59
,

ONLY

•

SPECIAL
.."ICI!

The Chrisli im monument is the
popular sloping type with the ivy
leaves, which symbolize lovi·ng
memory . It Is 42 inches long and
22 inches high.

THIS PRICE GOOD ONLY IF ORDERED
BEFORE MARCH 1
-

.29 oz..

ALL DEPOSITS GUARANTEED BY
OHIO DEPOSIT GUARANTEE FUND

Southwest
Ar iz 67 TeK tec h 6 1. 'ot
SW Tex 81 Ab i lene Chrisfian 70
MidWS i rn 83 Cn trl St . Of Okla 66
lex Lut heran 10.5 B i shop 91

through attorney Neil Papiano,
to make an appeal at a higher
level.
Phtilips said the law prevent- &lt;I
ed him from considering the
facl~ behind the case unless it
could be established that th e
arbitra tor had been "grossly

We are lowering the prices during the winter, giving you the finest SJeel Engraved Lettering

ON 2 YEAR CERTIACATES OF DEPOSITS
'•,
esl,OOO MINIMUM

M i les Coli 13 Savannah St . 65
Sprng
Artlr
83
Sthwstrn
( Tenn &gt; 57
So M iss 92 F Ia So 8J
No Ala 51 L 1v lng\ton 52
renn Martin 87 Mi'Ss Col lege 76

'

By United Press International
Once and for all, J ohn
Havlicek has rid himself of the
all-too-familiar "sixth man"
theme .

scorer

Size

91

·'

NBA Roundup

By JOE SARGIS
W
eber
State
68-48.
UP!
Sports Writer
T~xas Tech 62-61 in 0\'e rlime,
In
tournament
piny,
Houston
OAKLAND (UPll - Jim
Wnsh in~ton whipped Colorado
90-61 an d Monl&lt;l na do wned be&lt;tt Hawaii 105-96 and Texas "Catfish" liunter, baseball 's
A&amp;M edged Nev ada-Las Vegas ail-t ime highest paid player;
80-78 in the Blueb&lt;lnnet Classic ca n rest easy for now. But the
al liouslon whil e in th e fi ght for his services wiJI go on
Presidential Classic al fort because Charlie Finley, the
Meyer,
Vc1.,•
Am eri ca n '"''f'" he was cut loose from,
Univ ers ity go t by West simply won 't give up.
Virg·inia 82-78 and George
Hunter, the American LeaSup••rSoni rs 98, Trail Blazcl'!i Wa s hington topped Bosto n gue's Cy Young Award winner
93
University 80-71,
last season, ea rned his
Fred Brown scored 22 of his
Da ve Meye rs' 23 points fr eed om fr om the wo rld
game-h igh 32 points in the pa ced UCLA over Davidson as champion Oakland A's when an
second half as Seattle so lidifi ed th e Bruins ex tended d,eir home arbitrator ruled Finley had
its hold on second place in U1e court winrting strea k to 72 defaulted on the pi tcher 's 1974
Pacific Division , two games ga mes ove r th e last fi ve sala ry.
ahead of Phoenix. It was the seasons; John Lambert to~sed
The arbitrator, Peter Seitz of
fifth consecutive loss for the in 24 points lo help Southern New York, declared Hunter 's
Blazers, who were led by Ca l bea t Villanova ; Artzona con tract null and void, an act
Sidney Wicks with 24 points. · Slate plat-ed five !JlCn in double which made Hunter a (ree
76ers 107, Kings 95
figures in beating Oregon Sl&lt;•le agent. After 11 week of bidd ing
Steve Mix scored 14 points in and running its record to Il-l ; by every club in lhe major
the second quarter when Jerry Homan 's tip-in with four leagues ex~ept one, Hunter
Philadelphia ra n up a 58-11 seconds left to play enabled signed a $3.7 million multi-year
halftime advantage and wound MartJ,uclle to gel by stubborn l'O ntract with the New York
up with a game-high 29. After DePaul and freshmao Gilbert Yankees on New Year 's l':ve.
the Kin gs na rrow ed their Myles' two fr ee throws with 13
Finley, claiming Seitz overdeficit to 79-76 in the openmg seconds left in .overtime helped stepped his bounds, took his
seconds of the final qua r~r. Arizona beat Texas Tech.
plea to court but on Friday,
Philadelphia pu t together a n'
Clarenc-e Ramsey's 20 points Alameda County Superi or
18-2 streak during the next live paced Washington over Colora- Court Judge George W.
minutes. Dc ug Collins added 26 do; 'l'elGls A&amp;M used Sonny Phillips Jr. refused to overturn
points lor the 76ers and Billy Parker 's 14 points · to beat the arbitrator 's .award or issue
Cunningham had 22. Nate Nevada-Las Vegas wltile Otis an injunction.
Archibald led the Kings with Birdsong collected 29 points for
The move, at least tem-27.
liouston in its win over Hawaii; porarily , dealt a blow lo
Cavaliers 9~, H.ockets HJ
and Calvin Brown's career- baseball's reserve cla use
Bobby Smith scored 20 polnts high 30 points led American which binds a player to one
and Dick Snyder added 1.8 for University over West Virginia club until he quits or is
,the Cavaliers while Jim Chones while Pal Tallent scored 26 relea sed. However, Judge
contributed 20 reb&lt;lunds. Rudy points for George Washington Phillips said some questions
Tomjanovich scored 22 for in its vicwry over Boston have been left unanswered and
Houston.
University.
he more or less invited Finley,

'

ON 1 YEAR CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS
e$1,000 MINIMUM

South
William Colt 89 Kings Pl . 71
Mulligan 75 W al s h 73,
Ws h ngtn &amp; Lee 56 Hvr frd 43
A l bany St . ( Ga . &gt; lOS Tuske gee

I

HoDdo now

ONLY

'

Ame r ic ~ n

Wes t
UCLA 91 D avidson 64
w. 1. t. pts gf ga
usc 101 Vi lla nov a ·74 ~
Montreal 20 6 12 S2 163 ·107
Ariz St 76 Ore St . 70
los.Angels 20 6 II SillS 71
Mont 68 .We ber St. . 48
~IISbr9h 13 16 8 JJ 148 hH . w a stl 90 Col 61
Detroit
10 20
5 2.5 103 1•5
Bo ise St . 102 Portland St.. 101
.Wash ingfn 3 31
d 10 so 202
Ca l Pd ly -P.omona 59 Ca r St .-L A
D ivisio n 4
58
I
'
w. 1. t . pts gt ga
U S lnt'1 8 l Clare mont Mu dd 69
2~
8 6 s~ 1 6~ 123
B-uff a lo
Cai -R i vers lue u A zusa Pa c 66
Bosto n
21 10 6 48 171 118
Ca t St -Nrthrdge 8 2 Siou x F a ll s
. 67
To~onto.
11 18 '7 29 120 14 1
Occi d en tal 51 Po in t L o m e) 54 ·
Cal i for nia
9 23 a :?6 106 163 , Cal s t .-Bkt'sf l d 58 Sta n is laus St .
• Friday 's R e sult
' 34
Buffalo '1 Car iJo rnia 2 1

's·ta te 76-70, 14th ranked
Marquett e nipped De Paul 616o', 18th ranked -Arizona nipped

Phone 4%-9340

ON 90 DAY CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS
•sl,OOO MINIMUM

Ea st
Es n . Sh o re 51
Sh ep par d 97 D icki n son 70
Laf a ye tt e 72 vermon t 65
Sacred Hea r t 10_2 C la rkson 86

101-74.
Elsewhere, lith ranked
Arizona State beat Oregon

Upper Rt. 7
Gallipolis

ON
.PASSBOOK·
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

c .w P os t 59 M d .

filth
ranked
Southern
California was equally ·unpressed in thrashing Villanova

•

'

Save D'urlng This Winter Sale. Select .From Many Beautiful
Memorials A't Special Reduced Prices. You Can Choose The
Family Memorial That Will Mark Your Burial Estate For The
· Rest Of Eternity!

.ON CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS

Pres idential C lanic
u 82 w . va . 78
Georg e Washi n gton 80 Boston
u . 71

LB.

.POTATOES·

NOW PAYING
NEW HIGHER INTEREST RATES

Bluebonnet Classi c
Hous ton lOS Ha w aii 96
Te• A&amp;M 80 U N .La s Veg ~ S 18

'

U.

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS .&amp; LOAN

Fr i d11y ' s College
Bask e tball R e sults
By United Press International
Big Four Tournament
Wa k e F ores t SJ N C Slat e 78
D u ~e 99 NC 96 . o t

, time.
"[ don't want to take
anything away from Wake
Forest's win," said Wolfpack
Coach Norm Sloan af~r his
team posted a mlserabiEi 35 per
C1lnt shooting average and
dropped its first game since an
~ loss to UCLA in December, 1973. "I won't altribu~ our
defeat to poor shooting. I just
think they defended us like .
heck."
·
Even Wolfpack star David
Thompson, who entered the
game with a 35-point average,
was held to a season-low 15
points. Thompson, who led
N.C. State to its NCAA
championship last season,
connected on only five of 20
shots from the floor.
Wake Forest Coach Carl
Tacy said the Deacons did
''nothing special" to defense
Thompson other than to force
him outside to guard against
his famed "Alley Oop" dtmk
shot.
In contrast to N.C. State, the
Deacons posted a 54 per cent
shooting mark, led by Skip
Brown's 25 points, as !bey
raised their record to 6-3 and
dropped the Wolfpack's mark
to 8-1.
In the nightcap, Bob Fleischer's 26 points and 24 by Kevin
Billennan enabled Duke to
surprise North Carolina.
Freslunan Phil Ford led the
Tar Heels with 22 points.
Third ranked UCLA, with a
good chance of moving up in
the ratings next week, ran its
record to~ with an easy 91-64
victory over Davidson while

BREADED

COD FISH
RTIONS

'

WolfpEtck h'it by .Wake,83-78

MOBILE
HOMES

when a moneylender was unable to continue hi s business.

NEW YOR.K ( UPI ) - The of the Seattle SuperSonics, McMillian, Buffalo, 36,656, and
New York Knicks backcourt 50,302.
Paul Silas, Boston, 34,145;
tandem of Walt Frazier Wid
Picked as starting 'guards lor Center - Dave Cowens,
Earl Monroe were named the West were Gail Goodrich of Boston , 62,156 ; Guards -Jo Jo
Saturday as the only team- th e Los Aligeles Lakers, 58,986, White , Boston, 49,346, and
mates on either starting live in and Nate Archibald of the Ernie DiGregorio , Buffalo ,
fan balloting· for the National Ka ns as Ci ty-Omaha Kin gs, 37,366,
Basketball Association's 25th 46,724.
West : Forwards - Bob
annual Ea.t-West All-Star
NBA coaches will pick the Dandridge, Milwaukee , 36,318,
game at Phoenix, Ariz, Jan. 14. remaining seven players lor and Connie Hawkin s, Los
Frazier drew 91,621 votes each side and their selections Angeles, 28,263 ; Center - Bob
and Monroe collected 52,637 in will announced on Jan . 8.
Lanier, Detroit, 65,917; Guards
the first national voting by the
Top runnersup in the bal- - Charlie Scott, Phoenix ,
paying public for NBA All- loting :
40,736, and Lucius Allen, Los
Stars . Previously, the starting
East : Forwa rd s - Jim Angeles, 34,339.
teams were picked by sports
writers and broadcasters.
Bob McAdoo of the Buffalo
Braves was the people's choice
as 98,325 voles were flied for
the hlgh«''ring center.
•
Rounding oul the starting
East team were forwards John
Havlicek of the Boston Celtics,
with 87,715 votes, and Elvin
Hayes of the Washington
Bullets, ~2, 4&lt;14 .
Center Kareem AbdulJ a bbar of the Milwaukee
Bucks was the most popular
among Western voting fans
with a 77,832 total. At the
forwards were Rick Barry of
the Golden State Warriors,
60,547, and Spencer Haywood
REGULA~

l

I

Ground Be8f

1

Frazier, Monroe
tabbed to squad

,

'

'

Tornados hang 0 n
Southern Tornad os, despite

'

.Friib;l,y's ·college ·cage action

Pirates press Bobcats

,.
-··.,,•

'

''

18 .:.: The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 5,1975

~

••

'

.

�•

'

'

19 _;_ The SundayTimes -Sentinel, sunday ,.Jan. 5, 1975

BY DAt E ROTHGEB, JR.

"
'

VINTON - r&gt;orth Gallia
"·ent into a zone press midway
Frida~·

in the first period here

night. breaking a Kyger Creek
4.!.t·orner sU1ll then liJe .Pirates

rolled to an easy. i0-11 victory .
Coach Keith Ca rter's Bob:
cats began· their s~11l following

WiLLOW WOOD -

The

some sha ky performance at

the foul line , held on in the
closing minute to edge past

S)·mmes. Valley 58-56 in an
SVAC game here Friday night.
The win UPI'"d the 'l'ornados'
season mark l o 4-( :t-:J ins1de
the SVAC.
The loss drops the Vik tngs , a
pre-season pick by the league's
coaches to finish wt th a sha re
of lhe SVAC lolle, lo 0-4 in
league play, 0-7 overall.
II was a see-sa w battle all the
way , as the quin tet of Carl
Wolfe moved out to a 16- 14 first
period lead. The Vi ki ngs ,
howevrr, stormed back to take
a 31-29 intermission lead before

Southern retaliated in the third
period lo lead 44-41 goi ng into
the fin al hectic stanza.
Southern , building its largest
margin of lhe night at 6 points,
58-52, went into a sta ll with I
minute re ma ining, and the
Vikings had to foul in an attempt to get the ball back.
But the Torn ados, who · hit
just 6 ol l7 free throws, froze al
the chari ty stripe, missing 3
consecutive one-an d-&lt;me op-

portuniti es whil e Symmes
Vall ey respond ed wi th 4

a baske t on the tip by- Doug Cottrell cut the lead to 3-2 . Bob&lt;:a !S.
had eight points and Cottre ll
sophomore Fred Logan. Logan. befor e senior Gene Payne
Within
seconds,
.KC added lour .
. •·as fouled on the play and his put the Pirates ahead once proceeded to turn the ba ll over
Nort h Galli a hit 31 of 65 floor
free lhro•· made it :i-ll.
and eventuall y abandoned the attempts for 4!'pct. and 8 ol 17
a~ain , :\-2. M other goal by
The Bobcats ' used the ir Cottrell cut the lead to :H.
sl&lt;!ll ing offense .
at the' chari ty stripe. Kyger
discipli ned offense looki ng for
The
fi
rst
quarter
ended
with
Creek
connected on seven of 12
At that point, Pirate mentor
lhe open man whii.P attemp,lin~
Jtm Foster called time to set NG on top, !:Hi. Payne and at the free throw line.
to upset thr Pir ates' running
Logan led NG 's offense while
The Pirates also held a 28-20
up hi s zone press, a decision
ga me. A jwnper by 6-2 s~n.i&gt;Jr which proved cos tly for the Cottrell's six points kept the reb&lt;lunding edge .
The P~ra tes finished with
Bobcats in the ga me
North Gallia's offense began three players in double figures.
mov in g in the second penod as · Logan and Camden-led the way
the Pirates collected 18 points with.18 points. James dwnped ,
to ta ke a command ing, 31-14 in 16. KC also had three players
lead at the half.
in double fi gures. Cottrell had
Logan, big Bruce Runyon · 12 po ints; Wtse 11 and Metzner
and
Payne were the btg guns in 10.
.
.
, .
hit for 14 points.
straigh t free throws to pull to
the
quar
ter
with
six
and
four
.
The
wm
was
the
Pi~a
.
t
es
fifth
Symmes Valley held a 44-37
within 2 ~~ 58-56, before time
rebounding edge, whi le lite points res pec ti vely. Dave lll st x games thtsseasoh. NG ts
ran out.
Wise 1HJ senior forward led 111 second place 111 the Southern
"II was just a matter of Tornados commttled just 12
the Bobcat attack wtth' six Va ll ey Athlet ic Conferen ce
shooting, " said Wolfe wh o was turnovers .
behind Hannan Trace. Kyger
Junior Danny Brown led poi nts.
pleased wit h the victory,
Creek
dropped to 1-5 overa ll
The taller Pirates made it a
althoug h much disdained over Southern re bounders wtlh l4 to
go wi th Shultz's 10. Brammer run away in the third period and 0-4 in the SV AC.
h i~ squad's lack of free throw
Coach Mike Mulford 's Little
picked off 15 missed shots fo r rackin g up 31 points to lead 62proficiency.
Bucs
remained atop the SV AC
28 going into the final stanza.
The Tornados' 6 of 17 per- the Vikings .
Rese
rve
s tandings' with a Jl-22
Three Pira tes were par·
The Tornados hit 26 of 64
formance at .lhe 1:\-fool mark
ticul ariy hot during the third vic tory. Ric hard Eg gleton
was good for a freezing 34 pet., noor attempts for 11 pet.
pa ced the winners with nine
Southern travels to Water- peri od. 6&lt;i se nior cen ter Mike
while 75 pd . ts usually conpoin ts.
side red average fo r foul ford to face the Wi ldca ts Camden had 10 points; Greg
Ra lph Baylor led the
Tuesday while Symmes Va lley James, 6-4 jun ior guard, the
shooting.
Bobkit tens with nine points .
The Vikings also had charity is off un til Friday when it P ir a tes' lea di ng scorer wlw
Kyger Creek played Buffalo,
ha d just two baskets in the firs t·
stripe problems, canning jusl 6 travels to Roc k Hil l.
Va . Saturday night. North
W.
In Friday's reserve game. hal f, canned 12 poin ts on fi ve
of 11.
Galli
a tra vels to Eastern
baskets and two free throws
It was the shooting and b&lt;lard Ri chard Teaford and Dave
Friday night.
work of Tornado Paul Shultz Roush pumped in 14 and 10 and Logan, who played a KC
6 8 l4 13-41
that spelled the difference as poin ts respec ti vely to pace the cons is tent ga me. had fiv e North Galli a 13 18 31 8-70
the senior forw ard tossed in 22 Tornado jWJ ior varsitv to a 52· points .
Rese rv es - NG 31 KC 22.
Kyger Creek's third period
win.
Th e Tornado
poin ts and grab be d 10 31
er Cr eek (41)
Cort r ell
re bounds. Othe r Tor nados -rese rves a re now 3-5. scorin g wa s led by junior 4 4Kyg
12, Metzner 4 2 10, Wise 5 1
forward
Bill
Metzner.
Metzner
16 13 15 14- 58
I I. Stidh a m 0 0-0 , Ke rn 2 0 4.
turning in solid pe rformances Southern
Lucas 1-0-2, Sm i th 1-0-2. Total s
were Buddy Ervin and Mtke Symmes Val. 14 17 io 1:&gt;-56
17 -7·41.
SOUTHERN (58) - Ervi n 7
N orth Gallia {70 ) - L oga n 8 ·
Roberts wilh. 14 points apiece.
0 14 , Robe r ts 6· 2 14 . Br own 1 7
2 18, R unyo n 3 1 7. Ca m den 8 2
Three Vikings hit double ..t . Shu l tz 10 ·2 22 , Dun n ing 2 0 &lt;i ,
Breaking tbe Banco
18 . James 7 2 16, Pay n e 4·0·8,
Q_ 0 0 TOTAL $ 26-6· 58
D enny 1· 1-3_ Total s 31-8-70 .
ligures, led by Jaye Myers with H ill
Originall
y
meaning
"
bench"
SYMMES VALLEY (561 ·19. Jim Myers added 16, while Jaye Myers 8 J 19, Jim Mye r s or "shelf " in Italian, the word
7 2 16 .
B r ammer
7 0 14 .
banco was applied specially to a
Larry Brammer , who did mos t Quis
enberr y 2 1 5, Es tep , 1 0 '1
trademan'
s counter, and hence
of his damage in the fi rst hall. TOTALS 2 S+ S6 .
See Our Large
to a money-changer 's bench or
Selection of
table , from which th e modern
word bank is derived. In Italy,

Pro Standings
NBA Stand ing s
B y Unit ed Pr ess Int ern a ti on a l
Eu t er n c onf er enc e
... Atlanti c D I Vi SIO n
w . I. p et .
g .b .
13 I) .639
Boston
21 14 611 1
Bu ff alo
New York
20 IS .571 2 1 ~
Ph ita
15 21 . .117 8
Ce ntral D ivision
w . 1. pet . g .tl .
wa shi ngton
76 10 721
Cleveland
19 14 .576 S1 1
Houslon
19 16 .543 6 1 7
A tl ~n l a
16 27 42 1 11
New Orlean53 3 1 088 22
w es t ern Cont ere nce
M i dwes t Oiv i, hm
q . 1. pet . g . b.
De tr oit
7 1 17 553
Ch ic aoo
18 17 .514 11 7
KC .Qmana
20 :?0 .500 :?
Mlt w a u ~ee

I S 1'1 .441

4

Pacific D iv ision
w . 1. per . g .b .
Gold en Slate
13 17 .657
Sea lll c
18 19 ,&lt;186 6
Ph oe n ix
15 20 .J29 8
Por tla nd
15 21 4 17 8 1 1
Los Angeles
15 72 405 9
Frida y's Res ults
Detroit II I Bu ff a lo 92
Cleveland 95 Hous ton 83
Chicago 126 PMoe n ix 99
Ph iladelph ia 107 Kansas C i ty

Om aha 95
Bos ton 127 Los Ange les 1 0~
Seattle 98 Portland 9:1 ·
Sa tu r day ' s Gam es
Cl eveland ar New York
Buffa lo at Atlanta ~Kansas Ci ty Omaha a 1 Chicago
Ph iladelphia at Detroit
Houston at Milwaukee
WaSh ing ton a t Golden StAte
A B A Stand ln g s
By Un it£&gt; d Pr tts!. lnft' r national
E ast
w . 1. p e l . g . b .
Kentucky
24 10 106
New York.
26 11 703
5 1. L OU I
15 15 375 11
MemptHS
10 16 27 8 IS
Virgin 1a
9 27 -150 16
Wes t
w. I. p et. g . b.
Denver
32
5 865
San Anlon
12 18 550 1 ll 1
Utah
19 :?1 .H5 IJ ' •
I nd i ana
IJ 20 . J 17 16 1 ~
San D iego
lo1 12
389 ·17 1 ,
Fr iday ' s R es ul ts
Ke n tucky 113 Virginia 19
New York 130 St Louis 113
Denver 120 Indiana 111

B~

WH A St and ings
Un ited Press Inter national
Ea ~ t

w.

p rs gf
New Englnd20 13 1 J 1 125
Cleveland
1J 18 I :?9 n
Ch icago
11 70 o 7J 10J
lnd ianapl s 6 30 1 13 SO
Wes t
w I. t. pts gf
Houston
25 11 0 SO 165
P-hoen iJC
11 14 J 38 117
Minnesota 17 16 0 3J I JO
San Diego
Mich igan

1.

1.

16 I! I
11 13 ]
Ca na di a n

w. I.

ga

115
107
I ?J
161
ga
102
11.4
119

33110118
25 9215.9

Toronto

10

14

pt s gf ga
1 " ' 15 3 130

Que bec
Edmonton

70

15

0 .&amp;0

t.

us

123

181013711193

W i nn ipeg , 11 1 ~ 1 35 118 101
Vancouv er 16 IJ 2 J4 100 99
F ri day ' s Res u l h
N~ng:land S Toron to J
Sa
i eqo 1 Minnesota 1
Pho i x 3 Edmonlon l , o t

N H l S I ~Ht d 1 rt9 5
B v Unit ed Press lnfern ltionii l
D ivision 1
w . I . f . Ph g f 9•
Ph i ladelph 2S 7
_s ss ll9 14
NY Rangf!'r~ 17 11 .8 42 U0118
Atlanta
16' .15 · 1 J9 105 t09
NYUII!Indr'$ 15 14 9 39 127 IO.S

Divhi on 2
w I. t . pt s gf gii

V ancouver 22 11
Chicaoo
11 t6
S1 . L Ouis
16 15
M in n esota 11 11
Ka nsas- City 5 27
D ivis ion

5 49 139 111
4 38 126 !OJ
6 38 117 IJO
27 103 159
4 14 BS 161

s

By United Press International

It figured North earouna
State would play North Carolina tonight -but not in the
consolation game of the Big
Four tournament at Greens!
boro, N.C.
N.C. Sta~ saw its J&amp;ilame
winning streak snapped Friday
night when the top ranked
Wolfpack dropped an 83-78
decision to tmheralded Wake
Forest in the opener of tbe Big
Four tourney . The 'Iightcap
saw Duke spring an upset of its
own by downing eighth ranked
North Carolina 99-96 in over-

SAVE
NOW
LB.

hi s bench or counter was
broken up. and he was spoken of
as bancorotto - bankrupt .

'

and

SECTIONAL
HOMES

NO.1 OHI·O

20 lb

•MARLETTE
•ELCONA
•ARLINGTON
eGRANVlLLE
•SPRINGBROOK

Bag

owe service what we sell"

FRENCH CITY
MOBILE HOMES, IN£..

Even Hondo , who

first

gained pro fame as the sixth
man during the Celtic dynasty·,
had lo be a ware of the irony
involved Friday night whe~ he
. moved into fifth place on the
all-time National Basketball
Association scoring list .
Havlicek scored 22 points as
Boston crushed the Lakers,
127-106, at Los Angeles to run
his point total for 13 years to
21,586. This moved him ahead
of Hal Greer and onto the first
team which also consists of
Wilt Chamberlain, Oscar Robertson, Jerry West and Elgin
Baylor.
A Forum crowd of 16,995
treated Havlicek to a standing
ovation when he reached the
milestone, and the 34-year-old
Celtic captain then sat out the
linal15 minutes of the contest.
The victory also had special
significance to the defending
champion Celtics. It was their
fourth in a row on a West Coast
trip and pushed . them into
undisputed possession of first
place in the Atlantic Division
for the first time this season.
Buffalo, as the result of a 111-92
setback to the Detroit Pistons,
fell a full game back of the
leaders.
·
Jo Jo White led the Celtics
with 28 points and Dave
Cowens had 17 points and 13
rebotmds. Los Angeles center
Elmore Smith outplayed
Cowe~s. however, with a
season-ltigh 30 points and 12
rebounds,
Boston, which shot a torrid 60
per cent from the floor in
running up a 101-71 lead after
three periods, has won 16 of 19

road contests.
In other NBA action, Chicago
defea ted PhoeniK 126-99,
Sea ttle beat Portland 98-93,
Philadelphia beat Kansa s CityOmaha 107·95, and Cleveland
beat Houston 95-81.
Pistons 111, Braves 92
Bob Lanier led Detroit in
scoring with 23 points and also
go t involved in a scuffle with
Dale Schlueter· late in the
game. They argued near the
Braves' bench and Lanier took
a swing at the Buffalo center
but apparently missed. Detroit
players rushed over and Coach
Ray Scott had words with
Schlueter.
With six seconds left in the
game, Schlueter was J,ripped
by rookie Eric M011ey near the

De troit bench and the Pistons·
J im

na vi.s

jumped

on

Schlu eter . Scl1lu eter , who
made l wo fr ee throws on the
foul by Mon ey , and Davis w~re
ejected. Buffalo's Bob McAdoo
topped all scorers with 29
points before fouling out.
Bulls 126, Suns 99
Chicilgo hit on 17 of 21 field
goal attempts in the second
quarter Lo set o tea m reco rd
with 47 points and when the
rout was complete, Phoenix
Coach John Ma cLeod said of
the Bulls, "They just broke 11'
down . Tha t wa s the bes t
basketball I've ever seen a
team play."
Bob Love led th e Bulls with
20 points, a figure matched by
Mike Banlom of Phoenix.

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

with ~aior Hoople
HIS ONLY
t.VI&gt;.LUI&gt;.TION
TKI~ NE.W
YEI&gt;.R5 WA~
Wl-tETHER
HIS HEAD
ALREI'DY
HURT MORE - !
Tt&lt;I'.N HIS
HEMD
STOMACH !
HIM
Sr&gt;.Y

ON 2 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSITS
e'S,OOO MINIMUM

Ml d Wt'\f

Marauerte 61 OrPt!u l 60

lh l1 St 88 Manc-hester 67
Hanover 82 DePat~w H
Greern 8ev U Sl Ambrou .U
So . III · E&lt;twrdsv lll t' 71 Grand

valley 69
Carlton 59 Corne ll 57
Carthage 66 111 Bened ict ine b..&amp;
Oshkosh 100 St Norbert 82
SO Springf i eld 83 Chadron St.
73

SUBSTANTIAL INTEREST PENALTY IS REQUIRED FOR EARLY
WITHDRAWAL ON CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS

THE .GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
A.ND ·LOAN .COMPANY
·

-

.· ·

PHONE 446-3832

·

.

irrational" in h i~ decision.
P &lt;~p i a n o and Fi nl ey an nounce d they will fil e an appeal
wi th th e Cillifornia Stat e
Di, trict Court of Appeals.
"This is only the beginning,"
said Finley. "I will go all the
way to the U.S, Supreme Court
if I have to."
Pa pi ano pointed out· that the
U.S. Supreme Caurt had upheld
baseball 's reserve clause three
times over the years.

DUCATS ON SALE
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - The
Un iversit y of Da yton said
Friday that lickels for the
NC AA Mid-Eas t Regional
Basketbal l tournament March
20 and 22 will go on sale to the
public Monday.
A UD spokesman said mail
orders would be accepted on a
lit·st come fir st served basis
with a limit of four tickets per

•
'

I
I .

order .

GWBSTRADED
BLOOMINGTON ,' Minn.
( UPI) - The Minnesota North
Stars Saturday traded veteran
defensemiln Barry Gibbs to
AtlWlta for two rookies, Dean
Talafous of Duluth, Minn., and
Dwight Bialowas. • ·

··woRK":

USE OUR
LOW COST
PAYMENT
PLAN

rJH£
WORLD

!&gt;COFFS
AT !&gt;E.LF·

WINTER
SPECIALS

IMPROVEMENT•

WRITE US
ABOUT
THESE
"SPECIALS
AND OTHER
SPECIALS

..u..;..,~

1·¥

.

and Carving . Order now. We are holding the price line as long as supplies last !_ .

VINE RIPE
TOMATOES
40 OZ. TRAY
CHlf-BOY-ARDEE ·

'

I

I

,.

CHEES'E PIZZA

MIX

c

Double

I

Now you can achM
a beautiful coordinated
decorative ~ect In_your
home, wlth Amerocii'•
Carriage House Collection.

a

Regular Price

~

. "Safe Savings Since 1886"
OHIO

I , '

..I

•
..

Special pric"· tncludes
lettering shown. design,
and delivery to your
cemetery plot.

. Whether your project li ~orating,
ram6dellng or bul!dlng a neW home, you can
select tftelndlvldual hardware accents
you need from over 75 items, .. In
Antique English or Antique Silver finishes.
Corne In . .. See beautiful Carriage Hou~ display
. and..receive the Free Oeooratlng Idea
Brochure, with Handy Shoppers Guide.

.

$35 down, $15 per month

FROZEN
FRENCH FRIED

Potatoes

THE

'

LEAD£~

IH

~INE

Simply mail the Convenient Coupon ... Call ...
Write ... or come in. Transportation gladly
furnished to and from any of our showrooms,
without obligation.

OECOMIIVE . . _ , E .

,

·

CARTER and
EVANS :INC.
..

'

2 LB. BAG

"Cash &amp; Carry"

.

.

.

.

.

MIDD.LEPORT, OHI~
'
I

!

&gt;

..
,,

\

I,

'

I

. .
0 Please send .me FREE booklets

I'

showing memorials printOd in full colqr
wilh sizes and prices listed . .
0 Kindly have an authorized Logan Monu-

II.

Display Yard
Display Yard near .
I·
on W. Main Street POI'THiroy-Mason Bridge
James 0, Bush, -Mgr. Leo L. Vaughan, Mgr. . 1
8;·8-60_3......r.e.le·p·h·o-n.e-99·2--2·5-88_.. I,
L...r.e.le.;.p.ho_n_e_3_8..

...

:\

I

~~

::::;

Ma"soleurns without obligation.
-Name
'
strfftorRout;e__ _ _ _ __
City or Town _ _;..__ __
tlhone
· •
-~----·--- --"'!'--~----·.

.- .-.. ..

' '
,

I

I

· ~allip()lis, Ohio

I

r--------~-----------'
r.OIIPON
Logan Monumenl Company. POmeroy,

VI NTON, OHIO POMEROY, OHI0 : ~e;~~:s:ep:::et~:e :·;~t:~~:y

I

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER

(Additional lettering and
other style carvings may
be
used
on
above
memorial at a nominal
additional charge .)

If family name is desired
on pack of monument.
· there will' be an additional
charge .

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.

~

, ~;ock •.,

.

$'3 59
,

ONLY

•

SPECIAL
.."ICI!

The Chrisli im monument is the
popular sloping type with the ivy
leaves, which symbolize lovi·ng
memory . It Is 42 inches long and
22 inches high.

THIS PRICE GOOD ONLY IF ORDERED
BEFORE MARCH 1
-

.29 oz..

ALL DEPOSITS GUARANTEED BY
OHIO DEPOSIT GUARANTEE FUND

Southwest
Ar iz 67 TeK tec h 6 1. 'ot
SW Tex 81 Ab i lene Chrisfian 70
MidWS i rn 83 Cn trl St . Of Okla 66
lex Lut heran 10.5 B i shop 91

through attorney Neil Papiano,
to make an appeal at a higher
level.
Phtilips said the law prevent- &lt;I
ed him from considering the
facl~ behind the case unless it
could be established that th e
arbitra tor had been "grossly

We are lowering the prices during the winter, giving you the finest SJeel Engraved Lettering

ON 2 YEAR CERTIACATES OF DEPOSITS
'•,
esl,OOO MINIMUM

M i les Coli 13 Savannah St . 65
Sprng
Artlr
83
Sthwstrn
( Tenn &gt; 57
So M iss 92 F Ia So 8J
No Ala 51 L 1v lng\ton 52
renn Martin 87 Mi'Ss Col lege 76

'

By United Press International
Once and for all, J ohn
Havlicek has rid himself of the
all-too-familiar "sixth man"
theme .

scorer

Size

91

·'

NBA Roundup

By JOE SARGIS
W
eber
State
68-48.
UP!
Sports Writer
T~xas Tech 62-61 in 0\'e rlime,
In
tournament
piny,
Houston
OAKLAND (UPll - Jim
Wnsh in~ton whipped Colorado
90-61 an d Monl&lt;l na do wned be&lt;tt Hawaii 105-96 and Texas "Catfish" liunter, baseball 's
A&amp;M edged Nev ada-Las Vegas ail-t ime highest paid player;
80-78 in the Blueb&lt;lnnet Classic ca n rest easy for now. But the
al liouslon whil e in th e fi ght for his services wiJI go on
Presidential Classic al fort because Charlie Finley, the
Meyer,
Vc1.,•
Am eri ca n '"''f'" he was cut loose from,
Univ ers ity go t by West simply won 't give up.
Virg·inia 82-78 and George
Hunter, the American LeaSup••rSoni rs 98, Trail Blazcl'!i Wa s hington topped Bosto n gue's Cy Young Award winner
93
University 80-71,
last season, ea rned his
Fred Brown scored 22 of his
Da ve Meye rs' 23 points fr eed om fr om the wo rld
game-h igh 32 points in the pa ced UCLA over Davidson as champion Oakland A's when an
second half as Seattle so lidifi ed th e Bruins ex tended d,eir home arbitrator ruled Finley had
its hold on second place in U1e court winrting strea k to 72 defaulted on the pi tcher 's 1974
Pacific Division , two games ga mes ove r th e last fi ve sala ry.
ahead of Phoenix. It was the seasons; John Lambert to~sed
The arbitrator, Peter Seitz of
fifth consecutive loss for the in 24 points lo help Southern New York, declared Hunter 's
Blazers, who were led by Ca l bea t Villanova ; Artzona con tract null and void, an act
Sidney Wicks with 24 points. · Slate plat-ed five !JlCn in double which made Hunter a (ree
76ers 107, Kings 95
figures in beating Oregon Sl&lt;•le agent. After 11 week of bidd ing
Steve Mix scored 14 points in and running its record to Il-l ; by every club in lhe major
the second quarter when Jerry Homan 's tip-in with four leagues ex~ept one, Hunter
Philadelphia ra n up a 58-11 seconds left to play enabled signed a $3.7 million multi-year
halftime advantage and wound MartJ,uclle to gel by stubborn l'O ntract with the New York
up with a game-high 29. After DePaul and freshmao Gilbert Yankees on New Year 's l':ve.
the Kin gs na rrow ed their Myles' two fr ee throws with 13
Finley, claiming Seitz overdeficit to 79-76 in the openmg seconds left in .overtime helped stepped his bounds, took his
seconds of the final qua r~r. Arizona beat Texas Tech.
plea to court but on Friday,
Philadelphia pu t together a n'
Clarenc-e Ramsey's 20 points Alameda County Superi or
18-2 streak during the next live paced Washington over Colora- Court Judge George W.
minutes. Dc ug Collins added 26 do; 'l'elGls A&amp;M used Sonny Phillips Jr. refused to overturn
points lor the 76ers and Billy Parker 's 14 points · to beat the arbitrator 's .award or issue
Cunningham had 22. Nate Nevada-Las Vegas wltile Otis an injunction.
Archibald led the Kings with Birdsong collected 29 points for
The move, at least tem-27.
liouston in its win over Hawaii; porarily , dealt a blow lo
Cavaliers 9~, H.ockets HJ
and Calvin Brown's career- baseball's reserve cla use
Bobby Smith scored 20 polnts high 30 points led American which binds a player to one
and Dick Snyder added 1.8 for University over West Virginia club until he quits or is
,the Cavaliers while Jim Chones while Pal Tallent scored 26 relea sed. However, Judge
contributed 20 reb&lt;lunds. Rudy points for George Washington Phillips said some questions
Tomjanovich scored 22 for in its vicwry over Boston have been left unanswered and
Houston.
University.
he more or less invited Finley,

'

ON 1 YEAR CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS
e$1,000 MINIMUM

South
William Colt 89 Kings Pl . 71
Mulligan 75 W al s h 73,
Ws h ngtn &amp; Lee 56 Hvr frd 43
A l bany St . ( Ga . &gt; lOS Tuske gee

I

HoDdo now

ONLY

'

Ame r ic ~ n

Wes t
UCLA 91 D avidson 64
w. 1. t. pts gf ga
usc 101 Vi lla nov a ·74 ~
Montreal 20 6 12 S2 163 ·107
Ariz St 76 Ore St . 70
los.Angels 20 6 II SillS 71
Mont 68 .We ber St. . 48
~IISbr9h 13 16 8 JJ 148 hH . w a stl 90 Col 61
Detroit
10 20
5 2.5 103 1•5
Bo ise St . 102 Portland St.. 101
.Wash ingfn 3 31
d 10 so 202
Ca l Pd ly -P.omona 59 Ca r St .-L A
D ivisio n 4
58
I
'
w. 1. t . pts gt ga
U S lnt'1 8 l Clare mont Mu dd 69
2~
8 6 s~ 1 6~ 123
B-uff a lo
Cai -R i vers lue u A zusa Pa c 66
Bosto n
21 10 6 48 171 118
Ca t St -Nrthrdge 8 2 Siou x F a ll s
. 67
To~onto.
11 18 '7 29 120 14 1
Occi d en tal 51 Po in t L o m e) 54 ·
Cal i for nia
9 23 a :?6 106 163 , Cal s t .-Bkt'sf l d 58 Sta n is laus St .
• Friday 's R e sult
' 34
Buffalo '1 Car iJo rnia 2 1

's·ta te 76-70, 14th ranked
Marquett e nipped De Paul 616o', 18th ranked -Arizona nipped

Phone 4%-9340

ON 90 DAY CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS
•sl,OOO MINIMUM

Ea st
Es n . Sh o re 51
Sh ep par d 97 D icki n son 70
Laf a ye tt e 72 vermon t 65
Sacred Hea r t 10_2 C la rkson 86

101-74.
Elsewhere, lith ranked
Arizona State beat Oregon

Upper Rt. 7
Gallipolis

ON
.PASSBOOK·
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

c .w P os t 59 M d .

filth
ranked
Southern
California was equally ·unpressed in thrashing Villanova

•

'

Save D'urlng This Winter Sale. Select .From Many Beautiful
Memorials A't Special Reduced Prices. You Can Choose The
Family Memorial That Will Mark Your Burial Estate For The
· Rest Of Eternity!

.ON CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS

Pres idential C lanic
u 82 w . va . 78
Georg e Washi n gton 80 Boston
u . 71

LB.

.POTATOES·

NOW PAYING
NEW HIGHER INTEREST RATES

Bluebonnet Classi c
Hous ton lOS Ha w aii 96
Te• A&amp;M 80 U N .La s Veg ~ S 18

'

U.

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS .&amp; LOAN

Fr i d11y ' s College
Bask e tball R e sults
By United Press International
Big Four Tournament
Wa k e F ores t SJ N C Slat e 78
D u ~e 99 NC 96 . o t

, time.
"[ don't want to take
anything away from Wake
Forest's win," said Wolfpack
Coach Norm Sloan af~r his
team posted a mlserabiEi 35 per
C1lnt shooting average and
dropped its first game since an
~ loss to UCLA in December, 1973. "I won't altribu~ our
defeat to poor shooting. I just
think they defended us like .
heck."
·
Even Wolfpack star David
Thompson, who entered the
game with a 35-point average,
was held to a season-low 15
points. Thompson, who led
N.C. State to its NCAA
championship last season,
connected on only five of 20
shots from the floor.
Wake Forest Coach Carl
Tacy said the Deacons did
''nothing special" to defense
Thompson other than to force
him outside to guard against
his famed "Alley Oop" dtmk
shot.
In contrast to N.C. State, the
Deacons posted a 54 per cent
shooting mark, led by Skip
Brown's 25 points, as !bey
raised their record to 6-3 and
dropped the Wolfpack's mark
to 8-1.
In the nightcap, Bob Fleischer's 26 points and 24 by Kevin
Billennan enabled Duke to
surprise North Carolina.
Freslunan Phil Ford led the
Tar Heels with 22 points.
Third ranked UCLA, with a
good chance of moving up in
the ratings next week, ran its
record to~ with an easy 91-64
victory over Davidson while

BREADED

COD FISH
RTIONS

'

WolfpEtck h'it by .Wake,83-78

MOBILE
HOMES

when a moneylender was unable to continue hi s business.

NEW YOR.K ( UPI ) - The of the Seattle SuperSonics, McMillian, Buffalo, 36,656, and
New York Knicks backcourt 50,302.
Paul Silas, Boston, 34,145;
tandem of Walt Frazier Wid
Picked as starting 'guards lor Center - Dave Cowens,
Earl Monroe were named the West were Gail Goodrich of Boston , 62,156 ; Guards -Jo Jo
Saturday as the only team- th e Los Aligeles Lakers, 58,986, White , Boston, 49,346, and
mates on either starting live in and Nate Archibald of the Ernie DiGregorio , Buffalo ,
fan balloting· for the National Ka ns as Ci ty-Omaha Kin gs, 37,366,
Basketball Association's 25th 46,724.
West : Forwards - Bob
annual Ea.t-West All-Star
NBA coaches will pick the Dandridge, Milwaukee , 36,318,
game at Phoenix, Ariz, Jan. 14. remaining seven players lor and Connie Hawkin s, Los
Frazier drew 91,621 votes each side and their selections Angeles, 28,263 ; Center - Bob
and Monroe collected 52,637 in will announced on Jan . 8.
Lanier, Detroit, 65,917; Guards
the first national voting by the
Top runnersup in the bal- - Charlie Scott, Phoenix ,
paying public for NBA All- loting :
40,736, and Lucius Allen, Los
Stars . Previously, the starting
East : Forwa rd s - Jim Angeles, 34,339.
teams were picked by sports
writers and broadcasters.
Bob McAdoo of the Buffalo
Braves was the people's choice
as 98,325 voles were flied for
the hlgh«''ring center.
•
Rounding oul the starting
East team were forwards John
Havlicek of the Boston Celtics,
with 87,715 votes, and Elvin
Hayes of the Washington
Bullets, ~2, 4&lt;14 .
Center Kareem AbdulJ a bbar of the Milwaukee
Bucks was the most popular
among Western voting fans
with a 77,832 total. At the
forwards were Rick Barry of
the Golden State Warriors,
60,547, and Spencer Haywood
REGULA~

l

I

Ground Be8f

1

Frazier, Monroe
tabbed to squad

,

'

'

Tornados hang 0 n
Southern Tornad os, despite

'

.Friib;l,y's ·college ·cage action

Pirates press Bobcats

,.
-··.,,•

'

''

18 .:.: The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 5,1975

~

••

'

.

�'. .

,.

.

'

.

I

r

'

,.

•

• I

.· d · ·
National farm census un ' erway

I

•

WASHINGTON, D. C. - The
1 97 ~

J91'i9.

Wlder thrre million, as it was in

Census Qf A~rieulture got ·
To av ut d undue burden vn
1he wee k
of
sm~d l . fnrmcrs and to reduce

1969.
A new kmd of fePor:t form

underw ay

Oecemlrer 29 w1th the mallmg
of approximately four milli on
report form s to farms and

POMEROY - Fertilizer shortages and pri ce increases are
making II important that growers understand how to figure the
value of different fertilizer materials before,they buy. Here are
answers on how to calculate these values· by John Trie rweiler,
Extension agronomist at The Ohio State University .
QUESTION - How can farmers figure the value of fertilizer ? Answer : Whenever a product like fertilizer is in short
supply,the conswner must he extra careful to ge t full value 11 he
substitutes other rna terials for those he usually buys. He must he
wary of claims of new super products. With fertilizers , one pound
of a given nutrient, as listed on the label, is exactly equal to one
pollnd of the same nutrient as listed on the label of another
product.
QUESTION - Doesn't the availability of these nutrients
differ, depending on whether they are in a liquid or solid
material ? An~wer : No' As soon as either materia l is placed in
the so il, it equilibra tes with the moisture in the so il . The soil
moisture dissolves the dry material, and any excess water in a
liquid fertilizer is absorbed by the soil. Thus, the availability of
nutrients in both liquid and solid materia~ is the same soon after
their application to either a moist, or to a dry soil.
QUESTIO N - Then can liquids as well as dry fertilizer s he
evalua ted in calculating the best buy ? Answer : Yes ! For liquid
fertilizers, which are sold by the ga llon , you simply divide the .
cost in cents per gallon by the weight in pounds j&gt;er gallon to get
the costs in cents per pound. The rest of the ca lculations are the
same as for dry fertilizers.
QUESTION : To evaluate single-nutrient fertilizers, we first
divide the cost in dollars per ton by 20 to get the cost in cents per
pound of material. Then we divide this cost by the amount of
nutrient in the material to get the cost in cents per pound of
nutrient. How do we evaluate multiple - nutrient fertilizers•
Answer : To eva luate-multiple nutrient fertilizers we must firs t
set values for N, P t2) 0 (S) and K(2) 0. Tl)e easiest way to set
these values is to use single nutrient materials like NH (4)N0( 3)
( 33 . ~ ). concentrated superphosphate (046-il ) and muriate of
potash ( 0460). If NH(4 )N0(3) costs $225 per ton, this is 11 ~.
cents per pound of material which is 33.5 pet. N. So, divide n •,
cents per pound of material by .33 5 and you ge t a cost of 34 cents
per pound for N. Similarly, if concentrated superphosphate ( 0-:460) costs $210 per ton and muriate of potash ( 0460) costs $110 per
ton , the cost is 23 cents per pound of P(2)?(S) and 9 cents per
pound of K(2)) .
QUESTION: Before we figure the value of mixed fertilizers
with different ratios. of N, P(2)0( S) and K(2) 0 will you figure the
value of two similar fertilizers• Answer : Surely. Let's take a&amp;24-24 which costs $l~on and a S.2().20 which costs $173 per ton.
Here the ratios of N, P (2)0(5) and K(2)0 are exactly the same.
The 6,24-24 has S4 units of nutrients and the S.2().20 has 45 units of
the same nutrients. The &amp;-24-24 costs $193 per ton divided by 20 to
give 9.65cents per pound of material. Divide this by .54 equals 18
cents per pound of nutrient. The S.2().20 costs $173 per ton divided
by 20 to give 8.65 cents per pound of material. Divide this by .45
equals 19 cents per pound of nutrient. In this case the &amp;-24-24 is the
better buy at 18cents per pound of nutrient.
QUESTION : That was easy enough . Now will you compare a
1~1S.1Swiththe &amp;-24-24 and with an 1~? Answer : Okay. Let's
figure fertilizer costs of the 1S.1S.l5 at $195 per ton or 9.75 cents
per pound of material, the &amp;-24-24 at $193 per ton or 9.65 cents per
pound of material and the 18-4&amp;-0 at $254 per ton or 12.7 cents per
pound of material. The value of the 1S.1S.1S is .15 x 34 cents per
pound N plus .lh 23 cents per pound P(2)0(S) plus .IS x 9 cents
per pound of K(2)0 for a total value of 9.9 cents per pound of
material. the value of the &amp;-24-24 is .06 x 34 cents per pound N
plus .24 x 23 cents per pound of P(2)0(5 plus .24 x 9 Cents per
pound of K(2)0 for a total value of 9.72 cents per pound of
material. The value of the 1~ is .18 x 34 cents per pound of N
plus .46 x 23 cents per pound of P{2)0(5) for a total value of16.7
cents per pound of material. Now to determine the best fertilizer
buy, divide the cost of each fertilizer by the value of nutrients it
contains and the lowest cost to value ratio is the best buy . The IS.
IS.l5 costs 9.75 cents per pound of material divided by a value of
9.9 cents per poUnd or 0.98. The &amp;-24-24 costs 9.65 cents per pound

';{_

.

