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12-The DaUy sentinel, ~ddieporl-l'omeroy, o., Fe~. 4, 1972

Unions, Media

•ticized Feb. 5~ 11
·

•

WASHINGTON (UPI) ASsistant Attorney General L.
Patrick Gray Ill, the man in
charge of enforcing President
Nixon's wage.price controls,
today accused organized labor
of trying to destroy the
'program, and the news media
of ignoring good news in favor ·
of bad.
"The unions quite frankly
are out to dump the program
and dump the President . It's
desperately false and unfair to
the people of the United
States," Gray said.
In an Interview with UPJ

Emmett Gilmore
Is Found Dead
E:mmetl Gilmore, 80, was
found dead Thursday afternoon
at his residence at 200 Condor
St. in Pomeroy.
Chief of Police Jed Webster
and assistant Meigs Coroner
Dr. John Ridgway who were
called to the home determined
there was no evidence of foul
play, although the exact cause
of death was not known. It was
believed that Mr. Gilmore had
been dead about 24 hours.
Mr. Gilmore was a retired
· foundry worker. He was
preceded in death by his wife,
Florence, and a daughter .
Surviving is a sister, Mrs. Ina
Stone, Lawrence, Pa., and
several nieces and n~phews .
FWleral services will be held
at 10 a.m. Saturday at the
Martin Funeral Home in
Rutland with the Rev. Cecil
Cox officiating. Burial will be
in Beech Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home any time.

Justice Department reporter
Isabelle Hall, Gray also said
the news media paid litUe heed
to two major administration
court victories in the economic
control field-one against a
five·amt fare hike by the
Cincinnati Transit Co., and the
other to overturn a ticket price
increase planned by the Chic&amp;·
go Black Hawks hockey team.
"The Cincinnati transit case
got a one or two.peragraph
story," Gray said. "I don't
think newspapers are much
interested in publishing

results. 1be'news Is when we
get dumped. You joumaUsts
draw the conclusion that unless
suits are filed on · day one,
that's not tough law en·
forcement."
The White · House, meanwhile, released a long-range
. economic study which
predicted it would take nearly
ro years to achieve the administration's goal of full
employment. The reason, it
said Is that the post World War
. n "baby boom" is about to hit
the labor market in flill force .

Mental Let Down
Hard on Hearts

COLUMBUS (UPI)-A study
of ISO persons who died from
heart attacks reveals nearly
half had been mentally
depressed in the months just
preceding their deaths:
The 31&gt;-year study by scientists at Ohio State University .
also found that although the elderly are more likely to have
fatal heart attacks than the
young, "when a younger
person has a heart attack, he is
more likely to die suddenly
than the older person."
The study directed by Dr.
Joseph Anthony, also showed
that most of the 150 victims of
heart attacks "tended to
engage in excessive cigarette
smoking or alcoholic intake."
"Nearly three.fourths of the .
victims studied smoked a pack
or more of cigarettes a day,
while less than one-third of a
control population smoked this
amount," Anthony said.
Other factors which tend to
induce heart trouble, accordl!ig to the scientist, in·
Tonight &amp; Saturday
eluded "high blood pressure
February 4-S
and high levels of cholesterol
RED SKY
and other fats."
AT MORNING
Nearly 50 per cent of the
(Technicolorl
heart attack victtma studied
Richard Thoma s
CatherinE '•urns
had suffered form of mental
"G P"
depression in ..the few months
Feature tie : Three Stoo9e• •. prier to their death. Many were
Colorcartoons:
under excessive emotional
Deep End
The Hunt
stress, he said.
The studies alao revealed, he
said, that divorced men and
Sun., Mon., &amp; Tues.
February 6-7-B
women had double the sudden
Wall Dl•ney' •
death rate of either married or
THE LIVING DESERT
single
persona.
(Technlcolor)
The report also said a heart
Academy Award Winners
Tne Greatest wildlife attack victim has a greater
spectacle of lllem all!
chance of dying during the first
"G"
few hours foUowlng the attack
Walt Disney's
than iJI the next five years.
VANISHING PRAIRIE
(Technlcolor)
He noted that 75 per cent of
"G" the heart attack deaths occurr·
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
ed outside a hospital, and the

MEIGS THEATRE

a

WEL.L,Lci'S SfE
~jO LOANS

~OII.T6A6£' IJJANS
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&lt;;AVIN6S
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We're ready.
And waiting to

be asked
ACheckmg Accounl or a Sale Deposit Box ...
money to bo rrow or money to sa ve . you name it.
And we'll take care of you . Promptly.

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
•

POMEROY

average delay was four hours
to get a victim into a hospital
coronary care unit.
The mortality rate from
heart attacks, he predicted,
could be significanUy reduced
with mobU coronary care units.
"We know that ap·
proldmately 40 per cent of
people who suffer a heart attack wiD die from it within a
month ol the onset of their
symptoms,;, Anthony said.
"Nearly one.balf of these victims wiD die within the first
hour."

F.XTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Exteaded Oullook ;,.,
Sunday through Tutsdly:
Chance of rain south aDd
IDOW north Jate Su!Miay•
Lows early Sonday I to II.
High Sunday Ill •rlh, mid
In cooperation with Drew
30s
and low 401 Iouth. Ral11
Webster Pool 39, AMerican
Legion, Pomeroy Mayor south aDd rain ot snow oorlh
William G . Bar~nick has issued -Moaclay. Overnight lowt In
a proclamation declaripg Feb. the ZOs north and 30s south. ·
5-11 to be Religious Emphasfs Highs.In the upper 31. north,
40 to 50 south. J'artly cloudy
Week.
and
colder 'l:uesday. A
The mayor's . proclamation
was bas!ld on these facts : . chance of snow flurries
many Amerieans who believe north. I.Qws TUesday ln the
in the existence of God stiU ne- 208. Highs in the 20s to low
glect or. reject public worship 30s.
of Him, that public recognition ·.•.· •.·.•.·. ......·..· .·.. ·.·.·: ·.·:·:···.·.·.... •,•
by citizens of their faith in the
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Creator is an essential part of
DISCHARGES:
George
that faith, and that .a family by
Henry, Arnold Blankenship,
praying and worshiping
together, asking God's blessing Mrs. William White, Delores
and giving Him their thaj!ks for Duff, Edward Thomas, Mrs.
favors received, gives spiritual James . Bragg, Mrs. James
strength and unity to America. Gardner and son, Homer
It also · notes that the lm· Painter, Mrs. Robert Smith,
plantation of ideals and the Mrs. Charles Stewart, Mrs.
instilling of a sense of moral John LitUe, Mrs. Mary Brown,
and spiritual values in our Mrs . Jack Jeffers, Wilbur
youth are essential to 'the Whitt, Fred Harmon, Charles
molding of character and to Slaier, Kenneth Bland, l\lrs.
the preservation of a strong Albert Holt and Mrs. Forrest
Hargraves.
and God-blessed nation.
In 1966 President Lyndon
Johnson
flew to Hawaii for a
MRS. ROUSH ILL
The Middleport E-R unit conference on the Vietnam
answered a call at 6:39 p.m. War.
Thursday to the home of Mrs.
Linley Roush in Rutland. Mrs.
Roush, who was ill, was taken
to Holzer Medical Center.

Set Aside

In other developments:
- The International Union of
Electrical Workers uked a
federal court Thursday to
exempt from wage controls
everyone making up to $3.35 an
hour, instead of the $1.90 Umit
settled on by the CQst of Uving
Cquncll. The union called the
.1.90 figure a "cruel blow at
America's working poor ."
'-The Federal Reserve reported that consumer credltinBtallment buying-declined
in December from November.
The slowdown was due to fewer
loans for automobile pur·
chases.

Driver Injured
In Collision
Little damage was reported
to two cars, although the driver
of one was hospitalized in an
accident on Middleport's
Second Ave., Friday morning.
Police said a car driven by
Kenneth P. Lee, 24, Clifton,
approaching the Mill St. in·
tersection, skidded into a
parked taxi owned by Don
Covert, Pomeroy. Lee told
officers his wheels locked when
he applied the brakes. Lee was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by police where he
was admitted for a knee injury.

ews•• in Briefi

Two .Firtns .Bid
On Town·.uaJi
SYRACUSE - Bids· ,for a
new town hall and fire station
were opened by Syracuse
village council Thursday nlgbt.
Submitting bids were X-1
Corp., Columbus, and Carter
and Evans, Inc., GaDitx'lis
The !ada will be lltudled and
awarded next week.
Council Biso reviewed an
WHALEY TOO

Terry Whaley, eighth grade
student at Meigs Junior High
School, was )lnlntentionally
omitted from the third six
weeks honor roll.
LOCAL TEMPS

•The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Friday was 20 degrees, with
light snow falling .

Now You Know
The ' world's deepest water
well, in Queensland, Australia
. is 7,009 feet deep.

or~ce on the propoMd gas
rate Increase submitted by the
Syracuse Home Utilit!ea ,
Cm!PMY, Council wiD act on ·
the lncrea8e as 110011 as It is
reviewed by Solicitor Frank W
.
Porter. .
· Manhall Milton Varlari
discussed the use of the
baseball field by the Americari
Legion team. Council agree&lt;! .
that the Meigs team ·could use
the field but a schedule at
·games Ia ~ed as sOon ~
pc)saibie.
·.
Vacancies on the board of.
pJblic .affairs were ~
with action to be taken next·
Tuesday. Varian also reported:
cars and motorcydes are being
driven on tile ball field.
·
Mayor Herman London
warned that driving cars and
cycles on tile park area must
be stopped at ooce.
Attending were London, Troy
Zwilling, Robert Wingett,
O.arles Blake, Art Syl\ester
and AI Lipscomb, councii
members;
Varian, and.
Kathryn Crow, clerk.

Seven .Given Oath by Brown

Veterans Memorial Hospital
DISCHARGES
Iva
Howell, Sharon 1 Thompson,
Evelyn Wood, General Hall,
Carol Dailey, Tammie Clark,
Grant Hickman, Anna Welch.

Trash

PORTSMOUTH - The
Scioto County Board of
Elections Thursday hosted the
first of six "tcaveling office"
area visits scheduled by
Secretary of Slate Ted W.
Brown during February in
Ohio. Seven of 11 appointees for
new four-year terms, one
Democrat and one ·Republican,
to start March 1 in Adama,
Gailia, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs, Pike, Ross, Scioto and
Vinton were sworn in by Ted
Brown.
Participating in the informal
discussions of election adJ;Dinistrative problems with
Secretary of State Ted Brown
and members of his staff were
the prospective board appointees from the nine counties, holdover members,
directors and deputy directors

(Coptinued from page I)
The Bureau of Labor Statistics said the total number of persons
(Continued from page 1)
employed has risen 2.1 million to 80.6 million since the unem·
ployment rate began rising from a 5.5 per cent level in October, Lodhary who used an antique
chair for her demonstcation.
1970.
December's jobless rate originally had heen reported at 6.1 She explained seven stegs
per cent but the bureau said it had been reduced to 6.0 per cent involved in ~aning a chair, the
materials needed and their
after all data was analyzed.
source of purchase, and the
tools used .
It was noted that a workshop
BISCAYNE, FLA. -PRESIDENT NIXON isolated himself in caning may be offered by
today in his Florida borne for what probably will be his last few Mrs. Ldchary soon. Residents
days of rela:ration before leaving on his historic trip.to Mainland Interested in learning· the
China, Family and advisers were left behind as the President process are asked to contact
made a surprise decision to leave the cold and wet national Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, Meigs
capital late Thtirsday for the more restful climate in the Florida County extension agent.
RECOGNITION
Keys.
...
Techniques for recognizing
Pref!ldential News Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the
antiques
and refinishing them
President took along numerous briefing j)apers about the China
trip and planned to immerse himself in them during the were given by Mrs. Paul
weekend. Nixon leave~ for O.ina in two weeks. He will visit · Chapman. She said the first
The Ohio Valley Coin
step for a novice collector is to
Peking and two other O.inese cities Feb .. 21·28.
buy a guide book ' and become Association's (ANA30475) 16th
Coin Convention will open
LA VERNE, CAUF. -AN OIL company ThurSday unveiled familiar with styles. A good Saturday, Feb. 19,at 11 a.m. in
a plant that turns garbltge and trash into oU, metals, glass and book, she said, will not only the C.l.O. Hall at Steubenville.
give a detailed description of
charcoal. The byproduct&amp; of trash can be sold and the money
Lloyd Wilson, Louis Maiello
each piece but a picture for
used to pay for SOII)e of tile cost of co~g America's millions easier Identification.
and James are co-&lt;:hairmen for
of tons of waste, the company said.
She gave hints on ways to the two day event.
With officials from the Federal Environmental ProtecUon distinguish between an antique
The convention will feature
Agency (EPA) and authorities in San Diego County looking on, and a reproduction mentioning Franklin Mint display with the
Occidental Petroleum Corp. demonstrated a four-6\ory high pUot the normal signs of use, the largest collection of Franklin
plant that the company said could process four tons of waste a "warm glow" of old wood, and Mint issues ever shown in Ohio.
day. A researd! engineer vacuumed some trash into a pipe, and the markings of equipment A representative of the Mint,
Ray Manville, · will attend to
oU guabed out the other end.
used in its production.
answer
inquiries regarding the
Mrs. Chapman discussed
WABHINGTON -THE TOP nGURES in the economically woods and finishes, and Franklin Mint and its products.
crippling Weat Cout dock strike were ordered to Washington demonstrated how to refinish a The Franklin Mint is the
under 111bpoena today to teD Congress what issues remain and piece of furniture from the first world's largest . lhint not af.
process of removing the filiated with a governmental
why they have not been resolved.
A House labor aubcommittee summoned Harry Bridges, varnish or paint to putting on agency.
Elhibitors will compete for
president of the International Longshoremen •s and the new finish .
She displayed several an· over 30 trophies and an
Warebo111emen's Union (ILWU); Edward F1ylin, president of
the Pacific Maritime Asaoclation (PMA); and Albert Bnmdage lique chairs, along with a Educational Award.
These will include five
variety of other antiques and
of the Teamsters Union, to testify at 10 a.m. ESI'.
some needlework at the Master Trophies, one Junia~
Master Trophy, 10 Superior
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . hall
workshop
held
in
the
fellowship
of St. Paul's Lutheran Trophies, and 15 Excellent
Church. Others exhibiting were Trophies.
The Educational Award will
Put New Life
Mrs. Paul Nease, Mrs. Edward
Stark, Mrs. Paul Amberger, be given to the display that
In Your Diamond
Mrs . Lochary and Mrs. conveys the most numiamatlc
information to the viewer. ·The
Howard Nolan.
annual
event boasts the finest
Mrs : Nial Salser was
Make your diamond come
chairman for the meeting and in exhibits ol any local or
alive with an exciting new
gave devotions. A valentine regional show. .
Over 35 prominent United
theme was carrioo out in the
setting from our selection
table decorations for the noon States and Canadian dealers'
lun c heon . Attractive will be on hand to fill the needs
or pins, pendants, rings,
arrangements made from of the Tri.Stste area collectors,
valentine candy bOxes by Mrs. Maximum security measures
cufflinks, and more ...
Nolan were used on ta hies will be in effect for the
each desiQned to
along with red center stcipes. pr~tection of materials as we~

and some of the Republican
and Democratic county hiaders
of the district.
Appointments made by the
County Executive Committees
of the political parties of the
nine~ounty Portsmouth area,
of whom seven were sworn,
were (Note, "x" denotes in·
cumbent):
ADAMS - G. Paul Lewis,
Peebles, (R·x); Mrs. Velma I.
Grooms, Manchester, (D-x).
GALLIA- Lawrence Green,
Bidwell, (R·x) (Could not
attend).
JACKSON - W. Channell,
Jackson, (D).
LAWRENCE - Merrill A.
Gorby, Proctorville, (R·x).
MEIGS- James H. Quivey,
Pomeroy, (R·x); Edwin _S.
Cozart, Racine, (f)..x).
PIKE -Evert N. Hammond,

c:

Piketori, (R·x); Jesse Cole, Jr.:
Waverly, (D-x). ·
ROSS - David L. Barrett
(co~otattend), Chillicothe,
(R-~) Robert W, Badgley,
Chillicothe, (f)..x) .
·
SCIOTO- Ralph E. Cooley,
Portsmouth, (R·x); Norman
H. Bartlett, ·Portsmouth, (f).
x).

· GALLIPOLIS - Three young men,
The display consisted ofa wide variety · name, tomahawks, cypstones, pitted
One from Lawrence County and two of of materials ·that included bone needles, stones, and a few unfinished artifacts of
. .
·Gallta County, captured a first . place .. awls, bear teeth pendants, !Ish hoot~s. stone.
The collection also included several
ribbon for "beat site material" ~lays beads, fla~lng tools, and cut and worl&lt;ed
types
of pottery, shell artifacts and many
during the Jan. 16 Archaeological Society · bone spec1m~nts.
.
·
,
of Ohio meeting' at Otterbein College in
There were also SUCh ite'l!' as bone different types ·of·animal bones as well as
Westerville.
··
tinklers and_a bone flute. Included in the different types of fiint ll,9ed by the Indians
John Unrue, a 1969 Ironton High School fli~t .collection ~ere . triangular points, for fooq and to make their tools.
I
graduate, and Doug Rice and Steve Jef· knives, drills, arid several points from
. '
·fen, Southwestern High School students, various cultures.
.
.
More than 300 relics are included in
Patriot, 'combfued their collections from
Two very rare copper items from this tl)e trio's ruidings.
the "Gull Sl~" to form their display.
particul~r culture were also on display.
l,Jnrue is the son of Mr. and Mrs. ErTheir .,findings were unearthed last They were two copper beads and a piece of nest Unrue, Ironton. Rice Is the son of Mr.
October near ~allipolis Ferry, w, Va., sheet co~per. In the line of stone there and Mrs. Cecil Rice, and Jeffers is the son
irom Fort Ancient VIllage where Indians were a few stone tools fo\llld which in· of Mr. and Mrs. .Leon . Jeffers, aU of
began leaving artifacJs around 1200 ·AD. eluded dlscoidals, celts, or a more familiar Patriot.

t

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CHIWCOTHE, Ohio (UPl) -Rep.
William Haraha, R.Qhio, Ssturday !Ill·
nounced apjroval of a $M1,600 federal
grant for construction of an amphitheater
atthefootofSugarloafMountain northeast.
of here.
'
Haratia told a news conference the
amphltlleater will be "one of the most
exclli1!fi things" to happen to this area of
soulhi&amp;stern Ohio.

'
Construction
is expected to start in
Marchand it will take four months to build
theltheater, Harsha said.
Harsha said, however, the first
production won't be staged until May,
· 1973 because access roads to the area will
have to be built.
He said construction 'to the 1,600 seat
theater will provide jobs for abOut 60
persons.

The theater . wiD be utilized for a
historical play, eoncerts, civic events and
worship services.
The PortSmouth congressman said the
funds for construction. were inade
available by the Economic Development
Administration aa Jl!lri.of a publip works
im~ program. To qualify for this type of
grant the area must have substantial
unemployment, said Harsha.

Cloudy and not as cold with
snow likely: Sunday , Snow
posaibly mixed with rain south
portion .Sunday. High Sunday
in the 20s north to the 30s south.
Snow likely Sundsy night and
cold, low 5 to .15 ·above north
and 15 to ro south,
'

Elberfelds Are Open Friday
and Saturday Nights Until 9

VOL VII NO. 1

I

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tier)' brilliance of

.

·i·.·'

-~ .

' )'

REUCS DISPLAYED ~ John Unrue, left, Ironton; Doug
Rice, and Steve Jeffers, of Patriot, display a small part ·of
their collection of Indian tools and artifacts unearthed last

· 30 PAGES

AT THE

Serving Meigs County

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Since 1872

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to~O .,S

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ltiNO UTTINO

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All.Accounts Insured Up To$20.000.00

M'·"

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and Saturday Nights 10 until 2
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THREE SECTIONS

Pomeroy-Middleport

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1972

15 CENTS

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

•

WASinNGTON (UPI)' - In ordering a new tax, ratller than the •16 billion it in·
thorough study of the cOntroversial "value dicated elirlier it had in mfud.
'" ld4lll tp," J!nl!:l!en~ Nlpllia,sea~~ing """" HolUV\!J:', the total wou~d be ~~Y
tor an alternltfve lnelliod at financl!tg offset by use o( all&lt;lut f5 billion to mlniniize
schoola tliat would permit ''regressive" feature;$ of the value added
,
growing prOperty tax bqrden levy, tboee ~lliilg most heavily on lowbe cut by 50 per cent. '
income families.
• Documents' distributed io its members
It is these burdensome features that
by the Advisor)' I;OillllliSsioo on Iii- ·make . the value added tax a sure-fire
tergovet'IUII4!Iital Rela.ti011S and obtained source of · political dynamite for the
by UPI also show that the White House Democrats. A form of national sales
.. ho,pes to raise $16 bUiion from ·any such tax, it applies a specific rate to the value

PREPARE FOR NATIONAL VOCATIONAL EDUCATioN WEEK ..:. James
N, M. Davis, left, Gallla Academy High School principal, discusses upcoming
vocational education acUvities with City Manager D. KeMeth Morgan. The
Gallipolis City Schools wiD observe National Vocational Education Week Feb. 13
through 19. Purpose is to bring attention to the merits arid accomplis~ents of ·
vocational education. In commenting on the subject, Principal Davis said
"Vocational education at GAllS trains our·youth for a salable skill and prepares
them for employment wilhJn-our community.'~ City Manager Morgan, in support
of the oblervance, issued a proclamation urging aU citizens to support the
programs in vocational education at GAllS to the extent that each citizen can
benefit from these services.

F. Robinson, former
msyor of Pomeroy and a businessman
here, was reelected chairman of the Meigs
County Regional Planning Commission at
the annual meeting held 'l'hursdaY evening
at the Meigs County Home.
.Elected vice-chairman was Thereon
·Johnson, newly appointed member of the
Commiasion. Edison Baker was elected
secretary and Howard Frank, treasurer.
EaCh municipality, a county com·
missioner, ·the chairman of the County
aerks and Trustees Assn., and three
elected members are membe1'8 of the
· executive ·committee. Elected to the
' Executive 'Conunitiee last night, in ad·
dillon to the other seven, were Thereon
Jolrlson, Carl Barnhill, and carl Qualls.
Pat Meeker, Surveys Unlimited
consultant, presented his firm's maps in

proposed land use for the five mcorporated
villages and for the county. He also
discussed the impact areas of the county,
particularly in relation to the development
of western Meigs County.
Attending in addition to the above
were l'omeroy Mayor William Baronick
and Theodore T. Reed Jr. of tile Pomeroy
Planning Commission; Warden OUrs,
County Commissioner; Bill Parker and
Charles Brinkman Of SiJrve)'B UnUmited;
Robert Decl:er of Buckeye HiJls..Hocking
Valley IW~ional Development Dlstlict;
Dave Parry of Soil Conservation Service;
Beulah Jones, and C. E. Blakeslee, County
Extension Agent.
The next meeting of the planning
coinmtsslon wiD be Feb. 24 at the county
borne. All meetings of the planning
commission are open' to the public.

Rotarians .E lect Riggs
MII;JDLEPORT - Gene Riggs, elected
president of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club Friday night, will begin his
Rotary year July I.
An agent of the John Hancock Life
Insurance Co., Riggs resides on Route 7
llllrtheasl of Olester. Harold E. Hubbard,
of m S. Fourth St., Middleport, .was
elected vice president.
Other officers are John Werner,
reelected secretary; · the Rev. Robert
Kuhn, reelected treasurer, and directors
are retiring president C. E. Blakeslee,
John Will, and Dennis Keney. Wilbur
Theobald was chairman of the nominating
committee which brought In the report. All
were elected unanimously.
Earl Ingels, chairman of the Telethon
. March 25-26 - for 20 hours - to benefit the
Crippled Children's Society Easter seal
~~&amp;le said the goal of the telephone cam·
)llllgn in Meigs County will be $2,126, the

number of the telephone the public is to
call those two days.
One guest was Don Diener, ad·
ministrator of Veterans Memorial
Hospital. He was introduced by Presidentelect Riggs.
President Blakeslee presided over the
open meeting.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook - Monday
through Wednesday:
Cold Monday through Wednesday
with achance ofsnow Monday and again
on Wednesday. Day-time hlgha in the 20s
north and the lower 30s southern sectlou. Overnight lows 12 to 20 north and
20 to 25 south early Monday and again
Wednesday but in the teeu the entire
state early Tuesday.

your diamond.

RUTlAND

fallnearGallipolisFerry, W. Va.Their coUecUon exceeds 300
items. Asked about how orre goes about finding so many
objects they agreed, ''you just start digging."

President Pinning opes
On New Value Added Tax .

POMEROY ~ E.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.

·. ....

.

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valle,;

Robinson Reelected

A Good
Time
For
. I
.
Family Shopping
All Over The ·Store

'

tmts

Mint Show in Steubenville

Elberfeld s

" ,.

•

+

Weather

Valley Numismatists to See
as individuals.
Ernie Darmo, security; Louis
Hours of the , show on Matella, special awards; John
Saturday are 11 a.m. to 9 pm. Sulak, arrangements; William
and on Sunday from 11 a. m. to Warner, : signa; Eugene Bar·
5 p. m. Address of ·the C.I.O. ney, electrician; Ernest Yeo,
Hall in Steubenville is 'J:J.7 South tcansportatlon, and Regina
Third St.
Alex, publicity.
Olher committee chairmen
For more information
are Lloyd Wilson, bourse;
Ohio Valley Coin
contact:
Edward Kotora, exhibits; Dr.
and Mrs. Francis Fach, Association, P. 0. Box 451,
regiatcation and coat check; Steubenville, Ohio 43952.

I

.,

Theater at Foot of' Sugarloaf Moltntain Assured

VINTON - Gordon L.
Jenkins, McArthur, (R·x);
Austin P. Morrison, McArthur,
(D·x).
Green and Barrett will
receive their certificates at a
later date.
Also attending were Carl F.
Wallace, Hillsboro (D),
Highland County. and John
Ayers, Murray City, (f).
x), Hocking County, who could
not attend area sessions where
originally scheduled.

bring out the full,
•

Collection Wins Blue Ribbon

Old Letart Falls
School Building
Getting New .Life
cording to Mrs. Kitty Allen Skeels, was
built in 1878. It housed elementary and
high school pupU..
,
.
The Jut year the school Operated was
in 1937 when elementary pupUs were
moved to the present l.ttart Elementary
building. High &amp;:boo! students were
moved to Racine in 1931 in what Ia now
Southern Junior High.
Ray Hayman and Charles Hayman,
'(C(In!ii11U"fl on j&gt;age JJ

1

mlasi&lt;in on School Finance toltlldyw~ya to
improve acllool financing becauae local
propertr tau,, which provide most Of the
~
1111111m=:, are , ~ fA!g,;\l!ll'l'.: "".'4. , •. "'
' · "Although NIJ:oo'a State cl tile Union
. :
message referred to no speclf)c substitute,
theWhlteHWlM!releasedalettertoRobert
E. Merriam, a Chicago businet111 executive
andchairmanoftheadvlsoryCommlsaion,
ssklng for a study of the implications of a
.value added tax.
TWo Almll Soqbl
A preface to the docmnents to Ita
members said Nixon wss ~king two
objectives:
-To cut all residential property taxes
about in half by eliminating that part of the
tax going to the opera~ costs of
elementary and secondary schools.
-To encourage aU states to "assume
virtually all responsibility" for the
schools, aided by money · coming from
(Continued on page 3)

Arrests Expected
BOONE, N.C. (UPI)-Police sald
Saturday they had some "good clues" to
the identity of·the slayers of three persons
whose bodies were found crammed facedown in an overflowing bathtub in their
fashionable horne,
Watauga County Sheriff Ward Carroll
said he expected some early arrests in the
strangulation-drowning deaths of Bryce B.
Durham, Sl, co-owner of an auto dealer·
ship; his wife, Virginia, 46, and son, Bobby
Joe, 19.
Their bodies were discovered Thursday
about 10:30p.m. by a son-in-law, Ray Hall,
who said he received a distress phone call
from: Mrs. Durham ro minutes earlier.
Catron said he was looking for black
male; suapects and termed the murders
possible "Grudge killings, " although
robbery.has not been ruled out as a motive.
Quiet Neighborhood
The Durbams lived in an area which one
. neighbor said was considered "the
qule!est in the county-a place where you
don't care If you leave your doors
unlocked."
Many residents now are frightened and
the Durham's next door neighbor, Clinard
Wilson, declared : "I've got two guns, and 1

aim to protect myself."
A funeral lor the Durb8ms was
scheduled tot 2 p.m. Sunday at the First
Baptist Church in Boone. Burtal will be at
the Pleasant Home Baptist r:hurch
cemetery near the neighboring Wilkes
County community of Lomax.
State Medical Examiner Or. Page
Hudson Jr. said an autopsy showed
Durham and his son were strangled with a
nylon cord while their heads were held
under water in the bathtub.
Pl&gt;.one Goes Dead
Mrs. Durham was strangled before she
was stuffed headfirst in the tub alongside
her husband and son, Hudson said.
Hudson placed the time of death at 10.
p.m. Thursday "give or take an hour."
HaU told police he received a call about
10:30 p.m. from Mrs. Durham who said
three black men were holding her husband
and son in another room.
Then the phone went dead, Hall said.
Hall said he drove to the Durham
residence where he discovered the bodies,
then ran do~ the hill to a neighbor to call
pollee. ·The sheriff's department recorded
the call at 10:50 p.m.

New Program 'Funded

•

BY KATIE CROW
LETAltT FAU.S- The beat goes on.
And so dOea tile' Letart Falls Community
School. •
r
.
No t.qet uied as a school, the
l'lllidenta have united to prl!lerve the
neatly 100-year old ltructure in the heart
of this 1'111'11 clommunity.
Relidents Interested in Its aurvival
have bllldell tDgetbor ' to restore the
familiar landlriark. '1; • •'lnicture, ac-

added to products or services a teach stage
of production and distribution, and
ultimately results In steeper prices for the
consumer.
.•
Two Paoell Working ·
It is commonly used by Western Europe
nations, but has no chance of gaining
congressional approval thla year. Sen;
Russell B. Long, f)..La. , chairman of the
Senate Finance Committee, says in fact
that Congress would never approve it.
Sens. George S. McGovern, O.S.D., and
Henry M. Jackson, [).Wash., have come
out against It, but Democratic candidates
generaUy have yet to make a major
campaign issue of the value added concept.
Nixon has two panels working on the
problem of school financing . One is the 23member advisory commission, created by
law federally financed and representing
national, state and local governments. He
also asked the 19'10 President's Con:t·

AT')'RACTIVE PANELING has been used lavishly to modernize the aged
·Letart Fails Olmmunity HaU building. Viewing the remodeling are Mrs. Herbert
. Roush, and Dallas Hill, trustee,·, and Joey Roush. Extensive remodeling is being
done to the aged structure.

RUTLAND - Jack W. Crisp,
president of the Leading Creek Con·
servancy District with offices here, announced Saturday funding of a new
program 'from the Ohio State Bureau of
Vocational Rehabilitation to serve
. physically ·handicawect pel'8011S in such
areas as job training, carpentering,
plumbing and related trade ~kills.
Crisp said this program would serve
&amp;pproxlmately 100 people in the next 12
months in Meigs and surrounding coun·
ties.
The approximate tAltal Iundin!( for this
program would he in the are• of one-

quarter million dollars per year,
Crisp said this is one rl. tile first
programs of its kind in .this part of Ohio,
He commended the Bureau ol Vocational
Rehabilitation and the Rehabilitation
Services Commission for their action in
approving and funding this program for
the people of southeastern Obio, many of
wboni he said will benefit.
Persons who feel they can qualify flir ·
this 'program should contact the
Vocational Rehabilitation llepartment al
Leading Creek Conservancy Dlatrict, .
Rutland, or the Athens office .
1

•
I

)

�,· S&lt;Uula) flmes -Sentinei,SWlday, Feb.6,19rl

EDITORIAlS

BRUCE BIOSSAT

B[RAf'S WORlD

Nixon's Timing

Sleepy _Driver Wrecked Auto

Meeting in
.
..Pom~roy _ of Wide Interes,t
'

Viet Peace Bid
hnpact: How Long?

Marth .8111JeClallY oriented to ~ inte,esta
ot Metp Countianlln conneCtion with the
James M. Gavin Power Plant development. will be Wlllched allo by Glllla.County. We take eepecial notice al the fact
that attendance apparently Is DDt limlted
to Melp cltb:ens. The event, on a flrat. come llnt-.ved bulB, csn llei'Ve no more
than •PJI'OIImatel)' 55 penons. Thills fair,
warning to obtain dinner Uckets ell'ly.
The meetq has been arranged by
Pomeroy ittorney Fred a-ow through the
Pomeroy Olamber ri Commerce with Mr.
John Reece, public affairs COOI'dbiator of
the .James M. Gavin Plartt. Up 'to eight
offlclala of the Ohio Power Compan,y or of
the Amerlcsn Gas and Electric Corp. of
.New York aty will be on hand to meet us
and aniwer queationa. The topic wiiJ be the
Impact on the future development of Meigs
County of the power plant itself at
!lleshire, just across tbe "border" into
Gallia County, and ot the deep Cl1al mine
(Meigs Mine) near Salem Center In northwestern Melga ~ty,

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON &lt;NEA)
SOme political analysts here believe it is a mistake to
think of President Nixon's recently disclosed · Vietnam
peace plan as a new initiative. They argue il should be
taken as an old initiative which failed .
In their judgment, the President would not have disclosed the long-secret private approaches to Hanoi so
long a~ there was any real chance they might succeed.
His. anhouncement. then, may be viewed as a clear signal
tl!at private negotiations are dead . ·
Obviously, the fact of the talks bas been a powerful
weapon in Mr. Nixon's arsenal for a l considerable time.
He has known he could spring a big surprise. at home
and abroad, whenever he felt so moved.
What explains his timing?
Already dealt with in the first aftermath responses to
his disclosures- the disarming of his Democratic· president!~! rivals by stealing their stuff, the possibility of
heightening his own damaged credibility in a year when
voters' trust is thin, a pavin~ or the way for U.S. air
power reaction to an expected Hanoi offensive.
There is also the impending China visit in late February. In one analyst's vtew, the President understandably
has reasoned that he can't a11pear to be in any sort of
weakened position when he is m Peking.
Therefore, it is argued, he would not want to be fencing
with China's Chou En-lai while our ally, South Vietnam .
was getting clobbered by North Vietnam-with us standIng helplessly aside. Nor would he wish to sit in Peking
while we are mounting air strikes that mi~ht be widely
condemned In many quarters of the world.
To disclose our 30 months of peace- efforts is Mr.
Nixon's way. it is said, of preserving his option of reSPonding in streneth to Hanoi's offensive. without losinl(
all s.vmPathv at home and abroad. He can say : "Well ,
we tried another course. but this was forced upon us ."
There seems to be no question that the President has
sought to use the fact of the secret Vietnam talks for
both foreilln and domestic impact.
How effective this will be in the world's capitals, includine Pekin~. only time and coming events in Vietnam
may tell. As for the home front, the questions and doubts
are large.
It has been SUI!I!estcd previously that American voters
are predominantly Interested toda·y only in ~etting us out
of Vietnam, and not in details about elections, aid to
Saigon, a cease-fire, etc.
Some sources here think the President is overplaying
the surprise bit on the assumption it can have fairly
deep lone-lasting effect. They feel that the imPact from
bll! Presidential moves and announcements is shorter
and shallower than Mr. Nixon lmal!ines.
Pollsters like Louis Hartis have provided the ration~le
for the use of the big-move tActic. They arl!ue that a
president or other too oubllc fii!'Ure who is riot broadly
pooular itrue for both Nixon and Lyndon John.on) rnav
,l!et substantial benefit-for awhile- from pulling off a
big one. The key Is : for how long•
··
A veteran political appraiser here thinks the President is so enamored of this approach that he won't let
it go. Says this man :
"One thing you can bet- -lte'U do something big in
October (on the eve of the 1972 election). He's got the
power to do it. and he's been waiting years for just this
chance. All that time, he's been watching the other
fellows (the DemOcrats) do !hines in October. He's not
abo_!!t I!&gt; pass ·IIP his opportunity!"
.

'DAVID POLING, D.D.

Jesus Movement:
When Good Is Bad
By REV. DAVID POLING
A belligerent note has been struck in the encounter of
the Jesus movement and the traditional church. It was
bound to come and it carries the seeds of continuing conflict for the Christian church. There appears to be three
aspects of the Jesus movement which blend into one as
far as the public is concerned. This is unfortunate and the
several m~nifestations of religious "happening" need to
be carefully sorted out for they differ drastically.
The first aspect of the Jesus movement is· commercial.
!,t centers ~round the record, and Broadway production.
Jesus Chnst Superstar." A folk rock opera , it has catchy
t~nes and a poundin~ pace .- The theology is thin, presenting Jesus as a confused and bewildered humanitarian .
The material, cast and song have enjoyed popular acceptance- like ·any other commercial musical. It will fade.
for Broadway always looks to new seasons and new stars.
The Children of God is now an international movement,
spun out of the Jesus people that blossomed in California
and Texas. Absolute, total allegiance to their fundamental
brand of religion is demanded of members . Young people
change their names, often leave home and proclaim a
messal!e of immediate doom . Most of them seem to be
a wrathful. furious sect: The traditional church is the
enemy and American society the villain . In some areas
the conflict within family and community has become so ·
inten&lt;e -that a counter-organization has been formed
called Parents' Committee to Free Our Children frorri the
Children of God. While proclaiming valid truths of the
Bible (Jud~ment of a sens~ous culture, criticism of a lazy
church : they appear to tl(nore the love and peace and
reconciliation of the New Testament.
The third and. to this writer, the most significant aspect
c. the Jesus movement is the stirring of so many yow1g
people and childre~ to a ":e':l' and vital relationship to
J~•us Christ. The rtse of rehl(ton for many 1s nothing less
than the moving or the Holy Spirit in individual lives. It is
activated by_a need for certainty_ i_n a century of change.
It ts a yearnmg for moral and spmtual depth in a society
drenched with sexploitatlon, an advertising av~lanche to
buY-buy-buy, and a nation that talks peace and builds
bigger bombs. FoJ hundreds of thousands of younl( people, the New Testament has become a relevant and thrilling book- but the book is about a Person . not an idea o1·
concept
The result of all this is mixed. One comment by Peter
Adgie . the pastor of the United Church, Los Alari10s. N.M.,
is timely :
· " During the past month a number of high school students in Los Alamos have committed their lives to Christ
In a manner !Which perhaps' can best be described as
sudden and wonderful, although inexplicable to some .
Some of those who have found a new vision of Ghrist are
from the United Church, but many are from the commul)ity at large. Their zeal, earnestness and eagerness to
learn more of their Savior is amazing to see : heartwarmIng to some, disconcerting to others.
"Clearly, these new Christians need support , understanding. compassion. and love, as they take their first
stfps In the Christian life. From various parts of our community they have already experienced ndicule, rejection ,
severe criticism and scorn, and there ar~en those who
are attempting to staritp out their faith ere·1r can be anchored In prayer and the !Bible.
"Chriltlans in the United Church! Talk with these stu .
denll, belp them whenever you can, go out of your way to
know them, and . pray for them! . . . How happy and
thankful we are that the Holy Spirit h~s found them."

meetlllfl in Pomeroy· In

A · dlnne:

&lt;f.· 197l' b) NU,

There have been "tumors" and
''npllorl al rumon" floiting in Meigs
County the past 8IJ: montha that one or
more large oouaing developmenta in Metgs
County will be annoWICed mamentarUy.
To tiU pobtl, the rumors remain rumors.
Meuwhlle, tn Gal)la .C9unty, new
COilllnlctkln ri medium priced oomes
~ to be IIOIII'ing. The aingle most
lm)nlllve development is at Addison
where thee 4ngell Construction Co.,
Wbeelenburg, Ohio has · completed an
apartment project and is pr-oci!edjng with
clearing wcri 011 a site that eventually is
planned to contain 200 oomes, collllll~te
With a COillll)lll\lty swimming !JOO!, pther
recreation facilities, and Its own ~erage
syatem. ·
As candidates for county offices will
have to come tO realize soon, the Gavin
project In ita entirety representa the most
Important single economic development
. for Meigs County since 1900, maybe even
since the day Samuel Pomeroy came
floating down the Ohio River and, pointing
to the cUffs rising from the river ba~,

i

I

,(

"l're been waiting dinner lor you all this time, onrJ yo~
u~ct me to BELIEVE y~u're be!'n on Guam since 1944?"

"Fair and warmer," says the
weather man's morning forecast,

-Economy Strategy ·
Hangs on Vote P~g

and you dress accordingly. But
during the day a cloudburst bitt
town, drenching- and ruinlogyour clothes. You might (eel a
distinct urge to sue the weatherman·for damages. Or, 10 be more

By RAY CROMLEY

technical, to sue his employer,
the United States Government

WASHINGTON !NEAl
By accident or design, the Nixon budget is carefully tail·
ored to give selected industries a shot of adrenalin in time
for the November election .
These companies, to a considerable extent. are located
in specific regions- the West Coast and parts of the South,
for exam:rle- where Mr. Nixon must win in order to be
re-electe . They include, of course, the particularly depressed space and military industries .
Nationwide and overall, unemployment this year will
remain high . The best guesses g1ven run from 5.2 to 5.5
per cent, with some )1igher. But those are1 averages. If
Mr . Nixon's programs go through, unemploymlint
will be
down considerably in specific states and among those
groups where joblessness could cause him serious political trouble.
·
Don 't look at the spending figures. Instead , study the
authorizations for major new programs, designed to expand over the next few Y.ears. These starts, as they begin
to fire up, will go heavtly into tooling up, hiring and explormg for what subcontractors can do . This should stimulate greatly the signing on of blue-collar operatives.
clerks and engineers.
These are not the groupings where unemployment ·has
been the greatest percentagewise. But this is where there
have Been -s-ome of .the greatest problems.
.The unerppl~y~ent rate in November will still be very
htgh among marrt.ed women, high school and ·college age ·
youths and among those loo::ing for part-time jobs.
But unemployment should be below 2.8 per cent among
married men and low compared lo January-February 1972
for women who are heads of households.
The new budget also increases spending markedly for
the aged-addea jobs, more programs, more concern for
their over-all livelihood. Older persons should normally
do well by Mr. Nixon in the voting booths if their living
conditions are on the mend .
Mr. Nixon has a number of safety valves to · take the
steam ~ut rof some of.the most difficult solutions among
the m.ajor u~employed groups remaining. Welfare fundmg wtl contmue high. Some $2.25 billion in budget authority .wil~ be made available to state and local g6vernments m f1scal 1972 and 1973 to create transitional or
temporary employment Most of these funds will be
pumped into the system before November, 1972, if Mr.
Nixon gets congressional· action in time. This is new
money and new programs beginning this 1972 fiscal year.
Altogether manpower training, servicing job assistance
wi!J total a whopping $9.4 billion dollars fo~ fiscal 1972 and
1973, congress willing. This is almost double the funds
available for these purposes in the two previous fiscal
years. The two fiscal years have been combined for this
analysis , because it is known that. as in the public service
JOb program mentioned above, Mr. Nixon plans to pump
as much of this money inlo action in calendar year 1972
. as he possibly can to get the economy on its feet and
rolling before Nov. 7.

(Continued from page I)
principals, were the 18l!t teachers at Letart
School.
·
·
Residents of this area, sensing the
value of the building, purchased it in !937
from the Racine School Board for $1,250.
The building has been used by the com·
mrn~ity in a variety of ways.
Until 10 years ago Decoration day
dinners were served there each year.
Former residents returned for dinner and
to spend the rest of tbe day visiting old
friends. In addition it has beeit used for •
showers, jilney suppers and even revivals.
This too is where citizens vote .
The building Is being completely
rem~J~~el~~gh the efforts of the
trustee!,
_s Hill, Virgil Roush, Mrs.
George Yonker, Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Mrs. Bertha.Robinson, all of Racine, Rt. 2.
With money donated for the hall's
restoration the trustees have purchased
materials for complete renovation . Thus
far a total of $700 has been spent.
Work on the building is being done by
employes of Operation Main Stream,
which is carried out through the GalliaMeigs Community Action Program. Max
Edmundson is supervisor. ,
Attractive paneling is being used
lavishly to modernize the interior. Windows are being replaced, ceilings, painted,
floors sanded, a new heating system in·
stalled and the roof and exterior will be
painted.
lf.ail goes well, a jitney dinner will be
served .some time near Easter and a
Decoration Day dinner on Decoration Day,
Donations for the project are needed
and would be greaUy appreciated. They
may be sent to any one of the trustees.

Could yOii win such a lawsuit?
A quick answer would be no, because a wealher forecast is only
an educated guea, not a guara
antee. But what if the wcather'man was not only wrong but
also giUity of neglisence in mak·
.jng fiis prediction?
Thal complicates m·atters .
Consider this caSJ::
· -

A hurricane. . was bearia1 down
on a coastal city, and Jbe weath ..
cr bureau issued a aerie. '()f .,,~~-1
warninp. But the windl , and

flood · waters ' arrived aeveral
hours ''!illeaif'"of 'the · pfC&lt;licled""
time. A woman, c:auaht on low
land, was .drowned.

Later, her husband demanded
damages from the government.
"I n:alize," he told the court
"that weather predictina ia not
an exact science. But this wu
worse !han jwl a mistake. II wu ·
outright negligence. They had
discovered that the storm waa
coming in ahead of schedule, but

they failed to pass the word
along to

th~

public.''

today· s FUNNY

Tumer

'

.,.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

I

I f•

Medication fs Dangerous

•

I.

'I

'Reader 'Abuses
S'leeping Pills
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb - I have
had insomnia for the last
several years . I have been
to three doctors who have
prescribed various sleeping
pills without success. A few
months ago 1 obtained a
supply .of Seconal tablets,
but 1 didn:t obtain t h e m
through a doctor. I started
out with one pill and as of
today 1 take four pills a
night. They have worked
wonders for me. I have no
trouble sleeping at all. I do
not wake up with any aftere ffeels an· d 1 feel tern.f'tc.
·
I told o~e of my frtends
about my msomn!a and the
Sec~na.l I am takmg and he
advtsed me thts IS not good
for my health, b1!t dangerous. Once in awhtle I have
a glass of wine, also, before
I go to bed. Could you please
advise me if what I am doing is a danger or a threat
to my health? Will there be
any side effects in the fu ture ?
·
Dear Reader- Seconal tablets belong to the barbiturate
group. They do induce addiction when taken in sufficient

quantities long enough . Sudden withdrawal f r o m the
medicine may cause convulsions, d e I i r i u m, severe
cramps, nausea and even
death.
No one should take sleeping tablets except with a doctor's order. F o u r Seconal
capsules a night is too much.
1 suggest you start cutting
down immediately but not
quit suddenly because of the
dangers that imposes . Still
better, see a physician and
have y~urseif removed from
Seconal under medical su-

pervision.

Seconal is not ail bad. Ii
has useful purposes in medicine, as do many other druP,s
that can cause harm 'when
taken indiscriminately with·
out medical supervision. In
appropriate cases, barbiturates are used as sedatives
in amounts sufficiently limited . to prevent many of the
dangers.
Barbiturates do not mix
with alcohol, which includes
wme. The two have a com bined e f f e c t which · has
caused a number of deaths
The number · of deaths fro~
barbiturates or

overdosages in the United .·
States exceeds 3,000 each
year.
Insomnia is a common.
complaint. Some p eo p 1 e
can 't sleep because of medi- .•
cal problems - aches and
pains. Ot~ers can't sleep because of mental or emotional factors. Thousands of
ways have been devised to
induce sleep. In 1968 the U.S.
public spent $27 million dosing themselves with at least
100 different products advertised to induce sleep. T hi s
does nol include the medicines prescribed by physimns. Probably the be s t
ways to induce sleep are ade- .,.
quate physical activity, good
health and freedom fr ·om •'
mental stress and anxiety. ' ·
Unfortu_nate!y, these things ·••
often elude one in our com- ";
plex society.
•.
I would be interested In
hearing from people about
the different ways they have ·.. ~
found to induce ~leep ; other
than drugs, that have proved
succ!!ssful. If SOll,le good sug- · ,·.
gestwns come out of these
I will inclu?e them for th~
rest of the readers in some
future colum.n.

New Taxes
(Continued from page I)
value added tax collections.
Tbe "White House plan" was said to call
for collecting about $18 billion and subtracting $5 billion for ''regressive" tax
reUef, leaving between $12 billion and $13
. billlon for state use to cut residential
property taxes. Maximum grants would
not exceed $400 per pupil.
The commission said each I per cent of a
value added tax rate would yield $5 to $7
billion a year.
The tax would also be a_,key part of the
administration's revenue-11harlng concept.

-Want To
Get Ahead?
' Enroll Now for New
Quarter- Classes
Begin
March 16

•

'

I

•

POMEROY - A McConnelsville woman was cited to courl
for failure to stop · within
assured clear distance
following a four-car accidf nt
Friday at 4 p.m. on Pomeroy's
Ea: I Main Street.
Pomeroy Police said Martha
Clawson , 33, struck the rear of
a car stopped in line of traffic
driven by Junior Autherson , 35,
Pomeroy. Autherson 's vehicle
in turn struck the rear of a car
driven by Robert Burdette, 20,
Pomeroy; the Burdelle car
struck the rear of a car driven
by Edwin Cross, 17, Racine,
both stopped in line of traffic.
There was heavy damage to
the Burdette car, medium to
the Cross and Autherson

DJ.iver Charged

Bus.
Admini strat ion
Executiv e Secreta rial
Jr . Accounting
Secretarial
Gen eral Offi ce
Ail
co ttege
levet
subjects approved for
VA Benefits.
Job Placement
Assistance
Write, Visit, or

Call 446-4367

for our b~;tlletin ,

·

Gallipolis Business
College
36

Locust St.-

Reg. No. 71-02-00326

GALLIPOLIS - Oscar L.
Clark, 65, Rt. t, Thurman, was
charged with OWl-following a
traflic accident at 5:10 p.m.
Friday on Second Ave. , in front
of the U. S. Post Office.
City po li ce s~id Clark
traveling soulhwestlon Second
Ave. , attempted to turn into the
post office parking lot, lost
control of his car which struck
a stop sign and the curb. There
was minor damage to his car.
A second mishap occurred at
·6:16p.m. on Second Ave., near
the Shake Shoppe where an
auto driven by John L. Hood,
Gallipolis, backed into a car
operated by Robert L. Hogers,
26, Gallipolis.

GALLIPOLIS - Three
.youths had their driver license
suspended Fridsy In Gallia
County Juvenile Court.
Acting Judge Wray Bevan qf
Pike County 'fined Daniel
SIVisher, 17, Cheshire, $25 and
cbsta for spew. Judge Bevan
suspended $10 of the fine and
suspended Swisher's driver's
lleense for 15 days.
'Cafl DeWitt, 16, Bidwell, was
fined $25 and costs and his
driver's license WI$ suspended
for 15 days on a stop sign
violation. Judge Bevan
suspended $10 ol hill fine.
William Orr, 17, Galllpolls,
was lined $25 and costs and
given a 19 day license
suspension for speed. Ten
dollars of his fine was
Sll.!Pfnded. Mark Harrison, 15,
Gallipolis, was fined $25 and
costs for no driver's license.
Robert Hill, 16, Racine, was
fined $i5 and. costs for
operating a motorcycle without
eye pro,tecUon or gog~' ·

$JORTLEY 16 THE CLUB
i-IORSESHOE· PITCHING

CH"-MP. RI~ERS EVERY

TIME·..

.

,-------------------·
SUNDAY
I
I

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!

TIMESSENTINEL

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v..,,., ........_ t1.
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OALLIPOLU D"ILY tiUiiHII
1 UJ t•~rt Awe .• ~~-~~. Ollo5e, aU1 1.

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.

STILL HOSPITri.LIZED
LOS ANGELES (UP! ) Broadway columnist Walter
Winchell, 74, remained
hospitalized Friday in UCLA
Medical Center, where he was
admitted Nov . 19. The nature of
pi~ illness has not been
disclosed . .

N

.
LETART FAlLS COMMUNITY HALL is undergoing a drastic change. The
building, which hasn't been used for approximately 10 years, is being remodeled.
Mrs. Herbert Roush, left, and Dallas Hill, trustees, and Joey Hill Roush, stand
besijle the pot bellied stove that will soon be replaced with a new heating system.

As outlined, no state or local government
unit would be eligible for the aid if it levied
a tax on residential property for public
schools.
Nixon also was reported to have asked
Merriam's commission whetber a value
added tax was better than more intensive
use of existing conventional levies or a
national sales tax proper.
He asked Merriam what type of income
tax credit or other method could be u~ed to
eliminate regreSsive features and how
renters should get their ·share of property
tax relief.
. :nte President also asked whether there
might be higher tax rates on luxuries,
"pos.itive and negaUve
credits" the

Huur.~

Mon ., Tues ., Wed. ,' Thur&gt;.-·
11 A.M. to 10 P.M.

Fri . &amp; Sat--11 A.M. Ia 11 P.M.
Closed Sunday

t2D
Fifth ... lfiVI

HUNTINGTON, W.VA.

Italian Spaghetti
SPAGHETTI DINNER with Meat Sauce .. . . ... ... . .. 1.95
RAVIOLI OINNER .with Meat Sauce ............... . 2 .25
Includes: Salad and Drink . . . Rye &amp; French Bread

Dinners
FILET MIGNON, Wrapped w1th ~o(on . . ........... 4 .25
... .. . .. 4.25
T-80NE STEAK, ( 16 oz .) U .S. Prime ·.
GOLDEN FRIED SHRIMP, Tartar Sauce
. . ..... . 3 .25
. ' HOME BAKED HAM , Hawaiian Pineap_ple Ring . . .
2 .2S
FILLET OF WHITE FISH , Tartar Sauce ...... .. ... .... 2 .25
GRILLED CUBE STEAK . . . . . ...... . ..... . ........ . 1.95
Enlree l ndu d e~ Sa la d, Vege tab le, and Dri nk

••

Children:S Portion ' Available

LIFE IS FULL OF
liTTLE SURPRISES!!

highest and lowest income brackets, aod
exemptions on such items as prescription
drugs, medical and legal services,
banking, insurance and housing expenses.
Since 1969, tile commission itseH has ·
been on record for state government
financing of public schools, th c;ombination
with a federal takeover of welfare costs
and state sharing of federal income tax
collections without federal restrictions.
Tbe commission memo asked whether
the federal government should become
involved at all in extensive property tax
relief and whether it was better to link
property tax relief and federal aid for
schools in a single package or treat them

Lift is brocts on your ~hildren's teeth .
Life is your car when a utility pole jump~ out
and bangs your fender .
Lift is o broken washing mac hint with 2 wHks
w(lshing to do.
Life is your wife lcni"ing one poir of booties
ond having triplets.
Life is lost year's school clothes on this year's

''

son .
Life is full of surprises which stem to never
tnd .

Driver Licenses Lifted

They'll Do It Every Time .

MIU&lt;ttW&amp;

•• ••• he always seems
to use your allowance
· instead of h'is !"

,

'

EAAL"f
AMERICAA
IS THE

"He mu1t be smarter
than he looks • • •"

'

Old-Letart

WORLD ALMANAC

by Dick

1.,

Following Wreck

Nevertheless, the court turned
down his claim. The .judge said
Ihe government cannot be held
liable for .broad, generalized
activities like forecasting the
weather because this would place
too heavy a burden upon basic
governmental functions.
But that may not apply to
weather forecasting in a limited
specific situation. Thus:
'
The weather bureau at an airport, although aware of air turbulence near t~e ground, f~led
to warn_ the ptl~l of a. pnvate ·
plane !hat was JUst taki.ng off.
~~e plane crashed, the ptlot waa
led, and the ~ovemment was
sued .fort' damages
·
Th1s 1me, th e government
wu
FACTS
indeed held liable. The court deThe first Hautobank" with cided that in a particular localcomplete s e r v i c e in the ~ situation like thi•, the govUnited States was begWl by emment ought to pay the penalty
the E xc hang e National f9r its negligenc&lt;&gt;-just like any
Bank of Chicago, Nov . 12, other wrongdoer.
1946, The World Almanac
recalls. The bank had ' 10 An American Bar A~oeiatlon
tellers' windows protected and Ohio State Bar A.MOCiation
public ,.rvice fealu.., b• Wlll
by bullet-proOf glass and Bernard,
·'
equipped with automatic
slide-out drawers to enable e 1972 American liar Asoociatlan
motorists to do business
without leaving their autos.

CARNIVAL

'
.
'.
Elijah Clinton Bibbee (dark shirt), Sam Piice
over
Earl WoHe's shoulder), Charlie Alexander .(Witibi collar),
Wilbur Sayre (behind Edgar Ervin), Harvey'·Burke, Wilbur
Alexander (hat, white Collar). ·
' ·
.
Third row - 1 tot: Josie_Ervin (striped blouse), Lou
Price (behind May Day), Maggie Sine~ (bangs and tweed
dress), Cora Sayre .(lots of white on collar)_, Brul!e Barnett
(only eyes and nose show - he was ·Methodist Minister
Barnett's sop), Bob Campbell (leaniilg against brick wall be lived with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Higginbotham)· .
Fourth' row - 1 to r : Rush ':Alexander ([~ ·doofj'lay),
Edgar Barnett (dim, with white "T" sltirt 'showing), Bert
Sayre (shorter), and Ernest Wolfe (white collar aitd 'leaning
against doorway).
•
P)toto 'Kitty Allen Skeels.' file of "mementoes."

f

LETART FALLS COMMUNITY BUILDING was
originally a schqol bufuung. :ntis piCture taken in' 11!88, was
submi~ by Kitty Allen Skeels. Members of the class were :
Front row -left to tight: Mabel Anderson, Bertha Wagner,
AI~ .Haymap, Emma Price, Beatie Alexander,. Mentor
Caldwell,' Art Sa~e (books jlnder his left arm), Jodie Bentz.
(fur cap), Tom Wagner (books under his right arm), Ralph
Roush, HOward Coates, E;arl Wolfe (taU boy, white collar,
darker tie), ~rl Johnson (fur cap), Edgar Ervin (.shorter
boyi, Curl Roqsh (arms not showir)g), Sherman Sayre,
Alonzo. Coates (,very dim picture)..
·
Second row -1 tor1 Mlmle lloyd (behind Beatie Alex.),
May' Day (face slightly blurred), Prof.T. C, Coates, Tom Bell
(behind Tom .Wagner), Tom Caldwell (attending Letart
school froln Parkersburg, W.Va .), Joe Wagner (white shirt),

Sue The Weatherman

RAY CROMLEY

where an auto driven by John
Helm, 23, Wellston, attempted to make a left lurn at
the iame time a car operated
by Thomas B. Weaver, 27,
Gary, Ind., attempted to pa5s.
There was moderate damage
to both cars. Again, no charges
were filed .

demolished . No charge was · modera te damage to her car.
Wil!iam H. Lynch, 78, Rl. 2,
filed .
Joy R. Rife, 16, HI. I, Cheshire, was charged with
Cheshire, was taken to faili ng lo stop within the
Veterans Memorial Hospital assure d clear distance
for trea lment of injuries suf- following a two ca r mishap at
ferfd in a single ca r aecidcnt at 2:25 p.m. on Rt. 7, norlh of Rl.
9 p,rn. Friday on Rl. 7, south of 35.
Lynch's car struck the rear
the Gailia-Meigs County line.
The patrol said Miss Rife of an auto operated by Harry
traveling south , lost control of E. Albaugh, 54, Pl. Pleasant.
her ca r which ran off the right There was minor damage to
side of the highway and struck both cars.
an embankment. No citation
A Meigs Countian, Weslkey
was issued. The re ·was M~sters, 32, Heedsville, was
cited to Meigs County Court for
pl ac ing in jur ious' material
across lhe roadway following
an accident al 11 :19 a.m.
l'riday on Rt. 681.
Investigating officers said a
vehicle and none to Clawson.
Cross, who complained of a stale snow plow driven by
1
back injury and having dif- Herman Grossnickel, ~0 .
Reedsville, struck the elecficulty breathing, was taken to
tri(·a l wiring apparenlly
the hospital by private car.
leading to Masters' trailer
·.
home. The plow broke the wire,
causing il to break lhe antenna
MOCKUP TO BE SOLD
on an auto owned .by Charles
SEATILE, Wash. (UP!) - Harris, 32, of Reedsville.
The only full-scale mockup of
The first of two accidents
the U.S. supersonic tra_nsp,orl blamed on icy roads was in(SST! is going to be dismantled vestigated at IQ :40 a.m. on Rt.
and sold for junk by the Boeing 35, lwo and one-half miles west
Co. i..,.,.as announced Friday . of Rt. 160 where James H.
Boeing will open bids Feb. 18 Clark, 33 , Gallipolis, lost
on dismantling and removal of control of his car which slid off
· the 50,000 pound mockup which the highway over an emcost $10,680,000. It will go for bankment.
There
was
junk - 30,000 pounds of moderate damage to his car.
aluminum , 5,000 pounds of No citation was issued .
wood, 10,000 pounds of sleel
A final accident occurred at
and 5,000 pounds of copper !0:32 a.m. on Rt. 35, in front of
wire .
Bob Evans' Sausage Shoppe

One Bump: Two Follow

Cascj.

· A Shot in the Arm

I~

GALLIPOIJS .:._ Michael V.
Vinion, ·25, McArthur, was
treated 11nd released at the
Holze• Medical Center for
minor i'njuries suffered in a
single car accident at 4: 05p.m.
Friday on Rl. 35 near the Bob
Evans Sausage Shop.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol "said Vinion
apparently fell asleep driv i~g
at a high rale of speed . His car
left the highway, struck a
~uardrail
and concrete
culberl. The car wa s

said, "There must be coal lbere,"landed,
found hlB coal, and launched hla indu.llrll)
career.
'
. 'fhe Impact of the pow.- plant will
change every aspect of livlnl In Melca
Coun\Y .If it is to be to tbe IIOOCI. tbll r.ct
willljare to be recognlzed by the JIIGP)e
condUcting public affairs, and ~
acU~ taken.
·
. .
'
OiJr Meiga Local School dillrict board
of emcation is moving already w1tb a
proposal to expand its vocational
education department at .Meigs HIP
School to Include trllinlng . II) the skllla
neede&lt;l in modern, · ~ coal
mining. This is only a lirst, 11but very
. needed, step.
·
. '. ·
Meigs Co~tnty, a loser In , population ,
figures since 1880, in this d,eCade of lht
1970s can turn the numbers around, If new
housing to serve the Qew peOple ~ be
built.
· ...
Tickets for the March 6 dinner .
meeting at the neW Meigs rnn may be
obtained from Crow, Earl Ingtils or Paul

1

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'

The fine was susptmltd on
lhe condition that he obey all'
traffic laws. ·
Keith Robert Voreh, 17, I r

T:QN 1·GHJ

Gallipolis, was fined $15 and
costs for having no muffler. His
fine was suspended on the
same condition.
Two youths charged with
destruction of property had
their cases continued until
further investigation.

'fhe First National Bank offers you various ways of saving for life's little
surprises . Plim ·t or the unexpected and start saving today .

•

•••••••l!'•llll!••lJl!lll•

• • • •. .

'THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"
•

1111

MEIGS THEATRE

111

;~: !:

FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK

Tontoht, Mon. &amp; Tues.
Ftbruory 6-7-8
Walt Disney's

IN GALLIPOLIS

THE LIVING DESERT

CTtchnicolor)
Academy Award Winners
The Greatest wildlife
specfade of them all!
. Watt Disney's

,.

''G"

VANISHING PRAIRIE

' tTechnlcolorl

"G"

SHOW STAATS 7 P.M.

CARTOON

.

~~~ J· ~-'-- ·--------~~-----""---~--..._:_-

, 109 YEARS OF SERVICE"
.
.

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�,· S&lt;Uula) flmes -Sentinei,SWlday, Feb.6,19rl

EDITORIAlS

BRUCE BIOSSAT

B[RAf'S WORlD

Nixon's Timing

Sleepy _Driver Wrecked Auto

Meeting in
.
..Pom~roy _ of Wide Interes,t
'

Viet Peace Bid
hnpact: How Long?

Marth .8111JeClallY oriented to ~ inte,esta
ot Metp Countianlln conneCtion with the
James M. Gavin Power Plant development. will be Wlllched allo by Glllla.County. We take eepecial notice al the fact
that attendance apparently Is DDt limlted
to Melp cltb:ens. The event, on a flrat. come llnt-.ved bulB, csn llei'Ve no more
than •PJI'OIImatel)' 55 penons. Thills fair,
warning to obtain dinner Uckets ell'ly.
The meetq has been arranged by
Pomeroy ittorney Fred a-ow through the
Pomeroy Olamber ri Commerce with Mr.
John Reece, public affairs COOI'dbiator of
the .James M. Gavin Plartt. Up 'to eight
offlclala of the Ohio Power Compan,y or of
the Amerlcsn Gas and Electric Corp. of
.New York aty will be on hand to meet us
and aniwer queationa. The topic wiiJ be the
Impact on the future development of Meigs
County of the power plant itself at
!lleshire, just across tbe "border" into
Gallia County, and ot the deep Cl1al mine
(Meigs Mine) near Salem Center In northwestern Melga ~ty,

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON &lt;NEA)
SOme political analysts here believe it is a mistake to
think of President Nixon's recently disclosed · Vietnam
peace plan as a new initiative. They argue il should be
taken as an old initiative which failed .
In their judgment, the President would not have disclosed the long-secret private approaches to Hanoi so
long a~ there was any real chance they might succeed.
His. anhouncement. then, may be viewed as a clear signal
tl!at private negotiations are dead . ·
Obviously, the fact of the talks bas been a powerful
weapon in Mr. Nixon's arsenal for a l considerable time.
He has known he could spring a big surprise. at home
and abroad, whenever he felt so moved.
What explains his timing?
Already dealt with in the first aftermath responses to
his disclosures- the disarming of his Democratic· president!~! rivals by stealing their stuff, the possibility of
heightening his own damaged credibility in a year when
voters' trust is thin, a pavin~ or the way for U.S. air
power reaction to an expected Hanoi offensive.
There is also the impending China visit in late February. In one analyst's vtew, the President understandably
has reasoned that he can't a11pear to be in any sort of
weakened position when he is m Peking.
Therefore, it is argued, he would not want to be fencing
with China's Chou En-lai while our ally, South Vietnam .
was getting clobbered by North Vietnam-with us standIng helplessly aside. Nor would he wish to sit in Peking
while we are mounting air strikes that mi~ht be widely
condemned In many quarters of the world.
To disclose our 30 months of peace- efforts is Mr.
Nixon's way. it is said, of preserving his option of reSPonding in streneth to Hanoi's offensive. without losinl(
all s.vmPathv at home and abroad. He can say : "Well ,
we tried another course. but this was forced upon us ."
There seems to be no question that the President has
sought to use the fact of the secret Vietnam talks for
both foreilln and domestic impact.
How effective this will be in the world's capitals, includine Pekin~. only time and coming events in Vietnam
may tell. As for the home front, the questions and doubts
are large.
It has been SUI!I!estcd previously that American voters
are predominantly Interested toda·y only in ~etting us out
of Vietnam, and not in details about elections, aid to
Saigon, a cease-fire, etc.
Some sources here think the President is overplaying
the surprise bit on the assumption it can have fairly
deep lone-lasting effect. They feel that the imPact from
bll! Presidential moves and announcements is shorter
and shallower than Mr. Nixon lmal!ines.
Pollsters like Louis Hartis have provided the ration~le
for the use of the big-move tActic. They arl!ue that a
president or other too oubllc fii!'Ure who is riot broadly
pooular itrue for both Nixon and Lyndon John.on) rnav
,l!et substantial benefit-for awhile- from pulling off a
big one. The key Is : for how long•
··
A veteran political appraiser here thinks the President is so enamored of this approach that he won't let
it go. Says this man :
"One thing you can bet- -lte'U do something big in
October (on the eve of the 1972 election). He's got the
power to do it. and he's been waiting years for just this
chance. All that time, he's been watching the other
fellows (the DemOcrats) do !hines in October. He's not
abo_!!t I!&gt; pass ·IIP his opportunity!"
.

'DAVID POLING, D.D.

Jesus Movement:
When Good Is Bad
By REV. DAVID POLING
A belligerent note has been struck in the encounter of
the Jesus movement and the traditional church. It was
bound to come and it carries the seeds of continuing conflict for the Christian church. There appears to be three
aspects of the Jesus movement which blend into one as
far as the public is concerned. This is unfortunate and the
several m~nifestations of religious "happening" need to
be carefully sorted out for they differ drastically.
The first aspect of the Jesus movement is· commercial.
!,t centers ~round the record, and Broadway production.
Jesus Chnst Superstar." A folk rock opera , it has catchy
t~nes and a poundin~ pace .- The theology is thin, presenting Jesus as a confused and bewildered humanitarian .
The material, cast and song have enjoyed popular acceptance- like ·any other commercial musical. It will fade.
for Broadway always looks to new seasons and new stars.
The Children of God is now an international movement,
spun out of the Jesus people that blossomed in California
and Texas. Absolute, total allegiance to their fundamental
brand of religion is demanded of members . Young people
change their names, often leave home and proclaim a
messal!e of immediate doom . Most of them seem to be
a wrathful. furious sect: The traditional church is the
enemy and American society the villain . In some areas
the conflict within family and community has become so ·
inten&lt;e -that a counter-organization has been formed
called Parents' Committee to Free Our Children frorri the
Children of God. While proclaiming valid truths of the
Bible (Jud~ment of a sens~ous culture, criticism of a lazy
church : they appear to tl(nore the love and peace and
reconciliation of the New Testament.
The third and. to this writer, the most significant aspect
c. the Jesus movement is the stirring of so many yow1g
people and childre~ to a ":e':l' and vital relationship to
J~•us Christ. The rtse of rehl(ton for many 1s nothing less
than the moving or the Holy Spirit in individual lives. It is
activated by_a need for certainty_ i_n a century of change.
It ts a yearnmg for moral and spmtual depth in a society
drenched with sexploitatlon, an advertising av~lanche to
buY-buy-buy, and a nation that talks peace and builds
bigger bombs. FoJ hundreds of thousands of younl( people, the New Testament has become a relevant and thrilling book- but the book is about a Person . not an idea o1·
concept
The result of all this is mixed. One comment by Peter
Adgie . the pastor of the United Church, Los Alari10s. N.M.,
is timely :
· " During the past month a number of high school students in Los Alamos have committed their lives to Christ
In a manner !Which perhaps' can best be described as
sudden and wonderful, although inexplicable to some .
Some of those who have found a new vision of Ghrist are
from the United Church, but many are from the commul)ity at large. Their zeal, earnestness and eagerness to
learn more of their Savior is amazing to see : heartwarmIng to some, disconcerting to others.
"Clearly, these new Christians need support , understanding. compassion. and love, as they take their first
stfps In the Christian life. From various parts of our community they have already experienced ndicule, rejection ,
severe criticism and scorn, and there ar~en those who
are attempting to staritp out their faith ere·1r can be anchored In prayer and the !Bible.
"Chriltlans in the United Church! Talk with these stu .
denll, belp them whenever you can, go out of your way to
know them, and . pray for them! . . . How happy and
thankful we are that the Holy Spirit h~s found them."

meetlllfl in Pomeroy· In

A · dlnne:

&lt;f.· 197l' b) NU,

There have been "tumors" and
''npllorl al rumon" floiting in Meigs
County the past 8IJ: montha that one or
more large oouaing developmenta in Metgs
County will be annoWICed mamentarUy.
To tiU pobtl, the rumors remain rumors.
Meuwhlle, tn Gal)la .C9unty, new
COilllnlctkln ri medium priced oomes
~ to be IIOIII'ing. The aingle most
lm)nlllve development is at Addison
where thee 4ngell Construction Co.,
Wbeelenburg, Ohio has · completed an
apartment project and is pr-oci!edjng with
clearing wcri 011 a site that eventually is
planned to contain 200 oomes, collllll~te
With a COillll)lll\lty swimming !JOO!, pther
recreation facilities, and Its own ~erage
syatem. ·
As candidates for county offices will
have to come tO realize soon, the Gavin
project In ita entirety representa the most
Important single economic development
. for Meigs County since 1900, maybe even
since the day Samuel Pomeroy came
floating down the Ohio River and, pointing
to the cUffs rising from the river ba~,

i

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,(

"l're been waiting dinner lor you all this time, onrJ yo~
u~ct me to BELIEVE y~u're be!'n on Guam since 1944?"

"Fair and warmer," says the
weather man's morning forecast,

-Economy Strategy ·
Hangs on Vote P~g

and you dress accordingly. But
during the day a cloudburst bitt
town, drenching- and ruinlogyour clothes. You might (eel a
distinct urge to sue the weatherman·for damages. Or, 10 be more

By RAY CROMLEY

technical, to sue his employer,
the United States Government

WASHINGTON !NEAl
By accident or design, the Nixon budget is carefully tail·
ored to give selected industries a shot of adrenalin in time
for the November election .
These companies, to a considerable extent. are located
in specific regions- the West Coast and parts of the South,
for exam:rle- where Mr. Nixon must win in order to be
re-electe . They include, of course, the particularly depressed space and military industries .
Nationwide and overall, unemployment this year will
remain high . The best guesses g1ven run from 5.2 to 5.5
per cent, with some )1igher. But those are1 averages. If
Mr . Nixon's programs go through, unemploymlint
will be
down considerably in specific states and among those
groups where joblessness could cause him serious political trouble.
·
Don 't look at the spending figures. Instead , study the
authorizations for major new programs, designed to expand over the next few Y.ears. These starts, as they begin
to fire up, will go heavtly into tooling up, hiring and explormg for what subcontractors can do . This should stimulate greatly the signing on of blue-collar operatives.
clerks and engineers.
These are not the groupings where unemployment ·has
been the greatest percentagewise. But this is where there
have Been -s-ome of .the greatest problems.
.The unerppl~y~ent rate in November will still be very
htgh among marrt.ed women, high school and ·college age ·
youths and among those loo::ing for part-time jobs.
But unemployment should be below 2.8 per cent among
married men and low compared lo January-February 1972
for women who are heads of households.
The new budget also increases spending markedly for
the aged-addea jobs, more programs, more concern for
their over-all livelihood. Older persons should normally
do well by Mr. Nixon in the voting booths if their living
conditions are on the mend .
Mr. Nixon has a number of safety valves to · take the
steam ~ut rof some of.the most difficult solutions among
the m.ajor u~employed groups remaining. Welfare fundmg wtl contmue high. Some $2.25 billion in budget authority .wil~ be made available to state and local g6vernments m f1scal 1972 and 1973 to create transitional or
temporary employment Most of these funds will be
pumped into the system before November, 1972, if Mr.
Nixon gets congressional· action in time. This is new
money and new programs beginning this 1972 fiscal year.
Altogether manpower training, servicing job assistance
wi!J total a whopping $9.4 billion dollars fo~ fiscal 1972 and
1973, congress willing. This is almost double the funds
available for these purposes in the two previous fiscal
years. The two fiscal years have been combined for this
analysis , because it is known that. as in the public service
JOb program mentioned above, Mr. Nixon plans to pump
as much of this money inlo action in calendar year 1972
. as he possibly can to get the economy on its feet and
rolling before Nov. 7.

(Continued from page I)
principals, were the 18l!t teachers at Letart
School.
·
·
Residents of this area, sensing the
value of the building, purchased it in !937
from the Racine School Board for $1,250.
The building has been used by the com·
mrn~ity in a variety of ways.
Until 10 years ago Decoration day
dinners were served there each year.
Former residents returned for dinner and
to spend the rest of tbe day visiting old
friends. In addition it has beeit used for •
showers, jilney suppers and even revivals.
This too is where citizens vote .
The building Is being completely
rem~J~~el~~gh the efforts of the
trustee!,
_s Hill, Virgil Roush, Mrs.
George Yonker, Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Mrs. Bertha.Robinson, all of Racine, Rt. 2.
With money donated for the hall's
restoration the trustees have purchased
materials for complete renovation . Thus
far a total of $700 has been spent.
Work on the building is being done by
employes of Operation Main Stream,
which is carried out through the GalliaMeigs Community Action Program. Max
Edmundson is supervisor. ,
Attractive paneling is being used
lavishly to modernize the interior. Windows are being replaced, ceilings, painted,
floors sanded, a new heating system in·
stalled and the roof and exterior will be
painted.
lf.ail goes well, a jitney dinner will be
served .some time near Easter and a
Decoration Day dinner on Decoration Day,
Donations for the project are needed
and would be greaUy appreciated. They
may be sent to any one of the trustees.

Could yOii win such a lawsuit?
A quick answer would be no, because a wealher forecast is only
an educated guea, not a guara
antee. But what if the wcather'man was not only wrong but
also giUity of neglisence in mak·
.jng fiis prediction?
Thal complicates m·atters .
Consider this caSJ::
· -

A hurricane. . was bearia1 down
on a coastal city, and Jbe weath ..
cr bureau issued a aerie. '()f .,,~~-1
warninp. But the windl , and

flood · waters ' arrived aeveral
hours ''!illeaif'"of 'the · pfC&lt;licled""
time. A woman, c:auaht on low
land, was .drowned.

Later, her husband demanded
damages from the government.
"I n:alize," he told the court
"that weather predictina ia not
an exact science. But this wu
worse !han jwl a mistake. II wu ·
outright negligence. They had
discovered that the storm waa
coming in ahead of schedule, but

they failed to pass the word
along to

th~

public.''

today· s FUNNY

Tumer

'

.,.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

I

I f•

Medication fs Dangerous

•

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'I

'Reader 'Abuses
S'leeping Pills
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb - I have
had insomnia for the last
several years . I have been
to three doctors who have
prescribed various sleeping
pills without success. A few
months ago 1 obtained a
supply .of Seconal tablets,
but 1 didn:t obtain t h e m
through a doctor. I started
out with one pill and as of
today 1 take four pills a
night. They have worked
wonders for me. I have no
trouble sleeping at all. I do
not wake up with any aftere ffeels an· d 1 feel tern.f'tc.
·
I told o~e of my frtends
about my msomn!a and the
Sec~na.l I am takmg and he
advtsed me thts IS not good
for my health, b1!t dangerous. Once in awhtle I have
a glass of wine, also, before
I go to bed. Could you please
advise me if what I am doing is a danger or a threat
to my health? Will there be
any side effects in the fu ture ?
·
Dear Reader- Seconal tablets belong to the barbiturate
group. They do induce addiction when taken in sufficient

quantities long enough . Sudden withdrawal f r o m the
medicine may cause convulsions, d e I i r i u m, severe
cramps, nausea and even
death.
No one should take sleeping tablets except with a doctor's order. F o u r Seconal
capsules a night is too much.
1 suggest you start cutting
down immediately but not
quit suddenly because of the
dangers that imposes . Still
better, see a physician and
have y~urseif removed from
Seconal under medical su-

pervision.

Seconal is not ail bad. Ii
has useful purposes in medicine, as do many other druP,s
that can cause harm 'when
taken indiscriminately with·
out medical supervision. In
appropriate cases, barbiturates are used as sedatives
in amounts sufficiently limited . to prevent many of the
dangers.
Barbiturates do not mix
with alcohol, which includes
wme. The two have a com bined e f f e c t which · has
caused a number of deaths
The number · of deaths fro~
barbiturates or

overdosages in the United .·
States exceeds 3,000 each
year.
Insomnia is a common.
complaint. Some p eo p 1 e
can 't sleep because of medi- .•
cal problems - aches and
pains. Ot~ers can't sleep because of mental or emotional factors. Thousands of
ways have been devised to
induce sleep. In 1968 the U.S.
public spent $27 million dosing themselves with at least
100 different products advertised to induce sleep. T hi s
does nol include the medicines prescribed by physimns. Probably the be s t
ways to induce sleep are ade- .,.
quate physical activity, good
health and freedom fr ·om •'
mental stress and anxiety. ' ·
Unfortu_nate!y, these things ·••
often elude one in our com- ";
plex society.
•.
I would be interested In
hearing from people about
the different ways they have ·.. ~
found to induce ~leep ; other
than drugs, that have proved
succ!!ssful. If SOll,le good sug- · ,·.
gestwns come out of these
I will inclu?e them for th~
rest of the readers in some
future colum.n.

New Taxes
(Continued from page I)
value added tax collections.
Tbe "White House plan" was said to call
for collecting about $18 billion and subtracting $5 billion for ''regressive" tax
reUef, leaving between $12 billion and $13
. billlon for state use to cut residential
property taxes. Maximum grants would
not exceed $400 per pupil.
The commission said each I per cent of a
value added tax rate would yield $5 to $7
billion a year.
The tax would also be a_,key part of the
administration's revenue-11harlng concept.

-Want To
Get Ahead?
' Enroll Now for New
Quarter- Classes
Begin
March 16

•

'

I

•

POMEROY - A McConnelsville woman was cited to courl
for failure to stop · within
assured clear distance
following a four-car accidf nt
Friday at 4 p.m. on Pomeroy's
Ea: I Main Street.
Pomeroy Police said Martha
Clawson , 33, struck the rear of
a car stopped in line of traffic
driven by Junior Autherson , 35,
Pomeroy. Autherson 's vehicle
in turn struck the rear of a car
driven by Robert Burdette, 20,
Pomeroy; the Burdelle car
struck the rear of a car driven
by Edwin Cross, 17, Racine,
both stopped in line of traffic.
There was heavy damage to
the Burdette car, medium to
the Cross and Autherson

DJ.iver Charged

Bus.
Admini strat ion
Executiv e Secreta rial
Jr . Accounting
Secretarial
Gen eral Offi ce
Ail
co ttege
levet
subjects approved for
VA Benefits.
Job Placement
Assistance
Write, Visit, or

Call 446-4367

for our b~;tlletin ,

·

Gallipolis Business
College
36

Locust St.-

Reg. No. 71-02-00326

GALLIPOLIS - Oscar L.
Clark, 65, Rt. t, Thurman, was
charged with OWl-following a
traflic accident at 5:10 p.m.
Friday on Second Ave. , in front
of the U. S. Post Office.
City po li ce s~id Clark
traveling soulhwestlon Second
Ave. , attempted to turn into the
post office parking lot, lost
control of his car which struck
a stop sign and the curb. There
was minor damage to his car.
A second mishap occurred at
·6:16p.m. on Second Ave., near
the Shake Shoppe where an
auto driven by John L. Hood,
Gallipolis, backed into a car
operated by Robert L. Hogers,
26, Gallipolis.

GALLIPOLIS - Three
.youths had their driver license
suspended Fridsy In Gallia
County Juvenile Court.
Acting Judge Wray Bevan qf
Pike County 'fined Daniel
SIVisher, 17, Cheshire, $25 and
cbsta for spew. Judge Bevan
suspended $10 of the fine and
suspended Swisher's driver's
lleense for 15 days.
'Cafl DeWitt, 16, Bidwell, was
fined $25 and costs and his
driver's license WI$ suspended
for 15 days on a stop sign
violation. Judge Bevan
suspended $10 ol hill fine.
William Orr, 17, Galllpolls,
was lined $25 and costs and
given a 19 day license
suspension for speed. Ten
dollars of his fine was
Sll.!Pfnded. Mark Harrison, 15,
Gallipolis, was fined $25 and
costs for no driver's license.
Robert Hill, 16, Racine, was
fined $i5 and. costs for
operating a motorcycle without
eye pro,tecUon or gog~' ·

$JORTLEY 16 THE CLUB
i-IORSESHOE· PITCHING

CH"-MP. RI~ERS EVERY

TIME·..

.

,-------------------·
SUNDAY
I
I

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!

TIMESSENTINEL

1 PwbiJafltll ..,.,., lklftNy tt Nit Oftle
v..,,., ........_ t1.
I
OALLIPOLU D"ILY tiUiiHII
1 UJ t•~rt Awe .• ~~-~~. Ollo5e, aU1 1.

II
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S.t.wQ~. Stc111111 CleM , . . ......._ tl I
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I
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Ml DAILY llftfllllll.

cwn 11 .• """'•"'· o .. tiM, I
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TUMI Of' 'UI&amp;CIIIIftTIOH
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Tilt Dtllf ..... ~. tilt ...,. " '·" ' Ill

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.

STILL HOSPITri.LIZED
LOS ANGELES (UP! ) Broadway columnist Walter
Winchell, 74, remained
hospitalized Friday in UCLA
Medical Center, where he was
admitted Nov . 19. The nature of
pi~ illness has not been
disclosed . .

N

.
LETART FAlLS COMMUNITY HALL is undergoing a drastic change. The
building, which hasn't been used for approximately 10 years, is being remodeled.
Mrs. Herbert Roush, left, and Dallas Hill, trustees, and Joey Hill Roush, stand
besijle the pot bellied stove that will soon be replaced with a new heating system.

As outlined, no state or local government
unit would be eligible for the aid if it levied
a tax on residential property for public
schools.
Nixon also was reported to have asked
Merriam's commission whetber a value
added tax was better than more intensive
use of existing conventional levies or a
national sales tax proper.
He asked Merriam what type of income
tax credit or other method could be u~ed to
eliminate regreSsive features and how
renters should get their ·share of property
tax relief.
. :nte President also asked whether there
might be higher tax rates on luxuries,
"pos.itive and negaUve
credits" the

Huur.~

Mon ., Tues ., Wed. ,' Thur&gt;.-·
11 A.M. to 10 P.M.

Fri . &amp; Sat--11 A.M. Ia 11 P.M.
Closed Sunday

t2D
Fifth ... lfiVI

HUNTINGTON, W.VA.

Italian Spaghetti
SPAGHETTI DINNER with Meat Sauce .. . . ... ... . .. 1.95
RAVIOLI OINNER .with Meat Sauce ............... . 2 .25
Includes: Salad and Drink . . . Rye &amp; French Bread

Dinners
FILET MIGNON, Wrapped w1th ~o(on . . ........... 4 .25
... .. . .. 4.25
T-80NE STEAK, ( 16 oz .) U .S. Prime ·.
GOLDEN FRIED SHRIMP, Tartar Sauce
. . ..... . 3 .25
. ' HOME BAKED HAM , Hawaiian Pineap_ple Ring . . .
2 .2S
FILLET OF WHITE FISH , Tartar Sauce ...... .. ... .... 2 .25
GRILLED CUBE STEAK . . . . . ...... . ..... . ........ . 1.95
Enlree l ndu d e~ Sa la d, Vege tab le, and Dri nk

••

Children:S Portion ' Available

LIFE IS FULL OF
liTTLE SURPRISES!!

highest and lowest income brackets, aod
exemptions on such items as prescription
drugs, medical and legal services,
banking, insurance and housing expenses.
Since 1969, tile commission itseH has ·
been on record for state government
financing of public schools, th c;ombination
with a federal takeover of welfare costs
and state sharing of federal income tax
collections without federal restrictions.
Tbe commission memo asked whether
the federal government should become
involved at all in extensive property tax
relief and whether it was better to link
property tax relief and federal aid for
schools in a single package or treat them

Lift is brocts on your ~hildren's teeth .
Life is your car when a utility pole jump~ out
and bangs your fender .
Lift is o broken washing mac hint with 2 wHks
w(lshing to do.
Life is your wife lcni"ing one poir of booties
ond having triplets.
Life is lost year's school clothes on this year's

''

son .
Life is full of surprises which stem to never
tnd .

Driver Licenses Lifted

They'll Do It Every Time .

MIU&lt;ttW&amp;

•• ••• he always seems
to use your allowance
· instead of h'is !"

,

'

EAAL"f
AMERICAA
IS THE

"He mu1t be smarter
than he looks • • •"

'

Old-Letart

WORLD ALMANAC

by Dick

1.,

Following Wreck

Nevertheless, the court turned
down his claim. The .judge said
Ihe government cannot be held
liable for .broad, generalized
activities like forecasting the
weather because this would place
too heavy a burden upon basic
governmental functions.
But that may not apply to
weather forecasting in a limited
specific situation. Thus:
'
The weather bureau at an airport, although aware of air turbulence near t~e ground, f~led
to warn_ the ptl~l of a. pnvate ·
plane !hat was JUst taki.ng off.
~~e plane crashed, the ptlot waa
led, and the ~ovemment was
sued .fort' damages
·
Th1s 1me, th e government
wu
FACTS
indeed held liable. The court deThe first Hautobank" with cided that in a particular localcomplete s e r v i c e in the ~ situation like thi•, the govUnited States was begWl by emment ought to pay the penalty
the E xc hang e National f9r its negligenc&lt;&gt;-just like any
Bank of Chicago, Nov . 12, other wrongdoer.
1946, The World Almanac
recalls. The bank had ' 10 An American Bar A~oeiatlon
tellers' windows protected and Ohio State Bar A.MOCiation
public ,.rvice fealu.., b• Wlll
by bullet-proOf glass and Bernard,
·'
equipped with automatic
slide-out drawers to enable e 1972 American liar Asoociatlan
motorists to do business
without leaving their autos.

CARNIVAL

'
.
'.
Elijah Clinton Bibbee (dark shirt), Sam Piice
over
Earl WoHe's shoulder), Charlie Alexander .(Witibi collar),
Wilbur Sayre (behind Edgar Ervin), Harvey'·Burke, Wilbur
Alexander (hat, white Collar). ·
' ·
.
Third row - 1 tot: Josie_Ervin (striped blouse), Lou
Price (behind May Day), Maggie Sine~ (bangs and tweed
dress), Cora Sayre .(lots of white on collar)_, Brul!e Barnett
(only eyes and nose show - he was ·Methodist Minister
Barnett's sop), Bob Campbell (leaniilg against brick wall be lived with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Higginbotham)· .
Fourth' row - 1 to r : Rush ':Alexander ([~ ·doofj'lay),
Edgar Barnett (dim, with white "T" sltirt 'showing), Bert
Sayre (shorter), and Ernest Wolfe (white collar aitd 'leaning
against doorway).
•
P)toto 'Kitty Allen Skeels.' file of "mementoes."

f

LETART FALLS COMMUNITY BUILDING was
originally a schqol bufuung. :ntis piCture taken in' 11!88, was
submi~ by Kitty Allen Skeels. Members of the class were :
Front row -left to tight: Mabel Anderson, Bertha Wagner,
AI~ .Haymap, Emma Price, Beatie Alexander,. Mentor
Caldwell,' Art Sa~e (books jlnder his left arm), Jodie Bentz.
(fur cap), Tom Wagner (books under his right arm), Ralph
Roush, HOward Coates, E;arl Wolfe (taU boy, white collar,
darker tie), ~rl Johnson (fur cap), Edgar Ervin (.shorter
boyi, Curl Roqsh (arms not showir)g), Sherman Sayre,
Alonzo. Coates (,very dim picture)..
·
Second row -1 tor1 Mlmle lloyd (behind Beatie Alex.),
May' Day (face slightly blurred), Prof.T. C, Coates, Tom Bell
(behind Tom .Wagner), Tom Caldwell (attending Letart
school froln Parkersburg, W.Va .), Joe Wagner (white shirt),

Sue The Weatherman

RAY CROMLEY

where an auto driven by John
Helm, 23, Wellston, attempted to make a left lurn at
the iame time a car operated
by Thomas B. Weaver, 27,
Gary, Ind., attempted to pa5s.
There was moderate damage
to both cars. Again, no charges
were filed .

demolished . No charge was · modera te damage to her car.
Wil!iam H. Lynch, 78, Rl. 2,
filed .
Joy R. Rife, 16, HI. I, Cheshire, was charged with
Cheshire, was taken to faili ng lo stop within the
Veterans Memorial Hospital assure d clear distance
for trea lment of injuries suf- following a two ca r mishap at
ferfd in a single ca r aecidcnt at 2:25 p.m. on Rt. 7, norlh of Rl.
9 p,rn. Friday on Rl. 7, south of 35.
Lynch's car struck the rear
the Gailia-Meigs County line.
The patrol said Miss Rife of an auto operated by Harry
traveling south , lost control of E. Albaugh, 54, Pl. Pleasant.
her ca r which ran off the right There was minor damage to
side of the highway and struck both cars.
an embankment. No citation
A Meigs Countian, Weslkey
was issued. The re ·was M~sters, 32, Heedsville, was
cited to Meigs County Court for
pl ac ing in jur ious' material
across lhe roadway following
an accident al 11 :19 a.m.
l'riday on Rt. 681.
Investigating officers said a
vehicle and none to Clawson.
Cross, who complained of a stale snow plow driven by
1
back injury and having dif- Herman Grossnickel, ~0 .
Reedsville, struck the elecficulty breathing, was taken to
tri(·a l wiring apparenlly
the hospital by private car.
leading to Masters' trailer
·.
home. The plow broke the wire,
causing il to break lhe antenna
MOCKUP TO BE SOLD
on an auto owned .by Charles
SEATILE, Wash. (UP!) - Harris, 32, of Reedsville.
The only full-scale mockup of
The first of two accidents
the U.S. supersonic tra_nsp,orl blamed on icy roads was in(SST! is going to be dismantled vestigated at IQ :40 a.m. on Rt.
and sold for junk by the Boeing 35, lwo and one-half miles west
Co. i..,.,.as announced Friday . of Rt. 160 where James H.
Boeing will open bids Feb. 18 Clark, 33 , Gallipolis, lost
on dismantling and removal of control of his car which slid off
· the 50,000 pound mockup which the highway over an emcost $10,680,000. It will go for bankment.
There
was
junk - 30,000 pounds of moderate damage to his car.
aluminum , 5,000 pounds of No citation was issued .
wood, 10,000 pounds of sleel
A final accident occurred at
and 5,000 pounds of copper !0:32 a.m. on Rt. 35, in front of
wire .
Bob Evans' Sausage Shoppe

One Bump: Two Follow

Cascj.

· A Shot in the Arm

I~

GALLIPOIJS .:._ Michael V.
Vinion, ·25, McArthur, was
treated 11nd released at the
Holze• Medical Center for
minor i'njuries suffered in a
single car accident at 4: 05p.m.
Friday on Rl. 35 near the Bob
Evans Sausage Shop.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol "said Vinion
apparently fell asleep driv i~g
at a high rale of speed . His car
left the highway, struck a
~uardrail
and concrete
culberl. The car wa s

said, "There must be coal lbere,"landed,
found hlB coal, and launched hla indu.llrll)
career.
'
. 'fhe Impact of the pow.- plant will
change every aspect of livlnl In Melca
Coun\Y .If it is to be to tbe IIOOCI. tbll r.ct
willljare to be recognlzed by the JIIGP)e
condUcting public affairs, and ~
acU~ taken.
·
. .
'
OiJr Meiga Local School dillrict board
of emcation is moving already w1tb a
proposal to expand its vocational
education department at .Meigs HIP
School to Include trllinlng . II) the skllla
neede&lt;l in modern, · ~ coal
mining. This is only a lirst, 11but very
. needed, step.
·
. '. ·
Meigs Co~tnty, a loser In , population ,
figures since 1880, in this d,eCade of lht
1970s can turn the numbers around, If new
housing to serve the Qew peOple ~ be
built.
· ...
Tickets for the March 6 dinner .
meeting at the neW Meigs rnn may be
obtained from Crow, Earl Ingtils or Paul

1

I

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'

The fine was susptmltd on
lhe condition that he obey all'
traffic laws. ·
Keith Robert Voreh, 17, I r

T:QN 1·GHJ

Gallipolis, was fined $15 and
costs for having no muffler. His
fine was suspended on the
same condition.
Two youths charged with
destruction of property had
their cases continued until
further investigation.

'fhe First National Bank offers you various ways of saving for life's little
surprises . Plim ·t or the unexpected and start saving today .

•

•••••••l!'•llll!••lJl!lll•

• • • •. .

'THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"
•

1111

MEIGS THEATRE

111

;~: !:

FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK

Tontoht, Mon. &amp; Tues.
Ftbruory 6-7-8
Walt Disney's

IN GALLIPOLIS

THE LIVING DESERT

CTtchnicolor)
Academy Award Winners
The Greatest wildlife
specfade of them all!
. Watt Disney's

,.

''G"

VANISHING PRAIRIE

' tTechnlcolorl

"G"

SHOW STAATS 7 P.M.

CARTOON

.

~~~ J· ~-'-- ·--------~~-----""---~--..._:_-

, 109 YEARS OF SERVICE"
.
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.,

�,I
, I

'
4- 1be Smday Times · Sentinel, SUnday, Feb. 6, 1972

I

.

I

.

RECEIPTS OF $2.111.55

$640,000 Dam11ge Suit Filed in Cincinnati
stock on margin to his family while he was
a registered representative of Bache in
1968. He said the company later liquidated
the Vee family's entire aecount.

CINCINNATI (UP!) - A Cincinnati
has filed a $&amp;10,000 damage suit in
Hamilton County Pleas Court against the
• .~ek firm of Bacbe &amp; Co. of New York
'
.ty . .
COMMISSION TO MEET
Willillm Vee charged that Bache
POMEROY - The Meigs CoWlty
violated the )'lew York Stock Exchange
Hospital
Commission will hojd its annual
policies and procedures by liquidating
.stock held by Vee's family . He ·charged meeting at 7:30p.m. Monday at Veterans
that the company told him lo stop selling Memorial Hospital.
1• .an

POMEROY ..:.. Meigs County Court
receipts for the month of January totaled
$2,087.55 according to Betty Hobstetter,
dwuty clerk. FiJnd.s were distributed .as
follows : fines to state, $599.10; fees to
sheriff, $69.90; fines and costs to county,
general fund, $936.02; law library fund,
$275.25 ; automobile license and gas fund,
$207.28.

·

Fourth Big Suit Filed in Gallia
GALUPOIJS - The fourth
major damage suit wilhill iii
past year was filed Friday in ·
Gallla County Common Pleas
Court against the Hol~er
Medical Center. Donald E.
Adkins address uniQiown filed
· '
'

the acUon ~gainst Dr. Marcel · of the Holzer Medical Center
Q. Coronel and !he Medical staff. Adkins further states
Center Hospital.
that he was a membet of the
Adkins claims that on July 9, Naval Reserves and later was .
1971, he was treated for a called to active duty.
laceration in the sole of his left
According to the complaint,
f\)Ot by Dr. Coronel, a member Adkins while on active duty

Waniors Win 11th Straight
.

Two Defendants Bound

Over

'

.

Play ' 'Plaza Suite ' '

Plans Donations
•

: GALLIPOLIS - The regular
• meeting of the Gallia County
~- Salon No, 8,12, Elgbtand Forty,
: was held at tb~ home of Golda
:;. MournJnc In Middleport, with
~ Le Pettt Ch!lpeau J01111 Wood in
: charge.
• ·· .
:;: The; children and youth
• chairliwi, Emma Wayland,
.~ told of llie,Projecta for the year
• and donatfohs were planned for
~ Valentine's Day and Easter at
-:_ lheNationalJewlahHoapitalin
&lt; Denver and for a toy fund
~ there. She deacrlbed the
~ partne"'' project which is a
; morutcrJng machine and the
~ Amerlif~n Legion Child
~ Welfare progrtllll for .Cystic
•· FibrOIIls reaearch.
'
: A letter of thanks !l'as read

POINT PLEASM T - The
St. Peter Lutheran ..;ouncU met
Tuesday evening at the former
House Chapel with Walden F.
Roush, president, presiding.
New worship service hours
were approved starting Sun•
day, Feb. 13, the regular .
morning worship service wiU
start at 9 a.m. With Sunday
School at 10:15 a.m. Pastor
John F. Haberle wW conduct
the W\lfship service.
Joint Lenten services will
begin Wednesday, Feb. IS, 7:30
p.m. at St. Peter's Lutheran
and then on Wednesday, Feb.
23 at 7:30p.m. at New Haven,
the St. Paul's Lutheran
Church, These joint IMirvlces
were approved by both
churches for the Lenten season

.' ,. '
··li

3___...---........2

Fizer Files
For·Office

'

Coming
'

Events

L
K .
J 5

~6
0

8

Tuv

9
wxY

Donna Myers

FHA Has Girl

]antll.lry Girl

1

..

Hosts WSCS'

Leadership Club
Elects Co-advisor

'

OfThe .Month'
GALLIPOLIS - Donna
Myers· was elected January
Girl of the Month of The
Ch~ch of Christ in Christian
Umon. She excelled in scrip.
lure learning, attendance, and
is active in the youth group .
Miss Myers is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Myers,
Route 2, Gallipolis. No girl of
the month was elected in
Decem~r because of par·
ticipation in the Christmas
program.

SAVE
1·

The crabapple is the or·
iginal wild tree . The com·
mon cultivated varieties of
.· the apple tree are directly
' descended from the crab. apple.

.!

GALLIPOLiS - The Gallia
County Junior Leadership Club
met at th.. Grace United
Methodist 1urch recently
with the president, Cindy
Boggs, presiding. Devotions
were given by BIU Burleson.
The secretary's report was
given and the treasurer staled
that the club now has $193.26 In
the treasury.
Charlotte Buchy, advisor,
spoke about the Buckeye
recreation workshop. The
group chose two represen·
tatives and elected Dick Buchy
_as the new co-advisor.
Oi.ocusslons of the year's
program was held and decided
on.
The next meeting will be
Feb. 14 to tour the new Holzer
Hospital. A recreation period
was held prior to adjournment.

·atlia Notes
By Becky Vanco Phone 446-2342
'

Mrs. Margaret Lloyd Porter, accompanied by her husband,
celebrated her birthday on Saturday at the home of her son,
Jamess. Porter lllandfamily at Hamilton, Ohio.

$20
NOW

Come in and try th e
$19~
Stylist• zig-zag machine Irom
Reg. $219.00
Singer. See how it sew s up knits with its 4 built·in
stretch stitches. it switches easily from straight
to zig-zag stitching . ·You can me nd , darn, sew on
buttons, make butlonholes- with th e built-i n
bullonholer. And the exclusive Front Drop-in
Bobbin is so handy and con.venient.
·

Many Fabr,ic Specials
60"

POLYESTER KNit................ $398Yd.
Bonded &amp; Unbonded

PLAIDS .......................~~~~

\

1

Yd.

PRINTS ................ 30% OFF
AND MUCH MORE

FRENCH CITY
FABRIC SHOPPE
Anita Devault
58 Court St.

446·9255

; J

•
___ av£1.~
{falfi,:oliJ, Ohv,

WIUiam Ned Eachus, GaiUpolls, former all&amp;utheastern
Ohio football star and a former meniber of Coach Woody Hayes
Buckeye squad, is a member of the dean's liat at Capital
University where he Is a first year law student. Eachus
graduated from Ohio State with a BS degree In buaineaa ad·
ministration.

Gifts that say

CoY~ c;[/(jf/1..

Anyone wishing to buy Sara Coventry jewelry should contact
any member of the Rio Grande Mothers IA!ague, as !he group is
selling jewell')' for a money making project to help support the ·
~ring Conference on June 10 at the Rio Grande College .
Cafeteria.

FREE COOKING DEMONSTRATION.
THE CHEF WHO LOST HIS POT

FRANCO .PALUMBO·
EXEWTIVE CHEf OF WEIGHT
WATaiERS INTERNATIONAl. INC.
He 'lost 105 pounds on the
"Weight Watchers" Program

Lace !rimmed slips and half

slips in white and colors.

from 13.00
Double layered or satin Nyloo
gown In georgeous colo r
selections.
from

'7.00

'

birthdays

.IS

0

DIAMOND.
•

&amp;y with confiden ce,
We ser,ve with p1ide.

•
TAWNEY
JEWELERS

.,

WATCHERS" GOURMET
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1
'

7:30 P.M. Elks Hall

Chillicothe,
Ohio
•
•
EVERYONE IS INVITED

FREE RECIPES.

"Weight Watchers" classes meet: Wed., 9:30 a .m. at Grace United
Methodist Church and Tues., 7;30 p.m. at St. Louis Catholic Church.

Panty hose, sized or one sin
stretch.
(

Nylon stretch gloves In
gleaming white &amp; outwJar

trom

'1.00

Wttdltrs"
•••f•ro•m•'•Z•.OO••••••••••••••••••••••
N.Y. Is • r~tlsttrtdrtrlldemar~ of Weight Watchers tntern~tlo11111, tnc.,
422 second Ave.
~~=~=~~L~:.:::::::::.:.::~:::.::::~:;..J
L.:colors.
1-..!:!::~~0h~io:..J

'
.'

$ 98

Permanent Press

Mr. and Mrs. David Mltcltell, Route 160, spent the weekend
with their children, Mr, and Mrs. Dana Mitchell and daughter,
Tera, In Plain City, Ohio, and Michael &lt;i Columbus. Tiley also
spent Monday evening with Mr, and Mrs. Isaac Shupe and Mr.
and Mrs. Donnie Shupe and family of Bidwell.

WATCH HIM COOK •'WEIGHT

some

RIO GRANDE
Baptist
Aullliary, 7:30 p.m. at the
church.
WEDNESDAY
. GRACE CIRCLE meetings
7:30 p.m. Circle I, Mra. Em·
·mett Morrlaon, 533 Fourth
Ave.; Circle 2, Mra. Neal
Clark, 138firal Ave.; Circle .3,
Mrs. Hollla Queen, 50 Locua
St.; Circle 4, Mrs. l'!falcolm
Orebaugh, tiD\! Second Ave.
WEDNESDAY
. EX'l'ENBION Homemakn
COWicil meeting, 10 11.m. Grace
United Methodist Church,
. poU~ nollli meal.

for

cure

7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Charles
Limier.

@Ohio Bell

5 ~~3ns $1

conducted by Pastor John F.
Haberle and alternating every
other Wednesday for service.
The new bulldmg plans were
discussed and plans for the
ground breaking ceremony
was proposed for .~rly this
year.
A meeting with the Woman's
Club of Point Pleasant was
held Wedni!sday completing
the necessary details to
maintain worship servi~s In
the present House Chapel until
new construction of the church
is completed. 'the council
members and ,trustees of the
Women's Club were In at·
tendance.
A joint meeting of St. Peter's
and St. Paul's Church Councils
wassetfor Sunday, Feb. 6, 2:30
p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church in New Haven.
Attending the meeting were
Walden F. Roush, WiUiam
Knight, Frank Scholz, Lynn
Freeman, Emil Romans, Dale
Roush and Roger Freeman.

