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;....•Jtt iHI!I, !\II L1l Ut.' (lOrt·l-'01ll~fO), U ., l\ tt\ '. IU, 1! 1 1.~

Bash an

r·:-:·:·:'*sa:c:-i:~ ·:r~:·:·::·:l'i'

.\ppJt• Gron•

Mr. and

Mrs. Gar~· Holte r
and children spent Tha nksgiYing weekend with he r
relatives at Duncanville, Pa.
Mr . and Mrs. Ralph Trussell
and children spent a recent
weekend wtth her mother, Mrs.
Faye Kirkhart at Marion. lnd .
Mr. and 1\frS. Roscoe Pitzer
of Beckley , w. Va ., visited
their son, Mr. and Mrs. Clint
Pitzer and family .
Mrs . Freda Deeter spent a
few days recently wirh her son,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Deel&lt;r and
family .
l\fr. and Mrs . Vinton Jones ,
spent a few days with relatives
at Dunbar, W. Va .
Mr . and Mrs. Geo r ge
Roberts, Mr. and Mrs . E rilie
Deet&lt;r and children spent a
Sunday with Mr . and Mrs.
Randall Roberts of Letart
Falls.
Spending Thanksgiving with
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Trussell
were Mr. and Mr s. Rober t
Trussell, Mr. and Mrs. John
Riden ou r and Ja son, of
Ches l&lt;r, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Trussell a nd Dawn, of Ml.
Vernon, 0 ., Mr. an d Mrs.
Richa rd Kerns of Belpre , and
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph Trussell,
Peggy, Ste vi e, Renee and
Scotty , local. Al so callin g
during the week were Mr . and
Mrs. Albert Hill, Racine , a nd
Mr . and Mrs. Clint Pitzer.
Mrs. Iva Carpenter spent a
week with relatives in
Columbus.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight-Sat .- Sun._
Nov . 30, Dec. 1-1
FEAR IS THE KEY
I Technicolor)
( PG)
Barry New man
Suzy K~ndall
ACE ELl &amp;
ROGER OF THE SKIES ·
(Tec hni color)
( PGJ
Cliff Robertson
Pr;~m e l a Franklin

~; Calendarl!ii
FRIDAY ,
REVIVAl. i :JO p.m . each
C\•ening at Apos tolic Church ,
Ra c ine. with Ro bert Hall ,
evan gelist .
SOUP SUPPER 5 p.m. at
Sy r acuse As bury Un ited
Methodist Church . Soup, pie,
sandwiches , coffee and tea will
be served. Proc~eds to be used
to remodel basement.
SATURDAY
SQUARE DANCE 8 to 12
m idnight
s ponsored
by
Harrisonville PTO . Even t to be
held in Harris onv ille School
gym . Music by The Hilltoppers . Adults 50 cents, students
25 ce nts.
DANCE from 9 to 12 midnight at Pomeroy Junior High
School sponsored by Spanish
Club at Meigs High. Admission
$1.
HYMN SING, 7:30 p.m . at
Freedom Gospel Mission at
Bald Knob. The Rev . and Mrs.
Buddy
Allman,
Athen s,
singers; public invited.
SUNDAY
BILL KANE , assistant
direc tor of security operations,
Ohio Universi ty, at Middleport
Unite d Pentecostal Chur ch,
Sunday , 10 a.m. to display
materials a rid show film s
relative to drug abuse. Kane
served in Ohio State Patrol for
14 years . Public invited.
ADVENT " ROUND th e
Ta ble" ca rol sing, 6 p .m .
Sunday . at Pomeroy United
Meth odi st Ch urc h. Refres hments to be se rv ed in "round
the table" style . Public invited .

Mt·. anY Mrs Jad. Ahles and
fmruly
T•~. mhi.! • v in~ llohd ;,~ s w1th his
;\1r. ~rl(1 Mrs,' C.;;u·roU Biils~r
1-Jilrt~ul'i, ~lr and \1r :-. 1\h·x ttnd family uf Mansfield were
Wl•t•t"h·r :\1r. ami :'\1rs . Edward Wl"t.'kcnd guests or Mrs. Alk-c
1·1

Uy \lrs. Ht•rtx·rt ltnush
~1r . ~uul

News

\\1'1'1' Th;mk;o.t,:l\ Ill ~ I )ay J.tUOSl"t

Mrs. Arnold Hu(.lp

and son Hn&lt;.'k) spt•r•t Tlwu'&lt; :-.·
I-:1\'Ulf.! "t' •kt•nri Wllh Mr. ant•
Mrs. Kt.•nny B&lt;-tss and Mr. i.ind
Mrs.
Uwrll'l'
Hupp at

:\l ~· t· l •..,
.1n 11 ('!nldn:n
t"harlt •~ 'u ll, spNlt Sundt•y

('r

Mrs . Edith Gilkey of
(;allipolis, Rollin D;!l of
Mrs . /\lice Balser a nd Butch P'Jn1CTQY. Mrs. Alice Balser
Ables of the Shaffer Buat, were Sunday guests or Mr. and
Mary Congo of Bald Knobs Mrs . Jac k Ables.
tht• Wlu:•elcrs.

M:.m.• ngo, 0 .
Bill Wheeler, student at Ohio
State
Um\•ersily ,
spent

Janet Compson

appointment.

CAROL :5
COIFFEURS
Mason, W.Va.

of Mr . and Mrs. Boone
Adams at Racine . The birthday
f.lf Mrs. Jack Ad~m was
celebrated .
Mr. and Mrs . Tom Tarr and
children of Rockford , Ill., Mr .
and Mrs . Arc hie Brutvan and
children of Cuyahoga F'all•,
Mrs . EdiU1 Grimm of Kent
were Thanksgiving weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Grimm.

Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Donahue over Thanksgiving weekend were Mr. and
Mrs . Chorles Winebrenner and
children of Cheshire, Mr. and
Mrs . Kearny Donohue and
family , Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Harden and son Eric of
Marion. 0 ., Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell Burton and family of
Columbus.

•.

-

Shop Saturday 9:30. to 9 p.m.

AUDITOR HONORED - Gordon
Caldwell, retiring Meigs County
Auditor, was honored Friday morning
by his co-workers and fe llow court-

'·-

PRETEEN

De,voted To The Greater Middle Ohio Vallev ·

people - it wouldn't affect them a bit.
They could afford an increase in price."
STATIONS CLOSING
GALLIPOLIS It appeared
Saturday that If city reside nts p!aDJJed
to travel today they had to have thetr
tanks filled before 9 p.m. Saturday.
A spot check of c ity service s tations
Saturd ay afternoon showed that all
Sohio and As hland owned stations
expected to close Saturd·a y evening,
so me as early as 6 p.m. and others at 9
p.m. and would not re-open unttl
Monday morning.
Other se rvice stations such as
Union 76, Shell, Texaco, Gulf, Workman 's Friend, Sunoco, Bonded, and
Quake r State are all closed on Sunday.

4 SECTIONS

42 PAGES

I
JANE STOWERS .

Our Entire Stock Of
Pantcoats, All-Weather
Coats,·Untri'mmed .and
Fur Trimmed Coats Is
Included.

Oteerleader is
quee;n Cafldidate
GALUPOLIS - Miss Jane Stowers,
19, a sophomore at Rio Grande College,
has been selecl&lt;d by .the men of Pi Sigma
Fraternity to represent them as their
candidate lor the colle ge's · 1973
Homecoming Queen.
Miss Stowers, the daughter of Mr. and
MrS. S. B. Stowers, Rio Grande, is a 1972
graduate of Gallia Academy High School.
She is presently majoring in Business
Education at Rio Grande.
Jane is a varsity cheerleader for the
Redmen and was elected Sergeant-atAnns by her sorority, Alpha Mu Beta. She
also serves as fresh.man orientation
mentor.
The crowning of the 1973 Homecoming
.Queen wiU take place at 9 p.m., Friday,
Dec. 7 at Lyne Cenl&lt;r, Rio Grande,
('.ol!ege, at the cooclusion of the rock
concert.

.

BIG SELECTION OF MISSES 6 TO 20 .
JUNIORS 5 TQ ·15, PRETEEN AND GIRLS
,,

3 TO 6X AND 7 TO 14·
BE SURE TO REGISTER 'AT
MECHANIC STREET WAREHPUSE
FOR .TI-iE WHIRLPOOL DISHWASHER
N~ Purchase
Win-

1\jecessary-you need not

~e

present to

pomeroy

national
bank ·

DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING EARLY

the bo nk of
the cen lury

AND SAVE DURING OUR TWO-DAY SALE'

estoblished 1872

Womens Knit tops - Womens Acrylic Pants; - Misses
and Juniors Jeans - Sportswear - Table '(:overs Cosmetic Gift Sets - Womens Slips - Girls P~nts and
Knit Tops- Mens Sweater Vests - Boys Flann' I Shirts
- Boys Knit Shirts - Mens Flannel Shirts - Boot Cut
Denim Jeans - Ready-made Draperies- Tonka Toys Bicycles.
\

Member

FDIC
MAIN OFFICE
Mon .. T ues .. Wed ... Thurs . 9a.m .- 3 p.m .
Fr idav 9 a.m . to 7 p.m .

..

,.

.

,.

,.

'

/

YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING HEADQUARTERS

"Going one step further"

I .

500 women are

aided at clinic .

'

.I

got to drive every day to work and needs

tnc transpnrtation ,11 he said . uother

) our In vited Gue.~t
U e11ching Mort!
Them 12,000
Families

tmts

GIRLS

'

·. RUTL A NO BRA NCH
Mon , Tues ., Wed ., Sat ., 9a .m .-Jp .m .
Thvrsda y 9 a .m . to 11 Noon
Fr ldav 9 a m. to 7 p .m .

" Hoardm g of gasoline is not an
American thing to do because we should
all bear the brWit of this thing and share
and share alike," he added.
Dewey cautioned motori sts to use
properly made and properly marked cans
if they wish to purchase gasoline.
He also Condemned gasoline rationing
and the possible fed eral , surtax on
gasoline.
" I feel that if the American public will
get behind President Nixon's wishes and
try to conserve power, we wi L1 ha ve
gasoline," he said. " ! really feel the
government does n ~t want to put rationing
on .
" They know what problems will be
involved ir they try it,'' he said. ''We 're not
in a war situation right now .11 Dewey al so
said he didn't think the surtax, as ex·
plained so far to the public, would be right.
" 1 feel that it would only hurt certain
people - the small man , the man that's

+

WOMEN'S

Wool, Melton, Suede, Texturized Polyester,
Fake Fur, Leather LoOks, Skai.

~oon

punch, and a cake with the Inscri ption,
"Good Luck Gordon, 15 years
Dedicated Service.'' From !ell to right,
Coty Curtis, Helen Hubbard, Grace
While, Martha Dudding, Caldwell and
Gloria Michael. Above, Mr. Caldwell
displays a cuckoo clock, one of the gifts
he received.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1973

Gall ipo!is-l:'oint Pleasant

ABC's Diles giving
hall of fame .speech

SALEM CENTER PTA 7:30
p.m . Christmas program to .be
presenl&lt;d by the student body .
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
Club, 7:30 p.m. at the home of .
Mrs. Carl Horky. Christmas
party, $1 g ift e xc hange .
Members to take unwrapped
gifts for patients at the Athens
Mental Health Center.

Satu r day 9 a .m to 12

...

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Oren Dewey,
president of tl1e Central Ohio Retail
Ga so lin e Dealers Assoc iat io n , said
Saturday many Central Ohio service
sta tions would comply with President
Nixon's energy conserva ti on plan and
close for the ~,~:eekend s .
Dewey said as many as 9\1 pet. of th e
stations would be closed from 9 p.m.
toni ght through midoight Sunday. Dewey
said i£ motorists wanted to purchase
gasoline in cans , they could because the
gasoline dealer does not have the right not
to sell if he has gasoline.
Although he said hoarding of gasoline is
sornethj ng he didn 't Like to see, it was not
an American thing to do.
" We don ' t like to see it," he said.
" Everybody should be treated the same on
this thing and or Course the American
public,right away rWls scared if there's a
scarcity of the product and they don 't want
it to affec t them and their family.

Pomeroy -MidJlepor·t

PRICE 20 CENfS

.C &amp;SOE files rate hike application

AI reasonable rates. As fast as we can.
We al ways like ·t o go one step fu rther for you .

'"!land

Public seroice ends
for Gordon Caldwell

house employees wltb a surprise
farewell party In the auditor's offlce.
Caldwell is shown here with co-workers
around a table laden wtth presents,
,_

VOL. 8 NO. 44

Tt) e next time you need money , remember us.
·
We 'll co~ e throU gh with a loan.

pomeroy

I

Weather
Sunday mostly sunny and
warmer ; highs in the upper 40s
and low 50s north to mid 50s to
low 60s south and central. Fair
Sunday; !O\j'S mostly in the 30s.
Increasing cloudiness and mild
Monday with highs from the
50s north to the mid 60s south .

As ·a new € mployee .
She ha s jo in e d Sue
Floyd and Marilyn
Clark.
Phone 773 - 5352 for

~ucsts

Open Tonight Until· 9 p.m.

RA CINE Chapter 134 OES
practice for installation, 2 p.m.
at the hall. Installation Dec . 8
at 8 p.m . All 1974 officers and
installing officers asked to
atl&lt;nd .
MONDAY
EIGHT and Forty . Meigs
County Salon 710, Christmas
party, Meigs Inn, 6:30 p .m .
Secret sister · gift exchange .
Members to take food for
Chri s tmas basket. Sherrie
Mars hall, cystic fibrosis child,
to be honored guest; her siste r
Denise also to attend.
RACINE Chapl&lt;r 134, OES,
r eg ular m eeting , Monda y
nig ht , 8 p.m . Masonic Temple.

Carol's
CoiHeurs Is
Announcing

B~lser .

wit!\

Church or
Mi.irwn was a Thanksgiving
weekend KUCSt or Mr. and Mrs .
Mat·shal! Adams. Mr. and Mrs .
Hutch Donohue and c hi1drcn of
Marion ca lled on the Adamses .
Mrs . Florence Adarns visited
her s is ter , Mrs. Freda Evans
at the horne or Mrs. Donna
Rose recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Adams
we re Thanksgivin g dinner
Mrs . Floss ie

MIDDLEPORT - Planned parent.hood is serving 500 persons in Meigs
County according to the director . of
Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio
director Jane Ergood.
Mrs. Ergood was the speaker Friday
evening to members of the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club at Heath United
Methodist Church following dinner served
by ladles of the church. Mrs. Ergood was
presenl&lt;d by Rotarian Gene Riggs , PP(Continued on Page 2)

ARC grant approved
'
for child projects
COLUMBUS - Gov. John J . Gilligan
l).as announced the Appalachian Regional
,Commission (ARC) has approved a S62.2Q1
- grant to the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District. for ~d­
mlnlstration of its comprehenSive Chlld
development project.
The grant will be used to provide
continued child development services such
as health services, education and nutrition
asslslance to families in the district. In
·compliance with ARC procedures, the
Ohio Department of Economic and
Community Development will provide
monitoring service, training and l&lt;chmcal
assistance to U!e agency.

.,
II

. RIO GRANDE - Da ve Diles, co-host
of the ABC-TV Prudential College Football
Scoreboard Show, will be the featured
speaker at the Rio Grande CQllege Hall of
Fame Banquet, December 8, in the co llege
cafeteria beg inni ng at 5:30 p.m .
Diles ~ a nat ive of Middleport in nearbv
Meigs CoWity, will address the Hall of
Fame inductees, their families , and guests
of Rio Grande . College following the
Cedarville-Rio Grande basketball game.
Diles began his career as a writer with
the Gallipolis Tribune and the Pomeroy
Sentinel and was one of the first sportswriters to realize th e greatness of the
undefeated 1952-53 Redmen .basketball
l&lt;am coached by Newt Oliver and headed
by Bevo Francis and Wayne Wi seman. He
&lt;1!so served with the Athens Messenger
and attended Ohio University.
Diles advanced ln the media through
the Associated Press wire service. He
worked at the Louisville, Ky., Columbus,
Ohio, and Detroit, · Mich. bureaus. From
1961 throug h 1972 he. was spor l' director of

WXYZ television and r a dio in Detroit.
Diles has been a contributor to ABC
Television Sports, ABC News , a nd the
award winning ABC Wide World of Sports
for eight years. He has been seen on NBA
basketba ll, track and field, auto racing,
college football , and powerboat racing for
ABC-TV.
Diles is a former sports-editor of the
Associated Press and two-term president.
of the Michigan Football Writers and the
Detroit Sports Broadcasters' Assn. During
his career, ·he has been honored as one of
the Midwest's Outstanding yotlng men and
was nominated for broadcasting's highest
hon or , th e Peabudy Award. His tribute to
the late President Kennedy was placed in
the Ke nnedy Library and accepl&lt;d by the
DAVE DILES
Freedoms Foundation in Valley Forge,
Pa .
Diles has bee n cited more than 80
He gave the address last month
times f or professional awards and civic
honoring
the Meigs Marauder football
contributions. He is the father, of two
children and is the son of the late Lisle and . squad at the annual Rotary Club Football
Banquet in Meigs High SchooL
Lucille Diles. ·

Embroidered work
.Is creative
. art
•
•·

BY JAN COUNTRYMAN
GALLIPOLIS " We ll,
they're tearing the old home
place down .·,, Those were the
words that set Berniece
Brewer lind her embroidery
needle to work creating a
legacy in thread.
Mrs. Brewer, now a
resident of Urbana Ave.,
Dayton ; is originally from
Harrison Twp., Gallia County.
When one of her brothers (both
live in Gallia Co.) wrote and
told her that an all electric
home would soon replace the
bouse where she lived as a
child, Mrs . Brewer took up her
needle and launched into 100
hours of creating solid-work
embroidery.
The house that inspired all
this was the home of Berniece's
parents, Mr . and Mrs. John E .
Notter, near Gallipolis. She got
out old pictures of the house
and its surroundings, a shed
that became a garage, and the
car that inhabited it after the
horse moved out. The house
itself was built in the last year
of the Civil War in a countryvictorian style with a dark blue
roof and ornamental porch
posts.
Mrs. Brewer is married to
James Brewer who is an
engineer. He graduated from
the University of Dayton. Mrs.
Biewer attended classes at
Miami .Jacobs College and was
employed by the Third,
National Bank. She took
trail)ing through the bank's
educational prograin.
Often referred to by her
friends and relatives as 11The
Artist with tlle Needle, ' 1 Mrs.
Brewer is eager to master new
embroidery stitches and
designs. She enjoys psyc hology
and has taken three courses in
it. She worked for over 20 years

,.

before retiring to home life.
Along with her embroidery she
ha~ compiled an extensive
family 'history.
The Brewers have two
daughters , Joan Huffman,
assistant professor in History
at Macon Junior College,
Macon, Ga., and Nina Brush,
Dayton, who is attending the
Sinclair College of Nursing .
Along with the house , Mrs.
Brewer has done many
historical works for colleges,
states, Ohio Bell, the Ford
Company and has given close
to 400 of her embroidered
works a WiLY.
For the Notter homestead,
Mrs. Brewer spared nothing in
detail. She has used all of the
shades of home and says she
" studied on it for about a

,.

COLUMBUS -. The Columbus and Southern Ohio E: lectric Company filed an appli cation with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
(PUCO ) Frida)' to increase certain of its electric rates.
In announcing the filing, E:van E . Williams. Vice President Rates &amp;
Valuation, said the application covers approximately 35 pet. of the
company's customers and includes all residentil!l customers using
electricity under optional rates. All large commercial and industrial
users would be affected.
However, not included in this application are rates for 64 pet. of
C&amp;SOE's regular residential, small commercial and small industrial
customers using secondary service which are established through rate
ordinances in individual communities, including the City of Columbus.
The company has appealed to the PUCO an ordinance. passed by the
Columbus City Cotlncil and turned down by
the voters in November 1972, which asks
for increased rates to .these customers.
This appeal is still pending and the company cannot predict the amo)lllt or timing
of any increase which may be granted.
Williams cited increased costs of
operation, climbing c&lt;ists of capital and
increased investment in plant and
equipment as reasons for need of the
request which averages 19 pet. overall and ·
in total amounts to $13,181!,000. Of this
amount, approximately one-half would be
available for use by the cqmpany - the
other 9ne-half would be paid as additional
Federal Income tax.
"Since 1969 the company has raised its
outlay for plant and equipment by approximately $205 million - a 50 pet. increaSe. Costs of operation were up by 2~ . 5
pet. in the period December 1969 to
~ember 1972 despite continued company
ausl&lt;rity moves to hold costs down,"
Williams stated.

Under the Application the amount of
increase reflecl&lt;d by customer's bills
would vary depending upon the amount of
electricity used and upon the area where
the customer lives.
A regular residential customer in the
unincorporated areas of Franklin County
who used 400 kilowatt hours (KWH ) of
electricity in October and paid $12.08,
would pay $14.69 under the proposed
schedule .
Th e regular residential customer in an
non-ordinance town outside Franklin
County paid $12.54 for 400 KWH in October.
His bill under the proposed new rate would
be $16.54 _
Minimum charges for all affected
.(Continued on Page 2)

Project Hope is
funded by. ARC

COLUMBUS - Gov . John J . Gilligan
has announced Appalachian Regional
Commission ( ARC ) approval of a $143,452
grant for the Ohio Valley Regional
Development Commission for continued
funding of the Project Appalachian Hope .
The program is a home-orienl&lt;d,
educational
outreach program helping
GALUPOLJS -'-: Funds released to the
Gallipolis State Institute this week by the families foster ·a healthy, stimulating
State Controlling Buard will be used to environment for children. The project
renovate several cottages allowing currently is serving 130 familles with 168
patients to reside in independent living children ages one to six years throughout
Gallia County.
units insl&lt;ad of dormJtory rooms .:.
The program provides screening,
Dr. Bernard F . Niehm, GSI
diagnostic
and referral services. The
Superintendent, said the new living
11
arrangement will give patien~ more preschool pr og ram includes dally
television instructiont weekly classroom ·
freedom and more dignity."
In all, $405,000 was allocated. to the GSI experiences for children three to five
years or age and parent instruc tion-in the
for the rehabilitation project.
Dr . Niebm said the cottages would home by trained personnel.
The projec t was begun by the
each house about nine residents 'in five
bedrooms, a lounge, kitchen unit and sun Gallipolis City School District in 1972. The
district is the only Ohio school district to
deck.
In addition, some . of the larger operate a home-oriented preschool
buildings are being renovated to divide program. ·In compliance with ARC
them into separal&lt; wards to offer patients procedures, the Ohio Department of
Economic and Community Development
more privacy and more attention.
Another building on the institute will provide monitoring services, training
grounds is being remodeled to house a and l&lt;chnical assistance to the school
senior citizens center for the 35 to 40 district.
~tients w11o are over 60 years of age.
HEIFER DRESSED, STOLEN
CUrrently, 1,800 residents are living at
PORTLAND - The Meigs County
the Gallipolis State Institute ..
sheriff's Dept. was called to investigate
circ umstances (jf the s hooting , field
dressing and theft of an eight to eleven
month old Hereford heifer Friday night
here on the Hubert Price !ann.
GALLIPOLIS The GRI!ipolis
Merchants Association will meet. at CirCHEVY WRECKED, BURNED
cle's Restaurant for its December·session,
GALLIPOLIS ~ A 1962 Chevrolet
beginning at 8:30 a .m . Tuesday . Final owned by Louetta Hill of 447 Second Ave.,
plans for the Dec. 8 Gallia County Christ- Gallipolis, which was stolen some time
mas parade will be discussed.
,
Friday · night was found wrecked and
Charles Bostic , association president, burned Saturday morning on Woods Mill
Saturday reminded individuals that Rd. The ca r had been taken from a parking
Monday is the deadline for submitting space at the Gold Van Lines on Third Ave.
entries for this year's Christmas parade. and Sycamore St.
•

•

new units

EMBROIDERED PICTURE - The 1918 Ford in this
picture is shown next to the shed that originally housed the
Notter family's horse and carriage . Mrs. Brewer completed
this·work in about 50 hours. Her works also include college
crests and a picture of the Moon Landing for the Aviation
Hall of Fame in Dayton.
'

HOMEPLACE - Mrs. Berniece Brewer spent 100 boors
embroidering this picture of the house where she Jived as a
child. The picture is done entirely in solid-work embroidery
from a design drawn by Mrs. Brewer.
Francis and Sophia (Saunders) tington, and Harvey, who
Notter lived near Lecta. There ·never married and resided on
were six Notter sons, John, the homeplace all his life . The
Isa iah, Noah and Harvey, all boys had three sisters, Mary
who li\'ed in Ga.Uia County; Notter Elliott, Sarah Notl&lt;r
Jessee, who liv ed in Hun(Con tinued ori Page 2)

Parade plans will he
discussed by chamber

,

.1.
j

optional rated resident users

GSI plans

year."
The 1918 Ford and the garage
in which it stayed are the topic
Of another of Mrs . Brewer's
works . The car wa s purchased
in the spring of 1~19 by Elwin
· Notter . Mrs. Brewer recalls
that she and Elwin took their
first ride in it to visit their
neighbors, the Steiger family,
a distance of about 200 yards.
She. was five years old at the
time and recalled that, "To be
real honest I was a little afraid
of the car." Mrs. Brewer
thought that Noah Notter
bought the first car in her part
of the county, and to her , Ford
is stlll the only kind of car.
Her brother, Cecil Notter,
bought a 1929 Ford with a
rwnble seat, which she said,
''served heat, fresh air , cold
and colder, free to all."
Expanding her work, Mrs.
Brewer e mbroidered a picture
of the · Franc is Notter
hoJlleStead, as she ~egan to
, include the homes . of her .
relatives in the project.

Utility wants increase for all

I

\

1\

t

)

j

1

�•

.

3 - The Sunday Times. Sentinel. SWJday, Dec. 2, 1973

uel
shortages
Common sense approach asked in
.

Tht.~ Sunda \ Tune~- &amp;&gt;ntu'k'1, SundJ' . Ot&gt;\. :!. 1~;3

2

CAl LIPOI.LS - Wh olesale
suppliers have be\'n asked to
use a "common sense ap·
pruach·· m allocattng rn1ddle

distillate fut&gt;ls to cust&lt;J mers
dunng the current transHtonal
penod of th e ma nd a ro r:
all ocahon prog r am which
became effec tl\'e :\ twember 1
Duke R. Ugon. Dtrector.
Offiee of Oil and Gas. L S
SIG:&gt;OS OF:LAr E O
COLU~I BUS
I: Pf ' - .\
differencC' in legislatt on in
Cong ress has tem porar ily
halted for sen? ral days the
ere cti ng of 1,000 s•gns along
Ohio highways calling for a
voluntary speed limit of 50
m iles per hour.
SOOI\ERS ROMP
STILLWATE R, Okla . ! UP! I
. - Ok lah oma qua rt er ba ck
Steve Davis scored on rWis of

se\'en . nine and eigh t yards
Saturday to lead the M . 2·
ranked Sooners to a 45-18

slau ghter

of

a rch-r ival

Okl ah oma State.

SUNDAY
liMES-SENTINEL
P ub]1 :sne-d
by
TIH!
f' u b li ~llm'il

I

e'·er'l

01'1 &lt;0

Ca.

V a ll ey

MA I L

SU B SCRI PTI O N RATE S
Tn-: Gal li polis l r 1Dun e •n
Onio and Wto sl V irg i n i a on e
year \ 15, si • mo!'IIM Sll . tnree
m on thS ss, el sewhe r e s 17 per
yur , S i )( m onths 59 . l llru
mont h s 15.50
The D a lly s entinel. one
ye&amp; r SH 00. si ll. m ont h s u .so,
three month s 15.00.
T n e U n i t e d Pres s In
ter n a l i On lll l _IS I!X CI US i vely "
e n t •t l ed 10 the u s e tor
p u b lic at io n ot a ll ne ws
d i spat ch es. c red i ted IQ th is
ne wsp aper i:I!'ICI a l so t h e loc a l
new s pub l i shed herein

;. New med school plan attacked

assignment of a suppliers 6025 ).
Ligon
alSil
pointed
oul
:
Report forms for these
hould petition the Regional
month of 1972 - "a corrunon 1973, as a gUJde," Ligon said.
Depart men\ of the In tenor. has their I9i2 purchasos ."
" It should be noted that the Office of Oil and Gas, Federal purposes are available thorugh
sonse approach " should be " In other words, the suppliers
Ligon pmn ted out that while
told • holesale suppliers that
mandatory
program provides
should sell a cus tomer a
Office Building, Room 218, 536 the new middle distillate
'" tht&gt; mandat o r ~ prog ram doe s thf producers state that su p- followed in making good use of
proportionate share of the for suppliers and purchasers South Clark Street, Chicago, allocation office at the PUCO
the excess fuels.
not rpq wre that all customers pbers can use whate\·er supagreeing among themselves lo
lll . 60606 (telephone 312-591· address given above.
" We ask that su ppliers supplier 's excess so that the
b ~ re- duced to t he sa rne plies they haH left 0\•er in any
either
borrow
on
future
wholesale customer gets some
\'Olumes of fuels purcha5&lt;'d tn way that they see fit - after allocate those excess fu els to
allocations or defer current
fuel. Under this basis we
l9i2. unless a reductwn is th e wh olesale purchasers customers on a fair-share
allocations within the level of
basis, using the amount of fu el believe that undue hardships
necessary to ensure that all obtain 100 pet . of the fue ls they
the total allocation for the
would be avoided."
customers get a fai r share of purchased during the same a customer bought in October
year, as long as such
arrangements do not result in
'
an invo1untary reduction. in
alil&gt;cations to other pur·
chasers. Similarly," he added,
(Continued from Page I )
1Continued from Page I)
residential customers would also be in~ "suppliers may borrow or
provided her by the cllmc .
swap products amon g them·
Sli:O trea surer .
creased .
The speaker said local fWlding will be
The service is offered in Meigs County
To meet the continuing energy selves."
twice monthly in clinics at Veterans necessary in the future and that PPSEO is
The program ·also makes
requirements of its customers Ute combuilding up a tradition of volWltary giving.
Memorial Hospital with Dr . Roger
pany expects to spend approximately provisons for purchasers to
Daniels , M.D., the consulting physician . Patients ar e char ged for services on
$715,000 ,000 during the period 1973 through obtain needed supplies of
"There is reason to believe upward of ability to pay .
1977 for construction af new' facilities lo middle distillates. Wholesale
for everyone on your Christmas list.
The secretary of PPSEO is Mrs.
1,000 women in Meigs County nee_d the
purchasers who did not have a
supply
elec
tric
power.
More
than
counseling we can give them, " said the Bernard Fultz of Middleport.
Guests at dinner were Bruce Ergood _$8{),000,000 of this amount will be spent lo supplier in 1972, or who were
spea ker . She said the goal of the semi·
meet
increased
environmental not in business . during the
and
Dr
.
Carl
Wood
of
Gallipolis.
feder ally funded service ( $260,348' of a
regulations. Williams stressed that the entire year of 1972, or who have
President Harold Hubbard set th.e
1408,740 budget in 1973·'74) is " that every .
company needs an increase in rates to had substantial expansion in
club's Christmas party for Dec . 14 and
child born is a wanted child."
offset increased costs and to enable it lo fuel requirements to the extent
Mrs. Ergood read an unsolicited letter named Bob Buck and Danny Thompson
continue lo provide adequate electric that allocations · based on 1972
from one mother who praised the service chairmen .
are inadequate, are en!M!rvice to its custoniers.
couraged to explore · all
possibilities to obtain required
supplies. In this connection,
suppliers are encouraged lo
•
(Continued from Page I )
•
accept such new expartded
•
business within provisons of
Allison and Anna Notter Kerr.
the regulation .
Harley and Hazel (Notter)
. Requests for interpretation
Myers, a granddaughter, now
may be made to the Ohio
ti ve in the old house.
Allocations Office of the
Noah and Margaret (Vanz·
Mandatory Middle Distillate
let 1 Notter also lived near
&amp;
Allocation Program, Public
J....ecta , and their house is
UWities Commission of Ohio,
another of the subjects em·
PT . PLEASANT As
Ill North High Street,
broidered by Mrs. Brewer. warnings about the upcoming
Colwnbus 43215 (telephone 61~
They had four children, gas
rationing
increase,
466-5313 ), or the Petrolewn
Francis, Nola Notter Massie, residents or Point Pleasant and
Allocation Division, Office of
Hazel Notter Myers and Henderson are relieved to
Oil and Gas, Department of the
Daniel . Daniel now, lives on the learn of the bus service
Gifts large &amp; sma ll - for all your needs.
Interior, Washinglon, 0 . C.
homepla ce where he is established by the Pickens City
20240.
.
Christmas Hrs.- 10 · 8
engaged in farming.
Bus Service.
Whole•ale
purchasers
Phillip Pickens, owner and
.
needing
to
obtain
an adjusted
Brother Isaiah and Margaret operator of the Pickens Cab
State &amp; Third - - · -·~ Gallipolis. 0.
base period volume or the
Welis Notter lived in a house Company for the past seven
near Northup that is now the years, said the bus service
home of Joy and Donald originally was planned to
Barlow . They own the upper accommodate low income
half of the farm . The Notters' persons who felt they were
oldest daughter, Mrs. Glenn financially unable to pay cab.
(Mae ) Marr lives on the lower fares.
PICKENS BUS - This is the bus that has been put to
But, in view of the current
half of the farm. The Nctters'
in Polnt Pleasant and Henderson , serving residents of
work
yoWlger daughter, Mrs. Lady fuel crisis, it is anticipated that
the two communities, on a regularly scheduled ilasis.
Notter Coleman, lives in many will be seeking other
Liverpool, Pa. Joy is the oldest means of trat~sportation inout First and circles around
The second run reverses that
daughter of Mrs. Marr and her ste~d of by private car, and the
Heck 's and then heads north· of the first and so it goes that
bus will serve their needs .
husband~ Glenn ,
ward up Viand Street. '
one hour · it's up Kanawha
A 2Q.passenger bus was put
At 14th Street, the bus goes Street and the next it's down.
As well as doing family into sen:ice and is making 13 off on Kanawha upward to On the odd runs, I, 3, etc., as
homes, Mrs. Brewer has runs a day between the two North Main, to 22nd Street and listed in the Pickens City Bus
embroidered pictures of two comml,Ulities, although no rW1s then up Lincoln. It crosses 28th Service advertisement, the bus
churches. The Lincoln Chapel are being made on Sunday and Street to Jackson and con- travels up Kanawha Str.eet and
Church, built in 1905, on Li~­ holidays at this time.
tinues
northward
to on the even numbers it goes up
Pickens said since the bus
coln Ridge has since been
Bellemead, comes back across Jefferson and back down
abandoned, but -Mrs . Brewer service was started hours have the highway where it circles Kanawha Wltil the 13 runs are
recalled attending many been extended · by one in the Burdette Addition. Coming made daily.
programs, picnics and all-day early· morning and four at down Jackson to Park Drive,
Bus service is shut down for
night. The first run is made
celebrations on its grounds.
·the bus enters this area ·and · a one hour period from 12 until
The oldest daughter of Isaiah from the Pickens Cab stand on after circling moves downward 1 p.m. during lunch titne.
Notter and of Mr. and Mrs . Main Street at 7 a.m. and Uie to Jefferson and Viand through
. Fares are 50 cents each at
'
Gtf'nn Marr were married last at 8 p.m.
!own to the cab stand. Then at this time. There is a possibility
~-STORY
PIANOS-----~
Leaving the cab stand on the
there. Other
marriages
7:45a.m. it leaves Main Street that later tickets will be sold at
solemnized in ·the country first run of the day, the bus for Henderson on the first trip reduced prices for bus fares,
church included the youngest moves down Main Street, goes across the Kanawha River .
Mr. Pickens-said.
·. Model. 77, P-e -c a_n_ ! 9 4 9 Model 33, Wa_ l_n_u t_ $_ 8 4 9 :
granddaughter of John Notter,
REG. $1220
REG . $1060
and the youngest daughier of
·' .. ·' .· .. .
..
·' ..
COMPLETES COURSE
Cecil Notter.
AB.ERDEEN
PROVING
Northup Baptist Church was
Model 53,
. Model 35, P_e _c a_n_ • 8 8 5
GROUND, Md. Army
REG: $970
built in 1921 and is still in use .
REG. $1160
- --- ...
Private Jerry D. Slone, 19, son
Mrs. Brewer's father-in-law,
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Slone,
E. E. Brewer, was pastor of the
Model 43, W_a_ln_u_t _ $_ 7 4 9 ·.
Model 95, Maple • 9 9 5
.
church at one time and Mrs. Rt. 2, Gallipolis, completed a
REG. $1020
seven~week .recovery and
REG. $1395
.
Brewer happily recalls the
church children's program to evacuation specialist course at
Court St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
which she always looked the U. S. Army Ordnance
Model 54, W_a..,-ln_u_t _ $ _ 7 9.5
Center and school here
REG. $1095 .
forward.
For All Your Christmas Needs.
Mrs. Brewer's needle has recently.
embroidered Bible covers for
'
BITINER
OPTIONED
prisoners ,
pictures
for
ARLINGTON, Tex . (UPI) relatives, many things.
Larry Bittner of the
OUtfielder
She learned her embroidery
.from her mother, who learned Texas Rangers was optioned
Model J.ns
• 7 4 9' Model J.ns, Walnute.•71
Pecan - REG. $995 ~
REG. $985
· ~
it from art English woman in Friday to Spokane of the
•"
Pittsburgh. Mrs . Brewer Pacific Coast League, opening
sketches he.r own designs and a spot on the Texas roster for a
,,
· Ga IIi polis, Ohio
Model DF-115 Walnut $ 6 4 9 .
tones out the colors in ail effort possible addition in next
. . . .
REG. $895
.
to create depth and realism. It week's free agent draft.
is an effort well spent.
Mrs. Brewer ha:S ·won scores
of awards for her work at state
and county fairs, but for her
the greatest honor is lo lrn ow
Modell5-L, Walnut
• 5 9 5 Modell6-L, Walnut
' 6 1 '0
,
that her needle and thread
REG. 5795 - - - - REG. $839 _ __ _ _.:.
have given joy to others as well
'
as hours of pleasure to herself.
It .has been said Qf the work
__$_6 2
Fruitwood $ 6 4
of Berniece Brewer :
"If you look closely at the
churches , you can almosl hear
$ 6 ·3 9 Modell8-L, Walnut
$ '6 3 5 '
Model 75-L, Pecan
REG. s875
the bells ring .''
REG. $869

COLUMBUS \UP! ) A
Governor's Task Force on
Health
Care
committee
Thursday recommended Ohio
immediately junk curr ent
plans to build new medical
schools in Akron and Oaylon.
, A report by the committee

~

•••••
•••••

I

\ . By LEE MITGANG
r UPI Business Writer
~ NEWYORK (UPl ) - Talk of
;recession, the energy crisis a
1'eat-up in the Middle East situ·
~lion and rising interest rates
~layed havoc with prices for
lhe fifth consecutive week on
[the New York Stock Exchange.
;rrading was active.
1 The Dow Jones Industrial
aver age dropped 31.75 to
!1122.25, and only a 22.Q:;.point
'technical upsurge on Wed·
7'esday saved the widely
1ollowed index from near
fisaster.
, As it is, the Dow has plunged
~ 64 .81 points in the five-week
:Period, one of the sharpest
~drops In memory.
• Standard &amp; Poor's 500 Stock
!Index fell 3.46 to 95.96. The
~YSE Index lost 1.91 to 51.lli.
. It was another week of ex'tremely widespread losses. On
~Monday, as the Dow plunged
•29.05 - its fifth worst loss ever
i- a record 1,518 iss.ues
!declined. For the week, there
were 1,509 ' losers, only 336
:gainers, among the 1,985 issues
.traded. There were 827 new
•lows set, only 11 new highs .
Volume Below 1972
) The week's volum.e totaled
193,819,850 shares, compared
lwith 76,390,151 in the holiday.
shortened week before, . and
with 96,731,32fi the year earlier.

(Techni co lor)

l PG)
Ba rry New man
Suz y Kendall

(Tec hn ko lor)

I PGJ
Cliff Robert son
Pame la F ranklin
Show Starh 7 p.m .

BUY NOW

CHRISTMAS
SAVE

•

TONIGHT THRU
WEDNESDAY

'JOHN
WAYNE
UNITED STATES
MARSHAL

SHOP
MONTGOMERY
WARD
LAST DAY TO ORDER
DECEMBER 17, 1973

....

..

..

-- -- ........___ ,_ .. .
....

CARTOON

....,

FREE
PARKING
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS
EVERY
TUESDAY
AND

THURSDAY
ALL DAY

5

t---LOWREY
Genie IGGI , Walnut • 9 4 9
REG. 5t095
__:-_

' Venus~
Plus $249
Private Lesson Kit

t.

e POINSEniAS
e NATIVITIES

•

Lesson Kit - - - . . : . .

..
t
l

SMELTZER GARDEN CENTER

.. , ..... ,.

.... .,...,

•

Open 9 to 9 Weekdays
Sunday 1 to 6

-

.......,.....

..... ,.

"""'"""".,.._
.'

BRUNICARDI

4 miles west of Gallipolis on

HOUSE OF _f~USIC
446-0687

54 State Street
I'

'

searching

I

I

Gallipolis

500~000

.
TOP VALUE STAMPS

SANTA CLAUS
SWEEPSTAKES!

Valu ..
.First Prize .......... 100,000. Top
Stamps
Top Valu ..
• Se&lt;'ond Prize ...... 60,000
Stamps
'
Top Valu..
• Third Prize ......... 40,000 Stamps
PLUS .... Thirty (30) Prizes of
10,000 Top Value Stamps

A

for.

bla~er from our ex·

citing colleclion.

SIZES 36 TO 46
REGULARS AND LONGS

$

Deposit entry hlank at any Cox'~
Departownt Store · no later than
Sat u r d a y, De(' em her 2 2 , I 97 a.
Winners will he notified.

Special Purchase-

9

~

.

'
'

'.

:\ddr.-~!'4

11 lwru•

KNIT SLACKS

•.•••... , ...........•.....•. .......•••••....•.•.•....•• •• .•. ...•

··········~····················· ················· ···

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

Allllilional Entry Blanks availahl .. at Cox's Stor..s.

Regular 1 16.00

.Nothing to do, hut register
.No purchase necessary
• You need not he present to win

ll\£!":\.f

To '22.00 Values

500~000

TOP VALUE STAMPS
TO REGIVEN AWAY!
AND

Sizes
30 to 42

·=·-

Waist .

.

You ' ll •.'•ant them for all the
men on your Christmas list ...
quality polyester knit slacks
... by a famous manufacturer
. .. at a fabulously low price!
You'll find flat . knits. diagonal
knits, herringbone knits, solid
colors, prints and checks in
fall's most popular colors .
Flare legs . .. wide belt loqps
... snap waists. Sizes 30 to 42.
Get them now while there is a
grand selection.

t

,

.........•.••..........••.•... , . , .•.. _..•.... _.• _•...•...••••..••

~anu•

POLYESTER DOUBLE

• :I'wo suits filed

GALLIPOLIS - Two suits
't asking judgments were filed
'1'0 Friday in Gallia County
Common Pleas Court.
~
Hughes·Peters Inc. of
~ Columbus filed an action
seeking $912.03 plus interest
aild C&lt;JSI.s from Security and
Safety Services, Inc. 255 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, and Baldwin
Piano and Organ Col)lpany of
~ Cincinnati is suing Nellle ·
~ McQuire of 108 Locust St.,
~ f:lalllpolis, _seeking $503.95 plus .
j!..Jilterest and costs from June,
1972.

COX'S 500,000 TOP VALUE STAMPS
SANTA CLAUS SWEEPSTAKES

FROM A FAMOUS MAKER OF MEN'S

.t

I

•

TAWNEY JEWELERS

422 Second Ave.

STATE &amp; THIRO· _ _ __ _.o.._:.·_ GALLIPOLIS , OHIO _

new sport coat or

f

•ELECTRIC &amp;ACCOUSTIC GUITARS
.clASSICAL GUITARS
&amp;AMPLIFIERS
'
'

HOME SPARKLING

59.95

1

Peddler's Pantry

gift you've been

f"

NICE SELECTION OF

EVERYTHING TO MAKE YOUR

IMPORTED
And all I h e supp li es to do decoupage . 30 &amp; .
to le .
AT

Here's the special

i \

•

TIL CHRISTMAS

• ent worsening in the Middle
~ East situation and wall street's
f! old enemy, rising interest
., rates, cut short the list's at·
~ tempts at recovery begun on
Wednesday. Stocks fell both
Thursday and Friday as ArabIsraeli talks · collapsed at
Kilometer 101, and scattered
~ fighting reappeared along the
Suez Canal,
~.
Investors, who only a couple
~ qf months ago expressed high
; hopes for an easing in interest
i. rages, were handed a disap;J P.,intment Friday when First
:0 National City Bank of New
~ york and Harris Trust Co. of
. Chicago each restored its
P,.ime lending rate of 9'14 per
f.. dent. The two banks were
~ among a handful some weeks
f: ago to attempt to lower prime
~ to 9\2.
Declines of the magnitude ·of
•
~-• the last five weeks naturally
• raised questions among some
Qbservers of "another 1929,"
!jut
most analysts said "not
0
\ ~o." Not minimizing the
seriousness Of the nation's
~ ~nomic difficulties, many
~ yoil)ted out a recession, if not a

"

ORGANS--~Super Genie . ·~
•1249
REG. $1445 ~
Plus S249 Private

~ressants.

£ •Later in the week, an appar-

Holiday with Genie • 2 3

1 9 9·5

Piles of Prints

a

9:

~~~I 5~29~'

Have

SPORT
COATS

~ ~ebound.

..........---CURRIER PIANOS--...,......_.,..
~~~.1 ;:~:-·_w_al_n_ut

SONY®Ask anyone.

KNIT

• Problems Home And Abroad
~ ~ But the energy crisis, fear of
~
recession, and doubts over
~i What the Nixon administration
~ plans to do about it persisted
•· tproughout as the primary de·

,,

•

•

DOUBLE

J

5

.

The
market 's
decline
,.., generally is seen as an ex! pression from Wall Street of
= ''no confidence" in the ·Nixon
"• administration's handling
. of
,. the energy crisis, according to
~ analyst Robert Amster of
RoSenkrantz. ~hrenkrantz,
t. Lyon &amp; Ross. .
·
f · Comrrienting oil Nixon 's
~ energy speech, delivered last
weekend, Amster said, "The
~ American people realize we've
j got real problems, and .the
~ administration can't bail us out
of them."
~
For most of the week, how·
: ever, tile out news picture
l appeared to have stablized to
the point where, if there was
• little improvement in the
'J. market's many worries,
~- least things didn't seem much
, worse.
{ It was In that atmosphere an absence of any"serious news
I developments - that the mar·
ket found the strength Wednes·• day lo release a bit of its pent·
~ up buying power, and sent the
~ Dow to a 22.Q:;.point technical

p

----LOWREY PIANOS-------.,

DOOR WREATHES
AND SWAGS
GARLANDS
TABLE PIECES
e PERMANENT
TREES
. -•ORNAMENTS
e BELLS e CANDLES

Know?~
We

Did You

No wonde r Sony coils th e TFM -C770W a d el uxe
FM / AM clo&lt; k radio .
It tells you the time to the ~econd. the day and
the d a te.
It hos real power 1.6 wo t1 s {ma x . ).
"
It feott;,res a 90-minute sleep timer, a wide
S n~o ze Bar, music or b uzze r alarm, and large illumtno ted slide r ule tun ing .
. To fop i t o fT , it comes in o stu nOing rosewood
gra1n resonant hardwood cabinet.
Tomo rrow morn ing , woke up r ich. Wi th Sony's
TFM-C 770W.

NEW SHIPMENT
POLYESTER

at

._P_ec_a_"-~749

•MONTGOMERY WARD

Deluxe Sony clock tadlo tells all.

,.-

t

&amp; ClARK

NOT OPEN .

1-!raduate school and receive
clinical training.
Seventy-three per cent of all
Ohio resid ency position s and 58
per l'Cilt of all intern positions
are in Hamilton. CUyahoga and
franklin counties, the commit·
lee noted, and 77 counties have
no residency prog rams .

...------ ----·

......

~----:.---

~-du l'itlton re~.:10n s where medi C't.tl s tudent~:~ could attend

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

1

$$$$

. Monday thtu Thursday
December 3-6

Daytm and Akron
is going to be so expensive that
it will seriously undercut e(.
forts to improve health ser·
vices or expitnd other aspects
of higher education," the
committee said ln the report.
Ohio retains only about 45
per cent of its medical school
graduates eac h year, said the
committee, which projected
that only 90 of the 200 studenl.s
to graduate arumally from the
two proposed medical 1schools
would stay in tlie state.
"The cost of retaining the 90
students is $12 million a year in
addition to current expenses,"
the committee reported . ~&lt;Jt
must be emphasized that with
federal cutbacks all the costs
will fall on the taxpayers."
The committee suggested
that, instead of building new
schools, the state's medical

OPEN TODAY
FROM
1 T06PM

r

FOR

ACE Ell &amp;
ROGER OF THE SK IES

General Motors led the actives, off J:J..H to 483;4 on 1.038,600
shares. OJrysler sagged 3'1. in
active trading, and Ford 2\1..
All three companies announced
plans for layoffs and plant
sh utdowns, highli ghting the
auto industry's serious sales
troubles in the midst of fuel
shortages and probable cur·
tailments in the nation's car
travel.

t

PIANOS &amp; ORGANS

FEAR IS THE KEY

depression, already existed ·at
the time of the 1929 crash. And
on Oct. 28 and 29 of that year,
drops of 60, 70 and even 100
points in · a stock were not
uncommon.
"The market these days is as
different from the 1929 market
as day is from night, W.E. Hutton 's Lucien Hooper, the elder
stateSman of analysts, con·
eluded.

~rlier .

SALE ENDS DECEMBER 8th

Tonight , Dec 2

productive- means" of improvin~ health services in
Ohio, according to the report.
" Furthermore, because of
the very high cost involved. the
of
medical
expansion

t.-du~· at ion &lt;:tt

nnnmunity should -a ~ist in a
•· rapid dt~velo pment " of
l!,raduatL' lllf"dical centers in
D3ylon ~uul Akron . The
(-ommittee p~roposed lhe centPrs use the fa cilities of clinics
and community hospitals to
tram residents and interns.
The committee also said the
state could help keep doctors in
Ohio by creating six health

f

..

MEIGS THEATRE

" lhe most eX]&gt;ensive and least

•
f
h
k
t
wee
~tocks beaten down £

Wall Hangings
Toys from Yesteryear
Suncatchers
Stoneware
Patchwork Pillows
Candles
Glassware
Mobiles
Sculpture
Quilts Spreads
Jewelry
Purses
Woven Rugs

••

New medkal &amp;·hools wiU be

1

Creative Gifts

Embroidery Pickens

released to tlie 53-member task
force said the state should be
more concerned with encouraging doctors to pr&lt;tC"!il'f'
in rural and inner city areas
and less concerned with
building more medkal schools.

,

Peddler's
Pantry
has

Rate Hike

PPSOE clinic

bus in
•
service

~un Ciay

GAL L I P O LIS
D A IL Y TR I B U NE
82 5 T r.i rd Ave _. C.a ll1 pol15 .
Or. oo •Se- 31
P uo li !.l'l eQ t&gt; ve r r w ee kda y
eve nin g e::. ( ept Sa tvr da y .
Se c ond Cl a ss Po st age Po!1 1CI
at Galli poli s. . Ol'l io 45631
T HE DA I L Y S ENTINE L
I ll Cou rt S! ., Pomer oy , 0 .
~ 57(1.9 P ub lo sn ed evt"ry week
Cla y e ... en in9 e.o: ce pl Sat ur
Clay Enter!:' d a s second c tas5
m a o!o ng m i!IHer at Pome ro y .
D!Ho P o ~t Off ice ,
By UHr i er d a i l y a nd
_sun d a y . 55 c per w eek

•

.

MEN'S GLOVES
Assorted Leathers

and Suede

MEN'S FOLDING ·.

UMBRELLAS
Reg. 15.00 Value

'3.88
.-

•

•

I

I

•

�•

.

3 - The Sunday Times. Sentinel. SWJday, Dec. 2, 1973

uel
shortages
Common sense approach asked in
.

Tht.~ Sunda \ Tune~- &amp;&gt;ntu'k'1, SundJ' . Ot&gt;\. :!. 1~;3

2

CAl LIPOI.LS - Wh olesale
suppliers have be\'n asked to
use a "common sense ap·
pruach·· m allocattng rn1ddle

distillate fut&gt;ls to cust&lt;J mers
dunng the current transHtonal
penod of th e ma nd a ro r:
all ocahon prog r am which
became effec tl\'e :\ twember 1
Duke R. Ugon. Dtrector.
Offiee of Oil and Gas. L S
SIG:&gt;OS OF:LAr E O
COLU~I BUS
I: Pf ' - .\
differencC' in legislatt on in
Cong ress has tem porar ily
halted for sen? ral days the
ere cti ng of 1,000 s•gns along
Ohio highways calling for a
voluntary speed limit of 50
m iles per hour.
SOOI\ERS ROMP
STILLWATE R, Okla . ! UP! I
. - Ok lah oma qua rt er ba ck
Steve Davis scored on rWis of

se\'en . nine and eigh t yards
Saturday to lead the M . 2·
ranked Sooners to a 45-18

slau ghter

of

a rch-r ival

Okl ah oma State.

SUNDAY
liMES-SENTINEL
P ub]1 :sne-d
by
TIH!
f' u b li ~llm'il

I

e'·er'l

01'1 &lt;0

Ca.

V a ll ey

MA I L

SU B SCRI PTI O N RATE S
Tn-: Gal li polis l r 1Dun e •n
Onio and Wto sl V irg i n i a on e
year \ 15, si • mo!'IIM Sll . tnree
m on thS ss, el sewhe r e s 17 per
yur , S i )( m onths 59 . l llru
mont h s 15.50
The D a lly s entinel. one
ye&amp; r SH 00. si ll. m ont h s u .so,
three month s 15.00.
T n e U n i t e d Pres s In
ter n a l i On lll l _IS I!X CI US i vely "
e n t •t l ed 10 the u s e tor
p u b lic at io n ot a ll ne ws
d i spat ch es. c red i ted IQ th is
ne wsp aper i:I!'ICI a l so t h e loc a l
new s pub l i shed herein

;. New med school plan attacked

assignment of a suppliers 6025 ).
Ligon
alSil
pointed
oul
:
Report forms for these
hould petition the Regional
month of 1972 - "a corrunon 1973, as a gUJde," Ligon said.
Depart men\ of the In tenor. has their I9i2 purchasos ."
" It should be noted that the Office of Oil and Gas, Federal purposes are available thorugh
sonse approach " should be " In other words, the suppliers
Ligon pmn ted out that while
told • holesale suppliers that
mandatory
program provides
should sell a cus tomer a
Office Building, Room 218, 536 the new middle distillate
'" tht&gt; mandat o r ~ prog ram doe s thf producers state that su p- followed in making good use of
proportionate share of the for suppliers and purchasers South Clark Street, Chicago, allocation office at the PUCO
the excess fuels.
not rpq wre that all customers pbers can use whate\·er supagreeing among themselves lo
lll . 60606 (telephone 312-591· address given above.
" We ask that su ppliers supplier 's excess so that the
b ~ re- duced to t he sa rne plies they haH left 0\•er in any
either
borrow
on
future
wholesale customer gets some
\'Olumes of fuels purcha5&lt;'d tn way that they see fit - after allocate those excess fu els to
allocations or defer current
fuel. Under this basis we
l9i2. unless a reductwn is th e wh olesale purchasers customers on a fair-share
allocations within the level of
basis, using the amount of fu el believe that undue hardships
necessary to ensure that all obtain 100 pet . of the fue ls they
the total allocation for the
would be avoided."
customers get a fai r share of purchased during the same a customer bought in October
year, as long as such
arrangements do not result in
'
an invo1untary reduction. in
alil&gt;cations to other pur·
chasers. Similarly," he added,
(Continued from Page I )
1Continued from Page I)
residential customers would also be in~ "suppliers may borrow or
provided her by the cllmc .
swap products amon g them·
Sli:O trea surer .
creased .
The speaker said local fWlding will be
The service is offered in Meigs County
To meet the continuing energy selves."
twice monthly in clinics at Veterans necessary in the future and that PPSEO is
The program ·also makes
requirements of its customers Ute combuilding up a tradition of volWltary giving.
Memorial Hospital with Dr . Roger
pany expects to spend approximately provisons for purchasers to
Daniels , M.D., the consulting physician . Patients ar e char ged for services on
$715,000 ,000 during the period 1973 through obtain needed supplies of
"There is reason to believe upward of ability to pay .
1977 for construction af new' facilities lo middle distillates. Wholesale
for everyone on your Christmas list.
The secretary of PPSEO is Mrs.
1,000 women in Meigs County nee_d the
purchasers who did not have a
supply
elec
tric
power.
More
than
counseling we can give them, " said the Bernard Fultz of Middleport.
Guests at dinner were Bruce Ergood _$8{),000,000 of this amount will be spent lo supplier in 1972, or who were
spea ker . She said the goal of the semi·
meet
increased
environmental not in business . during the
and
Dr
.
Carl
Wood
of
Gallipolis.
feder ally funded service ( $260,348' of a
regulations. Williams stressed that the entire year of 1972, or who have
President Harold Hubbard set th.e
1408,740 budget in 1973·'74) is " that every .
company needs an increase in rates to had substantial expansion in
club's Christmas party for Dec . 14 and
child born is a wanted child."
offset increased costs and to enable it lo fuel requirements to the extent
Mrs. Ergood read an unsolicited letter named Bob Buck and Danny Thompson
continue lo provide adequate electric that allocations · based on 1972
from one mother who praised the service chairmen .
are inadequate, are en!M!rvice to its custoniers.
couraged to explore · all
possibilities to obtain required
supplies. In this connection,
suppliers are encouraged lo
•
(Continued from Page I )
•
accept such new expartded
•
business within provisons of
Allison and Anna Notter Kerr.
the regulation .
Harley and Hazel (Notter)
. Requests for interpretation
Myers, a granddaughter, now
may be made to the Ohio
ti ve in the old house.
Allocations Office of the
Noah and Margaret (Vanz·
Mandatory Middle Distillate
let 1 Notter also lived near
&amp;
Allocation Program, Public
J....ecta , and their house is
UWities Commission of Ohio,
another of the subjects em·
PT . PLEASANT As
Ill North High Street,
broidered by Mrs. Brewer. warnings about the upcoming
Colwnbus 43215 (telephone 61~
They had four children, gas
rationing
increase,
466-5313 ), or the Petrolewn
Francis, Nola Notter Massie, residents or Point Pleasant and
Allocation Division, Office of
Hazel Notter Myers and Henderson are relieved to
Oil and Gas, Department of the
Daniel . Daniel now, lives on the learn of the bus service
Gifts large &amp; sma ll - for all your needs.
Interior, Washinglon, 0 . C.
homepla ce where he is established by the Pickens City
20240.
.
Christmas Hrs.- 10 · 8
engaged in farming.
Bus Service.
Whole•ale
purchasers
Phillip Pickens, owner and
.
needing
to
obtain
an adjusted
Brother Isaiah and Margaret operator of the Pickens Cab
State &amp; Third - - · -·~ Gallipolis. 0.
base period volume or the
Welis Notter lived in a house Company for the past seven
near Northup that is now the years, said the bus service
home of Joy and Donald originally was planned to
Barlow . They own the upper accommodate low income
half of the farm . The Notters' persons who felt they were
oldest daughter, Mrs. Glenn financially unable to pay cab.
(Mae ) Marr lives on the lower fares.
PICKENS BUS - This is the bus that has been put to
But, in view of the current
half of the farm. The Nctters'
in Polnt Pleasant and Henderson , serving residents of
work
yoWlger daughter, Mrs. Lady fuel crisis, it is anticipated that
the two communities, on a regularly scheduled ilasis.
Notter Coleman, lives in many will be seeking other
Liverpool, Pa. Joy is the oldest means of trat~sportation inout First and circles around
The second run reverses that
daughter of Mrs. Marr and her ste~d of by private car, and the
Heck 's and then heads north· of the first and so it goes that
bus will serve their needs .
husband~ Glenn ,
ward up Viand Street. '
one hour · it's up Kanawha
A 2Q.passenger bus was put
At 14th Street, the bus goes Street and the next it's down.
As well as doing family into sen:ice and is making 13 off on Kanawha upward to On the odd runs, I, 3, etc., as
homes, Mrs. Brewer has runs a day between the two North Main, to 22nd Street and listed in the Pickens City Bus
embroidered pictures of two comml,Ulities, although no rW1s then up Lincoln. It crosses 28th Service advertisement, the bus
churches. The Lincoln Chapel are being made on Sunday and Street to Jackson and con- travels up Kanawha Str.eet and
Church, built in 1905, on Li~­ holidays at this time.
tinues
northward
to on the even numbers it goes up
Pickens said since the bus
coln Ridge has since been
Bellemead, comes back across Jefferson and back down
abandoned, but -Mrs . Brewer service was started hours have the highway where it circles Kanawha Wltil the 13 runs are
recalled attending many been extended · by one in the Burdette Addition. Coming made daily.
programs, picnics and all-day early· morning and four at down Jackson to Park Drive,
Bus service is shut down for
night. The first run is made
celebrations on its grounds.
·the bus enters this area ·and · a one hour period from 12 until
The oldest daughter of Isaiah from the Pickens Cab stand on after circling moves downward 1 p.m. during lunch titne.
Notter and of Mr. and Mrs . Main Street at 7 a.m. and Uie to Jefferson and Viand through
. Fares are 50 cents each at
'
Gtf'nn Marr were married last at 8 p.m.
!own to the cab stand. Then at this time. There is a possibility
~-STORY
PIANOS-----~
Leaving the cab stand on the
there. Other
marriages
7:45a.m. it leaves Main Street that later tickets will be sold at
solemnized in ·the country first run of the day, the bus for Henderson on the first trip reduced prices for bus fares,
church included the youngest moves down Main Street, goes across the Kanawha River .
Mr. Pickens-said.
·. Model. 77, P-e -c a_n_ ! 9 4 9 Model 33, Wa_ l_n_u t_ $_ 8 4 9 :
granddaughter of John Notter,
REG. $1220
REG . $1060
and the youngest daughier of
·' .. ·' .· .. .
..
·' ..
COMPLETES COURSE
Cecil Notter.
AB.ERDEEN
PROVING
Northup Baptist Church was
Model 53,
. Model 35, P_e _c a_n_ • 8 8 5
GROUND, Md. Army
REG: $970
built in 1921 and is still in use .
REG. $1160
- --- ...
Private Jerry D. Slone, 19, son
Mrs. Brewer's father-in-law,
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Slone,
E. E. Brewer, was pastor of the
Model 43, W_a_ln_u_t _ $_ 7 4 9 ·.
Model 95, Maple • 9 9 5
.
church at one time and Mrs. Rt. 2, Gallipolis, completed a
REG. $1020
seven~week .recovery and
REG. $1395
.
Brewer happily recalls the
church children's program to evacuation specialist course at
Court St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
which she always looked the U. S. Army Ordnance
Model 54, W_a..,-ln_u_t _ $ _ 7 9.5
Center and school here
REG. $1095 .
forward.
For All Your Christmas Needs.
Mrs. Brewer's needle has recently.
embroidered Bible covers for
'
BITINER
OPTIONED
prisoners ,
pictures
for
ARLINGTON, Tex . (UPI) relatives, many things.
Larry Bittner of the
OUtfielder
She learned her embroidery
.from her mother, who learned Texas Rangers was optioned
Model J.ns
• 7 4 9' Model J.ns, Walnute.•71
Pecan - REG. $995 ~
REG. $985
· ~
it from art English woman in Friday to Spokane of the
•"
Pittsburgh. Mrs . Brewer Pacific Coast League, opening
sketches he.r own designs and a spot on the Texas roster for a
,,
· Ga IIi polis, Ohio
Model DF-115 Walnut $ 6 4 9 .
tones out the colors in ail effort possible addition in next
. . . .
REG. $895
.
to create depth and realism. It week's free agent draft.
is an effort well spent.
Mrs. Brewer ha:S ·won scores
of awards for her work at state
and county fairs, but for her
the greatest honor is lo lrn ow
Modell5-L, Walnut
• 5 9 5 Modell6-L, Walnut
' 6 1 '0
,
that her needle and thread
REG. 5795 - - - - REG. $839 _ __ _ _.:.
have given joy to others as well
'
as hours of pleasure to herself.
It .has been said Qf the work
__$_6 2
Fruitwood $ 6 4
of Berniece Brewer :
"If you look closely at the
churches , you can almosl hear
$ 6 ·3 9 Modell8-L, Walnut
$ '6 3 5 '
Model 75-L, Pecan
REG. s875
the bells ring .''
REG. $869

COLUMBUS \UP! ) A
Governor's Task Force on
Health
Care
committee
Thursday recommended Ohio
immediately junk curr ent
plans to build new medical
schools in Akron and Oaylon.
, A report by the committee

~

•••••
•••••

I

\ . By LEE MITGANG
r UPI Business Writer
~ NEWYORK (UPl ) - Talk of
;recession, the energy crisis a
1'eat-up in the Middle East situ·
~lion and rising interest rates
~layed havoc with prices for
lhe fifth consecutive week on
[the New York Stock Exchange.
;rrading was active.
1 The Dow Jones Industrial
aver age dropped 31.75 to
!1122.25, and only a 22.Q:;.point
'technical upsurge on Wed·
7'esday saved the widely
1ollowed index from near
fisaster.
, As it is, the Dow has plunged
~ 64 .81 points in the five-week
:Period, one of the sharpest
~drops In memory.
• Standard &amp; Poor's 500 Stock
!Index fell 3.46 to 95.96. The
~YSE Index lost 1.91 to 51.lli.
. It was another week of ex'tremely widespread losses. On
~Monday, as the Dow plunged
•29.05 - its fifth worst loss ever
i- a record 1,518 iss.ues
!declined. For the week, there
were 1,509 ' losers, only 336
:gainers, among the 1,985 issues
.traded. There were 827 new
•lows set, only 11 new highs .
Volume Below 1972
) The week's volum.e totaled
193,819,850 shares, compared
lwith 76,390,151 in the holiday.
shortened week before, . and
with 96,731,32fi the year earlier.

(Techni co lor)

l PG)
Ba rry New man
Suz y Kendall

(Tec hn ko lor)

I PGJ
Cliff Robert son
Pame la F ranklin
Show Starh 7 p.m .

BUY NOW

CHRISTMAS
SAVE

•

TONIGHT THRU
WEDNESDAY

'JOHN
WAYNE
UNITED STATES
MARSHAL

SHOP
MONTGOMERY
WARD
LAST DAY TO ORDER
DECEMBER 17, 1973

....

..

..

-- -- ........___ ,_ .. .
....

CARTOON

....,

FREE
PARKING
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS
EVERY
TUESDAY
AND

THURSDAY
ALL DAY

5

t---LOWREY
Genie IGGI , Walnut • 9 4 9
REG. 5t095
__:-_

' Venus~
Plus $249
Private Lesson Kit

t.

e POINSEniAS
e NATIVITIES

•

Lesson Kit - - - . . : . .

..
t
l

SMELTZER GARDEN CENTER

.. , ..... ,.

.... .,...,

•

Open 9 to 9 Weekdays
Sunday 1 to 6

-

.......,.....

..... ,.

"""'"""".,.._
.'

BRUNICARDI

4 miles west of Gallipolis on

HOUSE OF _f~USIC
446-0687

54 State Street
I'

'

searching

I

I

Gallipolis

500~000

.
TOP VALUE STAMPS

SANTA CLAUS
SWEEPSTAKES!

Valu ..
.First Prize .......... 100,000. Top
Stamps
Top Valu ..
• Se&lt;'ond Prize ...... 60,000
Stamps
'
Top Valu..
• Third Prize ......... 40,000 Stamps
PLUS .... Thirty (30) Prizes of
10,000 Top Value Stamps

A

for.

bla~er from our ex·

citing colleclion.

SIZES 36 TO 46
REGULARS AND LONGS

$

Deposit entry hlank at any Cox'~
Departownt Store · no later than
Sat u r d a y, De(' em her 2 2 , I 97 a.
Winners will he notified.

Special Purchase-

9

~

.

'
'

'.

:\ddr.-~!'4

11 lwru•

KNIT SLACKS

•.•••... , ...........•.....•. .......•••••....•.•.•....•• •• .•. ...•

··········~····················· ················· ···

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

Allllilional Entry Blanks availahl .. at Cox's Stor..s.

Regular 1 16.00

.Nothing to do, hut register
.No purchase necessary
• You need not he present to win

ll\£!":\.f

To '22.00 Values

500~000

TOP VALUE STAMPS
TO REGIVEN AWAY!
AND

Sizes
30 to 42

·=·-

Waist .

.

You ' ll •.'•ant them for all the
men on your Christmas list ...
quality polyester knit slacks
... by a famous manufacturer
. .. at a fabulously low price!
You'll find flat . knits. diagonal
knits, herringbone knits, solid
colors, prints and checks in
fall's most popular colors .
Flare legs . .. wide belt loqps
... snap waists. Sizes 30 to 42.
Get them now while there is a
grand selection.

t

,

.........•.••..........••.•... , . , .•.. _..•.... _.• _•...•...••••..••

~anu•

POLYESTER DOUBLE

• :I'wo suits filed

GALLIPOLIS - Two suits
't asking judgments were filed
'1'0 Friday in Gallia County
Common Pleas Court.
~
Hughes·Peters Inc. of
~ Columbus filed an action
seeking $912.03 plus interest
aild C&lt;JSI.s from Security and
Safety Services, Inc. 255 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, and Baldwin
Piano and Organ Col)lpany of
~ Cincinnati is suing Nellle ·
~ McQuire of 108 Locust St.,
~ f:lalllpolis, _seeking $503.95 plus .
j!..Jilterest and costs from June,
1972.

COX'S 500,000 TOP VALUE STAMPS
SANTA CLAUS SWEEPSTAKES

FROM A FAMOUS MAKER OF MEN'S

.t

I

•

TAWNEY JEWELERS

422 Second Ave.

STATE &amp; THIRO· _ _ __ _.o.._:.·_ GALLIPOLIS , OHIO _

new sport coat or

f

•ELECTRIC &amp;ACCOUSTIC GUITARS
.clASSICAL GUITARS
&amp;AMPLIFIERS
'
'

HOME SPARKLING

59.95

1

Peddler's Pantry

gift you've been

f"

NICE SELECTION OF

EVERYTHING TO MAKE YOUR

IMPORTED
And all I h e supp li es to do decoupage . 30 &amp; .
to le .
AT

Here's the special

i \

•

TIL CHRISTMAS

• ent worsening in the Middle
~ East situation and wall street's
f! old enemy, rising interest
., rates, cut short the list's at·
~ tempts at recovery begun on
Wednesday. Stocks fell both
Thursday and Friday as ArabIsraeli talks · collapsed at
Kilometer 101, and scattered
~ fighting reappeared along the
Suez Canal,
~.
Investors, who only a couple
~ qf months ago expressed high
; hopes for an easing in interest
i. rages, were handed a disap;J P.,intment Friday when First
:0 National City Bank of New
~ york and Harris Trust Co. of
. Chicago each restored its
P,.ime lending rate of 9'14 per
f.. dent. The two banks were
~ among a handful some weeks
f: ago to attempt to lower prime
~ to 9\2.
Declines of the magnitude ·of
•
~-• the last five weeks naturally
• raised questions among some
Qbservers of "another 1929,"
!jut
most analysts said "not
0
\ ~o." Not minimizing the
seriousness Of the nation's
~ ~nomic difficulties, many
~ yoil)ted out a recession, if not a

"

ORGANS--~Super Genie . ·~
•1249
REG. $1445 ~
Plus S249 Private

~ressants.

£ •Later in the week, an appar-

Holiday with Genie • 2 3

1 9 9·5

Piles of Prints

a

9:

~~~I 5~29~'

Have

SPORT
COATS

~ ~ebound.

..........---CURRIER PIANOS--...,......_.,..
~~~.1 ;:~:-·_w_al_n_ut

SONY®Ask anyone.

KNIT

• Problems Home And Abroad
~ ~ But the energy crisis, fear of
~
recession, and doubts over
~i What the Nixon administration
~ plans to do about it persisted
•· tproughout as the primary de·

,,

•

•

DOUBLE

J

5

.

The
market 's
decline
,.., generally is seen as an ex! pression from Wall Street of
= ''no confidence" in the ·Nixon
"• administration's handling
. of
,. the energy crisis, according to
~ analyst Robert Amster of
RoSenkrantz. ~hrenkrantz,
t. Lyon &amp; Ross. .
·
f · Comrrienting oil Nixon 's
~ energy speech, delivered last
weekend, Amster said, "The
~ American people realize we've
j got real problems, and .the
~ administration can't bail us out
of them."
~
For most of the week, how·
: ever, tile out news picture
l appeared to have stablized to
the point where, if there was
• little improvement in the
'J. market's many worries,
~- least things didn't seem much
, worse.
{ It was In that atmosphere an absence of any"serious news
I developments - that the mar·
ket found the strength Wednes·• day lo release a bit of its pent·
~ up buying power, and sent the
~ Dow to a 22.Q:;.point technical

p

----LOWREY PIANOS-------.,

DOOR WREATHES
AND SWAGS
GARLANDS
TABLE PIECES
e PERMANENT
TREES
. -•ORNAMENTS
e BELLS e CANDLES

Know?~
We

Did You

No wonde r Sony coils th e TFM -C770W a d el uxe
FM / AM clo&lt; k radio .
It tells you the time to the ~econd. the day and
the d a te.
It hos real power 1.6 wo t1 s {ma x . ).
"
It feott;,res a 90-minute sleep timer, a wide
S n~o ze Bar, music or b uzze r alarm, and large illumtno ted slide r ule tun ing .
. To fop i t o fT , it comes in o stu nOing rosewood
gra1n resonant hardwood cabinet.
Tomo rrow morn ing , woke up r ich. Wi th Sony's
TFM-C 770W.

NEW SHIPMENT
POLYESTER

at

._P_ec_a_"-~749

•MONTGOMERY WARD

Deluxe Sony clock tadlo tells all.

,.-

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&amp; ClARK

NOT OPEN .

1-!raduate school and receive
clinical training.
Seventy-three per cent of all
Ohio resid ency position s and 58
per l'Cilt of all intern positions
are in Hamilton. CUyahoga and
franklin counties, the commit·
lee noted, and 77 counties have
no residency prog rams .

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~-du l'itlton re~.:10n s where medi C't.tl s tudent~:~ could attend

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

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. Monday thtu Thursday
December 3-6

Daytm and Akron
is going to be so expensive that
it will seriously undercut e(.
forts to improve health ser·
vices or expitnd other aspects
of higher education," the
committee said ln the report.
Ohio retains only about 45
per cent of its medical school
graduates eac h year, said the
committee, which projected
that only 90 of the 200 studenl.s
to graduate arumally from the
two proposed medical 1schools
would stay in tlie state.
"The cost of retaining the 90
students is $12 million a year in
addition to current expenses,"
the committee reported . ~&lt;Jt
must be emphasized that with
federal cutbacks all the costs
will fall on the taxpayers."
The committee suggested
that, instead of building new
schools, the state's medical

OPEN TODAY
FROM
1 T06PM

r

FOR

ACE Ell &amp;
ROGER OF THE SK IES

General Motors led the actives, off J:J..H to 483;4 on 1.038,600
shares. OJrysler sagged 3'1. in
active trading, and Ford 2\1..
All three companies announced
plans for layoffs and plant
sh utdowns, highli ghting the
auto industry's serious sales
troubles in the midst of fuel
shortages and probable cur·
tailments in the nation's car
travel.

t

PIANOS &amp; ORGANS

FEAR IS THE KEY

depression, already existed ·at
the time of the 1929 crash. And
on Oct. 28 and 29 of that year,
drops of 60, 70 and even 100
points in · a stock were not
uncommon.
"The market these days is as
different from the 1929 market
as day is from night, W.E. Hutton 's Lucien Hooper, the elder
stateSman of analysts, con·
eluded.

~rlier .

SALE ENDS DECEMBER 8th

Tonight , Dec 2

productive- means" of improvin~ health services in
Ohio, according to the report.
" Furthermore, because of
the very high cost involved. the
of
medical
expansion

t.-du~· at ion &lt;:tt

nnnmunity should -a ~ist in a
•· rapid dt~velo pment " of
l!,raduatL' lllf"dical centers in
D3ylon ~uul Akron . The
(-ommittee p~roposed lhe centPrs use the fa cilities of clinics
and community hospitals to
tram residents and interns.
The committee also said the
state could help keep doctors in
Ohio by creating six health

f

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MEIGS THEATRE

" lhe most eX]&gt;ensive and least

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h
k
t
wee
~tocks beaten down £

Wall Hangings
Toys from Yesteryear
Suncatchers
Stoneware
Patchwork Pillows
Candles
Glassware
Mobiles
Sculpture
Quilts Spreads
Jewelry
Purses
Woven Rugs

••

New medkal &amp;·hools wiU be

1

Creative Gifts

Embroidery Pickens

released to tlie 53-member task
force said the state should be
more concerned with encouraging doctors to pr&lt;tC"!il'f'
in rural and inner city areas
and less concerned with
building more medkal schools.

,

Peddler's
Pantry
has

Rate Hike

PPSOE clinic

bus in
•
service

~un Ciay

GAL L I P O LIS
D A IL Y TR I B U NE
82 5 T r.i rd Ave _. C.a ll1 pol15 .
Or. oo •Se- 31
P uo li !.l'l eQ t&gt; ve r r w ee kda y
eve nin g e::. ( ept Sa tvr da y .
Se c ond Cl a ss Po st age Po!1 1CI
at Galli poli s. . Ol'l io 45631
T HE DA I L Y S ENTINE L
I ll Cou rt S! ., Pomer oy , 0 .
~ 57(1.9 P ub lo sn ed evt"ry week
Cla y e ... en in9 e.o: ce pl Sat ur
Clay Enter!:' d a s second c tas5
m a o!o ng m i!IHer at Pome ro y .
D!Ho P o ~t Off ice ,
By UHr i er d a i l y a nd
_sun d a y . 55 c per w eek

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.

MEN'S GLOVES
Assorted Leathers

and Suede

MEN'S FOLDING ·.

UMBRELLAS
Reg. 15.00 Value

'3.88
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~ ~ The

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~ - Tbe Sunday Times -Sentinel, SWlday, Dec. 2, 1973

SundayTimes-S.ntinei.Sunday. D&lt;•r. 2. \973

Missionary speaks
GALLIPOLIS ~ The Rn .
Jim Bills. Rector of St. Ed-

Father Jim Bills attended
publi c s&lt;·hoo ls in UriJanit,

ward 's Ep iscopal Chu rch.

receh·ed his A. B. degree from

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

'

_{;Sf) Jan

's Side

Columbus, will be the ~uest Muslungum College in 1960 and
speaket at th e Every Member his Bachelor of Divinity degree
by
Canvas Dinner at 6 p .m. fr om Episcopal Theulo gicill
Seminary
in
1963.
He
served
as
Sunday. Dec. 2, at St. Peter 's
·Assistant Rector of Trinity
Durotb)' }. Countryman
Episcopal Church.
Church,
Hamilton,
1963-1966.
Father Bills ' topic of
J _:)
J~
discussion will be "On the Rim He became the Rcctvr of St.
of the Arctic Circle.'' He will Edward s, Colwnbus, when he
GALLIPOI.IS - Have you ever made an Advent wreath ' I
have slides to sho w and will returned fr om Allakaket , 'di scovered some people make theirs for the four weeks before
speak on his experiences as a Alaska, in 1969. He presently is Christmas, but 1 a lways made mine six weeks ahead.
missionary to the Indians and ser ving on the Diocesan
Nevertheless, for those of you who haven't done one, here are
Eskimos in Alaska. He was the Cow1cil of Southern Obio , is a a few tips and tales about the-Advent wreath.
Vicar of St. John's in lhe member of the Diocesan Youth
Wilderness Episcopal Mission Ta sk Force, a member of the
THE TERM ADVENT comes from the Latin , "Adventus
in Allakaket, Alaska , fr om 1966 Continuing Education of t11e
Redemptoris" which means 11 The coming of the Saviour." The
until 1969. Besides sharing his Clergy Committee. and serves period of waiting for the Christ begins around Nov. 11 in \he
the
Congregational Ethiopic Church, and on the Sunday nearest to Nov_ 30 in most
many varied and interesting ·on
experiences as he lived with Development Task Force in other churches.
\he Alaskans, he will also tell of Franklin County.
No one knows when the season was first observed, but the
The Rev . Jim Bills spoke to a Council at Tours in 567 made definite note of the period and it has
the new directi on of the
missionary field of today . group of people at St. Peter's long been recognized as the beginning of the ecclesiastical year.
While in Alaska he served on last year. and his talk and visit
J don' t know if ies still true or not, but at one time Roman
the Diocesan Council, the were met with such over· Catho1ics could not marry during the Advent season .
.Standing Committee and whelmjng approval, that his
In some parts of England, poor women used to carry \he
helped to set up the program return was requested to lei:trn Adv ent images ~ two dolls dressed as Christ and the Virgin
for nativ e training of men for more about his cx:periences Mary - . visiting every household and demanding halfpence. In
and ministry . .
\he priesthood.
Normandy children under 12 carry 'lighted torches through farm
fields and orchards setting fire to buridles of straw to drive out
vermin.
The last days of Advent in !tilly are marked by \he entry of
the Calabrian piflerari into Rome . There they play bagpipes
before the shri nes of the Holy Mother. It is believed that the
shepherds of Bethlehem played their pipes for the infant Saviour
at His birth. ·
Sometime back in the middle of the Civil War, if I remember
right, somebody started making a holiday wreath in \he United
States.
The circle of white candles represents purity and hope, the
red center candle, taller than the others, represents the blood of
\he Savior which is shed for the redemption of man. Usually
around the candles there are bits of greenery : poinsettias, holly
and-or evergreen; to represent the new life promised to the
followers of \he Christ.
One candle i.s burned for each Sunday In the season, with the
red one being lit pn Christmas day.
Among the hand-me-down tales about Advent is one
promising a joyous Christmas season and happy new year to the
maker of the wreath. Good health is supposed to bless anyone
residing in a house which has a wreath and a promise of manifold
blessings is made to those who show, by burning the candles, !bat
they await \he Second Coming of the Christ.
Regardless of the extra benefits from the wreath, it is one of
the most beautiful symbols of the Christian holiday as it lights
the way for \he Infant King .
Here's how I make mine.
Choose either a solid circle of styrofoam or a styrofo;lm ring,
large size, in white&lt;Jr green. (Remember green stands for life).
You will need one white taper for each week you choose to
observe the season. It's best to get the no-drip kind, since hot wax
can melt your styrofoam and ..or plastic greenery. Arrange the
white candles evenly around the outSide of the clrcle or ring,
lea\(ing at least an half inch edge. One of \he best ways to stick
the candles in is to make an indentation in tlle foam using the end
of the candle, then heat the base of the candle just to \he melting
stage, and press firmly into position.
Place your red candle, which should be much larger around
Sizes 2-14
and
taller, in the center.of the ring. U you're using thf open ring
$12-$25
arrangement, choose a candle holder that is sturdy, but not taller
than the ring itself.
A rea I nice seleclTon
· Arrange your holly berries and leaves aroWld the outside
for the Lillie Miss.
edge of the ring in whatever fashion you lind mqst pleasing. I've
found \hat one good way of keeping the leaves and berries in \he
styrofoam is to make an indentation for the stem, fill it with
Elmer 's Glue and press \he piece into it. Flat, metal-headed
straight pins can be used for more security, if you like, and the
shiny ones add a rich touch to \his arrangement. (Silver stands
for wealth, by \he way, and is also an advent color, as is gold, \he
color of wisdom). Between the . white candles, arrange your
..,COMPI..ETE STORE DEVOTED TO
}X)insettias so that there is one between each candle. You may
CHII..DREN 'S APPAREL':
or may not want to add an evergreen candlering to your r.ed
326 Second Ave ,
Phone 446-4343
. candle, but if the candle is \he dripping kind, I think it's very
Ohio
pretty standing alone, and much safer_
.. Gallipolis,
·.· .. . . . ,.. ..
Well, that's all there is to it. Advent wreaths can be used year
after year, and it's a nice
project that a teenager can
begin and make more
elaborate each Christmas as
she matures. Some of the
fellows might enjoy making \he ·
wreaths too. Store them,
wrapped in plastic with the
Watches by Bulova would certainly be at the top of the
candles dismantled, in a cool,
list. Come in with your Christmas list and ·see our
dry place.
dazzling collection of Bu !ova, Accutron and Caravella
If you're on the six week
watches. Bold styles, del icate fashions , automatics
calendar,
you should have
and calendars too. Selections in every price range for
three candles burning to&lt;layevery "gifted" grown-up on your list.
But for four week people, today
is only \he first one, so you will
have plenty of time to put one
together and get it lit befqre
midnight.
HAVE A nice week.
With the famous
tuning-fork movement.

~

GALLIPOLIS ~ The Senior
Citizens Center, located in the
Holzer Hospital Bldg., Cedar
St. entrance, is open Monday
through Friday from 9 a .m. to 3
p.m . and alS() one night a week .
The schedule lor this week is as
follows :
Monday, Dec. 3 · ~ Flower
Making Class 1-3 p_m.
Tuesday, Dec. 4 - Physical
Fitness Class 10 a.m., Teacher,
Margaret
Blazer i
Ru g
Lessons, 1-3p.m., Teacher, Bill
Menshouse.
Wednesday, Dec. 5 ~ Christ­
mas Decorations l-3 p.m. ;
Sunrise Trip 9:30 a .m.
Thursday, Dec. 6 ~ Bead
Making and Quilting 1-3 p_m_
Friday, Dec. 7 - Christmas
Wreath demons\rations 1-3
p.m.; Card and Games 6:30-9
p.m.

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OPEN EVERY NITE TIL 9

JACK-&amp; JILL~S

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Thomas-Henry vows read
'

'

A thought for the day :
American writer Henry David
Thoreau said, 11 Time is but the
stream I go fishing in."

\

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BRILLIANT DIAMOND
SOLITAIRE IN 4
PRONG TIFFANY SETIING

%CT.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.
Gallipolis. Ohio

Miss Billie ]o Hak

OPEN

A Travel Set by
of Caprolan •
nylon ...

shopping area recently by the
Gallipolis Garden Club.
Members were reminded of
the club's annual sewing
contest, the Last Monday in
January. Any area high school
student Who may wish to enter
should contact Sandy Blackburn at 446-00011.
Guests for \he evening·were
Patti Gingerich, Beverly
Bennett, Martha Willis, Sharon
Hewing, Candy Hand and Jan
Swonger.

A Beautiful Way
To Do Your
.Christmas Shopping ...
Once ..• And For All ·

Macao, tinY Portuguese enclave on Red China's door·
step, turns out firework s at
the rate of 10 tons a day,
most of it to the United
States .

NIGHT TIL 9

LoRRAINE

mERLE nORmAn COSmETIC STUDIO

JUANITA'S BEAUTY SHOPPE

£

even if
you're only
going as far
as the door....
'·

FREE GIFT
WRAPPING.

Make Bernadines
Headquarters For

•

•&lt;•

Accutron®

arl'SS

Your Party Dresses.
lARGEST SELECTION IN
' '
THE TRI-COUNTY
AREA.

PAMIL Y SIIOE STORI!

Where the fam~ly shops togethe1
328 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, 0.

LOCATED ON OUR

fer him

Caler~dar

OPEN EVERY

·-::;;..--"*"'*_____________,..__..

If grown-ups still wrote
letters to Santa ...

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GALl.IPOL1S - The Ye Olde walls. Tools should also be
Village
Garden Club rnet prepared for winter storage.
GALLIPOLIS - The can- dinin~ room. A three tiered
dlelit sanctuary or the Grace cake tr1mmed with red roses Thursday evening, Nov . 29, at Grease · tools before putting
United Methodist Church was ru&gt;d tupped by bells hi~hlighted the home of Mrs. Lin Young. them away . Drain lawn mower
The ' meeting was ca lled to of all fu el and clean
the setting lor the wedding of bride's table . The table was
order
b)' president , Mrs. John
thoroughly .
Miss Pamela Jean Henry and covered with a white linen
After this report, the meeting
Byers
who
also
gave
devotions.
John H. Thomas, Jr .. at 2:30 cloth. Blue candles in silver
•
Vice-president
Mrs.
Bill
Youn
g
was adjourned and a very
p.m. Saturday, Sept. 15.
holders completed the table
distributed
program
bookS
of
Rev. Paul Hawks performed arrangement. Serving were
•
the double ring ceremony for Mrs. James Enyard and Miss the coming year 's events .
\he daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cindy Boggs. Mrs. Enyard also Secrelary Mrs. Lin Young read
the minutes of the previous
Wallace R. Henry, Eureka Star registered guests.
meeting
and roll call was
Route, and the son of Mr. and
For her traveling costume,
Mrs. J . Richard Thomas, 507 the bride chose a 1'\\d, white answered with each rriember
Fourth Ave.
and blue nylon jersey with blue naming a plant or nower which
Nuptial music was provided accessories . The couple resides can be used in making Christdecorations.
The
by John Morgan, guitar, and in the Mill SL Apt. a-412, ma s
treasurer's report was given
Connie Coonen 1 flute . They Athens 45701.
sang " Never My Love," " Your
The new Mrs. Thomas is a by Mrs . James Cochran.
A report on the county
Song," "The Wedding Song" senior in secondary education and three original com- communications at Ohio garden cJub meeting was given
positions by Morgan .
University where she will by Mrs. James Stutes, who
Acolyte Nate Thomas, graduate in June . The groom, a attended the meeting along
brother of the groom, lit the student in speech pathology with Mrs. Bill Davis, Mrs . John
two seven branch candelabra and audiology, will also Reese and Mrs . James
•
which were flanked by altar graduate from Ohio University Cochran .
Mrs_ Bill Young gave a
vases and baskets of red in June.
carnations and white chrysOut-&lt;JI-town guests at the report on the Regional Garden
anthemums.
wedding ' were Mrs. Charles Club meeting at Eastern High
Given in marriage by her Huff and Marianna, St. James, School. Attending this meeting
father, the bride chose a nylon Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. George with Mrs. Young were Mrs .
gown fashioned with victori8n O'Briant
and
family, John Byers, Mrs. Lin Young,
neekline, sheer bishop sleeves, Sycamore; Mr . and Mrs . Mrs. James Stutes and Mrs.
empire waist, sheer yoke and Clarence George, Columbus. AI Harris.
It was announced that the
A-line skirt. Chantilly lace
'Annual Christmas dinner for
ruffles accented the yoke,
PLAN BAZAAR
basement of tho Middleport neck, sleeves and hem. Her lull
club members and their
·MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs Masonic Temple. As a special length mantilla of imported
husba~ds will be Monday
Chapter, Order of DeMolay feature, charcoal portraits will illusion was edged in chantilly
evening, 6:30 p·.m., Dec. 17 at
Mothers Club will hold a be done by a local talented lace and held in place by a
the home of Mrs. John Byers.
bazaar and bake sale Satur- artist,
Sal1y
Moshier, juliet cap covered in chantilly
GALLIPOLIS ~ The ThursGardening tips for the month
.
dav, Dec. B from 9 a.m. in the Gallipolis.
day
Club
met
at
the
home
of
of November were given by
lace and accented by a white
Mrs.
Gene
Welherholt
for
its
Mrs_
Bill Young who noted \hat
satin bow. Her bouquet was of
. .
R
W.
recent
meeting.
Mrs.
November is the time for
red roses and baby's breath.
J.
e
nkinS
reviewed
"Am
ish
winding down gardening ac·
Mrs.
Randall Harris,
Society"
by
John
A.
Hostettler.
tivities and cleaning tl1ings up
Columbus, sister of the bride,
The
book
deals
mainly
with
before
winter. Since we live in
served as ma:tron of honor. Her
\he
Old
Order
Amish
coman area with cold weather, it i.s
gown was in light blue nylon
munities
in
Pennsylvania,
Ohio
now time to prepare our plants ;·
with white lace trim. The
matching headpiece was in and Indiana. Born and reared for the icy blasts ahead.
If you apply mulch to flower
white and the gown featured as an Amishman, Hostettler
long, sheer, puffed sleeves. She writes with unique authority . beds, remove dead annua]s and
carried a bouquet of red roses and understanding of the cut off tops of perennials close
and baby's breath. Flower girl group's history, heritage, · to the ground, \his will help
was Miss Marianna Huff, St. customs, folkways and the eliminate disease and insects
James, Mo., cousin of the personal agonies that result that may house in dead plants.
Most kinds of garden roses
groom. She was attired in a from their conflict with
modern
civilization.
need protection aga.inst
white gown with blue satin
The
next
meeting
will
be
freezing
.temperatures. Several
ribbon sash and carried a white
Dec.
6
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
types of foam-formed cones
basket of rose petajs.
with
Mrs.
Sigmund
Harder
are available to slip over
William
D.
Thomas,
For ll er. Scenled gilts m decanters and vases sh e' ll
Gallipolis, served his brother Neil Prendergast in charge of · pruned rosebushes. Shrub
treaswe long aHer the frag rance is gone.
roses are often better off with a
as best man. Ushers were the program.
Creates ln~rigue With
Man1 cure sets for beauty at her finger ti p s, Cosmetics .
of protection. Rose
minimum
Randall Harris, Columbus, and
THE CASBAH SET
canes may be killed off, but
. For h[ni. /'\ man.lv ga llery of scented gifls and gill sets by
James Enyard, Gallipolis .
new growth will quickly
Rogue. Cotogne in lour roguish sce nts.
For her daughter's wedding,
SEEN AND HEARD
Mrs. Henry chose a floral print
GALLIPOLIS ~ A Thanks- replace them in \he spring.
For l ttlle people. Santa's splas hing menagerie of lloatlng
Along with care of plants,
ne makes you U1e Iemme
polyester gown featuring long giving day dinner and party
soap toys and bubble baths .
fa tale in the lush caress of Antron·
sheer s]eeves. Her flowers was held at the home of Mr. should be cleaning leaf-dogged
were yellow carnations tipped and Mrs_ Alfred Gabrielli on gutters which quickly damage
"'Oiil lll nylon tri cot, magnificent ly
and
house
.
foundation
plantings
clecbrated wilh shimmering gold bra id.
in white . Mrs. Thomas wore a Fairfield-Centenary Road.
ChoOse the grandeur of a S'Neeping
• peach crepe polyester gown Attending from Columbus were
'
ca
ftan or the sleek robe and gown
_.with long sleeves and A-line Mr. and Mrs. Bill Vance, Ricky Portsmouth. Locally attending 1
companion. En trance your ''Hn
skirt. Her corsage was of white and Bill, Mr _ and Mrs. Bob
Becky Ellioll &amp; Susan Russell, Operators
were Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
carnations.
·Casba l1 in
Leppert, Mike and Ginger.Rose Dickerson, Mr. ~nd Mrs .
12 Belmont Dr.
Ph. 446-2673
The reception fol1owing the Marie Porter, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Amythest
. Ca ftan
·.• ,.
lone size fit s all) at $14.00:
wedding was held in \he church Raymond Gabrielli from Larry North, Amanda and
Short Robe at $12 .00 and Shift Gown
Lorri, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
.at $7.00 in XS-S-M-L; Ma tchi ng Scuffs
Northup, Kimberly, Mr. and
in S-M-L-XL at $4 .00 .
Mrs. James Blevins, David,
Scott, and Elizabeth Ann.
Charge II
On BankAmericard
Or Master Charge
NOMINATED
· GALLIPOLIS - Miss Joyce .
Gallipolis,
Ohio
Reynolds was among the • - - - - - - - - -- - . :100 Second Ave.
nominees ·of the Gallia
In The Beautiful New Lafayette Mall
Academy High School National
"The Store with M&lt;or••'·
Honor Society.
·
· Gallipolis

used m a dL'iplay t:ts well as
fresh fl owers when possJble. To
preserve greens, they should
be washed in warm soa py
WC:~tcr and soaked in water for
twenty-four hours .
Mrs.
Frazier 's
After
demonstration, refre!i;.hmer.ts
were served and a soc1al hour
was enjoyed by all .

Amish book
topic of meet

NIGHT
TIL 9

Women meet

GALLIPOLIS
The
November meeting of the
Gallipolis Junior Women 's
Club was held at the home of
Mrs. Charles Reimund with the
education committee in charge
of the program.
Jane Reimund and Fran
Tabit discussed the various
vo1Wlteer services in operation
at the GSI. They also mentioned a new program at the
hospital in which a select group
of patients will independently
rWl their own cottage. These
patients are ones who are
employed at jobs off the
hospital grounds and are selfsufficient to some ex:tent.
Durin~'the business meeting,
it was announced that the
conservation committee paid
for one of the· new planters
placed in the' downtown

interesting demonstration was
presented by Mrs . Kenneth
Frazier of the GalhpuJis
Garden Club. Mrs. Frazier
created
four
different
arrangements for the hoHday
table,
coordinating
arrangements with tableware.
It was noted that different
types of greenery sho uld be

Mr. and Mrs. john R. Thomas, Jr.

EVERY

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mrs. Rosia Lee Hale,
1o37 Eastern Ave ., Gallipolis, aMounces \he engagement of
her daughter, Billie Jo, to Billie Lane Brown, son of Mr . and
Mrs. Isaac Brown, 3273 Bishop Rd ., Edenton. The bride-elect
is the daughter of the late Allen Hale, and is a student at
Gallia Academy High S.hool. The groom is employed as a
boiler-maker in Cincinnati. Wedding plans are incompJete .

Jr.

'185

Village Garden club has meet

MEZZANINE.

class ic.

l4K sol i d ~~:oid .

ForgetTB?
•

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Bulova

Carave11e

Reknowned for des ign ·
and dependability.

The right time
at the right price.

fer him
23 jewels.
Stainless s1eel.
Deep blue dial,

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WECAN11
Millions of Americans are
still involved with it:
44,000 peop le are II&gt;
k~own t o have the ~.•~,.,.,
,..iij
.
:;i:,S;..·

d 1sease.

c;..... ...

/ j.•'.":·}~ ·

For her

216,000 are re · .,., •..:;•.,:._:

Full

numeral

covered pat ients;

dial.
17 j!wels.

year.

3,000 relapse ea ch

260,000 live in
close contact with

~~'";;~

newly found cases.

16 million Ameri · •

cans are infected

with TB germs,
though

not sic k

with the disease at
present.

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
404 SECOND AVENUE
"We Service What We Sell"
TED
WATCHMAKER

Your
Christmas Seal
contribution
fights
lung disease,
including TB.

Cl"

&gt;

:rravelllng or at home,
you'll want to be seen
In this smart, mantailored coat and
-pajama set of nylon
tricot. The color is
appealin~y pure with
Caprolan , the more
colorful nylon.
Convenient large utility
pocket .on coat. Quick
'
drying. Elasticized
waistband. Nylon
stitched throughout
for longer wear,
Carnation Pink, Larkspur
Blue, Cherry Red, all
with white piping.
Sizes 32 to 40.

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lAY-AWAY
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OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
9:30 TIL 8 PM

t

The most beautiful colle-ction of
exciting new 2 and 3 piece
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piece
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You'll soar to new heights of
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from ELISSA ORIGINALS- It's a
va.l uable asset to own. Metallic
printed sh.eer long dress · long
sleeve
insert cowl neck
modified dolman softly flowing
. liar~ skirt.
Color: gold

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\•

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~

••

••.

•

NEW STORE HOURS
MONDAY thru SATURDAY

9:30 am
Gallipolis

'

OPEN
MONDAY
THRU
SATURDAY
TIL 9 PM

•lAYAWAY

••

"The Store with More"

A SHOP-A-RAMA
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~·

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'

I

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~ ~ The

--

.

~ - Tbe Sunday Times -Sentinel, SWlday, Dec. 2, 1973

SundayTimes-S.ntinei.Sunday. D&lt;•r. 2. \973

Missionary speaks
GALLIPOLIS ~ The Rn .
Jim Bills. Rector of St. Ed-

Father Jim Bills attended
publi c s&lt;·hoo ls in UriJanit,

ward 's Ep iscopal Chu rch.

receh·ed his A. B. degree from

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

'

_{;Sf) Jan

's Side

Columbus, will be the ~uest Muslungum College in 1960 and
speaket at th e Every Member his Bachelor of Divinity degree
by
Canvas Dinner at 6 p .m. fr om Episcopal Theulo gicill
Seminary
in
1963.
He
served
as
Sunday. Dec. 2, at St. Peter 's
·Assistant Rector of Trinity
Durotb)' }. Countryman
Episcopal Church.
Church,
Hamilton,
1963-1966.
Father Bills ' topic of
J _:)
J~
discussion will be "On the Rim He became the Rcctvr of St.
of the Arctic Circle.'' He will Edward s, Colwnbus, when he
GALLIPOI.IS - Have you ever made an Advent wreath ' I
have slides to sho w and will returned fr om Allakaket , 'di scovered some people make theirs for the four weeks before
speak on his experiences as a Alaska, in 1969. He presently is Christmas, but 1 a lways made mine six weeks ahead.
missionary to the Indians and ser ving on the Diocesan
Nevertheless, for those of you who haven't done one, here are
Eskimos in Alaska. He was the Cow1cil of Southern Obio , is a a few tips and tales about the-Advent wreath.
Vicar of St. John's in lhe member of the Diocesan Youth
Wilderness Episcopal Mission Ta sk Force, a member of the
THE TERM ADVENT comes from the Latin , "Adventus
in Allakaket, Alaska , fr om 1966 Continuing Education of t11e
Redemptoris" which means 11 The coming of the Saviour." The
until 1969. Besides sharing his Clergy Committee. and serves period of waiting for the Christ begins around Nov. 11 in \he
the
Congregational Ethiopic Church, and on the Sunday nearest to Nov_ 30 in most
many varied and interesting ·on
experiences as he lived with Development Task Force in other churches.
\he Alaskans, he will also tell of Franklin County.
No one knows when the season was first observed, but the
The Rev . Jim Bills spoke to a Council at Tours in 567 made definite note of the period and it has
the new directi on of the
missionary field of today . group of people at St. Peter's long been recognized as the beginning of the ecclesiastical year.
While in Alaska he served on last year. and his talk and visit
J don' t know if ies still true or not, but at one time Roman
the Diocesan Council, the were met with such over· Catho1ics could not marry during the Advent season .
.Standing Committee and whelmjng approval, that his
In some parts of England, poor women used to carry \he
helped to set up the program return was requested to lei:trn Adv ent images ~ two dolls dressed as Christ and the Virgin
for nativ e training of men for more about his cx:periences Mary - . visiting every household and demanding halfpence. In
and ministry . .
\he priesthood.
Normandy children under 12 carry 'lighted torches through farm
fields and orchards setting fire to buridles of straw to drive out
vermin.
The last days of Advent in !tilly are marked by \he entry of
the Calabrian piflerari into Rome . There they play bagpipes
before the shri nes of the Holy Mother. It is believed that the
shepherds of Bethlehem played their pipes for the infant Saviour
at His birth. ·
Sometime back in the middle of the Civil War, if I remember
right, somebody started making a holiday wreath in \he United
States.
The circle of white candles represents purity and hope, the
red center candle, taller than the others, represents the blood of
\he Savior which is shed for the redemption of man. Usually
around the candles there are bits of greenery : poinsettias, holly
and-or evergreen; to represent the new life promised to the
followers of \he Christ.
One candle i.s burned for each Sunday In the season, with the
red one being lit pn Christmas day.
Among the hand-me-down tales about Advent is one
promising a joyous Christmas season and happy new year to the
maker of the wreath. Good health is supposed to bless anyone
residing in a house which has a wreath and a promise of manifold
blessings is made to those who show, by burning the candles, !bat
they await \he Second Coming of the Christ.
Regardless of the extra benefits from the wreath, it is one of
the most beautiful symbols of the Christian holiday as it lights
the way for \he Infant King .
Here's how I make mine.
Choose either a solid circle of styrofoam or a styrofo;lm ring,
large size, in white&lt;Jr green. (Remember green stands for life).
You will need one white taper for each week you choose to
observe the season. It's best to get the no-drip kind, since hot wax
can melt your styrofoam and ..or plastic greenery. Arrange the
white candles evenly around the outSide of the clrcle or ring,
lea\(ing at least an half inch edge. One of \he best ways to stick
the candles in is to make an indentation in tlle foam using the end
of the candle, then heat the base of the candle just to \he melting
stage, and press firmly into position.
Place your red candle, which should be much larger around
Sizes 2-14
and
taller, in the center.of the ring. U you're using thf open ring
$12-$25
arrangement, choose a candle holder that is sturdy, but not taller
than the ring itself.
A rea I nice seleclTon
· Arrange your holly berries and leaves aroWld the outside
for the Lillie Miss.
edge of the ring in whatever fashion you lind mqst pleasing. I've
found \hat one good way of keeping the leaves and berries in \he
styrofoam is to make an indentation for the stem, fill it with
Elmer 's Glue and press \he piece into it. Flat, metal-headed
straight pins can be used for more security, if you like, and the
shiny ones add a rich touch to \his arrangement. (Silver stands
for wealth, by \he way, and is also an advent color, as is gold, \he
color of wisdom). Between the . white candles, arrange your
..,COMPI..ETE STORE DEVOTED TO
}X)insettias so that there is one between each candle. You may
CHII..DREN 'S APPAREL':
or may not want to add an evergreen candlering to your r.ed
326 Second Ave ,
Phone 446-4343
. candle, but if the candle is \he dripping kind, I think it's very
Ohio
pretty standing alone, and much safer_
.. Gallipolis,
·.· .. . . . ,.. ..
Well, that's all there is to it. Advent wreaths can be used year
after year, and it's a nice
project that a teenager can
begin and make more
elaborate each Christmas as
she matures. Some of the
fellows might enjoy making \he ·
wreaths too. Store them,
wrapped in plastic with the
Watches by Bulova would certainly be at the top of the
candles dismantled, in a cool,
list. Come in with your Christmas list and ·see our
dry place.
dazzling collection of Bu !ova, Accutron and Caravella
If you're on the six week
watches. Bold styles, del icate fashions , automatics
calendar,
you should have
and calendars too. Selections in every price range for
three candles burning to&lt;layevery "gifted" grown-up on your list.
But for four week people, today
is only \he first one, so you will
have plenty of time to put one
together and get it lit befqre
midnight.
HAVE A nice week.
With the famous
tuning-fork movement.

~

GALLIPOLIS ~ The Senior
Citizens Center, located in the
Holzer Hospital Bldg., Cedar
St. entrance, is open Monday
through Friday from 9 a .m. to 3
p.m . and alS() one night a week .
The schedule lor this week is as
follows :
Monday, Dec. 3 · ~ Flower
Making Class 1-3 p_m.
Tuesday, Dec. 4 - Physical
Fitness Class 10 a.m., Teacher,
Margaret
Blazer i
Ru g
Lessons, 1-3p.m., Teacher, Bill
Menshouse.
Wednesday, Dec. 5 ~ Christ­
mas Decorations l-3 p.m. ;
Sunrise Trip 9:30 a .m.
Thursday, Dec. 6 ~ Bead
Making and Quilting 1-3 p_m_
Friday, Dec. 7 - Christmas
Wreath demons\rations 1-3
p.m.; Card and Games 6:30-9
p.m.

ij~

OPEN EVERY NITE TIL 9

JACK-&amp; JILL~S

•

Thomas-Henry vows read
'

'

A thought for the day :
American writer Henry David
Thoreau said, 11 Time is but the
stream I go fishing in."

\

,

BRILLIANT DIAMOND
SOLITAIRE IN 4
PRONG TIFFANY SETIING

%CT.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.
Gallipolis. Ohio

Miss Billie ]o Hak

OPEN

A Travel Set by
of Caprolan •
nylon ...

shopping area recently by the
Gallipolis Garden Club.
Members were reminded of
the club's annual sewing
contest, the Last Monday in
January. Any area high school
student Who may wish to enter
should contact Sandy Blackburn at 446-00011.
Guests for \he evening·were
Patti Gingerich, Beverly
Bennett, Martha Willis, Sharon
Hewing, Candy Hand and Jan
Swonger.

A Beautiful Way
To Do Your
.Christmas Shopping ...
Once ..• And For All ·

Macao, tinY Portuguese enclave on Red China's door·
step, turns out firework s at
the rate of 10 tons a day,
most of it to the United
States .

NIGHT TIL 9

LoRRAINE

mERLE nORmAn COSmETIC STUDIO

JUANITA'S BEAUTY SHOPPE

£

even if
you're only
going as far
as the door....
'·

FREE GIFT
WRAPPING.

Make Bernadines
Headquarters For

•

•&lt;•

Accutron®

arl'SS

Your Party Dresses.
lARGEST SELECTION IN
' '
THE TRI-COUNTY
AREA.

PAMIL Y SIIOE STORI!

Where the fam~ly shops togethe1
328 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, 0.

LOCATED ON OUR

fer him

Caler~dar

OPEN EVERY

·-::;;..--"*"'*_____________,..__..

If grown-ups still wrote
letters to Santa ...

.,.

GALl.IPOL1S - The Ye Olde walls. Tools should also be
Village
Garden Club rnet prepared for winter storage.
GALLIPOLIS - The can- dinin~ room. A three tiered
dlelit sanctuary or the Grace cake tr1mmed with red roses Thursday evening, Nov . 29, at Grease · tools before putting
United Methodist Church was ru&gt;d tupped by bells hi~hlighted the home of Mrs. Lin Young. them away . Drain lawn mower
The ' meeting was ca lled to of all fu el and clean
the setting lor the wedding of bride's table . The table was
order
b)' president , Mrs. John
thoroughly .
Miss Pamela Jean Henry and covered with a white linen
After this report, the meeting
Byers
who
also
gave
devotions.
John H. Thomas, Jr .. at 2:30 cloth. Blue candles in silver
•
Vice-president
Mrs.
Bill
Youn
g
was adjourned and a very
p.m. Saturday, Sept. 15.
holders completed the table
distributed
program
bookS
of
Rev. Paul Hawks performed arrangement. Serving were
•
the double ring ceremony for Mrs. James Enyard and Miss the coming year 's events .
\he daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cindy Boggs. Mrs. Enyard also Secrelary Mrs. Lin Young read
the minutes of the previous
Wallace R. Henry, Eureka Star registered guests.
meeting
and roll call was
Route, and the son of Mr. and
For her traveling costume,
Mrs. J . Richard Thomas, 507 the bride chose a 1'\\d, white answered with each rriember
Fourth Ave.
and blue nylon jersey with blue naming a plant or nower which
Nuptial music was provided accessories . The couple resides can be used in making Christdecorations.
The
by John Morgan, guitar, and in the Mill SL Apt. a-412, ma s
treasurer's report was given
Connie Coonen 1 flute . They Athens 45701.
sang " Never My Love," " Your
The new Mrs. Thomas is a by Mrs . James Cochran.
A report on the county
Song," "The Wedding Song" senior in secondary education and three original com- communications at Ohio garden cJub meeting was given
positions by Morgan .
University where she will by Mrs. James Stutes, who
Acolyte Nate Thomas, graduate in June . The groom, a attended the meeting along
brother of the groom, lit the student in speech pathology with Mrs. Bill Davis, Mrs . John
two seven branch candelabra and audiology, will also Reese and Mrs . James
•
which were flanked by altar graduate from Ohio University Cochran .
Mrs_ Bill Young gave a
vases and baskets of red in June.
carnations and white chrysOut-&lt;JI-town guests at the report on the Regional Garden
anthemums.
wedding ' were Mrs. Charles Club meeting at Eastern High
Given in marriage by her Huff and Marianna, St. James, School. Attending this meeting
father, the bride chose a nylon Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. George with Mrs. Young were Mrs .
gown fashioned with victori8n O'Briant
and
family, John Byers, Mrs. Lin Young,
neekline, sheer bishop sleeves, Sycamore; Mr . and Mrs . Mrs. James Stutes and Mrs.
empire waist, sheer yoke and Clarence George, Columbus. AI Harris.
It was announced that the
A-line skirt. Chantilly lace
'Annual Christmas dinner for
ruffles accented the yoke,
PLAN BAZAAR
basement of tho Middleport neck, sleeves and hem. Her lull
club members and their
·MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs Masonic Temple. As a special length mantilla of imported
husba~ds will be Monday
Chapter, Order of DeMolay feature, charcoal portraits will illusion was edged in chantilly
evening, 6:30 p·.m., Dec. 17 at
Mothers Club will hold a be done by a local talented lace and held in place by a
the home of Mrs. John Byers.
bazaar and bake sale Satur- artist,
Sal1y
Moshier, juliet cap covered in chantilly
GALLIPOLIS ~ The ThursGardening tips for the month
.
dav, Dec. B from 9 a.m. in the Gallipolis.
day
Club
met
at
the
home
of
of November were given by
lace and accented by a white
Mrs.
Gene
Welherholt
for
its
Mrs_
Bill Young who noted \hat
satin bow. Her bouquet was of
. .
R
W.
recent
meeting.
Mrs.
November is the time for
red roses and baby's breath.
J.
e
nkinS
reviewed
"Am
ish
winding down gardening ac·
Mrs.
Randall Harris,
Society"
by
John
A.
Hostettler.
tivities and cleaning tl1ings up
Columbus, sister of the bride,
The
book
deals
mainly
with
before
winter. Since we live in
served as ma:tron of honor. Her
\he
Old
Order
Amish
coman area with cold weather, it i.s
gown was in light blue nylon
munities
in
Pennsylvania,
Ohio
now time to prepare our plants ;·
with white lace trim. The
matching headpiece was in and Indiana. Born and reared for the icy blasts ahead.
If you apply mulch to flower
white and the gown featured as an Amishman, Hostettler
long, sheer, puffed sleeves. She writes with unique authority . beds, remove dead annua]s and
carried a bouquet of red roses and understanding of the cut off tops of perennials close
and baby's breath. Flower girl group's history, heritage, · to the ground, \his will help
was Miss Marianna Huff, St. customs, folkways and the eliminate disease and insects
James, Mo., cousin of the personal agonies that result that may house in dead plants.
Most kinds of garden roses
groom. She was attired in a from their conflict with
modern
civilization.
need protection aga.inst
white gown with blue satin
The
next
meeting
will
be
freezing
.temperatures. Several
ribbon sash and carried a white
Dec.
6
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
types of foam-formed cones
basket of rose petajs.
with
Mrs.
Sigmund
Harder
are available to slip over
William
D.
Thomas,
For ll er. Scenled gilts m decanters and vases sh e' ll
Gallipolis, served his brother Neil Prendergast in charge of · pruned rosebushes. Shrub
treaswe long aHer the frag rance is gone.
roses are often better off with a
as best man. Ushers were the program.
Creates ln~rigue With
Man1 cure sets for beauty at her finger ti p s, Cosmetics .
of protection. Rose
minimum
Randall Harris, Columbus, and
THE CASBAH SET
canes may be killed off, but
. For h[ni. /'\ man.lv ga llery of scented gifls and gill sets by
James Enyard, Gallipolis .
new growth will quickly
Rogue. Cotogne in lour roguish sce nts.
For her daughter's wedding,
SEEN AND HEARD
Mrs. Henry chose a floral print
GALLIPOLIS ~ A Thanks- replace them in \he spring.
For l ttlle people. Santa's splas hing menagerie of lloatlng
Along with care of plants,
ne makes you U1e Iemme
polyester gown featuring long giving day dinner and party
soap toys and bubble baths .
fa tale in the lush caress of Antron·
sheer s]eeves. Her flowers was held at the home of Mr. should be cleaning leaf-dogged
were yellow carnations tipped and Mrs_ Alfred Gabrielli on gutters which quickly damage
"'Oiil lll nylon tri cot, magnificent ly
and
house
.
foundation
plantings
clecbrated wilh shimmering gold bra id.
in white . Mrs. Thomas wore a Fairfield-Centenary Road.
ChoOse the grandeur of a S'Neeping
• peach crepe polyester gown Attending from Columbus were
'
ca
ftan or the sleek robe and gown
_.with long sleeves and A-line Mr. and Mrs. Bill Vance, Ricky Portsmouth. Locally attending 1
companion. En trance your ''Hn
skirt. Her corsage was of white and Bill, Mr _ and Mrs. Bob
Becky Ellioll &amp; Susan Russell, Operators
were Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
carnations.
·Casba l1 in
Leppert, Mike and Ginger.Rose Dickerson, Mr. ~nd Mrs .
12 Belmont Dr.
Ph. 446-2673
The reception fol1owing the Marie Porter, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Amythest
. Ca ftan
·.• ,.
lone size fit s all) at $14.00:
wedding was held in \he church Raymond Gabrielli from Larry North, Amanda and
Short Robe at $12 .00 and Shift Gown
Lorri, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
.at $7.00 in XS-S-M-L; Ma tchi ng Scuffs
Northup, Kimberly, Mr. and
in S-M-L-XL at $4 .00 .
Mrs. James Blevins, David,
Scott, and Elizabeth Ann.
Charge II
On BankAmericard
Or Master Charge
NOMINATED
· GALLIPOLIS - Miss Joyce .
Gallipolis,
Ohio
Reynolds was among the • - - - - - - - - -- - . :100 Second Ave.
nominees ·of the Gallia
In The Beautiful New Lafayette Mall
Academy High School National
"The Store with M&lt;or••'·
Honor Society.
·
· Gallipolis

used m a dL'iplay t:ts well as
fresh fl owers when possJble. To
preserve greens, they should
be washed in warm soa py
WC:~tcr and soaked in water for
twenty-four hours .
Mrs.
Frazier 's
After
demonstration, refre!i;.hmer.ts
were served and a soc1al hour
was enjoyed by all .