More ask
land' use
sefvices

new lines outlet into a large
open ditch which 'has been
excavated from Rt. 3S to the
Kanawha River.
Yoho said that he looked on
the other side of the ditch on
~onijnued on page 2 8)

ran ches m the 50 states

(.!(' ·

cording to Vincent P . Barabba,
Director of the Burea u of the
Census. Th e Burea u is part of
the Depa rtment of Commerce's Social and E('O nomi c
Stat isti cs ·J\dmini str a l ion .
fo'armers and ranchers are

being asked to report on thw
ag ri cultura l

op~ rati ons

during

19H. This 1974 census, the
nation 's 20th fa rm !'ensus in a

series that started in 1840, will
update data must recen tly
obtained in 19i0 for 1969

bein g use~ in the 1974 farm

pn,tess mg costs, a Sho r t
\·erston uf the c-ensus report
form l!'i hei n~ m~iled to the
over unc milli on addresSees
estanated to have had both
fa rrn rCee ipts and expenses of

have beeh printed and addressed in a single operation,

less thar $2.000 in 1973. All

thus el imi na lin g separate

IS

crnsus in or der to reduce costs.
The repor t form, in struction
shee t. and return envelope

, .

records. Estimates are acceptable ~ lid should be
reported in the· absence of
records.
Rf dpients of ce nsus report
forms are cautioned not to

dis card them'. Follow-up
mailing s costing additional
postage wilt he required until
all form s are received. Even if

~

I

r epor t ca rrles fi rs t class

.

.•

... .

'

21 -:- The Sund~ Times· Sentinel. Sundav. Jan. 5. i975

I

~

•
"

...a.:
c
...&gt;-·
z
z...
a.

I
I
I
~
~

High burley prices assured

Stop dreaming ... start plowing
wilha Land Bank loon for a new farm
Making farmers out of dreamers has been our bus in ess
for over 50 years We do this by providing new farmers
w1th credit programs that fea ture lo nge r terms and smaller
payments at reasonable rates of interest. It's o ur way of
investing in t(le future of rural America. We wouldn 't have
it anv other way Ne ither s hou ld
you Stop by soon.

228 Upper River Road
P.O. Box 207, Gallipolis
.,qyde B. Walker, Mgr.

N

.,._
..........
G- 1I'J Cllil
0

70,000 to 150,000
Models In Stock

11:1

-a..
REMOVE FROM PAPER AND USE AS A SHOPPING GUIDE
•""'""' ""'""'""'""' ""'""'""' ""'""'""'""'""'""' -~-""' • • • ""'""' •""' •""'""' • • •

.. LaASa POLD HBRB

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

,. ,
..•

January

Sl

•

..••

SPECIALS

•

:e

On Floor and
Display Models

•
.a

\

NOW AT

t

...
Ct

·t

...a.

....

:I

~

u

~

'

IlK

Ill

!i

LANDMARK

Ill

u

•

'

'

young West Virginians who
have moved back from
Georgia. They come back to
the land expecting to raise
much of their own food supply.
McKinley Peyton Jr. who
bought the Bob Dunn farm
consisting of · 12! acres of
Jerries Run Road ; Michael T.
Nutter has a :~.&gt;acre farm on
Jerries Run Road, and Gary
Edwards bought an 87..acre
farm on the head of Kanawha
16 Mile Creek, all have asked
plan!Jing assistance in order to
help them decide the best uses
for their land.
DRAINAGE WORK has
been progressing in spite ol
rainy and cold wea !her. Drains
!Qtaling 3,150 feet were installed oo the Guy Ray place at
Southside operated b)• Thomas
I!Umgamer. During the in..
staliatim of this .tile the ditcher
cut through seJ.ral lines of
t;bree..inch tile tba t had been
installed many years ago.
., Mr. l!umgamer and Denver
Yobo of SCS specula ted that
the. tile had been originally
installed 90 tO 100 years ago. It
is remarkable !hat these old
tile lines were still clean, still
serving their purpo51!. nie
reaaoo. tha~ new tile was installed is !hat these.;old lines
,... . were ~ot close enough logether
~ . to do
adequate job. These

.

an

5

100 -OVER COST

Brand New 1974

INTERNATIONAL PICKUP
1h TON
liltfrigturor

With auto. transmission,
power steeri~g and pOWer brakes.

r

Watfttr

Ct

1.

Seninl
Meils,

~·
ana

Some ModelS Save Even

...

.,;
:::»•

Mason
Counties.

$75 to $100

Phone 992-2111
'

\

'•
I

.

, I

!

'·

I

'

'

•

'

I
.~

I .

I'

,-

'•

•

o'
' ·f ••

. a.:

is
... ...
._
_"'
...
&gt;
s&gt;vcm. ...

~

·In Stoct

POMEROY

~

POMEROY

On Any Refrige~ahw, Range,
Washer-Dryer ·Combinatiori

•

Meigs Equipment CO.
PH. ~992-2176
. .

Dryrr

Save $50

f All 1975 Pic~ups ~Redu~ed

r'•

'

years , recently covering year s

ending in "4" and "9."
The five-year cens useS are
the onl y source of statistics on

By Joha Cooper
Soil C0115ervalloo Servlo:e
PT. PLEASANT - Several
landowners have recently
become cooperators of the
Western Soil Conservation
District by asking for services.
One is Bill Londeree of
Robertsburg w}lo bought 20
acres on . the ridge behind
Arbuckle frqp~ Jake and Sarah
Gillespie.,J
·
Mr. and Mrs. Londeree are

lay of the land

. . ..
'

••

.

I

printing, assembling, sluffing , the recipient is not farming ,
ard the at !achin g of the printed the form should be returned
with thai fact noted.
address labels .
First Census In 1840
list of the following: persons
Also, for the fir st time, the
The Uni ted Sta tes took its
who fi lle&lt;J out Schedule F of the fo rms are bein g mailed out at
t9n lfldindual income t&lt;.tx the third cla ss bulk rate to fir st Census or' Agriculture 'in
re lurn . persuns lis led with reduce po stage cost. The 18ll4. Un till920 they were taken
nther Fede r al age ncies &lt;-:~ s re turn envelope contain ing the every ten years.: since then ,'
associat ed with agri cuJturaJ farm operat or 's comp leted there has been one every five

postage to protect the confidentiality of the information
will be on obta inin g' in·
1
reported
formati on atxlut farms cmQ
Completed forms are to be · agr iculture that ar e comran ches with sales of $2,500 or etc. 1 Th is combin ed list of ma il e'll -41ack as soon as parable coun ty by county. for
Such addressees forms a pool of possible. Cens us by mail allows the entire nation . They are the
more
ann uall y.
operations accoun ted for 98 potential respondents in the operators to fill out their sole source of comprehensive
perce nt of the total va lue of all census. The finallutal of farms reports at the ir convenience agricultural data ta bulated for
agri cultural prod ucts sold in euunted IS expec ted to be we ll and use their farm business each state ard for the U. S. as a
whole for farm s classified by
size . tenure .
type · of
organization, market vaiue of
products sold . and !)ope of fann
organization .
·
was a burley crop of 571.1 wi th an avera ge price of
United Press International
The selet'tion of qUO' lions in
The rf!ITlainder of the 1974 million lbs.
$108.50, th en climbed in succesburley tobacco crop goes to the
Re-sales lnduded
sive weeks to $111, $116 and to
Sales
so
far
,
said
Donoh
o,
auction warehouse beginning
$119 per hundredwe1ght the
M_onday, with almost 84 per inrlude about 42 million P,.unds th ird and final week of precent of the · crop estimate of re-sales --burley bought by a Olristmas sales .
already sold for record high warehouse fo r sale at a
"Good grade burley is still
prices.
hopefulll(.,higher price in the bringing $121 per hundred ..
Normally, the second half of future .
weight ," said Donoho, "but
bur ley sales in the 8-state
"This first week of the there was so much green, dirty
burley belt go until a bout the market should close up most of and frost-bitten tobacco the
middle of February, but the markets in Tennessee, and final week that the average
volume in pre.Qlristmas sales e&lt;cept for Lexington in Ken- was down. ''
tucky, .the Kentucky markets
was abnormally high. ·
Stabilization PrograQl
"For the same period last will just about be closed by the
Less than one-tenth of a
year, we are running 142 second week this month," said percent of total sales so far
million pounds more thi s Donoho.
have gone under the USDA's
Donoho said he was sur- stabilization program -{)nly
year," said Neil Donoho,
federal-state marke t news prised at the high prices this 52,1158 pounds .
reported for
the U.S. seaso n, par ticul arly conThe burley belt includes
Agri cultural · Depa rtm ent, siderin~ the $112-IIS price Ken t uck y,
Tennessee,
range for flu e-cured toba cco Virginia, North Carolina, 'west
Lexington , Ky.
Donoho says that sa les from late last year. Burley prices Virginia, Indiana, Ohio and
the burley belt have totaled normally follow flue -cured Missouri.
521,44(),332 lbs. for an ave rage trends, bu t this year were
The Lexington , Ky . market is
substan tially higher .
orice of $115.92.
by far the largest in the entire
The last 1974 crop estimate • Th e market opened Nov. 2S region .
Kentucky also has the
hi ghest
price
market.
of material divided by a value of 9.72 cents per pound or 0.99. The Spring'field, in Washington
!~costs 12.7 cents per pound of material diviped by a value of County, with $117.81 per
16.7 cents per pound or 0.76. The best ferWizer buy in this hundredweight on a volwne of
example is I~ with a ratio q,f 0.76 and the next best buy was 11.2 million pounds.
the 1S.IS.IS with a ratio of 0.98, ~en compared with &amp;-24-24 with a
The l&lt;l'west average price
ratio of 0.99 .. All of these mixed fertilizers were good buys when . paid is in West Jefferson , N.C.,
compared with single nutrient fertilizers at 1.00.
with only $104.06 on a small
QUESTION - Is 18-4&amp;-0 a good economical source of volume of 2.8 million pounds.
nitrogen and phosphorus ? Answer : Yes. Diammoniwn
Sales· in 1975 will run twicephosphate ( 18-4&amp;-0) is a very economical source of these daily, four days a week until
nutrients. One other factor we must keep iri mind is that as the the rest ofthe crop is sold.
price of the single-nutrient fertilizers we are using to place a
value are N, P(2)0(5 ) and K(2)0 increase or decrease, they increase or decrease the values of the multinutrient fertilizers we
are comparing. Therefore, current' prices on all fertilizers are
essential in making good comparisons.
QUESTION...,. Are you assuming that all the nutrients in the
fertilizers being evaluated are needed for the crops being fertilized' Answer: Yes, of course. We must also assume that the
rest of the nutrients needed to fill the complete fertilizer
recoJIU, .;ndation must be supplied by other fertilizers. Th3t
exercise is very similar to balancing a livestock ration when you
figure in the value of the different feeds and develop the "least
cost" ration. A computer program is ideal for that type of "lest
cost" calculation. All we have calculated today is the best buy
comparing individual fertilizers.
operat ions. Prim&lt;lry emphasis

same law, ,information flU'•
nished on report form s is kept
confiden ti al. It may be seen
pe ri ence gai ned in earlier only by sworn Census emcensuses, results of a Jan~ary ,plqyes and may be use&lt;J'o nly
1974 pretest census, and for statistical purposes. Even
recommendation-s of the other government agencies
Census Advisory Committee on cann ot obtain or use tl)e report
made by any operator . The law
Agricul lure Statistics.
also
pn)v ides that cQ pies
Response to th e census is
re(&lt;lined
by the operator are
required by law !Title 13 ,
immune
from legal process.
United- States Code 1. By the
the '74 census was based on
needs expressed -by users of
agri cul ture census .data , ex·

other addressees are 'rccei\"ing
the standard form
. . ..
Form s ar e betng mailed to a

operations, and those report mg
ICJrg e ur unu suCJI farm
operCJti ons in th e 1969 census
1such as in stitutional farms
farm s on Indian reservati ons:

,._

I

r---,1 .

~

.
..
•

.,.

I •

'

•
•
•

I

. '

.i

'

••

•

••

�'. .

,.

.

'

.

I

r

'

,.

•

• I

.· d · ·
National farm census un ' erway

I

•

WASHINGTON, D. C. - The
1 97 ~

J91'i9.

Wlder thrre million, as it was in

Census Qf A~rieulture got ·
To av ut d undue burden vn
1he wee k
of
sm~d l . fnrmcrs and to reduce

1969.
A new kmd of fePor:t form

underw ay

Oecemlrer 29 w1th the mallmg
of approximately four milli on
report form s to farms and

POMEROY - Fertilizer shortages and pri ce increases are
making II important that growers understand how to figure the
value of different fertilizer materials before,they buy. Here are
answers on how to calculate these values· by John Trie rweiler,
Extension agronomist at The Ohio State University .
QUESTION - How can farmers figure the value of fertilizer ? Answer : Whenever a product like fertilizer is in short
supply,the conswner must he extra careful to ge t full value 11 he
substitutes other rna terials for those he usually buys. He must he
wary of claims of new super products. With fertilizers , one pound
of a given nutrient, as listed on the label, is exactly equal to one
pollnd of the same nutrient as listed on the label of another
product.
QUESTION - Doesn't the availability of these nutrients
differ, depending on whether they are in a liquid or solid
material ? An~wer : No' As soon as either materia l is placed in
the so il, it equilibra tes with the moisture in the so il . The soil
moisture dissolves the dry material, and any excess water in a
liquid fertilizer is absorbed by the soil. Thus, the availability of
nutrients in both liquid and solid materia~ is the same soon after
their application to either a moist, or to a dry soil.
QUESTIO N - Then can liquids as well as dry fertilizer s he
evalua ted in calculating the best buy ? Answer : Yes ! For liquid
fertilizers, which are sold by the ga llon , you simply divide the .
cost in cents per gallon by the weight in pounds j&gt;er gallon to get
the costs in cents per pound. The rest of the ca lculations are the
same as for dry fertilizers.
QUESTION : To evaluate single-nutrient fertilizers, we first
divide the cost in dollars per ton by 20 to get the cost in cents per
pound of material. Then we divide this cost by the amount of
nutrient in the material to get the cost in cents per pound of
nutrient. How do we evaluate multiple - nutrient fertilizers•
Answer : To eva luate-multiple nutrient fertilizers we must firs t
set values for N, P t2) 0 (S) and K(2) 0. Tl)e easiest way to set
these values is to use single nutrient materials like NH (4)N0( 3)
( 33 . ~ ). concentrated superphosphate (046-il ) and muriate of
potash ( 0460). If NH(4 )N0(3) costs $225 per ton, this is 11 ~.
cents per pound of material which is 33.5 pet. N. So, divide n •,
cents per pound of material by .33 5 and you ge t a cost of 34 cents
per pound for N. Similarly, if concentrated superphosphate ( 0-:460) costs $210 per ton and muriate of potash ( 0460) costs $110 per
ton , the cost is 23 cents per pound of P(2)?(S) and 9 cents per
pound of K(2)) .
QUESTION: Before we figure the value of mixed fertilizers
with different ratios. of N, P(2)0( S) and K(2) 0 will you figure the
value of two similar fertilizers• Answer : Surely. Let's take a&amp;24-24 which costs $l~on and a S.2().20 which costs $173 per ton.
Here the ratios of N, P (2)0(5) and K(2)0 are exactly the same.
The 6,24-24 has S4 units of nutrients and the S.2().20 has 45 units of
the same nutrients. The &amp;-24-24 costs $193 per ton divided by 20 to
give 9.65cents per pound of material. Divide this by .54 equals 18
cents per pound of nutrient. The S.2().20 costs $173 per ton divided
by 20 to give 8.65 cents per pound of material. Divide this by .45
equals 19 cents per pound of nutrient. In this case the &amp;-24-24 is the
better buy at 18cents per pound of nutrient.
QUESTION : That was easy enough . Now will you compare a
1~1S.1Swiththe &amp;-24-24 and with an 1~? Answer : Okay. Let's
figure fertilizer costs of the 1S.1S.l5 at $195 per ton or 9.75 cents
per pound of material, the &amp;-24-24 at $193 per ton or 9.65 cents per
pound of material and the 18-4&amp;-0 at $254 per ton or 12.7 cents per
pound of material. The value of the 1S.1S.1S is .15 x 34 cents per
pound N plus .lh 23 cents per pound P(2)0(S) plus .IS x 9 cents
per pound of K(2)0 for a total value of 9.9 cents per pound of
material. the value of the &amp;-24-24 is .06 x 34 cents per pound N
plus .24 x 23 cents per pound of P(2)0(5 plus .24 x 9 Cents per
pound of K(2)0 for a total value of 9.72 cents per pound of
material. The value of the 1~ is .18 x 34 cents per pound of N
plus .46 x 23 cents per pound of P{2)0(5) for a total value of16.7
cents per pound of material. Now to determine the best fertilizer
buy, divide the cost of each fertilizer by the value of nutrients it
contains and the lowest cost to value ratio is the best buy . The IS.
IS.l5 costs 9.75 cents per pound of material divided by a value of
9.9 cents per poUnd or 0.98. The &amp;-24-24 costs 9.65 cents per pound

';{_

.

More ask
land' use
sefvices

new lines outlet into a large
open ditch which 'has been
excavated from Rt. 3S to the
Kanawha River.
Yoho said that he looked on
the other side of the ditch on
~onijnued on page 2 8)

ran ches m the 50 states

(.!(' ·

cording to Vincent P . Barabba,
Director of the Burea u of the
Census. Th e Burea u is part of
the Depa rtment of Commerce's Social and E('O nomi c
Stat isti cs ·J\dmini str a l ion .
fo'armers and ranchers are

being asked to report on thw
ag ri cultura l

op~ rati ons

during

19H. This 1974 census, the
nation 's 20th fa rm !'ensus in a

series that started in 1840, will
update data must recen tly
obtained in 19i0 for 1969

bein g use~ in the 1974 farm

pn,tess mg costs, a Sho r t
\·erston uf the c-ensus report
form l!'i hei n~ m~iled to the
over unc milli on addresSees
estanated to have had both
fa rrn rCee ipts and expenses of

have beeh printed and addressed in a single operation,

less thar $2.000 in 1973. All

thus el imi na lin g separate

IS

crnsus in or der to reduce costs.
The repor t form, in struction
shee t. and return envelope

, .

records. Estimates are acceptable ~ lid should be
reported in the· absence of
records.
Rf dpients of ce nsus report
forms are cautioned not to

dis card them'. Follow-up
mailing s costing additional
postage wilt he required until
all form s are received. Even if

~

I

r epor t ca rrles fi rs t class

.

.•

... .

'

21 -:- The Sund~ Times· Sentinel. Sundav. Jan. 5. i975

I

~

•
"

...a.:
c
...&gt;-·
z
z...
a.

I
I
I
~
~

High burley prices assured

Stop dreaming ... start plowing
wilha Land Bank loon for a new farm
Making farmers out of dreamers has been our bus in ess
for over 50 years We do this by providing new farmers
w1th credit programs that fea ture lo nge r terms and smaller
payments at reasonable rates of interest. It's o ur way of
investing in t(le future of rural America. We wouldn 't have
it anv other way Ne ither s hou ld
you Stop by soon.

228 Upper River Road
P.O. Box 207, Gallipolis
.,qyde B. Walker, Mgr.

N

.,._
..........
G- 1I'J Cllil
0

70,000 to 150,000
Models In Stock

11:1

-a..
REMOVE FROM PAPER AND USE AS A SHOPPING GUIDE
•""'""' ""'""'""'""' ""'""'""' ""'""'""'""'""'""' -~-""' • • • ""'""' •""' •""'""' • • •

.. LaASa POLD HBRB

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

,. ,
..•

January

Sl

•

..••

SPECIALS

•

:e

On Floor and
Display Models

•
.a

\

NOW AT

t

...
Ct

·t

...a.

....

:I

~

u

~

'

IlK

Ill

!i

LANDMARK

Ill

u

•

'

'

young West Virginians who
have moved back from
Georgia. They come back to
the land expecting to raise
much of their own food supply.
McKinley Peyton Jr. who
bought the Bob Dunn farm
consisting of · 12! acres of
Jerries Run Road ; Michael T.
Nutter has a :~.&gt;acre farm on
Jerries Run Road, and Gary
Edwards bought an 87..acre
farm on the head of Kanawha
16 Mile Creek, all have asked
plan!Jing assistance in order to
help them decide the best uses
for their land.
DRAINAGE WORK has
been progressing in spite ol
rainy and cold wea !her. Drains
!Qtaling 3,150 feet were installed oo the Guy Ray place at
Southside operated b)• Thomas
I!Umgamer. During the in..
staliatim of this .tile the ditcher
cut through seJ.ral lines of
t;bree..inch tile tba t had been
installed many years ago.
., Mr. l!umgamer and Denver
Yobo of SCS specula ted that
the. tile had been originally
installed 90 tO 100 years ago. It
is remarkable !hat these old
tile lines were still clean, still
serving their purpo51!. nie
reaaoo. tha~ new tile was installed is !hat these.;old lines
,... . were ~ot close enough logether
~ . to do
adequate job. These

.

an

5

100 -OVER COST

Brand New 1974

INTERNATIONAL PICKUP
1h TON
liltfrigturor

With auto. transmission,
power steeri~g and pOWer brakes.

r

Watfttr

Ct

1.

Seninl
Meils,

~·
ana

Some ModelS Save Even

...

.,;
:::»•

Mason
Counties.

$75 to $100

Phone 992-2111
'

\

'•
I

.

, I

!

'·

I

'

'

•

'

I
.~

I .

I'

,-

'•

•

o'
' ·f ••

. a.:

is
... ...
._
_"'
...
&gt;
s&gt;vcm. ...

~

·In Stoct

POMEROY

~

POMEROY

On Any Refrige~ahw, Range,
Washer-Dryer ·Combinatiori

•

Meigs Equipment CO.
PH. ~992-2176
. .

Dryrr

Save $50

f All 1975 Pic~ups ~Redu~ed

r'•

'

years , recently covering year s

ending in "4" and "9."
The five-year cens useS are
the onl y source of statistics on

By Joha Cooper
Soil C0115ervalloo Servlo:e
PT. PLEASANT - Several
landowners have recently
become cooperators of the
Western Soil Conservation
District by asking for services.
One is Bill Londeree of
Robertsburg w}lo bought 20
acres on . the ridge behind
Arbuckle frqp~ Jake and Sarah
Gillespie.,J
·
Mr. and Mrs. Londeree are

lay of the land

. . ..
'

••

.

I

printing, assembling, sluffing , the recipient is not farming ,
ard the at !achin g of the printed the form should be returned
with thai fact noted.
address labels .
First Census In 1840
list of the following: persons
Also, for the fir st time, the
The Uni ted Sta tes took its
who fi lle&lt;J out Schedule F of the fo rms are bein g mailed out at
t9n lfldindual income t&lt;.tx the third cla ss bulk rate to fir st Census or' Agriculture 'in
re lurn . persuns lis led with reduce po stage cost. The 18ll4. Un till920 they were taken
nther Fede r al age ncies &lt;-:~ s re turn envelope contain ing the every ten years.: since then ,'
associat ed with agri cuJturaJ farm operat or 's comp leted there has been one every five

postage to protect the confidentiality of the information
will be on obta inin g' in·
1
reported
formati on atxlut farms cmQ
Completed forms are to be · agr iculture that ar e comran ches with sales of $2,500 or etc. 1 Th is combin ed list of ma il e'll -41ack as soon as parable coun ty by county. for
Such addressees forms a pool of possible. Cens us by mail allows the entire nation . They are the
more
ann uall y.
operations accoun ted for 98 potential respondents in the operators to fill out their sole source of comprehensive
perce nt of the total va lue of all census. The finallutal of farms reports at the ir convenience agricultural data ta bulated for
agri cultural prod ucts sold in euunted IS expec ted to be we ll and use their farm business each state ard for the U. S. as a
whole for farm s classified by
size . tenure .
type · of
organization, market vaiue of
products sold . and !)ope of fann
organization .
·
was a burley crop of 571.1 wi th an avera ge price of
United Press International
The selet'tion of qUO' lions in
The rf!ITlainder of the 1974 million lbs.
$108.50, th en climbed in succesburley tobacco crop goes to the
Re-sales lnduded
sive weeks to $111, $116 and to
Sales
so
far
,
said
Donoh
o,
auction warehouse beginning
$119 per hundredwe1ght the
M_onday, with almost 84 per inrlude about 42 million P,.unds th ird and final week of precent of the · crop estimate of re-sales --burley bought by a Olristmas sales .
already sold for record high warehouse fo r sale at a
"Good grade burley is still
prices.
hopefulll(.,higher price in the bringing $121 per hundred ..
Normally, the second half of future .
weight ," said Donoho, "but
bur ley sales in the 8-state
"This first week of the there was so much green, dirty
burley belt go until a bout the market should close up most of and frost-bitten tobacco the
middle of February, but the markets in Tennessee, and final week that the average
volume in pre.Qlristmas sales e&lt;cept for Lexington in Ken- was down. ''
tucky, .the Kentucky markets
was abnormally high. ·
Stabilization PrograQl
"For the same period last will just about be closed by the
Less than one-tenth of a
year, we are running 142 second week this month," said percent of total sales so far
million pounds more thi s Donoho.
have gone under the USDA's
Donoho said he was sur- stabilization program -{)nly
year," said Neil Donoho,
federal-state marke t news prised at the high prices this 52,1158 pounds .
reported for
the U.S. seaso n, par ticul arly conThe burley belt includes
Agri cultural · Depa rtm ent, siderin~ the $112-IIS price Ken t uck y,
Tennessee,
range for flu e-cured toba cco Virginia, North Carolina, 'west
Lexington , Ky.
Donoho says that sa les from late last year. Burley prices Virginia, Indiana, Ohio and
the burley belt have totaled normally follow flue -cured Missouri.
521,44(),332 lbs. for an ave rage trends, bu t this year were
The Lexington , Ky . market is
substan tially higher .
orice of $115.92.
by far the largest in the entire
The last 1974 crop estimate • Th e market opened Nov. 2S region .
Kentucky also has the
hi ghest
price
market.
of material divided by a value of 9.72 cents per pound or 0.99. The Spring'field, in Washington
!~costs 12.7 cents per pound of material diviped by a value of County, with $117.81 per
16.7 cents per pound or 0.76. The best ferWizer buy in this hundredweight on a volwne of
example is I~ with a ratio q,f 0.76 and the next best buy was 11.2 million pounds.
the 1S.IS.IS with a ratio of 0.98, ~en compared with &amp;-24-24 with a
The l&lt;l'west average price
ratio of 0.99 .. All of these mixed fertilizers were good buys when . paid is in West Jefferson , N.C.,
compared with single nutrient fertilizers at 1.00.
with only $104.06 on a small
QUESTION - Is 18-4&amp;-0 a good economical source of volume of 2.8 million pounds.
nitrogen and phosphorus ? Answer : Yes. Diammoniwn
Sales· in 1975 will run twicephosphate ( 18-4&amp;-0) is a very economical source of these daily, four days a week until
nutrients. One other factor we must keep iri mind is that as the the rest ofthe crop is sold.
price of the single-nutrient fertilizers we are using to place a
value are N, P(2)0(5 ) and K(2)0 increase or decrease, they increase or decrease the values of the multinutrient fertilizers we
are comparing. Therefore, current' prices on all fertilizers are
essential in making good comparisons.
QUESTION...,. Are you assuming that all the nutrients in the
fertilizers being evaluated are needed for the crops being fertilized' Answer: Yes, of course. We must also assume that the
rest of the nutrients needed to fill the complete fertilizer
recoJIU, .;ndation must be supplied by other fertilizers. Th3t
exercise is very similar to balancing a livestock ration when you
figure in the value of the different feeds and develop the "least
cost" ration. A computer program is ideal for that type of "lest
cost" calculation. All we have calculated today is the best buy
comparing individual fertilizers.
operat ions. Prim&lt;lry emphasis

same law, ,information flU'•
nished on report form s is kept
confiden ti al. It may be seen
pe ri ence gai ned in earlier only by sworn Census emcensuses, results of a Jan~ary ,plqyes and may be use&lt;J'o nly
1974 pretest census, and for statistical purposes. Even
recommendation-s of the other government agencies
Census Advisory Committee on cann ot obtain or use tl)e report
made by any operator . The law
Agricul lure Statistics.
also
pn)v ides that cQ pies
Response to th e census is
re(&lt;lined
by the operator are
required by law !Title 13 ,
immune
from legal process.
United- States Code 1. By the
the '74 census was based on
needs expressed -by users of
agri cul ture census .data , ex·

other addressees are 'rccei\"ing
the standard form
. . ..
Form s ar e betng mailed to a

operations, and those report mg
ICJrg e ur unu suCJI farm
operCJti ons in th e 1969 census
1such as in stitutional farms
farm s on Indian reservati ons:

,._

I

r---,1 .

~

.
..
•

.,.

I •

'

•
•
•

I

. '

.i

'

••

•

••

�..

...

..

'

•

,.

'

'

23- The SIUlday Times !Sentinel, SlUlda)•, Jan. 5. 1975

.

''

•

YCC program lS doing
:plenty on conservation

--

n:=a.

I

CD!"" (
o_

,...-

~oeo

•

...
•

0

n - -'"',.'"

Ul

c

&gt;&lt;

."11

II

~ ,.

r-•

Iii

ii

-•
~

i::;

Jl

i

-:•
::;

.....
c
-n
...

-X

••

...
zc
,..z

!!.

-i•-

-'t!.

-an 80

na.:...

z

-"'
zo
"'z

...'"

0

., ...

:so
•

-..•.

~ ••i'

n

n"'
D•

m
-t
en

.., ........e

!"'

•

,::

-

:a,

ca'
.,:;:

•:a

•

a~

~=

i

0...

•
n_

.,-

:a

e

:Ill

~:z:

:acr
Ill •

m

ca
• 0'

...

m:r.:

r-c
"'-m
:z:

•

-lit

~ Z::l:ui

......,. Ut0

....

•

.

REMOVE FROM PAPER AND U5E A5 A 5HOPPI'NG GUIDE

By Harold L. Roach
COLUMBUS - (Speciij) A lot of people are talking
" about cons~rving natural
resources these davs . Talk
alone doesn't get thi~gs done .
Getting invoivect does, and
that 's the exciting part of the
infant Youth Conservation
Corps (YCC) program which is
fast gaining popularity across
the Uni~ States.
Each summer the YCC
program provides ga inful
employment for thousands of
young Americans . While doing
needed conservation work, the
YCC . participants
ga in
valuable knowledge and experience .
In 1974, Ohio was the first
state in the nation to be ap. proved by the federal government to operate a YCC
program . Four camps were
conducted in the Buckeye"State
last summer - two by the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources and tw o by the
federal government.
Since its inception in 1970, tl]e
YCC program has be en
· drawing praise from federal ,
stale and local governments,
eonservationists, environmentalists and the youths
'Who have participated .
In one letter to the Department of Natural Resources, a
young YCC participant wrote:
"!learned a great deal about
cqnserva\ion and wildlife and
I'm eager to learn much, much
more."
Numerous other lettets also
have been received from YCC
participants and their parents,
commending the Department
of Natural Resources and the
federal government for
initiating and maintaining the
YCC program .
Congress recently responded
to the overwhelming success of
the YCC program, making the
Youth Conservation Corps
permanent.
The YCC program is open to
all young men and women, age
15 through 18, who are permanent residents of the United
States, . its territories or
possessions. These young
people are put into a worklearning situation where they
are paid to accomplish work
which improves, maintains or
enhances the nation's natural

resources.
YCC is coeducational ; girts
work right along side of boys,
doing such tasks as pruning
trees or cutting new hiking
trails.
One · cami&gt;er in last summer's YCC program noted "It
. was fantastic, a great learning
experience... I'm still writing
to a lot of the friends I met

)1.

"'~

-Q .,

Q "'
Q.C

•

a~~~

there."

~ - ~.
CD &lt;

The J)epartment of Natural
Resources' YCC camps are at
Shawnee State Forest in Scioto
County and Zaleski State
Forest in Vinton County.
"
Federally-operated YCC
camps are located at Hebron
Fish Hatchery in Licking
County and Wayne National·
r'orest in Monroe County. The
Hebron camp is conducted by
the U.S. Department of Interior while the Department of

:s ....
~

....

Z

CD

CD

D

a.

'

'

0

z.0
z
.,.

"

Southeastern ·Ohio summer
camps at Zaleski and Wayne
Forests; both highly popular
Agri culture 's U.S. Forest
Service hand les the YCC camp
in Wayne National Forest:
vee ca mps are conducted

U.S. Forest Service.
Information on camper

recruitment is mailed In
January to the 1,100 high
school principals throughout
the slate. Schools showing
interest in the program are
then sent application forms .
Youths interested in participating in the YCC program
can apply only by registering
with their school counselor,
conservation science teacher
or
designated
YCC
representative. 'rhose not in
sctiool, but otherwise eligible

during the s1m1mer months in

two four-week sessions each
year . .The camps are resident

programs and under normal
circumstances, campers are

not permitted to return home
during their stay at the YCC
facility .
Campers attending the YCC
programs at Zaleski and
Shawnee state forests reside in
barracks at the two Department of Natural Resources'
envir onment a l resource
centers . The two centers are
old state correctton facilities
which have been remodeled .
At Hebron, the YCC participants live in dormitories at

for consideration , can register

at the nearest high ~c hool.
A YCC representative from
each sc hool evaluates all applications received

at

that

• • t

•

''~&lt;IJri!it~-·~·- ·.o

.:_j
•,.

'.

....., :'•..

0

•

-If
'
•
_• . N

)..

"'

...

z

Q

"'
~

'

•
•,

,.

'. .

P'._:. .... '

·~

i

'.,··•

' ·~. ":-__..
.•

:.:.'

though.

female camper geL' a helping hand from a hiking companion
during a tr·ek through Za leski State Forest in Vinton County .
(Ohio Department of Natural Resources photo).

•

industries. Black &amp; Decker, Um of lega l go ld buying f&amp;r
electric toolmaker, furlou ghed Amerieuns was a spectacular
7,500 for one week. Zenith flop. In a few locations people
Radio laid off 600 m.ore in- stood in line to buy go ld wafers.
·definitely. U.S. Steel Corp. was But ge nera ll y · Ameri cans
forced by a court order to close tihowcd tremendous disinLerest
a bank of open hearth furna ces in buying gold either in the spot
at Gary, Ind. , idling 2,500, or or future markets. 'D1is caused
else pay a fine of $2,300 a day. the fre e world gold price,
The Gary layoffs were ex- which had sp urted briefly to
pected to have a snowba lling $20 1 an ounce last week in
local effect, and late Thursday anticipation of big American
the Environmental Prot\ction bu ying, to drop to around $174.
Administration, whi ch St&lt;!Jted
New fa ctory orders fell in
the whole dispute ai' Gm·y, November for the third succesurged U.S. Steel to keep one sive month. Ma chine tool oropen heart h furnace the re ders dropped 54 per cent in
open.
November from a year earlier .
Wilson &amp; Co ., the meat New constr uction orders
slumped 20 per cent in
November.
But farm prices fell 3 per
ee nt on the aver age in
Decemher, indicating hope for
&amp;&gt;me offset to intlation in food
costs. A Congression~ l panel
packer, sa id it was closing study said the profits of food
three Midwestern pork packing prOcesso rs and marketers,
plants indefirtitely, idling 850. while not ex:travagenl, are
First National City Bank of gene rall y so mewhat hi gher
New York raised its interest than their fin ancial reports
rate for prime business loans to indicate . The study said these
10 v. per cent from 10 per cent, co mpani es normally stress
thus reversing the downward their narrow profit margins on
trend of interest rates in recent sales, but their yields on invested capital compare favor months.
~
The stock market ro se ably with _those of other inmaiilly in reaction to the dustries.
typical yearend oversold
Economists atte ndin g a
position of last week. For all of meeting in Sa n Fri,tncisco of
1974, the market had th~ worst the Allied Social Sciences
percentage drop since 1937.
Association sa id a federal tax
The year-to-year sales gains cu t is needed to stinnulate
of major retail chains in busi ness activity . But the
December were for the most dilemma this poses for the
part helow 1974's average .12.2 Whi I.e flouse and Congress was
per cent rate of inflation of implicit in another study by a
money.
Congress iona l panel that
In spite of all the an- forecast a $59 billion federal
ticipatory fanfare, the return deficit over this fiscal year and

the week
in business

the Collins report.

./

.

HELPING HAND - A nature hike is just one of the many
recreational activities available for campers taking part in
the Youth Conservation CorpJ (YCC) program. Here, a

New year opens on bad ·economic news

f

'

-~

particular school and then
forwards a list of nominees to
Denison University while those the Department of Natural
at Wayne National Forest stay Resources . A selection board,
in tents.
made up of representatives
In addition to food and from the three agencies inlodging, the campers earn volved, reviews the apa pproximately $200 during plications from candidates
their four-week stay.
from each congressional
I
The work performed by YCC district and makes fina l
NEW YORK (UP!) - Tile
crews include trail con- selections.
·.. . Decemher unemployment restruction, reclamation work,
If a primary candid~an · 'pnrt showing the jobless rate
limber stand improvement, not attend a camp session, an ' up to 7.1 per cent was a
picnic area construction, 'alternate will be -notified. All
shocking augury this week for
erosion control and stream candidates will be actvised of the new year.
bank stabilization and wildlife their status immediately after
The repnrt showed 6.5 million
habitat improvement.
the selection board meets . Americans out of work, half a
Each of the four weeks is Placement of candidates at a million more than in Novemca refully planned, and usually particular camp is at the ber, and it put an ironic
consists of 32 hours of en- board's discretion.
question mark to pronouncevironmentally-related tasks,
ments by President Ford and
eight hours of formal education
some economists that the inAppointments Announced
presentations and various
flation problem and the
other activities of interest to
recession both are on the way
the campers .
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ap- to solution and better times will
Evening programs include pointments of three new mem- come around midyear .
guest s peakers and films bers and reappointments of
The unempl9yment crisis is
to
r esource two others to the Ohio Beef hitting most of the free enre lating
management and the natural Matketing Committee were terpri se world with the
environment . Some of the announced Thursday by state automobile industry the worst
speakers for the evening Agriculture Difector Gene victim. In West Germany,
presentations include wildlife Abercrombie.
Volkswagen and General MoMarvin Beam, Sabina, H.M. tors' Opel subsidiary hetween
enforcement officers, par ~
rangers, foresters and crafts- Everhart, Circleville, and them have idled 100,000 wor. Cletus Wagner, Defiance, are kers. In France,. Chrysler's
men.
On weekends,
various newly appointed memliers. subsidiary, Simca Motors,
recreational activities are They replace Warren Healea, joined .other French auto
provided, such as overnight Mount Vernon, Joe Kirian, producers in begging President
camping, canoeing, horseback Tiffin, and Dwight Wise Jr., Gi'scard d' Estaing lo take
drastic emergency action to
riding, field trips, nature hikes Fremont.
Jim
Lake,
Norwich,
and
prevent catastrophe for ,the
and other outdoor' sports.
In addition, there· is ample Pean Shriver, Pleasant City, French motor industry.., .
lime for swimming, softball, were reappointed.
At home, Chrysler anPurpose
of
the
committee
is
nolUlced
it would close two auto
.basketball, badminton and
to
promote
Ohio's
beef
industr-y
1 assembly plants and two truck
volleyball, or just plain
with funds obtained from a 10 plants for one to several weeks
relaxing in the outdoors .
However, even with four cent per head checkoff at sale -affecting 9,700 workers. But
YCC camps, the number of time, said· Abercrombie. Beef Chrysler will reopen a munber
Ohio campers per summer is producers not wishing to of other plants next week after
limited. For..•lhe 1975 session, participate in the program can five weeks of almost total
there are 366 openings - 60 have their money refunded, he shutdown . C!Irysler now has
39,400 workers on protracted
each session at Zaleski and said.
furlough. All four major
Shawnee state forests, 40 each
domestic automakers have laid .
session at Wayne National
off a total of 300,000 workers.
Forest and 24 at Hebron .
Domestic automobile output
Campers are recruited
DOUGLAS BETIER
for all of 1974 was disclosed to
WASHINGTON (UP! )
through public and private
school systems . The recruiting Supreme Court Justice William have fallen 24 per cent.
There were lay-&lt;Jffs in other
program for all four YCC 0 . Douglas shows imcamps in Ohio iS' handled i provemenl from the stroke he
jointly by 'the Department of • suffered New Year's Eve in
Natural Resources, the lJ.S. Nassau, a medical bulletin said
Department of Interior and the Friday .

"The Party Is Over"

/

lotll· ·

GRANDMOM O.n,

liecked mldeut ol tbe llnlll• ·
field, m., Zoo, pluU a kill •
Ann, her &amp;raaddaqlder, will, .
at Dilly two-weeb old, ....,..
%110 powda aad llaatla I feet
tall. Ann has a lot of ...owlle
to do before lhe ClteiMt ..
with 13-yeir-old Dan, ·

By Oakley C. Collins
ironed out, and the bill
IRONTON - In a recent therefore needs further study.
column I discussed the fir st
·At the time of the floor vote
steps a bill follows on its way to on a bill, members of the
becoming law in Ohio. As you Senate answer to a roll call by
recall, a bill is introduced, read the clerk. In the House,
by title on the floor, an'd then because of its larger memreferred to a committee wher.e hership (99 members vs. 3:1 in
public hearings are held . This the Senate), an electric rollweek we'll follow the bill call system is used , and the
through the final steps in the members indicate ·their votes
legislative process; third by means of individual buttons.
reading and enactment.
The individual and total vote is
THIRD HEARING
shown on large ind ica tor
After a bill has heen reported . boards.
favorable by a 'standing
A "yes"votebyamajority of
committee in either the House the membership of eac h
or the Senate, a committee chamber is required to pass
called the Rules Committee most hills, although ce rtain
determines which bills should appropriation measures and
he considered for passage and emergency legislation require
on what date. (Some bills are a two-thirds vo te of the
held indefinitely in the Rules membership. (A bill passed as
Committee and thereby ef· an · emergency measure
becomes
effective
imfectively tailed.)
Wh.en a bill has been put on mediately upon sign ing by the
the legislative calendar, it is Governor.)
usually debated on the floo.r
Following passage of a bill in
and may be amended on the the house of its origin, it must
floor. Just because a bill is ori follow the same general
, the legislative calend¥ for a procedute in the other
given day, though, dpes not chamber. If amendmelllS are
guarantee that it will be vo~ · add~ to the bill in th e other
up on down on that date. Action _ house, they must be agreed
on the bill may be delayed to upon by··actual vote rn the
anot.her day, by " infoTI)lally chamber of origin before the
passing" the legislation.· No final enactment occurs . If
actual vote is taken and the agreement cannot be reached,
bill is merely ·put' on the a conference committee
calendar for a !liter date. It is composed of members of both
also common to see a bill "re- the House and the Senate is
referred" to a committee. This appointed to resolve the
is usually done because · matters of difference . There
memhers fe~l the bill has ·are.
three
member.s
problems that have not been \epresenli n~ each chamber,

fiscal 1976 .
A Social Security Administration panel study said
inflation soon will compel a
large increase in the payro)l
tax rate . Meanwhile, other
studies showed that inflation is
striking even affluent retirees
more severely .
Public
transportation
sys tems reported declining
revenues because of layoffs of
factory workers who are their
prill)e customers and unwillingness of shoppers to pay
the high fares.
Americim Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co. filed for a $717
million, 7 \2 per cent interstate
telephone rate increase.
Britain's Burmah Oil Co.
which not long ago borrowed
$600 niillion to buy the Signal
Oil Co. in th\ Uni~ States,
hecame so overextended the
British government had to bail
it out with an infusion of some
$700 million in cash and credit.
Top executives of Burmah
were fired.
The bankrupt Penn Central
railroad's November loss
jumped by 134 per cent from
the same month in 1973.
Grumman Corp. won a $425
million Navy order for F·l4
fighters , many of them to go to
Iran . Generals and other experts in . the Uni~ SUites

began to criticize the Ford·
administration for giving the
Shah of Iran such 11111111Y.'
military help, saying the U.S.
military was being drained·
thereby of both viii! I equipment,.
and much needed technlcll
manpower .
WestinghoUBe ElectriC Qnop.
agreed to sell ita $801knllllan-t1
yeaNr1ajor appliance b~
to White Co!UIO!Idated, Ine. of'
Cleveland and lake a t!IO'
milllon writedown en the tltal;
But there aiJI)eiu'ed to be 1101111 ,
doubt that the federal 10\'VD. l'nent would approve the ~.
Westinghouse al-'9 prepared to,
sell some European aubmdl••.
ies that have not been .
profitable energy.
:• t
The Agriculture Dlpartmeht
wa.s disclosed to be prepllriJic
to cut the food atan)p PfCIII'IIII
by ~ ml1lkrn a year in aplte
of the contention of 101111 of.
flcials that it ought to be
greatly expanded.
Ubya 's embargo on the sale ·
of oil to the United Stalel 11- ·
pired but at •12.00 a barm, '
about f2.50 ab!&gt;Ve the price ol,
Persian GuH oU, Libya ·~
peared to have jlriced htnelf
out of the U.S. marbt,fot the ·
present. Ubya allo baa cut ._ ·
production lll!arly in half an4
Clearly prefers to COI!Iti'Ve blr
oil rather than cut th' price.:

• •

with th e majority in each house
holding two of the three berths.
ENACTMENT
After a bill ha s becn")Jassed
by each house. it is then
enrolled in act form (wit!) all
mnendments added l, signed by
the presiding officers of the
House ·a nd Se nat e and
prese nted to the Governor for
hi s considera tio n: If th e
Governor- 'approves th e particui ar legislation, it is signed
and filed with the Secretary of
State. The bill then becomes an
act, &amp;nd goes into ~ffect 90 days
after the filing with the
Secretary of State.
The effective date, tho ugh,
for· emergency bill s, and
seve ral oth er typ es · of
legis lation is earlier. Also,
man y bills speci fi cally provide
for an effective date later than
!lO days after filing .
If_ the Governor vetoes the
measw·e, he sends it back to
the house of origin wi th his
reason s for the veto . A
governor, by the way, need not
veto the entire bill . He can veto
certain parts of the legislation;
this is cal led an "i tem veto." If
three-fifths of the merrtbers of
each house vote to pass the
measure over the Governor's
objection..,, it becomes law in
the · same manner 'as if the
Governor had originally approved it. The Government
may also refuse to stop a bill .' If
this happen s, ·the .bill
automatically 'become s l.aw
after it has been·on his desk for
te n days.

.'

THOUSANDS
OF
OUR .
.
.
.
ADVERTISERS CAN TELL
YOU- GET ACTION '
NOW WITH WANT ADS! .
~

\

~ ~·

SUNDAY
~

.

'

I.

~

' .,Jo '

-', ...

'.1.

....'

TIMES SENTIN~L

L

...•:

,u: .

__..;..__:___..__ _ _ _ _
I

~

·'

. ..

'.1' .

~

,, ~'

J".·C
"'

�..

...

..

'

•

,.

'

'

23- The SIUlday Times !Sentinel, SlUlda)•, Jan. 5. 1975

.

''

•

YCC program lS doing
:plenty on conservation

--

n:=a.

I

CD!"" (
o_

,...-

~oeo

•

...
•

0

n - -'"',.'"

Ul

c

&gt;&lt;

."11

II

~ ,.

r-•

Iii

ii

-•
~

i::;

Jl

i

-:•
::;

.....
c
-n
...

-X

••

...
zc
,..z

!!.

-i•-

-'t!.

-an 80

na.:...

z

-"'
zo
"'z

...'"

0

., ...

:so
•

-..•.

~ ••i'

n

n"'
D•

m
-t
en

.., ........e

!"'

•

,::

-

:a,

ca'
.,:;:

•:a

•

a~

~=

i

0...

•
n_

.,-

:a

e

:Ill

~:z:

:acr
Ill •

m

ca
• 0'

...

m:r.:

r-c
"'-m
:z:

•

-lit

~ Z::l:ui

......,. Ut0

....

•

.