FRENCH CITY Garden Club,

Apple Sauce

CORN
CORN

janet Stetuart

Mirs Rothgeb

was born February '6, 1138.
On this dl\Y in history:
In ln8 Massachusetts ratified
the Constitution.
·
In l!M3 General Dwight D.
Eisenhower was named com·
mander of Allied E~peditionary
Forces in North Mrlca .
In 1967 Cassius Clay defeated
Ernie Terrell to ktep the
heavyweight title,
In 1971 Apollo 14 began its
trip home after a moon landing.

leam how to ~t
stretch in 'PJr stitches

OJ The Month

MONDAY
. WEDNESDAY
COMMITTEE of Gallia
S. 1 . .din
Counlians 7:30 p.m. Room 104 SADDLE and If om n g
G8llla Academy High School, club, Bulavllle To~ hou~,
•
7:30 P·lll· Club w1ll furniSh
AMERICAN Red Cross
refreshments.
Volunt~ers (Gray Ladles) TIIURSDAY
Jun.cheon 12:30 p.m., . Holzer GALLIPOLIS Garden Club,
Hoepltal cafeteria.
Mrs. John Allison, Portsmouth
BAND BOOSTERS general Road, 8 p.m. Mrs. Forrest
meetJnS, 7:30p.m. In the band Davis guest speaker.
room,
FIRST C~urch of God
GRACE Guild 6:15 at the MISsionary Society, with Mrs.
cilurch. Pieaae bring table Pearl Elliott, 7:30p.m., annual
~rvice.
election of officers.
CHRIST United Methodist CORA WSCW with Mrs. David
Church Council on Minlatry Altizer, all day meeting, bring
Administrative board meeting, tl pledge.
7:30p.m. at the &lt;:hurch.
AAUW Rio Gra~e Dining haD, ·
dinner meeting, Martin Gold
wiD be the speaker, topic
"Small Investments and tax
breaks."
DAR French Colony Chapter, 2
p.m. Mrs. Ralph Burner, 90
Court St.
1UESDAY
GRACE Circles 5 and 6 will
meet at Grace United .
Methodist Church, 1 p.m .
Nursery open.

----'----

Guaranteed
To Satisfy.
Or Money Back

room

November Girl .

Council Plans Ground
,Breaking C~remonies

IN 15 MINUTES,YOU CAN TEACH
YOUR KIDS A LESSON .
FORGET.

ABc

from Mrs. Christensen for the
help of the salon with the
Christmas Seal Fund drive and
for a donation of $25 on the
Denver bed.
Plans were discussed for the
annual dlnper and the
Department Chapeau's visit
which wiU be April 6. Com·
,, mittees.app~inted were Emma
Wayland and Dorotlly Hecker
door prizes and favors; Carri~
Neutzling, special music, and
Mable Brown, reservations.
Chapeau passe membershi~
cards were distributed an&lt;l
refreshmenis · were served
during the social hour. The
next meeting wiD be at the
home of Ml'S. Joan Wood
March 2.

'

'

UALUPOLIS - Mr. and Ulurtlhf tll ·ministry of •·irst
Mrs. Morrla Huklns liosiAid the BaptlatChurch, and Mrs. Wahl .
First Baptlat \)lurch oftlctal· spoke concerning her 1mhoard_ mel!lbera and their presaions &lt;!I Gallipolis and told
wives, Pastor and Mrs. WUaon ol !he friendly recepUon that
·Wahl and associate pastor and she and her family has already
Mrs. Harry E. Cole at the Rio received from not only the
Grllilde College dinuig
Baptlat Church members but
Friday evening.
.
from townspeople.
, A palaliall)lelll was enjoyed
Before Pastor Wahl was
amidst a selling &lt;i hearts and · asked to give the benediction,
flowers. Morris Haskins acted 'Mrll. Wahl was presented with
u lol!~tmaster for !he.e~enlng the floral centerpiece which
and stated that the gathering . consla~ ' of 'fresh red car·
held a two-fold purpose giving nations. Attending were Board
occasion .for fellowship of the a( Oeacons, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
two ·church boards; plus Tope, Mr. llftd . Mrs;·' Dean
Iw!lplng \he Baptlat Church's Davis, Mr, and Mrs, Edward
new minister and hla wife, Rev, Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. George
and Mrs. \V~n W~. to Adams, . Mr. and Mrs.
become better acquainted with Raymond Gooch, Mr. and Mrs.
the board members and their Roger Hood, Mr. and Mrs.
wives.
Emerson Corbin, and Deacon
PATRIOT - Janet Sue
Toastmaster Haskins ~aUed Emeritus, Mr. and Mrs. Clay
upon Harry E. Cole, associate Halley; Board of Trustees, Mr. Stewart, daughter of Mr. and
pastor, to speak concerning the and Mrs. Morris Haskins, Mr. Mrs. Paul Stewart of Patriot,
coming of Pastor Wahl. The· and Mrs. Wendell Thomas, Mr . has been nlmled "February
toastmaster asked Wendell and Mrs. John Carhart, Mr. Girl of the Month" for the
Thomas, chairman of the and Mrs. Jack Carter, Mr. and Southwestern Future
Board of Trustees, to speak. He Mrs. Homer Johnson, Mr. and Homemakers of America.
Janet, a sophomore, serves
was followed by Mr. Earl Tope, Mrs. Harold Walker, and Mr.
as
the secretary bf the chapter
chairman of the Board of and Mrs . WIIIard Leedy;
Deacons.
Pastor and Mrs. Wilson Wahl, and last year received the
Pastor Wahl was called upon and Associate ·Pastor and Mrs. Junior· Homemaker Degree.
This year she is working
to give his views of the coming Harry E: Cole. · I
toward
the
'Ghapter
Homemaker Degree. Her other
activities Include being a
varsity football and basketball
cheerleader, a member of the
Pep Club, Library Club, school
choir ahd. serves as vice
president of the Sophomore
Class. She is also a oJ.H
KANAUGA - "Rescue the
member.
P_.Jlrishlng" was the opening
song of the Klinauga WSCS at
Its Thursday night meeting in
FAC CALENDAR
the home of Miss Evelyn
FEBRUARY: Tom Lllllck
Rothgeb. Roll call was an· exhibit_ Riverby.
swered by members repeating
Friday, Feb. 4, Deadline for
a. verse of scripture using the class registration.
word heart.
·
Sundar. Feb. 6, Tom LiUick,
Miss Rothgeb bad decorated "meet the artist" Program and
in keeping with the Valentine Rece 11 · 2
ru b
P on, p.m., ver y.
holiday on Feb. 14. The
GALLIPOLIS Anita
Monday, Feb. 14, Mem·
scripture was given by Mrs. ' bershlp Drive launched . Devault was chosen November
Audrey Brownell using Mat· Reservations for annual din· girl of the month of the Church
thew 28 verses 19-20. Readings ner-meeting In to Mrs. Thaler. of Christ in Christian Union. To
were given i!Y Mrs, Clyde . Tuesda y, Feb.· I'., FA
c be elected girl of the month by
. ..
Sha mbun, and "I Met The Board mee tl ng, 8 p.m., the church one must excel in
Master," by Mrs. John Raike. Riverby.
scripture learning, attendance
Mrs. Carl Rouse gave "The
Thursday, Feb. 24, Annual and be active In the youth
More Excellent Way," Dinner-Meeting, Oscar's, 6:30 group. Miss Devault Is the
followed .with a Bible study p.m.
daughter of Mr. and . Mrs.
from the second chapter of
Friday, March 3, Mem· William Devault, Madison
Thessalonians. The club bershlp Drive ends.
Ave., Gallipolis.
reported having made 25 sick
calls. The benediction was
giveq by Miss Rothgeb.

OjTheMonth

Put Here by VA

~·bEF

comedy, each act beJns con·
· cemed with different people
occupying Suite 719. Mrs.
Porter chose the first and third
acta to read. The audience was
much impresud by her exceiient portrayal of . the
characters, and !he. third act
particularly brought gales of
laughter.
A social hour followed the
p~ogram.
·

Eight and Forty

$¥2 Million

~~~~~
"'~'-''~··-·-:~~

'

GALLIPOLIS - · The
Phll001111hean Club~~ at the
hCille of Mrs. Dean Circle on
Feb. 3rd with Mrs. Frank
Porter givtng the pf08ram and
reading a comedy, ''Plaza
Suite" by NeD Simon, the first
&lt;i several aucceaful plays
written by him .•Others were
"Promises,. Promises,"
"Barefoot In the Park" and
"The Odd Couple.''
"Plaza Suite" is a threN~ct

The Almanac
By United Preu International
Today is $undaY, Feb. s; the
37th.day of 1972.
The moon is nearing its last
quarter.
_
The morning stars ' are
Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Aquarius.
British actor Sir Henry Irving

Pastor Wahl Honored
With Reception Friday

Mrs. Porter Reads

.

was unable to •lilly the
training program by r lllD Ill
a pbylical Jwndlrap • tile
injured sole, Jfe said the illjury
csWied )11m to be h•••""Awl
and submitted to ~
by the U· S. NaY)' 11'L 'II
authorities who fOUIIII lhlt hlr
foot contained a forelp Object
which hlld related to hla
trallliiatlc experience• •
Adkins says Dr. Conliellllld
the hospital Wll nqlipllt In•
that It faDed to eurclle lllat
deBree ' of care rt(julrid ·of
them to ascertilin the eliaiJIDce
and location of the \ forelp
object.
·
Adkins asked the court fllr .
compensatory damages In the
amount of $100,000 plua flO,OOO
for damages for Injuries in.
curred and another SIOO,OOO In
punitive damag~. He says ~ ·
has suffered mental anguish In
being released from his naval
duties.
·
· '

CHAIRMEI\f TO MEET
CANVASS IN PROGRESS '
GALLiPOLIS - Jim Saxton, chair·
.
'
VANDALIS"' REPORTED
GALLIPOLIS - Members of the man of the Gallipolis River RecreatiOilal
GALLIPOLiS - A vandalism report . Gallia County Board of Elections Monday Festival Committee, announced Saturday
was mvestigated Saturday by city police. will finish canvassing nominating petitions that all committee chairmen for the 1972
\ '
Thomas Thornton reported someone threw of the 28 candidates who filed for the May event are to meet Wednesday, beginning
a ·one-half inch socket through the window Primary Election. Several petitions were at 7 p.m., in the Chamber of Commerce cHICAGO (UP!) - Allie once in its last 58 games in· McGuire coonected for 11 to
at the State Liquor Store lor• ted on the 100 checked Friday but no one was office to make initial plans for this year's McGuire, hitting eight of 13 eluding toutnament pl8y. It take a 29-16 lead. Marquette
field goal !Jt~mpts, netted 20 was the. Warriors' second win had a 38-23 margin at the half.
block of Third Ave.
disqualified.
July Fourth celebration.
points Satqrday to lead the No. this season ·over DePaul ,
Harry Shields led the DePaul
2 ranked 1\farquette Warriors giving !he Blue. Demons a scorers with 15 points. Each
to !heir 17th ~traight win this season mark tll ~. ·
learn lost·one man on personal
season, '/9.11, •in a nationally
DePaul tied the score Utree fouls, Roger Shannon for
Rescue Unit Out televised contest .against times
jn the opening eight DePaul and 1&gt;-11 center Jim
DE! Paul.
minutes and once bad a three- . Chones for Marquette, but the
On Three Calls
It was the 51st straight wfu J)oint lead. But· the Warriors Blue Demons couldn't. ta~e
POMEROY - The Pomeroy during the regular ·season for outacored them then, netting 18 advantage of the big man's
E·R squad members answered Marquette, which has lost only of the next 20 points as absence.
two 011lls Friday and one early
Saturday morning. At 12:44
p.m. they were called to Nye
Ave., for Mabel Landaker who
POMEROY - Two defen- Carnell W. Vance , Jr., assured clear distance ; Carl E. was taken io Veterans
dants were bound over to the Cheshire, Rt. 2, $183 and costs, Stewart, no address recorded, Memorial Hospital and ,ad·
grand jury, 16 were fined and $103 suspended, overload ; $15 and costs, disturbing the milled.
five oihers posted,., bond in Frank H. Breeze, Mansfield, peace ; John V. Martin,
At 1:35 p.m. they went to the
Meigs' County Court Friday. $10 and costs, insecure load; Pomeroy, $10 and costs, in· Vance Imboden residence,
Bound over to the grand jury WadeL. Little, Cheshire, Rt. 2, toxication . Patricia Tolley, Welchtown Hill, for Thurman
~Y Judge Frank . W. Porter $10 and costs, stop sign
Rutland, Rt. I, costs 'only, Martin, Sr., who was also taken
under $1,000 bonds each were violation; Preston Martin , failure to transfer license.
to Veterans Memorial and
Douglas A. Burns, and David Proctorville, Rt. 3, $15 and
Forfeiting bonds were Clair admitted. Saturday at 1:54
Darst, both of Pomeroy, oo costs, speeding; Everette T. E. Martin, Vinton, Rt. I, $27.50 a.m. they went to Locust Street
charges of breaking and en· Calaway, Coolville, Rt. 2, $5 posted, stop sign violation; for Everett Thomas who was
tering.
and costs , extended load Charles Powell, Racine, RD, also admitted at Veterans
Fined were Catherine without flag; James C. Wyatt, $100, destruction of property; Memorial.
Domigan, Pomeroy, $5 and Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $10 and costs, Clair E. Swan, Langsville, Rt.
costs, defective muffler; Lewis left of center ; Kenneth Siders, I, $22.50, defective exhaust;
H. Sauer, Middleport, $10 and Gallipolis, $10 and costs , Harry W. Tabeling, South
costs, stop sign violation; speeding; Roy E. Frec~er, Gale, Ky., $25, passing at in·
HOSPITAL NEWS
James H. Kauff, Rutland, Rt. Minersville, Rt. I, $10 and tersection; Andy Toler, Bid·
I, $150 and costs, thrte days costs, failure to stop within well, $27.50, speeding.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
confinement , restricted
DISCHARG'ES:
M.rs .
driving privilege~. driving
Theodore Vancooney and son,
while intoxicated ; Steve R.
Tommy Jefferies, Mrs. Simon
Dailey, Racine, Rt. I, Walter
Hayes, Mrs. Hobert Crump,
E. King, Albany, Rt. 3, and
Lois Stanley, Norman Smith
William McHaffie, Middleport,
and WiUiam Bright.
$150 and cOsts each, three days
confinement, lic.erise
suspended for six months,
driving while intoxicated ;
POMEROY- The Veterans Ohio veterans received
Administration spent over $43,473,648.
$580,359 in Meigs County last
Merritt said construction and
year according to Lucius M. related costs throughout Ohio
Merritt, acting director of the amounted to $427,363 in fiscal
VA regional office in year 1971.
Cle•eland.
Total hospital operating
Total eipenditures for the costs for the state 's five
state of Ohio amounted to hospitals
amounted
to
$459,038,767, according to $91,148,311.
Merritt.
The largest segment of the
expenditures was for compensation and
pension Gary Kuhn of
payments which amounted to
$261,097,593. Of this total Meigs New Haven Dies
County received $404,701.
NEW HAVEN -Gary Lee
Compensa lion is paid to
Kuhn, 26, of 128 Lewis Street,
veterans who received some
sort of disability while on New Haven, was found dead at
his home Friday afternoon of
active duty . Pension payments
an
apparent self-inflicted 22
go to disabled veterans who
caliber pistol wound.
have little or no income
Thomas Parsons, New
because of disabilities suffered
ALFRED L. FIZER
Haven Police Chief, discovered
since service.
In Meigs County the VA the body Friday 2:45p.m. after
spent $88,274 for readjustment receiving a call from Kuhn's
and vocational rehabilitation fellow employees at Lakin
State Hospital who were
costs. These figures include the
costs involved in the Gl BiU concerned when he did not
which provides money for report for work. Kuhn resided
alone.
Vietnam veterans to attend
The incil!ent was in·
colleges, technical schools and
college schools. vestigate9 by the State Police
PT: PLEASANT - Ten below
and Parsons and according to
persons, including a Democrat Statewide VA expenditures reports Kuhn had been dead for
for assessor, filed as can· pyramided to $56,950,658 for approximately 14 hours before
didates for the May 9 primary these benefits.
being discovered.
Insurance and indemnities .
election in. the office of Circuit
The body was taken to the
Clerk Howard Sthultz from account for $67,384 of the Foglesong Funeral Home and
noon Friday until 10 a.m. county's share of VA expenses. later transferred to the Long
Saturday.
Funeral Home in Columbus.
Alfred Louis Fizer , 34 ,
Arrangements and survivors
Gallipolis Ferry, is seeking the Fritz Bonecutter
will be announced.
nomination for Mason County
Assessor on the democrat
slate. Fizer is the third person Died on Saturday
to file for that office with Mrs.
Jean Burdette, democrat and PT. PLEASANT - Fritz
Orville Sturgeon, republican, Bonecutter, 68, of 506 • 23rd
announcing their 'candidacy Street, died this morning 9 a.m.
in Pleasant Valley Hospital
earlier.
Fizer is a native of where he had been a patient for
Charleston and a graduate of the past week.
Charleston High School. He Anative of Mason County, he
was a member of the U. S. was born on June 10, 1903, a son
~"oast Guard for nine years and of the late George, and Sarah
is employed by the Ohio River Adkinson Bondcutter.
Mr. Bonecutter was cur·
CJmpany.
I
renUy
employed by the city of
Mr. Fizer is a member of
·Minturn Lodge No . 19, Point Pleasant but foqnerly
Franklin Commandery No. 17 was an employee of the
K.T., Point Pleasant No. 7 Mar ietta Manufacturing
R.A.M. He is married to the Company for 47 years. He is a
former Phyllis Bush and they member of the Boilermakers
are the parents of two Local 610 Point Pleasant.
Surviving are his wife, Cora
daughters.
Others filing were Nellie Riffle Bonecutter ; two
Preston, committeewoman, daughters , Mrs . Barbara
Hannan District, republican; Lucas, Point Pleasant; and
A&amp;P
The day your liltle boy or girl is
their telephone number, they can never
William Earl Nibert, constable Mrs. Betty McCoy, Akron ;
h;ave. them by the phone for the babyold enough to go out and play, is the
be lost.
Sitter.
of
Clendenin
District, three sons, William and Bruce
day your child is old enough to go out
It takes only a few minutes. And
democrat; William Yonker, Bonecutter, Point Pleasant,
Ohi? Bell also helps schools set up
and
get
lost.
it might save a lot of worry and heart•
courses
mtelephone use and etiquette
constable of Waggener and Robert Bonecutter of
It happens. Because kids are kids . ache later on,
Akron
;
two
sisters,
Mrs.
Edith
But if your children are not yei .
District, democrat; Virginia
and just naturally curious.
A&amp; P Cre;un Style
You might also want to show them
~chool
age, maybe a little homework
Yonker, justice of peace of Shamblin, Cheshire, 'and Mni.
They think Daddy's name is
how to dial "operator" in case of emer·
1s
m
9rder.
Waggener District, democrat. Myrtle Pyles, Chesapeake ;
Daddy. And they r:night even know.
gency. And have them cprry a 'clime for
Cecil E. Minton, com- and 21 grandchildren.
what street they live on. But that's not emergency calls.
Funeral services will be
mitteeman , "Lewis District,
.
much to go on.
Whole Kernel
.Qf course, it's always a ·good Idea
conducted
Monday
2
p.m.
in
repulllican; Franklin ~ . Cobb,
If, however, you teach your kids
to, jot down emer~ency numbers and
COIIIItable of Hall{llln District, the Wilcoxen Funeral Home
I,
repulllicsn ; Lester D. Ross, with the Rev. George Hoscbar
'
COIIIIIable of Lewis . District, and the Rev. John Steele of·
USE. . PI lONE FOR ALL IT'S WORm.
republican; George Bennett, ficiating. Burial will be in Lone
·
commllteeman, Union Oak cemetery.
Friends
may
call
at
the
Dlalrlct, republican and Olson
0. Wright, commltteP.man, funeral home after 2 p.m.
waurner District, rer·. .han. Sunday.
·

To Meigs Grand Jury

5-TheSillday Times •Sentinel, &amp;..day, Feb. e, 1972

1-

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4- 1be Smday Times · Sentinel, SUnday, Feb. 6, 1972

I

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RECEIPTS OF $2.111.55

$640,000 Dam11ge Suit Filed in Cincinnati
stock on margin to his family while he was
a registered representative of Bache in
1968. He said the company later liquidated
the Vee family's entire aecount.

CINCINNATI (UP!) - A Cincinnati
has filed a $&amp;10,000 damage suit in
Hamilton County Pleas Court against the
• .~ek firm of Bacbe &amp; Co. of New York
'
.ty . .
COMMISSION TO MEET
Willillm Vee charged that Bache
POMEROY - The Meigs CoWlty
violated the )'lew York Stock Exchange
Hospital
Commission will hojd its annual
policies and procedures by liquidating
.stock held by Vee's family . He ·charged meeting at 7:30p.m. Monday at Veterans
that the company told him lo stop selling Memorial Hospital.
1• .an

POMEROY ..:.. Meigs County Court
receipts for the month of January totaled
$2,087.55 according to Betty Hobstetter,
dwuty clerk. FiJnd.s were distributed .as
follows : fines to state, $599.10; fees to
sheriff, $69.90; fines and costs to county,
general fund, $936.02; law library fund,
$275.25 ; automobile license and gas fund,
$207.28.

·

Fourth Big Suit Filed in Gallia
GALUPOIJS - The fourth
major damage suit wilhill iii
past year was filed Friday in ·
Gallla County Common Pleas
Court against the Hol~er
Medical Center. Donald E.
Adkins address uniQiown filed
· '
'

the acUon ~gainst Dr. Marcel · of the Holzer Medical Center
Q. Coronel and !he Medical staff. Adkins further states
Center Hospital.
that he was a membet of the
Adkins claims that on July 9, Naval Reserves and later was .
1971, he was treated for a called to active duty.
laceration in the sole of his left
According to the complaint,
f\)Ot by Dr. Coronel, a member Adkins while on active duty

Waniors Win 11th Straight
.

Two Defendants Bound

Over

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Play ' 'Plaza Suite ' '

Plans Donations
•

: GALLIPOLIS - The regular
• meeting of the Gallia County
~- Salon No, 8,12, Elgbtand Forty,
: was held at tb~ home of Golda
:;. MournJnc In Middleport, with
~ Le Pettt Ch!lpeau J01111 Wood in
: charge.
• ·· .
:;: The; children and youth
• chairliwi, Emma Wayland,
.~ told of llie,Projecta for the year
• and donatfohs were planned for
~ Valentine's Day and Easter at
-:_ lheNationalJewlahHoapitalin
&lt; Denver and for a toy fund
~ there. She deacrlbed the
~ partne"'' project which is a
; morutcrJng machine and the
~ Amerlif~n Legion Child
~ Welfare progrtllll for .Cystic
•· FibrOIIls reaearch.
'
: A letter of thanks !l'as read

POINT PLEASM T - The
St. Peter Lutheran ..;ouncU met
Tuesday evening at the former
House Chapel with Walden F.
Roush, president, presiding.
New worship service hours
were approved starting Sun•
day, Feb. 13, the regular .
morning worship service wiU
start at 9 a.m. With Sunday
School at 10:15 a.m. Pastor
John F. Haberle wW conduct
the W\lfship service.
Joint Lenten services will
begin Wednesday, Feb. IS, 7:30
p.m. at St. Peter's Lutheran
and then on Wednesday, Feb.
23 at 7:30p.m. at New Haven,
the St. Paul's Lutheran
Church, These joint IMirvlces
were approved by both
churches for the Lenten season

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3___...---........2

Fizer Files
For·Office

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Coming
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Events

L
K .
J 5

~6
0

8

Tuv

9
wxY

Donna Myers

FHA Has Girl

]antll.lry Girl

1

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Hosts WSCS'

Leadership Club
Elects Co-advisor

'

OfThe .Month'
GALLIPOLIS - Donna
Myers· was elected January
Girl of the Month of The
Ch~ch of Christ in Christian
Umon. She excelled in scrip.
lure learning, attendance, and
is active in the youth group .
Miss Myers is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Myers,
Route 2, Gallipolis. No girl of
the month was elected in
Decem~r because of par·
ticipation in the Christmas
program.

SAVE
1·

The crabapple is the or·
iginal wild tree . The com·
mon cultivated varieties of
.· the apple tree are directly
' descended from the crab. apple.

.!

GALLIPOLiS - The Gallia
County Junior Leadership Club
met at th.. Grace United
Methodist 1urch recently
with the president, Cindy
Boggs, presiding. Devotions
were given by BIU Burleson.
The secretary's report was
given and the treasurer staled
that the club now has $193.26 In
the treasury.
Charlotte Buchy, advisor,
spoke about the Buckeye
recreation workshop. The
group chose two represen·
tatives and elected Dick Buchy
_as the new co-advisor.
Oi.ocusslons of the year's
program was held and decided
on.
The next meeting will be
Feb. 14 to tour the new Holzer
Hospital. A recreation period
was held prior to adjournment.

·atlia Notes
By Becky Vanco Phone 446-2342
'

Mrs. Margaret Lloyd Porter, accompanied by her husband,
celebrated her birthday on Saturday at the home of her son,
Jamess. Porter lllandfamily at Hamilton, Ohio.

$20
NOW

Come in and try th e
$19~
Stylist• zig-zag machine Irom
Reg. $219.00
Singer. See how it sew s up knits with its 4 built·in
stretch stitches. it switches easily from straight
to zig-zag stitching . ·You can me nd , darn, sew on
buttons, make butlonholes- with th e built-i n
bullonholer. And the exclusive Front Drop-in
Bobbin is so handy and con.venient.
·

Many Fabr,ic Specials
60"

POLYESTER KNit................ $398Yd.
Bonded &amp; Unbonded

PLAIDS .......................~~~~

\

1

Yd.

PRINTS ................ 30% OFF
AND MUCH MORE

FRENCH CITY
FABRIC SHOPPE
Anita Devault
58 Court St.

446·9255

; J

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___ av£1.~
{falfi,:oliJ, Ohv,

WIUiam Ned Eachus, GaiUpolls, former all&amp;utheastern
Ohio football star and a former meniber of Coach Woody Hayes
Buckeye squad, is a member of the dean's liat at Capital
University where he Is a first year law student. Eachus
graduated from Ohio State with a BS degree In buaineaa ad·
ministration.

Gifts that say

CoY~ c;[/(jf/1..

Anyone wishing to buy Sara Coventry jewelry should contact
any member of the Rio Grande Mothers IA!ague, as !he group is
selling jewell')' for a money making project to help support the ·
~ring Conference on June 10 at the Rio Grande College .
Cafeteria.

FREE COOKING DEMONSTRATION.
THE CHEF WHO LOST HIS POT

FRANCO .PALUMBO·
EXEWTIVE CHEf OF WEIGHT
WATaiERS INTERNATIONAl. INC.
He 'lost 105 pounds on the
"Weight Watchers" Program

Lace !rimmed slips and half

slips in white and colors.

from 13.00
Double layered or satin Nyloo
gown In georgeous colo r
selections.
from

'7.00

'

birthdays

.IS

0

DIAMOND.
•

&amp;y with confiden ce,
We ser,ve with p1ide.

•
TAWNEY
JEWELERS

.,

WATCHERS" GOURMET
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1
'

7:30 P.M. Elks Hall

Chillicothe,
Ohio
•
•
EVERYONE IS INVITED

FREE RECIPES.

"Weight Watchers" classes meet: Wed., 9:30 a .m. at Grace United
Methodist Church and Tues., 7;30 p.m. at St. Louis Catholic Church.

Panty hose, sized or one sin
stretch.
(

Nylon stretch gloves In
gleaming white &amp; outwJar

trom

'1.00

Wttdltrs"
•••f•ro•m•'•Z•.OO••••••••••••••••••••••
N.Y. Is • r~tlsttrtdrtrlldemar~ of Weight Watchers tntern~tlo11111, tnc.,
422 second Ave.
~~=~=~~L~:.:::::::::.:.::~:::.::::~:;..J
L.:colors.
1-..!:!::~~0h~io:..J

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$ 98

Permanent Press

Mr. and Mrs. David Mltcltell, Route 160, spent the weekend
with their children, Mr, and Mrs. Dana Mitchell and daughter,
Tera, In Plain City, Ohio, and Michael &lt;i Columbus. Tiley also
spent Monday evening with Mr, and Mrs. Isaac Shupe and Mr.
and Mrs. Donnie Shupe and family of Bidwell.

WATCH HIM COOK •'WEIGHT

some

RIO GRANDE
Baptist
Aullliary, 7:30 p.m. at the
church.
WEDNESDAY
. GRACE CIRCLE meetings
7:30 p.m. Circle I, Mra. Em·
·mett Morrlaon, 533 Fourth
Ave.; Circle 2, Mra. Neal
Clark, 138firal Ave.; Circle .3,
Mrs. Hollla Queen, 50 Locua
St.; Circle 4, Mrs. l'!falcolm
Orebaugh, tiD\! Second Ave.
WEDNESDAY
. EX'l'ENBION Homemakn
COWicil meeting, 10 11.m. Grace
United Methodist Church,
. poU~ nollli meal.

for

cure

7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Charles
Limier.

@Ohio Bell

5 ~~3ns $1

conducted by Pastor John F.
Haberle and alternating every
other Wednesday for service.
The new bulldmg plans were
discussed and plans for the
ground breaking ceremony
was proposed for .~rly this
year.
A meeting with the Woman's
Club of Point Pleasant was
held Wedni!sday completing
the necessary details to
maintain worship servi~s In
the present House Chapel until
new construction of the church
is completed. 'the council
members and ,trustees of the
Women's Club were In at·
tendance.
A joint meeting of St. Peter's
and St. Paul's Church Councils
wassetfor Sunday, Feb. 6, 2:30
p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church in New Haven.
Attending the meeting were
Walden F. Roush, WiUiam
Knight, Frank Scholz, Lynn
Freeman, Emil Romans, Dale
Roush and Roger Freeman.

FRENCH CITY Garden Club,

Apple Sauce

CORN
CORN

janet Stetuart

Mirs Rothgeb

was born February '6, 1138.
On this dl\Y in history:
In ln8 Massachusetts ratified
the Constitution.
·
In l!M3 General Dwight D.
Eisenhower was named com·
mander of Allied E~peditionary
Forces in North Mrlca .
In 1967 Cassius Clay defeated
Ernie Terrell to ktep the
heavyweight title,
In 1971 Apollo 14 began its
trip home after a moon landing.

leam how to ~t
stretch in 'PJr stitches

OJ The Month

MONDAY
. WEDNESDAY
COMMITTEE of Gallia
S. 1 . .din
Counlians 7:30 p.m. Room 104 SADDLE and If om n g
G8llla Academy High School, club, Bulavllle To~ hou~,
•
7:30 P·lll· Club w1ll furniSh
AMERICAN Red Cross
refreshments.
Volunt~ers (Gray Ladles) TIIURSDAY
Jun.cheon 12:30 p.m., . Holzer GALLIPOLIS Garden Club,
Hoepltal cafeteria.
Mrs. John Allison, Portsmouth
BAND BOOSTERS general Road, 8 p.m. Mrs. Forrest
meetJnS, 7:30p.m. In the band Davis guest speaker.
room,
FIRST C~urch of God
GRACE Guild 6:15 at the MISsionary Society, with Mrs.
cilurch. Pieaae bring table Pearl Elliott, 7:30p.m., annual
~rvice.
election of officers.
CHRIST United Methodist CORA WSCW with Mrs. David
Church Council on Minlatry Altizer, all day meeting, bring
Administrative board meeting, tl pledge.
7:30p.m. at the &lt;:hurch.
AAUW Rio Gra~e Dining haD, ·
dinner meeting, Martin Gold
wiD be the speaker, topic
"Small Investments and tax
breaks."
DAR French Colony Chapter, 2
p.m. Mrs. Ralph Burner, 90
Court St.
1UESDAY
GRACE Circles 5 and 6 will
meet at Grace United .
Methodist Church, 1 p.m .
Nursery open.

----'----

Guaranteed
To Satisfy.
Or Money Back

room

November Girl .

Council Plans Ground
,Breaking C~remonies

IN 15 MINUTES,YOU CAN TEACH
YOUR KIDS A LESSON .
FORGET.

ABc

from Mrs. Christensen for the
help of the salon with the
Christmas Seal Fund drive and
for a donation of $25 on the
Denver bed.
Plans were discussed for the
annual dlnper and the
Department Chapeau's visit
which wiU be April 6. Com·
,, mittees.app~inted were Emma
Wayland and Dorotlly Hecker
door prizes and favors; Carri~
Neutzling, special music, and
Mable Brown, reservations.
Chapeau passe membershi~
cards were distributed an&lt;l
refreshmenis · were served
during the social hour. The
next meeting wiD be at the
home of Ml'S. Joan Wood
March 2.

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UALUPOLIS - Mr. and Ulurtlhf tll ·ministry of •·irst
Mrs. Morrla Huklns liosiAid the BaptlatChurch, and Mrs. Wahl .
First Baptlat \)lurch oftlctal· spoke concerning her 1mhoard_ mel!lbera and their presaions &lt;!I Gallipolis and told
wives, Pastor and Mrs. WUaon ol !he friendly recepUon that
·Wahl and associate pastor and she and her family has already
Mrs. Harry E. Cole at the Rio received from not only the
Grllilde College dinuig
Baptlat Church members but
Friday evening.
.
from townspeople.
, A palaliall)lelll was enjoyed
Before Pastor Wahl was
amidst a selling &lt;i hearts and · asked to give the benediction,
flowers. Morris Haskins acted 'Mrll. Wahl was presented with
u lol!~tmaster for !he.e~enlng the floral centerpiece which
and stated that the gathering . consla~ ' of 'fresh red car·
held a two-fold purpose giving nations. Attending were Board
occasion .for fellowship of the a( Oeacons, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
two ·church boards; plus Tope, Mr. llftd . Mrs;·' Dean
Iw!lplng \he Baptlat Church's Davis, Mr, and Mrs, Edward
new minister and hla wife, Rev, Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. George
and Mrs. \V~n W~. to Adams, . Mr. and Mrs.
become better acquainted with Raymond Gooch, Mr. and Mrs.
the board members and their Roger Hood, Mr. and Mrs.
wives.
Emerson Corbin, and Deacon
PATRIOT - Janet Sue
Toastmaster Haskins ~aUed Emeritus, Mr. and Mrs. Clay
upon Harry E. Cole, associate Halley; Board of Trustees, Mr. Stewart, daughter of Mr. and
pastor, to speak concerning the and Mrs. Morris Haskins, Mr. Mrs. Paul Stewart of Patriot,
coming of Pastor Wahl. The· and Mrs. Wendell Thomas, Mr . has been nlmled "February
toastmaster asked Wendell and Mrs. John Carhart, Mr. Girl of the Month" for the
Thomas, chairman of the and Mrs. Jack Carter, Mr. and Southwestern Future
Board of Trustees, to speak. He Mrs. Homer Johnson, Mr. and Homemakers of America.
Janet, a sophomore, serves
was followed by Mr. Earl Tope, Mrs. Harold Walker, and Mr.
as
the secretary bf the chapter
chairman of the Board of and Mrs . WIIIard Leedy;
Deacons.
Pastor and Mrs. Wilson Wahl, and last year received the
Pastor Wahl was called upon and Associate ·Pastor and Mrs. Junior· Homemaker Degree.
This year she is working
to give his views of the coming Harry E: Cole. · I
toward
the
'Ghapter
Homemaker Degree. Her other
activities Include being a
varsity football and basketball
cheerleader, a member of the
Pep Club, Library Club, school
choir ahd. serves as vice
president of the Sophomore
Class. She is also a oJ.H
KANAUGA - "Rescue the
member.
P_.Jlrishlng" was the opening
song of the Klinauga WSCS at
Its Thursday night meeting in
FAC CALENDAR
the home of Miss Evelyn
FEBRUARY: Tom Lllllck
Rothgeb. Roll call was an· exhibit_ Riverby.
swered by members repeating
Friday, Feb. 4, Deadline for
a. verse of scripture using the class registration.
word heart.
·
Sundar. Feb. 6, Tom LiUick,
Miss Rothgeb bad decorated "meet the artist" Program and
in keeping with the Valentine Rece 11 · 2
ru b
P on, p.m., ver y.
holiday on Feb. 14. The
GALLIPOLIS Anita
Monday, Feb. 14, Mem·
scripture was given by Mrs. ' bershlp Drive launched . Devault was chosen November
Audrey Brownell using Mat· Reservations for annual din· girl of the month of the Church
thew 28 verses 19-20. Readings ner-meeting In to Mrs. Thaler. of Christ in Christian Union. To
were given i!Y Mrs, Clyde . Tuesda y, Feb.· I'., FA
c be elected girl of the month by
. ..
Sha mbun, and "I Met The Board mee tl ng, 8 p.m., the church one must excel in
Master," by Mrs. John Raike. Riverby.
scripture learning, attendance
Mrs. Carl Rouse gave "The
Thursday, Feb. 24, Annual and be active In the youth
More Excellent Way," Dinner-Meeting, Oscar's, 6:30 group. Miss Devault Is the
followed .with a Bible study p.m.
daughter of Mr. and . Mrs.
from the second chapter of
Friday, March 3, Mem· William Devault, Madison
Thessalonians. The club bershlp Drive ends.
Ave., Gallipolis.
reported having made 25 sick
calls. The benediction was
giveq by Miss Rothgeb.

OjTheMonth

Put Here by VA

~·bEF

comedy, each act beJns con·
· cemed with different people
occupying Suite 719. Mrs.
Porter chose the first and third
acta to read. The audience was
much impresud by her exceiient portrayal of . the
characters, and !he. third act
particularly brought gales of
laughter.
A social hour followed the
p~ogram.
·

Eight and Forty

$¥2 Million

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"'~'-''~··-·-:~~

'

GALLIPOLIS - · The
Phll001111hean Club~~ at the
hCille of Mrs. Dean Circle on
Feb. 3rd with Mrs. Frank
Porter givtng the pf08ram and
reading a comedy, ''Plaza
Suite" by NeD Simon, the first
&lt;i several aucceaful plays
written by him .•Others were
"Promises,. Promises,"
"Barefoot In the Park" and
"The Odd Couple.''
"Plaza Suite" is a threN~ct

The Almanac
By United Preu International
Today is $undaY, Feb. s; the
37th.day of 1972.
The moon is nearing its last
quarter.
_
The morning stars ' are
Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Aquarius.
British actor Sir Henry Irving

Pastor Wahl Honored
With Reception Friday

Mrs. Porter Reads

.

was unable to •lilly the
training program by r lllD Ill
a pbylical Jwndlrap • tile
injured sole, Jfe said the illjury
csWied )11m to be h•••""Awl
and submitted to ~
by the U· S. NaY)' 11'L 'II
authorities who fOUIIII lhlt hlr
foot contained a forelp Object
which hlld related to hla
trallliiatlc experience• •
Adkins says Dr. Conliellllld
the hospital Wll nqlipllt In•
that It faDed to eurclle lllat
deBree ' of care rt(julrid ·of
them to ascertilin the eliaiJIDce
and location of the \ forelp
object.
·
Adkins asked the court fllr .
compensatory damages In the
amount of $100,000 plua flO,OOO
for damages for Injuries in.
curred and another SIOO,OOO In
punitive damag~. He says ~ ·
has suffered mental anguish In
being released from his naval
duties.
·
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CHAIRMEI\f TO MEET
CANVASS IN PROGRESS '
GALLiPOLIS - Jim Saxton, chair·
.
'
VANDALIS"' REPORTED
GALLIPOLIS - Members of the man of the Gallipolis River RecreatiOilal
GALLIPOLiS - A vandalism report . Gallia County Board of Elections Monday Festival Committee, announced Saturday
was mvestigated Saturday by city police. will finish canvassing nominating petitions that all committee chairmen for the 1972
\ '
Thomas Thornton reported someone threw of the 28 candidates who filed for the May event are to meet Wednesday, beginning
a ·one-half inch socket through the window Primary Election. Several petitions were at 7 p.m., in the Chamber of Commerce cHICAGO (UP!) - Allie once in its last 58 games in· McGuire coonected for 11 to
at the State Liquor Store lor• ted on the 100 checked Friday but no one was office to make initial plans for this year's McGuire, hitting eight of 13 eluding toutnament pl8y. It take a 29-16 lead. Marquette
field goal !Jt~mpts, netted 20 was the. Warriors' second win had a 38-23 margin at the half.
block of Third Ave.
disqualified.
July Fourth celebration.
points Satqrday to lead the No. this season ·over DePaul ,
Harry Shields led the DePaul
2 ranked 1\farquette Warriors giving !he Blue. Demons a scorers with 15 points. Each
to !heir 17th ~traight win this season mark tll ~. ·
learn lost·one man on personal
season, '/9.11, •in a nationally
DePaul tied the score Utree fouls, Roger Shannon for
Rescue Unit Out televised contest .against times
jn the opening eight DePaul and 1&gt;-11 center Jim
DE! Paul.
minutes and once bad a three- . Chones for Marquette, but the
On Three Calls
It was the 51st straight wfu J)oint lead. But· the Warriors Blue Demons couldn't. ta~e
POMEROY - The Pomeroy during the regular ·season for outacored them then, netting 18 advantage of the big man's
E·R squad members answered Marquette, which has lost only of the next 20 points as absence.
two 011lls Friday and one early
Saturday morning. At 12:44
p.m. they were called to Nye
Ave., for Mabel Landaker who
POMEROY - Two defen- Carnell W. Vance , Jr., assured clear distance ; Carl E. was taken io Veterans
dants were bound over to the Cheshire, Rt. 2, $183 and costs, Stewart, no address recorded, Memorial Hospital and ,ad·
grand jury, 16 were fined and $103 suspended, overload ; $15 and costs, disturbing the milled.
five oihers posted,., bond in Frank H. Breeze, Mansfield, peace ; John V. Martin,
At 1:35 p.m. they went to the
Meigs' County Court Friday. $10 and costs, insecure load; Pomeroy, $10 and costs, in· Vance Imboden residence,
Bound over to the grand jury WadeL. Little, Cheshire, Rt. 2, toxication . Patricia Tolley, Welchtown Hill, for Thurman
~Y Judge Frank . W. Porter $10 and costs, stop sign
Rutland, Rt. I, costs 'only, Martin, Sr., who was also taken
under $1,000 bonds each were violation; Preston Martin , failure to transfer license.
to Veterans Memorial and
Douglas A. Burns, and David Proctorville, Rt. 3, $15 and
Forfeiting bonds were Clair admitted. Saturday at 1:54
Darst, both of Pomeroy, oo costs, speeding; Everette T. E. Martin, Vinton, Rt. I, $27.50 a.m. they went to Locust Street
charges of breaking and en· Calaway, Coolville, Rt. 2, $5 posted, stop sign violation; for Everett Thomas who was
tering.
and costs , extended load Charles Powell, Racine, RD, also admitted at Veterans
Fined were Catherine without flag; James C. Wyatt, $100, destruction of property; Memorial.
Domigan, Pomeroy, $5 and Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $10 and costs, Clair E. Swan, Langsville, Rt.
costs, defective muffler; Lewis left of center ; Kenneth Siders, I, $22.50, defective exhaust;
H. Sauer, Middleport, $10 and Gallipolis, $10 and costs , Harry W. Tabeling, South
costs, stop sign violation; speeding; Roy E. Frec~er, Gale, Ky., $25, passing at in·
HOSPITAL NEWS
James H. Kauff, Rutland, Rt. Minersville, Rt. I, $10 and tersection; Andy Toler, Bid·
I, $150 and costs, thrte days costs, failure to stop within well, $27.50, speeding.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
confinement , restricted
DISCHARG'ES:
M.rs .
driving privilege~. driving
Theodore Vancooney and son,
while intoxicated ; Steve R.
Tommy Jefferies, Mrs. Simon
Dailey, Racine, Rt. I, Walter
Hayes, Mrs. Hobert Crump,
E. King, Albany, Rt. 3, and
Lois Stanley, Norman Smith
William McHaffie, Middleport,
and WiUiam Bright.
$150 and cOsts each, three days
confinement, lic.erise
suspended for six months,
driving while intoxicated ;
POMEROY- The Veterans Ohio veterans received
Administration spent over $43,473,648.
$580,359 in Meigs County last
Merritt said construction and
year according to Lucius M. related costs throughout Ohio
Merritt, acting director of the amounted to $427,363 in fiscal
VA regional office in year 1971.
Cle•eland.
Total hospital operating
Total eipenditures for the costs for the state 's five
state of Ohio amounted to hospitals
amounted
to
$459,038,767, according to $91,148,311.
Merritt.
The largest segment of the
expenditures was for compensation and
pension Gary Kuhn of
payments which amounted to
$261,097,593. Of this total Meigs New Haven Dies
County received $404,701.
NEW HAVEN -Gary Lee
Compensa lion is paid to
Kuhn, 26, of 128 Lewis Street,
veterans who received some
sort of disability while on New Haven, was found dead at
his home Friday afternoon of
active duty . Pension payments
an
apparent self-inflicted 22
go to disabled veterans who
caliber pistol wound.
have little or no income
Thomas Parsons, New
because of disabilities suffered
ALFRED L. FIZER
Haven Police Chief, discovered
since service.
In Meigs County the VA the body Friday 2:45p.m. after
spent $88,274 for readjustment receiving a call from Kuhn's
and vocational rehabilitation fellow employees at Lakin
State Hospital who were
costs. These figures include the
costs involved in the Gl BiU concerned when he did not
which provides money for report for work. Kuhn resided
alone.
Vietnam veterans to attend
The incil!ent was in·
colleges, technical schools and
college schools. vestigate9 by the State Police
PT: PLEASANT - Ten below
and Parsons and according to
persons, including a Democrat Statewide VA expenditures reports Kuhn had been dead for
for assessor, filed as can· pyramided to $56,950,658 for approximately 14 hours before
didates for the May 9 primary these benefits.
being discovered.
Insurance and indemnities .
election in. the office of Circuit
The body was taken to the
Clerk Howard Sthultz from account for $67,384 of the Foglesong Funeral Home and
noon Friday until 10 a.m. county's share of VA expenses. later transferred to the Long
Saturday.
Funeral Home in Columbus.
Alfred Louis Fizer , 34 ,
Arrangements and survivors
Gallipolis Ferry, is seeking the Fritz Bonecutter
will be announced.
nomination for Mason County
Assessor on the democrat
slate. Fizer is the third person Died on Saturday
to file for that office with Mrs.
Jean Burdette, democrat and PT. PLEASANT - Fritz
Orville Sturgeon, republican, Bonecutter, 68, of 506 • 23rd
announcing their 'candidacy Street, died this morning 9 a.m.
in Pleasant Valley Hospital
earlier.
Fizer is a native of where he had been a patient for
Charleston and a graduate of the past week.
Charleston High School. He Anative of Mason County, he
was a member of the U. S. was born on June 10, 1903, a son
~"oast Guard for nine years and of the late George, and Sarah
is employed by the Ohio River Adkinson Bondcutter.
Mr. Bonecutter was cur·
CJmpany.
I
renUy
employed by the city of
Mr. Fizer is a member of
·Minturn Lodge No . 19, Point Pleasant but foqnerly
Franklin Commandery No. 17 was an employee of the
K.T., Point Pleasant No. 7 Mar ietta Manufacturing
R.A.M. He is married to the Company for 47 years. He is a
former Phyllis Bush and they member of the Boilermakers
are the parents of two Local 610 Point Pleasant.
Surviving are his wife, Cora
daughters.
Others filing were Nellie Riffle Bonecutter ; two
Preston, committeewoman, daughters , Mrs . Barbara
Hannan District, republican; Lucas, Point Pleasant; and
A&amp;P
The day your liltle boy or girl is
their telephone number, they can never
William Earl Nibert, constable Mrs. Betty McCoy, Akron ;
h;ave. them by the phone for the babyold enough to go out and play, is the
be lost.
Sitter.
of
Clendenin
District, three sons, William and Bruce
day your child is old enough to go out
It takes only a few minutes. And
democrat; William Yonker, Bonecutter, Point Pleasant,
Ohi? Bell also helps schools set up
and
get
lost.
it might save a lot of worry and heart•
courses
mtelephone use and etiquette
constable of Waggener and Robert Bonecutter of
It happens. Because kids are kids . ache later on,
Akron
;
two
sisters,
Mrs.
Edith
But if your children are not yei .
District, democrat; Virginia
and just naturally curious.
A&amp; P Cre;un Style
You might also want to show them
~chool
age, maybe a little homework
Yonker, justice of peace of Shamblin, Cheshire, 'and Mni.
They think Daddy's name is
how to dial "operator" in case of emer·
1s
m
9rder.
Waggener District, democrat. Myrtle Pyles, Chesapeake ;
Daddy. And they r:night even know.
gency. And have them cprry a 'clime for
Cecil E. Minton, com- and 21 grandchildren.
what street they live on. But that's not emergency calls.
Funeral services will be
mitteeman , "Lewis District,
.
much to go on.
Whole Kernel
.Qf course, it's always a ·good Idea
conducted
Monday
2
p.m.
in
repulllican; Franklin ~ . Cobb,
If, however, you teach your kids
to, jot down emer~ency numbers and
COIIIItable of Hall{llln District, the Wilcoxen Funeral Home
I,
repulllicsn ; Lester D. Ross, with the Rev. George Hoscbar
'
COIIIIIable of Lewis . District, and the Rev. John Steele of·
USE. . PI lONE FOR ALL IT'S WORm.
republican; George Bennett, ficiating. Burial will be in Lone
·
commllteeman, Union Oak cemetery.
Friends
may
call
at
the
Dlalrlct, republican and Olson
0. Wright, commltteP.man, funeral home after 2 p.m.
waurner District, rer·. .han. Sunday.
·

To Meigs Grand Jury

5-TheSillday Times •Sentinel, &amp;..day, Feb. e, 1972

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8-lbeSlllday Times-Sentinel,&amp;..day, Feb.8. tm

frogs can jump 211
OWII lenJth 011

·HOSPITAL
NEWS

ReedSville
News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Barn·
hart of' Chester are announcing the birth of a son,
Shawn AShley, born Jan. 26. ·
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Bing of
Long Bottom R. D. Greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Spencer of Long Bottom, R. D., and Mrs. Edith
Bing of Wooster. Great-great·
grandmother is Mrs. Martha
McElroy of Long Bottpm R. D.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs . Carl Barnhart of
Reedsville and Mrs . Ora
Russell of Great Falls, Mont.,
is paternal great.grandmother.
Donald Barnhart, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Bahlhart wiD
leave Feb . l8for FortDix, N. J.
He will be in the National
Guard.
Tona Boring has relurned
home after being a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy for several da~ .
Mrs. Rose Thomas and Mrs.
Opal Randolph recenUy visited
with friends and relatives 'at
Colwnbus.
Mrs. Claude . Smith is a
patient at University Hospital
in Colwnbus.
Jane Whitehead and David
Weber spent a couple or days in
Colwnbus with friends. While
there they toured Ohio Slate
campus.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hoffman
of Chesler recenUy honored
their daughter, Christi Lynn,
with a party on her first birth.
day. Attending were her
grandmothers, Mrs. George

Mr. and M1!. Frank Davis

Mr. and Mrs. ·Davis
To Celebrate 50th
. ~ A .
Weddtng nntversary
·

- · -- Mr. and Mrs. Duane Allison Clark

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OAK .HILL -Mr. and Mrs. Frank Davis of Route 4, Oak
Hill, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on Sunday, Feb.13, with open house from 2to 5p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Davis are the pare!)ls ol six children, Mrs.
Harold ('{enie) Vawtern and Phillip E· Davis of Columbus;
Mrs. Darlene Young. of Fond Du Lt!c, Wis.; Mrs. Cecil
"(Pauline) Elllott of Rio.Grande: Junior Davis of Gallia, and
Mrs. Adrian (Gladys) Haner of .Gallipolis. They have 15
grandcliildren and one great.grlindchild.
Mr. Davis is retired after 23 years with the Cambric Clay

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
. visiting hours 2-4 and 7.,'1 p.m.
' Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pedlairics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. William V.
Arthur, Jr., New Haven, a
daughter.
Discharges
Mrs. Wanda A. ScariM:rry,
· Rufus G. Jwnilton, Marj~rie
M. Fruth,! John E. Bowman,
· Mrs. Frances Littlejohn,
Herbert E. Dunn, Mary E.
'Schoolcraft, ·Carole
F.
Milstead, Mrs. George R.
Glazier, TaliUJly Lou Pi~r.
Eunice I. Nutter, Louise M.
McElhinny, C. Paul Northup, ·
Kelly A. Miller, Leslie H.
McDaniel, Virginia J. McCorley, Dale !. Grant and
Amos M. Waugh.

program's Inception,
enrollment has totaled over
eight and one-&lt;1uarter n1i111on,
and with this year's grants,
scholarship awards will
almost $2 million.

~each

•'•l~
.,
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,:· Cloae-IQ-Home Situation

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Qle

worth a
heartfelt
wishes · from · you to
Valentine. Let our
s s.o r tm e n.t ' o
Valentine cards say
all for you. Make vno.1r•
choice soon.

PAUL DAVIES ·
JEWELERS

DON'T FORGET
'

OUR SALE
ON FAMOUS
NAME RANDS,
SALE ENDS
Y, fEB. 6

.HOURS

TUES.-SAT.
10 .'5
SUN. I • 4
MONDA

Buckley of Reedsville, and
Mrs . ·walter Hoffman of
Chesler; her aunt and uncle,
Mr. and Mrs. John Grueser and
cousin, Angie, of Pomeroy, and
cousins, Timmy and Howard
Durst of Tuppers Plains.
Refreshments of a decorated
cake shaped like a doll, ice
cream, punch and favors were
served to the guests. Christi
received many gifts.
- Mrs. Lyle Balderson

Trading Nations Ready
'

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Real Estate Broker in
GOP District 92 Race

Best Doorway
Perhaps the best doorway to
the China . market is the
semiannual Csnton Fair wher.e ·
about 50 per cent of all Western ·
sales to Chlnli are 'trasnacled.
Foreign b~slnessmen then
have a chance to see export
goods being offered, make
personal contacts with.
government offi.;Jals, .nd lay
the groundwork for lo. ~ tough
negotiations.
There are some pur~ly
political roadblocks along \he
China · trading road·. . In
negotiatlitg recent agteemeitts
with Japan, for instance,
Premier Chou En-lal ruled that
no Japanese company could do
business with Peking if It had
investments In Taiwan . or
South Korea or supplied
rmmltions to Sooth Vietnam or
if It had any joint venlure
relations with American f~
anywhere.
"While the Chinese dot all
the I's and cross all the T's in
interminable conversations,
and then bold you to the.tinle8t
clause, there's one good thing
about them," said an ·
American businessman wiih
experience In that area. ''They
~ pay their bU!s on time."

Natura izer's
shoe·
on·the·
nse

Navy

AAA·AA·B

$21,95

I

A

HIGH-TONGUED
.STAR IN
GLEAMING CRINKLE PATENT
The perfect paftner for pants. or skills.
or whatever you wear most. with a moe toe
accented by sw1rl1 of gleam1 ng metal. And

llll11 thefamlll shopslllcllh•
G~lllpolls ,

CHESAPEAKE:_ OUs Mack
Fulks, Chesapeake, Saturday
announced hill candidacy for
Republican nomination for
State Repi-esentative in the
newly-formed. 92nd Ohio
District. •·
A native of Lawrence
County, Fulks attended local
schools and studied real estate,
publiq speaking and sales
promotion In Indiana.
Candidate
\has bad. 12
years ex~!JCC as a real
estate broker In \ t,awrence
County and has provided
leadership in land \promotion
that has stimulated the
economy of this ar~ through
increased populati and In·
creased land values.
·
Fulks reports he is
thoroughly familiar with the '
needs of the 921\d District. He
has handled property transactions for the Federal
government and ls vitally
Interested in protecting the
naiural resources of the
district.
He statd that. he has
protected the interests of
numerous people In the oourts

OUR SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE WITH

sri• 6t. ::0~..

·2·Speed; 4-Cy&lt;lft.

2.Spr~o~y Armt . • ·
Mdplo ~ult)ng lloor~

.

FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY

..

~ ooly

25%0FF

on·all active
Towle sterling patterns

l27911 .

IXW40_W....
2·Spoed. 3,Cy&lt;le

l

RAIN OR SHINE
, WHIRLPOOL CARES
ABOUT SERVICE
Ons MACK FULKS
of Ohio as an expert appraisal
witness in eminent domain
proceedings, and that he will
vigorously fight to protect the
people of the dilflrict against
special interestS.
\
Fulks served in Europe and
Asia during World War II.

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1866

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Mining ~ool Made Prototype
••
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•
•
•
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•

a

PhOne frH

for

where In the continental U.S..
lillie of day or night J•ot
dial IIOC).253-1301 (In Michigan,
100-4:12·2243). Whl~pool CillO It
tho Coot Uno.
. . . .111 till H ftliiiiiL You

any

'

SF;WARD, Pa. (UP!) - A
governme"nt . . constructed
,training school1or cool miners
· was characterized by top in·
dustry offlciaiB Friday as the
prototype for sl!\tllar facilities '
that will eventually be used to
train miners across the nation,
"When we turned this corner
we opened new passageway

Wlllltpool l i t -

NAICI Information from any•

'

.STO~IDE BARGAINS ON ME~ 1 S &amp; BOYS'.

to ssfety,'! said James H.
Hurley, chairman of the
Central Pennsylv~nia Coal
Producers Association, which
will operate the training
program. "The day is not far
away when we wlll be training
every man who enlen the'
mines In some manner."

V.l

a

limpllllo&lt;l

Warranty

loltOr

(rio "fino IHfnt"l thot 1110111 o•l
exactly wh.t 11 tnd what Ia not

1Wil4l UO&lt;tric

An unprecedented opportunity to purchase any active
Towle ·sterling patlern at 25% off the re&amp;uiar retail price.
Du .
this limited time offer you · may purchase single
pieces, place setlings or complete sets. and save 25% on
every purchase. Don 't delay' Come in today.

Sa~e up to $ 15.49. on a 4-piece place selling
s"ave up to $123.92 on a 32·pi ece se rvice for eight
Save up to $270.60 on a 72 -picce service for twelve

~-ol

A Deh.tu range

price.

o Standard

Wftirlpoof __

iblllty.

..._ill.,.. .... •ntu
Wftirlpoof IIO!Pt , lroln hundroclo
of •Mao~ .....,.. ...-, Yll(· 11.
YO\! ...r need Mt\'ICI, lllore I I
Wftl~poot frlnchll&lt;ld, Whlrlpoof

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Compocis _yovr 'troloh ~ torbott
probiPn 1nto a ntOf itt6l pac~~.
ago.

... ""' •zzg•

lr,lnod TtCh·Cirl ttNiOifllft
ftllr~.

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Our ng tho lirot r••r of
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tree ·tor qr.e N.-r • IIJIIDI
"""' of lftY PI"· Qulllty ""'
11~or.

c:an a.-net on.

·

ClARK'S JEWELRY STORE
. 342 Second Ave •

Ga•tipolis

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F.

WINTER WEARABLE$ CONTINUES.

y

Journey to Peking:

r;:========::;:,;~~~~~~t.

t

Suits • Sport .Coats • Top Coats • Slacks

..

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t

,

Ma,..uarP t Fadek11 Chosen
Bett1J Croc.. ker llOmema
u
ker

AVAILABLEJ

!

one

····~············

r

f

llyDEAN C. MILLER
Europeantraderswouldhavea jump on the U.S. through .
UPI Business Editor
difficult time competing with wheat sales.
NEW YORK (UPI)-The Japan, which has· rl!placed the . Japan, the most aggressive,
"great ieap forward" ta~~en in Soviet Union as China's chief is believed to have exported
reeent years by the United supplier of industrial and about $325 milllon In goods to
States toward . rapprpchement conswner goods. Aside from China In 1968, nearly 20 per
with . Mainland China has Japan's traditional efficiencies cent of Peking's total imports
p-ompted many business lead- and low labor costs, it sits next that year. Japan Increased that
ers to predict a trade bonanza door to the Chinese market. percentsge in 1969 through
by 1976.
.
Transportation costs weigh larges sales of steel products,
Most economists and re- heavily in profit margins.
heavy duty trucks, machines,
searchers disagree. While
At a recent briefing by the machine tools and chemical
agreeing. that China's 800 American Management ferttuzers.
million people are potentially Association, the advisory body
The United States, with a
sand.
the world's biggest market, for U.S. business, several politicalaswellasaneconomic
Alarge percentage of w)Jat Isn't washed away is tracked Into
they see substantial trade with panelists said trafjing with eye to · the future, broke the
the hdwlel or boated on the under side of every automobile in the
Peking coming in the long, not Mainland China could and diplomatic ice two years ago.
area. Businesses along the swa_th fouled by It find access to their
the short, term. It will he a probably would he worthwhile . After banning aU trade with
, parklrig areas difficult at best. Most people along 35 ta.ke a great mini-market with maxi-paten- but cautiorn:d that it would China In 11161 when she entered
ll'ide .In the appearance of their properties. That area unpressed
tial over the next decade or require patience and long the Korean War, a p-esidentlal
me greatly on my"flrst trip to Gallipolis.
two, they figure .
range planning.
announcement In December
In my opinion it Ia a llbame that lawns which only months ago
The Gallagher Presidents'
''Trade with the People's 1969 eased that ban slightly.
were well groomed now look as though a low budget monster
Report which recently queried Republic of China will be ex- Nixon said then that overseas
150 presidents of major compa- tremely difficult" said La- subsi(liaries and affiliates of
, film, "The Giant Insane Mole Who Ate Up Galllpolis" had been
nies on what . they thought wrence C. McQuade, president U.S. companies could trade
shot on location there.
about
the fulure of trade with and chief executive of Procon nonstrategic gOOiis with China.
The sewers are 'culp-its but not the only ones. While the
Chinese goods, however,
construction company tearS up streets, lanes and lawns to ,inatalf ·China reflects the business Inc. "At best In the foreseeable
world's
·
o
ptimism.
More
than
future
it
wiD
be
$30
million
to
could
not be exported to the
• their sewers, 'another bit of excavation was being. done at thJ:,
.United States for resale unless
corner of Bulavllle Rd. and S.R. 160 by the gas company. I hope · (iO per cent of thein believed it $50 million annually."
be feasible lri five years:
l.!~.~ii. ld that •'modest'' t~teY, un~rwent reprocessing.
~ 1111e evqr •bi!J;.Io pull off on to the~~ road there would
8'1.5
per
~~
favored
such
oPPGWi!l
·,(or trade in the
becalllle I·rli!!' afraid the berm wu·~;llnrlercut and, like
trade;. &lt;.,ln'1[1'•.,3.8 thought rnildhuit·raltlll~filltre probably
sailors of old, the motorist would face the proapects of "falling olr President · Ntion 's trip to · will ~\ioilie thl-oii'tli" overseas
· the edge of tbe worll;l" or (for joy) havinl! the berm cnunble
Peking would ·start things subsidiaries, affiliates or
beneath the wqtrt of their auto. This would be similar to being
n\oving.
• licenses. "As of today," said
caught in a dead fall.
Economists at the Stanford McQuade, "a decision to trade
!know as a relative newcomer to Ibis area, I should possibly
·Research Institute (SRI) with China is not compatible ·
~ keep quiet'and watt for things to change but with everything else "think tank" were less op- with commercial or lnbeing so·wlldly publlc:ized I feellt'a about time someone spoke up • timistic. They noted that China vestment deatings with the
~ about thla,_..ry llllAIII. Pleaae notice I said the mess was · is an agricultural economy and currently more attractive
' UlllleetNery and not the -era or other lnip-ovemenl.!. I believe
p-obably will continue as such . economy of the Republic of
t IIi tbll area or I would have' mOved on long ago.l also believe we
over the next ·decade. In that China on Taiwan."
~ have • choice of ~wing or regressing and growth Is the only case, It would have -limited .
. . Big Market
1 Iop:al pollibllity. .
.
.
export capablllty and !iltle or
Despite such warnings,
no money with which to buy many big Western countriea
A large 111111 of money Is being raised to landscape the new
bolliltal. 0. K. F1D1i! I But I How about a little relandacaplng, a Western goods and knowhow. are 'taking dead aim at China's
· A DHficult Time. '
potentially big market. Call8da
litlle recJ•maiJon, conservation and ecoloi!Y? The area we save
SRI pointed out that U.S. and and Au~iralia already have a
IS our own.
'
Respectful!y yi&gt;ura, .
James J. Enyart

Miss Margaret Fadeley

ITEMS
STILL

any

f

Wed Friday, january 28th
brocade, edged in pearls. Her Mary Elrod, grandmother of
veil of tulle was accented with the groom, of Barneville, Ga.;
daisies and pearls. She carried Mr. Kenneth Thomas, Mr.
a bridal bouquet or while rc;es, Reggie Moore, Mr. and Mrs.
daisies and baby's breatt..
Frank Haywood, Mr. and Mrs.
Miss · Beverly Billingsley Jack Strickland and family,,all
serVed as maid of honor and ,or Barneville; Mr. and Mrs.
Miss Dodie Jones, Miss Cindi David Hines or Hartford,
Lut..· r, and Miss Pal Woodard Conn.; Mr. and Mrs. Jason
were bridesmaids. All were Pennington of Columbia,
adorned in full length brown Tenn.; Mr. and Mrs. Don
chiffon gowns with fitted Proctor and Mr. and Mrs. Don
b.,,iices accented by Ivory Fleener of Bon Aqua, Tenn.;
Venice. !&amp;~ fof!1.li!ln~m. ;ma· ' ;~r::·and Mrs..·r. Allen .Sum·
head dresses of rna tchinJ p1ers and family of Norcross,
velvet bows. They carried pa., and ¥r. and Mrs. Jim
Louquets of yellow daisies and Bowen, of Gallipolis.
baby's breath.
Mr .· Kim Meadows, Mr.
Kevin Clark, and Mr. Galen
American history more
Clark served as ushers, and
exciting
then fiction? February
Mr. James Johnson was best
is a good month to find out.
man.
'Following the reception the That's why the Daughters of
bride and groom left for a the American Revolution
wedding trip to the Smoky sponsor February as American
.
Mountains and Gatlinburg, History Month. Washington.,
Tenn .
Lincoln, Roosevelt, Pershing,
f 6 • ..,
"J
Upon return they will reside MacArthur, EISenhower, the
in Madison, Tenn., where Mrs. list or American heroes is
Clark is a student at Madison endless. Take _time to re~d .
"J
High School and Mr. Clark is a about them and )OlD the DAR m
student at Goodlettsville High enco~aging .others to do so.
PATRIOT . - Margaret Homemakers of Tomorro~ a
Amencan hiStory more ex- F d 1 h b
·
t It!
School.
·
't' th r ti ? y ;11 find
a e ey as een named spectal $1,000 Nu r wn
Out of town guests were Mrs. out'
Cl mg an tc on · ou
Southwestern High School's Scholarship has been added to
·
Betty Crocker Homemaker of the Betty Crocker Search
Tomorrow for 1972. Margaret program this year. To earn this
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. award, a girl must be planning
William Fadeley of Patriot a college major in nutrition or
Star Route.
a related field, rank among the
· She was chosen on the basis hig~t in her stale in the
of her score in a written overall Search namlnation
knowledge and attitude and achieve the top score, from
examination taken by senior those meeting the first two
girls on Dec. 7, and received a criteria, on the lest's nutrition
specially deslaned award questions.
charm · from General Mills,
During the 18 years since the
sponsor of the annual
educational program. Ad·
ditionally, she is now eligible
for stale and national honors.
The Stale Homemaker of
Tomorrow, to be selected from
il11 school winners in the state
In judging whlch·wm center on
performance in the Dec. 7 test,
will be awarded a '1;500 college
scholarship, and her school will
receive a complete set of
Encyclopedia Britannica from ,
Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc.
A,scholarship of $500 will go to
the second-ranking girl in the
state.
Tlils April, the 51 Betty
Crocker ·Homemakers of
Tomorrow representing every
state and the !)!strict of
Columbia, each accompanied
by a faculty adviser, will be
given an expense-paid
educational lour of · Colonial
Williamsburg, Va ., and
,, 'shlngton, D. C.
Personal observation and
.
'
inleniiews during the tour,
-added to the earlier state-level
judging results, will culmill81e
in the aMouncement of the 1972
Betty Crocker All-American
Homemaker . of TomOIToW at
the COf1clusion of the tour. Her
scholarshlpwlll be inCreased to
fi;,OOO, with those of three
runners-up raised to $4,000,
'-1,000 and ·n,ooo.
.f)UALitY CWTHING SINCE
In addition to the awarda for
ischool, sl!tte and natlonaJ.. 1f~~~~~~"'~~~~IIIWIII!.IIII.--.~ 'Y~

..

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·404 Second Ave.
Olio

,THE

IT. 35
HENDEISON,
W.VA.

February 3, 1972
'
•' Dear Editor:
181111, when I fint came to Gallipolis for a job interview, I
:;•• wa ijDpreaed wltb !be'city's neat, clean appearance .. TI»ugb I .
~ !1.-'t been here uloag as most I feel an a~n !or this city
~ . and I J&gt;iliad II u my bmne.lt Is because Of this affection that I
:: feelflil\111 writ~ thJs Jetter'.
·
.
-:
Groupe In ,our ~!All ·.-e actively supporting the ecology ·
·: movement by trying to have s1rip mining banned "because of its
adVerse effects~ our environment." Al!!o there is a drjve fqJ."
·! 111011ey to beautlf)' the grounds of the new Holzer Medical Center
; HoSpital. Pewms Involved In these activities,are following the
! dictates ol their COOICiences so I won't debate
of these issues
• with them.
But, wblle the ecology-minded petition, p-o~, and write
•'
• letters l!bout ltrlp mining, I feel they must not have SCI!n or are
choosing to lgmre the situation right in and near lbeir owil city. I
atn ~ to tilt new aewerllnea put In to t11e new hospjljlland ·
. points,weilt along s. R.160 and U.S. 35.
Anyone Interested In eC;o)ogy should be appalled by this
abominable JDe88 ~ated west of our city. To have beautiful
gralll)' flelda chqed to seas Of lliUd and trel!lo tbaJ weren:t
[ within 40 .feet of the line bulldozed off for no apparent reason
seems to me quite 8e11Seleu. It brings to inlnd a time In the past
when many finn!n In the section Of northern Ohio where I grew
._,had the woodland areu ol their farms cleared.
They blid been sold on the Idea that the soil in the woods was
rich and tllil the trees served no useful purpose; Many of them
, never founcj out bow rich the soli was because it washed away In
It the flrs1.beavy spring ralna. .
!t ' You are probably lilting yourself, What if anrthlng, does all
this have to do with GallJpOlls? My answer Is: ·
Nothing rql)y, that Is, unless you've seen the Chickamauga
CZeelt fo~
ol•our frequent recent rains. The usually
dark brown cree1t -hu changed ID a bright red-i1range, a color
slmUar to the land Ill this area.
· I realize to progreai at all In this modem age man must
make sa~ but the people In the area west of the city have
had more than their llhare, It seems. There ~ve been numerous
; p-obleml; breaks of water and gas mains, driveways and lanes
. being tom up (and) or bloclled, having the concr~te or solid stone
base dug out and replaced with a gummy mixture of mud and

.I

another
gesture
of trading
Fpur U.S.
months
later
came
r
goodwill. In April 111'10 Niiton
• announced that U.S.-made
components and related spare
parts wootd be. selectively
licenaed for use In foreign
goods esported to China.
·
There was another move
toward liberaliultioo In April
of this year. The United Stales
listed cert~in goods which
wou)d be aulbOrlzed for trade
with China. It also said it would
permit U.S. i!hlps and planes to
carry Chinese cargo betWeen
non-C!Unese ports lind allolv
U.S.-i1wned foreign flagships to
call at &lt;lllnese ports.
Because all deals with China
must be made through government agencies and because
these agencies hew strictly to
A-lC Jack Jacobs, above, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs, Pomeroy, is manning. the
· the government's political
Oime SIDp SWitchboard at the Patrick Air .Force Base in Cocoa Beach, Fla. The swttch· · tines, any Western country has
board is designed to receive calls from servicemen and civilians who see anything out of
difficulty in gelling a trade
ordinary ~urring In their area. Jacobs and his wife, the former Jane Acree .of Mtd:dJeport,
toehold. No direct contact with
customers are permitted.
reside on the base.' Jacobs has been In the air force since November, 1970, lind IS servmg wtth
MQufBcturers are-not allowed
the security police. His address is 1153-A School Ave., Patrick Air Force Base.
to sen,d technicians Into China
to help the customer ll)stall or
use the products sold.
f

:

Dodie Meadows~Duane Clark
GOODLETTSVILLE, Tenn.
"- Miss Dodie Meadows and
Duane Allison Clark were
married Friday evening, Jan.
28, at the Alto Lorna Baptist
Church in Goodlettsville, Tenn.
The bride is the daughter of H.
Howard
Meadows, . of
Goodlettsv iile, and Mrs.
Delores Mq dows of Gallipolis.
Duane is th: ·son of Mr. and
Mrs . Herman Clark of
,Joladis&lt;Jo 1· ·Tenn . •·
The .Rev. Lloyd Bardowen
officllfted·' ln the · presence of
approximately 300 guests.
Given in marriage by her
father the bride wore a gown of
her own creation of cotton

:l ('

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·APPLE
TREE

'

Noncommercial jtems such as
OPENS TOI)A V
· exploits on the moon, la
library . and museum pieces t OLUMBUS (UPI )
scheduled to addreu the 79th
were exempted (rom that Former hardware store em- convention of the Oblo Hard·
p-ovislon ol the 1969 rufuig.
ploye Neil ·Armstrong, better ware AssoCiation which opelll
known to . the world for his here today.
Goodwut Gealure

•

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I

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8-lbeSlllday Times-Sentinel,&amp;..day, Feb.8. tm

frogs can jump 211
OWII lenJth 011

·HOSPITAL
NEWS

ReedSville
News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Barn·
hart of' Chester are announcing the birth of a son,
Shawn AShley, born Jan. 26. ·
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Bing of
Long Bottom R. D. Greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Spencer of Long Bottom, R. D., and Mrs. Edith
Bing of Wooster. Great-great·
grandmother is Mrs. Martha
McElroy of Long Bottpm R. D.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs . Carl Barnhart of
Reedsville and Mrs . Ora
Russell of Great Falls, Mont.,
is paternal great.grandmother.
Donald Barnhart, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Bahlhart wiD
leave Feb . l8for FortDix, N. J.
He will be in the National
Guard.
Tona Boring has relurned
home after being a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy for several da~ .
Mrs. Rose Thomas and Mrs.
Opal Randolph recenUy visited
with friends and relatives 'at
Colwnbus.
Mrs. Claude . Smith is a
patient at University Hospital
in Colwnbus.
Jane Whitehead and David
Weber spent a couple or days in
Colwnbus with friends. While
there they toured Ohio Slate
campus.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hoffman
of Chesler recenUy honored
their daughter, Christi Lynn,
with a party on her first birth.
day. Attending were her
grandmothers, Mrs. George

Mr. and M1!. Frank Davis

Mr. and Mrs. ·Davis
To Celebrate 50th
. ~ A .
Weddtng nntversary
·

- · -- Mr. and Mrs. Duane Allison Clark

'

·

.
OAK .HILL -Mr. and Mrs. Frank Davis of Route 4, Oak
Hill, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on Sunday, Feb.13, with open house from 2to 5p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Davis are the pare!)ls ol six children, Mrs.
Harold ('{enie) Vawtern and Phillip E· Davis of Columbus;
Mrs. Darlene Young. of Fond Du Lt!c, Wis.; Mrs. Cecil
"(Pauline) Elllott of Rio.Grande: Junior Davis of Gallia, and
Mrs. Adrian (Gladys) Haner of .Gallipolis. They have 15
grandcliildren and one great.grlindchild.
Mr. Davis is retired after 23 years with the Cambric Clay

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
. visiting hours 2-4 and 7.,'1 p.m.
' Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pedlairics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. William V.
Arthur, Jr., New Haven, a
daughter.
Discharges
Mrs. Wanda A. ScariM:rry,
· Rufus G. Jwnilton, Marj~rie
M. Fruth,! John E. Bowman,
· Mrs. Frances Littlejohn,
Herbert E. Dunn, Mary E.
'Schoolcraft, ·Carole
F.
Milstead, Mrs. George R.
Glazier, TaliUJly Lou Pi~r.
Eunice I. Nutter, Louise M.
McElhinny, C. Paul Northup, ·
Kelly A. Miller, Leslie H.
McDaniel, Virginia J. McCorley, Dale !. Grant and
Amos M. Waugh.

program's Inception,
enrollment has totaled over
eight and one-&lt;1uarter n1i111on,
and with this year's grants,
scholarship awards will
almost $2 million.

~each

•'•l~
.,
'·••
'•
'·••
,:· Cloae-IQ-Home Situation

;!

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I

Qle

worth a
heartfelt
wishes · from · you to
Valentine. Let our
s s.o r tm e n.t ' o
Valentine cards say
all for you. Make vno.1r•
choice soon.

PAUL DAVIES ·
JEWELERS

DON'T FORGET
'

OUR SALE
ON FAMOUS
NAME RANDS,
SALE ENDS
Y, fEB. 6

.HOURS

TUES.-SAT.
10 .'5
SUN. I • 4
MONDA

Buckley of Reedsville, and
Mrs . ·walter Hoffman of
Chesler; her aunt and uncle,
Mr. and Mrs. John Grueser and
cousin, Angie, of Pomeroy, and
cousins, Timmy and Howard
Durst of Tuppers Plains.
Refreshments of a decorated
cake shaped like a doll, ice
cream, punch and favors were
served to the guests. Christi
received many gifts.
- Mrs. Lyle Balderson

Trading Nations Ready
'

'

Real Estate Broker in
GOP District 92 Race

Best Doorway
Perhaps the best doorway to
the China . market is the
semiannual Csnton Fair wher.e ·
about 50 per cent of all Western ·
sales to Chlnli are 'trasnacled.
Foreign b~slnessmen then
have a chance to see export
goods being offered, make
personal contacts with.
government offi.;Jals, .nd lay
the groundwork for lo. ~ tough
negotiations.
There are some pur~ly
political roadblocks along \he
China · trading road·. . In
negotiatlitg recent agteemeitts
with Japan, for instance,
Premier Chou En-lal ruled that
no Japanese company could do
business with Peking if It had
investments In Taiwan . or
South Korea or supplied
rmmltions to Sooth Vietnam or
if It had any joint venlure
relations with American f~
anywhere.
"While the Chinese dot all
the I's and cross all the T's in
interminable conversations,
and then bold you to the.tinle8t
clause, there's one good thing
about them," said an ·
American businessman wiih
experience In that area. ''They
~ pay their bU!s on time."

Natura izer's
shoe·
on·the·
nse

Navy

AAA·AA·B

$21,95

I

A

HIGH-TONGUED
.STAR IN
GLEAMING CRINKLE PATENT
The perfect paftner for pants. or skills.
or whatever you wear most. with a moe toe
accented by sw1rl1 of gleam1 ng metal. And

llll11 thefamlll shopslllcllh•
G~lllpolls ,

CHESAPEAKE:_ OUs Mack
Fulks, Chesapeake, Saturday
announced hill candidacy for
Republican nomination for
State Repi-esentative in the
newly-formed. 92nd Ohio
District. •·
A native of Lawrence
County, Fulks attended local
schools and studied real estate,
publiq speaking and sales
promotion In Indiana.
Candidate
\has bad. 12
years ex~!JCC as a real
estate broker In \ t,awrence
County and has provided
leadership in land \promotion
that has stimulated the
economy of this ar~ through
increased populati and In·
creased land values.
·
Fulks reports he is
thoroughly familiar with the '
needs of the 921\d District. He
has handled property transactions for the Federal
government and ls vitally
Interested in protecting the
naiural resources of the
district.
He statd that. he has
protected the interests of
numerous people In the oourts

OUR SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE WITH

sri• 6t. ::0~..

·2·Speed; 4-Cy&lt;lft.

2.Spr~o~y Armt . • ·
Mdplo ~ult)ng lloor~

.

FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY

..

~ ooly

25%0FF

on·all active
Towle sterling patterns

l27911 .

IXW40_W....
2·Spoed. 3,Cy&lt;le

l

RAIN OR SHINE
, WHIRLPOOL CARES
ABOUT SERVICE
Ons MACK FULKS
of Ohio as an expert appraisal
witness in eminent domain
proceedings, and that he will
vigorously fight to protect the
people of the dilflrict against
special interestS.
\
Fulks served in Europe and
Asia during World War II.

'

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•

1866

.

Mining ~ool Made Prototype
••
•
•
•
•
•
••
•

a

PhOne frH

for

where In the continental U.S..
lillie of day or night J•ot
dial IIOC).253-1301 (In Michigan,
100-4:12·2243). Whl~pool CillO It
tho Coot Uno.
. . . .111 till H ftliiiiiL You

any

'

SF;WARD, Pa. (UP!) - A
governme"nt . . constructed
,training school1or cool miners
· was characterized by top in·
dustry offlciaiB Friday as the
prototype for sl!\tllar facilities '
that will eventually be used to
train miners across the nation,
"When we turned this corner
we opened new passageway

Wlllltpool l i t -

NAICI Information from any•

'

.STO~IDE BARGAINS ON ME~ 1 S &amp; BOYS'.

to ssfety,'! said James H.
Hurley, chairman of the
Central Pennsylv~nia Coal
Producers Association, which
will operate the training
program. "The day is not far
away when we wlll be training
every man who enlen the'
mines In some manner."

V.l

a

limpllllo&lt;l

Warranty

loltOr

(rio "fino IHfnt"l thot 1110111 o•l
exactly wh.t 11 tnd what Ia not

1Wil4l UO&lt;tric

An unprecedented opportunity to purchase any active
Towle ·sterling patlern at 25% off the re&amp;uiar retail price.
Du .
this limited time offer you · may purchase single
pieces, place setlings or complete sets. and save 25% on
every purchase. Don 't delay' Come in today.

Sa~e up to $ 15.49. on a 4-piece place selling
s"ave up to $123.92 on a 32·pi ece se rvice for eight
Save up to $270.60 on a 72 -picce service for twelve

~-ol

A Deh.tu range

price.

o Standard

Wftirlpoof __

iblllty.

..._ill.,.. .... •ntu
Wftirlpoof IIO!Pt , lroln hundroclo
of •Mao~ .....,.. ...-, Yll(· 11.
YO\! ...r need Mt\'ICI, lllore I I
Wftl~poot frlnchll&lt;ld, Whlrlpoof

svc•t• t ..

*'

c 0
Compocis _yovr 'troloh ~ torbott
probiPn 1nto a ntOf itt6l pac~~.
ago.

... ""' •zzg•

lr,lnod TtCh·Cirl ttNiOifllft
ftllr~.

.... IS III rnotrt•l 1..,.. ....

Our ng tho lirot r••r of
..........,. Ill I - . , . _ ...
tree ·tor qr.e N.-r • IIJIIDI
"""' of lftY PI"· Qulllty ""'
11~or.

c:an a.-net on.

·

ClARK'S JEWELRY STORE
. 342 Second Ave •

Ga•tipolis

I·

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F.

WINTER WEARABLE$ CONTINUES.

y

Journey to Peking:

r;:========::;:,;~~~~~~t.

t

Suits • Sport .Coats • Top Coats • Slacks

..

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t

,

Ma,..uarP t Fadek11 Chosen
Bett1J Croc.. ker llOmema
u
ker

AVAILABLEJ

!

one

····~············

r

f

llyDEAN C. MILLER
Europeantraderswouldhavea jump on the U.S. through .
UPI Business Editor
difficult time competing with wheat sales.
NEW YORK (UPI)-The Japan, which has· rl!placed the . Japan, the most aggressive,
"great ieap forward" ta~~en in Soviet Union as China's chief is believed to have exported
reeent years by the United supplier of industrial and about $325 milllon In goods to
States toward . rapprpchement conswner goods. Aside from China In 1968, nearly 20 per
with . Mainland China has Japan's traditional efficiencies cent of Peking's total imports
p-ompted many business lead- and low labor costs, it sits next that year. Japan Increased that
ers to predict a trade bonanza door to the Chinese market. percentsge in 1969 through
by 1976.
.
Transportation costs weigh larges sales of steel products,
Most economists and re- heavily in profit margins.
heavy duty trucks, machines,
searchers disagree. While
At a recent briefing by the machine tools and chemical
agreeing. that China's 800 American Management ferttuzers.
million people are potentially Association, the advisory body
The United States, with a
sand.
the world's biggest market, for U.S. business, several politicalaswellasaneconomic
Alarge percentage of w)Jat Isn't washed away is tracked Into
they see substantial trade with panelists said trafjing with eye to · the future, broke the
the hdwlel or boated on the under side of every automobile in the
Peking coming in the long, not Mainland China could and diplomatic ice two years ago.
area. Businesses along the swa_th fouled by It find access to their
the short, term. It will he a probably would he worthwhile . After banning aU trade with
, parklrig areas difficult at best. Most people along 35 ta.ke a great mini-market with maxi-paten- but cautiorn:d that it would China In 11161 when she entered
ll'ide .In the appearance of their properties. That area unpressed
tial over the next decade or require patience and long the Korean War, a p-esidentlal
me greatly on my"flrst trip to Gallipolis.
two, they figure .
range planning.
announcement In December
In my opinion it Ia a llbame that lawns which only months ago
The Gallagher Presidents'
''Trade with the People's 1969 eased that ban slightly.
were well groomed now look as though a low budget monster
Report which recently queried Republic of China will be ex- Nixon said then that overseas
150 presidents of major compa- tremely difficult" said La- subsi(liaries and affiliates of
, film, "The Giant Insane Mole Who Ate Up Galllpolis" had been
nies on what . they thought wrence C. McQuade, president U.S. companies could trade
shot on location there.
about
the fulure of trade with and chief executive of Procon nonstrategic gOOiis with China.
The sewers are 'culp-its but not the only ones. While the
Chinese goods, however,
construction company tearS up streets, lanes and lawns to ,inatalf ·China reflects the business Inc. "At best In the foreseeable
world's
·
o
ptimism.
More
than
future
it
wiD
be
$30
million
to
could
not be exported to the
• their sewers, 'another bit of excavation was being. done at thJ:,
.United States for resale unless
corner of Bulavllle Rd. and S.R. 160 by the gas company. I hope · (iO per cent of thein believed it $50 million annually."
be feasible lri five years:
l.!~.~ii. ld that •'modest'' t~teY, un~rwent reprocessing.
~ 1111e evqr •bi!J;.Io pull off on to the~~ road there would
8'1.5
per
~~
favored
such
oPPGWi!l
·,(or trade in the
becalllle I·rli!!' afraid the berm wu·~;llnrlercut and, like
trade;. &lt;.,ln'1[1'•.,3.8 thought rnildhuit·raltlll~filltre probably
sailors of old, the motorist would face the proapects of "falling olr President · Ntion 's trip to · will ~\ioilie thl-oii'tli" overseas
· the edge of tbe worll;l" or (for joy) havinl! the berm cnunble
Peking would ·start things subsidiaries, affiliates or
beneath the wqtrt of their auto. This would be similar to being
n\oving.
• licenses. "As of today," said
caught in a dead fall.
Economists at the Stanford McQuade, "a decision to trade
!know as a relative newcomer to Ibis area, I should possibly
·Research Institute (SRI) with China is not compatible ·
~ keep quiet'and watt for things to change but with everything else "think tank" were less op- with commercial or lnbeing so·wlldly publlc:ized I feellt'a about time someone spoke up • timistic. They noted that China vestment deatings with the
~ about thla,_..ry llllAIII. Pleaae notice I said the mess was · is an agricultural economy and currently more attractive
' UlllleetNery and not the -era or other lnip-ovemenl.!. I believe
p-obably will continue as such . economy of the Republic of
t IIi tbll area or I would have' mOved on long ago.l also believe we
over the next ·decade. In that China on Taiwan."
~ have • choice of ~wing or regressing and growth Is the only case, It would have -limited .
. . Big Market
1 Iop:al pollibllity. .
.
.
export capablllty and !iltle or
Despite such warnings,
no money with which to buy many big Western countriea
A large 111111 of money Is being raised to landscape the new
bolliltal. 0. K. F1D1i! I But I How about a little relandacaplng, a Western goods and knowhow. are 'taking dead aim at China's
· A DHficult Time. '
potentially big market. Call8da
litlle recJ•maiJon, conservation and ecoloi!Y? The area we save
SRI pointed out that U.S. and and Au~iralia already have a
IS our own.
'
Respectful!y yi&gt;ura, .
James J. Enyart

Miss Margaret Fadeley

ITEMS
STILL

any

f

Wed Friday, january 28th
brocade, edged in pearls. Her Mary Elrod, grandmother of
veil of tulle was accented with the groom, of Barneville, Ga.;
daisies and pearls. She carried Mr. Kenneth Thomas, Mr.
a bridal bouquet or while rc;es, Reggie Moore, Mr. and Mrs.
daisies and baby's breatt..
Frank Haywood, Mr. and Mrs.
Miss · Beverly Billingsley Jack Strickland and family,,all
serVed as maid of honor and ,or Barneville; Mr. and Mrs.
Miss Dodie Jones, Miss Cindi David Hines or Hartford,
Lut..· r, and Miss Pal Woodard Conn.; Mr. and Mrs. Jason
were bridesmaids. All were Pennington of Columbia,
adorned in full length brown Tenn.; Mr. and Mrs. Don
chiffon gowns with fitted Proctor and Mr. and Mrs. Don
b.,,iices accented by Ivory Fleener of Bon Aqua, Tenn.;
Venice. !&amp;~ fof!1.li!ln~m. ;ma· ' ;~r::·and Mrs..·r. Allen .Sum·
head dresses of rna tchinJ p1ers and family of Norcross,
velvet bows. They carried pa., and ¥r. and Mrs. Jim
Louquets of yellow daisies and Bowen, of Gallipolis.
baby's breath.
Mr .· Kim Meadows, Mr.
Kevin Clark, and Mr. Galen
American history more
Clark served as ushers, and
exciting
then fiction? February
Mr. James Johnson was best
is a good month to find out.
man.
'Following the reception the That's why the Daughters of
bride and groom left for a the American Revolution
wedding trip to the Smoky sponsor February as American
.
Mountains and Gatlinburg, History Month. Washington.,
Tenn .
Lincoln, Roosevelt, Pershing,
f 6 • ..,
"J
Upon return they will reside MacArthur, EISenhower, the
in Madison, Tenn., where Mrs. list or American heroes is
Clark is a student at Madison endless. Take _time to re~d .
"J
High School and Mr. Clark is a about them and )OlD the DAR m
student at Goodlettsville High enco~aging .others to do so.
PATRIOT . - Margaret Homemakers of Tomorro~ a
Amencan hiStory more ex- F d 1 h b
·
t It!
School.
·
't' th r ti ? y ;11 find
a e ey as een named spectal $1,000 Nu r wn
Out of town guests were Mrs. out'
Cl mg an tc on · ou
Southwestern High School's Scholarship has been added to
·
Betty Crocker Homemaker of the Betty Crocker Search
Tomorrow for 1972. Margaret program this year. To earn this
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. award, a girl must be planning
William Fadeley of Patriot a college major in nutrition or
Star Route.
a related field, rank among the
· She was chosen on the basis hig~t in her stale in the
of her score in a written overall Search namlnation
knowledge and attitude and achieve the top score, from
examination taken by senior those meeting the first two
girls on Dec. 7, and received a criteria, on the lest's nutrition
specially deslaned award questions.
charm · from General Mills,
During the 18 years since the
sponsor of the annual
educational program. Ad·
ditionally, she is now eligible
for stale and national honors.
The Stale Homemaker of
Tomorrow, to be selected from
il11 school winners in the state
In judging whlch·wm center on
performance in the Dec. 7 test,
will be awarded a '1;500 college
scholarship, and her school will
receive a complete set of
Encyclopedia Britannica from ,
Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc.
A,scholarship of $500 will go to
the second-ranking girl in the
state.
Tlils April, the 51 Betty
Crocker ·Homemakers of
Tomorrow representing every
state and the !)!strict of
Columbia, each accompanied
by a faculty adviser, will be
given an expense-paid
educational lour of · Colonial
Williamsburg, Va ., and
,, 'shlngton, D. C.
Personal observation and
.
'
inleniiews during the tour,
-added to the earlier state-level
judging results, will culmill81e
in the aMouncement of the 1972
Betty Crocker All-American
Homemaker . of TomOIToW at
the COf1clusion of the tour. Her
scholarshlpwlll be inCreased to
fi;,OOO, with those of three
runners-up raised to $4,000,
'-1,000 and ·n,ooo.
.f)UALitY CWTHING SINCE
In addition to the awarda for
ischool, sl!tte and natlonaJ.. 1f~~~~~~"'~~~~IIIWIII!.IIII.--.~ 'Y~

..

t

·404 Second Ave.
Olio

,THE

IT. 35
HENDEISON,
W.VA.

February 3, 1972
'
•' Dear Editor:
181111, when I fint came to Gallipolis for a job interview, I
:;•• wa ijDpreaed wltb !be'city's neat, clean appearance .. TI»ugb I .
~ !1.-'t been here uloag as most I feel an a~n !or this city
~ . and I J&gt;iliad II u my bmne.lt Is because Of this affection that I
:: feelflil\111 writ~ thJs Jetter'.
·
.
-:
Groupe In ,our ~!All ·.-e actively supporting the ecology ·
·: movement by trying to have s1rip mining banned "because of its
adVerse effects~ our environment." Al!!o there is a drjve fqJ."
·! 111011ey to beautlf)' the grounds of the new Holzer Medical Center
; HoSpital. Pewms Involved In these activities,are following the
! dictates ol their COOICiences so I won't debate
of these issues
• with them.
But, wblle the ecology-minded petition, p-o~, and write
•'
• letters l!bout ltrlp mining, I feel they must not have SCI!n or are
choosing to lgmre the situation right in and near lbeir owil city. I
atn ~ to tilt new aewerllnea put In to t11e new hospjljlland ·
. points,weilt along s. R.160 and U.S. 35.
Anyone Interested In eC;o)ogy should be appalled by this
abominable JDe88 ~ated west of our city. To have beautiful
gralll)' flelda chqed to seas Of lliUd and trel!lo tbaJ weren:t
[ within 40 .feet of the line bulldozed off for no apparent reason
seems to me quite 8e11Seleu. It brings to inlnd a time In the past
when many finn!n In the section Of northern Ohio where I grew
._,had the woodland areu ol their farms cleared.
They blid been sold on the Idea that the soil in the woods was
rich and tllil the trees served no useful purpose; Many of them
, never founcj out bow rich the soli was because it washed away In
It the flrs1.beavy spring ralna. .
!t ' You are probably lilting yourself, What if anrthlng, does all
this have to do with GallJpOlls? My answer Is: ·
Nothing rql)y, that Is, unless you've seen the Chickamauga
CZeelt fo~
ol•our frequent recent rains. The usually
dark brown cree1t -hu changed ID a bright red-i1range, a color
slmUar to the land Ill this area.
· I realize to progreai at all In this modem age man must
make sa~ but the people In the area west of the city have
had more than their llhare, It seems. There ~ve been numerous
; p-obleml; breaks of water and gas mains, driveways and lanes
. being tom up (and) or bloclled, having the concr~te or solid stone
base dug out and replaced with a gummy mixture of mud and

.I

another
gesture
of trading
Fpur U.S.
months
later
came
r
goodwill. In April 111'10 Niiton
• announced that U.S.-made
components and related spare
parts wootd be. selectively
licenaed for use In foreign
goods esported to China.
·
There was another move
toward liberaliultioo In April
of this year. The United Stales
listed cert~in goods which
wou)d be aulbOrlzed for trade
with China. It also said it would
permit U.S. i!hlps and planes to
carry Chinese cargo betWeen
non-C!Unese ports lind allolv
U.S.-i1wned foreign flagships to
call at &lt;lllnese ports.
Because all deals with China
must be made through government agencies and because
these agencies hew strictly to
A-lC Jack Jacobs, above, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs, Pomeroy, is manning. the
· the government's political
Oime SIDp SWitchboard at the Patrick Air .Force Base in Cocoa Beach, Fla. The swttch· · tines, any Western country has
board is designed to receive calls from servicemen and civilians who see anything out of
difficulty in gelling a trade
ordinary ~urring In their area. Jacobs and his wife, the former Jane Acree .of Mtd:dJeport,
toehold. No direct contact with
customers are permitted.
reside on the base.' Jacobs has been In the air force since November, 1970, lind IS servmg wtth
MQufBcturers are-not allowed
the security police. His address is 1153-A School Ave., Patrick Air Force Base.
to sen,d technicians Into China
to help the customer ll)stall or
use the products sold.
f

:

Dodie Meadows~Duane Clark
GOODLETTSVILLE, Tenn.
"- Miss Dodie Meadows and
Duane Allison Clark were
married Friday evening, Jan.
28, at the Alto Lorna Baptist
Church in Goodlettsville, Tenn.
The bride is the daughter of H.
Howard
Meadows, . of
Goodlettsv iile, and Mrs.
Delores Mq dows of Gallipolis.
Duane is th: ·son of Mr. and
Mrs . Herman Clark of
,Joladis&lt;Jo 1· ·Tenn . •·
The .Rev. Lloyd Bardowen
officllfted·' ln the · presence of
approximately 300 guests.
Given in marriage by her
father the bride wore a gown of
her own creation of cotton

:l ('

r

OJ,

·APPLE
TREE

'

Noncommercial jtems such as
OPENS TOI)A V
· exploits on the moon, la
library . and museum pieces t OLUMBUS (UPI )
scheduled to addreu the 79th
were exempted (rom that Former hardware store em- convention of the Oblo Hard·
p-ovislon ol the 1969 rufuig.
ploye Neil ·Armstrong, better ware AssoCiation which opelll
known to . the world for his here today.
Goodwut Gealure

•

•t
I

I·

�•p

8- The Sunday Times -Sentinel. Sunday, F'eb. 6, 1972

/?.ita Marlene ._ Salser is
l f3ride at Church Wedding

Dr. Sisson,

J

I
RACINE - An arch canMiss Beth Theiss, Route 2,
delabra
flanked
by ·Racine, was the maid of honor
arrangements
of
fugi for the bride. Other attendants
chrysanthemums decorated . were Miss Robin Allen, Portthe Wesleyan United Methodist lanct, and Miss Debbie Norris,
Church for the wedding of Miss Syracuse, bridesmaids; and
Ril&lt;' Marlene Salser, daughter Miss Robin Savage and Miss
of Mr. and Mrs. Grover Salser, Tonja Salser, Racine, flower
Jr., Route I, Racine, to Mr. girls.
Charlie Myles Mathews, Jr.,
The maid of honor and the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie bridesmaids were in deep
Mathews, Racine, Route 2.
purple formallengtl) velvet AThe wedding was an event of line dresses featuring empire
Dec. 18 at 6:30 p.m. with the bodices. The full sleeves were
Rev. Dale McClurg officiating of orchid chiffon terminating in
at the double ring ceremony. deep purp'le cuffs, and they
Nuptial music was provided by wore headpieces of ,purpie
Gerald Powell, organist, whose velvet ribbon and nylon net.
selections included "Be My The maid of honor carried a
Love,'' "f!awaiian Wedding nosegay of white roses tipped
Prayer, "
"The
Lord's in purple and baby's breath ,
11
Prayer/' Wedding Prayer/' and the bridesmaids carried
"Theme from Love Story" and single white roses with purple
"I'm Walking Behind You." accent and ribbon .
Given in marriage by her
The flower ·girls were in
father, the bride was attired in orchid formal length velvet
a white formal length silk peau dresses of ·A-line styling with
de soie and Chan tilly lace A· orchid chiffon sleeves. They
line gown. The empire bodice carried white baskets with
featured lace motifs, a high purple ribbons and dropped
lace cameo collar and long full white rose petals along the
bishop sleeves with lace ac- aisle.
cents. Bands of lace enhanced
Mr. Larry Circle of Racine
the skirt and her watteau train served as best man and the
extended to chapel length, Her ushers were. Mr. Michael
chapel length mantilla of silk Salser, Mr. Charles Wagner,
illusion edged in lace was held and Mr. Ed Cozart, ali of
'• in place by a lace profile. The Racine. Master Sean Riffle,
• bride carried a bouquet of
nephew of the groom, was the
' white roses and baby's breath ringbearer.
fashioned In .a cascade.
For her daughter's wedding,

self-employed, and helps pay
the hospital bills of peOPle 65
and over.
"You have seven months to
sign up for the medical in-

Vaughans Home
From Florida
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Vaughan have returned
from Miami Beach, Fla .,
where they attended the annual
convention of- the Monument
Builders of North America at
the Fountainbleu HoteL
Seven members of the staff
of Logan Monument Co. and
their wives traveled to the
convention. Accompanying the
Vaughans were Mr. and Mrs.
John Larimer of Circleville. ·
Displays of new designs and

modern cuts and finishes were
exhibited and the staff attended conferences on new
designs and techniques.
Before returning, the grou,
visited at Fort Meyers with
Mrs . Nell Covert. Mrs.
Vaughan, the former Rowena
Harrah, was employed by the
Covert Baking Co. a number of
years ago. The bakery
operated primarily in Middleport and was owned by the
Covert Family.

· PORTER .., The University .
of California Press has just
· published a bqok "The
Congress
Party
in
Rbajacthan," by ))r. Richard
Sisson, an associate professor
of political science at the
University of Californa al Los
Angeles. Dr. Sisson Is the son of
Mr.andMrs. Eiias.W.Sissonof

' VPI .....lillie Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPJ) - No
matter What happn In t1i.t
year'l leclllatlve election,
HoUle Speaker Charla F.
Kaiea ft.Bow11na Green, wUI
lo do a major.relluUding
: job011the~echelon of
·• hii·CIIIICU.
; All lbe horiel went to the

Rhajasthan, and traces the
political .and economic
development of this Indian
state. Dr. Sisson conducted the
research for the book during a
fourteen month stay in India
and Pakistan.

Inc
Hit
Hard
·

; • Ola,

DR. SISSON
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
chairman -of Time Inc., An·
drew Heiskell, said Friday . Rate Commission and nine .
proposed pD,!tal rate increases governors of the Postal Ser· for second class mail "make a vice," Heiskell said. "These
mockery" of the traditional Individuals have the power to
role of the poslal system io considerably affect the free
facilitate flow of information. flow of inforrnlltion throughout
Heiskell, reacting t~ a this country."
decision announced Thursday,
said the proposed increase In
Cheer , Sick
.
rates ,paid by magazines and
With A
newspapers threatened the
Beautiful
existence of some publications.
'rime Inc: publishes Time, Ufe,
Sports JUustratl!d and Fortune
maga~ines .

"The economic future. of the
magazine press and, to ale:SSer
extent, portions of the
newspaper press, is now in the
bands of a small group of
people - the five-man Postal

From s4.oo
.
Dudley's Florist

Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, ~lllpolls, 0.
&amp; Milson Co., W. Vo.

rf

SHOP THE NEW.JONES OOYS•
Best Jlalll@ on
Foods - Clothing - H~trdware
- in GaUia County
Parking For Over 100 Cars

,

137 , . ...• ••,

Clllllpllls, Ollie

t(.

SIX MALES A LONG SHOT -' On January 30 a new Ulter of basset hou~s "':er~ born to
"Gidget Steach" of the K. and P. KeMels, Campaign Rd. neat Porter. The litter~ SIX mal~s
with an average we:ght at birth of 1'1• ibs. The mother, Gidget, was one of a litter of _siX
females. The chance of a o~ litter is small. "Oliver's Billy Boy" of K and P Kennels IS a
very proud father. The kennels are owned and operated by Darrell and Clara Day, Bidwell.

Let's unlock that door to a New Mobile
Home , .. They are easier to get now.
Come in and let's discuss your Mobile
Home financing .

tA Condemned Man.Speaks
I

'

'

Buy Now, Take advantage of our Low
Mobile Home Financing.

'" Prisoner at the bar, haVe

you anything

''"

to say, any
reason why sentence of death
all not be passiiCI""'ll,q)\Yj&lt;)~·
• A solemn hulbHellfliiiiiiii~he
rowded courtroom, and every
erson waited In ..almost
, eothle.. expectation-fer lhe
answer to the ludge's question.
, The ludge'Walted In dignified
silence.
Not a whisper was heard
anywhere, and lhe sltuallon
had become painfully oppressive, whoin the prisoner .
was seen to 1110ve. ·his head was
raised, his hands were clen.
chad, and lhe blood had rushed
into his pale, careworn face.
Suddenly he arose to his feet,
and In a low, but firm and
diollnct voice, sold:
"I have! Your Honor, you
have asked mt a question, and

t

· GALUPOUS . SAVI'NGS····· ·
AND tOAN COMPANY
Opposite Post Office, Phone 446,3832

~allipolis

Our Lowest Prices of the Year

as the last favor on

remembrance of committing

Condcnaer
re.t• outlide on

the fNrlul deed, I have no right
to complain or to condemn the
verdict of the lwel•e good men
who have acted as lury In the
case; for their verdict Is In
accordance with the evidence
given. .
·
" But, may It please lhe
COU(I, I wish to show that I am
not alone r-esponsible for lhe
murder of my wife! "
The startlt'ng statement

c:onerete wlah

created a tremendous sen-

sation. The ludge leaned over
the desk, the lawyers wheeled
around and faced the prisoner.
the 'lurors looked at one
another In amazement. The
prisoner paused tor a few
seconds, and then continued in

.,
l

.,

Save '80 to '130

Window Air Conditioners

\.

Central Air Conditioners

8,000 BTU, .Was 194.95 - - - - - • - Now 174.95
11,000 BTU, Was 249.95 - - - - - - • Now 229.95
18,000, 17,000 BTU, Was 289.95 - - Now 259.95
(Limited Time Only)
23,000 BTU Sell out of last year's model, fully
automatic, Was 339.95
Now 279.95
(Limited quantity In stock!)
238,000 BTU · Slightly Damaged Air Con ditioner. Was 338.00 ~.. _ N0w 289.95

DAN THOMAS
AND SON

24,000
28,000
31,000
38,000
43,000
48,000

SHQP AT SEARS AND !lAVE

19:1, ..

Ohio

&amp;

BTU -Hr.
BTU- Hr.
BTU- Hr .
BTU- Hr.
BTU- Hr.
BTU- Hr.

Sears
S~AftS,

'I

close my lips ; I am nearly

Was 449.00
Was 519:00
Was; 569.00
Was 629.00
Was 689.00
Was 789.00
.

Now 369.00
Now 449.00
Now 479.00
· Now 519.00
Now569.00
Now 659.00

)

j
')

.,

435 Second Ave.

1
'1

Gallipolis, Obio
· Phone 446-2770

ftOUUCK ANIII:O,

l

P. R. DOYLE
POMEROY -The Rev. P.
R. Doyle, Michigan, a
Nazarene evangelist the past
:15 years, will be speaker at
the annual Indoor camp
meeting of the Meigs Area
Holiness Assn., to be held
Monday through Sunday,
Feb. 13. Services will be held
at the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. The Rev.
Mr. Doyle iB a past president
of the New York State Assn.,
and has been a delegate to
the national Nazarene
conventions. Singers at the
· services will .be Ralph and
Joann Dunmire of Nashville,
Tenn. The public Is Invited.

Swanbeckof Huron, ~ean of the
GOP caucus with. nine terms,
and Corwin Nixon of Lebanon
with five terms. Neither currently has a chairmanship.
But seniority is not everything in fillln~ the vacancies,
and Kurfess has a pair of highly respected troubleshooters
with three terms under their
belt to shuttle Into crucial slots
if he wishes,
R.ep. Robert A. Mal!ning of
Akron, chairinan of the State
Government Committee, did
about every sticky job for the
GOP except mop the noors last ·
year.
He could be installed as
chairmati of the critical
Finance or Ways and Means
Committeeslf Kurfes!! wants a
man of his own fiscal
philosophy in . those PQiitlons.
And Rep. George E. Mastics,
R-Fairvlew Park, has earned
his spurs by guiding COI!.trover·
sial legislation through the
chamber. He could replace
Manning as chairman of the
State Government Cornmillee.
Democrats Could Help
Three other three-tenn lawmakers - Reps. John A. Galbraith of Maumee, Rodney Hughes of Bellefontaine and
Frank H. Mayfield Jr. of
Cincinnati - have been
groomed for the future. as
chainnen of select and subcommittees.
Rep. John M. Scott of Fairborn is only in his second term
but could be tapped to fill the
void on the House Environment
:::ommittee left by tbe retirement of veteran Rep' KeMeth
B. Creasy of Delaware, the
chairman, and the resignation
last year of vice chairman
George V. Voinovich of Cleveland.
Two other Kuriess favorites
only in their second terms are '
Reps. Frederick N, Young of
Dayton and Donald R. Fraser
of Sylvania- both regarded as
potential committee chairmen.
Three vice chairmanships
will have to be filled - White's
on the Ways and Means
Committee, Rep. Morris L.
Boyd of Hudson on the
Education Committee, and
Rep. William H. Mussey of
Batavia on the Local Government Committee.
Of course, the. Democrats
can save Kurfess aU these
headaches by winning control .
of the House.

252 THIRD AVENUE, GAUIPOLI$, OHIO
OPEN 9 AM TO 9 PM MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
SUPERIOR-U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

FULLY COOKED

Semi-Boneless

H

.WHOLE-11/11-111. AYe.

We reserve the right to
limit quantlfll" oo· all
items in lhis illd. Pri ce~
efl•cthre lhru Sat. Feb.
12. 1972 . None sold to

ch!alers.

SEMI.-RONELESS HAM PORTIONS •••••• lb. 69•

. ,.

ilftstM

"

-~

U.S..,Ho•.J ·GRA·r&gt;~

'INTOSH
APPLES
3-lb. Bag

at a Specj•I Low Price

saloon. was in my pathway, my . In my drunken , frenzied,
weak diseased will power was
Irresponsible · condition, have

no match against the fearful,
consuming, agonizing appetite
for liquor.
"For one year our town was

murdered one ; but you have
deliberately voled for the
saloons, which have murdered
thousands, and they are In full

1 was a sober man. For one
year my wife and children
were happy, and our little

consent ..
" All of you know In Y?Ur
hearts thallhes~ words of mtne

home was a paradise.

are not the ravmgs of an un-

" 1 was one of those who
signed remonstrances against
reopening the saloons of our
town. ()ne.half ollhls lury, lhe

sound mind, butthe truth oflhe
Almighty God. You legalized
the saloons ·that made me a
drunkard and a murderer, and

case, and the fudge who sits on
this bench, all voled for the

God and man for the murder ol
my w1fe.

proSecuting· attorney on this

you are guilty with me before

" Your Honor, I am ~one. I
am now ready to rece1ve my

saloons. By their votes end
Influence, the saloons were

reopened and they have made
me what' 1 am ."
These Impassioned words of
the prisoner fell like coals of
fire upon the hearls of those
present and many of the

sentence, and be led forth lo
the place ol execution. You will
close by asking lhe Lord to
have mercy on my soul. I will
close by solemnly asking God
to open your blind eyes to your

spectat~rs and some of the

own individual responsibility ,
so that you will cease to give

lawyers were moved to tears.
The judge made a motion as If

your support to this dreadful
traffic.' - Author Unknown.
Provided by Mrs. Howard
Hatcher, Bidwell.

to stop furlherspeech when the
speaker hastily said: .
"No! No! Your Honor, do not

.

•

PEACHES
1-lb. 14-oz. Can

_,Jewett to
DEBORAH
LYNN
LAVALLEY, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
Lavalley, Dorcas, has been
chosen Sweetheart Queen of
the FFA at Southern_High
School. Deborah who was
homecoming queen Is
secretary for the can·
dystrlpers, a member of
Who's Who In America and
the National Honor Society.
She plans to enter Holzer
School of NursiDg this fall.
Debbie Bostick was second
runnerup.

Happiness: .a Healtlly

Plan Leaked

fellow Clin1- Halwes or Sliced

BILL JEWETT

--L

the sarrie firm, distinct voice:
"1 reJl041, Your Hdnor, that I
am not "'" only one gullly of
the murde..- of my wife. l)le . GALLIPOLIS - Children will last a lifetime.
on Ibis bench, the lury In
j·uctge
Prevention is the key to the
he box, 'the lawyers within this reflect their parents. If you
bar, and most o the witnesses, give your teeth proper care at · control of dental disease. Tooth
Including the 'pastor ol the home and seek professional decay and periodontal, or gum,
church, are also guilty before
Almighty God, and will have to care when it is needed, you can disease are the major causes of
stand wllh me before His expect your children to follow . tooth loss . ' You can help
your example. February 6 prevent both.
through 12 is National
A medical checkup Is not
Children's Dental Health complete unless it includes a
Week. Happiness is a "healthy dental checkup. At some time
mouth."
In their lives 98 per cent of
Now, during their formative Americans suffer from tooth
years, is the best time for decay. At least 90 per cent of
children to form good dental adults - and more than half of
habits. If they carry those those under 21 - have some
habits into adult life their teeth symptoms of periodontal, or
gun, disease. Some 50 per cent
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
of children in any age group
Personnel Director Paul .A.
should hav~ orthodontic
Corey says a~ official of the
treatment.
federal Wage Board has in- Wage Board is offering,"
Uke the stones in a bridge,
dicated it would approve .a 7 Corey said. "Our request foG a your teeth support one another.
pet. pay increase now for state wage adjustment, when .co~- If you lo,se one tooth because of
employes ·with a chance for sidered on a 12-month baSis, IS accident or disease, your other
other raises later on.
less than 7 pet., the federal 1 teeth tend to drill into the
- John Hulcher, as sis tan t guideline for cases that involve empty space. The stresses of
executive director of the Wage an exception because of chewing
are
uneve~1y
Board, said the board's inequities.
distributed, which can damage
propculs would be detailed In
"If the federal offer is better your gums and the other
writing and mailed here over than what-we are seeking, we s~pporting structures of your
the Weekend.
will be happy to accept It," he teeth . A child who loses a
"We are 'not aure ~ ·. · the added.
primary tooth too early may

F. &amp; p

'

without a saloon. For one year . operation today with your

in Ohio

'1

SaU${artinn Uuaralllcf'r{ or Your Manry Ratk

judgment throne~ where we

shall all be righteously judged. through . I began my downward
"If II had not been for the career at a saloon bar,
~l'll!l1 &lt;lf ll),Y ' li!lti~t I never ~ leg~llzed an~prolected l&gt;y the
N.Jou.fa it!'live ·k·b'e~ome o ~ vofers of this .lo:&lt;fn. A!ler the
drunkard, my wife never would . saloons you_allOY!~ have 111ade
have been mordeteil, t would me a drunkard and a murnol be here reody to be hurled derer, I am taken before
lnlo eternity. Had It not been another bar, the bar of justice,
for these human traps, I would ·and now the power of the law
have been a sober man, an will conduct me to lhe place ol
Industrious workman, a tender execution, and hasten my soul
father, and a loving husband. into eternlly. I shall appear
But today my home is before anoiher bar - the
destroyed,·my wife murdered, j'udgment bar of God - and
my little children - God bless
here you who legalized the
and care lor them -are cast traffic will have to appear with
on the mercy of the world, me. Think you that the greal
while tarn to be hanged by 'the Judge will hold me - the poor,
strong arm of the state.
weak, helpless vrctim of your
"God knows I tried to trafllc - alone responsible for
reform, but as long as the open the murder of my wife? Nay. I,

7% Hike

Save '20 to '60 .

f

,

now ask,

earth, the! you will not ln.
terrupl my answer until I am
through.
·
"Island here before this bar,
convicted of the willful murder
of my wife. Truthful witnesses
have testified lo the fact that I
was a loafer, a drunkard, a
wretch; that t returned from
one of my prolonged
debauches, anc;l fired the fatal
shot that killed the wife I had
sworn to love, cherish, and
protect. While t have no

/lorn• Sur!HIV ••• lnllall«llon ct Your Convenience
· Sear• Junellelerr•d F.n•v _Pavmtnl Pion let• vot1 buv no10 ••fllo Firat JUonthlv Pavn11nt In Jun•

tii'J:.

.,,..

'.,

Free

A thought for today: American statesman Henry Clay said,
"If you wish to avoid foreign
collision, you had better abandon U~e ocean." · ·

'

r I
I'

All Pric,. from IVInter S41• Catalo1 •• • In Effect for Duration of Catalo1 Sale

DI.SOJUNT
SA' VJNG
.

'

I

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shall file for re-election to the
House of Representatives for
the
4th
Congressional
District," Hechler said, He
quickly added that in order to
give the people a chance to
debate the issues oh a
statewide basis, "I shall also
file for the United States
Senate."
Hechler's choice of a site to
disclose his intentions was also
unusuaL He did i~ before
students at Huntington Vinson
High School.

\~

~
,_

Hechler in Two Races
HUNTINGTON, W. Va .
(UPI) - Faced with an adverse congressional
redistricting, Rep. Ken
Hechler, 0-W. Va., took a litUe
used road in announcing
Friday he will run for both the
U. S. Senate and re-election in
the new 4th Congressional
District.
1
In the Democratic primary,
he will face veteran Sen.
Jennings Randolph of Elkins,
who has held his seat since
1958, and Rep. James Kee of
Bluefield, from one of West
Virginia's most powerful .
political families.
·
"The voters of West Virginia
deserve a real choice and ·a
real chance to chart the future
course of this fine state ... I ·

,.

,.

Buy Now Before ROT Weather

For the past year I have been invol ved with a university course designed to help women- particularly the
over-35 housewife-set goals m life .
The women attendin~ the course learn to examine their
talents and skills, to mvesligate what opportunities are
available in their local communities, to simply conclude
which direction they want to traveL
The other day I attended an evaluation meeting and
listened while the directors of the course discussed what new .
had happen ~d to various women who completed the proIt se~med reminiscent of stories I've heard about prisgram sessions .
oners in concentration camps.
Several women had begun working at paid jobs. One
They had longed so desperately for freedom , but apwoman decided to quit working outside her home in order parently they had been prisoners for so long that when
to enjoy what she liked most- being ,a housewife. .
release came and freedom beckoned, they walked into
Another quit the volunteer groups she had complamed the sunshine, looked nervously about. then turned and
about for years and is painting aga in- at 50. She had al- trudged back inside the familiar darkness . back inside
most fo~gotten the joys she experienced when she was an the fences to which they had so long been accustomed .
exhibiting artist almost 25 years ago.

,

I

I

Of course we all like to talk about success stor·ies .
But not eve~v woman who attended the sessions was so
successful in' recharting her life .
As one of the directors pointed out , several women retreated. They went back to those vario us fru strations
that had initially sent them out to sign up for the course.
They chose to remain in the shadows of life, shadows
that shield them from even taking a clear look at themselves. because they were too afraid to tt·y something

M""'

ways Copunlttee chairman,
replacing either Rep. Gordon
M. Scherer of Cincinnati or
Rep. E.W. Lampson, of 1Jef.
ferson, both of- whom are
rel;iring. He also would. be ~
po~billty to replace White as
whip.
.
Wilhelm Is the !lelr apparent
to Rep. Howa~ A. Knight of
Fremont as chairman of the
Agriculture, Commerce and
Labor Committee.
Respected h!Juble Shooters
Rep. Joseph F. Hiesljind of
Hilllboro, another four--termer,
stands to inherit the powerful
Reference Commi!tlle !tom the
retiring Rep. Keith McNamara
of Columbus.
For pure seniority, Kurfess
can . call on Reps. Ethel G.

BLOOMING

Like Homicide

Get Out of the Rut, Maybe

I;.;__

"'!k,.

,.f
''
'

ROBEN JONES
YOUNG POET - Roben
Jones, 18, a junior at Gallia
Academy High School,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles L. Jones, 1004
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, has
published her first book, "'12
Days and Nights," a 20-page
collection of poems on
general subjects. The book
has been published by the
French City "Press, Is
available at the Log Cabin
Book Store for •us. Miss
Jones; • a ~~- n«llve ·' of ·'
Qiarleston, 'W. ·v•., and her
parents ·moved here three
years ago from Hansford, W.
Va. She Is enrolled in a
ge~eral course at GAHS.

dership. Then: assuming
Republicans c.ontinue to
oolitrol the House, for which
there Is about a 5IJ.5II chance,
he will have to bring a group of
third
and
fourth-term
laWmakers Into committee
chiurman PQiitions.
Speculations
on
the
emerging leaders is , interesting, but it must be done .
with the asaumptlon tbat the
incumben~ will · win in
November.
·
. Two prospectiw leaders Reps. Fred B. Hadley r:l. Bryan
and Robert L. Wilhelm r:1. Van
Wert - will be tahgliilg in the
primary and only one will be
back, Both are four-term veterans.
Hadley could be named

;•w

Melee Looked

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
melee at the end of the Jan . 25
or during the three months Ohio · State-Minnesota
after you're 65. But if you wish basketball game "appeared to
to have the protection begin- be an attempt to commit
ning with the month you're 65, homicide, "
James
W.
you must apply during the Shocknessy, Ohio State ~oard
three month period before of trustees chairman said.
you're 65.
Shocknessy, who said he
watched the game on tele
"Within three years after the vision, made his aom' nd of your first enrollment ments at an OSU trusperiod, you can still sign up . tees meeting Friday.
during any January, F'ebruary,
Shocknessy, a Columbus
or March," he said. "But if you attorney, said the trustees
enroll and then cancel your were disturbed . that inmedical insurance protection, tercolleg1ate athletics_ may no
you're eligible to re-enroll only . longer serve. as an Ideal f?r .
once. And you pay a higher students
Interested
m
premium if you sign up after developing sound "!lnds in
your first enrollment period "· sound bodies.
·
Gov. John J. Gilligan earlier
termed the Jan. 25 incident a
Nine out of 10 people 65 and "public mugging. "
over are enrolled in the
medical insurance part of
Medicare. Last year the
program paid $2 billion in
benefits on behalf of 91&gt; (llillion
people .

E. Nebley of Llura, J1mes g;.asp of the conservative fac- either Ways .and Means
Thorpe of Alliance and Joseph,. tion to reassert his caucus lea- Convnittee. cha~n or High--

P. Tulley of Mentor - ..-e Ifftliated with the GOP caiiCIIIi
splinter group whld! balled
. over againlt Kurfeu on .the
lncGme IQ: and other luues.
. ~ ~aker UIUJI1lng he
and the other incumbenlll are
reelected, will have HOUle
Speaker Pro Tempore Charles
o
E. Fry, of Springfield, lllid'
;
10 _...o
Majority Leader Robert E.
; poll far IIIII kcf*tiYe 11,1ces Levilt, North Canton, as the
~- lalt
the Feb. Zfl1!ng oocleus of leadership. .
' di!ldline, ' _. ~ House . But eveil Fry · and LeviU
Rep~mllcanlln the lead~ don't always see eye to eye
. brackel, Jftiiludlnc m Clllllllllt-- with Kurfess, and Majority
tee dlalrmeb with an ag. Whip Walter L. White of Lima
greljite of eo Jlll'll'ezperlence · and the other six Kurfess
were C01111Pic:uou1J abient.
lieutenants will be gone.
Of ·the m C:ummlttee chair5IJ.5II Chance
'
mel!' rQJIIIIng iQI' re.election,
Kuness will be faced with atthree of theiD - Reps. Rqbert tracting freshmen from the

.

Tmt"
e
.

.

. 11J LEE LEONARD

BETTY CANARY

By BETTY CANARY

1m

}. Rebuilding of.GOP Leadership Ahead

Publishes Book in West

Mrs. Salser was attired in a
pink cr~pe and nylon chiffon
with silver accessories. Her
flowers were P,ink _ cymbidiums. Mrs. Mathews wore a
gold brocade dress with brown
accessories and had a brown
cymbidium corsage.
~~
A reception honoring the
Dr. Sisson is a graduate of
couple was held at the Racine
Gallla Academy High School,
American Legion hall imreceived the B.A. and M.A.
mediately following the
.
degrees
from TJie Ohio state
wedding. the bride's table
University and the Ph. D.
featured a four-tiered wedding
degree from the University of
cake with columns between the
California at Berkley. While
top layers topped with the
serving three years with the
traditional bride and groom.
United States Army, he taught
Orchid and pilrple flowers
political
science at West Point
adorned the cake: Two -fiveAcademy. He resides with hts
branch candelabra with ptirple ·
wife, Mary, and ten year old
and orchid chrysanthemums In
son, John Cha_rles, _at Pacific
the top tier were used on either
Palisades, Cahforma.
side of the cake.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charlie
Mathews
]r,
Focusing on the Congress
Miss Becky Salser registered
·
Party,
the book analyzes the
the guests. Presiding at the
whole political structure of
reception tables were aunts of 1966, and is employed with
Karen,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Kenneth
the bride, Mrs. Roger Theiss, Johnson and . Greene ConWirt, Wooster; Mr.andMrs. H.
Mrs. Ronald Salser, Mrs. Sally struction of Columbus.
C.
Compton, Columbus; Mr.
Savage, Mrs. Robert Birch,
Out-of-town guests at the and Mrs. Clyde Evans , and
Mrs. Clyde Evans and Mrs. wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
daughters, Hattiesburg, Miss.;
Harriet Neigler .
•
Clarence Roush and Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Hawkins
The couple reside at 761 Winfield, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
and Shannon, Circleville; Mr.
Moon Rd., Columbus.
Robert Birch and Monica, and Mrs, Gary Gibbs and
The new Mrs. Mathews is a Bellevue; Mrs. Larry Jones,
1971 graduate of Southern High Mr. and Mrs. Charles I. Salser, family, Mason, W. Va.; Mrs,
School and attends Bliss Johnstown; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Simpson, Dayton ; Mr.
College. She is employed at the Marvin Hill, Mr . Donald and Mrs. Randy Ully, lro~ton;
Columbus Bureau of Medical Salser, Mrs . Judy Heer, Miss Debbie Harbrecht and
Miss Kim Fick, Columbus; and
Economies. ·
Columbus; Mrs. Flo Sprague Mr. and Mrs. Wallace AmMr . Mathews graduated and Vicki , Mr. and Mrs .
berger, Chester.
from Southern High School in Norman Pinklev. Steve and

surance part of Medicare the
first time," Ermatinger said.
"You can sign up during the
three months before you're 65,
during the month you reach 65,

of Port~r,

1 -'lbe ~ Tlmee. Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6,

.

Medicare Rolls Are Reopened
MARIETI'A - People who
are 65 and haven't already
signed up for the medical insurance part of Medicare may
enroll now through March 31 at
any social securitY office.
The medical part of
Medicare helps pay the doctor
bills for people 65 and over.
"Almost everyone 65 and
over is eligible," according to
Eugene Ermatinger, socia~
security district manager here .
"Most people who didn't sign
up in their original enrollment
period can sign up now," he
Sl\ld, • ~ ·'
The medical insurance
progriUJI Ia the voluntary part
of Medicare. People who enroll
in it are required to pay
monthly premiums that are
matched by the Federal
Government. It. supplements
Medicare hospital insurance,
which ts funded by social
security contributions by
workers, employers, and the

'

Mo~th

need a space maintainer. An
adult should have an artificial
tooth to replace the lost tooth
and protect the health of his
mouth.
You probably never have
envied a shark. But nature has
given him one advantage you
might well envy - an
inexhaustible supply of natural
teeth. If a shark loses a tooth
by accident, another moves up
to take its place. As nature has
given you only two sets of
teeth, you cannot afford to be
as careless as a shark. Your
teeth need proper home and
professional dental care so that
you can keep them from for
yoiu- lifetime.
You can · keep your mouth
~ealthy by cleaning your teeth
thoroughly every day, cutting
down on sweets, especially be. tween meals, and . having
regular dental checkups. You
'; hould brush your teeth at least
three times a day , And,
remember, the best way to
teach good dental health habits
tu your child is to practice
them yourself .

Head Crisp
STATE FARE

Campaign
LANGSVILLE - Bill Jewett
of Rutland has agreed to accept the campaign chairmanship of the "Crisp for
Congress Committee" in Meigs
County.
Jack W. Crisp, Democrat
candidate for Congress of the
lOth district, said Jewett is
presently employed at Kaiser
Aluminum Plant and has been
with the company for 14 years.
He is a member of Local Union
5668 United Steel Workers of
·'
America.
Jewett is a member of the
Pomeroy Nazarene Church
and is married · to the former
Betty J. Cundiff from the
Rutland area . They are the
parents of three children.
Jewett made the following
slatement: "I am convinced,
beyond any doubt, Crisp is
highly qualified and I'm sure
that Crisp would make an
eKcellent Congr~ssman for the
people of the lOth District.
"For all the years I have
known Crisp, I h~ve been very
favorably impressed with the
fact that Crisp , has been
working for the people of the
area and that in my opinion,
the present Congressman could
in no way begin to equal the
record of what Cirsp has done
for th'e area.
"I know of a great many
people who have fobs today
Uta! would not be working had
it not been for the efforts of
Jack Crisp. I'believe that when
Crisp is e lec~ to Congress, he
wiU really be able to benefit the
pe"ple by more jobs, industrit•s, Ctt'."
I

.•

POTATO
CHI~S
1-lb. Pkg.
DONALD DUCK
FROZEN

Orange Juice
12-oz. Can

SUNSHINE FEAlURES .
1-lb. 41k
FIG BARS
;r
I

I

I

I

I

I

Yl£111 fiiGERS
KRISPY CRACKERS
I

I

Pkg .