Amish book
topic of meet

NIGHT
TIL 9

Women meet

GALLIPOLIS
The
November meeting of the
Gallipolis Junior Women 's
Club was held at the home of
Mrs. Charles Reimund with the
education committee in charge
of the program.
Jane Reimund and Fran
Tabit discussed the various
vo1Wlteer services in operation
at the GSI. They also mentioned a new program at the
hospital in which a select group
of patients will independently
rWl their own cottage. These
patients are ones who are
employed at jobs off the
hospital grounds and are selfsufficient to some ex:tent.
Durin~'the business meeting,
it was announced that the
conservation committee paid
for one of the· new planters
placed in the' downtown

interesting demonstration was
presented by Mrs . Kenneth
Frazier of the GalhpuJis
Garden Club. Mrs. Frazier
created
four
different
arrangements for the hoHday
table,
coordinating
arrangements with tableware.
It was noted that different
types of greenery sho uld be

Mr. and Mrs. john R. Thomas, Jr.

EVERY

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mrs. Rosia Lee Hale,
1o37 Eastern Ave ., Gallipolis, aMounces \he engagement of
her daughter, Billie Jo, to Billie Lane Brown, son of Mr . and
Mrs. Isaac Brown, 3273 Bishop Rd ., Edenton. The bride-elect
is the daughter of the late Allen Hale, and is a student at
Gallia Academy High S.hool. The groom is employed as a
boiler-maker in Cincinnati. Wedding plans are incompJete .

Jr.

'185

Village Garden club has meet

MEZZANINE.

class ic.

l4K sol i d ~~:oid .

ForgetTB?
•

•

Bulova

Carave11e

Reknowned for des ign ·
and dependability.

The right time
at the right price.

fer him
23 jewels.
Stainless s1eel.
Deep blue dial,

For him

Precisian jeweled,
water resistant

WECAN11
Millions of Americans are
still involved with it:
44,000 peop le are II&gt;
k~own t o have the ~.•~,.,.,
,..iij
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:;i:,S;..·

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c;..... ...

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For her

216,000 are re · .,., •..:;•.,:._:

Full

numeral

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dial.
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3,000 relapse ea ch

260,000 live in
close contact with

~~'";;~

newly found cases.

16 million Ameri · •

cans are infected

with TB germs,
though

not sic k

with the disease at
present.

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
404 SECOND AVENUE
"We Service What We Sell"
TED
WATCHMAKER

Your
Christmas Seal
contribution
fights
lung disease,
including TB.

Cl"

&gt;

:rravelllng or at home,
you'll want to be seen
In this smart, mantailored coat and
-pajama set of nylon
tricot. The color is
appealin~y pure with
Caprolan , the more
colorful nylon.
Convenient large utility
pocket .on coat. Quick
'
drying. Elasticized
waistband. Nylon
stitched throughout
for longer wear,
Carnation Pink, Larkspur
Blue, Cherry Red, all
with white piping.
Sizes 32 to 40.

•'
i
•'
••

USE OUR
NO COST

lAY-AWAY
TIL XMAS

stPMAlE PJ.'s ..................... •:l.OO

OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
9:30 TIL 8 PM

t

The most beautiful colle-ction of
exciting new 2 and 3 piece
pantsuits
and
4
piece
weekenders. Totally co or·
dinated in the most demanded ·
styles in a variety of polyester
double knit · textures, colors
and patterns.-

••
•••
..
·'

You'll soar to new heights of
glamour in this printed mylar knit
from ELISSA ORIGINALS- It's a
va.l uable asset to own. Metallic
printed sh.eer long dress · long
sleeve
insert cowl neck
modified dolman softly flowing
. liar~ skirt.
Color: gold

••
•'
\•

•
••"

~

••

••.

•

NEW STORE HOURS
MONDAY thru SATURDAY

9:30 am
Gallipolis

'

OPEN
MONDAY
THRU
SATURDAY
TIL 9 PM

•lAYAWAY

••

"The Store with More"

A SHOP-A-RAMA
STORE

~·

TIL

ARRIVE' IN VELVET

Make your entrance a sensational one ..
velvet on a sltm platform. Shiny piping puts on a feminine finish. 1n
Black velvet piped in Silver, 116.99

9 PM

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•

'

I

•

·'

I

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�(
'
6 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel,
Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973

Craftsmen open show

..

GALLIPOLIS - Four artists
from the Hockin g Valley
Craftsmen
Association,
( HVC I, Athens. are sharing the
spoUight in the French Art
Colony galleries at Riverby
during the month of December .
Viewers will admire the
pottery and sculpture of Joy
Lindskold, president of the
HVC and members of Ohio Arts
and Crafts Guild and Ceramic
League of America . Joy lives
on a farm near Albany, and in
addition to ceramics, she
works in weaving, macrame,
painting, welded sculpture and keeping a husband and two
children well supplied with
home..grown and home-made
food .
Katie Meek, who was artistin-residence for the Gallipolis
and Gallia County schools last
year, displays her weaving and
spinning talents in the form of
luncheon sets, door charms
and decorator hangings. Katie
is currently the resident

weaver.

potter,

spinner,

love of the hiUs of the
River
country
Ohio
he
w~s
born .
where
For hlm there is great excitement in a sycamore tree in
front of dark pines. the evening
sWl angling across a rusty roof.
apples in the light. Paul has
won awards in many area
shows plus six national first
awards for design -and
illustration . or local interest is
his second place at the Freneh
Art Colony Festival Exhibit,
July. 1972.
Bonnie Guy Prince, an independent crafts designer with
a studi o in her home at Athens,
exhibits her "fire cushions"
which are made of batik-&lt;lyed
velvet. These cushions were
shown at the Seventh Biennial
Beaux Arts Designer - Crafts'
men Exhibition at th e
Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts
this past month. Bonnie is also
an instructor in Communications at the Hocking
Technical College, Nelsonville.

receptionist, office help ,
associate director, instructor
and workshop leader at Wood
· Thrush Folk Arts Council
Most of the items in the
Center in Jackson. Wife of John
Meek, also resident staff at · exhibit are for sale, and would
Wood Thrush, instrument make excellent . Christmas
repairman and musician, she: gifts. The galleries are open to
is mother of two children and the public each Saturday and
her hobbies include bread Sunday from 1-5 p.m . and each
making, quilting and reading . Tuesday and Thursday from 10
The 16 watercolor paintings a .m .-3 p.m.
of Paul Bradford reflect his

Thurman News

Catholic
women
meet

BY MYRTLE KUHN
Mr. and Mrs. William Ward
of West Patterson, New Jersey
are spending a week with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Ruff.
Visitors In the .home of Mr.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Catholic Woman's Club of Sl.
Louis Church had its monthly
meeting Nov. 19 at 7:45p.m. in
the basement of the church.

~

•

•

UP IN FLAMES - The note for the land for a new church at the Simpson Chapel United
Methodist Church was burned last Sunday during morning services. Present for the burning
were, left to right, District Superintendent of the Athens District, James McCormack, Wendell
Evans, church trustee, Robert Dalflschroder, pastor, aod Eleanor Fadeley.
~

'j

--- &amp;tc.

Ohio~...-..-.~

~

Mt'SS

"

-.

Rose betrothed

WILLOW WOOD - Mr . and
Mrs . Walter Rose , Willow
Wood · (formerly of Rt. I,
Northup ), are announcing the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Dorothy Joanne (Dottie) to S.
Sgt. John I. Jarrett, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John I. Jarrett, Sr.,
Monroe, Pa.
The bride-&lt;!lect is a 1966

graduate of South":estern High
School and a 1967 graduate of
Weaver Airline Personnel
School, Kansas City, Mo.
Jarrett is a 1969 graduate of
Monaca High School, Monaca,
Pa. Jarrett is now serving in
the U. S. Air Force in Thailand.
A late December wedding is
being planned.

under a footb~ll stadium at the
University of Chicago demonstrated a self-sustaining nuclear
reaction.
In 1964, 2.5 mii!ion persons
greeted Pope Paul as he visited
Bombay, India.

ALL NEW STOCK- .
ALL MADE IN AMERICA

Yo\.&amp;' ll WChder how
you. ev e.r ral a xed.

Men's
Heavy Duty

4 BUCKLE ARCTIC

Men's
Heavy Duty

5 BUCKlE ARCTIC

r.v. watchi"g

a&amp;.\d

nappinq. Choose From
;tl j \1 st.oc.k: -$ 19~ ardUf·

SIIIIIIOOJH ftOCimtC

COMFORT

RUBBER

IEtliMINii TO FULL
lED I'OSITION

LEG REST

•decorator$

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SAVE AT LEAST 20% OFF ALL FABRICS
p
R
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c

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I

1 Group

POLYESTER
KNITS

p

lh ·~

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1 Group

SWEATER

KNITS

p

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FANCY

POLYESTER

$2~!

FELT .

SQUAR~S 11

¢
Ea.

p
R
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JEWEL
TRIMS

c
E

.e

SAVE ON AU. FABRICS IN THE STORE NOW!

0=~
0
•..-1
0
~

PORTABLE PRICED
95
FROM

$79

•

OPEN SUNDAY
1 p.m. til6 p.m.

FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE.
2 COMPLETE FLOORS OF FABRICS &amp; NOTIONS
-

SIMPLICITY, McCALLS, BUTTE RICK, VOGUE PATTERNS

. _ . WE DO CUSTOM DRESS MAKIN~SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
sa COURT ST.
OPEN 9:30
9:00

~

ri:J

=
ea

SINGER.ZIG ZAG

Stocking Stuffers and SeWing Accessories
To Thrill Any Lady.

Plal3 .
L
t Ch . t
Sto k'ng
..., sure to Register forth~ World's Larges
ns. mas
c 1 •

...

..J

w

I

·-'·

13

§
&gt;

LAD!ES 2 SNAP BOOTS

SHOES
!~The ~ilver Bridqe

"'

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SEE THE ALL NEW RJTURA THE ULTIMATE IN SEWING

BOOIS

!?OrrPUr

•carpet

&lt;{

z

IIJ

I

And May We Suggest A Gift Certificate!

fine furniture

'

i

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE
·342 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS

TO

(Gum
Boot)

Ladies' Side Zipper

tJ •

•'

...Q
Q
-~

Save up to S 19.25 on a 4 piece place setting
Save up to $154.00 on a 32 piece service for 8
Save u p t o $336.00 on a 72 piece service for 12

.eALL MODELS IN STOCK
eFREE INSTRUCTIONS
eSERVICE GUARANTEED
e90 DAYS TO PAY

Women's Pull On
RECLINE WITH

0
0

::;;

u

-------

I

Ul

LAY-AWAY A SINGER TODA'Y

Men's Light Weight

KNEE BOOT

z

"'w · 0z
a

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%

s5 99

DRESS ARCTICS
Men's

0:

&gt;JI

.... .2!

STOREWIDE
FABRIC SAVINGS

SOLIDS

Light Weight

bac.k re.c.l i nes. for cat-

:J::

u

&lt;{

I~

D.

sterling flatware

We ig ht-watchers s hould
stay away from the paunch
bowl at yule parties.

BOOTS
2 BUCKLE ARCTIC

z

CONTINUES AT FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE

A thought for the day: Irish
dramatisi George Bernard
Shaw said, "There are no
secrets better kept than the
secrets that everybody gues·Ses."

OUR

~:;~~

.

In 1942, the atomic age was

born wheri scientists working

-COMPARE-

pme..

"'0

w
::E

t_0

I a.

0

111,

CHESHIRE - Plans have Mitchell, Cheshire. The bride
been completed for the up- will be given in marriage by
coming marriage of Miss her father, Samuel Scruggs.
Best man will be Scott
Susan
Yea Its
Scruggs,
Cheshire, and Micheal E . Schacht, Dayton. Ushers will
Throckmorton,
West be John Mowbrey, PortsCarrollton. The wedding will be mouth, and Tom Patte~son,
an event of Dec. 15, 2 p.m., at Jewett.
Miss Dianne Rosengarten,
the Cheshire Baptist Church
with Rev. William Beegle Coldwater, will provide organ'
music.
officiating.
Close friends of the bride and
A reception )Vill follow ·the
groom
are invited to attend.
ceremony in the fel1owship
room of the church.
Carol Scruggs, C~eshire,
sister of the bride, will serve as
maid of honor. Bridesmaids
will be Christine Violand,
North Canton, and Pamela .

Q

IIJ

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...D:

25%0FF
on Towle

Wedding plans completed

o:o
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.........
1.1- "'
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......~

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He1 e is a holiday speci al you can' t afford to miss .
All active Towle sterling patterns are avaJiable at
25 % off the regular retail price during thi s limited
11m e promot ion. You may purchase singl e pieces.
place settmgs or com plete se ts and save 25°/~ ,on
every pUrchase Now is the ti me to start or ad d to
your Towl e sterl1 ng se rv1 ce . Come· in today.

~

w
..J
Oct:;
c

Ul

'
•
''

·holiday
.
savmgs

o~
~

D:

·'•

'

... •

&lt;tcl:O
. ....

u

•"

dol:J·· .. relax in thi6

for

....

~O:::o::

::1:

•
•

At the end cf a ha~d.

•

-~

&lt;&gt;•u
w•
.,z

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0
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CLIP THIS AD AND
SAVE UNTIL YOU
NEED BOOTS!

it. lndependQj\t footre s.t come~ UP.

...
z

•
••

by LA-Z-BOY

witho~.tt.

&gt;~

Cl)

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•

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Use our lay-Away , BankAmericard or Master
Charge.

Duty .

w•

'

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f

nand·
burnished solid
•

z;.

G)

.

GIFTS

havtdsome roc.k.e.rthat c.radl~ you iV\
t,crthicJ&lt; bouyant ~oat'\'\
from head to hee\s.
Lu.strou$ tv-i m is

'•

q

The Almanac
By urlued Press Intcrnatio~
Today is Sunday, Dec . 2, the
336th day of 1973 with 29 to
foll ow.
The moon is in its first
quarter .
The morning stars are
Mercury and Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus,
SUNDAY
Mars and Jupiter.
GRACE GUILD Christmas · Those born on this day are
dinner at :us p.m. Bring table under the sign of Sagittarius.
service.
American statesman Frank
CHRISTIAN FILM "A Thief Kellogg was born Dec: .2, 18;6.
in the Night " at 2 p.m ..
On this day in history :
Syracuse Municipal Fire
In 1804, Napdleon Bonaparte
Station, free of charge.
crowned himself emperor of
CENTENARY UMW will France at ceremonies in Paris.
In 1651, Napoleon 's nephew,
sponsor a Christmas party for
members and friends of the Louis, overthrew the 3rd
church at 6 p.m . at the Cen- French Republic and protenary United Methodist claimed himself Emperor
Church. Bring covered dish, Napoleon Ill.
table service and $1 gift exchange.
TUESDAY
IYIONDAY
PATRIOT Grange regular
GAHS Band Boosters meet in meeting at 7:30 p.m . Dec. 4,
GAHS Auditorium at 7:30 with potluck refreshments.
· p.m. The Cadet Band will play Gift exchange,
before the meeting. Junior high PEMBROKE Club will meet
and senior high parents please with Mrs. Don Warehime at .8
attend.
p.m.
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio Gospel VINTON MASONIC Lodge 131
Music Association, 7:30 p.m., installation of officers and EA
Allen Hall, Rio Grande College. degree.
Installation of officers.
ANNUAL ADULT Christmas
Party for GSI Volunteers 7:30
TUESDAY
p.m. at West Hall. Bring $1
BIDWELL UMW meets at the grab bag gift for men and
church at 7:30p .m.
women .

_Gallipolis,

•

'
'

Four banners were-made by
the members as a Christmas
present for the church.
On Sunday afternoon, Dec. 2,
there will be a Deanery
Meeting at St. Joseph's Church
in Ironton . Please contact Mrs .
Saundra Koby at 446-9356, if
interested in going.
There will be no meeting in
December, so the next meeting
will take place on Monday
evening, Jan. 21, at 7:45p.m .
Alter an enjoyable meeting,
refreshments were served.

....en

•

'

suggrsts:

.,.

and Mrs. John Miller over the
holiday were Mrs . Louise
Frazure and son, Mr. Michael
Tackett of South qate,
Michigan and his friend, Mr.
Jimmie Bray of Ann Arbor,
Michigan .

0
I .

Second. Avenu~

The Reclining Rocker

7 - T~ Sunday Tim•s - S.nliolt'l, Sunday. DN·. 2. 1973

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'
6 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel,
Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973

Craftsmen open show

..

GALLIPOLIS - Four artists
from the Hockin g Valley
Craftsmen
Association,
( HVC I, Athens. are sharing the
spoUight in the French Art
Colony galleries at Riverby
during the month of December .
Viewers will admire the
pottery and sculpture of Joy
Lindskold, president of the
HVC and members of Ohio Arts
and Crafts Guild and Ceramic
League of America . Joy lives
on a farm near Albany, and in
addition to ceramics, she
works in weaving, macrame,
painting, welded sculpture and keeping a husband and two
children well supplied with
home..grown and home-made
food .
Katie Meek, who was artistin-residence for the Gallipolis
and Gallia County schools last
year, displays her weaving and
spinning talents in the form of
luncheon sets, door charms
and decorator hangings. Katie
is currently the resident

weaver.

potter,

spinner,

love of the hiUs of the
River
country
Ohio
he
w~s
born .
where
For hlm there is great excitement in a sycamore tree in
front of dark pines. the evening
sWl angling across a rusty roof.
apples in the light. Paul has
won awards in many area
shows plus six national first
awards for design -and
illustration . or local interest is
his second place at the Freneh
Art Colony Festival Exhibit,
July. 1972.
Bonnie Guy Prince, an independent crafts designer with
a studi o in her home at Athens,
exhibits her "fire cushions"
which are made of batik-&lt;lyed
velvet. These cushions were
shown at the Seventh Biennial
Beaux Arts Designer - Crafts'
men Exhibition at th e
Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts
this past month. Bonnie is also
an instructor in Communications at the Hocking
Technical College, Nelsonville.

receptionist, office help ,
associate director, instructor
and workshop leader at Wood
· Thrush Folk Arts Council
Most of the items in the
Center in Jackson. Wife of John
Meek, also resident staff at · exhibit are for sale, and would
Wood Thrush, instrument make excellent . Christmas
repairman and musician, she: gifts. The galleries are open to
is mother of two children and the public each Saturday and
her hobbies include bread Sunday from 1-5 p.m . and each
making, quilting and reading . Tuesday and Thursday from 10
The 16 watercolor paintings a .m .-3 p.m.
of Paul Bradford reflect his

Thurman News

Catholic
women
meet

BY MYRTLE KUHN
Mr. and Mrs. William Ward
of West Patterson, New Jersey
are spending a week with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Ruff.
Visitors In the .home of Mr.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Catholic Woman's Club of Sl.
Louis Church had its monthly
meeting Nov. 19 at 7:45p.m. in
the basement of the church.

~

•

•

UP IN FLAMES - The note for the land for a new church at the Simpson Chapel United
Methodist Church was burned last Sunday during morning services. Present for the burning
were, left to right, District Superintendent of the Athens District, James McCormack, Wendell
Evans, church trustee, Robert Dalflschroder, pastor, aod Eleanor Fadeley.
~

'j

--- &amp;tc.

Ohio~...-..-.~

~

Mt'SS

"

-.

Rose betrothed

WILLOW WOOD - Mr . and
Mrs . Walter Rose , Willow
Wood · (formerly of Rt. I,
Northup ), are announcing the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Dorothy Joanne (Dottie) to S.
Sgt. John I. Jarrett, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John I. Jarrett, Sr.,
Monroe, Pa.
The bride-&lt;!lect is a 1966

graduate of South":estern High
School and a 1967 graduate of
Weaver Airline Personnel
School, Kansas City, Mo.
Jarrett is a 1969 graduate of
Monaca High School, Monaca,
Pa. Jarrett is now serving in
the U. S. Air Force in Thailand.
A late December wedding is
being planned.

under a footb~ll stadium at the
University of Chicago demonstrated a self-sustaining nuclear
reaction.
In 1964, 2.5 mii!ion persons
greeted Pope Paul as he visited
Bombay, India.

ALL NEW STOCK- .
ALL MADE IN AMERICA

Yo\.&amp;' ll WChder how
you. ev e.r ral a xed.

Men's
Heavy Duty

4 BUCKLE ARCTIC

Men's
Heavy Duty

5 BUCKlE ARCTIC

r.v. watchi"g

a&amp;.\d

nappinq. Choose From
;tl j \1 st.oc.k: -$ 19~ ardUf·

SIIIIIIOOJH ftOCimtC

COMFORT

RUBBER

IEtliMINii TO FULL
lED I'OSITION

LEG REST

•decorator$

I-

•
I

en
:2:

a:

f2

c

&gt;-

e:z
....
a:

•

f2

•

§

:.::

•

OFF

SAVE AT LEAST 20% OFF ALL FABRICS
p
R
I

c

E '

I

1 Group

POLYESTER
KNITS

p

lh ·~

E

1 Group

SWEATER

KNITS

p

·lh ·r
E

FANCY

POLYESTER

$2~!

FELT .

SQUAR~S 11

¢
Ea.

p
R
I

JEWEL
TRIMS

c
E

.e

SAVE ON AU. FABRICS IN THE STORE NOW!

0=~
0
•..-1
0
~

PORTABLE PRICED
95
FROM

$79

•

OPEN SUNDAY
1 p.m. til6 p.m.

FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE.
2 COMPLETE FLOORS OF FABRICS &amp; NOTIONS
-

SIMPLICITY, McCALLS, BUTTE RICK, VOGUE PATTERNS

. _ . WE DO CUSTOM DRESS MAKIN~SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
sa COURT ST.
OPEN 9:30
9:00

~

ri:J

=
ea

SINGER.ZIG ZAG

Stocking Stuffers and SeWing Accessories
To Thrill Any Lady.

Plal3 .
L
t Ch . t
Sto k'ng
..., sure to Register forth~ World's Larges
ns. mas
c 1 •

...

..J

w

I

·-'·

13

§
&gt;

LAD!ES 2 SNAP BOOTS

SHOES
!~The ~ilver Bridqe

"'

I

SEE THE ALL NEW RJTURA THE ULTIMATE IN SEWING

BOOIS

!?OrrPUr

•carpet

&lt;{

z

IIJ

I

And May We Suggest A Gift Certificate!

fine furniture

'

i

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE
·342 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS

TO

(Gum
Boot)

Ladies' Side Zipper

tJ •

•'

...Q
Q
-~

Save up to S 19.25 on a 4 piece place setting
Save up to $154.00 on a 32 piece service for 8
Save u p t o $336.00 on a 72 piece service for 12

.eALL MODELS IN STOCK
eFREE INSTRUCTIONS
eSERVICE GUARANTEED
e90 DAYS TO PAY

Women's Pull On
RECLINE WITH

0
0

::;;

u

-------

I

Ul

LAY-AWAY A SINGER TODA'Y

Men's Light Weight

KNEE BOOT

z

"'w · 0z
a

w

0

%

s5 99

DRESS ARCTICS
Men's

0:

&gt;JI

.... .2!

STOREWIDE
FABRIC SAVINGS

SOLIDS

Light Weight

bac.k re.c.l i nes. for cat-

:J::

u

&lt;{

I~

D.

sterling flatware

We ig ht-watchers s hould
stay away from the paunch
bowl at yule parties.

BOOTS
2 BUCKLE ARCTIC

z

CONTINUES AT FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE

A thought for the day: Irish
dramatisi George Bernard
Shaw said, "There are no
secrets better kept than the
secrets that everybody gues·Ses."

OUR

~:;~~

.

In 1942, the atomic age was

born wheri scientists working

-COMPARE-

pme..

"'0

w
::E

t_0

I a.

0

111,

CHESHIRE - Plans have Mitchell, Cheshire. The bride
been completed for the up- will be given in marriage by
coming marriage of Miss her father, Samuel Scruggs.
Best man will be Scott
Susan
Yea Its
Scruggs,
Cheshire, and Micheal E . Schacht, Dayton. Ushers will
Throckmorton,
West be John Mowbrey, PortsCarrollton. The wedding will be mouth, and Tom Patte~son,
an event of Dec. 15, 2 p.m., at Jewett.
Miss Dianne Rosengarten,
the Cheshire Baptist Church
with Rev. William Beegle Coldwater, will provide organ'
music.
officiating.
Close friends of the bride and
A reception )Vill follow ·the
groom
are invited to attend.
ceremony in the fel1owship
room of the church.
Carol Scruggs, C~eshire,
sister of the bride, will serve as
maid of honor. Bridesmaids
will be Christine Violand,
North Canton, and Pamela .

Q

IIJ

w

t I--

...D:

25%0FF
on Towle

Wedding plans completed

o:o
n.Z

.........
1.1- "'
b

u

w~

--::E ~w

I

·""

......~

I &lt;1:

~

'

He1 e is a holiday speci al you can' t afford to miss .
All active Towle sterling patterns are avaJiable at
25 % off the regular retail price during thi s limited
11m e promot ion. You may purchase singl e pieces.
place settmgs or com plete se ts and save 25°/~ ,on
every pUrchase Now is the ti me to start or ad d to
your Towl e sterl1 ng se rv1 ce . Come· in today.

~

w
..J
Oct:;
c

Ul

'
•
''

·holiday
.
savmgs

o~
~

D:

·'•

'

... •

&lt;tcl:O
. ....

u

•"

dol:J·· .. relax in thi6

for

....

~O:::o::

::1:

•
•

At the end cf a ha~d.

•

-~

&lt;&gt;•u
w•
.,z

a
0
a.

c

•'

CLIP THIS AD AND
SAVE UNTIL YOU
NEED BOOTS!

it. lndependQj\t footre s.t come~ UP.

...
z

•
••

by LA-Z-BOY

witho~.tt.

&gt;~

Cl)

en

•

•

Use our lay-Away , BankAmericard or Master
Charge.

Duty .

w•

'

~

f

nand·
burnished solid
•

z;.

G)

.

GIFTS

havtdsome roc.k.e.rthat c.radl~ you iV\
t,crthicJ&lt; bouyant ~oat'\'\
from head to hee\s.
Lu.strou$ tv-i m is

'•

q

The Almanac
By urlued Press Intcrnatio~
Today is Sunday, Dec . 2, the
336th day of 1973 with 29 to
foll ow.
The moon is in its first
quarter .
The morning stars are
Mercury and Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus,
SUNDAY
Mars and Jupiter.
GRACE GUILD Christmas · Those born on this day are
dinner at :us p.m. Bring table under the sign of Sagittarius.
service.
American statesman Frank
CHRISTIAN FILM "A Thief Kellogg was born Dec: .2, 18;6.
in the Night " at 2 p.m ..
On this day in history :
Syracuse Municipal Fire
In 1804, Napdleon Bonaparte
Station, free of charge.
crowned himself emperor of
CENTENARY UMW will France at ceremonies in Paris.
In 1651, Napoleon 's nephew,
sponsor a Christmas party for
members and friends of the Louis, overthrew the 3rd
church at 6 p.m . at the Cen- French Republic and protenary United Methodist claimed himself Emperor
Church. Bring covered dish, Napoleon Ill.
table service and $1 gift exchange.
TUESDAY
IYIONDAY
PATRIOT Grange regular
GAHS Band Boosters meet in meeting at 7:30 p.m . Dec. 4,
GAHS Auditorium at 7:30 with potluck refreshments.
· p.m. The Cadet Band will play Gift exchange,
before the meeting. Junior high PEMBROKE Club will meet
and senior high parents please with Mrs. Don Warehime at .8
attend.
p.m.
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio Gospel VINTON MASONIC Lodge 131
Music Association, 7:30 p.m., installation of officers and EA
Allen Hall, Rio Grande College. degree.
Installation of officers.
ANNUAL ADULT Christmas
Party for GSI Volunteers 7:30
TUESDAY
p.m. at West Hall. Bring $1
BIDWELL UMW meets at the grab bag gift for men and
church at 7:30p .m.
women .

_Gallipolis,

•

'
'

Four banners were-made by
the members as a Christmas
present for the church.
On Sunday afternoon, Dec. 2,
there will be a Deanery
Meeting at St. Joseph's Church
in Ironton . Please contact Mrs .
Saundra Koby at 446-9356, if
interested in going.
There will be no meeting in
December, so the next meeting
will take place on Monday
evening, Jan. 21, at 7:45p.m .
Alter an enjoyable meeting,
refreshments were served.

....en

•

'

suggrsts:

.,.

and Mrs. John Miller over the
holiday were Mrs . Louise
Frazure and son, Mr. Michael
Tackett of South qate,
Michigan and his friend, Mr.
Jimmie Bray of Ann Arbor,
Michigan .

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Second. Avenu~

The Reclining Rocker

7 - T~ Sunday Tim•s - S.nliolt'l, Sunday. DN·. 2. 1973

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AND ITEMS

GIFT SETS

BABY

SLACKS

MONDAY MORNING OPENERS

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

I $3.000 IN MERCHANDISE PRI ZE S TO BE GIVEN
t AWAY ,
N r) Pur-c hase Necessary .

ADDRESS --~------------------

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ADDRESS ______________~-------

NAME _______________________

STORE

GIFl'-A-RAMA

DEPOSIT AT ANY MIDDLEPORT

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

MJDDLEPORT, O.

Our Shoes ~re 51ill Sensibly Priced

l BO~- .
SALE

9 A.M.

MONDAY

· STARTS

'9"

" Good Sizes" 6'12 to 12.

OXFORDS

1 Group of Men's
CURRENT STYLES
Black &amp; Brown

VAWES TO '17.99

1 GROUP OF MISS AMERICA
. AND QTiiERS

THE SHOE

$9"

· Samples. all in size 6 M. Values
·

HUSH PUPPIES

I GROUP

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1 WHOLE fABLE ASSORTED
STYLES AND SIZES BUT All

"These You Will Never Believe"

Only 14 Prs .
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TABLE OF BOYS
BILLY
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NAME __~----------~--------

STORE

GIFl'-A-RAMA

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5&amp;&amp;13
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Coals , Jackets, Snow Suits

DEPOSIT AT ANY MIDDLEPORT

-----

SOLID and
PLAIDS

· ·

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t AWAY .
No Pur-chase Necessary .

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ADDRESS

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GIRLS
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style c:;tJu~er

• •

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adjusts bnghlness . contrast
and vertica l hold
• Plug-in Circuit Modules
• Pre-Set VHF and UHF Tuning

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...

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100% SOLID STATE CHASSIS

22" BLACK &amp;

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FOR THE ENTIR
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FOR EACH LAY-A-WAY

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Toys - Plush ·Animal.s -

CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS
Dolls - Games - Etc.

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A Relaxing
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' A Lullaby
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A Convenienl
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Chair

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for con11enient

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO .

THE SEWING CENTER

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•Cabinets For Her Portable

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CHOOSE YOUR 'G IFT
FROM

Records, Sheet Music,
. Songbooks, Jew~lry
and Small Gift Uems

convenient

fotd·ing

rocker

are

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TEL NO.

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

BAKER FURNITURE

:

ADDRESS ______:____~--~~--~- II

I 53,000 IN MERCHANDISE PRIZES TO BE GIVEN
AWAY .
No Purchase NeCessary .

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NAME __________________~----- II

STORE

GIFl-A-RAMA

-----.

Regularly $59.95
BUY IT NOW!

$48
DEPOSIT AT ANY MIDDLEPORT~

graceful carved design on back lends
special charm . Come ~ee i t, rock in it!

enhanced by a warm , r'ichly finished wood
fr.ame and elegant tapestry upholstery . A

this

Never has such a lovely decorator cha·ir

. __ And We Dare To Predict That This
Delightful Little Folding Rocking Chair
Wi II Become An Heirloom Gem!
•

'

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

12.95

ONLY
REG. 119.95

BIBLE

Children's Story Bibles

Commentary - Dictionary

been priced so low ! The gracious lines of

1~

NELSON FAMILY

Holman, Living Bibles,
Zondervan

Cambridge, Wor1d,
Thompson Chain, Oakes,

BIBLES BY

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J.NVH:)U:3W J.U:Od3'1a&lt;IIW-XJS 3DVd

OUR RELIGIOUS SECfiON
· oFFERING

1tor~e

Scissors

•Electric

Scissors

•Knit

· • Buttonholers ·

• Pressing Hams

• Elna &amp; White Sewing Machines

• Knit Match-Mates

•Sale on

• Gift
Certificates

eTack-Its

SeWing Baskets

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STORE

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MIDDLEPORT

FRANKLIN

BEN

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MIDDLEPORT ~

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LAY-A-WAY
OR
GIVE A GIFT
CERTIFICATE

AND ITEMS

GIFT SETS

BABY

SLACKS

MONDAY MORNING OPENERS

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

I $3.000 IN MERCHANDISE PRI ZE S TO BE GIVEN
t AWAY ,
N r) Pur-c hase Necessary .

ADDRESS --~------------------

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No Purchase Necessar y.

$3,000 IN MERCHANDISE PRIZES TO BE GIVEN

f AWAY.

!

1 TEL N.O. - -- -· ~-----------------,--­

ADDRESS ______________~-------

NAME _______________________

STORE

GIFl'-A-RAMA

DEPOSIT AT ANY MIDDLEPORT

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

MJDDLEPORT, O.

Our Shoes ~re 51ill Sensibly Priced

l BO~- .
SALE

9 A.M.

MONDAY

· STARTS

'9"

" Good Sizes" 6'12 to 12.

OXFORDS

1 Group of Men's
CURRENT STYLES
Black &amp; Brown

VAWES TO '17.99

1 GROUP OF MISS AMERICA
. AND QTiiERS

THE SHOE

$9"

· Samples. all in size 6 M. Values
·

HUSH PUPPIES

I GROUP

00

1 WHOLE fABLE ASSORTED
STYLES AND SIZES BUT All

"These You Will Never Believe"

Only 14 Prs .
..a

~

11

OFF
TABLE OF BOYS
BILLY
THE KID

NAME __~----------~--------

STORE

GIFl'-A-RAMA

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14

~San?!i
HOLIDAY'
.DRESSES

5&amp;&amp;13
113!&gt;YAOA BIU.

Blouses .- School Dresses
Coals , Jackets, Snow Suits

DEPOSIT AT ANY MIDDLEPORT

-----

SOLID and
PLAIDS

· ·

~

I SJ .OOO IN MERCHANDISE PRIZES TO BE GIVEN
t AWAY .
No Pur-chase Necessary .

·----------------------

: TEL. NO.

ADDRESS

.
NAME

GIRLS
WIDE LEG

'"8 )I'JeiQ
sppe ln!U8Z

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1 DEPOSIT AT ANY

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··--------------------·

Model xun tJJP
Me&lt;.J.rc,ane,ln Credenza
style c:;tJu~er

• •

• Quick-Set Picture Controlone button automatically
adjusts bnghlness . contrast
and vertica l hold
• Plug-in Circuit Modules
• Pre-Set VHF and UHF Tuning

· l~stantPictureandSound

...

.

• tOO% Solid State Chassis

100% SOLID STATE CHASSIS

22" BLACK &amp;

,'lf'NOOV IO

e
•
•

•

~

5
WHITE CREDENZA T v ~ ~------------,c---------------i"
\-::f , ~ cr. =
~~-- "' = WINTER SHOES
DRESS SHOES
~~~ ~
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MOTOROLA.

Sill

&amp;;

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GIFl'-A-RAMA

DEPOSIT AT ANY

. NAME
•
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ADDRESS
J 1
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J 1 TEL NO.

J

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•

•

I

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FOR THE ENTIR
FAMILY
USE OUR LAY-- A-WAY
ONLYSLOO DOWN
FOR EACH LAY-A-WAY

Es

~

Toys - Plush ·Animal.s -

CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS
Dolls - Games - Etc.

.X'IHO

ss8-l ·s

saqnJ. lSaJ:J A.ueA.oi::J LJI!uaz
punos 'il oap!J\ '·:n a5elS"£
-SainPOII\I a)BIS-P!IOS
S!SSeLJ:J AJ. Al!leno 4l!uaz
punos 'il aJnl::l!d lU8lSUI

.JU 118VJ,H0d A\9BuZI

AND UP
Tags - Seals c Bows

' J0 t03

apJJO 09£ alardwo:::. e ur pas;adsrp ·arqaJJ pue sseQ paoue1eq Annmneaq JE&lt;H~ noA
MS9S :J • 3S d ll::&gt;3 3lU

"
OiH:US
HV1naow
aNnos :10 :11:&gt;111:&gt;

FOR ENTIRE FAMILY

$279

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Jn UtEM pau !EJ'E) )j:&gt;e f 3UOI..ldpeaLj oa.J31S ·tOJlUO:&gt; a n:J · wJE' auo1 DZ ., 4:&gt;no.1~0J OI W LU! M
JaEiuelj !J pJooaJ UO!S!::&gt;&lt;Hd oaJaiS Ja!111dw e a1e~S·P!!OS. Jnd~no JaMod "~le ad n eM OOl

WINTER BOOTS

l

I Gift Wrapping

______________ ..

•3.99 UP

HAND BAGS

LADIES NEW FALL

r~----

r

~

Children's

Religious

QIRISTMAS
CARDS BY THE BOX

a6~.ti!JO

'JVJO

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(ASO&lt;,;J)

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PAGE TWO-MIDDLEPORT MERCHANT SECTION

1' •"I&amp;

JOjO:) •114M

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·.

A Relaxing
Reading Chair

' A Lullaby
· Roc king Cha

A Convenienl
: Sewing Chair

Chair

-

.I.

'

.

..

.

.

for con11enient

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO .

THE SEWING CENTER

• Cutting Boards

•Cabinets For Her Portable

t~\

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'P\1\

. )....OIIl.. ~
~---f'i'.

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CHOOSE YOUR 'G IFT
FROM

Records, Sheet Music,
. Songbooks, Jew~lry
and Small Gift Uems

convenient

fotd·ing

rocker

are

:

1

TEL NO.

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

BAKER FURNITURE

:

ADDRESS ______:____~--~~--~- II

I 53,000 IN MERCHANDISE PRIZES TO BE GIVEN
AWAY .
No Purchase NeCessary .

i

·

-'"l

NAME __________________~----- II

STORE

GIFl-A-RAMA

-----.

Regularly $59.95
BUY IT NOW!

$48
DEPOSIT AT ANY MIDDLEPORT~

graceful carved design on back lends
special charm . Come ~ee i t, rock in it!

enhanced by a warm , r'ichly finished wood
fr.ame and elegant tapestry upholstery . A

this

Never has such a lovely decorator cha·ir

. __ And We Dare To Predict That This
Delightful Little Folding Rocking Chair
Wi II Become An Heirloom Gem!
•

'

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

12.95

ONLY
REG. 119.95

BIBLE

Children's Story Bibles

Commentary - Dictionary

been priced so low ! The gracious lines of

1~

NELSON FAMILY

Holman, Living Bibles,
Zondervan

Cambridge, Wor1d,
Thompson Chain, Oakes,

BIBLES BY

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J.NVH:)U:3W J.U:Od3'1a&lt;IIW-XJS 3DVd

OUR RELIGIOUS SECfiON
· oFFERING

1tor~e

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•Electric

Scissors

•Knit

· • Buttonholers ·

• Pressing Hams

• Elna &amp; White Sewing Machines

• Knit Match-Mates

•Sale on

• Gift
Certificates

eTack-Its

SeWing Baskets

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10 :..._The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday , Dec. 2, 197l

II - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday , Dec. 2, 1913

Addison UMW meets
ADDISON - The United exchange.
Methodist Women met at the
Mrs . Shaver g ave the
program, " An
Inspired
home Of Mrs. Joe Drummond
Wednesday evening with Mrs: Church." Thooe assisting were
Charles Shaver giving the Mrs. Helsel Russell, Mrs.
devotions. She read scripture Louis Hughes, Mrs. Beegle and
from James 2 and Matthew 2B Mrs. Ray Hughes.
The next meeting will be
and "For This One Hour" by
WiUiam Arthur Ward.
21 at the home of Mrs .
secretary
and Shaver.
The
treasurer 's report were heard
LAFF - A - DAY
and a thank-you note was read
from Floyd Leonard, Mrs. Bill
Beegle read a letter from Rev.
and Mrs. Hess, missionaries to
the American India ns expressing their needs for Christmas. Rev. and Mrs. Beegle w!U
send a gift box Dec. 10 for
which the women will donate
items.
The president reported on a
recent workshop and presented
the new program books for the
coming year. The group drew "'Don't think of it as a used car
names for a Chris tmas gift - think of it as a car with years

PAC
Calendar

nee·.

DAWN MARTIN

.

Sterling

•
•

-•

•

-

•

Gl 'T1

- c:

-I r
:1&gt; r

r

-n

n m

5n :;c
;&gt;;

NewHope

...0

BY ADA KEEI.S
Mi!S Jenia Keels, who has
been sick for a week, returned
to her school work at Rio
Grande Elementary school.
Bobbie Long, Nelson Howell
of Blackfork and Rev. Tubbs of
Ironton were through here
hunting a day recently .
Mrs. Silva Colema n of
Morgantown, W. Va. visited

fa a limited time only

•

save 20%

'.

0

..•

0

;&gt;J

ON ALL OPEN STOCK
OF FAMOUS
GORHAM STERLING

m
0

'

her mother, Mrs. Daisy Ross

Now is th e time to od d to your collection

-'.

or give a' gift of a lif etime of Gorham Sterl ing .
sa·¥e 20%

&lt;:'" each

piece -

w heth er. you

buy o sing le te a SP-OOn, a serving piece, or
a ploce-set1ing .

special set savings!

I:..:- I

save~lo30%
on a .set p urchase of Service -fo r-Eig ht!
What a fabulous woy to start yo u r
· coll ectio n of Qorho m Ste rl ing ! And, you
may choose frOm 24 Gq rham Original
Desi gn s. Imagine, you can sa ve up to 30%
on th e purc hase of a set of 8 Te a spoo ns,
8 Place Knives, 8 Pl ace Forks·, an d
8 Individual Sal ad Fo rk s.

z

G&gt;

~

· :I:

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS .

Ill

404

!
:Ill

·••

0

'

"'

-- ...-

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,.
=

w

....

0

•

-••
•
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:Ill

-a
•

..
•

•

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en
en
f'l'l

~

--- &amp;tc.

Miss

by

home economics students,

eOfRISTMAS CARDS

contains articles on fashion,

Gallipolis, Ohio

Ave-

for Thanksgiving. On Thursday
she and her mother, Mrs .
Daisy Ross, were entertained
at dinner with her sister, Mrs.
Edna Cooper and husband ,
Bob.
Mrs. Nanette Keels and son ,
Jeff, visited her mothe r, Mrs .
William Benson and son at
Piqua over weekend.
Mr, and Mrs. John Morgan
and daughters of Youngstown
visited her mother, Mrs. Mary
Howard recenUy.
Mrs. Mary Howard and
daughters, Mrs. Hazle Young
of Dayton and Mrs. Marianna ·
Morgan of Youngstown visited
Mrs. Daisy Ross, local, and
Mrs. Marjory Payne and Mrs.
Edna Payne at Bidwell.
Earl Diggs of Columbus
visited Mrs. Daisy Ros s
Saturday.
· Bobbie Deeri Of Gallipolis
spent the weekend with the
Howard families.

by AMERICAN GREETING

•HOLLY HOBBY DiRISTMAS
COLLECTION

Miss Martin, gra ndda ughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Georgie
Martin is a freshman at Kyger
Creek High School. She was
elected correspondent by Miss
Kemper, her home economics
teacher, and her fellow home
economics students.
Selected for qualities of
leadership and enthusiasm for
horne economics, Miss Martin
wiU serve as junior advisor to
Co-Ed editors. Like the other
Co -Ed
co rr es pond e nt s
throughout the United States
and Canada, she will keep the
editors informed of activities
at her schooL

•CAPE CRAFT PINE
GIRS
•FENTON ART GLASS GifTS
eGIFT WRAP, BOWS &amp; RIBBONS
eDiRISTMAS CANDLES AND RINGS
•INCENSE •PARTY GOODS
•NOVELTIES FOR THE BAR
eGIFTS FOR lHE WHOLE FAMILY
eWAI.l PLAQUES elEATHER GOODS
eGLASSWARE PWS MANY OTHER GIFT ITEMS

Miss Martin is an active
member
of
Future
15. Classes are offered in chair

Jackson, beginning next Jan.

Homemakers of America and
weaving , ·rug.making and 4-H club. She is also a reserve
quilling. Pre-registration date cheerleader at Kyger Creek.
is Dec. 15 and a ll those in- She attends th e Addison
,
terested should contact the Freewill Baptist Church.
caning, r egional litera ture,

'

center, 286-5875, on or before
that date, or Come on over to
the center, look aroimd, and

New York Senator Thomas

register in person . Class Platt nominated Theodore

materials are furnished by Roosevelt for vice president
Woodthrush , with the ex- in order to remove him rrom
ception of a chair or stool to be the governorship of New
caned , and all completed York. In 1900, after being
e lected to this office, The
projects are yours to keep .
World Almanac recalls, the
Wo odthrush Folk Arts ene rgetic Roosevelt was
Council is sponsored by a grant rescued from the "honorable
from the Ohio Arts Council, seclusion" of the vice presi:
and locally by Jackson-Vinton dency when President
William Mc Kinley was
Community Action.
assassinated.
·

THE IDEAL GIFT
and CARD SHOPPE
. 336 SECOND AVE., GALLIPOLIS
. . . . .. .. . . ,. ..
•,•

.

Enro Pajamas

.

Easy with

J &amp; F aothing

Arrow Shirts

"

Sunday, Dec. 2 thru Saturday, Dec. 8

'
'•

FOOTLONG
HOT

All Weather Coats
You will enhance his appearance
with a zip-out lined Ali Weather
Coat by Campus of Dacron
polyester and cotton specially
treated with Korotron Scotch
guard stain and water reoeller.

Evans Slippers

GET YOUR FREE
SHOP-A-RAMA
TICKETS HERE

'

'•'

·•.•

•
'•'
'
•
'

•

'

'

.

Sport Coats

NO LIMIT
"FIXED THE WAY
YOU LIKE 'EM"

•

'
•'

''

Beau Brun.mel Ties

Reston Slacks

..'
I

Stetson Hats

Highlight hi!&gt; wardrobe this Christmas
with a new Custom Fabric Suit by J&amp;F.
Choose now for peak selection. He will
appreciate the year round appearance,
the superior fit quality and craftsmanship of J&amp;F clothing.

•

.

PHONE 446.0026

rMakes Your Christmas Shopping

•••

"

""0
""0

;&gt;,ee

Margaret Hauser, editor of CoEd
m agazine. · Co-Ed,
published
nationally by
Scholastic Mag azin~s , Inc., for

Dunmar Robes

'
,•..
••'
'
•'

~

•

iD

00

announcement

JACKSON - Woodthrush and reach singing games to all
Folk Arts Council is sponsoring interested. This is a real family
a Folk Dance and Singing event, with good music and lots
Games workshop, Saturday, of fun for all. Bring your inDec. 8 from 1 to 5 p.m., in the . . slrument if you like, and gel in
afternoon at the Lick on the good Umes. Wond thrush
Elementary School gym- is asking a donation of 50 cents
nasium in Jackson . There will per person, or $1 lor the whole
be live music by Morgan's family .
The council would also like to
Raiders of Gallia County. Eric
Wright will be on hand to lead remind everyone of the winter
and instruct the folk dancing schedule of classes to be given
at the Center, 20 Broadway St. ,

•

0
o m

asksNeed Cruise

·woodthrush
snonsors
~~~-f~e~~:· homefurnishings
·
'J"' .
winter arts classes

GORHAM

•
-•
-•

Miss Dawn

Sunday School Institute at
Corinth Sunday afternoon and
had part in the program.
Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Howard and family visited his
mother, Mrs. Mary Howard
and family recently.

been
named
Co-Ed
Correspondent for the 1973-74
school year , according to an

CHRISTMAS BAZAAR - The Rio Grande Mothers
League is sponsoring an ' 'Old Fashioned Christmas Bazaar"
Friday, Dec. 7, from 1 to 9 p.m ., at Community Hall on the
Rio Grande College Campus. Clubs and individuals will offer
a wide var iety of homemade items including baked goods,
candles, Christmas decorations, decoupage, woodworking,
flora l arrangements, ceramics, quilts, and numerous gift
items. Holding one of the posters for the event are, left, Sue
Brandeberry and Cheryl Vanco.

'•

-••

I /'!

CHESlliRE -

..

-•
-•

(

DECEMBER
Exhibit at Riverby : Hocking
Valley Craftsmen.
Friday, Dec. 7, F.A.C. Annual Family Christmas party,
7:30-9:30 p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 15, FAC
dance instructor Gillian Moore
and students Christmas recital
7-9 p.m . at Grace United
Methodist Church auditorium .
Tuesday, Dec. 18, F .A.C.
interdepartmental meeting , 8
p.m.
Tuesd ay, Dec . 25 , F .A.C.
trustees meeting 8 p.m .
Jan•ary Exljibit, Daniel
Farber, Photog raphy .

Hope

Martin, 14, Rt. 1, Cheshire, has

•

..•
-•
.-•

'~"·/'''

f ,,

•

•

I

'I

or experience.,

•

..

II

Miss Martin
is honored

New
Mr. and Mrs . F rank Young
and children of Dayton visited
the latter's mother, Mrs . Mary
Howard and families from
Friday until Sunday.
Mrs. Murl Howard and Mrs.
Ja ckie Howard attended a

&amp;4akt

For dress and casual wear choose
for him a new s"p ort Coat by
Cricketeer in two or three button
styles of muted plaids, subtle checks
or pleasing patterns.

NO COUPON

· ~qnppr

Swank Jewelry

;'THAT OLD..FASHIONED GOODNESS"

ASHOP-A-RAMA STORE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
l
•

I

Freeman Shoes

FREE GIFT

WRAPPING

�•

-'

10 :..._The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday , Dec. 2, 197l

II - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday , Dec. 2, 1913

Addison UMW meets
ADDISON - The United exchange.
Methodist Women met at the
Mrs . Shaver g ave the
program, " An
Inspired
home Of Mrs. Joe Drummond
Wednesday evening with Mrs: Church." Thooe assisting were
Charles Shaver giving the Mrs. Helsel Russell, Mrs.
devotions. She read scripture Louis Hughes, Mrs. Beegle and
from James 2 and Matthew 2B Mrs. Ray Hughes.
The next meeting will be
and "For This One Hour" by
WiUiam Arthur Ward.
21 at the home of Mrs .
secretary
and Shaver.
The
treasurer 's report were heard
LAFF - A - DAY
and a thank-you note was read
from Floyd Leonard, Mrs. Bill
Beegle read a letter from Rev.
and Mrs. Hess, missionaries to
the American India ns expressing their needs for Christmas. Rev. and Mrs. Beegle w!U
send a gift box Dec. 10 for
which the women will donate
items.
The president reported on a
recent workshop and presented
the new program books for the
coming year. The group drew "'Don't think of it as a used car
names for a Chris tmas gift - think of it as a car with years

PAC
Calendar

nee·.

DAWN MARTIN

.

Sterling

•
•

-•

•

-

•

Gl 'T1

- c:

-I r
:1&gt; r

r

-n

n m

5n :;c
;&gt;;

NewHope

...0

BY ADA KEEI.S
Mi!S Jenia Keels, who has
been sick for a week, returned
to her school work at Rio
Grande Elementary school.
Bobbie Long, Nelson Howell
of Blackfork and Rev. Tubbs of
Ironton were through here
hunting a day recently .
Mrs. Silva Colema n of
Morgantown, W. Va. visited

fa a limited time only

•

save 20%

'.

0

..•

0

;&gt;J

ON ALL OPEN STOCK
OF FAMOUS
GORHAM STERLING

m
0

'

her mother, Mrs. Daisy Ross

Now is th e time to od d to your collection

-'.

or give a' gift of a lif etime of Gorham Sterl ing .
sa·¥e 20%

&lt;:'" each

piece -

w heth er. you

buy o sing le te a SP-OOn, a serving piece, or
a ploce-set1ing .

special set savings!

I:..:- I

save~lo30%
on a .set p urchase of Service -fo r-Eig ht!
What a fabulous woy to start yo u r
· coll ectio n of Qorho m Ste rl ing ! And, you
may choose frOm 24 Gq rham Original
Desi gn s. Imagine, you can sa ve up to 30%
on th e purc hase of a set of 8 Te a spoo ns,
8 Place Knives, 8 Pl ace Forks·, an d
8 Individual Sal ad Fo rk s.

z

G&gt;

~

· :I:

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS .

Ill

404

!
:Ill

·••

0

'

"'

-- ...-

e
z
,.
=

w

....

0

•

-••
•
-•
-

Ill

~
Q

••
••
•

-•

"CC .
:Ill

-a
•

..
•

•

-

::E:

:::0

en
en
f'l'l

~

--- &amp;tc.

Miss

by

home economics students,

eOfRISTMAS CARDS

contains articles on fashion,

Gallipolis, Ohio

Ave-

for Thanksgiving. On Thursday
she and her mother, Mrs .
Daisy Ross, were entertained
at dinner with her sister, Mrs.
Edna Cooper and husband ,
Bob.
Mrs. Nanette Keels and son ,
Jeff, visited her mothe r, Mrs .
William Benson and son at
Piqua over weekend.
Mr, and Mrs. John Morgan
and daughters of Youngstown
visited her mother, Mrs. Mary
Howard recenUy.
Mrs. Mary Howard and
daughters, Mrs. Hazle Young
of Dayton and Mrs. Marianna ·
Morgan of Youngstown visited
Mrs. Daisy Ross, local, and
Mrs. Marjory Payne and Mrs.
Edna Payne at Bidwell.
Earl Diggs of Columbus
visited Mrs. Daisy Ros s
Saturday.
· Bobbie Deeri Of Gallipolis
spent the weekend with the
Howard families.

by AMERICAN GREETING

•HOLLY HOBBY DiRISTMAS
COLLECTION

Miss Martin, gra ndda ughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Georgie
Martin is a freshman at Kyger
Creek High School. She was
elected correspondent by Miss
Kemper, her home economics
teacher, and her fellow home
economics students.
Selected for qualities of
leadership and enthusiasm for
horne economics, Miss Martin
wiU serve as junior advisor to
Co-Ed editors. Like the other
Co -Ed
co rr es pond e nt s
throughout the United States
and Canada, she will keep the
editors informed of activities
at her schooL

•CAPE CRAFT PINE
GIRS
•FENTON ART GLASS GifTS
eGIFT WRAP, BOWS &amp; RIBBONS
eDiRISTMAS CANDLES AND RINGS
•INCENSE •PARTY GOODS
•NOVELTIES FOR THE BAR
eGIFTS FOR lHE WHOLE FAMILY
eWAI.l PLAQUES elEATHER GOODS
eGLASSWARE PWS MANY OTHER GIFT ITEMS

Miss Martin is an active
member
of
Future
15. Classes are offered in chair

Jackson, beginning next Jan.

Homemakers of America and
weaving , ·rug.making and 4-H club. She is also a reserve
quilling. Pre-registration date cheerleader at Kyger Creek.
is Dec. 15 and a ll those in- She attends th e Addison
,
terested should contact the Freewill Baptist Church.
caning, r egional litera ture,

'

center, 286-5875, on or before
that date, or Come on over to
the center, look aroimd, and

New York Senator Thomas

register in person . Class Platt nominated Theodore

materials are furnished by Roosevelt for vice president
Woodthrush , with the ex- in order to remove him rrom
ception of a chair or stool to be the governorship of New
caned , and all completed York. In 1900, after being
e lected to this office, The
projects are yours to keep .
World Almanac recalls, the
Wo odthrush Folk Arts ene rgetic Roosevelt was
Council is sponsored by a grant rescued from the "honorable
from the Ohio Arts Council, seclusion" of the vice presi:
and locally by Jackson-Vinton dency when President
William Mc Kinley was
Community Action.
assassinated.
·

THE IDEAL GIFT
and CARD SHOPPE
. 336 SECOND AVE., GALLIPOLIS
. . . . .. .. . . ,. ..
•,•

.

Enro Pajamas

.

Easy with

J &amp; F aothing

Arrow Shirts

"

Sunday, Dec. 2 thru Saturday, Dec. 8

'
'•

FOOTLONG
HOT

All Weather Coats
You will enhance his appearance
with a zip-out lined Ali Weather
Coat by Campus of Dacron
polyester and cotton specially
treated with Korotron Scotch
guard stain and water reoeller.

Evans Slippers

GET YOUR FREE
SHOP-A-RAMA
TICKETS HERE

'

'•'

·•.•

•
'•'
'
•
'

•

'

'

.

Sport Coats

NO LIMIT
"FIXED THE WAY
YOU LIKE 'EM"

•

'
•'

''

Beau Brun.mel Ties

Reston Slacks

..'
I

Stetson Hats

Highlight hi!&gt; wardrobe this Christmas
with a new Custom Fabric Suit by J&amp;F.
Choose now for peak selection. He will
appreciate the year round appearance,
the superior fit quality and craftsmanship of J&amp;F clothing.

•

.

PHONE 446.0026

rMakes Your Christmas Shopping

•••

"

""0
""0

;&gt;,ee

Margaret Hauser, editor of CoEd
m agazine. · Co-Ed,
published
nationally by
Scholastic Mag azin~s , Inc., for

Dunmar Robes

'
,•..
••'
'
•'

~

•

iD

00

announcement

JACKSON - Woodthrush and reach singing games to all
Folk Arts Council is sponsoring interested. This is a real family
a Folk Dance and Singing event, with good music and lots
Games workshop, Saturday, of fun for all. Bring your inDec. 8 from 1 to 5 p.m., in the . . slrument if you like, and gel in
afternoon at the Lick on the good Umes. Wond thrush
Elementary School gym- is asking a donation of 50 cents
nasium in Jackson . There will per person, or $1 lor the whole
be live music by Morgan's family .
The council would also like to
Raiders of Gallia County. Eric
Wright will be on hand to lead remind everyone of the winter
and instruct the folk dancing schedule of classes to be given
at the Center, 20 Broadway St. ,

•

0
o m

asksNeed Cruise

·woodthrush
snonsors
~~~-f~e~~:· homefurnishings
·
'J"' .
winter arts classes

GORHAM

•
-•
-•

Miss Dawn

Sunday School Institute at
Corinth Sunday afternoon and
had part in the program.
Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Howard and family visited his
mother, Mrs. Mary Howard
and family recently.

been
named
Co-Ed
Correspondent for the 1973-74
school year , according to an

CHRISTMAS BAZAAR - The Rio Grande Mothers
League is sponsoring an ' 'Old Fashioned Christmas Bazaar"
Friday, Dec. 7, from 1 to 9 p.m ., at Community Hall on the
Rio Grande College Campus. Clubs and individuals will offer
a wide var iety of homemade items including baked goods,
candles, Christmas decorations, decoupage, woodworking,
flora l arrangements, ceramics, quilts, and numerous gift
items. Holding one of the posters for the event are, left, Sue
Brandeberry and Cheryl Vanco.

'•

-••

I /'!

CHESlliRE -

..

-•
-•

(

DECEMBER
Exhibit at Riverby : Hocking
Valley Craftsmen.
Friday, Dec. 7, F.A.C. Annual Family Christmas party,
7:30-9:30 p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 15, FAC
dance instructor Gillian Moore
and students Christmas recital
7-9 p.m . at Grace United
Methodist Church auditorium .
Tuesday, Dec. 18, F .A.C.
interdepartmental meeting , 8
p.m.
Tuesd ay, Dec . 25 , F .A.C.
trustees meeting 8 p.m .
Jan•ary Exljibit, Daniel
Farber, Photog raphy .

Hope

Martin, 14, Rt. 1, Cheshire, has

•

..•
-•
.-•

'~"·/'''

f ,,

•

•

I

'I

or experience.,

•

..

II

Miss Martin
is honored

New
Mr. and Mrs . F rank Young
and children of Dayton visited
the latter's mother, Mrs . Mary
Howard and families from
Friday until Sunday.
Mrs. Murl Howard and Mrs.
Ja ckie Howard attended a

&amp;4akt

For dress and casual wear choose
for him a new s"p ort Coat by
Cricketeer in two or three button
styles of muted plaids, subtle checks
or pleasing patterns.

NO COUPON

· ~qnppr

Swank Jewelry

;'THAT OLD..FASHIONED GOODNESS"

ASHOP-A-RAMA STORE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
l
•

I

Freeman Shoes

FREE GIFT

WRAPPING

�-·
12_-l'llfSundayTimes-Senlinei.SWKiav. n.r ?

•

1Q7~

Cub leader development is planned
HUNTI NGTON, W. Va. - A
new Cub Scout leader
development program will be
launched in early 1974 by the
Tri-StAte Area Council, Boy
Scouts of America .
Selection of volunteer coach ·
co unselor s who w iJJ be
available w work with Cub
Scout leaders will be under the
direc ti on
of
Tommy
Thomason , chairman of the

counc il lead ers hip trainin g

committee.
The Boy Scout.&lt;l of America
has been a leader in adult
edu cation related to the
leadership of boys and young
adults, and the new Cub Scout
~

•

ENTERTAINS GUESTS
CHESTER - Mrs . Barbara
Sargent entertained with a
belated Thanksgiving dinner a!
her home Saturday night.

l..ow ." .The rock concert is open to the public. Tickets are $3
advance and $4 at the door and are on sale now at Rio Grande
College . There are no reserved seats for the event. For more
information , call 245-5353, extension 44 . Doors will open for
the Homecoming Rock Concert at 6:30p.m. Friday , Dec. 7.

RIO GRANDE - A Homecoming Rock Concert is
scheduled for Lyne Center on the Rio Grande College campus
Dec. 7, at 7:30p.m. This concert will be a part of the college's
Homecoming activities. Featured at the concert will be the
"Stories." Also appearing on the program is the ~~ over Night

Through the committees,
club members are able to
express their needs, desires
and ideas and thereby outli ne a
program which will be
satisfying and enriching.
Projects,
lessons ,
and
workshops · will theri be
designed to carry out the
recommendations made by
these com mittees.
The
following
were
represented at the planning
session :
Projects for Independent
· Study - Mrs. Virgil Burris,
Mrs. Iva Capehart; Cultural
Arts : Mrs. Basil Whittington;
Fami ly Life : Mrs . John
Kelsey ; Mrs. Harry Staats and
Mrs. James Humphreys;
Health : Mrs. Ray Fox, Mrs.
Vernon Clifton ; Public Information: Mrs. Aaron Fowler,
Mrs: Edith Fox; Citizenship:
Mrs. C. E. McCulloch .
Memorial Book Committee
- Mrs. Girard Fowler, Fair
committee; Mrs. Ray Friend
and Mrs. Laurene Lew1s; Tour
Committee: Miss Louise Tyler,
Mts. Laurene Lewis; Spring
Luncheon ,
Mrs.
Elmer
Grueser; Achievement Day:
Mrs. Hubert Forbus and BiCentennial: Mrs. Edith Fox.
Others attending were Mrs.
Robert Mayriard, Mrs. Jam es
Rice and Mrs. Vicki Keefer,
Extension Agent.~ Home
Demonstration .
~

..;.

.....\, ...

'

.... .

GET

"\ .,..

-~/ '

Gallipolis, Ohio

FROM

THE

*

• Couenlenl ll n·
certlp switch In hln·

EMPIRE

'23995
MAPLE OR PINE
.

A
Great
Christmas
Gift

. .. .

'

-.,_
Whirlpool
WASHERS, DRYERS,
DISHWASHERS,
TRASH MASHERS,
REFRIGERATORS,
RANGES, FREEZERS.

21" COLOR T.V.
5

particle • Plus
man7 mllfe

'1995

MAKE PERFECT
GIFTS

PAUL &amp; .MADGE NORTHUP
OWNERS

POINT PLEASANT, WEST VIRGINIA 25550

.

'"

Before Videomalic no other TV could do it! lt'S'the
first co lo r TV that automaticall y ad justs its own picture
to changing room ligh t , .. to give you the proper
balance of color, brightness and contrast- day or night.
The chassis is 100% sol id · state, too . No chassis tubes to
burn out. One -button tuning. of course . In fact. it's the
most completely automatic one-button tuning system
.you can buy . And -it's the most thoroughly tested
of the 5 best sellin g solid-state color TV's . .
What a difference watching a Magna vox I

RECLINERS .

YOU'Ll HAVE TO SEE
AND HEAR TO BELIEVE

$22995
FREE

'

SOFA &amp;2 CHAIRS
,,

••
'

••••

•

GREEN PRINT HERCULON
.SOFA WITH MR. &amp; MRS.
SOLID GREEN CHAIRS

"
••
24th
Delivery
Guaranteed if Purchased Now!
December

$

'
-.,'

"'•
'
.

95

MOD·ERN SOFA
AND LOVE SEAt
STRIPE

lay-~way

•,•.
•
'"
••
"

·-..,
'

PHONE 446-1616
· ~

'

·'

// .,.,__,_,~--~-'--~------~--___;_----·---___;_-

'

-

,.'

SOLID BIRCH

INING ROOM SUITE BEDROOM SUITE
TABLE - 4 UPHOLSTERED
CHAIRS • HUTCH

•49995

ONLY

TRIPLE DRESSER, MIRROR,
CHEST. NIGHTSTAND,
HEADBOARD

$749

BEDSPREADS
FULL - TWIN - QUEEN - KING
MAKE NICE GIFTS

YOU SAVE •140.00

95
SOLID WOOD

WE SELL TO SELL AGAIN! '

•I

arr

'

••'

SPANISH

A VERY SMART SUITE

•'

Phon• "'"'"1~5
l'? elli,.ll_•

• Use Our . C~ristmas

•

WRAPPING

.• TABLES, COFFEE I STEP
&amp; COCKTAIL
e GUN CABINETS

~2

eRECORD CHANGER
•BUILTIN 8 TRACK
TAPE PlAYER
eRADIO

REDUCED
TO FIT
YOUR
BUDGET

Get Your Oder
lnNowFor
Christmas
Delivery .

e.- LAMPS, MANY TYPES

WE CARRY
OUR OWN
ACCOUNTS

STEREO-PHILHARMONIC

CLOCKS ·

BIG SAVINGS ON

e HASSOCKS
. 1

10%OFF

I

RIDGEWAY

.

e DESKS

•·

. ..

•1795

• Sofa Throw Cushions ··
e MIRRORS e PICTURES

QIIIIIIIIIV

. .

eRAGGADY ANDY &amp;
ANN LAMPS

BAR STOOLS

e BOOKCASES .

PH O N E

304./675 · 3000

•HANGING
. •TABLE
•RAIN LAMPS
eNOVELTY LAMPS
•

black &amp; white or color
. . . . .

OFF

LAMPS .

portables,

MUSHROOM STOOLS

DECORATOR
QiAIRS

e RECORD CABINETS

MOBILE HOME SALES

10%

Big savings on

e FARMHOUSE ROCKERS
In maple
e CHAIRS; All Styles
'

.Ginger JaiS

25" COLOR T.V.

In maple, black' or white

....._,~

.statues

44995

anm.

• STRATOLOUNGER RECLINERS
e BOSTON ROCKERS

,.~. ,.~

eBaldwin Brass

wanted tea-

, turea

WILL HOLD 'TIL CHRISTMAS

and Colors

CHOOSE FROM OUR
LARGE SELECTION
OF GIFT IDEAS

· GIFT FOR THE FAMILY .

nates eYerr dnt

10% DOWN

'

·, GIFT ACCESSORIES

, WILL MAKE A PERFECT

clea ning puwer

HOOVER
SWEEPER
This

. ,. .

· MOTOROLA T. V.

die • · Tri ple-me

GIVE THEM A

. '

'

suction cleans •
Spolllglt Illum i-

"A Full LineMusic Store"

·/

ONLY

sweeps , combS ,

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

.

6 SOLID MAPLE CHAIRS
42" ROUND TABLE
WITH 2 - 12" LEAVES

beats, shakes .

CHILDERS MUSIC CENTER
.. .

7 Piece Dinnette

OPEN
EVERY DAY 9 AM Til 9 PM
•
EXCEPT SUNDAY Til QiRISTMAS

ONLY

'

. .

Shop Our ·
Store

A GREAT VALUE

*

. . ..

For The Best
Selection In ·
Home Furnishings
Be Sure To

"

COMPILE WORK PROGRAM - Members of the
various committees of the Mason County Homemaker's Club
are pictured following a meeting Thursday in the auditorium
o£ the Courthouse Annex. Plans were made for the work
program of Homemaker's Clubs for 1974.

..

..

'

404 Second Ave.

... adjusts its own picture to
changing room light...
automatically!

'

.. ..

''

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS

SOLID-STATE COLOR TV

J. -

TO

453 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis

v•oeomat•c®:

Model4730 - offers dramatic contemporar&gt;y
styling and includes all features at right . . .
plus"' Super Brightr111 Matrix picture tube
for really bright. sharp, clear pictures .

EVERybody WOUld likE

th 1rd ar\nual Christmas plate by Humm(l fraluring
a bas rtlief design of H•mmtl creal ion. $U.50

SUNDAY SPECIAL

. ssgg95

ifT ...

'1·miSTMAS

1

·EUREKA

.. ·'

Regu larly Priced
Magnavox Value

A_.._

SmeHzer Garden
Center

"Serving you sjnce 1936"
"':" J IIi polis. Ohio _

CHRISTl ANN
RESTAURANT

'

We make our own
and we deliver.
Also
DISH GARDENS

DAN _THOMAS
AND SON

AND BAKED STEAK

..

'All With Lids

'

AND DRESSING

..

Beautiful Shapes
and Sizes.

Rogie and Lea Ann , suffiner;
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Gaul and
children, Michael and Sara,
Vincent; Mr . and Mrs. Ed
Murphy and daughter, Pam,
Tuppers Plains; Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Frank , PomeroyChester Road; Mrs. Lucy Gaul,
Sumner; Mrs . Jean Summerfield and Mrs. Nora
Brown, Chester. In conjunction
with the dinner the seventh
birthday of Lea Ann Gaul was
observed with two decorated
cakes and ice cream being
served .

--

ROASTED TURKEY

. ..

· - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973

leaders," Thomason said. "We

Miss ljTmbo Ut...len·
is honored
MINERSVILLE -:- Donna
Jean Imboden, Min ersville ,
entertAined recently at her
home honoring her daughter ,
Jayne Ann, on her fifth birthday: The home was beautifully
decorated in the red , white and
blue color scheme. The birthday cake was decorated in red,
while and blue with clowns and
ponies.
Attending !he party were
ROdrley Stewart, Chrissie
Bass, Usa Durst, Roger Scnith,
Jr., Harvey Martin, Penny Sue
Landers, Velvet Justi ce,
soOner Justice, Jackie Justice,
Robbie Imboden, Bobbie Sue
Imboden, Christie Imboden,
Mickey Cundiff, Brett Cundiff,
Teresa Imboden, Timmy
Imboden, Ralph and Shelia
Shain, Ora Bass, Sharon Durst,
Eloise Lawrence, Geraldine
Martin , Evelyn Landers,
Frances Imboden and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Vance
Imboden .
Unable to attend the party,
but sending gifts were Rev. and
Mrs . Larimore, Roger Hysell,
Jo Ann Williams, Edna
Triple!!, Goldie Mills, Traci
Wright, Louise London, David
and Sheni Bass and Mae
Roach.

program waH aJso serve
Cubmasters and assis!Anls,
den leader coaches, and pack
co mmittee
members,
Thomason said . The Tri-S!Aie
Area Council has more than 97
Cub Scout packs with over 900
adults participating.

feel that these important
leaders must have this opportunity to ~a in knowledge, to
improve their skills, and to
build attitudes. Development is
a process - it's not just par~
ticipatlng in an event."
In addition to the den leaders
who work with the 8-, 9-, and 10year-&lt;&gt;ld boys, the new
leadership development

Guests included Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Gaul and childr en ,

Committees planned
.homemaker programs
PT. PLEASANT - Commitlees of !he Mason County
Homemaker Clubs met in the
auditoriwn of the Courthouse
Annex Thursday to prepare a
program for 1974.
Homemaker Clubs are the
local organization thr ough
which West Virginia University carries out its · adult
program of home demon stration work . It is a part of the
Cooperative Extension Service
of !he West Virginia University
Agriculture Center and of the
United SlAtes Department of
Agriculture . The purpose of
club work is enriched llving for
individuals , famili es, and
communities, this bein g
achieved
through
(a)
education, (b ) home and
community improvement, (c)
development of leadership and
fellowship .

leader development program
will use the newest techniques
and materials to provide a
modern and effective learning
opportunity for all Cub Scout
leaders.
"The principal technique of
the program is to assume the
primary responsibility of
getting inrormation to the
leaders who deal directly with
the Cub and Webelos Scouts !he den and Webelos den

BACKFIRE BLAMED
GALLIPOLIS - A backfire
in the carburetor was blamed
for a $20 fire Friday afternoon
in an auto owned by Weldon
Strait of Rl. 2, Gallipolis. Six
men and one truck from Ule
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Dept.
responded to the 1171h alarm of
the year.

854 Third Avenue
'

urniture

Get Your Free Shop·A-Rama
Tickets Here

Gallipolis, Ohio
'

,,

'

�-·
12_-l'llfSundayTimes-Senlinei.SWKiav. n.r ?

•

1Q7~

Cub leader development is planned
HUNTI NGTON, W. Va. - A
new Cub Scout leader
development program will be
launched in early 1974 by the
Tri-StAte Area Council, Boy
Scouts of America .
Selection of volunteer coach ·
co unselor s who w iJJ be
available w work with Cub
Scout leaders will be under the
direc ti on
of
Tommy
Thomason , chairman of the

counc il lead ers hip trainin g

committee.
The Boy Scout.&lt;l of America
has been a leader in adult
edu cation related to the
leadership of boys and young
adults, and the new Cub Scout
~

•

ENTERTAINS GUESTS
CHESTER - Mrs . Barbara
Sargent entertained with a
belated Thanksgiving dinner a!
her home Saturday night.

l..ow ." .The rock concert is open to the public. Tickets are $3
advance and $4 at the door and are on sale now at Rio Grande
College . There are no reserved seats for the event. For more
information , call 245-5353, extension 44 . Doors will open for
the Homecoming Rock Concert at 6:30p.m. Friday , Dec. 7.

RIO GRANDE - A Homecoming Rock Concert is
scheduled for Lyne Center on the Rio Grande College campus
Dec. 7, at 7:30p.m. This concert will be a part of the college's
Homecoming activities. Featured at the concert will be the
"Stories." Also appearing on the program is the ~~ over Night

Through the committees,
club members are able to
express their needs, desires
and ideas and thereby outli ne a
program which will be
satisfying and enriching.
Projects,
lessons ,
and
workshops · will theri be
designed to carry out the
recommendations made by
these com mittees.
The
following
were
represented at the planning
session :
Projects for Independent
· Study - Mrs. Virgil Burris,
Mrs. Iva Capehart; Cultural
Arts : Mrs. Basil Whittington;
Fami ly Life : Mrs . John
Kelsey ; Mrs. Harry Staats and
Mrs. James Humphreys;
Health : Mrs. Ray Fox, Mrs.
Vernon Clifton ; Public Information: Mrs. Aaron Fowler,
Mrs: Edith Fox; Citizenship:
Mrs. C. E. McCulloch .
Memorial Book Committee
- Mrs. Girard Fowler, Fair
committee; Mrs. Ray Friend
and Mrs. Laurene Lew1s; Tour
Committee: Miss Louise Tyler,
Mts. Laurene Lewis; Spring
Luncheon ,
Mrs.
Elmer
Grueser; Achievement Day:
Mrs. Hubert Forbus and BiCentennial: Mrs. Edith Fox.
Others attending were Mrs.
Robert Mayriard, Mrs. Jam es
Rice and Mrs. Vicki Keefer,
Extension Agent.~ Home
Demonstration .
~

..;.

.....\, ...

'

.... .

GET

"\ .,..

-~/ '

Gallipolis, Ohio

FROM

THE

*

• Couenlenl ll n·
certlp switch In hln·

EMPIRE

'23995
MAPLE OR PINE
.

A
Great
Christmas
Gift

. .. .

'

-.,_
Whirlpool
WASHERS, DRYERS,
DISHWASHERS,
TRASH MASHERS,
REFRIGERATORS,
RANGES, FREEZERS.

21" COLOR T.V.
5

particle • Plus
man7 mllfe

'1995

MAKE PERFECT
GIFTS

PAUL &amp; .MADGE NORTHUP
OWNERS

POINT PLEASANT, WEST VIRGINIA 25550

.

'"

Before Videomalic no other TV could do it! lt'S'the
first co lo r TV that automaticall y ad justs its own picture
to changing room ligh t , .. to give you the proper
balance of color, brightness and contrast- day or night.
The chassis is 100% sol id · state, too . No chassis tubes to
burn out. One -button tuning. of course . In fact. it's the
most completely automatic one-button tuning system
.you can buy . And -it's the most thoroughly tested
of the 5 best sellin g solid-state color TV's . .
What a difference watching a Magna vox I

RECLINERS .

YOU'Ll HAVE TO SEE
AND HEAR TO BELIEVE

$22995
FREE

'

SOFA &amp;2 CHAIRS
,,

••
'

••••

•

GREEN PRINT HERCULON
.SOFA WITH MR. &amp; MRS.
SOLID GREEN CHAIRS

"
••
24th
Delivery
Guaranteed if Purchased Now!
December

$

'
-.,'

"'•
'
.

95

MOD·ERN SOFA
AND LOVE SEAt
STRIPE

lay-~way

•,•.
•
'"
••
"

·-..,
'

PHONE 446-1616
· ~

'

·'

// .,.,__,_,~--~-'--~------~--___;_----·---___;_-

'

-

,.'

SOLID BIRCH

INING ROOM SUITE BEDROOM SUITE
TABLE - 4 UPHOLSTERED
CHAIRS • HUTCH

•49995

ONLY

TRIPLE DRESSER, MIRROR,
CHEST. NIGHTSTAND,
HEADBOARD

$749

BEDSPREADS
FULL - TWIN - QUEEN - KING
MAKE NICE GIFTS

YOU SAVE •140.00

95
SOLID WOOD

WE SELL TO SELL AGAIN! '

•I

arr

'

••'

SPANISH

A VERY SMART SUITE

•'

Phon• "'"'"1~5
l'? elli,.ll_•

• Use Our . C~ristmas

•

WRAPPING

.• TABLES, COFFEE I STEP
&amp; COCKTAIL
e GUN CABINETS

~2

eRECORD CHANGER
•BUILTIN 8 TRACK
TAPE PlAYER
eRADIO

REDUCED
TO FIT
YOUR
BUDGET

Get Your Oder
lnNowFor
Christmas
Delivery .

e.- LAMPS, MANY TYPES

WE CARRY
OUR OWN
ACCOUNTS

STEREO-PHILHARMONIC

CLOCKS ·

BIG SAVINGS ON

e HASSOCKS
. 1

10%OFF

I

RIDGEWAY

.

e DESKS

•·

. ..

•1795

• Sofa Throw Cushions ··
e MIRRORS e PICTURES

QIIIIIIIIIV

. .

eRAGGADY ANDY &amp;
ANN LAMPS

BAR STOOLS

e BOOKCASES .

PH O N E

304./675 · 3000

•HANGING
. •TABLE
•RAIN LAMPS
eNOVELTY LAMPS
•

black &amp; white or color
. . . . .

OFF

LAMPS .

portables,

MUSHROOM STOOLS

DECORATOR
QiAIRS

e RECORD CABINETS

MOBILE HOME SALES

10%

Big savings on

e FARMHOUSE ROCKERS
In maple
e CHAIRS; All Styles
'

.Ginger JaiS

25" COLOR T.V.

In maple, black' or white

....._,~

.statues

44995

anm.

• STRATOLOUNGER RECLINERS
e BOSTON ROCKERS

,.~. ,.~

eBaldwin Brass

wanted tea-

, turea

WILL HOLD 'TIL CHRISTMAS

and Colors

CHOOSE FROM OUR
LARGE SELECTION
OF GIFT IDEAS

· GIFT FOR THE FAMILY .

nates eYerr dnt

10% DOWN

'

·, GIFT ACCESSORIES

, WILL MAKE A PERFECT

clea ning puwer

HOOVER
SWEEPER
This

. ,. .

· MOTOROLA T. V.

die • · Tri ple-me

GIVE THEM A

. '

'

suction cleans •
Spolllglt Illum i-

"A Full LineMusic Store"

·/

ONLY

sweeps , combS ,

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

.

6 SOLID MAPLE CHAIRS
42" ROUND TABLE
WITH 2 - 12" LEAVES

beats, shakes .

CHILDERS MUSIC CENTER
.. .

7 Piece Dinnette

OPEN
EVERY DAY 9 AM Til 9 PM
•
EXCEPT SUNDAY Til QiRISTMAS

ONLY

'

. .

Shop Our ·
Store

A GREAT VALUE

*

. . ..

For The Best
Selection In ·
Home Furnishings
Be Sure To

"

COMPILE WORK PROGRAM - Members of the
various committees of the Mason County Homemaker's Club
are pictured following a meeting Thursday in the auditorium
o£ the Courthouse Annex. Plans were made for the work
program of Homemaker's Clubs for 1974.

..

..

'

404 Second Ave.

... adjusts its own picture to
changing room light...
automatically!

'

.. ..

''

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS

SOLID-STATE COLOR TV

J. -

TO

453 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis

v•oeomat•c®:

Model4730 - offers dramatic contemporar&gt;y
styling and includes all features at right . . .
plus"' Super Brightr111 Matrix picture tube
for really bright. sharp, clear pictures .

EVERybody WOUld likE

th 1rd ar\nual Christmas plate by Humm(l fraluring
a bas rtlief design of H•mmtl creal ion. $U.50

SUNDAY SPECIAL

. ssgg95

ifT ...

'1·miSTMAS

1

·EUREKA

.. ·'

Regu larly Priced
Magnavox Value

A_.._

SmeHzer Garden
Center

"Serving you sjnce 1936"
"':" J IIi polis. Ohio _

CHRISTl ANN
RESTAURANT

'

We make our own
and we deliver.
Also
DISH GARDENS

DAN _THOMAS
AND SON

AND BAKED STEAK

..

'All With Lids

'

AND DRESSING

..

Beautiful Shapes
and Sizes.

Rogie and Lea Ann , suffiner;
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Gaul and
children, Michael and Sara,
Vincent; Mr . and Mrs. Ed
Murphy and daughter, Pam,
Tuppers Plains; Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Frank , PomeroyChester Road; Mrs. Lucy Gaul,
Sumner; Mrs . Jean Summerfield and Mrs. Nora
Brown, Chester. In conjunction
with the dinner the seventh
birthday of Lea Ann Gaul was
observed with two decorated
cakes and ice cream being
served .

--

ROASTED TURKEY

. ..

· - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973

leaders," Thomason said. "We

Miss ljTmbo Ut...len·
is honored
MINERSVILLE -:- Donna
Jean Imboden, Min ersville ,
entertAined recently at her
home honoring her daughter ,
Jayne Ann, on her fifth birthday: The home was beautifully
decorated in the red , white and
blue color scheme. The birthday cake was decorated in red,
while and blue with clowns and
ponies.
Attending !he party were
ROdrley Stewart, Chrissie
Bass, Usa Durst, Roger Scnith,
Jr., Harvey Martin, Penny Sue
Landers, Velvet Justi ce,
soOner Justice, Jackie Justice,
Robbie Imboden, Bobbie Sue
Imboden, Christie Imboden,
Mickey Cundiff, Brett Cundiff,
Teresa Imboden, Timmy
Imboden, Ralph and Shelia
Shain, Ora Bass, Sharon Durst,
Eloise Lawrence, Geraldine
Martin , Evelyn Landers,
Frances Imboden and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Vance
Imboden .
Unable to attend the party,
but sending gifts were Rev. and
Mrs . Larimore, Roger Hysell,
Jo Ann Williams, Edna
Triple!!, Goldie Mills, Traci
Wright, Louise London, David
and Sheni Bass and Mae
Roach.

program waH aJso serve
Cubmasters and assis!Anls,
den leader coaches, and pack
co mmittee
members,
Thomason said . The Tri-S!Aie
Area Council has more than 97
Cub Scout packs with over 900
adults participating.

feel that these important
leaders must have this opportunity to ~a in knowledge, to
improve their skills, and to
build attitudes. Development is
a process - it's not just par~
ticipatlng in an event."
In addition to the den leaders
who work with the 8-, 9-, and 10year-&lt;&gt;ld boys, the new
leadership development

Guests included Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Gaul and childr en ,

Committees planned
.homemaker programs
PT. PLEASANT - Commitlees of !he Mason County
Homemaker Clubs met in the
auditoriwn of the Courthouse
Annex Thursday to prepare a
program for 1974.
Homemaker Clubs are the
local organization thr ough
which West Virginia University carries out its · adult
program of home demon stration work . It is a part of the
Cooperative Extension Service
of !he West Virginia University
Agriculture Center and of the
United SlAtes Department of
Agriculture . The purpose of
club work is enriched llving for
individuals , famili es, and
communities, this bein g
achieved
through
(a)
education, (b ) home and
community improvement, (c)
development of leadership and
fellowship .

leader development program
will use the newest techniques
and materials to provide a
modern and effective learning
opportunity for all Cub Scout
leaders.
"The principal technique of
the program is to assume the
primary responsibility of
getting inrormation to the
leaders who deal directly with
the Cub and Webelos Scouts !he den and Webelos den

BACKFIRE BLAMED
GALLIPOLIS - A backfire
in the carburetor was blamed
for a $20 fire Friday afternoon
in an auto owned by Weldon
Strait of Rl. 2, Gallipolis. Six
men and one truck from Ule
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Dept.
responded to the 1171h alarm of
the year.

854 Third Avenue
'

urniture

Get Your Free Shop·A-Rama
Tickets Here

Gallipolis, Ohio
'

,,

'

�Thanksgiving reunion held by Harrises

(

I

Miss janice Boggs
GRADUATES- Janice Boggs, daughter 'of Mr. and Mrs.
Berl Boggs of Tuppers Plains, is a graduate of Martella
Valley Beauty School and aloo attended the P~rkersburg
Beauty College. A 1972 graduate of East er~ H1gh School
where she was active in F .H.A . and received the Good
Citizenship Award during her senior . year, Miss Boggs~
tends Orange Christian Church. She IS presently emplOf .
at Helen 's Beauty Shop in Pomeroy .

'

:Home to receive
gifts from UM W
.

.

POMEROY - Gifts to the
children's home at Otterbein,
the home for the aged at
Lebanon ,
and the Meigs
County Children's Home lind
the Meigs County Infirmary

by Mrs. Sadie Brown; "All

Year Around Thanksgiving 1 '

by Mrs. Mary Russell ; "My
Blessings" by Mrs. Ruby
Grue:;er; "A Good Creed" by
Mrs. June Sayre; "Growing In
:Prayer"
by Lillie Starcher; " A
: . were arr_anged during the
' Wednesday meeting of the Sacrament of Thanksgiving "
United Methodist Women at by Stella Grueser; " Thanksthe
Minersville
United giving" by Mrs. Rhoda Roush;
"Thanksgiving in .the U.S.A."
Methodist Church.
It ·was . also decided during by Mrs. Doris Grueser; and a
··- the meeting not to exchange poem on Mother 's Day written
Chrisbnas gifts this year at the by . Mrs . Pauline . Zahl,
turkey dinner and party Cleveland, sister-in-law of Mrs .
scheduled for Dec. 12 at noon, Forbes, who read it.
Guests at the meeting were
but rather to put the money
Mrs.
Gladys Taylor, Mr s.
usually spent on the .e xchange
in to the treasury . Remem- Freda Mitch and Mrs. Gerbrances will be sent to shut-ins . . trude Mitchell.
Mrs. Elsie Forbes presided at
the meeting which followed a
potluck dinner, and a inorning
IS TRANSFE.R RED .
of quilting.
.
POMEROY - Mrs . Ruth
There was group singing of Hennessy, a former patient at
"Count Your Blessings" and Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Mrs. Fannie Phillips had the has been taken to· the home of
program which opened with her daughter, Mrs . Irwin
prayer by Mrs. Dorothy Jarvis . Eubands, 216 Beechwood
Mrs. Forbes read Psabn 95.
Road, New Wilmington! Pa ,,
Readings Included "On File" 16143.

•
'

:;-.,

';··-~~ ... .

... '' •.·1
....' ' .,.•...

Evans

AT-HOME' FOOTWEAR

SUNDAY
BILL KANE, assis tant
director of security operations,
Ohio University, at Middleport
United Pentecostal Church,
Sunday, 10 a .m . to display
materials and show films
relative to drug abuse. Kane
served in Ohio State Patrol for
14 yea~s . Poblic invited.
ADVENT " ROUND the
Table" carol sing, 6 p .m .
Sunday at · Pomeroy United
Methodist Church . Refresh·
ments to be served in " roWld
the table" style. Public invited .
RACINE Chapter 134 OES
practice for installation, 2p.m.
at the halL Installation Dec. 8
at 8 p.m . All 1974 officers and
installing officers asked to
attend.
MONDAY
EIGHT and Forty, Meigs
County Salon 710, Christmas
party, Meigs Inn , 6:30 p .m.
Secret sister gift exchange.
Members to take food for
Ch ri stmas basket. Sherrie
Marshall , cystic fibrosis child ,
to be honored guest; her sister
Denise also to attend .
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
regula·r meeting, Monday
night, 8 p.m . Masonic Temple.

POMEROY - Families of
Ute late Grover and Elizabeth
Nease Harris had a Thanksgiving family get-together at
Ute home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Bartenschlag, Kathy and
Cheryl, Columbus.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert W. (Isabelle ) Lewis and
daughter, Brenda, Racine ; Mr.
and Mrs . Michael Elmore,
Glen Burnie, Md.; Mr. and
Mrs . Donald Hayman, Mark,
Shari, and Brian, Laurel, Md.;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Lewis,
Debbie and Diane, Laurel,
Md .; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
(Stacie) Bogard, Hillsboro;
Mr . and Mrs. Fred Main,
Randy and Steve, Mr. and Mrs.
Norman (Betty) Frazier,
Battle Creek, Mich.; Gary
Frazier,
Illinois
State
University; Mrs . Marilyn
Priez and Shawn, Battle Creek,
Mich.
Mr. and Mrs. Don (Dorothy )
C. Ford, Jr., LaDonna, Charles
and Janet, Delphos; Mr. and

Meigs Sr.
Citizens ·
Calendar

'

Mils Debra jewett

'

Miss Cheryl Ann Biggs

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Cormal
T. 'Jewett, Rutland 1 are annnouncing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Debra, to Michael
Grate ' son of Mr. and Mrs . George Grate, Rutland. Miss .
Jewett is a 1!173 graduate of Meigs High School and is employed at the Jones Boys store. Her fian ce is a 1971 graduate
of Meigs High School and is employed at the Rutland Furniture Co. The wedding will be an event of June 14 at 6:30
p.m. at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene. The gracious
custom of open church will be observed.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel
Biggs, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, ar e announcing the engsgement of
their daughter , Cheryl Ann , to Eddie G . McPhe rson, son of
Mr. and Mrs . Galen McPheroon , 814 Clinton St., Marietta.
The bride-elect is 1912 graduate of Meigs High School and is
currently a student nurse at the Ho cking Valley Technical
College, Nelsonville. Her fiance, a 196'1 graduate of Manetta
High School, is currently employed a t Vang uard Paints and
Finishes. He served four years in the U. S. Air Force inchiding one 12-month tour of duty in Vietnam . An open
ch urch wedding is planned for March 9 at 7:30p.m. at the
Hemlock Grove Christian ·Church, Hemlock Grove .

a

FOR DAD!
FOR MOM!
•

Surprise party given recently

AND THE

Mrs. John Ridenour and son,
Jason , Mr. and Mrs. John
Hayes, Mrs. Lucy Gaul, Mrs.
Barbara Sargent, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Gaul and son, David,
Todd Clay, and Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Christy, all of Chester,
Refreshments of homemade
ice cream, birthday cake, tea,
Kool-Aid and coffee were
served . She received many
gifts.

KIDS!

and Thursday, 9 a.m. to 5 p .m .
a t Enterprise United Methodist
Church. Baked goods and ·
Christmas items for sale.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
HOST DINNER
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m.
CHESTER
- Mr. and Mrs .
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
James Ridenour and sons,
American Legio~. 7:30 p .m .
Lowell and · John, Chester,

Happy Hustlers meet

Fine Selectioll
To Choose!

e

M a r g u r i t e 's 5hoes

if',,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"",,,,,,,;,,,,,,,,"''"''"''''''''''''''''''''';,:~-;"@'''''''$$'~ ~~:~r ~ 0-:~~~~::t!r .sri:~:~

J,Community I ~~~::~~£:;:t~ffi~
Lay-Away Plan- Gift Wrapping
if: c
~~de~~urM;;d:~:.J~;:~.;I~ho~
I orner By Charlene Hoeflich I ;ch:este:r-~·----====·:·:·· :·· :·====·:·:·=
·=====:;
102 E. MAIN .

:&amp;

POMEROY - Mrs. Betty Jewett, Rutland , will undergo h~r
second open heart surgery Wednesday at St. Vincent's Hospital
in Cleve land.
As in all open heart surgeries, units and units of blood will be
\tsed and replacement is required . Naturally, the family is.very .
concerned about this.
· Meigs Countians can give Mrs. Jewett and her family a very
special Christmas gift- peace of mind- if they will just report
to the American Red Cross bloodmobile at the Pomeroy
· Elementary School Dec.17. Indicate to the clerk if you want your
blood to be counted as a replacement for Mrs. Jewett.
Mrs. Jewett, who had her first open heart surgery about 15
years ago, has two children at home .

•

C\J~ r

!·N·I. Yll
M~rrc Lt!o;ll"'r

f1 rrv.1• P

11&lt;1

$11.95

'

''
.

Others
$8.99
to $14.95

He'll
love Evans
in December ...
and 1n May and August and October.

'•

Ruth Purvis, district coordinator for Christian personhood.
Mrs. Vivian Cady, secretary
of
program
materials,
acquainted the group with the
program resource material.
Di s tri ct Treasurer Vivian
Robinson , gave a resume ~f
pledges and.how the money IS
apportioned .

BEnY OHLINGER

POMEROY

JOIN THE
'

.

''

The distriat president elect,
Mrs . Irene Mathias, explained
the program for the new year
and how the units can use the
material for their programs .
The Off ering prayer was
given by Mrs. Mary Pennington, outgoing coordinator
for Christian global concerns.
Followi ng
the general
meeting, each district officer
conducted a training period for
the local unit office rs, with the
evening session a repeat of the
afternoon one.

RACINE - A Christmas program . Mrs. Margaret
party was planned for Dec. 19 Houdashelt had the devotions
at the home of Mrs. Alber! Hill which opened with singing of
when the Happy Hustlers' . "S tat' of the. East" by Mrs.
Circle of the Racine Wesleyan Lavinia · Simpson and Mrs.
At the close of the evening
Methodist Church met a t the Mattie Circle .
session, all assembled again in
church .
·· In the program on Thanks·
the sanctuary for si ngi ng,
Dooations were made to the giving, it was noteck-that the announcemenl&lt;i and the closing
Meigs CountY Children's Home ~irst observ~n~e wa s spoken of prayer which · was · by ~rs .
and to the - Athens Mental tn Exodus 23: Thou shalt keep Irene Mathias.
Health cen~r. Arrangement• · · the feast of harvest, the first
District officers attending
were also made to prepare fruits of h~~vest , wh1ch t~ou were Mrs . Roy Ballard,
holiday plates for shut-ins .
ha s sown in the field; and the Nelsonville, ou tg oing
Mrs. Grace Krider presided feast of m-gath~nng wh1ch ISm .president;
Mrs.
Walter
at the meeting with · Mrs . the end of the_year . when thou Mathias , Logan, presidentBertha Spencer presenting the has gathered tn thy labo~s.out elect; Mrs. Everett McMahon,
of the field.,. The or1g mal Ga llipolis, vice president; Mrs.
proclama tion of Thmiksgiving Ro be rt McKelvey , Belpre,
was issue d by President
secretary;
Mrs .
Ralph
PARATROOH;R NOW .
George Wa shing ton , · Oct. 3, Robinson, Logan, treasurer;
RACINE - Private First 1789,
Mrs . Robert Fisher, New
Class Cha rles W. Cornell III,
Assisting with the program Lexington, chair person on
19, whose parents live on Rout e were Mrs . Ora Hill, Mrs.
nomina tions; Mrs. Ira Purvis,
1, rec.elved a pa rachutist bad ge Kenneth Will, Ann Coe, Edith
New Lexington, coordinator
upon his recent completion of Hay man,
Betty for .Chris tian personhood; Mrs.
the three-week airborne course Ch ristopherson, Mrs. Dorothy
Har.; y Johns on, Marietta ,
at the U. S. Army Infantr y . McKenzie and Mrs. Beul~h
coordinator for supportive
, School, ~' t. Bennin g, Ga. Bradford .
community; Miss Marian
During the first week of
Reed, Circle Hill , coordinator
training, he underwent a
fo r social involvement; Mrs.
rigorous physical training
Daniel Evans, Vinton, coorprogram and received in·
VISIT FRIENDS
dinator for social concern;
struction in !he theory of
POMEROY ~ Mrs. Velma
Mrs. Jobn Cady, Athens,
parachuting. The second week Douglas and daughter and sonsecreta r y
of
program
, tested hi s a bilit y throu g h in-law , the Rev. and Mrs . Paul
mat erials;
Mrs .
Rob e rt
jumps from the 34-foot and 25(). Dag gett and daughter , Sarah,
McGee, The Plains, chair
foot towers. The final week he Center , Tex., visited recently
person committee on .mem·
was requ,ired to perform five in Ivydale, W. Va., with Mrs .
bership.
static line parachute jumps. Euda Hamrick.

CLUB

GUYS AND GALS

WITH THE

Just Truck On Down To

Any11me of year. Evans at-home footwear can
help a inan really en 1oy the comfon o t home

Many Other Styles Excellellt Selection.

Hartley 's Shoes
Middle of Upper Block in Pome·roy
Open All Day Thursc!tay
Friday Night Untii9:00

Christmas gilts, then be sure to vi$it the holiday bazaar at the
Senior Citizens Center in the old Pomeroy Junior High School
building . The senior citizens have been busy for weeks, each
doing his or her own thing, in preparation for the bazaar aod the
things we 've seen which will be for sale there are just lovely,
U&gt;retta Beegle has made a number of the magic art small
oval plaques which set on miniature easels for the hazaar and
they are just beautifuL Teresa Byer's !'llndles are most attractive, and the handwork, Christmas decorations and craft
objects, all -made by the senior citizenS, are nice enough for
anyone.
.
And , of course, the money from the bazaar goes back to the
individual who made the item which oold. It will be held Wed.
nesday, Thursday and Friday.
ANNAGRACE Torchiano was in town Friday - the first
time in a long time due to oome health problems - wearing her
new 40 year service pin. Annagrace has been a home economist
with the Ohio Power Co. that long . ijer office is in Portsmouth but
Meigs County is oneofthe areas she services,

~~

~~

lop Value Stamps

' · ,;w,·,-

.

.-;. u •. •"

1Q¢ Off
With

c."•'"

-E
-- Luncheon Meats
_ Beef Hindquarter ~
~...~ ...:;~~·;~:;;;F;;i ~·i ~;~:~~~~• ~']

With Coupon ond Pvrch ose of

u:s. Govt. Groded Choic:e
People's Choice

Beef Forequarter

Side of Beef

With (ovpon ond Purcho~e of

-

U.S . Govt. Graded Choice
People's Choice

The

Pur cho~e

of Any

B·ol . Kroger Sliced

Coupan hpiru

D~t .

8 , 19ll

ll'lllll 111111111111111

Plain or Seii ·Ri 1ing

·~illsbury Flour

&gt;5 79,/

Reg

·lb.

95C '\

'I'

Bag

J-

With Coupon
Coupon Expires Sat., Dec. 8, 197J
"S ~bJett

·

to

,appliu~lr

stat!

&lt;ind lo,al ules t, •..

...

----

. ,,,.,,.. , "'"" •! '• ' '""""" "·
Ki n g Size

'/ / Fab Detergent
Reg. ::

5 -lb.

$ 1 49 /

4-oz.
Box

•

$1

09

·\'
With Coupon
.
Coupon Expires Sat., Dec. 8, 1973
" Su bject 1D appl icable state
and local Sl!es ta~ ··

T '"·a'"
Delight
ea agS _ Dieter's
Fresh- Frozen Cello Wrapped

\ I/

s~c ~
I

48-ct.4 9 t

J\

Box

With Coupon
Coupon Expiru Sat,, Dec. 8, 1973

~ Tu,bot
·
§ F•ll f
....
= 1 e s .....
Serve N Save

" Sub ject ta Applicantr $h ' e
u~ LOn ! hies Tu "

Skinless
12-oz. ' ' "
•
·
W•eners .•.... . 'I'
Pkg.

All

Flo~or s

Jello

Reg. -:

Jumbo

stc ~J:~::.·29

~

:
:
-

SNcolkt.
31~~~:~$~
§ ap 1ns . . .·.

" -'
. h Coupon
W1t
Coupon Expires Sat., Dec. 8, 1973

:
:KrOger Brown &amp; Serve, Buttermilk, Twin
:
b
k
- Flake &amp; Com 0 Poe

" Sub1ut to Apalitanle Shte
· and Local Sales Ta~ "

ijm~.~..~.~~~,~~~~~.~~.~.~~.~-~~~~·~~~~~ Dinner
~I --- (;~~;;1 ~- Rolls ..... • •
11.•~·

Nu-Soft :

/

39
''' ._:.64-oi:.
··

f. \ ':
:

Btl.

99

·

Electric Perk, Drip or Regular Coffee

3

·

11-oz.
Pkgs.

I

$

House

Kroger

I• Nu 201.
-,o
=H.
$109
l ow f at
Gallon
•••
.

§
'I' §
"

·lb.

With Coupoo
:
Coupon Expires Sat., Dec. 8, 1973 :
" Subj~ct to A~•lican le StJte

:

Can

::::: Chicken, Turk ey, Salisbury Steak, Chopped Beef, Meot Loaf ,

2 89¢
88"

VBeol Parmogi on, Corn Beef Hash or Mexican Di nners•

anquel
o·
.
11-oz.
,,.o9 -,.. ar s0ap. = mners . .
~:r~·
Lislerine .zo-az.
Mouthwash . :1. .
~ Tc=--~"' ' "~~;~·,__,111~
a•9· I
Lux
:
B
~

""4 69t

Pkgs,

Antiseptic

8

•

With Coupon
Coupon Expires Sat., Dec. 8, 1973
" Subject to applicoble tlote
and local sales taK"

IV•U

1111111111111111111111

. .,.

··s u•iett to Appl itl nle Shte
""' LOtiil! hlu Tn '"

Vu~

There's an extra Christmas gift tucked into.your 1974 Christmas
Club at the Meigs Branch of the Athens County Savings and Loan . .
It's a free- soth payment. No gimmicks! Nothing to buy! To
qualify for your "bonus" all you need to do is make all the first 49
of the scheduled payments in your ChrLstmas Club coupon book.
We will then add the 50th payment as a "bonus!' It's our way of
saying "thank you" for co~pleting the first 49 payments .

•

Pok, R~g . , tlecl~&gt;t
Prnk or Drip

I 1 Kroger Coffee

si~t -~Can
~ -lb $259
·

•

With toupon
Coupon Expires Sat., Dec. 8, 1973
"Subject ta Applimle State
1nd local Slln Tu"

Plus Free Favors When You Open Your ·Account At Our Office

50th Payment

Fresh Hot Buttered Corn for Supper

CORNER THIRD AND STATE, GALLIPOLIS
PHONE 446-7767

Is FREE!

Sweet

With Coupon
· Coupon Expires Sat., Det. 8 , 1973
··sullljul to A-.liunle Shte
'"~

Corn ..

l"al hies ru··

·0~"?~ """' """"'"''•

'

New Jeans &amp; Tops Arriving

'

Join

1 %

MOTOROLA T.V.'s

i=
5-

~1111 ,

~11111111111111111!!11

~OING OUT OF BUSINESS

NOTRADEINS

U.S. Govt. Graded Choice
People's Choice

..... u ...~,· ....,--;, .."llllra

250 Extra

~

lop Value Stamps

---

W ith Co1.1pon ond Pur .:: ho ~e of

llffi ,~·

.•

500 Extra

250
-Extra
lop Value Stamps

·

ALL MERCHANDISE MUST GO

A•othorized

-

with coupon
, Coupon Expiru Sat., Dec. 8,

VISITED the annual Christmas flower show of the Meigs
County Gar~en Clubs Asoociation yet?
There's still time. Hours today are. 1 to 4 p.m. The show is
being held in the Pomeroy Elementary School auditorium and
the public is cordially invited to view the beauty of Christmas in
flower arrangements, a craft display, and gift wrappings.

1974

• •••• ••

us TQP Value Stamps!

B.lllllllliii.l'iii.Silii;iiiJtiJIII.

PAUL AND JANE Douglas Daggett and their small
daughter, Sarah, are in the process of moving from Center, Tex.
to Weirton, W. Va ., much to the delight .of Jane's mother, Mrs.
Velma Douglas, Rock Springs.
Paul is an Episcopalian minister and has pastored a church
in Center since his graduation from seminary. When he and his
family were here in September, they accepted the call of the
church in Weirton.

IF YOU'RE looking for attractive, reasonably priced, novel

•'

•

held afternoon and evening
workshop training sessions for
offi cers of the local units
at St. M.ark's United
Methodist Churc h,
District and local officers
and visitors assembled in the
church san ctuary for a general
meeting before going to
training groups. Mrs. Marjorie
Coakley, wtgoing coordinator
for Christian social relations ,
led the group in singi ng and the
welcome was given by Mrs .
Beulah Ballard, outgoing
district president, as well as by
the Rev. Roy Wigal, minister of
the host church.

'

'

•

The Athens District officers

"'o1/United Methodist Women

Devotions were Jed by Mrs.

SALEM CENTER PTA 7:30
p.m. Chrisbnas program to be
presented by the student body.
MIDDLEPORT
GARDEN
Club, 7:30p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Carl Horky . Chrisbnas
party , $1 gift exc hange.
CHESTER - A surpnse
Members to take unwrapped birthday party was held Thursgifts for patients at the Athens day evening at the home of Mr.
Mental Health Center.
and Mrs. J ohn Wi c kham,
Chester, for Mrs. John (Opal)
TUESDAY
OHIO Eta Phi, Beta Sigma Wickham .
Also attending were Mr. and
Phi Sorority, Christmas gift
exchange, 7 p.m., at the home Mrs. James Ridenour a nd
sons, Lowell and John, Mr. and
of Mrs. Debbie
Finlaw.
.
'
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY WCTU , Christ·
mas potluck at noon at the
home of Mrs . Robert Warner.
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter of
National
Farmer s
Organization meeting 8 p . ~ .,
vo-ag · room of Meigs High
.School.
CHRISTMAS Bazaar today

Workshop
held in
Athens

Mrs: Carl Harr~hl:,ec~: :~
1
David, He.ena,
. ' d Ma
Mrs. Curtis HarrtsdaMrn p ryul
Beth ' Uma·Mr
s. a
'
·Kan
Christy
(June ) Wagner. aren,
ard Keith, Lima; Mr. and Mrs.
. Carroll Harris, Jeff, Julia and
. Scott, Cairo, OhiOi Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Bartenschleg, Kathy
and Cheryl, Miss Wilma Sayre,
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmore and the
Donald Hayman family came
to Meigs County following the
reunion for a weekend visJt
with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs . Lewis and Mr, and Mrs.
POMEROY _ Meigs Senior
Gerald Hayman, East Letart.
Citizens Center Activities this
week are as' follo.ws :
TO MEET
Monday, Dec . 3, Square
POMEROY- Si Gamma Mu
Dance, I to 3 p.m.
Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi
Tuesday, Dec . 4, Chorus
Sorority will meet at 7:30p.m .,
practice, 1-3 p.m.
5, Tuesday, at the Columbia Gas
Wednesday,
Dec .
Co. offices in Middleport.
Chrisbnas Bazaar.
Thursday, Dec. 6, Christmas There will be a Betty Newton
demonstration and mothers of
Bazaar.
Friday·, Dec. 7, Chrisbnas the sorority members will be
guests for the evening.
Bazaar.
Mrs. Glen (Ruth) -Burgoon and
Susan, Elida, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs Clifford Harris and
. Gibsonburg ; Mr. an d
Nancy
•

EveryDay...

Now

'

Above

At••

cost

ALLSALESCASH

.

JOHNSON'S
T.V.
949-3151
RACINE, 0.

'
••'

'

•

''

I

OPEN 10 AM TIL 9 PM
NOW UNTIL CHRISTMAS
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

IC.ing 5•zo

•••· / Mint Vel
19'

_32-oz.

, fl'

Bottle

49¢

With Coupon
· Cou11011 bpirtt Sat., Ott, 8, 1973
"Sull ]tc\ It ipal ltUII Sbl1
~~~~ liCII SIIU Tn"

Body Powder

6.5-o%.22"
Pkg.