REMOVE FROM PAPER AND U5E A5 A 5HOPPI'NG GUIDE

By Harold L. Roach
COLUMBUS - (Speciij) A lot of people are talking
" about cons~rving natural
resources these davs . Talk
alone doesn't get thi~gs done .
Getting invoivect does, and
that 's the exciting part of the
infant Youth Conservation
Corps (YCC) program which is
fast gaining popularity across
the Uni~ States.
Each summer the YCC
program provides ga inful
employment for thousands of
young Americans . While doing
needed conservation work, the
YCC . participants
ga in
valuable knowledge and experience .
In 1974, Ohio was the first
state in the nation to be ap. proved by the federal government to operate a YCC
program . Four camps were
conducted in the Buckeye"State
last summer - two by the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources and tw o by the
federal government.
Since its inception in 1970, tl]e
YCC program has be en
· drawing praise from federal ,
stale and local governments,
eonservationists, environmentalists and the youths
'Who have participated .
In one letter to the Department of Natural Resources, a
young YCC participant wrote:
"!learned a great deal about
cqnserva\ion and wildlife and
I'm eager to learn much, much
more."
Numerous other lettets also
have been received from YCC
participants and their parents,
commending the Department
of Natural Resources and the
federal government for
initiating and maintaining the
YCC program .
Congress recently responded
to the overwhelming success of
the YCC program, making the
Youth Conservation Corps
permanent.
The YCC program is open to
all young men and women, age
15 through 18, who are permanent residents of the United
States, . its territories or
possessions. These young
people are put into a worklearning situation where they
are paid to accomplish work
which improves, maintains or
enhances the nation's natural

resources.
YCC is coeducational ; girts
work right along side of boys,
doing such tasks as pruning
trees or cutting new hiking
trails.
One · cami&gt;er in last summer's YCC program noted "It
. was fantastic, a great learning
experience... I'm still writing
to a lot of the friends I met

)1.

"'~

-Q .,

Q "'
Q.C

•

a~~~

there."

~ - ~.
CD &lt;

The J)epartment of Natural
Resources' YCC camps are at
Shawnee State Forest in Scioto
County and Zaleski State
Forest in Vinton County.
"
Federally-operated YCC
camps are located at Hebron
Fish Hatchery in Licking
County and Wayne National·
r'orest in Monroe County. The
Hebron camp is conducted by
the U.S. Department of Interior while the Department of

:s ....
~

....

Z

CD

CD

D

a.

'

'

0

z.0
z
.,.

"

Southeastern ·Ohio summer
camps at Zaleski and Wayne
Forests; both highly popular
Agri culture 's U.S. Forest
Service hand les the YCC camp
in Wayne National Forest:
vee ca mps are conducted

U.S. Forest Service.
Information on camper

recruitment is mailed In
January to the 1,100 high
school principals throughout
the slate. Schools showing
interest in the program are
then sent application forms .
Youths interested in participating in the YCC program
can apply only by registering
with their school counselor,
conservation science teacher
or
designated
YCC
representative. 'rhose not in
sctiool, but otherwise eligible

during the s1m1mer months in

two four-week sessions each
year . .The camps are resident

programs and under normal
circumstances, campers are

not permitted to return home
during their stay at the YCC
facility .
Campers attending the YCC
programs at Zaleski and
Shawnee state forests reside in
barracks at the two Department of Natural Resources'
envir onment a l resource
centers . The two centers are
old state correctton facilities
which have been remodeled .
At Hebron, the YCC participants live in dormitories at

for consideration , can register

at the nearest high ~c hool.
A YCC representative from
each sc hool evaluates all applications received

at

that

• • t

•

''~&lt;IJri!it~-·~·- ·.o

.:_j
•,.

'.

....., :'•..

0

•

-If
'
•
_• . N

)..

"'

...

z

Q

"'
~

'

•
•,

,.

'. .

P'._:. .... '

·~

i

'.,··•

' ·~. ":-__..
.•

:.:.'

though.

female camper geL' a helping hand from a hiking companion
during a tr·ek through Za leski State Forest in Vinton County .
(Ohio Department of Natural Resources photo).

•

industries. Black &amp; Decker, Um of lega l go ld buying f&amp;r
electric toolmaker, furlou ghed Amerieuns was a spectacular
7,500 for one week. Zenith flop. In a few locations people
Radio laid off 600 m.ore in- stood in line to buy go ld wafers.
·definitely. U.S. Steel Corp. was But ge nera ll y · Ameri cans
forced by a court order to close tihowcd tremendous disinLerest
a bank of open hearth furna ces in buying gold either in the spot
at Gary, Ind. , idling 2,500, or or future markets. 'D1is caused
else pay a fine of $2,300 a day. the fre e world gold price,
The Gary layoffs were ex- which had sp urted briefly to
pected to have a snowba lling $20 1 an ounce last week in
local effect, and late Thursday anticipation of big American
the Environmental Prot\ction bu ying, to drop to around $174.
Administration, whi ch St&lt;!Jted
New fa ctory orders fell in
the whole dispute ai' Gm·y, November for the third succesurged U.S. Steel to keep one sive month. Ma chine tool oropen heart h furnace the re ders dropped 54 per cent in
open.
November from a year earlier .
Wilson &amp; Co ., the meat New constr uction orders
slumped 20 per cent in
November.
But farm prices fell 3 per
ee nt on the aver age in
Decemher, indicating hope for
&amp;&gt;me offset to intlation in food
costs. A Congression~ l panel
packer, sa id it was closing study said the profits of food
three Midwestern pork packing prOcesso rs and marketers,
plants indefirtitely, idling 850. while not ex:travagenl, are
First National City Bank of gene rall y so mewhat hi gher
New York raised its interest than their fin ancial reports
rate for prime business loans to indicate . The study said these
10 v. per cent from 10 per cent, co mpani es normally stress
thus reversing the downward their narrow profit margins on
trend of interest rates in recent sales, but their yields on invested capital compare favor months.
~
The stock market ro se ably with _those of other inmaiilly in reaction to the dustries.
typical yearend oversold
Economists atte ndin g a
position of last week. For all of meeting in Sa n Fri,tncisco of
1974, the market had th~ worst the Allied Social Sciences
percentage drop since 1937.
Association sa id a federal tax
The year-to-year sales gains cu t is needed to stinnulate
of major retail chains in busi ness activity . But the
December were for the most dilemma this poses for the
part helow 1974's average .12.2 Whi I.e flouse and Congress was
per cent rate of inflation of implicit in another study by a
money.
Congress iona l panel that
In spite of all the an- forecast a $59 billion federal
ticipatory fanfare, the return deficit over this fiscal year and

the week
in business

the Collins report.

./

.

HELPING HAND - A nature hike is just one of the many
recreational activities available for campers taking part in
the Youth Conservation CorpJ (YCC) program. Here, a

New year opens on bad ·economic news

f

'

-~

particular school and then
forwards a list of nominees to
Denison University while those the Department of Natural
at Wayne National Forest stay Resources . A selection board,
in tents.
made up of representatives
In addition to food and from the three agencies inlodging, the campers earn volved, reviews the apa pproximately $200 during plications from candidates
their four-week stay.
from each congressional
I
The work performed by YCC district and makes fina l
NEW YORK (UP!) - Tile
crews include trail con- selections.
·.. . Decemher unemployment restruction, reclamation work,
If a primary candid~an · 'pnrt showing the jobless rate
limber stand improvement, not attend a camp session, an ' up to 7.1 per cent was a
picnic area construction, 'alternate will be -notified. All
shocking augury this week for
erosion control and stream candidates will be actvised of the new year.
bank stabilization and wildlife their status immediately after
The repnrt showed 6.5 million
habitat improvement.
the selection board meets . Americans out of work, half a
Each of the four weeks is Placement of candidates at a million more than in Novemca refully planned, and usually particular camp is at the ber, and it put an ironic
consists of 32 hours of en- board's discretion.
question mark to pronouncevironmentally-related tasks,
ments by President Ford and
eight hours of formal education
some economists that the inAppointments Announced
presentations and various
flation problem and the
other activities of interest to
recession both are on the way
the campers .
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ap- to solution and better times will
Evening programs include pointments of three new mem- come around midyear .
guest s peakers and films bers and reappointments of
The unempl9yment crisis is
to
r esource two others to the Ohio Beef hitting most of the free enre lating
management and the natural Matketing Committee were terpri se world with the
environment . Some of the announced Thursday by state automobile industry the worst
speakers for the evening Agriculture Difector Gene victim. In West Germany,
presentations include wildlife Abercrombie.
Volkswagen and General MoMarvin Beam, Sabina, H.M. tors' Opel subsidiary hetween
enforcement officers, par ~
rangers, foresters and crafts- Everhart, Circleville, and them have idled 100,000 wor. Cletus Wagner, Defiance, are kers. In France,. Chrysler's
men.
On weekends,
various newly appointed memliers. subsidiary, Simca Motors,
recreational activities are They replace Warren Healea, joined .other French auto
provided, such as overnight Mount Vernon, Joe Kirian, producers in begging President
camping, canoeing, horseback Tiffin, and Dwight Wise Jr., Gi'scard d' Estaing lo take
drastic emergency action to
riding, field trips, nature hikes Fremont.
Jim
Lake,
Norwich,
and
prevent catastrophe for ,the
and other outdoor' sports.
In addition, there· is ample Pean Shriver, Pleasant City, French motor industry.., .
lime for swimming, softball, were reappointed.
At home, Chrysler anPurpose
of
the
committee
is
nolUlced
it would close two auto
.basketball, badminton and
to
promote
Ohio's
beef
industr-y
1 assembly plants and two truck
volleyball, or just plain
with funds obtained from a 10 plants for one to several weeks
relaxing in the outdoors .
However, even with four cent per head checkoff at sale -affecting 9,700 workers. But
YCC camps, the number of time, said· Abercrombie. Beef Chrysler will reopen a munber
Ohio campers per summer is producers not wishing to of other plants next week after
limited. For..•lhe 1975 session, participate in the program can five weeks of almost total
there are 366 openings - 60 have their money refunded, he shutdown . C!Irysler now has
39,400 workers on protracted
each session at Zaleski and said.
furlough. All four major
Shawnee state forests, 40 each
domestic automakers have laid .
session at Wayne National
off a total of 300,000 workers.
Forest and 24 at Hebron .
Domestic automobile output
Campers are recruited
DOUGLAS BETIER
for all of 1974 was disclosed to
WASHINGTON (UP! )
through public and private
school systems . The recruiting Supreme Court Justice William have fallen 24 per cent.
There were lay-&lt;Jffs in other
program for all four YCC 0 . Douglas shows imcamps in Ohio iS' handled i provemenl from the stroke he
jointly by 'the Department of • suffered New Year's Eve in
Natural Resources, the lJ.S. Nassau, a medical bulletin said
Department of Interior and the Friday .

"The Party Is Over"

/

lotll· ·

GRANDMOM O.n,

liecked mldeut ol tbe llnlll• ·
field, m., Zoo, pluU a kill •
Ann, her &amp;raaddaqlder, will, .
at Dilly two-weeb old, ....,..
%110 powda aad llaatla I feet
tall. Ann has a lot of ...owlle
to do before lhe ClteiMt ..
with 13-yeir-old Dan, ·

By Oakley C. Collins
ironed out, and the bill
IRONTON - In a recent therefore needs further study.
column I discussed the fir st
·At the time of the floor vote
steps a bill follows on its way to on a bill, members of the
becoming law in Ohio. As you Senate answer to a roll call by
recall, a bill is introduced, read the clerk. In the House,
by title on the floor, an'd then because of its larger memreferred to a committee wher.e hership (99 members vs. 3:1 in
public hearings are held . This the Senate), an electric rollweek we'll follow the bill call system is used , and the
through the final steps in the members indicate ·their votes
legislative process; third by means of individual buttons.
reading and enactment.
The individual and total vote is
THIRD HEARING
shown on large ind ica tor
After a bill has heen reported . boards.
favorable by a 'standing
A "yes"votebyamajority of
committee in either the House the membership of eac h
or the Senate, a committee chamber is required to pass
called the Rules Committee most hills, although ce rtain
determines which bills should appropriation measures and
he considered for passage and emergency legislation require
on what date. (Some bills are a two-thirds vo te of the
held indefinitely in the Rules membership. (A bill passed as
Committee and thereby ef· an · emergency measure
becomes
effective
imfectively tailed.)
Wh.en a bill has been put on mediately upon sign ing by the
the legislative calendar, it is Governor.)
usually debated on the floo.r
Following passage of a bill in
and may be amended on the the house of its origin, it must
floor. Just because a bill is ori follow the same general
, the legislative calend¥ for a procedute in the other
given day, though, dpes not chamber. If amendmelllS are
guarantee that it will be vo~ · add~ to the bill in th e other
up on down on that date. Action _ house, they must be agreed
on the bill may be delayed to upon by··actual vote rn the
anot.her day, by " infoTI)lally chamber of origin before the
passing" the legislation.· No final enactment occurs . If
actual vote is taken and the agreement cannot be reached,
bill is merely ·put' on the a conference committee
calendar for a !liter date. It is composed of members of both
also common to see a bill "re- the House and the Senate is
referred" to a committee. This appointed to resolve the
is usually done because · matters of difference . There
memhers fe~l the bill has ·are.
three
member.s
problems that have not been \epresenli n~ each chamber,

fiscal 1976 .
A Social Security Administration panel study said
inflation soon will compel a
large increase in the payro)l
tax rate . Meanwhile, other
studies showed that inflation is
striking even affluent retirees
more severely .
Public
transportation
sys tems reported declining
revenues because of layoffs of
factory workers who are their
prill)e customers and unwillingness of shoppers to pay
the high fares.
Americim Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co. filed for a $717
million, 7 \2 per cent interstate
telephone rate increase.
Britain's Burmah Oil Co.
which not long ago borrowed
$600 niillion to buy the Signal
Oil Co. in th\ Uni~ States,
hecame so overextended the
British government had to bail
it out with an infusion of some
$700 million in cash and credit.
Top executives of Burmah
were fired.
The bankrupt Penn Central
railroad's November loss
jumped by 134 per cent from
the same month in 1973.
Grumman Corp. won a $425
million Navy order for F·l4
fighters , many of them to go to
Iran . Generals and other experts in . the Uni~ SUites

began to criticize the Ford·
administration for giving the
Shah of Iran such 11111111Y.'
military help, saying the U.S.
military was being drained·
thereby of both viii! I equipment,.
and much needed technlcll
manpower .
WestinghoUBe ElectriC Qnop.
agreed to sell ita $801knllllan-t1
yeaNr1ajor appliance b~
to White Co!UIO!Idated, Ine. of'
Cleveland and lake a t!IO'
milllon writedown en the tltal;
But there aiJI)eiu'ed to be 1101111 ,
doubt that the federal 10\'VD. l'nent would approve the ~.
Westinghouse al-'9 prepared to,
sell some European aubmdl••.
ies that have not been .
profitable energy.
:• t
The Agriculture Dlpartmeht
wa.s disclosed to be prepllriJic
to cut the food atan)p PfCIII'IIII
by ~ ml1lkrn a year in aplte
of the contention of 101111 of.
flcials that it ought to be
greatly expanded.
Ubya 's embargo on the sale ·
of oil to the United Stalel 11- ·
pired but at •12.00 a barm, '
about f2.50 ab!&gt;Ve the price ol,
Persian GuH oU, Libya ·~
peared to have jlriced htnelf
out of the U.S. marbt,fot the ·
present. Ubya allo baa cut ._ ·
production lll!arly in half an4
Clearly prefers to COI!Iti'Ve blr
oil rather than cut th' price.:

• •

with th e majority in each house
holding two of the three berths.
ENACTMENT
After a bill ha s becn")Jassed
by each house. it is then
enrolled in act form (wit!) all
mnendments added l, signed by
the presiding officers of the
House ·a nd Se nat e and
prese nted to the Governor for
hi s considera tio n: If th e
Governor- 'approves th e particui ar legislation, it is signed
and filed with the Secretary of
State. The bill then becomes an
act, &amp;nd goes into ~ffect 90 days
after the filing with the
Secretary of State.
The effective date, tho ugh,
for· emergency bill s, and
seve ral oth er typ es · of
legis lation is earlier. Also,
man y bills speci fi cally provide
for an effective date later than
!lO days after filing .
If_ the Governor vetoes the
measw·e, he sends it back to
the house of origin wi th his
reason s for the veto . A
governor, by the way, need not
veto the entire bill . He can veto
certain parts of the legislation;
this is cal led an "i tem veto." If
three-fifths of the merrtbers of
each house vote to pass the
measure over the Governor's
objection..,, it becomes law in
the · same manner 'as if the
Governor had originally approved it. The Government
may also refuse to stop a bill .' If
this happen s, ·the .bill
automatically 'become s l.aw
after it has been·on his desk for
te n days.

.'

THOUSANDS
OF
OUR .
.
.
.
ADVERTISERS CAN TELL
YOU- GET ACTION '
NOW WITH WANT ADS! .
~

\

~ ~·

SUNDAY
~

.

'

I.

~

' .,Jo '

-', ...

'.1.

....'

TIMES SENTIN~L

L

...•:

,u: .

__..;..__:___..__ _ _ _ _
I

~

·'

. ..

'.1' .

~

,, ~'

J".·C
"'

�.

25 -

In Memory
196 -l
J d nu a r ;
fl'l:lr e t s

corn~&lt;;

fhe ctny

o nd

Jn1

\\ t ft1

l

P-.t·

&lt;. 1!1

n {'lllt

wt'

vou

wrtl

s tli'l ll r10 1 for o f' t
For rn ou r he ar ts
rl \\ el l-S ~r ay

V.. f" "' 1 lov e an d r t' mr'rntH' r
vo u Pve rvda v
Sndly m rssed by ~..,d, o\ \ rl
rlnd C t1 l dren
I ~ IT~

IN

L O VIN G

d ertr

Ha ...... ~o. rns
~

Jan
5r t1 C('

memory

or

h U S b ilrHI

v.. h&lt;'J

'' "'

llOJlll r

P•'""'&lt;1

ll\ 'Y

1977

'(OI.J

\\

t

1 I

I r-, t

Ill(!

re marn('d
On (' lhtna I W tl tlH• to do
Wnt l.. :&gt; l o wly &lt;.io 1m It .-11
o 1q

o ng p,1111
F or I \&gt;\t i l

to

r wa nt t o

~ n ow

low V(

,

"0 I ll1c1Y lil "'- t I t -; -. tH
for s o me da\ c1CH\n 11 rr 10•tiY

pn n1
I hCtif ll f' l&lt; t l
'ln d l y nltSSCd

M r "&gt;

V ~ r

t" h

&lt;Ill t
wIt

'i

H omer H lV.. I. rtl.,

J

J ~ l

W llO

Prl'&gt;&lt;&gt;f'cl

~,l lf) l t
rt~

oy

jQl'J

I 'i It p

Card of Thanks
S JN CE ~ E

R o.l d

L •n r

l hilnlo..

TO

tr end s
n crg tl !)o rs
il rHI
r e l&lt;'l! I VC S lor t h f' rr n1a ny
ca rd s VrSt!S
and ac t s of
krndn ess durrng my co n
t tn ernc nt
at
t he H oll er
Mt:d t cilt Center
1
d ee ptv
appre c tate th e 1110ugh t ful ness
and the en cou ra ge me n t
D e lm.:H
A
Ca nadil)l
Pomeroy
1 5 tt c
THAN KS
to
muc t1
old
f r tends
ilnd
neighbors
for
r e m embert nq
IIH '
bt rlhdil y ot my Mo th er Mr s
Jo hn K ( Beul ah I Smti h w r!tt
many qree l tngs I a ppr er1 a1 e
rl mo r e ttoan worM ca n say
E nmil Je.ln Oabo
1 5 It c

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

1

T(' :o: ,l '&gt; 7)00 6

1

n

1f c

AUC T IO N
Ttwr sd ly
&lt;lnd
Scllur d ay n rqnr l p m at
M&lt;a .. on Au c t 10n H o rt on St 1~1
Mrl son W Vel Co n s,q nr n tn l !&gt;
W t ICOll('
Phone llO J J !7]

I.: L (,

p up
'101.1

Mf\T C H

H o tow Gun Cl u b T urn ltr ::. t
r rtll l ilt! N Mil es Cem c t o..r y
~ ult;~ nd
rac r o ry c t1ok c ri
q t n . only Sun c/iJO' Jc'l n ~ I p

"

OIL O f
M1nk Cosme ti CS
So und d 11f er f'nt ') W e h ave a
c omplete 1 nc th.lt w 1 sat1 st y
(' Vf ll YOU
( &lt;ll l U S W t hdV C
sp cc1 al 5 ,111 lt\f' t rme You 11 b e
''&gt;lrrpr•s('cl ORO WN :-, ? 9 ..,
~ I 11

p

WC' II

Il l

5 li e

tor rC'nt or c;al e 3
1l rclro o l1 !&lt;;
u n t u r n 1S h ec1
u t If I cr, P&lt;l d locat u l at new
Mobil '"
Hon e
Par k
rn
Hur nq t1111 Pll onr 99 7 7 / '&gt; 1
11 3 1 rt c-

h/ !=D IRJ SH 5( t t£&gt;rwrthw h l eon
ches t 111 1 ang s 111ile ar e a
R eward Call ! r ? 'i?09
I 5 6t p

pump

1\ NNU A I
D eer Feed il l t11 '"
Ril cr n c Gun Clu b Sat, Jcln t
6 p m Op en to tttc publ c
17 31 li e

19!3 DOD G E P U
Spo rt Ad
ve ntur e red a nd wh t e 3 1R
c rd
a r ps r.Ht o Kelly
too l bo)l:; 0 rom e w es t c oast
rn rrror s re ar s t ep bum p er
n 000 m tes P hone 99? &lt;; 10 5

I N COME T clX Pr epar ed bolh
rt'dNill nnd Stilt £ Taxc-s wd
b e done by app o 111tmen t s
o nly Plea se phone 992 27 72 or
sec Mrs Wondcl Ebltn L;~urc
Clif t Rd Pom eroy Ohr o
1 J JO t c

COM P LETE
7 16
or
76 1
C tw ll' r o let cn~;~t ne
F rank
l"\Ddd e r N
c o
Box
162
Coolvi l le OllrO
1 '} ] tp

FURNI SHED apt Adults only
M 1dd leport
Phone 992 38 7 ~
11 1&lt;1 II c

196H CHEVELLE 3 77 1 sp ee d
good bo dy ~1n d •tll cr ,or Phon e
99 2 / 489
l 1 3 I lip

U N F UR N I SHED
hous e
4
room s and bath 1650 Lmcoln
H etg hts Phon e 992 387&lt;1
11 I J tf c

196 1 O LD SMO B I LE Lu&gt;&lt;u ry
Model 111 o oo d conddtO\.{ s~ t
a t rcldr a l !ires S1le I R ii:o-' 5 111
qood Shi"p(' 21 n ct1 bl ac and
lhhtll' tet ev 1S. 01 ~mp lr
r lor
il
p a
sy stem
F or
rn
tcr mill1on c alt99 ? 150B or sec
at 131 Laurel St
Pom er oy
O h ro
12 29 6t c

TRA I LER spa ce 2m les fr om
Pomeroy Rl 1J3 Phone 992
'i85H
10 2l lf c

""

8 1 T BED tor " ton Ford truck
Phon e 99'1 5181
1 5 3tp

be r areas

For Sale

111 Court St , Pomeroy
Phon e 992 -2 156
-

MAN t o t ve m an d ass is t
h Sbil nd tn th e ca re of hts
&lt;1 1 1ng w rfe Room an d board
S d ar y
t 1m e off Telcphon£&gt;
99 l ~ f. b ctpr r noo n or aft er 8
m

CLOSE OUT on n ew Z1g Zag
sew ng rnach nes For sew1n g
stretch fabr cs buttonhol es
fan cy de s1gns e t c
Patnt
slightly b le mrShed Cho1ce
c arry ng case or sewtng
stand U9 80 cash or te rms
a\larlab l e Pnone 992 1155
12 IS tf c

H O P w a nlf'd
apply 111
s on dt Cro w 6 St e a k
H use
11 29 10tc

Pt

TAKE orders for Otl o f Mrnk
Cosmet cs
La d1es
safes
mee r mgs
g rfl s 1n t erestmg
l r arnrng e~ wa r ds recoQn rtron
Pa rt fu ll ltme Sa uvilg e s
Box J Sy ra cu '&gt;e Oh 10 .J5 779
I 5 1t p

EXPE RIEN CED fu el o tl- dr ver
...,1 e-e d ed Sen d repl tes to Box
71 qc co The Dally S~ nttn ~l
Pomeroy Oh10 45769
11 30 61 &lt;;

AN D SUE

+++

Dear Rap
Woul d) ou please repnnt ' What 1s a Father • 11Inch lou ran
m your colunm about three \'ears ago? It started 11 tlh 111o ktds
m college," and that's 11hat 111) Dad has - no\\ - GRATEFUL

For Rent
'J B EDROOM tr ailer
J975 o r 99'2 157 1

•

Is thlS the one 'ou mean .,

. ++++

Phon e 9~2

~~'!

3HS

7JHI

608 E

38 91

6 5 tfc

-----

W A L L pilpPr hanqmg and a lt
rntert or f1n shmg P hone 7J2
5081
12 '19 12tp
I m provem en t
a nd
Rf'parr Serv •ce
A n ythtng
frx ed around th f' home from
r oM to basement You w111
l 1kc our wo rk and ra te s
P hone 7 1/ 5081
12 29 tf c

C~R PET

y ard

n staii :H ron S l 25 pe r
Phone R tc ha rd West

8 I] 266 }

12 'l J 26 tp

peted storage bldg J UST
$26,000
OLD RT 33 - Close tn 12x65
Mob1le Home w1t h expando

bath, ca r

peted a rr cond 1 n1ce acre,
al l electnc about 4 years

old
NEAR LANGSVI LL E -

3 R OOM and b;1 ~f-;;r~ ~h:dapt
U I1 IJ I es pa 1d
356 North
F ourth St M rdd leport
17 31 tfc

tank

close to mtne areas

ss soo

I TUPPER S

PLA I NS

-

ALL CASH FOR YOUR
HOME LET US SELL IT
992 2259 or 9'12 256S

.We talk to you

. Pr i c;eel For ~o~~~ack

H O US E 4 roo ms and bath , 01 ce
yarQ anef drrveway
ALso
furn tshed apt Ca ll 99] 1780 0 ;

5a le

IN

FAM I L Y MUST SE L L $1 600
OR BES T O FF ER PH :145
566 3

Air conditioned, extra sha rp
m1leage

••

1971 Volkswagen 4 dr. Sedan

On a II Cas h Sal es of
Used Ap pli a nces &amp;
Used F urni t ure t hru
Dece m ber 29.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAt

.

."At Caut1on Light, Rt

ff•

Tuppers Pla1ns. Oh 1o

Phone 667 3S5a
OPEN WED THRU
SUNDAY9A M 7 p M

'895

•

Ch01ce of three ex ceptional cars

•••

For Rent

As l ow As

Mal ibu HT Cpe

StiE

•

6.:16 0008

301 It

FR ED BLAE T TNER,
DARRELL DOD RE I.l.,r DAN THOMPSON

•

c

Spec ial

Pomeroy,

b r ak es

o.

for Rent

:.:

71 Evil
72 Mast

Pertainrng to

•

the mind
7 Father ol Leah
12 Strikes

~

.. 17 Young bears

:. 21 Stimulate
• 22 Subject ot
--~

d1scourse

• 23 Clerical collar
; 24 Mounta1ns of
.,
Europe

r" 25 Note ol scale
~ 26 Suppltcates
~ 28

Wldeawake

92
94

~

Stalk
Devoured
Bone
Thin slrtp of
wood

45 ~asso
• 47 TeutoniC deity
48 Capital ol the
Ukraine
: 49 Fruit
• 52 Heckle

:-54 Mampul
ated
phone
numbers

Skeleton

""

mtlttary umt

116 Conta tners

.,

remember

• 59 Flock

~61 Measure
durat1on of

"62 Speechless
~63 Arab1an

seaport
64 For example

v, SIZE BASSETT·_

2

9995
75 00
139.95
179 95

_ _ _ _ _....!/'1.95

.

jJ

117 Cooling
device
118 We1ghl ol
lndta
120 ProliX down
121 Lake In Italy
122 Hug• 1" 0.
123 Evaluate
124 Abound
126 Continued
story

128 Consec rat e

respect

67 Number
;ea Pa 1nful
~69 A state (abbr)

119 95
149.95
99 95
99 95
69 95
88 00

111 Urged on

"

:Ji7 Cause to

- 2 White Fur Swavel Chairs Regular 188.00
- Black Fur Small Sofa
-2 Glass Top Tables,
Sale
All Wath Chrome Legs

95
96
97
99
100
101
102
103
105
107
109
110

lor
Spoken
Heavenly
body
Frees from dirt
Confe• upon
A state
Scottish own
Damage
ObtainS
Chapeaus
Rodent
V1tlate
Sun god
Belore
Planet

113 Hurry
t 14. Scott•sh cap
t 15 SteamshiP
labbr)

;'56

SPECIAL OF SPECIALS

(pt I
Ptumtlkelrutt
Greek letter
Symbollor lin
Laid away
Pronoun
Mix
Woolly plant
Scorch
EQUality
Expelled
Piece ol bed
ltnen

•

&lt;39
• 40
, 41
t 43

3- REFRIGERATORS, IEACH)
4995 1000
22 CU FT SIDE BY-SIDE, (WHITE)
95 00 319.95
18 CU FT REFRIGERATOR. GR., LIKE
NEW
269 95 229.95
2- COPPERTONE REFRIGERATORS, LIKE NEW,
EA
2SB 00 200.00
WHITE REFRIGERATOR
BS 00 139.95
WHITE REFRIGERATOR
159 95 SS 00

76
77
78
79
B1
82
B3
84
B5
87
89

90 Feel contr1tton

lellunum
.... 33 Pronoun
... 35 Masculine
~ 37 Condescending
...
looks

3 PC BEDROOM SUITE,_ _ _ _ _ _ 19'195 139.95
J PC BEDROOM SUITE
179 95 149.95

74 Young salmon

:,30 Calling

- 32 Symbol for

59.95
35 00
39.95
10.00
19.95

GE WASHER DRYER, COPPER, LIKE NEW--.299 95
MAYTAG DRYER
69.95
MAYTAGORYER
79h
MAYTAG DRYER
125 00
HAMILTON DRYER, LIKE NEW
1BB 00 139 95
MAYTAGAUTO WASHER
500
2 NEW RANGE HEADS
36" WHITE&amp; COPPER, EACH _.....,.._ _ _ 25 00

446 0168

Ca ll

t

JOA

tf

~0

IJ. ii'IOS

SLEEPING
ra t es

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
ACROSS

2 NE N
0 TABLE S--n~[;;;;;:;;;:;:;:;==:=J~ea
ch 3995
5.00
3
EWTABLES~IALLI
995
3 BIG TABLES, MEDITERRANEAN
\99 95 119 85

388 00

Ful l power ,
mileage

Cab &amp; Chass is, 102" cab to axle, 3Sll V a eng111e 15,000 tb 2
speed r ear ax le good 825x20 ! Ires, good solid truck

ROOM S

Quail Creek
Mobile Community
&amp; Sales

•

130 Wnle
132 Harvest
134 Th!n trne net

135
136
137
139
141

Dines
Conluncl\on
Go In
Toad
Symbol for
xenon
142 Away
143 ~reposll\on
145 Hebrew
weight
147 Stnng
149 Plunge
152 Hypotheti cal
forc e

153 Unlocked
155 PhoeniCian
city
157 Noose
159 Preposition
100 Check
162 Part olstep
164 Downy duck

166
168
t69
170
171

1

2
3
4
5

Armed bands
Gaelic
Perloan@fl
Ftoifers -

17
18
19
20
27
29
31

Mongrel
Chatdean c1ty
Cake mix
Pa~ ol jacket
Thick slice •
Partldlous
Printers
measure

34 Wllnderad
36 Graontand
settlement
38 Blemishes
40 Assistant
42 Twirl
44 Hastens
46 Orlantat
dan&lt;:111g girt
48 Girls
mckname

49 Snatches
50 Part ol
lortlllcat1on
51 Prlnler s
measure

53 Journey
55 Collega
degree (abbr I
Fug1t1vefrom
Soviet Russta 56 Heal
58 EXPellrom
country
DOWN
60 Sketch
Artthmet1c
62 Moroccan
(colloq I
65 Long slender
hsh
G•eat Lake
68 Skidded
Negat1ve
Vat
69 Gloss
Alloy ol gold 70 Food
and Sliver

6 Lawful

e.. 7 Army off 1cer

tabbr I
8 E )(c lamahon

programs
Rema1n erec I

72
73 Rumors
75 Greek tetter

78
77
79
dev tc o
10 Mohammedan 80
82
nobel
83
11 Seanymph
12 Sen1or (abbr I 84
13 100 ()()()
86
rupees
~ 88

Prophets
Challenges
Sedate
AI that place
Freshet
Tattered cloth
Mustc as

14 Arab ian

wntten

9 Warntng

garments
t 5 Separated
16 Beef an1mal

10

II

91 Pitchers
93 Long-handled
eyeglasses
95 Puraues
97 Peddles
98 Scold
102 Ugly otd
women
104 Trial
106 Emb•yo flowet"
107 Having
branches
108 Soap plant
110 Small 1ugs
111 01n1ng
112 Antterad

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

antmal

114
116
117
119
121
122
123

89 Long deep
cut ..

90 Rants

J it• [.f 16

Cructal potnt

Retect
Registered
nurse (abbr)
125 Refuse from
grapes

127 Lahn
conjunct ion

128
129
130
131
133
136
138
140

Ear11er than
Pantry
Sarcastic

Weirder
Body of water
MUSICal drama
W1re1ess
Feel ones

way
143 Above
--r44 Bird s home
146 Brlck ·carry1ng
devtces

Ltrrct er
C hoir.~:~ ~:~art

Labored
Food ftsh
Diminish
Sand bar

148
1~
151
153
154
156
158
161
163
165
167
117

Fate
Homan road

Attitude
Number
Rtver tn

Scotland
Born
Gree!&lt; teller
EKt sts
Road (abbr \
Rupees labbr I
S emor grade

(abbr )
IS

19 ;20

home We have more to offer
than any mobile commun1ty
111

Southeastern Ohio

·-----------------------1
For Rent
Cr eek

Onen Eves. ltl6 -

tires,

low

H

a t Quat!

245 502 1
285 If

BRADBURY efft Ctency apt
sec ond fl oor a dults on ly no
pets Ph on e 4.:16 0957
269 If
~- ---~----

SLEEP I NG ro oms
ra t e Gall• a H o l e!

weekly

F U RN
apar t me nt
n ea r
do wn town Ga llrpo i 1S Call 446
0139

286 tl
MOB I LE HO M ES for r en t
446 07 56
~ -~ - -----------

15 N E W R egen cy Inc Ap r 2
bed ro o m s c arp eted tot a l
e lec tr tc loca t ed on San d H il l
Roa d PI P lea san t P h 675
5 104 or 675 5386
269 If

Television Log
6 IJO-ThiS IS the L1fe 10

6 lO- Inlernatlonal Zone 4 Unfinished Business 10
Newsmaker '74 13
7 IJO-This Week 4, Commun ique 6, Talk ing Hands S, Old T1me
Gospel Hour 11
7 15-Tele Bible Time 4
7 lo-This Is the Life 3, Church by Side of the Road 4, Revival
Fires 6 , Old FashfOtled Gospel HourS; Camera Three 10
S IJO-Mormon Choir l , Day of Discovery 4, Gospel Caravan 6 ,
Mr Gospel Gu1lar 10, Mamre Church 13
a 3D-Oral Roberts l , Your Health 4, Kathryn Kuhlman 6, Day
of Discovery S, James Robison Presents 10 , Rex Hum bard
13, To Be Announced 15
a 55-Black Cameo 4
9 00-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3. Cadle Chapel 4, Oral Roberts
to, Re• Humbard 6, Rev Leonard Repass s, Across the
Fence 15
9 ]()-Yours lor the Asking 4, What Does the Bible Say 8,
Chu~ch Service 10, Christ IS the Answer 11, Insight 15.
10 IJO-Big Blue Marble 3, Church 1,S.rvlce 4, Leroy Jenkins 6 ,
Kathryn Kuhlman S, Movie "T~e Dangerous Days of Kiowa
Jolles" 10, Jtmmy Swoggart ll , Faith for Today 15
10 30--Go 3, Lassie's Rescue Ra "~ers 6 ; Insight 4, Public Affa~rs 8. What does the B1ble Plainly ~o( 13; This Is the Life
1S
11 IJO-TV Chapell, Focus on Columbus 4; Point of View 6, Re•
Humbard 8, to, Rev Henry Mahan 11
11 3()-ThiS Is the Answer l 1 Make a Wish 6, 13, Two Way Street
4

12 IJO-AI Issue 3,
11 IJO-TV Chapell, Focus on Columbus 4. Point of View 6, Re•
Humbard 8, Rev Henry Mahan 13
11 3()-ThiS IS the Answer l , Make a Wish 6, 13 , Two Way Street
4

12 IJO-AI Issue l , Pro Skiing's Rl ckesl Race The Lange Cup 4,
Bowlmg 6, To Be Announced 8, Columbus Town Meeting 10,
Rev Calvin Evans tl ; Sacred Heart 15
12 ts-&lt;lpen Bible 15
12 3()-Meel the Press 3,4, 1S, Face the Nation 8, Day of
Miracles 13
1 IJO-Year End l, American Bowl 4, CBS Sports Spectacu lar
S, 10; Lower Lighthouse ll
.1 JG-Issues &amp; Answers 6, t 13
:l IJO-Superstars 6.13
2 ]()-Remember w1lh Us l , To Be Announced 15
3.00-Golden Sprlng15, ltTake!ia Thtef 3, NBA BasketballS, 10
3 ]()-American Sportsman 6,13
4 IJO-NHL Hockey 1,4, 15, Antiques 33
• JG-Wide World of Sport s 6. 11, Erica 13
4 45-Maklng Things Work
5 IJO-Unto the Hills ll
5 3G- To Be Announeed 8, Face the Nation 10, Walsh's Animal s
ll
'
6 IJO-NFL Championship Games 6, 60-Minutes S,10, World of
Surv ival 11, VIlla Alegre 33.
6· 30-NBC News 3,4, 15, Nallooal Geographic 6, Untamed World
13 ; Zoom 33
7 IJO-Last of the Wild 3., 4, Animal World 8, In the Know 10,
Wild Kingdom 13. 15. Walsh's Animals 20, Lilias Yoga &amp; You

•

7 30---World of Disney 3,4 , Movie "How the West Was Won"
6, 13. Apple's Way 8.10, Nova 20. Feeling Good 33
S JG-McCioud 1,4, 15, Kolak 8, 10, Masterpiece Theatre 20,33
9· JG-Manm• 8, tO; Firing Line 20,33
10 Jlf-We Th ink You Should Know l, News 4.6,8, Mountain
Scene 33, H1gh Road to Adventure 10, To Be Announced 13,
Pollee Surgeon 15; Soundsla~e 20
11 IJO-News 3, 10, 13, 15. Bonanza 4, My Partner the Ghost 6 ,
CBS News 8, Janakl 33
11 15-Movle "Lydia Bailey" 8, CBS News 10
11 JO-Mov1e " Six Lesssons from Madame La Zonga" 3,
Weekend 15, Urban League 10; Don Kirshner's Rock Cort
~·rt 13
•
'
12 IJO-Weekend 4, Good News 6 . Movie "The W1ld Bunch" 10
12 JG-ABC News 6 •
1 OO,....News 13
1 30-News 4

Spring Valley
Green Apartmenjs

13
'1 BR

unfurn ished apa rtm ent
ex tr a nt ce bu i lt In k it chen.
a ir c:o nd cen tral hea t Qlaat ed
n ear sch ools, A d u lts onl y
Re feren ces r eq u (r ed No p ets
See a1 54 1 F our th Ave

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

LARGE tra l er space on Rt 35
on e m tl e f r o m hos p1 t al 446
380 5
27 4 If

For Rent

3 RM furn ished &amp;partm en t, 1h
ba t h. sh ow er sec ond floo r
U til i ti es paid at Ri o G r and e
Call '1.:15 55 10

297 II

3 R M and ba t h f urn
a pt
p r 1vate en t ra n ce
M o bile
ho m e c lose to GS J M ob il e
Hom e close to Crown City
Ca ll 446 0 168 Ca ll tn f or en o on
295 If

SUNDAY. JANUARY 5, 1975

For Rent

Ph

l :Zx 60 M O BI LE Ho m e On e
m tl e tram hos p ital Ad ult s
Ph .:1.:16 3805

Tal5 P.M. Sat.

See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burns
Lloyd Mclauahllo
Marvtn Keebaugh

MO BI LE h om e, tot al elec tr ic , 2
bedroom $100 , 3 b edroom
$125 Phone 446 0175 or 446
1934
286 If
U N FURN I SHED
e ffi c i e n cy
ap t , $1:15 per mo Ph -446
3643
163 If

Pomeroy

' You It Like Our Qua iiJy Way of Doing Busl"ess"

For Rent

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

33

new

Cadillac • Old smobile
GMAC Fmanclng Avaolable

992 5142

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992-212t Open Eves. Till 8 Pomeroy

Conlacl Newt Jones
~odney Cora Rd
Rodney, Ohio
Ph 1•5 nn-245-5071
We rent mobile homo lots,
not tus1 a place 1o ~rk your

atr ,

KARR &amp;VAN ZANDT

week l y :Z B R t o tal elec M

P ar k Central H ot el
306 tf

factory

•2195

'3495

257 If

25 00
10 00
6$ 00
25.00
35 00
50.00

2- BREAKFAST SET, 2 CHAIRS
WITH DROP LEAF TABLE _ __ _ _ _J!9.95
BREAKFAST SET
10 00

G SI
Call
for enoon

SUNDAY, JANUARY 5, 1975

WAS
SALE
__.29 95 10.00
9 95
19 95
6f 95 39 95
19 95
10 00
29 95
5 00
19 95
5 00

40" ELEC RANGE. WHITE
19 9S
2-40" ELEC RANGES, WHITE
129 95
30" ELEC RANGE, WHITE
179 95
36" ELECTRIC, GREEN, LIKE NEW - 2 19 95

BR h ou se
fu l l base m ent
Cl1pper M 1lls C tt y w ater $6 5
per mo Ph 446 01 75

re q ut
red Phhom446
'1 BR
mobile
e 1900
R ef eren ces
35

MOBIL E HOM E CL OSE T

308 6

'"

Sale Prices On The Best Used
Furniture Buys!!

2-JO" GAS RANGES, G0Lu...._ ,....._ _..J S9 9S
30' GAS RANGE, GREEN
ISS 00
30' GA S RANGE, WHITE
149 9S
36" GAS RANGE, WHIT
149 95
36" GAS RANGE, WHITE
119 95
30" GAS RANGE, BLUE
119 95

69 Cadillac Sedan DeVi

1971 CHEVROLET 2 TON

36

"••

8S 00
49 95
59 95
9 95
29 95

r ed ftnl sh . aood tires

3 ft

Mobtle Hom e 2 B R
K &amp;K Mob tle Homes P ark
GalltpOI IS 67 5 3000

3 OLIO OAK DRESSERS, (EACH)
WHITE BABY CHEST
MAPLE CHEST
DRESSER
SMALL CHEST

vinyl roof

SL EE PIN G roo m s w eek l y rat e
:.J- ibb y H o t e l

••
....
"''
:' 12x6.5 GA S

59 95
9 95
79 95
39 95
69 95
10000

Choice $7 500

'1595

SMA LL offt ce ( 145 sq ft ) to
do wntown b u rldtng Also 1.000
sq f1 tn r ear of b u1ldmg Ph
446 1694
3 tf

3

BEIGESOFA
BROWN SOFA
GOLD SOFA
GOLD SOFA BED
2 pc LIVING ROOM SUITE
3-1 PC LIVING ROOM SUITES,ea

'3295
1971 MATADOR

3l

BL UE ROCKE R_--::--::-::=c=:-:-::-::--BROWN ROCKER, GOOD SHAPE
PATCHWORK ROCKER
GREEN VINYL ROCKER
BROWN CHAIR, WITH FOOT STOOL
2- GREEN CHAIRS.ea

Apollo y e llow, brown vinyl top, Climate
Control a 1r c ond1tlonang , T&amp; T wheel , AM- FM
st e reo 8. tape, new w s w tares

V 8 J door, tac1ory a ir, a utomat1 c, powe r steenng &amp;

446 0822

CHAIRS

'

350 V a engine power steeri ng

fa cto ry a ir, tinted gla ss, radio, wheel covers g ood
1tres bl k mterlor st lver grey fini sh New Yea r s

For Rent

'1 BR mob rl e hom e Upp er Rt 7

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

1974 CHEVELLE

2 BR T ratl er 10x50 edge of
t own on 588 Sl ! O per mo Cal l

WHITE BED,
Does not apply to layaways
or pre\ltous advertised
spectals

fl n ts h

11 , 1975 at 5: 00

Ph . 992-2174

500 E. Main St.

Charcoa l grey wath leathe r anterior, f ull power
equapment , AM- FM st e r e o, new steel radial
t1re s. c limate contr ol air c ondltaonlng .

JJO V 8, 4 speed tr a ns , good tires cl ean In terior , ye llow

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.

CALL 992-3877.

DUNCAN PHYFE TABLE WITH4 CHAIRS 319 95 199.95
ZENI TH ~TEREO
139 9S 100 00
PH I LCD STEREO, LIKE NEW
WITij AM FM RECORD PLAYER~BS 00 188.00

Discount

Low

••
No one ev er sat on seats clean as
•• new
One local owner low m1leaga
•
~ • 1970 Maverick 6 cyl 2 dr Sedans

Bath and 112, excellent
neighborhood, wall-towall carpeting, storm
windows. large lot, 3
car garage, reasonable
ut11ities.

2-STOKER MATIC.COAL HEATERS, EA. 48S 00

20%

1970 DODGE DART SWINGER

But what else would you expect from

- 1971 Olds Cutlass SV8 2 dr. Hardtop

•4795
74 Cadillac Coupe· DeVille

'1695

and full equ ipment

HOUSE

Tuppers Plains, Q,

Kuhl's Bargain Center

Jack W C•rs.y , M g r
Phone 992 2111

L..

BARGAIN
_ C~NTER

like a person.

P OM EROY LANDMAR K

9913'31

-

KUHLIS

10

Beauttful bu1 ldmg s1te 11,
acres, wooded TP water 1n
a new area SJ 500

I

-

JUST

HEATERS

ROOM f urn 1shed apt Ca ll 99'2
5908 be,ore I p m
12 Jl 6tc

13

--

good blacktop road

------

FUEL OIL

19 73 B U ICK
fu ly equrp ped
Exc e liC'nl cond ton
low
rn leaq e 116 J09-I

acres, tdeal for home or
tratler a"ppro\led for sept tc

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

r

Auto Sales

0

about 1 acre 4 BR 2 baths
(ovely k1tchen &amp; dtn tng,
utt11ty R
rec space car

5 p m

PIG S
Sl5 each
Ho lst e rn
Heret ord he r fer S125 One fo n
1°65 Foro t ru ck 6 cyl tnder
S550 C W Rt ce Phon e 9.:19
1115

REALTY

3 BR

Shows tend er care A1r condttloned

7 ROOM

71 FO R D L TF
AC
PS
PB
RADI O
and 8 TR ACK
ST EREO
V INYL TOP I N GOOD CO NO

Offer good through Sat . , Jan
p . m.

1972 Ford LTD 4 dr. Hardtop

-

POMEROY- About 2 yr
old - BRICK0:' FRAME

lt yt ng R

•

Vanyl roof , factory aa r , s t ee l rad1al tires , SS
whe el s, bucket seats, c onsole, 6 wa y power
sea t . low mil ea ge SHARP• \

V 8 engme, a uto m a t ic tra ns power steer ing, radio sport
cust om cab good ftres gree n &amp; wh ite f tn tsh

•

,/

74 Olds ·cutlass Sup. Cpe.

1970 FORD 8' WIDE BODY

Simply test drive any new or used car
on our lot and you'll receive FREE, a 2
lb. box of Sugar:

Only 7,415 easy mil es Like new
Door ln back like statton wagon

'

Want To Save
Some Dollars?

Sweeten up your 1975
with a new Buick or Pontiac
or with a great used car.

