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End.of War ·in ·Vieinam, County Progress High on Wish Lists
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AJJ Old Year is
Gone; It's Time
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TC! ~Reflect Upon
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The New 1972

BOB ELBBRFELD, of tile Elberfeld Departmeat Store · In Pomeroy,
looking IntO -197%, concluded: "The
\ foremost wish, by far, I would have for
the aew year Is that there be peace on
; earth and well being for all the world's
families, and that cblldren everywhere
team and grow to become useful,
produ~tlve citizens."
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ALAN MclAUGIDJN, age 11, a
sophomore at M~lgs Wgb School, hopeful ·
of success In the classroom and on the
atble~c field: "I would like to be a
suc-cessful athlete at Meigs High. I would .
Uke to have the war end. I would Uke to
do well academically at Meigs. All these
tblngs would make the w~rld much nicer
to me."
,

POMEROY - Three Meigs
County bu.inessmen, a Aovernment
employe and a Meigs Wgh School
student were Invited to express tlielr
foremost "Wisb1' to come true 'in
197%.
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Their wishes varied. Three
mentioned the end of the war In
VIetnam. One had something to say,
not about dre.ss codes, but of the
Inclination of people to judge their
fellow man not by what be Is but by
bow be happens to appear to them,
and one, a young echelon
businessman, wanted other young
men to get busy making Meigs
County a better place to live. Here
they are:

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JAMES SOUL8BY, Pomeroy Post·
EARL INGEL8, IIWIIIger of the Mel1s
master: "The foremost wish I would
Branch of the Athens Savings and Loan:
have for 1972 Is that people would stop
"At the top of my wishes for 1972 Is for
judging others on their appearance alone • the young men of Meigs County to get
or according to their mannerisms. I feel
'Involved' In the county. This will make a
If we would make an honest effort to look
better place for them and their families
at the 'Inner man,' then all other
to live. Progress Is the key and we, the
problems or differences could be more
maker of this key."
easily resolved."

GEORGE HOBSTETTER, vice
president of the Pomeroy National Bank:
"The foremost wish I would have for 1972
Is that the war wQuld end In VIetnam and
that all' the boys be returned home,
especially the war prisoners, and that all
the world would be at peace. It would be
the best New Year's gift that people
everywhere could receive and enjoy.:•

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~~w You Know

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Your Invited Guest

tmts

. . ,he first American c o 1n
was ·a 'one-cent. piece minted
in 1787. It had 13t links rep:esenting. the · 13 origin a I
states and bore the motto,
"Mind Your Business."

Reaching More
Than 11,000

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

20 PAGES

VOL VI ·NO. 49

TWO SECTIONS
Pomeroy-Middleport

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SUNDAY, JANUARY 2, 1972

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'Families

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15 CENTS

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

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Gallia Politics Simmering toward May Prini.ary
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By DALE ROTIIGEB ·
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GALUPOUS - With the old year just
behind us, plans11iready are
for a more proQlialng . year in
the political front, Gallia County's
P~~~::~~ ha.ve started their uphill
st
In what may be a long, hard
carl)pllgn.
·1971 was its off-year election
which usually does not attract too much
attention. I¥ues laat November included
school board races, tax levies, township
trustee posts and village races.
ln.terest is beginning to stir for this
'year's presidential race locally as well as
1111 tionally.
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Here in Gallia County, eyes are

focusing on several important county •
positions. Offices up for grabs are
prosecuting attorn~!· she~iff, county
commissioner, coron,r, treasurer, clerk of
courts, county engineer, recorder, and
probate judge. '
Although candidates have until 4 p. m.
Wednesday, Feb .. 2, to file nominating
petitions, several 'are busy already circulating petitions. An accurate count
cannot be established since candidates
may obtain their petitions in ·other counties, according to the Gallia CoUnty Board
of elections.
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Thus far, the most interest seems to be
in the sheriff's race. Incumbent
Republican Denver A. Walker has announced that he will not seek reelection.

Maybe Little, but Ours

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Walker has held the position two terms. He the position are George . Woodyard, held by Republican John Howell. Howell,
is circulating a petition for a seat Qn the William Walters and James Pratt. Fife ill the past two years, has been unable to
was d~feated in his bid to unseat Walker in hold court. Calhoun has two more years
county conunlssion.
COMPETITION
,,, the 1968 May Primary. Pratt was defeated . left .on his ' t!lx•year term as judge of
Rumors ·around the Gallia CollhtY. by Walker in the last General Election. · •Commoh Pleas Court... If sucCessful, he
Courthouse are rampant that at least three·
would hold both judgeships. During the
or four of Wiflker's deputies will attempt to
Incumbent office holders known to be last two years, Juvenile Judges from other
follow their boss's footsteps. It is known seeking reelectiorr are Hamlin C. King, counties have been assigned here.
that deputies Jjm Baldwin, Derry Hem- ' prosecuting attornen Miss Marjorie
According to Auditor Morton L. Dickey,
phill ' and, Ja_ck Owens ba~e petitions. Rine¥rt, clerk of courts; Evalee Myers, the salaries for county officials are as
Another tJeputy, W. S. Vinson, Jr., who recorder ; Glen Smith, engineer; Clarence follows: Prosecuting Attorney, $6,600;
recently joined the department after Johnson, commissioner; Oty M. Stewart, commissioner, $4,920; recorder, $7,320;
serving in a similar capacity in Florida, treasurer, and Dr. Donald R. Warehime, clerk of courts, $7,680; treasurer, $7,380;
may seek the office on the Dt:mocratic coroner. All are Republicans.
sheriff, $7,560; coroner, $2,380 and
ticket.
. ' Democrat leaders are talking less engineer, $13,134. Judges salaries are
· Ivan Fife, an ex-deputy, is also cir- about who may seek the several county provided by the county and state.
culating a petition.
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offices. Common Pleas Court Judge
Gallia County has been a Republican
Democrats known to be interested in Ronald R. Calhoun, Democrat, is going to stronghold for the past 115 years with the
seek the Probate and Juvenile Judgeship exception of 1912 and. 1964. During those
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West
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Reclamation
Best in Uniori

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presidential election years, Gallians
supported Democratic candidates more
than Republicans.
I!!' 1912, Woodrow Wilson defea.ted ~1
Republican William Howard Taft by 380
votes; however, Teddy Roosevelt, running
on the Progressive ticket, won the county.
In 1964, Lyndon B. Johnson defeated
Barry Goldwater by 335 votes. It was the
first time the county had gone Democratic
in a Presidential Election.
Accordin~ to the Gallia County Board of
Elections, 3,403 Republicans voted in the
1970 May Primary compared to only 1,222
Democrats. During the 1968 Primary, 4,035'
Republicans voted along with 1,860
Democrats.
In 1968, President Nixon · defeated
Hubert H\lffiphrey by 2,479 votes.

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BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
• PORTLAND - T~ Times-Sentinel may be "just a little ole paper" In the
big cftles, but to local folk It's ''Our paper," and the Dec. Z4 one proves it. And
now that It's time to get "our hoaee In order" for the coming year we'd do well
to keep In mind our paper for that day.
CHARLESTON, W. VA. (UPI) - West
~ we clear oat the old hurts, mentments and uilbappy memories of the
Virginia con tlnues to reign as the na tiona!
past, IIUI'ely tbeae wrltlnp of our own folk can help us to keep alive some of the
leader In reclaiming surface mined land
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Chris•• tboachts expreased here:
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the state Surface Mining Reclamation
Let's remember the ''Cbrlltmas Eve 1171" ao very beautifully described by
Association said this week.
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Charlene Hoefllcb, and Katie Crow'a "Ready for Cbrlstmaa," McKean's
Figures from the ,sfate De~rlrnent of
Journa11 "What Christmas Meana," bfMn. Riley Pigott, and others.
Natural Resources, the association
I especially will remember the young serviceman's ''Dream" In Vietnam. i claimed, show West Virginia led ~nation
.. He c114 Jl!lt uk to go to calvary, bat clrcumatancea have dforcedd' Wmdlntoh at j in reclamation a fourth straight year and ·
. • Getlasemue qf Hla oWQ, and who could better appreclate.u 1DI erstan w a ;::: had a record breaking effort In 1971.
"The 20,369 acres reclaimed in the·
Chriltmaa II all about?
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Despite the new tuea, drug problema and alcohol, men atm In Vietnam and 'i~, Mountain State in 1971, breaks the
pre_vious record of 19,198 acres that bad
other countries, we have much to be thankful for. And we really can keep the
been set by West Virginia in 1968," the
faith, love and .peace of Christmas In our hearts, If we concentrate on this In·
association
said. ·
stead of pesalmlstlc Ideas.
,
The National Coal Association's '
God never promised us a i'ose ginlen \IJiless we work for it. And bow can we
Mined-Land
Conser.vatioh pamphlet states
appreciate one .If we bayen't walked In a rocky one?
thai from 1967 througli 1970, West Virginia
totaled 59,980 acres reclaimed.
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Kentucky trailed at if7,483 acres;
Pennsylvania, 47,306; Ohio, ~,001 and
Illinois, 23,989. Figures this year for the
other four states were not yet available,
the associ&amp;tlon said.
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Computers to Do
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Holzei-'s B~l"-rig

Coffee.Breaks.
O!fe'red Again

GALLIPOLIS ....: Holzer Medical procedure wW take about three or four
COLt}MBUS - For the 13th consecutive
Cent,r here Is preparing to initiate days. During this period, patient ledger yar free coffee will be offered to
computerized , billing In Its account .'cards · will '11ot be availablej should travellers on New Year'~ Eve at all.Ohio
departrr¥nt. Using a computer shared by a question~ concerning a bill arise.
Turnpike service plaza restaurants. From
· group of about 100 hospitals, all patient
.. The cashier's office will be open to 10 p.m. Friday, December 31, until 7 a.m .
. hospital charges will be. fed ln.to the accept payment on all bllls,.but the patient saturday, January 1, the eight Gladieux
machine a~ bills will be prepared by'.lt. ledger card will not be avalfable to answer ·Restaurants and the eight Howard
This compu~rlzed blllihg process is ~pecific !l,Uestlons.
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Johnson:' Restaurants on . the Turnpike
expected to benefit .the ,patient by
Holzer M~ical Gen~r blislness office will be hosts for all the {ree coffee their
·providing more accurate and timely employees will appreciate public guests care to drink.
blllliu! 'Information, according to Emil cooperation during .the three or four day
· Allan V Johnson, executive director of .
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Jankp, vice president Of .f~Fal and ad· period beginning Monday, Jan. 3. They the Ohio ~nplke Commis,slliri, urged
- ministration services at Holzer Medical hope to have 'everything back in normal travellers to take · a coffee break and
Center.
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operation by the end o.f the ·week.
· return to their cars relaxed arid refreshed.
In addiU~ to new charg~, all current
"The Ohio State Highway Patrol will
accounts
entered ln.to the comACTION URGED
be on the lookout, as 'usual, for drivers
I!Uter ·alio. ·'fttlt. means · holzer Medical
Indian External Affair! Minister Sardar under the lnfiuence of alcohol or drugs in
Center bualnea office employees have to Swaran Singh. urged a IJIM1Clal United order to r!!llove them from the Turnpike .
copfieach lqercanl and lend the copy to , Nat!ons envoy In New Delhi ~rlday to play so !bat they will not endanger their lives
Pearla, m., 19 be coded and k~y punclted an active role In efforts to ob~in the ·and the lives of others," Johnson said.
l!'f tbe computer.
. relea~e of East · Bengali leader Sheikh
Toll collectors at every interchange .
11Je bullnea . office will start the Mujlbur Rahman; Iridian government willbeprepartdtohandoutthelo~·itaU!&gt;na ,
c!Gp~ PJ'OCUI! next Monday. The entire sourcys said.
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.PLANNING 'CENTENNIAL events for the Ohio Valley
Bllnk in Gallipolis are Emerson E. Evans (seated),
p-e~ident; Morris E. Haskins, left, senior vice president;
Wendell Thomas, assistant .vice president; C. Leon• SBWidersI

assistant vice president, and Selwyn White, executive vice
president and cashier,. The bank will observe its lOOth anniversary during 1972.
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Centennial Observance Planned
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GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio Valley Bank
of Gallipolis will observe its centennial
anniversary in 1972.
Bank officials are alr!!ady in the
process of makh1g plans for the in~titution's lOOth birthday acc--ing to
Emerson E. Evans, president and Morris
E. Haskins, senior vice .president. · It all started a century ·ago in an upstairs room . of the old Alfred Henking
auilding on Court St.' The Old -French City
was 8:Z years old. Ul ysses s. Grant ·was
presiderfl of the ~ted Stales,
·. The bank 's , fir s t organizational
tCl' ·' ll 'l~ was twld Sent. 2t 1872. Init ial

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stockholders gathered with a beginning
capital of $80,000.
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Present for the historic event were
John T. Halliday, Alfred Henking, the
hank's first president; Charles Creuzit,
Dr. w. c. Needham, William Shober, John'
Dages, A. ~ . Allemong, John Ecker, Laing
Halliday, Henry. Ecker and C. w. Henklng.

bullding at the corner of Second Ave., and
State St., remaining there for over a half
century . .
Once again the growing trade in the Trl·
County area necessitated larger ac·
.commodatlons. The bank constructed its ·
present modern facUlty on the 400 block-of
Third Ave., In .t96o and 1961, with
dedication ceremonies being conducted In
Less than two months after its foun- October of 1961.
ding, Ohio ·'-:alley Bank opener! for .
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busin.ess in the Shober building on Second • Today, Ohio Valley Bank resources total
Ave., and by 18!16, the fir.m had already approkiii\Btely $25 million.
IIU_Igruwn its i.1itial home~
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..,, The bank's presentlocation offl!ra ample ·,
The bank then constructed iL• m 1111 r nn1'1'11 ln. . l .. t ...... - - - - - ' -

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3...,. TheSII!dayTin;...,":Sentlnei,S~day;JIIn. 2,1972

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-.Church Membe~s Enjoy Tr~ And Christmas Treat

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GALUPOUS
- Tried.!ltone
Ch
Bap"·t
fashi... ed urch· enjoyed im old-.··
on Christmas Tree and
treat on,Christmas Eve·at 7:30
P: m. Ji!veryone gathered In the
fello_wshlp rOOm of t(le choirch.
They sang·, carols and heard a
Christmas Story read by "Mrs
Henry Johnson. They wer~
surprised with a visit from

Santa . Claus ·who listened
patiently ·tot their wants and
wishes.
During the social hour they
were served r.efresbinents by
these hostesses, Brenda Lee
Carla Young, Sara Jan~
Johnson am! TIIDll1ly .Scott.
Under the pretty . tree, there
were gifts for the very young
and special gifts fo,r _others.
. The Sunday ·School save treats
tangerines and peppermint

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. ~ENTI.()CATION of Ute Ohio Valley Bank 1/J 420ThlrdAve. The modern facility was
wilt in I!N!Oand 1981, and dedicated in the fallof1981.
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· Apple Grove

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STARTED HERE - This is whet~ the Ohio Vdey Blink
began operations 100 years ago. It's the preseut side 'of The . .

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tlsidenttat the corner of Second Ave. and State St. for over a

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1\l!f ceirtury.

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pproval-of Indolrie Tax Bill
State's Bigg~st $toey of 1971
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one-half to 3"" per cent 1nconi~
tax for Individuals. It also coiltains a corporate lndlme tax, ar.
three-cent bike in the t8l on a :
pack of cigarettes, a vai'iety e£
minorbuslnesstai:kalldiatidlt .,
$200million worth of tax relief, ·
Including a 10
·cent acrosl
the board pr perty tax
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reduction for
. pf9periy ;
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Unllted Press International
Passage of Ohio's first
Jer~~&lt;onal income tax to finance
record $7.7 billion budget
selected by United Press
lnternallor~el editors in Ohio as
top news s_tory in the state
l!w"~ng 1971.
The Income tax bill ended
months of battling In the
:len1eral Assembly on a means
fln&lt;lllclng the budget as leglllat.nr. shifted between an inCrelilsed sales tax and an intax.
The other nine top news
llori1es of the year, selected in
order of importance,
The destruction of the
jury report on the Kent
st•t• · disturbances; sub~~~~ trials and dismissal of
l..t
against persons inThe 31 Indictments on
ranging from sodomy
torture of patients at Lima
Hospital.
4. Reduction of the voting age
21 to 18 in all elections.
John J. Gilligan's
IAn•U.ritv program.
6. Cleveland Mayor Carl B.
decides against third
Republican Ralph Perk
mayor's race.
7. The mine, telephone and
strikes.
8. The boiler explosion which
l k:~~~~~five persons ·in a
1111
Sunday School class.
9. The election of nineteenyear-old Ron Hooker as mayor
of Newcomerstown.
10. Seven-year-old Lima boy
survives rabies.
The tax measure calls lor a
ch&amp;J~ges

Events

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1111'&lt;111'1 '

Tonightthru
Mr. and' Mrs. Russell Roush Waid Fosters also visited her
Wednesday
and children, Mr. and- Mrs. · parents,. Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Herbert Roush and son ,' Roger, Hill Jr. at l~Jjcine.'
Mr , and Mrs. Walter McDade . Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hayman
and Gene Early of Troy, Mrs. were Christmas Day guests of
Edna Roush, Mrs. Gladys Mr. and Mrs. George Harris
Shields\ Mr. a~d Mrs. Ronald and familY at Pomeroy.
Russell of Middleport, Jeff
Mr. and Mrs. Blain Nice and
M11l~r, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac · three children of Newark w,ere
Lew1s, Mrs. Iva Orr were Christmas Day guests of Mr
dinner guests of Mr. and _Mrs. and Mrs. Uoyd Nice, Mr. and
Dan_a LewiS Sunday at Clifton. Mrs . George Skinner of
Dmner guests of. Mr. al)d Columbus and Eloise Adams of
Mrs. Don Bell and Lor~ were Pomeroy c~lled on the Nice's
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Noms, Mrs. in the afternoon. •
Amelia lta}"art was the
first
woman o receive the
Eulah B~acken and St. Clair
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Foster,
Distinguished
Flying Cross.
Hiij, Christmas Day. Evening Mr. and Mrs. Waid Foster and
dmner guests of the Bells were children of Racine were
Mr. Raymond Bell of Oak Christmas Day dinner guests
Gro~e Rd., Mr. and Mrs. Paul of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill ar.
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Ervm and chidren of Bashan at Racine.
Tonig.ht,
&amp;•Tues. .
Rd. and . Mona Moody of
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Wheeler
Januafv 2-3-4
Wellston. .
and son, Bill, arid Mrs. Bessie
FOOL'S PARADE
Mrs. Ahce Balser of. Letart Stitt spent ChriStmas and the
(Technicolor&gt;'
was Chrislplas Day guest of weekend · with Mr. and Mrs.
. James Stewart
her daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Foster and children at
George Kennedy
,
"GP"
Jack Ables and children.
Columbus. They were met
Disney
Colorcartoons:
Christmas Day guests of Mr. there by Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Goofy and Wilbur
and Mrs . Lester Roush and MorriS and children who alSo
Joey,\ the Dog
family were Mr. amfMrs._ Jim were guests of the Fosll!rs.
. Pluto's ,Blue Note
Connolly and two children of
Mr. and Mrs. Drew Filoher
. SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
CARTOON
Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Don and children spent Christmas .
Riffle and two children of ·
'·· ·Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Manuel of Racine.
Mr . and Mrs. Everette
Ho11rs
Connolly, Mr. and Mrs. George
Connolly, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Mon ., T-ues., Wed ., Thurs .-Connolly and children .. were
11 A.M.Io lO P.M.
Christmas Day ilinner guests
Fri. &amp; Sat--11 A.M. to 11 P.M.
of Mr. and Mrs. Doug I,teese at
Closed Sunday
Marietta.
.
Christmas weekend guestS Of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Foster 1-'
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were Mr. and Mrs. Waid'Foster
and children, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mall Karr of Columbus. The

pleaded guilty to first degree race which included a handriot charges, one was acquitted picked candidate of Carl B.
and cberges against another Stokes, the city's first black
defendant were dropped alter mayor.
four pet~ had testified.
Perk, who pledged in his
'rhe 31 indictments at the campaign to preserve "law
Stale Hospital for the and
order,"
became
Ctlilllnilly Insane at Ltma Cleveland's first Republican
resulted from an inveshgation . mayor in 30 years. Stokes had
..,.
decided against oi third term
u!i.Ule ~bole attorney general's . d
t d A ld R
omde -lot'ler it was revealed a~ suppor e
rno
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nlsrty Imitates had been con- . Pmkney, a school board
and is expected to lfooM:e fi9o filled at the hospital without me~ber and a b~ck lndependmillion In new revt;ues towaf4; trials for the crimes of which ent, ~ the el~ction.
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general goverruneht spendlngl they wi-e charged. Subsequent
Ohio was. hit by three maJor
for the remaining 18 months inl iliqillrles ' brought
up strikes cton:mg the year - the
the biermlum. 'I\ . .' ) ' ahtiOJI,I .pf brutality.
Urute&lt;b Mme Work~rs, Bell
0n March 16,ili:.f.~·~ ·-~ ~dictmenta were Tele~hone apd _ratls. The
proposed a 1 to 8 per cent-~ retur'iieU on charges ranging combl~ed econo~mc effects of
come tax. But the"itepublic&amp;ll=. ft6rn solliJmy to torture of th~ ~trikes in Ohio reached $31
controlled legislature was un- patients. Those indicted were million.
.
decided whether to glv~ either employed at the hospital
The UMW strike began Oct. I
Gilligan 'the inrome tax he or former employes.
":hen the union's. contract exwanted to hold) .increalll!~- ,.~! 30, the Ohio General p~ed and ended m Ohi? when
spending to a ~tir!'ttld ~ ~In . :. ratified tb.e 26th JlllDers began retummg . to
by with an 1n~rn tbll siit(J: Air)_{ ellt to the U.S. Con!lti- work Nov.l7. About 9,000umon
tax.
";·· ;-· ,,
~-~ . tulk&gt;il ;ai\d reduced the m~ers ~n(l about .3,000 no?"
The Senate paJei\ f1¥..if.~~ nitillmllihvotlng age from 21 to . un10n ll)lller~ were mvolved m out."
1 • the strike_. mar~ed by VIolence
cent sales tax inc~da'BeSII&gt;t."Jlii. 1811n itt elections.
Rounding out the top 10 was
but the House vOted ill; down ·
·• at non-uruon rrunes when UMW the story on Matthew Winkler,
The income tax bill-was ~a~;
Clh~\:pProval brought the picketS attempted to organize who celebrated his seventh
Dec. IO.
. ~ . ,, ~: , ~~j: ~ _' 1 . states ratifying the the non-union operations.
birthday Jan. 'l1 with 1\is reOn Jan. 28, a fed~al judgJ,II( iJlleriilllept to 38, the required
Th~ James Brothers Coal Co. lease from St. Rita's Hospital
Cleveland orderM ' 1 · -spe~ijl ~ow'lhs of the 50 states at Mmeral City was burned to where doctors said be ' ma!le
grand jury repol{ on ·the Ke)lt"' ~o!eSsaty to make an amend- the ground and another non- medical history by surviving
State dlsturbandti de&amp;ttoyfkl.. ~~ jl'al't of the Constitution. union mine office in Perry rabies.
because it would'be )&gt;rejlldlc!W''
~~_'Q!do H_ouse, meeting In a County was wrecked by
The boy had undergone
to lhe trials of ~"_j&gt;ers'ons itt~ spec181 t~mng sess~on, voted dyn8111lte.
. . treabnent smce Nov. 3, 1970,
dieted.
·" ' · ' · -•:.\t ~- t~ .P,ISS the amendment.
On at least two occasions m for rabies he contracted from a
In November . the! UBi The_ Sfme Senate ap!X'oved November about 500 miners In rabid bet. Doctors said treatSupreme Court ~ io ~~~~ ra~Cf;tlon by a 30-2 vote the cars and armed ;vlth shotguns ment . consisted of "anthe trials and tblly be!llln
Jitevlolli·day.
roamed through Tuscarawas \icipating the expected course
16. Five of the defendants
, The fifth Lop news story • the Co':"'ty and parts of easll!rn of the disease and poeslble
on trial before ~
au~J;Y program, came about Oh1o shutting down . non-umon
d . tit 1
1-. .
to dismiss the
on Setlt;\ l when Gov. Gilligan operations. Gov. Gilligan In- .comp lcahons an ms u ing
the
1814 off 1;000 state employes, creased Ohio Highway Patrol · trea~ent before }atal com\-'llhralf*fe and education pay- surveillance in the areas and phcatwns ensued.
ilienli:iJ\.d.closed state parks to Sen. Robert Taft Jr. called for
ptbttvl enough money to a federal grand jury lnvestlgal(lfet 'stpinditures when the tion into the violence.
· ~te, ~without a permanent
About 18,000 Ohioans joined
~dgef. .
the six-day contract related
:;Mtei: -~ days Gllllgan was strike by the Communications
folrced 'bj state law to reopen ...Workers of America against
the state parks. During the Ohio Bell. AnoUler 900 began a ·
austerity_ program, _ the strike
against
United
gciverntll' announced he was Telephone Co., which claimed
biking · a 10 per cent cut in It had a contract extension and
sll8ry 'and turning it over to fired the workers.
IIi~ stalft _
The rail strike affected the
_)fn the ~eveland election on Noo:folk and Western. Railroad
N6v. ~· ~lph J. Perk, a con- ~ in Ohio and lasted .10 days.
servali"e Republican, was There were some l!C~=~ ~
eleeted: lnllyor In a four-man incidents of violence i.J
·
·
the removal of spikes from
some sections of track in the
Bellevue area. The N&amp;W
employs 9,000 persons m Ohio.
The baUer explosion In ·MarIetta occurred Oct. 10 in Ute annex of the First Baptist
Church, causing tons of concrete; steel and scald~ water ·
to collapse on a Sunday School
class. Five persons ~ a
teacher and four teen-agers were killed and 14 were injured.
The force of .the blast ble.
out a stairWell and a wall which
forced the floor to collapse into
the basement of the annex
wbtlre the class was In session.
Four days later, Gov. Gllllgan •
signed \Dto law a bill tlg!J.tening
the state's 'bOiler inspection
laws.
'
On !iov. 2, Ron Hooker, a 19year~ld Ashland q..uu_, student, was elected mayor of the
east-central Ohio village of
Newcomerstown, 'getting twoand..a-half tilDes as many votes
as his four opponents COOl·
blned. Hooker bed pledged to
stop
"hot-rodding" on village
••
••
streets.
·
••
Hooker
said
recenUy
he was
•
''shucked and appalled" _by
~lbe:l offered him bul that he
•
.had ·'no il)tentlon of seUing '

i

News~

and the weekend with Mr . and
Mrs. Bob Johnson and Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Johnson at
Mammoth, W. Va.
Christmas Day guests of
Mrs. Eula Wolfe and Aaron
ware Mr. and Mrs. John Ord,
Be\h and John, Unda and Jack
Snodgrass of Letart, W. Va.
Route, Mr . .and Mrs. Carroll
Norris and Debbie, Mr. and
Mrs. Al!lltin Wolfe and son of
Syr~cuse, Mrt and Mrs. Jim
Lewis, Barbe and Connie of
-Pt. Pleasant.
,
.-

"

.MEIGS .HEATRE

Mt.

NOI ... ft'IOS

ACROSS

1-Ltlltntlne
ketch {pl.)

6-Hesltttt
11-Rips

16--Lotes color
21-Rintworm

22-Wipe out
23-Joln
24--Girt'l. name
25-Worm '
26-Mtndarln's
residence
28--Shades
3G--River In Africa
32-Symbol for
tantalum
33--Nteatlve prefhc
34-Man's
nickname
35-Famala ruff
36-European herb
37-Throueh
38--0penwork
fabric
40--Noxious
&lt;12-Sqd container
43-Stlf-c::ontrol
4"-Vehlcle•