'I'

,
~ith . Coupon
Coupon hpires Sot,, Dec. 8, 1973
· ·~ultjttl lo '''liURit $1111

Ull ltnl SIIU Tu "

20t Off
fin Puod1au! ol
0% or lowlot

Kroger Egg Nog
Coupon Expires Sal., Dec, 8, 1973
Nil VIlli il tltRIMtiiJ Stlfts

'

IIIII':Mi"""w"I..~,;:cle&lt;o.."',.",,' ,'""·"'11111

The Purcha~e of Galton
Clove t Valley F..;dge Morble o• Von ill o

Ice (ream

�Thanksgiving reunion held by Harrises

(

I

Miss janice Boggs
GRADUATES- Janice Boggs, daughter 'of Mr. and Mrs.
Berl Boggs of Tuppers Plains, is a graduate of Martella
Valley Beauty School and aloo attended the P~rkersburg
Beauty College. A 1972 graduate of East er~ H1gh School
where she was active in F .H.A . and received the Good
Citizenship Award during her senior . year, Miss Boggs~
tends Orange Christian Church. She IS presently emplOf .
at Helen 's Beauty Shop in Pomeroy .

'

:Home to receive
gifts from UM W
.

.

POMEROY - Gifts to the
children's home at Otterbein,
the home for the aged at
Lebanon ,
and the Meigs
County Children's Home lind
the Meigs County Infirmary

by Mrs. Sadie Brown; "All

Year Around Thanksgiving 1 '

by Mrs. Mary Russell ; "My
Blessings" by Mrs. Ruby
Grue:;er; "A Good Creed" by
Mrs. June Sayre; "Growing In
:Prayer"
by Lillie Starcher; " A
: . were arr_anged during the
' Wednesday meeting of the Sacrament of Thanksgiving "
United Methodist Women at by Stella Grueser; " Thanksthe
Minersville
United giving" by Mrs. Rhoda Roush;
"Thanksgiving in .the U.S.A."
Methodist Church.
It ·was . also decided during by Mrs. Doris Grueser; and a
··- the meeting not to exchange poem on Mother 's Day written
Chrisbnas gifts this year at the by . Mrs . Pauline . Zahl,
turkey dinner and party Cleveland, sister-in-law of Mrs .
scheduled for Dec. 12 at noon, Forbes, who read it.
Guests at the meeting were
but rather to put the money
Mrs.
Gladys Taylor, Mr s.
usually spent on the .e xchange
in to the treasury . Remem- Freda Mitch and Mrs. Gerbrances will be sent to shut-ins . . trude Mitchell.
Mrs. Elsie Forbes presided at
the meeting which followed a
potluck dinner, and a inorning
IS TRANSFE.R RED .
of quilting.
.
POMEROY - Mrs . Ruth
There was group singing of Hennessy, a former patient at
"Count Your Blessings" and Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Mrs. Fannie Phillips had the has been taken to· the home of
program which opened with her daughter, Mrs . Irwin
prayer by Mrs. Dorothy Jarvis . Eubands, 216 Beechwood
Mrs. Forbes read Psabn 95.
Road, New Wilmington! Pa ,,
Readings Included "On File" 16143.

•
'

:;-.,

';··-~~ ... .

... '' •.·1
....' ' .,.•...

Evans

AT-HOME' FOOTWEAR

SUNDAY
BILL KANE, assis tant
director of security operations,
Ohio University, at Middleport
United Pentecostal Church,
Sunday, 10 a .m . to display
materials and show films
relative to drug abuse. Kane
served in Ohio State Patrol for
14 yea~s . Poblic invited.
ADVENT " ROUND the
Table" carol sing, 6 p .m .
Sunday at · Pomeroy United
Methodist Church . Refresh·
ments to be served in " roWld
the table" style. Public invited .
RACINE Chapter 134 OES
practice for installation, 2p.m.
at the halL Installation Dec. 8
at 8 p.m . All 1974 officers and
installing officers asked to
attend.
MONDAY
EIGHT and Forty, Meigs
County Salon 710, Christmas
party, Meigs Inn , 6:30 p .m.
Secret sister gift exchange.
Members to take food for
Ch ri stmas basket. Sherrie
Marshall , cystic fibrosis child ,
to be honored guest; her sister
Denise also to attend .
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
regula·r meeting, Monday
night, 8 p.m . Masonic Temple.

POMEROY - Families of
Ute late Grover and Elizabeth
Nease Harris had a Thanksgiving family get-together at
Ute home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Bartenschlag, Kathy and
Cheryl, Columbus.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert W. (Isabelle ) Lewis and
daughter, Brenda, Racine ; Mr.
and Mrs . Michael Elmore,
Glen Burnie, Md.; Mr. and
Mrs . Donald Hayman, Mark,
Shari, and Brian, Laurel, Md.;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Lewis,
Debbie and Diane, Laurel,
Md .; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
(Stacie) Bogard, Hillsboro;
Mr . and Mrs. Fred Main,
Randy and Steve, Mr. and Mrs.
Norman (Betty) Frazier,
Battle Creek, Mich.; Gary
Frazier,
Illinois
State
University; Mrs . Marilyn
Priez and Shawn, Battle Creek,
Mich.
Mr. and Mrs. Don (Dorothy )
C. Ford, Jr., LaDonna, Charles
and Janet, Delphos; Mr. and

Meigs Sr.
Citizens ·
Calendar

'

Mils Debra jewett

'

Miss Cheryl Ann Biggs

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Cormal
T. 'Jewett, Rutland 1 are annnouncing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Debra, to Michael
Grate ' son of Mr. and Mrs . George Grate, Rutland. Miss .
Jewett is a 1!173 graduate of Meigs High School and is employed at the Jones Boys store. Her fian ce is a 1971 graduate
of Meigs High School and is employed at the Rutland Furniture Co. The wedding will be an event of June 14 at 6:30
p.m. at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene. The gracious
custom of open church will be observed.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel
Biggs, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, ar e announcing the engsgement of
their daughter , Cheryl Ann , to Eddie G . McPhe rson, son of
Mr. and Mrs . Galen McPheroon , 814 Clinton St., Marietta.
The bride-elect is 1912 graduate of Meigs High School and is
currently a student nurse at the Ho cking Valley Technical
College, Nelsonville. Her fiance, a 196'1 graduate of Manetta
High School, is currently employed a t Vang uard Paints and
Finishes. He served four years in the U. S. Air Force inchiding one 12-month tour of duty in Vietnam . An open
ch urch wedding is planned for March 9 at 7:30p.m. at the
Hemlock Grove Christian ·Church, Hemlock Grove .

a

FOR DAD!
FOR MOM!
•

Surprise party given recently

AND THE

Mrs. John Ridenour and son,
Jason , Mr. and Mrs. John
Hayes, Mrs. Lucy Gaul, Mrs.
Barbara Sargent, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Gaul and son, David,
Todd Clay, and Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Christy, all of Chester,
Refreshments of homemade
ice cream, birthday cake, tea,
Kool-Aid and coffee were
served . She received many
gifts.

KIDS!

and Thursday, 9 a.m. to 5 p .m .
a t Enterprise United Methodist
Church. Baked goods and ·
Christmas items for sale.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
HOST DINNER
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m.
CHESTER
- Mr. and Mrs .
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
James Ridenour and sons,
American Legio~. 7:30 p .m .
Lowell and · John, Chester,

Happy Hustlers meet

Fine Selectioll
To Choose!

e

M a r g u r i t e 's 5hoes

if',,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"",,,,,,,;,,,,,,,,"''"''"''''''''''''''''''''';,:~-;"@'''''''$$'~ ~~:~r ~ 0-:~~~~::t!r .sri:~:~

J,Community I ~~~::~~£:;:t~ffi~
Lay-Away Plan- Gift Wrapping
if: c
~~de~~urM;;d:~:.J~;:~.;I~ho~
I orner By Charlene Hoeflich I ;ch:este:r-~·----====·:·:·· :·· :·====·:·:·=
·=====:;
102 E. MAIN .

:&amp;

POMEROY - Mrs. Betty Jewett, Rutland , will undergo h~r
second open heart surgery Wednesday at St. Vincent's Hospital
in Cleve land.
As in all open heart surgeries, units and units of blood will be
\tsed and replacement is required . Naturally, the family is.very .
concerned about this.
· Meigs Countians can give Mrs. Jewett and her family a very
special Christmas gift- peace of mind- if they will just report
to the American Red Cross bloodmobile at the Pomeroy
· Elementary School Dec.17. Indicate to the clerk if you want your
blood to be counted as a replacement for Mrs. Jewett.
Mrs. Jewett, who had her first open heart surgery about 15
years ago, has two children at home .

•

C\J~ r

!·N·I. Yll
M~rrc Lt!o;ll"'r

f1 rrv.1• P

11&lt;1

$11.95

'

''
.

Others
$8.99
to $14.95

He'll
love Evans
in December ...
and 1n May and August and October.

'•

Ruth Purvis, district coordinator for Christian personhood.
Mrs. Vivian Cady, secretary
of
program
materials,
acquainted the group with the
program resource material.
Di s tri ct Treasurer Vivian
Robinson , gave a resume ~f
pledges and.how the money IS
apportioned .

BEnY OHLINGER

POMEROY

JOIN THE
'

.

''

The distriat president elect,
Mrs . Irene Mathias, explained
the program for the new year
and how the units can use the
material for their programs .
The Off ering prayer was
given by Mrs. Mary Pennington, outgoing coordinator
for Christian global concerns.
Followi ng
the general
meeting, each district officer
conducted a training period for
the local unit office rs, with the
evening session a repeat of the
afternoon one.

RACINE - A Christmas program . Mrs. Margaret
party was planned for Dec. 19 Houdashelt had the devotions
at the home of Mrs. Alber! Hill which opened with singing of
when the Happy Hustlers' . "S tat' of the. East" by Mrs.
Circle of the Racine Wesleyan Lavinia · Simpson and Mrs.
At the close of the evening
Methodist Church met a t the Mattie Circle .
session, all assembled again in
church .
·· In the program on Thanks·
the sanctuary for si ngi ng,
Dooations were made to the giving, it was noteck-that the announcemenl&lt;i and the closing
Meigs CountY Children's Home ~irst observ~n~e wa s spoken of prayer which · was · by ~rs .
and to the - Athens Mental tn Exodus 23: Thou shalt keep Irene Mathias.
Health cen~r. Arrangement• · · the feast of harvest, the first
District officers attending
were also made to prepare fruits of h~~vest , wh1ch t~ou were Mrs . Roy Ballard,
holiday plates for shut-ins .
ha s sown in the field; and the Nelsonville, ou tg oing
Mrs. Grace Krider presided feast of m-gath~nng wh1ch ISm .president;
Mrs.
Walter
at the meeting with · Mrs . the end of the_year . when thou Mathias , Logan, presidentBertha Spencer presenting the has gathered tn thy labo~s.out elect; Mrs. Everett McMahon,
of the field.,. The or1g mal Ga llipolis, vice president; Mrs.
proclama tion of Thmiksgiving Ro be rt McKelvey , Belpre,
was issue d by President
secretary;
Mrs .
Ralph
PARATROOH;R NOW .
George Wa shing ton , · Oct. 3, Robinson, Logan, treasurer;
RACINE - Private First 1789,
Mrs . Robert Fisher, New
Class Cha rles W. Cornell III,
Assisting with the program Lexington, chair person on
19, whose parents live on Rout e were Mrs . Ora Hill, Mrs.
nomina tions; Mrs. Ira Purvis,
1, rec.elved a pa rachutist bad ge Kenneth Will, Ann Coe, Edith
New Lexington, coordinator
upon his recent completion of Hay man,
Betty for .Chris tian personhood; Mrs.
the three-week airborne course Ch ristopherson, Mrs. Dorothy
Har.; y Johns on, Marietta ,
at the U. S. Army Infantr y . McKenzie and Mrs. Beul~h
coordinator for supportive
, School, ~' t. Bennin g, Ga. Bradford .
community; Miss Marian
During the first week of
Reed, Circle Hill , coordinator
training, he underwent a
fo r social involvement; Mrs.
rigorous physical training
Daniel Evans, Vinton, coorprogram and received in·
VISIT FRIENDS
dinator for social concern;
struction in !he theory of
POMEROY ~ Mrs. Velma
Mrs. Jobn Cady, Athens,
parachuting. The second week Douglas and daughter and sonsecreta r y
of
program
, tested hi s a bilit y throu g h in-law , the Rev. and Mrs . Paul
mat erials;
Mrs .
Rob e rt
jumps from the 34-foot and 25(). Dag gett and daughter , Sarah,
McGee, The Plains, chair
foot towers. The final week he Center , Tex., visited recently
person committee on .mem·
was requ,ired to perform five in Ivydale, W. Va., with Mrs .
bership.
static line parachute jumps. Euda Hamrick.

CLUB

GUYS AND GALS

WITH THE

Just Truck On Down To

Any11me of year. Evans at-home footwear can
help a inan really en 1oy the comfon o t home

Many Other Styles Excellellt Selection.

Hartley 's Shoes
Middle of Upper Block in Pome·roy
Open All Day Thursc!tay
Friday Night Untii9:00

Christmas gilts, then be sure to vi$it the holiday bazaar at the
Senior Citizens Center in the old Pomeroy Junior High School
building . The senior citizens have been busy for weeks, each
doing his or her own thing, in preparation for the bazaar aod the
things we 've seen which will be for sale there are just lovely,
U&gt;retta Beegle has made a number of the magic art small
oval plaques which set on miniature easels for the hazaar and
they are just beautifuL Teresa Byer's !'llndles are most attractive, and the handwork, Christmas decorations and craft
objects, all -made by the senior citizenS, are nice enough for
anyone.
.
And , of course, the money from the bazaar goes back to the
individual who made the item which oold. It will be held Wed.
nesday, Thursday and Friday.
ANNAGRACE Torchiano was in town Friday - the first
time in a long time due to oome health problems - wearing her
new 40 year service pin. Annagrace has been a home economist
with the Ohio Power Co. that long . ijer office is in Portsmouth but
Meigs County is oneofthe areas she services,

~~

~~

lop Value Stamps

' · ,;w,·,-

.

.-;. u •. •"

1Q¢ Off
With

c."•'"

-E
-- Luncheon Meats
_ Beef Hindquarter ~
~...~ ...:;~~·;~:;;;F;;i ~·i ~;~:~~~~• ~']

With Coupon ond Pvrch ose of

u:s. Govt. Groded Choic:e
People's Choice

Beef Forequarter

Side of Beef

With (ovpon ond Purcho~e of

-

U.S . Govt. Graded Choice
People's Choice

The

Pur cho~e

of Any

B·ol . Kroger Sliced

Coupan hpiru

D~t .

8 , 19ll

ll'lllll 111111111111111

Plain or Seii ·Ri 1ing

·~illsbury Flour

&gt;5 79,/

Reg

·lb.

95C '\

'I'

Bag

J-

With Coupon
Coupon Expires Sat., Dec. 8, 197J
"S ~bJett

·

to

,appliu~lr

stat!

&lt;ind lo,al ules t, •..

...

----

. ,,,.,,.. , "'"" •! '• ' '""""" "·
Ki n g Size

'/ / Fab Detergent
Reg. ::

5 -lb.

$ 1 49 /

4-oz.
Box

•

$1

09

·\'
With Coupon
.
Coupon Expires Sat., Dec. 8, 1973
" Su bject 1D appl icable state
and local Sl!es ta~ ··

T '"·a'"
Delight
ea agS _ Dieter's
Fresh- Frozen Cello Wrapped

\ I/

s~c ~
I

48-ct.4 9 t

J\

Box

With Coupon
Coupon Expiru Sat,, Dec. 8, 1973

~ Tu,bot
·
§ F•ll f
....
= 1 e s .....
Serve N Save

" Sub ject ta Applicantr $h ' e
u~ LOn ! hies Tu "

Skinless
12-oz. ' ' "
•
·
W•eners .•.... . 'I'
Pkg.

All

Flo~or s

Jello

Reg. -:

Jumbo

stc ~J:~::.·29

~

:
:
-

SNcolkt.
31~~~:~$~
§ ap 1ns . . .·.

" -'
. h Coupon
W1t
Coupon Expires Sat., Dec. 8, 1973

:
:KrOger Brown &amp; Serve, Buttermilk, Twin
:
b
k
- Flake &amp; Com 0 Poe

" Sub1ut to Apalitanle Shte
· and Local Sales Ta~ "

ijm~.~..~.~~~,~~~~~.~~.~.~~.~-~~~~·~~~~~ Dinner
~I --- (;~~;;1 ~- Rolls ..... • •
11.•~·

Nu-Soft :

/

39
''' ._:.64-oi:.
··

f. \ ':
:

Btl.

99

·

Electric Perk, Drip or Regular Coffee

3

·

11-oz.
Pkgs.

I

$

House

Kroger

I• Nu 201.
-,o
=H.
$109
l ow f at
Gallon
•••
.

§
'I' §
"

·lb.

With Coupoo
:
Coupon Expires Sat., Dec. 8, 1973 :
" Subj~ct to A~•lican le StJte

:

Can

::::: Chicken, Turk ey, Salisbury Steak, Chopped Beef, Meot Loaf ,

2 89¢
88"

VBeol Parmogi on, Corn Beef Hash or Mexican Di nners•

anquel
o·
.
11-oz.
,,.o9 -,.. ar s0ap. = mners . .
~:r~·
Lislerine .zo-az.
Mouthwash . :1. .
~ Tc=--~"' ' "~~;~·,__,111~
a•9· I
Lux
:
B
~

""4 69t

Pkgs,

Antiseptic

8

•

With Coupon
Coupon Expires Sat., Dec. 8, 1973
" Subject to applicoble tlote
and local sales taK"

IV•U

1111111111111111111111

. .,.

··s u•iett to Appl itl nle Shte
""' LOtiil! hlu Tn '"

Vu~

There's an extra Christmas gift tucked into.your 1974 Christmas
Club at the Meigs Branch of the Athens County Savings and Loan . .
It's a free- soth payment. No gimmicks! Nothing to buy! To
qualify for your "bonus" all you need to do is make all the first 49
of the scheduled payments in your ChrLstmas Club coupon book.
We will then add the 50th payment as a "bonus!' It's our way of
saying "thank you" for co~pleting the first 49 payments .

•

Pok, R~g . , tlecl~&gt;t
Prnk or Drip

I 1 Kroger Coffee

si~t -~Can
~ -lb $259
·

•

With toupon
Coupon Expires Sat., Dec. 8, 1973
"Subject ta Applimle State
1nd local Slln Tu"

Plus Free Favors When You Open Your ·Account At Our Office

50th Payment

Fresh Hot Buttered Corn for Supper

CORNER THIRD AND STATE, GALLIPOLIS
PHONE 446-7767

Is FREE!

Sweet

With Coupon
· Coupon Expires Sat., Det. 8 , 1973
··sullljul to A-.liunle Shte
'"~

Corn ..

l"al hies ru··

·0~"?~ """' """"'"''•

'

New Jeans &amp; Tops Arriving

'

Join

1 %

MOTOROLA T.V.'s

i=
5-

~1111 ,

~11111111111111111!!11

~OING OUT OF BUSINESS

NOTRADEINS

U.S. Govt. Graded Choice
People's Choice

..... u ...~,· ....,--;, .."llllra

250 Extra

~

lop Value Stamps

---

W ith Co1.1pon ond Pur .:: ho ~e of

llffi ,~·

.•

500 Extra

250
-Extra
lop Value Stamps

·

ALL MERCHANDISE MUST GO

A•othorized

-

with coupon
, Coupon Expiru Sat., Dec. 8,

VISITED the annual Christmas flower show of the Meigs
County Gar~en Clubs Asoociation yet?
There's still time. Hours today are. 1 to 4 p.m. The show is
being held in the Pomeroy Elementary School auditorium and
the public is cordially invited to view the beauty of Christmas in
flower arrangements, a craft display, and gift wrappings.

1974

• •••• ••

us TQP Value Stamps!

B.lllllllliii.l'iii.Silii;iiiJtiJIII.

PAUL AND JANE Douglas Daggett and their small
daughter, Sarah, are in the process of moving from Center, Tex.
to Weirton, W. Va ., much to the delight .of Jane's mother, Mrs.
Velma Douglas, Rock Springs.
Paul is an Episcopalian minister and has pastored a church
in Center since his graduation from seminary. When he and his
family were here in September, they accepted the call of the
church in Weirton.

IF YOU'RE looking for attractive, reasonably priced, novel

•'

•

held afternoon and evening
workshop training sessions for
offi cers of the local units
at St. M.ark's United
Methodist Churc h,
District and local officers
and visitors assembled in the
church san ctuary for a general
meeting before going to
training groups. Mrs. Marjorie
Coakley, wtgoing coordinator
for Christian social relations ,
led the group in singi ng and the
welcome was given by Mrs .
Beulah Ballard, outgoing
district president, as well as by
the Rev. Roy Wigal, minister of
the host church.

'

'

•

The Athens District officers

"'o1/United Methodist Women

Devotions were Jed by Mrs.

SALEM CENTER PTA 7:30
p.m. Chrisbnas program to be
presented by the student body.
MIDDLEPORT
GARDEN
Club, 7:30p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Carl Horky . Chrisbnas
party , $1 gift exc hange.
CHESTER - A surpnse
Members to take unwrapped birthday party was held Thursgifts for patients at the Athens day evening at the home of Mr.
Mental Health Center.
and Mrs. J ohn Wi c kham,
Chester, for Mrs. John (Opal)
TUESDAY
OHIO Eta Phi, Beta Sigma Wickham .
Also attending were Mr. and
Phi Sorority, Christmas gift
exchange, 7 p.m., at the home Mrs. James Ridenour a nd
sons, Lowell and John, Mr. and
of Mrs. Debbie
Finlaw.
.
'
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY WCTU , Christ·
mas potluck at noon at the
home of Mrs . Robert Warner.
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter of
National
Farmer s
Organization meeting 8 p . ~ .,
vo-ag · room of Meigs High
.School.
CHRISTMAS Bazaar today

Workshop
held in
Athens

Mrs: Carl Harr~hl:,ec~: :~
1
David, He.ena,
. ' d Ma
Mrs. Curtis HarrtsdaMrn p ryul
Beth ' Uma·Mr
s. a
'
·Kan
Christy
(June ) Wagner. aren,
ard Keith, Lima; Mr. and Mrs.
. Carroll Harris, Jeff, Julia and
. Scott, Cairo, OhiOi Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Bartenschleg, Kathy
and Cheryl, Miss Wilma Sayre,
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmore and the
Donald Hayman family came
to Meigs County following the
reunion for a weekend visJt
with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs . Lewis and Mr, and Mrs.
POMEROY _ Meigs Senior
Gerald Hayman, East Letart.
Citizens Center Activities this
week are as' follo.ws :
TO MEET
Monday, Dec . 3, Square
POMEROY- Si Gamma Mu
Dance, I to 3 p.m.
Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi
Tuesday, Dec . 4, Chorus
Sorority will meet at 7:30p.m .,
practice, 1-3 p.m.
5, Tuesday, at the Columbia Gas
Wednesday,
Dec .
Co. offices in Middleport.
Chrisbnas Bazaar.
Thursday, Dec. 6, Christmas There will be a Betty Newton
demonstration and mothers of
Bazaar.
Friday·, Dec. 7, Chrisbnas the sorority members will be
guests for the evening.
Bazaar.
Mrs. Glen (Ruth) -Burgoon and
Susan, Elida, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs Clifford Harris and
. Gibsonburg ; Mr. an d
Nancy
•

EveryDay...

Now

'

Above

At••

cost

ALLSALESCASH

.

JOHNSON'S
T.V.
949-3151
RACINE, 0.

'
••'

'

•

''

I

OPEN 10 AM TIL 9 PM
NOW UNTIL CHRISTMAS
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

IC.ing 5•zo

•••· / Mint Vel
19'

_32-oz.

, fl'

Bottle

49¢

With Coupon
· Cou11011 bpirtt Sat., Ott, 8, 1973
"Sull ]tc\ It ipal ltUII Sbl1
~~~~ liCII SIIU Tn"

Body Powder

6.5-o%.22"
Pkg.

'I'

,
~ith . Coupon
Coupon hpires Sot,, Dec. 8, 1973
· ·~ultjttl lo '''liURit $1111

Ull ltnl SIIU Tu "

20t Off
fin Puod1au! ol
0% or lowlot

Kroger Egg Nog
Coupon Expires Sal., Dec, 8, 1973
Nil VIlli il tltRIMtiiJ Stlfts

'

IIIII':Mi"""w"I..~,;:cle&lt;o.."',.",,' ,'""·"'11111

The Purcha~e of Galton
Clove t Valley F..;dge Morble o• Von ill o

Ice (ream

�16- The Sunday Ttmes -Sentinel, Sunday, Dt·r . ~.

.

t~ /J

•

17 - TheSundayTimes · Sentlnel,Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973

Land Crib or the "Preseplo" to
llaly, thr pinatas to Latin

'Holiday Happening ' opens Yule

America, she said . ln China

gifts are exchanged onl y within
the family and th~ less than
one pet. is Christian. Japan has
hecome known in the past two
decades for its manufacture of
millions of decorations and

trinkets distributed around the
world.

Jn co nclusion, Miss Tor.
chiano described the United
States as the leader of the
• world
in
Christmas
"showmanship." She said that

Sania Claus is so much a part
of North American childhood
that youngsters here consider
him a famil~ friend wh'o lives
at the North Pole.
FESTIVE FOODS
Mrs. Eleanor Crow displayed
a variety of holiday rolls and
breads, all attractively placed
on· decorated trays. She also
showed a large tray of "drop
fudge" and shared the recipe
with those attending the
"happening ." It is as follows:
DROP FUDGE

.....

'

·~

2 cups sugar, lA. cup cream,

A

•

MAGIC ART - The making of pins and plaques was demonstrated by Mrs. Loretta Beegle,

. center, at the 11Holiday Happening" Friday at St. Paul's Lutheran Church. Assisting her wi th

: the demonstration were Miss Freda Lieving, left, and Mrs. Beulah Utterback.

CHRISTMAS IN MANY LANDS - Miss Annagrace
jorchiano, home economist with the Ohio Power Co., used a
large display of dolls which she collected during her four
trips to Europe, in conjunction with her talk on customs of

.flY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
'· • C POMEROY An atmosphere of Christmas
merriment with an

eagerness

ti&gt; learn new things to brighten
. -;· lj!e days ahead prevailed at the
"Holiday Happening" staged
Friday in the fellowship hall at
St. Paul·'s Lutheran Church .
&lt;
~ It was a program planned by
Miss Marta Guilkey, County
ji:xtension Agent, Home
Economics, which offered
'~something for everyone'' in
.. the group of approximately 100
.:~ women and one . man who -at·

· tended.
· Miss Annagrace Torchiano,
~orne economist for the Ohio
~ .:-·· Power Co., shared Christmas

~

· traditions including food
· ~ustoms, and decorations from
,, . :,round the world. The magic
~rt te~hniq~es of creating

•attracttve · pms and plaques
:was demonstrated by Mrs.
:Loretta Beegle, Mrs. Minnie
,. •McGrath, Harrisonville,
:Shared her secrets of how to
: ~n a Reader's Pigest into a

Mrs. Dale Stoll, Vinton County

Program Aides,. Mrs. Myrtle

extension agent ; and Mrs .
Eleanor Crow, Syracuse ,

Clark and Mrs . Anna Moon .

commented on adding the
special touch to make foods
more festive for the holidays.
Another feature of the day
was a " gift of music" from

Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, who
entertained following the
holiday potluck with music on
her dulcimer including Ap·
palachian Christmas carols.
The beauty of Christmas in
holiday arrangements was

CHRISTMAS CUSTOMS
Opening the progr am
following a welcome by Miss

Christmas Eve convergence on place with which Americans
Bethlehem to witness the associate the Victorian style
religious ceremonles and get a. carol-singers with their tall

Guilkey was Miss Torchiano
who noted that in the beginning
Christmas was essentially a
day of spiritual observance
without any of the fanfare and
color now attending it.
' 'There were neitiler carols
nor bells ; not were there any
gaily dec.o rated tree s or,
·elaborate s preads on the

banquet table. It was a feast of

Gardeners with wreaths and
swags, many of pinecones
featw-ing wide velvet ribbons
in red , gold and green, wicker
containers, baubles and
candles of every siz:e.

soul. Bethlehem, bathed in
supernatural light, was the

pensive Chfistmas cards, and
nutritious holiday snacks were

:beautiful Chrisirnas angel, and . available for the laste test of
•Mrs. Teresa Byer, Middleport, those attending. These had
:gave tips on candlemaking b•en prepared by the Nutrition
; displaying a number of her own

at the session were for these
Bethlehem.
. baskets with candy and toys.
Miss Torchiano told of the She spoke of England as the

displayed by Mrs. Joe Bolin
and the Rutland Friendly

Holiday handiwork was
displayed by Mrs. Harold
Lohse . Mrs. Patty Kelly in a
special exhibit showed how to
make attractive , yet inex-

other lands.

the senses and a feast of the

exclusive object of wonder, "
she cqmmented.

cook to boiling . Add 2 squares
of chocolate cut in fine pieces,
then cook to soft ball. Add I
tablespoon butter, I teaspoon
vanilla. Cool, beat and drop.
Other recipes distributed

first hand view of the place
where the manger stood.
She spoke of contributions to
traditions by countries around
the world noting that Austria

gave one of the best loved
Christmas hymns, " Silent
Night, Holy Night," that

Discussing

customs

in

Nut~ition

bell ringers. In France, Christ-

Aides, Mrs. Clark
and Mrs. Moon.
FRUIT ROLL-UPS
2 eggs
I cup flake coconut
I cup chopped dates or

mas is a family holiday, a

raisins

hats, the lamplighters and the
religious celebration

with

merry making for children.
From Germany all of the
world has been the recipient of
Christmas deCorations, Miss

Switzerland gav~ d,elightful Torchiano pointed out, not only
music boxes and toys , and that ·the ornaments but also the
Germany gave the first wood carvings of the peasants.

beautiful ornaments.

nutritious treats made by the

She spoke of the advent wreath
which has been passed down

Belgium, the speaker noted for centuries in Germany
She described today's scene that there St. Nicholas makes culture.
as one where men are inclined. two visits - the first Dec. 4 to
The holly wreath can be
to forget the true significance . check on children 's behavior , traced to ·e arly settlers from
of Christmas, blinded by the and the second on his feast day, the south of Ireland, the
glitter of tinsel, the brilliance Dec. 6, to fill their shoes and mini8ture reolica!' nf thf! Hnlv
of light, the feasting, and the
gift-giving that have come to
surround the holiday. Thus, she

~

eup sugar

I cup chopped nuts
1h: teaspoon vanilla .

Mix all ingredients well.
Spread very thin in a large
cake pan. Bake 20 minutes at
350 degrees . Cool 3 minutes.

Miss Patti Lou Sexson
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs . Demaree
Sexson, Rt. 3, Pomeroy are announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Patti Lou, to
Nickolas R. Sawczyn, Fair Lawn, N.J. The bride-elect is a
1969 graduate qf Eastern High Schooi,Both she and her fiance
are employed )n Tampa, Fla. The marriage will take place
Dec. 14. The couple will reside at 3621 College Park Circle,
Apt. I, Tampa, Fla.
paper bag. Heat chocolate bits
in milk until completely
melted. Stir in cracker
crumbs, vanilla and salt. Cool

15 minut~$ . Form into balls and
roll in colored sugar. Let stand
overnight.

Take a fork and scramble
mixture. Use table spread on
hands to prevent sticking and
roll in balls. Makes 21&gt; dozen.
GRAHAM FUDGE
1 can sweetened condensed
milk
I package (six ounce)
chOcolate bits
% teaspoon salt
2Z graham crackers

2 teaspoons vanilla

said, we do not always hear the
angels sing, nor do we see the

colored sugar.
Crush graham crackers in a

true beauty that surrounds and
envelops the Nativity at

clean bread wrapper or brown

BONELESS
ROLL

Now! Lay It Away

SINGER
· Sewing Machine
For Christmas '73
.small depos it will hold

The Fabric Shop
·11$ W. Second992-2284 .
POMEROY. OHIO

PORK
ROAST

As a new employee.
She has joined Sue
Floyd and Marilyn
Clark .
Phone 773-5352 for
appointment.

SLICED
BACON

CAROL'S
COIFFEURS

l·LB•

Mason, W. Va. .

OLEO

IGA MASHMALLOW CREAM
1-LB. BOX
13 oz.
SWEETREAT
4 . 14 $1 (J(f IGA CORN FlAKES
PINEAPPLE
18 oz.
14 OZ. CANS
IGA CORN
KRAFT MARSHMALLOWS
4 15 OZ. CANS
16 oz.
BLACK PEPPER
IGA RED KIDNEY BEANS
S}
00
4 oz.
4· 15 OZ. CANS

age

Miss

1·· .

CLOROX
BLEACH

i·has meeting

Cltn~tma~ CSlippers

IGA CRACKERS

1 LB.

IGA WHIPPED 'TOPPING

25 lb. bag

~

Communications

; were read from the Ed Hawley
:family and the Earl Custer
•family.
·

.· .~ . : The nominating report was

·,&gt;'' ~given by · Nancy Neutzling.
·· ~ Officers nominated for the

.

.

. rcoming year were president,

.·. Nancy

Neutzling;

vice

:.. l.P~esident! Marie Rizer; .second

· ,;VIce preSident, Mary Pickens ;

WHAT'S CHRISTMAS WITHOUT FOOD' - Mrs . .
Eleanor Crow, Syracuse, displayed holiday rolls, breads, and
treats at Friday's "happening" held at St. Paul Lutheran
Church along with the recipes for each item. She is pictured
here with her food display and Mrs. Ardis R. Waggoner of
near Rutland who was copying down one of the recipes.

Former Middleport
resident marries·

Brown

Blue

Black

t and assistant treasurer, Ada

Birthday party given

WAVERLY - Miss Lamona
Jean Schramm, daughter of
Mr. and
Mrs. Alonzo
Schramm, Rt. I, Waverly, and

·POTATOES 59c
COFFEE-MATE
Argo Peas
11 oz.

flower girl, Mary Ann Hand
· also was dressed in a gown ·of
aqua crepe with white lace
trim. She carried a white lace

; Slack. •
.. ·. ·, The meetings have been
POMEROY
The occasions. The piano was Ronald LOuis Hand, Jr ., son of basket with pink streamers.
~ changed to the second and November Birthday Party at · donated by the Middleport Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Hand, The junior bridesmaid and
;. fourth Tuesday afternoon of the Senior Citizen Center was Baptist Church. The Senior Sr., Waverly, former Mid· flower girl, cousins of the
teach month. The Christmas held Thursday with 100 senior Citizens Chorus, which was · dleport residents, were bridegroom are daughters of
. dinner will be Dec. 14 at noon at citizens and guests attending. recently · organized, saug for married at 2:30 p.m.Nov. n 'at Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Hand,
Red Carpet Inn with a Those honored as having birth- the first time at the birthday the First Presbyterian Church Chillicothe .
'· · ~ J)rogram and gift exchange in days in November were Walter · party. Members of the chorus in Waverly.
Robin . Hand served as best
the
evening
at
the
building.
and
Vida
Green,
Vinton,
who
and
Betty
The
Rev.
Jack
Lewis
Pursell
man
for his brother. Ushers
singing
were
Ralph
1
··
'!'hose attending the meeting also celebrated their 45th Kern, Clara Thomas, Jessie officiated at tbe double ring were Alan Hoffman and
, were Agnes White, Mary anniversary in November ; Houchins, Mae Weber, Cora ceremony. A program of Randall Roe, Waverly.
:Pid!ens, .Jean Hall, Eleanor Nora Jordon, Zelia Pullin, Hilton, Gladys Deem, Thora nuptial music was presented
Miss Barbara Cornett had
! Bo~ram, Edith Hood, Nancy Rose McDade , Middleport; and Dean Blackwood, Ethel by Mrs . Glenn Freed, organist. charge of the guest book. A
Neutzllng, Charlotte Nease, Leona Karr, Thora Blackwood, Johnson, Rose McDade, Ura
Given in marriage· by her reception was held at the home
i Elva Dailey, Ada Slack, Clara Della Curtis and Victor Diehl, . Morris, Ira Wolfe and Darell father, the bride wore. a gown of the bridegroom's parenlli .
.. !lAvender, Marle Rizer, Janice Pomeroy ; Marie Bishop, Jestie Taylor . The chorus sang of nylon crystal satapeau and following
the
wedding .
~- · 1 I:awson, Mildred Pierce and Molden, Seth Nicholson, and " Battle
Hymn of ·the re-embroidered lace lined with Assisting hostesses were Mrs.
f 'l'helina Grueser. Visitors were Mae Weber, Rutland; Marie Rep.ublic," " America ,'; " How acetate. The gown, designed in -Lanny McDaniel, Mrs. Robert
• ,I """''
Swan, Long Bottom ; Georgia Great Thou Art" and "Silent demi-bell silhouette, had a high Malone, Mrs. James O'Brien,
.,...,. o•~~r, Eber Pi ckens; J r.,
! and Tina Pierce.
Diehl, Laurel Cliff ; and Bertha Night." Director of the chorus neckline, lantern sleeves, and and Miss Stephanie O'Brien,
, ,·1
Robinson , Apple Grove. An is Mrs. Ca~rie Neutzling, and an attached chaHel train . Her aunt and cousin of the
·j
orchid corsage was presented accompamsts are
Mrs . shoulder length veil was at- · bridegroom' visiting from
~ •
•
to Miss Zelia Pullin, the oldest Margaret Neuman and Mrs . tached to a rosette of seed North Carolina. .
'
· ; ., •
one celebrating a birthday. Hazel Thom~on . M~s. Ne,uman peads matching those emThe new' Mrs. Hand
f . PREPARE BOXES
Mrs. Lillian Smith , Middleport,
played mus1c durmg tfie -'!If· brmdered on the bodice. _She graduated from Eastern High
~ · :fOMEROY - Christmas has made corsages which will
t~rn?on and _led In group carriedabouquetofcarnations School in Pike County. Hand
1 ..... for six servtcement of be pre~entect to the oldest smgmg.
select10ns and lilies of the valley.
attended the Middleport
lfle Pomeroy Uniled Methodist senior citizen at each of the were also Musical
.presented by Mrs.
Serving as honor attendant schools graduated from
...:• Were prepared .Thurs- monthly birthday parties.
Betty Kern and Miss Kelly Sue for her sister, Miss Althea Waver!; High School in 1969
lhe home of Mrs. Ted
Homemade ice cream, cake, DeConnlck, 3 year old great- Schramm wore a gown of blue and attended both Ohi~
Meellng with Mrs. and coffee were served to all.
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. dotted swiss trimmed with University and Ohio State
to work on the project Cakes -for the November party
white lace. S~e carried. a University. He is employed by
Mrs. Roy Reutet and were baked by Edith Betzing, Charles R. Karr, Sr. .
The December Btr\hday bouquet of pmk. and wh1te the Big Bear store in Jackson.
Jay Warner.. The project Loretta Beegle, Thora BlackParty will be Dec. 13 With a carnations
w1th
pink They reside at Rt. 1, waverly.
-:::~, . by the Unlled wood, Marie Bishop, Edna potluck dmner_served at 12:30 streamers.
Ronald L. Hand, Sr., was
ttl
Women of the Clark, Bertha Robinson and
P · ~ ·: combmed wtth . a
Beth. Ann Hand, junior associated with the Middleport
will~ nWied to Jessie Houchins.
Chnotrnas Party. Each semor bridesmaid, wore a gown of office of the Colwnbus and
,IMTJ' W11'118r,
The Senior Citizens Center is citizen in Meigs County is aqua crepe trimmed with white Southern Ohio Electric Co
WriJIII, Freddie . very thankful after eight
especially invited to attend and lace. Her bouquet was a wheri the family resided ri~
Jolin c.rd and months of operation, to have a help the !)enior Citizens Center miniature of that carried by Middleport
MicllHI Hedl.
piano to be used br special usher in lhe Christmas Season. the honor · attendant. The ·
·

' · iffie

._,.urn,

'

I

'
Pink
Gold
Black

Wine

.

JAR ·
'

•

••
I

•
'

~

1

••

Gold

YELLOW
ONIONS

NESCAf:'E

INSTANT

.

39'

99~

WITH
COUPON
. UMIT 1

10 oz.
EXPIRES SATURDAY
rt-----·M&amp;R COUPON·--~-~

COFFEE

TASTER'S 'CHOICE

COFFEE '.

FLORIDA
TREE RIPE SWEET
BAG OF 24

U.S. NO.1

ANGES

'

ftOTATOES

ONLY

$149

Main St., Pomeroy

FREE GIFT WRAPPING

•

.

.ROllS age COUPON .
3
Roti .
.

..

..

~ -~.'

'

WITH

.TOWELS

i-··-··-·

'BAG

gge
4

~

'
I:".

•••'

'

•

Chapman's Shoes

....

LIMIT 3
EXPIRESJ2/8/73
M&amp;R COUPON--~~-··! ' '
LADY .StOll
Wmt
2
lOILET nSSUE PKS
COUPON

20 LB.

:•

.WITH

.
COUPON
EXPIRES SATURDAY LIMIT 1
!-!SCQoo
.'!!'.- .n'!!'
.••i
COUPON

JUMB(f

i

.

•

29 oz.

~~M&amp;R

•'•
•

Select Yours Now At

HARTS PEACHES

8 OZ. JAR .

••

. Brown

3 lb. can $}39

ALL VARIETIES

LB.

I

'

16 oz

IGA INSTANT

: .secretary, Janice Lawson;

; a,.nstant secretary, Chadotte
[·Nease ; treasurer, Elva Dailey

(LIVER FLAVOR ONLY)
•

Black

oz.

CRISCO

49'
4le
29e
49'

PURINA
TENDER VITTLES

PAPER ANGEL, CHOIR GIRL AND BIRD CAGE - All
made from the Readers Digest were displayed by Mrs.
Minnie McGrath of Harrisonville at the "Holiday Happending". Mrs. McGrath gave a demonstration on how to fold
the pages of the book to begin making the various objects.

: All reports were read and

4le

..

..

: :Q :

CHOW

, ; •devotions by Nancy Neutzling.

·~pproved .

4lh

PURINA DOG

GALLON

· ;".. t president , Janice Lawson .
. ;' i'Psalm 96 was used . for
Fourteen . members an·
'swered roll call by naming
~ their favorite girl's name.

.
. .
•

D.CON RAT KILLER

I-LB.

:.'· ;.Fire auxilwry

,.

PARKAY
WHIPPED
STICK

.

Helpful hints on . selecting .

- The Lord's
'. • fPrayer in unison and the flag
.•• ;Pledge opened the meeting of
• ;the Syracuse Ladies Auxiliary
. :: :of the Volunteer Fire Depart.- -. ·ment Monday evening at the
: J. !municipal building . The
·:.' · ;meeting was conducted by the

' I ··•

POPLAR

PKG.

&gt; SYRACUSE

'

~·
'

1-LB.

KAHN'S

Janet Compson

' .

LOAVES

rtoys for children were given by

.. •.

~

\

HAMS

LB.

-..

..,·• ,.....

SMOKED
PICNIC

79t;

Carol's
Coiffeurs Is
Announcing

;Christmas creations.
~

SUPERIORS

'

SHOPPING CENTER
MIDDLEPORT, OH.I O

'••
'••••
•

••

•

'

I

J

1

•

•

'

. I

~ ,

�16- The Sunday Ttmes -Sentinel, Sunday, Dt·r . ~.

.

t~ /J

•

17 - TheSundayTimes · Sentlnel,Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973

Land Crib or the "Preseplo" to
llaly, thr pinatas to Latin

'Holiday Happening ' opens Yule

America, she said . ln China

gifts are exchanged onl y within
the family and th~ less than
one pet. is Christian. Japan has
hecome known in the past two
decades for its manufacture of
millions of decorations and

trinkets distributed around the
world.

Jn co nclusion, Miss Tor.
chiano described the United
States as the leader of the
• world
in
Christmas
"showmanship." She said that

Sania Claus is so much a part
of North American childhood
that youngsters here consider
him a famil~ friend wh'o lives
at the North Pole.
FESTIVE FOODS
Mrs. Eleanor Crow displayed
a variety of holiday rolls and
breads, all attractively placed
on· decorated trays. She also
showed a large tray of "drop
fudge" and shared the recipe
with those attending the
"happening ." It is as follows:
DROP FUDGE

.....

'

·~

2 cups sugar, lA. cup cream,

A

•

MAGIC ART - The making of pins and plaques was demonstrated by Mrs. Loretta Beegle,

. center, at the 11Holiday Happening" Friday at St. Paul's Lutheran Church. Assisting her wi th

: the demonstration were Miss Freda Lieving, left, and Mrs. Beulah Utterback.

CHRISTMAS IN MANY LANDS - Miss Annagrace
jorchiano, home economist with the Ohio Power Co., used a
large display of dolls which she collected during her four
trips to Europe, in conjunction with her talk on customs of

.flY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
'· • C POMEROY An atmosphere of Christmas
merriment with an

eagerness

ti&gt; learn new things to brighten
. -;· lj!e days ahead prevailed at the
"Holiday Happening" staged
Friday in the fellowship hall at
St. Paul·'s Lutheran Church .
&lt;
~ It was a program planned by
Miss Marta Guilkey, County
ji:xtension Agent, Home
Economics, which offered
'~something for everyone'' in
.. the group of approximately 100
.:~ women and one . man who -at·

· tended.
· Miss Annagrace Torchiano,
~orne economist for the Ohio
~ .:-·· Power Co., shared Christmas

~

· traditions including food
· ~ustoms, and decorations from
,, . :,round the world. The magic
~rt te~hniq~es of creating

•attracttve · pms and plaques
:was demonstrated by Mrs.
:Loretta Beegle, Mrs. Minnie
,. •McGrath, Harrisonville,
:Shared her secrets of how to
: ~n a Reader's Pigest into a

Mrs. Dale Stoll, Vinton County

Program Aides,. Mrs. Myrtle

extension agent ; and Mrs .
Eleanor Crow, Syracuse ,

Clark and Mrs . Anna Moon .

commented on adding the
special touch to make foods
more festive for the holidays.
Another feature of the day
was a " gift of music" from

Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, who
entertained following the
holiday potluck with music on
her dulcimer including Ap·
palachian Christmas carols.
The beauty of Christmas in
holiday arrangements was

CHRISTMAS CUSTOMS
Opening the progr am
following a welcome by Miss

Christmas Eve convergence on place with which Americans
Bethlehem to witness the associate the Victorian style
religious ceremonles and get a. carol-singers with their tall

Guilkey was Miss Torchiano
who noted that in the beginning
Christmas was essentially a
day of spiritual observance
without any of the fanfare and
color now attending it.
' 'There were neitiler carols
nor bells ; not were there any
gaily dec.o rated tree s or,
·elaborate s preads on the

banquet table. It was a feast of

Gardeners with wreaths and
swags, many of pinecones
featw-ing wide velvet ribbons
in red , gold and green, wicker
containers, baubles and
candles of every siz:e.

soul. Bethlehem, bathed in
supernatural light, was the

pensive Chfistmas cards, and
nutritious holiday snacks were

:beautiful Chrisirnas angel, and . available for the laste test of
•Mrs. Teresa Byer, Middleport, those attending. These had
:gave tips on candlemaking b•en prepared by the Nutrition
; displaying a number of her own

at the session were for these
Bethlehem.
. baskets with candy and toys.
Miss Torchiano told of the She spoke of England as the

displayed by Mrs. Joe Bolin
and the Rutland Friendly

Holiday handiwork was
displayed by Mrs. Harold
Lohse . Mrs. Patty Kelly in a
special exhibit showed how to
make attractive , yet inex-

other lands.

the senses and a feast of the

exclusive object of wonder, "
she cqmmented.

cook to boiling . Add 2 squares
of chocolate cut in fine pieces,
then cook to soft ball. Add I
tablespoon butter, I teaspoon
vanilla. Cool, beat and drop.
Other recipes distributed

first hand view of the place
where the manger stood.
She spoke of contributions to
traditions by countries around
the world noting that Austria

gave one of the best loved
Christmas hymns, " Silent
Night, Holy Night," that

Discussing

customs

in

Nut~ition

bell ringers. In France, Christ-

Aides, Mrs. Clark
and Mrs. Moon.
FRUIT ROLL-UPS
2 eggs
I cup flake coconut
I cup chopped dates or

mas is a family holiday, a

raisins

hats, the lamplighters and the
religious celebration

with

merry making for children.
From Germany all of the
world has been the recipient of
Christmas deCorations, Miss

Switzerland gav~ d,elightful Torchiano pointed out, not only
music boxes and toys , and that ·the ornaments but also the
Germany gave the first wood carvings of the peasants.

beautiful ornaments.

nutritious treats made by the

She spoke of the advent wreath
which has been passed down

Belgium, the speaker noted for centuries in Germany
She described today's scene that there St. Nicholas makes culture.
as one where men are inclined. two visits - the first Dec. 4 to
The holly wreath can be
to forget the true significance . check on children 's behavior , traced to ·e arly settlers from
of Christmas, blinded by the and the second on his feast day, the south of Ireland, the
glitter of tinsel, the brilliance Dec. 6, to fill their shoes and mini8ture reolica!' nf thf! Hnlv
of light, the feasting, and the
gift-giving that have come to
surround the holiday. Thus, she

~

eup sugar

I cup chopped nuts
1h: teaspoon vanilla .

Mix all ingredients well.
Spread very thin in a large
cake pan. Bake 20 minutes at
350 degrees . Cool 3 minutes.

Miss Patti Lou Sexson
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs . Demaree
Sexson, Rt. 3, Pomeroy are announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Patti Lou, to
Nickolas R. Sawczyn, Fair Lawn, N.J. The bride-elect is a
1969 graduate qf Eastern High Schooi,Both she and her fiance
are employed )n Tampa, Fla. The marriage will take place
Dec. 14. The couple will reside at 3621 College Park Circle,
Apt. I, Tampa, Fla.
paper bag. Heat chocolate bits
in milk until completely
melted. Stir in cracker
crumbs, vanilla and salt. Cool

15 minut~$ . Form into balls and
roll in colored sugar. Let stand
overnight.

Take a fork and scramble
mixture. Use table spread on
hands to prevent sticking and
roll in balls. Makes 21&gt; dozen.
GRAHAM FUDGE
1 can sweetened condensed
milk
I package (six ounce)
chOcolate bits
% teaspoon salt
2Z graham crackers

2 teaspoons vanilla

said, we do not always hear the
angels sing, nor do we see the

colored sugar.
Crush graham crackers in a

true beauty that surrounds and
envelops the Nativity at

clean bread wrapper or brown

BONELESS
ROLL

Now! Lay It Away

SINGER
· Sewing Machine
For Christmas '73
.small depos it will hold

The Fabric Shop
·11$ W. Second992-2284 .
POMEROY. OHIO

PORK
ROAST

As a new employee.
She has joined Sue
Floyd and Marilyn
Clark .
Phone 773-5352 for
appointment.

SLICED
BACON

CAROL'S
COIFFEURS

l·LB•

Mason, W. Va. .

OLEO

IGA MASHMALLOW CREAM
1-LB. BOX
13 oz.
SWEETREAT
4 . 14 $1 (J(f IGA CORN FlAKES
PINEAPPLE
18 oz.
14 OZ. CANS
IGA CORN
KRAFT MARSHMALLOWS
4 15 OZ. CANS
16 oz.
BLACK PEPPER
IGA RED KIDNEY BEANS
S}
00
4 oz.
4· 15 OZ. CANS

age

Miss

1·· .

CLOROX
BLEACH

i·has meeting

Cltn~tma~ CSlippers

IGA CRACKERS

1 LB.

IGA WHIPPED 'TOPPING

25 lb. bag

~

Communications

; were read from the Ed Hawley
:family and the Earl Custer
•family.
·

.· .~ . : The nominating report was

·,&gt;'' ~given by · Nancy Neutzling.
·· ~ Officers nominated for the

.

.

. rcoming year were president,

.·. Nancy

Neutzling;

vice

:.. l.P~esident! Marie Rizer; .second

· ,;VIce preSident, Mary Pickens ;

WHAT'S CHRISTMAS WITHOUT FOOD' - Mrs . .
Eleanor Crow, Syracuse, displayed holiday rolls, breads, and
treats at Friday's "happening" held at St. Paul Lutheran
Church along with the recipes for each item. She is pictured
here with her food display and Mrs. Ardis R. Waggoner of
near Rutland who was copying down one of the recipes.

Former Middleport
resident marries·

Brown

Blue

Black

t and assistant treasurer, Ada

Birthday party given

WAVERLY - Miss Lamona
Jean Schramm, daughter of
Mr. and
Mrs. Alonzo
Schramm, Rt. I, Waverly, and

·POTATOES 59c
COFFEE-MATE
Argo Peas
11 oz.

flower girl, Mary Ann Hand
· also was dressed in a gown ·of
aqua crepe with white lace
trim. She carried a white lace

; Slack. •
.. ·. ·, The meetings have been
POMEROY
The occasions. The piano was Ronald LOuis Hand, Jr ., son of basket with pink streamers.
~ changed to the second and November Birthday Party at · donated by the Middleport Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Hand, The junior bridesmaid and
;. fourth Tuesday afternoon of the Senior Citizen Center was Baptist Church. The Senior Sr., Waverly, former Mid· flower girl, cousins of the
teach month. The Christmas held Thursday with 100 senior Citizens Chorus, which was · dleport residents, were bridegroom are daughters of
. dinner will be Dec. 14 at noon at citizens and guests attending. recently · organized, saug for married at 2:30 p.m.Nov. n 'at Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Hand,
Red Carpet Inn with a Those honored as having birth- the first time at the birthday the First Presbyterian Church Chillicothe .
'· · ~ J)rogram and gift exchange in days in November were Walter · party. Members of the chorus in Waverly.
Robin . Hand served as best
the
evening
at
the
building.
and
Vida
Green,
Vinton,
who
and
Betty
The
Rev.
Jack
Lewis
Pursell
man
for his brother. Ushers
singing
were
Ralph
1
··
'!'hose attending the meeting also celebrated their 45th Kern, Clara Thomas, Jessie officiated at tbe double ring were Alan Hoffman and
, were Agnes White, Mary anniversary in November ; Houchins, Mae Weber, Cora ceremony. A program of Randall Roe, Waverly.
:Pid!ens, .Jean Hall, Eleanor Nora Jordon, Zelia Pullin, Hilton, Gladys Deem, Thora nuptial music was presented
Miss Barbara Cornett had
! Bo~ram, Edith Hood, Nancy Rose McDade , Middleport; and Dean Blackwood, Ethel by Mrs . Glenn Freed, organist. charge of the guest book. A
Neutzllng, Charlotte Nease, Leona Karr, Thora Blackwood, Johnson, Rose McDade, Ura
Given in marriage· by her reception was held at the home
i Elva Dailey, Ada Slack, Clara Della Curtis and Victor Diehl, . Morris, Ira Wolfe and Darell father, the bride wore. a gown of the bridegroom's parenlli .
.. !lAvender, Marle Rizer, Janice Pomeroy ; Marie Bishop, Jestie Taylor . The chorus sang of nylon crystal satapeau and following
the
wedding .
~- · 1 I:awson, Mildred Pierce and Molden, Seth Nicholson, and " Battle
Hymn of ·the re-embroidered lace lined with Assisting hostesses were Mrs.
f 'l'helina Grueser. Visitors were Mae Weber, Rutland; Marie Rep.ublic," " America ,'; " How acetate. The gown, designed in -Lanny McDaniel, Mrs. Robert
• ,I """''
Swan, Long Bottom ; Georgia Great Thou Art" and "Silent demi-bell silhouette, had a high Malone, Mrs. James O'Brien,
.,...,. o•~~r, Eber Pi ckens; J r.,
! and Tina Pierce.
Diehl, Laurel Cliff ; and Bertha Night." Director of the chorus neckline, lantern sleeves, and and Miss Stephanie O'Brien,
, ,·1
Robinson , Apple Grove. An is Mrs. Ca~rie Neutzling, and an attached chaHel train . Her aunt and cousin of the
·j
orchid corsage was presented accompamsts are
Mrs . shoulder length veil was at- · bridegroom' visiting from
~ •
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to Miss Zelia Pullin, the oldest Margaret Neuman and Mrs . tached to a rosette of seed North Carolina. .
'
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one celebrating a birthday. Hazel Thom~on . M~s. Ne,uman peads matching those emThe new' Mrs. Hand
f . PREPARE BOXES
Mrs. Lillian Smith , Middleport,
played mus1c durmg tfie -'!If· brmdered on the bodice. _She graduated from Eastern High
~ · :fOMEROY - Christmas has made corsages which will
t~rn?on and _led In group carriedabouquetofcarnations School in Pike County. Hand
1 ..... for six servtcement of be pre~entect to the oldest smgmg.
select10ns and lilies of the valley.
attended the Middleport
lfle Pomeroy Uniled Methodist senior citizen at each of the were also Musical
.presented by Mrs.
Serving as honor attendant schools graduated from
...:• Were prepared .Thurs- monthly birthday parties.
Betty Kern and Miss Kelly Sue for her sister, Miss Althea Waver!; High School in 1969
lhe home of Mrs. Ted
Homemade ice cream, cake, DeConnlck, 3 year old great- Schramm wore a gown of blue and attended both Ohi~
Meellng with Mrs. and coffee were served to all.
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. dotted swiss trimmed with University and Ohio State
to work on the project Cakes -for the November party
white lace. S~e carried. a University. He is employed by
Mrs. Roy Reutet and were baked by Edith Betzing, Charles R. Karr, Sr. .
The December Btr\hday bouquet of pmk. and wh1te the Big Bear store in Jackson.
Jay Warner.. The project Loretta Beegle, Thora BlackParty will be Dec. 13 With a carnations
w1th
pink They reside at Rt. 1, waverly.
-:::~, . by the Unlled wood, Marie Bishop, Edna potluck dmner_served at 12:30 streamers.
Ronald L. Hand, Sr., was
ttl
Women of the Clark, Bertha Robinson and
P · ~ ·: combmed wtth . a
Beth. Ann Hand, junior associated with the Middleport
will~ nWied to Jessie Houchins.
Chnotrnas Party. Each semor bridesmaid, wore a gown of office of the Colwnbus and
,IMTJ' W11'118r,
The Senior Citizens Center is citizen in Meigs County is aqua crepe trimmed with white Southern Ohio Electric Co
WriJIII, Freddie . very thankful after eight
especially invited to attend and lace. Her bouquet was a wheri the family resided ri~
Jolin c.rd and months of operation, to have a help the !)enior Citizens Center miniature of that carried by Middleport
MicllHI Hedl.
piano to be used br special usher in lhe Christmas Season. the honor · attendant. The ·
·

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._,.urn,

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Pink
Gold
Black

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: .secretary, Janice Lawson;

; a,.nstant secretary, Chadotte
[·Nease ; treasurer, Elva Dailey

(LIVER FLAVOR ONLY)
•

Black

oz.

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49'
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PURINA
TENDER VITTLES

PAPER ANGEL, CHOIR GIRL AND BIRD CAGE - All
made from the Readers Digest were displayed by Mrs.
Minnie McGrath of Harrisonville at the "Holiday Happending". Mrs. McGrath gave a demonstration on how to fold
the pages of the book to begin making the various objects.

: All reports were read and

4le

..

..

: :Q :

CHOW

, ; •devotions by Nancy Neutzling.

·~pproved .

4lh

PURINA DOG

GALLON

· ;".. t president , Janice Lawson .
. ;' i'Psalm 96 was used . for
Fourteen . members an·
'swered roll call by naming
~ their favorite girl's name.

.
. .
•

D.CON RAT KILLER

I-LB.

:.'· ;.Fire auxilwry

,.

PARKAY
WHIPPED
STICK

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Helpful hints on . selecting .

- The Lord's
'. • fPrayer in unison and the flag
.•• ;Pledge opened the meeting of
• ;the Syracuse Ladies Auxiliary
. :: :of the Volunteer Fire Depart.- -. ·ment Monday evening at the
: J. !municipal building . The
·:.' · ;meeting was conducted by the

' I ··•

POPLAR

PKG.

&gt; SYRACUSE

'

~·
'

1-LB.

KAHN'S

Janet Compson

' .

LOAVES

rtoys for children were given by

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HAMS

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SMOKED
PICNIC

79t;

Carol's
Coiffeurs Is
Announcing

;Christmas creations.
~

SUPERIORS

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SHOPPING CENTER
MIDDLEPORT, OH.I O

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Rented ships plan bad ·business for Uncle Sam
\I'ASHJr-;GTO!\ ! UPil Tht• hm1t. Thus llw GAO had to rule
\ : S. Na\'y IS t.:omg down to thr the Ira ns&lt;.~cl ion i(' ~al.
sra in rented ships, and th('
Anm~d ntlh f1AO appro\'al ,
Gener'al Ac-counting Off tee the ~avy ;H;ked proposals on a
says it is a S\\f'Pt hltle deal for sh tp ··build and charter" deaL
almost t&gt;\'E-ryonP except Uncle The Na\'Y would guarantee a
S.1m.
2(}.~ear charter for vessels
A GAO report o ~ the tnner built with private money.
fmandal work1ngs .of the
Marine Transport Lines of
~a\·y's nnture mto rent-aNl'\\- York headed a syndicate
ships. obtamed Saturday by that proposed the cheapest
ll PI, says the go\'ernment will deal mne ships for 20 years
pay about twice as much to for $313 million. Ma rine and its
lease the vessels as it would if partners, 14 banks . ag reed to
it bought them .
put up $40 million a nd sell $120
The report also says the million in bonds to raise the
N:wy chose to r ent the ships total cost of build ing the
rather tha n bu y bc&lt;;"ause that vessels.
was the only way it could get
Actually. tlw char ter fees
nine tankers it said it needs. CO\'er only the cost of servicing
Congress didn 't think the ships the bonds - the borrowed $120
were necessary,
mil lion at 7'~ per cent for 20
The Na vy does not dispute )'('ars . That would seem to
GAO 's basic ar ithmetic. bu t it kavc Marine a nd pa rtners in
insists the deal also is sweet fol' the position of lending the other
Uncle Sam because two do llars $40 million in terest-free.
spe nt tomorrow actually are
But the Navy co mpensated
worth less than one spent for that by gett ing a special tax
today.
break so the Ma rine group will
Whatever th e logic, deta ils of be able to wr ite off
the rent-a-ship transaction he lp depreciation on the full, $160
illustrate why the Defense million value of the · shi ps
Department is regarded as a aga inst their own tax bills from
very good customer by the other business. What'S: more,
firms that •ell to it.
they will be able to do it in 12
The Navy got into the rental ye ars instea d of 20.
program in 1971 when, after
The effect of this, says John
severa l years, it gave up ef- Ri nk o, the GAO auditor who
fo rts to have Congress repla ce worked on the case, is that the
l4 aging "fl ee t oiler" tankers government actually will be
with nine moder n, 25,000-ton lending the Marine partners
vessels .
$72 million.
Despite the fa ct th at they
Though eventually all of it
annually vote billions for new will ha ve to be paid bac k in the
planes, carri ers and missile final eight years (in higher
submarines, neither the House taxes when there a re no writenor the Senate Ar med Ser vi ces offs ), the partners stand to
co mmi ttees s howed m uch gain $120 million in compound
interest in laying out $1(1(). investment income on tha t
million for th e ta nkers.
money .
Someone in the Navy fig w·ed
In addition, when the char ter
a way to run the blockade. ends the partner s still will own
Instead of buying shi ps, the the ships, which will in two
NaVy could' lease them -as the· ' decades be worth an estima ted
big oil companies do.
$24 mill io n. This would
It coul d hide the lease fees in amount, the GAO estima teS, to
it s opera tions budge t , a p- a ~o ta l return of $144 millio n on
proved by the appropriations a $40 million investment.
rathe r tha n armed ser vices
The Navy also wrote some
committees, and cha r ge off special profit guarantees in to
mu ch of the expense to the the contr act. If the .ships are
Army and Air Force --as the lost for any reason1 the owners
cost of transporting fuel for ge l back 122 per cent of the
t)lose services.
replacemen t costm
·Though government leases
So juicy was the deal that the
cos ting more lhan $500,000 partners h esi t~ted just long
t r a d i t ion a I I y
n e c d enough to make su re the Navy
~ o n g r e s sio~al a pproval, t he had the legal right to engage
law governing Navy tra ns- the "full faith and credi t" of
a ctio ns co nta ined no such lhe U. S. government before

~1..11ng

ahead .
Although f;AO ruled the deal
was lega l, il was so disturbed
by th• details tlm t it complained to both the Penta gon
and Congress.

year's dollar is worth only 90
cents next year, 81 cents the
ye ar after, and so on.
Figuring that way, Chase
said , the $313 mlllion over the
life of t he contract was worth
only $150 n.. !li on in 1972
dollars. So, he contended, the
govl!rnm c nt. " saves" $10
million by spend ing $178
million .
Bennett turn ed to his

,

GAO said that the Navy will
Spend $178 mi llion more in cash
to lease the ships than it would
to buy them outright.
It also noted that the Navy
undertook the deal -&lt;l btiga ti ng
the fu ll faith and credit of the
U. S. government - withou t

counsel, George Norris .
" Do you l.lnderstand it?" he
asked .
'~ No, sir," Norris replied.
" My staff agrees with me in
not being able to understand
it," Bermett said .
The GAO do es nol un·
derstand it, either . Even if the
Navy premise is accepted, the
auditors say , the discount rate
should be only 6 per cent. At

SON BORN
FRESHMAN STARS
POMEROY
- Mr. and Mrs.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UP! ) Hig hly recruited Freshman William H. Thomas, Enon, are
Adr ian Dantley sco red 16 announcing the birth of a son,
po ints and grabbed nine Devin Andrew, Nov . 15.
rebounds in his college debut Maternal grandparents are
Saturday, leading Notre Dame Mr . and Mrs. Walter P . Brown ,
to a season-opening 112-62 Heedsville, and paternal
bas ketball
victory
over grandparents are the Rev. and
Mrs . Clifford B. Thomas,
Valpara iso.
Jackson. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
are a lso parents of another son,
BADGERS TRIUMPH
Matthew Allen, 3.
MAD ISON , Wis . (UP!)
Wisconsin overcame a tough
ltOBINSON SHINES
Rollins College press .Saturday
MOUNT PLEASANT, Mich .
and crus hed the Tars 77-55.
(UP!) - Two-time defending
Rollins, much smaller than
Big Ten scorin·g champion
Wisconsin, jumped off to an
Mike Robinson scored 36 points
early lead, but the Badgers
Salw-day to help Michigan
used their ~.uper ior height and
went to a 36-25 half lime lead, State defeat Central Michigan,
7S-70 for the 20th straight time
mainly on the . shooting of
center Kim Hughes, hwo had 21 and spoil the Chippewas' first
game in the new Daniel P.
points for the game's high.
Rose Center.

consulting Congress.
The N ~VY 's response was to
take the proposition to a House

armed services sulx.'omm ittee
last spring ...... ) 1:! yea rs after the
project began .
The Navy told the subcommittee, headed by Rep. Charles
E. Bennett, D-Fia., that it was
not inte re s ted in t he ta x.
aspects of the renta l, only In

ho w much money would come
out of its own budge t.
On tha t basis, it said, th e deal
i s cheaper than buyin g. When

Bennett inquired how that was
possible, Rea r Adm. John D.
Chase e xplained it this way:
The value of the dollar
declines every year, and if the
governn1ent took th e dollars
and loaned them out, it also
would collect interest. Betwee n
the two, the dollar depreciates
by 10 per ce nt a year . This

tha t r ate. the government
•pends $20 million more in 1972
va lue - not $10 million less regardless of taxes.
Ultima tely Bennett · and his
committee agreed with the
GAO and slapped the Navy on
the wrist for having evaded the
authority ·of Congress.
Cha se's boss , Assistant
Secretary of Defense Arthur
Mendolia , apolog ized , and
Bennett told the Navy that if it
wanted to rent any more ships
it should come back with a bill
that would give the services
specific authority to do so.
So far, however, " they've
been stalling," says Norris.
One reason may be the dif·

ficulty of explaining how the
government saves $10 million
by spe nd ing $178 million. ·
Mea ntlme, the contract has
been let a nd the ships a re
under construction. A1l nine

are due to be completed by
Dec. 7, 1974" - the 33rd anniversary of Pearl Harbor and the U. S. Navy will of.
ficially be in the ship-rental
business.

I

SBA • another
'

Prins charged that White thew of New York City, who White House staff members
The subcommittee has evi·
WASHI NGTON (UP! ) ranging from bribery. and kick·
Rep. Parren Mitch•ll, D-Md., ba cks on loans and lease dence of 13 loans totaling $ll.6 House pressure was a pplied to was freed from jail in 1969 and persons acting on behalf of
was asked the other day how guarantee s to " sheer mis- million approved under !be grant a $100,000 loan for a under a pardoo issued by Nixon's 1972 re-el ec tion
tenure of form er Richmond fonner professional football President Nixon. Matthew was camp aig n extorted conse rious he considered the management. ''
charges of illegal loan making
And, according to CUrtis Director Tbomas F. Regan and player and co-chairman of the described in testimony as a tri but ions fr om California
recipients of SBA loans . He
and fin ancial manipulation in Prins, chief investigator for the benefiting his ' brother~n-law , Athletes for Nixon orga niza· " black Nixon supporter ."
A third case in volving the said the Senate Watergate
the Small Business Ad· House Banking Committee, the Joseph C. Palumbo, a Charlol· lions in 1968 and 1972.
The White House also has White
a lso
has
House
surfa ced comm ittee
SBA ·probe may reach all the tesvllle. Va ., financier , or
ministration.
been
accused
of
attempting
to
"
reopened"
its
probe
of
SBA
Saturday.
Sen.
Alan
Cranston,
· ''A scandal is a scandal is a way into the White House Pulumbo's business holdings.
Many of them were disa~ cover up the criminal in- D-Calif. , sa id his Senate opera tions in that state.
scandal, " replied Mitchell, before it is resolved.
Russell Hamilton , the fanner
The hearings are designed to proved or withdrawn after the ves ti gation of an SBA bankin g subcom mi ttee was
adding that in its own way, the
(Continued on Page 31 l
borrower , Dr . Thomas Mai- investigating a llegations that
SBA investigation is every bit resolve the charges against the investigation began.
as serious as the Watergate SBA so that the small business
subcommittee can act on
affair.
A week of testimony into the legislation increasing the
SBA activities in Richmond, SBA 's loan-making authority
Va., and other offices governed by $2.3 billion. Subcommittee
by the 2S.year-&lt;&gt;ld agency tend members believe the charges
NO. 44
SU-N-DA-Y,-D-EC-EM_B_E_R
- - - - - - --:-PA:-:G.E
to bear him out. Congressional are so serious that the agency VOL. R
investigators now believe that should not be given $2 billion ~~--~------------at least 22 other SBA offices more to spend until a full in·
are involved . in wrongdoing vestigation has been made.

UEPARTMENT
STORE

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·sales .stopped ·

GARY NffiERT, 12, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Nibert,
Addison, is pictured here with one of 73 deer tagged allhe
Quaker State Service Center checking station No. 68 last
week. Nibert got his 8 point buck in Addison Twp., on Friday.
The 1973deer gun season ended al5 p.m. Saturday. On right
is Bob Saunders, manager of Qual-.er State Serviee Center.

•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Treasury Saturday halted sale
of U.S. Savings Bonds because
Congress allowed the nation's
credit to run out at midnight
Friday.
A Treasury .. statement said
sale of series E and H savings
bonds was suspended because.
Congress -embroiled in . a
filibu ster on a campaign reform
amendment - failed to increase
th e ceiling on the national debt.
At midnight the debt ceiling
reverted to its .. " permanent"
base of $400 billion, far below
the present level of indebted·
ness. meaning the government
could no longer sell bonds or
otherwise borrow money .
The Treasury statement expressed confidence that 11authority will be gran ted shortly,
making it possible to reswne
normal issuance of bonds ."
On Capitol Hill it was
ex pected the debt legislation
would move ahead again next
week .
The Treasury said a · short
delay would not result in a loss
to purchasers or disrupt payroll
savings plans because all bonds
issued in December will bear
interest from Saturday, the
first of tile month .
The Treasury told its issuing

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Court ·st .
Gallipolis

Silver Bridge
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CHARLES OHLINGER OF Middleport proudly displays .
the 9 point buck deer he bagged ea rly Friday morning (n
'salem Twp ., near Langsville.

.Israel's father
TEL AVN (UP!) _ Fonner
Prime Minister David BenGw-ion, who in 1948 declared
the birth of the nation of Israel
and then led the infant state
through two wars of survival,
died Saturday at the age of 87.
The " Father of Israel" died
from Complications of a stroke
suffered Nov. 18. His son, two
daughters and personal physi·
clan were at hls 'bedside in
Sheba Medical Center when he
died at 11 :06 a.m. ( 4 a .m.
EST), the national radio said.
His wife Paula died in 1968.
'
FWleral services were tenialively scheduled for Monday at
Sde Boker-the Negev Desert
kibbutz Ben-Gurion called home
since 1963.
The government said his body
would lie in stale in the

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forecourt of the Knesset (parliament) building in Jerusalem
beginning Sunday morning and
would be taken to Sde Boker
Monday.
Ben-Gurion, whose nam e
·means son of a lion, had a
history of illnesses in the past
several years.
During his last hospitaliza·
·
lion, Ben.{iurion received
a
steady stream of visitors,
including Prime Minister Golda
Meir and Defense Minister
Moshe Dayan.
All his adult life, Ben-Gurion
pursued his dream of living in
a reborn Jewish state and those
who followed him through half
a century of confrontation with
the Turks, the British and the
Arabs, and almost as much
political infighting with his

•

agents they could accept
applications for bonds but could
not issue them.
The Treasury aiso announced
these other steps because of the
impasse over the debt ceiling :
-Certain special Treasury
securities held by foreign
monetary atJthorities which
were scheduled to malw-e in
the coming days were adv8nce
refund~ into new special
issues Friday to avoid a cash
drain.

- If a temporary debt ceiling
is not enacted by Monday
morning, the regular weekly
auction of $4.3 billion in
Treasw-y bills scheduled then
will be postponed. If possible, it
would be held 'fuesday.
- If the Monday auction is
not held, the Export-Import
Bank will auction $1:8 billion in
three-month
Export-Import
Bank bills for payment on
Thursday. Proceeds would be
used tp pay outstanding Export·
Impor t Ban k ·tnd e btedness t o

th~i~:~:C~. of spec ia1

obliga·

lions of the United States to
governmen t trust funds such as ·
social security will be su'spended until a high~r debt ceiling
becomes effective.

,.

dead

IS

fe llow J ews. knew his private was both prime minister and
vision of Zion reborn.
defense minister of a fledgling
·It was a vision that he · nation under attack by five
recalled having five years after Arab states.
his birth Oct. 16,1886, as David
Ben Gurion led Israel through
G(-eefl in the Czarist-ruled its war of ·independence and
Polish town of Plonsk.
guided the nation as prime
Not long after he reached minister for a total of 12 years.
O.ttoman Palestine as a steer· His tenn in office was broken
age-class voyager 19 years by voluntary retirement from
Iater, th e name ha d be come 1953 to 1955 and he was· at the
Ben.{iurion. In tile restored helm through the 1956 war.
Biblical tongue that would later
His final retirement from
bind Jews from all over the ' public life came in 1963 when
world, it meant "son of a lion he began devoting more time to
hts' second career of wrt'""g.
Cub. "
w•
th
k
B ;., ·
te th
d
On May 14, 194B, e stoc Y
en:uurton wro
ousan s
little man with the cherubic of arttcles a~d pamphlets and
fa ce stood in a crowded, stuffy several mullt-volume books on
Tel Aviv museum hall and Israel and Ztomsm. He was
f th
.
solemnIy read out the Decla ra· wor ki ng on a hts1ory o
e
h J . .h
th t·
fhi
·
1
1
tion of Independen ce of t e ewts peop e a
e une o s
stale of Israel. The next day he death.

• •

~riSIS
WASHINGTON (UP1) Sen.
Herman Talmadge, J).{;a., Saturday
predicted that unless farmers re(:eive
adequate fuel suppltes, food rationing
could result to 1974.
In a letter to President Nixon,
Talmadge sald his olitce had been
.swamped with calls from Georgia far·
mers who cannot get enough fuel to run
their tractors and harvest their crops,
"Our farmers ha:ve heeded the call
of the Secretary of Agriculture for all-&lt;&gt;ut
production in 1974," he wrote, "but now
they fear they will not receive adequate
fuel to produce the additional food
supplies that the nation's consumers
need..''
He added that many farmers cannot
getfuelbeeausc independent jobbers and
distributors who supply them are being
forced out of business by tbe refusal of oil
companies to make deliveries.
Talmadge backed up his food
rationing
predtctioh by
citing
Agriculture Department statistics that
show there would be a tight supply and
demand situation even without the
· 1s.
energy crts
.

'

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spri ng s, XL T body side molding , radio, full wheel covers . rear
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•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
honeymoon is over for special
Watergate ·p rosecutor Leon
Jaworski.
After a month on tbe job,
Jaworski has drawn criticism
from the White House and
praise from skeptics who
originaUy feared that he would
curtail the Watergate in·
vesligalion.
Since Nov. 1 when he was
named to replace fired
prosecutor. -Archibald Cox,
Jaworski has Indicted one
lormer White House aide, obtained a guilty plea frO!n a
second, overseen the fining of
two oil companies for Illegal
contributions for President
Nixon's 1972 campaign and won
a bailie to have tapes of Nixon's
Watergate conversations
turned over to federal court.
He also has gained the
support of an 8Q.member
prosecution staff, including 36
lawyers, who originally threat·
ened inass . resignation when
Nixon fired Cox.
Jaworski suggested last week
he may even ask the White
Houae for the entire three years
of tapa made in Nixon's offices
and on hla telephones.
While House Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler labeled the
proposal "nonsense" and continued with a slinging tlttack on
members
the prosecution
ala~ who he said ~d dllplayed

or

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ingrained suspicion and vise·
era! dislike for this President
and this administration."
Jaworski was asked if this
attack signaled that " your
honeymoon with the White
House is over.''
"I'm not sure there ever was
a honeymoon," replied Jawor·
ski, whose appointmenf had
been appr6ved by tile Presi·
dent. "Jlm just here to do a job
and I'm going tOdo it."
11

. One of Jawor:;ki's most
Jaworski turned down the
severe tests came on Thanks· lawyers' request for more time
givillg Eve when White House and an hour later they were in
lawyers J. Fred Buzhardt and court revealing the latest fault
Leonard Garment came for the . in the tapes.
first time to his fortress-like
The 68-yeti~-&lt;&gt;ld Texas lawyer
office less than five blocks from also appears to have gained the
the White House . They told him confidence of Congress. There
an 1S.minute gap had been are indications that legislation
discovered in one of the c"ritical Proposed earlier ordering the
Watergate tapes and pleaded courts to appoint a Watergate
for more tlme to find an prosecutor may be abandoned
explanation.
(Continued on Page 31)

Hotel maid may get $10,000
AUSTIN, Tex. (upi ) -Esther
Marie Bellard, 19, is a shy hotel
cleaning maid who earns $105
every two weeks. Her husband
lists his income at $300 a
month.
One month ago while making
a bed in the hotel where she
works, Esther Matie came
across a cellophane bag tucked
under the mattress. She noticed
something green in tile bag.
'' When I saw the bag
contained money I just took it
to the hotel manager," she
said. "I didn' t know how much
was there until he counted it in
front of me."
The manager counted $10,000
in '$100 bills.
" People leave a lol ·behind in
their rooms but this is the
biggest thing I've 'ever found, "
Mrs .. Bellard said.
.

The hotel manager contacted
local' police who investigated
the find for the past month but
could not tw-n up tile owner.
"The last person who stayed
in the room was interviewed
and he denied any knowledge of
the money, " said police Capt.
Bob Parsons. " After our
investigation failed to deter·
mine. who the lawful owner
was, we felt we should follow
channels to dispose of it."
. On Monday the money will be
turned over to a district cow-t
where anyone who thinks he
has a legitimate claim to it can
come forth and argue his case.
Esther Marie Bellard will be
there for one. If the legitimate
owner is not found, she will be
the likely choice to receive the
$10,000.

;.

Esther, her husband and
three-year-&lt;&gt;ld daughter Tiffy
hope to receive the money by
Dec. 30, their wedding anniversary.
They said they have a· dream
house in mind, one with a big
kitchen, a living room and a
room for Tiffany to play in .
" We both love the color
blue,'' Esther said, exchanging
glances with her husband over
Tiffany's bobbing head. " If we
get the money, we will put blue
carpet in the living room for
sure."
Her husband smiled.
" We courted for almost two
years," he said. &lt;I She was
always honest with me and
never kept anything from me . I
was glad she gave the money
back .''

•'

too good
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Sen .
Abraham Ribicoff, D.Conn.,
proposed Saturday to outlaw all
tax advantages thai u:_s. oil
companies receive for opera·
lions in Arab countries that
refuse to supply the United
States with oil.
Ail President Nixon remained
at the While House for a
weekend of conferences with
his top energy advisers, Ribic·
off said he would introduce a
bill next · week that would
. tax
pro h ibit cIa'uns for foretgn
d'ts .1 d 1 ti
ll
1 ' 01
ere
ep
e
on.
a
owances, intangible drilling expense
deductions and other sucl\ tax
b k
j d b
U S
c~~o:ati~::.oyi~ Mi~dle ·East
.
ki
t . th
.1
natbtOns ta ng par m e 01
em argo.
" Our policy of giving major
·oil companies billion-dollar tax
breaks for producing oil that
d b
we so desperate1y nee , ut
,1 1 h il b t
.
can ouc , a
u surpasses
the Russian grain deal in the
annals of American deception,"

to offer tax preferences to
companies for finding and
producing oil "in the very
Middle Eastern countries that
have .cut us off. "
In an attack on what he
called "petropolitics," Ribicoff
complained that if a foreign U.
S. subsidiary pays $10 million
in taxes to Saudi Arabia, the
patent company can subtract
$10 million from its tax bill to
the U. S. government.
"Because of this interpreta·
lion of the foreign tax.credit, U.
S . corporations in 1970 earned
$1,005,000,000 on mining and oil
. operations abroad, but paid not
one penny in U. S. taxes on that
income,,. he said.
tJ. S. companies also can
claim an automatic· 22 per cent
depletion allowance from the
government on all their foreign
and domestic earnings, regard·
less of the amoWlt invested, he
added.
"Imagine the average taxpayer who earns ~10, 000 a year:
being able to knock off $2,200
before even opening up hls
Form 1040," Riblcoff said.
Furthennore, he said,· U. S.
corporations get a double write·
off for tile same capitl\1
investment because in addition
to the depletion allowance, they
can claim a deduction. for
intangible drilling expenses the time and effort it takes to
tap a productive well. Both cost
the Treasury $1.8 billion a year,
he said.

I

ByJAYGIBIAN
COLUMBUS &lt;UPII - Families may literally en.d up with their
furniture in. their fireplaces this winter trying to stay warm, Roger
Dreyer,executive :vice president of the Ohio Petroleum Marketers
Association, said here.
Home thermostats may have to be turned far below that currently·
suggested 68-degree setting and Americans may have to get used to
cold homes, he said.
"lt any part of the nation has a really cold winter, there will be a lot
of sick and shivering families," said Dreyer. " A 68-degree settmg wtll
just not do it as Hit as fuel oil is concerned because there just is not
enough product to go around,"
Dreyer , who several weeks ago
predicted nationwide gasoline rationing
within 60-90 days, blamed the shortage on
electric utility companies.
' 'Prest'denl Nixon has osked the

OETROIT (UP!) - Ford
Motor Co. said Fr1day
workers at the Cleveland
Stamptug Plant and at the
Ford plant at Canton, Obto, .
were laid · off Indefinitely
mainly because of parts
shortages.
AI tbe Cleveiand plant, 253
of the 3,600 workers were
laid off, wblle 12 workers
were laid off at Canton In the
cbassts division.
:::::;::::::::::::::8:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

ASSESSMENT UP
SANTA ANA, calif. (UP!)The California Board of
Equalization has assessed the
Western White House at $1.5
million, $130,oo!i more than the
assessment earlier this year by
the county tax assessor, it was
announced Friday.
SHORT WEEK .
WARREN, Ohio (UP!) - A
cutback in production has
resulted in shorter work weeks
at the General Motors Packard
Electric plant here beginning
Monday. About 3,800 of the
13,000 employes will have the
shorter ·weeks .
CHECKS ON TIME
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - State
Auditor Joseph Ferguson said
Friday all Aid to Dependent
Children checks would be
mailed on tiine for December.
Ferguson said earlier this
week he thought there would be
a delay because the state
Welfare Department failed to
provide his office with
requested audit information.
He said the .probletn was
resolved Wednesday.

been caused by industry and, specifically'
e]et:tric power companies/' he said.
"In the last fiv€ ~mars electric utilities
have increased thPk use of home .heating
oil by Stl- pet.," he said . "They say they
are usi ng coal, but they are shooting fuel
(Continued on Page 31 )

Kissinger trying
to revive talks
0

By United Press International
Soviet and U.S. diplomats to
Secretary of State Henry A. discus$ the breakdown in the
Kissinger Satw-day conferred military withdrawal talks.
with U.N .. Secretary General
Israeli Premier Golda Meir
Kurt Waldheim in an effort to said despite the postponement
revive the suspended cease-fire of the cease-fire nedgotlations,
talks between Israel and Egypt. prospects for the forthcoming .
Egypt said a resumption of Middle East peace conference
the ti:tiks would be useless ·as in Geneva have not dimmed.
Israel charged that its forces The Arabs disagreed and said
had encountered fire on three the meeting was in jeopardy.
fronts , Egyptian, Syrian and
A • U.N. spokesman said
Lebanese.
Waldheim used the top-ranking
The latest reported violations American in the United Na·
of .the 38-day-&lt;&gt;ld cease-fire lions, Undersecretary General
came only one day after Israel Bradford Morse, as a goreported Egyptian troops tried between with Kissinger, who
to punch their way through its was staying at a New York
positions along the canal in five hotel. Kissinger is scheduled to
sporadic attacks that were visit the Middle East in the
repulsed.
near futw-e.
The Israeli command Satur·
Morse briefed Kissinger on
day reported small arms fire the latest developments · and
from elements of the Egyptian Waldheim held a lengthy
2nd and 3rd .a rmy along the telephone conversation with
Suez Canal. Several mortar Kissinger. Morse · was briefed
shells were fired from Kafr before and debriefed by WaldHarpab on the Syrian front and heim after the Kissinger talk.
unidentified tight arms fire was
Satw-day's move by Kissinger
reported near the northern was the first open act by him
frontier village of Zarail, since he returned from around
opposite Lebanon.
the world tour of the . Middle
In cairo, · the Egyptian · East and Aaia. He drew up the
government spokt:"!sman called six~point cease-fire agreement
for the United States and that was signed by the
Russia to pressw-e Israel into Egyptians and Israelis Nov. 11.
withdrawing its troops .. aionr
KILLED BY TRAIN
the Suez canal. He satd an) DOVER, Ohio (UP! ) _
further cease-ftre. talks alon! William Chenot, 65, was killed
with Cairo-Suez Htghway woul&lt;Friday night when .his car was
be useie:"'.
,struck by a train at a crossing
Egyptian gove~ent source. which had no warning fisher~.
satd that Prestdent Anwatth Oh'10 Highway Patrol said.
Sadat met separately wtth e

Blank in tape studied
NEW \VRK (U P!) - Elec·
Ironies experts studied one of
President Nixon's Watergato
tapes Satw-day to determine if
an Ill-minute blanked-&lt;&gt;ul por·
lion can be restored.
White House counsel Leonard
Garment told reporters Friday
that the tape was sent to the
Federal Scientific Corp., a New
York laboratory. Electronics
experts say that in some
instances a series of "signal
enhancement" procedures can
be used to revive ·at least ·
portions of such faulty tapes,
The~pe was made during a
June 20, 1972, conversation
between President Nixon and
his former top aid~, H. R.
Haldeman, three days after the
bugging and b~ak-in of Democralic national headquarters at
the Watergate.

It was one of several tapes
turned over to U.S. District
Judge' John J. Sirica last week
by the White House. The others
remained at the cow-thouse
under 24 hour guard.
.The President's long-time
personal secretary, Rose Mary
Woods, told Sirica last week
that she inadvertently spoiled
18 minutes of the taped
conversation while transcribing
it at her offite.

marshals Thursday.
Four of the other Watergate
tapes were cleared Friday with
the agreement of White House
lawyers for use by the special
grand jury investigating
charges of a cover-up of the
scandal.
.
.
The lawyers told Sirica and
Watergate prosecutors there
was no reason why the grand
jury should not be given access
to tile tapes, all of them dated
· in March. They record conver·
A spokesman for tile firm salions Nixon had with aides
declined Saturday to discuss John W. Dean III, Haldeman,
ihe reported enhancement tests and John D. Ehrlichman plus
or the tape's whereabouts. But former Attorney General John
the White House and the N. Mitchell,
prosecutor's office said there
Sirica Monday will begin
was no reason to believe that reviewing four other Watergate
tape was not still in the hands tapes which the White HouSe
of Federal Scientific, where !be says should be kept confidential
reel was taken in a carefully on grounds of executive privilepacked lead container by U.S. ge.

1,.

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IS

~:::::::::::::::::: : : : : : : :::: : :!:::::: :: :::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:; .~=~~~n ·~~o~;::,e~~tw~~ uss~o!~:!:i~:

Oil deal.

19

Petroleum spokesman
lays blame for fuel
shortages at door of
electric utilities s·

Fanners need fuel
•
•
or rattomng
sure

Jaworski .showing determination :~~:!~!r~::~o~:fF£~~~~
FORD LTD BROUGHAM 4 DOOR

atergate

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�•

Rented ships plan bad ·business for Uncle Sam
\I'ASHJr-;GTO!\ ! UPil Tht• hm1t. Thus llw GAO had to rule
\ : S. Na\'y IS t.:omg down to thr the Ira ns&lt;.~cl ion i(' ~al.
sra in rented ships, and th('
Anm~d ntlh f1AO appro\'al ,
Gener'al Ac-counting Off tee the ~avy ;H;ked proposals on a
says it is a S\\f'Pt hltle deal for sh tp ··build and charter" deaL
almost t&gt;\'E-ryonP except Uncle The Na\'Y would guarantee a
S.1m.
2(}.~ear charter for vessels
A GAO report o ~ the tnner built with private money.
fmandal work1ngs .of the
Marine Transport Lines of
~a\·y's nnture mto rent-aNl'\\- York headed a syndicate
ships. obtamed Saturday by that proposed the cheapest
ll PI, says the go\'ernment will deal mne ships for 20 years
pay about twice as much to for $313 million. Ma rine and its
lease the vessels as it would if partners, 14 banks . ag reed to
it bought them .
put up $40 million a nd sell $120
The report also says the million in bonds to raise the
N:wy chose to r ent the ships total cost of build ing the
rather tha n bu y bc&lt;;"ause that vessels.
was the only way it could get
Actually. tlw char ter fees
nine tankers it said it needs. CO\'er only the cost of servicing
Congress didn 't think the ships the bonds - the borrowed $120
were necessary,
mil lion at 7'~ per cent for 20
The Na vy does not dispute )'('ars . That would seem to
GAO 's basic ar ithmetic. bu t it kavc Marine a nd pa rtners in
insists the deal also is sweet fol' the position of lending the other
Uncle Sam because two do llars $40 million in terest-free.
spe nt tomorrow actually are
But the Navy co mpensated
worth less than one spent for that by gett ing a special tax
today.
break so the Ma rine group will
Whatever th e logic, deta ils of be able to wr ite off
the rent-a-ship transaction he lp depreciation on the full, $160
illustrate why the Defense million value of the · shi ps
Department is regarded as a aga inst their own tax bills from
very good customer by the other business. What'S: more,
firms that •ell to it.
they will be able to do it in 12
The Navy got into the rental ye ars instea d of 20.
program in 1971 when, after
The effect of this, says John
severa l years, it gave up ef- Ri nk o, the GAO auditor who
fo rts to have Congress repla ce worked on the case, is that the
l4 aging "fl ee t oiler" tankers government actually will be
with nine moder n, 25,000-ton lending the Marine partners
vessels .
$72 million.
Despite the fa ct th at they
Though eventually all of it
annually vote billions for new will ha ve to be paid bac k in the
planes, carri ers and missile final eight years (in higher
submarines, neither the House taxes when there a re no writenor the Senate Ar med Ser vi ces offs ), the partners stand to
co mmi ttees s howed m uch gain $120 million in compound
interest in laying out $1(1(). investment income on tha t
million for th e ta nkers.
money .
Someone in the Navy fig w·ed
In addition, when the char ter
a way to run the blockade. ends the partner s still will own
Instead of buying shi ps, the the ships, which will in two
NaVy could' lease them -as the· ' decades be worth an estima ted
big oil companies do.
$24 mill io n. This would
It coul d hide the lease fees in amount, the GAO estima teS, to
it s opera tions budge t , a p- a ~o ta l return of $144 millio n on
proved by the appropriations a $40 million investment.
rathe r tha n armed ser vices
The Navy also wrote some
committees, and cha r ge off special profit guarantees in to
mu ch of the expense to the the contr act. If the .ships are
Army and Air Force --as the lost for any reason1 the owners
cost of transporting fuel for ge l back 122 per cent of the
t)lose services.
replacemen t costm
·Though government leases
So juicy was the deal that the
cos ting more lhan $500,000 partners h esi t~ted just long
t r a d i t ion a I I y
n e c d enough to make su re the Navy
~ o n g r e s sio~al a pproval, t he had the legal right to engage
law governing Navy tra ns- the "full faith and credi t" of
a ctio ns co nta ined no such lhe U. S. government before

~1..11ng

ahead .
Although f;AO ruled the deal
was lega l, il was so disturbed
by th• details tlm t it complained to both the Penta gon
and Congress.

year's dollar is worth only 90
cents next year, 81 cents the
ye ar after, and so on.
Figuring that way, Chase
said , the $313 mlllion over the
life of t he contract was worth
only $150 n.. !li on in 1972
dollars. So, he contended, the
govl!rnm c nt. " saves" $10
million by spend ing $178
million .
Bennett turn ed to his

,

GAO said that the Navy will
Spend $178 mi llion more in cash
to lease the ships than it would
to buy them outright.
It also noted that the Navy
undertook the deal -&lt;l btiga ti ng
the fu ll faith and credit of the
U. S. government - withou t

counsel, George Norris .
" Do you l.lnderstand it?" he
asked .
'~ No, sir," Norris replied.
" My staff agrees with me in
not being able to understand
it," Bermett said .
The GAO do es nol un·
derstand it, either . Even if the
Navy premise is accepted, the
auditors say , the discount rate
should be only 6 per cent. At

SON BORN
FRESHMAN STARS
POMEROY
- Mr. and Mrs.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UP! ) Hig hly recruited Freshman William H. Thomas, Enon, are
Adr ian Dantley sco red 16 announcing the birth of a son,
po ints and grabbed nine Devin Andrew, Nov . 15.
rebounds in his college debut Maternal grandparents are
Saturday, leading Notre Dame Mr . and Mrs. Walter P . Brown ,
to a season-opening 112-62 Heedsville, and paternal
bas ketball
victory
over grandparents are the Rev. and
Mrs . Clifford B. Thomas,
Valpara iso.
Jackson. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
are a lso parents of another son,
BADGERS TRIUMPH
Matthew Allen, 3.
MAD ISON , Wis . (UP!)
Wisconsin overcame a tough
ltOBINSON SHINES
Rollins College press .Saturday
MOUNT PLEASANT, Mich .
and crus hed the Tars 77-55.
(UP!) - Two-time defending
Rollins, much smaller than
Big Ten scorin·g champion
Wisconsin, jumped off to an
Mike Robinson scored 36 points
early lead, but the Badgers
Salw-day to help Michigan
used their ~.uper ior height and
went to a 36-25 half lime lead, State defeat Central Michigan,
7S-70 for the 20th straight time
mainly on the . shooting of
center Kim Hughes, hwo had 21 and spoil the Chippewas' first
game in the new Daniel P.
points for the game's high.
Rose Center.

consulting Congress.
The N ~VY 's response was to
take the proposition to a House

armed services sulx.'omm ittee
last spring ...... ) 1:! yea rs after the
project began .
The Navy told the subcommittee, headed by Rep. Charles
E. Bennett, D-Fia., that it was
not inte re s ted in t he ta x.
aspects of the renta l, only In

ho w much money would come
out of its own budge t.
On tha t basis, it said, th e deal
i s cheaper than buyin g. When

Bennett inquired how that was
possible, Rea r Adm. John D.
Chase e xplained it this way:
The value of the dollar
declines every year, and if the
governn1ent took th e dollars
and loaned them out, it also
would collect interest. Betwee n
the two, the dollar depreciates
by 10 per ce nt a year . This

tha t r ate. the government
•pends $20 million more in 1972
va lue - not $10 million less regardless of taxes.
Ultima tely Bennett · and his
committee agreed with the
GAO and slapped the Navy on
the wrist for having evaded the
authority ·of Congress.
Cha se's boss , Assistant
Secretary of Defense Arthur
Mendolia , apolog ized , and
Bennett told the Navy that if it
wanted to rent any more ships
it should come back with a bill
that would give the services
specific authority to do so.
So far, however, " they've
been stalling," says Norris.
One reason may be the dif·

ficulty of explaining how the
government saves $10 million
by spe nd ing $178 million. ·
Mea ntlme, the contract has
been let a nd the ships a re
under construction. A1l nine

are due to be completed by
Dec. 7, 1974" - the 33rd anniversary of Pearl Harbor and the U. S. Navy will of.
ficially be in the ship-rental
business.

I

SBA • another
'

Prins charged that White thew of New York City, who White House staff members
The subcommittee has evi·
WASHI NGTON (UP! ) ranging from bribery. and kick·
Rep. Parren Mitch•ll, D-Md., ba cks on loans and lease dence of 13 loans totaling $ll.6 House pressure was a pplied to was freed from jail in 1969 and persons acting on behalf of
was asked the other day how guarantee s to " sheer mis- million approved under !be grant a $100,000 loan for a under a pardoo issued by Nixon's 1972 re-el ec tion
tenure of form er Richmond fonner professional football President Nixon. Matthew was camp aig n extorted conse rious he considered the management. ''
charges of illegal loan making
And, according to CUrtis Director Tbomas F. Regan and player and co-chairman of the described in testimony as a tri but ions fr om California
recipients of SBA loans . He
and fin ancial manipulation in Prins, chief investigator for the benefiting his ' brother~n-law , Athletes for Nixon orga niza· " black Nixon supporter ."
A third case in volving the said the Senate Watergate
the Small Business Ad· House Banking Committee, the Joseph C. Palumbo, a Charlol· lions in 1968 and 1972.
The White House also has White
a lso
has
House
surfa ced comm ittee
SBA ·probe may reach all the tesvllle. Va ., financier , or
ministration.
been
accused
of
attempting
to
"
reopened"
its
probe
of
SBA
Saturday.
Sen.
Alan
Cranston,
· ''A scandal is a scandal is a way into the White House Pulumbo's business holdings.
Many of them were disa~ cover up the criminal in- D-Calif. , sa id his Senate opera tions in that state.
scandal, " replied Mitchell, before it is resolved.
Russell Hamilton , the fanner
The hearings are designed to proved or withdrawn after the ves ti gation of an SBA bankin g subcom mi ttee was
adding that in its own way, the
(Continued on Page 31 l
borrower , Dr . Thomas Mai- investigating a llegations that
SBA investigation is every bit resolve the charges against the investigation began.
as serious as the Watergate SBA so that the small business
subcommittee can act on
affair.
A week of testimony into the legislation increasing the
SBA activities in Richmond, SBA 's loan-making authority
Va., and other offices governed by $2.3 billion. Subcommittee
by the 2S.year-&lt;&gt;ld agency tend members believe the charges
NO. 44
SU-N-DA-Y,-D-EC-EM_B_E_R
- - - - - - --:-PA:-:G.E
to bear him out. Congressional are so serious that the agency VOL. R
investigators now believe that should not be given $2 billion ~~--~------------at least 22 other SBA offices more to spend until a full in·
are involved . in wrongdoing vestigation has been made.

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GARY NffiERT, 12, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Nibert,
Addison, is pictured here with one of 73 deer tagged allhe
Quaker State Service Center checking station No. 68 last
week. Nibert got his 8 point buck in Addison Twp., on Friday.
The 1973deer gun season ended al5 p.m. Saturday. On right
is Bob Saunders, manager of Qual-.er State Serviee Center.

•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Treasury Saturday halted sale
of U.S. Savings Bonds because
Congress allowed the nation's
credit to run out at midnight
Friday.
A Treasury .. statement said
sale of series E and H savings
bonds was suspended because.
Congress -embroiled in . a
filibu ster on a campaign reform
amendment - failed to increase
th e ceiling on the national debt.
At midnight the debt ceiling
reverted to its .. " permanent"
base of $400 billion, far below
the present level of indebted·
ness. meaning the government
could no longer sell bonds or
otherwise borrow money .
The Treasury statement expressed confidence that 11authority will be gran ted shortly,
making it possible to reswne
normal issuance of bonds ."
On Capitol Hill it was
ex pected the debt legislation
would move ahead again next
week .
The Treasury said a · short
delay would not result in a loss
to purchasers or disrupt payroll
savings plans because all bonds
issued in December will bear
interest from Saturday, the
first of tile month .
The Treasury told its issuing

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CHARLES OHLINGER OF Middleport proudly displays .
the 9 point buck deer he bagged ea rly Friday morning (n
'salem Twp ., near Langsville.

.Israel's father
TEL AVN (UP!) _ Fonner
Prime Minister David BenGw-ion, who in 1948 declared
the birth of the nation of Israel
and then led the infant state
through two wars of survival,
died Saturday at the age of 87.
The " Father of Israel" died
from Complications of a stroke
suffered Nov. 18. His son, two
daughters and personal physi·
clan were at hls 'bedside in
Sheba Medical Center when he
died at 11 :06 a.m. ( 4 a .m.
EST), the national radio said.
His wife Paula died in 1968.
'
FWleral services were tenialively scheduled for Monday at
Sde Boker-the Negev Desert
kibbutz Ben-Gurion called home
since 1963.
The government said his body
would lie in stale in the

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forecourt of the Knesset (parliament) building in Jerusalem
beginning Sunday morning and
would be taken to Sde Boker
Monday.
Ben-Gurion, whose nam e
·means son of a lion, had a
history of illnesses in the past
several years.
During his last hospitaliza·
·
lion, Ben.{iurion received
a
steady stream of visitors,
including Prime Minister Golda
Meir and Defense Minister
Moshe Dayan.
All his adult life, Ben-Gurion
pursued his dream of living in
a reborn Jewish state and those
who followed him through half
a century of confrontation with
the Turks, the British and the
Arabs, and almost as much
political infighting with his

•

agents they could accept
applications for bonds but could
not issue them.
The Treasury aiso announced
these other steps because of the
impasse over the debt ceiling :
-Certain special Treasury
securities held by foreign
monetary atJthorities which
were scheduled to malw-e in
the coming days were adv8nce
refund~ into new special
issues Friday to avoid a cash
drain.

- If a temporary debt ceiling
is not enacted by Monday
morning, the regular weekly
auction of $4.3 billion in
Treasw-y bills scheduled then
will be postponed. If possible, it
would be held 'fuesday.
- If the Monday auction is
not held, the Export-Import
Bank will auction $1:8 billion in
three-month
Export-Import
Bank bills for payment on
Thursday. Proceeds would be
used tp pay outstanding Export·
Impor t Ban k ·tnd e btedness t o

th~i~:~:C~. of spec ia1

obliga·

lions of the United States to
governmen t trust funds such as ·
social security will be su'spended until a high~r debt ceiling
becomes effective.

,.

dead

IS

fe llow J ews. knew his private was both prime minister and
vision of Zion reborn.
defense minister of a fledgling
·It was a vision that he · nation under attack by five
recalled having five years after Arab states.
his birth Oct. 16,1886, as David
Ben Gurion led Israel through
G(-eefl in the Czarist-ruled its war of ·independence and
Polish town of Plonsk.
guided the nation as prime
Not long after he reached minister for a total of 12 years.
O.ttoman Palestine as a steer· His tenn in office was broken
age-class voyager 19 years by voluntary retirement from
Iater, th e name ha d be come 1953 to 1955 and he was· at the
Ben.{iurion. In tile restored helm through the 1956 war.
Biblical tongue that would later
His final retirement from
bind Jews from all over the ' public life came in 1963 when
world, it meant "son of a lion he began devoting more time to
hts' second career of wrt'""g.
Cub. "
w•
th
k
B ;., ·
te th
d
On May 14, 194B, e stoc Y
en:uurton wro
ousan s
little man with the cherubic of arttcles a~d pamphlets and
fa ce stood in a crowded, stuffy several mullt-volume books on
Tel Aviv museum hall and Israel and Ztomsm. He was
f th
.
solemnIy read out the Decla ra· wor ki ng on a hts1ory o
e
h J . .h
th t·
fhi
·
1
1
tion of Independen ce of t e ewts peop e a
e une o s
stale of Israel. The next day he death.

• •

~riSIS
WASHINGTON (UP1) Sen.
Herman Talmadge, J).{;a., Saturday
predicted that unless farmers re(:eive
adequate fuel suppltes, food rationing
could result to 1974.
In a letter to President Nixon,
Talmadge sald his olitce had been
.swamped with calls from Georgia far·
mers who cannot get enough fuel to run
their tractors and harvest their crops,
"Our farmers ha:ve heeded the call
of the Secretary of Agriculture for all-&lt;&gt;ut
production in 1974," he wrote, "but now
they fear they will not receive adequate
fuel to produce the additional food
supplies that the nation's consumers
need..''
He added that many farmers cannot
getfuelbeeausc independent jobbers and
distributors who supply them are being
forced out of business by tbe refusal of oil
companies to make deliveries.
Talmadge backed up his food
rationing
predtctioh by
citing
Agriculture Department statistics that
show there would be a tight supply and
demand situation even without the
· 1s.
energy crts
.

'

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•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
honeymoon is over for special
Watergate ·p rosecutor Leon
Jaworski.
After a month on tbe job,
Jaworski has drawn criticism
from the White House and
praise from skeptics who
originaUy feared that he would
curtail the Watergate in·
vesligalion.
Since Nov. 1 when he was
named to replace fired
prosecutor. -Archibald Cox,
Jaworski has Indicted one
lormer White House aide, obtained a guilty plea frO!n a
second, overseen the fining of
two oil companies for Illegal
contributions for President
Nixon's 1972 campaign and won
a bailie to have tapes of Nixon's
Watergate conversations
turned over to federal court.
He also has gained the
support of an 8Q.member
prosecution staff, including 36
lawyers, who originally threat·
ened inass . resignation when
Nixon fired Cox.
Jaworski suggested last week
he may even ask the White
Houae for the entire three years
of tapa made in Nixon's offices
and on hla telephones.
While House Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler labeled the
proposal "nonsense" and continued with a slinging tlttack on
members
the prosecution
ala~ who he said ~d dllplayed

or

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ingrained suspicion and vise·
era! dislike for this President
and this administration."
Jaworski was asked if this
attack signaled that " your
honeymoon with the White
House is over.''
"I'm not sure there ever was
a honeymoon," replied Jawor·
ski, whose appointmenf had
been appr6ved by tile Presi·
dent. "Jlm just here to do a job
and I'm going tOdo it."
11

. One of Jawor:;ki's most
Jaworski turned down the
severe tests came on Thanks· lawyers' request for more time
givillg Eve when White House and an hour later they were in
lawyers J. Fred Buzhardt and court revealing the latest fault
Leonard Garment came for the . in the tapes.
first time to his fortress-like
The 68-yeti~-&lt;&gt;ld Texas lawyer
office less than five blocks from also appears to have gained the
the White House . They told him confidence of Congress. There
an 1S.minute gap had been are indications that legislation
discovered in one of the c"ritical Proposed earlier ordering the
Watergate tapes and pleaded courts to appoint a Watergate
for more tlme to find an prosecutor may be abandoned
explanation.
(Continued on Page 31)

Hotel maid may get $10,000
AUSTIN, Tex. (upi ) -Esther
Marie Bellard, 19, is a shy hotel
cleaning maid who earns $105
every two weeks. Her husband
lists his income at $300 a
month.
One month ago while making
a bed in the hotel where she
works, Esther Matie came
across a cellophane bag tucked
under the mattress. She noticed
something green in tile bag.
'' When I saw the bag
contained money I just took it
to the hotel manager," she
said. "I didn' t know how much
was there until he counted it in
front of me."
The manager counted $10,000
in '$100 bills.
" People leave a lol ·behind in
their rooms but this is the
biggest thing I've 'ever found, "
Mrs .. Bellard said.
.

The hotel manager contacted
local' police who investigated
the find for the past month but
could not tw-n up tile owner.
"The last person who stayed
in the room was interviewed
and he denied any knowledge of
the money, " said police Capt.
Bob Parsons. " After our
investigation failed to deter·
mine. who the lawful owner
was, we felt we should follow
channels to dispose of it."
. On Monday the money will be
turned over to a district cow-t
where anyone who thinks he
has a legitimate claim to it can
come forth and argue his case.
Esther Marie Bellard will be
there for one. If the legitimate
owner is not found, she will be
the likely choice to receive the
$10,000.

;.

Esther, her husband and
three-year-&lt;&gt;ld daughter Tiffy
hope to receive the money by
Dec. 30, their wedding anniversary.
They said they have a· dream
house in mind, one with a big
kitchen, a living room and a
room for Tiffany to play in .
" We both love the color
blue,'' Esther said, exchanging
glances with her husband over
Tiffany's bobbing head. " If we
get the money, we will put blue
carpet in the living room for
sure."
Her husband smiled.
" We courted for almost two
years," he said. &lt;I She was
always honest with me and
never kept anything from me . I
was glad she gave the money
back .''

•'

too good
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Sen .
Abraham Ribicoff, D.Conn.,
proposed Saturday to outlaw all
tax advantages thai u:_s. oil
companies receive for opera·
lions in Arab countries that
refuse to supply the United
States with oil.
Ail President Nixon remained
at the While House for a
weekend of conferences with
his top energy advisers, Ribic·
off said he would introduce a
bill next · week that would
. tax
pro h ibit cIa'uns for foretgn
d'ts .1 d 1 ti
ll
1 ' 01
ere
ep
e
on.
a
owances, intangible drilling expense
deductions and other sucl\ tax
b k
j d b
U S
c~~o:ati~::.oyi~ Mi~dle ·East
.
ki
t . th
.1
natbtOns ta ng par m e 01
em argo.
" Our policy of giving major
·oil companies billion-dollar tax
breaks for producing oil that
d b
we so desperate1y nee , ut
,1 1 h il b t
.
can ouc , a
u surpasses
the Russian grain deal in the
annals of American deception,"

to offer tax preferences to
companies for finding and
producing oil "in the very
Middle Eastern countries that
have .cut us off. "
In an attack on what he
called "petropolitics," Ribicoff
complained that if a foreign U.
S. subsidiary pays $10 million
in taxes to Saudi Arabia, the
patent company can subtract
$10 million from its tax bill to
the U. S. government.
"Because of this interpreta·
lion of the foreign tax.credit, U.
S . corporations in 1970 earned
$1,005,000,000 on mining and oil
. operations abroad, but paid not
one penny in U. S. taxes on that
income,,. he said.
tJ. S. companies also can
claim an automatic· 22 per cent
depletion allowance from the
government on all their foreign
and domestic earnings, regard·
less of the amoWlt invested, he
added.
"Imagine the average taxpayer who earns ~10, 000 a year:
being able to knock off $2,200
before even opening up hls
Form 1040," Riblcoff said.
Furthennore, he said,· U. S.
corporations get a double write·
off for tile same capitl\1
investment because in addition
to the depletion allowance, they
can claim a deduction. for
intangible drilling expenses the time and effort it takes to
tap a productive well. Both cost
the Treasury $1.8 billion a year,
he said.

I

ByJAYGIBIAN
COLUMBUS &lt;UPII - Families may literally en.d up with their
furniture in. their fireplaces this winter trying to stay warm, Roger
Dreyer,executive :vice president of the Ohio Petroleum Marketers
Association, said here.
Home thermostats may have to be turned far below that currently·
suggested 68-degree setting and Americans may have to get used to
cold homes, he said.
"lt any part of the nation has a really cold winter, there will be a lot
of sick and shivering families," said Dreyer. " A 68-degree settmg wtll
just not do it as Hit as fuel oil is concerned because there just is not
enough product to go around,"
Dreyer , who several weeks ago
predicted nationwide gasoline rationing
within 60-90 days, blamed the shortage on
electric utility companies.
' 'Prest'denl Nixon has osked the

OETROIT (UP!) - Ford
Motor Co. said Fr1day
workers at the Cleveland
Stamptug Plant and at the
Ford plant at Canton, Obto, .
were laid · off Indefinitely
mainly because of parts
shortages.
AI tbe Cleveiand plant, 253
of the 3,600 workers were
laid off, wblle 12 workers
were laid off at Canton In the
cbassts division.
:::::;::::::::::::::8:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

ASSESSMENT UP
SANTA ANA, calif. (UP!)The California Board of
Equalization has assessed the
Western White House at $1.5
million, $130,oo!i more than the
assessment earlier this year by
the county tax assessor, it was
announced Friday.
SHORT WEEK .
WARREN, Ohio (UP!) - A
cutback in production has
resulted in shorter work weeks
at the General Motors Packard
Electric plant here beginning
Monday. About 3,800 of the
13,000 employes will have the
shorter ·weeks .
CHECKS ON TIME
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - State
Auditor Joseph Ferguson said
Friday all Aid to Dependent
Children checks would be
mailed on tiine for December.
Ferguson said earlier this
week he thought there would be
a delay because the state
Welfare Department failed to
provide his office with
requested audit information.
He said the .probletn was
resolved Wednesday.

been caused by industry and, specifically'
e]et:tric power companies/' he said.
"In the last fiv€ ~mars electric utilities
have increased thPk use of home .heating
oil by Stl- pet.," he said . "They say they
are usi ng coal, but they are shooting fuel
(Continued on Page 31 )

Kissinger trying
to revive talks
0

By United Press International
Soviet and U.S. diplomats to
Secretary of State Henry A. discus$ the breakdown in the
Kissinger Satw-day conferred military withdrawal talks.
with U.N .. Secretary General
Israeli Premier Golda Meir
Kurt Waldheim in an effort to said despite the postponement
revive the suspended cease-fire of the cease-fire nedgotlations,
talks between Israel and Egypt. prospects for the forthcoming .
Egypt said a resumption of Middle East peace conference
the ti:tiks would be useless ·as in Geneva have not dimmed.
Israel charged that its forces The Arabs disagreed and said
had encountered fire on three the meeting was in jeopardy.
fronts , Egyptian, Syrian and
A • U.N. spokesman said
Lebanese.
Waldheim used the top-ranking
The latest reported violations American in the United Na·
of .the 38-day-&lt;&gt;ld cease-fire lions, Undersecretary General
came only one day after Israel Bradford Morse, as a goreported Egyptian troops tried between with Kissinger, who
to punch their way through its was staying at a New York
positions along the canal in five hotel. Kissinger is scheduled to
sporadic attacks that were visit the Middle East in the
repulsed.
near futw-e.
The Israeli command Satur·
Morse briefed Kissinger on
day reported small arms fire the latest developments · and
from elements of the Egyptian Waldheim held a lengthy
2nd and 3rd .a rmy along the telephone conversation with
Suez Canal. Several mortar Kissinger. Morse · was briefed
shells were fired from Kafr before and debriefed by WaldHarpab on the Syrian front and heim after the Kissinger talk.
unidentified tight arms fire was
Satw-day's move by Kissinger
reported near the northern was the first open act by him
frontier village of Zarail, since he returned from around
opposite Lebanon.
the world tour of the . Middle
In cairo, · the Egyptian · East and Aaia. He drew up the
government spokt:"!sman called six~point cease-fire agreement
for the United States and that was signed by the
Russia to pressw-e Israel into Egyptians and Israelis Nov. 11.
withdrawing its troops .. aionr
KILLED BY TRAIN
the Suez canal. He satd an) DOVER, Ohio (UP! ) _
further cease-ftre. talks alon! William Chenot, 65, was killed
with Cairo-Suez Htghway woul&lt;Friday night when .his car was
be useie:"'.
,struck by a train at a crossing
Egyptian gove~ent source. which had no warning fisher~.
satd that Prestdent Anwatth Oh'10 Highway Patrol said.
Sadat met separately wtth e

Blank in tape studied
NEW \VRK (U P!) - Elec·
Ironies experts studied one of
President Nixon's Watergato
tapes Satw-day to determine if
an Ill-minute blanked-&lt;&gt;ul por·
lion can be restored.
White House counsel Leonard
Garment told reporters Friday
that the tape was sent to the
Federal Scientific Corp., a New
York laboratory. Electronics
experts say that in some
instances a series of "signal
enhancement" procedures can
be used to revive ·at least ·
portions of such faulty tapes,
The~pe was made during a
June 20, 1972, conversation
between President Nixon and
his former top aid~, H. R.
Haldeman, three days after the
bugging and b~ak-in of Democralic national headquarters at
the Watergate.

It was one of several tapes
turned over to U.S. District
Judge' John J. Sirica last week
by the White House. The others
remained at the cow-thouse
under 24 hour guard.
.The President's long-time
personal secretary, Rose Mary
Woods, told Sirica last week
that she inadvertently spoiled
18 minutes of the taped
conversation while transcribing
it at her offite.

marshals Thursday.
Four of the other Watergate
tapes were cleared Friday with
the agreement of White House
lawyers for use by the special
grand jury investigating
charges of a cover-up of the
scandal.
.
.
The lawyers told Sirica and
Watergate prosecutors there
was no reason why the grand
jury should not be given access
to tile tapes, all of them dated
· in March. They record conver·
A spokesman for tile firm salions Nixon had with aides
declined Saturday to discuss John W. Dean III, Haldeman,
ihe reported enhancement tests and John D. Ehrlichman plus
or the tape's whereabouts. But former Attorney General John
the White House and the N. Mitchell,
prosecutor's office said there
Sirica Monday will begin
was no reason to believe that reviewing four other Watergate
tape was not still in the hands tapes which the White HouSe
of Federal Scientific, where !be says should be kept confidential
reel was taken in a carefully on grounds of executive privilepacked lead container by U.S. ge.

1,.

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~:::::::::::::::::: : : : : : : :::: : :!:::::: :: :::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:; .~=~~~n ·~~o~;::,e~~tw~~ uss~o!~:!:i~:

Oil deal.

19

Petroleum spokesman
lays blame for fuel
shortages at door of
electric utilities s·

Fanners need fuel
•
•
or rattomng
sure

Jaworski .showing determination :~~:!~!r~::~o~:fF£~~~~
FORD LTD BROUGHAM 4 DOOR

atergate

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20 - The Sundav Times· S.nllpel, Sw1&lt;la)', Dee. 2, 1973

Pupils

Beat ...

giVIng

pageant

•••

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·'"'

BY KATIE CROW
SALEM CENTER - A
pageant, 11 The Spirit of ChristITl"S," will be presented by the
pupils of Salem Center
Elementary Monday at 7:30
p.m. under the direction of
Mrs . Maurita Miller, vocal
music teacher.
Assisting Mrs . Miller will be
Nykle Whitle)', Olive Page,
Carol Evans, Winifred Naas;
Anna E. Turner and Roberta
Wilson, principal.

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•

OTHF:RS TAKING PART in "The Spirit of Christmas." front row. are Mike Willford,
shoemaker , back row ~ l~r~ Barbara Peyton, spirit of music, Dennis Thornton, drummer boy,

Van Willford, king winter , Carl White, snowman and Teresa White, spirit of Christmas .

r-------------------------~

! Area Deat.h s
RUTH SANSBURY
MID DLEPORT - Mrs. Ruth
Sansbury, Middleport. d ied
Friday after noon at Hol zer
Med ical Cent~r at the age of 64 .
Born March 8, 190 9 in
Cheshire, Mrs. Sansbury was
th e daughter of the late George
and Florence Ra lph Gardner .
She was also preceded in deat h

by a hrot her, Carl Ga rdner .
A membe·r of the Old Kyg er
Free Will Ba pti st Chu r ch and a
me....,ber of th e wo men 's
auxiliary of the A mer ic an
Legion , Middleport. she is
survived by her husban d, Roy
Sansbury, a daug ht er , Mrs.
Jack {Lorraine) Neff. M iddl eport i a son, Dr. Ke ilh Riggs,
Po meroy; t wo sister s, Mrs.
Henry { Helen ) Ca rp enter ,
Middl eport, and Mrs. Millard
(Louise) Gilmore, Cheshire ;
th ese
brothers,
Arthur ,
Columbus r Mark and Wayne,
Fostor ia ; Floy d, of Ch.es hire,
and George Leo of Cheshire ;
seven grandchildren and four
great-gran de hi·ld ren .
An employee of Holsum
Ba kery, Middlepo rt, for 12
years, Mrs. Sans bur y a11en ded
th e M id d leport Churc h of
Christ .
Services w ill be held Monday
at 1 p.rn. a t the Rawlings-Coa l s
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Wilbur Perr in officia ting .
Buria l will be in the Ches hire
Gravel Hill Ce metery. Friends
wi ll be received by th e fam ily
today, fr om 2-4 and 7-9.

..

•

MANDA' BLACKBURN
VINTON ,...- Mr s. Manda C.
Black burn, 87, a r esident o f Rt..
2, Vinton, died at 7 p.m . Fr iday
at her home.
Bo·rn Oct . 20, 1886, she was
th e daughter of th e late Mose
and Octav ia Hatfel t Christ ian.
He"r first .. hu sband, John B.
Van.;;e, died J une 4, 1903.
Children surv i vi ng lh&lt;it union
arc Landon Vance , Freeborn,
Ky .; Mrs. Addie Ing ram ,
Pr ic hard , W . Va.; Clau de
Vance, Vin fon ; Hom er Va nce,
Rt. 2, Vinton; Joh n Vance, Rt .
2. Bidwel l ; Sid Vance, R1. 1,
Vinton ; Blaine Vance, Rt. 2,
Sidweli , and Lawren ce Vance
of Merin a, Calif.; 50 grand.
100
great.
chi ld ren ,
grandchildr en, and on e greatgreat - grdndch i ld ;
t hree
sisters, Cora Justus, Stone,
. Ky ., and Sadie Blackburn and
Lilli e Elders, Freeborn , Ky.;
two hali "brot hers. Flannery
Mounts, Eldr idge. Ky . a nd
Nelson Mount s, Gil bert , W . Va .
Services wiil be announced
by the McCoy -Moore Funeral
Home at Vinton .
CLAIR PHILLIPS
WELLSTO N Clai r A.
Phillips. 85, Rf. 3, Wellston , a
nati ve of MeiQs County , died at
no on Friday at the Wel lston
Nur si ng Home. She was born
Apr il 14, 1888 in Rulland to th e
late Char les Smith and Mary
J(1ne Thomas Smi th.
Mrs Phil liPs ·spe nt he r life in
Wellston and lhe Wilkesville
area. She was a member of the
Firs! Presby terian Chur ch of
Wellston, Wilkesville Gr ange.
Wel ls ton and Wilkesville
Garden Club5, and 1he Wellston
Senior Cl1izenc; Club. Her"
husband. Roy , died in 1953.
Surv ivo r s include three sons,
Kelson J Phi llips, Wellston ;
Rog er Pt1illips , Sco ttsdale.
Ariz.. and John of Bedford,
Pa ., and seven grandchildren.
Funeral sctv1ces wi ll be held
Bt 1 p.rn. Monda y fr om th e
Jen k i ns Funer&lt;~l Chape1 at
We_!l ~lo,n . wi th Rev John Taylor
otftctal1ng. Buna l will folldw in
Vinton
Mem or i?JI
Pa r k.
Fr iends may cal l allhe fune ral
horne afler lO a.m. today.

CHERYL BURNS
CLIFTON ~ Che ryl Jun e
Burns, 20, Clifton, died Fri day
at St. Marys Hospi tal , Huntington. Miss Burns was bor n
Dec . 5, 1952 at Pa rk ersburg.
She is survived by her
parents, George A. and June
Henry Burns ; one sister , Mrs .
Beverly · Hester. New Haven;
her maternal grandmother ,
Mr s. Ned Henry , (Ii f ton, a nd
two nieces, Sta cy and M ind y
Hester, New Haven .
M is.s Bu rn s was a senior at
Mar sha l-l Universi t y. She was a
graduate of Wahama High
School where she wa s an hon or
student. She was a member of
the Wahama High School Band
and act ive in 4-H . She · was a
member of the Clifton United
M ethodist Chur ch where she
was· organist.
·
Funeral services witt be held
Monday at 1::.:1 0 p.m. at the
t_ ' Cli ft on . Un i ted Methodist
Church w: lh tl".e Rev . James C.
Dempsey · off ici ating . Burial
will be in Kirkland - Memory
Garden s. Friends may call at
the Foglesong Funeral Home
todar from 2 to .1 and 7 to 9.

t

.

~

.

G.E.D. tests

! recommended

AGNES McGHEE
POM E ROY
Funeral
serv ices for Agnes Hy sell
M cG hee, former Meigs County
resident who died in Patrnetfo,
GALLIPOLIS - John R.
Fla ., were held at 1 p. m .
Longley, Chief Examiner for
Monday at the Ewi ng Funeral
Home with th e Rev . Carl Hic ks the G.E.D. testing program in
officiat ing.
southeastern Ohio Saturday
Mr s. M cG hee spent her
married life in Columbus until encouraged persons who have
she and her hUsband retired to not completed their formal
Pa lmetto five years ago. She
high school training to consider
was a member of the Maple
to establish an
Grove Methodist Church i n acting
equivalency
rating. This rating
, Columbus ahd of the Palm etto
Methodi st Church.
,
is generall)' accepted by many
Preceding her in de{lth were
employers
in place of the
her parents, Arthur W. Hy ~e ll
uncompleted high school.
and Bertha Hy se ll Oliver, and
a brother, Cecil Hysell.
training.
The
G.E .D.
Surviving are her hu sba nd,
Equivalency
is
not
a
high
David McGhee. a sister, Mrs .
school diploma but serves in
Allen ( Polly ) Eichinger of
Pomeroy ; a brother. Byron
place of one.
Hysell of Columbus. and
The G.E.D. test consist of
severa l ni eces and nephews . .
five
subjcts which covers the
Attending the services from
ou t of town· were Mr . and Mrs.
following areas: Correctness
Byron Hysell, Mr . an_d Mrs .
and effe~tiveness of exEdgar McGhee, Mr . and Mrs .
pression, interpretation of
Donald McGhee and Mr . and
Mrs. George Garrett. all of
reading materials in social
Colum bus." Burial was in Beech
studi es, interpretation of
Grove Cemete ry .

to non-grads

reading mater,ials in the
WAYNE RUPE
, naturc,~l
sciences,
inRUTLANO
Funeral
terpretation of literary
se rvices for Way.n e R. Rupe,
materials
and
general
68, were conducted Thur sday
at th e Rutland Nazarene
mathematical ability.
Chu rch with the Rev . Lloyd
Each subtest requires apGrimm, Jr ., offic iating . Burial
proximately two hours testing
was in, the Miles Cemetery .
Pallbearers were Wendell
time, and it is recommended
Gra te, Will iam Brown. David
that it be given over a two-day
Gra te, Herbie Grate, Mike

G rat e. and Victor Nel son. Qut.
of -cou nfy friends and relatives
her e for the funeral services
were Mr s. Don·ald Dav idson, a
daughter from Indio, Calif .;
Lewis A . (Ja kel Rupe, a son,
·Phoenix, Ariz.; Pvt. Steven
Rupe, San .Antonio, Tex; Mrs.
Mabel Reeves. daughters,
Judith an&lt;:1 Janet and the ir
ch ildren, Akrori; Mr . and Mrs .
Dwight Mutchler , Athens, and
Ke ith Mutchler, Co lumbus.
FLAVY SIGMAN
MIDDLEPORT - Flavy E .
Sigman, 75, Pearl St .. Mid ·
dleport, d ied Friday at
Vetera ns Memorial Hosp ital
follow i ng a long illness.
Mr, Sigman was born March
24, 1901 in Baxton County, W .
Va .• the son ot the late Wiley
.and Sa rah Woods Sigman. Nov .
?.6, 1923, he married Pearl
·soggs, who surv ives as do five
sons, Roy , Langsville,· Paul.
MiddlepOrf ; Elmer, Toledo;
Charl es,
Lima;
Robert,
Pomeroy; six daughters, Mrs.
Charles ( Marjor ie) Nelson,
Paden. City, W.Va.; Mrs. Gary
( Helen) Alexander, Paden
City ; Mrs. Eldon ( Kathleen)
Pa i nter , California ; Mrs.
Arn o ld
( Mary)
Green ,
Ch.;:.rles ton , W. Va .; Mrs.
Robert (Ru th ) Bobo, Langsvil le; Mrs . Dennie (Agnes)
Thompson, Stafford, Ariz.; a
brother. Emory Sigman, St.
Albans, W. Va. ; a sister, Mr s.
Vivia n Neal, Waco , Tex. ; 39
grandchildren, and six greatgrandchildren.
Preceding him in death were
his parents, a daughter, Erma
Hay nes, May 5, 1971. three
sis ter s and three brothers.
Mr . Sigman was a member
of the M idway Church where
ser vices ~ill be held at 1 p.m.
on Monday w ith the Rev.
Worley Haley and the Rev .
L e l a nc! Haley offic iating .
Friend s may ,c all -after 2 p.m .
today until 11 a.m. M onday at
the Wa lker Fu nera l Home in
Rutland . The fami ly w i ll
receive fri ends from 2 to 4 and
fr om 7 to 9 p.m. today . Buria l
wi ll be in the Mil es Ce metery .
DALE STILES
POMEROY Word was
received here of the deat h of
Dale F . Stiles, 80 , K ent, Ohio.
Mr . St i les, a former ...esident of
Pomeroy
prior
to
his
retirement, . was employed at
Kent State Univers ity . His wife
is the former Mae Carson
Stiles . Funeral services will be
he ld Monday at Bi sler Funeral
Home with burial at Kent .
MARY LETTS

GALLIPOLIS ~ Mrs. Mary

Inez Letts, 65 , a native of Galli a
Couri fy, died Friday in the ·
ureenf1eld Manor , ureenr1eta.
Ohio.
Mr s. Letts was the w idow of
How ard
Letts,
Ia rmer
Gallipolis mer c hant. Sh e
resided at 97 Prospect St.,
Chillicothe . She was born in
Walnut Twp., on Dec. 15, 1907,
daughter of the late William·
and Dora Null.
. Surviving are two sons,
Howard Letts, Jr ., and BillY
Letts, both of Chillicothe, llnd a
brother, FlOyd, Zanesville.
One brother , Herschal ,
preceded her in death.
Funeral services will be held.
1: 30 p.m . Sunday at t he Haller

•

peiiod.
It is recommended that

Youngsters tal&lt;mg part are,
fir st grade, Annie Barrett,
Peggy Barr ett, Glenn Chick,
Brenda Garnes•. Angel Har.
man , Brian Hicks , Beth
Hobstettei , Ma ry Co leman .
Jodie Kunath , Dickie Jarvis ,
Greg
Lath ey,
Johnny
Long streth, Terry Mullins ,
Gary Rife , M issy Riggs ,
Wanda Vaughn .
Second Grade. Cindy Priddy ,
Barrett.
Michael
Keith
Wi ll1ord, Ter ina Johnston, Jeff
Gilkey , Paul Janey , Mary Lou
Sturgeon , David Mould . Davld
Barr, Veron ica Scott , Jennifer
Jones, Diana Hypes, Kenny
Sue Thorhas, Ricky _ Zeigler,
Danny Blackson , Kenny Sue
Thomas and Jeff Gilkey.
Th ird Grade, Carrie Adkins,
Linda Ashburn , Gloria Barrett,
Donna Coleman, Sonya Cutler,
Leann Davis, Harold Fetty,
Steven
Gardner ,
Brenda
Graham, Keith Hypse, Rocky
Johnson, Keith Johnston, Gene
Kle in , . Jimmy Metheney,
Shirley McDonald , Bernard
Romine·, Brenda Smith, linda
Smith, Timmy Spires, Mike
Fromm, Tammy Ward , Anita
Basham, Sean Graves, Pearl
Coleman and Carl White .
Fourth
Grade,
Mark
Blackson, Henry Young, Roy
Coleman, Lynn Coleman, Chris
Lee, Paul Graves, Mark
McGuire, William Graham,
Tammy
Fetty,
Patri cia
Kunath , Connie Adkins, Viola
Wil l iams, Teresa Basham ,
Bonnie
Sm ith,
Teresa
N icholson . Denise s·arrett,
Jimmy Peyton. Curt Smith,
Timothy Jarrell.
Fifth Grad~ . Ricky Ashburn,
Timothy
Basham, · Dean
Colwell, Patti Dugan, ~lliam

Veterans Memorial'ilospltal
ADMITTED- Ervin Gerald
Baumgardner,
PomeroyWilliam Hunt, Albany.
'
DISCHARGED - Judith .
Elkins, Donald Greene, Ruth
Hennessy, Elmer Still, Bea
Autherson, Ralph Brooks.

TOY BAND - This toy band is composed of front row, 1r, Beth Hobstetter, Gary Rife, Terry Mullins, Missy Riggs,
Angel Harmon. Glen Olick, Dickie Jarvis, and Jodie Kunath;

back row, Annie Barrett, Brenda Garnes, Brian Hicks,
. Peggy Barrett, John Longstreth, Greg La they, Mary
C&lt;Jleman and Wanda Vaughan.

'

Dyer. Shei la Fetty, 1eresa
Fetty , Walter Garnes, Katrin~
Hale, Sandra Herdman, Floyd
Holliday , Terry Hutton , Joyce
Janey ,
Stoney
Johnson,
Tammy Kunath, Mary Matson,
Annette Romine, Denis Shuler ,
Jeffrey
Smith,
Charles
Stewart, Dwight Sturgeon ,
Kelly Thomas. John Van
Meter,
Michael
Zeigler ,
Mic hael Graham, Delmar
Davis.
Six th grade, Greg Walker,
R ic hard
Basham ,
Mike
M c Guire, Floyd McClellan ,
Craig
Nicinsky,
Lanny
Longstreth, Kay Jacks, Penny
Ja cks, Linda Jacks, Teresa
White, Van Willford, Barbara
Peyton, Vick ie Garnes, Karen
Mould, Connie Smith, Darlene
Priddy, Tammy Shuler, Paul
Matson, David Thornton, Kyle
Rupe, Paul and John Sturgeon.
Stage managers are Van
Willford and David Thornton.

45 Listed on
honors rolls
RAL IN t:. ~ t-orty -five Southern District junior high pupils
were listed on the second sixweek honor roiL six with
perfect averages of A. They
were Brice Hart, Seth Hill.
Brent Patterson , Tammy
Bradford, seventh grade, and
Jaye Ord and Sharon Bikacsan , eighth grade. Other eighth
graders were Perry HilL Steve
Hilt , Okey Kiser , Teresa
Meadows , Joy Neigler, Jean
Ritchhart , Patty Robinson ,
Joh n Sayre, Diana · Shoults,
R ic hard Teaford , Carmen
Thoma, Mike Warner , Debbie
Weddle , Barbara White, Nile
Wilson , Myra Woods , Lois
Bailey, Steve Baker , Shelly
Chevalier, Larry Fisher , and
lvaunna Powell. ·
Sevent"h ·Qraders. Janis
CarnahanBecky Crow, Teresa
Ervi n, Norn1a Jarrell, Jack
Lyons, Carol Morris, Beverly
Mclain, Julie Nance, Cindy
Patterson, Debbie Pickens,
Marie Pickens, Dave Robinson , Penny Smith, Pamela
. Spencer, Kelly Taylor, Nicki
Van Meter, John West , and
Dennis Wolfe.

MANGER SCENE- Pupils taking part in the manger see· . are l.r, Paul Sturgeon, John
sturgeon and Lanny Longstreth, shepherds, Penny Jacks, Mary, Craig Nicisky, Joseph, Kyle
Rupe, David Thornton and Paul Malson, Wisemen.
RETURNS HOME
POMEROY - PhUlip GinPOMEROY - Mr. Edd)' ther has returned to his home
Educator's Schedule for Dec . 3 in Middletown after spendin~
- 7 in Meigs Count)':
several days here with his
TUESDAY - Salisbur)' Ele., grandmother, Mrs . Oris '
8:30.11 a.m. ; Rutland Salem Ginther . He came especially to
St., 7:45- 8:30 p&lt;m.
deer hunt.
THURSDAY - Hysell Run,
7:30 - 8 p.m.
FRIDAY - Chester Ele .,
9:30-11 a.m.; Eastern, 11:15 •
!2 :15p .m.; Hemlock Grove, J.
2; Dick's Grocery, 2:15. 3:15;
Morgan's, 3:30 - 4:30; Rock
Springs, 4:45 - 5:45; Ches.ter,
17 DEER BAGGED
GALLIPOLIS - S.venteen 6: 15 - 7; Tuppers Plains, 7:30 deer were killed Frida)' 8;30.
MONDAY
'bringing the four day total to
NOWYOU~NOW
GALLIA CoWJcilll4 Daughters;
107 deer bagged since the gun
The New York telephone of America will meet at th~
deer season bEgan in . Gallia · book has a listing Eor Murder home of Elizabeth White at
Count)' last Monday.
Inc .
7:30p.m.

Eddy's schedule

ATTEND SERVICES
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles E. Blakeslee attended·
the funeral of Mrs. Leonard H.
Blakeslee, sister-in·law of Mr.
Blakeslee, at East Lansing ,
Mich. last week. They were
accompanied
by
their
daughters, Mrs. Melviil Circle,
Columbus, and Mrs. James
Butcher, Middleport. Burial
was made at· Beech Grove
Cemetery in St. Johns, Mich.

adults who wish to prepare for
the tests enroll, if possible , in a
local adult education program.
Testing will b€ conducted on
an appointment basis daily.
Individuals who wish to take
the G.E.D . test may obtain
applications and counseling
conerning
the
G.E.D.
Equivalency
from
the
Guidance Office at Gallia
Academy High School, 340
Fow-th Avenue, Gallipolis, or
by calling 614-446-3250.

"

..

for shale gas

,.

•

.

LANCASTER, Ohio (UP!) Shale Gas, Inc., Columbus, in
cooperation with the local
government, has begun drilling
an experimental well here to
extract shale gas.
Company founders Bob
Dewey, Zanesville, and
Thurlow Weed, Columbus, are
using a rotary rig to go down
about 1,250 feet.
The two, both geologisis,
believe they can be successful
by tapping small pockets of
gas.
Dewey said there is shale
WJder the entire eastern half of
the state, . and if this well is
successful, otherS will be
drilled elsewhere.
The pair expected the shale
from this well would be enough
to serve 40 homes and some
industries in the area .

3-PIECE BATH SET

Vanities
Medicine Cabinets

St.,

Chllllcothe. Burial will be in
Mound
Hill
Cemetery ~
Gall ipolls.
'

•
~ ~~ m

court

POMEROY
Eight
defendants were fined and 22
others forfeited bond in Meigs
Count)' Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Michael L. Smith,
Perry, . Fla ., $25 and costs,
hunting deer without permit ;
William A. Atkins, Gallipolis,
$10 and co8ts, speeding; Janice
I. Cardone, Racine, $11 and
costs, speeding; Ethel L. Orr,
Long Bottom, Rt. I, $15 and
costs, passing school bus ;
Dallas D. Jarrell, Racine, $15
and costs, speeding; Richard
L. Mollohan, Gallipolis, $5 and
costs, speeding; Donald A.
Hartung, Middleport, $5 and
costs, defective exhaust
system; Roger Stewart.
Pomeroy, $14 and costs,
speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were
Kermit Gilkey, Cheshire, Rt. 2,
$25 bond, parking on roadway;
Steven L. Boswell, Alvon, W.
MRS. BEA LISLE, AN ANTIQUE collector for years and a
membEr of the advertising staff of this newspaper, is going for an Va ,, $25, speeding ; Leonard D.
Siders, Racine, Rt. 2, $350,
old fashioned OJristmas tree.
She has been collecting old fashioned ornaments including driving while intoxicated; John
the long'8one candle holders for a number of )'ears and now has · N. Cousey, Reedsville, Rt. 1,
$27.50, failure to yield; Kenenough of everything to do her tr~ patterned after yule trees of
neth Hanning , Nelsonville,
several generations ago. She'll string popcorn and cranberries to
Jack L. Swain, Gallipolis,
add to the ornamental effect and around the base will use an
Oliver A. Cole, Sr., Middleport,
antique German Nativity scene.
Joseph Cerullo, Masontawn,
Fire departmetns should note that although Mrs. Lisle will
Pa ., Robert Gordon, Uhricasuse the old-time candle holders wiUt real candles, the candles
ville,
James H. Lochary, Glen
will not b€ lighted . That'll save a run during the holiday season.
Ridge, N. J ., Preston P. Richmond, Orlando, Fla., Jeffrey
SPEAKING OF FIRE DEPARTMENTS, Middleport
P. Leiter, Columbus, and
Volunteer firemen were delighted with Ute turnout for their
Chancey
B. Ross, Pittsburgh,
Santa's Workshop show held in the Meig• Junior High School at
Pa ., $27.50 each, speeding;
Middleport Thursday night.
James
R. Mees, Pomeroy,
Some 600 persons attended and merchants were most
$40.50, speeding; James L.
cooperative in purchasing blocks of tickets in suppo•t of the show
Mash, Jr. , CrookSville, Rt. 2,
- a well received event.
$27.50,
no operators license;
The Middleport department says "thanks" to all who helped.
Edgar Sanders, Columbus,
By the way, the firemen in Middleport will be making their
$32.50,
speeding; Ronald L.
first round through Middleport today collecting staples and nonVogler, Stewart, $27 .50, experishables in their annual project to provide food baskets for t~e
pired · operators license ;
needy. The door-to.OOor campaign will begin about noon. If you
Richard E . Cady, Crooksville,
don't plan to b€ at hOme, you can leave your contribution on the
and
Clair Russell, Roseville,
ti&lt;irch. Money, by uie way, will also be received and this will be
$209.55 each, spotlighting deer;
ilsed to purchase non-perishables when they are needed. The
l)loney will be reserved solely for Utis purchase, Fire Chief Bob Harley Adams, Reedsville,
$2&gt;9.55, possession of illegal
llyer reports.
deer parts; Paul W. Run)'on,
:· Anyone knowing of a needy family or the ramily itself
Minersville , Rt . I, $259.»,
jleeding help can drop a postcard to Box 144 at Middleport or can
hUnting deer out or season,
telephone 992-314&gt; so that the family will be registered to receive
$259.55, taking deer out of
:~food basket. Distribution of the baskets will be on Dec. 23.
season;
Chester Estep,
Chillicothe, $27.50, speeding.

- ~llegal

~ot

money
to politics

COLUMBUS (UPI) - $1,000 to the National
rhard E. Eckert, the deputy Democratic Congressional
Committee
m
rector of the Ohio Depart- Dinner
I;Jent of Insurance, contributed Washington .
ISz,900 lllegally to political
- $300 to the National Tribmpaigns using cor~orate ute to Sen. Vance Hartke, D·
nds from his then emplo)'er, Ind.
- $500 to the Ohio Republie American Ship Building
., Cleveland, it was reported can Finance Committee.
lfl,day.
Eckhert conceded the con~ The Cleveland Plain Dealer, ' tributions violated both state
)#1 a story by two of its state- and federal law but the one
~use correspondents·, BrianT.
year statute of limitations on
fsher and Robert Caldwell the state Jaw .has expired and
14uoted Eckhert as saying he he was promised lmmunity
:!\las given a $5,000 bonus on when he gave the testlmony to
l:lept. 25, 1970 and told by his staff lawyers for the office of
~erica n Ship Building superthe
special
Watergate
[j,rs to make tb€ following con- Prosecutor, The Plain Dealer
libutions :
.
said.
~ - $500 to the Mosher for ConEckert said he was directed
;tress (on behalf of Rep. to make the contributions by
'P'arles Mosher, R-Oberlin). Robert E. Bartlome, secretary
" - $500 to the Cloud for Gov· of American Ship Building.
10\ronnr C&lt;Jmmittee on behalf of
"There was a question in my
~oger Cloud, unsuccesSful Re- mind whether it was legal," he
~~~~~:'
candidate
for said. "I asked (other corporate
!I
in 1970
officials) and was told it was

