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                  <text>10 _ The Dallv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Dec. 28, 1973

.

~~::::;:~=:=:=:=:·:~=:::::::::~:::::wa:r.::a::~~..~~:;.::"«::"1'.:::::t~

..
i~
::i

The year: good and bad

y

MideJlst at brink of new war . b~ Donat~ons
'

By United Press lnlentatlonal
;;;;
:;:;
Egypt
said
lts
forces
shol
down
an
Intruding
lsraell
::::
(Continued from page 11
and agri·bus1ness. A new un1versal gym (a wetght ::) warplane today ln the mosl seri..,. cease-flrelncfdeat since
ml"iude grades l&lt;i. Additional new music books have
bargaining.
•
,
ltftmg machine ) has been purchased by the Athletic ;~ peace talks began last Friday at Geneva. Mtlltary ;:j
been proVlded. Some renovation or the hcat1ng
J will try to give you a brief report of some things
Board That thing is used before school, during
system has ~n completed. New thennostats are to
~!l negotlaiors at the truck talk.s said they bad reached limited !~!
U~at happened m the indivtdual schools m the diStrtct.
::;chooL. after school and any other time a kid can get :::: agreement on separating lsraell and EgypUan mllltary ~
be placed in several rooms to improve the control or
This is, of course, not complete. but it w1~ g~.~e you an
at it . It is available to all - athletes and non-athletes
heal. This building contm"ues to have much use by
~::: forces,
::~
idea of some of the ..extra., or " new thmgs that
- for pure physical development and lt is really used . ;:?,
commumty groups for meetings. part1es, etc . The
An
Egyptian
military
spokesn&gt;an
In
Cairo
safd
the
~l
Mrs. R&lt;llph Harvey, matron
happened during 1973. These are reported in random
AT POMEROY ELEMENTARY the reading :~; Israeli plane was shot down ln the southern sedor or the ~~
Rutland High School Gym is bemg used for adult
order.
program has been set up on a system of 10 levels !~: suez Canal. He said it was 1 of formation that Dew over 1:1 at the Children's Home, has
basketball groups in the evenings . This program lS
the
following
At Salisbury a new spellmg program went mlo all
rather than just five grade steps in grades 2&lt;i. There ;:;; Egyptian positions near the cease-fire tines. The aerial :::: reported
under the dtrectJOn of a commun1ty committee. There
to
the
children
donations
made
gT;ades 1&lt;i followmg a p1lot project. Sev~ral high
are two new staff members this year DPPF dollars :;:; action followed statements by both sides of increasing ~
are three new classroom teachers at Rutland
for Chrisbnas .
school students helped w1th the art program m grades
·~
~
have been spent to provade special materials in 3
Elementary.
;:
miliLary
actlvlty
along
the
canal
and
warnings
that
the
war
$!
Salvation Army, toys; young
l&lt;i. A b'l'oup of enthusiastic parents pamted all the
reading and m mathematics. The mus1c program has
At Harnsonville the PTO and the board shared
could
be
resumed
at
any
time
if
the
Geneva
military
talks
adult class of First Baptist
walls in the building. Htgh School welding students
been coordinated with U1e various subjects taught in
the cost of constructmg a large cement slab for an
:::
were
not
successful.
·
:
;·
Church, gifts and clothing;
repaired and reassembled the broken backstop and
the regular cJassroom .
outs1de basketball court Four bankrng boards w1th
painted all the playground equtpment . In a marshy
At Middleport Elementary the mus1c program -~t~::;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::·:::::::·::::!::::·:·:~~::::;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;.;.;-:·:·:::::::::~f Mrs. Clyde Ingels, game; Mt.
nets have been installed . Men in the commuruty set
Moriah Saptlst Missionary,
place m the play area, mterested parents installed 400
bas been coordinated with subjects as it has been in
up a fence for ttie ball diamond. The high school
Middleport, large fruit basket ;
feet of dram tile and spread 100 tons of donated
Pomeroy . Here also the reading program has been
welding class repatred the backstop. New overhead
Karen Price, Middleport, frrnt
gravel. They also mstalled a merry-go-round and a
set up in six levels in grades 2, 3 and 4. Donald
stage lights have been installed and a new front stage
and candy basket; Kmghts
horizontal ladder paid for by the PTA
Hanning is the new assistant prtncipal at Middleport.
curtarn has been ordered. New mats for physteal
Templar, gifts; Church of
BraObury contmued w1th its many innovative
He has been active in helping 10 develop this reading
education have been added to the gym . The departThe
Southeast
Ohio Memorial Hosp1tal after Christ, Pomeroy, fruit and
programs in ind1vidua1tzed mstructwn . They spent a
program.
mentalization of grades 4-.'i&lt;i has been expanded. The
Emergency
Medical
Service
suffering a posstble stroke.
candy ; Mrs. Jake Lee, R&lt;lcme,
week al camp agam. A new math program called lMS
AT THE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL the second
remedial reading has been expanded to rnclude
made
five
runs
Thursday,
two
At
5:10
p.m.
the
squad
was
clothmg and cosmetics;
( lnd1'1dualized Math System) from the Ginn Comgroup of S!'Venth graders started in pre-algebra.
grades 1-6. There are three new classroom teachers
mvolving
injured
persons
tn
an
to
the
scene
of
an
auto
called
Rutland Fire Department,
pany was placed in operalton thts fall. Title I
Algebra I is available to advanced students m grade
at this school.
auto
accident.
accident,
where
Thomas
Casto,
r cmedml reading was added . Three new teachers
fruit and candy; American
8. New ceramtc tile was mstalled in the girls' rest
At the h1gh school we have moved a long way on
At
1
p.m
.
the
squad
~as
2 Grove C1ty, and Linda Herd- Legion Auxiliary 39, gifts;
)Oinod the Bradbury staff. Individual reports to
room and gym dressing room. Mr. McComas directed
the big project of constructing a football practu~e
'
.
called
to
transfer
Doris
J
man,
17,
also
of
Grove
C1ty,
Hemlock Grove Christian
par~nts still replace report cards m this school. We
At
the
insistence
of
the
state
Title
I
ofthis
project.
field a track and a baseball diamond. You probably
Kaiser,
27,
Rt.
1,
Portland,
to
were taken to Veterans Church, candy ; Reedsville
hope that some perststent problems with the heatmg
fice we gave up scheduling two remedial sections in
saw ~ recent picture about this m the Sentinel. We
Riverside
Methodist
Hospital
Memorial where they were ladies, gills and a party;
system have been solved by recent repair worK on the
grade seven and grade etgljtTWe are trying to assist
have added eqwpment in several areas, parhcularly
tn
Columbus
apparenUy
suftreated and released.
Baptist Church, Porterfield,
control system.
these kids in other ways . The juniOr high buildmg 1s
in the welding shop and m industrial arts. The
fering
flu.
Squadmen
took
Max
EdAT SALEM CENTER the PTA built and paid for
party, and games; Pomeroy
shll used very much by school and community groups
welding class has built several new tables and InAt
2·08
p.m.
squadmen
were
an out.tde basketball court. The board bought
mundson,
66,
R.
I,
Langsville,
Church
of Nazarene, basket of
for meetings, parties, programs, etc.
creased the welding tea chm g statiOns. The VICA club
called
to
the
WhtSpenng
Pmes
honrontal and monkey bars for the playground.
to
Holzer
Medical
Center
at
apples; employes of Southern
Please remember that this this has been a very
is still qwte active . The Future Farmers of Amenca
Nile
Club
where
Layton
Sayre,
6:38
Slidmg curtams have been made and mstalled to
p.m.
suffering
apparent
Ohio Coal Co., $107.50; Midsketchy outline of some of the things that happened or
have greatly mcreased thel.f activity. The Off1ce
5S,
was
taken
to
Veterans
separate the ftrst grade m the multipurpose room
dehydration .
dleport American Legion,
changed dunng 1973. It IS certainly not a complete
EducatiOn Club has been chartered by the state
from the cafeteria section . The ha lf tune Tttle I
fruit, candy, and silver dollars ;
report by any means, but it should give you an 1dea of
group. We went through the long , hard process known
remedialreadmg teacher has new materials for work
Mrs. Mac Stewart, Mason ,
as PRIDE (Program to ReVtew, Improve, Develop the Meigs Local District in 1973
with students m grades 1-3. The PTA has purchased
dishes, clothing; Paul Simon,
We look forward w1th optimism to a good year for
and Expand vocational education). This w~s a
an electric typewriter, many classroom games, and a
oranges
and candy; Richard
the
district
in
1974.
We
look
forward
to
support
and
complete study and evaluation of all vocatiOnal
new nag stand. There, are two new classroom
Long and Rev. Hicks, candy;
pro grams in all three distncts in the county. We cooperation from staff, students and the public. From
teachers at this schooL
all
of
us
m
the
d1strict
comes
a
wiSh
for
a
happy
and
added a cooperative program ca lled OccupatiOnal
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. Midway Market, two boxes of
At Rutland Elementary School the T1tle I
Work Adjustment (OWA) for students under age 16. A prosperous 1974 for you
(UP!)- President Nixon is at apples; Connie Mash, Mid·
r t:!medJal readrng program has been expanded to
new agriculture program mvolves farm management
odds with the Secret Service dleport, box of oranges; Mr.
and the Federal Aviation and Mrs . Mike Hammer,
'
Administration (FAA) over his Columbus, box of candy;
Officers of the corporation
traveling on a commercial LeLart Falls United Methodist
for Appalachian Development
airlmer like an ordinary Church, $75 ; Avon representoday
the
opening
of
announced
Mrs . Earl Elberfe ld of
citizen. He thinks it set. a good tatives , Avon products;
( Contmued from page I)
l)
Contmued
from
page
the
posihon
of
director
of
(
l .ogan, Ohio died Thursday at
example of saving fueL They Bradbury school, g1fts; Farmmimum, Ntxon had knowlnutrtltonal
services
for
the
mers Hand, dolls to grrls; Mrs.
RACINE
Leo
Taylor,
64,
the Hockmg Valley Community however the latest hike was so large it would probably htt users edge of the Watergate cover-up
think it's dangerous
elderly.
Hospital in Logan where she of such r~fmed product. as gasolme and heating oil the hardest. at least several days before Racine • died Thursday at the
The White House isn't saying Gary Swope, Middleport,
The person to be employed
Holzer
MediCal
Center.
He
was
clothing; Loyal Women 's
had been taken Monday after
March 21, 1973, the date tbat preceded in death by his will be in charge of ad- how Nixon will travel back to Class,
of
Middleport
COLUMBUS - A SPOKESMAN FOR some 300 service Ntxon mamtains he first
becommg ill.
Washington from the Western
ministering
the
senior
citizens'
parents, Jessie and Sarah
Church of Christ, monMrs Elberfeld is surv1ved by station opera tors in central Ohio satd the standby ga'?lme learned of it.
Whtte House.
contrac
t
recently
nutrition
Smith
Taylor,
and
four
her husba nd, Earl, operator of rationing program proposed by U.S. Energy Czar W1lham Suno~
Presidential Press Secretary ey; Pomeroy Order of
The reported presidential brothers .
awarded
to
COAD
by
the
Ohio
Ronald Ziegler called fears for Eastern Stars, four gallons of
the Elberfeld Dept Store may be needed to make Americans aware that there really lS a decision would represent a
Commission
on
Aging
The
Survivmg
are
hts
wife,
Hazel
. . n .
111 Logan, and a brother of gasoline shortage.
the Prestdent's safety aboard ice cream; Barbara Shuler,
major scaledown of Nucon•s Sayre Taylor; three sons, award of $440,000 tn federal
"The
American
public
has
got
to
wake
up
to
this
thmg,
sa1d
Alfred Elberfeld, Pomroy
an airliner "groWldless'' and Middleport, $80; Hearthstone
"OperatiOn Candor ," and
23
funds
will
cover
businessman, who died Oren Dewey, executive d1rector of the Central Ohio Gasoline would break a promise made to Robert D. and Larry L., both of
said Nixon "enjoyed very Class, money; First Baptist
southeastern counties and will
Gallipohs,
and
David
L.,
of
Associati~n.
"We
do
have
a
big
problem."
Dewey
sa1d
Dealers
]\londay.
much" the unprecedented trip Church, $30 ; Maxine Coats
key congressmen including
Also surviving are a son, Dr . ralloning would bring a new way of life, a lot more thought and Senate Republtcan Leader Columbus; four daughters, be coordinated through Ia
to Los
Angeles from Gaskill, $25; Pomeroy National
community
action
agencies
of
Nadm
Fmdley,
Pauline
Taylor
planrung,
such
as
car
pools
and
consolidating
trips,
in
the
use
of
Harold T. Elberfeld, Columbia,
Hugh Scott, R-Pa ., and Sen. and Sandra Taylor, all of whlch the Gallia-Meigs CAP 1s Washington Wednesday on a Bank, $75; Mark V Store,
automobiles.
candy and nuts ; Jones Boys,
S. C ; three daughters, Mrs.
United Airlines flight.
John Tower, RTex .• that he Columbus, and Sarah Stone of a part .
Dewey
srud
he
preferred
a
government
imposed
r~~ionin
g
candy; M&amp;R Foodliner, nuts;
Martha E. Sampsel of
would release the tape tran- Dexter; a stster, Florence
The
position
requires
a
back·
system
over
leaving
dealers
to
shoulder
the
responsJbihty
for
D&amp;D Meats, f1ve pounds of
Wheaton, Ill. , Mrs . Susan E.
scripts. The White House had Simms, Galhpolis; a brother , ground of admmistrative and
sausage; Job's Daughters ,
Brenmng, Wadsworth, Ohw, allocating gasolme to their customers.
already miSsed the deadline of Hugh, in Missouri ; 12 grand- supervisory experience in the
cookies and gills; Wilma and
and Mrs. Sarah E. Countryman
DIVORCE GRANTED
releasing the transcrlpts children, and several meces field of soc1al•ervice delivery.
ANDERSON, CALIF.- THE THREE REAR cars of a 1 :-ear
of Chicago, and six grandAwarded divorces in Meigs Harold Sargent, Middleport,
before Congress went home lor
will
be
held
at
the
Interviews
Amtrak
train
with
some
450
persons
aboard
overturned
early
and
nephews.
children.
County common pleas court cookies; Mildred Betzing, $5,
the Christmas holidays.
funeral services w1ll be held Ohio University lnn, Athens, on are Sylvia Carman, Rt. 2, and Eloise Adams, Pomeroy,
Funeral services will be at 2 today, inJurmg many passe~gers! but ap~rently the~e were no ,
The Post satd presidential
all p.m. Sunday at the Ewing Jan. 4, starting at 10 a.m. All
p m. Saturday at the St. fatalities. A Southern Paciftc R&lt;!ilroad dispatcher sa1d the last
advisers do not believe the Funeral Home with burial to be inquiries should be made to Pomeroy, from Ivan Cannan, $Hi
Mathew Lutheran Church on three cars of Amtrak II, bound for San Diego from Seattle,
Rt 2, Pomeroy, on the grounds
tapes contam legal proof that
East Hunter St. m Logan. overturned one m1le north of hete, pinning passengers 111S1de. Nixon broke the law, but "most m the Letart' Falls Cemetery . COAD, Box 120, Marietta, of gross neglect of duty, and
Fnends may call at the funeral Ohio, 45750. The telephone Elyse Weil from S. David Wf!lL
Friends are being received Three other cars were derailed, he said.
Marriage License
of the public and the news
number 1s 614-37~3315.
time
.
home
any
Ambulance driver Dean Worley said many persons were
from 2 to 4 p.m and from 7 to 9
Larry Howard Shannon, 24,
med1a would read the tranp.m. this eve~1ng at the pinned m tne overturned cars~~t he sa1d he saw no fatali~ies. "I
Lincoln
Heights. and Edna
scripts and conclude that the
Heinlein Funeral Home, 204 went inside one overturned di mg car and helped the ftremen
Mae Blankenship, 19, Lincoln
Pres1dent was mvolved in a
remove some people who wer pinned," Worley said . " It was
West Mam St., Logan.
Heights.
conspiracy," the advtsers said.
handled very welL"
saJd.
The tapes show that the
AKRON (UP!) - The Akron made by Chamber of ComGronen's car was equipped
HOUSTON - THE SKYLAB 3 ASTRONAUTS complete the
President was aware that there Chamber of Commerce an~ merce President George with an electro magnet placed
UNIT CALLED
first hall of their endurance fli ght today, with assurances from
was an orgamzed effort to nounced today it was terminat- Britton at a news conference in it. fiberglass nose with hidThe Pomeroy E-R squad was
Tomghttl'lru Tuesday
ground controllers the1r craft is in good enough shape to comDec . 28-Jan 1, 1974
"contain" Watergate because ing all fmancial and adminis- here.
called
Thursday at 1:38 p.m.
den wires running to the back
plete the llllSsion.
it represented ~ threat to trative responsibility for the
Britton said although the" where they were hooked up to a for Nellie Eblin who was taken
Gerald P. Carr, Edward G. Gibson and William R. Pogue
EMPEROR OF THE
Nixon's re..,lection in the 1972 All-American Soap Box Derby, chamber has tenninated all battery.
to Holzer Medical Center .
reach the midpoint of·their 94-&lt;lay journey at 9:35 a.m. EST as
campa1gn, the Post said.
NORTH
stating that it was killed by financial and administrative
they cross the South Pacific coast of Chile. Flight director Milton
"
It
is
unclear
whether
he
was
11 C
heating, fraud and hoax." responsibility for the Derby it
Lee Marvin
Windler said he believed the stat10n would hold together through
aware
of
offers
of
executive
Ernest Borg nine
The 1973 derby was won by would be willing to work with
the three-month flight despite recurrmg problems with a conShow Starts 1 p.m.
clemency
or
the
payments
of
James
Gronen, 14, Boulder, any responsible organization,
trolling gyroscope and a depleting supply of stabilization gas.
money to the seven convicted Colo. driving a rigged car business or group which would
Watergate conspirators for whlch resulted m his disquali- want to sponsor the race.
s1lence,"
said the Post, quoting fication.
Holzer Medical Center
However, he said there are
one source familiar with the
(Discharged)
The announcement was no sponsors in sight at the
D1x1e Barnette, Darward contents of the tapes. "Tha t is
present time.
of
justice
and
a
obstruction
Bond, Frances Burrow. Oretha
One of those present at the
Caldwell , Hayden Calhhan, crime. The other, the containnews conference was Drew
Pre sto n Collier, Margaret mg of the Watergate, was just
Hern, director of the Derby
Hardm, Vtrgmia Jaques, Nellie good politics ."
qualifier in Charlotte, N.C who
However, the sources said
Jenkins, Bert Jones, Everett
said the Chamber was trying to
'
this
legal
disttnction
probably
McCain , Donald McManis,
kill the Derby with bad publiOPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Mrs. Thomas Robinette and would be ignored by the public.
city.
open
to
question
was
Left
daughter, Larry Sayre, Mrs .
Hern said he would work to
WASHING TON (UP! ) - En9:30 AM TO 9:00 PM
move the Derby to Charlotte.
Albert Tromm and daughter, whether Nixon also would
ergy
director
Wilham
Simon
Mrs. Albert Weaver and son, make a public release of other
sa1d today that new fuel
Carrol Williams. Merr ill documents. regarding Water- allocation regulations to go into
gate-related matters such as
Williams, Burneda Ziegler.
the ITT case or the milk fund effect in mid-January will leave
(Births)
gas stations with about 20 per
Mr . and Mrs. Leland Watson, controversy.
The Post said the most cent less fuel than their
a son, Crown City; Mr. and
customers will demand .
Mrs . Floyd Smith, a son, damaging eVIdence against
S1mon filed final regulations
Nixon was not necessarily in
Jackson.
the seven recordings already governing petroleum products
turned over to the Watergate Thursday lor publication in the
prosecutor but in the tapes of Federal Register. The regulanearly aOO conversations and tions will take effect on Jan. 15.
Simon said today that the
meetings subpoenaed by the
new allocation program will
Watergate committee.
place the local gas station at
HYMN SING SET
the bottom of the priority list
A hymn sing will be held at 8 for fuel, and he acknowledged
p.m. Monday, Dec . 31, New that the ?egulations would m
Year's Eve at the Eagle Ridge effect amount to "a moderate
Community Church. The form of rationing."
Bissell Brothers will be special
Coming ahead of gasoline for
POmeroy pomerov
All
singers
and
the
singers.
putomobiles will be
private
Home of
rutland
national
public are invited.
'
essential services such as
bank
farms,
hospitals, public trans- •
LOCAL TEMPS
the bank or
the cen l ury
The temperature in down- port and industries that
establi shed 1872
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. produce fuel. Other business
3 PIECE GROUP WITH VOCALIST
Friday was 43 degrees under and industry would take next
pnority,
and
next
would
come
sunny skies.
Mombor
gas stations.

eigs 1974

made to

:*

children

system, and an increase of $44,000 to be
spent by the County Board for Mental
Retardation, the total being $84 ,000
compared to $40.000 in 1973.
How It WIU Go
Disbursements m general fund are as
follows: Board of Commissioners salaries
- officials, $15,300; salaries, employes,
$4,600, supplies, $1,500; equipment, $2,000;
rent health departinent, $900; mol&lt;lr
vehicles, engineer's office, $100: conb"acts, repair, $5,000i travel and expenses
of commissioners, $900 ; advertising and
printing, $100; other expenses, $1,500;
landfill operation, $10,0Q0; total, $42,100.00.
ways.
County Auditor, salary-official, $8,200;
Other increases are apparent• in salaries, employes, $21,500, supplies,
$37,500 allotted for jail renovatlon, an $6,000i contracts, repairs, $1 ,~ ; ad·
increase of about $15,000 in the Auditor's vertising and printing, $3a0: other exoffice budget mainly for reassessment of penses, $400; assessing personal property,
_property; $10,000 for the county landfill salaries, employes, $1 ,520 ; assessing
POMEROY - Meigs County w1ll
spend nearly $2 million in providing public
services to it. citizens in 1974, up
$389,628.72 from what was spent in 1973.
· The record appropriation of
$1,919,100.26 was approved Frtday by the
board of county commissioners. The total
is a new record. The total last year was
$1,529,471.54.
Largest deparlmen tal increases Will
come from revenue sharing funds added to
local revenue by the federal government
for capital Improvements, anticipated to
be $202,700.63, and an additional $95,100 m
the motor vehicle fund for roads and high-

i

t

SEOEMS was busy Thursday

Director
needed in

Mrs. Elberfeld
of Logan dies

News . . . in Briefs

Tape renege

Leo Taylor of
Racine is dead

~ FDIC

..- - - - - - - - - -1 Simon said on the CBS-TV

FLOWERS

MAIN OFFICE
Mon • Tues , Wed ., Thurs 9 a m 3 p m
Frldev9a m to7p m
Saturday 9 a m to 12 Noon

RUTLAND BRANCH
Mon , Tues , Wed , Sa t , 9 a m ,J p m
Thursday~a m lo 12Noon

Fnday 9 a .m to 7 p .m

•

..,._..:..Fo;;;r~AI;;;;..I;;.O.;;.cc;;:a.,si..,on,.s.....,-'1

SANDWICH
Order By Phone

A hometown friend.

And Take Em Home
?92-5432

'

We W1re Flowers
Everywhere

!------..:...-----1

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Ph. 992-2039
Ph. 992-5721

Morning News the resulting
shortage of gas would vary
from area to area of the
country, but " basically what we
are looking at is a 20 per cent
shortfall in our gasoline."
Simon has announced a
standby gas rationing plan, and
he says that a btg factor in
determining whether the plan
wtll be implemented is whether
Americans voluntarily limit
themselves to a " target" of IO
gallons of gasoline per week.

VOL b NO. 48

HUNTINGTON, W. Va . - A public
hearing will be held at I :30 p.m. on Jan. 23•
at the Federal Building here on modernizing the Gallipohs Locks and Dam at
Eureka.
The hearing, conducted by the U. S.
Corps of Engineers is expected to settle a
question of whether or not to bypass the

'

present dam with a canal and new locks or
replace the present structure and locks.
The proposed plan w11l involve
replacement of the existing locks with
new , larger locks in a canal bypassmg the
existing dam and renovation of the dam to
continue it in service during the life of the
new locks.

0

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0

VIRGINIA

L[GIENO

.........I -...I
t

GALLIPOLIS
LOCKS AND DAM
REPLAc.Ef.AENT
OHIO IIIY'(II

1'001. AIIU.

.

•

HOW OLD IS IT? ~ Norm Swindler, Hannan Trace Rd., who displays an
ancient grass seed sowing machine above, 118id he purchased lt at a farm auction·
about !Oyearsago.lt'slngood workable condition . T)le Gallia Countian would like
to know about how old It is. Care to take a guess, anyone?

,.

I

•

MAYOR SWORN - Dal e E. Smith, R., right, received
his oath of office as the new mayor of Pomeroy Saturday
from Manning Webster, judge of the Meigs County Probate
and Juvenile Courts. Sm1th was elected in November to fill
the unexpired term of the late William Baronick which runs

(

'

MIDDLEPORT - Risks and rewards
in the Meigs County extension service
since 1940 were reviewed by C. E. Blakeslee for the Middleport - Pomeroy Rotary
Club Friday evening at Heath United
Methndlst Church followmg dinner.
Blakeslee, who is retlring early in
1974, and has been a member of Rotary
since 1940, said his "most hairy" time as
an extension agent came durlng World
War II when he was required to Investigate
loco! farms to determine if their levels of
production warranted retaining men on it
who otherwise would be drafted lnto
military service.
One investigation was carried out
after the Iarmer "innocently" displayed a
riDe to Blakeslee, describing how it
worked, lt.s range, etc., then invited
Blakeslee to proceed with his interview.
Most county agents of Ohio - and

,.. -

I'

through 1975. Don CoiiiM, veteran Pomeroy Village cour.cilman, has served as mayor from the tune of the death of the
late Mr. Baronick until Smith was elected. Mayor Smith
begins his new duties at !2:01a.m. Tuesday , Jan. 1.

Commission delays land option
GALLIPOLIS - Outgoing city comm1sswners, Richard Carter , C H.
McKenzie, and Wymond Bradbury Fnday
in special sess1on tabled a resolution
authorizing an option on land wh1ch the
c1ty IS planmng to purchase for
recreational purposes.
The option action was delayed smce an
accurate description of the land was not
available .
Commissioners signed an easement
agreement with Emerson E. Evans of the
Parklane Trailer Park for the maintenance of a four inch waterline and
authorized City Manager Paul W11ler to
advertise for bids on a new city manager's
car. Willer wrecked his 1970 Chevrolet city
owned car during last week 's snow on
Sanders Hill. The bids wtll be opened on ·
Jan . 17.
Wtller revtewed several projects
underway in the clty includmg the Allen
Drive survey conducted by Robert C.
Vernon Inc . of Marietta."
Residents of Allen Dnve had
requested thetr stree t be widened. Willer
also announced that drilling has begun on
the test wells for the city's addi tional
water supply.
Wilier thanked the commissiOners for
their service to the city during the past
four years. The cornmtssLOners in turn,

World War II was

NIGHT 10 TIL 2

'

It Is presently proposed to construct
two parallel lock chambers in the cana l,
each lock bemg 1,200 feet long and liO feet
wide. The canal will have a general bottom
width of 500 feet.
The canal is expected to provide the
equivalent of a straight reach of river in
which tows can maneuver w1th less mterlerence from the adverse river currents
that presenUy restrict and endanger
nav1gation at the exJStmg locks.
Renovation of the dam is expected to
include stabilization of the foundation rock
with the post-tensioned anchor rods mstalled in holes drilled underneath the
existing piers.
The present roller gales have
deteriorated, and replacement of the gates
is anticipated w1thm the next decade
following construction of the new locks.
The dam will continue to maintain the
navigation pool at the present normal
elevation of 538 feet.
The first cost of construction of the
canal project, including provision of two
1,200 foot locks in the canal and
stabilization of the foundation of. the
existing dam is $95,200,000.
Replacement of the roller gates in the
dam in the lOth year of project life will
have an equivalent present worth at the
lime of locks construction of $8,600,000.
Consideration has been given to the
need for installmg an emergency closure
system on the existing dam similar to the
bulkhead system provided at the new
dams elsewhere on the Ohio River.
The best alternative to the pcoposed
canal project would be a completely new
locks and dam located about three miles
downstream from the existing dam.
The downstream replacement project
was presented in a public hearing m
Huntington m 1967.
At that meeting , the downstream
project was suggested as the preferred
project because of presumed better
navigation conditions there than at the
canal site.
As a result of model studies of both the
proposed canal plan and the alternatlve
downstream plan, the anticipated
navigation conditions at both projects
have been improved .
Comparative cost estimates for the
plans now mdicate a balance in favor of
the canal plan . On the basis of acceptable
navigation conditions and a lower construction cost, the canal plan at the
existing dam is presented as the preferred
plan at this time.
Environmental impacts of the
proposed project are expected to be
moderate. As the existing dam is to be
(Continued on Page 2)

NO PAPER TUESDAY
Publlsher Richard S. OWen announced Saturday that the Dally
Sentinel and Dally Tribune will go to
press early Monday, and that neither
paper will be published on Tuesday ln
order to permll employees to observe
the New Year's hollday.

SATURDAl

POMEROY

PRICE 20 CENTS

Pomeroy-Middleport

Canal, new locks, proposed at Gallipolis dam

They Play It All! !

992-3629

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1973

Galhpohs-Pomt Pleasant

•

Save All of Your
Saleslips
From
Elherfelds In Pomeroy

THE MEIGS INN

Your lnvlled Gtte8l
R em:hing More
Th;m 12,000
Families

3 SECTIONS

WATER
WHEEL

the Fabulous

Elec ti ons, salary-official, $5,200:
salart es. employes , $18 ,340 : supplies,
S4,:l01 ; equipment, $800; contract scrvtces,
$8,044 , travel, $600; other expenses, $550,
total. $37,835.
Buildings and grounds - capital
improvemen t.;;, jail renovation, $37,500 :
matntenance, $5 ,000 ; other expenses,
renovating courthouse, $40,000 : maintenance and operation, sa]Qries, employes,
$8,068.20, supphes, $800 ; contract. , repatr ,
$3,600i contracts, servtces , fuel and hght,
$8,200. tota l, $103,168.20.
Protectton to property and person s,
shenff, salary
official,
$8,200 ;
salan es, employes, $35,900 ; equlpr.oent ,
$15,000 ;
contracts
and
repair, $5,1JOO: adv ertising and pnnting,
$500 ; other expenses, $300, total. $64,900.
Re corder , salary -o fficials , $7 ,900 :

30 PAGES

CIOW'S

•

salaries, employes, $5, 000 ; supplies,
$3,000: documents, rebindmg , $3,000; other
expenses, $100, total, $19,000.
Building regulation department ,
eqwpment . mileage, $600, total, $600
Agriculture, grants, $15,835, insurance
for buildings - fair board, $2,600 ; experimental farm s, s oil conservati on,
$3 ,000 ; apiary mspection, $300; cattle
d1 sease prevention 1 $750 ; bounties ,
hJstoncal soc1ety. $900, total, $23,585.
Health and welfare, Southeast Ohio
Emergency Service, salanes-employes.
$13,000; grant, advance on ambulances ,
$24.827.02, total, $37,827.02.
Tuberculosis Hosp1tal Climes and
Care, salaries, $12,200 ; supphes, $3,500 ;
contract serv1ces, $4,000 ; hospital , $7,000 ;
travel, $1,800 ; Publi c Employes
Rettrement System, $1 ,100; Workmen's
(Continued on Page 2)

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Vallev

Be Tinifty!

..

•

$500, total , $19,605 .95.

tmts

Snow likely northwest, rain
or snow southeast Sunday night
and Monday. Low Sunday night
in the teens northwest, 20s
southeast. High Monday in the
30s.

MEIGS THEATRE

STEAK
HOUSE

$156 : expenses. 1orc1gn JUdge, $500; Jur y
comm.1sston , salaries, employes, $240,
total , $13.773.82.
Juvemle PrfJb3tiOn Department ,
salanes..,mploye. Willoughby Hill , $6,000:
Janet Morris, $5,000; equ1pment, $2,000:
contracts, repair. $500; travel, $300, tot. I
$13,600.
Probate Court , salar y ~ ofrt cta l,
$3,563.82 ; salaries, empl oyes, $4 ,600,
supplies, $2,&gt;00: jurors ' fees, $300 ; other
expenses, $200, total, $11,163.82.
C\erlt of Courts , salary - off1da l,
18.300; saianes, employes, $13 ,700; supplies, $3,300, total, $25,300.
Coroner , salary.offtcia 1, $1 ,890 02;
salanes, employes, $1,100, total , $2,990.02
County Courts, salary-offt ctal ,
$7,583.92 ; salanes, employes. 18,913.03:
supplies, $1,700; witness fees, $9: other
fees. bondsmen, $900; other expenses,

•

Soap Box Derby dead?

Gas outlets
will have
20% less

property, $1,500; other expenses, $1 ,500;
professional serv1res , $3,000, total ,
$45,170.00.
County Treasurer. salary.ofhcla l,
$8,000, salanes, employes, $13,900 ; supplies, $2,100; advertising and printmg,
1500: other expenses, 1500, total. $25,000.
Prosecuhng Attorney, salary-&lt;Jfficlal ,
$6,600: salaries, employes, $4,100; supplies, $100; allowances, $3,000; extra help,
$2,400, total, $16,200.
Bureau of inspection, examinataons county offices, $5,000, total, $5,000.
County Planning Commission ,
salaries- employes, $1,250; Buckeye H1lls,
$978.53, total, $2,228.53.
Common Pleas Court, salar ies·
official, $3,563.82; salaries, employes,
$6,520; supplies, $200; attorney fees, $900;
jw-ors' fees , $1,000; witness fees. $400;
transcripts, $300; travel foreign judges,

Weather

Private flight
said dangerous

COAD work

2 million

a

thanked Willer and City Solicitor Richard
Appointment of a City Auditor. . .
C. Roderick for their hard work during the
Ordmance settlng salary of Mun1c1pal
past year.
Judge .
Newly elected commissioners John
Old business will include a supAllison, Arthur (Pete) Nibert and Douglas plemental appropriatiOn ordinance.
Wetherholt will be sworn in during the city
Other new business scheduled is a
commiSsiOn meeting, Wednesday, Jan . 2. proposed resolution setting date and tune
Other items on the agenda are as follows: of regular commission meetmg; proposed
Selection of a President and v1ce- resolution authorizing bids for courtroom;
Prestdent of City Commission.
proposed appropriati On ordinance for new
Ordinance setting salary of Solicitor. budget year; appointinents to Board of
Appointinent of a City Solicitor.
Health and City Recreation Board, and
Ordinance setting salary of City proposed ordinance authorizmg option for
Audttor.
purchase of recreational property.

Salary hikes needed
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Com1ssioners Friday in special session
employed Mrs. Annabelle Sibley of Sanders Hill as switchboard operator at the
courthouse replacing Mrs. Tressa
Cremeens who resigned.
~
Commissioners also discussed a new
salary raise for Gallipolis Municipal Court
Judge Robert S. Betz and the new city
solicitor .
Under State !.Sue III, all judges in the
state receLved salary mcreases based upon
populahon.

hairy time .

elsewhere in the U. S. - called on to
perform such duties, found it healthier tq
be moved to another county 's extension\
serv1ce following the war
Blakeslee, however, stayed on,
He said h1s only comfort in th1s risky
phase of being a county agent was his
conviction that he had been as honest and
fair as he knew how to be. Although some
political figures in Meigs county suggested
he leave in 1945 at the end of world
hostilities, he ignored their advice.
Blakeslee also had his own
"Watergate" about 25 years ago. An m.
terns! struggle (rooted in politics ) mvolving the desire of one faction to erase
an employe of a related local agency who
worked in the extension office resulted m
Blakeslee's waste basket being sifted
secreUy for "evidence" that might provide
groll!lds for the employe's dismissaL

Common Pleas Court Judge Ronald R.
Calhoun and Probate and Juvenile Judge
R. William Jenkins received salary hikes
in November. Tbe county pays two-fifths
of Betz's salary. Final action will be taken
at the Jan. 2 Gallipolis City Comnussion
meeting.
•
In other matters , commissioner s
granted Mrs. Lora Dickey permission to
transfer appropriations to balance out the
funds ln the 1973 budget and a townshtp
road was established neAr the Bare
property on Rt. 141.

.

COURTHOUSE TO CLOSE
POME!WY - Offices. of the Meigs
County Courthouse will be open on their
usual schedule on Monday, Dec. 31.
Common Pleas Court Judge John C. Bacon
said the offices would fun ction normally
for all resident. who wish to conduct
business on the last day of the year. Offices
will close on Tuesday, New Year's Day.

"Ever since that happened," said
Blakeslee, "I've personally burned the
contents of my waste basket, until, that ls
our county·wide sanitation system was
begun recently."
The rewards of being a county agent
are not counted In financial returns.
R&lt;lther, an agent reviews the years to
recall the "truly outstanding" young
people who have taken advantage of the 4H extension programs and have gone on to ..
become uniquely effective in society
POJ&gt;TOFFICE CLOSING
today.
GALLIPOLIS - Posbnaster Richard
"We did nothing for them, " said Bane announced Saturday that the
Blakeslee, "other than providing the Gallipolis Post Office window will close at
oppor tunity fo&lt; them to help themselves." noon on Monday . Normal mall delivery on
He added, "Seeing them today as all clty and rural routes will be made, and
adults in important roles is my reward." collection and dispatching of mail will be
President Harold Hubbard presided. made on a normal basis. The local post
Ladies of the church prepared and served office will be closed all day on Tuesday.
I
dinner _
iNormal service
resume ~~ay.

~

wil\

1

I

�I .

•

3- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 30, 1973

2- The Sunday Times -Sentinei,Sunday,Oec. 30,1973

Canal, locks

Meigs 1974 budget

~

hire and supplies, $445; salaries , em(Continued from Page 1)
Compensation, $250: other expenses, $656, ployes. $1 ,900; supplies, $800; equipment,
$2,000: clajms and witness rees, $4,000 ;
total, $30,506.00.
Public Employes' Retirement, $300; other
Registration of vital statistics , fees,
$100 : total , $100. Other, health , expenses, $1 ,055, total, $10,500.
Motor Vehicle and Gasoline Tax Fund,
hydrophobia rlaims, $200: crippled
salary-official , $1(,600; supplies,
engineer,
children aid, $2,411; pediatric Otological
$500; equipment, $5,000; expenses, $10,000;
Diagnostic Clinic POD, ~.500 . total, $9,111.
roads, labor, $198,000; materials, $100,000 :
County Board of Mental Retardation,
equipment,
$157,000; contracts, services,
salary-official, $60,000; Pubbc Employes
$250
,000;
emergency,
$10,000; com·
Retirement System, $3,000, Workmen's
pensation and damages, $5,000; Public
Compensation, $1,000, other expenses,
Employes' Retirement, $20,000; Work$20,000, 'total, $84,000.
men
's Compensation and disabled WorkCharities and correction, county
men's Relief, $5 ,000; other expenses,
home, salary-official, $4,171 ; salaries,
$5 ,'000; br idges and culver ts, , labor,
· employes, $11,160; supplies, $10,000;
$30,000; Materials, $40,000; contracts,
equipment, $3,506; contracts, repair , $300,
projects, UO,OOO, total, $860,100.
total, $29,131.
imChild Welfare Board, salary-official, . Reve nue Sharing, capital
provement,
$202,700.63,
total,
$202,700.63
.
$2,323.35 ; other child care, $2,400 ; supLandfill, new con tainers, $2,400;
plies, $700; Children's· Home, salary, ofmaterials,
$10, 000 ; contra cts-services,
ficial, $4,650; salaries, employes, $1! ,076;
supplies, $9,000 ; equipment, $200 ; con- $22,000 ; rent, $900 ; Public Employes'
tracts, repair, $3,000; contracts, services, Retirement , $2 ,000 ; Workmen 's Compensation and Disabled Workmen's Relief,
physician, $800; other expenses, $200,
·
$400
; other expenses, fuel, $7,500 ; other
total, $31 ,349 . 3~.
expenses, $3,100, total, $46,300.
Soldiers' Relief , salary-official, $2,100,
General fund totaled $682,300.71, Dog
salaries, employes, ~.000 ; equipment,
and Kennel Fund, $10,500 Motor Vehicle
$650; rellef allowances, $3,600 ; expenses,
$800; travel, $300 ; other expenses , $1,700, Fund, $860,100.
total, $14,950.
Public assistance, grants, $4,912, total,
$4,912. Workhouse, fees, $1,000, total,
POMEROY - Four candidates , all for
trustee in their respective townships,
$1,000.
Insurance, pensions and taxes, in- failed ,to file the required expense account ·
surance on property, county buildings,
of campaigning with the Meigs County
$6,000,
Workmen's
Compensation
Boa~d of Elections.
(County) and Disabled Workmen's Relief,
All a result these four have forfeited,
$4,000; official bonds, $2,500; pensions, according to Ohio law, their rlghtto run for
Public Employes' Retirement, $30,000, any public office for the next five years.
total, $42,500.
The four include Lowell Greer, Long
Contingencies , unanticipated Bottom ; Delbert F . Mitchell, Langsville;
emergencies, $40,000. total. $40,000.
Shirley R. Findling, Coolville Route 2, and
Dog and Kennel fund , auditor's clerk
Arthur Spencer, Pomeroy Route 3.

'

NEW YORK (UP!) - Nobel
Pri:r.e-wi.nning novelist
Alexander Solzhenitsyn, in a
manuscript smuggled out of
the Soviet Union, has published

tConlinued from Page 1)

continued in operation, the pool upstream

from the dam wiU remain unchanged.
Direct effects of the construction will be
confined to Ute immediate vicinity of Ute
locks and dam site.
Dredging and excavation ror the canal
will necessitate disposing of a considerable volume of sand and gravel on
lands adjoining the canal.
Existing trees and shrubs wiU be lost
and the farmland wiU no longer be
available for cultivation . Construction
operations will temporarily increase
turbidity and sedimentation in the Ohio
River.
The dam contractor will be·required to
conduct his operations so as to minimize,
so far as possible, the adverse effects of
construction.
AU interested individuals, groups, and
agencies are invited and urged to be
present or represented at the public
hearing .
Everyone will be given an opportunity
to express his views and furnish specific
data on any aspect of the study, including

CLOSED
MONDAY, DEC. 31st
...,,.
•
.• -

POMEROY - Many Meigs
County area persons apparently are unaware they are
eligible for benefits under the
new Supplementary Security
Program for the aged, blind
and· disabled scheduled to
begin January I.
The new program will be
moved out of county welfare
department control to the
Social
Security
Administration, an agency of the
U. S. Department of Health,

cloUd."

·

Saxbe is expected to take
office shortly after the new
year.
Bork took office Oct. 20 in the
"fire storm" that accompanied
the firing of special Watergate
prosecutor Archibald Cox and
the resignations of Attorney
General Elliot L. Richardson
and his deputy, William D.
Ruckelshaus.
Saxbe was named to fill the
post Dec o 10 and promptly
confinned by the Senate. Nixon
' had announced the Ohio

Republican's name earlier, but
ihe actual nomination was held
up by the Constitution.
Saxbe was in the Senate in
1969 when the pay of the attorney general was raised, and
a constitutional provision
prevents a member of
Congress from accepting a
federal job for which the pay
was increased while he was in
office.

WASHINGTON (NEAl - Recently I talked at length to one
of the ·most seasoned woman politicians in the country, and
learned that the matter which troubled her most was wbat she
conceived to be the rampant divisiveness in the nation.

Peterson said, possibly be- plemental Security Income
cause the rest don't Wlderstand disability must meet the social
security definition, which says
the new eligibility system.
The changeover from state to a person has to ' have a
federal control involves many disability that makes it imchanges in eligibility and possible for him to engage in
variations in the amount of any " substantial gainful activity because of a mental or
payment.
Basically , persons with . physical impairment" that is
financial need who are over 65, expected to last for a year or
or are legally blind are eligible. longer, or to end in death.
This means, Peterson said, a
There will be a change,
however,
in
disability person receiving welfare
money now with a broken leg,
requirements.
A person applying for Sup- will receive payments con- .
tinuing through, the first of the
year . A person who breaks his
leg after the first of the Y.ear is
not eligible as most fractures
don 't disable a person for a
year.
Peterson said under

come after January 1st

formsi one, a new gold colored
check and the other, the
familiar green Federal check
but with several names on the
face of the check. The gold
check and the special green
check will represent the first
payments made by the Federal
Govemment under ihe new
Supplemental Security Income
program Which begins January
I, 1974.
"The reason for the gold
colored check is simply to give

Texan to spe~ . io
men's fellowship
GAWPOUS - J . A. Dennis
of Austin, Texas, will be the
guest speaker for the "charter
party'' c~ the Full gospel
Businebi Men 's Fellowship ,
Gallipolil Olapter.
The event Ia slated at 7 p.m.
. Saturday, J.-. ~at the HoUday
Inn. Dennla, .., attorney , b an
auth&lt;r and publllher and an
advocate for J..us Ouist.

A bill was introduced to
lower the salary to ihe 1969
level, but during its progress
Proxmlie filed suit, claiming
Bork could only serve 30 days
under a 19th century law
regarding
acting
appointments. The Justice Department said the attorney
general's post was created
after the law was passed and
was specifically exempted.

everywher "t!,

non-

denominational itself, but
cooperating
with
all
denominations in encouraging
and inspiring men In the service of Jesus Christ and their
r~tive churches. (2) To
reach men everywhere for
Christ, taking note of Ute fact
that many are not being
reached by current methods of
The Full Golpel Bti&amp;lnesa evangeliom, and realizing
Men's
Fellowship
ln- others of their same social,
tem.Uonal wu founded with a cultucal , or industrial interests
three-fold purpoae: (I ) To more readily ,than can anyone
pniVitle I bull of feiJowahlp elae. ( 3l I To bring about a
llllCIIII aU lull goepel men Krealtr measure of unity in the
' I
body of ChriSt, the church .
\

us some quick way of knowing
which payment a person is
talking about when they
contact our office", Frederick
said. "The other special green
checks will be issued on an as
needed basis to newly eligible
applicants where there is an
immediate and emergency
need for funds . Banks, merchants and others who cash
checks as a part of their
regular business activity
should feel free to contact any
social security office if they
have any, question about the
new checks ."
The Supplemental Security
IncOme program is a new
program which begins January
1,1974. It provides paymen~ to
aged, blind and disabled Individuals up to $130 or up to
$195 for eligible couples.

weUare, a pers~on could have
$300 In the. bank. Uuder the
new program, an Individual
can have up to $1,500 In a
bank. PersoDS, wider . the
new · progra·m , c&amp;n own a
house valued at up to $25,000
plus furnishings.
About 2.9 million additional
persons nationally are eligible
for the new program over the
old one . And of that total, about
2.7 million are aged.
One of the reasons for the
dramatic increase of . eligible
aged is, there are no relative
re&amp;ponslbility provisions as
there were under the weHare
program.
Persons with little or no
regular cash income and who
don't own many liquid assets
are eligible for the program.
And persons, who fill the' age,
blindness
or
disability

requirerrients, who are now
geWng state or local assistance money are assured their
income will not be reduced
because . of the federal
program.
The program is to provide a
basic cash income of at least
$130 monthly for an individual
and $195 for a married couple.
In July 1974, it is expected
Congress will raise these
llgur~ to $140 and $210 monthly . These are maximum
figures , and the exact amount
an eligible persoo receives will
depend on how much other
income he has.
Peterson S.id the money is
not social security. The
payment money for the
program comes out of federal
general revenue funds (income
and corporate taxes ). Social
security benefits are 'paid from
contributionS pf ~ workers,
employers and self-&lt;&gt;mployed
people.
People receiving social
security checkl! can also get
supplemental security income
if they are eligible for both.
Tbe social security age~cy
was chosen to oversee the new
program mainly because it
already uses computers to
handle payments, and since the
new program is national with
standard
nationwide
requirements, It will be easier
to prevent duplicate payments,
overpayments, fraud and
payments to ineligible persons.
Meigs County persons who
aren'tgetting state aid now but
think they may qualify for the

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Wednesday As Usuall

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Happy New Year.

ALLISON ELECTRIC CO.
218 THIRD AVE.

&lt;'

Widespread industry slowdowns and heavily-increasing
unemployment are not inevitable.
The multi-billions which can and should be thrown into the
economy in the years just ahead - starting early in 1974 - to find
and produce more energy and to use more efficiently what we
have, could result in a boom the likes of which this country has
not seen in some time.
Dollars thrown into energy would have a rippl e effect
through the ecooomy. They would stimulate old industries a~d
encourage new ones. The result would be new efficiency, new
products, higher profits and wages and the need for more skilled
Present for part of the conversation was a young man
and unskilled' workmen of all types .
devoted to the problems of what today are called the "ethnics,"
That is, this will all be true if we use our common sense and
which in modern translatioo means European national
get oo ' with it.
minorities, and predominantly those from Eastern Europe.
The wider development of our huge reserve of offshore oil
He argues, with a rationale that neither the woman politician
and gas, of nuclear energy, of solar energy for heating, of slow
or l could follow, that in their current stage the ethnics were
sulfur coal are practical today , given a .Proper and reasonable
raising "eUmicltyn to new levels which were supportive rather
definition of environmental safeguards. The funds are available
than destructive of a broad sense of American nationality and
for these investments. A trans-Alaskan gas line and added
vital corrunon endeavors.
petroleum lines are urgently required.
The woman, totally unconVinced, contended ihat the
These actions are practical now. They don 't require new
problem runs much deeper than the simple fact of separateness,
research to be reasonable at current petroleum prices. They'll
where it exists, as between blacks and whites, the young and the
become even more profitable as the cost of oil moves up .
'
adult, men and women, "etlullcs" and the older established
Investment in the development of longer-range energy
Americans (some of whom had their own problems of
sources will also involve billions over the years ahead - in oil
separateness In an earlier era.)
shale, in theliquifaction and gassification of coal, in breeder and
What she finds most disturbing is the active, sometimes
fushion nuclear reactors, in geothermal energy and in the conVindictively militant promotion of this divisive spirit at the exversion of solar power to electricity, either on the ground or in
Pense of
corrunoj cause.
..,...
space. These investments will call for the employment of still
Her concern is especially interesting, coming as it does from
more men and wQmen' and fcir increasing the output of our fa ca Democrat of proven perception. For, while many Democrats
tories - In the same ma!lller as with the Apollo moon program.
have indeed laid heavy blame on Mr. Nixon, the Democratic
Next, there is a need for other billions for investment and
party -in the name of more ''real freedom" -has by reforms
production of energy saVing devices which would save more over
widened participation in their processes to include many diverse
their lifetimes than their cost and bring a return nn irivestment of
groups which belore1972played little if any role.
from 10 per cent to 30 or 40 per cent. These energy saving gadgets
What this troubled lady sees right now is freedom taken to
run all the way from complex computet systems to adjust inthe point of license, freedom read as an ingrown, selfish
dustrial furances and control the processing of steel and other
preoccupation with the presumed needs and the consequent
products to simple home devices such as insulation, dam'pers for
demands of the separate group.
our furancesand thermostats which automatically turn down the
She knows as well as anyone the argument, put forth
·
heat at bedtime.
sometiines by separatist leaders and sometimes by scholars and.
The money to spark this investment can be made available
observers, that groups once deprived, disadvantaged or ignored
now. Consider the huge slliilil which U.S. indusiry now spends
must be allowed some leeway of overstatement and overabroad in the search to develop oil and gas, and the major
reaction in the quest for their "identity" and a place in the SWl.
amoWlts which are programmed for the future . Private industry .
But she thinks the goals of attention.getting have been
has major plans for inv~ing in North African gas, which will
largely achieved, and that further militant exhorting to
necessitate a heavy investment in liquefaction, in tankers and in
separatism is severely damaging both to the separatists and the
other equipment. Private industry too has been scrambling for
country.
the chance to engage in tbe long range development of Soviet gas
Some separatist leaders would quickly snap back and say
fields. Other U.S. firms in a variety of fields spend many millions
that the substantive goals they seek - equality of ecooomic
each year in developing investments abroad. If a heavy portion
opportunity and status, as an examp)e, for both blacks and
of this projected spending can be diverted to domestic research
women - have not been approached at more than a token place .
in the fields mentioned above, American industry, U. S. defense
In some cases, this response ignores bigger gains. But
and the American consumer will profit greatlY.
probably the better contention is that, once "Identity" is ·
The major problem in doing all this will not be in finding the
achieved, excessive stress on divisive attitudes is grossly selfmoney- if the potential market is there, the profits reasonable,
the environmental and other restrictions not prohibitive and
defeating .
.
It takes two to separate. Surely we have needed to highlight
government regulations not overly time con~uining.
the shortcomings of those Americans who have borne heavy
But there will have to be a major change in official attitudes .
responsibility for keeping groups in this society disadvantaged
Washington must develop a better system of communications for
and unrecognized. But those batWng for their place in the sun
making available to the public much more freely and conhave to understand that resentments cannot be carried forever,
veniently the heavy amounts of data on energy exploration and
that the biggest gains will now from making peace and common . development apd in tecluliques for efficiency-of-use now hidden
cause and finding true nationality.
in government files.

an

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Little.new in health care proposal

By JOHN T. KADY
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Tbe
Governor's Task Force on
Health Care officially released
its long awaited report Saturday and it contained few surprises but it did have more detaU on a couple of controversial
items such as medical schools
and Blue Cross.
The report, as expected recommended against establish- ·
men\
or · undergraduate
medical schools In the Dayton
and Akron areas at the present
but did not rule them out
OPEN HOUSE SET
J
altogether.
ATHENS - An open house
"The Task · Force recomwill be held jointly by the
mends that within the region
Social Security Administration
around Akron and around
and the Armed Forces RecruitDayton, graduate medical
ing Center oil January 7. Both
centers should be developed u
facilities, located at 221
a
first
feasible
and
Columbus Road, Athens, have
etonomically appropriate way
recently opened their doors to
.to provide more physicians for
the public. They now want to
Ohio at an early date. through
take the opportunity to
upgrading retention
acquaint the people of this area
possibilities,' ' the report said.
with the services available
''Therefore, when additional
from them. A grand opening
need is proven and financial
ceremony will be held at I
feasibility Is assured, a second
p.m ., followed by guided tours
phase of development should
provide . undergraduate
of both facilities .
medical schools in these same
regional centers recognizing
Fleet Flier ·
this therefore as an ultimate
. Famous lor il s long migra·
and
costller method of
t1on s. the Canada goose ca~
ll&gt; at a steady pace of Sa
providing more physicians,"
miles an hour. It usually ' new federal program, may
Ute report said.
flie s in a ·Shape formati on conta~l The Athens Social
The Task Force also recom·
and at considerable eleva· Securtty Qfftce at 22II&gt;
mended
that the Ohio Board of
tions .'
Columbus Road, Athens.

v

TUESDAY, JAN. 1st

for energy investment ...·
WASHI~GTON (NEA) - The 1974 economic recesston or
. ..
slowdown so widely predicted need not occur .

BOARD TO ORGANIZE
MIDDLEPORT- Th e organiza tiona!
meeting of the Meigs Local Boa rd of
Education has been set for 7:30 p.m.
Though a Democrat, she did not automatically charge, u
Monday, Jan . 7, in the Superintendent's
some in her party do, that it is all President Nixon's fault, that he
Office in Middleport.
has pitted group against group in two elections and the interim
years. She believes that Americans themselves are advancing
the cause of separateness from each other.

.

AND

•'

Rx: new directions

' Undermining the
. common cause

New colors of checks to
MARIETTA
Some
residents of the southeastern
Ohio area will receive a different type of check from
Social Security shortly after
the first of the year.
According to Don A.
Frederick, Social Security
District Manager in Marietta ,
the new checks will take two

Ray Cromley

Bruce Biossat

and or environmental considerations.
Statements should be supported by
factual information insofar as practicable.

Bork's term challenged in
suit brought by Proxmire
WASifiNGTON (UPI)-The
attorney general's of!lce is
"under a legal cloud," Sen.
Wllliam Proxmire said Saturday in asking the U.S. district
Court to rule immediately on
his suit challenging the term of
acting Attorney General
Robert H. Bork.
In a $1tement, Proxmire, 0..
Wis., said he asked the court
for a sununary judgement in
the case . He said Bork's ap.
pointment expired 20 days
before hjs successor was
named and as.ked for a ruling if
any of Bork's actions exceeded
his authority or if Willism B.
Saxbe, should repeat any of
them after he ts sworn in as
attorney general .
"I ani asking the court to
resolve the ambiguity concerning actions taken by Mr. Bork
during Ute :ztl.day period when
he occupied office illegally,"
Proxmire ,said.
·
" It is intolerable that he
should be acting under a legal

were Albert Woodard, left, who retired a year ago after 29
years service for the depar\ffient, and CUrtis Powell, a lso a
recent retiree, wbo worked for the department for 27 years. A
big cake was presented to Durst by his fellow employes. ·

TiiREE RETIRE -Rudy Durst (center), 68, of Portland
will retire Monday from the Ohio Department of Highways in
Meigs County after more than 26 years service. Joining Durst
at !ar~weU festivities Friday at the highway garage on SR 7,

technical, economic, social and ecological

New benefits begin January 1st

an extensive documentary
expose of the Soviet secret
police, prison camp and terror
system, called "The Gulag
Archipelago, 19111-1956."

WE WILL BE

Four didn't file

Education and Welfare.
EdWin J . Peterson, manager
of the Athens office of HEW
said persons already receiving
welfare under Old Age
Assistance, Aid to the Blind or
Disabled, will be automatically
converted into the new federal
program and need not apply.
Many others, who perhaps
didn't meet state welfare
requirements, are eligible
under Jhe new program. Only
about 5.0 of these persons in
Meigs County . have applied,

Soviet secret police exposed in smuggled manuscript

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Regents distribute state funds
for
gradu•te
medical
education to assure that at
least 50 per cent of all
residencies
are
in
primary care. It also recommended that residency programs
are
equitably
distributed to assure that every
area has an opporturdty to
attract and retain physicians
for practice who trsin them.
The report said also ihe
state's established 111edical
schools have an obligation to
assist In the rapid development
of graduate medical centers in
the Dayton and Akron areas.
''This responsibility includes
the lending of faculty for development, assignment of student$ and residents for train·
ing, recruiting and appointing
the clinical faculty of ihese
centers to their own faculty,"
the report said.
The Tuk Force alao recommended that six health 111811power education regiODI be es'
tablllhed in ·the lllate.
.
''To maximize btlalth care
delivery tbrougbtoullhe lllate,
all llltllq)OWer tralnlng progl'lllllll, in both their academic
and cllnlcal phUetl, need to be
part Of .regional systems of
health manpower education to
assure !hat ultimately ihOie
!rallied are equitably distributed throughout a region and not
clustered in major cities:" the

report said.
n\e Task Force also recommended that the "Blue Cross
Enabling Act be amended to
strengthen the public accountability and effectiveness . of
Blue Cross In Ohio by consolidation into one statewide

plan."
The . plan, the Task Force
said, would be g9verned by a
nine member board of trustees
appointed by the governor,
have a hospital-medical committee in an advisory capacity
and has regional offices
throughout the state,
In a cover letter, Task Force
chairman Frank P. Celeste and
vice chairman Howard L. Collier, said a major theme which
runs through the entire report

is the need for greater public
accountability of the health
care system.
"Public accountability is
viewed as one of the ways to
make the health care system
responsive to public need,"
they said. ·
"At the same time, Ulis re~
port caIIs. uptin all those involved in the health CIU'e system - those who govern and
manage hospitals, doctors,
nurses and other health
professionals, and government
officials - to work together
towards achieving the objectives set out in the r~rt,"
Celeste and Collier said.

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PRESSMAN RETmES
CoLUMBUS (UP)) - Jtm ~
Pendergast, 68, a pressman for &gt;.
DRIVER INJURED
nearly 51 y~ars at .the ••
POMEROY
Richard Columbus Citizen Journal ~.
Robert Young, 34, Racine, Rt. here, announced his retirement _.
1, was treated and released at . FriW:y, effective after the New ' '
Veterans Memorial Hospital Years Eve shift. Pendergast, ; '
following a !Ingle car accident who joined the .old Citizen on .;
Saturday morning at 4:26 a.m. May I, 1923 wben he was not , ••
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's quite 18 years old, said his most
department said Young was memoral moment came when ··•
driving on county road 19, ~ Ore at ihe Ohio Penitentiary ••
Sutton Twp., when he struck a m 1930 required numerous ;
bridge. Young's car was extru and specials to be ;:
demolished. H~ was taken to printed.·Nearly 300 men died In ..
the hospital by th~ , Pomeroy· that fire. "We didn't c~nge '!
ER squad. The accident Is stiU clothes for
days, · he
Wider investigation.
said.

c.

thr!"

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Never in the history of any
land, Solzhenitsyn contends,
has any p&lt;'Ople so suffered at
the hands or their ~overnment
as under the Soviet system. He
does not explicitly call for the
downfall of the system but
makes clear his opinion that
without fundamental change
repression of the Soviet pecple
· cannot be ended.
There was no immediate
reaction from Soviet officials
in Moscow.
The book is expected to get
wide circulation and discussion
in the West. It is being
published in Europe and in
North America. The New York
Times, in tOOay's editions,
published the first of a threepart digest of excerpt" from
'the book in an English translation copyrighted by Harper
&amp; Row, and offered the excerpts to its newspaper clients
in North America .
Archipelago Is Symbol
Archipelago means a chain
or islands. In Solzhenitsyn's
work it symbolizes the network
of secret police installations,
camps, prisons, transit centers,
communications
facilities, transportation
systems,
and
spying
or ganizations that honeycombs
the length and breadth or the
Soviet Union.
Solzhenitsyn concludes that

the s(•crc! pollee arc the vital
element uf the Soviet regime,
and have been since its founding by Lenin .
" Solzhe nitsyn ('barged former
Soviet dictator Josef Stalin
with devising in 1953 a plot tn
harass, murder and imprison

thousand s

of

Jews.

Solzhenitsyn said the former
dictator whipped up &lt;:Hili Jewish feelin gs i~l a press
ca mpaign
beginning in
January , 1!15:1, hut Stalin died
before he completed the plan.
He gave a statisti ca l comparison between conditions
under the czars and in the
Soviet Union .· ln every
category -arrests, terms of

imprisorunent, executions._.:.l1e
found. the Soviet government
worse that czarist rule by up to
1_,000 to one.

Book Uses Real Names

1\ohl'l IIOI'l'.l ist Sulzlwnil7.yn s11ys no
fH'Oplt• haVl' ,..Ufl'('rt•d SO Ill LH"h a"

H ussians hall'

undt•r

publishing known as _"Sail Ill·
dat."
Last August 28, Solzhenitsyn
told Western newsmen his life
had been threatened, apparently by KGB agents, who
demanded he drop his dissident
activities and writing or " rot in

the Ht•ds

prison." A week later, he said a
friend, Elizavela Voronyenskaya, wa s arrested in Leningrad and after five days of
interrogation, handed over a
copy of the book to the KGB .
Si1e returned home and com. milled sultide by h.angi ng,

Ohio welfare is healthy
figures released by the
COLUMBUS I UP! )
of
Health,
Recently publi shed federal Department
Welfare,
figures s how Ohio well below Educati on and
Charl
es
W.
Bates,
sta te
the- national average and states
of compa rabl~ size in the welfare dir ector , said ThUrsnurnber of welfare recipients day .
Ohio has only 58.7 welfare
per 1,000 population.
As of June, 1973, Ohiu wa s in recipients per 1,000 populati on,
better sha pe than Penn- said Buies , compared with the
sylva nia ,
Massach use tts , ·national average of 70.1.
Michiga n , Jllinois, New York
and California, according to

Solz:henitsyn 's new book consists of two parts of his sevenpart autobiography. Unlike his
earlier 11ovels about life in
Soviet political concentraUon
camps, " A Day in the Life of ·
Ivan Denisovitch" and " The
First Circle," the new book
NFO TO MEET
marks Solzh enitsyn 's {irst
POMEROY - The Meigs
work using real names of County National Farmers
persons.
Orga nization wiJJ meet at 8
The new book was first p.m. Wednesday in the
published in Russian and vocationc-~1 • agriculture room
circulated secretly in typewrit- of Meigs High School. All
~n carbon copies-a form of fanners are welcome .

BRITAIN HIT HARD
LONDON (UP! ) - More
than 500,000 Britons have been
thrown out of work because of
the country 's energy crisis and
the number of jobless might
reach a milhon in the next f~w
weeks, government officials

announced .

Solzhenitsyn said .
He wrote: " I kept myself
from printing this book all

these years because of my duty
towards those still living"apparently re[erripg to the m
camp prisoners interviewed
for the book.
" But since the KGB seized
my book, there is nothing left
but to publish it immediMely''

SUNDAY
TJMES..SENTINEl
Publrshed every S.undolry
by
The
Oh io
VaHey
Pubfo5.hing Co
G A LLI POLIS
DAILY TRIBUNE
U~ rh l rd Ave , G•ll iPOHS,

On io 4 ~UI .
P ubhshf'&lt;:! every weeli:day
even i n'OI ll'X c ept S a turday
Second Class Posu1,1e Pai d
at G&amp;llopolos. . Onio 45631
THE DA ILY SE NT I NEL
Ill Court St , Pomeroy , o
~ Sl6 9 Publ i sh~td everr week
day t11en lng except Sa.t ur
day , Enll!'reci "'second ci a 55
m• ili ng mt~tter 111 P omeroy ,
Ohio Post Office
Bv c ar rter oaiiV Hid
Sunday. SSe per week
MA IL
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
The Ga lli po li s Tr ibune .n
Onio illnr:l WeSI Yir;in i a one
rear 11 5, srtt months i ll , lnree
months 5j, elsewhere 51 1 per
yearr , s ix month5 59, U1ree
months S.S SO
.
The Oa[ly S.ent i t~el. one
year il 6.00 . $ 1K..Jn.Clillti5 S8 so ,
three monthS "i S.O:tL-,.,.
The U n1 lt r:l Prti's f n..J
lernat i onilll Is e .H i ul l vety
l!ntltter:l to the ul.e t o r
publica t ion of a ll news
dispatchl!'!i c redll~d to t his
n ewspape r &amp;nd al5o the local
news published i'lere ln

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thr Li Tuesday
Dec . Jo.Jan . l , \974
EMPEROR
OF THE NORTH
Lee M arvin
Ernest Borgni ne

Show Starts 7 p.m .

Tonight thru
Monday, Dec . 31

GREEN
it...

Poople negd
in the year 2022.
METRCX:OtOR
PANAVI SION.!-

Cartoon

0

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3- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 30, 1973

2- The Sunday Times -Sentinei,Sunday,Oec. 30,1973

Canal, locks

Meigs 1974 budget

~

hire and supplies, $445; salaries , em(Continued from Page 1)
Compensation, $250: other expenses, $656, ployes. $1 ,900; supplies, $800; equipment,
$2,000: clajms and witness rees, $4,000 ;
total, $30,506.00.
Public Employes' Retirement, $300; other
Registration of vital statistics , fees,
$100 : total , $100. Other, health , expenses, $1 ,055, total, $10,500.
Motor Vehicle and Gasoline Tax Fund,
hydrophobia rlaims, $200: crippled
salary-official , $1(,600; supplies,
engineer,
children aid, $2,411; pediatric Otological
$500; equipment, $5,000; expenses, $10,000;
Diagnostic Clinic POD, ~.500 . total, $9,111.
roads, labor, $198,000; materials, $100,000 :
County Board of Mental Retardation,
equipment,
$157,000; contracts, services,
salary-official, $60,000; Pubbc Employes
$250
,000;
emergency,
$10,000; com·
Retirement System, $3,000, Workmen's
pensation and damages, $5,000; Public
Compensation, $1,000, other expenses,
Employes' Retirement, $20,000; Work$20,000, 'total, $84,000.
men
's Compensation and disabled WorkCharities and correction, county
men's Relief, $5 ,000; other expenses,
home, salary-official, $4,171 ; salaries,
$5 ,'000; br idges and culver ts, , labor,
· employes, $11,160; supplies, $10,000;
$30,000; Materials, $40,000; contracts,
equipment, $3,506; contracts, repair , $300,
projects, UO,OOO, total, $860,100.
total, $29,131.
imChild Welfare Board, salary-official, . Reve nue Sharing, capital
provement,
$202,700.63,
total,
$202,700.63
.
$2,323.35 ; other child care, $2,400 ; supLandfill, new con tainers, $2,400;
plies, $700; Children's· Home, salary, ofmaterials,
$10, 000 ; contra cts-services,
ficial, $4,650; salaries, employes, $1! ,076;
supplies, $9,000 ; equipment, $200 ; con- $22,000 ; rent, $900 ; Public Employes'
tracts, repair, $3,000; contracts, services, Retirement , $2 ,000 ; Workmen 's Compensation and Disabled Workmen's Relief,
physician, $800; other expenses, $200,
·
$400
; other expenses, fuel, $7,500 ; other
total, $31 ,349 . 3~.
expenses, $3,100, total, $46,300.
Soldiers' Relief , salary-official, $2,100,
General fund totaled $682,300.71, Dog
salaries, employes, ~.000 ; equipment,
and Kennel Fund, $10,500 Motor Vehicle
$650; rellef allowances, $3,600 ; expenses,
$800; travel, $300 ; other expenses , $1,700, Fund, $860,100.
total, $14,950.
Public assistance, grants, $4,912, total,
$4,912. Workhouse, fees, $1,000, total,
POMEROY - Four candidates , all for
trustee in their respective townships,
$1,000.
Insurance, pensions and taxes, in- failed ,to file the required expense account ·
surance on property, county buildings,
of campaigning with the Meigs County
$6,000,
Workmen's
Compensation
Boa~d of Elections.
(County) and Disabled Workmen's Relief,
All a result these four have forfeited,
$4,000; official bonds, $2,500; pensions, according to Ohio law, their rlghtto run for
Public Employes' Retirement, $30,000, any public office for the next five years.
total, $42,500.
The four include Lowell Greer, Long
Contingencies , unanticipated Bottom ; Delbert F . Mitchell, Langsville;
emergencies, $40,000. total. $40,000.
Shirley R. Findling, Coolville Route 2, and
Dog and Kennel fund , auditor's clerk
Arthur Spencer, Pomeroy Route 3.

'

NEW YORK (UP!) - Nobel
Pri:r.e-wi.nning novelist
Alexander Solzhenitsyn, in a
manuscript smuggled out of
the Soviet Union, has published

tConlinued from Page 1)

continued in operation, the pool upstream

from the dam wiU remain unchanged.
Direct effects of the construction will be
confined to Ute immediate vicinity of Ute
locks and dam site.
Dredging and excavation ror the canal
will necessitate disposing of a considerable volume of sand and gravel on
lands adjoining the canal.
Existing trees and shrubs wiU be lost
and the farmland wiU no longer be
available for cultivation . Construction
operations will temporarily increase
turbidity and sedimentation in the Ohio
River.
The dam contractor will be·required to
conduct his operations so as to minimize,
so far as possible, the adverse effects of
construction.
AU interested individuals, groups, and
agencies are invited and urged to be
present or represented at the public
hearing .
Everyone will be given an opportunity
to express his views and furnish specific
data on any aspect of the study, including

CLOSED
MONDAY, DEC. 31st
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POMEROY - Many Meigs
County area persons apparently are unaware they are
eligible for benefits under the
new Supplementary Security
Program for the aged, blind
and· disabled scheduled to
begin January I.
The new program will be
moved out of county welfare
department control to the
Social
Security
Administration, an agency of the
U. S. Department of Health,

cloUd."

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Saxbe is expected to take
office shortly after the new
year.
Bork took office Oct. 20 in the
"fire storm" that accompanied
the firing of special Watergate
prosecutor Archibald Cox and
the resignations of Attorney
General Elliot L. Richardson
and his deputy, William D.
Ruckelshaus.
Saxbe was named to fill the
post Dec o 10 and promptly
confinned by the Senate. Nixon
' had announced the Ohio

Republican's name earlier, but
ihe actual nomination was held
up by the Constitution.
Saxbe was in the Senate in
1969 when the pay of the attorney general was raised, and
a constitutional provision
prevents a member of
Congress from accepting a
federal job for which the pay
was increased while he was in
office.

WASHINGTON (NEAl - Recently I talked at length to one
of the ·most seasoned woman politicians in the country, and
learned that the matter which troubled her most was wbat she
conceived to be the rampant divisiveness in the nation.

Peterson said, possibly be- plemental Security Income
cause the rest don't Wlderstand disability must meet the social
security definition, which says
the new eligibility system.
The changeover from state to a person has to ' have a
federal control involves many disability that makes it imchanges in eligibility and possible for him to engage in
variations in the amount of any " substantial gainful activity because of a mental or
payment.
Basically , persons with . physical impairment" that is
financial need who are over 65, expected to last for a year or
or are legally blind are eligible. longer, or to end in death.
This means, Peterson said, a
There will be a change,
however,
in
disability person receiving welfare
money now with a broken leg,
requirements.
A person applying for Sup- will receive payments con- .
tinuing through, the first of the
year . A person who breaks his
leg after the first of the Y.ear is
not eligible as most fractures
don 't disable a person for a
year.
Peterson said under

come after January 1st

formsi one, a new gold colored
check and the other, the
familiar green Federal check
but with several names on the
face of the check. The gold
check and the special green
check will represent the first
payments made by the Federal
Govemment under ihe new
Supplemental Security Income
program Which begins January
I, 1974.
"The reason for the gold
colored check is simply to give

Texan to spe~ . io
men's fellowship
GAWPOUS - J . A. Dennis
of Austin, Texas, will be the
guest speaker for the "charter
party'' c~ the Full gospel
Businebi Men 's Fellowship ,
Gallipolil Olapter.
The event Ia slated at 7 p.m.
. Saturday, J.-. ~at the HoUday
Inn. Dennla, .., attorney , b an
auth&lt;r and publllher and an
advocate for J..us Ouist.

A bill was introduced to
lower the salary to ihe 1969
level, but during its progress
Proxmlie filed suit, claiming
Bork could only serve 30 days
under a 19th century law
regarding
acting
appointments. The Justice Department said the attorney
general's post was created
after the law was passed and
was specifically exempted.

everywher "t!,

non-

denominational itself, but
cooperating
with
all
denominations in encouraging
and inspiring men In the service of Jesus Christ and their
r~tive churches. (2) To
reach men everywhere for
Christ, taking note of Ute fact
that many are not being
reached by current methods of
The Full Golpel Bti&amp;lnesa evangeliom, and realizing
Men's
Fellowship
ln- others of their same social,
tem.Uonal wu founded with a cultucal , or industrial interests
three-fold purpoae: (I ) To more readily ,than can anyone
pniVitle I bull of feiJowahlp elae. ( 3l I To bring about a
llllCIIII aU lull goepel men Krealtr measure of unity in the
' I
body of ChriSt, the church .
\

us some quick way of knowing
which payment a person is
talking about when they
contact our office", Frederick
said. "The other special green
checks will be issued on an as
needed basis to newly eligible
applicants where there is an
immediate and emergency
need for funds . Banks, merchants and others who cash
checks as a part of their
regular business activity
should feel free to contact any
social security office if they
have any, question about the
new checks ."
The Supplemental Security
IncOme program is a new
program which begins January
1,1974. It provides paymen~ to
aged, blind and disabled Individuals up to $130 or up to
$195 for eligible couples.

weUare, a pers~on could have
$300 In the. bank. Uuder the
new program, an Individual
can have up to $1,500 In a
bank. PersoDS, wider . the
new · progra·m , c&amp;n own a
house valued at up to $25,000
plus furnishings.
About 2.9 million additional
persons nationally are eligible
for the new program over the
old one . And of that total, about
2.7 million are aged.
One of the reasons for the
dramatic increase of . eligible
aged is, there are no relative
re&amp;ponslbility provisions as
there were under the weHare
program.
Persons with little or no
regular cash income and who
don't own many liquid assets
are eligible for the program.
And persons, who fill the' age,
blindness
or
disability

requirerrients, who are now
geWng state or local assistance money are assured their
income will not be reduced
because . of the federal
program.
The program is to provide a
basic cash income of at least
$130 monthly for an individual
and $195 for a married couple.
In July 1974, it is expected
Congress will raise these
llgur~ to $140 and $210 monthly . These are maximum
figures , and the exact amount
an eligible persoo receives will
depend on how much other
income he has.
Peterson S.id the money is
not social security. The
payment money for the
program comes out of federal
general revenue funds (income
and corporate taxes ). Social
security benefits are 'paid from
contributionS pf ~ workers,
employers and self-&lt;&gt;mployed
people.
People receiving social
security checkl! can also get
supplemental security income
if they are eligible for both.
Tbe social security age~cy
was chosen to oversee the new
program mainly because it
already uses computers to
handle payments, and since the
new program is national with
standard
nationwide
requirements, It will be easier
to prevent duplicate payments,
overpayments, fraud and
payments to ineligible persons.
Meigs County persons who
aren'tgetting state aid now but
think they may qualify for the

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Wednesday As Usuall

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Happy New Year.

ALLISON ELECTRIC CO.
218 THIRD AVE.

&lt;'

Widespread industry slowdowns and heavily-increasing
unemployment are not inevitable.
The multi-billions which can and should be thrown into the
economy in the years just ahead - starting early in 1974 - to find
and produce more energy and to use more efficiently what we
have, could result in a boom the likes of which this country has
not seen in some time.
Dollars thrown into energy would have a rippl e effect
through the ecooomy. They would stimulate old industries a~d
encourage new ones. The result would be new efficiency, new
products, higher profits and wages and the need for more skilled
Present for part of the conversation was a young man
and unskilled' workmen of all types .
devoted to the problems of what today are called the "ethnics,"
That is, this will all be true if we use our common sense and
which in modern translatioo means European national
get oo ' with it.
minorities, and predominantly those from Eastern Europe.
The wider development of our huge reserve of offshore oil
He argues, with a rationale that neither the woman politician
and gas, of nuclear energy, of solar energy for heating, of slow
or l could follow, that in their current stage the ethnics were
sulfur coal are practical today , given a .Proper and reasonable
raising "eUmicltyn to new levels which were supportive rather
definition of environmental safeguards. The funds are available
than destructive of a broad sense of American nationality and
for these investments. A trans-Alaskan gas line and added
vital corrunon endeavors.
petroleum lines are urgently required.
The woman, totally unconVinced, contended ihat the
These actions are practical now. They don 't require new
problem runs much deeper than the simple fact of separateness,
research to be reasonable at current petroleum prices. They'll
where it exists, as between blacks and whites, the young and the
become even more profitable as the cost of oil moves up .
'
adult, men and women, "etlullcs" and the older established
Investment in the development of longer-range energy
Americans (some of whom had their own problems of
sources will also involve billions over the years ahead - in oil
separateness In an earlier era.)
shale, in theliquifaction and gassification of coal, in breeder and
What she finds most disturbing is the active, sometimes
fushion nuclear reactors, in geothermal energy and in the conVindictively militant promotion of this divisive spirit at the exversion of solar power to electricity, either on the ground or in
Pense of
corrunoj cause.
..,...
space. These investments will call for the employment of still
Her concern is especially interesting, coming as it does from
more men and wQmen' and fcir increasing the output of our fa ca Democrat of proven perception. For, while many Democrats
tories - In the same ma!lller as with the Apollo moon program.
have indeed laid heavy blame on Mr. Nixon, the Democratic
Next, there is a need for other billions for investment and
party -in the name of more ''real freedom" -has by reforms
production of energy saVing devices which would save more over
widened participation in their processes to include many diverse
their lifetimes than their cost and bring a return nn irivestment of
groups which belore1972played little if any role.
from 10 per cent to 30 or 40 per cent. These energy saving gadgets
What this troubled lady sees right now is freedom taken to
run all the way from complex computet systems to adjust inthe point of license, freedom read as an ingrown, selfish
dustrial furances and control the processing of steel and other
preoccupation with the presumed needs and the consequent
products to simple home devices such as insulation, dam'pers for
demands of the separate group.
our furancesand thermostats which automatically turn down the
She knows as well as anyone the argument, put forth
·
heat at bedtime.
sometiines by separatist leaders and sometimes by scholars and.
The money to spark this investment can be made available
observers, that groups once deprived, disadvantaged or ignored
now. Consider the huge slliilil which U.S. indusiry now spends
must be allowed some leeway of overstatement and overabroad in the search to develop oil and gas, and the major
reaction in the quest for their "identity" and a place in the SWl.
amoWlts which are programmed for the future . Private industry .
But she thinks the goals of attention.getting have been
has major plans for inv~ing in North African gas, which will
largely achieved, and that further militant exhorting to
necessitate a heavy investment in liquefaction, in tankers and in
separatism is severely damaging both to the separatists and the
other equipment. Private industry too has been scrambling for
country.
the chance to engage in tbe long range development of Soviet gas
Some separatist leaders would quickly snap back and say
fields. Other U.S. firms in a variety of fields spend many millions
that the substantive goals they seek - equality of ecooomic
each year in developing investments abroad. If a heavy portion
opportunity and status, as an examp)e, for both blacks and
of this projected spending can be diverted to domestic research
women - have not been approached at more than a token place .
in the fields mentioned above, American industry, U. S. defense
In some cases, this response ignores bigger gains. But
and the American consumer will profit greatlY.
probably the better contention is that, once "Identity" is ·
The major problem in doing all this will not be in finding the
achieved, excessive stress on divisive attitudes is grossly selfmoney- if the potential market is there, the profits reasonable,
the environmental and other restrictions not prohibitive and
defeating .
.
It takes two to separate. Surely we have needed to highlight
government regulations not overly time con~uining.
the shortcomings of those Americans who have borne heavy
But there will have to be a major change in official attitudes .
responsibility for keeping groups in this society disadvantaged
Washington must develop a better system of communications for
and unrecognized. But those batWng for their place in the sun
making available to the public much more freely and conhave to understand that resentments cannot be carried forever,
veniently the heavy amounts of data on energy exploration and
that the biggest gains will now from making peace and common . development apd in tecluliques for efficiency-of-use now hidden
cause and finding true nationality.
in government files.

an

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Little.new in health care proposal

By JOHN T. KADY
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Tbe
Governor's Task Force on
Health Care officially released
its long awaited report Saturday and it contained few surprises but it did have more detaU on a couple of controversial
items such as medical schools
and Blue Cross.
The report, as expected recommended against establish- ·
men\
or · undergraduate
medical schools In the Dayton
and Akron areas at the present
but did not rule them out
OPEN HOUSE SET
J
altogether.
ATHENS - An open house
"The Task · Force recomwill be held jointly by the
mends that within the region
Social Security Administration
around Akron and around
and the Armed Forces RecruitDayton, graduate medical
ing Center oil January 7. Both
centers should be developed u
facilities, located at 221
a
first
feasible
and
Columbus Road, Athens, have
etonomically appropriate way
recently opened their doors to
.to provide more physicians for
the public. They now want to
Ohio at an early date. through
take the opportunity to
upgrading retention
acquaint the people of this area
possibilities,' ' the report said.
with the services available
''Therefore, when additional
from them. A grand opening
need is proven and financial
ceremony will be held at I
feasibility Is assured, a second
p.m ., followed by guided tours
phase of development should
provide . undergraduate
of both facilities .
medical schools in these same
regional centers recognizing
Fleet Flier ·
this therefore as an ultimate
. Famous lor il s long migra·
and
costller method of
t1on s. the Canada goose ca~
ll&gt; at a steady pace of Sa
providing more physicians,"
miles an hour. It usually ' new federal program, may
Ute report said.
flie s in a ·Shape formati on conta~l The Athens Social
The Task Force also recom·
and at considerable eleva· Securtty Qfftce at 22II&gt;
mended
that the Ohio Board of
tions .'
Columbus Road, Athens.

v

TUESDAY, JAN. 1st

for energy investment ...·
WASHI~GTON (NEA) - The 1974 economic recesston or
. ..
slowdown so widely predicted need not occur .

BOARD TO ORGANIZE
MIDDLEPORT- Th e organiza tiona!
meeting of the Meigs Local Boa rd of
Education has been set for 7:30 p.m.
Though a Democrat, she did not automatically charge, u
Monday, Jan . 7, in the Superintendent's
some in her party do, that it is all President Nixon's fault, that he
Office in Middleport.
has pitted group against group in two elections and the interim
years. She believes that Americans themselves are advancing
the cause of separateness from each other.

.

AND

•'

Rx: new directions

' Undermining the
. common cause

New colors of checks to
MARIETTA
Some
residents of the southeastern
Ohio area will receive a different type of check from
Social Security shortly after
the first of the year.
According to Don A.
Frederick, Social Security
District Manager in Marietta ,
the new checks will take two

Ray Cromley

Bruce Biossat

and or environmental considerations.
Statements should be supported by
factual information insofar as practicable.

Bork's term challenged in
suit brought by Proxmire
WASifiNGTON (UPI)-The
attorney general's of!lce is
"under a legal cloud," Sen.
Wllliam Proxmire said Saturday in asking the U.S. district
Court to rule immediately on
his suit challenging the term of
acting Attorney General
Robert H. Bork.
In a $1tement, Proxmire, 0..
Wis., said he asked the court
for a sununary judgement in
the case . He said Bork's ap.
pointment expired 20 days
before hjs successor was
named and as.ked for a ruling if
any of Bork's actions exceeded
his authority or if Willism B.
Saxbe, should repeat any of
them after he ts sworn in as
attorney general .
"I ani asking the court to
resolve the ambiguity concerning actions taken by Mr. Bork
during Ute :ztl.day period when
he occupied office illegally,"
Proxmire ,said.
·
" It is intolerable that he
should be acting under a legal

were Albert Woodard, left, who retired a year ago after 29
years service for the depar\ffient, and CUrtis Powell, a lso a
recent retiree, wbo worked for the department for 27 years. A
big cake was presented to Durst by his fellow employes. ·

TiiREE RETIRE -Rudy Durst (center), 68, of Portland
will retire Monday from the Ohio Department of Highways in
Meigs County after more than 26 years service. Joining Durst
at !ar~weU festivities Friday at the highway garage on SR 7,

technical, economic, social and ecological

New benefits begin January 1st

an extensive documentary
expose of the Soviet secret
police, prison camp and terror
system, called "The Gulag
Archipelago, 19111-1956."

WE WILL BE

Four didn't file

Education and Welfare.
EdWin J . Peterson, manager
of the Athens office of HEW
said persons already receiving
welfare under Old Age
Assistance, Aid to the Blind or
Disabled, will be automatically
converted into the new federal
program and need not apply.
Many others, who perhaps
didn't meet state welfare
requirements, are eligible
under Jhe new program. Only
about 5.0 of these persons in
Meigs County . have applied,

Soviet secret police exposed in smuggled manuscript

.

.'

'

Regents distribute state funds
for
gradu•te
medical
education to assure that at
least 50 per cent of all
residencies
are
in
primary care. It also recommended that residency programs
are
equitably
distributed to assure that every
area has an opporturdty to
attract and retain physicians
for practice who trsin them.
The report said also ihe
state's established 111edical
schools have an obligation to
assist In the rapid development
of graduate medical centers in
the Dayton and Akron areas.
''This responsibility includes
the lending of faculty for development, assignment of student$ and residents for train·
ing, recruiting and appointing
the clinical faculty of ihese
centers to their own faculty,"
the report said.
The Tuk Force alao recommended that six health 111811power education regiODI be es'
tablllhed in ·the lllate.
.
''To maximize btlalth care
delivery tbrougbtoullhe lllate,
all llltllq)OWer tralnlng progl'lllllll, in both their academic
and cllnlcal phUetl, need to be
part Of .regional systems of
health manpower education to
assure !hat ultimately ihOie
!rallied are equitably distributed throughout a region and not
clustered in major cities:" the

report said.
n\e Task Force also recommended that the "Blue Cross
Enabling Act be amended to
strengthen the public accountability and effectiveness . of
Blue Cross In Ohio by consolidation into one statewide

plan."
The . plan, the Task Force
said, would be g9verned by a
nine member board of trustees
appointed by the governor,
have a hospital-medical committee in an advisory capacity
and has regional offices
throughout the state,
In a cover letter, Task Force
chairman Frank P. Celeste and
vice chairman Howard L. Collier, said a major theme which
runs through the entire report

is the need for greater public
accountability of the health
care system.
"Public accountability is
viewed as one of the ways to
make the health care system
responsive to public need,"
they said. ·
"At the same time, Ulis re~
port caIIs. uptin all those involved in the health CIU'e system - those who govern and
manage hospitals, doctors,
nurses and other health
professionals, and government
officials - to work together
towards achieving the objectives set out in the r~rt,"
Celeste and Collier said.

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PRESSMAN RETmES
CoLUMBUS (UP)) - Jtm ~
Pendergast, 68, a pressman for &gt;.
DRIVER INJURED
nearly 51 y~ars at .the ••
POMEROY
Richard Columbus Citizen Journal ~.
Robert Young, 34, Racine, Rt. here, announced his retirement _.
1, was treated and released at . FriW:y, effective after the New ' '
Veterans Memorial Hospital Years Eve shift. Pendergast, ; '
following a !Ingle car accident who joined the .old Citizen on .;
Saturday morning at 4:26 a.m. May I, 1923 wben he was not , ••
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's quite 18 years old, said his most
department said Young was memoral moment came when ··•
driving on county road 19, ~ Ore at ihe Ohio Penitentiary ••
Sutton Twp., when he struck a m 1930 required numerous ;
bridge. Young's car was extru and specials to be ;:
demolished. H~ was taken to printed.·Nearly 300 men died In ..
the hospital by th~ , Pomeroy· that fire. "We didn't c~nge '!
ER squad. The accident Is stiU clothes for
days, · he
Wider investigation.
said.

c.

thr!"

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Never in the history of any
land, Solzhenitsyn contends,
has any p&lt;'Ople so suffered at
the hands or their ~overnment
as under the Soviet system. He
does not explicitly call for the
downfall of the system but
makes clear his opinion that
without fundamental change
repression of the Soviet pecple
· cannot be ended.
There was no immediate
reaction from Soviet officials
in Moscow.
The book is expected to get
wide circulation and discussion
in the West. It is being
published in Europe and in
North America. The New York
Times, in tOOay's editions,
published the first of a threepart digest of excerpt" from
'the book in an English translation copyrighted by Harper
&amp; Row, and offered the excerpts to its newspaper clients
in North America .
Archipelago Is Symbol
Archipelago means a chain
or islands. In Solzhenitsyn's
work it symbolizes the network
of secret police installations,
camps, prisons, transit centers,
communications
facilities, transportation
systems,
and
spying
or ganizations that honeycombs
the length and breadth or the
Soviet Union.
Solzhenitsyn concludes that

the s(•crc! pollee arc the vital
element uf the Soviet regime,
and have been since its founding by Lenin .
" Solzhe nitsyn ('barged former
Soviet dictator Josef Stalin
with devising in 1953 a plot tn
harass, murder and imprison

thousand s

of

Jews.

Solzhenitsyn said the former
dictator whipped up &lt;:Hili Jewish feelin gs i~l a press
ca mpaign
beginning in
January , 1!15:1, hut Stalin died
before he completed the plan.
He gave a statisti ca l comparison between conditions
under the czars and in the
Soviet Union .· ln every
category -arrests, terms of

imprisorunent, executions._.:.l1e
found. the Soviet government
worse that czarist rule by up to
1_,000 to one.

Book Uses Real Names

1\ohl'l IIOI'l'.l ist Sulzlwnil7.yn s11ys no
fH'Oplt• haVl' ,..Ufl'('rt•d SO Ill LH"h a"

H ussians hall'

undt•r

publishing known as _"Sail Ill·
dat."
Last August 28, Solzhenitsyn
told Western newsmen his life
had been threatened, apparently by KGB agents, who
demanded he drop his dissident
activities and writing or " rot in

the Ht•ds

prison." A week later, he said a
friend, Elizavela Voronyenskaya, wa s arrested in Leningrad and after five days of
interrogation, handed over a
copy of the book to the KGB .
Si1e returned home and com. milled sultide by h.angi ng,

Ohio welfare is healthy
figures released by the
COLUMBUS I UP! )
of
Health,
Recently publi shed federal Department
Welfare,
figures s how Ohio well below Educati on and
Charl
es
W.
Bates,
sta te
the- national average and states
of compa rabl~ size in the welfare dir ector , said ThUrsnurnber of welfare recipients day .
Ohio has only 58.7 welfare
per 1,000 population.
As of June, 1973, Ohiu wa s in recipients per 1,000 populati on,
better sha pe than Penn- said Buies , compared with the
sylva nia ,
Massach use tts , ·national average of 70.1.
Michiga n , Jllinois, New York
and California, according to

Solz:henitsyn 's new book consists of two parts of his sevenpart autobiography. Unlike his
earlier 11ovels about life in
Soviet political concentraUon
camps, " A Day in the Life of ·
Ivan Denisovitch" and " The
First Circle," the new book
NFO TO MEET
marks Solzh enitsyn 's {irst
POMEROY - The Meigs
work using real names of County National Farmers
persons.
Orga nization wiJJ meet at 8
The new book was first p.m. Wednesday in the
published in Russian and vocationc-~1 • agriculture room
circulated secretly in typewrit- of Meigs High School. All
~n carbon copies-a form of fanners are welcome .

BRITAIN HIT HARD
LONDON (UP! ) - More
than 500,000 Britons have been
thrown out of work because of
the country 's energy crisis and
the number of jobless might
reach a milhon in the next f~w
weeks, government officials

announced .

Solzhenitsyn said .
He wrote: " I kept myself
from printing this book all

these years because of my duty
towards those still living"apparently re[erripg to the m
camp prisoners interviewed
for the book.
" But since the KGB seized
my book, there is nothing left
but to publish it immediMely''

SUNDAY
TJMES..SENTINEl
Publrshed every S.undolry
by
The
Oh io
VaHey
Pubfo5.hing Co
G A LLI POLIS
DAILY TRIBUNE
U~ rh l rd Ave , G•ll iPOHS,

On io 4 ~UI .
P ubhshf'&lt;:! every weeli:day
even i n'OI ll'X c ept S a turday
Second Class Posu1,1e Pai d
at G&amp;llopolos. . Onio 45631
THE DA ILY SE NT I NEL
Ill Court St , Pomeroy , o
~ Sl6 9 Publ i sh~td everr week
day t11en lng except Sa.t ur
day , Enll!'reci "'second ci a 55
m• ili ng mt~tter 111 P omeroy ,
Ohio Post Office
Bv c ar rter oaiiV Hid
Sunday. SSe per week
MA IL
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
The Ga lli po li s Tr ibune .n
Onio illnr:l WeSI Yir;in i a one
rear 11 5, srtt months i ll , lnree
months 5j, elsewhere 51 1 per
yearr , s ix month5 59, U1ree
months S.S SO
.
The Oa[ly S.ent i t~el. one
year il 6.00 . $ 1K..Jn.Clillti5 S8 so ,
three monthS "i S.O:tL-,.,.
The U n1 lt r:l Prti's f n..J
lernat i onilll Is e .H i ul l vety
l!ntltter:l to the ul.e t o r
publica t ion of a ll news
dispatchl!'!i c redll~d to t his
n ewspape r &amp;nd al5o the local
news published i'lere ln

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thr Li Tuesday
Dec . Jo.Jan . l , \974
EMPEROR
OF THE NORTH
Lee M arvin
Ernest Borgni ne

Show Starts 7 p.m .