LouGossett·
·Susan Clark

~~~-

..

HOUSE

45-HIIten
47-Star In
constellation
Oraconls
4g_....pttl
50-ClOth measurt"
51-Indites
54-Artbltn
comm111der
55-Moist
56-Btllt
59-Scottish for
"John"
60--Hindu cymbal1
62-o'tUttratlon
64-UndtrJarment
65-A stale (abbr.)
66-Prlnltr's
mellure
67-Malay &amp;lbbon
69-Chemlcal
compound

J

'

ltalia'n _Spaghetti .

70-Want
71-Filnhoad

133-Helr

72-French plurtl
ertlclt
74-GI'Mk lsltnd

76-Evenlne
... (poet .)

77-0bterved
78-Articl.. of
furniture
79-Rellable
82-Natlontl hymn

84-Pitch (pl.)
85-Fiower
86-Thl
88-0ry
89-Pedal
eJCtremlty
90--0en,.ude
92-Buy back
94-Amerlcan
a:o ldflnch
98-Cravats
99-Unlt of Italian
currency (pl.)
100-Moccasln
102-Transaetlons
103-Mtadow
104-Ethloplan title
105-Waa:ers
106-Cooks In tlot
water
108-Yttlow ocher
109-Roman a;ods
liD-Conjunction
Ill-Urn
112-SIInlfy
114-Farm animal
116-~odlum

chloride
117-Heathens
119-Mascullne
12Q-Pulverized
rock
122- Ntla:h
124-Number
125-Workmtn
126--Gathtred
128-Period of time
129-Bundle
131-cholcest
132-Equ•llty

20-Scorches

135-Hoc

27-Devoured
29-Metal

·

Ule arrlbulan ce.

I'
I
I

1 ~• G• n •ports Tfll'lunt

138-Sum up

139-Seuey
140-Disttnt

31-Sick
3f-Short dauer

141-Vir&amp;lnla willow
142-Pronoun
143-Artlllcial

37-Troplctl tree
39-Siender
40-Pedal

lan~~:uaa:e

ext~mltles

144-Appel latlon of
Alhena

41-Title of

145- More certtln

42-Buccaneer
43-0imlnlsh
44-Cut
46--Pronoun
48-Mud
49-Youns ulman
50--Wife of
Geraint
51-Use with
hands
52-Hindu quqn
53-Dinner COUf'lle

respect

147-Strlke
149-Resort
15G-Salt solution
152-Fewest
154-Body of water
156-Less
Inhibited
ISS-Cassia
159-Fhild flower
160--Girl's name
161-Fresh-water
ducks

(pl.)
S~hlloperon

DOWN
1-Beer mua:
2-Pass.a:eway
3-Ttlose holdlna:
office
4-Symbol for
cerium
5-DtCIIIrt
6--Lower In rank
7-Hermlt
8- Male
9-Pronoun
10-Soak
11-Put In harmony
12-Heraldry:
graftad
13-TtlrH-toed
sloths
14- Football
position (abbr.)
15-Pertainlnl to
old •••
16--Petlet
17- E.Kist
IS-French article
19- Go In

56-0anilh
measure
57-Hydro&amp;en
compound
!8-Ciayey earth
61-Tibet.!ln priest
63-Afrlcan tru
64-Appear
68-Buralars
7G-Stwlna
Implements
71-PI~tnt ol pea

family

,

'"'

t

I ll , 11• mon iM II ; "" " tnonlt&gt;l I S.DCl
Tt&gt;t Dt ll r Stlll fntl, onr "Yt• r IUOO : • I•

"7!.
II so.,
1 montM
lht V11
l~td '"''"
Prtu monllu
'~ "' ""lo_~~

;, ,.
1 ~ IU11~tl. v rnl l!l ta .. , .. , .. .. .. , pul'llin ll ofl
of
111
~ . ...., d••P•' c"'" uta +toa •o ~ ~~~
1 ne•nptper • nd til~ tnt laUI """ '

91--Prlnclpal

· fortification

97-Diumtl
99--Not so' much
101-Nearer

105-Wot
106--Brash
107- Heavenly body
111-WtsthercoC:k
112--Jaraon
113--F'Inllhts
liS-At'l()lat time?
116-Brllk
suddenly
lts:-Preclous metal
119-Spar
121-Based upon the
number 10
123-Prefl•: not
125-Hatbln&amp;er
126-Rabblt
127-Godllke
129-.Sharp
projections
130- Worship
131-lnstct
132-5oclal
&amp;:11therlna
134--Graln
136--Actuate
137-Whetl teeth
139-Entreaty

OAF Anscomatic: 996

Reg. $323

.

._ ... 995

Miss April Brandeberry

Miss Brandeberry To
Wed fames Magnussen

144-Girt's name
145-Capuchln
monkay
146--Brown kiwi
147-Bithoprlc
148-Ntwt
149--Qcean
I 51-Prepos ition
153-Babylonlan
delt)1
.
15S:,-Civitlan
'-. Defense
(abbr.)
157-Note of sc 1 1e

i

~\1 , :H )f~~ ~I! ! Y!.Fi

j

!

FILLET OF WHITE FISH, Ta!tar Sauce ............... 2.25
GRILLED CUBE STEAK .. . .. . . . .. . . ... . .. . ........ 1.95

..

rvo mI. ng
Events

.

_.,_-t

GALL!A COUNTY Pomona
Grange, · 8 p.m. at Harris
et--+-1--t Grange Hall. Potluck lunch
Bring own table service.
'
-f-+-l-4---1 GRACE Guild, 6:1~ p.m. for
_._..J....L....L...J dinner meeting. Please bring
· table service.
·
AM~RICAN
Red Cross
Volunteer (Gray Ladies)
luncheon, 12:30 p.m. Holzer
Hospital cafeteria. All
members urged to attend.
BAND Boosters Executive
board meeting, 7:30p.m. for .

THE HEALTH.FOOD· PANTRY·

Guild
as hostess.
Thirty-one
persons enjoyed&lt; a
ham and turkey dinner .
Following the dinner the group
was led in singing carols by
Mrs. Harold Mack. Mrs. Edward Preston had a program ·
on Advent with Mrs. George
Hawley, Mrs. Paul Shoemaker,
Sharon Cooper and Raymond
Zerkle taking part. The ~roup
told of the meaning of each
candle which is lighted leading
up to the last candle, which is ·
!"• Christ Candle telling of the
birth of Cbrist in Luke 2.
Pastor Richard Mitchell and
wife of Albany were guests. A
gift exchange was held and
enjoyed by all.

'

/OPEN ,12:~:00 DAILY EXCEPT' SUNDAYS

REESE FURNITURE
{/"

'

WHO~tGA-LE

YOU CAN BUY EVERY
D~ y AT REESE'S WHOLESALE
PRICES WITH SAVINGS OF
50% OR MORE ON ALL ITEMS
WITH OUR METHOD OF
SAVING!

•

YOU DON~ HAVE TO RUSH TO PURCHASE
SHOP WORN OR DAMANGED FURNITURE
AT SO CALLED SALE PRICES.

AMERICAN Association of
University Women. first
meeting of the new year. Mrs.
Malcolm Orebaugh , 632 1'.!'
Second Ave. Sam Smith, guest
speaker.
.
.

YOU CAN SELECTFRESH NEW
~ERCHANDISE AT REESE WHOLESALE
FURNITURE OUTLET WITH SAVINGS OF
50% OR ·MORE EVERYDAY ON

TUESDAY
ENGLISH Club meeting
~ostess Mrs. Owen Cantrell
with co-hostess, Mrs. Ruby
BOSS!'rt!, 7 p. m.

.,

31 1972

JACKSON,
'OHIO • PHONE 286-2916
.

Gallipolis, Ohio

-NO SALE PRICES!

officers and committees in
bend room:

•

LOCATED AT THE REAR 99 N. HIGH ST.

422 Second Ave. ·

GAUIPOLIS, OltiO

=i---1 MONDAY

-

TAWNEY STUDIO

GALLIPOLIS - Members church in 'the fellowship room
and friends of ' the Cheshire for a Christmas dinner with the
BapUst. Church _met at the Ji;tptist Links and the Adatp/

wo~ship ~~&lt;ervice.

ANNOUNCING

:~~: $169 95

CORNER OF SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE

WHITE Oak Choir will be
singing, Prospect Bolptist
::+--i,---1 Church, 7:30p.m. Everyone is
1:-;:;:-t--f welcome.
REV. BILLIE Payne will be
t--+-1 preaching, Walnut Ridge
-1-1--1 Church 7 p.m.
tRIEDSTONE Baptist
Church, guest minister, Elbert
D. McGhee, at 10:30 a. m.

..

Reg . $213

1 Attend Church Christmas Dinner

SUNDAY

'

GAF Anscomatlc 94lZ

GALLIPOLis - Dr. and Marietta College and is Gallipolis . The gradous
Mrs. Keith R. Bandeberry, 401 presently enrolled in the custom of open church will be
First Ave., announce the College of Medicine, Ohio state observed.
engagement and approaching. University.
ma~riage of their daughter,
Mr. Magnussen is a graduate
Apr1l Joyce, to ~r. James R. of Purdue University and will
Magnussen, son of Dr. and graduate from the College oJ
Mrs. Marcus Magnussen, 619 Medicine ,
Ohio
State
University, in June, 1972.
. Fourth Ave., Gallipolis.
iii· ~ss .B,r.~~d~J&gt;!lrry is ~ The wedding will take pla~e
•·granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. _ at 4:30p.m. Saturday, April!,
Ada~
W. . Brandeb~rry , in
the
First
United
Coolville. She IS a graduate of Presbyterian
Church
•

'

Enlree Include s Salad , Vegetable. and D.rink

'

••

•LA·Z·BOY ·

,

t~e

•SAWYERS

•

.. eSEALY.
.'
We're circling

v

A~~ ~URNITURE.

·

•MERSMAN

New Year with
the best round-up
. of wishes for
you. Many _thanks .

&lt;

•MODERN • •
•BASSETT

NAME BRANDS YOU KNOW!

See . our complete line of natural vitamins .and food sup-

. IF WE DON'T. SAVE .

plements ·- ~erbs_ and T~as - Natural Cosmetics - Nuts and
Seeds- Flours, Ju1-ces, 01ls" Books- Yogurt Makers, Cultures
- Raw Sugar and Hone.y Snacks. · •

..."'

I
1

~119

!

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1I

Reg. $142
Sale Price

,...-~--~----~--~--~--·---~-----

OPEN JANUARY

'

I

-====-----=- =--;;-..:.:..

PUb lllnra lltnln

~-- .7'

'I

95--Ptrttlnlnl' to
the ltlty
96-Part of

·

.

~I

GAF Anscomatic 913

.

.

Wnl
•.

COMPLETE HOME
OUTFIT
EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO -SticXlT
AND sHoW SUPER 8 MOVIES!

1~0-Ado

73-steeples
74-Cut
75-Ski d
77-Turned away
78-0unce ,
(colloq.}
&amp;~Goddess ol
discord
81 - Compass ,oint
83-Attempt
84-Hauls
87- Testify
89-Pursue
90-Sharpl!n

,,

1~ On klo • M

Vl r ~ain • • · ""' n •• $13 00 . II• ,.,w,,~ tt . I

I l~fltt 11'1111'11~ 1 U . iG : IIUIII~Ui , l fl t Vl lf

I

I

--

d · U~ l ~ d Sufi GI~ ,

•u M"I L SU I SCFI IPTI ON ,_olt. TE ,,

91--crown
92--ceremony

FILEl~IGNON, Wrapped w1th ~aeon . . ...... . .. .. 4.25
T-80 NE .STEAK,. (16 oz.) U.S. Prome
.
... . . . ......... 4. 25
GOLDEN FRIED SHRIMP, Tartar Sauce .. . . . . .... ~ .. . 3.25.
HOME BAKED HAM, Hawaiian Pineapple Ring ...... 2.25

Children's Portions Avoiloble·

~

their investigati
.
of lh e De•c. 14. . ace 'd
a enl Which
resulled In the dea th of Mrs •
I va Thomas , 82, a passenger In
.

I

SPAGHETTI DINNER with, Meat Sauce . .. . . . .. . .... 1.95
RAVIO_LI DINNERwifnMeat Sauce .. ....... . ... .. . 2.25
/ Includes: 'Salad and Drink. ·. . Rye &amp; French Bread

Dinners

~Qffipleted

HOFFA WOU!.D HELP
DETROIT (UP!) - James
R. Hoffa, who found out the
hard way what a demoralizing
experience imprisonment can
be, has joined ·a group of
prominent Detroill!rs whose
goal is the development of
recreational and vocational
programs at local jail
facilities. ''Uving in a 7""-by'10
loot cell without anything to do
is one of the most depre!ISing
experiences ever for a human
being," the former Teamsters
Union president, released from
prison himself only last week
said.
'

•

~

~

SUNDAY CROSSWORD·PUZZLE

James Garner

steak... spat)letti

d4~1

~IKOf'ICI

II'

SUNDAY, JANUARY 2, 1972

---. ... -- _:;-_·..;;:-.- ·'.

URIV ER CHARGED
·:
.
SUNDAY
I.
COLUMBUS I UP! I
Hubert N. Snead Jr ., 22, il .TIMES-SENTINEL ~ :
P~~lll~f'd ..,.fr ~U&lt;'I da y Or Ito• Ohio I
- Columbus, dri ver of. a city bus ' It V MII
~ l- u~ ll on l nl Co ~
G .. LL "'OLI OAIL "r tliii UN£
I H Thlro:l Av• , 0 1fll l"!li1, Oh io,
.
that collided .·with an am- I PIIII+
I ~ II H ••trY wtfta.v ~ l'll lllt • • , .,., I
( II" I' OII IDO P I ;CI ol
bulance two weeks· ago, has , 1I Sot,..-da1
Oolllpoho. Oll lo . 4UJI
•
1
bee n Charged W1
· th SeCOn d 'I~ . 11 1 Covrt
THE OAI
L T ~E N TI N.,._
St ., l'omtro v. o ., '5761, I ;
' veh'ICU1ar homtC
• I'de He flo 1 Pull
ilolll'llt•tr ' -ko:l•' t v•n lflt ••{_, 1 1
de,.," ree
so~ tura• ~ Eft to run~MDII• cto n mtnlflt 1
' ~ ~1, "'llltr II l'om••o- . OhiO, P a'll OIIIU
W3:) Cha r ged after pOliCe I Ill urr
tE AMS OF SU ISC. A I P TION .
I
,.,
SOc Ill'

lll""'!l· -

.
canes. The Chrisqnas
Eve
affair was in charge of Tammy
Scott and her assistant was
Deacon Robert Green. The
group was disinlssed by Pastor
John D. ~ng .
·

Dispute Settled
· The century-old Chamizal
bordar dispute btltween MexIco and the Unlted States
arose .out of the shifting of
the R10 Grande River in
1852. The portion of El Paso
.JJ ~eturns•o,dutb of thli· river was
"'
to Mexico by forceremonies on Oct. 28
1961. El Chamizal is Spanish
for lh1cket.

....,.,...... _....;- _·:..·_ - -

,

..

LE£. H. DELAY, OWNER
412-414 Secona

•

I

YOU MONEY •.•.~• .._

WE QON'T·I)ESERVE
•

,,

YOUR BUSINESSI
.
'

l

�...

.

-.
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r

....

_,

3...,. TheSII!dayTin;...,":Sentlnei,S~day;JIIn. 2,1972

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. )4

·'

-.Church Membe~s Enjoy Tr~ And Christmas Treat

'' -

•.
-

GALUPOUS
- Tried.!ltone
Ch
Bap"·t
fashi... ed urch· enjoyed im old-.··
on Christmas Tree and
treat on,Christmas Eve·at 7:30
P: m. Ji!veryone gathered In the
fello_wshlp rOOm of t(le choirch.
They sang·, carols and heard a
Christmas Story read by "Mrs
Henry Johnson. They wer~
surprised with a visit from

Santa . Claus ·who listened
patiently ·tot their wants and
wishes.
During the social hour they
were served r.efresbinents by
these hostesses, Brenda Lee
Carla Young, Sara Jan~
Johnson am! TIIDll1ly .Scott.
Under the pretty . tree, there
were gifts for the very young
and special gifts fo,r _others.
. The Sunday ·School save treats
tangerines and peppermint

. 'I

-~

~·
I

. 'f

-~

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\

. ~ENTI.()CATION of Ute Ohio Valley Bank 1/J 420ThlrdAve. The modern facility was
wilt in I!N!Oand 1981, and dedicated in the fallof1981.
I
•
l

· Apple Grove

-

\ · ·~ HOME - Ohio Valley Bank served area

STARTED HERE - This is whet~ the Ohio Vdey Blink
began operations 100 years ago. It's the preseut side 'of The . .

~-

tlsidenttat the corner of Second Ave. and State St. for over a

1
J'

1\l!f ceirtury.

'

pproval-of Indolrie Tax Bill
State's Bigg~st $toey of 1971
~

(

.· :

one-half to 3"" per cent 1nconi~
tax for Individuals. It also coiltains a corporate lndlme tax, ar.
three-cent bike in the t8l on a :
pack of cigarettes, a vai'iety e£
minorbuslnesstai:kalldiatidlt .,
$200million worth of tax relief, ·
Including a 10
·cent acrosl
the board pr perty tax
·
reduction for
. pf9periy ;
'

Unllted Press International
Passage of Ohio's first
Jer~~&lt;onal income tax to finance
record $7.7 billion budget
selected by United Press
lnternallor~el editors in Ohio as
top news s_tory in the state
l!w"~ng 1971.
The Income tax bill ended
months of battling In the
:len1eral Assembly on a means
fln&lt;lllclng the budget as leglllat.nr. shifted between an inCrelilsed sales tax and an intax.
The other nine top news
llori1es of the year, selected in
order of importance,
The destruction of the
jury report on the Kent
st•t• · disturbances; sub~~~~ trials and dismissal of
l..t
against persons inThe 31 Indictments on
ranging from sodomy
torture of patients at Lima
Hospital.
4. Reduction of the voting age
21 to 18 in all elections.
John J. Gilligan's
IAn•U.ritv program.
6. Cleveland Mayor Carl B.
decides against third
Republican Ralph Perk
mayor's race.
7. The mine, telephone and
strikes.
8. The boiler explosion which
l k:~~~~~five persons ·in a
1111
Sunday School class.
9. The election of nineteenyear-old Ron Hooker as mayor
of Newcomerstown.
10. Seven-year-old Lima boy
survives rabies.
The tax measure calls lor a
ch&amp;J~ges

Events

COLO\'
1111'&lt;111'1 '

Tonightthru
Mr. and' Mrs. Russell Roush Waid Fosters also visited her
Wednesday
and children, Mr. and- Mrs. · parents,. Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Herbert Roush and son ,' Roger, Hill Jr. at l~Jjcine.'
Mr , and Mrs. Walter McDade . Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hayman
and Gene Early of Troy, Mrs. were Christmas Day guests of
Edna Roush, Mrs. Gladys Mr. and Mrs. George Harris
Shields\ Mr. a~d Mrs. Ronald and familY at Pomeroy.
Russell of Middleport, Jeff
Mr. and Mrs. Blain Nice and
M11l~r, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac · three children of Newark w,ere
Lew1s, Mrs. Iva Orr were Christmas Day guests of Mr
dinner guests of Mr. and _Mrs. and Mrs. Uoyd Nice, Mr. and
Dan_a LewiS Sunday at Clifton. Mrs . George Skinner of
Dmner guests of. Mr. al)d Columbus and Eloise Adams of
Mrs. Don Bell and Lor~ were Pomeroy c~lled on the Nice's
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Noms, Mrs. in the afternoon. •
Amelia lta}"art was the
first
woman o receive the
Eulah B~acken and St. Clair
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Foster,
Distinguished
Flying Cross.
Hiij, Christmas Day. Evening Mr. and Mrs. Waid Foster and
dmner guests of the Bells were children of Racine were
Mr. Raymond Bell of Oak Christmas Day dinner guests
Gro~e Rd., Mr. and Mrs. Paul of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill ar.
'
Ervm and chidren of Bashan at Racine.
Tonig.ht,
&amp;•Tues. .
Rd. and . Mona Moody of
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Wheeler
Januafv 2-3-4
Wellston. .
and son, Bill, arid Mrs. Bessie
FOOL'S PARADE
Mrs. Ahce Balser of. Letart Stitt spent ChriStmas and the
(Technicolor&gt;'
was Chrislplas Day guest of weekend · with Mr. and Mrs.
. James Stewart
her daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Foster and children at
George Kennedy
,
"GP"
Jack Ables and children.
Columbus. They were met
Disney
Colorcartoons:
Christmas Day guests of Mr. there by Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Goofy and Wilbur
and Mrs . Lester Roush and MorriS and children who alSo
Joey,\ the Dog
family were Mr. amfMrs._ Jim were guests of the Fosll!rs.
. Pluto's ,Blue Note
Connolly and two children of
Mr. and Mrs. Drew Filoher
. SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
CARTOON
Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Don and children spent Christmas .
Riffle and two children of ·
'·· ·Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Manuel of Racine.
Mr . and Mrs. Everette
Ho11rs
Connolly, Mr. and Mrs. George
Connolly, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Mon ., T-ues., Wed ., Thurs .-Connolly and children .. were
11 A.M.Io lO P.M.
Christmas Day ilinner guests
Fri. &amp; Sat--11 A.M. to 11 P.M.
of Mr. and Mrs. Doug I,teese at
Closed Sunday
Marietta.
.
Christmas weekend guestS Of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Foster 1-'
.
(
were Mr. and Mrs. Waid'Foster
and children, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mall Karr of Columbus. The

pleaded guilty to first degree race which included a handriot charges, one was acquitted picked candidate of Carl B.
and cberges against another Stokes, the city's first black
defendant were dropped alter mayor.
four pet~ had testified.
Perk, who pledged in his
'rhe 31 indictments at the campaign to preserve "law
Stale Hospital for the and
order,"
became
Ctlilllnilly Insane at Ltma Cleveland's first Republican
resulted from an inveshgation . mayor in 30 years. Stokes had
..,.
decided against oi third term
u!i.Ule ~bole attorney general's . d
t d A ld R
omde -lot'ler it was revealed a~ suppor e
rno
.
nlsrty Imitates had been con- . Pmkney, a school board
and is expected to lfooM:e fi9o filled at the hospital without me~ber and a b~ck lndependmillion In new revt;ues towaf4; trials for the crimes of which ent, ~ the el~ction.
.
general goverruneht spendlngl they wi-e charged. Subsequent
Ohio was. hit by three maJor
for the remaining 18 months inl iliqillrles ' brought
up strikes cton:mg the year - the
the biermlum. 'I\ . .' ) ' ahtiOJI,I .pf brutality.
Urute&lt;b Mme Work~rs, Bell
0n March 16,ili:.f.~·~ ·-~ ~dictmenta were Tele~hone apd _ratls. The
proposed a 1 to 8 per cent-~ retur'iieU on charges ranging combl~ed econo~mc effects of
come tax. But the"itepublic&amp;ll=. ft6rn solliJmy to torture of th~ ~trikes in Ohio reached $31
controlled legislature was un- patients. Those indicted were million.
.
decided whether to glv~ either employed at the hospital
The UMW strike began Oct. I
Gilligan 'the inrome tax he or former employes.
":hen the union's. contract exwanted to hold) .increalll!~- ,.~! 30, the Ohio General p~ed and ended m Ohi? when
spending to a ~tir!'ttld ~ ~In . :. ratified tb.e 26th JlllDers began retummg . to
by with an 1n~rn tbll siit(J: Air)_{ ellt to the U.S. Con!lti- work Nov.l7. About 9,000umon
tax.
";·· ;-· ,,
~-~ . tulk&gt;il ;ai\d reduced the m~ers ~n(l about .3,000 no?"
The Senate paJei\ f1¥..if.~~ nitillmllihvotlng age from 21 to . un10n ll)lller~ were mvolved m out."
1 • the strike_. mar~ed by VIolence
cent sales tax inc~da'BeSII&gt;t."Jlii. 1811n itt elections.
Rounding out the top 10 was
but the House vOted ill; down ·
·• at non-uruon rrunes when UMW the story on Matthew Winkler,
The income tax bill-was ~a~;
Clh~\:pProval brought the picketS attempted to organize who celebrated his seventh
Dec. IO.
. ~ . ,, ~: , ~~j: ~ _' 1 . states ratifying the the non-union operations.
birthday Jan. 'l1 with 1\is reOn Jan. 28, a fed~al judgJ,II( iJlleriilllept to 38, the required
Th~ James Brothers Coal Co. lease from St. Rita's Hospital
Cleveland orderM ' 1 · -spe~ijl ~ow'lhs of the 50 states at Mmeral City was burned to where doctors said be ' ma!le
grand jury repol{ on ·the Ke)lt"' ~o!eSsaty to make an amend- the ground and another non- medical history by surviving
State dlsturbandti de&amp;ttoyfkl.. ~~ jl'al't of the Constitution. union mine office in Perry rabies.
because it would'be )&gt;rejlldlc!W''
~~_'Q!do H_ouse, meeting In a County was wrecked by
The boy had undergone
to lhe trials of ~"_j&gt;ers'ons itt~ spec181 t~mng sess~on, voted dyn8111lte.
. . treabnent smce Nov. 3, 1970,
dieted.
·" ' · ' · -•:.\t ~- t~ .P,ISS the amendment.
On at least two occasions m for rabies he contracted from a
In November . the! UBi The_ Sfme Senate ap!X'oved November about 500 miners In rabid bet. Doctors said treatSupreme Court ~ io ~~~~ ra~Cf;tlon by a 30-2 vote the cars and armed ;vlth shotguns ment . consisted of "anthe trials and tblly be!llln
Jitevlolli·day.
roamed through Tuscarawas \icipating the expected course
16. Five of the defendants
, The fifth Lop news story • the Co':"'ty and parts of easll!rn of the disease and poeslble
on trial before ~
au~J;Y program, came about Oh1o shutting down . non-umon
d . tit 1
1-. .
to dismiss the
on Setlt;\ l when Gov. Gilligan operations. Gov. Gilligan In- .comp lcahons an ms u ing
the
1814 off 1;000 state employes, creased Ohio Highway Patrol · trea~ent before }atal com\-'llhralf*fe and education pay- surveillance in the areas and phcatwns ensued.
ilienli:iJ\.d.closed state parks to Sen. Robert Taft Jr. called for
ptbttvl enough money to a federal grand jury lnvestlgal(lfet 'stpinditures when the tion into the violence.
· ~te, ~without a permanent
About 18,000 Ohioans joined
~dgef. .
the six-day contract related
:;Mtei: -~ days Gllllgan was strike by the Communications
folrced 'bj state law to reopen ...Workers of America against
the state parks. During the Ohio Bell. AnoUler 900 began a ·
austerity_ program, _ the strike
against
United
gciverntll' announced he was Telephone Co., which claimed
biking · a 10 per cent cut in It had a contract extension and
sll8ry 'and turning it over to fired the workers.
IIi~ stalft _
The rail strike affected the
_)fn the ~eveland election on Noo:folk and Western. Railroad
N6v. ~· ~lph J. Perk, a con- ~ in Ohio and lasted .10 days.
servali"e Republican, was There were some l!C~=~ ~
eleeted: lnllyor In a four-man incidents of violence i.J
·
·
the removal of spikes from
some sections of track in the
Bellevue area. The N&amp;W
employs 9,000 persons m Ohio.
The baUer explosion In ·MarIetta occurred Oct. 10 in Ute annex of the First Baptist
Church, causing tons of concrete; steel and scald~ water ·
to collapse on a Sunday School
class. Five persons ~ a
teacher and four teen-agers were killed and 14 were injured.
The force of .the blast ble.
out a stairWell and a wall which
forced the floor to collapse into
the basement of the annex
wbtlre the class was In session.
Four days later, Gov. Gllllgan •
signed \Dto law a bill tlg!J.tening
the state's 'bOiler inspection
laws.
'
On !iov. 2, Ron Hooker, a 19year~ld Ashland q..uu_, student, was elected mayor of the
east-central Ohio village of
Newcomerstown, 'getting twoand..a-half tilDes as many votes
as his four opponents COOl·
blned. Hooker bed pledged to
stop
"hot-rodding" on village
••
••
streets.
·
••
Hooker
said
recenUy
he was
•
''shucked and appalled" _by
~lbe:l offered him bul that he
•
.had ·'no il)tentlon of seUing '

i

News~

and the weekend with Mr . and
Mrs. Bob Johnson and Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Johnson at
Mammoth, W. Va.
Christmas Day guests of
Mrs. Eula Wolfe and Aaron
ware Mr. and Mrs. John Ord,
Be\h and John, Unda and Jack
Snodgrass of Letart, W. Va.
Route, Mr . .and Mrs. Carroll
Norris and Debbie, Mr. and
Mrs. Al!lltin Wolfe and son of
Syr~cuse, Mrt and Mrs. Jim
Lewis, Barbe and Connie of
-Pt. Pleasant.
,
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"

.MEIGS .HEATRE

Mt.

NOI ... ft'IOS

ACROSS

1-Ltlltntlne
ketch {pl.)

6-Hesltttt
11-Rips

16--Lotes color
21-Rintworm

22-Wipe out
23-Joln
24--Girt'l. name
25-Worm '
26-Mtndarln's
residence
28--Shades
3G--River In Africa
32-Symbol for
tantalum
33--Nteatlve prefhc
34-Man's
nickname
35-Famala ruff
36-European herb
37-Throueh
38--0penwork
fabric
40--Noxious
&lt;12-Sqd container
43-Stlf-c::ontrol
4"-Vehlcle•

LouGossett·
·Susan Clark

~~~-

..

HOUSE

45-HIIten
47-Star In
constellation
Oraconls
4g_....pttl
50-ClOth measurt"
51-Indites
54-Artbltn
comm111der
55-Moist
56-Btllt
59-Scottish for
"John"
60--Hindu cymbal1
62-o'tUttratlon
64-UndtrJarment
65-A stale (abbr.)
66-Prlnltr's
mellure
67-Malay &amp;lbbon
69-Chemlcal
compound

J

'

ltalia'n _Spaghetti .

70-Want
71-Filnhoad

133-Helr

72-French plurtl
ertlclt
74-GI'Mk lsltnd

76-Evenlne
... (poet .)

77-0bterved
78-Articl.. of
furniture
79-Rellable
82-Natlontl hymn

84-Pitch (pl.)
85-Fiower
86-Thl
88-0ry
89-Pedal
eJCtremlty
90--0en,.ude
92-Buy back
94-Amerlcan
a:o ldflnch
98-Cravats
99-Unlt of Italian
currency (pl.)
100-Moccasln
102-Transaetlons
103-Mtadow
104-Ethloplan title
105-Waa:ers
106-Cooks In tlot
water
108-Yttlow ocher
109-Roman a;ods
liD-Conjunction
Ill-Urn
112-SIInlfy
114-Farm animal
116-~odlum

chloride
117-Heathens
119-Mascullne
12Q-Pulverized
rock
122- Ntla:h
124-Number
125-Workmtn
126--Gathtred
128-Period of time
129-Bundle
131-cholcest
132-Equ•llty

20-Scorches

135-Hoc

27-Devoured
29-Metal

·

Ule arrlbulan ce.

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1 ~• G• n •ports Tfll'lunt

138-Sum up

139-Seuey
140-Disttnt

31-Sick
3f-Short dauer

141-Vir&amp;lnla willow
142-Pronoun
143-Artlllcial

37-Troplctl tree
39-Siender
40-Pedal

lan~~:uaa:e

ext~mltles

144-Appel latlon of
Alhena

41-Title of

145- More certtln

42-Buccaneer
43-0imlnlsh
44-Cut
46--Pronoun
48-Mud
49-Youns ulman
50--Wife of
Geraint
51-Use with
hands
52-Hindu quqn
53-Dinner COUf'lle

respect

147-Strlke
149-Resort
15G-Salt solution
152-Fewest
154-Body of water
156-Less
Inhibited
ISS-Cassia
159-Fhild flower
160--Girl's name
161-Fresh-water
ducks

(pl.)
S~hlloperon

DOWN
1-Beer mua:
2-Pass.a:eway
3-Ttlose holdlna:
office
4-Symbol for
cerium
5-DtCIIIrt
6--Lower In rank
7-Hermlt
8- Male
9-Pronoun
10-Soak
11-Put In harmony
12-Heraldry:
graftad
13-TtlrH-toed
sloths
14- Football
position (abbr.)
15-Pertainlnl to
old •••
16--Petlet
17- E.Kist
IS-French article
19- Go In

56-0anilh
measure
57-Hydro&amp;en
compound
!8-Ciayey earth
61-Tibet.!ln priest
63-Afrlcan tru
64-Appear
68-Buralars
7G-Stwlna
Implements
71-PI~tnt ol pea

family

,

'"'

t

I ll , 11• mon iM II ; "" " tnonlt&gt;l I S.DCl
Tt&gt;t Dt ll r Stlll fntl, onr "Yt• r IUOO : • I•

"7!.
II so.,
1 montM
lht V11
l~td '"''"
Prtu monllu
'~ "' ""lo_~~

;, ,.
1 ~ IU11~tl. v rnl l!l ta .. , .. , .. .. .. , pul'llin ll ofl
of
111
~ . ...., d••P•' c"'" uta +toa •o ~ ~~~
1 ne•nptper • nd til~ tnt laUI """ '

91--Prlnclpal

· fortification

97-Diumtl
99--Not so' much
101-Nearer

105-Wot
106--Brash
107- Heavenly body
111-WtsthercoC:k
112--Jaraon
113--F'Inllhts
liS-At'l()lat time?
116-Brllk
suddenly
lts:-Preclous metal
119-Spar
121-Based upon the
number 10
123-Prefl•: not
125-Hatbln&amp;er
126-Rabblt
127-Godllke
129-.Sharp
projections
130- Worship
131-lnstct
132-5oclal
&amp;:11therlna
134--Graln
136--Actuate
137-Whetl teeth
139-Entreaty

OAF Anscomatic: 996

Reg. $323

.

._ ... 995

Miss April Brandeberry

Miss Brandeberry To
Wed fames Magnussen

144-Girt's name
145-Capuchln
monkay
146--Brown kiwi
147-Bithoprlc
148-Ntwt
149--Qcean
I 51-Prepos ition
153-Babylonlan
delt)1
.
15S:,-Civitlan
'-. Defense
(abbr.)
157-Note of sc 1 1e

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~\1 , :H )f~~ ~I! ! Y!.Fi

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FILLET OF WHITE FISH, Ta!tar Sauce ............... 2.25
GRILLED CUBE STEAK .. . .. . . . .. . . ... . .. . ........ 1.95

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rvo mI. ng
Events

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_.,_-t

GALL!A COUNTY Pomona
Grange, · 8 p.m. at Harris
et--+-1--t Grange Hall. Potluck lunch
Bring own table service.
'
-f-+-l-4---1 GRACE Guild, 6:1~ p.m. for
_._..J....L....L...J dinner meeting. Please bring
· table service.
·
AM~RICAN
Red Cross
Volunteer (Gray Ladies)
luncheon, 12:30 p.m. Holzer
Hospital cafeteria. All
members urged to attend.
BAND Boosters Executive
board meeting, 7:30p.m. for .

THE HEALTH.FOOD· PANTRY·

Guild
as hostess.
Thirty-one
persons enjoyed&lt; a
ham and turkey dinner .
Following the dinner the group
was led in singing carols by
Mrs. Harold Mack. Mrs. Edward Preston had a program ·
on Advent with Mrs. George
Hawley, Mrs. Paul Shoemaker,
Sharon Cooper and Raymond
Zerkle taking part. The ~roup
told of the meaning of each
candle which is lighted leading
up to the last candle, which is ·
!"• Christ Candle telling of the
birth of Cbrist in Luke 2.
Pastor Richard Mitchell and
wife of Albany were guests. A
gift exchange was held and
enjoyed by all.

'

/OPEN ,12:~:00 DAILY EXCEPT' SUNDAYS

REESE FURNITURE
{/"

'

WHO~tGA-LE

YOU CAN BUY EVERY
D~ y AT REESE'S WHOLESALE
PRICES WITH SAVINGS OF
50% OR MORE ON ALL ITEMS
WITH OUR METHOD OF
SAVING!

•

YOU DON~ HAVE TO RUSH TO PURCHASE
SHOP WORN OR DAMANGED FURNITURE
AT SO CALLED SALE PRICES.

AMERICAN Association of
University Women. first
meeting of the new year. Mrs.
Malcolm Orebaugh , 632 1'.!'
Second Ave. Sam Smith, guest
speaker.
.
.

YOU CAN SELECTFRESH NEW
~ERCHANDISE AT REESE WHOLESALE
FURNITURE OUTLET WITH SAVINGS OF
50% OR ·MORE EVERYDAY ON

TUESDAY
ENGLISH Club meeting
~ostess Mrs. Owen Cantrell
with co-hostess, Mrs. Ruby
BOSS!'rt!, 7 p. m.

.,

31 1972

JACKSON,
'OHIO • PHONE 286-2916
.

Gallipolis, Ohio

-NO SALE PRICES!

officers and committees in
bend room:

•

LOCATED AT THE REAR 99 N. HIGH ST.

422 Second Ave. ·

GAUIPOLIS, OltiO

=i---1 MONDAY

-

TAWNEY STUDIO

GALLIPOLIS - Members church in 'the fellowship room
and friends of ' the Cheshire for a Christmas dinner with the
BapUst. Church _met at the Ji;tptist Links and the Adatp/

wo~ship ~~&lt;ervice.

ANNOUNCING

:~~: $169 95

CORNER OF SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE

WHITE Oak Choir will be
singing, Prospect Bolptist
::+--i,---1 Church, 7:30p.m. Everyone is
1:-;:;:-t--f welcome.
REV. BILLIE Payne will be
t--+-1 preaching, Walnut Ridge
-1-1--1 Church 7 p.m.
tRIEDSTONE Baptist
Church, guest minister, Elbert
D. McGhee, at 10:30 a. m.

..

Reg . $213

1 Attend Church Christmas Dinner

SUNDAY

'

GAF Anscomatlc 94lZ

GALLIPOLis - Dr. and Marietta College and is Gallipolis . The gradous
Mrs. Keith R. Bandeberry, 401 presently enrolled in the custom of open church will be
First Ave., announce the College of Medicine, Ohio state observed.
engagement and approaching. University.
ma~riage of their daughter,
Mr. Magnussen is a graduate
Apr1l Joyce, to ~r. James R. of Purdue University and will
Magnussen, son of Dr. and graduate from the College oJ
Mrs. Marcus Magnussen, 619 Medicine ,
Ohio
State
University, in June, 1972.
. Fourth Ave., Gallipolis.
iii· ~ss .B,r.~~d~J&gt;!lrry is ~ The wedding will take pla~e
•·granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. _ at 4:30p.m. Saturday, April!,
Ada~
W. . Brandeb~rry , in
the
First
United
Coolville. She IS a graduate of Presbyterian
Church
•

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Enlree Include s Salad , Vegetable. and D.rink

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•LA·Z·BOY ·

,

t~e

•SAWYERS

•

.. eSEALY.
.'
We're circling

v

A~~ ~URNITURE.

·

•MERSMAN

New Year with
the best round-up
. of wishes for
you. Many _thanks .

&lt;

•MODERN • •
•BASSETT

NAME BRANDS YOU KNOW!

See . our complete line of natural vitamins .and food sup-

. IF WE DON'T. SAVE .

plements ·- ~erbs_ and T~as - Natural Cosmetics - Nuts and
Seeds- Flours, Ju1-ces, 01ls" Books- Yogurt Makers, Cultures
- Raw Sugar and Hone.y Snacks. · •

..."'

I
1

~119

!

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Reg. $142
Sale Price

,...-~--~----~--~--~--·---~-----

OPEN JANUARY

'

I

-====-----=- =--;;-..:.:..

PUb lllnra lltnln

~-- .7'

'I

95--Ptrttlnlnl' to
the ltlty
96-Part of

·

.

~I

GAF Anscomatic 913

.

.

Wnl
•.

COMPLETE HOME
OUTFIT
EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO -SticXlT
AND sHoW SUPER 8 MOVIES!

1~0-Ado

73-steeples
74-Cut
75-Ski d
77-Turned away
78-0unce ,
(colloq.}
&amp;~Goddess ol
discord
81 - Compass ,oint
83-Attempt
84-Hauls
87- Testify
89-Pursue
90-Sharpl!n

,,

1~ On klo • M

Vl r ~ain • • · ""' n •• $13 00 . II• ,.,w,,~ tt . I

I l~fltt 11'1111'11~ 1 U . iG : IIUIII~Ui , l fl t Vl lf

I

I

--

d · U~ l ~ d Sufi GI~ ,

•u M"I L SU I SCFI IPTI ON ,_olt. TE ,,

91--crown
92--ceremony

FILEl~IGNON, Wrapped w1th ~aeon . . ...... . .. .. 4.25
T-80 NE .STEAK,. (16 oz.) U.S. Prome
.
... . . . ......... 4. 25
GOLDEN FRIED SHRIMP, Tartar Sauce .. . . . . .... ~ .. . 3.25.
HOME BAKED HAM, Hawaiian Pineapple Ring ...... 2.25

Children's Portions Avoiloble·

~

their investigati
.
of lh e De•c. 14. . ace 'd
a enl Which
resulled In the dea th of Mrs •
I va Thomas , 82, a passenger In
.

I

SPAGHETTI DINNER with, Meat Sauce . .. . . . .. . .... 1.95
RAVIO_LI DINNERwifnMeat Sauce .. ....... . ... .. . 2.25
/ Includes: 'Salad and Drink. ·. . Rye &amp; French Bread

Dinners

~Qffipleted

HOFFA WOU!.D HELP
DETROIT (UP!) - James
R. Hoffa, who found out the
hard way what a demoralizing
experience imprisonment can
be, has joined ·a group of
prominent Detroill!rs whose
goal is the development of
recreational and vocational
programs at local jail
facilities. ''Uving in a 7""-by'10
loot cell without anything to do
is one of the most depre!ISing
experiences ever for a human
being," the former Teamsters
Union president, released from
prison himself only last week
said.
'

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~

~

SUNDAY CROSSWORD·PUZZLE

James Garner

steak... spat)letti

d4~1

~IKOf'ICI

II'

SUNDAY, JANUARY 2, 1972

---. ... -- _:;-_·..;;:-.- ·'.

URIV ER CHARGED
·:
.
SUNDAY
I.
COLUMBUS I UP! I
Hubert N. Snead Jr ., 22, il .TIMES-SENTINEL ~ :
P~~lll~f'd ..,.fr ~U&lt;'I da y Or Ito• Ohio I
- Columbus, dri ver of. a city bus ' It V MII
~ l- u~ ll on l nl Co ~
G .. LL "'OLI OAIL "r tliii UN£
I H Thlro:l Av• , 0 1fll l"!li1, Oh io,
.
that collided .·with an am- I PIIII+
I ~ II H ••trY wtfta.v ~ l'll lllt • • , .,., I
( II" I' OII IDO P I ;CI ol
bulance two weeks· ago, has , 1I Sot,..-da1
Oolllpoho. Oll lo . 4UJI
•
1
bee n Charged W1
· th SeCOn d 'I~ . 11 1 Covrt
THE OAI
L T ~E N TI N.,._
St ., l'omtro v. o ., '5761, I ;
' veh'ICU1ar homtC
• I'de He flo 1 Pull
ilolll'llt•tr ' -ko:l•' t v•n lflt ••{_, 1 1
de,.," ree
so~ tura• ~ Eft to run~MDII• cto n mtnlflt 1
' ~ ~1, "'llltr II l'om••o- . OhiO, P a'll OIIIU
W3:) Cha r ged after pOliCe I Ill urr
tE AMS OF SU ISC. A I P TION .
I
,.,
SOc Ill'

lll""'!l· -

.
canes. The Chrisqnas
Eve
affair was in charge of Tammy
Scott and her assistant was
Deacon Robert Green. The
group was disinlssed by Pastor
John D. ~ng .
·

Dispute Settled
· The century-old Chamizal
bordar dispute btltween MexIco and the Unlted States
arose .out of the shifting of
the R10 Grande River in
1852. The portion of El Paso
.JJ ~eturns•o,dutb of thli· river was
"'
to Mexico by forceremonies on Oct. 28
1961. El Chamizal is Spanish
for lh1cket.

....,.,...... _....;- _·:..·_ - -

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LE£. H. DELAY, OWNER
412-414 Secona

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YOU MONEY •.•.~• .._

WE QON'T·I)ESERVE
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YOUR BUSINESSI
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4- TlleSWJday~·Sentinei,SWJday,Jan. Z, 1972 .

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1-fti... Tt-. Selltlnel)limday, Jan. z, 1972

't

bly
Gets
MiXed
Raves
in
~7J.
Ohio General
.Asse
.
1. In .Spite of 117Months !fiJigle~ · I
.

.

I

By LEE LEONARD
employment and. workmen's
.UPI Statehouse Reporter
compensation ami election reCOLUMBUS (UP!) .:._ There ·form.
.
was goOd news and bad news in
The Senate and House bolh
the Ohio General Assembly in spent more than 180 working
1971.
days in Columbus - the same
· The bad news was that ,the amoWJt of time spent in all of
lawmakersspentthe betterpart 1969 and 1970. Yet they passed
or 11 months haggling over a · only 211 out of 1,45'1 bills introbudget and tax program before . duced because most legislation
enacting the state's first incom~ was hog-tied by the fiscal staletax to fund a record $7.7 billion rna te.
budget.
Gov. John J . Gilligan un·
The good news was that they veiled a $9.1 billion two ·year
got it done before the year end- budget on March 15. It .was to
ed.
require $2.1 billion in new revThe first hall ~lthC! I09th ses- enues, including a 1 to 8 per
sion of the General Assembly, cent personal income tax.
which set records for longevity
House Republicans were split
in practically every category, over whether to try for a flatwas dominated by the fiscal rate coun ty income tax or an
battle.
increase in the sales tax with
Overshadowed w~re impor areducedbudget.They sent the
tant new laws in th reduced budget over to the Senareas o£ air and· water pol- ate May 28, leaving the .financlution, auto and home safe- ing provisions behind.
ty, hospital care, unAs the fiscal year ended June

.

.

"

30, the governor and the legislators found themselves operating the state on a one • month
interim budget - the first of
eight stopgap -measur~s during
the record six monthS the siDle
was to go without a permanent
budge t.
The House, with 16 Republicans joining 38 Democrats,
adopled a I to 4 per cent per.
sonal income tax July 14 and
ilent it to the Senate. It )lias lD
lund a $7.8 billion budget.
More than two months went
by before the Senate chose to
bring to the floor a m cent.
increase in the sales tax to lund
a $7.677 billion budget including
$798 million in new taxes. The
bill passed on Republican
votes, 18-1~.
TWo months . of conference
committee work followed. On
Nov. 9, the House resoundingly
defeated the Senate Republicans' sales tax approach. Then

Rhetoric Toning Down
KEY BISCAYNE, F1a. (UP! ) - President the year but not WJtil Nixon imposed a 90-day
Nixon continues to wax optimistic about the wage.price-rent freeze, followed by an elaborate
JI'Ospects for the economy in the new year, but set of economic controls.
rnrougtrout most or 1971, NiXon regularly
appears to have !Dned down his rhetoric a bit as
1972 approaches with many pocketbook repeated his prediction that the year would be a
good one, and 1972 a very good one, for the
JI'Oblems still festering.
"We can now confidently say that 1971 is en- economy._
The President probably hoped be could talk the
ding on a most encouraging economic note and
that 1972 will begin as a year of great economic economy back to health. The idea behind this is
promise," Nixon said last week in signing that if businessmen and consumers think times
are getting better they will spend their money in
legisl~tion extending his authority to control
a way that will spur the economy and help luHill
. wages and prices.
That may sound like a pretty rosy assessment the prophecy.
· But with election day about 1.1 months away,
But not when it is contrasted with Nixon's earlier
forecast of the economy in the coming election there has been a subtle change in the
presidential rhetoric.' The idea now is to raise
year.
1
About a year ago, Nixon told a nationwide hopes but not !Do high.
Should be Belter
television audience :
Most economists doubt that the economy can
"And this is a prediction : 1971 is going to be a
reach
robust prosperity by the first Tuesday
year of an expanding economy in which inflation,
the rise in inflation, is going to continue to go after the first Monday of November. But many of
down; in which unemployment, which is them agree that things should be a little better by
)ll'esently too high, will finally come under e_lection day.
It is in Nixon's political interest for the public
control and begin to recede , 1971, in essence, will
be a good year, and 1972 will be a very good not to get expectations !Do high. An unemploymentrate o!Sper cent, for instance, was one
year."
considered unacceptable. But it is a full perNota Good Year
Well, 1971 was not a good year. It was not quite centage point better than the rate most of this
as bad overall as 1970, when the nation ex- year.
Five per cent unemployment may be
perienced simultaneously the first recession in a
decade and a continuation of the worst inflation achievable by election day ; the full employment
rate of 4 to 4.~ per cent probably is nol.
In 2() years.
So as the new year approaches, 1972 bas
But it ·was bad enough. Unemployment
hovered around the 6 per cenl mark all year, changed from "a very good year" to "a year of
malting it worse than 1970 and the worst year for great economic promise."
whether that promise will be fuHilled, only
joblessness since 1961. Inflation subsided late in
time will ]Jlll.

Some Lucky People Can
Match Food an~ Energy
By DELOS SMITH
NEW YORK (UPI )-With a
marvelous feeding . machine
three scientists proved tbat
some people, like some rats
and other experimental ani-

on a wall . From it projects a
tube and a bulb. To be machine
fed , you put lhe tube between
your lips, squeeze the bulb and
liquefied food is shot into your
mouth .
Inside the box is a reservoir
Science Today
of the nutritious liquid and a
ma:s, automatically and un- pump that precisely regulates
wittingly match their inta'ke of the amount each bulb squeeze
food with their output of delivers. Through the wall it is
wired to a recorder that prints
mer~
th .
d
That means their body out e tune an amount of
weight hardly varies month to .. e_xery squeeze.
month and year to year. It is
Voluntarily five lean young
the effortless way of being men lived for weeks in an
healthily slender . Scientists experimental metabolic unit of
have ·found Ibis inborn and Columbia University's Inpurely physiological knack in stitute of Human Nutrition.
an assortment of animals but Their only food was the food
were despairing of proving its they squeezed from the
existence in humans.
machine and since the food was
There are a lot of con~ent- liquid and ·otherwise unly slender people to be sure- distinguished, presumably
just llS there are a lot of per- they squeezed only when · they
sistently fat ones. But i&gt;eople felt the physiological need for
eat for obscure psychological energy input.
reasons as well as for the
Secretly the scientists were
physiological demands for nu- manipulating the ''nutritional
trition.
density" of the liquid by adding
The scientific problem is to water to reduce its caloric
eliminate the psychological va lue and a thickener and
reasons in order to isolate the other agents to prevent any
inborn physiological control detectable change in taste or
texture."'
over intake (if one exists ll,J.. Recorder Documents Control
people ) ,and watch it at wor~ .
Drs. Robert G. Campbell, Sami
As density went down, the
A. Hashim and Theodore B. number of bulb squeezes inVan !Iallie did it with a feeding creased and when density
machine.
increased, bulb squeezes deJust a Box
creased. The .recorder printAll you see is a box mounted outs documented a physiologi-

'\. \

..

.

.

cal control in the young mim
which matched their intake
with their energy output, and
so 11\eir weights varied little
during the experimental
weeks.
The scientists also reported
the identical experimmts with
five "grossly obese" subjects
lD the New England Journal of
Medicine. There were wild
gyrations in the recorder Jrintouts: clearly machine feeding
was baffling to them. All of
them lost weight which to the
scientists showed no inborn
physiologicat control was operating in them.

Chester
News Notes
By Clarice Allen
. Weekend guests or Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Orr were Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Newnan and family of
Galion and Dr . and Mrs.
Grueser and family of Logan.
Calling on Saturday were Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Lee, Bashan.
· Miss Lucille Smith is
spending the holidays with her
sister , Mrs. John Reuter
'
Akron.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary WoH and
Rick Kgblentz '" Columbus,
spent the weekend with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. David
Koblentz and Mr. and Mrs.

.