:

PULLERS TO MEET
POMEROY - The Southern
Ohio
Tractor
Pullers
Association will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday
at
the
secretary's of£ice on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
legal ... it was OK."
George Steinbrenner Ill,
board chairman or American
Ship Building, also is under
investigation for allegedly
illegally channeling corporate
funds to tb€ Nixon campaign
and for allegedly destroying
and falsifyi ng documents
concerning the contrivutions .
Kenneth E. DeShetler, director of the state Insurance De·
i&gt;artment, declined immediate
comment.
"I'm going to talk to the gov·
ernor's office and with him
(Eckert ) about this," said
Deshetler.
"We really need mote inror·
mation before we can make
any decisions about what, if
anything, could or should be
done with regard to Mr. Eck·
e~t," said Max Brown! Gov.
John J. Gilligan's executive assistant for commWliCations.

1 .

I
1

Gallia

By Hobart Wilson Jr.

r.

:

GARY Bane, Gallia C&lt;Jun()''s Juvenile Court probation officer, submitted an article recently which should be of interest to
many parents in the communi()' . It reads :

+++

TOO BUSY TO LISTEN

Contractors face new bidding rules

Dear Folks,
Thank you for everything, but I am going to Chicago and try
and start some kind of new life.
You asked me why I did those things and why I gave you so
much trouble, and the answer is easy for me to give you, but I am
wondering if )'Ou will understand.
RemembEr when I was about six or seven and I used to want
you to just listen to me? I remember all the nice things you ~ave
me for OJristmas and my birthday and I was really happ)' with
the things - about a week - at the tlme I got the things,, but the
rest.of the time during the year I really didn't want presents, I
just wanted all the time you to listen to me like I was somebod)'
who felt things too, because I remember even when I was young 1
felt things. Bu.t you said )'OU were busy.
Mom, you are a wonderful cook, and you had everything so
clean and J'OU were tired so much from doing all those things that
made you busy ; but, you know som•thing, Mom? I would have
liked crackers and peanut butter just as well if you had only sat
down with me a while during the day and said to me : "Tell me all
about it so I can maybe help you understand!"
And when Donna came I couldn't understand why everyone
made somuchfuss because !didn't think it was my fault that her
hair is curly and her skin so whlte, and she doesn't have to wear
glasses wiUt such thick lenses. Her grades were better too,
weren't they?
U Donna ever has children, I hope you will tell her to just pay
some attention to the one who doesn't smile very much because
that one will really be crying inside. And when she's about to
bake six dozen cookies, to make sure first, that the kids don't
want to tell her about a dream or a hope or something, bEcause
thoughts are Jmportant too, to small kids even though they don't .
have so many words to use when they tell about what they have
inside them.
I think that all the kids who are doing so many things that
grown-up~ are tearing out their hair worrying about are really
· lookirig for somebody that will have time to listen a few minutes
and who really and truly will treat Utem as they would a grown·
up who might be useful to them, you know - polite to them, If you
' folks had ever said to me : "Pardon me" when you interrupted
me, I'd have dropped dead!
'
U anybody asks you where I am, tell them I've gone looking
for somebody with time because I've got a lot of Utings I want to
talk about.
Love to all,
Your Son

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ON PASSBOOK SAVINGS
COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY
-AS-K-US_A_BO::._::
UT:..;__...,
EQUALS ANNUAL

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Phone 675-1160
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THE GALLI POLIS SAVINGS
and LOAN ·COMPANY
' OPPOSITE POST OFFICE

· "SAFE SAVINGS SINCE 1886"

PHON.E 446-3832

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

* Kids love 'em

* Extra seating for adults
* 18 inches high for best leg rest .

* Long wearing upholstery fabrics in your
choice of colors

* Home shopping convenience - by mail
PERFECT CHRISTMAS GIFTS FOR EVERYONE
Gets the kids off floor for television.
Great for parties, too .

ORDER NOW

Trouble-free construction: soft foam top with
hard foam base. You'll be well ' pleased-

Introductory price only 24.88 each plus tax
and delivery. A very good buy.

GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERI,NG
Gal&amp;polis

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:Lyntronics
ORDER FORM
:P.O.Box 124
Date.______
:Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
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;Please ship the CUSIES indicated (fi 11 in "how many"
:under each fabric type and across from each color):
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Crushed velvet Plain nvlon Floral nylon
:Red
'Rust
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Green
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Gold
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:sPECIAL: Factory Cho1ce, get free del1very
:MEN: Leather-1 ook brown vinyl , tough, washac-b'le - -- -

NEED ANEW
FLOOR FOR THE
HOLIDAYS?

AND INSTALL AT••.

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CERTIFICATES
IN lliiS AREA

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749 Third Ave.

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PAID ON SAVINGS

INVENTORS OF
NO WAX
SHINYL• VINYL

WE GIVE ESTIMATES
-

Point Pleasant

YIELD OF ...

lliE HIGHEST VIELD

ORDER a CUBIE now for each of your ch ildren
and all of your friends. It's a fun gift.

THE NO WARP •• .sHINYL VINYL

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INTRODUCING

CONGOLEUM

Carolina Lumber &amp;Supply Co.

P AYIN~G=-===}o

. GUARAITEED SAYIISS

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times .. , Mothers march on polio scheduled
Jan. 28 ... Adelphi College snapa Rio Grande C&lt;Jllege's two-year4~ame basketball winning streak ~76 in Madison Square
Garden in New York after Redmen blow 17-point advantage
midway Utrough second half ... At()'. H. W. Olerrington reelected
president of Gallipolis Golf Club ... Coach Dick Shrider's GAHS
Blue Devils rip Oak Hill71J.57 in cage opener ... Pete Niberfand
Larry Radeker named First Team All-Southeastern by SEOAL
football writers ... Rio Redmen suffer second straight setback,
93-92, to Villanova in overtime before 8,000 fans in Philadelphia
Arena .

SEETHE LATEST
PATTERNS OF

312 6th St.

LOAN

AND

+++,

1

Don't A~logize - Modernize

WE'RE
NOW

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS

Wall Panels

Floor Covering

GUN STOLEN
GALL IP OL IS
Gallia
County sherif£'s deputies
Saturday investigated the theft
of a 12 gauge shotgun. Eddie ·
Bare of Bare Rd. off Neigh·
borhood Rd . said the gun was
taken sometime during the
week fr om his home.

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INDUSTRIES

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timetables established by the
EEO.

THE SIGN OF
SAFE SAVINGS

is a product of
FRENCH COLONY

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valued at SOO ,OOO or more to
increase minority hi ring on
state projects.
He said the requirements
cover the state 's major
in
metropolitan
areas
Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, Akron, Youngstown ,
Toledo and Dayton.
Evans SAid complete compliance for each metropolitan
area must be achieved by 1977,
acco rding
to
specific

COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - New
bidding requirements for all
contractors went into errect
Friday, guaran t eeing
minorities and women equal
opportwtities to work on statefunded construction projects.
Equal Employment Opportunity ( EEO) Director Art
Evans
said
the
new
requirements will force all
contractors with 50 or more
emp!Qyes and all projects

THE CUBIE

FIRST CHILD BORN
POMEROY - Sgt. and Mrs.
Roger D. Free, the former
Jud)' Righthouse, El Paso,
Tex., are announcing the birth
of their first child, a six pound
son, William Roger, Nov. 10 at
the William Beaumont Army
Medical Center. Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
William Righthouse, and
paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Lafe R. Free, Sr .,
Portsmouth.

Fun~ral Home; South Pi:tint

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well started

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Johnny
Vanscoy, Rt., Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Florence Cash, Buffalo,
and Patricia Condee, Point
Pleasant.

B,v /Job llm'flirlt

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POMEROY - The energy cr[;;is is the topic of the hour.
It seems to me, it's comparable to pollution and litter.
Everyone talks about it bot seemingly, little is being done.
People seem most willing to cooperate in taking some steps
but leadership has been weak in pointing out what they're really
to do. Certainly. evervone is willin2 to sacrifice a little as they go
along rather than to be hit with situations which cause hardships
or ~ven unsafe circumstances.
·
' C&lt;Jnfusion reigns.! mean, we're told of Ule power shortage that we must conserve electric energy. Exterior Christmas
decorations are to b€ unlighted. Then, power companies report
that in Ohio we're fine, we should go right ahead with lighted
?Utdoor decorations. One thing that's pretty definite , if An1erica
IS darkened a rising crime rate will go even higher.
As a saving measure on gasoline, one state official in Ohio
bas suggested a four day week so that state emplo)'eS won't be
using gasoline to travelto work on the fifth da)'. You can imagine
that wtth another day off the)''re going to hang around the house
and leave their car in the garage. SURE, THEY ARE! !!
Already, the economy is taking on a dtm picture because of
the energy crisis. Workers are being laid off, businesses will
suffer~ shoppers can't get to the establislunents and naturally,
the enttre problem will mushroom affecting all of us.
M~antime, the biggest thing that C&lt;Jngress seems to be doing
is establish Daylight Savings Time.
Frankiy, I can 't believe the WHOLE thing.

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Experimental

22 Don't
:
Dateline
appear r
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Of the Bend .._._

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21 - T_!&gt;e Swulay Times -S.ntinel, Sunday, O..c. 2, 1973

Ph. 446-1995

:Enclosed is check or M.O. for $27.63 each (24-88 +
1.00 tax+ 1.75 delivery). No C.O.D. orders. Shipments
outside Ohio do not pay tax. For "Special'' or for
•• . __
:orders of 3 or more each, pay no delivP.ry charges.
SUPER RESTFUL FOR TIRED LEG~ :Name
P~one._ _ _ _ __
ESPECIALLY DESIGNED
·Street
Clty-;o-..---:----.--.---,
· TO AID ciRCULATION.
.
:state or R:D.
Zip
Amt.Enclosed $. _ __

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:inquiries answered promptly.

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Lyntronics Corp.

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20 - The Sundav Times· S.nllpel, Sw1&lt;la)', Dee. 2, 1973

Pupils

Beat ...

giVIng

pageant

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BY KATIE CROW
SALEM CENTER - A
pageant, 11 The Spirit of ChristITl"S," will be presented by the
pupils of Salem Center
Elementary Monday at 7:30
p.m. under the direction of
Mrs . Maurita Miller, vocal
music teacher.
Assisting Mrs . Miller will be
Nykle Whitle)', Olive Page,
Carol Evans, Winifred Naas;
Anna E. Turner and Roberta
Wilson, principal.

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OTHF:RS TAKING PART in "The Spirit of Christmas." front row. are Mike Willford,
shoemaker , back row ~ l~r~ Barbara Peyton, spirit of music, Dennis Thornton, drummer boy,

Van Willford, king winter , Carl White, snowman and Teresa White, spirit of Christmas .

r-------------------------~

! Area Deat.h s
RUTH SANSBURY
MID DLEPORT - Mrs. Ruth
Sansbury, Middleport. d ied
Friday after noon at Hol zer
Med ical Cent~r at the age of 64 .
Born March 8, 190 9 in
Cheshire, Mrs. Sansbury was
th e daughter of the late George
and Florence Ra lph Gardner .
She was also preceded in deat h

by a hrot her, Carl Ga rdner .
A membe·r of the Old Kyg er
Free Will Ba pti st Chu r ch and a
me....,ber of th e wo men 's
auxiliary of the A mer ic an
Legion , Middleport. she is
survived by her husban d, Roy
Sansbury, a daug ht er , Mrs.
Jack {Lorraine) Neff. M iddl eport i a son, Dr. Ke ilh Riggs,
Po meroy; t wo sister s, Mrs.
Henry { Helen ) Ca rp enter ,
Middl eport, and Mrs. Millard
(Louise) Gilmore, Cheshire ;
th ese
brothers,
Arthur ,
Columbus r Mark and Wayne,
Fostor ia ; Floy d, of Ch.es hire,
and George Leo of Cheshire ;
seven grandchildren and four
great-gran de hi·ld ren .
An employee of Holsum
Ba kery, Middlepo rt, for 12
years, Mrs. Sans bur y a11en ded
th e M id d leport Churc h of
Christ .
Services w ill be held Monday
at 1 p.rn. a t the Rawlings-Coa l s
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Wilbur Perr in officia ting .
Buria l will be in the Ches hire
Gravel Hill Ce metery. Friends
wi ll be received by th e fam ily
today, fr om 2-4 and 7-9.

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MANDA' BLACKBURN
VINTON ,...- Mr s. Manda C.
Black burn, 87, a r esident o f Rt..
2, Vinton, died at 7 p.m . Fr iday
at her home.
Bo·rn Oct . 20, 1886, she was
th e daughter of th e late Mose
and Octav ia Hatfel t Christ ian.
He"r first .. hu sband, John B.
Van.;;e, died J une 4, 1903.
Children surv i vi ng lh&lt;it union
arc Landon Vance , Freeborn,
Ky .; Mrs. Addie Ing ram ,
Pr ic hard , W . Va.; Clau de
Vance, Vin fon ; Hom er Va nce,
Rt. 2, Vinton; Joh n Vance, Rt .
2. Bidwel l ; Sid Vance, R1. 1,
Vinton ; Blaine Vance, Rt. 2,
Sidweli , and Lawren ce Vance
of Merin a, Calif.; 50 grand.
100
great.
chi ld ren ,
grandchildr en, and on e greatgreat - grdndch i ld ;
t hree
sisters, Cora Justus, Stone,
. Ky ., and Sadie Blackburn and
Lilli e Elders, Freeborn , Ky.;
two hali "brot hers. Flannery
Mounts, Eldr idge. Ky . a nd
Nelson Mount s, Gil bert , W . Va .
Services wiil be announced
by the McCoy -Moore Funeral
Home at Vinton .
CLAIR PHILLIPS
WELLSTO N Clai r A.
Phillips. 85, Rf. 3, Wellston , a
nati ve of MeiQs County , died at
no on Friday at the Wel lston
Nur si ng Home. She was born
Apr il 14, 1888 in Rulland to th e
late Char les Smith and Mary
J(1ne Thomas Smi th.
Mrs Phil liPs ·spe nt he r life in
Wellston and lhe Wilkesville
area. She was a member of the
Firs! Presby terian Chur ch of
Wellston, Wilkesville Gr ange.
Wel ls ton and Wilkesville
Garden Club5, and 1he Wellston
Senior Cl1izenc; Club. Her"
husband. Roy , died in 1953.
Surv ivo r s include three sons,
Kelson J Phi llips, Wellston ;
Rog er Pt1illips , Sco ttsdale.
Ariz.. and John of Bedford,
Pa ., and seven grandchildren.
Funeral sctv1ces wi ll be held
Bt 1 p.rn. Monda y fr om th e
Jen k i ns Funer&lt;~l Chape1 at
We_!l ~lo,n . wi th Rev John Taylor
otftctal1ng. Buna l will folldw in
Vinton
Mem or i?JI
Pa r k.
Fr iends may cal l allhe fune ral
horne afler lO a.m. today.

CHERYL BURNS
CLIFTON ~ Che ryl Jun e
Burns, 20, Clifton, died Fri day
at St. Marys Hospi tal , Huntington. Miss Burns was bor n
Dec . 5, 1952 at Pa rk ersburg.
She is survived by her
parents, George A. and June
Henry Burns ; one sister , Mrs .
Beverly · Hester. New Haven;
her maternal grandmother ,
Mr s. Ned Henry , (Ii f ton, a nd
two nieces, Sta cy and M ind y
Hester, New Haven .
M is.s Bu rn s was a senior at
Mar sha l-l Universi t y. She was a
graduate of Wahama High
School where she wa s an hon or
student. She was a member of
the Wahama High School Band
and act ive in 4-H . She · was a
member of the Clifton United
M ethodist Chur ch where she
was· organist.
·
Funeral services witt be held
Monday at 1::.:1 0 p.m. at the
t_ ' Cli ft on . Un i ted Methodist
Church w: lh tl".e Rev . James C.
Dempsey · off ici ating . Burial
will be in Kirkland - Memory
Garden s. Friends may call at
the Foglesong Funeral Home
todar from 2 to .1 and 7 to 9.

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G.E.D. tests

! recommended

AGNES McGHEE
POM E ROY
Funeral
serv ices for Agnes Hy sell
M cG hee, former Meigs County
resident who died in Patrnetfo,
GALLIPOLIS - John R.
Fla ., were held at 1 p. m .
Longley, Chief Examiner for
Monday at the Ewi ng Funeral
Home with th e Rev . Carl Hic ks the G.E.D. testing program in
officiat ing.
southeastern Ohio Saturday
Mr s. M cG hee spent her
married life in Columbus until encouraged persons who have
she and her hUsband retired to not completed their formal
Pa lmetto five years ago. She
high school training to consider
was a member of the Maple
to establish an
Grove Methodist Church i n acting
equivalency
rating. This rating
, Columbus ahd of the Palm etto
Methodi st Church.
,
is generall)' accepted by many
Preceding her in de{lth were
employers
in place of the
her parents, Arthur W. Hy ~e ll
uncompleted high school.
and Bertha Hy se ll Oliver, and
a brother, Cecil Hysell.
training.
The
G.E .D.
Surviving are her hu sba nd,
Equivalency
is
not
a
high
David McGhee. a sister, Mrs .
school diploma but serves in
Allen ( Polly ) Eichinger of
Pomeroy ; a brother. Byron
place of one.
Hysell of Columbus. and
The G.E.D. test consist of
severa l ni eces and nephews . .
five
subjcts which covers the
Attending the services from
ou t of town· were Mr . and Mrs.
following areas: Correctness
Byron Hysell, Mr . an_d Mrs .
and effe~tiveness of exEdgar McGhee, Mr . and Mrs .
pression, interpretation of
Donald McGhee and Mr . and
Mrs. George Garrett. all of
reading materials in social
Colum bus." Burial was in Beech
studi es, interpretation of
Grove Cemete ry .

to non-grads

reading mater,ials in the
WAYNE RUPE
, naturc,~l
sciences,
inRUTLANO
Funeral
terpretation of literary
se rvices for Way.n e R. Rupe,
materials
and
general
68, were conducted Thur sday
at th e Rutland Nazarene
mathematical ability.
Chu rch with the Rev . Lloyd
Each subtest requires apGrimm, Jr ., offic iating . Burial
proximately two hours testing
was in, the Miles Cemetery .
Pallbearers were Wendell
time, and it is recommended
Gra te, Will iam Brown. David
that it be given over a two-day
Gra te, Herbie Grate, Mike

G rat e. and Victor Nel son. Qut.
of -cou nfy friends and relatives
her e for the funeral services
were Mr s. Don·ald Dav idson, a
daughter from Indio, Calif .;
Lewis A . (Ja kel Rupe, a son,
·Phoenix, Ariz.; Pvt. Steven
Rupe, San .Antonio, Tex; Mrs.
Mabel Reeves. daughters,
Judith an&lt;:1 Janet and the ir
ch ildren, Akrori; Mr . and Mrs .
Dwight Mutchler , Athens, and
Ke ith Mutchler, Co lumbus.
FLAVY SIGMAN
MIDDLEPORT - Flavy E .
Sigman, 75, Pearl St .. Mid ·
dleport, d ied Friday at
Vetera ns Memorial Hosp ital
follow i ng a long illness.
Mr, Sigman was born March
24, 1901 in Baxton County, W .
Va .• the son ot the late Wiley
.and Sa rah Woods Sigman. Nov .
?.6, 1923, he married Pearl
·soggs, who surv ives as do five
sons, Roy , Langsville,· Paul.
MiddlepOrf ; Elmer, Toledo;
Charl es,
Lima;
Robert,
Pomeroy; six daughters, Mrs.
Charles ( Marjor ie) Nelson,
Paden. City, W.Va.; Mrs. Gary
( Helen) Alexander, Paden
City ; Mrs. Eldon ( Kathleen)
Pa i nter , California ; Mrs.
Arn o ld
( Mary)
Green ,
Ch.;:.rles ton , W. Va .; Mrs.
Robert (Ru th ) Bobo, Langsvil le; Mrs . Dennie (Agnes)
Thompson, Stafford, Ariz.; a
brother. Emory Sigman, St.
Albans, W. Va. ; a sister, Mr s.
Vivia n Neal, Waco , Tex. ; 39
grandchildren, and six greatgrandchildren.
Preceding him in death were
his parents, a daughter, Erma
Hay nes, May 5, 1971. three
sis ter s and three brothers.
Mr . Sigman was a member
of the M idway Church where
ser vices ~ill be held at 1 p.m.
on Monday w ith the Rev.
Worley Haley and the Rev .
L e l a nc! Haley offic iating .
Friend s may ,c all -after 2 p.m .
today until 11 a.m. M onday at
the Wa lker Fu nera l Home in
Rutland . The fami ly w i ll
receive fri ends from 2 to 4 and
fr om 7 to 9 p.m. today . Buria l
wi ll be in the Mil es Ce metery .
DALE STILES
POMEROY Word was
received here of the deat h of
Dale F . Stiles, 80 , K ent, Ohio.
Mr . St i les, a former ...esident of
Pomeroy
prior
to
his
retirement, . was employed at
Kent State Univers ity . His wife
is the former Mae Carson
Stiles . Funeral services will be
he ld Monday at Bi sler Funeral
Home with burial at Kent .
MARY LETTS

GALLIPOLIS ~ Mrs. Mary

Inez Letts, 65 , a native of Galli a
Couri fy, died Friday in the ·
ureenf1eld Manor , ureenr1eta.
Ohio.
Mr s. Letts was the w idow of
How ard
Letts,
Ia rmer
Gallipolis mer c hant. Sh e
resided at 97 Prospect St.,
Chillicothe . She was born in
Walnut Twp., on Dec. 15, 1907,
daughter of the late William·
and Dora Null.
. Surviving are two sons,
Howard Letts, Jr ., and BillY
Letts, both of Chillicothe, llnd a
brother, FlOyd, Zanesville.
One brother , Herschal ,
preceded her in death.
Funeral services will be held.
1: 30 p.m . Sunday at t he Haller

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peiiod.
It is recommended that

Youngsters tal&lt;mg part are,
fir st grade, Annie Barrett,
Peggy Barr ett, Glenn Chick,
Brenda Garnes•. Angel Har.
man , Brian Hicks , Beth
Hobstettei , Ma ry Co leman .
Jodie Kunath , Dickie Jarvis ,
Greg
Lath ey,
Johnny
Long streth, Terry Mullins ,
Gary Rife , M issy Riggs ,
Wanda Vaughn .
Second Grade. Cindy Priddy ,
Barrett.
Michael
Keith
Wi ll1ord, Ter ina Johnston, Jeff
Gilkey , Paul Janey , Mary Lou
Sturgeon , David Mould . Davld
Barr, Veron ica Scott , Jennifer
Jones, Diana Hypes, Kenny
Sue Thorhas, Ricky _ Zeigler,
Danny Blackson , Kenny Sue
Thomas and Jeff Gilkey.
Th ird Grade, Carrie Adkins,
Linda Ashburn , Gloria Barrett,
Donna Coleman, Sonya Cutler,
Leann Davis, Harold Fetty,
Steven
Gardner ,
Brenda
Graham, Keith Hypse, Rocky
Johnson, Keith Johnston, Gene
Kle in , . Jimmy Metheney,
Shirley McDonald , Bernard
Romine·, Brenda Smith, linda
Smith, Timmy Spires, Mike
Fromm, Tammy Ward , Anita
Basham, Sean Graves, Pearl
Coleman and Carl White .
Fourth
Grade,
Mark
Blackson, Henry Young, Roy
Coleman, Lynn Coleman, Chris
Lee, Paul Graves, Mark
McGuire, William Graham,
Tammy
Fetty,
Patri cia
Kunath , Connie Adkins, Viola
Wil l iams, Teresa Basham ,
Bonnie
Sm ith,
Teresa
N icholson . Denise s·arrett,
Jimmy Peyton. Curt Smith,
Timothy Jarrell.
Fifth Grad~ . Ricky Ashburn,
Timothy
Basham, · Dean
Colwell, Patti Dugan, ~lliam

Veterans Memorial'ilospltal
ADMITTED- Ervin Gerald
Baumgardner,
PomeroyWilliam Hunt, Albany.
'
DISCHARGED - Judith .
Elkins, Donald Greene, Ruth
Hennessy, Elmer Still, Bea
Autherson, Ralph Brooks.

TOY BAND - This toy band is composed of front row, 1r, Beth Hobstetter, Gary Rife, Terry Mullins, Missy Riggs,
Angel Harmon. Glen Olick, Dickie Jarvis, and Jodie Kunath;

back row, Annie Barrett, Brenda Garnes, Brian Hicks,
. Peggy Barrett, John Longstreth, Greg La they, Mary
C&lt;Jleman and Wanda Vaughan.

'

Dyer. Shei la Fetty, 1eresa
Fetty , Walter Garnes, Katrin~
Hale, Sandra Herdman, Floyd
Holliday , Terry Hutton , Joyce
Janey ,
Stoney
Johnson,
Tammy Kunath, Mary Matson,
Annette Romine, Denis Shuler ,
Jeffrey
Smith,
Charles
Stewart, Dwight Sturgeon ,
Kelly Thomas. John Van
Meter,
Michael
Zeigler ,
Mic hael Graham, Delmar
Davis.
Six th grade, Greg Walker,
R ic hard
Basham ,
Mike
M c Guire, Floyd McClellan ,
Craig
Nicinsky,
Lanny
Longstreth, Kay Jacks, Penny
Ja cks, Linda Jacks, Teresa
White, Van Willford, Barbara
Peyton, Vick ie Garnes, Karen
Mould, Connie Smith, Darlene
Priddy, Tammy Shuler, Paul
Matson, David Thornton, Kyle
Rupe, Paul and John Sturgeon.
Stage managers are Van
Willford and David Thornton.

45 Listed on
honors rolls
RAL IN t:. ~ t-orty -five Southern District junior high pupils
were listed on the second sixweek honor roiL six with
perfect averages of A. They
were Brice Hart, Seth Hill.
Brent Patterson , Tammy
Bradford, seventh grade, and
Jaye Ord and Sharon Bikacsan , eighth grade. Other eighth
graders were Perry HilL Steve
Hilt , Okey Kiser , Teresa
Meadows , Joy Neigler, Jean
Ritchhart , Patty Robinson ,
Joh n Sayre, Diana · Shoults,
R ic hard Teaford , Carmen
Thoma, Mike Warner , Debbie
Weddle , Barbara White, Nile
Wilson , Myra Woods , Lois
Bailey, Steve Baker , Shelly
Chevalier, Larry Fisher , and
lvaunna Powell. ·
Sevent"h ·Qraders. Janis
CarnahanBecky Crow, Teresa
Ervi n, Norn1a Jarrell, Jack
Lyons, Carol Morris, Beverly
Mclain, Julie Nance, Cindy
Patterson, Debbie Pickens,
Marie Pickens, Dave Robinson , Penny Smith, Pamela
. Spencer, Kelly Taylor, Nicki
Van Meter, John West , and
Dennis Wolfe.

MANGER SCENE- Pupils taking part in the manger see· . are l.r, Paul Sturgeon, John
sturgeon and Lanny Longstreth, shepherds, Penny Jacks, Mary, Craig Nicisky, Joseph, Kyle
Rupe, David Thornton and Paul Malson, Wisemen.
RETURNS HOME
POMEROY - PhUlip GinPOMEROY - Mr. Edd)' ther has returned to his home
Educator's Schedule for Dec . 3 in Middletown after spendin~
- 7 in Meigs Count)':
several days here with his
TUESDAY - Salisbur)' Ele., grandmother, Mrs . Oris '
8:30.11 a.m. ; Rutland Salem Ginther . He came especially to
St., 7:45- 8:30 p&lt;m.
deer hunt.
THURSDAY - Hysell Run,
7:30 - 8 p.m.
FRIDAY - Chester Ele .,
9:30-11 a.m.; Eastern, 11:15 •
!2 :15p .m.; Hemlock Grove, J.
2; Dick's Grocery, 2:15. 3:15;
Morgan's, 3:30 - 4:30; Rock
Springs, 4:45 - 5:45; Ches.ter,
17 DEER BAGGED
GALLIPOLIS - S.venteen 6: 15 - 7; Tuppers Plains, 7:30 deer were killed Frida)' 8;30.
MONDAY
'bringing the four day total to
NOWYOU~NOW
GALLIA CoWJcilll4 Daughters;
107 deer bagged since the gun
The New York telephone of America will meet at th~
deer season bEgan in . Gallia · book has a listing Eor Murder home of Elizabeth White at
Count)' last Monday.
Inc .
7:30p.m.

Eddy's schedule

ATTEND SERVICES
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles E. Blakeslee attended·
the funeral of Mrs. Leonard H.
Blakeslee, sister-in·law of Mr.
Blakeslee, at East Lansing ,
Mich. last week. They were
accompanied
by
their
daughters, Mrs. Melviil Circle,
Columbus, and Mrs. James
Butcher, Middleport. Burial
was made at· Beech Grove
Cemetery in St. Johns, Mich.

adults who wish to prepare for
the tests enroll, if possible , in a
local adult education program.
Testing will b€ conducted on
an appointment basis daily.
Individuals who wish to take
the G.E.D . test may obtain
applications and counseling
conerning
the
G.E.D.
Equivalency
from
the
Guidance Office at Gallia
Academy High School, 340
Fow-th Avenue, Gallipolis, or
by calling 614-446-3250.

"

..

for shale gas

,.

•

.

LANCASTER, Ohio (UP!) Shale Gas, Inc., Columbus, in
cooperation with the local
government, has begun drilling
an experimental well here to
extract shale gas.
Company founders Bob
Dewey, Zanesville, and
Thurlow Weed, Columbus, are
using a rotary rig to go down
about 1,250 feet.
The two, both geologisis,
believe they can be successful
by tapping small pockets of
gas.
Dewey said there is shale
WJder the entire eastern half of
the state, . and if this well is
successful, otherS will be
drilled elsewhere.
The pair expected the shale
from this well would be enough
to serve 40 homes and some
industries in the area .

3-PIECE BATH SET

Vanities
Medicine Cabinets

St.,

Chllllcothe. Burial will be in
Mound
Hill
Cemetery ~
Gall ipolls.
'

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court

POMEROY
Eight
defendants were fined and 22
others forfeited bond in Meigs
Count)' Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Michael L. Smith,
Perry, . Fla ., $25 and costs,
hunting deer without permit ;
William A. Atkins, Gallipolis,
$10 and co8ts, speeding; Janice
I. Cardone, Racine, $11 and
costs, speeding; Ethel L. Orr,
Long Bottom, Rt. I, $15 and
costs, passing school bus ;
Dallas D. Jarrell, Racine, $15
and costs, speeding; Richard
L. Mollohan, Gallipolis, $5 and
costs, speeding; Donald A.
Hartung, Middleport, $5 and
costs, defective exhaust
system; Roger Stewart.
Pomeroy, $14 and costs,
speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were
Kermit Gilkey, Cheshire, Rt. 2,
$25 bond, parking on roadway;
Steven L. Boswell, Alvon, W.
MRS. BEA LISLE, AN ANTIQUE collector for years and a
membEr of the advertising staff of this newspaper, is going for an Va ,, $25, speeding ; Leonard D.
Siders, Racine, Rt. 2, $350,
old fashioned OJristmas tree.
She has been collecting old fashioned ornaments including driving while intoxicated; John
the long'8one candle holders for a number of )'ears and now has · N. Cousey, Reedsville, Rt. 1,
$27.50, failure to yield; Kenenough of everything to do her tr~ patterned after yule trees of
neth Hanning , Nelsonville,
several generations ago. She'll string popcorn and cranberries to
Jack L. Swain, Gallipolis,
add to the ornamental effect and around the base will use an
Oliver A. Cole, Sr., Middleport,
antique German Nativity scene.
Joseph Cerullo, Masontawn,
Fire departmetns should note that although Mrs. Lisle will
Pa ., Robert Gordon, Uhricasuse the old-time candle holders wiUt real candles, the candles
ville,
James H. Lochary, Glen
will not b€ lighted . That'll save a run during the holiday season.
Ridge, N. J ., Preston P. Richmond, Orlando, Fla., Jeffrey
SPEAKING OF FIRE DEPARTMENTS, Middleport
P. Leiter, Columbus, and
Volunteer firemen were delighted with Ute turnout for their
Chancey
B. Ross, Pittsburgh,
Santa's Workshop show held in the Meig• Junior High School at
Pa ., $27.50 each, speeding;
Middleport Thursday night.
James
R. Mees, Pomeroy,
Some 600 persons attended and merchants were most
$40.50, speeding; James L.
cooperative in purchasing blocks of tickets in suppo•t of the show
Mash, Jr. , CrookSville, Rt. 2,
- a well received event.
$27.50,
no operators license;
The Middleport department says "thanks" to all who helped.
Edgar Sanders, Columbus,
By the way, the firemen in Middleport will be making their
$32.50,
speeding; Ronald L.
first round through Middleport today collecting staples and nonVogler, Stewart, $27 .50, experishables in their annual project to provide food baskets for t~e
pired · operators license ;
needy. The door-to.OOor campaign will begin about noon. If you
Richard E . Cady, Crooksville,
don't plan to b€ at hOme, you can leave your contribution on the
and
Clair Russell, Roseville,
ti&lt;irch. Money, by uie way, will also be received and this will be
$209.55 each, spotlighting deer;
ilsed to purchase non-perishables when they are needed. The
l)loney will be reserved solely for Utis purchase, Fire Chief Bob Harley Adams, Reedsville,
$2&gt;9.55, possession of illegal
llyer reports.
deer parts; Paul W. Run)'on,
:· Anyone knowing of a needy family or the ramily itself
Minersville , Rt . I, $259.»,
jleeding help can drop a postcard to Box 144 at Middleport or can
hUnting deer out or season,
telephone 992-314&gt; so that the family will be registered to receive
$259.55, taking deer out of
:~food basket. Distribution of the baskets will be on Dec. 23.
season;
Chester Estep,
Chillicothe, $27.50, speeding.

- ~llegal

~ot

money
to politics

COLUMBUS (UPI) - $1,000 to the National
rhard E. Eckert, the deputy Democratic Congressional
Committee
m
rector of the Ohio Depart- Dinner
I;Jent of Insurance, contributed Washington .
ISz,900 lllegally to political
- $300 to the National Tribmpaigns using cor~orate ute to Sen. Vance Hartke, D·
nds from his then emplo)'er, Ind.
- $500 to the Ohio Republie American Ship Building
., Cleveland, it was reported can Finance Committee.
lfl,day.
Eckhert conceded the con~ The Cleveland Plain Dealer, ' tributions violated both state
)#1 a story by two of its state- and federal law but the one
~use correspondents·, BrianT.
year statute of limitations on
fsher and Robert Caldwell the state Jaw .has expired and
14uoted Eckhert as saying he he was promised lmmunity
:!\las given a $5,000 bonus on when he gave the testlmony to
l:lept. 25, 1970 and told by his staff lawyers for the office of
~erica n Ship Building superthe
special
Watergate
[j,rs to make tb€ following con- Prosecutor, The Plain Dealer
libutions :
.
said.
~ - $500 to the Mosher for ConEckert said he was directed
;tress (on behalf of Rep. to make the contributions by
'P'arles Mosher, R-Oberlin). Robert E. Bartlome, secretary
" - $500 to the Cloud for Gov· of American Ship Building.
10\ronnr C&lt;Jmmittee on behalf of
"There was a question in my
~oger Cloud, unsuccesSful Re- mind whether it was legal," he
~~~~~:'
candidate
for said. "I asked (other corporate
!I
in 1970
officials) and was told it was

:

PULLERS TO MEET
POMEROY - The Southern
Ohio
Tractor
Pullers
Association will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday
at
the
secretary's of£ice on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
legal ... it was OK."
George Steinbrenner Ill,
board chairman or American
Ship Building, also is under
investigation for allegedly
illegally channeling corporate
funds to tb€ Nixon campaign
and for allegedly destroying
and falsifyi ng documents
concerning the contrivutions .
Kenneth E. DeShetler, director of the state Insurance De·
i&gt;artment, declined immediate
comment.
"I'm going to talk to the gov·
ernor's office and with him
(Eckert ) about this," said
Deshetler.
"We really need mote inror·
mation before we can make
any decisions about what, if
anything, could or should be
done with regard to Mr. Eck·
e~t," said Max Brown! Gov.
John J. Gilligan's executive assistant for commWliCations.

1 .

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1

Gallia

By Hobart Wilson Jr.

r.

:

GARY Bane, Gallia C&lt;Jun()''s Juvenile Court probation officer, submitted an article recently which should be of interest to
many parents in the communi()' . It reads :

+++

TOO BUSY TO LISTEN

Contractors face new bidding rules

Dear Folks,
Thank you for everything, but I am going to Chicago and try
and start some kind of new life.
You asked me why I did those things and why I gave you so
much trouble, and the answer is easy for me to give you, but I am
wondering if )'Ou will understand.
RemembEr when I was about six or seven and I used to want
you to just listen to me? I remember all the nice things you ~ave
me for OJristmas and my birthday and I was really happ)' with
the things - about a week - at the tlme I got the things,, but the
rest.of the time during the year I really didn't want presents, I
just wanted all the time you to listen to me like I was somebod)'
who felt things too, because I remember even when I was young 1
felt things. Bu.t you said )'OU were busy.
Mom, you are a wonderful cook, and you had everything so
clean and J'OU were tired so much from doing all those things that
made you busy ; but, you know som•thing, Mom? I would have
liked crackers and peanut butter just as well if you had only sat
down with me a while during the day and said to me : "Tell me all
about it so I can maybe help you understand!"
And when Donna came I couldn't understand why everyone
made somuchfuss because !didn't think it was my fault that her
hair is curly and her skin so whlte, and she doesn't have to wear
glasses wiUt such thick lenses. Her grades were better too,
weren't they?
U Donna ever has children, I hope you will tell her to just pay
some attention to the one who doesn't smile very much because
that one will really be crying inside. And when she's about to
bake six dozen cookies, to make sure first, that the kids don't
want to tell her about a dream or a hope or something, bEcause
thoughts are Jmportant too, to small kids even though they don't .
have so many words to use when they tell about what they have
inside them.
I think that all the kids who are doing so many things that
grown-up~ are tearing out their hair worrying about are really
· lookirig for somebody that will have time to listen a few minutes
and who really and truly will treat Utem as they would a grown·
up who might be useful to them, you know - polite to them, If you
' folks had ever said to me : "Pardon me" when you interrupted
me, I'd have dropped dead!
'
U anybody asks you where I am, tell them I've gone looking
for somebody with time because I've got a lot of Utings I want to
talk about.
Love to all,
Your Son

'
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ON PASSBOOK SAVINGS
COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY
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' OPPOSITE POST OFFICE

· "SAFE SAVINGS SINCE 1886"

PHON.E 446-3832

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

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PERFECT CHRISTMAS GIFTS FOR EVERYONE
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Great for parties, too .

ORDER NOW

Trouble-free construction: soft foam top with
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Introductory price only 24.88 each plus tax
and delivery. A very good buy.

GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERI,NG
Gal&amp;polis

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ORDER FORM
:P.O.Box 124
Date.______
:Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
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;Please ship the CUSIES indicated (fi 11 in "how many"
:under each fabric type and across from each color):
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NEED ANEW
FLOOR FOR THE
HOLIDAYS?

AND INSTALL AT••.

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CERTIFICATES
IN lliiS AREA

•

749 Third Ave.

•

PAID ON SAVINGS

INVENTORS OF
NO WAX
SHINYL• VINYL

WE GIVE ESTIMATES
-

Point Pleasant

YIELD OF ...

lliE HIGHEST VIELD

ORDER a CUBIE now for each of your ch ildren
and all of your friends. It's a fun gift.

THE NO WARP •• .sHINYL VINYL

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INTRODUCING

CONGOLEUM

Carolina Lumber &amp;Supply Co.

P AYIN~G=-===}o

. GUARAITEED SAYIISS

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times .. , Mothers march on polio scheduled
Jan. 28 ... Adelphi College snapa Rio Grande C&lt;Jllege's two-year4~ame basketball winning streak ~76 in Madison Square
Garden in New York after Redmen blow 17-point advantage
midway Utrough second half ... At()'. H. W. Olerrington reelected
president of Gallipolis Golf Club ... Coach Dick Shrider's GAHS
Blue Devils rip Oak Hill71J.57 in cage opener ... Pete Niberfand
Larry Radeker named First Team All-Southeastern by SEOAL
football writers ... Rio Redmen suffer second straight setback,
93-92, to Villanova in overtime before 8,000 fans in Philadelphia
Arena .

SEETHE LATEST
PATTERNS OF

312 6th St.

LOAN

AND

+++,

1

Don't A~logize - Modernize

WE'RE
NOW

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS

Wall Panels

Floor Covering

GUN STOLEN
GALL IP OL IS
Gallia
County sherif£'s deputies
Saturday investigated the theft
of a 12 gauge shotgun. Eddie ·
Bare of Bare Rd. off Neigh·
borhood Rd . said the gun was
taken sometime during the
week fr om his home.

•

INDUSTRIES

I

timetables established by the
EEO.

THE SIGN OF
SAFE SAVINGS

is a product of
FRENCH COLONY

I

valued at SOO ,OOO or more to
increase minority hi ring on
state projects.
He said the requirements
cover the state 's major
in
metropolitan
areas
Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, Akron, Youngstown ,
Toledo and Dayton.
Evans SAid complete compliance for each metropolitan
area must be achieved by 1977,
acco rding
to
specific

COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - New
bidding requirements for all
contractors went into errect
Friday, guaran t eeing
minorities and women equal
opportwtities to work on statefunded construction projects.
Equal Employment Opportunity ( EEO) Director Art
Evans
said
the
new
requirements will force all
contractors with 50 or more
emp!Qyes and all projects

THE CUBIE

FIRST CHILD BORN
POMEROY - Sgt. and Mrs.
Roger D. Free, the former
Jud)' Righthouse, El Paso,
Tex., are announcing the birth
of their first child, a six pound
son, William Roger, Nov. 10 at
the William Beaumont Army
Medical Center. Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
William Righthouse, and
paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Lafe R. Free, Sr .,
Portsmouth.

Fun~ral Home; South Pi:tint

. ..

i

well started

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Johnny
Vanscoy, Rt., Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Florence Cash, Buffalo,
and Patricia Condee, Point
Pleasant.

B,v /Job llm'flirlt

I

I

POMEROY - The energy cr[;;is is the topic of the hour.
It seems to me, it's comparable to pollution and litter.
Everyone talks about it bot seemingly, little is being done.
People seem most willing to cooperate in taking some steps
but leadership has been weak in pointing out what they're really
to do. Certainly. evervone is willin2 to sacrifice a little as they go
along rather than to be hit with situations which cause hardships
or ~ven unsafe circumstances.
·
' C&lt;Jnfusion reigns.! mean, we're told of Ule power shortage that we must conserve electric energy. Exterior Christmas
decorations are to b€ unlighted. Then, power companies report
that in Ohio we're fine, we should go right ahead with lighted
?Utdoor decorations. One thing that's pretty definite , if An1erica
IS darkened a rising crime rate will go even higher.
As a saving measure on gasoline, one state official in Ohio
bas suggested a four day week so that state emplo)'eS won't be
using gasoline to travelto work on the fifth da)'. You can imagine
that wtth another day off the)''re going to hang around the house
and leave their car in the garage. SURE, THEY ARE! !!
Already, the economy is taking on a dtm picture because of
the energy crisis. Workers are being laid off, businesses will
suffer~ shoppers can't get to the establislunents and naturally,
the enttre problem will mushroom affecting all of us.
M~antime, the biggest thing that C&lt;Jngress seems to be doing
is establish Daylight Savings Time.
Frankiy, I can 't believe the WHOLE thing.

i

Experimental

22 Don't
:
Dateline
appear r
I

Of the Bend .._._

• •

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r-------------.:...-----------T·
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21 - T_!&gt;e Swulay Times -S.ntinel, Sunday, O..c. 2, 1973

Ph. 446-1995

:Enclosed is check or M.O. for $27.63 each (24-88 +
1.00 tax+ 1.75 delivery). No C.O.D. orders. Shipments
outside Ohio do not pay tax. For "Special'' or for
•• . __
:orders of 3 or more each, pay no delivP.ry charges.
SUPER RESTFUL FOR TIRED LEG~ :Name
P~one._ _ _ _ __
ESPECIALLY DESIGNED
·Street
Clty-;o-..---:----.--.---,
· TO AID ciRCULATION.
.
:state or R:D.
Zip
Amt.Enclosed $. _ __

•

:inquiries answered promptly.

'

Lyntronics Corp.

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l3- 1 ne :Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973
22 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, SWld.ay, Dec. 2, 1973

r

OPEN DAILY
10 TO 9
SUNDAY
2 TO 8

l

OPEl DAILY

OP£111 DAILY
10 TO 9

10 TO 9

OPEN

OPE

TODAY

TODAY

12 NOON
TO

12 00

'

DECEM

8PM

DECEMBER 2 AND 3
LAST

NO. 101

HUTCH
FOOTBALL
UNIFORM SET
~·
~
. • ·1 HECK'S
I, ~ &lt; (

MEDICINE
CABINET

McGRAW
EDISON

I

2
. BURNER
CAMP
STOVE

$266

\( · r,

HECK'S REG. s4.66

.•899

HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK'S

•348
.,......-

HUSKY

~ /~,/

HECK'S REG. •5.88

8921

21· PC. SOCKET SET

•14

LIMIT 5 PER CUSTOMER
1400 PER STORE .
HARDWARE

HARDWARE DEPT.

88

. FESCO
WASTE BASKET .-

HECK'S REG. '27.94

SCOTCH TAPE
ih

.

X 800"

NO. 2935

SWING
TOP

2

291h QTS.

STP GAS .
TREATMENT

Heck's Reg. $35.88

~.

NOT
INCLUDED

NOT AS PICTURED

~ -- -

· LADIES' SHAVER
M icro-twin sha vi ng head ... one si de
lor underarms. 1he other si de · for legs.
FasL sa fe and smooth f emi n ine
_g room ing acti on.

I

•799

HECK'S REG. 59' .

HECK'S REG.
18.99

HECK'S REG. •9.88

HARDWARE DEPT.

BAR
.
STOOLS

$699

SCHICK MIST
HAIRSETTER

MEN'S
OUTER .
WEAR

OFF
.

I

.1 '
· ·1., '

1
;

CHOOSE ·

FA~::TE

: , •a••

. TUM '•

TRANSMISSION

·•

"
• I

.

39~AND 47~

FLUID

.19¢
HECK'S REG. 38'

•1"

The Beaded look, Bust Out, and
'the Short Jacket look.

$344
HECK'S REG. ~4.99
CLOTHING DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

wiches, Tool Has Adjustable

$13.96

Thermostat Contro l and
S;gnol L;ght. All Ch•ome .
Plasti&lt;: Trim .

lo. -\ ·'
1t
.

.,

.

..

~

... [1

~

.......

~

GLOVES

.iQ_ .

JET SET

SWEAT SHIRTS
HEC~~~!EG.

l'laytcx

. S.50

lADIES WRA~GLER

"'

'-. .'J~

J , il ~

"

GIRJ.S BLO_USES
'

. tles"-Gri1!s, Toasts Sond ·

HECK'S REG. 84' ·

CLOTHING
DEPT.

~1.55

~99 ~"~~.~t~::BA~~~

sa~

HECK'S REG. TO s4.99

HECK'S REG.

SUN CHIEF TWIN

COLD SPRAY

· LIGHTED MIRROR

Oesi9ned •spe&lt;:ially lor wamen with glasses
but perfect lor oil women who ore eJO:tro co reful about the ir eye make· Vp applicotion . The
moonllying mirror is many times stronoer than
on narmol co$mltiC morrors .

$3 22

. :$599 ~~

COLGATE
DELSY OR
PLAYTEX
LADY scon
TOOTHPASTE HAND-SAVER
]ISSUE
SUPER SIZE
GLOVES
·
t.e

aDTHING DEPT.

88(

Rolls)

4$100

PACKS

·

HECK'S REG. $8.99

HECK'S REG. 33'

COSMETIC DEPT.

.

LISTERINE

__...._____

~

HECK'S REG. '1.09

HECK'S REG. 88' .

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

.!iiiil

4-WAY

99

CLOTHING DEPT.

ASSORTED STYLES

i

lOO's

68¢

·

PAJAMAS ~&amp; GOWNS

HECK'S REG. '10.99

SLINKEY

CANS

INFANTS &amp;TODDLERS

$

. ePOUCE eSTOCK
eFIRE CHIEF

SPRING
TOY

REG. TO 69•

$466

·- ..-

'1.44

BUFFER IN

3 STYLES

HECK'S REG. 11.12

HECK'S REG.
•3.19

HECK'S REG.

FRICTION
CARS

CHOICE · 78~

•244

·99e

·' I

GALVANIZED WRINGER

'

STO·RAGE
CHEST

ALARM
CLOCK ·

UTILITY .
,
..

HECK'S REG.
PRICE ·
CLOTHING
DEPT.

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

LUX

'

20%

HECK'S REG. 22'

UTILITY

DECORATIVE CAKE· AND CANDY

SALE
u

BOYS
OFFICIAL
. NFL ·
FOOTBALL
JACKETS

HECK'S REG. 78'

$26.88

CASE ' .

FIRE
EXTINGUISHER

'9.99 .

. MOP PAILS

"d•h"""

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SUNBEAM

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HOUSEWARE DEPT.

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HECK'S REG. - .,._
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IO .~ ... do•••
•ho~ rh.,;

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~·~• ·•o~ • • •
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all the delu~~:e features for • complete home ente rtai nment
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ahelf for rec ord pi eyer t hat mOY85 in and out .. Ba c ~ has
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l3- 1 ne :Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973
22 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, SWld.ay, Dec. 2, 1973

r

OPEN DAILY
10 TO 9
SUNDAY
2 TO 8

l

OPEl DAILY

OP£111 DAILY
10 TO 9

10 TO 9

OPEN

OPE

TODAY

TODAY

12 NOON
TO

12 00

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DECEM

8PM

DECEMBER 2 AND 3
LAST

NO. 101

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FOOTBALL
UNIFORM SET
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McGRAW
EDISON

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FasL sa fe and smooth f emi n ine
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Oesi9ned •spe&lt;:ially lor wamen with glasses
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on narmol co$mltiC morrors .

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HECK'S REG.
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LIMIT 4

39¢ .

b"'"'"

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SCORE
NATURAL
SPRAY

IO .~ ... do•••
•ho~ rh.,;

•o !iO•o r&lt;&gt;,,..

~·~• ·•o~ • • •
'"'"' lulln,. •h•

all the delu~~:e features for • complete home ente rtai nment
center.

HECK'S Resistors No Included

SPORTING GOODS

v~

Home EnHirUi i nment Center holds 1tert1o speakers PIUs
ahelf for rec ord pi eyer t hat mOY85 in and out .. Ba c ~ has
ou t fet h o les tor w i re~ . Tilted casset1e holder . Thll l.l rut has

CHAMPION
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AND AC

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HECK'S REG.

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REG. 59'

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12.99

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�2S - The Sunday Times- Sent4&gt;fi,Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973

.. .,' ··-.•.. ..·.·······"·'·'
-'h" ·······"···
·····•·.•.··-:...........
_...
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.

.

Nicklaus reaches UCLA posts 76th
$2 million mark straight victory
.

'

tAKE BUENA VISTA , fla.
11,; Pl l - ~1 t ghty Jack Nicklaus
conquered a Mickey MoUS&lt;
Golf Cour se Saturday, forging
a 67 to ••in the $150,000 Walt
Disney World Golf Classic a
th trd time and becoming the
fir st man in history to make
more than S2 miHion swingi ng
a golf club.
Ni cklaus , cla iming his
seventh victory in just 18
tournaments for the year ,
finished 72 holes at 13 wider
par 275, one stroke ahead of
veteran Mason Rudolph.
Personable J ohn Mahaffey , a
diminutive tour s~phom o re
from Texas who sta-rted the
final round with ·a two stroke
lead, bu ckl ed under the

press ure of the ~ ic klau s
charge but turned tn a
cred itable 7l to fini sh in thtrd
at II under par '!17.
The $30,000 first place check
put Nicklaus' career earnings
at $2,012,068 , far ahead of
Arn old Palmer , who ha s
$1 ,633,651 . It was th&lt;- second
stra ight year Ni cklaus has
gone over the $300,000 mark,
ba11king S3D8,362 this tour.
Hts triumph ill the PGA
Championship in August had
already given him 14 major
titles, beating the record held
by the late Bobby .Jones. He
also won the trophy this yea r in
the Bing Crosby National ProAm, the New Orleans Open, the
Atlanta Classic, th e Tour-

nament of Champwns and the

season tn a w esom~ [ashion,
By JCJE CAR.'\ICF.I.LI
rolling past Arkansas , 101-79.
UPI Sports Writer
t\i cklaus, who won t h1s H1Ur
Whi le UC LA dtd the expected Bill Wa Iton , the 6-foot-11
fi~~&lt;~le last year at 21 under par
and st.aru..&gt;ti th1s last round lwo for a 76th stn ught tunc, St. P layer of the Year, had 23
strokes back, had predicted J ohn 's ope ned the col lege points and 17 rebounds for the
would drop on Disney's 7, 162- basketball scaS!Jn with a htUe ;o.;o. 1 ranked -Bruins, who
played 16 men in the game ,
yard Magnolia Cour se if the bit of the unexpected.
UCLA , the basketball including five freshmen.
weather was pretty Sa turday.
But unranked St. John's ,
" A 67 is a good score but it's ma chme that has won seven
not a great S(.:orl! on this consecutive ~CAA ti tles and which welcomed back Coach
nine of the l(Js t 10, opened 1ts Lou Carne ~ca this season
course ," he said.
after a tour with the American
t&gt;amed the PGA Player of
Basketball Association New
the Year for the third time and
· York Net'i, made his return an
fin ishing in the top 10 in 16
auspicious one by dwnping
tournaments, Nicklaus had a
Jacksonville, 69-64, in the
stroke average of 69.8 in 69
opening
round of the [play
rounds this year .
Invitational at Clemson, S. C.
Frank Alagia, the Redmen's
ONE-TWO PUNCII
ATLANTA (UPIJ - Lou By United Pre ss International 5-9 guard, and Mel Utley had 17
Ohio State, with six players points each as St. J ohn's built a
ll udsoo and Pete Maravich
hitting
double fi gures, opened . 16-point lead at the half and
combined for a 72-point scoring
punch Saturday as the Atlanta Its basketball campaign with then held off the taller
Hawks beat Seattle 120.110 in a an overwhelming 90-fi2 win Dolphins .
In other games, No. 10 San
nationally televised National over ·rexas·Artington.
Marietta,
Steubenv
ille,
Francisco
, with 6·9 Kevin
Basketball Association game .
Ashland and J ohn Carroll also f\estani scoring 20 points and
scored victories in their season taking down 22 rebounds ,
openers. Several other Ohio ripped the University of San
MICIIIGAN WINS
colle ge teams roll into action Diego, 76-60, Alabama blasted
ANN ARBOR , Mi ch. iUPl i
- Campy Russell scored 29 tonight.
OSU center Bill Andreas
points, II of them in the closing
minutes, and grabbed 16 pumped in 20 points to lead the
rebounds Saturday to lead Bu ckeye attack . He was
Michigan to an 86-74 season- foll owed by Wardell Jackson
opening basketball victory 'with 15, Jack Wolfe. with 14,
over
Southern
Ill inois Dan Gerhard 12 and Gary
WOR CHESTER , Mass .
Repella and Larry Bolden 10
ru Pr 1 - Mel Briggs, a wide
L------...;;.;;.;;..;~.;;~-------' University.
each.
receiver, ran for two touchThe Buckeyes opened up a
downs Saturday and picked up
17-poin tspread in the first half,
a third on a 30-yard pass while
but the Maveri cks closed it lo
Mike Esposito set a team
36-30 OSU at halftime . The career rushing mark in gaining
Buckeyes roared ba ck in the 192 yards - including a 45-yard
second half to break the ga me TD run - as Boston College
open .
subdued Holy Cross, ~2-21.
rn other games Fl'iday night,
Gary Marangi threw two
Ashland downed Kenyon 93-74 touchdown passes, one to
Will Be Selling Christmas Trees In The Silver Bridge
behind the 33 poinl' from Bill Briggs and the other a 53Hi
ggins of the Eagles ; Jim yarder .to Dave Zumbach and
Shopping Plaza This Year. These Trees Will Be Fresh Cut On
Garriagan had 22 poillts in ran 18 yards for a third score to
December 1. Sales Will Begin on December 3.
Steubenville's 42-37 win over give the Eagles their sixth
West Uberty IW. Va .), fresh- straight win over the
Procee ds From Tree Sales Will Be Used On Various Community·
man Jeff Falloba hit some Crusader s in their 69th
Projects .
crucial points in the last three meeting . Boston College leads
minutes or the ga me to give the se ries 37-29-3.
BUY YOUR TREE FROM A LOCAL · JAYCEE
Marietta a 68-95 win over
Esposito broke Fred Willis'
Bethany (W. Va .) and Dave individua l career rushing
Hosea led J ohn Carroll with 22 ma rk of 2,115 yards in 419
points in the Blue Str eaks 77-69 carries. Esposito, in two years,
win over Baldwin-Wallace .
has carried the ball 2,219 in 436
attempts.
'-.§_t~~'~a ~ ~W....-- ..._.
~II.: '-''
~ Esposito's touchdown was
~,_:~;·~;"~ 1~ ;t.J'.c::_~-:-:-~ '"'n~t~~ his 17th of the season, also a
~~~ . . -p~
F• ·~~~ pi ' ;
career record for Bos ton
"'1'"" College.
~~
For his efforts, Esposito
received the Eddie Medlia
award for. outstanding player
of the game.
Briggs, used mostly as a
~l decoy this yea r, caugh t three
passes Saturday to give him a
~~ BC record of 86 career catches.
Briggs, scoring both Eagle
touchdowns in a 14-14 first half,
romped 15 ya rds around the
right side for a first period
~~ touchdown , hauled in a second
period scoring pass and added
~~ a 29-yard run in the final
period.
Esposito put the Eagles
ahead to stay at 5:22 of the
third period, carryillg the ball
\); on all six plays in the 69-yard
drive. The touchdown came on
~~ a pitch to the left side on which
Esposito turned in and then out
for the score.
Marangi followed on the next
series on a run to the right,
~ cappillg an 11-play 86-yard
march set up by linebacker
~~ Jim Combs' fumble recovery
at the Holy Cross 14.
Ohw Ktn gs Island Open.

OSU has
•
easy wm

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OJ')('n Sw•m

CLOSE D

Dec 5 CLO~ED 8 OOPioV•. Wal~h
Or·(. 6 8 J(} Collt-Qf" R'·ut-&lt;•llon

By VITO STELLINO
UP! Sports Writer
There were some snickers in
the National Football League
last year when John Ralston
started talking about the Super
Bowl before he ever coached a
pro game.
But yoo won't hear any
laughing in Dallas this week.
After Ralston coached Stanford to a pair of Rose Bowl
upsets over Ohio State and
Michigan, he left the college
ranks a year ago to take over
the lowly Denver Broncos,
who'd never eve n finished
above .500-much less challenged for the Super Bowl.
Ralston's first comment was ,
"Our goal is willning the Super
Bowl. There's no question that
we'll make it, the only thing we
don't know is how long it will
take."
Well, Lhe Broncos still don't
seem to be Super Bowl quality
but they're leading the AFC
Western Division wilh a 6-3-2
record and they have a shot a
derailing Dallas' bid for their
eighth straight playoff season
when they host the Cowboys
Lhis Sunday.
For Dallas, the rise of the
Broncos couldn't have come at

11 9 College Sw1m

CLOS~ D

DH 7 CLOSED 1 'lOHomt:r.omtngC.nflnrl

9 00(fownmqof t!'l!:(.JuH·n
~ 10.1 m GS I Sw•m
Ur·c B CLOSED 1 'j(J P(·cJ Whtlr· t,lurnru G,mw
CLOSED
J I)(J RIO 1'&gt; (l•dilfldhc
? 4 Orx:n Swun
Or-e 9 ')A 0(.14"n P · •c rl~ iiiiOn
8 9 Or.o~.: n Sw•m

8 10 Opr'n Rc-cre.1t 10n

Georgia Tech, 118-M, behind
freshman P. R. Dunn 's 16
points and Arizona r alli~r,!
behind a 22-point performance
by freshman Bob Elliott to
defeat Illinois, [01-illl.
Elsewhere, Van Gregg 's 18
points helped Clemson defeat
Auburn , 87-72, in the Iptay
!nvi ta tional
and
Doug
Ri chards' ~foot jwnp shot
with four seconds left lifted
Brigham Young to a 77-76
victory over Weber State.
Larry Pounds ; 19 poin ts
carried Washington to a 107-76
rout of Montana State and Pete
Padgett 's 20 points lifted
Nevada-Reno to a 76-09 upset of
Stanford .
Ron Ri ghte r 's 14 points
helped St . Jose ph's IPa .) beat
Army, 65-54, and Phil Sellers
hit 19 points as Rutge rs routed
Colgate , 71-49. Bill Andreas
scored 20 points to pace Ohio
State's, 90-&lt;i2, romp past TexasArlillgton and Uonel Billingy
had 16 points ilS Duquesne
crushed Wheeling, 11&gt;-53.

Foster captures bout on points
JOHANNESBURG (UP! I World Ught-Heav y wei~ht
Champion Bob foster beat
South African challenger
Pierre Fourie on points ror the
second time Saturday night to
retain his title on a unanimou:i
decision.
Foster with a seven-inch
reach advantage commanded
the fight throughout, but the
game challenger put up a
better display than he did whcQ
he lost to the champion in
Albuquerque, N. M., on Aug.
21.
Judge Sydney Beck of South
Africa scored the fight 101
points to Foster and 98 to
Fourie, and Judge Kim.
Keleher of Albuquerque, N. M.,
had f oster 103 point.&lt;; and

Fourie 95.
The referee Roland Dakin
scored it 103-98 in Foster's
favor .
Fourie, never C:tble io get in
cluse enough to land a telling
punch, won only two rounds.
fLOIIIDA ROMPS
GAINESVILLE, Fla . (UP!)
- Tailback Na t MO'Ore scored
on two shurt runs .and quarte rback·Don Gaffney fired a 31·
yard scoring pass Saturday as
Tangerine Bowl-bound Florida
trounced winless Florida State •
University 49-0.
The
loss ended
the
Semino les' sea so n in the 1
unenviable position of losing all •·
II games this season, a status
shared with only three other
major college teams.
,.
. '
.. ' ,.

a worse time .

I'

The Cowboys already are
thinking about next Surxlay's
natio~~&lt;~lly televised battle with
Washington.
That game will have a unique

DRIED FLOWER

Boston College routs
Holy Cross team 42-21

Free Hallmark Date Book

Denver near first title

LYNECENTERSCHEDULE
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
POOL
DATE - GYMNASIUM
B 9 Coii~J g c· Sw•m
(u·c J !; f(J (GIIr;q~· fJN:f f'dh()n

"
"

PICTURES
Orders being taken until
Dece mber 6.

Vaas to wide receiver Mark
She rid ail .
BULLDOGS NIP TECH
ATJ..ANTA (UPI I - Georgia
quarterback Andy J ohnson
completed only five passes
Saturday but one of those was a
12-yard touchdown strike early
ill the third period that gave the
Bulldogs a 10.3 victory over
Georgia Tech

URRARIUMS

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The Holy Cross touchdowns
came on a two-yard twisting
dive by Paul Anastasi, a sixyard run by Steve Buchanan,
and a . nine-yard pass from

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in Shrine Bowl
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Otter·
bein's lei! Pettersen kicked
two field goals and UJe East defense added two more points on
a safety to give the East an 6-6
victory over the West Saturday
ill the All-(Jhio Shrine Bowl
game.
Linebacker Doug Miller of
Findlay knocked .down a twopaillt conversion pass followillg
a West touchdown with 48 seconds left in the game to preserve the victory for the East.
Pettersen's field goals of 20
and 30 yards, and the two
poillts on the safety when West
quarterback Tim Dydo was
tackled in the end zone, were
Lhe only points scored ill the
game until Bowling Green's
Phil Polak put Lhe West on Lhe
scoreboard from three yards
out in the last minute of the
game.
Quarterback Jim Ruth's

pass for the two-poillt conversion and a tie game was
knocked down by Miller, and
Lhe East had its second consecutive victory in the All-Star
contest.
Pettersen's first field goal
came with 1:36 left to play in
the first quarter and capped ·a
77-yard mafch engilleered by
quarterback Eric Schoch or
Akron University.
A 12-yard run by Schoch and
a pass to tight end Gary Pinkel
of Kent State. good for I~ more
yards put the ball on the West
Lhree-yard4ine to set up Lhe
first-quarter field goal by Pettersen.
After a scoreless third quarter, Pettersen kicked his
second field goal from 30 yards
out wilh slightly more than
. eight minutes remaining in the
game.

"110 YEARS OF SERVICE"

CINCINN AT! (UP!)
of a dancer, but at times he
Cincinnati Assistant Coach forgets his dancillg," Weber
Chuck Weber says the Bengals explained.
. aren't going to be intimidated
The Bengals will activate
by the powerful Minnesota quarterback Greg Cook and
Vikings, who have already defensive tackle Ron Carwrapped up the Central penter for the game, replacillg
Division crown ill the National quarterback Mike Ernst and
· Conference.
tackle Stan Walters.
"We've got a good offense,
The Bengals are anxious to
we've got a good defense. test Cook under game conWe've got a good football ditions if the opportunity
team," Weber told a Touch- presents itself because he has
down Club audience. "And been throwing well in practice
we're going to give Minnesota during recent workouts.
hell on Sunday, I'll tell you."
The Bengals are engaged in a
battle with the Cleveland
Browns a11d the Pittsburgh
Steelers for the Centra·!
Division title in Lhe American
Conference with a wild card
berth ill Lhe Playoffs a good
DALJ.,AS
(UP! )
possibility for the second place
H~avyweight contender Oscar
ieam.
Currently the Be~gals are Bonavena says champion
third in the race wilh a 7-4 George ) Foreman is a
record, while the SteeJers lead , "monkey, ' ~d a . "chicken"
Lhe divison with an 8-3 mark who won t fight.
and the Browns are a haH
Bonavena Friday said
game behind in second place Fo~emanhad signed a contract
with a 7-3-1 record.
to ftght htm July, 1972, but that
Minnesota (10-1) has one or bout was cancelled after
Lhe stingiest defenses ill the Fore_man ch~llenged Joe
National Football League FraZier for the title. Since then,
headed by the defensive front there have been no deals.
four of Carl Eller Gary Lar"I don't think Foreman
sen Alan Page' and Jim wants to fight me," Bonavena
M.;shall. ·
·
sa~d. "He's a big money and a .
chicken
..
"They're all nine or 10-yl\ar
Bonavena
said he would like
veterans who play it tight.
Their line charge is ex- to fight Frazier next January
Ceptional and I think that's Lhe or February in Dallas.
secret of \heir defense," Weber
said.
VOLS EDGE FOE
Weber also poillted out that
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UP!)
Lhe VIking running backs are a
. mean and aggressive bunch led - Ricky Townsend connected
'by rookie sensation Chuck on a 37-yard field goal with 1:08
Foreman and ably assisted by left to play after a daring bit or
.Oscar Reed,'Ed J»arlnaro, Bill Vanderbilt strategy backfired
Saturday. and 'the Gator BowlSrown-and Dave Osborn. ·
"They won't try to dance bound Tennessee Volunteers
around you. They'll dance right escaped with a 20-17 win over
·
over you. Foreman is a little bit the Commodores.

Bonavena
calls Foreman
chicken

AT CHRISTMAS TIME.

*

.AND A TIMELY SERMON BY REV. PAUL

252 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

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over from the seven, averaged
a point every 18 seconds.
The lopsided defeat, viewed
at the John F . Kennedy ·
Stadium by 91,926 persons and
a national television audience,
gave Army a hwniliating o-10
record, the Cadet.&lt;;' worst log in
the 83-year history of intercollegiate football at West
Point. The worst previous
defeat in the series was Army's
38-0 win in 1949.
Navy gained its first victory
arter two consecutive losses to
Army and flnls[led wilh a 4-7
record. The Middies also
captured the commander-Inchief trophy, symbolic of
football supr¢macy among the
three military academies.

Open 9 Til9 Daily
Closed Sunday

Bengals set ·for
big Viking game

fi
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A.SPECIAL ADVENT SERVICE

CHRISTMAS ClUB

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SUSIE'S GREENHOUSE
State Route 588

It's impossible to even start
figuring out all the ways those
races can be decided. But Lhe
outcome of the KC-Cleveland
game will affect boUJ of Ulem.
Cleveland has scored backro:t&gt;ack upsets against Oakland
and Pittsburgh and the Browns
are three-point underdogs
against tbe Chiefs.

Navy rolls to

..'

' ••

POINSETTIAS
10 to 12 Bloom s

touch since the Cowboys have at Cincinnati, Los Angeles at Lhe Cowboys as a fouri)oint
to win the game. by more than Chicago and Oaklar.d at Hous- favorite .
seven points after losing the ton . In the Monday night TV
The Cleveland at Kansas
first meeting 14-7. lmagille the special, Pittsburgh is at City tussle will help decide two
strange strategy that could Miami.
tight division races. !llthe AFC
lead to- Washington, for
The other five games Sunday Central, Pittsburgh is 8-3,
e.arnple, could be trailing by involve teams playing out the Cleveland 7-3-1 and Cincinnati
six points and killing the clock. schedule. New Orleans meets 7-4. In the AFC West, Denver is
But if the Cowboys don't beat Green Bay at Milwaukee, &amp;-3-2 and Kansas City and
the Broncos in Denver, they'll Philadelphia is at San Frailcis- Oakland are 6-4-1.
probably fall two games behind co, Detroit is at St. Louis, San
Washington because the Red- Diego is at Ne~~:, England and
skins are heavily favored to Baltimore is at the N.Y. Jets.
beat the New York Giants.
The Denver-Dallas contest
It's probably not an exagger- will be the first ever between
ation to say this is the biggest the two clubs. After his bold
game in the history of .the prediction or a year ago,
Denver franchise. A triumph Ralston is being more cautious
would keep them in first with now. "Everyone knows it can
just two games-against San be more difficult staying on top
Diego and Oakland- left.
once you get there, Goodness
PH!l.ADELPHIA (UP! ) Seven of the 12 games knows it's been a struggle,
Sunday will involve teams after losing three of our first Navy, taking advantage of
vying for playoff spots. Two . four, but here we are. Now we ·Army blunders, exploded ror a
clubsMinnesota
and have to find a way to beat series-record 31 points in the
Miami- already have clin- Dallas and that's not going to second quarter Saturday to
ched. The other six spots are be easy. They have to win to -launch a ~1-0 rout of the Cadets
still open and won't be decided stay in their division race with and pile up the most points
ever scored in the 74-year
Washington .';
Sunday.
Things are fairly clear in the
Veteran Charley Johnson, history or the service academy
,
NFC where both Los Angeles who 's played such a major role rivalry,
Navy,
which
had
taken
Lhe
ar.d Atlanta are favored to get ill Denver's comeback this
playoff berths with Washington year, hit on a pair or scorillg openillg kickoff and marched
or Dallas expected to get the passes to Haven Moses in an HI- 72 yards in 12 plays ror a 6-0
other bid. But in the AFC, it's second span late in the second first-period lead, used two poor
still a wide open battle.
period last Sunday and the Army ki cks and two in·
Besides the Dallas at Denver defense held on in the second terceptions to score four touchand N.Y. Giants at Washington half to beat Kansas City 14-10. downs and a 47-yard field goal
games, tbe contests involvillg That put the Broncos in first in the second quarter.
The scoring outburst, which
teams wi th playoff hopes are place for the first time ever
started at 9:36 or the quarter
Cleveland at Kansas City, this late in the season.
Buffalo at Atlanta, Minnesota
The oddsmakers are listing when Cleveland Cooper went

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�2S - The Sunday Times- Sent4&gt;fi,Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973

.. .,' ··-.•.. ..·.·······"·'·'
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_...
..•.•
·....•.•.·-·········
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... ... .......•.".•):0'•:·.·:·.··············
.

.

Nicklaus reaches UCLA posts 76th
$2 million mark straight victory
.