Tonight thru
Monday, Dec . 31

GREEN
it...

Poople negd
in the year 2022.
METRCX:OtOR
PANAVI SION.!-

Cartoon

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~-The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 30, 1973

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

4- l'ht&gt; Sunday l'imes- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec . JD,1913

Young people fretted, but worked hard ' during 1973
{Editor's Note: The young
rebe-ls of the 19&amp;85 are older;
many have joined lhe system
they battled ; a few remaio
rebels buUhey are lillie heard.
A quiet ha s setlled over lhe
campuses. For telling the story
of ooe of those militants of lhe
'60s-Diana Oughtoo, who blew
herself up jo a New York
"bomb factory"-Lucloda L.
Franks shared the 1971 Pulttiz·
er Prize for national reportlng.
Here, she r~ports on the youth
scene as she finds it today.)

Diana Balot, a sophomore at some dues, new tou'gh drug Some of those who rioted in would begin going underground.

Ule ivy halls of Amerlca, events re~t~aining that way in 1974.

dictated a .different role for
Young people today are
Ulem. American military in- having their own particular
volvment in Vietnam had ended problems getting through coland the cri~is in the econom; lege and inlO secure profesbegan. Both made a large sions. Student loans and grants
are tight, the universities are
difference in their lives.
feeling
the dollar squeeze, and
Interviews this month with
Wliversity administrators, pro~ the job market is contracting.
Most cannot afford the luxury
fessorst and students in several
are&lt;\s throughout the country of taking time away from
showed that the campuses, studies and college jobs to
which have been relatively protest the state of the union .
•
quiet since 1970, are likPl:V tfl

Burger's son got
•b
a £a t creat ed JO

By LUCIN-DA- L. FRANKS
United Press Joternatlooal
Pinched by inflation and
deprived of causes, the nation's
young people worked hard this
year, fretted about their luluWASHINGTON (UPI) - The
res, and felt at least temporari- son of Supreme Court Chief
iy powerless to change anything Justice Warren E . Burger, a
$3,300 a year real estate
outside their own lives .
They had little in conunon salesman, got a "created"
with their older brothers and government job paying $25,863
sisters who spent their student- a year ·even though he ranked
hood rising up angry, buoyed last on a list of five applicants,
by the spirit of revolution, the Washington Star-News reconvinced that they could ported Saturday.
change the course of history by
Wade A. Burger, 37-year-old
sheer force of their outrage.
son of the Chief Justice , was
In a way, they had learned hired for a General Services
'WOMAN LAWYER ' Is from the mistakes of their Administrati~n (G&amp;A) post in
how Jill Wine Vollner does eiders. As young teens, they · 1970 shortly after his father was
not like to hear herself had watched the marches and nominated by President Nixon
described. She prefers the antiwar protests of the late to the top Supreme Court
simply 'attorney.' Asslstolo~J""'Os. which were followed · by · position, the newspaper said.
special prosecutor to
four more years of war. They
It reported that the younger
Waterga t e procee · gs had witnessed the bombing of Burger, who was said to have
before Judge John Sir ca In banks and federal institutions earned an av~age of less than
Washington, she played a by radicals and then, a while $3,300 for each of three years
key r ole in questioning Rose later, the Chrisbnas bombing of as a real estate salesman
Mary Woods, President Hanoi . They had watched Kent before the government job, also
Nixon's private secretary. State explode ·in proteSt against volunteered his services for
She is ao example of the the invasion of Cambodia and Nixon's 1968election campaign.
product of U1e turbulent '60s they had seen its only results"The disclosure of Burger's
being hired for the job, which
dedicated today to useful fouryoung persons shot dead.
careers and clean govern- · They were a litUe wiser, a was created at the time be was
menl.
little more skeptical. Moreover, brought to the agency, comes
as they took up the standard .in during a period when GSA is

under fire !rom the Civil
' Service Commission for hiring
some persons because of their
Republican contacts, rather
than job qualifications," the
newspaper said . .
The Civil Service Commission, it said, has started an
inquiry into Burger's hiring and
his qualifications for the job.
Burger was hired at $19,643 a
year and now draws $25 863 the
Star-News said .
'
ll quoted . Burger's former
employer as saying he earned
an average or less than $3,300
for each of three years work
prior to government service but
that he stated his salary "in the
area of $19,000" when applying
for the GSA post.
KNICKS TRIUMPH
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
New York Knicks shook off a
sluggish first half, exploding
for 34 third-quarter points
Saturday enroute to a 112-92
win over the Philadelphia 76ers
in an NBA game at MadiBon
Square Garden. ·

New York University, swns up
the attitudes of many of the
new breed : "In 1967 and '68 J
was as involved and angry in
grammar school as my college
counterparts. I was receptive
then, but now I am not ready to
accept anything anyone tells
me, " she said. " I think the
students then were idealistic
and intense. J ann not. Where
Utey cared about America, I
care about me."
Many of Diana Balot's
generation look at the rebels of
yesterday and observe that as
they rejected the system, so did
the system reject them. That
fact, in the face of a teetering
economy and an uncertain
future, stands as somewhat of a
warning to the young of today.
11 The innovative radical students who became the leaders
of the movement were reward·
ed with a 'no• when lt came
down to the reality of finding
jobs and being accepted as
members of the 'real world,"'
said Dale Cahan, an NYU

laws have discouraged users:
college drug sales in New York.
have declined and many
pushers are reported to have
gone out of business since the
slate instituted stringent narcotics laws _
Even marijuana has now
taken a back seat to beer and
wine among teen-agers-mainly
because a bottle of the popular
frl,lit wines is cheaper than
grass. Among young teens. in
fact, alcoholism is soaring; The
National Institute on Alcohol
Abuse and Alcoholism estimates that approximately
4~,000 pre-teens and young
teenagers have serious drinking
problems.
Dean Henry Coleman of
Columbia Univeristy , along
with other educators, predicts
that the new stability on the
campuses will last a long time.
" We've turned a corner," he
said. " The students are intent
on building fulfilling lives for
. themselves. They are going into
the solid professions of law and
junior.
medicine in the midst of a
So, beneath the blanket of shaky economic envirqnment.
calm which has settled over the
campuses 1 students have been
hunched over their books and
typewriters and it looks like
they will be doing the same
thing in 1974. Most of them say
they care about grades more
than anything else; many
universities · have discontinued
experimental pass-fail courses
because students insisted
grades were the only thing
graduate schools had to measure them by. Academic stand·
ards have become stricter ail
around because of the shortage
of funds to expand and improve
coUege facilities .

I think there would be some
guns and dynamite passed
around . We would expect the
National Guard to move onto
the campuses, n said David
Shapiro, Secretary of the
Senate at Columbia University.
There is a general feeUng,
however, that the uprisings of
the late '60s, while liberalizing
attitudes, did not accomplish
what the young rebels set out to
accomplish . Most of today's
students feel powerless to have
any affect on the system and
therefore, they won't bother to

1968 are coming back to gel
their law degrees so Uley ca n
really effect change."
Although conside.rabiy fewer
men were drafted after late
1970, the official end of the
draft earlier this year helped to
further dampen young people's
fervor for vigorous protests. '
" It was a symbolic end of an
era. It was the per sonal threat
of the draft which was the
initial catalyst for the whole
antiw·a r movement," said Rick
Ginn, a recent student at
Westchester State College in
Pennsylvania. ''The movement
grew to feel strongly about a
host of other ills but it was the
draft which produced the first
spark. ''
Most students agree that one
of the only things that would
interrupt the calm of the
campuses next year would be a
resumption of the bombing of
Vietnam. Some said they would
join peaceful protests if it
happened ; others said they
would react more violently.
"I think the campuses would
erupt again and some people

try.

an ethic of

become ilL
The chief drawback from the
viewpoint or many laymen is
that they are not certain to see
the same doctor on every visit.
Those HMO's now in exist·
ence often are staffed by a
doclol's. ·
large
nwnber of speci~liats so
The measure provides $250
patients on each visit are sent
million in direct subsidies over
to the doctor best qualified to
the next four years to
treat their ailments.
demonstrate the fe asi bility of a
. In a statement released here
nationa l network of Health
·and
in San Clemente, Calif.,
Maintenance
Organizations
where the bill was signed,
(HMO), the formal name for
Nixon said the HMO method
prepaid group health plans.
"represents one response to the
These are c.enters where for a
challenge of finding new and
better ways to improve health
care for the people of this
COLUMBUS ( UP!) - The lodge or dam. Traps must be COlUl try. II
Ca~r Weinberger, secretary
Ohio Department of Natural No. 3 size or larger, said Armof
Health, Education and
Resources Division of Wildlife bruster, and .trappers cannot
Welfare, told a White House
announced Friday that beaver use more than three traps.
1 !rapping season opens Feb . 1
All trapped beaver must be briefing that on the average
and will continue through 6 tagged and recorded by the families could expect to spend ,
p.m . ~'eb. 15.
game protector in the county less for their bealth care under
TI1e bag limit for beaver is where they are trapped by 8 HMO's than they do under the
two per season, said division p.m . Feb. 15, Annbruster said. existing system of a fee for
every visit to the doctor.
Chief Dan C. Armbruster.
Dr. Charles Edwards, assistBeaver trapping is permitted
ant HEW secretary, said
this season only on private land RAYBORN KilLED
in
Washington,
Vinton,
AUCKLAND, New Zealand HMO's could provide "the
Tuscarawas, Trumbull, Stark, ( UPI ) - American Cal Ray- continuity of care that· a lot of
Porta ge,
Perry, Noble, born, holder of •the · World people don't have on today's
Muskingum , Morgan , Monroe, Motorcycle Land Speed record health scene ."
ThE bill was .pushed through
Mahonin g, Lake, Jefferson, of :ffi5 miles per bour, died in a
Congress
by Sen. Edward M.
Jackson., Holmes, Hocking, 120-mile-an-hour crash at an
Harrison, Guernsey, Geauga, International meet near here Kennedy, [).Mass., chairman of
Galli a,
Coshocton,
Col- Saturday; the Auckland Sun the Senate health subconunittee. Niion said it was welcome
umbiana, Carroll , Belmont, . newspaper reported.
j\thens and Ashtabula counRayborn, tht&gt; United States though "somewhat broader
\ies.
motorcycle champion, was iri than the administration's propoArmbruster said trappers New Zealand for the Marlboro sal."
should scout the area they plan International Motorcycle
The measure provides funds
to t•ap and be sure to obtain series ·and the Tasman In- for planning studies and the
permission of the landowner . ternational Motorracing heavy start-up costs for creatBeaver trapping is prohibited series.
ing HMO's and subsidies to
on sta te land .
His 500cc Suzuki motorcycle meet deficits for their first
All traps must have a tag smashed into a wooden fence at three years of operation.
showing the user's name, ar.d the end of a long straight on the
lt lists benefits any HMO
traps must be set at least 10 Pukekohe circuit, the paper must offer which go beyond
r""t frorrl a beaver bank den, said . ~
what most now in operation
I
1&gt; , I
'
By MIKE FEINSILBER
WAS HINGTON ( UP!)
Presiden t Nixon signed a law
S&lt;iturday which offers families
a less co~tl y way of receiving
good medical attention from

single annual fee a family is
assured of receiving a year 1S
hea]th care no matter how
frequently a doctor's services
are required.
Backers believe HMO's promote better health since people
no longer need to be wary of
the cost of seeing a doctor at
the first sign of iU health,
·
The HMO's also have a profit
motive to practice preventive
medicine-looking after patients when ·they are well so
that they are · less apt to

Dates set for beaver seaso~

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provide. These include preven·
live dental care .for children,
treatment for alcohol and drug
abuse and "crisis intervention
mentatllealth services."
The bill also authorizes loan
guarantees for profitable
liMO's in ,·~medically underserved" areas. It auth.orizes HEW
to contract for HMO·tyjle health
services for Indians and migratory workers.
Nixon said that the national
health insurance bill he will
submit to q,ngress next year
will allow patients to use their
bealth insurance to join HMO's.

-----

·'

sJave

and

to

SPECIAL se rvi ces at the
Church of God Holiness, 10
a.m ., wi.th Don Seymour,
missionary t1.1 New Guinea.
Pastor, Rev. James Alley,
invites the public.
REV . Ernest Baker will p~each
at Walnut Ridge Church, 7 p.m .

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·...
,.

Miss Rebecca Ann Stump

society's moral

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Ernest

Jan's Side
.

; ,,,
:.
"
~

by
Dorothy }. Countryman
'

"

The financial squeeze, along
with the increasing awareness
of the dangers of strong drugs,.
have been cited as the reasons
for the decline of the heavy
drug culture. Although marijua·
na is often as conunon as
alcohol at parties, experiment·
ing with expensive LSD and
hard drugs _has tapered off. In

::;
GALUPOUS - Since I never write a column of New Year 's
!. resolutions, and since I am not about to sta rt, 1 thought I'd just
;::write up a list of New Year's wishes (really) for the friends I
:=hope I've made in Gallia County.
For the Southern Ohio Gospel Music Association director
..,.,
~ .,.,..,.r;y McGraw and all the members, concerts that draw
;::thousands of people.
~
For the·French Art Colony, a good seaSon of beautiful shows .
~
For the Ohio Valley Publishing Company , newsprint and
a sense. of humor.
For Bill Gray, somebody to keep him happy .
:
For my roommates. an electric dishwasher.
:
For Denny Fobes , a consolidated school in Meigs county so
: he'Uoniy have to cover one ballgame a w ~ek .
• · For Junior Wilson a year's supply of pipe tobacco.
:
For Dale Rothgeb improved communications with the Holzer
! Medical Center and the Gallia County Sheriff's Department.
:
For the gals in ~e Tribune fr~nt office, fewer irate phone

..

.

: calls.

.

:
For Chet Tannehill, more creative pictures from Meigs
• County,
·
:
For the composing room peop]e at OVP I fewer mistakes in
! the news copy.
:
For the Point Pleasant Register staff , another phone line.
:
For Gallipolitans, especially John Halliday, a windfall of
; proper pronunciation of ·tl1e name of our city._

•

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Interest
Savings
Account

I REALLY hope the New Year will be good to ali my friends ,
even though we're faced with an e_
nergy crisis. Hopefully there
will be happiness and love, even though there isn't much
gasoline. Love doesn' t cost anything, so it really should be in
good supply.
Whatever you're going New Year'sE.ve I hope it's happy and
I )Vish you all the very best.

••

BY THE WAY, just to clear up any lingering doubts, neither
: Debbie nor I received engagement rings for Cbristmas. The
~ fellows in the composing around here don't believe us, but it's
~ true,. Before you get a ring you have to have someone to give it to
: you.

GALUPOUS - Plans have
been completed for the wedding of Miss Billie Jo Hale, 1037
•• HAVE A HAPPY NEW YEAR.
Eastern Ave., and Billie Lane
•"
Brown, Goshen .
•
The ceremony will take place
Jan . 13 at 2 p.m., in the Vinton
Methodist Church with Rev.
John Bryant officiating .
Attendsnts for the wedding
~
GALUPOLIS - The Golden "Ready for Christmas" by
will
be Betty Twyman
: Rule Class of Old Kyger met Mrs . Lester Roush; "The ·
Ewington, sister of the bride'
! with Miss Mollie Johnson and Meaning of Christmas" by and
•
Dan
Murray,
Chillicothe.
n. her brother, Tom, in Gallipolis, Mrs . Hortie Roush.
Family and friends are
A gift exchange was enjoyed
: for the Christmas meeting.
welcome to attend.
:
A potluck dinner was enjoyed and a surprise gift, g.iven
: with Mrs. Lester Roush giving by Mrs. Spears, was woft by
~ grace before the meal. The . Mrs. Gardner.
SEEN AND HEARD
The meeting closed with the
• afternoon meeting opened with
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
~ singing of "SHent Night" and singing of " Joy to the World.''
Mr~
. John W. Houck, Rt. 218,
The next meeting will be with
: Mrs. 0. H. Fry gave the
Mrs. Lester Roush in January. are spending a par( of their
·: opening prayer.
h91iday vacation with Mr.
:
Roll call was answered with
Houck's niece and family, Mr.
• "What I'd Uke for Chrisbnas
•• and Where I EJ&lt;pect to Spend
and Mrs. Lyle Cox, Randy,
Amy Jo, Rhonda and ·John
GO
CAROLING
; the Day." That there be peace
CLIPPER MILLS ~ The PK Williann, Montpelier . They are
: iunong all people was the
youth
group of the Christ also visiting his . sister, Mrs.
; thought of all present.
:
Miss Johnson read Psah:n 95 United Methodist Church at Reba Cramer . On Saturday,
i. and Mrs. George Gardener Clipper Mills went caroling the group traveled to ShipFriday, Dec . 20, in the sewanna, Ind., to attend the
~- gave the secretary's report.
~ · Mrs. Ben Rupe reported on lhe Shoestring Ridge and Clippe_r Amish Country Horse Auction.
: treasury. The group voted to Mills area. Rev. W. Dale Hundreds of horse drawn
: make a donation toward new McClurg, youth leader, was in vehicles will bring the Amish
• song books for the church and charge of the evening. Those people to the auction where as
participating were Sheila, many as 500 or 600 horses are
•• Sunday school.
:
The annual Christmas Angie and Nick Cromlish, Tim sold. Many are purchased and
; project was discussed and and Carl Cheney, Chris and transported to Canada for
• Jason Thomas, who is in a Melvin Biars, Timmy Lewis, human consu.mption _ The
~ Greenfield nursing home was Barry Plymale and Greg, Houcks will return via Gerremembered with a box and Kevin and Lee MitchelL mantown, to visit his brother,
Cookies and hot chocolate were Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Houck.
! card.
1
~ Mrs. Edward' Spears asked served by Mrs. McClurg in the
· : Bible questions on the birth of fellowship room of the church
=.j,esus. Readings included following the caroling.
DEADLINE SET
· 'What is Christm.as? 11 by Mrs.
GALLIPOLIS - Deadline for
Leona Spires; "Our Precious
wedding and engagement
Saviour" by .Mrs. Fry; "The
announcements with pictures
Black Lamb" by Miss Johnfor the Sll!lday-Times Sentinel
. . G&amp;T 'YOUR MAN
son; "Christmas Comes at
is noon Thursday of each week.
Different Times'' by Mrs.
No oval photographa will be
·. Spears; uAlmost as Good" by
accepted, although · color
Mrs. Gardner; "A Song of
pictures can be used according
Christmas" by Mr$. Rupe;
to quality. ·

••

•

~

Class
has
meeting
•

Green grows faster
where interest rates
are higher ... ours
are always the highest allowable by
law. So why not start
the New Year right.'
With a bank that takes
care of ypur money. ··

•

VINTON BRANCH • VINTON, OHIO.

'7H£ OLD ;BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

JANE PARKER

S

FRESH

.APPLE PIE
&amp;

SPANISH BAR

CAKES

'

CHOICE

59'

''110 YEARS OF SERVICE"
I '

WE WILL BE

~~11~ ®il
©©~tr~

TUESDAY
MERCERVILLE Bapti s t
Church will begin r evival at
7:30p.m. with the Rev. Charles
Lusher, evangelist. The public
is Welcome .

VALUES TO 145.00
CHOICE

each member telling what she
considered the best class of the
Dec. 1 and 2 flower show given
by the club, and why .
The program consisted of
each nierriber giving a reading
pertaining to Chri&amp;tmas.
The club presented Mrs.
Pearl George a gift that was
handcrafted by Edna and
Willard Woodruff for being
treasurer -for 17 years. The gift
was klssinb ball made of a
large styrofoam bail covered
with gun\ bails and filled in with
miniature pine cones and
sprayed silver with a red
ve lvet ribbon bow and
streamers.
The social hour was
highlighted by a gift exchange.
Lucy Hartsook played Christmas carols at the plano as the
group sang and refreshments
of strawberry ice cream, cake,
sandwiches and punch were ·
served.
The ladies will have a New
Year's potluck dinner party
today (Dec. JD ) at 5 p.m. at the
home of Pearl George.
Members' families will be
guesis.
Jan. 9 a workshop will be
held with Maryann McCarley
at 10. a.m _, on string art.
Members are to bring a sack
lunch and the hostess will
furnish the beverage.

$3500

· SECOND GROUP

WOOSTER - Shirlene Ward,
B.A. in English from Denison Rl. 2, Gallipolis, has been
University and a B.S. in named to the dean 's list for the
elementary education from the fall quarter at the College of
University pf Kansas. Cackette · Wooste.r, according to Dean F .
earned a B.S. in engineering W. Cropp.
from tlie Univers ity of
ATLANTA, Ga . - StevenS.
Washington and is currently
· working on· a master's degree Walker, soil" of Dr. and Mrs. I.
at California State University C. Walker, 1 San Hollow Rd.,
Gallipolis, has been named to
at Northridge.
the dean's list at Emory
University for the fail term .

VALUES TO '65.00

AKRON - The University of .
Akron. plans no in12rease in fees
for the 1974-75 academic year.
The · fee·s per quarter for
students will (emain at $190 for
instructional and $45 for
general purposes, making · a
total of $235 per qu'\l't~

412-414 -Second Avenue
Gallipolis, O)lio
BankAmericard or
Master Cha

Clo sed Monday at s P.m.
Closed ~!I Day Tuesday

SWEEP UP THESE SAVINGS AT

a

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Sale
YOUR OLD SHOES ARE

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IF YOU WEAR
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IF YOU BRING
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$15.99 OR OVER IN STOCK
~ f!!B TRADE ,!!
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NO TRADE-INS ON THIS GROUP
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,I

PLAZA

ONE GROUP

Garden club has meeting

Nuptials
planned

organist. .

rn

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard A. Dowell, Southside, W. Va., announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter
RobcrtaKay , to David H. Mohler, son of Mrs. Mabel Mohler'
R10 Grande. Miss Dowell is a graduate of Point Pleasa nt
H1gh School and St. Mary 's HospitaL She is employed a s a lab
,asSI~Iant at Holzer Medical Center. Mohler js a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and works for Gailia County as
a mechamc. The open church wedding will be an event of
Feb. 16 at Beech Hill United Methodist Church, Southside .

Betrothal announced

VINTON - The Vinton
Friendship Garden Club met
Thursday everiing, Nov. 20, for
·the Christmas Club meeting at
the home of Mrs . Beatrice
Bush. The home was decorated
for the Christmas season.
The meeting was called to
order by the president; Esta
Downard. Devotions from St.
Luke on the birth of Christ
were read by Mrs. Bush and a
Christmas praYer was given.
Roil call was answered with

faithful member of the church
ror over 50 years, and is also
ac tive in Red Cross and
community work .
The congregation extends
best wishes to Miss Hayward
who will be greatly missed as

"ILVER BRIDGE

Miss Roberta Kay Dowell

NEW YEAR'S Eve service at
the Church of God Holiness,
Lecta, 8 p.m. Different
speakers and special singing
by a guest quartet. Rev. James
Alley·, pastor , invites the ·
public.
WATCH Night Service ' at
Fellowship Chapel , Vinton ,
beginning at 8 p.m. Public
.invited. Rev. Elmer Geiser. is
the pa&amp;tor .
TUESDAY
VINTON Masonic Lodge 131
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Dis trict deputy, educational
meeting.

GALLIPOLIS ~ Mr. and
Mrs. James M. Gillingham,
Overland Park, Kan., wish to
announce the engagement of
their dau ghter , Lynn, to
Thomas A. Cackette, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Sydney T. Cackette,
Seattle, Wash. Lynn is ·the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
G. B. Gillingham, Gallipolis.
Miss Gillingham earned a

GALLIPOLIS
Sunday,
· Dec . 16, a reception was held at
the First United Presbyterian
Church
to honor .Mis-s
Catherine Hayward , who is
retiring as organist or the
church after serving for 20
years.
She hils been an ~ctivP anrt

CLOSED TODAY

MONDAY
WATCH Service beginning at
7:30 p.m . at Centerpoint
Freewill Baptist Church. Revs .
Mil es Trout, Don Price,
Lawrence Conger and Homer
Stevens . Special singing .
Everyone welcome.

~~ Mrs. Raymond R . Sisk, Mason, W. Va .

AUTO BANK • THIRD AVE.

Everything Is
Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr
Back

••

•. Stwnp announce the engagement of their daughter 1 Rebecca
: .• Ann, 19, Gallipolis, to Gary William Sisk , 23, son of Mr . and

MAIN OFFICE • SECOND AVE,

WEO

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:,.

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!

WHUif ECONOMY ORIGIIIAT(S

THE Providence Missionary
Baptist Church on Teens Run
Rd., wiU have Donald COmer,
Stocktown, as guest speaker, 7
p.m.

ethics."

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Pilot HMO project bill signed

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compliance. I am struggUng
against this in order to become
alive, to be able to share my
feelings with other people ... not
to be a deaf, dumb, unhappy

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pounds of'cargo in wing compartments. Planned lor service
in the 198&amp;, it is being developed by Lockheed-Georgia Co.

deadness

GAI.I.IPOI.IS - The Senior
Citizens 'Center, located in the
old Holzer Hospital Building ,
Cedar Street entrance, is open
Monday through Friday from 9
a .m. to 3 p.m . and one night
each week . The schedule for
this week is as follows :
Monday, Dec . 31, Center is
closed during the day. New
Year 's Eve Party, 9 p.m .
Tuesday, Jan. 1, New Year 's
Day - Center is closed .
Wednesday, Jan. 2, Small
Crafts Class 1-3 p.m. , teacher ,
Elizabeth Evans _
Thursday, Jan. 3, BroOmstick Afghan Class, 1-3 p.m.,
teacher, Clara fisher .
Friday, Jan . 4, All Crafts 9
a.m.-3 p.m.

SUNDAY
REV. BRUCE Unroe will be
preaching at Bailey Chapel, 7
p.m.; publ.lc invited.

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Sometimes this feeling of
being powerless translates itself
into a certain confusion and
hopelessness about life. Many
students agreed with Lyn
Noland of NYU, who said she
was fighting being "raised with

Greet the
New Year 0
IJ.J:}
with a

FLYING WING is the shape of airfreighting in the future
if U1i s giant transport makes it from the drawing board into
the skies. The "Spanloader" is designed to carry 660,000

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Church honors Miss Hayward

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Gtlllpalls, D.

-NO LAYAWAYs-

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SAL'E STARTS WEDNESOAY- JAN. 2nd

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~-The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 30, 1973

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

4- l'ht&gt; Sunday l'imes- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec . JD,1913

Young people fretted, but worked hard ' during 1973
{Editor's Note: The young
rebe-ls of the 19&amp;85 are older;
many have joined lhe system
they battled ; a few remaio
rebels buUhey are lillie heard.
A quiet ha s setlled over lhe
campuses. For telling the story
of ooe of those militants of lhe
'60s-Diana Oughtoo, who blew
herself up jo a New York
"bomb factory"-Lucloda L.
Franks shared the 1971 Pulttiz·
er Prize for national reportlng.
Here, she r~ports on the youth
scene as she finds it today.)

Diana Balot, a sophomore at some dues, new tou'gh drug Some of those who rioted in would begin going underground.

Ule ivy halls of Amerlca, events re~t~aining that way in 1974.

dictated a .different role for
Young people today are
Ulem. American military in- having their own particular
volvment in Vietnam had ended problems getting through coland the cri~is in the econom; lege and inlO secure profesbegan. Both made a large sions. Student loans and grants
are tight, the universities are
difference in their lives.
feeling
the dollar squeeze, and
Interviews this month with
Wliversity administrators, pro~ the job market is contracting.
Most cannot afford the luxury
fessorst and students in several
are&lt;\s throughout the country of taking time away from
showed that the campuses, studies and college jobs to
which have been relatively protest the state of the union .
•
quiet since 1970, are likPl:V tfl

Burger's son got
•b
a £a t creat ed JO

By LUCIN-DA- L. FRANKS
United Press Joternatlooal
Pinched by inflation and
deprived of causes, the nation's
young people worked hard this
year, fretted about their luluWASHINGTON (UPI) - The
res, and felt at least temporari- son of Supreme Court Chief
iy powerless to change anything Justice Warren E . Burger, a
$3,300 a year real estate
outside their own lives .
They had little in conunon salesman, got a "created"
with their older brothers and government job paying $25,863
sisters who spent their student- a year ·even though he ranked
hood rising up angry, buoyed last on a list of five applicants,
by the spirit of revolution, the Washington Star-News reconvinced that they could ported Saturday.
change the course of history by
Wade A. Burger, 37-year-old
sheer force of their outrage.
son of the Chief Justice , was
In a way, they had learned hired for a General Services
'WOMAN LAWYER ' Is from the mistakes of their Administrati~n (G&amp;A) post in
how Jill Wine Vollner does eiders. As young teens, they · 1970 shortly after his father was
not like to hear herself had watched the marches and nominated by President Nixon
described. She prefers the antiwar protests of the late to the top Supreme Court
simply 'attorney.' Asslstolo~J""'Os. which were followed · by · position, the newspaper said.
special prosecutor to
four more years of war. They
It reported that the younger
Waterga t e procee · gs had witnessed the bombing of Burger, who was said to have
before Judge John Sir ca In banks and federal institutions earned an av~age of less than
Washington, she played a by radicals and then, a while $3,300 for each of three years
key r ole in questioning Rose later, the Chrisbnas bombing of as a real estate salesman
Mary Woods, President Hanoi . They had watched Kent before the government job, also
Nixon's private secretary. State explode ·in proteSt against volunteered his services for
She is ao example of the the invasion of Cambodia and Nixon's 1968election campaign.
product of U1e turbulent '60s they had seen its only results"The disclosure of Burger's
being hired for the job, which
dedicated today to useful fouryoung persons shot dead.
careers and clean govern- · They were a litUe wiser, a was created at the time be was
menl.
little more skeptical. Moreover, brought to the agency, comes
as they took up the standard .in during a period when GSA is

under fire !rom the Civil
' Service Commission for hiring
some persons because of their
Republican contacts, rather
than job qualifications," the
newspaper said . .
The Civil Service Commission, it said, has started an
inquiry into Burger's hiring and
his qualifications for the job.
Burger was hired at $19,643 a
year and now draws $25 863 the
Star-News said .
'
ll quoted . Burger's former
employer as saying he earned
an average or less than $3,300
for each of three years work
prior to government service but
that he stated his salary "in the
area of $19,000" when applying
for the GSA post.
KNICKS TRIUMPH
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
New York Knicks shook off a
sluggish first half, exploding
for 34 third-quarter points
Saturday enroute to a 112-92
win over the Philadelphia 76ers
in an NBA game at MadiBon
Square Garden. ·

New York University, swns up
the attitudes of many of the
new breed : "In 1967 and '68 J
was as involved and angry in
grammar school as my college
counterparts. I was receptive
then, but now I am not ready to
accept anything anyone tells
me, " she said. " I think the
students then were idealistic
and intense. J ann not. Where
Utey cared about America, I
care about me."
Many of Diana Balot's
generation look at the rebels of
yesterday and observe that as
they rejected the system, so did
the system reject them. That
fact, in the face of a teetering
economy and an uncertain
future, stands as somewhat of a
warning to the young of today.
11 The innovative radical students who became the leaders
of the movement were reward·
ed with a 'no• when lt came
down to the reality of finding
jobs and being accepted as
members of the 'real world,"'
said Dale Cahan, an NYU

laws have discouraged users:
college drug sales in New York.
have declined and many
pushers are reported to have
gone out of business since the
slate instituted stringent narcotics laws _
Even marijuana has now
taken a back seat to beer and
wine among teen-agers-mainly
because a bottle of the popular
frl,lit wines is cheaper than
grass. Among young teens. in
fact, alcoholism is soaring; The
National Institute on Alcohol
Abuse and Alcoholism estimates that approximately
4~,000 pre-teens and young
teenagers have serious drinking
problems.
Dean Henry Coleman of
Columbia Univeristy , along
with other educators, predicts
that the new stability on the
campuses will last a long time.
" We've turned a corner," he
said. " The students are intent
on building fulfilling lives for
. themselves. They are going into
the solid professions of law and
junior.
medicine in the midst of a
So, beneath the blanket of shaky economic envirqnment.
calm which has settled over the
campuses 1 students have been
hunched over their books and
typewriters and it looks like
they will be doing the same
thing in 1974. Most of them say
they care about grades more
than anything else; many
universities · have discontinued
experimental pass-fail courses
because students insisted
grades were the only thing
graduate schools had to measure them by. Academic stand·
ards have become stricter ail
around because of the shortage
of funds to expand and improve
coUege facilities .

I think there would be some
guns and dynamite passed
around . We would expect the
National Guard to move onto
the campuses, n said David
Shapiro, Secretary of the
Senate at Columbia University.
There is a general feeUng,
however, that the uprisings of
the late '60s, while liberalizing
attitudes, did not accomplish
what the young rebels set out to
accomplish . Most of today's
students feel powerless to have
any affect on the system and
therefore, they won't bother to

1968 are coming back to gel
their law degrees so Uley ca n
really effect change."
Although conside.rabiy fewer
men were drafted after late
1970, the official end of the
draft earlier this year helped to
further dampen young people's
fervor for vigorous protests. '
" It was a symbolic end of an
era. It was the per sonal threat
of the draft which was the
initial catalyst for the whole
antiw·a r movement," said Rick
Ginn, a recent student at
Westchester State College in
Pennsylvania. ''The movement
grew to feel strongly about a
host of other ills but it was the
draft which produced the first
spark. ''
Most students agree that one
of the only things that would
interrupt the calm of the
campuses next year would be a
resumption of the bombing of
Vietnam. Some said they would
join peaceful protests if it
happened ; others said they
would react more violently.
"I think the campuses would
erupt again and some people

try.

an ethic of

become ilL
The chief drawback from the
viewpoint or many laymen is
that they are not certain to see
the same doctor on every visit.
Those HMO's now in exist·
ence often are staffed by a
doclol's. ·
large
nwnber of speci~liats so
The measure provides $250
patients on each visit are sent
million in direct subsidies over
to the doctor best qualified to
the next four years to
treat their ailments.
demonstrate the fe asi bility of a
. In a statement released here
nationa l network of Health
·and
in San Clemente, Calif.,
Maintenance
Organizations
where the bill was signed,
(HMO), the formal name for
Nixon said the HMO method
prepaid group health plans.
"represents one response to the
These are c.enters where for a
challenge of finding new and
better ways to improve health
care for the people of this
COLUMBUS ( UP!) - The lodge or dam. Traps must be COlUl try. II
Ca~r Weinberger, secretary
Ohio Department of Natural No. 3 size or larger, said Armof
Health, Education and
Resources Division of Wildlife bruster, and .trappers cannot
Welfare, told a White House
announced Friday that beaver use more than three traps.
1 !rapping season opens Feb . 1
All trapped beaver must be briefing that on the average
and will continue through 6 tagged and recorded by the families could expect to spend ,
p.m . ~'eb. 15.
game protector in the county less for their bealth care under
TI1e bag limit for beaver is where they are trapped by 8 HMO's than they do under the
two per season, said division p.m . Feb. 15, Annbruster said. existing system of a fee for
every visit to the doctor.
Chief Dan C. Armbruster.
Dr. Charles Edwards, assistBeaver trapping is permitted
ant HEW secretary, said
this season only on private land RAYBORN KilLED
in
Washington,
Vinton,
AUCKLAND, New Zealand HMO's could provide "the
Tuscarawas, Trumbull, Stark, ( UPI ) - American Cal Ray- continuity of care that· a lot of
Porta ge,
Perry, Noble, born, holder of •the · World people don't have on today's
Muskingum , Morgan , Monroe, Motorcycle Land Speed record health scene ."
ThE bill was .pushed through
Mahonin g, Lake, Jefferson, of :ffi5 miles per bour, died in a
Congress
by Sen. Edward M.
Jackson., Holmes, Hocking, 120-mile-an-hour crash at an
Harrison, Guernsey, Geauga, International meet near here Kennedy, [).Mass., chairman of
Galli a,
Coshocton,
Col- Saturday; the Auckland Sun the Senate health subconunittee. Niion said it was welcome
umbiana, Carroll , Belmont, . newspaper reported.
j\thens and Ashtabula counRayborn, tht&gt; United States though "somewhat broader
\ies.
motorcycle champion, was iri than the administration's propoArmbruster said trappers New Zealand for the Marlboro sal."
should scout the area they plan International Motorcycle
The measure provides funds
to t•ap and be sure to obtain series ·and the Tasman In- for planning studies and the
permission of the landowner . ternational Motorracing heavy start-up costs for creatBeaver trapping is prohibited series.
ing HMO's and subsidies to
on sta te land .
His 500cc Suzuki motorcycle meet deficits for their first
All traps must have a tag smashed into a wooden fence at three years of operation.
showing the user's name, ar.d the end of a long straight on the
lt lists benefits any HMO
traps must be set at least 10 Pukekohe circuit, the paper must offer which go beyond
r""t frorrl a beaver bank den, said . ~
what most now in operation
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By MIKE FEINSILBER
WAS HINGTON ( UP!)
Presiden t Nixon signed a law
S&lt;iturday which offers families
a less co~tl y way of receiving
good medical attention from

single annual fee a family is
assured of receiving a year 1S
hea]th care no matter how
frequently a doctor's services
are required.
Backers believe HMO's promote better health since people
no longer need to be wary of
the cost of seeing a doctor at
the first sign of iU health,
·
The HMO's also have a profit
motive to practice preventive
medicine-looking after patients when ·they are well so
that they are · less apt to

Dates set for beaver seaso~

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provide. These include preven·
live dental care .for children,
treatment for alcohol and drug
abuse and "crisis intervention
mentatllealth services."
The bill also authorizes loan
guarantees for profitable
liMO's in ,·~medically underserved" areas. It auth.orizes HEW
to contract for HMO·tyjle health
services for Indians and migratory workers.
Nixon said that the national
health insurance bill he will
submit to q,ngress next year
will allow patients to use their
bealth insurance to join HMO's.

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sJave

and

to

SPECIAL se rvi ces at the
Church of God Holiness, 10
a.m ., wi.th Don Seymour,
missionary t1.1 New Guinea.
Pastor, Rev. James Alley,
invites the public.
REV . Ernest Baker will p~each
at Walnut Ridge Church, 7 p.m .

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·...
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Miss Rebecca Ann Stump

society's moral

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Ernest

Jan's Side
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by
Dorothy }. Countryman
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The financial squeeze, along
with the increasing awareness
of the dangers of strong drugs,.
have been cited as the reasons
for the decline of the heavy
drug culture. Although marijua·
na is often as conunon as
alcohol at parties, experiment·
ing with expensive LSD and
hard drugs _has tapered off. In

::;
GALUPOUS - Since I never write a column of New Year 's
!. resolutions, and since I am not about to sta rt, 1 thought I'd just
;::write up a list of New Year's wishes (really) for the friends I
:=hope I've made in Gallia County.
For the Southern Ohio Gospel Music Association director
..,.,
~ .,.,..,.r;y McGraw and all the members, concerts that draw
;::thousands of people.
~
For the·French Art Colony, a good seaSon of beautiful shows .
~
For the Ohio Valley Publishing Company , newsprint and
a sense. of humor.
For Bill Gray, somebody to keep him happy .
:
For my roommates. an electric dishwasher.
:
For Denny Fobes , a consolidated school in Meigs county so
: he'Uoniy have to cover one ballgame a w ~ek .
• · For Junior Wilson a year's supply of pipe tobacco.
:
For Dale Rothgeb improved communications with the Holzer
! Medical Center and the Gallia County Sheriff's Department.
:
For the gals in ~e Tribune fr~nt office, fewer irate phone

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: calls.

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For Chet Tannehill, more creative pictures from Meigs
• County,
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For the composing room peop]e at OVP I fewer mistakes in
! the news copy.
:
For the Point Pleasant Register staff , another phone line.
:
For Gallipolitans, especially John Halliday, a windfall of
; proper pronunciation of ·tl1e name of our city._

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Interest
Savings
Account

I REALLY hope the New Year will be good to ali my friends ,
even though we're faced with an e_
nergy crisis. Hopefully there
will be happiness and love, even though there isn't much
gasoline. Love doesn' t cost anything, so it really should be in
good supply.
Whatever you're going New Year'sE.ve I hope it's happy and
I )Vish you all the very best.

••

BY THE WAY, just to clear up any lingering doubts, neither
: Debbie nor I received engagement rings for Cbristmas. The
~ fellows in the composing around here don't believe us, but it's
~ true,. Before you get a ring you have to have someone to give it to
: you.

GALUPOUS - Plans have
been completed for the wedding of Miss Billie Jo Hale, 1037
•• HAVE A HAPPY NEW YEAR.
Eastern Ave., and Billie Lane
•"
Brown, Goshen .
•
The ceremony will take place
Jan . 13 at 2 p.m., in the Vinton
Methodist Church with Rev.
John Bryant officiating .
Attendsnts for the wedding
~
GALUPOLIS - The Golden "Ready for Christmas" by
will
be Betty Twyman
: Rule Class of Old Kyger met Mrs . Lester Roush; "The ·
Ewington, sister of the bride'
! with Miss Mollie Johnson and Meaning of Christmas" by and
•
Dan
Murray,
Chillicothe.
n. her brother, Tom, in Gallipolis, Mrs . Hortie Roush.
Family and friends are
A gift exchange was enjoyed
: for the Christmas meeting.
welcome to attend.
:
A potluck dinner was enjoyed and a surprise gift, g.iven
: with Mrs. Lester Roush giving by Mrs. Spears, was woft by
~ grace before the meal. The . Mrs. Gardner.
SEEN AND HEARD
The meeting closed with the
• afternoon meeting opened with
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
~ singing of "SHent Night" and singing of " Joy to the World.''
Mr~
. John W. Houck, Rt. 218,
The next meeting will be with
: Mrs. 0. H. Fry gave the
Mrs. Lester Roush in January. are spending a par( of their
·: opening prayer.
h91iday vacation with Mr.
:
Roll call was answered with
Houck's niece and family, Mr.
• "What I'd Uke for Chrisbnas
•• and Where I EJ&lt;pect to Spend
and Mrs. Lyle Cox, Randy,
Amy Jo, Rhonda and ·John
GO
CAROLING
; the Day." That there be peace
CLIPPER MILLS ~ The PK Williann, Montpelier . They are
: iunong all people was the
youth
group of the Christ also visiting his . sister, Mrs.
; thought of all present.
:
Miss Johnson read Psah:n 95 United Methodist Church at Reba Cramer . On Saturday,
i. and Mrs. George Gardener Clipper Mills went caroling the group traveled to ShipFriday, Dec . 20, in the sewanna, Ind., to attend the
~- gave the secretary's report.
~ · Mrs. Ben Rupe reported on lhe Shoestring Ridge and Clippe_r Amish Country Horse Auction.
: treasury. The group voted to Mills area. Rev. W. Dale Hundreds of horse drawn
: make a donation toward new McClurg, youth leader, was in vehicles will bring the Amish
• song books for the church and charge of the evening. Those people to the auction where as
participating were Sheila, many as 500 or 600 horses are
•• Sunday school.
:
The annual Christmas Angie and Nick Cromlish, Tim sold. Many are purchased and
; project was discussed and and Carl Cheney, Chris and transported to Canada for
• Jason Thomas, who is in a Melvin Biars, Timmy Lewis, human consu.mption _ The
~ Greenfield nursing home was Barry Plymale and Greg, Houcks will return via Gerremembered with a box and Kevin and Lee MitchelL mantown, to visit his brother,
Cookies and hot chocolate were Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Houck.
! card.
1
~ Mrs. Edward' Spears asked served by Mrs. McClurg in the
· : Bible questions on the birth of fellowship room of the church
=.j,esus. Readings included following the caroling.
DEADLINE SET
· 'What is Christm.as? 11 by Mrs.
GALLIPOLIS - Deadline for
Leona Spires; "Our Precious
wedding and engagement
Saviour" by .Mrs. Fry; "The
announcements with pictures
Black Lamb" by Miss Johnfor the Sll!lday-Times Sentinel
. . G&amp;T 'YOUR MAN
son; "Christmas Comes at
is noon Thursday of each week.
Different Times'' by Mrs.
No oval photographa will be
·. Spears; uAlmost as Good" by
accepted, although · color
Mrs. Gardner; "A Song of
pictures can be used according
Christmas" by Mr$. Rupe;
to quality. ·

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Class
has
meeting
•

Green grows faster
where interest rates
are higher ... ours
are always the highest allowable by
law. So why not start
the New Year right.'
With a bank that takes
care of ypur money. ··

•

VINTON BRANCH • VINTON, OHIO.

'7H£ OLD ;BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

JANE PARKER

S

FRESH

.APPLE PIE
&amp;

SPANISH BAR

CAKES

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CHOICE

59'

''110 YEARS OF SERVICE"
I '

WE WILL BE

~~11~ ®il
©©~tr~

TUESDAY
MERCERVILLE Bapti s t
Church will begin r evival at
7:30p.m. with the Rev. Charles
Lusher, evangelist. The public
is Welcome .

VALUES TO 145.00
CHOICE

each member telling what she
considered the best class of the
Dec. 1 and 2 flower show given
by the club, and why .
The program consisted of
each nierriber giving a reading
pertaining to Chri&amp;tmas.
The club presented Mrs.
Pearl George a gift that was
handcrafted by Edna and
Willard Woodruff for being
treasurer -for 17 years. The gift
was klssinb ball made of a
large styrofoam bail covered
with gun\ bails and filled in with
miniature pine cones and
sprayed silver with a red
ve lvet ribbon bow and
streamers.
The social hour was
highlighted by a gift exchange.
Lucy Hartsook played Christmas carols at the plano as the
group sang and refreshments
of strawberry ice cream, cake,
sandwiches and punch were ·
served.
The ladies will have a New
Year's potluck dinner party
today (Dec. JD ) at 5 p.m. at the
home of Pearl George.
Members' families will be
guesis.
Jan. 9 a workshop will be
held with Maryann McCarley
at 10. a.m _, on string art.
Members are to bring a sack
lunch and the hostess will
furnish the beverage.

$3500

· SECOND GROUP

WOOSTER - Shirlene Ward,
B.A. in English from Denison Rl. 2, Gallipolis, has been
University and a B.S. in named to the dean 's list for the
elementary education from the fall quarter at the College of
University pf Kansas. Cackette · Wooste.r, according to Dean F .
earned a B.S. in engineering W. Cropp.
from tlie Univers ity of
ATLANTA, Ga . - StevenS.
Washington and is currently
· working on· a master's degree Walker, soil" of Dr. and Mrs. I.
at California State University C. Walker, 1 San Hollow Rd.,
Gallipolis, has been named to
at Northridge.
the dean's list at Emory
University for the fail term .

VALUES TO '65.00

AKRON - The University of .
Akron. plans no in12rease in fees
for the 1974-75 academic year.
The · fee·s per quarter for
students will (emain at $190 for
instructional and $45 for
general purposes, making · a
total of $235 per qu'\l't~

412-414 -Second Avenue
Gallipolis, O)lio
BankAmericard or
Master Cha

Clo sed Monday at s P.m.
Closed ~!I Day Tuesday

SWEEP UP THESE SAVINGS AT

a

Carl's Annual Trade-In _
Sale
YOUR OLD SHOES ARE

NORlH THEIR WEIGHT IN GOLD!
IF YOU WEAR
THEM IN

•300 OFF

IF YOU BRING
THEM IN

ON ANY PAIR OF SHOES
$15.99 OR OVER IN STOCK
~ f!!B TRADE ,!!
PAIR

-

2f! =:.lEAal:;;.;

, .
!t','""1~;'~1""''
,t I
.

.... . . . .. .
~-·

Keepsake Diamond Solitaires
The ultimate in beauty and brilliance • • . Keepsake Solitaires
guaranteed, registered, perfect:

. ""'

....,

,.,

GROUP OF
WOMEN'S STYLE BOOTS

· R~D ..11

TO

'· /2 PRICE

Wlltn 1ht fatl ily shops ID1th"

3211 Second A"ft .

NO TRADE-INS ON THIS GROUP
.... .....,

,.

·• want

,I

PLAZA

ONE GROUP

Garden club has meeting

Nuptials
planned

organist. .

rn

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard A. Dowell, Southside, W. Va., announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter
RobcrtaKay , to David H. Mohler, son of Mrs. Mabel Mohler'
R10 Grande. Miss Dowell is a graduate of Point Pleasa nt
H1gh School and St. Mary 's HospitaL She is employed a s a lab
,asSI~Iant at Holzer Medical Center. Mohler js a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and works for Gailia County as
a mechamc. The open church wedding will be an event of
Feb. 16 at Beech Hill United Methodist Church, Southside .

Betrothal announced

VINTON - The Vinton
Friendship Garden Club met
Thursday everiing, Nov. 20, for
·the Christmas Club meeting at
the home of Mrs . Beatrice
Bush. The home was decorated
for the Christmas season.
The meeting was called to
order by the president; Esta
Downard. Devotions from St.
Luke on the birth of Christ
were read by Mrs. Bush and a
Christmas praYer was given.
Roil call was answered with

faithful member of the church
ror over 50 years, and is also
ac tive in Red Cross and
community work .
The congregation extends
best wishes to Miss Hayward
who will be greatly missed as

"ILVER BRIDGE

Miss Roberta Kay Dowell

NEW YEAR'S Eve service at
the Church of God Holiness,
Lecta, 8 p.m. Different
speakers and special singing
by a guest quartet. Rev. James
Alley·, pastor , invites the ·
public.
WATCH Night Service ' at
Fellowship Chapel , Vinton ,
beginning at 8 p.m. Public
.invited. Rev. Elmer Geiser. is
the pa&amp;tor .
TUESDAY
VINTON Masonic Lodge 131
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Dis trict deputy, educational
meeting.

GALLIPOLIS ~ Mr. and
Mrs. James M. Gillingham,
Overland Park, Kan., wish to
announce the engagement of
their dau ghter , Lynn, to
Thomas A. Cackette, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Sydney T. Cackette,
Seattle, Wash. Lynn is ·the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
G. B. Gillingham, Gallipolis.
Miss Gillingham earned a

GALLIPOLIS
Sunday,
· Dec . 16, a reception was held at
the First United Presbyterian
Church
to honor .Mis-s
Catherine Hayward , who is
retiring as organist or the
church after serving for 20
years.
She hils been an ~ctivP anrt

CLOSED TODAY

MONDAY
WATCH Service beginning at
7:30 p.m . at Centerpoint
Freewill Baptist Church. Revs .
Mil es Trout, Don Price,
Lawrence Conger and Homer
Stevens . Special singing .
Everyone welcome.

~~ Mrs. Raymond R . Sisk, Mason, W. Va .

AUTO BANK • THIRD AVE.

Everything Is
Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr
Back

••

•. Stwnp announce the engagement of their daughter 1 Rebecca
: .• Ann, 19, Gallipolis, to Gary William Sisk , 23, son of Mr . and

MAIN OFFICE • SECOND AVE,

WEO

...''"

:,.

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!

WHUif ECONOMY ORIGIIIAT(S

THE Providence Missionary
Baptist Church on Teens Run
Rd., wiU have Donald COmer,
Stocktown, as guest speaker, 7
p.m.

ethics."

•

Pilot HMO project bill signed

·-

compliance. I am struggUng
against this in order to become
alive, to be able to share my
feelings with other people ... not
to be a deaf, dumb, unhappy

\)

pounds of'cargo in wing compartments. Planned lor service
in the 198&amp;, it is being developed by Lockheed-Georgia Co.

deadness

GAI.I.IPOI.IS - The Senior
Citizens 'Center, located in the
old Holzer Hospital Building ,
Cedar Street entrance, is open
Monday through Friday from 9
a .m. to 3 p.m . and one night
each week . The schedule for
this week is as follows :
Monday, Dec . 31, Center is
closed during the day. New
Year 's Eve Party, 9 p.m .
Tuesday, Jan. 1, New Year 's
Day - Center is closed .
Wednesday, Jan. 2, Small
Crafts Class 1-3 p.m. , teacher ,
Elizabeth Evans _
Thursday, Jan. 3, BroOmstick Afghan Class, 1-3 p.m.,
teacher, Clara fisher .
Friday, Jan . 4, All Crafts 9
a.m.-3 p.m.

SUNDAY
REV. BRUCE Unroe will be
preaching at Bailey Chapel, 7
p.m.; publ.lc invited.

'

Sometimes this feeling of
being powerless translates itself
into a certain confusion and
hopelessness about life. Many
students agreed with Lyn
Noland of NYU, who said she
was fighting being "raised with

Greet the
New Year 0
IJ.J:}
with a

FLYING WING is the shape of airfreighting in the future
if U1i s giant transport makes it from the drawing board into
the skies. The "Spanloader" is designed to carry 660,000

'

Church honors Miss Hayward

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Gtlllpalls, D.

-NO LAYAWAYs-

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f."

SAL'E STARTS WEDNESOAY- JAN. 2nd

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�Candidate cites.
idle expertise

6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel,SWlday, Dec. 30, 1973

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MONDAY THE LAST DAYI
BED ROO
SUITES
FURNITURE
SAVE UP TO

Miss Jeanie Grate, a
Junior at Southwestern High
School, has served as
December Girl of the Month
for the Southwestern Future
Homemakers of America .
She is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Grate,
Patriot. Jeanie is presently
aerving her chapter in the
office of song leader and is
co-chairwoman this year for
the club project of Senior
. Citiz~ns. She also holds both
the junior and c hapter
homemaker degrees. During
her freshman year she ·
received the " Most Outstanding Home Economics
Student" award. Her other
activities include Beta Club,
pep club, library club,
district vice president of
Future Nurses of Gallia
County, drama club and
majorette of the Southwestern Band. She is a
member of the Salem
Baptist Church and is
president of her Baptist
Youth Fellowship. She is also
president of the Cora
Campers 4-H Club and a
member of the Junior
Leaders. Jea'nie enjoys
sports and sewing and plans
a future in nursing.

Name Brands:
Bassett, Singer, Coleman,
Kemp; DMI, Delker Bros.

COLEMAN MODERN
5 PIECE WALNUT
REGULAR •349.95

AN ARRAY OF BEAUTIES - An octette of the lovely
Glamour-leers who enhan-c e the skating st'One with their
beauty as weU as their skating talents in the 28th edition of

Holiday on Ice. It's a scene from the precision nwnber caHed
" Everything is Beautiful ." Holiday on Ice comes to Hlliltington at the Memorial f'ieldhouse from Jan . 9 to 13.

Show has internationatstars

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InHUNTINGTON
temational is the word for
Holiday on Ice, and the ,28th
Ectition of the world-famous ice
show is international not only
in name but in every respect.
Tbe skaters, both stars and
Glamour-leers, come from
several different cotu1tries and
four continents .
All this internationalism is
wrapped into two hours and 30
minutes of superb, ·excellent
production, wonderful music,
rib-tickling comedy, gorgeous
costumes and beautiful girls.
The new production comes to
, the Memorial Field House in
Huntington for seven performances from Wednesday,
Jan . 9 through Sunday, Jan. 13.
Canadian stars are in abWldance. Roberta Laurent,
Toronto, Canada, returns to the
limelight after being away to
become a mother. Marc LeBel,
a great young star from
Montreal, is .agaln in fine form .
Pat McKilligan, a sensational
new discovery from Van·
couver, is debuting. He has
been called the find of the year.
South Africa and England
are represented by the finest
duo of pair skaters in the world
at the present time, Clive and
Carol Phipson. This is their

14th year
of
stardom
with
Holiday
on
Ice
after winning wide acclaim in Europe, Asia and
South America.
England is represented by
Michel Henry and Carol Anne
(Mr. and Mrs . Henry ). They
are noted pair skaters, and
Michel Henry is one of the top
magicians and illusionists in
·. the entertainment field . They
have combined skating with
magic to . present an act of
Wlusual brilliance. This is their
first appearance with an ice
show in . the Unjted States.
South
Amefica 's
contribution to the 1974 Holiday on
lee International is one of the
great ice comics of all time,
Little Lito. He has become an
extraordinarily funny man
with enough talent
to
burn up any ice floor .
discovered in
He was
Argentina ,by Ed Leary, the
Holiday on Ic~ show manager.
Don Bonacci and Cathy
Mishkin and Patrice Leary
head the Americans in the cast.
.John Routh, Dennis Boyle,
Rulona Rolland, and Richard
Candiliere are other skaters
from the United States
featured in the production .
" Snoopy ," of course, is
an All-American . He 's the
product of Charles Schulz, the
famed
cartoonist
who
originated the " Pea,nuts" gang
of comic strip notoriety .
There are seven productions
in the 1974 skating revue: 1'It's
a Beautiful World," ''Mixup at
Montesorn ," "F1ddler on the

Grange
•
has sesston

·
HARRISBURG - Harris
Grange met Thursday evening
with Master Danny Hively
presiding.
The minutes of the last
meeting were read and ap-proved and it was decided to
change meeting time from 7:30
to 8 p.m . . because of daylight
savings time.
It was announced that
Pomona Grange would meet
Jan. 7 at· 8 p.m . at the
Springfield Grange hall .
Several cards were signed to
he sent to members and friends
that were ill:
The literary program, under
the direction of the worthy
lecturer, Wanda Lee Morris,
was given . The theme -"Christ.
mas" was used. Included in the
program were " It Came Upon
a Midnight Clear"; ~~A
Christmas Prayer " by Marie
Hively ; a song by John Meeks ;
"Christ Spirit" by Kathleen
Durst; uchrisbnas Facts" by
Irene Meeks ; ''Christmas·
Prayer" by Wesley Meek ;
"Christmas" by Edith Cornell;
"Christmas Everyday " · by
Garnette Meeks ; " Twelve
Days of Chrisimas Cards" by
Wanda Morris. A game involving three couples called
"Wrapping the Present" was
won by Judy and Danny
Hively .
Closing song was "0 Come
All Ye Faithful" and a gift
exchange, potluck lunch and
social hour followed.

Roof," "Let Your Spirit Soar,"
" Down on the Bayou,"
"Knights of the Road" and the
finale that ties together the
bea utiful swing waltz, th e
precision ska tin g oE the
Glamour-leers, and the entire
company in the sequen ce
" Everything is Beautiful."
A bigger and better family
show has never been produced !

NOW................ ~275

Name Brands: Bassett, Clayton
Marcus, Stratford, Burlington House;
Globe, Chestnut Creek.

SINGER 6 PIECE
SPANISH, WHITE &amp; GOLD

.SOFAS • CHAIRS ei..OVE SEATS

REGULAR •799.95

NOW.................~550

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END TABLES
SAVE UP TO

DMI 5 PIECE
SPANISH, OAK
REGULAR •399.95

" Serving you since 1936'"
- J lllpo1is. Ohio

NOW ................

!-3 00

COLEMAN MODERN
5 PIECE WALNUT

A VERY FEW MATCHED SETS

AT

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OFF

REGULAR •299.95

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•210
NOW..................
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COLEMAN ORIENTAL
6 PIECE PECAN

LAMPS

..

SAVE UP TO

REGULAR '799.95

ssso

BEST WISHES FOR A

HAPPY NEW YEAR

•••••••••••••••••••

HECK'S. WILL BE

CLOSED

DINING ROOM

ALL DAY MONDAY

OPEN
TUESDAY, JAN. 1

NEW ·YEAR'S DAY

eSWAGS ePOLES eTREES
eTRAYS eTABLES
SOME TABLE LAMPS IN PAIRS

REGULAR '649,95

'
.
you ve gqt It,
yolive·.gOt .1t.
.

55

BASSEn MEDITERRANEAN
. 9 PIECE OAK SUITE
REGULAR '649.95

NOW...................~

55

IT.)

EARLY AMERICAN

••

DINING ROOM
eMAPLE eOAK ePINE
eBy Bassett, Kincaid &amp;: Others
COMPLETE NEW SHIPMENT OF

MAPLE DINING

Master Charge, the card used to help manage your
money and keep track of purc~ases ~ith c&gt;,ne
itemized monthly statement . If you ve got 1t, you ve
probably got Master Charge, too. So . . use it!

ROOM FURNITURE

•

SPECIAL
HOOVER
DIAL~A-MATIC

WER DRIVE
THE SWEEPER THAT TAKES

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THE WORK OUT OF SWEEPING

N£VER AGAIN AT THESE
LOW PRICES

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Tbe Commercial
&amp; Bevin
Bank

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Court St.:
Gallipolis

Silver Bridge

Shopping

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Plaz~&gt;

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Mrs. RoDald CowaD and soD

Mrs. Dewey SloDe aad soD

SEEN AND HEARD
KYGER - Christmas Eve
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Sisson at their home in
Kyger were Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Sisson and Annette,
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs .
Robert Sisson and sons,
Rutland ; Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Hart, Pickerington; Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Bradbury,
Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Sisson, Kyger.

•

HURRY IN
TO THE
·EMPIRE
TOMORROW!

GALLIPOLIS
Approxirpately 35 persons were
present at the Senior Citizens
Center Thursday to honor those
having a Capricorn birthday.
Tbe program for the afternoon
was planned by the Sagittarius
birthday committee.
Those present completed a
form marking their interests in
activities an_d services per. talning to the center. New
Year's resolUtions for the
center were written . Rev.
Linson Stebbins told of some
interesting experiences he has
had as a minister and then read
an article "Usually on Sunday," a hwnorous account of
what a minister sees as he
stands before his congregation .
Irene Smeltzer read a poem,

"Birthdays Are a Gift from
God" taken from the Helen
Steiner
Rice collection .
Henrietta Church read a short
poem "I Pack My TrWlk."
Gifts were presented to the two
celebrating their birthdays.
The table was decorated with
blue candles on each side of
lighted praying hands. A 1974
Resolution notebook and a blue
and white card depicting the
idea of peace completed the
decoiations.
Cake, punch and coffee were
served to the guests. The cakes
were provided by )rene Smeltzer, Henrietta Church and
Garnet Betz. Tbe pWlch was
furnished by Ruth Miller and
Naomi Durst.

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BEST WISHES
ANDA

TRAINING TAKEN
CLOSINGATNOON
DUBLIN, Ohio - James
RIO GRANDE - James
Thomas, an employee of Don Weiher , Rio Grande postWatts Volkswagen of Gallipolis master, annoUnced Saturday
recenUy completed a training that the Rio post office window
course conducted by Midvo, will close at noon Monday. The
Inc., the distributorship for ---Rio post office will be closed all
Volks wagen, Porsche, and day on New Year's Day
Audi for Ohio and Kentucky . Tuesday. Normal serv1ce will
Classes are offered the em- reswne Wednesday .
ployees of authorized dealers
throughout the year as part of a
comprehensive training cycle
for techni~al personnel.

I

Mrs. Ronald Ashworth Jr. and son

HAPPY NEW YEAR

Pedd~r 's

By Goldie CleDdiDin
PORTLAND - Tbe last of
1973 is nearly upon us. And
many won 't even make it into
'74. May he you or I, just a few
more days~ hours and pages in
Utis last chapter of our lives in
Ute last year.
Another milestone sort of
along the way; and h;,. many,
in the mirror of our conscience
as we look back over the
yesterdays, can see the growth
of hettermimt in our lives that
should be there?
As we now look toward
whatever tomorrows we have
left, have we used these last
chapters to look up, and love
and laugh and lift some other
along the way, or by word or
.deed laid a stumbling block in

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DIRTY COUNCIL?
WINCHESTER, Ind. (UPI )
- Winchester City Council did
such a detailed job of writing
its new antipornography ordinance that the publisher of
the comrriWlity's newspaper ·
says Ws too dlrty to print.

WE FEATURE

~~OlfN'JI~~$S

lli\TESY

out.
Have we passed up a chance
to be a go~ Samaratin, or
walk~ to th~ other ~1de of the
road m _pa~m~. one m need of
~~p, ,thl~kmg Let /ohnrue do
11 , I m m a hurry .
Have ~e been good -~tewards _
of the hie and blessmgs God
has given us, by sharing hot
~nly worldly goods but our very
lives, talents and selves; oftimes a sn;tile or_kind word that
takes so little ttme makes the
GAL!JPOLIS - Tbe Am- included morcorn , pansit
day
for someone.
bassadors Class of First dihon, arroz ala valneciana,
There are so many reaching
Baptist Church recently fried lumpia, leche nan and
out
for help - mostly silentiy
held the annual Christ- bingka.
- the RSVP is helping in so
Followjng the meal the group
mas
dinner
at
the
many ways. If you have time
home of Dr. and Mrs. Ishmael sang Christmas carols and was
on your hands, reach out to
Jamora, Kathnor Lane, Point led In a period of devotion by
them with whatever s~ength
Pleasant. Tbe guests enjoyed a Pastor Wlison Wahl. This was
or talent y~u have. In this way
"Filipino" dinner prepared followed by the business
you receive a ·wonderful
and served by Mrs. Jamora. session and a white elephant
blessing, by making one for
Tbe menu of Filipino food gift exchange.
someone else. It's a·joy to go to
Those attending were Mr.
the Bookmobile and Sr. Citizen
and Mrs. Carl Simpkins, Mr.
Canter where folk are giving of
and Mrs. Ronald Keenan, Mr.
themselves. Paid employes
and Mrs. Tom Milstead, Mr.
and volunteers are working
and Mrs. Jerry McDivitt, Mr.
together.
and Mrs. Bob Reed, Pastor and
My wish and prayer is that
Mrs. Wilson Wahl, Pastor and
we
all try to make the next
Mrs. Harry E. Cole, Mr. and
.
d
Mrs. Uoyd Danner, Mr. and
COLUMBUS A bill addition, S. B. 41618 sponsore year the best one of our lives.
rantin•
state
employees
a 31 by Senators M. Morris
Mrs. Larry Marr , Mr . and Mrs. g
o
Cl
1 d)
.
Keith Wick, and the host and cents per hour pay raise has Jackson, (D- eve an ;
GAWPOUS-'- Mike Wise hostess, Dr. and Mrs. Jamora. been introduced into both the Howard C. Cook, (R-Toledo);
of MercervUle is among the
Ohio Senate and the House of Rober~T · Secrest, (Dflrst in the nation to be
Representatives.
_
Cambr ge); Thomas A.
awarded the special "Legion of
Drafted by the . 34,000 VanM- er, ( R·Ashland);
Merit Citation" by the National
PLEASANT VALLEY
member Ohio Civil Service Donald L. Woodland, ·(DFFA Alumni AssOciation made
DISCHARGES : Donald Employees Association, the Colwnbus); Walter L. White,
as part 0! the' National FFA Matheny, Gallipolis Ferry; blU affects 80,000 state, state (R-Lima),
.
Convention in Kansas City, Mo. William Weaver' Buffalo; university, and county wrlfare
In the House of RepresenThis was the first presen- Keith Spurlock, Rodney, 0.; employees.
tatives, the bill (II.B. 1032) was
tation of the Legion of Merit Kelly Kinniard, Gallipolis
''In this time of runawa'y introduced on December '/:1, by
Citation. The purpose of the Ferry; Mrs. Birdie Queen, son, inflation," OCSEA Executive Representatives Phale D.
award Is to recognize Southside; Berry Kesterson, Secretary James F. Marshall Hale, Jr., (D-Colwnbus) and
meritorious service and per- Pomeroy: Gilbert Bechtle, explained, "we are hoping that Mack D. Pemberton, (Rsonal effort- and initiative in Henderson; Mrs. Paul Winn, this increase wUl help our Colwnbus). In additio~, ten
. demonstrating the pioneering Middleport; MJ:s. James Ully, members keep their heads . other Representatives are
· spirit to help build the FFA Point Pleasant; Uonel France, above water as they -light to listed as co-sponsors; James
· Alumni Association and build a Kanauga; 0 .: Wilda Young, keep pace with the constanUy W. Rankin, (D-Cincinnali);
better
tom'o rrow
for Mason; Mrs. _ Russell Wood, spiralling cost of living."
Lawrence E . Hughes, (Ragriculture.
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Kenneth
Labelled snate Bill 416, the Colwnbus); John D. Tbomp• Wise, a, member of the Birchfield, Gallipolis; and measure was formally in- son, (D-Cleveland); Sam
Hannan Trace FFA &lt;\)umnl, is Jacque_line Sayre.
troduced into the Ohio Senate Speck, (R-New Concord); Troy
one of the nation's first to
Dec. 21, by s.;6ator Paul E . Lee James, (D·Cleveland);
provide the leadership to build
32,0000FF WELFARE
· Glllmor, (R-Port Clinton) ; _ Tho_!!las · M.
Bell,
(Dthe FFA Alumni Association .
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Over Douglas Applegate, (D- Cleveland); Arthur H. Bowers,
Tbe aim of the new FFA 32,000reciplentswereremoved Steubenville); and Harry L. (D-Steuhenvolle); M1chael P.
Alumni Association Is to from the welfare rolls during Armstrong, (R-Logan). In Stinziano, (D.Colwnbus).
promote a greater knowledge the first 12 months_of the Ohio
"We are most encouraged by
of the agricultural industry and Work Registration Program,
the aniount of both enthusiasm
support
education
In state Welfare Director Charles
and support shown by memagriculture. By providing a W. Bates said Friday. Bates
hers of bolh Houses for these
mechanism for former FFA said taxpayers saved $2.7
UCENSES DUE
biUs," Karl E. Stewart, Chief
'Ill
f
th
tim
th
COLUMBUS
(UP!)Ohio's
· Ag ent for OCSEA
members to become_involved mt on rom
e
e
e
Leg isJattve
in worthy activities to promote program s ta r ted In SePtemher • drivers licenses, with colored expIa!ned , " and fee1 th at this
the FFA 1972, until September, 1973. phot011 attached, will he issued support is indicative of the
and support
•- of ' beginning next week, Fred genume
·
·organization, FF A activities, More than 19•000 hea ""
concern th e Oh'10·
and agricultural education, it . fwnilles on general relief or Vierow, deputy director of the Legislators feel for public
hopes to build a better Aid to Dependent Children Ohio
Highway
Safety employees. Our members are
tomorrow for agriculture.
either folll'd jobs or -were Department announced. In financial trouble today
·
th e rolls Vierow said all currently valid he cause of m
· n a 11on, an d 1 am
For more infonnation about removed f rom
· d that the 1awma
· kers
the FF A Alumni movement, because th ey re fus· ed to paper and plastic licenses will convmce
·
contact Ronnie Slone at 256- re,.... r or accep t Job s," sa ld remain valid until their are gomg
to come 1o the 1r
•scheduled
expiration.
..
Ba oco.
600_7, G;;llla Coun\)1.
rescue .

the pathway of another?
Perhaps not deliberately, but
heedlessly, selfishly, unconsciously we may have, as
we rush headlong into doing
what co~es naturally to us.
There are ways to guard
against this.
.
Keep ourselves so bu~y domg
things constructively, ·helpfully, and hopefully, our minds
centered on things that are
rewarding in a sense of wellbeing that we've been able to
help another along life's pathway .
Looking for the best in others
we may bring out a smile instead of a frown or sad beaten
down look. We may not travel
thisroadagain - forthere'sno
assurance we'll see this year

STOP IN AND
TRY OUR
DELICIOUS

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HOMEMADE

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CHILl
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j~akr @t~nppr

State employes
ask pay raises

·•·ta

·"Home of That Ulrl Fashio11ed Goodness"
Comer of Second &amp; Olive
Gallipol~. 0.
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Pantry

STATE &amp; THIRD _ __ _ _ _ GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

Maybe you or I, -in this last chapter

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THREE AREA -MOTHERS had Christmas babies at
Holzer Medical Cenrer, photographed above by Jack Carr, ·
operating room orderly who moonlights in the role of hospital
photographer . The first baby to arrive came at 4:44 a.m. to
Mrs. Dewey Slone, Rt.l, Gallipolis, a son weighing 6lbs. 151'.
ounces· the second was a son at 3:17p.m. weighing 6lbs., 13
ounces 'to Mrs. Ronald Cowan, 1275 Vine St., Middleport, and
the third a son at 8:37p.m. weighing 7lbs. , 6 ounces to Mrs.
Ronald Ashworth Jr., Patriot Star Route, GaUipolis .

FFA alums

The Best Time To
Buy Is Now!

OW....................~77

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Stratolounger
•

REGULAR '899.95

I

January Exhibit is the
photography of Daniel Farber.

Wise cited
. ' b y nations

· NOW ON

RECLINERS

-BASSETT FRENCH
9 PIECE FRUITWOOD

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wheel."

Class has Filipino meal

BASSEn SPANISH
9 PC. SUITE, PECAN

NOW..................~

(~SE

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FURNITURE

DECEMBER 31

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Capricorns have party

'

DAN THOM~S
AND SON

GALUPOUS - The French
Art Colony Calendar of activities for . the month of
January is as follows:
Jan. 8, 10 a .m. to 2 p.m.,
Enrollment for dance classes.
call 446-4885; enrollment for
Slimnastiks course also at this
time.
Jan. 10, 7 to 8 p.m., Slimnastiks exercise course, ·
teacher, Gillian Moore.
Jan. 13, 2 to 4 p.m.,
Needlepoint by PAl Glass. $1
charge for materials. Bring
thimble and scissors. Call 4460953 or 446-1903 for reservations.
Jan . 15, 8 p.m ., Interdepartmental meeting.
Jan . 22, 8 p.m., Trustees
meeting.
Jan. 27, 2 p.m., Parent - Child
W&gt;rkshop, " Make a Color-

through long meetings, so I ~an
learn to preside over the
Senate ," she said . "That is the
only duty of the lieutenant
governor required by the
constitution."
Mrs. Rosenfield said she
favors a constitutional amendment, requiring the governor
and lieutenant governor to run
as a team, a proposal now
stalled in the legislature, which
she said would allow the
gove rn or to assign the
lieutenant governor additiorial
duties beca use they both would
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Gary Gin· be of the same political party.
ther, Chester ; Dana Haning ,
Lancaster ; Dana Hamm,
Middleport ; Irene Burris ,
Mason ; Nora Clathworthy,
DWI CHARGED
Middleport ; John Massie ,
GALLIPOLIS
- William
Pomeroy ; Alfred Robinson.
Middleport; Freda Mossman, E:dwards . 45, Colwnbus. was
Pomeroy ; Roger Winebrenner. charged with DW1 followin g a
traffic accident Friday on
Syracuse; Fred Larkins, Long
Second Ave . City police said
Bottom.
Edwards' car went through a
DISCHARGES J ohn
red light striking an auto
Mayes, Edith McCoy, Marilyn
Harper, Dottie Nelson, Scott operated by J ohn Jackson
Davis, 75, 936 Second Ave .
Hutton , Raymond Proffitt.

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Saying
her lack of qualifications fit the
lack of duties for the office,
Margaret Rosenfield ,
Columbus, announced Friday
she wiU be a ¥.Tile-in candidate .
for lieutenant governor in 1974.
II lobbyist for the League of
Women Voters, Mrs. Rosenfield said she decided to seek
the office beca use it will pay
$30,000 nexl term .
&lt;~J am experienced Ln si tting

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idle expertise

6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel,SWlday, Dec. 30, 1973

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MONDAY THE LAST DAYI
BED ROO
SUITES
FURNITURE
SAVE UP TO

Miss Jeanie Grate, a
Junior at Southwestern High
School, has served as
December Girl of the Month
for the Southwestern Future
Homemakers of America .
She is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Grate,
Patriot. Jeanie is presently
aerving her chapter in the
office of song leader and is
co-chairwoman this year for
the club project of Senior
. Citiz~ns. She also holds both
the junior and c hapter
homemaker degrees. During
her freshman year she ·
received the " Most Outstanding Home Economics
Student" award. Her other
activities include Beta Club,
pep club, library club,
district vice president of
Future Nurses of Gallia
County, drama club and
majorette of the Southwestern Band. She is a
member of the Salem
Baptist Church and is
president of her Baptist
Youth Fellowship. She is also
president of the Cora
Campers 4-H Club and a
member of the Junior
Leaders. Jea'nie enjoys
sports and sewing and plans
a future in nursing.

Name Brands:
Bassett, Singer, Coleman,
Kemp; DMI, Delker Bros.

COLEMAN MODERN
5 PIECE WALNUT
REGULAR •349.95

AN ARRAY OF BEAUTIES - An octette of the lovely
Glamour-leers who enhan-c e the skating st'One with their
beauty as weU as their skating talents in the 28th edition of

Holiday on Ice. It's a scene from the precision nwnber caHed
" Everything is Beautiful ." Holiday on Ice comes to Hlliltington at the Memorial f'ieldhouse from Jan . 9 to 13.

Show has internationatstars

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InHUNTINGTON
temational is the word for
Holiday on Ice, and the ,28th
Ectition of the world-famous ice
show is international not only
in name but in every respect.
Tbe skaters, both stars and
Glamour-leers, come from
several different cotu1tries and
four continents .
All this internationalism is
wrapped into two hours and 30
minutes of superb, ·excellent
production, wonderful music,
rib-tickling comedy, gorgeous
costumes and beautiful girls.
The new production comes to
, the Memorial Field House in
Huntington for seven performances from Wednesday,
Jan . 9 through Sunday, Jan. 13.
Canadian stars are in abWldance. Roberta Laurent,
Toronto, Canada, returns to the
limelight after being away to
become a mother. Marc LeBel,
a great young star from
Montreal, is .agaln in fine form .
Pat McKilligan, a sensational
new discovery from Van·
couver, is debuting. He has
been called the find of the year.
South Africa and England
are represented by the finest
duo of pair skaters in the world
at the present time, Clive and
Carol Phipson. This is their

14th year
of
stardom
with
Holiday
on
Ice
after winning wide acclaim in Europe, Asia and
South America.
England is represented by
Michel Henry and Carol Anne
(Mr. and Mrs . Henry ). They
are noted pair skaters, and
Michel Henry is one of the top
magicians and illusionists in
·. the entertainment field . They
have combined skating with
magic to . present an act of
Wlusual brilliance. This is their
first appearance with an ice
show in . the Unjted States.
South
Amefica 's
contribution to the 1974 Holiday on
lee International is one of the
great ice comics of all time,
Little Lito. He has become an
extraordinarily funny man
with enough talent
to
burn up any ice floor .
discovered in
He was
Argentina ,by Ed Leary, the
Holiday on Ic~ show manager.
Don Bonacci and Cathy
Mishkin and Patrice Leary
head the Americans in the cast.
.John Routh, Dennis Boyle,
Rulona Rolland, and Richard
Candiliere are other skaters
from the United States
featured in the production .
" Snoopy ," of course, is
an All-American . He 's the
product of Charles Schulz, the
famed
cartoonist
who
originated the " Pea,nuts" gang
of comic strip notoriety .
There are seven productions
in the 1974 skating revue: 1'It's
a Beautiful World," ''Mixup at
Montesorn ," "F1ddler on the

Grange
•
has sesston

·
HARRISBURG - Harris
Grange met Thursday evening
with Master Danny Hively
presiding.
The minutes of the last
meeting were read and ap-proved and it was decided to
change meeting time from 7:30
to 8 p.m . . because of daylight
savings time.
It was announced that
Pomona Grange would meet
Jan. 7 at· 8 p.m . at the
Springfield Grange hall .
Several cards were signed to
he sent to members and friends
that were ill:
The literary program, under
the direction of the worthy
lecturer, Wanda Lee Morris,
was given . The theme -"Christ.
mas" was used. Included in the
program were " It Came Upon
a Midnight Clear"; ~~A
Christmas Prayer " by Marie
Hively ; a song by John Meeks ;
"Christ Spirit" by Kathleen
Durst; uchrisbnas Facts" by
Irene Meeks ; ''Christmas·
Prayer" by Wesley Meek ;
"Christmas" by Edith Cornell;
"Christmas Everyday " · by
Garnette Meeks ; " Twelve
Days of Chrisimas Cards" by
Wanda Morris. A game involving three couples called
"Wrapping the Present" was
won by Judy and Danny
Hively .
Closing song was "0 Come
All Ye Faithful" and a gift
exchange, potluck lunch and
social hour followed.

Roof," "Let Your Spirit Soar,"
" Down on the Bayou,"
"Knights of the Road" and the
finale that ties together the
bea utiful swing waltz, th e
precision ska tin g oE the
Glamour-leers, and the entire
company in the sequen ce
" Everything is Beautiful."
A bigger and better family
show has never been produced !

NOW................ ~275

Name Brands: Bassett, Clayton
Marcus, Stratford, Burlington House;
Globe, Chestnut Creek.

SINGER 6 PIECE
SPANISH, WHITE &amp; GOLD

.SOFAS • CHAIRS ei..OVE SEATS

REGULAR •799.95

NOW.................~550

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END TABLES
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SPANISH, OAK
REGULAR •399.95

" Serving you since 1936'"
- J lllpo1is. Ohio

NOW ................

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COLEMAN MODERN
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A VERY FEW MATCHED SETS

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REGULAR •299.95

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COLEMAN ORIENTAL
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ssso

BEST WISHES FOR A

HAPPY NEW YEAR

•••••••••••••••••••

HECK'S. WILL BE

CLOSED

DINING ROOM

ALL DAY MONDAY

OPEN
TUESDAY, JAN. 1

NEW ·YEAR'S DAY

eSWAGS ePOLES eTREES
eTRAYS eTABLES
SOME TABLE LAMPS IN PAIRS

REGULAR '649,95

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you ve gqt It,
yolive·.gOt .1t.
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55

BASSEn MEDITERRANEAN
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REGULAR '649.95

NOW...................~

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EARLY AMERICAN

••

DINING ROOM
eMAPLE eOAK ePINE
eBy Bassett, Kincaid &amp;: Others
COMPLETE NEW SHIPMENT OF

MAPLE DINING

Master Charge, the card used to help manage your
money and keep track of purc~ases ~ith c&gt;,ne
itemized monthly statement . If you ve got 1t, you ve
probably got Master Charge, too. So . . use it!

ROOM FURNITURE

•

SPECIAL
HOOVER
DIAL~A-MATIC

WER DRIVE
THE SWEEPER THAT TAKES

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THE WORK OUT OF SWEEPING

N£VER AGAIN AT THESE
LOW PRICES

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Tbe Commercial
&amp; Bevin
Bank

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Court St.:
Gallipolis

Silver Bridge

Shopping

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Plaz~&gt;

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Mrs. RoDald CowaD and soD

Mrs. Dewey SloDe aad soD

SEEN AND HEARD
KYGER - Christmas Eve
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Sisson at their home in
Kyger were Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Sisson and Annette,
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs .
Robert Sisson and sons,
Rutland ; Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Hart, Pickerington; Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Bradbury,
Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Sisson, Kyger.

•

HURRY IN
TO THE
·EMPIRE
TOMORROW!

GALLIPOLIS
Approxirpately 35 persons were
present at the Senior Citizens
Center Thursday to honor those
having a Capricorn birthday.
Tbe program for the afternoon
was planned by the Sagittarius
birthday committee.
Those present completed a
form marking their interests in
activities an_d services per. talning to the center. New
Year's resolUtions for the
center were written . Rev.
Linson Stebbins told of some
interesting experiences he has
had as a minister and then read
an article "Usually on Sunday," a hwnorous account of
what a minister sees as he
stands before his congregation .
Irene Smeltzer read a poem,

"Birthdays Are a Gift from
God" taken from the Helen
Steiner
Rice collection .
Henrietta Church read a short
poem "I Pack My TrWlk."
Gifts were presented to the two
celebrating their birthdays.
The table was decorated with
blue candles on each side of
lighted praying hands. A 1974
Resolution notebook and a blue
and white card depicting the
idea of peace completed the
decoiations.
Cake, punch and coffee were
served to the guests. The cakes
were provided by )rene Smeltzer, Henrietta Church and
Garnet Betz. Tbe pWlch was
furnished by Ruth Miller and
Naomi Durst.

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BEST WISHES
ANDA

TRAINING TAKEN
CLOSINGATNOON
DUBLIN, Ohio - James
RIO GRANDE - James
Thomas, an employee of Don Weiher , Rio Grande postWatts Volkswagen of Gallipolis master, annoUnced Saturday
recenUy completed a training that the Rio post office window
course conducted by Midvo, will close at noon Monday. The
Inc., the distributorship for ---Rio post office will be closed all
Volks wagen, Porsche, and day on New Year's Day
Audi for Ohio and Kentucky . Tuesday. Normal serv1ce will
Classes are offered the em- reswne Wednesday .
ployees of authorized dealers
throughout the year as part of a
comprehensive training cycle
for techni~al personnel.

I

Mrs. Ronald Ashworth Jr. and son

HAPPY NEW YEAR

Pedd~r 's

By Goldie CleDdiDin
PORTLAND - Tbe last of
1973 is nearly upon us. And
many won 't even make it into
'74. May he you or I, just a few
more days~ hours and pages in
Utis last chapter of our lives in
Ute last year.
Another milestone sort of
along the way; and h;,. many,
in the mirror of our conscience
as we look back over the
yesterdays, can see the growth
of hettermimt in our lives that
should be there?
As we now look toward
whatever tomorrows we have
left, have we used these last
chapters to look up, and love
and laugh and lift some other
along the way, or by word or
.deed laid a stumbling block in

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-.

DIRTY COUNCIL?
WINCHESTER, Ind. (UPI )
- Winchester City Council did
such a detailed job of writing
its new antipornography ordinance that the publisher of
the comrriWlity's newspaper ·
says Ws too dlrty to print.

WE FEATURE

~~OlfN'JI~~$S

lli\TESY

out.
Have we passed up a chance
to be a go~ Samaratin, or
walk~ to th~ other ~1de of the
road m _pa~m~. one m need of
~~p, ,thl~kmg Let /ohnrue do
11 , I m m a hurry .
Have ~e been good -~tewards _
of the hie and blessmgs God
has given us, by sharing hot
~nly worldly goods but our very
lives, talents and selves; oftimes a sn;tile or_kind word that
takes so little ttme makes the
GAL!JPOLIS - Tbe Am- included morcorn , pansit
day
for someone.
bassadors Class of First dihon, arroz ala valneciana,
There are so many reaching
Baptist Church recently fried lumpia, leche nan and
out
for help - mostly silentiy
held the annual Christ- bingka.
- the RSVP is helping in so
Followjng the meal the group
mas
dinner
at
the
many ways. If you have time
home of Dr. and Mrs. Ishmael sang Christmas carols and was
on your hands, reach out to
Jamora, Kathnor Lane, Point led In a period of devotion by
them with whatever s~ength
Pleasant. Tbe guests enjoyed a Pastor Wlison Wahl. This was
or talent y~u have. In this way
"Filipino" dinner prepared followed by the business
you receive a ·wonderful
and served by Mrs. Jamora. session and a white elephant
blessing, by making one for
Tbe menu of Filipino food gift exchange.
someone else. It's a·joy to go to
Those attending were Mr.
the Bookmobile and Sr. Citizen
and Mrs. Carl Simpkins, Mr.
Canter where folk are giving of
and Mrs. Ronald Keenan, Mr.
themselves. Paid employes
and Mrs. Tom Milstead, Mr.
and volunteers are working
and Mrs. Jerry McDivitt, Mr.
together.
and Mrs. Bob Reed, Pastor and
My wish and prayer is that
Mrs. Wilson Wahl, Pastor and
we
all try to make the next
Mrs. Harry E. Cole, Mr. and
.
d
Mrs. Uoyd Danner, Mr. and
COLUMBUS A bill addition, S. B. 41618 sponsore year the best one of our lives.
rantin•
state
employees
a 31 by Senators M. Morris
Mrs. Larry Marr , Mr . and Mrs. g
o
Cl
1 d)
.
Keith Wick, and the host and cents per hour pay raise has Jackson, (D- eve an ;
GAWPOUS-'- Mike Wise hostess, Dr. and Mrs. Jamora. been introduced into both the Howard C. Cook, (R-Toledo);
of MercervUle is among the
Ohio Senate and the House of Rober~T · Secrest, (Dflrst in the nation to be
Representatives.
_
Cambr ge); Thomas A.
awarded the special "Legion of
Drafted by the . 34,000 VanM- er, ( R·Ashland);
Merit Citation" by the National
PLEASANT VALLEY
member Ohio Civil Service Donald L. Woodland, ·(DFFA Alumni AssOciation made
DISCHARGES : Donald Employees Association, the Colwnbus); Walter L. White,
as part 0! the' National FFA Matheny, Gallipolis Ferry; blU affects 80,000 state, state (R-Lima),
.
Convention in Kansas City, Mo. William Weaver' Buffalo; university, and county wrlfare
In the House of RepresenThis was the first presen- Keith Spurlock, Rodney, 0.; employees.
tatives, the bill (II.B. 1032) was
tation of the Legion of Merit Kelly Kinniard, Gallipolis
''In this time of runawa'y introduced on December '/:1, by
Citation. The purpose of the Ferry; Mrs. Birdie Queen, son, inflation," OCSEA Executive Representatives Phale D.
award Is to recognize Southside; Berry Kesterson, Secretary James F. Marshall Hale, Jr., (D-Colwnbus) and
meritorious service and per- Pomeroy: Gilbert Bechtle, explained, "we are hoping that Mack D. Pemberton, (Rsonal effort- and initiative in Henderson; Mrs. Paul Winn, this increase wUl help our Colwnbus). In additio~, ten
. demonstrating the pioneering Middleport; MJ:s. James Ully, members keep their heads . other Representatives are
· spirit to help build the FFA Point Pleasant; Uonel France, above water as they -light to listed as co-sponsors; James
· Alumni Association and build a Kanauga; 0 .: Wilda Young, keep pace with the constanUy W. Rankin, (D-Cincinnali);
better
tom'o rrow
for Mason; Mrs. _ Russell Wood, spiralling cost of living."
Lawrence E . Hughes, (Ragriculture.
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Kenneth
Labelled snate Bill 416, the Colwnbus); John D. Tbomp• Wise, a, member of the Birchfield, Gallipolis; and measure was formally in- son, (D-Cleveland); Sam
Hannan Trace FFA &lt;\)umnl, is Jacque_line Sayre.
troduced into the Ohio Senate Speck, (R-New Concord); Troy
one of the nation's first to
Dec. 21, by s.;6ator Paul E . Lee James, (D·Cleveland);
provide the leadership to build
32,0000FF WELFARE
· Glllmor, (R-Port Clinton) ; _ Tho_!!las · M.
Bell,
(Dthe FFA Alumni Association .
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Over Douglas Applegate, (D- Cleveland); Arthur H. Bowers,
Tbe aim of the new FFA 32,000reciplentswereremoved Steubenville); and Harry L. (D-Steuhenvolle); M1chael P.
Alumni Association Is to from the welfare rolls during Armstrong, (R-Logan). In Stinziano, (D.Colwnbus).
promote a greater knowledge the first 12 months_of the Ohio
"We are most encouraged by
of the agricultural industry and Work Registration Program,
the aniount of both enthusiasm
support
education
In state Welfare Director Charles
and support shown by memagriculture. By providing a W. Bates said Friday. Bates
hers of bolh Houses for these
mechanism for former FFA said taxpayers saved $2.7
UCENSES DUE
biUs," Karl E. Stewart, Chief
'Ill
f
th
tim
th
COLUMBUS
(UP!)Ohio's
· Ag ent for OCSEA
members to become_involved mt on rom
e
e
e
Leg isJattve
in worthy activities to promote program s ta r ted In SePtemher • drivers licenses, with colored expIa!ned , " and fee1 th at this
the FFA 1972, until September, 1973. phot011 attached, will he issued support is indicative of the
and support
•- of ' beginning next week, Fred genume
·
·organization, FF A activities, More than 19•000 hea ""
concern th e Oh'10·
and agricultural education, it . fwnilles on general relief or Vierow, deputy director of the Legislators feel for public
hopes to build a better Aid to Dependent Children Ohio
Highway
Safety employees. Our members are
tomorrow for agriculture.
either folll'd jobs or -were Department announced. In financial trouble today
·
th e rolls Vierow said all currently valid he cause of m
· n a 11on, an d 1 am
For more infonnation about removed f rom
· d that the 1awma
· kers
the FF A Alumni movement, because th ey re fus· ed to paper and plastic licenses will convmce
·
contact Ronnie Slone at 256- re,.... r or accep t Job s," sa ld remain valid until their are gomg
to come 1o the 1r
•scheduled
expiration.
..
Ba oco.
600_7, G;;llla Coun\)1.
rescue .

the pathway of another?
Perhaps not deliberately, but
heedlessly, selfishly, unconsciously we may have, as
we rush headlong into doing
what co~es naturally to us.
There are ways to guard
against this.
.
Keep ourselves so bu~y domg
things constructively, ·helpfully, and hopefully, our minds
centered on things that are
rewarding in a sense of wellbeing that we've been able to
help another along life's pathway .
Looking for the best in others
we may bring out a smile instead of a frown or sad beaten
down look. We may not travel
thisroadagain - forthere'sno
assurance we'll see this year

STOP IN AND
TRY OUR
DELICIOUS

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HOMEMADE

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CHILl
'

j~akr @t~nppr

State employes
ask pay raises

·•·ta

·"Home of That Ulrl Fashio11ed Goodness"
Comer of Second &amp; Olive
Gallipol~. 0.
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STATE &amp; THIRD _ __ _ _ _ GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

Maybe you or I, -in this last chapter

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THREE AREA -MOTHERS had Christmas babies at
Holzer Medical Cenrer, photographed above by Jack Carr, ·
operating room orderly who moonlights in the role of hospital
photographer . The first baby to arrive came at 4:44 a.m. to
Mrs. Dewey Slone, Rt.l, Gallipolis, a son weighing 6lbs. 151'.
ounces· the second was a son at 3:17p.m. weighing 6lbs., 13
ounces 'to Mrs. Ronald Cowan, 1275 Vine St., Middleport, and
the third a son at 8:37p.m. weighing 7lbs. , 6 ounces to Mrs.
Ronald Ashworth Jr., Patriot Star Route, GaUipolis .

FFA alums

The Best Time To
Buy Is Now!

OW....................~77

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Stratolounger
•

REGULAR '899.95

I

January Exhibit is the
photography of Daniel Farber.

Wise cited
. ' b y nations

· NOW ON

RECLINERS

-BASSETT FRENCH
9 PIECE FRUITWOOD

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wheel."