1974 Ford Pinto 3 door Runabout

..•

• (abbr I
' 66 Tttle ol

MAIN
POM E ROY

BED fr ame Sl O w hJte head
bo ar d S20 ref SJO chest of
dr"w ers '515
Call 991 1889

1957 C H E VY parts
NEW
Lakewood tract ton bars ht
1a c ker it tr shocks
hooker
headers w rth 3 collectors for
small bl ock
Cal l 992 3.&amp;96
aflf'r 6 P m BE ST O FF ER
10 17 tf c

12 12 t fc

EXC E LSIOR Salt Works East
M&lt;l rn St Pom e r oy A 1 kmd s
o f salt water pellets water
1uggets b lock sa lt an d own
Ohro R \l er Sal t PhOne 992

D.ELAND

F CARPETS too k dull ,lnd
rlr!:'ar re m ove spots as th ey
appe ar wrt h B lue Lustre
Ren t e lectr c s.hamp oo er S1
Baker Fu rn tturE' Comp an y
1 3 Jt c

FU RNISHED
apartmf!'nl
uf llr l tes f urnrshed
SU ttab lc
• for rwo w ork ng men or
re t red cou pl e L 1\1.111g room
l..rtchen shower il nd bath On
'('fla tn htghw&lt;:'ly Mason W Va
Phone 773 51J 7
10 27 ttc

------

2 1 1 tiC

1\0:.SOCIATES

POTATOES
Co bbler
and
Kennebec Tho m as Sa y r e
Phon e BJ3 2-191
1 3 Jtp

1 3 'l tc

---.-

~?]']

12 31 26 tp

CO U NTRY Mobile Ho me PM!..
------12 :19 6tp
Rt 33 tf'n miles north of Pomeroy
Large to ts wtlh
- - - - - - - : . . . . . ._ _ _.., ;---------~~~
COncrete patroS
Sl d E' Wd l kS
runners
and
oft
street
SIEGLER and
par l.. 1ng cho ne 992 1&lt;1 79
MONOGRAM
12 31 He

-1

E XCAVATI N G doz er
load er
ilnd ba c kh oe v.ork
septt c
tanks rns tall ed dump tru c k s
an d to boys f or h rre wll hau l
frll d r t t op so I I m c st on e 8.
qravel
Ca ll Bob or Roger
Je tt er s day phone 992 708 9
n 1gh t phone 991 3525 or 99'1

' 5J

Yn J6 t'i

1 5 lt c

MIN

.t RM furn tShed apt close to
Powells Super Valu phone
991 365 8
II '10 rfc

qQ]

GORDON B TEAFORD

7 161

TRA IL ER 64 1 Thir d A1.1e,
adult s on ly P h .:146 3870

1 11
TR A IL E R sp a c es
p r11.1 llt e 367 7438

l arg e lo ts

13
2

•

Now ready
for occupancy.

1

Model Open Dally
10-12 noon &amp; 4-6 p.m.
Sal &amp; Sun 1·4 p.m.
I &amp; 2 bedroom gordon
a~rtmenfs, renl storts from
$135 Dtr mont~

Phone 446-1599

BR
tratt er
a d ul ts onl y
F urnt shed 2 B R ho use In
Chesh 1re, al l ut l tltles p a id on
bo t h Call 367 742 0
13

AstroGrapM

MONDAY. JANUARY 6, 1975
6 oo-Sunr lse Sem inar 4 , Sunrise Sem ester 10
6 25-Farm Report 13
6 30-Five Minutes to L1ve By 4, News 6, Bible An swers 8.

Concerns &amp; Comments 10, Good News tl
6 35- Columbus Today 4
6 45- Mornlng Report 3, Farmtlme 10
7 IJO-Today 3,4, 1S , A M America 13,6 , CBS News s, 10
8 IJO-Lassle 6, Capt Kangaroo 8, Popeye10, Sesame St 13
8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10
s 30-Big Val ley 6
9 DO-AM l , Pau Dl•on 4 ; Phil Donahue IS, Bullwlnkle S,
Morning with D J 13
9 2 ~Chulck White Reports 10
9 lQ-Not For Wom en Only 3, Dinah 6 Hazel 8, Tattletales 10,
Ar thur Sm1th 12 , New Zoo Revue 11
10 DO-Celebrity Sweepstakes l,1 S, Joker's Wild B.10 Movie " A
Breath of Scandal" 1l
10 lQ-Wheet of Fortune l, 15 , Phil Donahue 4, Gambit 8, 10
II IJO-High Rollers l, 15 , One Life to L1ve 6 Now You See II
S, tO
II l o-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15 , Brady Bun ch 6, Love of Li fe
8, 10 , Sesame 51 31
11 55- CBS News s, Dan lmel'
s World 10, News 13
12 DO-Jackpot 3, 1S , Password All St o~s 6,11 , Bob Broun's SlJ 50
Club 4, News S, 10
12 l o-Btank Check 3, Split Second 6,13 Search for Tomorrow
s, 10 To Be Announced 33
12 45-NBC News l, 15
1 IJO-News 3, All My Children 6, 13 , What' s ,,,y Line 8 , Young
&amp; Restless 10, Nol For Women Only 15
\ 3Q-How to Survive a Marriage l,4, 15, Let' s Make a Deal 6 11,
As _the World Turns 8,10 _
2 t.ll--liu,OOO Pyramid 6,1 3, Gu ldlnQ Llgll! B,10
2 30-Doclors l,4, 15, Big Showdown 6, 11, Edgeol Night 8, 10.
l IJO-Another World 1,4,15 : General Hospital 6, 11, Price Is
Right 8, 10, Feeling Good 20, Personality &amp; Behavioral
Development
J · 3()--{)r:,e Life to Live 11, Lucy Show 6, Match GameS, 10
4 IJ0-1 Dream ol Jeannie 4, Somerset IS, Gilligan's Is 6 ,
Tottletales B Sesame St 20.11 . Mov ie' E,scapade In Japan "
10, Mike Douglas 13
4 30- Bewttched 3; Jackpot 4, MOO Sqijad 6, Lucy Show B,
Bonanzo 15
S IJO-FBI l . Merv Griffin 4, Andy Grlflllh B, Mister Rogers'
N ~ghborhood 20,33 , Raymond Burr 11
s »-News 6 , Beverly Hlttbl tlies , B Hodgepodge Lodge 20,
Tra1ls West 15, Elec Co :13 "
,
6 IJO-News 3,4,S, 10, 12, 1l, IS, AB C News 6 , Elec Co 20 ,
Adlerian Counseling 33
6· 30-NBC News 3,4, I S; ABC News 11, Bewitched 6, CBS News
s, Zoom 20.
7 IJO-Trulh or Cons l , Phil Donahue" s, Bowling for Dollars 6,
News 10, New Candid Camera 11, Wally's Worksl!op 1S;
Ohio This Week 20 . L1llas Yoga &amp; You 33
7 3()-That Good Ole Nashville Music l, Masquerade Party 4,
College Baskelball6; $25,000 Pyramid a; In the Know 10, To
Tettlhe Truth 13 , Untamed World 1S, Washington Straight
Tal k 20, Episode action 33
a IJO-Movle "The Spec ialists" 3,4, 1S, Jacques Covsteau 13,
Gunsmoke a, 10, Performance at Wolf Trap 33. Movie " The
Finest Hours" 20
,
9 IJO-ABC Theatre 11, Maude S,1 0, What Makes a Good Father
33
9 30-Movle " Target R1sk" 3.4, 15, ABC Theatre 6, Rhoda a, 10.
10 IJO-Med1cal Centers, 10, News 20; Washington Straight Talk
33
10 30-Beh~nd the Lines ll
11 IJO-News l,4,6,B,10.13,15 , ABC News :13.
11 30-Johnny Carson 1,4,15, Wide Worl!I-Mystery 11, FB I 6 ,
Movie ""Scream, Pr etty Peggy" 8. Movje " Calro" 10,
Janakl l l
12· 30-Wide World Myslery 6
1 oo-To m o r row 3, 4, News. 13

., BlrniCI Bide 0101
8undor - Jon. 5, 1175
~ RIU

(More~ 21 -Aprll 11)
Don t be too IBvlsh wtth com -

pli ments t o one who Isn't
d eser \llng of th em It will make
you r m at e unne c es s a ri ly

lealous
TAURUS (AP&lt;II 20- Mor 20)
Yo u II pay to o Utile attention to
tnstruct lons tha t are g l\len you
t oday Later when you follow

them. you II onl y do half a l ob
GEMINI (Moy 21 •Juno 20)
Lady Luck will not treat you
n tce l y II y o u g am ble on
somethtng sig ht unseen look
b efore you lea p

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Yo u II dl sapp otnt other s and
d(s r u p t th e tr pt a ns If you
change your m ind at the last
m nute to beg out of something
yo u prom1sed Ia d o

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You'll
com e up with some pretty nifty
when e xplaining to a
tn end why you dldn t get

e~c u ses

ar ound to a f avor she asked or

you
VIRGO (Au; 23·Stp1 22)

Yo~

stilt do n I have as ttghle grip oil
yo ur cr edit card as you &amp;hould
It s lik ely your extravagance

will gai n th e upper hand
LIBRA (Sept 23 · 001 23)
To (eranc e wilt be required o n
yo ur behalf at home today or
e lse you n m ake Issues out or
Sllu at1o n s th a t n or m a lly
wouldr. t faze you

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 221
Thts ts not one of your better
days fo r com 1ng up with brtght

Id eas Steep on your tMugh1s
O\lern 1g ht and see how you
vi ew them tom orrow

SAGITTARIUS (No• 23-Dec
21) You don t have sens1ble
sales r esis tance today Don t
scan the advertisements too
closely or you II make an unwtse purc hase

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jon 1;)
Even 1t you have' to squirm a bit

white domg II tell tlltke Il ls. A.
lttJie wh1te He wont get y ou off

the- hot seat
AQUARIUS (Jon 20- Fob 11)
T r y not to commit yourseH now
t o plans with ottlers too far In
ad vance Something (S coming
up and you II want to have an
o pen schedule

PISCES (Fob 20·Mtrch 20) Its
st1ll not wi se for you to tell a
frte nd o f yours ab o ut
so m et h1ng your l n stl nc~s warn
yo u t o keep secret

Your llrllociiJ - - . 1, 1171
You wilt undettaKe en eliCiting

n""' project this year The con'dlltons that bl'tng this about wilt
b e m o st unusual 81"1d will

happen very suddenly
\

-·I
:L:lc:&lt;'C£
• ==-",L

Of lr t t'

Offi....lal 's car Very low m tleage
Genuine lea th e r seat s and a 11
' good tes "

367-7250

Auto Sales

$SAVE$
$SAVE$
$SA~E$

1973 Ford Thunderbird 2 dr. Hardtop

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses •
1112 Baths
Pay Only One Utility
Addason, Ohio
For Information
Call Sharley Adkins

'

FURNI T UR E Uuno l s t er ng
Reasonabl e
rat e s
free
es t 1ma t e s
p r ckup
ar&gt;d
det rverv
prompt serv 1c e
Mo wr ey s Uphols t er y P ont
Pleasant N VJ P hone 675

HF Lf N l TEAfORD

&amp; N day o ld or slarted
L eghorn pu t le t s Both ttoor or
CC! Qe
gro w n
aYa rlab le
P ou try
housuog
a nd
a u to H &lt;rlion ModNn Poultr y
399 W Milt n Pomeroy 99 7

1 J r tc

Dear Grateful

Older 4 bedr oom

TARA

JANUARY
CLEARANCE

No purch~se is neces_sary. Only
licensed drivers are eligible, and there
is 'a limit of 1-2 lb . box perfamily.

t illed Full y equ tpped

DO ZER w o rk land cl eartng by
the Ct cr c hourly or con tra c t
F arr11 ponds
roads
et c
Large do2 er and ope r ator
wtlh over 20 y ears ex
pe r 1ence Pulltns Excavatmg
Pom ero y Ohro
Phone 992
2-l 78
12 19 tf c

WI L L lr rm or c ut trees or
Sh r ubl)ery
c l ean
o ut
basements .:l l rrcs etc 949
32'11 or 7 t2 &lt;14.&lt;11
12 15 26t c

Only dr iven by one of our off 1c1a ls
Ver y, very Jaw m ileage
Never

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

I
800-631 -1999
I1
Equa( (Jppor tun tty Em
I ployer I M F I

DE A TH

1974 Ford LTD Brougham 4 dr Sedan

3066

MR. PATRICK

TO /

Only driven by on e ol our off tc lals
Ver y low mt leage Never been titled
Fullv equ1pped

10x50
MOBILE
h ome
2
bedroom w1t h po r c h an d
awnrng on a l arge s1ze lot WJ fh
garden space 6 m 11es from
th e hosp ta l on old 160 tor S90 a
mon t h
Call 446 3589 a ft er
4 30

I CA LL I TOLL FREE

DUE

1974 Ford LTD Country Squire Station Wagon

3067

1

I

NEW TRUCKS, CARS AND OFFICIALS' CARS •

-- ----- ~ -- ---~ /&gt;

We'll Deal

Just for test driving an y
new or used car on our
lot, we will give you FREE
one 2-lh. box of sugar

DISCOU~T ON

,_'1,000

307 5

5 ROOM house an d on e l arge
Ira ler space, Kyger Cre ek
"SchOol Orstrrc t Ph 367 7350

I

G REAT DANE PUPS 8 weeks
old 550 Phone 99'1 5728 after 6
pm
12 '1 9 6t p
II

CA

NE G LER
BUIL D ING SUP
PI Y
I O f.!
RE M O DELI N G
6. N D I&lt; I T C HfN CABI NE T S
C A LL GU Y N E I G H L ER
RAC N E O HI O PH O NE 91 9
160 I
12 19 26t c

HO M E

$1 2,500 00 -

1 2 3t c

Dear FBC
Sorry m thts case, we both thank Father Kno\\s Best
True, your Dad can't cure a fever b) breakmg the thermometer - but he nught prevent pnewnorua ( vour ne11 mama '\
by protecung you from ovet exposure 1Jsten io htm - HELEN

WHAT IS A FATH ER ?
4 father as a man who has lwo k1ds m college and 111 0 k•ds at
home, and even•wtth the htgh cost of ltvmg, lets vou have a b1g
dog who takes up half the kitchen and eats lake a horse
He's your pet peeve and best fnend, both at the same time
He's someone who listens to what you sa~ and he 's alwal s
there wben you need him He knows the nght thmgs to sa) -but
at the wrong tunes.
He's a clown, a gentleman, a f tx-d man, a philosopher a
counsel or, an engmeer, a smger, a writer , a professaonal food
consumer , and can talk mtelligenUy on almost anything.
He hardly ever loses has temper, but when he does - wa.tch
out'
However, be never stays mad long and never holds a grudge
}.. father as the kind of guy you'd want to be strahded wtth m
the dentist's off ace
He complains about money, but shU g1veli 11 to you
He's the one who goes shoppmg wah us grrl.s, even though he
can't sf.and at. Sometimes he acts like a bear. but he would
sacrifice anythlilg1or tu¥amdy .
He understands you even when you can't , understaRd
yourself.
1
1
In other ~~:ords, be's the greatest' - M E C

water on ntce corner lot

hom e modern bath nat gas
ELECTROLUX Sw eeper del uxe fur nace, new block garag e
mode l
Complete wtth all barn and l.:'lrge lot
cte anmg iltta c hments a nd
uses paper bags Sitghtly used
BUILDIN G LOTS - Severa l
but c teM !. and looks like new
Wtll sell fo r $37 25 cash or l ocat1on s Sl500 00 up
t erms available Phone 99 2 LI ST IT WITH US FOR BEST
7755
RESU LTS
11 18 tt c

Thel&gt;aily Sentinel

p

$3 000 00 - Ol d one floo r 5 room
house with nat gas and ctty

-~~~-

Age 8 or Olde r

W

Vtrqrl B fp,lford . Sr.
BrokPr
110 Mf'C holrHC Strl'l'f
PornNoy. Oht o -IS76'll

S'lO 000 00 New 3 bedroom
home
11\ltng ro om 1Jx19
beau t ful ki t chen ceramtc ttle
bath
At tached gar ag e and
almost one acre

G RO C ERY b US1ness f or sale
Burldmg for sate or le a se
Phon e 773 56 18tro m 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for apporn trnent
3 10 tt c

NEW HAVEN
•
Dear Helen and Sue
Please tell my Dad )OU can't cure a fever by breaking the
thermometer
I've got a b1g crush on a guy " ho leads a rock group He tsn 't
rea l famous yet, bul he probably wtll be I never say more than
" Ht " to hun " hile 1'm dancmg to has musac. but Iftgure 1f I go to
enough of has dances, ma1 be some nuracle wall happen He s
around 19 I 'm 15
My Dad, who as norm a ll~ a greal person, sa)S l'm ·overdomg " the dances and he non t take me and my g1rl fn end to an1
more of them 11 here Ton1• pla) s See, I made the mlstakc of
telling hm1 1 re,11ly \\ani to meet Tony. and he Sil l S 1t s
dangerous. because mus1c1allS aren 't to be trusted
1 thrnk he's heard something bdd about Tom But 11 eouldn 1
be true Could you persuade lum to let me have d chance'' He
reads ) our coltmm - FlRST BlG CRUSH

TEAFORD

I

EPTI C
T ANK S
c l eaned
Mod er n San d at on 992 J9 5J or
997 /] 19
9 19 ti c

CREMEAN S CONCRETE d e
1vered Monday
th r ough
Saturday
and
cv cntn gs
Phone J 16 1142
6 13 lf c

S85 00 00 - Two bedroom frame
home Bath pa neling gas F A
furnace basement and c tfy
water

FURNI SH ED mo brle
for
r ent
Alb ert Htll
Racrne
Oht o Phon e 9J9 22 6 1
12 '19 6tc

In

How to Break a Fever

LOI S Pau ley
Branch M ana ocr

MODERN Walnut stereo
r ad o
B tra ck tap e com
btnal•on
am l m
r ad1o
Balance SI08 6J or t er ms Call
992 3965
12 31 tf c

Carrier Wanted

307 Sprang Ave nu e
Po m e roy
992 22 98
CONTACT

horn e

1 5 3t c

Help Wanted

110 BOO 00

J R M a pi turnr shed adults no
dr un k s Also 3 rm a p t Jo hn
Sllee t s
J mr les south of
Mrddl tO POrt on Rt 7
1229 61p

Accord1ng to NatiOn&lt;ll
Wald l 1fe F'ede• at ton esu
JUNK
a uto s
c omp lete ana
ma tes, demands 101 U S !01
d ell\lerect to our yard We pr c k
est products IS p11l JCC ted to
up auto bodtes and buy al t
WILL BABY SIT tn tnY home for
krnd s o f scrap rnetal s an d
double 111 30 yea • s t ho u ~h
workrng mother Phone 965
tron Rrder s Sat1.1ag e Sl Rt
product iO n w all not double lo•
11 02
1:14 Rt J Pom eroy Ohro
1'1 30 71(
50 years, T he Wor ld A lm,mac
Ca ll 99 2 5468
10 t7 tt c
notes W •ldl•fe off1c 1d ls P• o·
W I LL do b aby sitting 1n my
1ect that p•·oduc110n co uld be
home 5 dtWS per w ee k Infant
CAS H pard tor all nHtkes and
ancreased d1 amauca ll y by
to 2 years Ha s r (' f C'rences
mod e l s of mobr le homes
C&lt;l ll 99:1 7189
eff1c1en t management ol tun
Phon e area co de 614 413 9531
.f 13 lf c

BEDROOMS

Burt1ngham
some
ca r
pettng
furnttu~ nclud ed

of
B r oadway
and
Elm
Mrdd lep.o r t
No
pets o r
chrtd ren Call 99'1 :15 80 aft er 6
p &lt;n
1'1 5 tf c

REM O DELIN G
plumb tnq
tot•at rn q
Cl 1d all typ es o f
qercr a l
rE'pa r
V\o r k
CJuf\r&lt;'l nt eed
20 vcr~rs ex
pencnce Pho tH' 99 '1 ., 109
1 3 121C

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

2

'J BEDROOM trarler at corner

Employment Wanted

O L. D turnrl ure c e boxes bril SS
bC'dS or comp l et e ho use holds
W rr t e M D Miler Rt J
Pomero y Oh10 Call 992 7760
10 l 7 I

b e droom s full basem en t
ga ra ge 3 mt S of Shade
Term s available

Rd Ph 367 7181

1 Nah onal
corporataon
m a nutacturmg
j ltghtang products for
1
andu s tr aal and com 1 m er c aal accounts has
l op e nang s
fo .r
sa l es pers on s an local
areas . Must be non' p ress ure, honest and
sancere
tndavaduals
lookang for thetr LAST
JOB , mu st be quahfted
t o open n e w accounts
as well a s upgrade
es t a bla s h e d
users.
R epe at
bus anes s ,
se cure future. Ltberal
tr a anang
com pen salton , benefits .

Phone ( 304) 773 5503

"'

BEDROOM mobtl e home
util fl rF''&gt; turn rs hed c lo se n
Co t I 997 76J9 aft er 4 p m
1 5 61C

19 71 CO M E T
19 000 nl! ICS
&lt;'l \Jtomili •C tr ansm ss on 1 lo.e
new Cil ll any 1 me 667 3J I ]
1 5 l 'ltp

CA SH U$UFOR jU N K CAR S
Comp F-RYE S T RU CK Cl nd
AU T O
PART S
Ru t lilnd
PllOnl' 747 609~
' 2 ntp

I

Real Estate For Sale

PR I V A TE meetmg roo m for
any organ rzat ron ph one 992
] 97S
3 11 ti c

1 2 ) lp

Wanted To Buy

1

.1

Strout Realty

PLYMOU TH I u r y Ill
t p s ra clro Citll 99? 5105
I '1 31p

1'1,

Sat

8AM6PM

1 ke n ew tota l electrr c
trader Comple t ely f u r n iShed,
all uftl tt1es patd on Mtll Creek

LAST JOB!

Alummum stdtng
roofing
1 comp lete res1denf t a l con
j struc t1on Wrn ng pl u mbmg
elec
heaftng
ktfchen
cabtn et s etc
27 Yrs ex penence to cons t
t rade

AS MUCH AS
00

2 BR

I

JOHNSON'S

-,

Auto Sales
1966

Open Mon

- - -- - - -

BUILD I N G tot 80 It t ron t aq e
b y 165ft Tt e second lo t on le tt
on Rr11ervrew Or ve Ltn c oln
TRAil E R spoce 2 m1 es from
Hill Pomeroy Oh ro
It m
Harr rsonvr le Phon e 742 387 1
t ere s ted c all 991 J'l 30 aft e r s p
I 5 6tc
&lt;n
P A NO
1un nq .mc/ r epa r
10 1 ti c
I
ROOM turn Shtd apt
7
Cn ilr iCS COlt ~9 7 3' IB
b edroom s artutt s only Phon e
I 13 H l p
99 1 / 616
1 5 -Il L O L D H O U SE 111 C.yr iiCUSl' on I
C A RA D F ORD A uc ton ecr
nr cc to ts } 3 000 Wd
Tf'M
Com pl ro l e Ser v 1C' P
'l BEDROOM ,)If elt&gt;clr c ilpt
hou se dow n I Willl C"d P hon e
Pt101 !" 919 38? 1or949 3161
off Route ! net'lr Pom er oy
99 2 5B 98
R a e ne Ohro
Alldtl a bt e now ph one 99J /666
1} 7~ 7 tp
Cr tl t Bradtord
or 99"J 70 17
5 1 tf c
I 5 3t c
1 AEDR OOM house 3 mt l es out
SEPT C ta n k s
elC Cil vJ i rnq
orr
Sta rp
Rou t e
1 !)
O NE becllo om mobile 110me
dtJm p t n c k Phon e 742 3742
R r&gt; t c r en cec;
a nd
d l' po sr t
c tec trr c heat A c Sec at 308
1220261(
r c qutrccl N o pEl &lt;; Pt10nl 9 19
P aq 1.2 St Middl eport or r.:a t
J / 16
992 350 9
Jrc RE A DY MIX CO N CR E TE de
1 5 If c
" J
l rverc d r qhl to your p rot ec t
F a"&gt; t
and
ea sy
Free
I ROOM fur 1r shed apt
&lt;md
esttmat es P hone 992 32B J
batt1
utr l rtres pa rd
No
Goe gl e 1n R e ady Mtx Co
cl rld r ( n or p('IS Ph one 992
Mrddl eport Ohro
58 10 o r 81J Ea s t Matn
6 30 tfc
1
Pomeroy
I 5 61p
ll EW tN G MACH I N E Rep arr s
N E W - All elec carpeted 3
se r11 Ct' al l makes 99 2 2284
BR
a 1r
co nd tr o n 1ng
J and 4 RO OM f urn1shed and
Th e Fa br c Shop Pom eroy
117 500 00
unfurn iS h ed
Clparlmenls
A u th or ze d Srnge r S&lt;l tes. ilnd
Phone 992 5434
Se r v 1.. W e sharpen Sctssors
4 1 '1 ti c
J '19 tfc
4 AC RES
Rt
33
3

J..: t,I LE ~

1

'
7/9 tf c
'd EC it\ L \ UCTtO N C o 11 e1 l &lt;;
Of o l el
l1C r c hdnd r5C' s ro r r
rnci Ud1 n q m i'l n y 'lnt rqu('&lt;; lo bl
"0 1d b tq rnnrnq H I p rr '1 111
Jdn I Oil H or t on St
1 CI OS'&gt;
tr o ll1 ~~' 1"-0 11
\uc 1 on
rr1
Mrl&lt;;o n
W
V ,l
tl ow,l rct
Rf'1'&gt; 1ey l'o. uL IIOil f..'l r
I 7 21c
W ,..\ N TEO
deep
Pt1on c 98 5 JR 19

1

1

Smith Nelson Motors
wants to sweeten
your deal.

•

For Rent

REMODELING&amp; CON ST. :

On Sta t e Rt 124, t 1 mt fr·om
Route 7 by pass toward s
Ru tl and

Ph 992 5682 or 992-712 1
All M ec h anacal Work ,

- --

I

1 BEDROOM rr atl et rn Rulland
] fJEDR OO M house ~'100 d0w1
Ph one 7 11 1165
S ~ O m onth Phon e 992 3 9 7~ o r
1 5 3t c
9Q1(17 t

1Q71 MO D EL Mo ll lr h Q..mC
l h 60 1 b ~e droo m vnderp rnn C'd
w ndow &lt;1• r c ond 1 on rnQ
un lurnr Sh Prl
s Tlll I d o w n
Pclymt nt 11nd a:.su 11 e roan
f nan cC' d 'l l ! p e t Phon e 99'1
) 'i 16 b f' IW Pe n II l m and ~

I } ] Ic

1

For Rent

H1r tta ny 5p 11 f' l h mrt l f'
I
n or It &lt;; Old (,111 I'U

Mo'. , ,.

C o r rl

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp;HEATING
Comple te plumbang &amp;

---~ _9cc
92:..·::.:
S7c.:O
:.:
O_ _

I 1 l to..

10 J tf c

ROGER HYSELL'S~
GARAGE

HElL

h e altng se rvac e and
ge ne ral sheet m et a l
w or k s
F ree
Es tam a tes
Phon e 949 5961
E m erg ency 992 3995

O Nf ) y(' &lt;lr o ld l ull Oa mat ron
S I 'i P t10rH &lt;'1?1 71 17 r vcn n q s
1 1 l tr

~ -~ ! I

I oll r- n 51 1 1nc1 wo 1drr
Ju &lt;; t why you hild to qo
we w (ro.. so ha pp y toqettH'r
A n d Oil I m 1SS YOU SO
Jus t .-. c tus tf'r o t f) &lt;Hi t I tt
1\ C n or ~ s
Sprnyect w n; n m tl oo I t u c,
W1Sh you co uld t rl Vf' SP &lt;H t d
h rm lord
J ust for il tr w 1oorr Yt lr "&gt;
S ld l y
"""~f't1
l'Y
w It
H 'H r r t

MY

U oc tor

Pets For Sale

::-i HO OT ING
S p l"nt f'r

Oel t

- - --

I

1 \ 7tp
Meetings w d l be he ld every
oth er M onday nt B 00 p m
The Soctt'll Room will be open
l o a t I m embers f amily and
I q uest s ev ery Monday ntght 1 1- O f..'
;":. ! 1:..
to ~ ood ho me
11 n1 ature Dl rh "&gt; hl nd R eq
w th P &lt;1Pf'r S 1 y r &lt;, Wi th n il
'&gt; llO t s H ou sco r o lu' qoo d w th
'&gt; H OO TIN G mQt ch Ra e ne G u n
L h ldr c n Ph one 9fl) 1tHO
Cl ub Su tH t&lt;ty 1 p m A sso rt t"d
1 ') Jtp
!1l (' i11 S ,lnd f a c tory ct1 o k r () un :;

""
IN LOV IN G nl('n or y o l

}71~

( d 1t;&lt;;

1
7':S""

Business Servjces

I

I

p \0L

" ''

Tnc

C.ur ol lt on

EFFECTIVE I 6 75

()II y

hi

~!;l~!ll

i

In c

l r)O k

You

iN ( f..! l--() 11\ l f
N O t ee&lt;;
f-.1 0
W a rchou'ir nq
P&lt;tl l nl
I roi i!C I on ) ~ Yc "'r I-I 1Si or y
R C'p 1rr w rndsh tf' ld t nd pl.lt f'
qt1 .;c; ,lt lc&lt;&gt;&lt;; hcln 70 p e l o f
repl 'l C()nlCfl l cos t
Mr n r~n u m
rn vt•s lm cn t of S l ? 1')0
C illl
I
Co ll ec t Mr
frRnk trt (? lt t

NOTICE TO
EAGLE
I
CLUB MEMBERS

1

'

S,lm

AT OUR " ALL OUT" SALES ROADEO

Opportunthes

----~

IN .\\ E MORV o f Tn ornas Rrtll!f f

w t1 0 depa r t ed !'Irs tr l e

Bustr1ess

Jbe Sunday Times -Sentinel, Swday, Jan

•

lflFU /lEN/) EW~t' ~ 111

For ~ast Results Use The Sunday. Times-S.e niinel c;iassi/ieds-

,•'

•

.,

/

24 - The Sundal Tunes. Sent mel, Sund.11. Jan 5, 1975

•

I

.

�.

25 -

In Memory
196 -l
J d nu a r ;
fl'l:lr e t s

corn~&lt;;

fhe ctny

o nd

Jn1

\\ t ft1

l

P-.t·

&lt;. 1!1

n {'lllt

wt'

vou

wrtl

s tli'l ll r10 1 for o f' t
For rn ou r he ar ts
rl \\ el l-S ~r ay

V.. f" "' 1 lov e an d r t' mr'rntH' r
vo u Pve rvda v
Sndly m rssed by ~..,d, o\ \ rl
rlnd C t1 l dren
I ~ IT~

IN

L O VIN G

d ertr

Ha ...... ~o. rns
~

Jan
5r t1 C('

memory

or

h U S b ilrHI

v.. h&lt;'J

'' "'

llOJlll r

P•'""'&lt;1

ll\ 'Y

1977

'(OI.J

\\

t

1 I

I r-, t

Ill(!

re marn('d
On (' lhtna I W tl tlH• to do
Wnt l.. :&gt; l o wly &lt;.io 1m It .-11
o 1q

o ng p,1111
F or I \&gt;\t i l

to

r wa nt t o

~ n ow

low V(

,

"0 I ll1c1Y lil "'- t I t -; -. tH
for s o me da\ c1CH\n 11 rr 10•tiY

pn n1
I hCtif ll f' l&lt; t l
'ln d l y nltSSCd

M r "&gt;

V ~ r

t" h

&lt;Ill t
wIt

'i

H omer H lV.. I. rtl.,

J

J ~ l

W llO

Prl'&gt;&lt;&gt;f'cl

~,l lf) l t
rt~

oy

jQl'J

I 'i It p

Card of Thanks
S JN CE ~ E

R o.l d

L •n r

l hilnlo..

TO

tr end s
n crg tl !)o rs
il rHI
r e l&lt;'l! I VC S lor t h f' rr n1a ny
ca rd s VrSt!S
and ac t s of
krndn ess durrng my co n
t tn ernc nt
at
t he H oll er
Mt:d t cilt Center
1
d ee ptv
appre c tate th e 1110ugh t ful ness
and the en cou ra ge me n t
D e lm.:H
A
Ca nadil)l
Pomeroy
1 5 tt c
THAN KS
to
muc t1
old
f r tends
ilnd
neighbors
for
r e m embert nq
IIH '
bt rlhdil y ot my Mo th er Mr s
Jo hn K ( Beul ah I Smti h w r!tt
many qree l tngs I a ppr er1 a1 e
rl mo r e ttoan worM ca n say
E nmil Je.ln Oabo
1 5 It c

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

1

T(' :o: ,l '&gt; 7)00 6

1

n

1f c

AUC T IO N
Ttwr sd ly
&lt;lnd
Scllur d ay n rqnr l p m at
M&lt;a .. on Au c t 10n H o rt on St 1~1
Mrl son W Vel Co n s,q nr n tn l !&gt;
W t ICOll('
Phone llO J J !7]

I.: L (,

p up
'101.1

Mf\T C H

H o tow Gun Cl u b T urn ltr ::. t
r rtll l ilt! N Mil es Cem c t o..r y
~ ult;~ nd
rac r o ry c t1ok c ri
q t n . only Sun c/iJO' Jc'l n ~ I p

"

OIL O f
M1nk Cosme ti CS
So und d 11f er f'nt ') W e h ave a
c omplete 1 nc th.lt w 1 sat1 st y
(' Vf ll YOU
( &lt;ll l U S W t hdV C
sp cc1 al 5 ,111 lt\f' t rme You 11 b e
''&gt;lrrpr•s('cl ORO WN :-, ? 9 ..,
~ I 11

p

WC' II

Il l

5 li e

tor rC'nt or c;al e 3
1l rclro o l1 !&lt;;
u n t u r n 1S h ec1
u t If I cr, P&lt;l d locat u l at new
Mobil '"
Hon e
Par k
rn
Hur nq t1111 Pll onr 99 7 7 / '&gt; 1
11 3 1 rt c-

h/ !=D IRJ SH 5( t t£&gt;rwrthw h l eon
ches t 111 1 ang s 111ile ar e a
R eward Call ! r ? 'i?09
I 5 6t p

pump

1\ NNU A I
D eer Feed il l t11 '"
Ril cr n c Gun Clu b Sat, Jcln t
6 p m Op en to tttc publ c
17 31 li e

19!3 DOD G E P U
Spo rt Ad
ve ntur e red a nd wh t e 3 1R
c rd
a r ps r.Ht o Kelly
too l bo)l:; 0 rom e w es t c oast
rn rrror s re ar s t ep bum p er
n 000 m tes P hone 99? &lt;; 10 5

I N COME T clX Pr epar ed bolh
rt'dNill nnd Stilt £ Taxc-s wd
b e done by app o 111tmen t s
o nly Plea se phone 992 27 72 or
sec Mrs Wondcl Ebltn L;~urc
Clif t Rd Pom eroy Ohr o
1 J JO t c

COM P LETE
7 16
or
76 1
C tw ll' r o let cn~;~t ne
F rank
l"\Ddd e r N
c o
Box
162
Coolvi l le OllrO
1 '} ] tp

FURNI SHED apt Adults only
M 1dd leport
Phone 992 38 7 ~
11 1&lt;1 II c

196H CHEVELLE 3 77 1 sp ee d
good bo dy ~1n d •tll cr ,or Phon e
99 2 / 489
l 1 3 I lip

U N F UR N I SHED
hous e
4
room s and bath 1650 Lmcoln
H etg hts Phon e 992 387&lt;1
11 I J tf c

196 1 O LD SMO B I LE Lu&gt;&lt;u ry
Model 111 o oo d conddtO\.{ s~ t
a t rcldr a l !ires S1le I R ii:o-' 5 111
qood Shi"p(' 21 n ct1 bl ac and
lhhtll' tet ev 1S. 01 ~mp lr
r lor
il
p a
sy stem
F or
rn
tcr mill1on c alt99 ? 150B or sec
at 131 Laurel St
Pom er oy
O h ro
12 29 6t c

TRA I LER spa ce 2m les fr om
Pomeroy Rl 1J3 Phone 992
'i85H
10 2l lf c

""

8 1 T BED tor " ton Ford truck
Phon e 99'1 5181
1 5 3tp

be r areas

For Sale

111 Court St , Pomeroy
Phon e 992 -2 156
-

MAN t o t ve m an d ass is t
h Sbil nd tn th e ca re of hts
&lt;1 1 1ng w rfe Room an d board
S d ar y
t 1m e off Telcphon£&gt;
99 l ~ f. b ctpr r noo n or aft er 8
m

CLOSE OUT on n ew Z1g Zag
sew ng rnach nes For sew1n g
stretch fabr cs buttonhol es
fan cy de s1gns e t c
Patnt
slightly b le mrShed Cho1ce
c arry ng case or sewtng
stand U9 80 cash or te rms
a\larlab l e Pnone 992 1155
12 IS tf c

H O P w a nlf'd
apply 111
s on dt Cro w 6 St e a k
H use
11 29 10tc

Pt

TAKE orders for Otl o f Mrnk
Cosmet cs
La d1es
safes
mee r mgs
g rfl s 1n t erestmg
l r arnrng e~ wa r ds recoQn rtron
Pa rt fu ll ltme Sa uvilg e s
Box J Sy ra cu '&gt;e Oh 10 .J5 779
I 5 1t p

EXPE RIEN CED fu el o tl- dr ver
...,1 e-e d ed Sen d repl tes to Box
71 qc co The Dally S~ nttn ~l
Pomeroy Oh10 45769
11 30 61 &lt;;

AN D SUE

+++

Dear Rap
Woul d) ou please repnnt ' What 1s a Father • 11Inch lou ran
m your colunm about three \'ears ago? It started 11 tlh 111o ktds
m college," and that's 11hat 111) Dad has - no\\ - GRATEFUL

For Rent
'J B EDROOM tr ailer
J975 o r 99'2 157 1

•

Is thlS the one 'ou mean .,

. ++++

Phon e 9~2

~~'!

3HS

7JHI

608 E

38 91

6 5 tfc

-----

W A L L pilpPr hanqmg and a lt
rntert or f1n shmg P hone 7J2
5081
12 '19 12tp
I m provem en t
a nd
Rf'parr Serv •ce
A n ythtng
frx ed around th f' home from
r oM to basement You w111
l 1kc our wo rk and ra te s
P hone 7 1/ 5081
12 29 tf c

C~R PET

y ard

n staii :H ron S l 25 pe r
Phone R tc ha rd West

8 I] 266 }

12 'l J 26 tp

peted storage bldg J UST
$26,000
OLD RT 33 - Close tn 12x65
Mob1le Home w1t h expando

bath, ca r

peted a rr cond 1 n1ce acre,
al l electnc about 4 years

old
NEAR LANGSVI LL E -

3 R OOM and b;1 ~f-;;r~ ~h:dapt
U I1 IJ I es pa 1d
356 North
F ourth St M rdd leport
17 31 tfc

tank

close to mtne areas

ss soo

I TUPPER S

PLA I NS

-

ALL CASH FOR YOUR
HOME LET US SELL IT
992 2259 or 9'12 256S

.We talk to you

. Pr i c;eel For ~o~~~ack

H O US E 4 roo ms and bath , 01 ce
yarQ anef drrveway
ALso
furn tshed apt Ca ll 99] 1780 0 ;

5a le

IN

FAM I L Y MUST SE L L $1 600
OR BES T O FF ER PH :145
566 3

Air conditioned, extra sha rp
m1leage

••

1971 Volkswagen 4 dr. Sedan

On a II Cas h Sal es of
Used Ap pli a nces &amp;
Used F urni t ure t hru
Dece m ber 29.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAt

.

."At Caut1on Light, Rt

ff•

Tuppers Pla1ns. Oh 1o

Phone 667 3S5a
OPEN WED THRU
SUNDAY9A M 7 p M

'895

•

Ch01ce of three ex ceptional cars

•••

For Rent

As l ow As

Mal ibu HT Cpe

StiE

•

6.:16 0008

301 It

FR ED BLAE T TNER,
DARRELL DOD RE I.l.,r DAN THOMPSON

•

c

Spec ial

Pomeroy,

b r ak es

o.

for Rent

:.:

71 Evil
72 Mast

Pertainrng to

•

the mind
7 Father ol Leah
12 Strikes

~

.. 17 Young bears

:. 21 Stimulate
• 22 Subject ot
--~

d1scourse

• 23 Clerical collar
; 24 Mounta1ns of
.,
Europe

r" 25 Note ol scale
~ 26 Suppltcates
~ 28

Wldeawake

92
94

~

Stalk
Devoured
Bone
Thin slrtp of
wood

45 ~asso
• 47 TeutoniC deity
48 Capital ol the
Ukraine
: 49 Fruit
• 52 Heckle

:-54 Mampul
ated
phone
numbers

Skeleton

""

mtlttary umt

116 Conta tners

.,

remember

• 59 Flock

~61 Measure
durat1on of

"62 Speechless
~63 Arab1an

seaport
64 For example

v, SIZE BASSETT·_

2

9995
75 00
139.95
179 95

_ _ _ _ _....!/'1.95

.

jJ

117 Cooling
device
118 We1ghl ol
lndta
120 ProliX down
121 Lake In Italy
122 Hug• 1" 0.
123 Evaluate
124 Abound
126 Continued
story

128 Consec rat e

respect

67 Number
;ea Pa 1nful
~69 A state (abbr)

119 95
149.95
99 95
99 95
69 95
88 00

111 Urged on

"

:Ji7 Cause to

- 2 White Fur Swavel Chairs Regular 188.00
- Black Fur Small Sofa
-2 Glass Top Tables,
Sale
All Wath Chrome Legs

95
96
97
99
100
101
102
103
105
107
109
110

lor
Spoken
Heavenly
body
Frees from dirt
Confe• upon
A state
Scottish own
Damage
ObtainS
Chapeaus
Rodent
V1tlate
Sun god
Belore
Planet

113 Hurry
t 14. Scott•sh cap
t 15 SteamshiP
labbr)

;'56

SPECIAL OF SPECIALS

(pt I
Ptumtlkelrutt
Greek letter
Symbollor lin
Laid away
Pronoun
Mix
Woolly plant
Scorch
EQUality
Expelled
Piece ol bed
ltnen

•

&lt;39
• 40
, 41
t 43

3- REFRIGERATORS, IEACH)
4995 1000
22 CU FT SIDE BY-SIDE, (WHITE)
95 00 319.95
18 CU FT REFRIGERATOR. GR., LIKE
NEW
269 95 229.95
2- COPPERTONE REFRIGERATORS, LIKE NEW,
EA
2SB 00 200.00
WHITE REFRIGERATOR
BS 00 139.95
WHITE REFRIGERATOR
159 95 SS 00

76
77
78
79
B1
82
B3
84
B5
87
89

90 Feel contr1tton

lellunum
.... 33 Pronoun
... 35 Masculine
~ 37 Condescending
...
looks

3 PC BEDROOM SUITE,_ _ _ _ _ _ 19'195 139.95
J PC BEDROOM SUITE
179 95 149.95

74 Young salmon

:,30 Calling

- 32 Symbol for

59.95
35 00
39.95
10.00
19.95

GE WASHER DRYER, COPPER, LIKE NEW--.299 95
MAYTAG DRYER
69.95
MAYTAGORYER
79h
MAYTAG DRYER
125 00
HAMILTON DRYER, LIKE NEW
1BB 00 139 95
MAYTAGAUTO WASHER
500
2 NEW RANGE HEADS
36" WHITE&amp; COPPER, EACH _.....,.._ _ _ 25 00

446 0168

Ca ll

t

JOA

tf

~0

IJ. ii'IOS

SLEEPING
ra t es

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
ACROSS

2 NE N
0 TABLE S--n~[;;;;;:;;;:;:;:;==:=J~ea
ch 3995
5.00
3
EWTABLES~IALLI
995
3 BIG TABLES, MEDITERRANEAN
\99 95 119 85

388 00

Ful l power ,
mileage

Cab &amp; Chass is, 102" cab to axle, 3Sll V a eng111e 15,000 tb 2
speed r ear ax le good 825x20 ! Ires, good solid truck

ROOM S

Quail Creek
Mobile Community
&amp; Sales

•

130 Wnle
132 Harvest
134 Th!n trne net

135
136
137
139
141

Dines
Conluncl\on
Go In
Toad
Symbol for
xenon
142 Away
143 ~reposll\on
145 Hebrew
weight
147 Stnng
149 Plunge
152 Hypotheti cal
forc e

153 Unlocked
155 PhoeniCian
city
157 Noose
159 Preposition
100 Check
162 Part olstep
164 Downy duck

166
168
t69
170
171

1

2
3
4
5

Armed bands
Gaelic
Perloan@fl
Ftoifers -

17
18
19
20
27
29
31

Mongrel
Chatdean c1ty
Cake mix
Pa~ ol jacket
Thick slice •
Partldlous
Printers
measure

34 Wllnderad
36 Graontand
settlement
38 Blemishes
40 Assistant
42 Twirl
44 Hastens
46 Orlantat
dan&lt;:111g girt
48 Girls
mckname

49 Snatches
50 Part ol
lortlllcat1on
51 Prlnler s
measure

53 Journey
55 Collega
degree (abbr I
Fug1t1vefrom
Soviet Russta 56 Heal
58 EXPellrom
country
DOWN
60 Sketch
Artthmet1c
62 Moroccan
(colloq I
65 Long slender
hsh
G•eat Lake
68 Skidded
Negat1ve
Vat
69 Gloss
Alloy ol gold 70 Food
and Sliver

6 Lawful

e.. 7 Army off 1cer

tabbr I
8 E )(c lamahon

programs
Rema1n erec I

72
73 Rumors
75 Greek tetter

78
77
79
dev tc o
10 Mohammedan 80
82
nobel
83
11 Seanymph
12 Sen1or (abbr I 84
13 100 ()()()
86
rupees
~ 88

Prophets
Challenges
Sedate
AI that place
Freshet
Tattered cloth
Mustc as

14 Arab ian

wntten

9 Warntng

garments
t 5 Separated
16 Beef an1mal

10

II

91 Pitchers
93 Long-handled
eyeglasses
95 Puraues
97 Peddles
98 Scold
102 Ugly otd
women
104 Trial
106 Emb•yo flowet"
107 Having
branches
108 Soap plant
110 Small 1ugs
111 01n1ng
112 Antterad

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

antmal

114
116
117
119
121
122
123

89 Long deep
cut ..

90 Rants

J it• [.f 16

Cructal potnt

Retect
Registered
nurse (abbr)
125 Refuse from
grapes

127 Lahn
conjunct ion

128
129
130
131
133
136
138
140

Ear11er than
Pantry
Sarcastic

Weirder
Body of water
MUSICal drama
W1re1ess
Feel ones

way
143 Above
--r44 Bird s home
146 Brlck ·carry1ng
devtces

Ltrrct er
C hoir.~:~ ~:~art

Labored
Food ftsh
Diminish
Sand bar

148
1~
151
153
154
156
158
161
163
165
167
117

Fate
Homan road

Attitude
Number
Rtver tn

Scotland
Born
Gree!&lt; teller
EKt sts
Road (abbr \
Rupees labbr I
S emor grade

(abbr )
IS

19 ;20

home We have more to offer
than any mobile commun1ty
111

Southeastern Ohio

·-----------------------1
For Rent
Cr eek

Onen Eves. ltl6 -

tires,

low

H

a t Quat!