~~~~z:4gc

I

I

;~:: 41'

MUSSELMAN'S FEATURES
,.........69

BALLARD
REFRIGERATED

BISCUITS
OVEN READY
BUTTERMILK

APPLE BUTTER , ••.•• , • .•.••.• • · • '"
c
.
,..,_, " ·75c
APPLE SAUCE .•..•....• .• ..• · · · '"
.
' 5 ,.,•..,.•,,,
APPLE SAUCE • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
C1ns
11
APPLE BASE JELLIES •••.• , • • :,.:::,.. ~,';" 39c
NU MAID
SOFT

MARGARINE
1-lb.
Bowl

45e

Ht ·C

DRINKS
ALL FLAVORS
1-0t.
14-oz.
Cah

35e

SWEETHEART
LIME OEODORANT

SOAP

s-a•19e
Bar

�•p

8- The Sunday Times -Sentinel. Sunday, F'eb. 6, 1972

/?.ita Marlene ._ Salser is
l f3ride at Church Wedding

Dr. Sisson,

J

I
RACINE - An arch canMiss Beth Theiss, Route 2,
delabra
flanked
by ·Racine, was the maid of honor
arrangements
of
fugi for the bride. Other attendants
chrysanthemums decorated . were Miss Robin Allen, Portthe Wesleyan United Methodist lanct, and Miss Debbie Norris,
Church for the wedding of Miss Syracuse, bridesmaids; and
Ril&lt;' Marlene Salser, daughter Miss Robin Savage and Miss
of Mr. and Mrs. Grover Salser, Tonja Salser, Racine, flower
Jr., Route I, Racine, to Mr. girls.
Charlie Myles Mathews, Jr.,
The maid of honor and the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie bridesmaids were in deep
Mathews, Racine, Route 2.
purple formallengtl) velvet AThe wedding was an event of line dresses featuring empire
Dec. 18 at 6:30 p.m. with the bodices. The full sleeves were
Rev. Dale McClurg officiating of orchid chiffon terminating in
at the double ring ceremony. deep purp'le cuffs, and they
Nuptial music was provided by wore headpieces of ,purpie
Gerald Powell, organist, whose velvet ribbon and nylon net.
selections included "Be My The maid of honor carried a
Love,'' "f!awaiian Wedding nosegay of white roses tipped
Prayer, "
"The
Lord's in purple and baby's breath ,
11
Prayer/' Wedding Prayer/' and the bridesmaids carried
"Theme from Love Story" and single white roses with purple
"I'm Walking Behind You." accent and ribbon .
Given in marriage by her
The flower ·girls were in
father, the bride was attired in orchid formal length velvet
a white formal length silk peau dresses of ·A-line styling with
de soie and Chan tilly lace A· orchid chiffon sleeves. They
line gown. The empire bodice carried white baskets with
featured lace motifs, a high purple ribbons and dropped
lace cameo collar and long full white rose petals along the
bishop sleeves with lace ac- aisle.
cents. Bands of lace enhanced
Mr. Larry Circle of Racine
the skirt and her watteau train served as best man and the
extended to chapel length, Her ushers were. Mr. Michael
chapel length mantilla of silk Salser, Mr. Charles Wagner,
illusion edged in lace was held and Mr. Ed Cozart, ali of
'• in place by a lace profile. The Racine. Master Sean Riffle,
• bride carried a bouquet of
nephew of the groom, was the
' white roses and baby's breath ringbearer.
fashioned In .a cascade.
For her daughter's wedding,

self-employed, and helps pay
the hospital bills of peOPle 65
and over.
"You have seven months to
sign up for the medical in-

Vaughans Home
From Florida
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Vaughan have returned
from Miami Beach, Fla .,
where they attended the annual
convention of- the Monument
Builders of North America at
the Fountainbleu HoteL
Seven members of the staff
of Logan Monument Co. and
their wives traveled to the
convention. Accompanying the
Vaughans were Mr. and Mrs.
John Larimer of Circleville. ·
Displays of new designs and

modern cuts and finishes were
exhibited and the staff attended conferences on new
designs and techniques.
Before returning, the grou,
visited at Fort Meyers with
Mrs . Nell Covert. Mrs.
Vaughan, the former Rowena
Harrah, was employed by the
Covert Baking Co. a number of
years ago. The bakery
operated primarily in Middleport and was owned by the
Covert Family.

· PORTER .., The University .
of California Press has just
· published a bqok "The
Congress
Party
in
Rbajacthan," by ))r. Richard
Sisson, an associate professor
of political science at the
University of Californa al Los
Angeles. Dr. Sisson Is the son of
Mr.andMrs. Eiias.W.Sissonof

' VPI .....lillie Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPJ) - No
matter What happn In t1i.t
year'l leclllatlve election,
HoUle Speaker Charla F.
Kaiea ft.Bow11na Green, wUI
lo do a major.relluUding
: job011the~echelon of
·• hii·CIIIICU.
; All lbe horiel went to the

Rhajasthan, and traces the
political .and economic
development of this Indian
state. Dr. Sisson conducted the
research for the book during a
fourteen month stay in India
and Pakistan.

Inc
Hit
Hard
·

; • Ola,

DR. SISSON
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
chairman -of Time Inc., An·
drew Heiskell, said Friday . Rate Commission and nine .
proposed pD,!tal rate increases governors of the Postal Ser· for second class mail "make a vice," Heiskell said. "These
mockery" of the traditional Individuals have the power to
role of the poslal system io considerably affect the free
facilitate flow of information. flow of inforrnlltion throughout
Heiskell, reacting t~ a this country."
decision announced Thursday,
said the proposed increase In
Cheer , Sick
.
rates ,paid by magazines and
With A
newspapers threatened the
Beautiful
existence of some publications.
'rime Inc: publishes Time, Ufe,
Sports JUustratl!d and Fortune
maga~ines .

"The economic future. of the
magazine press and, to ale:SSer
extent, portions of the
newspaper press, is now in the
bands of a small group of
people - the five-man Postal

From s4.oo
.
Dudley's Florist

Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, ~lllpolls, 0.
&amp; Milson Co., W. Vo.

rf

SHOP THE NEW.JONES OOYS•
Best Jlalll@ on
Foods - Clothing - H~trdware
- in GaUia County
Parking For Over 100 Cars

,

137 , . ...• ••,

Clllllpllls, Ollie

t(.

SIX MALES A LONG SHOT -' On January 30 a new Ulter of basset hou~s "':er~ born to
"Gidget Steach" of the K. and P. KeMels, Campaign Rd. neat Porter. The litter~ SIX mal~s
with an average we:ght at birth of 1'1• ibs. The mother, Gidget, was one of a litter of _siX
females. The chance of a o~ litter is small. "Oliver's Billy Boy" of K and P Kennels IS a
very proud father. The kennels are owned and operated by Darrell and Clara Day, Bidwell.

Let's unlock that door to a New Mobile
Home , .. They are easier to get now.
Come in and let's discuss your Mobile
Home financing .

tA Condemned Man.Speaks
I

'

'

Buy Now, Take advantage of our Low
Mobile Home Financing.

'" Prisoner at the bar, haVe

you anything

''"

to say, any
reason why sentence of death
all not be passiiCI""'ll,q)\Yj&lt;)~·
• A solemn hulbHellfliiiiiiii~he
rowded courtroom, and every
erson waited In ..almost
, eothle.. expectation-fer lhe
answer to the ludge's question.
, The ludge'Walted In dignified
silence.
Not a whisper was heard
anywhere, and lhe sltuallon
had become painfully oppressive, whoin the prisoner .
was seen to 1110ve. ·his head was
raised, his hands were clen.
chad, and lhe blood had rushed
into his pale, careworn face.
Suddenly he arose to his feet,
and In a low, but firm and
diollnct voice, sold:
"I have! Your Honor, you
have asked mt a question, and

t

· GALUPOUS . SAVI'NGS····· ·
AND tOAN COMPANY
Opposite Post Office, Phone 446,3832

~allipolis

Our Lowest Prices of the Year

as the last favor on

remembrance of committing

Condcnaer
re.t• outlide on

the fNrlul deed, I have no right
to complain or to condemn the
verdict of the lwel•e good men
who have acted as lury In the
case; for their verdict Is In
accordance with the evidence
given. .
·
" But, may It please lhe
COU(I, I wish to show that I am
not alone r-esponsible for lhe
murder of my wife! "
The startlt'ng statement

c:onerete wlah

created a tremendous sen-

sation. The ludge leaned over
the desk, the lawyers wheeled
around and faced the prisoner.
the 'lurors looked at one
another In amazement. The
prisoner paused tor a few
seconds, and then continued in

.,
l

.,

Save '80 to '130

Window Air Conditioners

\.

Central Air Conditioners

8,000 BTU, .Was 194.95 - - - - - • - Now 174.95
11,000 BTU, Was 249.95 - - - - - - • Now 229.95
18,000, 17,000 BTU, Was 289.95 - - Now 259.95
(Limited Time Only)
23,000 BTU Sell out of last year's model, fully
automatic, Was 339.95
Now 279.95
(Limited quantity In stock!)
238,000 BTU · Slightly Damaged Air Con ditioner. Was 338.00 ~.. _ N0w 289.95

DAN THOMAS
AND SON

24,000
28,000
31,000
38,000
43,000
48,000

SHQP AT SEARS AND !lAVE

19:1, ..

Ohio

&amp;

BTU -Hr.
BTU- Hr.
BTU- Hr .
BTU- Hr.
BTU- Hr.
BTU- Hr.

Sears
S~AftS,

'I

close my lips ; I am nearly

Was 449.00
Was 519:00
Was; 569.00
Was 629.00
Was 689.00
Was 789.00
.

Now 369.00
Now 449.00
Now 479.00
· Now 519.00
Now569.00
Now 659.00

)

j
')

.,

435 Second Ave.

1
'1

Gallipolis, Obio
· Phone 446-2770

ftOUUCK ANIII:O,

l

P. R. DOYLE
POMEROY -The Rev. P.
R. Doyle, Michigan, a
Nazarene evangelist the past
:15 years, will be speaker at
the annual Indoor camp
meeting of the Meigs Area
Holiness Assn., to be held
Monday through Sunday,
Feb. 13. Services will be held
at the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. The Rev.
Mr. Doyle iB a past president
of the New York State Assn.,
and has been a delegate to
the national Nazarene
conventions. Singers at the
· services will .be Ralph and
Joann Dunmire of Nashville,
Tenn. The public Is Invited.

Swanbeckof Huron, ~ean of the
GOP caucus with. nine terms,
and Corwin Nixon of Lebanon
with five terms. Neither currently has a chairmanship.
But seniority is not everything in fillln~ the vacancies,
and Kurfess has a pair of highly respected troubleshooters
with three terms under their
belt to shuttle Into crucial slots
if he wishes,
R.ep. Robert A. Mal!ning of
Akron, chairinan of the State
Government Committee, did
about every sticky job for the
GOP except mop the noors last ·
year.
He could be installed as
chairmati of the critical
Finance or Ways and Means
Committeeslf Kurfes!! wants a
man of his own fiscal
philosophy in . those PQiitlons.
And Rep. George E. Mastics,
R-Fairvlew Park, has earned
his spurs by guiding COI!.trover·
sial legislation through the
chamber. He could replace
Manning as chairman of the
State Government Cornmillee.
Democrats Could Help
Three other three-tenn lawmakers - Reps. John A. Galbraith of Maumee, Rodney Hughes of Bellefontaine and
Frank H. Mayfield Jr. of
Cincinnati - have been
groomed for the future. as
chainnen of select and subcommittees.
Rep. John M. Scott of Fairborn is only in his second term
but could be tapped to fill the
void on the House Environment
:::ommittee left by tbe retirement of veteran Rep' KeMeth
B. Creasy of Delaware, the
chairman, and the resignation
last year of vice chairman
George V. Voinovich of Cleveland.
Two other Kuriess favorites
only in their second terms are '
Reps. Frederick N, Young of
Dayton and Donald R. Fraser
of Sylvania- both regarded as
potential committee chairmen.
Three vice chairmanships
will have to be filled - White's
on the Ways and Means
Committee, Rep. Morris L.
Boyd of Hudson on the
Education Committee, and
Rep. William H. Mussey of
Batavia on the Local Government Committee.
Of course, the. Democrats
can save Kurfess aU these
headaches by winning control .
of the House.

252 THIRD AVENUE, GAUIPOLI$, OHIO
OPEN 9 AM TO 9 PM MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
SUPERIOR-U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

FULLY COOKED

Semi-Boneless

H

.WHOLE-11/11-111. AYe.

We reserve the right to
limit quantlfll" oo· all
items in lhis illd. Pri ce~
efl•cthre lhru Sat. Feb.
12. 1972 . None sold to

ch!alers.

SEMI.-RONELESS HAM PORTIONS •••••• lb. 69•

. ,.

ilftstM

"

-~

U.S..,Ho•.J ·GRA·r&gt;~

'INTOSH
APPLES
3-lb. Bag

at a Specj•I Low Price

saloon. was in my pathway, my . In my drunken , frenzied,
weak diseased will power was
Irresponsible · condition, have

no match against the fearful,
consuming, agonizing appetite
for liquor.
"For one year our town was

murdered one ; but you have
deliberately voled for the
saloons, which have murdered
thousands, and they are In full

1 was a sober man. For one
year my wife and children
were happy, and our little

consent ..
" All of you know In Y?Ur
hearts thallhes~ words of mtne

home was a paradise.

are not the ravmgs of an un-

" 1 was one of those who
signed remonstrances against
reopening the saloons of our
town. ()ne.half ollhls lury, lhe

sound mind, butthe truth oflhe
Almighty God. You legalized
the saloons ·that made me a
drunkard and a murderer, and

case, and the fudge who sits on
this bench, all voled for the

God and man for the murder ol
my w1fe.

proSecuting· attorney on this

you are guilty with me before

" Your Honor, I am ~one. I
am now ready to rece1ve my

saloons. By their votes end
Influence, the saloons were

reopened and they have made
me what' 1 am ."
These Impassioned words of
the prisoner fell like coals of
fire upon the hearls of those
present and many of the

sentence, and be led forth lo
the place ol execution. You will
close by asking lhe Lord to
have mercy on my soul. I will
close by solemnly asking God
to open your blind eyes to your

spectat~rs and some of the

own individual responsibility ,
so that you will cease to give

lawyers were moved to tears.
The judge made a motion as If

your support to this dreadful
traffic.' - Author Unknown.
Provided by Mrs. Howard
Hatcher, Bidwell.

to stop furlherspeech when the
speaker hastily said: .
"No! No! Your Honor, do not

.

•

PEACHES
1-lb. 14-oz. Can

_,Jewett to
DEBORAH
LYNN
LAVALLEY, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
Lavalley, Dorcas, has been
chosen Sweetheart Queen of
the FFA at Southern_High
School. Deborah who was
homecoming queen Is
secretary for the can·
dystrlpers, a member of
Who's Who In America and
the National Honor Society.
She plans to enter Holzer
School of NursiDg this fall.
Debbie Bostick was second
runnerup.

Happiness: .a Healtlly

Plan Leaked

fellow Clin1- Halwes or Sliced

BILL JEWETT

--L

the sarrie firm, distinct voice:
"1 reJl041, Your Hdnor, that I
am not "'" only one gullly of
the murde..- of my wife. l)le . GALLIPOLIS - Children will last a lifetime.
on Ibis bench, the lury In
j·uctge
Prevention is the key to the
he box, 'the lawyers within this reflect their parents. If you
bar, and most o the witnesses, give your teeth proper care at · control of dental disease. Tooth
Including the 'pastor ol the home and seek professional decay and periodontal, or gum,
church, are also guilty before
Almighty God, and will have to care when it is needed, you can disease are the major causes of
stand wllh me before His expect your children to follow . tooth loss . ' You can help
your example. February 6 prevent both.
through 12 is National
A medical checkup Is not
Children's Dental Health complete unless it includes a
Week. Happiness is a "healthy dental checkup. At some time
mouth."
In their lives 98 per cent of
Now, during their formative Americans suffer from tooth
years, is the best time for decay. At least 90 per cent of
children to form good dental adults - and more than half of
habits. If they carry those those under 21 - have some
habits into adult life their teeth symptoms of periodontal, or
gun, disease. Some 50 per cent
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
of children in any age group
Personnel Director Paul .A.
should hav~ orthodontic
Corey says a~ official of the
treatment.
federal Wage Board has in- Wage Board is offering,"
Uke the stones in a bridge,
dicated it would approve .a 7 Corey said. "Our request foG a your teeth support one another.
pet. pay increase now for state wage adjustment, when .co~- If you lo,se one tooth because of
employes ·with a chance for sidered on a 12-month baSis, IS accident or disease, your other
other raises later on.
less than 7 pet., the federal 1 teeth tend to drill into the
- John Hulcher, as sis tan t guideline for cases that involve empty space. The stresses of
executive director of the Wage an exception because of chewing
are
uneve~1y
Board, said the board's inequities.
distributed, which can damage
propculs would be detailed In
"If the federal offer is better your gums and the other
writing and mailed here over than what-we are seeking, we s~pporting structures of your
the Weekend.
will be happy to accept It," he teeth . A child who loses a
"We are 'not aure ~ ·. · the added.
primary tooth too early may

F. &amp; p

'

without a saloon. For one year . operation today with your

in Ohio

'1

SaU${artinn Uuaralllcf'r{ or Your Manry Ratk

judgment throne~ where we

shall all be righteously judged. through . I began my downward
"If II had not been for the career at a saloon bar,
~l'll!l1 &lt;lf ll),Y ' li!lti~t I never ~ leg~llzed an~prolected l&gt;y the
N.Jou.fa it!'live ·k·b'e~ome o ~ vofers of this .lo:&lt;fn. A!ler the
drunkard, my wife never would . saloons you_allOY!~ have 111ade
have been mordeteil, t would me a drunkard and a murnol be here reody to be hurled derer, I am taken before
lnlo eternity. Had It not been another bar, the bar of justice,
for these human traps, I would ·and now the power of the law
have been a sober man, an will conduct me to lhe place ol
Industrious workman, a tender execution, and hasten my soul
father, and a loving husband. into eternlly. I shall appear
But today my home is before anoiher bar - the
destroyed,·my wife murdered, j'udgment bar of God - and
my little children - God bless
here you who legalized the
and care lor them -are cast traffic will have to appear with
on the mercy of the world, me. Think you that the greal
while tarn to be hanged by 'the Judge will hold me - the poor,
strong arm of the state.
weak, helpless vrctim of your
"God knows I tried to trafllc - alone responsible for
reform, but as long as the open the murder of my wife? Nay. I,

7% Hike

Save '20 to '60 .

f

,

now ask,

earth, the! you will not ln.
terrupl my answer until I am
through.
·
"Island here before this bar,
convicted of the willful murder
of my wife. Truthful witnesses
have testified lo the fact that I
was a loafer, a drunkard, a
wretch; that t returned from
one of my prolonged
debauches, anc;l fired the fatal
shot that killed the wife I had
sworn to love, cherish, and
protect. While t have no

/lorn• Sur!HIV ••• lnllall«llon ct Your Convenience
· Sear• Junellelerr•d F.n•v _Pavmtnl Pion let• vot1 buv no10 ••fllo Firat JUonthlv Pavn11nt In Jun•

tii'J:.

.,,..

'.,

Free

A thought for today: American statesman Henry Clay said,
"If you wish to avoid foreign
collision, you had better abandon U~e ocean." · ·

'

r I
I'

All Pric,. from IVInter S41• Catalo1 •• • In Effect for Duration of Catalo1 Sale

DI.SOJUNT
SA' VJNG
.

'

I

I

shall file for re-election to the
House of Representatives for
the
4th
Congressional
District," Hechler said, He
quickly added that in order to
give the people a chance to
debate the issues oh a
statewide basis, "I shall also
file for the United States
Senate."
Hechler's choice of a site to
disclose his intentions was also
unusuaL He did i~ before
students at Huntington Vinson
High School.

\~

~
,_

Hechler in Two Races
HUNTINGTON, W. Va .
(UPI) - Faced with an adverse congressional
redistricting, Rep. Ken
Hechler, 0-W. Va., took a litUe
used road in announcing
Friday he will run for both the
U. S. Senate and re-election in
the new 4th Congressional
District.
1
In the Democratic primary,
he will face veteran Sen.
Jennings Randolph of Elkins,
who has held his seat since
1958, and Rep. James Kee of
Bluefield, from one of West
Virginia's most powerful .
political families.
·
"The voters of West Virginia
deserve a real choice and ·a
real chance to chart the future
course of this fine state ... I ·

,.

,.

Buy Now Before ROT Weather

For the past year I have been invol ved with a university course designed to help women- particularly the
over-35 housewife-set goals m life .
The women attendin~ the course learn to examine their
talents and skills, to mvesligate what opportunities are
available in their local communities, to simply conclude
which direction they want to traveL
The other day I attended an evaluation meeting and
listened while the directors of the course discussed what new .
had happen ~d to various women who completed the proIt se~med reminiscent of stories I've heard about prisgram sessions .
oners in concentration camps.
Several women had begun working at paid jobs. One
They had longed so desperately for freedom , but apwoman decided to quit working outside her home in order parently they had been prisoners for so long that when
to enjoy what she liked most- being ,a housewife. .
release came and freedom beckoned, they walked into
Another quit the volunteer groups she had complamed the sunshine, looked nervously about. then turned and
about for years and is painting aga in- at 50. She had al- trudged back inside the familiar darkness . back inside
most fo~gotten the joys she experienced when she was an the fences to which they had so long been accustomed .
exhibiting artist almost 25 years ago.

,

I

I

Of course we all like to talk about success stor·ies .
But not eve~v woman who attended the sessions was so
successful in' recharting her life .
As one of the directors pointed out , several women retreated. They went back to those vario us fru strations
that had initially sent them out to sign up for the course.
They chose to remain in the shadows of life, shadows
that shield them from even taking a clear look at themselves. because they were too afraid to tt·y something

M""'

ways Copunlttee chairman,
replacing either Rep. Gordon
M. Scherer of Cincinnati or
Rep. E.W. Lampson, of 1Jef.
ferson, both of- whom are
rel;iring. He also would. be ~
po~billty to replace White as
whip.
.
Wilhelm Is the !lelr apparent
to Rep. Howa~ A. Knight of
Fremont as chairman of the
Agriculture, Commerce and
Labor Committee.
Respected h!Juble Shooters
Rep. Joseph F. Hiesljind of
Hilllboro, another four--termer,
stands to inherit the powerful
Reference Commi!tlle !tom the
retiring Rep. Keith McNamara
of Columbus.
For pure seniority, Kurfess
can . call on Reps. Ethel G.

BLOOMING

Like Homicide

Get Out of the Rut, Maybe

I;.;__

"'!k,.

,.f
''
'

ROBEN JONES
YOUNG POET - Roben
Jones, 18, a junior at Gallia
Academy High School,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles L. Jones, 1004
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, has
published her first book, "'12
Days and Nights," a 20-page
collection of poems on
general subjects. The book
has been published by the
French City "Press, Is
available at the Log Cabin
Book Store for •us. Miss
Jones; • a ~~- n«llve ·' of ·'
Qiarleston, 'W. ·v•., and her
parents ·moved here three
years ago from Hansford, W.
Va. She Is enrolled in a
ge~eral course at GAHS.

dership. Then: assuming
Republicans c.ontinue to
oolitrol the House, for which
there Is about a 5IJ.5II chance,
he will have to bring a group of
third
and
fourth-term
laWmakers Into committee
chiurman PQiitions.
Speculations
on
the
emerging leaders is , interesting, but it must be done .
with the asaumptlon tbat the
incumben~ will · win in
November.
·
. Two prospectiw leaders Reps. Fred B. Hadley r:l. Bryan
and Robert L. Wilhelm r:1. Van
Wert - will be tahgliilg in the
primary and only one will be
back, Both are four-term veterans.
Hadley could be named

;•w

Melee Looked

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
melee at the end of the Jan . 25
or during the three months Ohio · State-Minnesota
after you're 65. But if you wish basketball game "appeared to
to have the protection begin- be an attempt to commit
ning with the month you're 65, homicide, "
James
W.
you must apply during the Shocknessy, Ohio State ~oard
three month period before of trustees chairman said.
you're 65.
Shocknessy, who said he
watched the game on tele
"Within three years after the vision, made his aom' nd of your first enrollment ments at an OSU trusperiod, you can still sign up . tees meeting Friday.
during any January, F'ebruary,
Shocknessy, a Columbus
or March," he said. "But if you attorney, said the trustees
enroll and then cancel your were disturbed . that inmedical insurance protection, tercolleg1ate athletics_ may no
you're eligible to re-enroll only . longer serve. as an Ideal f?r .
once. And you pay a higher students
Interested
m
premium if you sign up after developing sound "!lnds in
your first enrollment period "· sound bodies.
·
Gov. John J. Gilligan earlier
termed the Jan. 25 incident a
Nine out of 10 people 65 and "public mugging. "
over are enrolled in the
medical insurance part of
Medicare. Last year the
program paid $2 billion in
benefits on behalf of 91&gt; (llillion
people .

E. Nebley of Llura, J1mes g;.asp of the conservative fac- either Ways .and Means
Thorpe of Alliance and Joseph,. tion to reassert his caucus lea- Convnittee. cha~n or High--

P. Tulley of Mentor - ..-e Ifftliated with the GOP caiiCIIIi
splinter group whld! balled
. over againlt Kurfeu on .the
lncGme IQ: and other luues.
. ~ ~aker UIUJI1lng he
and the other incumbenlll are
reelected, will have HOUle
Speaker Pro Tempore Charles
o
E. Fry, of Springfield, lllid'
;
10 _...o
Majority Leader Robert E.
; poll far IIIII kcf*tiYe 11,1ces Levilt, North Canton, as the
~- lalt
the Feb. Zfl1!ng oocleus of leadership. .
' di!ldline, ' _. ~ House . But eveil Fry · and LeviU
Rep~mllcanlln the lead~ don't always see eye to eye
. brackel, Jftiiludlnc m Clllllllllt-- with Kurfess, and Majority
tee dlalrmeb with an ag. Whip Walter L. White of Lima
greljite of eo Jlll'll'ezperlence · and the other six Kurfess
were C01111Pic:uou1J abient.
lieutenants will be gone.
Of ·the m C:ummlttee chair5IJ.5II Chance
'
mel!' rQJIIIIng iQI' re.election,
Kuness will be faced with atthree of theiD - Reps. Rqbert tracting freshmen from the

.

Tmt"
e
.

.

. 11J LEE LEONARD

BETTY CANARY

By BETTY CANARY

1m

}. Rebuilding of.GOP Leadership Ahead

Publishes Book in West

Mrs. Salser was attired in a
pink cr~pe and nylon chiffon
with silver accessories. Her
flowers were P,ink _ cymbidiums. Mrs. Mathews wore a
gold brocade dress with brown
accessories and had a brown
cymbidium corsage.
~~
A reception honoring the
Dr. Sisson is a graduate of
couple was held at the Racine
Gallla Academy High School,
American Legion hall imreceived the B.A. and M.A.
mediately following the
.
degrees
from TJie Ohio state
wedding. the bride's table
University and the Ph. D.
featured a four-tiered wedding
degree from the University of
cake with columns between the
California at Berkley. While
top layers topped with the
serving three years with the
traditional bride and groom.
United States Army, he taught
Orchid and pilrple flowers
political
science at West Point
adorned the cake: Two -fiveAcademy. He resides with hts
branch candelabra with ptirple ·
wife, Mary, and ten year old
and orchid chrysanthemums In
son, John Cha_rles, _at Pacific
the top tier were used on either
Palisades, Cahforma.
side of the cake.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charlie
Mathews
]r,
Focusing on the Congress
Miss Becky Salser registered
·
Party,
the book analyzes the
the guests. Presiding at the
whole political structure of
reception tables were aunts of 1966, and is employed with
Karen,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Kenneth
the bride, Mrs. Roger Theiss, Johnson and . Greene ConWirt, Wooster; Mr.andMrs. H.
Mrs. Ronald Salser, Mrs. Sally struction of Columbus.
C.
Compton, Columbus; Mr.
Savage, Mrs. Robert Birch,
Out-of-town guests at the and Mrs. Clyde Evans , and
Mrs. Clyde Evans and Mrs. wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
daughters, Hattiesburg, Miss.;
Harriet Neigler .
•
Clarence Roush and Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Hawkins
The couple reside at 761 Winfield, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
and Shannon, Circleville; Mr.
Moon Rd., Columbus.
Robert Birch and Monica, and Mrs, Gary Gibbs and
The new Mrs. Mathews is a Bellevue; Mrs. Larry Jones,
1971 graduate of Southern High Mr. and Mrs. Charles I. Salser, family, Mason, W. Va.; Mrs,
School and attends Bliss Johnstown; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Simpson, Dayton ; Mr.
College. She is employed at the Marvin Hill, Mr . Donald and Mrs. Randy Ully, lro~ton;
Columbus Bureau of Medical Salser, Mrs . Judy Heer, Miss Debbie Harbrecht and
Miss Kim Fick, Columbus; and
Economies. ·
Columbus; Mrs. Flo Sprague Mr. and Mrs. Wallace AmMr . Mathews graduated and Vicki , Mr. and Mrs .
berger, Chester.
from Southern High School in Norman Pinklev. Steve and

surance part of Medicare the
first time," Ermatinger said.
"You can sign up during the
three months before you're 65,
during the month you reach 65,

of Port~r,

1 -'lbe ~ Tlmee. Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6,

.

Medicare Rolls Are Reopened
MARIETI'A - People who
are 65 and haven't already
signed up for the medical insurance part of Medicare may
enroll now through March 31 at
any social securitY office.
The medical part of
Medicare helps pay the doctor
bills for people 65 and over.
"Almost everyone 65 and
over is eligible," according to
Eugene Ermatinger, socia~
security district manager here .
"Most people who didn't sign
up in their original enrollment
period can sign up now," he
Sl\ld, • ~ ·'
The medical insurance
progriUJI Ia the voluntary part
of Medicare. People who enroll
in it are required to pay
monthly premiums that are
matched by the Federal
Government. It. supplements
Medicare hospital insurance,
which ts funded by social
security contributions by
workers, employers, and the

'

Mo~th

need a space maintainer. An
adult should have an artificial
tooth to replace the lost tooth
and protect the health of his
mouth.
You probably never have
envied a shark. But nature has
given him one advantage you
might well envy - an
inexhaustible supply of natural
teeth. If a shark loses a tooth
by accident, another moves up
to take its place. As nature has
given you only two sets of
teeth, you cannot afford to be
as careless as a shark. Your
teeth need proper home and
professional dental care so that
you can keep them from for
yoiu- lifetime.
You can · keep your mouth
~ealthy by cleaning your teeth
thoroughly every day, cutting
down on sweets, especially be. tween meals, and . having
regular dental checkups. You
'; hould brush your teeth at least
three times a day , And,
remember, the best way to
teach good dental health habits
tu your child is to practice
them yourself .

Head Crisp
STATE FARE

Campaign
LANGSVILLE - Bill Jewett
of Rutland has agreed to accept the campaign chairmanship of the "Crisp for
Congress Committee" in Meigs
County.
Jack W. Crisp, Democrat
candidate for Congress of the
lOth district, said Jewett is
presently employed at Kaiser
Aluminum Plant and has been
with the company for 14 years.
He is a member of Local Union
5668 United Steel Workers of
·'
America.
Jewett is a member of the
Pomeroy Nazarene Church
and is married · to the former
Betty J. Cundiff from the
Rutland area . They are the
parents of three children.
Jewett made the following
slatement: "I am convinced,
beyond any doubt, Crisp is
highly qualified and I'm sure
that Crisp would make an
eKcellent Congr~ssman for the
people of the lOth District.
"For all the years I have
known Crisp, I h~ve been very
favorably impressed with the
fact that Crisp , has been
working for the people of the
area and that in my opinion,
the present Congressman could
in no way begin to equal the
record of what Cirsp has done
for th'e area.
"I know of a great many
people who have fobs today
Uta! would not be working had
it not been for the efforts of
Jack Crisp. I'believe that when
Crisp is e lec~ to Congress, he
wiU really be able to benefit the
pe"ple by more jobs, industrit•s, Ctt'."
I