Class has Filipino meal

BASSEn SPANISH
9 PC. SUITE, PECAN

NOW..................~

(~SE

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FURNITURE

DECEMBER 31

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Capricorns have party

'

DAN THOM~S
AND SON

GALUPOUS - The French
Art Colony Calendar of activities for . the month of
January is as follows:
Jan. 8, 10 a .m. to 2 p.m.,
Enrollment for dance classes.
call 446-4885; enrollment for
Slimnastiks course also at this
time.
Jan. 10, 7 to 8 p.m., Slimnastiks exercise course, ·
teacher, Gillian Moore.
Jan. 13, 2 to 4 p.m.,
Needlepoint by PAl Glass. $1
charge for materials. Bring
thimble and scissors. Call 4460953 or 446-1903 for reservations.
Jan . 15, 8 p.m ., Interdepartmental meeting.
Jan . 22, 8 p.m., Trustees
meeting.
Jan. 27, 2 p.m., Parent - Child
W&gt;rkshop, " Make a Color-

through long meetings, so I ~an
learn to preside over the
Senate ," she said . "That is the
only duty of the lieutenant
governor required by the
constitution."
Mrs. Rosenfield said she
favors a constitutional amendment, requiring the governor
and lieutenant governor to run
as a team, a proposal now
stalled in the legislature, which
she said would allow the
gove rn or to assign the
lieutenant governor additiorial
duties beca use they both would
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Gary Gin· be of the same political party.
ther, Chester ; Dana Haning ,
Lancaster ; Dana Hamm,
Middleport ; Irene Burris ,
Mason ; Nora Clathworthy,
DWI CHARGED
Middleport ; John Massie ,
GALLIPOLIS
- William
Pomeroy ; Alfred Robinson.
Middleport; Freda Mossman, E:dwards . 45, Colwnbus. was
Pomeroy ; Roger Winebrenner. charged with DW1 followin g a
traffic accident Friday on
Syracuse; Fred Larkins, Long
Second Ave . City police said
Bottom.
Edwards' car went through a
DISCHARGES J ohn
red light striking an auto
Mayes, Edith McCoy, Marilyn
Harper, Dottie Nelson, Scott operated by J ohn Jackson
Davis, 75, 936 Second Ave .
Hutton , Raymond Proffitt.

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Saying
her lack of qualifications fit the
lack of duties for the office,
Margaret Rosenfield ,
Columbus, announced Friday
she wiU be a ¥.Tile-in candidate .
for lieutenant governor in 1974.
II lobbyist for the League of
Women Voters, Mrs. Rosenfield said she decided to seek
the office beca use it will pay
$30,000 nexl term .
&lt;~J am experienced Ln si tting

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~-The Sunday

Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Oe&lt;

3(1, 1973

Crimes against property modernized
~: OITORS NIITE : This is the
fuurth uf five arti(·les un Ohio's
rK"w criminal t•ode. which takes
1: Ut•ct Jan. I. In this arli(•lc,
UPI Slalehnusl! Rt•purter Lee
l~.rtard dc~IJs

lhe moderniza-

uon

(If l'a.Ws protecting
property and lhe public peace,
heallh and sa fe ty, as well as
the administration of justice.

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
,COLUMBUS \ UP I) - Of·
fenses against property and the
public peace, health and safety
are bro.ught into the late 2oth
ce ntury under the new
criminal code .
Arson laws, written for ·rron-

••

••

. - -.

•

CAP HEADQUARTERS AND HANGAR - The building above was recently erected at the
Mason Cmmty Airport to serve as a hangar, to hotLSe County Court maintenance equipment and
wtth a seetlO~ 16 x 40 m the 42 x 40 factlity to be used for an office and meeting room. The
structure, whtch was dismantled and moved from Cheshire, 0 ., to the local airport is 90 per
cent C&lt;Jmplete and is loc~ted a distance away from the regular hangars.

Ten {Wed., 7 forfeit court bonds
Ten persons were fined and Verlie B. Midkiff, Rt. 3,
' seven fotieited bond in County Pomeroy, $10 and costs, left of
Court Judge Frank W. Porter's center ; Carl Stewart, $10 and
costs intoxication; Eddie A.
courtroom Friday. ,
Fined were John S. Codner, Hupp, Rt. 2, Racine, $10 and
Rt. 2, Racine, $15 speed; cos ts,- speed; Dennis W.
Thurman C. Yarbrough, Harris, Rt. 1, Racine, $5 and
Barberton, costs, stop siRn; costs, unsafe vehicle ; Mike W,

Marcwn, Rt. 1, Rutland, $18
and costs, speed; · Kenneth
West, Athens, costs, left of
center; Edward B. Ru ssell,
Coolville, $5 and costs, speed,
and Willi am E. Larkins, Rt. 1,
Portland, $25 and costs ' no
operator's lice nse.
.

Forfeiting bond were Bill
Cornell , Jr., Portland, $25
disturbing the peace ; Paul N.
Harris, Colwnbus, $33, speed;
Delores Bush, Oak Hill , $357 .50,
DWl;
·James
Dunlap ,
Char lesto n, W. Va ., $35.50
sp_eed;
George Hawley,
M1ddleport, $32.50 speed;
Grover Arnold, Rt. 11
Pomeroy, $27 .50 speed, and
Dana A. Covert , Pomeroy,
$357.50 DWJ.

tier buildings in 1788 are mod- $500 fine - six montlls and
ernit t.'{l to cover the use of ex- Sl ,OOO if there is a risk of
plosiws liS well as fire, and to physical harm to anyone .
U&gt;ke into account the potential
Riots Oealt With
harm to persons.
Riot situations are dealt with
Arson endangering persons in the new criminal code acis punishable by a prison term cording to modern-day experiof rour -to-25 years and a ences.
maximum fine of $10,000. But
Aggravated riot applies to
arson causing less llian $150 five or more persons bent on
damage and no personal injury harm to persons or property . It
in a nonpublic building draws carries penalties of six months
only a six-month jail term and to five years in prison and a
a maximwn $1,000 fine .
$2,500 fine. Prison riot is a
The $150 property value is separate offense, and calls for
also a dividing line for serious one to 10 years to be tacked
vandalism cases, and deter- onto the convict's sentence, in
mines petty or grand theft. The addition to a $5,000 fine.
minimum for grand theft was
The new code also treats orformerly $60.
dinary riot, failure to disperse
Distrupting public services, Md the justifiable use of force
including interference with to suppress riot, Use of deadly
policemen or firemen, draws a force is allowed only when
penalty of one-to-10 years in there is probable cause to bejail and a $5,000 fine .
lieve there is a " substantial
A separate new law, forbid- risk" of serious hann to perding tampering with safety de- sons,,
vices such as signals, fire exHowever, individual riot continguishers , alarms, life trol officers may use deadly .
preservers or first aid kits, force to repel deadly force in
dovetails with the criminal self~efense, even if serious
mischief section of the code. personal injury is not a threat
It carries a maximum to others.
penalty of 60 days in jail and a
Resisting arrest by force or

by ..going limp" carries a jail
term of up to 90 days and a
maximum fine of $750.
In addition to providing
guidelines for dealing with
protests on camptLSes, in urban
areas and on public highways,
the new £;ode section sets
penalties for disturbing a
Ia wful meeting, including
panic and making false
ala rms .
It also covers bysta nders and
curiosity seekers at emergencies, and sets new panalties for
telephone harassment - a
maximum six monthS in jail
and $1,000 fine - twice the old
fine. Telephone harassment
also includes calls made
anonymously, repeatedly or at
inconvenient hours.
Another section of the code
deals with offenses against law
enforcement and the adminis·
!ration of justice. It includes
violations by public officials.
Dlsquallflcatlon Forever
For example the crime of
bribery or soliciting bribes
covers every category of public
servant and carries a one-toten year prison term and $5,000
fine, as well as disqualification

forever rrom public office or
employment.
The same penalty is applied
to a companion crime or attempted intimidation or a public servant, either physically or
mentally.
Failure to report a crime and •
failure to aid a law enforcement officer are clarified in the
new code.
Persons are required to inform authorities of felonies or
which they have knowledge,
unless such a report would
breach a privileged relationship, such as attorney-client,
husband-wife, doctoriJalient,
cler.gymani&gt;arishioner~
There are no exemptions for
suspected crimes of violence,
such as physicit~.ns and nurses
discovering a battered child.
The law c&lt;lvers situations in
which bystanders ignore a victim's pleas for help because
they do not want to get involved.
Penalty for failure to report
a felony is a maximum J(klay
jail sentence and maximwn
$250 fine .
Failure to aid a law enforcement officer carries a maximwn $100 fine. A person is excused if he feels there is a
"strong possibility" he might
be injured in the process.

•
9- The Sunday Times -Sentinel,Sunda~,Oec.30,1973

Leaders expect llOth Assembly
will be long, hard, important
.,

By LEE LEONARD
UPl Statebot111e Reporter
COLUMBUS ( UP!) - The
Ohio General Assembly will reconvene Wednesday in the
second ball or it.. llOth session
which Is expected to last fo;
most of 1974,
Subject.. of initial consideration ·will be tax relief and
energy legislation - two poUt-

Ohio politics
icslly potent items in an election year.
"We'll probably be in session
for most of the year," said
House Speaker A.G. Lancione,
O.Bellalre, anticipating 1974.

"We'D take some recesses
from time to time lor election
campaigning and summer
yacatlon, but · I doubt we'll
adjourn early."
Senate President Pro Tempore Theodore M. Gray, R·
Columbus, indicated he did not
favor staying in session long,
but he did not argue with
Ltlncione's prediction.
"I think we ought to conduct
our business and go home,''

Gray said.
A number of major bills were
disposed or in a productive 1973
session. but enoug~ have been
held over to keep the legislators btLSy through the election
year.
In addition, the "energy
crisis,. has cropped up since
the regular session was adjourned in late AugtLSt .
The administration of Gov.
John J. Gilligan is expected to
have a parcel of bills ready to
go next month to help alleviate
the fuel shortfall.
One proposal would allow the
governor to reduce speed
limit.. on state roads to save
g~soline. The governor may
now reduce the speed limit..
only for safety reasons.
Another recommendation is
expected to be a cabinet-level
"energy czar" to coordinate
slaw fuel-&lt;18vfng programs.
Republicans are expected to
offer their own alternatives,
perhaps from the recommendations of the special
energy task force or Lt. Gov.
John W.. Brown, which is to

report early in January on its
six-month study,
Tax relief proposals also are
in the wind. The Gilligan administration had hoped for sufficient revenues to finance sut)..
stantial property tax relief, but
the energy s hortage has
created uncertainties .
Nevertheless, the House
Ways lind Means Committee
already has begun work on two
constitutional amendments
adopted by the voters in
November authorizing tax
breaks for farmers and large
families.
One bill expected to see early
action will allow unlimited
family exemptions from the
state income tax. Such
exemptions are now limited to
six at $500 per family member
to meet the old. C&lt;Jnstitutional
ceiling of $3,000 per family ,
A proposal to raise the exemption to $750 apiece
probably will fail becatLSe of
the estimated $40 million price
tag.
The other constitutional
amendment - property tax

•

breaks for- owners of agricultural land - will be harder to
implement.
Lawmakers already have
gotten into heated debates as to
whether the intent of the
amendment was to give tax
breaks to all farmers or just to
those near big cities.
The amendment authorized
the General Assembly to write
a law requiring agricUlb.Jral
land to be valued for tax purposes according to its "current
use" rather than its worth as a
speculative inve.!;itment .
SUch language would benefit
farmers near urban areas,
where land has a high value for
potential development, but not
necessarily for farming.
The legislature will implement still another adopted constitutional amendment setting cp procedures for the
Vietnam War era veterans'
bonus approved in November.
Another attempt is anticipated on campaign financing reform, which failed along partisan lines in a special session in
November.

Many ·]awmakers would like election reporting of exto see a compromise bill enact- penditures and rece ipts ,
ed on an emergency basis to eliminate forced political kicktake effect before the 1974 backs and macing of governcampaign officially begins ment employes for conearly in February with the tributions, and establish a
deadline for candidates to file. specia I commission to oversee
The compromise, which blew the law .
Any quick agreement would
apart last month, included
seven points of agreement be- have to leave out political C&lt;Jn·
tween Democrats and R~ubli­ siderations, such as limits and
disclosure of contributions by
cans.
· Basically, both parties want organized labor and political
to limit individual and famil y parties.
The Senate has a lready
campaign contributions, set
begun
hearings on a HoUse·
reasonable spending limits lor
office seekers, require pre- passed abortion reform bill,

WORK CONTINUES at the construction site of the
Gallipolis Parts Warehouse on the Industrial Park near the
Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport. canter and Evans, general
contractors have been busy moving dirt at the site to build up
the land before work is started on the main building.

and the chamber is expected to
be ready to vote on a new
version by February or March.
The House bill provides for
limited abortiOns under
carefully supe rvised conditions
with "informed consent" of
both parents. The Senate may
adopt a more conservative
approach .

Consideration of no-fault
automobile insurance will also
continue in the Sen"""ate. The
House adopted a proposal, but
it would only apply to damages
of $250 or less- a threshhold so
low that Gilligan said he would
veto the bill unless it was
changed.

•

~

••

---•

~

~

Oj

&amp;

IGA FLOUR

•
r

•
•...
~

MORTON HOUSE

BEEF

•

•=• ---~

•

ORANGE
JUICE

STEW

••
•

•
'••

••
••

..•

WE HAVE

••"

•

•

"'

•
••
••
,,•

••
•
•
•

•

••
•

IGA Peas .................... :......~~..~~: 4/95~
IGA Corn ............................~~..~~ 4/95e

24 ·.OZ. BOTTLE

TIDE

•
•••

IGA Cut Green Be~ms ......~~.~~. 4/89'

OIL

GIANT SIZE

w

IGA Pork &amp; Beans..........~~..~~:. 4Pl 00
IGA ·Kidney Beans........... ~.~.~~. 3/85~

ESSON

•

••

••

PLAIN OR SELF RISING

KRAFT

IGA

•

FOR

JUMBO
TOWELS

WITH
COUPON

'••
•

IGA Mixed Vegetables .....~~. ~~ 4/99~
IGA Peas, Carrots ............~~ .~~. 3/83e
IGA Tomatoes ................... ~~..~~:. 3/89~
IGA Apple Sauce ....... ~., ....1.~.~~...3J95~

ARMOUR COLUMBIA

IGA Canned Milk ..................~~.~~. 27'
SMUCKERS

STRAWBERRY

--.-..
~

~

BOB WHITE
CRYSTAL WHITE

JAM
32

oz.

SYRUP
SWIFT PREMIUM

5 LB.

JAR
-

BOLOGNA

.....

CHUNK STYLE

12 Ol

99~8.

U.S. NO. 1
MAINE

PKG.

~ ---.....----~-~~
SUPERIOR SMOKED

BAG

CALLA SWLE

-.
•

•.
~

&lt;

~

••
•

.

--

20 LB. BAG

••
•

~·
...•

--.--

-.
...
;...;.

LB•

...

•

I

'

I

.."
-......

-...

SHOPPING CENTER
MIDDLEPORT. 0 •
,. '
i

'I

I

'

'

'

•

�•
~-The Sunday

Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Oe&lt;

3(1, 1973

Crimes against property modernized
~: OITORS NIITE : This is the
fuurth uf five arti(·les un Ohio's
rK"w criminal t•ode. which takes
1: Ut•ct Jan. I. In this arli(•lc,
UPI Slalehnusl! Rt•purter Lee
l~.rtard dc~IJs

lhe moderniza-

uon

(If l'a.Ws protecting
property and lhe public peace,
heallh and sa fe ty, as well as
the administration of justice.

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
,COLUMBUS \ UP I) - Of·
fenses against property and the
public peace, health and safety
are bro.ught into the late 2oth
ce ntury under the new
criminal code .
Arson laws, written for ·rron-

••

••

. - -.

•

CAP HEADQUARTERS AND HANGAR - The building above was recently erected at the
Mason Cmmty Airport to serve as a hangar, to hotLSe County Court maintenance equipment and
wtth a seetlO~ 16 x 40 m the 42 x 40 factlity to be used for an office and meeting room. The
structure, whtch was dismantled and moved from Cheshire, 0 ., to the local airport is 90 per
cent C&lt;Jmplete and is loc~ted a distance away from the regular hangars.

Ten {Wed., 7 forfeit court bonds
Ten persons were fined and Verlie B. Midkiff, Rt. 3,
' seven fotieited bond in County Pomeroy, $10 and costs, left of
Court Judge Frank W. Porter's center ; Carl Stewart, $10 and
costs intoxication; Eddie A.
courtroom Friday. ,
Fined were John S. Codner, Hupp, Rt. 2, Racine, $10 and
Rt. 2, Racine, $15 speed; cos ts,- speed; Dennis W.
Thurman C. Yarbrough, Harris, Rt. 1, Racine, $5 and
Barberton, costs, stop siRn; costs, unsafe vehicle ; Mike W,

Marcwn, Rt. 1, Rutland, $18
and costs, speed; · Kenneth
West, Athens, costs, left of
center; Edward B. Ru ssell,
Coolville, $5 and costs, speed,
and Willi am E. Larkins, Rt. 1,
Portland, $25 and costs ' no
operator's lice nse.
.

Forfeiting bond were Bill
Cornell , Jr., Portland, $25
disturbing the peace ; Paul N.
Harris, Colwnbus, $33, speed;
Delores Bush, Oak Hill , $357 .50,
DWl;
·James
Dunlap ,
Char lesto n, W. Va ., $35.50
sp_eed;
George Hawley,
M1ddleport, $32.50 speed;
Grover Arnold, Rt. 11
Pomeroy, $27 .50 speed, and
Dana A. Covert , Pomeroy,
$357.50 DWJ.

tier buildings in 1788 are mod- $500 fine - six montlls and
ernit t.'{l to cover the use of ex- Sl ,OOO if there is a risk of
plosiws liS well as fire, and to physical harm to anyone .
U&gt;ke into account the potential
Riots Oealt With
harm to persons.
Riot situations are dealt with
Arson endangering persons in the new criminal code acis punishable by a prison term cording to modern-day experiof rour -to-25 years and a ences.
maximum fine of $10,000. But
Aggravated riot applies to
arson causing less llian $150 five or more persons bent on
damage and no personal injury harm to persons or property . It
in a nonpublic building draws carries penalties of six months
only a six-month jail term and to five years in prison and a
a maximwn $1,000 fine .
$2,500 fine. Prison riot is a
The $150 property value is separate offense, and calls for
also a dividing line for serious one to 10 years to be tacked
vandalism cases, and deter- onto the convict's sentence, in
mines petty or grand theft. The addition to a $5,000 fine.
minimum for grand theft was
The new code also treats orformerly $60.
dinary riot, failure to disperse
Distrupting public services, Md the justifiable use of force
including interference with to suppress riot, Use of deadly
policemen or firemen, draws a force is allowed only when
penalty of one-to-10 years in there is probable cause to bejail and a $5,000 fine .
lieve there is a " substantial
A separate new law, forbid- risk" of serious hann to perding tampering with safety de- sons,,
vices such as signals, fire exHowever, individual riot continguishers , alarms, life trol officers may use deadly .
preservers or first aid kits, force to repel deadly force in
dovetails with the criminal self~efense, even if serious
mischief section of the code. personal injury is not a threat
It carries a maximum to others.
penalty of 60 days in jail and a
Resisting arrest by force or

by ..going limp" carries a jail
term of up to 90 days and a
maximum fine of $750.
In addition to providing
guidelines for dealing with
protests on camptLSes, in urban
areas and on public highways,
the new £;ode section sets
penalties for disturbing a
Ia wful meeting, including
panic and making false
ala rms .
It also covers bysta nders and
curiosity seekers at emergencies, and sets new panalties for
telephone harassment - a
maximum six monthS in jail
and $1,000 fine - twice the old
fine. Telephone harassment
also includes calls made
anonymously, repeatedly or at
inconvenient hours.
Another section of the code
deals with offenses against law
enforcement and the adminis·
!ration of justice. It includes
violations by public officials.
Dlsquallflcatlon Forever
For example the crime of
bribery or soliciting bribes
covers every category of public
servant and carries a one-toten year prison term and $5,000
fine, as well as disqualification

forever rrom public office or
employment.
The same penalty is applied
to a companion crime or attempted intimidation or a public servant, either physically or
mentally.
Failure to report a crime and •
failure to aid a law enforcement officer are clarified in the
new code.
Persons are required to inform authorities of felonies or
which they have knowledge,
unless such a report would
breach a privileged relationship, such as attorney-client,
husband-wife, doctoriJalient,
cler.gymani&gt;arishioner~
There are no exemptions for
suspected crimes of violence,
such as physicit~.ns and nurses
discovering a battered child.
The law c&lt;lvers situations in
which bystanders ignore a victim's pleas for help because
they do not want to get involved.
Penalty for failure to report
a felony is a maximum J(klay
jail sentence and maximwn
$250 fine .
Failure to aid a law enforcement officer carries a maximwn $100 fine. A person is excused if he feels there is a
"strong possibility" he might
be injured in the process.

•
9- The Sunday Times -Sentinel,Sunda~,Oec.30,1973

Leaders expect llOth Assembly
will be long, hard, important
.,

By LEE LEONARD
UPl Statebot111e Reporter
COLUMBUS ( UP!) - The
Ohio General Assembly will reconvene Wednesday in the
second ball or it.. llOth session
which Is expected to last fo;
most of 1974,
Subject.. of initial consideration ·will be tax relief and
energy legislation - two poUt-

Ohio politics
icslly potent items in an election year.
"We'll probably be in session
for most of the year," said
House Speaker A.G. Lancione,
O.Bellalre, anticipating 1974.

"We'D take some recesses
from time to time lor election
campaigning and summer
yacatlon, but · I doubt we'll
adjourn early."
Senate President Pro Tempore Theodore M. Gray, R·
Columbus, indicated he did not
favor staying in session long,
but he did not argue with
Ltlncione's prediction.
"I think we ought to conduct
our business and go home,''

Gray said.
A number of major bills were
disposed or in a productive 1973
session. but enoug~ have been
held over to keep the legislators btLSy through the election
year.
In addition, the "energy
crisis,. has cropped up since
the regular session was adjourned in late AugtLSt .
The administration of Gov.
John J. Gilligan is expected to
have a parcel of bills ready to
go next month to help alleviate
the fuel shortfall.
One proposal would allow the
governor to reduce speed
limit.. on state roads to save
g~soline. The governor may
now reduce the speed limit..
only for safety reasons.
Another recommendation is
expected to be a cabinet-level
"energy czar" to coordinate
slaw fuel-&lt;18vfng programs.
Republicans are expected to
offer their own alternatives,
perhaps from the recommendations of the special
energy task force or Lt. Gov.
John W.. Brown, which is to

report early in January on its
six-month study,
Tax relief proposals also are
in the wind. The Gilligan administration had hoped for sufficient revenues to finance sut)..
stantial property tax relief, but
the energy s hortage has
created uncertainties .
Nevertheless, the House
Ways lind Means Committee
already has begun work on two
constitutional amendments
adopted by the voters in
November authorizing tax
breaks for farmers and large
families.
One bill expected to see early
action will allow unlimited
family exemptions from the
state income tax. Such
exemptions are now limited to
six at $500 per family member
to meet the old. C&lt;Jnstitutional
ceiling of $3,000 per family ,
A proposal to raise the exemption to $750 apiece
probably will fail becatLSe of
the estimated $40 million price
tag.
The other constitutional
amendment - property tax

•

breaks for- owners of agricultural land - will be harder to
implement.
Lawmakers already have
gotten into heated debates as to
whether the intent of the
amendment was to give tax
breaks to all farmers or just to
those near big cities.
The amendment authorized
the General Assembly to write
a law requiring agricUlb.Jral
land to be valued for tax purposes according to its "current
use" rather than its worth as a
speculative inve.!;itment .
SUch language would benefit
farmers near urban areas,
where land has a high value for
potential development, but not
necessarily for farming.
The legislature will implement still another adopted constitutional amendment setting cp procedures for the
Vietnam War era veterans'
bonus approved in November.
Another attempt is anticipated on campaign financing reform, which failed along partisan lines in a special session in
November.

Many ·]awmakers would like election reporting of exto see a compromise bill enact- penditures and rece ipts ,
ed on an emergency basis to eliminate forced political kicktake effect before the 1974 backs and macing of governcampaign officially begins ment employes for conearly in February with the tributions, and establish a
deadline for candidates to file. specia I commission to oversee
The compromise, which blew the law .
Any quick agreement would
apart last month, included
seven points of agreement be- have to leave out political C&lt;Jn·
tween Democrats and R~ubli­ siderations, such as limits and
disclosure of contributions by
cans.
· Basically, both parties want organized labor and political
to limit individual and famil y parties.
The Senate has a lready
campaign contributions, set
begun
hearings on a HoUse·
reasonable spending limits lor
office seekers, require pre- passed abortion reform bill,

WORK CONTINUES at the construction site of the
Gallipolis Parts Warehouse on the Industrial Park near the
Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport. canter and Evans, general
contractors have been busy moving dirt at the site to build up
the land before work is started on the main building.

and the chamber is expected to
be ready to vote on a new
version by February or March.
The House bill provides for
limited abortiOns under
carefully supe rvised conditions
with "informed consent" of
both parents. The Senate may
adopt a more conservative
approach .

Consideration of no-fault
automobile insurance will also
continue in the Sen"""ate. The
House adopted a proposal, but
it would only apply to damages
of $250 or less- a threshhold so
low that Gilligan said he would
veto the bill unless it was
changed.

•

~

••

---•

~

~

Oj

&amp;

IGA FLOUR

•
r

•
•...
~

MORTON HOUSE

BEEF

•

•=• ---~

•

ORANGE
JUICE

STEW

••
•

•
'••

••
••

..•

WE HAVE

••"

•

•

"'

•
••
••
,,•

••
•
•
•

•

••
•

IGA Peas .................... :......~~..~~: 4/95~
IGA Corn ............................~~..~~ 4/95e

24 ·.OZ. BOTTLE

TIDE

•
•••

IGA Cut Green Be~ms ......~~.~~. 4/89'

OIL

GIANT SIZE

w

IGA Pork &amp; Beans..........~~..~~:. 4Pl 00
IGA ·Kidney Beans........... ~.~.~~. 3/85~

ESSON

•

••

••

PLAIN OR SELF RISING

KRAFT

IGA

•

FOR

JUMBO
TOWELS

WITH
COUPON

'••
•

IGA Mixed Vegetables .....~~. ~~ 4/99~
IGA Peas, Carrots ............~~ .~~. 3/83e
IGA Tomatoes ................... ~~..~~:. 3/89~
IGA Apple Sauce ....... ~., ....1.~.~~...3J95~

ARMOUR COLUMBIA

IGA Canned Milk ..................~~.~~. 27'
SMUCKERS

STRAWBERRY

--.-..
~

~

BOB WHITE
CRYSTAL WHITE

JAM
32

oz.

SYRUP
SWIFT PREMIUM

5 LB.

JAR
-

BOLOGNA

.....

CHUNK STYLE

12 Ol

99~8.

U.S. NO. 1
MAINE

PKG.

~ ---.....----~-~~
SUPERIOR SMOKED

BAG

CALLA SWLE

-.
•

•.
~

&lt;

~

••
•

.

--

20 LB. BAG

••
•

~·
...•

--.--

-.
...
;...;.

LB•

...

•

I

'

I

.."
-......

-...

SHOPPING CENTER
MIDDLEPORT. 0 •
,. '
i

'I

I

'

'

'

•

�•

•

of silken illusion was eo\'ered
WJih Ia&lt;.'(' .and fell rrQill c.t
~:amclot headpiece of p('au
taffeta trimmed with lace. She
carried s.tephanolis, white
miniature carnations, heather
and d4irk rffi SWl'Clheart rOses
mountL1d on her 1-!reat .
grandmother's prayE'r book..
Mttirt of honor was MISS
Suzanne Huthl'r. Hamilton .
The attendants were Mrs.
C01lstance Hanson, Miss Jane
Ann Tenbusch, Miss Thereso
Marie Tenbusch, a II of
Hamilton, and all sisters of the
bride; and Miss Bever1y Jean
Price, Portland, sister of the
groom . Miss Amy J o Tenbusch, Hamilton, sister of the
bride, was a junior bridesmaid.
The maid of honor and the
attendants wore burgundy
velvet gowns accented with
ivory lace collar and curfs.
They carried hurncane lamps
surrounded by sprigs of
heather, mimature pink carnations and dark red sweetheart roses .
Flower gi rl was Miss
Kimberly Ann Hanson, niece or
the bride. She carried an ivory
colored basket of carnations ,
roses and heather . Her gown
was ivory . Master James
George Morath, nephew of the
bride, was the ringbearer.
Serving as best man for the
bridegroom wa s Wesley
Whitacre, Seven Mile, Ohio.
Ushers were Ric hard Carr,
Jeffery Watterson , Cincinnati ;
PORTLAND - In a can- church and hurricane lamps Jerald Schiering, Fairfield ;
dlelight cerem ony at the Saint with ivory bow accents lined Edward Dulle , Seven Mile .
For her daughter 's wedding ,
Veronica Church in Hamilton, the aisles of the church.
Given in marriage by her Mrs. Tenbusch was attired in a
Friday, Dec . 28, at 7:30p.m .,
Miss Mary Kristlne Tenbusch, father , the bride wore a gown flowered brocaded gown with a
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. of candlelight silk chiffon with matching brocaded coat. She
Geor ge Tenbusch, Hamilton, a high neckline, leg o' mutton wore a white carnahon. Mrs .
and Larry Ray Price, son of sleeves and an empire waist. A Price wore a deep blue \'elvet
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Price, yoke of clury lace trimmed gown with matching silver
Portland , exchanged wedding with venise lace detailed the accessories a nd a white car·
bodice and the same lace nation tinted to match her
vows.
Officiating at the double ring formed the colla r and cuffs. gown.
ce remony was the Rev. The skirt was A-hne, accented
A reception honormg the
Kenneth Schoeder, C.P .P.S . by an inverted pleat of lace at couple was held immediately
Director of Seminarians at St. the skirt's front . The chapel f oll ow in g the ceremony at
Josep h, Ind. Poinsettias train was a lso trimmed with Sa1nt Veronica 's Hall in
decorated the altar of the the 1ace. The bride's tiered veil Hamilton. Mr. a nd Mrs . Price
following their wedding tnp to
the Po co no Mountains in
Permsylvania wiU reside at 214
High St., Seven Mile.
The new Mrs. Price is a
graduate of Stephen T. Badin
High School. She attended Ohio
State
University
and
graduated
from
Miami ·
Univers ity , Oxrord with a
bachelor of science degree. She
is employed as a teacher for
Catholic Central Community
Schools.
Price graduated from
Marietta College with a
bachelor of arts in secondary
e ducation. He was a member of
Alpha Sigma Phi. He is employed by the Butler County
Schools and is a teacher and
basketball and baseball coach
at New Miami High School.
Out-of-town guests at the
wedding and reception in cluded Mr. and Mrs . Samuel
Price, Lincoln, Neb.; Mr. and
PRICED FROM $259
Mrs. Herman Goede, Mrs. Ray
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the most advanced mic rowave oven
Larkin,
Washington, D. C.;
you can buy .
COOK . . come In and ask for a
Mrs .
Virginia
Hardy,
demonstrati on.
Washington, D. C.; Bob Noel;
DISCOVER the com plete microwave
UniOnstown, Pa. ; Mr. and Mrs.
cooking package you get when you
buy now. Come in now!
Gary McDonald, North Poway,
N. H. ; and Mr. and Mrs. Roy"
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Williams, Caldwell.

,_

Mrs. lilrry Ray Price

Vows read in Hamilton

The most outstanding
microwave oven offer
we've ever made

[E LITTON
Utton

MIC•~

O•e"s

If Eve hadn ' t ea ten that
a pple, we'd not have to consume one eac h day to keep
the doctor away.

MIDDLEF,&gt;ORT,

Attention Dog Owners
DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1974 DOG LICENSE IS
JAN UARY 19TH. TWO DOLLAR {$2.00) PENALTY IF LICENSE IS
PI:JR CHASED AFTER THAT DATE . FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE
THI S HANDY APPLICAT ION BLANK AND MAlL TO THE COUNTY
AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE TWO DOLLARS
{$2.00 ) FOR EACH DOG. MALE OR FEMALE.

;;;.:~·;:;:;:;x:x-;.;.;.;.:.::::~:;:;::x~:::::z::::-::~:~i

f!'c~;;~-iiY&lt;:::::::::::::;;:::::»~:&gt;l:!

Social I
1~ 1 Corner By Charlene Hoeflich \l~· ~:1 Calendar I
'il: ·
=~=~

:~:~

::::

POMEHOY - A beautiful gesture While Eloise Hayes was not physically able to attend the
wedding last weekend of her only son, Greg, w Cindy l'errar at
the Chester Unitt!d Methodist Church, the wedding, in part, was
brought w her .
Before going to the church, the Rev . Carl Hicks, one of the
officiating ministers, and his wife ca l1ed at the Hayes home.
Shortly thereafter, the florist arrived with flowers for the mother
of the groom.
•
A close friend , Bob Parker, went to the wedding with his tape
recorder and taped the entire ceremony - from the nuptial
music through the reception line. And, of course. there were
pictures.
But the climax of all for Eloise came when Greg and Cindy
appeared at the house in their wedding attire . Two wedding
bouquets had been purchased, one to be thrown by the bride after
the wedd1ng, the other to be ca rried when the couple visited Mrs.
Hayes. Such joy the day brought !

schedule ball
POMEROY - The annual
New Year 's Ball of the Pomroy
Fire
Department
and
Emergency Squad will be held
Monday at the former
Pomeroy Junior High School
auditorium.
Music for dancing which
begins at 9:30 p .m . will be
provided by the Chaperelles.
Firemen are decorating the
aqditorium for the event and
the annual awarding or prize~
will be held. Dancing will
continue until 1:30 a.m.

Male Dog $2.00

Spayed Female $2.00

Female $2.00

Kennel License $10

------------------------------------------------------j,.,, .. ,

Address

-~ OvVI ,t, ll ip - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _...:._.,

I

;

I

l

James E. Roush
· County Auditor of Meigs-C9unty
License musl be- obtaine~ not l•ter than Jan . 19, 1974 to avotd pay ing penalty. After thi s date
poe; natty Wlfl be $7.00 for S.lrtgle fag and SS .OO fOr kennel licen se.

'

•

PLAN NUPTIAL'i
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Imboden are
announcing the approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Peggy, to Robert Lewis, Jr.
The event will take place at the
First Baptist Church in Middleportat2 :30p.m .,Jan.l. The
gracious c ustom of open
church will be observed.
'

Want~

SUNDAY
TWO WEEK revival now in
progress at the Middleport
United Pentecostal Church,
South Third Ave. Evangelist
and singers "Joyful Sounds
Trio", Betty Baker, Lyndia
Babb and Kay Anderson,
Kingsport, Tenn. Services 7:30
p.m. Pastor is William Knittel.
FOUR DAY Revival now in·
progress at Meigs County
Fairgrounds, 7:30 p.m . Yvonne
Lewingdon, Columbus,
evangelist. Heavenly Highway
Singers featured . All singers
9nd public invited.

Karen McElhmn) was home
for the Christmas holiday with
her parents. Mr . and Mrs.
Robert .McElhinny. Miss
McElhinny for the past year
has been involved with the
Child Development Program
which has headquarters at the
Mt. St. Mary's Hospital in
Nelsonville.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert .Turner,
Gary and Sandy and Mrs. John
Gracley and Travis Michael,
Bucyr us, were Chris tm as
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs . J oe Turner and granddaughter, Connie See. Michael
Turne r , who was seriously
injured in a motorcycle ac·
cident several months ago,
telephoned Christmas wishes
to his grandparents.
Mrs. Robert Eyer, Larry,
Julie and Mary Teresa, Mid-

ston and Mrs . Edgar Abbott. In
the group were Jay Evans,
Dixie Ebhn, Kimberly Eblin,
Crystal Sisson, Tammy Atkins,
Terry Atkins and Allen Partlow. Mrs. Beuna Grueser read
" The Most Priceless Gifts of
Chris tmas."
A play, "Kosher Christmas"
was presented by William
Radford, Harold Blackston ,
Mrs. Wendell . Jeffers, Tracy
J effers, Mrs. Ray Pullins, Jim
Jeffers, Pam Evans, Christie
Evans, Bruce Blackston, Judy
Radford, John Partlow and
Linda Partlow.
Following the Christmas
offering , a duet , " Star of the
East" was sung by Mrs . Robert
Sloan and Connie Radford . The
Rev. William Sydenstricker
had the be nedic tion . Jim
Jeffers and Brent Sisson were
acolytes for the service .
Poinsettias and greenery
decorated the church.
Santa came with treats for
the children.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Gerald D.
Nease, Racine, are aMouncing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Barbara Elizabeth, to
Keith A. Sheets, son of Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Sheets,
Gallipolis . Miss Nease is a graduate of Southern High School,
and is employed at the Holzer Medical Center. Her fian ce, a
graduate of Gallia Academy High School, served 14 months
in Vietnam and is now employed at the Gavin Power Plant,
Cheshire. The open church wedding will be at 2 p.m ., Feb. 9
at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy.

Rose Garden club meets
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
holiday meeting of the Rose
Garden Club was hosted by
Mrs. Merle Griffith whose
home was decorated for the
Christma s season.
Mrs. Ina Massar, president,
conducted a brief business
session prior to the party and
WILL DANCE
TUPPERS PLAINS
A
round and square dance will be
held New Year 's, Eve at the
Tuppers Plains School, 9 p.m.
to 1 a .m. , under the sponsorship of the Tuppers Plains
Boosters. Ross Branham and
the Country Cut-ups will
provide the music . The charge
is $2a couple . Food will be sold.

the exchange of gifts with Mrs.
Grace Stout giving devotions.
Thank-you notes were read
from members of the family of
Mrs . Mildred Headley for
flowers sent at the time of her
death.
The traveling prize was won
by Mrs. Maude Gray, and Mrs.
llazel Barnhill was the wiMer
of the door prize. For roll call
members exchanged a candy
or coo kie recipe. Gaffies were
played with prizes being
awarded and a dessert course
was served by the hostess to
those named and Mrs. Ethel
Arbaugh, Mrs. Leona Babcock,
Mrs. Rose Carr, Mrs. ·Helen
Dorst, Mrs. Mary Jane Goebel,
Mrs. Leota Massar , Mrs.
Vercia Stout, Mrs. Dorothy Stout, Mrs. Ulah Swan, and a

Casto, Mrs. Ollie Browning,
Mrs. Mina Johnson, Mr. and
Mrs. William Grinstead, Mr.
d Mr W'll'
T Wh'te

an

NEW HAVEN, W.&gt;Va . - The
Cherokee Homemakers Christmas dinner was held recently
at Roush 's Restaurant, Letart.
The club women 's husbands
were the guests.
Mrs .
Ollie
Browning
presented the devotions and
readings in keeping with
Christmas were read by Mr.
and Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo.
Gifts were exchanged .
The January meeting will be
at the home of Mrs. William
Grinstead, Jan. i5.
Those present were Mr . and
Mrs. Charles Stone, Mr .- and
Mrs. Richie Bird, Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Alva Luckeydoo, Mrs. David
Dewhurst, Mr. and Mrs. K. K.
Scites, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar

THOM MeAN HAS
TAUGHT AN OLD CLO&lt;i

1 1am

.

1 .

The Jan. 21 meeting of the
club will be held at the home of
Mrs. Dorst.

••
RING
•• •
IN
••
••
••
••
••
THE
••
••
NEW!
••
••
••
••
••
•• Thank You
•• For .Our Best Year!
•t
•• SEARS
•:
Catalog Merchant
!
:
•++
•

• •

••

It's the beginning of a whole new
year - a time for setting new
goals for a happier and more
fulfilled life. It's time to
celebrate lasting friendships
and memories with old friends
and to look forward to new and
rewarding experiences. We wish·
you a very happy new year.

NEW TRICKS

Thorn MeAn has
taken one of the oldest footwear sty les around
and taught it some of the latest
tricks. The result is a clog for the 70's
made stri ctly for me n. It's a brand new look
designed to go w1th today's new haggle, pleated or flare
pants. The new la ce-up and slipon clog styles combine the
thi ck, rugged clog bottom w1th a new blun t toe shape. And to
top lt off, they' re made fr om soft grainy leathers or sturdy
suedes in a choice of colors
Because Thom MeAn makes these clogs , here 's the best
trick of aiL A po pu lar price.

herit~ge house

s.

guest, Sandra Massar.

'

.

LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNE
220 E. MAIN 992-2178 POMEROY

Will Be Closed For Inventory
Monday &amp; Tuesday, Dec. 31 &amp; ·
Jan. 1

+

MIDDLEPORT

0.

'

••••••••••••••••••
f·

(

'

weight .gain

IIAVE VISITORS
llACINE Hollday ~uesL&lt; ••f
Mr . and Mrs. James Recs , Sr ,
R(:Jcine, were Mr and \1r s
Myron Mack , Trevor and
Jasvn , Grove City; :\1r. and
Mrs . Wmn Rees, Brad and
Matt, Westerville ; Mr. and
Mrs . Gayle Rees and !\ohchael ,
Westerville ; Mrs . Ed Follm er ,
Maysville , Ky .; Mr . and Mrs.
James Rees, Jr ., Jonath;in and
Jay, Racine ; Doug Rees , home
from Ohio Tec hnical Institut e
and Janie Rees, home from
Ohio Univfrsity

By Lawrence E. Lamb. M.D. left over for fat. In my opinion him to overeat and to ea t things
DEAR DR . LAMB - What that is good . It's good for that contain a lot of calories,
would be the 'best way for a health, but maybe not for you may be training him to
teenage boy to gain weight ? football. I'fn more concerned have heart disease ea rly in life.
The diet is our main concern. -with good health than . good I'm sure that is not what you
want. ~
He is six·fee..one and weighs football.
Our bOdies grow muscles · My advice would be to let
160 pounds . He plays football
to
inherited nature take its· course. Time
and gets lots of exercise, but according
The Almanac
still does not gain weight. He charac te ri stics and liviRg takes care or so many things , if
By
United
Pnss lntemn1ional
w11l eat any fruit or vegetable patterns . Most endurance we don 't try to rush it.
Today is Sunday, Dec. 30, the
DEAR DR. LAMB - Would
exercises such as running,
.;I
• raw but will not eat them too
364th
day of 1973 with one to
well when cooked . Also, he jogging and swimming are not you please tell me what causes
follow .
does not eat many sweets or designed to build large cramps in the legs and soles of
HARTFORD, W. Va.
The moon is approaching ll"l
the feet ? It always happens to
Robe rt Nicholas Roush, sou breads. Anything you can tell powerful muscles, but tough
first quarter .
of AUce Roush, Hartford, us that might help him to gain muscles capable of exercising me dw-ing the night and about
The m orni ng star is Mercu ry.
a long time . You can do orice a week. 1s there anything
celebrated hl s second birth· weight will be appreciated.
The evenin g sta rs are Venus.
DEAR READER - It is strength.type exercises and , by special· that l could do to avoid
day, Dec. 23 at his home. He
Mars
and J upiter.
natural not to gain a Jot of flesh increasing the load on the these cramps?
rece ived many gilts from
Those born on this date are
DEAR READER - There
'm th1s period of life . There just muscle, g radua lly train the
friends and relatives.
tm
dcr the s1gn of Capricorn .
aren't a lot of extra calories muscle and stimulate its arc a lot of things that can
British novelist Rudyard Kipgrowth . When thi.s happens , a cause this pr oblem . P oor
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::~::;:;:.;;::::::::::::::~~~;:::::::::::::::::.::::::::::::
larger amol.lflt of the protem in circ ulation 1s one , and you ling wa s born Dec. 30, 1865.
On this day in history :
·:·:
·:·:·
food will be used to grow would need an examination to
In 185~. the United States
find thi s out. If you can feel the
0 '
larger muscles.
bought
some 45,1)QO s qu are
When the male hormones are arteries pulsating mcely just
produced in large amounts behmd the inside ankle bone, it miles of land south of the Gila
and Mrs. Bill McKelvey, Port- :~
:-:they stimulate the body to is less likely to be poor cir- River from Mexico for $10
'
million. It now is the southern
land, for Christmas dinner.
Holiday weekend g~ests of
develop more muscles. That is culation .
areas
of Al'izona and New
Many of my readers have
Other guests there were Mr. . Mrs. Helen J ohnson, Wolf Pen
.
why men tend to have larger
HARRISONVILLE - Thirty muscles than women . Without assured me that if they keep MexiCO.
and Mrs. Marvin McKelvey, Road, were Mr. and Mrs.
In 1903 , a total of 602 perso ns
two members and guests a stimulu s of this type, though, the feet warm it will· pre\'ent
Syracuse,
and
Bruce Everett R. J ohnson, Audra,
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCE D - Mrs. Kenneth
were
and
killed when f1re swept
attended
a
potluck
supper
McKelvey and a friend.
J effrey , and Eric, Columbus.
Fosnaugh, Sr., and Dale E . Snyder, both of Lancaster, anmuscle growth will not occur. their problems . The most
1
Dinner guests Thursday of Joining Mrs. J ohnson and the Ch ristmas party when the
nounce the engagement of their daughter, Judith AM, to
Gaining weight by getting fat popular home remedy seems to th rough the Iroquois Theater in
Golden
Age
Club
met
at
the
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Byer, Everett John son family for a
John G . Sayre, son of Mrs . Charles Bailey, Portland and the
isn't good for one's health. be wearing warm socks to bed. Chicago.
In 1972, President Nixon
Kenny and John, were Mr. and dinner pa rty on Saturday night school for their December Many tall, slender people are You might ge t a pair of warm
late Oliver E . Sayre. Miss Snyder is a graduate of Lancaster
ordered
a halt in the bombing
meeting
.
Mrs. Bob Byer, Larry, Julie were Mr . and Mrs. Larry
High School and the Mount Carmel School of Nursing,
supposed to be that way . We wool socks that will go to the
of Hanoi and Ha1phong, and
The Gospel Harmonaires or ten overestimate how much a knees and try them .
and Mary Teresa, and Mrs. K. Johnson , Gina, Ta hnne, and
Columbus. She is employed at the Mount Carmel Medica l
several
songs,
thal secret North
announced
e
ntertained
with
E. Byer.
Brady , and Mr. and Mrs.
Center in Columbus:"Sayre is a graduate of Southern Local
tall person should weigh. Your
Send your questions to Dr. Vie tnamese peace talks would
Mr . and Mrs . Fielding James J ohnson , Jamie Sue, with guitar accompanimen t. boy probably has good ·eating
High School and attended the Hocking Technical College at
Hawkins and John Vroman Todd and Teresa, Mulberry The birthdays were observed habits. Deve loping good Lamb, in care of this ne ws· bz re sumed in Paris on Jan . 8.
Nelsonville. He ts also employed at the Mount Carmel
were Christmas guests of Mr. Heights. Mrs. Helen Johnson with Mrs. Orba Stout, 87, the nutritional habits early in life paper , P . 0. Box 1551, Radio
Medical Center. An April wedding is planned by the couple .
A thought for the day: British
and Mrs. Charles Vroman, spent Christmas Day with Mr . oldest present.
is a lot more important than City Station, New York, N. Y.
. •.• "'"""' .. ..:•:-:- Q ""'..,.;-;.. ................ , ••• ... ......_ .................
The
door
prize
was
won
by
novelist
Geor ge Eliot said,
daughter, Mary , ~and son, and Mrs. Larry Johnson and
~:~·:.:.'•.•.•.•:, ":. ·''.:.:"',:o. ·:•:O:o:O:•:•:•:•:•!•!•!'·,!•! ,,!•:•:•,•,•...-.«•nl'oY, , . ~
gai nin g more weight for 10019. For a copy of Dr. Lamb's
1
Norman Will and a gift ex- football. I would not encourage booklet on losing weight, send
'Blesscd is the man who, w1th
Marc, Belpre. Marc is home on famil y,
c
hange
was
enjoyed.
Rev.
nothing
to say , abstains fr om
a 30 day leave from the U S.
Rick Werner, student at Ohio
him to eat sweets, and it's 50 cents to the same address
Navy and will report to State Universi ty , is spending Chapman of the Baptist Church great he likes raw fruits and and ask for ' 1 Loslng We ight" giving in word s ev idence of that
fact."
Wa s hington the middle of the holidays here with h1s at Pagetown, gave the prayer . vegetables. If you encourage booklet.
~:.
Pearl Welker, head of the
January. Thursday Mr. and . parents, Mr . and Mrs. Paul
RSVP program in Meigs
Mrs. Hawkins went to Spring· Werner.
;::
field for a visit with Mr. and
Christmas Eve guests of Mr . County, was a special guest.
::·
The next meeting will be Jan .
Mrs. J ohn Hawkins.
and Mrs . William Radford
22
at the schOol and everyone is
POMEROY - The village of Syracuse has come a long way.
Mr .
and
Mrs.
Paul were Mrs . Grace Glaz e,
Winebre nn er, Miss Susan Middleport ;
M1ss
Mar y invited.
Just last summer village officials completed the erection of its
Bowman , Paul
Treacin , Radford, Columbus; Mr. and
new municipal building which houses the fir e and emergency
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs. J ohn Mrs. Bill Radford , Belpre, and
equipment, council chambers and office for the Board of Public
Bowman, Pataskala, and Mrs. Mr . a nd Mrs . Larry Romine ,
Affairs.
Goodrich, Dayton, were Pomeroy R. D,
John
In addition they have a large park area on which is located
Christmas guests of Mr. and
Mr . and Mrs . Homer Radthree ball fields and a teMis court. Now for the first time May or
.
'
Herman London and council members have on order a police
ford hosted a dinner party
Mrs . Karl Owens .
Miss Marcia Karr, Syracuse, Christmas Da y and their
cruiser - a first for the village .
MASON, W.Va. - The ladies
Mrs. Margaret Clatworthy, guests were Mr . and Mrs.
Milton Varian has served as Police Chieffor the village for 14
Mi ckey Childs, Middl e port , William Radford , Mr. and Mrs. auxiliary of the Ma s on
years. All this time he has used his own car and paid all expenses
were Chri stmas Day guests of Rollin Radford and daughters, Volunteer Fire Department
out of his own pocket. He certainly is to be commended.
The next step for the village is to purchase a new fire truck
Mr. and Mrs . James Clat- Sally and .Judy at home and held their annual Christmas
and within two years village officials hope to have a swimming
worthy and daughter Twila and Connie, a student nurse at the dinner and party Monday
~oirs . Albert Ebersbach .
Holzer Medical Center ; Mr. evening at the fire sta tion.
pool which will be located at the park.
Village officials should be commended for the steps forward
and Mrs . Larry Romine, and Secret pals for the year were
that have been taken and will be taken through the comiug years.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Goeglein, revea led and gifts were exAlso to be commended is Archie Lee for having the fortitude to
local ; and Miss Mary Radford, c hanged.
Members attending were
expand tire growth of the village with Rustic Hills division and
Columbus.
the Lee division.
Christmas guests of Mr. and Katheryn Stewart,. Frances
Your efforts are appreciated by many and will be long
Mrs. Albert Roush, Kenny and Johnson, Bonnie J ohnson, Jean
Bessie
Ingles,
remembered .
Becky, were Mr s. Kathy Tennant,
Smith, just home from a Charlotte Jenks, Pearl Roush,
MR. AND MRS. TED REED and sons entertained with a
Colwnbus hospital, and her Virginia Shrimplin and one
OUR SHOES ARE
POMEROY
Chri
s
tma
s
Christmas eve dinner party at their home on Mulberry Ave.
children, Christi and Kevin, guest, Mary Dudding.
ST ILL SENSIB L Y PRICED
MIDDLEPORT 1 0 .
party of the Evangeline Mr . and
Attending the dinner were Mae T. Meadows, Houston, Tex.,
Mr s. Charle s
MissiOnary Society or the Kessinger, Pomeroy R. D.;
aunt of the Reed children, Mr . and Mrs. Paul Eich, John, Sue and
Pomeroy Chw-ch of Christ was Mr. and Mrs. Larry Flowers,
Bill, Mrs. Theodore Reed, Sr.; "Athens, and the Rev . and Mrs.
held recently at the home of Columbus ; Mr . and Mrs. Roger
Harold Deeth", Pomeroy .
Mrs . Louis Osborne.
Guests at the Reed home following church services were Mr.
Roush and Doug, Pataskala ;
• ••
Gifts for an exchange were Mr . and Mrs. Dale Roush ,
and Mrs. Fred W. Crow, Jr., Rick and Carson, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
placed beneath a ligh.ted tree. Sherri and David, St. Albans;
Beegle, Mr. and Mrs. Thereon Johnson and Captain and Mrs .
For
roll call each member Mr. and Mrs. Odas Nelson,
Peter F . Klein.
related something about the Mrs. Mildred Mead and
UKE TO EXTEND sincere thanks to Grace Eich for the birth of Jesus. Mrs. John grandson, Brian Morris,
Amstutz, wife of the new Columbus ; Mrs. Garn et Herdlovely gifts she gave at Christmas from different countries she
pas tor of the church, had man, Mrs. Myrtle Matheny,
and her husband, Paul, visited the past year.
Paul and Grace just recently returned from Libya where · prayer. The group sang carols , Mrs. Bonnie Matheny and son,
revealed secret pals and drew
Paul was employed with an oil company. Tbey are presently
Doug, and Mrs . Clara McDade,
names for 1974. A con- all of Leon, W. Va.; and John
new
residing at Letart Falls.
tribution was sent to the
R. Mi1ler and son , Scott,
Clemens
Christian Children's
IT'SGETIING THAT TIME OF year for Fred Crow. to begin
Evansville, Ind.
Home in Ontario, Canada.
making preparations for the up-coming annual F~og Jump . Fred
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Arnold
Refreshments were served to
recently received a letter from the younger set m regard to mand sons, Jimmy Lee, Canal
those named and Mrs. Stanley Winchester, have been the
formation on frogs.
·
Bass, Mrs. Conrad Ohlinger, holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs .
The letter reads as follows : "From Laura's Liar. Most high,
Mrs. Earl Cleland, Mrs. Betty Charles Kessinger.
Manning Clements gave me my membership card and told me to
Spencer, Mrs. Elwood Bowers,
write to you and you'd send me information on frogs. Please send
Christmas guests of Mrs. W. ,
Mrs. Edward Venoy, Mrs. · A. Morgan, Rock Springs, were
me some information on frogs . Thanks. Love and peace, Laura
Evelyn Smith and Mrs. Denver Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Gothhardt,
Dever . P .S. ':j&lt;nee Deep." Mr . Clements told me how to address
Kapple.
you and Ute envelope."
Columbus, Bruce Gothhardt, a
student at Ohio University;
MR. AND MRS. OWEN WATSON, Rt. 1, Racine, after
Mr . and Mrs. Keith Morgan,
spending Christmas with their daughter and family, Mr. and
Middleburg Heights and Mr.
Mrs. Robert Roush, Colwnbus, were pleasantly surprised when
and Mrs. Robert Moore,
they returned home to find a lovely Christmas gift in their
Columbus.
doorway.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gilmore
The giver of the gift, however, did not identify himself. The
returned to Lake Villa, Ill.,
POMEROY - A dinner at
watsons extend their sincere thanks to the thoughtful person or
Wednesday after spending the
Oscar 's in Gallipolis preceded
persons.
holiday weekend here visiting
the' annual Christmas party of
their parents, Mr . and Mrs.
WILBUR LOGAN, Pomeroy, is spending a week with his the Sew-Rite Sewing Club at Gardner Wehrung and Mr . and
the home of Mrs. Flo
sister, Erma Bradford, Marysville, Ohio.
• 8- Track
Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr. and
Strickland.
Stereo Tape
families.
Members
exchanged
secret
Player
SANDY ZERKLE _CAROL, DAUGHTER of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Smith,
William R. Zerkle, Syracuse, received her B. S. degree in pal gifts around ,a decorated
A n •~ coli&lt;Jg Admiral bo~&gt;~»
Denean
and Ralph, Lincoln
!~f IOYTid of yoYr
education from Wayne State University, Michigan, Dec. 11. tree, and Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore
Park, Mi c h ., Mr.
and
received
an
anniversary
gift
lo~o ro t e Ste reo a ,orA
quality
product
it's
the
best
kind
of
protection
Attending the graduation were her parents and sister, Jackie.
Mrs .
Keith
Curtis,
tndg•• throvvh yov• TV
we can give you .
The Zerkles' son, William Ross Zerkle, Cleveland, who from her secret pal. Read at
\II Tope pl11y1r ha1
Gayla
Lee,
Middleport,
and
the
·
m
eeting
was
a
letter
in
l&lt;g ho ed trod on doccolot
received his jurist doctor degree from Ohio State University last
Mr. and Mrs. John Beaver,
One· year tree parts and labor warranty on all
~:~nd mami&lt;'li or o~ J om!lltt
summer is now associated with Travelers Life Insurance verse form from Mrs. Kathryn · J . D . and Doug, Lincoln
P'D9'om c~arQ'e Opera
1974
Admiral
co lor sets.
The
Pafltgon/
5L5851
.
Captivating
Contemporary
cabine1ry
W
!lh
Company . He visited here with his parents over the Christmas Spencer, former member now He ights , Pomeroy, were
the Admiral "wrap around" look of elegance. Wa lnut -gra ined toon It o;~11IOII\O I It ~­
ployer ttortt "''hen co•·
residing in Florida. Fruit
finish
on selected ,hardwooos. c-e· H. 41 w· w, ta ~~ D
Five-year p1cture tube protection.
,
holidays.
trtd ge it ont•rled.
holiday
guests
of
their
parents,
baskets for seven shut-ins were
Mr. and Mrs . John Beaver,
AFC 1 AND MRS. HAROLD WILUAM HANSON, Jr., Minot, prepared. Games were played · Nye Ave. The Smith family will
Free serv1ce loaners for color TV's.
N. D., are here visiting Mrs. Hanson 's parents, Mr. and Mrs. and carols sung during the return to Lincoln Park Monevening.
Harry Clark, Rock Springs and Hanson's parents! Mr. and Mrs.
Attending were Mrs . Lucy day.
Harold
Hanson, Sr., North Second Ave., Middleport. The
Mr . and Mrs . Patrick
COast·lo-coast toll-tree owner hot line.
famllies are delighted to have the children home for tbe holidays. White, Mrs. Nettie Boyer, Mrs. Lochary returned Friday from
Martha Hoffman, Mrs . Ann
Browning, Mrs. Shirley Baity, a week's visit with their son
TO EACH AND EVERYONE A llAPP_y NEW YEAR.
Mrs, Lenora McKnight, Mrs. and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
"Home ol
Mrs.
Charles
Lochary,
Meg
I•
Pandora Gollins, Mrs. Betty
Elegant
and
Robert,
of
near
Chicago.
Wehrung, Mrs. · Strickland ,
Furnishings n
Mrs. Gilmore, Mrs. Barbara
Kapple,
Miss
Louise
Gilmore,
HOST DINNER
Mullen and Mrs . Carolyn ,··your phone will j!n1hl
MIDDLEPORT
·POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. ~omeroy; Miss Debbie Avey,
.. c••h ntultl .., too. when1
McDaniel.
Elza Gilmore, Jr.,. entertained Portsmouth; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
1 )' ou phce · •n 1ction lent I
OHIO
Tht ~t/ILII01, Contemporary styling wllh. j ust a
1
Ad. You can nll furnltur~,
Christmas Eve with a family dilmore, Lake V!lla, Ill. ;
.hint ol Scandinavian lnftuence. Walnul·grarned finish
If she pull s at your
~•ncu. dothe••, .do~ 1
dlnnir'' lind gift exthange. Roger Gilmore, Columbus; heartstrings, be sure she's not IIppi
on hardbOard, 2i'MI• H. 40 Yt~ w
, 19"' D.
1
l••n• of oth•r unu••d but
and
Rick
a•d
Mike
Gilmore.
Their guests were Mrs. · Elza
..
I
trying to untie your pocket- lUIIful ltllll !
••
bod!&lt;.
Gt~e,
Mrs. Denver
'

E~~~=:~~~:~\i?.~~:. \ P:~::~~YN~~e~

Miss Barbara E. Nease

Cherokee
ladies
have meet •••••••••••••••••'\

To obtain license by mai l, fill in and mail thi s form to JAMES E.
ROU SH. COUN TY AUDITOR. Meigs County, Pomeroy. Ohio.
Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope and price of license .
SERVICE SLATED
MIDDLEPORT - A New
Year's eve service will be held
at the Middleport United
Pentecostal Church beginning
at 8p.m . There will be one hour
of fellowship prior to the
services which will bE! from
10:30 until 12 midnight.
Featured will be gospel
singers, Joyful Sounds Trio,
Kingsport,
Tenn.
Guest
s peaker will be the Rev .
Donald Howard, Hamilton.

DR LAWRENCE E. LAMB

1:,

Christmas program given
POMEROY - A trumpet and
organ prelude by Tracy Jeffers
and Mrs. William Radford, "0 ,
Come All Ye Faithful," opened
the annual Christmas Eve
service at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church.
The congregation sang " Go
Tell It On the Mountain" with
Amos Leonard giving: th e
.praye r . Nursery children
under the dire ction of Mrs.
Jeff e rs
giving
We ndell
recitations were Timmy
Jeffers, Neal Richmond, Scott
Pullins, Lisa Pullins, Sally
Radford, Timmy Sloan, Angie
Sloan, April Clark and Tammy
Eblin.
Recitations were also given
by the primary c hildren whose
teachers are Mrs. Helen Black-

11-The Sundav Times ·llentiiW'I. Sunllav. Dec. 30. 1973

~

MONDAY
WATCH Night Service at
7:30 p .m . a t Pomeroy
YOU 'VE HEARD of the Brady Bunch, but ha ve you heard of Wesleyan Holiness Chur c h .
the Batey Bunch. They carol shut.ins, fri ends and former neigh- Guest speakers and, special
bors every year and bring gifts of homel)'lade candies. The Batey si nging. Public invited.
Bunch are the five children of Mr. and Mrs . Andy Batey who
A NEW Year's eve dance and
lived in Middleport until about two years ago when they moved to
dinner will be observed for all
Chester . One of the most appreciative shut-ins they carol is
members or Drew Webster
Francis Klein .
Post 39, American Legion,
their families and gues ts,
THROUGH THE GENEROSITY of the Chris tian folk at the
Monday ni ght, Dec. 31,
Rock Springs , Enterprise and Flatwoods United Methodist
beginning at 9:30 p .m . Music
Churches, 20 senior citizens, either s hut·ins or living alone
will be provided by Armand
without a family to join for the holidays were delivered bountiful and a ll at tending are requested
Christmas dinners.
to bring a covered dish.
The three churches took up a special offering, a part of which
' NEW YEAR'S Eve hymn
- $37 in fact ~ was given to the Meigs County Counc il on Aging
. sing, 8 p.m . at Eagle Ridge
with in structio ns that it w~ to be used for ~'some thing for ChristCommunity Ch ur c h. Bissell
mas" ror the senior citizens. The day berore Christmas, one of
Brothers will be s pecial
the employes at the Center prepared a nd delivered the dmners.
singers; all si ngers and public
invited.
CHRISTMAS WAS really Christmas at the Walter Crooks'
CHURCH 01' Christ in
home. For the first time in live years, a ll of the family gathered
Chris tian Union, Hobson, will
for the holiday . LCDR and Mrs. Gene Crooks, Mark and John
hold a New Year watch and
were in from Rockville, Md., for a week's visit and others at t he
prayer se r vice, 7:30 p .m.
Crooks' home for Christmas were Mr . and Mrs. Daniel Thomas,
There will be two speakers and
Danny aod Kathy, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Crooks, Pam, Cindy
spec ial singing. Rev. Darrell
and Eddie, Middleport ; Mrs. H. E. Fruth and Miss Kathryn
Doddrell, pas tor, welcomes the
Fruth, Point Pleasant. Afternoon callers were Mr. and Mrs. Jack
public.
Fruth and their five and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rossi and their two
WATCH NIGHT Services,
r hildren. It was Gene's first Christmas in Middleport for five
Community Church on
Midway
years, three of whi ch he spent in Japan with the U . S . Navy.
the La ngsv ille-Dex ter Rd.,
DEAR OLD SANTA distributed treats on Christmas Eve to beg inning at 7:30 p.m.
TUESDAY
475 children at the American Legion Hall in Middleport. Annually
CHESTER Co un cil 323 ,
the le gionnaires or Feeney-Benne tt Post 128 sponsor Santa 's visit
of America, 7:30
Daughters
and then accompany him to the Children's Home and the Meigs
County Infirmary with goodies for everyone. This year the p.m. at the halL Installation of
program seemed particularly successful and sa tisfying for those officers. Officers requested to
wear whtte .
involved.
THE TOPS Club w11l meet at
A TIME FOR sorting out , fo&lt; s tarting over, for getting 7:30 p.m. Tuesday instead of
evening
as
e1,terything in the proper perspective - that's _what a new year is Thursday
previously planned.
all about. Hav~ a happy 1974 !

Fire, ER sqlUid

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
0.

'

Miss judith Ann Fosnaugh

~·

~

IKatie's
By

Golclen A uersthe

II enjoy party

-=~·xo:.

Korner

Katie Crow

~~

Buster Brown

Auxiliary
has meet

Hush Puppies
Miss America
Pedwin
Keds

Endicott JoJms1on

Society has
yule party

THE SHOE BOX

There Is Still Time To Watch The New Year's Parade On A

FOR1974

with the unprecedented Admiral
5- Point Color TV Protection Package

Sew-Rite club

.

.

en;oys se.sston

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1

2
3
4
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BAKER

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of silken illusion was eo\'ered
WJih Ia&lt;.'(' .and fell rrQill c.t
~:amclot headpiece of p('au
taffeta trimmed with lace. She
carried s.tephanolis, white
miniature carnations, heather
and d4irk rffi SWl'Clheart rOses
mountL1d on her 1-!reat .
grandmother's prayE'r book..
Mttirt of honor was MISS
Suzanne Huthl'r. Hamilton .
The attendants were Mrs.
C01lstance Hanson, Miss Jane
Ann Tenbusch, Miss Thereso
Marie Tenbusch, a II of
Hamilton, and all sisters of the
bride; and Miss Bever1y Jean
Price, Portland, sister of the
groom . Miss Amy J o Tenbusch, Hamilton, sister of the
bride, was a junior bridesmaid.
The maid of honor and the
attendants wore burgundy
velvet gowns accented with
ivory lace collar and curfs.
They carried hurncane lamps
surrounded by sprigs of
heather, mimature pink carnations and dark red sweetheart roses .
Flower gi rl was Miss
Kimberly Ann Hanson, niece or
the bride. She carried an ivory
colored basket of carnations ,
roses and heather . Her gown
was ivory . Master James
George Morath, nephew of the
bride, was the ringbearer.
Serving as best man for the
bridegroom wa s Wesley
Whitacre, Seven Mile, Ohio.
Ushers were Ric hard Carr,
Jeffery Watterson , Cincinnati ;
PORTLAND - In a can- church and hurricane lamps Jerald Schiering, Fairfield ;
dlelight cerem ony at the Saint with ivory bow accents lined Edward Dulle , Seven Mile .
For her daughter 's wedding ,
Veronica Church in Hamilton, the aisles of the church.
Given in marriage by her Mrs. Tenbusch was attired in a
Friday, Dec . 28, at 7:30p.m .,
Miss Mary Kristlne Tenbusch, father , the bride wore a gown flowered brocaded gown with a
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. of candlelight silk chiffon with matching brocaded coat. She
Geor ge Tenbusch, Hamilton, a high neckline, leg o' mutton wore a white carnahon. Mrs .
and Larry Ray Price, son of sleeves and an empire waist. A Price wore a deep blue \'elvet
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Price, yoke of clury lace trimmed gown with matching silver
Portland , exchanged wedding with venise lace detailed the accessories a nd a white car·
bodice and the same lace nation tinted to match her
vows.
Officiating at the double ring formed the colla r and cuffs. gown.
ce remony was the Rev. The skirt was A-hne, accented
A reception honormg the
Kenneth Schoeder, C.P .P.S . by an inverted pleat of lace at couple was held immediately
Director of Seminarians at St. the skirt's front . The chapel f oll ow in g the ceremony at
Josep h, Ind. Poinsettias train was a lso trimmed with Sa1nt Veronica 's Hall in
decorated the altar of the the 1ace. The bride's tiered veil Hamilton. Mr. a nd Mrs . Price
following their wedding tnp to
the Po co no Mountains in
Permsylvania wiU reside at 214
High St., Seven Mile.
The new Mrs. Price is a
graduate of Stephen T. Badin
High School. She attended Ohio
State
University
and
graduated
from
Miami ·
Univers ity , Oxrord with a
bachelor of science degree. She
is employed as a teacher for
Catholic Central Community
Schools.
Price graduated from
Marietta College with a
bachelor of arts in secondary
e ducation. He was a member of
Alpha Sigma Phi. He is employed by the Butler County
Schools and is a teacher and
basketball and baseball coach
at New Miami High School.
Out-of-town guests at the
wedding and reception in cluded Mr. and Mrs . Samuel
Price, Lincoln, Neb.; Mr. and
PRICED FROM $259
Mrs. Herman Goede, Mrs. Ray
LOOK at the new Litton
K. Larkin, Miss Bonnie Goede,
Minutemaster® microwave oven Paw Paw, W. Va. ; Mik e
the most advanced mic rowave oven
Larkin,
Washington, D. C.;
you can buy .
COOK . . come In and ask for a
Mrs .
Virginia
Hardy,
demonstrati on.
Washington, D. C.; Bob Noel;
DISCOVER the com plete microwave
UniOnstown, Pa. ; Mr. and Mrs.
cooking package you get when you
buy now. Come in now!
Gary McDonald, North Poway,
N. H. ; and Mr. and Mrs. Roy"
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Williams, Caldwell.

,_

Mrs. lilrry Ray Price

Vows read in Hamilton

The most outstanding
microwave oven offer
we've ever made

[E LITTON
Utton

MIC•~

O•e"s

If Eve hadn ' t ea ten that
a pple, we'd not have to consume one eac h day to keep
the doctor away.

MIDDLEF,&gt;ORT,

Attention Dog Owners
DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1974 DOG LICENSE IS
JAN UARY 19TH. TWO DOLLAR {$2.00) PENALTY IF LICENSE IS
PI:JR CHASED AFTER THAT DATE . FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE
THI S HANDY APPLICAT ION BLANK AND MAlL TO THE COUNTY
AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE TWO DOLLARS
{$2.00 ) FOR EACH DOG. MALE OR FEMALE.

;;;.:~·;:;:;:;x:x-;.;.;.;.:.::::~:;:;::x~:::::z::::-::~:~i

f!'c~;;~-iiY&lt;:::::::::::::;;:::::»~:&gt;l:!

Social I
1~ 1 Corner By Charlene Hoeflich \l~· ~:1 Calendar I
'il: ·
=~=~

:~:~

::::

POMEHOY - A beautiful gesture While Eloise Hayes was not physically able to attend the
wedding last weekend of her only son, Greg, w Cindy l'errar at
the Chester Unitt!d Methodist Church, the wedding, in part, was
brought w her .
Before going to the church, the Rev . Carl Hicks, one of the
officiating ministers, and his wife ca l1ed at the Hayes home.
Shortly thereafter, the florist arrived with flowers for the mother
of the groom.
•
A close friend , Bob Parker, went to the wedding with his tape
recorder and taped the entire ceremony - from the nuptial
music through the reception line. And, of course. there were
pictures.
But the climax of all for Eloise came when Greg and Cindy
appeared at the house in their wedding attire . Two wedding
bouquets had been purchased, one to be thrown by the bride after
the wedd1ng, the other to be ca rried when the couple visited Mrs.
Hayes. Such joy the day brought !

schedule ball
POMEROY - The annual
New Year 's Ball of the Pomroy
Fire
Department
and
Emergency Squad will be held
Monday at the former
Pomeroy Junior High School
auditorium.
Music for dancing which
begins at 9:30 p .m . will be
provided by the Chaperelles.
Firemen are decorating the
aqditorium for the event and
the annual awarding or prize~
will be held. Dancing will
continue until 1:30 a.m.

Male Dog $2.00

Spayed Female $2.00

Female $2.00

Kennel License $10

------------------------------------------------------j,.,, .. ,

Address

-~ OvVI ,t, ll ip - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _...:._.,

I

;

I

l

James E. Roush
· County Auditor of Meigs-C9unty
License musl be- obtaine~ not l•ter than Jan . 19, 1974 to avotd pay ing penalty. After thi s date
poe; natty Wlfl be $7.00 for S.lrtgle fag and SS .OO fOr kennel licen se.

'

•

PLAN NUPTIAL'i
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Imboden are
announcing the approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Peggy, to Robert Lewis, Jr.
The event will take place at the
First Baptist Church in Middleportat2 :30p.m .,Jan.l. The
gracious c ustom of open
church will be observed.
'

Want~

SUNDAY
TWO WEEK revival now in
progress at the Middleport
United Pentecostal Church,
South Third Ave. Evangelist
and singers "Joyful Sounds
Trio", Betty Baker, Lyndia
Babb and Kay Anderson,
Kingsport, Tenn. Services 7:30
p.m. Pastor is William Knittel.
FOUR DAY Revival now in·
progress at Meigs County
Fairgrounds, 7:30 p.m . Yvonne
Lewingdon, Columbus,
evangelist. Heavenly Highway
Singers featured . All singers
9nd public invited.

Karen McElhmn) was home
for the Christmas holiday with
her parents. Mr . and Mrs.
Robert .McElhinny. Miss
McElhinny for the past year
has been involved with the
Child Development Program
which has headquarters at the
Mt. St. Mary's Hospital in
Nelsonville.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert .Turner,
Gary and Sandy and Mrs. John
Gracley and Travis Michael,
Bucyr us, were Chris tm as
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs . J oe Turner and granddaughter, Connie See. Michael
Turne r , who was seriously
injured in a motorcycle ac·
cident several months ago,
telephoned Christmas wishes
to his grandparents.
Mrs. Robert Eyer, Larry,
Julie and Mary Teresa, Mid-

ston and Mrs . Edgar Abbott. In
the group were Jay Evans,
Dixie Ebhn, Kimberly Eblin,
Crystal Sisson, Tammy Atkins,
Terry Atkins and Allen Partlow. Mrs. Beuna Grueser read
" The Most Priceless Gifts of
Chris tmas."
A play, "Kosher Christmas"
was presented by William
Radford, Harold Blackston ,
Mrs. Wendell . Jeffers, Tracy
J effers, Mrs. Ray Pullins, Jim
Jeffers, Pam Evans, Christie
Evans, Bruce Blackston, Judy
Radford, John Partlow and
Linda Partlow.
Following the Christmas
offering , a duet , " Star of the
East" was sung by Mrs . Robert
Sloan and Connie Radford . The
Rev. William Sydenstricker
had the be nedic tion . Jim
Jeffers and Brent Sisson were
acolytes for the service .
Poinsettias and greenery
decorated the church.
Santa came with treats for
the children.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Gerald D.
Nease, Racine, are aMouncing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Barbara Elizabeth, to
Keith A. Sheets, son of Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Sheets,
Gallipolis . Miss Nease is a graduate of Southern High School,
and is employed at the Holzer Medical Center. Her fian ce, a
graduate of Gallia Academy High School, served 14 months
in Vietnam and is now employed at the Gavin Power Plant,
Cheshire. The open church wedding will be at 2 p.m ., Feb. 9
at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy.

Rose Garden club meets
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
holiday meeting of the Rose
Garden Club was hosted by
Mrs. Merle Griffith whose
home was decorated for the
Christma s season.
Mrs. Ina Massar, president,
conducted a brief business
session prior to the party and
WILL DANCE
TUPPERS PLAINS
A
round and square dance will be
held New Year 's, Eve at the
Tuppers Plains School, 9 p.m.
to 1 a .m. , under the sponsorship of the Tuppers Plains
Boosters. Ross Branham and
the Country Cut-ups will
provide the music . The charge
is $2a couple . Food will be sold.

the exchange of gifts with Mrs.
Grace Stout giving devotions.
Thank-you notes were read
from members of the family of
Mrs . Mildred Headley for
flowers sent at the time of her
death.
The traveling prize was won
by Mrs. Maude Gray, and Mrs.
llazel Barnhill was the wiMer
of the door prize. For roll call
members exchanged a candy
or coo kie recipe. Gaffies were
played with prizes being
awarded and a dessert course
was served by the hostess to
those named and Mrs. Ethel
Arbaugh, Mrs. Leona Babcock,
Mrs. Rose Carr, Mrs. ·Helen
Dorst, Mrs. Mary Jane Goebel,
Mrs. Leota Massar , Mrs.
Vercia Stout, Mrs. Dorothy Stout, Mrs. Ulah Swan, and a

Casto, Mrs. Ollie Browning,
Mrs. Mina Johnson, Mr. and
Mrs. William Grinstead, Mr.
d Mr W'll'
T Wh'te

an

NEW HAVEN, W.&gt;Va . - The
Cherokee Homemakers Christmas dinner was held recently
at Roush 's Restaurant, Letart.
The club women 's husbands
were the guests.
Mrs .
Ollie
Browning
presented the devotions and
readings in keeping with
Christmas were read by Mr.
and Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo.
Gifts were exchanged .
The January meeting will be
at the home of Mrs. William
Grinstead, Jan. i5.
Those present were Mr . and
Mrs. Charles Stone, Mr .- and
Mrs. Richie Bird, Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Alva Luckeydoo, Mrs. David
Dewhurst, Mr. and Mrs. K. K.
Scites, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar

THOM MeAN HAS
TAUGHT AN OLD CLO&lt;i

1 1am

.

1 .

The Jan. 21 meeting of the
club will be held at the home of
Mrs. Dorst.

••
RING
•• •
IN
••
••
••
••
••
THE
••
••
NEW!
••
••
••
••
••
•• Thank You
•• For .Our Best Year!
•t
•• SEARS
•:
Catalog Merchant
!
:
•++
•

• •

••

It's the beginning of a whole new
year - a time for setting new
goals for a happier and more
fulfilled life. It's time to
celebrate lasting friendships
and memories with old friends
and to look forward to new and
rewarding experiences. We wish·
you a very happy new year.

NEW TRICKS

Thorn MeAn has
taken one of the oldest footwear sty les around
and taught it some of the latest
tricks. The result is a clog for the 70's
made stri ctly for me n. It's a brand new look
designed to go w1th today's new haggle, pleated or flare
pants. The new la ce-up and slipon clog styles combine the
thi ck, rugged clog bottom w1th a new blun t toe shape. And to
top lt off, they' re made fr om soft grainy leathers or sturdy
suedes in a choice of colors
Because Thom MeAn makes these clogs , here 's the best
trick of aiL A po pu lar price.

herit~ge house

s.

guest, Sandra Massar.

'

.

LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNE
220 E. MAIN 992-2178 POMEROY

Will Be Closed For Inventory
Monday &amp; Tuesday, Dec. 31 &amp; ·
Jan. 1

+

MIDDLEPORT

0.

'

••••••••••••••••••
f·

(

'

weight .gain

IIAVE VISITORS
llACINE Hollday ~uesL&lt; ••f
Mr . and Mrs. James Recs , Sr ,
R(:Jcine, were Mr and \1r s
Myron Mack , Trevor and
Jasvn , Grove City; :\1r. and
Mrs . Wmn Rees, Brad and
Matt, Westerville ; Mr. and
Mrs . Gayle Rees and !\ohchael ,
Westerville ; Mrs . Ed Follm er ,
Maysville , Ky .; Mr . and Mrs.
James Rees, Jr ., Jonath;in and
Jay, Racine ; Doug Rees , home
from Ohio Tec hnical Institut e
and Janie Rees, home from
Ohio Univfrsity

By Lawrence E. Lamb. M.D. left over for fat. In my opinion him to overeat and to ea t things
DEAR DR . LAMB - What that is good . It's good for that contain a lot of calories,
would be the 'best way for a health, but maybe not for you may be training him to
teenage boy to gain weight ? football. I'fn more concerned have heart disease ea rly in life.
The diet is our main concern. -with good health than . good I'm sure that is not what you
want. ~
He is six·fee..one and weighs football.
Our bOdies grow muscles · My advice would be to let
160 pounds . He plays football
to
inherited nature take its· course. Time
and gets lots of exercise, but according
The Almanac
still does not gain weight. He charac te ri stics and liviRg takes care or so many things , if
By
United
Pnss lntemn1ional
w11l eat any fruit or vegetable patterns . Most endurance we don 't try to rush it.
Today is Sunday, Dec. 30, the
DEAR DR. LAMB - Would
exercises such as running,
.;I
• raw but will not eat them too
364th
day of 1973 with one to
well when cooked . Also, he jogging and swimming are not you please tell me what causes
follow .
does not eat many sweets or designed to build large cramps in the legs and soles of
HARTFORD, W. Va.
The moon is approaching ll"l
the feet ? It always happens to
Robe rt Nicholas Roush, sou breads. Anything you can tell powerful muscles, but tough
first quarter .
of AUce Roush, Hartford, us that might help him to gain muscles capable of exercising me dw-ing the night and about
The m orni ng star is Mercu ry.
a long time . You can do orice a week. 1s there anything
celebrated hl s second birth· weight will be appreciated.
The evenin g sta rs are Venus.
DEAR READER - It is strength.type exercises and , by special· that l could do to avoid
day, Dec. 23 at his home. He
Mars
and J upiter.
natural not to gain a Jot of flesh increasing the load on the these cramps?
rece ived many gilts from
Those born on this date are
DEAR READER - There
'm th1s period of life . There just muscle, g radua lly train the
friends and relatives.
tm
dcr the s1gn of Capricorn .
aren't a lot of extra calories muscle and stimulate its arc a lot of things that can
British novelist Rudyard Kipgrowth . When thi.s happens , a cause this pr oblem . P oor
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::~::;:;:.;;::::::::::::::~~~;:::::::::::::::::.::::::::::::
larger amol.lflt of the protem in circ ulation 1s one , and you ling wa s born Dec. 30, 1865.
On this day in history :
·:·:
·:·:·
food will be used to grow would need an examination to
In 185~. the United States
find thi s out. If you can feel the
0 '
larger muscles.
bought
some 45,1)QO s qu are
When the male hormones are arteries pulsating mcely just
produced in large amounts behmd the inside ankle bone, it miles of land south of the Gila
and Mrs. Bill McKelvey, Port- :~
:-:they stimulate the body to is less likely to be poor cir- River from Mexico for $10
'
million. It now is the southern
land, for Christmas dinner.
Holiday weekend g~ests of
develop more muscles. That is culation .
areas
of Al'izona and New
Many of my readers have
Other guests there were Mr. . Mrs. Helen J ohnson, Wolf Pen
.
why men tend to have larger
HARRISONVILLE - Thirty muscles than women . Without assured me that if they keep MexiCO.
and Mrs. Marvin McKelvey, Road, were Mr. and Mrs.
In 1903 , a total of 602 perso ns
two members and guests a stimulu s of this type, though, the feet warm it will· pre\'ent
Syracuse,
and
Bruce Everett R. J ohnson, Audra,
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCE D - Mrs. Kenneth
were
and
killed when f1re swept
attended
a
potluck
supper
McKelvey and a friend.
J effrey , and Eric, Columbus.
Fosnaugh, Sr., and Dale E . Snyder, both of Lancaster, anmuscle growth will not occur. their problems . The most
1
Dinner guests Thursday of Joining Mrs. J ohnson and the Ch ristmas party when the
nounce the engagement of their daughter, Judith AM, to
Gaining weight by getting fat popular home remedy seems to th rough the Iroquois Theater in
Golden
Age
Club
met
at
the
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Byer, Everett John son family for a
John G . Sayre, son of Mrs . Charles Bailey, Portland and the
isn't good for one's health. be wearing warm socks to bed. Chicago.
In 1972, President Nixon
Kenny and John, were Mr. and dinner pa rty on Saturday night school for their December Many tall, slender people are You might ge t a pair of warm
late Oliver E . Sayre. Miss Snyder is a graduate of Lancaster
ordered
a halt in the bombing
meeting
.
Mrs. Bob Byer, Larry, Julie were Mr . and Mrs. Larry
High School and the Mount Carmel School of Nursing,
supposed to be that way . We wool socks that will go to the
of Hanoi and Ha1phong, and
The Gospel Harmonaires or ten overestimate how much a knees and try them .
and Mary Teresa, and Mrs. K. Johnson , Gina, Ta hnne, and
Columbus. She is employed at the Mount Carmel Medica l
several
songs,
thal secret North
announced
e
ntertained
with
E. Byer.
Brady , and Mr. and Mrs.
Center in Columbus:"Sayre is a graduate of Southern Local
tall person should weigh. Your
Send your questions to Dr. Vie tnamese peace talks would
Mr . and Mrs . Fielding James J ohnson , Jamie Sue, with guitar accompanimen t. boy probably has good ·eating
High School and attended the Hocking Technical College at
Hawkins and John Vroman Todd and Teresa, Mulberry The birthdays were observed habits. Deve loping good Lamb, in care of this ne ws· bz re sumed in Paris on Jan . 8.
Nelsonville. He ts also employed at the Mount Carmel
were Christmas guests of Mr. Heights. Mrs. Helen Johnson with Mrs. Orba Stout, 87, the nutritional habits early in life paper , P . 0. Box 1551, Radio
Medical Center. An April wedding is planned by the couple .
A thought for the day: British
and Mrs. Charles Vroman, spent Christmas Day with Mr . oldest present.
is a lot more important than City Station, New York, N. Y.
. •.• "'"""' .. ..:•:-:- Q ""'..,.;-;.. ................ , ••• ... ......_ .................
The
door
prize
was
won
by
novelist
Geor ge Eliot said,
daughter, Mary , ~and son, and Mrs. Larry Johnson and
~:~·:.:.'•.•.•.•:, ":. ·''.:.:"',:o. ·:•:O:o:O:•:•:•:•:•!•!•!'·,!•! ,,!•:•:•,•,•...-.«•nl'oY, , . ~
gai nin g more weight for 10019. For a copy of Dr. Lamb's
1
Norman Will and a gift ex- football. I would not encourage booklet on losing weight, send
'Blesscd is the man who, w1th
Marc, Belpre. Marc is home on famil y,
c
hange
was
enjoyed.
Rev.
nothing
to say , abstains fr om
a 30 day leave from the U S.
Rick Werner, student at Ohio
him to eat sweets, and it's 50 cents to the same address
Navy and will report to State Universi ty , is spending Chapman of the Baptist Church great he likes raw fruits and and ask for ' 1 Loslng We ight" giving in word s ev idence of that
fact."
Wa s hington the middle of the holidays here with h1s at Pagetown, gave the prayer . vegetables. If you encourage booklet.
~:.
Pearl Welker, head of the
January. Thursday Mr. and . parents, Mr . and Mrs. Paul
RSVP program in Meigs
Mrs. Hawkins went to Spring· Werner.
;::
field for a visit with Mr. and
Christmas Eve guests of Mr . County, was a special guest.
::·
The next meeting will be Jan .
Mrs. J ohn Hawkins.
and Mrs . William Radford
22
at the schOol and everyone is
POMEROY - The village of Syracuse has come a long way.
Mr .
and
Mrs.
Paul were Mrs . Grace Glaz e,
Winebre nn er, Miss Susan Middleport ;
M1ss
Mar y invited.
Just last summer village officials completed the erection of its
Bowman , Paul
Treacin , Radford, Columbus; Mr. and
new municipal building which houses the fir e and emergency
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs. J ohn Mrs. Bill Radford , Belpre, and
equipment, council chambers and office for the Board of Public
Bowman, Pataskala, and Mrs. Mr . a nd Mrs . Larry Romine ,
Affairs.
Goodrich, Dayton, were Pomeroy R. D,
John
In addition they have a large park area on which is located
Christmas guests of Mr. and
Mr . and Mrs . Homer Radthree ball fields and a teMis court. Now for the first time May or
.
'
Herman London and council members have on order a police
ford hosted a dinner party
Mrs . Karl Owens .
Miss Marcia Karr, Syracuse, Christmas Da y and their
cruiser - a first for the village .
MASON, W.Va. - The ladies
Mrs. Margaret Clatworthy, guests were Mr . and Mrs.
Milton Varian has served as Police Chieffor the village for 14
Mi ckey Childs, Middl e port , William Radford , Mr. and Mrs. auxiliary of the Ma s on
years. All this time he has used his own car and paid all expenses
were Chri stmas Day guests of Rollin Radford and daughters, Volunteer Fire Department
out of his own pocket. He certainly is to be commended.
The next step for the village is to purchase a new fire truck
Mr. and Mrs . James Clat- Sally and .Judy at home and held their annual Christmas
and within two years village officials hope to have a swimming
worthy and daughter Twila and Connie, a student nurse at the dinner and party Monday
~oirs . Albert Ebersbach .
Holzer Medical Center ; Mr. evening at the fire sta tion.
pool which will be located at the park.
Village officials should be commended for the steps forward
and Mrs . Larry Romine, and Secret pals for the year were
that have been taken and will be taken through the comiug years.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Goeglein, revea led and gifts were exAlso to be commended is Archie Lee for having the fortitude to
local ; and Miss Mary Radford, c hanged.
Members attending were
expand tire growth of the village with Rustic Hills division and
Columbus.
the Lee division.
Christmas guests of Mr. and Katheryn Stewart,. Frances
Your efforts are appreciated by many and will be long
Mrs. Albert Roush, Kenny and Johnson, Bonnie J ohnson, Jean
Bessie
Ingles,
remembered .
Becky, were Mr s. Kathy Tennant,
Smith, just home from a Charlotte Jenks, Pearl Roush,
MR. AND MRS. TED REED and sons entertained with a
Colwnbus hospital, and her Virginia Shrimplin and one
OUR SHOES ARE
POMEROY
Chri
s
tma
s
Christmas eve dinner party at their home on Mulberry Ave.
children, Christi and Kevin, guest, Mary Dudding.
ST ILL SENSIB L Y PRICED
MIDDLEPORT 1 0 .
party of the Evangeline Mr . and
Attending the dinner were Mae T. Meadows, Houston, Tex.,
Mr s. Charle s
MissiOnary Society or the Kessinger, Pomeroy R. D.;
aunt of the Reed children, Mr . and Mrs. Paul Eich, John, Sue and
Pomeroy Chw-ch of Christ was Mr. and Mrs. Larry Flowers,
Bill, Mrs. Theodore Reed, Sr.; "Athens, and the Rev . and Mrs.
held recently at the home of Columbus ; Mr . and Mrs. Roger
Harold Deeth", Pomeroy .
Mrs . Louis Osborne.
Guests at the Reed home following church services were Mr.
Roush and Doug, Pataskala ;
• ••
Gifts for an exchange were Mr . and Mrs. Dale Roush ,
and Mrs. Fred W. Crow, Jr., Rick and Carson, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
placed beneath a ligh.ted tree. Sherri and David, St. Albans;
Beegle, Mr. and Mrs. Thereon Johnson and Captain and Mrs .
For
roll call each member Mr. and Mrs. Odas Nelson,
Peter F . Klein.
related something about the Mrs. Mildred Mead and
UKE TO EXTEND sincere thanks to Grace Eich for the birth of Jesus. Mrs. John grandson, Brian Morris,
Amstutz, wife of the new Columbus ; Mrs. Garn et Herdlovely gifts she gave at Christmas from different countries she
pas tor of the church, had man, Mrs. Myrtle Matheny,
and her husband, Paul, visited the past year.
Paul and Grace just recently returned from Libya where · prayer. The group sang carols , Mrs. Bonnie Matheny and son,
revealed secret pals and drew
Paul was employed with an oil company. Tbey are presently
Doug, and Mrs . Clara McDade,
names for 1974. A con- all of Leon, W. Va.; and John
new
residing at Letart Falls.
tribution was sent to the
R. Mi1ler and son , Scott,
Clemens
Christian Children's
IT'SGETIING THAT TIME OF year for Fred Crow. to begin
Evansville, Ind.
Home in Ontario, Canada.
making preparations for the up-coming annual F~og Jump . Fred
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Arnold
Refreshments were served to
recently received a letter from the younger set m regard to mand sons, Jimmy Lee, Canal
those named and Mrs. Stanley Winchester, have been the
formation on frogs.
·
Bass, Mrs. Conrad Ohlinger, holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs .
The letter reads as follows : "From Laura's Liar. Most high,
Mrs. Earl Cleland, Mrs. Betty Charles Kessinger.
Manning Clements gave me my membership card and told me to
Spencer, Mrs. Elwood Bowers,
write to you and you'd send me information on frogs. Please send
Christmas guests of Mrs. W. ,
Mrs. Edward Venoy, Mrs. · A. Morgan, Rock Springs, were
me some information on frogs . Thanks. Love and peace, Laura
Evelyn Smith and Mrs. Denver Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Gothhardt,
Dever . P .S. ':j&lt;nee Deep." Mr . Clements told me how to address
Kapple.
you and Ute envelope."
Columbus, Bruce Gothhardt, a
student at Ohio University;
MR. AND MRS. OWEN WATSON, Rt. 1, Racine, after
Mr . and Mrs. Keith Morgan,
spending Christmas with their daughter and family, Mr. and
Middleburg Heights and Mr.
Mrs. Robert Roush, Colwnbus, were pleasantly surprised when
and Mrs. Robert Moore,
they returned home to find a lovely Christmas gift in their
Columbus.
doorway.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gilmore
The giver of the gift, however, did not identify himself. The
returned to Lake Villa, Ill.,
POMEROY - A dinner at
watsons extend their sincere thanks to the thoughtful person or
Wednesday after spending the
Oscar 's in Gallipolis preceded
persons.
holiday weekend here visiting
the' annual Christmas party of
their parents, Mr . and Mrs.
WILBUR LOGAN, Pomeroy, is spending a week with his the Sew-Rite Sewing Club at Gardner Wehrung and Mr . and
the home of Mrs. Flo
sister, Erma Bradford, Marysville, Ohio.
• 8- Track
Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr. and
Strickland.
Stereo Tape
families.
Members
exchanged
secret
Player
SANDY ZERKLE _CAROL, DAUGHTER of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Smith,
William R. Zerkle, Syracuse, received her B. S. degree in pal gifts around ,a decorated
A n •~ coli&lt;Jg Admiral bo~&gt;~»
Denean
and Ralph, Lincoln
!~f IOYTid of yoYr
education from Wayne State University, Michigan, Dec. 11. tree, and Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore
Park, Mi c h ., Mr.
and
received
an
anniversary
gift
lo~o ro t e Ste reo a ,orA
quality
product
it's
the
best
kind
of
protection
Attending the graduation were her parents and sister, Jackie.
Mrs .
Keith
Curtis,
tndg•• throvvh yov• TV
we can give you .
The Zerkles' son, William Ross Zerkle, Cleveland, who from her secret pal. Read at
\II Tope pl11y1r ha1
Gayla
Lee,
Middleport,
and
the
·
m
eeting
was
a
letter
in
l&lt;g ho ed trod on doccolot
received his jurist doctor degree from Ohio State University last
Mr. and Mrs. John Beaver,
One· year tree parts and labor warranty on all
~:~nd mami&lt;'li or o~ J om!lltt
summer is now associated with Travelers Life Insurance verse form from Mrs. Kathryn · J . D . and Doug, Lincoln
P'D9'om c~arQ'e Opera
1974
Admiral
co lor sets.
The
Pafltgon/
5L5851
.
Captivating
Contemporary
cabine1ry
W
!lh
Company . He visited here with his parents over the Christmas Spencer, former member now He ights , Pomeroy, were
the Admiral "wrap around" look of elegance. Wa lnut -gra ined toon It o;~11IOII\O I It ~­
ployer ttortt "''hen co•·
residing in Florida. Fruit
finish
on selected ,hardwooos. c-e· H. 41 w· w, ta ~~ D
Five-year p1cture tube protection.
,
holidays.
trtd ge it ont•rled.
holiday
guests
of
their
parents,
baskets for seven shut-ins were
Mr. and Mrs . John Beaver,
AFC 1 AND MRS. HAROLD WILUAM HANSON, Jr., Minot, prepared. Games were played · Nye Ave. The Smith family will
Free serv1ce loaners for color TV's.
N. D., are here visiting Mrs. Hanson 's parents, Mr. and Mrs. and carols sung during the return to Lincoln Park Monevening.
Harry Clark, Rock Springs and Hanson's parents! Mr. and Mrs.
Attending were Mrs . Lucy day.
Harold
Hanson, Sr., North Second Ave., Middleport. The
Mr . and Mrs . Patrick
COast·lo-coast toll-tree owner hot line.
famllies are delighted to have the children home for tbe holidays. White, Mrs. Nettie Boyer, Mrs. Lochary returned Friday from
Martha Hoffman, Mrs . Ann
Browning, Mrs. Shirley Baity, a week's visit with their son
TO EACH AND EVERYONE A llAPP_y NEW YEAR.
Mrs, Lenora McKnight, Mrs. and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
"Home ol
Mrs.
Charles
Lochary,
Meg
I•
Pandora Gollins, Mrs. Betty
Elegant
and
Robert,
of
near
Chicago.
Wehrung, Mrs. · Strickland ,
Furnishings n
Mrs. Gilmore, Mrs. Barbara
Kapple,
Miss
Louise
Gilmore,
HOST DINNER
Mullen and Mrs . Carolyn ,··your phone will j!n1hl
MIDDLEPORT
·POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. ~omeroy; Miss Debbie Avey,
.. c••h ntultl .., too. when1
McDaniel.
Elza Gilmore, Jr.,. entertained Portsmouth; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
1 )' ou phce · •n 1ction lent I
OHIO
Tht ~t/ILII01, Contemporary styling wllh. j ust a
1
Ad. You can nll furnltur~,
Christmas Eve with a family dilmore, Lake V!lla, Ill. ;
.hint ol Scandinavian lnftuence. Walnul·grarned finish
If she pull s at your
~•ncu. dothe••, .do~ 1
dlnnir'' lind gift exthange. Roger Gilmore, Columbus; heartstrings, be sure she's not IIppi
on hardbOard, 2i'MI• H. 40 Yt~ w
, 19"' D.
1
l••n• of oth•r unu••d but
and
Rick
a•d
Mike
Gilmore.
Their guests were Mrs. · Elza
..
I
trying to untie your pocket- lUIIful ltllll !
••
bod!&lt;.
Gt~e,
Mrs. Denver
'

E~~~=:~~~:~\i?.~~:. \ P:~::~~YN~~e~

Miss Barbara E. Nease

Cherokee
ladies
have meet •••••••••••••••••'\

To obtain license by mai l, fill in and mail thi s form to JAMES E.
ROU SH. COUN TY AUDITOR. Meigs County, Pomeroy. Ohio.
Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope and price of license .
SERVICE SLATED
MIDDLEPORT - A New
Year's eve service will be held
at the Middleport United
Pentecostal Church beginning
at 8p.m . There will be one hour
of fellowship prior to the
services which will bE! from
10:30 until 12 midnight.
Featured will be gospel
singers, Joyful Sounds Trio,
Kingsport,
Tenn.
Guest
s peaker will be the Rev .
Donald Howard, Hamilton.