· ·'\R&amp;M Inc. Earnings Are Off
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio In
a
message
to
Robbins- &amp; Myers, Inc ., shareholders, J . Harold Karr
repOrted a decline in both~les President, attributed· th~
and earnings tor the first fiscal decline in sales and earnings to
quarter ended November 30, the extremely low sales )evels
1971. .
and below break-&lt;!ven profit ,
Net mcome amou.nle!l to levels of the firm 's Electric
f44,006 or $0.04 per . share Motor Group. Segments of tbe
comparedwith$278,482or$0.25 · mo l~r industry , he noted,
per Bhate ,for the same period conUnued to be plag~ed by
last year . Sales were problems of depressed demand
$10,929.256 as compar~ . to ·and over-ea[iaclly! a situation
$12,7~1,491j a year ago. '
~peeled to continue .through

the second quarter of the fiscal
year .
Karr added that lhe industrial Products and Comfort
Conditioning Products Groups
are operating at, or near,
forecasted sales and earnings
levels, and are ex[iected to
show significant improvement
over last year . The f!rm
operates· a plant on Bob McCormick Rd. near Gallipolis.
"

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f'' X''8''!®'~m8W~S.U:l&amp;8C

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' ·•

U.W§i;S' U:%~Jl'!W;?:1n"fi&lt;'li1l

the Senate ocked· down two · the area of public \lleHare, bad
income tax bills, one written by hetn cut drastically1 the budget
-'Repu!Jiiaans, the other with sUII called for a 35 per cent
Democratic help.
increase in state aid to basic I · · · ·
·e.•.•~:&amp;~S!"Mo.;•.
··· ~-~·:-~~..
· · ··
U:: .tA.Uau .C.Cilb.:.•.c.:.
Fina~y onj)ec. 9, the Senate. education, a 25 [ler cent hike ilr
pa~ with r~ votes-the exact higher education payments and
num6i!r needed for pas- a - ~2 per cent boost Jn weHare U.S. amendinent, edging North for drug use and veoo:eal disCarolina and Oklahoma in ·a eallewithoutparentalconsent.
sage the report of expenditures.
· the fourth conference com- · The budget far exceeded the race ·to be 38th the night of .. The General Assembly adopted a pair of comprehensive
mittee setting · the budget at $6.2 billion spent in fiscal 1969- JWJe 30.
The tegislatw-e _also adopted , measures!~ help the working
$7.686 billion and calling for
71, and the. Income tax was
one-hal!'to 31&gt; per cent gra'du- describect as a "major step for- ' an election reform package, man.
OneincreasesWJemployment
ated per!lonal income. tax,• a ward" in getting Ohio off lhe much of which was -based on
corporate net· income tax, a property tax as a base for'fl- conforming, the law to consti- -compensation benefits by 17 to
g o v e r n me n t tlltlonal amendments 811d fed- - 27 per cent, extends them for
three-a!ntincrealie in lire clgnr- n an c I n g
eral requirements.13 weeks during petiods of high,
ette tax, numerous minor busi- operations.
·
One
controversial
section
unemployment
and attaches a
ness tax hikes and' property
Through careful caiCWatton
tax relief.
by legislative leaders, Ohio be- wouldbavegivenlocaleleciions cost-ol-livingfactor,lhefirstfor
came the 38th and deciding boards altst of questions to ask any state in the nation.
The other grants a ~ per
The following day, 13 Repub- state to ratify the 26th amend- college students who wished to
licans joined 43 Democrats in ment to the U.S. Constitution vote in thew college communi- cent ·boost in workmen's compushing throug~ the House the alloWing 18-lo-2()-year-olds to ties. The governor vetoed the pensation payments, also in- ·
bill and the legislature adopted eluding cost-of-living inelections.
$790 million packag.e or net new vote in
it
again without the list of crements.
..
While advancing a resolution
revenpes to finance the greatest
Otherbillsenactedduring the
spending outlay in the history of to allow Ohio voters to amend 'li!estions.
On
the
last
day
of
the
ses1971
session:
their own Constitution on the
Ohio state government.
-Authorize the highway PaWhile Gilligan's original rec- matter, the lawmakers timed slon, · the General Assembly
adopted
landmark
legislation
trolto
intervene in civ~ disturbommendations, particularly in thetr action perfectly on the
givingtheattorneygeneralpow' · "Snces at the· request of the
er to enforce orders of the local governing WJit.
state Air Pollution Control
-Allow the state to build
Board and increasing penalties water treaunent facilities in
for violaijon to $10,000 a day.
municipalities which fail to
A two-year fight to reqUire comply with state clean water
By Mrs. Herberl Roush
were Christmas weekend safety glass in storm doors, standards.
.
Christmas Day and ·over the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert patio doors and shower stalla
- 0 v e r h a u I 0 h i o ' s'
weekend guests of Mr. and Sayre. Danny and Brice Sayre in private homes was ended regulations on credit unions.
Mrs. ))Qn Hupp and sons were will spend a·week with Mr. and with enactment the final day of
-Expand financing op
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Parsons, Mrs. Sayre.
the session.
portunities
for
hosMr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons,
Mrs. Jessie Parsons and son,
Also, the blood al~ohol toler- pi tal facilities and aut)lorGeorge, all of Ashland; Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell of ance of drinking drivers was ize Deparunent of Insurance to
and Mrs. Gerald ~ells and Middleport, Mr. and Mrs. Dana lowered from .15 per cent to require public hearings in
children of Syracuse; Mr. and Lewis of Clifton, ·Mrs. Edna .10 per cent.
health insurance rate increase
Mrs . Roger Parsons also Roush, George Parsons were
The legislature passe~ bills requests.
visited with her parents at Christmas Day dinner guests regulating everyone from
-Increase penalties for
Richwood, W. Va. Mrs. Kate of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush butchers to bakers to can- eredit- card theft and fraud.
Rowe and Ada were Sunday and family .
dlestick makers.
-Prohibit disclosure of inMr. and Mrs. Paul Manuel
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
There are new laws on meat formation from another's tax
were Chrisunas Day dinner inspection; barberlng and bak- return.
Hupp.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mitc_hell of guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert eries. There is a new law reguThere were bills that didn't
Columbus were Christmas Roush and sons. Mr. and Mrs. lating snowmobiles and other make it i.n 1971.
weekend guests of Mrs. Bertha Lester Manuel and daughter of all-terrain vehicles.
Some, like a pair of aborpon
Robinson. Sunday guests of Logan visited the Roushes and
There are new laws regula!- · reform bills killed in July, apMrs. Robinson were Mrs. Manuels in the afternoon.
ing junkyards and restricting , peared unlikely prospects for
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ernest WJsighUy billboards and aban- · 1972.
Marlene Fisher, Larry, Molly
and Amy, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bush Christmas Day were Mr. donedmotorv~icles. There are
Others, like a strip mine reSargent, John Fisher, Mr. and !'nd Mrs. Harry' Bush and two new laws authorizing rrilnors to form bill passed by the House
Mrs . Bill Robinson and children of Charleston, S. C. receive medical tre11tment but subject to change in the
children, Mike, Patty, Berta, and Rev. and Mrs. Charles
Pete, David and Bradley, Mrs. Bush and Bob Bush of LanFocie Hayman and Keith, Mrs. caster.
•
Mr. a,nd Mrs. Joe Manuel,
Ann Radford aqd Stephanie of
.Pomeroy Route and Mr. and Tim and Sid, spent Christmas
Mrs. Howard Robinson of Day with her mother, Mrs.
Flatwoods, W. Va.
Katie Young at Minersville
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Route.
Lawson called on Mr. and 1111s.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bush
Diamond Lawson at MI. visited ·Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Manuel Sunday afternoon.
Moriah Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Rufus RanChristmas Day guests of
Mrs. Mary Donohue and David dolph of Dayton, Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Rose Bachus were Charles Huw and children of
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Blackwell Racine called on Mr. and Mrs .
of Letart Falls and Charles Manuel Christmas night.
Blake, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Styer
and
C. J. and Wilda Lawson of
of Waterford, Paul Sayre,
Howard Sayre, Danny and Letart, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Brice Sayre, Mrs. .Dorothy Bob Lawson and family were
all
Glenn, Mrs. Doris Rogers and ChristmaS" Day guests of their__
balances!
Buck Rogers Jr. of Colwnbus parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Lawson and family.
Just the right
Mrs. Bertha Robinson spent
Christmas ~e with her son,
amooot of health
Mr. and Mrs Bill Robl!lson and
and happiness for all
family of
cine Route and
George WoH.
. Christmas Day with her
our loyal, friendly patrons.
Christmas dinner guests of daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Mr. and Mrs. James Ridenour Sargent at Racine . Other
and sons were Mr. and Mrs. guests of the Sargents were
Buel Ridenour, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sargent
John Ridenour, Mr. and Mrs. of Colwnbus, Mr. and Mrs.
John Hayes and Mrs. Elizabeth Philip Radford and Stephanie
Wickham. Calling in the of Pomeroy Route . '
750 lSr AVE. '
GALUPOLIS, OHIO
evening were Mr. and Mrs.
John Wickham.
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen and
Blll were Mr. and Mrs. Denzil
Cleland and Mr. V. D. Cleland.
Mr . and Mrs. Vernon
Cleland, Columbus, spent the
weekend witll Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Cleland. On SUnday they
visited in Wellston with Mrs.
Ellen Kimes.
·
Richard Frost of Michigan
spent the bolidays with Mr. and
Mrs. Willis Frost and Billie
Mo~y ~
Jean.

a·

au

Fairview News

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~
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Tuesday • _Jfednesday
and; ThurscliJy Only!

GALA
PAPER
TOWELS

•

Senate, appeare&lt;\inevltable for
enactment. .
Alsoawaitingactionnextyear
ar.e bills es~~Ushing,coUectlve
bargairiinniwc~ures for publie employes;' eliminating the .
position of fireman on freight
trains; requirlngweHarereclpients lD liv.e_ln the_state, one ·
}'ear, work on special projects
and present an identifl~atlon
Cllrtl to ·clatin their checks,
and eliminating the prohibition
against lotteries in Ohio .•
A compromise apparently
was reached the week
before · Christmas on ·a
congressional redlstrlclng
blll which would . preserve the dls\l'i~ts. qf,22 incumbents but combine th~ territory
of two Republic,an c\ln~ressmen
- William M. Mc~och of
Piqua and Jackson ~ ,Betts of
Findlay"__giving Repulilicans d
16-7 edge in the delegation if
form holds true in next year's
election.
•
At the same time; al federal
court has upheld a legislative
reapportionmentplanllrawnby
Democrats .and designed to
knock out five Republiban senators and a dozen GOP House
members In the election.
'

FRENCH·CITY
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4- TlleSWJday~·Sentinei,SWJday,Jan. Z, 1972 .

(

••

',

A' ...

1-fti... Tt-. Selltlnel)limday, Jan. z, 1972

't

bly
Gets
MiXed
Raves
in
~7J.
Ohio General
.Asse
.
1. In .Spite of 117Months !fiJigle~ · I
.

.

I

By LEE LEONARD
employment and. workmen's
.UPI Statehouse Reporter
compensation ami election reCOLUMBUS (UP!) .:._ There ·form.
.
was goOd news and bad news in
The Senate and House bolh
the Ohio General Assembly in spent more than 180 working
1971.
days in Columbus - the same
· The bad news was that ,the amoWJt of time spent in all of
lawmakersspentthe betterpart 1969 and 1970. Yet they passed
or 11 months haggling over a · only 211 out of 1,45'1 bills introbudget and tax program before . duced because most legislation
enacting the state's first incom~ was hog-tied by the fiscal staletax to fund a record $7.7 billion rna te.
budget.
Gov. John J . Gilligan un·
The good news was that they veiled a $9.1 billion two ·year
got it done before the year end- budget on March 15. It .was to
ed.
require $2.1 billion in new revThe first hall ~lthC! I09th ses- enues, including a 1 to 8 per
sion of the General Assembly, cent personal income tax.
which set records for longevity
House Republicans were split
in practically every category, over whether to try for a flatwas dominated by the fiscal rate coun ty income tax or an
battle.
increase in the sales tax with
Overshadowed w~re impor areducedbudget.They sent the
tant new laws in th reduced budget over to the Senareas o£ air and· water pol- ate May 28, leaving the .financlution, auto and home safe- ing provisions behind.
ty, hospital care, unAs the fiscal year ended June

.

.

"

30, the governor and the legislators found themselves operating the state on a one • month
interim budget - the first of
eight stopgap -measur~s during
the record six monthS the siDle
was to go without a permanent
budge t.
The House, with 16 Republicans joining 38 Democrats,
adopled a I to 4 per cent per.
sonal income tax July 14 and
ilent it to the Senate. It )lias lD
lund a $7.8 billion budget.
More than two months went
by before the Senate chose to
bring to the floor a m cent.
increase in the sales tax to lund
a $7.677 billion budget including
$798 million in new taxes. The
bill passed on Republican
votes, 18-1~.
TWo months . of conference
committee work followed. On
Nov. 9, the House resoundingly
defeated the Senate Republicans' sales tax approach. Then

Rhetoric Toning Down
KEY BISCAYNE, F1a. (UP! ) - President the year but not WJtil Nixon imposed a 90-day
Nixon continues to wax optimistic about the wage.price-rent freeze, followed by an elaborate
JI'Ospects for the economy in the new year, but set of economic controls.
rnrougtrout most or 1971, NiXon regularly
appears to have !Dned down his rhetoric a bit as
1972 approaches with many pocketbook repeated his prediction that the year would be a
good one, and 1972 a very good one, for the
JI'Oblems still festering.
"We can now confidently say that 1971 is en- economy._
The President probably hoped be could talk the
ding on a most encouraging economic note and
that 1972 will begin as a year of great economic economy back to health. The idea behind this is
promise," Nixon said last week in signing that if businessmen and consumers think times
are getting better they will spend their money in
legisl~tion extending his authority to control
a way that will spur the economy and help luHill
. wages and prices.
That may sound like a pretty rosy assessment the prophecy.
· But with election day about 1.1 months away,
But not when it is contrasted with Nixon's earlier
forecast of the economy in the coming election there has been a subtle change in the
presidential rhetoric.' The idea now is to raise
year.
1
About a year ago, Nixon told a nationwide hopes but not !Do high.
Should be Belter
television audience :
Most economists doubt that the economy can
"And this is a prediction : 1971 is going to be a
reach
robust prosperity by the first Tuesday
year of an expanding economy in which inflation,
the rise in inflation, is going to continue to go after the first Monday of November. But many of
down; in which unemployment, which is them agree that things should be a little better by
)ll'esently too high, will finally come under e_lection day.
It is in Nixon's political interest for the public
control and begin to recede , 1971, in essence, will
be a good year, and 1972 will be a very good not to get expectations !Do high. An unemploymentrate o!Sper cent, for instance, was one
year."
considered unacceptable. But it is a full perNota Good Year
Well, 1971 was not a good year. It was not quite centage point better than the rate most of this
as bad overall as 1970, when the nation ex- year.
Five per cent unemployment may be
perienced simultaneously the first recession in a
decade and a continuation of the worst inflation achievable by election day ; the full employment
rate of 4 to 4.~ per cent probably is nol.
In 2() years.
So as the new year approaches, 1972 bas
But it ·was bad enough. Unemployment
hovered around the 6 per cenl mark all year, changed from "a very good year" to "a year of
malting it worse than 1970 and the worst year for great economic promise."
whether that promise will be fuHilled, only
joblessness since 1961. Inflation subsided late in
time will ]Jlll.

Some Lucky People Can
Match Food an~ Energy
By DELOS SMITH
NEW YORK (UPI )-With a
marvelous feeding . machine
three scientists proved tbat
some people, like some rats
and other experimental ani-

on a wall . From it projects a
tube and a bulb. To be machine
fed , you put lhe tube between
your lips, squeeze the bulb and
liquefied food is shot into your
mouth .
Inside the box is a reservoir
Science Today
of the nutritious liquid and a
ma:s, automatically and un- pump that precisely regulates
wittingly match their inta'ke of the amount each bulb squeeze
food with their output of delivers. Through the wall it is
wired to a recorder that prints
mer~
th .
d
That means their body out e tune an amount of
weight hardly varies month to .. e_xery squeeze.
month and year to year. It is
Voluntarily five lean young
the effortless way of being men lived for weeks in an
healthily slender . Scientists experimental metabolic unit of
have ·found Ibis inborn and Columbia University's Inpurely physiological knack in stitute of Human Nutrition.
an assortment of animals but Their only food was the food
were despairing of proving its they squeezed from the
existence in humans.
machine and since the food was
There are a lot of con~ent- liquid and ·otherwise unly slender people to be sure- distinguished, presumably
just llS there are a lot of per- they squeezed only when · they
sistently fat ones. But i&gt;eople felt the physiological need for
eat for obscure psychological energy input.
reasons as well as for the
Secretly the scientists were
physiological demands for nu- manipulating the ''nutritional
trition.
density" of the liquid by adding
The scientific problem is to water to reduce its caloric
eliminate the psychological va lue and a thickener and
reasons in order to isolate the other agents to prevent any
inborn physiological control detectable change in taste or
texture."'
over intake (if one exists ll,J.. Recorder Documents Control
people ) ,and watch it at wor~ .
Drs. Robert G. Campbell, Sami
As density went down, the
A. Hashim and Theodore B. number of bulb squeezes inVan !Iallie did it with a feeding creased and when density
machine.
increased, bulb squeezes deJust a Box
creased. The .recorder printAll you see is a box mounted outs documented a physiologi-

'\. \

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cal control in the young mim
which matched their intake
with their energy output, and
so 11\eir weights varied little
during the experimental
weeks.
The scientists also reported
the identical experimmts with
five "grossly obese" subjects
lD the New England Journal of
Medicine. There were wild
gyrations in the recorder Jrintouts: clearly machine feeding
was baffling to them. All of
them lost weight which to the
scientists showed no inborn
physiologicat control was operating in them.

Chester
News Notes
By Clarice Allen
. Weekend guests or Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Orr were Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Newnan and family of
Galion and Dr . and Mrs.
Grueser and family of Logan.
Calling on Saturday were Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Lee, Bashan.
· Miss Lucille Smith is
spending the holidays with her
sister , Mrs. John Reuter
'
Akron.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary WoH and
Rick Kgblentz '" Columbus,
spent the weekend with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. David
Koblentz and Mr. and Mrs.

.

· ·'\R&amp;M Inc. Earnings Are Off
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio In
a
message
to
Robbins- &amp; Myers, Inc ., shareholders, J . Harold Karr
repOrted a decline in both~les President, attributed· th~
and earnings tor the first fiscal decline in sales and earnings to
quarter ended November 30, the extremely low sales )evels
1971. .
and below break-&lt;!ven profit ,
Net mcome amou.nle!l to levels of the firm 's Electric
f44,006 or $0.04 per . share Motor Group. Segments of tbe
comparedwith$278,482or$0.25 · mo l~r industry , he noted,
per Bhate ,for the same period conUnued to be plag~ed by
last year . Sales were problems of depressed demand
$10,929.256 as compar~ . to ·and over-ea[iaclly! a situation
$12,7~1,491j a year ago. '
~peeled to continue .through

the second quarter of the fiscal
year .
Karr added that lhe industrial Products and Comfort
Conditioning Products Groups
are operating at, or near,
forecasted sales and earnings
levels, and are ex[iected to
show significant improvement
over last year . The f!rm
operates· a plant on Bob McCormick Rd. near Gallipolis.
"

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U.W§i;S' U:%~Jl'!W;?:1n"fi&lt;'li1l

the Senate ocked· down two · the area of public \lleHare, bad
income tax bills, one written by hetn cut drastically1 the budget
-'Repu!Jiiaans, the other with sUII called for a 35 per cent
Democratic help.
increase in state aid to basic I · · · ·
·e.•.•~:&amp;~S!"Mo.;•.
··· ~-~·:-~~..
· · ··
U:: .tA.Uau .C.Cilb.:.•.c.:.
Fina~y onj)ec. 9, the Senate. education, a 25 [ler cent hike ilr
pa~ with r~ votes-the exact higher education payments and
num6i!r needed for pas- a - ~2 per cent boost Jn weHare U.S. amendinent, edging North for drug use and veoo:eal disCarolina and Oklahoma in ·a eallewithoutparentalconsent.
sage the report of expenditures.
· the fourth conference com- · The budget far exceeded the race ·to be 38th the night of .. The General Assembly adopted a pair of comprehensive
mittee setting · the budget at $6.2 billion spent in fiscal 1969- JWJe 30.
The tegislatw-e _also adopted , measures!~ help the working
$7.686 billion and calling for
71, and the. Income tax was
one-hal!'to 31&gt; per cent gra'du- describect as a "major step for- ' an election reform package, man.
OneincreasesWJemployment
ated per!lonal income. tax,• a ward" in getting Ohio off lhe much of which was -based on
corporate net· income tax, a property tax as a base for'fl- conforming, the law to consti- -compensation benefits by 17 to
g o v e r n me n t tlltlonal amendments 811d fed- - 27 per cent, extends them for
three-a!ntincrealie in lire clgnr- n an c I n g
eral requirements.13 weeks during petiods of high,
ette tax, numerous minor busi- operations.
·
One
controversial
section
unemployment
and attaches a
ness tax hikes and' property
Through careful caiCWatton
tax relief.
by legislative leaders, Ohio be- wouldbavegivenlocaleleciions cost-ol-livingfactor,lhefirstfor
came the 38th and deciding boards altst of questions to ask any state in the nation.
The other grants a ~ per
The following day, 13 Repub- state to ratify the 26th amend- college students who wished to
licans joined 43 Democrats in ment to the U.S. Constitution vote in thew college communi- cent ·boost in workmen's compushing throug~ the House the alloWing 18-lo-2()-year-olds to ties. The governor vetoed the pensation payments, also in- ·
bill and the legislature adopted eluding cost-of-living inelections.
$790 million packag.e or net new vote in
it
again without the list of crements.
..
While advancing a resolution
revenpes to finance the greatest
Otherbillsenactedduring the
spending outlay in the history of to allow Ohio voters to amend 'li!estions.
On
the
last
day
of
the
ses1971
session:
their own Constitution on the
Ohio state government.
-Authorize the highway PaWhile Gilligan's original rec- matter, the lawmakers timed slon, · the General Assembly
adopted
landmark
legislation
trolto
intervene in civ~ disturbommendations, particularly in thetr action perfectly on the
givingtheattorneygeneralpow' · "Snces at the· request of the
er to enforce orders of the local governing WJit.
state Air Pollution Control
-Allow the state to build
Board and increasing penalties water treaunent facilities in
for violaijon to $10,000 a day.
municipalities which fail to
A two-year fight to reqUire comply with state clean water
By Mrs. Herberl Roush
were Christmas weekend safety glass in storm doors, standards.
.
Christmas Day and ·over the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert patio doors and shower stalla
- 0 v e r h a u I 0 h i o ' s'
weekend guests of Mr. and Sayre. Danny and Brice Sayre in private homes was ended regulations on credit unions.
Mrs. ))Qn Hupp and sons were will spend a·week with Mr. and with enactment the final day of
-Expand financing op
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Parsons, Mrs. Sayre.
the session.
portunities
for
hosMr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons,
Mrs. Jessie Parsons and son,
Also, the blood al~ohol toler- pi tal facilities and aut)lorGeorge, all of Ashland; Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell of ance of drinking drivers was ize Deparunent of Insurance to
and Mrs. Gerald ~ells and Middleport, Mr. and Mrs. Dana lowered from .15 per cent to require public hearings in
children of Syracuse; Mr. and Lewis of Clifton, ·Mrs. Edna .10 per cent.
health insurance rate increase
Mrs . Roger Parsons also Roush, George Parsons were
The legislature passe~ bills requests.
visited with her parents at Christmas Day dinner guests regulating everyone from
-Increase penalties for
Richwood, W. Va. Mrs. Kate of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush butchers to bakers to can- eredit- card theft and fraud.
Rowe and Ada were Sunday and family .
dlestick makers.
-Prohibit disclosure of inMr. and Mrs. Paul Manuel
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
There are new laws on meat formation from another's tax
were Chrisunas Day dinner inspection; barberlng and bak- return.
Hupp.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mitc_hell of guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert eries. There is a new law reguThere were bills that didn't
Columbus were Christmas Roush and sons. Mr. and Mrs. lating snowmobiles and other make it i.n 1971.
weekend guests of Mrs. Bertha Lester Manuel and daughter of all-terrain vehicles.
Some, like a pair of aborpon
Robinson. Sunday guests of Logan visited the Roushes and
There are new laws regula!- · reform bills killed in July, apMrs. Robinson were Mrs. Manuels in the afternoon.
ing junkyards and restricting , peared unlikely prospects for
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ernest WJsighUy billboards and aban- · 1972.
Marlene Fisher, Larry, Molly
and Amy, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bush Christmas Day were Mr. donedmotorv~icles. There are
Others, like a strip mine reSargent, John Fisher, Mr. and !'nd Mrs. Harry' Bush and two new laws authorizing rrilnors to form bill passed by the House
Mrs . Bill Robinson and children of Charleston, S. C. receive medical tre11tment but subject to change in the
children, Mike, Patty, Berta, and Rev. and Mrs. Charles
Pete, David and Bradley, Mrs. Bush and Bob Bush of LanFocie Hayman and Keith, Mrs. caster.
•
Mr. a,nd Mrs. Joe Manuel,
Ann Radford aqd Stephanie of
.Pomeroy Route and Mr. and Tim and Sid, spent Christmas
Mrs. Howard Robinson of Day with her mother, Mrs.
Flatwoods, W. Va.
Katie Young at Minersville
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Route.
Lawson called on Mr. and 1111s.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bush
Diamond Lawson at MI. visited ·Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Manuel Sunday afternoon.
Moriah Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Rufus RanChristmas Day guests of
Mrs. Mary Donohue and David dolph of Dayton, Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Rose Bachus were Charles Huw and children of
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Blackwell Racine called on Mr. and Mrs .
of Letart Falls and Charles Manuel Christmas night.
Blake, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Styer
and
C. J. and Wilda Lawson of
of Waterford, Paul Sayre,
Howard Sayre, Danny and Letart, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Brice Sayre, Mrs. .Dorothy Bob Lawson and family were
all
Glenn, Mrs. Doris Rogers and ChristmaS" Day guests of their__
balances!
Buck Rogers Jr. of Colwnbus parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Lawson and family.
Just the right
Mrs. Bertha Robinson spent
Christmas ~e with her son,
amooot of health
Mr. and Mrs Bill Robl!lson and
and happiness for all
family of
cine Route and
George WoH.
. Christmas Day with her
our loyal, friendly patrons.
Christmas dinner guests of daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Mr. and Mrs. James Ridenour Sargent at Racine . Other
and sons were Mr. and Mrs. guests of the Sargents were
Buel Ridenour, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sargent
John Ridenour, Mr. and Mrs. of Colwnbus, Mr. and Mrs.
John Hayes and Mrs. Elizabeth Philip Radford and Stephanie
Wickham. Calling in the of Pomeroy Route . '
750 lSr AVE. '
GALUPOLIS, OHIO
evening were Mr. and Mrs.
John Wickham.
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen and
Blll were Mr. and Mrs. Denzil
Cleland and Mr. V. D. Cleland.
Mr . and Mrs. Vernon
Cleland, Columbus, spent the
weekend witll Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Cleland. On SUnday they
visited in Wellston with Mrs.
Ellen Kimes.
·
Richard Frost of Michigan
spent the bolidays with Mr. and
Mrs. Willis Frost and Billie
Mo~y ~
Jean.

a·

au

Fairview News

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you Cl deflnllw CIIIIOIUntj
1·- ... .-k. Slop in soon.
Start

1972

14 oz.

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and grilled, with a most skillful blend of 1f1eltect cheese, crisp green
lettuce, tomato, onion, pickle slices and Shake Shoppe special
·
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"THE FINEST SANJJWICH OBTAINABLE" .·

JUMBO
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TISSUES

Tuesday • _Jfednesday
and; ThurscliJy Only!

GALA
PAPER
TOWELS

•

Senate, appeare&lt;\inevltable for
enactment. .
Alsoawaitingactionnextyear
ar.e bills es~~Ushing,coUectlve
bargairiinniwc~ures for publie employes;' eliminating the .
position of fireman on freight
trains; requirlngweHarereclpients lD liv.e_ln the_state, one ·
}'ear, work on special projects
and present an identifl~atlon
Cllrtl to ·clatin their checks,
and eliminating the prohibition
against lotteries in Ohio .•
A compromise apparently
was reached the week
before · Christmas on ·a
congressional redlstrlclng
blll which would . preserve the dls\l'i~ts. qf,22 incumbents but combine th~ territory
of two Republic,an c\ln~ressmen
- William M. Mc~och of
Piqua and Jackson ~ ,Betts of
Findlay"__giving Repulilicans d
16-7 edge in the delegation if
form holds true in next year's
election.
•
At the same time; al federal
court has upheld a legislative
reapportionmentplanllrawnby
Democrats .and designed to
knock out five Republiban senators and a dozen GOP House
members In the election.
'

FRENCH·CITY
BUILDERS SUPPLY

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Or Mane Back

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7- The Sunday Times • Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 2, 11172

Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sw11tay, Jan . ., m~

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Jan.

usan_Scruggs
Crowns Swisher
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Mary S. Globakar Betrothed
]oyceline Waggoner to Wed

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•

MR. AND MRS. CLAIR WAGGONER, Rutland , are ·
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Joyceline
Carol, to Mr. James E. Haley, son of Mr. and Mrs. James A.
Haley, Rutland . Wedding plans are-incomplete.
.

!•

)

MR. AND MRS. WALTER F. ROUSH of Syracuse are
announcing the enga'gement of their daughter, Linda, to Mr.
Larry W. Fields, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jaines Clyde Fields of
Hartford, W. Va. Miss Roush is a 1971 graduate of Southern
High_School. Mr. Fields is a 1971 graduate of Wahama High
School. He is employed at the Federal Mogul Plant at
Gallipolis. Wedding plans are incomplete.

I .

•

MR. AND MRS. PHll.IP GLOBoKAR, Pomeroy, are
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Mary S., to
Mr . Gregory 0 . Erwin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dexter Erwin,
New Haven, W.Va. Asununer weddingisbeingplanned.

linch Roush is Engaged

Adult Class Dined

•

.•

~Classic CQol{bool{~ Classic So:llp
~

By AILEEN CLAIRE

"Classics in the Kitchen," it
. FRENCH ONION
serves up some goodies for
SOUP A DEUX
the literary ~ ourmet w1th the
1 tablespoon butter
theory . . . Ail of us at one Jl'z cup1f onions, thinly
~ ~ilent _gtfts. Many con tam time or another have come
sUced
: !f!terestmg stones or anec- across passa~es'which made
hi k
t k
3
: 4otes about fam~us persons us see, smell and taste the
cups c c en 5 oe
or
• 4nd what they hked to eat food served up on the
: 4r serve !herr guests. One pnnted page." Here is a
Beef bouillon (I cube
~ *nan volu~e offers ~ selec- Fre~ch Onion Soup a Deux
per cup)
t i?n o_f reCipes msptred by msp1red by the romantic re- 2 sllces French bread
~ :ouch htE;~ary _g1_
ants as IY,I,ark past of lovers in Rumer God- . 1 teaspoon butter
.• '!"'am , Vrrgm1a Woolf, or den·~. "The Greengage SumParmesan cheese
: l"Y de Maupassant .. Called mer.
Brown onions in butter
:
NE~ Food Editor
o, There 1s a spate of snecial~ ty. cookbooks that make ex-

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pAYMENT PLAN .

,

· ~·•~-. ·~..· Alii
a·
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· f~·•y, · .
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'

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SPECIAL
PRICE

. Regular Price

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MIDDLEPORT - Plans
have been clmipleted for the
open church wedding of Miss
Elaine Davis, daughter of Dr.
and Mrs. J. J. Davis, and Mr.
Don Swisher, son of Mr. and
Mrs.
Wayne
Swisher,
Pomeroy.
The wedding will be an event

...

of Sunday, Jan. 2 at 6:30p.m.

at the Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport. The Rey .
Robert Bumgarner will cil.ficiate at the candlelight
ceremony.
,
A reception
will be held at
'
. I
7:30 p.m. at the Meigs Inn, '
Pomeroy.
•

fu\rEJUioAT CAPTAIN WIWAM AULT of Middleport ts
{l"ollljlly !llaplayihg his !~year pin from the Ohio River Boat Co.
n Is! tiny boat repltca with diamond and ruby sets.
~ - TYREE GOT HOME for th~ holidays. Mark is the
YG~J~g Jiuili who lnjll'ed himself quite
While pre-Venting a

badlY

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THESE PRICES GOOD
ONLY IF ORDERED
BEFORE MARCH 1

The same style monument as the Rutledge
at left above in length of 42 inches and
height of 24 inches, is also in the famous
Barre Vermont granite . This price is for
plain panels without the Sunset carving.
The Ru l!~ dge Memorial is the famous Barre Vermont granite, the "Med ium of the
Masters .. _1s polished on the front and the back. The top and ends are in the beautiful
natural f1n1sh. Th1s companion mem.~ria l is in full th ickness, 32 in ches high, 52 inches long,
and os engraved w1th the beaut1ful Beyond the Sunset" design, along with the open books.

S3B9

Starts Monday, Jan. 3 at 9100 a.m.
··-:t·········-=-··:o········· ••,_.,.,........

several days old. Trim all
crustS from bread slices. If
fr~sh dry out at low temperature (200 degrees) oven. Cut
shrimp into very s m a II
pieces. finely chop water
chestnuts. Beat egg until
bubbly. Mix shrimp, water
chestnuts, on I o n, ginger,
sugar, seesoning and broth,
cornstarchand egg. Spread
one h e a p In g 'tablespoon
shrimp mixture over each
8 aUcea atale bread
slice of bread. Heat 2 inches
~ pound uncooked, ·
oil in a heavy saucepan or
develned lbrimP
deep skillet until hot or until
I canned water eheatnuis
deep fat thermometer regis! egg
ters 400 degrees. Fry bread
.. '
with shrimp side down for
I tableapoon chopped onion · ab9ut 40 seconds. Turn over·
1 teaapooo powdered
bread and fry for about 30
ginger
.
seconds _until bread Is golden
l'a leatpooD 1ugar
brown. Dt;,aln on paper towel·
! envelo'" golden HIIIOD· ing. Cut mto q u art e r s or.
1n1 aild broth
.
halves and !Mlrve as an appe-,
1 tableipOOn cornstarch
tizer with a cool drink, as an
. Salad oil
accompaniment to hot soup
or with a salad.
Use thinly sliced bread

MISS AMERICA &amp; SMARTAIRE
Latest Fashions in Sport &amp;Dress ShOtJS .·

8.88

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111014
~:im,:;:m:w;~w.=,:w;:;:~;:;:;:;: ; : : :~:w.~:::::::::::::::::w;.:o::;.~~ .J

!$'~
~·'

·-···:··
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3:1
i SOME HOUSE .. .
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I

Regular Price
:~:

MEN'S DRESS &amp;' .
SLIPPERS . . WORK SHOES ·

L;~,: ; : : : ~!~!~.~ g .I

From

I:,;,;·::'

SPECIAL. PRICE

$35 down, $20 per month

By AILEEN
CLAIRE
..
~A Food Editor
:(.~Joking f 0 r something .
dllferent to nibble with hot
soup or salad lunch? Try
Sl\rimP Toast. It is also a
gqod way to make use of
stale bread. Thi$ recipe may
be; doubled or tripled to cut
Into quarters or halves for
bridge snacks.
SHRIMP TOAST

0".~
,~;:mw.&lt;;::W~~w.&lt;::lmo\l-f«$1~-~&gt;AI&amp;
,"it:-•:O!"•W.•..~·-•~•:•:W'•'«~No'o'.V&lt;No"
......H~=»~'S*_,,

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Versatile Snack "

I

·. Personal Notes

Iirdoclr Climbing Pl~nl!-1 ·

' ·

·

Bolstered with 'Beading

··

Carm~l

By

~he

911

$279

252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
OPEN 9 AM TO 9.PM MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

U.S.D.A. Graded Choice ~~~.~~~-

.ARMOUR{\

CHUCK ROASTS
CENTER
BLADE CUTS

--r-nitz-.-_ -To_m_a-nd_T_Im_Df_an_d_W_Ill_ia_rn_Ca_r_le_:ton_,~Rn-c_in.e,:_

News,Ba

Day

Kingston, Mr. and Mrs .
Hayman Barnitz, Pomeroy,
William and Cathy Carleton of
Racine, Betty Van Meter, '
Sheryl . LeAnn and Patrick
Johnson, Racine R. D.
Betty Van Meter, Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur E. Johnson and
family, Eunie Brinker, loeal,

Mr. and Mrs. Russell Archer
and Mr . . John Archer of
Guysville spent a recent
Sunday with Walter, Eva and
Sadie Archer.
TffREE MEMBERS WERE misslng from the annual famlly
Those calling at the home of
gathering at the G. G. Werner ~dent Chrlltmas nay: William
Mr. - and Mrs. Arthur E.
(Pete) Werner, stationed with the U.S. Air' F&lt;I'Ce tn Germany;
Johnson, Sheryl LeAnn and
Steven Stewart, a grandson of the Werners; with the u: S. .Navy Patrick Johnson aild Betty
In New.Zealand,•and Mary Barcus, a granddaughter, 'who Is With
VanMeter on Christmas Eve
ber husband, Terry, In Kores. Terry is stationed there with the
were Mr. and Mrs. DoUglas
u.s. Army. .
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Junior
Johnson, Bobby and · Brenda
BIRTIIDA Y WISHES to Mrs. J. K. Smith of Mllidleport
Johnson, all of Racine, Mr. and
celelratlng her 87th anniversary today. ·
· '
Mrs. Max Manuel •of East
Letart, Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
MANY MIDDI:EPORT residents will remember Harold Bailey of Pomeroy. Mr. and
(Tough) Lewis. He Is now ccmflned to the Scioto Nursing Center
Mni. W. T. Carleton of Racine
at IWUard, Roon\ 25. Carda.will ~ten his days, Mr. and Mrs. called on Saturday,
C. H. Wise CGIIIIIIented, following a vlait With iwn.
Holtday guests of Mrs. Mary
,, ',.
.
·.
Circle were Mr. and Mrs.
HAPPf·IN-~:{ '
''. '' · . , . 1 ,- .._ .· . . . , .. M~lvin .Circle 8!14- family of
J' .
·1; / :, .. · ~OW., '"'t~/~Ai.~.,:,~·S:OliO.b111'inliiti~~··~dr, Mrs. •· ·. ~Donald Plercle of Atliens, Mr.
·

.h. ·· · . . · •
·. P
' Toa' s't Is
S ,· r' ··m

.1.

·&amp;

•1

friend from a bad fill. Since the accid~t. he has been confined to"
the Holzer Medical Center. He will be home untll Jan. 11 and then
~be retUrning ·~ hospital .for more treatment and therapy.

"TWICE-YEARLY SALE

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g_r •·e a

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5469

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tour

Wedding Plans Made

WRITE US ABOUT
THESE SPECIALS
' AND OTHERcSPECIALS

We are lowering the prices during
the winter, giving yo~ the finest
Steel Engraved Lettering and Carving.
We also have 50 other
"Winter Specials."

. SPECIAL
PRICE .

i!

."*

CHESHIRE - Dan Swisher at the punch bowl and PBIII · .
· was: croWIIeil Saiurpalia King Gerwig served the cake.'
··' by Consul Susan Scruggs at the Others on the fOod committee.
.: annual Saturnalia 'Of the SPQR were Susan SwiSher and VInton
Latin Club recenUy in the Rankin.
. ·
cafeteria of the Kyger Creek
Decorating was. handled by.·
High School.
·
Connie Priest, Jackie Burnett,
Mlsa. Scruggs also presented Debi .McDaniel, Miss Gerwig;
Senator Swisher with a gift of and Uz Hood..
jewelry. The king is selected
E'!tertainment was plallnell
_lr)lm the ranks of ll!!tricllms by T!1!1!J\'ilb!'ow,.Marle Groth;_
and senators by secretba)lot Of Diane · Polcyn. Gtileral
all club members.
' · chnlnnen for the obserVance
Mrs. Hnrold Sauer, club were Polyanna Thompson aild .
sponsor, showed slides on both Ronnie Roush, ihe aedlles. . · ·
ancient and modern Rome and
Others attending .tbjl party
spoke on her trip there last w~re Barbara Hugbes,,Kandy... 1,
summer. Relay games were Gmdlesberger, Edlcress ·
enjoyed during the evening.
Cremeans, Mary Ruth Sauer,
For refreshments guests Mike Hughes, Steve Hnhison,
were seated at tables Paul Rainey, Diana Graham,
decorated In the Christmas ·Sue Hughes, Greg HoW-ard,
theme. A cake with the in- Eddie Swisher, Judy SUllins,
scription "Laetea Saturnalla" Jean Ham, Keith Mtll~r,
was served from a table using Cynthia Clarke, James
the club's colors of purple and Howard, Greg Gerwig, and
gold. Debi McDaniel presided Mrs . Sauer.

I

$45 •down, $25 per month

Regular Price

Mrs. Eleanor Hoover, Mr. and
Mrs. James Reed, Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Russell, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Hendricks, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Mlller, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Sisson, Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Forrest, and Mrs.
Verna Hysell.