'

tAKE BUENA VISTA , fla.
11,; Pl l - ~1 t ghty Jack Nicklaus
conquered a Mickey MoUS&lt;
Golf Cour se Saturday, forging
a 67 to ••in the $150,000 Walt
Disney World Golf Classic a
th trd time and becoming the
fir st man in history to make
more than S2 miHion swingi ng
a golf club.
Ni cklaus , cla iming his
seventh victory in just 18
tournaments for the year ,
finished 72 holes at 13 wider
par 275, one stroke ahead of
veteran Mason Rudolph.
Personable J ohn Mahaffey , a
diminutive tour s~phom o re
from Texas who sta-rted the
final round with ·a two stroke
lead, bu ckl ed under the

press ure of the ~ ic klau s
charge but turned tn a
cred itable 7l to fini sh in thtrd
at II under par '!17.
The $30,000 first place check
put Nicklaus' career earnings
at $2,012,068 , far ahead of
Arn old Palmer , who ha s
$1 ,633,651 . It was th&lt;- second
stra ight year Ni cklaus has
gone over the $300,000 mark,
ba11king S3D8,362 this tour.
Hts triumph ill the PGA
Championship in August had
already given him 14 major
titles, beating the record held
by the late Bobby .Jones. He
also won the trophy this yea r in
the Bing Crosby National ProAm, the New Orleans Open, the
Atlanta Classic, th e Tour-