DR LAWRENCE E. LAMB

1:,

Christmas program given
POMEROY - A trumpet and
organ prelude by Tracy Jeffers
and Mrs. William Radford, "0 ,
Come All Ye Faithful," opened
the annual Christmas Eve
service at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church.
The congregation sang " Go
Tell It On the Mountain" with
Amos Leonard giving: th e
.praye r . Nursery children
under the dire ction of Mrs.
Jeff e rs
giving
We ndell
recitations were Timmy
Jeffers, Neal Richmond, Scott
Pullins, Lisa Pullins, Sally
Radford, Timmy Sloan, Angie
Sloan, April Clark and Tammy
Eblin.
Recitations were also given
by the primary c hildren whose
teachers are Mrs. Helen Black-

11-The Sundav Times ·llentiiW'I. Sunllav. Dec. 30. 1973

~

MONDAY
WATCH Night Service at
7:30 p .m . a t Pomeroy
YOU 'VE HEARD of the Brady Bunch, but ha ve you heard of Wesleyan Holiness Chur c h .
the Batey Bunch. They carol shut.ins, fri ends and former neigh- Guest speakers and, special
bors every year and bring gifts of homel)'lade candies. The Batey si nging. Public invited.
Bunch are the five children of Mr. and Mrs . Andy Batey who
A NEW Year's eve dance and
lived in Middleport until about two years ago when they moved to
dinner will be observed for all
Chester . One of the most appreciative shut-ins they carol is
members or Drew Webster
Francis Klein .
Post 39, American Legion,
their families and gues ts,
THROUGH THE GENEROSITY of the Chris tian folk at the
Monday ni ght, Dec. 31,
Rock Springs , Enterprise and Flatwoods United Methodist
beginning at 9:30 p .m . Music
Churches, 20 senior citizens, either s hut·ins or living alone
will be provided by Armand
without a family to join for the holidays were delivered bountiful and a ll at tending are requested
Christmas dinners.
to bring a covered dish.
The three churches took up a special offering, a part of which
' NEW YEAR'S Eve hymn
- $37 in fact ~ was given to the Meigs County Counc il on Aging
. sing, 8 p.m . at Eagle Ridge
with in structio ns that it w~ to be used for ~'some thing for ChristCommunity Ch ur c h. Bissell
mas" ror the senior citizens. The day berore Christmas, one of
Brothers will be s pecial
the employes at the Center prepared a nd delivered the dmners.
singers; all si ngers and public
invited.
CHRISTMAS WAS really Christmas at the Walter Crooks'
CHURCH 01' Christ in
home. For the first time in live years, a ll of the family gathered
Chris tian Union, Hobson, will
for the holiday . LCDR and Mrs. Gene Crooks, Mark and John
hold a New Year watch and
were in from Rockville, Md., for a week's visit and others at t he
prayer se r vice, 7:30 p .m.
Crooks' home for Christmas were Mr . and Mrs. Daniel Thomas,
There will be two speakers and
Danny aod Kathy, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Crooks, Pam, Cindy
spec ial singing. Rev. Darrell
and Eddie, Middleport ; Mrs. H. E. Fruth and Miss Kathryn
Doddrell, pas tor, welcomes the
Fruth, Point Pleasant. Afternoon callers were Mr. and Mrs. Jack
public.
Fruth and their five and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rossi and their two
WATCH NIGHT Services,
r hildren. It was Gene's first Christmas in Middleport for five
Community Church on
Midway
years, three of whi ch he spent in Japan with the U . S . Navy.
the La ngsv ille-Dex ter Rd.,
DEAR OLD SANTA distributed treats on Christmas Eve to beg inning at 7:30 p.m.
TUESDAY
475 children at the American Legion Hall in Middleport. Annually
CHESTER Co un cil 323 ,
the le gionnaires or Feeney-Benne tt Post 128 sponsor Santa 's visit
of America, 7:30
Daughters
and then accompany him to the Children's Home and the Meigs
County Infirmary with goodies for everyone. This year the p.m. at the halL Installation of
program seemed particularly successful and sa tisfying for those officers. Officers requested to
wear whtte .
involved.
THE TOPS Club w11l meet at
A TIME FOR sorting out , fo&lt; s tarting over, for getting 7:30 p.m. Tuesday instead of
evening
as
e1,terything in the proper perspective - that's _what a new year is Thursday
previously planned.
all about. Hav~ a happy 1974 !

Fire, ER sqlUid

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
0.

'

Miss judith Ann Fosnaugh

~·

~

IKatie's
By

Golclen A uersthe

II enjoy party

-=~·xo:.

Korner

Katie Crow

~~

Buster Brown

Auxiliary
has meet

Hush Puppies
Miss America
Pedwin
Keds

Endicott JoJms1on

Society has
yule party

THE SHOE BOX

There Is Still Time To Watch The New Year's Parade On A

FOR1974

with the unprecedented Admiral
5- Point Color TV Protection Package

Sew-Rite club

.

.

en;oys se.sston

POINT
PROTECTION
PACKAGE

1

2
3
4
5

w.

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si.,

.

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BAKER

FURNITUR~

�•

'

•
12 - The Sunday Ttmes -Sentmel,Sunday, Dec. 30,1973

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By T. Allan Wolter
District Rangtr
IRONTON
N0 d bt
1 th
ou many 0
e
Olnsbnas presents receavc.,~ th1s vear
Mll enable the recipient to ~~rtic 1 pa'tc m

sadelig~t

past £1ve years. An tnterestmg

spent annually for equipm ent and year.
·:::
clothmg.
Begmning Februarv 1, 1974, Oh1o will .'·.'..'·
'
Bicycling , wtth 37 m1lhon rtders last imtiate an experimental campmg by ·;::

~~athr • ~a1 smlo11ta11.0k0e apebopac1ke see0a1t0tyo1nbog athtinagt ~~d7eat~~ s::~:::~~g ~pem~:t%:0Y ;.',~ :,.

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door;i:~ t!:i~-~~~~~ ~~g:e::t hme for ~a: Je~;~;ed o;~r!:e~~ :t~rc;;~:~r~~~

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reflectmg on wha t surpn ses the new year
« has m store for us. let's take a qut ck peek
~ at what's happemng on the outdoor
~ recreatiOn scene.
~
Everyone knows there is a "boom"
~
t
h J
La
1
·•· m recrea wn ve JC es
st yea r 1.5
'·~
.. bilhon were spent on trailers , cam pers
§: and motorhomes Over 4 mtlhon are now
·..:

Forest Servacc and National Park Ser- ~::

to thts recreahon IS that $300 m1llion 15 vace tested prototypes syste ms this past ~~

some form of outd oor recreation A pa1r
of ski s, a new gun. a b1cyde. bmocu1ars,
sleeptng bags, tents, a mml-bike and a
surfboard all reqwre the great Out of

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Wayne National FOrest

sport
make reservations for any of 12 state.;::
Skin and scuba d1vmg has shown a parks at Sears stores 10 most large Ohio ~~:
te d
th
c1t1es:
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Ohto also has a novel program for
d1vers.
campers caiJed Rent-a-Tent. Novice and
Huntmg IS one of the few outdoor expert ahke may rent campmg eqUIP· t:!
sports that has remamed relatively ment at selected campgrounds. This ~~
stable Over the pasllO years the number program has been very successful and :~
of hunters has been fa~rly constant at Will probably be expanded next year to ~i
about 14 million hunters a year.
mclude more campgrounds.
~.:·.·
Summer homes are tncreasl' ng . fn
The U.S. population IS rapidly ur- ~.:~
~~
1967, 2. 7 pel. of all households had two banizing; 74 pet. of our population live In '!l
h
Tod
f Jl urban areas An even more startling{~.··
0
a
a
f1gure is that a whoppmg 95 pet. of
New forms of traditional types of population h ves within commutmg ~;
recreatton are developmg. AmerlCans d1stance of one o£ 250 metropohtan ~~
seem to have a never ending appetite for centers Not surprisingly then, 76 pet of ~l

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~~ ~e~l~e~~ a~:~a~~;:u~~~onn ~~ 7 ~~~ h~:~~olds o!~· ~~orfct~~~~
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greater than m 1961. The fuel shortage
l.l~.~ and prtces will no doubt put qulte a dent
...• m the use of these notor~ous gas hogs but

[.~ ~:.~~peal tor thiS type of veh•cle •s st•ll :;f;r~w,:n!,:~~:r:~

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Approximately 1.2 rmlhon vehtcles ·
~1~ are now used exclusively for off road
.,. travel ( mmi bJkes, trail scooters,
g:; A.T V.'s, snowmobiles etc .). Last year
~~ 587,000 snowmobiles were sold, an in.
=
.•:.:: crease of almost so ttmes over the past lO
··· years.
',f:~:
Another change we can expect to
contmue is the prolLferation of private
···· campgroWlds. Fifty-s 1x separate compan1es are now mvolved in commercial
campgrounds . Large firms such as KOA,
Humble Oil Co , Ramada Inns, Hobday
Inns and Stucky's are getting In on th•s
Lucrative market. Many of these campgrounds are auned at the traveling pubhc
although some are developing areas for
extended camping
Skimg 15 growmg by leaps and bounds
\l\ With 500,000 new skiers every year the
.

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campers come

Perhaps the most fantasllc :~~
development for the camper was an·;~
nounced recenUy b.y Hi..r1se CampSJtes,~
Inc. They have plans to construct a 26- ;;.
story campgrotmd in downtown New(:~
Orleans Thls corporation mamtains that~~
"people don 't want the woodsy b!t now;\:?
- th ey-want to camp m comfort near the;;~;
c1ty." Thetr planned factlity wtll have~::
eight lower stories of parking and 12~~:
upper floors carpeted wtth artificial turf~;;
and equipped with ullhty hookups.
~~
There, if you choose, you can watch:;:;
the Mardi Gras from your picmc table 20 !:!:
stones up 1 Bring your own chipmunks:~;~
and fresh atr.
::::
To each h1s own I suppose. Wilh the!~!!
gas shortage, they may have something.;:;:
Now about that new alpme fishing;~;·
lake. You take the elevator to 31st floor ...

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School tax rate cuts attacked
r

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

"Thus, most school districts
reawralSed m 1972 are being
demed the benefit of mflationary growth 10 the tax
duplicate," SB.Id Hauck. "If
th1s practice continues, the
school distr~cts will not be able
to take advantage of normal
growth m the value of the
property duplicate other than
growth due to new con·
strucUon "
Hauck said county budget
conunissions do not have the '
authority to reduce tax rates m

OOURTHOUSE IN POMEROY

production on his allotted
acres, but offers neither incentives nor restrictions on
additional acreage he added.
"The pull of the marketplace
Will determine crop acreages,"
the farm program official said.
Emphasizmg that wheat,
feed grains (corn, grain
sorghum, barley) and cotton
lire the only crops now under
target price Jegislabon,
McKenzie said that con·
siderable discussion IS bemg
heard around the country
about target prtces for some
commodities now under
restrictive programs, such as
peanuts, rtce, extra-long-staple
cotton, and sugar.
"Whenever possibilities for
new farm programs are under
heavy discussion, local ASC
committees and employees get
a Jot of questions We don't
have answers for a lot of them,
because our job is to ad·
rrunister the programs that are
on the books now." We can
answer questions about the
program we have i we can't
speculate about possible future
programs," McKeOZJe said.

Hl/'lf /IIJII 11M
Carpets last longer and stay brighter and
fresher when cleaned, sanitized, deodorized
and anti-resoiled in your own home by
Kieslings.

CARPET CARE SALE OFFER
Present this ad when paying and receive 25
Pet. off until Jan. 30, 1974. For a free estimate
mea sure your carpets then call 446-4408 in
Gallipoli~. Call day or night.

NEWCOMER to the world
scene, Shell&lt;b Ahmed Sekl
Yamanl Is also one of Its
most powerful ligures. Saudi
Arabia's oU minister, he is a
familiar llgure In western
capitals pursuing guiding the
Arabs' embargo policies.

It's become almost commonplace for bank headl;nes to scream
about rates, yields, term certificates w;th fixed maturities.

Securities and bank savmgs accounts are vastly different f;nancial Instruments. And choosing the securities route can be full of
'
pitfalls for the unwary.

DJo

.12°/o

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
spokesman for the Internal
Revenue ServiCe Saturday de·
nied the IRS was investigating
a special Rose Bowl expense
fund for asSistant football
coaches at Oh1o State Umver·
sity.
Frank M. Carroll, acting
director of the C10cinnati IRS
distnct, dismiSSed pubhshed
reports of !he incident.
We're not looking mto it and
if we were we wouldn't have
announced it 10 • the first
place," said CarrolL
'
Ernest W. Leggett Jr.,
executive director and treasurer of the Umversity's office of
fmances, also satd he knew
oothing of any IRS IOvestigation .
''U the IRS was interested in
10vestigat10g the fund it would

I

We prefer the way we do thmgs at Ohio Valley Bank. Taking the
time to g1ve calm, constructive, person-to-person advice on current fmancial developments-and their impact on your personal
savmgs program.

PASSBOOK SAVINGS

1-V~AR CERTIFICATE

0/o

41

ANNUAL
RATE

ANNUAL
YIELD

• Payable Quarterly
• Mm1mum $1 ,000 00

ANNUAL
RATE

%0/o

ANNUAL
RATE

• Payable Quarterly
• M1mmum $1 ,000 00

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE

%0/o

ANNUAL
RATE

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

/o

0

MONTEREY, Calif. (UPI)
- A Navy cargo ship and a
Liberian freighter collided
Saturday, cr1pp!mg the Navy
vessel and spllling 16,000
gallons of fuel oll 11 miles off
the beaches of scemc Big Sur.
No injuries were reported
among the 5tJ.rnan civitian
crew aboard the Navy's
Pr1vate Joseph F. Merrill, or
the civilian freighter Pearl
Venture.
The Navy ship's fuel tanks
were ruptured in the collision
off Cape San Martm, 160 miles
south of San Francisco. It
created what the Coast Guard
called a "medium size" splll.
A cutter With spill cleanup
equipment was sent to the
scene to prevent the oil from
washing in on Central Califor·
nia 's scentc beaches.
A spokesman said the spill

ANNUAL
RATE

• Payable Quarterly
• M1mmum $1 ,000 00

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE

%o/o

• Payabre Quarterly
• M1mmum $1.000 00

certamly have nolllled us and
it would have started here,"
said Leggett
A spokesman for OSU,
contacted 10 Pasadena, Calif.,
S3ld oo action would be taken
until after the Rose Bowl-if
then.
"When all of us get home
we'll reach some kmd of
deciston, '' srud the spokesman.
"The administratton Will make
a dec!Slon one way or another
whether to put a stop to
it or not." .
The fund mvolved a reported
400 solicitation letters mailed
recently which brought 1n
nearly $7,000 to be used as
bonuses to pay expenses for the
assistant foothall coathes and
their families going to the Rose
Bowl
The letter was s1gned
1
' WOOdy.''

ANNUAL
RATE

• Payable Quarterly
• M1mmum $1.000 00

presented no serious threat to
the beaches because of its
distance offshore and the calm
seas which improved chances
of containmg the oil and
"sweeping" it off the water
The Coast Guard rushed
rescue craft to the scene to
stand by the -!SMoot Navy ship,
which was "dead in the water"
With two bolds flooded.
Pumps were holding their
own in an effort to prevent the
Private Merrill from sinkmg,
but rescue craft were ready to
take the crew off if the ship
could not be saved.
The Pearl Venture suffered
damage to her bow. The
captain reported the ship was
10 no danger and was continuing its voyage to Los Angeles.
The collision happened about
3:30 a.m. 50 miles south of
Monterey. Seas were catm at

Most exciting ever

10-Gear rig more

In another case a drJver lined
up w1th other motorists outs1de
a Staten Island , N.Y .. filhng
station for an bour to buy h1s $3
quota of gas. When he got to the
front, the pump ran out out
after he received only $1.84
worth.

paris of the South, Southwest
and West Coast appeared ID be
open as usual, but traffic w&amp;
much hghter.
Some of the most blZarre
tales came from New York
City. Three young gunmen
hiJacked a truck carrymg 3,000
gallons of gasoline, police said.
One man told state officials,
who set up spectal "boUrnes"
along with federal government
agents to receive complamis of
price gouging, that he had to
pay $6.42 for two gallons of gas
at a Manhattan service stat1on.
Another sa1d his car's gas tank
was topped off with water, and
he was sllll thar~ed

Pollee s a1d the serv1ce
station wouldn't giVe him gas
from another pump unless he
went back to the end of the lme,
so he left. He returned a few
mmutes later and threatened
the attendant w1th a gun, but
left without gettmg any more.
In Chicago, attendants at one
string of stations were reported

Unh

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to have taped the meter to

block out the ptlce, charged $1
a gallon and pocketed the
difference-more than 50 cents
a gallon .
Actmg Attorney General
Robert H Bork ordered U S
attorneys across the country to
go to the homes of JUdges 1!
necessary to get court
restrammg orders agatnst
se rv1 ce stations goug10g
motorists.
The Internal Revenue , Ser·
vtce set up pnce watch complamt l'enters. SerVIce stations
chargmg more than allowed
tmder federal pnce ceLlings are
ordered to rollback pnccs and

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

.

Federal law and regulat1on proh1b1t the payment ol a t1me deposit
pnor to matunty unless three months of the mterest thereon 1S
torfe1ted and 1nterest on the amount Withdrawn IS reduced to the
passbook rate

MEIGS OOUNTIES
PHONE 446-4408

Kieslings Carpet &amp;
Furniture Cleaning Service
Gallipolis, Ohio
I

CT EVELAND (UP!) -Mfn,
meet Theresa Payne. She's a
woman of steel.
As a secretary, the shapely
22-year old was fed up With the
Hack from her boss and the
clack from her typewriter.
Then nearly a year ago her
brother put her behind the
wheel of his tractor-trailer.
She
aband_oned
her
typewriter for a 4o-foot, 29,tJOO.
pound rig and her llfe-style
hasn't been the same since.
"It's the most exclUng thing
I have ever clone," said the sfoot-10, lilfliiounder who says
the toughest thing about
dr1ving a rig is tying down the
load. "A lot of the men watch
me to see if I can do lt and
that's when I do it the best."
Althoush she has known how
to drive a 10-tlear rig for nearly
a year, she baa onlY worked
full-time at It for tWo months.
Sle ]JBS the first woman sleelhaulllr to artilve at the ~rt of

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face a $2,500 fine One 01!
company cut orr suppltes to a
sta t1on lha l charged 99.9 cents
a gallon at Chnstmas.

on .rationing rules

In Balt•more, rRS off•c•al
Glona Tanski estimated that
they recewed more than 140
calls 1n the ftrst three hours of
th e New Year's holiday week·
end
Robert Jacobs. an offtcta! of
the 6,000-member gasoline
dea1ers assoctallons m lllinms
and Indiana, smd he "wouldn 't
be supnsed " 1! 99 per cent of
slaliohS closed m the Chicago
area from Saturday mght until
Wertnesday

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whatever price they can

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Simon announced Friday that the standby rationing
.:',:,:. :;
: plan could take effect by March I if needed. He also an· ·•·•
.. nounccd an allocation plan whtch would give llllmg stations

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• By WlWAM E . CLAYTON
WASHINGTON tUPI)- A federal energy official said
Saturday the government anticipates granting very few
exemptions U.gasohne ratJoning is imposed.
•..
Doctors,·ctergymen - even congressmen -will have
::; to buy coupons from other drivers if they cannot live within
i:: lhetr ration, the official, John Hill, told UPI.
HtH, an assistant 1(! presidential energy adviser
:..
.
William E. Sunon said the key to avoiding the black
·_:!.: markets and administrative !roubles that plagued gasoline
rationing in World War II is the negotlabillly of coupons.
Motorists who don't need all lhey get will be able to sell

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effect, ::::

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The question of exemptions and exceptions should be ·,'.:.,: ,
largely settled by the "white market" system under which

.·

reduce the black market, and avoid having the govenunent

By RICHARD LERNER
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
President N1xon,
(UPI) spending a quiet weekend at
home, brought in top aides
Saturday to review some of the
legtslatwn on h1s desk and
Signed five of the 4tJ.odd bills
awaitmg acbon.
The most s1gniftcant bill
Nixon Signed Saturday w11l g1ve
the "prepaid" medtcal care
movement a major tift. It
authorized $325 million m
federal atd for expansiOn and
testing of health maintenance
organizatmns (HMO's) over a
five-year period.
"The establishment of HMO's
will allow people to select for
themselves e1ther a prepaid
system for obtammg health
services or the more tradittonaJ
approach which has served the
Amer~can people so well over
the years," Nixon said m a
statement
Among the other legiSlation
Signed by NIXon was a bill
authonzing an additional $600
million 10 federal funds for
reimbursements to states for
costs of bUilding sewage treat"1ent plants.
N1xon spent part of the day
meeting w1th Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler and Alexand-

cr M. Ha1g, the While House
ch1ef of staff. A presidential
spokesman said the meet10gs
were devoted to study of other
key bills wh1ch Congress passed
before ad1ourn10g last week.
Topprng the list of leglSlahon
still awatting action are measures to mcrease Social Seeur1ty
benefits by 11 per cent, to
provide appropnatwns of $5.8
b!Uion for fore1gn a1d and $73.7
billion for defense, and to
consolidate seven fmanctally
ailmg northeastern railroads.
A While House spokesman
sa1d Nixon also conferred by
telephone w1th Secretary of
State Henry A. Kissinger m
Washington Reporters were
giVen no clue to the subJects
discussed

In another phone call diS·
closed Saturday, a presidential
spokesman said Nixon had
contacted Pes1dent Johnson 's
Wtdow on Fnday to tell her that
he had just Signed a bill
creatmg a memortal grove of
trees 10 the Lady B1rd Johnson
Park along the Potomac R1ver
Durmg his stay m Cahforma,
Ntxon also planned to work on
the State of the Umon address
wh1ch he w11l send to Congress
next month and the Wh1te
House sa1d speechwrtter Ray
Pnce was m San Clemente.
Three other b1lls s1gned
Saturday by Nixon authomed:
- Adjustment of the Central
Intelligence Agency's retirement system to conform w1th
protection g1ven other govern·

BARBER KILLED
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
bullet-riddled body of a harher
shop owner was found
Saturday in the city's flats area
stuffed inside the trWlk of h1s
1974 blood-spattered car.
Phillip McMahon, 43, of
Parma, had been shot four
times m the head and twice in
the nght hand with a small
caliber revolver, homicide
detectives said. He had apparently fought With his killer
tnslde the auto because the
front seat was covered with
blood, the interior of the car
was dented and plastic molding
had been ripped away.

'

ment employes agamst rapid
mcreases m the cost of hvmg
- Broadened travel and transportatiOn allowances for rmhtary
se rviCemen
g1ven
consecutive ove rseas assignments.
- Nam1ng of a new U.S
courthou se m New Orleans for
forme1· Rep. Hale Boggs, D-La,
who was ktlled m an Alaskan
plane crash a year ago
N1xon also 1ssued an executive order to permit mmates of
state pnsons to work on
"proJecis contracted by the
federal government The order
replaced one 1ssued m 1905 by
then President Theodore Roose·
velt, wh1ch proh1b1ted such
employment for persons lmpnsoned m nonfederal facthtles.

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"In World War D, you had to have a large ad· :::
l~[ ministrative force just deciding special appeals and such.''
Hill said " We just really want to take care of health
: \.::.,, matters and emergencies."
There may be some exemptions or higher allotments of
~~~j ~::r.ons for health or emergency reasons, but not many, he •.•

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"Foreign diplomats will probably get art extra allot·
ment 9f coupons. They might not speak English well, and
car pooling may be difficult, so theirs would be a special
burden," Hill said.
Although the rationing plan envisions giving coupons
only to licensed drivers !Sand over, Hlllsald there would be
exemptions on a case-by-ease basis for younger teenagers
who are their family's major breadwinners "or have jobs
critical to their support."
"We wiU be very severe there," he said. There are
many more youngsters whose driving is mostly for fun or to
school. They could buy coupons from buddies, he said .
Special exemptions might also go to jurors, par·
ticularly in rural areas, or rehabJUtation patients who have
to get to therapy sessions.
Taxi drivers who own their own cars and buy gasoline
at retail will probably get a higher allotment, as wiU in·
dependent delivery men and others whose driving is a
living, he said.

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Missiles
get
'tFuture uncertain II
srae1·I plane
CARACAS (UP!) - Early
natiOnalization of foreign oil
compaoies was the subject of
speculation Saturday followmg
visits to President &amp;lfael
Caldera by the heads of
Exxon's and Shell's Venezuelan

subs1d1anes.
Both Robert Dolph, preSident
of Exxon 's Creole Petroleum
Copr., and Kenneth Wetherell,
president of Shell de Venezuela,
told newsmen they were sure
there would be a role for the

·British idle may
hit million soon

the tune and there was no
IJilillediate explanation of how
the accident occurred.
The Private Merrill was en
route from Point Hueneme m
SOuthern Callforma to Sao
Francisco with an unspecified
cargo.

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\\j :i~lk::!~~~ose distinctions between professional classes," :~::

Nixon relaxing in west

By CHARLES PEARSON
LONDON (UP!) - Britain's
unemployment rolls may rtse
to one million persons by
Monday -the start of the
emergency three-day work
week-as a result of layoffs
caused by fuel shortages, in·
dustry sources said Saturday.
The economic crists the
goverrunent has described as
the country's gravest smce
World War II showed no signs
of easing as leaders of Britain's
260,000 coal miners postponed
further talks on their overtime
ban until next Wednesday.
Government figures
published Friday showed
544,000 persons eligible for
unemployment benefits have
been laid off because ~f the
energy crisiS. A Department of
Employment spokesman said
many oU!ers have been put out
of work but are not counted
because they had their own
guaranteed income agreement
with employers and were not
eligible for government
benefits.
The country's fuel stocks

Cleveland this past week to
pick up 3;,000 pounds of steel.
"It's the most exciting thing
I have ever done," she said.
"My uncle told me that I could
never do it. That made me
want to drive all the more."
Her uncle, an executive with
Nick Strimbu Trucking, Inc., of
Sharon, Pa., eventually hired
her.
Miss Payne, who is divorced
and lives in Youngstown with
her two children, said women's
lib had nothmg to do with her
wanUng to drive a truck. She
said she did it because "the pay
lB good and it's fun."
"The men don't worry me
much except that I have to
prove that I can do it," she
said, adding that it takes her
between 50 and 60 hours a week
to earn $300. "Driving a truck
•
NEW Clfl''lCERS *ALLED - New officers of the
Ia really not that dlffll:ult as ,
ion&amp; as you are not afraid of it. GaWpolls Shrine Club were installed Thursday night at the
clubhouse by lnstaDing officer D. A. l}yers, far right. Byers 1s
Once that happens, you better
alto the club's membership chairman. Installed wer.left to
·"(
' get out of the cab."

/'

«

t

have dwindled as a result of the
mmers' ban on overtime work
In a demand for higher pay and
similar actions by electr•c
power workers and train
engmeers who haul coal, when
coupled with Arab oil cutbacks.
The government has had to
impose the three-day work
week m order to save stocks of
energy.
One ray of hope was the
decision Friday by 18,000
electric power engmeers to call
off a two-month old ban on
overtime work . This should
enable the Blectricity General·
ing Board to switch power
across the nallon to where 1t is
most needed
Government controls on the
use of electrtclty, unusually
rruld weather and cuts muse by
domestic consumers have
slowed the rate of depletiOn of
coal stocks at the power
stations.
However, the amount of coal
available at power stations has
been reduced from 16 million
tons on Nov. 24 to 13 million
tons a month later.

i~

fore1gn compames to play
the future. They Said they
made tl1e1r separate viSits to
Caldera, who leaves office
March 11, to dehver New
Year's greetmgs
"The relatwnsh1p between
the companies and the governments IS changmg everywhere
m the world and you can't
expeet that Venezuela will be
an exception," sa1d Dolph, who
went to the presidenbil palace
Fnday mght "It's necessary to
carefully study all alternatives "
'
Speculation about nahonaliza·
lwn before 1983, when the
current long-term ml leases
start to expire, was touched off
by a speech this week by
Enrique TeJera Parts, a former
ambassador to the Umted
States who 1s expected to
assume a h1gh post 10 the
government of Pres•dent-elect
Carlos Andres Perez.
All 12 presidential candidates
10 the Dec. 9 elections favored
natiOnalizing the mdustry
before 19113, when all oil
company facilities revert to the
stale without compensatiOn
w1th the expiration of the
leases The otl compames have
pmately sa1d they favor a
speed-up m order to clarify
their role and to enable them to
plan future investments, which
they have been hesistant to
make
"We acknowledge the need
for changes that Will perm1t the
appropriate invesbnent climate
m the last year's of the 01!
concessions system.

fun thl}Jl typing

and m addition to all th;s ...
monthly and quarterly income!

~

0
0
~V-O_L_8__NO- .-48_..:_____•..._,~: ___S_U_N_D_AY-.--DE_C_E_M--B-ER_3_0_,-~-9-73____________P_A_G_E_1_3• :ll: ~~~~?~T~ :.:~;: f~~:~~7ng' ::a~~fe:::~:~:P:::e': b~ :1~1

16,000 Gallons of fuel oil
spilled off scenic Big Sur

• Compounded Da1ly

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

By Uwted Press lntematloaal
An irate motorist threatened
a service station attendant
w1th vtolence when the gas
pump went dry Saturday
before he got his $3 quota . One
of several thousand drivers
used federal government
"gasohne pnce
watch"
telephones complatned he had
to pay $6 42 for two gallons of
gasoline.
Pollee and government
agents told "horror" stories
of the gasollne shortage as
motorists m some parts of the
country found themselves in
what could be one o( the worst
of 1973's gasless days, w1th the
promtse of worse to come in
1974
Service station operators
were locking up their pumps
and gomg home 10 several East
Coast and Midwest cities as
they used up the last of their
reduced monthly allocations.
!' ? fresh supplies were expected until next Wednesday, the
day after New Year's and the
end of the hobday season.
Traffic on most major high·
ways across the nation was
reported llghter than usual
Saturday, which pollee at·
, tributed to the gasoline
shortage. ServiCe stations in

Rose Bowl fund
not questioned

It's as if some banks were becommg "securities clearing houses."

GAI!IA. MASON AND

75 Locust St.

.

CALL ANSWERED
POMEROY - The Meigs
Branch of the Southeast OhiO
Emergency Medical Service
answered a call to the Syracuse
Nursing Home at I 50 p m
Friday for Nora Cl~tworthy .
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.

SERVING All OF

THE TAX IS PAYABLE AT THE OFFICE
OF MEIGS OOUNTY AUDITOR
-JAMES E. ROUSH 'AT THE

proportwn to the inflationary
growth m the tax duplicate and
are acting unproperly 10 so
domg.
The sUit is not asking for an
increase in tax rrullage, said
Hauck, but only that local local
school districts be penmtted to
operate with the millage voters
origirullly approved.
Hauck said the three groups
will take the matter before the
General Assembly if the high
court does not rule in theu:
favor.

Olanges apparent
in new farm law
GALLIPOLIS - Begmning
w1th 1974 crops, the Gallia
County
Agricultural
Stabilizabon and Conservation
(ASC) committee, which takes
office Jan. I, Will start ad·
mtnlstering the new farm
legislation for local producers.
Comrrutlee members as thiS
new era for agriculture beg10s
are J. Melvin Gilbert, chau:·
man; Uoyd E. Jeffers, vice·
chairman,
and
Ernest
Greenlee, member.
Target prlce programs for
wheat, feed grains, and cotton
were
included ln
the
Agriculture Act of 1973 and will
first apply to 1974 crops. The
legislation sets national farm
policy for 1974 through 1977
crops.
S10ce the target price law
frees farmers to produce
winter restriction in answer to
market demand, 1t IS a turn·
around from prev10us fann
legislation, reported David W.
McKenzie, executive director
of the county ASCS oflice.
The target price legislation
guarantees a mimmwn return
for a producer's normal

rabbits on the move, and we
collected our combined limit of
eight bunmes withm two hours.
The qua1l, already m the
fencerows, cooperated by
breakmg into handy smgles
which could be pomted by my
Brittany and flushed easily by
Barefoot and I. Harold even
managed a double on the covey
flush, not an easy task.
At day's end, we'd seen 19
rabbits, four coveys of bobwhites, and three rlngneck
cockbtrds.
And just as frosting on the
cake, a very high-flying V of
Canada
geese
honked
and called
thetr
way
over the low
!yin~
snow clouds, their wild talk the
perfect amen to the best day of
'Nnting I've ever had

k
h
ac
~l Simon will be tough I
Motorists· begin fighting

from -~

,•,,,.,.. "•'••"•oo•• • ••••••,•.•,• •o"'o"':OX''o'o'o•••••••,-••oo••,.•oo " "
.y.:.···-:.:·:·:·.·······················-:·:·.···········=·:-.·:·:
.·.·:·:·.·.·,·:-:·:·:·:·:·.·:-:.-..:;:.:-:;:.:.:«:-.....:-::::::::::x:::-.::o.:::.::::::::=:::::·:::.=:--.:·:::·:&gt;:::;:::-:::::·:-!!::=-::::::=:·:·:;:::;:.:.:;;::.:-f.::::=:=:::::·::t.!:::·x::·:::-:·:·:·:;:.~«:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:::-:-:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·•:•

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Buckeye Assoctalion of School
Administrators (BASA ), the
Oh1o Boards As.sociatwn and
the Ohm Education Associallon
filed a class action sult with the
Ohio Supreme Court Fnday
seekmg to prohibit county
budget commiSSIOns from reducing tax rates m proportmn
to mcreased property values.
The suit was filed on behaff
of 1~2 school districts in the
counties of Wayne, SUnumt,
Noble, Montgomery, Madison,
Knox, Greene, Fulton, Cler·
mont,
Butler,
Athens,
Ashtabula, and Ashland
A state Supreme Court rulmg
m 1971 called for wliform tax
HIKE DELAYED
assessment of real property,
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
according to BASA ExecutiVe U. S. Postal Service will delay
Director John Hauck, who sa1d scheduled rate 10creases until
the Board of Tax Appeals sub- March 2 because of a Cost of
sequently adopted a rule which Liv10g Council order calting for
set :J; per cent as the umform a 15 per cent reductwn in the
rate in Ohio.
mcrease, accordmg to Post~
A tax rollback in the first master General E. T. Klassen.
year of reapprrusal was called The postage increases, which
for in legiSlation enacted 10 were scheduled to go 10to effect
1972 to comply with equal Jan 5, would ra1se first-class
115$essment practices, Hauck rates from 8 to 10 cenis and
S8ld, but 1! was specifically airmail rates from 11 to 13
stated in the legislation that no cents There also would be
reduction in later years should mcreases 10 aU other postal
be made to tax rates.
rate categories .
"In each year after the re·
appraisal, u said Hauck, uthe
Board of Tax Appeals has ruled
that the coWlty auditor make
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
further adjustments 10 value m
MIDDLEPORT
The
order to keep the taxable value
at :J; per cent of the market Middleport EmergenCY. Squad
answered a call to the Harry
value.
"Acting under thiS rule Roush home at 302 Sycamore
would mean that property St. at 11:42 p m. Friday for
values would be adjusted up or Katie Young who was ill. She
down each year with no effect was taken to the Holzer
on the Ia" rates Jev1ed for Medtcal Center

Smaller but more numerous
U111ted l'rt.'SS lnterJWlfint.al
Tl PP CITY, Ohio - Wf both qua•! tracks,marked all fence·
agreed tt&lt;~t 1l had been U1e rows, the btrds having taken
.fmcsl day of Ohio small game refuge from the cold snap by
huntmg we'd had m several duckmg under 1ce-Jaden rose
hedges
years
Harold Barefoot, ca noe · But most plentiful were the
manufa cturer, and I hunt cottontails They were literally
together perhaps a dozen Urnes everywhere, scooting from be·
each season. but neither could neath our feet, zippmg from
remember any better huntmg under weed bunches, sneaking
than we had 10 the snow away through th10 cover along
a rural roadway.
recently.
There was no need to await
Two mches of powdery snow
lay on the 4().acre unp1cked the circled return of just one
soybean fteld, and tracks were rabbit ahead of my oldest
beagle, Jay. We merely put the
everywhere.
Three
wild
rooster bound behind one cottontail,
rmgnecks, dutifully followed then took up positions
-by their attendant hens, had alongside openings in the
drawn thetr fragile X's m cover.
The beagle's yowling kept
nearly every whitened furrow .

our~?

flve" on man~made waves from wave
machines m lakes . Surfers are also domg
the1r thmg on large waves formed below
maJOr dams.
Snowmobilers are substituting sand
dWles for snow and drag racmg on grass
has been popular several years. There IS
a proposal to build rollerskatrng paths
1
similar to bicycle paths .
You can also rent a submarine on
the Gulf of Mexico fully equipped with
freeze dried foods.
While water canoeing and kayaking
are now well orgamzed w1th National
Champwnshlp races every year. Tins
was also an event at the last swruner
Olympics.
Camp10g by reservation 100vated by
the State Park System of Califorma 10
1968, Will ex~and next year The u. s.

school purposes," Hauck said .
County aud1tors are not oper·
ating under the Board of Tax
Appeals rule and w1thm the
legislahve mtent, S3ld Hauck,
but mstead are sendmg abstracts of property values in
their counties to the state With·
out adjusting them to the 3; per
cent level.
Hauck said the Board of Tax
Appeals IS then ordering the
county aud1tor to revise his
abstract, and the auditor m
turn is reeommendmg the bud·
get commission reduce tax
rates in proportion to the mcrease m property value.

Small game hunting was excellent

~:::f:·:·~=::;:;:,.;';:;::::::::::::::::::~~-::::::x::~::::::::~0.!!:•:-:-:·:·:-:·:;:;:::·:;:.:-:·!·!·!;:::.;::;:;~~

UNIT CALLED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Emergency Squad was called
to East Main St. at 10· 15 p.m.
Friday for Jack Braley who
had suffered a hand laceration.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treat·
ment. At 1:53 p.m. Friday the
sqWld went to Rock St for John
Massie. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Ho~pital
where he was admitted

I

'

right. S. H Gardner, secretary-treasurer; Norman Stewart
vice president and Charles M. Neal, pres1dent. Neal succeed~
C1arence Thompson. The new officers wtll assume duties on
J'\n. 1.
If
I
'I

By United Press International
Egyptian missiles shot down
an lsraeh reconnaissance
plane over the tense Suez front
Saturday.
An Israeli military spokesman accused Cairo of formentmg an "eve of war" atmosphere in an effort to
pressure concessions at the
Geneva talks and unpose a
stram on the Israeli economy.
As the Israeli charge was
rured, Egyptian off1mals sa1d
that high tension continues on
the front Jines as a result of
Egypt •s policy of "steady
harassment" and "attrition of
the enemy."
A U.N. spokesman m Cairo
reported 40 shooting incidents
between Egyptian and Israeli
forces and ftve cases of 311'
activity in violation of the
cease-fire on Thursday.
An Egyptian military communique Saturday said that
''an enemy plane attempted a
reconnaissance flight over our
troops stationed in the southern
sector of the front. Our air
defense systems engaged the
enemy plane and destroyed it."
The plane ''was seen falling
in flames east of Lake Tunsah," just south of the c1ty of
Ismaiha, and the wreckage is
now m Egyptian hands, the
commW11que said.

The Israeli military command confirmed that Egyptian
surface-to-air missiles shot
down one of its urunanned spy·
planes Saturday . The plane,
said to have been radiocontrolled, was over Israeliheld ground when 1t was hit by
a missile launched from Egyptian territory, according to a
spokesman.
Egypt sa1d Friday it had shot
down an Israeli p!ane- 1denti·
lied by the authoritative news·
paper Al Ahram as a Phantom
--flying m a formation Qver the
canal's southern sector, but
Israel,
while
admitting
missiles were f1red, dented any
losses.
Egyptian Foreign Minister
Ismail Fahmi Saturday briefed
President Anwar Sadat on the
opening round of the Arab-Israeli peace conference in
Geneva.
The sources sa1d Fahm1
considers that Egypt has won
victories there by reserving a
seat for Syrta should 1t decide
to attend and achievmg a start
m troop disengagement talks .
The talks between Egypt and
Israel on separation of their
forces along the canal were
recessed Friday until next
Wednesday, following Israel's
national elections. Some progress has been reported.

Gift stocks to
avoid taxation
WASHINGTON (UP!) Rep. Henry S. Reuss sa1d
Saturday the Internal Revenue
Service had "absolved"
President Nixon's re-election
comnuttee of taxes due on $18
million in stock contributions.
An IRS decision that the
committee must pay taxes only
on prohts from stock sold after
Oet. 3, 1972, will mean that only
about $3 4 million of the
estimated $18 million to $20
rrullion in stock contr1bullons is
taxable, Reuss said.
Reuss said precise figures
were not available because the
orlgirull purchase price of the
stock given by numerous
contributors is not recorded.
But he sa1d the profit from the
stock sale ''is in the millions."
The Wisconsin Democrat
quoted a General AccounUng
Office report on stock contrlbu·
tion.s prepared at his request ~
saymg:
"Since 1965, the federal

government
has
held
repeatedly that poh\lcal
committees, like ordinary
citizens, must pay taxes on
capital gain income. Nevertheless Republican fund
raisers throughout
1972
soU\lcted contributions of
upprec1ated stock with Ule
promises that such gifts would
oot be subject to cap1tal gams
taxes ."
Reuss said the GAO report
showed "the IRS sunply absolved the (Nixon) conumttee
of taxes due on over $18 million
of stock Clllltributions."
The report concluded that
the IRS ruling that taxes be
paid only on stock sold during
the last month of the llBmpaign
"violates the spirit of the tax
code, previous IRS rulings, and
the good faith of candidates
and committee who have paid
income lax on capital gains for
years." \.
il
I

�•

'

•
12 - The Sunday Ttmes -Sentmel,Sunday, Dec. 30,1973

=-=·=!»:.::·::::::::::;:::::::=:=:::=::;·;.;:-;:;·.:;;.:::::·:·:::~:-:·:::-::::::::::::::::=:=:.-::;:;.:·:::-;=:~:::~::::;::;:::.:;:::.:-::::::::x=:::-t,::-..:::::o:;ox&amp;&lt;-:::::"«-:::::::w-.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::=:::::::=:=:·:·:=:·:·:.:::.;:::•:;:.»:::::::;s:o:=:::::::=:=:=x:~x;:=:=:

I Your
~~

~:::

:-:
~~
···
¥;:.

~~

By T. Allan Wolter
District Rangtr
IRONTON
N0 d bt
1 th
ou many 0
e
Olnsbnas presents receavc.,~ th1s vear
Mll enable the recipient to ~~rtic 1 pa'tc m

sadelig~t

past £1ve years. An tnterestmg

spent annually for equipm ent and year.
·:::
clothmg.
Begmning Februarv 1, 1974, Oh1o will .'·.'..'·
'
Bicycling , wtth 37 m1lhon rtders last imtiate an experimental campmg by ·;::

~~athr • ~a1 smlo11ta11.0k0e apebopac1ke see0a1t0tyo1nbog athtinagt ~~d7eat~~ s::~:::~~g ~pem~:t%:0Y ;.',~ :,.

:;~

t

door;i:~ t!:i~-~~~~~ ~~g:e::t hme for ~a: Je~;~;ed o;~r!:e~~ :t~rc;;~:~r~~~

~x

fg

reflectmg on wha t surpn ses the new year
« has m store for us. let's take a qut ck peek
~ at what's happemng on the outdoor
~ recreatiOn scene.
~
Everyone knows there is a "boom"
~
t
h J
La
1
·•· m recrea wn ve JC es
st yea r 1.5
'·~
.. bilhon were spent on trailers , cam pers
§: and motorhomes Over 4 mtlhon are now
·..:

Forest Servacc and National Park Ser- ~::

to thts recreahon IS that $300 m1llion 15 vace tested prototypes syste ms this past ~~

some form of outd oor recreation A pa1r
of ski s, a new gun. a b1cyde. bmocu1ars,
sleeptng bags, tents, a mml-bike and a
surfboard all reqwre the great Out of

"*~~

I

Wayne National FOrest

sport
make reservations for any of 12 state.;::
Skin and scuba d1vmg has shown a parks at Sears stores 10 most large Ohio ~~:
te d
th
c1t1es:
.:;:
8
Ohto also has a novel program for
d1vers.
campers caiJed Rent-a-Tent. Novice and
Huntmg IS one of the few outdoor expert ahke may rent campmg eqUIP· t:!
sports that has remamed relatively ment at selected campgrounds. This ~~
stable Over the pasllO years the number program has been very successful and :~
of hunters has been fa~rly constant at Will probably be expanded next year to ~i
about 14 million hunters a year.
mclude more campgrounds.
~.:·.·
Summer homes are tncreasl' ng . fn
The U.S. population IS rapidly ur- ~.:~
~~
1967, 2. 7 pel. of all households had two banizing; 74 pet. of our population live In '!l
h
Tod
f Jl urban areas An even more startling{~.··
0
a
a
f1gure is that a whoppmg 95 pet. of
New forms of traditional types of population h ves within commutmg ~;
recreatton are developmg. AmerlCans d1stance of one o£ 250 metropohtan ~~
seem to have a never ending appetite for centers Not surprisingly then, 76 pet of ~l

~;

i

~~ ~e~l~e~~ a~:~a~~;:u~~~onn ~~ 7 ~~~ h~:~~olds o!~· ~~orfct~~~~
~:;

greater than m 1961. The fuel shortage
l.l~.~ and prtces will no doubt put qulte a dent
...• m the use of these notor~ous gas hogs but

[.~ ~:.~~peal tor thiS type of veh•cle •s st•ll :;f;r~w,:n!,:~~:r:~

..r.r_..

Approximately 1.2 rmlhon vehtcles ·
~1~ are now used exclusively for off road
.,. travel ( mmi bJkes, trail scooters,
g:; A.T V.'s, snowmobiles etc .). Last year
~~ 587,000 snowmobiles were sold, an in.
=
.•:.:: crease of almost so ttmes over the past lO
··· years.
',f:~:
Another change we can expect to
contmue is the prolLferation of private
···· campgroWlds. Fifty-s 1x separate compan1es are now mvolved in commercial
campgrounds . Large firms such as KOA,
Humble Oil Co , Ramada Inns, Hobday
Inns and Stucky's are getting In on th•s
Lucrative market. Many of these campgrounds are auned at the traveling pubhc
although some are developing areas for
extended camping
Skimg 15 growmg by leaps and bounds
\l\ With 500,000 new skiers every year the
.

.:'::

~~!:~~ ~~:;:t .,~;:ice

campers come

Perhaps the most fantasllc :~~
development for the camper was an·;~
nounced recenUy b.y Hi..r1se CampSJtes,~
Inc. They have plans to construct a 26- ;;.
story campgrotmd in downtown New(:~
Orleans Thls corporation mamtains that~~
"people don 't want the woodsy b!t now;\:?
- th ey-want to camp m comfort near the;;~;
c1ty." Thetr planned factlity wtll have~::
eight lower stories of parking and 12~~:
upper floors carpeted wtth artificial turf~;;
and equipped with ullhty hookups.
~~
There, if you choose, you can watch:;:;
the Mardi Gras from your picmc table 20 !:!:
stones up 1 Bring your own chipmunks:~;~
and fresh atr.
::::
To each h1s own I suppose. Wilh the!~!!
gas shortage, they may have something.;:;:
Now about that new alpme fishing;~;·
lake. You take the elevator to 31st floor ...

r

0•0

School tax rate cuts attacked
r

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

"Thus, most school districts
reawralSed m 1972 are being
demed the benefit of mflationary growth 10 the tax
duplicate," SB.Id Hauck. "If
th1s practice continues, the
school distr~cts will not be able
to take advantage of normal
growth m the value of the
property duplicate other than
growth due to new con·
strucUon "
Hauck said county budget
conunissions do not have the '
authority to reduce tax rates m

OOURTHOUSE IN POMEROY

production on his allotted
acres, but offers neither incentives nor restrictions on
additional acreage he added.
"The pull of the marketplace
Will determine crop acreages,"
the farm program official said.
Emphasizmg that wheat,
feed grains (corn, grain
sorghum, barley) and cotton
lire the only crops now under
target price Jegislabon,
McKenzie said that con·
siderable discussion IS bemg
heard around the country
about target prtces for some
commodities now under
restrictive programs, such as
peanuts, rtce, extra-long-staple
cotton, and sugar.
"Whenever possibilities for
new farm programs are under
heavy discussion, local ASC
committees and employees get
a Jot of questions We don't
have answers for a lot of them,
because our job is to ad·
rrunister the programs that are
on the books now." We can
answer questions about the
program we have i we can't
speculate about possible future
programs," McKeOZJe said.

Hl/'lf /IIJII 11M
Carpets last longer and stay brighter and
fresher when cleaned, sanitized, deodorized
and anti-resoiled in your own home by
Kieslings.

CARPET CARE SALE OFFER
Present this ad when paying and receive 25
Pet. off until Jan. 30, 1974. For a free estimate
mea sure your carpets then call 446-4408 in
Gallipoli~. Call day or night.

NEWCOMER to the world
scene, Shell&lt;b Ahmed Sekl
Yamanl Is also one of Its
most powerful ligures. Saudi
Arabia's oU minister, he is a
familiar llgure In western
capitals pursuing guiding the
Arabs' embargo policies.

It's become almost commonplace for bank headl;nes to scream
about rates, yields, term certificates w;th fixed maturities.

Securities and bank savmgs accounts are vastly different f;nancial Instruments. And choosing the securities route can be full of
'
pitfalls for the unwary.

DJo

.12°/o

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
spokesman for the Internal
Revenue ServiCe Saturday de·
nied the IRS was investigating
a special Rose Bowl expense
fund for asSistant football
coaches at Oh1o State Umver·
sity.
Frank M. Carroll, acting
director of the C10cinnati IRS
distnct, dismiSSed pubhshed
reports of !he incident.
We're not looking mto it and
if we were we wouldn't have
announced it 10 • the first
place," said CarrolL
'
Ernest W. Leggett Jr.,
executive director and treasurer of the Umversity's office of
fmances, also satd he knew
oothing of any IRS IOvestigation .
''U the IRS was interested in
10vestigat10g the fund it would

I

We prefer the way we do thmgs at Ohio Valley Bank. Taking the
time to g1ve calm, constructive, person-to-person advice on current fmancial developments-and their impact on your personal
savmgs program.

PASSBOOK SAVINGS

1-V~AR CERTIFICATE

0/o

41

ANNUAL
RATE

ANNUAL
YIELD

• Payable Quarterly
• Mm1mum $1 ,000 00

ANNUAL
RATE

%0/o

ANNUAL
RATE

• Payable Quarterly
• M1mmum $1 ,000 00

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE

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2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

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0

MONTEREY, Calif. (UPI)
- A Navy cargo ship and a
Liberian freighter collided
Saturday, cr1pp!mg the Navy
vessel and spllling 16,000
gallons of fuel oll 11 miles off
the beaches of scemc Big Sur.
No injuries were reported
among the 5tJ.rnan civitian
crew aboard the Navy's
Pr1vate Joseph F. Merrill, or
the civilian freighter Pearl
Venture.
The Navy ship's fuel tanks
were ruptured in the collision
off Cape San Martm, 160 miles
south of San Francisco. It
created what the Coast Guard
called a "medium size" splll.
A cutter With spill cleanup
equipment was sent to the
scene to prevent the oil from
washing in on Central Califor·
nia 's scentc beaches.
A spokesman said the spill

ANNUAL
RATE

• Payable Quarterly
• M1mmum $1 ,000 00

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE

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certamly have nolllled us and
it would have started here,"
said Leggett
A spokesman for OSU,
contacted 10 Pasadena, Calif.,
S3ld oo action would be taken
until after the Rose Bowl-if
then.
"When all of us get home
we'll reach some kmd of
deciston, '' srud the spokesman.
"The administratton Will make
a dec!Slon one way or another
whether to put a stop to
it or not." .
The fund mvolved a reported
400 solicitation letters mailed
recently which brought 1n
nearly $7,000 to be used as
bonuses to pay expenses for the
assistant foothall coathes and
their families going to the Rose
Bowl
The letter was s1gned
1
' WOOdy.''

ANNUAL
RATE

• Payable Quarterly
• M1mmum $1.000 00

presented no serious threat to
the beaches because of its
distance offshore and the calm
seas which improved chances
of containmg the oil and
"sweeping" it off the water
The Coast Guard rushed
rescue craft to the scene to
stand by the -!SMoot Navy ship,
which was "dead in the water"
With two bolds flooded.
Pumps were holding their
own in an effort to prevent the
Private Merrill from sinkmg,
but rescue craft were ready to
take the crew off if the ship
could not be saved.
The Pearl Venture suffered
damage to her bow. The
captain reported the ship was
10 no danger and was continuing its voyage to Los Angeles.
The collision happened about
3:30 a.m. 50 miles south of
Monterey. Seas were catm at

Most exciting ever

10-Gear rig more

In another case a drJver lined
up w1th other motorists outs1de
a Staten Island , N.Y .. filhng
station for an bour to buy h1s $3
quota of gas. When he got to the
front, the pump ran out out
after he received only $1.84
worth.

paris of the South, Southwest
and West Coast appeared ID be
open as usual, but traffic w&amp;
much hghter.
Some of the most blZarre
tales came from New York
City. Three young gunmen
hiJacked a truck carrymg 3,000
gallons of gasoline, police said.
One man told state officials,
who set up spectal "boUrnes"
along with federal government
agents to receive complamis of
price gouging, that he had to
pay $6.42 for two gallons of gas
at a Manhattan service stat1on.
Another sa1d his car's gas tank
was topped off with water, and
he was sllll thar~ed

Pollee s a1d the serv1ce
station wouldn't giVe him gas
from another pump unless he
went back to the end of the lme,
so he left. He returned a few
mmutes later and threatened
the attendant w1th a gun, but
left without gettmg any more.
In Chicago, attendants at one
string of stations were reported

Unh

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to have taped the meter to

block out the ptlce, charged $1
a gallon and pocketed the
difference-more than 50 cents
a gallon .
Actmg Attorney General
Robert H Bork ordered U S
attorneys across the country to
go to the homes of JUdges 1!
necessary to get court
restrammg orders agatnst
se rv1 ce stations goug10g
motorists.
The Internal Revenue , Ser·
vtce set up pnce watch complamt l'enters. SerVIce stations
chargmg more than allowed
tmder federal pnce ceLlings are
ordered to rollback pnccs and

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

.

Federal law and regulat1on proh1b1t the payment ol a t1me deposit
pnor to matunty unless three months of the mterest thereon 1S
torfe1ted and 1nterest on the amount Withdrawn IS reduced to the
passbook rate

MEIGS OOUNTIES
PHONE 446-4408

Kieslings Carpet &amp;
Furniture Cleaning Service
Gallipolis, Ohio
I

CT EVELAND (UP!) -Mfn,
meet Theresa Payne. She's a
woman of steel.
As a secretary, the shapely
22-year old was fed up With the
Hack from her boss and the
clack from her typewriter.
Then nearly a year ago her
brother put her behind the
wheel of his tractor-trailer.
She
aband_oned
her
typewriter for a 4o-foot, 29,tJOO.
pound rig and her llfe-style
hasn't been the same since.
"It's the most exclUng thing
I have ever clone," said the sfoot-10, lilfliiounder who says
the toughest thing about
dr1ving a rig is tying down the
load. "A lot of the men watch
me to see if I can do lt and
that's when I do it the best."
Althoush she has known how
to drive a 10-tlear rig for nearly
a year, she baa onlY worked
full-time at It for tWo months.
Sle ]JBS the first woman sleelhaulllr to artilve at the ~rt of

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face a $2,500 fine One 01!
company cut orr suppltes to a
sta t1on lha l charged 99.9 cents
a gallon at Chnstmas.

on .rationing rules

In Balt•more, rRS off•c•al
Glona Tanski estimated that
they recewed more than 140
calls 1n the ftrst three hours of
th e New Year's holiday week·
end
Robert Jacobs. an offtcta! of
the 6,000-member gasoline
dea1ers assoctallons m lllinms
and Indiana, smd he "wouldn 't
be supnsed " 1! 99 per cent of
slaliohS closed m the Chicago
area from Saturday mght until
Wertnesday

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whatever price they can

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Simon announced Friday that the standby rationing
.:',:,:. :;
: plan could take effect by March I if needed. He also an· ·•·•
.. nounccd an allocation plan whtch would give llllmg stations

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• By WlWAM E . CLAYTON
WASHINGTON tUPI)- A federal energy official said
Saturday the government anticipates granting very few
exemptions U.gasohne ratJoning is imposed.
•..
Doctors,·ctergymen - even congressmen -will have
::; to buy coupons from other drivers if they cannot live within
i:: lhetr ration, the official, John Hill, told UPI.
HtH, an assistant 1(! presidential energy adviser
:..
.
William E. Sunon said the key to avoiding the black
·_:!.: markets and administrative !roubles that plagued gasoline
rationing in World War II is the negotlabillly of coupons.
Motorists who don't need all lhey get will be able to sell

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effect, ::::

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The question of exemptions and exceptions should be ·,'.:.,: ,
largely settled by the "white market" system under which

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reduce the black market, and avoid having the govenunent

By RICHARD LERNER
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
President N1xon,
(UPI) spending a quiet weekend at
home, brought in top aides
Saturday to review some of the
legtslatwn on h1s desk and
Signed five of the 4tJ.odd bills
awaitmg acbon.
The most s1gniftcant bill
Nixon Signed Saturday w11l g1ve
the "prepaid" medtcal care
movement a major tift. It
authorized $325 million m
federal atd for expansiOn and
testing of health maintenance
organizatmns (HMO's) over a
five-year period.
"The establishment of HMO's
will allow people to select for
themselves e1ther a prepaid
system for obtammg health
services or the more tradittonaJ
approach which has served the
Amer~can people so well over
the years," Nixon said m a
statement
Among the other legiSlation
Signed by NIXon was a bill
authonzing an additional $600
million 10 federal funds for
reimbursements to states for
costs of bUilding sewage treat"1ent plants.
N1xon spent part of the day
meeting w1th Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler and Alexand-

cr M. Ha1g, the While House
ch1ef of staff. A presidential
spokesman said the meet10gs
were devoted to study of other
key bills wh1ch Congress passed
before ad1ourn10g last week.
Topprng the list of leglSlahon
still awatting action are measures to mcrease Social Seeur1ty
benefits by 11 per cent, to
provide appropnatwns of $5.8
b!Uion for fore1gn a1d and $73.7
billion for defense, and to
consolidate seven fmanctally
ailmg northeastern railroads.
A While House spokesman
sa1d Nixon also conferred by
telephone w1th Secretary of
State Henry A. Kissinger m
Washington Reporters were
giVen no clue to the subJects
discussed

In another phone call diS·
closed Saturday, a presidential
spokesman said Nixon had
contacted Pes1dent Johnson 's
Wtdow on Fnday to tell her that
he had just Signed a bill
creatmg a memortal grove of
trees 10 the Lady B1rd Johnson
Park along the Potomac R1ver
Durmg his stay m Cahforma,
Ntxon also planned to work on
the State of the Umon address
wh1ch he w11l send to Congress
next month and the Wh1te
House sa1d speechwrtter Ray
Pnce was m San Clemente.
Three other b1lls s1gned
Saturday by Nixon authomed:
- Adjustment of the Central
Intelligence Agency's retirement system to conform w1th
protection g1ven other govern·

BARBER KILLED
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
bullet-riddled body of a harher
shop owner was found
Saturday in the city's flats area
stuffed inside the trWlk of h1s
1974 blood-spattered car.
Phillip McMahon, 43, of
Parma, had been shot four
times m the head and twice in
the nght hand with a small
caliber revolver, homicide
detectives said. He had apparently fought With his killer
tnslde the auto because the
front seat was covered with
blood, the interior of the car
was dented and plastic molding
had been ripped away.

'

ment employes agamst rapid
mcreases m the cost of hvmg
- Broadened travel and transportatiOn allowances for rmhtary
se rviCemen
g1ven
consecutive ove rseas assignments.
- Nam1ng of a new U.S
courthou se m New Orleans for
forme1· Rep. Hale Boggs, D-La,
who was ktlled m an Alaskan
plane crash a year ago
N1xon also 1ssued an executive order to permit mmates of
state pnsons to work on
"proJecis contracted by the
federal government The order
replaced one 1ssued m 1905 by
then President Theodore Roose·
velt, wh1ch proh1b1ted such
employment for persons lmpnsoned m nonfederal facthtles.

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"In World War D, you had to have a large ad· :::
l~[ ministrative force just deciding special appeals and such.''
Hill said " We just really want to take care of health
: \.::.,, matters and emergencies."
There may be some exemptions or higher allotments of
~~~j ~::r.ons for health or emergency reasons, but not many, he •.•

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"Foreign diplomats will probably get art extra allot·
ment 9f coupons. They might not speak English well, and
car pooling may be difficult, so theirs would be a special
burden," Hill said.
Although the rationing plan envisions giving coupons
only to licensed drivers !Sand over, Hlllsald there would be
exemptions on a case-by-ease basis for younger teenagers
who are their family's major breadwinners "or have jobs
critical to their support."
"We wiU be very severe there," he said. There are
many more youngsters whose driving is mostly for fun or to
school. They could buy coupons from buddies, he said .
Special exemptions might also go to jurors, par·
ticularly in rural areas, or rehabJUtation patients who have
to get to therapy sessions.
Taxi drivers who own their own cars and buy gasoline
at retail will probably get a higher allotment, as wiU in·
dependent delivery men and others whose driving is a
living, he said.

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Missiles
get
'tFuture uncertain II
srae1·I plane
CARACAS (UP!) - Early
natiOnalization of foreign oil
compaoies was the subject of
speculation Saturday followmg
visits to President &amp;lfael
Caldera by the heads of
Exxon's and Shell's Venezuelan

subs1d1anes.
Both Robert Dolph, preSident
of Exxon 's Creole Petroleum
Copr., and Kenneth Wetherell,
president of Shell de Venezuela,
told newsmen they were sure
there would be a role for the

·British idle may
hit million soon

the tune and there was no
IJilillediate explanation of how
the accident occurred.
The Private Merrill was en
route from Point Hueneme m
SOuthern Callforma to Sao
Francisco with an unspecified
cargo.

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\\j :i~lk::!~~~ose distinctions between professional classes," :~::

Nixon relaxing in west

By CHARLES PEARSON
LONDON (UP!) - Britain's
unemployment rolls may rtse
to one million persons by
Monday -the start of the
emergency three-day work
week-as a result of layoffs
caused by fuel shortages, in·
dustry sources said Saturday.
The economic crists the
goverrunent has described as
the country's gravest smce
World War II showed no signs
of easing as leaders of Britain's
260,000 coal miners postponed
further talks on their overtime
ban until next Wednesday.
Government figures
published Friday showed
544,000 persons eligible for
unemployment benefits have
been laid off because ~f the
energy crisiS. A Department of
Employment spokesman said
many oU!ers have been put out
of work but are not counted
because they had their own
guaranteed income agreement
with employers and were not
eligible for government
benefits.
The country's fuel stocks

Cleveland this past week to
pick up 3;,000 pounds of steel.
"It's the most exciting thing
I have ever done," she said.
"My uncle told me that I could
never do it. That made me
want to drive all the more."
Her uncle, an executive with
Nick Strimbu Trucking, Inc., of
Sharon, Pa., eventually hired
her.
Miss Payne, who is divorced
and lives in Youngstown with
her two children, said women's
lib had nothmg to do with her
wanUng to drive a truck. She
said she did it because "the pay
lB good and it's fun."
"The men don't worry me
much except that I have to
prove that I can do it," she
said, adding that it takes her
between 50 and 60 hours a week
to earn $300. "Driving a truck
•
NEW Clfl''lCERS *ALLED - New officers of the
Ia really not that dlffll:ult as ,
ion&amp; as you are not afraid of it. GaWpolls Shrine Club were installed Thursday night at the
clubhouse by lnstaDing officer D. A. l}yers, far right. Byers 1s
Once that happens, you better
alto the club's membership chairman. Installed wer.left to
·"(
' get out of the cab."

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have dwindled as a result of the
mmers' ban on overtime work
In a demand for higher pay and
similar actions by electr•c
power workers and train
engmeers who haul coal, when
coupled with Arab oil cutbacks.
The government has had to
impose the three-day work
week m order to save stocks of
energy.
One ray of hope was the
decision Friday by 18,000
electric power engmeers to call
off a two-month old ban on
overtime work . This should
enable the Blectricity General·
ing Board to switch power
across the nallon to where 1t is
most needed
Government controls on the
use of electrtclty, unusually
rruld weather and cuts muse by
domestic consumers have
slowed the rate of depletiOn of
coal stocks at the power
stations.
However, the amount of coal
available at power stations has
been reduced from 16 million
tons on Nov. 24 to 13 million
tons a month later.

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fore1gn compames to play
the future. They Said they
made tl1e1r separate viSits to
Caldera, who leaves office
March 11, to dehver New
Year's greetmgs
"The relatwnsh1p between
the companies and the governments IS changmg everywhere
m the world and you can't
expeet that Venezuela will be
an exception," sa1d Dolph, who
went to the presidenbil palace
Fnday mght "It's necessary to
carefully study all alternatives "
'
Speculation about nahonaliza·
lwn before 1983, when the
current long-term ml leases
start to expire, was touched off
by a speech this week by
Enrique TeJera Parts, a former
ambassador to the Umted
States who 1s expected to
assume a h1gh post 10 the
government of Pres•dent-elect
Carlos Andres Perez.
All 12 presidential candidates
10 the Dec. 9 elections favored
natiOnalizing the mdustry
before 19113, when all oil
company facilities revert to the
stale without compensatiOn
w1th the expiration of the
leases The otl compames have
pmately sa1d they favor a
speed-up m order to clarify
their role and to enable them to
plan future investments, which
they have been hesistant to
make
"We acknowledge the need
for changes that Will perm1t the
appropriate invesbnent climate
m the last year's of the 01!
concessions system.

fun thl}Jl typing

and m addition to all th;s ...
monthly and quarterly income!

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~V-O_L_8__NO- .-48_..:_____•..._,~: ___S_U_N_D_AY-.--DE_C_E_M--B-ER_3_0_,-~-9-73____________P_A_G_E_1_3• :ll: ~~~~?~T~ :.:~;: f~~:~~7ng' ::a~~fe:::~:~:P:::e': b~ :1~1

16,000 Gallons of fuel oil
spilled off scenic Big Sur

• Compounded Da1ly

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

By Uwted Press lntematloaal
An irate motorist threatened
a service station attendant
w1th vtolence when the gas
pump went dry Saturday
before he got his $3 quota . One
of several thousand drivers
used federal government
"gasohne pnce
watch"
telephones complatned he had
to pay $6 42 for two gallons of
gasoline.
Pollee and government
agents told "horror" stories
of the gasollne shortage as
motorists m some parts of the
country found themselves in
what could be one o( the worst
of 1973's gasless days, w1th the
promtse of worse to come in
1974
Service station operators
were locking up their pumps
and gomg home 10 several East
Coast and Midwest cities as
they used up the last of their
reduced monthly allocations.
!' ? fresh supplies were expected until next Wednesday, the
day after New Year's and the
end of the hobday season.
Traffic on most major high·
ways across the nation was
reported llghter than usual
Saturday, which pollee at·
, tributed to the gasoline
shortage. ServiCe stations in

Rose Bowl fund
not questioned

It's as if some banks were becommg "securities clearing houses."

GAI!IA. MASON AND

75 Locust St.

.

CALL ANSWERED
POMEROY - The Meigs
Branch of the Southeast OhiO
Emergency Medical Service
answered a call to the Syracuse
Nursing Home at I 50 p m
Friday for Nora Cl~tworthy .
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.

SERVING All OF

THE TAX IS PAYABLE AT THE OFFICE
OF MEIGS OOUNTY AUDITOR
-JAMES E. ROUSH 'AT THE

proportwn to the inflationary
growth m the tax duplicate and
are acting unproperly 10 so
domg.
The sUit is not asking for an
increase in tax rrullage, said
Hauck, but only that local local
school districts be penmtted to
operate with the millage voters
origirullly approved.
Hauck said the three groups
will take the matter before the
General Assembly if the high
court does not rule in theu:
favor.

Olanges apparent
in new farm law
GALLIPOLIS - Begmning
w1th 1974 crops, the Gallia
County
Agricultural
Stabilizabon and Conservation
(ASC) committee, which takes
office Jan. I, Will start ad·
mtnlstering the new farm
legislation for local producers.
Comrrutlee members as thiS
new era for agriculture beg10s
are J. Melvin Gilbert, chau:·
man; Uoyd E. Jeffers, vice·
chairman,
and
Ernest
Greenlee, member.
Target prlce programs for
wheat, feed grains, and cotton
were
included ln
the
Agriculture Act of 1973 and will
first apply to 1974 crops. The
legislation sets national farm
policy for 1974 through 1977
crops.
S10ce the target price law
frees farmers to produce
winter restriction in answer to
market demand, 1t IS a turn·
around from prev10us fann
legislation, reported David W.
McKenzie, executive director
of the county ASCS oflice.
The target price legislation
guarantees a mimmwn return
for a producer's normal

rabbits on the move, and we
collected our combined limit of
eight bunmes withm two hours.
The qua1l, already m the
fencerows, cooperated by
breakmg into handy smgles
which could be pomted by my
Brittany and flushed easily by
Barefoot and I. Harold even
managed a double on the covey
flush, not an easy task.
At day's end, we'd seen 19
rabbits, four coveys of bobwhites, and three rlngneck
cockbtrds.
And just as frosting on the
cake, a very high-flying V of
Canada
geese
honked
and called
thetr
way
over the low
!yin~
snow clouds, their wild talk the
perfect amen to the best day of
'Nnting I've ever had

k
h
ac
~l Simon will be tough I
Motorists· begin fighting

from -~

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COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Buckeye Assoctalion of School
Administrators (BASA ), the
Oh1o Boards As.sociatwn and
the Ohm Education Associallon
filed a class action sult with the
Ohio Supreme Court Fnday
seekmg to prohibit county
budget commiSSIOns from reducing tax rates m proportmn
to mcreased property values.
The suit was filed on behaff
of 1~2 school districts in the
counties of Wayne, SUnumt,
Noble, Montgomery, Madison,
Knox, Greene, Fulton, Cler·
mont,
Butler,
Athens,
Ashtabula, and Ashland
A state Supreme Court rulmg
m 1971 called for wliform tax
HIKE DELAYED
assessment of real property,
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
according to BASA ExecutiVe U. S. Postal Service will delay
Director John Hauck, who sa1d scheduled rate 10creases until
the Board of Tax Appeals sub- March 2 because of a Cost of
sequently adopted a rule which Liv10g Council order calting for
set :J; per cent as the umform a 15 per cent reductwn in the
rate in Ohio.
mcrease, accordmg to Post~
A tax rollback in the first master General E. T. Klassen.
year of reapprrusal was called The postage increases, which
for in legiSlation enacted 10 were scheduled to go 10to effect
1972 to comply with equal Jan 5, would ra1se first-class
115$essment practices, Hauck rates from 8 to 10 cenis and
S8ld, but 1! was specifically airmail rates from 11 to 13
stated in the legislation that no cents There also would be
reduction in later years should mcreases 10 aU other postal
be made to tax rates.
rate categories .
"In each year after the re·
appraisal, u said Hauck, uthe
Board of Tax Appeals has ruled
that the coWlty auditor make
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
further adjustments 10 value m
MIDDLEPORT
The
order to keep the taxable value
at :J; per cent of the market Middleport EmergenCY. Squad
answered a call to the Harry
value.
"Acting under thiS rule Roush home at 302 Sycamore
would mean that property St. at 11:42 p m. Friday for
values would be adjusted up or Katie Young who was ill. She
down each year with no effect was taken to the Holzer
on the Ia" rates Jev1ed for Medtcal Center

Smaller but more numerous
U111ted l'rt.'SS lnterJWlfint.al
Tl PP CITY, Ohio - Wf both qua•! tracks,marked all fence·
agreed tt&lt;~t 1l had been U1e rows, the btrds having taken
.fmcsl day of Ohio small game refuge from the cold snap by
huntmg we'd had m several duckmg under 1ce-Jaden rose
hedges
years
Harold Barefoot, ca noe · But most plentiful were the
manufa cturer, and I hunt cottontails They were literally
together perhaps a dozen Urnes everywhere, scooting from be·
each season. but neither could neath our feet, zippmg from
remember any better huntmg under weed bunches, sneaking
than we had 10 the snow away through th10 cover along
a rural roadway.
recently.
There was no need to await
Two mches of powdery snow
lay on the 4().acre unp1cked the circled return of just one
soybean fteld, and tracks were rabbit ahead of my oldest
beagle, Jay. We merely put the
everywhere.
Three
wild
rooster bound behind one cottontail,
rmgnecks, dutifully followed then took up positions
-by their attendant hens, had alongside openings in the
drawn thetr fragile X's m cover.
The beagle's yowling kept
nearly every whitened furrow .

our~?

flve" on man~made waves from wave
machines m lakes . Surfers are also domg
the1r thmg on large waves formed below
maJOr dams.
Snowmobilers are substituting sand
dWles for snow and drag racmg on grass
has been popular several years. There IS
a proposal to build rollerskatrng paths
1
similar to bicycle paths .
You can also rent a submarine on
the Gulf of Mexico fully equipped with
freeze dried foods.
While water canoeing and kayaking
are now well orgamzed w1th National
Champwnshlp races every year. Tins
was also an event at the last swruner
Olympics.
Camp10g by reservation 100vated by
the State Park System of Califorma 10
1968, Will ex~and next year The u. s.

school purposes," Hauck said .
County aud1tors are not oper·
ating under the Board of Tax
Appeals rule and w1thm the
legislahve mtent, S3ld Hauck,
but mstead are sendmg abstracts of property values in
their counties to the state With·
out adjusting them to the 3; per
cent level.
Hauck said the Board of Tax
Appeals IS then ordering the
county aud1tor to revise his
abstract, and the auditor m
turn is reeommendmg the bud·
get commission reduce tax
rates in proportion to the mcrease m property value.

Small game hunting was excellent

~:::f:·:·~=::;:;:,.;';:;::::::::::::::::::~~-::::::x::~::::::::~0.!!:•:-:-:·:·:-:·:;:;:::·:;:.:-:·!·!·!;:::.;::;:;~~

UNIT CALLED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Emergency Squad was called
to East Main St. at 10· 15 p.m.
Friday for Jack Braley who
had suffered a hand laceration.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treat·
ment. At 1:53 p.m. Friday the
sqWld went to Rock St for John
Massie. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Ho~pital
where he was admitted

I

'

right. S. H Gardner, secretary-treasurer; Norman Stewart
vice president and Charles M. Neal, pres1dent. Neal succeed~
C1arence Thompson. The new officers wtll assume duties on
J'\n. 1.
If
I
'I

By United Press International
Egyptian missiles shot down
an lsraeh reconnaissance
plane over the tense Suez front
Saturday.
An Israeli military spokesman accused Cairo of formentmg an "eve of war" atmosphere in an effort to
pressure concessions at the
Geneva talks and unpose a
stram on the Israeli economy.
As the Israeli charge was
rured, Egyptian off1mals sa1d
that high tension continues on
the front Jines as a result of
Egypt •s policy of "steady
harassment" and "attrition of
the enemy."
A U.N. spokesman m Cairo
reported 40 shooting incidents
between Egyptian and Israeli
forces and ftve cases of 311'
activity in violation of the
cease-fire on Thursday.
An Egyptian military communique Saturday said that
''an enemy plane attempted a
reconnaissance flight over our
troops stationed in the southern
sector of the front. Our air
defense systems engaged the
enemy plane and destroyed it."
The plane ''was seen falling
in flames east of Lake Tunsah," just south of the c1ty of
Ismaiha, and the wreckage is
now m Egyptian hands, the
commW11que said.

The Israeli military command confirmed that Egyptian
surface-to-air missiles shot
down one of its urunanned spy·
planes Saturday . The plane,
said to have been radiocontrolled, was over Israeliheld ground when 1t was hit by
a missile launched from Egyptian territory, according to a
spokesman.
Egypt sa1d Friday it had shot
down an Israeli p!ane- 1denti·
lied by the authoritative news·
paper Al Ahram as a Phantom
--flying m a formation Qver the
canal's southern sector, but
Israel,
while
admitting
missiles were f1red, dented any
losses.
Egyptian Foreign Minister
Ismail Fahmi Saturday briefed
President Anwar Sadat on the
opening round of the Arab-Israeli peace conference in
Geneva.
The sources sa1d Fahm1
considers that Egypt has won
victories there by reserving a
seat for Syrta should 1t decide
to attend and achievmg a start
m troop disengagement talks .
The talks between Egypt and
Israel on separation of their
forces along the canal were
recessed Friday until next
Wednesday, following Israel's
national elections. Some progress has been reported.

Gift stocks to
avoid taxation
WASHINGTON (UP!) Rep. Henry S. Reuss sa1d
Saturday the Internal Revenue
Service had "absolved"
President Nixon's re-election
comnuttee of taxes due on $18
million in stock contributions.
An IRS decision that the
committee must pay taxes only
on prohts from stock sold after
Oet. 3, 1972, will mean that only
about $3 4 million of the
estimated $18 million to $20
rrullion in stock contr1bullons is
taxable, Reuss said.
Reuss said precise figures
were not available because the
orlgirull purchase price of the
stock given by numerous
contributors is not recorded.
But he sa1d the profit from the
stock sale ''is in the millions."
The Wisconsin Democrat
quoted a General AccounUng
Office report on stock contrlbu·
tion.s prepared at his request ~
saymg:
"Since 1965, the federal

government
has
held
repeatedly that poh\lcal
committees, like ordinary
citizens, must pay taxes on
capital gain income. Nevertheless Republican fund
raisers throughout
1972
soU\lcted contributions of
upprec1ated stock with Ule
promises that such gifts would
oot be subject to cap1tal gams
taxes ."
Reuss said the GAO report
showed "the IRS sunply absolved the (Nixon) conumttee
of taxes due on over $18 million
of stock Clllltributions."
The report concluded that
the IRS ruling that taxes be
paid only on stock sold during
the last month of the llBmpaign
"violates the spirit of the tax
code, previous IRS rulings, and
the good faith of candidates
and committee who have paid
income lax on capital gains for
years." \.
il
I

�•
IS ;-The Sunday Times . Sentinel, Sunday , Dec. 30, 1973
II - The SundayTimes - Sentinei,SWlday, Dec. 30. 1!173

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

! Area Deaths !
MRS. OLA BLAKE
SYRACUSE - Mrs . Ada
Slack received word Friday
night of the death of her sister·
in-law, Mrs . Ola Blake, the
forrfler Ruth Ball of Butler, Pa.
Mrs. Blake died Friday at the
home of her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr . and Mrs. Marsh
Deitz at Hinckley , Ohio.
Funeral services will be held at
2 p.m. Monday at the SummersvilJe, •W. Va . Baptist
Church.

great-grandchildren. ·

Mr. Sargent, a .member ·ar

the Jordan Baptist Church,

Hannan Trac.e proud

Former Watergate p~osecutor may get D. C. post
at
Democ ratic
that President Nixon would try breakin
National
Committee
to bypass congressional in·
vestigatlon of his nomination headquarters in the Watergate
'
complex.
.
was labeled " inaccurate."
The
Star-News
,
quoting
Silbert
was
the
chie!
serious consideration for ap.
"sources
dose
to
the
matter,"
pointment as U. S. attorney for prosecutor in the U. S. District
.
the District of Columbia. A Court trial of the seven persons said :
"Silbert's
nomination
to the
Washington Star-News report accused of the JWle 17, 1972

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
White House said Saturday
that Earl J . &amp;IIbert, a former
Watergate prosecutor , is Wldrr

was employed by the Marietta
Ship Yards 20 years and the
Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad
two years .
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. SWlday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
in Middleport with the Rev.
Charles Moses and the Rev .
Hobart Carr officiating. Burial
By THOMAS G. GELOEN
cameras outaide lor 3 ~ hours beautiful. A very wide, broad
will be in the Gravel Hill
of comet photography . . Pilot tail, but not very long as well
UPI Science Writer
Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends
HOUSTON (UP! ) - The William R. Pogue stayed just as I can see."
The astronauts used the same
may call at the fWleral home at Skylab 3 crewmen stepped inside the lab to keep the
RUBY BRAOSHA W
three cameras that Carr and
outside their eight-room orbit- instruments pointed precisely.
GAWPOLIS - FWleral any time .
ing research ship Saturday lor
The pilots depended primarily Pogue aimed at the slreakirlg
, services lor Ruby Agnes
the second time in a week, on thru;ling gas instead of the comet four days ago during
Bradshaw, 74, a resident of 244
HOYT L. SAYRE
Second Ave., Gallipolis, will be
LETART, W. Va. - Hoyt taking a relatively short and spaceship's two working gyro- their record seven,hour holiday
held 10 a.m . today at MiUer's Labon Sayre, 71, of Letart, died simple spacewalk to learn all sc~es to ge t into position for spacewalk.
Home lor Funerals. Rev, Thursday in an Akron, Ohio they can about Comet Kohou- the comet watching, a depar- The two · research pilota
ture from procedures lor the probably collected the best data
Howard Kimble wiU officiate. hospital after a long illness . He tek.
Commander Gerald P. Carr last spacewalk Christmas Day. man has ever had on a comet
Burial will be in Riffle was staying with relatives in
Gibson spotted the streaking during that outside venture,
and flight scientist Edward G.
Cemetery , Leon , W. Va. Mrs. Akron at the time.
Bradshaw died around 1 a .m.
Mr. Sayre was a retired Gibson donned their cumber· Kohoutek a few minutes after made just as Kohoutek was
Friday in Pleasant Valley construction worker and some spacesuits, opened the stepping into the void of space soaring toward ita closest
Hospital.
member of the Huntington ship's hatch at 12 :29 p.m. EST and told Pogue to turn off a set approach to the sun.
The frozen ball of gases and
and lugged thr&lt;!e special of outside Jighta.
Mrs. Bradshaw was born in Labor Union.
''Holy cow, yeah!'' Carr space dust was propelled
Kanawha County, W. Va ., on
He is survived by five sons,
yelled when Gibson pointed around the sun by solar gravity
Oct. 'r/, 1899, daughter of the Dwayne, of Letart; Hoyt , Jr.,
Kohoutek out to him. "Oh yeah, and sent back toward ita origin
late Isaac and Rosalie Decker Mason; Ted, David and
in deep space Friday morning.
Riffle.
Everett, aU of Streetsboro,
Flight Director Milton WinShe ls survived by three sons Ohio; six daughters, Mrs .
dler said the decision io use
and three daughters, Charles, ., Angelene Adams and Mrs .
Bristol
43
Newbury .65
Grove City ; Isaac, Pataskala, Eileen Snyder, both of
.
------(cha mpi onship)
Ohio; Herbert, Columbus· Riverside, Calli., Mrs. MarOhio High School
Richmond
Heights
56 , 1
300 OlE IN COLD
. Mrs. Golda Hudnall, Dunbar', celine Buckner of Ssn Point,
Basketball Sc:ores
Cuyahoga
Hgts
55
NEW DEI.JII (UP!) - A twoW. Va.; Mrs. Kenneth Idaho, Marilyn Heffelfinger of
By United Press International
Midview 79 Avon 6A
Parma
57
Shaker
Heights
52
week-old
cold wave, whi~h bas
Williams, and Mrs . Pearl Monroe Falls, Ohio, Mrs .
Triadelphia ( W. Va.) 73
Mayfield
72
Bedford
63
Bellaire SJ 68
claimed over 300 lives so far,
Remy, both gf Gallipolis; 29 Imogene Snyder of Levitta- Strongsville 55 Brooklyn 40
East Cleve Shaw 9A Euclid 90
grand; IS great -grand- b~g , Ohio, Mrs. Catherine Mansfie ld St. Peter 71 Cleve Eastlake North 75 Wil loughby continued its chilling sweep
through northern and nor· ~hildren;
two brothers, ~e of New Haven; six Cath lolin 69
South 61
Southview
79
Amherst
70
Avon
Lake
52
Medina
41
theastern India Saturday with
Howard Riffle Columbus and Sisters, Mrs. Icy Blackburn, Cleve Byzantine 50 Cleve Hol y
Chagrin Falls 74 Kirtland 60 little prospect of relief in the
Willard Riffl;, Newport' rut- Mrs . Descie Bates, Mrs. !laze! Name 47
Akron Central Hower 58 Cleve
chie, Fla., and a sister, Mrs . Wolle, Mrs. zelda Dawson and Marietta 58 Grove City 51
next few days.
St. Ed . 56
Cleve Lutheran. East 80 Cleve
Thomas (Edith) Tozallo, St. . Mrs . Beulah King, all of Wooster 62 Ashland 60 (of )
Findlay 59 Mansfield Senior 57
Bene 75
Petersburg, Fla:
Columbus, Ohio; Mrs. Dollie Fredericktown 65 Danville 49
Boardman 90 Struthers 53
She was a member of the Hughes of Vienna ; two Zanesville 63 Cambridge 57
· Canton McK inley 87 Columbus
Church of God on Garfield Ave. brothers, Edgar of Leon, Omen Zanesvl Rosecrans 58 New c- South AB
KILLED IN CAR
merstn 57 (of)
Canton South 87 Glenwood SO
of Follansbee; 32 grand- West
MANSFIELD,
Ohio (UP!)Muskingum 71 IVN 51
Oakwood 55 North Canton
children and 14 great- Philo 61 Zane Trace 50
Hoover 51 (ot)
Steven Weaver, 23, Colwnbus,
Sheridan 67 Miller 58
grandchildren .
Perry 63 Marlington 47
was killed in a one-&lt;:ar crash
WM. LONGSTAFF
64 Meadowbrook 55
Canton St. Aquinas 72 Walsh
Funeral services will be Caldwell
near here Saturday, the Ohio
MIDDLEPORT - WiUiam conducted at 1 p.m. Sunday at Lancaster 46 Athens 36
Jesui t 53
Portsmouth NO 63 Eastern 59
Highway
Patrol said.
Akron St. Vin-St . Mar y 70
G. Longstaff, 74, died Friday at Casto Funeral Home in Evans Portsmouth 69 Waverly 58
Woodridge 56
· his home at Southside, W. Va. with the Rev. Earl Perkins Portsmouth
West
54
Akron Firestone 61 Stow 55
Wheelersburg
53
Born and reared iii Middleport, olfidatilig. Burial will be in
Akron Centrl Howar 58 lakewd
Canton Lincoln 55 Canton LM
, DIESINFffiE
51. Ed 56
••
be worked many years at the
Creston Cemetery near ,Evans. 53 &lt;otl
Cuyahoga Falls 58 Kent
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Hobson Yards of the New York
Cols Bishop Hartley 79 Cols
Roosevelt 54
Aubrey
Hayner, 24, Colwnbus,
North 51
Central Railroad.
Dover 81 Mansfield Malabar 56
Bloom -Carroll
80
Cols
Olentangy 73 Teays Valley 65 died early Saturday in a fire at
He ls survived by his \vlfe,
Academy 61.
,
·
Logan Elm Tournament
his home. Columbus Fire
the former Louise Beaver.
New Albany 80 Cols Wherle 61
Highland 68 MI. Gilead 64 (of) Battalion Chief Fred Thomas
Miami Trace 51 Wash Court
FW!eral services will be held
Indian Lake Tournament
House 50
Fairbanks 59 Riverside Indian said the lire was probably
SWlday at 2 p.m. at ·the CrowSprgfld North 63 Sprgfld Lake 42
started by a dropped cigarette.
HusseU FW!eral Home in Point
Shawnee 51
Indian Lake 66 Fairlawn 52
Pleasant. Burial will be in the
South Point 78 Meigs 59
Hillsboro 53 Circleville 47
Wooster 62 Ashland 60 (otl
PUEBLO, Colo. (UPI)
Leon Cemetery. Friends may
Chillicothe Flaget 79 lancaster
New Philadelphia 60 Mansfield
Patrornan Thomas M. Hanson, Fisher 61
call at the !Wleral home.
Madison 55
36, wanted only a carton of milk Gallipolis 73 Chesapeake 48
Dalton 79 Doylestown 54
Ayresville Tournament
when he and his partner stopped
Waynedale 57 Rittman 53
(Consolation)
Ridgemont 69 Continental 65
Toledo St. Francis 70 Sylvania Franklin &amp; Marshall (Pa.) 83
GLEN H. SARGENT
in a patrol car early Saturday at Bryan 54 Archbold 51
60
CHESHIRE - Glen H. a drive-in grocery.
Urbana 75
Hilltop 48 Hicksville 45
Toledo Rogers 61 Toledo
· (Colonia I City Classic)
Kettering Invitational
Sargent, 89, Cheshire Route 2,
But Hanson walked into the,
Whitmer 59
Bluffton 7A Kenyon 57
Dayton
Alter
1)7
Centerville
AJ
Toledo Cardin~l Stritch 62 Wright State 81 Adrlon (Mich.)
died Friday at the Holzer rruddle of a holdup and was
Fairmont West 61 Meadowdale
Lake 48 ·
Medical Center. He was born killed before he could get his 49
64
Toledo Waite 41
Toledo
Youngttown St. Classic)
. Feb. . 12, 19&lt;14, at Braxton gW1 out. His partner, shooting ·
Macomber A3
·
Cleveland State 76 Tennessee
'Dayton
Roth
70
Dayton
CoWlty, W.Va., the son of the through a window, killed the
Toledo Woodward 55 Toledo St. Tech 71
69
·
Johns 56
late Henry and Mary Jane Fox bandit, Identified as Bernard Fairview
Dayton Roosevelt 78 Dayton TOledo Central 85 Toledo Start Youngstown State .97 Georgia
Stole 79
Sargent. Besides his parenta, Meehan, 19, Pueblo .
Kiser 55
'
72
(Wooster Classic)
82 Brookville 64
he was preceded _in death by
Spencer Sharples 65 lakeside Defiance 100 Milligan {Tenn. )
AB Hanson went in for bis Arcanum
Vandalia 73 Eaton 47
62
three brothers and a sister.
81
milk, a man in a waiting Valley View 67 Dixie 52
Northwood 59 Otsego 53
·
Wooster 61 Oneota (N.Y.! 52
Surviving . are his wlfe, automobile hurriedly drove off. Marion Local 67 St. Henry 64 Perrysburg 65 Eastwood 63
(Case West. Reserve Tournl)
Velma~- Underwood Sargent;
· Elyria 68 Fremont Ross 54
Pollee hours later -arrested a Cin LaSalle 74 Cin Taft 50
Wittenberg 90 John Carroll 55
two dailghters, Mrs. William 17-year-old boy believed to be Flnneytown 66 Cin St. Xavier Adrian (Mich.) 57 Tecumseh 55 Baldwin-Wallace 74 Case
Parkway 69 Crestview 58
Western Re. 73
(Madeline) Murphy, New . the driver of the automobile and 62
Minster 72 New Bremen 60
(Indiana (Po.) Stole
Philadelphia; Mrs. Richard an accomplice of the slain Cin McNicholas 74 Mariemont VanLue 70 Hopewell Louden 52
Holiday
Tournament)
70
Mendon Union 75 Russia 58
(Emalin) Staten, Athens; four gWlman.
Denison
71
Indiana
( Pa . ) 69
Fairfield 71 Princeton 54
Bloomsbur~ 70 Mount Union 68
sons, Paul Edward, Little
"CTn """l&lt;oQer"Ba-con 81 ' Cin
(Tangerme Bowl Tourn.)
Rock, Ark.; Cecil Charles,
Ohio College
Courter Tech 62
Bowling- Green 70 Rollins 62
STICKING
TO
IT
Basketball Results
Cin Elder 65 Cin Purcell 38
Leon, W.Va.; Herbert Frank{Charlotte I nvitationa I)
By
United
Press International
Forest
Park
68
Franklin
44
WASHINGTON,
D.
C.
(UP!)
lin, Uncoln, Mo., and Ronald
Miami
96 Syracuse 74
(Ashland HOlidaY Tourn.)
North Olr'lll..,ed 74 Olmsted
(Evansville, Ind. Tourn.)
Ray, Cheshire; four sisters, - The National Safety CoWlcil Foils 56
(Championship)
Evansville (~ Ind . ) 67 Kent State
Mrs. Holley (Edith ) McCoy, Friday Is sticking to ita original Brecksville 61 Warrensville 50 Edinboro I Pa .) Stale 15 65
(ol)
Ashland 74
. Syracuse; Mrs. Ruth Bowen, ,estimate that from 470 to S70 Lorain 67 Marion 57
(Poinsettia Classic)
Warren, Pa. Tourney
(Consolation)
persons
will
die
on
the
nation's
Furman
68 Cincinnati 64
Morgantown, W. Va., and Mrs.
Erie (Pa.) Prep 54 Cleve St. West Virginia State 74 Kufz.
(Granite
City Tourn.)
Dorothy Crouch and Mrs. Dale highways during the New Jose"ph 52 (championship)
town ( Pa .) 50
Gustavus-Adolphus (Minn.) 58
( Muskingum Holiday Tourn.)
Antonson, both in California; a Year's weekend, despite a
Copilot 54
,
(Championship)
Newbury
Tourney
record-low
traffic
death
toll
(Spring
Arbor,
Mich.
Tourn.)
brother, Farrell, of Clem, w:
ledgemont 33 Bloomfield 31 Muskingum 71 Wheeling (W. Grand Valley 89 Malone 87 (oil
Va.; rl grandchildren, and five during the Christmas holiday. (consolation)
Vo .) 47

post was to have been annOWlced along with Friday's
resignation of U. S. Attorney
Harold H. Titus, but that White
House aides fearing
Congress might turn Silbert's
confirmation hearing into yet
another Watergate inquiry -

Skylab crew looks at Kohoutek again

College
cage results

Milk wanted,

but got death

· - - - ~ ·- ·- -

only the ship's gas thrusters to
point the .comet cameras
correctly was made after strain
was put on the gyros because of
the

astl'onauts'

movements

during the last spacewalk.