.•

POTATO
CHI~S
1-lb. Pkg.
DONALD DUCK
FROZEN

Orange Juice
12-oz. Can

SUNSHINE FEAlURES .
1-lb. 41k
FIG BARS
;r
I

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I

I

Yl£111 fiiGERS
KRISPY CRACKERS
I

I

Pkg .

~~~~z:4gc

I

I

;~:: 41'

MUSSELMAN'S FEATURES
,.........69

BALLARD
REFRIGERATED

BISCUITS
OVEN READY
BUTTERMILK

APPLE BUTTER , ••.•• , • .•.••.• • · • '"
c
.
,..,_, " ·75c
APPLE SAUCE .•..•....• .• ..• · · · '"
.
' 5 ,.,•..,.•,,,
APPLE SAUCE • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
C1ns
11
APPLE BASE JELLIES •••.• , • • :,.:::,.. ~,';" 39c
NU MAID
SOFT

MARGARINE
1-lb.
Bowl

45e

Ht ·C

DRINKS
ALL FLAVORS
1-0t.
14-oz.
Cah

35e

SWEETHEART
LIME OEODORANT

SOAP

s-a•19e
Bar

�I

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10 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6, 1972
~~.:. .. Co c. :00.00: '•'•'• .·.·.·..·.. ·.·...... ·-::....... ·.• ·.·.·.··:.· .··:·.·,·.··.··•,•,•••,•,-.•,•,

'1:.

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.lJ-lbe Slllday Times· Seminel, &amp;mdaJ, Feb. I, lfl2
.

,.·,·.·,·,·,·.·•• ·.·.••.. ·•·· .. ·., ·.v ...·.·,···,·,,·.·,·.· ·.··•.•• ..·.o.· .· .•••. '-•:- •..•··.•.. '

••

POLL\.,S POINTERS

I

Community
B .
·Corner clarlene Hoeflich
POMEROY - It happena JNery year I
Women of Heath Methodist Church bake dozens and dozens
of co&lt;ikies to carry o.ut thelf annual "heartline" valentine
project. About 60 Middleport shut-ins and senior citizens, along
with the children at the Meigs C&lt;lunty Home and the folks at the
Infirmary will be remembered with decorated plates of tasty
cookies.
The project will be carried out Thursday and Heath
Methodist women are reminded to have their cookies at the
church by I p.m. so that they can be arranged on the plates and
delirered that day.
INTERESTED IN LEARNING how to do &lt;$air caning 'I
H you are, advise the Meigs Qlunty Extension Office. Jennifer SheeiS, extension agent, is hopeful of organizing a class in
caning to be taught by Clara Lochary who has lots of experience
in caning and has taught a number of courses.
The course, if there is enough interest, and by this we mean
six or seven or more, will be offered in the next few weeks. Two
or three lull day sessions would be required. Those enrolling
would, of course, have to have a chair to work on and the
necessary supplies could be ordered through Mrs. Lochary.
EULAH FRANCIS TELLS US that she will be doing some
craft work with the retarded children of the Meigs County
Classes. "Extras" like this can mean so much to the children.
Eulah will, of course, be needing project supplies, so if she calls
on you for assistance, be generous.
·
GARDEN CLUB MEMBERS TALKING Christmas flower
show at the COIIJ!Iy meeting Monday night applauded Mrs.
Robert Kuhn's suggestion for a time change. For a number of
years the show has been held on the weekend following Thanksgiving but it was Mrs. Kuhn's thought that since so many club
members either have company or go out of tnwn that weekend, it
would be better to hare it on the first weekend in December.
Certainly an addition to planned Regatta .events this year
will be the flower show of the county clubs. This will be the first
under garden club sponsorship. A small show was staged last
year by the Jaycees.
H things go well during the next few months, there's a good
possibility that an arts and crafis display will be held at· the
Meigs museum on Regatta Weekend. H these two events
materialize, and there's no reason why they won't, they should be
a real addition.

Eddy 's Travel Schedule
POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator.:~ schedule in Meigs
County through mid.June:
Monday - February 7;
March 6; AprillO; May 8; June
12 - Pagetown , 3:3().4 :15;
Harrisonville, 4:45-5 :30; Wolf
Pen, 6:30..7; Rutland Main,
7:30-8:30.
Tuesday - February 8 ·
March 7; Aprilll; May 9; June
13 - School Lot, 9:30..9:45;
Carpenter, 2:31J..3; Snowville,
3:30·3 :45; Darwin, 4-4:30 ;
At nold 's, 6: 15~ 7 : 30: BrownTown, 8-ll: 15.
Wednesday - February 9;
March 8; April 12; May 10;

June 14 - Rutland Park, 8-ll:30
(p.m. I.
Thursday - February 10;
March 9.; April 13; May 11;
June 15 - Catholic Cilurch, g.
9:15; Riverview, 9:45-11 :30;
Tuppers Plains, 12:30·3;
Elmwood, 3:30-4; Alfred, 4:154:45; Burlingham, 5:15-5 :30;
For~st Run , 7-7 :30; Five
PoiniS, 7:45-ll; State Garage,
8:10-8:30.
Friday - February 11;
March 10; April 14; May 12;
June 16 - Pomeroy Ele., 92:30; Pomeroy Library, 3-3:30;
Laurel Cliff, 4-5; Minersville, 67.

®~::::~:::::::::::::::-;::::::::::::::~!::::::::::?.;.:~:::~~:::~=:~=x:=~~-::::::~::::::::-':::=::x::::::~

I

Social Calendar

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SUNDAY
SENIOR
CITIZENS
meeting, 3 p.m. Sunday at the
United Methodist Church,
Pomeroy. (Meeting scheduled
lor last Sunday canc~lled due
to weather) .
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club, 7:30Monday night, home
uf Mrs. H. J. Russell, with Miss
Hallie Zerkle and Mrs. Rita
Hamm as co-hos·tesses .
Program on "The Romance of
Lucy Audubon" by Mrs.' Sibley
Slack. Members to take tray
favors for hospitals.
THEODORUS Council 17,
Daughters of America, 7:30
Monday night at the IOOF
Hall. Charl&lt;or to be draped for
Jessie Sisson. Valentine party
with refreshments of cookies
and coffee .
POMEROY GARDEN Club,
7:30 p. m. Monday, home ol
Mrs. L. C. Karr with Mrs.
Howard 'Nolan assisting
hostess. For roll call members
are to display a valentine
arrangement.
SALEM Center PTA, 7:30
Monday at school. Founders'
Day program by third graders
and Mrs . Ruby Vaughan,
;~iddie port , guest speaker.
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
Monday, 8 p.m. at temple.
Initiation for two candidates,
February birthdays will be
honored.
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club Director~ meeting,
7p.m. Monday at the Farmer's
Bank and siJVings Co.
MEIGS COUNTY , Order of
DeMolay, regula r mee ting,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Middleport Masonic Temple.
MEIGS HOSPITAL Commission annual meeting, 7:30
p.m. Monday, at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
TUESDAY
AMATEUR GARDEN Club
regular meeting, 8 p.m. ·
Wednesday, Colwnbia Gas Co.
uffice, Middleport, with "Bring
a Little Spice in Your Life" as
program topic.
EASTERN BAND Boosters,
Bp.m. Tuesday at high school.
Everyone welcome.
·
SYRACUSE PTA, Tuesday,
7:30p.m. ; panel discussion by
teachers, babysitters proviued.

TUESDAY
WSCS, Wesleyan United
Methodist Church, Racine,
special meeting, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. at church annex.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15
p.m. Tuesday at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room. Cultural program
on drama to be given by Mrs.
Iris Payne. Mrs. Doris Ewing,
Mrs. Annie Chapman, and Mrs.
Donna Nese will be hostesses.
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary, l.ewis Manley Post
263, 7 p.m. home of Mrs.
Virginia DeLegal.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, noon Wednesday at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday night at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs : Dana Lewis of
Clifton were Sunday dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson ·
and C. J . o( Letart, W. Va.
spent Saturday with Mr. and
Mr~. Charles Lawson.
Paul Sayre of Columbus
spent the weekend at his farm
and visited Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre.
David Sayre was returned
home
!rom
University
Hospital, Cohunbus, Thursday
by his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre.
Mr. and · Mrs. Paul Manuel
and Mrs. Carrie Roush were
business visitors in Marietta
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Manuel
and daughter of Logan spent
the weekend with the former 's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Manuel.
Mrs. Erma Wilson was a
Sundsydinner guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Butch Wilson. Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Hunt called on the

Vows .Taken in November

MIDqLEPORT - Miss
Chris line Bailey, daughter of
Mr. and Mr•. llichard Bailey,
Middlepdrt, and Mr. Gary
Sampson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Sampson, Parkersburg, W. Va. , exchanged
wedding vows in an afternoon
ceremony Nov. 20 al. the South
Parkersburg United Methodist
Church.
The Rev. l&gt;enzil Proudfoot
officiated at the double ring
ceremony . Selections by
Patricia Hamrick, organist,
included "The Lord's Prayer,"
"Theme from Love Story,".
"Theme from Romeo and
Julie~" and "Panis Angelius."
The 2:30p.m. ceremony was
. performed before an altar
decorated with two seven
branch candelabra, palms and
gold vases of gold,. bronze, and
yellow mums mixed with
wheat . White satin bows
marked the family' pews.
Escorted to the altar by her
father the bride was attired in
a gown of silk peau de soie
enhanced with r~mbroidered
alencon lace which was appliqued on the basque bodice
and edged the _standup
neckline. The long ful~ bishop
sleeves· fashioned with a wide
cuff were appliqued with lace

motifs forming a point over the
bride's hands.
Panels of scalloped lace
failing from the waistline to the
hemline were featured on the
floor length skirt. The back of
the gown was accented with
tiny covered buttons from the
neckline to the waistline and a
fl'l"ting panel with alencon
lace appliques extended from
the waistline to the hem.

standup neckline and deep
cu.lfs were edged with gold
print challis which makhed
the floor length skirt. Her .
headpiece was a gold French
chillon bow with a bouffant veil
of illusion.
I

The bride's other attendaniS
were Mrs. Ed Hetzer, Belpre,
and Mrs. Marilyn Hetzer,
Parkersburg, W. Va . Their
gowns were in identical styling
The bride's chapel length to the one worn by Mrs.
veil of silk illusion with a Cooper. They carried nosegays
blusher was edged with of gold, bronze and yellow
scalloped lace and was at- feather carnations with wheat
!ached to a french bow of peau accent.
de soie. She carried a bridal
Mr. Ed Hetzer, Belpre, a
bouquet of' white carnations cousin of the groom, was the
and roses with white ·satin best man. Mr. Rick, Deem,
streamers tied in lovers knots. · Parkersburg, W. Va. and Mr.
The bride wore a diamond Rick Bailey, brother of the
pendant, a gil\ of the groom. bride, Middleport, were the
Carrying out the tradition of ushers.
something old, the bride wore a
For her daughter's wedding,
cameo ring belonging to her Mrs. Bailey wore a three piece
grandmother. She ' wore royal blue knit suit with gray
borrowed white pearl earrings accessories and a corsage .of
and white lace garter trimmed pink carnations. Mrs. Sampson
in blue made by Mrs. C. H. was in a two piece pale gold
Wise, Jr., Waverly.
ensemble trimmed with fur
Mrs. Cathy Cooper, sister of and black a~d gold acthe bride, served as the matron cessories. She wore a corsage
of honor. Her gown was styled of pale gold carnations.'
with ·a gold chiffon bodice and
A reception honoring the
long lull bishop sleeves. The couple was held at the Holiday

Inn in Marietta immediately
following the ceremony. An
autumn theme was caqied out
with fall flower arrangements.
The three tiered wedding cake
was topped with two white
doves. Cathi Zusp~~n of New
Martinsville, W.Va. regi.!tered
the guests and the l!oiiday Inn
manager and department
heads presided at the tables.
For a wed\iing trip to the
' Pocono Mountains in Pennsylvania, the bride changed into a
pink sweater knit pan~o&gt; suit
with black accessories. The
couple reside at 2500 Harrison
Ave., Parkersburg.
The new Mrs. Sampson is a
1966 graduate of Middleport
High School, and a 1969
graduate of the St. Joseph
School of· .Nursing, Parkers·
burg. She is employed in the
coronary care unit of St.
Joseph Hospital.
Mr. Sampson graduated
from Parkersburg High SChool·
in 1965. He attended West
Uberty College two years,
served two years in the Marine
Corps, and is presently attending the Parkersburg
Community College while
employed
as
assistant
manager at the Holiday Inn in
Marietta.
·

'

Pe:rso?Zality Profile

BY ~ HOEFLIQt
Gardeners Club.
MlDDLEPORT - Wbl!ll Middleport
Working with her husband day In
)byor Jobn Zerkle appointed Mrs. and day out at Werner's Radio has been
JQhn ( A1wilda) Werner to a conunlttee a 10urce of enjoyment for both John and
'roMJ:ROY:_ Last Sunday Mn. Grace Vaqllan was at htr
~ lllvilorS to vulage Qlundl on lm· · Alwilda.
poll 8. teiCber of lbe YOIIIlller set allbe MiddJeporl PenteCOital
proW!c and beautifying the Yillage last
They enjoy togetherness! Alwllda
week, be knew·wblthe was dofug.
handles all of the clerical work, . does
&lt;llureh.
'
. . Alwll~ 'I p1111t pertorm~mce in civic part of the sales work, and listens to the
~· Vaupn was explaining to the chUclreo the need for
afflln and organlzallolll bas all the problems and complaints which come
Gochrhen -18 ID. She noted that "call on God and he w1U help."
IDII'Idnp.ot not only her teen Interest . their way, ~e John takes care of the
. · One}'Oqlllr,~
It all. in, asked ''wbat'ablanumtier"?
·;
l
.
. .
inlilllklnll Middleport •'tl!e best place in rest of the business.
'
the wwld to live," but~ her tremenThe work arrangement started ·23
liPEAKlNG OF ILLNESS, we are rfllilinded that LarrY
·c1oua
ability
to
get
a
job
done.
years
ago when the couple exchanged
Morriloll, •pilltant superintendent at Melp HJch School, un·
Conscientious and capable, wedding vows.
der'Went 'majol' IIW'gery . Wednesday at Unlreralty ·Hospital;
Alwilda
Ia' a ''Juitural" for Jeadenhip.
HoJne was the apartment over the
. Qllumbul. We lincerely hope Larry has a· speedy recovery.
In a1moa1 an cl the church civic and store up unUllut April when lhe genial
There 18 no doobt•.bout It he la.one fine periOD.
profl!llllional organizations fA{ Which she oouple moved lntn their !lpllclOIIS and
'.
belonp, abe Ia an officer. ·
beautiful new house at 915 park St.
We learned thiB week Uiat Howard Rouah d. Mansfield,
'1\1 the Middleport First Baptist Gracious hosts, they enjoy oothlng
formerly Ill the Racine area, Is confined at Mansfield Gcinerlll
Church where abe and John ·are very . incire ~ et)tertalnlng grou)lll In the
, ~Ita~ His !!If~, Betty, wrote that he underwent major IIW'gl!ry
active, Alwilda serves as chainnan of paneled recreation room.
early in December lild was ·only home for a short time when he
the Board of Deaconesses and is
· Endowed with . a good sense of
had to agabi enter lht hoapltal.
'
president of both the B. H.' Sanborn. humor, Alwilda describes herself as
·
.. Betty a111o bu been ID &amp;pel had to retire from the teaching
Misilonary Soctety and the Hearth· !'just an old country girl from the
ALWILDA WEllNER
profession. We certainly'bope things begin to "look up" soon, The
stone Sunday School Class.
.
sticks." She was born n~ RuUand and
best tD you both. Tho'" wishing to rtme~~~ber Howard biB rocm
She is a past president and· now had her ·first eight years of education In
•.
number 18 320,
treallllHr of lhe Middleport Business a one room schoolhouse. After
AI wilda likes to be busy. She eojoys ~
and Profeulonal Women's Club and graduating from high school she ·
'mE' 0100 DtP
of Highway Safety advises . ~." several years ago was selected comple.ted a business course at ke!!J)ing house and puttering around
drivers IQ allow several extra car lengths for winter driving. At ~ "Woman of the Year" in recognition of Moulltam Slate Business &lt;:oUege. The outside, but like most working women :~
:;::
her significant contributions tn the club next few years she spent m Parkers- finds time for hobbies very limited.
only :Ill~ per hour, a rout,lne stop requires two car lengths tD
She's concerned about others less ~~
program.
·
burg, working at one time for the for·
stop'safely. .
fortunate, and expresses her desire to ::::
.,..
Alwilda ia alllo treasiU'er and mer Elberfeld Department Store there
Driving at 60 miles per hour requires 15 car lengths-to stop. ·
spread
a
little
sunshine
as
she
goe5
:::=
. serveaontheboirdollheMelpCounty, managed by Robert Elberfeld. She
Good drivers alw~ys allow adequate safe clearance on an sides.
along life's way by doing something ::!
Chapter of the Amern:lll Red Cross, returned to Meiga County when she
Panlcstopsarehardon your brakea,your tires, your nerves, and
special
for som~ne erery day.
~~
, . and actire in the Middleport Amateur married John.
sometimes yoiU' length of life.
.
~
-~ ~·:;s::~'(m'"&lt;t*
V 0ul*"=*"NoYh
......:.:·:
...O•:o!o'o'..o!&gt;!o!o:o..'o'o:o!o'o'•...o!- • -• • • • " :
·.·.··=-·:·:·.-•..-.·.·.·.···.· ·•·••· O:OC
. .. .
.. *"'" •.!
nnu .•.w~;.o;.r.-;
•• ...
~:•'O:.Y.O
.o,; .v.r..o;o•• ;..;.o;.o•..,.• • n.-•• .-.~ ~
'

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AR~NT

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Sampson

§ :,

effective school programs and
teacher relations.
He conveyed to the
Association his. desire to be of
assistance to the teachers and
invited them to call on him
when problems arise . He said

that it is his general policy to
get ali the pertinent inlormation and evaluate it
before making a decision and
that this will be his method of
handling school business. He
answered questions regarding

Congregation Elects Vestrymen
POMEROY - Vestrymen
were elected and delegates and
alternates to the convention of
the Southern Diocese were
narrled at a congregational
meeting held at Grace
Episcopal Church .
Vestrymen elected include

Rome Williamson, senior
warden; Theodore T. Reed,
Jr :, junior warden; Dale
Dutton, Aaron K. Kelton, three
year terms to the vestry ; Mrs.
Ann Chapman, two year term
on the vestry, and Tom Reed,
youth vestryman lor one year.

Club Elects New President
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs.
Juanita Bachtel is the n&lt;w
president of the Middleport
Literary Club following a
,meeting Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Dwight Wallace.
Other new officers elected
were Mrs. Emerson Jones,
vice president; Mrs. Wallace,
secrelary, and Mrs. M. L.
French, treasurer.
Mrs. Richard Owen, retiring
president, gave the nominating
report. Mrs. C. M. Hennesy will
host the meeting on Feb. 16.
Mrs.
ArthUr
Strauss
reviewed the "White Dawn" by
James Huston, a story of three
men rescued from the sea by
Eskimos who nurtured them
back to health and the

Veterans Memorial Hospital
FRIDAY DISCHARGES Sandra Floccari, Leora
Zwilling, Etta Custer, Ethel
Smith, Daisy Glassburn,
Michael Harris, Ryan Evans,
Larry Salser.

Wilsons in the afternoon.
Richard Wilso_n of Detroit,
Michigan spent the weekend
with his brother, Mr. and Mrs.
Butch Wilson, and his mother,
Mrs. Erma Wilson.

struggles of the long, hard
winter
when
misunderstandings and problems
with the women develop.
The 14 members attending
answered roll call with a
response on the book .
Homemade candy and coffee
were served.

the salary schedule and increments asked by the
teachers .
Mrs. Chiorus Grimm
reported to the group on the
Ohio Education Association
convenUon which she attended
in Columbus in December. She
explained the inner workings of
the OEA and told of the hours
devoted by the staff and the
accomplishments during the
pasti yekr. She said that it is
necessary for the smaller
districts to cooperat~ and work
together in order to compete
with the larger districiS obtaining passage of necessary
policy making decisions.
In her report Mrs. Grimm
listed some of the services
rendered by the OEA during
the past year. These included
65 0~. ,spqnsore~sonleren~es o~,
and worksbops~eld, wif11. 2J,OOO • .
teachers attendil,lg; ,oYer, one
million miles driven to provide
direct service to individual

Other members are Leo Story,
Mrs. Thereon Johnson, Mrs. J.
0 . Roedel, treasurer, and Mrs.
Wilma Sargent, secretary.
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore T.
Reed, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs.
Aaron K. Kelton were named
delegates to the convention to
be held in May at Cincinnati.
Alternates named are Norbert
Compton, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Moore and Mrs. Helen Hayes.
Making up the nominating
committee were Leo Story,
Norbert Compton, Iris Kelton
and Morton Titus. A coffee
hour was held during which
time the birthdays of Mrs. J. 0.
SEMINARS SET
Roedel and Mrs. Fred Crow,
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Jr ., were observed with a cake Ohio Department of Liquor
baked by Mrs. J. E. D. Har· Control announced Saturday
linger being served.
that investigators from its
Enforcement and Beer and
Wine Divisions would participate in two seminars on
Howard Thoma and Patricia. druguseandabuseFeb. 7,8, 15
They also visited Mr. and Mrs. and 16 here by the Bureau of
Harley T. Johnson.
Narcotics and Agents of the
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, U.S. Department of Justice.
Kail, Kevin and Charles, were
Sunday evening visitor of his
· KILLEDBYTRUCK
aunt, Mrs. Henry Baird and
TOLEDO (UPI) - A city
mother, Mrs. Lena Knapp of employe was killed when a
Gallipolis.
truck backed over him in the
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy garage where salt trucks were
of Columbus were recent kept late Wednesday. Police
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul said John Lipkowski, SO, was
McElroy. Bill McElroy was checking the rear of one salt
also a
visitor.
hit him.
truck when

·members and the assa&lt;;iatlon;
3,400 requesiS for materials
and publications answered;
direct field service in 278
successful salary negotiations; .
200 requests ·for assistan·ce in
teacher contract cases; spent
$25,000 in legal dissents for 30
educators, and $28,000 in direct
support of local associations.
Mrs. Grimm played a tape of
highlights of the convention
including the adoption ol
several resolutions and e~­
cerpts from talks by William C.
McDonald,OEA president, and
Gov . John Gilligan.
Mrs.
Erma
McClurg
presided at the meeting. In her
opening welcome to the
teachers she compared the
profession to salt, a product
which brings out the true flavor
or food: .Sl]e , 1!3i~ . ~1 \l!e.,,
re~pons1bil1ty of ';""ch~rs is to
bp~g o~tl!!e \lest IO·~Nidren as well as the people m a com-

ouDLErs
Breath Spr!ng.
BOUQUET

Put A Touch of Spring

1

Your Life..

ss.95 Delivered

,,

Serving: Midclloport,
· ' l!omeroy ,.GellipoHs.-0. •
Mason Co., W.Va.

_, ·

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• 7·Pc. Dinette

.,
'1

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Se~\ ............. 711.()()
'

,&lt;

$3.99

.-------:-.···· ~
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THE SHOE BOX

Sets .............. 44.00

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It's a beautiful

SAVE EVERY DAY
AT

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with a gift of flowers.

GAS - OIL- ELECTRIC

·

•FREE ESTIMATES
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eEASY TERMS
.SALES ~D SE~VICE

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
MiDDLEPOR r, 0.

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Eleanor Hoover; secretary,
Doris .Carder ; treasurer,
Bernice May, and news
reporter, Paula Haynes .
Improvements for the
Christian youth camp at
Bedford will be one of the
projectS of the group. Refresh·
ments were served to the ladies
followihg t,he meeting.
The next meeting will he
March 23, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Bradford Church of Christ. All
women of the Meigs Qlunty
Churches of Christ are invited.

:, · · , "·. '"" . Polly's .Problem

BAKED LOUISIANA YAMS
WITH SAVORY TOPPING
6 medium I.Joulslana
yam a
1 cup chopped mushrooms,
about ''•·pound
'k cup chopped onion
2 tablespoons butter or

margarl~e

'!, cup chopped parsley

6 slices erlsp-eooked
bacon. crumbled
Salt
Pepper
1/4

cup butter or
margarine, melted
Hot mllk {about 14 -eupl

···''Wil&lt;M&gt;·'"'"uJ&amp;te

''

DEAR POLLY- There is a mold or stain on my
W mahogany-colored spinet pi~no caused !rom hands
;~ and arms touching it. We live in a damp climate on
~ the coast which may also have somethinl! to do with
\. this. How do I remove this discoloration?-MRS. N.
B. M.
.·

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DEAR POLLY - Surely Rose could' wash her plastic slipcovers as I do my shower curtains. ·1 put one cup of water
conditioner in the washer and ,they come out sparkling
clean with no water spots or film. (PoUy~ • note-Use only
lukewarm water for plastic and spread it out to dry.IR R.
'
DEAR POLLY- For 21k years 1 have cleaned my plastic
slipcovers by saturating cheesecloth with spray lurniture
polish and this has kept them in such good condition I
have received many compliments. Rub gently and the
polish leaves them very soft and pliable.-LILLIAN
DEAR POLLY- When making a cake from a boxed
mix, empty contents of the
plastic bag into a bowl and
then slip the bag over your
hand while g,r ea s ing the
cake pan . No more messy
hands.-MRS. L. R. McK.
DEAR POLLY- To keep
my wig from slipping and
hairs from straying out
!rom under it, I first put
on two sheer hair nets in
opposite directions.
When ironing , button the
two sleeves of a iong.sleeved shirt or blouse together to
keep them !rom dragg ing on the floor .
By unscrewing and removing the plastic handle, an old
skillet can give double service as a baking pan.
We repaired two parchment lampshades on which the
top edging was cracked and peeling off by completely
removin~ the edging and replacing it with self-stick
gold bra1d. The braid was pressed to the outside or the
top of the shades, folded over the metal rim, then pressed
t by hand ) to the inside. Otherwise, these shades were in
good condition. With the new gold braid at the tops they
actually look better than when new.-PAULE'ITE
(NEWSPAPER ENnlti'RISE ASSN.)

Yo11 wm reeelve a doUar If Polly uses your favorite
bomejllaldag Idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's Problem or aolutlon
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newapaper.

TENDRILS TRICK
Wlapy tendrils are verv
feminine artd romantic-looking. Unfortunately, with fine
hair they're somewhat hard
to set. II you have this prob·
lem, simply roll a quilted
oven 15 minutes. Lower tern. cosmetic pad Into a little bol.
perature to 375 degrees and
bake 45 minutes or until
tender. Meanwhile, saute
mushrooms and onion in · 2
tablespoons butt e r until
onion .is tender: stir . in parsley, bacon, 1 1~ -teaspoon sa1l
and dash pepper . Score baked
yams lengthwise and crosswise and scoop out yam centers, leaving 'I• ·inch shells.
Mash yams: add 1If• tea·
spoons salt , dash pepper,
melted butter and hot milk.
Whip well, adding a little
more hot milk, if desired.
Spoon whipped yams into
shells and top each with
some of mushroom-bacon
mixture. Place on a baking
sheet and heat in a 375-de·
gree oven·15 minutes. Makes
6 servings.
'.

ster and wind the tendril
around tt. Hold the pad In
place with tape or balr clip,
A great trick, especially for
revltullzlng hair that has
wilted from the weather or
strenuous acllvlty.

Super Duper

lace Up

BAKER FURNITURE
I

DEUVERY.

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Apple Grove

Langsville
Mrs. Shelia Fetty is ill with
mumps.
Mrs. Glenna Fetty called on
· Mrs. Jessie Sansbury and her
mother, Rose Moler, at the
home of Mrs. Sansbury's son,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Sansbury of
Middleport. She reports Mrs.
Rose Moler is in poor health.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Wright have been medical
patients at O'Bleness Hospital
in Athens but are now at their
home and doing nicely. Mr.
Wright is taking treatment at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr
and son, Shawn, of Oak Hlil
called on tbeir parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Alpha Barr Sunday
afternoon . Mike Barr of
Glenville State COllege also
spent the weekend at home.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Willcox
are home after vacationing in
Florida and visiting her cousin,
Mrs. Helen Graham or Naples, .
Fla., They also visited at Key
West.
Ronnie Gorby of Marietta
spent Saturday with his
parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Black
and children spent Sunday
.vlaiting with Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Barr and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
children spent a day "this week
with her grandpareniS·, Mr.
and Mrs . Harley Johnson,
Pomeroy R. D.
Mrs. Roy Sigman and Mrs.
Pauline Gorby called on Mr.
and Mrs. Alpha Barr recently.

News, Events
Mrs. Iva Orr spent Sunday
afternoon with Mrs. Mattie
Circle at Racine.
Herbert Roush called on his
mother, Mrs. Edna Roush, at
Racine Sunday.
Mr . and Mrs. Roger Manuel
and new daughter, Angela
Michelle, have returned to
their home at Racine after
spending a few days with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Roush .
Mr . Ray Byers of Tanners
Run was taken by ambulance
to Holzer Medical Center
Sunday and admitted as, a
medical patient.

Acity or county lace up that's a natural for all
your favorite fashion get·ups. White crepe sole
and heel. Green suede with·white leather trim.
A real news maker at a soft price.

Middle of the Upper Block

Open Friday Nights
" Hawaii Ponoi 1My Ha·
waii l" . is the official stale
song of Hawaii.

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POMEROY, OHIO

:rn'

Open All Day Thursdays

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ALL ROADS LEAD TO

BAHR CLOTHIERS
N. Second Ave.

Middleport, 0 •
t

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• ·F1oor Lamps ...!····················· 9.98

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, Where Shoes Are Sensibly Priced I
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

BRADBURY - The first
meeting ol the Women's
Fellowship was held Thursday
evening at the Bradbury
Church of Christ. Members of
the Meigs County area
Churches or' Christ were
present for the devotional and
song service which was
presented by the women of the
Bradbury church.
of
An e1ec11on
officers was
held 'th lhe f II . be'
. wt
o owmg 1ng
elected, president, Merle
Johns.on; vice president,

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve concerns those roughedged zippers that ate put on clothing made for. new·
born babfes. My inla. t has an outfit with a zipper in the
neck that is rough e ~ ugh to cut a finger . At first I could
not Figure out why liaby cried every time I put this outrit
on him.-MRS. R. M. H.
.

15.00

BuY-B~ FOR BABY!

WHITE
SIZE: 0 THRU 4

Fellowship Elects Officers

Bake yams in 400·degree

' .

Let her

.

........ ••••• • ••••••

BE.

'J

simply wonderful

• • ••

CHECK THESE PRICES/

GO AHEAD ... BE SENTIMENTAL

know she's

• •••

•,"·.·N..0 T.ICE

FROM
-. 'RUARY 1·1, 1972
FE
MAR(JI 9, 1972.

Wolfpen News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
of Albany and Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Russell of Columbus were
Sunday afternoon visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mr . and Mrs. Eugene
Haning, Rhonda and Ronald,
were Sunday afternoon visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves,
Linda, and g~and s on, Bryan
Lee.
Mrs. Harold Gillogly of
Albany was a Monday visitor of
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mrs. Eva Knopp, Mrs.
Wanda Capp and a friend of
West Columbus were Saturday
evening visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mrs. Howard Thoma and
Mrs. Harley T. Johnson were
recent visitors of Mrs. Minnie
Bengel of Pomeroy .
Mr. and Mrs. Larry.Barr and
family of Rutland were recent
visitors of Mr . and Mrs.

•

By POLLY CRAMER

Ch
.
h
n
Vams ange t e race

of

&amp;

..

MINI TRAVEL W.AROROBE
Designer ,Giorgio Di SanPOMEROY- The Pioneers was caller for the group.
tangelo has a new travel/
of Marietta, the Promenairs of Having brought three squares
resort weekend wardrobe
Graod Squares
Parkersburg, W. Va., Square with them,
that !its in a tiny envelope.
Naders of Belpre, and the retrieved
their banner
It includes a two·piece swim·
suit, ti~hts, a tunic and
Grande Squares of Gallipolls previously won by the Belles
wrap
sk1rt. The price is high,
were guests at the Saturday and Beaus and took the
but
by
the time slimmer rolls
night dance of the Belles and president's shirt since th·e .
around,
moderately priced
Beaus held at Royal Oak Park. Belles and Beall!l' banner had
versions of the travel wardCecil Sayre of Letart, W.Va. ~rller been. taken by the
MIDDLEPORT _ Mr. and robe envelope should be
Square !'laders.
.
available. - e v e r y t h i n g
Mem~rs report that visitors Mrs. Albert Gooden of wrinkle-proof, ol course. ·
are welcome tn any of the open Colwnbus are announcing . the
PARTY GIVEN NEPHEW
dances or any of the regular engagement .and approacblng
The Maltese c r o s s has
. t It a ·
MIDI;ILEPORT - Mr. and Thursday nighL dances. The marriage of their daughter, . ht h
elg
s arp pom s.
w'
Mrs. Bukh Brinker of Mid· next open dance will be 80• Cheryl Sue, to Mr. Jqn Michael used as an emblem by an
dleport entertained Friday nounced.
·
Cunningham, son d. Mr. and order of knights of the Mid·.
·
evening with a party honoring
Mrs. 'Raymond CUI!ningham, die Ages.
Tony Salser on his ninth birth·
Middleport.
day:Tonyisthebrotherof.Mrs.
The open church wedding
.
Brinker.Attendingtheparty
TIETIP ·
/ wlll .beaneventofFeb.1~at _
were Mrs. Mildred Hubbard,
h b d' .
6:30 p.m. at the Heath Umted ~ •
Mr. and Mrs. v;raiJ Dill, Miss
Borrow your. u~ ~n s ttes Methodist Church Middleport. ·
-D
for the man-tailored . look
'
Crystal Manley, David Hub, that goes with the blazer
Mrs. Chester Erwin · ":UI
bard and Mark Salser. Gifts jacket and pa,nts. Or better present a program of nuptial
By AILEEN CLAI.R E_
were .presented to the honoreq yet, get hold of one of the mulde
preceding
the
NEA Food Editor
guest. Calte · ice cream jello easy tie-making patterns and ceremony. Officiating wUI be
·
and Kool-Ald were 1111rv~:
• ake his and her ties.
the·. Rev. R~rt BumgiU'JIOI'.
Cured , ya~~ are .exce11en1
111
hw u. ~ , 11., . _,,.
. 1' "I ··;. ,. · • ' !\ · ""'t · Milislt!et!IY'cililiilpiham; sister' \ bakers an? maltea·c~ange·of·
. .. . . . . . . . . .~-. .- - - -·- - , _• .,._.,. of the .groomoelect, )will serve · pace -taste .w1th . your fa-.:ot·
as mllid of honor, arid the best 1te meats m wmter . :ams
man will be Mr. Alan Ray ma.y be topped .with an mter•
~W· ILL
·
•
Cunningham. Mr. Paul Cun· estmg sauce, similar to sour
· q\
J;'•
ningham and Mr. Leland cream or other favorite top·
'
· ~ Brown will be the ushers.
pmgs noriMIIy thought of
M ~ED
when servmg baked pota·
,;..&amp;..v,;, ·
,
toes . Surprise the family
o'
PINS AND PENDAN'Jl§
with the interesting combinaA sort of agile grace fs tion or the sweet moistness
'
.
·
yours with new pins and pen· of yams w h i p p e d and
T()
dants in the form of ballet spooned back into shell,
ligures. Let the pin dangle topped with a combination or
from a chain around your mushrooms, onion . parsley .
1
• i
neck as an interesting effect. bacon.
,
,

munity.
Committees appointed were
'Leah Ord, Ruth Steams, Betty
Wllso~, Duane Wolfe and Greg
Baile~, negotiating; Robert
Beegle, Howard Nolan, and
Rogerl Roush, nominating.
Mrs. g1ma Louks, Syracuse,
was program . chairman.
RefreshmeniS were served by
the Racine · Grade School
teachers.

Du~W~ ,FJo!.ist

•

Belles &amp; BeausHave Guests .
Cheryl Sue
ihe
GQoden to
be :Wed

Teachers, Board President Discuss School Issues
RACINE ~ David Nease,
president of the Southern Local
School Board, met with the
Southern Local Education
Association Thursday night ·at
Southern High School here to
discuss matters relevant to

Rough Zippers
Irritate Bahy

By Katie Crow

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Katie's Korner

~

Frigldaire-Admlrai·Hoover·Speed Ouee'n·Flexsleel!

.MIDDlEPORT, ·OHIO .

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,..__OONVE---.NIENT

TERMS

IIABY ltli\'GS
Bab~· rings that no lonl(er
!It c·un still prove luncttonul
und attrucllve. Use one as o
lh• •llch· lor those aHro&gt;ctlvt• ·
upachl· !'icar\" I'S ur lunf!
US.~ FU L

shoulder st•arvt.•s.

.2 0% to 50%
On Famous Brand Nam~ Clothing - .•

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For Men and Women

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10 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6, 1972
~~.:. .. Co c. :00.00: '•'•'• .·.·.·..·.. ·.·...... ·-::....... ·.• ·.·.·.··:.· .··:·.·,·.··.··•,•,•••,•,-.•,•,

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.lJ-lbe Slllday Times· Seminel, &amp;mdaJ, Feb. I, lfl2
.

,.·,·.·,·,·,·.·•• ·.·.••.. ·•·· .. ·., ·.v ...·.·,···,·,,·.·,·.· ·.··•.•• ..·.o.· .· .•••. '-•:- •..•··.•.. '

••

POLL\.,S POINTERS

I

Community
B .
·Corner clarlene Hoeflich
POMEROY - It happena JNery year I
Women of Heath Methodist Church bake dozens and dozens
of co&lt;ikies to carry o.ut thelf annual "heartline" valentine
project. About 60 Middleport shut-ins and senior citizens, along
with the children at the Meigs C&lt;lunty Home and the folks at the
Infirmary will be remembered with decorated plates of tasty
cookies.
The project will be carried out Thursday and Heath
Methodist women are reminded to have their cookies at the
church by I p.m. so that they can be arranged on the plates and
delirered that day.
INTERESTED IN LEARNING how to do &lt;$air caning 'I
H you are, advise the Meigs Qlunty Extension Office. Jennifer SheeiS, extension agent, is hopeful of organizing a class in
caning to be taught by Clara Lochary who has lots of experience
in caning and has taught a number of courses.
The course, if there is enough interest, and by this we mean
six or seven or more, will be offered in the next few weeks. Two
or three lull day sessions would be required. Those enrolling
would, of course, have to have a chair to work on and the
necessary supplies could be ordered through Mrs. Lochary.
EULAH FRANCIS TELLS US that she will be doing some
craft work with the retarded children of the Meigs County
Classes. "Extras" like this can mean so much to the children.
Eulah will, of course, be needing project supplies, so if she calls
on you for assistance, be generous.
·
GARDEN CLUB MEMBERS TALKING Christmas flower
show at the COIIJ!Iy meeting Monday night applauded Mrs.
Robert Kuhn's suggestion for a time change. For a number of
years the show has been held on the weekend following Thanksgiving but it was Mrs. Kuhn's thought that since so many club
members either have company or go out of tnwn that weekend, it
would be better to hare it on the first weekend in December.
Certainly an addition to planned Regatta .events this year
will be the flower show of the county clubs. This will be the first
under garden club sponsorship. A small show was staged last
year by the Jaycees.
H things go well during the next few months, there's a good
possibility that an arts and crafis display will be held at· the
Meigs museum on Regatta Weekend. H these two events
materialize, and there's no reason why they won't, they should be
a real addition.

Eddy 's Travel Schedule
POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator.:~ schedule in Meigs
County through mid.June:
Monday - February 7;
March 6; AprillO; May 8; June
12 - Pagetown , 3:3().4 :15;
Harrisonville, 4:45-5 :30; Wolf
Pen, 6:30..7; Rutland Main,
7:30-8:30.
Tuesday - February 8 ·
March 7; Aprilll; May 9; June
13 - School Lot, 9:30..9:45;
Carpenter, 2:31J..3; Snowville,
3:30·3 :45; Darwin, 4-4:30 ;
At nold 's, 6: 15~ 7 : 30: BrownTown, 8-ll: 15.
Wednesday - February 9;
March 8; April 12; May 10;

June 14 - Rutland Park, 8-ll:30
(p.m. I.
Thursday - February 10;
March 9.; April 13; May 11;
June 15 - Catholic Cilurch, g.
9:15; Riverview, 9:45-11 :30;
Tuppers Plains, 12:30·3;
Elmwood, 3:30-4; Alfred, 4:154:45; Burlingham, 5:15-5 :30;
For~st Run , 7-7 :30; Five
PoiniS, 7:45-ll; State Garage,
8:10-8:30.
Friday - February 11;
March 10; April 14; May 12;
June 16 - Pomeroy Ele., 92:30; Pomeroy Library, 3-3:30;
Laurel Cliff, 4-5; Minersville, 67.

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I

Social Calendar

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SUNDAY
SENIOR
CITIZENS
meeting, 3 p.m. Sunday at the
United Methodist Church,
Pomeroy. (Meeting scheduled
lor last Sunday canc~lled due
to weather) .
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club, 7:30Monday night, home
uf Mrs. H. J. Russell, with Miss
Hallie Zerkle and Mrs. Rita
Hamm as co-hos·tesses .
Program on "The Romance of
Lucy Audubon" by Mrs.' Sibley
Slack. Members to take tray
favors for hospitals.
THEODORUS Council 17,
Daughters of America, 7:30
Monday night at the IOOF
Hall. Charl&lt;or to be draped for
Jessie Sisson. Valentine party
with refreshments of cookies
and coffee .
POMEROY GARDEN Club,
7:30 p. m. Monday, home ol
Mrs. L. C. Karr with Mrs.
Howard 'Nolan assisting
hostess. For roll call members
are to display a valentine
arrangement.
SALEM Center PTA, 7:30
Monday at school. Founders'
Day program by third graders
and Mrs . Ruby Vaughan,
;~iddie port , guest speaker.
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
Monday, 8 p.m. at temple.
Initiation for two candidates,
February birthdays will be
honored.
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club Director~ meeting,
7p.m. Monday at the Farmer's
Bank and siJVings Co.
MEIGS COUNTY , Order of
DeMolay, regula r mee ting,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Middleport Masonic Temple.
MEIGS HOSPITAL Commission annual meeting, 7:30
p.m. Monday, at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
TUESDAY
AMATEUR GARDEN Club
regular meeting, 8 p.m. ·
Wednesday, Colwnbia Gas Co.
uffice, Middleport, with "Bring
a Little Spice in Your Life" as
program topic.
EASTERN BAND Boosters,
Bp.m. Tuesday at high school.
Everyone welcome.
·
SYRACUSE PTA, Tuesday,
7:30p.m. ; panel discussion by
teachers, babysitters proviued.

TUESDAY
WSCS, Wesleyan United
Methodist Church, Racine,
special meeting, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. at church annex.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15
p.m. Tuesday at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room. Cultural program
on drama to be given by Mrs.
Iris Payne. Mrs. Doris Ewing,
Mrs. Annie Chapman, and Mrs.
Donna Nese will be hostesses.
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary, l.ewis Manley Post
263, 7 p.m. home of Mrs.
Virginia DeLegal.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, noon Wednesday at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday night at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs : Dana Lewis of
Clifton were Sunday dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson ·
and C. J . o( Letart, W. Va.
spent Saturday with Mr. and
Mr~. Charles Lawson.
Paul Sayre of Columbus
spent the weekend at his farm
and visited Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre.
David Sayre was returned
home
!rom
University
Hospital, Cohunbus, Thursday
by his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre.
Mr. and · Mrs. Paul Manuel
and Mrs. Carrie Roush were
business visitors in Marietta
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Manuel
and daughter of Logan spent
the weekend with the former 's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Manuel.
Mrs. Erma Wilson was a
Sundsydinner guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Butch Wilson. Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Hunt called on the

Vows .Taken in November

MIDqLEPORT - Miss
Chris line Bailey, daughter of
Mr. and Mr•. llichard Bailey,
Middlepdrt, and Mr. Gary
Sampson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Sampson, Parkersburg, W. Va. , exchanged
wedding vows in an afternoon
ceremony Nov. 20 al. the South
Parkersburg United Methodist
Church.
The Rev. l&gt;enzil Proudfoot
officiated at the double ring
ceremony . Selections by
Patricia Hamrick, organist,
included "The Lord's Prayer,"
"Theme from Love Story,".
"Theme from Romeo and
Julie~" and "Panis Angelius."
The 2:30p.m. ceremony was
. performed before an altar
decorated with two seven
branch candelabra, palms and
gold vases of gold,. bronze, and
yellow mums mixed with
wheat . White satin bows
marked the family' pews.
Escorted to the altar by her
father the bride was attired in
a gown of silk peau de soie
enhanced with r~mbroidered
alencon lace which was appliqued on the basque bodice
and edged the _standup
neckline. The long ful~ bishop
sleeves· fashioned with a wide
cuff were appliqued with lace

motifs forming a point over the
bride's hands.
Panels of scalloped lace
failing from the waistline to the
hemline were featured on the
floor length skirt. The back of
the gown was accented with
tiny covered buttons from the
neckline to the waistline and a
fl'l"ting panel with alencon
lace appliques extended from
the waistline to the hem.

standup neckline and deep
cu.lfs were edged with gold
print challis which makhed
the floor length skirt. Her .
headpiece was a gold French
chillon bow with a bouffant veil
of illusion.
I

The bride's other attendaniS
were Mrs. Ed Hetzer, Belpre,
and Mrs. Marilyn Hetzer,
Parkersburg, W. Va . Their
gowns were in identical styling
The bride's chapel length to the one worn by Mrs.
veil of silk illusion with a Cooper. They carried nosegays
blusher was edged with of gold, bronze and yellow
scalloped lace and was at- feather carnations with wheat
!ached to a french bow of peau accent.
de soie. She carried a bridal
Mr. Ed Hetzer, Belpre, a
bouquet of' white carnations cousin of the groom, was the
and roses with white ·satin best man. Mr. Rick, Deem,
streamers tied in lovers knots. · Parkersburg, W. Va. and Mr.
The bride wore a diamond Rick Bailey, brother of the
pendant, a gil\ of the groom. bride, Middleport, were the
Carrying out the tradition of ushers.
something old, the bride wore a
For her daughter's wedding,
cameo ring belonging to her Mrs. Bailey wore a three piece
grandmother. She ' wore royal blue knit suit with gray
borrowed white pearl earrings accessories and a corsage .of
and white lace garter trimmed pink carnations. Mrs. Sampson
in blue made by Mrs. C. H. was in a two piece pale gold
Wise, Jr., Waverly.
ensemble trimmed with fur
Mrs. Cathy Cooper, sister of and black a~d gold acthe bride, served as the matron cessories. She wore a corsage
of honor. Her gown was styled of pale gold carnations.'
with ·a gold chiffon bodice and
A reception honoring the
long lull bishop sleeves. The couple was held at the Holiday

Inn in Marietta immediately
following the ceremony. An
autumn theme was caqied out
with fall flower arrangements.
The three tiered wedding cake
was topped with two white
doves. Cathi Zusp~~n of New
Martinsville, W.Va. regi.!tered
the guests and the l!oiiday Inn
manager and department
heads presided at the tables.
For a wed\iing trip to the
' Pocono Mountains in Pennsylvania, the bride changed into a
pink sweater knit pan~o&gt; suit
with black accessories. The
couple reside at 2500 Harrison
Ave., Parkersburg.
The new Mrs. Sampson is a
1966 graduate of Middleport
High School, and a 1969
graduate of the St. Joseph
School of· .Nursing, Parkers·
burg. She is employed in the
coronary care unit of St.
Joseph Hospital.
Mr. Sampson graduated
from Parkersburg High SChool·
in 1965. He attended West
Uberty College two years,
served two years in the Marine
Corps, and is presently attending the Parkersburg
Community College while
employed
as
assistant
manager at the Holiday Inn in
Marietta.
·

'

Pe:rso?Zality Profile

BY ~ HOEFLIQt
Gardeners Club.
MlDDLEPORT - Wbl!ll Middleport
Working with her husband day In
)byor Jobn Zerkle appointed Mrs. and day out at Werner's Radio has been
JQhn ( A1wilda) Werner to a conunlttee a 10urce of enjoyment for both John and
'roMJ:ROY:_ Last Sunday Mn. Grace Vaqllan was at htr
~ lllvilorS to vulage Qlundl on lm· · Alwilda.
poll 8. teiCber of lbe YOIIIlller set allbe MiddJeporl PenteCOital
proW!c and beautifying the Yillage last
They enjoy togetherness! Alwllda
week, be knew·wblthe was dofug.
handles all of the clerical work, . does
&lt;llureh.
'
. . Alwll~ 'I p1111t pertorm~mce in civic part of the sales work, and listens to the
~· Vaupn was explaining to the chUclreo the need for
afflln and organlzallolll bas all the problems and complaints which come
Gochrhen -18 ID. She noted that "call on God and he w1U help."
IDII'Idnp.ot not only her teen Interest . their way, ~e John takes care of the
. · One}'Oqlllr,~
It all. in, asked ''wbat'ablanumtier"?
·;
l
.
. .
inlilllklnll Middleport •'tl!e best place in rest of the business.
'
the wwld to live," but~ her tremenThe work arrangement started ·23
liPEAKlNG OF ILLNESS, we are rfllilinded that LarrY
·c1oua
ability
to
get
a
job
done.
years
ago when the couple exchanged
Morriloll, •pilltant superintendent at Melp HJch School, un·
Conscientious and capable, wedding vows.
der'Went 'majol' IIW'gery . Wednesday at Unlreralty ·Hospital;
Alwilda
Ia' a ''Juitural" for Jeadenhip.
HoJne was the apartment over the
. Qllumbul. We lincerely hope Larry has a· speedy recovery.
In a1moa1 an cl the church civic and store up unUllut April when lhe genial
There 18 no doobt•.bout It he la.one fine periOD.
profl!llllional organizations fA{ Which she oouple moved lntn their !lpllclOIIS and
'.
belonp, abe Ia an officer. ·
beautiful new house at 915 park St.
We learned thiB week Uiat Howard Rouah d. Mansfield,
'1\1 the Middleport First Baptist Gracious hosts, they enjoy oothlng
formerly Ill the Racine area, Is confined at Mansfield Gcinerlll
Church where abe and John ·are very . incire ~ et)tertalnlng grou)lll In the
, ~Ita~ His !!If~, Betty, wrote that he underwent major IIW'gl!ry
active, Alwilda serves as chainnan of paneled recreation room.
early in December lild was ·only home for a short time when he
the Board of Deaconesses and is
· Endowed with . a good sense of
had to agabi enter lht hoapltal.
'
president of both the B. H.' Sanborn. humor, Alwilda describes herself as
·
.. Betty a111o bu been ID &amp;pel had to retire from the teaching
Misilonary Soctety and the Hearth· !'just an old country girl from the
ALWILDA WEllNER
profession. We certainly'bope things begin to "look up" soon, The
stone Sunday School Class.
.
sticks." She was born n~ RuUand and
best tD you both. Tho'" wishing to rtme~~~ber Howard biB rocm
She is a past president and· now had her ·first eight years of education In
•.
number 18 320,
treallllHr of lhe Middleport Business a one room schoolhouse. After
AI wilda likes to be busy. She eojoys ~
and Profeulonal Women's Club and graduating from high school she ·
'mE' 0100 DtP
of Highway Safety advises . ~." several years ago was selected comple.ted a business course at ke!!J)ing house and puttering around
drivers IQ allow several extra car lengths for winter driving. At ~ "Woman of the Year" in recognition of Moulltam Slate Business &lt;:oUege. The outside, but like most working women :~
:;::
her significant contributions tn the club next few years she spent m Parkers- finds time for hobbies very limited.
only :Ill~ per hour, a rout,lne stop requires two car lengths tD
She's concerned about others less ~~
program.
·
burg, working at one time for the for·
stop'safely. .
fortunate, and expresses her desire to ::::
.,..
Alwilda ia alllo treasiU'er and mer Elberfeld Department Store there
Driving at 60 miles per hour requires 15 car lengths-to stop. ·
spread
a
little
sunshine
as
she
goe5
:::=
. serveaontheboirdollheMelpCounty, managed by Robert Elberfeld. She
Good drivers alw~ys allow adequate safe clearance on an sides.
along life's way by doing something ::!
Chapter of the Amern:lll Red Cross, returned to Meiga County when she
Panlcstopsarehardon your brakea,your tires, your nerves, and
special
for som~ne erery day.
~~
, . and actire in the Middleport Amateur married John.
sometimes yoiU' length of life.
.
~
-~ ~·:;s::~'(m'"&lt;t*
V 0ul*"=*"NoYh
......:.:·:
...O•:o!o'o'..o!&gt;!o!o:o..'o'o:o!o'o'•...o!- • -• • • • " :
·.·.··=-·:·:·.-•..-.·.·.·.···.· ·•·••· O:OC
. .. .
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nnu .•.w~;.o;.r.-;
•• ...
~:•'O:.Y.O
.o,; .v.r..o;o•• ;..;.o;.o•..,.• • n.-•• .-.~ ~
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AR~NT

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Sampson

§ :,

effective school programs and
teacher relations.
He conveyed to the
Association his. desire to be of
assistance to the teachers and
invited them to call on him
when problems arise . He said

that it is his general policy to
get ali the pertinent inlormation and evaluate it
before making a decision and
that this will be his method of
handling school business. He
answered questions regarding

Congregation Elects Vestrymen
POMEROY - Vestrymen
were elected and delegates and
alternates to the convention of
the Southern Diocese were
narrled at a congregational
meeting held at Grace
Episcopal Church .
Vestrymen elected include

Rome Williamson, senior
warden; Theodore T. Reed,
Jr :, junior warden; Dale
Dutton, Aaron K. Kelton, three
year terms to the vestry ; Mrs.
Ann Chapman, two year term
on the vestry, and Tom Reed,
youth vestryman lor one year.

Club Elects New President
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs.
Juanita Bachtel is the n&lt;w
president of the Middleport
Literary Club following a
,meeting Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Dwight Wallace.
Other new officers elected
were Mrs. Emerson Jones,
vice president; Mrs. Wallace,
secrelary, and Mrs. M. L.
French, treasurer.
Mrs. Richard Owen, retiring
president, gave the nominating
report. Mrs. C. M. Hennesy will
host the meeting on Feb. 16.
Mrs.
ArthUr
Strauss
reviewed the "White Dawn" by
James Huston, a story of three
men rescued from the sea by
Eskimos who nurtured them
back to health and the

Veterans Memorial Hospital
FRIDAY DISCHARGES Sandra Floccari, Leora
Zwilling, Etta Custer, Ethel
Smith, Daisy Glassburn,
Michael Harris, Ryan Evans,
Larry Salser.

Wilsons in the afternoon.
Richard Wilso_n of Detroit,
Michigan spent the weekend
with his brother, Mr. and Mrs.
Butch Wilson, and his mother,
Mrs. Erma Wilson.

struggles of the long, hard
winter
when
misunderstandings and problems
with the women develop.
The 14 members attending
answered roll call with a
response on the book .
Homemade candy and coffee
were served.

the salary schedule and increments asked by the
teachers .
Mrs. Chiorus Grimm
reported to the group on the
Ohio Education Association
convenUon which she attended
in Columbus in December. She
explained the inner workings of
the OEA and told of the hours
devoted by the staff and the
accomplishments during the
pasti yekr. She said that it is
necessary for the smaller
districts to cooperat~ and work
together in order to compete
with the larger districiS obtaining passage of necessary
policy making decisions.
In her report Mrs. Grimm
listed some of the services
rendered by the OEA during
the past year. These included
65 0~. ,spqnsore~sonleren~es o~,
and worksbops~eld, wif11. 2J,OOO • .
teachers attendil,lg; ,oYer, one
million miles driven to provide
direct service to individual

Other members are Leo Story,
Mrs. Thereon Johnson, Mrs. J.
0 . Roedel, treasurer, and Mrs.
Wilma Sargent, secretary.
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore T.
Reed, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs.
Aaron K. Kelton were named
delegates to the convention to
be held in May at Cincinnati.
Alternates named are Norbert
Compton, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Moore and Mrs. Helen Hayes.
Making up the nominating
committee were Leo Story,
Norbert Compton, Iris Kelton
and Morton Titus. A coffee
hour was held during which
time the birthdays of Mrs. J. 0.
SEMINARS SET
Roedel and Mrs. Fred Crow,
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Jr ., were observed with a cake Ohio Department of Liquor
baked by Mrs. J. E. D. Har· Control announced Saturday
linger being served.
that investigators from its
Enforcement and Beer and
Wine Divisions would participate in two seminars on
Howard Thoma and Patricia. druguseandabuseFeb. 7,8, 15
They also visited Mr. and Mrs. and 16 here by the Bureau of
Harley T. Johnson.
Narcotics and Agents of the
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, U.S. Department of Justice.
Kail, Kevin and Charles, were
Sunday evening visitor of his
· KILLEDBYTRUCK
aunt, Mrs. Henry Baird and
TOLEDO (UPI) - A city
mother, Mrs. Lena Knapp of employe was killed when a
Gallipolis.
truck backed over him in the
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy garage where salt trucks were
of Columbus were recent kept late Wednesday. Police
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul said John Lipkowski, SO, was
McElroy. Bill McElroy was checking the rear of one salt
also a
visitor.
hit him.
truck when

·members and the assa&lt;;iatlon;
3,400 requesiS for materials
and publications answered;
direct field service in 278
successful salary negotiations; .
200 requests ·for assistan·ce in
teacher contract cases; spent
$25,000 in legal dissents for 30
educators, and $28,000 in direct
support of local associations.
Mrs. Grimm played a tape of
highlights of the convention
including the adoption ol
several resolutions and e~­
cerpts from talks by William C.
McDonald,OEA president, and
Gov . John Gilligan.
Mrs.
Erma
McClurg
presided at the meeting. In her
opening welcome to the
teachers she compared the
profession to salt, a product
which brings out the true flavor
or food: .Sl]e , 1!3i~ . ~1 \l!e.,,
re~pons1bil1ty of ';""ch~rs is to
bp~g o~tl!!e \lest IO·~Nidren as well as the people m a com-

ouDLErs
Breath Spr!ng.
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Eleanor Hoover; secretary,
Doris .Carder ; treasurer,
Bernice May, and news
reporter, Paula Haynes .
Improvements for the
Christian youth camp at
Bedford will be one of the
projectS of the group. Refresh·
ments were served to the ladies
followihg t,he meeting.
The next meeting will he
March 23, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Bradford Church of Christ. All
women of the Meigs Qlunty
Churches of Christ are invited.

:, · · , "·. '"" . Polly's .Problem

BAKED LOUISIANA YAMS
WITH SAVORY TOPPING
6 medium I.Joulslana
yam a
1 cup chopped mushrooms,
about ''•·pound
'k cup chopped onion
2 tablespoons butter or

margarl~e

'!, cup chopped parsley

6 slices erlsp-eooked
bacon. crumbled
Salt
Pepper
1/4

cup butter or
margarine, melted
Hot mllk {about 14 -eupl

···''Wil&lt;M&gt;·'"'"uJ&amp;te

''

DEAR POLLY- There is a mold or stain on my
W mahogany-colored spinet pi~no caused !rom hands
;~ and arms touching it. We live in a damp climate on
~ the coast which may also have somethinl! to do with
\. this. How do I remove this discoloration?-MRS. N.
B. M.
.·

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lil
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•

DEAR POLLY - Surely Rose could' wash her plastic slipcovers as I do my shower curtains. ·1 put one cup of water
conditioner in the washer and ,they come out sparkling
clean with no water spots or film. (PoUy~ • note-Use only
lukewarm water for plastic and spread it out to dry.IR R.
'
DEAR POLLY- For 21k years 1 have cleaned my plastic
slipcovers by saturating cheesecloth with spray lurniture
polish and this has kept them in such good condition I
have received many compliments. Rub gently and the
polish leaves them very soft and pliable.-LILLIAN
DEAR POLLY- When making a cake from a boxed
mix, empty contents of the
plastic bag into a bowl and
then slip the bag over your
hand while g,r ea s ing the
cake pan . No more messy
hands.-MRS. L. R. McK.
DEAR POLLY- To keep
my wig from slipping and
hairs from straying out
!rom under it, I first put
on two sheer hair nets in
opposite directions.
When ironing , button the
two sleeves of a iong.sleeved shirt or blouse together to
keep them !rom dragg ing on the floor .
By unscrewing and removing the plastic handle, an old
skillet can give double service as a baking pan.
We repaired two parchment lampshades on which the
top edging was cracked and peeling off by completely
removin~ the edging and replacing it with self-stick
gold bra1d. The braid was pressed to the outside or the
top of the shades, folded over the metal rim, then pressed
t by hand ) to the inside. Otherwise, these shades were in
good condition. With the new gold braid at the tops they
actually look better than when new.-PAULE'ITE
(NEWSPAPER ENnlti'RISE ASSN.)

Yo11 wm reeelve a doUar If Polly uses your favorite
bomejllaldag Idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's Problem or aolutlon
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newapaper.

TENDRILS TRICK
Wlapy tendrils are verv
feminine artd romantic-looking. Unfortunately, with fine
hair they're somewhat hard
to set. II you have this prob·
lem, simply roll a quilted
oven 15 minutes. Lower tern. cosmetic pad Into a little bol.
perature to 375 degrees and
bake 45 minutes or until
tender. Meanwhile, saute
mushrooms and onion in · 2
tablespoons butt e r until
onion .is tender: stir . in parsley, bacon, 1 1~ -teaspoon sa1l
and dash pepper . Score baked
yams lengthwise and crosswise and scoop out yam centers, leaving 'I• ·inch shells.
Mash yams: add 1If• tea·
spoons salt , dash pepper,
melted butter and hot milk.
Whip well, adding a little
more hot milk, if desired.
Spoon whipped yams into
shells and top each with
some of mushroom-bacon
mixture. Place on a baking
sheet and heat in a 375-de·
gree oven·15 minutes. Makes
6 servings.
'.

ster and wind the tendril
around tt. Hold the pad In
place with tape or balr clip,
A great trick, especially for
revltullzlng hair that has
wilted from the weather or
strenuous acllvlty.

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Apple Grove

Langsville
Mrs. Shelia Fetty is ill with
mumps.
Mrs. Glenna Fetty called on
· Mrs. Jessie Sansbury and her
mother, Rose Moler, at the
home of Mrs. Sansbury's son,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Sansbury of
Middleport. She reports Mrs.
Rose Moler is in poor health.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Wright have been medical
patients at O'Bleness Hospital
in Athens but are now at their
home and doing nicely. Mr.
Wright is taking treatment at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr
and son, Shawn, of Oak Hlil
called on tbeir parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Alpha Barr Sunday
afternoon . Mike Barr of
Glenville State COllege also
spent the weekend at home.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Willcox
are home after vacationing in
Florida and visiting her cousin,
Mrs. Helen Graham or Naples, .
Fla., They also visited at Key
West.
Ronnie Gorby of Marietta
spent Saturday with his
parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Black
and children spent Sunday
.vlaiting with Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Barr and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
children spent a day "this week
with her grandpareniS·, Mr.
and Mrs . Harley Johnson,
Pomeroy R. D.
Mrs. Roy Sigman and Mrs.
Pauline Gorby called on Mr.
and Mrs. Alpha Barr recently.

News, Events
Mrs. Iva Orr spent Sunday
afternoon with Mrs. Mattie
Circle at Racine.
Herbert Roush called on his
mother, Mrs. Edna Roush, at
Racine Sunday.
Mr . and Mrs. Roger Manuel
and new daughter, Angela
Michelle, have returned to
their home at Racine after
spending a few days with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Roush .
Mr . Ray Byers of Tanners
Run was taken by ambulance
to Holzer Medical Center
Sunday and admitted as, a
medical patient.

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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

BRADBURY - The first
meeting ol the Women's
Fellowship was held Thursday
evening at the Bradbury
Church of Christ. Members of
the Meigs County area
Churches or' Christ were
present for the devotional and
song service which was
presented by the women of the
Bradbury church.
of
An e1ec11on
officers was
held 'th lhe f II . be'
. wt
o owmg 1ng
elected, president, Merle
Johns.on; vice president,

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve concerns those roughedged zippers that ate put on clothing made for. new·
born babfes. My inla. t has an outfit with a zipper in the
neck that is rough e ~ ugh to cut a finger . At first I could
not Figure out why liaby cried every time I put this outrit
on him.-MRS. R. M. H.
.

15.00

BuY-B~ FOR BABY!

WHITE
SIZE: 0 THRU 4

Fellowship Elects Officers

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FROM
-. 'RUARY 1·1, 1972
FE
MAR(JI 9, 1972.

Wolfpen News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
of Albany and Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Russell of Columbus were
Sunday afternoon visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mr . and Mrs. Eugene
Haning, Rhonda and Ronald,
were Sunday afternoon visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves,
Linda, and g~and s on, Bryan
Lee.
Mrs. Harold Gillogly of
Albany was a Monday visitor of
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mrs. Eva Knopp, Mrs.
Wanda Capp and a friend of
West Columbus were Saturday
evening visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mrs. Howard Thoma and
Mrs. Harley T. Johnson were
recent visitors of Mrs. Minnie
Bengel of Pomeroy .
Mr. and Mrs. Larry.Barr and
family of Rutland were recent
visitors of Mr . and Mrs.

•

By POLLY CRAMER

Ch
.
h
n
Vams ange t e race

of

&amp;

..

MINI TRAVEL W.AROROBE
Designer ,Giorgio Di SanPOMEROY- The Pioneers was caller for the group.
tangelo has a new travel/
of Marietta, the Promenairs of Having brought three squares
resort weekend wardrobe
Graod Squares
Parkersburg, W. Va., Square with them,
that !its in a tiny envelope.
Naders of Belpre, and the retrieved
their banner
It includes a two·piece swim·
suit, ti~hts, a tunic and
Grande Squares of Gallipolls previously won by the Belles
wrap
sk1rt. The price is high,
were guests at the Saturday and Beaus and took the
but
by
the time slimmer rolls
night dance of the Belles and president's shirt since th·e .
around,
moderately priced
Beaus held at Royal Oak Park. Belles and Beall!l' banner had
versions of the travel wardCecil Sayre of Letart, W.Va. ~rller been. taken by the
MIDDLEPORT _ Mr. and robe envelope should be
Square !'laders.
.
available. - e v e r y t h i n g
Mem~rs report that visitors Mrs. Albert Gooden of wrinkle-proof, ol course. ·
are welcome tn any of the open Colwnbus are announcing . the
PARTY GIVEN NEPHEW
dances or any of the regular engagement .and approacblng
The Maltese c r o s s has
. t It a ·
MIDI;ILEPORT - Mr. and Thursday nighL dances. The marriage of their daughter, . ht h
elg
s arp pom s.
w'
Mrs. Bukh Brinker of Mid· next open dance will be 80• Cheryl Sue, to Mr. Jqn Michael used as an emblem by an
dleport entertained Friday nounced.
·
Cunningham, son d. Mr. and order of knights of the Mid·.
·
evening with a party honoring
Mrs. 'Raymond CUI!ningham, die Ages.
Tony Salser on his ninth birth·
Middleport.
day:Tonyisthebrotherof.Mrs.
The open church wedding
.
Brinker.Attendingtheparty
TIETIP ·
/ wlll .beaneventofFeb.1~at _
were Mrs. Mildred Hubbard,
h b d' .
6:30 p.m. at the Heath Umted ~ •
Mr. and Mrs. v;raiJ Dill, Miss
Borrow your. u~ ~n s ttes Methodist Church Middleport. ·
-D
for the man-tailored . look
'
Crystal Manley, David Hub, that goes with the blazer
Mrs. Chester Erwin · ":UI
bard and Mark Salser. Gifts jacket and pa,nts. Or better present a program of nuptial
By AILEEN CLAI.R E_
were .presented to the honoreq yet, get hold of one of the mulde
preceding
the
NEA Food Editor
guest. Calte · ice cream jello easy tie-making patterns and ceremony. Officiating wUI be
·
and Kool-Ald were 1111rv~:
• ake his and her ties.
the·. Rev. R~rt BumgiU'JIOI'.
Cured , ya~~ are .exce11en1
111
hw u. ~ , 11., . _,,.
. 1' "I ··;. ,. · • ' !\ · ""'t · Milislt!et!IY'cililiilpiham; sister' \ bakers an? maltea·c~ange·of·
. .. . . . . . . . . .~-. .- - - -·- - , _• .,._.,. of the .groomoelect, )will serve · pace -taste .w1th . your fa-.:ot·
as mllid of honor, arid the best 1te meats m wmter . :ams
man will be Mr. Alan Ray ma.y be topped .with an mter•
~W· ILL
·
•
Cunningham. Mr. Paul Cun· estmg sauce, similar to sour
· q\
J;'•
ningham and Mr. Leland cream or other favorite top·
'
· ~ Brown will be the ushers.
pmgs noriMIIy thought of
M ~ED
when servmg baked pota·
,;..&amp;..v,;, ·
,
toes . Surprise the family
o'
PINS AND PENDAN'Jl§
with the interesting combinaA sort of agile grace fs tion or the sweet moistness
'
.
·
yours with new pins and pen· of yams w h i p p e d and
T()
dants in the form of ballet spooned back into shell,
ligures. Let the pin dangle topped with a combination or
from a chain around your mushrooms, onion . parsley .
1
• i
neck as an interesting effect. bacon.
,
,

munity.
Committees appointed were
'Leah Ord, Ruth Steams, Betty
Wllso~, Duane Wolfe and Greg
Baile~, negotiating; Robert
Beegle, Howard Nolan, and
Rogerl Roush, nominating.
Mrs. g1ma Louks, Syracuse,
was program . chairman.
RefreshmeniS were served by
the Racine · Grade School
teachers.

Du~W~ ,FJo!.ist

•

Belles &amp; BeausHave Guests .
Cheryl Sue
ihe
GQoden to
be :Wed

Teachers, Board President Discuss School Issues
RACINE ~ David Nease,
president of the Southern Local
School Board, met with the
Southern Local Education
Association Thursday night ·at
Southern High School here to
discuss matters relevant to

Rough Zippers
Irritate Bahy

By Katie Crow

,.!'

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I

Katie's Korner

~

Frigldaire-Admlrai·Hoover·Speed Ouee'n·Flexsleel!

.MIDDlEPORT, ·OHIO .

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'·.

,..__OONVE---.NIENT

TERMS

IIABY ltli\'GS
Bab~· rings that no lonl(er
!It c·un still prove luncttonul
und attrucllve. Use one as o
lh• •llch· lor those aHro&gt;ctlvt• ·
upachl· !'icar\" I'S ur lunf!
US.~ FU L

shoulder st•arvt.•s.

.2 0% to 50%
On Famous Brand Nam~ Clothing - .•

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'·

For Men and Women

. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ .

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12 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWldaY.Feb. 6. 1972

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Bea

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! Of the Bend

OUR WANT-ADS CAN

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By llob Hoeflich

:

PUT A HAPPY
FACE

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POMEROY - Who haS the book?
Mrs. ~ehna Orr of out Chester way is ~rdling for one of
two oopl~ of "March Forward" which she apparently loaned
IUld ~as been l;ljd uide by liomeone.
"March Forward" was published - at about •100 a copy following World War I with pr0Cf1edaused to aidaervlcemenwho
had been injured in the war. The volumes were purchaaed by
Mrs. Orr's father.
If anyone knows of tl)e whereabQuts .of the book, Mrs. Orr
would appreciate hearing.

MRS. JUNE VAN VRANKEN HAS been returned home
following another hospitallzatlon and has reswned her duties at
the Pauley Irlsurance offices. This time June had a great deal of
nose surgery reqUired as the result of an auto accident in whlcm
she was injured some y~s back. The surgery was don~ at Jane
Case Hospital in Delaware, Ohio, where June was confined for a
week.

a

,IJ'S TIME 10

IMPROVE
·
'
YOUR

..........

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"

~~-.k

.

HOME!
New Shipl)lent of

jmtba)! .i!imts ... jentinel

WAL-LITE
TILE
'BOARD .

'

WE HAVE
BLUE, GOlD &amp;

FRANK1JN RIZER II, SON of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Rizer
of Pomeroy, was named to the dean's list lor the fU'st quarter at
· the Air Force Academy in Colorado. A graduate of Meigs High
School last spring where he was a top student, Rizer began his
service as a cadet at the academy last fall .

•PREFINISHED SATINY
SMOOTH

THE AGED, WHITE FRAME Home Laundry buDding was
raced the past week in Middleport reportedly to make room for a
new business venture. The laundry was closed last JWie by
· Charles Strauss who has operated the business after it was sold
by the Phil Joachim family which had been in the locaUon lor
years and years.
·

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·GOODNESS SNAKES ALIVE!
This is an actual photograph of the Tunes-Sentinel, taken near the famous Red Fort in Delhi, India.

••
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••••
:
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The young snake charmer, Pritamnath, meaning Beloved Master, isn't exacUy "posing", since the
cobra in front of him has not had its fangs removed. Of cou'JSe, with the irresistible lure of the
Times-Sentinel to help him, maybe he feels safer than usual. Though we won't guarantee it!

r--------------------------1
i Area Deaths !
1

Mabel Landaker

We wouldn't want you to try this trick - even in New Delhi. (We'll leave that to
.,.

But if you have anything to SEll, here at home, thafs something else! For the

Sunday Times-Sentinel WANT-ADS pmsess powers out of all relation to their size and cost.
They can move your house (or move you to buy one). Move your car, find you a job, find a lost puppy.
And how they can make )'OUr phone ring!

The reason is this:
Whereas all other forms of advertising go looking for people, people go ~ng for WANT-ADS.

That's the secret! People go out of their wri to find and read them. And w~h our .circulation,
that's a lot of people.
So, tell i~ and sell ~ with a TimeS-Sentinel WANT-AD. Easy to place,
low in ·cost. Just phot)e

~2·2156 or 446.2342 and ask for "a.ified".
..

You're asking for ACTION when you do!

POMEROY - Mabel Lan·
daker, 76, of 1507 Nye Ave.,
Pomeroy, died Saturday
morning in the Veterans
Memorial Hospital. A member
of the Rutland Church of God,
she was born In Athens CoWlty.
Survivors include four
childreq, Martha Landaker ·
Graham, Pomeroy; Llby
Landaker Smith, Tiffin, and
David and John, both of
Pomeroy; a brother, Bill
Lotdrlge; a sister, Opal Lot·
drige, and Morgan French,
Pomeroy, a faithful com·
panion; 21 grandchildren, 31
great-grandchildren,
and
·several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Monday.at lla.m. at the Ewing ·
Chapel with the Rev. Arthur
Lund officiating. Burial will be
in Meigs Memorial Gsrdens.
Friends may call at the funeral .
home anytime.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Allen E. Ball, Freda Ball to
George S. Hobstetter, Zelda
Maxine Hobstetter, 1.0 acre,
Chester.
John W. Arbaugh, Ethel
Arbaugh to Darrell Landon,
Esther Landon, Lot, Tuppers
Plains.
Almyra D. Maullar, dec., to
City National Bank and Trust
Co. of Columbus, Trustee.,
Cert. lor Trans., Lebanon.
W. S. Posey, Louise Posey to
Monongahela Power Co .,
easement, Olive.
Woodrow Shaffer, Catherine
Shaffer to Monongahela Power
Do., easemeht, Olive.
Virgil Parsons, Larry V.
Parsons: Sonia E: Parsons,
Louise Eads, Jerry D. Eads to
Ohio ' Power · Co., easement,
Columbia.
. Glen Robinson, ·Dorothy ,
Robinson to Genevieve
Guthrie, right of way, Orange.
Genevieve Guthrie, Maxine ·
Yost, Delbert R. Yost to Glen
Robinson, l'lght of way,
Orange.
Allen E. Ball, Freda Ball to
Carl Sauvage, Jo.deena
Sauv11ge, 1.96 'acre, Chester.
•·reda Fauber, dec., to .
Marguerite Meyer, cert. lor
trans., Pomeroy.
Paul Simon, Allie Simon,

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• RESISTS SCUFFS,

•WIPES ~LEAN WITH
DAMP .LOTH
.•SMOOT : SURFACE .
AND TILt:D DESIGN

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Armor·ed BntiS
• • h c:onvoy Amb·u sh ed

•LOW COST
APPLICATION
•FOR THE
PROFESSIONAL OR
DO·IT·YOURSELF · ·
•'\l

,

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' MIDDLEPORT - Woodrow
W. Daugherty, 58, S. Front,
Middleport, died early
Saturday morning at' the
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He was born Aprll30, 1913, at
Leon, W. Va., the son of the late
Homer and Georgeanne
Fowler Daugherty. He was
also preceded in deatb by one
brother.
·
He was an electrician in
construction work and a
member of Local IBEW 972.
Survivors include his wife,
Ella Mae Lewis Daugherty;.
three sisters, Mrs. Roy (Alta)
Shoemaker, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Walter (Thehna) Schoonover,
Kanauga, and Mrs. Paul
(Maxine) Burns, Pomeroy;
one brother, Charles, Pt.
Pleasant, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Monday at 2 p.m. at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Joseph C.
Chapman officiating. Burial
will be In the Gravel Hill
Cemetery, at Cheshire . .
Friends may call at the funeral
home alter l1 a.m. today
(Sunday) .
·

FIX-UP YOUR
KITCHEN OR
BATHROOM .

FOR THE PEOPLE
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
(UP!)- Vowing to be a lawyer
for the people and not merely
counsel for government, state
Tax Commissioner Charles
"Chuck" Haden Ill announced
Friday as a Republican can·
dldated fw attorney general.
He joins 'fellow Morgantown
native, Monongalia County
Prosecutor Joseph Laurlta, in
the GOP race. Two Democrats
have filed for the post·
i,ncumbent Chauncey
Browning Jr., and Berkeley
County Prosecutor Jero111e
Radosh of Martinsburg.

CAFE
MD
.INTERIOR

AFIELD FOR HELP.
DUBLIN (UP!) - Prime
Minister Jack Lynch said
Friday the Itish Republic will
consider seeking support from
Communist . countries If Its
friends do not back it In the
dispute with Britain over the
future ·of BrltislH'uled ·Northem Ireland.

ouri:H srM"DAitb

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Swiss Want Mrs. Irving and $650,000

WAUawtM
RAT lATEX

PAINT

We Also HIVe

Plirit BlUshes &amp;
Paint lain

WE HAVE
.DOORS

Stop In
. and See Our Fine
.' Selection Of

STARLIGHT
LIGHT
FIXTIJRES

FRENCH
CITY
BUilDERS

Howard Baker Saunders, Allee
Ruth Saunders to Marvin W.
Dawson, Galena K. La111on,
Iota, PomtrD).
·750 First Ave.
Marguerite Meyer to Her·
Gallipolis, b.
man H. Bolinger, Sarah S.
Bolinger, Iota; Pomer.y.
. ._ _ _ _ _ _,..

SUPPLY

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Local Leadership M~de

Sister
Fuzz is
Departed

STAINS &amp; MARS

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Conspiracy of Silence?

Library into Reality

AVOCADO

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our young Hindu friend.)

W. W. Daugherty

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Gis·Drawn
Into Battle

JOHN Wll.L, MANAGER of the state Uquor store in
Pomeroy a number of years -and a town dweller - says It's so
· peaceful in the COWl try. John retired last summer•and has how
moved to. what ·is known as the TExas community in eastern
Meigs County where he is living in the big llk'oom famUy·
homeplace - and enjoying every minute of it.

·PERHAPS, YOU'VE MISSED in our regular news columns
about the hospitalization of Larry Morrison, assistant superlrr
tendent of the Meigs Local SchoQl District. Larry has had some ·
real setbacks healthwise in the past couple of weeks. He'd love to
hear from you, I know. The room number at University Hospital
in Columbus is 1017. Larry has undergone major surgery.

By MICHAEL POSNER
my was in advance of special
with • .slowdown on its ha.nds had been in touch with Labor well at producing new jobs."
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UP!) and union friends in olher Secretary James Hodgson on
Since the inception of his new message Nixon . will . send to
.,.The -White House accused countries refuatng to lllad the matter early • Saturday economic policy · last August, Congress Monday on a special
longshoremen boss Harry vessels desUned for West Coast morning.
,
•.
Nixon said, more than a revenue sharing program for
Bridges of "lnlranstgence" ports.
The chief · executive also million new job's have been manpower training.
"
Saturday and urged Congress to
Nixon is returning to Wash·
"I think this is an unrortunate . issued a statement saying thst generated, but he added that
· force a settlement of the West atUtude," said Ziegler. "This "America is making great the current 5.9 per cent ington Monday and will address
Coast dock strike before. it country and . the West Coast progress in the light against Wlemployment rate. "reinains a White House conference· on
reeesses next week for Un· have suffered too long."
the future of u.s. industry
thst "the unacceptably high."
. infllltion " . and
Cotn's birthday.
.
Ziegler said the President economy is doing remarkably
The statement on the econo- Monday night.
'.'It Is inconceivable that
• Congi'ess ,woultl go l)om~ext
'·
week" without passi!ll! the
adrillnistratlon's legislation to
end the BevelHIIODth·long Ueup,
said ,Ronald 1;. Ziegler, Pres.
!dent ~!Jon's press secretacy.
.
.
I
The cblet executive is 8pend·
ing ~ quiet weekend . at hisV.: .O:.:L: . . V.:..:.II~N:..:.O.....:l_ _ _ _.,.-'--_.. .:S:. :.UN.. .:D. . :AY..•:.:.:. :.FE:.:B. :. :R: . .UA.:. :.R.:. :.Y..:.:6•....:.1:..:.97:...:::2~-------PA_G_E. . ;__13
· .Fl~ilil retreat on the.shores of
BisCayne ,BaY., studying moun·
·,·
tains of backgrpund material In
preparation for his forthcoming
triP. to · China.'. . ,
Ziegler discounted the proba·
Middleport Library, Completed in 1912
bUlty of·a negotiated settlement
WASHINGTON.(UPI) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
to the dock tieup. He said such
D·Maas., charged Saturday thst the Cambodiso
asolu.tion would "be good (but)
goveioment and U.S. authorlUes eagaged in a "eon·
.· I ddn't 'think we can count on.
splracy or sUence" over the wonenlng refugee arul
that:"
.
elv.lllu war casualty problem In Cambodia. Kennedy
H~ accused Bridges, ~ead of
releUed •a report by the Geaeral Accouuting Office
the International LongshoreSAIGON (UP! )-U.S . Americall8 wounded in the
fighting and said Conbnunist
(GAO) that he said documents "the worstfean many of
i
men's and Warehousemen's helicopters and ground troo~
losses were unknown.
111 llave had 811 to the heavy toll the war is taking In
Union, of intr~nsigence and battled. Communists in the
A command communique
Cambodia."
making."veiled threats against jungles and rice fields Q.C South
said
American
helicopters
Kennedy hlmlelf flew to Parts to join several
the nation."
·
Vietnam ~nd Americ~ jets
flying
over
rice
fields
in
the
membert!
of his famUy lor several days of skiing with
Bridges said during congres· evuded ITUSSiles over North
Sen. and Mrt!. John V. Tunney, D-Callf., In Switzerland.
sional testimony Friday thst If VIetnam and Laos, the U.S . Mekong Delta 60 mUes south of
Theo Kemledy plauried to go to Bangladesh for several,
BY BOB HOEFLICH
acquire both books and funds . The first appropriation was
the government forced his ·- command reported Saturday. Saigon opened up on a Com·
· munist patrol rnoving on the
days. In hls statement Kennedy said the GAO ''reports
MIDDLEPORT _ It seems The first \ venture was an ~7.64. This bought a few
15,000 dock workers back to
The
command
said ground. seven Communists
that two million refugees -or aearly a third of the
that Meigs County has always "entertainment'' and book books and paid current ex·
· their jobs it might find itself
American troops from the were reported killed without
Cambodian·populaUoo -has been disloeated In little
had residents _ perhaps, not reception held at Coe's Opera penses.
It was during these following
!96th Light Infantry Brigade any U.S. losses.
over a year and a baH of war."
enough _ willing to put forth House, then located over what
clashed with Communists
The U.S. comm;~nd said
leadership and effort for is now the Mark VMarket. The years ·thst libraries were being
twice Friday afternoon In the Communist antiaircraft guns
community improvement and public was invited with the built across the nation, many
billy jungles south of Da Nang, and surface-to•air missiles
admi i being a book or through the Andrew Carnegie
.
In
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nd
Ia
t
't
·
··~
lth
bo
bs
k
eking
t
divls1'on
flew
back
to
Bangkok
·
progress.
on result of the venture Foundation of New York. The
Vie am s seco
rges Cl y. challenged American · jets st..,. w
m , no
ou
Typieal of such Meigs books.ssThe
A U.S. reconnaissance team Friday during three bombing at least two of them in North last Friday wi~out any official Countians was a group af was about 200 books which local library board established
jumped a Communist patrolll raids llVoc Laos and a recon· Vietnam, the command said. announcement.
Middleport residents who in were stored that same night, a contact to learn If the town
mUes southwest of Da Nang naissance flight ovoc North . The stepped-up American
The U.S. command Saturday 1903 felt that the community by lantern light, in a vacant could receive funda for a
.•
and another American recon Vietnam.
fighting came after ~ailand confirmed the pullout of the should have some type of room in the office facilities of library building.
There
were
certain
squad attacked a small Com·
The communique said none became the fourth ally to puU Thai division, which numbered library facility . They united, Dr. Hamlin. The upper room of
munist base camp 14 miles of the American planes was hit its 'troops out of Vietnam. The 12,000 men at its height but got the ball rolling and lor 60 the building occupied by the requirements. One was thst
southweSt of Da Nang. The in the attacks. The U.S. jeis hit last 824-man contingent of never really got involved in years the attractive book Firestone Store was obtained Middleport had to pledge to the
GRANITE CITY, Ill. (UP!) U.S. command reported fotir back at the Communist grqund Thailand's "Black Leopard" heavy fighting.
center has heen serving the for a more permanent storage library a yearly income of one·
- "Sister Fuzz," the pistol·
town.
area and some of the boa rd tenth of one pel'(:ent of lis
packing Roman Catholic nun
It was in September, 1908, members with the aid of Miss taxable property which
who had worked parttime lor
that a small group of these Mary Downey, state library amounted to $75C and another
1
police, . has been transferred .
. .
Middleport residents met at organizer, claPi6ed the_books. required the town to provide a
from th~ area, It was con- ·
the home of Miss ElllllUl
Miss Emm'a..JlcQu)gg of suitable site.
Middleport agreed to the tax
lirmect today.
NEWRY, Northern Ireland day's scheduled march of 8ome vacation, told newsmen he had were wounded in the shooting Rowley, a teacher in the Pomeroy became librarian and
stipulation
- and received
Si"ster Mary Cornelia (UPI)-;A British armored 30,000 detl)onstrators.
no intention of going to Ireland that followed, an anny spokes. schools, and chose seven the Middleport Public Library
from the Carnegie Corporation
Hawkins, a pari-lime juvenile convoy . was ambushed in
The IRA announced in or taking p&amp;rt In' the Newry man said.
persons ·whom they recom· was in business.
officer and police dispatcher Londonderry Saturday and two !)ublin it has ordered iis men demonstration. Kennedy has
Several hours later a mended to the town's school . Donations were sought and $7,500, or one percent of the
for the village of P o : army trucks. were dynamited not to carry arms in Newry .
been an outspoken oppilnent of soldier's scalp was grazed In board to compose thti first · benefit entertainments were assessed property evaluation
., , . ,, held to raWelunda:-one concert of $750,000.
1 Beathe~· .llwceas dS::r•~~nt i•.st JJr.. llmote contrql near this · , . Kfllll~Y Won't~ • · Brit,ish !19llcl1!5 in Northern 'unother glll\fight in the same library boardr .• ;)
However, then wu ' DO
\
·~
une
~
oonler to'im where lll'ltish
"We are not out for offensive Ireland. ·
area. Two -g~rnmell •we re .. .. ~~et!'i9!;e ®ard';;ere the"'was " i!'lven by ~rs. Clair
• month while hospitalized with troops are girding for a Sunday action," said a ·spokesman for
As the fli'st contingents of wounde4 when they aiilbushed Rev. w. L. Gladish, pastor of Graham Stewart Daniels and money to purcbue a lot lor
building.
pneumonia.
showdown with Roman the ffiA's mllltant provisional demonstrators passed through armored cars taking the man the Church of the New another by Mrs. Edith.Hudson the library
The suspension came after Catholic civilrights demon· wing.
British army roadblocks to a hospital, the spokesman Jerusalem, Professor A. w. Lord, both natives of Mid· Workertl nlHed to eot41aet a
the 46-yearoOld nun appeared strators.
Officials in Britain · and aroWid Newry, violence ex- said.
McKay, Miss Nella Calder· dleport who lived in Columbus. house-to-house cuva11 and
before a Madison County grand
In an extraordinary ap- Northern Ireland, as weD as ploded in Londonderry.
A ~oman who said she was wood, Miss ElllllUl Rowley, From these events $131.83 was the end rnult wu the lot
jury in December In all in· proach from the Vatican, Pope Cardinal Conway, pleaded for
The British convoy was thestster of one of the wounded Dan s. Lewis, Mrs. Edgar raised. The amount carried the price plus a llttle to. lfiii'O·
The lot was purchaaed from
vestigatlon of reported Paul VI informed Cardinal canCellation ' of the march. · attacked with explosives ·and civilians Identified him as Ervin and Mrs. D. B. Har· library along until March when
irregulariUes in the village of William Conway, the Catholic They feared a repetition of last naU bombs outside an army Walter McDaid, whose older linger.
·
it received its first ap- Emma, ~da aJld Augusta Van
~.200 residents.
primate rJ. Ireland, that he is Sunday's clashes In Lon· post on the edge of the Catholic brother,Mlchael was one of the
The school board left it up to proj)riation from the board of Duyn for $900. Charles P.
(Continued on page l4)
Sister Cornelia had said she ''praying ... ardentlythatthere donderry,inwhich 13civilians Bogslde district. Five soldiers
'(Continued on page 14
these seven individuals to education for the year, 1909.
re~elved several threats will be no more violenee from were killed by British soldiers.
warning her not to testl{y about any side."
·
The Northern Ireland Civil
alleged corruption in Pontoon
British troops surrounded Rights Association, jVhich
Beach, which ~me ' citizens Newry Saturday and armored scheduled the march · as a
have labeled "Little Sin City." cars rumbled throu~h the memorial for the Londonderry
The grand jury indicted five streets hunting for . Irish dead, Invited Sen. Edward M.
persons following the Inquiry, Republican Army (IRA) Kennedy,J).Mass., to take part By Unlled Press International
psrently was part of the $650,000.
forwarded to U.S. authorlUes through regular
but coocluded thst there were gunmen. The British said the in the parade.
Swiss authorities announced Saturday they have
Three Deposita Made
dlplomaUc channels, he said. The blonde and .at·
no Instances of "extreme ffiA may infUtrate the town to
But Kennedy, who arrived in issued an international arrest warrant lor the wife of
This would bring to about $500,000 the amount of
tractive Mrs. Irving accompanied her American
corruption."
provoke a battle duril)g Sun· Paris Saturday on a skiing
author CliHord Irving and will seek her extradition to money recovered in Switurland.
husband to New York from their home in lbeza last
face fraud charges In the increasingly bizarre case of
Swiss authorities said earlioc Mrs. Irving had
week.
the · Howard Hughes "autobiography" and the deposited three checks made out to H. R. Hughes
In addition to the contention over the authenUcity ri.
disappearing $650,000.
totaling t650,000 in the Swiss Credit Bank of Zurich, the manuscript submitted by Irving to McGraw-Hill
District Attorney Peter Veleff disclosed the moves then withdrawn most of the money and deposited and the disposition of the advance checks, the case
in .Zurich as a federal grand jury in New York
$442,000 in the nearby Swiss Bank Corp. in the name also 'tnvolves such disparaq, elements as a con·
prepared to question the lrvings Monday on possible of HaliJIII .Rosekranz-the present wife of Mrs.
versatlon a.bout organic prunes Hughes' researcher
maU . fraud bharges also growing out of the
Irving's previous husband.
clahna to have had with Hughes and the story ri. a
manuscript which Irving claims the billionaire
The third account was in a branch of the Union Danish baroness tl\at Irving was trysting with her
recluse dictated for his editing but which Hughes has
Bank of Switurland in the town of Winterthur, about rather than interviewing Hughes during a trip to
repudiated.
12 mUes north of Zurich, Veleff said. He did not Mexico last winter.
Irving admitted to authorities in New York eight
disclose when and In what name the account hud been
.lays ago that his Swiss-born wife Edith was the
opened.
The New York Dally News reported Saturday that
mysterious
"Helga
R.
Hughes"
who
deposited
Veleff,
who
had
issued
arrest
warrants
valid
only
in
' .
Irving had attempted to convert all his stocks Into
By Ulllted PHis lnlernatllllllll fann crisis for all the years It being pushed further out in $650,000 in advance checks from the -McGraw-Hill
Switzerland for Mrs. Irving last week, said the new cash but agents of the Internal Revenue Service
Sen. George s, McGovern, has been growing and brewing, front" of other Democratic Book Co., in a Swiss bank accourit. The author said he
international arrest warrlll!t was being transmitted placed a deU.iner on the portfolio and said they would
· {Xllting more punch in his bid and who now start expressing contenders.
had delivered the three checks to Hughes but that
to New York police through Interpol, the interna· file a legal lien Monday. In addition, the paper said,
for
the
Democratic new-found concern when it's
In other political develop- HugheS had returned them to him.
tiona] police organization.
the IRS moved to tie up the lrvlngs' bank accounta
presidential qomlnatlon, ;time to harvest the farm vote." ments :
·
Veleff said Saturday that hiS staff had discovered a
other
Elements
Involved
and asked them to immediately file a 1971
tax
Saturday labeled his frontIn St. J,ouis, meantime, Sen.
--!louse Republican leader
third bank accoWit containing · $31,250, which apThe
request
for
Mrs.
Irving's
extradition
will
be
return.
runn~ rival, Sen. EdmundS. Robert J. Dole of Kansas, the Gerald R. Ford, R·Mlch., in a
Muskle, as a "weathervane" GOP national chairman, Slild prepared Lincoln Day speech
candidate trying to exploit the in a prepared Lincoln Day in Waukesha, Wis., said all of
(a
r'L.
farm crlsla. .
dinner speech that Muskle's the Democratic presidential Cancer
USing '-..dleiDI
S
Muakie meantime came un- alternate two-point plan for candidates except Jackson and
Reece·to Speak
der continued fire from th~ peace ini' Vietilam should be Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey had
John Reece, public affairs
Republicans for ~Is sharp interpreted as "overpowering WIWillingly prolonged the In·
coordinator for the James A.
criUcism of ·President Nixon's ambition," not responsible dochina War by urging 'the •
Gavin Power plant, will
latest Vietnam peace proposal. leadership.
United States to make peace on
The levels.of nitrosamine• in formed of our linOUJg&gt;.., tar. · speak at the Feb. 17 meeting
McGovern, speaking in
''The Muslde plan calls for ' North VIetnam's tenns.
By hii.CI'l FERRIS
the
affected samples ranged
One of the unknowns, he said, of Central Ohio Valley In·
Springfield,
did not total withdrawal Qf all Amerl·
WASH!NG1'vl'i :UP!)
mention Muskle by .name. But can trQOPS, and urges the
-Humphrey, loser to.Nixon Traces of nitrosamine from 5 paru per bllllon to 106 was why the bacon In which dustrlal Corp. (COVIC) with
·aides said the Maine senator Saigon government to reach an in 1968, said In Philadelphia chemicals that ~used cancer parts per billion. Two of the FDA scientists found from 30 to the Galllpolls Cbamber of
was the target when McGovern accommodation with all politi· that the administration's an- • in some test animals have been samples were dried beef, one 106 parts per bUlion of the Commerce the host. His
spoke of a candidate "ex· cal elements in South Viet· noWie~&gt;ment of a decline in discovered In eight samples of was cured pork, one cured chemicals did not show any of topic wlll he plans lor future
pressing newfqund concern nalll," Dole said, "but pressed Wlemployment was "a phony proC!lSSI!d meat, government ha111, and four were of bacon them before being cooked.
construction and area
Romans Used Nitrates
when It's time to harvest' the for further details, Mu.skle l)o8ll." He also accused Gov. scientists disclosed Saturday. (ali . different brands) after
development.
CHARLESTON , W. Va.
'
Besides the cooked bacon,
farm vote."
declines to provide them."
Milton J. Shapp of Pennsylva· , One scientist described the cooking.
The meeting at Oscar's
(UP!)
- Upgrading W. Va. 2in
No
tolerance
level
has
been
scientists
reported
finding
l\luskle also was In Illinois . ReacUoo Is Overkill
nia of going back on his word in levels as ' "potentially hazar.
Restaurant I&amp; Gallipolis will
determined for consumption of nitrosamine levels of 11 to 48 begin with a soelal hour at 7 the Parkersburg and Hun·
dous."
Saturday, speak~ at Rock·
Muskie's rejection of Nixon's . endorsl~ Muskle.
Both the Agriculture Depart. the chemicals by humans. paris per billion in the dried p.m. Reservations are tington areas will be IWlded 115
-Jackson woWid up a visit to
ford, and Eastern Illinois peace p~ now has drawn
Univenity ai Charleston, then pirticular criticism from three Wisconsin 'and headed back to ment and the Food and Drug Scientists said that some beef and cured pork samples, requested by Chamber of -per cent by federal money,
continuing to St. Louis, Mo.
cabinet members-the latest Florida, where he has been Administration (FDA) found laboratory animals develope.d, and 5 parts per billion in a ham Commeree president Dr. A. Gov. Arch A. Moore revealed
Farm Crttls Growillg
from Interior Secretary campaigning hard In advance traces of the chemicals in cancer after being given the - that had ~dergone an ex· R. Christensen by Feb. 14. Friday.
Moore's announcement
McGovern, who comes from 1,\ogers C. B. Morton--and Sen. of that state's presidential separate tests of meat samples chemicals. Some animals In tensive cunng process.
~~·~!:~::~:~~:::m.::::::.-:.~· followed word from U. S.
the
same
tests
showed
no
ef·
The
Agriculture
Department
the rural state ri. South Dakota, Heriry M. Jackson, another in .primary . March 14. In obtainecl from packing plants
Transportation Secretary John
feet, they said.
said use of nitrate salts in meat
said ·fannera would not be the blg field of Deinocratic Wisconsin, Jackson hit on the and retail stores. · .
A, Volpe thst the areas had
"We really don't know how processing was known to date
BIG TURNOU:t'
theme of combining economic
"conned by defenders of the ' presidential candidates.
MANAGUA, Nicaragua been designated as an
The chemicals develop in these compounds develop and ' back to Roman times. Besides
diaaitroua corporate line on Senate Democratic Leader progress with protection of the
some mysteriou~ way from form," said one scientist in· imparting red color and im· (UPI) - An 8S per cent turnout "economic gr~ center'' IIi
agriculture tbat. has bee~ Mike Mansfield liid Saturday envlro!Jment.
.
expected
for
the West Vlrginis. " ·
-Mayor
John
V.
Undsay
of
o.:ompounds . such as nitrate volved ui the studv. "These are proving flavor, a prime pur- is
pJayln(j out for the last 31 ·he telt Muskle l)llgfit have
congrel!Sional.
e
lec.
t
ions
Sunday
The govetnor last OCtobll'
·monlhl."
III)Oken too 10011 In opposing the New York c~paigned in salts used for. hundreds of raiher preliminary reSults of pose o.f their US;t is to prevent
our
studies
but
we
must
or
mhtblt
growth
of
botulinum
asked
Volpe for the dellenlllan
which
are
expected
ultillllitely
"Nor," he 111d, "will you be Nllllll formula, but lhat the Florida,'s panhandle, where ~ars' as antibacterial agents
comild lly -thervlllll pre~- s.publlcan reactiOn "could be Gov. George C. WaUMce ·of and for improVing the ap- assume that any levels are spore• which when consumed to pave the way for the re· to bring all of W. Va. 2 undoli'
ldentlal calidldlt.,, nr eandl-. described u ovj!l'kill" and·that • Alabama is believed to hokl the pearanCI! and tasl' of meats in potentially hazardous. and we by humans, .ean c•use. the · election of.President Anastasio provisions of the new federal
felt the public should beo in· ~adly nerve diSease botulism. Somoza ..
· (Continued on pap 14) ·
the curing process.
dates who have lgn4&gt;. !. the "the result· Is that Muskir is Democratic strength.
'
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11

THIS IS FOUR CHAPLAINS SWiday and both Pomeroy's
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, and Feeney-Bennett
. Post 128, American Legion, of MidcDeport are urging veterans to
attend the churches of their choice. The SWlday is held in tribute
to the lour chaplains who gave their life jackets to other ser·
vicemen as their ship sank and went down with tlie ship whUe
praying together.

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Democrats Be
Intra-Party Fight

income

'cal

Dan.gerous Traces in Meats

W-Va. 2
Funding

m.;

lmpro:ved

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12 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWldaY.Feb. 6. 1972

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Bea

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! Of the Bend

OUR WANT-ADS CAN

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By llob Hoeflich

:

PUT A HAPPY
FACE

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POMEROY - Who haS the book?
Mrs. ~ehna Orr of out Chester way is ~rdling for one of
two oopl~ of "March Forward" which she apparently loaned
IUld ~as been l;ljd uide by liomeone.
"March Forward" was published - at about •100 a copy following World War I with pr0Cf1edaused to aidaervlcemenwho
had been injured in the war. The volumes were purchaaed by
Mrs. Orr's father.
If anyone knows of tl)e whereabQuts .of the book, Mrs. Orr
would appreciate hearing.

MRS. JUNE VAN VRANKEN HAS been returned home
following another hospitallzatlon and has reswned her duties at
the Pauley Irlsurance offices. This time June had a great deal of
nose surgery reqUired as the result of an auto accident in whlcm
she was injured some y~s back. The surgery was don~ at Jane
Case Hospital in Delaware, Ohio, where June was confined for a
week.

a

,IJ'S TIME 10

IMPROVE
·
'
YOUR

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~~-.k

.

HOME!
New Shipl)lent of

jmtba)! .i!imts ... jentinel

WAL-LITE
TILE
'BOARD .

'

WE HAVE
BLUE, GOlD &amp;

FRANK1JN RIZER II, SON of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Rizer
of Pomeroy, was named to the dean's list lor the fU'st quarter at
· the Air Force Academy in Colorado. A graduate of Meigs High
School last spring where he was a top student, Rizer began his
service as a cadet at the academy last fall .

•PREFINISHED SATINY
SMOOTH

THE AGED, WHITE FRAME Home Laundry buDding was
raced the past week in Middleport reportedly to make room for a
new business venture. The laundry was closed last JWie by
· Charles Strauss who has operated the business after it was sold
by the Phil Joachim family which had been in the locaUon lor
years and years.
·

~

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·GOODNESS SNAKES ALIVE!
This is an actual photograph of the Tunes-Sentinel, taken near the famous Red Fort in Delhi, India.

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••••
:
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The young snake charmer, Pritamnath, meaning Beloved Master, isn't exacUy "posing", since the
cobra in front of him has not had its fangs removed. Of cou'JSe, with the irresistible lure of the
Times-Sentinel to help him, maybe he feels safer than usual. Though we won't guarantee it!

r--------------------------1
i Area Deaths !
1

Mabel Landaker

We wouldn't want you to try this trick - even in New Delhi. (We'll leave that to
.,.

But if you have anything to SEll, here at home, thafs something else! For the

Sunday Times-Sentinel WANT-ADS pmsess powers out of all relation to their size and cost.
They can move your house (or move you to buy one). Move your car, find you a job, find a lost puppy.
And how they can make )'OUr phone ring!

The reason is this:
Whereas all other forms of advertising go looking for people, people go ~ng for WANT-ADS.

That's the secret! People go out of their wri to find and read them. And w~h our .circulation,
that's a lot of people.
So, tell i~ and sell ~ with a TimeS-Sentinel WANT-AD. Easy to place,
low in ·cost. Just phot)e

~2·2156 or 446.2342 and ask for "a.ified".
..

You're asking for ACTION when you do!

POMEROY - Mabel Lan·
daker, 76, of 1507 Nye Ave.,
Pomeroy, died Saturday
morning in the Veterans
Memorial Hospital. A member
of the Rutland Church of God,
she was born In Athens CoWlty.
Survivors include four
childreq, Martha Landaker ·
Graham, Pomeroy; Llby
Landaker Smith, Tiffin, and
David and John, both of
Pomeroy; a brother, Bill
Lotdrlge; a sister, Opal Lot·
drige, and Morgan French,
Pomeroy, a faithful com·
panion; 21 grandchildren, 31
great-grandchildren,
and
·several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Monday.at lla.m. at the Ewing ·
Chapel with the Rev. Arthur
Lund officiating. Burial will be
in Meigs Memorial Gsrdens.
Friends may call at the funeral .
home anytime.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Allen E. Ball, Freda Ball to
George S. Hobstetter, Zelda
Maxine Hobstetter, 1.0 acre,
Chester.
John W. Arbaugh, Ethel
Arbaugh to Darrell Landon,
Esther Landon, Lot, Tuppers
Plains.
Almyra D. Maullar, dec., to
City National Bank and Trust
Co. of Columbus, Trustee.,
Cert. lor Trans., Lebanon.
W. S. Posey, Louise Posey to
Monongahela Power Co .,
easement, Olive.
Woodrow Shaffer, Catherine
Shaffer to Monongahela Power
Do., easemeht, Olive.
Virgil Parsons, Larry V.
Parsons: Sonia E: Parsons,
Louise Eads, Jerry D. Eads to
Ohio ' Power · Co., easement,
Columbia.
. Glen Robinson, ·Dorothy ,
Robinson to Genevieve
Guthrie, right of way, Orange.