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·Jt(ti.I.Y'S
POINTERS
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Pomeroy...:
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POME ~ . .
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Mr, and Mri. Bill Gibbs and .
..
,
RO -Jiro""'lyFerneB.HnymanofEut!.etartiB daugJiter tetiirned to Kent
By POJ,J.Y (C RAMER .•..
.
theonly
_ _ Jole~Counttan
_, .. ...
wbocanclalnian_._,.,
--'_- .ofro-•ty._ · . Wedtlellday.
""U
"''"'
following
holiday
.
PO
. .
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·Did
•¥ ·lin. ow ,._
.,e Is the
t.geat.gr·...,_
d-.,;,•- of vtalt h · with
Mr andaMrs
·w· . · ·DEAR . LLY - 1 wol1ld like to share_a ·d1scovery with
~eenVtaorlaofEngland'Wll, eltbe
· - ...... _....
· ere ·. ·
: · !heolhergirl$. Iwent toalumberyardtoget somet1iing
~
acCI: • .. . .• . · .e n · rdldlheuntU just a few .A.Giblla and son,' Jeff, .home · ·ld..hold up f!IY. ~,:limbirig plants and happened to see metal .
·F1
said ·· '
·
·
!tOni ·eollege for the boUdays. . stripping that carpenters use in corners befo re a wall is
· .\!111e . that ·llhe ~ al\VIIy~ linoll'!l there Was ~e
Mr. and Mrs. EldOn Weeb plast~red . · I· think . it is called beading. This is sturdy
roy..ty !l!llll•where along the Une 'bl!t had nevet been alile to were In Reynoldsburg for . ,~ eno~gh. for a profuse groWth, ~lands alone from floo r to
traee It bacll:. Anyway, whUe vlaiting·a COU8In 1n PemsYlvlni. Clu1stliw With their 8011 and ceilmg when in .a good.sized pot and really looks nice. 'I
lalt; month, a. parctunerit aboli.t'24 Inches long ·arrlved frolli
daUiihter.m-law, Mr. and Mrs. have hnd many ~ompliments. on the w,a y mine looks.~ Wrlfylng. the ancestry. .
.
· .
John Weeki and chlldten;
MRS. R. T.
llelmul that ~trn~·s cousin started researclllnto iheJamUy
Mr. tmd Mrs: Tom Bowen' • DEAR POLLY- Tostrengthen my ~hildren's shoe laces
~wblie tnEngllindduringthe!H4liandlthastakenall returned W:edliesday from a and make them wear longer, I stitch each one lengthwise
this time to get it all-together.
. • .
· week'svisltln Brad~ton, Fla., three or' four times on the sewing machine.;-CATHERIN E
.-erne•s )jrt!at.gandf&amp;ther on .her mother's side married - With Mr, and Mr,s.;Joh!t Bowen . . .
p II. , p b.I
.
~aecaw-~. daughter .of QUeell ~vldorla. He was a and at SU!Imon's Jslaild Ga. ~ ""~lm-J o Y.s ro em
. ··· •rcun-~couii)IQner ~~ llhe was, therefor; ezpe!led· from the family · · )Vitb. · Mr .. _:..a.nd ·Mrs. _
-'Joru: ·. · · DEAR POLLY_:How do I change a .golden "_a.k . : ·. :.
clr~. Prtn~ lltarloHe and her husband came to America, RolUniiOil and son, 'John.
buffet to a mahogany flnish ?-R. B.
·
TheY, had fl~·f'lll, one of whom was Ferne's grandfather.
R. J. Grueser of Columbus,
.
Wi.tM -.R i!ltl\t-1&gt;!'· ~~"•·:
was the recent visitor of his
DEA!l- POLLY- I have two fet Peeves .. First, why
~CH I. NICE rHING the Sunbealll 'Cl~ 01 the Rutland aunt, MIBs ~vieve ~t. don't the make.J"s of those quilted mattress pads allow for
Unit~., Meth
, od1st Oturch did durlrig ,.., advent se
'' 'aso'n'.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Ch11'ence shrinkage? After they are washed the size is a disgrace.
011 .....
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Massar · have returned from
T~e other is with the check-out counters in dime stores,
. ""'i
Sundays preceding Olrllt!nas, the seventh and Upper Arlington where they drugstores, .etc., that are so cluttered that there is often
elihtli 81'1~&lt;*'s wlth their teacher, Fay Sauer, went Into the spent · the · Christmas hoUday not room to put down large purchases. I have actually had
homes a( llhut-lns for special services. They "took the regular
With their son and daugJiter.m- to .Put such things on the floor between my feet while I
, Sunday ~I hour.for thelr vlaitlng program.
·
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pa1d the check. Come on, store owners, glve us some room
1n the .d.'•p were Duane Weber, Joy Sauer, Debb.le law, Mr. •and. Mrs. George. and get rid of "the junk you are trying to tem(Jt us to buy.
gro.
Massa(,.and grandchildren, - LOUISE
Wl!ljmpiOn, Bobby Wllllamson, Ricky George and Randy
Steven ind Melissa.
·
DEAR POLLY- 1do not know how Polly M. can prevent
George. 111ey vialted Mrs. El81e Bryant, Mrs. Evelyn Jordan,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Spencer, her stainless steel pans from burning but cleaning them
Mni. Bertha Lasher and Mrs. Lennje Taylor, taking to eacll cine
Mrs. Frances Hewetson and is simple when done my way. Dissolve two -tablespoons
_the church bulletin, copies of ''The Qmcern" ''The Upper
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Jennings cream of tartar in one quart boiling water In the darkened
Room'' and "The Oirlstl.ait Home", and a ~8 card.
were Otrlstmas dinner guests Pan. Place over flame and-boil rapidly for 10 minutes and
touch up lightly with a soapy steel wool pad.-MRS.
'lbe:_vlalta~ was so successful that the boys and gttiB have
of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin then
A. D. J.
.
decllled_to ,make It a tlrice-a,year. ~roject. For their part 1n the
Spencer and family. On SQnday
(NEWSPAPER ENT£RPRI SE ASSN.)
~ prggram at the cllurcll, the young people evaluated Mr. and Mrs. Jennings were
You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
the vlaitation, commeriting on what was done, what they felt It
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
homemaking
Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
meant to the llhut.ms, and what It had meant to them.
Ralph Spencer·
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this n.ewspaper.,
:
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·Win,ter--Specials

USE OUR LOW COST

'

over low flame Add chicken
stock or bouillon. Simmer for
one-hail hour.. (It is better if
it stands for several more
hours.) To serve, ladle soup
into earthenware bowls top
with a thick slice of buttered
French bread and sprinkle
wtth Parmesan ··c·tre e s e.
Place under broiler for about
3 minutes. Serve with extra
Parmesan cheese. Makes
two servings.

MIDDLEPORT - A holiday
dinner party was held Saturday night at the Bradford
Church of Christ for members
of the Adult class.
Both ham and iurkey with all
the trinunings were served In
the dining room which was
decorated for the season by
Mrs. Tressie Hendricks, Mrs.
Norma Russell, and Mrs .
JaCkie Reed. Secret pals were
revealed with a gift exchange
and new names drawn. Mrs .
Reed led the group in a carol
sing.
Attending were Mrrand Mrs.
Clifford Smith 1\nd Chris, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Gilkey, Mrs .
~ildr ed Clark, Mrs. Frances
.,.yse , Mrs .. Nora Cambron,

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_- _t_ :I_
J.t _·_i_.t..y···· - : .
8y
Charlene'Hoetlich

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C
· •.Qmer
m_· .-.,._ ._._m_ • ..

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Circle, all of New Haven,
Mr . . and Mrs. Dwight
Swepston and family of
Colmnbus visited with Ralph
Lee and Mr. and l!ll's. Robert
Lee and famUy on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr Of
Chester visited at the home of
Mr. 11nd Mrs. Robert Lee, Bob
Bill and Becky on Tuesday.
Recent visitors of Eunle
Brinker were Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Clark of Racine, Mrs.
Cecll Hill, Terri and Robin of
Lima, Mr. and Mrs. Keith

spent Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Hayman Damitz,
Pomeroy. '
Eunie Brinker, Betty Van
Meter, Sheryl LeAnn and
Patrick Johnson called at the '
home of William and Cathy
Carleton.

SHOP .lHE NEW. JONES BOYS'
. &lt;. .•1.. ·:B••~

Valae&amp; •.(m . i\,~ ,, """" 11.
Foods - Clothing - Hardware
·
..- in Gallia County

SOUND RIPE

BANANAS
~lb •

Parking For over 100 Cars

DISCOUNT SA
111 Plne · Sinet .
. Gelllpoill, Olllo

STATE FARE
$LIC:ED

Whi.te Bread

HAPPY NEW YEAR
SPEQAL TO OUR PAIRCNS

1-lb. 4-oz •. Loaf .

•

THOROFARE
GRADE A LARGE

White Eggs
Dozen Carton

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BROUGHTON

Ice Cream

$25 down, $10 per month

ALL' FLAVORS

/2-Gal. Pkg.

1

All of these monuments have the
EVERl).STING GUARANTEE.

Special prices abon Include lettering, desigq,
and deliver}
to your cemetil}
plot.
.
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The ,Copelin is the finest Crystal Gray Gra nite, 62 inches long and 22 in.ches high. This
memonal 1s.'he compamon type· engravea w1th the w1ld roses aro und the name panels,
w1th the pol1shed gramte vase. The w1ngs are polished on fro nt and back, with the Mellotone f1msh next to the vase. If white Car.rora marble vase is used. price of Copel in is ·$359.

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Log ~ n Mon t.~ me~pa.ny, Pemeroy, Ohio I
Ol'lnle lead me FREE lleotletltbow·
' lie me~~~orlalt prllled Ia fall color will I
1 oltet •IMI prl..islllted.
. ,.. I
Oltlldly bve u ••tborlzeti·Liru MI
I mat
Co. ••PI etalldve c11ht my lome.
,I ·1111111111
OPia• _. me ....... 1boat M•• I
I'
I Nme wllbot ..u1.~~n;
I Stnetor r.
I
I atyor rOWL..
· ·
II
'L
&gt;'
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COUPON

011•

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It family name is desired on back of monument
there wili-be an additional ~·harge of $20. '

(Additional lettering and olher carvings may be
used on above memorials at 75¢ per letter and
$15 to $45 for carving.)

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New Year's SpecU.l -

Ptoplt art SOJ1trtgatlng to
usher in a New Y11r. ·Wt

-~:::

.~........_loin ~n.t~thh thanks.

~:: :

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$AVE $100·

}lil

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Estroda .

4

Display Yard near
Pomer o y - ~as on Bridge
leo l . Vaughan, Mgr.
· Telep.l10ne 992 2588
_...J....,...,.

'"""'= · - - ...

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VINTON, OHIO
Display- Yard -on W. Main Street
James 0. Bush, Mgr.
· · Tel111hone 388·8603

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

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ON. THE

Model C7382UDK

·Marked

·. -

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Foreman &amp; Abbott

K&amp;K MOBILE HOM'ES .·
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~POUS,
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OHIO

. PI FASANT, W. VA.

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Sun$h.ine Chip-a-Roos .. 9~~t 37c
Sunshine Vanilla Wafers ~;~~ 37c
Bo-Peep Ammqriia .... ·~! 25c
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HEINZ
KETCHUP
1-Pt_.1_ 0·0 2.
Bottle

4 _5e

;::::::=;:::=:::::::::::!
·FOLGER
'
COFFEE

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SPANISH•styling. ~~nuine Oa!&lt; veneers and solids; molded
front; antiqued fm1sh. With· Phllceim(!tic . tuning. Transistorized solid state slgna·l ·system..
·. .
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POMEROY, OHIO

00

PHILCO .25'.' COLOR TV

LOGAN
II
MONU·M ENT co·., JNC. I

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FUL
·NEW YEAR·

CHIJN;KING SKILLET DINNERS
CHOW MEIN .
• ,~PII;f.
'·" 19c
CHOP SUEY . ·
,.,.Plll9.
........'89 c
SWEET &amp; SOUR .. .. ..... ·. . . . . • . ' ·'~.~~· ltc
.PEPPER STEAK .. . . , , . . .. , , , , , • , ' ·'~;;:" 89c
SUKIYAKI .. . ......... . 1 • • , •• ,. ''~;;" -&amp;9c
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.. .... ... .·...... .. •·.·,·•.'.· 45c
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DOWNY
Fabric Softener ·
1·01. 1-oz.

Bot.

OHIO
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$179

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EGG FOO YOUN(? . . ....... .. : . ' '~;;" .89c

FRIED RI.CE MIX

2-lli.

Can

ase

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Jan.

usan_Scruggs
Crowns Swisher
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Mary S. Globakar Betrothed
]oyceline Waggoner to Wed

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MR. AND MRS. CLAIR WAGGONER, Rutland , are ·
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Joyceline
Carol, to Mr. James E. Haley, son of Mr. and Mrs. James A.
Haley, Rutland . Wedding plans are-incomplete.
.

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MR. AND MRS. WALTER F. ROUSH of Syracuse are
announcing the enga'gement of their daughter, Linda, to Mr.
Larry W. Fields, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jaines Clyde Fields of
Hartford, W. Va. Miss Roush is a 1971 graduate of Southern
High_School. Mr. Fields is a 1971 graduate of Wahama High
School. He is employed at the Federal Mogul Plant at
Gallipolis. Wedding plans are incomplete.

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MR. AND MRS. PHll.IP GLOBoKAR, Pomeroy, are
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Mary S., to
Mr . Gregory 0 . Erwin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dexter Erwin,
New Haven, W.Va. Asununer weddingisbeingplanned.

linch Roush is Engaged

Adult Class Dined

•

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~Classic CQol{bool{~ Classic So:llp
~

By AILEEN CLAIRE

"Classics in the Kitchen," it
. FRENCH ONION
serves up some goodies for
SOUP A DEUX
the literary ~ ourmet w1th the
1 tablespoon butter
theory . . . Ail of us at one Jl'z cup1f onions, thinly
~ ~ilent _gtfts. Many con tam time or another have come
sUced
: !f!terestmg stones or anec- across passa~es'which made
hi k
t k
3
: 4otes about fam~us persons us see, smell and taste the
cups c c en 5 oe
or
• 4nd what they hked to eat food served up on the
: 4r serve !herr guests. One pnnted page." Here is a
Beef bouillon (I cube
~ *nan volu~e offers ~ selec- Fre~ch Onion Soup a Deux
per cup)
t i?n o_f reCipes msptred by msp1red by the romantic re- 2 sllces French bread
~ :ouch htE;~ary _g1_
ants as IY,I,ark past of lovers in Rumer God- . 1 teaspoon butter
.• '!"'am , Vrrgm1a Woolf, or den·~. "The Greengage SumParmesan cheese
: l"Y de Maupassant .. Called mer.
Brown onions in butter
:
NE~ Food Editor
o, There 1s a spate of snecial~ ty. cookbooks that make ex-

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pAYMENT PLAN .

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· ~·•~-. ·~..· Alii
a·
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. · ... ,li)·~·····~
ii ' ...i£'_i11. -~
·· ·.•.,
· f~·•y, · .
~-~,
'

·" ,,,-~.•. .

•. '·

SPECIAL
PRICE

. Regular Price

~

11

MIDDLEPORT - Plans
have been clmipleted for the
open church wedding of Miss
Elaine Davis, daughter of Dr.
and Mrs. J. J. Davis, and Mr.
Don Swisher, son of Mr. and
Mrs.
Wayne
Swisher,
Pomeroy.
The wedding will be an event

...

of Sunday, Jan. 2 at 6:30p.m.

at the Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport. The Rey .
Robert Bumgarner will cil.ficiate at the candlelight
ceremony.
,
A reception
will be held at
'
. I
7:30 p.m. at the Meigs Inn, '
Pomeroy.
•

fu\rEJUioAT CAPTAIN WIWAM AULT of Middleport ts
{l"ollljlly !llaplayihg his !~year pin from the Ohio River Boat Co.
n Is! tiny boat repltca with diamond and ruby sets.
~ - TYREE GOT HOME for th~ holidays. Mark is the
YG~J~g Jiuili who lnjll'ed himself quite
While pre-Venting a

badlY

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THESE PRICES GOOD
ONLY IF ORDERED
BEFORE MARCH 1

The same style monument as the Rutledge
at left above in length of 42 inches and
height of 24 inches, is also in the famous
Barre Vermont granite . This price is for
plain panels without the Sunset carving.
The Ru l!~ dge Memorial is the famous Barre Vermont granite, the "Med ium of the
Masters .. _1s polished on the front and the back. The top and ends are in the beautiful
natural f1n1sh. Th1s companion mem.~ria l is in full th ickness, 32 in ches high, 52 inches long,
and os engraved w1th the beaut1ful Beyond the Sunset" design, along with the open books.

S3B9

Starts Monday, Jan. 3 at 9100 a.m.
··-:t·········-=-··:o········· ••,_.,.,........

several days old. Trim all
crustS from bread slices. If
fr~sh dry out at low temperature (200 degrees) oven. Cut
shrimp into very s m a II
pieces. finely chop water
chestnuts. Beat egg until
bubbly. Mix shrimp, water
chestnuts, on I o n, ginger,
sugar, seesoning and broth,
cornstarchand egg. Spread
one h e a p In g 'tablespoon
shrimp mixture over each
8 aUcea atale bread
slice of bread. Heat 2 inches
~ pound uncooked, ·
oil in a heavy saucepan or
develned lbrimP
deep skillet until hot or until
I canned water eheatnuis
deep fat thermometer regis! egg
ters 400 degrees. Fry bread
.. '
with shrimp side down for
I tableapoon chopped onion · ab9ut 40 seconds. Turn over·
1 teaapooo powdered
bread and fry for about 30
ginger
.
seconds _until bread Is golden
l'a leatpooD 1ugar
brown. Dt;,aln on paper towel·
! envelo'" golden HIIIOD· ing. Cut mto q u art e r s or.
1n1 aild broth
.
halves and !Mlrve as an appe-,
1 tableipOOn cornstarch
tizer with a cool drink, as an
. Salad oil
accompaniment to hot soup
or with a salad.
Use thinly sliced bread

MISS AMERICA &amp; SMARTAIRE
Latest Fashions in Sport &amp;Dress ShOtJS .·

8.88

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111014
~:im,:;:m:w;~w.=,:w;:;:~;:;:;:;: ; : : :~:w.~:::::::::::::::::w;.:o::;.~~ .J

!$'~
~·'

·-···:··
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3:1
i SOME HOUSE .. .
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I

Regular Price
:~:

MEN'S DRESS &amp;' .
SLIPPERS . . WORK SHOES ·

L;~,: ; : : : ~!~!~.~ g .I

From

I:,;,;·::'

SPECIAL. PRICE

$35 down, $20 per month

By AILEEN
CLAIRE
..
~A Food Editor
:(.~Joking f 0 r something .
dllferent to nibble with hot
soup or salad lunch? Try
Sl\rimP Toast. It is also a
gqod way to make use of
stale bread. Thi$ recipe may
be; doubled or tripled to cut
Into quarters or halves for
bridge snacks.
SHRIMP TOAST

0".~
,~;:mw.&lt;;::W~~w.&lt;::lmo\l-f«$1~-~&gt;AI&amp;
,"it:-•:O!"•W.•..~·-•~•:•:W'•'«~No'o'.V&lt;No"
......H~=»~'S*_,,

I .

;

Versatile Snack "

I

·. Personal Notes

Iirdoclr Climbing Pl~nl!-1 ·

' ·

·

Bolstered with 'Beading

··

Carm~l

By

~he

911

$279

252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
OPEN 9 AM TO 9.PM MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

U.S.D.A. Graded Choice ~~~.~~~-

.ARMOUR{\

CHUCK ROASTS
CENTER
BLADE CUTS

--r-nitz-.-_ -To_m_a-nd_T_Im_Df_an_d_W_Ill_ia_rn_Ca_r_le_:ton_,~Rn-c_in.e,:_

News,Ba

Day

Kingston, Mr. and Mrs .
Hayman Barnitz, Pomeroy,
William and Cathy Carleton of
Racine, Betty Van Meter, '
Sheryl . LeAnn and Patrick
Johnson, Racine R. D.
Betty Van Meter, Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur E. Johnson and
family, Eunie Brinker, loeal,

Mr. and Mrs. Russell Archer
and Mr . . John Archer of
Guysville spent a recent
Sunday with Walter, Eva and
Sadie Archer.
TffREE MEMBERS WERE misslng from the annual famlly
Those calling at the home of
gathering at the G. G. Werner ~dent Chrlltmas nay: William
Mr. - and Mrs. Arthur E.
(Pete) Werner, stationed with the U.S. Air' F&lt;I'Ce tn Germany;
Johnson, Sheryl LeAnn and
Steven Stewart, a grandson of the Werners; with the u: S. .Navy Patrick Johnson aild Betty
In New.Zealand,•and Mary Barcus, a granddaughter, 'who Is With
VanMeter on Christmas Eve
ber husband, Terry, In Kores. Terry is stationed there with the
were Mr. and Mrs. DoUglas
u.s. Army. .
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Junior
Johnson, Bobby and · Brenda
BIRTIIDA Y WISHES to Mrs. J. K. Smith of Mllidleport
Johnson, all of Racine, Mr. and
celelratlng her 87th anniversary today. ·
· '
Mrs. Max Manuel •of East
Letart, Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
MANY MIDDI:EPORT residents will remember Harold Bailey of Pomeroy. Mr. and
(Tough) Lewis. He Is now ccmflned to the Scioto Nursing Center
Mni. W. T. Carleton of Racine
at IWUard, Roon\ 25. Carda.will ~ten his days, Mr. and Mrs. called on Saturday,
C. H. Wise CGIIIIIIented, following a vlait With iwn.
Holtday guests of Mrs. Mary
,, ',.
.
·.
Circle were Mr. and Mrs.
HAPPf·IN-~:{ '
''. '' · . , . 1 ,- .._ .· . . . , .. M~lvin .Circle 8!14- family of
J' .
·1; / :, .. · ~OW., '"'t~/~Ai.~.,:,~·S:OliO.b111'inliiti~~··~dr, Mrs. •· ·. ~Donald Plercle of Atliens, Mr.
·

.h. ·· · . . · •
·. P
' Toa' s't Is
S ,· r' ··m

.1.

·&amp;

•1

friend from a bad fill. Since the accid~t. he has been confined to"
the Holzer Medical Center. He will be home untll Jan. 11 and then
~be retUrning ·~ hospital .for more treatment and therapy.

"TWICE-YEARLY SALE

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g_r •·e a

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5469

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tour

Wedding Plans Made

WRITE US ABOUT
THESE SPECIALS
' AND OTHERcSPECIALS

We are lowering the prices during
the winter, giving yo~ the finest
Steel Engraved Lettering and Carving.
We also have 50 other
"Winter Specials."

. SPECIAL
PRICE .

i!

."*

CHESHIRE - Dan Swisher at the punch bowl and PBIII · .
· was: croWIIeil Saiurpalia King Gerwig served the cake.'
··' by Consul Susan Scruggs at the Others on the fOod committee.
.: annual Saturnalia 'Of the SPQR were Susan SwiSher and VInton
Latin Club recenUy in the Rankin.
. ·
cafeteria of the Kyger Creek
Decorating was. handled by.·
High School.
·
Connie Priest, Jackie Burnett,
Mlsa. Scruggs also presented Debi .McDaniel, Miss Gerwig;
Senator Swisher with a gift of and Uz Hood..
jewelry. The king is selected
E'!tertainment was plallnell
_lr)lm the ranks of ll!!tricllms by T!1!1!J\'ilb!'ow,.Marle Groth;_
and senators by secretba)lot Of Diane · Polcyn. Gtileral
all club members.
' · chnlnnen for the obserVance
Mrs. Hnrold Sauer, club were Polyanna Thompson aild .
sponsor, showed slides on both Ronnie Roush, ihe aedlles. . · ·
ancient and modern Rome and
Others attending .tbjl party
spoke on her trip there last w~re Barbara Hugbes,,Kandy... 1,
summer. Relay games were Gmdlesberger, Edlcress ·
enjoyed during the evening.
Cremeans, Mary Ruth Sauer,
For refreshments guests Mike Hughes, Steve Hnhison,
were seated at tables Paul Rainey, Diana Graham,
decorated In the Christmas ·Sue Hughes, Greg HoW-ard,
theme. A cake with the in- Eddie Swisher, Judy SUllins,
scription "Laetea Saturnalla" Jean Ham, Keith Mtll~r,
was served from a table using Cynthia Clarke, James
the club's colors of purple and Howard, Greg Gerwig, and
gold. Debi McDaniel presided Mrs . Sauer.

I

$45 •down, $25 per month

Regular Price

Mrs. Eleanor Hoover, Mr. and
Mrs. James Reed, Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Russell, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Hendricks, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Mlller, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Sisson, Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Forrest, and Mrs.
Verna Hysell.

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·Jt(ti.I.Y'S
POINTERS
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Pomeroy...:
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POME ~ . .
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Mr, and Mri. Bill Gibbs and .
..
,
RO -Jiro""'lyFerneB.HnymanofEut!.etartiB daugJiter tetiirned to Kent
By POJ,J.Y (C RAMER .•..
.
theonly
_ _ Jole~Counttan
_, .. ...
wbocanclalnian_._,.,
--'_- .ofro-•ty._ · . Wedtlellday.
""U
"''"'
following
holiday
.
PO
. .
. · '.
·Did
•¥ ·lin. ow ,._
.,e Is the
t.geat.gr·...,_
d-.,;,•- of vtalt h · with
Mr andaMrs
·w· . · ·DEAR . LLY - 1 wol1ld like to share_a ·d1scovery with
~eenVtaorlaofEngland'Wll, eltbe
· - ...... _....
· ere ·. ·
: · !heolhergirl$. Iwent toalumberyardtoget somet1iing
~
acCI: • .. . .• . · .e n · rdldlheuntU just a few .A.Giblla and son,' Jeff, .home · ·ld..hold up f!IY. ~,:limbirig plants and happened to see metal .
·F1
said ·· '
·
·
!tOni ·eollege for the boUdays. . stripping that carpenters use in corners befo re a wall is
· .\!111e . that ·llhe ~ al\VIIy~ linoll'!l there Was ~e
Mr. and Mrs. EldOn Weeb plast~red . · I· think . it is called beading. This is sturdy
roy..ty !l!llll•where along the Une 'bl!t had nevet been alile to were In Reynoldsburg for . ,~ eno~gh. for a profuse groWth, ~lands alone from floo r to
traee It bacll:. Anyway, whUe vlaiting·a COU8In 1n PemsYlvlni. Clu1stliw With their 8011 and ceilmg when in .a good.sized pot and really looks nice. 'I
lalt; month, a. parctunerit aboli.t'24 Inches long ·arrlved frolli
daUiihter.m-law, Mr. and Mrs. have hnd many ~ompliments. on the w,a y mine looks.~ Wrlfylng. the ancestry. .
.
· .
John Weeki and chlldten;
MRS. R. T.
llelmul that ~trn~·s cousin started researclllnto iheJamUy
Mr. tmd Mrs: Tom Bowen' • DEAR POLLY- Tostrengthen my ~hildren's shoe laces
~wblie tnEngllindduringthe!H4liandlthastakenall returned W:edliesday from a and make them wear longer, I stitch each one lengthwise
this time to get it all-together.
. • .
· week'svisltln Brad~ton, Fla., three or' four times on the sewing machine.;-CATHERIN E
.-erne•s )jrt!at.gandf&amp;ther on .her mother's side married - With Mr, and Mr,s.;Joh!t Bowen . . .
p II. , p b.I
.
~aecaw-~. daughter .of QUeell ~vldorla. He was a and at SU!Imon's Jslaild Ga. ~ ""~lm-J o Y.s ro em
. ··· •rcun-~couii)IQner ~~ llhe was, therefor; ezpe!led· from the family · · )Vitb. · Mr .. _:..a.nd ·Mrs. _
-'Joru: ·. · · DEAR POLLY_:How do I change a .golden "_a.k . : ·. :.
clr~. Prtn~ lltarloHe and her husband came to America, RolUniiOil and son, 'John.
buffet to a mahogany flnish ?-R. B.
·
TheY, had fl~·f'lll, one of whom was Ferne's grandfather.
R. J. Grueser of Columbus,
.
Wi.tM -.R i!ltl\t-1&gt;!'· ~~"•·:
was the recent visitor of his
DEA!l- POLLY- I have two fet Peeves .. First, why
~CH I. NICE rHING the Sunbealll 'Cl~ 01 the Rutland aunt, MIBs ~vieve ~t. don't the make.J"s of those quilted mattress pads allow for
Unit~., Meth
, od1st Oturch did durlrig ,.., advent se
'' 'aso'n'.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Ch11'ence shrinkage? After they are washed the size is a disgrace.
011 .....
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Massar · have returned from
T~e other is with the check-out counters in dime stores,
. ""'i
Sundays preceding Olrllt!nas, the seventh and Upper Arlington where they drugstores, .etc., that are so cluttered that there is often
elihtli 81'1~&lt;*'s wlth their teacher, Fay Sauer, went Into the spent · the · Christmas hoUday not room to put down large purchases. I have actually had
homes a( llhut-lns for special services. They "took the regular
With their son and daugJiter.m- to .Put such things on the floor between my feet while I
, Sunday ~I hour.for thelr vlaitlng program.
·
' ··
·
pa1d the check. Come on, store owners, glve us some room
1n the .d.'•p were Duane Weber, Joy Sauer, Debb.le law, Mr. •and. Mrs. George. and get rid of "the junk you are trying to tem(Jt us to buy.
gro.
Massa(,.and grandchildren, - LOUISE
Wl!ljmpiOn, Bobby Wllllamson, Ricky George and Randy
Steven ind Melissa.
·
DEAR POLLY- 1do not know how Polly M. can prevent
George. 111ey vialted Mrs. El81e Bryant, Mrs. Evelyn Jordan,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Spencer, her stainless steel pans from burning but cleaning them
Mni. Bertha Lasher and Mrs. Lennje Taylor, taking to eacll cine
Mrs. Frances Hewetson and is simple when done my way. Dissolve two -tablespoons
_the church bulletin, copies of ''The Qmcern" ''The Upper
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Jennings cream of tartar in one quart boiling water In the darkened
Room'' and "The Oirlstl.ait Home", and a ~8 card.
were Otrlstmas dinner guests Pan. Place over flame and-boil rapidly for 10 minutes and
touch up lightly with a soapy steel wool pad.-MRS.
'lbe:_vlalta~ was so successful that the boys and gttiB have
of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin then
A. D. J.
.
decllled_to ,make It a tlrice-a,year. ~roject. For their part 1n the
Spencer and family. On SQnday
(NEWSPAPER ENT£RPRI SE ASSN.)
~ prggram at the cllurcll, the young people evaluated Mr. and Mrs. Jennings were
You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
the vlaitation, commeriting on what was done, what they felt It
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
homemaking
Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
meant to the llhut.ms, and what It had meant to them.
Ralph Spencer·
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this n.ewspaper.,
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·Win,ter--Specials

USE OUR LOW COST

'

over low flame Add chicken
stock or bouillon. Simmer for
one-hail hour.. (It is better if
it stands for several more
hours.) To serve, ladle soup
into earthenware bowls top
with a thick slice of buttered
French bread and sprinkle
wtth Parmesan ··c·tre e s e.
Place under broiler for about
3 minutes. Serve with extra
Parmesan cheese. Makes
two servings.

MIDDLEPORT - A holiday
dinner party was held Saturday night at the Bradford
Church of Christ for members
of the Adult class.
Both ham and iurkey with all
the trinunings were served In
the dining room which was
decorated for the season by
Mrs. Tressie Hendricks, Mrs.
Norma Russell, and Mrs .
JaCkie Reed. Secret pals were
revealed with a gift exchange
and new names drawn. Mrs .
Reed led the group in a carol
sing.
Attending were Mrrand Mrs.
Clifford Smith 1\nd Chris, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Gilkey, Mrs .
~ildr ed Clark, Mrs. Frances
.,.yse , Mrs .. Nora Cambron,

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_- _t_ :I_
J.t _·_i_.t..y···· - : .
8y
Charlene'Hoetlich

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C
· •.Qmer
m_· .-.,._ ._._m_ • ..

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~r~~:::eM~cl;a:~

Circle, all of New Haven,
Mr . . and Mrs. Dwight
Swepston and family of
Colmnbus visited with Ralph
Lee and Mr. and l!ll's. Robert
Lee and famUy on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr Of
Chester visited at the home of
Mr. 11nd Mrs. Robert Lee, Bob
Bill and Becky on Tuesday.
Recent visitors of Eunle
Brinker were Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Clark of Racine, Mrs.
Cecll Hill, Terri and Robin of
Lima, Mr. and Mrs. Keith

spent Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Hayman Damitz,
Pomeroy. '
Eunie Brinker, Betty Van
Meter, Sheryl LeAnn and
Patrick Johnson called at the '
home of William and Cathy
Carleton.

SHOP .lHE NEW. JONES BOYS'
. &lt;. .•1.. ·:B••~

Valae&amp; •.(m . i\,~ ,, """" 11.
Foods - Clothing - Hardware
·
..- in Gallia County

SOUND RIPE

BANANAS
~lb •

Parking For over 100 Cars

DISCOUNT SA
111 Plne · Sinet .
. Gelllpoill, Olllo

STATE FARE
$LIC:ED

Whi.te Bread

HAPPY NEW YEAR
SPEQAL TO OUR PAIRCNS

1-lb. 4-oz •. Loaf .

•

THOROFARE
GRADE A LARGE

White Eggs
Dozen Carton

.• .

BROUGHTON

Ice Cream

$25 down, $10 per month

ALL' FLAVORS

/2-Gal. Pkg.

1

All of these monuments have the
EVERl).STING GUARANTEE.

Special prices abon Include lettering, desigq,
and deliver}
to your cemetil}
plot.
.
.· - .........

.

The ,Copelin is the finest Crystal Gray Gra nite, 62 inches long and 22 in.ches high. This
memonal 1s.'he compamon type· engravea w1th the w1ld roses aro und the name panels,
w1th the pol1shed gramte vase. The w1ngs are polished on fro nt and back, with the Mellotone f1msh next to the vase. If white Car.rora marble vase is used. price of Copel in is ·$359.

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I .
Log ~ n Mon t.~ me~pa.ny, Pemeroy, Ohio I
Ol'lnle lead me FREE lleotletltbow·
' lie me~~~orlalt prllled Ia fall color will I
1 oltet •IMI prl..islllted.
. ,.. I
Oltlldly bve u ••tborlzeti·Liru MI
I mat
Co. ••PI etalldve c11ht my lome.
,I ·1111111111
OPia• _. me ....... 1boat M•• I
I'
I Nme wllbot ..u1.~~n;
I Stnetor r.
I
I atyor rOWL..
· ·
II
'L
&gt;'
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COUPON

011•

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.
It family name is desired on back of monument
there wili-be an additional ~·harge of $20. '

(Additional lettering and olher carvings may be
used on above memorials at 75¢ per letter and
$15 to $45 for carving.)

t:

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New Year's SpecU.l -

Ptoplt art SOJ1trtgatlng to
usher in a New Y11r. ·Wt

-~:::

.~........_loin ~n.t~thh thanks.

~:: :

'·'·

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$AVE $100·

}lil

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Estroda .

4

Display Yard near
Pomer o y - ~as on Bridge
leo l . Vaughan, Mgr.
· Telep.l10ne 992 2588
_...J....,...,.

'"""'= · - - ...

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VINTON, OHIO
Display- Yard -on W. Main Street
James 0. Bush, Mgr.
· · Tel111hone 388·8603

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

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ON. THE

Model C7382UDK

·Marked

·. -

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Foreman &amp; Abbott

K&amp;K MOBILE HOM'ES .·
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· 1·

~POUS,
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-Ill!

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OHIO

. PI FASANT, W. VA.

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Sun$h.ine Chip-a-Roos .. 9~~t 37c
Sunshine Vanilla Wafers ~;~~ 37c
Bo-Peep Ammqriia .... ·~! 25c
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HEINZ
KETCHUP
1-Pt_.1_ 0·0 2.
Bottle

4 _5e

;::::::=;:::=:::::::::::!
·FOLGER
'
COFFEE

•

SPANISH•styling. ~~nuine Oa!&lt; veneers and solids; molded
front; antiqued fm1sh. With· Phllceim(!tic . tuning. Transistorized solid state slgna·l ·system..
·. .
·

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POMEROY, OHIO

00

PHILCO .25'.' COLOR TV

LOGAN
II
MONU·M ENT co·., JNC. I

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FUL
·NEW YEAR·

CHIJN;KING SKILLET DINNERS
CHOW MEIN .
• ,~PII;f.
'·" 19c
CHOP SUEY . ·
,.,.Plll9.
........'89 c
SWEET &amp; SOUR .. .. ..... ·. . . . . • . ' ·'~.~~· ltc
.PEPPER STEAK .. . . , , . . .. , , , , , • , ' ·'~;;:" 89c
SUKIYAKI .. . ......... . 1 • • , •• ,. ''~;;" -&amp;9c
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0

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o o o o o o o o o

••

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•

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.. .... ... .·...... .. •·.·,·•.'.· 45c
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DOWNY
Fabric Softener ·
1·01. 1-oz.

Bot.

OHIO
'
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$179

•

EGG FOO YOUN(? . . ....... .. : . ' '~;;" .89c

FRIED RI.CE MIX

2-lli.

Can

ase

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10 ~ TheSundayTIJMs -Sentlriel,Sunday, Jan. 2.

'

-II. Games) .

R. Bentley - 8 •
H. Halrston - 8.
8 . Williams ..,- 8
W. Jordan - 8
S. Sartram - 8
R. Lambert -. 8
D. Tfiompson - 6
D. Bollln!l"r - 7
M. Rouse- 7
' D. Hari -8
C. Carm lchael - 5
A. Martln -2
Others
Rio Totals - 8

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Fga Fgm Pet. Rb A , Flo Ftm Pet Tp Av.

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Herd
Trips
'Cats

Ole' ·Miss
Wins Mud
•
Bowl41-18

NEW LYNE CENTER RECORDS
I Varsity)

71

Most Points: 39, Mark Todd, Urbana vs W. Va . State - 11 - 2~ -

Largest Margin of Victory : 34, Rio Grande vs Cedarville
(105-71) 12-2-71
.

Weekend lrt Store
'

For Pro Football Scouts

freezer doors. separate temperature conrrols, and effective 7 ·dlly meat keeper.

.14 w ·IDE·

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!he

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Letters Of
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WIO·D ·
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Sunday·
Jan. 2
Only

. ., ;'

Protect -Ftee Enterprile )
Dec. 24,1971

Dear Editor:

·:A

, Sincerely;
MarshallM. Burnett.

Dear Sir: .
The reildenta of the Eureka community wl8b to thank the .

Winter Wheat
Crop to .Beat
• .

' "'!

1~ litnJei;~·

.

Bring In the year
with towering hopes for
peak. happiness and
health. And, top them off with thanks from us.

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
ANDOfttctWAN COMPANY ·-

·cARTER &amp; EVANS
.INCORPORATED

Opposllt ....,

A,f••--1

Dedicated To Quality

Ded!cated
To Quality .. .
. Backedby

Best Buy Values Taken From

Consumer Guide
Home Furnishings Report
Complete Reviews &amp;Evaluations
of 1971 To ·Brands &amp; Models.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
1972 prospecUve winter wheat
, crop is estimated at M,1ll0,000
bushels, 3 per cent more than
the 1871 crop, the Ohio
Agricultural Research and
Development Center reported
today.
Dan C. Tucker, 4 tatistlcian,
. said the 1972 crop was
predicted on the basis of
conditions u of Dec. I.
Winter wheat eeedlngs in the
state this fall totaled 1,104,000
· acres, up 10 per cent from the
acreal!e Seeded a year earUer,
Tucker said.
·
The seeding of winter wheat
was 15 per cent completed by
Sept. 20, the same u in 1970,
and winter wheat planUng wu
20 per cent completed by Sept.
27 down 5 per cent of the
))fev!oua year, he Ald.
· Ninety per cent of the crop
was plan~ by Oct. 26, be said,

Tbe Amw"e·
.
By lJillted Prell ~
\ Today Is Slllday, Jan. 2, the .
second day of 1972 with 3M to
. follow. .
·
The moon Ia between Its full
phase and lait quarter.
I '&lt;.The mornin1.o 1tan· are
Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
On this day in hiStOry:
In 1778 Continental IOldlers
railed the first flag of George
Wuhlngtoo's army at cam.
lrldge, Mall.
·1n 18011 Soviet forces landed
at Port Arthur, Manchuria,
lllll'rendered w tbe Japa11eM
and ended the lilt mljor
military eagagement in the
RUIIO-JaplllMe war.
In lllli8 MOICUW radio IDiioUI)Ced a CGII1llc rocket had
been tallDched toward the

MOTOR
OIL

99~

Hardware

•

', _18

Hardwa11e Dept.

.. "'.

KITS

.,oo

Heck's
Reg. 11.55

FLASHLIGHTS

Hardware Dept.

,, .

ahelf, "bookc:Bte'' freezer door
ahelt ·are juat aome of the quality
Admll'lll teaturealnc:luded. Flta anv·
where-'only 30" wldel

FUTURE
-FLOOR· WAX.

Platinum.Pius

e

IRONING BOARD '

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•

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•

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'2'.'

f11118y PICk ·
Includes lhue •
4 sandwiches •
and 4 orders ,
of Irene~ tries,

27

f1l.

KLEAR ·
FLOOR WAX
LADIES·

/

.Heck's
Reg. $1.09

WALTZ
GOWNS

· sst
·Dept.

.

FESCO

LAUNDRY BASKET
No, 1080
Heck's Reg.
$1.79
'

_$11)0

Heck's
Reg. &amp;r

2 pair
88$•

--coNVENIENTTERMS

.

• ••

Clothing Dept.

Plmlly IIIIIIUrlldl .

•

' ',

1503
•
EASTtRN

Reg. $2.48

r

-LADIES PANTIES ,

.

(ALL-DAY)
•

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••

88t

~ardware Dept.

Heck's Reg. 4.99

EveP1·Suw

·LoW Price: '309.9$
-_ MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Heck's Reg. 11.09

FOR

1

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BA

7's
Gillette

Housewares Dept.

ODIJ

'

I

'

Hardware Dept.

_Heck's Reg. 3r

27 rsz..

' Housewares Dept.

lein criapers, contoured frozen cen

Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-,340
Galli~ lis, 01\io

66

Heck's '
Reg. s199

Heck's

Model NTI-14
•
Exceptional Value! Full Sized! Dual
Temperature controla, twin porce·

FURNITU'·R·E.

PLASTIC

,

Heck's Reg. $26.88

NO -· DEFROSTING EVER I

FREE
DELIVERY

,. .,. "' ~a'N11QUING·· · : . ~.. '"

· Sheets

Reg. 11.29

Adn•l•al.'
.BEST .B UY
,.

MOBILE
HOME SALES- See Jim Staats or Joe Giles :

99~

Hardware Dept.