The spacemen ran into one

jlroblem as they prejlared for
the spacewalk. Because there is
no strain on their muscles or
skeletal systems, they have aU
grown a little taller since going
Into space «days ago.
"We may have grown an inch
and a half but our suita
haven't," Gibson told Mission
Control.

THREE KUJ.EO
WAUSEON, Ohio (UP!)- A
collision of two trucks and an
ensuing fire claimed the Uves
of three .persons on U. S. 20
near here Friday night. The
vicUms were identified by the
Ohio Highway Patrol as Guy J .
Claybaugh, 21 , Hillsdale ,
Mich., driver of one truck, his
passenger 9harles Crofta Jr.,
31, Osseo, Mich., and Charles
P . Billings, 17, Toledo ,
passenger in the second truck.

judge of the U. S. District
Court. He is John J . Sirlca, who
is presiding over the Watergate
criminal and civil trials.
Sirica could appoint Silbert,
now a prir)cipal assistant U. S.
attorney, to U.S. attorney lor
the district before Dec. 31
without Congressional approval.
" Fear of what a con!irrnalion hearing might
require Silbert to disclose is
what prompted the While
House to cancel Silbert's

decided at· the last minute on a
route that bypasses Congress
altogether." Gerald 1•. farren,
assistant White Hou.., press
secretary, said in San
Clemente, Calif., that Silbert is

"under serlous consideration"
for the post and the Titus
resignation has been accepted.
The nomination, however,
"definitely will be submitted to
Congress," Warren said. "The
allegation that we would avoid
it is insccurate."
If the President fails to fiU a
·vacant U. S. attorney ship, the
task falls by law to the chief

of unbeaten cage squad
Summer program
paying off; ·'Cats
are balanced crew

nomination," .the Washington
Star-News said.
•

Traff•·c ••s extra light

Uy DALE ROTIIGEU, Jr.

nation.

By Ualted PressiDteruaUonal
The nation headed into a 102-;
hour New Year's holiday period
Saturday with traffic reporta
almost as notable lor lack of
travel as for a light nwnber of
latalaccidenta.
New England states reported
traffic very light. Some porUons of the · Midwest foWld
motorists few and far between,
although other sections of the
nation, Including California and
Pennsylvania, found traffic
about normal for a Saturday.
But fatal accident reporta
were low.
·
A United Press International
COWl! at 2 p.m. EST showed 63
traffic deaths throughout the

••

A breakdown :
Traffic 63
Fires 4
Other~

Total 72
The National Safety Council
on Dec. 22 issued a estimate or
470 to ~70 deaths on the
highways during the New
Year's weekend, saying it took
into consideration lower speeds
being observed on highways,
and lighter traffic because · of
the gasoline shortages. ,
In a comparable nonholiday
period at the end of December,
council statistics showed about
400 deaths could be expected.

HANNAN TRACE VARSITY - Members of the 1973-74
Hannan Trace basketball team are first row, left to right,
Randy Halley, Kent Halley, Faron Sanders, David Shaffer

·-

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sporte Writer
Miami, Wittenberg and Ohio
State - three perennial powers
.- put the Buckeye State In the
college football limelight .this
fall, highlighting the 1973
aporia scene in Ohio.
Miami won the Mid·
American Conference and
capped an unbeaten 11-4 season
with a 13-7 victory over F1orida
In the Tangerine Bowl.
Wittenberg took the Ohio
Conference Iitle with a victory
over Marietta and became the
flnt Division m champion in
the NCAA's · new alignment
with a fl-4 trouncing of Juniata
(I'll.) In the Stagg Bowl at
Phenix City, Ala.
Ohio Slate which has a return
engagement with. Southern
California In the Jan. 1 Rose
Bowl game, finished the
replar 118UOII with 8 ~1
~ having an othftioe
r--~.· record-~ POBBible
'

.

national championship .
apolled by a closing 16-10 Ue
with Michigan.
The post game turmoil over
the Buckeyes' selection by Big
Ten athletic directors to repre·
sent the conference In the Rose
Bowl for the second straight
year rivaled the pre-game
buildup.
Four Ohio State players tailback Archie Griffin, tackle
John Hicks, lineback..- Randy
Gradlshar and defensive end
Van DeCree - were named to
the first team of the UPI AllAmerican lliiWid. Safety Neal
Colzle and defensive tackle
Pete Cusick landed second
team berths .
Miami, whoae coach Bill
Mallory was voted the Ohio
CoUege Football Coach of the
Year, included Purdue and
South Carolina among Its
vicUms and won the MAC title
with a showdown ov..- Kent
State Nov , 10 at Kent.
Banner Golf Year ·
The year 1973 was also a
benner year for golf iii Ohio,
\vlth the Buckeye State's two
proleasirinal superstars- Jack
Nicklaus and Torn Weiskopf capturing 11 PGA toor eventa
between them and each win·
ning one of the major touma.
menta .
Weiskopf, who was voted
Male Golfer 'of the Year by

members of the U.S.Golf Writers Association, won the
British Open for his first major
trlwnph, and added four victories on the tour as well as the
World Series of Golf at the
Firestone Country Club in Ak·

ron.
The
Massillon-born,
Cleveland-raised resident of
Columbus, who had winnirlgs of
$245,~fortheyear, had one of
the hottest streaks ever by a
professional in the middle of
the sununer, wilmirlg three of
four tournaments he entered.
Nicklaus, wbo passed the $2
million
in career earnirlga with his $305,000 in 1973,
took seven events durilig the
year, including his 14th major
title in the PGA at CanterburY
in Cleveland, and his own OhioKings Island Open at Kings
Mllls, near Cincinnati.
Ed Sneed, Like Nicklaus a
Colwnbus native, also got into
the PGA winners circle, taking
the Kaiser Open for his f1nt
tour win and flnlshed the year
\vlth earnings of $67,990, good
enough for 4001 on the money
list.
Bruce Crampton won the.
American Golf Classic at Firestone by four shots and Craig
Stadler, a junior at the Unlver·
sity of Southern California,
won the National Amateur

mark

•

.

,

.

•

Missouri
humbles
Auburn

Selection plan

College results
· Molor City Classic
Detroil96 Mont. St. 85

rumounced by

Muskingum Holiday

Frnkln!.Mrshll83 Urbana 15
OIL STOCKS NOTED
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
American Petroleum Institute's latest estimate gives
the nation a 30-&lt;lay supply of
gasoline and S8 days of home
fuel oil. The Institute, an oil
industry•assoclatlon, said in a
report t'ult gasoline stocks as
of Dec. 21 totaled 203,173,000
barrels -enough for 30 day~ at
present consumpUon - as
compared to a 33-day supply on
the same date In 1972 and a 36day supply In 1971.

New Jersey Kiwanis
Yale 101 Geor~la Tech 95

Old Dom. 87 Baylor 79

PoinseHa Classic
Clemson 78 Delaware 63
Furman 82 Xavier 70

R09ue Valley
&lt;Semifinal)
Hum bolt St. 65 Sou. Ore. 62
Ore.hTech67 Warner Pac. 61

(Consolo lion)

Fresno Pac. 86 Whitwrth 70
Pacemaker Classic

Eost Tenn. 82 lo . Tech 70
N.E. La . 86 Mls.. 78

Quaker City Classic
Penn 97 For ham 66
·
St. Bon 70 Harvard 69
California 64 Penn St. 63

Temple 68 Clnclnnatl64
Queen City
N.C.-Chrltte 112 Rchmnd 68
Canlslus1DO Geo. Wosh. 89

SUCCESSOR NAMED
CLEVELAND (UP!)
CharlesP. Bolton,31, son of the
Rainbow Classic
late U. S. Rep. Oliver P. Bolton Wash. St. 82 Sta Clara 71
Tennessee 60
and grandson of former U. S. Provdnce64Scranton
Rep. Frances P. Bolton and the Scranton 82 Kings Pt. 81
Sugar Bowl
late U. S. Rep. Chester C.
Memphis
St.
86 LSU -NO 81
Bolton, has been named to N.C. St. 91 VIllanova
82
succeed Robert E. Stockdale In
Chodron St. Holiday
(Semifinal)
the state Senate. Republican
Col.
Mines
Bllvue Coli . 55
leaders ln Cuyahoga, Lake and Chdrn St. 7658Western
St. 72
Geauga counties recomNorthCentral Conference
mended Bolton succeed Stock- Augstna 0 Mornngsde 58
Chicogi/Christmas Cra551c
dale who Is resigning because
( Semlflnof)
of poor health.
Lmyne-c&gt;.vns 91 Xavier. La .
Consolation

Mrgn 51. 101 St. Paul's 88
Stillman 82 Cheney St. 81

Buckeye conference basketChampionship played at the . got buried In the American Dec. 23.
in
Clevelaod
Dl11ppolntmeol
ball tlUe while Capital, WitLeague
East
basement
early
Inverness Club in Toledo In
Cleveland's 7-6-2 record was tenberg,
Otterbein and
September. The only LPGA the season and, despite im·
proved
play
the
last
two
a
disappointment
to
Coach
Muskingum
tied
for the regular
event iii Ohio in 1973 the Pabst
Classic at the Riviera Country months of the season, flnlahed Nick Skorlch and owner Art aeason Ohio Conference tiUe
Modell, who had expected · lvlth 16-2 marks. Musklngum's
Club in Columbus, went to Judy last in the dlvlslon.
The Indlansdldcome up \vlth better things after a promiBing Jim Burson, who led the
Rankin
Muskles to a 19-4 overall
Lancaster's Steve GroVes some promising youngsters 1n college draft last January.
George
Hendrick
and
CharUe
Of
the
kip
three
choices,
record, was voted the Ohio
captured the Ohio Amateur
title at the Findlay CoWltry Spikes, bot obtained in trades, however, only third round pick College Basketball Coach of
Club; Jim Federici of Findlay and were pleased \vlth the con- Greg Pruitt of Oklahoma con- the Year.
The Ohio State Buckeyes had
won his third straight Oblo tinned progress made by tribute&lt;! to the cause as he
Buddy
BeU
and
Chris
Olambecame
a
vital
part
of
the
a
disappointing season iii basSeniors at Westbrook Country
Club, Mansfield; Don Albert of bUss, although the latter took a Browns' offense and an instant ketball. Picked as a Utle confavorite of the fans.
tender, the Bucks finished \vlth
Colwnbus took the Pre-Seniors while to get going.
The
Cincinnati
Bengals
put
•
Southern.
Cal's
Pete
Adams,
an
8-6 conference mark, good
at Riviera; and Jim Decker of
Fremont won the Ohio Juniors together a . six-game winning an offensive lineman, waa in- enough.onty for a lie for third
totle at Belmont Hills COW1try streak to end the ·season ancl jured before the regular aeason place behind lndlana and Minwon the Central Dlvlslon of the began and dld not play and nesota. They were 14-10
Club, St. Clairsville.
NFL's American Conference Steve Holden, llke Adams· overall.
·
selected In the f1nt round,
The Cleveland Cavaliers fin~
The Cincinnati Reds made a with a 10-4 record.
Coach
Paul
Brown
came
up
failed
to
live
up
to
ex·
!shed
last in the NBA's Central
stirring comeback to win the
.
Division, but continued to
Western Division of the , with two blue chip rookies In pectatloM.
The Unlveralty of Akron, for make progreu. Cava coa.ch
National League after trailing \vide receiver Isaac Curtl.s and
fullback
Boobie
Clark
and
got
the
second year In a row, wore and. general manager, Bill
Loa Angeles at one ttme by 11
fine running from Essex John- the bridesmaid's role In the Fitch; traded two of his stargalll&lt;!S.
son
and quarterbacking from NCAA College Division ters last aprlng, John Johnson
But the effort went to waste
Tournament, lolini to Ten- and Rick RDberson, for a draft
when the New York Mets Ken Anderson.
The
key
victory
for
the
Ben·
neuee State In the finals last choice which he used to take
downed the Re¢11n five games
Jim Brewer of Minne!Oia.
in the National League gals was a 34-17 win over March.
Cleveland iii ttl!! nat 19 last
Tha Zips, who flnlshed 2W
Cruaders Advalleed
playoffs.
week
of
the
aeason,
'
which
for
the
1Bn-73
ae&amp;IIOD,
were
the
.The
Crusaders of the ·new
Pete Rose, who won the NL
virtually
assured
them
a
spot
ooly
Buckeye
Slate
team
to
World
Hockey Auocl•llon,
battirlg championship \vlth a
.338 average, was named the In the playoffs whlle comecloletdanatiooallltleu \vlth superstar goalie Gerry
MAC champion Miami, Ohio Cheevers, formerly of ~e
league's most valuable player, ellmlnallng the Browns.
Cincinnati's
Super
Bowl
Con1erence
Tournament Bolton Bruins In the neta,
edging out 'Willie Stargell of the
dreams were quickly ended, winner Wooeter, and atlarge advanced to the finala of the
Pittsburgh Plratea.
' The. Cleveland Indians, who however, by the " ~efendlng entry Capital all -failed . to East'rn Dlvlalon playoffs
.
opened the season with l)Uiny champion Miami Dolphins who advance pill the f1nt round. • befclri being eUmlnated.
Defiance· won the . Hndller·
J4lghlight ofI the
. year In tennew faces and much optimism, eliminate&amp; the Benols 3416

RETURNING LETTERMEN for Hannan Trace's cage team which has a perfect 7.0 record
re Randy Halley, John Lusher, Don Wells and Mark Swain.

Bucks slight favorites
By JIM COUR
UP! Sports Writer
PASADENA, Calif. (UP! ) Ohio State's Buckeyes, beaten
badly a year ago by Southern
California, are rated as slight
favorites to defeat the Trojans

on New Year's day and end a

string of four straight Pacific.,ll
victories in the Rose Bowl.

The oddsm 0 kers have listed
Ohio State as a 1-'k point choice
in the granddaddy of all bowl
games.

Missouri to

kn ocked the Wildcats out of the

a 34-17 Sun

Bowl

Swain has been the outstanding offensive star. In
seven outings, he is

averaging 24.7 points per
game and has been the
leading point producer in the

area .
Lusher is also ranked

-

·,,

tatives, the Big Ten haSn 't won

made bri-ghter with peace everywhere.

(

Carolina Lumber &amp;, Supply Co.
312-6th St.

laver and Newcombe won a

~

pair til singles matches and
teamed to win the doubles.
• Dlle Nastase of Romani won
the Western Tennis tournament In Cincinnati and
Jimmy Connors of BeUviUe, ill.
captured his second straight
singles IItle in the Buckeye
tournament in Colwnbus.
Melvin's Woe, driven by Joe
O'Brien, won the 28th ruming
of Ibe Utile Brown Jug pacing
classic for three-year-olds at
the
Delaware
County
Fairgrounds, earning $44,4(10 of
a record $120,0(1() Jug purse.
In high school spor\s, Cineili·
nati Elder won three state
championships during
calendar year 1973, taking both
the Class AAA basketball and
baseball titles last spring and
tacking on the blg school cross
country championship this fall.
Marton Pleasant (A) and
.Columbus Bl.fJhop Ready (AA)
won the other two basketball
champlonshipa, while YoWlgstown Cardinal Mooney (AAA),
Cleveland Benedictine (AA)
and Middletown Fen\vlck (A)
captured the three football
playoff UUes this 1fall. )

,
•
. •.
•
•
,-•

6 cen~er , who received all
league recognition and .
honorable mention, All
St.a te; Rodney Dunfee, 5-9·
guard and Terry Shaffer, 6-2
forward.

terback Phil Gargis )o junior
Thomas Goss om with .eight

seconds left in the half,
Missouri quarterback Ray

Smith threw touchdown passes
of two yards to John Kelsey
and 15 yards to Jim Sharp and
halfback Ray Bybee al so

both undefeated, Buckeyes' a 35-yard halfback option pass,
Coach Woody Hayes says Chuck Link to Kelsey .
simply, "the Rose Bowl will be
Auburn, which saw its
the best of aU the bowl games ." running game stymied all
He may have a point. Based afternoon by the tenacious
on the records, it sho_uld be Missouri defense, got its other
close . Ohio State is 9.().1 while touchdown on a 32-yard pass
Southern Cal, which won the also Gargis to Cossom. The

Once virtually invincible
against West Coast represen-

. .•

•
'

squad were Mike Caldwell 6·

counter of national champion . scored on a two-yard plunge.
A.abama and Notre Dame, Missouri's first score came on

in the nation.

LEAVESHOSPITAL
OTI'AWA (UP!) - Mrs.
Margaret Trudeau, 25-year-old
\vlfe of the Canadian prime
minister, left Ottawa Civic
Hospital · Saturday with · her ·:
four-day-old son, the couple's
second child born on Christmas .'
,.
Day.

nis came this faU when the
Australians, led by Rod Laver
and John Newcombe, whipped
the Americans~ in Davis Cup
competition in Cleveland. Both

broke Auburn 's back with his
scoring jaunt a s time ran out in
the fin;t half.
Be fore Mose ley broke it
open, Auburn had cut a 21-3
deficit to 11 points on a 17-yard
pass from freshman quar-

opening score of the game

Point Pleasant

here since 1969 when Ohio
State, then the national cham-·
pion, beat USC and O.J.
Simpson 27-16.
The Trojans defeated Michi·
gan 10-3 in the 1970 game and
Stanford followed with a 27-17
win over Ohio Slate In '71 and a
13-12 decision over Michig;m in

Missouri s truck back twice

within a minute as its defense
convfrted the first two Auburn '

fumbles into touchdowns.
Missouri linebacker Lynn
Evans recovered a fwnb1e at

the Auburn 35 and on the next
play Link hi t Kelsey with the
halfback toss. Kelsey took the
pass at the 10 and the big tight
. end bulled over the final
defender to slide into the end
zone at 10 :14 of the second
'72.
USC isn't the . same club it period .
Greg Hill kicked the first of
was last season but it did play
four
ex tr a points to give
Oklahoma to a 7-7 tie and beat
UCLA 23-13 in the Pac-8 Missouri the lead it never
relinquished.
decider for the Rose Bowl.

th~

Hannan Trace as a team has

scored

~18

points, a 74 point
average per game while its
defense has permitted just 388
points, a 55.4 point avera ge per

outing.
Coach Dillon said, " I didn't

think we would be Wldefeated
at this point, I thought we
possibly would lose at least one
SV AC contest and maybe the
Southeastern game ." The
Wildcats had problems with
Southeastern before holding on

at Meigs High School.
Three players lost via
graduation from last year's

rn

top 10 with a 17.7 point average.

Class A Sec tional Tournament

Eight in punt return s and
kickoff returns· this season,

ago and whipped the Buckeyes came on a 35-yard field goal by
42-17 in the Rose Bowl, has a 9- Auburn 's Roger Pruett. .
1-1 mark.
Pruett's field goal capped. a
After the 16-10 tie between seven-pla y drive which was
Ohio State and Michigan Nov. kept alive by a pass in24, the Big Ten athletic terfere nce penalty agains t
directors voted to send who Missouri at their own 39 yard
they thnught was the best team line. The drive started . after
-tbe Bucl&lt;eyes.
Missouri's Kelsey fumbled at
Until the deadlock, Ohio the Auburn 49 and end Rusty
State had been the No. I team Dean rec overE:d.
··

..

''

Despite the Sugar Bowl en-

national chamPionship a year

..'

.I

loss to the Vikings which

Moseley , who Jed the Big

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio Democratic Party executive committee adopted a program Thursday night outlining
the way Ohio's 89delegates will
be selected lor the national
Democratic midterm conference Dec. 6-8, 1974 in Kansas
City; Mo.
-The program asks lor special
legislation to allow for the
. direct election of 64 of the 89 •.
delegates- iii the 1974 May
primary. The other 16 would be
c)losen at the state party
convention next September
and the remaining nine would
be the Buckeye State's
Congressional delegation, U.S.
Sen.-designate Howard Metzenbawn and Gov . John~oJ.
Gilligan,
Nineteen alternates would be
chosen at 'the party convention . .
State . Party Chairman
William A. Lavelle said · he
talked to leaders of both '
parties in the legislature ani! '
78 they said they felt the special
bill could be passed.
The maili purpose of the national party midterm convention will be to act on a new '
democratic party charter. The
convention was expected to '·
draw 2,036 delegates from the ::
50 states and the territories. . •

CHIEF TO RETIRE
Younstown St.
'Cleve 51. 76 Tenn . Tech 11
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)
East
Pollee Chief Robert Duck has
51. 72 Cath 62
Potsdam
announced he will retire after · Le lhlyne 95 Ham II ton 69
33 years on the force. Duck, 06, Sienna 86 Albany St. i6
South .
called. a news conference for
No.
Car.
112
Biscayne 12
Jan. 4 to announce the exact
Southwest
date on which he will retire.
Tex Sthrn 79 Mlnn.-Mrrs 68
Lincoln 86 Cent. Coli. 6C
Midwest
Bwlng Grn 170 Rllns Coli. 62
WesL
DIES CHOKING
Mont. 90 Prllnd St. 70
PIEDMONT, Calif. (UP!) Gonzaga 99 Carroll 73
Retired U. S. Circuit Court· Snma l&gt;t. 72 Cal. Ply 67
Judge Oliver D. Hamlin Jr.,
died late Friday, apparenUy as
In 1948, Trygve Lie, first U.S.
the result of choking on a piece ' secretary general, died at the
of meat.
age of 72.

Halley is rated as a good ball
handler and hustler .

were picked no betler than

into scores Saturday to lead
v~ctory.

Ohio Democrats

Old Oom1nlon Classic

Hannan Trace is leading the
Southern Va lley Athletic
Confe rence with a perfec t 5-0
record. The Wildcats fi nished
in a three-way tie with Eastern
and Symmes Valley last year
for the conference crown .
Thi::; fall , however , the Cats

third in a poll of the league
coaches.
EL PASO, Tex. (UP! ) Speedy senior John Moseley
The 1972-73 HT varsity
returned a kickoff 84 yards for posted an overall 16-3 record,"
a touchdown and an op- but two of those losses came at
portunistic Missouri defense critical times, a two-point loss
turned three Auburn ftunblcs to Symmes Va Hey and another

Miami, Wittenberg, Ohio State make history in 1973
EDlrORS NOTE: The slate
of Oblo bas long been known lor
Its r0·olball ·- both hlgb
ocbool and college - and 1973
was no exception \vlth three
110beateo teams headiDg the
list. UP! Sports Writer Gene
Caddea take• a backward
glaaee at the top stories to the
world of sports during tbe past
12 months.

and Paul Montgomery. Second row, left to right , Coach Paul
Dillon, Jeff Wells, John Lusher, Don Wells , Wayne Hesson,
Mark Swain, BiU Hail and Asst. Coach Dan Cornell .

ME RCERVILLE - A good at titude, team
unity, fan support and a good junior high program
are some of the reasons given for Ha nna n Trace's
successful start in the 1973-74 cage season .
Paul Dillon , former Southweste rn High School
and Rio Gr ande College star, now in his eighth year
at Hannan Trace, feels those assets hav e aided the
team elll;oute to its 7-0 mark the first half of this
season.

BLOCKING OUT TECHNIQUE - Coach Paul Dillon,
former Rio Grande ca ge star, stresses defe.nse and blocking
out during recent drill with two of his offensive stars, John
Lusher and Mark Swain.

terest and it no longer was
financiaJiy feasible to hold the

12.

The Morehead State
.U niversity grad is a lso . tournam ent. Back in my
playing years, it really meant
pleased that the Gallia
cou nty To urnam ent was

dropped after 50 years.
"People began losing in·

sumething, but in recent years,
it didn 't mean a thing", he

said.

VETERANS!

to a one point victory .

Hannan Trace had little
tr ouble in posting league
victories over Eastern, North

Coach Dillon feels the big · Gallia , Symmes Valley, Southwestern and Southern. The
team and the 1972-73 squad is TornadO&lt;sd gave the Gallians
quickness , speed , and .better · a good struggle.
Hannan Trace basketball is
shooting provided by Mark
being
aided by a summer
Swain, 6-0 junior guard.
"Swain has really improved. program which was organized
He teams with the steady John for four weeks at the Hannan
Lusher, 6·2 senior forward, to Trace Elementary Building
difference between this year's

help our offensive punch ."

where an outside court was

In addition, Wayne Hesson,
6-2 junior and Bill Hall; 6-1

consturcted by the Athletic
Boosters Club.

junior have shared starting

A similar court was built in

assignments and have taken up
the offensive slack left by
Caldwell' s
departure.

Crown City Village by Coach
Dillon from funds appropriated
by the ,village council.'
The court is located on land
donated ~y Assistant Coach ·
Danny Cornell .
In addition,- three of

"However, we miss Caldwell 's

defensive play," Dillon stated .
" Our overall team defense is

not as good as last year. The
attitude has been real good.
The boys work real hard, make
a ll practices and have
sac rificed a lot toward our
program," Dillon emphasized.

Other Wildcat starters are 6•
6 senior center Don Wells and

5-9 senior guard Randy Halley.
Wells does not score as much
but is rugged on 'the board s.

Bucks
upset

Hannan Trace's starters,
t Lusher, Swain and Hesson

did not play football this fall.
Wells, Halley and Hall did
participate on the gridiron.
The overall program has
been helped by hard work in
the lower grades. Cutrently,
Coach Jim Chestnut's junior
high
teams have woh 13 out of
·
14 ga mes . The seventh grade is
6-1 while ·the eighth graders
have a perfect 7.0 slate.
The freshman team is 2-2 and

G.l. MOBILE HOME LOANS
AVAILABLE NOW!
NO DOWN PAYMENT·

1_2__ YRS. to pay.
CHOICE LOTS AVAILABLE WITH APPROVED WATER
&amp; SEWER, GALLIPOLIS SCHOOL ·DISTRICT
PURCHASE LOT AND MOBILE HOME
OF YOUR CHOICE NOW!

WHY PAY LOT RENT?
OWN YOUR OWN LOT IN A
CHOICE LOCATION!
STOP IN TODAY AND LET US SHOW YOU HOW
EASY IT IS TO GET YOUR MOBILE HOME AND LOT.
ON A G.l. LOAN

c7~~~·

the reserves have a 3-4 record.

With that, the fan support in
the district has also aided the
basketball cause greatly.
·Dillon has had only two losing
seasons at Hannan Trace .
During his first year, the

MOBILE
HOME
SALES
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles

,.

Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-9340
Galli!Jolis, Ohio

Wildcats struggled to an li-11
mark and in 1969-70, HT was 8-

..

Complete Evening
Of Entertainment

•
· •·
:·:
·•

e Favors

''

• Lots of Fun

• Complete Dinner

-~

•
;·.
•
.~
"'
••
.,
, ""

Ring In
'.

'

'74· With Us!

~·

:.
•
...
•,
::.' ·

.

!
•

".f

,,._

(

I

'

�•
IS ;-The Sunday Times . Sentinel, Sunday , Dec. 30, 1973
II - The SundayTimes - Sentinei,SWlday, Dec. 30. 1!173

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

! Area Deaths !
MRS. OLA BLAKE
SYRACUSE - Mrs . Ada
Slack received word Friday
night of the death of her sister·
in-law, Mrs . Ola Blake, the
forrfler Ruth Ball of Butler, Pa.
Mrs. Blake died Friday at the
home of her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr . and Mrs. Marsh
Deitz at Hinckley , Ohio.
Funeral services will be held at
2 p.m. Monday at the SummersvilJe, •W. Va . Baptist
Church.

great-grandchildren. ·

Mr. Sargent, a .member ·ar

the Jordan Baptist Church,

Hannan Trac.e proud

Former Watergate p~osecutor may get D. C. post
at
Democ ratic
that President Nixon would try breakin
National
Committee
to bypass congressional in·
vestigatlon of his nomination headquarters in the Watergate
'
complex.
.
was labeled " inaccurate."
The
Star-News
,
quoting
Silbert
was
the
chie!
serious consideration for ap.
"sources
dose
to
the
matter,"
pointment as U. S. attorney for prosecutor in the U. S. District
.
the District of Columbia. A Court trial of the seven persons said :
"Silbert's
nomination
to the
Washington Star-News report accused of the JWle 17, 1972

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
White House said Saturday
that Earl J . &amp;IIbert, a former
Watergate prosecutor , is Wldrr

was employed by the Marietta
Ship Yards 20 years and the
Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad
two years .
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. SWlday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
in Middleport with the Rev.
Charles Moses and the Rev .
Hobart Carr officiating. Burial
By THOMAS G. GELOEN
cameras outaide lor 3 ~ hours beautiful. A very wide, broad
will be in the Gravel Hill
of comet photography . . Pilot tail, but not very long as well
UPI Science Writer
Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends
HOUSTON (UP! ) - The William R. Pogue stayed just as I can see."
The astronauts used the same
may call at the fWleral home at Skylab 3 crewmen stepped inside the lab to keep the
RUBY BRAOSHA W
three cameras that Carr and
outside their eight-room orbit- instruments pointed precisely.
GAWPOLIS - FWleral any time .
ing research ship Saturday lor
The pilots depended primarily Pogue aimed at the slreakirlg
, services lor Ruby Agnes
the second time in a week, on thru;ling gas instead of the comet four days ago during
Bradshaw, 74, a resident of 244
HOYT L. SAYRE
Second Ave., Gallipolis, will be
LETART, W. Va. - Hoyt taking a relatively short and spaceship's two working gyro- their record seven,hour holiday
held 10 a.m . today at MiUer's Labon Sayre, 71, of Letart, died simple spacewalk to learn all sc~es to ge t into position for spacewalk.
Home lor Funerals. Rev, Thursday in an Akron, Ohio they can about Comet Kohou- the comet watching, a depar- The two · research pilota
ture from procedures lor the probably collected the best data
Howard Kimble wiU officiate. hospital after a long illness . He tek.
Commander Gerald P. Carr last spacewalk Christmas Day. man has ever had on a comet
Burial will be in Riffle was staying with relatives in
Gibson spotted the streaking during that outside venture,
and flight scientist Edward G.
Cemetery , Leon , W. Va. Mrs. Akron at the time.
Bradshaw died around 1 a .m.
Mr. Sayre was a retired Gibson donned their cumber· Kohoutek a few minutes after made just as Kohoutek was
Friday in Pleasant Valley construction worker and some spacesuits, opened the stepping into the void of space soaring toward ita closest
Hospital.
member of the Huntington ship's hatch at 12 :29 p.m. EST and told Pogue to turn off a set approach to the sun.
The frozen ball of gases and
and lugged thr&lt;!e special of outside Jighta.
Mrs. Bradshaw was born in Labor Union.
''Holy cow, yeah!'' Carr space dust was propelled
Kanawha County, W. Va ., on
He is survived by five sons,
yelled when Gibson pointed around the sun by solar gravity
Oct. 'r/, 1899, daughter of the Dwayne, of Letart; Hoyt , Jr.,
Kohoutek out to him. "Oh yeah, and sent back toward ita origin
late Isaac and Rosalie Decker Mason; Ted, David and
in deep space Friday morning.
Riffle.
Everett, aU of Streetsboro,
Flight Director Milton WinShe ls survived by three sons Ohio; six daughters, Mrs .
dler said the decision io use
and three daughters, Charles, ., Angelene Adams and Mrs .
Bristol
43
Newbury .65
Grove City ; Isaac, Pataskala, Eileen Snyder, both of
.
------(cha mpi onship)
Ohio; Herbert, Columbus· Riverside, Calli., Mrs. MarOhio High School
Richmond
Heights
56 , 1
300 OlE IN COLD
. Mrs. Golda Hudnall, Dunbar', celine Buckner of Ssn Point,
Basketball Sc:ores
Cuyahoga
Hgts
55
NEW DEI.JII (UP!) - A twoW. Va.; Mrs. Kenneth Idaho, Marilyn Heffelfinger of
By United Press International
Midview 79 Avon 6A
Parma
57
Shaker
Heights
52
week-old
cold wave, whi~h bas
Williams, and Mrs . Pearl Monroe Falls, Ohio, Mrs .
Triadelphia ( W. Va.) 73
Mayfield
72
Bedford
63
Bellaire SJ 68
claimed over 300 lives so far,
Remy, both gf Gallipolis; 29 Imogene Snyder of Levitta- Strongsville 55 Brooklyn 40
East Cleve Shaw 9A Euclid 90
grand; IS great -grand- b~g , Ohio, Mrs. Catherine Mansfie ld St. Peter 71 Cleve Eastlake North 75 Wil loughby continued its chilling sweep
through northern and nor· ~hildren;
two brothers, ~e of New Haven; six Cath lolin 69
South 61
Southview
79
Amherst
70
Avon
Lake
52
Medina
41
theastern India Saturday with
Howard Riffle Columbus and Sisters, Mrs. Icy Blackburn, Cleve Byzantine 50 Cleve Hol y
Chagrin Falls 74 Kirtland 60 little prospect of relief in the
Willard Riffl;, Newport' rut- Mrs . Descie Bates, Mrs. !laze! Name 47
Akron Central Hower 58 Cleve
chie, Fla., and a sister, Mrs . Wolle, Mrs. zelda Dawson and Marietta 58 Grove City 51
next few days.
St. Ed . 56
Cleve Lutheran. East 80 Cleve
Thomas (Edith) Tozallo, St. . Mrs . Beulah King, all of Wooster 62 Ashland 60 (of )
Findlay 59 Mansfield Senior 57
Bene 75
Petersburg, Fla:
Columbus, Ohio; Mrs. Dollie Fredericktown 65 Danville 49
Boardman 90 Struthers 53
She was a member of the Hughes of Vienna ; two Zanesville 63 Cambridge 57
· Canton McK inley 87 Columbus
Church of God on Garfield Ave. brothers, Edgar of Leon, Omen Zanesvl Rosecrans 58 New c- South AB
KILLED IN CAR
merstn 57 (of)
Canton South 87 Glenwood SO
of Follansbee; 32 grand- West
MANSFIELD,
Ohio (UP!)Muskingum 71 IVN 51
Oakwood 55 North Canton
children and 14 great- Philo 61 Zane Trace 50
Hoover 51 (ot)
Steven Weaver, 23, Colwnbus,
Sheridan 67 Miller 58
grandchildren .
Perry 63 Marlington 47
was killed in a one-&lt;:ar crash
WM. LONGSTAFF
64 Meadowbrook 55
Canton St. Aquinas 72 Walsh
Funeral services will be Caldwell
near here Saturday, the Ohio
MIDDLEPORT - WiUiam conducted at 1 p.m. Sunday at Lancaster 46 Athens 36
Jesui t 53
Portsmouth NO 63 Eastern 59
Highway
Patrol said.
Akron St. Vin-St . Mar y 70
G. Longstaff, 74, died Friday at Casto Funeral Home in Evans Portsmouth 69 Waverly 58
Woodridge 56
· his home at Southside, W. Va. with the Rev. Earl Perkins Portsmouth
West
54
Akron Firestone 61 Stow 55
Wheelersburg
53
Born and reared iii Middleport, olfidatilig. Burial will be in
Akron Centrl Howar 58 lakewd
Canton Lincoln 55 Canton LM
, DIESINFffiE
51. Ed 56
••
be worked many years at the
Creston Cemetery near ,Evans. 53 &lt;otl
Cuyahoga Falls 58 Kent
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Hobson Yards of the New York
Cols Bishop Hartley 79 Cols
Roosevelt 54
Aubrey
Hayner, 24, Colwnbus,
North 51
Central Railroad.
Dover 81 Mansfield Malabar 56
Bloom -Carroll
80
Cols
Olentangy 73 Teays Valley 65 died early Saturday in a fire at
He ls survived by his \vlfe,
Academy 61.
,
·
Logan Elm Tournament
his home. Columbus Fire
the former Louise Beaver.
New Albany 80 Cols Wherle 61
Highland 68 MI. Gilead 64 (of) Battalion Chief Fred Thomas
Miami Trace 51 Wash Court
FW!eral services will be held
Indian Lake Tournament
House 50
Fairbanks 59 Riverside Indian said the lire was probably
SWlday at 2 p.m. at ·the CrowSprgfld North 63 Sprgfld Lake 42
started by a dropped cigarette.
HusseU FW!eral Home in Point
Shawnee 51
Indian Lake 66 Fairlawn 52
Pleasant. Burial will be in the
South Point 78 Meigs 59
Hillsboro 53 Circleville 47
Wooster 62 Ashland 60 (otl
PUEBLO, Colo. (UPI)
Leon Cemetery. Friends may
Chillicothe Flaget 79 lancaster
New Philadelphia 60 Mansfield
Patrornan Thomas M. Hanson, Fisher 61
call at the !Wleral home.
Madison 55
36, wanted only a carton of milk Gallipolis 73 Chesapeake 48
Dalton 79 Doylestown 54
Ayresville Tournament
when he and his partner stopped
Waynedale 57 Rittman 53
(Consolation)
Ridgemont 69 Continental 65
Toledo St. Francis 70 Sylvania Franklin &amp; Marshall (Pa.) 83
GLEN H. SARGENT
in a patrol car early Saturday at Bryan 54 Archbold 51
60
CHESHIRE - Glen H. a drive-in grocery.
Urbana 75
Hilltop 48 Hicksville 45
Toledo Rogers 61 Toledo
· (Colonia I City Classic)
Kettering Invitational
Sargent, 89, Cheshire Route 2,
But Hanson walked into the,
Whitmer 59
Bluffton 7A Kenyon 57
Dayton
Alter
1)7
Centerville
AJ
Toledo Cardin~l Stritch 62 Wright State 81 Adrlon (Mich.)
died Friday at the Holzer rruddle of a holdup and was
Fairmont West 61 Meadowdale
Lake 48 ·
Medical Center. He was born killed before he could get his 49
64
Toledo Waite 41
Toledo
Youngttown St. Classic)
. Feb. . 12, 19&lt;14, at Braxton gW1 out. His partner, shooting ·
Macomber A3
·
Cleveland State 76 Tennessee
'Dayton
Roth
70
Dayton
CoWlty, W.Va., the son of the through a window, killed the
Toledo Woodward 55 Toledo St. Tech 71
69
·
Johns 56
late Henry and Mary Jane Fox bandit, Identified as Bernard Fairview
Dayton Roosevelt 78 Dayton TOledo Central 85 Toledo Start Youngstown State .97 Georgia
Stole 79
Sargent. Besides his parenta, Meehan, 19, Pueblo .
Kiser 55
'
72
(Wooster Classic)
82 Brookville 64
he was preceded _in death by
Spencer Sharples 65 lakeside Defiance 100 Milligan {Tenn. )
AB Hanson went in for bis Arcanum
Vandalia 73 Eaton 47
62
three brothers and a sister.
81
milk, a man in a waiting Valley View 67 Dixie 52
Northwood 59 Otsego 53
·
Wooster 61 Oneota (N.Y.! 52
Surviving . are his wlfe, automobile hurriedly drove off. Marion Local 67 St. Henry 64 Perrysburg 65 Eastwood 63
(Case West. Reserve Tournl)
Velma~- Underwood Sargent;
· Elyria 68 Fremont Ross 54
Pollee hours later -arrested a Cin LaSalle 74 Cin Taft 50
Wittenberg 90 John Carroll 55
two dailghters, Mrs. William 17-year-old boy believed to be Flnneytown 66 Cin St. Xavier Adrian (Mich.) 57 Tecumseh 55 Baldwin-Wallace 74 Case
Parkway 69 Crestview 58
Western Re. 73
(Madeline) Murphy, New . the driver of the automobile and 62
Minster 72 New Bremen 60
(Indiana (Po.) Stole
Philadelphia; Mrs. Richard an accomplice of the slain Cin McNicholas 74 Mariemont VanLue 70 Hopewell Louden 52
Holiday
Tournament)
70
Mendon Union 75 Russia 58
(Emalin) Staten, Athens; four gWlman.
Denison
71
Indiana
( Pa . ) 69
Fairfield 71 Princeton 54
Bloomsbur~ 70 Mount Union 68
sons, Paul Edward, Little
"CTn """l&lt;oQer"Ba-con 81 ' Cin
(Tangerme Bowl Tourn.)
Rock, Ark.; Cecil Charles,
Ohio College
Courter Tech 62
Bowling- Green 70 Rollins 62
STICKING
TO
IT
Basketball Results
Cin Elder 65 Cin Purcell 38
Leon, W.Va.; Herbert Frank{Charlotte I nvitationa I)
By
United
Press International
Forest
Park
68
Franklin
44
WASHINGTON,
D.
C.
(UP!)
lin, Uncoln, Mo., and Ronald
Miami
96 Syracuse 74
(Ashland HOlidaY Tourn.)
North Olr'lll..,ed 74 Olmsted
(Evansville, Ind. Tourn.)
Ray, Cheshire; four sisters, - The National Safety CoWlcil Foils 56
(Championship)
Evansville (~ Ind . ) 67 Kent State
Mrs. Holley (Edith ) McCoy, Friday Is sticking to ita original Brecksville 61 Warrensville 50 Edinboro I Pa .) Stale 15 65
(ol)
Ashland 74
. Syracuse; Mrs. Ruth Bowen, ,estimate that from 470 to S70 Lorain 67 Marion 57
(Poinsettia Classic)
Warren, Pa. Tourney
(Consolation)
persons
will
die
on
the
nation's
Furman
68 Cincinnati 64
Morgantown, W. Va., and Mrs.
Erie (Pa.) Prep 54 Cleve St. West Virginia State 74 Kufz.
(Granite
City Tourn.)
Dorothy Crouch and Mrs. Dale highways during the New Jose"ph 52 (championship)
town ( Pa .) 50
Gustavus-Adolphus (Minn.) 58
( Muskingum Holiday Tourn.)
Antonson, both in California; a Year's weekend, despite a
Copilot 54
,
(Championship)
Newbury
Tourney
record-low
traffic
death
toll
(Spring
Arbor,
Mich.
Tourn.)
brother, Farrell, of Clem, w:
ledgemont 33 Bloomfield 31 Muskingum 71 Wheeling (W. Grand Valley 89 Malone 87 (oil
Va.; rl grandchildren, and five during the Christmas holiday. (consolation)
Vo .) 47

post was to have been annOWlced along with Friday's
resignation of U. S. Attorney
Harold H. Titus, but that White
House aides fearing
Congress might turn Silbert's
confirmation hearing into yet
another Watergate inquiry -

Skylab crew looks at Kohoutek again

College
cage results

Milk wanted,

but got death

· - - - ~ ·- ·- -

only the ship's gas thrusters to
point the .comet cameras
correctly was made after strain
was put on the gyros because of
the

astl'onauts'

movements

during the last spacewalk.

The spacemen ran into one

jlroblem as they prejlared for
the spacewalk. Because there is
no strain on their muscles or
skeletal systems, they have aU
grown a little taller since going
Into space «days ago.
"We may have grown an inch
and a half but our suita
haven't," Gibson told Mission
Control.

THREE KUJ.EO
WAUSEON, Ohio (UP!)- A
collision of two trucks and an
ensuing fire claimed the Uves
of three .persons on U. S. 20
near here Friday night. The
vicUms were identified by the
Ohio Highway Patrol as Guy J .
Claybaugh, 21 , Hillsdale ,
Mich., driver of one truck, his
passenger 9harles Crofta Jr.,
31, Osseo, Mich., and Charles
P . Billings, 17, Toledo ,
passenger in the second truck.

judge of the U. S. District
Court. He is John J . Sirlca, who
is presiding over the Watergate
criminal and civil trials.
Sirica could appoint Silbert,
now a prir)cipal assistant U. S.
attorney, to U.S. attorney lor
the district before Dec. 31
without Congressional approval.
" Fear of what a con!irrnalion hearing might
require Silbert to disclose is
what prompted the While
House to cancel Silbert's

decided at· the last minute on a
route that bypasses Congress
altogether." Gerald 1•. farren,
assistant White Hou.., press
secretary, said in San
Clemente, Calif., that Silbert is

"under serlous consideration"
for the post and the Titus
resignation has been accepted.
The nomination, however,
"definitely will be submitted to
Congress," Warren said. "The
allegation that we would avoid
it is insccurate."
If the President fails to fiU a
·vacant U. S. attorney ship, the
task falls by law to the chief

of unbeaten cage squad
Summer program
paying off; ·'Cats
are balanced crew

nomination," .the Washington
Star-News said.
•

Traff•·c ••s extra light

Uy DALE ROTIIGEU, Jr.

nation.

By Ualted PressiDteruaUonal
The nation headed into a 102-;
hour New Year's holiday period
Saturday with traffic reporta
almost as notable lor lack of
travel as for a light nwnber of
latalaccidenta.
New England states reported
traffic very light. Some porUons of the · Midwest foWld
motorists few and far between,
although other sections of the
nation, Including California and
Pennsylvania, found traffic
about normal for a Saturday.
But fatal accident reporta
were low.
·
A United Press International
COWl! at 2 p.m. EST showed 63
traffic deaths throughout the

••

A breakdown :
Traffic 63
Fires 4
Other~

Total 72
The National Safety Council
on Dec. 22 issued a estimate or
470 to ~70 deaths on the
highways during the New
Year's weekend, saying it took
into consideration lower speeds
being observed on highways,
and lighter traffic because · of
the gasoline shortages. ,
In a comparable nonholiday
period at the end of December,
council statistics showed about
400 deaths could be expected.

HANNAN TRACE VARSITY - Members of the 1973-74
Hannan Trace basketball team are first row, left to right,
Randy Halley, Kent Halley, Faron Sanders, David Shaffer

·-

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sporte Writer
Miami, Wittenberg and Ohio
State - three perennial powers
.- put the Buckeye State In the
college football limelight .this
fall, highlighting the 1973
aporia scene in Ohio.
Miami won the Mid·
American Conference and
capped an unbeaten 11-4 season
with a 13-7 victory over F1orida
In the Tangerine Bowl.
Wittenberg took the Ohio
Conference Iitle with a victory
over Marietta and became the
flnt Division m champion in
the NCAA's · new alignment
with a fl-4 trouncing of Juniata
(I'll.) In the Stagg Bowl at
Phenix City, Ala.
Ohio Slate which has a return
engagement with. Southern
California In the Jan. 1 Rose
Bowl game, finished the
replar 118UOII with 8 ~1
~ having an othftioe
r--~.· record-~ POBBible
'

.

national championship .
apolled by a closing 16-10 Ue
with Michigan.
The post game turmoil over
the Buckeyes' selection by Big
Ten athletic directors to repre·
sent the conference In the Rose
Bowl for the second straight
year rivaled the pre-game
buildup.
Four Ohio State players tailback Archie Griffin, tackle
John Hicks, lineback..- Randy
Gradlshar and defensive end
Van DeCree - were named to
the first team of the UPI AllAmerican lliiWid. Safety Neal
Colzle and defensive tackle
Pete Cusick landed second
team berths .
Miami, whoae coach Bill
Mallory was voted the Ohio
CoUege Football Coach of the
Year, included Purdue and
South Carolina among Its
vicUms and won the MAC title
with a showdown ov..- Kent
State Nov , 10 at Kent.
Banner Golf Year ·
The year 1973 was also a
benner year for golf iii Ohio,
\vlth the Buckeye State's two
proleasirinal superstars- Jack
Nicklaus and Torn Weiskopf capturing 11 PGA toor eventa
between them and each win·
ning one of the major touma.
menta .
Weiskopf, who was voted
Male Golfer 'of the Year by

members of the U.S.Golf Writers Association, won the
British Open for his first major
trlwnph, and added four victories on the tour as well as the
World Series of Golf at the
Firestone Country Club in Ak·

ron.
The
Massillon-born,
Cleveland-raised resident of
Columbus, who had winnirlgs of
$245,~fortheyear, had one of
the hottest streaks ever by a
professional in the middle of
the sununer, wilmirlg three of
four tournaments he entered.
Nicklaus, wbo passed the $2
million
in career earnirlga with his $305,000 in 1973,
took seven events durilig the
year, including his 14th major
title in the PGA at CanterburY
in Cleveland, and his own OhioKings Island Open at Kings
Mllls, near Cincinnati.
Ed Sneed, Like Nicklaus a
Colwnbus native, also got into
the PGA winners circle, taking
the Kaiser Open for his f1nt
tour win and flnlshed the year
\vlth earnings of $67,990, good
enough for 4001 on the money
list.
Bruce Crampton won the.
American Golf Classic at Firestone by four shots and Craig
Stadler, a junior at the Unlver·
sity of Southern California,
won the National Amateur

mark

•

.

,

.

•

Missouri
humbles
Auburn

Selection plan

College results
· Molor City Classic
Detroil96 Mont. St. 85

rumounced by

Muskingum Holiday

Frnkln!.Mrshll83 Urbana 15
OIL STOCKS NOTED
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
American Petroleum Institute's latest estimate gives
the nation a 30-&lt;lay supply of
gasoline and S8 days of home
fuel oil. The Institute, an oil
industry•assoclatlon, said in a
report t'ult gasoline stocks as
of Dec. 21 totaled 203,173,000
barrels -enough for 30 day~ at
present consumpUon - as
compared to a 33-day supply on
the same date In 1972 and a 36day supply In 1971.

New Jersey Kiwanis
Yale 101 Geor~la Tech 95

Old Dom. 87 Baylor 79

PoinseHa Classic
Clemson 78 Delaware 63
Furman 82 Xavier 70

R09ue Valley
&lt;Semifinal)
Hum bolt St. 65 Sou. Ore. 62
Ore.hTech67 Warner Pac. 61

(Consolo lion)

Fresno Pac. 86 Whitwrth 70
Pacemaker Classic

Eost Tenn. 82 lo . Tech 70
N.E. La . 86 Mls.. 78

Quaker City Classic
Penn 97 For ham 66
·
St. Bon 70 Harvard 69
California 64 Penn St. 63

Temple 68 Clnclnnatl64
Queen City
N.C.-Chrltte 112 Rchmnd 68
Canlslus1DO Geo. Wosh. 89

SUCCESSOR NAMED
CLEVELAND (UP!)
CharlesP. Bolton,31, son of the
Rainbow Classic
late U. S. Rep. Oliver P. Bolton Wash. St. 82 Sta Clara 71
Tennessee 60
and grandson of former U. S. Provdnce64Scranton
Rep. Frances P. Bolton and the Scranton 82 Kings Pt. 81
Sugar Bowl
late U. S. Rep. Chester C.
Memphis
St.
86 LSU -NO 81
Bolton, has been named to N.C. St. 91 VIllanova
82
succeed Robert E. Stockdale In
Chodron St. Holiday
(Semifinal)
the state Senate. Republican
Col.
Mines
Bllvue Coli . 55
leaders ln Cuyahoga, Lake and Chdrn St. 7658Western
St. 72
Geauga counties recomNorthCentral Conference
mended Bolton succeed Stock- Augstna 0 Mornngsde 58
Chicogi/Christmas Cra551c
dale who Is resigning because
( Semlflnof)
of poor health.
Lmyne-c&gt;.vns 91 Xavier. La .
Consolation

Mrgn 51. 101 St. Paul's 88
Stillman 82 Cheney St. 81

Buckeye conference basketChampionship played at the . got buried In the American Dec. 23.
in
Clevelaod
Dl11ppolntmeol
ball tlUe while Capital, WitLeague
East
basement
early
Inverness Club in Toledo In
Cleveland's 7-6-2 record was tenberg,
Otterbein and
September. The only LPGA the season and, despite im·
proved
play
the
last
two
a
disappointment
to
Coach
Muskingum
tied
for the regular
event iii Ohio in 1973 the Pabst
Classic at the Riviera Country months of the season, flnlahed Nick Skorlch and owner Art aeason Ohio Conference tiUe
Modell, who had expected · lvlth 16-2 marks. Musklngum's
Club in Columbus, went to Judy last in the dlvlslon.
The Indlansdldcome up \vlth better things after a promiBing Jim Burson, who led the
Rankin
Muskles to a 19-4 overall
Lancaster's Steve GroVes some promising youngsters 1n college draft last January.
George
Hendrick
and
CharUe
Of
the
kip
three
choices,
record, was voted the Ohio
captured the Ohio Amateur
title at the Findlay CoWltry Spikes, bot obtained in trades, however, only third round pick College Basketball Coach of
Club; Jim Federici of Findlay and were pleased \vlth the con- Greg Pruitt of Oklahoma con- the Year.
The Ohio State Buckeyes had
won his third straight Oblo tinned progress made by tribute&lt;! to the cause as he
Buddy
BeU
and
Chris
Olambecame
a
vital
part
of
the
a
disappointing season iii basSeniors at Westbrook Country
Club, Mansfield; Don Albert of bUss, although the latter took a Browns' offense and an instant ketball. Picked as a Utle confavorite of the fans.
tender, the Bucks finished \vlth
Colwnbus took the Pre-Seniors while to get going.
The
Cincinnati
Bengals
put
•
Southern.
Cal's
Pete
Adams,
an
8-6 conference mark, good
at Riviera; and Jim Decker of
Fremont won the Ohio Juniors together a . six-game winning an offensive lineman, waa in- enough.onty for a lie for third
totle at Belmont Hills COW1try streak to end the ·season ancl jured before the regular aeason place behind lndlana and Minwon the Central Dlvlslon of the began and dld not play and nesota. They were 14-10
Club, St. Clairsville.
NFL's American Conference Steve Holden, llke Adams· overall.
·
selected In the f1nt round,
The Cleveland Cavaliers fin~
The Cincinnati Reds made a with a 10-4 record.
Coach
Paul
Brown
came
up
failed
to
live
up
to
ex·
!shed
last in the NBA's Central
stirring comeback to win the
.
Division, but continued to
Western Division of the , with two blue chip rookies In pectatloM.
The Unlveralty of Akron, for make progreu. Cava coa.ch
National League after trailing \vide receiver Isaac Curtl.s and
fullback
Boobie
Clark
and
got
the
second year In a row, wore and. general manager, Bill
Loa Angeles at one ttme by 11
fine running from Essex John- the bridesmaid's role In the Fitch; traded two of his stargalll&lt;!S.
son
and quarterbacking from NCAA College Division ters last aprlng, John Johnson
But the effort went to waste
Tournament, lolini to Ten- and Rick RDberson, for a draft
when the New York Mets Ken Anderson.
The
key
victory
for
the
Ben·
neuee State In the finals last choice which he used to take
downed the Re¢11n five games
Jim Brewer of Minne!Oia.
in the National League gals was a 34-17 win over March.
Cleveland iii ttl!! nat 19 last
Tha Zips, who flnlshed 2W
Cruaders Advalleed
playoffs.
week
of
the
aeason,
'
which
for
the
1Bn-73
ae&amp;IIOD,
were
the
.The
Crusaders of the ·new
Pete Rose, who won the NL
virtually
assured
them
a
spot
ooly
Buckeye
Slate
team
to
World
Hockey Auocl•llon,
battirlg championship \vlth a
.338 average, was named the In the playoffs whlle comecloletdanatiooallltleu \vlth superstar goalie Gerry
MAC champion Miami, Ohio Cheevers, formerly of ~e
league's most valuable player, ellmlnallng the Browns.
Cincinnati's
Super
Bowl
Con1erence
Tournament Bolton Bruins In the neta,
edging out 'Willie Stargell of the
dreams were quickly ended, winner Wooeter, and atlarge advanced to the finala of the
Pittsburgh Plratea.
' The. Cleveland Indians, who however, by the " ~efendlng entry Capital all -failed . to East'rn Dlvlalon playoffs
.
opened the season with l)Uiny champion Miami Dolphins who advance pill the f1nt round. • befclri being eUmlnated.
Defiance· won the . Hndller·
J4lghlight ofI the
. year In tennew faces and much optimism, eliminate&amp; the Benols 3416

RETURNING LETTERMEN for Hannan Trace's cage team which has a perfect 7.0 record
re Randy Halley, John Lusher, Don Wells and Mark Swain.

Bucks slight favorites
By JIM COUR
UP! Sports Writer
PASADENA, Calif. (UP! ) Ohio State's Buckeyes, beaten
badly a year ago by Southern
California, are rated as slight
favorites to defeat the Trojans

on New Year's day and end a

string of four straight Pacific.,ll
victories in the Rose Bowl.

The oddsm 0 kers have listed
Ohio State as a 1-'k point choice
in the granddaddy of all bowl
games.

Missouri to

kn ocked the Wildcats out of the

a 34-17 Sun

Bowl

Swain has been the outstanding offensive star. In
seven outings, he is

averaging 24.7 points per
game and has been the
leading point producer in the

area .
Lusher is also ranked

-

·,,

tatives, the Big Ten haSn 't won

made bri-ghter with peace everywhere.

(

Carolina Lumber &amp;, Supply Co.
312-6th St.

laver and Newcombe won a

~

pair til singles matches and
teamed to win the doubles.
• Dlle Nastase of Romani won
the Western Tennis tournament In Cincinnati and
Jimmy Connors of BeUviUe, ill.
captured his second straight
singles IItle in the Buckeye
tournament in Colwnbus.
Melvin's Woe, driven by Joe
O'Brien, won the 28th ruming
of Ibe Utile Brown Jug pacing
classic for three-year-olds at
the
Delaware
County
Fairgrounds, earning $44,4(10 of
a record $120,0(1() Jug purse.
In high school spor\s, Cineili·
nati Elder won three state
championships during
calendar year 1973, taking both
the Class AAA basketball and
baseball titles last spring and
tacking on the blg school cross
country championship this fall.
Marton Pleasant (A) and
.Columbus Bl.fJhop Ready (AA)
won the other two basketball
champlonshipa, while YoWlgstown Cardinal Mooney (AAA),
Cleveland Benedictine (AA)
and Middletown Fen\vlck (A)
captured the three football
playoff UUes this 1fall. )

,
•
. •.
•
•
,-•

6 cen~er , who received all
league recognition and .
honorable mention, All
St.a te; Rodney Dunfee, 5-9·
guard and Terry Shaffer, 6-2
forward.

terback Phil Gargis )o junior
Thomas Goss om with .eight

seconds left in the half,
Missouri quarterback Ray

Smith threw touchdown passes
of two yards to John Kelsey
and 15 yards to Jim Sharp and
halfback Ray Bybee al so

both undefeated, Buckeyes' a 35-yard halfback option pass,
Coach Woody Hayes says Chuck Link to Kelsey .
simply, "the Rose Bowl will be
Auburn, which saw its
the best of aU the bowl games ." running game stymied all
He may have a point. Based afternoon by the tenacious
on the records, it sho_uld be Missouri defense, got its other
close . Ohio State is 9.().1 while touchdown on a 32-yard pass
Southern Cal, which won the also Gargis to Cossom. The

Once virtually invincible
against West Coast represen-

. .•

•
'

squad were Mike Caldwell 6·

counter of national champion . scored on a two-yard plunge.
A.abama and Notre Dame, Missouri's first score came on

in the nation.

LEAVESHOSPITAL
OTI'AWA (UP!) - Mrs.
Margaret Trudeau, 25-year-old
\vlfe of the Canadian prime
minister, left Ottawa Civic
Hospital · Saturday with · her ·:
four-day-old son, the couple's
second child born on Christmas .'
,.
Day.

nis came this faU when the
Australians, led by Rod Laver
and John Newcombe, whipped
the Americans~ in Davis Cup
competition in Cleveland. Both

broke Auburn 's back with his
scoring jaunt a s time ran out in
the fin;t half.
Be fore Mose ley broke it
open, Auburn had cut a 21-3
deficit to 11 points on a 17-yard
pass from freshman quar-

opening score of the game

Point Pleasant

here since 1969 when Ohio
State, then the national cham-·
pion, beat USC and O.J.
Simpson 27-16.
The Trojans defeated Michi·
gan 10-3 in the 1970 game and
Stanford followed with a 27-17
win over Ohio Slate In '71 and a
13-12 decision over Michig;m in

Missouri s truck back twice

within a minute as its defense
convfrted the first two Auburn '

fumbles into touchdowns.
Missouri linebacker Lynn
Evans recovered a fwnb1e at

the Auburn 35 and on the next
play Link hi t Kelsey with the
halfback toss. Kelsey took the
pass at the 10 and the big tight
. end bulled over the final
defender to slide into the end
zone at 10 :14 of the second
'72.
USC isn't the . same club it period .
Greg Hill kicked the first of
was last season but it did play
four
ex tr a points to give
Oklahoma to a 7-7 tie and beat
UCLA 23-13 in the Pac-8 Missouri the lead it never
relinquished.
decider for the Rose Bowl.

th~

Hannan Trace as a team has

scored

~18

points, a 74 point
average per game while its
defense has permitted just 388
points, a 55.4 point avera ge per

outing.
Coach Dillon said, " I didn't

think we would be Wldefeated
at this point, I thought we
possibly would lose at least one
SV AC contest and maybe the
Southeastern game ." The
Wildcats had problems with
Southeastern before holding on

at Meigs High School.
Three players lost via
graduation from last year's

rn

top 10 with a 17.7 point average.

Class A Sec tional Tournament

Eight in punt return s and
kickoff returns· this season,

ago and whipped the Buckeyes came on a 35-yard field goal by
42-17 in the Rose Bowl, has a 9- Auburn 's Roger Pruett. .
1-1 mark.
Pruett's field goal capped. a
After the 16-10 tie between seven-pla y drive which was
Ohio State and Michigan Nov. kept alive by a pass in24, the Big Ten athletic terfere nce penalty agains t
directors voted to send who Missouri at their own 39 yard
they thnught was the best team line. The drive started . after
-tbe Bucl&lt;eyes.
Missouri's Kelsey fumbled at
Until the deadlock, Ohio the Auburn 49 and end Rusty
State had been the No. I team Dean rec overE:d.
··

..

''

Despite the Sugar Bowl en-

national chamPionship a year

..'

.I

loss to the Vikings which

Moseley , who Jed the Big

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio Democratic Party executive committee adopted a program Thursday night outlining
the way Ohio's 89delegates will
be selected lor the national
Democratic midterm conference Dec. 6-8, 1974 in Kansas
City; Mo.
-The program asks lor special
legislation to allow for the
. direct election of 64 of the 89 •.
delegates- iii the 1974 May
primary. The other 16 would be
c)losen at the state party
convention next September
and the remaining nine would
be the Buckeye State's
Congressional delegation, U.S.
Sen.-designate Howard Metzenbawn and Gov . John~oJ.
Gilligan,
Nineteen alternates would be
chosen at 'the party convention . .
State . Party Chairman
William A. Lavelle said · he
talked to leaders of both '
parties in the legislature ani! '
78 they said they felt the special
bill could be passed.
The maili purpose of the national party midterm convention will be to act on a new '
democratic party charter. The
convention was expected to '·
draw 2,036 delegates from the ::
50 states and the territories. . •

CHIEF TO RETIRE
Younstown St.
'Cleve 51. 76 Tenn . Tech 11
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)
East
Pollee Chief Robert Duck has
51. 72 Cath 62
Potsdam
announced he will retire after · Le lhlyne 95 Ham II ton 69
33 years on the force. Duck, 06, Sienna 86 Albany St. i6
South .
called. a news conference for
No.
Car.
112
Biscayne 12
Jan. 4 to announce the exact
Southwest
date on which he will retire.
Tex Sthrn 79 Mlnn.-Mrrs 68
Lincoln 86 Cent. Coli. 6C
Midwest
Bwlng Grn 170 Rllns Coli. 62
WesL
DIES CHOKING
Mont. 90 Prllnd St. 70
PIEDMONT, Calif. (UP!) Gonzaga 99 Carroll 73
Retired U. S. Circuit Court· Snma l&gt;t. 72 Cal. Ply 67
Judge Oliver D. Hamlin Jr.,
died late Friday, apparenUy as
In 1948, Trygve Lie, first U.S.
the result of choking on a piece ' secretary general, died at the
of meat.
age of 72.

Halley is rated as a good ball
handler and hustler .

were picked no betler than

into scores Saturday to lead
v~ctory.

Ohio Democrats

Old Oom1nlon Classic

Hannan Trace is leading the
Southern Va lley Athletic
Confe rence with a perfec t 5-0
record. The Wildcats fi nished
in a three-way tie with Eastern
and Symmes Valley last year
for the conference crown .
Thi::; fall , however , the Cats

third in a poll of the league
coaches.
EL PASO, Tex. (UP! ) Speedy senior John Moseley
The 1972-73 HT varsity
returned a kickoff 84 yards for posted an overall 16-3 record,"
a touchdown and an op- but two of those losses came at
portunistic Missouri defense critical times, a two-point loss
turned three Auburn ftunblcs to Symmes Va Hey and another

Miami, Wittenberg, Ohio State make history in 1973
EDlrORS NOTE: The slate
of Oblo bas long been known lor
Its r0·olball ·- both hlgb
ocbool and college - and 1973
was no exception \vlth three
110beateo teams headiDg the
list. UP! Sports Writer Gene
Caddea take• a backward
glaaee at the top stories to the
world of sports during tbe past
12 months.

and Paul Montgomery. Second row, left to right , Coach Paul
Dillon, Jeff Wells, John Lusher, Don Wells , Wayne Hesson,
Mark Swain, BiU Hail and Asst. Coach Dan Cornell .

ME RCERVILLE - A good at titude, team
unity, fan support and a good junior high program
are some of the reasons given for Ha nna n Trace's
successful start in the 1973-74 cage season .
Paul Dillon , former Southweste rn High School
and Rio Gr ande College star, now in his eighth year
at Hannan Trace, feels those assets hav e aided the
team elll;oute to its 7-0 mark the first half of this
season.

BLOCKING OUT TECHNIQUE - Coach Paul Dillon,
former Rio Grande ca ge star, stresses defe.nse and blocking
out during recent drill with two of his offensive stars, John
Lusher and Mark Swain.

terest and it no longer was
financiaJiy feasible to hold the

12.

The Morehead State
.U niversity grad is a lso . tournam ent. Back in my
playing years, it really meant
pleased that the Gallia
cou nty To urnam ent was

dropped after 50 years.
"People began losing in·

sumething, but in recent years,
it didn 't mean a thing", he

said.

VETERANS!

to a one point victory .

Hannan Trace had little
tr ouble in posting league
victories over Eastern, North

Coach Dillon feels the big · Gallia , Symmes Valley, Southwestern and Southern. The
team and the 1972-73 squad is TornadO&lt;sd gave the Gallians
quickness , speed , and .better · a good struggle.
Hannan Trace basketball is
shooting provided by Mark
being
aided by a summer
Swain, 6-0 junior guard.
"Swain has really improved. program which was organized
He teams with the steady John for four weeks at the Hannan
Lusher, 6·2 senior forward, to Trace Elementary Building
difference between this year's

help our offensive punch ."

where an outside court was

In addition, Wayne Hesson,
6-2 junior and Bill Hall; 6-1

consturcted by the Athletic
Boosters Club.

junior have shared starting

A similar court was built in

assignments and have taken up
the offensive slack left by
Caldwell' s
departure.

Crown City Village by Coach
Dillon from funds appropriated
by the ,village council.'
The court is located on land
donated ~y Assistant Coach ·
Danny Cornell .
In addition,- three of

"However, we miss Caldwell 's

defensive play," Dillon stated .
" Our overall team defense is

not as good as last year. The
attitude has been real good.
The boys work real hard, make
a ll practices and have
sac rificed a lot toward our
program," Dillon emphasized.

Other Wildcat starters are 6•
6 senior center Don Wells and

5-9 senior guard Randy Halley.
Wells does not score as much
but is rugged on 'the board s.

Bucks
upset

Hannan Trace's starters,
t Lusher, Swain and Hesson

did not play football this fall.
Wells, Halley and Hall did
participate on the gridiron.
The overall program has
been helped by hard work in
the lower grades. Cutrently,
Coach Jim Chestnut's junior
high
teams have woh 13 out of
·
14 ga mes . The seventh grade is
6-1 while ·the eighth graders
have a perfect 7.0 slate.
The freshman team is 2-2 and

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the reserves have a 3-4 record.

With that, the fan support in
the district has also aided the
basketball cause greatly.
·Dillon has had only two losing
seasons at Hannan Trace .
During his first year, the

MOBILE
HOME
SALES
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles

,.

Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-9340
Galli!Jolis, Ohio

Wildcats struggled to an li-11
mark and in 1969-70, HT was 8-

..

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'

�Pirates hurt
by bad start

Devils rip
CHS, 73-48

I
GARY SNOWDEN ( 40) pops in short jwnper against
visiting Chesapeake during Friday night's non-conference
basketball game on the GAHS boards. Chesapeake's Shawn
Stephens ( 25) tries to block the shot. Snowden came off. the
bench to score 10 points for the Devils, and was named
" Pl•yer-&lt;&gt;f-the-Week" by Coach Jim Osborne.

circles. Snowden was named
" player-of-the-week" by Coach
Osborne.
. Price hauled down 13
rebounds for GARS. JIUiior
forward Tom Valentine came
up wiUo 10 snags for the winners.
Senior guard Dale Pemberton led Chesapeake's attack
with 12 potnts. Denny Burke,
senior center, was limited to
six points by the Devils' tight
man-to-man aefense.
Chesapeake hit, only 20 of o7
field goal attempts for 35.8 pet.
Coach Lewis n•Antoni's lads
were eight of 14 at the foul
circles (00.7). The visitors
committed 30 personal fouls,
losing four men by Uoe foul
route. Chesapeake had 30
rebo!Uids and 24 cosUy tumovers.
Burke puUed down elgbt
rebounds for tbe losers.
Sophomore forward Roger
Adkins added seveo.
The Blue Devils upped their
season mark to 4-1. The
Panthers dropped to 3-4
overall.
Neither team managed to
score during the first two

Gales
.Imps win in three
upset
OT's; Folden hero
B u lldous:~al5::~'fe~i g:~k~~ ~:.

I

I
'

1-

I

1

GALLIPOLIS -

...

Sophomore guard Tony Folden

can ned three clutch free throws during the final 26
seconds of a tr1pl e overtime to gtve Coach W1llard
! Buddy) Moore's Ga llipolis Blue Imps a thrilling 5149 victory over Coach Tom McClellan's visiting
Ch esa peake C ubs here Friday night.
Folde.~,"~ho led a ll scorers
with 22 poonts, sank lwo charity Sophomore Brent Sa!Uiders' 16.
tosses with 26 ~econds left in Fourteen cos tly turnovers
the third extra period to give
were committed by the Imps.
UJe lmps a 50-41 advantage.
Sophomore guard Rusty
Fre shman ...gllil r&lt;! ... Keith
Marcum led ~oe Cubs attack
McGuire popped in . .u long_ with 12 points. Another
ju mper , with 13 -seconds . sophomore,JoeJenkins,added
10 ·
remoining lo reduce it to \i:0.-49.
The C•bs fouled Folden on
The Imps next outing is at
purpose with six seco~ds left. Logan Friday. Box si:ore of
Folden 's flrst shot was true , Friday's victory:
making it 51-49. Time ran. out
CHESAPEAKE CUBS ·1491
- Dale Ros.sell , 3-1-7; Rusty
before the visitors could get Marcum, 6-0-12 ; Kev Rice, 2-4·
down court.
8; Joe Jenkins, o .JO; Bob
It was the Imps' third victory ~~~n~~7t~ -~~~~f~~~ J~~ n,e~eif
in five sU!rts. The Cubs are now Bla ck, o.o.o; Dirk Singer, o.o.o.
4-3 on the year.
TOTALS 20-9-48.
Th Im ·urn do t · f t
GAHS BLUE IMPS !511 e
PSJ pe u m ron
Brefl Wilson . 3-2-B; Tony
12-4 after one period. It was Hh Folden, 7-8-22; Brent Saunders,
6 during t.h e halftim e in- 3·0-6; Brent Johnson , .4-0-B;
termiss ion. GAHS maintained David O..ens, 1·5· 7; Roger
·
d
Brandeberry, 0-0-0; Ed Smith,
a ll).poont a vantage a fter o.o.o. TOTALS 18. 15 . 51.
three penods, 28-18.
Score by quarter"
The Panthers race-horse Cubs
4 2 12 18 • 4 5-49
Imps
12 4 12 8 4 4 7-5 1
1 1
styepaygotto
t h e I mps inthe
flnal period as the visitors
outscored GAHS 16-8 to send
the game into overtime with
the score tied 36-all.
CHS led 41).38 with 1: 19left in
the overti m e. Sophomore
cente1· David Owens tied it up
ALL-GAMES
40-all with .1 :10 left to send the TEAM
W L P OP
game into a second overtime. ro~~e~ly
: · ~ ~: ~~
Chesapeake took a 44-43 lead Gall ipolis
4 1 320 237
with 1:01 left iq the second Portsmouth
7 2 666 558
extra period. Owens again hit a· South Point
'7 2 632 507
Athens
5 3 461 435
clutch free tllrdw with 34 Wheelersburg 4 3 427 388
sec onds left to send the game Chesapeake
3 .4 370 .423
into a th_ird ove~; time .
Ironton
2 5 .413 501
Jackson
2 5 419 509
F' reshman Guard Brent Well ston
1 5 240 .~21
Johnson hit two goals early in Meigs
1 6 389 458
the final overtime t9 give the
Friday' s Results:
Imps a 48-44 advantage with .Gallipolis 73 Chesapeake 48
South Poiryt 78 Meigs 59
2:22 left. However, a fifth West 54 Wheelersburg 53
personal foul on SOphomore Ports mouth 69 Waverly 58
East 75 Jackson 59
Bre tt W1'lson, f0 11 owed by a Lancaster
46 Athen s J6
technical agai ns t GAHS,
Jan. 4 Games.:
enabled tl1e Cubs to pull within Gallipolis at Logan
48 47 · ' lh 1 59
· ·
Athens at Waverly
one, - 'WI
: remammg.
Meigs at Ironton
Then Came Folden ~s game- Wellston at Jackson
Coal Grove at South Point
winning points.
h"t
18
of
54
r·
ld
Green
. at Wheelersburg
Tl10 J
te
mps 1
Springfield South · at Portsgoal attempts for 31.4 pet. The mouth
winners won it at the foul
Jan. s Games:
circles·, sinking .15 Of 31 at- Chesapeake at Symmes Valley
tempts for 48 _3 pet. The Imps Wheelersburg at Minford
· had 42 r ebounds, led by

2

SEOA.L

stan dings

SVAC

404

International Hockey
Standings
By United Press International
North
w 1 lplsgfga
Muskegon 19 10 4 42 117 103
Toledo
14 18 1 29 118 121
Flint ·
13 JO 2 28 113 123
Saginaw
13 10 1 27 136 128
Port Huron 11 20 1 23 84 88
South
w f t. pts gf ga

410

Columbus

Standings
SVAC STA NDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Ha.nnan Tface 7 0 SlB 388
Southern

4 3 423

North G;;lllia

3 .s 466

Kyger Creek
S. Valley

2 3 318 317
2 5 489 566

Dayton
18 14 3 39 119 107
Ft. Wayne 18 15 0 36 114 123

Southwestern

1 S 320

Des Moines 17 11

401

s

e'

ATHE
Gold
gal -;,.;an~ast;;'s
of a ~~poin~~roduc~o:~
Atbens Bulldogs in the second
half Friday night to post a 46-36
upset victory over Uoe SEOAL
entry.
Coach Charlle McAfee's
quintet, playing their worst
. game of the yoiUig season,
tallied only four points in the
third period, enabling Lancaster to take a 29-27 lead . t
the final period.
m o
The visiting Gales had taken
a 12-ll first quarter lead but
Athens fought back for a 23-20
halftime advantage.
The Bulldog · sho.ts just
wouldn't fall whlle Lancaster
outscored the hosts 17-9 in the
f' 1
ma period to even their
season record at 3-3.
Athens, whose season mark
dropped to 5-3, hit on 16 of 4li
shots for 35 pet. and only
managed four of 16 at the
charily lme.
.
Lancaster's shooting
produced 19 of 56 attempts for
34pct.andeightof17atthefoul
circle.
·
Athens led in reboiUids 38-29
with Arnie Chonko grabbing 15
for the Bulldogs and Terry
Cunningham eight for the
whiners ,
Don Johnson canned 17
points for the Gales while Mark
Mace tallied 15 for Athens.
The box sc. ore'

J:

LANCASTER {46) '- Haning
1-0-2; Johnson 8-1 -17 ; Bui-ney 1·
2-4; Blosser 5-0-10 ; Cunningham-2-.4-8; Thlmmes 2-1-5.
TOTALS 19'8-46.
ATHENS (36) - Romig 2-15; T. Ellwood 1-0-2; Chonko 3· 2·
8; Locke 2-0-'d.; Mace 7-1-15;
Dailey 1-0-2. TOTALS 16-4-36.
Score by quarters:
Lancaster
12 8 9 _17-.46
Athens
11 12 .4 9-36 .
Reserves : Athens 38, Lan.
caster 37.
Richmond 7 22 .4 18 79 139
Friday's Results.
Springfield 2 New Haven 2
Providence 6 Baltimore 1
!Only games scheduled)

I SVAC ONLY)
Friday's Results
TEAM
W L P OP Des Moines 5 Tojedo 2
Hannan Trace s 0 356 261 Columbus 3 Flint 2
Southern
4 1 320 296
{only games scheduled)
S. Valley
2 2 288 306
American Hockey
Easfern
2 2 225 230
Leag_ue Standing$
N. Gallia
2 3 329 328
By United Press International
Kyger Creek
1 3 253 268
Norlh
. Southwestern 0 5 258 3~0
W · 1 1 pfs gf ga
Totals
16 16 1029 2029 New liaven 20 11 . 7 47 143 117
SVAC RESERVES
Providence 19 15 3 41 168 118
TEAM
W L p OP NovaScolia16 15 5 37 106 101
4 I 22 7 190 Rochester 15 10 5 35 113 10S
North Gallia
Eastern
3 1 14 7 126 Boston
13 17 4 30 106 120
H, Trace
3
2
199
178
s
1
f
d
3 2 194 11 ,
pr ng iel 6 19 7 19 91 126
Sou t hern
South
Kyger Creek
2 2 143 140
~
w 1 t pts gf ga
1 3 171 161 Hershe
S. Valley
19 9 6 • 135 93
Sou 1 hwet:tern
0 5 113 '19 Ctncin~ ti 18 8 ,. ~ 119 98
Totals .
~ 16 l6 .1l04 1204 · Baltimore 17 10 3 37106 91
Friday's Results : ·
·
VIrginia
l2 l7
27 . 93 113
East Kno~ 60 North Gallia 53 ·Jacksnvlte 11 11 3 '17 102 139
'
I} I

PRICE DROPS IN TWO - Gailia'sGil Price (24) tallies
two of his 23 points in this Steve WilBon photo during Friday
night's Blue Devil victory over Chesapeake. Steve Holbrook
{44) and Denny Burke (12) try desperately to stop the GAHS
eenter.

GARS-Chesapeake box

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"For That Personal &amp; Professional Toucll"
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•

.around the two Meigs b1g men,
that bailie 55-49.
The key to the encoWlter 6-3 senior Blll Myers on~ 6-2
f., riday was the effective junior Dan Dodson .
Myers, getting into early foul
defensive net the Pointers put
takin~

•.

ATLANTA ( UPI ) - Lateblooming Georgia took the big
play away from Maryland and
resurrected a two-year-Old
screen pass for its big play to
win the Peach Bowl Friday
night, 17-16.
Maryland got one big play a 68-yard pass from tallback
Louis Carter to tight end
Walter White. But three
Maryland fwnbles stymied .the
Terps and allowed Georgia to
notch its flfth victory in its last
six games.
Bulldog quarterback Andy
Johnson lofted a secondquarter screen pass to running
back Jimmy Poulos who bolted
62 yards for touchdown.
Johnson scored the other
Georgia touchdown on a oneyard riUI.

a

Louisville Holiday
So. Car. 73 Eastrn Ky. 58
Alabama 65 Louisville 55
Luthtr.an Brotherhood
Gettysbg 82 Augsburg 75
Augusiana 71 Roanoke 66

INc.

low 3 points and just 4
rebowuls .
Dodson 1 meanwhile, could
manage just 6 points, getting
off only 4 shots from the- floor,
while grabbing 3 caroms.
Meigs sophomo re Terry
Qualls, seeing less than one
PF Pts . half of artlon, "led the
3
9 Marauder boardmen , hauling
I
4 down 10 missed shots. He was
1
0
1
0 followed by sophomore Jerry
'
16 Cremeans with 9 and freshman
5
6 Chip Brauer with 8.
1
16
David Vance led Pointer
2
'
board
work, grabbing 12. He
3
16
4
8 was helped by Fred Shope with
26 78
10 and Schritter with 9.
PF Pts .
The Marauders, who travel
4
13 to Ironton on Jan , 4 for a teague
4 ~ battle with the Tigers, are now
0
o
, . at 1-6, 0-4 in SEOAL play.
1
12
South Point's record stands
at 7-2.
2,
3'
1
3
&amp;oring by quarters:
5
6
I 2 3 4- T
1
0
South Point
16 18 29 15-78
~
Meigs
12 12 15 20-59
22 59

RT. 7 " CHESHIRE.

PHONE 367-7424

·Meigs-South Point box
Player
Hurd
Pleasant
Ball
Coleman
Tennant
R . Smith
Prater
Vance
Schritter
Shope
TOTALS

SOUTH POINT 1781
FG-A FT -A Reb .

Player

South Point
12 4 5 10-31
hitting for 9 points .
Meigs ( 44 ) - Cremeans 5-1Meigs hit on 17 of 43 shots
from the floor for 39 pet., while 11, Oavenpcirt 3-5-ll, Lewis()..().
South Point canned just 14 of 45 0, Marshall 5-j)-10, Anderson 2field attempts . The Marauders 2-6. Browning 3-0-6. Martin 0-0hil 8 of II from the £oul line, 0, Chapman 0-0-0, Van Meter 1).
w:.lle the Pointers could cash ().().
South Point (31)- Williams
in just 3 times in 10 tries.
2-0-4, Smith 4-1·9, Knight 2-().4,
Scoring by quarters :
'
Coleman
1-1-3, Bolden ~.
1234-T
. 15 12 15 2-44 Kinney 1-1-3, Haynes 1-11-2.
Meigs

Coats

Myers
Dodson
Brauer
Price
Qualls
Au It
Walburn
Blanchad
Ash
May
Cremeans
TOTALS

.:110

0- 1

l -2

o.o

0· 1
0-0

0·0

0-0

2

6 13
2·4

4·.:1

7
l

6·.,

2-4
4·4

1-4

2-2

3
1

0

7

12

7 ~9

l 2

9

1-5

68

10

29-54

20 -26

S2

MEIGS (59)
FG-A FT-A Reb .
6.2 1 l .2
6
1-5
1-2
4
2-4
1-4

2-2

3

5-13
1-7

2·5
8
2-.:1
2
o'. J . 10

1-6

2-2

3

l -3

1-3
2-5
1-2
0-0
1-3
15.,-31

0

2-4
0-2
1·2
1·3
22-74

4

I
2
9
52

71 Ford Gal. 500, 6, auto .• P.S . ............ S17V5
..4..

I

l

LOS ANGELES (UP!) Despite scoring six touch• Woody Hayes was listening to downs against Notre Dame in
the words but it was· a warning an ea rlier game and rushin g
buzzer that he heard.
for 15 TDs during his final six
'' We'd like to get Davis out of games last season, Davis says
the game," Ohio State's jWlior he's bigger, stronger, and
defensive tackle Pete Cusick quicker this year .
was saying to · a group of
He has fallen a bit in the slats
sportswritersm
this season , but he still rushed
" Wait a minute, Pete," for over 1,000 yards and scored
quickly interrupted the Buck- 14 TDs. He is also looking
eyes' ever cautious coach. forward to another shot at the
''You want to be ca reful how Buckeyes.
you say this.' '
"They aren 'I going to be able
Cusick coaly r ecovered and to concentrate solely on me,"
explained, " We're going to Davis said. " II they do, we'll
stick him in the numbers" of
his uniform , not injW'e him.
Smaller statistics this year .
or not, . Anthony Davis,
Southern Cal's crac k tailback,
is sw-e to be carefully watched ''
by
the
sllghtly-favo red
Buckeyes in their Rose Bowl
rematch with the Trojans New
Year 's Day.
· ·
Davis scored a touchdown
MIAMI (UP! ) - Coach Don
and gained 157 yards against Shula of the Miami Dolphins,
Ohio State last year when who today will attempt to
Southern Cal· ran up ils loP.. .become ·the fir st coach to win
sided 42-17 win and claime d the tllree consecuti Ve · Amefican
national championship.
Football Conference titles,
won't make any comparisons
yet between this year's club
College Basketball Results
By United Press International and last year's IUidefeated
Tournaments
·world ch3mpions.
Alb~~~i~!eO~~!~b!i~:~cees
" You can judge the com·
Williams 81 Leb. Valley 69
- parison after the . playoffs, "
A11. COllege
Shula said after putting his
&lt;Sem::;nan
team through its final workout
0 . Roberls 118 '' &gt;uston 108
Southern Cal 82 Rutgers 81
prior to today 's AFC title game
(Consolation&gt;
against the Oakland Raiders at
Weber St. 79 Va . Tech 74
the Orange Bowl. " That's the
Arkansas Razorback
Pittsburgh 83 Conn. 63
Arkansas 96 VMI 86
Asn1and Holiday
W.Va St. 74 Kuiztwn Si. 50
Fredoni~ St. 76 Pace 56
Bentley Holiday
Governor's Classic
Bnfl y Coli. 83 Brynf Coli. 75
Wagner
67 Fa irlgh Ocknsn 65
Bruin Classic
Trenton St . 55 Rider 54
Mi c higan 88 San Fran 66
ECAC Holiday Feolival
UCLA 86 Wyom ing 58
Manhattan
73 Lasalle 65
Nebraska -Omaha
St.John's 64 Princeton 61
Carthage 86 Concordia 76
EAU Claire Classic
Sf. Olaf 75 Thi el 51
EAU
Claire
76 Wabash 70
Big Eight
Armstrng
St
. 75 Ky . St. 74
Ne braska 69 Okla . St.62
Evansville Holiday
Kansas 82 Oklahoma 72
Long Bch 8.4 Assmption 61
Missouri 89 Colorado 83
Evansvl67 Kent St. 65, ot
Iowa 51. 61 Kan . St. 55
Far WeSt Classic
.Chico Classic
Brigham Young 81 Army 72
{Consolatian)
West Vir. 80 Texas 79
Alaska 7.4 Cent. Wash. 67
Oregon St 61 Indiana 48
Pac. Luthrn 722 Laverne 52
Washington 83 Oregon 77
Charlotte Invitational
Freedom Classic
Dvdsn 98 Loyola, Ill. 82
Delaware
St. 79 Shaw 76
Miami , 0 . 96 Syracuse 74
Hampton
lnst.
60 Ho~rd 57
Kodak Classic
Gem Cily
Rochester 81 TCU 74
Long Island 69 E . Mich. 57
Niagra 68 Colgate 6.4
Chattanooga 75 Gannon 73
· Christmas Tree
Granite City Classic
Bloomsbg 70 Mt. Un1on 68
76 Wayne St. 71
St.John's
Denison 71 Ind., Pa . 69
Hllsdle
82
Plfi-Jhnstn 60
Claxton Classic
Hall of Fame Classic
GA . Southern 93 St. Fran 84
Depaul 75 Brown 69
Bos ton Coli. 88 No. Tex . 84
Mass.
84 St. Ptr•s Coli. 61
Colonial City
Lafayette
Invitational
Bluffton 74 Kenyon 57
American 89 St. Fran 68
Doylestown Area Jaycees
Lafayette 85 Buffalo 73
Muhlenberg 67 Del. Val. 57
Lobo Invitational
Lycoming 77 Swarthmore 7.4
Minnesota 73 Bradley 68
Freedonia Jaycees
New Mex_. 109 Columbia 56
Point Park 100 Dow Iing 85

throw the ball to Lynn Swann,
and if they cover him , we can
throw it to (J.K.) McKay and
(Jim ) Obradovich."
The
Buckeyes
went
through their fina l heavy
session
Saturday
at their Rose Bowl training
grounds at Citrus College in
Azusa . Today will be a light
workout day, with the players
in sweats · for a strictly
loosening up period Monday.
' Southern Cal has similar
training sessions planned, although head coach John

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L--------------~

Buc}{.eyes wary of USC
McKay's squad has generally
spent less time in practice.
McKay says the Trojans are
used to not s pending all of their
time in scrimmages.
The Big 10 writers got their
annual look Friday at this
year's Pacific 8 represe ntativ~
in the Pasadena, Calif. classic.
The Pac-8 writers were not
accorded the same privileges
with the Ohio State squad since
Hayes personally screens his
training ca·mp visitors to
restrict the observers to only
those that he knows.

Shula goes for third
straight APC crown

WlllS

P e. a 'Ch BOWI

II Ohio Valley Auto Sales
I
o.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I ~ BG,r:~d. ~~~~~~ ~-r.':. :~.2.. ~--~:. -~~~~:·. ~-1S,S I

trouble, was held to a season-

only way you can judge if we're
as good - if we win it again. "
Shula said the one significant
change woWd be in his club's
quarterback situation:
" Last year we went into th e
title game against Pittsbw-gh
with Earl Morrall starting and
Bob Griese questionable. In
fact, Griese had played only
one quarter in the two months
preceding the title game.
Going in here today, Griese is
coming off two strong performances and Earl is ready to
back him up. Our quarterback
situation is in better shape than
last season but we have more
little hurts this year than last."
Discussing Oakland, Shula
commented that the Raiders,
" Execute-·brilliantly.
"The big difference fr om
when they beat us out there ( 1:17) is the quarterback. Daryle
· Lamonica played against us
. out there and he was reluctant
to. throw. His first pass was
intercepted and he looked
unsure the rest ol the way.
Kenny Stabler has no qualms

Saturday's College
Basketball Results
By United Press International
Final Round
Action Tournaments
Big Eight Tournament
(Consolation)
Oklahoma 91 Oklahoma St. 73
ECAC Holiday
Festival Tournament
(Consolation)
Stanford 79 St. Louis 63

about throwing. He was very
impressive in the second half
against Pittsburgh. He 's more
ready to put the ball irrthe air."
Shula attributed the first
game loss, which broke a
record 18-game winning
str~ak, to the Raiders ' ability
to control the ball.
"Oakland ran well against
us, " Shula said. "They got
themselves
into
good
situations. Their offense is a'lot
like ours. Their three-back
offense is very similar. Marv
Hubbard is the constant like
our Larry Csonka. Clarence
Davis is their outside threat,
like Merc ury Morris, and
CHarlie Smith is a lot like Jim
Kiick. "
·Shula said he possibly would
make one more roster change
before the game today.

City folk and country kin get our
sunny wishes for a New Year of blue skies.
We look forward to happy days ••. and
the good fortune of continuing friendships.

CARTER &amp; EVANS, INC.
GALliPOLIS, OHIO

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.

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•

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Portsmouth rally

topples Waverly 69-58

Lady Kenmore WASHER and DRYER

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·------

CAGERS NAMED
Sophomore forward ·Terry
Qualls was named the Meigs
Marauder 11 Rebounder of the
Week" Friday Dight for his
work in the secood ball of the
'I' Marauders' 78-59 loss to
: Soutb Polol.
,,. Qualls, playing less than
;; ooe ball of the game, pulled
: In 10 rebounds.
•
Senior guard Steve Price
.....was named the "Anfst
-,.layer of the Week," while
junior guard Perk Aull was
tabbed Bs"Defensive Player
of the Week."