Genevieve Guthrie, Maxine ·
Yost, Delbert R. Yost to Glen
Robinson, l'lght of way,
Orange.
Allen E. Ball, Freda Ball to
Carl Sauvage, Jo.deena
Sauv11ge, 1.96 'acre, Chester.
•·reda Fauber, dec., to .
Marguerite Meyer, cert. lor
trans., Pomeroy.
Paul Simon, Allie Simon,

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• RESISTS SCUFFS,

•WIPES ~LEAN WITH
DAMP .LOTH
.•SMOOT : SURFACE .
AND TILt:D DESIGN

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Armor·ed BntiS
• • h c:onvoy Amb·u sh ed

•LOW COST
APPLICATION
•FOR THE
PROFESSIONAL OR
DO·IT·YOURSELF · ·
•'\l

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' MIDDLEPORT - Woodrow
W. Daugherty, 58, S. Front,
Middleport, died early
Saturday morning at' the
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He was born Aprll30, 1913, at
Leon, W. Va., the son of the late
Homer and Georgeanne
Fowler Daugherty. He was
also preceded in deatb by one
brother.
·
He was an electrician in
construction work and a
member of Local IBEW 972.
Survivors include his wife,
Ella Mae Lewis Daugherty;.
three sisters, Mrs. Roy (Alta)
Shoemaker, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Walter (Thehna) Schoonover,
Kanauga, and Mrs. Paul
(Maxine) Burns, Pomeroy;
one brother, Charles, Pt.
Pleasant, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Monday at 2 p.m. at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Joseph C.
Chapman officiating. Burial
will be In the Gravel Hill
Cemetery, at Cheshire . .
Friends may call at the funeral
home alter l1 a.m. today
(Sunday) .
·

FIX-UP YOUR
KITCHEN OR
BATHROOM .

FOR THE PEOPLE
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
(UP!)- Vowing to be a lawyer
for the people and not merely
counsel for government, state
Tax Commissioner Charles
"Chuck" Haden Ill announced
Friday as a Republican can·
dldated fw attorney general.
He joins 'fellow Morgantown
native, Monongalia County
Prosecutor Joseph Laurlta, in
the GOP race. Two Democrats
have filed for the post·
i,ncumbent Chauncey
Browning Jr., and Berkeley
County Prosecutor Jero111e
Radosh of Martinsburg.

CAFE
MD
.INTERIOR

AFIELD FOR HELP.
DUBLIN (UP!) - Prime
Minister Jack Lynch said
Friday the Itish Republic will
consider seeking support from
Communist . countries If Its
friends do not back it In the
dispute with Britain over the
future ·of BrltislH'uled ·Northem Ireland.

ouri:H srM"DAitb

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Swiss Want Mrs. Irving and $650,000

WAUawtM
RAT lATEX

PAINT

We Also HIVe

Plirit BlUshes &amp;
Paint lain

WE HAVE
.DOORS

Stop In
. and See Our Fine
.' Selection Of

STARLIGHT
LIGHT
FIXTIJRES

FRENCH
CITY
BUilDERS

Howard Baker Saunders, Allee
Ruth Saunders to Marvin W.
Dawson, Galena K. La111on,
Iota, PomtrD).
·750 First Ave.
Marguerite Meyer to Her·
Gallipolis, b.
man H. Bolinger, Sarah S.
Bolinger, Iota; Pomer.y.
. ._ _ _ _ _ _,..

SUPPLY

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Local Leadership M~de

Sister
Fuzz is
Departed

STAINS &amp; MARS

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Conspiracy of Silence?

Library into Reality

AVOCADO

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our young Hindu friend.)

W. W. Daugherty

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Gis·Drawn
Into Battle

JOHN Wll.L, MANAGER of the state Uquor store in
Pomeroy a number of years -and a town dweller - says It's so
· peaceful in the COWl try. John retired last summer•and has how
moved to. what ·is known as the TExas community in eastern
Meigs County where he is living in the big llk'oom famUy·
homeplace - and enjoying every minute of it.

·PERHAPS, YOU'VE MISSED in our regular news columns
about the hospitalization of Larry Morrison, assistant superlrr
tendent of the Meigs Local SchoQl District. Larry has had some ·
real setbacks healthwise in the past couple of weeks. He'd love to
hear from you, I know. The room number at University Hospital
in Columbus is 1017. Larry has undergone major surgery.

By MICHAEL POSNER
my was in advance of special
with • .slowdown on its ha.nds had been in touch with Labor well at producing new jobs."
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UP!) and union friends in olher Secretary James Hodgson on
Since the inception of his new message Nixon . will . send to
.,.The -White House accused countries refuatng to lllad the matter early • Saturday economic policy · last August, Congress Monday on a special
longshoremen boss Harry vessels desUned for West Coast morning.
,
•.
Nixon said, more than a revenue sharing program for
Bridges of "lnlranstgence" ports.
The chief · executive also million new job's have been manpower training.
"
Saturday and urged Congress to
Nixon is returning to Wash·
"I think this is an unrortunate . issued a statement saying thst generated, but he added that
· force a settlement of the West atUtude," said Ziegler. "This "America is making great the current 5.9 per cent ington Monday and will address
Coast dock strike before. it country and . the West Coast progress in the light against Wlemployment rate. "reinains a White House conference· on
reeesses next week for Un· have suffered too long."
the future of u.s. industry
thst "the unacceptably high."
. infllltion " . and
Cotn's birthday.
.
Ziegler said the President economy is doing remarkably
The statement on the econo- Monday night.
'.'It Is inconceivable that
• Congi'ess ,woultl go l)om~ext
'·
week" without passi!ll! the
adrillnistratlon's legislation to
end the BevelHIIODth·long Ueup,
said ,Ronald 1;. Ziegler, Pres.
!dent ~!Jon's press secretacy.
.
.
I
The cblet executive is 8pend·
ing ~ quiet weekend . at hisV.: .O:.:L: . . V.:..:.II~N:..:.O.....:l_ _ _ _.,.-'--_.. .:S:. :.UN.. .:D. . :AY..•:.:.:. :.FE:.:B. :. :R: . .UA.:. :.R.:. :.Y..:.:6•....:.1:..:.97:...:::2~-------PA_G_E. . ;__13
· .Fl~ilil retreat on the.shores of
BisCayne ,BaY., studying moun·
·,·
tains of backgrpund material In
preparation for his forthcoming
triP. to · China.'. . ,
Ziegler discounted the proba·
Middleport Library, Completed in 1912
bUlty of·a negotiated settlement
WASHINGTON.(UPI) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
to the dock tieup. He said such
D·Maas., charged Saturday thst the Cambodiso
asolu.tion would "be good (but)
goveioment and U.S. authorlUes eagaged in a "eon·
.· I ddn't 'think we can count on.
splracy or sUence" over the wonenlng refugee arul
that:"
.
elv.lllu war casualty problem In Cambodia. Kennedy
H~ accused Bridges, ~ead of
releUed •a report by the Geaeral Accouuting Office
the International LongshoreSAIGON (UP! )-U.S . Americall8 wounded in the
fighting and said Conbnunist
(GAO) that he said documents "the worstfean many of
i
men's and Warehousemen's helicopters and ground troo~
losses were unknown.
111 llave had 811 to the heavy toll the war is taking In
Union, of intr~nsigence and battled. Communists in the
A command communique
Cambodia."
making."veiled threats against jungles and rice fields Q.C South
said
American
helicopters
Kennedy hlmlelf flew to Parts to join several
the nation."
·
Vietnam ~nd Americ~ jets
flying
over
rice
fields
in
the
membert!
of his famUy lor several days of skiing with
Bridges said during congres· evuded ITUSSiles over North
Sen. and Mrt!. John V. Tunney, D-Callf., In Switzerland.
sional testimony Friday thst If VIetnam and Laos, the U.S . Mekong Delta 60 mUes south of
Theo Kemledy plauried to go to Bangladesh for several,
BY BOB HOEFLICH
acquire both books and funds . The first appropriation was
the government forced his ·- command reported Saturday. Saigon opened up on a Com·
· munist patrol rnoving on the
days. In hls statement Kennedy said the GAO ''reports
MIDDLEPORT _ It seems The first \ venture was an ~7.64. This bought a few
15,000 dock workers back to
The
command
said ground. seven Communists
that two million refugees -or aearly a third of the
that Meigs County has always "entertainment'' and book books and paid current ex·
· their jobs it might find itself
American troops from the were reported killed without
Cambodian·populaUoo -has been disloeated In little
had residents _ perhaps, not reception held at Coe's Opera penses.
It was during these following
!96th Light Infantry Brigade any U.S. losses.
over a year and a baH of war."
enough _ willing to put forth House, then located over what
clashed with Communists
The U.S. comm;~nd said
leadership and effort for is now the Mark VMarket. The years ·thst libraries were being
twice Friday afternoon In the Communist antiaircraft guns
community improvement and public was invited with the built across the nation, many
billy jungles south of Da Nang, and surface-to•air missiles
admi i being a book or through the Andrew Carnegie
.
In
'
nd
Ia
t
't
·
··~
lth
bo
bs
k
eking
t
divls1'on
flew
back
to
Bangkok
·
progress.
on result of the venture Foundation of New York. The
Vie am s seco
rges Cl y. challenged American · jets st..,. w
m , no
ou
Typieal of such Meigs books.ssThe
A U.S. reconnaissance team Friday during three bombing at least two of them in North last Friday wi~out any official Countians was a group af was about 200 books which local library board established
jumped a Communist patrolll raids llVoc Laos and a recon· Vietnam, the command said. announcement.
Middleport residents who in were stored that same night, a contact to learn If the town
mUes southwest of Da Nang naissance flight ovoc North . The stepped-up American
The U.S. command Saturday 1903 felt that the community by lantern light, in a vacant could receive funda for a
.•
and another American recon Vietnam.
fighting came after ~ailand confirmed the pullout of the should have some type of room in the office facilities of library building.
There
were
certain
squad attacked a small Com·
The communique said none became the fourth ally to puU Thai division, which numbered library facility . They united, Dr. Hamlin. The upper room of
munist base camp 14 miles of the American planes was hit its 'troops out of Vietnam. The 12,000 men at its height but got the ball rolling and lor 60 the building occupied by the requirements. One was thst
southweSt of Da Nang. The in the attacks. The U.S. jeis hit last 824-man contingent of never really got involved in years the attractive book Firestone Store was obtained Middleport had to pledge to the
GRANITE CITY, Ill. (UP!) U.S. command reported fotir back at the Communist grqund Thailand's "Black Leopard" heavy fighting.
center has heen serving the for a more permanent storage library a yearly income of one·
- "Sister Fuzz," the pistol·
town.
area and some of the boa rd tenth of one pel'(:ent of lis
packing Roman Catholic nun
It was in September, 1908, members with the aid of Miss taxable property which
who had worked parttime lor
that a small group of these Mary Downey, state library amounted to $75C and another
1
police, . has been transferred .
. .
Middleport residents met at organizer, claPi6ed the_books. required the town to provide a
from th~ area, It was con- ·
the home of Miss ElllllUl
Miss Emm'a..JlcQu)gg of suitable site.
Middleport agreed to the tax
lirmect today.
NEWRY, Northern Ireland day's scheduled march of 8ome vacation, told newsmen he had were wounded in the shooting Rowley, a teacher in the Pomeroy became librarian and
stipulation
- and received
Si"ster Mary Cornelia (UPI)-;A British armored 30,000 detl)onstrators.
no intention of going to Ireland that followed, an anny spokes. schools, and chose seven the Middleport Public Library
from the Carnegie Corporation
Hawkins, a pari-lime juvenile convoy . was ambushed in
The IRA announced in or taking p&amp;rt In' the Newry man said.
persons ·whom they recom· was in business.
officer and police dispatcher Londonderry Saturday and two !)ublin it has ordered iis men demonstration. Kennedy has
Several hours later a mended to the town's school . Donations were sought and $7,500, or one percent of the
for the village of P o : army trucks. were dynamited not to carry arms in Newry .
been an outspoken oppilnent of soldier's scalp was grazed In board to compose thti first · benefit entertainments were assessed property evaluation
., , . ,, held to raWelunda:-one concert of $750,000.
1 Beathe~· .llwceas dS::r•~~nt i•.st JJr.. llmote contrql near this · , . Kfllll~Y Won't~ • · Brit,ish !19llcl1!5 in Northern 'unother glll\fight in the same library boardr .• ;)
However, then wu ' DO
\
·~
une
~
oonler to'im where lll'ltish
"We are not out for offensive Ireland. ·
area. Two -g~rnmell •we re .. .. ~~et!'i9!;e ®ard';;ere the"'was " i!'lven by ~rs. Clair
• month while hospitalized with troops are girding for a Sunday action," said a ·spokesman for
As the fli'st contingents of wounde4 when they aiilbushed Rev. w. L. Gladish, pastor of Graham Stewart Daniels and money to purcbue a lot lor
building.
pneumonia.
showdown with Roman the ffiA's mllltant provisional demonstrators passed through armored cars taking the man the Church of the New another by Mrs. Edith.Hudson the library
The suspension came after Catholic civilrights demon· wing.
British army roadblocks to a hospital, the spokesman Jerusalem, Professor A. w. Lord, both natives of Mid· Workertl nlHed to eot41aet a
the 46-yearoOld nun appeared strators.
Officials in Britain · and aroWid Newry, violence ex- said.
McKay, Miss Nella Calder· dleport who lived in Columbus. house-to-house cuva11 and
before a Madison County grand
In an extraordinary ap- Northern Ireland, as weD as ploded in Londonderry.
A ~oman who said she was wood, Miss ElllllUl Rowley, From these events $131.83 was the end rnult wu the lot
jury in December In all in· proach from the Vatican, Pope Cardinal Conway, pleaded for
The British convoy was thestster of one of the wounded Dan s. Lewis, Mrs. Edgar raised. The amount carried the price plus a llttle to. lfiii'O·
The lot was purchaaed from
vestigatlon of reported Paul VI informed Cardinal canCellation ' of the march. · attacked with explosives ·and civilians Identified him as Ervin and Mrs. D. B. Har· library along until March when
irregulariUes in the village of William Conway, the Catholic They feared a repetition of last naU bombs outside an army Walter McDaid, whose older linger.
·
it received its first ap- Emma, ~da aJld Augusta Van
~.200 residents.
primate rJ. Ireland, that he is Sunday's clashes In Lon· post on the edge of the Catholic brother,Mlchael was one of the
The school board left it up to proj)riation from the board of Duyn for $900. Charles P.
(Continued on page l4)
Sister Cornelia had said she ''praying ... ardentlythatthere donderry,inwhich 13civilians Bogslde district. Five soldiers
'(Continued on page 14
these seven individuals to education for the year, 1909.
re~elved several threats will be no more violenee from were killed by British soldiers.
warning her not to testl{y about any side."
·
The Northern Ireland Civil
alleged corruption in Pontoon
British troops surrounded Rights Association, jVhich
Beach, which ~me ' citizens Newry Saturday and armored scheduled the march · as a
have labeled "Little Sin City." cars rumbled throu~h the memorial for the Londonderry
The grand jury indicted five streets hunting for . Irish dead, Invited Sen. Edward M.
persons following the Inquiry, Republican Army (IRA) Kennedy,J).Mass., to take part By Unlled Press International
psrently was part of the $650,000.
forwarded to U.S. authorlUes through regular
but coocluded thst there were gunmen. The British said the in the parade.
Swiss authorities announced Saturday they have
Three Deposita Made
dlplomaUc channels, he said. The blonde and .at·
no Instances of "extreme ffiA may infUtrate the town to
But Kennedy, who arrived in issued an international arrest warrant lor the wife of
This would bring to about $500,000 the amount of
tractive Mrs. Irving accompanied her American
corruption."
provoke a battle duril)g Sun· Paris Saturday on a skiing
author CliHord Irving and will seek her extradition to money recovered in Switurland.
husband to New York from their home in lbeza last
face fraud charges In the increasingly bizarre case of
Swiss authorities said earlioc Mrs. Irving had
week.
the · Howard Hughes "autobiography" and the deposited three checks made out to H. R. Hughes
In addition to the contention over the authenUcity ri.
disappearing $650,000.
totaling t650,000 in the Swiss Credit Bank of Zurich, the manuscript submitted by Irving to McGraw-Hill
District Attorney Peter Veleff disclosed the moves then withdrawn most of the money and deposited and the disposition of the advance checks, the case
in .Zurich as a federal grand jury in New York
$442,000 in the nearby Swiss Bank Corp. in the name also 'tnvolves such disparaq, elements as a con·
prepared to question the lrvings Monday on possible of HaliJIII .Rosekranz-the present wife of Mrs.
versatlon a.bout organic prunes Hughes' researcher
maU . fraud bharges also growing out of the
Irving's previous husband.
clahna to have had with Hughes and the story ri. a
manuscript which Irving claims the billionaire
The third account was in a branch of the Union Danish baroness tl\at Irving was trysting with her
recluse dictated for his editing but which Hughes has
Bank of Switurland in the town of Winterthur, about rather than interviewing Hughes during a trip to
repudiated.
12 mUes north of Zurich, Veleff said. He did not Mexico last winter.
Irving admitted to authorities in New York eight
disclose when and In what name the account hud been
.lays ago that his Swiss-born wife Edith was the
opened.
The New York Dally News reported Saturday that
mysterious
"Helga
R.
Hughes"
who
deposited
Veleff,
who
had
issued
arrest
warrants
valid
only
in
' .
Irving had attempted to convert all his stocks Into
By Ulllted PHis lnlernatllllllll fann crisis for all the years It being pushed further out in $650,000 in advance checks from the -McGraw-Hill
Switzerland for Mrs. Irving last week, said the new cash but agents of the Internal Revenue Service
Sen. George s, McGovern, has been growing and brewing, front" of other Democratic Book Co., in a Swiss bank accourit. The author said he
international arrest warrlll!t was being transmitted placed a deU.iner on the portfolio and said they would
· {Xllting more punch in his bid and who now start expressing contenders.
had delivered the three checks to Hughes but that
to New York police through Interpol, the interna· file a legal lien Monday. In addition, the paper said,
for
the
Democratic new-found concern when it's
In other political develop- HugheS had returned them to him.
tiona] police organization.
the IRS moved to tie up the lrvlngs' bank accounta
presidential qomlnatlon, ;time to harvest the farm vote." ments :
·
Veleff said Saturday that hiS staff had discovered a
other
Elements
Involved
and asked them to immediately file a 1971
tax
Saturday labeled his frontIn St. J,ouis, meantime, Sen.
--!louse Republican leader
third bank accoWit containing · $31,250, which apThe
request
for
Mrs.
Irving's
extradition
will
be
return.
runn~ rival, Sen. EdmundS. Robert J. Dole of Kansas, the Gerald R. Ford, R·Mlch., in a
Muskle, as a "weathervane" GOP national chairman, Slild prepared Lincoln Day speech
candidate trying to exploit the in a prepared Lincoln Day in Waukesha, Wis., said all of
(a
r'L.
farm crlsla. .
dinner speech that Muskle's the Democratic presidential Cancer
USing '-..dleiDI
S
Muakie meantime came un- alternate two-point plan for candidates except Jackson and
Reece·to Speak
der continued fire from th~ peace ini' Vietilam should be Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey had
John Reece, public affairs
Republicans for ~Is sharp interpreted as "overpowering WIWillingly prolonged the In·
coordinator for the James A.
criUcism of ·President Nixon's ambition," not responsible dochina War by urging 'the •
Gavin Power plant, will
latest Vietnam peace proposal. leadership.
United States to make peace on
The levels.of nitrosamine• in formed of our linOUJg&gt;.., tar. · speak at the Feb. 17 meeting
McGovern, speaking in
''The Muslde plan calls for ' North VIetnam's tenns.
By hii.CI'l FERRIS
the
affected samples ranged
One of the unknowns, he said, of Central Ohio Valley In·
Springfield,
did not total withdrawal Qf all Amerl·
WASH!NG1'vl'i :UP!)
mention Muskle by .name. But can trQOPS, and urges the
-Humphrey, loser to.Nixon Traces of nitrosamine from 5 paru per bllllon to 106 was why the bacon In which dustrlal Corp. (COVIC) with
·aides said the Maine senator Saigon government to reach an in 1968, said In Philadelphia chemicals that ~used cancer parts per billion. Two of the FDA scientists found from 30 to the Galllpolls Cbamber of
was the target when McGovern accommodation with all politi· that the administration's an- • in some test animals have been samples were dried beef, one 106 parts per bUlion of the Commerce the host. His
spoke of a candidate "ex· cal elements in South Viet· noWie~&gt;ment of a decline in discovered In eight samples of was cured pork, one cured chemicals did not show any of topic wlll he plans lor future
pressing newfqund concern nalll," Dole said, "but pressed Wlemployment was "a phony proC!lSSI!d meat, government ha111, and four were of bacon them before being cooked.
construction and area
Romans Used Nitrates
when It's time to harvest' the for further details, Mu.skle l)o8ll." He also accused Gov. scientists disclosed Saturday. (ali . different brands) after
development.
CHARLESTON , W. Va.
'
Besides the cooked bacon,
farm vote."
declines to provide them."
Milton J. Shapp of Pennsylva· , One scientist described the cooking.
The meeting at Oscar's
(UP!)
- Upgrading W. Va. 2in
No
tolerance
level
has
been
scientists
reported
finding
l\luskle also was In Illinois . ReacUoo Is Overkill
nia of going back on his word in levels as ' "potentially hazar.
Restaurant I&amp; Gallipolis will
determined for consumption of nitrosamine levels of 11 to 48 begin with a soelal hour at 7 the Parkersburg and Hun·
dous."
Saturday, speak~ at Rock·
Muskie's rejection of Nixon's . endorsl~ Muskle.
Both the Agriculture Depart. the chemicals by humans. paris per billion in the dried p.m. Reservations are tington areas will be IWlded 115
-Jackson woWid up a visit to
ford, and Eastern Illinois peace p~ now has drawn
Univenity ai Charleston, then pirticular criticism from three Wisconsin 'and headed back to ment and the Food and Drug Scientists said that some beef and cured pork samples, requested by Chamber of -per cent by federal money,
continuing to St. Louis, Mo.
cabinet members-the latest Florida, where he has been Administration (FDA) found laboratory animals develope.d, and 5 parts per billion in a ham Commeree president Dr. A. Gov. Arch A. Moore revealed
Farm Crttls Growillg
from Interior Secretary campaigning hard In advance traces of the chemicals in cancer after being given the - that had ~dergone an ex· R. Christensen by Feb. 14. Friday.
Moore's announcement
McGovern, who comes from 1,\ogers C. B. Morton--and Sen. of that state's presidential separate tests of meat samples chemicals. Some animals In tensive cunng process.
~~·~!:~::~:~~:::m.::::::.-:.~· followed word from U. S.
the
same
tests
showed
no
ef·
The
Agriculture
Department
the rural state ri. South Dakota, Heriry M. Jackson, another in .primary . March 14. In obtainecl from packing plants
Transportation Secretary John
feet, they said.
said use of nitrate salts in meat
said ·fannera would not be the blg field of Deinocratic Wisconsin, Jackson hit on the and retail stores. · .
A, Volpe thst the areas had
"We really don't know how processing was known to date
BIG TURNOU:t'
theme of combining economic
"conned by defenders of the ' presidential candidates.
MANAGUA, Nicaragua been designated as an
The chemicals develop in these compounds develop and ' back to Roman times. Besides
diaaitroua corporate line on Senate Democratic Leader progress with protection of the
some mysteriou~ way from form," said one scientist in· imparting red color and im· (UPI) - An 8S per cent turnout "economic gr~ center'' IIi
agriculture tbat. has bee~ Mike Mansfield liid Saturday envlro!Jment.
.
expected
for
the West Vlrginis. " ·
-Mayor
John
V.
Undsay
of
o.:ompounds . such as nitrate volved ui the studv. "These are proving flavor, a prime pur- is
pJayln(j out for the last 31 ·he telt Muskle l)llgfit have
congrel!Sional.
e
lec.
t
ions
Sunday
The govetnor last OCtobll'
·monlhl."
III)Oken too 10011 In opposing the New York c~paigned in salts used for. hundreds of raiher preliminary reSults of pose o.f their US;t is to prevent
our
studies
but
we
must
or
mhtblt
growth
of
botulinum
asked
Volpe for the dellenlllan
which
are
expected
ultillllitely
"Nor," he 111d, "will you be Nllllll formula, but lhat the Florida,'s panhandle, where ~ars' as antibacterial agents
comild lly -thervlllll pre~- s.publlcan reactiOn "could be Gov. George C. WaUMce ·of and for improVing the ap- assume that any levels are spore• which when consumed to pave the way for the re· to bring all of W. Va. 2 undoli'
ldentlal calidldlt.,, nr eandl-. described u ovj!l'kill" and·that • Alabama is believed to hokl the pearanCI! and tasl' of meats in potentially hazardous. and we by humans, .ean c•use. the · election of.President Anastasio provisions of the new federal
felt the public should beo in· ~adly nerve diSease botulism. Somoza ..
· (Continued on pap 14) ·
the curing process.
dates who have lgn4&gt;. !. the "the result· Is that Muskir is Democratic strength.
'
I
·l;
11

THIS IS FOUR CHAPLAINS SWiday and both Pomeroy's
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, and Feeney-Bennett
. Post 128, American Legion, of MidcDeport are urging veterans to
attend the churches of their choice. The SWlday is held in tribute
to the lour chaplains who gave their life jackets to other ser·
vicemen as their ship sank and went down with tlie ship whUe
praying together.

'I!

es on

r1

~

I

\

..
Ire

. r -------. - ---------..,.-----·~-·
.
I'

•

Democrats Be
Intra-Party Fight

income

'cal

Dan.gerous Traces in Meats

W-Va. 2
Funding

m.;

lmpro:ved

1

·"

\I

�• ••

..
1

'

•

(Coolil)ued from page 13)
13menkWed in umdmderry.
Pleao R~~ted
Near Keady, on the bo~r 20
Rilles weot of Neirry, a mine
de!Alllated from the Jrlsb Side
damaged two patroiiiJlg vehicles maMed by !'iorth Irish
reM!rvlsb. ()le soldier was hit
In tbe shoulder by bomb
fragments,
an
army
spokesman said.
The Newry organizers
rejected pleas from Britl.th
'I'Hme Minl!ler Edward Heath
and Northern Ireland Prerpler
Brian Faullmer to call off1he
dvll-righta march.
The chairman of the' Newry
lx'ancb of the Civil Rlghta
Association, Rory McShlme,
said the march would be
canceled if Britain releaaed
more than 700 security
suspects interned without
trial_. condition the government has refused.
"'!be possibility of cancelling
the march rests with Heath and
Faulkner," McShane said. "All
they have to do is open the
gates."
Patrob HOD! Gunmen
An estimated 3,000 Brltl.th
troopll swarmed in and around
Newry. Armored personnel
carriers and Land Rovers
rumbled past rows of homes
and stores whose windows
were boarded up in expectation
of violence.
British officers said !he
patrols were hunting IRA
gunmen who inforniants said
had sUpped through the roadblocks sealing the approaches
to the town. The border is just
five miles away. ·
Across the border, extra
troops and pollee moved into
the town of Dundalk to control
thousands of southern Irishmen expected to cross over for
the Newry march.
The demonstrators plan to
march a mUe and a hall from
·the outskirts of Newry to the
town square, where they will
be addressed by lister
nationalist Member of
Parliament Bernadette DevUn,
actress Vaneosa Redgrave and
others. The march is scheduled
· to begin at 3 p.m. (10 a.m.
EST).

Army's HQ
Destroyed
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
multiple-alarm fire destroyed
a two-story brick warehouse
building at a downtown
Salvation Army headquarters
complex Friday night. Fire
chief Raymond Fadley said the
building was a total loss but
was unable to estimate the
loss.
One fireman was overcome,
apparenl]y from exhauslion,
while several others were
treated at the scene, he said.
When firemen rushed to the
burning structure, one of three
buildings In the city block,
names were shooUng up from
the roof, but firemen sprayed
the roof and soon had the blaze
under control. An hour later
the roof had fallen in and the
walls were falling down.
The building had a Salvation
Army recreation center In the
basement, while the other
space was used to store furniture, clothing and other
merchandise to be repaired
and distributed. The area also
had paints and repair equipment.

MAIL CAU
EVER WONOER HOW
MANY LETTEI'S VOL!
MAIL EACH VEAR l
WELl., THE NATIONAl.

PER PIERSON!

WHO

THERE?
1HE

ARMV 1/AS A
RAOAR So SENSITIVE
IT CAN OETECT THE
()!!'FERENCE BETWEEN
TilE GAff 0&gt; A MAN
ANOA WOMAN AT A
RANG£ oP 6 MILES /

Library
..

•

j

•

The
Department
of
Highways
GALUPOUS- Members of
has awarded two contracts
Gallipolis Post No . 4464,
and·
advertised 13 others for
Veterans of Foreign Wars, will
upcoming bld openlncs with
[trve as pallbearers for
today's 1 o'clock service of ,33 mne · of the WiDIIeld·
E.dwin E. Gates. Services will . Point Pleasant road on U. S.
35 for relocatioa to ellmtnate
he beld at the Waugh-Halleybad curve, the curve 'Is
WoodFuneral Home with Rev.
lmown locally ao the Jobn
Allred Holley and Rev. Bruce
Oshel
curve, belug one of lbe
Unroe officiating.
13 to be opened on February
Burial will he in Salem
29.
Cemetery. Military graveside.
The contract Is listed as a
rites will be conducted by the
·Clan "A" job which Is
local VFW Post.
flllailced entirely with stale
The name or Eldon Gales,
funds aad call for widening
Rt. 2, Patriot, a son, was
and pavement coastrudlon.
omitted in Friday's story.

..

.

Route 2'

(Continued from page 13)
Kircher of Athens was named
the contractor and in the fall or
1912 the building was completed and by December books
had been moved into the new
library - a real Christmas
present for the whole community.
Three months later the 1913
Hood struck and five feet of
water went onto'the main noor.
Miss Cora Cook was the first
librarian and through her
efforts and two men from
Clifton the books were stored In
the atUc and the furnishings
were moved to the higher
Presbyterian Church.
After the flood, the carnegie
Corporation again came to the
aid of the library by sending
$600 to repair the damages
incurred by the Hood. Of
course, the library was again
hi I by a Hood In 1937 but this
tin:• cleaning was done by
local help and books were
repaired by workers of the
W.P.A.
The library has remained an
often-visited spot in the
community and has virlually
remained unchanged until the
mid-!!lxties when an addition
was built at the rear of the
structure.
Providing the finances for
the addllion, which is a special
children's reading room, was '
the late Homer Cook, Middleport businessman. He gave
the addition in memory of his
late wife, who served on the
library board from 1944 to 1963,
and his sister, Cora Cook
Stuart who was the firs!
librarian when the building
was new; She served from 1912
to 1925.
The Middleport institution is
now a Meigs Local School
District · Library and is
operated by the PomeroyMiddleport Library Board.
Malting up the members are C.
E. Blakeslee, president; Mrs.
Don Mills, vice president;
Manning Kloes, Theodore T.
Reed, Jr., Mrs. Nellie Vale,
Mrs. Roy Holter and Dr. P. E.
Stanley.
RecenUy named director of
the Pomeroy and Middleport
Libraries was Jonathan
Louden. Miss Jane Bailey is
currently the Middleport
librarian.

PT.. PLEASANT -

MOTION DENIED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Appeal! Court Judge Robert E.
C90k Friday rejected a motion
to dismiss criminal charges
against three officers of
Cl'ofters Inc., Involved in the
11170 Statehouse loan scandal.
Gerald Oonahue, Sidney
Grtfrl!li lind !larry A. Groban
contended they were denied the
rlJht' to a speedy trial.
However, Cook said the delay
In the trial ·wu due to t.heir
act10111, no( the state's.
'

U. 5,

GAME POSTPONED
OLEAN, N. Y. (UP!) - The
scheduled college basketball
game between St. Bonaventure
University and Detroit
University was postponed
Saturday after the Detroit
team was unable to arrive here
because of poor road condltlo~s
caused by a weekend
snowstorm. The game,
originally scheduled for
Saturday night, will be played
today, at 2·p.m. EST.

Il:onUnued from page 13)
Highway FUnding Act.
"Heretofore
all
Improvements to Route 2 had to
he done under a 50 per cent
state fund, 50 per cent federal
fund formula, :' Moore said.
"The economic growth
designation for Huntington and
Parkersburg means that this
highway has been brought
under provisions of a new
federal enactment which
provides federal aid of up to 100
per cent for engineering aud
economic survey and up to 95
per cent for actual construction

work.."
Moore added that prospects
appear
" increasingly
brighter" for including all of
the highway from Chester to
Huntington, in a 95 per cent
federal finance program.
'

GALLIPOLIS - Central
"This acquisilion should also
Soya Company, Inc., (NYSE) enable Central Soya to further
has purchased the asseta of the its policy of expa•oding sales in
Bonds Industrial Corporation its proprietary ·and refined
(lndustriele Beleggings- products group, where earmaatschapplj Honda- nings} u:lia to show steady
Rotterdam N. V.). Dale rather than cyclical growth.
W. McMillen, Jr., chairman of This group oi activities acthe board of Central Soya, counted for 37 pet. of Central
announced. Central Soya has a Soya's fiscal 1971 sales. In- .
farm supply store at Third and elusion o!Bonda's sales in last
Vine here.
year's results would have
Bonda is a Rotterdam, increaseq the percentage of
Netherlands-based holding sales in this area to t5 pet. of
company whose principal our total," he added.
assets are majority interests in
Central Soya is a Fort
livestock and poultry feed · Wayne, Ind. based livestock
manufacturing facilities In the and poultrY feed manufacturer
Netherlands, France, Belgium, and soybean processor. Its
Portugal, Brazil, Canada and Master Mix brand of livestock · '
Morocco . Through minority and poultry feed is marketed In
interests and licensing 37 slates east of the Rockies
agreements the company and in 25 foreign countries,·
maintains livestock and some of which are served by
poultry feed marketing and feed manufacturing plants In
distribution in 19 additional Puerto Rico, Jamaica,
countries.
Trinidad, Guatemala and
Bonda realized sales In Brazil. The company Is ilso
excess of $100 million in the active in grain merchandising
calendar ' year
ending , and Is a major factor in the
December 31, 1911. Ap- transportation of grain,
proximately 85 pet. of Its total soybeans and soybean meal.
sales were in livestock and
Central Soya earned
poultry feeds and con- $14,033,ii99, equal · to $2.09 per ·
centrates. The balance was share on sales of $751,132,353 in
gener~ted by a widely diver- its fiscal year ended August 31,
sified list of products including 1971.
edible fish, fish meal (an
important feed ingredient) , M~land
textiles, knit wear, asphalt,
rolled roofing, exterior paints
and pearl essence, an
COLLEGE PARK, Md.
ingredient in some nail (UPI)- Tom McMiUan tossed
· polishes.
in a series·of Hi-foot jwnpers
" The acquisition of the over Duke's zone defense
assets of Bonda, one of the Saturday afternoon to lead
larger multinational livestock Maryland to a 77-M victory
and poultry feed manufac- over the Blue Devils.
turers and marketers, permits
McMillen, who finished with
Central Soya to achieve an a game high 29 points, was 13immediate presence in the 20 from the noor in leading
countries involved . and Maryland to its 14th victory of
. provides an opportunity to the season.
.
serve their growing livestock
The Terps hit 60 per cent
and poultry potential," Mr: from the noor in the opening
McMillen stated. "This would half to lead 38-20 and 'coasted
have taken several years to through the second hall.
achieve had it been negotiated
Chris Reading led Duke with
on a country-by-countrY basis. 22 points.

Black Panthers
.

Go Legitimate
OAKLAND, Calli. (UPI) Huey P. Newlon says the Black
Panthers are going to work
within the system for social
and economic advances for
blacks, and he blames fugitive
Eldridge Cleaver for losing
community support with a
"pick-up-the-gun now" philosophy.
In his first interview since
1charges In t~ 1967 slaying of a
policeman were dropped, Newton said Sunday that his future
efforts would he geared toward
"organizing
the
community."
Blasts Cleaver
Newton, 29, lashed out at
Cleaver, the expeUed panther
minister of defense, during a
two-hour interview in his $650amonth apartment overlooking
scenic Lake Merritt.
Cleaver fled the countrY in
1963, three days before he was
ordered to surrender to
authorities. in Oakland as a
parole violator. He was last
reported In Algiers, where he
resigned his post with the
Panthers.
Newton was freed in December when the district attorney's
office decided a fourth trial in
the slaying of officer John Frey
would be frull)ess. The decision
came four days after a jury
deadlocked 6-6 In Newton's
third trial on voluntary manslaughter charges.
Earlier Trials
An earlier trial last year also
resulted In a deadlocked panel.
The first in 1968 ended in a
guilty verdict which was
overturned by an appeUate
court on grounds of judicial
error.
Newton, the PartY cofounder,
served 22 months in Jl"lson ·
before the appeUate court's
ruling.
.
Newlon said that while he
was In Jl"ison and the party was
under Cleaver, "the com-

NAME CALLING
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey
Saturday called Nixon administration announcements
on decreases in unemployment
"government hypocrisy" and
said they widened the
"credibility gap." Hwnphrey
was here to open local
headquarters in his campaign
to win the Democratic Party's
. presidential nomination.·
·

munity turned off on my whole
Jl"Ogram."
He said Cleaver offered a
choice between "either picking
up the gun now and winning the
revolulion, or you are an Uncle
Tom."
"In order to win you must
participate whether It's
electoral politics or the contradlclions going on In the
church," Newton said In a
PROGRAM URGED
relaxed interview.
WASHINGTON !UPI)
Sips Whiskey
Newlon, sipping whiskey at a Assistant Senate Republican
long table, defended a recent Leader Robert P. Griffin,
agreement with a group of urged the administration
black businessmen that Saturday to adopt a cornguaranteed contributions prehensi ve program to clean
up the Great Lakes . The
toward the party's aclivities.
The pact ended months of Michigan senator said the
Panther picketing at a liquor administralion has not yet
store owned by black business- funded an antipollution
man Bill Boyette, who said the program drawn up by the
taclic drove him to the verge of Environmental · Protection
bankruptcy.
, Agency (EPA) last year and he
"They will get more custof cited published reports the
mers and a tax writeoff,' .. administration does not intend·
to do so.
Newton said.
Newlon said most of his lime
in the future would be" geared
toward getting out the vote.
· The Panther leader said the
MUSKIE ENDORSED
drive currently was con- NEW YORK (UP!) -Rep.
centrated in Oakland and · Emanuel CeDer,
Dean
of the
.
I
Berkeley, but would be "soon" House of Representatives,
extended to Chicago, New endorsed Sen. Edmund s.
York, AUanta, and other cities. Muskie for the presidency
"We have 30 chapters and Saturday. He dismissed John
branches," he said, but refused V. l,indsay as an absentee
to reveal the nwnber of party mayor who is "not too great an
members .
administrator."

I'IEDNESDAY AD 212/72
The Copy On Tile 5.48 BERNZ-0MATIC KIT Was Incorrect But The
Illustration Was Correct.
·

SAN JUAN, P.R. (UP!) Fred Biletnkoff sank a six foot
putt for a double eagle on the
last hole Saturday to enable the
Oakl1111d Raider pass catching
great and his partner, Willie
Davis of the Los Angeles
Dodgers, to take a one stroke
, lead in the $30,000 Astrojet Golf
. Classic.
"It was the only putt I sank
. all day," the blond Blletnikoff
: said aflerward. "WIIIle reiuJy

DOOR BUSTERS

: carried us.''

PANTY HOSE

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I'

However, successive Ken luck) and dropped the Commodores
field goals and Vanderbilt SEC record to &lt;h5.
turnovers enabled U\e Wildcats
LAMPO.WINS $10,000'
to put the game mio overtime .' SAN JOSE, Calif. - .Gus
Kentucky is now 7-2 and Lampo, Endicott, N.Y., pro
leading the ' conference. The · who captured his first bowling
Wildcats also received 1!).po.inl crown .two weeks ag(l at Las
performances from ' Tom Vegas, made ittwo out or three '
Parker and Jim Andrews.
Saturday as he led all the way
Vanderbilt had five players to win .fir•t' plaee · prizes · of
in double figures : Terry $10,000 an~ a new automobile in
Compfun had · 20 points and the $85,000 Mercury Cougar
Tom Arnholt 13.
Ope? Bowling Tmp:nament. ,
It was Vanderbilt's first
Tlie 28-year-old lrlghthander,
home game loss of the season who went inlo th~ nationally

televised finals as the top seed
after leading-through ·the first
42 games. broke on ·top in I I.e
champioQship matclf against
Don Glover, South Bend, Ind .,
and was an easy winner, 2:&gt;11224. Glover had advanced to
the· title game by downing two
opponents.
The one-game elimination
format began with Larry Laub,
San' Francisco, disposing of
Barry Asher , Costa Mesa,
Calif.., by a 200-193 count. then
it was Glover taking the

measure of Laub, 207-195. That
set the stage for a game be·
tween five-time iitlist Glover
and Mike OrJovsky, friend and
traveling companion to Lampo
from Endicott, N. Y. Orlovsky
was off his game, bowing to
the lefthander in the day's
lowest scoring ma((;h, 188-172.
ROLLICKING WINS
BOWIE, Md. - Rollicking,
the highweight of the field,
drew away in the streb:h
Saturday at Bowie to post an
easy victory in the $25,000

on

·StrYker Handicap at seven
· furlongs for Maryland Breds.
The ~year-old took command from favored Joys Fella ·
on the backstretch under Bill
Passmore and once In theJead
pulled away to win by I 'h
lengths and earn $141950 ior _
owner Robert A. Leonard.
Joys Fella, who led for
nearly a half mile, was second,
followed by Johnny West who
was another three lengths baok
in third .

'

.

'

Name 6 To Basketball Hall o Fame
..

SPRINGFIELD, Mass .
(UPI) - Basketball's Hall of
Fame selection committee
reached into the past for two
former players, a college
coach and three contributors to
the sport in naming six additions ·to ' the Naismith Shrine
Saturday.
Former players P~l En·
dac ott and Max " Marty "
Friedman, the late Coach
Edgar A. Diddle, and the
owner . ·promoter - administrator' trio of Edward
GotUieb, Robert L. · Douglas
an.d Clifford Wells made up one
of the largest groups chosen for
. the Hall of Fame in several
years.
The latest selections, who
will formally take places in the
shrine on the Springfield
College campus April 20, swell
Naismith Basketball Hall of
Fame membership to 83.
Endacott was cited by the
selection committee headed by
Forrest Twogood as a two-time
All-American at the University
of Kansas. The retired
president
of
Phillips
Petroleum, Endacott was cited
as the National Collegiate
Player of the Year in 1923 and

was chosen to the Helms alltime All-American team.
Friedman was singled out
as a f&gt;.foot-Bdefensive star who
played professional basketball
for Newburgh, N. Y., Utica, N.
Y., Carbondale, Pa., Albany of
the New York Slate League,
the New York Whirlwinds and
as a player-coach for the
Cleveland RoseQblums before
retiring in 1927 . .
Diddle coached at Western
Kentucky for 42 years,
directing his teams to 13
Kentucky intercollegiate tiUes,
eight Southern Athletic Conference championships and 11
Ohio Valley Conference
crowns.
Diddle, who relired in 1964
and died hist year, ranked
fourth on the list of all-time
victories with 759, trailing only
three other Hall of Famers,
Adolph Rupp, Phog Allen, and

Hank lba.
Gottlieb
owned
the
Philadelphia Sphas, coached
the Warriors, first champions
of the National Basketball
Association and has ~ involved in basketball in various
capacities for nearly 59 years.

now living in New York, ving as executive secretary of
Douglas is the first black to IX' the National Association of
elected as an individual to the Basketball Coaches.
Hall of Fame.
His teams won nearly 900
Wells was the first full time games in his 47-year coaching
director of the Hall of Fame, career including an Indiana
taking over in 1963 after ser- high school crown at
•
,

Bloomington In 1919 . He
coached at Tulane for 18 years
and is the author of a number
of articles on basketball and a
former officer of both the
Coaches Associalion and · the
NCAA.

~t~~::~m~th~:~!~·s:~~1: Weather Perfect For Big Ract

Committee, a consuila)Jt to
Commissioner Walter Kennedy and the leag ue 's
schedule maker.
Douglas, 87, coached and
owned the Renaissance learn
that was elected en masse to
the Hall of Fame in 1964. His 22year coaching record with the
Rens included 2,318 victories,
an 88-game winning streak in
1933 and a world Iitle series
victory over the Harlem
Globetrotters in 1939.
A British West Indies native

Marshall Tops

LIU In Garden

Drysdale ln.

Tennis Finals

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I

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)
- Kentucky overcame a
furio,us secQOd half Vanderbilt
rally behind the 23-point effort
or little Ronnie _l;.yons to beat
the ,Commodores 85-80 in
overtime Saturday.
Lyons hit four crucial
overiime points to put the
Southeastern · Conference
contest out of Vanderbilt's
reach.,
Vanderbilt had outscored
Kentuc)ty by a 15-0 margin at
one point in the second half.

Lund Gets

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••
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·

ninth green, a short par five, to
set up his eagle.
.
"He was pulling so bad all
day I figure he's got to make
this one,'' said an elated Davis,
who was thinking. about
collecting $3,000 in firs t place
prize money. ·
J.')lere was a 11U'ee-way tie at
117, two strokes back .and '!/
under p·a r, among Mike
Richardson, Houston OileJS,
and Jim Wynn, Houston
Astros; Norm -~sh, Detroit
Tigers, and Wayne Walker,
Detroit Lions; and Ernie
Banks, Chicago Cubs, and John
Niland, Dallas Cowboys.
Jim Pa_lmer of the Ballimore
Orioles and Willie Richardson
of the Colla were alone at 118
and .Jim Buoning of the
Philadelphia Phillies and Ron
Bull of the Chicago Bears were
at ·119.
Joe Namath and Mickey
ManUe were well back in the
field of 32 teams at 130.
Defending champions Bill
l\1azero~ki of the Pittsburgh
Pirates and Andy RusseU of the
Steelers were also seemingly
out of contenlion at 127.

•

, DAYTONA BEACH, Fla , manufacturers' championship for the start of a busy 24 hours
( UPI) - When the in- since 1967. The Ferraris placed of racing .
ternational racing . crowd one-two in the tour opener last
A 100-k.ilometer race pitting
gathers at Daytona, you'll find month in Buenos Aires, but . the little Volkswagen-powered
an Italian pit crewman there are nine more races to formula Vee cars kicked off the
wearing a ·Davr Crockett gq.
weekend at 4 p.m. while u1e
coonskin cap changing tires on
A canary yellow Lola Ford bigger grand touring cars such
a Ferrari.
handled by Joakim Bonnier of as Mustangs, Camaros and
Or a Lebanese beauty queen Switzerland and Reine WiseII Porcbefi were in a 200-mile run
chatting with Nanni Galli about of Sweden is the fourth starting beginning at midnight;
his Alia Romeo while ad- place while Stommelen and · A Michigan team of Ronald
milling she knows nothing Peter itevson placed fifth in an Weaver and Jerry Thompson
about auto racing.
Alfa Romeo 33.
won the pole for the midnight
Or Dave Heinz and Bob
"The Lola is very quick, but challenge race with a' lap at
Johnson's Corvette · out of I'm not so afraid of the Lola," 117.552 in a Corvette. ·
Tampa, painted like a Con- said Stommelen. "It's a new
The Dixie-striped Heinzfederate battle flag and car and not so strong for six Johnson Corvette claimed U1e
bearing a tag which says, hours . The Important thing is outside pole with a lap at
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) - concrete bowl which the Tigers
"Save yo' Confederate money, to make the finish without 114.855 m.p.h. In the third slot
Memphis State football coach call home in recent years and
boys,
the South gonna rise trouble."
was a Camaro driven by Tom
lliUy "Spook" Murphy quit fans and alumni have griped at
again."
But the 28-year-old bachelor Nehl of Jacksonville, Fla. and .
under fire from fans Saturday the schoot;s inability . to comBut
on
the
eve
ol
Sunday's
from
Cologne respects the Jim Fitzgerald of Clenimons,
but remained on as Athlelic pete with big-time powers like
six-hour Daytona Continental, Ferraris , " They are ' well N. C. They qualified at 111.602
Director.
Tennessee and Ole Miss on the
Germany's
Rolf Stommelen organized,'' he said.
m.p.h.
Murphy did not attend the football field .
was being more realistic.
Stommelen was distressed at
press conference .which the
"I ask for a re-dedication to
'
"
lt:S
going
to
be
difficult
to
,
the
way his car was handUng
school caUed to announce the the Memphis Stale athlelic
NEW YORK (UPI ) - game open in the second half. beat the Ferraris,'' said the tall during the trial runs on
change.
program from the thousands of
"It is my understanding that fans who have enjoyed our
Russell Lee's 26 points sparked The Marshall center scored 18 Alia Romeo plio!, unhappy Daytona's high-banked turns.
he (Murphy) is out of town, successes and shared our
16th-ranked Marshall to a 70-61 of his points in the second half. with the way his car is han- " l don 't think it's the power, it
dling, "but I'm sure they will seems to be an aerodynamics
~ai~ athletic committee setbacks through the past
victory over Long Island
RQn Williams, with 18 points,
c~an Dr. A. Ford Haynes, . decade~,'' said Haynes.
University Saturday afternoon was high man for LIU which he slower in the race than they problem," he said.
Work came to a virtual
who pr11ised Murphy's record l ' Murphy "said In a statement \
in the second game .of a college has now dropped six straight were in qualifying."
\
...
.
.
~· li ti:dich and hiS wllUngJ\ess ' that ' there were no definite
basketball doubleheader at games and Is 9-9 on the s11ason. · If the c!!allengersv w~ re s\!Jndstill in the ltusy pit,'&gt;
gloomy, the Ferrari team was Saturday when Miss Universe
rr
6i.turn his coaching duties over prospects under consideration
Madison Square Garden.
Bill James .had 14 for Mar- sitting pretty, with the red shed a black-maxi-length fur
RiCHMOND,
Va.
(UP!)
lb a yet-unchosen successor. at the present time to fill the
Mont~lair State upset shall which Is now 17-2 on the
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI)
"praneing horses" holding the coat to pose for publicity Classy Cliff Drysdale whipped
"A program to move MSU head coaching job.
Fairleigh Dickinson, 57-55, in year.
- Former Major League the first game.
1
first
three pla"ces for the start pictures in hot pants and knee- John Newcombe of Australia
football off a middle position to
Among the possibilities
outfielder Don Lund was
of the long rim over the 3.81· length boola.
Saturday to advance to the
the heights of Collegiate mentioned have been Bill Pace
elevated Saturday from LIU's ball control tactics
mile track and r~ad course.
"What a baby. Wow, wow," fihals with lop-!Jeeded Rod
Football is being iniliated,'' pf Vanderbilt and Southeastern
kept the game close in the first
assistant to Associate Athletic
Marion
Andretti
and
Jacky
shouted
an Italian in the Laver today in the Fidelity
said Haynes.
,
Conference assistants John Director at the University of half as Marshall led by only 31fckx, calling their new three- Ferrari garage, using his best World · Championship Tennis
Milrphy, 51, built a multi- David Crow and Bob lyler of
Michigan, where he earned 't/. But the tough Herd press
II
ter 'llachine ""f~ntastic ;" English.
·
.Tournament.
mi!Hon dollar sports complex Ala bam a and Florida's Jimmy nine letters as ·a collegiate and Lee's hot hand broke the
won the pole position with a lap
But
the
long-limbed
Drysdale posted scores of 4- lncludillg an indoor tartan Dunn.
sports star.
at
131.606
miles
per
hour
Lebanese
beauty,
Georgina
8,
6-4, and 6-4 to defeat
turf practice field for football
"I am going to miss
Lund replaces Dave Strack,
Friday.
Rizk, demonstrated she could Newcombe, number one
-during his 14 years as head coaching,'' Murphy said. "Just
r~cenlly
na_med
athletic
Clay
Regazzoni
of
Switspeak
Italian as well as ranked player In the world, in
coach and complied a 91-44-11 as 1 tried to do my best as a
d1rector at Amona.
.
zerland and Brian Redman of French, English and Arabic - the semifinals play. Laver
record.
football coach at all times in
"We are fortunate to have
England will he in the second even though her lmowledge of easily disposed of Arthur Ashe
Murphy's 5-S-1 record last the past 14 years, I will consomeone as capable as Don
LAFAYETIE,
Ind.
(UP!)
car,
with a qualifying lap of cars was limited.
in the other semifinals match,
season was his first losing year tinue to put the success of the
Ll!fld to take over for Dave,''
Forward Bob Ford and center 130.678 m.p.h., while the third
"I'll know something about it IVinning 6-2, 7~.
siqce 1958.
Memphis State University athletic director Don Canham
HONOLULU (UP!) - Portly William Franklin sparked a )ead Ferrari willl)e driven by by the end o( the race," said
Drysdale, a South Mrican
But attendance has been athletic program first in my
Bob Murphy increased his iead second-half Purdue surge as Ronnie Peterson of Sweden and Miss Rizk, who will present the who now lives in Austin, Tex:,
said
In
making
the
andwindling in the modern, career."
noWJcement.
to three strokes Saturday after the Boilermakers beat Big Ten Tim Schenken of Australt.!.
trophy to the winner of the started slow but during the
"Don will retain a few of his six holes of play in the third rival Michigan 84-74, Saturday
Young Peter Schetty, ContinentaL
second set moved up a couple
more important duties as round of the 200,000 Hawaiian to stay in the thick of the managing the Ferrari team for , A bright sun but chill wind of ste~ Into the court and
assistant director, in addition Open.
conference basketball ,race.
the first time this year, ex- bathed the dusty infield which . began h1tting excellent service
Murphy , of Jacksonville,
to his new responsibilities as
Ford pumped in a game-high pressed confidence the Modena suddenly blossomed with tents r~turns, shaking Newcombe's
associate director, " Canham Fla., birdied the par-five first 29 points - 15 in the last half factory will win Its first world and campers 'while fans waited service.
hole, took a bogey on the par- while Franklin made 28, insaid . .
'
'
three fourth hole but came cluding 16 in the final 20
L110d
joined the Wolverines'
athletic department in 1970 back to birdie the par four minutes.
following eight .years in the sixth. He started the third
The victory upped the
ATHENS - Rod Cooper, however, the titles did not have Detroit Tigers' front office. He round the leader with a nine Purdue season record to 9~
Chief of the Division of to be presented in order to also spent part of his playing under par total of 135.
and 3-1 in the Big Ten.
Watercraft of the Ohio obtain annual registration.
career with the Tigers and ! Fred Marti of Baytown, Tex., Michigan, conquerer or Ohio
Department of Natural
"After we started requiring a coached Michigan's baseball who started the day one stroke State, is 10-7 overall and f&gt;-2 In
Resources, has issued new valid title for these boats and team for four seasons, in- !back, fell off the pace by three the conference. The loss
regulations to help Ohio boat motors to he registered, we cluding the NCAA Cham- strokes after recording two lmocked them out of 'a tie for
bogeys following a birdie.
Ofners
receive
1972 discovered that many citizens . pionship season of 1962.
the Big Ten lead.
Marty Fleckman of Port
registrations under a new state did not have titles and were not
He will take over much of the
The game was deadlocked at
law.
aware they were required by business side of running Arthur, Tex., who was two the half, 37-37, but Michigan
The . law, adopted in law," Cooper said.
Michigan 's sports operation s lroke back going into jumped into a !-point adDecember by the state
Cooper · nMed the new formerly handled by Strack. Saturday 's play, fell back vantage after interniission on
another stroke when he scored the shooting of Big Henry
legislature, for the first time regulations will be in effect
bogeys on the third and fifth Wilmore, who ended with 26
makes it necessary for a boat only until the end of 1972, and
holes
and birdies on the fourth points - all but four In the
owner to present a valid tiUe urgfl[ all boat and motor
and sixth.
for a boat more than 14 feel owners who do not have a Iitle
second hall.
Of the handful of 78 players
long or a motor of more than 10 to obtain one this year, even if
But Franklin put the
who had completed nine holes, Boilermakers on top to stay at
horsepower In order to obtain a they are not planning to use
three Californians - Ron 45-44; with 16 :33 left.
1972 registration.
their boats this year.
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UP!) Cerrudo
of Napa, Jerry Heard
The new regulalions, to be
"Once this regulations, ex- All-American guard Greg
. effective Tue!l¥y, February I, plres," Cooper said, "we'll Kohls' 29 points led a run-and-. of Visalia and John Schroeder
· allow those boat owners who revert back to the old way of shoot attack Saturday as of La Jolla - had four under
have no certificate of title for a ·tilling, and those who . can't Syracuse
topp ed par 32s.
Partly cloudy skies and light
boat or motor bought after produce proof of ownership, Massa chusetts 90-85 in a
Overstuffed with a quarter pound of U.S. cllolce' beef, freshly gro1.11d
October 9, 1962, to" submit a such as a manufacturer's or regionally televised basketball winds · greeted the field
and grilled, with a most skillful blend of melted cheese, crisp green
Saturday at the par 72, 7,122sworn, notarized slatement of Importer's statement of origin, game.
lettuce, tomato, onion, pickle slices and Shake Shoppe special
ownership In lieu of a will just be out ,of luck. They
Kohls fired in 17 points in the yard oceanside course at the
dressing.
Ser,ved on a gigantic toasted bun.
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
llllinufactu'rer's or Importer's won't have a valid title, and first half as the Orange took a Waialae Country Club.
Atlantic Coast Football .
statement of origin.
they won't be able to register 46-41 lead at halftime! and
League, at its annual meeting
tossed ln 12 more in the final 20 St. Louis Ups Mark Saturday, approved a franThe regulations also instruCt their boata and motors."
COifllly clerks of courts to
The new Jaw and regulations minutes as Syracuse bliilt•a 71ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) - St. chise for Mt. Vernon, N. Y..as
accept the statementa as proof do not apply to boats and 57 advantage with 10 minutes Louis University, led by Harry the fifth team in the pro grid
of ownership, and'to issue valid I motors acquired 'before Oct. 9, left in the game. Kohls' . per- Rogers and Bill Paradoski; league.
certlflcates.of tiUe to those who 1963, or to boats less than 14 formance included seven-of- slaved off a Wichita State
In 1971, the league consisted
submit them.
feet long and motors of Jess seven from the free throw 'line. challenge late in the game to of Bridgeport and Hartford,
Massachusetts , which\ en- gain a 63-60 Missouri Valley Conn. and Norfolk and
·Cooper explained the " than 10 hor!!epower.
regulations were made · Cooper also said oriicials joyed its last lead at 23-2tland Conference vic!Qry Saturday Roanoke, Va., in 1972, the loop
necessary because a boat and froril lhe Division. of Water- gained ita final tie of the .game afternoon and boost their will operate as a six-team unit.
mo!:or litUng law passed in 1964 craft in the last two weeks held at 25-25, kept chipping away at league record tQ 4-2.
Commissioner Cosmo
was not enforced, and many seminars explaining the · new the Orange lead but could come · Rogers.pack~ the Bills with lacovavi also revealed his
Ohio boat owners do not law and regulations to the no closer than the final five- 19 while Paradoski added 15 · league and the Midwest
. posaess a tiUe and have no way more than • 300 watercraft point margin.
and limited Wichita's Terry League, which is based in
Mike Cee contributed 24 llenton to seven pointa, Carlos Columbus, 0 ., have agreed to a
of obtaining one.
registrars In the state.
The 1964 law requires tilling
"We hope to make this period points and nine rebounds to the Martinez had 12 for the Bills, series of pre-11eason exhibition
''THAT OLD FASHIONED GOODNESl"
of all boats more than 14 feet of transition under the new Jaw Syracuse cause, while Rich now 12-1 overall.
games, and that the respective
long and motors of more than as easy as possible for the boat Vogeley scored 17 points for ·the
Vince Smith led Wichita, now title holders in each league will
10 hcnepower bought after owners of Ohio," Cooper said . Redmen, now 11-Q on 'the 4-1 in the conlere_;~ce and 12-Q meet In a championship game
October 9, 1963. Until this year,
·
season.
at season's end .
overall, with 23 poi~ts .

SHEETS.·

FANCY CANNON

.

, Davi~. a )0-handicapped
, going Into the round, fired a
:_two over par 74 at the
: Cerromar Beach Hotel Golf
course Saturday. The players'
handicap committee met
· immediately afterWard and cut
: Davis to a seven handicap for
: Sunday's final round In the 54·
: hole,event.
: The C&amp;Uiornla twosome had
: a two round best ball total of 57: 56-115 which put them just
·ahead of two other californians, Sal , Bamdo of ·the
Oakland A's and . Daryle
Lamonica of the Raiders with a
57~l16 ..
Blletnkof( hit a five onto the

Princess Sue Ladies'

'

HECK'S

In Astrojet

.I .

?

SIZE SO" to 52"

ECIION

.

1 P~ TO 7 PM
ONLY

In
77-58 Victory

END INSIGHT
VIENNA (UP!)- Soviet and
U.S. negotiators expect to
finish work on a treaty ,when
the Strategic Arms Limitation
Talks (SALT) resume . in
Helsinki
next
month,
diplomatic sources said today.
The sixth SALT round adjourned here Friday with both
sides talking of ''progress" but
volunteering few details: They
will resume the talks March 28
- in time they hoped to write a
treaty for signing when
· President Nixon goes to
Moscow in May.

-Biletnkoff Has
Double Eagle

SUNDAY
ONLY
• !

AVERAGE IS 353

Pallbearers lor
Funeral Noted

Central Soya Has
Rotterdam Firm

15 - The&amp;lldayTimes -Sentinei,Sunday, f'eb.6, 1972 ·

.

'

'

.

'

I

I•
'I

NO
COUPONS
TO CUP/

GAU.IPOLIS, OHIO

�• ••

..
1

'

•

(Coolil)ued from page 13)
13menkWed in umdmderry.
Pleao R~~ted
Near Keady, on the bo~r 20
Rilles weot of Neirry, a mine
de!Alllated from the Jrlsb Side
damaged two patroiiiJlg vehicles maMed by !'iorth Irish
reM!rvlsb. ()le soldier was hit
In tbe shoulder by bomb
fragments,
an
army
spokesman said.
The Newry organizers
rejected pleas from Britl.th
'I'Hme Minl!ler Edward Heath
and Northern Ireland Prerpler
Brian Faullmer to call off1he
dvll-righta march.
The chairman of the' Newry
lx'ancb of the Civil Rlghta
Association, Rory McShlme,
said the march would be
canceled if Britain releaaed
more than 700 security
suspects interned without
trial_. condition the government has refused.
"'!be possibility of cancelling
the march rests with Heath and
Faulkner," McShane said. "All
they have to do is open the
gates."
Patrob HOD! Gunmen
An estimated 3,000 Brltl.th
troopll swarmed in and around
Newry. Armored personnel
carriers and Land Rovers
rumbled past rows of homes
and stores whose windows
were boarded up in expectation
of violence.
British officers said !he
patrols were hunting IRA
gunmen who inforniants said
had sUpped through the roadblocks sealing the approaches
to the town. The border is just
five miles away. ·
Across the border, extra
troops and pollee moved into
the town of Dundalk to control
thousands of southern Irishmen expected to cross over for
the Newry march.
The demonstrators plan to
march a mUe and a hall from
·the outskirts of Newry to the
town square, where they will
be addressed by lister
nationalist Member of
Parliament Bernadette DevUn,
actress Vaneosa Redgrave and
others. The march is scheduled
· to begin at 3 p.m. (10 a.m.
EST).

Army's HQ
Destroyed
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
multiple-alarm fire destroyed
a two-story brick warehouse
building at a downtown
Salvation Army headquarters
complex Friday night. Fire
chief Raymond Fadley said the
building was a total loss but
was unable to estimate the
loss.
One fireman was overcome,
apparenl]y from exhauslion,
while several others were
treated at the scene, he said.
When firemen rushed to the
burning structure, one of three
buildings In the city block,
names were shooUng up from
the roof, but firemen sprayed
the roof and soon had the blaze
under control. An hour later
the roof had fallen in and the
walls were falling down.
The building had a Salvation
Army recreation center In the
basement, while the other
space was used to store furniture, clothing and other
merchandise to be repaired
and distributed. The area also
had paints and repair equipment.

MAIL CAU
EVER WONOER HOW
MANY LETTEI'S VOL!
MAIL EACH VEAR l
WELl., THE NATIONAl.

PER PIERSON!

WHO

THERE?
1HE

ARMV 1/AS A
RAOAR So SENSITIVE
IT CAN OETECT THE
()!!'FERENCE BETWEEN
TilE GAff 0&gt; A MAN
ANOA WOMAN AT A
RANG£ oP 6 MILES /

Library
..

•

j

•

The
Department
of
Highways
GALUPOUS- Members of
has awarded two contracts
Gallipolis Post No . 4464,
and·
advertised 13 others for
Veterans of Foreign Wars, will
upcoming bld openlncs with
[trve as pallbearers for
today's 1 o'clock service of ,33 mne · of the WiDIIeld·
E.dwin E. Gates. Services will . Point Pleasant road on U. S.
35 for relocatioa to ellmtnate
he beld at the Waugh-Halleybad curve, the curve 'Is
WoodFuneral Home with Rev.
lmown locally ao the Jobn
Allred Holley and Rev. Bruce
Oshel
curve, belug one of lbe
Unroe officiating.
13 to be opened on February
Burial will he in Salem
29.
Cemetery. Military graveside.
The contract Is listed as a
rites will be conducted by the
·Clan "A" job which Is
local VFW Post.
flllailced entirely with stale
The name or Eldon Gales,
funds aad call for widening
Rt. 2, Patriot, a son, was
and pavement coastrudlon.
omitted in Friday's story.

..

.

Route 2'

(Continued from page 13)
Kircher of Athens was named
the contractor and in the fall or
1912 the building was completed and by December books
had been moved into the new
library - a real Christmas
present for the whole community.
Three months later the 1913
Hood struck and five feet of
water went onto'the main noor.
Miss Cora Cook was the first
librarian and through her
efforts and two men from
Clifton the books were stored In
the atUc and the furnishings
were moved to the higher
Presbyterian Church.
After the flood, the carnegie
Corporation again came to the
aid of the library by sending
$600 to repair the damages
incurred by the Hood. Of
course, the library was again
hi I by a Hood In 1937 but this
tin:• cleaning was done by
local help and books were
repaired by workers of the
W.P.A.
The library has remained an
often-visited spot in the
community and has virlually
remained unchanged until the
mid-!!lxties when an addition
was built at the rear of the
structure.
Providing the finances for
the addllion, which is a special
children's reading room, was '
the late Homer Cook, Middleport businessman. He gave
the addition in memory of his
late wife, who served on the
library board from 1944 to 1963,
and his sister, Cora Cook
Stuart who was the firs!
librarian when the building
was new; She served from 1912
to 1925.
The Middleport institution is
now a Meigs Local School
District · Library and is
operated by the PomeroyMiddleport Library Board.
Malting up the members are C.
E. Blakeslee, president; Mrs.
Don Mills, vice president;
Manning Kloes, Theodore T.
Reed, Jr., Mrs. Nellie Vale,
Mrs. Roy Holter and Dr. P. E.
Stanley.
RecenUy named director of
the Pomeroy and Middleport
Libraries was Jonathan
Louden. Miss Jane Bailey is
currently the Middleport
librarian.

PT.. PLEASANT -

MOTION DENIED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Appeal! Court Judge Robert E.
C90k Friday rejected a motion
to dismiss criminal charges
against three officers of
Cl'ofters Inc., Involved in the
11170 Statehouse loan scandal.
Gerald Oonahue, Sidney
Grtfrl!li lind !larry A. Groban
contended they were denied the
rlJht' to a speedy trial.
However, Cook said the delay
In the trial ·wu due to t.heir
act10111, no( the state's.
'

U. 5,

GAME POSTPONED
OLEAN, N. Y. (UP!) - The
scheduled college basketball
game between St. Bonaventure
University and Detroit
University was postponed
Saturday after the Detroit
team was unable to arrive here
because of poor road condltlo~s
caused by a weekend
snowstorm. The game,
originally scheduled for
Saturday night, will be played
today, at 2·p.m. EST.

Il:onUnued from page 13)
Highway FUnding Act.
"Heretofore
all
Improvements to Route 2 had to
he done under a 50 per cent
state fund, 50 per cent federal
fund formula, :' Moore said.
"The economic growth
designation for Huntington and
Parkersburg means that this
highway has been brought
under provisions of a new
federal enactment which
provides federal aid of up to 100
per cent for engineering aud
economic survey and up to 95
per cent for actual construction

work.."
Moore added that prospects
appear
" increasingly
brighter" for including all of
the highway from Chester to
Huntington, in a 95 per cent
federal finance program.
'

GALLIPOLIS - Central
"This acquisilion should also
Soya Company, Inc., (NYSE) enable Central Soya to further
has purchased the asseta of the its policy of expa•oding sales in
Bonds Industrial Corporation its proprietary ·and refined
(lndustriele Beleggings- products group, where earmaatschapplj Honda- nings} u:lia to show steady
Rotterdam N. V.). Dale rather than cyclical growth.
W. McMillen, Jr., chairman of This group oi activities acthe board of Central Soya, counted for 37 pet. of Central
announced. Central Soya has a Soya's fiscal 1971 sales. In- .
farm supply store at Third and elusion o!Bonda's sales in last
Vine here.
year's results would have
Bonda is a Rotterdam, increaseq the percentage of
Netherlands-based holding sales in this area to t5 pet. of
company whose principal our total," he added.
assets are majority interests in
Central Soya is a Fort
livestock and poultry feed · Wayne, Ind. based livestock
manufacturing facilities In the and poultrY feed manufacturer
Netherlands, France, Belgium, and soybean processor. Its
Portugal, Brazil, Canada and Master Mix brand of livestock · '
Morocco . Through minority and poultry feed is marketed In
interests and licensing 37 slates east of the Rockies
agreements the company and in 25 foreign countries,·
maintains livestock and some of which are served by
poultry feed marketing and feed manufacturing plants In
distribution in 19 additional Puerto Rico, Jamaica,
countries.
Trinidad, Guatemala and
Bonda realized sales In Brazil. The company Is ilso
excess of $100 million in the active in grain merchandising
calendar ' year
ending , and Is a major factor in the
December 31, 1911. Ap- transportation of grain,
proximately 85 pet. of Its total soybeans and soybean meal.
sales were in livestock and
Central Soya earned
poultry feeds and con- $14,033,ii99, equal · to $2.09 per ·
centrates. The balance was share on sales of $751,132,353 in
gener~ted by a widely diver- its fiscal year ended August 31,
sified list of products including 1971.
edible fish, fish meal (an
important feed ingredient) , M~land
textiles, knit wear, asphalt,
rolled roofing, exterior paints
and pearl essence, an
COLLEGE PARK, Md.
ingredient in some nail (UPI)- Tom McMiUan tossed
· polishes.
in a series·of Hi-foot jwnpers
" The acquisition of the over Duke's zone defense
assets of Bonda, one of the Saturday afternoon to lead
larger multinational livestock Maryland to a 77-M victory
and poultry feed manufac- over the Blue Devils.
turers and marketers, permits
McMillen, who finished with
Central Soya to achieve an a game high 29 points, was 13immediate presence in the 20 from the noor in leading
countries involved . and Maryland to its 14th victory of
. provides an opportunity to the season.
.
serve their growing livestock
The Terps hit 60 per cent
and poultry potential," Mr: from the noor in the opening
McMillen stated. "This would half to lead 38-20 and 'coasted
have taken several years to through the second hall.
achieve had it been negotiated
Chris Reading led Duke with
on a country-by-countrY basis. 22 points.

Black Panthers
.

Go Legitimate
OAKLAND, Calli. (UPI) Huey P. Newlon says the Black
Panthers are going to work
within the system for social
and economic advances for
blacks, and he blames fugitive
Eldridge Cleaver for losing
community support with a
"pick-up-the-gun now" philosophy.
In his first interview since
1charges In t~ 1967 slaying of a
policeman were dropped, Newton said Sunday that his future
efforts would he geared toward
"organizing
the
community."
Blasts Cleaver
Newton, 29, lashed out at
Cleaver, the expeUed panther
minister of defense, during a
two-hour interview in his $650amonth apartment overlooking
scenic Lake Merritt.
Cleaver fled the countrY in
1963, three days before he was
ordered to surrender to
authorities. in Oakland as a
parole violator. He was last
reported In Algiers, where he
resigned his post with the
Panthers.
Newton was freed in December when the district attorney's
office decided a fourth trial in
the slaying of officer John Frey
would be frull)ess. The decision
came four days after a jury
deadlocked 6-6 In Newton's
third trial on voluntary manslaughter charges.
Earlier Trials
An earlier trial last year also
resulted In a deadlocked panel.
The first in 1968 ended in a
guilty verdict which was
overturned by an appeUate
court on grounds of judicial
error.
Newton, the PartY cofounder,
served 22 months in Jl"lson ·
before the appeUate court's
ruling.
.
Newlon said that while he
was In Jl"ison and the party was
under Cleaver, "the com-

NAME CALLING
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey
Saturday called Nixon administration announcements
on decreases in unemployment
"government hypocrisy" and
said they widened the
"credibility gap." Hwnphrey
was here to open local
headquarters in his campaign
to win the Democratic Party's
. presidential nomination.·
·

munity turned off on my whole
Jl"Ogram."
He said Cleaver offered a
choice between "either picking
up the gun now and winning the
revolulion, or you are an Uncle
Tom."
"In order to win you must
participate whether It's
electoral politics or the contradlclions going on In the
church," Newton said In a
PROGRAM URGED
relaxed interview.
WASHINGTON !UPI)
Sips Whiskey
Newlon, sipping whiskey at a Assistant Senate Republican
long table, defended a recent Leader Robert P. Griffin,
agreement with a group of urged the administration
black businessmen that Saturday to adopt a cornguaranteed contributions prehensi ve program to clean
up the Great Lakes . The
toward the party's aclivities.
The pact ended months of Michigan senator said the
Panther picketing at a liquor administralion has not yet
store owned by black business- funded an antipollution
man Bill Boyette, who said the program drawn up by the
taclic drove him to the verge of Environmental · Protection
bankruptcy.
, Agency (EPA) last year and he
"They will get more custof cited published reports the
mers and a tax writeoff,' .. administration does not intend·
to do so.
Newton said.
Newlon said most of his lime
in the future would be" geared
toward getting out the vote.
· The Panther leader said the
MUSKIE ENDORSED
drive currently was con- NEW YORK (UP!) -Rep.
centrated in Oakland and · Emanuel CeDer,
Dean
of the
.
I
Berkeley, but would be "soon" House of Representatives,
extended to Chicago, New endorsed Sen. Edmund s.
York, AUanta, and other cities. Muskie for the presidency
"We have 30 chapters and Saturday. He dismissed John
branches," he said, but refused V. l,indsay as an absentee
to reveal the nwnber of party mayor who is "not too great an
members .
administrator."

I'IEDNESDAY AD 212/72
The Copy On Tile 5.48 BERNZ-0MATIC KIT Was Incorrect But The
Illustration Was Correct.
·

SAN JUAN, P.R. (UP!) Fred Biletnkoff sank a six foot
putt for a double eagle on the
last hole Saturday to enable the
Oakl1111d Raider pass catching
great and his partner, Willie
Davis of the Los Angeles
Dodgers, to take a one stroke
, lead in the $30,000 Astrojet Golf
. Classic.
"It was the only putt I sank
. all day," the blond Blletnikoff
: said aflerward. "WIIIle reiuJy

DOOR BUSTERS

: carried us.''

PANTY HOSE

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HECK'S R£G.

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Twin Size, White Only
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Quits Under Fire

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'Heck's
Reg. $16.88

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However, successive Ken luck) and dropped the Commodores
field goals and Vanderbilt SEC record to &lt;h5.
turnovers enabled U\e Wildcats
LAMPO.WINS $10,000'
to put the game mio overtime .' SAN JOSE, Calif. - .Gus
Kentucky is now 7-2 and Lampo, Endicott, N.Y., pro
leading the ' conference. The · who captured his first bowling
Wildcats also received 1!).po.inl crown .two weeks ag(l at Las
performances from ' Tom Vegas, made ittwo out or three '
Parker and Jim Andrews.
Saturday as he led all the way
Vanderbilt had five players to win .fir•t' plaee · prizes · of
in double figures : Terry $10,000 an~ a new automobile in
Compfun had · 20 points and the $85,000 Mercury Cougar
Tom Arnholt 13.
Ope? Bowling Tmp:nament. ,
It was Vanderbilt's first
Tlie 28-year-old lrlghthander,
home game loss of the season who went inlo th~ nationally

televised finals as the top seed
after leading-through ·the first
42 games. broke on ·top in I I.e
champioQship matclf against
Don Glover, South Bend, Ind .,
and was an easy winner, 2:&gt;11224. Glover had advanced to
the· title game by downing two
opponents.
The one-game elimination
format began with Larry Laub,
San' Francisco, disposing of
Barry Asher , Costa Mesa,
Calif.., by a 200-193 count. then
it was Glover taking the

measure of Laub, 207-195. That
set the stage for a game be·
tween five-time iitlist Glover
and Mike OrJovsky, friend and
traveling companion to Lampo
from Endicott, N. Y. Orlovsky
was off his game, bowing to
the lefthander in the day's
lowest scoring ma((;h, 188-172.
ROLLICKING WINS
BOWIE, Md. - Rollicking,
the highweight of the field,
drew away in the streb:h
Saturday at Bowie to post an
easy victory in the $25,000

on

·StrYker Handicap at seven
· furlongs for Maryland Breds.
The ~year-old took command from favored Joys Fella ·
on the backstretch under Bill
Passmore and once In theJead
pulled away to win by I 'h
lengths and earn $141950 ior _
owner Robert A. Leonard.
Joys Fella, who led for
nearly a half mile, was second,
followed by Johnny West who
was another three lengths baok
in third .

'

.

'

Name 6 To Basketball Hall o Fame
..

SPRINGFIELD, Mass .
(UPI) - Basketball's Hall of
Fame selection committee
reached into the past for two
former players, a college
coach and three contributors to
the sport in naming six additions ·to ' the Naismith Shrine
Saturday.
Former players P~l En·
dac ott and Max " Marty "
Friedman, the late Coach
Edgar A. Diddle, and the
owner . ·promoter - administrator' trio of Edward
GotUieb, Robert L. · Douglas
an.d Clifford Wells made up one
of the largest groups chosen for
. the Hall of Fame in several
years.
The latest selections, who
will formally take places in the
shrine on the Springfield
College campus April 20, swell
Naismith Basketball Hall of
Fame membership to 83.
Endacott was cited by the
selection committee headed by
Forrest Twogood as a two-time
All-American at the University
of Kansas. The retired
president
of
Phillips
Petroleum, Endacott was cited
as the National Collegiate
Player of the Year in 1923 and

was chosen to the Helms alltime All-American team.
Friedman was singled out
as a f&gt;.foot-Bdefensive star who
played professional basketball
for Newburgh, N. Y., Utica, N.
Y., Carbondale, Pa., Albany of
the New York Slate League,
the New York Whirlwinds and
as a player-coach for the
Cleveland RoseQblums before
retiring in 1927 . .
Diddle coached at Western
Kentucky for 42 years,
directing his teams to 13
Kentucky intercollegiate tiUes,
eight Southern Athletic Conference championships and 11
Ohio Valley Conference
crowns.
Diddle, who relired in 1964
and died hist year, ranked
fourth on the list of all-time
victories with 759, trailing only
three other Hall of Famers,
Adolph Rupp, Phog Allen, and

Hank lba.
Gottlieb
owned
the
Philadelphia Sphas, coached
the Warriors, first champions
of the National Basketball
Association and has ~ involved in basketball in various
capacities for nearly 59 years.

now living in New York, ving as executive secretary of
Douglas is the first black to IX' the National Association of
elected as an individual to the Basketball Coaches.
Hall of Fame.
His teams won nearly 900
Wells was the first full time games in his 47-year coaching
director of the Hall of Fame, career including an Indiana
taking over in 1963 after ser- high school crown at
•
,

Bloomington In 1919 . He
coached at Tulane for 18 years
and is the author of a number
of articles on basketball and a
former officer of both the
Coaches Associalion and · the
NCAA.

~t~~::~m~th~:~!~·s:~~1: Weather Perfect For Big Ract

Committee, a consuila)Jt to
Commissioner Walter Kennedy and the leag ue 's
schedule maker.
Douglas, 87, coached and
owned the Renaissance learn
that was elected en masse to
the Hall of Fame in 1964. His 22year coaching record with the
Rens included 2,318 victories,
an 88-game winning streak in
1933 and a world Iitle series
victory over the Harlem
Globetrotters in 1939.
A British West Indies native

Marshall Tops

LIU In Garden

Drysdale ln.

Tennis Finals

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· HAVE READ 2 GALLON ·$3.66.

I

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)
- Kentucky overcame a
furio,us secQOd half Vanderbilt
rally behind the 23-point effort
or little Ronnie _l;.yons to beat
the ,Commodores 85-80 in
overtime Saturday.
Lyons hit four crucial
overiime points to put the
Southeastern · Conference
contest out of Vanderbilt's
reach.,
Vanderbilt had outscored
Kentuc)ty by a 15-0 margin at
one point in the second half.

Lund Gets

. 2 9nly l Twin Bed,
••
Single Control

2nd &amp;·ouvE st.

I
'

ins in Overtime

Michigan's

$1 000

Heck's
Reg. $14.88

·

ninth green, a short par five, to
set up his eagle.
.
"He was pulling so bad all
day I figure he's got to make
this one,'' said an elated Davis,
who was thinking. about
collecting $3,000 in firs t place
prize money. ·
J.')lere was a 11U'ee-way tie at
117, two strokes back .and '!/
under p·a r, among Mike
Richardson, Houston OileJS,
and Jim Wynn, Houston
Astros; Norm -~sh, Detroit
Tigers, and Wayne Walker,
Detroit Lions; and Ernie
Banks, Chicago Cubs, and John
Niland, Dallas Cowboys.
Jim Pa_lmer of the Ballimore
Orioles and Willie Richardson
of the Colla were alone at 118
and .Jim Buoning of the
Philadelphia Phillies and Ron
Bull of the Chicago Bears were
at ·119.
Joe Namath and Mickey
ManUe were well back in the
field of 32 teams at 130.
Defending champions Bill
l\1azero~ki of the Pittsburgh
Pirates and Andy RusseU of the
Steelers were also seemingly
out of contenlion at 127.

•

, DAYTONA BEACH, Fla , manufacturers' championship for the start of a busy 24 hours
( UPI) - When the in- since 1967. The Ferraris placed of racing .
ternational racing . crowd one-two in the tour opener last
A 100-k.ilometer race pitting
gathers at Daytona, you'll find month in Buenos Aires, but . the little Volkswagen-powered
an Italian pit crewman there are nine more races to formula Vee cars kicked off the
wearing a ·Davr Crockett gq.
weekend at 4 p.m. while u1e
coonskin cap changing tires on
A canary yellow Lola Ford bigger grand touring cars such
a Ferrari.
handled by Joakim Bonnier of as Mustangs, Camaros and
Or a Lebanese beauty queen Switzerland and Reine WiseII Porcbefi were in a 200-mile run
chatting with Nanni Galli about of Sweden is the fourth starting beginning at midnight;
his Alia Romeo while ad- place while Stommelen and · A Michigan team of Ronald
milling she knows nothing Peter itevson placed fifth in an Weaver and Jerry Thompson
about auto racing.
Alfa Romeo 33.
won the pole for the midnight
Or Dave Heinz and Bob
"The Lola is very quick, but challenge race with a' lap at
Johnson's Corvette · out of I'm not so afraid of the Lola," 117.552 in a Corvette. ·
Tampa, painted like a Con- said Stommelen. "It's a new
The Dixie-striped Heinzfederate battle flag and car and not so strong for six Johnson Corvette claimed U1e
bearing a tag which says, hours . The Important thing is outside pole with a lap at
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) - concrete bowl which the Tigers
"Save yo' Confederate money, to make the finish without 114.855 m.p.h. In the third slot
Memphis State football coach call home in recent years and
boys,
the South gonna rise trouble."
was a Camaro driven by Tom
lliUy "Spook" Murphy quit fans and alumni have griped at
again."
But the 28-year-old bachelor Nehl of Jacksonville, Fla. and .
under fire from fans Saturday the schoot;s inability . to comBut
on
the
eve
ol
Sunday's
from
Cologne respects the Jim Fitzgerald of Clenimons,
but remained on as Athlelic pete with big-time powers like
six-hour Daytona Continental, Ferraris , " They are ' well N. C. They qualified at 111.602
Director.
Tennessee and Ole Miss on the
Germany's
Rolf Stommelen organized,'' he said.
m.p.h.
Murphy did not attend the football field .
was being more realistic.
Stommelen was distressed at
press conference .which the
"I ask for a re-dedication to
'
"
lt:S
going
to
be
difficult
to
,
the
way his car was handUng
school caUed to announce the the Memphis Stale athlelic
NEW YORK (UPI ) - game open in the second half. beat the Ferraris,'' said the tall during the trial runs on
change.
program from the thousands of
"It is my understanding that fans who have enjoyed our
Russell Lee's 26 points sparked The Marshall center scored 18 Alia Romeo plio!, unhappy Daytona's high-banked turns.
he (Murphy) is out of town, successes and shared our
16th-ranked Marshall to a 70-61 of his points in the second half. with the way his car is han- " l don 't think it's the power, it
dling, "but I'm sure they will seems to be an aerodynamics
~ai~ athletic committee setbacks through the past
victory over Long Island
RQn Williams, with 18 points,
c~an Dr. A. Ford Haynes, . decade~,'' said Haynes.
University Saturday afternoon was high man for LIU which he slower in the race than they problem," he said.
Work came to a virtual
who pr11ised Murphy's record l ' Murphy "said In a statement \
in the second game .of a college has now dropped six straight were in qualifying."
\
...
.
.
~· li ti:dich and hiS wllUngJ\ess ' that ' there were no definite
basketball doubleheader at games and Is 9-9 on the s11ason. · If the c!!allengersv w~ re s\!Jndstill in the ltusy pit,'&gt;
gloomy, the Ferrari team was Saturday when Miss Universe
rr
6i.turn his coaching duties over prospects under consideration
Madison Square Garden.
Bill James .had 14 for Mar- sitting pretty, with the red shed a black-maxi-length fur
RiCHMOND,
Va.
(UP!)
lb a yet-unchosen successor. at the present time to fill the
Mont~lair State upset shall which Is now 17-2 on the
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI)
"praneing horses" holding the coat to pose for publicity Classy Cliff Drysdale whipped
"A program to move MSU head coaching job.
Fairleigh Dickinson, 57-55, in year.
- Former Major League the first game.
1
first
three pla"ces for the start pictures in hot pants and knee- John Newcombe of Australia
football off a middle position to
Among the possibilities
outfielder Don Lund was
of the long rim over the 3.81· length boola.
Saturday to advance to the
the heights of Collegiate mentioned have been Bill Pace
elevated Saturday from LIU's ball control tactics
mile track and r~ad course.
"What a baby. Wow, wow," fihals with lop-!Jeeded Rod
Football is being iniliated,'' pf Vanderbilt and Southeastern
kept the game close in the first
assistant to Associate Athletic
Marion
Andretti
and
Jacky
shouted
an Italian in the Laver today in the Fidelity
said Haynes.
,
Conference assistants John Director at the University of half as Marshall led by only 31fckx, calling their new three- Ferrari garage, using his best World · Championship Tennis
Milrphy, 51, built a multi- David Crow and Bob lyler of
Michigan, where he earned 't/. But the tough Herd press
II
ter 'llachine ""f~ntastic ;" English.
·
.Tournament.
mi!Hon dollar sports complex Ala bam a and Florida's Jimmy nine letters as ·a collegiate and Lee's hot hand broke the
won the pole position with a lap
But
the
long-limbed
Drysdale posted scores of 4- lncludillg an indoor tartan Dunn.
sports star.
at
131.606
miles
per
hour
Lebanese
beauty,
Georgina
8,
6-4, and 6-4 to defeat
turf practice field for football
"I am going to miss
Lund replaces Dave Strack,
Friday.
Rizk, demonstrated she could Newcombe, number one
-during his 14 years as head coaching,'' Murphy said. "Just
r~cenlly
na_med
athletic
Clay
Regazzoni
of
Switspeak
Italian as well as ranked player In the world, in
coach and complied a 91-44-11 as 1 tried to do my best as a
d1rector at Amona.
.
zerland and Brian Redman of French, English and Arabic - the semifinals play. Laver
record.
football coach at all times in
"We are fortunate to have
England will he in the second even though her lmowledge of easily disposed of Arthur Ashe
Murphy's 5-S-1 record last the past 14 years, I will consomeone as capable as Don
LAFAYETIE,
Ind.
(UP!)
car,
with a qualifying lap of cars was limited.
in the other semifinals match,
season was his first losing year tinue to put the success of the
Ll!fld to take over for Dave,''
Forward Bob Ford and center 130.678 m.p.h., while the third
"I'll know something about it IVinning 6-2, 7~.
siqce 1958.
Memphis State University athletic director Don Canham
HONOLULU (UP!) - Portly William Franklin sparked a )ead Ferrari willl)e driven by by the end o( the race," said
Drysdale, a South Mrican
But attendance has been athletic program first in my
Bob Murphy increased his iead second-half Purdue surge as Ronnie Peterson of Sweden and Miss Rizk, who will present the who now lives in Austin, Tex:,
said
In
making
the
andwindling in the modern, career."
noWJcement.
to three strokes Saturday after the Boilermakers beat Big Ten Tim Schenken of Australt.!.
trophy to the winner of the started slow but during the
"Don will retain a few of his six holes of play in the third rival Michigan 84-74, Saturday
Young Peter Schetty, ContinentaL
second set moved up a couple
more important duties as round of the 200,000 Hawaiian to stay in the thick of the managing the Ferrari team for , A bright sun but chill wind of ste~ Into the court and
assistant director, in addition Open.
conference basketball ,race.
the first time this year, ex- bathed the dusty infield which . began h1tting excellent service
Murphy , of Jacksonville,
to his new responsibilities as
Ford pumped in a game-high pressed confidence the Modena suddenly blossomed with tents r~turns, shaking Newcombe's
associate director, " Canham Fla., birdied the par-five first 29 points - 15 in the last half factory will win Its first world and campers 'while fans waited service.
hole, took a bogey on the par- while Franklin made 28, insaid . .
'
'
three fourth hole but came cluding 16 in the final 20
L110d
joined the Wolverines'
athletic department in 1970 back to birdie the par four minutes.
following eight .years in the sixth. He started the third
The victory upped the
ATHENS - Rod Cooper, however, the titles did not have Detroit Tigers' front office. He round the leader with a nine Purdue season record to 9~
Chief of the Division of to be presented in order to also spent part of his playing under par total of 135.
and 3-1 in the Big Ten.
Watercraft of the Ohio obtain annual registration.
career with the Tigers and ! Fred Marti of Baytown, Tex., Michigan, conquerer or Ohio
Department of Natural
"After we started requiring a coached Michigan's baseball who started the day one stroke State, is 10-7 overall and f&gt;-2 In
Resources, has issued new valid title for these boats and team for four seasons, in- !back, fell off the pace by three the conference. The loss
regulations to help Ohio boat motors to he registered, we cluding the NCAA Cham- strokes after recording two lmocked them out of 'a tie for
bogeys following a birdie.
Ofners
receive
1972 discovered that many citizens . pionship season of 1962.
the Big Ten lead.
Marty Fleckman of Port
registrations under a new state did not have titles and were not
He will take over much of the
The game was deadlocked at
law.
aware they were required by business side of running Arthur, Tex., who was two the half, 37-37, but Michigan
The . law, adopted in law," Cooper said.
Michigan 's sports operation s lroke back going into jumped into a !-point adDecember by the state
Cooper · nMed the new formerly handled by Strack. Saturday 's play, fell back vantage after interniission on
another stroke when he scored the shooting of Big Henry
legislature, for the first time regulations will be in effect
bogeys on the third and fifth Wilmore, who ended with 26
makes it necessary for a boat only until the end of 1972, and
holes
and birdies on the fourth points - all but four In the
owner to present a valid tiUe urgfl[ all boat and motor
and sixth.
for a boat more than 14 feel owners who do not have a Iitle
second hall.
Of the handful of 78 players
long or a motor of more than 10 to obtain one this year, even if
But Franklin put the
who had completed nine holes, Boilermakers on top to stay at
horsepower In order to obtain a they are not planning to use
three Californians - Ron 45-44; with 16 :33 left.
1972 registration.
their boats this year.
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UP!) Cerrudo
of Napa, Jerry Heard
The new regulalions, to be
"Once this regulations, ex- All-American guard Greg
. effective Tue!l¥y, February I, plres," Cooper said, "we'll Kohls' 29 points led a run-and-. of Visalia and John Schroeder
· allow those boat owners who revert back to the old way of shoot attack Saturday as of La Jolla - had four under
have no certificate of title for a ·tilling, and those who . can't Syracuse
topp ed par 32s.
Partly cloudy skies and light
boat or motor bought after produce proof of ownership, Massa chusetts 90-85 in a
Overstuffed with a quarter pound of U.S. cllolce' beef, freshly gro1.11d
October 9, 1962, to" submit a such as a manufacturer's or regionally televised basketball winds · greeted the field
and grilled, with a most skillful blend of melted cheese, crisp green
Saturday at the par 72, 7,122sworn, notarized slatement of Importer's statement of origin, game.
lettuce, tomato, onion, pickle slices and Shake Shoppe special
ownership In lieu of a will just be out ,of luck. They
Kohls fired in 17 points in the yard oceanside course at the
dressing.
Ser,ved on a gigantic toasted bun.
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
llllinufactu'rer's or Importer's won't have a valid title, and first half as the Orange took a Waialae Country Club.
Atlantic Coast Football .
statement of origin.
they won't be able to register 46-41 lead at halftime! and
League, at its annual meeting
tossed ln 12 more in the final 20 St. Louis Ups Mark Saturday, approved a franThe regulations also instruCt their boata and motors."
COifllly clerks of courts to
The new Jaw and regulations minutes as Syracuse bliilt•a 71ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) - St. chise for Mt. Vernon, N. Y..as
accept the statementa as proof do not apply to boats and 57 advantage with 10 minutes Louis University, led by Harry the fifth team in the pro grid
of ownership, and'to issue valid I motors acquired 'before Oct. 9, left in the game. Kohls' . per- Rogers and Bill Paradoski; league.
certlflcates.of tiUe to those who 1963, or to boats less than 14 formance included seven-of- slaved off a Wichita State
In 1971, the league consisted
submit them.
feet long and motors of Jess seven from the free throw 'line. challenge late in the game to of Bridgeport and Hartford,
Massachusetts , which\ en- gain a 63-60 Missouri Valley Conn. and Norfolk and
·Cooper explained the " than 10 hor!!epower.
regulations were made · Cooper also said oriicials joyed its last lead at 23-2tland Conference vic!Qry Saturday Roanoke, Va., in 1972, the loop
necessary because a boat and froril lhe Division. of Water- gained ita final tie of the .game afternoon and boost their will operate as a six-team unit.
mo!:or litUng law passed in 1964 craft in the last two weeks held at 25-25, kept chipping away at league record tQ 4-2.
Commissioner Cosmo
was not enforced, and many seminars explaining the · new the Orange lead but could come · Rogers.pack~ the Bills with lacovavi also revealed his
Ohio boat owners do not law and regulations to the no closer than the final five- 19 while Paradoski added 15 · league and the Midwest
. posaess a tiUe and have no way more than • 300 watercraft point margin.
and limited Wichita's Terry League, which is based in
Mike Cee contributed 24 llenton to seven pointa, Carlos Columbus, 0 ., have agreed to a
of obtaining one.
registrars In the state.
The 1964 law requires tilling
"We hope to make this period points and nine rebounds to the Martinez had 12 for the Bills, series of pre-11eason exhibition
''THAT OLD FASHIONED GOODNESl"
of all boats more than 14 feet of transition under the new Jaw Syracuse cause, while Rich now 12-1 overall.
games, and that the respective
long and motors of more than as easy as possible for the boat Vogeley scored 17 points for ·the
Vince Smith led Wichita, now title holders in each league will
10 hcnepower bought after owners of Ohio," Cooper said . Redmen, now 11-Q on 'the 4-1 in the conlere_;~ce and 12-Q meet In a championship game
October 9, 1963. Until this year,
·
season.
at season's end .
overall, with 23 poi~ts .

SHEETS.·

FANCY CANNON

.

, Davi~. a )0-handicapped
, going Into the round, fired a
:_two over par 74 at the
: Cerromar Beach Hotel Golf
course Saturday. The players'
handicap committee met
· immediately afterWard and cut
: Davis to a seven handicap for
: Sunday's final round In the 54·
: hole,event.
: The C&amp;Uiornla twosome had
: a two round best ball total of 57: 56-115 which put them just
·ahead of two other californians, Sal , Bamdo of ·the
Oakland A's and . Daryle
Lamonica of the Raiders with a
57~l16 ..
Blletnkof( hit a five onto the

Princess Sue Ladies'

'

HECK'S

In Astrojet

.I .

?

SIZE SO" to 52"

ECIION

.

1 P~ TO 7 PM
ONLY

In
77-58 Victory

END INSIGHT
VIENNA (UP!)- Soviet and
U.S. negotiators expect to
finish work on a treaty ,when
the Strategic Arms Limitation
Talks (SALT) resume . in
Helsinki
next
month,
diplomatic sources said today.
The sixth SALT round adjourned here Friday with both
sides talking of ''progress" but
volunteering few details: They
will resume the talks March 28
- in time they hoped to write a
treaty for signing when
· President Nixon goes to
Moscow in May.

-Biletnkoff Has
Double Eagle

SUNDAY
ONLY
• !

AVERAGE IS 353

Pallbearers lor
Funeral Noted

Central Soya Has
Rotterdam Firm

15 - The&amp;lldayTimes -Sentinei,Sunday, f'eb.6, 1972 ·

.

'

'

.

'

I

I•
'I

NO
COUPONS
TO CUP/

GAU.IPOLIS, OHIO

�I

17- Tbe &amp;IJday Tlmei·Jiedlnel, SUidly, Feb, 1,1972
..

-- ~

'

NG Pirates Ml But·Assured Of CroWn

Blue Devils Trip'
Marauders, 6

VINTON ....: Coach Jim an Impressive, 8'1·72 vlcj()ey will hoit Kyger Creek Friday
Foeter'a North Gallla Pirates, over COach ·Aaa Bradbury'• night.'
moved a atep Closer to clln- Southern TOI'nadoes. .~ ,.
North Gallla is 1~1 in league
chlng the Southern Valley
The Pirates have only one . play and 1:!-2 in all games.
Athletic Conference .cage . league encounter !eli-on their Southern. ' alter winning six
crown here Friday night with regular season schedule. They stralsht, c~J:opped Its 2nd in a

BY KEI'nl WISECUP
center, led the Marauders with their presence known, and throw to make it 38-23 with 5:59
ROCK SPRINGS _ The 18 points and II rebounds. how! Three two-pointers by left in the third period.
It . was an evenly played .
Gallipolis Blue , Devils . out- ·Vaughan was forced to the Snowden and one fielder plus a
scored the Meigs Marauder; · outside most of the ga.me, .With foul shot by Noe opened the game from here on .out. Meigs
20-6 in the second quarter and the_G~~elense taking away second period's . first lour came wi\flin 11 once, and
minutes. GAHS led, 22-17.
Gallipolis,' biggest margin was
held the "Big Maroon" at bay Me1gs I!IStde game.
Meigs
got
its
first
poini
of
the
17, clirning fits! at 45-28, then
the other three quarters to take
An~y Vaughan ('I:ony's .
a rough 63-48 victory here cous~n), sco~ed 10 while second quarter with 3::W left on 47-30, then 49-32, and finally at •
Friday night in a Southeastern lead.mg Me1gs With 15 a free throw by T. Vaughan. 53-36.'
Dhlo Athletic Laague game. ret~Ieves, a tremendous After Ferguson made a field
The game was a "hard·
Although playing without achievement for a 5-10 ' for- goal, Boggs and A. Vaughan hitting" aflainwith one Meigs
star center Gil Price from late ward . Jimmy Boggs added 11 each drop~ in twin-pointers player ejected and a technical
in the first period when he was markers for the. Marauders. to make it 24-22 with 2:26left in foul charged to the Blue.Devlls,
assessed his third personal
'111~ Bl~e Devils, a great the half. And. this was as close And the fans, from both aides,
foul, Coach Jim Osborne's Blue physical team, , took their . as Meigs carne the remainder several times expreased their
opinion of calls. When a rivalry
Devils wiped out a 17·13 Meigs stubborn defense ~nd fast- of the game.
lead with excellent shooting rnovmg offense mto the . In the final 1:29, Snowden such as Meigs 'and Gallipolis
fine ball·handling and great Marauders ' teeth. They dropped in a free throw, Orr compete in anything, one has to
·defense to take a 23 halftime domi~a.ted the boards, taking tipped in a missed shot, and expect !his. In .the five-year
lead. Meigs had lect 17•13 going 44 ~1sf1r_es compared to 32 for Noe swished three straight rivalry · between the learns,
from 10 feet while Meigs Gallipolis holds an - ~2 edge,
in to the second quarter.
MeJg~.
After scoring the first five
Neither team really had a 111anaged only a free throw, both of Meigs' wins corning last
points of the third period to great floor game. The making the halftime score, 33· year.
take a commanding 38 •23 Mar_auders turned the ball over 23.
Gallipolis played at POI'Iso
'
Snowden
hit
a
fielder,
Noe
margin the closest the De 'Is 20 limes, 12 m the first hall.
mouth last night irnd
hosts
allowed' Meigs was 11 pointsVlat GARS had 14 turnovers, eight made a two-pointer, than that Logan Friday night. Meigs
man Noe made another free plays Ironton at horne Friday.
57-46, with 2:49 remaining .:0d in ·the se~ond half.
the decision already reached
A rn1ghty man-to-man
Larry Snowden, 5-ll senio; del~nse . ~rnployed . b~ the
guard, played a brilliant of. Devils rnmiiDIZed Me1gs f1eld
fensive game for GARS with 23 goal _atternpts to a meager 40,
points. The . high-scoring making. only 15, for 35 pet.
Snowden hit from outside and Gaihpohs made 25 of 57 for
on his patented twisting dri
43.8 pet. The Marauders had 18
for Jayups.
ves of 33 foul line attempts fall in
PRICE SNAGS REBOUND - Gallia's 6-31\o sophomore
Following Snowden for the lor 55 pet., and the Devils made
six.rebounds and three points. Marauders on left are Steve
center, Gil Price (25) hauls down rebound aga~t Meigs in
winners was Jinuny Noe who 13 of 22 for 59.9 pet.
Dunfee (12) and Mike Sayre (22). Behind Price. Is Jimmy
Friday'sSEOALgarneatRock Springs. Price sat out 18:04ol
drilled horne 19 markers and ~ith the loss Meigs ~s now 4.
Noe, GARS forward. On right Is Marauder ace Andy
the tilt with three personals. He finished the game with only
was the key man in the 7m league play, dropping to _6-9
Vaughan (24). Gallia's Rod Ferguson iS on far right. •
Gallipolis second quarter on the year, and now havmg
uprising, scoring nine points lost three m a row. GARS
including three fielders in the ~oves up to 12-2 ove~ali.and 9-2
final 50 seconds! Noe also In !~ague play, still m con·
hauled down 12 rebounds
tention lor the league chamRod Ferguson led the Devils pionship behind II~ Waverly.
on the boards with l5 grabs and The two Blue Devil losses have
scored 12 points. Topper Orr, a been to Waverly, 65-44, and to
husky junior carne off th
Ironton, 00-54, both away from
· bench for foul-troubled Pric: hoin~. GARS has now ~on five
Take advantage of this sale. Get in the sWiin
and contributed a great straight smce losmg at
with a 'World Famous Hallmark Fiberglas®
defensive effort while scoring Waverly on Jan. 14..
.
Pool'. Backed by the most daring Fiberglas
In first quarte~ act10n, wh1ch
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - Ohio six points. Price played only
uarantee. A full15 y.ears in writing! ...
State University Board of the first seven minutes of the was the only period of the mghl
first
quarter
and
the
last
live
when
Coach
Carl
Woile's
Trustees Chainnan James W.