.' :- Ground:"·· :;·

~- ANOTHER

•

GAL

Heck's
Reg. 11.18

·Play .Pen

$AVE$ .$ $

HEATER
HOSE

Hardware Dept.

cos co

14x65 3 BEDROOM, EXTRA NICE.

'5''
Hardware

·cOLEMAN
FUEL·

Heck's

•2 BEDROOM •FRONT KITDIEN..
•FORMAL DINING

-_ ELCON'\ .

Heck's
Reg. '9.48

$

'
.
Houseware~ . Dept.

NEW.MODERN

DRILL

,Heck's Reg. s1.99 gal.

Hardware Dept.

r·~-

It Is required by law that
the Latin m9~to, "E Pluribua
· Unum," must appear on one
side of every u.s. coin that '
Is minted.
·

'9950o

lA" )

ANTI FREEZE

oz.

. &lt;

McGRAW EDISO

-PRESTONE OR ZEREX

STP Gas
Treatment
Heck's
.0.
~8
Rea. 59'

gal.

6pl'1''

Heck's
R,eg. '2.38

Heck's Reg. $1.3,8
- Hardware Depf.

moon.

'

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PRIZE PENN

"

Heck's Reg. $1.39 Gal .

14x60 SYLVAN PARK

.cYHNii ·~tt

•
STRAP-ON
TIRE.
CHAINS

yo111gpqleoftbeMt. Zion Clurch (of Waugh Bottom) for their '
lovely carolll, 11 our church hu been closed and two pad!ockl put
on tbe door. '1'1111, our )'OUilll pqle cannot enjoy the songs and
works of our Sa"rior at this lleUIIl, nor tbe love and lriendsblp.Of
our friends IUld aeJ8bbora.
.
·
_ Ruth Montgomery.

WEEKEND
SPECIAL

SAVE

CLOSED _ALL DAY SAT., JAN. 1st • OP.EN SUNDAY 1 PM TO 7 PM

am

Eureka, Ohio
Dec. :rT, 1971

..._....
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····.
...
·....··-... ···- ......
........

limited Quantities

mlliins

~b ritade by J. A. McKean oondeming strip
in
his Sort ,Of Jounla)" B!lpearing in the &amp;mday 'lbnes-Senlinel,
Dec. 5, 1971 in my opinion was not ooly nm«nsscal but was a
cle!'r attack on OUi' ]ll'lvate free enjerprlae•lyslem.
As to_,,our prhate free l!nlerpflle system, as far as I
concerqecl, It Ia 1\C!lle of Mr. McKean's buslneas, ·none of my buslne.!B, neither Is It any of our alate or federal government's
business what Hama Coal Conqt&amp;ny, or any other mining
company, does with 1J!e land l;hey have legaDy ~ through
purcha&amp;e from private land owners, .. long as,In their strl~
mining operaUon they damage no other property owner'aland,
our streams, or any.public propet ty.
.
~ The · good Lord in ~ Infinite wklsom 1111 the. natura)
re~purces in this goqd earth for Hll people to uee.
In GaDla Counly He formed sballow veins of coal near the lop
of some of our most rugged hllll. Th1a coal baa laid there through
th~ ages scarcely touched by lJunan hands becauee untll the
advent of giant earth-moving machines there had been no
practical way to mine .it.
'
Now at !!Arne whet) this coal can be removed from the land
by a profllalile and practical method we have thoee self.
appointed envlronmentallsta like Mr. McKean and others interf!i'lng wthe_point where strlp.mining would be outlawed If
they had their way. Act!on o( this kind would be another step
toward Socialism, another defeat for private frea enterprlae.

····: .... -:·.·:·.·:·:·:·: ·:-:~·:·:· :-:·:·: ··•·.·.·. ·,··. ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·:·.

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·You Wil Earn a Fortune

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defensive back of the Oakland fdrmer All-Pro Quarter Joe
Though schooled iii the slyle what ~ was doing out there;"
Raiders, .each collected two ~pp. When Kapp bec;une It the drop-back, slay-In-the- Plunkett admitted. "But the
votes. John Riggins, the ,New engangled in a contract dispute . pocket pallllnc 81111\e, Pluilkett veterans, Uke (center) ·Jon
York Jets' powerful running and was j)rdered out of camp was sometimel fon:ed to run Morris, helped out a lot,
back, and Phil Villapiano, the' by commissioner Pete Rozelle, more than be would have llked reading defen8es is the hardest
Raiders ' gr~at lin~backing Plunkett was edged to _the u the Pilttlot -offensive llne thing In the WCI"ld (j) do.''
ObviouslY. Plunke(t . WBSJ~ 't ·
prospect, received one vole for~gi"Qund of IJ!e New England CI'Wilbled after a good :atarl.
'apiece. ·
offense.
'
· ·
Plunltett responded, however, shaken too blid!y by ~ taSk of
· Poise, inte llige~ce and&lt;, . The powerfully-built; dark- ,by running for 210 ylllda.Jn 46 sjgna,l-ealllng since he
strepgth were phrases that featured Plunkett quickly ~ttempiB 8lld flnlahing . the remained in · the; · llneup for
offensive
down ·
became associated with lhe captured the enthusiasm of the se&amp;IICIII u .!be Piltrlola' third every
throughout
the.enlire
season
,.
name of Jim PlJlllkett ali he veteran Patriots. Though only . leading ruBber.
passed ~is way. to national a rookie, he proved himself
Statistically rallked among a feat unmatche!l by any r,ookle
,
recognilion and Rose Bowl capable of taklhg charge on the the top five .qilarterbacks in the -ever.And h1s reaction . after this
glory at Stanford University. field and iriliiating his · own AFC, Plunkett was intercepted
The IN, 210-pound son of momentum.
only 16 times in 328 attempts first season in the Pros?
Mexican llBrents broke nearly
By rrH~·November the while passing for 2,158 yards , "It .Wfti!, quite an exevery
Pacific-8 record Patriots had already doubled and tied-Bob GrieSe of Miami perience," Plunkett said after
available to him ·and set new their victory toJal of the for the . secQOd highest TD being told of the Rookie of the
·
NCAA career records with preylous year with their fourth passing total in the AFC, two Year honor.
"It wasn't as difficult as i
7,544 yards passing a~d 7,887 triumph, a 38-33 win over the behind John Hlldl's 21 TD
thought'in
some resl!\lCta,lilie ·.
yards total offense . .J
Buffalo Bills: 11 was in that passes for San ~go. Only one
His performa~ce in the 1971 game that Plunkett proved to other quarterback . in the the physical. part offl, but In ..
Rose Bowl agamst Ohw State those still-doubling veterans· history of the game has thrown other ways it was veq- hard.
rate_d among the_ classic's that he was, indeed, a pro. ·
more TD passes 'in his rookie Learning our own team's ofgreatest ·shows. Httting on 20 of
~spite being hobbled by a season -(Charlie Connerly with (ense, the moves of the dlf.
ferent players and, of clourse,
30 passes for 265 yards and pulled hamstring muscle 22), tha~ Plunkett,
running~o 49 yards more, which he-sustained on the firsi
A serious man and eager to all the other teamil' deferises ...
Plunkett tl the Indians to a 27- offensive series, the strong- improve his game, Plunkett those were really the · key
17 upse of the Buckeyes and armed. quarterback connected studied for hours films of his things."
'
earned for himseil the Player on TD passes of 16, 5, 80 and 31 games and films Of the opof the Game trophy,
yards and$ompleted nine of 16 position's defenses. According
Professional ·euslntn
After declining numerous · attempts fOJ; 218 yards. The 8(). to New England Coach John Training can bt olll.lned
offers from many of the other yard pass play to Mike Garrett Mazur, Plunkett was allowed only through • colltg•ltvel
NFL clubs to trade its numblir set a club record which was in to call his own plays ""about 95 prCgB~mGraduates· Get.· '
one pick In the draft, New turn, broken five weeks la'ter pet. Of the time," II · rarity ·
England chose Plunkett and when Plonkettconnected on an among rookie quarterbacks.
.
Better Jobs! . · signed him with the hope that 88-yarder to his ex.Stanford
With the various and com- Write or call «6·4367 tor
he.would lead the Patriots out aerial mate, Randy Vataha, plicated defenses used by the
catalog of courses and next
of the AFC's Eastern Division against the Baltimore Colts. Pros, thi job of calling the starling date.
. cellar an~ help fill their 61,457With their season-ending right play is possibly the
GALLIPOLIS
seat stadmm m Foxboro. _
upset victory over the playoff- hardest single aspect 'of the
BUSINE$S_g)UEGE .
Season ticket sales boomed bound Colts, the Patriots game ... especially If one is a U Locvst St. _ GaliiPoli&amp;
to over 50,000_ as Plunkett chalked up their sixth win newcomer to the league.
Shlte Reg. No. 71-02·00328
reported to the ,Pa.triots' against eight losses :.. this
"Sometimes I had no idea

ADMIRAL

no·dtfrosting unit, it has bookcase

.Honor

f'

By BRUCE B. BAKKE
ATLANTA (UPI)- Georgia
Tech Coach Bud Carson,
looking grim and tired in his
team's dressing room after the
Peach Bo~l game, said, "It's
the worst thing . that ever
happened to me m one half of
football."
Caron's ·Yellow Jackets fell
behind, 38-0, to Mississippi in
the second quarter before
losing, 41-18, on a rain-drenched
field.
For one and a half quarters,
Mississippi was unstoppable
and Tech could do nothing
right. Carson's Yellow Jackets
trjining camp with the compared to their 1970 record
gave the ball up five times on prospect
of playing behind of 2-12.
three fumbles and two pass
, interceptions and Mississippi
rang up five touchdowns and a
field goal.
Mississippi played cautious
between your first and last paychecks
football in the second hall. The
TOTAL EARNINGS OVER THE YEARS
Rebels had gained 232 yards
total offense at the intermisMonlhly
II y_,
Zl v...
sion, but finished with only 318.
The workhorse on offense for
1 n ,aaa • •.aoo $110.001 ......tOO
111,000
Mississippi was tailback Greg
~=
t44,aao
110.000
ltUOO
Ainsworth, who rushed for U9
121,1111 ......ooo
100
it10,000
JfJ,OOO
yards . in 28 carries. Weese
IM,IIID
1110
112.Gaa
M,OOO
completed· seven of 14 passes
IIZ,OOI ZII,OCID ·
IJO,OOO
114,000 :171.010
IIO,IIDD
1.1100
for 116 yards and Kenny Lyons,
aueo '
210,11DD
uoo
QO,oot
-·
~
' who played in the second·
quarter, fired . four times and
BUT HOW MUCH WILL
-c"ompleted two. Each of the
YOU HAVE LEFT AT RETIREMENn
quarterbacks had a touchdown
throw.
Doesn't !I make good stnH, lhtn, io put 10me of II awey
. The Rebel coach said an
eech pay~y Into savlnga? Wt1hlnk 10 and 1ugges1 tlllt.t
&lt;(!.b.flll5lic surgeon had exayou p~ac:. II. in our cart where II will not oniY..tniOV
unus1Ntlljl high llmlngs but txc:.l!int&gt;
"Haai'lt/. 7 And
miiieii'LyonsTI!ursdayandsaid
rememblr,
no
orw
hils
fYtl'
liod
to
wall
lor
their mGoty.
he could play so long as he did
Gl._
us
a
call
todaYl
not get involved In any play
that could·strain his shoulder,
ALL SAYINGS GUARANTEED IN FULl
such as. a tackle.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UP!)
, - Led by the scoring and reINDIVIDUAL ONE--GAME HIGH MARKS
bounding of Russell Lee and
FOR THIS SEASON
Randy Noil, Marshall held off Most Points, 31, Lambert vs Georgetown - 11 -26-71
Most Field Goals, 14. Bentley vs W. Fla. U. - 12-20-71
a second , half comeback by
Most Free Throws, 9, Lambert vs Cedarville - 12-2-71 and 9,
Ohio University for an 118-81 Bartram
vs. Georgetown - 11 -26-71
victory Thursday night to give
Most Rebounds, 20, Bentley vs Urbana - 12·8-71
the Thundering Herd its ninth
win in 10 games.
· Lee scored 26 points and
grabbed 10 rebounds and Noll
added 21 points and 13 rebounds.
Marshall spurted to a 25-8
advantage before the Bobcats
autscored the Herd 11-li to pull
of San Diego Slate.
within ~26 with 7:02left in the
United Pres• lnlemallooal
The game, a benefit for
Proscoutswillkeepa careful
first half.
crippled
children, will be
The Herd took a 49-36 lead by watch in person and' on their
intermission and led by 58-40 television sets. early New televised nalionally at 4 p.m.
early in the second half. ~
Year's Eve as some of the EST.
In other post-season bowl
Ohio, however, slowly cut greatest players in college
away at the lead and came football will}!erform in the 47th games Friday, Georgia is a 10
within 74-71 with six minutes annual East-West Shrine All- point favorite over North
remaining .on a free throw by Star game in San Francisco's Carolina in the Gator Bowl,
Tod Lalich ,
Candlestick Park.
• and Colorado is a 3\2 point
Tom Corde led the visitors
With the nation's lop teams choice over Houston in the
with 22points and LaUch added slated to play New Year's Day, Astro-Blaebonnel Bowl.
On New Year's Day, No, 1
21.
· there was still an outstanding
Nebraska
is six over No. 2
Both teams had good shoot- crop of seniors left to choose
ing nights from the floor. Mar- from for this game, Incluaing Alabama in the Orange Bowl,
shall canned 50.7 per cent of its all-time rushing leader Ed Michigan is 10\2 over Stanford
field goals while Ohio hit 54.1 Marinaro of Cornell, Eric Allen In the Rose Bowl, Oklahoma is
per cent.
of Michigan Stale, Bobby 10\2 over Auburn in the Sugar
Marshallhelda37-31rebound-. Moore of Oregon, Brian Sipe of Bowl and Texas if 3\2 over
ing edge in handing the Bob- San Diego State, John Reaves Penn State in the Cotton Bowl.
The Gator Bowl offers an
cats their fifth loss in eight of Florida and Mike Siani of
starts.
Villanpva. ·
·
in teres ling maichup with th~
The Herd ' returns to action
Marinaro and Allen will start Georgia Bulldogs coached by
M~) al Morehead;'"""'&lt;'&gt; ., .t 1 -~ ~~ I!!IQI!;(ield along '{~nee Dooley going 'aaalnst the
,'
willi qui-Urllack Craig Curry Tar Heels frorri North
of ·Minnesota while the West Carolina, who are coached by
MOODY ACTS
will go with Slpe at quar- Vince's brother BilL Georgia
COLUMBUS (UP!)
terback and Moore .and Ber- (1().1) is ranked eighth while
Bernard T, Chupka , vice nard Jackson of Washington as North Carolina (9-2) is 18th.
chairman of the Ohio Liquor the running backs.
In the Astro-Bluebonnet
Control Commission, has been
Reaves will relieve. Curry Bowl in Houston, Tex ,, purpose threat Cliff Branch
selected by Mayor~lecl -Tom and Jimmy Jones of Southern Colorado and Houston both while
fullback
Robert
Moody to serve as city safety California will spell Sipe.'
carry idenlical 9-2 records into Newhouse, who finished second
director_. Chupka, 45, is a
The defensive stars include the game. Colorado, having in rushing behind Marinaro in ·
former city prosecutor and at Will Hemby of Northwes,tern, lost only to Nebraska and 1971, is Houston's top offensive
one time served as all assistant Fred Swendsen of Notre Dame, Oklahoma, is led by all- player .
attorney general.
Ron Curl of Michigan State,
Tom Myers of Syracuse,. Ron
Mayor Read Comic• . Estay and Tom Ca511nova of
. D~g a newspaper strike Louisiana Slate, Jim Sherbert
an hiS term as mayor of New of Oregon Slate Will' H 11 of
York City, Fiorello La Guar,
•
te , a
_
dia, gave a Sunday morning USC, Sherman While of
radio performance of read· Callforma, Mark Arneson of
in~ the 90mic strips for the Arizona, Dave Cahney of San
ADMIRAL ND 22 17 Duplex. unll. has
child~ of Manhattan.
Jose State and Willie Buchanon
22 cu. ft. capacity in 3.3" c•binet. A

B llSY.

'&lt;•

I

NEW VORK iUPI) - Jim
·141 57 40.4 66 17 17 I I 64.7 125 15.6. Plunkett, 'last year 's Heisman
.81 44 54.3 ' 46 . 29 22 9 40.9 97 12.1 ' trophy winner and nwnber one
64 32 50 .0 85 4 ~5 14 56 .0 78 9.7
draft choice of the Pros in 1971,
77 41 53.2 35 19 IS 12 66.6 94 11.7
74 38 51.3 11 34 31 24 12.9 I Oj) 12.5
added one more horior to his
88 49 .55 .6 54 10 41 JO 74.3 128 16.0
glorious yet young career
21 s 39.1 ... 5 4 5 4 80.0 20 3.3
i
Friday when-he I"BS named by
40
11 275 26 . 1 ,i 6 87.8 28 4.0
42 .8 26 3.1
27 12 44.4 24 1 7
UPI as the Rookie of the Year
33.3 ' 30 31
26 14 53.7 • 8 4 6
in
the American Ftolball
. 13 5 38.5 3 0 17 10 58 .8 20 4.0
31 12 38.7 . 6 3 5 3 60.0 27 13.5 Confererice,
2 66.6 4 1.0
I
1 50.0
2
0
3
The ohrwhelming choice of
615 124 47'4 371 126 195 128 4U 714 97 .o
a nationwide panel of sports.
'
writers, the 24-year·old
.
Y~rsity Basketball Scores-todal•
Rio They. Opponenl
Leading Varsity Scorer is) quarterback of the New
Ill
S3 Georgetown
Lilln bert31 ; Williams 19; Bartram 15 England Patriots received 25 of
92 lOB Urbana
.
Jordan 20 ; Bentley 19; Lambert 15
31 votes cast. Billy Parks, th&amp;
114 86 Alderson-Broaddus
,
B~liey 17; Jordan 15
_105 71 .x-Cec;larvllle
Lamberl27; Bentley25 fine young receiver of the San
75 1• ~-Malone ·
Bartram2l
87 112 x-Urbana
Hairston 19 Diego Chargers; and Jack
101 100 xx-West Florida
Benlley 28; Bartram20 Tatum, the outstanding
91 92 •-West Florida
, Lambert20
x - Mld-Ohlo Conference Games·
·
• . single overtime
•• · double overtime
MOC Record : Won 2 - Lost 1
Season Record: Won 5 - Lost 3
Next Game: Jan . 6 at Otterbein
&lt;

·\

Plunkett ·co

OFFICIAL CU/oiUI,AT!YE BASKETBALL SCHEDULES
• RIO ~,ANOE COLLEGE "REDME!f'
..
.

..

'

urn.

·· R~ Grande Cage·Sta~tics
N•mo .:... c

.,

•

Not ·

PILLOW
CASES

$

Housewares Dept.

As Illustrated

•

Heck's Reg. 12.49

•

Clolhing O.bn~t

99

�-

10 ~ TheSundayTIJMs -Sentlriel,Sunday, Jan. 2.

'

-II. Games) .

R. Bentley - 8 •
H. Halrston - 8.
8 . Williams ..,- 8
W. Jordan - 8
S. Sartram - 8
R. Lambert -. 8
D. Tfiompson - 6
D. Bollln!l"r - 7
M. Rouse- 7
' D. Hari -8
C. Carm lchael - 5
A. Martln -2
Others
Rio Totals - 8

•

·

Fga Fgm Pet. Rb A , Flo Ftm Pet Tp Av.

'

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Herd
Trips
'Cats

Ole' ·Miss
Wins Mud
•
Bowl41-18

NEW LYNE CENTER RECORDS
I Varsity)

71

Most Points: 39, Mark Todd, Urbana vs W. Va . State - 11 - 2~ -

Largest Margin of Victory : 34, Rio Grande vs Cedarville
(105-71) 12-2-71
.

Weekend lrt Store
'

For Pro Football Scouts

freezer doors. separate temperature conrrols, and effective 7 ·dlly meat keeper.

.14 w ·IDE·

.

!he

r-------------..;.----·

••-----tiiiiiiil.l

Letters Of
• •
WIO·D ·
.

•

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Sunday·
Jan. 2
Only

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Protect -Ftee Enterprile )
Dec. 24,1971

Dear Editor:

·:A

, Sincerely;
MarshallM. Burnett.

Dear Sir: .
The reildenta of the Eureka community wl8b to thank the .

Winter Wheat
Crop to .Beat
• .

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1~ litnJei;~·

.

Bring In the year
with towering hopes for
peak. happiness and
health. And, top them off with thanks from us.

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
ANDOfttctWAN COMPANY ·-

·cARTER &amp; EVANS
.INCORPORATED

Opposllt ....,

A,f••--1

Dedicated To Quality

Ded!cated
To Quality .. .
. Backedby

Best Buy Values Taken From

Consumer Guide
Home Furnishings Report
Complete Reviews &amp;Evaluations
of 1971 To ·Brands &amp; Models.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
1972 prospecUve winter wheat
, crop is estimated at M,1ll0,000
bushels, 3 per cent more than
the 1871 crop, the Ohio
Agricultural Research and
Development Center reported
today.
Dan C. Tucker, 4 tatistlcian,
. said the 1972 crop was
predicted on the basis of
conditions u of Dec. I.
Winter wheat eeedlngs in the
state this fall totaled 1,104,000
· acres, up 10 per cent from the
acreal!e Seeded a year earUer,
Tucker said.
·
The seeding of winter wheat
was 15 per cent completed by
Sept. 20, the same u in 1970,
and winter wheat planUng wu
20 per cent completed by Sept.
27 down 5 per cent of the
))fev!oua year, he Ald.
· Ninety per cent of the crop
was plan~ by Oct. 26, be said,

Tbe Amw"e·
.
By lJillted Prell ~
\ Today Is Slllday, Jan. 2, the .
second day of 1972 with 3M to
. follow. .
·
The moon Ia between Its full
phase and lait quarter.
I '&lt;.The mornin1.o 1tan· are
Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
On this day in hiStOry:
In 1778 Continental IOldlers
railed the first flag of George
Wuhlngtoo's army at cam.
lrldge, Mall.
·1n 18011 Soviet forces landed
at Port Arthur, Manchuria,
lllll'rendered w tbe Japa11eM
and ended the lilt mljor
military eagagement in the
RUIIO-JaplllMe war.
In lllli8 MOICUW radio IDiioUI)Ced a CGII1llc rocket had
been tallDched toward the

MOTOR
OIL

99~

Hardware

•

', _18

Hardwa11e Dept.

.. "'.

KITS

.,oo

Heck's
Reg. 11.55

FLASHLIGHTS

Hardware Dept.

,, .

ahelf, "bookc:Bte'' freezer door
ahelt ·are juat aome of the quality
Admll'lll teaturealnc:luded. Flta anv·
where-'only 30" wldel

FUTURE
-FLOOR· WAX.

Platinum.Pius

e

IRONING BOARD '

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'2'.'

f11118y PICk ·
Includes lhue •
4 sandwiches •
and 4 orders ,
of Irene~ tries,

27

f1l.

KLEAR ·
FLOOR WAX
LADIES·

/

.Heck's
Reg. $1.09

WALTZ
GOWNS

· sst
·Dept.

.

FESCO

LAUNDRY BASKET
No, 1080
Heck's Reg.
$1.79
'

_$11)0

Heck's
Reg. &amp;r

2 pair
88$•

--coNVENIENTTERMS

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Clothing Dept.

Plmlly IIIIIIUrlldl .

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1503
•
EASTtRN

Reg. $2.48

r

-LADIES PANTIES ,

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(ALL-DAY)
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88t

~ardware Dept.

Heck's Reg. 4.99

EveP1·Suw

·LoW Price: '309.9$
-_ MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Heck's Reg. 11.09

FOR

1

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BA

7's
Gillette

Housewares Dept.

ODIJ

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Hardware Dept.

_Heck's Reg. 3r

27 rsz..

' Housewares Dept.

lein criapers, contoured frozen cen

Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-,340
Galli~ lis, 01\io

66

Heck's '
Reg. s199

Heck's

Model NTI-14
•
Exceptional Value! Full Sized! Dual
Temperature controla, twin porce·

FURNITU'·R·E.

PLASTIC

,

Heck's Reg. $26.88

NO -· DEFROSTING EVER I

FREE
DELIVERY

,. .,. "' ~a'N11QUING·· · : . ~.. '"

· Sheets

Reg. 11.29

Adn•l•al.'
.BEST .B UY
,.

MOBILE
HOME SALES- See Jim Staats or Joe Giles :

99~

Hardware Dept.

.' :- Ground:"·· :;·

~- ANOTHER

•

GAL

Heck's
Reg. 11.18

·Play .Pen

$AVE$ .$ $

HEATER
HOSE

Hardware Dept.

cos co

14x65 3 BEDROOM, EXTRA NICE.

'5''
Hardware

·cOLEMAN
FUEL·

Heck's

•2 BEDROOM •FRONT KITDIEN..
•FORMAL DINING

-_ ELCON'\ .

Heck's
Reg. '9.48

$

'
.
Houseware~ . Dept.

NEW.MODERN

DRILL

,Heck's Reg. s1.99 gal.

Hardware Dept.

r·~-

It Is required by law that
the Latin m9~to, "E Pluribua
· Unum," must appear on one
side of every u.s. coin that '
Is minted.
·

'9950o

lA" )

ANTI FREEZE

oz.

. &lt;

McGRAW EDISO

-PRESTONE OR ZEREX

STP Gas
Treatment
Heck's
.0.
~8
Rea. 59'

gal.

6pl'1''

Heck's
R,eg. '2.38

Heck's Reg. $1.3,8
- Hardware Depf.

moon.

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PRIZE PENN

"

Heck's Reg. $1.39 Gal .

14x60 SYLVAN PARK

.cYHNii ·~tt

•
STRAP-ON
TIRE.
CHAINS

yo111gpqleoftbeMt. Zion Clurch (of Waugh Bottom) for their '
lovely carolll, 11 our church hu been closed and two pad!ockl put
on tbe door. '1'1111, our )'OUilll pqle cannot enjoy the songs and
works of our Sa"rior at this lleUIIl, nor tbe love and lriendsblp.Of
our friends IUld aeJ8bbora.
.
·
_ Ruth Montgomery.

WEEKEND
SPECIAL

SAVE

CLOSED _ALL DAY SAT., JAN. 1st • OP.EN SUNDAY 1 PM TO 7 PM

am

Eureka, Ohio
Dec. :rT, 1971

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limited Quantities

mlliins

~b ritade by J. A. McKean oondeming strip
in
his Sort ,Of Jounla)" B!lpearing in the &amp;mday 'lbnes-Senlinel,
Dec. 5, 1971 in my opinion was not ooly nm«nsscal but was a
cle!'r attack on OUi' ]ll'lvate free enjerprlae•lyslem.
As to_,,our prhate free l!nlerpflle system, as far as I
concerqecl, It Ia 1\C!lle of Mr. McKean's buslneas, ·none of my buslne.!B, neither Is It any of our alate or federal government's
business what Hama Coal Conqt&amp;ny, or any other mining
company, does with 1J!e land l;hey have legaDy ~ through
purcha&amp;e from private land owners, .. long as,In their strl~
mining operaUon they damage no other property owner'aland,
our streams, or any.public propet ty.
.
~ The · good Lord in ~ Infinite wklsom 1111 the. natura)
re~purces in this goqd earth for Hll people to uee.
In GaDla Counly He formed sballow veins of coal near the lop
of some of our most rugged hllll. Th1a coal baa laid there through
th~ ages scarcely touched by lJunan hands becauee untll the
advent of giant earth-moving machines there had been no
practical way to mine .it.
'
Now at !!Arne whet) this coal can be removed from the land
by a profllalile and practical method we have thoee self.
appointed envlronmentallsta like Mr. McKean and others interf!i'lng wthe_point where strlp.mining would be outlawed If
they had their way. Act!on o( this kind would be another step
toward Socialism, another defeat for private frea enterprlae.

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defensive back of the Oakland fdrmer All-Pro Quarter Joe
Though schooled iii the slyle what ~ was doing out there;"
Raiders, .each collected two ~pp. When Kapp bec;une It the drop-back, slay-In-the- Plunkett admitted. "But the
votes. John Riggins, the ,New engangled in a contract dispute . pocket pallllnc 81111\e, Pluilkett veterans, Uke (center) ·Jon
York Jets' powerful running and was j)rdered out of camp was sometimel fon:ed to run Morris, helped out a lot,
back, and Phil Villapiano, the' by commissioner Pete Rozelle, more than be would have llked reading defen8es is the hardest
Raiders ' gr~at lin~backing Plunkett was edged to _the u the Pilttlot -offensive llne thing In the WCI"ld (j) do.''
ObviouslY. Plunke(t . WBSJ~ 't ·
prospect, received one vole for~gi"Qund of IJ!e New England CI'Wilbled after a good :atarl.
'apiece. ·
offense.
'
· ·
Plunltett responded, however, shaken too blid!y by ~ taSk of
· Poise, inte llige~ce and&lt;, . The powerfully-built; dark- ,by running for 210 ylllda.Jn 46 sjgna,l-ealllng since he
strepgth were phrases that featured Plunkett quickly ~ttempiB 8lld flnlahing . the remained in · the; · llneup for
offensive
down ·
became associated with lhe captured the enthusiasm of the se&amp;IICIII u .!be Piltrlola' third every
throughout
the.enlire
season
,.
name of Jim PlJlllkett ali he veteran Patriots. Though only . leading ruBber.
passed ~is way. to national a rookie, he proved himself
Statistically rallked among a feat unmatche!l by any r,ookle
,
recognilion and Rose Bowl capable of taklhg charge on the the top five .qilarterbacks in the -ever.And h1s reaction . after this
glory at Stanford University. field and iriliiating his · own AFC, Plunkett was intercepted
The IN, 210-pound son of momentum.
only 16 times in 328 attempts first season in the Pros?
Mexican llBrents broke nearly
By rrH~·November the while passing for 2,158 yards , "It .Wfti!, quite an exevery
Pacific-8 record Patriots had already doubled and tied-Bob GrieSe of Miami perience," Plunkett said after
available to him ·and set new their victory toJal of the for the . secQOd highest TD being told of the Rookie of the
·
NCAA career records with preylous year with their fourth passing total in the AFC, two Year honor.
"It wasn't as difficult as i
7,544 yards passing a~d 7,887 triumph, a 38-33 win over the behind John Hlldl's 21 TD
thought'in
some resl!\lCta,lilie ·.
yards total offense . .J
Buffalo Bills: 11 was in that passes for San ~go. Only one
His performa~ce in the 1971 game that Plunkett proved to other quarterback . in the the physical. part offl, but In ..
Rose Bowl agamst Ohw State those still-doubling veterans· history of the game has thrown other ways it was veq- hard.
rate_d among the_ classic's that he was, indeed, a pro. ·
more TD passes 'in his rookie Learning our own team's ofgreatest ·shows. Httting on 20 of
~spite being hobbled by a season -(Charlie Connerly with (ense, the moves of the dlf.
ferent players and, of clourse,
30 passes for 265 yards and pulled hamstring muscle 22), tha~ Plunkett,
running~o 49 yards more, which he-sustained on the firsi
A serious man and eager to all the other teamil' deferises ...
Plunkett tl the Indians to a 27- offensive series, the strong- improve his game, Plunkett those were really the · key
17 upse of the Buckeyes and armed. quarterback connected studied for hours films of his things."
'
earned for himseil the Player on TD passes of 16, 5, 80 and 31 games and films Of the opof the Game trophy,
yards and$ompleted nine of 16 position's defenses. According
Professional ·euslntn
After declining numerous · attempts fOJ; 218 yards. The 8(). to New England Coach John Training can bt olll.lned
offers from many of the other yard pass play to Mike Garrett Mazur, Plunkett was allowed only through • colltg•ltvel
NFL clubs to trade its numblir set a club record which was in to call his own plays ""about 95 prCgB~mGraduates· Get.· '
one pick In the draft, New turn, broken five weeks la'ter pet. Of the time," II · rarity ·
England chose Plunkett and when Plonkettconnected on an among rookie quarterbacks.
.
Better Jobs! . · signed him with the hope that 88-yarder to his ex.Stanford
With the various and com- Write or call «6·4367 tor
he.would lead the Patriots out aerial mate, Randy Vataha, plicated defenses used by the
catalog of courses and next
of the AFC's Eastern Division against the Baltimore Colts. Pros, thi job of calling the starling date.
. cellar an~ help fill their 61,457With their season-ending right play is possibly the
GALLIPOLIS
seat stadmm m Foxboro. _
upset victory over the playoff- hardest single aspect 'of the
BUSINE$S_g)UEGE .
Season ticket sales boomed bound Colts, the Patriots game ... especially If one is a U Locvst St. _ GaliiPoli&amp;
to over 50,000_ as Plunkett chalked up their sixth win newcomer to the league.
Shlte Reg. No. 71-02·00328
reported to the ,Pa.triots' against eight losses :.. this
"Sometimes I had no idea

ADMIRAL

no·dtfrosting unit, it has bookcase

.Honor

f'

By BRUCE B. BAKKE
ATLANTA (UPI)- Georgia
Tech Coach Bud Carson,
looking grim and tired in his
team's dressing room after the
Peach Bo~l game, said, "It's
the worst thing . that ever
happened to me m one half of
football."
Caron's ·Yellow Jackets fell
behind, 38-0, to Mississippi in
the second quarter before
losing, 41-18, on a rain-drenched
field.
For one and a half quarters,
Mississippi was unstoppable
and Tech could do nothing
right. Carson's Yellow Jackets
trjining camp with the compared to their 1970 record
gave the ball up five times on prospect
of playing behind of 2-12.
three fumbles and two pass
, interceptions and Mississippi
rang up five touchdowns and a
field goal.
Mississippi played cautious
between your first and last paychecks
football in the second hall. The
TOTAL EARNINGS OVER THE YEARS
Rebels had gained 232 yards
total offense at the intermisMonlhly
II y_,
Zl v...
sion, but finished with only 318.
The workhorse on offense for
1 n ,aaa • •.aoo $110.001 ......tOO
111,000
Mississippi was tailback Greg
~=
t44,aao
110.000
ltUOO
Ainsworth, who rushed for U9
121,1111 ......ooo
100
it10,000
JfJ,OOO
yards . in 28 carries. Weese
IM,IIID
1110
112.Gaa
M,OOO
completed· seven of 14 passes
IIZ,OOI ZII,OCID ·
IJO,OOO
114,000 :171.010
IIO,IIDD
1.1100
for 116 yards and Kenny Lyons,
aueo '
210,11DD
uoo
QO,oot
-·
~
' who played in the second·
quarter, fired . four times and
BUT HOW MUCH WILL
-c"ompleted two. Each of the
YOU HAVE LEFT AT RETIREMENn
quarterbacks had a touchdown
throw.
Doesn't !I make good stnH, lhtn, io put 10me of II awey
. The Rebel coach said an
eech pay~y Into savlnga? Wt1hlnk 10 and 1ugges1 tlllt.t
&lt;(!.b.flll5lic surgeon had exayou p~ac:. II. in our cart where II will not oniY..tniOV
unus1Ntlljl high llmlngs but txc:.l!int&gt;
"Haai'lt/. 7 And
miiieii'LyonsTI!ursdayandsaid
rememblr,
no
orw
hils
fYtl'
liod
to
wall
lor
their mGoty.
he could play so long as he did
Gl._
us
a
call
todaYl
not get involved In any play
that could·strain his shoulder,
ALL SAYINGS GUARANTEED IN FULl
such as. a tackle.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UP!)
, - Led by the scoring and reINDIVIDUAL ONE--GAME HIGH MARKS
bounding of Russell Lee and
FOR THIS SEASON
Randy Noil, Marshall held off Most Points, 31, Lambert vs Georgetown - 11 -26-71
Most Field Goals, 14. Bentley vs W. Fla. U. - 12-20-71
a second , half comeback by
Most Free Throws, 9, Lambert vs Cedarville - 12-2-71 and 9,
Ohio University for an 118-81 Bartram
vs. Georgetown - 11 -26-71
victory Thursday night to give
Most Rebounds, 20, Bentley vs Urbana - 12·8-71
the Thundering Herd its ninth
win in 10 games.
· Lee scored 26 points and
grabbed 10 rebounds and Noll
added 21 points and 13 rebounds.
Marshall spurted to a 25-8
advantage before the Bobcats
autscored the Herd 11-li to pull
of San Diego Slate.
within ~26 with 7:02left in the
United Pres• lnlemallooal
The game, a benefit for
Proscoutswillkeepa careful
first half.
crippled
children, will be
The Herd took a 49-36 lead by watch in person and' on their
intermission and led by 58-40 television sets. early New televised nalionally at 4 p.m.
early in the second half. ~
Year's Eve as some of the EST.
In other post-season bowl
Ohio, however, slowly cut greatest players in college
away at the lead and came football will}!erform in the 47th games Friday, Georgia is a 10
within 74-71 with six minutes annual East-West Shrine All- point favorite over North
remaining .on a free throw by Star game in San Francisco's Carolina in the Gator Bowl,
Tod Lalich ,
Candlestick Park.
• and Colorado is a 3\2 point
Tom Corde led the visitors
With the nation's lop teams choice over Houston in the
with 22points and LaUch added slated to play New Year's Day, Astro-Blaebonnel Bowl.
On New Year's Day, No, 1
21.
· there was still an outstanding
Nebraska
is six over No. 2
Both teams had good shoot- crop of seniors left to choose
ing nights from the floor. Mar- from for this game, Incluaing Alabama in the Orange Bowl,
shall canned 50.7 per cent of its all-time rushing leader Ed Michigan is 10\2 over Stanford
field goals while Ohio hit 54.1 Marinaro of Cornell, Eric Allen In the Rose Bowl, Oklahoma is
per cent.
of Michigan Stale, Bobby 10\2 over Auburn in the Sugar
Marshallhelda37-31rebound-. Moore of Oregon, Brian Sipe of Bowl and Texas if 3\2 over
ing edge in handing the Bob- San Diego State, John Reaves Penn State in the Cotton Bowl.
The Gator Bowl offers an
cats their fifth loss in eight of Florida and Mike Siani of
starts.
Villanpva. ·
·
in teres ling maichup with th~
The Herd ' returns to action
Marinaro and Allen will start Georgia Bulldogs coached by
M~) al Morehead;'"""'&lt;'&gt; ., .t 1 -~ ~~ I!!IQI!;(ield along '{~nee Dooley going 'aaalnst the
,'
willi qui-Urllack Craig Curry Tar Heels frorri North
of ·Minnesota while the West Carolina, who are coached by
MOODY ACTS
will go with Slpe at quar- Vince's brother BilL Georgia
COLUMBUS (UP!)
terback and Moore .and Ber- (1().1) is ranked eighth while
Bernard T, Chupka , vice nard Jackson of Washington as North Carolina (9-2) is 18th.
chairman of the Ohio Liquor the running backs.
In the Astro-Bluebonnet
Control Commission, has been
Reaves will relieve. Curry Bowl in Houston, Tex ,, purpose threat Cliff Branch
selected by Mayor~lecl -Tom and Jimmy Jones of Southern Colorado and Houston both while
fullback
Robert
Moody to serve as city safety California will spell Sipe.'
carry idenlical 9-2 records into Newhouse, who finished second
director_. Chupka, 45, is a
The defensive stars include the game. Colorado, having in rushing behind Marinaro in ·
former city prosecutor and at Will Hemby of Northwes,tern, lost only to Nebraska and 1971, is Houston's top offensive
one time served as all assistant Fred Swendsen of Notre Dame, Oklahoma, is led by all- player .
attorney general.
Ron Curl of Michigan State,
Tom Myers of Syracuse,. Ron
Mayor Read Comic• . Estay and Tom Ca511nova of
. D~g a newspaper strike Louisiana Slate, Jim Sherbert
an hiS term as mayor of New of Oregon Slate Will' H 11 of
York City, Fiorello La Guar,
•
te , a
_
dia, gave a Sunday morning USC, Sherman While of
radio performance of read· Callforma, Mark Arneson of
in~ the 90mic strips for the Arizona, Dave Cahney of San
ADMIRAL ND 22 17 Duplex. unll. has
child~ of Manhattan.
Jose State and Willie Buchanon
22 cu. ft. capacity in 3.3" c•binet. A

B llSY.