"All New AMFEquipment"

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Addison, Ohio

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STRUCTION AVAILABLE

SOUTH POINT- The Meigs
~serve cage team. outscoring
South Point 12-4 in the second
period and 15-5 in the third
frame , ' romped over the
Pointer reserves, 44-31 here
Friday evening .
• Coach
Ron
Logan's
yearlings, playing without the·
services of starting guard Mike
Magnotta, jwnped off to a
quick 15-12 lead, increasing it
to 27-16 at intermission. The
Marauders then opened up
their biggest margin of the
night, 21 points, bulging to a 4221 lead at the end of three
quarters.
· Meigs, with the bench
cleared, was held to just 2
points in the final period while
the Pointers managed to hit for
.;-lO points.
::: Logan was very pleased with
: his team's work, saying, " The
..boys played a super game.
; They did a real good job,
~specially defensively. It was
&gt;excellent defensive game."
: The Meigs junior varsity was
!!Jl8Ced by Jerry Cremeans and
iiiMickey Davenport with 11
~oinls each, follow ed by
;poarlie Marshall with 10.
• ·Sinith led the Pointer attack,

-

&amp;

from the floor, a freezing 29
pel., while canning just 15 of 31
foul shots. Junior guard Lonnie
Coots led the Meigs offense,
hittlng 6 from the field and 1 at
the line for 13 points, while
senior ballhandler Steve Price
hit 5 times [rom long range and
twice at lhe line for 12 points.
South Point and Meigs met
earlier in the year at Rock
Springs, with the Pointers

Reserves romp

.;:::::i:::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::

TARA
Townhouse
Apartments

·'

SOUTH POINT - The South 10 and 12-alllate in thai initial
Point Pointers, behind just period.
twice early in the contest.
The Pointer,s, hitting a
dominated the final three bllstering 54 pet. from lhe field
quarters here Friday night and 77 pet. from the charity
enroule to a. 711-09 blasting of stripe, were paced by guard
the Meigs Marauders. ,
Ron Tennant and forwards
The Marauders of coach Greg Prater and John Schritter
Roger Brauer took early leads with 16 points each.
of 2..oand 4·2, but were never in
The Marauders, getting off
front after that, although they 20 more shots than South Point.
knotted the coWJt iwice. at 10- 74-54, connected only 22 times

~~~=:;:=::::~:::::::::::::::::

EAR

"0

"
'

"

4
EW

Sears
0

..'

SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP

CHESAPEAKE PANTHERS {48)
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
7
1
6
Roger Adkins. f
3-7.
0·0
5
0
0
1
Rusty Marcum, f
0-0
0-0
1
4
2
9
m~utes of sloppy pia~ in .!be SteveHolbrook, f
4-11 1-l
2
·1
Shawn Stephens, f
2· 11 · 2-.4
3
5
6
4
8
6
Denny Bur~e . c
3-9
0-0
5
1
6
12
5·9
2-4
5
thers first blood.
. Date Pemberton, g
2
0
Kev Rice , g
o.o
0-0
1
0
The Panthers led 8-4 with
1
3 .7
Dave Sheeis, g
. -2-6
3-5
5
3
5
0
2:31 left.Jim Niday hit two free
Dave Musser, c
0·2
0-0
2
DaleRussell
,
g
J.J
0-0
1
0
0
2
throws,Pricetalliedonalayup TOTALS
20-57 8· 14 30 30 24 48
.
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS (73)
and free throw to give GARS a
FG-A FT.A PF RB TO TP
9-8 advantage after one pertod. PLAYER-Pos.
Mike Sickles, f
3·6
5-8
1
5
1 11
The Devils were never
2.
MlkeBerridge.f
J.J
0-1
0
0
2
headed . GAHS outscored Tom Valentine, f
s
·
4
1·3
3-5
2 10
3
10
2·8
6-6
1
3
Ch~peake 21-9 m the sec~nd Gary Snowden, g
3
23
Gil
Price.
c
5-9
13-18
2
13
penod to take. a 31).15 hal!tune
0
4
Jim Warren, c
2·2
0-0
0
3
lead.
.
B 12
5-9
2-3
4
l
Jim Niday ,g
1
Roger Dailey, f
0.1
2-3
0
5
2
Tbe Galliaos outscored
4
1
JimSinger,
g
2·6
0-0
4
3
2
17
CHS 1). in Uoelhlrd period
0
0
Paul Tar.lor. 1
0-0
0-0
0
1
for a 5N2 advaolage. The
0
0
Ken Wil , g
0-0
0-0
0
0
TOTALS
21 -47 31 -44 14 44 23 73
Devils laW~d 23 markers to
Score by quilrters :
Chesapeakes 16 in Uoe last
8 7 17 . 16 - 48
Chesapeake Panthers
slaD2a • . ,
.
.
9 21 20 23 - 73
GAHS
Blue
Devils
G lhpolis next t 10g
t
and
Marvin Turner,
Officials
Scotty
Grei
sheimer
a
ou
ts a ·
Chillicothe
Chapter
.
Logan Friday. The Panthers
pl~y at . Symmes Valley . 'l_~~;~~~f:m@;~;;~~f.;l;~;mili~~1~l;;;m~~mmml;i~f:l;[:l~~j~j~~~f:j~;l~~j~~j~~~m~ffi~j;j~~§ili~~;j~j~;§fi~;~i;mm;m~~;~
Saturday mght.

..

SHARKS SOLD
.
LOS ANGELES (UP! )- The
. Los Angeles Sharks hockey
team, currently struggling in
last place in the WHA's
Western Division, was sold
Friday by majority owner Dr:
Leonard Bloom to Los Angeles
business executive Larry Daniels for an undisclosed amoiUitl
The sale, annoiUiced by WHA
President Dennis Murphy, bsa
to be ratified by the league's
Board of Trustees at its
m~eting in St. Paul, Mlnn. l
next week .

Cofors $5 more

20 15 2 42 139 134
2 36 122 114

..

Mercef75 Ind iana St. 68
Milwaukee Classic
W1sconsin 7.4 SMU 73
MarQuette· 76 Arizona 62

r·------- ----,

•

hauled down 33 reboiUids with
Sterling Logan grabbing ntne&lt;
The Pirates concluded thefi.
two game road trip at Ea.t
Knox Saturday night.
Friday night, North Gailll!
will travel to Kyger Creek in an
important SVAC encounter. '
North Gallia (Sl) - Wed·
dington , 2.0. .4 ; Logan, 2-4-8 ;
Camden, 2-0-4; Robinette, 3...:
10; James, 3-0-6; Stout, .7-3-17 ;
Smith, 2-0-4. Totals :n -11· 53 . .,.
East Knox (60) - Frazee, l2-8; Buckingham, 5 -5· 15~
Dague, 6-0-12 ; Shriver. 3·2-8;
Swartz, 5-0-10; Hissong, 3-0-6;
Kirk, 0·1-1. Totals 25-10-60.
By Quarters :
5 19 14 15-51
North Gallia
22 16 10 12- 66
East Knox

BLADENSBURG - The host
East Knox Bulldogs jwnped
- inlo a 16-0 lead early in the £irst
quarter here Friday night then
held on to hand North Gallia a
60-53 loss.
Before Coach Jim Foster's
Pirates could get untracked,
East Knox led by Mike Swartz,
blitzed the court in taking a
commanding 22-0 lead at the
end of the first JlOrlod.
North Gailia came on strong
in the second quarter outscoring the Bulldogs, 19-16 but
NG was behind, 38-24, at the
half. The Pirates outplayed
East Knox the rest of the way
but the early deflcit was too big
to make up.
East Knox, hitting :;o pet.
from the' floor, was led by Jeff
Buckingham's 15 points.
Other Bulldogs hitting double
!lgures were Carlos Dague
with 12 points and Swartz with
10.
· Tim Stout, :;.10 senior guard ,
led the Pirates with 17 points.
Dave Robinette, 6-2 senior
forward, also dwnped in 10
points. North Gallla hit 21 of 65
floor attempts for 32 pet. and 11
of 20 at the charity stripe.
East Knox sank 10 of 27 £rom
the rree throw line and grabbed
45 rebound s. Nortlt Gallia

Las Vegas Clii$-SIC
Denver 80
Nevada 114 No. Ill . 9'2
Mercer lrwitat1onal

v1rgm ia 81

':l

"

GALLIPOLIS - Consistency from both the field
and free throw circle, good defensive play, and
bOard control el)abled Coach Jim Osborne's
Gallipolis Blue Devils to bomb visiting C h esapeake
73-48 before a full house here Friday night.
The Blue Devils enjoyed
their best night of the year
offensively, hitting 21 of 47 field
goal attempts for 44.6 pet .
against a zone defense
set
up
by
the
Panthers. From the charity
llne, GAHS canned 31 of 44
attempts for 70.4 pet.
The Galliaos picked .off 44
rebounds aod committed
ooly 14 personal fouls .
GAHS, however, was guilty
of 23 turnovers.
Four Blue Devils finiShed in
double figures in scoring.
· Senior Center Gil Price led the
balanced attack with 23. JIUiior
guard Jlm Niday pwnped in 12
while jiUiior forward Mike
Sickles added 11. Sophomore
guard Gary Snowden finished
the game with 10 markers,
including six-for-six at the foul

..
...

• 17- The SWJday Times. Senti'!"l, SIUiday, Dee. 30, 1913

This offer good
on NEW TIR.S only
from '74 "X" Flyer

•

WAVERLY- Bo Clemmons
. and · Dave Underwood combined for 44 points Friday night
in leading the Portsmouth
·Trojan~ to a 69-58 victory over
previously IUibeaten Waverly.
The loss was Waverly's first
of the season, their first loss 'in
Uoe new fieldhouse, and their
£frst Joss at home' since Ports-.
mouth downed the Tigers two·
years ago.
Despite balanced scoring by
all five Tiger siarters and good
Shooting, the Trojans simply
owned the backboards as they
pulled dO)'m 51 reboiUids whlle
pemllttlng the Tigers only 24.

r.4

The Tigers and Trojans
played even for the first three
quarters as Waverly led 14-ll
after one period, Portsmouth
took a 3:1-27' halftime lead, and
the score was·deadlocked at 4545 after three quarters.
However, the fantastic board
work and hot shooting by the
Trojans in the !lnal slanza was
overpowering as they outscored Waverly 24-13 for the

win.
Underwood's 24points and 19
'rebounds top~ all individual
performances
while
Bo
Clemmons chipped in 20 points,

and Randy Fite added 10.
All five Tigers- finished in
double 'figures led by John
Shoemaker's l4 points and six
reboiUids.
Statistics of the contest show
Portsmouth hitting 28 of 65
shots for 43 pet. PHS converted
13 of 19 free throws:
TbeTigersconnectedon 23of
· 54 attempts for 42 pet. and
cashed in 12 of 17 cbarity '
throws.
Coach . Carroll • -Hawhee's
quintet held a sllm 56-53 lead
with4:37leftin the contest, but
the Trojans dwnped in six
consecutive polnt.o to regain

the lead for good with 2:44left
and won going away .
The win upped Portsmouth's
'season mark to 7-2 while the
Tigers are now 6-l.
, The box score:

'

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APPLICANTS MAY CALL ( 304) 882-2126 (collect)
BEtWEEN THE HOURS OF 7:30 AM TO 4:00 PM

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PORTSMOUTH {69) - Doll .
2·2·6; Clemmons 8-4-20 ' Un·
derwood 12·0-24 ; Williamson 31-7; McCoy 1-0-2; Fife 2·6·10 ,
TOTALS 28-13-69.
WAVERLY {SBI - Thomas
4-.4-12 ; tracy 5·2-12; Dudu it .4·2·
10 ; Shol:!maker 6-2-14; Swindler
4'7-10. TOTALS 23-12'58.
Score by quarters'
Portsmouth
J.J 21 13 24- 69
Waverly
14 l3 18 13- 58
Res.erves; Portsmouth 42,
Waverly 38.

PHILIP SPORN PLANT
Post Office Box :1611, N•w H•ven, Wttt Vlrtinl• 25MS
TolepllciM' .,..acodo304 112-3111

An Equ.al Opportunity ElllploJer
'.

!

,
I

�Pirates hurt
by bad start

Devils rip
CHS, 73-48

I
GARY SNOWDEN ( 40) pops in short jwnper against
visiting Chesapeake during Friday night's non-conference
basketball game on the GAHS boards. Chesapeake's Shawn
Stephens ( 25) tries to block the shot. Snowden came off. the
bench to score 10 points for the Devils, and was named
" Pl•yer-&lt;&gt;f-the-Week" by Coach Jim Osborne.

circles. Snowden was named
" player-of-the-week" by Coach
Osborne.
. Price hauled down 13
rebounds for GARS. JIUiior
forward Tom Valentine came
up wiUo 10 snags for the winners.
Senior guard Dale Pemberton led Chesapeake's attack
with 12 potnts. Denny Burke,
senior center, was limited to
six points by the Devils' tight
man-to-man aefense.
Chesapeake hit, only 20 of o7
field goal attempts for 35.8 pet.
Coach Lewis n•Antoni's lads
were eight of 14 at the foul
circles (00.7). The visitors
committed 30 personal fouls,
losing four men by Uoe foul
route. Chesapeake had 30
rebo!Uids and 24 cosUy tumovers.
Burke puUed down elgbt
rebounds for tbe losers.
Sophomore forward Roger
Adkins added seveo.
The Blue Devils upped their
season mark to 4-1. The
Panthers dropped to 3-4
overall.
Neither team managed to
score during the first two

Gales
.Imps win in three
upset
OT's; Folden hero
B u lldous:~al5::~'fe~i g:~k~~ ~:.

I

I
'

1-

I

1

GALLIPOLIS -

...

Sophomore guard Tony Folden

can ned three clutch free throws during the final 26
seconds of a tr1pl e overtime to gtve Coach W1llard
! Buddy) Moore's Ga llipolis Blue Imps a thrilling 5149 victory over Coach Tom McClellan's visiting
Ch esa peake C ubs here Friday night.
Folde.~,"~ho led a ll scorers
with 22 poonts, sank lwo charity Sophomore Brent Sa!Uiders' 16.
tosses with 26 ~econds left in Fourteen cos tly turnovers
the third extra period to give
were committed by the Imps.
UJe lmps a 50-41 advantage.
Sophomore guard Rusty
Fre shman ...gllil r&lt;! ... Keith
Marcum led ~oe Cubs attack
McGuire popped in . .u long_ with 12 points. Another
ju mper , with 13 -seconds . sophomore,JoeJenkins,added
10 ·
remoining lo reduce it to \i:0.-49.
The C•bs fouled Folden on
The Imps next outing is at
purpose with six seco~ds left. Logan Friday. Box si:ore of
Folden 's flrst shot was true , Friday's victory:
making it 51-49. Time ran. out
CHESAPEAKE CUBS ·1491
- Dale Ros.sell , 3-1-7; Rusty
before the visitors could get Marcum, 6-0-12 ; Kev Rice, 2-4·
down court.
8; Joe Jenkins, o .JO; Bob
It was the Imps' third victory ~~~n~~7t~ -~~~~f~~~ J~~ n,e~eif
in five sU!rts. The Cubs are now Bla ck, o.o.o; Dirk Singer, o.o.o.
4-3 on the year.
TOTALS 20-9-48.
Th Im ·urn do t · f t
GAHS BLUE IMPS !511 e
PSJ pe u m ron
Brefl Wilson . 3-2-B; Tony
12-4 after one period. It was Hh Folden, 7-8-22; Brent Saunders,
6 during t.h e halftim e in- 3·0-6; Brent Johnson , .4-0-B;
termiss ion. GAHS maintained David O..ens, 1·5· 7; Roger
·
d
Brandeberry, 0-0-0; Ed Smith,
a ll).poont a vantage a fter o.o.o. TOTALS 18. 15 . 51.
three penods, 28-18.
Score by quarter"
The Panthers race-horse Cubs
4 2 12 18 • 4 5-49
Imps
12 4 12 8 4 4 7-5 1
1 1
styepaygotto
t h e I mps inthe
flnal period as the visitors
outscored GAHS 16-8 to send
the game into overtime with
the score tied 36-all.
CHS led 41).38 with 1: 19left in
the overti m e. Sophomore
cente1· David Owens tied it up
ALL-GAMES
40-all with .1 :10 left to send the TEAM
W L P OP
game into a second overtime. ro~~e~ly
: · ~ ~: ~~
Chesapeake took a 44-43 lead Gall ipolis
4 1 320 237
with 1:01 left iq the second Portsmouth
7 2 666 558
extra period. Owens again hit a· South Point
'7 2 632 507
Athens
5 3 461 435
clutch free tllrdw with 34 Wheelersburg 4 3 427 388
sec onds left to send the game Chesapeake
3 .4 370 .423
into a th_ird ove~; time .
Ironton
2 5 .413 501
Jackson
2 5 419 509
F' reshman Guard Brent Well ston
1 5 240 .~21
Johnson hit two goals early in Meigs
1 6 389 458
the final overtime t9 give the
Friday' s Results:
Imps a 48-44 advantage with .Gallipolis 73 Chesapeake 48
South Poiryt 78 Meigs 59
2:22 left. However, a fifth West 54 Wheelersburg 53
personal foul on SOphomore Ports mouth 69 Waverly 58
East 75 Jackson 59
Bre tt W1'lson, f0 11 owed by a Lancaster
46 Athen s J6
technical agai ns t GAHS,
Jan. 4 Games.:
enabled tl1e Cubs to pull within Gallipolis at Logan
48 47 · ' lh 1 59
· ·
Athens at Waverly
one, - 'WI
: remammg.
Meigs at Ironton
Then Came Folden ~s game- Wellston at Jackson
Coal Grove at South Point
winning points.
h"t
18
of
54
r·
ld
Green
. at Wheelersburg
Tl10 J
te
mps 1
Springfield South · at Portsgoal attempts for 31.4 pet. The mouth
winners won it at the foul
Jan. s Games:
circles·, sinking .15 Of 31 at- Chesapeake at Symmes Valley
tempts for 48 _3 pet. The Imps Wheelersburg at Minford
· had 42 r ebounds, led by

2

SEOA.L

stan dings

SVAC

404

International Hockey
Standings
By United Press International
North
w 1 lplsgfga
Muskegon 19 10 4 42 117 103
Toledo
14 18 1 29 118 121
Flint ·
13 JO 2 28 113 123
Saginaw
13 10 1 27 136 128
Port Huron 11 20 1 23 84 88
South
w f t. pts gf ga

410

Columbus

Standings
SVAC STA NDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Ha.nnan Tface 7 0 SlB 388
Southern

4 3 423

North G;;lllia

3 .s 466

Kyger Creek
S. Valley

2 3 318 317
2 5 489 566

Dayton
18 14 3 39 119 107
Ft. Wayne 18 15 0 36 114 123

Southwestern

1 S 320

Des Moines 17 11

401

s

e'

ATHE
Gold
gal -;,.;an~ast;;'s
of a ~~poin~~roduc~o:~
Atbens Bulldogs in the second
half Friday night to post a 46-36
upset victory over Uoe SEOAL
entry.
Coach Charlle McAfee's
quintet, playing their worst
. game of the yoiUig season,
tallied only four points in the
third period, enabling Lancaster to take a 29-27 lead . t
the final period.
m o
The visiting Gales had taken
a 12-ll first quarter lead but
Athens fought back for a 23-20
halftime advantage.
The Bulldog · sho.ts just
wouldn't fall whlle Lancaster
outscored the hosts 17-9 in the
f' 1
ma period to even their
season record at 3-3.
Athens, whose season mark
dropped to 5-3, hit on 16 of 4li
shots for 35 pet. and only
managed four of 16 at the
charily lme.
.
Lancaster's shooting
produced 19 of 56 attempts for
34pct.andeightof17atthefoul
circle.
·
Athens led in reboiUids 38-29
with Arnie Chonko grabbing 15
for the Bulldogs and Terry
Cunningham eight for the
whiners ,
Don Johnson canned 17
points for the Gales while Mark
Mace tallied 15 for Athens.
The box sc. ore'

J:

LANCASTER {46) '- Haning
1-0-2; Johnson 8-1 -17 ; Bui-ney 1·
2-4; Blosser 5-0-10 ; Cunningham-2-.4-8; Thlmmes 2-1-5.
TOTALS 19'8-46.
ATHENS (36) - Romig 2-15; T. Ellwood 1-0-2; Chonko 3· 2·
8; Locke 2-0-'d.; Mace 7-1-15;
Dailey 1-0-2. TOTALS 16-4-36.
Score by quarters:
Lancaster
12 8 9 _17-.46
Athens
11 12 .4 9-36 .
Reserves : Athens 38, Lan.
caster 37.
Richmond 7 22 .4 18 79 139
Friday's Results.
Springfield 2 New Haven 2
Providence 6 Baltimore 1
!Only games scheduled)

I SVAC ONLY)
Friday's Results
TEAM
W L P OP Des Moines 5 Tojedo 2
Hannan Trace s 0 356 261 Columbus 3 Flint 2
Southern
4 1 320 296
{only games scheduled)
S. Valley
2 2 288 306
American Hockey
Easfern
2 2 225 230
Leag_ue Standing$
N. Gallia
2 3 329 328
By United Press International
Kyger Creek
1 3 253 268
Norlh
. Southwestern 0 5 258 3~0
W · 1 1 pfs gf ga
Totals
16 16 1029 2029 New liaven 20 11 . 7 47 143 117
SVAC RESERVES
Providence 19 15 3 41 168 118
TEAM
W L p OP NovaScolia16 15 5 37 106 101
4 I 22 7 190 Rochester 15 10 5 35 113 10S
North Gallia
Eastern
3 1 14 7 126 Boston
13 17 4 30 106 120
H, Trace
3
2
199
178
s
1
f
d
3 2 194 11 ,
pr ng iel 6 19 7 19 91 126
Sou t hern
South
Kyger Creek
2 2 143 140
~
w 1 t pts gf ga
1 3 171 161 Hershe
S. Valley
19 9 6 • 135 93
Sou 1 hwet:tern
0 5 113 '19 Ctncin~ ti 18 8 ,. ~ 119 98
Totals .
~ 16 l6 .1l04 1204 · Baltimore 17 10 3 37106 91
Friday's Results : ·
·
VIrginia
l2 l7
27 . 93 113
East Kno~ 60 North Gallia 53 ·Jacksnvlte 11 11 3 '17 102 139
'
I} I

PRICE DROPS IN TWO - Gailia'sGil Price (24) tallies
two of his 23 points in this Steve WilBon photo during Friday
night's Blue Devil victory over Chesapeake. Steve Holbrook
{44) and Denny Burke (12) try desperately to stop the GAHS
eenter.

GARS-Chesapeake box

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1973

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•

.around the two Meigs b1g men,
that bailie 55-49.
The key to the encoWlter 6-3 senior Blll Myers on~ 6-2
f., riday was the effective junior Dan Dodson .
Myers, getting into early foul
defensive net the Pointers put
takin~

•.

ATLANTA ( UPI ) - Lateblooming Georgia took the big
play away from Maryland and
resurrected a two-year-Old
screen pass for its big play to
win the Peach Bowl Friday
night, 17-16.
Maryland got one big play a 68-yard pass from tallback
Louis Carter to tight end
Walter White. But three
Maryland fwnbles stymied .the
Terps and allowed Georgia to
notch its flfth victory in its last
six games.
Bulldog quarterback Andy
Johnson lofted a secondquarter screen pass to running
back Jimmy Poulos who bolted
62 yards for touchdown.
Johnson scored the other
Georgia touchdown on a oneyard riUI.

a

Louisville Holiday
So. Car. 73 Eastrn Ky. 58
Alabama 65 Louisville 55
Luthtr.an Brotherhood
Gettysbg 82 Augsburg 75
Augusiana 71 Roanoke 66

INc.

low 3 points and just 4
rebowuls .
Dodson 1 meanwhile, could
manage just 6 points, getting
off only 4 shots from the- floor,
while grabbing 3 caroms.
Meigs sophomo re Terry
Qualls, seeing less than one
PF Pts . half of artlon, "led the
3
9 Marauder boardmen , hauling
I
4 down 10 missed shots. He was
1
0
1
0 followed by sophomore Jerry
'
16 Cremeans with 9 and freshman
5
6 Chip Brauer with 8.
1
16
David Vance led Pointer
2
'
board
work, grabbing 12. He
3
16
4
8 was helped by Fred Shope with
26 78
10 and Schritter with 9.
PF Pts .
The Marauders, who travel
4
13 to Ironton on Jan , 4 for a teague
4 ~ battle with the Tigers, are now
0
o
, . at 1-6, 0-4 in SEOAL play.
1
12
South Point's record stands
at 7-2.
2,
3'
1
3
&amp;oring by quarters:
5
6
I 2 3 4- T
1
0
South Point
16 18 29 15-78
~
Meigs
12 12 15 20-59
22 59

RT. 7 " CHESHIRE.

PHONE 367-7424

·Meigs-South Point box
Player
Hurd
Pleasant
Ball
Coleman
Tennant
R . Smith
Prater
Vance
Schritter
Shope
TOTALS

SOUTH POINT 1781
FG-A FT -A Reb .

Player

South Point
12 4 5 10-31
hitting for 9 points .
Meigs ( 44 ) - Cremeans 5-1Meigs hit on 17 of 43 shots
from the floor for 39 pet., while 11, Oavenpcirt 3-5-ll, Lewis()..().
South Point canned just 14 of 45 0, Marshall 5-j)-10, Anderson 2field attempts . The Marauders 2-6. Browning 3-0-6. Martin 0-0hil 8 of II from the £oul line, 0, Chapman 0-0-0, Van Meter 1).
w:.lle the Pointers could cash ().().
South Point (31)- Williams
in just 3 times in 10 tries.
2-0-4, Smith 4-1·9, Knight 2-().4,
Scoring by quarters :
'
Coleman
1-1-3, Bolden ~.
1234-T
. 15 12 15 2-44 Kinney 1-1-3, Haynes 1-11-2.
Meigs

Coats

Myers
Dodson
Brauer
Price
Qualls
Au It
Walburn
Blanchad
Ash
May
Cremeans
TOTALS

.:110

0- 1

l -2

o.o

0· 1
0-0

0·0

0-0

2

6 13
2·4

4·.:1

7
l

6·.,

2-4
4·4

1-4

2-2

3
1

0

7

12

7 ~9

l 2

9

1-5

68

10

29-54

20 -26

S2

MEIGS (59)
FG-A FT-A Reb .
6.2 1 l .2
6
1-5
1-2
4
2-4
1-4

2-2

3

5-13
1-7

2·5
8
2-.:1
2
o'. J . 10

1-6

2-2

3

l -3

1-3
2-5
1-2
0-0
1-3
15.,-31

0

2-4
0-2
1·2
1·3
22-74

4

I
2
9
52

71 Ford Gal. 500, 6, auto .• P.S . ............ S17V5
..4..

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l

LOS ANGELES (UP!) Despite scoring six touch• Woody Hayes was listening to downs against Notre Dame in
the words but it was· a warning an ea rlier game and rushin g
buzzer that he heard.
for 15 TDs during his final six
'' We'd like to get Davis out of games last season, Davis says
the game," Ohio State's jWlior he's bigger, stronger, and
defensive tackle Pete Cusick quicker this year .
was saying to · a group of
He has fallen a bit in the slats
sportswritersm
this season , but he still rushed
" Wait a minute, Pete," for over 1,000 yards and scored
quickly interrupted the Buck- 14 TDs. He is also looking
eyes' ever cautious coach. forward to another shot at the
''You want to be ca reful how Buckeyes.
you say this.' '
"They aren 'I going to be able
Cusick coaly r ecovered and to concentrate solely on me,"
explained, " We're going to Davis said. " II they do, we'll
stick him in the numbers" of
his uniform , not injW'e him.
Smaller statistics this year .
or not, . Anthony Davis,
Southern Cal's crac k tailback,
is sw-e to be carefully watched ''
by
the
sllghtly-favo red
Buckeyes in their Rose Bowl
rematch with the Trojans New
Year 's Day.
· ·
Davis scored a touchdown
MIAMI (UP! ) - Coach Don
and gained 157 yards against Shula of the Miami Dolphins,
Ohio State last year when who today will attempt to
Southern Cal· ran up ils loP.. .become ·the fir st coach to win
sided 42-17 win and claime d the tllree consecuti Ve · Amefican
national championship.
Football Conference titles,
won't make any comparisons
yet between this year's club
College Basketball Results
By United Press International and last year's IUidefeated
Tournaments
·world ch3mpions.
Alb~~~i~!eO~~!~b!i~:~cees
" You can judge the com·
Williams 81 Leb. Valley 69
- parison after the . playoffs, "
A11. COllege
Shula said after putting his
&lt;Sem::;nan
team through its final workout
0 . Roberls 118 '' &gt;uston 108
Southern Cal 82 Rutgers 81
prior to today 's AFC title game
(Consolation&gt;
against the Oakland Raiders at
Weber St. 79 Va . Tech 74
the Orange Bowl. " That's the
Arkansas Razorback
Pittsburgh 83 Conn. 63
Arkansas 96 VMI 86
Asn1and Holiday
W.Va St. 74 Kuiztwn Si. 50
Fredoni~ St. 76 Pace 56
Bentley Holiday
Governor's Classic
Bnfl y Coli. 83 Brynf Coli. 75
Wagner
67 Fa irlgh Ocknsn 65
Bruin Classic
Trenton St . 55 Rider 54
Mi c higan 88 San Fran 66
ECAC Holiday Feolival
UCLA 86 Wyom ing 58
Manhattan
73 Lasalle 65
Nebraska -Omaha
St.John's 64 Princeton 61
Carthage 86 Concordia 76
EAU Claire Classic
Sf. Olaf 75 Thi el 51
EAU
Claire
76 Wabash 70
Big Eight
Armstrng
St
. 75 Ky . St. 74
Ne braska 69 Okla . St.62
Evansville Holiday
Kansas 82 Oklahoma 72
Long Bch 8.4 Assmption 61
Missouri 89 Colorado 83
Evansvl67 Kent St. 65, ot
Iowa 51. 61 Kan . St. 55
Far WeSt Classic
.Chico Classic
Brigham Young 81 Army 72
{Consolatian)
West Vir. 80 Texas 79
Alaska 7.4 Cent. Wash. 67
Oregon St 61 Indiana 48
Pac. Luthrn 722 Laverne 52
Washington 83 Oregon 77
Charlotte Invitational
Freedom Classic
Dvdsn 98 Loyola, Ill. 82
Delaware
St. 79 Shaw 76
Miami , 0 . 96 Syracuse 74
Hampton
lnst.
60 Ho~rd 57
Kodak Classic
Gem Cily
Rochester 81 TCU 74
Long Island 69 E . Mich. 57
Niagra 68 Colgate 6.4
Chattanooga 75 Gannon 73
· Christmas Tree
Granite City Classic
Bloomsbg 70 Mt. Un1on 68
76 Wayne St. 71
St.John's
Denison 71 Ind., Pa . 69
Hllsdle
82
Plfi-Jhnstn 60
Claxton Classic
Hall of Fame Classic
GA . Southern 93 St. Fran 84
Depaul 75 Brown 69
Bos ton Coli. 88 No. Tex . 84
Mass.
84 St. Ptr•s Coli. 61
Colonial City
Lafayette
Invitational
Bluffton 74 Kenyon 57
American 89 St. Fran 68
Doylestown Area Jaycees
Lafayette 85 Buffalo 73
Muhlenberg 67 Del. Val. 57
Lobo Invitational
Lycoming 77 Swarthmore 7.4
Minnesota 73 Bradley 68
Freedonia Jaycees
New Mex_. 109 Columbia 56
Point Park 100 Dow Iing 85

throw the ball to Lynn Swann,
and if they cover him , we can
throw it to (J.K.) McKay and
(Jim ) Obradovich."
The
Buckeyes
went
through their fina l heavy
session
Saturday
at their Rose Bowl training
grounds at Citrus College in
Azusa . Today will be a light
workout day, with the players
in sweats · for a strictly
loosening up period Monday.
' Southern Cal has similar
training sessions planned, although head coach John

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L--------------~

Buc}{.eyes wary of USC
McKay's squad has generally
spent less time in practice.
McKay says the Trojans are
used to not s pending all of their
time in scrimmages.
The Big 10 writers got their
annual look Friday at this
year's Pacific 8 represe ntativ~
in the Pasadena, Calif. classic.
The Pac-8 writers were not
accorded the same privileges
with the Ohio State squad since
Hayes personally screens his
training ca·mp visitors to
restrict the observers to only
those that he knows.

Shula goes for third
straight APC crown

WlllS

P e. a 'Ch BOWI

II Ohio Valley Auto Sales
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o.
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I
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I ~ BG,r:~d. ~~~~~~ ~-r.':. :~.2.. ~--~:. -~~~~:·. ~-1S,S I

trouble, was held to a season-

only way you can judge if we're
as good - if we win it again. "
Shula said the one significant
change woWd be in his club's
quarterback situation:
" Last year we went into th e
title game against Pittsbw-gh
with Earl Morrall starting and
Bob Griese questionable. In
fact, Griese had played only
one quarter in the two months
preceding the title game.
Going in here today, Griese is
coming off two strong performances and Earl is ready to
back him up. Our quarterback
situation is in better shape than
last season but we have more
little hurts this year than last."
Discussing Oakland, Shula
commented that the Raiders,
" Execute-·brilliantly.
"The big difference fr om
when they beat us out there ( 1:17) is the quarterback. Daryle
· Lamonica played against us
. out there and he was reluctant
to. throw. His first pass was
intercepted and he looked
unsure the rest ol the way.
Kenny Stabler has no qualms

Saturday's College
Basketball Results
By United Press International
Final Round
Action Tournaments
Big Eight Tournament
(Consolation)
Oklahoma 91 Oklahoma St. 73
ECAC Holiday
Festival Tournament
(Consolation)
Stanford 79 St. Louis 63

about throwing. He was very
impressive in the second half
against Pittsburgh. He 's more
ready to put the ball irrthe air."
Shula attributed the first
game loss, which broke a
record 18-game winning
str~ak, to the Raiders ' ability
to control the ball.
"Oakland ran well against
us, " Shula said. "They got
themselves
into
good
situations. Their offense is a'lot
like ours. Their three-back
offense is very similar. Marv
Hubbard is the constant like
our Larry Csonka. Clarence
Davis is their outside threat,
like Merc ury Morris, and
CHarlie Smith is a lot like Jim
Kiick. "
·Shula said he possibly would
make one more roster change
before the game today.

City folk and country kin get our
sunny wishes for a New Year of blue skies.
We look forward to happy days ••. and
the good fortune of continuing friendships.

CARTER &amp; EVANS, INC.
GALliPOLIS, OHIO

Central Operating Company's
.

Philip Sporn Plant
New Haven, W.Va.

•

.Has Job Openings For Permanent Employment In The Following
Skills
·
MECHANICAL MAINTENANCE

Sugar Bowl Classic
(Consolation)
LSU !N.O.J 81 Vlllanova eo Cot )

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)

~ate

Portsmouth rally

topples Waverly 69-58

Lady Kenmore WASHER and DRYER

Kenmore
SEWING
MACHINE

Pay Only One
Uti lily

·------

CAGERS NAMED
Sophomore forward ·Terry
Qualls was named the Meigs
Marauder 11 Rebounder of the
Week" Friday Dight for his
work in the secood ball of the
'I' Marauders' 78-59 loss to
: Soutb Polol.
,,. Qualls, playing less than
;; ooe ball of the game, pulled
: In 10 rebounds.
•
Senior guard Steve Price
.....was named the "Anfst
-,.layer of the Week," while
junior guard Perk Aull was
tabbed Bs"Defensive Player
of the Week."

"All New AMFEquipment"

v

llh Baths
Addison, Ohio

"'
•
:
:
::
:::

~II ,\\

PROFESSIONAL BALL FITTING.
DRILLING&amp; IN·
STRUCTION AVAILABLE

SOUTH POINT- The Meigs
~serve cage team. outscoring
South Point 12-4 in the second
period and 15-5 in the third
frame , ' romped over the
Pointer reserves, 44-31 here
Friday evening .
• Coach
Ron
Logan's
yearlings, playing without the·
services of starting guard Mike
Magnotta, jwnped off to a
quick 15-12 lead, increasing it
to 27-16 at intermission. The
Marauders then opened up
their biggest margin of the
night, 21 points, bulging to a 4221 lead at the end of three
quarters.
· Meigs, with the bench
cleared, was held to just 2
points in the final period while
the Pointers managed to hit for
.;-lO points.
::: Logan was very pleased with
: his team's work, saying, " The
..boys played a super game.
; They did a real good job,
~specially defensively. It was
&gt;excellent defensive game."
: The Meigs junior varsity was
!!Jl8Ced by Jerry Cremeans and
iiiMickey Davenport with 11
~oinls each, follow ed by
;poarlie Marshall with 10.
• ·Sinith led the Pointer attack,

-

&amp;

from the floor, a freezing 29
pel., while canning just 15 of 31
foul shots. Junior guard Lonnie
Coots led the Meigs offense,
hittlng 6 from the field and 1 at
the line for 13 points, while
senior ballhandler Steve Price
hit 5 times [rom long range and
twice at lhe line for 12 points.
South Point and Meigs met
earlier in the year at Rock
Springs, with the Pointers

Reserves romp

.;:::::i:::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::

TARA
Townhouse
Apartments

·'

SOUTH POINT - The South 10 and 12-alllate in thai initial
Point Pointers, behind just period.
twice early in the contest.
The Pointer,s, hitting a
dominated the final three bllstering 54 pet. from lhe field
quarters here Friday night and 77 pet. from the charity
enroule to a. 711-09 blasting of stripe, were paced by guard
the Meigs Marauders. ,
Ron Tennant and forwards
The Marauders of coach Greg Prater and John Schritter
Roger Brauer took early leads with 16 points each.
of 2..oand 4·2, but were never in
The Marauders, getting off
front after that, although they 20 more shots than South Point.
knotted the coWJt iwice. at 10- 74-54, connected only 22 times

~~~=:;:=::::~:::::::::::::::::

EAR

"0

"
'

"

4
EW

Sears
0

..'

SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP

CHESAPEAKE PANTHERS {48)
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
7
1
6
Roger Adkins. f
3-7.
0·0
5
0
0
1
Rusty Marcum, f
0-0
0-0
1
4
2
9
m~utes of sloppy pia~ in .!be SteveHolbrook, f
4-11 1-l
2
·1
Shawn Stephens, f
2· 11 · 2-.4
3
5
6
4
8
6
Denny Bur~e . c
3-9
0-0
5
1
6
12
5·9
2-4
5
thers first blood.
. Date Pemberton, g
2
0
Kev Rice , g
o.o
0-0
1
0
The Panthers led 8-4 with
1
3 .7
Dave Sheeis, g
. -2-6
3-5
5
3
5
0
2:31 left.Jim Niday hit two free
Dave Musser, c
0·2
0-0
2
DaleRussell
,
g
J.J
0-0
1
0
0
2
throws,Pricetalliedonalayup TOTALS
20-57 8· 14 30 30 24 48
.
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS (73)
and free throw to give GARS a
FG-A FT.A PF RB TO TP
9-8 advantage after one pertod. PLAYER-Pos.
Mike Sickles, f
3·6
5-8
1
5
1 11
The Devils were never
2.
MlkeBerridge.f
J.J
0-1
0
0
2
headed . GAHS outscored Tom Valentine, f
s
·
4
1·3
3-5
2 10
3
10
2·8
6-6
1
3
Ch~peake 21-9 m the sec~nd Gary Snowden, g
3
23
Gil
Price.
c
5-9
13-18
2
13
penod to take. a 31).15 hal!tune
0
4
Jim Warren, c
2·2
0-0
0
3
lead.
.
B 12
5-9
2-3
4
l
Jim Niday ,g
1
Roger Dailey, f
0.1
2-3
0
5
2
Tbe Galliaos outscored
4
1
JimSinger,
g
2·6
0-0
4
3
2
17
CHS 1). in Uoelhlrd period
0
0
Paul Tar.lor. 1
0-0
0-0
0
1
for a 5N2 advaolage. The
0
0
Ken Wil , g
0-0
0-0
0
0
TOTALS
21 -47 31 -44 14 44 23 73
Devils laW~d 23 markers to
Score by quilrters :
Chesapeakes 16 in Uoe last
8 7 17 . 16 - 48
Chesapeake Panthers
slaD2a • . ,
.
.
9 21 20 23 - 73
GAHS
Blue
Devils
G lhpolis next t 10g
t
and
Marvin Turner,
Officials
Scotty
Grei
sheimer
a
ou
ts a ·
Chillicothe
Chapter
.
Logan Friday. The Panthers
pl~y at . Symmes Valley . 'l_~~;~~~f:m@;~;;~~f.;l;~;mili~~1~l;;;m~~mmml;i~f:l;[:l~~j~j~~~f:j~;l~~j~~j~~~m~ffi~j;j~~§ili~~;j~j~;§fi~;~i;mm;m~~;~
Saturday mght.

..

SHARKS SOLD
.
LOS ANGELES (UP! )- The
. Los Angeles Sharks hockey
team, currently struggling in
last place in the WHA's
Western Division, was sold
Friday by majority owner Dr:
Leonard Bloom to Los Angeles
business executive Larry Daniels for an undisclosed amoiUitl
The sale, annoiUiced by WHA
President Dennis Murphy, bsa
to be ratified by the league's
Board of Trustees at its
m~eting in St. Paul, Mlnn. l
next week .

Cofors $5 more

20 15 2 42 139 134
2 36 122 114

..

Mercef75 Ind iana St. 68
Milwaukee Classic
W1sconsin 7.4 SMU 73
MarQuette· 76 Arizona 62

r·------- ----,

•

hauled down 33 reboiUids with
Sterling Logan grabbing ntne&lt;
The Pirates concluded thefi.
two game road trip at Ea.t
Knox Saturday night.
Friday night, North Gailll!
will travel to Kyger Creek in an
important SVAC encounter. '
North Gallia (Sl) - Wed·
dington , 2.0. .4 ; Logan, 2-4-8 ;
Camden, 2-0-4; Robinette, 3...:
10; James, 3-0-6; Stout, .7-3-17 ;
Smith, 2-0-4. Totals :n -11· 53 . .,.
East Knox (60) - Frazee, l2-8; Buckingham, 5 -5· 15~
Dague, 6-0-12 ; Shriver. 3·2-8;
Swartz, 5-0-10; Hissong, 3-0-6;
Kirk, 0·1-1. Totals 25-10-60.
By Quarters :
5 19 14 15-51
North Gallia
22 16 10 12- 66
East Knox

BLADENSBURG - The host
East Knox Bulldogs jwnped
- inlo a 16-0 lead early in the £irst
quarter here Friday night then
held on to hand North Gallia a
60-53 loss.
Before Coach Jim Foster's
Pirates could get untracked,
East Knox led by Mike Swartz,
blitzed the court in taking a
commanding 22-0 lead at the
end of the first JlOrlod.
North Gailia came on strong
in the second quarter outscoring the Bulldogs, 19-16 but
NG was behind, 38-24, at the
half. The Pirates outplayed
East Knox the rest of the way
but the early deflcit was too big
to make up.
East Knox, hitting :;o pet.
from the' floor, was led by Jeff
Buckingham's 15 points.
Other Bulldogs hitting double
!lgures were Carlos Dague
with 12 points and Swartz with
10.
· Tim Stout, :;.10 senior guard ,
led the Pirates with 17 points.
Dave Robinette, 6-2 senior
forward, also dwnped in 10
points. North Gallla hit 21 of 65
floor attempts for 32 pet. and 11
of 20 at the charity stripe.
East Knox sank 10 of 27 £rom
the rree throw line and grabbed
45 rebound s. Nortlt Gallia

Las Vegas Clii$-SIC
Denver 80
Nevada 114 No. Ill . 9'2
Mercer lrwitat1onal

v1rgm ia 81

':l

"

GALLIPOLIS - Consistency from both the field
and free throw circle, good defensive play, and
bOard control el)abled Coach Jim Osborne's
Gallipolis Blue Devils to bomb visiting C h esapeake
73-48 before a full house here Friday night.
The Blue Devils enjoyed
their best night of the year
offensively, hitting 21 of 47 field
goal attempts for 44.6 pet .
against a zone defense
set
up
by
the
Panthers. From the charity
llne, GAHS canned 31 of 44
attempts for 70.4 pet.
The Galliaos picked .off 44
rebounds aod committed
ooly 14 personal fouls .
GAHS, however, was guilty
of 23 turnovers.
Four Blue Devils finiShed in
double figures in scoring.
· Senior Center Gil Price led the
balanced attack with 23. JIUiior
guard Jlm Niday pwnped in 12
while jiUiior forward Mike
Sickles added 11. Sophomore
guard Gary Snowden finished
the game with 10 markers,
including six-for-six at the foul

..
...

• 17- The SWJday Times. Senti'!"l, SIUiday, Dee. 30, 1913

This offer good
on NEW TIR.S only
from '74 "X" Flyer

•

WAVERLY- Bo Clemmons
. and · Dave Underwood combined for 44 points Friday night
in leading the Portsmouth
·Trojan~ to a 69-58 victory over
previously IUibeaten Waverly.
The loss was Waverly's first
of the season, their first loss 'in
Uoe new fieldhouse, and their
£frst Joss at home' since Ports-.
mouth downed the Tigers two·
years ago.
Despite balanced scoring by
all five Tiger siarters and good
Shooting, the Trojans simply
owned the backboards as they
pulled dO)'m 51 reboiUids whlle
pemllttlng the Tigers only 24.

r.4

The Tigers and Trojans
played even for the first three
quarters as Waverly led 14-ll
after one period, Portsmouth
took a 3:1-27' halftime lead, and
the score was·deadlocked at 4545 after three quarters.
However, the fantastic board
work and hot shooting by the
Trojans in the !lnal slanza was
overpowering as they outscored Waverly 24-13 for the

win.
Underwood's 24points and 19
'rebounds top~ all individual
performances
while
Bo
Clemmons chipped in 20 points,

and Randy Fite added 10.
All five Tigers- finished in
double 'figures led by John
Shoemaker's l4 points and six
reboiUids.
Statistics of the contest show
Portsmouth hitting 28 of 65
shots for 43 pet. PHS converted
13 of 19 free throws:
TbeTigersconnectedon 23of
· 54 attempts for 42 pet. and
cashed in 12 of 17 cbarity '
throws.
Coach . Carroll • -Hawhee's
quintet held a sllm 56-53 lead
with4:37leftin the contest, but
the Trojans dwnped in six
consecutive polnt.o to regain

the lead for good with 2:44left
and won going away .
The win upped Portsmouth's
'season mark to 7-2 while the
Tigers are now 6-l.
, The box score:

'

T~ese Jobs Provide Excellent Wages And A Benefits Program Which Includes

Life Insurance, Medical Insurance, Disabillity Insurance t Sick leave, Vacations
··-·flotrMy, And Retirement,
··~ ·
··
'
Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate The Plant.

APPLICANTS MAY CALL ( 304) 882-2126 (collect)
BEtWEEN THE HOURS OF 7:30 AM TO 4:00 PM

TO ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW

PORTSMOUTH {69) - Doll .
2·2·6; Clemmons 8-4-20 ' Un·
derwood 12·0-24 ; Williamson 31-7; McCoy 1-0-2; Fife 2·6·10 ,
TOTALS 28-13-69.
WAVERLY {SBI - Thomas
4-.4-12 ; tracy 5·2-12; Dudu it .4·2·
10 ; Shol:!maker 6-2-14; Swindler
4'7-10. TOTALS 23-12'58.
Score by quarters'
Portsmouth
J.J 21 13 24- 69
Waverly
14 l3 18 13- 58
Res.erves; Portsmouth 42,
Waverly 38.

PHILIP SPORN PLANT
Post Office Box :1611, N•w H•ven, Wttt Vlrtinl• 25MS
TolepllciM' .,..acodo304 112-3111

An Equ.al Opportunity ElllploJer
'.

!

,
I

�..
•

19 - The Swtday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 30,1973

18 - The Sunda)' Ttmes · Senhnel. Sunday. Der . 30, 1973

Extension activities sharpened in 1922
II)

'POMEROY - Enc Chambers, ho me for the holiday season
with his parents, Mr . and Mrs. Richard Chambers in Middleport ,
is now located m Ortando. F1a .. and IS enjovmg every mmute of
it.
Working full tune in management dealing w1th water and
sewage , Enc LS also spending {our evenings a wet&gt;k working at a
health club. Sin&lt;;!' bermmng a n employe of !he health club, En c
has ~one on an organic diet and has lost 30 pounds In his spare
lime, Eric is seeing a lot of Florida.
RUTLAND VILLAGE RESIDENTS are adVISed that they
can get nd of their Christmas trees on Wednesday . Bruce Davis
will be making the pickup Ulrough !he town
A NEW YEAR'S CARD arriVed , and although it was un·
signed, it clearly was from Miss l.&lt;Jwse Gilmore, Pomeroy's
deluxe sign maker. Louise

lS

known in the community for her

signs, many humorous, particularly dealing with the Cincinnati
Reds. Is she ever a booster of that bail club ! At any rat e the card,
very clever , features some photographs of Louise's signs in the
fall, about the time that the Reds and Vice President Agnew both
hit the dust.
AND VIRGINIA BUCHANAN was m for a surprise the other
evening when she and husband, Jim, returned to thetr new horne
on Gravel Hill following a brief outing. She bad mstructed Junto
lock the doors before they left the home. However, she noted a
door ajar when they arrived home. Sure enough, it was a surprise
housewarming party g1ven by some of Virginia 's friends. The
group - Erruna K. Clatworthy, Rosemary Lyons , Nora Rice, '
Wilma Parmalee, Lettie Roush and Katie Anthony- went for gag
gifts among which were jar lid coasters, a dish towel full of holes
and that type thing. However, the ladies did present some nicer
gifts after !hey had their fun .
FOUR GENERATIONS of the family of Mr . and Mrs.

Charles Swatzel became members of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church Sunday .
The Swatzels' granddaughter, Michelle Eileen Winebre nner ,
three-month-o ld daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wmebre nncr,
Columbus, (the fonner Cindy Swatzel) was christened at the
local church with the Rev . Carl Hicks officiati ng. Godparents
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Winebrenner of Ravenswood. Aiso on
SUnday , Mrs. Swatzel's mother, Mrs. Shirley Gregory, transferred her membership to the United Methodist Church to round

LT. BROWN

Silver wings
awarded Brown

by Air Force
NEW HAVEN, W Va. Second [Jeutena nt Ed ward M.
Brown, son of Mrs Frances G
Brown, 61 6 F1fth St. , New
Haven, has been awarded hts
s1lver pilot wmgs at La ughli n
AFB, Tex ., upon graduittton
from U. S. Atr Force pilot
traming. Lt. Brown will remam

at Laughim for duty w1lh the
86th Flying Traming Squadron,
a wnt of the Air Training
Commcind .
,,
A 1966 graduate of Wahama
Htgh School, he received hiS
A.A. and B.S C. degrees
majonn g

in

r adlO

and

television from Ohio Umversity and was commisswned
there through the Reserve
Offic ers Trawmg Co rp s
program. He earned his M.S
and M.A. deg rees m radiO·
televiswn and journalism m

out the four generation affiliation .

1972 fr om Ohio Umve rSity
POMEROY FIREMEN ARE hoping again for excellent
support of their annual New Year's Ball to be held be ginning at
9:30p.m. Monday in the former Pomeroy Junior High School
auditorium. The ball is a tradition in Pomeroy and at one lime

Gr aduate SchooL

H1s w1fe,

DoriJia, IS the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Martm Wilcoxen , Rt.
2, Racme

was a masked event.

Staffs training to operate
new photo license syste~
GALLIPOLIS - Vaught and retail bu sinesses, and
honest citi ze ns from
(Doc) Smith, deputy registrar protect
bei ng de fraud ed or i m for the Ohio Bureau of Motor personated by cr iminal s who
Vehicles, announced Saturda y hide behtnd t~ fal se Identify .
Q When wi ll th e state begin
that the Smith Buick-Pontiac Issuing
photo licenses'

offic ials tdentt fied t hose depu ty
reg1s tra r agenc tes wh rc h a)
const sten tl y hand le' a ·h 1gh
vo lu me of dnver license tr an s
ac tions, and bl are cen tra ll y
loca ted to serve a dtstmct
geograph rc ar ea On ly those
Agency's office on Eastern
A January 2, 1974 Any agenc 1es wh tc h met both
Ave., will be closed Monday, qualified person who appl tes critena were chosen, except
and that no operators' licenses for an Oh1 odriver or cha uffeur when un tque geograph ic
license on or after that da te .barner s or drstance pr oblem s
will be sold that day.
wi ll recei ve a ph oto license. ,-.made tf necessary to loca te a
Smith said local motor Onl y tempora r y i ns truc ti on photo agency m a part icu larly
vehicle employe es will be permits will be issued without r emote com muni ty . Eve r y
effort has been made to
photo.
involved in a tralning session in a Q:
Where will ph oto licenses provi de eHtctent, econom rcal
connection with color photo be availabl e?
se rvice w hile marnta tntn g the
A: Photo li ce nses will be highest possible level of publ ic
equipment. Color photo
Issued through 205 specia ll y - conven tence
licenses will be issued to all equipped
deputy r egrst rar • Q What about the agenc tes
Ohio motorists who purchase agencies strategi ca lly locat ed not chosen to 1ssue ph oto
to se rve every part of the state. li ce nses' Wil l they stil l issue
new licenses in 1974.
For a list of desi gnated photo li ce nse pl ates?
Since the office will be closed license
agencies In your area,
A· Yes Every one of Oh1o's
Tuesday on New Year 's Day, write the Ohto Bureau of Motor 500 cur r ent deputy reg tstrars
WP""Qesday, Jan . 2, wtll be the Vehicles, P. 0 Box 1199, will re main the state's apI'll - • day local motorists will be Colu mbu s 43 216, Attent ion : pomted agent to reg ister motor
ve hic l es and issue l1cense
Accoun ting Di vis 1on.
able to purchase new color
Q: Why only 205 photo license
pl ates. Should a deputy resign ,
photo driver licenses.
agenci es when there are 500 every eff ort wdl be made to
Meanwhile, Ohw Reg1strar deputy regi strats curre ntl y appoint a r eplacement at the
business in Ohio?
same loca tioh.
C. Donald Curry has released a doing
A : A two year effi ciency
Q Will ther e be a photo
question and answer bulletin study showed that the low li cense agency loca ted in ~ver y
pertalnlng to the new driver volume of dri ver license trans- Ohi o County?
action s handled by ma n y
A Yes . In those counties
licensing system.
deputies d1d not JUStify th e wher-e only one photo l tcense
It follows :
•
expense of eq ui pping th em to agency has been appo tnted,
Q: Why Is Ohio convert ing to
handle photo license tss uance
that agency will be located at
a photo driver license?
In ord er to pr ovi de Oh1o ' the cCJun ty sea t - where area
A : The purpose of a dn ver
Ci tizens with con venient, over- re s1dent s
fr equently
do
license is to identify tts holder
the- counter pho1 o li cense business an d where they come
as a qualified motor vehicle
service, ever y des ig na t ed to pay taxes an d complete
operator. Dri ver licenses are photo Iicense agency must be other dea lings wit h state or
also used by most citizens as equi pped with both an "i nstant local governmen t
proof of their identi ty for process" camera un 1t and a
Q Wil l th e ma 1or populat ton
business purposes (c.redi t co mputer terminal w h 1ch centers have addit ional photo
purchases, che ck cashi ng provi des direct access to the license agencies?
etc.). The addit ion of a photo to state's central record bank m
A · Yes . For exam pl e,
Ohio's driver license will in- Col umb us. These cameras and res1dents of Ham ilton County
crease Its reliability as an
fie ld termi nals ar e highly (Ci nci nna t i area) wt ll be
identification document - and
sophistica ted machines, and served by 17 photo lice nse
correspond ingl y decrease the
each untt installetf represents a deput ies
ability of lawbreakers to SIQOifican t mvestment of tax
Q I hold a va l td paper
assume a false Identity by
dolla r s
plas t tc license tha t won' t exUsing a forged or stolen driver
Q . How were
p1re for som·e t ime yet Am I
license as identifi cati on. This
supposed to visit a deputy ri ght
should benefit law enforcement·
to abta 1n a new photo
officers, financial institut ion s

''

RDER YOUR TOBACCO
SUPPLIES NOW
eBROMOGAS
~IGATION

COVERS
e}JLANT BED CANVAS
eENIDE
•SEED

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CENTRAL SOY A
OF OHIO

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3rd &amp; Sycamore Streets
Gallipolis. Ohio

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"Your Farm Supply Super Mkt."

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t.:. E. lllake•lt·e

reality 11 had the best local

..:xa•·••J;i:m Agt•nt, Agnc.·ultu rc leader uf any of the U r n~ •·
I'QMEI!OY - Last woek 's
1 Note: lt would be in·
s wn m:.J t) of co unty extension ter·estmg to hear tr anyone
work tn Metgs CoWlty brOught living r ernem bers be1ng a
us to the second year· or Carl me mber of these clubs. J
Woodward 's tenure as county
A swnrnary of the 1922
extension agent.
ac ti vities hsted fo ur lime
The year 1922 was similar to dcmonstratwns, six past ure
1921 but on an expanded basts 1mprovem_cnt demonstrations,
Nt! names added to the tounty 11 poultr y cullin g dem onextension organizatiOn hst m stratiOns, s1x poultry feeding
that year were J . B. Thompson, demonstratiOns, one poultry
C. F . H1ll, Harley Musser, Mrs. demonstratiOn farm , 650 tons
W C Keebaugh, Mrs Grace of
lime
purchased
Wh1 te, J W. Lee, J H Pryor cooperativel y t hat would not
and G. C. Betzmg.
have been used, three car loads
The group was apparently o£ nor thern gr own seed
developm g
.a
two -fold potatoes purchased that would
cha r a cteri sti c, part Farm not have been purchased had it
Bureau and part Extenston , not been for the association,
but total financial support was one orchard demonstration
still entir ely Farm Bureau.
far m, 78 dress fo1·ms made, 250
The need for leadership was bushels soybeans purchased
obvious in 1922 when Wood- because of pubhc1ty, f1ve farm
ward wrbte
ac\..oWl t scHool s, and three
"Right here I wouid like to boys and girls clubs
say !ho t the greatest need of
There ts no official record of
the rW'al communities is not so extension work m U1e county
much better hvestock, hm e, fro m Novem ber 30, 1922, lo
mcreased fertthty, etc., but tt Ma y 16, 1923, when George W,
Js more and better leaders who Kre1tler was sel ected as exare not only able but have te nsion agent. Kre1tler served
confidence enoug h m their own Me1gs Coun ty over 14 years to
ability to do th mgs . When we 1937 He then served m Lickmg
have the leaders all the other County, (w1lh time out for
pr oblems will take care of m1litar y ser vice with the Army
themselves.
of Occupation m Ital y durtng
"There has always been the World Wa r II ) un til hiS
most kmdly feeling m thiS retirement a bout 1960 . He
county betwee n th e Farm passed away m 1970. Many
Burea u
and
other Me1g;;;. Countlans remember h1 s
or gamzations. Of course ther e work and activ ities here.
are many Grangers wh o see no
Under Kreitler 's gmdance
need for the Farm Bureau but the F arm Bureau was r emth ey are not a ntago nisti c Vl gorated w1 th membership
toward it, wh1le on the other n sing from 250 members m
hand we hav e town ship October , 1922, to 401 m October,
chairmen who ar e Grange t923. The plan "as still $10 dues
ma sters The •rela tiOn ship per year on a thr ee -year
toward the K1wams Club has contract .
,
been very gratifying. ''
Th e orgamzatwn scheme
Home Economic s and 4-H later used by ASCS and Farm
club work contmued m 1922 and Bureau (now F arm Bureau
we re re ported a.s. f ollows · Coun cils) consisted of townshtp
' 'Over 78 dress form s were wnts w1th cha1rman , vtcemade this past year m onl y chmrman, and secretary The
four townships ; 126 people to wnship chai rman became
were taught how to make dress
forms and many have been
mad e since I receJved th1s
report.
" Three boy s and gu-Is clubs

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· th•· NEW in FARM lNG

.

::-'::;:;:::;::t:(;:o:;::o,:::--:=::::;:::::::::::::::::::::~::::::;:::::::.~::::::::::::::::::::=::::::~::::::·:-~:::·::::::::::::~:::!:::..::: ::~::~·:_.:;·
were ~ark eted cooperativel y also demonstrate that in the ~
hilly coun ties far from
this year.''
" Orchard work and pasture markets, the farm-raised gram
and lime work were contmued should be fed lo some form of
m 1923. The start of larger livestock which will pennit its
scale poultr y work occurred m being shipped long distances at
1923 us ing two poultry a low cost. "
d e m 0 n s trati 0 0
farm s
" Purchasing work has been
earned
on through a county
es tablished a year earlier ,
Eight
poult ry
culling purchasing agent hired by !he
demonstrations were held . The Farm Bureau who bought
.. owner of one demonstratiOn $15,382.19 worth of farm sup·
fl ock made an agreement with phes £or farmers at a savmgs
her husband lo pay hun market as nearly as can be estimated
prices for home gr own grams of $1,256 74."
In 1923 five farmer institutes
fed to the poultry. Both kept
fatrly accurate r ecords of the1r were held w1th a total attend·
work for the year , and now her ance of 2,741 people.
One new Ohio type poultry
husband compiams that whtle
she made a profit of over $760 house was built and several
from her flock of )60 hens, he remodeled. This year also saw
has made less than 15 cents a the start of cream being
nearby
day raising the gram. This s hipped to a
flock has also served as a cooperative station .
Next week we will try to pick
splendid means of demon out outstandmg events of instra hng Improved poultry
terest durmg the late 20s and
feeding and management in
!hat communi ty. This should early 30s.

upon suggestion IJl a com rm tt~ meetinu
or secured
0
personally by the t&gt;xtensi on
agent. The duty of th e leaders
is to carr y the information
concernmg the project mto h1s
or her commWlity and prom ote
that particul ar proJec t in hts
c-ommuntty. "
t

The deveiopmg of Farm
Bureau (later Farm Bureau
Cooperative Association and
now Landmar k ) policy was
listed as :
~:Th e

Q'JIXJX.M

F a r m Bureau enpromote
to

cooperalwn agency for the
i)l.ll'chasing and marketing of
farm supplies and prod ucts .
This IS '" addition to ItS
governmg motive of promotmg

general agriculturol welfare,
wc ludmg
the
exten siOn

program "
The year 1923, accordmg to
Kre Jtler 's re port, saw the
contm uatJOn of 4-H club work .

"'l'wo clothmg d ubs With a
total enrollment of 36 were

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Payments hiked to schools
for higher priced lunches

th1s

Th e
fir st
or gam ze d
coo per ative
a ch v1ty
in

By BERNARD BRENNER

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Complying with the mandate of
a law passed last month, the
~riculture Department said
Friday it is boosting payments
to schools to help offset !he
rising cost of school lunches
and breakfast.
The lncrease is expected to
add about $130 million to the
cost of the goverrunent's $1.4
billion a year child nutrition
program.
In a related action, the
Departme nt belatedly an- ·
nounced it is moving finally
toward full operation of a $40
million supplemental feeding

As you welcome the New Year, mayyou ltnd new worlds of
happine ss . . . with health and good luck em in your orbit.
... and
Thank you lor your patronage and confidence
lh ~o ughout

1973.

children. The contribution on
free lunches willbe45 cents per
meal and can be higher in some
cases. Slmilar increases ln aid
for breakfast.• served to needy
children were also announced.
In the W!Cprogram, officials
announced they had selected 53
additional project areas in 25
states to take part in the
supplemental fe eding ex·
perlment. This brings the total
number of approved project
areas to 216ln 45 states, Puerto
Rico and the Virgin Islands .

program for women, infants

and children (WIC ).
Officials said that under !he
November school lunch law,
they are · hiking lunch and
breakfast subsidy payments on
a retroactive basis to cover
meals served from last July 1
to Dec. 31 , 1973. A second in·
crease, required by law under
a fonnula geared to changing
food costs, will take effect Jan.

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
POMEROY

PH . 992-2 176

A No
younowholda
val
td . . .- - - - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Ohto
.dntfver
or chauff
eur
li cense , that li cense will
remam
va l1 d
un til
tt s
sched uled expi r ah 9n da t e.
When your pr esent license
expires an d you VISit a deput y
regis trar to have 1t renewed,
the deputy wi ll take your
pi cture and issue you a photo
0
ltcense
Q: Do I have to obtam m y
photo lrcense m my home
county'
A No Any special l y
equipped photo l tcense deputy
ca n issue a photo license to any
qua l tfted
app ltcant- reg ard
less of wh tch county he
res 1des m
Q : What about a central
negative f il e? Is the state go1ng
to keep a " mug shot" of ever y
l tce nsed dri ve r ?
- A · No Through the Ins tant
photo process t o be used, the
onlr ptcture of each licensee
wil be on hts or her license.
Q Are dnve r licenses fees
being tncreased?
A No. The f ee for a photo
l tce nse will be exact ly the
sa m e as t ha t now bei ng
charged for paper and plas t tc
i• ce nses $5 plus a 50 cent
ser v1ce char ge .
Q
How long will photo
licenses be valid ?
A Th ey wi ll be va lid for four
yea r s, and will expire on the
li ce nsee's birthday Note:
Duplicate lt censes, issueO to
re pla ce licenses which have
been lost or stolen, are on ly
va lid untl l the scheduled ex piratt on of the or igmallt cense
Q Wil l r enewal ·licenses be
1ssued " over the counter " as of
Jan. 2?
A Yes Whn a qual ified
applicant surrender s hts ex ptr ing license for renewa l,, the
deput y wil l take h1s p1cture,
col lect the proper fee, and
issue a fin ished photo license
on t he spot

Special Savings!

On Floor and
Display Models
NOW AT

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LANDMAR

Under the liberalized subsidy
schedule, the national average
federal payment on school
lunches was raised from etght
cents per meal to a new
average of 10 cents 'for the
July-December period. Begin·
ning Jan. 1 the average is
expected to rise to 10.&gt; cents
because of the cost-of.Uving
escalator clause.
For school breakfasts, the
July -December av erage
subsidy -previously five cents
per meal -lias been raised to
eight cents. This rate also will
be increased &gt; per cent
beginning Jan. 1, officials
predicted.
The new re~ulations aiso
provide that for the first time
states will be given a guaran·
teed additional subsidy to help
cover the cost of serving free or
cut-rate meals to needy

BERRY'S WORLD

CAMBRIDGE,Ohio (UP! ) - distillery, west of the house,"
In these days when copper is he added.
getting expensive, especially
When the wooden water line
for water lines, two Guernsey was \Ulcovered , it was still inCountians may have found an tact and water (lowing through
answer.
it
Lester GUller of Senecaville
Day moved from the farm
a nd Donald Placl!e of about a year ago. He said wa·
Salesville discovered a wooden ter was bronght to the house
water llne Guller was digging a from the spring through the
ditch on Placke's farm to in· wooden pipe.
stall plastic pipe .
This llne was constructed
The walnul water line was with !:;.foot lengths of walnut
buried about two and one half logs, hewn into trangular
feet deep in a field .
shapes with an ax.
Historians in the eastern
A hot iron rod had been used
Ohio county believe the wooden to burn a hole through the cen·
water llne may be 169 years ter of each.
old, and put down when the now
One end of Ule log had been
extinct town of Frankfort was tapered so it would slide lnto
founded.
the blunt end of the next one.
Placke's !ann is on the site of , A smaller hot iron rod had
Frankfort, the first settlement been used to burn a hole
in Guernsey County.
through the side of each log on
"From what l understand, the tapered end. A notch had
that water line was put in wben been cut on the blunt end of the
Frankfort was there, " said logs.
Walter Day, 73, who used to
The logs were fitted together
own a farm where Frankfort and a wooden pin driven
was located.
through the notch and into the
"There's another wooden hole to hold the water line towater llne from the same gether .
spring to the Frankfort
The line extended from a
spring, which still flows today,
169 years after Frankfort was
platted, to the spigot.
When the water started flowing, tbe wood swelled enough to
O close the pipe tight.

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Dr yer

wa sher

Compactor

~ poMEROY

to verify appli cat ions in his
awn off ice - and 1ssue f ir st and
dupl icate l icenses d irectl y over
the counter .

Selling
MeiRS,
Gallia
and

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Counties
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

kindness be your guide.

Phone 992-2181

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Travelogue 4
Thr s Week 4 ; Newsmaker '73 13
T•me for Trmothy 4, Jenny Fa lwelllJ, Communique 6 .
No Man Is An Island 10
1 30 Fruth lor Today 8; Rev• val Fires 6, Herald at Truth l ;
You r &lt;&gt; for the Ask.mg 4; Camera Three 10
8 00
Gospel Carr cwan 6, Church Ser vice 13. Billy Jam es
Harg1s &amp; His AII. Amencan K1ds 10 . Mormon Chotr J . Day of
Drscovery 4; Upper Room Chur ch 8
8 30- Oral Rober ts 3; Your Health4 ; Kalhryn Kuhlman6 , Da y
ol D1 scovc r y a, Get Together 10; Rex Humbafd 13, R-ev1 val
Fires 15

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+ K Q10 2

• J 106 2

.7
WEST

EAST

. K96 5 2
+ 98
. Q9743

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9 oo - Singing JublleeJ , Cad leChapel4 ; Oral Rober ts 10. Re x
Humbard 6, 15; Hair Bear Bunch 8
9 30 - Church by S1de of Roa d 4 , Christ is the Answer 13,
Amazmg Chan 8, Popeye 10.
10 00 - Church Servtces 4, This Is the Lit e 3; Fat th for Today 15,
K1d Power6, 13, Fa ctng Life 8. Movie " All About Eve" 10
10. 30- Vision On 6; lnsr ght 4, Osmonds 13 , Ca pta1 n Noah 3, Th1s
1S The Ltfe 15, Vi ewpoint B
11 00 - Point of V1ew 6 . TV Chapel 3; Focus on Co l umbus 4,
Across th e Fence 15; H R. Pufnstuf 13 , Camera Th ree 8.
11 30 - Thts is The Answer 3; Make W1sh 6, 13 , lns1ght 15; Rex
Humbard 8
12 00 - At Issue 3, Bowling 6. Rev Ca lvm Evans 13 , Sacred
Heart 15, Co lumbus Town Meeting 10, Fred f ayior 4
12 15 - Open B•bl e 15
12 30 - Meet Th e Press 3, 4, 15; NFL Pr e-Ga me- Today 8.
ReVival Ftres 13.
1. 00 - Lower L•ghthouse 13; Pro Football S, 10 , Wagon Train 3,
AFC, NFC ChamptonShlPS 4, 15.
1 30 - Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13
2.00 - Soul Train 6; Tarzan 13.
J· 00 - Other People, Other Places6 , Wi ld K1ngdom 13
3 Jo- J 1mm y Uean Show 13, Odd Coupl e 6, 1-'"re-Game Show J
4 00 - French Chef J3 , Rookies 6; AFC -NFC Champ10nshtps 3,
' 4, 15, 10; Ama zmg World of Kreskin 13
4 30 - Help Wanted 33, Vt r ginian 8, Wa lt T1ll Your Father Gets
Hom e 13
5 oo - Umbrella 33; Wor ld of Std &amp; Marty Krafft 6, Mov ie
" Good Mornmg, Miss Dove" 13
5 15 - Makrng Things Work 33.
5 30 - T' Aicllt---ttl 'uan 33.
6 00 - Grand Master Chess 33 ; Let's Make A Oeal 6
6 30 - World Af War 6, Vmce Lombardi Scrence &amp; Art of
Football 33
7 00 - Zoom 20, 33; Wrld Kingdom 15, Circus .4 ; Lass ie 8, In the
Kn ow 10; Untamed Wor ld 13 . Safari to Adventure 3
7 30 - Mount am Sce ne 33 , Per ry Mason 8, FBI 6, 13; Fren ch
Chef 20; World of Ot sney 3, 4, 15, Perry Mason 8; Off to the
Roses 10.
8 00 - Portland Jun ior Symphony 20, 33 , ,Movie '' Peggy" 10
8 30 - Mannix 8, 10; Hec Ramsey 3, .a, 15; Movte '' Earth II " 6,

A K 10 6 3

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Boltl vuln er ablt'

West

North

East

Pass
Pass

2•Pass

Pas..'i
Pass.

Opemng lead- 4•

DON 'T BE A LOSER
- Set clocks ahead
one hour on Jan . 6
for energy - saving

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South
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The year it young
and lime loolarl
anew. Much oucceot
10 all in 1974.

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(C) 197)

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9 00 - Masterp tece Thea ter 30, 33
9· 30- Bar naby Jones 8, 10 ; 73 Action In Retrospec t 10.
10 00 - F tnng Une 20, 33i We Think You Should Know 3, Probe
- Th e Wor ld Around Us 4
10· 30 - News 6, 8, High Road to Adventure 10, Newsmaker '73
13 . Johnny Mann's Stand Up &amp; Cheer 4; Po l1 ce Surgeon 15
11 00 - News 3. 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15
11 15 - Pol tce Surgeon 6, News 10, 13 , Movie " Ta les of
Manha ttan " 8
11 · 30 - Face the Natron 10 ; Movie " Night After Night" 3, Rose
Bowl Bound .4 . Don Kt r shner ' s Rock Concert 13 ; Johnn y
Car son 15
11 45 - Good News 6.
12 00 - Urban League 10
12 30 - Mov re " Duel of th e Titans" 10.
1 00 - News 4, 13
~::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::·:·:-:-;;:·:-:·:-:-:'»3~·::::~:-;·:::::·:~

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By Helen and Sue Bottel

:~~~

Why Not Courtesy to "Ubs "?

DAYLIGHT TIME.
Unscramble th ese four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
for m ro ur ord tnary words.

I PLEEX

'" ''' ":
,,,,,'•
~ ". X

The bidding has been
East
West
North
I+
Pass
Pass
P&lt;t SS
3.
Pass
Pass

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"I hod somt HASH this alter1100n1 on' it WCIS beCIIIfiful/
Why don't YOU tYtr lir cotnefl beef hash, Momr'

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South

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4+
?

II

10

r

t)

WWLAF

I

You bid four notrump and your . _
partner b1ds ftve spades to show
three aces What do you do now"

II

I

Now arranr• the circled letters
to fonn the surprise answer, u

~:~-==i~·~~~~·~~~~~s~u~r~res::tedl by the above cartoon.

lc__-=
Pril=l -=*=-=-=--=···==·~--'1

''( I

I I T'

( Ant wer e Monda\ )

ll'""' '"rd•f•

A n,.w~r :

Whal h~ bemme wher1he IOOif offt!rt'd IOU'x
expemm·t' Cll(f t - " FUR·IOU·S"

for

a"

'

Ci\PTN N EASY

equality for women than is Tom, who 11 liberates" himself

through boorishness, and lnsists on gratitude when be doesn't ! -

+++

Tying women's liberation to simple courtesy is pretty silly,
don't you think? (And choosing a man on the ground of etiquette
alone isn't very smart either. )
If you have an all-around favorite, stand by htm, and stop
worrying about the games of dating. Many girls, lncludling me,
still like doors opened for us, help with our coats, etc. BUT, if my
guy's hands are full, or he can't flnd his overcoat sleeve , I 'll give
HIM the same kind of belp. - SUE

+++

Rap :
I'm 18 and am planning marriage next year. I love to dream
about my future, but one thought always spoils it. How will I
raise my children to love, in a world where there is so much
hate ?
When l was little, l never cared what religion or background
a person had. Th only differences I saw were color, but I
reasoned that everything - flowers, houses, cars, animals were different colors (and no better or worse for them ) so why
not people?
But as I grew older I realized how many prejudices there are
in the world, and I'm afraid my children will "catch" them too.
I wonder how many others are scared, too . Maybe , just a
little maybe, qecpeople of all colors, religions, nationalities,
languages, could join together in peace and acceptance , to make
life a little easier for the next fellows - our children. - A
FRIEND

PROPHET HONORED
STEEL DEARER
SALT
LAKE
CITY
(UP!
)
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (UP!)
RENNERT SENTENCED
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (UP!) The Monnon Church paid final - Armco Steel Co., will in- Robert J. Rennert, 19, tribute Saturday to its 11th crease prices on certain types
Defiance, was sentenced to life prophet, seer and revelator. of steel by $10 a ton, effective
imprisonment Friday on a Funeral services were con.. immediately, the company
firsklegree IIIW'der conviction dueled in the silver-&lt;lomed announced Friday. Prices will
and 11'&gt;-25 years on a second- Mormon Tabernacle for go up on carbon and alloy
degree murder charge . Ren· Harold B. Lee, 74, who died products made at Armco
nert was found guilty of the Wednesday after serving 17 plants where purchased scrap
Jan . I, 1972, shooting death of months as the president of the is used extensively and steel
Robert D. Hudson and Daniel Church of Jesus Christ of used in reinforclng bars and in
wire , the company said.
L. Wolfe, both of Fort Wayne. Latter-Day Sa ints .

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TOOAY 'S QUESTIO N

IDANNIL j
1

10 6 5 4

What do you do now'!
A - Bid fo ur notrump. You intend to bid SI X spades if your
part ner shows two aces.

DOES extend little thoughtfulness, I'm expected to thank him
copiously. l 'm afraid Jim spoiled me so much that I now feel self.
conscious, showing grati!Jlde for acts I once took for granted.
I've gone from one extreme to the other. Should l give up on
both these guys and try for an ln-betweener who wouldn't go
against my liberated views, but still wouldn't treat me as one of
the (tagalong) boys?
I really DO like Jim best, but what with women's lib in full
swmg , well, he'ssortofananachromism, isn'the? - T.V.
Dear T.:
Anachronism - schmanachronism! If you like Jim best,
stay with him, ~ourtesy and all. I'll bet he's a lot farther lnto

.

211

You. South, hold
• K J 65 92 +A Q

pull out chairs for women. And when, once in a blue moon, he

T.:

ASSN ~

JJr]J~1.!Ji® /k.J -uw~. .....J ,_.

Rap:
First there's Jim. He is a very proper fellow, exceptionally
polite and courteous. When I first dated him, I'd seat myself at a
table or open the car door without his help. This upaet him. So I
let hlm play the gentleman and thanked him for it. This also
upset hlm. He said it made hlm uncomfortable to be thanked for
common cow1esies.
Now comes Tom. He goes out of his way NOT to open doors or

H.

Pro fessor l ed a low d1amond.

(NE.WS!'AI'E:It E:'I!Tt: I U' I U!'i ~:

Juml.lr-1': RODEO FUSSY INJURY UPROAR

Generation Rap

hands of th e year (o/lay "
Then he d1scarde his ten
of hearts· West wa s in with
Lhe queen of c lubs and for
want of an ylhln ~ better lo do
led a third club .
The Professor d iScarded
h1 s Jack of hearts on dummy's
10 of clubs and proceeded to
c as h du mmy's rune and
queen of !rumps tf both oppo·
nents had follow ed he would'
have played a lhlfd !ru mp,
d tsc arded h1 s queen of hearts
on the Jack of clubs and con·
ceded a tnck to the ace of
diamonds but West showed
out on the second trum p
The professor promptly led
dummy's kmg of d1a monds.
East thought a wh 1ie and
played low wh ereupon the

East ducked agam and declarer's
JaCk he ld the tnc k A
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
th1rd d1amond knocked out
West opened the four of East's ace and the re was no
clubs to hts pa rtner's ace . way to keep the Professor
East led the e1ghl of clubs from disc ardi ng h1s quee n of
back The Professor who was hea 1'ts on the last diam o nd.
d ec larer t u rned to t he
As the P rofe ssor sa 1d a t the
student who was watchmg st a rt , 1l was a tough hand
htm a nd t·ema rked) "Th1s Jus! lry and find any simple
may be one of the toughest way to brmg home 10 tric ks
aga inst good defense .

experience.''

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83
A763
A8 5

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SOU TH
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Mason
Lei happiness ond

NOKTH

HE'LL SIGN BILL
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
White House said today Friend :
President Nixon would change
' evil with good ... "
"Overcome
his mind and sign the ComYou and your husband will never be able to hide your
prehensive Manpower Act, children from all the "hate" in !he world, but you can give them
which Is expected to generate the love needed to conquer that hate. And you will be the kind
$1.8 bUilon In federal grants to who can do it!
local and state governments
The opposite of hate is love, and that's the greatest tool ever
over a year's time. The bUl t~sed . - SUE
continues for three years the
+++
program of manpower training Dear Friend:
for the unemployed. It also
Children mainly "catch" prejudice from their parents. If you
extends for two years the 1970 and your generation reject prejudice, the next crop of kids won't
Emergency Employment Act, grow up with it - and you'll be that much nearer to the lovely
which put 300,000 jobless thought you expressed in your last paragraph.
Thanks for bringing us into the New Year with a hopeful
persons to work on public
service projects.
"maybe." - HELEN

•

Refn ger a1or

Officials estimated that 316,000
women, lnfants and children
will take part in the program at
a cost of about $40 million , the
full amount voted by Congress.
The program had been
authorized by Congress in 1972.
The Agriculture Department's
delay in aclivatlng it had
brought criticiSm from some
members of Congress and a
federal court order directing
!he agency to comply ~ith the
law.

Logs prove fine
for water lines

•

What about first and

ACTION APPROVED
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio AFL-C!O executive board
Friday commended Gov. John
J . G11tigan for h1s appomtmen t
of Howard M. Metzenbaum to
an intenm term in the U. S.
Senate.
The
board
unanimously approved a letter
to Gilligan which described
Me tzenbaum ao a " talented
and capable" man with "broad

~

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

'

Gaiha Coun ty "

· equ1pped deputy ,wi ll be able

~~

•l'

associatwn in cooperation w1th

Dr shwas her·

'

,1 ~- '

-

Toughest hand of the year?

13

marketmg 1n Meigs County
oppeared m 192:!.
' 'A coope1·at1ve frmt growers
associat iOn was orgamzed and
established at Rutland. There
ar e seven members m the
association They have erected
and equipped a packin g plan t
members of the coun ty board owned by t he a ssoc tatwn
of directors. Collilly officers va lued at about $3 ,500.
were elec ted at the annual Something over 3,000 bwTels of
meetmg The offtcers plus four apples \.\ er e grad ed and
men and two women made up packed by this assoc1allon
1
the executive comm1ttee whtch
' Some per sonal adv1ce and
wa s the true go vernmg body of assi stance has r esulted 1n some
few poul try raisers ; h1ppmg
the county or gamzat10n .
The pro ject leader tdea theu pr odu cts direc tl y to

A1 r Cond it• oner

·&lt; '
' ' ''
.....-.
'

-

Q.

...

..

were organized thls past year,
two food clubs and one poultry
club. Of these only one food
clu b and the poultry club
exhibited. Seven of nine of the becam e m ore fo rm a li ze d eastern m arkets. Inter est tn
g ~r ls in one club exh1bited and
accordmg to Kreitler 's 1923 th1s work tS increaswg as the
10 out of 12 fm1shed m the report ·
poul trymen who are shtppmg
poultry club I can ' t un"The people who are chosen re por t a considerable extra
derstand why the th1rd club to lead the different proJects m profit.
failed to do an ythmg because in the extensiOn program are
" About 4,000 fleeces of wool

duplicate licenses?
A Unhl computer termi na ls
have been Install ed ( Ju / ~
197 4), f ir st a nd d up li ca t ~
li censes Wi ll be produced by
th e deput y on the spot, t hen
forwarded to Columbus for
ver i f 1cat1 on bef or e be ing
mailed to the applt cant. Thts IS
the sam e procedure foll owed
fo r yea r s with non -ph oto
li censes Orice the ter mi nals
are opera tiona l, each speciall y

'.

'

1923, but discontinued at the
end of four m onths on account
of the restgnatwn of the tester.
Consi der abl e effor t was put

reestabliSh

~

6

,,

WIN A T BRIDGE

6: 00
6 30
1 00 -

a · sS - Bla c kCam~4 .

pleted the club work maki ng a
total of 132 garments and other
articles a! a cost of $162.60 and
valued at $166.
" A cow testi ng assoclallon
was orgamzed on J anuary 1,

to

SUNDAY. DEC . l O, I913

I

or ganized Uus year and carried
the wor k t hr ough to concl uswn ; 22 members com -

fo r th

Television Log

--

\

•.. '-..-- ..... ' ... ,.• ' .• ·-:-·........'*.:.:.:.-...x,y.

:;:;.;.;•:•:-:·:·:-:•:•:•:-:•:•:·:•:•:-:-:·:-:•:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;-;•:•:•:•:•:•:-:•:•:•....o! •'•:•: •:•:O!O:._._.}~·- :.~'«• .

three ways. They

nwy be appOinted by lhe
tu wns h1p cha i rman, .seIec ted

deavor s

To the Rescue!

Daylight Saving
Time

•

The English novelist and
poet Rudyard Kipling once
descrtbed San FranCJSCO as
"a mad city- inhabited for
the most part by perfec tly insane peopl e wh ose w om en
are of a remarkable bea uty ."

�..
•

19 - The Swtday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 30,1973

18 - The Sunda)' Ttmes · Senhnel. Sunday. Der . 30, 1973

Extension activities sharpened in 1922
II)

'POMEROY - Enc Chambers, ho me for the holiday season
with his parents, Mr . and Mrs. Richard Chambers in Middleport ,
is now located m Ortando. F1a .. and IS enjovmg every mmute of
it.
Working full tune in management dealing w1th water and
sewage , Enc LS also spending {our evenings a wet&gt;k working at a
health club. Sin&lt;;!' bermmng a n employe of !he health club, En c
has ~one on an organic diet and has lost 30 pounds In his spare
lime, Eric is seeing a lot of Florida.
RUTLAND VILLAGE RESIDENTS are adVISed that they
can get nd of their Christmas trees on Wednesday . Bruce Davis
will be making the pickup Ulrough !he town
A NEW YEAR'S CARD arriVed , and although it was un·
signed, it clearly was from Miss l.&lt;Jwse Gilmore, Pomeroy's
deluxe sign maker. Louise

lS

known in the community for her

signs, many humorous, particularly dealing with the Cincinnati
Reds. Is she ever a booster of that bail club ! At any rat e the card,
very clever , features some photographs of Louise's signs in the
fall, about the time that the Reds and Vice President Agnew both
hit the dust.
AND VIRGINIA BUCHANAN was m for a surprise the other
evening when she and husband, Jim, returned to thetr new horne
on Gravel Hill following a brief outing. She bad mstructed Junto
lock the doors before they left the home. However, she noted a
door ajar when they arrived home. Sure enough, it was a surprise
housewarming party g1ven by some of Virginia 's friends. The
group - Erruna K. Clatworthy, Rosemary Lyons , Nora Rice, '
Wilma Parmalee, Lettie Roush and Katie Anthony- went for gag
gifts among which were jar lid coasters, a dish towel full of holes
and that type thing. However, the ladies did present some nicer
gifts after !hey had their fun .
FOUR GENERATIONS of the family of Mr . and Mrs.

Charles Swatzel became members of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church Sunday .
The Swatzels' granddaughter, Michelle Eileen Winebre nner ,
three-month-o ld daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wmebre nncr,
Columbus, (the fonner Cindy Swatzel) was christened at the
local church with the Rev . Carl Hicks officiati ng. Godparents
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Winebrenner of Ravenswood. Aiso on
SUnday , Mrs. Swatzel's mother, Mrs. Shirley Gregory, transferred her membership to the United Methodist Church to round

LT. BROWN

Silver wings
awarded Brown

by Air Force
NEW HAVEN, W Va. Second [Jeutena nt Ed ward M.
Brown, son of Mrs Frances G
Brown, 61 6 F1fth St. , New
Haven, has been awarded hts
s1lver pilot wmgs at La ughli n
AFB, Tex ., upon graduittton
from U. S. Atr Force pilot
traming. Lt. Brown will remam

at Laughim for duty w1lh the
86th Flying Traming Squadron,
a wnt of the Air Training
Commcind .
,,
A 1966 graduate of Wahama
Htgh School, he received hiS
A.A. and B.S C. degrees
majonn g

in

r adlO

and

television from Ohio Umversity and was commisswned
there through the Reserve
Offic ers Trawmg Co rp s
program. He earned his M.S
and M.A. deg rees m radiO·
televiswn and journalism m

out the four generation affiliation .

1972 fr om Ohio Umve rSity
POMEROY FIREMEN ARE hoping again for excellent
support of their annual New Year's Ball to be held be ginning at
9:30p.m. Monday in the former Pomeroy Junior High School
auditorium. The ball is a tradition in Pomeroy and at one lime

Gr aduate SchooL

H1s w1fe,

DoriJia, IS the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Martm Wilcoxen , Rt.
2, Racme

was a masked event.

Staffs training to operate
new photo license syste~
GALLIPOLIS - Vaught and retail bu sinesses, and
honest citi ze ns from
(Doc) Smith, deputy registrar protect
bei ng de fraud ed or i m for the Ohio Bureau of Motor personated by cr iminal s who
Vehicles, announced Saturda y hide behtnd t~ fal se Identify .
Q When wi ll th e state begin
that the Smith Buick-Pontiac Issuing
photo licenses'

offic ials tdentt fied t hose depu ty
reg1s tra r agenc tes wh rc h a)
const sten tl y hand le' a ·h 1gh
vo lu me of dnver license tr an s
ac tions, and bl are cen tra ll y
loca ted to serve a dtstmct
geograph rc ar ea On ly those
Agency's office on Eastern
A January 2, 1974 Any agenc 1es wh tc h met both
Ave., will be closed Monday, qualified person who appl tes critena were chosen, except
and that no operators' licenses for an Oh1 odriver or cha uffeur when un tque geograph ic
license on or after that da te .barner s or drstance pr oblem s
will be sold that day.
wi ll recei ve a ph oto license. ,-.made tf necessary to loca te a
Smith said local motor Onl y tempora r y i ns truc ti on photo agency m a part icu larly
vehicle employe es will be permits will be issued without r emote com muni ty . Eve r y
effort has been made to
photo.
involved in a tralning session in a Q:
Where will ph oto licenses provi de eHtctent, econom rcal
connection with color photo be availabl e?
se rvice w hile marnta tntn g the
A: Photo li ce nses will be highest possible level of publ ic
equipment. Color photo
Issued through 205 specia ll y - conven tence
licenses will be issued to all equipped
deputy r egrst rar • Q What about the agenc tes
Ohio motorists who purchase agencies strategi ca lly locat ed not chosen to 1ssue ph oto
to se rve every part of the state. li ce nses' Wil l they stil l issue
new licenses in 1974.
For a list of desi gnated photo li ce nse pl ates?
Since the office will be closed license
agencies In your area,
A· Yes Every one of Oh1o's
Tuesday on New Year 's Day, write the Ohto Bureau of Motor 500 cur r ent deputy reg tstrars
WP""Qesday, Jan . 2, wtll be the Vehicles, P. 0 Box 1199, will re main the state's apI'll - • day local motorists will be Colu mbu s 43 216, Attent ion : pomted agent to reg ister motor
ve hic l es and issue l1cense
Accoun ting Di vis 1on.
able to purchase new color
Q: Why only 205 photo license
pl ates. Should a deputy resign ,
photo driver licenses.
agenci es when there are 500 every eff ort wdl be made to
Meanwhile, Ohw Reg1strar deputy regi strats curre ntl y appoint a r eplacement at the
business in Ohio?
same loca tioh.
C. Donald Curry has released a doing
A : A two year effi ciency
Q Will ther e be a photo
question and answer bulletin study showed that the low li cense agency loca ted in ~ver y
pertalnlng to the new driver volume of dri ver license trans- Ohi o County?
action s handled by ma n y
A Yes . In those counties
licensing system.
deputies d1d not JUStify th e wher-e only one photo l tcense
It follows :
•
expense of eq ui pping th em to agency has been appo tnted,
Q: Why Is Ohio convert ing to
handle photo license tss uance
that agency will be located at
a photo driver license?
In ord er to pr ovi de Oh1o ' the cCJun ty sea t - where area
A : The purpose of a dn ver
Ci tizens with con venient, over- re s1dent s
fr equently
do
license is to identify tts holder
the- counter pho1 o li cense business an d where they come
as a qualified motor vehicle
service, ever y des ig na t ed to pay taxes an d complete
operator. Dri ver licenses are photo Iicense agency must be other dea lings wit h state or
also used by most citizens as equi pped with both an "i nstant local governmen t
proof of their identi ty for process" camera un 1t and a
Q Wil l th e ma 1or populat ton
business purposes (c.redi t co mputer terminal w h 1ch centers have addit ional photo
purchases, che ck cashi ng provi des direct access to the license agencies?
etc.). The addit ion of a photo to state's central record bank m
A · Yes . For exam pl e,
Ohio's driver license will in- Col umb us. These cameras and res1dents of Ham ilton County
crease Its reliability as an
fie ld termi nals ar e highly (Ci nci nna t i area) wt ll be
identification document - and
sophistica ted machines, and served by 17 photo lice nse
correspond ingl y decrease the
each untt installetf represents a deput ies
ability of lawbreakers to SIQOifican t mvestment of tax
Q I hold a va l td paper
assume a false Identity by
dolla r s
plas t tc license tha t won' t exUsing a forged or stolen driver
Q . How were
p1re for som·e t ime yet Am I
license as identifi cati on. This
supposed to visit a deputy ri ght
should benefit law enforcement·
to abta 1n a new photo
officers, financial institut ion s

''

RDER YOUR TOBACCO
SUPPLIES NOW
eBROMOGAS
~IGATION

COVERS
e}JLANT BED CANVAS
eENIDE
•SEED

'.

CENTRAL SOY A
OF OHIO

'

3rd &amp; Sycamore Streets
Gallipolis. Ohio

.

•

"Your Farm Supply Super Mkt."