nament of Champwns and the

season tn a w esom~ [ashion,
By JCJE CAR.'\ICF.I.LI
rolling past Arkansas , 101-79.
UPI Sports Writer
t\i cklaus, who won t h1s H1Ur
Whi le UC LA dtd the expected Bill Wa Iton , the 6-foot-11
fi~~&lt;~le last year at 21 under par
and st.aru..&gt;ti th1s last round lwo for a 76th stn ught tunc, St. P layer of the Year, had 23
strokes back, had predicted J ohn 's ope ned the col lege points and 17 rebounds for the
would drop on Disney's 7, 162- basketball scaS!Jn with a htUe ;o.;o. 1 ranked -Bruins, who
played 16 men in the game ,
yard Magnolia Cour se if the bit of the unexpected.
UCLA , the basketball including five freshmen.
weather was pretty Sa turday.
But unranked St. John's ,
" A 67 is a good score but it's ma chme that has won seven
not a great S(.:orl! on this consecutive ~CAA ti tles and which welcomed back Coach
nine of the l(Js t 10, opened 1ts Lou Carne ~ca this season
course ," he said.
after a tour with the American
t&gt;amed the PGA Player of
Basketball Association New
the Year for the third time and
· York Net'i, made his return an
fin ishing in the top 10 in 16
auspicious one by dwnping
tournaments, Nicklaus had a
Jacksonville, 69-64, in the
stroke average of 69.8 in 69
opening
round of the [play
rounds this year .
Invitational at Clemson, S. C.
Frank Alagia, the Redmen's
ONE-TWO PUNCII
ATLANTA (UPIJ - Lou By United Pre ss International 5-9 guard, and Mel Utley had 17
Ohio State, with six players points each as St. J ohn's built a
ll udsoo and Pete Maravich
hitting
double fi gures, opened . 16-point lead at the half and
combined for a 72-point scoring
punch Saturday as the Atlanta Its basketball campaign with then held off the taller
Hawks beat Seattle 120.110 in a an overwhelming 90-fi2 win Dolphins .
In other games, No. 10 San
nationally televised National over ·rexas·Artington.
Marietta,
Steubenv
ille,
Francisco
, with 6·9 Kevin
Basketball Association game .
Ashland and J ohn Carroll also f\estani scoring 20 points and
scored victories in their season taking down 22 rebounds ,
openers. Several other Ohio ripped the University of San
MICIIIGAN WINS
colle ge teams roll into action Diego, 76-60, Alabama blasted
ANN ARBOR , Mi ch. iUPl i
- Campy Russell scored 29 tonight.
OSU center Bill Andreas
points, II of them in the closing
minutes, and grabbed 16 pumped in 20 points to lead the
rebounds Saturday to lead Bu ckeye attack . He was
Michigan to an 86-74 season- foll owed by Wardell Jackson
opening basketball victory 'with 15, Jack Wolfe. with 14,
over
Southern
Ill inois Dan Gerhard 12 and Gary
WOR CHESTER , Mass .
Repella and Larry Bolden 10
ru Pr 1 - Mel Briggs, a wide
L------...;;.;;.;;..;~.;;~-------' University.
each.
receiver, ran for two touchThe Buckeyes opened up a
downs Saturday and picked up
17-poin tspread in the first half,
a third on a 30-yard pass while
but the Maveri cks closed it lo
Mike Esposito set a team
36-30 OSU at halftime . The career rushing mark in gaining
Buckeyes roared ba ck in the 192 yards - including a 45-yard
second half to break the ga me TD run - as Boston College
open .
subdued Holy Cross, ~2-21.
rn other games Fl'iday night,
Gary Marangi threw two
Ashland downed Kenyon 93-74 touchdown passes, one to
Will Be Selling Christmas Trees In The Silver Bridge
behind the 33 poinl' from Bill Briggs and the other a 53Hi
ggins of the Eagles ; Jim yarder .to Dave Zumbach and
Shopping Plaza This Year. These Trees Will Be Fresh Cut On
Garriagan had 22 poillts in ran 18 yards for a third score to
December 1. Sales Will Begin on December 3.
Steubenville's 42-37 win over give the Eagles their sixth
West Uberty IW. Va .), fresh- straight win over the
Procee ds From Tree Sales Will Be Used On Various Community·
man Jeff Falloba hit some Crusader s in their 69th
Projects .
crucial points in the last three meeting . Boston College leads
minutes or the ga me to give the se ries 37-29-3.
BUY YOUR TREE FROM A LOCAL · JAYCEE
Marietta a 68-95 win over
Esposito broke Fred Willis'
Bethany (W. Va .) and Dave individua l career rushing
Hosea led J ohn Carroll with 22 ma rk of 2,115 yards in 419
points in the Blue Str eaks 77-69 carries. Esposito, in two years,
win over Baldwin-Wallace .
has carried the ball 2,219 in 436
attempts.
'-.§_t~~'~a ~ ~W....-- ..._.
~II.: '-''
~ Esposito's touchdown was
~,_:~;·~;"~ 1~ ;t.J'.c::_~-:-:-~ '"'n~t~~ his 17th of the season, also a
~~~ . . -p~
F• ·~~~ pi ' ;
career record for Bos ton
"'1'"" College.
~~
For his efforts, Esposito
received the Eddie Medlia
award for. outstanding player
of the game.
Briggs, used mostly as a
~l decoy this yea r, caugh t three
passes Saturday to give him a
~~ BC record of 86 career catches.
Briggs, scoring both Eagle
touchdowns in a 14-14 first half,
romped 15 ya rds around the
right side for a first period
~~ touchdown , hauled in a second
period scoring pass and added
~~ a 29-yard run in the final
period.
Esposito put the Eagles
ahead to stay at 5:22 of the
third period, carryillg the ball
\); on all six plays in the 69-yard
drive. The touchdown came on
~~ a pitch to the left side on which
Esposito turned in and then out
for the score.
Marangi followed on the next
series on a run to the right,
~ cappillg an 11-play 86-yard
march set up by linebacker
~~ Jim Combs' fumble recovery
at the Holy Cross 14.
Ohw Ktn gs Island Open.

OSU has
•
easy wm

NEED AN EXCHANGE GIFT?

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446-1136

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THE GALLIPOLIS AREA JAYCEES

~ ?

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Dr:r. d

OJ')('n Sw•m

CLOSE D

Dec 5 CLO~ED 8 OOPioV•. Wal~h
Or·(. 6 8 J(} Collt-Qf" R'·ut-&lt;•llon

By VITO STELLINO
UP! Sports Writer
There were some snickers in
the National Football League
last year when John Ralston
started talking about the Super
Bowl before he ever coached a
pro game.
But yoo won't hear any
laughing in Dallas this week.
After Ralston coached Stanford to a pair of Rose Bowl
upsets over Ohio State and
Michigan, he left the college
ranks a year ago to take over
the lowly Denver Broncos,
who'd never eve n finished
above .500-much less challenged for the Super Bowl.
Ralston's first comment was ,
"Our goal is willning the Super
Bowl. There's no question that
we'll make it, the only thing we
don't know is how long it will
take."
Well, Lhe Broncos still don't
seem to be Super Bowl quality
but they're leading the AFC
Western Division wilh a 6-3-2
record and they have a shot a
derailing Dallas' bid for their
eighth straight playoff season
when they host the Cowboys
Lhis Sunday.
For Dallas, the rise of the
Broncos couldn't have come at

11 9 College Sw1m

CLOS~ D

DH 7 CLOSED 1 'lOHomt:r.omtngC.nflnrl

9 00(fownmqof t!'l!:(.JuH·n
~ 10.1 m GS I Sw•m
Ur·c B CLOSED 1 'j(J P(·cJ Whtlr· t,lurnru G,mw
CLOSED
J I)(J RIO 1'&gt; (l•dilfldhc
? 4 Orx:n Swun
Or-e 9 ')A 0(.14"n P · •c rl~ iiiiOn
8 9 Or.o~.: n Sw•m

8 10 Opr'n Rc-cre.1t 10n

Georgia Tech, 118-M, behind
freshman P. R. Dunn 's 16
points and Arizona r alli~r,!
behind a 22-point performance
by freshman Bob Elliott to
defeat Illinois, [01-illl.
Elsewhere, Van Gregg 's 18
points helped Clemson defeat
Auburn , 87-72, in the Iptay
!nvi ta tional
and
Doug
Ri chards' ~foot jwnp shot
with four seconds left lifted
Brigham Young to a 77-76
victory over Weber State.
Larry Pounds ; 19 poin ts
carried Washington to a 107-76
rout of Montana State and Pete
Padgett 's 20 points lifted
Nevada-Reno to a 76-09 upset of
Stanford .
Ron Ri ghte r 's 14 points
helped St . Jose ph's IPa .) beat
Army, 65-54, and Phil Sellers
hit 19 points as Rutge rs routed
Colgate , 71-49. Bill Andreas
scored 20 points to pace Ohio
State's, 90-&lt;i2, romp past TexasArlillgton and Uonel Billingy
had 16 points ilS Duquesne
crushed Wheeling, 11&gt;-53.

Foster captures bout on points
JOHANNESBURG (UP! I World Ught-Heav y wei~ht
Champion Bob foster beat
South African challenger
Pierre Fourie on points ror the
second time Saturday night to
retain his title on a unanimou:i
decision.
Foster with a seven-inch
reach advantage commanded
the fight throughout, but the
game challenger put up a
better display than he did whcQ
he lost to the champion in
Albuquerque, N. M., on Aug.
21.
Judge Sydney Beck of South
Africa scored the fight 101
points to Foster and 98 to
Fourie, and Judge Kim.
Keleher of Albuquerque, N. M.,
had f oster 103 point.&lt;; and

Fourie 95.
The referee Roland Dakin
scored it 103-98 in Foster's
favor .
Fourie, never C:tble io get in
cluse enough to land a telling
punch, won only two rounds.
fLOIIIDA ROMPS
GAINESVILLE, Fla . (UP!)
- Tailback Na t MO'Ore scored
on two shurt runs .and quarte rback·Don Gaffney fired a 31·
yard scoring pass Saturday as
Tangerine Bowl-bound Florida
trounced winless Florida State •
University 49-0.
The
loss ended
the
Semino les' sea so n in the 1
unenviable position of losing all •·
II games this season, a status
shared with only three other
major college teams.
,.
. '
.. ' ,.

a worse time .

I'

The Cowboys already are
thinking about next Surxlay's
natio~~&lt;~lly televised battle with
Washington.
That game will have a unique

DRIED FLOWER

Boston College routs
Holy Cross team 42-21

Free Hallmark Date Book

Denver near first title

LYNECENTERSCHEDULE
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
POOL
DATE - GYMNASIUM
B 9 Coii~J g c· Sw•m
(u·c J !; f(J (GIIr;q~· fJN:f f'dh()n

"
"

PICTURES
Orders being taken until
Dece mber 6.

Vaas to wide receiver Mark
She rid ail .
BULLDOGS NIP TECH
ATJ..ANTA (UPI I - Georgia
quarterback Andy J ohnson
completed only five passes
Saturday but one of those was a
12-yard touchdown strike early
ill the third period that gave the
Bulldogs a 10.3 victory over
Georgia Tech

URRARIUMS

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Have yours planted now for
Christmas .

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that keep, ·
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The Holy Cross touchdowns
came on a two-yard twisting
dive by Paul Anastasi, a sixyard run by Steve Buchanan,
and a . nine-yard pass from

IT'S NO JOKE TO BE BROKE

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Church
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Second Avenue at Cedar Street
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··
. Gallipolis, Ohio·· ~
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~~·r:L.. ~JMZ".}I~ '-

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...\114i

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MAIN OFFICE •
SECOND AVE.

Give an "-l:J,.o
Club memberJhipl

AUTO Q.UB OF
Phone : 446-0699 or
9?2 -2590, Pomeroy

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SOUTHERN OHIO
33 C::ourt St., Gallipolis

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AUTO BANK •
THIRD AVE.

Call or visit ...

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"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

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U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Famil Pak Chicken Parts
Includes: 3 Breast Quarters W/ Rib s &amp;
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,.....,.., Giblets &amp; 2 Necks.

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Fresh
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WHOLE

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Backs or Giblets

Best O'Chicken

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59c

in Shrine Bowl
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Otter·
bein's lei! Pettersen kicked
two field goals and UJe East defense added two more points on
a safety to give the East an 6-6
victory over the West Saturday
ill the All-(Jhio Shrine Bowl
game.
Linebacker Doug Miller of
Findlay knocked .down a twopaillt conversion pass followillg
a West touchdown with 48 seconds left in the game to preserve the victory for the East.
Pettersen's field goals of 20
and 30 yards, and the two
poillts on the safety when West
quarterback Tim Dydo was
tackled in the end zone, were
Lhe only points scored ill the
game until Bowling Green's
Phil Polak put Lhe West on Lhe
scoreboard from three yards
out in the last minute of the
game.
Quarterback Jim Ruth's

pass for the two-poillt conversion and a tie game was
knocked down by Miller, and
Lhe East had its second consecutive victory in the All-Star
contest.
Pettersen's first field goal
came with 1:36 left to play in
the first quarter and capped ·a
77-yard mafch engilleered by
quarterback Eric Schoch or
Akron University.
A 12-yard run by Schoch and
a pass to tight end Gary Pinkel
of Kent State. good for I~ more
yards put the ball on the West
Lhree-yard4ine to set up Lhe
first-quarter field goal by Pettersen.
After a scoreless third quarter, Pettersen kicked his
second field goal from 30 yards
out wilh slightly more than
. eight minutes remaining in the
game.

"110 YEARS OF SERVICE"

CINCINN AT! (UP!)
of a dancer, but at times he
Cincinnati Assistant Coach forgets his dancillg," Weber
Chuck Weber says the Bengals explained.
. aren't going to be intimidated
The Bengals will activate
by the powerful Minnesota quarterback Greg Cook and
Vikings, who have already defensive tackle Ron Carwrapped up the Central penter for the game, replacillg
Division crown ill the National quarterback Mike Ernst and
· Conference.
tackle Stan Walters.
"We've got a good offense,
The Bengals are anxious to
we've got a good defense. test Cook under game conWe've got a good football ditions if the opportunity
team," Weber told a Touch- presents itself because he has
down Club audience. "And been throwing well in practice
we're going to give Minnesota during recent workouts.
hell on Sunday, I'll tell you."
The Bengals are engaged in a
battle with the Cleveland
Browns a11d the Pittsburgh
Steelers for the Centra·!
Division title in Lhe American
Conference with a wild card
berth ill Lhe Playoffs a good
DALJ.,AS
(UP! )
possibility for the second place
H~avyweight contender Oscar
ieam.
Currently the Be~gals are Bonavena says champion
third in the race wilh a 7-4 George ) Foreman is a
record, while the SteeJers lead , "monkey, ' ~d a . "chicken"
Lhe divison with an 8-3 mark who won t fight.
and the Browns are a haH
Bonavena Friday said
game behind in second place Fo~emanhad signed a contract
with a 7-3-1 record.
to ftght htm July, 1972, but that
Minnesota (10-1) has one or bout was cancelled after
Lhe stingiest defenses ill the Fore_man ch~llenged Joe
National Football League FraZier for the title. Since then,
headed by the defensive front there have been no deals.
four of Carl Eller Gary Lar"I don't think Foreman
sen Alan Page' and Jim wants to fight me," Bonavena
M.;shall. ·
·
sa~d. "He's a big money and a .
chicken
..
"They're all nine or 10-yl\ar
Bonavena
said he would like
veterans who play it tight.
Their line charge is ex- to fight Frazier next January
Ceptional and I think that's Lhe or February in Dallas.
secret of \heir defense," Weber
said.
VOLS EDGE FOE
Weber also poillted out that
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UP!)
Lhe VIking running backs are a
. mean and aggressive bunch led - Ricky Townsend connected
'by rookie sensation Chuck on a 37-yard field goal with 1:08
Foreman and ably assisted by left to play after a daring bit or
.Oscar Reed,'Ed J»arlnaro, Bill Vanderbilt strategy backfired
Saturday. and 'the Gator BowlSrown-and Dave Osborn. ·
"They won't try to dance bound Tennessee Volunteers
around you. They'll dance right escaped with a 20-17 win over
·
over you. Foreman is a little bit the Commodores.

Bonavena
calls Foreman
chicken

AT CHRISTMAS TIME.

*

.AND A TIMELY SERMON BY REV. PAUL

252 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

SOUND
RIPE

BA

lb.

DONALD DUCK. Florida

$

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FROZEN CONCENTRATED 100 %

ORANGE JUICE
6-o:z.

C~ns

for

PILLSBURY _

~

l!f
l!f

over from the seven, averaged
a point every 18 seconds.
The lopsided defeat, viewed
at the John F . Kennedy ·
Stadium by 91,926 persons and
a national television audience,
gave Army a hwniliating o-10
record, the Cadet.&lt;;' worst log in
the 83-year history of intercollegiate football at West
Point. The worst previous
defeat in the series was Army's
38-0 win in 1949.
Navy gained its first victory
arter two consecutive losses to
Army and flnls[led wilh a 4-7
record. The Middies also
captured the commander-Inchief trophy, symbolic of
football supr¢macy among the
three military academies.

Open 9 Til9 Daily
Closed Sunday

Bengals set ·for
big Viking game

fi
fi

"The Gospel Hour"
A.SPECIAL ADVENT SERVICE

CHRISTMAS ClUB

~

7:30 THIS EVENING

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WID

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51-0 grid

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East nips West

SUSIE'S GREENHOUSE
State Route 588

It's impossible to even start
figuring out all the ways those
races can be decided. But Lhe
outcome of the KC-Cleveland
game will affect boUJ of Ulem.
Cleveland has scored backro:t&gt;ack upsets against Oakland
and Pittsburgh and the Browns
are three-point underdogs
against tbe Chiefs.

Navy rolls to

..'

' ••

POINSETTIAS
10 to 12 Bloom s

touch since the Cowboys have at Cincinnati, Los Angeles at Lhe Cowboys as a fouri)oint
to win the game. by more than Chicago and Oaklar.d at Hous- favorite .
seven points after losing the ton . In the Monday night TV
The Cleveland at Kansas
first meeting 14-7. lmagille the special, Pittsburgh is at City tussle will help decide two
strange strategy that could Miami.
tight division races. !llthe AFC
lead to- Washington, for
The other five games Sunday Central, Pittsburgh is 8-3,
e.arnple, could be trailing by involve teams playing out the Cleveland 7-3-1 and Cincinnati
six points and killing the clock. schedule. New Orleans meets 7-4. In the AFC West, Denver is
But if the Cowboys don't beat Green Bay at Milwaukee, &amp;-3-2 and Kansas City and
the Broncos in Denver, they'll Philadelphia is at San Frailcis- Oakland are 6-4-1.
probably fall two games behind co, Detroit is at St. Louis, San
Washington because the Red- Diego is at Ne~~:, England and
skins are heavily favored to Baltimore is at the N.Y. Jets.
beat the New York Giants.
The Denver-Dallas contest
It's probably not an exagger- will be the first ever between
ation to say this is the biggest the two clubs. After his bold
game in the history of .the prediction or a year ago,
Denver franchise. A triumph Ralston is being more cautious
would keep them in first with now. "Everyone knows it can
just two games-against San be more difficult staying on top
Diego and Oakland- left.
once you get there, Goodness
PH!l.ADELPHIA (UP! ) Seven of the 12 games knows it's been a struggle,
Sunday will involve teams after losing three of our first Navy, taking advantage of
vying for playoff spots. Two . four, but here we are. Now we ·Army blunders, exploded ror a
clubsMinnesota
and have to find a way to beat series-record 31 points in the
Miami- already have clin- Dallas and that's not going to second quarter Saturday to
ched. The other six spots are be easy. They have to win to -launch a ~1-0 rout of the Cadets
still open and won't be decided stay in their division race with and pile up the most points
ever scored in the 74-year
Washington .';
Sunday.
Things are fairly clear in the
Veteran Charley Johnson, history or the service academy
,
NFC where both Los Angeles who 's played such a major role rivalry,
Navy,
which
had
taken
Lhe
ar.d Atlanta are favored to get ill Denver's comeback this
playoff berths with Washington year, hit on a pair or scorillg openillg kickoff and marched
or Dallas expected to get the passes to Haven Moses in an HI- 72 yards in 12 plays ror a 6-0
other bid. But in the AFC, it's second span late in the second first-period lead, used two poor
still a wide open battle.
period last Sunday and the Army ki cks and two in·
Besides the Dallas at Denver defense held on in the second terceptions to score four touchand N.Y. Giants at Washington half to beat Kansas City 14-10. downs and a 47-yard field goal
games, tbe contests involvillg That put the Broncos in first in the second quarter.
The scoring outburst, which
teams wi th playoff hopes are place for the first time ever
started at 9:36 or the quarter
Cleveland at Kansas City, this late in the season.
Buffalo at Atlanta, Minnesota
The oddsmakers are listing when Cleveland Cooper went

YINlON BRANCH
VINlON, OHIO .
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, 18% -o:z. Pkgs.

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MIRACLE WHIPPED

MA

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MARGARINE

1-lb.
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1-lb.
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47e

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GRAPE JAM .................... 1a-oz. 59c
ORANGE MARMALADE ...•....• ,. .. ,. 58c
GRAPE JELLY ................... 11-oz. 59c

PILLSBURY

Cinnamon Rolls
9,:.;;:~

4 1e

SMUCKER'S Ice Cream Toppings
WALNUT .. .... . ~ .................... J"
BUTTERSCOTCH .•... , ..•...... 12-oz. '"
CARAMEL •...••.......• , ••..• .12-oz. J..
CHOCOLATE FUDGE •••.••••.•• 12-oz. '"

49c
37c
37c
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Super Sugar Chex

53e

9-o•Pkg.

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IRAn CHEFS SURPRISE SUPPERS
SLOPPY JOE ...•.....•....•.•. a-oz. Pko.67c
COLONIAL •••.•. : .•.•. , ....•• ... ,_••• 67c
HOMESPUN .•.•.••......•... -1•-oz . •• ,. 67t
.r::HILI MACARONI ••••.••••.• , ,,..• ,_ ""' · 67c
FISHE"MANS ..•.••• ; •.•.••••• , .. , . •.,. 67c
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COFFEE
3-lb.
Can

$317
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•

�27 - The Sunday Times- Sentill&lt;'l, Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973

•

26 - Tho Sunday Times - S..~ttn\&gt;1, SW&gt;day, Dec. 2, 1973

•

Bobcats zn
66-57 win

By Uni ted Pren Inter nit-Ilona I
Obe r lin 69 E lyn a Cat hol ic SJ

Cl eve

came

Qn

· Zan es y i ll e

Centerb urg 46

strong the second period as
Phll Lewis, 6-2, 215 pound
senior forward, had eight
points on offensive reboW&gt;ds.
The Bobcat scoring was led by
Tabor and Rumley.
The game's tempo picked up
in the third period as the
Highlanders outscored the
Bobcats, 111-15. Walker led the
way with six points while
Lewis, Wood, and Carter had
four points each. Hudson and
Wise paced tlie Bobcat attack
with six points each.
Wise, playing one of the best
overall games · of his cage
career, hacj 15 points on the
night and 12 rebounds.
Hudson, who sat out most of
the second quarter,. finished as
the Bobcats' top pointproducer with 19 points on
seven baskets and five
freethrows. · Rumley also
playing a steady game had 12
points.
·
Southwestern also had three
players in double ligures'.
Walker led the way with 15
points, Wood added 13 and
Lewis finished with 12.
Kyger Creek sank 21 of 61
floor attempts for 34 pet. and 24
of 32 from the charity stripe for
75 pet.
The Highlanders hit 21 of 56
from the floodor 37 pet. and 15
of 24 free throws lor 42 pet.
Kyger Creek collected 61
rebounds led by Rumley's 16.
Wtse had 12 and Joe Stidham,
6-2 junior center; had 11.
Kyger Creek · also won the
reserve game , 36-23. Jim

Temple 79 West Chstr St . 66
B lnghmtn St . 73 Baruch 52
Geotown -OC 66 St . Leo 58
Rochstr Tech 78 P!t sbgh St. 67
Duquesne 85 Whee ling 53
South
F lo r ida Sf. 93 Hofstra 62
Alabama 88 Ga . Tech 64
Tenn BO North Texas 71

Sam Hou s 81 Sou thern U . 68

Mt . St . Mary 'S 97 Salsb r y St .BO
Memph ~s St . 103 Mo .-Rol l a 79
. Tu lane 81 Al a.-Huntsv l 65
Midwest

Chi Circle 70 Northern Mich 61
Mo Western 63 Bened ictinli! 61
Drury 93 F riends 81
Marietta 68 Bethany 65

Steubenvl .42 W. Liberty 37
Fe rr is St . 69 Mer cy 50
Crei ghton 92 Regis 38
Ashland 93 Kenyon 74

Oakla nd U . 57 Olivet 49

Loyola -11, _ 77 St. John ' s-M in . 56
Ohio Sl. 90 UT -Arlington 62

•

Rosec ran s

53

67

Wh iteha ll 60 De l aware Hayes

Portsmouth 78 Asnlend (Ky. )

62

S&lt;

Mt . Vernon 76 Worlh ington 46
Reynol dsburg 11 westland 70

Canton McK inley 79 Alliance

•t

Spr ingf ield Shawnee 74 South.

Teays Va ll ey 98 west Jell . 61
Granv i lle 85 Lic k ing Hts . -48
Lakewood
65
Watkins
Memor ia l 62
utica 59 Heath 54
Licking valley 94 North R idge
57
Mar ion Franklin 71 Columbus

58

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
Academy High School's alue
Devlls opened their 1973-74
basketball campaign on a
successful note here Friday
night by turning back visiting
Athens 56-45 . It was the
Southeastern Ohio League
opener for bolll teams.
While It was the season
opener lor Coach J im
Osborne's lads, the loss left
Charlie McAfee's Bulldogs
with a 1-2 season mark.

eastern 47
Massi llon 11 Fa irless 57

Manchester 92 Marllngton 70

Massillon 11 Fairless 57
Ayresville 63 Tlnora 61
Pettisv ille 8S Fayette 69'
Lima Bath 68 Napoleon 66
Continental 82_ Pavldlng '75

Ready 51

Team

GALLIPOLIS' NEWEST STORE FOR MEN IS
WAITING TO HELP YOU SELECT THE RIGHT
GIFT FOR THE MAN ON YOUR SHOPPING LIST.

·~~

Wake Fores t 75 Ri ce 70

Cemetery
reaths

West

,9!1;~:....

Utah St . 93 Doane 69

Denver 83 Idaho St. 73
s.ou Co lo . 66 Colo . Wstrn ·62
No Colorado 11 1 Adams St . 96
UCLA 101 Arkansas 79
'San Fran 76 San Diego 60
Okla 87 Ok latioma City 68

TOTAlS 24-10-58.

Vases
Blankets

SURGERY SUCCESSFUL
BOSTON (UP!) - Rogelio
Moret, who had a 13-2 record
for the Boston Red Sox this
season tmderwent successful
surgery Friday lor a knee
injury suffered while playing

For th e young man whO Iikes the
baggie look .

Score by' quarters:

Wellston
3 14 5 4- 26
Waverly
14 22 31· 18- 85
Reserve Score: Waverly 50,
Wellston 19.

'

G\'le a 8

•9.50- •20.00

'

'I

G\f1

ce

1503 Eastern Ave.

Friday's results:
Gallipolis 56 Athens 45

Gary Snowden, g
Gil Price, c
Jim Niday , g
Roger . Dail ey, f
J im Singer, g
Paul Taylor , f
Ken Will , g
Jim Warren, c

Waverly 85 Wellston 26

TOTAlS

o 56 45
1 o 67 58
0 1 58 . 67
o 1 45 56
o 1 69 82
1

0 1 26 85
4 4 488 488

1 0 50 19
1 0 50 37
1 0 41 ·34
1
39 36

o

o 1 36 39
o 1 34 41

o

1 37

50

0

1 19

50

4

4

Friday's results:

'

eUSE OUR LAY-AWAY

. .r·
Galllpollo

. 446·7733

. . .. .. .

opener

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Loan

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DOLLAR ON YOUR

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SAVINGS!
I

5.2 %

•
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ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
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ASSETS NOW OVER $7,000,000

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All Accounts Guaranteed In Full By The Ohio Deposit Guarantee Fund

ANDLOANCOMPANY
. ..

Gallipolis, Ohio

MIKE SICKLES (30) and Tom Valentfue (22) reach for loose ball
hoop
during second hall actiodn of Friday's GAHS-Athens basketball game. Sicliles, who tallied 16
points, pulled down 13 rebounds and was named Player of the Week ·by Coach Jim Osborne.
GAHS won,, 56-45. (Keith Wilson photo) .
·

Imps lose close tilt, 39-36
GALLIPOLIS
Steve
Green, !&gt;-11 junior guard 1
canned two free throws with
1:09 remaining, then assured
Coach Fred Gibson's Athens
Bullpups
of
a
39-36
Southeastern Ohio League
reserve victory over Coach
Buddy Moore's GAHS Blue
Imps with a three-point play
with seven seconds (eft in the
game here Friday night.
It was the Imps' sea_
1mn
opener. Athens is 2-1 on the
year. It was llle loop opener for
both teams.
Mter trailing IHJ following
one period of play, the Imps,
sparked by 5-9 sophomore
guard Tony Folden and
6 - ri sophomore forward
Brent SaW&gt;ders, rallied to knot
the count at 17-all just before
intermission .
David
Owens,
6-2
sophomore center, Brell
Wllson, 5-7 sophomore
guuard and Brent Johnson,
5-7 freshman guard kept the
Imps alive In tbe second hall.
The score was tied four times
and the Imps led three times in
the third stanza before Green's
three-point play with :17 left
~ave the visitors. a 29-26 three-

.

non-conference victory. Bennie

Burks topped the Panthers
with 18 while teammates Roger
Adkins and Dale Pemperton
chipped in 17 and 11 respectively. Jaye. Myers paced the
Vikings with 14 points, Paul
Bro)l'n had 12 points and Mike
Burcham canned II.
- SYMMES VALlEY .,... 15-21 -

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1-2
o.o

0

0
5

3
4

2
6

4-4

1

0
0

0

2

7

0
0

4
R

l -9 ; Heady, 0-1-1; Grover, 2-04; Blackford, 1-2-4 ; Green , 7-5-

.19; May , 1-0-2. .,-OTAlS iS-(921)-39.
BlUE IMPS (36) - Wilson,
2-0-4; Fold en,

2 ~ 1-5:

Saunders,

5- 1-11: Wa Il is. o.o.n : .lnhnc;nn. ?0-4 ; Owen s, S-O-J9 ; _Sm_itt1 1-0-2; '

eight, 31-23, hefore the halftime
inte r miss ion . The G allian s

maintained an 8 to 12 point lead
th roughout the third period. It
was 43-33 after lllree periods of
twJee - 2..0 on Skinner ' s
play.
layup to open the game's
In a rugged lourth period,
scoring at the 6:49 mark
GARS maintained a 10 to 13
- and 4·2 on Locke's tappoint advantage. Biggest
In with :&gt;: 52 s~ow l n g
on the clock.
GAHS lead was 54-11 (2o12)
and 56-43 11:45 ) in the final
The score was tied 2-2, 4-4, 6period.
6, and 11-8 before Price's three·
Gallipolis will journey to
point play at the 2::12 ma rk put
Dec. 7 lor its next
Wellston
the home club ahead lor keeps.
GAHS led 17-11 at . the fi rst outin g. Athens wi ll meet
Ironton at Athens in its first
quarter break.
GAHS increased its lead to home game of the ye ar Friday.

2

1 1
3 0
0-1 0·0
0
1
0
0
0-2 o.o
0
0
0
0
o.o o.o
a.12 o-1 4 2 . 2 16
0 0 0. 0
0-1 0-0
16
30 11 ~5
19-61 7-17
GAHS BlUE DEVIlS (56 )
FG-A FT-A · PF RB TO TP
6·11 4-6 0 13 1 16
2·2 0-0
1 2 0 4

.4·14
8-14

0-4
0-0
3·4

2-10

o.o

0·2

5 7
2
1
4 17
2 3

o:o

0-0

1 8
1 0
2 19
4 4

oooo

nn40 2 5
0-0
0-0 0 0 0 0
0-1 0-0
0
1
0 0
0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0
24-56 6-16 18 44 11 56
12
45
12 13
56
Davis and JoP ~ ..v art s, Chi II icothe Cha pter .
11
17

10

12
14

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Convenience and Luxury.

Stop in today and see the new exciting
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Th;, pl,a n features an 18 11. living room, large
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Score by quarters :
Bullpups
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Blue Imps
8 9 9 10- 36

Upper Rt, 7 Kanauga, Ohio

Just South of Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza

Gallipolis, Ohio

Phone 446-9340

CLOSE OUT AND ·REDUCTION SALE
ON PANELLING
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Myers 14, Brammer 5.

CHESAPEAKE 24-11 -15-1969: Holbrook 6. Adkins 17 ,
Sruke 18, Pemberton 11, Sheets

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REGULAR $6.79

AND NAILS

GILLIAM TO START
PITTSBURGH (UP I)
Third-string
Pittsburgh
Steeler
\
.
quarterback Joe Gilliam has .
been selected to start Monday
nlght's game against the
Miami Dolphins, but the firststring signal caller, Terry
Bradshaw, worked out at full
tilt Friday.

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R lchmond ( lnd . &gt; 67 Dayton

Moft .. f~ 11.m . l9s • .m.
Satt.trd1y 1 1 .m . to • p.m.

Visit the Colonel

.

COLONEL SANDERS' RECPPE

Kut..ektt fried Ckiekt"

Cheminade 57
'
Clerk Northeastern 73 Greenon
69 loti
..
.
Waynesville 67 Spr1ngboro , 58
Ft Lonm le 73 Houston 58 1
Miami Trace 70 Greenfield 66
~fofld Nortl'l so sp~t_ld t•thollc

CASH &amp;CARRY

· B[I]~[Ml

®

BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN
_,

•

'

'

lor Athens .
BOx score :
BUlLPUPS (39) - Greer, 4·

•

•

•
'

0
1

SKYLINE LANES

10. Turner 2. Smith 5.

Withdrawable At Any Time

TIUrd and Locust .

,.•

L

PAYS DOLLAR FOR
.1

1·5
2-6

0-1
0-0

Bulldogs were a Iso cool at the
foul circles, sinking 7 of 17 lor
41.1 pet.
The Bulldogs led onl y

.,

HAVE YOU LOST MONEY
ON THE STOCK MARKET?
Buckeye Building &amp;

3-21

y-:o'::-"'

..

Offici 3 !: -

quarter advantage.
Well ston at Oak Hill
Bill Greer, 6-2 sophomore .
Friday's Games.:
center, stole a Blue Imp pass
Gallipolis at Well st on
under the AHS bucket and laid
Wa verly at Meigs
Ja ckson -at Logan
i~ a key twin-pointer for Athens
Ironton at Athens ·
with 2:11left in the game.
The Imps were met at midSE0Al FROSH
Team
W L
POP
court by Athens defenders
logan
1 0 53 27
most of the evening. The
Waverly
. 1 0 46 17
Mooremen, however, were
Gallipol is
1 0 36 29
Me igs
1 0 33 30
able to lick the AHS defense
Jackson
0 1 30 33
tllere, but found a lid on the
0 1 29 36
Athens
hoop on down floor where they
Wellston
-0 1 17 46
Ironton
0 1 27 53
managed to hit only 17 of 60
TOTAlS
4 4 271 271
. field goel attempts lor a cool
Thursday's resu its:
28 pet. The Imps were two of
Gallipolis 36 Athens 29
Meigs 33 Jackson 30
four at the foul circles for 50
Waverly 46 Wel lston 17
pet.
Logan 53 Ironton 27
The losers hauled down 36
Dec-. 6 games :
Wellston at Gall ipol is
rebounds . Bre~t Saunders
.Meigs at Waverly
snagged 10. GAHS had 15 turnLogan at Jack son
over. The Gallians committed
Athens at Ironton
21 personals - guards Brett
Wilson and Brent Johnson
fouled . out in the final stanza .
The Imps outgoaled Athens, 1715. AHS canned 9 of 21·charity
shots.
Ed Smith, 6-2 . sophomore
forw~rd, picked up three quick
personals in the firsi stanza.
CHESAPEAKE - Symmes
He was replaced by Steve
Valley, a tri-&lt;!hamp of the
Wallis.
Southern Valley Athletic
The Imps may have lost
Conference last year, lost a
the
services ol guard Tony
heartbreaker here Friday
-Folden for the remainder of
night to the Ohio Valley ConOHIO
COLLEGE
the year. The GAHS sparkference Panthers, 69-66 .
BASKETBALL SCORES
plug collided with a teamChesapeake jumped into a nine
By United Press lnterna_
t ional
Ohio
State
90
TeKas
-Arlington
mate at mid-court in the'
point first quarter lead, but had
to put on a second hall spurt to Marietta 68 BetMny (W . va . ) second half, and may have
suffered tom ligaments in
down the Vikings of Coach 65
Steubenv ille 42 West Libel'ty
bis 1elt knee.
Ferrell Hesson.
fW . Va .) 37
Ashland
93
Kenypn
74
Saunders and Owens led the
Trailing by one at the half, John Carroll 77 Baldwin Imps scoring with 11 and 10
the Panthers outscored · Wallace 69
ooints. Green finished with 19
Symmes Valley by three in the
third period and held on lor the

Panthers top
Vikings in

... .

0-2
13

Score bv quarters :
Athen s Bu lldogs
GAHSBiueDevils

306 306

Wave rly 50 Wellston 19
Ironton SO Logan 37
Ja ck,son 41 Me igs 3-4
Athens 39 Gallipolis 36
Tuesday's. Games :

THE BUCI(EYE .BQILDING
.,

Gallipolis

TOTAlS

0-U ;
2-0-4;
2-0-4;
2-0-4;

1\
A Burger Chef Gift Certificate is the
perfect way to treat your friends to a special holiday meal. Each Burger Chef Certificate is worth one dollar toward your
next Burger Chef meal. It's a sure ·way
to please everyone on your gift list this
season!

PLAYER- Pos.
Mike Sickles, f
Mike Berridge, f
Tom Valent ine. f

Gallipolis
Meigs
Logan
Well ston

I'

'

l
~------------------------------- ~-------------

$75 . suo

Aramis

Estee Lauder

300 Se&lt;ond Ave,

TOTAlS

SEOAl VARSITY
Team
W L ' POP
Wa verl y
1 o 85 26
1 o 82 69
Ja ckson

Jackson
Athens

For Men By :

37.

R1\f\C~1E

02115138
0 2 81 151

Ironton

!)nits, Corduroy

BUCKEY E BUILDING &amp; LOAN

uRGER cHEf

''

02 118 137

Ironton

Waverly

Beatt ie 1-0·2. TOTAlS 36-13-85 .

Share a
holiday meal
with .everyone
you know. ...

P.R.

Meigs

Doug Ell wood, g
John Locke, g
Bob Gardner , g

SEOAl RESERVES
Team
W l POP

VESTED SUITS

by Mal e, lee, Landlubber

GIFT
·wrapping

1 218 182

ATHENSBUllDOGSI4S)
FG-A FT -A PFRBTOTP
3 12
4 8
3-8 2-9

Chesapeake 69 Symmes Valley
66

'

2-1-5,' Tracy 1-2.-4; Duduit 4_-210 ;
Shoemaker
12 -3- 27 ; ·
Swind ler 2-1-5; Pfeifer 12-2-26 ;
Holland 1-2-4 ; Workman 1-0-2;

1

winter basebal1 in Santurce,

.

TOTAlS 7-12-26.
WAVERlY 185) - Thomas

UNIFORM RETIRED
EAST LANSING, Mi ch.
(UP! ) - Five-foot-five Gary
Ganakas had hi s No. 11
basketball uniform retired by
Michigan State. His lather,
Spartan head Coach Gus
Ganakas,quipped , "We had to;
no' one else. could get into it."

453 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis

1 2 171 189

Whee lersbu rg 66 Notre Dam e

PANT VAULT

,-

Smeltzer Garden
Center

Athens

59

Select From The

FREE

PLAYER- Pos.
Don Skinner , t
Carl StempeL f
Todd Ellwood. g
Mark Mace, g
Matt Faulkner, c
Arnie Chonko , c
Todd Romig , f __,
. Scott Oailey , f

Portsmouth 78 Ashland. Ky. 62

Reser ve Score : Ironton 50,

log~n

1069. 66

committed 18 personal s.
Valentine fouled out with 3:18
remaining in the game. Price
and Singer each had four
personals . Ath ens had t6
personals.
The Blue Devils picked off 44
rebounds, Athens snagged 30.
Each team committed II turnovers.
Athens hit 19 of 61 field goal
attempts lor 31.1 pet. The

GAHS box score

Ja ckson 82 Meigs 69
Logan 67 Ironton 58.
Non-Conference :

'10.00 . •26.00

Exclusive
Toiletries

exceptions, played a tight man- for the Galllans. Sickles was
to-man defense while the named player of the week lor
Bulldogs zoned the Gallians his performance.
John Locke, 5-9 senior guard,
throughout the evening.
Gil Price, below par as a paced Athens scorers with 16
result of illness earlier in the points. Don Skinner, 6-2 senior
week, still managed to score 19 forward , hauled down 12
points and snag 17 rebounds for reoounds lor the Bulldogs.
GAHS hit 24 of 56 field goal
the winners. The 6-5 senior
Blue Devil center is recovering attempts lor 42.8 pet. The
from an attack of bronchitis. Devils were 8 of 16 at the folil
Mike Sickles, 6-3 junior circles for 50 pet. GAHS
forward, popped In 16 points
and hauled down 13 reoounds

20147131
20151101
1 0 Q5 26
105645
106659
2

Athens
Meigs
· Wellston
TOTAlS

In the new Baseball loo k .
By : Europe Craft, Lamplighter
and M ike's Fri ends .

only crowd.
McMee and AHS reserve
coach Fred Gibson had special
praise for Tom Valentine, 6-2
jW&gt;ior Blue Devil forward who
held high-scoring Mark Mace
to seven points. Mace, an allleague
performer
who
averaged 19 points a game last
year, entered Friday's game
with a 3l-point average in two
starts. The 6-2 senior Bulldog
ace was 3 of 21 from the field .
GAHS, with two or three

POP

Portsmouth

logan

Score by quarters:
Logan
19 14 11 2J- 67
Ironton
14 1ll 18 -·12- 58

Sprays

NEW CONTRACTS
LUBBOCK , Tex. ( UPI) Texas Tech football Coach Jim
Carlen and basketball Coach
Gerald Myers were each given
new 10-year contracts F•iday
by the school's board Of
regents.

•

"Our defense did it, "
remarked Osborne after his
team had recorded Its fifth
straight hardwood victory
over an Athens team.
' 'Your boys are real
scrappers. They played well
out there tonight. Our boys
never gave up . We think we 'll
come along/' the veteran
Bulldog mentor said . in the
Athens
dressing
room
following the hard-fought
contest before a standing room

3 0 220 164

Chesa peak e

Wellston

SWEATERS

1-2-4 ; Walburn 1-2-4; Holzapfel
0-1-1; Sci tes ·1-0-2; Apple dorn 20 -.:l ; long 1-0-2; McKinnis 0- l -1;
Peop les 0-6-6 ; Exli ne 1-0·2.

Campbe l l6 ·4· 16 ; Young 5-1-11 ;
Harwe ll 0-0-0. TOTALS 29 -9·67 .

Neal
Rann 17-5-39 ; F itzpafr ick
M c Crea r y 0-3-3; Wylie
Brown 1-0-2; Howard

Wheelers burg

Ironton

PROBERS MOVING
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
special team of 10 investigators
will move into Clark &lt;;ounty
Monday to begin a review of
that county's Aid to Dependent
Childr en and Food Stamp
programs. Welfare · Director
Charles W. Bates said the
review would determine. if any
recipients were being overpaid
. and if there were any ineligible
LOGAN (67) - Pierce 11-1 ·
persons on the rolls.
23 ; Wr ight 3·2·8; Ke mper 4-l -9;
IRONTON ISS) -

Wa verly
Gallipol is

•1.00 . •16.00

It was str ictly no contest as to top the scorers.
the strong Tigers led by
Waverly' s statis tics show
qu arter scores of 14-3, 36-17, their total domination as they
and 67-22 as they canned 13 of hit 36 of 66 field goal attempts
16 field goal attempts in that ·for 54 pet., converted 13 of 26
hot third period.
free throws, and picked off 46
Shoema ker, a two.time All· rebounds.
SEOAL player, led the attack
The losers managed just
with 27 points with Pfeifer seven fielders of 35 shots,
adding 26, and Tjm Duduit dropped in 12 of 25 charity
getting 10.
tosses, and netted 26 rebounds.
Nine players contributed to
The Waverly defense forced
the Rocket scoring with Randy Wellston into 36 turnovers
Peoples hitting six free throws while the champs committed
jus t an even dozen rnistak~s .
The box score:
WEllSTON 126) - Gil liland

Rann, the only returning
starter from la st year 's team,
just couldn' t be shut down by
the Chiefs as he connected on
17 of 40 shot.s and actually led
the Tigers into a brief third
period lead.
Logan's big veteran team
took a 19-14 first period lead
and clun g to a 33-28 halftime
lead.
.
But in the third p~riod Rann
led the Tigers on a scoring
binge that carried them into a
46-44 lead alter three quarters
of play.
Jim Pierce, a three year
veteran, led \he Chiefs with 23
points with Jeff Ca mpbell
ge tting ·16, and Don Young
adding 11 .
The box score : · ·

South Po int

In Pat1erns and Soli d s

Chieftains edge Ironton
IRONTON - Despite a
sensational 39-point performance by. Ironton's Dave Rann,
the visiting Logan Chieftains
had too much firepow er as they
downed the ·Tigers 67-58 here
Friday night.

Jack son

by : Eagle &amp;
Career Club

·waverly rips Wellston.
WAVERLY - Coach Carroll
Hawhee's Waverly ba sket·
bailers displayed a new look
Friday nig ht but the result was
the same as the Tigers
destroyed visiting Wellston 8526.
Th e three-time defending
SEOAL champs notched their
40th consecutive league vic tory
as John Shoemaker and Tom
Pfeifer combined lor 53 points .
It was Wellston's 24th straight
loss, and 17th straight loop loss .

All GAMES
Wl

Logan

SHIRTS

PRICE FOULED - Gallipolis center Gil Price (24) was fouled by Athens' Matt Faulkner
( 34) on this play in the second period of Friday's SEOAL cage opener at Gallipolis. On right is
Athens ace Mark Mace, 42. (Don Wright photo) .

Okla St. 72 Tulsa 54

.I

Boardman 70 A ust intown F i t ch

High land 51 East K nox .o!O
West Holme.s 61 Coshocton 48
Vgstn . Cd l Mooney 5 7 Ygstn
Chny..J.Q_

Rio idle
until ·Dec. 7

.

62

Pleasant i 3

Southwest
Arizona 101 I ll in o is 80

RIO GRANDE - The Rio game with 24, and teammate
Grande N basketball team, Mike Beaths adding 23, to lead
under Coach Bob Leith, split the way. Doug Davis hit for 18,
their first two games of the Randy Cox added 17, and Jack
1973-74 season recently.
Everson finished with 10.
The Redmen dropped their
OU-Chillicothe wrapped up
season opener at Lyne Center the \vin early with a 60-27 lead
to the , Ohio University- at the half. The Redmen out·
Chillicothe Branch, lll-90. Rio scored OU-Chillicothe, 63-51 in
Grande came back later to llle final twenty minutes.
gain an impressive 98-58 vic- , Scoring balance and an
tory against AShland Business improved defense keyed the
College.
Rio Grande victory against
The Redmen placed five men Ashland Business College , Rio
in double figures against OU- guard Mar'k Kiesling paced the
Oiillicothe, but failed to stop Rio attack willl 18 points while
the bigger and stronger Bobby Caldwell had 16, Bruce
visitors. Gallipolis freshmen Schaefer 15, Bruce Croskey 11,
M1rk Kiesling ~nd Bruce and Eugene Terry had 10.
Schaefer combined for 40
The only inan in double
'
points. Both youngsters
ligures for Ashland Business
finished with 20 points. Browne College was Ken Barrows with
Wi~Pt had 15, while Bobby 11 points,
c.ldweD and AI,Robinson each
The Rio JV team is idle until
connected ror 10 points. ou- Dec . 7. The Redmen will travel
ChUUcot~e also had live to Grayson, Ky. on that date to
players ill double figures with meet Kentucky Christian in a 6
Joe Plrk the lllp score•
. of the p.m. game.

48
Yng s tn . Urs u li n e 93 Hubbard

Philo 62 Zane Tra ce 42
River Vall e y 6 7 Mar ion

Varsity Sox

R . I. Coli. Bl Babson 79
N.!vy 96 Lycom ing ~8
F rostburg 73 Ca!if .-Pa . 1.2
Holy Cross 81 Dartmouth 70

.ol9 Yn gstn North 47
East Liv erpool 50 Vgnst. East

Lim a Se n i or 71 M idd letown 67
Spr ingtJ e ld S. 76 D e lph os St .
Joh n 73
P'atr ic k H enry ·H O ttawa
G leodore 53
Zan es v ille 74 Cambr idge 66

The fourth quarter scoring 1 Ward , 6-1 sophomore center,
barrage was led by 6-0 senior led the Bobkittens with 12
guard Clay Hudson; 5-7 points while Tim Lucas, :HI
sophomore Tom Kern; senior sophomore guard had 11
guard Lawrence Tabor and points.
junior forward Dave Wise.
Keilll Grate, :HI and Chris
Going into the final quarter, Lewis, 5-9 both freshmen, led
Coach
Keith
Carter's the Highlanders with six
Highlanders held a four point points.
lead, 44-38.
, Southwestern travels to
Suddenly, Coach
Jim Norlll Gallia Tuesday while
Arledge's Bobcats caught fire Kyger Creek will play at
as Hudson began hitting Eastern Friday.

Southwestern

Chane l56
Pis . Notre

64

PATRIOT - A 28 point explosion in the fourth
quarter here Friday night carried the Kyger Creek
Bobcats to a come-from-behind 66 -57, victory over
Southwestern.
It was Kyger's opening game of the 1973-74
Southern Valley Athletic Conference season while
the Highlanders dropped to 0·2 .

while Tabor, Rumley, Kern
Kyger Creek (66 ) ,__ Hudson ,
and Wise all converted clutch 7-5-19; Rum ley, 3-6-12 ; Tabor ,
4- 1-9 ; Clay , ) -0-2 ; Wise, 3+9- 15 ;
free throws . •
Stidham, 2-0-4; Lucas, 0-0-0 and
During the comeback two Kern , 1-3-5. Total s 21 ;24-66 .
Southwestern 1571 - Ll&gt;wis,
charity tossed by Rumlev
6-0-12;
1-3-5; Fallon. 0-0knotted the score at 44-44 then 0 ; WoodWhitt,
. 5-3-13; Carter, 4-0-8 ;
came two quick layups by Banks, 0-4-4; Frasher. 0-0-0.
Tabor and Kern, two baskets Totals 21 -15-57 .
By Quarter s:
by Hudson, three free throws Kyger
Creek
11 12 15 28- 66
by Kern, two by Wise and three Southwestern 11 13 18 13- 57
by Hudson.
Reserve Box
Southwestern made it c1ose
Kyger Creek (36) - Metzner,
behind the foul shooting of 6-1 2-0-.4 ; Booten, 0-0-0 ; Arnett , 0-0jW&gt;ior Kevin Walker and subs 0; Blazer, 0-0-0; -Ward, 4-4-12;
Gr im, 0-0-0 ; Lucas, 3-5-11 ;
David Whitt and Jeff Banks. Geiger,
1-1-3 ; Preston , 0-2-2 ;
Whitt, playing in place of Bu c k, 2-0-4 ; Armsbruster , 0-0senior Larry Frasher who 0 . Total s 12 -12-36.
Southwestern (2 3) - Grate,
fouled out, hit three of five
1-4-6; At ha , 2-0-4; Lew is, 0-6-6;
charity tosses and a long 30 V. Miller, 1-1-3; Walker, 1-0-2 ;
Fortner, 0-0-0·; Ruff, 0-0-0 and
footer from the corner.
Banks, who entered the D. Mill er, 1-0-2. Totals 6-11 -23 .
game when Terry Carter
College Basketball Results
fouled out, wasfour for four at
By United Press International
lptay Invitational
the ·free throw line _
( 1 s.t round)
Sou~hwestern jumped in Sl . John ' s -N .Y . 69 Jaxnvl 64
front 13-12 at the end of the first Clemso n 87 Auburn 7'1
Sports Foundation
quarter and increased it to 26(1st round)
Centenary 82 M cNees e St . 72
23 at the hall.
Spartan Classic
Lloyd Wood, 6-2 junior
(1st round)
center, paced the first period Ind . Cenl. 72 Cu lv er Stcktn 61
Harbor 83
scoring drive with five points Aurora 87 Spring
East
while Walker and Carter had Cheyny Sf. 65 Br i Qgept 63
tty sbg 63 Messi ah 48
four points each. Hudson and Ge
Cor tla nd 79. Itha ca 70
Wise led KC w,iijt lour points Gannon 39 Fredonia St . 38
. Rutgers 71 Colgate .49
each.
St . Jo.s .• Pa . 65 Army 5.4

66

b

Can ton Li n coln 52 Vg s tn Soo th

Wapakone ta 69 L ima Sh awn ee

•

consistently from the side,

North l and 64 Col i .
Watte-rson S?
Co tumbus St. Charles
BtK!ey A7
ColumbuS Mohawl!i 73 Lem M
Monroe- 72
Cols . INalout Rdge . 84 Cola
Hartley 70
Miffli n 74 Cols , DeSeles 69
london 5'2 Picker ington -4-4
Lancaster 5.5 Grove City 49
New Albany 70 Jonathan Al det

••Salem

B e n e d i ctine~l

Whe@ ler sbtJr9
Da me- 59

GAHS defeats Athens 56-45 In opener

Co ls .

Friday's high school results

.-

'.

•
J
'

...

;l

•

�27 - The Sunday Times- Sentill&lt;'l, Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973

•

26 - Tho Sunday Times - S..~ttn\&gt;1, SW&gt;day, Dec. 2, 1973

•

Bobcats zn
66-57 win

By Uni ted Pren Inter nit-Ilona I
Obe r lin 69 E lyn a Cat hol ic SJ

Cl eve

came

Qn

· Zan es y i ll e

Centerb urg 46

strong the second period as
Phll Lewis, 6-2, 215 pound
senior forward, had eight
points on offensive reboW&gt;ds.
The Bobcat scoring was led by
Tabor and Rumley.
The game's tempo picked up
in the third period as the
Highlanders outscored the
Bobcats, 111-15. Walker led the
way with six points while
Lewis, Wood, and Carter had
four points each. Hudson and
Wise paced tlie Bobcat attack
with six points each.
Wise, playing one of the best
overall games · of his cage
career, hacj 15 points on the
night and 12 rebounds.
Hudson, who sat out most of
the second quarter,. finished as
the Bobcats' top pointproducer with 19 points on
seven baskets and five
freethrows. · Rumley also
playing a steady game had 12
points.
·
Southwestern also had three
players in double ligures'.
Walker led the way with 15
points, Wood added 13 and
Lewis finished with 12.
Kyger Creek sank 21 of 61
floor attempts for 34 pet. and 24
of 32 from the charity stripe for
75 pet.
The Highlanders hit 21 of 56
from the floodor 37 pet. and 15
of 24 free throws lor 42 pet.
Kyger Creek collected 61
rebounds led by Rumley's 16.
Wtse had 12 and Joe Stidham,
6-2 junior center; had 11.
Kyger Creek · also won the
reserve game , 36-23. Jim

Temple 79 West Chstr St . 66
B lnghmtn St . 73 Baruch 52
Geotown -OC 66 St . Leo 58
Rochstr Tech 78 P!t sbgh St. 67
Duquesne 85 Whee ling 53
South
F lo r ida Sf. 93 Hofstra 62
Alabama 88 Ga . Tech 64
Tenn BO North Texas 71

Sam Hou s 81 Sou thern U . 68

Mt . St . Mary 'S 97 Salsb r y St .BO
Memph ~s St . 103 Mo .-Rol l a 79
. Tu lane 81 Al a.-Huntsv l 65
Midwest

Chi Circle 70 Northern Mich 61
Mo Western 63 Bened ictinli! 61
Drury 93 F riends 81
Marietta 68 Bethany 65

Steubenvl .42 W. Liberty 37
Fe rr is St . 69 Mer cy 50
Crei ghton 92 Regis 38
Ashland 93 Kenyon 74

Oakla nd U . 57 Olivet 49

Loyola -11, _ 77 St. John ' s-M in . 56
Ohio Sl. 90 UT -Arlington 62

•

Rosec ran s

53

67

Wh iteha ll 60 De l aware Hayes

Portsmouth 78 Asnlend (Ky. )

62

S&lt;

Mt . Vernon 76 Worlh ington 46
Reynol dsburg 11 westland 70

Canton McK inley 79 Alliance

•t

Spr ingf ield Shawnee 74 South.

Teays Va ll ey 98 west Jell . 61
Granv i lle 85 Lic k ing Hts . -48
Lakewood
65
Watkins
Memor ia l 62
utica 59 Heath 54
Licking valley 94 North R idge
57
Mar ion Franklin 71 Columbus

58

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
Academy High School's alue
Devlls opened their 1973-74
basketball campaign on a
successful note here Friday
night by turning back visiting
Athens 56-45 . It was the
Southeastern Ohio League
opener for bolll teams.
While It was the season
opener lor Coach J im
Osborne's lads, the loss left
Charlie McAfee's Bulldogs
with a 1-2 season mark.

eastern 47
Massi llon 11 Fa irless 57

Manchester 92 Marllngton 70

Massillon 11 Fairless 57
Ayresville 63 Tlnora 61
Pettisv ille 8S Fayette 69'
Lima Bath 68 Napoleon 66
Continental 82_ Pavldlng '75

Ready 51

Team

GALLIPOLIS' NEWEST STORE FOR MEN IS
WAITING TO HELP YOU SELECT THE RIGHT
GIFT FOR THE MAN ON YOUR SHOPPING LIST.

·~~

Wake Fores t 75 Ri ce 70

Cemetery
reaths

West

,9!1;~:....

Utah St . 93 Doane 69

Denver 83 Idaho St. 73
s.ou Co lo . 66 Colo . Wstrn ·62
No Colorado 11 1 Adams St . 96
UCLA 101 Arkansas 79
'San Fran 76 San Diego 60
Okla 87 Ok latioma City 68

TOTAlS 24-10-58.

Vases
Blankets

SURGERY SUCCESSFUL
BOSTON (UP!) - Rogelio
Moret, who had a 13-2 record
for the Boston Red Sox this
season tmderwent successful
surgery Friday lor a knee
injury suffered while playing

For th e young man whO Iikes the
baggie look .

Score by' quarters:

Wellston
3 14 5 4- 26
Waverly
14 22 31· 18- 85
Reserve Score: Waverly 50,
Wellston 19.

'

G\'le a 8

•9.50- •20.00

'

'I

G\f1

ce

1503 Eastern Ave.

Friday's results:
Gallipolis 56 Athens 45

Gary Snowden, g
Gil Price, c
Jim Niday , g
Roger . Dail ey, f
J im Singer, g
Paul Taylor , f
Ken Will , g
Jim Warren, c

Waverly 85 Wellston 26

TOTAlS

o 56 45
1 o 67 58
0 1 58 . 67
o 1 45 56
o 1 69 82
1

0 1 26 85
4 4 488 488

1 0 50 19
1 0 50 37
1 0 41 ·34
1
39 36

o

o 1 36 39
o 1 34 41

o

1 37

50

0

1 19

50

4

4

Friday's results:

'

eUSE OUR LAY-AWAY

. .r·
Galllpollo

. 446·7733

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ANDLOANCOMPANY
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Gallipolis, Ohio

MIKE SICKLES (30) and Tom Valentfue (22) reach for loose ball
hoop
during second hall actiodn of Friday's GAHS-Athens basketball game. Sicliles, who tallied 16
points, pulled down 13 rebounds and was named Player of the Week ·by Coach Jim Osborne.
GAHS won,, 56-45. (Keith Wilson photo) .
·

Imps lose close tilt, 39-36
GALLIPOLIS
Steve
Green, !&gt;-11 junior guard 1
canned two free throws with
1:09 remaining, then assured
Coach Fred Gibson's Athens
Bullpups
of
a
39-36
Southeastern Ohio League
reserve victory over Coach
Buddy Moore's GAHS Blue
Imps with a three-point play
with seven seconds (eft in the
game here Friday night.
It was the Imps' sea_
1mn
opener. Athens is 2-1 on the
year. It was llle loop opener for
both teams.
Mter trailing IHJ following
one period of play, the Imps,
sparked by 5-9 sophomore
guard Tony Folden and
6 - ri sophomore forward
Brent SaW&gt;ders, rallied to knot
the count at 17-all just before
intermission .
David
Owens,
6-2
sophomore center, Brell
Wllson, 5-7 sophomore
guuard and Brent Johnson,
5-7 freshman guard kept the
Imps alive In tbe second hall.
The score was tied four times
and the Imps led three times in
the third stanza before Green's
three-point play with :17 left
~ave the visitors. a 29-26 three-

.

non-conference victory. Bennie

Burks topped the Panthers
with 18 while teammates Roger
Adkins and Dale Pemperton
chipped in 17 and 11 respectively. Jaye. Myers paced the
Vikings with 14 points, Paul
Bro)l'n had 12 points and Mike
Burcham canned II.
- SYMMES VALlEY .,... 15-21 -

'

1-2
o.o

0

0
5

3
4

2
6

4-4

1

0
0

0

2

7

0
0

4
R

l -9 ; Heady, 0-1-1; Grover, 2-04; Blackford, 1-2-4 ; Green , 7-5-

.19; May , 1-0-2. .,-OTAlS iS-(921)-39.
BlUE IMPS (36) - Wilson,
2-0-4; Fold en,

2 ~ 1-5:

Saunders,

5- 1-11: Wa Il is. o.o.n : .lnhnc;nn. ?0-4 ; Owen s, S-O-J9 ; _Sm_itt1 1-0-2; '

eight, 31-23, hefore the halftime
inte r miss ion . The G allian s

maintained an 8 to 12 point lead
th roughout the third period. It
was 43-33 after lllree periods of
twJee - 2..0 on Skinner ' s
play.
layup to open the game's
In a rugged lourth period,
scoring at the 6:49 mark
GARS maintained a 10 to 13
- and 4·2 on Locke's tappoint advantage. Biggest
In with :&gt;: 52 s~ow l n g
on the clock.
GAHS lead was 54-11 (2o12)
and 56-43 11:45 ) in the final
The score was tied 2-2, 4-4, 6period.
6, and 11-8 before Price's three·
Gallipolis will journey to
point play at the 2::12 ma rk put
Dec. 7 lor its next
Wellston
the home club ahead lor keeps.
GAHS led 17-11 at . the fi rst outin g. Athens wi ll meet
Ironton at Athens in its first
quarter break.
GAHS increased its lead to home game of the ye ar Friday.

2

1 1
3 0
0-1 0·0
0
1
0
0
0-2 o.o
0
0
0
0
o.o o.o
a.12 o-1 4 2 . 2 16
0 0 0. 0
0-1 0-0
16
30 11 ~5
19-61 7-17
GAHS BlUE DEVIlS (56 )
FG-A FT-A · PF RB TO TP
6·11 4-6 0 13 1 16
2·2 0-0
1 2 0 4

.4·14
8-14

0-4
0-0
3·4

2-10

o.o

0·2

5 7
2
1
4 17
2 3

o:o

0-0

1 8
1 0
2 19
4 4

oooo

nn40 2 5
0-0
0-0 0 0 0 0
0-1 0-0
0
1
0 0
0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0
24-56 6-16 18 44 11 56
12
45
12 13
56
Davis and JoP ~ ..v art s, Chi II icothe Cha pter .
11
17

10

12
14

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Score by quarters :
Bullpups
11 6 12 1Q-39
Blue Imps
8 9 9 10- 36

Upper Rt, 7 Kanauga, Ohio

Just South of Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza

Gallipolis, Ohio

Phone 446-9340

CLOSE OUT AND ·REDUCTION SALE
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CHESAPEAKE 24-11 -15-1969: Holbrook 6. Adkins 17 ,
Sruke 18, Pemberton 11, Sheets

Ph. 446-0315

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AND NAILS

GILLIAM TO START
PITTSBURGH (UP I)
Third-string
Pittsburgh
Steeler
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quarterback Joe Gilliam has .
been selected to start Monday
nlght's game against the
Miami Dolphins, but the firststring signal caller, Terry
Bradshaw, worked out at full
tilt Friday.

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STORE HOURS

Shelby 67 Bucyrus 63 (otJ
Fremont Ross 68 Mansfield 63
Mepltlon 73 Black River ~B
Deyton Jefferson 73 Ham 1\lon
Garfield 6.ol
R lchmond ( lnd . &gt; 67 Dayton

Moft .. f~ 11.m . l9s • .m.
Satt.trd1y 1 1 .m . to • p.m.

Visit the Colonel

.

COLONEL SANDERS' RECPPE

Kut..ektt fried Ckiekt"

Cheminade 57
'
Clerk Northeastern 73 Greenon
69 loti
..
.
Waynesville 67 Spr1ngboro , 58
Ft Lonm le 73 Houston 58 1
Miami Trace 70 Greenfield 66
~fofld Nortl'l so sp~t_ld t•thollc

CASH &amp;CARRY

· B[I]~[Ml

®

BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN
_,

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lor Athens .
BOx score :
BUlLPUPS (39) - Greer, 4·

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SKYLINE LANES

10. Turner 2. Smith 5.

Withdrawable At Any Time

TIUrd and Locust .

,.•

L

PAYS DOLLAR FOR
.1

1·5
2-6

0-1
0-0

Bulldogs were a Iso cool at the
foul circles, sinking 7 of 17 lor
41.1 pet.
The Bulldogs led onl y

.,

HAVE YOU LOST MONEY
ON THE STOCK MARKET?
Buckeye Building &amp;

3-21

y-:o'::-"'

..

Offici 3 !: -

quarter advantage.
Well ston at Oak Hill
Bill Greer, 6-2 sophomore .
Friday's Games.:
center, stole a Blue Imp pass
Gallipolis at Well st on
under the AHS bucket and laid
Wa verly at Meigs
Ja ckson -at Logan
i~ a key twin-pointer for Athens
Ironton at Athens ·
with 2:11left in the game.
The Imps were met at midSE0Al FROSH
Team
W L
POP
court by Athens defenders
logan
1 0 53 27
most of the evening. The
Waverly
. 1 0 46 17
Mooremen, however, were
Gallipol is
1 0 36 29
Me igs
1 0 33 30
able to lick the AHS defense
Jackson
0 1 30 33
tllere, but found a lid on the
0 1 29 36
Athens
hoop on down floor where they
Wellston
-0 1 17 46
Ironton
0 1 27 53
managed to hit only 17 of 60
TOTAlS
4 4 271 271
. field goel attempts lor a cool
Thursday's resu its:
28 pet. The Imps were two of
Gallipolis 36 Athens 29
Meigs 33 Jackson 30
four at the foul circles for 50
Waverly 46 Wel lston 17
pet.
Logan 53 Ironton 27
The losers hauled down 36
Dec-. 6 games :
Wellston at Gall ipol is
rebounds . Bre~t Saunders
.Meigs at Waverly
snagged 10. GAHS had 15 turnLogan at Jack son
over. The Gallians committed
Athens at Ironton
21 personals - guards Brett
Wilson and Brent Johnson
fouled . out in the final stanza .
The Imps outgoaled Athens, 1715. AHS canned 9 of 21·charity
shots.
Ed Smith, 6-2 . sophomore
forw~rd, picked up three quick
personals in the firsi stanza.
CHESAPEAKE - Symmes
He was replaced by Steve
Valley, a tri-&lt;!hamp of the
Wallis.
Southern Valley Athletic
The Imps may have lost
Conference last year, lost a
the
services ol guard Tony
heartbreaker here Friday
-Folden for the remainder of
night to the Ohio Valley ConOHIO
COLLEGE
the year. The GAHS sparkference Panthers, 69-66 .
BASKETBALL SCORES
plug collided with a teamChesapeake jumped into a nine
By United Press lnterna_
t ional
Ohio
State
90
TeKas
-Arlington
mate at mid-court in the'
point first quarter lead, but had
to put on a second hall spurt to Marietta 68 BetMny (W . va . ) second half, and may have
suffered tom ligaments in
down the Vikings of Coach 65
Steubenv ille 42 West Libel'ty
bis 1elt knee.
Ferrell Hesson.
fW . Va .) 37
Ashland
93
Kenypn
74
Saunders and Owens led the
Trailing by one at the half, John Carroll 77 Baldwin Imps scoring with 11 and 10
the Panthers outscored · Wallace 69
ooints. Green finished with 19
Symmes Valley by three in the
third period and held on lor the

Panthers top
Vikings in

... .

0-2
13

Score bv quarters :
Athen s Bu lldogs
GAHSBiueDevils

306 306

Wave rly 50 Wellston 19
Ironton SO Logan 37
Ja ck,son 41 Me igs 3-4
Athens 39 Gallipolis 36
Tuesday's. Games :

THE BUCI(EYE .BQILDING
.,

Gallipolis

TOTAlS

0-U ;
2-0-4;
2-0-4;
2-0-4;

1\
A Burger Chef Gift Certificate is the
perfect way to treat your friends to a special holiday meal. Each Burger Chef Certificate is worth one dollar toward your
next Burger Chef meal. It's a sure ·way
to please everyone on your gift list this
season!

PLAYER- Pos.
Mike Sickles, f
Mike Berridge, f
Tom Valent ine. f

Gallipolis
Meigs
Logan
Well ston

I'

'

l
~------------------------------- ~-------------

$75 . suo

Aramis

Estee Lauder

300 Se&lt;ond Ave,

TOTAlS

SEOAl VARSITY
Team
W L ' POP
Wa verl y
1 o 85 26
1 o 82 69
Ja ckson

Jackson
Athens

For Men By :

37.

R1\f\C~1E

02115138
0 2 81 151

Ironton

!)nits, Corduroy

BUCKEY E BUILDING &amp; LOAN

uRGER cHEf

''

02 118 137

Ironton

Waverly

Beatt ie 1-0·2. TOTAlS 36-13-85 .

Share a
holiday meal
with .everyone
you know. ...

P.R.

Meigs

Doug Ell wood, g
John Locke, g
Bob Gardner , g

SEOAl RESERVES
Team
W l POP

VESTED SUITS

by Mal e, lee, Landlubber

GIFT
·wrapping

1 218 182

ATHENSBUllDOGSI4S)
FG-A FT -A PFRBTOTP
3 12
4 8
3-8 2-9

Chesapeake 69 Symmes Valley
66

'

2-1-5,' Tracy 1-2.-4; Duduit 4_-210 ;
Shoemaker
12 -3- 27 ; ·
Swind ler 2-1-5; Pfeifer 12-2-26 ;
Holland 1-2-4 ; Workman 1-0-2;

1

winter basebal1 in Santurce,

.

TOTAlS 7-12-26.
WAVERlY 185) - Thomas

UNIFORM RETIRED
EAST LANSING, Mi ch.
(UP! ) - Five-foot-five Gary
Ganakas had hi s No. 11
basketball uniform retired by
Michigan State. His lather,
Spartan head Coach Gus
Ganakas,quipped , "We had to;
no' one else. could get into it."

453 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis

1 2 171 189

Whee lersbu rg 66 Notre Dam e

PANT VAULT

,-

Smeltzer Garden
Center

Athens

59

Select From The

FREE

PLAYER- Pos.
Don Skinner , t
Carl StempeL f
Todd Ellwood. g
Mark Mace, g
Matt Faulkner, c
Arnie Chonko , c
Todd Romig , f __,
. Scott Oailey , f

Portsmouth 78 Ashland. Ky. 62

Reser ve Score : Ironton 50,

log~n

1069. 66

committed 18 personal s.
Valentine fouled out with 3:18
remaining in the game. Price
and Singer each had four
personals . Ath ens had t6
personals.
The Blue Devils picked off 44
rebounds, Athens snagged 30.
Each team committed II turnovers.
Athens hit 19 of 61 field goal
attempts lor 31.1 pet. The

GAHS box score

Ja ckson 82 Meigs 69
Logan 67 Ironton 58.
Non-Conference :

'10.00 . •26.00

Exclusive
Toiletries

exceptions, played a tight man- for the Galllans. Sickles was
to-man defense while the named player of the week lor
Bulldogs zoned the Gallians his performance.
John Locke, 5-9 senior guard,
throughout the evening.
Gil Price, below par as a paced Athens scorers with 16
result of illness earlier in the points. Don Skinner, 6-2 senior
week, still managed to score 19 forward , hauled down 12
points and snag 17 rebounds for reoounds lor the Bulldogs.
GAHS hit 24 of 56 field goal
the winners. The 6-5 senior
Blue Devil center is recovering attempts lor 42.8 pet. The
from an attack of bronchitis. Devils were 8 of 16 at the folil
Mike Sickles, 6-3 junior circles for 50 pet. GAHS
forward, popped In 16 points
and hauled down 13 reoounds

20147131
20151101
1 0 Q5 26
105645
106659
2

Athens
Meigs
· Wellston
TOTAlS

In the new Baseball loo k .
By : Europe Craft, Lamplighter
and M ike's Fri ends .

only crowd.
McMee and AHS reserve
coach Fred Gibson had special
praise for Tom Valentine, 6-2
jW&gt;ior Blue Devil forward who
held high-scoring Mark Mace
to seven points. Mace, an allleague
performer
who
averaged 19 points a game last
year, entered Friday's game
with a 3l-point average in two
starts. The 6-2 senior Bulldog
ace was 3 of 21 from the field .
GAHS, with two or three

POP

Portsmouth

logan

Score by quarters:
Logan
19 14 11 2J- 67
Ironton
14 1ll 18 -·12- 58

Sprays

NEW CONTRACTS
LUBBOCK , Tex. ( UPI) Texas Tech football Coach Jim
Carlen and basketball Coach
Gerald Myers were each given
new 10-year contracts F•iday
by the school's board Of
regents.

•

"Our defense did it, "
remarked Osborne after his
team had recorded Its fifth
straight hardwood victory
over an Athens team.
' 'Your boys are real
scrappers. They played well
out there tonight. Our boys
never gave up . We think we 'll
come along/' the veteran
Bulldog mentor said . in the
Athens
dressing
room
following the hard-fought
contest before a standing room

3 0 220 164

Chesa peak e

Wellston

SWEATERS

1-2-4 ; Walburn 1-2-4; Holzapfel
0-1-1; Sci tes ·1-0-2; Apple dorn 20 -.:l ; long 1-0-2; McKinnis 0- l -1;
Peop les 0-6-6 ; Exli ne 1-0·2.

Campbe l l6 ·4· 16 ; Young 5-1-11 ;
Harwe ll 0-0-0. TOTALS 29 -9·67 .

Neal
Rann 17-5-39 ; F itzpafr ick
M c Crea r y 0-3-3; Wylie
Brown 1-0-2; Howard

Wheelers burg

Ironton

PROBERS MOVING
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
special team of 10 investigators
will move into Clark &lt;;ounty
Monday to begin a review of
that county's Aid to Dependent
Childr en and Food Stamp
programs. Welfare · Director
Charles W. Bates said the
review would determine. if any
recipients were being overpaid
. and if there were any ineligible
LOGAN (67) - Pierce 11-1 ·
persons on the rolls.
23 ; Wr ight 3·2·8; Ke mper 4-l -9;
IRONTON ISS) -

Wa verly
Gallipol is

•1.00 . •16.00

It was str ictly no contest as to top the scorers.
the strong Tigers led by
Waverly' s statis tics show
qu arter scores of 14-3, 36-17, their total domination as they
and 67-22 as they canned 13 of hit 36 of 66 field goal attempts
16 field goal attempts in that ·for 54 pet., converted 13 of 26
hot third period.
free throws, and picked off 46
Shoema ker, a two.time All· rebounds.
SEOAL player, led the attack
The losers managed just
with 27 points with Pfeifer seven fielders of 35 shots,
adding 26, and Tjm Duduit dropped in 12 of 25 charity
getting 10.
tosses, and netted 26 rebounds.
Nine players contributed to
The Waverly defense forced
the Rocket scoring with Randy Wellston into 36 turnovers
Peoples hitting six free throws while the champs committed
jus t an even dozen rnistak~s .
The box score:
WEllSTON 126) - Gil liland

Rann, the only returning
starter from la st year 's team,
just couldn' t be shut down by
the Chiefs as he connected on
17 of 40 shot.s and actually led
the Tigers into a brief third
period lead.
Logan's big veteran team
took a 19-14 first period lead
and clun g to a 33-28 halftime
lead.
.
But in the third p~riod Rann
led the Tigers on a scoring
binge that carried them into a
46-44 lead alter three quarters
of play.
Jim Pierce, a three year
veteran, led \he Chiefs with 23
points with Jeff Ca mpbell
ge tting ·16, and Don Young
adding 11 .
The box score : · ·

South Po int

In Pat1erns and Soli d s

Chieftains edge Ironton
IRONTON - Despite a
sensational 39-point performance by. Ironton's Dave Rann,
the visiting Logan Chieftains
had too much firepow er as they
downed the ·Tigers 67-58 here
Friday night.

Jack son

by : Eagle &amp;
Career Club

·waverly rips Wellston.
WAVERLY - Coach Carroll
Hawhee's Waverly ba sket·
bailers displayed a new look
Friday nig ht but the result was
the same as the Tigers
destroyed visiting Wellston 8526.
Th e three-time defending
SEOAL champs notched their
40th consecutive league vic tory
as John Shoemaker and Tom
Pfeifer combined lor 53 points .
It was Wellston's 24th straight
loss, and 17th straight loop loss .

All GAMES
Wl

Logan

SHIRTS

PRICE FOULED - Gallipolis center Gil Price (24) was fouled by Athens' Matt Faulkner
( 34) on this play in the second period of Friday's SEOAL cage opener at Gallipolis. On right is
Athens ace Mark Mace, 42. (Don Wright photo) .

Okla St. 72 Tulsa 54

.I

Boardman 70 A ust intown F i t ch

High land 51 East K nox .o!O
West Holme.s 61 Coshocton 48
Vgstn . Cd l Mooney 5 7 Ygstn
Chny..J.Q_

Rio idle
until ·Dec. 7

.

62

Pleasant i 3

Southwest
Arizona 101 I ll in o is 80

RIO GRANDE - The Rio game with 24, and teammate
Grande N basketball team, Mike Beaths adding 23, to lead
under Coach Bob Leith, split the way. Doug Davis hit for 18,
their first two games of the Randy Cox added 17, and Jack
1973-74 season recently.
Everson finished with 10.
The Redmen dropped their
OU-Chillicothe wrapped up
season opener at Lyne Center the \vin early with a 60-27 lead
to the , Ohio University- at the half. The Redmen out·
Chillicothe Branch, lll-90. Rio scored OU-Chillicothe, 63-51 in
Grande came back later to llle final twenty minutes.
gain an impressive 98-58 vic- , Scoring balance and an
tory against AShland Business improved defense keyed the
College.
Rio Grande victory against
The Redmen placed five men Ashland Business College , Rio
in double figures against OU- guard Mar'k Kiesling paced the
Oiillicothe, but failed to stop Rio attack willl 18 points while
the bigger and stronger Bobby Caldwell had 16, Bruce
visitors. Gallipolis freshmen Schaefer 15, Bruce Croskey 11,
M1rk Kiesling ~nd Bruce and Eugene Terry had 10.
Schaefer combined for 40
The only inan in double
'
points. Both youngsters
ligures for Ashland Business
finished with 20 points. Browne College was Ken Barrows with
Wi~Pt had 15, while Bobby 11 points,
c.ldweD and AI,Robinson each
The Rio JV team is idle until
connected ror 10 points. ou- Dec . 7. The Redmen will travel
ChUUcot~e also had live to Grayson, Ky. on that date to
players ill double figures with meet Kentucky Christian in a 6
Joe Plrk the lllp score•
. of the p.m. game.

48
Yng s tn . Urs u li n e 93 Hubbard

Philo 62 Zane Tra ce 42
River Vall e y 6 7 Mar ion

Varsity Sox

R . I. Coli. Bl Babson 79
N.!vy 96 Lycom ing ~8
F rostburg 73 Ca!if .-Pa . 1.2
Holy Cross 81 Dartmouth 70

.ol9 Yn gstn North 47
East Liv erpool 50 Vgnst. East

Lim a Se n i or 71 M idd letown 67
Spr ingtJ e ld S. 76 D e lph os St .
Joh n 73
P'atr ic k H enry ·H O ttawa
G leodore 53
Zan es v ille 74 Cambr idge 66

The fourth quarter scoring 1 Ward , 6-1 sophomore center,
barrage was led by 6-0 senior led the Bobkittens with 12
guard Clay Hudson; 5-7 points while Tim Lucas, :HI
sophomore Tom Kern; senior sophomore guard had 11
guard Lawrence Tabor and points.
junior forward Dave Wise.
Keilll Grate, :HI and Chris
Going into the final quarter, Lewis, 5-9 both freshmen, led
Coach
Keith
Carter's the Highlanders with six
Highlanders held a four point points.
lead, 44-38.
, Southwestern travels to
Suddenly, Coach
Jim Norlll Gallia Tuesday while
Arledge's Bobcats caught fire Kyger Creek will play at
as Hudson began hitting Eastern Friday.

Southwestern

Chane l56
Pis . Notre

64

PATRIOT - A 28 point explosion in the fourth
quarter here Friday night carried the Kyger Creek
Bobcats to a come-from-behind 66 -57, victory over
Southwestern.
It was Kyger's opening game of the 1973-74
Southern Valley Athletic Conference season while
the Highlanders dropped to 0·2 .

while Tabor, Rumley, Kern
Kyger Creek (66 ) ,__ Hudson ,
and Wise all converted clutch 7-5-19; Rum ley, 3-6-12 ; Tabor ,
4- 1-9 ; Clay , ) -0-2 ; Wise, 3+9- 15 ;
free throws . •
Stidham, 2-0-4; Lucas, 0-0-0 and
During the comeback two Kern , 1-3-5. Total s 21 ;24-66 .
Southwestern 1571 - Ll&gt;wis,
charity tossed by Rumlev
6-0-12;
1-3-5; Fallon. 0-0knotted the score at 44-44 then 0 ; WoodWhitt,
. 5-3-13; Carter, 4-0-8 ;
came two quick layups by Banks, 0-4-4; Frasher. 0-0-0.
Tabor and Kern, two baskets Totals 21 -15-57 .
By Quarter s:
by Hudson, three free throws Kyger
Creek
11 12 15 28- 66
by Kern, two by Wise and three Southwestern 11 13 18 13- 57
by Hudson.
Reserve Box
Southwestern made it c1ose
Kyger Creek (36) - Metzner,
behind the foul shooting of 6-1 2-0-.4 ; Booten, 0-0-0 ; Arnett , 0-0jW&gt;ior Kevin Walker and subs 0; Blazer, 0-0-0; -Ward, 4-4-12;
Gr im, 0-0-0 ; Lucas, 3-5-11 ;
David Whitt and Jeff Banks. Geiger,
1-1-3 ; Preston , 0-2-2 ;
Whitt, playing in place of Bu c k, 2-0-4 ; Armsbruster , 0-0senior Larry Frasher who 0 . Total s 12 -12-36.
Southwestern (2 3) - Grate,
fouled out, hit three of five
1-4-6; At ha , 2-0-4; Lew is, 0-6-6;
charity tosses and a long 30 V. Miller, 1-1-3; Walker, 1-0-2 ;
Fortner, 0-0-0·; Ruff, 0-0-0 and
footer from the corner.
Banks, who entered the D. Mill er, 1-0-2. Totals 6-11 -23 .
game when Terry Carter
College Basketball Results
fouled out, wasfour for four at
By United Press International
lptay Invitational
the ·free throw line _
( 1 s.t round)
Sou~hwestern jumped in Sl . John ' s -N .Y . 69 Jaxnvl 64
front 13-12 at the end of the first Clemso n 87 Auburn 7'1
Sports Foundation
quarter and increased it to 26(1st round)
Centenary 82 M cNees e St . 72
23 at the hall.
Spartan Classic
Lloyd Wood, 6-2 junior
(1st round)
center, paced the first period Ind . Cenl. 72 Cu lv er Stcktn 61
Harbor 83
scoring drive with five points Aurora 87 Spring
East
while Walker and Carter had Cheyny Sf. 65 Br i Qgept 63
tty sbg 63 Messi ah 48
four points each. Hudson and Ge
Cor tla nd 79. Itha ca 70
Wise led KC w,iijt lour points Gannon 39 Fredonia St . 38
. Rutgers 71 Colgate .49
each.
St . Jo.s .• Pa . 65 Army 5.4

66

b

Can ton Li n coln 52 Vg s tn Soo th

Wapakone ta 69 L ima Sh awn ee

•

consistently from the side,

North l and 64 Col i .
Watte-rson S?
Co tumbus St. Charles
BtK!ey A7
ColumbuS Mohawl!i 73 Lem M
Monroe- 72
Cols . INalout Rdge . 84 Cola
Hartley 70
Miffli n 74 Cols , DeSeles 69
london 5'2 Picker ington -4-4
Lancaster 5.5 Grove City 49
New Albany 70 Jonathan Al det

••Salem

B e n e d i ctine~l

Whe@ ler sbtJr9
Da me- 59

GAHS defeats Athens 56-45 In opener

Co ls .

Friday's high school results

.-

'.

•
J
'

...

;l

•

�T~ SWlda" TmJ('S • Srntml'l. Sunda\,
. l~t·. :!..1~h:J

-

28 -

ezgs zn SEOAL opener

lronmen sink
I

JACKSON - The Meigs
Marauders, again out·done
drastically at the foul line,
went down to their second
defeat of the 1973-74 campaign,
dropping an 82-69 decision to
the Ja ckson Ironmen here
Friday night.
The Marauders gained a
draw from the field, 60-liO, but

Jackson cashed in on 22 of 28
charity chances, whilt&gt; !V1ciKs
could sink just 9 of 19 for 47 pet.
Meigs was down by as much
as 13 points at 3 different
s12ges of th.e battle, 35-22 with
:t : 47 rerrlaining in the first half,
44-31 at the 7:01 mark of the
tllird frame , and 82-li9 ·at the
•
final buzzer .

Browns expect
physical battle
KANSAS CITY ( UP!) two very physical teams."
Cleveland Coach Nick Skorich
The Browns are in pretty
says ~vera! coaches have wid good physical condition except
himKansasCityisevena more for safety Thorn Darden wl1o
physical football team tllan has suffered a badly bruised
Pittsburgh and Oakland a nd hip.
that could present some
The Browns last two wins
problems for the Browns hav e been Oakland and PittsSunday.
burg h and the same kind of
The winner of the 4 p.m. con- effort will he needed Sunday.
test will remain very much
" We live week to week with
alive in the race for the pro our schedule," said Skorich.
football playoffs as the Browns
There is also another incenare in second place in the live to be earned with a victOry
Central Division of the over the Chiefs .
American Football Conference
"Do you realize Kansas City
while _the Chiefs are tied for , is the only team in the National
Football league the Browns
second in tlle AFC west.
11
A couple of coaches rve have never beaten?" asked
talked to feel Kansas City is an guard John Demarie.
However, they have met only
even more physical club than
Pittsbw-gh and Oakland," said tllr ee times with the · Chiefs
Skorich, "and to me, those are wiiUling a1l three.

The Maroon and Gold came
storming back to '~\ake a ! '&lt;~''"''-'
&lt;tf it aJtc1 cal'h of those first 2
deficit•.
That first time Meigs came
back to within a at 31-39, the
halftime margin . Then. after
dropping back down to 44-31 ,
the Marauders pow-ed in 10
unanswered points midway
through the third stanza, with a
Lonnie Coats 15 footer ma king
it 41-44 .
The closest the M &lt;trauders
came to taking t11e lead after
losing it! or good at 7-S on a layup ea rly in the fir st quarter by
Jacksori's Paul White, was
with just 15 seconds gone in the
four th quarter when forward
Bill Myers connected from 8
feet lo cut the margin to I at 5857.
Following ·My ers' basket,

2:35 remaining, Price s:conl.; l of
~ ~=·~~ tluOI'Ii.:-., :vl: . . "'rll. by a
Price lay-up, a Coats foul shot '
and a 10 footer by junior center
Dan Dodson to cut the lead to 5
at 69-74 .
But Jackson rounded out the "
night 's scoring with 8 s traight
points to notch the Jronmen's
initi•l SEOAL victory of the
season , joining Waverly,
l.ogan and Gallipolis at the top
of the loop heap, all with unblemished 1-0 league records.
Juni or guard Mike MeDonald, al 5-7, led the Jackson
attack, laying in 29 points on 10
of 16 from the field and 9 of 12
from the foul line. He was
joined in double figures by

Jackson's Don Jenkins gave

NBA Standings
By Unit'ed Pre ss International

teammates Tom Conr oy and

Pout \\'tiit.:: -o1.· it~ 21 and 15
points respectively.
The Marauders, meanwhile,
had 4 players in double ligures,
led by Myers ' 21 points on 9 of
11 from !he floor and 3 of 6 from
the charity stripe. He was
helped out by Dodson with 14,
Coatswithl3andPri cewith 12.
Amazingly, both squads hit
over 50 pet. from tlle field , with
the Jronmen connecting 30
times in just 54 tries lor 55 pel.,
whileMeigspwnped in 30 in 58
attempts for 51 pel.
Only 50 total reboW1ds were
snared the entire evenipg, a
tribute to tlle loosely played,
run and shoot style of Jackson
eoach AI Burger. White led the

Pro Standings

the 1)..2 senior a chance to put
the Mara uder s out in front, but
Myers missed on the front end
of a . 1 and 1 opportunity from
tlle foul line.
lronman Mike Mc Donald
tllen hit from 15 feet and
connec ted on boU1 end s of a 1
and I to up the Jackson lead to
57-62.
A Steve Price rocket fr om 25
feet cut tlle defici t to 59-62
before Jacks on scored 6
quicki es to put the ga me out of
reach at 68-59.
The Marauders weren't dead
at this junc ture , however,
Trailing 63-74 with a little over

Australians take Davis
Cup from United States
CLEVELAND, 0. (UP!) Using only John NewC&lt;Jmbe
and Rod Laver, the Australians
Wok the Davis Cup away from
the United Swtes Saturday as
Newcombe and Laver destroyed America's No. I
plilyer, Stan Smith, and 22year-old Erik Van Dillen, 6-1, 62, 6-1, in the doubles for an
W1beabible 3-Q margin.
Australian captain Neale
Fraser startled fans and
veteran observers alike by
deciding to bypass 39-year-o\d
. Ken Rosewall, who had been
expected to play in the doubles ,
especially since each had been
involved in five-set victorie's on
Friday.
Fraser's decision was emi-

•

•

East ern Conference
Atlanti c Di visi on

w. 1. pet . g.b .

Bos ton

16

N E:'w York

12

4 ,800
12 .500

6 •

west

w. \.

Denver
Utah
Ind iana

Buffalo
10 15 . 400
Ptliladelp h ia
8 I S . J4 8 91 1
Cen tr al Divi sio n
w. 1. pet . g . b .
Ca p i t al
1 1 9 . 55 0
11
At lanta
12 11 .522
Cle v eland
9 16 . 360
4 11
Houston
8 15 . 348
41 ?

Western Conf ere nce

11 .522
12 .520
12 .500
13 .480
9 15 .375

San Anton io
San Di ego

a• 1 .

·.

pet. g .b.

12
13
12
12

•12

~.12

Ja ckson b()ardmen with 10
while Myers snared 12 off the
glass for the Marauders.
In the reserve co ntest,
Jackson
used
balanced
scoring, 9, 9, 8, 8 and 7 to outduel the Meigs reserves, 41-34.
Chip Brauer led the
Marauder attack with 10
points, followed closely by
Mike Magnot12 wilh 9and Greg
Browning with 8.
The Marauders return home
Friday night to face !he allpowerful Waverly Tigers,
, under the direction of Carroll
Hawhee. Hawhee's Waverly
clubs have captw-ed 40 consecutive league victories over
. the last 4 years.
Reserve game :
-Jackson ( 41 ) - Conroy 3-1-7,
Morrow 4-1-9, Osborne 4-6-8,
Shields 4-~. Swingle 4-1-9.
Meigs (34) :... Brauer 4-2-10,
Browning 4-0-8, Magnotta 4-1-9,
·Cremeans 2-0-4, Davenport 0..33, Anderson~' Meadows 1).0-

Meigs box score
JACKSON (821
FG-A FT-A TP RB

PLAYER
Paul White
Don Jenkins
Tom Conrov
M lke M cQonald
Greg Fannin
Art DeStephen
Mark Buchanr~n
Rick Gentil

TOTALS

7-!J
1-J

1-J
0 ·0

6-11

9-9

10-16
J-5

9-12
1·2
2-2
0 -0
0 -0

10

s

7•
8

0
0

30-54 22-28 82

21

0-0
0-2

2
4

$

o•
03 ,.
17

(69)

FG-A FT-A TP RB

PLAYER
Lonnie Coa1S

Bill Myers
Dan Dodson
Perk Ault
Steve Walburn
Steve Price
Terry Quail s
Orrjon Blan chard
Fred Burney
Mick Ash
Mike May

5-13

3-4

13

9-11
7-12
2·6
0-1
5-9

J -6
0-0
1· 4
0·0

21
"
5
0

2-5

12

2-5

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

0-1
0-0

0~ ,

0-0

30-SB

TOTALS
Score by quarters:
Jackson
Meigs

J
12

2

2

I
0

' '
0
0
0
I

9-!9 69

'

PF·
2

5

0

0

[.

::i

0
l

29

J
0
I
I

J -4

MEIGS

15
2
21

t
§l

PF

0
29

.

5'"
3

0 .•
0

0'

0
21

.'

20 19 19 24 -- 82
15 16 24 " -- 69"

0.

Friday 's Results

Caro lina 124 Memph i s 88
Ind i ana 107 Kentucky 104
Utah 104 San Antonio 92
New York 123 Denver 102
San Diego 145 V irg in i a 139
(Only qam es scheduled I

Bend Tire Center

NHL Standings

By United Press Int ernatio nal
East
w. 1. t. pts gf ga
16
4 2 34 105 58
Boston

Midwest Division
w . 1. pet . g . b.
Mi lw a ukee
21
4 .840
.Chicago
18 6 . 750
21 '7
Detro i t
12 11 .522
8
6 2 28 76 '59
Montreal 13
KC Orna ha
6 20 . 231 15' '1 Toronto
11 7 5 27 79 58
. ~ Paciii != Division
6 26 86 67
NY Rangr s 10 7
w. 1. pet . g . b.
L9;sAngeles
16
7 .696 -··
Buffalo
10 10
1 21 68 72
Go ld efl.S iate
13
7 .650
Detroi t
9 12
1 19 74 98
Po r tlan d
10 13 .435
6
NYislandrs4 9 7 15 49 65
Sea tt le
9 17 .346
8''1 Vancouver 5 12 4 14 52 74
Ph oenix
7 16 .3 04
9
·
Wes t
Fr iday 's Results
w . I. I. pts gf ga
Capital 12 1 Buffalo H 3
13 6 2 28 60 35
Ph i la
Cl eveland 112 Philade l ph ia 110
Houston 110 De troit 95
Atlanta
11
7 4 26 61 59
Chic ago 115 New York 97
Chicago
9 5 7 25 64 40
Mi l waukee 117 Bos ton 93
St . Louis
9 B 4 22 55 49
Los Angeles 123 KC -Omaha 107
Pittsburgh 7 11 3 17 55 87
Phoenix 107 Portland 99
M innesota 5 11 6 16 63 79
(On ly games sc he cluled )
California 6 \4
I 13 48 75
Los Angeles·5 14
3 13 59 79
ABA Standings
Friday 's Results
B-y Un i t ed Press International
Minnesota 5 Vanc9uver 4
East
(Only game schedu le d J
w. I. pet . g. b.
19
8 . 704
Ca rolina
WHA Standings
Kentucky
16
7 . 696.
1
By United Press International
12 12 .500
51 !~
N E&gt; W Yor~
East
Memphis
9 i 6 . 360
9
w. 1: t . pts gt ga
V irgin ia
7 15 .31 8 9 lf~
Nw Englnd 14 9
1 29 93 79
Que be c
12 12 2 26 99 87
Chicago
1l
7 1 23 71 63
ROSE SHARES AWARD
Cleveland 10 a
3 23 74 76

I' '

..

: b y E a s.t er n·

~~·

The Australians needed only
nently correct, since neither
18
minutes to win the fir st set,
Australian player showed any
semblance of being tired, breaking Van Dillen in the
particularly the 35-year-old fourth game when the AmeriLaver, who had finished play at can youngster yielded all low10 o'clock Friday nnight but points. The Aussies attacked
ST. LOUIS, Mo. ( UP! ) '- Toronto
was fresh for Saturday's 2:15 Smith · in the sixth game t.o
10 12 3 -23 79
P
e
te Rose, the National N ew J ersey 7 14 2 16 54
. break again and lock up the
start.
West
League 's Most Valuable
The
Australians
con- set.
•
w. I. I . pts gf
Rolling r elentlessly now, Player, will share the J . Roy · Edmonton 15 6 0 30 81
centrated
th.e i r
atta ck
Houston
1l
7 2 24 7 7
they broke Smith in the Stockton Award for out- Minnesota
t~roughout on Van Dillen,
11.. 10
1 2J 84
striving always to keep !he ball opening game Of the second swnding achievement at the Winnipeg 9 13 J 21 87
9 14
o 18 79
se t, then coas ted along, St. Louis Baseball Writers vancouver
away from tlle 6-foot-4 SmithLos Angele s 9 16
0 18 70
working on Van Dillen and then Association dinner Jan. 21,. it
particularly at the net.
Friday's Results
Los Angeles 5 Winn i peg 2
was
announced
Satw-day.
breaking
him
in
the
seventh
In the final set, Van Dillen
Toronto 2 M inneso ta 1
Rose . joins Atlan12's Dave
was broken in the seventh game for their 6-2 margin .
(Only games sc h eduled )
The Austra1ians were vir· · J ohnson and Oakland 's Darold
game and that was ·all the
107 Montana St. 76
Australjans needed, with the tually impregnable on service, Knowl es in r eceiving the Wash
Nev . Reno 76 Stanford 69
honor of serving the final game neve r dropping a game and award, named in honor of the Nev -LV 122 AlA 96
Sta Barbara 94 Ariz St 77
going to Laver who served it with each man holding love form er sports editor of the St. Oregon
105 U of Amer icas 61
games four times.
Louis Post-Dispatch.
Ca li f 85 New Sou th Wales 40
out at love .

82
aa
ga
58
61
75
91
96
92

Formerly New Haven Discount Tire
Now·In The The Wilson Texaco Station In Mason W.Va.
1

Sale:

Thru December 15th On Brand

New Premium Black And White Wall 4 Ply Nylon Winter Tires :

Black

Size
A78x13
B78x13
C78x13
C78x14
E78x14
· F78xl4
G78x14
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560X15
678x15
F78x15
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H78x15
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17.00
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19.00
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22.00
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-

While

..

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Umited

20.00
21.00
22.00
23.00
24.00
25.00
19.00
20.00
23.00
24.00
25.00
27.00

Supply

Of Some Tires

MERCERVILLE - The
Hannan Trace Wildcats ,"
displaying an excellent zone
defense that yielded just one
shot practically every trip
down the Door, ripped the
Easiem Eagles, 59-41, here
Friday night.
A delirious crowd of Wildcat
supporters saw Paul Dillon's
cagers move out w a 13-8 first
quarter lead, 'n-17 halftime
margin, and commanding 45-26
lead after 3 periods.
•The story of the game is
reDected in tlle reboW1ding
statistics, wltll Hannan Trace
grabbing 55 caroms, while
coach Bill Phillips' charges
could pull In just n, will! few
coming off errant Eagle shots.
Eastern shot a freezing 24
]Itt. from the field, hitting on
:Just 16 of 66 attempts, while the
•Wildcats, not doing much
hetter, .sank just 20 of 66 tries.
The Hannan Trace attack
was led by 6-1 senior Don Wells
who, although netting just 8
poinls on 2 from the field and 4
at the line, . grabbed 20
rebottilds In controlling the
defensive boards, Wayne
Hesson ~nd John Lusher
provided help on !he boards
with 15 and 11 caroms
respectively .
, Larry Alberton, a 6-1 senior,
led Eastern reboW1ders with
13, while 6-1 senior John Sheets
• garnered 12 errant shots.
' Dillon cited Wells' play on
tlle boards, calling it his best
effort, and adding that he
" seems to he hnproving every
"It was an overall good ef' fort," Dillon said. "Everyone
~ played well."
: Phillips, meanwhile, was
-~ '~ery, very disappointed'' with

We've Taken The
Confusion Out Of
Tire ·Buying. 1m.
Extra Charge For

:

~:t~:~::t~e7~~~~~::.~: .

• said. ~~Hannan Trace showed a

' real good· defense, especialiy
with that press w-e zone. But
we'·re not giving up/' he sald,
: noting that !be loss will start
' the defending tri-champs'
: season off in. the SV AC
: basement. "We'll hang right In

; there."

'

: floor .

The .Advertised Price Is The Price You Pay.
No Trade In Tires Required,
1

•'

The Eastern offense was
.
hampered
by those poor
~ shooti~g percentages, as
:! ~videnced by the fact that 4 of
,;: the Eagles' swrters combined
:.': 10 make just 6 of 42 shots from

"',,.,

No Extra -Charge For Federal Excise Tax.

.

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"

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MORTGAGE Fllt(ANCING

B70x13
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.For Customers ofJim WDiter Homes!
Jim

\

W~lter

provides a one·stop service, doing
both construction and financing. No red tape!
No delay! No third party! You choose your
new home from more than 20 beautiful models .
and we•ll do the rest ••• custom .. building almost
anywhere that you own property. With new
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be taking advantage of today's low Jim ·W al·
ter prices. And, by building now, you'll realize
a tremendous gain in the· increased value of
your property.

Jim Walter will help you cut the cost of your
new home even more by making it possible
for you to do some or all of your own interior ·
finishing. You decide how much. The more you
do, the more money you save.

Jim Walter completely finishes the outside of
your home including ... FOUNDATION, ROOFING, SIDING, WINDOWS, DOORS, PAINTING.
Then you have options to purchase inside ma~
teriols and installotion of .•. ELECTRICAL WIR.
tNG AND FIXTURES, PLUMBING, FLOORING,
WALLS, DOORS &amp; TRIM, KITCHEN AND BATH
FIXTURES.
When Jim Wolter installs all .of these ii1terior
options, you'll need only to paint or paper
walls, paint trim, conned to outside -utilities
and move in. Or you may purchase individual
materials packages, install them yourSelf and
save even more. lither way, the cost can be
included iri your mortgage.

• OVER 20 MODELS .
• BUllT ON YOUR PROPERTY
We want youtoknowthefuU costandexadfy
.,.hat ·your monthly mortgage payments will
be. We also want you to know lnore about
t,e superior materials and the quarlty con ..
struction methods we'fl use. Call, visit or .send
the coupon to the nearest Jim Walter Homes
display pork for complete, no-obi/gallon Information.
Wil"fl ~nu th ~•

I

CHESAPEAKE, OHIO 45619
P. 0. Box 250
Old Hwy. 52
PH : 867-3153

NITRO, W. VA.
608 lsi Ave. So.
25 East
PH: 727-2296

u.s. Hwy.

Write
P.O.

Box 8367

So. Charleston, W.Va. 25303

''

•

1,,,,.

,•

J

I
I
I

Studs
Just $3.00
Per Tire

.""
..§Mallory is

I
·I
I

(Mail fo n eore~f office)
I wo!J id li ke to hove more
in forma tion ond th e cost of
bu ilding on my property . I
vnderstond tl,'ere wovld be
no ob li gation to buy and
th a t you wou ld gi11e me these
fo ~ ts free of ch arge .

I

NAME
AOORESS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~-----

Group

OJLUMBUS (UP!)- Miami
coach Bill Mallory, wbose unbeaten Redskins face the Universlty of F1orlda in the Tang,
erine Bowl Dec. 22, has been
named the 1973 Ohio College
Football Coach of the Year in a
poll of the state's . 33 college
coaches by the Columbus
Evening Dispatch newspaper.
-Mallory guided the Redskins
to 10 straight victories and the
: "Mid-American Conference
• championship in the team's
: first perfect season since

::
..
.,
::
••
;:
::
:
:
:
•

I
-

U.S.

I

ZIP
-

I

~w.:!::pe,Jy ~---- ~·:J
·- - -

0

; 1955.

•
Mallory, 36, has a five-year
"' record at Miami of 38-12. He
received 18 flrs~lace votes and
,.. was tlll'ntioned 29 ballots for a
.. total 75 points .
~ Wittenberg coach Dave
Maurer was runnerup in the
" voting with 54 polnls.
Mallory became delenalve
;'l coordinator at Bowling Green
I: &amp;.te University in 19611, was
J:: later named aBSiltant coach at
•w Yale and In 1966 took over as
"' guard and laclde coaCh at Ohio

$24.00
$27.00
s32.00

C

m.

.

33 Mason W.Va.

Phone 773-5881

4 Ways To charge

1: &amp;.te.

• American

I

Mallory replaced Bo Schem: bechler at the Mlaml helm in
:;.t~.
'
::

••

r

Instead of knocking the deal,
!he fans in Cleveland this week
were busy buzzing about
Phipps' game-saving play last
·Sunday against the tough
Pittsbw-gh Steelers' defenseone of the best.
It was the kind of play that
can tum the season around.
The Browns were trailing tlle
Steelers 16-14 in the final two
minutes and faced a third-11nd-

Last season in Phipps' first
full year as the starting QB
W1der coach Nick Skorich, they
had to win eight of last nine
games to make tlle playoffs
with a 10-4 record after losing
all six of their exhibition games
and lhree of their first five
regular season games.
This year the team was 4-3-1
after losing to Minnesota tllree
weeks ago but they've beaten
Houston, oakland and Pittsburgh in succession.
" We knew we had a tougher
schedule !his year and we knew
we'd have to scratch imd dig
because we know we're not
going w overpower people and
!hat's the kind of season it's
been . But if we can win our
final lhree games, we'd finish
at 10-J-1 and that'd be a bit
hetter than last year."

in the game, scoring 2 points
and snaring ~ caroms.
Southern, led by senior
center Norman Curfman's 16
points and 7 reboW1ds, led by a
34-25 count going into the fow-tll
stanza, but the scoring and
defensive work of Waterford
enabled tlle hosts to hit the nets
for 18 points in that final
quarter and send the game in to
overtime.
Joining Curfman in double
figures for Southern were Bob
Miller and Sayre with 10 points
each.
Close pwnped in 15 for the
victors, while McFerren
chipped in 13.
" If· we ge t this kind of
defensive effort every game,
we 'll be a nice ball club,"
concluded Wolfe, whose cagers
meet Glouster Friday night on
tlle Racine planks.
The night wasn 't a total loss
for Southern fans , however, as

the Tornado reserves downed
the Waterford jW1ior varsity,
42-30 in !be preliminary game.
The Southern reserves
pwnped in 20 field goals, while
hitting 100 pet, 2 for 2, from the
foul line .
Waterford
5 10 10 18 6--49
Southern
9 12 13 9 4-47
Varsity
Waterford ( 49 ) - Rauch ~
8, Sampson ().2-2, Hickman 142, King 3-3-9, McFerren 3-7-13,
Clo~ 5-5-15.
Southern ( 47) - Curfman 72-'16, Miller 4-2-10, Sayre 5-0-10,
Ord 2-&lt;1-4, Warner 1-1;3, Nease
14-2, Theies J-l).2.
Reserve
Southern (42 ) - Schultz 6-012, Brown 3-0-6, Dunning 2-2-li,
Roberts 6-0-12, Huffman 3-G-6.
Waterford (30) - Rauch 7414, Schaad 3-2-8, CW1ningham
2-0-4, Diamond 2-Q-4,
Next Southern game - Dec.
7 vs: Giouster.

Why Not Give The Family

•

A New Room
For Christmas?

By

TERRY

.

.

..!

be
In
automobiles
today .
However ,
those
that
provide lots of elbow as
well as leg room are stilt in
popular demand.
SmaiL compact cars are
ideal for racing , individual
driving. or for taki,[1g your
date out . But for families,
tour ing and vacationing the
large roomy QOes take top
priority.
Are you still, living in
small. compact hou sing
quarters? You don ' t have
to, you know. Why not
spread out and live com fo.rtably in a spacious,
modern, mobile home-. the
mobile hom.;! being com plete of house and fur nishing s
is
also
relo~atable ,
providing a
source of changing locality
and scenery whenever the
mood strikes you. We have
the mobile home built for
your particular tastes and
needs, more beautlful· In
style and design than any
conventional home or regal
estate
and
more
economical on_. the budget
than paying rent
Compactnes:::t

;,-c~ ms to

a big . drawing card

Since 18SCJ

WII(A( ECONO,_Y O~IGIMAHS

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Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate The Plant.

APPLICANTS MAY CAll.( 304) 882-2126 (collect)

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PT. PLEASANT

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nine play inside their own 40.
. Pbipl"' decided to call a pass
play to Frank Pitts, who had
heen open on a similiar pass
earlier in the game but
dropped it.
However, the Steelers' tough
defense put on a strong rush
and forced Phipps out of the
pocket and he was suddenly
scrambling for his life.
Before the Steelers could
haul him down, he spotted
Greg Pruitt and connected on a
42-yard pass. Two plays later,
Pruitt scored on a 19-yard run
and tlle Browns had a 21-16
triumph that kept them alive in
!he race for !he playoffs.
"It wasn't exactly tlle way
we planned it," Phipps said as
he deseribed the wild pass
play.
''Greg had run a flag pattern
and he had maintained it on the
sidelines when he saw I was in
trouble," Phipps explained, " I
think they kind of forget about
him."
It was an especially satisfy_ing victory since the Steelers
had won the first game 33-6. "!
guess we had an off day but
.P ittsburgh can intimidate you
in th.eir park," he said."
The victory gave the Browns
a 7-3-1 record and they are only
a half-game behind Pittsburgh
( 8-3) and a half game ahead of
Cincinnati (7-4) in !he tight
AFC Central race.
But the Browns don't have
any time to relax and
celebrate.
. They have a tough schedule
with Kansas City ( 6-4-1)
coming up Sunday followed by
games with Cincinnati (7-4)
and Los Angeles (9-2) closing
out the schedule. All games are
on the road.
''We've had problems wllh
Kansas City," Phipps admits,
"this Is the third time we've
played them in my four years
and we haven't beaten them
yet."
But heing in a difficult spot is
nothing new for PhiPI"' and the
Browns.

.

Anti-Freeze While
It •.asts
s1.79 Gallon

3Yr.

NEW YORK (UP!) - There
aren't too many pro . football
piayers who've come out of
C&lt;Jllege to face instant pressure
the way Mike Phipps did lowyears ago.
Phipps was a logical first
round draft choice when the
Cleveland Browns selected him
In 1970 because he was anolher
in a long list of standout
Purdue quarterbacks and
seemed to he a sure pro
prospect.
But tlle . problem was that
owner Art Modell, in one of his
most difficult decisions, had
traded away Paul Warfieldan Ohio folk hero wbo'd played
his college ball at Ohio Stateto Miami for the draft rights to
Phipps.
Warfield was bitter personally about the tradealthqugh playing in a pair of
Super Bowls at Miami has
given him a new outlook on it-and the fans in Clevelan!l were
furious.
"It was a pressure situation
all right," admits Phippa, "wt
there 's always pressure in
football and I don 't know how
much more pressure Utere was
thari there is for any olher
rookie because that's the
situation I faced ."
And faced it quite well.
You don 'I hear people in
Cleveland knocking that deal
tllese days. Especially after
last Sunday.
.
" I think they've seen !he
trade has been justified,"
Phipps says. "They realize
that I .should he playing in
Cleveland after Warfield has

board against Pittsburgh," · he
says the offense hasn't been
playing as well as it did last
year. He says tlle defense is
" tlle key to our record," and
adds, "the offense is a delicate
operation. It's no one person's
fault but we just haven't jelled
this season. "
If tlle Browns can get into !he
playoffs again, !bough, !he
Cleveland fans will have no
complaints.

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•

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I

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29.00
25.00
27.00
29.00
31.00

I(
?

~nd said !hat " little" mis12kes
cos t the Tornadoes a victory.
The Southern defense,
meanwhile, held Waterford
shooters to just 3 field goals the
entire first half, although they
came back to connect 13 times
the final 2 periods.
The loss of senior forward
Pete Sayre, who picked up his
third foul as early as the
second period and fouled out
early in the fourth quarter, was
a determining fa ctor in the
Southern downfall according to
Wolle. Through 3 quarters of
acbon, Sayre had netted 10
points and grabbed 6 reboW1ds.
Another Tornado, senior
Dave
Theiss,
found
himself
in
dire
personal foul straits
early
in
the
game.
Theiss picked up his tllird foul
after just 2 minutes had
elapsed in lhe opening quarter .
However. he managed to smy

the noor.

"
The Eagles gained a draw on
,. the night, however, with the
~ reserves routing Hannan
:;: Trace, JS-25, as only 2 Wildcat
.. reserves hit the scoring
• colwnn, Kent Halley with 16
C: poinls and Petrie wltll 9. ,
:
The Eagles were led by Greg
:: Bailey's 1~ ..
u
Scoring by quarters:
" Hannan Trace 13 14 18 14---S!l
u• Eastern ·
8 9 9 1:;-!1

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,
Mark Swain led llle Wildcat
• offense, pouring in 19 points on
6 from the field and 7 free
. i throws. He was joined in
' double figures by teammates
;• Hesson with 12 points and
• Lusher with 1~.
;: Senior forward Tim Bawn
· ; was the only · Eagle to hit
: double figures, netting 10
: points on 5 out of 10 from the

Mounting, Or
Balancing

WAT E RFORD
The entire evening by cold spells at
Southern Tornadoes, playing !he beginning of each" quarter .
what head coach Carl Wolfe
Ahead 9-S at the end of !he
i;; described as an excellenl first frame, Southern waited 3
defensive ball game, came out minutes at the beginning of tlle
{~ on the short end of a nip and second period w put the ball
~:~; tuck overtime battle here through the hoop. Leading 21-1~
:~:~ Friday night, losing to at halftime , Tornado shooters
Waterford, 49-47.
couldn't find the range W1til 2
Varsity
1-3, Blake 2-0-4, Harris 2-0-4,
The game, knotted at 43-all and a half minutes had elap~
Hannan Trace ( ~9 )- Hesson Bowen 0-0-0, Bailey 5 - 5-1~ , after regulation time, saw in !be tllird quarter, and !he
5-2'12, Swain 6-7-19, Lusher 6-3- Nelson 0-0-0, Good 2-2-6, Southern lose it at the foul line, fourtl! quarter found Southern
15, Halley 0-0-0, Wells "i-4-a, Hanmun 1-1-3.
making just 33 pet. of its free scoreless Wllil just 4 and a half
Hannan Trace ( 25) - Halley throws on 5 of 1~ .
Hall 0-J-3, Sanders 14-2.
minutes remained in !he game.
Eastern (41 ) - Spencer 2-2-S, 6-4-16, Petrie 2-5-9, Shaffer 114Waterford, on the other
Wolfe attributed the poor
0,
Cremeans
11-0-0.
McGuire
114Dill 3-3-9, Milhoan 0-0-0, Sheets
hand, connected on 17 of 'n, for offensive showing, w some
3-2-8, Bawn 5-0-10, Goehel2-0-4, 0, Sheets 0-0-0, Jones 11-0-0.
a 12 point advantage at the extent, to opening night jitters
Next Eastern game - Dec. 7 charity stripe .
Atherton ll-2-2, Weber 0-ll-0, Orr
vs. Kyger Creek.
14-2, Holland 0-0-0.
The Purple Tornadoes,
In 1874 , Winston Chw-chill
Next Hannan Trace game Reserves
hittingatacool30pet. from the was born . He was destined w
Eastern (35) - Eichinger 1- Dec. 7 at North Gallia .
field, were hampered the become Britain's prime minister twice and he lffiighted as Sir
Winston . He died in 196S.
.a. Y .a
Althongh Phipps admitted
~or
that, "you feel good when you
J.l
put three touchdowns on the
~1

Phl.pps su-.qr:ves pressure 0 f
m•
stant
star
demand

' game.

•

:;:;;

S'r. ALBANS
PHILIP SPORN PLANT
Past Offlco lox Ml, -

Hovon, Wttt Vlrtlnlo U26J

Toll,.._: oreocodo:I04 112-3111

•

OPtN: Weekdays 8:00A.M. to 9:00P.M. Saturdays 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.II.
'
•

•

I

------~_.---~----~~------~IL------~------------ L·-~--------~--~~----------------~----~~L_----~~~-- '

�T~ SWlda" TmJ('S • Srntml'l. Sunda\,
. l~t·. :!..1~h:J

-

28 -

ezgs zn SEOAL opener

lronmen sink
I

JACKSON - The Meigs
Marauders, again out·done
drastically at the foul line,
went down to their second
defeat of the 1973-74 campaign,
dropping an 82-69 decision to
the Ja ckson Ironmen here
Friday night.
The Marauders gained a
draw from the field, 60-liO, but

Jackson cashed in on 22 of 28
charity chances, whilt&gt; !V1ciKs
could sink just 9 of 19 for 47 pet.
Meigs was down by as much
as 13 points at 3 different
s12ges of th.e battle, 35-22 with
:t : 47 rerrlaining in the first half,
44-31 at the 7:01 mark of the
tllird frame , and 82-li9 ·at the
•
final buzzer .

Browns expect
physical battle
KANSAS CITY ( UP!) two very physical teams."
Cleveland Coach Nick Skorich
The Browns are in pretty
says ~vera! coaches have wid good physical condition except
himKansasCityisevena more for safety Thorn Darden wl1o
physical football team tllan has suffered a badly bruised
Pittsburgh and Oakland a nd hip.
that could present some
The Browns last two wins
problems for the Browns hav e been Oakland and PittsSunday.
burg h and the same kind of
The winner of the 4 p.m. con- effort will he needed Sunday.
test will remain very much
" We live week to week with
alive in the race for the pro our schedule," said Skorich.
football playoffs as the Browns
There is also another incenare in second place in the live to be earned with a victOry
Central Division of the over the Chiefs .
American Football Conference
"Do you realize Kansas City
while _the Chiefs are tied for , is the only team in the National
Football league the Browns
second in tlle AFC west.
11
A couple of coaches rve have never beaten?" asked
talked to feel Kansas City is an guard John Demarie.
However, they have met only
even more physical club than
Pittsbw-gh and Oakland," said tllr ee times with the · Chiefs
Skorich, "and to me, those are wiiUling a1l three.

The Maroon and Gold came
storming back to '~\ake a ! '&lt;~''"''-'
&lt;tf it aJtc1 cal'h of those first 2
deficit•.
That first time Meigs came
back to within a at 31-39, the
halftime margin . Then. after
dropping back down to 44-31 ,
the Marauders pow-ed in 10
unanswered points midway
through the third stanza, with a
Lonnie Coats 15 footer ma king
it 41-44 .
The closest the M &lt;trauders
came to taking t11e lead after
losing it! or good at 7-S on a layup ea rly in the fir st quarter by
Jacksori's Paul White, was
with just 15 seconds gone in the
four th quarter when forward
Bill Myers connected from 8
feet lo cut the margin to I at 5857.
Following ·My ers' basket,

2:35 remaining, Price s:conl.; l of
~ ~=·~~ tluOI'Ii.:-., :vl: . . "'rll. by a
Price lay-up, a Coats foul shot '
and a 10 footer by junior center
Dan Dodson to cut the lead to 5
at 69-74 .
But Jackson rounded out the "
night 's scoring with 8 s traight
points to notch the Jronmen's
initi•l SEOAL victory of the
season , joining Waverly,
l.ogan and Gallipolis at the top
of the loop heap, all with unblemished 1-0 league records.
Juni or guard Mike MeDonald, al 5-7, led the Jackson
attack, laying in 29 points on 10
of 16 from the field and 9 of 12
from the foul line. He was
joined in double figures by

Jackson's Don Jenkins gave

NBA Standings
By Unit'ed Pre ss International

teammates Tom Conr oy and

Pout \\'tiit.:: -o1.· it~ 21 and 15
points respectively.
The Marauders, meanwhile,
had 4 players in double ligures,
led by Myers ' 21 points on 9 of
11 from !he floor and 3 of 6 from
the charity stripe. He was
helped out by Dodson with 14,
Coatswithl3andPri cewith 12.
Amazingly, both squads hit
over 50 pet. from tlle field , with
the Jronmen connecting 30
times in just 54 tries lor 55 pel.,
whileMeigspwnped in 30 in 58
attempts for 51 pel.
Only 50 total reboW1ds were
snared the entire evenipg, a
tribute to tlle loosely played,
run and shoot style of Jackson
eoach AI Burger. White led the

Pro Standings

the 1)..2 senior a chance to put
the Mara uder s out in front, but
Myers missed on the front end
of a . 1 and 1 opportunity from
tlle foul line.
lronman Mike Mc Donald
tllen hit from 15 feet and
connec ted on boU1 end s of a 1
and I to up the Jackson lead to
57-62.
A Steve Price rocket fr om 25
feet cut tlle defici t to 59-62
before Jacks on scored 6
quicki es to put the ga me out of
reach at 68-59.
The Marauders weren't dead
at this junc ture , however,
Trailing 63-74 with a little over

Australians take Davis
Cup from United States
CLEVELAND, 0. (UP!) Using only John NewC&lt;Jmbe
and Rod Laver, the Australians
Wok the Davis Cup away from
the United Swtes Saturday as
Newcombe and Laver destroyed America's No. I
plilyer, Stan Smith, and 22year-old Erik Van Dillen, 6-1, 62, 6-1, in the doubles for an
W1beabible 3-Q margin.
Australian captain Neale
Fraser startled fans and
veteran observers alike by
deciding to bypass 39-year-o\d
. Ken Rosewall, who had been
expected to play in the doubles ,
especially since each had been
involved in five-set victorie's on
Friday.
Fraser's decision was emi-

•

•

East ern Conference
Atlanti c Di visi on

w. 1. pet . g.b .

Bos ton

16

N E:'w York

12

4 ,800
12 .500

6 •

west

w. \.

Denver
Utah
Ind iana

Buffalo
10 15 . 400
Ptliladelp h ia
8 I S . J4 8 91 1
Cen tr al Divi sio n
w. 1. pet . g . b .
Ca p i t al
1 1 9 . 55 0
11
At lanta
12 11 .522
Cle v eland
9 16 . 360
4 11
Houston
8 15 . 348
41 ?

Western Conf ere nce

11 .522
12 .520
12 .500
13 .480
9 15 .375

San Anton io
San Di ego

a• 1 .

·.

pet. g .b.

12
13
12
12

•12

~.12

Ja ckson b()ardmen with 10
while Myers snared 12 off the
glass for the Marauders.
In the reserve co ntest,
Jackson
used
balanced
scoring, 9, 9, 8, 8 and 7 to outduel the Meigs reserves, 41-34.
Chip Brauer led the
Marauder attack with 10
points, followed closely by
Mike Magnot12 wilh 9and Greg
Browning with 8.
The Marauders return home
Friday night to face !he allpowerful Waverly Tigers,
, under the direction of Carroll
Hawhee. Hawhee's Waverly
clubs have captw-ed 40 consecutive league victories over
. the last 4 years.
Reserve game :
-Jackson ( 41 ) - Conroy 3-1-7,
Morrow 4-1-9, Osborne 4-6-8,
Shields 4-~. Swingle 4-1-9.
Meigs (34) :... Brauer 4-2-10,
Browning 4-0-8, Magnotta 4-1-9,
·Cremeans 2-0-4, Davenport 0..33, Anderson~' Meadows 1).0-

Meigs box score
JACKSON (821
FG-A FT-A TP RB

PLAYER
Paul White
Don Jenkins
Tom Conrov
M lke M cQonald
Greg Fannin
Art DeStephen
Mark Buchanr~n
Rick Gentil

TOTALS

7-!J
1-J

1-J
0 ·0

6-11

9-9

10-16
J-5

9-12
1·2
2-2
0 -0
0 -0

10

s

7•
8

0
0

30-54 22-28 82

21

0-0
0-2

2
4

$

o•
03 ,.
17

(69)

FG-A FT-A TP RB

PLAYER
Lonnie Coa1S

Bill Myers
Dan Dodson
Perk Ault
Steve Walburn
Steve Price
Terry Quail s
Orrjon Blan chard
Fred Burney
Mick Ash
Mike May

5-13

3-4

13

9-11
7-12
2·6
0-1
5-9

J -6
0-0
1· 4
0·0

21
"
5
0

2-5

12

2-5

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

0-1
0-0

0~ ,

0-0

30-SB

TOTALS
Score by quarters:
Jackson
Meigs

J
12

2

2

I
0

' '
0
0
0
I

9-!9 69

'

PF·
2

5

0

0

[.

::i

0
l

29

J
0
I
I

J -4

MEIGS

15
2
21

t
§l

PF

0
29

.

5'"
3

0 .•
0

0'

0
21

.'

20 19 19 24 -- 82
15 16 24 " -- 69"

0.

Friday 's Results

Caro lina 124 Memph i s 88
Ind i ana 107 Kentucky 104
Utah 104 San Antonio 92
New York 123 Denver 102
San Diego 145 V irg in i a 139
(Only qam es scheduled I

Bend Tire Center

NHL Standings

By United Press Int ernatio nal
East
w. 1. t. pts gf ga
16
4 2 34 105 58
Boston

Midwest Division
w . 1. pet . g . b.
Mi lw a ukee
21
4 .840
.Chicago
18 6 . 750
21 '7
Detro i t
12 11 .522
8
6 2 28 76 '59
Montreal 13
KC Orna ha
6 20 . 231 15' '1 Toronto
11 7 5 27 79 58
. ~ Paciii != Division
6 26 86 67
NY Rangr s 10 7
w. 1. pet . g . b.
L9;sAngeles
16
7 .696 -··
Buffalo
10 10
1 21 68 72
Go ld efl.S iate
13
7 .650
Detroi t
9 12
1 19 74 98
Po r tlan d
10 13 .435
6
NYislandrs4 9 7 15 49 65
Sea tt le
9 17 .346
8''1 Vancouver 5 12 4 14 52 74
Ph oenix
7 16 .3 04
9
·
Wes t
Fr iday 's Results
w . I. I. pts gf ga
Capital 12 1 Buffalo H 3
13 6 2 28 60 35
Ph i la
Cl eveland 112 Philade l ph ia 110
Houston 110 De troit 95
Atlanta
11
7 4 26 61 59
Chic ago 115 New York 97
Chicago
9 5 7 25 64 40
Mi l waukee 117 Bos ton 93
St . Louis
9 B 4 22 55 49
Los Angeles 123 KC -Omaha 107
Pittsburgh 7 11 3 17 55 87
Phoenix 107 Portland 99
M innesota 5 11 6 16 63 79
(On ly games sc he cluled )
California 6 \4
I 13 48 75
Los Angeles·5 14
3 13 59 79
ABA Standings
Friday 's Results
B-y Un i t ed Press International
Minnesota 5 Vanc9uver 4
East
(Only game schedu le d J
w. I. pet . g. b.
19
8 . 704
Ca rolina
WHA Standings
Kentucky
16
7 . 696.
1
By United Press International
12 12 .500
51 !~
N E&gt; W Yor~
East
Memphis
9 i 6 . 360
9
w. 1: t . pts gt ga
V irgin ia
7 15 .31 8 9 lf~
Nw Englnd 14 9
1 29 93 79
Que be c
12 12 2 26 99 87
Chicago
1l
7 1 23 71 63
ROSE SHARES AWARD
Cleveland 10 a
3 23 74 76

I' '

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: b y E a s.t er n·

~~·

The Australians needed only
nently correct, since neither
18
minutes to win the fir st set,
Australian player showed any
semblance of being tired, breaking Van Dillen in the
particularly the 35-year-old fourth game when the AmeriLaver, who had finished play at can youngster yielded all low10 o'clock Friday nnight but points. The Aussies attacked
ST. LOUIS, Mo. ( UP! ) '- Toronto
was fresh for Saturday's 2:15 Smith · in the sixth game t.o
10 12 3 -23 79
P
e
te Rose, the National N ew J ersey 7 14 2 16 54
. break again and lock up the
start.
West
League 's Most Valuable
The
Australians
con- set.
•
w. I. I . pts gf
Rolling r elentlessly now, Player, will share the J . Roy · Edmonton 15 6 0 30 81
centrated
th.e i r
atta ck
Houston
1l
7 2 24 7 7
they broke Smith in the Stockton Award for out- Minnesota
t~roughout on Van Dillen,
11.. 10
1 2J 84
striving always to keep !he ball opening game Of the second swnding achievement at the Winnipeg 9 13 J 21 87
9 14
o 18 79
se t, then coas ted along, St. Louis Baseball Writers vancouver
away from tlle 6-foot-4 SmithLos Angele s 9 16
0 18 70
working on Van Dillen and then Association dinner Jan. 21,. it
particularly at the net.
Friday's Results
Los Angeles 5 Winn i peg 2
was
announced
Satw-day.
breaking
him
in
the
seventh
In the final set, Van Dillen
Toronto 2 M inneso ta 1
Rose . joins Atlan12's Dave
was broken in the seventh game for their 6-2 margin .
(Only games sc h eduled )
The Austra1ians were vir· · J ohnson and Oakland 's Darold
game and that was ·all the
107 Montana St. 76
Australjans needed, with the tually impregnable on service, Knowl es in r eceiving the Wash
Nev . Reno 76 Stanford 69
honor of serving the final game neve r dropping a game and award, named in honor of the Nev -LV 122 AlA 96
Sta Barbara 94 Ariz St 77
going to Laver who served it with each man holding love form er sports editor of the St. Oregon
105 U of Amer icas 61
games four times.
Louis Post-Dispatch.
Ca li f 85 New Sou th Wales 40
out at love .

82
aa
ga
58
61
75
91
96
92

Formerly New Haven Discount Tire
Now·In The The Wilson Texaco Station In Mason W.Va.
1

Sale:

Thru December 15th On Brand

New Premium Black And White Wall 4 Ply Nylon Winter Tires :

Black

Size
A78x13
B78x13
C78x13
C78x14
E78x14
· F78xl4
G78x14
H78x14
560X15
678x15
F78x15
G78x15
H78x15
L78x15

17.00
18.00
19.00
20.00
21.00
22.00
23.00
24.00
18.00
19.00
22.00
23.00

-

While

..

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Umited

20.00
21.00
22.00
23.00
24.00
25.00
19.00
20.00
23.00
24.00
25.00
27.00

Supply

Of Some Tires

MERCERVILLE - The
Hannan Trace Wildcats ,"
displaying an excellent zone
defense that yielded just one
shot practically every trip
down the Door, ripped the
Easiem Eagles, 59-41, here
Friday night.
A delirious crowd of Wildcat
supporters saw Paul Dillon's
cagers move out w a 13-8 first
quarter lead, 'n-17 halftime
margin, and commanding 45-26
lead after 3 periods.
•The story of the game is
reDected in tlle reboW1ding
statistics, wltll Hannan Trace
grabbing 55 caroms, while
coach Bill Phillips' charges
could pull In just n, will! few
coming off errant Eagle shots.
Eastern shot a freezing 24
]Itt. from the field, hitting on
:Just 16 of 66 attempts, while the
•Wildcats, not doing much
hetter, .sank just 20 of 66 tries.
The Hannan Trace attack
was led by 6-1 senior Don Wells
who, although netting just 8
poinls on 2 from the field and 4
at the line, . grabbed 20
rebottilds In controlling the
defensive boards, Wayne
Hesson ~nd John Lusher
provided help on !he boards
with 15 and 11 caroms
respectively .
, Larry Alberton, a 6-1 senior,
led Eastern reboW1ders with
13, while 6-1 senior John Sheets
• garnered 12 errant shots.
' Dillon cited Wells' play on
tlle boards, calling it his best
effort, and adding that he
" seems to he hnproving every
"It was an overall good ef' fort," Dillon said. "Everyone
~ played well."
: Phillips, meanwhile, was
-~ '~ery, very disappointed'' with

We've Taken The
Confusion Out Of
Tire ·Buying. 1m.
Extra Charge For

:

~:t~:~::t~e7~~~~~::.~: .

• said. ~~Hannan Trace showed a

' real good· defense, especialiy
with that press w-e zone. But
we'·re not giving up/' he sald,
: noting that !be loss will start
' the defending tri-champs'
: season off in. the SV AC
: basement. "We'll hang right In

; there."

'

: floor .

The .Advertised Price Is The Price You Pay.
No Trade In Tires Required,
1

•'

The Eastern offense was
.
hampered
by those poor
~ shooti~g percentages, as
:! ~videnced by the fact that 4 of
,;: the Eagles' swrters combined
:.': 10 make just 6 of 42 shots from

"',,.,

No Extra -Charge For Federal Excise Tax.

.

._1

"

Wide 70 Series For More Traction

MORTGAGE Fllt(ANCING

B70x13
E70x14
F70x14
C70x14
H70x14
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.For Customers ofJim WDiter Homes!
Jim

\

W~lter

provides a one·stop service, doing
both construction and financing. No red tape!
No delay! No third party! You choose your
new home from more than 20 beautiful models .
and we•ll do the rest ••• custom .. building almost
anywhere that you own property. With new
home costs continuing to spiral upward, you'll
be taking advantage of today's low Jim ·W al·
ter prices. And, by building now, you'll realize
a tremendous gain in the· increased value of
your property.

Jim Walter will help you cut the cost of your
new home even more by making it possible
for you to do some or all of your own interior ·
finishing. You decide how much. The more you
do, the more money you save.

Jim Walter completely finishes the outside of
your home including ... FOUNDATION, ROOFING, SIDING, WINDOWS, DOORS, PAINTING.
Then you have options to purchase inside ma~
teriols and installotion of .•. ELECTRICAL WIR.
tNG AND FIXTURES, PLUMBING, FLOORING,
WALLS, DOORS &amp; TRIM, KITCHEN AND BATH
FIXTURES.
When Jim Wolter installs all .of these ii1terior
options, you'll need only to paint or paper
walls, paint trim, conned to outside -utilities
and move in. Or you may purchase individual
materials packages, install them yourSelf and
save even more. lither way, the cost can be
included iri your mortgage.

• OVER 20 MODELS .
• BUllT ON YOUR PROPERTY
We want youtoknowthefuU costandexadfy
.,.hat ·your monthly mortgage payments will
be. We also want you to know lnore about
t,e superior materials and the quarlty con ..
struction methods we'fl use. Call, visit or .send
the coupon to the nearest Jim Walter Homes
display pork for complete, no-obi/gallon Information.
Wil"fl ~nu th ~•

I

CHESAPEAKE, OHIO 45619
P. 0. Box 250
Old Hwy. 52
PH : 867-3153

NITRO, W. VA.
608 lsi Ave. So.
25 East
PH: 727-2296

u.s. Hwy.

Write
P.O.

Box 8367

So. Charleston, W.Va. 25303

''

•

1,,,,.

,•

J

I
I
I

Studs
Just $3.00
Per Tire

.""
..§Mallory is

I
·I
I

(Mail fo n eore~f office)
I wo!J id li ke to hove more
in forma tion ond th e cost of
bu ilding on my property . I
vnderstond tl,'ere wovld be
no ob li gation to buy and
th a t you wou ld gi11e me these
fo ~ ts free of ch arge .

I

NAME
AOORESS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~-----

Group

OJLUMBUS (UP!)- Miami
coach Bill Mallory, wbose unbeaten Redskins face the Universlty of F1orlda in the Tang,
erine Bowl Dec. 22, has been
named the 1973 Ohio College
Football Coach of the Year in a
poll of the state's . 33 college
coaches by the Columbus
Evening Dispatch newspaper.
-Mallory guided the Redskins
to 10 straight victories and the
: "Mid-American Conference
• championship in the team's
: first perfect season since

::
..
.,
::
••
;:
::
:
:
:
•

I
-

U.S.

I

ZIP
-

I

~w.:!::pe,Jy ~---- ~·:J
·- - -

0

; 1955.

•
Mallory, 36, has a five-year
"' record at Miami of 38-12. He
received 18 flrs~lace votes and
,.. was tlll'ntioned 29 ballots for a
.. total 75 points .
~ Wittenberg coach Dave
Maurer was runnerup in the
" voting with 54 polnls.
Mallory became delenalve
;'l coordinator at Bowling Green
I: &amp;.te University in 19611, was
J:: later named aBSiltant coach at
•w Yale and In 1966 took over as
"' guard and laclde coaCh at Ohio

$24.00
$27.00
s32.00

C

m.

.

33 Mason W.Va.

Phone 773-5881

4 Ways To charge

1: &amp;.te.

• American

I

Mallory replaced Bo Schem: bechler at the Mlaml helm in
:;.t~.
'
::

••

r

Instead of knocking the deal,
!he fans in Cleveland this week
were busy buzzing about
Phipps' game-saving play last
·Sunday against the tough
Pittsbw-gh Steelers' defenseone of the best.
It was the kind of play that
can tum the season around.
The Browns were trailing tlle
Steelers 16-14 in the final two
minutes and faced a third-11nd-

Last season in Phipps' first
full year as the starting QB
W1der coach Nick Skorich, they
had to win eight of last nine
games to make tlle playoffs
with a 10-4 record after losing
all six of their exhibition games
and lhree of their first five
regular season games.
This year the team was 4-3-1
after losing to Minnesota tllree
weeks ago but they've beaten
Houston, oakland and Pittsburgh in succession.
" We knew we had a tougher
schedule !his year and we knew
we'd have to scratch imd dig
because we know we're not
going w overpower people and
!hat's the kind of season it's
been . But if we can win our
final lhree games, we'd finish
at 10-J-1 and that'd be a bit
hetter than last year."

in the game, scoring 2 points
and snaring ~ caroms.
Southern, led by senior
center Norman Curfman's 16
points and 7 reboW1ds, led by a
34-25 count going into the fow-tll
stanza, but the scoring and
defensive work of Waterford
enabled tlle hosts to hit the nets
for 18 points in that final
quarter and send the game in to
overtime.
Joining Curfman in double
figures for Southern were Bob
Miller and Sayre with 10 points
each.
Close pwnped in 15 for the
victors, while McFerren
chipped in 13.
" If· we ge t this kind of
defensive effort every game,
we 'll be a nice ball club,"
concluded Wolfe, whose cagers
meet Glouster Friday night on
tlle Racine planks.
The night wasn 't a total loss
for Southern fans , however, as

the Tornado reserves downed
the Waterford jW1ior varsity,
42-30 in !be preliminary game.
The Southern reserves
pwnped in 20 field goals, while
hitting 100 pet, 2 for 2, from the
foul line .
Waterford
5 10 10 18 6--49
Southern
9 12 13 9 4-47
Varsity
Waterford ( 49 ) - Rauch ~
8, Sampson ().2-2, Hickman 142, King 3-3-9, McFerren 3-7-13,
Clo~ 5-5-15.
Southern ( 47) - Curfman 72-'16, Miller 4-2-10, Sayre 5-0-10,
Ord 2-&lt;1-4, Warner 1-1;3, Nease
14-2, Theies J-l).2.
Reserve
Southern (42 ) - Schultz 6-012, Brown 3-0-6, Dunning 2-2-li,
Roberts 6-0-12, Huffman 3-G-6.
Waterford (30) - Rauch 7414, Schaad 3-2-8, CW1ningham
2-0-4, Diamond 2-Q-4,
Next Southern game - Dec.
7 vs: Giouster.

Why Not Give The Family

•

A New Room
For Christmas?

By

TERRY

.

.

..!

be
In
automobiles
today .
However ,
those
that
provide lots of elbow as
well as leg room are stilt in
popular demand.
SmaiL compact cars are
ideal for racing , individual
driving. or for taki,[1g your
date out . But for families,
tour ing and vacationing the
large roomy QOes take top
priority.
Are you still, living in
small. compact hou sing
quarters? You don ' t have
to, you know. Why not
spread out and live com fo.rtably in a spacious,
modern, mobile home-. the
mobile hom.;! being com plete of house and fur nishing s
is
also
relo~atable ,
providing a
source of changing locality
and scenery whenever the
mood strikes you. We have
the mobile home built for
your particular tastes and
needs, more beautlful· In
style and design than any
conventional home or regal
estate
and
more
economical on_. the budget
than paying rent
Compactnes:::t

;,-c~ ms to

a big . drawing card

Since 18SCJ

WII(A( ECONO,_Y O~IGIMAHS

Everything Is
Guaranteed
To Satisfy.
Or Money Ba'k
JANE PARKER

FRESH APPLE PIE
AND

ANGEL FOOD CAKE

SALE ·PRICES
\ Thru SATURDAY!
, 1:\:\

JOHNSON'.S MOB\ LE
HOME SALES
21!0 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHON

4' X8'
• \ \ PANELS
· -~~ :-\ \
. In a wide variety to fit every budget. .
\ " ·
and so easy to install yourself!
VINYL FACED Vintage &amp; Mountain ........ $2.99 each
NATURAL W()OD V.I.P. Lauan Mahogany .. $3.59 each
Wedgewood or Winchester ........ _....... $4.69 each

-:•

1/ 4" HARDBOARD PANELS
Appalachian, Royal, Pagoda, Crodova . _... $5.17 each

''

Central Operating Company's

PRE-FINISHED PANELING

Top

ALL PURPOSE

POLYETHYLENE FILM
8' x 100' LENGTH

·Philip Sporn Plant

White

97Cper 2' x 4' poMI

MEDICINE CABINET

ALUMINUM
COLONIAL
CROSS BUCK
STORM &amp; SCREEH DOOR
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White Enamel finiU

1 !. " Thl&lt;~
32" &amp; 36" 180"

Pre-hun~

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QILING TILE

LIGHT BULBS 60 &amp; 100 watt 4 for 65~

894 eo.

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$37.70

94 per sq. ft.

-· $5.59
Green

orWhile

FIBER GLASS
PANELING
26"
26"
26"

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X

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'

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SUSPENDED CEIUNG ''
.'
Lay-ln-C•iling Tile

PREMIUM
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New Haven, W.Va.

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DISAPPEARING •••
___,---,STAIRWAYS ••
OE:LUXE RCH111h dp.nint
25•• ~ht&lt;.., .....

8' $2,36/PC
10' $2.96/PC
12' $3,56/PC.

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•

. .These J()bs Provide Excellent Wages And A Benefits Program Which Includes
U-fe.lnsurance, Medical Insurance, Disablility Insurance , Sick Leave, Vacations,
Holiday, And Retirement.
Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate The Plant.

APPLICANTS MAY CAll.( 304) 882-2126 (collect)

84 LUMBER CO.
Warehouse/Showroom
PT. PLEASANT

0ST. ALBANS, W. VA.
28 Winfield Roail, Route 17

. SEIWEEN lHE HOURS OF --·
7:30AM TO 4:00 PM
...

~

TO ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW

,,

Bend
Tire
Center
Rt.

Texaco •Bank Ameiicard •Master
I.

J

1:

4 Yr.

$21.00
$22.00
'29.00

22F
24 &amp;24F
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retired."

.

nine play inside their own 40.
. Pbipl"' decided to call a pass
play to Frank Pitts, who had
heen open on a similiar pass
earlier in the game but
dropped it.
However, the Steelers' tough
defense put on a strong rush
and forced Phipps out of the
pocket and he was suddenly
scrambling for his life.
Before the Steelers could
haul him down, he spotted
Greg Pruitt and connected on a
42-yard pass. Two plays later,
Pruitt scored on a 19-yard run
and tlle Browns had a 21-16
triumph that kept them alive in
!he race for !he playoffs.
"It wasn't exactly tlle way
we planned it," Phipps said as
he deseribed the wild pass
play.
''Greg had run a flag pattern
and he had maintained it on the
sidelines when he saw I was in
trouble," Phipps explained, " I
think they kind of forget about
him."
It was an especially satisfy_ing victory since the Steelers
had won the first game 33-6. "!
guess we had an off day but
.P ittsburgh can intimidate you
in th.eir park," he said."
The victory gave the Browns
a 7-3-1 record and they are only
a half-game behind Pittsburgh
( 8-3) and a half game ahead of
Cincinnati (7-4) in !he tight
AFC Central race.
But the Browns don't have
any time to relax and
celebrate.
. They have a tough schedule
with Kansas City ( 6-4-1)
coming up Sunday followed by
games with Cincinnati (7-4)
and Los Angeles (9-2) closing
out the schedule. All games are
on the road.
''We've had problems wllh
Kansas City," Phipps admits,
"this Is the third time we've
played them in my four years
and we haven't beaten them
yet."
But heing in a difficult spot is
nothing new for PhiPI"' and the
Browns.

.

Anti-Freeze While
It •.asts
s1.79 Gallon

3Yr.

NEW YORK (UP!) - There
aren't too many pro . football
piayers who've come out of
C&lt;Jllege to face instant pressure
the way Mike Phipps did lowyears ago.
Phipps was a logical first
round draft choice when the
Cleveland Browns selected him
In 1970 because he was anolher
in a long list of standout
Purdue quarterbacks and
seemed to he a sure pro
prospect.
But tlle . problem was that
owner Art Modell, in one of his
most difficult decisions, had
traded away Paul Warfieldan Ohio folk hero wbo'd played
his college ball at Ohio Stateto Miami for the draft rights to
Phipps.
Warfield was bitter personally about the tradealthqugh playing in a pair of
Super Bowls at Miami has
given him a new outlook on it-and the fans in Clevelan!l were
furious.
"It was a pressure situation
all right," admits Phippa, "wt
there 's always pressure in
football and I don 't know how
much more pressure Utere was
thari there is for any olher
rookie because that's the
situation I faced ."
And faced it quite well.
You don 'I hear people in
Cleveland knocking that deal
tllese days. Especially after
last Sunday.
.
" I think they've seen !he
trade has been justified,"
Phipps says. "They realize
that I .should he playing in
Cleveland after Warfield has

board against Pittsburgh," · he
says the offense hasn't been
playing as well as it did last
year. He says tlle defense is
" tlle key to our record," and
adds, "the offense is a delicate
operation. It's no one person's
fault but we just haven't jelled
this season. "
If tlle Browns can get into !he
playoffs again, !bough, !he
Cleveland fans will have no
complaints.

Has Job Openings For Permanent Employment In The Followi
Skills
Etop college
.Mechanics
~ grid c~ach
Instrument Repairmen

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Titan Poly Force Batteries .Fully Guaranteed
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•

JIM WALTER HOMES

1 CITY
•
STATE
'I ;;~::::~:u~:~P~:~,:b;;;~ dirfclion•

..

Extra· Wheels- Any Size.S9.50

....Jim Waller~
I

•

af.1 "r~+

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25.00
27.00
29.00
25.00
27.00
29.00
31.00

I(
?

~nd said !hat " little" mis12kes
cos t the Tornadoes a victory.
The Southern defense,
meanwhile, held Waterford
shooters to just 3 field goals the
entire first half, although they
came back to connect 13 times
the final 2 periods.
The loss of senior forward
Pete Sayre, who picked up his
third foul as early as the
second period and fouled out
early in the fourth quarter, was
a determining fa ctor in the
Southern downfall according to
Wolle. Through 3 quarters of
acbon, Sayre had netted 10
points and grabbed 6 reboW1ds.
Another Tornado, senior
Dave
Theiss,
found
himself
in
dire
personal foul straits
early
in
the
game.
Theiss picked up his tllird foul
after just 2 minutes had
elapsed in lhe opening quarter .
However. he managed to smy

the noor.

"
The Eagles gained a draw on
,. the night, however, with the
~ reserves routing Hannan
:;: Trace, JS-25, as only 2 Wildcat
.. reserves hit the scoring
• colwnn, Kent Halley with 16
C: poinls and Petrie wltll 9. ,
:
The Eagles were led by Greg
:: Bailey's 1~ ..
u
Scoring by quarters:
" Hannan Trace 13 14 18 14---S!l
u• Eastern ·
8 9 9 1:;-!1

Premium 4 Ply Polyester Polyester White Walls s3.00
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'

.

,
Mark Swain led llle Wildcat
• offense, pouring in 19 points on
6 from the field and 7 free
. i throws. He was joined in
' double figures by teammates
;• Hesson with 12 points and
• Lusher with 1~.
;: Senior forward Tim Bawn
· ; was the only · Eagle to hit
: double figures, netting 10
: points on 5 out of 10 from the

Mounting, Or
Balancing

WAT E RFORD
The entire evening by cold spells at
Southern Tornadoes, playing !he beginning of each" quarter .
what head coach Carl Wolfe
Ahead 9-S at the end of !he
i;; described as an excellenl first frame, Southern waited 3
defensive ball game, came out minutes at the beginning of tlle
{~ on the short end of a nip and second period w put the ball
~:~; tuck overtime battle here through the hoop. Leading 21-1~
:~:~ Friday night, losing to at halftime , Tornado shooters
Waterford, 49-47.
couldn't find the range W1til 2
Varsity
1-3, Blake 2-0-4, Harris 2-0-4,
The game, knotted at 43-all and a half minutes had elap~
Hannan Trace ( ~9 )- Hesson Bowen 0-0-0, Bailey 5 - 5-1~ , after regulation time, saw in !be tllird quarter, and !he
5-2'12, Swain 6-7-19, Lusher 6-3- Nelson 0-0-0, Good 2-2-6, Southern lose it at the foul line, fourtl! quarter found Southern
15, Halley 0-0-0, Wells "i-4-a, Hanmun 1-1-3.
making just 33 pet. of its free scoreless Wllil just 4 and a half
Hannan Trace ( 25) - Halley throws on 5 of 1~ .
Hall 0-J-3, Sanders 14-2.
minutes remained in !he game.
Eastern (41 ) - Spencer 2-2-S, 6-4-16, Petrie 2-5-9, Shaffer 114Waterford, on the other
Wolfe attributed the poor
0,
Cremeans
11-0-0.
McGuire
114Dill 3-3-9, Milhoan 0-0-0, Sheets
hand, connected on 17 of 'n, for offensive showing, w some
3-2-8, Bawn 5-0-10, Goehel2-0-4, 0, Sheets 0-0-0, Jones 11-0-0.
a 12 point advantage at the extent, to opening night jitters
Next Eastern game - Dec. 7 charity stripe .
Atherton ll-2-2, Weber 0-ll-0, Orr
vs. Kyger Creek.
14-2, Holland 0-0-0.
The Purple Tornadoes,
In 1874 , Winston Chw-chill
Next Hannan Trace game Reserves
hittingatacool30pet. from the was born . He was destined w
Eastern (35) - Eichinger 1- Dec. 7 at North Gallia .
field, were hampered the become Britain's prime minister twice and he lffiighted as Sir
Winston . He died in 196S.
.a. Y .a
Althongh Phipps admitted
~or
that, "you feel good when you
J.l
put three touchdowns on the
~1

Phl.pps su-.qr:ves pressure 0 f
m•
stant
star
demand

' game.

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:;:;;

S'r. ALBANS
PHILIP SPORN PLANT
Past Offlco lox Ml, -

Hovon, Wttt Vlrtlnlo U26J

Toll,.._: oreocodo:I04 112-3111

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OPtN: Weekdays 8:00A.M. to 9:00P.M. Saturdays 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.II.
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30 - The Sunday T1mes- Sentinel. Sunday, Dec 2~73

31 - The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973

Landowners
ask
planning
assistance
Advice to putter-offer gardener~
By JOHN

makesl..
County Extension Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - It's almost too late to dig and store summer flowering bulbs and it's almost too late to plant sprmg
flowermg bulbs However, 1£ you are a "putter~ffer," it 's
oot too Lale to try.
Most summer llowenng bulbs should be dug and stored
when the leav"" on the plants turn yello". Ull the bulbs
from the ground with a spading fork and wash off any sml
that clmgs to the bulbs, except lor bulbs that are stored m
pots or those where the soil should be Left around them
Leave the sod on achuncnes , begoma , canna, caladium,
dahlia, and 1smere bulbs Store these bulbs m clnmps on a
slightly mmstened layer of peat moss or sawdust m a cool
place. Wash and separate them JUSt before planting
Spread the washed bulbs m a dry, cool place to dry .
When dry, sto re them away from sunlight m a cool, dry
hasement , cellar, garage or shed at 60 to 6ii degrees F
Avoid temperatures below 50 or above 70 degrees, unless
different mstructwns are g1ven for a particular bulb.
Inspect bulbs lor signs of disease Keep only the Large ,
healthy ones that are firm and free of spots . lf you have only
a lew bulbs, they may be stored m paper bags hung from
the ce•ting or wall .
If you are gomg to try late plantmg of spnn g ll ower~ng
bulbs, get the JOb done Y""terday . The b""t time IS early m
the fall so that roots will ha ve a cha nce to grow before the
ground freezes. Be sure to water the soil thoroughly alter
planting bulbs and keep 11 mo1st to encourage good root
growth .
The depth to plant depends on the bulbs and the sml
type . Normally, you would plant to a depth two Urnes the
diameter of the bulb m clay so1Is and deeper, about two and
a hall tunes the diameter, m sandy so1Is
In areas where the ground IS hkely to freeze f1ve or
more mches deep , mulch wtth straw, wood chips, leaves,
etc Apply mulch alter the ground freezes and remove 1t or
rake tt back from around the plant when growth appears m
the sprmg.
If the homeowner IS shiltmg h1s interest to houseplants,
he may run mto pests of these plants this wmter. Most of the
conunon pests of house plants can be controlled w1th msecticide sprays or dtps. Exceptions are slugs and snatls
These require po1son ba1ts
InsectiCides may be apphed as dusts , but sprays and
dips are preferred because they usually gwe better control,
are less likely to leave obJectwnable res•dues, and do not

dnft to the nearby objects so readily when apphed , arC'ordmg to cnlomologtsts at The Ohio State Umversity
For best results . appl}· control mcaswes at the ftrst
s1gn or pests If mfestau on &lt;.'OnlJnues, repeat treatment m
it we('k or JOda} s. unless olhcrwtse noted under conlrol
recommer1datwns ror spet·t(tc pests
lnsec t pests most commonly found on house plants are
aphrds, rmtcs, fungus gndts, mealybugs, mJihpe:des,
psoctds, scales, llu'JP~. and \\lutefhes
Insecticides .such &lt;~s chlordane, ltndane. ntalathton, etc .
may be mixed wtth \~atcr and used as a spray or dtp
Followmg arc rates to rmx Cluordane. 4ii pet emulsifiable
concentrate, 2 teaspoons peo ga llon of water: lindane, 20
oct. emulsifiable concentrat.. I teaspoon per gallon of
waler , malathiOn, 57 pet. emul sJr1able concentrate, 2
teaspoons per gallon of ~~ tc r
SQme plants are more difft rult to wet than others. If a
preparation does not readtly spread over and wet a plant,
add •, teaspoon of a mold household detergent (not soap)
per gallon of spray or dip The detergent Improves the
wcttmg power of the mLXture and reduces v1s1ble residues
Sprays are used most often to treat plants, but they
may also be used to treat surfaces of sot! , pots, saucers, or
shelves to help control som e pests
Spray plants untiL they ure wet - no Longer Apply
spray w1Lh a good hand &lt;ltorntzer or small compressed atr
sprayer .
Hand atomizers that hold 12 p1nt to 1 quart of spray are
smtable for spraymg one or a few plants Choose an
atomizer that Will dehver a contmuous spray and that has
an adJustable nozzle that can be turned to direct the spray
upward or downward
It IS sometmtes more convement to d1p plants mto the
ntsectlctde-water solutiOn than to spray them In this case,
put the miXture m a pail or pan large enough to accommodate the top of the largest plant to be d1pped Then
turn each plant upslde down and unmerse the foliage and
stems m the mixture for. a few seconds To keep loose sml
from sptllmg out as you turn the plant over, hold crumpled
paper or a cardboard dtsk hrmly over the sot! around the
plant Silt cardboard d1sk to fit around the plant stem.\(eep
your hands out of the dip
Washing With soa py water and a soft brush or cloth mav
be all that IS needed to remove aph1ds, mealybugs and
scale msects from broad-leaved plants. Use 2 teaspoons of a
m1ld deter gent to a gallon of wate r
4

B y c. E.

Ohio ponds are havens to wildlife
COLUMBUS - "The 26,114 products of farm ponds and tmg, and the aesthetics of
seemg and enJO} mg a beautiful
!arm ponds built m Ohw over lakes.
Ute last30years support dozens
The grow1ng number of landscape.
of species of water lovmg ponds has lncreased the
Landowners can also get
wildlife," says Robert E. nwnbet or pond-lovmg Wildlife, techmcal help from SCS w1th
Quilliam,
State
Con· even such ammals as the deer , livestock water tanks, hsh
servatiomst with the U S SOIL wh1ch use ponds lor the~r stockmg, weed control, -and
Conservation Service (SCS ). drmkmg water, accordmg to ammal problems HPlantmg
the pond area to shrubs, trees,
The$e mclude purple mar- Qllllham.
Ponds have been mstalled by and grasses w11l enhance the
tins, swallows, and birds such
as flycatchers which eat landowners cooperalmg w1th pond for wlldbfc and luunan
aquatic insects that emerge thetr local soli and water
from the water surface . Fish conservation districts for such
eating btrds such
as purposes
as
provtdmg
ktngf1shers, ducks, grebes, livestock water, home water,
herons, and very rarely even recreatiOn, 1rngat10n, fn e
an osprey also use the pond contr ol, beauhhcabon and
areas, along w1tlt the raccoon, w1Idhle use Ponds usually
muskrat, and an occasiOnal se rve the landowners for
beaver and mmk. Turties, several purposes.
frogs, toads, dragonflies ,
Re creation uses mclude
GALLIPOLIS Ga lh a
crawdads, snails, and other ftshmg, swimmmg, tee skatmg, Cotu1ly producers who have
lower lonns of wlldllle are also boatmg, bird watchmg, hun- returned thm MQ-38 cards
have received their burley
tobacco marketmg cards. The
followmg nine pomts are unportant
WITH
Pounds marketed abov e 110
pet. of the !arm quota IS subJect to a marketmg quota
penalty and 1s not ehgible lor
pn ce support All tobacco
marketed (mc) udm g g1fls)
must be recorded on your
marketmg card
Tobacco marketed above 100
pet of your farm quota w1ll be
deducted !rom the farm quota
1. CLEAN MATERNITY AREA
for the lollowmg year
Likewi se, tobacco marketed
2. PREVENTION OF NAVEL ILLS
under farm quoLa , up to 100 pet
of farm quota, will be added to
3. PROPER HOUSING
the farm 's quota lor the
lollowmg year
4. FRESH CLEAN WATER SUPPLY
You should not perm1l
anyone to market tobacco on
5. CLEAN FEEDING EQUIPMENT
yow card whtch was produced
on another farm
You must pr esenl your
6. PROPER FEEDING
marketmg card at the
warehouse when your tobacco
ts welghed-in. The card must
remam m custody of the
warehouse until payment Js
VINE STREET
made or unt.ll your tobacco Js
removed from the warehouse
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
(except where card ts needed
by owner or operator to effect

use," QUILham stated
Many sml and water con·
servatton d1str1cts make
w1Ldll fe
shrub
packets
available to landowners for
Lmprovmg the area around
ponds These packets mclude
plants wh1ch produce berries
used by song and ga meb~rds
and cover wh1ch protects small
ammals from cold m \nrtter
and from the1r enemtes

Guide offered to
burley producers

r---------------------.,
HEALTHIER CALVES
PURITY CALF MILK REPLACER
THE FACTORS INVOLVED IN GOOD
MANAGEMENT WITH AQUALITY
MILK REPLACER

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE CO.

ORDER YOUR TOBACCO
SUPPLIES NOW
eBROMOGAS
eFUMIGATION COVERS
•PLANT BED CANVAS
eENIDE
•SEED

OF OHIO
Jrd &amp; Sycamore St s.
Galltpolis, Oh•o
Your Far m Supply Supermarket

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UNIT CALLED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Em~rge ncy Squad was called
to "Stiffler 's Department Store
at 10:13 a .m. Saturday where
Sarah Greene of Pomery had
become 1ll She was taken to
Veterans Memonal Hospital.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
POMEROY Kenneth
Harlan Wht::eler, 20, Dexter,
and Cynthia Marie VanMeter,
17, Middleport.

CENTRAL SOYA

•

transfer of quota) Any tobacco
lefl at the warehouse 1s considered marketed and subJect
to penalty even though you are
not pa1d for the tobacco
You must piCk up your
marketmg card fr om the
warehouse at the time you
recetve payment for your
tobacco.
You should cxamme your
marketmg card and sale bills
after each sale to see If the sale
was correctly recorded Report
any error to the ASCS
marketmg recorder at the
warehouse or to your local
county ASCS off1ce
As soon as you complete yo ur
marketmg, you must return
your marketmg card to the
county ASCS office.
If an error results in your
sellmg above !!0 pet. of your
farm quota, or tobacco Is
marketed on your card that
was produced on another farm,
you can be held responsible for
payment of marketmg quota
penalhes at ii9 cents per pound
and the next quota established
for the farm may be reduced.
lf the marketmg card 1s used
to market tobacco produced on
ano ther farm or If tobacco
prouuc" .i un tu~ J farm JS
Id entifi ed on the marketmg
card for another farm, the
person mvolved may be subject to prosecuhon under Title
16, Sectwn 1001 of the U. S.
Crimmal code wh1ch provides
for a fme of not more than
$10,000 or 1mpnsonment lor not
more than fiVe years or both.

"'

TWO ASSISTS MADE
RACINE - The Racme ER
squad answered a call Friday
evem ng and one Saturday
mormng Fnday at 7: 50 they
transpor ted Mrs
Freda
Manuel, Racme, Rt 2, to
Vet.rans Memortal Hospital
and Saturday at 7 : 2~ a.m they
gave !1rst a•d to Charles
Bryson iit hiS residence in
Racme
••

COOPER
Conservation Service
PT PLEASANT - Several
people have recently become
cooperators of the Western S01l

L11y of tire Land
Conservahon D1strtct and have
asked for planmng assistance.
These mclude Benjamm
Roush, Rt. 1, Letart, wtth an
187..acre farm on Broad RWl ,
Boyd D Stover of Gall1pohs,
Ohto, who owns a 95-acre rarm
on Kapp R•dge: Theodore
N1ber t, w1th 19 acres at
Galhpohs Ferry, and Wilham
A. Edwards, Southside, w1th 22
acres.
Other recent cooperators are
Sanford
Powell
of
Meadowbrook wtth 125 acres

Friday accidents
of minor variety
GALLIPOLIS - Two minor
traffic acc1dents were mvesllgated Friday m downtown
Gallipolis The !1rst occurred
on Vme St. where an auto
driven by Corbett Jesse
Roberts, 71, Rt 3, Gallipolis,
backed mto a car owned by
Luella Lou Holcomb, 40, of
Eureka Star Rt
Another mishap occurred on
E astern Ave . where cars
dnven by Ray Garlmger, 46,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis and Marshall
R. Wolfe, 22, of Kanauga,
collided No charges were
filed I

INSTALLATION SET
MIDDLEPORT - The Me1gs
County Chapter, Order of
DeMolay Will observe open
mstallatwn at 7 30 p m Friday
at the Middleport Masomc
Temple To be mstalled are
Don Vaughan, master counCilor elect; Herbert Carson,
semor coWicllor elect, and Bert
MoshiJ r, JWiior councilor elect
A recepbon w1ll follow the
mstallabon .

on FIVe Mile Creek, and
Richard P. Ne well on
Mossman Circle w1th 124 acres,
also on Fwe Mde Creek.
AIL of these landowners have
asked for planrung assiStance
S01l maps and !arm plan maps
hilve been ordered on wh1ch the
plans will be made. The so1Is
maps and woodland maps
prov1de mventory tnformatlon
m regard to the soils and
woodland capab1hlles of the
so •• s on each of the farms
WE RECENTLY helped B.
W. Pamter of Route 2, near
Roosevelt School, w1th a
conservation plan fo r h1s farm
Mr. Pamter IS mterested m
developing the farm for
livestock production, therefore
he IS rnamly mterested m
unprovmg the grassland and
water on his farm Mr. Pamter
owns some Kentucky Fned
Ch1cken restaurants around
the Charleston area.
DENVER YOGO of SCS has
been working out detailed t1Ie
surveys lor some of the farms
which w11l be mstalling llle
drainage m the near future
The most recent of these are
Thomas Bwngarner of SouthSide, who w1ll be mstalling
3,500 feet of clay tile on the Ray
Farm Forrest N1bert at
Ashton w1ll 1nstall IiiOO feet of
plastic dram pipe

T~levision

theamountofstorie• told about
them, we could hang a nng on
13 points. According to IIi
anc~ent set of Stillards, on
which we weighed the deer, the
we1ght was 140 pounds. We
we1ghed two quarters of the
deer on platform scales alter
they had hung in a cooler lor a
week and we found that eacn
had shrunk 2 pounds from the
amount indicated by the
Stlllards
We went out m the woods the
day alter bagging our deer
without a gun In order to assist
our other hunters and enjoyed
watching the squirrel and
grouse which flushed ahead of
us.
Incidentally, our hunt was in
Doddridge County on M1ddle
Island Creek near West Union.

Mr. Yoho is workmg on the
Robert Hollman farm With a
detailed survey. Mr. Hollman
w1Ll use clay tile
ANYONE who has read this
far m th1s colwnn today !lllght
as weU read about my deer
hunting. The weather was
exceUent except for some ram
and fog on the l~rs t day and we
enjoyed being out m the woods
and f1elds very much,
espec1al1y smce we can report
Uus year that we bagged a
deer Smce it was the f1rst one
m several years, we feel that
we have a r~ght to brag about it
a little bit and mentwn it m th1s
colwnn.
Most people would only calli I
a 10 pomt, but since we were
the Lucky hunter and !1sh and
deer get bigger ac~ording to

SUNDAY, DEC 2, 1973

6 00 ~ Travelogue 4
6 30 - This Week~ · NewS'maker '13 13. Fantasy and Fugue 10
7 00 - Time for Trmothy 4, Jenny Falwell 13 , Communrque 6
7 30 - Fafth for Today 8, Revival Frres 6; Herald of Truth 3.
Yours for the Askmg 4, Camera Three 10

8 00 -

Chorr 3, Day of D rscovery 4
8 30 - Oral Roberts 3, Your Health 4, Day of Dr scovery e. Re)(
Humbard 13 , Rev•val Ftres l5 , Kathryn Kuhlman 6 , Get
Together 10
8 55 - Black Cameo 4.
9 00 - Singing Jub1lee 3, Cadle Chapel 4, Oral Roberts 10 , Rex
Humbard 6, I..S Hair Bear's Bunch 8.
9 30 - Churc h by S1de of Road 4, Christ ts the Answer 13 .
Amazing Chan 8, Popeye 10.
10 00.- ChurchServlces4 . Th1s Is The Ltfe3 , Fa ith tor Today 15,
K1d Power 6, 13, Rex Humbard8 l Mov •e '' Uiysses''lO
10 30 - V1s1on On6 . ln slght4 , Osmohds 13, Captain Noah 3, This
IS the Lite 15
11 00 - Po1n t of V1ew 6. TV Chapel 3, Facts on Columbus 4,
Across th e Fence IS. H R Pufnstuf 13, Notre Dame Football
t'loghl oghts 8
II 30 - Thts IS the Answer 3. Make A Wish 6, 13 ; ln stght 15. Fred
Taylor 4
12 00 - At Issue 3, Bowling 6, Rev Calv 1n Evans 13, West
V~ratn1a Un 1ver s1 ty 8. Sacred Sheart 15, OSU Football
1 H•9hilght 4, Columbus Town Meeting 10
12 15 - Open Btble IS
12 30 - Revival F•res 13, Meet the Press 3. 15, Pro Football Pre·
Game 8

12 55 - Ted M ullms 10
1 00 - Lower L1ghthouse 13. Pro Footba ll 3, 4, 15. Pro Football

8, 10

I 30 - Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13
2 00 - College Footba 111973 13 , Soul Tra tn 6
, 3 00 - other People , Other Places6 , Survlval13
• 3. 30 - J1mmy Dean Show 13 , Wacky World of Jonathan Winters
• 6
4 00 - French Chef 33, Pro Football 3, 4, 15, ABC News Close
1
up 6 TBA 8, Film 10 , Amenca 13
~4 15 - Popeye10
·
....4 30 - Lass1e 10 ; B tll Dailey 's Hocus Pocus Gang 6. Famous
! Class1c Tales a, 10 . Mov1e " Des•re Under the Elms " 13
_.. 5 00 - Umbrella 33
., 5 15 - Mak.ng Th1ngs Work 33
5 30 - T'Atc hr Ch'uan 33
• 6 00 - Grdnd Master Chess33, Let's Make A Dea l6, CBS News
~
Spec1a l a, 10
: 6 30 - World at War 6. Vince Lombardi Science and Art of

"

15 Scholarships

• Culs a 6" log tn 5 seco nds
• 6 9 lbs less cutting
attachments
• Cuts logs up to 20 tnches
• Only McCulloch makes a saw
so 11ght for so 11111e

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
POMEROY

PH. 992-2176

SUNDAY

OPEN 24 HOURS

TODAY -

POMEROY

ONLY ONE

20 cu. ft. UNICO CHEST FREEZER
CASH &amp; CARRY

ON DISPLAY

Come, see it! A different special every
Sunday.

•260
Plus Tax

DON'T MISS ffiiS!

'

~ 6 00 -

SUPER SERVICE STATION
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

Foolball 3

1 00 - Zoom ?0 31 Wtl(t l&lt;inftlil"'m lli !=iAftm tn Arlv~nture 3·
C1rcus 4, Lassre 8, In the Know 10. Untamed World 13
"'7 30 · World ol Ulsney 3, 4, I S, Mountain Scene 33. Perry Mason
• 8
8 00 - Men Who Made the Movres 20 , Pnmal Man 6, 13. A
Whole New Season . Called Wmter 10. Folk life 20
8 30 - Mannrx 8,•10, M cCloud 3, 4. 15 . Movre ' Prudence and the
Pill ' 6, 13
/} 00 - Masterprece Theater 20. 33
9 30 - Barnaby Jones a. 10
10 00 - Frnng Lme 20, 33
10 30 - News 6 8, H1gh Road to Adventure 10 , Newsmaker ' 73
13 , We Th•nk You Should Know 3, Police Surgeon 15; Johnny
Mann 's Stand Up and Cheer 4
l'l ,oo - News 3, '· 6, 8, 10, 13, 15
11 15 - Pol1 ceS urgeon6 , News 10, 13, Movle '' Coney Island" a
11 30 - Face the Nation 10, Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 13 ,
Movie " Never A Dull Moment" 3, Johnny Carson 4, 15
11 45 - Good News 6
12 00 - Urban league lO
12 15 - College Football 1973 6
12 30 - Movre ' 'Around the World Under the Sea " 10
1 00 - News 4, 13

made available

$9995

landmark has a complete line of
Appliances on sale at our store 6
days a week. We can save you
money on Hotpoint and Unico for
Christmas.

•l •'

Yes! We're OPEN, But We Can't Sell Gas!

" MONDAY , DEC. 3, 1973

Sunnse Se m r na~ 4. Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - School Scene 10
..... 6 20 - Farm Report 13
~ 6 25 - Paul Harv ey 13
6 30 - B1ble Answers 8, News 6 F•ve Mmutes to Ltve By 4,
:
Good News 13
,.. 6 35 - Co lumbu s Today 4
• 6 45 - Corn cob Repo rt 3. Farmt1me 10
'~ 7 00 - Today 3 4, 15 , CBS News 8, 10 , Fl1ntstones 13 ; Romper
Room 6
!• 7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwrnkle 13 New Zoo Rev ue6
: 8 00 - Capt Kangaroo B. 10 , New Zoo Revue 13. Sesame St 33 .
T1 mmy and Lass•e 6
.., 8 30 - Hu ck and Yog16 , D1 c k Van Dyke 13
~~ 8 55 - News 13
"'
., 9 00 - Paul O•xon 4, Fnendly Junctton 10 , AM 3, Phil
..
Donahue 15 , Brady Bunch 6. Abbott and Costello 8, Mov 1e
'' House of Bamboo" 13
9 30 - To Tell The Truth 3, Secre t Storm 8, M1chaels &amp; Co 6
Chuck White Reports 10
1 .. 9 55 • 10 00 - Dtnah Shore 3, 15 , Joker' s Wild 8, 10
~ 10 30 - Baffle 3. 4, 15 , $10.000 Pyram•d 8, 10 . M1ke Douglas 6
11 00 - Ga mb1t 10, Password 13, W• za rd of Odds 3. 4, 15 . Hazel
8 Unt o the Hil ls 33
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15 . Love of L•fe 8, 10 , Brady
Bunch 13 ; Bow ling 6, Sesa me Street 33
11 55 - CBS News 8, Dan I mel's World 10
~ 12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4, Password 6,
News 8. 10, 13
~ 12 30 - 3 W's 3, 15, Spl1 t Seton d 6. Search For Tomorrow a. 10
12 45 - Elect nc Company 33
12 55 - News 3. 15
~ 1 1 00 - News 3. All My Children 6. 13 , Not For Women Only 15,
L
Conc entrat iOn 8, What's My Lme 10
1•
1 30 - 3 On A Mat ch 3, 4, 15, The World Turns 8, 10. ABC' s
•
Mat1nee Today 6, 13
2 00 - Days Of Our L 1ves 3, 4, 15 , Guldtng L1ght a, 10
2 30 - EdgeofN•ghtS, 10 , Doctors3, 4,1 5
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hosp•tal 6, 13 , Pnce Is
R•ght 10 Book Beat 20. V1rginlan 8, Adlerian Counsel1ng 33
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 15; One Lrfe to lrve 13, Secret
Storm 10 , Phrl Donahue 4 Huck and Yogl6 , French Chef'20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 , Love, American Style 13 , Somerset 15,
Sesa me St 33 , Speed Ra ce r 6, Sesame St 20; Movie " The
Gunl 1ghter " 10
' 4 30 - I Love Lucy 6, Green Acres 3, Jeopardy 4, Grlllgan's
Island 13, Santa Claus 15 , Lucy Show B. ,
• 5 00 - Mr Rogers 33, 20 , Bonanza 3, Merv Grtffm 4, Andy
'
Gr•ff•th 8, I Dream of Jeannie 13 , Miss•on lmpossrble 6,
r
Bonanza 15
~ 5 30 Beverly Hdlb111tes 8; Elec Co 33 , Gomer Pyle 13 .
..,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20
5 55 - Earl N1ghhngale 15
6 00 - News 3, 4, 6, a, 10, IS , Sesame Street 20 , ABC News 13,
Personal tty and Behavioral Development 33
6 30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15. ABC News 6 . CBS News 8, 10,
~
Hogan's Heroes 13
7 00 - Truth or Consequences 3, 6 , What' s My Lme 8, Beat the
,.,
Clo ck 4 News 10, Electric Co111pany 20; Circus 13 , TBA 15 ,
, 1
M1ne Curcus 33
7 30 - Bobby Goldsboro 3, College Baske!balt 4 , To Tell !he
,,.
Truth6 , Buck Owens a, Lock, Stock and Barrel 20 , Muntclpal
~~
Court 10 , Beat the Clock 13 , Wacky World of Jonathan
..
Wrnters 15. Episode Adton 33
~ B OO - LotsaLuck3. 15. Rooktes13 , 's Wonderful,'s Marvelous,
l:'e
's Gershwin 20, Nat tonal Geographic 6, Gunsmoke 8, 10
~ B 30- D1ana J, 15
,, 9 00 - Movte "The Double Man " 3, 15, Here's Lucy 8, 10 , West
0 1
·Meets East 20, 33. Pro Football6, 13, Movte "Journey to the
!"; Far S•de of the Sun" 4
~t• 9 30 - Dtck Van Dyke a, 10 , Book Beat 20, 33.
'~ 10 00 - Med1cal Center 8, 10, News 20 , Paul Nuchtms 33
:' 11 OO - NewsJ,4, 8. 10.15 . Janakl33
:an 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15. Movres " In Cold Blood" 8, " It
:;
~hould Happen to You " 10
... 12 00 - News 6, 13
l" 12 30 - Movie "Strangers at Sunnse" 13
.,., 1 00 - Tomorrow 3. 4
• 2 00 - News 4, 13

t"

'

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• • • • • .. • •

H You Need An•••

.",,•
.."'
..'

Nixon keeps the faith in

I

Oil Change Lube Job
Wash Job Tires
Tire Repair

If You Need •••
Milk

Leonard Repass 8, Gospel Caravan 6 Church Ser v•ce

13, Billy James Hargts &amp; hi s All Amenca.n Kids 10, Mormon

GREAT GIFT TO
TRIM A TREE WITH

GALLIPOLIS
J1m
Bowser , admissions counselor
at Hocking Technical College,
has notified the guidance olf1ce
at Gal11a Academy H1gh
SchO!ll, that 1ii lull scholarships
are avatlable tn their Heat
Processmg Program. The
scholarships mclude tuitton,
fees, and books and are
available for both the wmter
and spring quarters. Students
would have to be avallable to
start classes next January 3.
For addthona1 informatwn,
contact the Guidance OI!ICe at
Galha Academy H1gh School or
call 446-32~0

Log

Eggs

Candy

manageable energy crisis

~

,,

"'••"
.,.
..'"

•••
•

~

Pop

••'

•

GET YOUR NEW SNOW TIRES TODAY
We Want To Continue To Give You Good Car Service,
Regardless of Shortage..
•

.....'..•
"

Crisis now
(Continued from Page 19)
o1I into the coal to make 11 burn better and
that is taking fuel ml away from homes "
Commenting on the current prospects
ror gasohne rahomng, Dreyer saJd he
could see no olher course but rationing.
11
There ts no turmng the clock back,"
he said. "The day of running with the
throttle Wide open IS over. And, although I
am pleased so many persons are already
lirmtmg thell' car's speed to 50 miles per
hour, that is simply not enough con-

Attorney
to teach

servation
"I don't know JUSt what form gasolme
rationmg wall take - all Lhose recent 1deas
hemg proposed by Washmgton officials
are JUSt tr~ a l balloons to see how the pubhc
reacts
"But make no mistake, we w1l1 have
gasoline rationing and It wlll be w1th us a
Long lime," he added.
Last swnrner, Dreyer said, he encountered people who would not believe
lhal season's gasoline shortage was real
and who refused to believe there was any
real energy crJ,Sis. "!!eel hke the guy who
shouts 'They're commg! They're

..."'-

WASHINGTON (UPI)- President Nixon believes the
energy shortage stUI representa a "manageable crisis" and
probably will not decide until tbe end of December whether
to order oll and gasoline raUonlng, his budget chief said
Saturday.
Roy L. Ash, director of the Office of Management and
Budget told reporters after a 110-minnte Wbite House
meetl~ wltlt the President aDd Cabinet level of 9fflclals
that the fuel sho~es wUl help throw the federal budget
Into a $2 bUUon deficit this year,
He and NIJ&lt;on disagreed wltb thole who believe
rationing ts IDevitable, Alb tald. He acknowledged,
hOwever, that "lt IB oomelhlag !hat WllloC be lgaored" and
that work on contingency plano Is contlnuinll "so that U
needed, Its rationing wiD be avaUable."
Ash aald Nixon was "keeplag an eye oo the clock" and
Utl't '.'December wiD be a mootb of many declsl0111,
probably lncladlag whether or not to go to ps rallonlug."

commg 1 " and no one believes htm until
' they ' a re there
'' WelJ, the CriSIS IS OOW With US and

shll some people Just won't behove 11. I
don't know why they need a 'Pearl
Harbor" before they w1ll understand a bad
sttuahon
"Fuel ml, gasohne, kerosene, motor
011 and all other petrolewn products will be
1n short supply lor a long, long time to
come," he satd.
"The cns1s IS now," he added
"We've got to reahze that and what 11

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

B
·
.-f. ;!!.
Jl , ews •• zn
rzeJ St
~ 7\.T

•

~.

•

SCI
RIO GRANDE - Sam Smith,
assistant dean lor social and
admimstratlve sciences at R10
Grande College, today announced the appointment of
William S. Slavens, 31, a
Jackson attorney, as the in·
structor for a course tn
political sc1ence during the
Wmter Quarter.
Slavens, a Jackson nahve,
will be teaching the American
Constitutional System at Rio
Grande College each Monday
and Thursday from 7 until6:40
p.m.
Married and the father of two
children, he is a graduate of
Wake Forest Umvers1ty in
Winston-Salem,
North
Carolma, and he recetved his
law degree from the Umvers1ty
of Tennessee CoUege of Law in
KnoxVIlle.
Slavens IS a member of the
Amencan Bar Assoc1atwn, the
Ohio Bar Association, the
Jackson Lions Club and is
President of the Rio Grande
Community College Board of
Trustees.
In making today's an·
nouncement, Smith said, "We
are happy to have a person
With Mr. Slaven's background
and expilrience teaching the
Amencan Constitutional
System course at Rio Grande.
He is well qualifted and will be
an asset to our institutiOnal
program."
Saturday's College
Football Results
By United Press International
(Playoffs)
NAJA Dlvlslonll Playoffs
Northwestern (Iowa) 10
GlenVIlle 3
(Division II)
Western Kentucky 25 Leh1gh 16

In Memort

Notice
RUSS ' S GLASS Servrce , gla;S\
for all neeods.speclafizmq rn
wrndshreldS .
mirrors .
plex1g1ass , rescreen 704 P in e,
Rto Grande 245 5048

100"
REO 'S Barber Shop anct used
baoks , Upper Rt 1 Open 6
days I 0 a m to 1 p m
171 ff
808 LANE ' S
Complete Bookkeep ing and Tu
Serv•ce 424\• Fourth Ave,
Kanauga Burness by ap
po1nlm enl
Ph
446 · 1049