245 502 1
285 If

BRADBURY efft Ctency apt
sec ond fl oor a dults on ly no
pets Ph on e 4.:16 0957
269 If
~- ---~----

SLEEP I NG ro oms
ra t e Gall• a H o l e!

weekly

F U RN
apar t me nt
n ea r
do wn town Ga llrpo i 1S Call 446
0139

286 tl
MOB I LE HO M ES for r en t
446 07 56
~ -~ - -----------

15 N E W R egen cy Inc Ap r 2
bed ro o m s c arp eted tot a l
e lec tr tc loca t ed on San d H il l
Roa d PI P lea san t P h 675
5 104 or 675 5386
269 If

Television Log
6 IJO-ThiS IS the L1fe 10

6 lO- Inlernatlonal Zone 4 Unfinished Business 10
Newsmaker '74 13
7 IJO-This Week 4, Commun ique 6, Talk ing Hands S, Old T1me
Gospel Hour 11
7 15-Tele Bible Time 4
7 lo-This Is the Life 3, Church by Side of the Road 4, Revival
Fires 6 , Old FashfOtled Gospel HourS; Camera Three 10
S IJO-Mormon Choir l , Day of Discovery 4, Gospel Caravan 6 ,
Mr Gospel Gu1lar 10, Mamre Church 13
a 3D-Oral Roberts l , Your Health 4, Kathryn Kuhlman 6, Day
of Discovery S, James Robison Presents 10 , Rex Hum bard
13, To Be Announced 15
a 55-Black Cameo 4
9 00-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3. Cadle Chapel 4, Oral Roberts
to, Re• Humbard 6, Rev Leonard Repass s, Across the
Fence 15
9 ]()-Yours lor the Asking 4, What Does the Bible Say 8,
Chu~ch Service 10, Christ IS the Answer 11, Insight 15.
10 IJO-Big Blue Marble 3, Church 1,S.rvlce 4, Leroy Jenkins 6 ,
Kathryn Kuhlman S, Movie "T~e Dangerous Days of Kiowa
Jolles" 10, Jtmmy Swoggart ll , Faith for Today 15
10 30--Go 3, Lassie's Rescue Ra "~ers 6 ; Insight 4, Public Affa~rs 8. What does the B1ble Plainly ~o( 13; This Is the Life
1S
11 IJO-TV Chapell, Focus on Columbus 4; Point of View 6, Re•
Humbard 8, to, Rev Henry Mahan 11
11 3()-ThiS Is the Answer l 1 Make a Wish 6, 13, Two Way Street
4

12 IJO-AI Issue 3,
11 IJO-TV Chapell, Focus on Columbus 4. Point of View 6, Re•
Humbard 8, Rev Henry Mahan 13
11 3()-ThiS IS the Answer l , Make a Wish 6, 13 , Two Way Street
4

12 IJO-AI Issue l , Pro Skiing's Rl ckesl Race The Lange Cup 4,
Bowlmg 6, To Be Announced 8, Columbus Town Meeting 10,
Rev Calvin Evans tl ; Sacred Heart 15
12 ts-&lt;lpen Bible 15
12 3()-Meel the Press 3,4, 1S, Face the Nation 8, Day of
Miracles 13
1 IJO-Year End l, American Bowl 4, CBS Sports Spectacu lar
S, 10; Lower Lighthouse ll
.1 JG-Issues &amp; Answers 6, t 13
:l IJO-Superstars 6.13
2 ]()-Remember w1lh Us l , To Be Announced 15
3.00-Golden Sprlng15, ltTake!ia Thtef 3, NBA BasketballS, 10
3 ]()-American Sportsman 6,13
4 IJO-NHL Hockey 1,4, 15, Antiques 33
• JG-Wide World of Sport s 6. 11, Erica 13
4 45-Maklng Things Work
5 IJO-Unto the Hills ll
5 3G- To Be Announeed 8, Face the Nation 10, Walsh's Animal s
ll
'
6 IJO-NFL Championship Games 6, 60-Minutes S,10, World of
Surv ival 11, VIlla Alegre 33.
6· 30-NBC News 3,4, 15, Nallooal Geographic 6, Untamed World
13 ; Zoom 33
7 IJO-Last of the Wild 3., 4, Animal World 8, In the Know 10,
Wild Kingdom 13. 15. Walsh's Animals 20, Lilias Yoga &amp; You

•

7 30---World of Disney 3,4 , Movie "How the West Was Won"
6, 13. Apple's Way 8.10, Nova 20. Feeling Good 33
S JG-McCioud 1,4, 15, Kolak 8, 10, Masterpiece Theatre 20,33
9· JG-Manm• 8, tO; Firing Line 20,33
10 Jlf-We Th ink You Should Know l, News 4.6,8, Mountain
Scene 33, H1gh Road to Adventure 10, To Be Announced 13,
Pollee Surgeon 15; Soundsla~e 20
11 IJO-News 3, 10, 13, 15. Bonanza 4, My Partner the Ghost 6 ,
CBS News 8, Janakl 33
11 15-Movle "Lydia Bailey" 8, CBS News 10
11 JO-Mov1e " Six Lesssons from Madame La Zonga" 3,
Weekend 15, Urban League 10; Don Kirshner's Rock Cort
~·rt 13
•
'
12 IJO-Weekend 4, Good News 6 . Movie "The W1ld Bunch" 10
12 JG-ABC News 6 •
1 OO,....News 13
1 30-News 4

Spring Valley
Green Apartmenjs

13
'1 BR

unfurn ished apa rtm ent
ex tr a nt ce bu i lt In k it chen.
a ir c:o nd cen tral hea t Qlaat ed
n ear sch ools, A d u lts onl y
Re feren ces r eq u (r ed No p ets
See a1 54 1 F our th Ave

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

LARGE tra l er space on Rt 35
on e m tl e f r o m hos p1 t al 446
380 5
27 4 If

For Rent

3 RM furn ished &amp;partm en t, 1h
ba t h. sh ow er sec ond floo r
U til i ti es paid at Ri o G r and e
Call '1.:15 55 10

297 II

3 R M and ba t h f urn
a pt
p r 1vate en t ra n ce
M o bile
ho m e c lose to GS J M ob il e
Hom e close to Crown City
Ca ll 446 0 168 Ca ll tn f or en o on
295 If

SUNDAY. JANUARY 5, 1975

For Rent

Ph

l :Zx 60 M O BI LE Ho m e On e
m tl e tram hos p ital Ad ult s
Ph .:1.:16 3805

Tal5 P.M. Sat.

See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burns
Lloyd Mclauahllo
Marvtn Keebaugh

MO BI LE h om e, tot al elec tr ic , 2
bedroom $100 , 3 b edroom
$125 Phone 446 0175 or 446
1934
286 If
U N FURN I SHED
e ffi c i e n cy
ap t , $1:15 per mo Ph -446
3643
163 If

Pomeroy

' You It Like Our Qua iiJy Way of Doing Busl"ess"

For Rent

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

33

new

Cadillac • Old smobile
GMAC Fmanclng Avaolable

992 5142

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992-212t Open Eves. Till 8 Pomeroy

Conlacl Newt Jones
~odney Cora Rd
Rodney, Ohio
Ph 1•5 nn-245-5071
We rent mobile homo lots,
not tus1 a place 1o ~rk your

atr ,

KARR &amp;VAN ZANDT

week l y :Z B R t o tal elec M

P ar k Central H ot el
306 tf

factory

•2195

'3495

257 If

25 00
10 00
6$ 00
25.00
35 00
50.00

2- BREAKFAST SET, 2 CHAIRS
WITH DROP LEAF TABLE _ __ _ _ _J!9.95
BREAKFAST SET
10 00

G SI
Call
for enoon

SUNDAY, JANUARY 5, 1975

WAS
SALE
__.29 95 10.00
9 95
19 95
6f 95 39 95
19 95
10 00
29 95
5 00
19 95
5 00

40" ELEC RANGE. WHITE
19 9S
2-40" ELEC RANGES, WHITE
129 95
30" ELEC RANGE, WHITE
179 95
36" ELECTRIC, GREEN, LIKE NEW - 2 19 95

BR h ou se
fu l l base m ent
Cl1pper M 1lls C tt y w ater $6 5
per mo Ph 446 01 75

re q ut
red Phhom446
'1 BR
mobile
e 1900
R ef eren ces
35

MOBIL E HOM E CL OSE T

308 6

'"

Sale Prices On The Best Used
Furniture Buys!!

2-JO" GAS RANGES, G0Lu...._ ,....._ _..J S9 9S
30' GAS RANGE, GREEN
ISS 00
30' GA S RANGE, WHITE
149 9S
36" GAS RANGE, WHIT
149 95
36" GAS RANGE, WHITE
119 95
30" GAS RANGE, BLUE
119 95

69 Cadillac Sedan DeVi

1971 CHEVROLET 2 TON

36

"••

8S 00
49 95
59 95
9 95
29 95

r ed ftnl sh . aood tires

3 ft

Mobtle Hom e 2 B R
K &amp;K Mob tle Homes P ark
GalltpOI IS 67 5 3000

3 OLIO OAK DRESSERS, (EACH)
WHITE BABY CHEST
MAPLE CHEST
DRESSER
SMALL CHEST

vinyl roof

SL EE PIN G roo m s w eek l y rat e
:.J- ibb y H o t e l

••
....
"''
:' 12x6.5 GA S

59 95
9 95
79 95
39 95
69 95
10000

Choice $7 500

'1595

SMA LL offt ce ( 145 sq ft ) to
do wntown b u rldtng Also 1.000
sq f1 tn r ear of b u1ldmg Ph
446 1694
3 tf

3

BEIGESOFA
BROWN SOFA
GOLD SOFA
GOLD SOFA BED
2 pc LIVING ROOM SUITE
3-1 PC LIVING ROOM SUITES,ea

'3295
1971 MATADOR

3l

BL UE ROCKE R_--::--::-::=c=:-:-::-::--BROWN ROCKER, GOOD SHAPE
PATCHWORK ROCKER
GREEN VINYL ROCKER
BROWN CHAIR, WITH FOOT STOOL
2- GREEN CHAIRS.ea

Apollo y e llow, brown vinyl top, Climate
Control a 1r c ond1tlonang , T&amp; T wheel , AM- FM
st e reo 8. tape, new w s w tares

V 8 J door, tac1ory a ir, a utomat1 c, powe r steenng &amp;

446 0822

CHAIRS

'

350 V a engine power steeri ng

fa cto ry a ir, tinted gla ss, radio, wheel covers g ood
1tres bl k mterlor st lver grey fini sh New Yea r s

For Rent

'1 BR mob rl e hom e Upp er Rt 7

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

1974 CHEVELLE

2 BR T ratl er 10x50 edge of
t own on 588 Sl ! O per mo Cal l

WHITE BED,
Does not apply to layaways
or pre\ltous advertised
spectals

fl n ts h

11 , 1975 at 5: 00

Ph . 992-2174

500 E. Main St.

Charcoa l grey wath leathe r anterior, f ull power
equapment , AM- FM st e r e o, new steel radial
t1re s. c limate contr ol air c ondltaonlng .

JJO V 8, 4 speed tr a ns , good tires cl ean In terior , ye llow

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.

CALL 992-3877.

DUNCAN PHYFE TABLE WITH4 CHAIRS 319 95 199.95
ZENI TH ~TEREO
139 9S 100 00
PH I LCD STEREO, LIKE NEW
WITij AM FM RECORD PLAYER~BS 00 188.00

Discount

Low

••
No one ev er sat on seats clean as
•• new
One local owner low m1leaga
•
~ • 1970 Maverick 6 cyl 2 dr Sedans

Bath and 112, excellent
neighborhood, wall-towall carpeting, storm
windows. large lot, 3
car garage, reasonable
ut11ities.

2-STOKER MATIC.COAL HEATERS, EA. 48S 00

20%

1970 DODGE DART SWINGER

But what else would you expect from

- 1971 Olds Cutlass SV8 2 dr. Hardtop

•4795
74 Cadillac Coupe· DeVille

'1695

and full equ ipment

HOUSE

Tuppers Plains, Q,

Kuhl's Bargain Center

Jack W C•rs.y , M g r
Phone 992 2111

L..

BARGAIN
_ C~NTER

like a person.

P OM EROY LANDMAR K

9913'31

-

KUHLIS

10

Beauttful bu1 ldmg s1te 11,
acres, wooded TP water 1n
a new area SJ 500

I

-

JUST

HEATERS

ROOM f urn 1shed apt Ca ll 99'2
5908 be,ore I p m
12 Jl 6tc

13

--

good blacktop road

------

FUEL OIL

19 73 B U ICK
fu ly equrp ped
Exc e liC'nl cond ton
low
rn leaq e 116 J09-I

acres, tdeal for home or
tratler a"ppro\led for sept tc

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

r

Auto Sales

0

about 1 acre 4 BR 2 baths
(ovely k1tchen &amp; dtn tng,
utt11ty R
rec space car

5 p m

PIG S
Sl5 each
Ho lst e rn
Heret ord he r fer S125 One fo n
1°65 Foro t ru ck 6 cyl tnder
S550 C W Rt ce Phon e 9.:19
1115

REALTY

3 BR

Shows tend er care A1r condttloned

7 ROOM

71 FO R D L TF
AC
PS
PB
RADI O
and 8 TR ACK
ST EREO
V INYL TOP I N GOOD CO NO

Offer good through Sat . , Jan
p . m.

1972 Ford LTD 4 dr. Hardtop

-

POMEROY- About 2 yr
old - BRICK0:' FRAME

lt yt ng R

•

Vanyl roof , factory aa r , s t ee l rad1al tires , SS
whe el s, bucket seats, c onsole, 6 wa y power
sea t . low mil ea ge SHARP• \

V 8 engme, a uto m a t ic tra ns power steer ing, radio sport
cust om cab good ftres gree n &amp; wh ite f tn tsh

•

,/

74 Olds ·cutlass Sup. Cpe.

1970 FORD 8' WIDE BODY

Simply test drive any new or used car
on our lot and you'll receive FREE, a 2
lb. box of Sugar:

Only 7,415 easy mil es Like new
Door ln back like statton wagon

'

Want To Save
Some Dollars?

Sweeten up your 1975
with a new Buick or Pontiac
or with a great used car.

1974 Ford Pinto 3 door Runabout

..•

• (abbr I
' 66 Tttle ol

MAIN
POM E ROY

BED fr ame Sl O w hJte head
bo ar d S20 ref SJO chest of
dr"w ers '515
Call 991 1889

1957 C H E VY parts
NEW
Lakewood tract ton bars ht
1a c ker it tr shocks
hooker
headers w rth 3 collectors for
small bl ock
Cal l 992 3.&amp;96
aflf'r 6 P m BE ST O FF ER
10 17 tf c

12 12 t fc

EXC E LSIOR Salt Works East
M&lt;l rn St Pom e r oy A 1 kmd s
o f salt water pellets water
1uggets b lock sa lt an d own
Ohro R \l er Sal t PhOne 992

D.ELAND

F CARPETS too k dull ,lnd
rlr!:'ar re m ove spots as th ey
appe ar wrt h B lue Lustre
Ren t e lectr c s.hamp oo er S1
Baker Fu rn tturE' Comp an y
1 3 Jt c

FU RNISHED
apartmf!'nl
uf llr l tes f urnrshed
SU ttab lc
• for rwo w ork ng men or
re t red cou pl e L 1\1.111g room
l..rtchen shower il nd bath On
'('fla tn htghw&lt;:'ly Mason W Va
Phone 773 51J 7
10 27 ttc

------

2 1 1 tiC

1\0:.SOCIATES

POTATOES
Co bbler
and
Kennebec Tho m as Sa y r e
Phon e BJ3 2-191
1 3 Jtp

1 3 'l tc

---.-

~?]']

12 31 26 tp

CO U NTRY Mobile Ho me PM!..
------12 :19 6tp
Rt 33 tf'n miles north of Pomeroy
Large to ts wtlh
- - - - - - - : . . . . . ._ _ _.., ;---------~~~
COncrete patroS
Sl d E' Wd l kS
runners
and
oft
street
SIEGLER and
par l.. 1ng cho ne 992 1&lt;1 79
MONOGRAM
12 31 He

-1

E XCAVATI N G doz er
load er
ilnd ba c kh oe v.ork
septt c
tanks rns tall ed dump tru c k s
an d to boys f or h rre wll hau l
frll d r t t op so I I m c st on e 8.
qravel
Ca ll Bob or Roger
Je tt er s day phone 992 708 9
n 1gh t phone 991 3525 or 99'1

' 5J

Yn J6 t'i

1 5 lt c

MIN

.t RM furn tShed apt close to
Powells Super Valu phone
991 365 8
II '10 rfc

qQ]

GORDON B TEAFORD

7 161

TRA IL ER 64 1 Thir d A1.1e,
adult s on ly P h .:146 3870

1 11
TR A IL E R sp a c es
p r11.1 llt e 367 7438

l arg e lo ts

13
2

•

Now ready
for occupancy.

1

Model Open Dally
10-12 noon &amp; 4-6 p.m.
Sal &amp; Sun 1·4 p.m.
I &amp; 2 bedroom gordon
a~rtmenfs, renl storts from
$135 Dtr mont~

Phone 446-1599

BR
tratt er
a d ul ts onl y
F urnt shed 2 B R ho use In
Chesh 1re, al l ut l tltles p a id on
bo t h Call 367 742 0
13

AstroGrapM

MONDAY. JANUARY 6, 1975
6 oo-Sunr lse Sem inar 4 , Sunrise Sem ester 10
6 25-Farm Report 13
6 30-Five Minutes to L1ve By 4, News 6, Bible An swers 8.

Concerns &amp; Comments 10, Good News tl
6 35- Columbus Today 4
6 45- Mornlng Report 3, Farmtlme 10
7 IJO-Today 3,4, 1S , A M America 13,6 , CBS News s, 10
8 IJO-Lassle 6, Capt Kangaroo 8, Popeye10, Sesame St 13
8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10
s 30-Big Val ley 6
9 DO-AM l , Pau Dl•on 4 ; Phil Donahue IS, Bullwlnkle S,
Morning with D J 13
9 2 ~Chulck White Reports 10
9 lQ-Not For Wom en Only 3, Dinah 6 Hazel 8, Tattletales 10,
Ar thur Sm1th 12 , New Zoo Revue 11
10 DO-Celebrity Sweepstakes l,1 S, Joker's Wild B.10 Movie " A
Breath of Scandal" 1l
10 lQ-Wheet of Fortune l, 15 , Phil Donahue 4, Gambit 8, 10
II IJO-High Rollers l, 15 , One Life to L1ve 6 Now You See II
S, tO
II l o-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15 , Brady Bun ch 6, Love of Li fe
8, 10 , Sesame 51 31
11 55- CBS News s, Dan lmel'
s World 10, News 13
12 DO-Jackpot 3, 1S , Password All St o~s 6,11 , Bob Broun's SlJ 50
Club 4, News S, 10
12 l o-Btank Check 3, Split Second 6,13 Search for Tomorrow
s, 10 To Be Announced 33
12 45-NBC News l, 15
1 IJO-News 3, All My Children 6, 13 , What' s ,,,y Line 8 , Young
&amp; Restless 10, Nol For Women Only 15
\ 3Q-How to Survive a Marriage l,4, 15, Let' s Make a Deal 6 11,
As _the World Turns 8,10 _
2 t.ll--liu,OOO Pyramid 6,1 3, Gu ldlnQ Llgll! B,10
2 30-Doclors l,4, 15, Big Showdown 6, 11, Edgeol Night 8, 10.
l IJO-Another World 1,4,15 : General Hospital 6, 11, Price Is
Right 8, 10, Feeling Good 20, Personality &amp; Behavioral
Development
J · 3()--{)r:,e Life to Live 11, Lucy Show 6, Match GameS, 10
4 IJ0-1 Dream ol Jeannie 4, Somerset IS, Gilligan's Is 6 ,
Tottletales B Sesame St 20.11 . Mov ie' E,scapade In Japan "
10, Mike Douglas 13
4 30- Bewttched 3; Jackpot 4, MOO Sqijad 6, Lucy Show B,
Bonanzo 15
S IJO-FBI l . Merv Griffin 4, Andy Grlflllh B, Mister Rogers'
N ~ghborhood 20,33 , Raymond Burr 11
s »-News 6 , Beverly Hlttbl tlies , B Hodgepodge Lodge 20,
Tra1ls West 15, Elec Co :13 "
,
6 IJO-News 3,4,S, 10, 12, 1l, IS, AB C News 6 , Elec Co 20 ,
Adlerian Counseling 33
6· 30-NBC News 3,4, I S; ABC News 11, Bewitched 6, CBS News
s, Zoom 20.
7 IJO-Trulh or Cons l , Phil Donahue" s, Bowling for Dollars 6,
News 10, New Candid Camera 11, Wally's Worksl!op 1S;
Ohio This Week 20 . L1llas Yoga &amp; You 33
7 3()-That Good Ole Nashville Music l, Masquerade Party 4,
College Baskelball6; $25,000 Pyramid a; In the Know 10, To
Tettlhe Truth 13 , Untamed World 1S, Washington Straight
Tal k 20, Episode action 33
a IJO-Movle "The Spec ialists" 3,4, 1S, Jacques Covsteau 13,
Gunsmoke a, 10, Performance at Wolf Trap 33. Movie " The
Finest Hours" 20
,
9 IJO-ABC Theatre 11, Maude S,1 0, What Makes a Good Father
33
9 30-Movle " Target R1sk" 3.4, 15, ABC Theatre 6, Rhoda a, 10.
10 IJO-Med1cal Centers, 10, News 20; Washington Straight Talk
33
10 30-Beh~nd the Lines ll
11 IJO-News l,4,6,B,10.13,15 , ABC News :13.
11 30-Johnny Carson 1,4,15, Wide Worl!I-Mystery 11, FB I 6 ,
Movie ""Scream, Pr etty Peggy" 8. Movje " Calro" 10,
Janakl l l
12· 30-Wide World Myslery 6
1 oo-To m o r row 3, 4, News. 13

., BlrniCI Bide 0101
8undor - Jon. 5, 1175
~ RIU

(More~ 21 -Aprll 11)
Don t be too IBvlsh wtth com -

pli ments t o one who Isn't
d eser \llng of th em It will make
you r m at e unne c es s a ri ly

lealous
TAURUS (AP&lt;II 20- Mor 20)
Yo u II pay to o Utile attention to
tnstruct lons tha t are g l\len you
t oday Later when you follow

them. you II onl y do half a l ob
GEMINI (Moy 21 •Juno 20)
Lady Luck will not treat you
n tce l y II y o u g am ble on
somethtng sig ht unseen look
b efore you lea p

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Yo u II dl sapp otnt other s and
d(s r u p t th e tr pt a ns If you
change your m ind at the last
m nute to beg out of something
yo u prom1sed Ia d o

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You'll
com e up with some pretty nifty
when e xplaining to a
tn end why you dldn t get

e~c u ses

ar ound to a f avor she asked or

you
VIRGO (Au; 23·Stp1 22)

Yo~

stilt do n I have as ttghle grip oil
yo ur cr edit card as you &amp;hould
It s lik ely your extravagance

will gai n th e upper hand
LIBRA (Sept 23 · 001 23)
To (eranc e wilt be required o n
yo ur behalf at home today or
e lse you n m ake Issues out or
Sllu at1o n s th a t n or m a lly
wouldr. t faze you

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 221
Thts ts not one of your better
days fo r com 1ng up with brtght

Id eas Steep on your tMugh1s
O\lern 1g ht and see how you
vi ew them tom orrow

SAGITTARIUS (No• 23-Dec
21) You don t have sens1ble
sales r esis tance today Don t
scan the advertisements too
closely or you II make an unwtse purc hase

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jon 1;)
Even 1t you have' to squirm a bit

white domg II tell tlltke Il ls. A.
lttJie wh1te He wont get y ou off

the- hot seat
AQUARIUS (Jon 20- Fob 11)
T r y not to commit yourseH now
t o plans with ottlers too far In
ad vance Something (S coming
up and you II want to have an
o pen schedule

PISCES (Fob 20·Mtrch 20) Its
st1ll not wi se for you to tell a
frte nd o f yours ab o ut
so m et h1ng your l n stl nc~s warn
yo u t o keep secret

Your llrllociiJ - - . 1, 1171
You wilt undettaKe en eliCiting

n""' project this year The con'dlltons that bl'tng this about wilt
b e m o st unusual 81"1d will

happen very suddenly
\

-·I
:L:lc:&lt;'C£
• ==-",L

Of lr t t'

Offi....lal 's car Very low m tleage
Genuine lea th e r seat s and a 11
' good tes "

367-7250

Auto Sales

$SAVE$
$SAVE$
$SA~E$

1973 Ford Thunderbird 2 dr. Hardtop

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses •
1112 Baths
Pay Only One Utility
Addason, Ohio
For Information
Call Sharley Adkins

'

FURNI T UR E Uuno l s t er ng
Reasonabl e
rat e s
free
es t 1ma t e s
p r ckup
ar&gt;d
det rverv
prompt serv 1c e
Mo wr ey s Uphols t er y P ont
Pleasant N VJ P hone 675

HF Lf N l TEAfORD

&amp; N day o ld or slarted
L eghorn pu t le t s Both ttoor or
CC! Qe
gro w n
aYa rlab le
P ou try
housuog
a nd
a u to H &lt;rlion ModNn Poultr y
399 W Milt n Pomeroy 99 7

1 J r tc

Dear Grateful

Older 4 bedr oom

TARA

JANUARY
CLEARANCE

No purch~se is neces_sary. Only
licensed drivers are eligible, and there
is 'a limit of 1-2 lb . box perfamily.

t illed Full y equ tpped

DO ZER w o rk land cl eartng by
the Ct cr c hourly or con tra c t
F arr11 ponds
roads
et c
Large do2 er and ope r ator
wtlh over 20 y ears ex
pe r 1ence Pulltns Excavatmg
Pom ero y Ohro
Phone 992
2-l 78
12 19 tf c

WI L L lr rm or c ut trees or
Sh r ubl)ery
c l ean
o ut
basements .:l l rrcs etc 949
32'11 or 7 t2 &lt;14.&lt;11
12 15 26t c

Only dr iven by one of our off 1c1a ls
Ver y, very Jaw m ileage
Never

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

I
800-631 -1999
I1
Equa( (Jppor tun tty Em
I ployer I M F I

DE A TH

1974 Ford LTD Brougham 4 dr Sedan

3066

MR. PATRICK

TO /

Only driven by on e ol our off tc lals
Ver y low mt leage Never been titled
Fullv equ1pped

10x50
MOBILE
h ome
2
bedroom w1t h po r c h an d
awnrng on a l arge s1ze lot WJ fh
garden space 6 m 11es from
th e hosp ta l on old 160 tor S90 a
mon t h
Call 446 3589 a ft er
4 30

I CA LL I TOLL FREE

DUE

1974 Ford LTD Country Squire Station Wagon

3067

1

I

NEW TRUCKS, CARS AND OFFICIALS' CARS •

-- ----- ~ -- ---~ /&gt;

We'll Deal

Just for test driving an y
new or used car on our
lot, we will give you FREE
one 2-lh. box of sugar

DISCOU~T ON

,_'1,000

307 5

5 ROOM house an d on e l arge
Ira ler space, Kyger Cre ek
"SchOol Orstrrc t Ph 367 7350

I

G REAT DANE PUPS 8 weeks
old 550 Phone 99'1 5728 after 6
pm
12 '1 9 6t p
II

CA

NE G LER
BUIL D ING SUP
PI Y
I O f.!
RE M O DELI N G
6. N D I&lt; I T C HfN CABI NE T S
C A LL GU Y N E I G H L ER
RAC N E O HI O PH O NE 91 9
160 I
12 19 26t c

HO M E

$1 2,500 00 -

1 2 3t c

Dear FBC
Sorry m thts case, we both thank Father Kno\\s Best
True, your Dad can't cure a fever b) breakmg the thermometer - but he nught prevent pnewnorua ( vour ne11 mama '\
by protecung you from ovet exposure 1Jsten io htm - HELEN

WHAT IS A FATH ER ?
4 father as a man who has lwo k1ds m college and 111 0 k•ds at
home, and even•wtth the htgh cost of ltvmg, lets vou have a b1g
dog who takes up half the kitchen and eats lake a horse
He's your pet peeve and best fnend, both at the same time
He's someone who listens to what you sa~ and he 's alwal s
there wben you need him He knows the nght thmgs to sa) -but
at the wrong tunes.
He's a clown, a gentleman, a f tx-d man, a philosopher a
counsel or, an engmeer, a smger, a writer , a professaonal food
consumer , and can talk mtelligenUy on almost anything.
He hardly ever loses has temper, but when he does - wa.tch
out'
However, be never stays mad long and never holds a grudge
}.. father as the kind of guy you'd want to be strahded wtth m
the dentist's off ace
He complains about money, but shU g1veli 11 to you
He's the one who goes shoppmg wah us grrl.s, even though he
can't sf.and at. Sometimes he acts like a bear. but he would
sacrifice anythlilg1or tu¥amdy .
He understands you even when you can't , understaRd
yourself.
1
1
In other ~~:ords, be's the greatest' - M E C

water on ntce corner lot

hom e modern bath nat gas
ELECTROLUX Sw eeper del uxe fur nace, new block garag e
mode l
Complete wtth all barn and l.:'lrge lot
cte anmg iltta c hments a nd
uses paper bags Sitghtly used
BUILDIN G LOTS - Severa l
but c teM !. and looks like new
Wtll sell fo r $37 25 cash or l ocat1on s Sl500 00 up
t erms available Phone 99 2 LI ST IT WITH US FOR BEST
7755
RESU LTS
11 18 tt c

Thel&gt;aily Sentinel

p

$3 000 00 - Ol d one floo r 5 room
house with nat gas and ctty

-~~~-

Age 8 or Olde r

W

Vtrqrl B fp,lford . Sr.
BrokPr
110 Mf'C holrHC Strl'l'f
PornNoy. Oht o -IS76'll

S'lO 000 00 New 3 bedroom
home
11\ltng ro om 1Jx19
beau t ful ki t chen ceramtc ttle
bath
At tached gar ag e and
almost one acre

G RO C ERY b US1ness f or sale
Burldmg for sate or le a se
Phon e 773 56 18tro m 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for apporn trnent
3 10 tt c

NEW HAVEN
•
Dear Helen and Sue
Please tell my Dad )OU can't cure a fever by breaking the
thermometer
I've got a b1g crush on a guy " ho leads a rock group He tsn 't
rea l famous yet, bul he probably wtll be I never say more than
" Ht " to hun " hile 1'm dancmg to has musac. but Iftgure 1f I go to
enough of has dances, ma1 be some nuracle wall happen He s
around 19 I 'm 15
My Dad, who as norm a ll~ a greal person, sa)S l'm ·overdomg " the dances and he non t take me and my g1rl fn end to an1
more of them 11 here Ton1• pla) s See, I made the mlstakc of
telling hm1 1 re,11ly \\ani to meet Tony. and he Sil l S 1t s
dangerous. because mus1c1allS aren 't to be trusted
1 thrnk he's heard something bdd about Tom But 11 eouldn 1
be true Could you persuade lum to let me have d chance'' He
reads ) our coltmm - FlRST BlG CRUSH

TEAFORD

I

EPTI C
T ANK S
c l eaned
Mod er n San d at on 992 J9 5J or
997 /] 19
9 19 ti c

CREMEAN S CONCRETE d e
1vered Monday
th r ough
Saturday
and
cv cntn gs
Phone J 16 1142
6 13 lf c

S85 00 00 - Two bedroom frame
home Bath pa neling gas F A
furnace basement and c tfy
water

FURNI SH ED mo brle
for
r ent
Alb ert Htll
Racrne
Oht o Phon e 9J9 22 6 1
12 '19 6tc

In

How to Break a Fever

LOI S Pau ley
Branch M ana ocr

MODERN Walnut stereo
r ad o
B tra ck tap e com
btnal•on
am l m
r ad1o
Balance SI08 6J or t er ms Call
992 3965
12 31 tf c

Carrier Wanted

307 Sprang Ave nu e
Po m e roy
992 22 98
CONTACT

horn e

1 5 3t c

Help Wanted

110 BOO 00

J R M a pi turnr shed adults no
dr un k s Also 3 rm a p t Jo hn
Sllee t s
J mr les south of
Mrddl tO POrt on Rt 7
1229 61p

Accord1ng to NatiOn&lt;ll
Wald l 1fe F'ede• at ton esu
JUNK
a uto s
c omp lete ana
ma tes, demands 101 U S !01
d ell\lerect to our yard We pr c k
est products IS p11l JCC ted to
up auto bodtes and buy al t
WILL BABY SIT tn tnY home for
krnd s o f scrap rnetal s an d
double 111 30 yea • s t ho u ~h
workrng mother Phone 965
tron Rrder s Sat1.1ag e Sl Rt
product iO n w all not double lo•
11 02
1:14 Rt J Pom eroy Ohro
1'1 30 71(
50 years, T he Wor ld A lm,mac
Ca ll 99 2 5468
10 t7 tt c
notes W •ldl•fe off1c 1d ls P• o·
W I LL do b aby sitting 1n my
1ect that p•·oduc110n co uld be
home 5 dtWS per w ee k Infant
CAS H pard tor all nHtkes and
ancreased d1 amauca ll y by
to 2 years Ha s r (' f C'rences
mod e l s of mobr le homes
C&lt;l ll 99:1 7189
eff1c1en t management ol tun
Phon e area co de 614 413 9531
.f 13 lf c

BEDROOMS

Burt1ngham
some
ca r
pettng
furnttu~ nclud ed

of
B r oadway
and
Elm
Mrdd lep.o r t
No
pets o r
chrtd ren Call 99'1 :15 80 aft er 6
p &lt;n
1'1 5 tf c

REM O DELIN G
plumb tnq
tot•at rn q
Cl 1d all typ es o f
qercr a l
rE'pa r
V\o r k
CJuf\r&lt;'l nt eed
20 vcr~rs ex
pencnce Pho tH' 99 '1 ., 109
1 3 121C

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

2

'J BEDROOM trarler at corner

Employment Wanted

O L. D turnrl ure c e boxes bril SS
bC'dS or comp l et e ho use holds
W rr t e M D Miler Rt J
Pomero y Oh10 Call 992 7760
10 l 7 I

b e droom s full basem en t
ga ra ge 3 mt S of Shade
Term s available

Rd Ph 367 7181

1 Nah onal
corporataon
m a nutacturmg
j ltghtang products for
1
andu s tr aal and com 1 m er c aal accounts has
l op e nang s
fo .r
sa l es pers on s an local
areas . Must be non' p ress ure, honest and
sancere
tndavaduals
lookang for thetr LAST
JOB , mu st be quahfted
t o open n e w accounts
as well a s upgrade
es t a bla s h e d
users.
R epe at
bus anes s ,
se cure future. Ltberal
tr a anang
com pen salton , benefits .

Phone ( 304) 773 5503

"'

BEDROOM mobtl e home
util fl rF''&gt; turn rs hed c lo se n
Co t I 997 76J9 aft er 4 p m
1 5 61C

19 71 CO M E T
19 000 nl! ICS
&lt;'l \Jtomili •C tr ansm ss on 1 lo.e
new Cil ll any 1 me 667 3J I ]
1 5 l 'ltp

CA SH U$UFOR jU N K CAR S
Comp F-RYE S T RU CK Cl nd
AU T O
PART S
Ru t lilnd
PllOnl' 747 609~
' 2 ntp

I

Real Estate For Sale

PR I V A TE meetmg roo m for
any organ rzat ron ph one 992
] 97S
3 11 ti c

1 2 ) lp

Wanted To Buy

1

.1

Strout Realty

PLYMOU TH I u r y Ill
t p s ra clro Citll 99? 5105
I '1 31p

1'1,

Sat

8AM6PM

1 ke n ew tota l electrr c
trader Comple t ely f u r n iShed,
all uftl tt1es patd on Mtll Creek

LAST JOB!

Alummum stdtng
roofing
1 comp lete res1denf t a l con
j struc t1on Wrn ng pl u mbmg
elec
heaftng
ktfchen
cabtn et s etc
27 Yrs ex penence to cons t
t rade

AS MUCH AS
00

2 BR

I

JOHNSON'S

-,

Auto Sales
1966

Open Mon

- - -- - - -

BUILD I N G tot 80 It t ron t aq e
b y 165ft Tt e second lo t on le tt
on Rr11ervrew Or ve Ltn c oln
TRAil E R spoce 2 m1 es from
Hill Pomeroy Oh ro
It m
Harr rsonvr le Phon e 742 387 1
t ere s ted c all 991 J'l 30 aft e r s p
I 5 6tc
&lt;n
P A NO
1un nq .mc/ r epa r
10 1 ti c
I
ROOM turn Shtd apt
7
Cn ilr iCS COlt ~9 7 3' IB
b edroom s artutt s only Phon e
I 13 H l p
99 1 / 616
1 5 -Il L O L D H O U SE 111 C.yr iiCUSl' on I
C A RA D F ORD A uc ton ecr
nr cc to ts } 3 000 Wd
Tf'M
Com pl ro l e Ser v 1C' P
'l BEDROOM ,)If elt&gt;clr c ilpt
hou se dow n I Willl C"d P hon e
Pt101 !" 919 38? 1or949 3161
off Route ! net'lr Pom er oy
99 2 5B 98
R a e ne Ohro
Alldtl a bt e now ph one 99J /666
1} 7~ 7 tp
Cr tl t Bradtord
or 99"J 70 17
5 1 tf c
I 5 3t c
1 AEDR OOM house 3 mt l es out
SEPT C ta n k s
elC Cil vJ i rnq
orr
Sta rp
Rou t e
1 !)
O NE becllo om mobile 110me
dtJm p t n c k Phon e 742 3742
R r&gt; t c r en cec;
a nd
d l' po sr t
c tec trr c heat A c Sec at 308
1220261(
r c qutrccl N o pEl &lt;; Pt10nl 9 19
P aq 1.2 St Middl eport or r.:a t
J / 16
992 350 9
Jrc RE A DY MIX CO N CR E TE de
1 5 If c
" J
l rverc d r qhl to your p rot ec t
F a"&gt; t
and
ea sy
Free
I ROOM fur 1r shed apt
&lt;md
esttmat es P hone 992 32B J
batt1
utr l rtres pa rd
No
Goe gl e 1n R e ady Mtx Co
cl rld r ( n or p('IS Ph one 992
Mrddl eport Ohro
58 10 o r 81J Ea s t Matn
6 30 tfc
1
Pomeroy
I 5 61p
ll EW tN G MACH I N E Rep arr s
N E W - All elec carpeted 3
se r11 Ct' al l makes 99 2 2284
BR
a 1r
co nd tr o n 1ng
J and 4 RO OM f urn1shed and
Th e Fa br c Shop Pom eroy
117 500 00
unfurn iS h ed
Clparlmenls
A u th or ze d Srnge r S&lt;l tes. ilnd
Phone 992 5434
Se r v 1.. W e sharpen Sctssors
4 1 '1 ti c
J '19 tfc
4 AC RES
Rt
33
3

J..: t,I LE ~

1

'
7/9 tf c
'd EC it\ L \ UCTtO N C o 11 e1 l &lt;;
Of o l el
l1C r c hdnd r5C' s ro r r
rnci Ud1 n q m i'l n y 'lnt rqu('&lt;; lo bl
"0 1d b tq rnnrnq H I p rr '1 111
Jdn I Oil H or t on St
1 CI OS'&gt;
tr o ll1 ~~' 1"-0 11
\uc 1 on
rr1
Mrl&lt;;o n
W
V ,l
tl ow,l rct
Rf'1'&gt; 1ey l'o. uL IIOil f..'l r
I 7 21c
W ,..\ N TEO
deep
Pt1on c 98 5 JR 19

1

1

Smith Nelson Motors
wants to sweeten
your deal.

•

For Rent

REMODELING&amp; CON ST. :

On Sta t e Rt 124, t 1 mt fr·om
Route 7 by pass toward s
Ru tl and

Ph 992 5682 or 992-712 1
All M ec h anacal Work ,

- --

I

1 BEDROOM rr atl et rn Rulland
] fJEDR OO M house ~'100 d0w1
Ph one 7 11 1165
S ~ O m onth Phon e 992 3 9 7~ o r
1 5 3t c
9Q1(17 t

1Q71 MO D EL Mo ll lr h Q..mC
l h 60 1 b ~e droo m vnderp rnn C'd
w ndow &lt;1• r c ond 1 on rnQ
un lurnr Sh Prl
s Tlll I d o w n
Pclymt nt 11nd a:.su 11 e roan
f nan cC' d 'l l ! p e t Phon e 99'1
) 'i 16 b f' IW Pe n II l m and ~

I } ] Ic

1

For Rent

H1r tta ny 5p 11 f' l h mrt l f'
I
n or It &lt;; Old (,111 I'U

Mo'. , ,.

C o r rl

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp;HEATING
Comple te plumbang &amp;

---~ _9cc
92:..·::.:
S7c.:O
:.:
O_ _

I 1 l to..

10 J tf c

ROGER HYSELL'S~
GARAGE

HElL

h e altng se rvac e and
ge ne ral sheet m et a l
w or k s
F ree
Es tam a tes
Phon e 949 5961
E m erg ency 992 3995

O Nf ) y(' &lt;lr o ld l ull Oa mat ron
S I 'i P t10rH &lt;'1?1 71 17 r vcn n q s
1 1 l tr

~ -~ ! I

I oll r- n 51 1 1nc1 wo 1drr
Ju &lt;; t why you hild to qo
we w (ro.. so ha pp y toqettH'r
A n d Oil I m 1SS YOU SO
Jus t .-. c tus tf'r o t f) &lt;Hi t I tt
1\ C n or ~ s
Sprnyect w n; n m tl oo I t u c,
W1Sh you co uld t rl Vf' SP &lt;H t d
h rm lord
J ust for il tr w 1oorr Yt lr "&gt;
S ld l y
"""~f't1
l'Y
w It
H 'H r r t

MY

U oc tor

Pets For Sale

::-i HO OT ING
S p l"nt f'r

Oel t

- - --

I

1 \ 7tp
Meetings w d l be he ld every
oth er M onday nt B 00 p m
The Soctt'll Room will be open
l o a t I m embers f amily and
I q uest s ev ery Monday ntght 1 1- O f..'
;":. ! 1:..
to ~ ood ho me
11 n1 ature Dl rh "&gt; hl nd R eq
w th P &lt;1Pf'r S 1 y r &lt;, Wi th n il
'&gt; llO t s H ou sco r o lu' qoo d w th
'&gt; H OO TIN G mQt ch Ra e ne G u n
L h ldr c n Ph one 9fl) 1tHO
Cl ub Su tH t&lt;ty 1 p m A sso rt t"d
1 ') Jtp
!1l (' i11 S ,lnd f a c tory ct1 o k r () un :;

""
IN LOV IN G nl('n or y o l

}71~

( d 1t;&lt;;

1
7':S""

Business Servjces

I

I

p \0L

" ''

Tnc

C.ur ol lt on

EFFECTIVE I 6 75

()II y

hi

~!;l~!ll

i

In c

l r)O k

You

iN ( f..! l--() 11\ l f
N O t ee&lt;;
f-.1 0
W a rchou'ir nq
P&lt;tl l nl
I roi i!C I on ) ~ Yc "'r I-I 1Si or y
R C'p 1rr w rndsh tf' ld t nd pl.lt f'
qt1 .;c; ,lt lc&lt;&gt;&lt;; hcln 70 p e l o f
repl 'l C()nlCfl l cos t
Mr n r~n u m
rn vt•s lm cn t of S l ? 1')0
C illl
I
Co ll ec t Mr
frRnk trt (? lt t

NOTICE TO
EAGLE
I
CLUB MEMBERS

1

'

S,lm

AT OUR " ALL OUT" SALES ROADEO

Opportunthes

----~

IN .\\ E MORV o f Tn ornas Rrtll!f f

w t1 0 depa r t ed !'Irs tr l e

Bustr1ess

Jbe Sunday Times -Sentinel, Swday, Jan

•

lflFU /lEN/) EW~t' ~ 111

For ~ast Results Use The Sunday. Times-S.e niinel c;iassi/ieds-

,•'

•

.,

/

24 - The Sundal Tunes. Sent mel, Sund.11. Jan 5, 1975

•

I

.

�'

2&amp;-

'!'hi! Sunday Times- Sent!nel. S\Dlaay, J an . 5, 197li

;

'

..

'

.
For Fast Results Use The Sund;iy Times·-Sentinel Classifieds. .
~

72 Che_vr~let Impala

~

holice

Help Wanted

Real Estate For Sale

BABYSITTER weekday s only,
7 · •5 4 ' )0, two c hildr e n Ca l l
S unday 446 498 7, aft er 4.3 0
week day s
3 3

FREE BOOK
TEL LS ST ORY

AN I NTERE ST I NG book called
Ttle Masterv of L tfe w tl! be
sent
to
you
Wtlhout
obl~at i on This book will tell
;~ ~
yo how you may rE'ceive th e cOSMETo_L_ oG~Sr
manage r 's ltc ense to tak.~
untQ e Rosi c rucian me thod
011er establiS h ed ShOP rn R tO
for self unfo l dment in · t he
Grande Ca ll 145 9311
pnvacy of your home Ad
3 II
dreSS ' Scribe Ill Ros icructa n
Order . AMORC . S,An Jose
IMMED IA TE • openmg for 5
Calif 95 1 14
•
faShton show dtrec tors fu l l or
3 1
par t ttm e For mtorma t ton
c all 446 3963 , 9 to 5
YEAR END SALE
Kntl Na c
Yarn Shop , Begmners cro c het
33
and knitting 'lessons . Phone
EX PERIEN CED
ba r te nd er
446 288-1
I3
ahd wattress
Apply K 1ngs
Arm Kntght Club
Rl
7,
CheS h1re
DE A D s to c k r emoved
~0
33
c harge Call 745 5514
207 If
WO M A N to l1v e 111 and t1 e !p m
cll r e of el d er l y ma n Fa mtly
STOP A ND CHAT Brow se or
co ns1sts of man and wife . w1f e
buy
Dec oupage and orher
1S tn g ood hea lt h
Wages
g dt s
Co rn e r
Crafls .
neg ot1a b le Ph 446 9519
Chil l icoth e Rd
3 3
180 rl

•

TWO WAY Radios Sales &amp;
Se r vtce New &amp; use d CB ' s,
pol1ce m on1 to rs. an t ennas .
etc Bob's Citizen Band Radio
EQu i p ., Geor ges Creek Rd ,
Ga llipoli s Oh io 446 4517
212 1f
SW EEPER Repatr , Par ts and
Su ppl ies
P tc k
up
a nd
deltvery
Oav ts
Vaccum
Clean er. I :1 m tie up Georges
Cr eek Road Ph .a46 0294
75 tf

SA LESMA N WA N TED
TEXA S OIL COMPA NY nee d s
dependable man wtto c ~n
work w tl hOUI Su p e r v•~ 10n lfl
Ga l lt polt s ar e a
Co nt,l c l
custome r s Age unimportant,
tlut maturtly is We tr a• n Air
Mall G H D 1ck Pr es . Sou th
western
Petro l eum .
Fl
wor t h. r.:
I J
TE L EP H O NE SOitcr tor s. we
w rll t r a•n Ph 146 4367 a lt er 'J
p m . Monday , January 6
2J

RUS S' S GLASS SERVI CE.
Storm wi n dow s rc pa tred .
auto
g l ass
P l elo g las s,
m trror s. d ec orator and cut to
Stle .&amp; 35 Sec
Ave . ac ro ss
from the P 0 in G allipO l iS
Ph 446 7632
223 7B

wanted To lease Rent
FARMw1thhouse Ph 3792649
23

~or

f Wanted To

Do

,.

' Will babysit •n my home , 445

790 3

o)o 1.,

~-

•

;ade

71 P l YMOUTH D U STER , VB
a ut o, good condilwn . no
reasonable offer re fu sed 256
IJ3 1, alter 1

13

Business Opportunities

FURN I T U RE
U PH O L ST E RIN G .
Spec1al
TIR E D OF TH E
p r ices now thr o ug h Febr ua r y
RETA IL RATR ACE
1975 F r ee es t l m 8tes . Ptck up
an d deliver y
P romp t Ser · 3 YEAR S ago 1 so ld a succe ss f ul
business and started over at
v1ce
age 45 in a n ew f 1eld tha t has
Mow rey's Upholster y
rea ll y boomed . Now I am
Point Pl easa nt, W. Va
t rymg to h tre a person wtlh
675-4154
stm tlar am b111ons and find all
1 11
are In b usmess tor th&amp;rtl
selves . If thi s sounds like vou
CUSTOM sewmg , alter at tons on
an d you have S20.000 op
11 11 types of cl ot h m g , fur s
era t ing cap it al. I c an ge l you
Reweavi ng Ph 446 ·7510 or
in
a
busine ss
t ha t
ts
446 1171 .
depression proof . wh e re yo u
?11 .tf
work on l y 7 mos. a year an d
en ioy l ife In the great oul ·
TY P I N G SE R VICE S W i ll do
door s Do not c on f use this
all k inds o l typmg m my
wll h any franchtse or me r ·
ho me . Call 446 4999 .
tf
c ha n d i sing sch em e PhOn e 1·
254
614 .256 11 13

----------BABVSifTIN
G 7 a m to 5

2-6

w ee kl y Hot mea l s, lots o f
lo ve , ne~t r Ho l ze r . Dial 44ft.
1J16
MOBILE hom e i a cr e co r n er lot
23
on Rt 160 and F loyd Cla r k
Rd . sa ,soo or r en t stso mo
Adul t s only 388 8706 or 4.t6
9369

For Rent or Sale

Lost

Vir~l

· Real Estate For Sale

B.

TEAFORD

WISEMAN

512 Seco11d Avenu e

.

:
B Ull
•
I
•
• I
IS vacan t to t s
su bdiVISton . approx
mtl cs from Gall tpol• s on
good
road
Ul tl tltes
ava1labl e Call now
GOOD " OLD STY L E "
'2 STORY HOME
On Sta te R 1 7 norfh of
Gal ltpOi tS Plenty of room
Gas f urnace On l c ~; e l lot
Only \1 8.500 00
VACAN'f l OT
STATE RT 7
Close fo G all1 pol ts
l eve l
and cl ean
HOU &lt;i l= TRA I L.'ER ON
lOT IOO'lc1 10'
'1 Bedroom
level tor A ll
tor only \6500 00
SACRES
Cl ose to Vmton
House
and 3 bed roo m mobtle
home , drilled well &amp; pump,
modern ktt c hen Wt l h ref &amp;
s tove
A ll
for
on ly
$ 11 900 00
MUST SE l l
G I VE U S A N OFFER
11 Room s, mo d ern sp l tt
level 11ome, 2 f• re pla c es ,
fa m lly ro om. '1 baths , 2 car
garage , basemen t , 1 ac r e
p l us n 1ce l andscaped yard
with to t s of Sh rubb ery
G ood bla c kto p road , 4
mile s fr om Ga ll tPO f tS, lots
of r oom
for
to ts
of
POSS tblitll eS
Wtlh
!h tS
hom e
18S ACRES
1972 7 room home . J
bedrooms , la r ge farntly
room , 2 f ull modern bath s,
etec tn c sto ve. r e f , car
pet tng , J s torage bu 1ldtngs ,
lot s of trees . ap prox 15
acres , cle ared L tn c fen ce
1n CheShtr e Town shtp Ca n
se l l home B. 5 ac res by tt self
and 180 ac r es o f vaca nt
land by 1t s elf or a ll
toget h er
25 AC R ES
6 Rooms
3 bedrooms ,
bath . clec tr 1c s tov e r et.,
a l um s1 dmg, 5 room s of
f urn i t u r e goes , s torag e
but l d1ng , ChiC k en h ouse ,
cel lilr , 10 acres ca n be
cu ll tva ted , 4 acr es o f
timb er
1I acre pa st ure
Only $2 1,900 .00

MORTGAGE MONEY AVA ILABLE

1215.