'&lt;•

I

NEW VORK iUPI) - Jim
·141 57 40.4 66 17 17 I I 64.7 125 15.6. Plunkett, 'last year 's Heisman
.81 44 54.3 ' 46 . 29 22 9 40.9 97 12.1 ' trophy winner and nwnber one
64 32 50 .0 85 4 ~5 14 56 .0 78 9.7
draft choice of the Pros in 1971,
77 41 53.2 35 19 IS 12 66.6 94 11.7
74 38 51.3 11 34 31 24 12.9 I Oj) 12.5
added one more horior to his
88 49 .55 .6 54 10 41 JO 74.3 128 16.0
glorious yet young career
21 s 39.1 ... 5 4 5 4 80.0 20 3.3
i
Friday when-he I"BS named by
40
11 275 26 . 1 ,i 6 87.8 28 4.0
42 .8 26 3.1
27 12 44.4 24 1 7
UPI as the Rookie of the Year
33.3 ' 30 31
26 14 53.7 • 8 4 6
in
the American Ftolball
. 13 5 38.5 3 0 17 10 58 .8 20 4.0
31 12 38.7 . 6 3 5 3 60.0 27 13.5 Confererice,
2 66.6 4 1.0
I
1 50.0
2
0
3
The ohrwhelming choice of
615 124 47'4 371 126 195 128 4U 714 97 .o
a nationwide panel of sports.
'
writers, the 24-year·old
.
Y~rsity Basketball Scores-todal•
Rio They. Opponenl
Leading Varsity Scorer is) quarterback of the New
Ill
S3 Georgetown
Lilln bert31 ; Williams 19; Bartram 15 England Patriots received 25 of
92 lOB Urbana
.
Jordan 20 ; Bentley 19; Lambert 15
31 votes cast. Billy Parks, th&amp;
114 86 Alderson-Broaddus
,
B~liey 17; Jordan 15
_105 71 .x-Cec;larvllle
Lamberl27; Bentley25 fine young receiver of the San
75 1• ~-Malone ·
Bartram2l
87 112 x-Urbana
Hairston 19 Diego Chargers; and Jack
101 100 xx-West Florida
Benlley 28; Bartram20 Tatum, the outstanding
91 92 •-West Florida
, Lambert20
x - Mld-Ohlo Conference Games·
·
• . single overtime
•• · double overtime
MOC Record : Won 2 - Lost 1
Season Record: Won 5 - Lost 3
Next Game: Jan . 6 at Otterbein
&lt;

·\

Plunkett ·co

OFFICIAL CU/oiUI,AT!YE BASKETBALL SCHEDULES
• RIO ~,ANOE COLLEGE "REDME!f'
..
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urn.

·· R~ Grande Cage·Sta~tics
N•mo .:... c

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Not ·

PILLOW
CASES

$

Housewares Dept.

As Illustrated

•

Heck's Reg. 12.49

•

Clolhing O.bn~t

99

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; , - 'fhe Sunday Times -sentinel, Sunday, Jan: 2.1972 _

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· guidellnes and infonnatlon for · periOds and}or heifen not yet
setting up one on Yrour farm. In the' inllklng beni, _says
The Utah system, now being Taylor: Work Ia underway to
used in the Ohio DHIA build llils Into the jiogtain.
program, auwmallcally
So start .now c~ting the
provides all the producti~n calving Interval of your ]lerd:s
bei,ng a goal.
the break-even· point between ment.
By C. E. BLAKESLEE
·~
eluding parl()r ahd all equip- over ·J6 months, and 'the records a dairyman peeds dairY cow~. The effort will pay
IDlunty E~t..Agi., Agri.
It is also very important that medium . and
highly
Michigan State University men!, was $130 and $135 for the production level of these herds except for recording 'heat off in more net returns.
POMEROY - Management ·expenses for •buildings , - mechanized forage systems has also come uo with some double three, . four ·and five show this to be a cosUy prac• _and management dec isio ns equipment , and operating • was 90 cows with labor charged conclusions in · regard · to herringbone, the double. three Uce. •
continue to be the most im- needs be carefully controlled . at $2. If this labor clu!rge was milking parlor efficiencies that walk-through, and the double · · "We can iook at two aspects .
portant determiners of ne' A complete record system is $4 per hour the ~reak~ven found !hat herringbone parlors 'three l;llld· four ~de openblj! · of the problem," he says."One
income on dairy farms.
important to pinpoint trouble point was 60 cows.
.are theJIIost efficient and side parlors, With \he double eight , is the effect on milk producUon ·
areas
in advance. Good · It is expec_teJ! that dairy opening parlors are the least herringbone tpe Investment ljlld the other IS the reduction in
Studies reported on Michigan
dairy . farms ril~ntly indicate managerial skill is arso hlg hly fa rms wilt c'ontinue to increase efficient 1n terms of cows was 'about $100 per cow. The income a8soclaled with a delay
in size due to economic and . milked per-man hour. Milking . Michigan researchers con- in conception, In a recent S\Udy
impor tant.
New 'in Farming
Increased mechanization technological forces. Even ·in rates ranged from 35 to 44 cows eluded that the best parlor for in Michigan involving 4,:!85
becomes more attractive to Meigs' County we have seen per man-hQur for herringbone _dairymen mllklng up to 130 !iolstein cow~ in 944 herdS v~~
0
that profil.s are related directly dairymen as labor costs rise. II ... this trend toward more parlors; from 26 to.28 per man- cows is the double four a five-year period, the "average
to certain factors such as high should be pointed out however prOduction per dairy farm. hour for side opening parlors. herringbone. For ovf." 120 cows daily milk production declined
output per cow - 13,000 pounds that mechanization for This hasbeenmotivaledbythe · This of course asswned skilled the double eight heriingbone is slighUy as length of calving
and up. High output per man is mechanization 's sake is not a need to offset higher labor and workers in both cases.
best.
increased from 12 to 13 months.
another important fac tor with profi t making item. In the capital requirements as \vel! as
Another dairY management But an incre~se to 15 months
500,000 pounds and up per man Michigan study it showed that to· make use of better equipInvestment per cow, in- problem which is difficult to resulted in an' averag~
¥
lick but most dairymen keep deerease .of over three pounds
working at It Is the calving per day. This three-pound
interval. U yow; da!ry cows are - deCrease amounted to 1,155
averaging a 12-month calving !lounds less 'llilk per year and
interval, you are getting the repre$ented · a reduction in
highest net return, says · income of $67 per cow because
Wallace · Taylor, Extension of decreased milk sales,"
, Dairyman at The Ohio State Taylor explains.
"
SJory
~ University. Delayed conNovember, December,
~ ·ception, however, results in January and February are the .,
RY HOBART WilSON, JR.
reduced hnilk sales and fewer heavy breeding months and
available
for about 50 percent of all cows are - .
ElSEWHERE in today's combination Tribune-sunday '
OTHER stories rating the "top 12" include,: Hanna Coal calves
Times-sentinel is a chronological report on many of the year's
Company's announcement on March 23 that it wOUld begin strip replacements or sale, he says. bred during this period. So, the
top news stories in Gallia County.
mine operations in Gallia County; Vinton Bank Robbery (second In the long run, it means in- thing each dairyman can do to
in four years) on May 18; Death of Ally. Henry Cherrington, 85, creased treatnient costs and improve the calving Interval is
DEPE;!'IDING on what section of today's paper you are
on May 2; Gallia County Junior Fair (Aug. U) ; River the culling of infertile cows keep a breeding inventory of
readin g, it'~end of another calendar year, or the beginning of
Recreation Fe~! (July 2-4); Purchas,e of Ri~rby as per- · with. a , ~-~~I,,. result of less in- his herd . A simple, but complete and permanent, breeding
a prosperous (hopefully ) and happy ileiv year.
manent-home for French Art Colony, climaxing several months' come.
Inarecentstudyon402herds and calving record system for
effort to raise $77,500 for project (Oct. 29); Annual Southeastern with over 18,000 cows, Taylor each animal in the herd shoUld
DURING the past decade, Dateline has, at the end of the
Ohio Golf Association Tournament, held on the local links (June . says the average calving in- be set up.
calendar year, selected Gallia's top 12 news stories.
25, 26,27); · Project Pride, involving numerous residents for terval was 13.2 months. "This
If you do not have a records
Gallia's biggest story of 1971, a tragic one, occurred on
beautification of community and Project Freedom, an attempt to is not too bad," he says, "but sys.tem, county Extension
Sunday, April 25. Six persons perished in a fire at the Bert Yost
help free American prisoners of war in North Vietham (January some of the herds averaged personnel wiii provide
Gallipolis, Ohio
home, located on Poplar Church Road in Cheshire Twp.
through May); Stabbing death of C. 1;. Clagg (July I) ; Robbery
of Medical Plaza and Quaker State Service Center (Oct. 14 ).
KILLED in GaUia 's second worst fire involving loss of life
were Mrs. Lcuella Yost, 52; Bert Yost, 55; Bob Yost, 24; Thelma
AS we close out the old year and prepare for 1972, we would
Yost, 18; Jeff Dobbins, 13, and Paul Kent, Jr., 14. The lone surlike to wish each individual a Happy New Year!
vivor of the 8a. m. blaze which completely leveled the two4ory,
seven-room wooden structure eight months ago was Cecil Yost,
TWNETY YEARS ago, from the files of the Daily Tribune and
22. Gallia's worst fire involving loss of life took place on April 7,
weekly Gallia Times ... Mr. and Mrs. D. K. Wilson, Buffalo, W.
!931. James White and seven of his children died in a blaze at
Va ., pay last toll to cross Silver Bridge. Clyde Mitchell last
Swan Creek.
Gallipolitan to pay toil as West VirginiiHtees Ohio River span.
Dr . Olarles E. Holzer, Sr., cut ribbon during special ceremony
SECOND top news story during 1971 was the March 10 anconducted in 7(klegree temperature ... Harry M. Wilcox to head
nouncement by Ohio Power that it would build a $488 million
GaJlii..County Commissioners in 1952 ... Pomeroy trips GAHS 41power plant (Gavin) in the Cheshire area. ·
39'1fii SEOAL cage contest.
·

·. Management.Key to :Farm ·Profits·
'

.

'

I

"

(

Gallia

-News

in 1971

1968 ·Firebird- ~ .

'

'

'40Q' 2 dr .. hdtp ., V-8, 4-spd .. p.-st., p--tir.,
.-··
sharp.

News Notes

. PICKUP 1972 .
Truck durability!
Truck chassis!
Truck ower!
Truck re 1a 1ljty!

Want a pickup truck? Get
the. one that has truck built
parts! The only one. Then
choose from truck-built engines-,-hlgherpowered engines from standard s ix up
to big V-392. Truck-built options .
include power steering, automatic
transmission, all-wheel drive, ai r
conditioning and stereo. Nan&gt; ·
your needs. Name ,your deal. ·
Call us now!

•
•
•
•

More power
Double-Wall Boxes
Optional dlac ·brakes
Optional rear anti-skid
brake systami
• New_ventilating systems
• Biggest choice of rear
axle ratings

INTERNATIONA('72 KEEPS IT HAPPENIN61.

Meigs Equipment CO. ~r ·
THIRD ST.

992-2176

POMEROY

Mr. and Mrs. John Newell
and sons, Columbus, and
Elmer Newell, Philadelphia,
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Hobart NeweU and
Sheila.
Mrs. Susan Hibbs, Greg and
Mary, and Mrs. Mary Reed
were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ross Cleland and Larry
on Friday evening .
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil WQOd,
Springfield, spent Saturday
night and Sunday with Mrs.
Letha Wood .
. Mrs. Opal Eichinger and .
chlldren spent Saturday night
and SUnday with Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Eichinger, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs.Daniel Toban·
and chlldfen, Mr. and Mrs.
John Ginther and sons, Mr. and
Mrs. Maxon and Mrs. selam
Call were Wednesday evening
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Thomas.
·Christmas dinner guests of
Mrs. ,Thoqtas Weber were Mr.
and Mrs. John Sayre, Mr. and
, Mrs . Daniel Toban and chUdren, Carl Thomas Offut
and Mrs. Cleo Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Warden Ours
spent several days with Mr.
and Mrs. Ri~hard Gaul since
they have been released from
the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Purley Karr
left Monday to spend the next .
few months in Florida.· Tiley
were accompanied by their
grandsons, Ray and ROger
Karr, who 'will return home the
last of the week.
Ou-istmas dinner ·guests of
Mr,and Mrs. Roy Christy wer~
-~il,aDonna Kay Matlack, Mrs.
·Letha Wood, MR. Fre1.:a MIUer .
and Miss l.enora Betzln~ .

1968
Rambler.
s1495
Smitlf Auto ·s.s
1966 Plymouth s1095
American '440' station wagon,
automali'c, economy is here.

six

cyl.,

.i

Fury 1114 d~ - V•8, r:tlite, p.-steer i'ng, sharp·
.special this week .
-.
·

1969 - Rambler

s169S

American 2·Dr., six cyl., std . shift, less than
· 25,000 miles.

See Einerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,

.

Wi!llace Amberget, Dick Rawlings . .
.

.

I

-.

J.

-

.

•

..

1911 ~IUAC COUPE DeVILLE ••.•• ,•• '6100
, Tawny beige .finish, brown vinyl top, ,matching leather
ln1-, full power equipment, Climate· .Control air. conditioning, AM-FM radio, ~1 I&gt;'-''" " " new Cad illac lr~ de . '
.

'

. l970
•• 5100
- CADILlAC COUPE DeVILLE ••••••••
)

..

2oo· Gallo.ns No•. 1
Landmark Fuel 011
W~th . Any · slegle-r Fuel OJI Haa-~er
.

.

Through -Dec. 31~ 1971

POMEROY LANDMARK
992-2181

.

c.lse,, Manager,

. Ph.
· Setving Miias, GaNia and Mlson Counties
·store Open Mon.~ TI1 .6, Station Open 24 HOurs

.

12' '-14' · 24~ · WIDE

Tawny beige fini sh, brown vinyl top, beige interior, full
power equipment, Cl imate Control ,a ir condition ing.
•

MILLER

69 CADILlAC SEDAN DeVILLE .. .-••••••••••• 13900

MOBILE ti»MES

Gold melalllcfinlsh, green interior. full power equipment,
tilt &amp; telescope wheel , Climate Control air conditioning,
Real nice one.

ll!rs.J~sTuckerandslx

of Colotado, . and
V(. Wolfe .in service.
f'rseas
'
I

Two In One

. You Can luy· at Lanclmark-Ev•ryone Canl ·

Wllson was the
pre~ldent to simul·
defeat two other
election.
Howard

5!1arp. ·

Gold llnlsh with matching interlor.- full power equ ipment.
tilt &amp; telescope wheel, .. CIIma)e Control air conditioning.

KARRcadillac
&amp; VANZANDT
: Old$moblle
Open Eves. Til 6-Til s P.M. Sat. .•,
m-5342
OMAC Financing Avollobte
Po~ei!OY
"Yoo'll Ll~e Our Qu_aii!Y Way o~ Doing Business : ~

•

68 Pontiac Catalina4 Dr. sedan, p. steering, p. brakes, radio &amp;

automatic trilnsmission , white finish, mat .
· interior, w-S·W tii-~ .. One owner. A real sharp ·

.'

"''

';,

'

•1695,
I

WOOD MOTOR ·sALES
Eastern Ave.

_,

·'

'

miles. ,;;,.,. :,.

- Super Sport, auto., 2 dr ., vinyl lop.

67 Mercury...........:........ $1095

1969 PONTIAC'- FIREBIRD

Monte} ey 4 dr., air conditioning.

Auto., P.S., P. B., loca,l doctor's trade.

·66 Ford............................. sags

•2295
••••••••••

'

~~ BUI~

ELECTRA 4 DR. .

Ga llipo!i'S, Ohio

.•

.

Air cond., dark blue, 72 Elecjra trade . .,,.,..,.,,.-. ..........
. -.

·

--

2295

SMALL DOWN PAYMENT UP TO
36 MONTHS TO PAY

Chester

@ Y~-End ci~rance (,J

·v.

Sale TRUCKS

p

BUICK ,;~.•• :·."; ~!..."~-...,.;......

New
Year Off

with gold interior. Only 30,387 miles on it. Priced for quick
sale,

NORTII
• 7543

1

.93
.AQ984
•sa

'1970.'PONTIAC ............. ..'2895
CataJina 4 dr. sed .. green with white top, with matching_
green interior. Power steering, power brakes, factory air
&amp; a local one Ol.)'ner car. Must see this one to appreclale lt.

WEST
.K9
.QJlO
•J762
... J 8 4 2

.

1969
OLDS
......................
s3295
98 Lux. Sed ., light green with black vinyl top. This car is

EAST
.Q1062
.K8762

•s

4Q 109,

.AJS

•As'4
• K103
... AK76
Both wlner~ ble
Wesl I'lorlh Eaat South

1967
PONTIAC.
...............
s1195
Catalina dr. HTs. We hav'e two of these. both one·local

Pass

Pass

2

,

1•
Pass
3 N.T. Pass

...
2N.T.
.~

Pass

Pass

owners, very low mileages. one is while on blue, both cars
are·ln excettenl shape. Priced to sell

Opening lead- • Q
•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Since everyone is apt to be
tired
on New Year's dar., we
Station Wagon, one local owner, makes a real nice second
will
start
the year wtth a
~ar. Drive this one and get 35 miles _to the gallon.
simple
hand
. South is too
,,
strong ·for a . one no-trump
opening anjl too weak for a
two no-trump, so he opens
one
club with hls strong fourGataxle 500 2dr'. HT, aulo.,.power steering. power brakes,
card suit.
~ radio. This car only has 41 ,876 on it. How's that for a low
mileage 65 model . Thl• is a one local own~r, be glad Ia
North canJ'ust scrape up a
give you his na_me.
one diamon response ·with
hls six high-&lt;:ard points, but
Is delightelloito go from two
no.;trump ID game. It looks
as if his flve-&lt;:ard suit , will
develop., It will if South is
Phone 992-2174
500 E. Main St.
alert, but wiD fall by · the
· Pomeroy
\
wayside If he,isn't.
Come in and see Bill Nelson, Ron Smilh 1 Ceward Calvert,
This time it is unimportant
or Ed Bartels.
.
.
whether South takes the first
We are open every evening till7 p.lt). and on Sat. tills p.m.
heart 'or ducks, but general
Service is open on -Sat. till t2.noon.
good ' technique would be to
We Service WhatVVe Sell
hold off until the third lead.
..,;_ _ _ _ _ 0 ur Wiior d 1SS!sOu
· r Bond_ _""!'_ _ _,
Now.it is up to South to at..
111111111111 111111 111111111111111
tack diamonds and he should
lead to dummy's ace-queen
'
~.·
-! ~ s a starter. Again this is un1 necessary but just a matter
I of keeping in good practice.
: If South leads the three
spot he will be starting the

'1967 OPEL ....................... $895

1965 FORD....................... $895

..•
.
Pom.roy
'@
-Motor Co.

'Loaded with all Cadillac extras . .

·70 OLDSMOBILE 98

SOUTII (D)

just like new, only 34.~7 miles on It: Has factory air, aulo.
Climate ControL power windows, power seats, !Itt wheel ,
trun~ea se. This car i~ show~oom clean, Price'&lt;! for sale
today, "'( .
-

••

~70 CADILI..AC

H. .Cutl~ss ,
..owner car, has facfory air. power steering, power brakes.

Smith Nelson Motors Inc.

car.

..

68 Chevrqlet.. ........_..~····· s1295

4

Dr. sedan, loaded with extras.

70 MAVERICK
6 Cv.l.. standard.

70 BUICK ELECTRA 225
4 Dr., H.T., yellow with black vinyl top, loaded
with extras.

66 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS
4 Dr., H. T., extra sharp.

69 FORD GALAXIE 500
4 Dr., H.T., V-l P.S., P.B.dadory air, vinyl
top.

70 CHEVROLET Pickup Truck
Three-quarter, long wide bed, V-8, 4 '!peed.

~!g- ~E~~~:~p~~~kup Truck
\

66
CHEVROLET
Pickup
Truck
Long narrow bed.
•

64 CHEVROLET ~i~kup Truck
70 HORNET
6 CyL, standard, 4 dr. sedan .

251 ,, .

· ~ -\ OF
. -. . · ~ qUALITY
.v '

. .

1970 GAMAR'II Cl\~.
.
U09)
.Less than n,'ooo miles ·&amp; appearance of 72 model. Rally
Sport equlpged, Classic copper with sandalwood lnterJor,
tinted glass1 factorr. air oondltloned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler. lurbo hydromatic; power steering &amp;
brakes, 3SO cu~· in . V-8 engine. Really Sharp.
1970 CAMARO COUff£
'
·
$2795
350 V-8 engine. automatic, power sleerlng console,
bea~t l ful dark green, finished.with green·vinyl roof. Less
tha~ 12,000 miles by local owner, radif• new w-w tires. ~
sharp model priced to please.
.
1968 DODGE CORONE:r
.
$1495
4 Dr . H.T. Cpe. local! owner car &amp;shows lhebest of care.
V-8, automptlc, p. sieerlng , radio. gOQd tires. dark blue
f ini sh with vinyl interior .. Prlr"Prl
to.,. move.
.
~-,

Pomeroy Mitor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 -P.M•.
--f'~l!ltOY, OHIO
._
'

I

. . 4\DR:

.1970
ol.Ds
...
·
..
:
...............
~2995 Right
.2 Dr . T.,
gold with black vinyl top. This Is a one

'

.'j ..

1

•

. ' •-29
•2995
. '
' · .
26·9 5
•249 5

•••••••••••

:~t~~p~~ ~~!.~!~!~~.000

2 Dr._

eq~lpmen1, Climate Control air c~ndlti oning .

We Finance!

23.000 miles, like

Factory· ak . vlnyl top. Sharp!., ... ,,.,',,.,,., ..........., •• ;.,

"'

Limited 4' dr. H.T. , while with 'green -vl"yl to~. This was
my wif.!ls car, th is cal has everything anybody could w'anl
on a car. Sticker price was $7481.76. Price~ now for only

Black finish .with green leather Interior, full power

We Senice!

1970 OLDS

69 Chevrolet.. .................s1395

.t.ft.~
J"l9.'1
·I '

'

S~arp.,,. ....

~Fact .. Air cond., bucket seats, 2~,000 miles.

·67-Buick........................s1295
Skylark, 2 dr,. H. T.

·2··995..

l970 SKYLARK CUST. CONV.

RIGGS BROS., 'INC.
. USEP~!:~RS

1971 CADILlAC COUPE' DeVILLE •••••••••• ''6100

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Stein
baby of Morgantown, W.
Don Aten and James
Jr., Sl touia, Mo., Bill
.of Detroit, Mich., Mr.
Mrs. VIctor Wolfe, Vicki
Kevin, ai1d Kenny -'l'hels!J,
1ttnnov Wolfe and Mickey of
. Mni. WCIIfe'sdaughter,
Glenn Sivll,l'tz, called
ri!~'~:~~~~Day.ft:om Dixon, ill.
~ ',
dinner guests of
and Mrs. Clyde Tllcker
Mr: and Mrs. f'red Miller
chUdren, Fl-ed Jr, Bobby,
Debbi, Charles Hill,
and Mrs. Glenn Tucker
Randy, Rod and,Ailen, Mr.
Mrs. Robert Tucker and
't:~: Mark, Kim, Tammy,
.1
Trudy and Mellssa,
Anna Wolfe anii.'Joey and
Danny; Chris and , Micky
•:rueter, R11111eU Tucker, ~:
Connie Bush, GIU, Terry and
emcty -Tucker, Mr. and Mrs.
·JlalUeThorton 'of Robertsburg,
Va. Ail of the 'll!cker
··ntll,es children were present
Mr. and Mrs. WoOdrow
IW ano Jason of V11'81nla, Mr.

air ~llnd .. vinyl top,

2 Dr. H. T., air condition. li'ke new.

BWCK

I

SKYlARK ·

'

PONTIAC

•• •

\

SEE: RAY RIGGS, AL ZEIGLER

_,,

'

Grove

,..:•
'

located on S. Rt. 7

· CHECK
US
-

Pbiinit "l-7004
Daily h to 9,.Sundty 1to6 ·
Mlddltport, Ohio __
Dell~ery, FrN Sell-Up

.

Pick-up Truck, real nice 112 ton, long wide bed.

'

Wt ·sell anything -too: '
anjbody. Bring your
Items to KnoHs Community Auction Barn.
earn.r Third &amp; Olive. ,
For appointment uti
446-2917. Salt Ivery
Slturdoy Evening · at

· .'KEilH 'GOBLE
MOBILE'
HOMES
- •t .. - .

'···

'

'

· ·

Soldn~forS7SOO. OO . .............

1~700
l.D$.
CUTLASS . . "
Supreme,2·Dr. Hdtp, air cond .. red, black, vinyl top.

.

61 Ford .............................ss95

992·2151 OR 992·2152 MIDDLEPORT

L

.·-

,.,

,· 4 br , H.T., vinyl top, turquoi.se. :

.

DEPENDABLE CITY

PUBLIC·
NQTICE

\"
\ For • ...:. "' ..
Price, Quality, Snirigs .

.. . ...

Ail Buick Exlrasptus60_-40seat.

'•

Pickup Truck, 112 ton, 6 cyl.

·RAWLINGS

• KING ..
eFLAMINGQ ·- 1
MOBILE
... . . HOMES .

-We Install!

.·.

·
.
.
~55_00.

1971BUICK ELECJ'RA UMITED 4 HDTP. - .

~kylark, 4 dr.

Conv .• V-8, automatic, p.-st ., clean &amp; ready ·

'Eastern Ave.

.

1968 Mustang

68 CADILlAC SEDAN DeVILLE •••••••••••• '2900

Jack W.

· At 'Riggi' BrOs.
.. &amp;9 ~Ford-.triL. ...:..........~ ..•lB95 '

68 Buick ...:.. :................}1695

Caprice4 Dr. HTr V-8, automatic, p.-st., p. -br.;
air cond. Very nice. ·

1220 Wuhlngton Blvd.
llttpre, Ohio

,

"

f967 Chevrolet.. .s1~95

··················~·

Chester

'

START OUT lHE NEW YEAR RIGHT.
DEAl WITH THE MAN YOUR
NEIGHBORS DEALT WITH. :

SMITH '

- .·.• $3695
7! Ford LTD••••••••••••••••••

e LIBERTY

The new Siegler
gives you
the
amazing comfort of
warm floor heating
- and only Siegler
--- has the patented
Inner Heater Tubes
and built-in blower
system that stops
the waste of heat on
the ceiling and out
the chimney. Drop
in and let us prove
how Siegler can
give you Super
Floor
Heating
comfort as it pays ··
for Itself with the
,,. It ..~.)

'

"DOC"·

. I

~

--Siegler Fuel ·01t ~Heaters

''

,_~_Buy . ,A~ Good.Used ·Car

...

recommends needed proBuckley
said .
jects,"
"We -- hope to build on
!his _,Q~i £ jramework and
· eKpan'il the 'inventory into
further studies indicating the
steps necessary to develop a
viable recreation industry."
Walker, a PHS graduate, is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Walker, 1804 Franklin Avenue
and Balmer! is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Balmer!, Jr .,
2228 Grandview Avenue. He
attended Notre Dame High
School.
OVRDC coordinates planning, funding and technical
services in Scioto, Adams,
Pike, Lawrence, Jackson,
Ross, Vinton, Brown, Clermont, Highland and Gallia
Gounties.

'

-

'
am( should be followed by the
development of policies and
actual facilities to enhance
these _c.!l__ll1!llUllity assets which
are' attractive to industry'" the
Director noted. "Data in the
report can also be used in the
preparation of promotional
material to attract industry to
the area.
"The purpose of Balmert's
recreation report was ' to
determine if there was much
potential within the District to
build a dynamic tourism industry . The study discusses the
economic returns of tourism;
investigates the types of
recreational facilities the
tourist most often · seeks; inventories the recreation and
tourist attractions in each of
the eleven counties in the
District and based on this information , evaluates the
Di strict's potential and

'·

Start The NeW Y~r Off
Wah A_BiJng

~good~~=

'

Two Portsmouth college program is to interest young
students received special people -in government service
recognition this . ~e~k , wl)en and provide a n!!f(led research
jWtey were awarded certificates j iTG tq ~ C~iPn - ~
J wiJ!I"!Ijlielill':af.jliffi!lttri•'"'ftr'"· acO:.JO~rn had a par 'cwar
the successful completion of a research area to study and on
summer internship program which to report.
with the Ohio Valley Regional
Walker's study was entitled
_ Development Commission.
"A G'uide to Industrial · Sites
Donald Buckley, Executive Along The Corridors of the
Director of O.V.R.D.C., said ·Appalachian Highway within
Robert Walker, a senior at the Ohio Valley Development
Ohio State University, and Dan District" while Balmert's
Balmer!, a junior at the report concerned ~' The
University of Notre Dame were Potential of Recreation as an
honored for the preparation of Industry in the Ohio Valley
"outstanding" reports com- Development District."
pleled during the 12 week
Buckley said the inventory of
program.
industrial sites prepared by
"We are proud of the reports Walker lists 24 sites-located
these studenl.s prepared since along Appalachian Highway ·
only seven of forty-nine such corridors in Scioto, Pike, Ross,
projects were awarded the Adams, Brown, Clermont and
special Distinction" lionor, Jackson Counties.
Buckley said.
"The inventory is the first
Objective of the intern step in attracting new industry

.

•

t'i.lulwwd

CENTRAl .SOYA OF OHIO

Students' Work Is Recognized

.

1972

in !972

Dateline

1.•

.

-

l

Stnp

Sl for JAC05\' MOOE,RH book

I fo ; 'Win at 8ridgt," (c/o litis newJ·
poper/, P.O. Bo• .419, Radio Citr

·station, New York , N.Y. 10019.

play 'the 10 the fiFst time.

EXPANSION SET
TOLEDo (UPI) - A fiveyear, $399 million expansion
The bidding has been: "- : program to help meet tlie
West North Eaal South . growing demand for electric
3•
Pass
? · service in nortliwestern Ohio
'You, SouliJ, hold:
·•
was announced Thursday · by
• • AQt65 .KH3 ... K QU the Toledo Edison ,Co.
What do you do now?
President John K. Davis said
A- P-. You have • lot of the company would double the '
nice hl«h;cat'ds but !hey •ron't size of its investments dllring
&amp;•inr to be mu&lt;h help OptJOIIito ·the five-year period. The total
a bad hand with a loll( spoode
suit
includes a record single-year
TODA Y'S QUESTION
protiram of $7, mi~ion for 1~72.

New . Year ·off very badly.
Nothinl: bad will happen on
the first trick but when he
-leads back to his king East
will show ·out and all of a
Sudden tl)a~ 10 spot will took
like a blocking hack on the
Vikings.
. When he leads it West will
play low and if he win~ in
dummy th&lt; jack will be Ana in •your p a r 'l n e r opens
h r ll -e t\pa:dt.-s. This time you
high; if he duoks duJ7~mY lhold
: '•
will be oead .
.
A
z
•Q 9 87 6
Harrison was
•
54 •Q 10 • theBenjalflin
~;n m]\' $ . ~ · 11.h who wants a
•Q
last
U.S.
president to '
........... • ............ _~ .
happy N~w Y••ar lw l better . Whn,!. do you do now '!

•

�.

,,
•

; , - 'fhe Sunday Times -sentinel, Sunday, Jan: 2.1972 _

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· guidellnes and infonnatlon for · periOds and}or heifen not yet
setting up one on Yrour farm. In the' inllklng beni, _says
The Utah system, now being Taylor: Work Ia underway to
used in the Ohio DHIA build llils Into the jiogtain.
program, auwmallcally
So start .now c~ting the
provides all the producti~n calving Interval of your ]lerd:s
bei,ng a goal.
the break-even· point between ment.
By C. E. BLAKESLEE
·~
eluding parl()r ahd all equip- over ·J6 months, and 'the records a dairyman peeds dairY cow~. The effort will pay
IDlunty E~t..Agi., Agri.
It is also very important that medium . and
highly
Michigan State University men!, was $130 and $135 for the production level of these herds except for recording 'heat off in more net returns.
POMEROY - Management ·expenses for •buildings , - mechanized forage systems has also come uo with some double three, . four ·and five show this to be a cosUy prac• _and management dec isio ns equipment , and operating • was 90 cows with labor charged conclusions in · regard · to herringbone, the double. three Uce. •
continue to be the most im- needs be carefully controlled . at $2. If this labor clu!rge was milking parlor efficiencies that walk-through, and the double · · "We can iook at two aspects .
portant determiners of ne' A complete record system is $4 per hour the ~reak~ven found !hat herringbone parlors 'three l;llld· four ~de openblj! · of the problem," he says."One
income on dairy farms.
important to pinpoint trouble point was 60 cows.
.are theJIIost efficient and side parlors, With \he double eight , is the effect on milk producUon ·
areas
in advance. Good · It is expec_teJ! that dairy opening parlors are the least herringbone tpe Investment ljlld the other IS the reduction in
Studies reported on Michigan
dairy . farms ril~ntly indicate managerial skill is arso hlg hly fa rms wilt c'ontinue to increase efficient 1n terms of cows was 'about $100 per cow. The income a8soclaled with a delay
in size due to economic and . milked per-man hour. Milking . Michigan researchers con- in conception, In a recent S\Udy
impor tant.
New 'in Farming
Increased mechanization technological forces. Even ·in rates ranged from 35 to 44 cows eluded that the best parlor for in Michigan involving 4,:!85
becomes more attractive to Meigs' County we have seen per man-hQur for herringbone _dairymen mllklng up to 130 !iolstein cow~ in 944 herdS v~~
0
that profil.s are related directly dairymen as labor costs rise. II ... this trend toward more parlors; from 26 to.28 per man- cows is the double four a five-year period, the "average
to certain factors such as high should be pointed out however prOduction per dairy farm. hour for side opening parlors. herringbone. For ovf." 120 cows daily milk production declined
output per cow - 13,000 pounds that mechanization for This hasbeenmotivaledbythe · This of course asswned skilled the double eight heriingbone is slighUy as length of calving
and up. High output per man is mechanization 's sake is not a need to offset higher labor and workers in both cases.
best.
increased from 12 to 13 months.
another important fac tor with profi t making item. In the capital requirements as \vel! as
Another dairY management But an incre~se to 15 months
500,000 pounds and up per man Michigan study it showed that to· make use of better equipInvestment per cow, in- problem which is difficult to resulted in an' averag~
¥
lick but most dairymen keep deerease .of over three pounds
working at It Is the calving per day. This three-pound
interval. U yow; da!ry cows are - deCrease amounted to 1,155
averaging a 12-month calving !lounds less 'llilk per year and
interval, you are getting the repre$ented · a reduction in
highest net return, says · income of $67 per cow because
Wallace · Taylor, Extension of decreased milk sales,"
, Dairyman at The Ohio State Taylor explains.
"
SJory
~ University. Delayed conNovember, December,
~ ·ception, however, results in January and February are the .,
RY HOBART WilSON, JR.
reduced hnilk sales and fewer heavy breeding months and
available
for about 50 percent of all cows are - .
ElSEWHERE in today's combination Tribune-sunday '
OTHER stories rating the "top 12" include,: Hanna Coal calves
Times-sentinel is a chronological report on many of the year's
Company's announcement on March 23 that it wOUld begin strip replacements or sale, he says. bred during this period. So, the
top news stories in Gallia County.
mine operations in Gallia County; Vinton Bank Robbery (second In the long run, it means in- thing each dairyman can do to
in four years) on May 18; Death of Ally. Henry Cherrington, 85, creased treatnient costs and improve the calving Interval is
DEPE;!'IDING on what section of today's paper you are
on May 2; Gallia County Junior Fair (Aug. U) ; River the culling of infertile cows keep a breeding inventory of
readin g, it'~end of another calendar year, or the beginning of
Recreation Fe~! (July 2-4); Purchas,e of Ri~rby as per- · with. a , ~-~~I,,. result of less in- his herd . A simple, but complete and permanent, breeding
a prosperous (hopefully ) and happy ileiv year.
manent-home for French Art Colony, climaxing several months' come.
Inarecentstudyon402herds and calving record system for
effort to raise $77,500 for project (Oct. 29); Annual Southeastern with over 18,000 cows, Taylor each animal in the herd shoUld
DURING the past decade, Dateline has, at the end of the
Ohio Golf Association Tournament, held on the local links (June . says the average calving in- be set up.
calendar year, selected Gallia's top 12 news stories.
25, 26,27); · Project Pride, involving numerous residents for terval was 13.2 months. "This
If you do not have a records
Gallia's biggest story of 1971, a tragic one, occurred on
beautification of community and Project Freedom, an attempt to is not too bad," he says, "but sys.tem, county Extension
Sunday, April 25. Six persons perished in a fire at the Bert Yost
help free American prisoners of war in North Vietham (January some of the herds averaged personnel wiii provide
Gallipolis, Ohio
home, located on Poplar Church Road in Cheshire Twp.
through May); Stabbing death of C. 1;. Clagg (July I) ; Robbery
of Medical Plaza and Quaker State Service Center (Oct. 14 ).
KILLED in GaUia 's second worst fire involving loss of life
were Mrs. Lcuella Yost, 52; Bert Yost, 55; Bob Yost, 24; Thelma
AS we close out the old year and prepare for 1972, we would
Yost, 18; Jeff Dobbins, 13, and Paul Kent, Jr., 14. The lone surlike to wish each individual a Happy New Year!
vivor of the 8a. m. blaze which completely leveled the two4ory,
seven-room wooden structure eight months ago was Cecil Yost,
TWNETY YEARS ago, from the files of the Daily Tribune and
22. Gallia's worst fire involving loss of life took place on April 7,
weekly Gallia Times ... Mr. and Mrs. D. K. Wilson, Buffalo, W.
!931. James White and seven of his children died in a blaze at
Va ., pay last toll to cross Silver Bridge. Clyde Mitchell last
Swan Creek.
Gallipolitan to pay toil as West VirginiiHtees Ohio River span.
Dr . Olarles E. Holzer, Sr., cut ribbon during special ceremony
SECOND top news story during 1971 was the March 10 anconducted in 7(klegree temperature ... Harry M. Wilcox to head
nouncement by Ohio Power that it would build a $488 million
GaJlii..County Commissioners in 1952 ... Pomeroy trips GAHS 41power plant (Gavin) in the Cheshire area. ·
39'1fii SEOAL cage contest.
·

·. Management.Key to :Farm ·Profits·
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(

Gallia

-News

in 1971

1968 ·Firebird- ~ .

'

'

'40Q' 2 dr .. hdtp ., V-8, 4-spd .. p.-st., p--tir.,
.-··
sharp.

News Notes

. PICKUP 1972 .
Truck durability!
Truck chassis!
Truck ower!
Truck re 1a 1ljty!

Want a pickup truck? Get
the. one that has truck built
parts! The only one. Then
choose from truck-built engines-,-hlgherpowered engines from standard s ix up
to big V-392. Truck-built options .
include power steering, automatic
transmission, all-wheel drive, ai r
conditioning and stereo. Nan&gt; ·
your needs. Name ,your deal. ·
Call us now!

•
•
•
•

More power
Double-Wall Boxes
Optional dlac ·brakes
Optional rear anti-skid
brake systami
• New_ventilating systems
• Biggest choice of rear
axle ratings

INTERNATIONA('72 KEEPS IT HAPPENIN61.

Meigs Equipment CO. ~r ·
THIRD ST.

992-2176

POMEROY

Mr. and Mrs. John Newell
and sons, Columbus, and
Elmer Newell, Philadelphia,
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Hobart NeweU and
Sheila.
Mrs. Susan Hibbs, Greg and
Mary, and Mrs. Mary Reed
were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ross Cleland and Larry
on Friday evening .
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil WQOd,
Springfield, spent Saturday
night and Sunday with Mrs.
Letha Wood .
. Mrs. Opal Eichinger and .
chlldren spent Saturday night
and SUnday with Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Eichinger, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs.Daniel Toban·
and chlldfen, Mr. and Mrs.
John Ginther and sons, Mr. and
Mrs. Maxon and Mrs. selam
Call were Wednesday evening
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Thomas.
·Christmas dinner guests of
Mrs. ,Thoqtas Weber were Mr.
and Mrs. John Sayre, Mr. and
, Mrs . Daniel Toban and chUdren, Carl Thomas Offut
and Mrs. Cleo Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Warden Ours
spent several days with Mr.
and Mrs. Ri~hard Gaul since
they have been released from
the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Purley Karr
left Monday to spend the next .
few months in Florida.· Tiley
were accompanied by their
grandsons, Ray and ROger
Karr, who 'will return home the
last of the week.
Ou-istmas dinner ·guests of
Mr,and Mrs. Roy Christy wer~
-~il,aDonna Kay Matlack, Mrs.
·Letha Wood, MR. Fre1.:a MIUer .
and Miss l.enora Betzln~ .

1968
Rambler.
s1495
Smitlf Auto ·s.s
1966 Plymouth s1095
American '440' station wagon,
automali'c, economy is here.

six

cyl.,

.i

Fury 1114 d~ - V•8, r:tlite, p.-steer i'ng, sharp·
.special this week .
-.
·

1969 - Rambler

s169S

American 2·Dr., six cyl., std . shift, less than
· 25,000 miles.

See Einerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,

.

Wi!llace Amberget, Dick Rawlings . .
.

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J.

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•

..

1911 ~IUAC COUPE DeVILLE ••.•• ,•• '6100
, Tawny beige .finish, brown vinyl top, ,matching leather
ln1-, full power equipment, Climate· .Control air. conditioning, AM-FM radio, ~1 I&gt;'-''" " " new Cad illac lr~ de . '
.

'

. l970
•• 5100
- CADILlAC COUPE DeVILLE ••••••••
)

..

2oo· Gallo.ns No•. 1
Landmark Fuel 011
W~th . Any · slegle-r Fuel OJI Haa-~er
.

.