Please call after' p m
278 tf

means."

~,_,,.,..,.,.,m:,.~,.,,,.,,,,,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,,.,,,.,,,.,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,,

By United Press International
WASffiNGTON - REFLECTING A contmuing declme m the
pnce of raw rarm products, grocery prtces are also commg
down, accordmg to an Agriculture Department report. For the
third straight month, ending Nov. I~. raw !ann products !ell and
are now 12.~ pet. below the record reached 1n August, the report
said.
But despite the latest declme, raw farm product prices
averaged 38 pet. above a year earlier
Although some of the decrease has been cancelled for consumers by increased marketmg costs, tile annual cost of a
typical market basket of food dropped from a record of $1,653 a
year in August to $1,629 in September and $1,620 m October. The
latest decline, Lii pet., caused mainly by lower farm pnces for
catUe, calves, cotton, broiler chtckens and soybeans, which more
thap offset price mcreases for milk, rtce, potatoes and tomatoes.
WASffiNGTON - THE SENATE COMMERCE Committee
has taken a major step toward approval of a bill to rebuild seven
hankrupt rail lines into one government-run railroad. The
committee Fr1day accepted a $250 million labor prot.ction
provision contained m House'llassed legislation. By rejecting an
adrrumstration-backed substitut. that would have left the labor
protection section more vaguely worded and subject to later
negotiations, the panel gave organized labor a major victory.
The major sectiOn of the btllleft to be completed deals with
abandonment of rail lines the proposed government corporation
does not need. The labor protection section guarantees lifetime
payments at lull salary up to $30,000 a year to railroad workers
with more than five years senionty who lose their jobs when the
new railroad ts created.
There have been estimates that from 10,000 to lii,OOO miles of
the seven railroads' mileage will be abandoned, creating an
unemployment problem. But a ra1l worker would be requ1red to
accept any job offered bun m h1s craft on the new system. II he
refuses, he would be fired with severance pay.
WASffiNGTON - TilE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT has not
acted on an audit showmg mismanagement of $!.2 million m
federal funds obtatned by a camprugn supporter of President
NIXon, accordmg to an oi!Iclal of the Small Busmess Administration's audit department.
Marvm Shelton, who conducted tbe audit on Dr. Thomas
Matthew of New York City in November, 197!, told a
congressional hearmg Fnday the audit was turned over to the
Justice Department lor crurunal action on Jan. ~. 1972. He said
desp1te serious charges involving the commingling of $!.2 million
m federal monies -l(lcluding $17~,000 m SBA loans- there has
been no Justice Department actwn on the case "to my
knowledge ."
In addition, Shelton testified he was urged to destroy the
Matthew audit in May or June of this year by a top SBA official, I.
Townsen Burden III, who has since left the agency

SB A probe

DAY CARE

SUN VALLEY Nursery SchooL
t1cens.ed bv Sta te of Oh 10, w,

m11es west of new hospttal
577 Sun VI ley Or Ph 446 ·3 65?
Day ca re thai says " we
care " Madge Hau l dren ,
Owner , Lored•th and John
Hauldren , Operators

(Continued !rom Page 19)
Philadelphia regional d1rector
who provided tbe information
that launched the sub·
committee probe, testllied he
beheved SBA Admm1strator
Thomas Kleppe may he mvolved in some of the Richmond wrongdoings , He srud he
reported hiS cha rges against
Kleppe to Congress mstead of
the SBA because he d1d not
trust any of his superiors .
Hamilton said that Kleppe
" und errated" the state of
Pennsylvania dunn g
Hurricane Agnes m 1972,
possibly to further hiS own
political ambitions. He sa1d the
disaster warranted a "class A"
pr10r1 ty for government
assistance but was classified
only as a "B" area by KJeppe.
Hamilton speculated the
lower rating was picked to
make him the "fall guy" in
case the SBA disaster rebel
programs failed. Then, he said,
Kleppe could have stepped in,
run successful programs and
poSSibly earned a cabinet post.
Kleppe was "conun1tted" to
keep Regan on the job in Richmond despite documented
ev1dence showtng sertous
problems with loan mlsmanagement, accordmg to
Hamilton. He said Kleppe also
had long range plans to Ioree
him out of the Philadelphia job
and replace him with Regan.
Kleppe will be the first
witness when the hearings
resume on Tuesday.

114

'261 If

Jaworski.
(Continued from Page 19)
lor a Republican alternallve
s1mply reqwrmg Jaworski to
obtam congressional confirmation .

UAW APPROVES
DETROIT (UP! ) - The
Umted Auto Workers Umon at
the Central Foundry of General
Motors Co rp . m Defiance ,
Oh1o, ratified a contract offer
Fnday With GM
CHECK INSURANCE
COLUMBUS (UP!) - John
C. Winchell, executive drrector
of the Ohio Insurance Institute,
advised motorists to check on
their Insurance poliCies II they
have formed car pools because
of the energy crisis. "A
motoriSt who plans to use h1s
automobile as part of a·car poor
should consult his insurance
company or allent " 1\~tlci
Winchell, pointmg but the
motorists should he certain the
pohcy mcludes med1cal
payments coverage.

Tennessee 20 Vanderbilt 17
Boston CJoll. 42 Holy Cross 21
Navy 51 ArriiY 0

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue. Bottel
When HIS Mom's the Matchmaker
Sue
and
Helen:
Dear
I am !6 and considered attractive. But I have a terrible
problem. Every time I go with a boy, things are just great Wltil
hls mother tries to persuade him to marry me. Then he dropa me.
You know that's the kiss of death - a mother playing matchmaker.It's happened three times already, and each time, a big
,cooloQff. Am I a - BORN LOSER?
Dear Born Loser:
No - you just win mothers over.
Maybe Ute solution IS: av01d meeting the guy's mother until
he makes the decision. Then he'll be happy that she agrees. -

SUE

+++

Dear B.L.:
... And II youcan'tavoidmeeting hismotlter, at leastdon'tgo
all out to make a tremendous unpression. Perhaps you unconsciously give these fellows the idea that two women are
conspiring against htm. - HELEN

+++

Rap:
One night my girlfriend and I sat down and told each other
the other's faults, Md man, were there a lot!
Uke for instance: I bat my eyes and sniff a lot. I can't afford
contact lenses and glasses don't do much lor my looks.
We are both too nosey and sometimes 'don't act our ~~ges,
which is !3. Also, we're llat-cbested, and we've never had steady
boyfriends in our entire lives, because of flatness, probably .
I told my girlfriend she was getting a little fat, and she says I
hke ice cream and candy too much and tempt her.
We found out we were real messes, so please tell us what to
do to unprove. - TilE TWO BLOBS
•

Mr . and Mrs Doyle Multi
and
family
of
New
Philadelphia, 0 visited wlth
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle,
Verna and Wavie, over the
weekend. Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Snyder and Cec•l of
Columbus visited on Friday at
the Circle home.
Miss Susan Yost of Oak
Grove was guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Circle and fam1Iy on
Wednesday mght.
Mr. and Mrs. Edson Roush
~pent Thursday and Fnday
with Mr. and ' Mrs. Robert
Watson and family of Kent,
OhiO.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Young
and family VIsited relatives at
Corning, Ohio recenUy.

Dear Two:·
Why not have a trutlt seSSion about your GOOD points?
What's the use of painting yourselves ugly and probably
straining your friendship when you could check out your assets
instead and work on how to emphasize them?
Start with the freckles: They never bothered Sandy Duncan
or Doris Day! So make the most of your outdoor, hea!Uty look
Batting your eyes is no sm; and call your "nosiness"
friendliness. Flat-chested? At age 13, you've got lots of company
... and lots of time left for those steadies. They'll show up when
you stop seeing each other (and yourselves) as blobs. - HELEN
Two:
Patience is a virtue but persistence helps too. You'll change
a lot In a year, but you can help yourselves along by cutting down
on desserts and candy, experimenting With styles that do the
most for you, seeing boys as lr1ends, not just boyfr1ends, and
.
having fun as l~yearoQids.
· ... And forget the slam sessions. They only make you sell•
'conscious. - SUE
P.S. Only way to get rid of freckles is stay out of tbe sun.
And who'd do a silly thing like that?

l

001\'T~.~.

I'M /lOIN' RJR liEU'!

INMATE WOUNDED

LUCASVILLE, OhiO (UP!)
- An argwnent between inmates at tbe Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility Friday
resulted in serious InJUry to
Floyd L. Thomas, 26, Chardon.
He was transferred to
University
Hospital
In
Colwnbus. Prison officials said
Thomas was beat with a metal
bar when he and Billy Ray
Ballew, 26, argued m a corridor
of the prison s_hop area.

- -

SUGGESTS LOCATION
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Former Gov. James A. Rhodes
suggested locating the Ohio
Lottery
CommissiOn In
Cleveland because it was
conceived and promoted by
people of the greater Cleveland
area.
FUNDS DIVIDED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan said Friday
Ohw communities have
received 99.7 per cent or the
more than $60 million allocated
in federal revenue sharing
funds. LoCal governments in 34
counties received all the funds
for which they were eligible
while others will receiVe the
rest when t~ey complete
requlred reports.

'' I

I

WINKLE

IIIJriT/tJBOME·

71/IN/9 THAT HA6
TORPOI'Iel

IN

LOVING remembrance of

Rol:1e-rt Johnson who pas~d
awav Nov 30, 1961 No one
knows the llltrrt hetr UIChtl

Only those who have lost Uti
lei I of 1ht9rte f thai Is borne 1n
silence , for the ont we loved
so well lt's a lonesom e houn
without you , And sad has b•en
1ne way , For 11v e end home
are not the same. smc:e vou
were callea away
WUe and F am 1ly
'284 I

Notice
WANTE-D
INVENT IONS- IDEAS

.: ASH
Sale or
Rovallles
PoSSib l e Wrtte tor fr•e
li terature
IMPERIAL
4055 E)llecut•ve Park Or.ve .
Ctnc.nnat 1, OhtO 45241 or
phone Mr Wh tlfteld collect 1t
( 5131 563 4710
28l 30

tf

SWEEPER Repa 1rs , parts,
supplies , 4-16' 029.rl, 10 a m
5
p m Dav1s Va cuu m Cleaner
Store Georges Creek Road ,
next lo Bob 's CB Rad •o Sales

NCAA Dlvlslou !II Playoffs
Wittenberg 21 San D1ego U. 14

P.S.Is there any possible way to get nd of freckles ?

~

Bread

'

TWO WAY RadiOS S~le$ &amp;
Serv.ice New and used CB's ,
pollee mon1tors , ante-nnas ,
e1c Bob 's Cltuen Band Rlld lo
Equtp , Gorges Creek Rd .'
GallipOliS, Ohto 446 4517
212 .tf

Wanted
CO CKTAIL Waitress 6 p m '0
2 30 a m 6 n•ght!S weekly In
lounge at Sk y\1ne Lanes
BOWling Alley
ApQiy ln
person
28-4 5

For Sale
Champtoned stred Yorkshtre
Ternor
Puppies . Pnc~
SI7S.OO &amp; up

Evenings 446-0$48

Help Wanted

IMMEDIATE OPENING
FOR

SECRETARIAL POSITION
Prior
experience
desirable. typing and
shorthand
required.
Excellent benefits and
starting pay. Apply in
person at Federal
Mogul Corp., 2160
Eastern
Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-9211.
Equal employment
employer.

•

�• •

•

•
,

30 - The Sunday T1mes- Sentinel. Sunday, Dec 2~73

31 - The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 2, 1973

Landowners
ask
planning
assistance
Advice to putter-offer gardener~
By JOHN

makesl..
County Extension Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - It's almost too late to dig and store summer flowering bulbs and it's almost too late to plant sprmg
flowermg bulbs However, 1£ you are a "putter~ffer," it 's
oot too Lale to try.
Most summer llowenng bulbs should be dug and stored
when the leav"" on the plants turn yello". Ull the bulbs
from the ground with a spading fork and wash off any sml
that clmgs to the bulbs, except lor bulbs that are stored m
pots or those where the soil should be Left around them
Leave the sod on achuncnes , begoma , canna, caladium,
dahlia, and 1smere bulbs Store these bulbs m clnmps on a
slightly mmstened layer of peat moss or sawdust m a cool
place. Wash and separate them JUSt before planting
Spread the washed bulbs m a dry, cool place to dry .
When dry, sto re them away from sunlight m a cool, dry
hasement , cellar, garage or shed at 60 to 6ii degrees F
Avoid temperatures below 50 or above 70 degrees, unless
different mstructwns are g1ven for a particular bulb.
Inspect bulbs lor signs of disease Keep only the Large ,
healthy ones that are firm and free of spots . lf you have only
a lew bulbs, they may be stored m paper bags hung from
the ce•ting or wall .
If you are gomg to try late plantmg of spnn g ll ower~ng
bulbs, get the JOb done Y""terday . The b""t time IS early m
the fall so that roots will ha ve a cha nce to grow before the
ground freezes. Be sure to water the soil thoroughly alter
planting bulbs and keep 11 mo1st to encourage good root
growth .
The depth to plant depends on the bulbs and the sml
type . Normally, you would plant to a depth two Urnes the
diameter of the bulb m clay so1Is and deeper, about two and
a hall tunes the diameter, m sandy so1Is
In areas where the ground IS hkely to freeze f1ve or
more mches deep , mulch wtth straw, wood chips, leaves,
etc Apply mulch alter the ground freezes and remove 1t or
rake tt back from around the plant when growth appears m
the sprmg.
If the homeowner IS shiltmg h1s interest to houseplants,
he may run mto pests of these plants this wmter. Most of the
conunon pests of house plants can be controlled w1th msecticide sprays or dtps. Exceptions are slugs and snatls
These require po1son ba1ts
InsectiCides may be apphed as dusts , but sprays and
dips are preferred because they usually gwe better control,
are less likely to leave obJectwnable res•dues, and do not

dnft to the nearby objects so readily when apphed , arC'ordmg to cnlomologtsts at The Ohio State Umversity
For best results . appl}· control mcaswes at the ftrst
s1gn or pests If mfestau on &lt;.'OnlJnues, repeat treatment m
it we('k or JOda} s. unless olhcrwtse noted under conlrol
recommer1datwns ror spet·t(tc pests
lnsec t pests most commonly found on house plants are
aphrds, rmtcs, fungus gndts, mealybugs, mJihpe:des,
psoctds, scales, llu'JP~. and \\lutefhes
Insecticides .such &lt;~s chlordane, ltndane. ntalathton, etc .
may be mixed wtth \~atcr and used as a spray or dtp
Followmg arc rates to rmx Cluordane. 4ii pet emulsifiable
concentrate, 2 teaspoons peo ga llon of water: lindane, 20
oct. emulsifiable concentrat.. I teaspoon per gallon of
waler , malathiOn, 57 pet. emul sJr1able concentrate, 2
teaspoons per gallon of ~~ tc r
SQme plants are more difft rult to wet than others. If a
preparation does not readtly spread over and wet a plant,
add •, teaspoon of a mold household detergent (not soap)
per gallon of spray or dip The detergent Improves the
wcttmg power of the mLXture and reduces v1s1ble residues
Sprays are used most often to treat plants, but they
may also be used to treat surfaces of sot! , pots, saucers, or
shelves to help control som e pests
Spray plants untiL they ure wet - no Longer Apply
spray w1Lh a good hand &lt;ltorntzer or small compressed atr
sprayer .
Hand atomizers that hold 12 p1nt to 1 quart of spray are
smtable for spraymg one or a few plants Choose an
atomizer that Will dehver a contmuous spray and that has
an adJustable nozzle that can be turned to direct the spray
upward or downward
It IS sometmtes more convement to d1p plants mto the
ntsectlctde-water solutiOn than to spray them In this case,
put the miXture m a pail or pan large enough to accommodate the top of the largest plant to be d1pped Then
turn each plant upslde down and unmerse the foliage and
stems m the mixture for. a few seconds To keep loose sml
from sptllmg out as you turn the plant over, hold crumpled
paper or a cardboard dtsk hrmly over the sot! around the
plant Silt cardboard d1sk to fit around the plant stem.\(eep
your hands out of the dip
Washing With soa py water and a soft brush or cloth mav
be all that IS needed to remove aph1ds, mealybugs and
scale msects from broad-leaved plants. Use 2 teaspoons of a
m1ld deter gent to a gallon of wate r
4

B y c. E.

Ohio ponds are havens to wildlife
COLUMBUS - "The 26,114 products of farm ponds and tmg, and the aesthetics of
seemg and enJO} mg a beautiful
!arm ponds built m Ohw over lakes.
Ute last30years support dozens
The grow1ng number of landscape.
of species of water lovmg ponds has lncreased the
Landowners can also get
wildlife," says Robert E. nwnbet or pond-lovmg Wildlife, techmcal help from SCS w1th
Quilliam,
State
Con· even such ammals as the deer , livestock water tanks, hsh
servatiomst with the U S SOIL wh1ch use ponds lor the~r stockmg, weed control, -and
Conservation Service (SCS ). drmkmg water, accordmg to ammal problems HPlantmg
the pond area to shrubs, trees,
The$e mclude purple mar- Qllllham.
Ponds have been mstalled by and grasses w11l enhance the
tins, swallows, and birds such
as flycatchers which eat landowners cooperalmg w1th pond for wlldbfc and luunan
aquatic insects that emerge thetr local soli and water
from the water surface . Fish conservation districts for such
eating btrds such
as purposes
as
provtdmg
ktngf1shers, ducks, grebes, livestock water, home water,
herons, and very rarely even recreatiOn, 1rngat10n, fn e
an osprey also use the pond contr ol, beauhhcabon and
areas, along w1tlt the raccoon, w1Idhle use Ponds usually
muskrat, and an occasiOnal se rve the landowners for
beaver and mmk. Turties, several purposes.
frogs, toads, dragonflies ,
Re creation uses mclude
GALLIPOLIS Ga lh a
crawdads, snails, and other ftshmg, swimmmg, tee skatmg, Cotu1ly producers who have
lower lonns of wlldllle are also boatmg, bird watchmg, hun- returned thm MQ-38 cards
have received their burley
tobacco marketmg cards. The
followmg nine pomts are unportant
WITH
Pounds marketed abov e 110
pet. of the !arm quota IS subJect to a marketmg quota
penalty and 1s not ehgible lor
pn ce support All tobacco
marketed (mc) udm g g1fls)
must be recorded on your
marketmg card
Tobacco marketed above 100
pet of your farm quota w1ll be
deducted !rom the farm quota
1. CLEAN MATERNITY AREA
for the lollowmg year
Likewi se, tobacco marketed
2. PREVENTION OF NAVEL ILLS
under farm quoLa , up to 100 pet
of farm quota, will be added to
3. PROPER HOUSING
the farm 's quota lor the
lollowmg year
4. FRESH CLEAN WATER SUPPLY
You should not perm1l
anyone to market tobacco on
5. CLEAN FEEDING EQUIPMENT
yow card whtch was produced
on another farm
You must pr esenl your
6. PROPER FEEDING
marketmg card at the
warehouse when your tobacco
ts welghed-in. The card must
remam m custody of the
warehouse until payment Js
VINE STREET
made or unt.ll your tobacco Js
removed from the warehouse
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
(except where card ts needed
by owner or operator to effect

use," QUILham stated
Many sml and water con·
servatton d1str1cts make
w1Ldll fe
shrub
packets
available to landowners for
Lmprovmg the area around
ponds These packets mclude
plants wh1ch produce berries
used by song and ga meb~rds
and cover wh1ch protects small
ammals from cold m \nrtter
and from the1r enemtes

Guide offered to
burley producers

r---------------------.,
HEALTHIER CALVES
PURITY CALF MILK REPLACER
THE FACTORS INVOLVED IN GOOD
MANAGEMENT WITH AQUALITY
MILK REPLACER

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE CO.

ORDER YOUR TOBACCO
SUPPLIES NOW
eBROMOGAS
eFUMIGATION COVERS
•PLANT BED CANVAS
eENIDE
•SEED

OF OHIO
Jrd &amp; Sycamore St s.
Galltpolis, Oh•o
Your Far m Supply Supermarket

•

•

[
I

I

UNIT CALLED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Em~rge ncy Squad was called
to "Stiffler 's Department Store
at 10:13 a .m. Saturday where
Sarah Greene of Pomery had
become 1ll She was taken to
Veterans Memonal Hospital.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
POMEROY Kenneth
Harlan Wht::eler, 20, Dexter,
and Cynthia Marie VanMeter,
17, Middleport.

CENTRAL SOYA

•

transfer of quota) Any tobacco
lefl at the warehouse 1s considered marketed and subJect
to penalty even though you are
not pa1d for the tobacco
You must piCk up your
marketmg card fr om the
warehouse at the time you
recetve payment for your
tobacco.
You should cxamme your
marketmg card and sale bills
after each sale to see If the sale
was correctly recorded Report
any error to the ASCS
marketmg recorder at the
warehouse or to your local
county ASCS off1ce
As soon as you complete yo ur
marketmg, you must return
your marketmg card to the
county ASCS office.
If an error results in your
sellmg above !!0 pet. of your
farm quota, or tobacco Is
marketed on your card that
was produced on another farm,
you can be held responsible for
payment of marketmg quota
penalhes at ii9 cents per pound
and the next quota established
for the farm may be reduced.
lf the marketmg card 1s used
to market tobacco produced on
ano ther farm or If tobacco
prouuc" .i un tu~ J farm JS
Id entifi ed on the marketmg
card for another farm, the
person mvolved may be subject to prosecuhon under Title
16, Sectwn 1001 of the U. S.
Crimmal code wh1ch provides
for a fme of not more than
$10,000 or 1mpnsonment lor not
more than fiVe years or both.

"'

TWO ASSISTS MADE
RACINE - The Racme ER
squad answered a call Friday
evem ng and one Saturday
mormng Fnday at 7: 50 they
transpor ted Mrs
Freda
Manuel, Racme, Rt 2, to
Vet.rans Memortal Hospital
and Saturday at 7 : 2~ a.m they
gave !1rst a•d to Charles
Bryson iit hiS residence in
Racme
••

COOPER
Conservation Service
PT PLEASANT - Several
people have recently become
cooperators of the Western S01l

L11y of tire Land
Conservahon D1strtct and have
asked for planmng assistance.
These mclude Benjamm
Roush, Rt. 1, Letart, wtth an
187..acre farm on Broad RWl ,
Boyd D Stover of Gall1pohs,
Ohto, who owns a 95-acre rarm
on Kapp R•dge: Theodore
N1ber t, w1th 19 acres at
Galhpohs Ferry, and Wilham
A. Edwards, Southside, w1th 22
acres.
Other recent cooperators are
Sanford
Powell
of
Meadowbrook wtth 125 acres

Friday accidents
of minor variety
GALLIPOLIS - Two minor
traffic acc1dents were mvesllgated Friday m downtown
Gallipolis The !1rst occurred
on Vme St. where an auto
driven by Corbett Jesse
Roberts, 71, Rt 3, Gallipolis,
backed mto a car owned by
Luella Lou Holcomb, 40, of
Eureka Star Rt
Another mishap occurred on
E astern Ave . where cars
dnven by Ray Garlmger, 46,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis and Marshall
R. Wolfe, 22, of Kanauga,
collided No charges were
filed I

INSTALLATION SET
MIDDLEPORT - The Me1gs
County Chapter, Order of
DeMolay Will observe open
mstallatwn at 7 30 p m Friday
at the Middleport Masomc
Temple To be mstalled are
Don Vaughan, master counCilor elect; Herbert Carson,
semor coWicllor elect, and Bert
MoshiJ r, JWiior councilor elect
A recepbon w1ll follow the
mstallabon .

on FIVe Mile Creek, and
Richard P. Ne well on
Mossman Circle w1th 124 acres,
also on Fwe Mde Creek.
AIL of these landowners have
asked for planrung assiStance
S01l maps and !arm plan maps
hilve been ordered on wh1ch the
plans will be made. The so1Is
maps and woodland maps
prov1de mventory tnformatlon
m regard to the soils and
woodland capab1hlles of the
so •• s on each of the farms
WE RECENTLY helped B.
W. Pamter of Route 2, near
Roosevelt School, w1th a
conservation plan fo r h1s farm
Mr. Pamter IS mterested m
developing the farm for
livestock production, therefore
he IS rnamly mterested m
unprovmg the grassland and
water on his farm Mr. Pamter
owns some Kentucky Fned
Ch1cken restaurants around
the Charleston area.
DENVER YOGO of SCS has
been working out detailed t1Ie
surveys lor some of the farms
which w11l be mstalling llle
drainage m the near future
The most recent of these are
Thomas Bwngarner of SouthSide, who w1ll be mstalling
3,500 feet of clay tile on the Ray
Farm Forrest N1bert at
Ashton w1ll 1nstall IiiOO feet of
plastic dram pipe

T~levision

theamountofstorie• told about
them, we could hang a nng on
13 points. According to IIi
anc~ent set of Stillards, on
which we weighed the deer, the
we1ght was 140 pounds. We
we1ghed two quarters of the
deer on platform scales alter
they had hung in a cooler lor a
week and we found that eacn
had shrunk 2 pounds from the
amount indicated by the
Stlllards
We went out m the woods the
day alter bagging our deer
without a gun In order to assist
our other hunters and enjoyed
watching the squirrel and
grouse which flushed ahead of
us.
Incidentally, our hunt was in
Doddridge County on M1ddle
Island Creek near West Union.

Mr. Yoho is workmg on the
Robert Hollman farm With a
detailed survey. Mr. Hollman
w1Ll use clay tile
ANYONE who has read this
far m th1s colwnn today !lllght
as weU read about my deer
hunting. The weather was
exceUent except for some ram
and fog on the l~rs t day and we
enjoyed being out m the woods
and f1elds very much,
espec1al1y smce we can report
Uus year that we bagged a
deer Smce it was the f1rst one
m several years, we feel that
we have a r~ght to brag about it
a little bit and mentwn it m th1s
colwnn.
Most people would only calli I
a 10 pomt, but since we were
the Lucky hunter and !1sh and
deer get bigger ac~ording to

SUNDAY, DEC 2, 1973

6 00 ~ Travelogue 4
6 30 - This Week~ · NewS'maker '13 13. Fantasy and Fugue 10
7 00 - Time for Trmothy 4, Jenny Falwell 13 , Communrque 6
7 30 - Fafth for Today 8, Revival Frres 6; Herald of Truth 3.
Yours for the Askmg 4, Camera Three 10

8 00 -

Chorr 3, Day of D rscovery 4
8 30 - Oral Roberts 3, Your Health 4, Day of Dr scovery e. Re)(
Humbard 13 , Rev•val Ftres l5 , Kathryn Kuhlman 6 , Get
Together 10
8 55 - Black Cameo 4.
9 00 - Singing Jub1lee 3, Cadle Chapel 4, Oral Roberts 10 , Rex
Humbard 6, I..S Hair Bear's Bunch 8.
9 30 - Churc h by S1de of Road 4, Christ ts the Answer 13 .
Amazing Chan 8, Popeye 10.
10 00.- ChurchServlces4 . Th1s Is The Ltfe3 , Fa ith tor Today 15,
K1d Power 6, 13, Rex Humbard8 l Mov •e '' Uiysses''lO
10 30 - V1s1on On6 . ln slght4 , Osmohds 13, Captain Noah 3, This
IS the Lite 15
11 00 - Po1n t of V1ew 6. TV Chapel 3, Facts on Columbus 4,
Across th e Fence IS. H R Pufnstuf 13, Notre Dame Football
t'loghl oghts 8
II 30 - Thts IS the Answer 3. Make A Wish 6, 13 ; ln stght 15. Fred
Taylor 4
12 00 - At Issue 3, Bowling 6, Rev Calv 1n Evans 13, West
V~ratn1a Un 1ver s1 ty 8. Sacred Sheart 15, OSU Football
1 H•9hilght 4, Columbus Town Meeting 10
12 15 - Open Btble IS
12 30 - Revival F•res 13, Meet the Press 3. 15, Pro Football Pre·
Game 8

12 55 - Ted M ullms 10
1 00 - Lower L1ghthouse 13. Pro Footba ll 3, 4, 15. Pro Football

8, 10

I 30 - Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13
2 00 - College Footba 111973 13 , Soul Tra tn 6
, 3 00 - other People , Other Places6 , Survlval13
• 3. 30 - J1mmy Dean Show 13 , Wacky World of Jonathan Winters
• 6
4 00 - French Chef 33, Pro Football 3, 4, 15, ABC News Close
1
up 6 TBA 8, Film 10 , Amenca 13
~4 15 - Popeye10
·
....4 30 - Lass1e 10 ; B tll Dailey 's Hocus Pocus Gang 6. Famous
! Class1c Tales a, 10 . Mov1e " Des•re Under the Elms " 13
_.. 5 00 - Umbrella 33
., 5 15 - Mak.ng Th1ngs Work 33
5 30 - T'Atc hr Ch'uan 33
• 6 00 - Grdnd Master Chess33, Let's Make A Dea l6, CBS News
~
Spec1a l a, 10
: 6 30 - World at War 6. Vince Lombardi Science and Art of

"

15 Scholarships

• Culs a 6" log tn 5 seco nds
• 6 9 lbs less cutting
attachments
• Cuts logs up to 20 tnches
• Only McCulloch makes a saw
so 11ght for so 11111e

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
POMEROY

PH. 992-2176

SUNDAY

OPEN 24 HOURS

TODAY -

POMEROY

ONLY ONE

20 cu. ft. UNICO CHEST FREEZER
CASH &amp; CARRY

ON DISPLAY

Come, see it! A different special every
Sunday.

•260
Plus Tax

DON'T MISS ffiiS!

'

~ 6 00 -

SUPER SERVICE STATION
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

Foolball 3

1 00 - Zoom ?0 31 Wtl(t l&lt;inftlil"'m lli !=iAftm tn Arlv~nture 3·
C1rcus 4, Lassre 8, In the Know 10. Untamed World 13
"'7 30 · World ol Ulsney 3, 4, I S, Mountain Scene 33. Perry Mason
• 8
8 00 - Men Who Made the Movres 20 , Pnmal Man 6, 13. A
Whole New Season . Called Wmter 10. Folk life 20
8 30 - Mannrx 8,•10, M cCloud 3, 4. 15 . Movre ' Prudence and the
Pill ' 6, 13
/} 00 - Masterprece Theater 20. 33
9 30 - Barnaby Jones a. 10
10 00 - Frnng Lme 20, 33
10 30 - News 6 8, H1gh Road to Adventure 10 , Newsmaker ' 73
13 , We Th•nk You Should Know 3, Police Surgeon 15; Johnny
Mann 's Stand Up and Cheer 4
l'l ,oo - News 3, '· 6, 8, 10, 13, 15
11 15 - Pol1 ceS urgeon6 , News 10, 13, Movle '' Coney Island" a
11 30 - Face the Nation 10, Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 13 ,
Movie " Never A Dull Moment" 3, Johnny Carson 4, 15
11 45 - Good News 6
12 00 - Urban league lO
12 15 - College Football 1973 6
12 30 - Movre ' 'Around the World Under the Sea " 10
1 00 - News 4, 13

made available

$9995

landmark has a complete line of
Appliances on sale at our store 6
days a week. We can save you
money on Hotpoint and Unico for
Christmas.

•l •'

Yes! We're OPEN, But We Can't Sell Gas!

" MONDAY , DEC. 3, 1973

Sunnse Se m r na~ 4. Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - School Scene 10
..... 6 20 - Farm Report 13
~ 6 25 - Paul Harv ey 13
6 30 - B1ble Answers 8, News 6 F•ve Mmutes to Ltve By 4,
:
Good News 13
,.. 6 35 - Co lumbu s Today 4
• 6 45 - Corn cob Repo rt 3. Farmt1me 10
'~ 7 00 - Today 3 4, 15 , CBS News 8, 10 , Fl1ntstones 13 ; Romper
Room 6
!• 7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwrnkle 13 New Zoo Rev ue6
: 8 00 - Capt Kangaroo B. 10 , New Zoo Revue 13. Sesame St 33 .
T1 mmy and Lass•e 6
.., 8 30 - Hu ck and Yog16 , D1 c k Van Dyke 13
~~ 8 55 - News 13
"'
., 9 00 - Paul O•xon 4, Fnendly Junctton 10 , AM 3, Phil
..
Donahue 15 , Brady Bunch 6. Abbott and Costello 8, Mov 1e
'' House of Bamboo" 13
9 30 - To Tell The Truth 3, Secre t Storm 8, M1chaels &amp; Co 6
Chuck White Reports 10
1 .. 9 55 • 10 00 - Dtnah Shore 3, 15 , Joker' s Wild 8, 10
~ 10 30 - Baffle 3. 4, 15 , $10.000 Pyram•d 8, 10 . M1ke Douglas 6
11 00 - Ga mb1t 10, Password 13, W• za rd of Odds 3. 4, 15 . Hazel
8 Unt o the Hil ls 33
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15 . Love of L•fe 8, 10 , Brady
Bunch 13 ; Bow ling 6, Sesa me Street 33
11 55 - CBS News 8, Dan I mel's World 10
~ 12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4, Password 6,
News 8. 10, 13
~ 12 30 - 3 W's 3, 15, Spl1 t Seton d 6. Search For Tomorrow a. 10
12 45 - Elect nc Company 33
12 55 - News 3. 15
~ 1 1 00 - News 3. All My Children 6. 13 , Not For Women Only 15,
L
Conc entrat iOn 8, What's My Lme 10
1•
1 30 - 3 On A Mat ch 3, 4, 15, The World Turns 8, 10. ABC' s
•
Mat1nee Today 6, 13
2 00 - Days Of Our L 1ves 3, 4, 15 , Guldtng L1ght a, 10
2 30 - EdgeofN•ghtS, 10 , Doctors3, 4,1 5
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hosp•tal 6, 13 , Pnce Is
R•ght 10 Book Beat 20. V1rginlan 8, Adlerian Counsel1ng 33
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 15; One Lrfe to lrve 13, Secret
Storm 10 , Phrl Donahue 4 Huck and Yogl6 , French Chef'20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 , Love, American Style 13 , Somerset 15,
Sesa me St 33 , Speed Ra ce r 6, Sesame St 20; Movie " The
Gunl 1ghter " 10
' 4 30 - I Love Lucy 6, Green Acres 3, Jeopardy 4, Grlllgan's
Island 13, Santa Claus 15 , Lucy Show B. ,
• 5 00 - Mr Rogers 33, 20 , Bonanza 3, Merv Grtffm 4, Andy
'
Gr•ff•th 8, I Dream of Jeannie 13 , Miss•on lmpossrble 6,
r
Bonanza 15
~ 5 30 Beverly Hdlb111tes 8; Elec Co 33 , Gomer Pyle 13 .
..,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20
5 55 - Earl N1ghhngale 15
6 00 - News 3, 4, 6, a, 10, IS , Sesame Street 20 , ABC News 13,
Personal tty and Behavioral Development 33
6 30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15. ABC News 6 . CBS News 8, 10,
~
Hogan's Heroes 13
7 00 - Truth or Consequences 3, 6 , What' s My Lme 8, Beat the
,.,
Clo ck 4 News 10, Electric Co111pany 20; Circus 13 , TBA 15 ,
, 1
M1ne Curcus 33
7 30 - Bobby Goldsboro 3, College Baske!balt 4 , To Tell !he
,,.
Truth6 , Buck Owens a, Lock, Stock and Barrel 20 , Muntclpal
~~
Court 10 , Beat the Clock 13 , Wacky World of Jonathan
..
Wrnters 15. Episode Adton 33
~ B OO - LotsaLuck3. 15. Rooktes13 , 's Wonderful,'s Marvelous,
l:'e
's Gershwin 20, Nat tonal Geographic 6, Gunsmoke 8, 10
~ B 30- D1ana J, 15
,, 9 00 - Movte "The Double Man " 3, 15, Here's Lucy 8, 10 , West
0 1
·Meets East 20, 33. Pro Football6, 13, Movte "Journey to the
!"; Far S•de of the Sun" 4
~t• 9 30 - Dtck Van Dyke a, 10 , Book Beat 20, 33.
'~ 10 00 - Med1cal Center 8, 10, News 20 , Paul Nuchtms 33
:' 11 OO - NewsJ,4, 8. 10.15 . Janakl33
:an 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15. Movres " In Cold Blood" 8, " It
:;
~hould Happen to You " 10
... 12 00 - News 6, 13
l" 12 30 - Movie "Strangers at Sunnse" 13
.,., 1 00 - Tomorrow 3. 4
• 2 00 - News 4, 13

t"

'

ll.i :'-"o":o'
..
·=-·•.•:.'• •.._,·:·'•!&gt;9·:0
....o;• ..• ,o;:.:·;:;-:&amp;!8!.:~•S:~~:?;.:;:-..:·;.,,.o;•:z:·:~·:•::;•.•:::;;•;•,•:•;,
.;r.. •
•
• • .. • • • .. • • .. .. ..:;·:x:•;::•::::;:;o.-..,::;:::·&gt;~:=·::
• • • • • .. • •

H You Need An•••

.",,•
.."'
..'

Nixon keeps the faith in

I

Oil Change Lube Job
Wash Job Tires
Tire Repair

If You Need •••
Milk

Leonard Repass 8, Gospel Caravan 6 Church Ser v•ce

13, Billy James Hargts &amp; hi s All Amenca.n Kids 10, Mormon

GREAT GIFT TO
TRIM A TREE WITH

GALLIPOLIS
J1m
Bowser , admissions counselor
at Hocking Technical College,
has notified the guidance olf1ce
at Gal11a Academy H1gh
SchO!ll, that 1ii lull scholarships
are avatlable tn their Heat
Processmg Program. The
scholarships mclude tuitton,
fees, and books and are
available for both the wmter
and spring quarters. Students
would have to be avallable to
start classes next January 3.
For addthona1 informatwn,
contact the Guidance OI!ICe at
Galha Academy H1gh School or
call 446-32~0

Log

Eggs

Candy

manageable energy crisis

~

,,

"'••"
.,.
..'"

•••
•

~

Pop

••'

•

GET YOUR NEW SNOW TIRES TODAY
We Want To Continue To Give You Good Car Service,
Regardless of Shortage..
•

.....'..•
"

Crisis now
(Continued from Page 19)
o1I into the coal to make 11 burn better and
that is taking fuel ml away from homes "
Commenting on the current prospects
ror gasohne rahomng, Dreyer saJd he
could see no olher course but rationing.
11
There ts no turmng the clock back,"
he said. "The day of running with the
throttle Wide open IS over. And, although I
am pleased so many persons are already
lirmtmg thell' car's speed to 50 miles per
hour, that is simply not enough con-

Attorney
to teach

servation
"I don't know JUSt what form gasolme
rationmg wall take - all Lhose recent 1deas
hemg proposed by Washmgton officials
are JUSt tr~ a l balloons to see how the pubhc
reacts
"But make no mistake, we w1l1 have
gasoline rationing and It wlll be w1th us a
Long lime," he added.
Last swnrner, Dreyer said, he encountered people who would not believe
lhal season's gasoline shortage was real
and who refused to believe there was any
real energy crJ,Sis. "!!eel hke the guy who
shouts 'They're commg! They're

..."'-

WASHINGTON (UPI)- President Nixon believes the
energy shortage stUI representa a "manageable crisis" and
probably will not decide until tbe end of December whether
to order oll and gasoline raUonlng, his budget chief said
Saturday.
Roy L. Ash, director of the Office of Management and
Budget told reporters after a 110-minnte Wbite House
meetl~ wltlt the President aDd Cabinet level of 9fflclals
that the fuel sho~es wUl help throw the federal budget
Into a $2 bUUon deficit this year,
He and NIJ&lt;on disagreed wltb thole who believe
rationing ts IDevitable, Alb tald. He acknowledged,
hOwever, that "lt IB oomelhlag !hat WllloC be lgaored" and
that work on contingency plano Is contlnuinll "so that U
needed, Its rationing wiD be avaUable."
Ash aald Nixon was "keeplag an eye oo the clock" and
Utl't '.'December wiD be a mootb of many declsl0111,
probably lncladlag whether or not to go to ps rallonlug."

commg 1 " and no one believes htm until
' they ' a re there
'' WelJ, the CriSIS IS OOW With US and

shll some people Just won't behove 11. I
don't know why they need a 'Pearl
Harbor" before they w1ll understand a bad
sttuahon
"Fuel ml, gasohne, kerosene, motor
011 and all other petrolewn products will be
1n short supply lor a long, long time to
come," he satd.
"The cns1s IS now," he added
"We've got to reahze that and what 11

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

B
·
.-f. ;!!.
Jl , ews •• zn
rzeJ St
~ 7\.T

•

~.

•

SCI
RIO GRANDE - Sam Smith,
assistant dean lor social and
admimstratlve sciences at R10
Grande College, today announced the appointment of
William S. Slavens, 31, a
Jackson attorney, as the in·
structor for a course tn
political sc1ence during the
Wmter Quarter.
Slavens, a Jackson nahve,
will be teaching the American
Constitutional System at Rio
Grande College each Monday
and Thursday from 7 until6:40
p.m.
Married and the father of two
children, he is a graduate of
Wake Forest Umvers1ty in
Winston-Salem,
North
Carolma, and he recetved his
law degree from the Umvers1ty
of Tennessee CoUege of Law in
KnoxVIlle.
Slavens IS a member of the
Amencan Bar Assoc1atwn, the
Ohio Bar Association, the
Jackson Lions Club and is
President of the Rio Grande
Community College Board of
Trustees.
In making today's an·
nouncement, Smith said, "We
are happy to have a person
With Mr. Slaven's background
and expilrience teaching the
Amencan Constitutional
System course at Rio Grande.
He is well qualifted and will be
an asset to our institutiOnal
program."
Saturday's College
Football Results
By United Press International
(Playoffs)
NAJA Dlvlslonll Playoffs
Northwestern (Iowa) 10
GlenVIlle 3
(Division II)
Western Kentucky 25 Leh1gh 16

In Memort

Notice
RUSS ' S GLASS Servrce , gla;S\
for all neeods.speclafizmq rn
wrndshreldS .
mirrors .
plex1g1ass , rescreen 704 P in e,
Rto Grande 245 5048

100"
REO 'S Barber Shop anct used
baoks , Upper Rt 1 Open 6
days I 0 a m to 1 p m
171 ff
808 LANE ' S
Complete Bookkeep ing and Tu
Serv•ce 424\• Fourth Ave,
Kanauga Burness by ap
po1nlm enl
Ph
446 · 1049
Please call after' p m
278 tf

means."

~,_,,.,..,.,.,m:,.~,.,,,.,,,,,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,,.,,,.,,,.,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,,

By United Press International
WASffiNGTON - REFLECTING A contmuing declme m the
pnce of raw rarm products, grocery prtces are also commg
down, accordmg to an Agriculture Department report. For the
third straight month, ending Nov. I~. raw !ann products !ell and
are now 12.~ pet. below the record reached 1n August, the report
said.
But despite the latest declme, raw farm product prices
averaged 38 pet. above a year earlier
Although some of the decrease has been cancelled for consumers by increased marketmg costs, tile annual cost of a
typical market basket of food dropped from a record of $1,653 a
year in August to $1,629 in September and $1,620 m October. The
latest decline, Lii pet., caused mainly by lower farm pnces for
catUe, calves, cotton, broiler chtckens and soybeans, which more
thap offset price mcreases for milk, rtce, potatoes and tomatoes.
WASffiNGTON - THE SENATE COMMERCE Committee
has taken a major step toward approval of a bill to rebuild seven
hankrupt rail lines into one government-run railroad. The
committee Fr1day accepted a $250 million labor prot.ction
provision contained m House'llassed legislation. By rejecting an
adrrumstration-backed substitut. that would have left the labor
protection section more vaguely worded and subject to later
negotiations, the panel gave organized labor a major victory.
The major sectiOn of the btllleft to be completed deals with
abandonment of rail lines the proposed government corporation
does not need. The labor protection section guarantees lifetime
payments at lull salary up to $30,000 a year to railroad workers
with more than five years senionty who lose their jobs when the
new railroad ts created.
There have been estimates that from 10,000 to lii,OOO miles of
the seven railroads' mileage will be abandoned, creating an
unemployment problem. But a ra1l worker would be requ1red to
accept any job offered bun m h1s craft on the new system. II he
refuses, he would be fired with severance pay.
WASffiNGTON - TilE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT has not
acted on an audit showmg mismanagement of $!.2 million m
federal funds obtatned by a camprugn supporter of President
NIXon, accordmg to an oi!Iclal of the Small Busmess Administration's audit department.
Marvm Shelton, who conducted tbe audit on Dr. Thomas
Matthew of New York City in November, 197!, told a
congressional hearmg Fnday the audit was turned over to the
Justice Department lor crurunal action on Jan. ~. 1972. He said
desp1te serious charges involving the commingling of $!.2 million
m federal monies -l(lcluding $17~,000 m SBA loans- there has
been no Justice Department actwn on the case "to my
knowledge ."
In addition, Shelton testified he was urged to destroy the
Matthew audit in May or June of this year by a top SBA official, I.
Townsen Burden III, who has since left the agency

SB A probe

DAY CARE

SUN VALLEY Nursery SchooL
t1cens.ed bv Sta te of Oh 10, w,

m11es west of new hospttal
577 Sun VI ley Or Ph 446 ·3 65?
Day ca re thai says " we
care " Madge Hau l dren ,
Owner , Lored•th and John
Hauldren , Operators

(Continued !rom Page 19)
Philadelphia regional d1rector
who provided tbe information
that launched the sub·
committee probe, testllied he
beheved SBA Admm1strator
Thomas Kleppe may he mvolved in some of the Richmond wrongdoings , He srud he
reported hiS cha rges against
Kleppe to Congress mstead of
the SBA because he d1d not
trust any of his superiors .
Hamilton said that Kleppe
" und errated" the state of
Pennsylvania dunn g
Hurricane Agnes m 1972,
possibly to further hiS own
political ambitions. He sa1d the
disaster warranted a "class A"
pr10r1 ty for government
assistance but was classified
only as a "B" area by KJeppe.
Hamilton speculated the
lower rating was picked to
make him the "fall guy" in
case the SBA disaster rebel
programs failed. Then, he said,
Kleppe could have stepped in,
run successful programs and
poSSibly earned a cabinet post.
Kleppe was "conun1tted" to
keep Regan on the job in Richmond despite documented
ev1dence showtng sertous
problems with loan mlsmanagement, accordmg to
Hamilton. He said Kleppe also
had long range plans to Ioree
him out of the Philadelphia job
and replace him with Regan.
Kleppe will be the first
witness when the hearings
resume on Tuesday.

114

'261 If

Jaworski.
(Continued from Page 19)
lor a Republican alternallve
s1mply reqwrmg Jaworski to
obtam congressional confirmation .

UAW APPROVES
DETROIT (UP! ) - The
Umted Auto Workers Umon at
the Central Foundry of General
Motors Co rp . m Defiance ,
Oh1o, ratified a contract offer
Fnday With GM
CHECK INSURANCE
COLUMBUS (UP!) - John
C. Winchell, executive drrector
of the Ohio Insurance Institute,
advised motorists to check on
their Insurance poliCies II they
have formed car pools because
of the energy crisis. "A
motoriSt who plans to use h1s
automobile as part of a·car poor
should consult his insurance
company or allent " 1\~tlci
Winchell, pointmg but the
motorists should he certain the
pohcy mcludes med1cal
payments coverage.

Tennessee 20 Vanderbilt 17
Boston CJoll. 42 Holy Cross 21
Navy 51 ArriiY 0

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue. Bottel
When HIS Mom's the Matchmaker
Sue
and
Helen:
Dear
I am !6 and considered attractive. But I have a terrible
problem. Every time I go with a boy, things are just great Wltil
hls mother tries to persuade him to marry me. Then he dropa me.
You know that's the kiss of death - a mother playing matchmaker.It's happened three times already, and each time, a big
,cooloQff. Am I a - BORN LOSER?
Dear Born Loser:
No - you just win mothers over.
Maybe Ute solution IS: av01d meeting the guy's mother until
he makes the decision. Then he'll be happy that she agrees. -

SUE

+++

Dear B.L.:
... And II youcan'tavoidmeeting hismotlter, at leastdon'tgo
all out to make a tremendous unpression. Perhaps you unconsciously give these fellows the idea that two women are
conspiring against htm. - HELEN

+++

Rap:
One night my girlfriend and I sat down and told each other
the other's faults, Md man, were there a lot!
Uke for instance: I bat my eyes and sniff a lot. I can't afford
contact lenses and glasses don't do much lor my looks.
We are both too nosey and sometimes 'don't act our ~~ges,
which is !3. Also, we're llat-cbested, and we've never had steady
boyfriends in our entire lives, because of flatness, probably .
I told my girlfriend she was getting a little fat, and she says I
hke ice cream and candy too much and tempt her.
We found out we were real messes, so please tell us what to
do to unprove. - TilE TWO BLOBS
•

Mr . and Mrs Doyle Multi
and
family
of
New
Philadelphia, 0 visited wlth
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle,
Verna and Wavie, over the
weekend. Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Snyder and Cec•l of
Columbus visited on Friday at
the Circle home.
Miss Susan Yost of Oak
Grove was guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Circle and fam1Iy on
Wednesday mght.
Mr. and Mrs. Edson Roush
~pent Thursday and Fnday
with Mr. and ' Mrs. Robert
Watson and family of Kent,
OhiO.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Young
and family VIsited relatives at
Corning, Ohio recenUy.

Dear Two:·
Why not have a trutlt seSSion about your GOOD points?
What's the use of painting yourselves ugly and probably
straining your friendship when you could check out your assets
instead and work on how to emphasize them?
Start with the freckles: They never bothered Sandy Duncan
or Doris Day! So make the most of your outdoor, hea!Uty look
Batting your eyes is no sm; and call your "nosiness"
friendliness. Flat-chested? At age 13, you've got lots of company
... and lots of time left for those steadies. They'll show up when
you stop seeing each other (and yourselves) as blobs. - HELEN
Two:
Patience is a virtue but persistence helps too. You'll change
a lot In a year, but you can help yourselves along by cutting down
on desserts and candy, experimenting With styles that do the
most for you, seeing boys as lr1ends, not just boyfr1ends, and
.
having fun as l~yearoQids.
· ... And forget the slam sessions. They only make you sell•
'conscious. - SUE
P.S. Only way to get rid of freckles is stay out of tbe sun.
And who'd do a silly thing like that?

l

001\'T~.~.

I'M /lOIN' RJR liEU'!

INMATE WOUNDED

LUCASVILLE, OhiO (UP!)
- An argwnent between inmates at tbe Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility Friday
resulted in serious InJUry to
Floyd L. Thomas, 26, Chardon.
He was transferred to
University
Hospital
In
Colwnbus. Prison officials said
Thomas was beat with a metal
bar when he and Billy Ray
Ballew, 26, argued m a corridor
of the prison s_hop area.

- -

SUGGESTS LOCATION
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Former Gov. James A. Rhodes
suggested locating the Ohio
Lottery
CommissiOn In
Cleveland because it was
conceived and promoted by
people of the greater Cleveland
area.
FUNDS DIVIDED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan said Friday
Ohw communities have
received 99.7 per cent or the
more than $60 million allocated
in federal revenue sharing
funds. LoCal governments in 34
counties received all the funds
for which they were eligible
while others will receiVe the
rest when t~ey complete
requlred reports.

'' I

I

WINKLE

IIIJriT/tJBOME·

71/IN/9 THAT HA6
TORPOI'Iel

IN

LOVING remembrance of

Rol:1e-rt Johnson who pas~d
awav Nov 30, 1961 No one
knows the llltrrt hetr UIChtl

Only those who have lost Uti
lei I of 1ht9rte f thai Is borne 1n
silence , for the ont we loved
so well lt's a lonesom e houn
without you , And sad has b•en
1ne way , For 11v e end home
are not the same. smc:e vou
were callea away
WUe and F am 1ly
'284 I

Notice
WANTE-D
INVENT IONS- IDEAS

.: ASH
Sale or
Rovallles
PoSSib l e Wrtte tor fr•e
li terature
IMPERIAL
4055 E)llecut•ve Park Or.ve .
Ctnc.nnat 1, OhtO 45241 or
phone Mr Wh tlfteld collect 1t
( 5131 563 4710
28l 30

tf

SWEEPER Repa 1rs , parts,
supplies , 4-16' 029.rl, 10 a m
5
p m Dav1s Va cuu m Cleaner
Store Georges Creek Road ,
next lo Bob 's CB Rad •o Sales

NCAA Dlvlslou !II Playoffs
Wittenberg 21 San D1ego U. 14

P.S.Is there any possible way to get nd of freckles ?

~

Bread

'

TWO WAY RadiOS S~le$ &amp;
Serv.ice New and used CB's ,
pollee mon1tors , ante-nnas ,
e1c Bob 's Cltuen Band Rlld lo
Equtp , Gorges Creek Rd .'
GallipOliS, Ohto 446 4517
212 .tf

Wanted
CO CKTAIL Waitress 6 p m '0
2 30 a m 6 n•ght!S weekly In
lounge at Sk y\1ne Lanes
BOWling Alley
ApQiy ln
person
28-4 5

For Sale
Champtoned stred Yorkshtre
Ternor
Puppies . Pnc~
SI7S.OO &amp; up

Evenings 446-0$48

Help Wanted

IMMEDIATE OPENING
FOR

SECRETARIAL POSITION
Prior
experience
desirable. typing and
shorthand
required.
Excellent benefits and
starting pay. Apply in
person at Federal
Mogul Corp., 2160
Eastern
Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-9211.
Equal employment
employer.

•

�32

~ n n&lt;l ~and

1he Sunda l u

' l.li.' 2 19 3

33 - The Sunday TLmes Sent mel Sunday Dec 2 1973

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Thurman
Business
Services
-----==-===~==~~~~~------------~~
Card of

L ETCHER P ano S(&gt;
Tu
Ca
11 &amp; Rep
13

WE

W SH
0
hanll.
n qhbo s and e a ves or
her eJ~~p ess on o sympa hY

News

Mrs M\ rt e Welker and son
Ted PeiToud spent Thanks
g1vmg "1th Mr and Mrs Paul
PeiToud and daughter Jan
Mrs John Brev.er \\aS a
\1sttor n the home of her son
and lam ly Mr and Mrs
George Bre\\er
v sttors m the home of Mrs
M)rtle Kuhn for Thanksg1v ng
\\ere Mr and Mrs Donald
F1lmer and Betsy of Reynolds
burg and Mr and Mrs Dav d
Kuhn and son

Kenny of

Columbus
Herbert Kuhner of South
Po nt and Ronn e Rouse of
Jackson were v s tors of Mr
and Mrs J ohn M ller
Mr and Mrs W !ham Tate
and daugh ter Melody v sited
over the weekend w th her
parents Mr and M s Matt
McCorm ck of Charleston
Mr and Mrs Ezra Harper

k ndn£'SS. ond he p a
he oss
o ou
a he
Ha ey Ho
man A s-pec a hanks o he
Pome ov Eme qency SQuad
D R dgway end he wa ker
1- une a Home Th(! Ho mcln

Fan

es

8

SH o exp ess au hea
e
hank'S
o e a ves
ends and ne 9hbo s
o
he
a s o k ndness and
sympa hy shown a he dea h
o au w te and s s e Agnes
A M Ghee Fo
he ca ds
o
0 (I o e ng~ and ood
Pome oy Un cd Me hods
women and o mcmbe s o
au e c 1 Hea h C ub
Spec a hanks o he Rev and
M s Ca H ks o
onso ng
wo ds and o ne S a
o
Ew 119 Fune a Ho l1C Dav d
McGhee M
and M s A en
E ch nge
M
and M s
By on Hyse
p
27

cas

STEEL

on e c

985

Ca

"'

c

25

F ARM w h QOOd house W
pay '!i 50 pe mon h Ca 837
839 o w
e Ode Ba
3320
A nsby Road Co umbus Oh o
4371
28 6 c

•

l.be meetin g

•

•

•

"

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

992 2094
606 E Maon Pomeroy

Roofmg Spouhng
K1tchens &amp; Bathrooms
Complete Remodeling

OI'FICE SUPPLIES

For Sale or Trade
5 KAWASAK
or gu ar
amp t e Phon e 992 7270

9 2

Stop In and See Our
Floor Do~lay

742-6273

27 6 c

MALE poode puppy
ba k
m n a u e P hone 992 5858
13 fc

c

SAL T FO R CE AND SN OW
Ro ck sa
o
o wn sh ps
o w ns and bus nesses
bu ks and bags fo
ce and
sno w Ex e s o Sa
Wo k s
Phone 992 38 9

EXPERT

96200DGE4d sd Ps pb
a
a c Good un n ng con
d on good
es good body
no gas hog Phone 992 2826
2 2 3 p

ASK US ABOUT

WOOD TRUSSES

'5.55

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

USED
and
PAYROLL
BOOKKEEPER
fu
me
Ex
REPOSSESSED
pe ence helpfu
o
PRICES
n e v ew
appo n men
F REWOOD
N SCO
42 43
To make room for the
many
new
un1ts
- -----------_WANTED
Meehan c
1n
Jan
1974
arrov1ng
T uc k ng Compa ny
2 2 31p
DELAYED
992 3088 M dd epo t
DELIVERY
AM FM ado s e eo 8 a ck
ape co mb nat on 4 speake
AVAILABLE
sound
sys em
Ba an ce
s 03 49 o use ou budge W1th the exceptoon of a
e ms Ca 99 2 3965
small deposot
27 0 c
2 2 6 c
-------- EXPER ENCED
NO MONEY
AT
LAST
fi.PT S ZE
REFRIGERATOR S $4 5 up
o he modes f om S 9 95
Ex ce en
se ec on
gas
ange s
seve a
e ec
c
anges new used u n u e
Many g ft ems oys 8 ack
ape s
NI:::W
s 99
KUHL S BARGA N CEN
TE R R
a au on gh t
TUPPERS PLANS
open
eve yday e)(cep t Monday
22 6 c

HAVE YOUR
ophy moun ed
uae r head s sma
an mas
and b d s How a d B chf e d
Mu be y S ee
Ru and
Phone 42 6834

c

--------

SHOO T N G Ma ch Fo ke d Run
Spa sman Cub no on Sun
day Fa o y Chok ed Gun s
y

SH EARED
WH TE
Xmas
ees need es
ea y
say on KUHL 5 BARGA N
CE NTER R
a cau on
gh
Tuppe s P a ns

29 3 c

SHO O T NG Ma ch
Gun C ub R
Dec
2
2 noon
hok ed guns on y

ne

------ ~-

2 2

H

Sunday
Fa o v

hen s

---+--------------

-~-,--- - - ---- --C -- -

Employment Wanted
LL do se w ng
Phone 992 58 66

n my home

0J1en8T IS
Monday thru Saturday

AT~ RIALS

773 5554

606 E. Main . Pomeroy, 0 .

BACKHOE se v c e Al so
wa e 1 nes oo e s
en ches
Cha es R Ha e d Rou e
R u and
Oh o
Phone 742
6092
1 3 8 p

For Rent

2 5c

2 bedroom u n shed
apa tm ent S75 pe
depos I
no pe s
Ra ne
Robe H

1/10 B L E Home n M ddlepo

Phone 99 2 5592

20

----

F OWERS o Ch s ma s o
he home dec ora on Sp ays
w ea t hs po s ba ske s o
erne e y A so o s of g s
Sma e y s G f Sho p Ches e
Oh o Phone 985 353
296
SHOOT N G
Mach
Co n
Ho ow Gun C ub T u n f s
ght a e M es Ceme e y
R u and
Fac o y c hoked
guns on y Sunday Decem be

2

p m

c

oom to
phone 992
3

fc

TRA LE R
Ma so n
W
Va
coup e on y phone 992 5693
16 f c
Pho

n

e . .,

22 6c
SMA

L

a

--------~--------

..

n ng ch a s
buy now o
s ma s On y
$89 95 Sw ve rocke s n
ve vef ny on and pr nts ha
make a wonde u g ff fa
you
w le On y $69 95 A
l t ems cash and ca y o 60
day
ay away
Pom e r oy
Reco&gt;~e y
6 22 E
Man
Pome oy Phone 992 554
1 20 26 c

--- -- ---UPHOLSTERY Fab cs by

e

29 8 p

•

&amp; N DAY old o
sta ed
Legho n pv e s Bo h f oor o
cage
grown
ava abe
Pou
y
l")ous ng
&amp;
au om a on Mode n P ou ry
399 W Ma n Pome oy 992
2164
2 2 1 c

SHEARED
WH TE
P NE
XMAS t ees need es ea y
say on KU HL S BARGA N
CE NTE R R 7
a cau on
1 gh
Tuppe s P a ns
2 2 8 c

3 A ND 4 ROOM f u rn shed and
apa men ts
vn furn shed
Phone 992 5A34

APARTMENT or en
742 655 0 992 2550

WANT ADS
NFORMAT ON
DEADL NES
5 P M Day Befo e Pu b c a on
Monday Dead I ne 9 a m
Cance a on
Co r ec ons
w be a ep ed un 9 a m fo
Day of Pub ca on
REGULA T ONS
The Pub she:
ese ves he
gh o ed o
e ec any ads
deemeCI
ob ec ona
The
pub she w
no be espon
s b e o more han one n
cor ec nse on
RATES
Fo want Ad Serv ce
S cen s pe Wo d one nser on
M n mum Cha geS 00
14 cen s pe
wo d
h ee
consecu ve nse ens
26 cen s pe word s x con
secut ve nse ons
25 P e Cen D scoun on pa d
ads and ads pad w t h n 10
day s
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; 08 TUARY
12 00 to
so wo d n n
mvm Eilch add ona wo d
3c
BLIND ADS
Add t ona 25c Cha rge pe
Adver t semen
OFF CE HOURS
8 30 a m o S 00 p m Da y
8 30 a m
o
2 00 Noon
Sat11rday
"

H

30 8 c

Adu s on y

FUR N SHE D house a e
o
e n P e e ons u c on men
on y
L nens
aunde ed
Con a c
a e
4 30 p m
week y excfi) Sa u day and
Su nday
He en
R ggs
R u and Oh o
I 27 6 p

- ---------------For Sale

GROCERY bus ness to sa.!
Bu d ng o si!l e o
ease
Phone 73 56 8 from 8 30 p m
o o p m to appo n men
3 20 fc
1972 c ~" 'f K s B a ze
wh ee d ve A speed
m ss on
emovab e
exce en cond I on Ca
7205 after 4 p m

and
ans
op
992
28 4 c

KNAPP Shoes ode now o
nsure pre Xmas de ve y
Phon e 992 5324

9 3 Z G ZAG se w ng rna h ne
Th s rna h ne da ns
em
b ode s
o ve cas s and
monog oms a
w hou a
ac hments Pay ba ance of
i4 50 o pa v $6 a mon h Ca
992 533
02 c

he
ya d 54 nches w de as ow as
$ 95 pe ya d ve ve s as ow
as SJ 45
mpo ed ve ve s
$9 95 We a so have ny on
he cu on
co on
p n s
v ny s and r emnan s by he
ya do by the p ece Pome oy
Rec ove y
622 Eas
Man
Po me oy Phone 992 554
20 26 c

FOAM o
you o d couch and
cha r cus h ons as ow as
S 0 95 U pho s e y books on y
soc
4 nc h cove ed foam
mat esses to standa d s ze
bed
S29 95
Pome oy
Recovery
622 E
Ma n
Pome oy PhOne 992 755a
20 26tc
-~----

-------

STARCRAFT 974 T 11 e sand
Fa d Down s Spec a Ch sf
mas p ces CAMP CONLEY
STARCRA F T SALES RT 62
N of Po n P easan
Beh nd
Red Ca pe
nn 675 5384
29 ~tc

---------------Auto sa es

972 GRAND To no Sport V 8
IIV omaf c
PS
PB
mag
whee s new res ve y good
cond on See Roger Roush o
phone 247 355
973
SE REORado
com
b na on w h 8 ack bu
n
ake ove paymen s of $1 55
per man hi:&gt; payS. 0 50 Ca
992 5]3
0 21 fc
~-

•

DOWNTOWN
BELPRE
OHIO

- -----

I

NOV SPEC
$ 12SOPerm For
Req Ha r $8 50

-----------992 7474
Johnson Masonry
&amp; ! Remodeling}
992 7608

MOB LE hom e epa
E ec
't ca p umb ng and hea ng
Phone 992 5858
7 5 fc

1 Rt

'llrqll B. Ttaford . 'Sr.

Real Estate For Sale

And 4 bed ooms

ba h

ga age and a
stock
nc uded n the sa e Sma
own locat on $25 000 00 o et s

Love at f st s ght s a con
ld ifi on tha saves a ot oft me
money AND t wil be

LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT
WHEN YOU NSPECT ONE
OF THESE HOMES
Just off Rl 33
A NEW
HOME and
ACRES 3
ave y bedrooms
da ub e
closets Modern colored bath
w th shower Mom the k t
chen has 29 ft cab nets
ange and Ref and a arge
d n ng a ea Laundry room
Ca rpet ng
2 car garage
25x3 0
Ba n 20x 42
New
fe n ces Made ust fa you
and the tam ly Dad $22 500

LOOK OAD
A NEW
HOME FOR YOU AND THE
FAMILY FOR XMAS
TUPPERS
PLAINS
AFTER thew fe chooses th e
co l or carpe t ng that she
wants you can move r ght n
c losets
3 bedrooms W
Modern colo ed bath W
sho1e
K tchen has ots ot
cab nets and d n ng area
Laundry room A I electr c
ACRE
eve
ground
A
garage and Custom bu t
$ 8 900

SYRACUSE OWNER HAS
BEEN TRANSFERRED This home ust over 2 years
o d Hardwood floo s car
pet ng
drape s
Lovely
k t chen w th ange lots of
cab nets too Laundry room
Modern c;;.olored bath w th
shower 3 n ce bedrooms
Ca port You can move now
- spend Xmas n your own
home $2 000

LET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY
HENRY E CLELAND
YOUR
FRJ.ENDLY BROKER
992 2259
If no answer 992 2568

No 1 M dd eport

Anthony Russell Owner

2

ta k

of the

fC

SE W N G MACH N ES Repa
se v ce a makes 992 2284
The Fab c Shop Porn e oy
Au hor zed S nge Sa es and
Se v ce We Sha pen Sc sso s
3 29

fu n tu e nc ud ng s ave and
efr gerator 2 bed ooms bath
ca po
R ve r
at
On y

One ac e 2
bed ooms F A furnace T P
wate J ust $4 000 00
2 APARTMENTS
Rent one
I ve n the o he Co ne at n
OUT

Phone
0
949

s 3 sao 00 or what wou d
you g ve'
LARGE HOME AND RENTAL

town

OEAO S OCK - W
re move
a a easonab e cha rae Ca
2&lt;15 55 4
8 23 90f c

- In M ddl epo ton good st eet
Q-le ac e of n ce lay ng and

Ask ng $ 7 500 00
PRIVACY

In town but ave
one ac re Has 2 bed oom house
w h gas F A fu nace N ce
shade t ees Only $ 1 500 00

OOZI:::R and ba ck hoe wo k
ponds and sep c anks d
ch ng serv ce
op so I f I
d t
mestone
B&amp;K
Escava ng Phone 992 5367 o
992 3861
c

Sta f ght on

h s great buy 2 bed cams
bath n ce k tchen and po ch
n Pomeroy On y $15 000 00

WE
HAVE
OVER
40
PROPERTIES FOR YOU TO
SEE 3 ASSOC ATES N TWO
COUNTIES WHO HAVE JUST
CO MPLETED
ANOTHER
REAL ESTATE COURSE AT
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
llfi.FOfW
GORDON B T! fl. I OIHI

P &amp; J Hea ng &amp; Coo l ng Gas o
Fue 0
we have many
fu nace pars and plumb ng
pa s o 10 p c above cos
215 N Second M dd epo
992 3509
03130 c
ELNA and Wh te Sew ng
Mach nes
Se rv ce on a
makes Reasonabfe
a es
The Sew ng Cen e
M d
dleport Oh o

HflENL

SEPT C
TANKS
AROB C
SEWAGE
S YSTEM S
CLEANED
REPA REO
MILLER
S AN TAT ON
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
3035

A&lt;. '&gt; OC II\ l l ',

992-3325 or
991-3b 15

A LOVELY new Home
m e RON SHEPARD F oo
Wa
from Me gs H gh Schoo
Remade ng Ceram c
e
Three bedrooms two baths
baths Box 28D Rut and 742
fu
basemen w th wo car
3664
garage La ge lot $27 soo
6 26 f c
A so
recen y remode ed
three bedroom o der home n WILL
m
ees and
Pome oy
Pr ce of s 5 000
shrubbery
A so clean ou
nc udes turn ture Owne w
basements at cs e c Ca I
he p f nance ether of these
949 3221 or 742 4441
wo proper es Ca
593 5667
2 30 c
A hens
2 2 30tc

5 ROOM house

w

h ut ty room
and bath at 50 x 00 fenced
n ya d
Phone 99 2 5770
oca ed on Cherry Street n
Syrac use
12 2 c

L:A:ftG"E
conven en
bu d ng
o s at Rock Spr ngs Area
restr cted tor houses on y
Tuppers Pia ns &amp; Ches er
Water ava abe Ca I or see
B
w tte 992 2789

&lt;

2BEDR00 Mhou se Jyea so d
c a pe ng b g k tchen w h
o s of ca b ne s
ac e of
g ound Rae ne Oh o Cal
949 4998
9 2 fC
SMALL house
camp ete y
fu n shed
Bachelo s h de
away Phone 992 5786
1 27 7 c

---------

~----~

3 BEDROOMS
basemen
carpeted v ng room and ha I
w th lot SO K 200 1662 L ncoln
H 11
our ng day
can be
c ontacted at the General
James Gav n fl ant
Con
struct on Department f om 8
t I .t 367 733 after 6 p m and
weekends phone 1 (304) 768
7452 Robe t H Potter
1 30 Jtp

NO

Addoson Ohon

--------'

For lnformallon
Call Shorley Adkms

1

367-7250
Ph
6

To Our Cu stomer s
Pea se
ca
o
ap
po n ment o ge you Bee o
P g p ocesse d
Effect ve h s yea a dee
p o ces sed
S20 oo Plu s Por k
AI dee h a e to be sk nned
a nd agged befo e we can
accep
Call These
Number s Please
0 ck Vaughan
Dale L ttle
992 JJ7 4
992 3884

SEVERAL mob
e

c

a

Ca

e

homes
Oh o
4 60 5 o

Ke

ng t or a mob e hom e
o o &lt;1 q1.1a t v. n ob e ho m e"
We have both a
~..uoH

OUAIL CREEh
MOBILE
COMMUNITY
&amp;SALES

READY M X
CONCRETE
de ve ed r gh
o you
pro ec Fas t and easy F ee
es rna es Phone 992 3284
Goeg en Ready M ~&lt; Go
M dd epo t Oh o
6 30 c

RANCHO COMPANY
THE HOME FOLKS
0 A C R E S oba c o ba~e
house Reasonab e

SEPT C TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE ra es Ph. ~6
4 82 Ga po s John Rus~e
Owne and Ope a o

8

OUTCO ME
s
ncom e
w en vou buy
h s daub e
b ck. on Se ond A enu e

A N D 8. LOTS R
R o G a de
FREE M APS

!:::IL t t:;t=' NG

Hoe

00

Ga

"
0

B

ROOM ho use
ga age
2
ou b dgs 3 ac es g ound on
ohn on s R dge 4 6 956
?80 3

ga age
446

"

280 6
BEDROOM
o1-1d
men
--~fu n s hed
U
es pa d
Loca ed n R o G an de S. 00
H OU SE 2
ace s
3 0
'
pe man h 245 55 35
Schoo
bed oom!:.
c: Y
282 3
R
4
d s
c
2 rr es ou
446
2)23
y No
2 BE DROOM
247
ch d
'
46
96 9
282 3

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

STEREO

2 BEDROOM '2 x 60 mob
home fa
en l 36

92.1 FM

WMPO

e

M ddleport Pomer :!Y~-"

280 6
~-"~.= -o7-"----- - --

EFF C ENCY Ap
month Fu n shed a
pa d 446 44 6 af e
WELL kep c a pet s sho w he
resu s of regu a B ve Lus e
spo c ean ng Ren e eel c
shampooe s Cen a Su pp

y

Co

'rhos

284 6

YOU SAVED and saved to
wa,tl o wal ca rpe
Keep
neW w th B ue Lus e Ren
e ec c shampooe S G C
Murphy Co
284 6

WANTED FARMS

•'
'•
I

Have buvers for farm s
vacant land vacat on spot s
Write to Harnet K rk
patnck 924 Year I ng Road
Columbus
Oh o or call
collect even ngs
861 8356
M rkpatnck ~ Rea It)'

Country Home On
Edge of
Bob Evans Farms
HE RE 5 AN OLDE R HOME
T H A T S MU CH BE T TE R
T HAN AVERAGE
T 5 A 2
STOR Y 3 B EDROO M H OME
W TH fl. OOE RN K TCHEN
MODE'RN HE A T N G A ND
N CE WA L L TO W ALL
CARPE T N G
EX
CE LLENT
OCA T ON
$
900 00

Trad1t onal
Amerocan Warmth
YOUR
VE RY
OWN
4
BEDROOM
CAPE
CO D
H OME
BRAND NEW A S
A MATTER OF FACT
F
YOU BUY NOW YOU CAN
DO
ALL
YOUR
DE CO RAT N G
N CLU DE$
A DEN
FA M L Y ROOM
K TCHEN COMB NAT ON
W TH F REPLACE 2 CAR
GA R AGE O N A
ll,RGE
COU NT R Y
OT
N C TY
SC HOOL D S R CT

RUSSELL
WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066
NOT CE
To a
ea o s and p eop e
wan ng a new b ck enee
a
h
ype
hou se
The
p ope y
o
C aude and
Madge Shahan jus o R 160
s no
and oc ked as wa s
epa ed We have he map
and pap e s r om he h ghway
d
son o p o e
See h s beau tu a
ee
c
home 4 a ge r ooms and
ha wa
a pe ed Fam y
oom s 5 x2 6
Shown b y appo n men
w h
Wood Age n y

24AC RES bockhouseonWh e
Ho ow Rd
Toba cc o base
ba n dO x 00 p ce $ 2 000

5

ACRES 3 bed oom 2 ba h
doub e w de 3 m es
om
own on M
C eel&lt;. R oa d
$20 000 Pp 44 6 0 26

26

PUBLIC
NOTICE
We sell anyth ng for
anybod)'
B fng your
terns to Knotts Com
mun ty Auct on Barn
Corner Th1rd &amp; 01 ve
For appomtment call
256 6967 affer 5 p m
Sale every Saturday
even ng at 7 0 Clock

TH S OLDER H OM E HA
BEE N
PART ALLY
REMODELED
NCLUDE S
5
BEDROOMS
BATH
S HOP BLDG
CEL AR
ETC N CE LOCAT ON ON
AL CE RD

Seller Needs
A Buyer
VE RY N CE MODERN 3
BE DROOM HOME W T H
FA M LY
ROOM
N I CE
K T C HEN
FOR MAL
D N NG
LAR GE
CA R
PETED LV NG ROOM
AND
LARGE
LA ND
SC APED
01'
PR CES
W Ll BE H G HER TH S
SPR NG SO BUY NOW

Brand New
Brock Ranch
Lovely LocatiOn
UST AC RO SS THE 0 D
M LL STR EAM YOU Ll
F ND
TH S
NEW
3
BEDROO M BR CK W TH A
BEA UT F U K TCH EN
BATH S D N NG ROOM O N
A LARGE FLA T LOT ALL
ROO M S ARE
ARGE AND
ALL ARE CAR PETED
BU
OER HA S TAKEN
SP EC AL
CARE
N
DECORAT NG AND OF
F ER S A L TTLE MORE
FO R
THE
MONEY
PR CEO LO W TH RT E S
C T Y SC HOO
D STR CT
Ga

a Co s Largest Rea
Estate Sales Agency
Off ce 446 3643
Even ngs Ca
E M
ke W seman
446 3796
E N W seman 446 4500
Bud McGhee 446 1255

N TOWN a Fou h A e and
0 ve S ee
We have ou
oom
b ck
ca mp e e y
emode ed n ew oof ce ng
pane ng k t chen l u nace
and ho wa e hea e
P ce
$ 0 500
OFF CE 446 066
EVEN NGS
Russell Wood 446 46 8
Ron Canaday 446 3636
John R cha ds 446 0280

Neal Realty

J4 NE L AVENUE
Th s h ee
bed oom house needs o s o
wo k bu
he o
self s
wo h the p ce of ss 280
95 LOCUST ST REET Good
ame hom e w h
h ee
bed ooms bath na tu a gas
fu na ce
pa a
basemen
good ocat on c ose o schoo s
and down own

1 28 CHATHA M AVENUE
N ce hree b edroom home
na u a gas hea ba h a ge
v ng
oom w h
ove y
pe
oca ed on wo enced
n lo s
N ce p ace fo
c h d en

INVESTMENT
4 DWEL L NG S on on e o
A
have new a um num s d ng
Annua
enta 52 520 A a e
ren 1d 1 n e es ed n a good
nves men ca
oday
LOOK NG for a svmme home
We have a new 2 BR w th
ba h sept c tank we wa er
and
oca ed on Raccoon
C eek
Ca
today
or an
appo n ment o see h s one
Ott ce Phone 446 1694
Even ngs
Cha les M Naa 446 1546
J M chae Neal 446 1503
Sam Neal446 7358

40 ACRES
4 m es west on R
lA
Good r sh ng and cam
p ng Phone 419 288 3 28
282 6

620 CHATHAM AVENUE
Good wo bedroom hom e w h
ba h n ce deep Of f OOm fa a
ga den Good hom ~ fa $9 500
ROUTE 588
Th s love y ranch
home s ess han wo yea s
od
has hree bed oom s
one and one half ba hs bu
n rang e and oven
fu y
ca pe ed one ca ga age w h
c one ete dr ve Th s has a
a ge o and s n he c y
schoo d s c
E UREKA
Th S p a per y haS
a 972 Freed om 2x60 mob le
home w h a
he fu n ture a
two oom cab n and
ac e
o
Th s s a good buy fo
$8 500
~

EUREKA Good f ou bedroom
home
ba h
a ge meta
ga age Loca ed on a a
and pr ced a $ 4 ooo
fou
bath
other
p ace
4 000

2 ACRES - N ce bu d ng s te
on R 775
3 ACRES
N ce bud ng ste
n R 775
~a

WOODLAND DR
6 ms a
new ca pe o e H w
s
Cen
a
ga age
and
wo kshop 28 x 28
P ce
$78 500
CRO USE BECK RD
T
Leve 6 ms
ba ns 2
ysodHWtoos
Ao
Th s sa good house and cou d
no be bu
fa
he ask ng
p ce oday $32 ooo
y
ms
e ec
s a

9M DOWN R V f;:R
2so y
b c k. base a(ll a pe
v
m 5 1&lt; 36 w t h F P A so
has2ndhousew h4 ms 2A
R ve r v ew o $45 000
EVERGREEN
ba h u hea
wn$4000

ACRES
f you wan apace
n he coun ry ake a ook a
h s Good h ee bed oom w h
new bat
ga age and p en y
of bU IU ngs
Loca ed on
Georges Creek Road

UTILIZE NOW our honest
p ofess ona se v ce L s w th
us at no cos o you f we se
your prope y ou tee s only
F VE PERCENT No sa e no
fee We wo k for you 10 f nd
th e buye s
Even ngs ca 1446 4244
Steven Betz: 446 9583
John M Fu ler 446 4327
2 NEW 3 BR b ck home s now
ea dy fo sa e e ec hea
ce n a a
a ge o s w h
ga den
n
ow
h
es
Loc a ed on Rt 35 n Su nk s1
V age Can be seen w ee k
days a o 5 See o
a Her
m&lt;in Slo; aggs d46 2572

-----~---- ":.. 12

THE LEAOER SINCE 1900 N
$ERVING HiE NATIONS
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS

EVA N ::. HE G HT S - $ 9 500 d BRs and a f u basemen
OJWHTERO
$28500
B and new
o a
e ec
c
beau y
B DWELL ...- S23 000
mode n
3 BR anch w h basemen
STA TE ROUTE 60 $39 000
L ke n ew
b ck w h
basemen nes ed on 5 A o
o ng and
FA RF ELO CENTENARY
RD
$23906- y od o a
e ec c an ch
VNTO N
Remade ed 8
ba semen

$9500
home w h

m

on

A

WOOD L A ND DR
6
m
ameaysod H W f r s
eQu pped k ch en A bar ga n
a S20 000

EUREKA $25000
N cey
emode ed 4 BR home w h a
ve r v ew

STATE ROUTE 588
$29 500
mode n ranch w h
u
basemen and over
ac e
POMEROY
$34000
2
apa men s and 2 bus ness
en fa s
FARMS
NE AR TYCOON L AKE $28 000
45 A W h a 4 x
mob e home

$13 000

NEAR LECTA
ba ga n p ced

FARFELD
SU BD V
B t k 3 bd m
has cen a
ca pe
qua y
beau y
oca on and oca ed on a
a g;e o
$3 1 500

NEAR V N TON
$15 000
A mas l y woods

NVE ST MENT
4 m house
w h base
moder n
and 3
m
ap
u n shed $ 8 000
5 m house pus
5 pc
etu n

OOA$0000

s

A

a

0 000
Any hr 446 1998

and

NE AR ADO SON
A coun y wa e

15

RACCOON TWP
$ S 500
30
A grass and 7 pc f nan c ng
ava ab e
NEAR EN0 - $20000
w h house and barn

50 A

OVERLOOK NG OH 0 RVER
38 A wooded homes tes
3 GRADE ADA RY FARMS
P ces s a
a $.:10 000
ROY SP RES R 0
$20 000
84 A mos y fa m and
L TTLE
$6 700

BULLSK N RD
42 A wood and

DEVELOPMENT
CORP.

·

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE

Bu ld ng
Slles
Available Kongsberry
Homes bu It to Itt any
spec 1f 1cat 1on s
All
Underground Ut I t es
·;Provoded

__________ _
For lnformatoon
Or Appoontrnent

PHONE
367-7250
Addoson 0

- ---~----

•

SEPT C TANKS
C eaned and ns a ed
R usse s P umb ng 446 4782
29

SERVICE

G L L E N W A-T_·c:E.~R:-:S~-~S. ~
E PT C
TANK
CL EANING
AND
R EPA R
ALSO
HOUSE
W RECKNG Ph 4469 499
E s ab shed n 940
69

"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY '

JIMME SAYRE

- ------------,---

ALBERT EHMAN
Wa er De \le y Se 11 ce
Pa o S a R
Ga po s
Ph 379 2133
243 f

AUCTIONEER

Real Estate For Sale
O T S app
Geo ges C
om R
984 0 446

ox
11
e on
eek Rd 2 n es
S2 500 ea P ti 446
6 5
25

NEW 4 bed oom b ck ca
pe ed 2 ba t hs 2 a ga age
Lake D
R o Gr ande pr ce
m d
h
es
p
n
ere s Ph 24 5 5439
20

Virg1l B.

TEAFORD

Sr.

f&lt;1 ·,1l F'&gt;l,lte Brokc·r
'1

17 S~&gt;cond Ave

EASTERN AVE
3 Bedroom home 6 oom
a ge
v ng room
gas
forced a
u na ce copper
p umb ng
ha dwood
floo s t s n ce See t
must se

8

----

NEW house on Rl
60 near
Porter
2 baths
double
garage n ce o
Phone 446
3563 af er 5 p m

284

Lo s to sa e
6 M LE S up R 7 Coun ry A
Esta es
A
u
es un
derground
n ce s ze
o s
P ced
gh to se
446 171
affe 5 &lt;146 2573
280 6

Plumbtng &amp; Heattng
GENE PLANTS&amp; SON
?LUM BING - Hea ng
A
Cond I on ng 300 Four h Ave
Ph 446 637
481
CARTER S PLUMB NG
A ND HEAT NG
Co Fou h &amp; P ne
Phone 446 3888 or 446 4477
165 f
RUSSELLS
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
Gall pol s 446 4782
297 f

---

DEW TT S PLUMB NG
AND HEAT NG
Rou e 60 a Everg een
Phone 446 2735
87

-----,-----,---STA NDARD

Pum b ng&amp;Hea ng
2 4Th dAve 446 3782

87

1~::..::::::::::.;;.;;,;;,;;;;,;;,;;,;;,;;;,;;.;;,;;_,1

PUBLIC SALE

---.-A
-Nc
K-s=~T~.=~
e c:E:·,~.
=-~
.~v-~
lc' e
FREEesmaes lab
y n
surance P un ng tr mm ng
and ca v y wo k
ee and
s t ump em ova Ph .:ld6 d953
73 f
MOTOR ST MUTUAL
NSURANCE
THE bes n su an c e a the bes
pr ce
Fo
au o
home
bus ness and
e Ray Hawk
agen
446 2300 54 41h Ave

50

Spa c ious
room s
3
bed ooms
2 2
baths
fam ly
oom w th wood
burn ng f ep ace fa ced
a r e ectr c hea
&amp; a r
cond t on ng
a ge and
sca ped ot con stru ct ed of
on y the f nest mater als
Wh t e br ck Co on a Pr ce
reduced for qu ck sale Cal
for appo ntment

TO OL
s ha pen ng
saws
sc sso s shea s home and
ga den oo s Sharp Sho p
A ey ear
47 Second
216 tf

------

M &amp; S CONSTRUCTION
E XCAVA T O N and gene a
emode ng
Ba c khoe doze
and
ench ng Se p c ank s
and faa e s A
phases of
p umb ng
w ng new n
s a a on Ca I 388 9986

-

-c;'T,'~=;::o~=--::--,-.::_
"' If
a
ypes of

CAB NET Shop
wood work 10
Ph 4.:16 7745

Court S reef
187 f

THOMAS Fan Exterm na ng
Co Te m te and Pest contra
Wheelersburg Oh o
233 tf

1------------------PROTECT
w th T E
Cal Ron
afte 3 p

your mob e hon:i"e
DOWN ANCHORS
Sk dmore 446 756

m

22 1 If
WA SHER
d yer
and
ref ge a or
epa
No
cha ge fo se v ce ca
we
ca n f x your app ance Ph
675 424 2
254
M&amp;M

ROOFING &amp; Spou ng Sh ngle
&amp; Bu ldup oof Hot &amp; co d
process Home mprovemen
n
gene a
Fo r
free
es m a es
phone
Rober
Meade 388 8 4
B dwe
Oh o
230 f

IN SYRACUSE
4 Bedroom
approx
5
acres 7 room hou se w th
arge modern k tchen with
bu It n b rch cab nets
bath w th s howe
gas
fu nace 24 x24 base ment
paneled
Lots of shade
tree s
ga den spa ce
A
stea l at s 8 900

BULAVILLE RD
3 Bedroom br ck
p us

4

m

acre

f om

les

Gall po s

SO OF EUREKA
acre fa m 4 bed oom
home tobacco base barn
See t

29

IN GALLIPOLIS
2 B e d oom
th oughout
d t oned
Ia
60 x 3 A real

ca rp e t ng
a r
c.on
ge
ot
n ce home

MADfSC.N AVE
3 Bed oom h ome n ce lot
dO x 3
S5 500 00

Ask ng

o nly

VACANT LAND
47 Ac es 1 m e off Rt 35 3
m les west of hasp tal
8 Acres pus on Rl 60 nea
Po ter
5 acres near V n on has
we I sept c tank ba n
4 443 acres R o Cen e point
Road nea R o G ande

THURSDAY, DEC. 6
11:00 A.M.

WHOLESALE

MOBILE
HOMES

10x39 2 Bdnn
$3495
lflx512 Bdnn
$39!15
10X56 3 Bdnn
$4195
12x412 Bdnn
$389S
12x512Bdnn
$4295
12x56 3 Bdnn
$4695
12x613Bdnn
$5495
All homes are total
electroc
completely
furmshed quarter mch
panelong
storm
wo ndows
&amp;
door
Delovered &amp; set up
free

TRI COUNTY
MOBILE
HOMES
2013 Eastern Ave
Gallopolts Ohoo
446 0175

PUBLIC AUCTION

LOCATED: FROM GALLIPOLIS TAKE 141
TO GAGE TURN LEFT ON PATRIOT-GAGE
RD. WATOi FOR SIGNS.
Ant que sec et~ y te e phon e Hardw ck gas stove couch
and cha s beds d essers end tables stand tables
d nette set 2 ron kettles w th stands stone 1ars &amp; ugs
wheat c rad es marble top wash stand oak cup boa d
other hou seho d t ems P oneer cha n saw 2 cut off saws
fuel o I stove Wa m Morning coal stove a r camp esso
hand saws dog hous.e g.ra n dr II
2 Cows &amp; 2 calves 300 ba es m Ked ha y
00 bu corn
e lectr c rnoto s other tool s &amp; m sc tem s tQO numerous to
menton

STANLEY R EVANS OWNER
Terms Cash
Tommy Joe Stewart Auct onee
Gallipolis Oh o-Phone 446 3941

Lunch Served

located at 211 Maple Ave n Oak H I Oh1o Or State
Route 279 West Watch for PubliC Auct on S1gns
SATURDAY DECEMBER 8th 1973

Startrng at o JO A M
Cons st ng n pa t of
Kenmore E ectr c Automat c
Washe {new) Ph leo Combo
Refi gerator Freeze
( new) Vesta Gas Kitchen Range 2 p ece L v ng Room
Su e (n ce) 3 p ece Bed oom Su te n ce) New Hasp tal
Bed Mattress Sold Ro und Oak S ng e Pedestal D n ng
Room Table w th Leaves and 6 match ng Cha rs

SEVERAL NICE PIECES OF OLD OAK FURNITURE
Bureau Rock ng Gha rs Dressers Wa sh Stand w th
Towel Bar Ch fforobe La ge Hang ng Beveled M rror
W cker Sw ng Iron Beds {compete) Vacuum Cleaners
9x 2 Wool Rugs Seth Thomas Fancy Mantel Clock
Electr cal Appliances
0 shes and G lasswa e
Oak
Upholstered Arm Cha w th C aw Feet and one CHURCH
Pew from old M E Chu ch Ant ques and Co l ector s
It ems Hand Too s Stone Churn Other M sce l aneous
Item s Too Numerous to Menton A I n Good Cond t on

TERMS CASH
lunch Wol l Be Served
MR P P POTTS OWNER
Daryl Alban

Oak H 11 Oh o

f

J&amp;WMOUNT
CLEANIN_G SERVICE
GENERAL hoUse c ea n ng We
supp y a
he c ean ng sup
p es 388 88 5 a e 6 p m c al
388 8865 Week y or month y
c ean ng by appo ntmenl
9 f

- --------

Bus ness space 3 52 sq
ft up o 800 ft f on age
pu s 6 oom f a me house 3
bed oo m s
a ge
v ng
oom &amp; k tchen gas arced
a r fu nace
a
c on
d t on ng
a ge bus ness
space n a n vp &amp; com ng
a ea Idea for f o a shop
and othe
bu s ness ven
lure s
Show n
by
ap
po n m en on y

MEADOWGREEN
ESTATE

SE CO ND mor gage money
ava ab e
Ca
manaQe
E nes Cover a Cred hr ft
of A me ca Phone 446 4 3
284 30

STEWART E ec ca
,Repa
house w
ng
e ec c heat ng Phone 4A6
456

AUCTION

RT 3S WEST

L STING S NEEDED
RANNY BLACKBURN
BRANCH MANAGER

TARA

"'

$ 6 500
35 A
25

P
n &amp; son Wale
De
Sevce
You
pa O{lage
w
be
ap
p ec a m::1 Ph .446 0463

26

WALLPAPER NG and pa
ng Phon e 446 9865 o 379

28

$4 000

D

t

TERM TE PEST CONTROL
FREE nspec on Ca 446 3245
Me
o De Opera o t)y
Ex erm na T m te Se 11 ce
10 Be mong D

G,llltpo ll s. Oluo

GARF E LD AVE
5
m
a me w h base
A um
s d ng s o m d s and w n
new gas u
P ce
Nea
S 500

ROOF NG and gut e
wok
A so bu
up t10 ng 388 8507

2 f

6

GA LL POL S SC H OOL D ST
$10 500
30 A mos y
bo om and
NEAR Ga a
A
og cab n

epa r ng
Lane Danes 159 B oad w ay
M dd epo
Phone 992 2081
217 30

-~-----

PH 4463444

MILLS V L L AGE
S2B 500 ov e y
s o y w h 1u
ba se men
WOODSM LL RD - $4 00
5 ms basemen and 3 ac es
of p nes

COU NT RY A R ES TATE S
1
y o d b c k and a um 3 b g
bd m s
ba hs a ca pe
hug e 2 ca ga
and a a ge
a o $36 900

75

HOLLEY 8 OS
COn!&gt; uct on
bu doz ng back hoe wo k
d &lt;:h ng unde rol!lds bo ng
Phone 245 50 8 o 245 5006
8

NEXT TO C TV - $3 500
Love Sp
f oyer w th ce n a

5 ms and

CHATHAM AVE
5 ms and
u n u e
ba h w h new
u n u e
S 7 500 w hou
$ 6 000

RT

P ANO tun ng and

KEMPER HOLLOW RD
4
BR br c k
anch w h tu
basemen and 7 A of and

KANAUGA
S 6 000
5 rm
home and a co nme c a s ze
garage

ST R T 35
6 m f a me r anch
s pa
w h base H W
ca pe F P 2 a gar w h
P ce
e ec d
La ge o
S28 500

C HE SH RE a e pad
$8 000

ROOF NG AND SPOUT N G
Sh ng es s d ng and bu dup
ho roofs F ee Es ma es 76
yea s e•per ence
ames
Ma cum V n on Oh o 388
9940

Ph 446 0008

5 ms and
s o m d s and

6M DOWN RT
ba h 2 ou b dgs
eve o S 2 800

Serv1ces Offered

o

'1 a a ached

SM TH RD

TH RD AVENUE
Good
daub e hou se A ooms and
ba h down 3 ooms and ba h
up ga age and an ce lo ThS
sa good nvestmen p ope y
o good home n own

ACRES
G ood
bedl'oom home n ce
c y wa er ga age and
bu d ng s Th s sa n ce
and war h he pr ce of S

br ck a e ec
ga
S34 000

SeiVltes Offered

no

World 's Larg&lt;!St

a

&lt;.:k
A

M
NORTH o HM C
New
6 ms &amp;
ba hs a tarpe

ST

Osca Ba d
Doug Wethe ho t
Brokers
Off ce 446 3434
PROPERTY N TOWN
6 CEDAR STREET
Good
h ee bed oom b ck home
one u
ba h and wo ha
ba hs good k che n w h
ange d shwashe
f am y
oom and a to v ca ga age
Good am y h ome w h a
a ge of

1

b

ST RT
4
2 A w h 2
hou ses and a ba n s 6 DOD

OHIO RIVER
Realty

8 ACRES 4 room frame home
w h some tu n tu e
wo
s ma au bu d ngs new pond
Pr e $ o ooo

CALL 446·1171 OR 446-4305

2 BEDRO OM 0 X 48 mob e
home AdU s on y $ 5 pe
month p us u
t es Locat ed
n R o G ande Oh o Con a c
Rm 105 R o G an de Co ege
28d 3

-------

NEED
A
MODERN
VEABLE HOME
TH S
ONE HAS 4 BEDROOM S
FA M
Y ROOM
0 N NG
ROOM
AND
FU L
BASEME N T
T S
A
M ODER N
HOME
A ND
OW N ER W L HELP YOU
F N ANCE
T
CA L
US
FOR
FULL
OETA LS
WE L
SH O W YOU T H S
H O ME ANYT ME
T S
VACA N A ND READY T O
MOVE N 0

MT Z ON Rd 6 m
ca pe
F P and
$) 500

BU SH MORTON RO
o d arne b c k
m 5
ba hs al
a pe a
pa o
cove ed
Th s
beau y On y 526 900

$12 000 Barga on
Large Home
3 Acres

Owner Woll Help
Fmance Very Very
Anxoous To Sell

En10Y the com1ng Hoildays on thos beaut1ful
spht level house 3 moles from town on Marhn
Dr nea r hosp1tal It features three bedrooms
one and half ceramoc tile baths wall to wall
carpetmg large kotchen and donong area woth
bu1lt 10 oven range top dosposal doshwasher
serv ng bar fonoshed recreahon room on
basement w1th !.replace forced a.r gas fur
n~ce central aor cond1tooner large two car
garage w1th electroc door opener fully tan
scaped c1ty school d1stroct and ready to move
on

MOB LE Home
C ose o own
0599 even ngs

•37 ,900

150 ACRE FARM
Located on L ncoln P ke n Harr son Twp
about 12 m from town 30 to 40 A t liabl e
balance m pasture and woods 1600 lb tobacco
base older 4 bedroom home DownstairS has
been remodeled Large barn Onwer anx1ous
to sell Pr ced at $27 000 00

MODERN home on 3 a es o
and ha dw ood
oo s a
c ond on ng bu
n mode n
k chen ca po
and sma
au b v d ng p ced
o se l
S2 000

LILI6·0001

a

SLE EP N G ROOMS
week y
a es Pa k Ce n a Ho e
306

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

I

BROCHUR E S

""'"' •I " '

"

INFORMATION ABOUT

419 Phoenix.. Arttona 1$012

an d n ea

36

k can be
on y a
me due o ness n
Phone
fa
ap
742 3237
25 f c

Dostnbutrng Corp Hot Food Division 3443 North Central

own $26 500

lHE

on

oct~

uc

For' further Information or a personal nterv ew send
Name Address &amp; Phone number to North Amer~can

Porn e oy

N EAR HO SP A
L ove y on e
oo p an
a ge e e o

n

C
TA NKS c c aned
Mod e n San a o n 992 3954 o
992 7349

INVOLVED

RE 5

up

COAC HMAN T a
d
e
Moto
H omes
5 h Whee
T u k Cam pe s App e C y
Au o Sa es R 35 N
a kson
Oh o Pho ne 286 5 00
0

SEP

SELLING

A~

NE W homes ou o

NEW mob e home e)( e en
oca on adu s on y Phone
d46 0338
?25

FOR FREE es m a es on
a um num s d ng 5 arm
Doo. s and w ndows
Ca
po s M a quees and Ra I ng
Phone
Cha es
L s e
sy acuse Oh o Ca
Jacob
Sa es Rep esen a ve V V
Johnson and Son nc
6 22 H e

od

9 ACRES de e opmen and R
4
and G aham S hoo Rd

Rodne y Co
Rd
R odM Y Oh o
Hou 9 a
o9p m
M ond ay th u Salu d y
P t 245 93 4 245 502 1

CASH INVESTMENT REQUIRED
PART TIME
PLAN ONE
$2 285 00
PLAN TWO
S3 861 00
PLAN THREE
S7 719 00
FULL tiME
PLAN FOUR
$127900
PLAN FIVE
S18 998 00
PLAN SIX
S36 798 00

te

e

pe m o
93

bus ness can be started part hme - no need to qu1t vour
tob Can be expanded full ttme w th company hnanc1ng
We need people we can depend on Our products are
nat onally famous Hot Food Items m-ade by Hemz We
have over 36 var1et es of Hot Soups and Hot Entrees such
as Beef Stew Ch1cken &amp; Dumplings Ch , &amp; Beans and on
and on We have all of America s favor tes All these
dellc1ous products are sold from the latest n automatiC
vendmg equ pmen1 Your route wtll be establ shed and
mstalled b)' us Your age IS not a factor If you quahf)'
Perfect for a n ce couple to operate as a fam1ly bus ness

Avenue Su

How a dB annon B ok e
01 446 2674
Luc e 8 an non
E e 446 226 o 446 2674
NEW BR CK
A
e ec_ c 4 BR 2 ba hs
ca pe
h oughou
beau f u
ea n k chen to ma d n ng
oom
aund y
oom
auoma
doo s o w o c a
ga age
one e e d ve and
s ee
nea hosp a
A LL BR CK
WE HAVE 2 new 3 BR 2 bah
and
ba h
a e ec c
c a pe ed
one and 2 ca
ga age homes One new 3 8 R
am e home
a ee
c
A N X OUS OWNER
+ EMPTY HOME
EQUALS OPPORTUN TY
TH s gas hea ed anch s Y e
ho c s n he c y a ge ea
n k
hen
aun d y
R
spac ous am y
oom w h
ep a e ga age s o a ge
and
a ge w e
es ab shed
awn $2.:1 000
N.EAR NEW
3YEA R So d
JBRb cka nd
I ame
ha m ng k
hen
u y equ pped w h bu
ns
sh ag c a pe ng ga ag e
e e o 85 x 00 A s o age
bu d ng S22 000
A TWOFER
LOCAT O N
down own
pe e
o a on o a b us ness
o he s oo and ca mp e e
ng qua e on he sec ond
Fu
ba semen w h 2 nea
new gas u aces pa k ng o
L ST NGS WANTED
WE
NE:ED homes
n a
o a ons a ms and ac eage
We need YOUR
s ng now

Pay Only One
Ut1htv

Unless you mean bus ness
We are now cons1dermg
qua 1f ed appl 'cants n your area lo become a workmg
part of our Nat onal Hot Food D1str but or System You
are not applymg for a 10b You are applymg for a very
t1 gh prof t busmess of vour own NO EXPERIENCE

-

H Locu stS

1% Baths

DON'T READ THIS AD

NECESSARY

REALTY

THE SHOP

AUTOMOB LE nsvran ce been
c ance ed?
Los
you
opera or s cense Ca
992
428
6 S fc
•

INCOME - 2 bed ooms n ce
v ng Ia ge d n ng w h oak
oo s
ba h
c ty wa e

FURNISHED

Localed Co Road 5 Bradbu Y

oade
and backhoe wo k
sep t c
anks nsta ed dump
ucks
and o boys for h e w I hau
f 1 d
op so I
m es one
and grave Ca Bob o Roger
eff e s day phone 992 7089
n gh phone 99 2 3525 o 99 2
5232

Broker
110 Mech;m1c Stree1
Pomeroy, OhiO H769

WAY

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

C BRADFORD Auc onee
Com pie e Serv ce
Phone 949 382
Ra c neOho
C f B adtord

TEAFORD

Mo'

!

Russell's Auto Trim

t/}llfUillOIL

2 Bedroom
Townhouses

·--------------------~

Real Estate For Sale

$5 000 00
NEARLY NEW

"'ason W Va

1 -Custom Seat Covers -Custom Tnm Work I
1
-Auto Carpeting - Vmyl Tops
1
II PHONE 992-2839
II

FREE EST

BUSINESS

All work guaranteed

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

$0 50000

2 2 3 p TWO bed oom hou se a
473
Sycamo r e S ee
n M d
AT
LAST
APT
S ZE
d epa
va can Ca I 992 53 0
REFR GERATORS $d5 up
21 26 c
Othe
models f om S 9 95
_ ,- --- ---c--------Exec en
on
gas
a ng es
el ec
c ~-----------~- 1
anges new used u n tu e 7'
Many g f
ems oys 8 ack
apes
NEW
Sl 99
KUHL S BARGA N CEN
TER
R
7
at c a u on
gh
TUPPER S PLA N S
open eve y day ex c ep
Monday

M N

REV VA a Ches e Church o
God N o embe 25 o De c 2
30 p m Spec a s ng ng ea h
e ven ng Evange s Rev
Ches e
E s ep
om
Ch
co he Oh o Eve ybody
we orne

MILLER
HOMES

6 ROOM S and bah
n own
$1 000 Ca
992 3975 o 992
25
9 28 fc

CAR PENTER wo k masonry
wo k gene a emode ng by
ho u o con ac
Phon e 99 3
35

MODERN
up s a s
mon h
eQU ed
9A9 38 1

GUARANTEE
BEST SERVICE
IN
OHIO VALLEY

CO

Exec lent oca t on n c ty schoo l d s ct and on Ra ccoon
Ck Just a sho 1 dr ve f om town Ve y n ce 30 ac esc ean
fa to ol ng a m and w t h 5 A co n base 1 35 b
obacco base Larg e o d ba n and several other au
bu d ngs Som e good t mber The house has 1ust been
camp et e y r emade ed and ncludes 4 bedroom s fam y
oom n ce k. tchen new roof mode n cen t a l heat

Real Estate For Sale

Jgwnhouse
Apartments

Area s Most
Reasonable Pr ces

r---------------------•

Johnoes Beauty
Salon

I YEAR

224c

12 6 c

GARAGE Sa e a
Ma n
S ee
Mas y w n e
o h ng s zes
o 5 Wednesday Thu sday
F r day Novembe 28 29 30
II 28 3

c

9 0 H~AVY du y
uck $ 500
96 5 Mus ang 4 speed 5550
960 n erna ona
8
Van
$250 sma
a camp esso
$85 ab e saw $50 40 asso ed
bo es very o d S25 pe a
2
nch Zen h po abe
$30
Phone 992 2388

26 6 c

w

8

NEEDED UNTIL
JANUARY 1974

TARA

Pamllng A Spectalty

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

--~

ROUTE 7 Sou h a b ck 8bg
m s 2 ba hs a ca pe 2
F Ps sw mm ng poo
ve
v ew and A o Luxu y p us

92 ACRE FARM

SE LF SERV CE
AM seek ng ope a o s o
s c v ce gas s a on n Po n
P easan W Va Mob e home
o ve n
en
ee u
es
ee Gua an eed om m ss on
on g s sa e F o
a 30.:1 6 .'i 6 6
2 95

28

L

Tel 446 1998

AGENCY

baths No mo e us II ke lh s one ex sf o

2 BEDROOM
2 x 50 mob e
home n Add son Phone 446
0294

Really 32 State St

WISEMAN

For Rent

L ncoln H II Pom eroy 0
Bu1lfto Your Specs
Delivered to Job S1te

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

Help Wanted

on

Pome oy

Ph 992 5271

On Mos t Amer can Ca s

--- - - - --

26

2174

-Gene's
Body Shop

PRE FABRICATED

Wheel Alignment

Auto Sales

DISPERSAL
SALE

KO SC OT KO SMET CS &amp; W GS
Spec a s each mon t h We w
ne o
g ad y show you ou
Kosme s n he p vacy o
you r hom e a
you
con
ven en ce R em em be Ch s
na s s no a aw ay so phon e
He e
Jane 8 own 99 2 5 3

Ph~92

Pets For Sale

Mob1le Homes For Sale

Notice

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.~

FURNITURE

PHONE

STROUT
REALTY

MASSIE

THE

\ggoess 1v e tndn1dual wolhn g to 1101k to takt
O\ er established mul!t hne msurancc agency
SIIH) to stut nul to 1nnn g mclud ed Ca ll
Galhpohs I II ~•07 collect f01 appomlmcnt

From the laroest
Bul dozer Rad ato
to
~ma es Hea e Lo e
Nathan B ggs
Rad a tor Spec al s1

Real Estate For Scile

Real E~tate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

•

WANTED

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

and

CAS H pad to a
make s and
modes o mob le homes
Phone a ea ode 6 4 423 953

3

.....
I

FO R RENTorsae
homes
Ha
sonv

8 TRACK -.; e eo conso e due o
damage n sh pmen W se
fo
sm a
ba a nee o S99
o
paymen s
of
S6 99
pe mon h Ca 992 533

Help Wanted

c

-----

ch1ldren Syracuse

MIDDLEpORT Santa " 11
make hLS tradit onal v s t to the
Amencan Leg10n Hall Ill
Middleport Chnstmas Eve 5 to
7 p m to d1str bute treats to
children of the community
Members of the Feeney
Bennett Post 128 meeting at the
hall Wednesday mght arranged
to sack the candy treats at the
hall at 6 p m Dec 21 The post
" ll also assiSt fmanc1ally w1th
the frwt trays to be prepared
for t1 e shut ns charter
members and go ld star
mothers of both the aux1hary
lllld the post
A ch1cken dmner preceded

P

2 23

3 BEDROOM house w h bah
ec ea on oom u
tv room
and
wash oom
ca po
ca pe ng n v ng oom a so
e ec r c ange 6 a L n co n
He gh s Ava abe Dec
ca 949 1M
27 6 c

65 c

9

A uxiltary meets

112

c

phone

COR NER cupboa ds
wa
LOTS o ch ysanthemums o
970 GTO Ri!m A
V P S PB
cupbo a ds
hes s o d guns
sa e 1 e d g own We on Y
es
ow
a
cond
ne w
any co nd on
A so b ue
ha&gt;~e one o o - ye ow
0
m eage Phone 304 992 2993
deco a ed s oneware W e
bunch es o $5 we ha e so me
28 6 p
P 0 Box 44 Mar nsbu g
ou
n u b oom same us
Oh o 43935 o c a
484 4440
bu dd ng Reyno ds F owe r
a e 7 p m
Shop Mason w Va Ca 7 3
8 8 90 c
9 26 c
5 '
2 x 44TRA LER 970 mode l 2
WA NT ED
o
au c on
bed oom Phone 42 58 8
househo d goods ~ T oo s m os
1 30 4
pho s e Y
dny h ng o va ue W I buy or WE HAVE a you
needs
Bu
ap
d
en
m
se on com m s s on W
ha u
am b c oam g ue z ppe s
Ca
99 2 335 4 o r 99 2 2 92
Hay man s
25 fc
ack ng s p
sp ng s and
ps
ch p boa d
bu on
w ne se w ng h ead
egs
O LD
u n u e oak
ab es
upho s e y boo k s da c on
c oc ks ce bo;.;es b ass bed s
webb ng sp ng w n e a k s
dshes
o
com p ee
we
co d
o on sw ve
househo ds
W te M
D
bases an d oam oam oam
M e R 4 Pome oy Oh o
28 New Homes To Be
Pome oy Re cove Y 622 Eas
ca 992 62
Man s ee Pome oy Phone
5 3 c
SOLD
99 2 7 55d
20 26 c
At

and

The lam ly of Mrs Eula
Wolfe enjoyed ThanksgLVLng
Day dmner at the ca bm of 1om
Wolfe Horse Cave Rd A p g
was roasted by J1m Lew1s and
Tom Wolfe m the backyard and
was served along w th turkey
and all the tnmmmgs to Mr
and Mrs Thomas Wolfe Mrs
Eula Wolfe and Aaron Mr and
Mrs Jack Ord Mr and Mrs
Jack Snodgrass and M chael
Mr and Mrs James Lew s ar d
children James Jr Barbara
Conme and fr end Mr and
Mrs
Ronme Stem and
daughter Wendy Mr and Mrs
Carroll Norr sand Debb e Mr
and Mrs Austin Wolfe and
children Syracuse Mr and
Mrs Richard Hopk ns of
Akron Mr and Mrs Jerry
Coughlm and ch1ldren Knsten
and Matthew of West M1lton
Mr and Mrs V ctor Wolfe
V1ck1 and Kevm Jean and
fr1end Mr and Mrs W lham
Hoback and son John B1ll
Kenny Theiss
Thanksg vmg weekend
guests of Mr and Mrs Gerald
Hayman and Ke1th were Mr
and Mrs Don Hayman and
fam11) of Laurel Md Mr and
Mrs Ted Hayman and fam ly
of Westerville Mrs Phyllis
Young children Steve and
Kenny of Mason Mrs Rober t
Hart children Beth Br ce
Beverly of Rae ne Bruce Hart
of Columbus Allen Cun
n ngham Syracuse Mr and
Mrs Gene Jewell and ch ldren
Letart W Va Rt Lorna Bell
Mrs Mmdy DaviS son E n
Elmer Van Meter Roc k
Sprmgs and R chard Da s
Hoi day weekend guests of
Mr and Mrs Leste Rous
were Mr and Mrs Do R ffle
a d children of I ucasv lle 0
Mr and Mrs J m Connally and

0

Wanted To Buy

'

Thanksg1v ng v s t ng hLS
cous ns m Portsmouth
V sttors m the home of Mr
and Mrs Hobart Damels for

News, Events

HOLSTE N he te S soon
f eshen Phone 696 00

-

Endu o

For Rent or Sale

we w

Mr and Mrs Marvm spent

Apple Grove

6 76 p

c

Oh o and he also hunted deer
Mrs Hathe Saxton s
spendmg the w nter w th her
daughter Mr and Mrs Alfred
Folden of Flonda
Miss Barbara W ll ams of
Portsmouth and Mr and Mrs
Roger Boster of Galhpol s were
guests of Mr and Mrs Chester
Boster for Thanksgl\ ng
Mr and Mrs J ohnny Kuhn
viSited Sunday evenmg w th
her parents Mr and Mrs
Arthur Rose of Waterloo

Mrs Harold Damels and
children of Marengo and Mr
and Mrs Gerald Dan els and
children of Columbus Mr and
Mrs Dav1d Pelfrey and
children of Galha Mrs Allee
Sprouse of Wh tev lie W Va

ce
fl98

'} ') J

For Sale

360 YAMAHA
992 300

u ds w h
REDUCE e•cess
F u de•
Lose we gh w h
De• A D e
capsu e~
a
Ne son D uQs
30 2 c

THE TELEPHONE NO 992 6'26.5
s no onge a wo 1&lt;. n9
numbe
M s van Ca man
Hou e 'J Pome oy 0~ o

spent several da~ s n northern

ThanksgLvmg were Mr

For Sale

Mot1ce

Thank~

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Ame ia Muhlback- Guardtan
- AUCTIONEERsKenneth Swa f1

Gall polrs Ohoo
Not Respons ble for Ace dents

�32

~ n n&lt;l ~and

1he Sunda l u

' l.li.' 2 19 3

33 - The Sunday TLmes Sent mel Sunday Dec 2 1973

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Thurman
Business
Services
-----==-===~==~~~~~------------~~
Card of

L ETCHER P ano S(&gt;
Tu
Ca
11 &amp; Rep
13

WE

W SH
0
hanll.
n qhbo s and e a ves or
her eJ~~p ess on o sympa hY

News

Mrs M\ rt e Welker and son
Ted PeiToud spent Thanks
g1vmg "1th Mr and Mrs Paul
PeiToud and daughter Jan
Mrs John Brev.er \\aS a
\1sttor n the home of her son
and lam ly Mr and Mrs
George Bre\\er
v sttors m the home of Mrs
M)rtle Kuhn for Thanksg1v ng
\\ere Mr and Mrs Donald
F1lmer and Betsy of Reynolds
burg and Mr and Mrs Dav d
Kuhn and son

Kenny of

Columbus
Herbert Kuhner of South
Po nt and Ronn e Rouse of
Jackson were v s tors of Mr
and Mrs J ohn M ller
Mr and Mrs W !ham Tate
and daugh ter Melody v sited
over the weekend w th her
parents Mr and M s Matt
McCorm ck of Charleston
Mr and Mrs Ezra Harper

k ndn£'SS. ond he p a
he oss
o ou
a he
Ha ey Ho
man A s-pec a hanks o he
Pome ov Eme qency SQuad
D R dgway end he wa ker
1- une a Home Th(! Ho mcln

Fan

es

8

SH o exp ess au hea
e
hank'S
o e a ves
ends and ne 9hbo s
o
he
a s o k ndness and
sympa hy shown a he dea h
o au w te and s s e Agnes
A M Ghee Fo
he ca ds
o
0 (I o e ng~ and ood
Pome oy Un cd Me hods
women and o mcmbe s o
au e c 1 Hea h C ub
Spec a hanks o he Rev and
M s Ca H ks o
onso ng
wo ds and o ne S a
o
Ew 119 Fune a Ho l1C Dav d
McGhee M
and M s A en
E ch nge
M
and M s
By on Hyse
p
27

cas

STEEL

on e c

985

Ca

"'

c

25

F ARM w h QOOd house W
pay '!i 50 pe mon h Ca 837
839 o w
e Ode Ba
3320
A nsby Road Co umbus Oh o
4371
28 6 c

•

l.be meetin g

•

•

•

"

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

992 2094
606 E Maon Pomeroy

Roofmg Spouhng
K1tchens &amp; Bathrooms
Complete Remodeling

OI'FICE SUPPLIES

For Sale or Trade
5 KAWASAK
or gu ar
amp t e Phon e 992 7270

9 2

Stop In and See Our
Floor Do~lay

742-6273

27 6 c

MALE poode puppy
ba k
m n a u e P hone 992 5858
13 fc

c

SAL T FO R CE AND SN OW
Ro ck sa
o
o wn sh ps
o w ns and bus nesses
bu ks and bags fo
ce and
sno w Ex e s o Sa
Wo k s
Phone 992 38 9

EXPERT

96200DGE4d sd Ps pb
a
a c Good un n ng con
d on good
es good body
no gas hog Phone 992 2826
2 2 3 p

ASK US ABOUT

WOOD TRUSSES

'5.55

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

USED
and
PAYROLL
BOOKKEEPER
fu
me
Ex
REPOSSESSED
pe ence helpfu
o
PRICES
n e v ew
appo n men
F REWOOD
N SCO
42 43
To make room for the
many
new
un1ts
- -----------_WANTED
Meehan c
1n
Jan
1974
arrov1ng
T uc k ng Compa ny
2 2 31p
DELAYED
992 3088 M dd epo t
DELIVERY
AM FM ado s e eo 8 a ck
ape co mb nat on 4 speake
AVAILABLE
sound
sys em
Ba an ce
s 03 49 o use ou budge W1th the exceptoon of a
e ms Ca 99 2 3965
small deposot
27 0 c
2 2 6 c
-------- EXPER ENCED
NO MONEY
AT
LAST
fi.PT S ZE
REFRIGERATOR S $4 5 up
o he modes f om S 9 95
Ex ce en
se ec on
gas
ange s
seve a
e ec
c
anges new used u n u e
Many g ft ems oys 8 ack
ape s
NI:::W
s 99
KUHL S BARGA N CEN
TE R R
a au on gh t
TUPPERS PLANS
open
eve yday e)(cep t Monday
22 6 c

HAVE YOUR
ophy moun ed
uae r head s sma
an mas
and b d s How a d B chf e d
Mu be y S ee
Ru and
Phone 42 6834

c

--------

SHOO T N G Ma ch Fo ke d Run
Spa sman Cub no on Sun
day Fa o y Chok ed Gun s
y

SH EARED
WH TE
Xmas
ees need es
ea y
say on KUHL 5 BARGA N
CE NTER R
a cau on
gh
Tuppe s P a ns

29 3 c

SHO O T NG Ma ch
Gun C ub R
Dec
2
2 noon
hok ed guns on y

ne

------ ~-

2 2

H

Sunday
Fa o v

hen s

---+--------------

-~-,--- - - ---- --C -- -

Employment Wanted
LL do se w ng
Phone 992 58 66

n my home

0J1en8T IS
Monday thru Saturday

AT~ RIALS

773 5554

606 E. Main . Pomeroy, 0 .

BACKHOE se v c e Al so
wa e 1 nes oo e s
en ches
Cha es R Ha e d Rou e
R u and
Oh o
Phone 742
6092
1 3 8 p

For Rent

2 5c

2 bedroom u n shed
apa tm ent S75 pe
depos I
no pe s
Ra ne
Robe H

1/10 B L E Home n M ddlepo

Phone 99 2 5592

20

----

F OWERS o Ch s ma s o
he home dec ora on Sp ays
w ea t hs po s ba ske s o
erne e y A so o s of g s
Sma e y s G f Sho p Ches e
Oh o Phone 985 353
296
SHOOT N G
Mach
Co n
Ho ow Gun C ub T u n f s
ght a e M es Ceme e y
R u and
Fac o y c hoked
guns on y Sunday Decem be

2

p m

c

oom to
phone 992
3

fc

TRA LE R
Ma so n
W
Va
coup e on y phone 992 5693
16 f c
Pho

n

e . .,

22 6c
SMA

L

a

--------~--------

..

n ng ch a s
buy now o
s ma s On y
$89 95 Sw ve rocke s n
ve vef ny on and pr nts ha
make a wonde u g ff fa
you
w le On y $69 95 A
l t ems cash and ca y o 60
day
ay away
Pom e r oy
Reco&gt;~e y
6 22 E
Man
Pome oy Phone 992 554
1 20 26 c

--- -- ---UPHOLSTERY Fab cs by

e

29 8 p

•

&amp; N DAY old o
sta ed
Legho n pv e s Bo h f oor o
cage
grown
ava abe
Pou
y
l")ous ng
&amp;
au om a on Mode n P ou ry
399 W Ma n Pome oy 992
2164
2 2 1 c

SHEARED
WH TE
P NE
XMAS t ees need es ea y
say on KU HL S BARGA N
CE NTE R R 7
a cau on
1 gh
Tuppe s P a ns
2 2 8 c

3 A ND 4 ROOM f u rn shed and
apa men ts
vn furn shed
Phone 992 5A34

APARTMENT or en
742 655 0 992 2550

WANT ADS
NFORMAT ON
DEADL NES
5 P M Day Befo e Pu b c a on
Monday Dead I ne 9 a m
Cance a on
Co r ec ons
w be a ep ed un 9 a m fo
Day of Pub ca on
REGULA T ONS
The Pub she:
ese ves he
gh o ed o
e ec any ads
deemeCI
ob ec ona
The
pub she w
no be espon
s b e o more han one n
cor ec nse on
RATES
Fo want Ad Serv ce
S cen s pe Wo d one nser on
M n mum Cha geS 00
14 cen s pe
wo d
h ee
consecu ve nse ens
26 cen s pe word s x con
secut ve nse ons
25 P e Cen D scoun on pa d
ads and ads pad w t h n 10
day s
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; 08 TUARY
12 00 to
so wo d n n
mvm Eilch add ona wo d
3c
BLIND ADS
Add t ona 25c Cha rge pe
Adver t semen
OFF CE HOURS
8 30 a m o S 00 p m Da y
8 30 a m
o
2 00 Noon
Sat11rday
"

H

30 8 c

Adu s on y

FUR N SHE D house a e
o
e n P e e ons u c on men
on y
L nens
aunde ed
Con a c
a e
4 30 p m
week y excfi) Sa u day and
Su nday
He en
R ggs
R u and Oh o
I 27 6 p

- ---------------For Sale

GROCERY bus ness to sa.!
Bu d ng o si!l e o
ease
Phone 73 56 8 from 8 30 p m
o o p m to appo n men
3 20 fc
1972 c ~" 'f K s B a ze
wh ee d ve A speed
m ss on
emovab e
exce en cond I on Ca
7205 after 4 p m

and
ans
op
992
28 4 c

KNAPP Shoes ode now o
nsure pre Xmas de ve y
Phon e 992 5324

9 3 Z G ZAG se w ng rna h ne
Th s rna h ne da ns
em
b ode s
o ve cas s and
monog oms a
w hou a
ac hments Pay ba ance of
i4 50 o pa v $6 a mon h Ca
992 533
02 c

he
ya d 54 nches w de as ow as
$ 95 pe ya d ve ve s as ow
as SJ 45
mpo ed ve ve s
$9 95 We a so have ny on
he cu on
co on
p n s
v ny s and r emnan s by he
ya do by the p ece Pome oy
Rec ove y
622 Eas
Man
Po me oy Phone 992 554
20 26 c

FOAM o
you o d couch and
cha r cus h ons as ow as
S 0 95 U pho s e y books on y
soc
4 nc h cove ed foam
mat esses to standa d s ze
bed
S29 95
Pome oy
Recovery
622 E
Ma n
Pome oy PhOne 992 755a
20 26tc
-~----

-------

STARCRAFT 974 T 11 e sand
Fa d Down s Spec a Ch sf
mas p ces CAMP CONLEY
STARCRA F T SALES RT 62
N of Po n P easan
Beh nd
Red Ca pe
nn 675 5384
29 ~tc

---------------Auto sa es

972 GRAND To no Sport V 8
IIV omaf c
PS
PB
mag
whee s new res ve y good
cond on See Roger Roush o
phone 247 355
973
SE REORado
com
b na on w h 8 ack bu
n
ake ove paymen s of $1 55
per man hi:&gt; payS. 0 50 Ca
992 5]3
0 21 fc
~-

•

DOWNTOWN
BELPRE
OHIO

- -----

I

NOV SPEC
$ 12SOPerm For
Req Ha r $8 50

-----------992 7474
Johnson Masonry
&amp; ! Remodeling}
992 7608

MOB LE hom e epa
E ec
't ca p umb ng and hea ng
Phone 992 5858
7 5 fc

1 Rt

'llrqll B. Ttaford . 'Sr.

Real Estate For Sale

And 4 bed ooms

ba h

ga age and a
stock
nc uded n the sa e Sma
own locat on $25 000 00 o et s

Love at f st s ght s a con
ld ifi on tha saves a ot oft me
money AND t wil be

LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT
WHEN YOU NSPECT ONE
OF THESE HOMES
Just off Rl 33
A NEW
HOME and
ACRES 3
ave y bedrooms
da ub e
closets Modern colored bath
w th shower Mom the k t
chen has 29 ft cab nets
ange and Ref and a arge
d n ng a ea Laundry room
Ca rpet ng
2 car garage
25x3 0
Ba n 20x 42
New
fe n ces Made ust fa you
and the tam ly Dad $22 500

LOOK OAD
A NEW
HOME FOR YOU AND THE
FAMILY FOR XMAS
TUPPERS
PLAINS
AFTER thew fe chooses th e
co l or carpe t ng that she
wants you can move r ght n
c losets
3 bedrooms W
Modern colo ed bath W
sho1e
K tchen has ots ot
cab nets and d n ng area
Laundry room A I electr c
ACRE
eve
ground
A
garage and Custom bu t
$ 8 900

SYRACUSE OWNER HAS
BEEN TRANSFERRED This home ust over 2 years
o d Hardwood floo s car
pet ng
drape s
Lovely
k t chen w th ange lots of
cab nets too Laundry room
Modern c;;.olored bath w th
shower 3 n ce bedrooms
Ca port You can move now
- spend Xmas n your own
home $2 000

LET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY
HENRY E CLELAND
YOUR
FRJ.ENDLY BROKER
992 2259
If no answer 992 2568

No 1 M dd eport

Anthony Russell Owner

2

ta k

of the

fC

SE W N G MACH N ES Repa
se v ce a makes 992 2284
The Fab c Shop Porn e oy
Au hor zed S nge Sa es and
Se v ce We Sha pen Sc sso s
3 29

fu n tu e nc ud ng s ave and
efr gerator 2 bed ooms bath
ca po
R ve r
at
On y

One ac e 2
bed ooms F A furnace T P
wate J ust $4 000 00
2 APARTMENTS
Rent one
I ve n the o he Co ne at n
OUT

Phone
0
949

s 3 sao 00 or what wou d
you g ve'
LARGE HOME AND RENTAL

town

OEAO S OCK - W
re move
a a easonab e cha rae Ca
2&lt;15 55 4
8 23 90f c

- In M ddl epo ton good st eet
Q-le ac e of n ce lay ng and

Ask ng $ 7 500 00
PRIVACY

In town but ave
one ac re Has 2 bed oom house
w h gas F A fu nace N ce
shade t ees Only $ 1 500 00

OOZI:::R and ba ck hoe wo k
ponds and sep c anks d
ch ng serv ce
op so I f I
d t
mestone
B&amp;K
Escava ng Phone 992 5367 o
992 3861
c

Sta f ght on

h s great buy 2 bed cams
bath n ce k tchen and po ch
n Pomeroy On y $15 000 00

WE
HAVE
OVER
40
PROPERTIES FOR YOU TO
SEE 3 ASSOC ATES N TWO
COUNTIES WHO HAVE JUST
CO MPLETED
ANOTHER
REAL ESTATE COURSE AT
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
llfi.FOfW
GORDON B T! fl. I OIHI

P &amp; J Hea ng &amp; Coo l ng Gas o
Fue 0
we have many
fu nace pars and plumb ng
pa s o 10 p c above cos
215 N Second M dd epo
992 3509
03130 c
ELNA and Wh te Sew ng
Mach nes
Se rv ce on a
makes Reasonabfe
a es
The Sew ng Cen e
M d
dleport Oh o

HflENL

SEPT C
TANKS
AROB C
SEWAGE
S YSTEM S
CLEANED
REPA REO
MILLER
S AN TAT ON
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
3035

A&lt;. '&gt; OC II\ l l ',

992-3325 or
991-3b 15

A LOVELY new Home
m e RON SHEPARD F oo
Wa
from Me gs H gh Schoo
Remade ng Ceram c
e
Three bedrooms two baths
baths Box 28D Rut and 742
fu
basemen w th wo car
3664
garage La ge lot $27 soo
6 26 f c
A so
recen y remode ed
three bedroom o der home n WILL
m
ees and
Pome oy
Pr ce of s 5 000
shrubbery
A so clean ou
nc udes turn ture Owne w
basements at cs e c Ca I
he p f nance ether of these
949 3221 or 742 4441
wo proper es Ca
593 5667
2 30 c
A hens
2 2 30tc

5 ROOM house

w

h ut ty room
and bath at 50 x 00 fenced
n ya d
Phone 99 2 5770
oca ed on Cherry Street n
Syrac use
12 2 c

L:A:ftG"E
conven en
bu d ng
o s at Rock Spr ngs Area
restr cted tor houses on y
Tuppers Pia ns &amp; Ches er
Water ava abe Ca I or see
B
w tte 992 2789

&lt;

2BEDR00 Mhou se Jyea so d
c a pe ng b g k tchen w h
o s of ca b ne s
ac e of
g ound Rae ne Oh o Cal
949 4998
9 2 fC
SMALL house
camp ete y
fu n shed
Bachelo s h de
away Phone 992 5786
1 27 7 c

---------

~----~

3 BEDROOMS
basemen
carpeted v ng room and ha I
w th lot SO K 200 1662 L ncoln
H 11
our ng day
can be
c ontacted at the General
James Gav n fl ant
Con
struct on Department f om 8
t I .t 367 733 after 6 p m and
weekends phone 1 (304) 768
7452 Robe t H Potter
1 30 Jtp

NO

Addoson Ohon

--------'

For lnformallon
Call Shorley Adkms

1

367-7250
Ph
6

To Our Cu stomer s
Pea se
ca
o
ap
po n ment o ge you Bee o
P g p ocesse d
Effect ve h s yea a dee
p o ces sed
S20 oo Plu s Por k
AI dee h a e to be sk nned
a nd agged befo e we can
accep
Call These
Number s Please
0 ck Vaughan
Dale L ttle
992 JJ7 4
992 3884

SEVERAL mob
e

c

a

Ca

e

homes
Oh o
4 60 5 o

Ke

ng t or a mob e hom e
o o &lt;1 q1.1a t v. n ob e ho m e"
We have both a
~..uoH

OUAIL CREEh
MOBILE
COMMUNITY
&amp;SALES

READY M X
CONCRETE
de ve ed r gh
o you
pro ec Fas t and easy F ee
es rna es Phone 992 3284
Goeg en Ready M ~&lt; Go
M dd epo t Oh o
6 30 c

RANCHO COMPANY
THE HOME FOLKS
0 A C R E S oba c o ba~e
house Reasonab e

SEPT C TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE ra es Ph. ~6
4 82 Ga po s John Rus~e
Owne and Ope a o

8

OUTCO ME
s
ncom e
w en vou buy
h s daub e
b ck. on Se ond A enu e

A N D 8. LOTS R
R o G a de
FREE M APS

!:::IL t t:;t=' NG

Hoe

00

Ga

"
0

B

ROOM ho use
ga age
2
ou b dgs 3 ac es g ound on
ohn on s R dge 4 6 956
?80 3

ga age
446

"

280 6
BEDROOM
o1-1d
men
--~fu n s hed
U
es pa d
Loca ed n R o G an de S. 00
H OU SE 2
ace s
3 0
'
pe man h 245 55 35
Schoo
bed oom!:.
c: Y
282 3
R
4
d s
c
2 rr es ou
446
2)23
y No
2 BE DROOM
247
ch d
'
46
96 9
282 3

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

STEREO

2 BEDROOM '2 x 60 mob
home fa
en l 36

92.1 FM

WMPO

e

M ddleport Pomer :!Y~-"

280 6
~-"~.= -o7-"----- - --

EFF C ENCY Ap
month Fu n shed a
pa d 446 44 6 af e
WELL kep c a pet s sho w he
resu s of regu a B ve Lus e
spo c ean ng Ren e eel c
shampooe s Cen a Su pp

y

Co

'rhos

284 6

YOU SAVED and saved to
wa,tl o wal ca rpe
Keep
neW w th B ue Lus e Ren
e ec c shampooe S G C
Murphy Co
284 6

WANTED FARMS

•'
'•
I

Have buvers for farm s
vacant land vacat on spot s
Write to Harnet K rk
patnck 924 Year I ng Road
Columbus
Oh o or call
collect even ngs
861 8356
M rkpatnck ~ Rea It)'

Country Home On
Edge of
Bob Evans Farms
HE RE 5 AN OLDE R HOME
T H A T S MU CH BE T TE R
T HAN AVERAGE
T 5 A 2
STOR Y 3 B EDROO M H OME
W TH fl. OOE RN K TCHEN
MODE'RN HE A T N G A ND
N CE WA L L TO W ALL
CARPE T N G
EX
CE LLENT
OCA T ON
$
900 00

Trad1t onal
Amerocan Warmth
YOUR
VE RY
OWN
4
BEDROOM
CAPE
CO D
H OME
BRAND NEW A S
A MATTER OF FACT
F
YOU BUY NOW YOU CAN
DO
ALL
YOUR
DE CO RAT N G
N CLU DE$
A DEN
FA M L Y ROOM
K TCHEN COMB NAT ON
W TH F REPLACE 2 CAR
GA R AGE O N A
ll,RGE
COU NT R Y
OT
N C TY
SC HOOL D S R CT

RUSSELL
WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066
NOT CE
To a
ea o s and p eop e
wan ng a new b ck enee
a
h
ype
hou se
The
p ope y
o
C aude and
Madge Shahan jus o R 160
s no
and oc ked as wa s
epa ed We have he map
and pap e s r om he h ghway
d
son o p o e
See h s beau tu a
ee
c
home 4 a ge r ooms and
ha wa
a pe ed Fam y
oom s 5 x2 6
Shown b y appo n men
w h
Wood Age n y

24AC RES bockhouseonWh e
Ho ow Rd
Toba cc o base
ba n dO x 00 p ce $ 2 000

5

ACRES 3 bed oom 2 ba h
doub e w de 3 m es
om
own on M
C eel&lt;. R oa d
$20 000 Pp 44 6 0 26

26

PUBLIC
NOTICE
We sell anyth ng for
anybod)'
B fng your
terns to Knotts Com
mun ty Auct on Barn
Corner Th1rd &amp; 01 ve
For appomtment call
256 6967 affer 5 p m
Sale every Saturday
even ng at 7 0 Clock

TH S OLDER H OM E HA
BEE N
PART ALLY
REMODELED
NCLUDE S
5
BEDROOMS
BATH
S HOP BLDG
CEL AR
ETC N CE LOCAT ON ON
AL CE RD

Seller Needs
A Buyer
VE RY N CE MODERN 3
BE DROOM HOME W T H
FA M LY
ROOM
N I CE
K T C HEN
FOR MAL
D N NG
LAR GE
CA R
PETED LV NG ROOM
AND
LARGE
LA ND
SC APED
01'
PR CES
W Ll BE H G HER TH S
SPR NG SO BUY NOW

Brand New
Brock Ranch
Lovely LocatiOn
UST AC RO SS THE 0 D
M LL STR EAM YOU Ll
F ND
TH S
NEW
3
BEDROO M BR CK W TH A
BEA UT F U K TCH EN
BATH S D N NG ROOM O N
A LARGE FLA T LOT ALL
ROO M S ARE
ARGE AND
ALL ARE CAR PETED
BU
OER HA S TAKEN
SP EC AL
CARE
N
DECORAT NG AND OF
F ER S A L TTLE MORE
FO R
THE
MONEY
PR CEO LO W TH RT E S
C T Y SC HOO
D STR CT
Ga

a Co s Largest Rea
Estate Sales Agency
Off ce 446 3643
Even ngs Ca
E M
ke W seman
446 3796
E N W seman 446 4500
Bud McGhee 446 1255

N TOWN a Fou h A e and
0 ve S ee
We have ou
oom
b ck
ca mp e e y
emode ed n ew oof ce ng
pane ng k t chen l u nace
and ho wa e hea e
P ce
$ 0 500
OFF CE 446 066
EVEN NGS
Russell Wood 446 46 8
Ron Canaday 446 3636
John R cha ds 446 0280

Neal Realty

J4 NE L AVENUE
Th s h ee
bed oom house needs o s o
wo k bu
he o
self s
wo h the p ce of ss 280
95 LOCUST ST REET Good
ame hom e w h
h ee
bed ooms bath na tu a gas
fu na ce
pa a
basemen
good ocat on c ose o schoo s
and down own

1 28 CHATHA M AVENUE
N ce hree b edroom home
na u a gas hea ba h a ge
v ng
oom w h
ove y
pe
oca ed on wo enced
n lo s
N ce p ace fo
c h d en

INVESTMENT
4 DWEL L NG S on on e o
A
have new a um num s d ng
Annua
enta 52 520 A a e
ren 1d 1 n e es ed n a good
nves men ca
oday
LOOK NG for a svmme home
We have a new 2 BR w th
ba h sept c tank we wa er
and
oca ed on Raccoon
C eek
Ca
today
or an
appo n ment o see h s one
Ott ce Phone 446 1694
Even ngs
Cha les M Naa 446 1546
J M chae Neal 446 1503
Sam Neal446 7358

40 ACRES
4 m es west on R
lA
Good r sh ng and cam
p ng Phone 419 288 3 28
282 6

620 CHATHAM AVENUE
Good wo bedroom hom e w h
ba h n ce deep Of f OOm fa a
ga den Good hom ~ fa $9 500
ROUTE 588
Th s love y ranch
home s ess han wo yea s
od
has hree bed oom s
one and one half ba hs bu
n rang e and oven
fu y
ca pe ed one ca ga age w h
c one ete dr ve Th s has a
a ge o and s n he c y
schoo d s c
E UREKA
Th S p a per y haS
a 972 Freed om 2x60 mob le
home w h a
he fu n ture a
two oom cab n and
ac e
o
Th s s a good buy fo
$8 500
~

EUREKA Good f ou bedroom
home
ba h
a ge meta
ga age Loca ed on a a
and pr ced a $ 4 ooo
fou
bath
other
p ace
4 000

2 ACRES - N ce bu d ng s te
on R 775
3 ACRES
N ce bud ng ste
n R 775
~a

WOODLAND DR
6 ms a
new ca pe o e H w
s
Cen
a
ga age
and
wo kshop 28 x 28
P ce
$78 500
CRO USE BECK RD
T
Leve 6 ms
ba ns 2
ysodHWtoos
Ao
Th s sa good house and cou d
no be bu
fa
he ask ng
p ce oday $32 ooo
y
ms
e ec
s a

9M DOWN R V f;:R
2so y
b c k. base a(ll a pe
v
m 5 1&lt; 36 w t h F P A so
has2ndhousew h4 ms 2A
R ve r v ew o $45 000
EVERGREEN
ba h u hea
wn$4000

ACRES
f you wan apace
n he coun ry ake a ook a
h s Good h ee bed oom w h
new bat
ga age and p en y
of bU IU ngs
Loca ed on
Georges Creek Road

UTILIZE NOW our honest
p ofess ona se v ce L s w th
us at no cos o you f we se
your prope y ou tee s only
F VE PERCENT No sa e no
fee We wo k for you 10 f nd
th e buye s
Even ngs ca 1446 4244
Steven Betz: 446 9583
John M Fu ler 446 4327
2 NEW 3 BR b ck home s now
ea dy fo sa e e ec hea
ce n a a
a ge o s w h
ga den
n
ow
h
es
Loc a ed on Rt 35 n Su nk s1
V age Can be seen w ee k
days a o 5 See o
a Her
m&lt;in Slo; aggs d46 2572

-----~---- ":.. 12

THE LEAOER SINCE 1900 N
$ERVING HiE NATIONS
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS

EVA N ::. HE G HT S - $ 9 500 d BRs and a f u basemen
OJWHTERO
$28500
B and new
o a
e ec
c
beau y
B DWELL ...- S23 000
mode n
3 BR anch w h basemen
STA TE ROUTE 60 $39 000
L ke n ew
b ck w h
basemen nes ed on 5 A o
o ng and
FA RF ELO CENTENARY
RD
$23906- y od o a
e ec c an ch
VNTO N
Remade ed 8
ba semen

$9500
home w h

m

on

A

WOOD L A ND DR
6
m
ameaysod H W f r s
eQu pped k ch en A bar ga n
a S20 000

EUREKA $25000
N cey
emode ed 4 BR home w h a
ve r v ew

STATE ROUTE 588
$29 500
mode n ranch w h
u
basemen and over
ac e
POMEROY
$34000
2
apa men s and 2 bus ness
en fa s
FARMS
NE AR TYCOON L AKE $28 000
45 A W h a 4 x
mob e home

$13 000

NEAR LECTA
ba ga n p ced

FARFELD
SU BD V
B t k 3 bd m
has cen a
ca pe
qua y
beau y
oca on and oca ed on a
a g;e o
$3 1 500

NEAR V N TON
$15 000
A mas l y woods

NVE ST MENT
4 m house
w h base
moder n
and 3
m
ap
u n shed $ 8 000
5 m house pus
5 pc
etu n

OOA$0000

s

A

a

0 000
Any hr 446 1998

and

NE AR ADO SON
A coun y wa e

15

RACCOON TWP
$ S 500
30
A grass and 7 pc f nan c ng
ava ab e
NEAR EN0 - $20000
w h house and barn

50 A

OVERLOOK NG OH 0 RVER
38 A wooded homes tes
3 GRADE ADA RY FARMS
P ces s a
a $.:10 000
ROY SP RES R 0
$20 000
84 A mos y fa m and
L TTLE
$6 700

BULLSK N RD
42 A wood and

DEVELOPMENT
CORP.

·

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE

Bu ld ng
Slles
Available Kongsberry
Homes bu It to Itt any
spec 1f 1cat 1on s
All
Underground Ut I t es
·;Provoded

__________ _
For lnformatoon
Or Appoontrnent

PHONE
367-7250
Addoson 0

- ---~----

•

SEPT C TANKS
C eaned and ns a ed
R usse s P umb ng 446 4782
29

SERVICE

G L L E N W A-T_·c:E.~R:-:S~-~S. ~
E PT C
TANK
CL EANING
AND
R EPA R
ALSO
HOUSE
W RECKNG Ph 4469 499
E s ab shed n 940
69

"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY '

JIMME SAYRE

- ------------,---

ALBERT EHMAN
Wa er De \le y Se 11 ce
Pa o S a R
Ga po s
Ph 379 2133
243 f

AUCTIONEER

Real Estate For Sale
O T S app
Geo ges C
om R
984 0 446

ox
11
e on
eek Rd 2 n es
S2 500 ea P ti 446
6 5
25

NEW 4 bed oom b ck ca
pe ed 2 ba t hs 2 a ga age
Lake D
R o Gr ande pr ce
m d
h
es
p
n
ere s Ph 24 5 5439
20

Virg1l B.

TEAFORD

Sr.

f&lt;1 ·,1l F'&gt;l,lte Brokc·r
'1

17 S~&gt;cond Ave

EASTERN AVE
3 Bedroom home 6 oom
a ge
v ng room
gas
forced a
u na ce copper
p umb ng
ha dwood
floo s t s n ce See t
must se

8

----

NEW house on Rl
60 near
Porter
2 baths
double
garage n ce o
Phone 446
3563 af er 5 p m

284

Lo s to sa e
6 M LE S up R 7 Coun ry A
Esta es
A
u
es un
derground
n ce s ze
o s
P ced
gh to se
446 171
affe 5 &lt;146 2573
280 6

Plumbtng &amp; Heattng
GENE PLANTS&amp; SON
?LUM BING - Hea ng
A
Cond I on ng 300 Four h Ave
Ph 446 637
481
CARTER S PLUMB NG
A ND HEAT NG
Co Fou h &amp; P ne
Phone 446 3888 or 446 4477
165 f
RUSSELLS
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
Gall pol s 446 4782
297 f

---

DEW TT S PLUMB NG
AND HEAT NG
Rou e 60 a Everg een
Phone 446 2735
87

-----,-----,---STA NDARD

Pum b ng&amp;Hea ng
2 4Th dAve 446 3782

87

1~::..::::::::::.;;.;;,;;,;;;;,;;,;;,;;,;;;,;;.;;,;;_,1

PUBLIC SALE

---.-A
-Nc
K-s=~T~.=~
e c:E:·,~.
=-~
.~v-~
lc' e
FREEesmaes lab
y n
surance P un ng tr mm ng
and ca v y wo k
ee and
s t ump em ova Ph .:ld6 d953
73 f
MOTOR ST MUTUAL
NSURANCE
THE bes n su an c e a the bes
pr ce
Fo
au o
home
bus ness and
e Ray Hawk
agen
446 2300 54 41h Ave

50

Spa c ious
room s
3
bed ooms
2 2
baths
fam ly
oom w th wood
burn ng f ep ace fa ced
a r e ectr c hea
&amp; a r
cond t on ng
a ge and
sca ped ot con stru ct ed of
on y the f nest mater als
Wh t e br ck Co on a Pr ce
reduced for qu ck sale Cal
for appo ntment

TO OL
s ha pen ng
saws
sc sso s shea s home and
ga den oo s Sharp Sho p
A ey ear
47 Second
216 tf

------

M &amp; S CONSTRUCTION
E XCAVA T O N and gene a
emode ng
Ba c khoe doze
and
ench ng Se p c ank s
and faa e s A
phases of
p umb ng
w ng new n
s a a on Ca I 388 9986

-

-c;'T,'~=;::o~=--::--,-.::_
"' If
a
ypes of

CAB NET Shop
wood work 10
Ph 4.:16 7745

Court S reef
187 f

THOMAS Fan Exterm na ng
Co Te m te and Pest contra
Wheelersburg Oh o
233 tf

1------------------PROTECT
w th T E
Cal Ron
afte 3 p

your mob e hon:i"e
DOWN ANCHORS
Sk dmore 446 756

m

22 1 If
WA SHER
d yer
and
ref ge a or
epa
No
cha ge fo se v ce ca
we
ca n f x your app ance Ph
675 424 2
254
M&amp;M

ROOFING &amp; Spou ng Sh ngle
&amp; Bu ldup oof Hot &amp; co d
process Home mprovemen
n
gene a
Fo r
free
es m a es
phone
Rober
Meade 388 8 4
B dwe
Oh o
230 f

IN SYRACUSE
4 Bedroom
approx
5
acres 7 room hou se w th
arge modern k tchen with
bu It n b rch cab nets
bath w th s howe
gas
fu nace 24 x24 base ment
paneled
Lots of shade
tree s
ga den spa ce
A
stea l at s 8 900

BULAVILLE RD
3 Bedroom br ck
p us

4

m

acre

f om

les

Gall po s

SO OF EUREKA
acre fa m 4 bed oom
home tobacco base barn
See t

29

IN GALLIPOLIS
2 B e d oom
th oughout
d t oned
Ia
60 x 3 A real

ca rp e t ng
a r
c.on
ge
ot
n ce home

MADfSC.N AVE
3 Bed oom h ome n ce lot
dO x 3
S5 500 00

Ask ng

o nly

VACANT LAND
47 Ac es 1 m e off Rt 35 3
m les west of hasp tal
8 Acres pus on Rl 60 nea
Po ter
5 acres near V n on has
we I sept c tank ba n
4 443 acres R o Cen e point
Road nea R o G ande

THURSDAY, DEC. 6
11:00 A.M.

WHOLESALE

MOBILE
HOMES

10x39 2 Bdnn
$3495
lflx512 Bdnn
$39!15
10X56 3 Bdnn
$4195
12x412 Bdnn
$389S
12x512Bdnn
$4295
12x56 3 Bdnn
$4695
12x613Bdnn
$5495
All homes are total
electroc
completely
furmshed quarter mch
panelong
storm
wo ndows
&amp;
door
Delovered &amp; set up
free

TRI COUNTY
MOBILE
HOMES
2013 Eastern Ave
Gallopolts Ohoo
446 0175

PUBLIC AUCTION

LOCATED: FROM GALLIPOLIS TAKE 141
TO GAGE TURN LEFT ON PATRIOT-GAGE
RD. WATOi FOR SIGNS.
Ant que sec et~ y te e phon e Hardw ck gas stove couch
and cha s beds d essers end tables stand tables
d nette set 2 ron kettles w th stands stone 1ars &amp; ugs
wheat c rad es marble top wash stand oak cup boa d
other hou seho d t ems P oneer cha n saw 2 cut off saws
fuel o I stove Wa m Morning coal stove a r camp esso
hand saws dog hous.e g.ra n dr II
2 Cows &amp; 2 calves 300 ba es m Ked ha y
00 bu corn
e lectr c rnoto s other tool s &amp; m sc tem s tQO numerous to
menton

STANLEY R EVANS OWNER
Terms Cash
Tommy Joe Stewart Auct onee
Gallipolis Oh o-Phone 446 3941

Lunch Served

located at 211 Maple Ave n Oak H I Oh1o Or State
Route 279 West Watch for PubliC Auct on S1gns
SATURDAY DECEMBER 8th 1973

Startrng at o JO A M
Cons st ng n pa t of
Kenmore E ectr c Automat c
Washe {new) Ph leo Combo
Refi gerator Freeze
( new) Vesta Gas Kitchen Range 2 p ece L v ng Room
Su e (n ce) 3 p ece Bed oom Su te n ce) New Hasp tal
Bed Mattress Sold Ro und Oak S ng e Pedestal D n ng
Room Table w th Leaves and 6 match ng Cha rs

SEVERAL NICE PIECES OF OLD OAK FURNITURE
Bureau Rock ng Gha rs Dressers Wa sh Stand w th
Towel Bar Ch fforobe La ge Hang ng Beveled M rror
W cker Sw ng Iron Beds {compete) Vacuum Cleaners
9x 2 Wool Rugs Seth Thomas Fancy Mantel Clock
Electr cal Appliances
0 shes and G lasswa e
Oak
Upholstered Arm Cha w th C aw Feet and one CHURCH
Pew from old M E Chu ch Ant ques and Co l ector s
It ems Hand Too s Stone Churn Other M sce l aneous
Item s Too Numerous to Menton A I n Good Cond t on

TERMS CASH
lunch Wol l Be Served
MR P P POTTS OWNER
Daryl Alban

Oak H 11 Oh o

f

J&amp;WMOUNT
CLEANIN_G SERVICE
GENERAL hoUse c ea n ng We
supp y a
he c ean ng sup
p es 388 88 5 a e 6 p m c al
388 8865 Week y or month y
c ean ng by appo ntmenl
9 f

- --------

Bus ness space 3 52 sq
ft up o 800 ft f on age
pu s 6 oom f a me house 3
bed oo m s
a ge
v ng
oom &amp; k tchen gas arced
a r fu nace
a
c on
d t on ng
a ge bus ness
space n a n vp &amp; com ng
a ea Idea for f o a shop
and othe
bu s ness ven
lure s
Show n
by
ap
po n m en on y

MEADOWGREEN
ESTATE

SE CO ND mor gage money
ava ab e
Ca
manaQe
E nes Cover a Cred hr ft
of A me ca Phone 446 4 3
284 30

STEWART E ec ca
,Repa
house w
ng
e ec c heat ng Phone 4A6
456

AUCTION

RT 3S WEST

L STING S NEEDED
RANNY BLACKBURN
BRANCH MANAGER

TARA

"'

$ 6 500
35 A
25

P
n &amp; son Wale
De
Sevce
You
pa O{lage
w
be
ap
p ec a m::1 Ph .446 0463

26

WALLPAPER NG and pa
ng Phon e 446 9865 o 379

28

$4 000

D

t

TERM TE PEST CONTROL
FREE nspec on Ca 446 3245
Me
o De Opera o t)y
Ex erm na T m te Se 11 ce
10 Be mong D

G,llltpo ll s. Oluo

GARF E LD AVE
5
m
a me w h base
A um
s d ng s o m d s and w n
new gas u
P ce
Nea
S 500

ROOF NG and gut e
wok
A so bu
up t10 ng 388 8507

2 f

6

GA LL POL S SC H OOL D ST
$10 500
30 A mos y
bo om and
NEAR Ga a
A
og cab n

epa r ng
Lane Danes 159 B oad w ay
M dd epo
Phone 992 2081
217 30

-~-----

PH 4463444

MILLS V L L AGE
S2B 500 ov e y
s o y w h 1u
ba se men
WOODSM LL RD - $4 00
5 ms basemen and 3 ac es
of p nes

COU NT RY A R ES TATE S
1
y o d b c k and a um 3 b g
bd m s
ba hs a ca pe
hug e 2 ca ga
and a a ge
a o $36 900

75

HOLLEY 8 OS
COn!&gt; uct on
bu doz ng back hoe wo k
d &lt;:h ng unde rol!lds bo ng
Phone 245 50 8 o 245 5006
8

NEXT TO C TV - $3 500
Love Sp
f oyer w th ce n a

5 ms and

CHATHAM AVE
5 ms and
u n u e
ba h w h new
u n u e
S 7 500 w hou
$ 6 000

RT

P ANO tun ng and

KEMPER HOLLOW RD
4
BR br c k
anch w h tu
basemen and 7 A of and

KANAUGA
S 6 000
5 rm
home and a co nme c a s ze
garage

ST R T 35
6 m f a me r anch
s pa
w h base H W
ca pe F P 2 a gar w h
P ce
e ec d
La ge o
S28 500

C HE SH RE a e pad
$8 000

ROOF NG AND SPOUT N G
Sh ng es s d ng and bu dup
ho roofs F ee Es ma es 76
yea s e•per ence
ames
Ma cum V n on Oh o 388
9940

Ph 446 0008

5 ms and
s o m d s and

6M DOWN RT
ba h 2 ou b dgs
eve o S 2 800

Serv1ces Offered

o

'1 a a ached

SM TH RD

TH RD AVENUE
Good
daub e hou se A ooms and
ba h down 3 ooms and ba h
up ga age and an ce lo ThS
sa good nvestmen p ope y
o good home n own

ACRES
G ood
bedl'oom home n ce
c y wa er ga age and
bu d ng s Th s sa n ce
and war h he pr ce of S

br ck a e ec
ga
S34 000

SeiVltes Offered

no

World 's Larg&lt;!St

a

&lt;.:k
A

M
NORTH o HM C
New
6 ms &amp;
ba hs a tarpe

ST

Osca Ba d
Doug Wethe ho t
Brokers
Off ce 446 3434
PROPERTY N TOWN
6 CEDAR STREET
Good
h ee bed oom b ck home
one u
ba h and wo ha
ba hs good k che n w h
ange d shwashe
f am y
oom and a to v ca ga age
Good am y h ome w h a
a ge of

1

b

ST RT
4
2 A w h 2
hou ses and a ba n s 6 DOD

OHIO RIVER
Realty

8 ACRES 4 room frame home
w h some tu n tu e
wo
s ma au bu d ngs new pond
Pr e $ o ooo

CALL 446·1171 OR 446-4305

2 BEDRO OM 0 X 48 mob e
home AdU s on y $ 5 pe
month p us u
t es Locat ed
n R o G ande Oh o Con a c
Rm 105 R o G an de Co ege
28d 3

-------

NEED
A
MODERN
VEABLE HOME
TH S
ONE HAS 4 BEDROOM S
FA M
Y ROOM
0 N NG
ROOM
AND
FU L
BASEME N T
T S
A
M ODER N
HOME
A ND
OW N ER W L HELP YOU
F N ANCE
T
CA L
US
FOR
FULL
OETA LS
WE L
SH O W YOU T H S
H O ME ANYT ME
T S
VACA N A ND READY T O
MOVE N 0

MT Z ON Rd 6 m
ca pe
F P and
$) 500

BU SH MORTON RO
o d arne b c k
m 5
ba hs al
a pe a
pa o
cove ed
Th s
beau y On y 526 900

$12 000 Barga on
Large Home
3 Acres

Owner Woll Help
Fmance Very Very
Anxoous To Sell

En10Y the com1ng Hoildays on thos beaut1ful
spht level house 3 moles from town on Marhn
Dr nea r hosp1tal It features three bedrooms
one and half ceramoc tile baths wall to wall
carpetmg large kotchen and donong area woth
bu1lt 10 oven range top dosposal doshwasher
serv ng bar fonoshed recreahon room on
basement w1th !.replace forced a.r gas fur
n~ce central aor cond1tooner large two car
garage w1th electroc door opener fully tan
scaped c1ty school d1stroct and ready to move
on

MOB LE Home
C ose o own
0599 even ngs

•37 ,900

150 ACRE FARM
Located on L ncoln P ke n Harr son Twp
about 12 m from town 30 to 40 A t liabl e
balance m pasture and woods 1600 lb tobacco
base older 4 bedroom home DownstairS has
been remodeled Large barn Onwer anx1ous
to sell Pr ced at $27 000 00

MODERN home on 3 a es o
and ha dw ood
oo s a
c ond on ng bu
n mode n
k chen ca po
and sma
au b v d ng p ced
o se l
S2 000

LILI6·0001

a

SLE EP N G ROOMS
week y
a es Pa k Ce n a Ho e
306

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

I

BROCHUR E S

""'"' •I " '

"

INFORMATION ABOUT

419 Phoenix.. Arttona 1$012

an d n ea

36

k can be
on y a
me due o ness n
Phone
fa
ap
742 3237
25 f c

Dostnbutrng Corp Hot Food Division 3443 North Central

own $26 500

lHE

on

oct~

uc

For' further Information or a personal nterv ew send
Name Address &amp; Phone number to North Amer~can

Porn e oy

N EAR HO SP A
L ove y on e
oo p an
a ge e e o

n

C
TA NKS c c aned
Mod e n San a o n 992 3954 o
992 7349

INVOLVED

RE 5

up

COAC HMAN T a
d
e
Moto
H omes
5 h Whee
T u k Cam pe s App e C y
Au o Sa es R 35 N
a kson
Oh o Pho ne 286 5 00
0

SEP

SELLING

A~

NE W homes ou o

NEW mob e home e)( e en
oca on adu s on y Phone
d46 0338
?25

FOR FREE es m a es on
a um num s d ng 5 arm
Doo. s and w ndows
Ca
po s M a quees and Ra I ng
Phone
Cha es
L s e
sy acuse Oh o Ca
Jacob
Sa es Rep esen a ve V V
Johnson and Son nc
6 22 H e

od

9 ACRES de e opmen and R
4
and G aham S hoo Rd

Rodne y Co
Rd
R odM Y Oh o
Hou 9 a
o9p m
M ond ay th u Salu d y
P t 245 93 4 245 502 1

CASH INVESTMENT REQUIRED
PART TIME
PLAN ONE
$2 285 00
PLAN TWO
S3 861 00
PLAN THREE
S7 719 00
FULL tiME
PLAN FOUR
$127900
PLAN FIVE
S18 998 00
PLAN SIX
S36 798 00

te

e

pe m o
93

bus ness can be started part hme - no need to qu1t vour
tob Can be expanded full ttme w th company hnanc1ng
We need people we can depend on Our products are
nat onally famous Hot Food Items m-ade by Hemz We
have over 36 var1et es of Hot Soups and Hot Entrees such
as Beef Stew Ch1cken &amp; Dumplings Ch , &amp; Beans and on
and on We have all of America s favor tes All these
dellc1ous products are sold from the latest n automatiC
vendmg equ pmen1 Your route wtll be establ shed and
mstalled b)' us Your age IS not a factor If you quahf)'
Perfect for a n ce couple to operate as a fam1ly bus ness

Avenue Su

How a dB annon B ok e
01 446 2674
Luc e 8 an non
E e 446 226 o 446 2674
NEW BR CK
A
e ec_ c 4 BR 2 ba hs
ca pe
h oughou
beau f u
ea n k chen to ma d n ng
oom
aund y
oom
auoma
doo s o w o c a
ga age
one e e d ve and
s ee
nea hosp a
A LL BR CK
WE HAVE 2 new 3 BR 2 bah
and
ba h
a e ec c
c a pe ed
one and 2 ca
ga age homes One new 3 8 R
am e home
a ee
c
A N X OUS OWNER
+ EMPTY HOME
EQUALS OPPORTUN TY
TH s gas hea ed anch s Y e
ho c s n he c y a ge ea
n k
hen
aun d y
R
spac ous am y
oom w h
ep a e ga age s o a ge
and
a ge w e
es ab shed
awn $2.:1 000
N.EAR NEW
3YEA R So d
JBRb cka nd
I ame
ha m ng k
hen
u y equ pped w h bu
ns
sh ag c a pe ng ga ag e
e e o 85 x 00 A s o age
bu d ng S22 000
A TWOFER
LOCAT O N
down own
pe e
o a on o a b us ness
o he s oo and ca mp e e
ng qua e on he sec ond
Fu
ba semen w h 2 nea
new gas u aces pa k ng o
L ST NGS WANTED
WE
NE:ED homes
n a
o a ons a ms and ac eage
We need YOUR
s ng now

Pay Only One
Ut1htv

Unless you mean bus ness
We are now cons1dermg
qua 1f ed appl 'cants n your area lo become a workmg
part of our Nat onal Hot Food D1str but or System You
are not applymg for a 10b You are applymg for a very
t1 gh prof t busmess of vour own NO EXPERIENCE

-

H Locu stS

1% Baths

DON'T READ THIS AD

NECESSARY

REALTY

THE SHOP

AUTOMOB LE nsvran ce been
c ance ed?
Los
you
opera or s cense Ca
992
428
6 S fc
•

INCOME - 2 bed ooms n ce
v ng Ia ge d n ng w h oak
oo s
ba h
c ty wa e

FURNISHED

Localed Co Road 5 Bradbu Y

oade
and backhoe wo k
sep t c
anks nsta ed dump
ucks
and o boys for h e w I hau
f 1 d
op so I
m es one
and grave Ca Bob o Roger
eff e s day phone 992 7089
n gh phone 99 2 3525 o 99 2
5232

Broker
110 Mech;m1c Stree1
Pomeroy, OhiO H769

WAY

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

C BRADFORD Auc onee
Com pie e Serv ce
Phone 949 382
Ra c neOho
C f B adtord

TEAFORD

Mo'

!

Russell's Auto Trim

t/}llfUillOIL

2 Bedroom
Townhouses

·--------------------~

Real Estate For Sale

$5 000 00
NEARLY NEW

"'ason W Va

1 -Custom Seat Covers -Custom Tnm Work I
1
-Auto Carpeting - Vmyl Tops
1
II PHONE 992-2839
II

FREE EST

BUSINESS

All work guaranteed

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

$0 50000

2 2 3 p TWO bed oom hou se a
473
Sycamo r e S ee
n M d
AT
LAST
APT
S ZE
d epa
va can Ca I 992 53 0
REFR GERATORS $d5 up
21 26 c
Othe
models f om S 9 95
_ ,- --- ---c--------Exec en
on
gas
a ng es
el ec
c ~-----------~- 1
anges new used u n tu e 7'
Many g f
ems oys 8 ack
apes
NEW
Sl 99
KUHL S BARGA N CEN
TER
R
7
at c a u on
gh
TUPPER S PLA N S
open eve y day ex c ep
Monday

M N

REV VA a Ches e Church o
God N o embe 25 o De c 2
30 p m Spec a s ng ng ea h
e ven ng Evange s Rev
Ches e
E s ep
om
Ch
co he Oh o Eve ybody
we orne

MILLER
HOMES

6 ROOM S and bah
n own
$1 000 Ca
992 3975 o 992
25
9 28 fc

CAR PENTER wo k masonry
wo k gene a emode ng by
ho u o con ac
Phon e 99 3
35

MODERN
up s a s
mon h
eQU ed
9A9 38 1

GUARANTEE
BEST SERVICE
IN
OHIO VALLEY

CO

Exec lent oca t on n c ty schoo l d s ct and on Ra ccoon
Ck Just a sho 1 dr ve f om town Ve y n ce 30 ac esc ean
fa to ol ng a m and w t h 5 A co n base 1 35 b
obacco base Larg e o d ba n and several other au
bu d ngs Som e good t mber The house has 1ust been
camp et e y r emade ed and ncludes 4 bedroom s fam y
oom n ce k. tchen new roof mode n cen t a l heat

Real Estate For Sale

Jgwnhouse
Apartments

Area s Most
Reasonable Pr ces

r---------------------•

Johnoes Beauty
Salon

I YEAR

224c

12 6 c

GARAGE Sa e a
Ma n
S ee
Mas y w n e
o h ng s zes
o 5 Wednesday Thu sday
F r day Novembe 28 29 30
II 28 3

c

9 0 H~AVY du y
uck $ 500
96 5 Mus ang 4 speed 5550
960 n erna ona
8
Van
$250 sma
a camp esso
$85 ab e saw $50 40 asso ed
bo es very o d S25 pe a
2
nch Zen h po abe
$30
Phone 992 2388

26 6 c

w

8

NEEDED UNTIL
JANUARY 1974

TARA

Pamllng A Spectalty

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

--~

ROUTE 7 Sou h a b ck 8bg
m s 2 ba hs a ca pe 2
F Ps sw mm ng poo
ve
v ew and A o Luxu y p us

92 ACRE FARM

SE LF SERV CE
AM seek ng ope a o s o
s c v ce gas s a on n Po n
P easan W Va Mob e home
o ve n
en
ee u
es
ee Gua an eed om m ss on
on g s sa e F o
a 30.:1 6 .'i 6 6
2 95

28

L

Tel 446 1998

AGENCY

baths No mo e us II ke lh s one ex sf o

2 BEDROOM
2 x 50 mob e
home n Add son Phone 446
0294

Really 32 State St

WISEMAN

For Rent

L ncoln H II Pom eroy 0
Bu1lfto Your Specs
Delivered to Job S1te

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

Help Wanted

on

Pome oy

Ph 992 5271

On Mos t Amer can Ca s

--- - - - --

26

2174

-Gene's
Body Shop

PRE FABRICATED

Wheel Alignment

Auto Sales

DISPERSAL
SALE

KO SC OT KO SMET CS &amp; W GS
Spec a s each mon t h We w
ne o
g ad y show you ou
Kosme s n he p vacy o
you r hom e a
you
con
ven en ce R em em be Ch s
na s s no a aw ay so phon e
He e
Jane 8 own 99 2 5 3

Ph~92

Pets For Sale

Mob1le Homes For Sale

Notice

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.~

FURNITURE

PHONE

STROUT
REALTY

MASSIE

THE

\ggoess 1v e tndn1dual wolhn g to 1101k to takt
O\ er established mul!t hne msurancc agency
SIIH) to stut nul to 1nnn g mclud ed Ca ll
Galhpohs I II ~•07 collect f01 appomlmcnt

From the laroest
Bul dozer Rad ato
to
~ma es Hea e Lo e
Nathan B ggs
Rad a tor Spec al s1

Real Estate For Scile

Real E~tate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

•

WANTED

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

and

CAS H pad to a
make s and
modes o mob le homes
Phone a ea ode 6 4 423 953

3

.....
I

FO R RENTorsae
homes
Ha
sonv

8 TRACK -.; e eo conso e due o
damage n sh pmen W se
fo
sm a
ba a nee o S99
o
paymen s
of
S6 99
pe mon h Ca 992 533

Help Wanted

c

-----

ch1ldren Syracuse

MIDDLEpORT Santa " 11
make hLS tradit onal v s t to the
Amencan Leg10n Hall Ill
Middleport Chnstmas Eve 5 to
7 p m to d1str bute treats to
children of the community
Members of the Feeney
Bennett Post 128 meeting at the
hall Wednesday mght arranged
to sack the candy treats at the
hall at 6 p m Dec 21 The post
" ll also assiSt fmanc1ally w1th
the frwt trays to be prepared
for t1 e shut ns charter
members and go ld star
mothers of both the aux1hary
lllld the post
A ch1cken dmner preceded

P

2 23

3 BEDROOM house w h bah
ec ea on oom u
tv room
and
wash oom
ca po
ca pe ng n v ng oom a so
e ec r c ange 6 a L n co n
He gh s Ava abe Dec
ca 949 1M
27 6 c

65 c

9

A uxiltary meets

112

c

phone

COR NER cupboa ds
wa
LOTS o ch ysanthemums o
970 GTO Ri!m A
V P S PB
cupbo a ds
hes s o d guns
sa e 1 e d g own We on Y
es
ow
a
cond
ne w
any co nd on
A so b ue
ha&gt;~e one o o - ye ow
0
m eage Phone 304 992 2993
deco a ed s oneware W e
bunch es o $5 we ha e so me
28 6 p
P 0 Box 44 Mar nsbu g
ou
n u b oom same us
Oh o 43935 o c a
484 4440
bu dd ng Reyno ds F owe r
a e 7 p m
Shop Mason w Va Ca 7 3
8 8 90 c
9 26 c
5 '
2 x 44TRA LER 970 mode l 2
WA NT ED
o
au c on
bed oom Phone 42 58 8
househo d goods ~ T oo s m os
1 30 4
pho s e Y
dny h ng o va ue W I buy or WE HAVE a you
needs
Bu
ap
d
en
m
se on com m s s on W
ha u
am b c oam g ue z ppe s
Ca
99 2 335 4 o r 99 2 2 92
Hay man s
25 fc
ack ng s p
sp ng s and
ps
ch p boa d
bu on
w ne se w ng h ead
egs
O LD
u n u e oak
ab es
upho s e y boo k s da c on
c oc ks ce bo;.;es b ass bed s
webb ng sp ng w n e a k s
dshes
o
com p ee
we
co d
o on sw ve
househo ds
W te M
D
bases an d oam oam oam
M e R 4 Pome oy Oh o
28 New Homes To Be
Pome oy Re cove Y 622 Eas
ca 992 62
Man s ee Pome oy Phone
5 3 c
SOLD
99 2 7 55d
20 26 c
At

and

The lam ly of Mrs Eula
Wolfe enjoyed ThanksgLVLng
Day dmner at the ca bm of 1om
Wolfe Horse Cave Rd A p g
was roasted by J1m Lew1s and
Tom Wolfe m the backyard and
was served along w th turkey
and all the tnmmmgs to Mr
and Mrs Thomas Wolfe Mrs
Eula Wolfe and Aaron Mr and
Mrs Jack Ord Mr and Mrs
Jack Snodgrass and M chael
Mr and Mrs James Lew s ar d
children James Jr Barbara
Conme and fr end Mr and
Mrs
Ronme Stem and
daughter Wendy Mr and Mrs
Carroll Norr sand Debb e Mr
and Mrs Austin Wolfe and
children Syracuse Mr and
Mrs Richard Hopk ns of
Akron Mr and Mrs Jerry
Coughlm and ch1ldren Knsten
and Matthew of West M1lton
Mr and Mrs V ctor Wolfe
V1ck1 and Kevm Jean and
fr1end Mr and Mrs W lham
Hoback and son John B1ll
Kenny Theiss
Thanksg vmg weekend
guests of Mr and Mrs Gerald
Hayman and Ke1th were Mr
and Mrs Don Hayman and
fam11) of Laurel Md Mr and
Mrs Ted Hayman and fam ly
of Westerville Mrs Phyllis
Young children Steve and
Kenny of Mason Mrs Rober t
Hart children Beth Br ce
Beverly of Rae ne Bruce Hart
of Columbus Allen Cun
n ngham Syracuse Mr and
Mrs Gene Jewell and ch ldren
Letart W Va Rt Lorna Bell
Mrs Mmdy DaviS son E n
Elmer Van Meter Roc k
Sprmgs and R chard Da s
Hoi day weekend guests of
Mr and Mrs Leste Rous
were Mr and Mrs Do R ffle
a d children of I ucasv lle 0
Mr and Mrs J m Connally and

0

Wanted To Buy

'

Thanksg1v ng v s t ng hLS
cous ns m Portsmouth
V sttors m the home of Mr
and Mrs Hobart Damels for

News, Events

HOLSTE N he te S soon
f eshen Phone 696 00

-

Endu o

For Rent or Sale

we w

Mr and Mrs Marvm spent

Apple Grove

6 76 p

c

Oh o and he also hunted deer
Mrs Hathe Saxton s
spendmg the w nter w th her
daughter Mr and Mrs Alfred
Folden of Flonda
Miss Barbara W ll ams of
Portsmouth and Mr and Mrs
Roger Boster of Galhpol s were
guests of Mr and Mrs Chester
Boster for Thanksgl\ ng
Mr and Mrs J ohnny Kuhn
viSited Sunday evenmg w th
her parents Mr and Mrs
Arthur Rose of Waterloo

Mrs Harold Damels and
children of Marengo and Mr
and Mrs Gerald Dan els and
children of Columbus Mr and
Mrs Dav1d Pelfrey and
children of Galha Mrs Allee
Sprouse of Wh tev lie W Va

ce
fl98

'} ') J

For Sale

360 YAMAHA
992 300

u ds w h
REDUCE e•cess
F u de•
Lose we gh w h
De• A D e
capsu e~
a
Ne son D uQs
30 2 c

THE TELEPHONE NO 992 6'26.5
s no onge a wo 1&lt;. n9
numbe
M s van Ca man
Hou e 'J Pome oy 0~ o

spent several da~ s n northern

ThanksgLvmg were Mr

For Sale

Mot1ce

Thank~

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Ame ia Muhlback- Guardtan
- AUCTIONEERsKenneth Swa f1

Gall polrs Ohoo
Not Respons ble for Ace dents

�35 - The SWI~Y Times -Sentinel, Sllllday; Dec. 2., 1973

SMITH NELSON ·MOTORS, INC • .

OUR YEAR END
CLEARANCE
. .'.

73 CADILLAC

COMES EARLY

CQUPE DeVILLE

1973 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

Light grey fin ish, matching leather interior,
full power equipment , AM- FM sfereo, Climate
Control air. steel radial tires , new Cad illac
trade .

"

500 E. MAIN

Retail Li s t

~S034 .

Catalina 4 dr . sed . One owner.

73 Cadillac

1971 DODGE POLARA ............... ~1695

SEDAN DeVILLE

Newport Royal , 4 dr . like new.

4 Door , V 8, automat ic, power steering &amp; brakes ,
factory a i r , r adio, good 1st line t ires , clean interior,
gr eet'! 1in is h .

Dark brown, beige vinyl top. beige leather
interior, tilt &amp; tel. wheel, AM-FM rad io, full
power equip ., Climate Control air.

Newyorker. 2 dr . H. T. Extra
clean.

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU ............11695

2 Dr .. 6 cyl. , stand. Gas saver.

&lt;1 door gold fin ish. s potless clean int erior , V-8 engin e
au toma t ic, power st ee r ing, rad io. A honey ot a buy .

$6500
72 Cadillac

Skylark 2 dr. H.T., 2 bbl . carb.
Gas saver.

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY 111 ......... 11295

LeMans 2 dr . sed., another gas

4-door, V-8 automati c, power steering , radio, good tires,
bl ue fin ish , spotless interior .

saver .

Monte Carlo, 350 engine, like

1970 DODGE POLARA .. Reduced 11095

SEDAN DeVILLE

new.

&lt;~ - door

factory air, automati c transmi ssion, power
steering &amp; brak es, good white waH tires, white fini sh ,
vinyl root, r a dio, heavy duly su spen sion.

'

Dark green, black vinyl top, gree.r interior. tilt
&amp; tel. wheel. AM- FM radio. full power equip.,
Climate Control air.

'.
•

Cat. Brougham , air. one owner.

Cat. 2 dr. H.T. One of the nicest
70's anywhere.

1968 CHEV. BELAIR .................. $895

$5500
KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

4- Door V -8, automatic, power steer ing, factory air , radio.
good t ir es. rea l Clean i nter io r , sharp blue f ini sh . Reta il

$990 .

.

1968 CHEVELLE 4 DR................1595

which are ·really economy cars.

Pomeroy

1968 CHEVROLET PICKUP

•

Open Eves. Til 6- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

8' Flee l si de, '?cat 1 owher Irk..,
cab, automat1c trans ., rarl io.

"You'l l Like Our Qual i ty Way of Doing Business'

NOT BECAUSE THE JOB WAS DONE WRONG
•

1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER .. .$2895

.
' ·:.

4· wheet dr ive, V-8, locking front hubs, automat ic
t~ansm is~ion . power steering &amp; bra k es, radio , good
l1res. veh1de of many uses. cus t om tr im , White top
over .
A

Give A Present The
WHOLE FAMILY Can Enjoy

...

302

I·
I,

li

tires; cornering Its., tinted g la ss, radio R.
speaker, viny l top. (three more 1973 priced
similarly) (Four 1974's).

·. :1:;1973 FORD

:::~~~~7

··· !:

I

$3626

Now

Gran Torino 2 dr . Hardtop (sticker $4301.07$
cond ., 351 engine, vinyl top. P. S., P. B., AT.
'!,: . Air
Radio , tinted gla ss, wheel cove·r s. ( Two more
::

·

Caprice 4 DOOr. Caprice Estate Wagon,
· Impala 4 Door, Impala Cqe.

l

For Sale

IJ

L- -.....,_-- -·-n-•-•_,_,____,

"We ru~rv simote business" ·

. f FOUR 1974 FORD PICKUPS

/

PRICED FOR
QUICK SALEI
I Gels Savers)

~ · 1969

" Your Chev;r Dealer"

· MANY MORE

0P!l"-, .~~ Till 8 Pomeroy

. 992·2126

Fuel saving hours: 8: 00AM to 6 : 00 PM all
days except Saturday 5:00 PM, closed Sunday.

.f•

Keith Goble Ford. Inc.

HIDDEN TREASURES
GIFTSHOPPE
Hand crafted Raggedy Ann
&amp; Andy dolls in 3 sizes.
Necklaces, pins, earrings,

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

tt 1972
Ford Gran Torino 4dr., P.S., AT. 302 v.'s. $2395
1970 Ford Maverick 6 cyl.
·
.
$1295
·~

candles, &amp; other novelties
which would make nice X·

For Sale

For Sale

992·2196

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Greenberg squeezes for big six

Wanted To Do

.,

'·

'·

·:r:

,,.

+

s•

":'~~

Pass
·'
OfX'ning lead - U·

:By

Oswald &amp; 'James Jacoby

:' The Tulsa regionals at ·
.. (racled s4ch a large out-of·
· own atte ndance that Byi"On
reenberg was the only local
layer to win an event. He
.4Vas on the winning Swiss

earn, playing with Gerald
1chaud of Wichita.
Byron 's four notrump over·
al 1 of East's four-spade
reempt was not Blackwood.

t was just a demand to
artner to bid a suit.

Gerry bid five clubs and·
ft er Byron went to . five
ear·t$ Gerry raised him to
ix. It was obvious to Gerry
hat

B~· ron

was showi ng a

ery strong hand.
, Byron won the spade lead
and ~layetl out •ace, kltlg and

dtamond lricks a nd his
cont ract.
three

o:e:1 :~ ''*Mtt1
The b_
i dd ing has b~n :
W est
North
East

Pass
Pa s.s
P ass
Pass

It
3..
3•

4•

6+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pa ss
Pass

South

1•
3+
3N.T.
5+
?

Y ou. South, hold :

• K J 6 5 •K 8 3 2

+ K 10 4 olo6 3

What do you do now')

A - Pa ss happily.

'V ou

asked
your part ner to bid six a nd h e

ha s obliged .
"
TODAY'S QUESTION

.

You have the sam e hand excep't
t~a t you hold the ace, not the
kmg . of hcarls. The bidding proceed s Lhc same way up to three
spades. Wha t du :t,ou c:J now?
.
Aqswer IJonday

Notice

RED'S Barber Shop and Used
Book ~ tore , open 6 days , 10
a .m . til 7 p .m .
272 -tf

.
bE~AD STOCK
WI LL remove at a rea~o na"bl e
charge . Call 245 -55 14.

3 BLACK AV
Icy minia t ur e
Poodles , 7 . ·eks old , ready
for ChriStmas . 1 male toy
poodle 3 years old, AKC. All
very n"ice . 446 -4170.
284 ·3

--------------..,..-A .K .C. Saint Bernard pupp ies .

mas gifts. Discontinued·
Artex gilts to point. On Rt.
554 in Bidwell. Martha E.
Rose. Ph. 388-41888, 1 til 6

afternoons.
A .K .C. r egistered Chinese Pug
pups . Wormed , loveable,
adorab l e and very gentle for
children and adults . Will ho ld
tor Christ mas . Phone 675 1595.
283-8

283 - 3' ------ --~----

REMODELING
SALE

NEW
USED

FUR N ITUR_E .

854 Second , 446-9523
Will be r eady for Chfistina s.
Cenetenary Woods Ken ne l.
-~~-------- --. --- ~
1967 PONTIA C, power .steering,
446-0231 .
power brakes , factor y air, tilt
4
1
WE BUY gold coins and silver
28 wheel,
must
self.
No
dollar-s, also old coins
----------~- -reasonable offer refused . 446·
Tawney·~ Jewele r s .
· ' 13 WHITE Leghorn hens and
9537.
22 4·1f
pullets . Ca ll -446 -4523 .
278-6
2S4 -3
- - - - - -- - - - - - - - -

r--____:._ __ _ ----------BOARD YOU~ PETS
Wanted To Buy
AT K&amp;P KENNELS
Exercise
runs,
warm
sleepi ng quarter s, cOn !inuous fre sh water &amp; food,
car p et e d beds, love ~hd
understanding, AKC puppies
and stud se rvice,. Call JSS8274 for inspectiort a~d
reservations .
I

'ol.o

toy

tra1ns,

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

par l s

'973 HONDA S, L. 70 . Excellent
condi tion . ·Ph . A-46 -4536
4536,
.
or

anyth;ng con necled w;th loy

-----------

284-3

tra ins. Call 446 -4843 after 4: 30
1970 MOBILE home, J2-;_- 60 2
p.m . and weekends .
bedroom , 2 baths , carpeted,
216-tf
fuel tank with oil
un derpinning, Very attr~ctlve
USED Spinet Pia no . Phone 6Hi Pr ice 55,200 . Call 446·2.615 . '
2248.
284 -tf
282 -3
25" ZENITH T .V ., black- and
white . Phone .446 -1286 .
A BABY bed .· tall 367 -7177 .
28&gt;4 -3
2S4· 3

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

,,
-------------I
I

o.m.

.Sellice 'Til 12

For Sale

For Sale

tor

PIPE S, P fpes
Pipes , GBD ,
, Cheratan, BBB . Jobey , Hilson
and . others . Tawney's P ipe and
Trophy House, 422 Second
Ave.
·
'
199 -tf

LUM~

NE:v• and useo 1nstruments ,
Brun lcardi House of Music , 5~
Stat e Sfreet. Phone 446 -0687 .
190 -lf

Coal , Jaymar Coa t Co ,,
Mergs and Gall ia line , St. Rt. 7
at Cheshire , 7 a.m . to 6: 30
p .m . 5 day s a week . 992 -5693 .
271 -tf

-----

- -----------'--Tri -State Mobile

--- ----~

;)ale

67 VALIANT 0 cyl. AUtO . Radio
and W LW tires . 446 -1615 after
6, 446-· 12414 .
260 -tf

ADvt:t&lt; 11::111'.1 ·..,. 11oJVell res , book
mat ches , pens and penc ils
im pr i nted wifh your ad .
Sim mons Pig . &amp; Off ic e
Supplies .
BUY direct from owr\er , Jo ts inthe ci ty or CO!,mty or acreage .
;;-;~:;-;;-;;-;::-:-,-,-::-:...,....""T~244 . tf
BACK H OE and Loader, ' Ca5e
Look at the rest th en buy the
530 diesel with extension
be st . RQber t A . Queen , 1026
boom . 245 -5535.
Second Ave . 44"6 .0168 .
·
282 -3
210-lf

Home Sales
P~ . 446 -7572
12 X 50 1966 liberty
12 x 50 1963 Lakewood
12 x 52 1970 F lee twood
a x 35 1957 Marlette
10 x 54 195~ E tcar
10 x 50 1965 Star All E lectric
-~---- ------'------a x 45 1954 Vagabond
1966 FORD Galaxie , 4 speed .
10 x 45 1960 Magno l ia
Call 446 -0876 .
8 x 27 1953 Trotwood
282 -3
248 -tf

----....!....--.--'------

1F YOU are b ui lding a n~w
home o r remo d eling , see OS .
We are bu;(ders , o; str;bu lor
for Hotpoint Appliances,
,
Allison E lectri c.
l
154 -ff
.
'
-------------JUS T rece ived a housefu l of
used furniture . Everything
you might want. Come first ,
NO HUNTIN G, no tr-espassing
get the beSL New fur·n iture
signs. Signs of all kinds .'
specia l . Early American 3 pc .
Simmqns Ptg . and Office
living room. suite, $299 .95 . Ph .
Euipment.
446 -926 1.
206 -tf
273 -tf

1967 CHEVELLE Su per Spo rt .
Excellent c ondition . 446 -00JS .
280 -6

GOOD . CLEA N LUMP and
st9 k ~ r coa l . C,:~rl Winters_. Rj9
Grande . Phone 245-5115 .
S-tf .

By Ed Malek·
Attorney at Law
1227 South H igh Street
Co lumbus, Ohio .A3206
Nov . 4, 11 , 18, 25, Dec . 2. 9

FOR SALE

388·8512 .

KE NW ORT H V . l.T . 370
Cummi ns. low m.lteage. fullv
equipped . 529,500 . · .446-2562 . ·
2SJ .J
I..I EW : Serta
Bemco mat tress and box springs . Large
se lect ion in stock firm
mattresses starting at $39 .00 .
955 SeCOnd Avr!nue '
446·1171
116-tf

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

I

'

""""""
on·

'

.

_,

.&gt;

0

0

_..,_, @@I~;

Many Others
50x12
UPTO
70x14

..."

.._

,_
1
[!]
•

""'"''""
"""
,, '

'

....

"' i.

d

•8495

•

71 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX 2 DR.

*3295

71. DODGE MONACO 4 DR. HT

•2995

7l DODGE MONACO 4 DR. SEDAN

•2895

1974 CHRYSLER OR
PLYMOUTH FURY

71 POLARA 9 PASS. WAGON

*2795

71 POLARA 2 DR. H.T.
.71 ~l.KSWAGON 411 4 DR. SEDAN

*2795

IN STOCKI

•2595

1974 DUSTERS
P!us Tax
Type 2, 3 &amp; 4
Slightly higher

71 PLYMOUTli SATEWTE 4 DR.

•2195

•2750

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth

Includes:
Parts &amp; Labor: New spark plugs, new
points, adjust timing, dwell, carburetor, valves, &amp; check compression.

For Sale

TYPEWRITERS, portable and DACHS H UN D puppies, small,
off ice mode ls, new ijnd used,
standard, AKC reg ., red .
f i les , desks, chairs ,. si gns ,
Phone 446 -4999 .
bookmatches, pen , pen ci ls ,
237 -tf
adv .
novelt ies,
bumpe r
st ickers, pr inting . Ph . 446VACUUM
CLEANERS
1397 . Simmons Ptg .
Electro
Hygiene
New
277 -tf
Demonstrators
has
all
c leani ng attachments p l us fhe
1965 P l YM.!JUTH wagon , $275 :
n_ew
Electro
Suds
for
1965 Capr i n• Chevy $500 ; l96S
sham pooing ca rp et . $27 . 50
Plymouth Fury $550 . 446 0952
cash price or terms available .
alter 5 p .m .
Phone 446 -2460:
277 -tf
278-6

OIL &amp;LUBE SERVICE
Plus Tax

Change Oil Clean oil strainer
Lube front suspension
Check &amp; fill battery · correct tire
pressure - fill windsheld washer .
check transmission • .Lube door hinges
- Lube door striker plates - Lube hood
&amp; trunk latch · Lube heater cables.

---,--------

.
·SIAMESE Kit t ens : 20 inch WE CARRY
complete line of
Sp ider b i ke ·we st Po i nl. Good
Projection bulbs. Tawney
condl t1on . 245 -5689 .
Stud io, 424 sec ond Ave .
280-6
224 -tf
~

1973 ZIG -ZAG sew i ng machine.
This machine d·a rns. em brol'ders ; overcasts
an d
monograms 811 Without at ·. ta chments . Pay balan ce Of
. S4l .SO or pay $6 per month .
Call ,.46-0255 .
·
'269-tf .
1973 SiEREO -RADIO co m ·
bination with S-track bu i lt -ln.
Take over payments of $7 .55
per month or pay $101.50 . Call"
446 ·0255.
_269 -tf

"

.

•

DELIVERED
AND SET' UP

t

I

f

'

ATTENTION VETERANS - Gl Loans available, no down
payment with approved credit .
We Service What

SEE
OUR
MARKED DOWN
SPE(:IALS
SAVE
BIG
DOLLARS.

•

!

'•
I

'
•
I •
I

Open Dally 8 to 6, IClosed Sundays) . Open Anytime by
Appointment. Contact Thompson or Tom Lavender . ·

•

2 Dr. hardtop, radio, auto. trans., P. steering,
P . brakes, fac . air con d., green metallic finish
with matching interior . VInyl roof, w-s-w tires,
spare tire never down, looks &amp; runs like new ..

.. f"'"'"
~-

·~

! .'• .

1970 MOBILE
bedroom , 2
fuel tank
derpinning
55 ,200 . Call

home, 12 x 60 , 2
baths , carpeted ,
1Wifh · oiL un very attract i ve .
446 -2615 .-

__________ ___

278 -6

_,

••

•3495

~:;n.--

WOOD MOTOR SALES

.'·'
'

==G=AL:L:IPO:L:IS,:OH:IO= ·~

S U N D A Y C R O- S - S W O R D PUZZLE:=E:AS:TE:R:NA:VE:
.

SEE THE ALL NEW

SUNDAY , DECEMBER 2, 1973

"!;'~

..

.·.•-.,..
' j :''

DON WAnS

t:-- W1ne ct rin k
6J- Symbol fo r

ACR OSS

If convenient, please call for an appointment.

V.W.I)

Gallipolis, OhiQ

Ph . 446-9800

l ~ P ac~s

dysp rOS IUm

d"n- d y

65- Ne~ r

6- Ur1r r1 ly ch lidr €11
ll - 13 cgged

18-TLIIned
19.-Pay

65- S;:~ I I ale
67~ An cien t

left

JJ1]1Mffi~® u..t -~t.J .-J ,_.

21 - looked h ;.:edty
23- ll cco m pll.,h rn e n t

I

81-D re ss bord er

Tt'a•l &lt;i nc'l
31-fles h

no t e
8:1 - Co,lS \

32-Go.::~t

85 ---;- lllCI In at 1011 5
87 -- Rem &lt;n nd!! r
90- 1r1 I ervenm 15

8/ - GUi do' s high

n1 t: k nao11e
3~- Ha•1 l ess

36-Gr rl" s

narne

-10- Mou rnf ul

9 ~--l nl et

144- Let\er

9!"1- DomJ in

l ii 6- An i m11l
enclosu res

99"--- NQ! i' ry IHib lfc

43- Rc c:en l
4 5- Style of

rabb r.)
10 \....:.. Evaporil les

p;~int1ng

4Ll -G ypmlOid li sh

103-W&lt;ne CliP
l 04- Prep OSI \10 r1
105 - Adhe s 1ve

47 - Vessel
-18 - Evi'lltli'l l e

! D

Sll bS!.'lnce

49- let in

1 o s ~ Sick

S I - PerP in 111g to

110-Are;,s

e;~r

1 I?- P1g!&gt;
1 13- Ne rvous
)wit ch ing

tlt&gt; not•ng or t

Now """'nil" t.he dn:led le!teril

to form the .urpriat anawer. as

;:;;:::~;=;;;_,.1;;::;-.L-L~:;;~,..:•u:r~re~sted by the above cartoon.

I I ]-[I I X IT'

31 -

53-- A IItl e rc[l

.1!l illl i'l l

114- Span is h
article

~ 4 -G III' s ni ckn~r:ne

55- Poi so n
57- PI &lt;'ce

115-Ct~ udi'll

aJipend&lt;~ge

117- Wnlks
118-Mahs l&lt;1ce
119- Su lemn vow
120-Note o t sc&lt;~ le

U l-Com petitor ,

149-'Sol as
co~;niza nt

37 ....... Divi sion o f

Arabi a
39-Pair
41-Tax
42-C hurch service
Furn ished
with drink

of

! 51- Unlocks

1- P&lt;~rH c ip&lt;~tcd

in

Biblica l weeds

3-Was in debt
4- Marry
5-

A s tate {abbr.)

6- B&lt;~ker's

product

·/-Paper measure
R- DrH1ish la nd
·division
9- Note of scale
! 1]-Sp1ri t ed horses

l1 -S ham5
12-French article
13- Liimb's pen
nam e
14- Eag le's nest

HAROlD GODDARD INC.
HAROLD GODDARD AUCT.

Lay-Away
One For Christmas
Today!

..

Ill-Ma nages
112- M ale deer

126-Changes
128-Smallest
number
130-A rlificial

60- Lane
61 - Man 's

nickn ame
63-Grieve fo r
66-Symbol for t1n
67 - Bon'e
68-Encc 11nle rs
70- Sources of
annoyance
.71 - ln musk. high
72-Venti late

73-Snakes
75-Fo lds.
three

7s--:Ocea n
80- Wde ot Ger;,int

language
13 1- Conse crate
132- M an's n ame ·
135- Great Lake
137 - Again
138-Horse's neck

hair
140-Hasten
14 2- Time gone by

143- Soft food
144- Manusc ripl
(a bbr .)
14 5-Brother of Odin
147-ln definite
article
148- A state (abbr.)

,__ _

Smith Horiela Sales
Upper Rilllr Rd.

GaiHpdlis, 0•.

.".
'' "

_, ..._~~ '" ·
·--·

. ,"1'

Tax workshops
POMEROY ~ Meigs CoWlly
farmers, their wives, and
bookkeepers are invited to
participate in one or both Fann
Income Tax Management
Workshops this coming week in
this area . The first is Tuesday,
Det;. 4, at 7:30p.m. at the TriCoWlty Jolnt Vocational School
at Nelsonville.
The second Is Wedne.&lt;tday,
Det:. 5, from 9:30'a.m" to 3:30
p.m. in the basement of the
new Production
Credit
Assocliitlom building on upper
Rt. 7 (in front of the ~irport) at
Gallipolis.
Subjects to be coveted include tax management,
depreciation, Investment

credit, income averaging, an
uJldate on the Ohio income tu,
and social security and . self·
employment tax. No reaer·
vations are needed.
~

··;.:·
••

···

' ·.:"• '

.~OI.t..nos

DALE R.· SANDERS INC.
600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.
ATHENS, OHIO

,. ·
I

...

, ••

.~.'

YOUR OlALER FOR
•LINCOLN CONTINENTAL eMARK IV
•MERCURY MONTEGO •COMET
eCAPRI •DATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR
L&amp;M Phone 592-4491

AKC reg is tered mini&amp;ture
Schnauzer,
Bas sets
and
CocKer Spaniel Pupp ies. Will
bt rtedy for Christmas K
and P Kennels, 388-8274.

DA TSON Phone 592 -4463

273-tf

. '

;: ···

107-lnired ient
109-Biack and blUe

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

I

,~

of a bone
106-P.iece of ground

124- Ad brn
125- NuiSa n ce

M. atu res

..

.

.........

105- Spongy in terio r

55-

56-Schoot of
painting

-

..

'

102-Precip it ous

118-H url

For Sale

--------------'

..:.

~.

104-Greek le1ter

119- Man' s name
122- Newest

77 - Pr efi~:

~ -.

HUGE STOCK IN OUR SHOWROOM

94-Cians
96- Note of 5cale
98- Every
99-Sa lt of nitric
acid
t OO-Simpler

50- Stripe d animal
54- Annoy

In Bartlett, Ohio on Rt. SOA. (inside).
The owner having gone t.o a rest home
·We will sell remainder of a nice home.

china and glass. A .real nlee sale .

l ov~d

49 -De bate

(slang)
:? -

91- Ma iden
by Zeus

'74 HONDA

pagodas.
116-Arabic letter

59-Deposited
temporarily

DOWN

s.hip
86- Pigpens
58-Scorches
89-Scottlsh C&lt;'PS
90-Negative p re fix
8 3~ J ason ' s

113- Ch ines·e

47-Whip
48-Savio r

148.- Demesne of a
150- ls

Ponder

33- Latvians
.
35- Bill ol a bi rd
36- Ri..,er islands

44 -

lord

mP&lt;'!5d re

WO nli'l l"l

the

27- Crowded
28--'- Despica bl e
pe rsons
30- Season i ng

137-ln &lt;1ddi t1Qn
138-Morning
prayer
139- Te utOn ic dei ty
l ii O- L-is te n 10
141-Pedal d ig i t

:\ ?.....,. Unm arried

I [J

25-Anned ~;on l liCt

.1 34-Gu l l mound
136-Sur,,s up

93-F"ood programs
97-C I1 ar,l:c te r 1n
" O ti1 E!IIo""

~

-11 - Nar rate

JI I

Lunb

142........-D ills ee d
143- f ather or
mo ther

penod

38 - Do wny ducks

r/RF/!11 1
BL/GET
I
V" ~

79--.W,.,s· fond of

3·1-0 b'&gt;t'l Vt' S

·-·
- - ·~ ·· '''"""''
" .~ "' ''

r

IJ

76~ Privlleges

"' ye s "
29-Wi'S 11HS t&lt;1kP.Il
30- 0 W name for

13-MHn s

............
,.,, .

126-

127- Beast
6'J -C h ouge t he
129-C iergyma n
131- Wagers
. ~ccou nt ol
132-'-Wings
71 -SwiSS ri ver
73- Nil !I'Onl'll hym ns 133 ~S pread Jo.r
7•t..:_Le,1k throng h
.ctrymg

sh eeo
2G....;;... Fiower .,
27-SpHI1 •5 h for

'

Greek

15-0id Ja pane-se
nOble
16- Worm
17-P r ef i ~ : down
21- Meet ing
2 2 -foot le\ler
23-Pe rva de

123- Bi shopric
124-Colcl Adriatic
w1 nd
125-C hief god ol
Memp hi s

the At re

2-1-Fem;:~lto

Thursday, Decembe.r 6th
at 10:00 A.M. ·

'

ELECTRA 225

---~----'-------

MOBILE HOMES
58~Co untry ot
FOR SALE
WITH "(
A ~i.l
RECONDITIONED
60-Seed
MOBILE HOMES
(Antw~n Mnndu~·l
co nt&lt;1 i ncro
1953 Pra i rie Schooner s x 36,
ooon NIIILI WIDEST
JumhW~z SICUNK
61 - Urge 011
bdrm .
1953 Peerless 8 x 35, 1 BR
1959 Castle S x 3S 2 BR
Rolli!llhome 10 x 56 3 BR
1965 Buddy 12 X SO 2 BR
1970 West Brook 12 x 50 2 BR
"A'[LTYPES of
b uilding
1969 Richardson 12 x 60 , 2 BR
STARCRAFT'
meterlals , block , br ick, sewer
196S Catalina 1.2 :11. 60, 2 BR
197-4 TRAILERS and told
pipes , windows , ~inlets, etc ..
downs . Special Christmas
1967 PMC 12 x 60, 3 SR
Claude Wlnt!lrS . Rio Grr.nrtP .
1970 Monarch 1'2 x 60, 2 BR
price .
0 . Phone 2.45-5121 after -~ - .
B&amp;SMOBILEHOMES \
CAMP CONLEY
STAR CRAFT SALES
second &amp; Viand St .
. 123 -tf
Rt. 62 N. of Pt. Pleasant
Pt. Pleasant
Behind Rtd Carpet Inn.
I next to He~k's)
New GMC
275 -tf
675·5114
Truck Headquarters
280-tf 19:68. 1h ton G_Mt pickup
1963 2 ton Ford
1967 ~. T . GMC PU
1969 V2 T . GMC PU
1969 Chevrolet 112 ton pickup
1967 1!2 ton Chev .
1969 1!2 T . Ford PU
·
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
1959 Ford Galaxie
1967 1h ton Chevy pickup
1966 1h ton GMC p ickup
1969 '12 T . Chev. P U
1969 'h T. GMC PU
1968. 1!~ T . GMC PU
1967 1!2 T , GMC PU
1967 112 T . GMC PU
1969 '12 Ton GMC PU
1968 1 T . Ford
1!71 :V. _T_. _F~~..:f_U
1967 1h ton GMC pickuP
196S 112 ton GMC p ickup
196• V2 ton Chevy P ic kup
19'68 '2 ton GMC truck
1969 'h ton GMC Pickup
2 nice can bottom rockers. bookcase, claw foot and Lions
1972 V2 ton Ford P icku p
1969 il4 ton GMC Pickup
head rocker, square glass china cabinet , writing desk and
1971 GMC Suburban
bookcase, child's wicker rocker, oak breakfront cupNEW llres Winter tread : Si zes
board , fire fenders . Several old and new dolls, several ol,d
7.7S )( 14, 8.25 X 14, S.55 X 14,
viollns (nice). very nice old satin glass, G .W.W. lamps , J
SlS each . Cash and carrv '-;;:-f-+--11--1!
while supply lasts .
r::
old Shotguns , coal and wood heaters. Roseville, Weller,
SOMMERS
G.M
.
C.
hanging lights, paintings, Currier &amp; lves prints, e~­
TRUCKS. INC.
ceptlonal " New Century" music box with 18112" records,
133 Pine St ~
nice old phonograph, plays cylinder records. nl_ce linens,
446-2532
254 -tf
rugs, Norltake for 12 setting, lndt~n tree china, other

•'•
l'
I

72 BUICK CUSTOM
~--.;·

AUCTION

' """"Ill'"'..

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

For Sale
·For Sale

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

-;

.,

446 -3273

Gallipolis

1639 Eastern Ave.

50 STATE ST.

.
-----------...::--

(.;]

Up .to 12 Year Financing We Sell. ·

•2995

ON ANY

For Sale

•"·ill'·-1
'

""'""01 T "

72 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DR.

TUNE-UP SPECIAL

I ""'.::.-::' I

Private front dining and kitchen, fully carpeted, 3 door
model with house type doors, half jal. U L approved .

....

ALL OF THE FOLLOWING HAVE FACTORY AIR

' ---·--...-..-..-----~--·--._~-..-.--

An Expertly Tuned Car Means:
( 1l Easier cold morning starts
(2) Better gas mileage
(Jl Maximum performance
(4) Longer engine life.

CAR~S­

EXTRA SHARP!

WE OFFER

1

HILLCREST

!._
.........
""
_,
.,..
k-1"~""

Happy New Year

Corbin &amp; ·Snyder I RYKUIII
Furniture

1972 trailer and 2 tots with
se ptic tank an·d water . '
Located in BidwelL Phone

TOTAL ELECTRIC
70x14 - 3 BEDROOM

-ALL CLEAN ONE OWNER

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER .

I

Unscramble the&amp;e four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, lo
form four ordinary words.

For Sale

"This Home Can Be Yours"

Dan Thompson

j

Ed Mal ek
WOLERY AND MALEK

100.ooo B 1 u gd:. fu rnace .
Com p le t e with · duc t work . 3
years Old . 388 -8155 .
281 -5'

73

Joe Johnson

r--~--------____..,_.,_...,

20- Lrt g o

---,....,~----,-------··

parson ,s

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

ALL PRICES reduced · on all
furniture . N ew 5 pC . maple
d inette sets , Reg. 5129.95 now
$124 .95 . New so fa beds, R eg .
$69 .95 now $64 .95. New se t box
sp r ing and mattress $80 se t
now $75 se t .

RICE'S

5

500 E. Main St., POmeroy, Ohio

1965 CORVA IR , 9ood co ndit ion .
Good ti res . $350 . &lt;146-2966 .
283-3
196 1 INTERNAT IONAL schoo l
bus, very good &lt;::on dition. Ca ll
669-3S90, RD 1, Ewington ,
Ohio .
·

7 o.m. "

~t. 'ttl

9

992-2174

capes, aprons, thmwoovers,
plaques,
pocketbooks,

1969 2 DOOR Ford Galaxie $500 . 1970 CORVETTE wh ile with
.47,78 7.3 actuaJ m i tes . Wi l l sell
black convert ible top . $4.50 4
for $700 . Puritan, adjustable
speed . 4110 -1324.
regu l ator tor oxygen tank .
284 -6
Has flow gu age or de livery
~~~~~~~~';H:.~~ guage. $40 . Phone 388 -823 3. 1965 CORVA IR 2 door Monza,
284 -6
bucket sea t s, 3 speed tran smission, new pilint job, oood
1968 FORD Ranch Wagon, $500.
condition , S400. PhOne 245 446 -7725 aft'er 5 p .m .
5873 .
284 -3
284 -J
1973 PONTIAC le-M ans, radio ,
powe r
steer ing ,
power
another trump. East who had
brakes
,
air
condit
ioning
.
pla yed the eight of spades a t.
·• 'I I
10,000 actual miles . Must sell.
NORTH
-..)-' !&gt;
trick one ca refully dtscarded WILL do babysitting i n my
388 -9991 or 367 -7481.
• 7654
'
284 -5
the three and then the nine of hom e. 446 -3991 ..
283 -3
' 94
spad es.
I
+ A73
19 HEAD of horses , registered
West read this piti r of di s~ WANTED to Care tor elder ly
Tennessee Wa l king horseS,
... K 752
person
In
my
home
.
Phone
c~rds as a suit prefe rence
registered Quarter horses,
'" I
WEST
EAST IDl
Grade horses and pon ies . $40
Signal for th e lower SUit, 379 -2243 .
28 1-6
. •::~ · · 2
. KQJl0983
and up . 4Ba-9991 or 367 -7481.
c
lubs.
It was well he did ~-----~------284 -10
.• rr . ' Q6 3
' 2
because a diamond lead POODLE Grooming . Ca l l .446 - -------- ~- ---+ QJ8 52
+ 64
7059 after 3:30p .m . on Week - 1972 CHEVROLET J,\i ton Super
would have give n Byro n days
••. 4 9864
4 QJ 10
.
Ch eyenne -Custom Cab. Has
three
diamond
tricks.
,
280-6
1q.
SOUTH
full width toot box. fa c tory
. Unfortunately it didn't help
air, automat ic tra nsmission .
••
• A
!11m at all. Byron won th e CHILDREN to care for d uring
Also has vinyl bed. cover ..
t
' AK./1087 5
two ex perien ced
E&gt;&lt;'Cellent condition , Ph one·
club with his ace: led a club lthade iesday,
wil l pickup and return
K 109
.446
-0276 .
to dummy's king and ruffed a chi ldr en day or wee'k l y rate.
284 -3
• A3
club. Then he ran off the rest Ph . 446 -Z594 or 446 -2971.
" ·r
Norlh
-Suuth
vulne
rable
'
280 -12 1967 RED Mustang Convertible.
'.
&lt;&gt;f his trumps. The last trump
Phone 4~6 - 4922 or 446 -4412 .
W est North
East
South
lead squeezed West out of CHILD care in my home , days.
284 -3
'
..
4•
4N .T.
prote~tion for his queen-jack
446 -7739 .
• I•
Pass s•
Pass
of d1amonds becau se he
282 -6 COAL and Limestone . Phone
~;:
Pass 6•
Pass Pass
could not throw away the
307-7141.
284·6
nine of ~l ubs and Byron mad e