!f you had bough t a home ltke this 5 yrs ago you would
have saved $7 ,000.00 on t he pur c hase price above . Don ' t
loos. any more - owner mus t sell lht s a ll ractrve 3
bedr oom home with beautiful burlf rn kttchen , 2 b.:l ths.
large ta m ! l y room , 2 car garage, excel len t ne1g hborhood .

Fa rm s a nd Bare {Bear) Land
MOD E RN HOM E SO AC.- Nea rl y new 3 bedroom home•
1
with 2 h ba th s, fam rly n ncfdin 1ng rooms W B. f 1rep lace,
beau f 1ful built· i n k1tch en a nd •s all c lean
140 Ac with old house in need of co mplete r emode l mg tab
Perfect for summer home or sp or ts men . Good t(mber
covers m os t of th e gently ro lling to hill land
150 A c good older home wrth bath and ce ntral hea t , 35 A
bottom, 50 A tdlable, 75 A posture Good set of bu!ldrng s,
close to Thurmo n

153 A c w1th home and large ba,rn House ts unde r repa 1r at
pre sent. New rn sulation roo f. bath etc Exce lle nt fla t crop
land, pl enty o f pa s ture and balan ce in t 1mber $45,000
m cl udes mcJchmery and a good buy a t th at. F1nancmg
availabl e
B U Y IN AREA
J h1S ve r y
nt ce b 1 l evel •nclude s 3
bedrooms , 2 f ull baths.
large butll 1n kt tc hcn , sun
deck . huge famt ly room
and g ar .1ge Mint cond tlto n
in ex ce llent loca t1 011, 'l
mtlcs out Prtce redu ce d
from $33 ,000 10 S29 ,900 You
c&lt;1n spend more an d not
buy better

.].)6 Q)](}

leo P. Kmg, Assoc1ate

Y O U CAN AFFORD THIS
- Assu m e pre se nt 7'} P et

Homt' Ph . l ·~b ·199-J

l'o a n Monlh l y paym e nt
SI BS 00 lov ely J bedroom
home
wit h
ca rp e lt n~
th1ougt1 out , huqe butlltn
ktt c hen l entral a1 r , 11
yr s old

Mobile Homes For Sale

Wantett To Buy

J IJ N K AU T O , Scrap metals . Ph
J88·877 6.

1-12

2 BR; mobile home . n ice
n ear !OWn . 446 4051

Lo l
26

----------~

T I-ST ATE

I 18&gt;&lt;5 M sv Sl em
2BR UX281BR
BOAROING &amp; AKC PUPPIES . lOxSO Bren strall er 2
K &amp; p Ke nn el s, 388 827~ Rt
554 . v, ml e~ts t o f Por ter

JOS.tf

8obb n t'Oo dle B o ut iqu e
P R OFESSIO N A L groo mi ng by
a p poin tm ent on l y . Ph . Bobbie
C11s to . 4-1 6 · 1~ 44
'2 12 If

lbxso

M ar1etta 2 BR
lOx SO W o l ver i ne 2 B R
IO;ocS O Mar l ette 2 BR
10x50 Be l mon t 2 BR
lOlCSO Kaywood 2 BR
44 6-1511

--------------.-

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

-------------For Lease

0008.

J.tf

. Will Trade
Nice Building
Lot For •
GoOd Tractor
PH.
7

L OV E LY RANCH H OME
Y ou w 1ll l ike th e three large
be drooms , tamily ro om , wif e
appro ved kitchen , l 1 1 baths .
l1v1ng room Wl l h f 1rep 1ace .
basement, large two ca r
garage With etec tr •c eye
N ice rev er lot on R t 35 .
GA R F I E LD A VE . N ice
two bedroom horne with a
bea ul! f UI v1ew of the river ,
fullY turn 1s hed , g Mage anrt
ntce lo t

DETRO I T Mobi le Hom e 10 X 50 .
excellent c ond t t •on
I d ea l
home f or widow or w 1dowe.r:\
PINE RIDOE COLLI-ES
or
ne wlywed ,
one
~
AKC Reo . Col l ies , sab le an a
bed r o om . larg e l 1vt ng ro '
white (614J 256 1167
an d kitchen . To see. ph 4 6
28J .If
1425 or 446 3949 .
JOB 1f
AKC Reg . Ge rm an She pherd
pu p p!es S.50, 2.56 ·68 46
B&amp; S MOBIL E HOM ES
308· 4
Pt. Pl ea sant
197 0 Con c ord 12¥ 60 2 BR
1967 ( h ll mp ion l2x60 ') BR
1962 N ew Moon 10)(5 5 2 BR
1968 Champ •on 12)(60 2 BR
1966 Liber t y J2)(50 2 BR
1957 Great Lake 8XJ5 2 BR
Ll K E n ew , 3 BR home . car p et.
ce nt r al air , gariQe . l a r ge fl at
rot . S22S per month . d eJ),.os il
and references requ ired 446

_
NOTICE

llutter,

G•llfpolls. Ohio CSUl

Pels

N E W BRI CK RAN CH
Very
n 1ce
w i th
t hr ee
bedroOms ,
l 11
ba t hs .
firepla ce, fully carpeted , two
cAr garage, loca ted on a n ~ee
lo t 5 rn rles from town

11 , AC R E S Good ba rn ,
other outbutld tngs arl d an o l d
ho use , n1ce pla ce rn th e
Po SSi bl e
l and
co u ntry
con tr &amp;i.f to QuaiJfred buy er
1S AC R ES ·- Good sma ll
farm , has a two bed room
11lObtle hom e. large barn ,
large. pond being buil l ,
toba cco b ase . loc M ed 5 m~~ s
h orn to wn in ci ty se ll
dtsl r ic t Better hu rry , lilts
wo n ' t lils l long
F H A .Jnd
a va ilab le

VA

t1nan ctrl 9

'

WE BUY, SEU.. TRADE
.
Eveni ngs Ca ll
Jo hn M. Fu ller -14 6-4327
~ ee Johnson 25 6-674 0
Ooug
Wettler ho lt 446 -4244

se ll anything for
·ai\yb&lt;&gt;dy at our Auction
or in your home. For
and pickup
,SIJrVi'ce call256·"67 alter 5

R••rl Mr~l1ee , 446 - ln~

Every S.turday Nlghl
Al7p.m .

SWAIN
AUCTION SERVICE
&amp; Olive

Tel. 614-446-1998

Pllimbing &amp; H!!ating
GE N E PLA N TS &amp; SO N
PL UMB IN G - HeC111nQ
A1r
Condlltonmg . 300 Foul-til A-..e
Ph J46 1637
J8 If
STAN D AR D
Pl umbm g · Heatin9
214 T h trd Av e. , 44 6·378 2
18) .If

RU SSE L L ' S
P LU M BI NG&amp; HE AT IN G
Galli polis , 446 -4782

____________ ___ _

J

NEAR WATERLOO
10 A
(3 A l evel ) , pl en ty good tr ee
water , 12' x 60 ' El khM t
Tr cn lcr : good f un11 ture Onl y
\c 10,500
MILL CREEK RD ·'13
M od el , 1 bdrm ., 12 x 60 '
mob il e home , f ull furn• Shed
li lt ac re s l 'l n d Prt ced tor
QU• ck sa t e at $17 ,900
J' ~

MILE S from town . 5 rm
fra rn e horne ar 1d J A . lan d
Steam
Car pe l ov~ r H W
heat , 1 cn r ca r port Prtct'
$12 ,500
ST R T 160
N rar 111~ w
sect1onal home , 8 b1 g rms 2
ba ths , alt ca rp e t, ~~~ e lcc
Pr ice o f ~2 7 , 000 tncluctes
r ang e , D W d1s dr&lt;1pes &lt;1nd
cen a 1r
PATRIOT
7 J&lt;mS . 1 story
W1tl1 b.'lse , fur heat , cen &lt;11r,
bath , carp et over II W , 25 '
t&gt;eaut1 f UI kttCI1cn ca b tnets
Has a bar n and ' . A flat tot
S18.000

· •FBrmowners Policy-Complete Protection In One Polley
•~ Modern Mobile Homeowner Polley.
·· ~ Cost Fire Polley&lt;
e A Special Multi-Peril Pacflege Policy for Your Busl n~ss .

compare our rates- with your present
We know we can save
money.

'

2890

I

l

J7 1 : ACR E S, 6 rm house . on
good bl i!ck top road Slate Rt
21 8, Wtl h IObl'ICCO base Phone
25 6 6769
JOB 6

--------...... - RANC H O Clm\PAN

1

Realtors - Auchon ee ,.s
44 6 0001 . 367.03 00 \
NI CE buildtng tot . F a trf1 e ld .
Budd to su1 t Five &lt;1cre hOme
S1 l e $5 .000. J2 A farm , new
l1ome , S24 ,900
27 1 It

Wanted· To Buy
LAN 0 Approx '25 to JO a~c re s
Ca ll any t tme 446 1588
30B ·6

WANTED ·
Household Goo{ts, Antiques, Farm
Equipment, Consignments for Public
Auction Jan. 11 at Porter Beach AC
Station. Ca II Today .

446-0001 or 446-0002

Ph. 446 /699
51) :.;,;cond Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

RANCHO CO. AUCTIONEERS
&amp; REALTORS

"

YO UR DR E AM COME

TRUE .
SPR IN G VALLEY

)

3 &lt;ll '' BR , cook',s de li g ht
ktlc h en , p l &lt;'!yroom &amp; ta mtly
room, .11r con cl, car peted . 2
c.1r gar.1ge By ow n er, 446 ·
08 18

__

243 t f

B A NK S TRE E SE RVIC E _"!
FREE esti m a t es, l iab ilit y ~
suran ce Pr un in g , t r 1mm tn g
an d cav 1t y wo r k , tr ee a nd
stump remova l Ph 446 4953
73 'tf

PRO T EC T your mobile h om e.
wtt h T I E DOWN ANCHORS ·
Ca ll Ron Ski,dmore, 446 -1756:
after3pm
1
221 tf1

• 3 BR, full ba semen!, ful ly
carpe ted , rn c i ty sc ho o l
drstrict. Ph. 446 -9373 .

7 ROOM " CE N T U RY "

HOME

Lo wN R 1ver Rd , 3 BR . t wo
• } &amp; 1 full ba th , 2 fi re pla t.: es ,
scr eened in bre eze way ,
bM n 3 9 acres Sho wn by
appo m ttne nt
Ph
156 6786
a ft e ~ S pIll Aven Lus k

I

T H OMA S Fa tn ElC. t er m tn atln g t
Co T ermite an d Pest Contr ol ,:
Wh eelersburg. OlltO
- - - - - - - - - - -- - - -

I

F RENCH C I TY B LO CK , 446 I
3608 , located at Kerr B et h el :
Kemper Hollow tntersectto n 1
150 tf
- - - - - - -- - - - - - - -

I

GA R AGE , a ttt c an d basemen t
• leant ng Tras h ha uli ng Free:
est1mates Ph 44 6 0355 or 446 1
2950
I
2 1B If '
- - -- -------·-- - - '
DRAFTING SERVICE
:
D ESIGNER - Draftsman ...,;trf'
To p o S1le, r emod e lin g .,
1'm erc 1a l ,
or
n ew
,
den t 1a l pl ans
15 yea r s_,
t',.: ,H~ rlen ce rn c rvrl and a r
ch1tec tur a 1 Ph 1 682 7498
2B5 ·1f

'"

O~l
' S I · kG E
TH !: LE . • F
SI~C ·

IN

'

N A TIO f\ ' ULJ
SELL ERS
Ph . 446 •· .. J

I"'RUsSEU
I
mJ,
REALlOR
446-1066
I

UPPLIES

BidW e ll. Ohio
J T u nd co l d p last i c pip e and
f 1tt rngs,sew e r and dra in p i pe,
k ttche.n sink s, flb er.l gass tub s 1
and sh ow er , vani t ies and Bl ue
R id ge P a int Ph . JB8 ·8576.
New Onwer s
Arnold Smith and
Charl es Smith

231 tl '
--------------ELEC TR ! CAL
se rvi ce.
r e m ode l rn g. gu tt e r w o r k
Free es trm a t es CaH 446 -2582. ,
a fte r 5 p m
3Q4 If

REALTY
H locust Sf.
Howa r d Branno n. Brok er
Off . 446·2674
lucill e Brannon
E v e. 446 -1226 or 446 -2 674
BEAUllt· UL6Rit..K. - n ea r
tow n on 112 ac r e, w ell ca red
to r l ot. 3 B R , 1112 bat h , w .w
ca r pet , s p ac ious b a nqu e t
style k i tche n w it h o w &amp; a ll
the bud t in for comfo rt . F ull
d tv td ed · base m ent, paneled
doub l e ga r age, c on crete
dr tve &amp; pat io Th e pn ce IS
Onl y SJ6 ,000

K OTALIC LANDSCAPING
R IO GR A NDE , OHIO
COMPLETE PROGRE SSIVE ·I
LANDSCAPING
SHR UB S,
TREES,
R O CK

G ARD ENS.

L arge
ol d er
t- · me
ove rlook• no l he c•tY , IO l 120
l o t · s1ze ,
3
be d ro.~ m ,
basemen! with gas f urna ce ,
Ctty wale~ and sewer , p ri ced
$26.500
.

Road , c1 t y wo t er , gas an d
sewer, large lot , stov e and
re fr tgerator included . tn t11e
Ga llipolis sch ool d 1Strtcl,
Pr tced S22 ,500

HOL STEI N CO N CR E T E. all
types o f c on c r e t e w o r ,k ,
foo t i ng s , wa ll s, co n c r e t e
f ! ni s hin g, ca rp en te r work
Free es t 1mat es Ph J67·04 17
or 446 7795
276 80

NEW and NEAR
NEW
HOMES - 3 BR with 1'12 &amp; 2
bath s . P r rced S25,S OO
$29,500
2 ACRES - On e stor y J BR
hom e, la r g e eat In k itch en &amp;
dmmg roo m , 1 c ar garag e, 1
b arn &amp; c h 1cken ho u se
Lo c at e d a l Ce nt e rpoi n t .
$22.000

Electric Contractor s
CO MP-L ETE e lec lri ca l servi ce.
Gal l tpo l is, Ohi o Ph 36 7-0311 .

'

287 tf

BTU , S95 or bes t offer
J46 9654

185,000
Phone

~-------

2. REAL ESTATE -

83 ACRES: MORE OR LESS,
LOCAT ED JUST OFF WHEATON ROAD IN MORGAN
TOWNSH IP. - Properly includes old barn and two dug
wet IS Plenty of l ocu st posts and some oak. tl m ber.

Above real eslate ( 1. and 2.1 fo be so ld a t the Beach AC
Sta t ion at 1. 00 p .m . - owner reser ves ri ght to re ject
highest bid . Terms: 10 Pet. day of sale - l;&gt;ala nc e in 30
doys
SER VICE STAT ION EQUIPMENT -

like new a ir

t ofnpressor , fire cnanger. battery cflarger, jacks, tool s,
other m1scel la neous ite m s .

ANTIQUE S &amp; HOUSEHOLD GOODS - Ofd, old cl ocks,
crocks. churns, dishes, tables, 5-stri ng banjo, oil paintings , mov ie projector and screen , fireplace scr een, old
and
new 8·track
refr i gerators.

tapes,

FARM EQUIPMENT -

apartment

gas

r ange,

Ford lrac iO!' mower, garden

tradors, old tract or. d1scs , plOws A l so other fa rm
equipment
(Sellers: Bri ng consignments by B a . m . Januar y 11, 1975)

TERMS : CASH •
LUNCH AVAILABLE
. OWNER : FRANKLIN E. BEACH, SR.
Sa le Conducled By : Rancho Co. Auctioneers &amp; Brokers
250 J ackson Pike, Ga llipolis, Ollio 45631 , Phone: 1-614·446·
0001
AUCTIONEERS : Jay SM ppard, DtnYer IR-.11 Higley. ·
Call J ay Sheppard fo r infor mation or inspection of RNI
Estate.

1973 PONTIAC VENTURA 2 DR.
1973
MERCURY COMET GT
and
Air

REMOD E LIN G, a ll t y p es bu t It
in ca bin ets , a l u m m um sidrng ,
roofing ,
pan el in g
Free
es t i m at e, 245 56~7
282 JO

all extras .

1973 CHEVY NOVA CUSlOM
Air , p

s,

P.B.,

v i ny l top .

-

"SEARS BEST"
CAR tape d eck, FM rad•o
combtnalton w1 th spe ak ers
S65 ·R CA P or tab l e ste re o
phonogrirph w1 th stan d S50
Ph 416 &lt;1196

1972 VW, automatic, stick shift, sharp__ -:--------- 11695
1971 VW, 4 speed, sharp___________________ 11495
1971 FORD LTD 4 DR .. air condition. _________ _; __ 11495
1971 PLYM. FuRY Ill 4 DR., air cond.l PS, PB------11495
1972 OLDS DELTA 2 DR. HT•• ------ -----~----· 11995
air cond. PSt PB, cruise contJVI
.
1968 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 OOOR----------- - ---1595
1969 VW FASTBACK----- ------------ -------1695
v CHECK WITH US BEFORE YOU BUY

TW O
rtdt n g
hors es,
On e
H ackney Pony JBB 8155
J3
1973 TOYOT A ~tckup truck ,
camper top for 1 ~ ton wide
long bed tru c k . bo th tn ex
celle n t cond il ion 446 0497
J3

For Sale
1967 C H EVY
.!.16 7797

VOLKSWAGEN

Pickup 2B J. Ph
308 9

1

DEFENSE • DEFENSE DEFENSE

70 FO RD PiCKU P V8.wldebed ,
low mt leage, $147 5 or" best
offer .146 9654
13

AREYOUPREPAREDFOR .

------~-

CARPETS and l1 f e too can b e
beau t rf ul tf you u se Blue
L ust r e.
Rent
e l ectr. c
sh ampooer
$1
Central
Supp l y
36

CONSIDERABlY HIGHER GASOLINE PRICES

COM PLETE
bed
a nd . 2
d r essers. Stnger peda l sew 1ng
rnachme A l so el ec t nc por
ta ble se w in g mac hin e Can be
se en at 1902 Er~stern Ave

AND

2J

·GALLI POLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH

POSSIBLY GASOLINE RATIONING!

-·------~------- - :·--

1639 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLI~, 44_6-12~3

FARM EQUIPMENT
Good 1956 Ford Tractor, 2
bottom turmng plow, Pickup
disk, 6 11. mower, cor n
picker , 2 wneel utility lrailer

- ~'~

12350. Ph . 388-8463 .

~ · ( .'~
.

C.:A P!~. EASY
W l~l- Be TOLD
PRINCI! ~9 TRAY E'L-

PLANS 1"-' DUE TIME-!

'

100'
:~Gal/a)?. -~

ME'AP.t'o\I HILE . P J(AY
E,_ JOV 'r'O UII:SELVES
AS MV PA LACE:

" Ui: STS

.___ . ~~-- - -

I'.J.

"-:' .;"~,,~~'&gt;
;·~ ~!' · ~
~~ :!. •"' - ..

-,

,•, :'1 " l'l

.. ~

·-

i"

.
. '

Bee" use of the huge monetary outlay to the oil
exporting countries for crude oil, the U. S. has
to take action to reduce these imports .
Regardless of what course is taken it will hit
the automobile driver in the pocketbook. "
Now is the time to put yourself in a qualify car
that is a real gas miser. The E. P. A. '75'
gasoline ratings show V. W. to be the most
economical family of cars built in the world..
Some models gave highway mileage up to 38
miles per gallon.

M&amp;M
ROOF IN G &amp; Spoutin g Shingl e
and Bu fi dUp ro of . H ot and
Co ld pr ocess
Home im ·
p r ove m ent m g en er a l
For
fr ee est imat es, p hon e Rob ert
Mea d e, 38 8 81 14, B i dw ell.
O h 10
263 ff

Join the smart crowd . Join the switch
to a Volkswagen.

------~--- - -- -----&lt;

D

P Mart in &amp; Son s W a t er
De l tvery
Ser v1 c e .
Y our
p a tr o n age
w i ll
be
ap .
p r eda t ed Ph 446 ·046 3.
21f

IJT[LE ORPHAN ANNIE

Don Watts V. W., Inc.

LITTLE

G I L L E N WA T ER 'SSE PT IC
TA N K
CL EA NIN G
A ND
R EP A IR
A·L SO
HOU S E
WRECK IN G Fh
44 6 9499
Es t a blished •n 1940

,.-___,~

Upper Rt. 7

Gallipolis, Oh.

' ,,.,

.,

U • lt~

For Sale

191 3 I NTERNAT I O N AL
se r i es , latiUm ax le Ph
6574

1800
306 6

l'L ABNER

Located ; at the Gallia County Highway
Garage, 2112 miles, west of Gallipolis, Ohio.
The sale consists of 4 trucks and 2 cars from
the Highway Department, and also the chatel
property of the old Gallia County Home . .
TRUCKS: 1962 '12 ton Ford, 1962 F500 Ford,
two 1966 Chevy Dumps - 60 series.
CARS: 1970 Ford, 1972 Plymouth, used batteries, used tires, scrap iron. and
miscellaneous items.
·

1964 OLDS M OB I LE l uxury ,
mode l. good sha pe. set of
r adia l tires. s txe L R 70, 15 Ph
992 -2508 or see a t 13 1 Laure l
Sl , Pomeroy, 0
......_
306 6
4

t-- L&gt;OW farm tracto r . mowe r .
c ult iva t or, p lows Make ofl er .
4tl 6 9654 .
13
~--- --- ----

I

type s of living r oom sui tes,
e~e tra
ch es ts,
b ed r oom
suites, dinette set s. Th1 s and
much more. Open 9' t o
6
d:JS pe r w eek.

s

--

l 'nscrambl t these fout Jumbl es.

one letter to each square, to

or~A N D

NEW c l r.ct r i c guita r
w 1 th amp 'S t85 or bes t offer
,u '1 965 1
I3

LOCU~T

62 -17

II

Il J I II

t

G/NTHK

PIHse ~ole that sale of trvclcs and atri !Will be sold
promptl)&lt; at 10:30. Also note !hat this safe contains many

~

I

I

I I

~ircled

Now arTanr• lhe
letters
to f orm the surpnse answer, aa

:=::::A::::=~·=:P=.::~==~·=~·;':"~K«::•:•:.:.ted::_bly the above cartoon .

.L,_

Rne anttqun l
·
AUCTIONEERS:
Tommy J .. Sl4!warto1Gallipolis, OIIio
· t.ee Johnson of Crown City, Ollio

=..!·= =:.=AIISW8
= 11re::.:.--' [ I I I

_!!
. .=:d
.-. .

J

l ..\M'Itf'rt 'tlmu l•' J

I Juntlol •• : MAGIC

lr•lrr•f&gt;"

··1

KNEEl lr.t' 0 AI R

hil T• t&lt;E AIM

'

MARTYR
o
•

\ 1,..... r : H'htrl /11 d11 if HlllllmfH' Ill m n r.l ' fl

'

.'

NOllTil

. 862
¥ A J4

· ~n

• KQti 4

tl&lt;8

EAST
• 51
•Q 952
tl0 96 4 2

olo 913

• 1,0 8

WEST
. KQ .J 93

"' 8 6 3

SOUTII 11)1
t AJ 5
olo A J52

'

.

.

fence posts

Ct~ ll

25 6

297 -H

/

Both \' ulne rablc

'

Alter th1s s t ar t he would
th row West '" with a spade a nd
rela x West would c ash three
spade tncks . Two diamond s
would be d1 scarded !rom the
North ha nd and a diamond and
hea rt !rom South.
Wes t would have to lead a red
card to give South the rest of .
•
the trick s. .
Why Was it necessary lor
South to take car e to lea ve the
h1gh club in dummy' Because if
he hadn 't done tha t West could
lead a hea rt ; Easl could refuse
to play his queen and there
would be no way for South to
score three heart tricks .
iN J.:W!ii 'AI'EH I:!N'fb: lt l'IUSt::: ASSN .l

Wu l • North

Eut

South

Pass

I NT
Pass

245 ) f.

TYP E S o f
building
male rtai S, block. bri ck. sewer
pipes, w1ndows, linte l s, et c
Claude Wmte r s, R io Gran d e.
o Phone '2&lt;15 5121 after 5
123 tf

·There Is also a new-like dryer, lelevis fon a nd a few
· electr ical appl iances. One fO!'ge and tools, vise, saws,
hand tools' for gun repairs, shoe lasf, 2 (drill presses I,
' efectrlc dr ill and sanders, 2 lard kettles, ice box, roto
tiller, 'lawn mower, lawn tools, and other tools and items
too numerous to mention.
TERMs-CASH
Lunch will be 11rvtcl by the
G. Ilia Collnty SenlorCltlnns

A cinch play for 3NT contract

NAOM I 's Wtg St yltng
Se ll
and st yle ·all fashtons W1g s,
w1glcts fnll o:; PhOtiC 38 8 8J OS
.
286 If
GOO D CIPan lump a;d. ~Joke r
co al
Carl
W tnl er s . R lo
Gri'lnde Ph .2&lt;15 5 11 5

1

1967 Pl YMO U T H F UR Y 3, VB
en g1ne, 3 18 . 51. 000 ac tu a l.
"mil es, goo CI c on d it ion, U OO.
Ph 67 5.1175 o r 675 3073
13

WIN AT BRIDGE

• A 10 7
¥ K 10 7

ALL

l I

69 M E R CU R Y M a r au d er , " Ai r
con d ., p .s, P 'b , g ood gas
mi leage an d w or k ca r \155 or
best offe r 446 9654
13

N ew GMC
Tr u c k H e ad quart ers
1968 1 , 1 · GMC P1ckup
19M I T GM C
1970 1 T Chcv Pick up
197.\ 1. T Chev Pt ck up
t96R 1, T GMC Ptckup
196 ~ 1
T GMC P 1ckup
1%9 1 1 1 GMC P ickup
1971 ' , T r orct P 1ck up
1968 1: T GMC P tck up
19!1 ') 1 Dodg e Cab and ChassiS
1967 11 T GMC P1 ck up
196B I ] T GMC PtCkt:p
1968 1 : T GMC Ptck up
1 968~': 1
Ch ev y Pt ck up
1971 GMC Suburban
1967 1.· 1 f-ord Ptck up
SOMMERS G M C
TRUCKS , I NC
1 33 P m e St .
446 -2532
147 If

fo rm f o u r ur drnary Vtords.

[flows

For Sale

For Sale

Ph. 446-9230-----·

JJlY~M® /kJ lclo.,&amp;/.J .-J 11"-

numerous to mention .

I·

Kanauga -Ga llipolis

Factory Oulle l Sal e. All

_____________ _

FURNITURE FROM THE COUNTY HOME
Over 200 stone jars. twenty (5-10.301 gallon stone jars,
numerous fruit Iars, approximately 35 wcioden chairs
(straighl backs and rockers), 40 Iron beds, 18 iron beds
with brass knobs, wicker furniture. numerous 011k tables .
and dressers, wash stands,, old barber chair or df!l1tal ,
chafr, library table, roc:l&lt;ers, while wooden kitchen cha irs,,
cne large oak table wfth e ight matching chalfs, leather
bottoms and backs; mallresses, pillows, gas lights with ·
fluted llg_ht globes. trunks, love seats, china cabinet wfth
curved glass, plano, cane bottom c hairs, lawn furniture,
several dlsMs. and other furniture and items too

.,

PARSON'S
FURNITURE

256

For Sale

L!Ml: STONE for d rtv ewu yS
C~ r l Wtn tcr s Ph on e 245 5115
245 If

- 169 -tf

Thursday, January 9, 1974, 10:30 A.M. :

,.

Fulfy equ ipped, onl y 12,000 miles.

I J

F OR yo ur Tir e a nd Ba tt er y ST A N D I NG t1mb er
Ph
388
need s, com e to Sea r s Ti r e
8490
Shop rn Th e Sil ve r Br tdge
:u
P laza
136 tf B F T T RUCK ca mper , slee ps 4
-----wrth r efrrg , S60 0 Ph ]67
RICE ' S NEW&amp; U5EO FURN
0226
S~ALY MATTRESSE S S49 9S,
J 6
COMPARE AT B 9.95. 8S4
Second , 446 -9S2 J.
197J ~hevro l e t Caprice
298 .tf
Station wagon . eHellent
co nd iti on, $3,295 1 1970
USED FURNITURE
Chev r o l e t Ptcku p , ru n s g ood
G E Dryer l! ke n ew. b edroom
$1,495 l n qut r e day at 675 ·4340,
su i te Wtfh matt r ess and box
ext 143 or eve n1ng 614 388
s~ri ngs .
Cor bm &amp; Sny der
81B I
J 6
r urn .
301 lf

PUBLIC SALE

el u d es land and 2 bay st ation s 36'x90', und e rground tank
· and pumps . approxima t el y three ( 3) acr e s, more or less.
1
Inc ludes wa ter tap and septic

P B,

•2397

•2997

For Sale

2 PAR CELS OF REAL ESTATE
FA RM EQUIPMENT . HOUSEHOLO GOODS
SE RVI CE STATION EQUIPMENT
SAT URDAY , J ANUARY 11 , 1975--TIME : 10 A.M.
PLAC E: PORTER , OHIO SA LE WILLBEHELDRAIN
OR
SHIN E
1. IUAL ESTAT E - BEACH AC .STATION AT PORTER,
OH IO - Junct,on of Rt 160 a nd Rt. 554. Real Estate In·

1974 PONTIAC LeMANS 2 DR. HL~-----------; 13695
Air and all ex tras .

280 If

BO B'r

POPE ' S E tectr tca r Con trac t in g .
Indus t ria l , c omm er c •a l an d
r esr d ent tal . Ph . d ay 38 8 8747
o r eve n rn gs , J88 8657
I
283tf

3805

OVERHE~a s h e ater ,

P S,

v

WAS $2695

DOZ ER wo rk , cl ea r ing , ex
cavat mg , s tump rem o val,
b ush ~ og gin g . Ph . 446 0051

SeiVices Offered

Rodney VtllaQe II , seven
tlou s es availab l e' S532 00
down with t h e balan ce paid
ove r a 33 yea r per iod A ll
three
bedroom
tlo m es ,
ca rpeted , ga r age , el ec trtc
heat

FIL ES, cabm e ts, fll mg sup
pli es, d esk s, offi ce char rs
!, imm ons Pt g &amp; Off 1ce E q ui p
306 t r

c l ea n ca rp e t s wtth Blue
Lus tre
R ent
elect rt c
sham po oer
$1
Ce ntra l
Supply
J06 6

4 Door , automat ic
28,22 1 mil es .

WAS $3395

.-:-F-oR a -,o;:~ e r, dOne feeli ng ."

----

'3497

Station wagon , a ir, la pe , 11.900
ex tra ni ce .

Pa ul Smith , 24 hr . w r ec ker
se r vice Ph 245 5034 or 446 ·
9311
.
263 If

'

GENERAL CONTRACTING
Ho m e improvem e nts an d ad
d it io ns Roofi n g , v tn y l std tng .
Ca ll 446 0668 or 245 5138..
152 56

Phone 614· 446-9777 or 446·

3592

1969 I M P ALA Wtlh .1 1r J dr
n 1ce . m1 tn tow scvenlles
Also 19 72 H onda , excelle nt
con d $5 .000 ac tu a l rn 1l es Pll
'l J5 S685

207 -If '

outbuildings, tobacco base.
mineral rights &amp; 1 tenths mi .
road frontage on blacktop

W O R K, hand ru b b ed
taquer wo rk . Ex p ert rep a! r
iob Sa ti sf ac ti on gu a ran t eed
F r ee es t tmates . 446 9654 .
16

JIM'S FARM
EQUIP. CENTER
Rt. 35 W. , Gallipol is, Ohto

WAS $3895

1973 CHEV. MALIBU 1973 BUICK APOLLO

•

Used too l s of a ll k ind s.

nice fami ly car .

•3397

For Sale

SPECIAL SALE
New Long T r acto r s
New Holland hay tools
Used FO!'d 4500 backhoe·
loade r
MF135 gas &amp; Ds l
MFl l O gas &amp; Ds l
1-MF 175 Dsl
1-MF 50 ga s w-P S.
Ferg . 20-35·40
1 Ford 2000. W·live P TO
Ford Jubilee
Ford 641
J-8 N Ford

4 dr. hdtp ., 26,501 m iles . AM-FM,

custom

WAS$3795

GALLI POLIS, 0 .

For Sale

AM - ~M,

'

'

TRI· STAR

'\
FARM FOR SALE
13 miles north of Gallipolis,
124 A., good house, barn, 2

A n 1ce three bed r oom home .
good har dwo od f loo r s, lar ge
ex t ra nice klf chen , c ab inets,
ull tty r oom , gas furn ace ,
batn ,
sma ll
basemen 1.
w a lktng d i stan ce to sc hool ,
lo t 42x 142, w d l sel l on la nd
c ontract with a r easonable
down payment , $ 15, 500

2 dr . hdlp ., a ir,
inter ior .

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FR EE rnsp ec 11 on Ca ll 446 ·-3245.
M erritt O' De ll , Op er ator by
Ex t erm inal T ermi te Ser v1ce ,
10 Be lmont D r .
267 tf
T OO L
sha rp en 1ng ,
saws ,
sctss or s. s he ars. hom e and
ga rd en toots
Sha rp Sho p ,
A ll ey rea r . 147 Second .
216 If

road. Ph . 388-8463.

1973 BUICK LeSABRE 1973 BUICK LeSABRE

'r'OL)

3 ACRES on St . R t 160 w if h
12'x 65' mobil e hom e li ke
n ew J BR , deta c hed garag e,
pon y b a rn . A real good buy

J bed r oom hom e on Bulav tll e

A LL

GUARA NT E ED . P a tio and
poo l l andsCa pi ng St on e, Si! nd ,
coa t, sh r ubber y t nmmtng
D ump t r uck se r v ices
245
9131
187 .If

ISl ACRES - Loc at ed 12 m i .
dO A
f tllab l e,
from ci t y
ba l an ce in t 1mb er &amp; pa st ure
w i t h plenty coa l 3, 000 lb
tob acco bas e, 2 barn s, on e
st or y hom e r emod e led &amp; in
good co nd tt !On .

Newly cons tr ucted log c ab in ,
ba seme n t , sp r ing , septtc
lank , r ese r vo i r , 11' ~ acres,
pr tce d a t $ 14,'100

EASTERN AVE .

GALL_
IPOLIS
·cHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH
'

$2495
WOOD MOTOR SALES

12x 60 M obil e Home One m 11e
fro m h oSp1 t a1 A d ul t s Pll 446

E ,E AN S PIPE &amp;

I RAN NY BbACKBURN, BRANDi MANAG .~ [

J bedroom home on T exas
1
Road , 1 acre,
ba th. some
pane ll ing , tn sul ated. g a r age.
pr ic ed r edu ced lo Sll ,500
Owner has moved fro m state
anct IS anxio us to se ll

HOUSE
FOR SALE

....
...

•
•

---------------•

I

PUBLIC AUCTION

... VMPLETEL Y remodeled . 2
bed r oom hom e Wtlh 4 62
acres Close to town . Call !-16

Leadingham Agency
.

Ph . 379 -2133

850
' •es

35 -

tt rr• I t .
ava •b l e
dt v

O WN ER
Wil l
HE L P
F IN A NCE - Modern hom e
6
rrn s,
ba t h ,
o ff ers
basem ent a nd over I Je re of
ro lt 1nQ lanrt.. J us! l i sted
$15 ,500

80 A farm . Wheaton Rd
76 A
Bulavtlle Porter Rd
Baby Far m . Clark Evan s

j _U&gt;W, Cost Auto lnsurance-&lt;ompare our rates

t 'l.Dw Cost Homeowner Polk:y.
•lbw Cost Homeowners Polley for Renters .

ALBERT EH MAN

W a t er De liv er y Ser v ice
P a i no ! St a r , Gall1po l is

A DDI SON TW P
N ew
sec l iona t homers a ll el ec tnc
for your convenience and
com fort Features 3 BRs ,
bath , shag carpet, k 1tc he n
w tl h
r ange ,
hood
and
re f r.gcrator Sttuated o n a
larg e flat l ot on a B T rd

uJ

Sm a l l far m 50 acres mo r e or
less. a ll clean Wtt ll !mproved
pasture , develop ed sp r 1ng ,
3'7 r'nde s f rom the hosp tt al.
two bedroom hom e. la r ge
ba th ,
furnace ,
some
c abin e t s, barn J6x40 La n d
a nd ba r n prtce d at S21 ,SOO
Land , bar n and dwe ll !ng
pr i c ed at S36,500

""m

W Hil E RD
N ew
br 1ck and f r am e , J bdrtns ,
all elec , all carp el , l• v r oo Ill
15')(16' . krf an d dtn a 1ea 13
"' 26' 2 ba t hs 2 car g&lt;~r nnd
1 :1 A
fla t lot Price 'fil l 500
0

197 t r

D EW I TT ' S Pl-U MBlNG
AND H EAT IN G
Route 160 at Everg reen
Phone U6 ·27lS
....,.
18 7 H

Of fi ce P h 446· 169'4
E vening s
Ch arles M Nea l, 446 - 15A6
J Mtchae l NeaL 446-1503
Nea l , 446 -7358

ST
R T J'i
Nell r new ,
11~ ba t hs a l t
brtck , 5 r ms
clec , all c.:voet H W tnrn .
co pp er plum bing. '1 eM qar
W1lh elec ct oo r and loc&lt;lted
on a lo t 100' x 180 ' (fenced !
AS ktn g SJ9 YOO

Rd

CARTER ' S PL U M B I N G
AN D H EATING
Cor . Fou,. lh &amp; Pine
Phone 446 -3888 or 446 -4477
165 If

Writes ~II Types ·ef Insurance for
Your Auto. Heme or Business
Rep~nt , Llghtnln,g Rod M~tual
lnsur'C!Ince C.ompany

NEA L REA LTV

...•

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

1

N o e njoymen t , however
tn co n s ider ab lc , is co nf in ed to
the prese nt m omen t A man
tS t he ha p pre r for ltte from
hav•ng
made · once
an
agreeable tour , or l tv ed fo r
a ny l e ngth of ftme wt th
pl e asant people, or en1oyed
any co ns tderable •nterval o f
mnocent pleasur e.

15 A fa rrn 5 rrn hou se w1 th
bath. rural Wafer, located 5
n11 from town on blacktop
r ond _

LO T S ~ Mitche l rd , 0 J
White r d , St R t 35 nnd 160
ANY HR 446 - 1998
W C. MaSS i e

-----·- ----- - -----

'

Ga ll .a Co 's larges t Red I
E s tat e Sa l es Agency
Olhce 446 ·l64J
Eve nmQ s Ca ll
lkf' Wt s~&gt; m a n 446 · J796
t
1J W• &lt;: eman, 4 d6 .4 ~f'IO

.Realty, 32 State Sl

oo•rJ2wether•
··
Sec., ... . . ..... .,.

- ------ --------::_.,.__-~,t,~o~eJ';a~st H~ ~~es

I

AS LITT L E AS S1r2 SO.OO
DOWN
You become the
owner Ol thi S n 1c e WEi ll
IJUtll , J bed r oom home
I n c ludes dintnCJ rtntl family
rooms Pn cr •S $15 ,900 See
.t today

MASSIE

308 6

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

I

1

DON'T BE B E AT B Y IN
F lATION .
Invest
your
sav1nqs 111 land
ElC.pe r t s
con c lude th ,'l' t he na t ion ' s
land w•ll r tS• 1n v alue by at
l east 15 pe t ··• 1 ~/ 4 . W e hav.e
328 acre s of N ~. -:tlan c · : m l
from l ow n tu 1 L· 1Y $l ~'
"
acre

IN EX P E N SIVE COUN T R Y
LIV I NG - 5 rms . and bath.
ce llar . small barn , shop and
: '1 ac r es nea r V!nton , $10.500

I

REMOOEL E D 2 STO RY Th!S lovely home is loc ated
•n Addrson Twp and offers
lots of good livi n g for on l y
S2J .900 Some feat ures are
new a l um mu m siding , storm
windows , natural g a s heat,
new fa c to ,. y k1 tc hen Wttll
cabine ts, range , d tShwasher
a nd refrig e r ator , fo r ma l
dintng rm
and almost 'J
acres cl ose to town

.
4 Dr . hardtop, .P. steer ing, P. br akes, ·rad io,
auto . trans ., fac . ai r cond ..; 350 cu. in. V-8
engine, w-s·w tires, grey met: finis h, mat .
interior, vin yl top, exira c lea n.
;

SAN D Y an d Beaver lnsu ra nQ
.co has offer ed ser v ices IQC
Fire I nsura n ce cover ag e •
Ga ll 1a county for al mos t i
cen t ur y . Far m s, hom es a
person a l property , cove r a g _
a r e ava!lable to meet ln.
d1vidual
needs
Contad
Emme tt Churc h , you r nelg!J:
bor and agent .
~

I

W1lhs T. leadmgham

.ROIIIRI

SeiYices Offered

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

MAKE SURE Y OU SEE
T HI S O N E . Like new lrt
l eve l otters 2,800 sq fl of
ltv tn g space p l us a 2 r~ r
g arage Other featur e ll
8 R s, 2 1 2 balhs . sun '- . t
dr e am k tlc hen, fo n y rr •
wtlll WB ftreplace , ce nt at r ,
pa t to , a n d la r g e l ot L oca t ed
1n on e of th e ar ea 's nrcer
subd •v ision s,

Buy Now a nd Save

Ph ·116 7699

Otur allrd, JOftfll

F H A A PPROVED - 2 yr .
old r a nch ha s 3 BRs , ca rpe t,
natu ral gas hea t , br1ck fr ont
and g ar age Loca ted on a t lat
tot on Bulavtl l e Ret $2 0,00 0
MOBI LE H OME PARK tn
Cheshire wtth 6 renta l u.n.ts
ha s rent poten ttal or over
$700 p er month
A good
money maker for o nl y
S39, 500

23

Year E~d Clearance
- -------- ----·- LO~ --; .,&gt;J gea m a l e Beag le, Sale. 10x50
2 BR
reddi sh. bro w n an d white,
v i ci n it y of N elg h b.orhood and
mobile hom e, your
E ngles Rd . Fa mil y pet . 446 .
choice
$1750, Tri -State
0740
Homes.
Mobile
2-3
1220 Eastern Ave .

0 J WH-ITE RD - L_i k e new
br tck an d f r am e r an c h o rter s
3 la rge BRs , 7 bath s, factory
k 1t che n , fo rmal dtntng rm .,
WW car pe l , gar age, pa tio
a nd large flat lot

N ow ts the ttme to buy Pnces are- lower now because
se ller s don ' t want to carry the house through th e wmte r
Most wdl cons1 der offer s now that would n' t in th e sp ring
If you ha ve a permanent job, don ' t pay r e nt a ny longer
than ab solutely necessMy and bef ore you buy a tratl er
compare •t to owning a horne .

•

A TA N NI SH ye llow and w hite
dog lost On Eas t er n A v &amp;nue
A nsw e r s to t h e n ame ol
Snoopy , Rewar d . Ca ll 446

'I

BABY
FAR M
NEAR
VIN T ON I J 1'1 ac res of
clea n r o lling Land . pond ,
l arge garden spa ce. 2 barns ,
ce llar house. 5 rm s and
ba l h SIB ,500

AGENt:l

Gall1polis, Oh1o

sale

STROUT REALTY

IHE

~r.

Real Estate Broker

H Dilll' Pll

Real Estate For

....:I.

Pass

3NT

uaH:I:J1!&amp;£ttU
The bidding has bEen :

4

Pass

Openmg lead- K •

West

Norlb

Ent \ South
lolo

Pass
1t
Pass
1•
Ry Oswald &amp; J a mes Jacoby
Pass 3 t
Pass ~ •
If you look a t a ll the cards you Pass 4 •
Pass
'
can see tha i Sooth can ma ke You. Soulh, hold
four nolru1]1p by ta king a • K 7 6 4 3 ¥A 3 +9 • A K 7 3 2
successful finesse for the queen What dp you do now•
of hea rts and eventually gethng A- Pats. You like tbe spot you are
an end p lay "a~ainst West.
ln.
A m at ch-pomt pl~yer trying
TODAY'S QUESTION

SEE pur large se lecti of} o f
dtamonds
an d ~ wa~eS
Compa r e our pnces Tawney
Jeweler s
_
278 11
-· -· - · - - - - OHIO ST OKER, W Va lump
coal . ftrewood oro cks, tile.
f or a top scor e might well do
Instea d of 'respond mg one d1a·
cement mortar. Ga l l iPOli S
j ust tha t, ' but a good rubber mond; your parlner responds one
B-loc~&lt;,. Co Ph ·146 HB3
29 ) If br idge player would see th~t heart to yoo r one club a nd rebids

there was a cinch play for his
three notrump contract. .
He would start · proceedmgs
by ducking the first spade and
the next one. Then he
'taki
wou~
cash just ·three club
GRAV EL . lt mestone , sand,
tricks
while· taking care to
Mason san d , ltl l dtrt P 1t r un .
Del 1vered by tile ton .1.16 11..a2 lea ve the h1gher club in dum247 I f
my .
:I

GOT an eye lor ·a buy? Many
i t ems on s p ecta l. Corner
(ra ll s , Ch1lltc oth e Rd .
287 .t f

•

two htarts over your one spade.
What do ycu do now~
Aao..er Mooday
Send $I lor JACOBY MODERN
book to: "Win at Bndge," (clo
this newspaper!: P.O Box-489.
Radio C~y Stat1on. /1/ew Yo rl&lt;.
N. Y 100 .) \
,
,,

•

~:

1

'

''

~:
•

. •,.

•,.
·...:.
''·.,

!~·

'•,I'
,,,.
,.

.,"
'•
•,I,,, .
•,

,.

•'
I

:·

�'

2&amp;-

'!'hi! Sunday Times- Sent!nel. S\Dlaay, J an . 5, 197li

;

'

..

'

.
For Fast Results Use The Sund;iy Times·-Sentinel Classifieds. .
~

72 Che_vr~let Impala

~

holice

Help Wanted

Real Estate For Sale

BABYSITTER weekday s only,
7 · •5 4 ' )0, two c hildr e n Ca l l
S unday 446 498 7, aft er 4.3 0
week day s
3 3

FREE BOOK
TEL LS ST ORY

AN I NTERE ST I NG book called
Ttle Masterv of L tfe w tl! be
sent
to
you
Wtlhout
obl~at i on This book will tell
;~ ~
yo how you may rE'ceive th e cOSMETo_L_ oG~Sr
manage r 's ltc ense to tak.~
untQ e Rosi c rucian me thod
011er establiS h ed ShOP rn R tO
for self unfo l dment in · t he
Grande Ca ll 145 9311
pnvacy of your home Ad
3 II
dreSS ' Scribe Ill Ros icructa n
Order . AMORC . S,An Jose
IMMED IA TE • openmg for 5
Calif 95 1 14
•
faShton show dtrec tors fu l l or
3 1
par t ttm e For mtorma t ton
c all 446 3963 , 9 to 5
YEAR END SALE
Kntl Na c
Yarn Shop , Begmners cro c het
33
and knitting 'lessons . Phone
EX PERIEN CED
ba r te nd er
446 288-1
I3
ahd wattress
Apply K 1ngs
Arm Kntght Club
Rl
7,
CheS h1re
DE A D s to c k r emoved
~0
33
c harge Call 745 5514
207 If
WO M A N to l1v e 111 and t1 e !p m
cll r e of el d er l y ma n Fa mtly
STOP A ND CHAT Brow se or
co ns1sts of man and wife . w1f e
buy
Dec oupage and orher
1S tn g ood hea lt h
Wages
g dt s
Co rn e r
Crafls .
neg ot1a b le Ph 446 9519
Chil l icoth e Rd
3 3
180 rl

•

TWO WAY Radios Sales &amp;
Se r vtce New &amp; use d CB ' s,
pol1ce m on1 to rs. an t ennas .
etc Bob's Citizen Band Radio
EQu i p ., Geor ges Creek Rd ,
Ga llipoli s Oh io 446 4517
212 1f
SW EEPER Repatr , Par ts and
Su ppl ies
P tc k
up
a nd
deltvery
Oav ts
Vaccum
Clean er. I :1 m tie up Georges
Cr eek Road Ph .a46 0294
75 tf

SA LESMA N WA N TED
TEXA S OIL COMPA NY nee d s
dependable man wtto c ~n
work w tl hOUI Su p e r v•~ 10n lfl
Ga l lt polt s ar e a
Co nt,l c l
custome r s Age unimportant,
tlut maturtly is We tr a• n Air
Mall G H D 1ck Pr es . Sou th
western
Petro l eum .
Fl
wor t h. r.:
I J
TE L EP H O NE SOitcr tor s. we
w rll t r a•n Ph 146 4367 a lt er 'J
p m . Monday , January 6
2J

RUS S' S GLASS SERVI CE.
Storm wi n dow s rc pa tred .
auto
g l ass
P l elo g las s,
m trror s. d ec orator and cut to
Stle .&amp; 35 Sec
Ave . ac ro ss
from the P 0 in G allipO l iS
Ph 446 7632
223 7B

wanted To lease Rent
FARMw1thhouse Ph 3792649
23

~or

f Wanted To

Do

,.