IA•Qalnst ·chipping, cracking, peeling, rotting,
Marauders outplayed the qwck
Shocknessy said Friday the minutes of the final period.
Devils, GARS scored two lmiilderw, rusting or tearing apart.
melee at the end of Jan. 25 Ohio Tony Vaughan ' 6-2 senior Blue
buckets, the first at 5:46 and
State - Minnesota basketball
the other comi'ng 20 seconds
heaters normally cost ·$475 and up.
· game "appeared to me to be an
later, f~ a 4-0 lead.
IGua1rantee yourself Spring installation at
attempt to commit homicide."
Bog~s popped in a long
Three Ohio State · players
prices! And, a Fre~:r pool ;heater. · ~.:'J
jwnper to lie the game at' 7'7
were injured and hospitallZj!d
ALL GAMES
W L P OP with 3::i8 left in the opening
after a light broke out with 36 TEAM
Waverly
13 2 1061 804 canto. Another long jumper by
Offer ~nds February 29,1972
seconds remaining in the Big Gallipolis
12 2 955 767 Boggs broke an 11-11 tie and
Ten game at Minneapolis. The Athens
10 5 946 799 two free throws by T. Vaughan
G. 0. ROUSH &amp; SONS, INC. ·
Portsmouth
9 6 1070 1020
game was stopped and Ohio
Iranian
8
6 967 915 at 0:49 made it 15·11. Dunfee hit
State, leading 50-44, was Chesapeake
8 6 971 882 on a lay-in, his final field goal
NEW HAVEN, W.VA.
awarded the victory.
Meigs
6 9 904 954 of the night, with six seconds
882-2222
6 9 894 958
A Big Ten investigation Fed-Hocking
left
to
make
it
17·13
alter
one
Logan
4 11 825 1006
882-2722
882-2657
resulted in two Minnesota Wellslon
J 11 845 1131 period .
players being suspended for Jackson
2 12 810 1003
And then the sky fell in. Or
SEOAL VARSITY
Your
Pool Builder
the rest of the season. The
rather the Blue Devils made
TEAM
W
L
P
OP
investigation is continuing.
•fuel hook-up extra
11 Regl1tered Tr1d1m1rk OWens-corning
Waverly
11 0 803 534
Shocknessy, commenting at Gallipolis
9 2 726 613
8 3 789 675
an OSU trustees meeting, said Iranian
7 4 708 593
he watched the game on Alhens
Meigs
4 7 659 695
television.
Jackson
2 9 612 770
"It appeared to me to be an Logan
2 9 601 770
1 10 631 879
attempt to commit homicide," Wellslon
44 44 5529 5519
Shocknessy said. "I am not TOTALS
FRIDAY'S RESULTS:
passing judgment on the of. Gallipolis 63 Meigs ;a
ficials, or the Minnesota coach, Waverly 72 .Logan 61
lronlon 91 Wellston 62
or their athletic department or Alhens
68 Jackson 42
the spectators. We will await Porlsmouth 67 Hunt. East 37
the conclusion of the Western South Point 71 Chesapeake 67
Conference's Big Ten in- Fed-Hocking 56 Vln . County 44
vestigation before offering
.
SEOAL RESERVES
'judgment."
TEAM .
w- L P OP
However, Shocknessy did Ironton
9 2 600 396
say the OSU trustees deplored Logan
8 3 SOl 457
8 3 490 442
the incident, and the suspen- Waverly
Athens
7
4 452 396
sion of the two players did not Meigs
6 5 451 407
TONY VAUGHAN (32) Meigs' tiig center, picks off a rebound in ihls action shot taken
satisfy the trustees' concerns. Jackson
4 7 479 517
during Friday's SEOAL battle at Rock Springs. The big man collected 18 points to pace the
2 9 430 645
Shocknessy, a ·Columbus Wellston
Marauders scoring attack. On right iB Meigs' Andy Vaughan (24). Blue Devils left to right are
Gallipolis
o II 364 507 WE SELL DREAMS
attorney, said the trustees TOTALS
44 44 3767 3767
Topper Orr (15), Rod Ferguson (33),Rick Boone (13)andJinunyNoe (23).
AND WHAT DREAMS
were disturbed that inFRIDAY'S RESULTS:
'""'~
tercollegiate a!J!ietics may no Meigs 38 Gallipolis 26
ARE
MAPE
OF
...
46 Waverly 42
longer serve as an ideal for Logan
.
'
Ironton 67 Wellston 30
students
interested
in Athens 43 Jackson 36
HELPING YOU PLAN
developing sound minds in
FEB. 11 GAMES:
York 83 John Jay 66
.
YOUR NEW KITCHEN,~~
Logan at Gallipolis
sound
bodies.
·
Rutgers
(S.J.)
68
Drew
40
MEIGS.GALLIPOLIS CAGE STATISTICS
Waverly
at
Alhens
Hofstra 86 St. Fran. INYJ 70
He said intercollegiate sports Jackson at Wellston
MEIGS MARAUDERS 1481
YOUR HOME MODER~IZATIQtf,
La1aye1te
104 Boston U. 89
PLAYER
programs
should
be
examined
Ironton
at
Meigs
FG-FGA
FT-FTA
RB
PF
TO
TP
Buffalo St. 81 Ithaca 75
S1efe Dunfee, I
EVEN YOUR NEW HOME
SEOAL FRESHMEN
1· 8
1- 4
4
3
4
5
Stonybrook
100 Queens Call . 78 to see that competition and
Tony Vaughan, c
TEAM
W
L
P
OP
5-11
8-13 11
3 2 18 Houston 94 Florida St. 86
winning were not overern· Logan
'Indy Vaughan, f
10 1 615 333
Rutgers 108 Lehigh 76
~ 4
~ 7 15
3
3
10
phasized .
Galli
polis
9 2 473 375
.llch Bailey, g
South
Car.
St.
84
Howard
81
0 4
1- 4
I
6
1
Waverly
8 3 5JS 384
Jimmy Boggs, g
• Wood &amp; Aluminum Windows ·
4-11
3-4
I
1
II
Athens
6 5 431 424
l&gt;~ark Werry, c
0· 0 0- 0 0 I 0 0
• Armstrong Ceilings
lronlon
5 5 488 424
· Bill Vaughan, g
1· 3
0- I
0
3
2
2
Meigs
4 7 380 454
Rick Ash, g
• Welchwood Paneling
0- 0 0- 0 0 0 0 0
Wellston
1 9 305 542
Mike Sayre, I
Jackson
0 11 . 301 592
0 I 0 0 0 0 1 0
• Westinghouse Appliances
TOTALS
TOTALS
43 43 3521 3528
15-40 18·33 32 .IS 20 41
• J-M Insulation
THURSDAY'S RESULTS:
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS 1631
PLAYER
Gallipolis
31
Meigs
22
FG-FGA FT-FTA RB PF TO TP
.
Logan 58 Waverly 55
Rod Ferguson, I
6·16 0- 115 4 212
Athens 55 Jackson 30
Rick Boone, g ·
0- I 0- o· 1 4 I 0
Ironton-Wellston, ppnd, lo be
Gil Price, c
1- 2
]. 5
6
4
1
3
played
Monday at Wellston
Larry Snowden. g
ROCK SPRINGS - The 42 pet. but hit on only 10 of 21
10-20 3- 5 2 4 3 23
FEB.
10 GAMES:
Jll'f1my Noe, I
Meigs Marauder reserves from the foul line for a cool 48 Gallipolis at Logan
6-14
79 12
3
3
.19
Kevin Shee1s, g
0- 2 0- 0 2 1 4 0 handed the Gallipolis Blue pet. Gallipolis netted 10 of 42 Athens at Waverly
Topper Orr, c
Wellston at Jackson
2· 2
2 1
6
3
0
6
Imps their 14th straight loss of from the field for a blizz.ardly Meigs
TOTALS
al Ironton
25-57 13-22 44 23 14 63
the season here Friday night, 23 pet. and six of 19 from the
BY QUARTERS:
Gallipolis
33-26, in a Southeastern Ohio foul line for 32 pet.
17 20 16 1~3
Meigs
Athletic League reserve battle.
17 6 13 12- &lt;8
Officials, Hall and Shupert.
Coach Bill Wickline 's little
Meigs 1381 - Price 1·2·4,.
Marauders are now !J.6 on the Myers 4·0-8, Chaney 4-1·9,
Floyd Burney 2-4·8, George 2-1year and 1&gt;-5 in league play. 5,
Fred Burney 0-1-1, Couch 0.1 -·
! Coach Ed Pauley's Blue Imps
Co-Chairmen
NBmed
I, M. Ash 1-0-2, May 0-0.(), Kiser Columbia 85 Yale 69
'
are ~14 on the year and fl.ll in 0-0-0, Lefebre 0-0·0. Toto Is 14· Glenville 97 Beckley 74
10-31.
M. Pttrsn 72 Glssbro 70
the league.
For LombBrdi Event
Gallipolis
(26)
Berridge
J.
Darlmouth 81 Princeton 79
Bill Chaney led the little 06, Lemley 1·0·2, Dalley 2·0-4, Penn
84 Harvard 60
HOUSTON (UPIJ - Heart
The announcerneni was Marauders with nine ·points Singer 2-4-8, New 0-0-0, Rees 1- Hillsdale 83 O.klend 73
~geons Dr. Denton Cooley made by Dr. Dan Procter, while Bill Myers and Floyd
1-3, Thomas 1·0-2, Maynard 0·1· Lend r 83 A t
s1. 81
e 104 rms
rong
and Dr. Michael DeBakey will president of the Rotary Club of BW'ney added eight apiece. ·· ·Brown 0-0-0, Cornett o.o.o. Mercer
S. Tech 83
10·6·26.
Ala. St. 101 Florida A&amp;M 77
serve as bonOI'ary co-chainnen Houston. All proceeds from the Jim Singer led Gallipolis with Totals
.
By Quorttn
Quincy 81 St. Norbert 75
of lhe 1972 Vince Lombardi $100 a person dinner go to the eight markers.
8 7 8 3--26 St. Olaf 89 Knox 87
, Gallipolis
11 12 8 7- 38 . Ripon 80 Cornell (Iowa) 79
Award Dinner, it was an- American Cancer Society's
Meigs dropped in 14 of 33 Mergs
• 3t26nt ST.
PHONE 675-1160
Offl~l•ls,
Gear'"
Nenelroad Grlnnell66 Lawrence 59
nounced Slturday.
research prosrarn.
from the field lor a respectable and Mrke Werry.
Coe 67 Bel oil 60

••

OSU Trustees

Cf!ESHIRE - Coach Bill
Phillips' Eastern Eagles
conUnued their mastery over
the ){yger Creek Bobcats here
Friday night with a 58-11
vlcto,ry in a hard-fought
defensive struggle.
Kyge~ Creek has not
defeated an Eastern varsity
cage team slnce·1967. the win
moved the Eagles into undisputed second place in the
league standing&amp; behind the
North Gallia Pirates.
·
Eastern Is now 8-2 in the
Southern Valley Athletic
Con!erence ahd 1~2 overall.
The Bobcats dropped to 2-9 in

.'

···· ·

Hallmark

We Sell

More Than

2 x ·4's!

GAHS-Meigs Box

.

Q.ge Scores

Meigs Reserves Down
GAHS Blue Imps 38-26

There Are Mal_'!y Ways We Can 'Save You
Precious Time And Money, We Can He.lp You ·
Formulate Plans 0" Put Your own ·Plans Into
Action, Our Home Service •

Scores :

'

Experts Have Years Of Experience And Will
Be Most Happy To Cooperate With You. They
Have A Complete Knowledge Of The Best
Values In Modernization Needs.

,CAROLINA LUM·BER A
SUPPLY CO.

the league and 2-12 overall.
Curry h~d six points while
With both teams having a Thompson added lour.
bad night hitting from the
The Eagles, behind the
lloor, Eastern moved into an shooting of big Dennis
14-Slead going Into the second Eichinger, 6-3 senior center,
Period. Bo~ Caldwell, 5-10 surged _into lhe driver's seat
senior buard, had six of his II wi!h ' a 20 point third period.
points on the night diU'ing the Eichinger scored 14 of the 20
first jleriod.
.
points. Randy Young, 6·2
Midway through · the second senior forward, had four
stanza, Coach Jim Arledge's .. j)jlints.
Bobcats came alive wfth--a' Greg Mccarty, 5-8 junior
scoring flurry which cut the guard and Glenn Smith, 5-8
visitors' lead to 23-18 at the senior ,guard, led the Bobcat
half. George Curry, 6-0 junior attack during the third stanza.
forward and Roy Thompson, 62 senior center, were mainly
responSible for the comeback.

Cenlervllle 66 Fairmont Easl
64 (ot)
Springfield North 75 Fairborn
Baker 45
Fairmont West 75 Wayne 56
Xenia 90 Dayton Stebbins 63
Brookville 66 Vandalia Buller

so

50

Toledo Central 82 Rogers 78
Portsmouth 67 Hunllngton IW.
Va.) East 37
35
Franklin Monroe 76 Newton 71
Cols. Marion-Franklin 61
Oberlin 89 Amhers1 75
Madison 'Butler 78 Franklin 64
Columbus Brookhaven 42
Lemon Monroe 70 Oxford Reynoldsburg 66 Worthington
63
Talawonda 66
London 59 Grandview 48
Arcanum 56 Bradford 53
West Jeflerson 98 Hamilton
Fairlawn 76 Houston 48
Twp. 66
New Bremen 62 Minster 45
College Corner 78 Laurel lind.) Franklin Heights 84 Dublin 64
72
Teays Valley 47 Ole.ntangy 45
lot)
Shenandoah 79 Waterford 70
Dayton Col. White 85 Dayton Cardington 75 Northmor 61
Kiser 68
Big Walnut 72 North Union 53
! Daylon,Jl~n~~r ,,~7,. Da~t~n Plain City l6 Cedarvllle.,65.
MelldO'ol(dille 71
.
Niles McKinley 70 Brookfield
53
,, O.yton Fairview 68 Dayton
Wright 61
Barberton 68 Warren Harding
58
Oaylon 'Patterson 74 Daylon
Silvers 65
Cin. Moeller 63 Cln. Purcell 47
Daylon Rofh 67 Dayton Sycamore 77 Deer Park 53
,. Roosevelt 62 ·
Milford 92 Glen Estes 76 ·
Cin. Elder 58 Cln. LaSalle 52
Cln. McNicholas 74 51. Henry
IKy.l 48
North Cenlral 73 Hilltop 42
Archbold 87 Bryan 45
Delta 62 Wauseon 56
Edon 69 Fremont (Ind.) 48
·
NBA Standings
Napoleon 77 Liberty Center 57
·I By Unlted.Prns International
Edgerton 56 Hicksville 55
Eastern Conference
AflanHc DMslon
W. L. Pet. GB
Boston
40 18 .690 ...
·New York
32 22 .593 6
NHL Standings
Philadelphia 23 32 .418 15 1/2
By Uniftd Press International
Buflalo
15 · 38 .283 22'12
East
Cenlr•l Division
W. L. T. P!s
W. L. Pel. GB Boslon
367880
•Balllmore 24 29 .453
New York
32 10 8 72
Aflanta
' 20 34 .370 41!2 Montreal
28 13 10 66
Clnclnnall 17 36 .321 7
Detro II
2221851
Cleveland
17 ,39 . .304 8'12 Toronto
21 21 10 52
·
Western Cenference
V3,CC~uver
15 29 5 35
Midwest Divi.sioti .
Bullalo
10 20 12 32
W. L. Pel. GB
West
Milwaukee 45 12 .789
W. L. T. Pis
Chicego
39. 17 .696 51!&gt; Chicago
35 11 5 75
Phoenix
33 25 ,569 121!&gt; Mlnnesola
27 17 8 62
De!rolt
20 36 .357 24'' '
Calllornla
17 26 11 45
Pacific Division
St. Louis
17 28 7 41
.
W. L. Pet. GB Philadelphia
15 26 B 38
Los Angeles' 45 7 .865 ...
Plllsburgh
13 29 9 35
Golden Slate 34 22 .607 13
Los Angeles
14 33 7 35
Seallle
33 24 .579 14'12
Friday's Resulfs
Houston
20 35 .364 !6'12 California 2 Montreal 2
Portland
13 44 .228 34'12 Chicago 6 Vancouver 2
Friday's Results
IOnfygames scheduled)
Chicago 110 Baltimore 108
Saturday's Games
Boston 122 Clncinnatl109
Philadelphia at Toronto
Detroit 118 Phlladelr,hla133
New York at 51. Louis
New York 103 Bulla o 84
Detroit of Bosfon, all.
Seattle liS Cleveland 112
Buflalo at Minnesota
Phoenix 113 Golden S1a1e105
Pi1tsburgh al Los Arig
Porlland 114 Houston 113
(Onlygamesscheduledl
Los Angeles 118 Milwaukee 105
Sunday's Games S.turday's Games .
Montreal a! Vancvr. aft.
Detro II at Cincinnati ·
Toronto at New York, aft.
Phlllidelphla al New York
Boston at Buffalo
Cleveland at Atlanta
California e1 De1rol1
Bufl•lo at Chicago
Mlnnesofa of Chicago
Milwaukee al Houston
St. Louis at PhiladelPhia
Los Angeles at Golden Slate
IOnly games scheduled)
Phoenix al Pot'fland
(Only
games scheduled!
1
Coshocton 70 Dover 66 lot)
Euclid 67 Lakewood 62
Richmond Heights 57 Newbury

r

Pro Standings

Sunday's Games

Seaftle at Boston, aft.
New York al Philo, oft.
Baltimore at Los Angeles
Porlland ·~ ·Phoenix
. Buffalo al Cleveland
' Atlanta at Houston
Cine at Chicago. aft. ·
IOnlygamessched\JiedJ

.

Bull~ogs

I

,.

And now a wo.rd about
H&amp;R Block's competition.

staved off the threat.
In posUng their 22nd con·
secutlve SEOAL victory the
Tigers led- by quarter scores of
16-11, 33-24, and ~4 enroute to
their eleventh league victory
while Logan dropped to 2-9 in
league play.
Butch Workman, a 6-1 senior,
picked up the scoring slack for
Waverly by slamming in 23

points with Mike Oyer adding
17 and John Shoemaker 14.
Jim Pierce pumped in 17 for
the .Chiefs with Ken Culbertson
taking runnerup honors with
12.
Waverly did not enjoy a
typical good shooting night as
they )lit·on jus tTl of 69 shOts for
40 pet. and made 18 of 25 free
throws. ·
The .Chieftains gunned in 23
of 52 1\ho~ for i4 pet. and
converted 15 of 25 charaity
attempts.
Mike Oyer pulled down 12 of
Waverly's 34 rebounds while
Randy Norris collected eight of
Logan's 33.
In the preliminary game the
Logan reserves moved into a
tie with the Tiger Cubs by
support from Mike Green with posting a 46-42 victory to
14 markers and Mark Mace deadlock the two teams at 8-3
with 11.
records.
Dan Morrow topped the
The box score :
Jackson attack with 13 points
,,W•·YI'rly. ~/~&gt;, ./1Aa.loy: l;~&gt; 4;
and Steve Keii~r added 11.
Dyer·
Falrchrld 3-1 -7;
Statistics · show Athens hit- Gullion6-5-17;
2-1-5; Workmen 9-5-23;
ling on Tl of 59 shots for 45.8 Shoemaker 6·2·14; Salyers 0·2pet. and 14 of 21 free throws. 2. Totals 27-18-72• .
Logan (61) - Norris 2-4-8;
Jackson made 16 of 37 for 43.2 Culbertson
6-0-12-; Shaw 4-2-10;
pet. and canned 10 of 23 charity Pierce 8-1-17; Whitcralt 0-2-2;
Smith 2-1-5; Krebs 0-S.S; Good
tosses.
Tofals 23-15-61.
Athens also outrebounded 1-0-2.
Score by quarters:
the Ironrnen 42-23 with Smith Waverly
16 20 17 19- 72
11 13 20 17-41
getting 121or t~e winners and Logan
Reserve
sCore:
Logan 461
. Keller snatchmg nme for Waverly 42 .
Jackson.
A1htns 16il - D. Smith 13·1·
27; Mace S-1-11; Wood 1-0-2 ;
Chonko 1-0-2; Ackerman 0·1-1 ·
Green 3-B-14; S. Smith 3-06 ;
Essex 1·3·5. T~tals 27-14-68.
J1ckson 142)- Keller 5-1-11 ;
Davidson 1-4-6; Morrow 6·1-13·
DeS!ephen 2-1-5; Conroy 2-2·6;
Martin 0-1-1. · To!als 16-10-42.
Score by qu•rters:
Athens
19 12 17 2HB
Jackson
11 J4 4 13- 42
Reserve score: Athens 43,
Jackson 36

Win

Second In Row
JACKSON - Led by Dave
Smith's T/ point performance
the Athens Bulldogs chewed up
the Jackson Ironrnen 68-42
Friday night to hold their
fourth place in the SEOAL
standings.
Playing their sleady brand of
ball the Bulldogs led 19-11 after
one quarter and 31·25 at the
halftime.
The third period was the
crusher for the Ironrnen as the
ARS defense did not give up a
field goal untilinidway through
the periOI), and it was tlie only
two-pointer Jackson managed
as Athens outscOI'ed then 17-4
. th I d to ,. 29 I
to Increase e ea
..,. a
the end of the third period.
Coach Charlie McAfee's
'
th ir 1
team ·Upped e eague recOI'd to 7-4 . while JacksOn
dipped to 2-9 in loop com.
petition.
In addition to Smith's 27
points the Bulldogs had good

Ironton Comes From
Behind To Whip WHS
INRTON - The Ironton
Tigers rallied from a halftime
deficit Friday night to shellac
the visiting Wellston Golden
Rockets 91-62. ,
Following a 15-15 first period
standoff the Rockets surprised
the Tigers by taking a 34-32
halftime lead into the locker
room.

Local Bowling
.,
BANTAM
January 22, 1972
· S!andings:
Ieam
Red Barons

AHL StandingsBy United Press International
EMt ·
4
W. L. T. Pfs
ZodlaC 1S
4
Bosfon
30 15 8 68 Mustang's
~
Nova Scotia
27 15 10 64 Ball Breakers
Springfield
20 11 11 51
Pin Busters
2
Providence
17 24 9 43 Sneaky Snakes
Rochester
18 28 6 42
High Individual Game 2
ABA Standings
West
David Smith, 140 ; Ronnie
By United Prtsslnttrnationa I
.
W. L. ~- Pfs Casci, 133.
East
Belllmore
24 18 7 ss.
Hiall
Series
David Smith,
W. L. Pel. GB Hershey
22 16 8 52
263; Ronnie Cascl. 227.
41 12 .774 ... Cincinnati
Kentucky
21 22 9 51
Tum High Game - Red
33 23 .589 9'h Cleveland
VIrginia
22
20
7
51
Barons,
754.
New York
27 29 .482 15112 Richmond
18 24 8 44
Team High Series - Red
22 34 .393 20'12 Tidewater
Caroline
12 32 5 29 Baron's, 1500.
Floridians 21 34 .382 21
Friday's Results
· Pittsburgh 20 33 .377 21
Richmond 3Clnclnnelll
SENIOR
Wnt
Rochester 5 ProvidenceJ
. J~nuary 22, 1972
W. L. Pel. GB Springfield 3 Boston 3
Stondings:
Utah
37 19 .661 ...
IOnlygamesschedule~l
Tum
Indiana
a2 23 .582 4lf2
S.turdiy'sGIMts
Born Losers
8
Dallas
26 34 m 13
Providence at Boston
Pin Busters
5
Memphis
'23 32 .418 lllf2 Richmond at Cleveland
The Pros
s
Denver
22 31 .415 13lf2 Cincinnati at Hershey
Royal Crowns
4
Friday's Ruulla
Tidewater at Springfield
Gutter Duster•
3
Kentucky 131 llltlsburgh 111
Strikers
2
Carolina 106 Memphis 100
High' Individual Game
· VIrginia 115 Florlcflons 107
Gene Davis, 180; Debi
Utalll21 Indiana 110
·
Gallagher, 159:
,Sunday's Games
Dallas 118 Denver 1~
· High Series c.. Gene Davis
New
York
at
Kentucky
,S.turday's Games
460
; Rich Baiiey, 421.
'
Plltsburgh al Floridians
PJttsburgh vs. Carolina
Hlih
Gan1e
T~•
To...,
A1 GrHnsboro, Nc. Memphis vs. Dallas
. AI Denver, all. Pro•. 783.
Vlrginl• at Now York
Team High Se~ies .. The
l~dlena AI Denver, aft.
Denver at K..,tucky
Pros.
1170.
(Clnlygamesschtcluled)
(0nlygameuchtcluled 1

"

.
McCarty had six points on
three field goals while Smith
added four points.
Eastern,
again
with
Eichinger having a hol·hahd,
wrapped It up with a 13 point
· four period. He.scOI'ed eight of
those 13 points. Curry canned
live points before exiting with
his five personal to pace the.
Bobcat fourth quarter attack.
Eichinger topped the game ·
scoring with Tl points and 33 .
rebounds. caldwell, who 1s
averaging 15.4 points per ~arne

Waverly
Records
22nd
1~
1Straight L·e ague Win

LOGAN - The Waverly
Tigers found themselves in a
bit of a bind Friday night at
Logan before · finally battling
off the stugl!orn Chieftains for
a 72-61 SE'5AL victory.
54
Late in the third period fhe
West Milton 58 ·Eaton 55
Trotwood Madison 67 North- vastly improved Logan team
mont 66
had closed to within four
60 '
.
Oa_yton Chamlnade 65 Dayton points, 49-44, before the Tigers
Belmont 55'
·
Alliance 64 East Liverpool 47
Akron Easl 92 Akron Garfield Dayton Alter 81 Miamisburg '43 · pulled themselves together and
72
Greenville 66 Bellefontaine 61
Akron North 80 Akron Eliot 77 Toledo Scott66 Toledo Waite 46
Akron South 65 Akron Kenmore Toledo Slart 96 Toledo Bowsher

Waverly 72 Logan 61
Buckeye Valley 75 Mt. Gilead
51
.
Lancaster Reemelln 111
Hunllngton 67
Greenview 76 Triad 41
Canton McKinley 61' Massillon
49
Canton Lincoln 79 Cuyahoga
Falls 64
· Canton Aquinas 61 Canton C. C.

.o
I

one free throw. Hubbard was
especially effective in the first
half. Bruce Hart, 6-1 senior,
had 16 points and Jerry Hubbard poured in 12 points.
North Gallia led 24-13 after

the first period, 45-33at the half
and 67-50 moving into the final ·
eight minutes of ac~on.
The Pirates hit 4il of ~ field
goal attempts for 53 pet. North
Gallia also grabbed 48
rebounds. North Gal!ia ·s
reserves captured their niuth
victory in II outings with a 4~
26 win. •
Don Justus led the Pirates
with 12 points. Sterling Logan
and Dave Robinette had 10
.
points each. Norm Curfman
was held to II points by KC's only 16 of 61 lor 26 pet. The Hudson dumped in 14 and Dave canned 14 in a losing effort.
Greg Mccarty. , ...
Eagles converted 14 of 32 foul Wise had 12.
North Gallla played at
Overall, it was one of Kyger attempts. The Bobcats. canned
Kyger Creek travels to North Federal-Hocking last night.
Creek's best defensive efforts only nine of 23.
Galiia Friday . Eastern played Southern will host Symmes
of the year. Curry led the
John Sheets' field goal with Glouster Saturday night.
Valley Friday night.
Bobcat 'offe.nse .with 11 points. three seconds left in the game
EASTERN ISS) - Duvall, 2Norlh Gallia 187) - Justus 6·
Thompson had eight points gave the Little Eagles a 2-6; Eichinger. 10-7-27; Boring, 3- 15; Crosswhite 5-2·12; Clark
Young, 2-3-7; Caldwell, 5· 14-1-29 ; Stout8-0-I6 ; Brown4-1while Smith and McCarty thrilling ~5 victory over the 2-1-5;
1-11 and Cross 1-0·2. TOTALS 9 ; Smllh 1-0·2; Glassburn 1-0-2;
scored seven each. Th()mpson Little Bobkitlens.
22-14-58.
Eggleton 1-0'2. Tol•ls 40-7-87.
KYGER CREEK (41) Southern 172) - Jim Hubled the 'Cats rebounding
Tim Spencer paced the
Thompson,
4-0-8;
Curry,
4-3·11
;
bard
12-1-25; Bruce Hart 6-4-16;
brigade with 20. Both teams winners with 15 points. Steve Darsl, 2-2-6; Smith, 3-1-7;
Jerry Hubbard 6-0-12 ; B. Hart
exhibited a very cold shooting Dill added 14. The Bobkltlens McCarly, 3-1-7; and Hudson, o. 0-0-0; lhle 1-0-2 ; Hill 1-0 2;
percentage.
Jenkins 3-2-8; Holman 1-2-4 and
placed three players In double 2-2. TOTALS 16-9-41 .
By Quarters:
Nease 0-J.J. Totals 30-12-72.
Eastern hit 22 of 79 Ooor- figures . Lawrence Tabor led
Eastern
14
9
20
13-58
lioulhern
12 20 17 22:...72
natternp\8 lor 28 pet. KC sank · the way with 17 poin\8. Clay Kyger Creek
s 13 12 11-41 North Gallia 24 21 22 ~7

gwr~~=m-m«;, ...~

FridAy's Hi/!h
·School Results

Disturbed Over
Recent Brawl

1$ points ahd 14 rebounds and
Gary Crosawhite, 6-4 junior
forward, canned 12 points •.
Jim Hubbard, 5-11 senior
forward, paced the Tornadoes
with 25 points on 12 baskets and

Eagles Top KC, Rem(Jin Alive In Race

aJ.

..........

row. The Totnadoea have a 5-i In pacing the Pirate attack. Big
league mark and &amp;.9 overall Arthur Clark, 6-6 senior center,
recOI'd.
.
. led the way with 29 points and
A well-balanced s.ame was 20 rebounds. Pat Stout, senior I
the difference Fridlly ni,Kht. guard, had 16 points; Larry
Four players hit double figures Justus, 6-4 senior forward had

However Coach Dick Myers'
Tigers roared out in the third
period and ticked off 10
straight points before the
Rockets scored to move into 5949lead after three quarters and
then win going away as they
outscored the Rockets 22-13 in
the final period,
The victory enabled the
Tigers to hold their third place
position with an 8-3 league
record while Wellston remains
in the league cellar with a 1-10
mark.
Freshman Mark Ferguson's
22 points led the Tiger attack
. with Jeff Hannon and Bill
Markin each adding 17 while
Danny Settles tallied 17 for the
losing Rockets.
The Tigers connected on 36 of
71 field goal attempts and
converted IG of 21 free throws
while 'pulling down 42
rebounds.
Wellston tallied on 26 of 75
attempts and made good on 10
of17 at the charity stripe while
grabbing 32 rebounds .
WeltSion !621- S1ewart 4·3·
11 ; Setfles 8-1-17; McKinnlss 3·
3-9; Warrington 2-1-S: Denney
4-1-9; Souders 3-0-6; Martin 0-1·
I; Snare 1-0-2; Zimmerman 1-02. Totals 26·10·62.
,
. Ironton lf!l - Christian 6·1·
13; Hennon 7·3· 17 : Ferguson
10-2:22 : l!oykin 4-0-8; Markin65-17; Schuyler 1-0-2; Spears 0-4·
t : Banks 1-0-2; Ford 1·0-2;
Payne 1-0-2; Hughes 1-0-2 .
. Totals 38-15-91 ,
Score by quarters: ·
Wellston
15 19 15 13-42
Ironton
15 17 27 22- 91
.Reserve uore: Ironton 67,
Wellston 30.

Because we think our competition represenQ
more of a threat to you than it does to us, we're goinc
to help you sort them out.
Your Family
The greatest people in the world. Most
of the time. Unfortunately, most of the
time doesn't include income tax time.
Because the last thing you need when
you're doing your taxes is an aunt who
took an accounting course just hefore
ahe dropped out of college. Or a father
who thinks how much money you make
and what you do with it is something
the rest of the family should know
about.

Your Naishbors
You know the type. The mild-mannered shoe salesman next door who
suddenly turns into a mathematical
Jeliius just al&gt;out the time income tax
1s due. He knows all the angles. Some
of which even the Internal Revenue
Service doesn't know about- yet. And
he's willing to ahare them with you,
"Just to he neighborly."

You
Your own worst enemy. All year long
you can't balance your check book, but
~.~HJat doesn:t stop you. Armed with Your
1'1"''. -2'~'J,~ of paper and a ~le
of· gallons of coffee you bravely attack
that stack of forms. You may be taking
deductions you're not entitled to, and
entitled to deductions you're not taking. So, should you he doing your own
taxes?

Us
We're H &amp; R Block, with over 6,000
conveniently located offices manned
by thousands of specially trained tax
preparers who eat, sleep, and drink in.
come tax returns. People who set out to
eave you money and much of the
do it The cost? Fees start at S5 and the
avera'e cost waa under $12.50 for over
7 rni lhon customers we served.last year,
Furth•~te.-if your return is audited
we will acrompany ·you, at no utro
cost, to the Internal Revenue Service
and explain how your return was prepared, even thou'h we will not act aa
your legal representative.
,-\nd everyone is eligible to receive our
year 'round service which is covered by
our orie time fee. No extra charse for
help with audits, estimates, or tax
questions.
We know the people we've just told y011
about will do your income tax return
for less than we can but we don't think
you can afford them.

time

H&amp;RBiock.
1\ei.ciw- ~~~~

9 A.M.-6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9A.M.-5P.M. SATURDAYS
PHONE: 446-0303
NO ~· · PO!NTMENT NECESSARY

27 SYCAMORE ST.
Gallipolis, Ohio

Specials
Feb. 7th Thru Feb. 12th Only

_,Under Pinning SALE
shee" 21x60 Inches S1.t5

INSULATION

'

Che(k Our Sale Price on
All ·Your Insulation
Needs.

·.-.

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Regular

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I

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Special •4.99 set
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brands. Tools, household and giftwares. sporting goods,
electrical appliances and toys. ·Many, Many Others.

A masking ta pe for general use. Easy
to put on and take off. Ideal for uu
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S.turday- 7A.M."' 4 P.M.
PHONE446-4fOS

.7 OLIVE ST.

f

GAWPOLII. OHIO

�I

17- Tbe &amp;IJday Tlmei·Jiedlnel, SUidly, Feb, 1,1972
..

-- ~

'

NG Pirates Ml But·Assured Of CroWn

Blue Devils Trip'
Marauders, 6

VINTON ....: Coach Jim an Impressive, 8'1·72 vlcj()ey will hoit Kyger Creek Friday
Foeter'a North Gallla Pirates, over COach ·Aaa Bradbury'• night.'
moved a atep Closer to clln- Southern TOI'nadoes. .~ ,.
North Gallla is 1~1 in league
chlng the Southern Valley
The Pirates have only one . play and 1:!-2 in all games.
Athletic Conference .cage . league encounter !eli-on their Southern. ' alter winning six
crown here Friday night with regular season schedule. They stralsht, c~J:opped Its 2nd in a

BY KEI'nl WISECUP
center, led the Marauders with their presence known, and throw to make it 38-23 with 5:59
ROCK SPRINGS _ The 18 points and II rebounds. how! Three two-pointers by left in the third period.
It . was an evenly played .
Gallipolis Blue , Devils . out- ·Vaughan was forced to the Snowden and one fielder plus a
scored the Meigs Marauder; · outside most of the ga.me, .With foul shot by Noe opened the game from here on .out. Meigs
20-6 in the second quarter and the_G~~elense taking away second period's . first lour came wi\flin 11 once, and
minutes. GAHS led, 22-17.
Gallipolis,' biggest margin was
held the "Big Maroon" at bay Me1gs I!IStde game.
Meigs
got
its
first
poini
of
the
17, clirning fits! at 45-28, then
the other three quarters to take
An~y Vaughan ('I:ony's .
a rough 63-48 victory here cous~n), sco~ed 10 while second quarter with 3::W left on 47-30, then 49-32, and finally at •
Friday night in a Southeastern lead.mg Me1gs With 15 a free throw by T. Vaughan. 53-36.'
Dhlo Athletic Laague game. ret~Ieves, a tremendous After Ferguson made a field
The game was a "hard·
Although playing without achievement for a 5-10 ' for- goal, Boggs and A. Vaughan hitting" aflainwith one Meigs
star center Gil Price from late ward . Jimmy Boggs added 11 each drop~ in twin-pointers player ejected and a technical
in the first period when he was markers for the. Marauders. to make it 24-22 with 2:26left in foul charged to the Blue.Devlls,
assessed his third personal
'111~ Bl~e Devils, a great the half. And. this was as close And the fans, from both aides,
foul, Coach Jim Osborne's Blue physical team, , took their . as Meigs carne the remainder several times expreased their
opinion of calls. When a rivalry
Devils wiped out a 17·13 Meigs stubborn defense ~nd fast- of the game.
lead with excellent shooting rnovmg offense mto the . In the final 1:29, Snowden such as Meigs 'and Gallipolis
fine ball·handling and great Marauders ' teeth. They dropped in a free throw, Orr compete in anything, one has to
·defense to take a 23 halftime domi~a.ted the boards, taking tipped in a missed shot, and expect !his. In .the five-year
lead. Meigs had lect 17•13 going 44 ~1sf1r_es compared to 32 for Noe swished three straight rivalry · between the learns,
from 10 feet while Meigs Gallipolis holds an - ~2 edge,
in to the second quarter.
MeJg~.
After scoring the first five
Neither team really had a 111anaged only a free throw, both of Meigs' wins corning last
points of the third period to great floor game. The making the halftime score, 33· year.
take a commanding 38 •23 Mar_auders turned the ball over 23.
Gallipolis played at POI'Iso
'
Snowden
hit
a
fielder,
Noe
margin the closest the De 'Is 20 limes, 12 m the first hall.
mouth last night irnd
hosts
allowed' Meigs was 11 pointsVlat GARS had 14 turnovers, eight made a two-pointer, than that Logan Friday night. Meigs
man Noe made another free plays Ironton at horne Friday.
57-46, with 2:49 remaining .:0d in ·the se~ond half.
the decision already reached
A rn1ghty man-to-man
Larry Snowden, 5-ll senio; del~nse . ~rnployed . b~ the
guard, played a brilliant of. Devils rnmiiDIZed Me1gs f1eld
fensive game for GARS with 23 goal _atternpts to a meager 40,
points. The . high-scoring making. only 15, for 35 pet.
Snowden hit from outside and Gaihpohs made 25 of 57 for
on his patented twisting dri
43.8 pet. The Marauders had 18
for Jayups.
ves of 33 foul line attempts fall in
PRICE SNAGS REBOUND - Gallia's 6-31\o sophomore
Following Snowden for the lor 55 pet., and the Devils made
six.rebounds and three points. Marauders on left are Steve
center, Gil Price (25) hauls down rebound aga~t Meigs in
winners was Jinuny Noe who 13 of 22 for 59.9 pet.
Dunfee (12) and Mike Sayre (22). Behind Price. Is Jimmy
Friday'sSEOALgarneatRock Springs. Price sat out 18:04ol
drilled horne 19 markers and ~ith the loss Meigs ~s now 4.
Noe, GARS forward. On right Is Marauder ace Andy
the tilt with three personals. He finished the game with only
was the key man in the 7m league play, dropping to _6-9
Vaughan (24). Gallia's Rod Ferguson iS on far right. •
Gallipolis second quarter on the year, and now havmg
uprising, scoring nine points lost three m a row. GARS
including three fielders in the ~oves up to 12-2 ove~ali.and 9-2
final 50 seconds! Noe also In !~ague play, still m con·
hauled down 12 rebounds
tention lor the league chamRod Ferguson led the Devils pionship behind II~ Waverly.
on the boards with l5 grabs and The two Blue Devil losses have
scored 12 points. Topper Orr, a been to Waverly, 65-44, and to
husky junior carne off th
Ironton, 00-54, both away from
· bench for foul-troubled Pric: hoin~. GARS has now ~on five
Take advantage of this sale. Get in the sWiin
and contributed a great straight smce losmg at
with a 'World Famous Hallmark Fiberglas®
defensive effort while scoring Waverly on Jan. 14..
.
Pool'. Backed by the most daring Fiberglas
In first quarte~ act10n, wh1ch
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - Ohio six points. Price played only
uarantee. A full15 y.ears in writing! ...
State University Board of the first seven minutes of the was the only period of the mghl
first
quarter
and
the
last
live
when
Coach
Carl
Woile's
Trustees Chainnan James W.
IA•Qalnst ·chipping, cracking, peeling, rotting,
Marauders outplayed the qwck
Shocknessy said Friday the minutes of the final period.
Devils, GARS scored two lmiilderw, rusting or tearing apart.
melee at the end of Jan. 25 Ohio Tony Vaughan ' 6-2 senior Blue
buckets, the first at 5:46 and
State - Minnesota basketball
the other comi'ng 20 seconds
heaters normally cost ·$475 and up.
· game "appeared to me to be an
later, f~ a 4-0 lead.
IGua1rantee yourself Spring installation at
attempt to commit homicide."
Bog~s popped in a long
Three Ohio State · players
prices! And, a Fre~:r pool ;heater. · ~.:'J
jwnper to lie the game at' 7'7
were injured and hospitallZj!d
ALL GAMES
W L P OP with 3::i8 left in the opening
after a light broke out with 36 TEAM
Waverly
13 2 1061 804 canto. Another long jumper by
Offer ~nds February 29,1972
seconds remaining in the Big Gallipolis
12 2 955 767 Boggs broke an 11-11 tie and
Ten game at Minneapolis. The Athens
10 5 946 799 two free throws by T. Vaughan
G. 0. ROUSH &amp; SONS, INC. ·
Portsmouth
9 6 1070 1020
game was stopped and Ohio
Iranian
8
6 967 915 at 0:49 made it 15·11. Dunfee hit
State, leading 50-44, was Chesapeake
8 6 971 882 on a lay-in, his final field goal
NEW HAVEN, W.VA.
awarded the victory.
Meigs
6 9 904 954 of the night, with six seconds
882-2222
6 9 894 958
A Big Ten investigation Fed-Hocking
left
to
make
it
17·13
alter
one
Logan
4 11 825 1006
882-2722
882-2657
resulted in two Minnesota Wellslon
J 11 845 1131 period .
players being suspended for Jackson
2 12 810 1003
And then the sky fell in. Or
SEOAL VARSITY
Your
Pool Builder
the rest of the season. The
rather the Blue Devils made
TEAM
W
L
P
OP
investigation is continuing.
•fuel hook-up extra
11 Regl1tered Tr1d1m1rk OWens-corning
Waverly
11 0 803 534
Shocknessy, commenting at Gallipolis
9 2 726 613
8 3 789 675
an OSU trustees meeting, said Iranian
7 4 708 593
he watched the game on Alhens
Meigs
4 7 659 695
television.
Jackson
2 9 612 770
"It appeared to me to be an Logan
2 9 601 770
1 10 631 879
attempt to commit homicide," Wellslon
44 44 5529 5519
Shocknessy said. "I am not TOTALS
FRIDAY'S RESULTS:
passing judgment on the of. Gallipolis 63 Meigs ;a
ficials, or the Minnesota coach, Waverly 72 .Logan 61
lronlon 91 Wellston 62
or their athletic department or Alhens
68 Jackson 42
the spectators. We will await Porlsmouth 67 Hunt. East 37
the conclusion of the Western South Point 71 Chesapeake 67
Conference's Big Ten in- Fed-Hocking 56 Vln . County 44
vestigation before offering
.
SEOAL RESERVES
'judgment."
TEAM .
w- L P OP
However, Shocknessy did Ironton
9 2 600 396
say the OSU trustees deplored Logan
8 3 SOl 457
8 3 490 442
the incident, and the suspen- Waverly
Athens
7
4 452 396
sion of the two players did not Meigs
6 5 451 407
TONY VAUGHAN (32) Meigs' tiig center, picks off a rebound in ihls action shot taken
satisfy the trustees' concerns. Jackson
4 7 479 517
during Friday's SEOAL battle at Rock Springs. The big man collected 18 points to pace the
2 9 430 645
Shocknessy, a ·Columbus Wellston
Marauders scoring attack. On right iB Meigs' Andy Vaughan (24). Blue Devils left to right are
Gallipolis
o II 364 507 WE SELL DREAMS
attorney, said the trustees TOTALS
44 44 3767 3767
Topper Orr (15), Rod Ferguson (33),Rick Boone (13)andJinunyNoe (23).
AND WHAT DREAMS
were disturbed that inFRIDAY'S RESULTS:
'""'~
tercollegiate a!J!ietics may no Meigs 38 Gallipolis 26
ARE
MAPE
OF
...
46 Waverly 42
longer serve as an ideal for Logan
.
'
Ironton 67 Wellston 30
students
interested
in Athens 43 Jackson 36
HELPING YOU PLAN
developing sound minds in
FEB. 11 GAMES:
York 83 John Jay 66
.
YOUR NEW KITCHEN,~~
Logan at Gallipolis
sound
bodies.
·
Rutgers
(S.J.)
68
Drew
40
MEIGS.GALLIPOLIS CAGE STATISTICS
Waverly
at
Alhens
Hofstra 86 St. Fran. INYJ 70
He said intercollegiate sports Jackson at Wellston
MEIGS MARAUDERS 1481
YOUR HOME MODER~IZATIQtf,
La1aye1te
104 Boston U. 89
PLAYER
programs
should
be
examined
Ironton
at
Meigs
FG-FGA
FT-FTA
RB
PF
TO
TP
Buffalo St. 81 Ithaca 75
S1efe Dunfee, I
EVEN YOUR NEW HOME
SEOAL FRESHMEN
1· 8
1- 4
4
3
4
5
Stonybrook
100 Queens Call . 78 to see that competition and
Tony Vaughan, c
TEAM
W
L
P
OP
5-11
8-13 11
3 2 18 Houston 94 Florida St. 86
winning were not overern· Logan
'Indy Vaughan, f
10 1 615 333
Rutgers 108 Lehigh 76
~ 4
~ 7 15
3
3
10
phasized .
Galli
polis
9 2 473 375
.llch Bailey, g
South
Car.
St.
84
Howard
81
0 4
1- 4
I
6
1
Waverly
8 3 5JS 384
Jimmy Boggs, g
• Wood &amp; Aluminum Windows ·
4-11
3-4
I
1
II
Athens
6 5 431 424
l&gt;~ark Werry, c
0· 0 0- 0 0 I 0 0
• Armstrong Ceilings
lronlon
5 5 488 424
· Bill Vaughan, g
1· 3
0- I
0
3
2
2
Meigs
4 7 380 454
Rick Ash, g
• Welchwood Paneling
0- 0 0- 0 0 0 0 0
Wellston
1 9 305 542
Mike Sayre, I
Jackson
0 11 . 301 592
0 I 0 0 0 0 1 0
• Westinghouse Appliances
TOTALS
TOTALS
43 43 3521 3528
15-40 18·33 32 .IS 20 41
• J-M Insulation
THURSDAY'S RESULTS:
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS 1631
PLAYER
Gallipolis
31
Meigs
22
FG-FGA FT-FTA RB PF TO TP
.
Logan 58 Waverly 55
Rod Ferguson, I
6·16 0- 115 4 212
Athens 55 Jackson 30
Rick Boone, g ·
0- I 0- o· 1 4 I 0
Ironton-Wellston, ppnd, lo be
Gil Price, c
1- 2
]. 5
6
4
1
3
played
Monday at Wellston
Larry Snowden. g
ROCK SPRINGS - The 42 pet. but hit on only 10 of 21
10-20 3- 5 2 4 3 23
FEB.
10 GAMES:
Jll'f1my Noe, I
Meigs Marauder reserves from the foul line for a cool 48 Gallipolis at Logan
6-14
79 12
3
3
.19
Kevin Shee1s, g
0- 2 0- 0 2 1 4 0 handed the Gallipolis Blue pet. Gallipolis netted 10 of 42 Athens at Waverly
Topper Orr, c
Wellston at Jackson
2· 2
2 1
6
3
0
6
Imps their 14th straight loss of from the field for a blizz.ardly Meigs
TOTALS
al Ironton
25-57 13-22 44 23 14 63
the season here Friday night, 23 pet. and six of 19 from the
BY QUARTERS:
Gallipolis
33-26, in a Southeastern Ohio foul line for 32 pet.
17 20 16 1~3
Meigs
Athletic League reserve battle.
17 6 13 12- &lt;8
Officials, Hall and Shupert.
Coach Bill Wickline 's little
Meigs 1381 - Price 1·2·4,.
Marauders are now !J.6 on the Myers 4·0-8, Chaney 4-1·9,
Floyd Burney 2-4·8, George 2-1year and 1&gt;-5 in league play. 5,
Fred Burney 0-1-1, Couch 0.1 -·
! Coach Ed Pauley's Blue Imps
Co-Chairmen
NBmed
I, M. Ash 1-0-2, May 0-0.(), Kiser Columbia 85 Yale 69
'
are ~14 on the year and fl.ll in 0-0-0, Lefebre 0-0·0. Toto Is 14· Glenville 97 Beckley 74
10-31.
M. Pttrsn 72 Glssbro 70
the league.
For LombBrdi Event
Gallipolis
(26)
Berridge
J.
Darlmouth 81 Princeton 79
Bill Chaney led the little 06, Lemley 1·0·2, Dalley 2·0-4, Penn
84 Harvard 60
HOUSTON (UPIJ - Heart
The announcerneni was Marauders with nine ·points Singer 2-4-8, New 0-0-0, Rees 1- Hillsdale 83 O.klend 73
~geons Dr. Denton Cooley made by Dr. Dan Procter, while Bill Myers and Floyd
1-3, Thomas 1·0-2, Maynard 0·1· Lend r 83 A t
s1. 81
e 104 rms
rong
and Dr. Michael DeBakey will president of the Rotary Club of BW'ney added eight apiece. ·· ·Brown 0-0-0, Cornett o.o.o. Mercer
S. Tech 83
10·6·26.
Ala. St. 101 Florida A&amp;M 77
serve as bonOI'ary co-chainnen Houston. All proceeds from the Jim Singer led Gallipolis with Totals
.
By Quorttn
Quincy 81 St. Norbert 75
of lhe 1972 Vince Lombardi $100 a person dinner go to the eight markers.
8 7 8 3--26 St. Olaf 89 Knox 87
, Gallipolis
11 12 8 7- 38 . Ripon 80 Cornell (Iowa) 79
Award Dinner, it was an- American Cancer Society's
Meigs dropped in 14 of 33 Mergs
• 3t26nt ST.
PHONE 675-1160
Offl~l•ls,
Gear'"
Nenelroad Grlnnell66 Lawrence 59
nounced Slturday.
research prosrarn.
from the field lor a respectable and Mrke Werry.
Coe 67 Bel oil 60

••

OSU Trustees

Cf!ESHIRE - Coach Bill
Phillips' Eastern Eagles
conUnued their mastery over
the ){yger Creek Bobcats here
Friday night with a 58-11
vlcto,ry in a hard-fought
defensive struggle.
Kyge~ Creek has not
defeated an Eastern varsity
cage team slnce·1967. the win
moved the Eagles into undisputed second place in the
league standing&amp; behind the
North Gallia Pirates.
·
Eastern Is now 8-2 in the
Southern Valley Athletic
Con!erence ahd 1~2 overall.
The Bobcats dropped to 2-9 in

.'

···· ·

Hallmark

We Sell

More Than

2 x ·4's!

GAHS-Meigs Box

.

Q.ge Scores

Meigs Reserves Down
GAHS Blue Imps 38-26

There Are Mal_'!y Ways We Can 'Save You
Precious Time And Money, We Can He.lp You ·
Formulate Plans 0" Put Your own ·Plans Into
Action, Our Home Service •

Scores :

'

Experts Have Years Of Experience And Will
Be Most Happy To Cooperate With You. They
Have A Complete Knowledge Of The Best
Values In Modernization Needs.

,CAROLINA LUM·BER A
SUPPLY CO.

the league and 2-12 overall.
Curry h~d six points while
With both teams having a Thompson added lour.
bad night hitting from the
The Eagles, behind the
lloor, Eastern moved into an shooting of big Dennis
14-Slead going Into the second Eichinger, 6-3 senior center,
Period. Bo~ Caldwell, 5-10 surged _into lhe driver's seat
senior buard, had six of his II wi!h ' a 20 point third period.
points on the night diU'ing the Eichinger scored 14 of the 20
first jleriod.
.
points. Randy Young, 6·2
Midway through · the second senior forward, had four
stanza, Coach Jim Arledge's .. j)jlints.
Bobcats came alive wfth--a' Greg Mccarty, 5-8 junior
scoring flurry which cut the guard and Glenn Smith, 5-8
visitors' lead to 23-18 at the senior ,guard, led the Bobcat
half. George Curry, 6-0 junior attack during the third stanza.
forward and Roy Thompson, 62 senior center, were mainly
responSible for the comeback.

Cenlervllle 66 Fairmont Easl
64 (ot)
Springfield North 75 Fairborn
Baker 45
Fairmont West 75 Wayne 56
Xenia 90 Dayton Stebbins 63
Brookville 66 Vandalia Buller

so

50

Toledo Central 82 Rogers 78
Portsmouth 67 Hunllngton IW.
Va.) East 37
35
Franklin Monroe 76 Newton 71
Cols. Marion-Franklin 61
Oberlin 89 Amhers1 75
Madison 'Butler 78 Franklin 64
Columbus Brookhaven 42
Lemon Monroe 70 Oxford Reynoldsburg 66 Worthington
63
Talawonda 66
London 59 Grandview 48
Arcanum 56 Bradford 53
West Jeflerson 98 Hamilton
Fairlawn 76 Houston 48
Twp. 66
New Bremen 62 Minster 45
College Corner 78 Laurel lind.) Franklin Heights 84 Dublin 64
72
Teays Valley 47 Ole.ntangy 45
lot)
Shenandoah 79 Waterford 70
Dayton Col. White 85 Dayton Cardington 75 Northmor 61
Kiser 68
Big Walnut 72 North Union 53
! Daylon,Jl~n~~r ,,~7,. Da~t~n Plain City l6 Cedarvllle.,65.
MelldO'ol(dille 71
.
Niles McKinley 70 Brookfield
53
,, O.yton Fairview 68 Dayton
Wright 61
Barberton 68 Warren Harding
58
Oaylon 'Patterson 74 Daylon
Silvers 65
Cin. Moeller 63 Cln. Purcell 47
Daylon Rofh 67 Dayton Sycamore 77 Deer Park 53
,. Roosevelt 62 ·
Milford 92 Glen Estes 76 ·
Cin. Elder 58 Cln. LaSalle 52
Cln. McNicholas 74 51. Henry
IKy.l 48
North Cenlral 73 Hilltop 42
Archbold 87 Bryan 45
Delta 62 Wauseon 56
Edon 69 Fremont (Ind.) 48
·
NBA Standings
Napoleon 77 Liberty Center 57
·I By Unlted.Prns International
Edgerton 56 Hicksville 55
Eastern Conference
AflanHc DMslon
W. L. Pet. GB
Boston
40 18 .690 ...
·New York
32 22 .593 6
NHL Standings
Philadelphia 23 32 .418 15 1/2
By Uniftd Press International
Buflalo
15 · 38 .283 22'12
East
Cenlr•l Division
W. L. T. P!s
W. L. Pel. GB Boslon
367880
•Balllmore 24 29 .453
New York
32 10 8 72
Aflanta
' 20 34 .370 41!2 Montreal
28 13 10 66
Clnclnnall 17 36 .321 7
Detro II
2221851
Cleveland
17 ,39 . .304 8'12 Toronto
21 21 10 52
·
Western Cenference
V3,CC~uver
15 29 5 35
Midwest Divi.sioti .
Bullalo
10 20 12 32
W. L. Pel. GB
West
Milwaukee 45 12 .789
W. L. T. Pis
Chicego
39. 17 .696 51!&gt; Chicago
35 11 5 75
Phoenix
33 25 ,569 121!&gt; Mlnnesola
27 17 8 62
De!rolt
20 36 .357 24'' '
Calllornla
17 26 11 45
Pacific Division
St. Louis
17 28 7 41
.
W. L. Pet. GB Philadelphia
15 26 B 38
Los Angeles' 45 7 .865 ...
Plllsburgh
13 29 9 35
Golden Slate 34 22 .607 13
Los Angeles
14 33 7 35
Seallle
33 24 .579 14'12
Friday's Resulfs
Houston
20 35 .364 !6'12 California 2 Montreal 2
Portland
13 44 .228 34'12 Chicago 6 Vancouver 2
Friday's Results
IOnfygames scheduled)
Chicago 110 Baltimore 108
Saturday's Games
Boston 122 Clncinnatl109
Philadelphia at Toronto
Detroit 118 Phlladelr,hla133
New York at 51. Louis
New York 103 Bulla o 84
Detroit of Bosfon, all.
Seattle liS Cleveland 112
Buflalo at Minnesota
Phoenix 113 Golden S1a1e105
Pi1tsburgh al Los Arig
Porlland 114 Houston 113
(Onlygamesscheduledl
Los Angeles 118 Milwaukee 105
Sunday's Games S.turday's Games .
Montreal a! Vancvr. aft.
Detro II at Cincinnati ·
Toronto at New York, aft.
Phlllidelphla al New York
Boston at Buffalo
Cleveland at Atlanta
California e1 De1rol1
Bufl•lo at Chicago
Mlnnesofa of Chicago
Milwaukee al Houston
St. Louis at PhiladelPhia
Los Angeles at Golden Slate
IOnly games scheduled)
Phoenix al Pot'fland
(Only
games scheduled!
1
Coshocton 70 Dover 66 lot)
Euclid 67 Lakewood 62
Richmond Heights 57 Newbury

r

Pro Standings

Sunday's Games

Seaftle at Boston, aft.
New York al Philo, oft.
Baltimore at Los Angeles
Porlland ·~ ·Phoenix
. Buffalo al Cleveland
' Atlanta at Houston
Cine at Chicago. aft. ·
IOnlygamessched\JiedJ

.

Bull~ogs

I

,.

And now a wo.rd about
H&amp;R Block's competition.

staved off the threat.
In posUng their 22nd con·
secutlve SEOAL victory the
Tigers led- by quarter scores of
16-11, 33-24, and ~4 enroute to
their eleventh league victory
while Logan dropped to 2-9 in
league play.
Butch Workman, a 6-1 senior,
picked up the scoring slack for
Waverly by slamming in 23

points with Mike Oyer adding
17 and John Shoemaker 14.
Jim Pierce pumped in 17 for
the .Chiefs with Ken Culbertson
taking runnerup honors with
12.
Waverly did not enjoy a
typical good shooting night as
they )lit·on jus tTl of 69 shOts for
40 pet. and made 18 of 25 free
throws. ·
The .Chieftains gunned in 23
of 52 1\ho~ for i4 pet. and
converted 15 of 25 charaity
attempts.
Mike Oyer pulled down 12 of
Waverly's 34 rebounds while
Randy Norris collected eight of
Logan's 33.
In the preliminary game the
Logan reserves moved into a
tie with the Tiger Cubs by
support from Mike Green with posting a 46-42 victory to
14 markers and Mark Mace deadlock the two teams at 8-3
with 11.
records.
Dan Morrow topped the
The box score :
Jackson attack with 13 points
,,W•·YI'rly. ~/~&gt;, ./1Aa.loy: l;~&gt; 4;
and Steve Keii~r added 11.
Dyer·
Falrchrld 3-1 -7;
Statistics · show Athens hit- Gullion6-5-17;
2-1-5; Workmen 9-5-23;
ling on Tl of 59 shots for 45.8 Shoemaker 6·2·14; Salyers 0·2pet. and 14 of 21 free throws. 2. Totals 27-18-72• .
Logan (61) - Norris 2-4-8;
Jackson made 16 of 37 for 43.2 Culbertson
6-0-12-; Shaw 4-2-10;
pet. and canned 10 of 23 charity Pierce 8-1-17; Whitcralt 0-2-2;
Smith 2-1-5; Krebs 0-S.S; Good
tosses.
Tofals 23-15-61.
Athens also outrebounded 1-0-2.
Score by quarters:
the Ironrnen 42-23 with Smith Waverly
16 20 17 19- 72
11 13 20 17-41
getting 121or t~e winners and Logan
Reserve
sCore:
Logan 461
. Keller snatchmg nme for Waverly 42 .
Jackson.
A1htns 16il - D. Smith 13·1·
27; Mace S-1-11; Wood 1-0-2 ;
Chonko 1-0-2; Ackerman 0·1-1 ·
Green 3-B-14; S. Smith 3-06 ;
Essex 1·3·5. T~tals 27-14-68.
J1ckson 142)- Keller 5-1-11 ;
Davidson 1-4-6; Morrow 6·1-13·
DeS!ephen 2-1-5; Conroy 2-2·6;
Martin 0-1-1. · To!als 16-10-42.
Score by qu•rters:
Athens
19 12 17 2HB
Jackson
11 J4 4 13- 42
Reserve score: Athens 43,
Jackson 36

Win

Second In Row
JACKSON - Led by Dave
Smith's T/ point performance
the Athens Bulldogs chewed up
the Jackson Ironrnen 68-42
Friday night to hold their
fourth place in the SEOAL
standings.
Playing their sleady brand of
ball the Bulldogs led 19-11 after
one quarter and 31·25 at the
halftime.
The third period was the
crusher for the Ironrnen as the
ARS defense did not give up a
field goal untilinidway through
the periOI), and it was tlie only
two-pointer Jackson managed
as Athens outscOI'ed then 17-4
. th I d to ,. 29 I
to Increase e ea
..,. a
the end of the third period.
Coach Charlie McAfee's
'
th ir 1
team ·Upped e eague recOI'd to 7-4 . while JacksOn
dipped to 2-9 in loop com.
petition.
In addition to Smith's 27
points the Bulldogs had good

Ironton Comes From
Behind To Whip WHS
INRTON - The Ironton
Tigers rallied from a halftime
deficit Friday night to shellac
the visiting Wellston Golden
Rockets 91-62. ,
Following a 15-15 first period
standoff the Rockets surprised
the Tigers by taking a 34-32
halftime lead into the locker
room.

Local Bowling
.,
BANTAM
January 22, 1972
· S!andings:
Ieam
Red Barons

AHL StandingsBy United Press International
EMt ·
4
W. L. T. Pfs
ZodlaC 1S
4
Bosfon
30 15 8 68 Mustang's
~
Nova Scotia
27 15 10 64 Ball Breakers
Springfield
20 11 11 51
Pin Busters
2
Providence
17 24 9 43 Sneaky Snakes
Rochester
18 28 6 42
High Individual Game 2
ABA Standings
West
David Smith, 140 ; Ronnie
By United Prtsslnttrnationa I
.
W. L. ~- Pfs Casci, 133.
East
Belllmore
24 18 7 ss.
Hiall
Series
David Smith,
W. L. Pel. GB Hershey
22 16 8 52
263; Ronnie Cascl. 227.
41 12 .774 ... Cincinnati
Kentucky
21 22 9 51
Tum High Game - Red
33 23 .589 9'h Cleveland
VIrginia
22
20
7
51
Barons,
754.
New York
27 29 .482 15112 Richmond
18 24 8 44
Team High Series - Red
22 34 .393 20'12 Tidewater
Caroline
12 32 5 29 Baron's, 1500.
Floridians 21 34 .382 21
Friday's Results
· Pittsburgh 20 33 .377 21
Richmond 3Clnclnnelll
SENIOR
Wnt
Rochester 5 ProvidenceJ
. J~nuary 22, 1972
W. L. Pel. GB Springfield 3 Boston 3
Stondings:
Utah
37 19 .661 ...
IOnlygamesschedule~l
Tum
Indiana
a2 23 .582 4lf2
S.turdiy'sGIMts
Born Losers
8
Dallas
26 34 m 13
Providence at Boston
Pin Busters
5
Memphis
'23 32 .418 lllf2 Richmond at Cleveland
The Pros
s
Denver
22 31 .415 13lf2 Cincinnati at Hershey
Royal Crowns
4
Friday's Ruulla
Tidewater at Springfield
Gutter Duster•
3
Kentucky 131 llltlsburgh 111
Strikers
2
Carolina 106 Memphis 100
High' Individual Game
· VIrginia 115 Florlcflons 107
Gene Davis, 180; Debi
Utalll21 Indiana 110
·
Gallagher, 159:
,Sunday's Games
Dallas 118 Denver 1~
· High Series c.. Gene Davis
New
York
at
Kentucky
,S.turday's Games
460
; Rich Baiiey, 421.
'
Plltsburgh al Floridians
PJttsburgh vs. Carolina
Hlih
Gan1e
T~•
To...,
A1 GrHnsboro, Nc. Memphis vs. Dallas
. AI Denver, all. Pro•. 783.
Vlrginl• at Now York
Team High Se~ies .. The
l~dlena AI Denver, aft.
Denver at K..,tucky
Pros.
1170.
(Clnlygamesschtcluled)
(0nlygameuchtcluled 1

"

.
McCarty had six points on
three field goals while Smith
added four points.
Eastern,
again
with
Eichinger having a hol·hahd,
wrapped It up with a 13 point
· four period. He.scOI'ed eight of
those 13 points. Curry canned
live points before exiting with
his five personal to pace the.
Bobcat fourth quarter attack.
Eichinger topped the game ·
scoring with Tl points and 33 .
rebounds. caldwell, who 1s
averaging 15.4 points per ~arne

Waverly
Records
22nd
1~
1Straight L·e ague Win

LOGAN - The Waverly
Tigers found themselves in a
bit of a bind Friday night at
Logan before · finally battling
off the stugl!orn Chieftains for
a 72-61 SE'5AL victory.
54
Late in the third period fhe
West Milton 58 ·Eaton 55
Trotwood Madison 67 North- vastly improved Logan team
mont 66
had closed to within four
60 '
.
Oa_yton Chamlnade 65 Dayton points, 49-44, before the Tigers
Belmont 55'
·
Alliance 64 East Liverpool 47
Akron Easl 92 Akron Garfield Dayton Alter 81 Miamisburg '43 · pulled themselves together and
72
Greenville 66 Bellefontaine 61
Akron North 80 Akron Eliot 77 Toledo Scott66 Toledo Waite 46
Akron South 65 Akron Kenmore Toledo Slart 96 Toledo Bowsher

Waverly 72 Logan 61
Buckeye Valley 75 Mt. Gilead
51
.
Lancaster Reemelln 111
Hunllngton 67
Greenview 76 Triad 41
Canton McKinley 61' Massillon
49
Canton Lincoln 79 Cuyahoga
Falls 64
· Canton Aquinas 61 Canton C. C.

.o
I

one free throw. Hubbard was
especially effective in the first
half. Bruce Hart, 6-1 senior,
had 16 points and Jerry Hubbard poured in 12 points.
North Gallia led 24-13 after

the first period, 45-33at the half
and 67-50 moving into the final ·
eight minutes of ac~on.
The Pirates hit 4il of ~ field
goal attempts for 53 pet. North
Gallia also grabbed 48
rebounds. North Gal!ia ·s
reserves captured their niuth
victory in II outings with a 4~
26 win. •
Don Justus led the Pirates
with 12 points. Sterling Logan
and Dave Robinette had 10
.
points each. Norm Curfman
was held to II points by KC's only 16 of 61 lor 26 pet. The Hudson dumped in 14 and Dave canned 14 in a losing effort.
Greg Mccarty. , ...
Eagles converted 14 of 32 foul Wise had 12.
North Gallla played at
Overall, it was one of Kyger attempts. The Bobcats. canned
Kyger Creek travels to North Federal-Hocking last night.
Creek's best defensive efforts only nine of 23.
Galiia Friday . Eastern played Southern will host Symmes
of the year. Curry led the
John Sheets' field goal with Glouster Saturday night.
Valley Friday night.
Bobcat 'offe.nse .with 11 points. three seconds left in the game
EASTERN ISS) - Duvall, 2Norlh Gallia 187) - Justus 6·
Thompson had eight points gave the Little Eagles a 2-6; Eichinger. 10-7-27; Boring, 3- 15; Crosswhite 5-2·12; Clark
Young, 2-3-7; Caldwell, 5· 14-1-29 ; Stout8-0-I6 ; Brown4-1while Smith and McCarty thrilling ~5 victory over the 2-1-5;
1-11 and Cross 1-0·2. TOTALS 9 ; Smllh 1-0·2; Glassburn 1-0-2;
scored seven each. Th()mpson Little Bobkitlens.
22-14-58.
Eggleton 1-0'2. Tol•ls 40-7-87.
KYGER CREEK (41) Southern 172) - Jim Hubled the 'Cats rebounding
Tim Spencer paced the
Thompson,
4-0-8;
Curry,
4-3·11
;
bard
12-1-25; Bruce Hart 6-4-16;
brigade with 20. Both teams winners with 15 points. Steve Darsl, 2-2-6; Smith, 3-1-7;
Jerry Hubbard 6-0-12 ; B. Hart
exhibited a very cold shooting Dill added 14. The Bobkltlens McCarly, 3-1-7; and Hudson, o. 0-0-0; lhle 1-0-2 ; Hill 1-0 2;
percentage.
Jenkins 3-2-8; Holman 1-2-4 and
placed three players In double 2-2. TOTALS 16-9-41 .
By Quarters:
Nease 0-J.J. Totals 30-12-72.
Eastern hit 22 of 79 Ooor- figures . Lawrence Tabor led
Eastern
14
9
20
13-58
lioulhern
12 20 17 22:...72
natternp\8 lor 28 pet. KC sank · the way with 17 poin\8. Clay Kyger Creek
s 13 12 11-41 North Gallia 24 21 22 ~7

gwr~~=m-m«;, ...~

FridAy's Hi/!h
·School Results

Disturbed Over
Recent Brawl

1$ points ahd 14 rebounds and
Gary Crosawhite, 6-4 junior
forward, canned 12 points •.
Jim Hubbard, 5-11 senior
forward, paced the Tornadoes
with 25 points on 12 baskets and

Eagles Top KC, Rem(Jin Alive In Race

aJ.

..........

row. The Totnadoea have a 5-i In pacing the Pirate attack. Big
league mark and &amp;.9 overall Arthur Clark, 6-6 senior center,
recOI'd.
.
. led the way with 29 points and
A well-balanced s.ame was 20 rebounds. Pat Stout, senior I
the difference Fridlly ni,Kht. guard, had 16 points; Larry
Four players hit double figures Justus, 6-4 senior forward had

However Coach Dick Myers'
Tigers roared out in the third
period and ticked off 10
straight points before the
Rockets scored to move into 5949lead after three quarters and
then win going away as they
outscored the Rockets 22-13 in
the final period,
The victory enabled the
Tigers to hold their third place
position with an 8-3 league
record while Wellston remains
in the league cellar with a 1-10
mark.
Freshman Mark Ferguson's
22 points led the Tiger attack
. with Jeff Hannon and Bill
Markin each adding 17 while
Danny Settles tallied 17 for the
losing Rockets.
The Tigers connected on 36 of
71 field goal attempts and
converted IG of 21 free throws
while 'pulling down 42
rebounds.
Wellston tallied on 26 of 75
attempts and made good on 10
of17 at the charity stripe while
grabbing 32 rebounds .
WeltSion !621- S1ewart 4·3·
11 ; Setfles 8-1-17; McKinnlss 3·
3-9; Warrington 2-1-S: Denney
4-1-9; Souders 3-0-6; Martin 0-1·
I; Snare 1-0-2; Zimmerman 1-02. Totals 26·10·62.
,
. Ironton lf!l - Christian 6·1·
13; Hennon 7·3· 17 : Ferguson
10-2:22 : l!oykin 4-0-8; Markin65-17; Schuyler 1-0-2; Spears 0-4·
t : Banks 1-0-2; Ford 1·0-2;
Payne 1-0-2; Hughes 1-0-2 .
. Totals 38-15-91 ,
Score by quarters: ·
Wellston
15 19 15 13-42
Ironton
15 17 27 22- 91
.Reserve uore: Ironton 67,
Wellston 30.

Because we think our competition represenQ
more of a threat to you than it does to us, we're goinc
to help you sort them out.
Your Family
The greatest people in the world. Most
of the time. Unfortunately, most of the
time doesn't include income tax time.
Because the last thing you need when
you're doing your taxes is an aunt who
took an accounting course just hefore
ahe dropped out of college. Or a father
who thinks how much money you make
and what you do with it is something
the rest of the family should know
about.

Your Naishbors
You know the type. The mild-mannered shoe salesman next door who
suddenly turns into a mathematical
Jeliius just al&gt;out the time income tax
1s due. He knows all the angles. Some
of which even the Internal Revenue
Service doesn't know about- yet. And
he's willing to ahare them with you,
"Just to he neighborly."

You
Your own worst enemy. All year long
you can't balance your check book, but
~.~HJat doesn:t stop you. Armed with Your
1'1"''. -2'~'J,~ of paper and a ~le
of· gallons of coffee you bravely attack
that stack of forms. You may be taking
deductions you're not entitled to, and
entitled to deductions you're not taking. So, should you he doing your own
taxes?

Us
We're H &amp; R Block, with over 6,000
conveniently located offices manned
by thousands of specially trained tax
preparers who eat, sleep, and drink in.
come tax returns. People who set out to
eave you money and much of the
do it The cost? Fees start at S5 and the
avera'e cost waa under $12.50 for over
7 rni lhon customers we served.last year,
Furth•~te.-if your return is audited
we will acrompany ·you, at no utro
cost, to the Internal Revenue Service
and explain how your return was prepared, even thou'h we will not act aa
your legal representative.
,-\nd everyone is eligible to receive our
year 'round service which is covered by
our orie time fee. No extra charse for
help with audits, estimates, or tax
questions.
We know the people we've just told y011
about will do your income tax return
for less than we can but we don't think
you can afford them.

time

H&amp;RBiock.
1\ei.ciw- ~~~~

9 A.M.-6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9A.M.-5P.M. SATURDAYS
PHONE: 446-0303
NO ~· · PO!NTMENT NECESSARY

27 SYCAMORE ST.
Gallipolis, Ohio

Specials
Feb. 7th Thru Feb. 12th Only

_,Under Pinning SALE
shee" 21x60 Inches S1.t5

INSULATION

'

Che(k Our Sale Price on
All ·Your Insulation
Needs.

·.-.

'

'

Special 49$ sq. foot

H

w
A

Brush Set.

H
E

4" &amp; 211

s·

t!;;;~~~R
294.00

1

Avocado

HAJR DRYER

REGULAR 69c SQ. FOOT

s

Regular

ELECTRIC

FORMICA

D
I

IIODEL 11·11121-Exclusive reversa-iete

-

REGULAR $6.99 SET

Special •4.99 set
R"wllr
.. 1. S,.Cial '2,
o. 1.
6 Colors
Plus White

99

•194.00
"Something New"
Carter &amp; Evans Catalog Sales Weekly Delivery. Name
brands. Tools, household and giftwares. sporting goods,
electrical appliances and toys. ·Many, Many Others.

A masking ta pe for general use. Easy
to put on and take off. Ideal for uu
.when paintinl( windows, toys, furniture
et c.

Regular 59c

w~~nd~Jne.
''BUILDING SUPPLIES"
Mondar lllrv Friday-7 A.M."'$ P.M. .,
S.turday- 7A.M."' 4 P.M.
PHONE446-4fOS

.7 OLIVE ST.

f

GAWPOLII. OHIO

�. "·"
~

•
It- '1be Smday 'l'fmee-Settinel, &amp;mclay, Feb. 6, 1972

Utah Computer ·Reading.Out .Milk Data for Meigs Herds l§i§;:,~

R·io R~dmen To Host .Capital,- Ohio's
.
.
Only Unbeaten Tealn At Lyne Center ·
,.

.

RIO GRANDE - T)le Rio
Grande College Redlnen h011t
sixth-ranked Capital
University . (I~) Wednesday
night at Lyne Center in the first
of five games in eight days for
the Redmen that m;tY decide
.

•'

whether Rio Grande will
qualify for this year's NAIA
District No. 22 tournament.
C8pital played powerflll Urbana Saturday night.
During that five-game
strelc)l, Rio Grande faces

Class For Prospective
Umpires Slated Feb. 17

RICH BAILEY ( 10) Melgs guard, is hounded by Gallia's Kev Sheets during Friday's
Meigs-GAHS basketball game at Rock Springs. GAHS pulled away in the second half for a 63-48
victory. Official John Shuppert looks on.

i

"'·•

'

Reds To Back

completing
tire
course
examination will be eligible for
.slate certification ·as baseball·
softball umpires.
. A course fee of $20 includes
an Ohio High School Athletic
Association charge of fl~ for
texts, the state · certification
test and membership dues. The
course without · the state certification test may be taken for
a fee of $15.
Registration is made through
the Workshops office, 301
Tupper Hall, Ohio University,
Athens, Ohio 45701. Further
information on this course may
be obtained by calling 594-4907.

'Florida Team

CINCINNATI. (UPI) .,. The
Cincinaati Reds will back the
Melbourne, Fla. team in the
newly formed Florida East
Coast League this year to fill
the vacancy left by the
disbanding of the Sioux Falls,
S. D., team in the Northern
League.
The Reds said the mfnor
league team would be basically
for rookies, and would •be
managed by Dave Pavelsic
. who formerly was the Sioux ·
Falls pilot.
The Reds also signed three
minor league outfielders for
the coming baseball season.
They were Kent Burkick, 20,
and
Ken Griffin, 21, who were
By United Press loternational
at Tampa last season, and
Elyria 69 Marion 57
Wickliffe 75 Gilmour 61
Gene Locklear, 22, who was the
Cambridge 86 Sl . Clairsville 62 Eastern League's most
l-ancaster 65 Marietla 57
valuable . player and batting
Chilllcolhe 49 Newark 34
Upper Arlington 54 Zanesville champion last season while
43
New Boston 92 Northwest 66 playing for Three Rivers,
Portsmouth East 74 Minford 63 Canada.
Portsmouth West 94 Porls·
moulh N.D. 81
Sidney 69 lima Shawnee 52
Upper Sandusky 68 Shelby 51
Celina 64 lima .Bath 42
Willard
65 Bucyrus 42
Elida 82 Coldwaler 71
Clo11ario
57 Crestview 49
Wapakonela 67 Kenton 61
Clear
Fork
67 Crestline 59
leipsic 72 Fort Jennings 70
Hil
lsdale
57 Northwestern 51
Crestview 56 Bluffton 53
Central 82 Cols . Walnut
Upper Scioto Valley 74 Lima Cols.
Ridge 76
Perry 60
Cols. Linden 74 Cols. Wes l 58
Sheridan 65 Tri Valley 64
Norlhland 83 Cols . South
New lexington 61 West Cols.
82
'
Musklngum 57
Cols.
Easlmoor
68 Cols. East 58
Maysville 79 Philo 53
Cols. North 92 Cols. Mohawk 82
Crooksville 54 New Concord Mt.
Vernon 62 Westerville 49
J.G. 50
Whitehall
84 Cols. Weslhind 71
Skyvue 52 Caldwell 45
Delaware
81 Gahanna 66
Miller 69 Giousler 51
Grove
Clly
65 Mifflin 43
Ohio Deaf 101 Mansfield Fields Bexley 54 Hilliard
53
.&gt;10
Marysville
57
GrbVeporf
5S
Mansfield Malabar 61 New Cols. Wehrle 59 Cols. DeSales
Philadelphia 49
46
loroin Senior 82 Manslield Cols. Ready 85 Cois. Hartley 61
Senior 60
New Albany 65 Danville 4ll
lucos 79 Mansfield Christian Cols. Academy 68 Centerburg
71 (ot)
59

'·

BY C. E. BLUESI.EE.

.-

'

Capital,
WJlsh, ' Ohio
Dominican, Wilherforce and
Cedarville. As of last week; Rio
Grande stood fourth among
eligible NAJA schools. in the
district with a 9-8 mark. Other
teams in the runnliig for the
four tourn""'ent . spots are
Defiance, (15-1) Findlay, ( 10-8)
Wilmington, (7·7) Bluffton, (7·
8) and Wilberforce, (5-.'1).
"We feel that we have a good
ch3nce to nuike the district No. '

.

ATHENS - An evening class
dealing with the , rules,
mechanics and procedures of
umpiring baseball and softball
games will begin at Ohio
University's Grover Center on
Thursday·, Feb. 17. ,
Whfle the course is designed
primarily for individuals in·
terested in becoming state
certified umpires, the course is
open to all area residents,
including coaches, players, or
juRI plain sports fans. The
course will consist of at least
eight Thursday evening
sessions from 7 to 9 p.m. ,
Richard Wooiison, instructor
in Health, Physical Education
and Recreation at Ohio
University and a state certified
umpire, will teach tlie course.
Participants successfully

.

'

time. The herd average for
these cows was 10,473 polinda of
POMEROY - Elgbt Meigs milk and 447 pounds of but.
County· farmers are .utllizing· terfat.
·
ctenpUter eervicea located in
The individual fanner gets a
. tbe state af Utah. This is report each month on the in·
through tile procram of the · dividual cow for the test day,
bt.Aa-.~

., '
.
.
and 14 respectively. A8 a team,
the Crusaders are scoring
better than 90 pointa per game
while holding their opponents
to 67.
Following Capital, Rio
Grande hOlts Wallh; a ieam
the Redmen beat 88-84 earlier
this year. Mid.Ohio Conference
foe Ohio Domlillcan comes into
Lyile Center Saturday l)]ght.
The Redmen won the first
meeting, 86-79.
,
The Redmen travel to
Wilberforce fpr a game Feb.
15, then visit Cedarville two
nights later: The team returns
home to close the :resutar
season against Cedarville on
the 26th and FiDdlay on March
1...
. .
Ali Rip Grande . College
Redrnen basketbail games can
be heard on W.iEH-FM. ·
'

22 tournament," Redmen
coach Art Lanham said today.
"What we do in the rest of the
season will . determine our
chances to be one of the four
scbools t)lat play for the
district championship ·and' a
berth in the national tournament jn Kansas City."
Capital, now on a 19-game
winning streak over the past
two seasons, moved up one
notch in the United Press In·
,ternational pool this week.
With 13wins this·year, they are
the only unbeaten team in
Ohio. '
··
Bob Stumpf, a 6'8" center,
leads the Capital alta~ with 17
points and 12.5 rebounds per
game. Scott Weakley is second
in scoring with . 16.5, while
forward Bob Arnold and sixth;
man Joe Jacobus average 15

· Ohio All Slirvlces which carries
out production testing for
Meigs and the otber B7 counties
in the state.
· ·
Pauline and Virgil Atkins are
·the local testers who' visit the

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d

Friday's
Results

the test month, the rolling herd
average, and the total milk
prOduced 'during the Cun-ent
.lactation.
The report also shows the
month in which each cow
calved during the previous
N~ in Farming
year; lists the date at which the
' eight farms ea'ch month, cow is 60 days from freshening,
secure the milk samples, weigh and permits indication of when
the milk, and fill out the
· nece!SIIry fprms to submit the
information to the computer
·center.
The selection of the computer center in Utah is a rather
:complicated story. To make it
made good use of the wood
BY JOHN COOPER
brief, the farmers were not
prod'Ucls which have been
.Soli Coll8ervalion Service
getting the services they
removed
and sold most of them
PT. PLEASANT - Several
needed from the computer at landowners have become for pulpwood.
Colwnbus; they transferred cooperators re&lt;:ently ol the Aft~r the land has beeu
the operation to North We6tern Soil Conservation cleared, they have been in the
Carolina, and have finally District. Most of these have habit of seeding it with Ken·
contracted. the Utah firm.
come a.bout by change in tucky 31 fescue. They have ·
At present, the computer is ownership of the farm .
found that this gives dense
averaging 3.8 days. from the
Henrietta Foard of Hun- grass cover and ·that their
receipt of the information to tington recently bqught the dairy cows do . well on it,
Uie date when this information James Green farm near together with grass and
is mailed to the farmer. Adding Upland and made application legume hay which they'cut on
on two days for air mall time for a conservation plan on it. their farm .
the informatlOI'I is back to the She is mostly interested in
WE ARE WORKING with
farmer quickly in as great wildtife habitat development. Carl Cook, WVU Extension
detail as he wishes.
J. H. Cassell on Five Mile· Agent in Mason County, with a
The most recent county Crab Creek · Road is another research project on the Henry
summary shows that these
and Ernest Kay farm at South
eight herds represented 321
Lay of the Land Side. The purpose of this
cow-months with the cows
project is to find out the rate of
being in milk 86 pet. of the new cooperator of the district. daily gain of livestock on
James Camp bought the Fred different feeding operations
Holley farm on Fees Branch of and on different soil types.
Eighteen Mile Creek. David B.
We visited the farm recently
Shitnet has leased the Reather with Charles Sperow, Ex·
Ferrell farm near Mt. Olive tension Agronomist from
Church and plans to develop it WVU,, and James Newman,
(~
as a grassland farm. He works State
Grassland
Conin Huntington . and commutes servationist, of SCS. The
from the farm to his work each details of this research project
Tramiaol
day.
will be worked out by future
Colllll- Pllll1!
WE
WERE
SORRY
to
hear
visits of Mr. Sperow.
.DitATtO
that John R. Hussell has been
Many people will remember
-ca:z:x:nill. Mr. Hussell Is one of our Mr. Sperow because he was
octogenarian farmers about manager of the WVU Ex·
whom we wrote stories last periment Farm in this county
year. He is 891'.1 years old and for many years.
until recently had never been
BOBBIE CLUTTER of near
in a hospital.
Mt. Alto reports that he Is well
Mrs. Clara Schultz, his
daughter, reported that
examination at the hospital
Sale.~
CONTROLS MORE WORMS
shows that he has an ulcer and
More thon ony other product. a shortage of white corpuscles
Now TRAMISOL0 levamisole in his blood. He was in the
HCI c:ontrols all 9 major worms
(no"*ibdes)'td the lungs, stom· hosjlital lour days'iiJd·'lfasll!ent
ach, ind Intestines, that steal home to recover because his
profitable woi11ht lill~s.
doctor felt that he inlght catch
NO GUESSWORK
' the virus which is rampant in
Dosage is based on body weight h ·tals
alone You don't guess which ospl
now.
wonni are pretent or how many. He has had arthritis several
WASHINGTON ( UPI )
All the wormer
years but has been able to k"':P Agriculture Department trade
,
on working m sp1te of this experts say they hope a recent
you II ever need
ailment. Mr. HusseU has been sale of American dairy heifers
a cooperator of the soil con- · to Yugoslavia can be the
Your Farm
servation district for many opening wedge to more cattle
Supply
years and has carried out a sales to Iron Curtain countries.
Service Center
good conservation program on
The Yugoslavian sale inhis farm.
volved nearly 900 holstein bred
DOUGLAS RANDOJ4'H told heifers from farms in Illinois,
Denver Yoho that he and his . Maine, Michigan, Minnesota,
son had cleared four acres of New Hampshire, New York,
land and had developed It into Ohio ,' Pennsylvania and
pasture. Land clearing has Wisconsin:
been a continuous process for
The heifers were Down to
' Douglas and his father, Otis, · Yugoslavia last year and are
for several years. They have now grazing on two giant slate
farms, part of a YtigOIJiavian
effort to upgrade the breeding
. and productivity of their dairy
herds.
Officials here say they are
optimistic about the possibility
of future sales of this kind to
other communist nations in
Eastern Europe. '

li

· 1 BIG
SHI;F

NEW

'
Family Pack
includes these •
4 sandwiches •
and 4 orders
of french fries.

i

!

I

I~

ODIY

l'

the most effective
cattle wormer
you can feed

EverY SundaY
(ALL DAY)

· 1503
' . ·'.II

WltRit ~~I

!
'

..'

toll of ftlpe

'{

'
•'JI

wltll tilly /IIIICIItlll til

f•

[

Pool. 7·8 College Swim.
·
Wednesdlly~. Feb. 9-5:45, JV's vs Marshall Freshmen; 8:00,
Varsoty vs C.potal. Pool . Closed.
Thursday, Feb. 10- 5:45 . JV's vs Gallipolis Faculty, 8:00,
Var01ty vs Walsh' Pool, 6:30·8:30, WSI Class.
Friday, Feb. 11 - 7·10, College &amp; Community Recreation.
Pool, 1·9:30a.m., GSI Swim; 7·9 p.m.. C&amp; CSwim.
Saturady, Feb. 12 ,- 1·3, C&amp;C Recreation; 5:45, J. V.'s vs Ohio
Do!"'•"'can; 8:00, Varsity vs Ohio _Dominican. Pool, 1·3 C &amp;

c

Swom; Closod.
Sunday, F.eb. 13 - The gymnasium will be closectall day for
floor resurfacong ... No one should go on the floor until Monday.
Po~l, 2·4 C&amp; C Swom; (Use back doors tolockeroomsl'; 7.9 C&amp;C
Swom, (Use back doors to lockerrooms) .
C &amp; C- Col lou- and Community.

t

WORMS.
... can cost 25%, more feed.
With one dose of Purina
Liquid. Pig Wormer you
can save money · with
better feed efficiency
and faster gains.

.

.

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Stick With ·U s •••
Our·na111
ha
n
chang

Gafha, Me1gs, Jackson, Vinton Co. Extension Service meeting

'

'

STEVE Dunfee, Meigs forward, (12) checks Gallla's
Jimmy Noe ( 23) before the Blue Devil junior passed off under
the hoop to Larry Snowden for two points in Friday's GAHSM~igs basketball game. Noe finished the night with 19 polnta.'
Dilnfee tallied five for the Marauders.

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
Johnslown Ill Norlhridge 45
•
(ol J
.
Licking Valley 85 Granville 83
®::::s:&amp;::::::
:::::;g-:;:;;;:;:.:-:-:-:·:·:-:-:-:-: :·:·:·:·;.~:···:.~xm·=-··tiim·················ii·
··~;.w Licking Helghl s 87 Walkins
m•~:;::·&gt;:·:·:-:-:-:·:·.·.·:·:-:-:··:·:...&lt;-:.:-:-:-:-~:·· :--:~~.
:!:=--4=:·......x
•
•·•·• .................... ·.·-~·- · ··· · • ••;&gt;.•........:o:o.. • .•
..m~
.:o.. • • • . • ~•
Memorial 70

.

lrbnlon 91 Wellslon 62
Fort F(ye 66 Frontier 47
Gallipolis 63 Meigs 411.
Hillsboro 65 Wilmington SO
Adena 58 East Cl'oton 55
Greenlieid Mclalr1 72 Miami
Trace 69

'

Purina
LIQUID PIG WORMER
J.D. NORTH
PRODUCE
VINE STREET

t

Vast Acreages
Available for

Crops at Need

'

POMEROY LANDMARK

Tuppers Plains

S •

N

. PICKUP 1972
reJ~b~!

HI.

.

INTERNATIONA('72 KEEPS IT HAPPENIN&amp;I

Other Models In Stock '

GAU.IPOLIS

Available At

Upper Rt. 7

..

Pesticide School at OU

SWISHER tMPLEMENT

'
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·

POMEROY - Everyone in
the area interested in grape
production is invite~ to attend
an ·Area Grape School Wed·
nesday, Feb. 16, at the Grace
United Methodist Church in

SPACE HEATERS

1010 FIRST A\fENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

l 'i'NE CENTER SCHEDULE
Feb. 7. Feb. 13, 1972
Monday, Feb. 7- 7:30 . 9:00, '12 Gym, Gymnastics and
Apparatus •. 7:30 · 9:00, 112 gym, College Recreation, Pool. 8·9
College Swom.
·
Tuesd~y, Feb. B- .7·11 :30, Men's Intra murals; 1:30 . LC 204 .

Grape School Scheduled in Jackson

ltOMELITE"

I

IRB¥'5
PENNZOIL

Selcer, a 1959 graduate of
Notre Dame said he quit "for
personal and professional
reasons." He said at present he
has had no other coaching
offers.

-

I

Cecchini Takes Xavier Position
Wolverines and was team
captain his senior year.
He served on the coaching
staff of both Bump Elliot and
Bo Schembechler as scout and
assistant.

II has . been found that
springs many times provide a
dependable and cheap source
of water for the home. This is
especially true when the spring
is located at a higher elevation
than the house and the water
supply can be furnished by
gravity.
We have helped several
people with home water supply

Expected Back

OF OHIO

CINCINN~TI
(UP! )
Thomas Cecphini, 28, former
assistant football coach at the
University of Michigan, was
named Friday as Xavier
University's head coach. ·
Cecchini succeeds Dick
8elcer, who unexpectedly
1'1 ;igned Thursday after two
years as Xavier head coach.
Cecchini, a native of Detroit
is a 1966 graduate of Michigan.
He played linebacker for the

pleased with a spring
development completed last
fall. He uses this spring as a
source of livestock water as
·well as a home water supply.
He built a, 50().gallon concrete
watering tank for the livestock
and placed a 1,000-gallon
concrete reservoir nearby
,from which he pumps water to
the house.

Jackson from 1:30 p.m. to 4 started, and those who are
p.m.
somewhat - but not all the
· The school is oriented to the way - Into the business.
interests of personS thinking
Instructors for the program
about getting into the business, · will be Dr. Garth Cahoon,
the beginner just getting Extension Horticulturist, Dr.
Blair Jans'on, Extension Plant
Pathologist, Dr. Richard
Miller,
Extension
Entomologist, and Dr. James
Gallander, Associate
Professor, Horticulture,
POMEROY - Meigs-Gallia cover the latest information OARDC.
area pesticide applicators regarding the control of in·
Problems to be considered
sects,
diseases
and
weeds
in
should plan to attend the school
will include insect control,
to be held Feb. 14 at Ohio vegetables, agronomic crops, disease control, wine making
livestock, ornamentals, trees, and problems of the small
University Inn, Athens.
The one-day · schools will and turf.
winery, and current problems
The Ohio Pesticide Use and and progress in grape
Applicator Law; safe use of production .
pesticides,
industrial
vegetation control, mosquito
and other vector control; as
Week's Weather
well as the control of aquatic
Buy a "NO SWEAT" Homelite 150 Automatic-or
wee.ds and rodent and bird
any other new Homelite Chain Saw at the regular
control will also be discussed.
GALLIPOLIS
Tem·
price during our cold weather Special Promotion.
· Specialists
from
the perature, precipitation, and
and we'll give you a zip-front. therrno·lined Sweat
deparlments of entomology, weather conditlons for each 24
period as recorded by
Shirt absolutely FREE!
·
plant pathology, natural hour
Pete McCormick , Fairfield
Ma~e of water-ref)~llent.cott?n .Joam l~min~ed
WASHINGTON (UP!) - J~~"5S!\\&lt;~ta,groPOJW,,I!fld ,, "feather obser¥4: '. '1._
Hljll Low Prec .
for e~tra warmth. machme-washa61e. Hd&amp;l, elas·
Wh1le
tpp
Agroculture ~lfom tlie Oliio Deparbnent o! Day
Sunday
31
24
Department Policymakers Agriculture will present the Monday
ticized waist and cuffs, pockets. You 'II wear this
31
4
wrestle with the problem of new information.
Tuesday
37
13
ail year 'round Sweat Shirt for ail outdoor activitieil
26
holding more than 60 million
·Those interested in attending Wednesday 59
-especially when you use your new Homellte 'No
47
32
.26
acres of cropland idle in 1972 to should contact John Un- Thursday
Friday
30
15
Sweat' Chain Saw these chilly days.
avert surpluses, deparbnent derwood; 378 East Main Street, Saturday
13
4
Hurry ln. OHer good only while aupply leata.
Average high temperature
economis(l; have released a Box 32, Jackson; Ohio 45640,
for week this year - 35.4. Last
report showing that about 49 phone 286-2177.
year - 35.2.
million acres of woods and
Average low temperture for
pastures could be converted
week this year - 16.8. Last
year - 14.2.
profitably to crop use - if
Total precipitation for week
Jack W. Carsey, Manager
needed.
this year - .26. lasl year The report studied the
OCiety ews
1.43.
.
Ph. 992-2181
Total precipitation to date
amount of , potential new
Serving Meigs, Gallia
By Mrs. Evelyn Brleldes
this year - 4.81 Inches. last
cropland which could be
and Mason Counties
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth year - 3.10 inches. ,
profitably farmed at recent Griffith celebrated their 25th
Normal ·
average
Store Open
price levels. The study focused wedding anniversary at their precipitation annually - .&gt;10.99
Mon.· Sat. Til6
On the Delta, Midwest and home here Sunday. A dinner Inches.
Southeast slates where there was served at noon. There
has been "substantial" were 75 guests in attendance
c!earing of land ·in recent and the couple received many
years .
lovely and useful gifts.
The study indicated some 37
Mrs. Thurman Babcock fell
million acres of woodland and at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
12 million acres of pasture Oscar Babcock one day last
might be shifted profitably into week and received some bad
crops in the three regions bruises but fortunately no ·
•
under a combination of bones were broken.
Truck durability!
economic .conditions including
Miss
Ruthie
Walker
no government production graduaied Friday from the
.Truck chassis!
restrictions.
Beauty Academy School in
Truck
Columbus.
Truck
re 1a llity!
Elmer Newell, who received
his honorable discharge from
Ill!
the Navy, called on his grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jessie
Newell Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Taylor
and family ol Torch were
Sunday guests of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Blain Taylor.
Dr. Daniels was called here
last week to see Mrs. Oscar
Babcock who was quite ill.
Mrs. Eulah Swan, Mrs. Leota
Massar, and Mr. and Mrs.
· Dinsmoor Boyles visited her.
Mrs. Olen Young had the
misfortune to fall in the
bathtub and break her hip. She
Want a pickup truck? a·at
was taken to a Parkersburg
the one th'at has truck built
hospital.
parts! The only one. Then
• More power
The. W.S.C.S. of the
choose from truck·built engines-higherDouble-Wall Boxes
•
Methodist Church here put on a
powered engines from standard six up
• Optional dltc brakes
program for the Prayer and
to big V,392. Truck-built options
• Optional rear antl·akid
Self-Denial meeting which was
include power steering, automatic
brake syatems
held at the Alfred Churcp Jan.
transmission, all-wheel drive, ai r
• New ventilating systems
25. Those taking part from here
conditioning and stereo. Name
• Biggeat choice of rear
HD-125-D
were Mrs. Nelsel Weatherman,
your needs. Name your ·deal.
axle ratings
SPECIFICATIONS Mrs. Gorrell and daughter, and
Call us now!
type ................ , .'direct llred
Mrs. Maxine Chapman, Mrs.
capacity .... . .... 125,000 BTU.
Edith Harper, Mrs . Betty
Juel ............. ....... kerosene or #lluol oil
Chevalier, Mrs. Wilmer Rice,
motor ,. ........... , ... 115 volts ! 60 cycle ·
weight..
. ... 100 lbs.
and Mrs. Mae Vineyard. .
fuel capa.ci1y ...... 10.6 gal.
Mr. and Mrs . Robert
running lome ......... 12·hours apx.
Campbell
and daughter of
accessories
. oplional flame guard, purge control
Columbus visited her father,
and thermostat ·
Carl Lemley, Sunday .

Cattle

SOYA

TAKES BREATHER - Senior Blue Devil guard Larry
Snowden took a breather late in Friday's GAHS.Meigs
basketball game after he was shaken up on a driving layup.
Official Dale Hall looks on.

would be a losing proposition to pounds of body weight (12 to II
feed a poor cow the same po~ds for a 1,201J..powld cow).
amount of grain as the high · Th1s helps estabh•h the
producer.
•
neceSsary micro nor,a in the
According to 1968 Ohio dairy . rumens? cows CIIJI be go~ten on
production records cows fed full feedmg of,concentraoes 7 to
annually 2,600 pounds of 10 days follow:tng calving. You
concentrates produced 9,180 can accomplish this by In·
pounds of milk at a feed cost of creasing concentrate feeding 2
$184 for a return over feed cost pounds per day following
of $367 The better cows were calving .
led 6;300 pounds of con·
Most cow~ will rea~h their
centrates with the annual milk true peak m production and
production per cow of 13,535 maintain a high level . of
pounds. This was a feed cost of production over a longer penod
$302 for a return over feed cos[ of Ume when fed adequate
of '$451.
8J!10unts of co~ntrates along
Dairy. cows often fail to With good quality forage. In
express their true inheritance herds where cow~ are being
because they receive too little underfed early m lactation
energy early in lactation. In (first. four monlil8 ), 11 Is not
general, cows should receive a unusual woth . increased con50 to 61J.day dry period. They centrale feedmg to get an
should be in good condition but annual added r~ of up to
from springs. Some of these not fat at time or calving. 2,000 pounds of rrulk per cow.
which quickly come to our
mind are Lawrence Powell,
near Palestine Church, Donald
Meadows, on Whitten Ridge,
Guy Rollins, on Ten Mile
Creek, Landis Pearson, on
Redmond Ridge, Leonard
Upton and R. R. Stranahan,
near Arbuckle, and Virginia
Casto at West Columbia.

.herd owners ' should give
Milk production recordS are
special attention to feeding . needed l9' better determine
of which cows leave, which cows
adequate
amounts
economical and well-balanced stay, and how much grain to
concenb'ate ,iatlons. The cost feed. In general, the better the
of homegrown feeds depends to cow, the lower the feed cOIJI per ·
a large extent upon the owner's 100 pounds of milk, even though
performance as a producer of better cows eat more feed .
crops.
Surely you would invest $30
You don't reduce feed costs in additional feed to make
by being skimpy when feeding nearly $150. Who wouldn't?
dairy cows. You reduce feed . That's about the way it adds
costs by putting more feed up when you get higher
through better .. cows - by production per cow and reduce
feeding grain according to the cost per hundred pounds of
production, body condition, milk produced . Of course, it
and age.

Of Iron Line

fJet .Your
FERGUSON GETS TWO - Rod Fergu.On (33) senior
Blue Devil forward, drops in two points for GAHS during
Friday night's SEOAL co~test at Rock Springs. On left Is
Marauder Tony Vaughan. Looking on in rear is Meigs' Rich
Bailey (10).

with each current.month. ., .
Herd owners currently on
l;)st are James Boggs, Jotu.
Colwell, Earl Cross, Earl
Dean, James Gibson, Albert
Parker, Edson f!oush, Rex
Shenefield, and. Sunnysage
Farm (Carnahan.
Use of Records
One of the traditional uses of
records has been in relation to
the feeding · of cattle.
Production records provide a
basis for feeding cows ac·
cording to production. Since
feed cost comprises 4o to 50 pet.
of the cost of producing milk,

New Landowner Planning Wildlife Habitat

,;•

1 SUPER
. 'SHEF
.

the cow should be dried off and
when she should calve.
The state sununary for the
last current month shows a
total of 1,581 henbi on test. The
cows averaged 86 pet. ol the
days in milk and produced at
the rate ·of 12,721 pounds of
inllk and 489 JM!W!ds of fat.
Since June the computer has
been able to report the cows
prQducing an actual am~t of·
. over 12,000 pounds of milk or
over 500 pounds of butterfat. A
total of 39 cows have been .
· reported in the six month
period. Others will be reported

•

· Gallipolis, 0.

Daniel De.,atur Emnwlt
wrote "Dixie" in 1859 as a
'' houra.v song" or "walk
around " roo· a quartet o( Vorginia minstrels he headed .
a e&lt;· ordin ~ '" ,En&lt;:~clopaedia
Brit onnkCl .

Meigs Equipment Co.
'

PHON£ 992·2176

POMEROY, OHIO

�. "·"
~

•
It- '1be Smday 'l'fmee-Settinel, &amp;mclay, Feb. 6, 1972

Utah Computer ·Reading.Out .Milk Data for Meigs Herds l§i§;:,~

R·io R~dmen To Host .Capital,- Ohio's
.
.
Only Unbeaten Tealn At Lyne Center ·
,.

.

RIO GRANDE - T)le Rio
Grande College Redlnen h011t
sixth-ranked Capital
University . (I~) Wednesday
night at Lyne Center in the first
of five games in eight days for
the Redmen that m;tY decide
.

•'

whether Rio Grande will
qualify for this year's NAIA
District No. 22 tournament.
C8pital played powerflll Urbana Saturday night.
During that five-game
strelc)l, Rio Grande faces

Class For Prospective
Umpires Slated Feb. 17

RICH BAILEY ( 10) Melgs guard, is hounded by Gallia's Kev Sheets during Friday's
Meigs-GAHS basketball game at Rock Springs. GAHS pulled away in the second half for a 63-48
victory. Official John Shuppert looks on.

i

"'·•

'

Reds To Back

completing
tire
course
examination will be eligible for
.slate certification ·as baseball·
softball umpires.
. A course fee of $20 includes
an Ohio High School Athletic
Association charge of fl~ for
texts, the state · certification
test and membership dues. The
course without · the state certification test may be taken for
a fee of $15.
Registration is made through
the Workshops office, 301
Tupper Hall, Ohio University,
Athens, Ohio 45701. Further
information on this course may
be obtained by calling 594-4907.

'Florida Team

CINCINNATI. (UPI) .,. The
Cincinaati Reds will back the
Melbourne, Fla. team in the
newly formed Florida East
Coast League this year to fill
the vacancy left by the
disbanding of the Sioux Falls,
S. D., team in the Northern
League.
The Reds said the mfnor
league team would be basically
for rookies, and would •be
managed by Dave Pavelsic
. who formerly was the Sioux ·
Falls pilot.
The Reds also signed three
minor league outfielders for
the coming baseball season.
They were Kent Burkick, 20,
and
Ken Griffin, 21, who were
By United Press loternational
at Tampa last season, and
Elyria 69 Marion 57
Wickliffe 75 Gilmour 61
Gene Locklear, 22, who was the
Cambridge 86 Sl . Clairsville 62 Eastern League's most
l-ancaster 65 Marietla 57
valuable . player and batting
Chilllcolhe 49 Newark 34
Upper Arlington 54 Zanesville champion last season while
43
New Boston 92 Northwest 66 playing for Three Rivers,
Portsmouth East 74 Minford 63 Canada.
Portsmouth West 94 Porls·
moulh N.D. 81
Sidney 69 lima Shawnee 52
Upper Sandusky 68 Shelby 51
Celina 64 lima .Bath 42
Willard
65 Bucyrus 42
Elida 82 Coldwaler 71
Clo11ario
57 Crestview 49
Wapakonela 67 Kenton 61
Clear
Fork
67 Crestline 59
leipsic 72 Fort Jennings 70
Hil
lsdale
57 Northwestern 51
Crestview 56 Bluffton 53
Central 82 Cols . Walnut
Upper Scioto Valley 74 Lima Cols.
Ridge 76
Perry 60
Cols. Linden 74 Cols. Wes l 58
Sheridan 65 Tri Valley 64
Norlhland 83 Cols . South
New lexington 61 West Cols.
82
'
Musklngum 57
Cols.
Easlmoor
68 Cols. East 58
Maysville 79 Philo 53
Cols. North 92 Cols. Mohawk 82
Crooksville 54 New Concord Mt.
Vernon 62 Westerville 49
J.G. 50
Whitehall
84 Cols. Weslhind 71
Skyvue 52 Caldwell 45
Delaware
81 Gahanna 66
Miller 69 Giousler 51
Grove
Clly
65 Mifflin 43
Ohio Deaf 101 Mansfield Fields Bexley 54 Hilliard
53
.&gt;10
Marysville
57
GrbVeporf
5S
Mansfield Malabar 61 New Cols. Wehrle 59 Cols. DeSales
Philadelphia 49
46
loroin Senior 82 Manslield Cols. Ready 85 Cois. Hartley 61
Senior 60
New Albany 65 Danville 4ll
lucos 79 Mansfield Christian Cols. Academy 68 Centerburg
71 (ot)
59

'·

BY C. E. BLUESI.EE.

.-

'

Capital,
WJlsh, ' Ohio
Dominican, Wilherforce and
Cedarville. As of last week; Rio
Grande stood fourth among
eligible NAJA schools. in the
district with a 9-8 mark. Other
teams in the runnliig for the
four tourn""'ent . spots are
Defiance, (15-1) Findlay, ( 10-8)
Wilmington, (7·7) Bluffton, (7·
8) and Wilberforce, (5-.'1).
"We feel that we have a good
ch3nce to nuike the district No. '

.

ATHENS - An evening class
dealing with the , rules,
mechanics and procedures of
umpiring baseball and softball
games will begin at Ohio
University's Grover Center on
Thursday·, Feb. 17. ,
Whfle the course is designed
primarily for individuals in·
terested in becoming state
certified umpires, the course is
open to all area residents,
including coaches, players, or
juRI plain sports fans. The
course will consist of at least
eight Thursday evening
sessions from 7 to 9 p.m. ,
Richard Wooiison, instructor
in Health, Physical Education
and Recreation at Ohio
University and a state certified
umpire, will teach tlie course.
Participants successfully

.

'

time. The herd average for
these cows was 10,473 polinda of
POMEROY - Elgbt Meigs milk and 447 pounds of but.
County· farmers are .utllizing· terfat.
·
ctenpUter eervicea located in
The individual fanner gets a
. tbe state af Utah. This is report each month on the in·
through tile procram of the · dividual cow for the test day,
bt.Aa-.~

., '
.
.
and 14 respectively. A8 a team,
the Crusaders are scoring
better than 90 pointa per game
while holding their opponents
to 67.
Following Capital, Rio
Grande hOlts Wallh; a ieam
the Redmen beat 88-84 earlier
this year. Mid.Ohio Conference
foe Ohio Domlillcan comes into
Lyile Center Saturday l)]ght.
The Redmen won the first
meeting, 86-79.
,
The Redmen travel to
Wilberforce fpr a game Feb.
15, then visit Cedarville two
nights later: The team returns
home to close the :resutar
season against Cedarville on
the 26th and FiDdlay on March
1...
. .
Ali Rip Grande . College
Redrnen basketbail games can
be heard on W.iEH-FM. ·
'

22 tournament," Redmen
coach Art Lanham said today.
"What we do in the rest of the
season will . determine our
chances to be one of the four
scbools t)lat play for the
district championship ·and' a
berth in the national tournament jn Kansas City."
Capital, now on a 19-game
winning streak over the past
two seasons, moved up one
notch in the United Press In·
,ternational pool this week.
With 13wins this·year, they are
the only unbeaten team in
Ohio. '
··
Bob Stumpf, a 6'8" center,
leads the Capital alta~ with 17
points and 12.5 rebounds per
game. Scott Weakley is second
in scoring with . 16.5, while
forward Bob Arnold and sixth;
man Joe Jacobus average 15

· Ohio All Slirvlces which carries
out production testing for
Meigs and the otber B7 counties
in the state.
· ·
Pauline and Virgil Atkins are
·the local testers who' visit the

.

r

!
!
I

!'
d

Friday's
Results

the test month, the rolling herd
average, and the total milk
prOduced 'during the Cun-ent
.lactation.
The report also shows the
month in which each cow
calved during the previous
N~ in Farming
year; lists the date at which the
' eight farms ea'ch month, cow is 60 days from freshening,
secure the milk samples, weigh and permits indication of when
the milk, and fill out the
· nece!SIIry fprms to submit the
information to the computer
·center.
The selection of the computer center in Utah is a rather
:complicated story. To make it
made good use of the wood
BY JOHN COOPER
brief, the farmers were not
prod'Ucls which have been
.Soli Coll8ervalion Service
getting the services they
removed
and sold most of them
PT. PLEASANT - Several
needed from the computer at landowners have become for pulpwood.
Colwnbus; they transferred cooperators re&lt;:ently ol the Aft~r the land has beeu
the operation to North We6tern Soil Conservation cleared, they have been in the
Carolina, and have finally District. Most of these have habit of seeding it with Ken·
contracted. the Utah firm.
come a.bout by change in tucky 31 fescue. They have ·
At present, the computer is ownership of the farm .
found that this gives dense
averaging 3.8 days. from the
Henrietta Foard of Hun- grass cover and ·that their
receipt of the information to tington recently bqught the dairy cows do . well on it,
Uie date when this information James Green farm near together with grass and
is mailed to the farmer. Adding Upland and made application legume hay which they'cut on
on two days for air mall time for a conservation plan on it. their farm .
the informatlOI'I is back to the She is mostly interested in
WE ARE WORKING with
farmer quickly in as great wildtife habitat development. Carl Cook, WVU Extension
detail as he wishes.
J. H. Cassell on Five Mile· Agent in Mason County, with a
The most recent county Crab Creek · Road is another research project on the Henry
summary shows that these
and Ernest Kay farm at South
eight herds represented 321
Lay of the Land Side. The purpose of this
cow-months with the cows
project is to find out the rate of
being in milk 86 pet. of the new cooperator of the district. daily gain of livestock on
James Camp bought the Fred different feeding operations
Holley farm on Fees Branch of and on different soil types.
Eighteen Mile Creek. David B.
We visited the farm recently
Shitnet has leased the Reather with Charles Sperow, Ex·
Ferrell farm near Mt. Olive tension Agronomist from
Church and plans to develop it WVU,, and James Newman,
(~
as a grassland farm. He works State
Grassland
Conin Huntington . and commutes servationist, of SCS. The
from the farm to his work each details of this research project
Tramiaol
day.
will be worked out by future
Colllll- Pllll1!
WE
WERE
SORRY
to
hear
visits of Mr. Sperow.
.DitATtO
that John R. Hussell has been
Many people will remember
-ca:z:x:nill. Mr. Hussell Is one of our Mr. Sperow because he was
octogenarian farmers about manager of the WVU Ex·
whom we wrote stories last periment Farm in this county
year. He is 891'.1 years old and for many years.
until recently had never been
BOBBIE CLUTTER of near
in a hospital.
Mt. Alto reports that he Is well
Mrs. Clara Schultz, his
daughter, reported that
examination at the hospital
Sale.~
CONTROLS MORE WORMS
shows that he has an ulcer and
More thon ony other product. a shortage of white corpuscles
Now TRAMISOL0 levamisole in his blood. He was in the
HCI c:ontrols all 9 major worms
(no"*ibdes)'td the lungs, stom· hosjlital lour days'iiJd·'lfasll!ent
ach, ind Intestines, that steal home to recover because his
profitable woi11ht lill~s.
doctor felt that he inlght catch
NO GUESSWORK
' the virus which is rampant in
Dosage is based on body weight h ·tals
alone You don't guess which ospl
now.
wonni are pretent or how many. He has had arthritis several
WASHINGTON ( UPI )
All the wormer
years but has been able to k"':P Agriculture Department trade
,
on working m sp1te of this experts say they hope a recent
you II ever need
ailment. Mr. HusseU has been sale of American dairy heifers
a cooperator of the soil con- · to Yugoslavia can be the
Your Farm
servation district for many opening wedge to more cattle
Supply
years and has carried out a sales to Iron Curtain countries.
Service Center
good conservation program on
The Yugoslavian sale inhis farm.
volved nearly 900 holstein bred
DOUGLAS RANDOJ4'H told heifers from farms in Illinois,
Denver Yoho that he and his . Maine, Michigan, Minnesota,
son had cleared four acres of New Hampshire, New York,
land and had developed It into Ohio ,' Pennsylvania and
pasture. Land clearing has Wisconsin:
been a continuous process for
The heifers were Down to
' Douglas and his father, Otis, · Yugoslavia last year and are
for several years. They have now grazing on two giant slate
farms, part of a YtigOIJiavian
effort to upgrade the breeding
. and productivity of their dairy
herds.
Officials here say they are
optimistic about the possibility
of future sales of this kind to
other communist nations in
Eastern Europe. '

li

· 1 BIG
SHI;F

NEW

'
Family Pack
includes these •
4 sandwiches •
and 4 orders
of french fries.

i

!

I

I~

ODIY

l'

the most effective
cattle wormer
you can feed

EverY SundaY
(ALL DAY)

· 1503
' . ·'.II

WltRit ~~I

!
'

..'

toll of ftlpe

'{

'
•'JI

wltll tilly /IIIICIItlll til

f•

[

Pool. 7·8 College Swim.
·
Wednesdlly~. Feb. 9-5:45, JV's vs Marshall Freshmen; 8:00,
Varsoty vs C.potal. Pool . Closed.
Thursday, Feb. 10- 5:45 . JV's vs Gallipolis Faculty, 8:00,
Var01ty vs Walsh' Pool, 6:30·8:30, WSI Class.
Friday, Feb. 11 - 7·10, College &amp; Community Recreation.
Pool, 1·9:30a.m., GSI Swim; 7·9 p.m.. C&amp; CSwim.
Saturady, Feb. 12 ,- 1·3, C&amp;C Recreation; 5:45, J. V.'s vs Ohio
Do!"'•"'can; 8:00, Varsity vs Ohio _Dominican. Pool, 1·3 C &amp;

c

Swom; Closod.
Sunday, F.eb. 13 - The gymnasium will be closectall day for
floor resurfacong ... No one should go on the floor until Monday.
Po~l, 2·4 C&amp; C Swom; (Use back doors tolockeroomsl'; 7.9 C&amp;C
Swom, (Use back doors to lockerrooms) .
C &amp; C- Col lou- and Community.

t

WORMS.
... can cost 25%, more feed.
With one dose of Purina
Liquid. Pig Wormer you
can save money · with
better feed efficiency
and faster gains.

.

.

.

.

Stick With ·U s •••
Our·na111
ha
n
chang

Gafha, Me1gs, Jackson, Vinton Co. Extension Service meeting

'

'

STEVE Dunfee, Meigs forward, (12) checks Gallla's
Jimmy Noe ( 23) before the Blue Devil junior passed off under
the hoop to Larry Snowden for two points in Friday's GAHSM~igs basketball game. Noe finished the night with 19 polnta.'
Dilnfee tallied five for the Marauders.

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
Johnslown Ill Norlhridge 45
•
(ol J
.
Licking Valley 85 Granville 83
®::::s:&amp;::::::
:::::;g-:;:;;;:;:.:-:-:-:·:·:-:-:-:-: :·:·:·:·;.~:···:.~xm·=-··tiim·················ii·
··~;.w Licking Helghl s 87 Walkins
m•~:;::·&gt;:·:·:-:-:-:·:·.·.·:·:-:-:··:·:...&lt;-:.:-:-:-:-~:·· :--:~~.
:!:=--4=:·......x
•
•·•·• .................... ·.·-~·- · ··· · • ••;&gt;.•........:o:o.. • .•
..m~
.:o.. • • • . • ~•
Memorial 70

.

lrbnlon 91 Wellslon 62
Fort F(ye 66 Frontier 47
Gallipolis 63 Meigs 411.
Hillsboro 65 Wilmington SO
Adena 58 East Cl'oton 55
Greenlieid Mclalr1 72 Miami
Trace 69

'

Purina
LIQUID PIG WORMER
J.D. NORTH
PRODUCE
VINE STREET

t

Vast Acreages
Available for

Crops at Need

'

POMEROY LANDMARK

Tuppers Plains

S •

N

. PICKUP 1972
reJ~b~!

HI.

.

INTERNATIONA('72 KEEPS IT HAPPENIN&amp;I

Other Models In Stock '

GAU.IPOLIS

Available At

Upper Rt. 7

..

Pesticide School at OU

SWISHER tMPLEMENT

'
I I

·

POMEROY - Everyone in
the area interested in grape
production is invite~ to attend
an ·Area Grape School Wed·
nesday, Feb. 16, at the Grace
United Methodist Church in

SPACE HEATERS

1010 FIRST A\fENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

l 'i'NE CENTER SCHEDULE
Feb. 7. Feb. 13, 1972
Monday, Feb. 7- 7:30 . 9:00, '12 Gym, Gymnastics and
Apparatus •. 7:30 · 9:00, 112 gym, College Recreation, Pool. 8·9
College Swom.
·
Tuesd~y, Feb. B- .7·11 :30, Men's Intra murals; 1:30 . LC 204 .

Grape School Scheduled in Jackson

ltOMELITE"

I

IRB¥'5
PENNZOIL

Selcer, a 1959 graduate of
Notre Dame said he quit "for
personal and professional
reasons." He said at present he
has had no other coaching
offers.

-

I

Cecchini Takes Xavier Position
Wolverines and was team
captain his senior year.
He served on the coaching
staff of both Bump Elliot and
Bo Schembechler as scout and
assistant.

II has . been found that
springs many times provide a
dependable and cheap source
of water for the home. This is
especially true when the spring
is located at a higher elevation
than the house and the water
supply can be furnished by
gravity.
We have helped several
people with home water supply

Expected Back

OF OHIO

CINCINN~TI
(UP! )
Thomas Cecphini, 28, former
assistant football coach at the
University of Michigan, was
named Friday as Xavier
University's head coach. ·
Cecchini succeeds Dick
8elcer, who unexpectedly
1'1 ;igned Thursday after two
years as Xavier head coach.
Cecchini, a native of Detroit
is a 1966 graduate of Michigan.
He played linebacker for the

pleased with a spring
development completed last
fall. He uses this spring as a
source of livestock water as
·well as a home water supply.
He built a, 50().gallon concrete
watering tank for the livestock
and placed a 1,000-gallon
concrete reservoir nearby
,from which he pumps water to
the house.

Jackson from 1:30 p.m. to 4 started, and those who are
p.m.
somewhat - but not all the
· The school is oriented to the way - Into the business.
interests of personS thinking
Instructors for the program
about getting into the business, · will be Dr. Garth Cahoon,
the beginner just getting Extension Horticulturist, Dr.
Blair Jans'on, Extension Plant
Pathologist, Dr. Richard
Miller,
Extension
Entomologist, and Dr. James
Gallander, Associate
Professor, Horticulture,
POMEROY - Meigs-Gallia cover the latest information OARDC.
area pesticide applicators regarding the control of in·
Problems to be considered
sects,
diseases
and
weeds
in
should plan to attend the school
will include insect control,
to be held Feb. 14 at Ohio vegetables, agronomic crops, disease control, wine making
livestock, ornamentals, trees, and problems of the small
University Inn, Athens.
The one-day · schools will and turf.
winery, and current problems
The Ohio Pesticide Use and and progress in grape
Applicator Law; safe use of production .
pesticides,
industrial
vegetation control, mosquito
and other vector control; as
Week's Weather
well as the control of aquatic
Buy a "NO SWEAT" Homelite 150 Automatic-or
wee.ds and rodent and bird
any other new Homelite Chain Saw at the regular
control will also be discussed.
GALLIPOLIS
Tem·
price during our cold weather Special Promotion.
· Specialists
from
the perature, precipitation, and
and we'll give you a zip-front. therrno·lined Sweat
deparlments of entomology, weather conditlons for each 24
period as recorded by
Shirt absolutely FREE!
·
plant pathology, natural hour
Pete McCormick , Fairfield
Ma~e of water-ref)~llent.cott?n .Joam l~min~ed
WASHINGTON (UP!) - J~~"5S!\\&lt;~ta,groPOJW,,I!fld ,, "feather obser¥4: '. '1._
Hljll Low Prec .
for e~tra warmth. machme-washa61e. Hd&amp;l, elas·
Wh1le
tpp
Agroculture ~lfom tlie Oliio Deparbnent o! Day
Sunday
31
24
Department Policymakers Agriculture will present the Monday
ticized waist and cuffs, pockets. You 'II wear this
31
4
wrestle with the problem of new information.
Tuesday
37
13
ail year 'round Sweat Shirt for ail outdoor activitieil
26
holding more than 60 million
·Those interested in attending Wednesday 59
-especially when you use your new Homellte 'No
47
32
.26
acres of cropland idle in 1972 to should contact John Un- Thursday
Friday
30
15
Sweat' Chain Saw these chilly days.
avert surpluses, deparbnent derwood; 378 East Main Street, Saturday
13
4
Hurry ln. OHer good only while aupply leata.
Average high temperature
economis(l; have released a Box 32, Jackson; Ohio 45640,
for week this year - 35.4. Last
report showing that about 49 phone 286-2177.
year - 35.2.
million acres of woods and
Average low temperture for
pastures could be converted
week this year - 16.8. Last
year - 14.2.
profitably to crop use - if
Total precipitation for week
Jack W. Carsey, Manager
needed.
this year - .26. lasl year The report studied the
OCiety ews
1.43.
.
Ph. 992-2181
Total precipitation to date
amount of , potential new
Serving Meigs, Gallia
By Mrs. Evelyn Brleldes
this year - 4.81 Inches. last
cropland which could be
and Mason Counties
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth year - 3.10 inches. ,
profitably farmed at recent Griffith celebrated their 25th
Normal ·
average
Store Open
price levels. The study focused wedding anniversary at their precipitation annually - .&gt;10.99
Mon.· Sat. Til6
On the Delta, Midwest and home here Sunday. A dinner Inches.
Southeast slates where there was served at noon. There
has been "substantial" were 75 guests in attendance
c!earing of land ·in recent and the couple received many
years .
lovely and useful gifts.
The study indicated some 37
Mrs. Thurman Babcock fell
million acres of woodland and at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
12 million acres of pasture Oscar Babcock one day last
might be shifted profitably into week and received some bad
crops in the three regions bruises but fortunately no ·
•
under a combination of bones were broken.
Truck durability!