Through -Dec. 31~ 1971

POMEROY LANDMARK
992-2181

.

c.lse,, Manager,

. Ph.
· Setving Miias, GaNia and Mlson Counties
·store Open Mon.~ TI1 .6, Station Open 24 HOurs

.

12' '-14' · 24~ · WIDE

Tawny beige fini sh, brown vinyl top, beige interior, full
power equipment, Cl imate Control ,a ir condition ing.
•

MILLER

69 CADILlAC SEDAN DeVILLE .. .-••••••••••• 13900

MOBILE ti»MES

Gold melalllcfinlsh, green interior. full power equipment,
tilt &amp; telescope wheel , Climate Control air conditioning,
Real nice one.

ll!rs.J~sTuckerandslx

of Colotado, . and
V(. Wolfe .in service.
f'rseas
'
I

Two In One

. You Can luy· at Lanclmark-Ev•ryone Canl ·

Wllson was the
pre~ldent to simul·
defeat two other
election.
Howard

5!1arp. ·

Gold llnlsh with matching interlor.- full power equ ipment.
tilt &amp; telescope wheel, .. CIIma)e Control air conditioning.

KARRcadillac
&amp; VANZANDT
: Old$moblle
Open Eves. Til 6-Til s P.M. Sat. .•,
m-5342
OMAC Financing Avollobte
Po~ei!OY
"Yoo'll Ll~e Our Qu_aii!Y Way o~ Doing Business : ~

•

68 Pontiac Catalina4 Dr. sedan, p. steering, p. brakes, radio &amp;

automatic trilnsmission , white finish, mat .
· interior, w-S·W tii-~ .. One owner. A real sharp ·

.'

"''

';,

'

•1695,
I

WOOD MOTOR ·sALES
Eastern Ave.

_,

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'

miles. ,;;,.,. :,.

- Super Sport, auto., 2 dr ., vinyl lop.

67 Mercury...........:........ $1095

1969 PONTIAC'- FIREBIRD

Monte} ey 4 dr., air conditioning.

Auto., P.S., P. B., loca,l doctor's trade.

·66 Ford............................. sags

•2295
••••••••••

'

~~ BUI~

ELECTRA 4 DR. .

Ga llipo!i'S, Ohio

.•

.

Air cond., dark blue, 72 Elecjra trade . .,,.,..,.,,.-. ..........
. -.

·

--

2295

SMALL DOWN PAYMENT UP TO
36 MONTHS TO PAY

Chester

@ Y~-End ci~rance (,J

·v.

Sale TRUCKS

p

BUICK ,;~.•• :·."; ~!..."~-...,.;......

New
Year Off

with gold interior. Only 30,387 miles on it. Priced for quick
sale,

NORTII
• 7543

1

.93
.AQ984
•sa

'1970.'PONTIAC ............. ..'2895
CataJina 4 dr. sed .. green with white top, with matching_
green interior. Power steering, power brakes, factory air
&amp; a local one Ol.)'ner car. Must see this one to appreclale lt.

WEST
.K9
.QJlO
•J762
... J 8 4 2

.

1969
OLDS
......................
s3295
98 Lux. Sed ., light green with black vinyl top. This car is

EAST
.Q1062
.K8762

•s

4Q 109,

.AJS

•As'4
• K103
... AK76
Both wlner~ ble
Wesl I'lorlh Eaat South

1967
PONTIAC.
...............
s1195
Catalina dr. HTs. We hav'e two of these. both one·local

Pass

Pass

2

,

1•
Pass
3 N.T. Pass

...
2N.T.
.~

Pass

Pass

owners, very low mileages. one is while on blue, both cars
are·ln excettenl shape. Priced to sell

Opening lead- • Q
•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Since everyone is apt to be
tired
on New Year's dar., we
Station Wagon, one local owner, makes a real nice second
will
start
the year wtth a
~ar. Drive this one and get 35 miles _to the gallon.
simple
hand
. South is too
,,
strong ·for a . one no-trump
opening anjl too weak for a
two no-trump, so he opens
one
club with hls strong fourGataxle 500 2dr'. HT, aulo.,.power steering. power brakes,
card suit.
~ radio. This car only has 41 ,876 on it. How's that for a low
mileage 65 model . Thl• is a one local own~r, be glad Ia
North canJ'ust scrape up a
give you his na_me.
one diamon response ·with
hls six high-&lt;:ard points, but
Is delightelloito go from two
no.;trump ID game. It looks
as if his flve-&lt;:ard suit , will
develop., It will if South is
Phone 992-2174
500 E. Main St.
alert, but wiD fall by · the
· Pomeroy
\
wayside If he,isn't.
Come in and see Bill Nelson, Ron Smilh 1 Ceward Calvert,
This time it is unimportant
or Ed Bartels.
.
.
whether South takes the first
We are open every evening till7 p.lt). and on Sat. tills p.m.
heart 'or ducks, but general
Service is open on -Sat. till t2.noon.
good ' technique would be to
We Service WhatVVe Sell
hold off until the third lead.
..,;_ _ _ _ _ 0 ur Wiior d 1SS!sOu
· r Bond_ _""!'_ _ _,
Now.it is up to South to at..
111111111111 111111 111111111111111
tack diamonds and he should
lead to dummy's ace-queen
'
~.·
-! ~ s a starter. Again this is un1 necessary but just a matter
I of keeping in good practice.
: If South leads the three
spot he will be starting the

'1967 OPEL ....................... $895

1965 FORD....................... $895

..•
.
Pom.roy
'@
-Motor Co.

'Loaded with all Cadillac extras . .

·70 OLDSMOBILE 98

SOUTII (D)

just like new, only 34.~7 miles on It: Has factory air, aulo.
Climate ControL power windows, power seats, !Itt wheel ,
trun~ea se. This car i~ show~oom clean, Price'&lt;! for sale
today, "'( .
-

••

~70 CADILI..AC

H. .Cutl~ss ,
..owner car, has facfory air. power steering, power brakes.

Smith Nelson Motors Inc.

car.

..

68 Chevrqlet.. ........_..~····· s1295

4

Dr. sedan, loaded with extras.

70 MAVERICK
6 Cv.l.. standard.

70 BUICK ELECTRA 225
4 Dr., H.T., yellow with black vinyl top, loaded
with extras.

66 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS
4 Dr., H. T., extra sharp.

69 FORD GALAXIE 500
4 Dr., H.T., V-l P.S., P.B.dadory air, vinyl
top.

70 CHEVROLET Pickup Truck
Three-quarter, long wide bed, V-8, 4 '!peed.

~!g- ~E~~~:~p~~~kup Truck
\

66
CHEVROLET
Pickup
Truck
Long narrow bed.
•

64 CHEVROLET ~i~kup Truck
70 HORNET
6 CyL, standard, 4 dr. sedan .

251 ,, .

· ~ -\ OF
. -. . · ~ qUALITY
.v '

. .

1970 GAMAR'II Cl\~.
.
U09)
.Less than n,'ooo miles ·&amp; appearance of 72 model. Rally
Sport equlpged, Classic copper with sandalwood lnterJor,
tinted glass1 factorr. air oondltloned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler. lurbo hydromatic; power steering &amp;
brakes, 3SO cu~· in . V-8 engine. Really Sharp.
1970 CAMARO COUff£
'
·
$2795
350 V-8 engine. automatic, power sleerlng console,
bea~t l ful dark green, finished.with green·vinyl roof. Less
tha~ 12,000 miles by local owner, radif• new w-w tires. ~
sharp model priced to please.
.
1968 DODGE CORONE:r
.
$1495
4 Dr . H.T. Cpe. local! owner car &amp;shows lhebest of care.
V-8, automptlc, p. sieerlng , radio. gOQd tires. dark blue
f ini sh with vinyl interior .. Prlr"Prl
to.,. move.
.
~-,

Pomeroy Mitor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 -P.M•.
--f'~l!ltOY, OHIO
._
'

I

. . 4\DR:

.1970
ol.Ds
...
·
..
:
...............
~2995 Right
.2 Dr . T.,
gold with black vinyl top. This Is a one

'

.'j ..

1

•

. ' •-29
•2995
. '
' · .
26·9 5
•249 5

•••••••••••

:~t~~p~~ ~~!.~!~!~~.000

2 Dr._

eq~lpmen1, Climate Control air c~ndlti oning .

We Finance!

23.000 miles, like

Factory· ak . vlnyl top. Sharp!., ... ,,.,',,.,,., ..........., •• ;.,

"'

Limited 4' dr. H.T. , while with 'green -vl"yl to~. This was
my wif.!ls car, th is cal has everything anybody could w'anl
on a car. Sticker price was $7481.76. Price~ now for only

Black finish .with green leather Interior, full power

We Senice!

1970 OLDS

69 Chevrolet.. .................s1395

.t.ft.~
J"l9.'1
·I '

'

S~arp.,,. ....

~Fact .. Air cond., bucket seats, 2~,000 miles.

·67-Buick........................s1295
Skylark, 2 dr,. H. T.

·2··995..

l970 SKYLARK CUST. CONV.

RIGGS BROS., 'INC.
. USEP~!:~RS

1971 CADILlAC COUPE' DeVILLE •••••••••• ''6100

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Stein
baby of Morgantown, W.
Don Aten and James
Jr., Sl touia, Mo., Bill
.of Detroit, Mich., Mr.
Mrs. VIctor Wolfe, Vicki
Kevin, ai1d Kenny -'l'hels!J,
1ttnnov Wolfe and Mickey of
. Mni. WCIIfe'sdaughter,
Glenn Sivll,l'tz, called
ri!~'~:~~~~Day.ft:om Dixon, ill.
~ ',
dinner guests of
and Mrs. Clyde Tllcker
Mr: and Mrs. f'red Miller
chUdren, Fl-ed Jr, Bobby,
Debbi, Charles Hill,
and Mrs. Glenn Tucker
Randy, Rod and,Ailen, Mr.
Mrs. Robert Tucker and
't:~: Mark, Kim, Tammy,
.1
Trudy and Mellssa,
Anna Wolfe anii.'Joey and
Danny; Chris and , Micky
•:rueter, R11111eU Tucker, ~:
Connie Bush, GIU, Terry and
emcty -Tucker, Mr. and Mrs.
·JlalUeThorton 'of Robertsburg,
Va. Ail of the 'll!cker
··ntll,es children were present
Mr. and Mrs. WoOdrow
IW ano Jason of V11'81nla, Mr.

air ~llnd .. vinyl top,

2 Dr. H. T., air condition. li'ke new.

BWCK

I

SKYlARK ·

'

PONTIAC

•• •

\

SEE: RAY RIGGS, AL ZEIGLER

_,,

'

Grove

,..:•
'

located on S. Rt. 7

· CHECK
US
-

Pbiinit "l-7004
Daily h to 9,.Sundty 1to6 ·
Mlddltport, Ohio __
Dell~ery, FrN Sell-Up

.

Pick-up Truck, real nice 112 ton, long wide bed.

'

Wt ·sell anything -too: '
anjbody. Bring your
Items to KnoHs Community Auction Barn.
earn.r Third &amp; Olive. ,
For appointment uti
446-2917. Salt Ivery
Slturdoy Evening · at

· .'KEilH 'GOBLE
MOBILE'
HOMES
- •t .. - .

'···

'

'

· ·

Soldn~forS7SOO. OO . .............

1~700
l.D$.
CUTLASS . . "
Supreme,2·Dr. Hdtp, air cond .. red, black, vinyl top.

.

61 Ford .............................ss95

992·2151 OR 992·2152 MIDDLEPORT

L

.·-

,.,

,· 4 br , H.T., vinyl top, turquoi.se. :

.

DEPENDABLE CITY

PUBLIC·
NQTICE

\"
\ For • ...:. "' ..
Price, Quality, Snirigs .

.. . ...

Ail Buick Exlrasptus60_-40seat.

'•

Pickup Truck, 112 ton, 6 cyl.

·RAWLINGS

• KING ..
eFLAMINGQ ·- 1
MOBILE
... . . HOMES .

-We Install!

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~55_00.

1971BUICK ELECJ'RA UMITED 4 HDTP. - .

~kylark, 4 dr.

Conv .• V-8, automatic, p.-st ., clean &amp; ready ·

'Eastern Ave.

.

1968 Mustang

68 CADILlAC SEDAN DeVILLE •••••••••••• '2900

Jack W.

· At 'Riggi' BrOs.
.. &amp;9 ~Ford-.triL. ...:..........~ ..•lB95 '

68 Buick ...:.. :................}1695

Caprice4 Dr. HTr V-8, automatic, p.-st., p. -br.;
air cond. Very nice. ·

1220 Wuhlngton Blvd.
llttpre, Ohio

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f967 Chevrolet.. .s1~95

··················~·

Chester

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START OUT lHE NEW YEAR RIGHT.
DEAl WITH THE MAN YOUR
NEIGHBORS DEALT WITH. :

SMITH '

- .·.• $3695
7! Ford LTD••••••••••••••••••

e LIBERTY

The new Siegler
gives you
the
amazing comfort of
warm floor heating
- and only Siegler
--- has the patented
Inner Heater Tubes
and built-in blower
system that stops
the waste of heat on
the ceiling and out
the chimney. Drop
in and let us prove
how Siegler can
give you Super
Floor
Heating
comfort as it pays ··
for Itself with the
,,. It ..~.)

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"DOC"·

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--Siegler Fuel ·01t ~Heaters

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recommends needed proBuckley
said .
jects,"
"We -- hope to build on
!his _,Q~i £ jramework and
· eKpan'il the 'inventory into
further studies indicating the
steps necessary to develop a
viable recreation industry."
Walker, a PHS graduate, is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Walker, 1804 Franklin Avenue
and Balmer! is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Balmer!, Jr .,
2228 Grandview Avenue. He
attended Notre Dame High
School.
OVRDC coordinates planning, funding and technical
services in Scioto, Adams,
Pike, Lawrence, Jackson,
Ross, Vinton, Brown, Clermont, Highland and Gallia
Gounties.

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am( should be followed by the
development of policies and
actual facilities to enhance
these _c.!l__ll1!llUllity assets which
are' attractive to industry'" the
Director noted. "Data in the
report can also be used in the
preparation of promotional
material to attract industry to
the area.
"The purpose of Balmert's
recreation report was ' to
determine if there was much
potential within the District to
build a dynamic tourism industry . The study discusses the
economic returns of tourism;
investigates the types of
recreational facilities the
tourist most often · seeks; inventories the recreation and
tourist attractions in each of
the eleven counties in the
District and based on this information , evaluates the
Di strict's potential and

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Start The NeW Y~r Off
Wah A_BiJng

~good~~=

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Two Portsmouth college program is to interest young
students received special people -in government service
recognition this . ~e~k , wl)en and provide a n!!f(led research
jWtey were awarded certificates j iTG tq ~ C~iPn - ~
J wiJ!I"!Ijlielill':af.jliffi!lttri•'"'ftr'"· acO:.JO~rn had a par 'cwar
the successful completion of a research area to study and on
summer internship program which to report.
with the Ohio Valley Regional
Walker's study was entitled
_ Development Commission.
"A G'uide to Industrial · Sites
Donald Buckley, Executive Along The Corridors of the
Director of O.V.R.D.C., said ·Appalachian Highway within
Robert Walker, a senior at the Ohio Valley Development
Ohio State University, and Dan District" while Balmert's
Balmer!, a junior at the report concerned ~' The
University of Notre Dame were Potential of Recreation as an
honored for the preparation of Industry in the Ohio Valley
"outstanding" reports com- Development District."
pleled during the 12 week
Buckley said the inventory of
program.
industrial sites prepared by
"We are proud of the reports Walker lists 24 sites-located
these studenl.s prepared since along Appalachian Highway ·
only seven of forty-nine such corridors in Scioto, Pike, Ross,
projects were awarded the Adams, Brown, Clermont and
special Distinction" lionor, Jackson Counties.
Buckley said.
"The inventory is the first
Objective of the intern step in attracting new industry

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CENTRAl .SOYA OF OHIO

Students' Work Is Recognized

.

1972

in !972

Dateline

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Stnp

Sl for JAC05\' MOOE,RH book

I fo ; 'Win at 8ridgt," (c/o litis newJ·
poper/, P.O. Bo• .419, Radio Citr

·station, New York , N.Y. 10019.

play 'the 10 the fiFst time.

EXPANSION SET
TOLEDo (UPI) - A fiveyear, $399 million expansion
The bidding has been: "- : program to help meet tlie
West North Eaal South . growing demand for electric
3•
Pass
? · service in nortliwestern Ohio
'You, SouliJ, hold:
·•
was announced Thursday · by
• • AQt65 .KH3 ... K QU the Toledo Edison ,Co.
What do you do now?
President John K. Davis said
A- P-. You have • lot of the company would double the '
nice hl«h;cat'ds but !hey •ron't size of its investments dllring
&amp;•inr to be mu&lt;h help OptJOIIito ·the five-year period. The total
a bad hand with a loll( spoode
suit
includes a record single-year
TODA Y'S QUESTION
protiram of $7, mi~ion for 1~72.

New . Year ·off very badly.
Nothinl: bad will happen on
the first trick but when he
-leads back to his king East
will show ·out and all of a
Sudden tl)a~ 10 spot will took
like a blocking hack on the
Vikings.
. When he leads it West will
play low and if he win~ in
dummy th&lt; jack will be Ana in •your p a r 'l n e r opens
h r ll -e t\pa:dt.-s. This time you
high; if he duoks duJ7~mY lhold
: '•
will be oead .
.
A
z
•Q 9 87 6
Harrison was
•
54 •Q 10 • theBenjalflin
~;n m]\' $ . ~ · 11.h who wants a
•Q
last
U.S.
president to '
........... • ............ _~ .
happy N~w Y••ar lw l better . Whn,!. do you do now '!

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:14- The Swulay-TiinesSmllnt .,Swlday, January 2, 1972

..~iddle··Aged
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iSinne·r ·R·esolves
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By LOUIS CASSELS
Uolled Press International
Nl!w Year's resolutions of
.lnicldle..aged sinner:
' For the sake of iny faithful
and long-suffering wife, 1 will
forego watching football . on
.television during the months of
·February, March, April, May
and June. During tbe:remainde~ of the year, I wllllimit my
'lndui~cc1n, this pastime to
Saturdays, Sundays· and Mon-

a

"-of God, and Man .

~

the moments I can say, "Thy
will be done," and honestly
mean it, I will hand over the
problem of reforming my
character to God by oHe_ring
daily the very realistic prayer
of St. Francis: "0 Lord, belp
me to want to love You."
I will endeavor tq keep my
nasty temper under control,
even
when
somebody
telephones me on a trivial
matter during the suppos~y
sacrosanct hours of early
mornillg, when I am totally ·
absorbed in trying to gel my
column written.
~
A Grea.l Waste .
Even though it seems a great
waste to deny young people the
benefit of the vast store of
wisdom I have accumulatedover the years, I will offer
counsel to people under 30 only
when specifically requested to
do so. I will not offer advl~ to ·
people over 30 even if they ask
for it, because I know tbey
don't really want it. Besides, it
has come to my attention that
my judgment is not necessarily
infalliblr. !!lld on occasion has
been disastrously wrong.
I will not expect to keep U1•sc
resolutions faithfully all yea.
lbfig, because I have already
discovered how difficult it will
be to live up to them without an
occasional relapse. Somebody
just called me on the telephone.

'day nights, unless there haP:
pens to be a game on Friday
night.
: I will try to give up my
favorite form of travel,
namely, tbe ego trip. I will
resist, insofar as I am able, the
temptation. to take advantage
of a listener's credulity (or
kindness) by subUy exaggeratIng my own status or achieve- .
ments. ·
Will Slow Down
: I will slow do\Vn, take life
easier aiid get more rest, not
merely for the sake of my
:physical health, bl!l, ~re
:Unportantly, because I have ,
learned it is well-111gb impossible to be kind, considerate and
'eoncerned with the needs of
others when fatigue has driven
ine into a slate of nervous
irascibility. .
: I wiU build into my daily
routine more fixed and inviolable times for prayer and
Had More Tille Bouts
inedltation, because I have
Joe
Louis defended his
~earned that it tak~s more than
one act of surrender a dliy to world heavyweight title 25
times, or mpre times than
~eep my stubborn s~lf-will in the preceding eight cham~objection to God's wiU. Know- pions CO!Ilbined, according to
!ng how brief and fleeting are Encyclopaedia Britannica.

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Beat~..~

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By BQb Hoeflich

POMEROY - A new year and time for new hope, new
disappointments, and heaven only l!ylows what else 1972 holds.
Let's hope that all goes well for you.
Probably the most unique news slor]fln 1971 was lbe rock fall
thai heavily damaged the Pomeroy Post Orncer~ Incidentally, a
Columbus firm has just fm~ placing mel beams under the
corner of the roof where the buij.dlng was so badly dl!maged.
This, of course, is just a temporary measure \lniU the U. S. Post
Department comes forth with a~iledsloo &lt;in just what i8 to ·be
done on~ more permanent basis. Perhaps, ta7~ will see Pomeroy
gelling a new post office.
.
AM - 1972 Should Iring quite a stir on tbe local political
scene, due to the elections. There are severlll county offices to be .
filled and there'll probably be .some rdug!! competition. Already
the names of several persons are being tossed around as po~ple
candidates. County officials fotmd, t~t 1971 lrought a bif of a
kick in their pocketbooks. The census ligures were released and
threw the coulttY, into a lower pay seale due to the decrease in
population. Most county officialS received about a $600 yeal)(y
reduction in salary as a result.
Otristmas was wrapped into &amp; pretty neal package with so
ma!)y doing numerou3 acts of kindness. Before the holiday gets
too far out of sight, 'we'd like to report ulat the l'l!iddleport
Feeney·Bennett Post128, American i.egloo members distributed
500 sacks of candy to Middleport children - more than ever -on
Otrlstmas Eve a~ the Legion Hall. This was a joint project of the
post and the Middleporl merchants. "santa", represented by
John Fultz, and post members on the afternoon before Christmas
also visited the county infll'lll8ry and children's home and gave
each resident a dollar, a candy treat and fruit. Santa visited a
youngster at Ve\erans Memorial Hospital since he was so close
due to the proximity of the hospillil to the two county homes.
Middleport firemen distributed 90 baskets of food to un·
derpnvileged famill• :· ;,. ·.~e Middleport area. Firemen report
that people were most liberal in .providing food and cash to
enable the firemen to carry out the llnnual project.
Of course, 1972 mlghljust be the year that your "ship comes
in." Golly, I hope so. Among residents who are really looking
forward to the new year is John Mohler, Middleport Route 1. ·
John has jus! hlid a new song released by Jareco Records. The
tune, ''On My Way to Heaven," is one of 20 original country and
gospel songs on &amp;;1 album by vocalist Paul Jackson.
John is a BMI affiliated writer now ..He has a new "Action"
label recording -two ~cred and two coUntry-western tunes which will be out in February or early March. These will
probably be ASCAP.
•
John feels that success might just be around the corner, in
'72. I hope it not only comes for John but for YOU too !
Meantime, let me extend to each reader my most sincere
thanks for all the help you've given me In 1971. I do wish you the
happieS\ New Year!

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'BY J. A. McKEAN

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GALLIPOLIS - One gift 1receivej
for Christmas is a new.f~ngled . album
·
· which . adhe~;e.
leaves
.with clear pl!Jstic
. to cardbo.hr,d'inserts and thus holq and
pro~!'the contents. It's a remarkably
efficient and tidy ,portfolio and a quite
·~ usehillile for some of my writings and
~ mementos of 1971.
·
S~
• While selecting and affixing •these
items, each recalling -specific eve~ts
and cir~slances, the task · induced
me to contemplate why one struggles
;~: with the writing trade and what are the
~ inost basic, essenti~l·ramies a
creative writer must p
ss: Creative
Writing in ihe sense whereby one takes
a pen and some blank paper and
Produces a manuscript purely from
~ within one's seil.
~-'
This is my home county. I'm
'
~ reasonable acqualilled in these ·parts.
;,. M
f · ds ( d
fe tr ngers)
:~
any nen
an a w s a
~ have talked wiLi me about my articles,
«
·"':. and their comments have been sur·
Prisinglv favorable and generous. Often
' know me have asked : "How
those who
~
:,.;. !do you do it?"
~
My own question, "Why?", is easily
""
~ answered: it 1,9 merely something I've
~. always wan led to try, a challenge, a
!!: gnawing" feeling it was so.mething 1
~
~ could do and perhaps it needed doing.

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Time for ·Reflection

Movie Folks Set Records
~

In Marriage Dissolutions
. HOLLY.WOOD (UP!) Mov.ielown celebrities set an
all-time high in 1971 for the
marriage-divorce ratio with
nwre than three times as many
slllts going their separate ways
than exchanging vows.
Some did both during the old
year.
Burl Ives and Jean Peters
were among those who
divorced and remarried within

the 12-month period .
Perhaps Miss n .lers'
divorce from Howard :~ughes
was most news":orthy r.1 all. So
far as is known the ex-actress
is the best source. of information on the mysterious
billionaire. And she 's not
talking now that she is Mrs.
Stanley Hough, wife of a 20th
Cenlury·Fox Studio executive.
A factor in the · lagging

Hollywood marriage rate is the
growing number · of en·
tertainers who simply live
together rather than march to
the altar only to pay attorney
fees a few years later.·.
Divorred or ser.arated
during 1971 were Ernest
llorgriine (hiS fourth), Edie
Adams, · Vera Miles, Red
Skelton, Hope Lange, Rex
HarrU!on , Tuesday Weld ,

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NEED NEW SOURCES
. CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
chairman of the board of the
Standard Oil Co. of Ohio said
Th"rsday private Industry
·must be encouraged to find
new sources of energy or the
nation is going to find it,elf In
an "energy crunch" that will
cause a deterioration of •.our
standard of Uving.

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MAI£1~1:

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RAi6.. 1M

~TILL. I~
' HUNGR~

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SHOP WEEKMYS ,9:30 A.~. TO ~:110 P.M.
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··'.: :3·65*·

, Li~enst must be obtained notiatar tlwln Jan. 20, 1972, to avoid paying' penalty, After
this date pena tty will be $1.00 for single tag and $5.00 for kennel license.
(
'

ICt'lli S

of inveslment. "

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qov ARE NOll).FIVE '{CARS

~0 (JAATG U&gt;RON~ Wm( A',
.DEFICIT EATIN6 7

AHEAD OF '(OQ~L.F

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DINN~R:!O! ·
. ' ,.;~-_.

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Save $1.01
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PI.AYTEX• LIVINGt
UNDERWIRE
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Reg. $4.95 $3.94
32·420 $4.94
Cotton Strips. 32·36A,
32-408, 32·42C
Reg. $4.50 Now $3.49
32·420 'Now $4.4t

self-adjust, for
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straps.
32·408, 32·42C ,..
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SPIRITI TRICOT BRA-

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34·36A, 34·408, 34·42C
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34·440 Now $7.94
C9tton Strops 34·36A.
34·408, 34·44C
Re1. $7.95 - $ 8.94
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14 Lon1·llnt Stretch
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SoH Cup 32·36A,
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32-388. 32·38C
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Fully Podded 32·36A,
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t." •

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HEARTO TRICOT BRA-tho

Noturol took of Tricot In 1
CronY our Htort St(ltch Bri:
Soft Cup-Tricot stropo
32-36~. 32·408, 32-42C
. Ro1. $5.00 P,tt
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Shorlle-XS, S, M,l, XL'
Reg. $1 2.50 Now $10.49
Avg. L011- XS. 5, M, L. XL'
Rot. $12.95 Now·$10.94
Long Lo1 -XS, S, M, L, XL'
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""tch strapS 34·36A, 34·408, 34·42C

Cotton Strops 34·44C

R••·
$8.95
34-440
Reg. S8.95
34-440

-Now

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.94

7.t4

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$1.00 Mo")

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Offer uplres Jan. 15, 1972. All Bras and Girdle.s-Whlle. •l?uPonl's rea lstered trademark. Pl"YTEX made with LYCRA• Girdle· ck
·
16% rayan, 10% spt~ndex. Crotch: 100% nylon. (Elastic S1des : 80% nylon, 20% spand~X. J EICCiuslve of orher elas)lc.
· 81
Pine 11 74% ~
fi?: 1t 71 . , INTIIINA"J:I PNiiiL I'LAYTlX COIII~O~IIITION
~IIINTII:b fN 11 . 10 ...
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F

bv...Cok.
e
r
&amp;
P~nn
.
.

on these great
. Playtex Products

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TO DO WITH
'(OO••

·' '{625·* ·

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~emale

COunty Auditor .of Meigs County ·

OUT SOMETAIN~ ...

.. :-s =

A ttentlon· Do~g Owners

Gordon H~ Cal·d well

'{00 TO. ~NOW. I'JUGT
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WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.

JOB BEING DONE
CLEVELAND (UPI )
Akron Mayor John Ballard, a
member of the Ohio Air
Pollution Control Board, said
today the ,state's problems ·
regarding air pollution are not
with the l~er industries bu)
wi!h the smaller ones .
"Frankly, I think the air is
.gelling cleaned up and the
prospects are good that It lfi,li
con linue," said Ballard, here
for an aU-day anli1Jollution
workshop. "Our problem Is nQt
g.,ing o be with the larger
in•Jus ·rics, but wilh lhe smaller ,
. ones where . air pollution
coillrols represent an \almusl
i11sm·mounta~le muu:.lain in

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H~RE ·itov·A.Re, BUT

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NEW YORK (UPI)-The the U.S. wage1Jrice freeze and
worldwide economic story, in· Phase ll controls, the worldeluding the wagfilrlce freeze wide monetary crisis which
imposed by President Nlxori, led to the devaluation of the
was voted the top story of 1971 ·dollar, international trade Bl!d
by U.S. newspaper editors sluggish business activity ·in
participating in the annual the .United States. •
United Press International
II also was voted No. 1 in
poll.
significance, with the Otina
The thaw in relations with developments ranked second.
Mainland China was chosen
No. 3 in both categories was
No. 3. This category included the winding down of the
President Nixon's pending trip Vietnam War by American
to Peking, announced after the troops, the fighting in Cambovisit of·a U.S. ping pong team dia and Laos and President
to the mainland, and the "nlieu's re-election in South
Communist Chinese admission Vietnam.
MAY THE NEW YEAR BRING
to the United Nations.
Headline Impact :
Editors were asked to rate
WORLD PEACE.
I. The economy .
the big news stories of the year
2. China relations thaw.
on the basis of headline impact
3. Indochina War.
. and in terms of long-range
4. U.S. moon landings.
significance.
5. India-Pakistan war.
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .
The economic story covered
6. Pentagon papers coijtroversy.
7. Prison violence at Attica,
N.Y., 'San Quentin and Rahway, N.J.
8. Ll. William Calley convicted.
9. California earthquake kills
DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1972 DOG LICENSE IS
64.
JANUARY 20TH. ONE DOLLAR ($1.00) PENALTY IF LICENSE IS
10. Eighteen-year-olds win
PURC,HASED AFTER THAT DATE . FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
right to vote.
USE THIS HANDY APPLICATION .BLANK AND MAIL TO THE
Significance:
COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE
I. The economy.
TWO DOLLARS ($2 .00) FOR EACH DOG, MALE OR FEMALE.
2.
China relations thaw.
'
To ot~tain license·by mail, fill In and mail this form to GORQON H.
3. Indochina war.
CALDWELL, &lt;:;OUNTY AUDITOR, Meigs County. Pomeroy, Olio .
4. Pentagon .papers.
Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope , and price of license.
5. lndia-Pakillan war .
6. Makeup of Supreme Court
altered.
· Male Dog $2.00 Spayed Female $2 .00
$2.00 Kennel License $10
. 7. Eighteen-year&lt;{lid vote.
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8. . Middle East teJ;Jslon ,
continues.
·Owners Name---------------------------.:. __ _
9. U.S. moon landings.
10. Prison violence.
Address. ___________ .., .,..., ____________ _______ _

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I DON'T KNOll)
WHAT I'M 601N6

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Yr. Mo. M. F . Blk Wh ite Gray Brind le Tan Brown Yellow Long Short II Know Paid

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ADVANCe?/

.DI,NNER ..

Year's Big Story

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ANOTHEK..

I CAN GET AN

~~ .Ott ToMORROW

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ELBERFELD$ IN f!()MEIOY
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.CtlOMP
CJ.lOM?
CHOMf'

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Raquel Welch, George Peppsrd and Elizabeth ~hley, ,
Donna Reed, Mar~e and Gower
Champion, Vic Damone, Jack
Jones, Barbra Strelsand and
Elliott Gould, Robert WagneP,
and Edd BY!1les to name a few.
Steve McQueen and Natalie
Wood both found their
marriages failures and began
dating one another.

OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO·9:00 P.M;

Age ~------------------------r--------~--Sex
COLOR
Hair
Br~
Fees ·

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Economy Vated

TownshiP------------------~------------ ~

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I=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.-:::::::::~=:::::::::::::::::t::::::::::::::-.~:::::::::::::::~:,::::::::-.::~::m:::~~==:=~=~..&lt;:-:~::;:.-:~:;:=:::;:~=:~:=:;:~:;~~~=-~.,
.. . . .,~ggl818~~~g;-;:.~,
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The "How?" is not so simple;
f~~mentals.
But l;pf working ~,'
·
I
I
shall
. mas ter '"·
r.alher, it is far ll)llre complex. But I do
them. Sure y
never
u..,.
believe I've gained some insight on the
craft to my own sa~acllon.
personal qualifications n~ssary : the
II is a good lime to refl~l: lhe end
1
·
1
1
·
•·
·
st
own
···of
one
year, anot)ler begihruns. l owe,a
basic, essentja e emen.... on~ mu
t· have•a go at creative manuscripts.
heap of thanks toalotofpeop)efor their
The Iirst is ·a ceaseleSs, inex- blessings and support this year:· I
tinguishable desire to write. There is no
cannot possibly name~ all here, but
substitute for hard, uncompromising
I'd like to list· a few :
work, both mental physical. Talent is a
. Chet Tannehill, my editor, w~o has'
highly overused catchword. ·
been a tower of strength lvith ~dviee,
Secondly, a writer must possess , assistance, and encouragement; Mrs.
and forever keep an open, observing
Raymah Grover, editor, The Oxford
mind; a detached, yet keenly sensitive
Press, Oxford, Ohio: the staff ~t the
interest.
Public bibrary, especially Mrs. Kate
Neil, one must. have the ability to
.
Tr
d ~·. even·seek out, criticism from
Foster; the Rev. Miles
• ·~
accept,
th Bout an Good
.
brother,
Wayne;
Fa
er
.
raun,
·
whlltever source, then analyze it for h1s
. own improvement. But, the author· Samaritan Hospital, Dayton;h· Fred
h
Wood
and
Clarence
Waug
;
I
must be his own most·severe critic.
Ia .
f e
coun Uess friends ,and re l1ves o my
Lastly • and perhaps most imbe- sister Edna, my brother Watterson,.and
portant, the IOJ'eative writer must
·
.
my sister.in.Jaw, Della McKean - a11
1
extremely patient, having particular Y deceased. And finally, my grt!tltude to
the·sta
· m1'na to to'lerate much seclusion
those who attended my cousin, . Fred
and g. reat loneliness, for writing is a
..
Wallace, Glenwood, W.Va.; and my old
solitary enterprise.
and dear friends, Alonzo Armslt:ong
These, as I see them, are the fundalnentals. The non-writer thinks in- and Knox Williams ' too, gone to their
~lint~.
variably of the mechanics of writing:
Oftentimes a year paSsed Is a
language , method, siyle, themes,
education, experience. These are only chunk of life endured, a cr:umbled page,.
surface matters, and virtually anyone a fallen leaf; and however.it may have
has or can acquire them.! certainly do gpne it could ha~'' cJeen better ... and It
· of a11 thc could 'have been worse .
not claim ·full possessiOn

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a
Sort
of
Journal
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.to' .World.'s
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:14- The Swulay-TiinesSmllnt .,Swlday, January 2, 1972

..~iddle··Aged
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iSinne·r ·R·esolves
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By LOUIS CASSELS
Uolled Press International
Nl!w Year's resolutions of
.lnicldle..aged sinner:
' For the sake of iny faithful
and long-suffering wife, 1 will
forego watching football . on
.television during the months of
·February, March, April, May
and June. During tbe:remainde~ of the year, I wllllimit my
'lndui~cc1n, this pastime to
Saturdays, Sundays· and Mon-

a

"-of God, and Man .

~

the moments I can say, "Thy
will be done," and honestly
mean it, I will hand over the
problem of reforming my
character to God by oHe_ring
daily the very realistic prayer
of St. Francis: "0 Lord, belp
me to want to love You."
I will endeavor tq keep my
nasty temper under control,
even
when
somebody
telephones me on a trivial
matter during the suppos~y
sacrosanct hours of early
mornillg, when I am totally ·
absorbed in trying to gel my
column written.
~
A Grea.l Waste .
Even though it seems a great
waste to deny young people the
benefit of the vast store of
wisdom I have accumulatedover the years, I will offer
counsel to people under 30 only
when specifically requested to
do so. I will not offer advl~ to ·
people over 30 even if they ask
for it, because I know tbey
don't really want it. Besides, it
has come to my attention that
my judgment is not necessarily
infalliblr. !!lld on occasion has
been disastrously wrong.
I will not expect to keep U1•sc
resolutions faithfully all yea.
lbfig, because I have already
discovered how difficult it will
be to live up to them without an
occasional relapse. Somebody
just called me on the telephone.

'day nights, unless there haP:
pens to be a game on Friday
night.
: I will try to give up my
favorite form of travel,
namely, tbe ego trip. I will
resist, insofar as I am able, the
temptation. to take advantage
of a listener's credulity (or
kindness) by subUy exaggeratIng my own status or achieve- .
ments. ·
Will Slow Down
: I will slow do\Vn, take life
easier aiid get more rest, not
merely for the sake of my
:physical health, bl!l, ~re
:Unportantly, because I have ,
learned it is well-111gb impossible to be kind, considerate and
'eoncerned with the needs of
others when fatigue has driven
ine into a slate of nervous
irascibility. .
: I wiU build into my daily
routine more fixed and inviolable times for prayer and
Had More Tille Bouts
inedltation, because I have
Joe
Louis defended his
~earned that it tak~s more than
one act of surrender a dliy to world heavyweight title 25
times, or mpre times than
~eep my stubborn s~lf-will in the preceding eight cham~objection to God's wiU. Know- pions CO!Ilbined, according to
!ng how brief and fleeting are Encyclopaedia Britannica.

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Beat~..~

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By BQb Hoeflich

POMEROY - A new year and time for new hope, new
disappointments, and heaven only l!ylows what else 1972 holds.
Let's hope that all goes well for you.
Probably the most unique news slor]fln 1971 was lbe rock fall
thai heavily damaged the Pomeroy Post Orncer~ Incidentally, a
Columbus firm has just fm~ placing mel beams under the
corner of the roof where the buij.dlng was so badly dl!maged.
This, of course, is just a temporary measure \lniU the U. S. Post
Department comes forth with a~iledsloo &lt;in just what i8 to ·be
done on~ more permanent basis. Perhaps, ta7~ will see Pomeroy
gelling a new post office.
.
AM - 1972 Should Iring quite a stir on tbe local political
scene, due to the elections. There are severlll county offices to be .
filled and there'll probably be .some rdug!! competition. Already
the names of several persons are being tossed around as po~ple
candidates. County officials fotmd, t~t 1971 lrought a bif of a
kick in their pocketbooks. The census ligures were released and
threw the coulttY, into a lower pay seale due to the decrease in
population. Most county officialS received about a $600 yeal)(y
reduction in salary as a result.
Otristmas was wrapped into &amp; pretty neal package with so
ma!)y doing numerou3 acts of kindness. Before the holiday gets
too far out of sight, 'we'd like to report ulat the l'l!iddleport
Feeney·Bennett Post128, American i.egloo members distributed
500 sacks of candy to Middleport children - more than ever -on
Otrlstmas Eve a~ the Legion Hall. This was a joint project of the
post and the Middleporl merchants. "santa", represented by
John Fultz, and post members on the afternoon before Christmas
also visited the county infll'lll8ry and children's home and gave
each resident a dollar, a candy treat and fruit. Santa visited a
youngster at Ve\erans Memorial Hospital since he was so close
due to the proximity of the hospillil to the two county homes.
Middleport firemen distributed 90 baskets of food to un·
derpnvileged famill• :· ;,. ·.~e Middleport area. Firemen report
that people were most liberal in .providing food and cash to
enable the firemen to carry out the llnnual project.
Of course, 1972 mlghljust be the year that your "ship comes
in." Golly, I hope so. Among residents who are really looking
forward to the new year is John Mohler, Middleport Route 1. ·
John has jus! hlid a new song released by Jareco Records. The
tune, ''On My Way to Heaven," is one of 20 original country and
gospel songs on &amp;;1 album by vocalist Paul Jackson.
John is a BMI affiliated writer now ..He has a new "Action"
label recording -two ~cred and two coUntry-western tunes which will be out in February or early March. These will
probably be ASCAP.
•
John feels that success might just be around the corner, in
'72. I hope it not only comes for John but for YOU too !
Meantime, let me extend to each reader my most sincere
thanks for all the help you've given me In 1971. I do wish you the
happieS\ New Year!