' Will babysit •n my home , 445

790 3

o)o 1.,

~-

•

;ade

71 P l YMOUTH D U STER , VB
a ut o, good condilwn . no
reasonable offer re fu sed 256
IJ3 1, alter 1

13

Business Opportunities

FURN I T U RE
U PH O L ST E RIN G .
Spec1al
TIR E D OF TH E
p r ices now thr o ug h Febr ua r y
RETA IL RATR ACE
1975 F r ee es t l m 8tes . Ptck up
an d deliver y
P romp t Ser · 3 YEAR S ago 1 so ld a succe ss f ul
business and started over at
v1ce
age 45 in a n ew f 1eld tha t has
Mow rey's Upholster y
rea ll y boomed . Now I am
Point Pl easa nt, W. Va
t rymg to h tre a person wtlh
675-4154
stm tlar am b111ons and find all
1 11
are In b usmess tor th&amp;rtl
selves . If thi s sounds like vou
CUSTOM sewmg , alter at tons on
an d you have S20.000 op
11 11 types of cl ot h m g , fur s
era t ing cap it al. I c an ge l you
Reweavi ng Ph 446 ·7510 or
in
a
busine ss
t ha t
ts
446 1171 .
depression proof . wh e re yo u
?11 .tf
work on l y 7 mos. a year an d
en ioy l ife In the great oul ·
TY P I N G SE R VICE S W i ll do
door s Do not c on f use this
all k inds o l typmg m my
wll h any franchtse or me r ·
ho me . Call 446 4999 .
tf
c ha n d i sing sch em e PhOn e 1·
254
614 .256 11 13

----------BABVSifTIN
G 7 a m to 5

2-6

w ee kl y Hot mea l s, lots o f
lo ve , ne~t r Ho l ze r . Dial 44ft.
1J16
MOBILE hom e i a cr e co r n er lot
23
on Rt 160 and F loyd Cla r k
Rd . sa ,soo or r en t stso mo
Adul t s only 388 8706 or 4.t6
9369

For Rent or Sale

Lost

Vir~l

· Real Estate For Sale

B.

TEAFORD

WISEMAN

512 Seco11d Avenu e

.

:
B Ull
•
I
•
• I
IS vacan t to t s
su bdiVISton . approx
mtl cs from Gall tpol• s on
good
road
Ul tl tltes
ava1labl e Call now
GOOD " OLD STY L E "
'2 STORY HOME
On Sta te R 1 7 norfh of
Gal ltpOi tS Plenty of room
Gas f urnace On l c ~; e l lot
Only \1 8.500 00
VACAN'f l OT
STATE RT 7
Close fo G all1 pol ts
l eve l
and cl ean
HOU &lt;i l= TRA I L.'ER ON
lOT IOO'lc1 10'
'1 Bedroom
level tor A ll
tor only \6500 00
SACRES
Cl ose to Vmton
House
and 3 bed roo m mobtle
home , drilled well &amp; pump,
modern ktt c hen Wt l h ref &amp;
s tove
A ll
for
on ly
$ 11 900 00
MUST SE l l
G I VE U S A N OFFER
11 Room s, mo d ern sp l tt
level 11ome, 2 f• re pla c es ,
fa m lly ro om. '1 baths , 2 car
garage , basemen t , 1 ac r e
p l us n 1ce l andscaped yard
with to t s of Sh rubb ery
G ood bla c kto p road , 4
mile s fr om Ga ll tPO f tS, lots
of r oom
for
to ts
of
POSS tblitll eS
Wtlh
!h tS
hom e
18S ACRES
1972 7 room home . J
bedrooms , la r ge farntly
room , 2 f ull modern bath s,
etec tn c sto ve. r e f , car
pet tng , J s torage bu 1ldtngs ,
lot s of trees . ap prox 15
acres , cle ared L tn c fen ce
1n CheShtr e Town shtp Ca n
se l l home B. 5 ac res by tt self
and 180 ac r es o f vaca nt
land by 1t s elf or a ll
toget h er
25 AC R ES
6 Rooms
3 bedrooms ,
bath . clec tr 1c s tov e r et.,
a l um s1 dmg, 5 room s of
f urn i t u r e goes , s torag e
but l d1ng , ChiC k en h ouse ,
cel lilr , 10 acres ca n be
cu ll tva ted , 4 acr es o f
timb er
1I acre pa st ure
Only $2 1,900 .00

MORTGAGE MONEY AVA ILABLE

1215.

!f you had bough t a home ltke this 5 yrs ago you would
have saved $7 ,000.00 on t he pur c hase price above . Don ' t
loos. any more - owner mus t sell lht s a ll ractrve 3
bedr oom home with beautiful burlf rn kttchen , 2 b.:l ths.
large ta m ! l y room , 2 car garage, excel len t ne1g hborhood .

Fa rm s a nd Bare {Bear) Land
MOD E RN HOM E SO AC.- Nea rl y new 3 bedroom home•
1
with 2 h ba th s, fam rly n ncfdin 1ng rooms W B. f 1rep lace,
beau f 1ful built· i n k1tch en a nd •s all c lean
140 Ac with old house in need of co mplete r emode l mg tab
Perfect for summer home or sp or ts men . Good t(mber
covers m os t of th e gently ro lling to hill land
150 A c good older home wrth bath and ce ntral hea t , 35 A
bottom, 50 A tdlable, 75 A posture Good set of bu!ldrng s,
close to Thurmo n

153 A c w1th home and large ba,rn House ts unde r repa 1r at
pre sent. New rn sulation roo f. bath etc Exce lle nt fla t crop
land, pl enty o f pa s ture and balan ce in t 1mber $45,000
m cl udes mcJchmery and a good buy a t th at. F1nancmg
availabl e
B U Y IN AREA
J h1S ve r y
nt ce b 1 l evel •nclude s 3
bedrooms , 2 f ull baths.
large butll 1n kt tc hcn , sun
deck . huge famt ly room
and g ar .1ge Mint cond tlto n
in ex ce llent loca t1 011, 'l
mtlcs out Prtce redu ce d
from $33 ,000 10 S29 ,900 You
c&lt;1n spend more an d not
buy better

.].)6 Q)](}

leo P. Kmg, Assoc1ate

Y O U CAN AFFORD THIS
- Assu m e pre se nt 7'} P et

Homt' Ph . l ·~b ·199-J

l'o a n Monlh l y paym e nt
SI BS 00 lov ely J bedroom
home
wit h
ca rp e lt n~
th1ougt1 out , huqe butlltn
ktt c hen l entral a1 r , 11
yr s old

Mobile Homes For Sale

Wantett To Buy

J IJ N K AU T O , Scrap metals . Ph
J88·877 6.

1-12

2 BR; mobile home . n ice
n ear !OWn . 446 4051

Lo l
26

----------~

T I-ST ATE

I 18&gt;&lt;5 M sv Sl em
2BR UX281BR
BOAROING &amp; AKC PUPPIES . lOxSO Bren strall er 2
K &amp; p Ke nn el s, 388 827~ Rt
554 . v, ml e~ts t o f Por ter

JOS.tf

8obb n t'Oo dle B o ut iqu e
P R OFESSIO N A L groo mi ng by
a p poin tm ent on l y . Ph . Bobbie
C11s to . 4-1 6 · 1~ 44
'2 12 If

lbxso

M ar1etta 2 BR
lOx SO W o l ver i ne 2 B R
IO;ocS O Mar l ette 2 BR
10x50 Be l mon t 2 BR
lOlCSO Kaywood 2 BR
44 6-1511

--------------.-

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

-------------For Lease

0008.

J.tf

. Will Trade
Nice Building
Lot For •
GoOd Tractor
PH.
7

L OV E LY RANCH H OME
Y ou w 1ll l ike th e three large
be drooms , tamily ro om , wif e
appro ved kitchen , l 1 1 baths .
l1v1ng room Wl l h f 1rep 1ace .
basement, large two ca r
garage With etec tr •c eye
N ice rev er lot on R t 35 .
GA R F I E LD A VE . N ice
two bedroom horne with a
bea ul! f UI v1ew of the river ,
fullY turn 1s hed , g Mage anrt
ntce lo t

DETRO I T Mobi le Hom e 10 X 50 .
excellent c ond t t •on
I d ea l
home f or widow or w 1dowe.r:\
PINE RIDOE COLLI-ES
or
ne wlywed ,
one
~
AKC Reo . Col l ies , sab le an a
bed r o om . larg e l 1vt ng ro '
white (614J 256 1167
an d kitchen . To see. ph 4 6
28J .If
1425 or 446 3949 .
JOB 1f
AKC Reg . Ge rm an She pherd
pu p p!es S.50, 2.56 ·68 46
B&amp; S MOBIL E HOM ES
308· 4
Pt. Pl ea sant
197 0 Con c ord 12¥ 60 2 BR
1967 ( h ll mp ion l2x60 ') BR
1962 N ew Moon 10)(5 5 2 BR
1968 Champ •on 12)(60 2 BR
1966 Liber t y J2)(50 2 BR
1957 Great Lake 8XJ5 2 BR
Ll K E n ew , 3 BR home . car p et.
ce nt r al air , gariQe . l a r ge fl at
rot . S22S per month . d eJ),.os il
and references requ ired 446

_
NOTICE

llutter,

G•llfpolls. Ohio CSUl

Pels

N E W BRI CK RAN CH
Very
n 1ce
w i th
t hr ee
bedroOms ,
l 11
ba t hs .
firepla ce, fully carpeted , two
cAr garage, loca ted on a n ~ee
lo t 5 rn rles from town

11 , AC R E S Good ba rn ,
other outbutld tngs arl d an o l d
ho use , n1ce pla ce rn th e
Po SSi bl e
l and
co u ntry
con tr &amp;i.f to QuaiJfred buy er
1S AC R ES ·- Good sma ll
farm , has a two bed room
11lObtle hom e. large barn ,
large. pond being buil l ,
toba cco b ase . loc M ed 5 m~~ s
h orn to wn in ci ty se ll
dtsl r ic t Better hu rry , lilts
wo n ' t lils l long
F H A .Jnd
a va ilab le

VA

t1nan ctrl 9

'

WE BUY, SEU.. TRADE
.
Eveni ngs Ca ll
Jo hn M. Fu ller -14 6-4327
~ ee Johnson 25 6-674 0
Ooug
Wettler ho lt 446 -4244

se ll anything for
·ai\yb&lt;&gt;dy at our Auction
or in your home. For
and pickup
,SIJrVi'ce call256·"67 alter 5

R••rl Mr~l1ee , 446 - ln~

Every S.turday Nlghl
Al7p.m .

SWAIN
AUCTION SERVICE
&amp; Olive

Tel. 614-446-1998

Pllimbing &amp; H!!ating
GE N E PLA N TS &amp; SO N
PL UMB IN G - HeC111nQ
A1r
Condlltonmg . 300 Foul-til A-..e
Ph J46 1637
J8 If
STAN D AR D
Pl umbm g · Heatin9
214 T h trd Av e. , 44 6·378 2
18) .If

RU SSE L L ' S
P LU M BI NG&amp; HE AT IN G
Galli polis , 446 -4782

____________ ___ _

J

NEAR WATERLOO
10 A
(3 A l evel ) , pl en ty good tr ee
water , 12' x 60 ' El khM t
Tr cn lcr : good f un11 ture Onl y
\c 10,500
MILL CREEK RD ·'13
M od el , 1 bdrm ., 12 x 60 '
mob il e home , f ull furn• Shed
li lt ac re s l 'l n d Prt ced tor
QU• ck sa t e at $17 ,900
J' ~

MILE S from town . 5 rm
fra rn e horne ar 1d J A . lan d
Steam
Car pe l ov~ r H W
heat , 1 cn r ca r port Prtct'
$12 ,500
ST R T 160
N rar 111~ w
sect1onal home , 8 b1 g rms 2
ba ths , alt ca rp e t, ~~~ e lcc
Pr ice o f ~2 7 , 000 tncluctes
r ang e , D W d1s dr&lt;1pes &lt;1nd
cen a 1r
PATRIOT
7 J&lt;mS . 1 story
W1tl1 b.'lse , fur heat , cen &lt;11r,
bath , carp et over II W , 25 '
t&gt;eaut1 f UI kttCI1cn ca b tnets
Has a bar n and ' . A flat tot
S18.000

· •FBrmowners Policy-Complete Protection In One Polley
•~ Modern Mobile Homeowner Polley.
·· ~ Cost Fire Polley&lt;
e A Special Multi-Peril Pacflege Policy for Your Busl n~ss .

compare our rates- with your present
We know we can save
money.

'

2890

I

l

J7 1 : ACR E S, 6 rm house . on
good bl i!ck top road Slate Rt
21 8, Wtl h IObl'ICCO base Phone
25 6 6769
JOB 6

--------...... - RANC H O Clm\PAN

1

Realtors - Auchon ee ,.s
44 6 0001 . 367.03 00 \
NI CE buildtng tot . F a trf1 e ld .
Budd to su1 t Five &lt;1cre hOme
S1 l e $5 .000. J2 A farm , new
l1ome , S24 ,900
27 1 It

Wanted· To Buy
LAN 0 Approx '25 to JO a~c re s
Ca ll any t tme 446 1588
30B ·6

WANTED ·
Household Goo{ts, Antiques, Farm
Equipment, Consignments for Public
Auction Jan. 11 at Porter Beach AC
Station. Ca II Today .

446-0001 or 446-0002

Ph. 446 /699
51) :.;,;cond Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

RANCHO CO. AUCTIONEERS
&amp; REALTORS

"

YO UR DR E AM COME

TRUE .
SPR IN G VALLEY

)

3 &lt;ll '' BR , cook',s de li g ht
ktlc h en , p l &lt;'!yroom &amp; ta mtly
room, .11r con cl, car peted . 2
c.1r gar.1ge By ow n er, 446 ·
08 18

__

243 t f

B A NK S TRE E SE RVIC E _"!
FREE esti m a t es, l iab ilit y ~
suran ce Pr un in g , t r 1mm tn g
an d cav 1t y wo r k , tr ee a nd
stump remova l Ph 446 4953
73 'tf

PRO T EC T your mobile h om e.
wtt h T I E DOWN ANCHORS ·
Ca ll Ron Ski,dmore, 446 -1756:
after3pm
1
221 tf1

• 3 BR, full ba semen!, ful ly
carpe ted , rn c i ty sc ho o l
drstrict. Ph. 446 -9373 .

7 ROOM " CE N T U RY "

HOME

Lo wN R 1ver Rd , 3 BR . t wo
• } &amp; 1 full ba th , 2 fi re pla t.: es ,
scr eened in bre eze way ,
bM n 3 9 acres Sho wn by
appo m ttne nt
Ph
156 6786
a ft e ~ S pIll Aven Lus k

I

T H OMA S Fa tn ElC. t er m tn atln g t
Co T ermite an d Pest Contr ol ,:
Wh eelersburg. OlltO
- - - - - - - - - - -- - - -

I

F RENCH C I TY B LO CK , 446 I
3608 , located at Kerr B et h el :
Kemper Hollow tntersectto n 1
150 tf
- - - - - - -- - - - - - - -

I

GA R AGE , a ttt c an d basemen t
• leant ng Tras h ha uli ng Free:
est1mates Ph 44 6 0355 or 446 1
2950
I
2 1B If '
- - -- -------·-- - - '
DRAFTING SERVICE
:
D ESIGNER - Draftsman ...,;trf'
To p o S1le, r emod e lin g .,
1'm erc 1a l ,
or
n ew
,
den t 1a l pl ans
15 yea r s_,
t',.: ,H~ rlen ce rn c rvrl and a r
ch1tec tur a 1 Ph 1 682 7498
2B5 ·1f

'"

O~l
' S I · kG E
TH !: LE . • F
SI~C ·

IN

'

N A TIO f\ ' ULJ
SELL ERS
Ph . 446 •· .. J

I"'RUsSEU
I
mJ,
REALlOR
446-1066
I

UPPLIES

BidW e ll. Ohio
J T u nd co l d p last i c pip e and
f 1tt rngs,sew e r and dra in p i pe,
k ttche.n sink s, flb er.l gass tub s 1
and sh ow er , vani t ies and Bl ue
R id ge P a int Ph . JB8 ·8576.
New Onwer s
Arnold Smith and
Charl es Smith

231 tl '
--------------ELEC TR ! CAL
se rvi ce.
r e m ode l rn g. gu tt e r w o r k
Free es trm a t es CaH 446 -2582. ,
a fte r 5 p m
3Q4 If

REALTY
H locust Sf.
Howa r d Branno n. Brok er
Off . 446·2674
lucill e Brannon
E v e. 446 -1226 or 446 -2 674
BEAUllt· UL6Rit..K. - n ea r
tow n on 112 ac r e, w ell ca red
to r l ot. 3 B R , 1112 bat h , w .w
ca r pet , s p ac ious b a nqu e t
style k i tche n w it h o w &amp; a ll
the bud t in for comfo rt . F ull
d tv td ed · base m ent, paneled
doub l e ga r age, c on crete
dr tve &amp; pat io Th e pn ce IS
Onl y SJ6 ,000

K OTALIC LANDSCAPING
R IO GR A NDE , OHIO
COMPLETE PROGRE SSIVE ·I
LANDSCAPING
SHR UB S,
TREES,
R O CK

G ARD ENS.

L arge
ol d er
t- · me
ove rlook• no l he c•tY , IO l 120
l o t · s1ze ,
3
be d ro.~ m ,
basemen! with gas f urna ce ,
Ctty wale~ and sewer , p ri ced
$26.500
.

Road , c1 t y wo t er , gas an d
sewer, large lot , stov e and
re fr tgerator included . tn t11e
Ga llipolis sch ool d 1Strtcl,
Pr tced S22 ,500

HOL STEI N CO N CR E T E. all
types o f c on c r e t e w o r ,k ,
foo t i ng s , wa ll s, co n c r e t e
f ! ni s hin g, ca rp en te r work
Free es t 1mat es Ph J67·04 17
or 446 7795
276 80

NEW and NEAR
NEW
HOMES - 3 BR with 1'12 &amp; 2
bath s . P r rced S25,S OO
$29,500
2 ACRES - On e stor y J BR
hom e, la r g e eat In k itch en &amp;
dmmg roo m , 1 c ar garag e, 1
b arn &amp; c h 1cken ho u se
Lo c at e d a l Ce nt e rpoi n t .
$22.000

Electric Contractor s
CO MP-L ETE e lec lri ca l servi ce.
Gal l tpo l is, Ohi o Ph 36 7-0311 .

'

287 tf

BTU , S95 or bes t offer
J46 9654

185,000
Phone

~-------

2. REAL ESTATE -

83 ACRES: MORE OR LESS,
LOCAT ED JUST OFF WHEATON ROAD IN MORGAN
TOWNSH IP. - Properly includes old barn and two dug
wet IS Plenty of l ocu st posts and some oak. tl m ber.

Above real eslate ( 1. and 2.1 fo be so ld a t the Beach AC
Sta t ion at 1. 00 p .m . - owner reser ves ri ght to re ject
highest bid . Terms: 10 Pet. day of sale - l;&gt;ala nc e in 30
doys
SER VICE STAT ION EQUIPMENT -

like new a ir

t ofnpressor , fire cnanger. battery cflarger, jacks, tool s,
other m1scel la neous ite m s .

ANTIQUE S &amp; HOUSEHOLD GOODS - Ofd, old cl ocks,
crocks. churns, dishes, tables, 5-stri ng banjo, oil paintings , mov ie projector and screen , fireplace scr een, old
and
new 8·track
refr i gerators.

tapes,

FARM EQUIPMENT -

apartment

gas

r ange,

Ford lrac iO!' mower, garden

tradors, old tract or. d1scs , plOws A l so other fa rm
equipment
(Sellers: Bri ng consignments by B a . m . Januar y 11, 1975)

TERMS : CASH •
LUNCH AVAILABLE
. OWNER : FRANKLIN E. BEACH, SR.
Sa le Conducled By : Rancho Co. Auctioneers &amp; Brokers
250 J ackson Pike, Ga llipolis, Ollio 45631 , Phone: 1-614·446·
0001
AUCTIONEERS : Jay SM ppard, DtnYer IR-.11 Higley. ·
Call J ay Sheppard fo r infor mation or inspection of RNI
Estate.

1973 PONTIAC VENTURA 2 DR.
1973
MERCURY COMET GT
and
Air

REMOD E LIN G, a ll t y p es bu t It
in ca bin ets , a l u m m um sidrng ,
roofing ,
pan el in g
Free
es t i m at e, 245 56~7
282 JO

all extras .

1973 CHEVY NOVA CUSlOM
Air , p

s,

P.B.,

v i ny l top .

-

"SEARS BEST"
CAR tape d eck, FM rad•o
combtnalton w1 th spe ak ers
S65 ·R CA P or tab l e ste re o
phonogrirph w1 th stan d S50
Ph 416 &lt;1196

1972 VW, automatic, stick shift, sharp__ -:--------- 11695
1971 VW, 4 speed, sharp___________________ 11495
1971 FORD LTD 4 DR .. air condition. _________ _; __ 11495
1971 PLYM. FuRY Ill 4 DR., air cond.l PS, PB------11495
1972 OLDS DELTA 2 DR. HT•• ------ -----~----· 11995
air cond. PSt PB, cruise contJVI
.
1968 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 OOOR----------- - ---1595
1969 VW FASTBACK----- ------------ -------1695
v CHECK WITH US BEFORE YOU BUY

TW O
rtdt n g
hors es,
On e
H ackney Pony JBB 8155
J3
1973 TOYOT A ~tckup truck ,
camper top for 1 ~ ton wide
long bed tru c k . bo th tn ex
celle n t cond il ion 446 0497
J3

For Sale
1967 C H EVY
.!.16 7797

VOLKSWAGEN

Pickup 2B J. Ph
308 9

1

DEFENSE • DEFENSE DEFENSE

70 FO RD PiCKU P V8.wldebed ,
low mt leage, $147 5 or" best
offer .146 9654
13

AREYOUPREPAREDFOR .

------~-

CARPETS and l1 f e too can b e
beau t rf ul tf you u se Blue
L ust r e.
Rent
e l ectr. c
sh ampooer
$1
Central
Supp l y
36

CONSIDERABlY HIGHER GASOLINE PRICES

COM PLETE
bed
a nd . 2
d r essers. Stnger peda l sew 1ng
rnachme A l so el ec t nc por
ta ble se w in g mac hin e Can be
se en at 1902 Er~stern Ave

AND

2J

·GALLI POLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH

POSSIBLY GASOLINE RATIONING!

-·------~------- - :·--

1639 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLI~, 44_6-12~3

FARM EQUIPMENT
Good 1956 Ford Tractor, 2
bottom turmng plow, Pickup
disk, 6 11. mower, cor n
picker , 2 wneel utility lrailer

- ~'~

12350. Ph . 388-8463 .

~ · ( .'~
.

C.:A P!~. EASY
W l~l- Be TOLD
PRINCI! ~9 TRAY E'L-

PLANS 1"-' DUE TIME-!

'

100'
:~Gal/a)?. -~

ME'AP.t'o\I HILE . P J(AY
E,_ JOV 'r'O UII:SELVES
AS MV PA LACE:

" Ui: STS

.___ . ~~-- - -

I'.J.

"-:' .;"~,,~~'&gt;
;·~ ~!' · ~
~~ :!. •"' - ..

-,

,•, :'1 " l'l

.. ~

·-

i"

.
. '

Bee" use of the huge monetary outlay to the oil
exporting countries for crude oil, the U. S. has
to take action to reduce these imports .
Regardless of what course is taken it will hit
the automobile driver in the pocketbook. "
Now is the time to put yourself in a qualify car
that is a real gas miser. The E. P. A. '75'
gasoline ratings show V. W. to be the most
economical family of cars built in the world..
Some models gave highway mileage up to 38
miles per gallon.

M&amp;M
ROOF IN G &amp; Spoutin g Shingl e
and Bu fi dUp ro of . H ot and
Co ld pr ocess
Home im ·
p r ove m ent m g en er a l
For
fr ee est imat es, p hon e Rob ert
Mea d e, 38 8 81 14, B i dw ell.
O h 10
263 ff

Join the smart crowd . Join the switch
to a Volkswagen.

------~--- - -- -----&lt;

D

P Mart in &amp; Son s W a t er
De l tvery
Ser v1 c e .
Y our
p a tr o n age
w i ll
be
ap .
p r eda t ed Ph 446 ·046 3.
21f

IJT[LE ORPHAN ANNIE

Don Watts V. W., Inc.

LITTLE

G I L L E N WA T ER 'SSE PT IC
TA N K
CL EA NIN G
A ND
R EP A IR
A·L SO
HOU S E
WRECK IN G Fh
44 6 9499
Es t a blished •n 1940

,.-___,~

Upper Rt. 7

Gallipolis, Oh.

' ,,.,

.,

U • lt~

For Sale

191 3 I NTERNAT I O N AL
se r i es , latiUm ax le Ph
6574

1800
306 6

l'L ABNER

Located ; at the Gallia County Highway
Garage, 2112 miles, west of Gallipolis, Ohio.
The sale consists of 4 trucks and 2 cars from
the Highway Department, and also the chatel
property of the old Gallia County Home . .
TRUCKS: 1962 '12 ton Ford, 1962 F500 Ford,
two 1966 Chevy Dumps - 60 series.
CARS: 1970 Ford, 1972 Plymouth, used batteries, used tires, scrap iron. and
miscellaneous items.
·

1964 OLDS M OB I LE l uxury ,
mode l. good sha pe. set of
r adia l tires. s txe L R 70, 15 Ph
992 -2508 or see a t 13 1 Laure l
Sl , Pomeroy, 0
......_
306 6
4

t-- L&gt;OW farm tracto r . mowe r .
c ult iva t or, p lows Make ofl er .
4tl 6 9654 .
13
~--- --- ----

I

type s of living r oom sui tes,
e~e tra
ch es ts,
b ed r oom
suites, dinette set s. Th1 s and
much more. Open 9' t o
6
d:JS pe r w eek.

s

--

l 'nscrambl t these fout Jumbl es.

one letter to each square, to

or~A N D

NEW c l r.ct r i c guita r
w 1 th amp 'S t85 or bes t offer
,u '1 965 1
I3

LOCU~T

62 -17

II

Il J I II

t

G/NTHK

PIHse ~ole that sale of trvclcs and atri !Will be sold
promptl)&lt; at 10:30. Also note !hat this safe contains many

~

I

I

I I

~ircled

Now arTanr• lhe
letters
to f orm the surpnse answer, aa

:=::::A::::=~·=:P=.::~==~·=~·;':"~K«::•:•:.:.ted::_bly the above cartoon .

.L,_

Rne anttqun l
·
AUCTIONEERS:
Tommy J .. Sl4!warto1Gallipolis, OIIio
· t.ee Johnson of Crown City, Ollio

=..!·= =:.=AIISW8
= 11re::.:.--' [ I I I

_!!
. .=:d
.-. .

J

l ..\M'Itf'rt 'tlmu l•' J

I Juntlol •• : MAGIC

lr•lrr•f&gt;"

··1

KNEEl lr.t' 0 AI R

hil T• t&lt;E AIM

'

MARTYR
o
•

\ 1,..... r : H'htrl /11 d11 if HlllllmfH' Ill m n r.l ' fl

'

.'

NOllTil

. 862
¥ A J4

· ~n

• KQti 4

tl&lt;8

EAST
• 51
•Q 952
tl0 96 4 2

olo 913

• 1,0 8

WEST
. KQ .J 93

"' 8 6 3

SOUTII 11)1
t AJ 5
olo A J52

'

.

.

fence posts

Ct~ ll

25 6

297 -H

/

Both \' ulne rablc

'

Alter th1s s t ar t he would
th row West '" with a spade a nd
rela x West would c ash three
spade tncks . Two diamond s
would be d1 scarded !rom the
North ha nd and a diamond and
hea rt !rom South.
Wes t would have to lead a red
card to give South the rest of .
•
the trick s. .
Why Was it necessary lor
South to take car e to lea ve the
h1gh club in dummy' Because if
he hadn 't done tha t West could
lead a hea rt ; Easl could refuse
to play his queen and there
would be no way for South to
score three heart tricks .
iN J.:W!ii 'AI'EH I:!N'fb: lt l'IUSt::: ASSN .l

Wu l • North

Eut

South

Pass

I NT
Pass

245 ) f.

TYP E S o f
building
male rtai S, block. bri ck. sewer
pipes, w1ndows, linte l s, et c
Claude Wmte r s, R io Gran d e.
o Phone '2&lt;15 5121 after 5
123 tf

·There Is also a new-like dryer, lelevis fon a nd a few
· electr ical appl iances. One fO!'ge and tools, vise, saws,
hand tools' for gun repairs, shoe lasf, 2 (drill presses I,
' efectrlc dr ill and sanders, 2 lard kettles, ice box, roto
tiller, 'lawn mower, lawn tools, and other tools and items
too numerous to mention.
TERMs-CASH
Lunch will be 11rvtcl by the
G. Ilia Collnty SenlorCltlnns

A cinch play for 3NT contract

NAOM I 's Wtg St yltng
Se ll
and st yle ·all fashtons W1g s,
w1glcts fnll o:; PhOtiC 38 8 8J OS
.
286 If
GOO D CIPan lump a;d. ~Joke r
co al
Carl
W tnl er s . R lo
Gri'lnde Ph .2&lt;15 5 11 5

1

1967 Pl YMO U T H F UR Y 3, VB
en g1ne, 3 18 . 51. 000 ac tu a l.
"mil es, goo CI c on d it ion, U OO.
Ph 67 5.1175 o r 675 3073
13

WIN AT BRIDGE

• A 10 7
¥ K 10 7

ALL

l I

69 M E R CU R Y M a r au d er , " Ai r
con d ., p .s, P 'b , g ood gas
mi leage an d w or k ca r \155 or
best offe r 446 9654
13

N ew GMC
Tr u c k H e ad quart ers
1968 1 , 1 · GMC P1ckup
19M I T GM C
1970 1 T Chcv Pick up
197.\ 1. T Chev Pt ck up
t96R 1, T GMC Ptckup
196 ~ 1
T GMC P 1ckup
1%9 1 1 1 GMC P ickup
1971 ' , T r orct P 1ck up
1968 1: T GMC P tck up
19!1 ') 1 Dodg e Cab and ChassiS
1967 11 T GMC P1 ck up
196B I ] T GMC PtCkt:p
1968 1 : T GMC Ptck up
1 968~': 1
Ch ev y Pt ck up
1971 GMC Suburban
1967 1.· 1 f-ord Ptck up
SOMMERS G M C
TRUCKS , I NC
1 33 P m e St .
446 -2532
147 If

fo rm f o u r ur drnary Vtords.

[flows

For Sale

For Sale

Ph. 446-9230-----·

JJlY~M® /kJ lclo.,&amp;/.J .-J 11"-

numerous to mention .

I·

Kanauga -Ga llipolis

Factory Oulle l Sal e. All

_____________ _

FURNITURE FROM THE COUNTY HOME
Over 200 stone jars. twenty (5-10.301 gallon stone jars,
numerous fruit Iars, approximately 35 wcioden chairs
(straighl backs and rockers), 40 Iron beds, 18 iron beds
with brass knobs, wicker furniture. numerous 011k tables .
and dressers, wash stands,, old barber chair or df!l1tal ,
chafr, library table, roc:l&lt;ers, while wooden kitchen cha irs,,
cne large oak table wfth e ight matching chalfs, leather
bottoms and backs; mallresses, pillows, gas lights with ·
fluted llg_ht globes. trunks, love seats, china cabinet wfth
curved glass, plano, cane bottom c hairs, lawn furniture,
several dlsMs. and other furniture and items too

.,

PARSON'S
FURNITURE

256

For Sale

L!Ml: STONE for d rtv ewu yS
C~ r l Wtn tcr s Ph on e 245 5115
245 If

- 169 -tf

Thursday, January 9, 1974, 10:30 A.M. :

,.

Fulfy equ ipped, onl y 12,000 miles.

I J

F OR yo ur Tir e a nd Ba tt er y ST A N D I NG t1mb er
Ph
388
need s, com e to Sea r s Ti r e
8490
Shop rn Th e Sil ve r Br tdge
:u
P laza
136 tf B F T T RUCK ca mper , slee ps 4
-----wrth r efrrg , S60 0 Ph ]67
RICE ' S NEW&amp; U5EO FURN
0226
S~ALY MATTRESSE S S49 9S,
J 6
COMPARE AT B 9.95. 8S4
Second , 446 -9S2 J.
197J ~hevro l e t Caprice
298 .tf
Station wagon . eHellent
co nd iti on, $3,295 1 1970
USED FURNITURE
Chev r o l e t Ptcku p , ru n s g ood
G E Dryer l! ke n ew. b edroom
$1,495 l n qut r e day at 675 ·4340,
su i te Wtfh matt r ess and box
ext 143 or eve n1ng 614 388
s~ri ngs .
Cor bm &amp; Sny der
81B I
J 6
r urn .
301 lf

PUBLIC SALE

el u d es land and 2 bay st ation s 36'x90', und e rground tank
· and pumps . approxima t el y three ( 3) acr e s, more or less.
1
Inc ludes wa ter tap and septic

P B,

•2397

•2997

For Sale

2 PAR CELS OF REAL ESTATE
FA RM EQUIPMENT . HOUSEHOLO GOODS
SE RVI CE STATION EQUIPMENT
SAT URDAY , J ANUARY 11 , 1975--TIME : 10 A.M.
PLAC E: PORTER , OHIO SA LE WILLBEHELDRAIN
OR
SHIN E
1. IUAL ESTAT E - BEACH AC .STATION AT PORTER,
OH IO - Junct,on of Rt 160 a nd Rt. 554. Real Estate In·

1974 PONTIAC LeMANS 2 DR. HL~-----------; 13695
Air and all ex tras .

280 If

BO B'r

POPE ' S E tectr tca r Con trac t in g .
Indus t ria l , c omm er c •a l an d
r esr d ent tal . Ph . d ay 38 8 8747
o r eve n rn gs , J88 8657
I
283tf

3805

OVERHE~a s h e ater ,

P S,

v

WAS $2695

DOZ ER wo rk , cl ea r ing , ex
cavat mg , s tump rem o val,
b ush ~ og gin g . Ph . 446 0051

SeiVices Offered

Rodney VtllaQe II , seven
tlou s es availab l e' S532 00
down with t h e balan ce paid
ove r a 33 yea r per iod A ll
three
bedroom
tlo m es ,
ca rpeted , ga r age , el ec trtc
heat

FIL ES, cabm e ts, fll mg sup
pli es, d esk s, offi ce char rs
!, imm ons Pt g &amp; Off 1ce E q ui p
306 t r

c l ea n ca rp e t s wtth Blue
Lus tre
R ent
elect rt c
sham po oer
$1
Ce ntra l
Supply
J06 6

4 Door , automat ic
28,22 1 mil es .

WAS $3395

.-:-F-oR a -,o;:~ e r, dOne feeli ng ."

----

'3497

Station wagon , a ir, la pe , 11.900
ex tra ni ce .

Pa ul Smith , 24 hr . w r ec ker
se r vice Ph 245 5034 or 446 ·
9311
.
263 If

'

GENERAL CONTRACTING
Ho m e improvem e nts an d ad
d it io ns Roofi n g , v tn y l std tng .
Ca ll 446 0668 or 245 5138..
152 56

Phone 614· 446-9777 or 446·

3592

1969 I M P ALA Wtlh .1 1r J dr
n 1ce . m1 tn tow scvenlles
Also 19 72 H onda , excelle nt
con d $5 .000 ac tu a l rn 1l es Pll
'l J5 S685

207 -If '

outbuildings, tobacco base.
mineral rights &amp; 1 tenths mi .
road frontage on blacktop

W O R K, hand ru b b ed
taquer wo rk . Ex p ert rep a! r
iob Sa ti sf ac ti on gu a ran t eed
F r ee es t tmates . 446 9654 .
16

JIM'S FARM
EQUIP. CENTER
Rt. 35 W. , Gallipol is, Ohto

WAS $3895

1973 CHEV. MALIBU 1973 BUICK APOLLO

•

Used too l s of a ll k ind s.

nice fami ly car .

•3397

For Sale

SPECIAL SALE
New Long T r acto r s
New Holland hay tools
Used FO!'d 4500 backhoe·
loade r
MF135 gas &amp; Ds l
MFl l O gas &amp; Ds l
1-MF 175 Dsl
1-MF 50 ga s w-P S.
Ferg . 20-35·40
1 Ford 2000. W·live P TO
Ford Jubilee
Ford 641
J-8 N Ford

4 dr. hdtp ., 26,501 m iles . AM-FM,

custom

WAS$3795

GALLI POLIS, 0 .

For Sale

AM - ~M,

'

'

TRI· STAR

'\
FARM FOR SALE
13 miles north of Gallipolis,
124 A., good house, barn, 2

A n 1ce three bed r oom home .
good har dwo od f loo r s, lar ge
ex t ra nice klf chen , c ab inets,
ull tty r oom , gas furn ace ,
batn ,
sma ll
basemen 1.
w a lktng d i stan ce to sc hool ,
lo t 42x 142, w d l sel l on la nd
c ontract with a r easonable
down payment , $ 15, 500

2 dr . hdlp ., a ir,
inter ior .

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FR EE rnsp ec 11 on Ca ll 446 ·-3245.
M erritt O' De ll , Op er ator by
Ex t erm inal T ermi te Ser v1ce ,
10 Be lmont D r .
267 tf
T OO L
sha rp en 1ng ,
saws ,
sctss or s. s he ars. hom e and
ga rd en toots
Sha rp Sho p ,
A ll ey rea r . 147 Second .
216 If

road. Ph . 388-8463.

1973 BUICK LeSABRE 1973 BUICK LeSABRE

'r'OL)

3 ACRES on St . R t 160 w if h
12'x 65' mobil e hom e li ke
n ew J BR , deta c hed garag e,
pon y b a rn . A real good buy

J bed r oom hom e on Bulav tll e

A LL

GUARA NT E ED . P a tio and
poo l l andsCa pi ng St on e, Si! nd ,
coa t, sh r ubber y t nmmtng
D ump t r uck se r v ices
245
9131
187 .If

ISl ACRES - Loc at ed 12 m i .
dO A
f tllab l e,
from ci t y
ba l an ce in t 1mb er &amp; pa st ure
w i t h plenty coa l 3, 000 lb
tob acco bas e, 2 barn s, on e
st or y hom e r emod e led &amp; in
good co nd tt !On .

Newly cons tr ucted log c ab in ,
ba seme n t , sp r ing , septtc
lank , r ese r vo i r , 11' ~ acres,
pr tce d a t $ 14,'100

EASTERN AVE .

GALL_
IPOLIS
·cHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH
'

$2495
WOOD MOTOR SALES

12x 60 M obil e Home One m 11e
fro m h oSp1 t a1 A d ul t s Pll 446

E ,E AN S PIPE &amp;

I RAN NY BbACKBURN, BRANDi MANAG .~ [

J bedroom home on T exas
1
Road , 1 acre,
ba th. some
pane ll ing , tn sul ated. g a r age.
pr ic ed r edu ced lo Sll ,500
Owner has moved fro m state
anct IS anxio us to se ll

HOUSE
FOR SALE

....
...

•
•

---------------•

I

PUBLIC AUCTION

... VMPLETEL Y remodeled . 2
bed r oom hom e Wtlh 4 62
acres Close to town . Call !-16

Leadingham Agency
.

Ph . 379 -2133

850
' •es

35 -

tt rr• I t .
ava •b l e
dt v

O WN ER
Wil l
HE L P
F IN A NCE - Modern hom e
6
rrn s,
ba t h ,
o ff ers
basem ent a nd over I Je re of
ro lt 1nQ lanrt.. J us! l i sted
$15 ,500

80 A farm . Wheaton Rd
76 A
Bulavtlle Porter Rd
Baby Far m . Clark Evan s

j _U&gt;W, Cost Auto lnsurance-&lt;ompare our rates

t 'l.Dw Cost Homeowner Polk:y.
•lbw Cost Homeowners Polley for Renters .

ALBERT EH MAN

W a t er De liv er y Ser v ice
P a i no ! St a r , Gall1po l is

A DDI SON TW P
N ew
sec l iona t homers a ll el ec tnc
for your convenience and
com fort Features 3 BRs ,
bath , shag carpet, k 1tc he n
w tl h
r ange ,
hood
and
re f r.gcrator Sttuated o n a
larg e flat l ot on a B T rd

uJ

Sm a l l far m 50 acres mo r e or
less. a ll clean Wtt ll !mproved
pasture , develop ed sp r 1ng ,
3'7 r'nde s f rom the hosp tt al.
two bedroom hom e. la r ge
ba th ,
furnace ,
some
c abin e t s, barn J6x40 La n d
a nd ba r n prtce d at S21 ,SOO
Land , bar n and dwe ll !ng
pr i c ed at S36,500

""m

W Hil E RD
N ew
br 1ck and f r am e , J bdrtns ,
all elec , all carp el , l• v r oo Ill
15')(16' . krf an d dtn a 1ea 13
"' 26' 2 ba t hs 2 car g&lt;~r nnd
1 :1 A
fla t lot Price 'fil l 500
0

197 t r

D EW I TT ' S Pl-U MBlNG
AND H EAT IN G
Route 160 at Everg reen
Phone U6 ·27lS
....,.
18 7 H

Of fi ce P h 446· 169'4
E vening s
Ch arles M Nea l, 446 - 15A6
J Mtchae l NeaL 446-1503
Nea l , 446 -7358

ST
R T J'i
Nell r new ,
11~ ba t hs a l t
brtck , 5 r ms
clec , all c.:voet H W tnrn .
co pp er plum bing. '1 eM qar
W1lh elec ct oo r and loc&lt;lted
on a lo t 100' x 180 ' (fenced !
AS ktn g SJ9 YOO

Rd

CARTER ' S PL U M B I N G
AN D H EATING
Cor . Fou,. lh &amp; Pine
Phone 446 -3888 or 446 -4477
165 If

Writes ~II Types ·ef Insurance for
Your Auto. Heme or Business
Rep~nt , Llghtnln,g Rod M~tual
lnsur'C!Ince C.ompany

NEA L REA LTV

...•

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

1

N o e njoymen t , however
tn co n s ider ab lc , is co nf in ed to
the prese nt m omen t A man
tS t he ha p pre r for ltte from
hav•ng
made · once
an
agreeable tour , or l tv ed fo r
a ny l e ngth of ftme wt th
pl e asant people, or en1oyed
any co ns tderable •nterval o f
mnocent pleasur e.

15 A fa rrn 5 rrn hou se w1 th
bath. rural Wafer, located 5
n11 from town on blacktop
r ond _

LO T S ~ Mitche l rd , 0 J
White r d , St R t 35 nnd 160
ANY HR 446 - 1998
W C. MaSS i e

-----·- ----- - -----

'

Ga ll .a Co 's larges t Red I
E s tat e Sa l es Agency
Olhce 446 ·l64J
Eve nmQ s Ca ll
lkf' Wt s~&gt; m a n 446 · J796
t
1J W• &lt;: eman, 4 d6 .4 ~f'IO

.Realty, 32 State Sl

oo•rJ2wether•
··
Sec., ... . . ..... .,.

- ------ --------::_.,.__-~,t,~o~eJ';a~st H~ ~~es

I

AS LITT L E AS S1r2 SO.OO
DOWN
You become the
owner Ol thi S n 1c e WEi ll
IJUtll , J bed r oom home
I n c ludes dintnCJ rtntl family
rooms Pn cr •S $15 ,900 See
.t today

MASSIE

308 6

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

I

1

DON'T BE B E AT B Y IN
F lATION .
Invest
your
sav1nqs 111 land
ElC.pe r t s
con c lude th ,'l' t he na t ion ' s
land w•ll r tS• 1n v alue by at
l east 15 pe t ··• 1 ~/ 4 . W e hav.e
328 acre s of N ~. -:tlan c · : m l
from l ow n tu 1 L· 1Y $l ~'
"
acre

IN EX P E N SIVE COUN T R Y
LIV I NG - 5 rms . and bath.
ce llar . small barn , shop and
: '1 ac r es nea r V!nton , $10.500

I

REMOOEL E D 2 STO RY Th!S lovely home is loc ated
•n Addrson Twp and offers
lots of good livi n g for on l y
S2J .900 Some feat ures are
new a l um mu m siding , storm
windows , natural g a s heat,
new fa c to ,. y k1 tc hen Wttll
cabine ts, range , d tShwasher
a nd refrig e r ator , fo r ma l
dintng rm
and almost 'J
acres cl ose to town

.
4 Dr . hardtop, .P. steer ing, P. br akes, ·rad io,
auto . trans ., fac . ai r cond ..; 350 cu. in. V-8
engine, w-s·w tires, grey met: finis h, mat .
interior, vin yl top, exira c lea n.
;

SAN D Y an d Beaver lnsu ra nQ
.co has offer ed ser v ices IQC
Fire I nsura n ce cover ag e •
Ga ll 1a county for al mos t i
cen t ur y . Far m s, hom es a
person a l property , cove r a g _
a r e ava!lable to meet ln.
d1vidual
needs
Contad
Emme tt Churc h , you r nelg!J:
bor and agent .
~

I

W1lhs T. leadmgham

.ROIIIRI

SeiYices Offered

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

MAKE SURE Y OU SEE
T HI S O N E . Like new lrt
l eve l otters 2,800 sq fl of
ltv tn g space p l us a 2 r~ r
g arage Other featur e ll
8 R s, 2 1 2 balhs . sun '- . t
dr e am k tlc hen, fo n y rr •
wtlll WB ftreplace , ce nt at r ,
pa t to , a n d la r g e l ot L oca t ed
1n on e of th e ar ea 's nrcer
subd •v ision s,

Buy Now a nd Save

Ph ·116 7699

Otur allrd, JOftfll

F H A A PPROVED - 2 yr .
old r a nch ha s 3 BRs , ca rpe t,
natu ral gas hea t , br1ck fr ont
and g ar age Loca ted on a t lat
tot on Bulavtl l e Ret $2 0,00 0
MOBI LE H OME PARK tn
Cheshire wtth 6 renta l u.n.ts
ha s rent poten ttal or over
$700 p er month
A good
money maker for o nl y
S39, 500

23

Year E~d Clearance
- -------- ----·- LO~ --; .,&gt;J gea m a l e Beag le, Sale. 10x50
2 BR
reddi sh. bro w n an d white,
v i ci n it y of N elg h b.orhood and
mobile hom e, your
E ngles Rd . Fa mil y pet . 446 .
choice
$1750, Tri -State
0740
Homes.
Mobile
2-3
1220 Eastern Ave .

0 J WH-ITE RD - L_i k e new
br tck an d f r am e r an c h o rter s
3 la rge BRs , 7 bath s, factory
k 1t che n , fo rmal dtntng rm .,
WW car pe l , gar age, pa tio
a nd large flat lot

N ow ts the ttme to buy Pnces are- lower now because
se ller s don ' t want to carry the house through th e wmte r
Most wdl cons1 der offer s now that would n' t in th e sp ring
If you ha ve a permanent job, don ' t pay r e nt a ny longer
than ab solutely necessMy and bef ore you buy a tratl er
compare •t to owning a horne .

•

A TA N NI SH ye llow and w hite
dog lost On Eas t er n A v &amp;nue
A nsw e r s to t h e n ame ol
Snoopy , Rewar d . Ca ll 446

'I

BABY
FAR M
NEAR
VIN T ON I J 1'1 ac res of
clea n r o lling Land . pond ,
l arge garden spa ce. 2 barns ,
ce llar house. 5 rm s and
ba l h SIB ,500

AGENt:l

Gall1polis, Oh1o

sale

STROUT REALTY

IHE

~r.

Real Estate Broker

H Dilll' Pll

Real Estate For

....:I.