••
'

t.:. E. lllake•lt·e

reality 11 had the best local

..:xa•·••J;i:m Agt•nt, Agnc.·ultu rc leader uf any of the U r n~ •·
I'QMEI!OY - Last woek 's
1 Note: lt would be in·
s wn m:.J t) of co unty extension ter·estmg to hear tr anyone
work tn Metgs CoWlty brOught living r ernem bers be1ng a
us to the second year· or Carl me mber of these clubs. J
Woodward 's tenure as county
A swnrnary of the 1922
extension agent.
ac ti vities hsted fo ur lime
The year 1922 was similar to dcmonstratwns, six past ure
1921 but on an expanded basts 1mprovem_cnt demonstrations,
Nt! names added to the tounty 11 poultr y cullin g dem onextension organizatiOn hst m stratiOns, s1x poultry feeding
that year were J . B. Thompson, demonstratiOns, one poultry
C. F . H1ll, Harley Musser, Mrs. demonstratiOn farm , 650 tons
W C Keebaugh, Mrs Grace of
lime
purchased
Wh1 te, J W. Lee, J H Pryor cooperativel y t hat would not
and G. C. Betzmg.
have been used, three car loads
The group was apparently o£ nor thern gr own seed
developm g
.a
two -fold potatoes purchased that would
cha r a cteri sti c, part Farm not have been purchased had it
Bureau and part Extenston , not been for the association,
but total financial support was one orchard demonstration
still entir ely Farm Bureau.
far m, 78 dress fo1·ms made, 250
The need for leadership was bushels soybeans purchased
obvious in 1922 when Wood- because of pubhc1ty, f1ve farm
ward wrbte
ac\..oWl t scHool s, and three
"Right here I wouid like to boys and girls clubs
say !ho t the greatest need of
There ts no official record of
the rW'al communities is not so extension work m U1e county
much better hvestock, hm e, fro m Novem ber 30, 1922, lo
mcreased fertthty, etc., but tt Ma y 16, 1923, when George W,
Js more and better leaders who Kre1tler was sel ected as exare not only able but have te nsion agent. Kre1tler served
confidence enoug h m their own Me1gs Coun ty over 14 years to
ability to do th mgs . When we 1937 He then served m Lickmg
have the leaders all the other County, (w1lh time out for
pr oblems will take care of m1litar y ser vice with the Army
themselves.
of Occupation m Ital y durtng
"There has always been the World Wa r II ) un til hiS
most kmdly feeling m thiS retirement a bout 1960 . He
county betwee n th e Farm passed away m 1970. Many
Burea u
and
other Me1g;;;. Countlans remember h1 s
or gamzations. Of course ther e work and activ ities here.
are many Grangers wh o see no
Under Kreitler 's gmdance
need for the Farm Bureau but the F arm Bureau was r emth ey are not a ntago nisti c Vl gorated w1 th membership
toward it, wh1le on the other n sing from 250 members m
hand we hav e town ship October , 1922, to 401 m October,
chairmen who ar e Grange t923. The plan "as still $10 dues
ma sters The •rela tiOn ship per year on a thr ee -year
toward the K1wams Club has contract .
,
been very gratifying. ''
Th e orgamzatwn scheme
Home Economic s and 4-H later used by ASCS and Farm
club work contmued m 1922 and Bureau (now F arm Bureau
we re re ported a.s. f ollows · Coun cils) consisted of townshtp
' 'Over 78 dress form s were wnts w1th cha1rman , vtcemade this past year m onl y chmrman, and secretary The
four townships ; 126 people to wnship chai rman became
were taught how to make dress
forms and many have been
mad e since I receJved th1s
report.
" Three boy s and gu-Is clubs

w

~ tc&lt;.:tcd

· th•· NEW in FARM lNG

.

::-'::;:;:::;::t:(;:o:;::o,:::--:=::::;:::::::::::::::::::::~::::::;:::::::.~::::::::::::::::::::=::::::~::::::·:-~:::·::::::::::::~:::!:::..::: ::~::~·:_.:;·
were ~ark eted cooperativel y also demonstrate that in the ~
hilly coun ties far from
this year.''
" Orchard work and pasture markets, the farm-raised gram
and lime work were contmued should be fed lo some form of
m 1923. The start of larger livestock which will pennit its
scale poultr y work occurred m being shipped long distances at
1923 us ing two poultry a low cost. "
d e m 0 n s trati 0 0
farm s
" Purchasing work has been
earned
on through a county
es tablished a year earlier ,
Eight
poult ry
culling purchasing agent hired by !he
demonstrations were held . The Farm Bureau who bought
.. owner of one demonstratiOn $15,382.19 worth of farm sup·
fl ock made an agreement with phes £or farmers at a savmgs
her husband lo pay hun market as nearly as can be estimated
prices for home gr own grams of $1,256 74."
In 1923 five farmer institutes
fed to the poultry. Both kept
fatrly accurate r ecords of the1r were held w1th a total attend·
work for the year , and now her ance of 2,741 people.
One new Ohio type poultry
husband compiams that whtle
she made a profit of over $760 house was built and several
from her flock of )60 hens, he remodeled. This year also saw
has made less than 15 cents a the start of cream being
nearby
day raising the gram. This s hipped to a
flock has also served as a cooperative station .
Next week we will try to pick
splendid means of demon out outstandmg events of instra hng Improved poultry
terest durmg the late 20s and
feeding and management in
!hat communi ty. This should early 30s.

upon suggestion IJl a com rm tt~ meetinu
or secured
0
personally by the t&gt;xtensi on
agent. The duty of th e leaders
is to carr y the information
concernmg the project mto h1s
or her commWlity and prom ote
that particul ar proJec t in hts
c-ommuntty. "
t

The deveiopmg of Farm
Bureau (later Farm Bureau
Cooperative Association and
now Landmar k ) policy was
listed as :
~:Th e

Q'JIXJX.M

F a r m Bureau enpromote
to

cooperalwn agency for the
i)l.ll'chasing and marketing of
farm supplies and prod ucts .
This IS '" addition to ItS
governmg motive of promotmg

general agriculturol welfare,
wc ludmg
the
exten siOn

program "
The year 1923, accordmg to
Kre Jtler 's re port, saw the
contm uatJOn of 4-H club work .

"'l'wo clothmg d ubs With a
total enrollment of 36 were

·

I'.

,.

{

: 1

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}

Payments hiked to schools
for higher priced lunches

th1s

Th e
fir st
or gam ze d
coo per ative
a ch v1ty
in

By BERNARD BRENNER

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Complying with the mandate of
a law passed last month, the
~riculture Department said
Friday it is boosting payments
to schools to help offset !he
rising cost of school lunches
and breakfast.
The lncrease is expected to
add about $130 million to the
cost of the goverrunent's $1.4
billion a year child nutrition
program.
In a related action, the
Departme nt belatedly an- ·
nounced it is moving finally
toward full operation of a $40
million supplemental feeding

As you welcome the New Year, mayyou ltnd new worlds of
happine ss . . . with health and good luck em in your orbit.
... and
Thank you lor your patronage and confidence
lh ~o ughout

1973.

children. The contribution on
free lunches willbe45 cents per
meal and can be higher in some
cases. Slmilar increases ln aid
for breakfast.• served to needy
children were also announced.
In the W!Cprogram, officials
announced they had selected 53
additional project areas in 25
states to take part in the
supplemental fe eding ex·
perlment. This brings the total
number of approved project
areas to 216ln 45 states, Puerto
Rico and the Virgin Islands .

program for women, infants

and children (WIC ).
Officials said that under !he
November school lunch law,
they are · hiking lunch and
breakfast subsidy payments on
a retroactive basis to cover
meals served from last July 1
to Dec. 31 , 1973. A second in·
crease, required by law under
a fonnula geared to changing
food costs, will take effect Jan.

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
POMEROY

PH . 992-2 176

A No
younowholda
val
td . . .- - - - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Ohto
.dntfver
or chauff
eur
li cense , that li cense will
remam
va l1 d
un til
tt s
sched uled expi r ah 9n da t e.
When your pr esent license
expires an d you VISit a deput y
regis trar to have 1t renewed,
the deputy wi ll take your
pi cture and issue you a photo
0
ltcense
Q: Do I have to obtam m y
photo lrcense m my home
county'
A No Any special l y
equipped photo l tcense deputy
ca n issue a photo license to any
qua l tfted
app ltcant- reg ard
less of wh tch county he
res 1des m
Q : What about a central
negative f il e? Is the state go1ng
to keep a " mug shot" of ever y
l tce nsed dri ve r ?
- A · No Through the Ins tant
photo process t o be used, the
onlr ptcture of each licensee
wil be on hts or her license.
Q Are dnve r licenses fees
being tncreased?
A No. The f ee for a photo
l tce nse will be exact ly the
sa m e as t ha t now bei ng
charged for paper and plas t tc
i• ce nses $5 plus a 50 cent
ser v1ce char ge .
Q
How long will photo
licenses be valid ?
A Th ey wi ll be va lid for four
yea r s, and will expire on the
li ce nsee's birthday Note:
Duplicate lt censes, issueO to
re pla ce licenses which have
been lost or stolen, are on ly
va lid untl l the scheduled ex piratt on of the or igmallt cense
Q Wil l r enewal ·licenses be
1ssued " over the counter " as of
Jan. 2?
A Yes Whn a qual ified
applicant surrender s hts ex ptr ing license for renewa l,, the
deput y wil l take h1s p1cture,
col lect the proper fee, and
issue a fin ished photo license
on t he spot

Special Savings!

On Floor and
Display Models
NOW AT

I.

.
'•

LANDMAR

Under the liberalized subsidy
schedule, the national average
federal payment on school
lunches was raised from etght
cents per meal to a new
average of 10 cents 'for the
July-December period. Begin·
ning Jan. 1 the average is
expected to rise to 10.&gt; cents
because of the cost-of.Uving
escalator clause.
For school breakfasts, the
July -December av erage
subsidy -previously five cents
per meal -lias been raised to
eight cents. This rate also will
be increased &gt; per cent
beginning Jan. 1, officials
predicted.
The new re~ulations aiso
provide that for the first time
states will be given a guaran·
teed additional subsidy to help
cover the cost of serving free or
cut-rate meals to needy

BERRY'S WORLD

CAMBRIDGE,Ohio (UP! ) - distillery, west of the house,"
In these days when copper is he added.
getting expensive, especially
When the wooden water line
for water lines, two Guernsey was \Ulcovered , it was still inCountians may have found an tact and water (lowing through
answer.
it
Lester GUller of Senecaville
Day moved from the farm
a nd Donald Placl!e of about a year ago. He said wa·
Salesville discovered a wooden ter was bronght to the house
water llne Guller was digging a from the spring through the
ditch on Placke's farm to in· wooden pipe.
stall plastic pipe .
This llne was constructed
The walnul water line was with !:;.foot lengths of walnut
buried about two and one half logs, hewn into trangular
feet deep in a field .
shapes with an ax.
Historians in the eastern
A hot iron rod had been used
Ohio county believe the wooden to burn a hole through the cen·
water llne may be 169 years ter of each.
old, and put down when the now
One end of Ule log had been
extinct town of Frankfort was tapered so it would slide lnto
founded.
the blunt end of the next one.
Placke's !ann is on the site of , A smaller hot iron rod had
Frankfort, the first settlement been used to burn a hole
in Guernsey County.
through the side of each log on
"From what l understand, the tapered end. A notch had
that water line was put in wben been cut on the blunt end of the
Frankfort was there, " said logs.
Walter Day, 73, who used to
The logs were fitted together
own a farm where Frankfort and a wooden pin driven
was located.
through the notch and into the
"There's another wooden hole to hold the water line towater llne from the same gether .
spring to the Frankfort
The line extended from a
spring, which still flows today,
169 years after Frankfort was
platted, to the spigot.
When the water started flowing, tbe wood swelled enough to
O close the pipe tight.

•

.-

••-

Dr yer

wa sher

Compactor

~ poMEROY

to verify appli cat ions in his
awn off ice - and 1ssue f ir st and
dupl icate l icenses d irectl y over
the counter .

Selling
MeiRS,
Gallia
and

'
'

Counties
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

kindness be your guide.

Phone 992-2181

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••
••' '

Travelogue 4
Thr s Week 4 ; Newsmaker '73 13
T•me for Trmothy 4, Jenny Fa lwelllJ, Communique 6 .
No Man Is An Island 10
1 30 Fruth lor Today 8; Rev• val Fires 6, Herald at Truth l ;
You r &lt;&gt; for the Ask.mg 4; Camera Three 10
8 00
Gospel Carr cwan 6, Church Ser vice 13. Billy Jam es
Harg1s &amp; His AII. Amencan K1ds 10 . Mormon Chotr J . Day of
Drscovery 4; Upper Room Chur ch 8
8 30- Oral Rober ts 3; Your Health4 ; Kalhryn Kuhlman6 , Da y
ol D1 scovc r y a, Get Together 10; Rex Humbafd 13, R-ev1 val
Fires 15

. QJ9
• 74

+ K Q10 2

• J 106 2

.7
WEST

EAST

. K96 5 2
+ 98
. Q9743

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9 oo - Singing JublleeJ , Cad leChapel4 ; Oral Rober ts 10. Re x
Humbard 6, 15; Hair Bear Bunch 8
9 30 - Church by S1de of Roa d 4 , Christ is the Answer 13,
Amazmg Chan 8, Popeye 10.
10 00 - Church Servtces 4, This Is the Lit e 3; Fat th for Today 15,
K1d Power6, 13, Fa ctng Life 8. Movie " All About Eve" 10
10. 30- Vision On 6; lnsr ght 4, Osmonds 13 , Ca pta1 n Noah 3, Th1s
1S The Ltfe 15, Vi ewpoint B
11 00 - Point of V1ew 6 . TV Chapel 3; Focus on Co l umbus 4,
Across th e Fence 15; H R. Pufnstuf 13 , Camera Th ree 8.
11 30 - Thts is The Answer 3; Make W1sh 6, 13 , lns1ght 15; Rex
Humbard 8
12 00 - At Issue 3, Bowling 6. Rev Ca lvm Evans 13 , Sacred
Heart 15, Co lumbus Town Meeting 10, Fred f ayior 4
12 15 - Open B•bl e 15
12 30 - Meet Th e Press 3, 4, 15; NFL Pr e-Ga me- Today 8.
ReVival Ftres 13.
1. 00 - Lower L•ghthouse 13; Pro Football S, 10 , Wagon Train 3,
AFC, NFC ChamptonShlPS 4, 15.
1 30 - Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13
2.00 - Soul Train 6; Tarzan 13.
J· 00 - Other People, Other Places6 , Wi ld K1ngdom 13
3 Jo- J 1mm y Uean Show 13, Odd Coupl e 6, 1-'"re-Game Show J
4 00 - French Chef J3 , Rookies 6; AFC -NFC Champ10nshtps 3,
' 4, 15, 10; Ama zmg World of Kreskin 13
4 30 - Help Wanted 33, Vt r ginian 8, Wa lt T1ll Your Father Gets
Hom e 13
5 oo - Umbrella 33; Wor ld of Std &amp; Marty Krafft 6, Mov ie
" Good Mornmg, Miss Dove" 13
5 15 - Makrng Things Work 33.
5 30 - T' Aicllt---ttl 'uan 33.
6 00 - Grand Master Chess 33 ; Let's Make A Oeal 6
6 30 - World Af War 6, Vmce Lombardi Scrence &amp; Art of
Football 33
7 00 - Zoom 20, 33; Wrld Kingdom 15, Circus .4 ; Lass ie 8, In the
Kn ow 10; Untamed Wor ld 13 . Safari to Adventure 3
7 30 - Mount am Sce ne 33 , Per ry Mason 8, FBI 6, 13; Fren ch
Chef 20; World of Ot sney 3, 4, 15, Perry Mason 8; Off to the
Roses 10.
8 00 - Portland Jun ior Symphony 20, 33 , ,Movie '' Peggy" 10
8 30 - Mannix 8, 10; Hec Ramsey 3, .a, 15; Movte '' Earth II " 6,

A K 10 6 3

. AQJ IO
• J 54

.K

Boltl vuln er ablt'

West

North

East

Pass
Pass

2•Pass

Pas..'i
Pass.

Opemng lead- 4•

DON 'T BE A LOSER
- Set clocks ahead
one hour on Jan . 6
for energy - saving

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South
I•

The year it young
and lime loolarl
anew. Much oucceot
10 all in 1974.

•,
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(C) 197)

•

9 00 - Masterp tece Thea ter 30, 33
9· 30- Bar naby Jones 8, 10 ; 73 Action In Retrospec t 10.
10 00 - F tnng Une 20, 33i We Think You Should Know 3, Probe
- Th e Wor ld Around Us 4
10· 30 - News 6, 8, High Road to Adventure 10, Newsmaker '73
13 . Johnny Mann's Stand Up &amp; Cheer 4; Po l1 ce Surgeon 15
11 00 - News 3. 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15
11 15 - Pol tce Surgeon 6, News 10, 13 , Movie " Ta les of
Manha ttan " 8
11 · 30 - Face the Natron 10 ; Movie " Night After Night" 3, Rose
Bowl Bound .4 . Don Kt r shner ' s Rock Concert 13 ; Johnn y
Car son 15
11 45 - Good News 6.
12 00 - Urban League 10
12 30 - Mov re " Duel of th e Titans" 10.
1 00 - News 4, 13
~::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::·:·:-:-;;:·:-:·:-:-:'»3~·::::~:-;·:::::·:~

I
ti

:1\

By Helen and Sue Bottel

:~~~

Why Not Courtesy to "Ubs "?

DAYLIGHT TIME.
Unscramble th ese four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
for m ro ur ord tnary words.

I PLEEX

'" ''' ":
,,,,,'•
~ ". X

The bidding has been
East
West
North
I+
Pass
Pass
P&lt;t SS
3.
Pass
Pass

.

,........ ..
.,, . ~

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'
~ IIIlA, IIIK ~

"I hod somt HASH this alter1100n1 on' it WCIS beCIIIfiful/
Why don't YOU tYtr lir cotnefl beef hash, Momr'

'

South

t•

4+
?

II

10

r

t)

WWLAF

I

You bid four notrump and your . _
partner b1ds ftve spades to show
three aces What do you do now"

II

I

Now arranr• the circled letters
to fonn the surprise answer, u

~:~-==i~·~~~~·~~~~~s~u~r~res::tedl by the above cartoon.

lc__-=
Pril=l -=*=-=-=--=···==·~--'1

''( I

I I T'

( Ant wer e Monda\ )

ll'""' '"rd•f•

A n,.w~r :

Whal h~ bemme wher1he IOOif offt!rt'd IOU'x
expemm·t' Cll(f t - " FUR·IOU·S"

for

a"

'

Ci\PTN N EASY

equality for women than is Tom, who 11 liberates" himself

through boorishness, and lnsists on gratitude when be doesn't ! -

+++

Tying women's liberation to simple courtesy is pretty silly,
don't you think? (And choosing a man on the ground of etiquette
alone isn't very smart either. )
If you have an all-around favorite, stand by htm, and stop
worrying about the games of dating. Many girls, lncludling me,
still like doors opened for us, help with our coats, etc. BUT, if my
guy's hands are full, or he can't flnd his overcoat sleeve , I 'll give
HIM the same kind of belp. - SUE

+++

Rap :
I'm 18 and am planning marriage next year. I love to dream
about my future, but one thought always spoils it. How will I
raise my children to love, in a world where there is so much
hate ?
When l was little, l never cared what religion or background
a person had. Th only differences I saw were color, but I
reasoned that everything - flowers, houses, cars, animals were different colors (and no better or worse for them ) so why
not people?
But as I grew older I realized how many prejudices there are
in the world, and I'm afraid my children will "catch" them too.
I wonder how many others are scared, too . Maybe , just a
little maybe, qecpeople of all colors, religions, nationalities,
languages, could join together in peace and acceptance , to make
life a little easier for the next fellows - our children. - A
FRIEND

PROPHET HONORED
STEEL DEARER
SALT
LAKE
CITY
(UP!
)
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (UP!)
RENNERT SENTENCED
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (UP!) The Monnon Church paid final - Armco Steel Co., will in- Robert J. Rennert, 19, tribute Saturday to its 11th crease prices on certain types
Defiance, was sentenced to life prophet, seer and revelator. of steel by $10 a ton, effective
imprisonment Friday on a Funeral services were con.. immediately, the company
firsklegree IIIW'der conviction dueled in the silver-&lt;lomed announced Friday. Prices will
and 11'&gt;-25 years on a second- Mormon Tabernacle for go up on carbon and alloy
degree murder charge . Ren· Harold B. Lee, 74, who died products made at Armco
nert was found guilty of the Wednesday after serving 17 plants where purchased scrap
Jan . I, 1972, shooting death of months as the president of the is used extensively and steel
Robert D. Hudson and Daniel Church of Jesus Christ of used in reinforclng bars and in
wire , the company said.
L. Wolfe, both of Fort Wayne. Latter-Day Sa ints .

'
I

K 43

TOOAY 'S QUESTIO N

IDANNIL j
1

10 6 5 4

What do you do now'!
A - Bid fo ur notrump. You intend to bid SI X spades if your
part ner shows two aces.

DOES extend little thoughtfulness, I'm expected to thank him
copiously. l 'm afraid Jim spoiled me so much that I now feel self.
conscious, showing grati!Jlde for acts I once took for granted.
I've gone from one extreme to the other. Should l give up on
both these guys and try for an ln-betweener who wouldn't go
against my liberated views, but still wouldn't treat me as one of
the (tagalong) boys?
I really DO like Jim best, but what with women's lib in full
swmg , well, he'ssortofananachromism, isn'the? - T.V.
Dear T.:
Anachronism - schmanachronism! If you like Jim best,
stay with him, ~ourtesy and all. I'll bet he's a lot farther lnto

.

211

You. South, hold
• K J 65 92 +A Q

pull out chairs for women. And when, once in a blue moon, he

T.:

ASSN ~

JJr]J~1.!Ji® /k.J -uw~. .....J ,_.

Rap:
First there's Jim. He is a very proper fellow, exceptionally
polite and courteous. When I first dated him, I'd seat myself at a
table or open the car door without his help. This upaet him. So I
let hlm play the gentleman and thanked him for it. This also
upset hlm. He said it made hlm uncomfortable to be thanked for
common cow1esies.
Now comes Tom. He goes out of his way NOT to open doors or

H.

Pro fessor l ed a low d1amond.

(NE.WS!'AI'E:It E:'I!Tt: I U' I U!'i ~:

Juml.lr-1': RODEO FUSSY INJURY UPROAR

Generation Rap

hands of th e year (o/lay "
Then he d1scarde his ten
of hearts· West wa s in with
Lhe queen of c lubs and for
want of an ylhln ~ better lo do
led a third club .
The Professor d iScarded
h1 s Jack of hearts on dummy's
10 of clubs and proceeded to
c as h du mmy's rune and
queen of !rumps tf both oppo·
nents had follow ed he would'
have played a lhlfd !ru mp,
d tsc arded h1 s queen of hearts
on the Jack of clubs and con·
ceded a tnck to the ace of
diamonds but West showed
out on the second trum p
The professor promptly led
dummy's kmg of d1a monds.
East thought a wh 1ie and
played low wh ereupon the

East ducked agam and declarer's
JaCk he ld the tnc k A
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
th1rd d1amond knocked out
West opened the four of East's ace and the re was no
clubs to hts pa rtner's ace . way to keep the Professor
East led the e1ghl of clubs from disc ardi ng h1s quee n of
back The Professor who was hea 1'ts on the last diam o nd.
d ec larer t u rned to t he
As the P rofe ssor sa 1d a t the
student who was watchmg st a rt , 1l was a tough hand
htm a nd t·ema rked) "Th1s Jus! lry and find any simple
may be one of the toughest way to brmg home 10 tric ks
aga inst good defense .

experience.''

.I

8 5 42
83
A763
A8 5

IOJ

SOU TH
•

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•'

Mason
Lei happiness ond

NOKTH

HE'LL SIGN BILL
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
White House said today Friend :
President Nixon would change
' evil with good ... "
"Overcome
his mind and sign the ComYou and your husband will never be able to hide your
prehensive Manpower Act, children from all the "hate" in !he world, but you can give them
which Is expected to generate the love needed to conquer that hate. And you will be the kind
$1.8 bUilon In federal grants to who can do it!
local and state governments
The opposite of hate is love, and that's the greatest tool ever
over a year's time. The bUl t~sed . - SUE
continues for three years the
+++
program of manpower training Dear Friend:
for the unemployed. It also
Children mainly "catch" prejudice from their parents. If you
extends for two years the 1970 and your generation reject prejudice, the next crop of kids won't
Emergency Employment Act, grow up with it - and you'll be that much nearer to the lovely
which put 300,000 jobless thought you expressed in your last paragraph.
Thanks for bringing us into the New Year with a hopeful
persons to work on public
service projects.
"maybe." - HELEN

•

Refn ger a1or

Officials estimated that 316,000
women, lnfants and children
will take part in the program at
a cost of about $40 million , the
full amount voted by Congress.
The program had been
authorized by Congress in 1972.
The Agriculture Department's
delay in aclivatlng it had
brought criticiSm from some
members of Congress and a
federal court order directing
!he agency to comply ~ith the
law.

Logs prove fine
for water lines

•

What about first and

ACTION APPROVED
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio AFL-C!O executive board
Friday commended Gov. John
J . G11tigan for h1s appomtmen t
of Howard M. Metzenbaum to
an intenm term in the U. S.
Senate.
The
board
unanimously approved a letter
to Gilligan which described
Me tzenbaum ao a " talented
and capable" man with "broad

~

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

'

Gaiha Coun ty "

· equ1pped deputy ,wi ll be able

~~

•l'

associatwn in cooperation w1th

Dr shwas her·

'

,1 ~- '

-

Toughest hand of the year?

13

marketmg 1n Meigs County
oppeared m 192:!.
' 'A coope1·at1ve frmt growers
associat iOn was orgamzed and
established at Rutland. There
ar e seven members m the
association They have erected
and equipped a packin g plan t
members of the coun ty board owned by t he a ssoc tatwn
of directors. Collilly officers va lued at about $3 ,500.
were elec ted at the annual Something over 3,000 bwTels of
meetmg The offtcers plus four apples \.\ er e grad ed and
men and two women made up packed by this assoc1allon
1
the executive comm1ttee whtch
' Some per sonal adv1ce and
wa s the true go vernmg body of assi stance has r esulted 1n some
few poul try raisers ; h1ppmg
the county or gamzat10n .
The pro ject leader tdea theu pr odu cts direc tl y to

A1 r Cond it• oner

·&lt; '
' ' ''
.....-.
'

-

Q.

...

..

were organized thls past year,
two food clubs and one poultry
club. Of these only one food
clu b and the poultry club
exhibited. Seven of nine of the becam e m ore fo rm a li ze d eastern m arkets. Inter est tn
g ~r ls in one club exh1bited and
accordmg to Kreitler 's 1923 th1s work tS increaswg as the
10 out of 12 fm1shed m the report ·
poul trymen who are shtppmg
poultry club I can ' t un"The people who are chosen re por t a considerable extra
derstand why the th1rd club to lead the different proJects m profit.
failed to do an ythmg because in the extensiOn program are
" About 4,000 fleeces of wool

duplicate licenses?
A Unhl computer termi na ls
have been Install ed ( Ju / ~
197 4), f ir st a nd d up li ca t ~
li censes Wi ll be produced by
th e deput y on the spot, t hen
forwarded to Columbus for
ver i f 1cat1 on bef or e be ing
mailed to the applt cant. Thts IS
the sam e procedure foll owed
fo r yea r s with non -ph oto
li censes Orice the ter mi nals
are opera tiona l, each speciall y

'.

'

1923, but discontinued at the
end of four m onths on account
of the restgnatwn of the tester.
Consi der abl e effor t was put

reestabliSh

~

6

,,

WIN A T BRIDGE

6: 00
6 30
1 00 -

a · sS - Bla c kCam~4 .

pleted the club work maki ng a
total of 132 garments and other
articles a! a cost of $162.60 and
valued at $166.
" A cow testi ng assoclallon
was orgamzed on J anuary 1,

to

SUNDAY. DEC . l O, I913

I

or ganized Uus year and carried
the wor k t hr ough to concl uswn ; 22 members com -

fo r th

Television Log

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•.. '-..-- ..... ' ... ,.• ' .• ·-:-·........'*.:.:.:.-...x,y.

:;:;.;.;•:•:-:·:·:-:•:•:•:-:•:•:·:•:•:-:-:·:-:•:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;-;•:•:•:•:•:•:-:•:•:•....o! •'•:•: •:•:O!O:._._.}~·- :.~'«• .

three ways. They

nwy be appOinted by lhe
tu wns h1p cha i rman, .seIec ted

deavor s

To the Rescue!

Daylight Saving
Time

•

The English novelist and
poet Rudyard Kipling once
descrtbed San FranCJSCO as
"a mad city- inhabited for
the most part by perfec tly insane peopl e wh ose w om en
are of a remarkable bea uty ."

�20 - TheSundayTm es Sentnel Sunda) De&lt;' 30 1973
21- The Sunday Times Senhnel Sunday Dec 30 1973

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
DEADLiNES
Day Be o e Pub ca on
Monday Dead ne9 am

'i P M

on~

Canct at on
Co ec
w
be accepted un 9 a m
Davo Pub ca on
..REGULAT ONS

ese ves he

The Pub sher

r gh

o ed

deemed

o

e e

ob ec ona
w
no be

pub she

o

n

RATES

Fo..- Wiln Ad se v ce
5 cen s pe Wo d one nse on
M n mum Cha ge s 00
14 cen s jte
wo d
h ee

consecu ve nse
26 cen s pe

secv ve nse

LL be ak ng ew ng o de s
n
anua y
Be Y
ag a n
k
Pho e 98.5 3860
F ede
1 30 6 P

espon

ons

25 Per Cen D scoun on pad
ads and ads pa d w h n 0
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITlJARY
52 00 fo
50 wo d m n
mum Each add ona wo d

3c

BL NO ADS
Add ona 2Sc Cha ge pe
Adve semen
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m o 5 00 p m Da y
8 30 a m
o
2 00 N oon

T~E~~

In Mem011
RUSSELL

c:.:pc ence neces.S&lt;)
n p e son 8 e Ta

' 2 3
SHOOT N G MAT CH
Con
Ho ow Gun C ub
u n
s
gh a e M es Ceme e Y
Ru and
Fa o y
hoked
guns on y Su ndav De 30

FARM 50 a es o rno
house and wa e Coa
Phone 992 S 57

8 TRACK apes coun Y &amp;
wes e o o k &amp; gospe on v
s2 ea h Tape cases S2 95 &lt;'nd
so 95 Tt1 s o e good on
un
anua v
6
9
Pome oy Reco e y 627 E
Ma n s ee Phone 992 554
2 2t&gt; 8

e

BEAUT FUL wa nu S e eo
ad o A M F M
ape com
b na on 8 a ck ape deck
ems
Ba ance S. 0 93 o
a a abe ca 992 396 5

good
gh s

1 28 2 p

223

NO

COPPER 60
ad a o S
b a s JOe ba e es
s oo M A H a Reeds e
Oh o Pho e 3 8 6249

N LOV NG memo y o ou
dea mo he Amy C a k. who
passed away 9 vea s ago
oday Dec 29
964 Ou
ps
can no e how we m ss he
ou heer s canno e wha o
say God above knows how we
m ss he
n ou homes ha
a e onesome
oday Sad Y
m ssed by he c h d en
2 30 c

--------------Card of Thanks
TO ALL ou
end y
bo h nea and far
you
to
you
cads
knd
and
deeds
du
S ay n he hosp
deep v app ec a
Lee
F
A
Sy acuse Oh o

ne ghbo s
We hank
p aye s
wods
ng
my
a
A
s
ed
M s
Enoch

2 26 4

'

5 3

WANTED
PAPER CARRIER
IN
SYRACUSE

be

THE DAILY SENTINEL

valley n Afr ca

h

Pom er oy 0
Your
Favor te Country
Mus c Sta s V s. t On

WANTED
PAPER CARRIER
Q.IFTON, W. VA.

THE RAlPH
EMERY SHOW
430T0530

---;_-,-----

Monda y thru F day
On

NOTICE

ACROSS
1 Dec are
6 Deck mop
10 Deve op
14 Sp.n lh p e5
19 Vegetlb 11
21 T lllHCt on
22 T ck
23 Eag es nea s
24 Manage
26 Buys back
28 Se eao

mo ono
29 RuN an
commun 'f
30 Lease
32 Sea aag es
33 Son o Adam
34 Ga den oo
36 Sou
37 Househo d pe 8
39 PoaMSS
40 G ea y p eaaed
41 Mendwthco on
42 S keb eeke
t• ang)
44 Stat onary pa o
moJo
46 Lege ode
•1 Arrow
48 Sanda ac e a
50 L o
52 Workman
53 Man 8 n ckname
65 MMls name

57 Mans n ckname
58 T opca ea
59 Con et
60 P oceed
82 00 000 upees
&amp;4 En 11.nce
88 Me den oved by
Zeus
68 Symbo fo n on
89 S onv gasp
70 Once a ound
ICk

Oenanuse
73 Tapped
75 Jov a
77 S ong w nd
78 G 5 name
80 FO OW ng
second
8 floem
82 Od me
84 Odo s
66 Concea ng
87 Recuse
eg Emp oy
92 am o p ope y
95 Hand e
98 Af can
an e opes
99 Beg ns
0 Geome c c u e
OJ Ac ua be ng
04 Be
05 Sa k
06 Bone
07Avenay
08 Cease
0 Cava
Re ormed
P esbyte a

34Lkey
35 Pack away
37 Kna e a ca ds
p
39 Has en
40 T me gone b
4 Co e ed
43 We k
45 Mans name
46 D aw owa d
onese
48 cooked eggs n
casse o e
SOE gaveb
means o do s
52 Re ea
53Appeaoo
A hena
54 Lambs pen name
56 Pa ed down
57 0 opsy
58 Changes co o o
59 Rock JJh
60 ock o ha

2 G ve ood o
3 Engende ed
5 Symbo o

Oal&lt;

2 "Fo ecas
24 Depass on
26 Musca
o gan za on
27 OdGeekc y
28 Head o a pa sh
chu ch
30 G s name
32 Dec a es
33 Toad

scone ab a

aa c"

23
:25
2
213

••0 'I
Pe ods o me
En o d
Gasp o t1 ea h
G sname

3
33 M n
36 Cha ange

38 Aa ona
40 P epos on
4 E opea
43 Poe

se eme
6 S eamsh p
obb
A mad conn c
8 owa d st1e e
9 Room n hOuse
0 Coo
A coho c
be e ages
2 Wo d Wa
agency n
3 P onoun
4 Mex can abo e
5 Pa o c c e

F R EWOOD
Can de \LeL
Pllone 992 2826 o 992 5565

2 6 2 p

1

NTERNAT ONAL Ooze
oo b a de d ese
n good
o.nd on $2 500 968 Massey
Ha s T ac o w 11 on end
oade
n good
and on
$650 968 P ymou h Fu y n
good ond on $450 Ca 992
2 20 0 992 3589

MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVER WANTED

230 3

APPLY THE
DAILY SENTINEL

89 Cha dean c y
90 Ae a
es eb shmen s
9 A c en ella o
92 Snake
93 Aha cs
9 4 Span sh o
es
96 A con nen
97 Go mounds
OOPs o obe
02 Nob eman
EXPER
05 Sow
n e o
09 Bake s p oduc s
985 395
2 Me shes
3 Shpsp son
4 Lade
6 Wage s
8 B eak sudden
20 Baby 5 wa d abe
2 Consp acy
22 One who
p o des and
se es ood
5 ROOM
23 Specks
u na ce
25
ead unde he

uns good needs
wo
5 hp
ohnson
ou boa d mo o good shape
5300 Brooks Say e ove
Ash and S a t on n Sy a use
2 30 3 p

POMEROY OHIO

WE HAVE a you upho s e y
Bu ap
den m
c amb
oam g ue z pp e s
sp ngs and
a c k ng s p
ps
ch pboa d
bu on
w ne sew ng h ead
egs
upho s e y b ooks da r on
webb ng sp ng w ne acks
ENCEO
pane
we
cord
co on sw e
and ex e o
Pt;one
bases and o am oam oam
Pome oy Recove y 622 Eas
ManS ee Pome oy Phone
992 554

PHONE 992 2156

Employment Wanted

972 KAWASAK
Pe ec con d

2 6 26

3S6

For Rent

DOWN

(abb

ub dum
Goddess o
d sco d
9 Con unc on
20 Condescend ng

6

87 Seaweed
subs ance

---------·-------,---,--

POMEROY 0

\:01.1 I lOS

SUNDAY DECEMBER 30 l973

STEREORAOO arnfm
8
ack ape comb na on 4 way
speake
sound
sys em
Ba an e $ 02 56 o use ou
budge
e ms Ca
992 3965
2 6 fc

PHONE 992 2156

M dd eport Pom eroy

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

------~--,--,--~----=----

DAllY SENTINEL

WMPO-FM
STEREO 921

CUSTOMERS we now
hy gas Come on back
F EO GAS STAt ON
bu we can no ong e
checks of any k nd
Ce
ed Pome oy

c

r

UPHOLSTERY Fab cs by he
ya d 54 n ches w de as ow as
s 95 pe ya d e ve s as ow
as $3 45
mpo ed
e ve s
$9 95 We a so lla e ny on
he cu on
co on
P n s
ny s and emnan s by he
ya do by hep ece Pome oy
622 Eas
Man
Re ave y
S ee
Pam e oy Phone 992
554
2 23 26 c

59 Be na u a y
a aced
60 Fes e
6 Un ock
63 Fu made om
sk ns o young
am tis
65 Chee s
67 Unusua
69 En sed man

36

38
40
4
42

76 Compass po n
7 S y e o pan g
79 To d
83Sma bd
85 T eo espec
86 Posses s ve
p onoun

44
4
46
49
5
53
55

E ced
Fo me y
Decays

Soap pan s
Po on
Con on
So OS
Dampens
Sows
Baz anesuay
Odponoun
E ase p n ng
Anc en
H gh ande
Edge

Ca y
No sa
EQua y
Pa d nu ce
Cooed a a

FUR N SHED
2
bed oom
apa men
M dd epa
Phone 992 38 4

2 30

c

--------c----,--~c-----,--_--:-

THREE ROOMS a
e ec c
apa men on Eas Ma n S n
Pome oy ke n ew wa oven
abe op
ange Phone
46
099 o
46 9539 a e 5 p m
2 23 6 c

coAL FOR SALE
AYMAR
COAL
COMPA NY
THE
ME GS &amp; GALL A L NE
STATE
ROUTE
AT
CHE SH RE OPEN 7 AM
T L L 6 30 P M 5 DAYS A
WEEK PHONE 992 5693
2 31 4 c

---------·~--

For Rent or Sale
HOU SE 6 8 nco n He gh s
bed ooms Fam y oom
bclsemen
wash oom u
E ec c
ange

TRA LER space
phone 992 3 02

PR VATE meet ng oom
o
any o gan za t on phone 992
3975

b"

c.

MAYTAG
406

2 30 3 p
973
3 AND 4 ROOM fun shed and VACU LTM C eane s new
Mode
~omp e e
w h a
un u n shed
apa men s
pa n
c ean ng oo s Sma
Phone ~92 5434
damage n sh pp ng W
take
52
cash o
budge
pan
ava ab e Phone Q92 2984
2 8 fc

For Sale

F REWOOD S 2 pe
p ckuj:)
oad any day a e
2 00
Go don P o f
G ea Bend
Sandy Dese
Rd
Po and
Oh o R

PA NT DAMAGE
9 3 Z G
ZAG SEW NG MACH NES
St
n o g na ca ons No
a achmen s needed as our
con o s a e bu
n
Sew s
w h
o 2 need es makes
bu onho es sew on bu ons
956FORO
onpckupwh
monog ams and b nd hem
ca e acks 5225
967 Cub
s ch Fu cash p ce S38 50
Cade W h CU VB 0 S 5350
o
budge
pan ava ab e
949 Chevy 5 50
uns good
Phone 992 2984
Phone 949 2 34 o 247 2 92
2 27 3 c
s
c z g Zag
Sew ng Mach nes n sew ng
abe Makes bu onho es
sews on bu ons b nd hems
etc Top no ch cond on Pay
S5 or erms ava abe Phone
992 2984
t:LECTROLUX Sweepe de uxe
2 8 fc
mode
comp e e w h a
c ean ng a act1men s and
uses pape bags S gh y used GROCERY bus ness o sare
bu c ean sand ooks ke new
Bu d ng fo
sa e o
ease
w se o 537 25 cash o
Phone 773 56 8 f om 8 30 p m
e ms ava abe Phon e 992
o 10 p m fo appo n ment
3 20 fc
2984
2 5 fc

-------

8 TR ACK apes &lt;: oun V &amp; S N GER sew ng mach nes 1972
wes e n ock &amp; gospe on
mode
n beau u wa nu
cab ne
Makes des gn s
$2 each Tape cases $2 95
ches z g zag
bu onho es
56 95 Th s offe good on y
b nd h ems e c L ke new
un
anuary
6
9 4
On y 58 9 95 ca Ravenswood
Pome oy Recovery 622 E
273 952 0 273 9B9 3 af er 5 0(}
Ma n S ee
Phone 992 7554
2 7 fc

l

----------------~2__:_:
26 8 c

Res denc:e com mere al or
mob le hom es Save on parts
&amp; labor
215 N lnd Ave
M ddleport
Phone 992 3509

Dick's
Hoard House

DITCHING SERVICE
Water L nes and Power
L nes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and sept c tanks n
sta lied

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
N1ght 992 3525
or 992 5232

WANTED
INVENTIONS DEAS
CASH
Sale or
Rova t es
Poss be
Wr e fo
free
I terature
IMPERIAL
.055 Exe&lt;ut ve Pa k Dr ve
C nc nnat
Oh o 452~
o
phone Mr Wh red co ec a
513 563 4710
283 30

STRIPPERS

We Strip Paint Varnishes
elc I om Fu n ture

I

J

Ant ques Modern Metals
We buy Ant ques Co lee
tbesetc
P1ck up Serv1ce Available
DICK SEYLER Owner
Phone 992 2798

-

Kerr Street
Pomeroy Oh1o

t...,....._ _ _

w
___..~

C BRADFORD Ave oneer
Compete Se v ce
Phone 949 382
Ra e ne Oh o
c Badfod

G &amp; E App ance Repa

a

he shop

Phon e
992 3802 or 949

4254

s

c

oade
sep c

u ks

and o boys tor h e w hau
f
d
op so
mesone
and g ave Ca Bob or Rage
effe s day phone 99 2 7089
n gh phone 992 3525 o 992
5232
2
fc

DOZER wo k and c ear ng by
the acre hou y o con ac
fa m ponds oads e c Large
doze e~nd ope a o w h ove
20 yea s expe ence Pu ns
Excava ng Pomero y Oh o
Phone 992 '24 8
2 9 fc

-:c--------·---,----REAOY M X

CO NCRETE
de vered
gh
o your
p o ec Fas and easy F ee
es mates Phone 992 328~
Goeg en Ready M x Co
M dd epor Oh o
6 JO fc

0 DEL

Real Estate For Sale

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

AUTOMOB
cance ed
ope ato s
7428

REALTY

MAIN
POMEROY

START THE NEW YEAR
RIGHT BUY A HOME
NO HEATING PROBLEM
HERE THESE ARE ALL
ELECTRIC
NEW
w th
acre
3
bed ooms
a ge closets
Colo ed bath w
shower
K chen has lo s of cab ne s
and Ia ge d n ng
Ut I ty
oom Ga age Your cho ce
coo of carpet ng CUSTOM
BU l T SIB 900 00

6 O,tfc

C HARLES R
m n backhoe
footers d a n
742 6092

HATF ELO
wa e
nes
nes Phone

1

8

~:pa

SEW NG MACH NES
rc '
se v cd a makes 992 228~
he Fab c Shop Pomeroy
A~:~ ho zed S nger Sa es and
Serv ce We Sha pen Sc sso s
3 29 fc
~·~·------

TEAFORD
V11qil!l

r,,,,.r,' ·),

f) I I Jl&lt; ' I

3 yea s

acre
3
bed ooms W C osets N ce
k tchen w th Range Ia ge
d n ng area Mode n bath
Large L v ng Ca port w th
sto a g e and Ut I ty
oom
JU ST $ 6 000 00

'1•'/u(h,;riH ·,,,,,.

old

y o d 1 ac e 3 B R Bath
N ce k tchen and d n ng
oom
Hardwood floo.rs
Garage and B eezeway
Po c hes
So me
woods

$19 000 00
2 Y s o d
a c re Lovely
kitchen and d n ng Range
Ut I y oom 3 n ce B R s
Co ored bath
Hardwood
f oars
some carpet ng
Drapes Close n $21 000 00
3 Y s old
2 acre 3 B R s
Co ored bath W
shower
Beaut fu k tchen
lots of
cabinets Range &amp; Ref
U ty D n ng R Basement
$2 000 00
F NONE OF THESE ARE
SUITABLE
WE
HAVE
OTHERS AI pr ces
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER

991 2139
If no anSwer 992 2568

12x60 2 BEDRoo.Mt;;-; no
m o e han 2 ch d en c ean
waslie and d yer Ph 256

62 6

305 3
4 ROOMS and ba h basement
aundry oom fo ced a
fu ni!lce so m w ndows and
sc eens cen ra y oca ed
adu ts p eferred
A1o'a abe
mmed ate y
Ca
446 2865
305 3
------·-----~

ONE bedroom apa t men n R o
G ande u n shed ut
es
pad S100 per mon 11
no
ch d en Phone 245 5535
305 3
BR

Home

305 3

----~
ELCONA., Mob e Home El(
ce ent cond on Need qu ck
sac e S2 500 Phone 6 5
~
307 1

:-:-:-: --::--:-,-,- ::- ---,--

---

F REWOOD any amoun
de ve h43 0088

Pru

roy. ()1,1" I'•·&lt;'•':;

POMER" (
2 bedroom home
w th hardwood floors Compact
K tchen bath gas F A fur
nace and basement Only

$6

500

NEW HOME 3 bedrooms
1 baths all electr c d n ng 2
fam y rooms double garage
and about acre
SYRACUSE
4 bedrooms
n ce bath large modern k t
chen
2 family rooms and
garage N ce porches on 12-4
POMEROY - Large br ck 3
bedrooms bath gas F A
furnace Central air modern
k tchen a rge d n ng 2 porches
and 2 car garage
OVER 1 ACRE - of vacant
and n Sal sbu y Township on

R

7

NOW IS THE TIME TO SELL
IF YOU WANT TO GO
SOMEWHERE YOU MUST
THINK BIG TRY US

USED
and
REPOSSESSED
PRICES
To make room for the
many
new
umts
arnvmg m Jan 1974.
DELAYED
DELIVERY
AVAILABLE
W1th the except1on of a
small depos1t

NO MONEY
NEEDED UNTIL
JANUARY 1974

307 6
ON GEORGES Creek Road
hree 3 bed oom homes and
one 4 bed oom t1ome Ca 446
398 0 .446 3.459

:ro

,-,-·-::---:-cc --,--,---------,--

963 CHEVROLET 4Speed 256
' 7

30 3

:--:--c--c-:-:cc::--:----,-----,M

ugs have been

e ec c
Cen a

--------CARPETS and
beau fu
Lus e
shampooe

30

6

- --=-:-:--:_-c--:---,----:--:--

----- -----------~

307 6

Sw'E'EPER: Repairs pa s
supp es 446 0294
D am 5
p m Dav s Vacuum C eane
Store Georges Creek Road
nex 0 Bobs CB Rad o Sa es
293 f

-----REO S BARBER

SHOP w
be
cloud 23 thru 30 of December
Season s G ee ngs
300 f
DAY CARE

SUN VALLEY Nu se y Sc hoo
censed bY S ate of Oh o
m es west or new hosp a
577 Sun ~ ey Dr Ph 446 J6S7
Day ca e that says
w
care
Madge Hllu dren
owner
Lored h and Joh
Hau dren Ope ators
114 I

·----

PROFESS ONAL men o
serve you bet e and taste
Save on off season p c es now
hrouoh February 1974 Fa
f ee est mates phone 675
A15A Shop ocated a Mason
Co Fa g ounds
30'2 26

Wanted To Buy

3 BEDROOM a I e ec r c K&amp;K
Mob e- Homes P P easan
304 6

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

VERY CLEAN 2 bedroom home
n town Just
ke n ew no
pes s 25per man h ca 446
2356 or 446 9145
300
COACHMAN T ave
a e
Moor Homes
5 h Whee
Truck Campers App E) c y
Auto Sa es R 3l N ac kson
O~"Phone 286 5700

2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM ap
depos t and 6 mon hs
446· 397

5150
fil: ase
292 tf

~----------~------

FURN SHED ap
U
es
pa d
Reference!
eq u ed
nqu re a 63 Fourth Ave
292 tf

&lt;4f

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE nspec on Ca 446 3245
Me r
o De Ope a o by
Ex e m na T m te Se v ce
0 Be mong D

APARTMENT for cons
men Ph 446 0756

LOFTY p e f ee f om so
5
the carpet c eaned w h B ue
Lus e
Ren
e ec c
OLD c ock operat ve o no
sham pooer
$
Cen a
s ate make cond on and
Supp y
pr ce n e ter Bo x 298 c o
302 6
Ga po s Da y T bune
306 7 F OR a
e ec
c
Murphy

Help Warded

MENTAL
Hea th
Worker
needed to new Commun V
Mental Health Cente
ser
v ng Ge a
Jackson
and
Me gs Count es Must be an
R N
w th psych atr c ex
perlence o
possess h gh
apt ude and
nte est
n
psych etry o possess a B A
n Soc a wo k psycho ogy or
an A A degree n Menta
Technology
Exce ent
work ng cond ons Adectua e
superv s on and opportun It es
for lea n no s art ng sa a Y
S7 800 to $8 000 depend ng on
background with e sa ary
a se Ju
Ca or George
G eaves at 6 ~ 446 4950 for
further nfo matlon or send
etter and resume to Ga a
Jack5on and Me gs Com
mun ty Menta Hea h Center
p 0 Box: 292 Ga po 5 Oh o
45631
302
,
--:--

v

--n and care to

302 6

Jay Sheppa d
B oker Auc onee

G LLENWA TER S SEPT C
TANK
CLEA N N G AND
REPA R
ALSO
HOU SE
WRECK NG Ph 446 9~ 99
Es ab shed n 940
f

FREE es ma es
ab ty n
su ance P un ng
mm ng
and cav y wo k
ee and
s um p emo a Ph 446 4953
3 f

MOTORIST MUTUAL
INSURANCE
THE best n!u an ce a he be!t
p ce
For au o
home
bus ness and fe Ray Hawk
agen
446 2300 54 4 h Ave
50 If

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

ROOF N G
A so bu

MOBllf_
COMMUNITY
&amp; SALES
r..uaney Cora Rd
Rodney Ohio
Hour.s-'la m to9p m
Monday thru Saturday
Ph 245 9374 245 5021
LARGE 3 bedroom t10me edge
of town $ 25 month 446 066
or ~46 4618 even nos
290 tf

n &amp; Son Wa e
Serv ce
You
palr~age
w
be
ap
prec a ed Ph 4.46 0463
2 f
P

IN GALliPOLIS
2 Bedrooms
ca pc ng
h oughou
a ge
o
60 x 3 A r ea n ce home
MADISON AVE
3 Bed oom home n ce o
Ox3
Askngony$5500
VACANT LAND
.4 Ac es
m e of R 35
wes 3 m es om hasp al
BAcesonR
60nea

Ma

De ve y

J&amp;WMDUN
CLEANIN,.G SERV CE
GENERAL house c ean ng We
supp y a
he c ean ng sup
p es 388 8B75 a e 6 p m ca
388 886S Week y o mon h y
c ean ng by appo n men
9 f
TOOL
sha pen ng
saws
sc sso s shea s home and
ga den oo! Sha P Shop
A ey rea
47 Second

Po e

v
y
'

Dave O'Neal
Real Estate

5 ACRES o and o d house
aer5e
wo
dea for
we s e ect c $4 500

2

BEDROOM home
ace
of
and
possess on 56 500

ST RT

s

50 A

BULAV LLE RD
3 Bd m b ck
acre 4
m l es f rom Ga pol s n ce
ke new

4 A

SS 500

a

ba h
Qu ck

23 ACRE S w th beau fu
shade
ees on hard op oad
u a wa e and e ec c y
Lo c a ed on Rodney Cora
oad Th s o can a so be
made n o wo sma e ots
245 5520
307 4

RUSSEll

WOOD
REALTOR

Larg~st
LEAOER SINCE 1900

ND SPENSAB LE
A
ref ge a o s a p ace whe e
hey
you sto e e ove s un
a e o d enough o h ow ou

THE
IN
SERVING THE NATION~
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph A46 0008

EVAN S HE GHTS
$ 9 500
4BRsandafu basemen
0
WH TE RD
$28 500
B and new o a
e ectr c
beau y
523 000
mode n
B DWELL
3 BR anch w h basement
STA TE ROU TE 60
$39 000
L ke new b ck w h
basemen nes ed on 5 A of
o ng and

Plumbing &amp; Healing

sa5A

MODERN
anch
ype
ame
home on 2
ac es
v ng
room 30 x 15 2 bedrooms
oca ed a he unc on of 2 B
and 553
3 BE D R.OO M b ck and tame
house on Bu av e Rd
ca
ga age com p e e y ca r pe ed
Ow ne mo ed ou of sta e and
anx ous o se

a

EURE KA $25 000
N ce 'jr
emode ed 4 BR home w h a
ver v ew
KANAUGA
$ 6 000
5 rm
home and a Gam mere. a s ze
garage
WOODSM LL RD
s 4 00
5 m s basemen and 3 ac es
of p nes

ON SECOND Ave 3 bed ooms
ba 115 new k chen new
u nace anQ a cond on ng
Compet e y carpe ed P ce
524 500
8 AC RE Sw h4 bomhouseand
fu n u e
2 sm a
ou
bu d ngs Sma pond P ce
$ 0 000

3

ACRES Moden 3 bed oom

home gas u nace ha dwood
f oo s house n exce en
cond on Vacan
eady o
move n P ce S21 000

-----

-------

For Sale

For Sale

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

RICE'S

UNIFORM CENTER
IN DOWNTOWN
GALLIPOLIS

after 5 p m
'NEW and used natrume ::~
Brvn card House ~f Mus c 54
S ete Street Phone A46 0687
190 tf
LIJMP Coa Jaymar Coa
Me1gs and Ga l.;e ne St
at Chesh re 7 a m to
p m
deys e week 992

Co
Rt 7
6 30
5693

---

122 If

s

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

FURNITURE

Tremendous location &amp;
potential for rlgbl poorly
Priced for quick 118le Owner
mulleavoarea Ph «ll-t738

For Sale or Trade

Our new show
room
now open
USED FURNITURE

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

iXPii'"'IENCED-

----------

-----"-------.-

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

---------

PUBLIC
NOTICE

r.

Wanted To Kent

--~-

2
CH LL C OTHE RO
SPE(: AL
DWELL NG
NCLUD NG GAS RANGE
REFR G
AND OT HER
FURN T URE
GOOD
N
VE STMENT JUST R GHT
FOR NEWLYWED S OR
RET REO COUPLE
3 RUT AND
STORY
HOMES ON
A LARGE
F LAT
OT W TH LARGE
K T CHE N 3 BEDROOMS
BATH
N EW
F OOR
COVER NG AND CA RPET
ALUM NUM
S 0 NG
STORAGE
BU LD NG
OWNER VERY ANX OUS
TO
SELL
AND
HA S
PR CEO
T
BELOW
MARKET
VALUE
AT
$ 3 500

Lookmg For Quality
At the R1ght Pr ce
TH S VERY WELL BU LT 3
BEDROOM
HOME
N
CLUDE S
EXPENS VE
CAR PET
N
LARGE
L V NG ROOM AND 2
BEDROOMS
THE K T
CH E N
S EXTRA N CE
W TH OTS OF CAB NET S
AND BU LT N RANGE
D N NG
AREA
OR
FAM Y ROOM
ARGE
CAR GARAGE ALL ON A
LARGE
F AT
LA N D
SCAPE D COU NTR Y LOT
TH S S AN EXCEPT ONAL
HOME BESUREANDSEE
T
BEFORE
BUY N G
ELSEW HE RE

30 ACRE S ALL CLEAN AS
A HOUND S TOOTH W TH
VERY GOO D 4 BEDROOM
HOME
N C E MODERN
K TCHEN
NEW S 0 NG
NEW
ROOf
MODERN
F URNA C E
BATHS
REALLY A VER Y COM
FO RTABLE HOME

Large 3 Bedroom
Woodland Dr
EXCELLENT LOCAT ON
M LE
FROM TOWN
NCLUDE S
LARGE
L V N G ROOM 0 N NG
AND
F AM LV
ROOM
LARGE
LOT
PR CEO
$24 900 00

Panoramic
V1ew of
The OhJD Valley
S T
N
T H S LARGE
CARPETED LV NG ROOM
AND BE H PNOT ZED BY
THE V EW
YOU LL
ALSO ENJOY A COZY
FAM LV
ROOM
3
BEDROOM S
LARGE
S PA C OUS
K TC HEN
WOOD
BURN
NG
F REP L ACE AND O N E OF
THE
BEST
NE G H
BORHOOD S N TOWN ALL
TH S ON A LARGE LOT
FOR LESS THAN S50 000 00

New 3 Bedroom
Bnck
W TH FULL BASEMENT
LOVELY
K TCHEN
QUAL TY CO N STRU CT ON
THROUGH0 T
N C TV
SC HOOL D STR CT $35 900

Best Older Home
For Sale
In Galhpohs

HOME
N CL UDES CAR
PE T NG
THROUGHOUT
ON
ARGE LOT W TH
GARAGE
PR CED
AT
522 900 00
VERY VERY
N CE

Excellent Buy
In Country
LARGE 0 OER HOME
COMPLETELY
REMODELED ON 6 ACRE
LOT O N RT 325 BETWEEN
R 0 GRANDE A ND V N

BEAUT FUL BR CK
N
N
M NT COND T ON
CLUDES 3 BEDROOMS
LARGE FORMAL 0 N NG
ROOM
COMPLETE Y
MODERN
K TCHEN
LARGEST FAM LY ROOM
N TOWN PLUS A FULL
BASEMENT
BATHS
AND 2 CAR GARAGE W TH
WORK SHOP
AN EX
CELLENT H OME
M 0
FORT ES

Brand New
Spht Entry

TON

Lovely New
Split Level
TH S BRAND
NEW
3
BEDROOM
HOME
S
COMPLETELY
CAR
PETED AND
N C LUOE S
RANGE
0 SHWASHER
CENTRAL A R 1
BATH S
STORM W ,NOOWS LARGE
L V NG
ROOM
ANQ
0 N NG
W FE
AP
PROVED K TCHEN 2 CA R
GARAGE AND LAR GE LOT
N
C TY
SC HO OL
D STR CT

HA S 3 BEDROOMS
h
BATH LARGE FAM LY
ROOM 2 CAR GARAGE
AND A LL THE EXTRAS N
THE K TCHEN $2890000
Gal a Co s La ge5t Rea
Estate ..Sa es Agehcy
Off ce 446 3643
Even ngs Cat
E M
ke w seman
446 3796
E N W seman 446 4500
Bud McGhee 446 1255

on s a e ou e w h
u a wa e
ar:ge ba n ob
base P ced at 56 000

h

Fer Sale or Trade

'

Excellent
Farm Property

o ACRES

$ 9 500
m home w

NEXT TO C TV
$3 500
Love Sp foye w h cen

FORGO TTEN So many sub
s u es ha e been d scove ed
bV sc en s s ha
s d cu
o emembe wha
was we
n eed ed n he t s p ace

STAT E ROUTE 588
$29 500
mode n ranch w h f u
basemen and ove
a e
TWO tral er 0 s Adu S Ph
POMEROY
$34 000
2 NEW hom e on 0 J Wh te Road
4&lt;6 380S
WEEKfor20 hours work
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
264
t
apa
mens
and
2
bus
ness
PLUMB NG
Hea ng
A r
after 5 30 even ngs
Lo
00 ~ 200 frame and
ren a s
Cond ton ng 300 Fou h Ave
b ck
v ng room 4 x 25 2
APPLy n person at Up Towner
Ph 446"163
ba hs and 2 showers ca pe ed
FARMS
nn Hun ngton on January 2
w h e ec c h ea
48 f NE AR TYCOON
P ced a
LAKE
at 7 p m ask tor Mr Ha e no MASSEY Ha
----------------$2 000
s Fe gilson
CAB NET Shop a
ypes of
$28 000
45 A w h a 4 x 70
CARTERS PLUMB NG
phone calls p ease
tractor and a
equ pmen
wood work 01 Cour S eet
mob e home
AND HEAT NG
3 BEDROOM
home w tti
W
1
trade
for
young
I
ves
ock
Ph
.t46
745
187
tf
306 3
Cor Fou h &amp; P ne
pano
am
c
v
ew
of the Oh o
Phone 367 7607
GALL P OL S SC COL 0 ST
-------· -·-----=---,--·-~
Phone 446 3888or 446 4.477
R ve f ont room ca rpe ed
306 3 WASHER
ana
S
0
500
30
A
mos
y
6S f
mode rn
k ! c hen
u
ref ge a or
epa
No
bottom and
en
P
ced
at
$23
000
ba5em
cha g e fo se v ce ca
f we
RUSSELLS
c an f x your app ance Ph
NE AR Ga a
$ 3 000
2 8 AT Rodney on
PLUMBING &amp; HEAT NG
acre frame 4
F YOU are bu d ng a new
675 4242
A
og cab n
Gall pol s 446 4782
bed oom carpe ed
e ect c
home o remode no see us
LADY' TO WORK Cafeter a ne
hea
s o m doo
and w n
297 f NE AR LECTA
we are- bu l,ders
o s r butor
$
6
500
from 11 00 o 7 30 App y n
dows cemen t bock garage
for Hotpo n
App ances
D-E
--W
- -T- T- 5- -P- L--U
-M
---B- -N-G
barga n pr ced 3S A
PROTECT you mo b e hom e ---person C rc: e s Cafeteria and
P ce reduced
o s 9 500
A son Elect c
w
h T E DOWN ANCHORS
Restauraht
AND
HEAT
NG
ng
ava
ab
e w h
F-R--anc
54 If
Ca
Ron Sk dmo e 446 756
NEAR ADD SO N
$4 000
25
305 3
SIJI
a
down
paym
en
Roue
60a
Eve
g
een
af er 3 p m
A coun v wate
Phone 446 2735
OFF CE 446 066
f
EVEN NGS
87 tr NEAR V NTON
S15 000
5
R u sse Wood 446 46 8
THOMAS Fan E x e m n~1 ng
A
mos
y
woods
ENERGY CR S S DEMANDS
STANDARD
Ron Canaday 446 3636
Co Term te and Pest conlr o
Nuc ea
Train ng
for
P
urn
b ng &amp; H ea ng
John I R chards 446 0280
Whee ersburg Oh o
RACCOON TWP
S 5 500
30
Qual f ed tnd v dualS The U
2 od Th dAve 446 3782
233 tf
A g ass and 7 pet
ntt n c ng
S Navy offers the bes
87 tf
NEW
ava
abe
SECO ND mor gage money
M &amp; S CON--:5-T
-R
-:U--C-T- Q-N
nuc ear power train ng n the
USED
ava abe
Ca
manaae
word tor those who qua fy
EXCAVAT ON and gene a
154
Second
Ave
•••
f513
50
A
E
nest
Cover
at
Cred
th f
NEAR•SnL"
ooo
Open ngs ava abe for bo t1
emode ng Backhoe dozer
wht&gt;"V'"Uban
o Ame ca Phone 446 4 13
officer
and
enl sted
63 FORO Fa ane
70 Fo d
and trench ng Sept c ;;tnks
284 30
programs
Fut
pay and
Cus om 70 P ymouth
and too ers A
phases of
OVERLOOK NG OH 0 'R VER
""
y
allowance• while you train
IS
Phone
446
216
p um b ng w r ng
new n
38 A wooded homes es
For mort nformatton ca I tot
37~3
s a at on ca 388 9986
free 800 8-41 BOOO anytime!
-------3 GRADE A OA RY FAR MS
_______:__
m 11 ----'-TAKE COMMAND OF YOUR
963 NTERNAT ONAL P ck up
p cess ar a SAO 000
sofa bed
FUTURE IN THE NUCLEAR H GH cha r
S250 Fo d 4 !peed s 00 956 2
6M
couches
9x1'2
woo
rug
2
NAVY
doo Chevy F be g ass ont ROY SP RES RD
$20000
2 fu
ength ROOF NG &amp; Spout no Sh ng e
3056 ree n ce deskl
bubb e hood 336 9906
&amp;
Bu
dup
roof
Hot
&amp;
co
d
84 A mos y fa m and
m rrors Portable TV 2 or 3
J05 3
roceu Home mprovemen
yean o d
OP~N NG In Gal lpo s area
n
gene a
Fo
f ee
L TTLE BULLSK N RD
Age
un!rrtPOrte,t
but
est ma es
Pt10ne Robert
23 PH LCO co or conso e TV
\6 100 - 42 A wood and
We se I anyth1ng for
F
LE
CA81NETS
F
le
fo
ders
m 1tur1ty II We tre ,
A r
4.46 0692
Meade 388 8 4 B dwe
anybody
Br1ng your
ledgers
columnar pads
mell B R D ckerson Pres
305 6 L ST NGS NEE DED
Oh o
230 f
tems
to
Knotts
Com
SouthWtlttrn Petro eum Ft
5 mmons Pr nt ng and Off ce
RAN NY BLACKBURN
mun ty Auct on Barn
Suppl
ea
305
f
worth Ttx:
~
BRANCH
MANAGER
RvOF NG AND ::&gt;t-'uu NU
30 4
Co ner Th rd &amp; Ohve
Sh ng es s d ng and bu dup
3 0
4
HOUS El ~ ac es
For appo ntment call
hotroofs
Free
Est
mates
26
A
SMALL
house
or
2
bedroom
tur";;ac•
schoo
bedrooms
c v
years
exper
ence
Jame-s
256
6967 after s p m
--.&gt;FORD Qatax: e 500 conv
apa men
P efer g ound
rtpllrmen
. . lery
com
4
d at c 2 m es ou R
Marcum v nton Oh o 388
.;·=~uCI Phone4A60876or
toor For a ma u e oupe
every s.-turdav
Sa
e
mtndlblt to lbllity Wr te
446 2323
99ol0
Ca 446 7805
IOJI K n c-o Tr bunt
247
even
ng
at 7 0 Clock
2.47 t
306 3
29~ I
302 6

3073

LES OUT OF TOW N
C TY
SCHOOL
0 STR CT
DANDY
OLDER
HOME
W TH
MODERN
K TCHEN
CE NTR AL HEAT AND
BATH
LARGE
TOBACCO BASE LARGE
BARN
20 TO 30 A
CLEAR
BALANCE
N
WOOD
A ND
BRUSH
R GHT NOW S T ME TO
BUY
BEFORE
N
TEREST GOES UP WE
W LL SPL T TH S FARM
F DE S REO
N

Economy Group
OLDER: HOME NEWLY
DECORA EO N S DE AND
OUT
NC UD NG STO RM
W N DOW S AN 0
DO OR
NEW FLOOR COVER NG
THROUGHOUT
TH S
2
BEDROOM HOME HA S
PART AL
BASEMENT
OCATEO ON A SPAC OUS
TREE SHAD ED LOT W TH
C TY WATER
EN OY
A L
TH S
W TH
A
REGULAT ON S ZE POOL
TABLE AS
A
BONUS
PR CE $7900

~

6

Excellent

Worla s

Remode ed 8
basemen

AT EDGE OF TOWN ON 2
ACRE LOT W TH FAN
T AST C V EW OF THE
RVER THREE LARGE
BEDROOM S
W FE
APPROVED
K TCHEN
FORMA
0 N NG
l V NG AND FAM LY
RO OMS
ARE
CAR
PET EO
EVERYTH NG
S CLEAN A ND N M NT
CONO TON N S DE A ND
OUT
YOU LL FALL N
LOVE W TH THE LAND
THE
REE S
THE
PEACE AND
QU ET
OWNER TRANSFER REO
OUT OF STA TE MU ST
SELL BELOW MARKET
VALUE

How About 79 Acres
W1lh Small Lake

3 Bedroom

SlROUT
REALTY

V NTON

One Look Is
Worlh I 000 Words

and

KEMPER HOLL OW RD - 4
BR b
k
anch w h fu
basemen and
A o and

Co ne 101 Park D ve
&amp; Jackson Blvd
Pont P easant W Va 2SS50
Phone 304 675 1580
DEAL Fam y home
wo
ba hs
a ge
v ng oom
d n ng
a ea
com b ned
f ep ac e 3 bed ooms k
chen k t c hene e den u
y
m
s orage rm
sma
ou b dg
approx
ac e of
and You won
bea
he
p ce Fue o hea
$25 000

n

See

ST RT
4
2 A w h 2
houses and a ba n S 6 000

SM TH RD
$ 0 000
Any h

RE FOR SALE
NEW 3 BEDROOM b u ck
ba h fu y a
a g e k chen and
area d s hwash e
ange 2 car ga ag e
doo opene N ce
Wou d se on and
sm a
down
paymen Lo ca ed 6 m e up
R
Coun y A e Es a es
Phone 446 1
o
446 2573
af e 5 p m

wa e De very Serv ce
Pa o s a R
Ga po s
Ph J 9 2 33
2.43 f

0

h

ce

NVESTMENT
.4 m house
w h base
mode n and 3
m
ap
u n shed S 8 000

'1Lf6-0001

Look ng for a mob le home
lo1 ora qual ty mob e hcime?
We have both at

QUAIL CREEK

w

P

on

29

--·-----,--------::::-:-:-

anch
pa

SO OF EUREKA
29 acr e Ia m -1 bed oom
home obacco base ba

--8
::-:
A-:N- :K:S:-T
~
R·-:E:cEc-:S~
E -:_
R-:-V:---:-C_-:E

306 6

4 BEDROOM
App ox
ac es Ia ge
mode n k chen ba h &amp;
howe
ga s
fu nace
24 x24 basement pane ed
Lo s o sha de ees ga den
spa ce A s ea a $18 900

THREE a es SR 325 sou h of
R o G ande Mob e home
B o k ce
We and sep c

2

uc on

NEW LISTING
One b ock
om bus ness
sec on o Ga pol s on 2nd
Ave 3 bed oom a me ga s
to ced a
u na ce ha d
wood oo s n good shape
See
now

SAcesnea Vnon ha s
we
sep
ank ba n
4 443 ac es near
Ro
G ande

456

69

EASTERN AVE
3 Bed oom home moden
gas
orced a
tu.t.na e
ha dwood oo s
s n ce
See t must se

G VE some1h ng b g o Ch s
WOODLAND DR
6
m
mas Fo examp e 4 ooms
ame8ysod H W f s
h ee ba hs
a ge o on
eqv pped k t1en A ba ga n
Se ond A enue P ced S6 000
a S20 000
unde rna ke
GARF ELD AVE
5 m
RACCOON C eek farm o e
ame w h base A um
200 ac es
Easy 90 head
s d ng s o m d s and w n
pas u e New barn Mode n
Nea
n ew gas
u
P ce
home w h f ep ace
$ 7 500

STEWAR T E ec ca
v e
Repa
house w
ng
e ec c hea ng Phon e 4&lt;6

----------------ALBERT EHMAN

BUSINESS SPACE
3 52 sq f up o 800
on age on R 35 wes. p us
J bed oom mode n home
gas forced a
fu nac e
a ge bus ness space n an
up &amp; com ng a ea adap
abe o many bus nesses
Shown by appo ntmen
on y

5 ms and
on
A

ST R T 35
w h base
a pe F P
e ec d
$28 500

SEPTIC TANKS
C ea n ed and ns a ed
Russe s P umb ng 446 4 82

968 Fo d Cor
used Ph 245

5202

f

24 tf

=~"'~==~~·,----~--­

GOOD
c ean used c oth ng
boy s s ze 3 and 4 12 s m and
14 s m ca 446 97 '3
307

8

MEADOWGREEN
ESTATE
8 spac ous
ooms
J
bed cams
2
baths
f ep l ace a ge andsca ped
wh e b ck Co on a
p ce
educed f o
qu ck
o appo nlmen
sa e Ca

T S he se ason o be o y and
by go y
wou d be a c n h n
$ 6 000
h s beau fu b ck horne
Th ee o fou bedrooms wo COUN T RY A RE STATE S
ba hs
ep ace
doub e
y o d b ck and a urn 3 b g
ga age A con d on ng P us
bd ms
ba hs a ca pe
co un y s ze o
Qua
y
huge 2 a ga
and a a ge
cus om bu
home
a o S36 900

HOLLEY B os Cons uc on
bu do ng back hoe wo k
d ch ng unde oads bor ng
Phon e 245 50 8 o 245 5006

MoWny s Upho ster ng

STARTER to
na new o

6M DOWNRT
bath 2 ou b Qgs
eve o S 2 BOO

AGENCY

CHATHAM AVE
5 ms and
ba h w h new
u n
s 500 w hou u n "u ee

Serv1ces Offeree!

week y
pa k ng

WISEMAN

Tel 4461998

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

293 f

JHE

bsc~ Ba rd
Doug Wefhe flo t
0
'I
0 d 5
Broke s.
ba h a b ck a
Of Cf' 446 3434
e ec oca ed on a
CE NTENARY
You can have
P
e SJO 000
mmed a e possess on on 11 s
01o'e v h ee- bed oom home
s u y carpe ed n ce ba h CROWN C TY - 8 yrs o d
H W f oo s S ms and ba h
basemen
w h shower fu
a ge so age b dg
and
one ca ga age na u a gas
oca ed on
A
o
On y
hea
c y wa e and schoo
s. 2 500
d s
Owne
w
he p
f nance
on and con ROUTE
Souhabck8bg
ms 2 baM a
a pe 1
F Ps
sw mm ng poo
er
WOODLAND OR VE
Tt1 s
v ewand A o Luxu y pus.
ove y h ee bedroom home
has h&amp;d exce en ca e N e MT Z O N Rd 6 m b ck a
ba 11 k chen w h bu
n
ca pe
F P and
A o
ange and oven fu y
a
5.3 500
pe ed natu a gas hea w h
c en a a
one ca ga age
M N ORT H o HMC
New
w h workshop Loca ed on
6 ms &amp;
ba h s a ca pet
two o s n c y schoo d s ct
b c)( a e ec 2 a a a hed
case o
own
mmedae
ga
S34 000
possess on
CROU SE BE C
RD
T
Leve 6 ms
11 ba hs 2
EUREKA
Loveyvewo he
ysodHW oos
Ao
r ve w h h s h ee bed oom
Th s sa good house and ou d
home n ce ba h to ced a
no be bu
o
he ask ng
fu nace
ove y d n ng and
p ce oday 532 000
v ng oom w h
ep ace
ga age and a b g o
P ce
BUHL MORTON R D yr
educed o S 0 300
o d ame b ck
m 5 ms
ba hs a ca pe a e ec
WE HAVE 0 t1e pope y or
pa o
co e ed
Th s s a
sa e
o s
vacant g ound
beau y On y S26 900
fa ms and homes ca
o
nfo ma on
9M OOWNRVER
2soy
b c k base a
ca p e
v
WE NE ED L ST NG S
you
m 5 x J6 w h F P A so
have a home o ac eage o se
t1as2ndhousew h4 ms 2A
o
a de
a
Oh o R ve
R ver
ew o S45 000
Rea y oday we
beg ad o
he p you
EVERGREEN
5 m s and
Even ngs Ca 446 4244
ba h u hea s o m d s and
Steven Beh 446 9583
wn$4000
John M Fu e 446 432

30 3 ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
c
eane
s
camp
e
e
w h a
2 BEDROOM
par a y
u
achmen s
o dw nde
and
n shed h o me on
Lowe
pa n sp ay Used bu n ke
Fo u t h 446 2876
new cond on
Pay S34 45
cash o budget pan ava abe
Phone P
P easan 675 2225
30 6

206

Real Estate For Sale

Real

Real Estate For Sale

MASSIE
Realty, 32 State Sl

·--·--------------

DEAD STOCK
LL remove 11 a easonab ~
cha ge Ca 245 55 ~

WOMAN tot ve
nva ct lady

MILLER
HOMES
DOWNTOWN
BELPRE
OHIO

30 6

fe oo can be
you use B ue
Ren
e ec
$ G C Mu phy

0 X 50 2 BEDROOM mob e
home
4 G arf e d Ex
Ph
4..t6 0958 0 446 3553

---:-:;-::-::-~-;.­

______

lYEAR
GUARANTEE
BEST SERVICE
IN
OHIO VALLEY

w

2 BEDROOM ra e
u
es
pad 034 Second Avenue Ph
446 0893
30 3

TWO W~Y Rad us Sa es &amp;
se v ce New and used CBs
po ce mon to s antennas
etc Bobs C t zen Band Rad o
Equ p
Go ges Creek Rd
Ga po s Oh o 446 45 7
2 2 f

3

~

96 RAMBLER Sta on wagon
446 7489

2 2

----------------Mobile Homes For Sale

608 E

307

NotiCe

A nem en wo Ill can be
done by appo n men on y a
presen
m e due o ness n
am y
Phone
fa
ap
' PO
po n men
42 3232
SEPT C TANKS CLEANED
ng r oom
1 25 c REASONABLE a es Ph 446
4782 Ga po s John Russe
2 2 6 c SEPT C-rANKS
AROB 'C
owrte l!lnd Ope ator
SEWAGE
SYS TEM S
5 2 tc
9
A L E ec r c W no u
CLEANED
REPA REO
Mob e Ho me
2 x 65
3
M L ER
SAN TAT ON
cond one
3
bed oom a
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
expando
ac e g ound 0 d
3035
R 33 No h of Ro c k Sp ngs
ADO A ROOMS by VEMCO
Phone 992 56
F T ANY MOB LE HOME 6
223 c E:LF\1~ "
-r.
~
.:at!'w no
5 ZES &amp;. FLOOR PLANS
Mach nes
Serv ce on a
ADD EXTRA BEDROOMS
makes Reasonabfe
a es
BATH S FAM LY ROOM
The se w ng Cen er M d
ONE DAY NSTALLAT ON
d epo
011 o
YOU NG S M H SALES RT
TWO STORY b ck a par ment
7 &amp; 35 BELOW 5 LVER
bu d ng
wo apa ments
MEMOR AL
BR DGE
CONSTRUCT ON
P R CE
Sou h Th d S
M dd epo
GALL POL S
Roof ng spou ng
k chens
Show n
by
appo n men
12 30 He
and bah oom s Camp e e
Rodney Down ng Rea Esta e
:-:--:-:--::-_
--::---::-::-:'--c-_
--::-:-:
emode ng Phone 42 6i. 3
B oke
Phon e 992 373
2 X 60 J BEPROOM S
969
23 c
2 20 6 p
G obemaster 0 acres and
gas ava abe Cab n ocated
DOZER and back hoe wo k
on McKenz e R dge Road
ponds and sep c anks d
back of Rae ne Con ac Don
ch ng se v ce top so
f
E o Box 1 B R ac ne Oh o
~577
mes one
B&amp;K
d r
Escava ng Pt1one 992 5367 o
12303p
992 386
A
OVE L Y new Home
m e
9 1 tc
om Me gs H gh Sc hoo
Th ee bed ooms
wo ba hs
bu a ng houses
u basemen w h wo c a
cab ne s Ca
$27 500
ga age LanJ.e o
Ra e ne Oh o
A so
ecen y
emode ed
h ee bed oom o der home n
22026C
Pam e oy
P ce of S 5 000
28 New Homes To Be
n c udes t u rn u e Owne w
he p nance e he of hes e NEED A new ce
SOLD
pane ed o nte or pa n ng
wo p ope es ca
593;.5667
Ca
R
cha
d
w
992
2889
A hens
At
121826c
2 2 30 c

---------

ZGZAG
SEW NG
MACH NE S e
n ayaway
A bu t n o bu onho e do
s e ch sew ng and fancy
s ct1 ng Pay us S48 5 cash
o erm s ava abe T ade ns
accep ed Phone 992 2984
2 30 c
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
Ceane s co mpee w h a
and
ac hmen s cordw nde
pa n sp ay Us ed bu n ke
n ew cond on
Pay S34 45
cash o budge pan ava abe
Pt10ne 992 2984

I

ror Sale or Trade

Th s
T uck
DE-SERT
came
om
ruck
neve
ex posed o
A zona
969 Fo d p ck u p
oad sa
VB p S P B au om a c a
cond on ng
h ome
a s
new
es J 500 m es ooks
an d uns
ke new w 11 o
ch ome
whee s
w hou
Ha o dB ewe Long Bo om
Oh o Phone 98 5 355 4
2 30 3 p

GAS and OIL
SALES&amp; SERVICE

DISPERSAL
SALE

downs a s ap
w h
Ca 992 3056
2 28 3

ee
211
2
29
3
32
33
34

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay

Open 8 T IS
Monda)" thru Saturda)f'
606 E Ma n Pomeroy 0

9 0 MAVE R CK
Y
s anda d
ansm ss on has
been w ecked Con ac Je Y
a ks Ru and Fu n u e
Company
2 30 3 p

AND COOLING

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Phone 992 2156

P&amp;J HEATING

On Most Amer can Cars

FURNITURE

00 LB Po ed bu
osaeo'r
a de fo a no he o equa
va ue Phone 992
06
2 23 6 p

PHONE 843-2341

EXPERT
Wheel A11gnment
•5.55

and

C OSE OUT qn 'new Z g Zag
Sew ng Mach nes Fo se w ng
s e ch ab cs bu onho es
an y des gns e
Pa n
s gh y b em shed Cho ce o
a y no
ase o
sew ng
s and 5~9 80 ash o e ms
ava abe Phone 992 2984
25 c

c

More than half of the est
mated s x m lhon fan ngos
n the world hve on the alka
ne akes of the Great R It

TO THE young peop esc ass of
Reedsv e Un ed Me hod s
Church We w sh o hank you
fo he ove y t ay of good es
May God bess each one o
you k nd hough u ness M
and M s 0 s K cas o
2 30 c

2 2 3

MATERIALS CO
773 S5S4
Mason W Va

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUYO

223

c

TO OUR
havee
CERT
So y
accep
Russ s

Pomeroy

Ph '991 2 74

For Renl

306 3

WE w sh to express our s nee e
and heartfe t thanks to
re atlves f ends. and ne gh
bo s for the r k ndness and
S~Jm pathy Shown us dur ng
the lness and death of ou
dee s ster and Aunt Mrs
F oren ce
R
Hou ck
Espec a ly A::ev c J Lem ey
for hiS wonde fu se v ce he
M
er Home for Fun eras to
the r persona and k nd a
tent on to the •unera de a s
and to the Kanauga com
mun tv fr ends and ne Ohbo s
for the beaut fU f o a of
fe r ngs
AI
have
ou
eve ast no grat tude
S sters Da sy Maxwe and
Mrs E tva Wo re N eces and
Nephew
307 1

OHIO RIVER
Realty

---------

-------Card of Thanks

Resadence and
Mobtle Homes

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

OffiCE SUPPLIES

H AVE
ha wan s oorn
a e a any age
2B54

w

SMITH NElSON
MOTORS, INC.

MAN S execu ve
pho og ay SOL 0 OAK rou nd abe 6
bi'foca glasses
f found
ma ch ng cha s a so 6 ex a
Phone 4.46 0 23 a e 4 30 p m
c ha s
sod oak spnd e
307 3
backs. Across f om W
ams
M&lt;t ket Crown c y Phone
156 294

m n&lt;l
2 BEDROOM mob te home
I never shall to get
m e East of Crown C y on
No matte how the years go by
Route 7 Rent 575 mont'h Ca
My love s w th you ye
256 6305
Sadly m ssed bV w e Ne e
S ag e S tr 1
307 2

Built to Your Sptc;s
Del vered to Job S1te

06 E Mam Pomeroy

Ven ce lla y constantly
th eate1 ed by wa er and
h m d ty has suffered al
most 60 f oocts n he pa st
t a f ce tu y

WARNER

From he laroes
Bu dozer Rad ato to
ma es Hea er lo e
Nathan B ggs
Rad a tor Spec al sf

992 2094

Saturday

In Memorv

"'""'

To nhke me th nk of vou
Your face and voce a e fresh n

JOe

KOSCOT KOSME CS &amp; W GS
We have he p odu c on hand
and we de e
o you pe
son a y He en ane B own
99 2 5 3
'] 30 f

Januar~t

1 doesn t matte where go o
matter whet do
There II 1 wavs be some
lie

c

c

o m

5 tr

Rea Estate For Sale

For Sale

lost

964

Wanted To Buy

SHOOT NG Ma h Ho ne H
Gun.C ub Sunday De 30 2
noon F a o y hoked guns
on y

ons

wo d s x con

For Sale

.. "

W I\

DEPENDAL\ E PC son
0
hou•;;e·kcepe
o
e de Y
WA K E R P p 6 mon hS LOS
cou pe Good wages and me
n R u a d T ownsh p
\ 0
R e e en e
eq
ed EXCEL S OR Sa
0
Woks t
ewa d Pt10fle 42 4285
Phone 99 5293
Ma n S
Porn e OY A k nd s
2 26 4 p
228
o sa wa e pe e s wa e
nugge s b ock sa
and ~';'2n
SOMQ.ONE o ve n possbe
Oh 0 R er sa
Phone
gh ' housewo k ake ca e o
389
65 c
1 sma
h d en age 4 and
\.900)(
u k
ms
1 u SE D
age
8
5
days
a
week
Ca
99 ~
20 F anK Dodde e Box 62
788 o nqu e a 6 ~ L nco n SALT FOR CE AND SNOW
Coo
e Oh o
H g s e en ngs
Rock sa
o
own'5h ps
2 30 J p
2 30 6 c
owns and bus ('sses n
bu ks and bags o
e and
s.now Exce so Sa Wo ks
Phone 992 389

w

The

s b e tor more han one
cor ec nSfl on

C HARMBaee nhe
o Me gs nn o La
BPa u y S op Second S ee
Porn e oy
ound p ease ca
992 :,J 4
1 30 3 c

T S HE ea
h ng
he SE-w
and Go Shop a e Ch s mas
Sa e A. po YE'S
educed
S 99 ya d and vp
Owne
M s E T Ca away A ed
Oh o
18 6 c

any ads

ltelp Wanted

Lost

Nolice

WANT ADS
NFORMAT ON

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Neal Realty

REALTY
25 Locust St
Howard Brannon Broker
Off 446 2674
Luc e Brannon
Eve 446 1226 or 446 2674
HOL DAY SPECIAL
A CHARM NG 3 BR br ck and
frame home w h chee fu
su ound ngs
a deep we
estab shed p o w th storage
bu d ng 5 m
from own
DIAL YOUR
OWN WEATHER
N TH S gas hea cen a a
count y 11om e nea
own A
beaut fu k tchen and d n ng
a ea 3 BR p enty s o age
space ga age p us 2 acres
$2 000
WHAT A V EW
BR CK &amp; f arne 3 BR a fu V
equ pped k chen w h a the
bu
ns d n ng a ea w th
pa o doors to added v ew
bes des he pana am c v ew
f om he beau fu L R deep
p e ca pet garage and a
beau fu awn
HUGE PLAYROOM
LARGE an ch stye n town
Spac ous
p ayroom
w h
f ep ace .and pat o doo s L R
bu t n countqc.styte k tc'hen
off k chen aundry and hobby
oom _9)1 age and 2 outs tie
bu d ngs on arge eve ot
Now vacant
SPR NG IS COMING
L ST you property early - we
need
st ngs
n
tvery
ocat on Ca today
w

poy

THE STA FF AT NEAL
N
SURANCE
A ND
NEAL
REALTY WOULD L Kl: TO
W SH
EVERYONE
AT
YOUR
HOME A VE RY
MERRY CHR STMAS AND A
OYOUS NEW YEAR
Oft ce Phone 446 1694

Even ngs
Ch rles M N.. l446 1546
J M chael Neal 446 1503
s.. m Neat446 7358

TARA
DEVELOPMENT
CORP.

NEW

I

HOMES
fOR SALE

AUCTION
SERVICE

Su ld1ng
~Jtes
Ava Iable K ngsberry
Homes bu It to I t any
All
spec 11cat ons
Underground Ut hiles
Prov d_e_d

"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY'

For lnformahon
Or An"" nfrnent

JIMME SAYRE
WCTIONEER
i'H. 446-344~

,_______ ---PHONE

367-7250
AddiSOn 0

•

�20 - TheSundayTm es Sentnel Sunda) De&lt;' 30 1973
21- The Sunday Times Senhnel Sunday Dec 30 1973

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
DEADLiNES
Day Be o e Pub ca on
Monday Dead ne9 am

'i P M

on~

Canct at on
Co ec
w
be accepted un 9 a m
Davo Pub ca on
..REGULAT ONS

ese ves he

The Pub sher

r gh

o ed

deemed

o

e e

ob ec ona
w
no be

pub she

o

n

RATES

Fo..- Wiln Ad se v ce
5 cen s pe Wo d one nse on
M n mum Cha ge s 00
14 cen s jte
wo d
h ee

consecu ve nse
26 cen s pe

secv ve nse

LL be ak ng ew ng o de s
n
anua y
Be Y
ag a n
k
Pho e 98.5 3860
F ede
1 30 6 P

espon

ons

25 Per Cen D scoun on pad
ads and ads pa d w h n 0
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITlJARY
52 00 fo
50 wo d m n
mum Each add ona wo d

3c

BL NO ADS
Add ona 2Sc Cha ge pe
Adve semen
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m o 5 00 p m Da y
8 30 a m
o
2 00 N oon

T~E~~

In Mem011
RUSSELL

c:.:pc ence neces.S&lt;)
n p e son 8 e Ta

' 2 3
SHOOT N G MAT CH
Con
Ho ow Gun C ub
u n
s
gh a e M es Ceme e Y
Ru and
Fa o y
hoked
guns on y Su ndav De 30

FARM 50 a es o rno
house and wa e Coa
Phone 992 S 57

8 TRACK apes coun Y &amp;
wes e o o k &amp; gospe on v
s2 ea h Tape cases S2 95 &lt;'nd
so 95 Tt1 s o e good on
un
anua v
6
9
Pome oy Reco e y 627 E
Ma n s ee Phone 992 554
2 2t&gt; 8

e

BEAUT FUL wa nu S e eo
ad o A M F M
ape com
b na on 8 a ck ape deck
ems
Ba ance S. 0 93 o
a a abe ca 992 396 5

good
gh s

1 28 2 p

223

NO

COPPER 60
ad a o S
b a s JOe ba e es
s oo M A H a Reeds e
Oh o Pho e 3 8 6249

N LOV NG memo y o ou
dea mo he Amy C a k. who
passed away 9 vea s ago
oday Dec 29
964 Ou
ps
can no e how we m ss he
ou heer s canno e wha o
say God above knows how we
m ss he
n ou homes ha
a e onesome
oday Sad Y
m ssed by he c h d en
2 30 c

--------------Card of Thanks
TO ALL ou
end y
bo h nea and far
you
to
you
cads
knd
and
deeds
du
S ay n he hosp
deep v app ec a
Lee
F
A
Sy acuse Oh o

ne ghbo s
We hank
p aye s
wods
ng
my
a
A
s
ed
M s
Enoch

2 26 4

'

5 3

WANTED
PAPER CARRIER
IN
SYRACUSE

be

THE DAILY SENTINEL

valley n Afr ca

h

Pom er oy 0
Your
Favor te Country
Mus c Sta s V s. t On

WANTED
PAPER CARRIER
Q.IFTON, W. VA.

THE RAlPH
EMERY SHOW
430T0530

---;_-,-----

Monda y thru F day
On

NOTICE

ACROSS
1 Dec are
6 Deck mop
10 Deve op
14 Sp.n lh p e5
19 Vegetlb 11
21 T lllHCt on
22 T ck
23 Eag es nea s
24 Manage
26 Buys back
28 Se eao

mo ono
29 RuN an
commun 'f
30 Lease
32 Sea aag es
33 Son o Adam
34 Ga den oo
36 Sou
37 Househo d pe 8
39 PoaMSS
40 G ea y p eaaed
41 Mendwthco on
42 S keb eeke
t• ang)
44 Stat onary pa o
moJo
46 Lege ode
•1 Arrow
48 Sanda ac e a
50 L o
52 Workman
53 Man 8 n ckname
65 MMls name

57 Mans n ckname
58 T opca ea
59 Con et
60 P oceed
82 00 000 upees
&amp;4 En 11.nce
88 Me den oved by
Zeus
68 Symbo fo n on
89 S onv gasp
70 Once a ound
ICk

Oenanuse
73 Tapped
75 Jov a
77 S ong w nd
78 G 5 name
80 FO OW ng
second
8 floem
82 Od me
84 Odo s
66 Concea ng
87 Recuse
eg Emp oy
92 am o p ope y
95 Hand e
98 Af can
an e opes
99 Beg ns
0 Geome c c u e
OJ Ac ua be ng
04 Be
05 Sa k
06 Bone
07Avenay
08 Cease
0 Cava
Re ormed
P esbyte a

34Lkey
35 Pack away
37 Kna e a ca ds
p
39 Has en
40 T me gone b
4 Co e ed
43 We k
45 Mans name
46 D aw owa d
onese
48 cooked eggs n
casse o e
SOE gaveb
means o do s
52 Re ea
53Appeaoo
A hena
54 Lambs pen name
56 Pa ed down
57 0 opsy
58 Changes co o o
59 Rock JJh
60 ock o ha

2 G ve ood o
3 Engende ed
5 Symbo o

Oal&lt;

2 "Fo ecas
24 Depass on
26 Musca
o gan za on
27 OdGeekc y
28 Head o a pa sh
chu ch
30 G s name
32 Dec a es
33 Toad

scone ab a

aa c"

23
:25
2
213

••0 'I
Pe ods o me
En o d
Gasp o t1 ea h
G sname

3
33 M n
36 Cha ange

38 Aa ona
40 P epos on
4 E opea
43 Poe

se eme
6 S eamsh p
obb
A mad conn c
8 owa d st1e e
9 Room n hOuse
0 Coo
A coho c
be e ages
2 Wo d Wa
agency n
3 P onoun
4 Mex can abo e
5 Pa o c c e

F R EWOOD
Can de \LeL
Pllone 992 2826 o 992 5565

2 6 2 p

1

NTERNAT ONAL Ooze
oo b a de d ese
n good
o.nd on $2 500 968 Massey
Ha s T ac o w 11 on end
oade
n good
and on
$650 968 P ymou h Fu y n
good ond on $450 Ca 992
2 20 0 992 3589

MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVER WANTED

230 3

APPLY THE
DAILY SENTINEL

89 Cha dean c y
90 Ae a
es eb shmen s
9 A c en ella o
92 Snake
93 Aha cs
9 4 Span sh o
es
96 A con nen
97 Go mounds
OOPs o obe
02 Nob eman
EXPER
05 Sow
n e o
09 Bake s p oduc s
985 395
2 Me shes
3 Shpsp son
4 Lade
6 Wage s
8 B eak sudden
20 Baby 5 wa d abe
2 Consp acy
22 One who
p o des and
se es ood
5 ROOM
23 Specks
u na ce
25
ead unde he

uns good needs
wo
5 hp
ohnson
ou boa d mo o good shape
5300 Brooks Say e ove
Ash and S a t on n Sy a use
2 30 3 p

POMEROY OHIO

WE HAVE a you upho s e y
Bu ap
den m
c amb
oam g ue z pp e s
sp ngs and
a c k ng s p
ps
ch pboa d
bu on
w ne sew ng h ead
egs
upho s e y b ooks da r on
webb ng sp ng w ne acks
ENCEO
pane
we
cord
co on sw e
and ex e o
Pt;one
bases and o am oam oam
Pome oy Recove y 622 Eas
ManS ee Pome oy Phone
992 554

PHONE 992 2156

Employment Wanted

972 KAWASAK
Pe ec con d

2 6 26

3S6

For Rent

DOWN

(abb

ub dum
Goddess o
d sco d
9 Con unc on
20 Condescend ng

6

87 Seaweed
subs ance

---------·-------,---,--

POMEROY 0

\:01.1 I lOS

SUNDAY DECEMBER 30 l973

STEREORAOO arnfm
8
ack ape comb na on 4 way
speake
sound
sys em
Ba an e $ 02 56 o use ou
budge
e ms Ca
992 3965
2 6 fc

PHONE 992 2156

M dd eport Pom eroy

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

------~--,--,--~----=----

DAllY SENTINEL

WMPO-FM
STEREO 921

CUSTOMERS we now
hy gas Come on back
F EO GAS STAt ON
bu we can no ong e
checks of any k nd
Ce
ed Pome oy

c

r

UPHOLSTERY Fab cs by he
ya d 54 n ches w de as ow as
s 95 pe ya d e ve s as ow
as $3 45
mpo ed
e ve s
$9 95 We a so lla e ny on
he cu on
co on
P n s
ny s and emnan s by he
ya do by hep ece Pome oy
622 Eas
Man
Re ave y
S ee
Pam e oy Phone 992
554
2 23 26 c

59 Be na u a y
a aced
60 Fes e
6 Un ock
63 Fu made om
sk ns o young
am tis
65 Chee s
67 Unusua
69 En sed man

36

38
40
4
42

76 Compass po n
7 S y e o pan g
79 To d
83Sma bd
85 T eo espec
86 Posses s ve
p onoun

44
4
46
49
5
53
55

E ced
Fo me y
Decays

Soap pan s
Po on
Con on
So OS
Dampens
Sows
Baz anesuay
Odponoun
E ase p n ng
Anc en
H gh ande
Edge

Ca y
No sa
EQua y
Pa d nu ce
Cooed a a

FUR N SHED
2
bed oom
apa men
M dd epa
Phone 992 38 4

2 30

c

--------c----,--~c-----,--_--:-

THREE ROOMS a
e ec c
apa men on Eas Ma n S n
Pome oy ke n ew wa oven
abe op
ange Phone
46
099 o
46 9539 a e 5 p m
2 23 6 c

coAL FOR SALE
AYMAR
COAL
COMPA NY
THE
ME GS &amp; GALL A L NE
STATE
ROUTE
AT
CHE SH RE OPEN 7 AM
T L L 6 30 P M 5 DAYS A
WEEK PHONE 992 5693
2 31 4 c

---------·~--

For Rent or Sale
HOU SE 6 8 nco n He gh s
bed ooms Fam y oom
bclsemen
wash oom u
E ec c
ange

TRA LER space
phone 992 3 02

PR VATE meet ng oom
o
any o gan za t on phone 992
3975

b"

c.