3rd AVE.

USED FURNITURE
USED dryer , 36" gas range ,
G.E . up r ight f reezer, dinette
set and a c hairs , mattress se t,
modern, l iving room Sui l e,
vinyl recliner .
955 Second A.ve.
446 -1171
Open Fridays 6 tillS
Plenty Free P.irking
276-tf

MA LE Dachshund , f ul l -blooded
but no papers . Would make a
nice . Christmas pre sen t .
Phone 675 -2421.
278 -7

Corino, 2 dr. auto. trans. Sharp. - $1195
,•. 1971 Toyota
Ford Pinto,4cyl ., 4sp.
. $1395

f

Corbin &amp; Snyder

. AKC reg . Austral ian · Terr ier
Pups . Randy Breech , 446 4314 ,
r
27 6-'J.6

WI SELL &amp; SERVICE CHEVROLET CAI!S &amp; TRUCKS.

!: TWO 1973 FORD PICKUPS

'Til

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

s imilarly pr iced) (Two 1974's).

.. t

.

NEW 1973 CHEVROLET
'CLOSE.OUT!

1
I

~t eel

;:

Open Evenings

We Service
What We Sell

_ std . lraJi15. , 4 whee l driv e with locking hubs,

973 FORD LTD $4~~~i.~~~rNow $3967 r--·- ·--··- -----...
4 dr ., air cond . , P.S., P. B., AT.
belted

See Ceward Calvert, Qeggy Story or Bill Nelson

REMEMBER

1968 FORD BRONCO ..........11595
I

I'

WE WANT YOU BACK CAUSE THE JOB WAS DONE RIGHT

cusfom

$1095

See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

.....

v:a eng ine,

Christmas and a

Bill

· VS ·

Richard Tniner , et al ,
Oefendanh
The unknown heirs , devisees ,
legatees. and assigns, it any , of
Tipton Tra i ner , deceased upon
all or whom service of sum mons
canno t be made , because their
respective names and places of
residence are unknown to the
a ffiant
and
cannot
with
reasonable
diligence
be
ascertained. are hereby notified
that on Nov . 2, 1973, Hermit L .
Tra i ner. Lola Tra iner , Jessie
Tra i ner. Luella Jones, Edith
Larsen , Har'old Tra i ner and
Sy lvia Hu mphrey filed a
com plaint as plaintiffs in the
Co urt of Common Pleas of
Gallia Coun t y, Oh io, in Case No .
11 -7l -CL 253, againsJ them and
others as defel'\dants , alleging
that the · p lai nt iffs Herm it L .
Trainer, a brother , Lola
Trainer , a sister ,
Jessie
Trainer , a brother , Luella
Jones , a si ster , Edith Larsen , a
sis ter , Haro ld Trainer , a
brother and Sylv ia Humphrey,
a sis ter . are each, an heir at law
and next of kin of T ipton
Trainer , deceased ; I hat Tipton
Traine r died a res ident of Ga ll ia
Coun ty, Ohio on Apr i l 4, 1973,
leaving a docu ment. purported
to be h is last W i ll and
Testament ; that sai d purported
Last Will and Testame nt was
adm i tted to probate on May 4,
1973 , and defendant Florence
Roush Trainer was appointed
E:~~.ecutrix
ot the .Estate of
T ipton Train,;or, by the Probate
Division of the Gadlia County
Cour t of Common Pleas ; that
said defendant , Flo r ence Roush
Trainer , is a sister -i n -law ot the
decedent, T i pfon Tra i ner and is
a devisee or teoate'e under sa id
purpor t ed
Last
Will
and
Testament ; thai 'de fendants,
Richa rd Tra jner , a brother , and
Elm a Tra i ner , a sister , are each
an he ir -at -law and next of kin of
Tipton Trainer . decea se d ; that
there are no persons , other than
plaintiffs. and
defendants
named there in, who have any
interests in sa i d do c ument. as
the Last W ill and . Tesf!lment of
Tipton Trainer ; that th e pur ported will admitted to probate .
is not the Last Will and
Testament of Ti pton Tra iner ;
t.hat Tipton Tra iner was not of
sound mind , and was . under
undue in f luence on th e date of
e~C.ecution of the purported Last
Will and Testament ; that by
reason of .the invalidity of said
purported wilL the plaintiffs ii!S
he irs at law and next of kin of
said decedent , are entifted t _
o a
port ion of the Estate of Tipton
Tra lner', dec eased ; ther~fore,
ptainllHs d em and I that the
purported
LaSt
Will
and
Testament of Tipton Trainer,
deceased. be determined to be
Invalid, and that they re cover
their cos ts there in .
De f endan ts , first here inabove
·ment ioned are further notified
that they are requ ired 'lO answer
said complaint on or before
J anuary 6, 1974, whi c h includes
28· day s
from
the
last
public!ltlon or ludgment may be
rendered as demanded therein .

Pontiac Venturas, 4 new Buick Apollo and 6 new Opels

Automat i c tran s .• V-8 eng i ne , good tires, blue f in is h ,
rad io .

Cadilla c - Oldsmobile

GMAC Financing Availabl e

992 -5342

s4495
,S1995
S2895
S3295
s·1 795
S2295
$1795
$2995
S2295
S1795

CHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH

ForA Men-y

PUBLIC NOTICE
In the court of Common Pleas ,
Galtia County , Oh io
Ca:ie No. 11·73· Cl 253 Hermit
L Trainer, et at. , Ptaintith

1973 PONTIAC
1972 .PONTIAC
1972 C·HRYSLER
1972 CHRYSLER
J971 GREMLIN
1970 BUICK
1970 PONTIAC
1971 CHEV.
1971 PONTIAC
1970 PONTIAC
.. For Economy Car Buyer we have in stock 6 New
G. P. an·e owner , low mileage .

GALLIPOLIS
•

,. 1,d be i nformed of the tunc lions of your government are
embodied i n p11bl ic notices. In
that self government charges
all ci t i zens to be in to{lned ;
this new!tpaper urges every
ci t i len to read and study thes~
norice:i . we strongly adv ise
those citizens , seeking further
information. to e:~~.ercise their
r ig hl of actess to public
re cords and t?ublic meet ings.

ALL NEW &amp; USED CARS

3995 .

•

Your Right to Know:

YEAR END STOCK
SALE ·

1

Special Clo se Out

POMEROY, OHIO

•. l

4 Door, fa c tory air, lint gla ss. deluxe belt s, si de
pro tec t ive mldgs:, w w . !ires, bumper guards, Std .
V 8 er1gin ~·. power ste&lt;&gt;r ing &amp; di sc brakes,
ilulomat ic. A M rad io &amp; tape, low mileage wifh bal.
of new car warranty . Color white w i th beige vi nyl
top .

$6500

PH. 992-2174

-

VOLKSWAGEN

PUBLIC NOT!qS

.,

_,

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'

.

-••

�35 - The SWI~Y Times -Sentinel, Sllllday; Dec. 2., 1973

SMITH NELSON ·MOTORS, INC • .

OUR YEAR END
CLEARANCE
. .'.

73 CADILLAC

COMES EARLY

CQUPE DeVILLE

1973 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

Light grey fin ish, matching leather interior,
full power equipment , AM- FM sfereo, Climate
Control air. steel radial tires , new Cad illac
trade .

"

500 E. MAIN

Retail Li s t

~S034 .

Catalina 4 dr . sed . One owner.

73 Cadillac

1971 DODGE POLARA ............... ~1695

SEDAN DeVILLE

Newport Royal , 4 dr . like new.

4 Door , V 8, automat ic, power steering &amp; brakes ,
factory a i r , r adio, good 1st line t ires , clean interior,
gr eet'! 1in is h .

Dark brown, beige vinyl top. beige leather
interior, tilt &amp; tel. wheel, AM-FM rad io, full
power equip ., Climate Control air.

Newyorker. 2 dr . H. T. Extra
clean.

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU ............11695

2 Dr .. 6 cyl. , stand. Gas saver.

&lt;1 door gold fin ish. s potless clean int erior , V-8 engin e
au toma t ic, power st ee r ing, rad io. A honey ot a buy .

$6500
72 Cadillac

Skylark 2 dr. H.T., 2 bbl . carb.
Gas saver.

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY 111 ......... 11295

LeMans 2 dr . sed., another gas

4-door, V-8 automati c, power steering , radio, good tires,
bl ue fin ish , spotless interior .

saver .

Monte Carlo, 350 engine, like

1970 DODGE POLARA .. Reduced 11095

SEDAN DeVILLE

new.

&lt;~ - door

factory air, automati c transmi ssion, power
steering &amp; brak es, good white waH tires, white fini sh ,
vinyl root, r a dio, heavy duly su spen sion.

'

Dark green, black vinyl top, gree.r interior. tilt
&amp; tel. wheel. AM- FM radio. full power equip.,
Climate Control air.

'.
•

Cat. Brougham , air. one owner.

Cat. 2 dr. H.T. One of the nicest
70's anywhere.

1968 CHEV. BELAIR .................. $895

$5500
KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

4- Door V -8, automatic, power steer ing, factory air , radio.
good t ir es. rea l Clean i nter io r , sharp blue f ini sh . Reta il

$990 .

.

1968 CHEVELLE 4 DR................1595

which are ·really economy cars.

Pomeroy

1968 CHEVROLET PICKUP

•

Open Eves. Til 6- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

8' Flee l si de, '?cat 1 owher Irk..,
cab, automat1c trans ., rarl io.

"You'l l Like Our Qual i ty Way of Doing Business'

NOT BECAUSE THE JOB WAS DONE WRONG
•

1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER .. .$2895

.
' ·:.

4· wheet dr ive, V-8, locking front hubs, automat ic
t~ansm is~ion . power steering &amp; bra k es, radio , good
l1res. veh1de of many uses. cus t om tr im , White top
over .
A

Give A Present The
WHOLE FAMILY Can Enjoy

...

302

I·
I,

li

tires; cornering Its., tinted g la ss, radio R.
speaker, viny l top. (three more 1973 priced
similarly) (Four 1974's).

·. :1:;1973 FORD

:::~~~~7

··· !:

I

$3626

Now

Gran Torino 2 dr . Hardtop (sticker $4301.07$
cond ., 351 engine, vinyl top. P. S., P. B., AT.
'!,: . Air
Radio , tinted gla ss, wheel cove·r s. ( Two more
::

·

Caprice 4 DOOr. Caprice Estate Wagon,
· Impala 4 Door, Impala Cqe.

l

For Sale

IJ

L- -.....,_-- -·-n-•-•_,_,____,

"We ru~rv simote business" ·

. f FOUR 1974 FORD PICKUPS

/

PRICED FOR
QUICK SALEI
I Gels Savers)

~ · 1969

" Your Chev;r Dealer"

· MANY MORE

0P!l"-, .~~ Till 8 Pomeroy

. 992·2126

Fuel saving hours: 8: 00AM to 6 : 00 PM all
days except Saturday 5:00 PM, closed Sunday.

.f•

Keith Goble Ford. Inc.

HIDDEN TREASURES
GIFTSHOPPE
Hand crafted Raggedy Ann
&amp; Andy dolls in 3 sizes.
Necklaces, pins, earrings,

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

tt 1972
Ford Gran Torino 4dr., P.S., AT. 302 v.'s. $2395
1970 Ford Maverick 6 cyl.
·
.
$1295
·~

candles, &amp; other novelties
which would make nice X·

For Sale

For Sale

992·2196

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Greenberg squeezes for big six

Wanted To Do

.,

'·

'·

·:r:

,,.

+

s•

":'~~

Pass
·'
OfX'ning lead - U·

:By

Oswald &amp; 'James Jacoby

:' The Tulsa regionals at ·
.. (racled s4ch a large out-of·
· own atte ndance that Byi"On
reenberg was the only local
layer to win an event. He
.4Vas on the winning Swiss

earn, playing with Gerald
1chaud of Wichita.
Byron 's four notrump over·
al 1 of East's four-spade
reempt was not Blackwood.

t was just a demand to
artner to bid a suit.

Gerry bid five clubs and·
ft er Byron went to . five
ear·t$ Gerry raised him to
ix. It was obvious to Gerry
hat

B~· ron

was showi ng a

ery strong hand.
, Byron won the spade lead
and ~layetl out •ace, kltlg and

dtamond lricks a nd his
cont ract.
three

o:e:1 :~ ''*Mtt1
The b_
i dd ing has b~n :
W est
North
East

Pass
Pa s.s
P ass
Pass

It
3..
3•

4•

6+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pa ss
Pass

South

1•
3+
3N.T.
5+
?

Y ou. South, hold :

• K J 6 5 •K 8 3 2

+ K 10 4 olo6 3

What do you do now')

A - Pa ss happily.

'V ou

asked
your part ner to bid six a nd h e

ha s obliged .
"
TODAY'S QUESTION

.

You have the sam e hand excep't
t~a t you hold the ace, not the
kmg . of hcarls. The bidding proceed s Lhc same way up to three
spades. Wha t du :t,ou c:J now?
.
Aqswer IJonday

Notice

RED'S Barber Shop and Used
Book ~ tore , open 6 days , 10
a .m . til 7 p .m .
272 -tf

.
bE~AD STOCK
WI LL remove at a rea~o na"bl e
charge . Call 245 -55 14.

3 BLACK AV
Icy minia t ur e
Poodles , 7 . ·eks old , ready
for ChriStmas . 1 male toy
poodle 3 years old, AKC. All
very n"ice . 446 -4170.
284 ·3

--------------..,..-A .K .C. Saint Bernard pupp ies .

mas gifts. Discontinued·
Artex gilts to point. On Rt.
554 in Bidwell. Martha E.
Rose. Ph. 388-41888, 1 til 6

afternoons.
A .K .C. r egistered Chinese Pug
pups . Wormed , loveable,
adorab l e and very gentle for
children and adults . Will ho ld
tor Christ mas . Phone 675 1595.
283-8

283 - 3' ------ --~----

REMODELING
SALE

NEW
USED

FUR N ITUR_E .

854 Second , 446-9523
Will be r eady for Chfistina s.
Cenetenary Woods Ken ne l.
-~~-------- --. --- ~
1967 PONTIA C, power .steering,
446-0231 .
power brakes , factor y air, tilt
4
1
WE BUY gold coins and silver
28 wheel,
must
self.
No
dollar-s, also old coins
----------~- -reasonable offer refused . 446·
Tawney·~ Jewele r s .
· ' 13 WHITE Leghorn hens and
9537.
22 4·1f
pullets . Ca ll -446 -4523 .
278-6
2S4 -3
- - - - - -- - - - - - - - -

r--____:._ __ _ ----------BOARD YOU~ PETS
Wanted To Buy
AT K&amp;P KENNELS
Exercise
runs,
warm
sleepi ng quarter s, cOn !inuous fre sh water &amp; food,
car p et e d beds, love ~hd
understanding, AKC puppies
and stud se rvice,. Call JSS8274 for inspectiort a~d
reservations .
I

'ol.o

toy

tra1ns,

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

par l s

'973 HONDA S, L. 70 . Excellent
condi tion . ·Ph . A-46 -4536
4536,
.
or

anyth;ng con necled w;th loy

-----------

284-3

tra ins. Call 446 -4843 after 4: 30
1970 MOBILE home, J2-;_- 60 2
p.m . and weekends .
bedroom , 2 baths , carpeted,
216-tf
fuel tank with oil
un derpinning, Very attr~ctlve
USED Spinet Pia no . Phone 6Hi Pr ice 55,200 . Call 446·2.615 . '
2248.
284 -tf
282 -3
25" ZENITH T .V ., black- and
white . Phone .446 -1286 .
A BABY bed .· tall 367 -7177 .
28&gt;4 -3
2S4· 3

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

,,
-------------I
I

o.m.

.Sellice 'Til 12

For Sale

For Sale

tor

PIPE S, P fpes
Pipes , GBD ,
, Cheratan, BBB . Jobey , Hilson
and . others . Tawney's P ipe and
Trophy House, 422 Second
Ave.
·
'
199 -tf

LUM~

NE:v• and useo 1nstruments ,
Brun lcardi House of Music , 5~
Stat e Sfreet. Phone 446 -0687 .
190 -lf

Coal , Jaymar Coa t Co ,,
Mergs and Gall ia line , St. Rt. 7
at Cheshire , 7 a.m . to 6: 30
p .m . 5 day s a week . 992 -5693 .
271 -tf

-----

- -----------'--Tri -State Mobile

--- ----~

;)ale

67 VALIANT 0 cyl. AUtO . Radio
and W LW tires . 446 -1615 after
6, 446-· 12414 .
260 -tf

ADvt:t&lt; 11::111'.1 ·..,. 11oJVell res , book
mat ches , pens and penc ils
im pr i nted wifh your ad .
Sim mons Pig . &amp; Off ic e
Supplies .
BUY direct from owr\er , Jo ts inthe ci ty or CO!,mty or acreage .
;;-;~:;-;;-;;-;::-:-,-,-::-:...,....""T~244 . tf
BACK H OE and Loader, ' Ca5e
Look at the rest th en buy the
530 diesel with extension
be st . RQber t A . Queen , 1026
boom . 245 -5535.
Second Ave . 44"6 .0168 .
·
282 -3
210-lf

Home Sales
P~ . 446 -7572
12 X 50 1966 liberty
12 x 50 1963 Lakewood
12 x 52 1970 F lee twood
a x 35 1957 Marlette
10 x 54 195~ E tcar
10 x 50 1965 Star All E lectric
-~---- ------'------a x 45 1954 Vagabond
1966 FORD Galaxie , 4 speed .
10 x 45 1960 Magno l ia
Call 446 -0876 .
8 x 27 1953 Trotwood
282 -3
248 -tf

----....!....--.--'------

1F YOU are b ui lding a n~w
home o r remo d eling , see OS .
We are bu;(ders , o; str;bu lor
for Hotpoint Appliances,
,
Allison E lectri c.
l
154 -ff
.
'
-------------JUS T rece ived a housefu l of
used furniture . Everything
you might want. Come first ,
NO HUNTIN G, no tr-espassing
get the beSL New fur·n iture
signs. Signs of all kinds .'
specia l . Early American 3 pc .
Simmqns Ptg . and Office
living room. suite, $299 .95 . Ph .
Euipment.
446 -926 1.
206 -tf
273 -tf

1967 CHEVELLE Su per Spo rt .
Excellent c ondition . 446 -00JS .
280 -6

GOOD . CLEA N LUMP and
st9 k ~ r coa l . C,:~rl Winters_. Rj9
Grande . Phone 245-5115 .
S-tf .

By Ed Malek·
Attorney at Law
1227 South H igh Street
Co lumbus, Ohio .A3206
Nov . 4, 11 , 18, 25, Dec . 2. 9

FOR SALE

388·8512 .

KE NW ORT H V . l.T . 370
Cummi ns. low m.lteage. fullv
equipped . 529,500 . · .446-2562 . ·
2SJ .J
I..I EW : Serta
Bemco mat tress and box springs . Large
se lect ion in stock firm
mattresses starting at $39 .00 .
955 SeCOnd Avr!nue '
446·1171
116-tf

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

I

'

""""""
on·

'

.

_,

.&gt;

0

0

_..,_, @@I~;

Many Others
50x12
UPTO
70x14

..."

.._

,_
1
[!]
•

""'"''""
"""
,, '

'

....

"' i.

d

•8495

•

71 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX 2 DR.

*3295

71. DODGE MONACO 4 DR. HT

•2995

7l DODGE MONACO 4 DR. SEDAN

•2895

1974 CHRYSLER OR
PLYMOUTH FURY

71 POLARA 9 PASS. WAGON

*2795

71 POLARA 2 DR. H.T.
.71 ~l.KSWAGON 411 4 DR. SEDAN

*2795

IN STOCKI

•2595

1974 DUSTERS
P!us Tax
Type 2, 3 &amp; 4
Slightly higher

71 PLYMOUTli SATEWTE 4 DR.

•2195

•2750

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth

Includes:
Parts &amp; Labor: New spark plugs, new
points, adjust timing, dwell, carburetor, valves, &amp; check compression.

For Sale

TYPEWRITERS, portable and DACHS H UN D puppies, small,
off ice mode ls, new ijnd used,
standard, AKC reg ., red .
f i les , desks, chairs ,. si gns ,
Phone 446 -4999 .
bookmatches, pen , pen ci ls ,
237 -tf
adv .
novelt ies,
bumpe r
st ickers, pr inting . Ph . 446VACUUM
CLEANERS
1397 . Simmons Ptg .
Electro
Hygiene
New
277 -tf
Demonstrators
has
all
c leani ng attachments p l us fhe
1965 P l YM.!JUTH wagon , $275 :
n_ew
Electro
Suds
for
1965 Capr i n• Chevy $500 ; l96S
sham pooing ca rp et . $27 . 50
Plymouth Fury $550 . 446 0952
cash price or terms available .
alter 5 p .m .
Phone 446 -2460:
277 -tf
278-6

OIL &amp;LUBE SERVICE
Plus Tax

Change Oil Clean oil strainer
Lube front suspension
Check &amp; fill battery · correct tire
pressure - fill windsheld washer .
check transmission • .Lube door hinges
- Lube door striker plates - Lube hood
&amp; trunk latch · Lube heater cables.

---,--------

.
·SIAMESE Kit t ens : 20 inch WE CARRY
complete line of
Sp ider b i ke ·we st Po i nl. Good
Projection bulbs. Tawney
condl t1on . 245 -5689 .
Stud io, 424 sec ond Ave .
280-6
224 -tf
~

1973 ZIG -ZAG sew i ng machine.
This machine d·a rns. em brol'ders ; overcasts
an d
monograms 811 Without at ·. ta chments . Pay balan ce Of
. S4l .SO or pay $6 per month .
Call ,.46-0255 .
·
'269-tf .
1973 SiEREO -RADIO co m ·
bination with S-track bu i lt -ln.
Take over payments of $7 .55
per month or pay $101.50 . Call"
446 ·0255.
_269 -tf

"

.

•

DELIVERED
AND SET' UP

t

I

f

'

ATTENTION VETERANS - Gl Loans available, no down
payment with approved credit .
We Service What

SEE
OUR
MARKED DOWN
SPE(:IALS
SAVE
BIG
DOLLARS.

•

!

'•
I

'
•
I •
I

Open Dally 8 to 6, IClosed Sundays) . Open Anytime by
Appointment. Contact Thompson or Tom Lavender . ·

•

2 Dr. hardtop, radio, auto. trans., P. steering,
P . brakes, fac . air con d., green metallic finish
with matching interior . VInyl roof, w-s-w tires,
spare tire never down, looks &amp; runs like new ..

.. f"'"'"
~-

·~

! .'• .

1970 MOBILE
bedroom , 2
fuel tank
derpinning
55 ,200 . Call

home, 12 x 60 , 2
baths , carpeted ,
1Wifh · oiL un very attract i ve .
446 -2615 .-

__________ ___

278 -6

_,

••

•3495

~:;n.--

WOOD MOTOR SALES

.'·'
'

==G=AL:L:IPO:L:IS,:OH:IO= ·~

S U N D A Y C R O- S - S W O R D PUZZLE:=E:AS:TE:R:NA:VE:
.

SEE THE ALL NEW

SUNDAY , DECEMBER 2, 1973

"!;'~

..

.·.•-.,..
' j :''

DON WAnS

t:-- W1ne ct rin k
6J- Symbol fo r

ACR OSS

If convenient, please call for an appointment.

V.W.I)

Gallipolis, OhiQ

Ph . 446-9800

l ~ P ac~s

dysp rOS IUm

d"n- d y

65- Ne~ r

6- Ur1r r1 ly ch lidr €11
ll - 13 cgged

18-TLIIned
19.-Pay

65- S;:~ I I ale
67~ An cien t

left

JJ1]1Mffi~® u..t -~t.J .-J ,_.

21 - looked h ;.:edty
23- ll cco m pll.,h rn e n t

I

81-D re ss bord er

Tt'a•l &lt;i nc'l
31-fles h

no t e
8:1 - Co,lS \

32-Go.::~t

85 ---;- lllCI In at 1011 5
87 -- Rem &lt;n nd!! r
90- 1r1 I ervenm 15

8/ - GUi do' s high

n1 t: k nao11e
3~- Ha•1 l ess

36-Gr rl" s

narne

-10- Mou rnf ul

9 ~--l nl et

144- Let\er

9!"1- DomJ in

l ii 6- An i m11l
enclosu res

99"--- NQ! i' ry IHib lfc

43- Rc c:en l
4 5- Style of

rabb r.)
10 \....:.. Evaporil les

p;~int1ng

4Ll -G ypmlOid li sh

103-W&lt;ne CliP
l 04- Prep OSI \10 r1
105 - Adhe s 1ve

47 - Vessel
-18 - Evi'lltli'l l e

! D

Sll bS!.'lnce

49- let in

1 o s ~ Sick

S I - PerP in 111g to

110-Are;,s

e;~r

1 I?- P1g!&gt;
1 13- Ne rvous
)wit ch ing

tlt&gt; not•ng or t

Now """'nil" t.he dn:led le!teril

to form the .urpriat anawer. as

;:;;:::~;=;;;_,.1;;::;-.L-L~:;;~,..:•u:r~re~sted by the above cartoon.

I I ]-[I I X IT'

31 -

53-- A IItl e rc[l

.1!l illl i'l l

114- Span is h
article

~ 4 -G III' s ni ckn~r:ne

55- Poi so n
57- PI &lt;'ce

115-Ct~ udi'll

aJipend&lt;~ge

117- Wnlks
118-Mahs l&lt;1ce
119- Su lemn vow
120-Note o t sc&lt;~ le

U l-Com petitor ,

149-'Sol as
co~;niza nt

37 ....... Divi sion o f

Arabi a
39-Pair
41-Tax
42-C hurch service
Furn ished
with drink

of

! 51- Unlocks

1- P&lt;~rH c ip&lt;~tcd

in

Biblica l weeds

3-Was in debt
4- Marry
5-

A s tate {abbr.)

6- B&lt;~ker's

product

·/-Paper measure
R- DrH1ish la nd
·division
9- Note of scale
! 1]-Sp1ri t ed horses

l1 -S ham5
12-French article
13- Liimb's pen
nam e
14- Eag le's nest

HAROlD GODDARD INC.
HAROLD GODDARD AUCT.

Lay-Away
One For Christmas
Today!

..

Ill-Ma nages
112- M ale deer

126-Changes
128-Smallest
number
130-A rlificial

60- Lane
61 - Man 's

nickn ame
63-Grieve fo r
66-Symbol for t1n
67 - Bon'e
68-Encc 11nle rs
70- Sources of
annoyance
.71 - ln musk. high
72-Venti late

73-Snakes
75-Fo lds.
three

7s--:Ocea n
80- Wde ot Ger;,int

language
13 1- Conse crate
132- M an's n ame ·
135- Great Lake
137 - Again
138-Horse's neck

hair
140-Hasten
14 2- Time gone by

143- Soft food
144- Manusc ripl
(a bbr .)
14 5-Brother of Odin
147-ln definite
article
148- A state (abbr.)

,__ _

Smith Horiela Sales
Upper Rilllr Rd.

GaiHpdlis, 0•.

.".
'' "

_, ..._~~ '" ·
·--·

. ,"1'

Tax workshops
POMEROY ~ Meigs CoWlly
farmers, their wives, and
bookkeepers are invited to
participate in one or both Fann
Income Tax Management
Workshops this coming week in
this area . The first is Tuesday,
Det;. 4, at 7:30p.m. at the TriCoWlty Jolnt Vocational School
at Nelsonville.
The second Is Wedne.&lt;tday,
Det:. 5, from 9:30'a.m" to 3:30
p.m. in the basement of the
new Production
Credit
Assocliitlom building on upper
Rt. 7 (in front of the ~irport) at
Gallipolis.
Subjects to be coveted include tax management,
depreciation, Investment

credit, income averaging, an
uJldate on the Ohio income tu,
and social security and . self·
employment tax. No reaer·
vations are needed.
~

··;.:·
••

···

' ·.:"• '

.~OI.t..nos

DALE R.· SANDERS INC.
600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.
ATHENS, OHIO

,. ·
I

...

, ••

.~.'

YOUR OlALER FOR
•LINCOLN CONTINENTAL eMARK IV
•MERCURY MONTEGO •COMET
eCAPRI •DATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR
L&amp;M Phone 592-4491

AKC reg is tered mini&amp;ture
Schnauzer,
Bas sets
and
CocKer Spaniel Pupp ies. Will
bt rtedy for Christmas K
and P Kennels, 388-8274.

DA TSON Phone 592 -4463

273-tf

. '

;: ···

107-lnired ient
109-Biack and blUe

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

I

,~

of a bone
106-P.iece of ground

124- Ad brn
125- NuiSa n ce

M. atu res

..

.

.........

105- Spongy in terio r

55-

56-Schoot of
painting

-

..

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102-Precip it ous

118-H url

For Sale

--------------'

..:.

~.

104-Greek le1ter

119- Man' s name
122- Newest

77 - Pr efi~:

~ -.

HUGE STOCK IN OUR SHOWROOM

94-Cians
96- Note of 5cale
98- Every
99-Sa lt of nitric
acid
t OO-Simpler

50- Stripe d animal
54- Annoy

In Bartlett, Ohio on Rt. SOA. (inside).
The owner having gone t.o a rest home
·We will sell remainder of a nice home.

china and glass. A .real nlee sale .

l ov~d

49 -De bate

(slang)
:? -

91- Ma iden
by Zeus

'74 HONDA

pagodas.
116-Arabic letter

59-Deposited
temporarily

DOWN

s.hip
86- Pigpens
58-Scorches
89-Scottlsh C&lt;'PS
90-Negative p re fix
8 3~ J ason ' s

113- Ch ines·e

47-Whip
48-Savio r

148.- Demesne of a
150- ls

Ponder

33- Latvians
.
35- Bill ol a bi rd
36- Ri..,er islands

44 -

lord

mP&lt;'!5d re

WO nli'l l"l

the

27- Crowded
28--'- Despica bl e
pe rsons
30- Season i ng

137-ln &lt;1ddi t1Qn
138-Morning
prayer
139- Te utOn ic dei ty
l ii O- L-is te n 10
141-Pedal d ig i t

:\ ?.....,. Unm arried

I [J

25-Anned ~;on l liCt

.1 34-Gu l l mound
136-Sur,,s up

93-F"ood programs
97-C I1 ar,l:c te r 1n
" O ti1 E!IIo""

~

-11 - Nar rate

JI I

Lunb

142........-D ills ee d
143- f ather or
mo ther

penod

38 - Do wny ducks

r/RF/!11 1
BL/GET
I
V" ~

79--.W,.,s· fond of

3·1-0 b'&gt;t'l Vt' S

·-·
- - ·~ ·· '''"""''
" .~ "' ''

r

IJ

76~ Privlleges

"' ye s "
29-Wi'S 11HS t&lt;1kP.Il
30- 0 W name for

13-MHn s

............
,.,, .

126-

127- Beast
6'J -C h ouge t he
129-C iergyma n
131- Wagers
. ~ccou nt ol
132-'-Wings
71 -SwiSS ri ver
73- Nil !I'Onl'll hym ns 133 ~S pread Jo.r
7•t..:_Le,1k throng h
.ctrymg

sh eeo
2G....;;... Fiower .,
27-SpHI1 •5 h for

'

Greek

15-0id Ja pane-se
nOble
16- Worm
17-P r ef i ~ : down
21- Meet ing
2 2 -foot le\ler
23-Pe rva de

123- Bi shopric
124-Colcl Adriatic
w1 nd
125-C hief god ol
Memp hi s

the At re

2-1-Fem;:~lto

Thursday, Decembe.r 6th
at 10:00 A.M. ·

'

ELECTRA 225

---~----'-------

MOBILE HOMES
58~Co untry ot
FOR SALE
WITH "(
A ~i.l
RECONDITIONED
60-Seed
MOBILE HOMES
(Antw~n Mnndu~·l
co nt&lt;1 i ncro
1953 Pra i rie Schooner s x 36,
ooon NIIILI WIDEST
JumhW~z SICUNK
61 - Urge 011
bdrm .
1953 Peerless 8 x 35, 1 BR
1959 Castle S x 3S 2 BR
Rolli!llhome 10 x 56 3 BR
1965 Buddy 12 X SO 2 BR
1970 West Brook 12 x 50 2 BR
"A'[LTYPES of
b uilding
1969 Richardson 12 x 60 , 2 BR
STARCRAFT'
meterlals , block , br ick, sewer
196S Catalina 1.2 :11. 60, 2 BR
197-4 TRAILERS and told
pipes , windows , ~inlets, etc ..
downs . Special Christmas
1967 PMC 12 x 60, 3 SR
Claude Wlnt!lrS . Rio Grr.nrtP .
1970 Monarch 1'2 x 60, 2 BR
price .
0 . Phone 2.45-5121 after -~ - .
B&amp;SMOBILEHOMES \
CAMP CONLEY
STAR CRAFT SALES
second &amp; Viand St .
. 123 -tf
Rt. 62 N. of Pt. Pleasant
Pt. Pleasant
Behind Rtd Carpet Inn.
I next to He~k's)
New GMC
275 -tf
675·5114
Truck Headquarters
280-tf 19:68. 1h ton G_Mt pickup
1963 2 ton Ford
1967 ~. T . GMC PU
1969 V2 T . GMC PU
1969 Chevrolet 112 ton pickup
1967 1!2 ton Chev .
1969 1!2 T . Ford PU
·
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
1959 Ford Galaxie
1967 1h ton Chevy pickup
1966 1h ton GMC p ickup
1969 '12 T . Chev. P U
1969 'h T. GMC PU
1968. 1!~ T . GMC PU
1967 1!2 T , GMC PU
1967 112 T . GMC PU
1969 '12 Ton GMC PU
1968 1 T . Ford
1!71 :V. _T_. _F~~..:f_U
1967 1h ton GMC pickuP
196S 112 ton GMC p ickup
196• V2 ton Chevy P ic kup
19'68 '2 ton GMC truck
1969 'h ton GMC Pickup
2 nice can bottom rockers. bookcase, claw foot and Lions
1972 V2 ton Ford P icku p
1969 il4 ton GMC Pickup
head rocker, square glass china cabinet , writing desk and
1971 GMC Suburban
bookcase, child's wicker rocker, oak breakfront cupNEW llres Winter tread : Si zes
board , fire fenders . Several old and new dolls, several ol,d
7.7S )( 14, 8.25 X 14, S.55 X 14,
viollns (nice). very nice old satin glass, G .W.W. lamps , J
SlS each . Cash and carrv '-;;:-f-+--11--1!
while supply lasts .
r::
old Shotguns , coal and wood heaters. Roseville, Weller,
SOMMERS
G.M
.
C.
hanging lights, paintings, Currier &amp; lves prints, e~­
TRUCKS. INC.
ceptlonal " New Century" music box with 18112" records,
133 Pine St ~
nice old phonograph, plays cylinder records. nl_ce linens,
446-2532
254 -tf
rugs, Norltake for 12 setting, lndt~n tree china, other

•'•
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72 BUICK CUSTOM
~--.;·

AUCTION

' """"Ill'"'..

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

For Sale
·For Sale

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-;

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446 -3273

Gallipolis

1639 Eastern Ave.

50 STATE ST.

.
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(.;]

Up .to 12 Year Financing We Sell. ·

•2995

ON ANY

For Sale

•"·ill'·-1
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72 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DR.

TUNE-UP SPECIAL

I ""'.::.-::' I

Private front dining and kitchen, fully carpeted, 3 door
model with house type doors, half jal. U L approved .

....

ALL OF THE FOLLOWING HAVE FACTORY AIR

' ---·--...-..-..-----~--·--._~-..-.--

An Expertly Tuned Car Means:
( 1l Easier cold morning starts
(2) Better gas mileage
(Jl Maximum performance
(4) Longer engine life.

CAR~S­

EXTRA SHARP!

WE OFFER

1

HILLCREST

!._
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_,
.,..
k-1"~""

Happy New Year

Corbin &amp; ·Snyder I RYKUIII
Furniture

1972 trailer and 2 tots with
se ptic tank an·d water . '
Located in BidwelL Phone

TOTAL ELECTRIC
70x14 - 3 BEDROOM

-ALL CLEAN ONE OWNER

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER .

I

Unscramble the&amp;e four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, lo
form four ordinary words.

For Sale

"This Home Can Be Yours"

Dan Thompson

j

Ed Mal ek
WOLERY AND MALEK

100.ooo B 1 u gd:. fu rnace .
Com p le t e with · duc t work . 3
years Old . 388 -8155 .
281 -5'

73

Joe Johnson

r--~--------____..,_.,_...,

20- Lrt g o

---,....,~----,-------··

parson ,s

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

ALL PRICES reduced · on all
furniture . N ew 5 pC . maple
d inette sets , Reg. 5129.95 now
$124 .95 . New so fa beds, R eg .
$69 .95 now $64 .95. New se t box
sp r ing and mattress $80 se t
now $75 se t .

RICE'S

5

500 E. Main St., POmeroy, Ohio

1965 CORVA IR , 9ood co ndit ion .
Good ti res . $350 . &lt;146-2966 .
283-3
196 1 INTERNAT IONAL schoo l
bus, very good &lt;::on dition. Ca ll
669-3S90, RD 1, Ewington ,
Ohio .
·

7 o.m. "

~t. 'ttl

9

992-2174

capes, aprons, thmwoovers,
plaques,
pocketbooks,

1969 2 DOOR Ford Galaxie $500 . 1970 CORVETTE wh ile with
.47,78 7.3 actuaJ m i tes . Wi l l sell
black convert ible top . $4.50 4
for $700 . Puritan, adjustable
speed . 4110 -1324.
regu l ator tor oxygen tank .
284 -6
Has flow gu age or de livery
~~~~~~~~';H:.~~ guage. $40 . Phone 388 -823 3. 1965 CORVA IR 2 door Monza,
284 -6
bucket sea t s, 3 speed tran smission, new pilint job, oood
1968 FORD Ranch Wagon, $500.
condition , S400. PhOne 245 446 -7725 aft'er 5 p .m .
5873 .
284 -3
284 -J
1973 PONTIAC le-M ans, radio ,
powe r
steer ing ,
power
another trump. East who had
brakes
,
air
condit
ioning
.
pla yed the eight of spades a t.
·• 'I I
10,000 actual miles . Must sell.
NORTH
-..)-' !&gt;
trick one ca refully dtscarded WILL do babysitting i n my
388 -9991 or 367 -7481.
• 7654
'
284 -5
the three and then the nine of hom e. 446 -3991 ..
283 -3
' 94
spad es.
I
+ A73
19 HEAD of horses , registered
West read this piti r of di s~ WANTED to Care tor elder ly
Tennessee Wa l king horseS,
... K 752
person
In
my
home
.
Phone
c~rds as a suit prefe rence
registered Quarter horses,
'" I
WEST
EAST IDl
Grade horses and pon ies . $40
Signal for th e lower SUit, 379 -2243 .
28 1-6
. •::~ · · 2
. KQJl0983
and up . 4Ba-9991 or 367 -7481.
c
lubs.
It was well he did ~-----~------284 -10
.• rr . ' Q6 3
' 2
because a diamond lead POODLE Grooming . Ca l l .446 - -------- ~- ---+ QJ8 52
+ 64
7059 after 3:30p .m . on Week - 1972 CHEVROLET J,\i ton Super
would have give n Byro n days
••. 4 9864
4 QJ 10
.
Ch eyenne -Custom Cab. Has
three
diamond
tricks.
,
280-6
1q.
SOUTH
full width toot box. fa c tory
. Unfortunately it didn't help
air, automat ic tra nsmission .
••
• A
!11m at all. Byron won th e CHILDREN to care for d uring
Also has vinyl bed. cover ..
t
' AK./1087 5
two ex perien ced
E&gt;&lt;'Cellent condition , Ph one·
club with his ace: led a club lthade iesday,
wil l pickup and return
K 109
.446
-0276 .
to dummy's king and ruffed a chi ldr en day or wee'k l y rate.
284 -3
• A3
club. Then he ran off the rest Ph . 446 -Z594 or 446 -2971.
" ·r
Norlh
-Suuth
vulne
rable
'
280 -12 1967 RED Mustang Convertible.
'.
&lt;&gt;f his trumps. The last trump
Phone 4~6 - 4922 or 446 -4412 .
W est North
East
South
lead squeezed West out of CHILD care in my home , days.
284 -3
'
..
4•
4N .T.
prote~tion for his queen-jack
446 -7739 .
• I•
Pass s•
Pass
of d1amonds becau se he
282 -6 COAL and Limestone . Phone
~;:
Pass 6•
Pass Pass
could not throw away the
307-7141.
284·6
nine of ~l ubs and Byron mad e

3rd AVE.

USED FURNITURE
USED dryer , 36" gas range ,
G.E . up r ight f reezer, dinette
set and a c hairs , mattress se t,
modern, l iving room Sui l e,
vinyl recliner .
955 Second A.ve.
446 -1171
Open Fridays 6 tillS
Plenty Free P.irking
276-tf

MA LE Dachshund , f ul l -blooded
but no papers . Would make a
nice . Christmas pre sen t .
Phone 675 -2421.
278 -7

Corino, 2 dr. auto. trans. Sharp. - $1195
,•. 1971 Toyota
Ford Pinto,4cyl ., 4sp.
. $1395

f

Corbin &amp; Snyder

. AKC reg . Austral ian · Terr ier
Pups . Randy Breech , 446 4314 ,
r
27 6-'J.6

WI SELL &amp; SERVICE CHEVROLET CAI!S &amp; TRUCKS.

!: TWO 1973 FORD PICKUPS

'Til

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

s imilarly pr iced) (Two 1974's).

.. t

.

NEW 1973 CHEVROLET
'CLOSE.OUT!

1
I

~t eel

;:

Open Evenings

We Service
What We Sell

_ std . lraJi15. , 4 whee l driv e with locking hubs,

973 FORD LTD $4~~~i.~~~rNow $3967 r--·- ·--··- -----...
4 dr ., air cond . , P.S., P. B., AT.
belted

See Ceward Calvert, Qeggy Story or Bill Nelson

REMEMBER

1968 FORD BRONCO ..........11595
I

I'

WE WANT YOU BACK CAUSE THE JOB WAS DONE RIGHT

cusfom

$1095

See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

.....

v:a eng ine,

Christmas and a

Bill

· VS ·

Richard Tniner , et al ,
Oefendanh
The unknown heirs , devisees ,
legatees. and assigns, it any , of
Tipton Tra i ner , deceased upon
all or whom service of sum mons
canno t be made , because their
respective names and places of
residence are unknown to the
a ffiant
and
cannot
with
reasonable
diligence
be
ascertained. are hereby notified
that on Nov . 2, 1973, Hermit L .
Tra i ner. Lola Tra iner , Jessie
Tra i ner. Luella Jones, Edith
Larsen , Har'old Tra i ner and
Sy lvia Hu mphrey filed a
com plaint as plaintiffs in the
Co urt of Common Pleas of
Gallia Coun t y, Oh io, in Case No .
11 -7l -CL 253, againsJ them and
others as defel'\dants , alleging
that the · p lai nt iffs Herm it L .
Trainer, a brother , Lola
Trainer , a sister ,
Jessie
Trainer , a brother , Luella
Jones , a si ster , Edith Larsen , a
sis ter , Haro ld Trainer , a
brother and Sylv ia Humphrey,
a sis ter . are each, an heir at law
and next of kin of T ipton
Trainer , deceased ; I hat Tipton
Traine r died a res ident of Ga ll ia
Coun ty, Ohio on Apr i l 4, 1973,
leaving a docu ment. purported
to be h is last W i ll and
Testament ; that sai d purported
Last Will and Testame nt was
adm i tted to probate on May 4,
1973 , and defendant Florence
Roush Trainer was appointed
E:~~.ecutrix
ot the .Estate of
T ipton Train,;or, by the Probate
Division of the Gadlia County
Cour t of Common Pleas ; that
said defendant , Flo r ence Roush
Trainer , is a sister -i n -law ot the
decedent, T i pfon Tra i ner and is
a devisee or teoate'e under sa id
purpor t ed
Last
Will
and
Testament ; thai 'de fendants,
Richa rd Tra jner , a brother , and
Elm a Tra i ner , a sister , are each
an he ir -at -law and next of kin of
Tipton Trainer . decea se d ; that
there are no persons , other than
plaintiffs. and
defendants
named there in, who have any
interests in sa i d do c ument. as
the Last W ill and . Tesf!lment of
Tipton Trainer ; that th e pur ported will admitted to probate .
is not the Last Will and
Testament of Ti pton Tra iner ;
t.hat Tipton Tra iner was not of
sound mind , and was . under
undue in f luence on th e date of
e~C.ecution of the purported Last
Will and Testament ; that by
reason of .the invalidity of said
purported wilL the plaintiffs ii!S
he irs at law and next of kin of
said decedent , are entifted t _
o a
port ion of the Estate of Tipton
Tra lner', dec eased ; ther~fore,
ptainllHs d em and I that the
purported
LaSt
Will
and
Testament of Tipton Trainer,
deceased. be determined to be
Invalid, and that they re cover
their cos ts there in .
De f endan ts , first here inabove
·ment ioned are further notified
that they are requ ired 'lO answer
said complaint on or before
J anuary 6, 1974, whi c h includes
28· day s
from
the
last
public!ltlon or ludgment may be
rendered as demanded therein .

Pontiac Venturas, 4 new Buick Apollo and 6 new Opels

Automat i c tran s .• V-8 eng i ne , good tires, blue f in is h ,
rad io .

Cadilla c - Oldsmobile

GMAC Financing Availabl e

992 -5342

s4495
,S1995
S2895
S3295
s·1 795
S2295
$1795
$2995
S2295
S1795

CHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH

ForA Men-y

PUBLIC NOTICE
In the court of Common Pleas ,
Galtia County , Oh io
Ca:ie No. 11·73· Cl 253 Hermit
L Trainer, et at. , Ptaintith

1973 PONTIAC
1972 .PONTIAC
1972 C·HRYSLER
1972 CHRYSLER
J971 GREMLIN
1970 BUICK
1970 PONTIAC
1971 CHEV.
1971 PONTIAC
1970 PONTIAC
.. For Economy Car Buyer we have in stock 6 New
G. P. an·e owner , low mileage .

GALLIPOLIS
•

,. 1,d be i nformed of the tunc lions of your government are
embodied i n p11bl ic notices. In
that self government charges
all ci t i zens to be in to{lned ;
this new!tpaper urges every
ci t i len to read and study thes~
norice:i . we strongly adv ise
those citizens , seeking further
information. to e:~~.ercise their
r ig hl of actess to public
re cords and t?ublic meet ings.

ALL NEW &amp; USED CARS

3995 .

•

Your Right to Know:

YEAR END STOCK
SALE ·

1

Special Clo se Out

POMEROY, OHIO

•. l

4 Door, fa c tory air, lint gla ss. deluxe belt s, si de
pro tec t ive mldgs:, w w . !ires, bumper guards, Std .
V 8 er1gin ~·. power ste&lt;&gt;r ing &amp; di sc brakes,
ilulomat ic. A M rad io &amp; tape, low mileage wifh bal.
of new car warranty . Color white w i th beige vi nyl
top .

$6500

PH. 992-2174

-

VOLKSWAGEN

PUBLIC NOT!qS

.,

_,

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-••

�Your Wayne National Forest
BJ'T. Allan Woltrr.
Distr1rt ranger
IROr\TON - A contrm:ersial aspect
amQng some hunters of the 1973 dt-er
season which Just dosed last week \~as
the doe pennit system .
One hundred doe permits were
issued m each of several coW1ttes where
deer damage to crops was occurring. In
addition, resjdents within the county
where doe htUlting was permitted, were
allowed to apply for a doe permit.
Hunters wiU1 the special d~ perm1t
could fill thclr tag with either buck or
doc .
While this action -was taken to
pre ve nt further damage to crops, game
biologists most often take action such &lt;JS
this to prevent damage to the deer herds
natural food - browse 1small twigs of
certain trees , shrubs, and bushes ).
The secret of doing this is kn ow ing
where to do it~ of cow·se. but vastly more
important is knowing when to do 1t .
When left on the.ir own in suitable
habitat. a deer herd can build up very
rapidly. In fact it can literally explode.

Nature runs wild in deer production,
forgettinv. e1 very basic clement in any
living creatlU'c's lire, FOOD ! Unless the
population is checked in some way, by
hunting , ror example, natural mortality,
swnahon and disease take a tragic toll.
It's a pathclic sight to see one of the
most beautiful creatures ur1 this earth
starve to death, but many a well meaning
hut uninformed individual has committed thousands upon thou sands of deer
to a much slower and agonizing death
than a welt placed shot from a hunter's

gun.
The loss of deer to starvation is
serious but more serious is the loss or
habitat which is usually so badly
overbrowsed during the peak
populritlon th;Jt it may never agajn
regain its former productivity without
man 's intcrv~nlion.
Browse species can be cQmpletely
eliminated and the site taken over by
species undersircable by deer. Whole
new forests can be destroy~d ! At best it
takes many years for the range to be
reesta blished . The deer population which

could reproduce faster, must now wait
ror its food. supp ly to regain ils former
abundance and variety.
SO the secret spoken of earlier is
timing in reducing the deer herd before
the often irreparable damage occurs.
This can best be accomplished by a
regular hunting season where the
number and sex of animals harvested is
based on up-to-date census data and
range condi tion .
The history of game management in
the United States is full of cases where
the game biologists hands were tied by
emotional outcries that usually res ulted
in political action to eliminate or
drastically reduce hunting . While opposing factions wrangled, the ecosystem
was being destroyed . Deer were star·
ving, the habitat was being destroyed
and other species of wildHfe were being
adverse ly a ffected also.
While some chec ks and balances are
necessary, the biologist must have the
latitude to regul ate · wildlife harvests
based on scientifi c fact to insure that
mistakes of the past are not repe'ated.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS
(UP I)
Successful politicians have a

Ohio politics
way of latching onto the issue
of the moment, making what
they can of it and turning it into
a headline-grabbing weapon
for them.
Right now in Ohio, the politiCians are conducting a
fa sci nating game of one·
upmans!lip which might be
te rmed the " Politics of
Energy."
It all started last July, when
Lt. Gov. John W. Brown became a believer in the " energy
crisis" and established a task
force to study the problem and
come up with
re com·
mendations.
The administration of Gov.
John J. Gilligan claims to have
been studying the matter privately before that. Score one

ders for state employes to turn
point for them.
But in July. the governor was down tfieir thermostats, tum
loudly expressing disbelief that off their lights and let up on the
Ulere was any energy shortage • accelerator.
The governor tossed the
at all. Take away the point.
Shortly after Gilligan got blame at one of his favorite
around to publicly announcing targets, the Nixon ad·
his cabinet4evel Emergency ministration.
By now it was evident that
Energy Management Committee to set priorities "in the Gilligan, a Democrat, was run·
face of dwindling fuel sup- ning full tilt for re-election and
plies,'' the lieutenant gover- Brown, a Republican, was
nor's task force came out with after a U.S. Senate seat. The
pointscoring came thicker and
an interim report.
faster.
Nothing Really SpecUic
Brown
sought
some
The interim report contained
11
mileage"
.
out
of
reduced
14 laudable long-&lt;ange recom·
mendations , but none was speed limits, so he proposed a
more specific than: 11 promote voluntary reduction of 10 miles
the development of natural gas an hour for all Ohio motorists
and petrolewn resourcesn or driving 50 m.p.h. or more.
He also challenged Gilligan
"prepare state procedures to
by
recommending that the gov·
meet allocations of critical and
·· ernor give s tate employes
sca rce reso urces.''
Three weeks later, Gilliga n Christmas Eve a nd New
recognized " the greatest Year 's Eve off to save fuel - a
energy crisis this nation has popular idea with 57 ,000
fa ced in 30 years" and muscled potential election supporters.
Gilligan called for a volunonto the front pages with ortary s peed limit of 50 m.p.h.,
said he would recommend
legislation to give him self
emergency powers to react to
federal energy guidelines. and
The best assessment of that his cabinet level group
analysts ' he re and in Peking would have rec ommended
appears to be that Mao and solutions soon.
Chou generally are in concert
Too soon for John Brown.
on the main thrust of Chinese With this kind of a dragon
policy because they both want · breathing down his neck, the
to set the pattern for the future. lieutenant governor had to re-

Modern China debati~Jg anew Confucius' ideas
By CHARLES R. SMITH
UPI SENIOR EDITOR
HONG KONG (UP! ) - 'l11e
most intense debate since the
turbulent days of the cultural
revolution is underway in
China.
The debate revolves mainly
a r ound the 2,000-year-old
philosophy of Confucius, !he
poli cies of ancient emperor s
and a hazy modern. phrase,
"going against the tide. "
But these are only vehicles

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Pa:rk Cen1r.11 Hol e l Bldg .

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H~ OIB

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)lim on

p 7322

fo r subtle political in-fighting
Lhat involves much morepresent policies and future
leadership.
.
This is more a battle, of
factions than individuals. For
simplicity's sake, these factions can be boiled down to
radica ls - extreme leftists versus
moderates,
regionalists - mainly military versus ce ntrists.
At the moment, the moderates and centrists hold the
uppe•· hand.
'fhe policy of the "ins" include s, in for eign affair s, a
retreat from m ilitant support
of so-ca ll ed
'' wars
of
liberation " to a generally more
constructive international role
by Chin a, improved SinoAmerican relations. a staunch
anti-Soviet posture and heavy
emphasis on t rad e and
economic relations.
Domestically, the tide is
towards
more
realistic
economic policies, stronger,
more ce nt r aiizt!d civil1an
(Communist Party ) leadership, diminished milita ry in·
vo lvemcnt in nonmilitary
affairs and a slight relaxettion
of rigid co ntro ls on t he
population.
and
The
r adica ls
regionali s ts. who are not
ne cessa rily
bedfellows,
probably are more concerned
with changing these and other
policies than with any ovet·t
. power play. ·

· It is likely they are jockeying
for position for the longer run,
when the MaO dynasty is over .
The longer run in this case may
ngt, be so long, considering that
the two most influential menParty Chairman Mao Tse-Tung
afld Premier Chou En-Lai~
are a pproaching 80 and 75,
respectively.
In the subtle daily dialogue of
China 's press and radio ,the
criticism and counter-criticism
is skillfully disguised . Ponderous
hi storical
and
philoso phical analyses of
Confucian thought and the
actions of ancient emperors
are
used to attack present
.
policies and personalities.
Such oblique attacks are also
co ntain ed in widesp read
discussions about " daring" to
oppose an undefined " tide" of

Weekend flower

Gilligan-Brown gTabbing hard
at headlines in energy crisis

contemporary developments.
As with most such debates in
China, it is difficu1t, if not
impossible , for outsiders looking in to tell just who and what
policies are under attacj&lt;, and
how severely. This is particu·
larly true in the initial stages.
But many analysts here and
in Peking are convinced that
Chou- th e man directing the
current tide- is under attack
from som e quarters .
It aloo is clear that Chou's
supporters are counter-attacking more vigoroUsly in .the
same oblique manner.
Just where Mao stands in all
this is not certain; it never is in
the ea rl y stages of such
political jousting. Mao publicly
has endorsed some of the
present policies {such as im·proved Sino-American rela-

lions ), but in the past Mao
often has set various groups
against each other while
remaining aloof frorh it all
until political blood was
spilled. He could be doing the
same now.

Senate votes SS hike
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Senate passed a bill Friday to
increase Social Security payments by 11 per cent and to
reward poor working people
with a cash "work bonus" of up
to $400 a year.
The ineasure also would
increase payroll withholding
taxes in 1974 for middle and
upper income wage earners
and exp;md Medicare to cover
most of the cost of prescription

drugs for the chronic illnesses
of the elderly.
Unless its impact on the
Treasury is trimmed considerably by a Hou8e-Senate
conference committee the bill
faces the prospect of a
presidential veto.
The Social Serurity increase
is expected to survive , however, since both hQuses have
approved it.
The Senate bill calls for a 7

per cent increase upon enact.
ment and a 4 per con\ additional increase in June, 1974.
payable in checks received in
July.
Nearly 30 million retired or
disabled workers, dependents
and spouses would share in the
$3.5 billion increase.
The 5. 85 pee cent.payroll tax,
paid by both workers and
employers, would rise to 5.9
per cent

-- ·~

act. His task force's recom~
mendations wouldn't be
finalized until Jan. 15. By that

(

time, the governoi-'s proposals
could be halfway through the
legislative mill.
So Brown met with chairman
Joseph E . Davison of Dayton,
and they singled out seven
areas for legislation and swn·
moned the members to Colwnbus last week to vote on them.
Brown Ups Oeadlloe
Brown told the 20 members
who showed up he wanted a final report by Dec. 15, and he
wanted an immediate go-ahead
to draft some kind of legislation. He said he would abide by
whatever the task force decided.
Many of the task force mem-

show a success

I

\

bers were loath to vote ''yes"

'

or "no" on anything. They had
met so infrequently that they
hardly knew each other's
names and affiliations, let

''

I

PHOTOGRAPHIC ART by Ray Sutherland, an employe of tbe Southern Ohio Coal Co. and
a part-time student at Ohio University, was a special display at the holiday flower show of the ·
Meigs County Garden Clubs over the weekend at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Most of the
scenes which Sutherland displayed were taken on the Easl Coast during his six years in the U.
S. Navy. Sutherland, above, exhibits a portion of his works.

alone the various viewpoints on
the complex energy questions.
Brown did get a grudging
plurality of consent from the
members to draft legislation in
the seven areas, although
details were so lacking that
task force members will be
able to disclaim any bills that
are produced .
The results may serve
Brown's purposes as he gets
the industry and utility favored
bills rolling in the Republicancontrolled Senate.
But no matter how late the .
governor is in recognizing the
problem and offering a legislative· package, his recommendations will bear the
stamp of No. I, and will likely
ge l the most attention and
consideration. ·
AS one cynic put it , a trifle
unkindly perhaps, ' 'The best
way for John Brown to conserve energy would be to put
his reconunendations in the
fireplace ."

.Your Christmas Shopping Headquarters
Open Weekaays 9:30 to 5 pm
Fridays and Saturdays 9:30 to 9 pm
•

/

By United Press International
CAMBRIDGE, MASS. - AN · " IRREPLACEABLE "
colltction of ancient Greek and Roman coins valued as high as $5
mlllion was stolen Sunday from Harvard University's Fogg
Museum by a gang of armed men who overpowered a security
guard.
The FBI said coin dealers and police throughout the United
States has been alerted in case the thieves tried to sell any of the
5 600 coins. ,·,we have no sus~cts yet," said James Newph er,
'
.
'
special agent in charge of the FBI's Boston office. " We don 't
expect anything definite for at least three or four days."

--~

.-~
- •.,.. '..!... , 'f!.
·- ........ -, _..~ '

&lt;·~ ·' '- .

t

' ~.'l

It's a 60x74' TOTAL ELECTRIC

UNFURNI SHED ••... '14,900
lop siding. Pitched shingled roof. 40 gal. hot water

k,

·~" paneling throughout , eye· level oven, 2·

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bath &amp; 3/4 's, carpeted through -out,· walk in
ad jacent to bathroom with double mirro red
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IT'S A BEAUTY
We have o 'oil li ne of vlhiD AlE MOBilES,
60x/4 ' - as well as 12 ' &amp; 14' w 1des. W1de
selec ti o n onrl p rt CI? ronqe with many floo r

olons to c ho ose !r o m,

'~

•

WASffiNGTON - LEADING DEMOCRATS say President
Nixon is giving behind-the-scenes support to a Senate filibuster
which has tied up reform of campaign financing and threatens
'the government's ability to pay its bills. :rJJe Senate, in its first
Sunday session in 112 years, voted .47 to 33 to shut off the
filibuster, but that was seven votes short of the two-thirds needed
to do so. Another and perhaps several cloture votes are exP!'cted
this week.
Sen. James B. Allen, 0-Ala., and several conservative
Republicans have waged the filibuster since Friday, .refusing to
allow a vote on whether to send a debt ceiling bill - to which
campaign ref9rm is attacbed - to a cQnference committee with
the House. Also Sens .. Dewey Bartlett, R.Qkla ., and Henry
Bellmon, R-Okla., were flown back to Washington from an
·Oklahoma quail hunt in a government plane for the Sunday vo ~e.
'Both voted against cloture.
•
SENS. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.; Russell B. Long, DLa., and Walter B. Mondale , D-Minn., all charged Sunday that
Ute White House was actively supporting the filibuster in hopes of
killing campaign reform so Nixon won't face the decision
whether or not to·veto it. They said White House lobbyists have
been urging senators to vote against cloture, which would end the
. filibuster.

j:O-·-

'·&lt;~

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1

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'

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Be Sure To Register At Our .

PITTSBURGH - ARNOLD Mtt..LER, president of the
United Mine Workers of America (UMWA), said Sunday he will
retire after serving the remaining four years of his term. "!
figure I can do all I have to do in one term,". he said. "If I can't, I
don't deserve another."
Miller 51J who defeated former union president W. A. " Tony"
Boyle in' a ~ourt.,rdered election in December, 1972, said there
still Is opposition in the union and his life had been threatened,
but he would not elaborate. Miller, here lor the UMWA's 46th
constitutional convention which opened tnday, said he would
build a log cabin on a 42-acre tract he purch~d recently near
his present home id Ohley, W. Va .

MECHANIC STREET WAREtiQUSE
For the Whirlpool Dishwasher to
be given to one of our customers.

No purchase . is necessary. You
need not be present to win.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

'
GUNNERS

·SAIGON - COMMUNIST
rocketed a huge
American petrolewn complex on Ute outskirts of Saigon today,
( Coni1nued on. Page 2)

\

•

J

I

'

The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. investigated three auto
accidents Sunday, one putting
a driver in O'Bieness Hospital
at Athens .
At 6 a. m. Sunday , an auto
driven by Ollie Gambill, 29, Rt.
1, New Marshfield, went out of
control on a curve on SR 681 in
ScipioTwp ., off the right side of
the road, came back across the
road , went off the left side and
into an embankment. The car
landed on its side.
Gambill wa s taken to
O'Bleness Hospital by private
auto . Hi s car had heavy
damage. The extent of his
injuries was not .reported.
At 8:15p. m. Sunday, on CR
10 in Rutland, an auto driven
by Beverly A. Spires, 33, Rt. I,
Lan gsville, was backing when
it hit an auto driven by James
R. Dailey , 22, Rt. I, Middlep.ort, that was turning left
into a church parking lot.
.No injuries were rep orted
and no citation was issued.
Two autos, one driven by
Michael P. Salser, 17, Rt. I,
Racine, and the other by Gary
R. Cooper, 20, Rt. I, Portland,
were traveling east on CR 31 in
Sutton T\VP· early Sunday
morning when Salser attempted to turn left into a
private driveway . At that time,
Cooper tired to pass, striking
Salser's auto in the left side.
Both cars had moderate
damage. No injuries were
reported and no citation was
issued.

ews .. in Briefsi!!·

•'

.

.~lwre

lrmwrs in

Arlislit·

an accredited judge of the Ohio
Ao:;sociation, judged the show
which had 91 entries in the
arrangements division, 33
entries in the horticulture
classes, 14 in gift wrapping,
five in Quistmas corsages, all
judged, along with numerous
exhibits in the non&lt;mnpetitive
division which included Christmas crafts, evergreen display
by Mrs . James Titus, and
Christmas hooks, by the Meigs
Bookmobile.
Another
feature . and
highlight was an outstanding
exhibit by Ray Sutherland of
photographic art. An employee
of the Southern Ohio Coal Co.
and a part-time student at Ohio
University, Sutheorland
displayed pictures which he
had taken on the East Coast
dul'ing his time stationed there
with the U. S. Navy.
The Christmas craft display
arranged by Mrs. Geneva
Nolan was wide-ranged and
most attractive including a

divi.~io11

rmrk.~

o/ tire

ll'eel-oell d 10how
while tree decorated with
ornaments handmade by Mrs.
Iris Baker of Syracuse.
Plaques of dried materials,
ornamental trees, wreaths,
novelty items were included in
the display.
Artistic Arrangements
Winn in g the ribbons in the
artistic arrangement classes
blue tor first , red for second,
yellow l or third, and white for
fo urth . were th e following
gardeners listed first through
fou rth respectively :
11
John wants a Pa i r o t
Skates." usina two containers:
Mrs. Pat Holter, Chester
Garden Club; Mrs. Betty Dean,
Chester Garden Club ; Mr s.
Ada Holler, Chester Garden
Club ; and Mr s. ,Dorothy
Morri s. Middleport Garden

CHRISTMAS CASTLE - Sue Baker of Lanl(sville
created with tin cans of various sizes, felt and foil this
Christmas castle viewed here by seven-year.&lt;Jld Roxann
Kearns of West Columbia, W. Va .

Love leaves

Club.

"Susie Wants a Sled," the
hogarth cu rve : Mrs. Audrey

(Continued on page 2

job as czar
over energy

Driver
hurt in
wreck

ELBERFELD$
IN
POMEROY
.

BROADMORE

Put 1/oltt&gt;r

·"

~o;:.-:-:=:::;:;::::::::;:;:;:;:~;:::::::;:-;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::.-:::::::::::::~::::::::::::::!!:::::::::;:::;:;:;:::;:;.

...

Mr.~.

VOL XXV NO. 162

Doris JacksOn, Portland,
bagged ber seventh deer in a!i many seasons Saturday, the
last day of Ohio's deer season. The doe was killed on Mrs.
Jackson's farm in Portland.

"'1~

Judy 'J'itm;,

Devoted To The lntereab Of The· Meigs-Mwon Area

GETS HER SEVENTH -

.

BY CHA RLEN E HOEFLICH
Elegant
flower
arrangements bedecked with
colorful baubles and other
symbols of Christmas, attractive gift wrappings, and a
variety of holiday crafts were
featur ed at the annual show of
the Meigs County Garderi
Clubs over the weekend at the
Pomeroy Elementary School.
Nearly 250 viewers registered.
Mrs . Judy Titus of the
Rutland and Middleport
Garden Clubs, and Mrs. Pat
Holter of the Chester Garden
Club shared top honors in the
artistic arrangement division
of the show, " Jolly Old St.
Nicholas.''
The best of show award went
to Mrs. Titus. for her entry in
the " Grandpa Wants a Chair"
class which featured the use of
weathered wood. Mrs. Holter
won four of the 20 blue ribbon
awards given in the artistic
arrangements divisiQn.
Mrs. Aida Cullen of Marietta,

Mr.~.

I

I

I
I

I

,

'\

OPEN HOUSE WAS HELD SUNDAY at The Farmers Bank and Savings Company for
residents to see the many dolls on display in the Dress-A-Doll Contest. Mrs . Reed, left, wife of
Bank President Theodore Reed , visits with Mrs. N~llie Tewksbary, Middleport , one of the
estimated 300 persons attending. Mrs . Reed was hostess at the occasion. Second picture on
page 2.

operators with Nixon's request ,
that they close voluntarily on
Sunday, In Co nn ecticut, a
California motorist became so
incensed at being denied gas at
a stati on that was open that he
smashed his fist through a
window of the place. He was
put in jail.
- In nervou s New E ngland,
where the heating oil shortage
may create the worst problems
this
winter ,
weather
foreca sters had a favor able ·
foreca st: a warmer than usual
December.
- A Louis Harris public
opinion poll showed that by a
margin of 78 pet. to 17 pe t. with
5 pet. having no opinion,
Ameri cans are opposed to
higher gasoline taxes as a
means of discouraging conswnption . By a 71-21 margin,
they reacted favorabl y to
possible gasoline rationing, if
necessary .
-'- Sen . William E . Proxmire,
D-Wi s .,
ur ged
gaso lin e
rationing in a Sunday broadcast d escribed
as · the
Democratic reply to Nixon 's
energy speec h the prevfous
Sunday. The President has said
he is against rationing except
as a last resort.

Majority thinks something wrong
WASHINGTON (UP! ) " The rich get richer and the
poor get poorer: " is a belief
held by three out of four
Ameri cans surveyed in a poll
for a Senate subcommittee.
More than half think " there is
something deeply wrong in
America. "
Trust in the executive branch

of government, the Louis
Harris polling organization reported Sunday, has fallen to the
bottom in a list of sOcial and
political institutions in the
nationwide sample of adults
taken during the fall.
Respect for the press, the
survey said, has " risen markedly" in the past six years.

Boyle won't
get his case
in high court
WASHINGTON (UP! )- The
Supreme Court refused tnday
to hear an appeal by W. A.
"Tony" Boyle from his conviction of illegally funneling
mine union money to political
candidates.
The brief order by the~high
court denying his request to
present arguments on the
appeal, means Boyle must
serve the fiVe-year prison
sentence meted out and pay a
$130,000 fine plus another
$49,250 in restitution.
Boyle, who turned 72 on Dec.
1, has also been indicted by a
federal grand jury on charges
of conspiring to murder his
former union rival, Joseph A.
"Jock" Yablonski.
·
The one-time protege . of
UMW leader John L. Lewis .
was hospitalized in
a
Washington hospital Sept. 24
after taking an overdose of
barbituates in an apparent
suicide attempt.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
RACJ;NE · - The Southem
Local Athletic Boosters . )Vill
meet at 7:30p.m. Tue~day at
the high School in Racine.

WASHINGTON (U PI ) Bypassed in a reshuffle of
admini s tration e n e r gy
. priorities by creation of a new
agency, John A. Love and his
chief deputy have decided to
resign as.presidential advisers,
it was learn ed today.
William E . Simon, deputy
Treasury secretary who
served as the top energy s pokesm an in the
a dmini stration for a time
before Love and Charles
DiBona Were brought in, is to
be head of the new Federal
Energy Administration .
It had been reported that
Love; former
CQ]orado
.·g over.nor whose support for
gasoline rationing apparently
ran counter to views of Nixon
and some of his other top advisers, would remain ils a
pre sidential ass istant. But
sources said both he and
DiB ona, his deputy, were
resigning .
In other e ner gy-related
matters :
Postm as ter General
Elmer T. Klassen said he had
been assured . of enough
gasoline to deliver Christmas
mail on time . But he prediced
hundreds more airline cancelations today which "will
have an impact on us."
- There was widespread
compliance by gas s tation

Overall public confidence in
government institutions " drastically" declined during the
same period, the poll reported.
Harris was to present the
finding s to the Senate intergov·
errmental relations subcommittee today .
Among government institutions, those polled had more
confidence in local governments
and institutions than jn state
and fe &lt;\e ral.
But state and local leaders
surveyed disagreed with the
public's view of a deepening

crisis of confidence and s.a w
crisis·as an inherent-part Of the
c;lemocratic system.
In swnmary, the survey
showed':
-80 per cent said government could do better, but first
has to abandon secrecy and
cooperate · more fully at all
leveis as well as with the
people .
- 76 per cent bel_ie"e " the
rich get richer and the poor get
poorer."
-lil per cent believe "what
you think doesn 't count much

anymore .' '
HOW' S THAT, DICK?
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Pat
Roach , owner of the Bit
1 0 '8\arney Pub, has decided to
11

1imlt" hts customers to 10

gallons at a time in keeping
with the spirit of the times.
A sign outside the bar at
W. 120th St. and Lorain Ave.
reads: " In the interest of
conserving energy, we are
limiting all whiskey purchases to 10 gallons per
customer. How 's that,
DiCk! "

LOCAL TEMP
The temperature in down.
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Monday was 60 degrees under
sunny skies:
·

•

IDGH FOR A REBOUND - Southern Hi gh School
defeated NorthGallia Saturday night at Racine 7f&gt;.74 to open
its 1973-74 Southern Valley Conference action . Above,
Sterling bogan (23 ) takes a rebound, with Dave Robinette
(20) backing him up. For Southern, Dave Theiss ( 40 ) left, and
Pete Sayre ( 44 ), also would like to get the ball. See Page 4 for
story and picture .
•

TWO ASK DIVORCE
Tw o person s filin g for
div orce in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court, both on
the grounds of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty , are
Hazel Darlene Hayman, Long
Bottom, from Jerry Ronald
Hayman, Rt. 1. Long Bottom,
and Darlene Warner, Rt. 2,
Albany, from John Warner,
also Rt. 2 Albany .

--,';5 per cent said " people

running the country don 't really
care what hapPens to you."
-55- per cent was " alienated
and disenchanted, feeling pro·
roundly impotent to influence
the actions of their leaders."
-53 per cent believe "there
is something deeply wrong with
America, that these are no
ordinary tiqtes of crisis. ''.
- 25 per cent believe ''government leaders are corrupt and
immoral. "

' ANSWERED
CALL
The Pomeroy E·R squad
answered a call to Mechanic
St., at 7: !5 p.m. ,Monday for
Pauline Derenberger who was
ill, She was taken to Veterans
.Memorial Hospital.

18
SHOPPING DAYS

TO CHRISTMAS·

Deputy Trea sury Secretary
William E . Simon will be
named to head a new Federal
Energy Administration, whi ch .
wil1 run the government's
energy program, officials said.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D·
Wash. , in an interview Sunday
with radio station KIRO in
Seattle , confirmed that Love
now Y,.ill work in a different
capacity from his past r ole . He
said he did not doubt that the
·gasoline rationing issue was at
least in part involved in the
change but the reasons were
"broader than that.''
An administrati on source who
declined to be identified said
Simon and Treasury Secretary
George P. Shultz "conc.octed"
Love's downfall and "eroded' '
(Continued on Page 8)

School board
nan:led in suit
for damages
Elizabeth Allman, Rt. 2,
McArthur, has filed s uit for
damag ~s in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against
Pansy B. Jordan , Rt. 4,
'Pomeroy, and the Meigs Local
School District, in the amount
of $15,000 and cos ts .
Mrs. Allman, asking for a
trial by jury, petitioned that
she wa s a passenger in a cBr
that was s truck Jan . 14, 1972,
by a school bus driven by
J ordan that was left of center.
She claims that she suffered a
frac1Ure of her left leg, $426 in
medical and hospital expenses,
and $2,050 in lost wages. ·
In another action, James W.
Suttle, Rt . I, Long Bottom,
filed a suit against Lawrence
G. J ohnston, Rt. '1, Portland,
asking for $3,585.11.
Suttle claims that on June 3,
1972, Joh.!lston crashed into
Suttle's tractor , causing him to
inc ur $1,479.11 in tractor
damages, $106 in doctor and
hospital payments, $1 ,000 in
personal injury and 1$,000 In
pain and suf!ering .

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