economic .conditions including
Miss
Ruthie
Walker
no government production graduaied Friday from the
.Truck chassis!
restrictions.
Beauty Academy School in
Truck
Columbus.
Truck
re 1a llity!
Elmer Newell, who received
his honorable discharge from
Ill!
the Navy, called on his grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jessie
Newell Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Taylor
and family ol Torch were
Sunday guests of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Blain Taylor.
Dr. Daniels was called here
last week to see Mrs. Oscar
Babcock who was quite ill.
Mrs. Eulah Swan, Mrs. Leota
Massar, and Mr. and Mrs.
· Dinsmoor Boyles visited her.
Mrs. Olen Young had the
misfortune to fall in the
bathtub and break her hip. She
Want a pickup truck? a·at
was taken to a Parkersburg
the one th'at has truck built
hospital.
parts! The only one. Then
• More power
The. W.S.C.S. of the
choose from truck·built engines-higherDouble-Wall Boxes
•
Methodist Church here put on a
powered engines from standard six up
• Optional dltc brakes
program for the Prayer and
to big V,392. Truck-built options
• Optional rear antl·akid
Self-Denial meeting which was
include power steering, automatic
brake syatems
held at the Alfred Churcp Jan.
transmission, all-wheel drive, ai r
• New ventilating systems
25. Those taking part from here
conditioning and stereo. Name
• Biggeat choice of rear
HD-125-D
were Mrs. Nelsel Weatherman,
your needs. Name your ·deal.
axle ratings
SPECIFICATIONS Mrs. Gorrell and daughter, and
Call us now!
type ................ , .'direct llred
Mrs. Maxine Chapman, Mrs.
capacity .... . .... 125,000 BTU.
Edith Harper, Mrs . Betty
Juel ............. ....... kerosene or #lluol oil
Chevalier, Mrs. Wilmer Rice,
motor ,. ........... , ... 115 volts ! 60 cycle ·
weight..
. ... 100 lbs.
and Mrs. Mae Vineyard. .
fuel capa.ci1y ...... 10.6 gal.
Mr. and Mrs . Robert
running lome ......... 12·hours apx.
Campbell
and daughter of
accessories
. oplional flame guard, purge control
Columbus visited her father,
and thermostat ·
Carl Lemley, Sunday .

Cattle

SOYA

TAKES BREATHER - Senior Blue Devil guard Larry
Snowden took a breather late in Friday's GAHS.Meigs
basketball game after he was shaken up on a driving layup.
Official Dale Hall looks on.

would be a losing proposition to pounds of body weight (12 to II
feed a poor cow the same po~ds for a 1,201J..powld cow).
amount of grain as the high · Th1s helps estabh•h the
producer.
•
neceSsary micro nor,a in the
According to 1968 Ohio dairy . rumens? cows CIIJI be go~ten on
production records cows fed full feedmg of,concentraoes 7 to
annually 2,600 pounds of 10 days follow:tng calving. You
concentrates produced 9,180 can accomplish this by In·
pounds of milk at a feed cost of creasing concentrate feeding 2
$184 for a return over feed cost pounds per day following
of $367 The better cows were calving .
led 6;300 pounds of con·
Most cow~ will rea~h their
centrates with the annual milk true peak m production and
production per cow of 13,535 maintain a high level . of
pounds. This was a feed cost of production over a longer penod
$302 for a return over feed cos[ of Ume when fed adequate
of '$451.
8J!10unts of co~ntrates along
Dairy. cows often fail to With good quality forage. In
express their true inheritance herds where cow~ are being
because they receive too little underfed early m lactation
energy early in lactation. In (first. four monlil8 ), 11 Is not
general, cows should receive a unusual woth . increased con50 to 61J.day dry period. They centrale feedmg to get an
should be in good condition but annual added r~ of up to
from springs. Some of these not fat at time or calving. 2,000 pounds of rrulk per cow.
which quickly come to our
mind are Lawrence Powell,
near Palestine Church, Donald
Meadows, on Whitten Ridge,
Guy Rollins, on Ten Mile
Creek, Landis Pearson, on
Redmond Ridge, Leonard
Upton and R. R. Stranahan,
near Arbuckle, and Virginia
Casto at West Columbia.

.herd owners ' should give
Milk production recordS are
special attention to feeding . needed l9' better determine
of which cows leave, which cows
adequate
amounts
economical and well-balanced stay, and how much grain to
concenb'ate ,iatlons. The cost feed. In general, the better the
of homegrown feeds depends to cow, the lower the feed cOIJI per ·
a large extent upon the owner's 100 pounds of milk, even though
performance as a producer of better cows eat more feed .
crops.
Surely you would invest $30
You don't reduce feed costs in additional feed to make
by being skimpy when feeding nearly $150. Who wouldn't?
dairy cows. You reduce feed . That's about the way it adds
costs by putting more feed up when you get higher
through better .. cows - by production per cow and reduce
feeding grain according to the cost per hundred pounds of
production, body condition, milk produced . Of course, it
and age.

Of Iron Line

fJet .Your
FERGUSON GETS TWO - Rod Fergu.On (33) senior
Blue Devil forward, drops in two points for GAHS during
Friday night's SEOAL co~test at Rock Springs. On left Is
Marauder Tony Vaughan. Looking on in rear is Meigs' Rich
Bailey (10).

with each current.month. ., .
Herd owners currently on
l;)st are James Boggs, Jotu.
Colwell, Earl Cross, Earl
Dean, James Gibson, Albert
Parker, Edson f!oush, Rex
Shenefield, and. Sunnysage
Farm (Carnahan.
Use of Records
One of the traditional uses of
records has been in relation to
the feeding · of cattle.
Production records provide a
basis for feeding cows ac·
cording to production. Since
feed cost comprises 4o to 50 pet.
of the cost of producing milk,

New Landowner Planning Wildlife Habitat

,;•

1 SUPER
. 'SHEF
.

the cow should be dried off and
when she should calve.
The state sununary for the
last current month shows a
total of 1,581 henbi on test. The
cows averaged 86 pet. ol the
days in milk and produced at
the rate ·of 12,721 pounds of
inllk and 489 JM!W!ds of fat.
Since June the computer has
been able to report the cows
prQducing an actual am~t of·
. over 12,000 pounds of milk or
over 500 pounds of butterfat. A
total of 39 cows have been .
· reported in the six month
period. Others will be reported

•

· Gallipolis, 0.

Daniel De.,atur Emnwlt
wrote "Dixie" in 1859 as a
'' houra.v song" or "walk
around " roo· a quartet o( Vorginia minstrels he headed .
a e&lt;· ordin ~ '" ,En&lt;:~clopaedia
Brit onnkCl .

Meigs Equipment Co.
'

PHON£ 992·2176

POMEROY, OHIO

�.

. ·'
~-The Sunday Times- Sentinel. Sunday, Feb . 6,1972

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times~Sentinel . Classifieds .
"otice

• WO -WAY Radios ~ales &amp; Wanted To Do
Service. New and used CB's, BOB
Lane' s
compl ete
police monitors, antennas,
Bookkeeping and Tax Seretc. Bob's Citizens Band
vice. 424 1 2 Fourth Ave .•
Radio Equip., Georges Creek
Kanauga. Ph . 446-1049 .
Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio. ~46- 4517 .
Bu-siness hours 9 ~ . m . - 1 p.m .
16-tf
Monday thru Saturday . Let
RALPH'S Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Cleaning Service . Free
estimates. Ph. 446-0294. Ralph
A. Davis, owner .

Sob

tak e

ca re

of

your

bookkeeping and tax needs
By appoi ntment only .
294-tf

Business Opportunities
FABR fC business lor sale. Low
Investment. Contact Albert
Folts, 1364 Colgate Dr .,
Marietta, Ohio. Ph . 374-5352.
6-tf

- - - -- -

2· NEW ALL electric mobile
Must

furnish

George
9·11 SEAMSTRESS wants to make
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
27-3
clothing and draperies. Ph .
DAY CARE
--,-367-7101.
Sun Valley Nurserr School ,
apartment,
28-3 FURNISHED
licensed by State o Oh io, 1'1'2
adulls only, utilities paid . 258
miles west of new hospital TEACHER
State St. Ph . 446-0085.
ava ilable for
577 Sun Volley Dr . Ph. 446·
27-lf
private tutoring . Ph . 446-3338.
3657 . Day care that says "we
~-=---,----,-~­
27·6 LARGE
two story brick home, 4
care ."
bedrooms, garage, gas hoi
_ __ __ __ _2_8-lf ALTERATIONS on all types of
water heat , rural water,
clolh mg in my home. Call
garden
space , barn, pasture
Mrs. Ross Northup, 446 2543.
Help Wanted
21 -26 available at edge of city on
Mill Creek, Gallipolis School
BABYSITTER from 8 to 5
District. Sl50 a month . Call
located in city area . Pt-.. 446· VI NYL and alum . siding.
446-1030 betweeri 9 a .m . and l
roofing
,
build
ing.
remodel
mg
.
9339 after 6.
p.m. Monday through Friday .
30·3 papering. Ph. 446-3608.
30-6
.
22-12
-----~
WOMEN!
ROOFING and gutter work and UPSTAIRS furnish ed apart BIG MONEY FAST!
ment, J rooms and bath, all
FAMOUS Studio Girl Cosmetics cleaning William Mitchell,
utiloties
paid. Ph . 4&gt;16-0322.
388-8507 .
and Hair Fashions needs 3
30 If
252-tf
more Beauty Advisors over 17
and

up

in

and

around

Gallipolis who want a start

earning up to $50 comm . in a

FURNISHED apt. , ground

Wanted To Rent

day immediately! Full or part FARMhouse at least 15acresof

time. No experience required .
Take orders anywhere. No
territory restrictions . High

profits up to 60 pet .I 300
exquisite Cosmetics, Wigs.
Wiglets and Falls. We furnish
everything. Credit extended.
No•slack Investment. For full
Information by mail plus 2

pasture and 5 acres of
workable land. Must have
barn, henhouse, pig pen , will
pay 2 years rent In advance
for the ri~ht place. Barney

Prince, 256-1249 or 256- 12~7.
26·6

fl oor . 4 rooms and bath, ex cellent locati on, no pets,

adulls only. Ph.

~46-1803.

28-lf

HALF of duplex, 2 bedrooms,
large living room and kitchen,

carpeted throughout , yard.
Water, sewer, garbage paid.

$135 mo. Ph .

446 -~806.

28- lf

For Rent or Sale

- -----

Also need ladies with car for

.
WE BUY gold coins anc sll ve'

..(J!gls.tered nurses and 2
licensed practical nurses for
evening, night and rotation

_27-6
--~·--~~·--------~'

•hilts. Liberal fringe benefits,

dollars. Tawney Jewe lers.

5-tt

competitive salary and ex-

beautiful suburban apts .
Contemporary
In style,
luxurious carpeting , i n·

dividually controlled heating,

color ·coordinated appliances,
private patios , many other
features. Lease S135 mo. Call
446-3772 for arpointment 1o
see model uni . 526 Jackson

. P i~e •. ~~,ar Ho lzer Med.
Cenfer.
THIRTY-FIVE WEST
APARTMENTS
20-: I

cellent working ~ondltlons.
Call, write or apply : PerSLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
•onnel Dept., Pleasant Valley
rates. Park Central Hotel.
Hospital, Valley Dr ., Pt.
308-If
Pleasant, W. Va . 25550. Ph .
LEGAL NOTICE
;
The unders igned w ill se ll al APARTMENT for construction
675-4340.
27-4 public sale for cash the
men . Ph . ~46 -0756 .
following
motor
vehicle,
267-lf
from Roy Pierce :
BABYSITTER Ia come to my retaken
1 - 1968 Dodge 2-Door Hard
home. Must have reference . Top. Serial No . WS23L8A 116717 SLEEPING ROOMS weekly
Ph. 4&gt;16·2950.
The sale will be held at the
rates, free garage parking ,
28-3 Farmers Bank and Savings
Libby Hotel.
Company , 221 West Second
289-tf
reer·. Pomeroy, Ohio af 10 : 00
EX-NAVY MEN to work on St
A .M . on the 12th dav of
river tow boats in engine Februery, 1972. · The un · NOW leasing new 1 bed room

lEGAl NOTICE

-------

room, must be familiar wi th dersigned reserves fhe rig ht to

GM 12-.167 series, also GM 16·
278 series or Cooper Bess! mer

engines . Send resume with
first correspondence, men

acceptable will have em ployment immediately. Write
Mrs. Lucy Anthony, Gen .
Del., Pt. Pleasant, W. Va .,
25550.
28-6

b id .

121 6, 11

THE FARMERS BANK
&amp; SAVING.S CO
POMERQY , OHIO

apartments, adults only. Ph.

675-3450 Pt. Pleasant.

296-tf

Real Estate For Sale
446-0001
THE NO. 1 number for Galli a
County, Ohio
FARMS,
LANDS AND HOMES.

Sa_lly Townsend, Milly
Barrett, Lydia Darrah, ' "Now" Possession
Hannah Thurston, Mary
Under $15,000
Videau ! Who are they? Just a IN TOWN . Three bedroom ,
story and half frame , ll/2
few
of the great American
call Mrs . Helen Yeager, Box
balhs. Alum . siding. Storms.
172, Jackson, Ohio. Ph . 286· heroines who, along with Molly
Full basement, Porch and
4028.
Pitcher and Betsy Ross, helped
extra lot. Very good con·
25-6 to · win
dilion .
the American
- - -- - Revolution. They, along with
A Better
our heroic men, helped HOME for your family . Like
new three bedroom frame .
America gain its freedom and
Six closets . Wife saver kif.
its heritage. Join with the
chen and dining room.
Daughters of the American
Hardwood floors , Sliding
BY RUBY SAUNDERS
glass door to patio. Attached
Revolution in observing
garage. $18,500.
Mr. and Mrs. Manual King February as American History
spent the weekend with their Month.
Need 4 Bedrooms?
son, Mr. and Mrs. Don King
Syracuse
and two children of West
SEVEN room block home,~ BR,
Jefferson.
dining room, country kitchen
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Sheets
with lots of cablnets, 2
visited a recent SWlday af·
paneled rec. rooms in
ternoon with Mr. and Mrs. recuperating.
basement . Attached garage.
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Sheets
Over acre land .
.::ustace Jeffers. Mr. and Mrs. called on Mr. and Mrs. Clark
Business
.l~ffers both have been very Caldwell. Mr. and Mrs.
ppportunity
poorly and their daughter, Caldwell both have been
Mrs. Opal Perkins has been poorly .
BE your own boss this year .
Well established retail !som e
helping to care for them.
Jimmie Saun~ers and son,
service
) business . Will sell
Mr . and Mrs. Ray Willis and Matthew, called on Mr. and
brick building and wareroom
two children, tou Ann and Mrs. Grover Smith.
• outrlgh l or lease . Possible
terms on stock . Call for
Matthew of Cincirmati spent
Mr. and Mrs. Shelly Slone
de
1ails.
the weekend with her -mother, received word of the death of
Mrs. Ruby SaWlders.
Country
Mr . and Mrs . Harold an uncle, Wilson Niday, who
passed away recently at his
Executive
Sowards were Saturday guests home in Georgia. He was
RELAX In this custom buill
of her mother, Mrs. Almira buried there.
BE AN Avon Representative!
Let me show you how easy it
is to make money and have
fun ln your free hours. For a
person~l interview. write or

Blue Lake

o.

Cox.
Recent Sunday guests of
Mrs. Mayme Gooderham were
her granddaughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Queen and
daughter, Sherr! of Chillicothe,
Mr. and Mrs. Burdell Forth,
Mrs. James 0. Gooderham and
son, Jimmie, Bill Gooderham
and daughter, Beth.
Mrs , Darlene Sheets called
on Mrs. Lucy Hamilton.
Mrs . Hershel Brumfield
re'cenUy underwent surgery on
her eyes at University Hospital
in Colwnbus. She is now at the
home of her daughter, Mr. al\d
Mrs &gt; R:verette McGomery

Randy Cox, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Handford Cox, is now
serving with the armed forces
in Germany.
Friends and relatives were
sorry to hear of the death of
Charley S. Johnson who passed
away recently at the Mt.
Carmel Hospital in Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs . Johnson spent
most of their life in Gallia and
reared a )arge family. His
. funeral was held at Victory
Baptist Church and was buried
in the church cemetery. Rev.
Webster Swain _officiated .
Several from Colwnbus al·
!ended the funerHI.

Evenina :
Ike Wiseman
446-3796
E. N. W~seman
446-4500

Thomas J.
FLYNN
Realty
Greenfield, Ohio

HERE'S AN AIR CON DITIONED HOME WITH
VERY NICE KITCHEN ,
BU ILT IN RAN(;E , OVEN,

two income units plus farm

-.

Call fror personal showinq.

.

~~6-0001
Oe~v e•

1&lt; . h1gley 446-0001
Wandt S. ~shenour 446-0003

· 'Strong, reliable 96 H)' overhead cam engine• Rugged tors~on bar front, heavy duty

ETC LOCATED ON LARGE

-OH~IO-:RIVE_
R

_

30·1

Realty

452 Second Ave.
446·3434 446-4775
L-------~G~a:::~o:h~io~------J _;J~ ACRES,
LOTS BUILDINGS
NEARLY new all brick ranch , 3 FOR SALE by 0wner . 2
- Nice laying farm in city
bed r ooms, 2 baths, w-w
bedroom home, with large
school district, fruit trees,

LOT A1 EDGE OF TOWN
Have Property You
Want Sold?
Please Call Us

car pet throughout, large
buill -in kitchen with breaK fast bar, large flat lot near

new hospita l. Ph. 4&gt;16-4700

Very Good
4 Bedroom Brick
THIS FULLY CARPETED
HOME INCLUDES A VERY
NICE KITCHEN WITH ALL
APPLIANCES BUILT IN ,

after 4.

21 -lf

Neal Realty

BATHS ,

LARGE FAMILY ROOM ,
DINING AREA. GARAGE ,
LOW DOWN PAYMENT
CEN TRAL · AIR
AND ihi s J BR home with full
LARGE FLAT LOT IN CITY
SCHOO L ·BI-S·T R tCT .

basement ·has just been
redecorated and is readv for
you to move in. Ha s carpet 10
li vi ng room, kitchen and one
bedr oom . Call tod ay lor

The Home Buying
Season Came Early
This Year .
We Need Listings.
NOW

details. Price $13,500.
lots on US Rt . 35 in Rio
Gra nde, Oh1o . Good place for
a business or 3 houses. Choi ce

living room, wall to wall
carpel. bath and utility room ,
wi th or without furniture.

plenty of water, old farm
house, good fences.

ONE ACRE IN CITY- Suitable

Phone 256-6328 after 5.
26-6

- - - -- -

for apartment complex, on

malo_r highway, plenty of
parkmg.

MASSIE

lot, clly schools, brick ranch

Realty, 32 State St

with two car garage, bufft.fn
kitchen, patio, city water,

Tel. 446-1998

owner will trade.

KERR- Near new, all brick, 4 . LIST WITH US chen. It has H.W. floors and
carpet. Full finished base.,
with a 2 car gar .. This house
has 1,888 sq. ft. l1v. area on
eac h floor . Located on near 2
A. level land. Bought for

replacement cost .

1

STANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Healing
215 Third Ave., 446-3782
187-lf

We have

buyers for your property. List
with us. We need farms and

city houses NOW.
Evenings
Oscar C. Baird 446-4632
D. J. Wetherholl 446-4244
Steven R. Bell 446-9583
•

,,

base. Low taxes, good schools

1s taking place . Pri ce $16,000.

REALTY
25 Locust St.

Nearly New By-Level
5 Bedrooms
YES , S BEDROOMS
LARGE FAMILY ROOM,
CARPET THROUGHOUT.
VERY N'·IC"E ~KITCHEN
!RANGE. DISH WASHER,
, ETC.) , CENTRAL AIR.
GA RA GE AND LARGE
FLAT LOT
IN CITY
SCHOOL DISTRICT
We Need Farms and
Bare Land To Sell
Land For Sale
111152ACRES, 'I• MILE RD.
FRONTAGE,2MILE FROM
DOWNTOWN , LOTS OF
TREES . HILLS
AND
WILDLIFE .
121 2 &amp; ONE -THIRD A.,
BEAUTIFU LLY
FORE STED , GENTLY
ROLLI NG LAND, WATER

AVAILABLE ,
SC HOOL S.

CITY

Howard Brannon, Broker

Off. 446-2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve. 446-1226

,.

'

"

two story home 832 3rd· Ave . 4 BR and bath ,

~SPAC I O U S

2nd floor. Four larg e rooms,
over size storage and en .
closed back porch . All on fir st
floor , part · basement. some
storm windows and door s,
front porch, deep lol 42' x 180'.
Now vacan t. The price is
right. Call to see. We have the

key.
Reduced

$1,000

TWO story frame home on a
deep lot 173'. 3 BR &amp; bath,
family size kitchen, formal
din ing room, fireplace in LR,

large reception haiL plenty
stora·ge space, two room
basement, front and back

yard, hobby building and
detached garage.

(3) 27 A , GOOD BUILDING
SITE WITH LOTS OF
Easy Living
PASTURE
IN
CITY JUST PERFECT for the
SCHOOL DISTRICT AND
retir ing couple . All electric, 2
RURAL WATER .
BR home, walls are plaster
and paneled . Nice kitchen
(4) WE HAVE 3 TEN ACRE
PLOTS 300 FT . RD .
with plen ty cabinets and
FRONTAGE. RURAL
ample ea ting area, TV room ,
WATER, CITY SCHOOLS .
storage room,
ca rport ,
TAKE YOUR PICK .
alum inum siding . Deep well.
Located on a large double lot .
Qu ick possession.

Want To Sell Or
Trade Your Farm?
Call Wisemans

Gracious
Spacious LivingYOUR fami ly will !'live it up" in

2 Farms For Sale

100 ACRES
BUILDINGS
517.000.00 .
114 ACRES
BUILDINGS

WITH GOOD
AND LAND,
GOOD LAND.
VERY RUN

DOWN . $17 ,000.
2 FARMS ARE

11"'

MILE

APAQT WILL SELL BOTH
FOR !32.000.

Wow! Here's A Dandy ·
4 LARGE

BEDROOMS,

LARGE FORMAL DINING

this l e vel~ home. Attractive
entrance hall leads to a Iaroe

LR

wi th

WB

fire -

place ,ccomfor table family
room, an extra LR on the
seco nd flo or to give the
children tha t wanted privacy .

5 BR, 2'1&gt; baths, walk-In

closets and plenty storage. All
rooms carpeted on second
fl oor Two over·size rooms in
the finished attic. Full divided
basement with all copper
plumbing, new central air and
gas furna ce. Shown only by
appointment.

For Sale

Now vacant. Price $12,600.

RIO - All brick, all Electric,
beautiful,5 rm . home, loc ~tted
in
excellero• , · ' ..... .,tial
section . Owne , ·~
1}e liv.
rm. for beaut~ , ...... This

6 A. UPPER RT. 7, 5 rm. block
house, 35 x 30 garage, Ideal
for any type mechanical biz.
$18,000.

UPPER RT. 7

Phone 446-2735

Datsun Pickup

' 187-ff
- - - - ---:-:-::-:-:-::
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
830 Fourth Avenue
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
155-ff

SMITH AUTO SALES

HAWK Insurance Agency, 541
Fourth Avenue, Phone 446·
2300. Fire-life-auto-church.
8-tf

KANAUGA, OHIO

66 PONTIAC CATALINA
4 Dr. Sedan, P.S., P.B., Radio, Factory Air,
Burgundy Finish with Black Interior

DEAD STOCK
ss:oo Servlco·Chorge

and cavity work, tree and

PUkiC
' NOTICE

'

'

'895

.VIII rei1)0ve your dead
horse and cows
Call Jackson 786--453)

ATTENTION
stump removal. Ph. 446-4953. 1
DUE to the present construction _
__ _ _ _ _ _73-tr_
in Gollla Co., we have several
1
out of town buyers I~ need of
Some people have tact. O!h&lt;,r&lt;
·1
FAIN
homes In this area. If you
tell the truth .
·
EXTERMINATING CO '· J
have property for sale, don ' t
If you feel neglected, think of
Termite &amp; Pest Control·
settle for les• Ihan nationwide
Whistler's father .
Wheelersburg, Ohio
advertising . CALL STROUT.
ALL NEW LISTINGS
Ph. 57 ~ -6112
i
FARMS40A. Here Is that very nice place
SPRINGFIELD TWP.
you have been looking for . 1- 90 A., Kerr -Harrisburg Rd ., ---::-:-::-::-:::-:--..::.:231·If
Nice 8 room , S bedroom home,
ALBERT EHMAN · !
2 barns, creek frontage, good
gas furnace, completely
Wafer Delivery -Service"
pastureland, 519,500.
furnished, also dozens of jars
1
Patriot Star R1., Gallipolis
of home canned frulf. Owner 2 - 76 ,A. Bidwell-Rodney Rd.,
Ph. 379-2133
only removing personal Items
mostiJ level and rolling ·----~-..::243-tf J
as they "'" moving ouf of
groun , some bottom, pond,
state. Pasture very clean , no
creek, $11,900.
brush, pasture fertilized and
TOWNSHIP
seeded, good . fences. Sold 1- 95PERRY
A.,
rolling
ground, pond,
1
$2,000 of hay this year, good
plenty
of
buildings,
12 rm.
corn land. Full line of farming
home, tob. bose.
equipment. Tractor, diSc,
plow, rake, efc. Barn and
- 163 A., good home and
other buildings . -Cio'e to 2 buildings,
56 A. bottom, 100 A.
village.
We 1111 onythlng lor
pasture.
'
'
onybocly. Bring your
If you are looking for a fine HUNTINGTON TWP.- 50 A., 2
Items to Knolls c.,...
loca-tion on Second A:venue,
munlty Auction hrn.
barns, log house, $10,000. ,
wa lking dl•tance to school.
Cor!Mr Third &amp; OIIYt.,
MORGAN
TOWNSHIP
See this real nice 3 bedroom
1
JO
A.,
pasture
and
woods,
For appolntmont a II
full brick home, modern
nice
5
rm
.
home,
barn,
pond,
446·2917.
Sift ovory
kitchen, dinette, dining.
$17,000.
Stlurday Evonlng at
room·, targe living room wlfh
70'Ciock.
wood burning fireplace, bath,
two half -baths, carpeted, full 2 - so A., yacant, $9.000.
CHEAP HOUSING
basement. Good lot extends
from Second Ave. to alley In 3 RMS. on 160, land contract.

--,

1970 VOLKSWAGEN

AUCTION
.SERVIa ·

AUCJJONE£1

Generation Rap
By Helen

and Sue Botte_l

OKAY IN ROME; A No-NO HERE
Dear Helen and Sue :
This guy is Italian. How do I get it across that he lsn 't in Italy
now? I never know (when I am near him) when he's going to
pinch me on the fanny. It's embarrassing, and he can't Ull·
derstand why because it's a compliment In his country. PINCHED PEACH

++++
Dear P .P. :
I had that problem once - and cured it by a "reflex." At the
first pinch, l!lY elbow would "just happen" to swing out and
connect with ·the guy's ribs, or I might tuni real quick and slap
him across the face. (Could I help It If I was jumpy?) He learned
fast! - SUE

++++
Dear Peach:
If this overly enthusiastic guy can't Wlderstand that "When
in Rome" also applies to "When In America (do as Americans
do)," then I guess you'd better practice up on pinch-bitting. But
try a little explanation about our customs first, i.e.: whistles Si; pinches - No, before you unwind your "reflex." - HELEN

++++
Dear Helen and Sue :
I've had It with this guy.l'm walking home from school and he
gets behind me and says "Wiggle, wiggle; boom-boom" until he
turns off at his block. Outsldeofpltchingrocksathim, what can I
do? He thinks he's so-o-o cute (and he Is). - SICK OF SMART
RDMARKS

++++
Dear Sick:
Waltfor him to catch up and then "expect" him to walk you
home. He can't make smart remarks V(hen he's busy trying to
make conversation. - HELEN

'

++++

DearS of SR:
... And If he doesn't disappear fast, well, kid, you've got
yoursell a new boy friend. - SUE
'

++++

Dear Helen and Sue:
.: What do you think of a guy who won't marry the girl, .won-'t
even pay for her prepancy, but says if she has an abqrtion he'll
~ something terrible, like kill himself? .
.
• That's the fellow I'm going with now and, though !love hun, I
'
wonder if he'd treat me the same way.
i I just found out about this other girl - in fact I met her and
talked 'to her. She's going to a home for unwed mothers because
he made suclla fusa about a legal abortion. But he doesn't want
allythbig more to do with her and told her this just after sh~
learned she was pregnant.
Does a nian have the right to insist that his former girl have
hli baby -when he wants neither the baby nor the girl? Maybe
It's IllS religion, but not hers. ·
.
And what should I do about hhn? -NOT SURE

.

l'lrhaptl you slloul.d dlacllll what you've heard with your boy
friend. Sometimes alllor)'lgeta pretty garbled from here to there
-eapeclally If lt'slold by a dJJcarded girl friend. - HELEN

Ptl 446-3444

fees

tax
are

11,000 miles, 4 speed, extra nice:

'1995

• 99

1969 DiEV. IMPAlA

2 Dr . hdtp. , cust., air, blue, black

'

1971 DODGE-----~2395

8.

Panel Delivery, 6,000 miles, auto.,
radio , same as new .

1969 BUICK ElECTRA
vinyl top, new Electra trade .

Spt. cp~., automatic , P.S., blue
finish.

'2695

'1695

1970 DODGE DART

1968 BUICK leSABRE

Swinger 2 dr. hdtp .. vinyl top, V-8
engine, automatic, P.S., air .

4 Dr . hdtp., gold, vinyl top, cus.t.
Interior . One owner, sharp .

• 495

'2395

Polara Custom 6 passenger station wagon,
Torqueflite transmission, power steering,
power disc brakes, air conditioning, luggage
rack, 360 V-8 engine.

1967 CHEVELLE
2 Dr . hdtp., 289 eng .. auto ., P. S.,
red, black vinyl lop. Won 't last
long.

D100 112 Ton pickup truck , 6 cylinder .

not

1971 VEGA

'2695

1971 DODGE-----s3795

To qualified buyers: The
balance due is $2020.00
payable in 36 monthly
payments. Interest &amp; Credit

State

1971 OPEl STA. WAGON

4 Dr. , air, vinyl top, blue, cust.
interior.

Monaco 4 Dr. ha.rdtop, Torqueflite trans.,
power steering, power disc brakes., air con ditioning, vinyl roof. power ben&lt;;h seat, 383 V-8
engine.

Equipped &amp; ready to
go with radio, un dercoat, tool kit, 24,000
mile
warranty,
mirrors, etc .

registration

1970 BUICK

1967 BUICK G.S.
2 . Dr. hdtp ., auto., P.S..

P. B. ,
maroon , black vinyl top, mag
wheels. XTRA, XTRA, Nice.

'129

Included .

'1395

NORRIS'CDODGE~ I
SO State Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

SUE
Dear Not SUre:

JIMME SAYRE

NEW '72 V.W.,
Model 1111

52413 . ~4 .

'2195

•2995

1971 DODGE _____ s4095

a

interest Is 11.95 percent per

Dear N.S.:
.
I think a man who won't marry the girl has no right to make
her declslona for her.
And I'd think long and hard before I married the creep! -

I

per ma .. e
down

'5500
Skylark custom , air, 22.000 miles.
Extra nice.

SAVE
•1ao·o

yr. resulting in total note of

++++

"SELL THE AUCfiON
WAf' .

SURCHARGE &amp; EXCISE
TAX HAVE
BEEN.REMOVED

$6704
$19700

Air cond . , AM-FM. auto . shift,
17,000miles, sold new in 1971 . New
cond.

1970 OLDS CUTlASS

· GALLIPOL.l~,O. ,

-

'"

1971 BUICK LIMITED

GALLIPOLIS

Life Ins. is $393 .44. Bank rate

WOOD MOTOR SALE

I I

! '

'3995

UPTO

Insurance

WOOD
REALTOR

CLIPPER MILL - S rooms and
rear . Good rental on rear of
'
both, carr,eted LR, oven and
lot. Quick possession. Shown BIDWELL - 7 rms. an~ bath,
1957 GMC 'to T. pickup, good range
55,500.
n kitchen, full
by appointment.
runni ng, ~ l · li d, $225. Ph . 4&lt;16basement,
deep
lot.
Price
,VINTON
- 7 rms. and bath,
4999.
510,500.
furnace,
s•.~. $500 dn.
5 A. tot. 2 A. lot . Both have
24-tf
LOTS
OF LOTS ,
beautiful
view
of
river,
eight
~-:----,.:--__:Wanted
WE
HAVE
several
nice level
USED
Mobile
Home
miles South of Gallipolis .
lots 1 mi. from new hasp., 100
Headquarters . Ali size mobile
L-i-s-t -i-n-g-s!
ft . front, 200 fl . deep, rural
homes in stock. B &amp; S Mobile
We had a very good year In
, water, $2,700, 1500 dn .
ANY TIME is a good time to list
Home
Sa
les,
Second
&amp;
Viand
.
selling
Real
Estate
but
we
I Pt . Pleasant, next to Heck's.
' FARM LISTINGS
your property for sale. We
need listings for the coming
have
an
acllve
den.and
for
N&amp;EDED
year.
Let
us.
help
you
with
67-lf
-::-:cc--=-::-_:,.-_ _
homes and small acreage. ! your sale In 1972.
THE BUYIN(' SEASON lsj,.'
LIST WITH THE BRANNON
around lhe corner. For ast.
~ E BUILT Eledrolu x cleaners,
Office 441·1066
REALTY TODAY - 'ITWILL ' ·
act11111 on your property, call
service on Bll r1 akes. Phone
Evtlltngs: Call
PAY .
Ronny Blackburn
446-9453
Ron Canaday 446-306
Branch Malllf•r ,
20'-12
Russell D. Wood, 446-4611

'5500

-DE
-W-IT-T'-S.-P-L_
U_M-:-8~1N~G

RUSSELL

446-1066

4 Dr . Hdtp ., ·demonstrator, air,
vinyl top_. P.S ., P. B. List $5151.

4 Dr. hdlp., air, FM. P. W., P. S.,
power door locks, 60-40 seat. orig .
cost $7500.

SM.ITH BUICK

AND HEATING

1971 BUICK l.eSABRE

9,000 .miles, air, AM-FM
stereo -tape, PW., PS ., new
Riviera trade.

~98-tf

3 A. - 7 RMS. &amp; BATH,
remodeled o)der home, :
located
on a BT ' rd. in L.f..;...-'-----~---~
property may be bought w•lh
Springfield Twp.
HOLLEY'S .DITCHING
3 First Lady beauty Salon
Stations, reception desk, 2
.,
COMPLETE water line in '
stallatlon, backhoe.- bulldoze ·
First Lady drying stations 5 BR . ~ 2'12 BATHS
Nearly new by-level within
and boring machlpe services '
and chairs . . All for $24,000.
J . P..l Holley,· Ph. 245'5018 0
, House for. :12'!,§Qjl. ;J,
• ~ wa)~l.rg .dl~laQce. _of new
NEAR ADDISON - Baby farm , hosp•lal on a large corner lot. 446-4344
Completely built-in kitchen,
·
1-t(J
of 5 A., with older remodeled
ww carpet, 2 car garage.
home, new furnace, new file
LISTINGS WANTED
ceilings, 2 rms. paneled, 3
C&amp;S Electrical Service &amp;
WE
HAVE BUYERS
rms . carpeted, Mrs. approved
Repairs . House w\rlng,
WE NEED SELLERS
kitchen and on Rural wafer
electric heat, motor controls.
line ; air-conditioned. Price COLD WEATHER SPECIAL Free estimates. Ph . 446-~561
this large stone fireplace can
511,500.
or
675-3361.
make Feb. feel like July.
GREEN ACRES - ~ yrs . old,
22·11
Lavely modern home with 3 - -- - - - - Brick &amp; frame, H.W. floors , 3
BR and 1'' ' baths located _
nlce br . rms. large llv. rm.,
close to town.
VESTA'S TV Service. Expert
beautiful kitchen and din ...
repair at reasonable prices.
area . It has a 2 car gar. with
Nicely Grover Rd., Cheshire, 0 . Ph.
elec. door. Located on 80'x150' POMEROY
remodeled 2 story home 367-7727.
lot. Priced in low twenties .
3-ff
LOTS- St. Rt. 160, St. Rt. 141. . located on a quiet st.
Presently renting for 5185 ""r - - -- - -- -- Bulaville Rd ., Neighborhood
ik.
Buy below replacement TERMITE PEST CONTROL
Rd. and Orchard Hill Rd.
1..~ ( :.1/,!&gt;UU,
VACANT LAND - 47 A.
FREE Inspection. Call&lt;l-46-3245.
Shoestring Ridge and 25 A. on
Merrill 0' Dell. Operator lor
State rt. 325 South of Rio NOT MANY LEFT at fhls price Extermlnal Termlf• Service,
- 3 BR brick less than 2 vrs. 19 Bel!"ont Dr.
Grande.
old. Cent. air, ww carpet,
FARMS - 100 A. on Swan
267-tf
built-in kitchen, 520,900.
Creek, big barn, some bottom
land, 6 rm. house, plenty
Central Air Conditioning
water, 1,600 lb. lob. bose. CAMPSITES - $2,500, ex&amp; Heating
cellent hunting, lots of pines,
$15,000.
Free
Estimates
localed 20 mi . from Gallipolis,
53 A. 8 RM. house, both, 2 rms.
Stewart's
Hardware
$200 down .
paneled, big barn, pond and
VInton, Olllo
800 lb. lob. bose. Price 512,500.
144-tf
BIDWELL - Like new 3 BR - - - - - - - - - ANY HR.-446·1998
home, would probably apE. Winters- 446-3828
prove for FHA foan, or make
SWISHER'S
AI Arnold - 446-07.16
a 10 pet . down payment and Plumbing &amp; Heating and
Eve., J. Fulfer- 446·3246
go conventional. ALSO, 2 eleclrlcal service. 367-7475.
Eve .. J . Berry- 446-3466
story home In good repair
306-ti
with 7 rms. and both, cellar, 2 - - - - - -- -- car garage and 3 lots.
SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and Installed
ONE OF THE LARGEST Russell's Plumbing, 446-4782 '
modern brick homes on the
297-tf '
market. 3 BR, bath, kitchen, - - - - - - - - - - dining rm., LR, and family
BANKS TREE SERVICE
rm . on ground level, plus full
FREE
estimate•, liability ln- 1
finished basement. See to surance.
Pruning, trimming ·
believe.

1972 BUICK.SKYLARK
-TUDOR SALE

RlJffiLL'S
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
21 Gallla Ave.
446-4782
297-lf
Brammer Plumbing &amp; Healing
300 Fourth Ave.
Phone 446-1637
Gene Plants, Owne;

. Stop in and inspect our large
selechon of used c;ars. You'll
agree they're the be.st in the
area.

1971 OLDS TORONADO

With air condition · power steering, automatic trans. ; V-8 eng ., white
walls, tinted windshield, dlx. steering wheel, carpet frt . &amp; rear, dlx . wheel
covers: protective b.umper strips. Plus manv more extras .

STROUT REALTY

and located where the action

WE BEAT ALL BIG
CITY DEALER PRICES!

• Half-ton capacity aUcsteel bed
• Full synchro 4-speed stick, whitewalls
• Proven durability---the ·No. 1 selling
import truck
))riYf1 a Datsun ... then decide.

of lots $2,500 or all three
Services Offered
for57 ,000. Would make a good . CITY - Located at 127 Kineon,
2 Bedroom With
GILLENWATER'S septic tonk
lof for mobile homes.
house is in good rePair, some
Excellent Extra
cleaning and repair, als
World's Lat gest
new copper plumbing and
house wrecking. Ph. 4&gt;16-9499
Building Lot
iee th is 3 BR home located just
winng. 5 ni ce rms . and bath, THE LEADER SINCE '900 IN
Established in 1940.
4 miles south of Gallipolis on a
full base., H.W floors with
SERVING THE Nl• : tON'S
HERE 'S A GOOD IOEA . 2 acre lot Pnced to sell
169-1
new carpet an ~ paneling in
BUYERS &amp; SC'.LE! ,,
VERY GOOD 2 BEDROOM
$15,000
'
liv. rm. Don't wait h.. see this
Ph. 4. ..
HOME , NICE KI TCHEN,
D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Wafe
Off1ce Phone 446-1694
one. Price Sl7 ,500.
FULL BASEMENT PLUS
Delivery Service. You
Evenings
THIS BONUS - AN EX CITY - 3 tli'l. - located oil a patronage
be ap
Charles
M.
Neat
446-1546
CELLENT BUILDING LOT
quiet st., carpet over HW preciafed. Ph.will
ADD ISON - Modern home.
446-0463.
J . Michael Neal446-1503
FOR YOUR NEW HOME .
H W fl oors, fully carpeted.
floors, built-In kitchen, utility
7-1
MOVE INTO THE SMALL
Liv
.
rm.
lo1'x18
'
.
Kitchen
room,
air cond., and carport.
ONE UNTIL YOUR NEW
!13,900.
t2'x16', plenty cabinets. Full
ONE IS DONE .
We Have Buyers So
Call Wiseman For Fast
Action.

·

Route 160 at Evergreen

3 BEDROOM RANCH - Level

bdrms ., larve llv. rm .• di_n.
rm and Mrs. approved kif ·

rear suspensiOn

Plumbing &amp;Heating

~46-0208 .

Asso. John Smith, Jr.,
Phone 446-3981

ROOM , DEN , VERY NICE
FULLY EQUIPPED KIT 36 Acres
CHEN , 2 CAR GARAGE ON 1 MILE off Rt. 7 on a blacktop
A LARGE SHADY LAN D· - road . Larg e barn, tobacco
SCAPEcl LOT .
base , .7 acres of extra good
farm land, one story 3 'BR
3 Bedroom In Town
home, dr illed well, well
Excellent
shaded lawn. Price 516,000.
Neighborhood
6 Acres
2 STORY FRAME HOME
EIGHT
room - ~ BRand bath,
WITH ~ORMAL DINING ,
fireplace In living room,
CAR P ETED
LIVING
country
ki tchen with plenty
ROOM , FIREPLACE , 1'1&gt;
cabinet~. plaster walls, H.W.
BATHS , FULL BASEMENT ,
ON LARGE LOT IN EX and pine floors, cellar house.
CELLENT
NEIGH barn , 4 car garage and store
BORHOOD . S26.900 .
building . Some timber . All for
$18,000.
3 Bedroom $15,900
brick · home with stone
2 B.R. Homes
f i replace. Deluxe kitchen .
ON RT . 160 2 MILES FROM
Master bedroom with all - TOWN . HERE'S A GOOD EUREKA - 4 rooms and bath,
garage - nice lot 75' x 100'. A
BUY FOR SOME ONE
ceda r walk -in closet. All
LOOKING
FOR
A
GOOD
River View . Price $9,000.
car pe t. Air conditioned .
AND INEX - RIO GRANDE - 5 room and
At l ached two car garage. .LOCATION
PEN SIV E HOUSING .
bath, garage, lot 100' x 163'.
This country estale ,also has
building . Includes 30 acres.

Datsun's Li'l Hustler Picl!up is built to build
your bank roll. ·

compressor . 1972 low profile
FOR SALE by owner. 2 story
18 ft. 5 for 51.850 . 1972 Sfor
brick at ~2 First Ave. 7
Master camper $1,325. Used
room s. 2 baths, gas hot air , units also . Camp Coni~{ Star
furnace .
Present
Craft Sales, Rt. 62, N. o Point
arrangement 2 apartments.
Pleasant.
Easily converted to one
20-lf
family dwelling . Asking
$35,000. Shown by appt. Ph.

This. 3.,bedroom home can be yours with a 33
,year mortgage and interest rates. as. low as 1
per cent to qualified buyers_.

2 Acres 3 Bedroom
Home Close In

CERAM IC

plan
you·

tained, sleeps 6, converter.

We've Sold 12 Since
Christmas
We Would Like To Sell
Your Home For You.

'2 lJ2

free samples wrlle STUDIO
GIRL HOLLYWOOD, Dept. 6 ROOM all electric ranch style SLEEP ING room. Ph. ~46- 2470.
28-3
M- ~79, 11461 Hart St., No.
home with fireplace , patio
Hollywood, Cal. 91605 or
and garage, finished re~ . 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
PHONE TOLL-FREE 800-621·
room with bar . The lot ts
total electric with washer &amp;
400.5. No one will call on you .
150xl60 on Haven Hgfs ., New
dryer, 5100 mo. at Cl ipper
Write or phone today.
Haven, W. Va. Sale pri ce
Mills. 2 bedroom mobile home
30·1 518,500 or rent 5100 per mo.
with auto. washer, air con .
Ph . 882-3258 from 9 till 5 or
dltloned,
fuel oil , water and
WANT L. P.N . or retired R.
(614) 992-3078 after 5:30.
se wage furnished. across
nurse to work in nursing
27-6
from Holzer HospitaL $130
home. Can live In if desired.
mo.
Ph . 446-0175.
Write Box 313, Ironton, Ohio,
28-3
Rt. 1.
Instruction
30·3
SEMI DRIVER
BRADBURY efficiency
TRAINEES
WE HAVE an Immedia te SEMI DRIVER WANTED
apartment. 729 2nd Ave ,
training ionopening in the accounting
adults only, no pels.
the -job type) with our trucks
departmen1. Job requires
26-lf
hauling steel throughout the
typing and shorthand skills. Mid
--West.
Free
job
Exceflent starting pay and
placement . For an ap - RECENTLY remodeled, ~
liberal benefits. Apply in
rooms, bath. All new fur ·
plication and interview, call
person between 8 a.m . and 5
nilure,
clean , no pets, adults
or write: TRI STATE
p.m,. Federal Mogul Corp ..
only.
Ph
. ~46-1519.
DRIVER TRAINING, INC.,
216Q Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, 2507
26-lf
North Verity, Mid ·
Ohio. An equal employment dletown,
Ohio 450~2 , 513·424·
opportunity employer.
NEW
1237.
29-2
2
BEDRM.
30-1
TOWNHOUSE APTS.
-----:-LADIES needed for good paying
BE WITH the first to choose
temporary office like work . Wanted To Buy
your residence in these
light delivery work : Apply in I HORSE, good for 4-H project .
person only to Room 72 Libby
Like to have it between 56 ln .
Hotel. see Mrs. Carter 9 to 1°
•nd 59 in. Ph . 446-3715.
a.m. Tuesday, Feb . 8.
29-6
29-3
100 OR MORE acres of roll ing
farmland. Write Box 205 c-o
NURSES
Gallipolis Tribune.
IMMEDIATE opening for 2

Off. 446;3643

reference . Call
Sheets 4&gt;16- ~571 .

Real E$tate For Sale

FARM fOr sale near Mer· FARMan WoOd•·MIII Rd . 1 mile
cerville . 52 acres, house 5
from Bidwell . 50 acrtl. 20
rooms and path, large born
acres in hay, 4acre corn base,
and tobacco bose. Ph. 2.16- plenty' water, small bar~. see
69611.
'
Jack Mills, ~- 0157.'
27~
J0-3
. '
HOUSE for sale. 3 bedrooms,
1'1• baths, central gas heatlog Campin• Equipment .
and air conditioning, Inside WINTER SALE, 1972 trailers 18
city l imits, river view, · 3t.
ft. 7 $3,299 retail for $2,575 ; 20
acre .
House
available
ft. 7 53,85~ retail for 52,999;
beglnnln~ of March. Ph . 4461971 24 ft . 7 $5,452 for $~,000 .
4885.
·'
All
Wander Stars, self con·
28-3

REALTOR

For Rent
ho mes .

Real Estate For $ale

The W·ISEMAN-·
Agency ·

DOC SMITH SAYS:

"DOC"
-SMITH

\I

DON WAITS
VOLKSWAGEN INC.
Upper Rt 7
Gallipolis, Ohio

Unoeramblt theoe rour Jumbles,
one letter to tach square, to
form four ordinary warda.

For Sale
SPORTS before your eyes- on
your new carpet -

~lYMJll~;"'-' ::::!t!-!c
I

JIJST ARRIVED at t_he Parsons
Furnlfure Co. a load of

CILRY

new living room suites direct
from factory . Many colors to
choose from. Some selling at
wholesale cost. Terms can be
arranged. Parsons Furniture

remove

them with Blue Lustre. Rent
elec tric shampooer Sl. Lower

G. C. Murphy Store.
J0-6

- -- - - -

AKC Toy Poodle puppies, 550 to
$65. Ph. 256-6247.
30-3
DON'T merely brighten your
carpets ... Blue Lustre them
... eliminate rapid resolling .

VORAF

I I.

rJ

Co., Kanauga, Rl. 7.
28-3
1

..,

tTANVBE (

DEEP WELL water pump,
large storage tank ; 2 Culligan
water soffners, 1 large, 1
small ; 125 bales straw or will

trade for cattle. Ph.

~46 - 4170

between 4 &amp; 6 p. m .

SEE THE NEW

1972 COA.CHMAN
eTRAVEL TRAILERS
• PICKUP CAMPERS
eMOTOR HOMES
eMOBILE HOMES

••••

Rent electric shampooer Sl.

Central Supply Co.

PARTS and SERVICE FOR
ALL TRAVEL TRAilERS

30-6

------

COLONIAL Early American
Stereo, AM-FM radio combination, 4 speed changer, ~
speaker

sound

••••

system.

Balance $78 .69. Use our
budg~t terms. Call 446-1028.
30·3

- - - - ----'-

BEAUTIFUL Modern Walnut

OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK
Y«•lerday'•
An.wer1

Stereo..r.1dio combination, 4

,.plolillllll- PARCELS

speaker sound system, 4
spee d

changer,

separate

controls. Balance $62.74. Use
our· budget terms. Call 4461028.
J0-3

MF 135 gasoline tractor 50
hours, MF 7 ft. mowing
machine, MF finger wheel
hay rake, MF No. 12 hay
baler, 5 ft . Bush Hog, 1 set
Ferguson 3 botloll! turn
plows, boom pole, 2 T.'

Comple•ely ried up in polldl

For Sale

New GMC

Truck Headquarters

For Sale
'69 MOBILE home, all electric,
1'12 baths, tully carpeted. Ph .
245-5696.
26-6

Aluminum
Sheets
USED

OF~SET

PLATES

HAVE
MANY USES

204

••••

BANK RATE FINANCING

••••

BUY NOW AND BE READY
FOR SPRING!

••••

1967 &gt;;, T. Chev. PU
1962 '12 T. Chev. PU
a for $1.00
1963 GMC dump truck
FOR SALE
1968 3 T. GMC
12x68 Mobile home, 1972
1971 '~• T. GMC PU
Rilzcrafl' Royal. Owner
New
11
ft
.
camper
manure spreader, Black
leaving
town .
1966
:v,
T.
GMC
Hawk corn planter, side
1967
Plymouth
~
dr.
sedan
delivery hay rake, automatic
PH. 3888446
water softener 1 vear old . Ph. 1968 "' T. GMC PU
1966
3
T.
Ford
dump
truck,
1 MILE NORTH OF JACKSON, OHIO
367-7534.
825 Third Ave.
exceptionally clean
StGN .. ul .:.11 .,n,l.l::. 111 ::. lock or
30-3
Gallipolis, 0. ·
1969' Roadrunner
printed to order . Billboard
ON
PH.
- ----1968
If•
T.
GMC
PU
plasti
c
with
250
letters.
make
NEW 1971 Zig -Zag Sewing
WESTINGHOUSE elec tric
your own . sign, S29.95. Sim·
1966 '12 T. GMC PU
Machine in original factory
112 T. GMC PU
roaster oven with dishes,
mons
Ptg
.
&amp;
Office
Equip.
Ph.
1963
carton . Zig-Zag to make
portable, good condilion . Ph.
446-1397'
For Sale
buttonholes, sew on buttons, 1965 1 T. GMC
For Sale
4&gt;16-2465 after 6 p.m .
5-11
1969
GMC
4
T.
log
truck
monograms. and make fancy .
ALL
TYPES
ot
building
25-6
USED FURNITURE
1963 1''' T. Ehe' . PU
designs with just the twist of a
materials. block , brick. sewer
FORTH
E
best
buy
in
diamonds
1967
12
T.
C
PU
2
sulfes, double size
single·dial. Left in lay-away
pipes, window s. lintels, etc. BEDROOM
go to Tawney Jewelers, 422 I BELL &amp; Howell fl. a zoom lens
1968 Chev. uburban
box
springs
and maHress, 2
and never been used. Will sell
Claude Winters, Rio Grande.
8 MM regular movie camera .
Second Ave.
good
living
room suites,
lor only $47 cash, or credit 1966 ·~ T. hevrolel PU
0. Ph. 245-5121 alter 5.
1 Kodak Brownie 8 regular
5-tf
refrigerator , maple twin bed
terms available. Phone 4&gt;16- 1967 IJ2 T. Chev. PU
278-tf
movie pro Lector , 1 Sylvania
1963 F600 Ford Truck
with springS and mattress,
4811 .
N
o.
2
Sun
Gun
movie
light,
1
WE
HAVE
the
largest
selection
1961
2
T.
GMC
·
dresser.
Rice's New &amp; Used
26-6
Prinz 3 way flash gun for WHITE ce ment, all sizes tile in
of men 's pipes in this area ,
1964 3 T. GMC
Furn
.
~
854
Secontt (across
over 500. GBD, Charatan, 35MM slide camera , 1 pr . hlp stock. 12" .and 15" field tile,
------~~~
from Texaco Station.) 446·
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum 1964 '12 T. Chev. PU
suitable
for
highway
ditching
,
Savinelli , BBB and Joby . All
boots size 8. Ph . 446-2465 after
.SOMMER'S G.M.C.
9523.
Cleaner complete with at.
concrete
blocks .
6
p.m.
priced to se ll. Tawn ey
TRUCKS,
INC.
29-lf
tachme'nts , cordwlnder and
Jewelers.
25-6 GALLI POL IS BLOCK CO.,
133 Pine St.
paint spray . Used but in like
1231!&gt; Pine St., Ph . 446-2783.
511
446·2532
new condition. Pay $34.45
.
16-lf '65 VW . Needs some repairs.
18-tf
Ph. •46-4313.
cash or budget plan available.
"
---::--:---29-3
CORBIN &amp; S~YDER
Phone ~46- 4811 .
FOR THE best dea l in a new or
J P's Tropical Wonderland,
396-375
H
P
Chevrolel
engine
.
FURN.
CO.
used mobde home try
26·6
415'n Main Sf ., Pl. Pleasant.
Ph. ~46 -2320 after 4 p.m .
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales, USED' Hollywood lull size bed,
Fish and supplies. Open It'
' 27-~ Kanauga, Ohio. Ph . 446-9662 .
complete, 2 Hollywood twin
a.m.
till 6 p.m.
IF YOU wanl to buy, trade or
s1ze bed complete, 3 pc
Reg.
miniature , _ _ __ __ _ __ 296-tf
17-lf Sl NGER Sewing Machine Sale•
sell used paper back books, AKC
Wdlnut end tab l e grouping ,
&amp; Service. All
models in
Schnauzers, 8 weeks old. Ph .
westerns,
mysteries ,
breakfast set wi th 4 chairs,
F:ree
delivery.
Service
stock.
deteclives and romance, see
4&gt;16-2497 after ~ p.m.
solid maple coffee table, red IF YOU are building a new
guaranteed.
Model•
price&lt;!
BettY. or Denver Higley at
27-6 CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
L•liltty cart . 4 woo1den chairs,
home or remodeling, see us .
from
$69.95
.
French
City
Red s Barber ~Mp and Used
open Friday eve ning until 8.
.
SERTA &amp; liemco Mattresses &amp;
We are builders . Distributor
Fabric
Shoppe,
Singer
apBook Store. Upper Rt. 7, &lt;Oil AKI,; Reg. Dachshund puppies, 1 box springs $29 up. 955 Second
Free Dell'~o~ery . free parking .
for Hotpoint Appliances ,
proved
dealer,
58
Court
S+.,
446-0002.
male, I female. Ph. 446-4999. Ave. ~46- 1171 .
Phono 446 11 71
Allison Electric.
Ph. j46-9255.
26-6
6-lf / .
10-tf
20·11
154-tf
308-tf

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

APPLE CITY
AUTO SALES
U.S. 35

----:----~

-------------"

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

•I

286-5700

�.

. ·'
~-The Sunday Times- Sentinel. Sunday, Feb . 6,1972

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times~Sentinel . Classifieds .
"otice

• WO -WAY Radios ~ales &amp; Wanted To Do
Service. New and used CB's, BOB
Lane' s
compl ete
police monitors, antennas,
Bookkeeping and Tax Seretc. Bob's Citizens Band
vice. 424 1 2 Fourth Ave .•
Radio Equip., Georges Creek
Kanauga. Ph . 446-1049 .
Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio. ~46- 4517 .
Bu-siness hours 9 ~ . m . - 1 p.m .
16-tf
Monday thru Saturday . Let
RALPH'S Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Cleaning Service . Free
estimates. Ph. 446-0294. Ralph
A. Davis, owner .

Sob

tak e

ca re

of

your

bookkeeping and tax needs
By appoi ntment only .
294-tf

Business Opportunities
FABR fC business lor sale. Low
Investment. Contact Albert
Folts, 1364 Colgate Dr .,
Marietta, Ohio. Ph . 374-5352.
6-tf

- - - -- -

2· NEW ALL electric mobile
Must

furnish

George
9·11 SEAMSTRESS wants to make
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
27-3
clothing and draperies. Ph .
DAY CARE
--,-367-7101.
Sun Valley Nurserr School ,
apartment,
28-3 FURNISHED
licensed by State o Oh io, 1'1'2
adulls only, utilities paid . 258
miles west of new hospital TEACHER
State St. Ph . 446-0085.
ava ilable for
577 Sun Volley Dr . Ph. 446·
27-lf
private tutoring . Ph . 446-3338.
3657 . Day care that says "we
~-=---,----,-~­
27·6 LARGE
two story brick home, 4
care ."
bedrooms, garage, gas hoi
_ __ __ __ _2_8-lf ALTERATIONS on all types of
water heat , rural water,
clolh mg in my home. Call
garden
space , barn, pasture
Mrs. Ross Northup, 446 2543.
Help Wanted
21 -26 available at edge of city on
Mill Creek, Gallipolis School
BABYSITTER from 8 to 5
District. Sl50 a month . Call
located in city area . Pt-.. 446· VI NYL and alum . siding.
446-1030 betweeri 9 a .m . and l
roofing
,
build
ing.
remodel
mg
.
9339 after 6.
p.m. Monday through Friday .
30·3 papering. Ph. 446-3608.
30-6
.
22-12
-----~
WOMEN!
ROOFING and gutter work and UPSTAIRS furnish ed apart BIG MONEY FAST!
ment, J rooms and bath, all
FAMOUS Studio Girl Cosmetics cleaning William Mitchell,
utiloties
paid. Ph . 4&gt;16-0322.
388-8507 .
and Hair Fashions needs 3
30 If
252-tf
more Beauty Advisors over 17
and

up

in

and

around

Gallipolis who want a start

earning up to $50 comm . in a

FURNISHED apt. , ground

Wanted To Rent

day immediately! Full or part FARMhouse at least 15acresof

time. No experience required .
Take orders anywhere. No
territory restrictions . High

profits up to 60 pet .I 300
exquisite Cosmetics, Wigs.
Wiglets and Falls. We furnish
everything. Credit extended.
No•slack Investment. For full
Information by mail plus 2

pasture and 5 acres of
workable land. Must have
barn, henhouse, pig pen , will
pay 2 years rent In advance
for the ri~ht place. Barney

Prince, 256-1249 or 256- 12~7.
26·6

fl oor . 4 rooms and bath, ex cellent locati on, no pets,

adulls only. Ph.

~46-1803.

28-lf

HALF of duplex, 2 bedrooms,
large living room and kitchen,

carpeted throughout , yard.
Water, sewer, garbage paid.

$135 mo. Ph .

446 -~806.

28- lf

For Rent or Sale

- -----

Also need ladies with car for

.
WE BUY gold coins anc sll ve'

..(J!gls.tered nurses and 2
licensed practical nurses for
evening, night and rotation

_27-6
--~·--~~·--------~'

•hilts. Liberal fringe benefits,

dollars. Tawney Jewe lers.

5-tt

competitive salary and ex-

beautiful suburban apts .
Contemporary
In style,
luxurious carpeting , i n·

dividually controlled heating,

color ·coordinated appliances,
private patios , many other
features. Lease S135 mo. Call
446-3772 for arpointment 1o
see model uni . 526 Jackson

. P i~e •. ~~,ar Ho lzer Med.
Cenfer.
THIRTY-FIVE WEST
APARTMENTS
20-: I

cellent working ~ondltlons.
Call, write or apply : PerSLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
•onnel Dept., Pleasant Valley
rates. Park Central Hotel.
Hospital, Valley Dr ., Pt.
308-If
Pleasant, W. Va . 25550. Ph .
LEGAL NOTICE
;
The unders igned w ill se ll al APARTMENT for construction
675-4340.
27-4 public sale for cash the
men . Ph . ~46 -0756 .
following
motor
vehicle,
267-lf
from Roy Pierce :
BABYSITTER Ia come to my retaken
1 - 1968 Dodge 2-Door Hard
home. Must have reference . Top. Serial No . WS23L8A 116717 SLEEPING ROOMS weekly
Ph. 4&gt;16·2950.
The sale will be held at the
rates, free garage parking ,
28-3 Farmers Bank and Savings
Libby Hotel.
Company , 221 West Second
289-tf
reer·. Pomeroy, Ohio af 10 : 00
EX-NAVY MEN to work on St
A .M . on the 12th dav of
river tow boats in engine Februery, 1972. · The un · NOW leasing new 1 bed room

lEGAl NOTICE

-------

room, must be familiar wi th dersigned reserves fhe rig ht to

GM 12-.167 series, also GM 16·
278 series or Cooper Bess! mer

engines . Send resume with
first correspondence, men

acceptable will have em ployment immediately. Write
Mrs. Lucy Anthony, Gen .
Del., Pt. Pleasant, W. Va .,
25550.
28-6

b id .

121 6, 11

THE FARMERS BANK
&amp; SAVING.S CO
POMERQY , OHIO

apartments, adults only. Ph.

675-3450 Pt. Pleasant.

296-tf

Real Estate For Sale
446-0001
THE NO. 1 number for Galli a
County, Ohio
FARMS,
LANDS AND HOMES.

Sa_lly Townsend, Milly
Barrett, Lydia Darrah, ' "Now" Possession
Hannah Thurston, Mary
Under $15,000
Videau ! Who are they? Just a IN TOWN . Three bedroom ,
story and half frame , ll/2
few
of the great American
call Mrs . Helen Yeager, Box
balhs. Alum . siding. Storms.
172, Jackson, Ohio. Ph . 286· heroines who, along with Molly
Full basement, Porch and
4028.
Pitcher and Betsy Ross, helped
extra lot. Very good con·
25-6 to · win
dilion .
the American
- - -- - Revolution. They, along with
A Better
our heroic men, helped HOME for your family . Like
new three bedroom frame .
America gain its freedom and
Six closets . Wife saver kif.
its heritage. Join with the
chen and dining room.
Daughters of the American
Hardwood floors , Sliding
BY RUBY SAUNDERS
glass door to patio. Attached
Revolution in observing
garage. $18,500.
Mr. and Mrs. Manual King February as American History
spent the weekend with their Month.
Need 4 Bedrooms?
son, Mr. and Mrs. Don King
Syracuse
and two children of West
SEVEN room block home,~ BR,
Jefferson.
dining room, country kitchen
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Sheets
with lots of cablnets, 2
visited a recent SWlday af·
paneled rec. rooms in
ternoon with Mr. and Mrs. recuperating.
basement . Attached garage.
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Sheets
Over acre land .
.::ustace Jeffers. Mr. and Mrs. called on Mr. and Mrs. Clark
Business
.l~ffers both have been very Caldwell. Mr. and Mrs.
ppportunity
poorly and their daughter, Caldwell both have been
Mrs. Opal Perkins has been poorly .
BE your own boss this year .
Well established retail !som e
helping to care for them.
Jimmie Saun~ers and son,
service
) business . Will sell
Mr . and Mrs. Ray Willis and Matthew, called on Mr. and
brick building and wareroom
two children, tou Ann and Mrs. Grover Smith.
• outrlgh l or lease . Possible
terms on stock . Call for
Matthew of Cincirmati spent
Mr. and Mrs. Shelly Slone
de
1ails.
the weekend with her -mother, received word of the death of
Mrs. Ruby SaWlders.
Country
Mr . and Mrs . Harold an uncle, Wilson Niday, who
passed away recently at his
Executive
Sowards were Saturday guests home in Georgia. He was
RELAX In this custom buill
of her mother, Mrs. Almira buried there.
BE AN Avon Representative!
Let me show you how easy it
is to make money and have
fun ln your free hours. For a
person~l interview. write or

Blue Lake

o.

Cox.
Recent Sunday guests of
Mrs. Mayme Gooderham were
her granddaughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Queen and
daughter, Sherr! of Chillicothe,
Mr. and Mrs. Burdell Forth,
Mrs. James 0. Gooderham and
son, Jimmie, Bill Gooderham
and daughter, Beth.
Mrs , Darlene Sheets called
on Mrs. Lucy Hamilton.
Mrs . Hershel Brumfield
re'cenUy underwent surgery on
her eyes at University Hospital
in Colwnbus. She is now at the
home of her daughter, Mr. al\d
Mrs &gt; R:verette McGomery

Randy Cox, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Handford Cox, is now
serving with the armed forces
in Germany.
Friends and relatives were
sorry to hear of the death of
Charley S. Johnson who passed
away recently at the Mt.
Carmel Hospital in Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs . Johnson spent
most of their life in Gallia and
reared a )arge family. His
. funeral was held at Victory
Baptist Church and was buried
in the church cemetery. Rev.
Webster Swain _officiated .
Several from Colwnbus al·
!ended the funerHI.

Evenina :
Ike Wiseman
446-3796
E. N. W~seman
446-4500

Thomas J.
FLYNN
Realty
Greenfield, Ohio

HERE'S AN AIR CON DITIONED HOME WITH
VERY NICE KITCHEN ,
BU ILT IN RAN(;E , OVEN,

two income units plus farm

-.

Call fror personal showinq.

.

~~6-0001
Oe~v e•

1&lt; . h1gley 446-0001
Wandt S. ~shenour 446-0003

· 'Strong, reliable 96 H)' overhead cam engine• Rugged tors~on bar front, heavy duty

ETC LOCATED ON LARGE

-OH~IO-:RIVE_
R

_

30·1

Realty

452 Second Ave.
446·3434 446-4775
L-------~G~a:::~o:h~io~------J _;J~ ACRES,
LOTS BUILDINGS
NEARLY new all brick ranch , 3 FOR SALE by 0wner . 2
- Nice laying farm in city
bed r ooms, 2 baths, w-w
bedroom home, with large
school district, fruit trees,

LOT A1 EDGE OF TOWN
Have Property You
Want Sold?
Please Call Us

car pet throughout, large
buill -in kitchen with breaK fast bar, large flat lot near

new hospita l. Ph. 4&gt;16-4700

Very Good
4 Bedroom Brick
THIS FULLY CARPETED
HOME INCLUDES A VERY
NICE KITCHEN WITH ALL
APPLIANCES BUILT IN ,

after 4.

21 -lf

Neal Realty

BATHS ,

LARGE FAMILY ROOM ,
DINING AREA. GARAGE ,
LOW DOWN PAYMENT
CEN TRAL · AIR
AND ihi s J BR home with full
LARGE FLAT LOT IN CITY
SCHOO L ·BI-S·T R tCT .

basement ·has just been
redecorated and is readv for
you to move in. Ha s carpet 10
li vi ng room, kitchen and one
bedr oom . Call tod ay lor

The Home Buying
Season Came Early
This Year .
We Need Listings.
NOW

details. Price $13,500.
lots on US Rt . 35 in Rio
Gra nde, Oh1o . Good place for
a business or 3 houses. Choi ce

living room, wall to wall
carpel. bath and utility room ,
wi th or without furniture.

plenty of water, old farm
house, good fences.

ONE ACRE IN CITY- Suitable

Phone 256-6328 after 5.
26-6

- - - -- -

for apartment complex, on

malo_r highway, plenty of
parkmg.

MASSIE

lot, clly schools, brick ranch

Realty, 32 State St

with two car garage, bufft.fn
kitchen, patio, city water,

Tel. 446-1998

owner will trade.

KERR- Near new, all brick, 4 . LIST WITH US chen. It has H.W. floors and
carpet. Full finished base.,
with a 2 car gar .. This house
has 1,888 sq. ft. l1v. area on
eac h floor . Located on near 2
A. level land. Bought for

replacement cost .

1

STANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Healing
215 Third Ave., 446-3782
187-lf

We have

buyers for your property. List
with us. We need farms and

city houses NOW.
Evenings
Oscar C. Baird 446-4632
D. J. Wetherholl 446-4244
Steven R. Bell 446-9583
•

,,

base. Low taxes, good schools

1s taking place . Pri ce $16,000.

REALTY
25 Locust St.

Nearly New By-Level
5 Bedrooms
YES , S BEDROOMS
LARGE FAMILY ROOM,
CARPET THROUGHOUT.
VERY N'·IC"E ~KITCHEN
!RANGE. DISH WASHER,
, ETC.) , CENTRAL AIR.
GA RA GE AND LARGE
FLAT LOT
IN CITY
SCHOOL DISTRICT
We Need Farms and
Bare Land To Sell
Land For Sale
111152ACRES, 'I• MILE RD.
FRONTAGE,2MILE FROM
DOWNTOWN , LOTS OF
TREES . HILLS
AND
WILDLIFE .
121 2 &amp; ONE -THIRD A.,
BEAUTIFU LLY
FORE STED , GENTLY
ROLLI NG LAND, WATER

AVAILABLE ,
SC HOOL S.

CITY

Howard Brannon, Broker

Off. 446-2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve. 446-1226

,.

'

"

two story home 832 3rd· Ave . 4 BR and bath ,

~SPAC I O U S

2nd floor. Four larg e rooms,
over size storage and en .
closed back porch . All on fir st
floor , part · basement. some
storm windows and door s,
front porch, deep lol 42' x 180'.
Now vacan t. The price is
right. Call to see. We have the

key.
Reduced

$1,000

TWO story frame home on a
deep lot 173'. 3 BR &amp; bath,
family size kitchen, formal
din ing room, fireplace in LR,

large reception haiL plenty
stora·ge space, two room
basement, front and back

yard, hobby building and
detached garage.

(3) 27 A , GOOD BUILDING
SITE WITH LOTS OF
Easy Living
PASTURE
IN
CITY JUST PERFECT for the
SCHOOL DISTRICT AND
retir ing couple . All electric, 2
RURAL WATER .
BR home, walls are plaster
and paneled . Nice kitchen
(4) WE HAVE 3 TEN ACRE
PLOTS 300 FT . RD .
with plen ty cabinets and
FRONTAGE. RURAL
ample ea ting area, TV room ,
WATER, CITY SCHOOLS .
storage room,
ca rport ,
TAKE YOUR PICK .
alum inum siding . Deep well.
Located on a large double lot .
Qu ick possession.

Want To Sell Or
Trade Your Farm?
Call Wisemans

Gracious
Spacious LivingYOUR fami ly will !'live it up" in

2 Farms For Sale

100 ACRES
BUILDINGS
517.000.00 .
114 ACRES
BUILDINGS

WITH GOOD
AND LAND,
GOOD LAND.
VERY RUN

DOWN . $17 ,000.
2 FARMS ARE

11"'

MILE

APAQT WILL SELL BOTH
FOR !32.000.

Wow! Here's A Dandy ·
4 LARGE

BEDROOMS,

LARGE FORMAL DINING

this l e vel~ home. Attractive
entrance hall leads to a Iaroe

LR

wi th

WB

fire -

place ,ccomfor table family
room, an extra LR on the
seco nd flo or to give the
children tha t wanted privacy .

5 BR, 2'1&gt; baths, walk-In

closets and plenty storage. All
rooms carpeted on second
fl oor Two over·size rooms in
the finished attic. Full divided
basement with all copper
plumbing, new central air and
gas furna ce. Shown only by
appointment.

For Sale

Now vacant. Price $12,600.

RIO - All brick, all Electric,
beautiful,5 rm . home, loc ~tted
in
excellero• , · ' ..... .,tial
section . Owne , ·~
1}e liv.
rm. for beaut~ , ...... This

6 A. UPPER RT. 7, 5 rm. block
house, 35 x 30 garage, Ideal
for any type mechanical biz.
$18,000.

UPPER RT. 7

Phone 446-2735

Datsun Pickup

' 187-ff
- - - - ---:-:-::-:-:-::
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
830 Fourth Avenue
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
155-ff

SMITH AUTO SALES

HAWK Insurance Agency, 541
Fourth Avenue, Phone 446·
2300. Fire-life-auto-church.
8-tf

KANAUGA, OHIO

66 PONTIAC CATALINA
4 Dr. Sedan, P.S., P.B., Radio, Factory Air,
Burgundy Finish with Black Interior

DEAD STOCK
ss:oo Servlco·Chorge

and cavity work, tree and

PUkiC
' NOTICE

'

'

'895

.VIII rei1)0ve your dead
horse and cows
Call Jackson 786--453)

ATTENTION
stump removal. Ph. 446-4953. 1
DUE to the present construction _
__ _ _ _ _ _73-tr_
in Gollla Co., we have several
1
out of town buyers I~ need of
Some people have tact. O!h&lt;,r&lt;
·1
FAIN
homes In this area. If you
tell the truth .
·
EXTERMINATING CO '· J
have property for sale, don ' t
If you feel neglected, think of
Termite &amp; Pest Control·
settle for les• Ihan nationwide
Whistler's father .
Wheelersburg, Ohio
advertising . CALL STROUT.
ALL NEW LISTINGS
Ph. 57 ~ -6112
i
FARMS40A. Here Is that very nice place
SPRINGFIELD TWP.
you have been looking for . 1- 90 A., Kerr -Harrisburg Rd ., ---::-:-::-::-:::-:--..::.:231·If
Nice 8 room , S bedroom home,
ALBERT EHMAN · !
2 barns, creek frontage, good
gas furnace, completely
Wafer Delivery -Service"
pastureland, 519,500.
furnished, also dozens of jars
1
Patriot Star R1., Gallipolis
of home canned frulf. Owner 2 - 76 ,A. Bidwell-Rodney Rd.,
Ph. 379-2133
only removing personal Items
mostiJ level and rolling ·----~-..::243-tf J
as they "'" moving ouf of
groun , some bottom, pond,
state. Pasture very clean , no
creek, $11,900.
brush, pasture fertilized and
TOWNSHIP
seeded, good . fences. Sold 1- 95PERRY
A.,
rolling
ground, pond,
1
$2,000 of hay this year, good
plenty
of
buildings,
12 rm.
corn land. Full line of farming
home, tob. bose.
equipment. Tractor, diSc,
plow, rake, efc. Barn and
- 163 A., good home and
other buildings . -Cio'e to 2 buildings,
56 A. bottom, 100 A.
village.
We 1111 onythlng lor
pasture.
'
'
onybocly. Bring your
If you are looking for a fine HUNTINGTON TWP.- 50 A., 2
Items to Knolls c.,...
loca-tion on Second A:venue,
munlty Auction hrn.
barns, log house, $10,000. ,
wa lking dl•tance to school.
Cor!Mr Third &amp; OIIYt.,
MORGAN
TOWNSHIP
See this real nice 3 bedroom
1
JO
A.,
pasture
and
woods,
For appolntmont a II
full brick home, modern
nice
5
rm
.
home,
barn,
pond,
446·2917.
Sift ovory
kitchen, dinette, dining.
$17,000.
Stlurday Evonlng at
room·, targe living room wlfh
70'Ciock.
wood burning fireplace, bath,
two half -baths, carpeted, full 2 - so A., yacant, $9.000.
CHEAP HOUSING
basement. Good lot extends
from Second Ave. to alley In 3 RMS. on 160, land contract.

--,

1970 VOLKSWAGEN

AUCTION
.SERVIa ·

AUCJJONE£1

Generation Rap
By Helen

and Sue Botte_l

OKAY IN ROME; A No-NO HERE
Dear Helen and Sue :
This guy is Italian. How do I get it across that he lsn 't in Italy
now? I never know (when I am near him) when he's going to
pinch me on the fanny. It's embarrassing, and he can't Ull·
derstand why because it's a compliment In his country. PINCHED PEACH

++++
Dear P .P. :
I had that problem once - and cured it by a "reflex." At the
first pinch, l!lY elbow would "just happen" to swing out and
connect with ·the guy's ribs, or I might tuni real quick and slap
him across the face. (Could I help It If I was jumpy?) He learned
fast! - SUE

++++
Dear Peach:
If this overly enthusiastic guy can't Wlderstand that "When
in Rome" also applies to "When In America (do as Americans
do)," then I guess you'd better practice up on pinch-bitting. But
try a little explanation about our customs first, i.e.: whistles Si; pinches - No, before you unwind your "reflex." - HELEN

++++
Dear Helen and Sue :
I've had It with this guy.l'm walking home from school and he
gets behind me and says "Wiggle, wiggle; boom-boom" until he
turns off at his block. Outsldeofpltchingrocksathim, what can I
do? He thinks he's so-o-o cute (and he Is). - SICK OF SMART
RDMARKS

++++
Dear Sick:
Waltfor him to catch up and then "expect" him to walk you
home. He can't make smart remarks V(hen he's busy trying to
make conversation. - HELEN

'

++++

DearS of SR:
... And If he doesn't disappear fast, well, kid, you've got
yoursell a new boy friend. - SUE
'

++++

Dear Helen and Sue:
.: What do you think of a guy who won't marry the girl, .won-'t
even pay for her prepancy, but says if she has an abqrtion he'll
~ something terrible, like kill himself? .
.
• That's the fellow I'm going with now and, though !love hun, I
'
wonder if he'd treat me the same way.
i I just found out about this other girl - in fact I met her and
talked 'to her. She's going to a home for unwed mothers because
he made suclla fusa about a legal abortion. But he doesn't want
allythbig more to do with her and told her this just after sh~
learned she was pregnant.
Does a nian have the right to insist that his former girl have
hli baby -when he wants neither the baby nor the girl? Maybe
It's IllS religion, but not hers. ·
.
And what should I do about hhn? -NOT SURE

.

l'lrhaptl you slloul.d dlacllll what you've heard with your boy
friend. Sometimes alllor)'lgeta pretty garbled from here to there
-eapeclally If lt'slold by a dJJcarded girl friend. - HELEN

Ptl 446-3444

fees

tax
are

11,000 miles, 4 speed, extra nice:

'1995

• 99

1969 DiEV. IMPAlA

2 Dr . hdtp. , cust., air, blue, black

'

1971 DODGE-----~2395

8.

Panel Delivery, 6,000 miles, auto.,
radio , same as new .

1969 BUICK ElECTRA
vinyl top, new Electra trade .

Spt. cp~., automatic , P.S., blue
finish.

'2695

'1695

1970 DODGE DART

1968 BUICK leSABRE

Swinger 2 dr. hdtp .. vinyl top, V-8
engine, automatic, P.S., air .

4 Dr . hdtp., gold, vinyl top, cus.t.
Interior . One owner, sharp .

• 495

'2395

Polara Custom 6 passenger station wagon,
Torqueflite transmission, power steering,
power disc brakes, air conditioning, luggage
rack, 360 V-8 engine.

1967 CHEVELLE
2 Dr . hdtp., 289 eng .. auto ., P. S.,
red, black vinyl lop. Won 't last
long.

D100 112 Ton pickup truck , 6 cylinder .

not

1971 VEGA

'2695

1971 DODGE-----s3795

To qualified buyers: The
balance due is $2020.00
payable in 36 monthly
payments. Interest &amp; Credit

State

1971 OPEl STA. WAGON

4 Dr. , air, vinyl top, blue, cust.
interior.

Monaco 4 Dr. ha.rdtop, Torqueflite trans.,
power steering, power disc brakes., air con ditioning, vinyl roof. power ben&lt;;h seat, 383 V-8
engine.

Equipped &amp; ready to
go with radio, un dercoat, tool kit, 24,000
mile
warranty,
mirrors, etc .

registration

1970 BUICK

1967 BUICK G.S.
2 . Dr. hdtp ., auto., P.S..

P. B. ,
maroon , black vinyl top, mag
wheels. XTRA, XTRA, Nice.

'129

Included .

'1395

NORRIS'CDODGE~ I
SO State Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

SUE
Dear Not SUre:

JIMME SAYRE

NEW '72 V.W.,
Model 1111

52413 . ~4 .

'2195

•2995

1971 DODGE _____ s4095

a

interest Is 11.95 percent per

Dear N.S.:
.
I think a man who won't marry the girl has no right to make
her declslona for her.
And I'd think long and hard before I married the creep! -

I

per ma .. e
down

'5500
Skylark custom , air, 22.000 miles.
Extra nice.

SAVE
•1ao·o

yr. resulting in total note of

++++

"SELL THE AUCfiON
WAf' .

SURCHARGE &amp; EXCISE
TAX HAVE
BEEN.REMOVED

$6704
$19700

Air cond . , AM-FM. auto . shift,
17,000miles, sold new in 1971 . New
cond.

1970 OLDS CUTlASS

· GALLIPOL.l~,O. ,

-

'"

1971 BUICK LIMITED

GALLIPOLIS

Life Ins. is $393 .44. Bank rate

WOOD MOTOR SALE

I I

! '

'3995

UPTO

Insurance

WOOD
REALTOR

CLIPPER MILL - S rooms and
rear . Good rental on rear of
'
both, carr,eted LR, oven and
lot. Quick possession. Shown BIDWELL - 7 rms. an~ bath,
1957 GMC 'to T. pickup, good range
55,500.
n kitchen, full
by appointment.
runni ng, ~ l · li d, $225. Ph . 4&lt;16basement,
deep
lot.
Price
,VINTON
- 7 rms. and bath,
4999.
510,500.
furnace,
s•.~. $500 dn.
5 A. tot. 2 A. lot . Both have
24-tf
LOTS
OF LOTS ,
beautiful
view
of
river,
eight
~-:----,.:--__:Wanted
WE
HAVE
several
nice level
USED
Mobile
Home
miles South of Gallipolis .
lots 1 mi. from new hasp., 100
Headquarters . Ali size mobile
L-i-s-t -i-n-g-s!
ft . front, 200 fl . deep, rural
homes in stock. B &amp; S Mobile
We had a very good year In
, water, $2,700, 1500 dn .
ANY TIME is a good time to list
Home
Sa
les,
Second
&amp;
Viand
.
selling
Real
Estate
but
we
I Pt . Pleasant, next to Heck's.
' FARM LISTINGS
your property for sale. We
need listings for the coming
have
an
acllve
den.and
for
N&amp;EDED
year.
Let
us.
help
you
with
67-lf
-::-:cc--=-::-_:,.-_ _
homes and small acreage. ! your sale In 1972.
THE BUYIN(' SEASON lsj,.'
LIST WITH THE BRANNON
around lhe corner. For ast.
~ E BUILT Eledrolu x cleaners,
Office 441·1066
REALTY TODAY - 'ITWILL ' ·
act11111 on your property, call
service on Bll r1 akes. Phone
Evtlltngs: Call
PAY .
Ronny Blackburn
446-9453
Ron Canaday 446-306
Branch Malllf•r ,
20'-12
Russell D. Wood, 446-4611

'5500

-DE
-W-IT-T'-S.-P-L_
U_M-:-8~1N~G

RUSSELL

446-1066

4 Dr . Hdtp ., ·demonstrator, air,
vinyl top_. P.S ., P. B. List $5151.

4 Dr. hdlp., air, FM. P. W., P. S.,
power door locks, 60-40 seat. orig .
cost $7500.

SM.ITH BUICK

AND HEATING

1971 BUICK l.eSABRE

9,000 .miles, air, AM-FM
stereo -tape, PW., PS ., new
Riviera trade.

~98-tf

3 A. - 7 RMS. &amp; BATH,
remodeled o)der home, :
located
on a BT ' rd. in L.f..;...-'-----~---~
property may be bought w•lh
Springfield Twp.
HOLLEY'S .DITCHING
3 First Lady beauty Salon
Stations, reception desk, 2
.,
COMPLETE water line in '
stallatlon, backhoe.- bulldoze ·
First Lady drying stations 5 BR . ~ 2'12 BATHS
Nearly new by-level within
and boring machlpe services '
and chairs . . All for $24,000.
J . P..l Holley,· Ph. 245'5018 0
, House for. :12'!,§Qjl. ;J,
• ~ wa)~l.rg .dl~laQce. _of new
NEAR ADDISON - Baby farm , hosp•lal on a large corner lot. 446-4344
Completely built-in kitchen,
·
1-t(J
of 5 A., with older remodeled
ww carpet, 2 car garage.
home, new furnace, new file
LISTINGS WANTED
ceilings, 2 rms. paneled, 3
C&amp;S Electrical Service &amp;
WE
HAVE BUYERS
rms . carpeted, Mrs. approved
Repairs . House w\rlng,
WE NEED SELLERS
kitchen and on Rural wafer
electric heat, motor controls.
line ; air-conditioned. Price COLD WEATHER SPECIAL Free estimates. Ph . 446-~561
this large stone fireplace can
511,500.
or
675-3361.
make Feb. feel like July.
GREEN ACRES - ~ yrs . old,
22·11
Lavely modern home with 3 - -- - - - - Brick &amp; frame, H.W. floors , 3
BR and 1'' ' baths located _
nlce br . rms. large llv. rm.,
close to town.
VESTA'S TV Service. Expert
beautiful kitchen and din ...
repair at reasonable prices.
area . It has a 2 car gar. with
Nicely Grover Rd., Cheshire, 0 . Ph.
elec. door. Located on 80'x150' POMEROY
remodeled 2 story home 367-7727.
lot. Priced in low twenties .
3-ff
LOTS- St. Rt. 160, St. Rt. 141. . located on a quiet st.
Presently renting for 5185 ""r - - -- - -- -- Bulaville Rd ., Neighborhood
ik.
Buy below replacement TERMITE PEST CONTROL
Rd. and Orchard Hill Rd.
1..~ ( :.1/,!&gt;UU,
VACANT LAND - 47 A.
FREE Inspection. Call&lt;l-46-3245.
Shoestring Ridge and 25 A. on
Merrill 0' Dell. Operator lor
State rt. 325 South of Rio NOT MANY LEFT at fhls price Extermlnal Termlf• Service,
- 3 BR brick less than 2 vrs. 19 Bel!"ont Dr.
Grande.
old. Cent. air, ww carpet,
FARMS - 100 A. on Swan
267-tf
built-in kitchen, 520,900.
Creek, big barn, some bottom
land, 6 rm. house, plenty
Central Air Conditioning
water, 1,600 lb. lob. bose. CAMPSITES - $2,500, ex&amp; Heating
cellent hunting, lots of pines,
$15,000.
Free
Estimates
localed 20 mi . from Gallipolis,
53 A. 8 RM. house, both, 2 rms.
Stewart's
Hardware
$200 down .
paneled, big barn, pond and
VInton, Olllo
800 lb. lob. bose. Price 512,500.
144-tf
BIDWELL - Like new 3 BR - - - - - - - - - ANY HR.-446·1998
home, would probably apE. Winters- 446-3828
prove for FHA foan, or make
SWISHER'S
AI Arnold - 446-07.16
a 10 pet . down payment and Plumbing &amp; Heating and
Eve., J. Fulfer- 446·3246
go conventional. ALSO, 2 eleclrlcal service. 367-7475.
Eve .. J . Berry- 446-3466
story home In good repair
306-ti
with 7 rms. and both, cellar, 2 - - - - - -- -- car garage and 3 lots.
SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and Installed
ONE OF THE LARGEST Russell's Plumbing, 446-4782 '
modern brick homes on the
297-tf '
market. 3 BR, bath, kitchen, - - - - - - - - - - dining rm., LR, and family
BANKS TREE SERVICE
rm . on ground level, plus full
FREE
estimate•, liability ln- 1
finished basement. See to surance.
Pruning, trimming ·
believe.

1972 BUICK.SKYLARK
-TUDOR SALE

RlJffiLL'S
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
21 Gallla Ave.
446-4782
297-lf
Brammer Plumbing &amp; Healing
300 Fourth Ave.
Phone 446-1637
Gene Plants, Owne;

. Stop in and inspect our large
selechon of used c;ars. You'll
agree they're the be.st in the
area.

1971 OLDS TORONADO

With air condition · power steering, automatic trans. ; V-8 eng ., white
walls, tinted windshield, dlx. steering wheel, carpet frt . &amp; rear, dlx . wheel
covers: protective b.umper strips. Plus manv more extras .

STROUT REALTY

and located where the action

WE BEAT ALL BIG
CITY DEALER PRICES!

• Half-ton capacity aUcsteel bed
• Full synchro 4-speed stick, whitewalls
• Proven durability---the ·No. 1 selling
import truck
))riYf1 a Datsun ... then decide.

of lots $2,500 or all three
Services Offered
for57 ,000. Would make a good . CITY - Located at 127 Kineon,
2 Bedroom With
GILLENWATER'S septic tonk
lof for mobile homes.
house is in good rePair, some
Excellent Extra
cleaning and repair, als
World's Lat gest
new copper plumbing and
house wrecking. Ph. 4&gt;16-9499
Building Lot
iee th is 3 BR home located just
winng. 5 ni ce rms . and bath, THE LEADER SINCE '900 IN
Established in 1940.
4 miles south of Gallipolis on a
full base., H.W floors with
SERVING THE Nl• : tON'S
HERE 'S A GOOD IOEA . 2 acre lot Pnced to sell
169-1
new carpet an ~ paneling in
BUYERS &amp; SC'.LE! ,,
VERY GOOD 2 BEDROOM
$15,000
'
liv. rm. Don't wait h.. see this
Ph. 4. ..
HOME , NICE KI TCHEN,
D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Wafe
Off1ce Phone 446-1694
one. Price Sl7 ,500.
FULL BASEMENT PLUS
Delivery Service. You
Evenings
THIS BONUS - AN EX CITY - 3 tli'l. - located oil a patronage
be ap
Charles
M.
Neat
446-1546
CELLENT BUILDING LOT
quiet st., carpet over HW preciafed. Ph.will
ADD ISON - Modern home.
446-0463.
J . Michael Neal446-1503
FOR YOUR NEW HOME .
H W fl oors, fully carpeted.
floors, built-In kitchen, utility
7-1
MOVE INTO THE SMALL
Liv
.
rm.
lo1'x18
'
.
Kitchen
room,
air cond., and carport.
ONE UNTIL YOUR NEW
!13,900.
t2'x16', plenty cabinets. Full
ONE IS DONE .
We Have Buyers So
Call Wiseman For Fast
Action.

·

Route 160 at Evergreen

3 BEDROOM RANCH - Level

bdrms ., larve llv. rm .• di_n.
rm and Mrs. approved kif ·

rear suspensiOn

Plumbing &amp;Heating

~46-0208 .

Asso. John Smith, Jr.,
Phone 446-3981

ROOM , DEN , VERY NICE
FULLY EQUIPPED KIT 36 Acres
CHEN , 2 CAR GARAGE ON 1 MILE off Rt. 7 on a blacktop
A LARGE SHADY LAN D· - road . Larg e barn, tobacco
SCAPEcl LOT .
base , .7 acres of extra good
farm land, one story 3 'BR
3 Bedroom In Town
home, dr illed well, well
Excellent
shaded lawn. Price 516,000.
Neighborhood
6 Acres
2 STORY FRAME HOME
EIGHT
room - ~ BRand bath,
WITH ~ORMAL DINING ,
fireplace In living room,
CAR P ETED
LIVING
country
ki tchen with plenty
ROOM , FIREPLACE , 1'1&gt;
cabinet~. plaster walls, H.W.
BATHS , FULL BASEMENT ,
ON LARGE LOT IN EX and pine floors, cellar house.
CELLENT
NEIGH barn , 4 car garage and store
BORHOOD . S26.900 .
building . Some timber . All for
$18,000.
3 Bedroom $15,900
brick · home with stone
2 B.R. Homes
f i replace. Deluxe kitchen .
ON RT . 160 2 MILES FROM
Master bedroom with all - TOWN . HERE'S A GOOD EUREKA - 4 rooms and bath,
garage - nice lot 75' x 100'. A
BUY FOR SOME ONE
ceda r walk -in closet. All
LOOKING
FOR
A
GOOD
River View . Price $9,000.
car pe t. Air conditioned .
AND INEX - RIO GRANDE - 5 room and
At l ached two car garage. .LOCATION
PEN SIV E HOUSING .
bath, garage, lot 100' x 163'.
This country estale ,also has
building . Includes 30 acres.

Datsun's Li'l Hustler Picl!up is built to build
your bank roll. ·

compressor . 1972 low profile
FOR SALE by owner. 2 story
18 ft. 5 for 51.850 . 1972 Sfor
brick at ~2 First Ave. 7
Master camper $1,325. Used
room s. 2 baths, gas hot air , units also . Camp Coni~{ Star
furnace .
Present
Craft Sales, Rt. 62, N. o Point
arrangement 2 apartments.
Pleasant.
Easily converted to one
20-lf
family dwelling . Asking
$35,000. Shown by appt. Ph.

This. 3.,bedroom home can be yours with a 33
,year mortgage and interest rates. as. low as 1
per cent to qualified buyers_.

2 Acres 3 Bedroom
Home Close In

CERAM IC

plan
you·

tained, sleeps 6, converter.

We've Sold 12 Since
Christmas
We Would Like To Sell
Your Home For You.

'2 lJ2

free samples wrlle STUDIO
GIRL HOLLYWOOD, Dept. 6 ROOM all electric ranch style SLEEP ING room. Ph. ~46- 2470.
28-3
M- ~79, 11461 Hart St., No.
home with fireplace , patio
Hollywood, Cal. 91605 or
and garage, finished re~ . 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
PHONE TOLL-FREE 800-621·
room with bar . The lot ts
total electric with washer &amp;
400.5. No one will call on you .
150xl60 on Haven Hgfs ., New
dryer, 5100 mo. at Cl ipper
Write or phone today.
Haven, W. Va. Sale pri ce
Mills. 2 bedroom mobile home
30·1 518,500 or rent 5100 per mo.
with auto. washer, air con .
Ph . 882-3258 from 9 till 5 or
dltloned,
fuel oil , water and
WANT L. P.N . or retired R.
(614) 992-3078 after 5:30.
se wage furnished. across
nurse to work in nursing
27-6
from Holzer HospitaL $130
home. Can live In if desired.
mo.
Ph . 446-0175.
Write Box 313, Ironton, Ohio,
28-3
Rt. 1.
Instruction
30·3
SEMI DRIVER
BRADBURY efficiency
TRAINEES
WE HAVE an Immedia te SEMI DRIVER WANTED
apartment. 729 2nd Ave ,
training ionopening in the accounting
adults only, no pels.
the -job type) with our trucks
departmen1. Job requires
26-lf
hauling steel throughout the
typing and shorthand skills. Mid
--West.
Free
job
Exceflent starting pay and
placement . For an ap - RECENTLY remodeled, ~
liberal benefits. Apply in
rooms, bath. All new fur ·
plication and interview, call
person between 8 a.m . and 5
nilure,
clean , no pets, adults
or write: TRI STATE
p.m,. Federal Mogul Corp ..
only.
Ph
. ~46-1519.
DRIVER TRAINING, INC.,
216Q Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, 2507
26-lf
North Verity, Mid ·
Ohio. An equal employment dletown,
Ohio 450~2 , 513·424·
opportunity employer.
NEW
1237.
29-2
2
BEDRM.
30-1
TOWNHOUSE APTS.
-----:-LADIES needed for good paying
BE WITH the first to choose
temporary office like work . Wanted To Buy
your residence in these
light delivery work : Apply in I HORSE, good for 4-H project .
person only to Room 72 Libby
Like to have it between 56 ln .
Hotel. see Mrs. Carter 9 to 1°
•nd 59 in. Ph . 446-3715.
a.m. Tuesday, Feb . 8.
29-6
29-3
100 OR MORE acres of roll ing
farmland. Write Box 205 c-o
NURSES
Gallipolis Tribune.
IMMEDIATE opening for 2

Off. 446;3643

reference . Call
Sheets 4&gt;16- ~571 .

Real E$tate For Sale

FARM fOr sale near Mer· FARMan WoOd•·MIII Rd . 1 mile
cerville . 52 acres, house 5
from Bidwell . 50 acrtl. 20
rooms and path, large born
acres in hay, 4acre corn base,
and tobacco bose. Ph. 2.16- plenty' water, small bar~. see
69611.
'
Jack Mills, ~- 0157.'
27~
J0-3
. '
HOUSE for sale. 3 bedrooms,
1'1• baths, central gas heatlog Campin• Equipment .
and air conditioning, Inside WINTER SALE, 1972 trailers 18
city l imits, river view, · 3t.
ft. 7 $3,299 retail for $2,575 ; 20
acre .
House
available
ft. 7 53,85~ retail for 52,999;
beglnnln~ of March. Ph . 4461971 24 ft . 7 $5,452 for $~,000 .
4885.
·'
All
Wander Stars, self con·
28-3

REALTOR

For Rent
ho mes .

Real Estate For $ale

The W·ISEMAN-·
Agency ·

DOC SMITH SAYS:

"DOC"
-SMITH

\I

DON WAITS
VOLKSWAGEN INC.
Upper Rt 7
Gallipolis, Ohio

Unoeramblt theoe rour Jumbles,
one letter to tach square, to
form four ordinary warda.

For Sale
SPORTS before your eyes- on
your new carpet -

~lYMJll~;"'-' ::::!t!-!c
I

JIJST ARRIVED at t_he Parsons
Furnlfure Co. a load of

CILRY

new living room suites direct
from factory . Many colors to
choose from. Some selling at
wholesale cost. Terms can be
arranged. Parsons Furniture

remove

them with Blue Lustre. Rent
elec tric shampooer Sl. Lower

G. C. Murphy Store.
J0-6

- -- - - -

AKC Toy Poodle puppies, 550 to
$65. Ph. 256-6247.
30-3
DON'T merely brighten your
carpets ... Blue Lustre them
... eliminate rapid resolling .

VORAF

I I.

rJ

Co., Kanauga, Rl. 7.
28-3
1

..,

tTANVBE (

DEEP WELL water pump,
large storage tank ; 2 Culligan
water soffners, 1 large, 1
small ; 125 bales straw or will

trade for cattle. Ph.

~46 - 4170

between 4 &amp; 6 p. m .

SEE THE NEW

1972 COA.CHMAN
eTRAVEL TRAILERS
• PICKUP CAMPERS
eMOTOR HOMES
eMOBILE HOMES

••••

Rent electric shampooer Sl.

Central Supply Co.

PARTS and SERVICE FOR
ALL TRAVEL TRAilERS

30-6

------

COLONIAL Early American
Stereo, AM-FM radio combination, 4 speed changer, ~
speaker

sound

••••

system.

Balance $78 .69. Use our
budg~t terms. Call 446-1028.
30·3

- - - - ----'-

BEAUTIFUL Modern Walnut

OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK
Y«•lerday'•
An.wer1

Stereo..r.1dio combination, 4

,.plolillllll- PARCELS

speaker sound system, 4
spee d

changer,

separate

controls. Balance $62.74. Use
our· budget terms. Call 4461028.
J0-3

MF 135 gasoline tractor 50
hours, MF 7 ft. mowing
machine, MF finger wheel
hay rake, MF No. 12 hay
baler, 5 ft . Bush Hog, 1 set
Ferguson 3 botloll! turn
plows, boom pole, 2 T.'

Comple•ely ried up in polldl

For Sale

New GMC

Truck Headquarters

For Sale
'69 MOBILE home, all electric,
1'12 baths, tully carpeted. Ph .
245-5696.
26-6

Aluminum
Sheets
USED

OF~SET

PLATES

HAVE
MANY USES

204

••••

BANK RATE FINANCING

••••

BUY NOW AND BE READY
FOR SPRING!

••••

1967 &gt;;, T. Chev. PU
1962 '12 T. Chev. PU
a for $1.00
1963 GMC dump truck
FOR SALE
1968 3 T. GMC
12x68 Mobile home, 1972
1971 '~• T. GMC PU
Rilzcrafl' Royal. Owner
New
11
ft
.
camper
manure spreader, Black
leaving
town .
1966
:v,
T.
GMC
Hawk corn planter, side
1967
Plymouth
~
dr.
sedan
delivery hay rake, automatic
PH. 3888446
water softener 1 vear old . Ph. 1968 "' T. GMC PU
1966
3
T.
Ford
dump
truck,
1 MILE NORTH OF JACKSON, OHIO
367-7534.
825 Third Ave.
exceptionally clean
StGN .. ul .:.11 .,n,l.l::. 111 ::. lock or
30-3
Gallipolis, 0. ·
1969' Roadrunner
printed to order . Billboard
ON
PH.
- ----1968
If•
T.
GMC
PU
plasti
c
with
250
letters.
make
NEW 1971 Zig -Zag Sewing
WESTINGHOUSE elec tric
your own . sign, S29.95. Sim·
1966 '12 T. GMC PU
Machine in original factory
112 T. GMC PU
roaster oven with dishes,
mons
Ptg
.
&amp;
Office
Equip.
Ph.
1963
carton . Zig-Zag to make
portable, good condilion . Ph.
446-1397'
For Sale
buttonholes, sew on buttons, 1965 1 T. GMC
For Sale
4&gt;16-2465 after 6 p.m .
5-11
1969
GMC
4
T.
log
truck
monograms. and make fancy .
ALL
TYPES
ot
building
25-6
USED FURNITURE
1963 1''' T. Ehe' . PU
designs with just the twist of a
materials. block , brick. sewer
FORTH
E
best
buy
in
diamonds
1967
12
T.
C
PU
2
sulfes, double size
single·dial. Left in lay-away
pipes, window s. lintels, etc. BEDROOM
go to Tawney Jewelers, 422 I BELL &amp; Howell fl. a zoom lens
1968 Chev. uburban
box
springs
and maHress, 2
and never been used. Will sell
Claude Winters, Rio Grande.
8 MM regular movie camera .
Second Ave.
good
living
room suites,
lor only $47 cash, or credit 1966 ·~ T. hevrolel PU
0. Ph. 245-5121 alter 5.
1 Kodak Brownie 8 regular
5-tf
refrigerator , maple twin bed
terms available. Phone 4&gt;16- 1967 IJ2 T. Chev. PU
278-tf
movie pro Lector , 1 Sylvania
1963 F600 Ford Truck
with springS and mattress,
4811 .
N
o.
2
Sun
Gun
movie
light,
1
WE
HAVE
the
largest
selection
1961
2
T.
GMC
·
dresser.
Rice's New &amp; Used
26-6
Prinz 3 way flash gun for WHITE ce ment, all sizes tile in
of men 's pipes in this area ,
1964 3 T. GMC
Furn
.
~
854
Secontt (across
over 500. GBD, Charatan, 35MM slide camera , 1 pr . hlp stock. 12" .and 15" field tile,
------~~~
from Texaco Station.) 446·
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum 1964 '12 T. Chev. PU
suitable
for
highway
ditching
,
Savinelli , BBB and Joby . All
boots size 8. Ph . 446-2465 after
.SOMMER'S G.M.C.
9523.
Cleaner complete with at.
concrete
blocks .
6
p.m.
priced to se ll. Tawn ey
TRUCKS,
INC.
29-lf
tachme'nts , cordwlnder and
Jewelers.
25-6 GALLI POL IS BLOCK CO.,
133 Pine St.
paint spray . Used but in like
1231!&gt; Pine St., Ph . 446-2783.
511
446·2532
new condition. Pay $34.45
.
16-lf '65 VW . Needs some repairs.
18-tf
Ph. •46-4313.
cash or budget plan available.
"
---::--:---29-3
CORBIN &amp; S~YDER
Phone ~46- 4811 .
FOR THE best dea l in a new or
J P's Tropical Wonderland,
396-375
H
P
Chevrolel
engine
.
FURN.
CO.
used mobde home try
26·6
415'n Main Sf ., Pl. Pleasant.
Ph. ~46 -2320 after 4 p.m .
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales, USED' Hollywood lull size bed,
Fish and supplies. Open It'
' 27-~ Kanauga, Ohio. Ph . 446-9662 .
complete, 2 Hollywood twin
a.m.
till 6 p.m.
IF YOU wanl to buy, trade or
s1ze bed complete, 3 pc
Reg.
miniature , _ _ __ __ _ __ 296-tf
17-lf Sl NGER Sewing Machine Sale•
sell used paper back books, AKC
Wdlnut end tab l e grouping ,
&amp; Service. All
models in
Schnauzers, 8 weeks old. Ph .
westerns,
mysteries ,
breakfast set wi th 4 chairs,
F:ree
delivery.
Service
stock.
deteclives and romance, see
4&gt;16-2497 after ~ p.m.
solid maple coffee table, red IF YOU are building a new
guaranteed.
Model•
price&lt;!
BettY. or Denver Higley at
27-6 CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
L•liltty cart . 4 woo1den chairs,
home or remodeling, see us .
from
$69.95
.
French
City
Red s Barber ~Mp and Used
open Friday eve ning until 8.
.
SERTA &amp; liemco Mattresses &amp;
We are builders . Distributor
Fabric
Shoppe,
Singer
apBook Store. Upper Rt. 7, &lt;Oil AKI,; Reg. Dachshund puppies, 1 box springs $29 up. 955 Second
Free Dell'~o~ery . free parking .
for Hotpoint Appliances ,
proved
dealer,
58
Court
S+.,
446-0002.
male, I female. Ph. 446-4999. Ave. ~46- 1171 .
Phono 446 11 71
Allison Electric.
Ph. j46-9255.
26-6
6-lf / .
10-tf
20·11
154-tf
308-tf

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

APPLE CITY
AUTO SALES
U.S. 35

----:----~

-------------"

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

•I

286-5700

�.
(

22 - TheSunday Times-Sentin~l . SWldny .Frb . S, 1972

.,

.

.

,

..

PRE.SPRING
NEW CAR SAI.ES
Smith Nelson Moton, lni

For Fast Results'· Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

~
· _ · ::_
.. ~
- _.:___...2·--~:_...._,.:....-......;.._~

·'·
Notice
Notice
~ound
Notice
Real Estate For Sale
..;ERMAN Shepherd dog . Bla ck A MI RACLE Revival, de· UPHOLSTER ING . SERV ICE, WI LL DO babysitting in m)
and tan. It lost, call 9'1 2·3906 live r ance for the · whole
comp lete selec llon' of , fa bri~s
home w ith chil dr en from age s
or co nta ct Bob · Moore , man; First Church pf God,
and vinyl to chqose from. Pick
2 to 5, phone 949-4703 .
Syracuse.
New Haven, W. Va .; George
up and deli very . Slater
' ·
2-Htc
2-6·3tc Oi ler , Evangel ist .. F ebruary
Uphof~t er i ng, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
9, 1972, 7:30 p.m. each phone 9'1 2-3617.
GUN SHOOT, Broad Ru n Rod &amp;
even ing .
2·3·30tp
Gun Club. New Haven, W.
Employment Wanted
2-6·6tc
Va. , Sunday , Feb. 6, noon t i lL
HAVE we lder, will t r avel. Local PART Dachshund and part KOSCOT KOSMETI CS and wigs
2-3·31C

Virgil B.

---

- ------

.TEAFORD

2-4 6tp

r abbit hound puppies to give

away. Phone 9'17-6656 .

!

COLONIAL ·

SR.

- - - - --

welder wants we lding job s.
Phone ~2 · 527 1.

Business .. Service.s .

for sal e. Br own's. Phone 992 -

5113.

12-31 -tfc

2·6·3tp

------LANCEJDT

GUN SHOOT, Feb. 6, 1 p. m..
Mile Hill Road. 20 lb. steak,

110 Mechanic Street

Po_meroy, Ohio
ha ms. bacons. Sponsored by
WE TAKE LISTINGS ANY.
Racine Fire Dept.

2-3-3tc

DANCE
WHISPERING
PINES
NITE CLUB

Friday &amp; Saturday
'Night, 10 Til2
Music By
Red Stewart &amp;
The Al1)bassadors

I

AUTO BODY •

Broker

WHERE
IN
MEIGS
COUNTY.
RACINE
6 ROOMS - 3 bedrooms, bath,
large living and dining r ooms.

Nearl y ne w gas furn ace .

Garage. $10.500.00.
COUNTRY HOME
10 ACRES - 4 bedroom ranch
style. p;, baths. ·Hot water
heat, 2 dr illed wells. Faun·
da ti on for 2nd house.

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core .
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

home. Bath, furnace . Large
kitchen. Garage. City water.

crocheted lams and scarfs,
hen door stops, toa st er
covers, ·painted items, etc .
Come and look around . Need
some new and different items

to sell . Phone 992-6710 after 6
p. m.

utilities.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992·2174

Level lot. Asking

$2,500.00 .
RUTLAND
NEARLY NEW- 3 bedrooms,

modern kitchen, dishwasher,
dining
room .
Carp eted
throughout.
Ba se ment ,

, ,

Cleland

•

The
Orchid Room

Wheel ..Alignment

$5.55

·Make reservations for your

private 'parties, banquets.

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094 ·
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open B Til 5
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

special occas·lons.

·

Ideal for meeting p!a ce with or wlthout kitchen
privileges.

Individual Catering
Will seal up to 150 poop/e.

2·3·3tp carport.
MIDDLEPORT
WANT WORK at home ad· CORNER
Phon~
- 3 bedroom ~.
dressing and stuff ing en· bath ,· largLOT
992-3975
992-5786
e living and dining
velopes? Rush self-stamped rooms . Ga rage . Near stores.
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36, $10,000.00.
Albany.-Ohlo: 45710 .
ALL KINDS OF
FRONTAGE
1-6-tfc 1200 RIVER
608
East
Main
POMEROY
FEET - For boat laun.
GLASS
POMEROY
ching , camping , and home
For Every Purpose
ABOUT YOUR WE /GHT ... sties. Drilled well.
HOME ·&amp; AUTO
We
specialize in auto glass
Hom
es
Wa
nted
ov erweight" ladies, teens and
BUY BEFORE THE SPRING
on the spot installation .
men interested in a Weight
RUSH
992-2094
Mirrors . Table Tops - Plate
Wat chers {RI Cla ss in
1- 3 Bedrooms; 2- baths; 3 HELEN L. TEAFORD,
606 E. Main Pomeroy
Pomeroy writ e: Weight
Glass. Small home' repairs ·
mod ern
kit che n :
4
ASSOCIATE
Watchers ( R). 1863 Section
basement
:
5
ni
ce
lot;
6
screens
storm
Windows
992-3325 992-2378
Rd., Cincinnati . Ohio 45237.
ALL PRI CES. AT ONC E repaired.
2+6tc
OFFICE SUPPLIES
10-3-tfc - - - - - HAVE BUYERS CLELAND
FREE ESTIMATE
- - -- -REALTY
,
HENRY
and
Point Pleasant &amp; Mason
SA VE up to one half. Br ing your 104 1ACRE farm on Shade Creek, CLEL AND , REAL TDR .
1
12
miles
from
Eastern
High
AUTO
GLASS
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop. School. 24 acres creek bottom , Offi ce 992-2259 ; Resi den ce
FURNITURE
AI Conard, Mgr.
151 Butternut Av e.. Pomer oy.
992
-2568,
608
East
Main
,
24 acres h ill pasture land,
Stop In and See Our
Phone 304-773-5710
POMEROY.
approxi
ely 56 ac res young
Route 33
Mason, W. Va .
11 ·21-tfc timber, mat
2-6-6tc
Floor Di,play .
5 room modern house,
--fuel oil heat, 2 car garage,
Help Wanted
almost new. Phone 667-61 29, Real Estate For Sale
Real Estate For Sale
Coolville .
RE CEPTIONI ST, pa rt ti me. H
2-4-2tp
WEATHER ROOFING
4 BEDROOM, bath &amp; half, RU TLAND - 6 room house,
&amp; R Block. Pomeroy , Ohio. - - -- - - - - laundry room , bath, paved
2·4·3tc IT is vacant ; IT has 3 nice lots; · utility r oom, built-in ki tchen,
wall to wall carpet &amp; garage. drive &amp; ca rport, city water &amp;
-----IT has bath ; IT ha s fo ur
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
Located 112 mile north of
gas , garden, larg e yard ,
For Rent or Sale
bedrooms; IT has range and
Ea stern High School. House is
exce llent loca tion . Phone 742·
Ref .; IT has wi de front por ch
5045.
almost
f
inished
and
other
s
6 ROO M all -electr ic, ranch type
and enclosed rear porch; IT
&amp; PLUMBING CO.
being buil t. Call 985-3598.
2-3·3tc
home w ith fi r eplace, pat io &amp;
ha s ba serrient ; IT has stora ge
·
1-21-JOtc
garage, fini shed recr eati on
building ; IT is pri ced to se ll ;
NICE 2-story home with full
240 Lincoln Sf. ·
room with bar, lot 150 x 160 on
IT can be bought today.
basement, 2 lots, new forced
Middleport,
Ohio
Haven Hgts., New Haven, W. CLE LAND R E A LT Y, 3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
Dba
Anthony
Pluml!!ng
Va. Sale Pr ice - 118,500.00;
HENR y C L E LAND , Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
Elementary School. Phone We have a complete Home
Rent - S1 00 permonth. Phone
REAL TOR , Office 9'1 2-2259 ; Plains. All new with total
992-7284 to see.
882-3258 9 a. m . to 5 p. m. or
Residence 992·2568, 608 East el ectric and ce ntral a ir
11 -7-tfc Moiritenanct Service lhe
992·3078 after 5:30 p. m.
Mai n. POMEROY.
conditioning, bath and 3;4 full y
· year around,. No matter who! I ·
2·J.6tc. - -- - - - - . , - carpeled, full ba sement , ·" I:IO.LJ ~ .r 14.U, Ll~coln , Helgl\ts. your need. Complete roof or
ao· AcRES. 3 bedrc\oms' and gara9e in basement. See by · tall Danny Thompson, 9'12· spouting repoir. Interior or
21 96.
bath, deep well and shallow appotntmenl, phone 992-2196
exterior corpentry. Ceiling
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson .
7-18-lfc life and Paneling and Siding.
we l l, on state route. JJhQne
Financing ava ilable.
992-6096.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
12-30-t!c SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
2-J.6 tc
Healing.
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Day Number 992-2550
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
We have 24 hr. emergency
Ohio, phone 237·4334.
985·3529.
service.
Thursday with their son, Dr.
t
11 -21-tfc
1-28-tfc
992-5803
742-3947
and
Mrs.
james
W
ebb
in
By MRS. FRANCIS MORRIS
9'12-3898 742-4761 .
The Ber tha . M. Sayre Colwnbus.
We are fully insured
Linley Hart and Mildred
Missionary Society met at the
First Baptist Church Tuesday Roush visited in Colwnbus a Roderick Grimm.
Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher of George Neigler.
evening, Feb. 1. Mary K. Yos t, day with Mr. and Mrs. David
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts HARRI SON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2522 .
president, presided at the Roush and Mr. and Mrs. James Akron spent the weekend here. of Patriot spent Sunday with
Laird
.
6-10-tfc
They
brought
her
father,
Mr.
meeting and opened with a
his
mother,
Mrs.
Fran
ces
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Norris Henry Roush, home after his
meditation, "This is the Book"
SIGNS, posters, mail boxes and
Mr . and Mrs. Jerry visit of two weeks with them. Roberts. '
and
with scripture reading and
fa vorite saying ; hand letMr. and Mrs. Larry Grinun
tered ; in your favor ite style .
prayer followed with the theme Bradley and two children of Mr: and Mrs. Rob Palmer of and son of Columbus spent the
David Hooker, Rt. 2, Albany ,
song "They'll Know We Are Gallipolis were supper guests Parkersburg spent Sunday weekend with their parents.
Ohio
45710 I Pagetownl.
Christians by Our Love," with Monday of Mr. and Mrs. with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
2-6-30tc
Lillian Hayman, pianist.
AfU.r a business session, the
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
Love Gift offerings of the
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 9'12-2478.
circles were dedicated by
·
4-25-tfc
Gretta Simpson, Marie Roush
and Ollie Mae CC1lart. "A Light
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Bearer" was the theme of the
BY JACK O'BRIAN
it; but plunked for later Sat. night show starts ... REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
program presented by Mar4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
NOVE~ SOUND
Carroll O'Connor refuses to do any more "Allin
Owner &amp; Operator.
jorie Grimm. Hymn, "The
STRANGELY FAMIUAR
the Family" albums or lhe proffered full~englh
5-12-tfc
Light of the World Is Jesus"
NEWYORK (KFS)- The glut of "novels" movie or cafe appear1111ce as his TV Archie
was sung by lhe group. limping to notoriety by recklessly tracing Jives
Bunker character; understandable: It's em- .O' DELL WHEEL a/lghment
Scripture, Matt. 5:14-16 and II
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
of living celebrities sloshes on: the latest barrassing being a bigot more than once a week
Cor. 4:5·7. Readings included
Complete
front end service,
alleged "creation" is titled "Thanks for I he ... British TV (which permilled TV about seven
tune up and brake ser vice.
"The Light of the Mind," "The
Wheels balanced e/ec.
Light of Compassion," " A Rubies, Now Please Pass the Moon," whose hours a day) now can run full time, ,and there
tron ica/ly .
All
work
Christian Woman is a Light", transparently veiled principals now may start will go quality - wall!
. guaranteed .
Reasonable
Few years ago we Interviewed Oscar·
rates. Phone 992-3213 .
" Wha t About Us ?" The cringing ... Its female character is a ''world
socialite,
widow
of
an
assassinated
U.
S.
7-27-tfc
wiming
movie
composer
Dimitri
Tiomkin
who
prog ram closed with prayer.
Refreshments were served in President " who marries "an incredibly ancient volunteered his disgust with both Communism
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete .Service
the basement to 18 members shipping magnate" named "Osiris"; it's by and sexsational fllms ; since then he's produced
Phone 949-3821
oldtime
movie
magnate
Dore
Schary's
flicks
In
Russia
wilh
Soviet
financing,
anand one guest by the Ruth
Racine, Ohio
nounces his next film will be "May We Borrow
Circle members. The table was daughter, Jill.
Crill Bradford
Liza Minnelli requested an extra suite for Your Husband," a short Graham Greene story
lovely
with
Valenti ne
5-1-tfc
decorations.
her Miami Beach Eden Roc engagement - but from Esquire about a brace of old queens who
· Sunday afternoon a baptizing won 'I say who will occupy it; the guessing is "borrow" a groom from his honeymooning SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Free
pipe Inspection . Paul Steinservice was held at the Mid· Desi Arnaz Jr ... Ginger Rogers is set for her bride just for the filth of it.
metz, phQne 742·5864.
dlepor t Baptist Church when Bill Marshall divo.rce filing ... "The Happy
Ill wind : Columbia Pictures added
1·26-12tp
ten people were baptized by' Hooker" is the tille of Xaviera Hollander's $1,000,000 or more by converting its foreign
Rev. Charles Norris.
squeal.aU memoir. She tells pals and customers currency Into newly Inflated Yankee Dollm ... AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
Mr. and Mrs. Thereon that Dell Books gave her $100,000 in.front; she's Tha~ old underdog-protector and agitpropoperator's license? Call 9'12·
Johnson are vacationing in the Dutch ho-house madame of Knapp Com· drama celebrity of the 30s, Elia Kazan, br911ght
2966.
6-15-tfc
Albuquerque, New Mexico, for mission in! arne who still knows how .to make a in his next flick "The Visitors" very simply several days.
phone-fortune.
using a lour-man non~ion filnl crew ... Alec
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson
tanks cleaned. Miller
The Howard Hughes scandal isn't selling Guinness will play Hiller in an upcoming fllm, SEPTIC
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
and c hildren of Baltimore books (courts stopped that), but it's selling
662-3035.
Ricltard Burton, Mussolinl ... The Steve
spent the weekend here to visit newspapers ... Tille of the new off-Bdwy. play at
2·12-lfc
McQueen-Paul Newman:Barbra Streisand·
Mrs . Simpson's , brother , the N. Y. Theater Ensemble: "John Wayne
:
-Sidney Pottier "First Artists" flick firm goes
Darrell Badgley who is
READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
Doesn't Hit Women" ... The British TV public this week.
livered right to your prolect.
hospil.alized at Holzer Medical
"Casanova"
series,
sifted
into
Irish
homes
via
Fast and easy . Free
Torruny
Smothers
hasn't
quit
his
political
Center.
estimates
. Pho.ne 992·3284.
North
of
Ireland
projection,
has
the
Irish
irritations: he's produced a movie wilh Nixon &amp;
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co..
Middleport, Ohio.
·
spent fr om Sunday until revolted - and fascinated; specific sex scenes, Agnew as Laurel &amp; Hardy4ypes ... American
' . 6-30-tfc ·
doily language (the gutter's English ), scacls of International pix just finished its swish on a
nudity etc ... Senior officer of famed bank classical chiller: "Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde"; ·sewiNG MACHINES. Repair
faces a serious $2,000,000 panic.
Doc turns Into his own st.ler ... If lhe unem·
service, all makes. 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Marian McPartland, great as any jazz ploymentfigure is &amp;pet ., how come 7pct. of the
Authorized Singer Sales and
pianist can be, got composer Alec Wilder to U.S. is on 11elfare, as new polls attest.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
custom a dozen of his lovely tunes for her next
Kentucky violinist Mary Kanner, 24,
3-29-tfc
neatiy titled album "McPartland Goes Wilder" audition~ for and got her poet with HaUfax,
a.~
... There'll be a mini-Cadillac in 1974at a hardly Nova Scotia's Atlantic Sympllony - by pbOne:
For Sale
mirli-$11,000 ... Is there anything prettier as Ma Bell, you're swell ... Bed mfgrs. will replace
1 ELECTROLUX Vacuum
counterpoint to this deadline typing than Bobby the old 54-inch-by-75 double beCI with a 60-by-80
Cleaner complete with at.
Hackett 's gentle brass brilliance? Hoora:• for job. No one ever bothered 10 cb•nge dlmenslons
tachments, cordwlnder and
paint
spray. Used but In like
Station
W!'FM!
More.
More!
'
of
the
old
standar~
•.
~trodUced.
a
Cllnlury
ago
•
new
cOII(Iltlon. Pay · $34.d
Playbill (program in all Bdwy. theaters ) when Yanks were lhree inches shorter and '30
cash or budget plan available.
ON YOUR DIAL . polled playgoers on the newish 7:30p.m. curtain lbs. lighter.
Phone 992-5641.
2·2·61c
time and they reported they tried it, they liked
•
••
•
.I
'
;~

Realty

.

Racine

1 ·5

-

Social Events

&amp;C.PICt4L~V

WITH 8A$1CJT8Al.L.

PI.AVIII.S AAOUNO J

-----

U 't ABNER

I

---

----- - -

.:
. TERRY

• '¥'

• . •,..•,

.. .

....... ... ·.

..

' ; ••.

..

\

.,

.

'383'

'383' v,a, T· fllte, . p:-st., p .·br •• console shift,
"mag"; covers; medium blue with !iark blue
•intl'rior.

1966 Charger 2. Pr•.HT

ACROSS
1-Grllft

6-SoMkrit
dloloct

lo-Klllod
14-Wtlked In

w•tlr

19-Land

au~d

by'wNr
21--MIM lflttance
22--NHd

23-Rot24-KIIters

26-Sowt ...

.......

28-Privlto WIY

--

29-'-PooHc:

32-F.. r

1
·

'
•·

_..,.-

71--Donmd

lOJ.-...Amount lnf'td

35-Britde
37-M8tl't

105-Thl cttmt
106-A contlntnt
(obbr.)

39-fn mutJc, hllh
40--€rHe .
(prinHncJ
41--£W'IrMF

·-·

l~F,.. of

Sale ,prices on above: ·
1970 Charger----.---- '2695
1,.7 ~harger ---~---- •1395
.19.66 :Chargen ........;...._~-· '1195

~07--com~ ..

"-tee

52- Toll
53-Pronoun ·
5~ ...... blrd
57~n

conlun-ctlon
58-Ump- ·
Sg.....ol'tlnt UH of
60 Note 'ot ICIIe

-.."'...

624)tuuured

·66-F'rench trtJcle
tl l~•bol for

DOWN • ·
l-Ate~ndt

tiD-Asheas
111-Piurtlendlnc
112--M IC8WI
113--f'ollah
115-Symbol for

2-Dorm•nt
3-lncllnod

124-Extrtml4y

terrible '
12'-Mtn't n•m• ·
127-Food fish
128 Rtcaunt
no-Rite and ftll
Of OCIIF

152-Dcy, crenultlld
atorcll
U~footf"'

·- ·

11-M,n't
nlcknllmo
36-Acolo

34-~pllnt

4o-tPtCkl .
41-t..octft
41-Gvll-llko bi&lt;d
45-DHt't horn
U-Hold••r
47-Liquld
mttsure

.,_,,,lao.
5l_,.ruHI

....

52-Rtmtlntd •t
S~UIIy,

eil.....Ofll.ftl of
httrfill

4-,--.R.muntrat~

s.!-otrt:
&amp;-l'o... t (colloq,)
7-Ptld notlolt

f.-Told f o i 9-Rtptlt:
• ._..... p i _
l1......,1t of IWint

12-Ab&amp;troot IMine
13--Wolcht (obbr.)

· 14-0INC!Ion
15-Unlt of
lltmete

.

curr.ney

l~o/IDwlnc

cert•ln fDOd
IM'OCrem

17-lollolokoa

11 l)epNMlonl
, 20 ·. -.GlMclry'l

• wolttlt

!59 *bttlnl
60---Act:utl

....,"

63-Exptlltd

tf-Act

t7-8iHtr vetch
f9-Symbol for
nlcktl

70-Wtll coetlnc

72-wttmltttktn
74-Symbol for

"""
77-wnm

76--Compn.t potnt

7t-$1Uor (COllOQ.)
13-MtllthHp

..-.

17--Entk;e
11-fDIIttltn

a..-Hot. of ICtlt
to-lioN in tlto

'

V-8 ·engine, automatic tra ns., p. steering ; factory air
conditioned, good w·w tires, rad io, dark green finish with
spotless interior.

1967 Dlevelle Malibu HT Cpe.-.$1395

Auto. trans., P.S., P.B .• factory. air.

70 Ford Pickup Truck

14~hlneN

milt

96--Ctntrtl
, ~trlctn tttt
17.-.sttlk

The U•ed Car Lot with a HART!

1QQ.--Pronoun
102-ce,. for

lO~tlnAtlt

109-LIF~er
ll~nlth

ltltnd
l U- Unlte cktttl)'
114-l.one~-

blrda

. U...._.,..ol)em,.d.t n
cor«mandtt
111-Court order

120-Purpll&amp;h·ood
. dyo

121-lntttumtnt
122-Amtnds
J2J--Ct1H
12!5-TrtiiJ
125--CtiJinl
127-Rttartt

V-8 engine. std. trans., good tires, clean Inte rior, green
finish, rad io.

"OWN A CADILIA~

Of Course You Can"

OLD F\JRNITURE, Round Ook
tableo. · Brass beds, dishes,

,_(pl.)

••CI-S1l'~pod

moldlne: '
141-Tableltnd
I

14~rtk:o

l4J.;,-..Girt's nemt

complete

153 8tholdl
15!-Tou...,lc dolly

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

Mobil Homes For Sale ·
60X12, 2-bedroom. all-electric, ·
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch
aluminum

awning,

aluminum sk irting, com .
pletely setup. Beautiful