Pass

3NT

uaH:I:J1!&amp;£ttU
The bidding has bEen :

4

Pass

Openmg lead- K •

West

Norlb

Ent \ South
lolo

Pass
1t
Pass
1•
Ry Oswald &amp; J a mes Jacoby
Pass 3 t
Pass ~ •
If you look a t a ll the cards you Pass 4 •
Pass
'
can see tha i Sooth can ma ke You. Soulh, hold
four nolru1]1p by ta king a • K 7 6 4 3 ¥A 3 +9 • A K 7 3 2
successful finesse for the queen What dp you do now•
of hea rts and eventually gethng A- Pats. You like tbe spot you are
an end p lay "a~ainst West.
ln.
A m at ch-pomt pl~yer trying
TODAY'S QUESTION

SEE pur large se lecti of} o f
dtamonds
an d ~ wa~eS
Compa r e our pnces Tawney
Jeweler s
_
278 11
-· -· - · - - - - OHIO ST OKER, W Va lump
coal . ftrewood oro cks, tile.
f or a top scor e might well do
Instea d of 'respond mg one d1a·
cement mortar. Ga l l iPOli S
j ust tha t, ' but a good rubber mond; your parlner responds one
B-loc~&lt;,. Co Ph ·146 HB3
29 ) If br idge player would see th~t heart to yoo r one club a nd rebids

there was a cinch play for his
three notrump contract. .
He would start · proceedmgs
by ducking the first spade and
the next one. Then he
'taki
wou~
cash just ·three club
GRAV EL . lt mestone , sand,
tricks
while· taking care to
Mason san d , ltl l dtrt P 1t r un .
Del 1vered by tile ton .1.16 11..a2 lea ve the h1gher club in dum247 I f
my .
:I

GOT an eye lor ·a buy? Many
i t ems on s p ecta l. Corner
(ra ll s , Ch1lltc oth e Rd .
287 .t f

•

two htarts over your one spade.
What do ycu do now~
Aao..er Mooday
Send $I lor JACOBY MODERN
book to: "Win at Bndge," (clo
this newspaper!: P.O Box-489.
Radio C~y Stat1on. /1/ew Yo rl&lt;.
N. Y 100 .) \
,
,,

•

~:

1

'

''

~:
•

. •,.

•,.
·...:.
''·.,

!~·

'•,I'
,,,.
,.

.,"
'•
•,I,,, .
•,

,.

•'
I

:·

�'•
28 ~ The Sunjlay Tunes- Sentuwl, Sunday , Jan

~~~~
.
ATHENS Ohw tU Pil , Oh10 Umverstty,led b) Wall&lt;!r
LuckeUs 27 pOints, was "'
command all the WB\' m
handmg Kent Stale a 68-53 MtdAmencan Co nferen ce loss
Saturday afternoon
For the Bobcats, no" 54 on
the )ear and!-(} m the MAC. tl

-r

I

5, 1975

.¥

I

I

1
1
I

.

-------------------------,

D
1•
r ate me
I

'

I

1

Adult-ed classes
: begin on Tuesday
I

I
!
I

I

obeytng safety rules but for the
suppor t shown the department
good safet y ru les clurtng the through the year
The department had 49 calls
twildu) SCcJSOn and th e
ViN'tON - Nt\1 Adult IJ,Iot&lt; ddult
bas a:
educatiOn
durtng
the year whwh mcluded
Porner{'
Y
Fire
Department
rdtH HtJCJn
thtSSCS
drC p1 ogrtlii iS purpose Is to ass1st
sci!Ctlult•d to beg tn Tuesday at adults O\ er the a~c nf 16 111 £t ppr ec i&lt;:~te s 1t , Fuc Ch1ef tv.o false alarms, 12 residence
ftres 10 brush ftres etght
N111 th Ga lha fTt gh School prcpanng for the Crener.1 1 Chwl es I.eg.JJ sau.J
[
egar
sarll
the
commumty
auto~oblle
flv·e business
(~alha Academ) H1 gh Sehoul
~ rlu c.ttwna l
DC\' elopmcnt
houses
f1ve
runs
to assist m~
got
through
the
holiday
season.
K\ger Creek H1gh Sdwul , .md rxdlllllldtiOn
cludrng four m Mtddleport and
H~mn.1n 'I rau· Htgh &amp;houl
Adul ts \\ho pa .s!-/thrs tes t will v.1 thout cill\ fires I .e gar ex
POMEHOY
Pomeroy
rcsrdcnls app"renlly practtced

a county trash con tamer f1re, a

coalltpple, a motorcycle and a
Junk automobile hre
r
Losses durtng the ftrst half of
the
year ran htgh COlJlpared to
By Hohnrt Wil.wm Tr.
the losses by hre durtng the
was their fourth wm m a ro~
last
stx months of 1974, Chtef
AS the yem 1975 unfold:.,( , '"''' Counu"ns c1111 hopl'fulil look
OU led 34-24 at halftuue and
Legar
reports In the first half
grabbed tts btggest margm at forward wtth reasonable conftdence that rt wtll be a gootl 12
bf
the
year, Bowers· Dnve-ln
55-37 on a Jumper b) Tom months desptte nattonal problems
alone had a ftre wtth losses III
+-j +
Hester n Hh 12 m1nutes
pres~t.:tl
his
appreue~tJOn
to
the
one
Jn
Mason,
two
shed
or
barn
the $10,000 range and m the out(
ld
S.Sl'S
"Ill
be
Offl'
l
~d
Ill
ru
e
l\(
d
c~r
frfJl'
d
t
e
flurn
the
TRANSITION from old to new ts dttftcult for some, but tt
rematmng
pubiH.
:
out
unl
)
fo
r
th
eJr
f1
res
a
chem1
tal
spi
llover
run
,
of-town
ca tegory, a ftre arthe
malh~matr c s,
re.acl1ng Ohw .Slate Dcpnr tm ent of
should gtve us all another opporturu t; tv avotd rntstakes of the
J
D
Gnmm
home III Columbta
Engli sh. bu srt·
st 1ence t:du&lt;-.Jtwn whtt h Is equiva lent
past year and make the best posstble use of the a&lt;compltshments
Township had losses of $24,000
1\metlt.:an H1stur y and t.:on~ tv ,r hu.~h school diploma Th1s
of the preceding perwd
WANTS NO SCHOOL
In the ftrst half-of 1974 there
sumer
educ,rtwn
r
ertJf1
cale
ma)
be
used
fr11
+++BOSTO~ t UPI I Ma)Or
WA'l
E
R
TESTS
SET
were
30 calls wht le m the
The
purpose
of
lhts
program
emplo}rnent purposes and
AS we prepare to start the second week of 1975, somethmg
Kr \ 111 H Whltr met w1th school
CHARI
ESTON,
W
Va
second ha lf of the year there
IS to assist the residents of enrollnwn t 1n nruny colleges
new (for those of us 40and under) has captured our attentwn Supertl'llcnde nt Wilham J
1 UP! I
- The U S En - wet e only 19 calls whtch toGallra County rn rece 1vrng the and umvelsit ies
gold
Last
week,
for
the
ftrst
tUlle
smce
1933,
gold
bulhon
I "·"l and other offtc tals
\ 1ronmental
Protection eluded 10m-town ca lls and niiie
equn.alent to .r h1gh .Sl huol
Uu~ses meet or1 Tuesday and
(Con trnued fi om page 151
Saturda) and ta iled for the ownership by Um,ted States cttizens became legal.
Agency
wtll
undertake
a out of !ow n Total losses for the
d1plom.t
J'hur sda} from 6·9 p nr There
permanent clos tng of racially
nattonwtde study to determme las t stx months of the year
1 he adult " '"Y obta111 the 1s dbsoluteh no cos t to the accused of ct ossmg a state
troub led South Boston Htgh
\\hether
dnnkmg water can be amoLUl ted to only $8,823 for the
eqwval en t to a h1gh sdw,ol student
boundarj In conspiring to
Sd1ool l thmk tl should he
hazardous
to hea lth The EPA 10 ca lls wtth $8,123 of the losses
d1ploma bv passtng th e
Anyone
lllt eres ted
1n mctte a not at the 1968
dused and an alternative s1te
w11l
test
water
supphes m 80 betng on one-fire, at the Metgs
Gen er,li t·:ducattona l eruollment tn the adult bc~ ~Jt: DemocrO:Jlic Natio nal Con.
should be found because there
c1lies around the nation to fmd Inn Total losses for the las! SIX
Developmen t Examrndt iOil, L'ti uc.ttwn cla sse~ may ca ll ventwn
IS no educa t10n gomg on
Ellsberg was accused of out 1f they conlam ca ncer months for out~of~lown £1res
whtch ts gtven through the Ho\\,ud ~eckdlll~ at 388-8346
there,' Whti&lt;' satd durtn~ a
ran $2 050 for the mne calls
stealmg, espiOna ge and con. causmg agents
Gall tpolts Ctt) Schools TIIC 11r !88~8724 m the evenm g
bre"k tn the lengthy meetmg
sptracv to obtam the Pentagon
Papers about the Vtetnam war
The Berngans, who are
NOVELIST DIF.S •
Catholic prtests, \\ere accused
IWMF I UP!) - Carlo Levt,
RACINE---Spokesmen satd Memorral Church Go ld te of consptrtng to blow up
the IIO\ eltsl \1 ho portrayed the
Saturday the new ambulan ce Gtlland, Jack Sha1pneck, heatmg tunnels 111 Washmgton
c~ge.ol d peas,Jn t world of
COLUMBUS (UP! )
teachers' demands, tt would
for the Ractne P.R squad Davtd L Hrll, Dm lene Juslts. and to ktdnap Secretary of
sou thern ltaiv and the new
Negottattons broke off late have been necessary to seek
purchased tn Januar) of 1974 Albert Htlt, Charles Baker, State Henry A Kissmger
\\ Orld of ff1sc1sm m Chnst
was patd fot tn full on De&lt;' 23 Gary Wtllford. Mr and Mrs
The Gamesvtlle Etght were Saturday m a wage dispute voter ap proval of an
Stopped .JI Ebolt, · dted of
The ve htcl e cost
ap- Kenneth Thetss, Harry Curlts, accused of conspmng to create between the Columbus Educa- emergency tax levy smce the
br Dnc hml pneumonia at the
proxtma tely $13,000
Hazel Car nahan, Charles havoc at lhe 1972 Repubhcan tion Assoctatwn, whtch repre- school budget does not have the
Rome Polvchntc Saturda) He
sents the ctty's 5,000 teachers, funds to cover tt
PLACER GOLD DISPLAYED - Stanley Evans dtsplays
lhe members of the sq uad P1 les Mt and Mr s Lee NatiOnal Convention
\\Hs72 l'heaulhor,pamter and
two ounces of placer gold m pan above valued at ap" If the board would offer the
Mttchell- who himself took and the Columbus Board of
are maktng kno11n lhetr ap Enoch, Isabe ll Stmpson,
one~hme Commumst sena tor
proxunately $400
Educatton
less
than
two
days
amount asked, we would have
prectalton to the 1estdents of Charl es Alku e, Helen Stmpson, part tn dtscuss10ns of G
!tad been hosp tt ahzed on
before
a
walko~adline The
to have a maJor local tax mGordon
Uddy's
plan
to
ktdnap
th
e
area
[or
th
e
many
J.tlhan
Ha)man,
S
W
Durst,
+++
ChnstllM S Drw
U&gt;achers
wUI
holq
a
mass
crease
because I can't see any
demonstra
tiOn
leaders
at
the
MOST indtvtduals under 40 have probably never even seen donahons and the busmessmen Junwr Spalll1. Het bert Roush,
meetmg
Sunday
afternoon
to
pro[ection
that would mdteate
gold,let alone own some That's probably one reason why many of Metgs County for thetr Dan Sha 111 , Mr and Mrs 1972 GOP conventwn- tesufted
discuss
developments
before
the
state
would
approprtate the
Grover Sals•r. It Ramona m the Gamesvtlle Etght tnal
showed lots of ctmostty but cautiOn when tt became avatlable on frnanctal support
Oue defendant m tha t tnal, the deadlock and posstbly take amount of money requested by
the trading market last week
"
Con tttbu ttn g donati ons In Vonke1s Vug1e Ours, Harr)
ORERLJN WINS
Scott
Carmi, satd "The con- a strtke vote . No further the CEA," he satd
Decelnher were Roy Pearson Swan, Gracte Roush, Ra lph
+++
STEUBEN\i!LLE,
Ohto
Burgess satd the teachers
NONE of Galltpolls' three ban~ IS handlmg any type of gold
Evelyn C Young, John Hall, Radchff e, Ronnre Sa lset, sptracy that extsts ts a con- negottaltons were scheduled
(UP!) - Jtrnmy Jones and
Jack
Burgess,
chtef
CEA
were stU! wtlling to bargain,
Jt·r ry Saunders scored 16 Spokesmen satd, however, that tf any of thetr customers Forrest VanMeter Gm rett Martha L Beeg le Ora Bass, sptracy on the part of the Ntxon negottator, satd "the school bu t tf a stnke became
adtmmstratton
tv
silence
any
(
Commerctal
&amp;
Savmgs,
First
Naltonal
or
Dh10
Valley
Bank
)
are
Ctrcle
Douglas
Johnson,
Wavre
C11cle,
Verna
Ctrcle,
pomts aptece Saturday to lead
Albert Htll, Jt , Joe Swam, Okey Paynter , Charles K person, orgamzahon or board had refused to budge necessary, he believ'ed most of
Oberhn to a 6%6 vtclory over mterested, they wlll be referred through proper channels
Fred Sham. Ft eeland Noms, Spencer, C IV Proffttt, poltttca l party whose acttons from tis posttion of approXI- the teachers and the non+++
.5teubenvllle
TIIOSE of you who have never seen gold wtll have a chance
Etleen Buck, Carroll Netgler, Clarence Baker, Mt and Mrs do not remforce the Ntxon ad- mately a 4 per cent pay In- teachmg personnel would stay
crease,'' while ''the association off the JOb.
to see two ounces of placer gold on display (one day only)
Mr and Mrs Harry Willford Davtd B Sayre, Mrs Ruda A muustrahon. ''
pared close to $4 mtlllon of the
" Parents should thmk twtce
Monday at Stanley Evans' Last Chance Carry.Out at Fourth
In
the
Watergate
tnal,
Mr and Mrs Ross Scat ben y Dw st. Mt and MIS Ralph R
demands
m
its
package
to
a
12
about sendmg chtldren mto
Ave , and Pine St., ln GallipoliS.
Mr and Mrs Hornet Oatley, Henderson PomerO) Nat rona! Mttchell, Haldeman, Ehrlich+++
Mr and Mrs Earl Shuler, Mr Ba nk , Gene and Chat les man and Mardtan were ac- per cent base proposal, which schools where there are not
EVANS satd the placer golrl was mmed recently by Larry
and Mrs Wmston Va&amp;ne). Beegle, Legar Monument Co cused of consptrmg to obstruct we thmk ts fatr at a time when competent teachers," Burgess
Burns on his ranch In Wblte Sulphur Sprmgs, Montana A frtend
JUStice m an effort to conceal we hitve 12 per cent tnflatton " satd
Halite
Payn ter,
Plants and Mts Gladys Shtelds
Burgess satd the CEA would
of Evans purchased the gold from Burns for apprmamately $400
"I would say parents should
top-level mvolvement tn the
recommend
the teachers reJect follow the normal precautions
while hunting out west It ts rated 919, whtch ts near perfect pure
Watergate buggmg Twent}
gold from the ground
other persons, mcludmg NIXon, the 4 per cent offer, addmg he they would on any school day,"
+++
were named as unmdtcted C(). felt "an overwhelmmg maJort- Ellts satd, adding puptls should
ty" would favor holding a go to thetr usual bwldmgs "as
BURNS mmes gold on hts ranch for a hvmg He starts when
In ptoneer devs. good
Ert ol Ptckett Hollywood, wet e Mr and Mrs Larry conspirators
strtke
we don 't know when teachers
netghbors helped rebuild the earth begms to thliw tn the sprmg, and works unttl the ground
Flonda, fle\1 to Coh1111bus then Stante\ and Anna Marron
TheA tm anar
"About
a
2-1
ma1onty
of
ali
freezes
late
in
the
fall
He
relaxes
durmg
the
wmter
months
would
arrtve or at what
when e home wes dedrove here to spend a recen t Mtss Nancv Smtih , Columbus,
By Umt ed Press Internahonal teachers, members and non- butldmgs "
Burns
goes
through
10
yards
of
dtrt
m
order
to
obtam
two
ounces
stroved. Todev, a Stela
\\Cekend w1th Iu s mother, and Reece Tt ather, Pm tsmoth
Today ts Saturda\, J.1n 4 the members, now favor a work
Farm Homeowners Policy of gold. He usually goes through 40 ya rds of dirt a day Thus far,
r t~ u rci KI ebs and hts Guests of Mull Gdlm'l-aJ fourth day of i975 wtth 361 to stoppage," he said "It's gomg
With
_ he has mined more than 10 acres on his ranch. Once he ftmshes tn
daughters , Rtck11 and Rona were M1 and M1 s Rtcllctrd follow
to be unpleasant if we have
an area, he reclaU!ls the land and moves on
Hts grandmothet Maude Pm son~ and sun, Dt~yton and
The
moon
Is
m
1ts
last
one
We're hopeful if there lS a
Continued from page 20)
+++
Holcomb, who had spen t some the Leon Wooclrum famt l) of quarter
stnke,
tt wtll not be of a long land belongmg to- Wtlhamsons
BURNS' ranch is located near Helena, Montana, where
ltme \\tlh her daughier and McArthur
The m'SI-mn g stars arc Mars duration 11
Nelson Story, a Gallia Countlan, was the first rancher to drtve
and said that he saw some tile
family 1n Ccaii[OI ma, flc\\ to
Mt
and
Mt
s Cec tl Gtll ogl} and Saturn
Dr John Eilts, supenn- outlets wh1ch were dtschargmg
catUe through Indian temtory more than 175 years ago Burns Columbus and ac&lt;:ompamed
and fa mtly attend ed a farntl;
Ti1e evemng stars are Mer- tend ent of schools, satd steady streams of water. Thes~
mtnes approximately $1,600 worth of gold a day m his one-man Enol to her home here '
a~~~~~~~t!hel same "good operation
gathermg on Chnstmas eve at curv. Venus and Juptler
classrooms would be kept open tile systems had been mstalled
Those of you who are Interested and are willing _to
n1
principle to
Mr and Mrs Earl Sl&lt;lrkey the home of Mt and Mt s
Those born on thts date arc Monday if the teachers dectded by Henry Wtlliamson and his
"risk" some cash fpr gold can do so by callmg Burns, area cocle
""'"" 't RSUfiRCI.
JOtned their grandchildren and Hmle\. HHmng, Pome r oy
under the stgn of Caprtcorn.
to strike There are 1110,000 son Juruny 15 to 20 years ago
406 M7.J546, m White Sulphur Sprmgs, Mont famthes Mr and Mrs La11 1 Othe1 s present were Mr and
It c~n IIU!omatically lncreue
S1r Isaac Ne\\ ton, discoverer pupils attendmg 170 schools
'
+++ TilE DITCHER has begun
Clark, Tamara and Penn) of Mts Gene Lambert Charlotte of the Ia\\ of gravtty, and here.
your prot~ t l o(1 as the &gt;~•lue
TWENTY YEARS AGQ. from the !ties of the Daily Tnbune
ot vour hom e mcreases
work on the Glenn Holland
Chester and Rev and Mrs and Don, Mt and Mrs Davtd actress Jane Wyman were born
So 1f somethms happens,
" We have a senous farm out Sandhill Road. One of
and weekly Galha Times ... Harold Wetherholl named secretary
you II be able to rebuild
David Wrseman, Renee , Evan Abbott, Mt and Mrs Kenneth Januar} 4ih - he tn 1642 and obliga tion to many parttes (to
• treasurer of Galllpohs Savings &amp; Loan Company
Apyour home tomorrow tht WtY
the ftrst dratnage lmes InDavtd
and Owen Earl of G1 over wtd clu ldi en, Mr and she 111 1914 "'
It 1s today Call or come In
stay open) and the sertous stalled was from the creek to
proxunately 100 electricians go on strike at Kyger Cr1;0k Power
at the home of Mts Marvtn Whtte, Demse and
On thts day m hiStory
salary constderatton, whtle the road and parallel with the
CARROL K. SNOWDEN Plant . GaiUa County enters 37th straight month wtthout auto iVoodsfteld,
their son.m.law and daughter Bn an, and Mr and Mts Bytne
In 1885, tlr Wtlltam Grant of extremely Ullportant, ts not the road. Mr Yoho said that this
fa tallty ... Pollo campaign off to !lymg sl&lt;lrt here _. Record 870
Park Central Hole! Bldg.
Second Avenue
tlabies born In Holzer Hospital durmg 195-1 . John W. (Btl! ) Mtlls Mr and Mrs Roy W1seman m Vaughn all of the PometD} Davenport Iowa perform ed only vartable whtch we must was an extremely wet area and
Hm I Isonville on Chri stmas .1re&lt;-1
Ga llipolis/ Oh1o
the ftrst appendectomy The consider t'' Ellis said
named new Kiwanis Club president . $600,000 lake proposed for
that water was seepmg out of
Eve
for a fanuly gathermg
Phone44~0
Cht
1stmns
dmnei
guests
of
patten! made a complete
The school offtctal satd if the the grolDld mto the ttle all
Gallia County . County reported $36,000 m the red ... C L
Home 446-4518
Mr and Mrs Earl Holland, Mr and Mrs Edrl Starkey 1ecoverv
board had agreed to the along the ditch
(Johnny) Ecker one of 59 men selected to go on tour with Ohio
iiiI ' fMt} tqh,
Jt
and
three
sons,
Phoemx,
\\CI
e
theu
son s~In ~lmv and
Wesleyan Umversity's Glee Club. GAllS nps Jackson 75-55 for
Srlll ,,,. It Mfrl
~
26th straight Southeastern Ohto League wtn .. Blue Imps crush Artzona VISited hcte WJth h1s daug hters, Mr and Mt s Roy
mother, E:len F acemy1e Wtseman Hlllttsonville and
STATE FARM FIRE
Ironboys 57-28 for 36th strBighl hardwood VICtory
un cle and aunt Mr and Mrs Mr and Mt s Donald Jones,
•ltd Cuulftw Comptny
Homt OtliCI
Vtctor Perry c~n d oth e1 Nelsonvtlle Then gra11dson
Bluanli!tlon M•IIOis
telahves
and fami1y Mr and M1 s
NOW YOU KNOW
ftve years to procluce the ftrst
P7326
Mrs Roll,~nd Crabtree and Donald Jones. Jr Bnan and
It took Johann Gutenberg
prmted Btble
Mr and Mrs Mendal Jordan Ca r11e Alexandt la, Vu gima,
received telephone gr ee tings vtstted them on Thut sda)
for Chnsbnds from tlleir son
Mt and Mrs D11ame Jorand daughter Mr and Mrs dan Bryan, Ketth and Salah
Kenneth Ct abtrec. McArthur. Faye \\ el E' m Chtlhcothe for
who spen l the Ch1 tstmas dmne1 on New Yea1 s Eve and
vacalton rn Flonda The stopped em oute home to VISi t
Crabtrees vtstled het uncle and Ius brother-to-law and stster,
mmt, Mr and Mrs Eddte Mr dlld MIS Kenneth CrabCOLOR T.V.
Jot dan and sons at West Palm tree m McArthur
Beach. Flortda on Chrtstmas
Mr
and Mr s
F1 ank

Gallia

Aides ·

New ambulance paid for

Dispute stymied

Carpenter / News, Event

More ask

INFLATION

COVERAGE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

NOW With The Purchase of

AH"Adlftlrc./®
YOU CAN BUY THIS
ELEORONIC CALCULATOR
FO~ ONLY

World's

Fin~&gt;&lt;:t

•9 91

from Rockwellltlternatimrill
Full Feature 8-digit Electromc Calculator.

·operates
ona Batteries or A.C. Current
2

LIMITED TIME OFFERJ
Seeing is
Believing!

Ad•••lral.
Super-Solarcolor

$588

00

100% Soltd State

YOURS FROM ADMIRAL
-COLOR T.V. WARRANTY• ·1 yr. free par1s and
90 day free lABOR.

• Ftve year picture

• A quality product.
This is the best basis

for any warranty.

tube protection

BAKER FURNITURE
411#

Dav

Holtday guests of Mr ,md
Mrs Wrlltam Mtller and
daughters tncluded Mr and
Mrs Dann) Akers dnd Linda,

'

I '

pm ento Mt and. MIS C.1rrol
Wood gerd and fan ull dunng
the hohday vacatron

Platn City; Mr and Mrs Glen
Helall\ es from a distance
Gassa wav. Powell, Mr and who spent time \Uth l\11 .md
Mrs Fred Whelllall, Colum- Mr s Wtlham Lawson and
bus. and Mr and Mrs Ted fa nHI) tim tn g the holtday
Mtller of Caledoma
\ac;.~hon \H're M1kc Lawson
Mr and Mrs Joe Moster Umvetsttv of Kcnluck) Mr
Cectl, Ohw, \1St led relaltves 111 and Mrs Bob Gnm and fanHI)
the area dunng Chnstmas from Poca , W Va Mr and
holtdavs and whtle here they Mrs Austm Wtthrow and son
were ~ohfted that thetr home Charleston W Va and Mr and
had been destroyed by ftre ~ Mrs Ted Mtller, Caledoma,
Mrs Moster ts a gra nd - Ohpo
daughl&lt;!r of Murl Galaway and
both were rea red tn lhts
commwnty He ts the son of
Hi\WKEYES ROMP
Mr. and Mrs Douglas Mos•er
IOWA CITY. Iowa (UP!l 11ho are nO\\ in Alhany
Bruce
'Sk) . Kmg scored 18
Mr and Mt s Ralph Fra~ter
pomts
to
top ftve Iowa players
and Susan, Galhpohs, ytstled
\\tth Mrs .Goldte Gtltogly and m double figures Saturday,
leadmg the Ha" keyes to a
other reialtves here
crushmg
95-70 "'" over llhnots
Angela Lingle, San Franm
a
regtonall)
lelevtsed Btg
ctsco, Call forma, ts spendmg
some tune here \\lth her mece. Ten game
Mrs Gene Jeffers and famtly
Others "ho vtstled at the
Jeffers home durtng the
hohda1s were Mr and Mrs
John ·Dunham, famtly, New ·
Boston Ill mots, Mr and Mrs
Btll Lawson and famtly, and
Mr and Mrs Mtchael Lawson
Those "ho g.1thered at the
home of M1 and Mrs LewiS
Srn1fh for u prc·lwhd(l\ dmner

. I '

Wood ge rd and dilug hter.
Cohunbus '' c' e gm ~b of his

DUNLEAVY SHINES
COLUMBIA, S C (UPI ) South Carohna , concentratmg
tis attack wtth guard Mtke
Dunleavy and Alex Enghsh
after tts othe r starters goi mto
fuul

trou ble,

Ot

.wned

Manhattan 82.Ji3 Saturday tn a
rcgtOn,lily televised game

!

finn · smooth top.

Famot.$ Serta Quality.
Furniture Department - Jrd Floor
.

Sale! 25% Off o n Mattress and Box Spring
F:loor Samples · Twin and Full Bed Sizes. ~
.

.

.EtBERFELDS
-

•

-

IN POMEROY
'

~

DETROIT (UPI) _ TheUS

auto mdustry launched the ftrst
W/
t
~: full week of 1975 productiOn
t
W
~ today With 14 assembly plants
~ closed, 140,000 workers on
NEW YORK (UP!) -James Neal, the chief prosecutor §! longterm layoffs and reports
In the Watergate conspiracy trial, beUeves former ~ showmg steadily droppmg car
President Nixon bad no prior knowledge of the bugglug 8Dd ~ sales
break-In, accordlug to the current issue of 11me mqazlne.
Prelim mar) figures tilThe Time article said that Neal based hJs opinion on ~ dicated Decemller sales of
"some surprise 00 Nixon's part" when be was Informed of !![ 430,000 domestic-built cars, a
the Watergate affair.
il\ 25 per cent drop from last
Neal said that accordlug to the June 23, 1912 ta@e, when ;!; December's gasolme-pmc hed
Nixon was told by H. R. Haldeman about the break-lo, the ~ sales and 40 per cent below
former president wondered out loud about who bad been W, 1972's record December The
responsible.
!;!

~~

brea k lnto
.
he

t

i~
~

!~

ill
~

~

aterga e

~

~
~
~

$:

!~

~

hn dl fig ures wel-e to be
released late todny
Det-ember sales were the
lowest for any month smce
December of 1970, when a
strtke against General Motors
cut deeply mto dehvenes They
ftmshed · 1974 domesllc car
productton wtth a 7 45 mtlhon
total, the lowest smce stnkeaffected 1970
Industry ana lysts satd sales
sho11ed httle stgn of tnlprovement mDecember They added
the dropoff from November

!!
!;!
~;

Dn New Year's Day the Watergate jury found John N.
~' Mitchell and three others -Haldeman, the former Wblte ...

~ Housechlefolstaff; John D. EbrUehman, theformerWhlte

~-:

e

I'

House domestic affairs cb[ef; and Robert C. Manllan, once
the assistant attorney general In charge of the Justice ~!
« Departmeat's Internal Security Division - goUty of eon- ·&lt;
splraey. Another defendant, Kenneth W. Parkinson, a lj!
lawyer hired by Nixon re-elecllon committee after the :::

;i:

i
l_

breu-m, was found not guUty.
!!
~~-·~; others
Asked for• his opinion of !be guilty defendants and !~
wbo pleaded goUty, Neal told 11me: ''These are not i

VOL XXVI

NO. 185

Willi not as g1·eat as the usua125

per cent Thts past December
saw dehvenes drop about IS
pet cent from slack November
sales.
•
"December may not have
been . the absolute bottom for
sales, but at least tl dtdn 't
follow the tradittonal year end
pattern," one mdustry analyst

srud "That really would have
been dtsastrous "
Bestdes the 140,000 workers
on open-&lt;&gt;nded la yoffs thts
11eek, another 40,000 were ttlled

lternporartly at the
II car nnd
three truck assembly plants
that were shut and thousands
more were off the Job at
manufacturmg plants
Fo(d Motor Co. kept stx car
and one truck assembly plant
closed, Chrysler two car and'
two truck plants, GM two car
plants and Amen can Motors
one ca r plant to begm
changeover to tts new sporty
Pacer
The mdustry already has

scheduled ftrst quarter production at the lowest point ln 14
years Layoffs through March
will put at least 160,000 workers
on mdefiiitte layoffs and another 140,000on short layoffs from
one to stx weeks -&lt;~bout 40 per
cent of the mdustry's hourly
work force
The mdustry closely guards
the actual number of salarted
workers who have lost their
JObs because of slwnpmg sales,
but authortllahve sources esll-

mate 26,1100 white collar workers -&lt;~bout 20,000 at Chrysler
-are out of work.
Both mdustry and union
officials agree many workers
will not return to their JObs
unUl there is an upturn In new
ear sales. Ward's AntomoUve
Reports, the Industry's statistical publication, m an earlier
predlcllon said automakers
have not faced such a p.&gt;tenitally depressed car market
since the 1930s.

•

(exp~~~!~~:~ :~~~;~:~teo~~": ~d;~ was the i i

;I'

•

at y

•

enttne

Devoted To The luterests of Th e Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY MIDDLEPORT OHIO
MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1975

~~~~~!::.~~:____...:._.:;::.:.:_::.:.:_:::_.:.::::::::::-::::.:_.:::_:~~:_::-,--_______:__~_:_____::__:__.2..::...:._:__::_ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ TEN
-CENTS
--

!!; evU men. There was no one In control. There was no czar. ;~

But men wbo become convinced their eause Is just, resort to ~-~
- means to attain It !bat they otherwise would not consider. :§
"For example, I can't conceive of any government, any
presldentlal administration, letting a man Ulte Uddy run
.•.
.• Ioose. "
~~
'1::::::

~
~

IN:.,ews.. -in Briefs

Economy, energy
pressing on Ford

~

~~:~=::';i.'f.:;:;o:::;:--:;.i::::::-: :=»:;;·:·:·:=:-::::::::·:·:-:-:-:·~=·~:·:-:.:·:·~=-~·=-=·:·:-:::·:-:·:::::·:·:;:::.~:-:·~:·:§:&gt;:·:;:;:.:-:;:;:;:;:.~
Cv...

•• ••

~ .: ....~bb&gt;:
0

,

.....

" " ( ; )

By United Press International
WASHINGTON- TODAY'S AUCI'ION of 2mlllion ounces of
gold, valued at perhaps $2 bilhoo, wlll not be much different from
goverrunent sales of surplus desks. Six employes of the General
Services Admtnlstration, the government's property
manaRement a2encv _eather around a olam, ROVernment-tssue
table. One will open sealed btds. Another calls out the offermg
The third writes down the bid. Two are observers .
The Items au&lt;.'tioned are 4()(J.ounce brtcks.of 99.9 per cent
pure gold The experts say it will take a nwwnwn of $611,000 to
get one. Successful btdders will have to pay wit:1 cash or cerUfied
check and make arrangements for removmg the gold from
stockpiles m New York, Denver and San Francisco. GSA and
Treasury officials declmed to speculate on the demand. Charles
R. Stahl, publisher of the authorttative Green's Commodity
Market Comments, was one of the prtvate experts to predict the
bidding probably will be slow
"I would expect no more than lOper cent of the goverrunent's
gold offermg to be sold," he satd

SAIGON -COMMUNIS!' GUNNERS FIRED a barrage of
rockets at suburban Satgon today m the first shelling ag81nst the
capital area m more than three years. To the north, CommlDltSl
troops bombarded a huge underground bunker m the embatUed
province eapttal of Phuoc Binh today but failed to oust diehard
goverrunent defenders.
The Saigon mlll_tary command said CommlDlist glDlners In
camouflaged JUngle lllllnching Sltes!Ii'ect 12 Soviet-made rockets
this mornmg Into the southwestern suburb of Phu Lam. A
spokesman said half the huge rockets hit a long..-ange communications stattoo and the other six crashed Into civilian homes
bordering the base. Four ctvtllans were reported kllled and SIX
wounded. A dozen homes were destroyed
GRESHAM, 'VIS. - A SECOND OUTBURST of gunfii-e
ended a cease-fire Sunday mght, and some 50 Indtans today held
a 64-room monastery for the siXth slratght day. Pohce cut off
their electrtcity and refused to allow deliveries of food mto the
building.
The Shawano County district attorney's offtce satd shooting
erupted for about an hour from the closed Mextan · Brothers
no VI bate monastery. Pohce satd they returned fired three times.
There were no re~pts of InJuries. The shooting ended a ceasefire the Indians and
enforcement offtcers agreed to earlier tn
the day.
The Indians -men, women and children -took over the
abandoned noVItiate early New Year's day and demanded the
budding and surrolDlding grounds be returned to the Menommee
tribe.
BELFAST- THE IRISH REPUBLICAN ARMY has offered
to negottate a permanent cease-fll'e with Britain to end 5.,. years
of rellgtous warfare m Northern Ireland. The Smn Feln, political
arm of the IRA's militant Provisional wmg, said Smday it would
help set up talks wtth Britain on extendmg a holiday season truce
Indefinitely.
"We are wlllmg to act as messenger boys between the
government and the ProvtslonallRA leadership," said Seam~
U&gt;ughran, the Sinn Fein's northern organizer The ffiA ts
outlawed ln Northern Ireland, but the Sinn Fein ts a legal
pol!Ucal party 1n the troubled province.
There was no Ullillediate reacUon from Brttaln to the
posstbility of talks aimed at ending the Protestant-Roman
Catholtc fighting, wh!ch has taken 1,143lives tn the province.

HOBART, Australia (UP!)
- Frank and Sylvia Manley
were driving over the mile-long
bridge with their teen-age
daughter !llaron when 250 feet
of the concrete span crumbled.
''The bridge hao gone!" Mrs.
Manley screamed out as the
rubble fell 150 feet mto the
Derwent River on the Island of

$5400
•

ili~

~

ignorant of plan tO bug,

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R squad
answered a call to Union Ave
for Mrs Gladys Taylor
Saturday afternoon. She was
taken to Veterans Memortai
Hospital where she was adrrutted.

'

••

-

WHAT WITH TilE WARMER WINTERS, Metgs Counttans have few opportunlttes to tee
skare However, some are l&lt;lking advantage of the tndoor artiftctaltce rink whtch offers open
skatmg foureverungs a week and two afternoon sesswns on SIDlday The rmk, known as Btrd
Arena, ts located on the Ohio Uruverstty Campus tn Athens. A nomtnal fee ts charged for
skating and shoe skates are avatlable for rental. Some half dozen Metgs Comttans were among
the skaters at the rmk Sunday afternoon.
-

The Manleys -were among the
lucky ones. The rear of their
car stuck on the edge of the
lrldge. "We just hwtg there,"
Manley said."
''I had a bit of trouble getting
oot of the car because my door
opened over the edge, but we
got out through the back door
and ran down the lrldge as fast
as we oould," he said. · .
• The 10,110tk0n freighter Lake
Dlawarra, loaded with zmc ore,
smaslted one of the bridge's
supports, lmocking down a :zoofoot section of the span. The
ship sank within 10 minutes .

Columbus teachers out
Accidents
•
were mmor
Pomeroy pohce mvesttgated
two acctdents Sunday, both
nimor. At 10 50 a.m , at the
corner of Butternut and West
Second St , a car dnven by
Joseph Thompson, Cheshtre,
was stopped at the stop stgn on
Second when tl was struck by a
car drtven by Troy Ohhnger,
Sr , Pomeroy, turnmg from
Butrernut onto Second There
was moderate damage, but no
mJurtes and no arrests
At 3·06 p.m on New St. a car
drtven by Ira Eblin, Syracuse,
hacked mto a parked car
owned by Paul Garnes of
Pomeroy Damage was mtnor
There were no tn]urles and no
ares!

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesd ay through
Friday, chance of showers
Thursday mixed with snow
or snow flum es Friday
Highs Wednesday in the
upper 40s and lo" er 50s and
lows In the 30s lowcrmg by
Friday lo htghs in lhe 30s and
lows m the 20s.

Weather
Cloudy tomght, lows m the
Tower 30s Tuesday cloudy, a
little warmer, 40 pet chance of
ram Highs 111 the lower 50s

BOARD TO MEET
The Meigs County Fatr
Board wtll meet at 8 tomght m
the secretary's offtce on the
Rock Sprmgs Fatrgrounds

Police and navy frogmen
searched the rtver bed today
for the sunken ears, missmg
passengers and the lost
freighter crewmen.
Gordon Allan was standing
near his home tn the harborstde suburb - of Montague
Bay when the freighter
smaslted mto tlte bridge.
"I heard a big bang like
thiDtder and saw-a car heading
Into the city swerve across the
bridge,'.' he satd. " It htt
another car and both fell mto

He satd he heard a rwnbling
sound JUst as he drove off the
brtdge. He looked back and
saw two cars plunge Into the
r1ver.
"I could see the headllghts
pointing stratght down at the
water," he sa1d. "It was a
horrtble stght and 1t made me
feel sick I'll never forget the
Tasmania.
,
sound the br1dge made as' tt
"I hit the !rakes but It was
started to go "
too late," Manley satd. "The
Offictals satd VISibility was.
front of the car went over the
poor at the ttme of the accident
lridge."
and the ship's crew apparently
A freighter ranuned Into the
the r1ver.''
mistook an openmg on the
Tasman Bridge Sunday night,
Richard Marsland, a young eastern stde of the JJridge for a
shattering Ute concrete span.
clerk retunung from a date navtgatlon charmel.
Police said two of the wtth hts gtrl frtend , crossed the
Rescue workers recovered five
The brtdge, whtch ltnks 1
vessel's
42 crewmen were lrldge just before the collapse Hobart with Its eastern subodies but said ~ to 14 others
might have perjshed. Thirty ~ ana feared dead. A "If I had stopped for one more burbs, IS tn , the state of
two IJerSOilS were injured. , spokesman said another 12 kiss I reckon I would have gone Tasmania, an tsland oft AusPollee said at least four aul08 peraons may have been 111 lhe Into the rtver," he said
tralia's southeastern Up
fell Into tbe 90-footodeep river- cars that feU mto the river.
'

.

'I'
I

WASHINGTON ( UP!) Prestdent Ford ts plannmg to
set astde tUlle every day this
week to work on proposals for
repairing the economy and
conservmg energy
White House Press Secretary
Ron Nessen, satd Sunday Ford
wlli work on legislative proposals for the ne"' Congress as
well as ht~ upcoming State of
the Union message.
Admlnlstratlon sources said
Saturday one of the proposals
was an Income tax cut for low
and mtdtlle-lncome Americans
which, one source estimated,
could put $20 billion hack ln the
economy -but that arnolD\!
wol!!d be taken from a
Treasury facmg large deficits
this year and next.
Time Magazme reported
Sunday th.t admuustratton has
agreed on an- excise...lax to
Increase the prtce of gaSOlineabout 5 cents a'l!allon, cut oil
consumptton by 750,000 to
800,000 gallons a day, a $1 to $3
per barrel tariff on oll Imports,
lnd endtng price controls
coupled wtth a windfall profits
tax
Ford moved Saturday to
cope wtth the natton 's unemployment sthtaiton. About 6.5
million Americans who want
work cannot get It -about 7 I

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

Au;to 'h~ng on shattered bridge

FuII Size Mattresses
Healthful~

~

UNIT CALLED
RACINE - The Racme ER
squad Saturday at 8 20 p. m.
was called to Letart Falls for
James Ettkins, a POSSible heart
patten!, who was taken to
Veterans Memonal Hospital

Sale! Sfi9.95.Serta Rest

• I

l··;::::b:;::·=lA utO sales continue In
·- slump-

Subs, supervisors will
take turn in classrooms
COLUMBUS (UP!) ~ The nearly 4,000-member
Columbus Education Association early today struck
the 170 Columbus public schools, which has a total
enrollment of 100,000, in a wage dispute Schools
were scheduled to open with classes taught by
substitute teachers and supervtsory personnel
The CEA posted pickets at each building and
each school-constructlop ,site CEA Prestdent Ted
Thomas sa1d he expected the some 1,000 nonmember teachers, the city's non-teachmg personnel
and building trade union members to refuse to cross
the picket lines.
Teachers Jammed mto the
Lausche building at the stall&gt;
fa1rgromds .SIDlday afrernoon
and voted m favor of the
walkout by a 60 per cent
maJortty, after rejecting the
school board's last offer by a 72
per cent margin and turning
down two alternatives
The teachers reJe cted a
proposal to delay the walkout
for one week, pending the
oul&lt;!ome of further bargaining.
They also rejected the alternative of both sides submitting
the contract to binding arbitration
Teachers First Walkout
The group decided to go
ahead wtth the state capital
ctly's first teachers strike ln
history after talks broke off
.l;lte Saturday, with no further
negollattons--~eduled. The
teachers had dropped - their
wage mcrease demands from
20 per cent to 12, while Ute ctty
offered 4.1 per cent hike.
Jack Burgess, chief CEA
negotiator, sind "the school
board refused to budge from its
posttton of approxlma tely 4 per
cent pay mcrease " He said his
group had ''pared close to $4
mtlhon of the demands m tts
package to a 12 per cent hase
propos_al, &gt;~hich we think ts frur

at a time when we have a 12 per
cent mflallon."
Dr Johr\ Ellis, ctty school
supertntendent, said the treasury did not have any more
money to grant _teachers. He
said It would he necessary to
seek passage of an emergency
levy to get more money
"We are naturally deeply
(Continued on page 10)

Deer fall' to
machines
The Meigs CQtlllty Shert!f's
Dept. Investigated two accidents over the weekend &lt;£tn
whtch a deer was killed in
each
Saturday at 8:03 p. m. on U.
S. Rt :p Alva L Tiemeyer,
Pomeroy;-traveling south, htt a
deer which ran Into !he-path oi-

per cent. The President s1gned
a bill to provide $4 5 btlllon ln
unemployment benefits and
new
government
job
programs
VIce President Nelson A
Rockefeller is expected to have
some part ln the strategy
sessions. Rockefeller sat ln
Saturday on the meeting of the
Economic Polley Board which
Nessen satd "dovetalled"
energy
and
economic
problems.

Nessen said of Rockefeller
Sunday "He's going to be a
very b!L'Iy mao."
One . of the jobs will he
heading the eight-member
commission to Investigate the
Central lntelllgence Agency.
The commission wlU seek to
find out if the CIA violated Its
charter, which bans domestic
spying, and spied on what news
reports have said were as
many as 10,000 Amerleans
during the 1960s.

Flight is c&lt;&gt;ff
SANTA ANA, Calif. (UP!)Malcolm Forbes' planned
7,(J(J(J.mile balloon fllght to
Europe was aborted before
dawn today when the four tlers
of heliwn filled balloons broke
•
apart.
But Forbes said he wlll
immediately plan another
flight lo be launched before the
end of Febnl'(fy.
Forbes, 55, and aerospace
scientist Thomas Helnshelmer,
35, were Inside the gondola,
"Wlndborne," when the balloons snapped free. The gondola was dragged about 20 feet
across the tarmac of the
Marine Corpll heUcopter base
here. but neither man was
hurt.
Forbes satd they have the
nylon to make more balloons
and the high a!Utude weather
wlll be adequate untlllhe end
of February.
He sold the Wlndborne,
which was not damaged
allhough tt ended up on lts top,
could be relldy to go again ln 30
days.
Forbes, publisher of a buslne,ss magazine, and Helnshlemer, of Rolling Hills,
Calif , had planned four
prevlo!L'I takeoffs since Dec. 30.
Gusty surlace winds delayed
the flight three times. A faulty
communlcatlons system
further delayed the fhght early
Saturday. ,
It was scheduled for launchm~ Into the jetstream 40,000

feet above the earth Sunday
morning and was again postponed by mfavorable winds.
Early today, Forbes said the
weather was good and he was
ready to go, and quickly began
a COIDlldown.
The Uers of balloons were
dragged from the hanger onto
the tarmac and were being
raised $lowly with hellwn when
they began separating.
Forbes said as one Uer pulled
another upward, he released
the bottom stack of three
balloons to prevent heavy
damage to the spherical alumlnwn gondola, which could have
been bounced across the
l'tlllways.
The freed balloons rose lnlo
the dark morning sky above
the glare of floodlights and
vanished.'
The "airship," as Forbes
calls the balloon-gondola rig,
would tower 624 feet high. He
had planned to reach the jelstream and be pushed by the
100 to 150 mOe per hour winds
there to either southern Europe
or northern Africa.
Twelve attempts have been
made to cross the Atlantlc by
balloon. AU failed and ![even
persons died m the attelnpts.
NOW YOU KNOW
The use of fingerprmts for
identification was first used m
the 1860s by Enghsh adllllnlslrator William Herschel
In India

Oldest citizen is de'lid at
age of 101 in Otester
Metgs County's oldest
resident, Mrs. Elizabeth Jane
Wickham, died Monday
mormng at the home of a
daughter, Mrs
Pauline
Rtdenour, m Chester at the age
of 101
Mrs Wickham had been
active through her years She
was a member of the United
Methodist
Church
but
frequently .l'ttended the
Chester Cliurch of the
Nazarene wh1ch was close to
her residence ln Chester She
was a member of Chester
Councll 323, Daughters of
America, and of the Hemlock
Grange
Mrs. Wickham, born July 'l:l1
1873, was preceded m death by
her parents, John Wesley and
Melvlrui Bailey Pulll113; her

16 great-grandchlldren, and
nine great-greatgrandchildren
Runeral $ervlces wlll be held
at 2 p m. Wednesday at Ute
Ewing FID\eral Home with the
Rev Carl mcks and the Rev.
Herbert Grate officiating.
Burial will be In the MI. Hermon Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home
anytime after 7 this evening.
ANSWERS CALL
The Middleport E-R squad "
answered a call to South Third
Ave. at 6:14p. m. SIDlday for
Miss Frieda Faehnle, who was
Ul. She was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center, treated, and
returned liome by private
meanS' later.

hls car There was moclerate husband:'James :- a--.daughter,
iifii~~:-f~!~~=
damage to the car.
Edtth Bryant, a son,- Edsoil; '---SET
SIDlday at 9 30 a.m. in Oltve four grandchildren, a greal.,.--of----,_-&lt;.,,_t
Township on SR 681, W!Ulam grandchild, and a brother, have free pickup
"
Congrove, Reedsville , was James Pullllls.
their Christmas trees, Mayor
traveling east when a deer ran
Survivmg are two daughters, Fred Hoffman s1dd todaymto the path of his car. There ' Mrs. Pauline Ridenour and Residents are to place th~
was mocler~te damage There" Mrs. Erma Hellman, both of discarded trees near the
1
were no personal mjurtes t~ Chester; a son, John, of ctirblng of their homes. The
etther acctdenl
QJesler; four grandchildren, pickup will be made Tuesday.
4

--

J

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="760">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11160">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48512">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48511">
              <text>January 5, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1408">
      <name>hite</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4352">
      <name>mcangus</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1988">
      <name>welker</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