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'BY J. A. McKEAN

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GALLIPOLIS - One gift 1receivej
for Christmas is a new.f~ngled . album
·
· which . adhe~;e.
leaves
.with clear pl!Jstic
. to cardbo.hr,d'inserts and thus holq and
pro~!'the contents. It's a remarkably
efficient and tidy ,portfolio and a quite
·~ usehillile for some of my writings and
~ mementos of 1971.
·
S~
• While selecting and affixing •these
items, each recalling -specific eve~ts
and cir~slances, the task · induced
me to contemplate why one struggles
;~: with the writing trade and what are the
~ inost basic, essenti~l·ramies a
creative writer must p
ss: Creative
Writing in ihe sense whereby one takes
a pen and some blank paper and
Produces a manuscript purely from
~ within one's seil.
~-'
This is my home county. I'm
'
~ reasonable acqualilled in these ·parts.
;,. M
f · ds ( d
fe tr ngers)
:~
any nen
an a w s a
~ have talked wiLi me about my articles,
«
·"':. and their comments have been sur·
Prisinglv favorable and generous. Often
' know me have asked : "How
those who
~
:,.;. !do you do it?"
~
My own question, "Why?", is easily
""
~ answered: it 1,9 merely something I've
~. always wan led to try, a challenge, a
!!: gnawing" feeling it was so.mething 1
~
~ could do and perhaps it needed doing.

"1.

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Time for ·Reflection

Movie Folks Set Records
~

In Marriage Dissolutions
. HOLLY.WOOD (UP!) Mov.ielown celebrities set an
all-time high in 1971 for the
marriage-divorce ratio with
nwre than three times as many
slllts going their separate ways
than exchanging vows.
Some did both during the old
year.
Burl Ives and Jean Peters
were among those who
divorced and remarried within

the 12-month period .
Perhaps Miss n .lers'
divorce from Howard :~ughes
was most news":orthy r.1 all. So
far as is known the ex-actress
is the best source. of information on the mysterious
billionaire. And she 's not
talking now that she is Mrs.
Stanley Hough, wife of a 20th
Cenlury·Fox Studio executive.
A factor in the · lagging

Hollywood marriage rate is the
growing number · of en·
tertainers who simply live
together rather than march to
the altar only to pay attorney
fees a few years later.·.
Divorred or ser.arated
during 1971 were Ernest
llorgriine (hiS fourth), Edie
Adams, · Vera Miles, Red
Skelton, Hope Lange, Rex
HarrU!on , Tuesday Weld ,

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NEED NEW SOURCES
. CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
chairman of the board of the
Standard Oil Co. of Ohio said
Th"rsday private Industry
·must be encouraged to find
new sources of energy or the
nation is going to find it,elf In
an "energy crunch" that will
cause a deterioration of •.our
standard of Uving.

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MAI£1~1:

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RAi6.. 1M

~TILL. I~
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SHOP WEEKMYS ,9:30 A.~. TO ~:110 P.M.
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··'.: :3·65*·

, Li~enst must be obtained notiatar tlwln Jan. 20, 1972, to avoid paying' penalty, After
this date pena tty will be $1.00 for single tag and $5.00 for kennel license.
(
'

ICt'lli S

of inveslment. "

l '

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qov ARE NOll).FIVE '{CARS

~0 (JAATG U&gt;RON~ Wm( A',
.DEFICIT EATIN6 7

AHEAD OF '(OQ~L.F

. · o~

DINN~R:!O! ·
. ' ,.;~-_.

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Save $1.01
Save $1.01

PLAYTEX• LIVING•
STRETCH BRA- Moves

PI.AYTEX• LIVINGt
UNDERWIRE
STRETCH BRA-

with You ... breathes
1
with you.
Stretch Strops 32·36A,
. 32·40B, 32·42C
Reg. $4.95 $3.94
32·420 $4.94
Cotton Strips. 32·36A,
32-408, 32·42C
Reg. $4.50 Now $3.49
32·420 'Now $4.4t

self-adjust, for
carrifortable fit and

S~ve

~t.~pport-strelch

straps.
32·408, 32·42C ,..
Roa. $7.00

$1.01

PI.AYTEXO CROSS YOU~
HEARl'l COTTON BRA-

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32-420

•

Strotch strops. Llftl ~nd

$8.tt

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Seporotn lor 1 Lovtlior

PLAYTEX• LIVING I
LONGLINE STRETCH

32·36A, 32-408; 32·42C

FIJUrt,

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BRA-ends midriff

bula:e •.. comfortebly-

PI.AYTEXI FREE
SPIRITI TRICOT BRA-

··tr'ef~tlstraps .

34·36A, 34·408, 34·42C
Ro1. $7.95 Now $8.94
34·440 Now $7.94
C9tton Strops 34·36A.
34·408, 34·44C
Re1. $7.95 - $ 8.94
34·440 Now $7.94
14 Lon1·llnt Stretch
Strops 34·36A,
34·408, 34·42C
Re1. $7.95 Now·$8.94
34-440 Now $7 .•94

Total Comfort In a
lineerle·Soft Trlco.t for
Todey's "Netural
look'' ... ln thrH Styles:
SoH Cup 32·36A,
lz-408, 32-400
tree. $5.00 Now U.!lt
' Fl~rfill Uned 32·36A,
32-388. 32·38C
Rq. $6.00 Now $4.!19
Fully Podded 32·36A,
32-38B
R.l l· $6.00 Now $4.!19

t." •

Save·$1.01
PI.AYTEx-CRO$$ YOUR
HEARTO TRICOT BRA-tho

Noturol took of Tricot In 1
CronY our Htort St(ltch Bri:
Soft Cup-Tricot stropo
32-36~. 32·408, 32-42C
. Ro1. $5.00 P,tt
. Ntw 32·420 t4.tt
Flbtrlill Llnlnr-Strotcll
Strops 32-liA, 32·408,
3HOC

R••· u .oo· Now $4."

Save $2.01
Pl.AYTEX• DOUBLE
OIAMONO• GIRDLE-

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Now with eiCira tummr.
p1ntl1 for ••tra contro .

Shorlle-XS, S, M,l, XL'
Reg. $1 2.50 Now $10.49
Avg. L011- XS. 5, M, L. XL'
Rot. $12.95 Now·$10.94
Long Lo1 -XS, S, M, L, XL'
Ro,. $13.95 Now $11.94
Re1. G1rdle-XS, S, M, L, XL•
Rog.,$10.95 Now $11.94

(XL'

PLAYTE~O [IvfNG• LONG-LINE STRETCH BRA-

with edra tlngth waistband for extr1 FJ~idrifr control.

'

""tch strapS 34·36A, 34·408, 34·42C

Cotton Strops 34·44C

R••·
$8.95
34-440
Reg. S8.95
34-440

-Now

-

H'"'
.94

7.t4

.94

$1.00 Mo")

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Offer uplres Jan. 15, 1972. All Bras and Girdle.s-Whlle. •l?uPonl's rea lstered trademark. Pl"YTEX made with LYCRA• Girdle· ck
·
16% rayan, 10% spt~ndex. Crotch: 100% nylon. (Elastic S1des : 80% nylon, 20% spand~X. J EICCiuslve of orher elas)lc.
· 81
Pine 11 74% ~
fi?: 1t 71 . , INTIIINA"J:I PNiiiL I'LAYTlX COIII~O~IIITION
~IIINTII:b fN 11 . 10 ...
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F

bv...Cok.
e
r
&amp;
P~nn
.
.

on these great
. Playtex Products

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TO DO WITH
'(OO••

·' '{625·* ·

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~emale

COunty Auditor .of Meigs County ·

OUT SOMETAIN~ ...

.. :-s =

A ttentlon· Do~g Owners

Gordon H~ Cal·d well

'{00 TO. ~NOW. I'JUGT
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WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.

JOB BEING DONE
CLEVELAND (UPI )
Akron Mayor John Ballard, a
member of the Ohio Air
Pollution Control Board, said
today the ,state's problems ·
regarding air pollution are not
with the l~er industries bu)
wi!h the smaller ones .
"Frankly, I think the air is
.gelling cleaned up and the
prospects are good that It lfi,li
con linue," said Ballard, here
for an aU-day anli1Jollution
workshop. "Our problem Is nQt
g.,ing o be with the larger
in•Jus ·rics, but wilh lhe smaller ,
. ones where . air pollution
coillrols represent an \almusl
i11sm·mounta~le muu:.lain in

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H~RE ·itov·A.Re, BUT

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NEW YORK (UPI)-The the U.S. wage1Jrice freeze and
worldwide economic story, in· Phase ll controls, the worldeluding the wagfilrlce freeze wide monetary crisis which
imposed by President Nlxori, led to the devaluation of the
was voted the top story of 1971 ·dollar, international trade Bl!d
by U.S. newspaper editors sluggish business activity ·in
participating in the annual the .United States. •
United Press International
II also was voted No. 1 in
poll.
significance, with the Otina
The thaw in relations with developments ranked second.
Mainland China was chosen
No. 3 in both categories was
No. 3. This category included the winding down of the
President Nixon's pending trip Vietnam War by American
to Peking, announced after the troops, the fighting in Cambovisit of·a U.S. ping pong team dia and Laos and President
to the mainland, and the "nlieu's re-election in South
Communist Chinese admission Vietnam.
MAY THE NEW YEAR BRING
to the United Nations.
Headline Impact :
Editors were asked to rate
WORLD PEACE.
I. The economy .
the big news stories of the year
2. China relations thaw.
on the basis of headline impact
3. Indochina War.
. and in terms of long-range
4. U.S. moon landings.
significance.
5. India-Pakistan war.
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .
The economic story covered
6. Pentagon papers coijtroversy.
7. Prison violence at Attica,
N.Y., 'San Quentin and Rahway, N.J.
8. Ll. William Calley convicted.
9. California earthquake kills
DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1972 DOG LICENSE IS
64.
JANUARY 20TH. ONE DOLLAR ($1.00) PENALTY IF LICENSE IS
10. Eighteen-year-olds win
PURC,HASED AFTER THAT DATE . FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
right to vote.
USE THIS HANDY APPLICATION .BLANK AND MAIL TO THE
Significance:
COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE
I. The economy.
TWO DOLLARS ($2 .00) FOR EACH DOG, MALE OR FEMALE.
2.
China relations thaw.
'
To ot~tain license·by mail, fill In and mail this form to GORQON H.
3. Indochina war.
CALDWELL, &lt;:;OUNTY AUDITOR, Meigs County. Pomeroy, Olio .
4. Pentagon .papers.
Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope , and price of license.
5. lndia-Pakillan war .
6. Makeup of Supreme Court
altered.
· Male Dog $2.00 Spayed Female $2 .00
$2.00 Kennel License $10
. 7. Eighteen-year&lt;{lid vote.
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8. . Middle East teJ;Jslon ,
continues.
·Owners Name---------------------------.:. __ _
9. U.S. moon landings.
10. Prison violence.
Address. ___________ .., .,..., ____________ _______ _

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I DON'T KNOll)
WHAT I'M 601N6

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Yr. Mo. M. F . Blk Wh ite Gray Brind le Tan Brown Yellow Long Short II Know Paid

..

ADVANCe?/

.DI,NNER ..

Year's Big Story

..

:•

ANOTHEK..

I CAN GET AN

~~ .Ott ToMORROW

..

~.,

,.

ELBERFELD$ IN f!()MEIOY
.,.

--

.CtlOMP
CJ.lOM?
CHOMf'

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I

Raquel Welch, George Peppsrd and Elizabeth ~hley, ,
Donna Reed, Mar~e and Gower
Champion, Vic Damone, Jack
Jones, Barbra Strelsand and
Elliott Gould, Robert WagneP,
and Edd BY!1les to name a few.
Steve McQueen and Natalie
Wood both found their
marriages failures and began
dating one another.

OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO·9:00 P.M;

Age ~------------------------r--------~--Sex
COLOR
Hair
Br~
Fees ·

•

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Economy Vated

TownshiP------------------~------------ ~

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tlntli

I=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.-:::::::::~=:::::::::::::::::t::::::::::::::-.~:::::::::::::::~:,::::::::-.::~::m:::~~==:=~=~..&lt;:-:~::;:.-:~:;:=:::;:~=:~:=:;:~:;~~~=-~.,
.. . . .,~ggl818~~~g;-;:.~,
"'

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•

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'

The "How?" is not so simple;
f~~mentals.
But l;pf working ~,'
·
I
I
shall
. mas ter '"·
r.alher, it is far ll)llre complex. But I do
them. Sure y
never
u..,.
believe I've gained some insight on the
craft to my own sa~acllon.
personal qualifications n~ssary : the
II is a good lime to refl~l: lhe end
1
·
1
1
·
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st
own
···of
one
year, anot)ler begihruns. l owe,a
basic, essentja e emen.... on~ mu
t· have•a go at creative manuscripts.
heap of thanks toalotofpeop)efor their
The Iirst is ·a ceaseleSs, inex- blessings and support this year:· I
tinguishable desire to write. There is no
cannot possibly name~ all here, but
substitute for hard, uncompromising
I'd like to list· a few :
work, both mental physical. Talent is a
. Chet Tannehill, my editor, w~o has'
highly overused catchword. ·
been a tower of strength lvith ~dviee,
Secondly, a writer must possess , assistance, and encouragement; Mrs.
and forever keep an open, observing
Raymah Grover, editor, The Oxford
mind; a detached, yet keenly sensitive
Press, Oxford, Ohio: the staff ~t the
interest.
Public bibrary, especially Mrs. Kate
Neil, one must. have the ability to
.
Tr
d ~·. even·seek out, criticism from
Foster; the Rev. Miles
• ·~
accept,
th Bout an Good
.
brother,
Wayne;
Fa
er
.
raun,
·
whlltever source, then analyze it for h1s
. own improvement. But, the author· Samaritan Hospital, Dayton;h· Fred
h
Wood
and
Clarence
Waug
;
I
must be his own most·severe critic.
Ia .
f e
coun Uess friends ,and re l1ves o my
Lastly • and perhaps most imbe- sister Edna, my brother Watterson,.and
portant, the IOJ'eative writer must
·
.
my sister.in.Jaw, Della McKean - a11
1
extremely patient, having particular Y deceased. And finally, my grt!tltude to
the·sta
· m1'na to to'lerate much seclusion
those who attended my cousin, . Fred
and g. reat loneliness, for writing is a
..
Wallace, Glenwood, W.Va.; and my old
solitary enterprise.
and dear friends, Alonzo Armslt:ong
These, as I see them, are the fundalnentals. The non-writer thinks in- and Knox Williams ' too, gone to their
~lint~.
variably of the mechanics of writing:
Oftentimes a year paSsed Is a
language , method, siyle, themes,
education, experience. These are only chunk of life endured, a cr:umbled page,.
surface matters, and virtually anyone a fallen leaf; and however.it may have
has or can acquire them.! certainly do gpne it could ha~'' cJeen better ... and It
· of a11 thc could 'have been worse .
not claim ·full possessiOn

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Yeai-;s End is a

a
Sort
of
Journal
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.to' .World.'s
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Of the Bend

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SLAJ)TO!

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ANYTHIN6
FOR A. PAL

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,
1tJ RALPHIES .
HOLl6E/ FOP• .

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HE SAID ITS THE
LAST TIME;= HE'LL
EVER GalOANBV ·
YEARIS PARTY.

WHAT DID HE
S\Y~

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MMPF Ml.JM6L.E
ML\MBLE.

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NOT ONE Qi:JAAREL. IN AI. I. OU~­

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MA"RIED -I.IFE- SIGH· WONt&gt;S~
WHAT1fi KEPT UC3 SUCH GOO!:)

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.·3o&amp;N·N Yt ·wo·N DER,-

"WHERE'$ THE GROAN WITH WHICH
YOU HORMALLY GREET THE LOSS OF THE

1

AUDIO PORTIONr'

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UP TO Willi£
YOU'AE DOING HIS HOME·WOliQ"
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AH, 1-!ER.E:'S
MY CIIANCE. '1"0
IMPitESS. '1"1-ll! .
F=it.I.CWS!

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MY OUILL -;eN AND
4- HMMMII
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L.l KE; WOW~ ,
ReALLY I&gt;IG ,
TWi&amp; Fl~ltE ·

I-lEY,

8tMO,

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SKATING!

WHATS

ON TJ:iE
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INK

W~EN

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UP ·"fHIS

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FUDDSV! KNowiN'

A~L. 11-tE.SE YEARS
't'A DIDN'T EXPEcr · .

NO.

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HAPPV
NEW

YEAR.1

ME. T' f&lt;leP 11-1' .

"e5ERLUnONS,
DID YA? -.....:

SHE Gers
ALLOFiHE
AND ALL OF

Al.L. OF' "'THE FARM LAND,
AU.. or= 1'HE F'OI&lt;ESIS ....
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··NUOn ·Eirm · on Release· POWs

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W~TQN (UPi) -Prelldeni Nixon ..uci Suuday ~tall .

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• "Bui if PoW's ijte still retained-by North Vietn:rn,.. Bdded

Nixon icknowledged Vice President Spiro T. Aetew has been
conii'Owralal, but Jll'alaed him and said "he lho'!ld stay on the

U.S,
qould be out' of Soutlt Vlelnan) by elec:IIGo time In
Nlzon, ''tn ordet to have any bargaining position at aU wiih the
NoveiD!Mr lf1111 American pj'iJonen of war were rele~ by the teaJn,••
Vietnamese, the North VIetnamese, we· will have to continue. to
Omnunlall by then,
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ioJ for the eeonoiny, Nlion viewed 1m op!iJnllllcaUy, seeing retain a residual force In Vietnam, and we will have to continue ·
' Unleulliat CCIIIdltlon Is met, the Festd~t said the Communist the lllet11Piorment rate (ftpping to below the 5.1 per' cent thepossiblllty 9falr strikes ori the North VIetnamese."
side can expect -to ~ a continuing ·residual f~e of 25,000 to . average of the 19601, and Predicting liOIIIe 'Cill)trols may be' lifted
During his comments about the POW's, Nixon disclosed that
•,DOOAmerican military men In tbe 1011tli and poaslbly renewed before the year Ia out.
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Dr. Henry A, Kissinger discussed the Issue with Ollnese Premier
bo~ of,the north.
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Nison ~lld out U.S. Vietnam poUcy In wofdlng that did not . Olou·EIHai when the presidential adviser for national secwity
'l'lle carrot«&lt;ct-use of tht; POW lalue blghllghted il one-bour · differ from past stateme~ts b!ll which did reflect a possible shift affairs visited the Ollnese leader In preparation for Nixon's visit .
televiaion, Interview of the. President &amp;mday night by CBS In emphesla.
In February. .
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COI'I'eiJPOndent Den Rather Foreign Potlcy dominated the aeesion,
Nixon did not Indicate what response Kissinger received from
. ''Our goal Is to enr;! the anneriC!UI Involvement In Vietnam
~!&lt;ll!!l.fore an unllgh\ed firePlace In Nlion's White House oval
befOre the end of this year and before the election, not just O.ou. But 'be characterized as "a slightly hopeful note" the
office.
b,lcaUBe it is an elecUon,. but ·because these are lbe ways our ~nt release by the O.lnese of two American prisoners held for
,• Nixon also noted that when the ldea 'of setting a deadUne for plans are working out," Nixon said. "· ·
,
many years. He described this -Ollnese ptiltude as '~nuch more
total u,s. Withdrawal 'fu eii:hange for·release of f'OW's ' Was
His preference; he added, wu to end the fighting through · clviUzed than that of the North Vietnamese."
floated out thla !aU, the North Vietnamese totally rejected II." negotiations, but if that !ailed the United States would disengage
During the Interview, the president also :
-Assessed the recent new five days of Intensive bombing of
On domesllc affairs, Nixon said he would reveal his reelecUon through the administration's VletnamU;allOn pi8n-the progfBIII
plans by Jan.14, but added "there Is, of course, good reason" to IUider which American forces turn over prosecution of the·war to ' North Vietnam as ''very, very effecilve," llrnited to "military
think that he would seek· a ·second term.
the South Vietnamese.
(Coollnoed oo Page 8)
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S. Sgt. GaryE.Jenldns, left,andW. R. Lobell

at

Medal Awarded S-Sgt; Jertkins
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1Jevo14?d To The lnkre.ll Of The Meiga• MQM)n. Area

N,;;.;O·..;l.;,84;..·~-· .:. PO: .:M: .:E:'R.O:..:Y...:;·M:.:.:ID:.:D=:LE::..P:
;,
O_. .:R:IT•:.,::
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.&amp;SGT. GARY E. JENKINS, U. S. Marine Corps, son of Mr .
and Mrs. Fred Jenkbis, Syracuse, was awarded the Navy
Achievemen.t medal with combat V on Nov. 24 for' Meritorious
, Service from June 1966 to March 1968 while stationed in Vietnam .

!~s~~~=~· director 9th Marine Corps District, made the

A letter with the award said: "WhUe serving with Force
llSM~llil:llll'l'M~SiSiiiiiiQi~'~:!::::::~:::::::.-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-;:::::: Logistic Support Group Bravo, Force Logistic Command in
connection with a combat operations against the enemy in the
Republic of Vietnam, Sgt. Jenkins performed his duties in an
exemplary manner. AB group chief clerk, he displayed out·
standing initiative and perseverance despite the extremely
PHILADELPIDA (UP!)- Frank L. Rizzo, a high ~ adverse conditions and difficulties associated with a combat
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school dropout who worked his way from beat patrolman
environment. By his consistently high level of efficiency, he
to commlssloner 'of poUce, was sworn In !Qday as mayor
materially enhanced the operations! effectiveness of his unit and
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of Philadelphia and promised Jaw and order and no tax
. gained the ~ct and admiration of all who associated with
Increases despite a·combined clty«hool board deficit of
about $100 mU1Ion. ·
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and with meticulous attention to detail,
"There will be no abuse of police power In any
he ably prepared all required reporta and affiliated corre·
community. AI. the same time, I will not tolerate gang
spondence accurately and expeditiously, and ensured their
rule or anarchy In the streets," Rizzo said. Rizzo, who
prompt submission to higher headquarters, thereby providing
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has
caUed
for
an
additional
800
policemen
to
bolster
the
his command with outatandlng admlniBtrative support. ·
· OONOORD, N.H. (UPI)- ference he would like to get 15 campaigning."
he wanted to give Republican ..
·
poUce
force
In
PhUadelphia,
the
nation's
fourth
largest
:'$
Alb brook said be could spend conservatives-whom he said •.•.
" In addition, serving as order writing clerk and rest and
.Rep. Jolm M. Ashbrook, R· .to 20per cent of the RepubUcan
·!·!
city, add'ed:
Ohio, said toda)' he had half tj!e vote lri the March 7 primary up to $100,000·In the one-elate were the majority of the party !•!•
recuperating
clerk, he established procedures which resulted in
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campaign.
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"I pledge you this: This administration will do
s!P,ature1 neidec:l to me In the which kicks off the nation's
. the orderly handUng and control of these vital areas. Sgt.
-an alternative to Nison's
::::
He
announced
his
New Hampablre prealdentlal presidential runoffs.
everything possible to see to It that anyone will be able to
poUclee.
,
Jenkins' outatanding professional ability, untiring deter·
~
primary and enoUgh 111011ey to
"We might get more than presidential candidacy last
"Regardless of what he ·:-:
operate
a
business
without
fear
In
any
section
of
this
mlnation, and steadfast devotions to duty throoghout his tour In
:-:·
mount a stroog clllllpilp.
that," he slid. ."We · have Wednesday, saying he hoped to does,"
Ashbrook said, :::: · city." 'l'lle lnauguratioo made Rizzo the first pollee
the RepubUc of Vietnam reflect great credit upon hlmseH, the
~by ,about li youths- enough ~- to mount a head off the leftward drift of ''Regardless of how far to the :::: commissioner to.become mayor of a large Amerlean
Marine Corps, and the United States Naval Service."
many of them membera of the strong -campaign in N'ew the Nixon administration.
left he goes,. he has ·!he .•..•.::~. city.
Sgt. Jenkins ill presently stationed at Headquarters 9th
con ae rv a tl v e Youn-g - Hampshire.
"I think we expe&lt;;ted a Wide Republican C01Jservatives, the .•
,.......~.~···~·
.,.,.,......~.....,_.,..'
F ""'"'~&lt;!l'. .WSI:&gt;.l
Marine Corps District, 9401 Santa Fe Drive, Overland Park,
.................
-.•••••,....-...........:.Nn~-.!;;;&amp;;;.0
o; t .~~····"•"~~•
. . . . '.w.li8iSi:mliil
.
Americans for Freedom~
" I plan to 11pend more than difference between this admi- mainstream conservatives,
Kansas 66212.
.
Aahbrook told a news con· :In days In the state personaUy nistration and previous ones;" locked Into his campaign."
EXTENDED OUTI.OOK
he told the news conference In • Ashbrook said he would
Oblo: Elllended outlook
the senste chamber of the State spend Jll!1 of the rest of the.day
Wednesday tbrougb Friday
House. "We dldr,J 't get II.
In an effcrt to gain more
Fair and cold Wednesday
"This administration has signatures for .bls candidacy
aad Thursday, hlgb tem·
eontlnued almost In locll«ep petitions which muat be, flied
perature
ID the upper 20s to
with prevtous administrations. by 'l'llursday.
' '
mid lOs, LoWJ at DIPI Ill tbe
~ ·We've 1Dt ..over half the
Business . •• · usual in
. "
...... ; ___, . - -'i~J!l* leelll' to illld·... Friday
ltepubUcim Pou!ics Isn't 'good legll requtrlment, but that'~
BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
m911ly cloudy and uot aa cold,
enough, as far as. we're con· not aU we ·want," he said. He
.
chance of aoow north and raiD
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needa 1,000 signatures and a
R~ -A ROME DOCTOR said 1,000 fingers were am·
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or
aoow
south
pori!ODJ.
HIP•
The Ohio congressman said $500 filing fee.
putated and poUce said at leut 2,000 persons were Injured In a
The Meigs Soil and Water packet, $5.50.,
ID the 301 .nortb, and t0s soutb
United
Press
IDtemalloaaJ
wet and wild weekend of New Year's celebrations. ~ewspapera
Conservation District again
Crown Vetch will be packed
~t!ollJ· Low at nigbt In the
The
New
Year's
weekend
llld II liD like wartime Italy.
•
this year In offering Wlldllfe In 50 crown )Qta only aud will be
death toll neared the upper end :iilt.
Planting Packets, Crown $7.
· Romans and Neapolltana uaed up tons of !lm'Orks, much of
'
of a pre-holiday estimate · ··:·:·:·:-:·:·.·.·:·:·.···.·.·:·.····.·:····:-:-:·:·:·. ·.·.·:·.·.·:·: Vetch, Song,Bird
Packeis and
The "Song Bird Packet" will
II illepl, and Ut up the llides of their cities for hours: Genoese .
today.
quantity
bundles
of
any
of
the
contain
the foUowing (it will
&amp;-ank more than one mlltlon boltles of wine. The girls of Matera
The
National
Safety
Council
seedlings Included In the not be possible. to substitute or
let their hair go stringy and knotted.
had estimated that between 400
packets for sale this year'
e-nullte changes in the assort·
and 500 persons would die In
WildUfe
Packeta
will
contain
ment): 3 White flowering
AYRSHIRE,IOWA-A YEAR AG0,19-year-old Jody Smith
traffic accidents during the 78the following varieties.
Dogwood, 8-12", 2 Manchu
Pomeroy poUce inveetlgated Main St. when cars driven by
w1111'teven old enough to vote in Iowa. Today he takes ofllce as
bour period that began at 6
25
large
White
Pine,
2-yr.
Cherry,
8,12", 3 Gray
the mayor of this amalJ central Iowa COOllllunity -and becomes three accidel!ts over the ,John Ridgway, Jr ,, 191 New p.m. local time Thursday and
seedlings - ~", eight small Dogwood, 6-12" and 2 Mountain0 .
holiday weekend.
Haven; and Edna Slusher, 53, ended midnight Sunday.
the -young~ mayor In the nstion.
packeta.
ABh - 4-3 ...
AI 12:30 p. m. Saturday, a Pomeroy, collided. Damages
Smith Ia several months ybunge,r than Ohio's youngest
A United Press lnlernationaf
15 large Red Pine, 2 yr.
Any of the seedlings listed In
mayor - 19-year-old Ron Hooker of Newcomerstown, who was car driven by Rodney Sayre, were heavy' but there were no count at 9 a.m. EST showed 452
seedlings - 3-li", five small either of the above packets
. sworn In last month. Smith, a freshman at Enunetslmg JIDiior 23, 1\fiddleport, struck the rear Injuries.
persons had died In traffic
packets,
!JUlY be ordered in quantity. ·
CoUege, was put ,Into office on a promise to ·fix the town's streets, of a truck driven by Marvin
accidents.
15 large Scotch Pine, 2 yr. Orders must be placed in
Fry, 41, West Columbia, which
At 3:50 'p. m, Friday on East
defeating Incumbent Mayor E:l!. Swanson by a vote of~.
A bteakdown of accidental
seedlings
- 3-5", five small multiples of 25. "
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One deer was killed and a
had stopped for the traffic Ught Main St. a car driven by Scott deailis:
second one Injured In separate packeta.
The following rates will be
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PARIS-TWO CL08E'fi'RIENDS KEPT a lonely vigil over at the Intersection of Nye Ave. Walton, 16, Pomeroy, struck. Traffic
452 auto accidents over the holiday
10
large
Colorado
Blue
charged
for each variety :
and Main St. There were no the rear of a car driven by Fires
41 weekend the Meigs County Spruce, 4 yr. seedlings 8-12", White Pine, Red Pine, Scotch
the ~.qt. P!!aurlce tbevaUer today, mOurning the death of the
to the Fry vehicle but Violet Walker, 51, Pomeroy, Planes
I Sheriff's Dept. reported.
man who entertained tile world for 60 years With hla special damages
three small packets.
Pine, 25 for f2.50 ; Colorado
heavy to the Sayre car. Sayre who had stopped to make a left Other
43
brand of Parisian charm.
,
10
large
Nor\vay
Spruce,
:J..
Blue
Spruce, Norway Spruce,
Sunday
at
1:29a.
m.
onSR
7,
was · arres.ted for allegedly
Total
537 sill·lentha of a mile north of yr. seedUngs - 12-18", three White, 25 for $3.75; Chinese
Although telegrl!lll of sympathy poured In from all ovet the leaving the scene of an . ace turn. Walton was cited to
world, no vlsltora were allowed inlide .the large white house at cldent and reckless operation. juvenUe court for falling to · California, as over , the Five Points, a deer was killed small packets.
Chestnut, Manc)lu Cherry,
maintain a~sured clear Christmas holiday period,
Marnes-La Coquette, Outside Paris, where the body of the 8:J.
PoUce are continuing their distance. Medium damages {'eported the most traffic when It ran Into the side of a 10 large White Spruce, 4 yr. White or Gray Dogwood, 25 {or
year~ld en~r:!llner J4y,
investigation of an accident at were reported to both vehicles. fataUUes - 58. Texas reported car driven by Donald Curtis seedlings - 1:1-16, three small S6.25; MoiUitain Ash, 25 for
Roush, 22, Pomeroy, Rt. 3. packets.
$12.50.
4:411 a. m. Saturday on East There were no liljurles..
33
traffic
deaths,
Florida
MIDLAND- MICII·. -"AN F.STIMATED 2,000 persons were
5 large White flowering
ADyone wishing to place
There was medium damage to
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COIDited· 31, Michigan 24 and the car.
Dogwood - 8-12", two small orders should either caU the
evacuated from' their bomes SUnday night and early today when
Georgill 23. ·
Meigs Soil and Water Con.
TCII!ay~~a. m. on SR 124, packets.
a truck driver ml"•lrflly pumped ~.ooo gallons of gasolk\e Into
Only three slates, New two=~lle west of
5
larK§
.
.Gray
Dogwood
servation
office 992-3628 or
the city aewerlystem/ .
.
,
.
Hampshire,
Alaska
and
Langsville, a deer was Injured 6-12", two small packeta. · write the office Box 432,
Acc1lmuiaUona of gas fumes resulted In fires which heavUy
RACINE - Carroll V. Corp. and was In charge.of the
Delaware
were
without
any
when it ran into the path of a
5 large Chinese Chestnut Pomeroy, Ohio for an order
damaged threehom~andcauaedlesaer damage to two others. A Grlnun, 77, Racine· Rouli! 2, baseball program of the
traffic
fataUties.
car
driven
by
Buddy
Gene
12-18",
three
small
packeta.
form
for ord~rlng the packets,
minor explo*lon also occurred but pollee said there were .no died Monday at Veterans COm(Nil!Y·
Kuhn, 31, Clover, W. Va. There
Sur"&lt;lvlng are two brothers,
100 large Total Seedlings, 34 .J flr crown vetch. Orders must be
Memorial Hospital. The son of
reported injuries.
was
medium
munage
to
the
amaU packeta.
placed by February . 1st and
.
the late Joseph L: and Letha Ernest J. Grimm and Bert
Grimm,
both
of
Racine
Route
ADMISSION
NOTED
car.
The
cost
on
the
large
packet
will
be received during the first
MONROVIA, LIBERIA. RlaiAI\D M. Nixon and , Pickens Grimm, he ,tlao was
Admission to see the ftxas
A minor accident occurred Will be $11 and the small week of April.
W11llam R. Tolbert, the pr,!i•ent.oeelgnate of this African preceded In death by his wife, 2, and several nieces and
nephews.
Cowgirls,
professional
·
gcrls
Sunday
at 8:45 a. m. at the
country, heard evangellat BUJy Graham tell an overfloW'crowd Etta Womeldorff Gr~, and
Funeral services Will be held basketbaU team, who will play Sohlo Service Station In
·
&amp;mday that liberia could bi!oome' a 'lll)lirltual superjlower.'.'
a sister • Mrs. Bessie Hum.
I p.m. Wednesday at the aL Southern Hi~ School
Mrs. NIXon, the first wile of. U. S. preSident to OfflclaUy P~!·G .. .
.
. at
Ewing
Funeral Home with the Tuesday night, s ' $1 lor
rep.-entlier huablllid lrl Afriea.Is making an eight-day tour of - '"'· nnun was a member of ·
Rev.
Freeland
Norris of· studenls an~ $1.50 or adults. Pomeroy, Rt. 4, was at the gas .
, the Letart FaUs Methodist
.
• .
A deer was killed at 5:30 a . car, traveling east, ran off the
liberia, the lvory.Coast ani! Thana. Today she aUenda Tolbert s Church and of ' Battle Creek flclaling, Burial will be In ti)e . The girls will p ay Lhe pumps when he backed up and
Inauguration ceremoi)J',_occupying a seat bealde Ivory Coast Lodge No. l2, F&amp;AM, BatUe Letart Falls Cemetery:· coaches of Southern Local scraped a car pulling In unseen m. today on Rt. 7, two-tenths of highway after failing to roimd
a curve. The car rolled over
President Felix Houphoue\eBolgny and Mauretanian ,head of Creek, Mich. He was a reUred Friends may call at the funeral School District. Game time is 8 by Turner driven by CU!ford a mile north of Rt. 35.
According
to
the
Gallia·
three times, Morrison being
state, Mohktar Ould Dllddah.
employe of the General Foods home ally ttme.
p.m.
Whittington, 39, Harrisonville.
Meigs Post State Highway thrown out. He was charged
I'
.
'
There were no injwies or
•
Patrol, the animal ran into the with reckless o~ration ~nd
arrests.
path of a car driven by Ruth having· no operator's license . '
Ann Corbin, 27, Rt. I, Cheshire. There was heavy damage to his
There was moderate damage car.
to her car.
·
'
•
The first accident of 1972,
Another deer was killed at 10
'
LOS ANGELEs (UPI)- "1 muat get help" said the husband couldn't make It out.
·"No one would stop to help me: By Saturday I
Chance of snow tonight and however, investigated by the p. m. Friday on Rt. 7, four and
,.oman, slaggerlng In exhauatlon from a three hour
"We were snoWbound. We had no phone."
couldn't stay any longer."
Tuesday, possibly mixed with patrol , occurred · at noon two. tenths miles north of
hike throul!h hiplleep snow. "My husband Is1dead
~e found !!he could not l!)'en open the door of the
It took lllrs. Culter 3"2 hours to walk the 112 mDes to or changing to rain in the south Sunday on Rt. 325, four·tenths Gallipolis. Officers said It ran
. back In our trailer,"
·
, l
trailer becallse of the weight of snow against It, she . the road. Two 'mDes down tlie road, she found people', Tuesday. Lows tonight ·In the of a mile north of County Rd. illto the path of a car operated
.
·' Themanllhehadlllkedforhelpturnedawar.
said. Herhuaband, Stanley, 53, baa moved their 35e apparently city dwellers who had brought their upper teens to mid 2tm. High 32, where vehicles driven by by Dennis E. Lane, 29, Rt. 1,
,,Ulysses· G. Davis, 21, Rt. I, Gallipolis. There was minor
_jf I
"I Clli't help you," he said, pointing to his chlldren · by.., foot trailer to a remote ridge so that he could be children out to play In the mountains in the mow .
Tuesday in the 30s.
liulldlnc a mowlnan on their outing In the snow. out of the smog of the lowlands and breathe purer
Northup , and Ronald ·E. damage to Lane!s car.
She uked one ttuln for a ride to the nearest town,
(:OVerechnountalna. _''The c:hlldren are· playing)'
mowitaln air. He had heart trouble and emphysema. Gorma9. He said he Wll!l going the other way . Another
""""' ··'
Stephens, 16, Rt. 2, Patriot,
A llnul mishap occurred at
·
: Mri. Georgina CUlver, 49, told Sunday how she . In their Isolation dlle to the &amp;nowstonn, her dldn 'I want .to interrupt his children's ·snowman·
TWO FORFEIT BONDS
~oliided . There was minor 11:25 p. m. on the Kerr·
·
pnt four dlyiiiiOWbound In a traUer on a remote husband's supply of oxygen In tanks was ellha118ted building.
J'Wo Meigs Countians for. damage to both cars. No Harrisburg Rd ., four-tenths of
·(ldlli In the Tehachapi Mountains north of Los · . and they'!rere unable to bring In rno~. Wednesday
a mile west of Rt. 160 where a
She tried to.hltch a ride, she said, but no one would felted $3P8 bonds each this charges were filed .
~eiN with the boclr of her OOaband.
morning be told her, "I can't breathe," gaaped as he
plck .her up.
·
morning ' In
Gallipolis
Three. minor ~ccidents were · wheel came Jff an aut~
' When llhe did manase to get out, people she asked 1 sat ontheedgeofthe bed,andfelloverdeild,llhe said.
Municipal Court on highway Investigated Fn day, the last operated by Geor ge A.'
"I just plodded along," she said.
for .&amp;d Would not help her, she said. When she found a
"The sun came out and I got out a sheet and painted
Westfall, 23, Vinton. The In·
Four miles and slx hours after she left the trailer, patrol charges of driving while . day of 1971.
hllbway, motoriltl would not slop for her.
·
'help' on II In big letters and wtlt on the roof of the she reached a restaurant In Gonnan and telephoned under the influence. They were
Jerry Morrlsrn, 23, Rt,. I~ cident caused Westfall to lose
• ''LIIIS\IIIday,thelllowbepntofaU,"piesaid. "It trailer . HeUcopters passed over many times, and I friends.
Clyde J. fngies, 56, Middleport, . VInton, sufferM minor injuries control and .run into a ditch.
c:ame down unW It wu sill reet deep/l'he car was waved for help. I even tried slgnaJIIn( them at night
Sherlfi's deputies brought out the body of her and Maxine M. DitMie, 41, in a slngle~ar accident on Rt. There was moderate damage
IIIOWI(IIn. It's a mUe and 1 hall to the I'OIId .and my with 1 flalhJtght. "
R~d ne .
· 554. The patrol said Morrison 's to his car.
·
·
husband
SUnday.
1
' '

Ashbrook Hopeful·
In ew Hampshire

Law and Order Mayor Strom
.

it
'

'

'

:

1,..-&gt;i•'·
·~J'~
'

•i'

' .:
'

'

&lt;

•'

'. '

•

i

'
'

'

®
MAKE.
MAH
LIFE.i-ONc;
,DREAM

'

him."Wof{~lessly

Coffin

COME. .
:rp,uE.-

NeW$.•• in BriefS

Seedling fackets

wunt is
Ove.r 500

Three Accidents
Are Investigated

Have ·9,Varieties

Two Deer

Struck by

Vehicles ,

'
'

'

.

....,..

CAPTAIN EASY
· •• NOU

YOU MEAN

THAT.M-

OF

McKE&amp;

FIR~T

MU~T ·
DEVELOP

;nle: CHARI~M6

,-,, .,

,,'\',.,

Carroll Grimm Dies on Monday
.

OF l..f:AI'ISR?HIP
ANP'AOOPT A

. I./F6 f,T'/te,H
''
'

I

.,
'

I

Mas.

~::~~~:~ttTurner,Sr.,s9.

Deer Killed Early Today

0

AND UN(.!!!j? WI:: WI?H TO

She Met only C6Id Heart~d Americans
'

Weather

f

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