location. Owner leaving stale.
PI! one ·9•9·4892 or 9'12·5272.
· 1-.10-tfc

1971

12' · 14' · 24' · WID£

MILLER
MOBIL! ti)MES

brown vinyl lop, mat.
chlng leather Int., full
power equipment,
Climate Control air
conditioning, AM-FM
radio, 1 owner new
Cadillac' trade.
WAS

•

COUPE DeVILLE
Black finish with green
leather Interior. full
power
equipment.
Climate Control air
conditioning.
'

WAS
UIOO

'5900

1970 CADIWC

69 CADIUAC

COUPE DeVIlLE

SEDAN DeVILLE

Tawny beige finish ,
brown vinyl top, beige
terlor, full power
equipment, Climate
Control air condltlonine.
WAS

'4900

Silver metafile finish with
black vinyl top, matching
interior,

full

power .

equipment, Climate
Control air conditioning. .
WAS .
S4tOO

13900
.

.'
C.ditlac . Oldsmobile
Open Eves. Til 6- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

. 2-6-llc

992·5342
GMAC Financing Available
Pomerov
" You'll Like O..r Quality Way ol Doing Business" ·

Clearance

For Rent
For Sale
• ROOMS and bath unfurnished USED baby bed, playpen, baby
1971 Model
· house, 1650 Lincoln Hts. · carrier, car seat, gi rl's winter
Phone 9'12·3874.
coat, size 8. Calf 9115-4203,
Chester.
-:-===:-:-- .,..,.,.._:_:
2-.1·6fc
2-4-31p
2 BEDROOM mobile home,
furnished, util ities paid,
FORD tractor , good con·
available now . Phone 992. 1952
dillon
- $650 ; phone m -6048.
SAV£ AS Muat AS
7384.
, 2-4-6tc
2-4-3tc
mixed . Phone Albany 698. 1 BEDROOM tra·i/er apart- HAY,
3290.
Idea
l
for
couples
.·
ments,
. Now GoiJie Mabile
. 2·J.6tp
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992·5248
or
9'12-3A36.
11.1i Models On Sale
2·3-,121c TROPICAL FISH, fan ~ y
S.lt Prlat Include De~t..n•l
gupples: angelsand br•ders,
and Set up.
4 ROOM house. furnished, at 124 Bellu and supplies: Phone
992-5&lt;143.
.
Laurel St., Pomeroy. Call 992·
Talk to Dan ThomfiiOII
5136
or
Inquire
at
126
Laurel
12-JO.tfc
Tom Llv..,.rer JOt Hood
St.
·
1HO INTERNATIONAL panel
-::-:---:---,---,.....::2_:
· t-Stp truck ; 19311 Buick Coupe; 1%4
4 dr. Ford Falrlane; Arabian
FURNISHED and unfurn ished
mare. 112 reglslered; G, E.
apartments. ·Close to school.
Aut omatic washer ; -4 1h acres
Phone 9'12-5434.
with
trailer ; phone 992-9943 .
10·18-tfc
Lot Phont ft2.7004
n -6tc
·--::----_.:.._
If no IMWtr, Ph. ft2·21t6 '
2 BE OROOM mobile home, 12 x JOHN Deere- manure spreader ;
Locu•t St.
60. adults only .! Phone 992· Harry Hill, Racine, Ohio,
Orton Dally 11196 .
5A43.
.
phone 247-2142:
Sunday 1:00 ros,oo
1-11 -tfc
H -31c

, MOBILE

HOMES

'1600

------

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

at

.,...
GOIILE

-HOMD, INC.

- -- - - -

'·
' \1

Your Chevy Dealer

Open Eves. Till

992-2126

Sale

For

Pomero.v

sale

~""-115, ~x'~gs· ' WAL'WO't • STEReo; MOdern
from new motili·· ·;;~';;.'e .
Walnut Stereo-rodlo com ·
Phone 702 -~7 .
blnatlon, • spMktr 1011nd
2-6-31p
system, • speed CheJI!Ier.
- -- - - - - - Balance U8.70. Use our
50,000 BTU gas healer wilh
budget terms. Call 992-IOIS.
blower;
Boer' s _l,l kt. ,
2·2-.ltc
Syracuse, Ohio.
2-6-3tp COLONIAL Maple stereo-radio
-AM·FM radio, 4 spuken. 4
H &amp; N DAY old or started
speed automatic turntable.
Leghorn pullets. Both floor or Balance $79.32. Use our
cage grown available.
budget l.,;ms. Call 992-7085.
Poultry
housing · &amp;
2·2-.ltc
automation . Modern Poultry, :__~----'-399 W. Main, Pomeroy, 992· NEW 1971 Zig-Zag Sewing
2164.
Machine In original factory
• 2-6-llc ttriQn , Zig-Zag to make
buttonhottt, sew on buttons,
t;OAL, limestone. Excelsior
moribgrams and mike fancy
· Salt Works, E. Main St.,
dftlgna with lust the twist of •
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
single-dial. Left tn ley..way
4-9-Ift
and ne- bMn used. Will sell
for only 547 cash, or. cndll
POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy, terms available. Phone 992·
Park view Kennels, Phone 992.
5641.
5443.
· 2-2-6tc
...;___
fl.15-tfc

____

WIN AT BRIDGE

ARCH Proves-Right Code
NORTH

5

• J987
.. 73

1220 Wtllllngton Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio
FOR THE BEST deal) n a new
or used mobile home, , try
Kanauga Mobile Home Sates,
Kanauga, Ohio.
12·17-901c

1971 CADiwc

KARR &amp;VANZANDT

., IDe.

'

- - -- -COUPE DeVIu.E
Tawny beige finish,

ISI-fooncbtor
"summer''

Pomeroj Motor Co.

- -- - --

SALES-SERVICE

households . Write M. D.
Miller, Rl. •· Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call 992-6271 .
12.11-ttc

131- Wom IWI)'
132-wtlt on

131-1'•" of

4 Door H.T. Sedan, local owner, sharp Interior, vinyl roof
&amp; dark blue finish, factory air, good w-w !Ires, rad io &amp;

For

·' 12!1-Ciotll
mettunl (pl.)

133-Wtr &amp;od
Ill-Jury lltt
13'-C.., off

1967 Olevrolet Impala. ______$1495
1965 DlevrOiet Sta. Wagon-----$595

' OLD
POCKET '· ·kn lvesl
especially Case XX . Also
have other old knives to lrade
or sell . Phone 992-2343.
'
1-18-lfc

and

New ring lob. dean lnter,lor, good !Ires. radio. heater.
Sharp black fi nish.

heater.

To Buy

cloc-ks, . and-or

327 engine,' A speed trans., clean Inter-lor &amp; good tires .
Med. grn . finish . Nice.

1966 Volkswagen Sq. Back SedaQ$1095

70 Hornet

~

WMP0/1390

--

1969 Die¥. Impala Cpe, ---:--$2095

(tbbr,)

144-DII-md
15-Servtnt ·
147-Dtwn ~Ht~n•
86 l'tet:Nttlon ,,., Ut Sa.k up

We talk to you
like

I

old

!S~mpotent

1011-Wit IWIN Of

·~·pnt
121- Mtstlln by
who

93-Mtdlclntl
pltnt

..Hiemtnt

point

n'I. .IUN

31-Wtlk

21-Europ.tn

'4-G'""I•nd

pltntl

.....,

oval tires, 4 speed trans., power steering, radio. A
; sweetheart ol a buy .

than 22,000 miles bY loca l owner, radi o, new w-w tires. A

.

92-Manuscrfptt

Green fi nish. bfk . vinyl roof, green vinyl Interior. new
wide

sharp model priced to please.

69 Ford LTD VI

or 992·2152 MIDDLEPORT

27..-8trik• out

Cpe. ~ ... ---$2295

350 v.a engine. automatic, power steering consnle,
beautiful dark green, finished with green vinyl ri&gt;of. Less

61 Volkswagen Bug
66 Volkswcigen ·lug
61 Volkswagen Bus

WE STILL HAVJ: A FINE SEL,ECTION OF
RUPP MINI BIKES ON DISPLAY.

DEPENDABLE CITY

tl-With mouth

color, bl k. vin y l inter ior .

1970 Camaro Coupe ·-------'2795

. ·. RAWLINGS

· women

Germtnr

70 Chevrolet VI

6 Cyl., siand. trans. •

21-Fiower

new car trade In, 13.000 miles, automatic

tra ns., luggage rack, radio, chrome wheel oovers, blue

5,000 milts by local owne r, p. steering, automatic trans., 6
tyl. engine, P.B., radio, white walls, beautiful belgellnlsh
&amp; blk., interlor. Like new.
·

V-8, 3 sp.• power steering.

V-8, auto. trans., power steering, power brakes, deluxe.

... - ,.·-

l ocal 1 owner,

I

1970 Ncwa Dlevy II 4 Door ·---$2195

'
'
.
See Emerson. Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolle,
Wallace Amberger, Dick Rawlings.

Wanted

"•

Special, ·V-8, auto. trans.

'318' V-8, ·t .fllte. ·p. ·st., console shift, same
type as C~bove. 4 buckets, white with red in ·
terior .' : : ·

25-Pitn:e

160-Unwtnted

42-lltut up ·
44-.ChltHM
4&amp;-lotlot
corium
47-Metal fltt.ner't l17--Ett IWIY
411-Proround
119--ftrlnttr't
50

(COfiOCJ.)

73-,tvor
137-Tnt
75-Stllf&gt;
1 3 9 - -.
17-Wh'lll..
140 lpltn
71-111ouM
141-.. ltllllo
IU-..Wolk woo~/{
11-&lt;:ompttt pofnt 145-Cry or dow
12-conHnuad
. 144-locka - . ,
14........ _1&gt;)'
•• Llftlld for
the Mnlft
11-f'oot: I~W~rs
150-kltltrs
17--MttttHf·ftct
152-ftl)ectt
19-Af'ttlmoon
_1 5l-le defttted
"""'
.
154-Affoctlon
92-City In lttly
1!55-Couch
95 "pportlona
1!57-Wipe out
9a...-lmpfoJed
1!51 ltmi·PreciOUt
99 Stlb:hlnc
stone
101-Enthu.. tsm
1!59-Distrtct In

33-Stotlon
34 Smtll child
ntckntme

p-

~-~r

U~loor's

618ulck 2 Dr. Sedan

.1966 .Charger .2 Dr. HT

SWNDAYI fEBRUARY
6, li!l72
•I

ll-lllrd'a homo

brakes , factory. a ir .

Auto . trans .• poWer steering, power brakes .

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-.21.14_ _ _ __

' I

1

Your-Money Used Car Selection
1971 Volkswagen Sq. Back Sedan '2495

1970 DleveHe SS396

2 Dr., H. T., V-8, auto. trans., power steering, power

69 Ford Mustang

'

'

!

69 Chevrolet Impala

• '318' V-8, T·fllte, p.·st •• console' shift, "one of a
kind" ~bucket seats, panel behind rear seats
fol~s down for full length between front seats
and trunk, .silver with red interior .

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
.

,

.

"

Auto Sales
white with 1~69 DODGE Swing.,;, 2 door 1967 PONTIAC , 3 seal, 9
power hardiOj), . v.e. standard, still
passenger slat/on wagon,
brakes.
under warranty - $975;
pow&amp;r steering and power
phone 9'12-6048.
brakes, while finish .with
2·6·3tc
2·4·6tc
bla ck. lnterio•, excellent
condition.
Priced to self fast.
i;;.6;2fF~AULrc:0oiiiN:-,-;;g;;;ood;;;-:~;iiu,,. .-6-9 -C!i- EV_R_O_L_E_T_I_m_p_al.:..a,- 4·dr: Call 7•2-4745,
Michael· Cllf·
phone 949·322].
dark green, vinyl hardtop,
for.d.
2-2-61c light green finish, '3So, va,
2·3-3tc
~--------:--automatic, factory air, low
VOLKSWAGEN. 2 door mileage, power, excellent 1969 FORD F-100. custom. V8.
360 cu. ln .• automatic, will
sedan, good condition - S450; condition. Phone 742·•745, Bill
phone ~2-6048 .
Jewell.
cbnslder trade. Phone 992·
.
H -6tc
6372.
2·J.3tc
2·3-6tc

........ -. . '

69 Ford Mustang

Milch I, v.e, auto. trans., power steer ing~ power brakes.

1967 Charger 2 Dr. HT

.

a

V-8, T•fllte,

Auto Slles

~~

More-for.

USED' CARS

p. ·si.• p·.· br.; console shift,
"mag." wheel$• stereo tape deck. die; . green .
vinyl roof. vinyl inter .
·
.

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.
Ph,

a.arger 2 Dr .HT

19~0

CJ

I'ONiw:

'

'·

" ..

C
_·· .'.

soo E.·Main St. .

·

~terve;

rv eroy, 01119

00 J
iuan

the

Rawlings will help. Here are
4 units from Dodge that will
get you headed the right
way,.

Come in &amp; see Bill Nelson, ~· Smith, Ceward
Calvert or Ed Bartels. Open .e venings till 1
p.m. &amp; Sat. till 5 p.m . Service open' till 12 noon

AU.

.

.

had

~tner

1972 SKYLARK 2 Dr. H. T. Flame orange •
white top. auto .• 350, P.S.. P. B. Sticker Price
$3762.82.
·
: Your Price $3275
1972 BUICK Le SABRE Custom 2 Dr. HT,
· White wit~ black vinyl top. factory air. Sticker
' Price S5024.0S.
·
Now $4250
1'972 · PONTIAC LEMAN$, 4·Dr. Sed1n1 350
engine. auto ., P.S. Sticker PriceS3S58:lo. Now
. $3190. .~
1972 SKYLARK, 4 Dr. Sedan. All white, 350
eng .•.auto., P.S., P. B. Sticker Price
$3~48.45.
Now S3270
1972 PONTIAC 'CATALINA Brougham, 2 Dr.
HT. All white wllhwhite .lnterlor. factory air,
P.S.• P. B., radlo1 rear spea ~er. Mag Wheels.
This Is a real sharp car. Sticker Prjcl!
$4849.90. , . .
•·
· Now 54125
. 1~72 CATALINA· BROUGHAM; 4 Dr. stdan.
SOlid' green, factory ·alr,.'r alllo, white walls ..
Sticker Prlce$4821.90. '
•·' Nciw$4100
'1972 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2 .Dr. H.T., white
· with blue top, factory air. Stlcke~ Price
$477 4.
.
·
Now 54060

percentage rate.

. EXPERT

.

Plloni 992-2174
.
·
"-m

You say you've 1lways
wa~tttd to be • "Sport" and

We Servl~e What We Sell
Our .Word Is Our Bond

CAL.L
BILL NELSON, 992-3657
HILTON WOLFE, 949-3211
TOM CROW, 992-2580
DALE DUTTON, 992·2534

breakfa st nook . For ced air
furnace. Central air. Doubl e

garage. $14,500.00.
.
RURAL
NICE - 3 bedroom renovated

FOURNEWHOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONe HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SY~ACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PC.T. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16.900.00 home can . be purchaSed with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a"famlly .wllh a base
salary .of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual

'I

MIDDLEPORT
8 ROOMS - 4 bedrooms, bath,

HI DO EN Treasures Gift $11,000.00.
Shoppe on Co. Rd. 34 nea r
SYRACUSE
Royal Oa k Pa rk , has 4 ROOMS - Full basement, all

•
••
•
l

537 -High St:.
Middleport, Ohio
Complete body repairs
and ·paintings, glass
installation,
free
loaner
cars
and
es llm.,.tes, also
mechanical
repairs.
Phone 992-3793

500 E. Main St.

•.

At Your 'Chevrolet Dealer

---,·-- ·- - -

• Q72
.AKIOS

WEST
.K6 3
¥A S
t10864
.8762

..\5

SOUTH

EAST
.QIO U
¥109862
tA3
.93
(D)

¥KQJ4
+KJ95
.QJ4

lo the Stayman two club bid
to show four hearta and that
the biddlns had shown he
didn't hold lour spades.
He wouldn't be a b I e to
C o u n t enough winners to
beat three no-t1 ~mp, but
Selld $1 fol II.COI'f MDIJfiiN 6oolo

to: ·w;, at lriltt.'' (c/o tllir ...,,_
poper/, P.O. lo• • • •olio City
Settion, Hrw Yorio, N.Y. 10019.

when he a s k e d himself,
" :tow can I beat this con·
Both vulnerable
tract? " the .answer .would
Weol North t:.ast South
be, "Not with any lead but
! N.T.
a low spade." Then 'he
Pass 2•
Pass 2•
would lead the spade deuce .
Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
South would be helpless.
P...
His
best play would be tD
Opening lead- t 4
play low. West would take
his king and lead back the
By 01wald &amp; James Jacoby six. Dummy would follow
East won the first trick and East would have to
with the ace of diamonds and make one other good play
promptly led back the three and duck. Declarer would be
spot. After this start South forced to play his ace and
had no trouble collecting 10 when West got in with the
ace of hearts he would lead
tricks, game and rubber .
his last spade to set declarer.
East remarked t h a t he
{NlWSPAPII lHTl~H.IH ASSN.)
never held any cards. He
pointed out that six high·
card points seemed to be his
normal qu o l a. He thougHt
The bidd ing has been:
about qu itting bridge to take
Souih
up gin r ummy or backgam . West North Eat
Pass
mon .
Pass
P011
East's six p o i n. t s plus
?
4•
Paaa
West's seven w o u I d have Pass
You, South, hold:
been enough lo defeat the no.
trump game if E a s I had • 18154. AQI tAU
Wh.1t do yOu do now!
taken lime to think instead
A- hu, wltll- ... baers.
ol just giving up . .
Bid
Ove ...... wllh a ,..._
All East had to do was to
who
u... 'die p,.., to ' - • a
use the code word ARCH.
very &gt;11'01111 bid• ..,. n.........
He would Analyze the lead call says, "Don't. w...,.y a~t die
as rourlh best since he was unbid sui ts, but yuu need very
I o o k i n g al lhe deuce in Jt'tMMI trumps...
,
dumm y and the three in his
'.
TOIM Y'S QUilSTioN
own hand. T;tal wo t~d give
Instead of bidd int~ four spades,
declarer four dia monds a lso. yout· partne r has jumped to two
He would Review the bid· no~tru nap over your one apldto.
ding and see that South had What do you do now?
bid two hearts in res ponse

t.

I.

•u

�.
(

22 - TheSunday Times-Sentin~l . SWldny .Frb . S, 1972

.,

.

.

,

..

PRE.SPRING
NEW CAR SAI.ES
Smith Nelson Moton, lni

For Fast Results'· Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

~
· _ · ::_
.. ~
- _.:___...2·--~:_...._,.:....-......;.._~

·'·
Notice
Notice
~ound
Notice
Real Estate For Sale
..;ERMAN Shepherd dog . Bla ck A MI RACLE Revival, de· UPHOLSTER ING . SERV ICE, WI LL DO babysitting in m)
and tan. It lost, call 9'1 2·3906 live r ance for the · whole
comp lete selec llon' of , fa bri~s
home w ith chil dr en from age s
or co nta ct Bob · Moore , man; First Church pf God,
and vinyl to chqose from. Pick
2 to 5, phone 949-4703 .
Syracuse.
New Haven, W. Va .; George
up and deli very . Slater
' ·
2-Htc
2-6·3tc Oi ler , Evangel ist .. F ebruary
Uphof~t er i ng, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
9, 1972, 7:30 p.m. each phone 9'1 2-3617.
GUN SHOOT, Broad Ru n Rod &amp;
even ing .
2·3·30tp
Gun Club. New Haven, W.
Employment Wanted
2-6·6tc
Va. , Sunday , Feb. 6, noon t i lL
HAVE we lder, will t r avel. Local PART Dachshund and part KOSCOT KOSMETI CS and wigs
2-3·31C

Virgil B.

---

- ------

.TEAFORD

2-4 6tp

r abbit hound puppies to give

away. Phone 9'17-6656 .

!

COLONIAL ·

SR.

- - - - --

welder wants we lding job s.
Phone ~2 · 527 1.

Business .. Service.s .

for sal e. Br own's. Phone 992 -

5113.

12-31 -tfc

2·6·3tp

------LANCEJDT

GUN SHOOT, Feb. 6, 1 p. m..
Mile Hill Road. 20 lb. steak,

110 Mechanic Street

Po_meroy, Ohio
ha ms. bacons. Sponsored by
WE TAKE LISTINGS ANY.
Racine Fire Dept.

2-3-3tc

DANCE
WHISPERING
PINES
NITE CLUB

Friday &amp; Saturday
'Night, 10 Til2
Music By
Red Stewart &amp;
The Al1)bassadors

I

AUTO BODY •

Broker

WHERE
IN
MEIGS
COUNTY.
RACINE
6 ROOMS - 3 bedrooms, bath,
large living and dining r ooms.

Nearl y ne w gas furn ace .

Garage. $10.500.00.
COUNTRY HOME
10 ACRES - 4 bedroom ranch
style. p;, baths. ·Hot water
heat, 2 dr illed wells. Faun·
da ti on for 2nd house.

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core .
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

home. Bath, furnace . Large
kitchen. Garage. City water.

crocheted lams and scarfs,
hen door stops, toa st er
covers, ·painted items, etc .
Come and look around . Need
some new and different items

to sell . Phone 992-6710 after 6
p. m.

utilities.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992·2174

Level lot. Asking

$2,500.00 .
RUTLAND
NEARLY NEW- 3 bedrooms,

modern kitchen, dishwasher,
dining
room .
Carp eted
throughout.
Ba se ment ,

, ,

Cleland

•

The
Orchid Room

Wheel ..Alignment

$5.55

·Make reservations for your

private 'parties, banquets.

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094 ·
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open B Til 5
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

special occas·lons.

·

Ideal for meeting p!a ce with or wlthout kitchen
privileges.

Individual Catering
Will seal up to 150 poop/e.

2·3·3tp carport.
MIDDLEPORT
WANT WORK at home ad· CORNER
Phon~
- 3 bedroom ~.
dressing and stuff ing en· bath ,· largLOT
992-3975
992-5786
e living and dining
velopes? Rush self-stamped rooms . Ga rage . Near stores.
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36, $10,000.00.
Albany.-Ohlo: 45710 .
ALL KINDS OF
FRONTAGE
1-6-tfc 1200 RIVER
608
East
Main
POMEROY
FEET - For boat laun.
GLASS
POMEROY
ching , camping , and home
For Every Purpose
ABOUT YOUR WE /GHT ... sties. Drilled well.
HOME ·&amp; AUTO
We
specialize in auto glass
Hom
es
Wa
nted
ov erweight" ladies, teens and
BUY BEFORE THE SPRING
on the spot installation .
men interested in a Weight
RUSH
992-2094
Mirrors . Table Tops - Plate
Wat chers {RI Cla ss in
1- 3 Bedrooms; 2- baths; 3 HELEN L. TEAFORD,
606 E. Main Pomeroy
Pomeroy writ e: Weight
Glass. Small home' repairs ·
mod ern
kit che n :
4
ASSOCIATE
Watchers ( R). 1863 Section
basement
:
5
ni
ce
lot;
6
screens
storm
Windows
992-3325 992-2378
Rd., Cincinnati . Ohio 45237.
ALL PRI CES. AT ONC E repaired.
2+6tc
OFFICE SUPPLIES
10-3-tfc - - - - - HAVE BUYERS CLELAND
FREE ESTIMATE
- - -- -REALTY
,
HENRY
and
Point Pleasant &amp; Mason
SA VE up to one half. Br ing your 104 1ACRE farm on Shade Creek, CLEL AND , REAL TDR .
1
12
miles
from
Eastern
High
AUTO
GLASS
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop. School. 24 acres creek bottom , Offi ce 992-2259 ; Resi den ce
FURNITURE
AI Conard, Mgr.
151 Butternut Av e.. Pomer oy.
992
-2568,
608
East
Main
,
24 acres h ill pasture land,
Stop In and See Our
Phone 304-773-5710
POMEROY.
approxi
ely 56 ac res young
Route 33
Mason, W. Va .
11 ·21-tfc timber, mat
2-6-6tc
Floor Di,play .
5 room modern house,
--fuel oil heat, 2 car garage,
Help Wanted
almost new. Phone 667-61 29, Real Estate For Sale
Real Estate For Sale
Coolville .
RE CEPTIONI ST, pa rt ti me. H
2-4-2tp
WEATHER ROOFING
4 BEDROOM, bath &amp; half, RU TLAND - 6 room house,
&amp; R Block. Pomeroy , Ohio. - - -- - - - - laundry room , bath, paved
2·4·3tc IT is vacant ; IT has 3 nice lots; · utility r oom, built-in ki tchen,
wall to wall carpet &amp; garage. drive &amp; ca rport, city water &amp;
-----IT has bath ; IT ha s fo ur
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
Located 112 mile north of
gas , garden, larg e yard ,
For Rent or Sale
bedrooms; IT has range and
Ea stern High School. House is
exce llent loca tion . Phone 742·
Ref .; IT has wi de front por ch
5045.
almost
f
inished
and
other
s
6 ROO M all -electr ic, ranch type
and enclosed rear porch; IT
&amp; PLUMBING CO.
being buil t. Call 985-3598.
2-3·3tc
home w ith fi r eplace, pat io &amp;
ha s ba serrient ; IT has stora ge
·
1-21-JOtc
garage, fini shed recr eati on
building ; IT is pri ced to se ll ;
NICE 2-story home with full
240 Lincoln Sf. ·
room with bar, lot 150 x 160 on
IT can be bought today.
basement, 2 lots, new forced
Middleport,
Ohio
Haven Hgts., New Haven, W. CLE LAND R E A LT Y, 3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
Dba
Anthony
Pluml!!ng
Va. Sale Pr ice - 118,500.00;
HENR y C L E LAND , Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
Elementary School. Phone We have a complete Home
Rent - S1 00 permonth. Phone
REAL TOR , Office 9'1 2-2259 ; Plains. All new with total
992-7284 to see.
882-3258 9 a. m . to 5 p. m. or
Residence 992·2568, 608 East el ectric and ce ntral a ir
11 -7-tfc Moiritenanct Service lhe
992·3078 after 5:30 p. m.
Mai n. POMEROY.
conditioning, bath and 3;4 full y
· year around,. No matter who! I ·
2·J.6tc. - -- - - - - . , - carpeled, full ba sement , ·" I:IO.LJ ~ .r 14.U, Ll~coln , Helgl\ts. your need. Complete roof or
ao· AcRES. 3 bedrc\oms' and gara9e in basement. See by · tall Danny Thompson, 9'12· spouting repoir. Interior or
21 96.
bath, deep well and shallow appotntmenl, phone 992-2196
exterior corpentry. Ceiling
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson .
7-18-lfc life and Paneling and Siding.
we l l, on state route. JJhQne
Financing ava ilable.
992-6096.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
12-30-t!c SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
2-J.6 tc
Healing.
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Day Number 992-2550
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
We have 24 hr. emergency
Ohio, phone 237·4334.
985·3529.
service.
Thursday with their son, Dr.
t
11 -21-tfc
1-28-tfc
992-5803
742-3947
and
Mrs.
james
W
ebb
in
By MRS. FRANCIS MORRIS
9'12-3898 742-4761 .
The Ber tha . M. Sayre Colwnbus.
We are fully insured
Linley Hart and Mildred
Missionary Society met at the
First Baptist Church Tuesday Roush visited in Colwnbus a Roderick Grimm.
Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher of George Neigler.
evening, Feb. 1. Mary K. Yos t, day with Mr. and Mrs. David
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts HARRI SON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2522 .
president, presided at the Roush and Mr. and Mrs. James Akron spent the weekend here. of Patriot spent Sunday with
Laird
.
6-10-tfc
They
brought
her
father,
Mr.
meeting and opened with a
his
mother,
Mrs.
Fran
ces
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Norris Henry Roush, home after his
meditation, "This is the Book"
SIGNS, posters, mail boxes and
Mr . and Mrs. Jerry visit of two weeks with them. Roberts. '
and
with scripture reading and
fa vorite saying ; hand letMr. and Mrs. Larry Grinun
tered ; in your favor ite style .
prayer followed with the theme Bradley and two children of Mr: and Mrs. Rob Palmer of and son of Columbus spent the
David Hooker, Rt. 2, Albany ,
song "They'll Know We Are Gallipolis were supper guests Parkersburg spent Sunday weekend with their parents.
Ohio
45710 I Pagetownl.
Christians by Our Love," with Monday of Mr. and Mrs. with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
2-6-30tc
Lillian Hayman, pianist.
AfU.r a business session, the
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
Love Gift offerings of the
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 9'12-2478.
circles were dedicated by
·
4-25-tfc
Gretta Simpson, Marie Roush
and Ollie Mae CC1lart. "A Light
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Bearer" was the theme of the
BY JACK O'BRIAN
it; but plunked for later Sat. night show starts ... REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
program presented by Mar4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
NOVE~ SOUND
Carroll O'Connor refuses to do any more "Allin
Owner &amp; Operator.
jorie Grimm. Hymn, "The
STRANGELY FAMIUAR
the Family" albums or lhe proffered full~englh
5-12-tfc
Light of the World Is Jesus"
NEWYORK (KFS)- The glut of "novels" movie or cafe appear1111ce as his TV Archie
was sung by lhe group. limping to notoriety by recklessly tracing Jives
Bunker character; understandable: It's em- .O' DELL WHEEL a/lghment
Scripture, Matt. 5:14-16 and II
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
of living celebrities sloshes on: the latest barrassing being a bigot more than once a week
Cor. 4:5·7. Readings included
Complete
front end service,
alleged "creation" is titled "Thanks for I he ... British TV (which permilled TV about seven
tune up and brake ser vice.
"The Light of the Mind," "The
Wheels balanced e/ec.
Light of Compassion," " A Rubies, Now Please Pass the Moon," whose hours a day) now can run full time, ,and there
tron ica/ly .
All
work
Christian Woman is a Light", transparently veiled principals now may start will go quality - wall!
. guaranteed .
Reasonable
Few years ago we Interviewed Oscar·
rates. Phone 992-3213 .
" Wha t About Us ?" The cringing ... Its female character is a ''world
socialite,
widow
of
an
assassinated
U.
S.
7-27-tfc
wiming
movie
composer
Dimitri
Tiomkin
who
prog ram closed with prayer.
Refreshments were served in President " who marries "an incredibly ancient volunteered his disgust with both Communism
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete .Service
the basement to 18 members shipping magnate" named "Osiris"; it's by and sexsational fllms ; since then he's produced
Phone 949-3821
oldtime
movie
magnate
Dore
Schary's
flicks
In
Russia
wilh
Soviet
financing,
anand one guest by the Ruth
Racine, Ohio
nounces his next film will be "May We Borrow
Circle members. The table was daughter, Jill.
Crill Bradford
Liza Minnelli requested an extra suite for Your Husband," a short Graham Greene story
lovely
with
Valenti ne
5-1-tfc
decorations.
her Miami Beach Eden Roc engagement - but from Esquire about a brace of old queens who
· Sunday afternoon a baptizing won 'I say who will occupy it; the guessing is "borrow" a groom from his honeymooning SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Free
pipe Inspection . Paul Steinservice was held at the Mid· Desi Arnaz Jr ... Ginger Rogers is set for her bride just for the filth of it.
metz, phQne 742·5864.
dlepor t Baptist Church when Bill Marshall divo.rce filing ... "The Happy
Ill wind : Columbia Pictures added
1·26-12tp
ten people were baptized by' Hooker" is the tille of Xaviera Hollander's $1,000,000 or more by converting its foreign
Rev. Charles Norris.
squeal.aU memoir. She tells pals and customers currency Into newly Inflated Yankee Dollm ... AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
Mr. and Mrs. Thereon that Dell Books gave her $100,000 in.front; she's Tha~ old underdog-protector and agitpropoperator's license? Call 9'12·
Johnson are vacationing in the Dutch ho-house madame of Knapp Com· drama celebrity of the 30s, Elia Kazan, br911ght
2966.
6-15-tfc
Albuquerque, New Mexico, for mission in! arne who still knows how .to make a in his next flick "The Visitors" very simply several days.
phone-fortune.
using a lour-man non~ion filnl crew ... Alec
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson
tanks cleaned. Miller
The Howard Hughes scandal isn't selling Guinness will play Hiller in an upcoming fllm, SEPTIC
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
and c hildren of Baltimore books (courts stopped that), but it's selling
662-3035.
Ricltard Burton, Mussolinl ... The Steve
spent the weekend here to visit newspapers ... Tille of the new off-Bdwy. play at
2·12-lfc
McQueen-Paul Newman:Barbra Streisand·
Mrs . Simpson's , brother , the N. Y. Theater Ensemble: "John Wayne
:
-Sidney Pottier "First Artists" flick firm goes
Darrell Badgley who is
READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
Doesn't Hit Women" ... The British TV public this week.
livered right to your prolect.
hospil.alized at Holzer Medical
"Casanova"
series,
sifted
into
Irish
homes
via
Fast and easy . Free
Torruny
Smothers
hasn't
quit
his
political
Center.
estimates
. Pho.ne 992·3284.
North
of
Ireland
projection,
has
the
Irish
irritations: he's produced a movie wilh Nixon &amp;
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co..
Middleport, Ohio.
·
spent fr om Sunday until revolted - and fascinated; specific sex scenes, Agnew as Laurel &amp; Hardy4ypes ... American
' . 6-30-tfc ·
doily language (the gutter's English ), scacls of International pix just finished its swish on a
nudity etc ... Senior officer of famed bank classical chiller: "Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde"; ·sewiNG MACHINES. Repair
faces a serious $2,000,000 panic.
Doc turns Into his own st.ler ... If lhe unem·
service, all makes. 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Marian McPartland, great as any jazz ploymentfigure is &amp;pet ., how come 7pct. of the
Authorized Singer Sales and
pianist can be, got composer Alec Wilder to U.S. is on 11elfare, as new polls attest.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
custom a dozen of his lovely tunes for her next
Kentucky violinist Mary Kanner, 24,
3-29-tfc
neatiy titled album "McPartland Goes Wilder" audition~ for and got her poet with HaUfax,
a.~
... There'll be a mini-Cadillac in 1974at a hardly Nova Scotia's Atlantic Sympllony - by pbOne:
For Sale
mirli-$11,000 ... Is there anything prettier as Ma Bell, you're swell ... Bed mfgrs. will replace
1 ELECTROLUX Vacuum
counterpoint to this deadline typing than Bobby the old 54-inch-by-75 double beCI with a 60-by-80
Cleaner complete with at.
Hackett 's gentle brass brilliance? Hoora:• for job. No one ever bothered 10 cb•nge dlmenslons
tachments, cordwlnder and
paint
spray. Used but In like
Station
W!'FM!
More.
More!
'
of
the
old
standar~
•.
~trodUced.
a
Cllnlury
ago
•
new
cOII(Iltlon. Pay · $34.d
Playbill (program in all Bdwy. theaters ) when Yanks were lhree inches shorter and '30
cash or budget plan available.
ON YOUR DIAL . polled playgoers on the newish 7:30p.m. curtain lbs. lighter.
Phone 992-5641.
2·2·61c
time and they reported they tried it, they liked
•
••
•
.I
'
;~

Realty

.

Racine

1 ·5

-

Social Events

&amp;C.PICt4L~V

WITH 8A$1CJT8Al.L.

PI.AVIII.S AAOUNO J

-----

U 't ABNER

I

---

----- - -

.:
. TERRY

• '¥'

• . •,..•,

.. .

....... ... ·.

..

' ; ••.

..

\

.,

.

'383'

'383' v,a, T· fllte, . p:-st., p .·br •• console shift,
"mag"; covers; medium blue with !iark blue
•intl'rior.

1966 Charger 2. Pr•.HT

ACROSS
1-Grllft

6-SoMkrit
dloloct

lo-Klllod
14-Wtlked In

w•tlr

19-Land

au~d

by'wNr
21--MIM lflttance
22--NHd

23-Rot24-KIIters

26-Sowt ...

.......

28-Privlto WIY

--

29-'-PooHc:

32-F.. r

1
·

'
•·

_..,.-

71--Donmd

lOJ.-...Amount lnf'td

35-Britde
37-M8tl't

105-Thl cttmt
106-A contlntnt
(obbr.)

39-fn mutJc, hllh
40--€rHe .
(prinHncJ
41--£W'IrMF

·-·

l~F,.. of

Sale ,prices on above: ·
1970 Charger----.---- '2695
1,.7 ~harger ---~---- •1395
.19.66 :Chargen ........;...._~-· '1195

~07--com~ ..

"-tee

52- Toll
53-Pronoun ·
5~ ...... blrd
57~n

conlun-ctlon
58-Ump- ·
Sg.....ol'tlnt UH of
60 Note 'ot ICIIe

-.."'...

624)tuuured

·66-F'rench trtJcle
tl l~•bol for

DOWN • ·
l-Ate~ndt

tiD-Asheas
111-Piurtlendlnc
112--M IC8WI
113--f'ollah
115-Symbol for

2-Dorm•nt
3-lncllnod

124-Extrtml4y

terrible '
12'-Mtn't n•m• ·
127-Food fish
128 Rtcaunt
no-Rite and ftll
Of OCIIF

152-Dcy, crenultlld
atorcll
U~footf"'

·- ·

11-M,n't
nlcknllmo
36-Acolo

34-~pllnt

4o-tPtCkl .
41-t..octft
41-Gvll-llko bi&lt;d
45-DHt't horn
U-Hold••r
47-Liquld
mttsure

.,_,,,lao.
5l_,.ruHI

....

52-Rtmtlntd •t
S~UIIy,

eil.....Ofll.ftl of
httrfill

4-,--.R.muntrat~

s.!-otrt:
&amp;-l'o... t (colloq,)
7-Ptld notlolt

f.-Told f o i 9-Rtptlt:
• ._..... p i _
l1......,1t of IWint

12-Ab&amp;troot IMine
13--Wolcht (obbr.)

· 14-0INC!Ion
15-Unlt of
lltmete

.

curr.ney

l~o/IDwlnc

cert•ln fDOd
IM'OCrem

17-lollolokoa

11 l)epNMlonl
, 20 ·. -.GlMclry'l

• wolttlt

!59 *bttlnl
60---Act:utl

....,"

63-Exptlltd

tf-Act

t7-8iHtr vetch
f9-Symbol for
nlcktl

70-Wtll coetlnc

72-wttmltttktn
74-Symbol for

"""
77-wnm

76--Compn.t potnt

7t-$1Uor (COllOQ.)
13-MtllthHp

..-.

17--Entk;e
11-fDIIttltn

a..-Hot. of ICtlt
to-lioN in tlto

'

V-8 ·engine, automatic tra ns., p. steering ; factory air
conditioned, good w·w tires, rad io, dark green finish with
spotless interior.

1967 Dlevelle Malibu HT Cpe.-.$1395

Auto. trans., P.S., P.B .• factory. air.

70 Ford Pickup Truck

14~hlneN

milt

96--Ctntrtl
, ~trlctn tttt
17.-.sttlk

The U•ed Car Lot with a HART!

1QQ.--Pronoun
102-ce,. for

lO~tlnAtlt

109-LIF~er
ll~nlth

ltltnd
l U- Unlte cktttl)'
114-l.one~-

blrda

. U...._.,..ol)em,.d.t n
cor«mandtt
111-Court order

120-Purpll&amp;h·ood
. dyo

121-lntttumtnt
122-Amtnds
J2J--Ct1H
12!5-TrtiiJ
125--CtiJinl
127-Rttartt

V-8 engine. std. trans., good tires, clean Inte rior, green
finish, rad io.

"OWN A CADILIA~

Of Course You Can"

OLD F\JRNITURE, Round Ook
tableo. · Brass beds, dishes,

,_(pl.)

••CI-S1l'~pod

moldlne: '
141-Tableltnd
I

14~rtk:o

l4J.;,-..Girt's nemt

complete

153 8tholdl
15!-Tou...,lc dolly

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

Mobil Homes For Sale ·
60X12, 2-bedroom. all-electric, ·
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch
aluminum

awning,

aluminum sk irting, com .
pletely setup. Beautiful
location. Owner leaving stale.
PI! one ·9•9·4892 or 9'12·5272.
· 1-.10-tfc

1971

12' · 14' · 24' · WID£

MILLER
MOBIL! ti)MES

brown vinyl lop, mat.
chlng leather Int., full
power equipment,
Climate Control air
conditioning, AM-FM
radio, 1 owner new
Cadillac' trade.
WAS

•

COUPE DeVILLE
Black finish with green
leather Interior. full
power
equipment.
Climate Control air
conditioning.
'

WAS
UIOO

'5900

1970 CADIWC

69 CADIUAC

COUPE DeVIlLE

SEDAN DeVILLE

Tawny beige finish ,
brown vinyl top, beige
terlor, full power
equipment, Climate
Control air condltlonine.
WAS

'4900

Silver metafile finish with
black vinyl top, matching
interior,

full

power .

equipment, Climate
Control air conditioning. .
WAS .
S4tOO

13900
.

.'
C.ditlac . Oldsmobile
Open Eves. Til 6- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

. 2-6-llc

992·5342
GMAC Financing Available
Pomerov
" You'll Like O..r Quality Way ol Doing Business" ·

Clearance

For Rent
For Sale
• ROOMS and bath unfurnished USED baby bed, playpen, baby
1971 Model
· house, 1650 Lincoln Hts. · carrier, car seat, gi rl's winter
Phone 9'12·3874.
coat, size 8. Calf 9115-4203,
Chester.
-:-===:-:-- .,..,.,.._:_:
2-.1·6fc
2-4-31p
2 BEDROOM mobile home,
furnished, util ities paid,
FORD tractor , good con·
available now . Phone 992. 1952
dillon
- $650 ; phone m -6048.
SAV£ AS Muat AS
7384.
, 2-4-6tc
2-4-3tc
mixed . Phone Albany 698. 1 BEDROOM tra·i/er apart- HAY,
3290.
Idea
l
for
couples
.·
ments,
. Now GoiJie Mabile
. 2·J.6tp
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992·5248
or
9'12-3A36.
11.1i Models On Sale
2·3-,121c TROPICAL FISH, fan ~ y
S.lt Prlat Include De~t..n•l
gupples: angelsand br•ders,
and Set up.
4 ROOM house. furnished, at 124 Bellu and supplies: Phone
992-5&lt;143.
.
Laurel St., Pomeroy. Call 992·
Talk to Dan ThomfiiOII
5136
or
Inquire
at
126
Laurel
12-JO.tfc
Tom Llv..,.rer JOt Hood
St.
·
1HO INTERNATIONAL panel
-::-:---:---,---,.....::2_:
· t-Stp truck ; 19311 Buick Coupe; 1%4
4 dr. Ford Falrlane; Arabian
FURNISHED and unfurn ished
mare. 112 reglslered; G, E.
apartments. ·Close to school.
Aut omatic washer ; -4 1h acres
Phone 9'12-5434.
with
trailer ; phone 992-9943 .
10·18-tfc
Lot Phont ft2.7004
n -6tc
·--::----_.:.._
If no IMWtr, Ph. ft2·21t6 '
2 BE OROOM mobile home, 12 x JOHN Deere- manure spreader ;
Locu•t St.
60. adults only .! Phone 992· Harry Hill, Racine, Ohio,
Orton Dally 11196 .
5A43.
.
phone 247-2142:
Sunday 1:00 ros,oo
1-11 -tfc
H -31c

, MOBILE

HOMES

'1600

------

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

at

.,...
GOIILE

-HOMD, INC.

- -- - - -

'·
' \1

Your Chevy Dealer

Open Eves. Till

992-2126

Sale

For

Pomero.v

sale

~""-115, ~x'~gs· ' WAL'WO't • STEReo; MOdern
from new motili·· ·;;~';;.'e .
Walnut Stereo-rodlo com ·
Phone 702 -~7 .
blnatlon, • spMktr 1011nd
2-6-31p
system, • speed CheJI!Ier.
- -- - - - - - Balance U8.70. Use our
50,000 BTU gas healer wilh
budget terms. Call 992-IOIS.
blower;
Boer' s _l,l kt. ,
2·2-.ltc
Syracuse, Ohio.
2-6-3tp COLONIAL Maple stereo-radio
-AM·FM radio, 4 spuken. 4
H &amp; N DAY old or started
speed automatic turntable.
Leghorn pullets. Both floor or Balance $79.32. Use our
cage grown available.
budget l.,;ms. Call 992-7085.
Poultry
housing · &amp;
2·2-.ltc
automation . Modern Poultry, :__~----'-399 W. Main, Pomeroy, 992· NEW 1971 Zig-Zag Sewing
2164.
Machine In original factory
• 2-6-llc ttriQn , Zig-Zag to make
buttonhottt, sew on buttons,
t;OAL, limestone. Excelsior
moribgrams and mike fancy
· Salt Works, E. Main St.,
dftlgna with lust the twist of •
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
single-dial. Left tn ley..way
4-9-Ift
and ne- bMn used. Will sell
for only 547 cash, or. cndll
POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy, terms available. Phone 992·
Park view Kennels, Phone 992.
5641.
5443.
· 2-2-6tc
...;___
fl.15-tfc

____

WIN AT BRIDGE

ARCH Proves-Right Code
NORTH

5

• J987
.. 73

1220 Wtllllngton Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio
FOR THE BEST deal) n a new
or used mobile home, , try
Kanauga Mobile Home Sates,
Kanauga, Ohio.
12·17-901c

1971 CADiwc

KARR &amp;VANZANDT

., IDe.

'

- - -- -COUPE DeVIu.E
Tawny beige finish,

ISI-fooncbtor
"summer''

Pomeroj Motor Co.

- -- - --

SALES-SERVICE

households . Write M. D.
Miller, Rl. •· Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call 992-6271 .
12.11-ttc

131- Wom IWI)'
132-wtlt on

131-1'•" of

4 Door H.T. Sedan, local owner, sharp Interior, vinyl roof
&amp; dark blue finish, factory air, good w-w !Ires, rad io &amp;

For

·' 12!1-Ciotll
mettunl (pl.)

133-Wtr &amp;od
Ill-Jury lltt
13'-C.., off

1967 Olevrolet Impala. ______$1495
1965 DlevrOiet Sta. Wagon-----$595

' OLD
POCKET '· ·kn lvesl
especially Case XX . Also
have other old knives to lrade
or sell . Phone 992-2343.
'
1-18-lfc

and

New ring lob. dean lnter,lor, good !Ires. radio. heater.
Sharp black fi nish.

heater.

To Buy

cloc-ks, . and-or

327 engine,' A speed trans., clean Inter-lor &amp; good tires .
Med. grn . finish . Nice.

1966 Volkswagen Sq. Back SedaQ$1095

70 Hornet

~

WMP0/1390

--

1969 Die¥. Impala Cpe, ---:--$2095

(tbbr,)

144-DII-md
15-Servtnt ·
147-Dtwn ~Ht~n•
86 l'tet:Nttlon ,,., Ut Sa.k up

We talk to you
like

I

old

!S~mpotent

1011-Wit IWIN Of

·~·pnt
121- Mtstlln by
who

93-Mtdlclntl
pltnt

..Hiemtnt

point

n'I. .IUN

31-Wtlk

21-Europ.tn

'4-G'""I•nd

pltntl

.....,

oval tires, 4 speed trans., power steering, radio. A
; sweetheart ol a buy .

than 22,000 miles bY loca l owner, radi o, new w-w tires. A

.

92-Manuscrfptt

Green fi nish. bfk . vinyl roof, green vinyl Interior. new
wide

sharp model priced to please.

69 Ford LTD VI

or 992·2152 MIDDLEPORT

27..-8trik• out

Cpe. ~ ... ---$2295

350 v.a engine. automatic, power steering consnle,
beautiful dark green, finished with green vinyl ri&gt;of. Less

61 Volkswagen Bug
66 Volkswcigen ·lug
61 Volkswagen Bus

WE STILL HAVJ: A FINE SEL,ECTION OF
RUPP MINI BIKES ON DISPLAY.

DEPENDABLE CITY

tl-With mouth

color, bl k. vin y l inter ior .

1970 Camaro Coupe ·-------'2795

. ·. RAWLINGS

· women

Germtnr

70 Chevrolet VI

6 Cyl., siand. trans. •

21-Fiower

new car trade In, 13.000 miles, automatic

tra ns., luggage rack, radio, chrome wheel oovers, blue

5,000 milts by local owne r, p. steering, automatic trans., 6
tyl. engine, P.B., radio, white walls, beautiful belgellnlsh
&amp; blk., interlor. Like new.
·

V-8, 3 sp.• power steering.

V-8, auto. trans., power steering, power brakes, deluxe.

... - ,.·-

l ocal 1 owner,

I

1970 Ncwa Dlevy II 4 Door ·---$2195

'
'
.
See Emerson. Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolle,
Wallace Amberger, Dick Rawlings.

Wanted

"•

Special, ·V-8, auto. trans.

'318' V-8, ·t .fllte. ·p. ·st., console shift, same
type as C~bove. 4 buckets, white with red in ·
terior .' : : ·

25-Pitn:e

160-Unwtnted

42-lltut up ·
44-.ChltHM
4&amp;-lotlot
corium
47-Metal fltt.ner't l17--Ett IWIY
411-Proround
119--ftrlnttr't
50

(COfiOCJ.)

73-,tvor
137-Tnt
75-Stllf&gt;
1 3 9 - -.
17-Wh'lll..
140 lpltn
71-111ouM
141-.. ltllllo
IU-..Wolk woo~/{
11-&lt;:ompttt pofnt 145-Cry or dow
12-conHnuad
. 144-locka - . ,
14........ _1&gt;)'
•• Llftlld for
the Mnlft
11-f'oot: I~W~rs
150-kltltrs
17--MttttHf·ftct
152-ftl)ectt
19-Af'ttlmoon
_1 5l-le defttted
"""'
.
154-Affoctlon
92-City In lttly
1!55-Couch
95 "pportlona
1!57-Wipe out
9a...-lmpfoJed
1!51 ltmi·PreciOUt
99 Stlb:hlnc
stone
101-Enthu.. tsm
1!59-Distrtct In

33-Stotlon
34 Smtll child
ntckntme

p-

~-~r

U~loor's

618ulck 2 Dr. Sedan

.1966 .Charger .2 Dr. HT

SWNDAYI fEBRUARY
6, li!l72
•I

ll-lllrd'a homo

brakes , factory. a ir .

Auto . trans .• poWer steering, power brakes .

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-.21.14_ _ _ __

' I

1

Your-Money Used Car Selection
1971 Volkswagen Sq. Back Sedan '2495

1970 DleveHe SS396

2 Dr., H. T., V-8, auto. trans., power steering, power

69 Ford Mustang

'

'

!

69 Chevrolet Impala

• '318' V-8, T·fllte, p.·st •• console' shift, "one of a
kind" ~bucket seats, panel behind rear seats
fol~s down for full length between front seats
and trunk, .silver with red interior .

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
.

,

.

"

Auto Sales
white with 1~69 DODGE Swing.,;, 2 door 1967 PONTIAC , 3 seal, 9
power hardiOj), . v.e. standard, still
passenger slat/on wagon,
brakes.
under warranty - $975;
pow&amp;r steering and power
phone 9'12-6048.
brakes, while finish .with
2·6·3tc
2·4·6tc
bla ck. lnterio•, excellent
condition.
Priced to self fast.
i;;.6;2fF~AULrc:0oiiiN:-,-;;g;;;ood;;;-:~;iiu,,. .-6-9 -C!i- EV_R_O_L_E_T_I_m_p_al.:..a,- 4·dr: Call 7•2-4745,
Michael· Cllf·
phone 949·322].
dark green, vinyl hardtop,
for.d.
2-2-61c light green finish, '3So, va,
2·3-3tc
~--------:--automatic, factory air, low
VOLKSWAGEN. 2 door mileage, power, excellent 1969 FORD F-100. custom. V8.
360 cu. ln .• automatic, will
sedan, good condition - S450; condition. Phone 742·•745, Bill
phone ~2-6048 .
Jewell.
cbnslder trade. Phone 992·
.
H -6tc
6372.
2·J.3tc
2·3-6tc

........ -. . '

69 Ford Mustang

Milch I, v.e, auto. trans., power steer ing~ power brakes.

1967 Charger 2 Dr. HT

.

a

V-8, T•fllte,

Auto Slles

~~

More-for.

USED' CARS

p. ·si.• p·.· br.; console shift,
"mag." wheel$• stereo tape deck. die; . green .
vinyl roof. vinyl inter .
·
.

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.
Ph,

a.arger 2 Dr .HT

19~0

CJ

I'ONiw:

'

'·

" ..

C
_·· .'.

soo E.·Main St. .

·

~terve;

rv eroy, 01119

00 J
iuan

the

Rawlings will help. Here are
4 units from Dodge that will
get you headed the right
way,.

Come in &amp; see Bill Nelson, ~· Smith, Ceward
Calvert or Ed Bartels. Open .e venings till 1
p.m. &amp; Sat. till 5 p.m . Service open' till 12 noon

AU.

.

.

had

~tner

1972 SKYLARK 2 Dr. H. T. Flame orange •
white top. auto .• 350, P.S.. P. B. Sticker Price
$3762.82.
·
: Your Price $3275
1972 BUICK Le SABRE Custom 2 Dr. HT,
· White wit~ black vinyl top. factory air. Sticker
' Price S5024.0S.
·
Now $4250
1'972 · PONTIAC LEMAN$, 4·Dr. Sed1n1 350
engine. auto ., P.S. Sticker PriceS3S58:lo. Now
. $3190. .~
1972 SKYLARK, 4 Dr. Sedan. All white, 350
eng .•.auto., P.S., P. B. Sticker Price
$3~48.45.
Now S3270
1972 PONTIAC 'CATALINA Brougham, 2 Dr.
HT. All white wllhwhite .lnterlor. factory air,
P.S.• P. B., radlo1 rear spea ~er. Mag Wheels.
This Is a real sharp car. Sticker Prjcl!
$4849.90. , . .
•·
· Now 54125
. 1~72 CATALINA· BROUGHAM; 4 Dr. stdan.
SOlid' green, factory ·alr,.'r alllo, white walls ..
Sticker Prlce$4821.90. '
•·' Nciw$4100
'1972 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2 .Dr. H.T., white
· with blue top, factory air. Stlcke~ Price
$477 4.
.
·
Now 54060

percentage rate.

. EXPERT

.

Plloni 992-2174
.
·
"-m

You say you've 1lways
wa~tttd to be • "Sport" and

We Servl~e What We Sell
Our .Word Is Our Bond

CAL.L
BILL NELSON, 992-3657
HILTON WOLFE, 949-3211
TOM CROW, 992-2580
DALE DUTTON, 992·2534

breakfa st nook . For ced air
furnace. Central air. Doubl e

garage. $14,500.00.
.
RURAL
NICE - 3 bedroom renovated

FOURNEWHOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONe HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SY~ACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PC.T. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16.900.00 home can . be purchaSed with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a"famlly .wllh a base
salary .of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual

'I

MIDDLEPORT
8 ROOMS - 4 bedrooms, bath,

HI DO EN Treasures Gift $11,000.00.
Shoppe on Co. Rd. 34 nea r
SYRACUSE
Royal Oa k Pa rk , has 4 ROOMS - Full basement, all

•
••
•
l

537 -High St:.
Middleport, Ohio
Complete body repairs
and ·paintings, glass
installation,
free
loaner
cars
and
es llm.,.tes, also
mechanical
repairs.
Phone 992-3793

500 E. Main St.

•.

At Your 'Chevrolet Dealer

---,·-- ·- - -

• Q72
.AKIOS

WEST
.K6 3
¥A S
t10864
.8762

..\5

SOUTH

EAST
.QIO U
¥109862
tA3
.93
(D)

¥KQJ4
+KJ95
.QJ4

lo the Stayman two club bid
to show four hearta and that
the biddlns had shown he
didn't hold lour spades.
He wouldn't be a b I e to
C o u n t enough winners to
beat three no-t1 ~mp, but
Selld $1 fol II.COI'f MDIJfiiN 6oolo

to: ·w;, at lriltt.'' (c/o tllir ...,,_
poper/, P.O. lo• • • •olio City
Settion, Hrw Yorio, N.Y. 10019.

when he a s k e d himself,
" :tow can I beat this con·
Both vulnerable
tract? " the .answer .would
Weol North t:.ast South
be, "Not with any lead but
! N.T.
a low spade." Then 'he
Pass 2•
Pass 2•
would lead the spade deuce .
Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
South would be helpless.
P...
His
best play would be tD
Opening lead- t 4
play low. West would take
his king and lead back the
By 01wald &amp; James Jacoby six. Dummy would follow
East won the first trick and East would have to
with the ace of diamonds and make one other good play
promptly led back the three and duck. Declarer would be
spot. After this start South forced to play his ace and
had no trouble collecting 10 when West got in with the
ace of hearts he would lead
tricks, game and rubber .
his last spade to set declarer.
East remarked t h a t he
{NlWSPAPII lHTl~H.IH ASSN.)
never held any cards. He
pointed out that six high·
card points seemed to be his
normal qu o l a. He thougHt
The bidd ing has been:
about qu itting bridge to take
Souih
up gin r ummy or backgam . West North Eat
Pass
mon .
Pass
P011
East's six p o i n. t s plus
?
4•
Paaa
West's seven w o u I d have Pass
You, South, hold:
been enough lo defeat the no.
trump game if E a s I had • 18154. AQI tAU
Wh.1t do yOu do now!
taken lime to think instead
A- hu, wltll- ... baers.
ol just giving up . .
Bid
Ove ...... wllh a ,..._
All East had to do was to
who
u... 'die p,.., to ' - • a
use the code word ARCH.
very &gt;11'01111 bid• ..,. n.........
He would Analyze the lead call says, "Don't. w...,.y a~t die
as rourlh best since he was unbid sui ts, but yuu need very
I o o k i n g al lhe deuce in Jt'tMMI trumps...
,
dumm y and the three in his
'.
TOIM Y'S QUilSTioN
own hand. T;tal wo t~d give
Instead of bidd int~ four spades,
declarer four dia monds a lso. yout· partne r has jumped to two
He would Review the bid· no~tru nap over your one apldto.
ding and see that South had What do you do now?
bid two hearts in res ponse

t.

I.

•u

�.,
I

·, •

~ - The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Feb, 6, 1m:

•

....
\'

-··

.J

Your .Wayne
. O...est
National F
._ '

GALUPOUS - Everything
has a beginning.
This is the beginning of what
I hope will be a series of in·
formative
articles
on
management of your Wayne
National Forest. Planned
future articles will cover such
topics as timber sales, environmental problems, hunting , camping, recreation,
minerals management,
waters hed management, forest
fires , wildernewmanagement
and many other topics about
your National Forest.
l have many times heard the
comment, "Boy! I wish I had a
job like yours! "
l believe what peOPle are
really wishing for is a nice
relaxing job taking care of the
trees and the animals. While
there are still days like that,
and there is still excitement
and adventure in the Forest
Service, we too are caught up
in the whirlwind of modern day
society.
The role of the Forest

Ranger has changed con·
. siderably over the years but
never more so than during the
lastdecade.ln 1900, a Ranger's
only company was his horse
and perhaps an occasional
trapper or hunter he would
encounter in making the
rounds of his wilderness
domain. Fire control and a lew
timber sales were his first
responsibilities.
Things began to change
around 1930 when National
Forests in the eastern region of
the United States were
es!Jiblished. Lands acquired by
the Forest Service In the east
were badly in need of
reforestation.
In most cases the land had
been logged , burned over
several times, or farmed out to
the point where the land was
useless. The CCC Program of
the 1930's was the beginning of
a land rebuilding program on a
scale never before attempted.
Millions upon millions of trees
were planted, campgrounds,
roads and Ira ils were built, and

,.,

'

''

BY T. ALLEN WOLTER
DISTRICT RANGER

flretowers and ranger stations biologists , recrea lion
beltan to IDoear. The D&amp;llem of specialists, entomologists .
land abuie and lhe scour_Be of pathologists, geneticists - the
the devasta ling forest fire list could g'o on.
began to be controlled.
Decisions are not easily
Although honeS and mules reached when' there·is so much
still play an important role in "peOPle pressure" on the land,
some parts of . the National particularly in the East, and
Forest system, particularly the specifically in southeast Ohio
wilderness and primitive where the bulk of Ohio's Public
areas, they are gradually being land is located.
·
replaced by rne·chanized
Campers, bikers, bike
transport.
'
riden, hOne riders, loggers,
Fire towers are being hunters, miners, power
replaced by airplanes and compulea, fishermen, land
helicOPters, telephones by 2- developers, rock bounds,
way radios, snowshoes by nature Ioven, bird watchers
snowmobiles and pack mules and wllderaeu advllfates all
by a gyro-stabilized trail want a piece of the action.
scooter gets around or narrow
Herein lies the challenge to
mountain trails like a goat.
loday's land manager. He must
Some, including me, shed an weave his course through a
occasional noatalgic tear for maze of alternatives, .kee)ling
the good old days of campfires one eye on his backtrall lo
and lonely trails, but the push avoid past mistakes and one
to gel things done faster and eye on the future to insure a
cheaper drives us on.
·
qlllllity forest environment for
The complexities of properly future ge~rations.
managing public land today
To quote a phrase:
have resulted in the addition of
"The greatest good lor the
many specialists to our staff. greatest number in the long
Geologists, soli scientists, run."
watershed scientists,
(Next Week : " The Eomaterials and civil engineers, vlronment)
land~ape architects, wildlife

Dateline

•

••

Gallia

.:t mts.,..

·ANOTHER honor has come to the late Oscar Odd Mcintyre
nearly 34 years after his. death.

. +++++ ..

..

.
1etio1~d T~ The Gr:eal~r MiJdle Ohio V,a,llfrr
'

. '

~·

ON -Jan. 21, in COlumbus, Mcintyre was one of 210 Ohioanll
whose completed careerS were recognized during d~cation
cere111onies of the recenUy-a~mpleted Great Ohioans Hall of
Fame at the Ohio Historical Center. ·

'

I

'

'

+++++
MciNTYRE, who spent his boyho9d days in the Old French
City, made it big with his "New York Day By Day" syndicated·
column in the 1920s and 1930s. He died Feb. 14, 1938, at the age of
54. He rests in Mound Hill Cemetery, "overlooking the beautiful
Ohio River and Gallipolis."

+++++
NOMINATIONS, BCC!lrding to the Jan. 21 edition of the
Cincini)Bti Post, were screened by society officers and grouped
into two main classi6cations - the great and near great.
Mcintyre was listed among the great wtder "communicatloiiB.".
The "great" classification contained ' 148 persons, and the
"communications.. category included 19 individuals.

+++++
NAMES of those selected under "great" classi6cation were
published in. The Post, along with a brief statement of their
contributions, Of OOM, the statement read: "Oscar Odd
Mcintyre, (1884-1938, Gallipolis) - the columnist who made
Broadway and Main Street 'a dual highway.' "

ED BEWLEY
RADIO-TV-FJLM OOORDINATOR-EdBewley, '1fT, has
joined the Ohio Department of DeveloJIIlent as Radio-'IV·
Film Coordinator. Department Director David C. Sweet said
Bewley, former anchorman for WTVN-TV in Columb41s, will
develop a series of films and tapes lor use by the state's
lroadcast media describing Development Department
programa and services, as weU as Ohio's industriallJ&gt;cation
.advantages ·and tourist attractions.

+++++

MRS. RALPH Rife, Oleshire, reports numerous Evening
Grosbeaks gathered around her bird feeder in the Riles' back
yard a week ago Friday. It is rare for ·these l!irds to be In this
area according to a feature article in last llunday's COlumbus
EXTON, Pa. - Foote
Dispatch. The birds were also seen In Franklin and Fairfield
CO!Inties last month. They hall from along the Canadian border. . Mineral Company Tuesday
The male hasa yellow colored body with black and white colored reported net sales for the year
wings and a long ivory colored beak. The female's color is a bit 1971 of $92,772,301, down from
duller, sort of a brownish gold according to Mrs. Rife. The birds sales of $100,256,042 in 1970. Net
measure approximately 7\2 to &amp;Inches in length and are "simply earnings for 1971 were
$1,777,712 . compared with
beautiful," Mrs. RHe remarked.
$3,840,482 in 1970.
+++++
The 1971 net earnings are
RECEIVED an i1tteresting letter Wednesday from Norman
after
a fourth quarter
L. Price, Jr., Pomeroy, concerning an article which appeared in
deduction of an extraordinary
last Sunday's Dateline. "Possum" as he is known throughout the
charge
of $355,380 (net of
Bend Area, wrote:
·
"Dear Hobart:
"To begin, let me quote your column, DATELINE Gallla, of
Sunday, Jan. 30, 1972, in the Sunday Times SenUnel (paragraph
GMHIRING
four). ("GAHS basketball faiiB are still talking about the Blue
DETROIT (UPl) -General
Devils' thrilling 60-59 come-from-behind victory over Athens on
Motors Corp. announced today
Jan. 21. Tom Metiers, veteran Athens Messenger sports writer,
it would add 4,300 new jobs
during the next few months to
informed us recenUy that if the Bulldogs beat Waverly in second
meet
rising production needs
haH.play, Gallipolis will become the only SEOAL team to sweep a
with 720. of them to be hired in
season series from Athens during the past 16 years.)
Ohio,
120 at the GM complex in
"There's some inaccuracy to that statement ...
Lordstown.
"My calculation ol16 from 1972 puts me back in the 1956-57
basketball season. That year the powerful Pomeroy Purple
Panthers, coached by Dick Retton, dumped Athens twice. On
Jan. 11, 1957, Pomeroy won 61-48 at Athens, on Feb. 8, 1957,
Pomeroy won 67,~ at Pomeroy. Aaron Buffington (fonner Ohio
Valley PUblishing COmpany employee) was chosen the SEOAL'S
Moat Vablable Player.
"The following season, 1957~ saw the Panthers take the
SEOALchampionship,getthe SEOAL's Most Valuable Player in
S. T. Johnson and beat Athens twice (now that's bac~..to-back).
~ Jan. 17, 1958, Pomeroy won 65-64 and on Feb. 14, 1958,
Pomeroy won 61-M at Athens.
"The latter gsrne was the championship game. With a SRO
crowd inside, the doors to the Athens gym were closed and many
Pomeroy fans waited outside in the cold unW the final buzzer to
help bring the bacon home.
"The 1959-60 season Pomeroy had a new basketball coach,
Rusaell Moore. PHS took the SEQAL championship again along
with 1the reserve and freshmen basketball championships and
had the SEOAL's Most Valuable Player in Phil Harrison. And we
also beat Athens twice, 56-51 at Pomeroy on Dec. 8, 1959 and~
at Athens on Jan. 22, 1960.''
'

Foote's Net Off in 1971

MEIGS cheerleaders f'!" the
eighth grade B baaketbaU
team are, 1-r, front, Katrina
llftey; in back, I to r,.Drema
Hovatter and Demarts. Ash.
M!'•· Dana K~mger ts. the
inltructor astltsted by Cmdy
Colfrnan.

1
1

Whealey is Peace C~didate
Dr. Robert H. Whealey, 41, Vielnam War since coming to
Tenth District Democratic ·the University -in 1964, he.
Congreasional candidate, an frequently participated in
Associ a lion Professor of antiwar teach-ins and other
History at Ohio University in debating activities . He also ·
Athens, is campaigning on six worked on a local level for
key issues.
former Senator Eugene McHe said these are :
Carthy during the latter's 1968
(I ) Cut hack the Arms Race; Presidential campaign.
(2) peace in Indo-China; (3) Whealey, his wife Lois and
restore confidence in the in· their three children reside at 14
flated dollar; (4) defend the Oak Street, Athens.
constitution; (5) reconcile the
races through love; (6) that he
is the best qualified Democrat
to run against the Republican
incumbent.
Whealey's career has been in
the study and teaching of in·
ternatlonal relations. A native
of Long Island, N. Y. he
earned a master and Ph. D.
degrees in history and in·
Bob Lich, Dorsey Jordan and
ternational relations at the Clay Jordan attended a
University of Michigan managers and co-workers twofollowing two years in the day conference at Wooster for
army and a year of study at employees of Experiment
Oxford.
Farms in Ohio.
In 1964, he moved to Athens . Mr. and Mrs. Thad Dye 'BOd
and began t~ teach at Ohio Dale Dye were guests of Mr.
University.
and Mrs.· Lewis Smith and
A vocal opponent of the Nancy and the group
celebrated Thad Dye's birthday.
Victor · Perry.
Hazel
Dunigan, Amy Lowther and

+++++

BOB WHEALEY

News, Event

moil bo•! Sa ve time

special trips by moiling
your checks for deposit.
for o special " Bonk-by·
il" envelope ANYTIME!

Ohio

Valley
Bank

Fernie Woodgerd were in
Columbus to visit their brother,
Vernon Perry, who ·was
seriously ill and . confined to
Doctors Hospital West. Mr.
Perry.is reportedly improving
slowly.
Mrs . Geue Jeffers and
daughter, Margie, along with
Mike Lawson were in East
liverpool for the Junior Miss '
Pageant finals .
Mrs. Ida Dennison suffered a
hip injury in an accident and is
confined to Holzer Hospital.
She underwent surg.ery on

NLY NE UTILITY

Get a
wheel deal
A S!a!e Farm McblfeHcme:;,wne~!i
t:c!!c; prOtectsycwr mo~i !e home,
i!s co ntE-ntS, e.nd inch..:des ctrson!: li!.J ;~ ! ty co·.-era~e. e.!l ln a
$l!'l g!e, low·cost · ~a~~&lt;agt. s:ata
F!rrn is al! ycu r.eed to. k·:: w

ELECTRICITY

We furnish·Water • ~Sewage -Garbage Collection. Am,Pie
Parking • TV AoleWIB - Wall-to·WaU Carpeting Draperies - Rlugei • Refrigerators - Air Conditioning Garbage Dlsposall -Dishwashers- Heat Lamps -Private
Palios • Swl11111lln.( Pool - Clubhouse.

abcut in$~r4nc.e. C~! rr.e tc-::r.

CARROL K. SNOWDEN
Park Central Hotel Bldg.
5e(ond Ave. • Ph. 446·4290
Home Ph . '144·4511
Golllpoli•
uthe now bank that
appreciates y~ur but~inets''

...,.A"rf" FA ttl\ J
CA. !.I l.':. '.1'..-•••;·....1/J

S

S:e:a F11"1"' r:··e •~"~ c.
Ce~ Ja i ..J Cclmp1n; ,

Member : Ftderal Deposit

Home Off1ee:
Sir:; :"&lt;\1n~ :'" r.. .u::-:c i1

f -701:·· .

I

2HEDROOMTOWNHOUSES

l~BA'lliS

.
TGWNHOUSE
TARA
For Information

Call·

HERE, I

eous~r

blOW
NICE!

'fdu ·

sbMeTI-UNe:.
. '·

't

•• ,..

.··

~.

'.

.. .

,• t
-&lt;r; •

I

l'

'

•

more time
for cooking
less time
for clr.aning

. THE ONL4' TROUBLE WA&gt;,
IT TOOK ME AN ~OUR TO
·, 6ET IT ON THE FLEA!
•

+++++
TWENTY YEARS AGO,Irom the files of the Daily Tribwte
and weekly Gallia Times .... Portion of bank on 400 block of First
Ave;, slips Into Ohio River alter winter storm ... Dr. N. Howard
Foster urges parents to keep ill children horne from school as flu .
epidemic continues ... Paul Watson to head Gallipolis Olamber
of Commerce for third straight year .... Hobart Wilson, GAHS
senior, named Rotary's "Boy-of-the-Month" ... W. G. Scarberry
named GAHS commencement speaker ... Olase upsets Rio
Redmen, 91-M ... Blue Devils maul Pomeroy Panthers, 75-18.

Carpenter

is bank is as close as your

•-'

WE'D !ike to. thank "Possum" for that bit of information.
Actually, it was a mistake on Dateline's part. Athens, however,
has dominated the SEOAL tbe past 10 years, and Mr. Mettera is
in the process of Checking his records to see how long it has been
since a SEOAL ~ub WOII a season series from the Bulldogs. Could ·
be I~ was the last time.

taxes) • for a non-recurring
write off of certain machinery .
and equipment which had no
further economic or operating
value.
The net earnings in 1971 were
equivalent to $1.36 per share of
the company's Convertible
Preferred Stock or $2.2«
cumulative if earned (earnings
were $1.63 per preferred share
before· the extraordinary
charge). Foote . operates one
plant near New Haven, W.Va.
The. fourth quarter 1971
results reflected the continued
soft levels of business, particularly in sales to the sleel
and aluminum industries. Also
contributing to the operating
loss was a two week strike by
the United Steelworkers at
three of the company's
ferroalloy plants.

APARTMENTS

Shirley Adkins
Kon

lee- U772SO

==~."~-'~=·.-=.~:::. ._:;,;.,~~.-:&lt;";. :-j~ REMOVABLE
OVEN DOOR

.

'

..:L .A NCBLOT

J' ' ,

t

' ,

f ,

•

·

1,

I

·

'

'

AND DOOR
SEALS.

+++++
I

v

Monday and is convalescing
satisfactorily.
Rob Turner is a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy for observation and
treatment.
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan
attended tpe theme program , James Circle, New Haven,
contest for Vinton County and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
which was held at Wilkes Pierce of Athens visited with
Grange on Saturday evening. Mary Circle on Sunday.
Mrs. Jordan , Meigs, County
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie RanPomona , Grange Lecturer, dolph of Rock Springs spent
along with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Sunday evening with Mr. and
Stewart, dep 11ties from Mrs . -Arthur E. Johnson,
Jackson County, .were judges Patrick, Sheryl LeAnq and
for the contest. Wilkes Grange Betty Van Meter.
had first place entry .with
Mr. and Mrs. Shelby Pickens ·
· 1\llensville Grange placing and family, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
second. Mrs. 'Justice Harden, Hudson, Syracuse, and Mr : and
Vinton County Pomona Lee- Mrs .· Frank Hudson and
turer, was in charge of the , daughter 'of Racine spe~t
contest.
Sunday with .Mr . and Mrs.
Guests of Mrs. Murl Allan Taylor.
Galaway were Leon Woodt'um,
Ricky, Cathy and Randy,
ESCAP.ES INJURY
McArthur. .
BATON ROUGE, ·La. (UP!)
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
- High winds blew an oak tree
were in Columbus on business
on a ho use Thursday,
and visited his sisler, Mrs.
dislodging three roof beams
Jessie Jewell, called on his
and sending them crushing
· brother, Eldon Starkey, who Js
still hospitalized there, and into the bedroom of Robert ·
Wallis, Y.'hO was asleep. The 2- "
were guests of their son-in-law
by-0 beams speared his bed in
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
three places, and 11e 18y pinned
Donald Jones, Nelsonville,
until two deputy sheriffs helped
enroute.
free him. He was not hurt.

Carmel News,

By the Day

I

"""'
Magic Chef combines beauty and convenience to add extra hours of pleasure to
your cooking day. The sealed oven window
lets you watch your meal take shape.
Eliminates constantly opening and closing
the oven door to check and recheck. The
heat stays in the oven. And out of your
kitchen. ·
'

--·-

, _ _ 1o rou ~·•loftlll
lbout wMt'I,OOC*Iftg.

·----------------------

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Visit the Appliance Depart"'ent on the
Jrd floor. Se~ the iarge ·sele~tion of
Refrigerators, Washers, Dryers, Dish_washers, l;lectric R~nges, Sinks, Hot
Water Tan~s (.Electric and Gas&gt;,
Humidifiers
and Oehumidiflers.
•
,.
• I

"

'

'

'

by Coker &amp; .P enn·

�.,
I

·, •

~ - The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Feb, 6, 1m:

•

....
\'

-··

.J

Your .Wayne
. O...est
National F
._ '

GALUPOUS - Everything
has a beginning.
This is the beginning of what
I hope will be a series of in·
formative
articles
on
management of your Wayne
National Forest. Planned
future articles will cover such
topics as timber sales, environmental problems, hunting , camping, recreation,
minerals management,
waters hed management, forest
fires , wildernewmanagement
and many other topics about
your National Forest.
l have many times heard the
comment, "Boy! I wish I had a
job like yours! "
l believe what peOPle are
really wishing for is a nice
relaxing job taking care of the
trees and the animals. While
there are still days like that,
and there is still excitement
and adventure in the Forest
Service, we too are caught up
in the whirlwind of modern day
society.
The role of the Forest

Ranger has changed con·
. siderably over the years but
never more so than during the
lastdecade.ln 1900, a Ranger's
only company was his horse
and perhaps an occasional
trapper or hunter he would
encounter in making the
rounds of his wilderness
domain. Fire control and a lew
timber sales were his first
responsibilities.
Things began to change
around 1930 when National
Forests in the eastern region of
the United States were
es!Jiblished. Lands acquired by
the Forest Service In the east
were badly in need of
reforestation.
In most cases the land had
been logged , burned over
several times, or farmed out to
the point where the land was
useless. The CCC Program of
the 1930's was the beginning of
a land rebuilding program on a
scale never before attempted.
Millions upon millions of trees
were planted, campgrounds,
roads and Ira ils were built, and

,.,

'

''

BY T. ALLEN WOLTER
DISTRICT RANGER

flretowers and ranger stations biologists , recrea lion
beltan to IDoear. The D&amp;llem of specialists, entomologists .
land abuie and lhe scour_Be of pathologists, geneticists - the
the devasta ling forest fire list could g'o on.
began to be controlled.
Decisions are not easily
Although honeS and mules reached when' there·is so much
still play an important role in "peOPle pressure" on the land,
some parts of . the National particularly in the East, and
Forest system, particularly the specifically in southeast Ohio
wilderness and primitive where the bulk of Ohio's Public
areas, they are gradually being land is located.
·
replaced by rne·chanized
Campers, bikers, bike
transport.
'
riden, hOne riders, loggers,
Fire towers are being hunters, miners, power
replaced by airplanes and compulea, fishermen, land
helicOPters, telephones by 2- developers, rock bounds,
way radios, snowshoes by nature Ioven, bird watchers
snowmobiles and pack mules and wllderaeu advllfates all
by a gyro-stabilized trail want a piece of the action.
scooter gets around or narrow
Herein lies the challenge to
mountain trails like a goat.
loday's land manager. He must
Some, including me, shed an weave his course through a
occasional noatalgic tear for maze of alternatives, .kee)ling
the good old days of campfires one eye on his backtrall lo
and lonely trails, but the push avoid past mistakes and one
to gel things done faster and eye on the future to insure a
cheaper drives us on.
·
qlllllity forest environment for
The complexities of properly future ge~rations.
managing public land today
To quote a phrase:
have resulted in the addition of
"The greatest good lor the
many specialists to our staff. greatest number in the long
Geologists, soli scientists, run."
watershed scientists,
(Next Week : " The Eomaterials and civil engineers, vlronment)
land~ape architects, wildlife

Dateline

•

••

Gallia

.:t mts.,..

·ANOTHER honor has come to the late Oscar Odd Mcintyre
nearly 34 years after his. death.

. +++++ ..

..

.
1etio1~d T~ The Gr:eal~r MiJdle Ohio V,a,llfrr
'

. '

~·

ON -Jan. 21, in COlumbus, Mcintyre was one of 210 Ohioanll
whose completed careerS were recognized during d~cation
cere111onies of the recenUy-a~mpleted Great Ohioans Hall of
Fame at the Ohio Historical Center. ·

'

I

'

'

+++++
MciNTYRE, who spent his boyho9d days in the Old French
City, made it big with his "New York Day By Day" syndicated·
column in the 1920s and 1930s. He died Feb. 14, 1938, at the age of
54. He rests in Mound Hill Cemetery, "overlooking the beautiful
Ohio River and Gallipolis."

+++++
NOMINATIONS, BCC!lrding to the Jan. 21 edition of the
Cincini)Bti Post, were screened by society officers and grouped
into two main classi6cations - the great and near great.
Mcintyre was listed among the great wtder "communicatloiiB.".
The "great" classification contained ' 148 persons, and the
"communications.. category included 19 individuals.

+++++
NAMES of those selected under "great" classi6cation were
published in. The Post, along with a brief statement of their
contributions, Of OOM, the statement read: "Oscar Odd
Mcintyre, (1884-1938, Gallipolis) - the columnist who made
Broadway and Main Street 'a dual highway.' "

ED BEWLEY
RADIO-TV-FJLM OOORDINATOR-EdBewley, '1fT, has
joined the Ohio Department of DeveloJIIlent as Radio-'IV·
Film Coordinator. Department Director David C. Sweet said
Bewley, former anchorman for WTVN-TV in Columb41s, will
develop a series of films and tapes lor use by the state's
lroadcast media describing Development Department
programa and services, as weU as Ohio's industriallJ&gt;cation
.advantages ·and tourist attractions.

+++++

MRS. RALPH Rife, Oleshire, reports numerous Evening
Grosbeaks gathered around her bird feeder in the Riles' back
yard a week ago Friday. It is rare for ·these l!irds to be In this
area according to a feature article in last llunday's COlumbus
EXTON, Pa. - Foote
Dispatch. The birds were also seen In Franklin and Fairfield
CO!Inties last month. They hall from along the Canadian border. . Mineral Company Tuesday
The male hasa yellow colored body with black and white colored reported net sales for the year
wings and a long ivory colored beak. The female's color is a bit 1971 of $92,772,301, down from
duller, sort of a brownish gold according to Mrs. Rife. The birds sales of $100,256,042 in 1970. Net
measure approximately 7\2 to &amp;Inches in length and are "simply earnings for 1971 were
$1,777,712 . compared with
beautiful," Mrs. RHe remarked.
$3,840,482 in 1970.
+++++
The 1971 net earnings are
RECEIVED an i1tteresting letter Wednesday from Norman
after
a fourth quarter
L. Price, Jr., Pomeroy, concerning an article which appeared in
deduction of an extraordinary
last Sunday's Dateline. "Possum" as he is known throughout the
charge
of $355,380 (net of
Bend Area, wrote:
·
"Dear Hobart:
"To begin, let me quote your column, DATELINE Gallla, of
Sunday, Jan. 30, 1972, in the Sunday Times SenUnel (paragraph
GMHIRING
four). ("GAHS basketball faiiB are still talking about the Blue
DETROIT (UPl) -General
Devils' thrilling 60-59 come-from-behind victory over Athens on
Motors Corp. announced today
Jan. 21. Tom Metiers, veteran Athens Messenger sports writer,
it would add 4,300 new jobs
during the next few months to
informed us recenUy that if the Bulldogs beat Waverly in second
meet
rising production needs
haH.play, Gallipolis will become the only SEOAL team to sweep a
with 720. of them to be hired in
season series from Athens during the past 16 years.)
Ohio,
120 at the GM complex in
"There's some inaccuracy to that statement ...
Lordstown.
"My calculation ol16 from 1972 puts me back in the 1956-57
basketball season. That year the powerful Pomeroy Purple
Panthers, coached by Dick Retton, dumped Athens twice. On
Jan. 11, 1957, Pomeroy won 61-48 at Athens, on Feb. 8, 1957,
Pomeroy won 67,~ at Pomeroy. Aaron Buffington (fonner Ohio
Valley PUblishing COmpany employee) was chosen the SEOAL'S
Moat Vablable Player.
"The following season, 1957~ saw the Panthers take the
SEOALchampionship,getthe SEOAL's Most Valuable Player in
S. T. Johnson and beat Athens twice (now that's bac~..to-back).
~ Jan. 17, 1958, Pomeroy won 65-64 and on Feb. 14, 1958,
Pomeroy won 61-M at Athens.
"The latter gsrne was the championship game. With a SRO
crowd inside, the doors to the Athens gym were closed and many
Pomeroy fans waited outside in the cold unW the final buzzer to
help bring the bacon home.
"The 1959-60 season Pomeroy had a new basketball coach,
Rusaell Moore. PHS took the SEQAL championship again along
with 1the reserve and freshmen basketball championships and
had the SEOAL's Most Valuable Player in Phil Harrison. And we
also beat Athens twice, 56-51 at Pomeroy on Dec. 8, 1959 and~
at Athens on Jan. 22, 1960.''
'

Foote's Net Off in 1971

MEIGS cheerleaders f'!" the
eighth grade B baaketbaU
team are, 1-r, front, Katrina
llftey; in back, I to r,.Drema
Hovatter and Demarts. Ash.
M!'•· Dana K~mger ts. the
inltructor astltsted by Cmdy
Colfrnan.

1
1

Whealey is Peace C~didate
Dr. Robert H. Whealey, 41, Vielnam War since coming to
Tenth District Democratic ·the University -in 1964, he.
Congreasional candidate, an frequently participated in
Associ a lion Professor of antiwar teach-ins and other
History at Ohio University in debating activities . He also ·
Athens, is campaigning on six worked on a local level for
key issues.
former Senator Eugene McHe said these are :
Carthy during the latter's 1968
(I ) Cut hack the Arms Race; Presidential campaign.
(2) peace in Indo-China; (3) Whealey, his wife Lois and
restore confidence in the in· their three children reside at 14
flated dollar; (4) defend the Oak Street, Athens.
constitution; (5) reconcile the
races through love; (6) that he
is the best qualified Democrat
to run against the Republican
incumbent.
Whealey's career has been in
the study and teaching of in·
ternatlonal relations. A native
of Long Island, N. Y. he
earned a master and Ph. D.
degrees in history and in·
Bob Lich, Dorsey Jordan and
ternational relations at the Clay Jordan attended a
University of Michigan managers and co-workers twofollowing two years in the day conference at Wooster for
army and a year of study at employees of Experiment
Oxford.
Farms in Ohio.
In 1964, he moved to Athens . Mr. and Mrs. Thad Dye 'BOd
and began t~ teach at Ohio Dale Dye were guests of Mr.
University.
and Mrs.· Lewis Smith and
A vocal opponent of the Nancy and the group
celebrated Thad Dye's birthday.
Victor · Perry.
Hazel
Dunigan, Amy Lowther and

+++++

BOB WHEALEY

News, Event

moil bo•! Sa ve time

special trips by moiling
your checks for deposit.
for o special " Bonk-by·
il" envelope ANYTIME!

Ohio

Valley
Bank

Fernie Woodgerd were in
Columbus to visit their brother,
Vernon Perry, who ·was
seriously ill and . confined to
Doctors Hospital West. Mr.
Perry.is reportedly improving
slowly.
Mrs . Geue Jeffers and
daughter, Margie, along with
Mike Lawson were in East
liverpool for the Junior Miss '
Pageant finals .
Mrs. Ida Dennison suffered a
hip injury in an accident and is
confined to Holzer Hospital.
She underwent surg.ery on

NLY NE UTILITY

Get a
wheel deal
A S!a!e Farm McblfeHcme:;,wne~!i
t:c!!c; prOtectsycwr mo~i !e home,
i!s co ntE-ntS, e.nd inch..:des ctrson!: li!.J ;~ ! ty co·.-era~e. e.!l ln a
$l!'l g!e, low·cost · ~a~~&lt;agt. s:ata
F!rrn is al! ycu r.eed to. k·:: w

ELECTRICITY

We furnish·Water • ~Sewage -Garbage Collection. Am,Pie
Parking • TV AoleWIB - Wall-to·WaU Carpeting Draperies - Rlugei • Refrigerators - Air Conditioning Garbage Dlsposall -Dishwashers- Heat Lamps -Private
Palios • Swl11111lln.( Pool - Clubhouse.

abcut in$~r4nc.e. C~! rr.e tc-::r.

CARROL K. SNOWDEN
Park Central Hotel Bldg.
5e(ond Ave. • Ph. 446·4290
Home Ph . '144·4511
Golllpoli•
uthe now bank that
appreciates y~ur but~inets''

...,.A"rf" FA ttl\ J
CA. !.I l.':. '.1'..-•••;·....1/J

S

S:e:a F11"1"' r:··e •~"~ c.
Ce~ Ja i ..J Cclmp1n; ,

Member : Ftderal Deposit

Home Off1ee:
Sir:; :"&lt;\1n~ :'" r.. .u::-:c i1

f -701:·· .

I

2HEDROOMTOWNHOUSES

l~BA'lliS

.
TGWNHOUSE
TARA
For Information

Call·

HERE, I

eous~r

blOW
NICE!

'fdu ·

sbMeTI-UNe:.
. '·

't

•• ,..

.··

~.

'.

.. .

,• t
-&lt;r; •

I

l'

'

•

more time
for cooking
less time
for clr.aning

. THE ONL4' TROUBLE WA&gt;,
IT TOOK ME AN ~OUR TO
·, 6ET IT ON THE FLEA!
•

+++++
TWENTY YEARS AGO,Irom the files of the Daily Tribwte
and weekly Gallia Times .... Portion of bank on 400 block of First
Ave;, slips Into Ohio River alter winter storm ... Dr. N. Howard
Foster urges parents to keep ill children horne from school as flu .
epidemic continues ... Paul Watson to head Gallipolis Olamber
of Commerce for third straight year .... Hobart Wilson, GAHS
senior, named Rotary's "Boy-of-the-Month" ... W. G. Scarberry
named GAHS commencement speaker ... Olase upsets Rio
Redmen, 91-M ... Blue Devils maul Pomeroy Panthers, 75-18.

Carpenter

is bank is as close as your

•-'

WE'D !ike to. thank "Possum" for that bit of information.
Actually, it was a mistake on Dateline's part. Athens, however,
has dominated the SEOAL tbe past 10 years, and Mr. Mettera is
in the process of Checking his records to see how long it has been
since a SEOAL ~ub WOII a season series from the Bulldogs. Could ·
be I~ was the last time.

taxes) • for a non-recurring
write off of certain machinery .
and equipment which had no
further economic or operating
value.
The net earnings in 1971 were
equivalent to $1.36 per share of
the company's Convertible
Preferred Stock or $2.2«
cumulative if earned (earnings
were $1.63 per preferred share
before· the extraordinary
charge). Foote . operates one
plant near New Haven, W.Va.
The. fourth quarter 1971
results reflected the continued
soft levels of business, particularly in sales to the sleel
and aluminum industries. Also
contributing to the operating
loss was a two week strike by
the United Steelworkers at
three of the company's
ferroalloy plants.

APARTMENTS

Shirley Adkins
Kon

lee- U772SO

==~."~-'~=·.-=.~:::. ._:;,;.,~~.-:&lt;";. :-j~ REMOVABLE
OVEN DOOR

.

'

..:L .A NCBLOT

J' ' ,

t

' ,

f ,

•

·

1,

I

·

'

'

AND DOOR
SEALS.

+++++
I

v

Monday and is convalescing
satisfactorily.
Rob Turner is a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy for observation and
treatment.
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan
attended tpe theme program , James Circle, New Haven,
contest for Vinton County and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
which was held at Wilkes Pierce of Athens visited with
Grange on Saturday evening. Mary Circle on Sunday.
Mrs. Jordan , Meigs, County
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie RanPomona , Grange Lecturer, dolph of Rock Springs spent
along with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Sunday evening with Mr. and
Stewart, dep 11ties from Mrs . -Arthur E. Johnson,
Jackson County, .were judges Patrick, Sheryl LeAnq and
for the contest. Wilkes Grange Betty Van Meter.
had first place entry .with
Mr. and Mrs. Shelby Pickens ·
· 1\llensville Grange placing and family, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
second. Mrs. 'Justice Harden, Hudson, Syracuse, and Mr : and
Vinton County Pomona Lee- Mrs .· Frank Hudson and
turer, was in charge of the , daughter 'of Racine spe~t
contest.
Sunday with .Mr . and Mrs.
Guests of Mrs. Murl Allan Taylor.
Galaway were Leon Woodt'um,
Ricky, Cathy and Randy,
ESCAP.ES INJURY
McArthur. .
BATON ROUGE, ·La. (UP!)
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
- High winds blew an oak tree
were in Columbus on business
on a ho use Thursday,
and visited his sisler, Mrs.
dislodging three roof beams
Jessie Jewell, called on his
and sending them crushing
· brother, Eldon Starkey, who Js
still hospitalized there, and into the bedroom of Robert ·
Wallis, Y.'hO was asleep. The 2- "
were guests of their son-in-law
by-0 beams speared his bed in
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
three places, and 11e 18y pinned
Donald Jones, Nelsonville,
until two deputy sheriffs helped
enroute.
free him. He was not hurt.

Carmel News,

By the Day

I

"""'
Magic Chef combines beauty and convenience to add extra hours of pleasure to
your cooking day. The sealed oven window
lets you watch your meal take shape.
Eliminates constantly opening and closing
the oven door to check and recheck. The
heat stays in the oven. And out of your
kitchen. ·
'

--·-

, _ _ 1o rou ~·•loftlll
lbout wMt'I,OOC*Iftg.

·----------------------

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Visit the Appliance Depart"'ent on the
Jrd floor. Se~ the iarge ·sele~tion of
Refrigerators, Washers, Dryers, Dish_washers, l;lectric R~nges, Sinks, Hot
Water Tan~s (.Electric and Gas&gt;,
Humidifiers
and Oehumidiflers.
•
,.
• I

"

'

'

'

by Coker &amp; .P enn·

�.

.

'

.b)r,.~ T. ~ap~.li_D·
ll""r"--~-....., .

... t

I

.

.,.

,by~ick ., Cavalli ·

__

. . ..
'

AIN'T CALLEP

s.&amp;.FFO TH' KIUER

AND YOL.lb WKE ME 10

FO~NUTHIN!

I3LlT I OON'T
HA.VSANY .
' MONE:Y10
6LlY1HEM

•
'

j

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BUY 1H.E:M FOR.)t:Xl?

WI1H.

I

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-

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',

I

••'
'
.. '

,.

,

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...BUT I DON'T RECKON

.•.'

GRAMPS? ·

· HE'LL BE AROUNP TO
GET HIS SHARE OF

val WANT 10 6END ourA
HLlND~AND FIFTY6E.V'EN VALE=NTINE!S ~! .

BRSAKI=AST •••

~N

IF

l HELP IT

IM VERY

AFA=CTIONA1E~

..

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.
.
,.'·
'

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......

~'

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, '.....

.;

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. ,I

© 1?72 hr NEA,'ln£., ·

PBISCI~I.A.'S

POP.
CAN I ASK 'IM
TO ~~1FT 11S
Fec-r; 1=1.0?

..,•,..'
.

'

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,,
..

'

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• '

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AND PACKING
A BIG-

'

!

PISTOL.!

BUT NO ·

' t

EVE~

.

'
' '

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.'

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.

.. ,

;.

'

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.....

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·YWONDBR
·
'

by Dick Bogers

)t\\l'tlfacts· . .

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:t1' 1AI&lt;I!l6

l

POUNP5
OP G~AP1!!5
1'0 MAI&lt;!i
ON!i-POUNO

4.1i.

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d

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RAI5LN5.

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, ~DON'T SCOWL AT ME, YOUNG MAN ! IT WAS YOU WHO rUT THE ONE
..,
I WANT ON TH~ IOTTOM lQWJ"
.
.

.

•I'L~

•

TELL YOU SOMETHING ELSE THAT'S

!'

WEll:.· STACKED •• , OUR .KITCHEN SINK!"

' ~ .

·,

-~,..
,'

I.

•

o

I

One of the valuable .
prizes above for question · :
answered here each week, · :
and libroryeditions of the
World Almanac for the :next four best! Send
your gues~on and age to:

. ~W~dw

(c/o this ~~P:C:!~~)
P·.O. Box
Santo

�s

H!:R.E'S
A GOOD

IS MV GAL. PAT-; 'lOW KNOW
THOSE: FOI?.TUNE CARCIS YOU GeT
AT WEiiGHING- MACHINES "l-SHE
GETS A S'IMPATHV CARC&gt;J

ONE)

LiSTEN TO T:.liS GAG~ M'l
IS SQ PAT, HER ROOM

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HAS~EONI..V RUGWITI~
WALl.~TO~WAL~

PERSON

· Otr·R . :SOARDXNG HOUSE

by Les Carroll

THE DOCTOR PUT 1-!ER ON A
DU.fOS TAKIIJJ .
STRICT I.OW-CALORUo OIST -Q'JOTE-HLIMO~
-RETROACTIVE TO 19b3
WRmNG, THIS.
· '
TERM

FROM OOOLITTLE COLLEG..E
"

by~~
WOU~D HI!

STEP.L.

SUCH LOUSY
JOI&lt;:SS ~

WE !&lt;UMOR!STS CALL
CALLING Til EM JOKeS,
THESE''EXAGGERATION IS AN EKAGG&amp;RATION 1
JOKes··
ALL RtGHT J

M'i WUMOR WRiiiNG
CLASS IS SO CROWDEiD,
WE ~AVE TO TAKe 'fURNS
ROI.~I NG IN THE AISLESJ

TALK 490UT F'OPULARl MV

HEY, $1M01 '

~ CLASS IS SO CR()WI)~!O,
I'VE GOT Af\1 .
Tlol&amp;ltE'S
IDEA FOR '(OU J
ROOM ~

A~E. YOU IMPORTING
6R~WL.S BY M~IL.~ lVE.
13E.EN BIRD·D0661N6
1HE. DOOIZ6, AND YOU
l-ltWEN'T 6EEN OUT~ .

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'ffirtJK Of

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AS AN

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BUGS BUNNY

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THANKS,
AN'
EAt' HEARTY/, .

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GReeTJN::;S,

61...\V'NOR/

.[X)N'I O'V'C"I..OOK '11-IE
1Ut;.IA ... III'S MOST

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\'\' AAS A COMIC

by Stoffel &amp; Hein1.dahl

APPETI:Z:ING/

.

11'1-tAS AN WI"IORIAI.. f'AG~
AIJD A Cl..ASS!Fit:D f'AG!:·~

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THB BORN LOSER

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by Art SansoDJ.

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;

President Resubmits Manpower Bill
WASHINGTON (UPI)~sldent Nixon resulxnltted to · '11le nation needs better trained workers to restore I~
Congress today a billion manpower lraliling program, saying productivity growth and f!l8ke American goods more competiit would cut unemployment and Increase productivity of . tive witll prOducts of nations that have a lower paid but less efAmerican wOI'kers.
.
·
ficient work force, the President told the House and Senate.
E118e111ially unchanged from a' plan first sent up to Capltpl Hill
In addition, Nixon aald, proper job training will help unemlast Mari:h II would provide that $1.7 billion be divided amorig ployed workers quallfy for available jobs.
atates, cities and counties on a formula based on.the siZe of their
"We coricerned abOut the individual American~ncerned
labor force aro the numbers of unemployed and disadvantllged. thai he learn the Skills to gain employment or learn more skills to
The other $300 million would be retaliled by the Labor Depart- gain better employment,'' Nixon said.
ment for nationw ·tralnlng )rOgralllB.
,.
.
"We are concerned aboUt the health of our economy, knowing
Nixon noted that the steady increase In productivity-the that a strong, .highly productive economy is the individual
output per Am~can worker- which averaged 3.4 per cent a · American's best Insurance against unemployment."
The propOsal is one Of six special revenue sharing progr811lB
year In the late 19508 and early 1960s had declined to an average
of only 1.8 per cent by the end of the last decade.
Nixon seeks, aimed at giving state and local governments
.
\-

n

are

' ' ·' ·~

greater llexlbllity in using spending grants from Washington.
The sjJecial .revenue sharing plan folds in the funds which
would finance ex~ single-purpose programs into broad .
grants, to give the state and local governments discretion on how
to tailor programs to local needs.
'The proposed manpower program is essentially unchanged
from last year.
Congress did not pass any of Nixon's revenue sharing plansthe six special purpose programs or the general revenue sharing
measuie-1a!t year.
'
In today's message, the President said current federal
assislance meas\lres, keyed to specillc programs and often
requiring special actions by state · or local governments,
represented "a hardening of governmental arteries ."

.

'·

'

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Devoted To 'lJullnlere.ll

NO. XXIV NO. 209

POMEROY-MIDDlEPO.RT OHIO

•

~&amp;'AKING !IAI'~V 5UT WE ·CAN ,
KEEP AFLOAT·M~VB6- WITH.THE

PUMP. I CAN'T G5T A 51~Hr ~0 t
t:'ON"T' KNOW OU!t J&gt;&lt;AC.T POSITION •

This 8ookworm has
®a Happt; Endin~ · ·
PRESIPENT !.'

mEN G ITRID
· o: Tf.\l&gt;.T NASTY

THIS
PRESIDENT-

LI'LWOR~I!

TM'LATI

DINJ.JER IS A · '

CIRI!AT HONOR!! '

.JAMISK.

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1972
-~ I

PHONE 992-2156'

lEN CENT§

Viet Cong Rockets
Hit Rural Capital

___ ..

GUESS WJ.ItJ'S COMIIII'
TO DINNER ?- TJ.f

Of 'lJie Meigi·MfUOn Area

AH GOTTA INVITE..
MAMMY!!' r-.--c';l

POLK!!

DEVOTEDFAJII - Mrs.Mabel VanMeter, who will be 83
years old the 27th of this month, very rarely misses an
Eastern lligh School basketball game. Mrs. VanMeter is .
Dennis Eichinger's grandmother. Dennis is having another
great year in basketball, his fourth as a starter. Mrs. VanMeter follows aU sports. Friday night she was keeping her
own tally of the Eastern-Glouster game.

Ice Dangerous
On Meigs Roads

.. -~~-~!q
in a building commWiist of· 1UhWmw·.,=~~~,-···-.
y.•.v.•;,N:·.-.·:~ .......m~:;a;:.............:.•':·•!•Mlm
fensive in the Highlands, ac4,000 Year-Old Document Found
cording to allied intelligence.
· Two rockets exploded near :B
CAIRO (UPI) - Archeologists cUgglng near Cairo
the province headquarters, ·"
·"!:
have discovered a papyrnt document about 4,000 years
killing one Vietnamese and
At 4:47 p. m. Wilbert J.
1'hree accidents were inold written ID Aramaic, the language of Christ, an
wounding three others, field
McClain,
39, Racine, Rt. I, was
vestigated by the Meigs County
Egyptian antiquarian said today.
reports said.
traveling east on 124 when his
Sheriff's Dept. Sunday.
Kontum, a town of 30,000
Kamal Mallnllh, an authority Ill ancient languages,
At 10:40 a. m. at the in- car went off the highway on the
population 260 miles north of
said It wu "a major discovery."
tersection of Vine and Fifth right, traveled along the berm
Saigon, has been widely
Papyrus !A a' reed ID abllndane&lt;o aloag the banks of
Sts. in Racine, 'William M. and Into a ditch, hitting a
mentioned by allied officers as
the Nne. During biblical Umes the Egyptians used It to
Beegle, 18, Racine, Rt. 1, and culvert.
the most likely point to be
· make parchment for wrldng and to COII8truct sea-coing ~ William R. Arnott, 43, Racine~
McClain was taken to
attacked in any guerrilla ofvessels.
:$
Rt. 2, collided. Beegle was Veterans Memorial Hospital
fensive, expected to be timed
"lbe document appears to tell of a plan dating from !~i stopped at the intersection and by the Racine E-R squad where
with President Nixon's Feb. 21
2,000 years before the birth of Christ for a Syrian In· ~ did not see Arnott's vehicle he was treale\1 for lacerations
visit to Peking.
vaslon of Egypt and of bow the Egyptians countered the ~ approach.
to an eye and arm , and
Besides Kontum,
the .
plan;" Mallakb said.
~:
released.
guerrillas shelled a hamlet
.:-· There were no Injuries or
McClain was cited to court on
~!!! n . .....,:.~:•:»r.:~:;'i§:~».::::'*&gt;~~:x~~~w.~'fd(, arrests and medium darruige to
near Chuong Nghia, 26 miles
MEIGS CHEERLEAPERS for' the eighth grade A
charges
of reckless oper~Uon .
the Beegle car, light to Ar·
northeast of Kontum then
football and basketball teams are : front row, Tamra
BOSTON (UP!)- Prealdent attacked !lie militia outpost
nott's.
Stanley; second row, 1-r, Usa Thomas and Kathy Harris;
Nixon is far and way the most defending it.
At 3 p. m. on SR 33 near the
popular candidate among
back row, Kathy Werry, Merri Ault and Debbie Bailey.
roadside
park, Howard A.
One South Vietnamese
....
potential RejJubllcan votera in soldier was wounded and .-two
'
' .
Dailey, 48, Middltport, Willi
· the New ltlimpshlre prlmilry, VietCong were killed, military
WASHINGTON (UP!)- • using the prisoners as pawns to traveling south when his car hit
according to a newspaper poll,
Hanoi's Xuan '11luy and U.S. gain concessions from the ice. It went off the highway on
The poll, copyrighted in the sources said.
In 11 sizeable clashes and Secretary of State Wlll1am P. United States. "It is Mr. Nixon the left, returned across the
Boston Sunday Globe, showed
Rogers dlaagree on how to end who uses the POWs as pawns, highway and skidded sideways
Rep. Paul N. McCloskey, R· shellings in the 24 hours ending the Indochina war, and how the not us," he said.
into a guardrail. There were no
Calif., favored .by, only 14 per at 6 a.m. today (6 p.m. EST United States can recover
'l1luy, Vietnam's chief dele- Injuries and only· medium
BY UNITED PRESS INTERIIIATIONAL
cent of New Hampshire Repub- Sunday) the South Vietnamese prisoners of war.
gate
to the P~ris talks, also damage to the car.
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UP!) CHAPEL HIU., N.C.- SEN. EDWARD M. .Kennedy, D- lican voters, with President command reported 74 Com"Why
doesn't
President
asked
whY
It
was
necessary
for
With only one more pr1111)lecMass., probably would be the strongest Democratic presidential Nixon supported by 71 per cent, munist !loops killed. Military Nixon make a statement the North Vietnamese to allow
sources
said
11
South
Viettive juror to be selected to the
candidate In North Carolina, according to a survey taken by the and conservative Rep. John
stopping •commitment to the a team of medical experts tend
namese
and
one
American
.
preliminary panel, the Jfarria.
Institute for Research In Social Sciences at the University of Ashbrook, R.()hlo, by 4 per were killed and 50 injured or Saigon administration and then to the captives who may be sick
burg Seven appsrenUy wiU be
cen\.
North Caroilna.
Cloudy northeast and tried by a jury predominantly
the Vietnam problem would be or hurt.
wounded,
Including
five
One per cent favored
Further, the institute said, the survey showed President
very rapidly settled, both
"If now we let those people clearing elsewhere tonight and female, of middle-age, and
Americans.
·
comedian
Pat
Paulsen,
I
per
Nixon could outpoU any of the leading Democratic contenders, as
The heaviest fighting was In political and militarily," Thuy viait camps it might help Mr. cold wl th a few snow flurries Protestant.
cent
supported
other
cannortheast. Low tonight zero to
well as Alabama Gov. George Wallace. The institute said in a
Nixon in his aim..."
the U Minh Forest in the said SUnday.
The kidnBiHJomb conspiracy
didates,
and
9
per
cent
said
random survey of 1,091 adult North Carolinians between August ·
Rogers retorted "It is not the
Rogers said the North 10 above. Tuesday partly trial entered Its third week
Mekong
Delta
where
46
and November, 35 pet. of aU Democrats and Independents they were undecided.
guerrillas were killed in three Saigon regime we're support- Vietnamese have been ar- cloudy northeast and fair with only one·person needed to
In
the
poll,
30
per
cent
said
lng . We're supporting the bltrary In discussions about elsewhere. High Tuesday J2 to flU a panel of 48, from wlich
favored Kennedy.
they did not know enough about clashes at a cost of nine South people in South Vietnam so that release of the prisonera ...
20 north and 18 to 25 south.
VIetnamese killed and 50
the final 12 jurors wiU be
NEWRY, NOR'l11ER IRELAND - MORE than 20,000 McCloskey to form an opinion wounded.
they can decide their own
'"'They have said, 'we won't
selected by an elimination
of him. Almost two-thirds of
future."
return your POWs unless you
persons marched in the biggest demonstration In Northern those polled _ 84 per cent _
· process lo!laY or Tuesday.
LOCAL TEMPS
'11luy and Rogers were in- throw out the government in
Ireland history Sunday but turned back to avoid a clash with said they had no opinion of
TWO CA~MADE
The temperature in down- Then, sll alternate jurors will
interviewed
In
separate
halfVIetnam
and
meet
our
other
British troops. March organizers today called for a "day of Ashbrook .
The Pomeroy E-R squad ho\lr segments on CBS-TV's considerations.' It has never town Pomeroy at II a. m. . be picked In a process that may
take the rest of the week.
disruption" we&lt;Jnesday to protest the six-month anniversary of
Nixon was alandallde winner answered a call to the home of
"Face
the
Nation.''
been
any other way," Rogers Monday was 26 degrees under
In tivo weeks of clearing
the government policy of detention without trial.
· 1n the 1968 New Hampshire Mrs. Iva Fields, 650 Osborne
sunny skies.
Thuy denied that Hanoi was said.
veniremen
from the ll~unty
A spokesman for the Northern Ireland Civil Rights primary, receiving 77.6 per St., lit 12:04 p.m. Saturday,
Federal Court District of
Association said a province-wide slldown demonstration was cent, of the Republican ballots · who was ill. Mrs. Fields was
Middle Pennsylvania, 45 have
planned this week "to dislocate the functioning of the state and cast. New York Gov. Nelson A. taken to Veterans Memorial
been selected; 28 of them ire
Iring Northern Ireland to a standstill."
Rockefeller was runnerup with Hospital a!ld admitted.
women;
23 are between the
At 11:15 p.m. Sunday the
10.8 per cent.
ages 40 to 60; and only five are.
The poll of 1,035 New Hamp- squad was . called for Mrs.
SONOMA, CAUF. -A WOMAIII who received over $12,000 in
By Ualted Preu International
Patrolman Carl L. Thursh, jured. The accldent remained Roman Catholics.
welfare payments, deaplte assets estimated at close to $1))0,000, . shire Republicans who said Gerald Grate who suffered an
An
Ohio
Highway
Patrolman
'11le Rev. Philip F. Berrigan
30,
was one of two persons ldll- under Investigation.
was to surrender to authorities today on charges of welfare they plan to vote In the primary apparent heart attack at her enroute to the scene of a traffic
Thrush, of Creola, joined the and six other antiwar activists
fraud. Betty S. Pohlman, mother of six, was charged in a six- was conducted exclusively for home on Route 124 near accident Sunday was killed ed In the crash on Ohio 93 four
patrol
in 1984 and was first as- are on trial on charges of
miles
north
of
McArthur
in
. count felony complaint with receiving $12,713.48 under the Aid to the Globe by the Becker Pomeroy. She was taken to when his cruiser plowed into
VInton County.
signed to the Wilmington )XI6t, plotting to kidnap Henry A.
Research Corp. 'lbe polling· Holzer Medical Center.
Families with Dependent Children program.
·another
car on a snow-covered
A paaaenger in the other car, then transferred to the sub-post Kissinger, blow up the
Assistant District Attorney John Hawkes said the woman was completed Jan. 24.
highway,
boosting
the
weekend
.Washington, D.C., heating
Mrs. Sharon Griffy, 25, of Cre- at McArthur In 1968.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
transf~ tiUe to a seven-room house 911 a two-acre estate ~th ~.:.u.e. •.•.u.•.u.&amp;.;:¥:_._;_..w_.:.n.m: .;;..£
traffic
toll
in
the
state
to
at
ola, was also killed, and her
It was the only multiple . system, and vandalize draft
Plans to build a new cona swlnuning pool to another member of the family and claimed
least
12.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
husband and small son were in- death accident of the weekend boards In nine states.
cession stand and bleachers
direct income of only $736 during a 'jleriod In which her actual
Ohio extended outlook will be made when the
as Inches of snow kept travel · Six of the defendants are
income was more than $9,000.
. Wednesday lbrough Friday · Southern High School Athletic
and speed at a minimum In ·present or former clergy
Cold Wednesday through Boosters meet at 7:30 p.m.
members of the Roman Catho,
most parts of the state.
WS A!IIGELES - GIRI.8 WHO ENGAGE in sexual inFriday with a chance of Ugbt tonight at the high school in
Taking advantage of the Congressman will travel to
Three pedeatrisns were kill- lic left. The other is a Moslem
tercourse In their teens may be more likely to develop cancet of snow or snow flurries Tbuts- Racine .
Lincoln Day Congressional Pomeroy where he will conduct ed, two on Saturday and one ·scholar from Pakistan, a fellow
the cervix; according to a medical researcher.
day 8lld Friday. Daytime
Recess, !Oth District lawmaker an' Open Door Session in the Friday .night. The previous at the Adlai Stevenson Institute
TAKEN
TO
HOSPITAL
Dr. Duane E . Townsend said that Spanish-jjpeaking women highs mostly Ill tbe ZOs
in Chicago.
Clarence Miller returns to Jury Room at lhe Meigs weekend's toll was 14.
RtrrLAND
James
W,
In the mostly Mexlcart-~erlcan area of East Los Angeles
Wednetday and the upper
Southeastern Ohio this Thurs- County CoUrthouse from 3 to 4
develop cancer of the cervix at a rate two to four times as great ZOt to lower, 301 Thunday Whittington , Rutland, was day for three days of con- p.m. That evening Miller
and Friday. Overnight lows 5 taken to Veterans Memorial stituent activities .
concludes his schedule in
as the national average.
'
Hospital
by
the
Middleport
E-R
to 10 early Wednesday
The Congressman
on Nelsonville where he will
BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND - ROMAIII CathoUc
moderating to the upper unit at 2:54 p.m. Sunday from Thur&amp;day and Friday will be in address the Annual Athens
civil rights leaders today proclaimed Wednesday a "day of
teens and lower ZOs by his home. Experiencing dif- the Marietta and Zanesville County lincoln Day Banquet
MASON - Ervin Clayton . three brothers , Bernard
disruption" thtoughout Northern Ireland despite a pollee crackficulty · In breathing, he was areas.
Thursday night •.
which will be held at the Tri- Roush, 66, Letart, W. Va., was Bennett,. Reedsville ; Ben
down on leadera of Sunday's mammoth protest march by 20,000 · ~,
admitted.
®.~
dead on arrival at Veterans Bennett, New Castle, Pa ., and
On Salurday, Feb. 12, the County Vocational School.
persons In Newry.
Memorial Hospital Saturday Emery Bennett, Homesworth,
. Pollee In Belfast said 28 persons, including some members of
evening where he was taken by Ohio; five sisters, Mrs.
the British and Northern Ireland Parliaments, wiU be prosecuted
the New Haven E-R squad Beatrice Donohue, Letart;
after being found along the Mrs. Ralph Gilber, Coshocton;
for taking pirt In SUnday's Illegal civil rights mal'cb In Newry,
road near his home.
Mrs.
Bridget
Snyder,
the biggest in Northern Ireland history.
It was repOrted that he had Millwood, W. Va.; Mrs. Betty
NEW YORK (UPI)-A 1954, Newsweek said in an Book Co. to prove that he had lrvlng deposited It In Swiss
gone, to look for a cab and was Wilson, Ravenswood, and Mra.
met with Hughes in a Series of bank accounta.
NEW YORK - PRESIDENTIAL Adviser Henry A. transcript with marginal notes article in Its current Issue.
The New York Daily News, found after he failed to retUrn Birdie Rhodes, in Florida . .
Stephen White, who wrote interviews, was ~cbeduled to
l(lsalngt!l', in an interview publlahed Sunday, said the Nixon in Howard Hughes' han'd·
reported
Saturday that Irving home. Death apparently was
Friends may call at the
writing
that
Clifford
Irving
.the
Look
article,
confirmed
appear
before
a
federaJ
grand
adnilnlatration was very anxious to.end the Vietnam war but in a
had attempted to coilVert all due ·to natural causes. Mr. residence at Letart after 4 p,
11111111er that would not injure Americans "spirit" or sell- used as proof that an that tapes and,trrinacrlpta were jury today.
autobiography : of
the made of his Hughes'lnterviews
'lbe grand jury, In- his stocks into cash but agents Roush, a retired storekeeper, m. today. Funeral services wiD
confidence.
·
. Klaslnger, Nixon's asalstant for national security affairs, billionaire was authentic may In 1964, Newsweek aaid, and vestigating whether mail fraud of the lntemal Revenue Ser- . was born March 22; 1900 at be held at 2 p. m. Tuesday ~
'
the Asbury United Methmade his remarks to Interviewer Hugh Sldey of Ufe magazine. he IS yeara old, Newaweek that he thought he remem- . or other federal offenses are vice placed a detainer on ·the Letart.
magazine reported Sunday.
bered that Hughes had made involved, summo~ed Irving portfollo and said they would
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. od!st Church at Letart
An agent of Intertel, Hughes' •• andwrltten · corrections. and his . wife Edith to testify file a legal lien today. In ad- Genevieve Roush; three with the Rev. Mrs. Ashach
SAProRO, JAPAN ...:. Ll'M'LE JANET Lynn of Rockford,
intelligence
claimed White, however, said he behind closed doors on \be book dillon, Ute paper said, the IRS daughters, Mrs. Ruby Grimm ·Miller officiating. Burial wiD
m., brougb.t the United States its second medal of lhe 1972 Winter the transcriptnetwork,
originally may thought aU that ~tertal had that cost McGraw-Hill $850,000 moved to tie up the lrvlngs' and Mrs. June Brooks, both of be in the Eversreen,CematwJ
Olympic Garnes today when she placed thlrd anJI took the bronze
have been used as the baals for been burned years ago.
· in advance payments. 'lbe bank accounts and asked them Letart, and Mrs. Ruth Steele, at Letart. Arr11111emenla 11'1
medal In women's figure skating. .
·
a long profile on Hughes thaf Irvin~. who ~bowed the company thought the money to immediately file a 197l · Pomeroy; 11 grandchildren, 1111der . the directi911 of lilt
lContinued on Page 8)
aPPeared in Look magazine in· transcript to McGraw-Hill w~ going to Hugbes but Edith Income tax return.
three great-grandchildren, Foglesong Fun~al Home.
I

SAIGON (UP!) - Communist troops fired rockets Into
the Central Highlands province
capital of Kontum today, and
along the Cen,ral Coast
. militiamen claimed to 'have
killed the VietCong "chief" of
troubled Binh Dinh Province,
military spokesmen said.
The rockets marked the first
assault on Kontum, the city
expected to be a prime target

'ilf
.

~

Nixon in
Runaway

Debate ·on Air

Composition of
-~

Jury for Seven

•

ews •• ln

SHE.
~LOPPID!I

WORM!! •AH f.\l&gt;.IN'T SA'/ IN' YO'
~IN'T TH' L ATE.

IT .WERE A NICE TR'f,
WORM-AN' WEHAIN'T

AN'CQLI)/,1
SHE'SST1~F

JAMES K.

POLK - BUTAH HAIN'T

GONNA IGUA&amp;J.I '10'
FO'IT-

SHI."SIN

ADMITYIJ.J' '/0' I t - UNTIL AH
IN

r----

KIN LIVE A FULL,RICH LIFE.

INTHISMAILORDE.RCATT'I· LOG.
IT BJ;.GIJ.JS WIF' ABDOMINAL
SUPPORTS, AN' f'NDS WIF

:ZINC SINKS-

.

TOUC:H!!-

, UcAIIIWHILe•.,
.,.AT A J.OCAJ.

.~or -tsr. sur re~L.

IF NEW~ LE-AK? OIJT ABOUT THAT
C~EAT!]J&lt;e 5ETTIN6 l..OG:;E' fROM
OUR t:XPERIMENTAI.. !.AS- McKEe
I~PU!?TRIE£&gt; 1-S RUII-JEDt

Becoming Clear

Weather

Officer Dies Near McArthur

CAPTAIN EASY
Mc.K!lS W(::'RIS FL.YJN6
A SE:A~CH PATTeRN!

TELEVJ,JON

. 5TATION,..

. A~D NOW, W!:' l~TI:RFWPT
· OUR LATS·NIGHf HOflRO~

lt10VIi TO .~~~ YOU '!;HI=&gt;.

WORP FROM OIJK5,P~O~
'

Miller Conii.ng To Courthouse

Ervin Roush Dead

DO YOU HAVE: A TE~D!&lt;NCY .·

TO see:

~TRAN6E

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