MAYTAG
406

2 30 3 p
973
3 AND 4 ROOM fun shed and VACU LTM C eane s new
Mode
~omp e e
w h a
un u n shed
apa men s
pa n
c ean ng oo s Sma
Phone ~92 5434
damage n sh pp ng W
take
52
cash o
budge
pan
ava ab e Phone Q92 2984
2 8 fc

For Sale

F REWOOD S 2 pe
p ckuj:)
oad any day a e
2 00
Go don P o f
G ea Bend
Sandy Dese
Rd
Po and
Oh o R

PA NT DAMAGE
9 3 Z G
ZAG SEW NG MACH NES
St
n o g na ca ons No
a achmen s needed as our
con o s a e bu
n
Sew s
w h
o 2 need es makes
bu onho es sew on bu ons
956FORO
onpckupwh
monog ams and b nd hem
ca e acks 5225
967 Cub
s ch Fu cash p ce S38 50
Cade W h CU VB 0 S 5350
o
budge
pan ava ab e
949 Chevy 5 50
uns good
Phone 992 2984
Phone 949 2 34 o 247 2 92
2 27 3 c
s
c z g Zag
Sew ng Mach nes n sew ng
abe Makes bu onho es
sews on bu ons b nd hems
etc Top no ch cond on Pay
S5 or erms ava abe Phone
992 2984
t:LECTROLUX Sweepe de uxe
2 8 fc
mode
comp e e w h a
c ean ng a act1men s and
uses pape bags S gh y used GROCERY bus ness o sare
bu c ean sand ooks ke new
Bu d ng fo
sa e o
ease
w se o 537 25 cash o
Phone 773 56 8 f om 8 30 p m
e ms ava abe Phon e 992
o 10 p m fo appo n ment
3 20 fc
2984
2 5 fc

-------

8 TR ACK apes &lt;: oun V &amp; S N GER sew ng mach nes 1972
wes e n ock &amp; gospe on
mode
n beau u wa nu
cab ne
Makes des gn s
$2 each Tape cases $2 95
ches z g zag
bu onho es
56 95 Th s offe good on y
b nd h ems e c L ke new
un
anuary
6
9 4
On y 58 9 95 ca Ravenswood
Pome oy Recovery 622 E
273 952 0 273 9B9 3 af er 5 0(}
Ma n S ee
Phone 992 7554
2 7 fc

l

----------------~2__:_:
26 8 c

Res denc:e com mere al or
mob le hom es Save on parts
&amp; labor
215 N lnd Ave
M ddleport
Phone 992 3509

Dick's
Hoard House

DITCHING SERVICE
Water L nes and Power
L nes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and sept c tanks n
sta lied

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
N1ght 992 3525
or 992 5232

WANTED
INVENTIONS DEAS
CASH
Sale or
Rova t es
Poss be
Wr e fo
free
I terature
IMPERIAL
.055 Exe&lt;ut ve Pa k Dr ve
C nc nnat
Oh o 452~
o
phone Mr Wh red co ec a
513 563 4710
283 30

STRIPPERS

We Strip Paint Varnishes
elc I om Fu n ture

I

J

Ant ques Modern Metals
We buy Ant ques Co lee
tbesetc
P1ck up Serv1ce Available
DICK SEYLER Owner
Phone 992 2798

-

Kerr Street
Pomeroy Oh1o

t...,....._ _ _

w
___..~

C BRADFORD Ave oneer
Compete Se v ce
Phone 949 382
Ra e ne Oh o
c Badfod

G &amp; E App ance Repa

a

he shop

Phon e
992 3802 or 949

4254

s

c

oade
sep c

u ks

and o boys tor h e w hau
f
d
op so
mesone
and g ave Ca Bob or Rage
effe s day phone 99 2 7089
n gh phone 992 3525 o 992
5232
2
fc

DOZER wo k and c ear ng by
the acre hou y o con ac
fa m ponds oads e c Large
doze e~nd ope a o w h ove
20 yea s expe ence Pu ns
Excava ng Pomero y Oh o
Phone 992 '24 8
2 9 fc

-:c--------·---,----REAOY M X

CO NCRETE
de vered
gh
o your
p o ec Fas and easy F ee
es mates Phone 992 328~
Goeg en Ready M x Co
M dd epor Oh o
6 JO fc

0 DEL

Real Estate For Sale

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

AUTOMOB
cance ed
ope ato s
7428

REALTY

MAIN
POMEROY

START THE NEW YEAR
RIGHT BUY A HOME
NO HEATING PROBLEM
HERE THESE ARE ALL
ELECTRIC
NEW
w th
acre
3
bed ooms
a ge closets
Colo ed bath w
shower
K chen has lo s of cab ne s
and Ia ge d n ng
Ut I ty
oom Ga age Your cho ce
coo of carpet ng CUSTOM
BU l T SIB 900 00

6 O,tfc

C HARLES R
m n backhoe
footers d a n
742 6092

HATF ELO
wa e
nes
nes Phone

1

8

~:pa

SEW NG MACH NES
rc '
se v cd a makes 992 228~
he Fab c Shop Pomeroy
A~:~ ho zed S nger Sa es and
Serv ce We Sha pen Sc sso s
3 29 fc
~·~·------

TEAFORD
V11qil!l

r,,,,.r,' ·),

f) I I Jl&lt; ' I

3 yea s

acre
3
bed ooms W C osets N ce
k tchen w th Range Ia ge
d n ng area Mode n bath
Large L v ng Ca port w th
sto a g e and Ut I ty
oom
JU ST $ 6 000 00

'1•'/u(h,;riH ·,,,,,.

old

y o d 1 ac e 3 B R Bath
N ce k tchen and d n ng
oom
Hardwood floo.rs
Garage and B eezeway
Po c hes
So me
woods

$19 000 00
2 Y s o d
a c re Lovely
kitchen and d n ng Range
Ut I y oom 3 n ce B R s
Co ored bath
Hardwood
f oars
some carpet ng
Drapes Close n $21 000 00
3 Y s old
2 acre 3 B R s
Co ored bath W
shower
Beaut fu k tchen
lots of
cabinets Range &amp; Ref
U ty D n ng R Basement
$2 000 00
F NONE OF THESE ARE
SUITABLE
WE
HAVE
OTHERS AI pr ces
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER

991 2139
If no anSwer 992 2568

12x60 2 BEDRoo.Mt;;-; no
m o e han 2 ch d en c ean
waslie and d yer Ph 256

62 6

305 3
4 ROOMS and ba h basement
aundry oom fo ced a
fu ni!lce so m w ndows and
sc eens cen ra y oca ed
adu ts p eferred
A1o'a abe
mmed ate y
Ca
446 2865
305 3
------·-----~

ONE bedroom apa t men n R o
G ande u n shed ut
es
pad S100 per mon 11
no
ch d en Phone 245 5535
305 3
BR

Home

305 3

----~
ELCONA., Mob e Home El(
ce ent cond on Need qu ck
sac e S2 500 Phone 6 5
~
307 1

:-:-:-: --::--:-,-,- ::- ---,--

---

F REWOOD any amoun
de ve h43 0088

Pru

roy. ()1,1" I'•·&lt;'•':;

POMER" (
2 bedroom home
w th hardwood floors Compact
K tchen bath gas F A fur
nace and basement Only

$6

500

NEW HOME 3 bedrooms
1 baths all electr c d n ng 2
fam y rooms double garage
and about acre
SYRACUSE
4 bedrooms
n ce bath large modern k t
chen
2 family rooms and
garage N ce porches on 12-4
POMEROY - Large br ck 3
bedrooms bath gas F A
furnace Central air modern
k tchen a rge d n ng 2 porches
and 2 car garage
OVER 1 ACRE - of vacant
and n Sal sbu y Township on

R

7

NOW IS THE TIME TO SELL
IF YOU WANT TO GO
SOMEWHERE YOU MUST
THINK BIG TRY US

USED
and
REPOSSESSED
PRICES
To make room for the
many
new
umts
arnvmg m Jan 1974.
DELAYED
DELIVERY
AVAILABLE
W1th the except1on of a
small depos1t

NO MONEY
NEEDED UNTIL
JANUARY 1974

307 6
ON GEORGES Creek Road
hree 3 bed oom homes and
one 4 bed oom t1ome Ca 446
398 0 .446 3.459

:ro

,-,-·-::---:-cc --,--,---------,--

963 CHEVROLET 4Speed 256
' 7

30 3

:--:--c--c-:-:cc::--:----,-----,M

ugs have been

e ec c
Cen a

--------CARPETS and
beau fu
Lus e
shampooe

30

6

- --=-:-:--:_-c--:---,----:--:--

----- -----------~

307 6

Sw'E'EPER: Repairs pa s
supp es 446 0294
D am 5
p m Dav s Vacuum C eane
Store Georges Creek Road
nex 0 Bobs CB Rad o Sa es
293 f

-----REO S BARBER

SHOP w
be
cloud 23 thru 30 of December
Season s G ee ngs
300 f
DAY CARE

SUN VALLEY Nu se y Sc hoo
censed bY S ate of Oh o
m es west or new hosp a
577 Sun ~ ey Dr Ph 446 J6S7
Day ca e that says
w
care
Madge Hllu dren
owner
Lored h and Joh
Hau dren Ope ators
114 I

·----

PROFESS ONAL men o
serve you bet e and taste
Save on off season p c es now
hrouoh February 1974 Fa
f ee est mates phone 675
A15A Shop ocated a Mason
Co Fa g ounds
30'2 26

Wanted To Buy

3 BEDROOM a I e ec r c K&amp;K
Mob e- Homes P P easan
304 6

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

VERY CLEAN 2 bedroom home
n town Just
ke n ew no
pes s 25per man h ca 446
2356 or 446 9145
300
COACHMAN T ave
a e
Moor Homes
5 h Whee
Truck Campers App E) c y
Auto Sa es R 3l N ac kson
O~"Phone 286 5700

2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM ap
depos t and 6 mon hs
446· 397

5150
fil: ase
292 tf

~----------~------

FURN SHED ap
U
es
pa d
Reference!
eq u ed
nqu re a 63 Fourth Ave
292 tf

&lt;4f

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE nspec on Ca 446 3245
Me r
o De Ope a o by
Ex e m na T m te Se v ce
0 Be mong D

APARTMENT for cons
men Ph 446 0756

LOFTY p e f ee f om so
5
the carpet c eaned w h B ue
Lus e
Ren
e ec c
OLD c ock operat ve o no
sham pooer
$
Cen a
s ate make cond on and
Supp y
pr ce n e ter Bo x 298 c o
302 6
Ga po s Da y T bune
306 7 F OR a
e ec
c
Murphy

Help Warded

MENTAL
Hea th
Worker
needed to new Commun V
Mental Health Cente
ser
v ng Ge a
Jackson
and
Me gs Count es Must be an
R N
w th psych atr c ex
perlence o
possess h gh
apt ude and
nte est
n
psych etry o possess a B A
n Soc a wo k psycho ogy or
an A A degree n Menta
Technology
Exce ent
work ng cond ons Adectua e
superv s on and opportun It es
for lea n no s art ng sa a Y
S7 800 to $8 000 depend ng on
background with e sa ary
a se Ju
Ca or George
G eaves at 6 ~ 446 4950 for
further nfo matlon or send
etter and resume to Ga a
Jack5on and Me gs Com
mun ty Menta Hea h Center
p 0 Box: 292 Ga po 5 Oh o
45631
302
,
--:--

v

--n and care to

302 6

Jay Sheppa d
B oker Auc onee

G LLENWA TER S SEPT C
TANK
CLEA N N G AND
REPA R
ALSO
HOU SE
WRECK NG Ph 446 9~ 99
Es ab shed n 940
f

FREE es ma es
ab ty n
su ance P un ng
mm ng
and cav y wo k
ee and
s um p emo a Ph 446 4953
3 f

MOTORIST MUTUAL
INSURANCE
THE best n!u an ce a he be!t
p ce
For au o
home
bus ness and fe Ray Hawk
agen
446 2300 54 4 h Ave
50 If

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

ROOF N G
A so bu

MOBllf_
COMMUNITY
&amp; SALES
r..uaney Cora Rd
Rodney Ohio
Hour.s-'la m to9p m
Monday thru Saturday
Ph 245 9374 245 5021
LARGE 3 bedroom t10me edge
of town $ 25 month 446 066
or ~46 4618 even nos
290 tf

n &amp; Son Wa e
Serv ce
You
palr~age
w
be
ap
prec a ed Ph 4.46 0463
2 f
P

IN GALliPOLIS
2 Bedrooms
ca pc ng
h oughou
a ge
o
60 x 3 A r ea n ce home
MADISON AVE
3 Bed oom home n ce o
Ox3
Askngony$5500
VACANT LAND
.4 Ac es
m e of R 35
wes 3 m es om hasp al
BAcesonR
60nea

Ma

De ve y

J&amp;WMDUN
CLEANIN,.G SERV CE
GENERAL house c ean ng We
supp y a
he c ean ng sup
p es 388 8B75 a e 6 p m ca
388 886S Week y o mon h y
c ean ng by appo n men
9 f
TOOL
sha pen ng
saws
sc sso s shea s home and
ga den oo! Sha P Shop
A ey rea
47 Second

Po e

v
y
'

Dave O'Neal
Real Estate

5 ACRES o and o d house
aer5e
wo
dea for
we s e ect c $4 500

2

BEDROOM home
ace
of
and
possess on 56 500

ST RT

s

50 A

BULAV LLE RD
3 Bd m b ck
acre 4
m l es f rom Ga pol s n ce
ke new

4 A

SS 500

a

ba h
Qu ck

23 ACRE S w th beau fu
shade
ees on hard op oad
u a wa e and e ec c y
Lo c a ed on Rodney Cora
oad Th s o can a so be
made n o wo sma e ots
245 5520
307 4

RUSSEll

WOOD
REALTOR

Larg~st
LEAOER SINCE 1900

ND SPENSAB LE
A
ref ge a o s a p ace whe e
hey
you sto e e ove s un
a e o d enough o h ow ou

THE
IN
SERVING THE NATION~
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph A46 0008

EVAN S HE GHTS
$ 9 500
4BRsandafu basemen
0
WH TE RD
$28 500
B and new o a
e ectr c
beau y
523 000
mode n
B DWELL
3 BR anch w h basement
STA TE ROU TE 60
$39 000
L ke new b ck w h
basemen nes ed on 5 A of
o ng and

Plumbing &amp; Healing

sa5A

MODERN
anch
ype
ame
home on 2
ac es
v ng
room 30 x 15 2 bedrooms
oca ed a he unc on of 2 B
and 553
3 BE D R.OO M b ck and tame
house on Bu av e Rd
ca
ga age com p e e y ca r pe ed
Ow ne mo ed ou of sta e and
anx ous o se

a

EURE KA $25 000
N ce 'jr
emode ed 4 BR home w h a
ver v ew
KANAUGA
$ 6 000
5 rm
home and a Gam mere. a s ze
garage
WOODSM LL RD
s 4 00
5 m s basemen and 3 ac es
of p nes

ON SECOND Ave 3 bed ooms
ba 115 new k chen new
u nace anQ a cond on ng
Compet e y carpe ed P ce
524 500
8 AC RE Sw h4 bomhouseand
fu n u e
2 sm a
ou
bu d ngs Sma pond P ce
$ 0 000

3

ACRES Moden 3 bed oom

home gas u nace ha dwood
f oo s house n exce en
cond on Vacan
eady o
move n P ce S21 000

-----

-------

For Sale

For Sale

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

RICE'S

UNIFORM CENTER
IN DOWNTOWN
GALLIPOLIS

after 5 p m
'NEW and used natrume ::~
Brvn card House ~f Mus c 54
S ete Street Phone A46 0687
190 tf
LIJMP Coa Jaymar Coa
Me1gs and Ga l.;e ne St
at Chesh re 7 a m to
p m
deys e week 992

Co
Rt 7
6 30
5693

---

122 If

s

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

FURNITURE

Tremendous location &amp;
potential for rlgbl poorly
Priced for quick 118le Owner
mulleavoarea Ph «ll-t738

For Sale or Trade

Our new show
room
now open
USED FURNITURE

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

iXPii'"'IENCED-

----------

-----"-------.-

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

---------

PUBLIC
NOTICE

r.

Wanted To Kent

--~-

2
CH LL C OTHE RO
SPE(: AL
DWELL NG
NCLUD NG GAS RANGE
REFR G
AND OT HER
FURN T URE
GOOD
N
VE STMENT JUST R GHT
FOR NEWLYWED S OR
RET REO COUPLE
3 RUT AND
STORY
HOMES ON
A LARGE
F LAT
OT W TH LARGE
K T CHE N 3 BEDROOMS
BATH
N EW
F OOR
COVER NG AND CA RPET
ALUM NUM
S 0 NG
STORAGE
BU LD NG
OWNER VERY ANX OUS
TO
SELL
AND
HA S
PR CEO
T
BELOW
MARKET
VALUE
AT
$ 3 500

Lookmg For Quality
At the R1ght Pr ce
TH S VERY WELL BU LT 3
BEDROOM
HOME
N
CLUDE S
EXPENS VE
CAR PET
N
LARGE
L V NG ROOM AND 2
BEDROOMS
THE K T
CH E N
S EXTRA N CE
W TH OTS OF CAB NET S
AND BU LT N RANGE
D N NG
AREA
OR
FAM Y ROOM
ARGE
CAR GARAGE ALL ON A
LARGE
F AT
LA N D
SCAPE D COU NTR Y LOT
TH S S AN EXCEPT ONAL
HOME BESUREANDSEE
T
BEFORE
BUY N G
ELSEW HE RE

30 ACRE S ALL CLEAN AS
A HOUND S TOOTH W TH
VERY GOO D 4 BEDROOM
HOME
N C E MODERN
K TCHEN
NEW S 0 NG
NEW
ROOf
MODERN
F URNA C E
BATHS
REALLY A VER Y COM
FO RTABLE HOME

Large 3 Bedroom
Woodland Dr
EXCELLENT LOCAT ON
M LE
FROM TOWN
NCLUDE S
LARGE
L V N G ROOM 0 N NG
AND
F AM LV
ROOM
LARGE
LOT
PR CEO
$24 900 00

Panoramic
V1ew of
The OhJD Valley
S T
N
T H S LARGE
CARPETED LV NG ROOM
AND BE H PNOT ZED BY
THE V EW
YOU LL
ALSO ENJOY A COZY
FAM LV
ROOM
3
BEDROOM S
LARGE
S PA C OUS
K TC HEN
WOOD
BURN
NG
F REP L ACE AND O N E OF
THE
BEST
NE G H
BORHOOD S N TOWN ALL
TH S ON A LARGE LOT
FOR LESS THAN S50 000 00

New 3 Bedroom
Bnck
W TH FULL BASEMENT
LOVELY
K TCHEN
QUAL TY CO N STRU CT ON
THROUGH0 T
N C TV
SC HOOL D STR CT $35 900

Best Older Home
For Sale
In Galhpohs

HOME
N CL UDES CAR
PE T NG
THROUGHOUT
ON
ARGE LOT W TH
GARAGE
PR CED
AT
522 900 00
VERY VERY
N CE

Excellent Buy
In Country
LARGE 0 OER HOME
COMPLETELY
REMODELED ON 6 ACRE
LOT O N RT 325 BETWEEN
R 0 GRANDE A ND V N

BEAUT FUL BR CK
N
N
M NT COND T ON
CLUDES 3 BEDROOMS
LARGE FORMAL 0 N NG
ROOM
COMPLETE Y
MODERN
K TCHEN
LARGEST FAM LY ROOM
N TOWN PLUS A FULL
BASEMENT
BATHS
AND 2 CAR GARAGE W TH
WORK SHOP
AN EX
CELLENT H OME
M 0
FORT ES

Brand New
Spht Entry

TON

Lovely New
Split Level
TH S BRAND
NEW
3
BEDROOM
HOME
S
COMPLETELY
CAR
PETED AND
N C LUOE S
RANGE
0 SHWASHER
CENTRAL A R 1
BATH S
STORM W ,NOOWS LARGE
L V NG
ROOM
ANQ
0 N NG
W FE
AP
PROVED K TCHEN 2 CA R
GARAGE AND LAR GE LOT
N
C TY
SC HO OL
D STR CT

HA S 3 BEDROOMS
h
BATH LARGE FAM LY
ROOM 2 CAR GARAGE
AND A LL THE EXTRAS N
THE K TCHEN $2890000
Gal a Co s La ge5t Rea
Estate ..Sa es Agehcy
Off ce 446 3643
Even ngs Cat
E M
ke w seman
446 3796
E N W seman 446 4500
Bud McGhee 446 1255

on s a e ou e w h
u a wa e
ar:ge ba n ob
base P ced at 56 000

h

Fer Sale or Trade

'

Excellent
Farm Property

o ACRES

$ 9 500
m home w

NEXT TO C TV
$3 500
Love Sp foye w h cen

FORGO TTEN So many sub
s u es ha e been d scove ed
bV sc en s s ha
s d cu
o emembe wha
was we
n eed ed n he t s p ace

STAT E ROUTE 588
$29 500
mode n ranch w h f u
basemen and ove
a e
TWO tral er 0 s Adu S Ph
POMEROY
$34 000
2 NEW hom e on 0 J Wh te Road
4&lt;6 380S
WEEKfor20 hours work
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
264
t
apa
mens
and
2
bus
ness
PLUMB NG
Hea ng
A r
after 5 30 even ngs
Lo
00 ~ 200 frame and
ren a s
Cond ton ng 300 Fou h Ave
b ck
v ng room 4 x 25 2
APPLy n person at Up Towner
Ph 446"163
ba hs and 2 showers ca pe ed
FARMS
nn Hun ngton on January 2
w h e ec c h ea
48 f NE AR TYCOON
P ced a
LAKE
at 7 p m ask tor Mr Ha e no MASSEY Ha
----------------$2 000
s Fe gilson
CAB NET Shop a
ypes of
$28 000
45 A w h a 4 x 70
CARTERS PLUMB NG
phone calls p ease
tractor and a
equ pmen
wood work 01 Cour S eet
mob e home
AND HEAT NG
3 BEDROOM
home w tti
W
1
trade
for
young
I
ves
ock
Ph
.t46
745
187
tf
306 3
Cor Fou h &amp; P ne
pano
am
c
v
ew
of the Oh o
Phone 367 7607
GALL P OL S SC COL 0 ST
-------· -·-----=---,--·-~
Phone 446 3888or 446 4.477
R ve f ont room ca rpe ed
306 3 WASHER
ana
S
0
500
30
A
mos
y
6S f
mode rn
k ! c hen
u
ref ge a or
epa
No
bottom and
en
P
ced
at
$23
000
ba5em
cha g e fo se v ce ca
f we
RUSSELLS
c an f x your app ance Ph
NE AR Ga a
$ 3 000
2 8 AT Rodney on
PLUMBING &amp; HEAT NG
acre frame 4
F YOU are bu d ng a new
675 4242
A
og cab n
Gall pol s 446 4782
bed oom carpe ed
e ect c
home o remode no see us
LADY' TO WORK Cafeter a ne
hea
s o m doo
and w n
297 f NE AR LECTA
we are- bu l,ders
o s r butor
$
6
500
from 11 00 o 7 30 App y n
dows cemen t bock garage
for Hotpo n
App ances
D-E
--W
- -T- T- 5- -P- L--U
-M
---B- -N-G
barga n pr ced 3S A
PROTECT you mo b e hom e ---person C rc: e s Cafeteria and
P ce reduced
o s 9 500
A son Elect c
w
h T E DOWN ANCHORS
Restauraht
AND
HEAT
NG
ng
ava
ab
e w h
F-R--anc
54 If
Ca
Ron Sk dmo e 446 756
NEAR ADD SO N
$4 000
25
305 3
SIJI
a
down
paym
en
Roue
60a
Eve
g
een
af er 3 p m
A coun v wate
Phone 446 2735
OFF CE 446 066
f
EVEN NGS
87 tr NEAR V NTON
S15 000
5
R u sse Wood 446 46 8
THOMAS Fan E x e m n~1 ng
A
mos
y
woods
ENERGY CR S S DEMANDS
STANDARD
Ron Canaday 446 3636
Co Term te and Pest conlr o
Nuc ea
Train ng
for
P
urn
b ng &amp; H ea ng
John I R chards 446 0280
Whee ersburg Oh o
RACCOON TWP
S 5 500
30
Qual f ed tnd v dualS The U
2 od Th dAve 446 3782
233 tf
A g ass and 7 pet
ntt n c ng
S Navy offers the bes
87 tf
NEW
ava
abe
SECO ND mor gage money
M &amp; S CON--:5-T
-R
-:U--C-T- Q-N
nuc ear power train ng n the
USED
ava abe
Ca
manaae
word tor those who qua fy
EXCAVAT ON and gene a
154
Second
Ave
•••
f513
50
A
E
nest
Cover
at
Cred
th f
NEAR•SnL"
ooo
Open ngs ava abe for bo t1
emode ng Backhoe dozer
wht&gt;"V'"Uban
o Ame ca Phone 446 4 13
officer
and
enl sted
63 FORO Fa ane
70 Fo d
and trench ng Sept c ;;tnks
284 30
programs
Fut
pay and
Cus om 70 P ymouth
and too ers A
phases of
OVERLOOK NG OH 0 'R VER
""
y
allowance• while you train
IS
Phone
446
216
p um b ng w r ng
new n
38 A wooded homes es
For mort nformatton ca I tot
37~3
s a at on ca 388 9986
free 800 8-41 BOOO anytime!
-------3 GRADE A OA RY FAR MS
_______:__
m 11 ----'-TAKE COMMAND OF YOUR
963 NTERNAT ONAL P ck up
p cess ar a SAO 000
sofa bed
FUTURE IN THE NUCLEAR H GH cha r
S250 Fo d 4 !peed s 00 956 2
6M
couches
9x1'2
woo
rug
2
NAVY
doo Chevy F be g ass ont ROY SP RES RD
$20000
2 fu
ength ROOF NG &amp; Spout no Sh ng e
3056 ree n ce deskl
bubb e hood 336 9906
&amp;
Bu
dup
roof
Hot
&amp;
co
d
84 A mos y fa m and
m rrors Portable TV 2 or 3
J05 3
roceu Home mprovemen
yean o d
OP~N NG In Gal lpo s area
n
gene a
Fo
f ee
L TTLE BULLSK N RD
Age
un!rrtPOrte,t
but
est ma es
Pt10ne Robert
23 PH LCO co or conso e TV
\6 100 - 42 A wood and
We se I anyth1ng for
F
LE
CA81NETS
F
le
fo
ders
m 1tur1ty II We tre ,
A r
4.46 0692
Meade 388 8 4 B dwe
anybody
Br1ng your
ledgers
columnar pads
mell B R D ckerson Pres
305 6 L ST NGS NEE DED
Oh o
230 f
tems
to
Knotts
Com
SouthWtlttrn Petro eum Ft
5 mmons Pr nt ng and Off ce
RAN NY BLACKBURN
mun ty Auct on Barn
Suppl
ea
305
f
worth Ttx:
~
BRANCH
MANAGER
RvOF NG AND ::&gt;t-'uu NU
30 4
Co ner Th rd &amp; Ohve
Sh ng es s d ng and bu dup
3 0
4
HOUS El ~ ac es
For appo ntment call
hotroofs
Free
Est
mates
26
A
SMALL
house
or
2
bedroom
tur";;ac•
schoo
bedrooms
c v
years
exper
ence
Jame-s
256
6967 after s p m
--.&gt;FORD Qatax: e 500 conv
apa men
P efer g ound
rtpllrmen
. . lery
com
4
d at c 2 m es ou R
Marcum v nton Oh o 388
.;·=~uCI Phone4A60876or
toor For a ma u e oupe
every s.-turdav
Sa
e
mtndlblt to lbllity Wr te
446 2323
99ol0
Ca 446 7805
IOJI K n c-o Tr bunt
247
even
ng
at 7 0 Clock
2.47 t
306 3
29~ I
302 6

3073

LES OUT OF TOW N
C TY
SCHOOL
0 STR CT
DANDY
OLDER
HOME
W TH
MODERN
K TCHEN
CE NTR AL HEAT AND
BATH
LARGE
TOBACCO BASE LARGE
BARN
20 TO 30 A
CLEAR
BALANCE
N
WOOD
A ND
BRUSH
R GHT NOW S T ME TO
BUY
BEFORE
N
TEREST GOES UP WE
W LL SPL T TH S FARM
F DE S REO
N

Economy Group
OLDER: HOME NEWLY
DECORA EO N S DE AND
OUT
NC UD NG STO RM
W N DOW S AN 0
DO OR
NEW FLOOR COVER NG
THROUGHOUT
TH S
2
BEDROOM HOME HA S
PART AL
BASEMENT
OCATEO ON A SPAC OUS
TREE SHAD ED LOT W TH
C TY WATER
EN OY
A L
TH S
W TH
A
REGULAT ON S ZE POOL
TABLE AS
A
BONUS
PR CE $7900

~

6

Excellent

Worla s

Remode ed 8
basemen

AT EDGE OF TOWN ON 2
ACRE LOT W TH FAN
T AST C V EW OF THE
RVER THREE LARGE
BEDROOM S
W FE
APPROVED
K TCHEN
FORMA
0 N NG
l V NG AND FAM LY
RO OMS
ARE
CAR
PET EO
EVERYTH NG
S CLEAN A ND N M NT
CONO TON N S DE A ND
OUT
YOU LL FALL N
LOVE W TH THE LAND
THE
REE S
THE
PEACE AND
QU ET
OWNER TRANSFER REO
OUT OF STA TE MU ST
SELL BELOW MARKET
VALUE

How About 79 Acres
W1lh Small Lake

3 Bedroom

SlROUT
REALTY

V NTON

One Look Is
Worlh I 000 Words

and

KEMPER HOLL OW RD - 4
BR b
k
anch w h fu
basemen and
A o and

Co ne 101 Park D ve
&amp; Jackson Blvd
Pont P easant W Va 2SS50
Phone 304 675 1580
DEAL Fam y home
wo
ba hs
a ge
v ng oom
d n ng
a ea
com b ned
f ep ac e 3 bed ooms k
chen k t c hene e den u
y
m
s orage rm
sma
ou b dg
approx
ac e of
and You won
bea
he
p ce Fue o hea
$25 000

n

See

ST RT
4
2 A w h 2
houses and a ba n S 6 000

SM TH RD
$ 0 000
Any h

RE FOR SALE
NEW 3 BEDROOM b u ck
ba h fu y a
a g e k chen and
area d s hwash e
ange 2 car ga ag e
doo opene N ce
Wou d se on and
sm a
down
paymen Lo ca ed 6 m e up
R
Coun y A e Es a es
Phone 446 1
o
446 2573
af e 5 p m

wa e De very Serv ce
Pa o s a R
Ga po s
Ph J 9 2 33
2.43 f

0

h

ce

NVESTMENT
.4 m house
w h base
mode n and 3
m
ap
u n shed S 8 000

'1Lf6-0001

Look ng for a mob le home
lo1 ora qual ty mob e hcime?
We have both at

QUAIL CREEK

w

P

on

29

--·-----,--------::::-:-:-

anch
pa

SO OF EUREKA
29 acr e Ia m -1 bed oom
home obacco base ba

--8
::-:
A-:N- :K:S:-T
~
R·-:E:cEc-:S~
E -:_
R-:-V:---:-C_-:E

306 6

4 BEDROOM
App ox
ac es Ia ge
mode n k chen ba h &amp;
howe
ga s
fu nace
24 x24 basement pane ed
Lo s o sha de ees ga den
spa ce A s ea a $18 900

THREE a es SR 325 sou h of
R o G ande Mob e home
B o k ce
We and sep c

2

uc on

NEW LISTING
One b ock
om bus ness
sec on o Ga pol s on 2nd
Ave 3 bed oom a me ga s
to ced a
u na ce ha d
wood oo s n good shape
See
now

SAcesnea Vnon ha s
we
sep
ank ba n
4 443 ac es near
Ro
G ande

456

69

EASTERN AVE
3 Bed oom home moden
gas
orced a
tu.t.na e
ha dwood oo s
s n ce
See t must se

G VE some1h ng b g o Ch s
WOODLAND DR
6
m
mas Fo examp e 4 ooms
ame8ysod H W f s
h ee ba hs
a ge o on
eqv pped k t1en A ba ga n
Se ond A enue P ced S6 000
a S20 000
unde rna ke
GARF ELD AVE
5 m
RACCOON C eek farm o e
ame w h base A um
200 ac es
Easy 90 head
s d ng s o m d s and w n
pas u e New barn Mode n
Nea
n ew gas
u
P ce
home w h f ep ace
$ 7 500

STEWAR T E ec ca
v e
Repa
house w
ng
e ec c hea ng Phon e 4&lt;6

----------------ALBERT EHMAN

BUSINESS SPACE
3 52 sq f up o 800
on age on R 35 wes. p us
J bed oom mode n home
gas forced a
fu nac e
a ge bus ness space n an
up &amp; com ng a ea adap
abe o many bus nesses
Shown by appo ntmen
on y

5 ms and
on
A

ST R T 35
w h base
a pe F P
e ec d
$28 500

SEPTIC TANKS
C ea n ed and ns a ed
Russe s P umb ng 446 4 82

968 Fo d Cor
used Ph 245

5202

f

24 tf

=~"'~==~~·,----~--­

GOOD
c ean used c oth ng
boy s s ze 3 and 4 12 s m and
14 s m ca 446 97 '3
307

8

MEADOWGREEN
ESTATE
8 spac ous
ooms
J
bed cams
2
baths
f ep l ace a ge andsca ped
wh e b ck Co on a
p ce
educed f o
qu ck
o appo nlmen
sa e Ca

T S he se ason o be o y and
by go y
wou d be a c n h n
$ 6 000
h s beau fu b ck horne
Th ee o fou bedrooms wo COUN T RY A RE STATE S
ba hs
ep ace
doub e
y o d b ck and a urn 3 b g
ga age A con d on ng P us
bd ms
ba hs a ca pe
co un y s ze o
Qua
y
huge 2 a ga
and a a ge
cus om bu
home
a o S36 900

HOLLEY B os Cons uc on
bu do ng back hoe wo k
d ch ng unde oads bor ng
Phon e 245 50 8 o 245 5006

MoWny s Upho ster ng

STARTER to
na new o

6M DOWNRT
bath 2 ou b Qgs
eve o S 2 BOO

AGENCY

CHATHAM AVE
5 ms and
ba h w h new
u n
s 500 w hou u n "u ee

Serv1ces Offeree!

week y
pa k ng

WISEMAN

Tel 4461998

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

293 f

JHE

bsc~ Ba rd
Doug Wefhe flo t
0
'I
0 d 5
Broke s.
ba h a b ck a
Of Cf' 446 3434
e ec oca ed on a
CE NTENARY
You can have
P
e SJO 000
mmed a e possess on on 11 s
01o'e v h ee- bed oom home
s u y carpe ed n ce ba h CROWN C TY - 8 yrs o d
H W f oo s S ms and ba h
basemen
w h shower fu
a ge so age b dg
and
one ca ga age na u a gas
oca ed on
A
o
On y
hea
c y wa e and schoo
s. 2 500
d s
Owne
w
he p
f nance
on and con ROUTE
Souhabck8bg
ms 2 baM a
a pe 1
F Ps
sw mm ng poo
er
WOODLAND OR VE
Tt1 s
v ewand A o Luxu y pus.
ove y h ee bedroom home
has h&amp;d exce en ca e N e MT Z O N Rd 6 m b ck a
ba 11 k chen w h bu
n
ca pe
F P and
A o
ange and oven fu y
a
5.3 500
pe ed natu a gas hea w h
c en a a
one ca ga age
M N ORT H o HMC
New
w h workshop Loca ed on
6 ms &amp;
ba h s a ca pet
two o s n c y schoo d s ct
b c)( a e ec 2 a a a hed
case o
own
mmedae
ga
S34 000
possess on
CROU SE BE C
RD
T
Leve 6 ms
11 ba hs 2
EUREKA
Loveyvewo he
ysodHW oos
Ao
r ve w h h s h ee bed oom
Th s sa good house and ou d
home n ce ba h to ced a
no be bu
o
he ask ng
fu nace
ove y d n ng and
p ce oday 532 000
v ng oom w h
ep ace
ga age and a b g o
P ce
BUHL MORTON R D yr
educed o S 0 300
o d ame b ck
m 5 ms
ba hs a ca pe a e ec
WE HAVE 0 t1e pope y or
pa o
co e ed
Th s s a
sa e
o s
vacant g ound
beau y On y S26 900
fa ms and homes ca
o
nfo ma on
9M OOWNRVER
2soy
b c k base a
ca p e
v
WE NE ED L ST NG S
you
m 5 x J6 w h F P A so
have a home o ac eage o se
t1as2ndhousew h4 ms 2A
o
a de
a
Oh o R ve
R ver
ew o S45 000
Rea y oday we
beg ad o
he p you
EVERGREEN
5 m s and
Even ngs Ca 446 4244
ba h u hea s o m d s and
Steven Beh 446 9583
wn$4000
John M Fu e 446 432

30 3 ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
c
eane
s
camp
e
e
w h a
2 BEDROOM
par a y
u
achmen s
o dw nde
and
n shed h o me on
Lowe
pa n sp ay Used bu n ke
Fo u t h 446 2876
new cond on
Pay S34 45
cash o budget pan ava abe
Phone P
P easan 675 2225
30 6

206

Real Estate For Sale

Real

Real Estate For Sale

MASSIE
Realty, 32 State Sl

·--·--------------

DEAD STOCK
LL remove 11 a easonab ~
cha ge Ca 245 55 ~

WOMAN tot ve
nva ct lady

MILLER
HOMES
DOWNTOWN
BELPRE
OHIO

30 6

fe oo can be
you use B ue
Ren
e ec
$ G C Mu phy

0 X 50 2 BEDROOM mob e
home
4 G arf e d Ex
Ph
4..t6 0958 0 446 3553

---:-:;-::-::-~-;.­

______

lYEAR
GUARANTEE
BEST SERVICE
IN
OHIO VALLEY

w

2 BEDROOM ra e
u
es
pad 034 Second Avenue Ph
446 0893
30 3

TWO W~Y Rad us Sa es &amp;
se v ce New and used CBs
po ce mon to s antennas
etc Bobs C t zen Band Rad o
Equ p
Go ges Creek Rd
Ga po s Oh o 446 45 7
2 2 f

3

~

96 RAMBLER Sta on wagon
446 7489

2 2

----------------Mobile Homes For Sale

608 E

307

NotiCe

A nem en wo Ill can be
done by appo n men on y a
presen
m e due o ness n
am y
Phone
fa
ap
' PO
po n men
42 3232
SEPT C TANKS CLEANED
ng r oom
1 25 c REASONABLE a es Ph 446
4782 Ga po s John Russe
2 2 6 c SEPT C-rANKS
AROB 'C
owrte l!lnd Ope ator
SEWAGE
SYS TEM S
5 2 tc
9
A L E ec r c W no u
CLEANED
REPA REO
Mob e Ho me
2 x 65
3
M L ER
SAN TAT ON
cond one
3
bed oom a
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
expando
ac e g ound 0 d
3035
R 33 No h of Ro c k Sp ngs
ADO A ROOMS by VEMCO
Phone 992 56
F T ANY MOB LE HOME 6
223 c E:LF\1~ "
-r.
~
.:at!'w no
5 ZES &amp;. FLOOR PLANS
Mach nes
Serv ce on a
ADD EXTRA BEDROOMS
makes Reasonabfe
a es
BATH S FAM LY ROOM
The se w ng Cen er M d
ONE DAY NSTALLAT ON
d epo
011 o
YOU NG S M H SALES RT
TWO STORY b ck a par ment
7 &amp; 35 BELOW 5 LVER
bu d ng
wo apa ments
MEMOR AL
BR DGE
CONSTRUCT ON
P R CE
Sou h Th d S
M dd epo
GALL POL S
Roof ng spou ng
k chens
Show n
by
appo n men
12 30 He
and bah oom s Camp e e
Rodney Down ng Rea Esta e
:-:--:-:--::-_
--::---::-::-:'--c-_
--::-:-:
emode ng Phone 42 6i. 3
B oke
Phon e 992 373
2 X 60 J BEPROOM S
969
23 c
2 20 6 p
G obemaster 0 acres and
gas ava abe Cab n ocated
DOZER and back hoe wo k
on McKenz e R dge Road
ponds and sep c anks d
back of Rae ne Con ac Don
ch ng se v ce top so
f
E o Box 1 B R ac ne Oh o
~577
mes one
B&amp;K
d r
Escava ng Pt1one 992 5367 o
12303p
992 386
A
OVE L Y new Home
m e
9 1 tc
om Me gs H gh Sc hoo
Th ee bed ooms
wo ba hs
bu a ng houses
u basemen w h wo c a
cab ne s Ca
$27 500
ga age LanJ.e o
Ra e ne Oh o
A so
ecen y
emode ed
h ee bed oom o der home n
22026C
Pam e oy
P ce of S 5 000
28 New Homes To Be
n c udes t u rn u e Owne w
he p nance e he of hes e NEED A new ce
SOLD
pane ed o nte or pa n ng
wo p ope es ca
593;.5667
Ca
R
cha
d
w
992
2889
A hens
At
121826c
2 2 30 c

---------

ZGZAG
SEW NG
MACH NE S e
n ayaway
A bu t n o bu onho e do
s e ch sew ng and fancy
s ct1 ng Pay us S48 5 cash
o erm s ava abe T ade ns
accep ed Phone 992 2984
2 30 c
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
Ceane s co mpee w h a
and
ac hmen s cordw nde
pa n sp ay Us ed bu n ke
n ew cond on
Pay S34 45
cash o budge pan ava abe
Pt10ne 992 2984

I

ror Sale or Trade

Th s
T uck
DE-SERT
came
om
ruck
neve
ex posed o
A zona
969 Fo d p ck u p
oad sa
VB p S P B au om a c a
cond on ng
h ome
a s
new
es J 500 m es ooks
an d uns
ke new w 11 o
ch ome
whee s
w hou
Ha o dB ewe Long Bo om
Oh o Phone 98 5 355 4
2 30 3 p

GAS and OIL
SALES&amp; SERVICE

DISPERSAL
SALE

downs a s ap
w h
Ca 992 3056
2 28 3

ee
211
2
29
3
32
33
34

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay

Open 8 T IS
Monda)" thru Saturda)f'
606 E Ma n Pomeroy 0

9 0 MAVE R CK
Y
s anda d
ansm ss on has
been w ecked Con ac Je Y
a ks Ru and Fu n u e
Company
2 30 3 p

AND COOLING

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Phone 992 2156

P&amp;J HEATING

On Most Amer can Cars

FURNITURE

00 LB Po ed bu
osaeo'r
a de fo a no he o equa
va ue Phone 992
06
2 23 6 p

PHONE 843-2341

EXPERT
Wheel A11gnment
•5.55

and

C OSE OUT qn 'new Z g Zag
Sew ng Mach nes Fo se w ng
s e ch ab cs bu onho es
an y des gns e
Pa n
s gh y b em shed Cho ce o
a y no
ase o
sew ng
s and 5~9 80 ash o e ms
ava abe Phone 992 2984
25 c

c

More than half of the est
mated s x m lhon fan ngos
n the world hve on the alka
ne akes of the Great R It

TO THE young peop esc ass of
Reedsv e Un ed Me hod s
Church We w sh o hank you
fo he ove y t ay of good es
May God bess each one o
you k nd hough u ness M
and M s 0 s K cas o
2 30 c

2 2 3

MATERIALS CO
773 S5S4
Mason W Va

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUYO

223

c

TO OUR
havee
CERT
So y
accep
Russ s

Pomeroy

Ph '991 2 74

For Renl

306 3

WE w sh to express our s nee e
and heartfe t thanks to
re atlves f ends. and ne gh
bo s for the r k ndness and
S~Jm pathy Shown us dur ng
the lness and death of ou
dee s ster and Aunt Mrs
F oren ce
R
Hou ck
Espec a ly A::ev c J Lem ey
for hiS wonde fu se v ce he
M
er Home for Fun eras to
the r persona and k nd a
tent on to the •unera de a s
and to the Kanauga com
mun tv fr ends and ne Ohbo s
for the beaut fU f o a of
fe r ngs
AI
have
ou
eve ast no grat tude
S sters Da sy Maxwe and
Mrs E tva Wo re N eces and
Nephew
307 1

OHIO RIVER
Realty

---------

-------Card of Thanks

Resadence and
Mobtle Homes

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

OffiCE SUPPLIES

H AVE
ha wan s oorn
a e a any age
2B54

w

SMITH NElSON
MOTORS, INC.

MAN S execu ve
pho og ay SOL 0 OAK rou nd abe 6
bi'foca glasses
f found
ma ch ng cha s a so 6 ex a
Phone 4.46 0 23 a e 4 30 p m
c ha s
sod oak spnd e
307 3
backs. Across f om W
ams
M&lt;t ket Crown c y Phone
156 294

m n&lt;l
2 BEDROOM mob te home
I never shall to get
m e East of Crown C y on
No matte how the years go by
Route 7 Rent 575 mont'h Ca
My love s w th you ye
256 6305
Sadly m ssed bV w e Ne e
S ag e S tr 1
307 2

Built to Your Sptc;s
Del vered to Job S1te

06 E Mam Pomeroy

Ven ce lla y constantly
th eate1 ed by wa er and
h m d ty has suffered al
most 60 f oocts n he pa st
t a f ce tu y

WARNER

From he laroes
Bu dozer Rad ato to
ma es Hea er lo e
Nathan B ggs
Rad a tor Spec al sf

992 2094

Saturday

In Memorv

"'""'

To nhke me th nk of vou
Your face and voce a e fresh n

JOe

KOSCOT KOSME CS &amp; W GS
We have he p odu c on hand
and we de e
o you pe
son a y He en ane B own
99 2 5 3
'] 30 f

Januar~t

1 doesn t matte where go o
matter whet do
There II 1 wavs be some
lie

c

c

o m

5 tr

Rea Estate For Sale

For Sale

lost

964

Wanted To Buy

SHOOT NG Ma h Ho ne H
Gun.C ub Sunday De 30 2
noon F a o y hoked guns
on y

ons

wo d s x con

For Sale

.. "

W I\

DEPENDAL\ E PC son
0
hou•;;e·kcepe
o
e de Y
WA K E R P p 6 mon hS LOS
cou pe Good wages and me
n R u a d T ownsh p
\ 0
R e e en e
eq
ed EXCEL S OR Sa
0
Woks t
ewa d Pt10fle 42 4285
Phone 99 5293
Ma n S
Porn e OY A k nd s
2 26 4 p
228
o sa wa e pe e s wa e
nugge s b ock sa
and ~';'2n
SOMQ.ONE o ve n possbe
Oh 0 R er sa
Phone
gh ' housewo k ake ca e o
389
65 c
1 sma
h d en age 4 and
\.900)(
u k
ms
1 u SE D
age
8
5
days
a
week
Ca
99 ~
20 F anK Dodde e Box 62
788 o nqu e a 6 ~ L nco n SALT FOR CE AND SNOW
Coo
e Oh o
H g s e en ngs
Rock sa
o
own'5h ps
2 30 J p
2 30 6 c
owns and bus ('sses n
bu ks and bags o
e and
s.now Exce so Sa Wo ks
Phone 992 389

w

The

s b e tor more han one
cor ec nSfl on

C HARMBaee nhe
o Me gs nn o La
BPa u y S op Second S ee
Porn e oy
ound p ease ca
992 :,J 4
1 30 3 c

T S HE ea
h ng
he SE-w
and Go Shop a e Ch s mas
Sa e A. po YE'S
educed
S 99 ya d and vp
Owne
M s E T Ca away A ed
Oh o
18 6 c

any ads

ltelp Wanted

Lost

Nolice

WANT ADS
NFORMAT ON

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Neal Realty

REALTY
25 Locust St
Howard Brannon Broker
Off 446 2674
Luc e Brannon
Eve 446 1226 or 446 2674
HOL DAY SPECIAL
A CHARM NG 3 BR br ck and
frame home w h chee fu
su ound ngs
a deep we
estab shed p o w th storage
bu d ng 5 m
from own
DIAL YOUR
OWN WEATHER
N TH S gas hea cen a a
count y 11om e nea
own A
beaut fu k tchen and d n ng
a ea 3 BR p enty s o age
space ga age p us 2 acres
$2 000
WHAT A V EW
BR CK &amp; f arne 3 BR a fu V
equ pped k chen w h a the
bu
ns d n ng a ea w th
pa o doors to added v ew
bes des he pana am c v ew
f om he beau fu L R deep
p e ca pet garage and a
beau fu awn
HUGE PLAYROOM
LARGE an ch stye n town
Spac ous
p ayroom
w h
f ep ace .and pat o doo s L R
bu t n countqc.styte k tc'hen
off k chen aundry and hobby
oom _9)1 age and 2 outs tie
bu d ngs on arge eve ot
Now vacant
SPR NG IS COMING
L ST you property early - we
need
st ngs
n
tvery
ocat on Ca today
w

poy

THE STA FF AT NEAL
N
SURANCE
A ND
NEAL
REALTY WOULD L Kl: TO
W SH
EVERYONE
AT
YOUR
HOME A VE RY
MERRY CHR STMAS AND A
OYOUS NEW YEAR
Oft ce Phone 446 1694

Even ngs
Ch rles M N.. l446 1546
J M chael Neal 446 1503
s.. m Neat446 7358

TARA
DEVELOPMENT
CORP.

NEW

I

HOMES
fOR SALE

AUCTION
SERVICE

Su ld1ng
~Jtes
Ava Iable K ngsberry
Homes bu It to I t any
All
spec 11cat ons
Underground Ut hiles
Prov d_e_d

"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY'

For lnformahon
Or An"" nfrnent

JIMME SAYRE
WCTIONEER
i'H. 446-344~

,_______ ---PHONE

367-7250
AddiSOn 0

•

�22- The Sunday Times- &amp;·ntinel, Sunday, Dec. 30, 1973

23- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Swrday, Dec.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS; INC.
.500 E;

73 CADILLAC

Are BELOW

Light grey finish . matching leather in terior ,
full power equipment. AM-FM stereo, Climate
Control air. steel radial tires, new Cadillac
trade , 16,000 miles.

City

1973 PONTIAC
SALE $4295
1972 CHRYSLER ~~~~z-~i~neowner, loaded. SA.LE '3295
1972 CHRYSLER ~;~~o~~~:~yal
SALE$2995
1972 PONTIAC
SALE '1995
1972 FORD
SALE '4195
1971 CH EV • ~~~~edCarlo,
SALE •279 5
1971 PONTIAC
SALE$1995
1970 BUICK
dr ~
SALE '1895
l970 PONTIAC ~~:r~s,
SALE$1695
SALE$ 1795
1971 DODGE ~e;~on
BIG $1 395
1969 PONTIAC
SAVINGS
1968
ICK
4
ONLY '995
1968 PLY·MOUTH
ONLY •99 5
1967 FORD
ONLY '495
WE WANT YOU BACK CAUSE THE JOB WAS DONE RIGHT
NOT BECAUSE THE JOB WAS DONE WRONG

New fear's

4

Dark brown, beige vinyl lop, beige leather
interior, till &amp; tel. wheeL AM-FM radio, full
power equip ., Climate Control air. 18,000
miles.

SALE

'6500
72 CADILLAC

•5500
72 CAI)ILLAC

1972 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
I249S
4 door, local! owner car with less than 15,000 miles, beige
finish ,' blk. vi ny l top , good w -w tire s. standard V-8 engine,

automat ic, power steer ing &amp; brakes, radio, spotless clean

1972 NOVA 2 DOOR
S229S ·
· 307 V-8 engine. automatic with power steer ing, good w-w
tires , Rally wheels. body mldgs., radio, white finish &amp;
spo tless c lean interior . A real stopper &amp; pri ced way below
city prices.

KARR &amp;VAN ZANDT
Cadillac . Oldsmobile

WAS

$

WAS

1971 OLDS CUTlASS 2 DR HDTP

UNCLE SAM'S lOSS • YOUR GAIN

~2495

Air cond., white·, black vi nyl top ,
sharp .

Pomeroy

,-' You'l l Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business '

See one of these courteous sales men:
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

1971 D&lt;iDGE POLARO
S169S
4 Door , V-8 engine , automatic trans ., power steer ing &amp;
brakes , factory air. radio, like new 1st line tires, spotless
i nter ior , sharp ixterior green finish . It's priced to please,
see it!!

IS

$2000

1970 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO
S229S
Local 1 owner new car trade, 350 V-8 engine, automat ic,
power steer i ng &amp; brakes , factory air, rad io, spot less cleAn
blue interior with silver grey fi!1iSh , vi nyl roof . A nice one.

All Used Cars-and Trucks priced for

On~

quick sale.

OUR WORD
OUR BOND

$2895
·

We want to thank you for the many pleasant
r elations that we had in 1973 and past years ,
and wish you a

Happy &amp; Prosperous
New Year!

992-2174

1969 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR HDTP
Air cond., vinyl top .

CUSTOM 4 DR. HDTP.
BRAND NEW

LIST

the c ity or county or acr eage .
Loo k at th e res t th en buy the
best . Robert · A . Queen , 1026
Second Ave . 446 -0168 .
210· tf

_____ ._._,--:-------

ADVERT I SING novelti es , book
matches , pens- and pencils
imprinted with your ad .
Simmons Ptg . &amp; ·office
Supplies.

SAVE '300 TO '500

IF ·YOU ACT NOW!

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 11.747
Estate ·o f Harrison N . Stice
Oeceaised .
Not ice (S hereby. Qiven that
Herbert H . Moore of VInton,
Ohio, has been duty appointed
Adm i nistra t or de bonis non of
the Estate of Harrison N . St ice,
deceased , tate ot Bi dwell, Gall ia
County , Ohio .
Creditors are required to file
the ir claims with said fidu ci ary
w ith in four m ont hs.
Dated thiS 17th day of
December 1973.

. 1971 FORD F-250
a;. Ton Pickup, topper, 4 sp. trans ., power
booster brakes, nice.

SOON???

'1895

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Pomeroy

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
FRANKLIN COUNTY, OHIO
OHIO

A IR

QUALITY

DEVELOPME NT
AUTHORITY ,

- vs-

Pla intiff .

JOSE .PH T . FERGUSON ,

et at.

Defendants,
CASE NO . 7JCV - 12-4293

ic®rOC)on_
HOMES CORFORATIC!\J

60x12 • 2 Bedroom
64x14 • 3 Bed~~

Goble Mobile Homes

1

586 Locust St.
992-7004
Middleport
Open 8 to 6 Mon , thru Sat ..

;.....: We 5ervict! What 'It ~
Sell.

Open Daily ·s to 6,( Ciosed Sundays) . Open Anytime by
Appointment. Contact Thompson or Tom Lavender.

JUDGE'WRIGHT

ORDER

AND

NOTICE TO
THE STATE OF OHIO AND TQ_
All PROPERTY OWNERS ,
TAXPAYER S·,
CITIZENS ,
AND OTHERS HAV IN G OR
CLAIMING
ANY
RIGHT ,
TIT LE. dR INTE REST IN
ANY PROPERTY OR FUNDS
TO BE AFFECTED BY THE
ISSUANCE OF AIR QUALITY
REVENUE BONDS TO BE
ISS UED BY THE OH IO A IR
QUALITY
OEVELOPMENT
;'\',J Tf-JOR IT Y 0" AFF·ECTED
I N ANY WAY THEF&lt;EB'Y .
On this 10th day of Dec·ember ,
1973 , a " Petit ion for Validat ion
of Ai r Quality Revenue Bonds"
having been filed in this Court
by t he Ohio Air Quality
Dev·elopm ent Authority and
said Petition having th is day
been presented to · the Court ;
IT I S HEREBY ORDERED,
pUrsuant to Ohio Revised Code
Sectlon , 133 . 73 , t hat t he state of
Oh io. thrOugh its Attorney
General, and all property
owners . tax -payers , citizens ,
and ot hers having or claiming
any r ight, t i tle or interest in any
property or funds to be affected
by the issuance of the secu r ities
hereinafter described , or af .
fected in any way thereby , be,
~nd they hereby are , requ ire d to
appear and be heard before this
Court at 9 o'clock A.M . on the
18tfl. day ot J anuary , 1974 then
and there to show cause why the
prayer of the aforesaid Petition
should not b·e gran t ed, and why
th is Court should not validate
and c:onfirm the proceed in gs ·tor
the iss uance of a ir , quality
revenue bonds in the m'aximum
amount of $20,000.000 by the
Ohio Air Quali ty Development
Author ity and adJud icate the
author i ty of the Silid Ohio Air
Quatrty Development Aut hority ·
to issue said securi ti es for the
purpose of paying the cost of
acquiring, by purchase and
construction , real and personal
Property constitut ing an air
quality pro Iect for lease and
sate thereof to Union Carbide
Corporation as prayed for in
sa id Petition .
(S) Craig Wright
Judge
Dec . 21 -28 , Jan . 4

For Sale
~GOO D

CLI!AN ' LUMP an .ct
· stok.er coaL Cui Winter$. . R..i.P
Gfande. p, \e 245 -5115 .

c..-------------.. . . . . . . .-...,( --------------

. a.1

.,

.'«

s1795

BUY BELOW WHOLESALE

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

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Middleport, Ohio

1969 PONTIAC FIREBIRD

Service 'Til 12
On Saturday

500 E. M.ain St., Poml!ro_y, Ohio

Getting Married .

992-2126

$1695

.

Auto ., P.S., P. B. , red , black vinyl

Auto., P.S., P. B.

Open EveninRS
·1il 7 p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.

WE SELL &amp; SERVICE CHEVROLET CARS. &amp; TRUCKS.

Open Eves Till 8

1970 CHEV IMPALA 2 DR HDTP

20% DISCOUNT

$2180

~2495

Custom , air cond ., 48',00 miles , new
ti

For Sale

BUY direct trom owner . lots in

"We run avery SimPle busmess"

Keith Goble Ford, Inc.

1970 BUICK ELECTRA

-·

.2 - 2 DR. HDTPS

~2395

8 ft. Bed, a uto. trans. , sha rp .

dr. H. T., air, real nice 225.

A . K .C.
registered
Beagle 1967 MERCURY sta t ion wagon ,
pupp ies , 7 weikS old . S25
S450 . Phone 256 -6247 .
each . Phone 256 -6278 .
304 -6
306 -3 -------------~

.

'

2 - 4 DR. SEDANS

Air cond .. new Prem tires, nice.

'

IS

For Sale

A Few New '73 Pass. Ca.S left!

,.._,
..

Elec . 225

REMEMBER
We Service
What We Sell

Check Our Close-Out Prices.

Sale Starling Dec. 29th - We will be open
Monday, Dec. 31st, closed only Jan. lst •.
1974.

SOME LESS THAN 1,000 MILES

•3695

$2495

~

1971 GMC PICKUP

1974 BUICK
LeSABRES
DEMONSTRATORS

•3395

1972 BUICK SPORTSWAGON

See Ceward Calvert, Ron Hester or Bill Nelson

1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER
frt . hubs, automat ic tran s., power
steering &amp; ·brakes. radio. vehicle of
many uses, cu~t om t rim, sharp 1
owner .

1974 PONTIAC BONNEVILLES
&amp; GRANVILLES IN STOCK .

'

Gal. 500 4 dr. sed., auto., P.S .. P.B.

'

4 wh . drive. 350 V -8 engine , locking

Cust. interior. air cond., shar~.

.

Air cond., 26,000 m iles, New Pr em .
tires .

$2495

GTX 2 dr . H.T., fac .
air,
power w1ndows .

1968 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
$895
4 Door, V-8 engine, automatic trans ., power steering ,
factory a ir , rad io. good t ires, clean .interior, b l ue f inist} .

ALL 1973 CARS • Three LTDs and three
Gran Torinos offered at less than our cost.

Air cond., vinyl top, 16,000 miles.

1972 BUICK ESTATE WAGON

•349.5

Firebird 350, 2 BBL
engrne, auto.

au

1971 DODGE CORONET
51495
4 Door, 1 owner , small V-8 engine, automatic .trans .. good
1st line tires , clean interior, dark b l ue finish . Dodge
popular model.

JANUARY
CLEARANCE
SALE

1973 CHEVELLE 4 DR.

H.T., G.S. Real sharp.

·ON ALL

•339.5

Auto. trans. , rotary engine.

6 cyl., std . trans., nice little

Open Eves. Til 6- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

· Up to l1 Year Financ::in

1973 MAZDA STA. WAGON

2 dr. std. Real gas

'5500

Gl

Custom, air cond. , vinyl top, tape;

Cat. 2dr . H.T.. air. Real sharp.

Skylark 2

Wh ile with blue vinyl top, blue interior, full
power, Climate Control air, 18,000 miles .

Loans ~vailable, no
down payment with
approved credi t.

1973 CHEV 2 DR HDTP IMPALA

T-Bird . This car has everything . Only

in t erior . Want a sharp car at the pr ice of average car?

Sedan DeVille

ATTENTION
VETERANS

P. wind ., P. seat.

PRICES GOOD THRU DECEMBER 31

dr ., air . Only

one of the sharpest cars

Dark green, black vinyl top, gree[llnterior, tilt
&amp; tel. wheel, AM-FM radio, full power equip ..
Climate Lontrol air. 10,000 miles.

NEW TOTAL
ELECTRIC HOMES

HOTP.

LeMANNS SPORT

Cat. 4 dr . sed ., local one owner .

Sedan DeVille

SEE OUR
NEW LINE
OF MOBILE
HOMES BY

-1973 BUICK

BIG SAVINGS

Price.~!

Sedan DeVille

GMAC Financing Available

PH. 992-2174

G.P. Local one owner, .loaded.

'6500
73 CADILLAC

992.5]42

POMEROY, OHIO

START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT
WITH A GOOD USED CAR FROM
SMITH NELSON

1'hese Prices

Coupe DeVille

MAIN

•

If so, you w ill be needing a home that f its the
" Just Married" pocketbook . We have what we
th ink is the perfect " Just Married" home, a
mobile home!
And we would like to help you get started on
th e right foot, so we are going to make the
following offer.

rw:::-;;~~~~~7-ordered
by, "Gelling Married Soon" couples,
we are going to foot the bill for the

1970 Camaro, 2 dr. H.T., 6 cyl., auto. , red in
color
$1295
1971 Vega Hatchback, 4 sp.
$1395
1969 Olds. Cutlass, 4 dr. H. T. , sharp
$995
1972 Ford Galaxie 500, 4 dr. H. T., 302 V-8, P. S.,
P. B., factory air .
$1695
1969 Mercury Marquis, 4 dr . H. T. Loaded . $995
1968 Buick Skylark, bubble top, 4 dr. with
rack.
$595
1969 Dodge Monaco, 4 dr . H. T., factory air,
P. S., P. B., vinyl roof .
$895
1970. Ford LTD, 4 dr. Wagon, 3 seater - with
rack.
$1295
1971 Ford Galaxie 500,2 dr. H.T., P. S., P.B.,
vinyl roof.
$1195
1970 Olds Della 88, 4 dr., fa ctory air, P.S.,
P. B., one owner .
· $1295
. 1969 Plymouth Fury Ill, 4 dr ., 318 V-8, auto.,
factory air..
$895
1966 Plymouth 4 dr . wagon. Runs the best. $495

DALE R. SANDERS INC.
600 E. STATE ST.
· &amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.
ATHENS, OH 10
YOUR DEALER FOR

R . William Jenk ins
Judge
Court Of Common Pleas ,
Prob~te Division
Dec: . 2J, 30, Jan . 6 ..
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No . 1S.074
Estate of Ruby COleman , aka
Rubie Coleman Deceased.
Not ice is hereby g i'Jen that
Rose've lt Colem an of V inton ,
Ohio , has been du l y appo inted
Admin istrator of the Esta t e of
Ruby Coleman . aka Rub i e
Coleman , deceased , lat e of
Vinton, Gallia County , Ohio ,
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said f i duc i ary
within tour mon ths .
Dated t his 17th day of
Decembe~ 1973.

R . W i!I iam Jenk ins
Judge
court ot Common Pleas ,
Probate Division
Dec . 23 . 30, Jan . 6.

eLINCOLN CONTINENTAL •MARK IV
eMERCURY MONTEGO eCOMET
eCAPRI eDATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR
L&amp; M Phone 592-4491
_,

DATSON Phone 592 -4463

SEE THE ALL NEW
'74 HONDA

PUBLIC NOTICE
No. 15,052
Noti ce is hereby given that
the
Invento r y , and
Ap praisement of the Estate of
E-thel Stice f i led in the Probate
Co urt.at Gallia County, Oh io. by
Herberl
H . Moore .
Ad min ist r ator , Wi ll be for hearing
on the 11th day of January, 1974,
at 10 :00 o'clock , A ,M . ·

blood test, the marriage license and
to boot, we are . going to buy your

1959 Ford '12 Ton Pickup, 6 cyl., standard.
Runs good and looks good ,
$295
1965 T-Bird, runs good.
$295
1964 Comet, 4dr. 6 cyi., standard.
$295
1963 Mercury, 2 dr. H. T.
$125
1962 Chev. 4'dr. wagon.
$50

first $1011.00 in groceries.

HUGE STOCK IN OUR SHOWROOM

Happy New Year

.For Sale

To All!

New GMC
Truck HeadQuarters '
1968 lh ton GMC p ic kup
·1963 2 ton Ford
1967 ¥.1 T. GMC PU
1969 'h T . GMC PU
1969 Chevrolet 1l2 ton pickup
196; 112 ton Chev.
1969 'h T . F,ord P U
1969 Dodge Stat ion Wagon
1959 Ford Ga la xie
1967 'h ton Chevy p ick up
1966 'I? ton G M C pi'ckup
1969 •12 T . Chev . Fl'U
1.969 'h T . GMC PU
1968 11? T , GMC PU
1967 'h T . GMC PU
1967 1/2 T . GMC PU
1969 112 Ton GMt PU
1968 1 T. Ford ·
1971 ll"' T . Ford PU _.
1967 lh ton GMC picl(up
1968 lh ton GMC pickup
1968 112 ton Chevy Pickup
TYPEWR IT ERS , portable and
1968 2 ton GMC 1ruck ·
offi ce mod els, new and used ,
1969 'h ton GMC Pickup
file$ , desks, chai r s, signs,
1972 'h ton . Ford Pi cku p
bookmatches, pen. pencils,
1969 ll• ton GMC P ickup
adv .
novelties,
b um per
1971 GMC Suburban
.
s ti ckers , printing . Ph : .446·
NEW t ires Winter treed : Stzes
7.75 X U , 8.25 x 14. 8.55 X 14,
1397 . Simmons Ptg .
271 -tf
$18 et~c h . Cash and carry
while supply. lasts.
1965 PLYMOUTH wagon , $275 ;
SOMMERS G.M.C.
1965 Caprice Chevy SSOO ; 1969
TRUCKS, INC .
Plymouth Fury $550. 4-46 -0952
.
133 Pint St.
after
5 p.m .
446-2532
·254 -tf \
277'itf

985-4100
Located on St- Rt. 7 .

·

J

Chester, 0 .

For Sale

Parson S
· Moving sale at ParsOns In
Kanauna w i ll continue until
•
11
1
t k
Jan . 31 .' All
emt n soc
reduced .

I

Tri-State Mobile
HomeSales
Ph . 4.116·7572
12 x so 1966 Liberty
12 x so 1963 Lakewood
· 12 x 52 1970 Fleetwood
. 8 x 35 1957 Marletre
· 10. x SA 1959 Elcar
10 x 50 1965 Star All Electric
8 x 45 19Si Vagabond
10 x
1960 Magnolia
x 27 19S3 Trotwood
?A8 .ff

a

•s

I

•

i

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

-------------~

I '

''

,......_..._.._..._.,.__~-----

: - ~ SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST
: ~. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

..-....-....-..-..._.._._.._.~._.._,_...--..~

•
••
• I ~!/!!/

••
••
••

••
SPECIAL DEALS
ON ALL CARS IN STOCK
•••
•• •TREMENDOUS SAVINGS
••• TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS
• Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
•

•
••

•••
••

••
••
••
•

'72 CHEVROLET IMPALA

Upper River Rd.

RIGGS USED CARS

.•

•••
••
••
OUR YEAR-END CLEARANCE
••
ON ALL USED CARS ON
••
••
OUR
LOTI
CHECK
OUR
••
•• CARS FIRST- BEFORE YOU BUY.
••
••
ForA Real
•

-""'-------------

(}?;

For Sale

Corbin &amp; Snyder

4 door hardtop. V-8, 350 cu . Inch engine. P.
steering, P. brakes, radio, auto. trans .. lac .
air cond ., ascot blue finish with matching ,
interior and vinyl top.

•2695

WOOD MOTOR SALES

USED FU~NITURE
EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
2 AUTO. Elec , clothes dryers (1
Whirlppol , 1 HotpointJ, 1 gas
range, 2 pc . LR su11e, sofa
bed , coffee table, portable
TYPES of . bUi1din"g' PIPES , Pipes , . P i pes , ~BD,
record player with stand, set .AlL
of table lamps .
,
materials, b·lock , br1ck , sewer,
Cherat an , BBB , Jobey,i H tl~o n
955 Second Ave.
pipes windows , lin tels , etc .
and others . Tawney s Ptpe
446-1171 .
Claude Winters , R io Gr.anriP , 'a nd Trophy House . A22 Second
Open Fridays 91o 8
0 Phnne 245 -5121 a.fter Si..
Ave .
-Plenty Free Parking
•
I
\13 ·1f
199-lf

--L-----------

--~-----:-,----·--·

I

Extra Specia I

Dodge Cars

Dodge

'

Buy -

Shop Our

New Car Specials!

.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
50

Smith Honda Sales

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

:• PLYMOUTH

•: 1639 Eastern Ave. Gallipolis 446-3273 . :
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

R·. WILLIAM JENKINS
Probate Judge
Dec . 23, 30

. So if you're getting married soon stop in and
let us help you get started o'n the right track.
Remember, you can buy a Mobile Home as
cheap as you can rent. Maybe cheaper! This
-offer good thru March 31, 1974.

•

_________________.. : If you are planning to purchase a new
• or used automobile, check with
'
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. : Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth.

~

•

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
•
: GALLIPOLIS
••
•
•
~ CHRYSLER••

STATE ST.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'

For Sale

For Sale
SEWING mat.n.nes , Bran.d new
Zig -Zag In nice walnut table .
In or i ginal cartons . Never
used . Clearance on ' 73 models
(only a few ava il able). $63.40
cash or terms available .
Plione 6f5 . 2225 .
302 -6

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

For Sale

STARCRAFT,
1974 TRAILER S and fol d
dbwns . Special Chris1m as
pr ic e.
CAMP CONLEY
STA·RCRAFT SALES
Rt . 62 N. of P1 . Pleasant
Beh i nd R e~ Carpet I nn .
675-5384
280 -tt

MOBIL~ HOMES

WE CA RRY •c omplete l ine u,
Proje ctio n bulbs . Tawney
stuq io, 42&lt;1 Sec ond Ave , 2'2 If
-~""'"'----------

......

-

4

Cor~in

&amp; Snyder .
Furniture

, Q7) l!G - ZA Gs~WIIty ""' '--rllnt.
Th is ma c hine- darnS. em ·
bro i ders , over cas t s and
MOBILE HOMES
monograms all w ithout al ·
1953 Pra i r ie SchOoner 8 x. 36. 1
tachments . Pa y balance of
bdrm .
S41.50 or pay S6 per mon t h.
1953 Peerless 8 x. 35, 1 BR
Call 446-0255.
1959 Castle 8 X 35 2 BR
26 9 - 1~
Rollahome 10 x 56 3 BR
1965 Buddy 12 x 50 2 BR
197 3 STEREO -RADIO com ~
1970 West Brook 12 x SO 2 BR
b~nat i on w i th B-track buill -in.
1969 Richardson 12 x 60, 2 BR
Take over pay ments ot S7 .SS ·
1968 Catalina 12 x 60, '2 BR
per month or pay $\01 SO. Call NEW :· Serta and Bemco mo 1
1967 PMC 12 x 60, 3 BR
446 -0255 .
1rec:s an.d box spr i ngs Ll'rg.e
1970 Monarch 12 x 60, 2 BR
269 -11 ·
se lection in sto ck. firm
8 &amp; S MOB! LE H'OMES
,...---..... ~--- .
ma ttre sses starting , a t $39 .00 .
Seco nd &amp; Viand St . ..,
67 v~''-'1--\' .. 1 o c yl Auto . R'adio
'ISS Second A11enue
Pt . Pleasant .
\
)
and W w, tir es . 446 1615 after
446-1171
ne~t to Heck ' s) ~ H
6, 44.6 lQ44 .
_
tf
_____
_:
__ - - - - ,) ll6 u
260
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED

(

75

-----.-·--t-~ '-

""'"""'---.- ........

�22- The Sunday Times- &amp;·ntinel, Sunday, Dec. 30, 1973

23- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Swrday, Dec.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS; INC.
.500 E;

73 CADILLAC

Are BELOW

Light grey finish . matching leather in terior ,
full power equipment. AM-FM stereo, Climate
Control air. steel radial tires, new Cadillac
trade , 16,000 miles.

City

1973 PONTIAC
SALE $4295
1972 CHRYSLER ~~~~z-~i~neowner, loaded. SA.LE '3295
1972 CHRYSLER ~;~~o~~~:~yal
SALE$2995
1972 PONTIAC
SALE '1995
1972 FORD
SALE '4195
1971 CH EV • ~~~~edCarlo,
SALE •279 5
1971 PONTIAC
SALE$1995
1970 BUICK
dr ~
SALE '1895
l970 PONTIAC ~~:r~s,
SALE$1695
SALE$ 1795
1971 DODGE ~e;~on
BIG $1 395
1969 PONTIAC
SAVINGS
1968
ICK
4
ONLY '995
1968 PLY·MOUTH
ONLY •99 5
1967 FORD
ONLY '495
WE WANT YOU BACK CAUSE THE JOB WAS DONE RIGHT
NOT BECAUSE THE JOB WAS DONE WRONG

New fear's

4

Dark brown, beige vinyl lop, beige leather
interior, till &amp; tel. wheeL AM-FM radio, full
power equip ., Climate Control air. 18,000
miles.

SALE

'6500
72 CADILLAC

•5500
72 CAI)ILLAC

1972 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
I249S
4 door, local! owner car with less than 15,000 miles, beige
finish ,' blk. vi ny l top , good w -w tire s. standard V-8 engine,

automat ic, power steer ing &amp; brakes, radio, spotless clean

1972 NOVA 2 DOOR
S229S ·
· 307 V-8 engine. automatic with power steer ing, good w-w
tires , Rally wheels. body mldgs., radio, white finish &amp;
spo tless c lean interior . A real stopper &amp; pri ced way below
city prices.

KARR &amp;VAN ZANDT
Cadillac . Oldsmobile

WAS

$

WAS

1971 OLDS CUTlASS 2 DR HDTP

UNCLE SAM'S lOSS • YOUR GAIN

~2495

Air cond., white·, black vi nyl top ,
sharp .

Pomeroy

,-' You'l l Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business '

See one of these courteous sales men:
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

1971 D&lt;iDGE POLARO
S169S
4 Door , V-8 engine , automatic trans ., power steer ing &amp;
brakes , factory air. radio, like new 1st line tires, spotless
i nter ior , sharp ixterior green finish . It's priced to please,
see it!!

IS

$2000

1970 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO
S229S
Local 1 owner new car trade, 350 V-8 engine, automat ic,
power steer i ng &amp; brakes , factory air, rad io, spot less cleAn
blue interior with silver grey fi!1iSh , vi nyl roof . A nice one.

All Used Cars-and Trucks priced for

On~

quick sale.

OUR WORD
OUR BOND

$2895
·

We want to thank you for the many pleasant
r elations that we had in 1973 and past years ,
and wish you a

Happy &amp; Prosperous
New Year!

992-2174

1969 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR HDTP
Air cond., vinyl top .

CUSTOM 4 DR. HDTP.
BRAND NEW

LIST

the c ity or county or acr eage .
Loo k at th e res t th en buy the
best . Robert · A . Queen , 1026
Second Ave . 446 -0168 .
210· tf

_____ ._._,--:-------

ADVERT I SING novelti es , book
matches , pens- and pencils
imprinted with your ad .
Simmons Ptg . &amp; ·office
Supplies.

SAVE '300 TO '500

IF ·YOU ACT NOW!

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 11.747
Estate ·o f Harrison N . Stice
Oeceaised .
Not ice (S hereby. Qiven that
Herbert H . Moore of VInton,
Ohio, has been duty appointed
Adm i nistra t or de bonis non of
the Estate of Harrison N . St ice,
deceased , tate ot Bi dwell, Gall ia
County , Ohio .
Creditors are required to file
the ir claims with said fidu ci ary
w ith in four m ont hs.
Dated thiS 17th day of
December 1973.

. 1971 FORD F-250
a;. Ton Pickup, topper, 4 sp. trans ., power
booster brakes, nice.

SOON???

'1895

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Pomeroy

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
FRANKLIN COUNTY, OHIO
OHIO

A IR

QUALITY

DEVELOPME NT
AUTHORITY ,

- vs-

Pla intiff .

JOSE .PH T . FERGUSON ,

et at.

Defendants,
CASE NO . 7JCV - 12-4293

ic®rOC)on_
HOMES CORFORATIC!\J

60x12 • 2 Bedroom
64x14 • 3 Bed~~

Goble Mobile Homes

1

586 Locust St.
992-7004
Middleport
Open 8 to 6 Mon , thru Sat ..

;.....: We 5ervict! What 'It ~
Sell.

Open Daily ·s to 6,( Ciosed Sundays) . Open Anytime by
Appointment. Contact Thompson or Tom Lavender.

JUDGE'WRIGHT

ORDER

AND

NOTICE TO
THE STATE OF OHIO AND TQ_
All PROPERTY OWNERS ,
TAXPAYER S·,
CITIZENS ,
AND OTHERS HAV IN G OR
CLAIMING
ANY
RIGHT ,
TIT LE. dR INTE REST IN
ANY PROPERTY OR FUNDS
TO BE AFFECTED BY THE
ISSUANCE OF AIR QUALITY
REVENUE BONDS TO BE
ISS UED BY THE OH IO A IR
QUALITY
OEVELOPMENT
;'\',J Tf-JOR IT Y 0" AFF·ECTED
I N ANY WAY THEF&lt;EB'Y .
On this 10th day of Dec·ember ,
1973 , a " Petit ion for Validat ion
of Ai r Quality Revenue Bonds"
having been filed in this Court
by t he Ohio Air Quality
Dev·elopm ent Authority and
said Petition having th is day
been presented to · the Court ;
IT I S HEREBY ORDERED,
pUrsuant to Ohio Revised Code
Sectlon , 133 . 73 , t hat t he state of
Oh io. thrOugh its Attorney
General, and all property
owners . tax -payers , citizens ,
and ot hers having or claiming
any r ight, t i tle or interest in any
property or funds to be affected
by the issuance of the secu r ities
hereinafter described , or af .
fected in any way thereby , be,
~nd they hereby are , requ ire d to
appear and be heard before this
Court at 9 o'clock A.M . on the
18tfl. day ot J anuary , 1974 then
and there to show cause why the
prayer of the aforesaid Petition
should not b·e gran t ed, and why
th is Court should not validate
and c:onfirm the proceed in gs ·tor
the iss uance of a ir , quality
revenue bonds in the m'aximum
amount of $20,000.000 by the
Ohio Air Quali ty Development
Author ity and adJud icate the
author i ty of the Silid Ohio Air
Quatrty Development Aut hority ·
to issue said securi ti es for the
purpose of paying the cost of
acquiring, by purchase and
construction , real and personal
Property constitut ing an air
quality pro Iect for lease and
sate thereof to Union Carbide
Corporation as prayed for in
sa id Petition .
(S) Craig Wright
Judge
Dec . 21 -28 , Jan . 4

For Sale
~GOO D

CLI!AN ' LUMP an .ct
· stok.er coaL Cui Winter$. . R..i.P
Gfande. p, \e 245 -5115 .

c..-------------.. . . . . . . .-...,( --------------

. a.1

.,

.'«

s1795

BUY BELOW WHOLESALE

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

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Middleport, Ohio

1969 PONTIAC FIREBIRD

Service 'Til 12
On Saturday

500 E. M.ain St., Poml!ro_y, Ohio

Getting Married .

992-2126

$1695

.

Auto ., P.S., P. B. , red , black vinyl

Auto., P.S., P. B.

Open EveninRS
·1il 7 p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.

WE SELL &amp; SERVICE CHEVROLET CARS. &amp; TRUCKS.

Open Eves Till 8

1970 CHEV IMPALA 2 DR HDTP

20% DISCOUNT

$2180

~2495

Custom , air cond ., 48',00 miles , new
ti

For Sale

BUY direct trom owner . lots in

"We run avery SimPle busmess"

Keith Goble Ford, Inc.

1970 BUICK ELECTRA

-·

.2 - 2 DR. HDTPS

~2395

8 ft. Bed, a uto. trans. , sha rp .

dr. H. T., air, real nice 225.

A . K .C.
registered
Beagle 1967 MERCURY sta t ion wagon ,
pupp ies , 7 weikS old . S25
S450 . Phone 256 -6247 .
each . Phone 256 -6278 .
304 -6
306 -3 -------------~

.

'

2 - 4 DR. SEDANS

Air cond .. new Prem tires, nice.

'

IS

For Sale

A Few New '73 Pass. Ca.S left!

,.._,
..

Elec . 225

REMEMBER
We Service
What We Sell

Check Our Close-Out Prices.

Sale Starling Dec. 29th - We will be open
Monday, Dec. 31st, closed only Jan. lst •.
1974.

SOME LESS THAN 1,000 MILES

•3695

$2495

~

1971 GMC PICKUP

1974 BUICK
LeSABRES
DEMONSTRATORS

•3395

1972 BUICK SPORTSWAGON

See Ceward Calvert, Ron Hester or Bill Nelson

1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER
frt . hubs, automat ic tran s., power
steering &amp; ·brakes. radio. vehicle of
many uses, cu~t om t rim, sharp 1
owner .

1974 PONTIAC BONNEVILLES
&amp; GRANVILLES IN STOCK .

'

Gal. 500 4 dr. sed., auto., P.S .. P.B.

'

4 wh . drive. 350 V -8 engine , locking

Cust. interior. air cond., shar~.

.

Air cond., 26,000 m iles, New Pr em .
tires .

$2495

GTX 2 dr . H.T., fac .
air,
power w1ndows .

1968 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
$895
4 Door, V-8 engine, automatic trans ., power steering ,
factory a ir , rad io. good t ires, clean .interior, b l ue f inist} .

ALL 1973 CARS • Three LTDs and three
Gran Torinos offered at less than our cost.

Air cond., vinyl top, 16,000 miles.

1972 BUICK ESTATE WAGON

•349.5

Firebird 350, 2 BBL
engrne, auto.

au

1971 DODGE CORONET
51495
4 Door, 1 owner , small V-8 engine, automatic .trans .. good
1st line tires , clean interior, dark b l ue finish . Dodge
popular model.

JANUARY
CLEARANCE
SALE

1973 CHEVELLE 4 DR.

H.T., G.S. Real sharp.

·ON ALL

•339.5

Auto. trans. , rotary engine.

6 cyl., std . trans., nice little

Open Eves. Til 6- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

· Up to l1 Year Financ::in

1973 MAZDA STA. WAGON

2 dr. std. Real gas

'5500

Gl

Custom, air cond. , vinyl top, tape;

Cat. 2dr . H.T.. air. Real sharp.

Skylark 2

Wh ile with blue vinyl top, blue interior, full
power, Climate Control air, 18,000 miles .

Loans ~vailable, no
down payment with
approved credi t.

1973 CHEV 2 DR HDTP IMPALA

T-Bird . This car has everything . Only

in t erior . Want a sharp car at the pr ice of average car?

Sedan DeVille

ATTENTION
VETERANS

P. wind ., P. seat.

PRICES GOOD THRU DECEMBER 31

dr ., air . Only

one of the sharpest cars

Dark green, black vinyl top, gree[llnterior, tilt
&amp; tel. wheel, AM-FM radio, full power equip ..
Climate Lontrol air. 10,000 miles.

NEW TOTAL
ELECTRIC HOMES

HOTP.

LeMANNS SPORT

Cat. 4 dr . sed ., local one owner .

Sedan DeVille

SEE OUR
NEW LINE
OF MOBILE
HOMES BY

-1973 BUICK

BIG SAVINGS

Price.~!

Sedan DeVille

GMAC Financing Available

PH. 992-2174

G.P. Local one owner, .loaded.

'6500
73 CADILLAC

992.5]42

POMEROY, OHIO

START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT
WITH A GOOD USED CAR FROM
SMITH NELSON

1'hese Prices

Coupe DeVille

MAIN

•

If so, you w ill be needing a home that f its the
" Just Married" pocketbook . We have what we
th ink is the perfect " Just Married" home, a
mobile home!
And we would like to help you get started on
th e right foot, so we are going to make the
following offer.

rw:::-;;~~~~~7-ordered
by, "Gelling Married Soon" couples,
we are going to foot the bill for the

1970 Camaro, 2 dr. H.T., 6 cyl., auto. , red in
color
$1295
1971 Vega Hatchback, 4 sp.
$1395
1969 Olds. Cutlass, 4 dr. H. T. , sharp
$995
1972 Ford Galaxie 500, 4 dr. H. T., 302 V-8, P. S.,
P. B., factory air .
$1695
1969 Mercury Marquis, 4 dr . H. T. Loaded . $995
1968 Buick Skylark, bubble top, 4 dr. with
rack.
$595
1969 Dodge Monaco, 4 dr . H. T., factory air,
P. S., P. B., vinyl roof .
$895
1970. Ford LTD, 4 dr. Wagon, 3 seater - with
rack.
$1295
1971 Ford Galaxie 500,2 dr. H.T., P. S., P.B.,
vinyl roof.
$1195
1970 Olds Della 88, 4 dr., fa ctory air, P.S.,
P. B., one owner .
· $1295
. 1969 Plymouth Fury Ill, 4 dr ., 318 V-8, auto.,
factory air..
$895
1966 Plymouth 4 dr . wagon. Runs the best. $495

DALE R. SANDERS INC.
600 E. STATE ST.
· &amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.
ATHENS, OH 10
YOUR DEALER FOR

R . William Jenk ins
Judge
Court Of Common Pleas ,
Prob~te Division
Dec: . 2J, 30, Jan . 6 ..
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No . 1S.074
Estate of Ruby COleman , aka
Rubie Coleman Deceased.
Not ice is hereby g i'Jen that
Rose've lt Colem an of V inton ,
Ohio , has been du l y appo inted
Admin istrator of the Esta t e of
Ruby Coleman . aka Rub i e
Coleman , deceased , lat e of
Vinton, Gallia County , Ohio ,
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said f i duc i ary
within tour mon ths .
Dated t his 17th day of
Decembe~ 1973.

R . W i!I iam Jenk ins
Judge
court ot Common Pleas ,
Probate Division
Dec . 23 . 30, Jan . 6.

eLINCOLN CONTINENTAL •MARK IV
eMERCURY MONTEGO eCOMET
eCAPRI eDATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR
L&amp; M Phone 592-4491
_,

DATSON Phone 592 -4463

SEE THE ALL NEW
'74 HONDA

PUBLIC NOTICE
No. 15,052
Noti ce is hereby given that
the
Invento r y , and
Ap praisement of the Estate of
E-thel Stice f i led in the Probate
Co urt.at Gallia County, Oh io. by
Herberl
H . Moore .
Ad min ist r ator , Wi ll be for hearing
on the 11th day of January, 1974,
at 10 :00 o'clock , A ,M . ·

blood test, the marriage license and
to boot, we are . going to buy your

1959 Ford '12 Ton Pickup, 6 cyl., standard.
Runs good and looks good ,
$295
1965 T-Bird, runs good.
$295
1964 Comet, 4dr. 6 cyi., standard.
$295
1963 Mercury, 2 dr. H. T.
$125
1962 Chev. 4'dr. wagon.
$50

first $1011.00 in groceries.

HUGE STOCK IN OUR SHOWROOM

Happy New Year

.For Sale

To All!

New GMC
Truck HeadQuarters '
1968 lh ton GMC p ic kup
·1963 2 ton Ford
1967 ¥.1 T. GMC PU
1969 'h T . GMC PU
1969 Chevrolet 1l2 ton pickup
196; 112 ton Chev.
1969 'h T . F,ord P U
1969 Dodge Stat ion Wagon
1959 Ford Ga la xie
1967 'h ton Chevy p ick up
1966 'I? ton G M C pi'ckup
1969 •12 T . Chev . Fl'U
1.969 'h T . GMC PU
1968 11? T , GMC PU
1967 'h T . GMC PU
1967 1/2 T . GMC PU
1969 112 Ton GMt PU
1968 1 T. Ford ·
1971 ll"' T . Ford PU _.
1967 lh ton GMC picl(up
1968 lh ton GMC pickup
1968 112 ton Chevy Pickup
TYPEWR IT ERS , portable and
1968 2 ton GMC 1ruck ·
offi ce mod els, new and used ,
1969 'h ton GMC Pickup
file$ , desks, chai r s, signs,
1972 'h ton . Ford Pi cku p
bookmatches, pen. pencils,
1969 ll• ton GMC P ickup
adv .
novelties,
b um per
1971 GMC Suburban
.
s ti ckers , printing . Ph : .446·
NEW t ires Winter treed : Stzes
7.75 X U , 8.25 x 14. 8.55 X 14,
1397 . Simmons Ptg .
271 -tf
$18 et~c h . Cash and carry
while supply. lasts.
1965 PLYMOUTH wagon , $275 ;
SOMMERS G.M.C.
1965 Caprice Chevy SSOO ; 1969
TRUCKS, INC .
Plymouth Fury $550. 4-46 -0952
.
133 Pint St.
after
5 p.m .
446-2532
·254 -tf \
277'itf

985-4100
Located on St- Rt. 7 .

·

J

Chester, 0 .

For Sale

Parson S
· Moving sale at ParsOns In
Kanauna w i ll continue until
•
11
1
t k
Jan . 31 .' All
emt n soc
reduced .

I

Tri-State Mobile
HomeSales
Ph . 4.116·7572
12 x so 1966 Liberty
12 x so 1963 Lakewood
· 12 x 52 1970 Fleetwood
. 8 x 35 1957 Marletre
· 10. x SA 1959 Elcar
10 x 50 1965 Star All Electric
8 x 45 19Si Vagabond
10 x
1960 Magnolia
x 27 19S3 Trotwood
?A8 .ff

a

•s

I

•

i

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

-------------~

I '

''

,......_..._.._..._.,.__~-----

: - ~ SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST
: ~. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

..-....-....-..-..._.._._.._.~._.._,_...--..~

•
••
• I ~!/!!/

••
••
••

••
SPECIAL DEALS
ON ALL CARS IN STOCK
•••
•• •TREMENDOUS SAVINGS
••• TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS
• Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
•

•
••

•••
••

••
••
••
•

'72 CHEVROLET IMPALA

Upper River Rd.

RIGGS USED CARS

.•

•••
••
••
OUR YEAR-END CLEARANCE
••
ON ALL USED CARS ON
••
••
OUR
LOTI
CHECK
OUR
••
•• CARS FIRST- BEFORE YOU BUY.
••
••
ForA Real
•

-""'-------------

(}?;

For Sale

Corbin &amp; Snyder

4 door hardtop. V-8, 350 cu . Inch engine. P.
steering, P. brakes, radio, auto. trans .. lac .
air cond ., ascot blue finish with matching ,
interior and vinyl top.

•2695

WOOD MOTOR SALES

USED FU~NITURE
EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
2 AUTO. Elec , clothes dryers (1
Whirlppol , 1 HotpointJ, 1 gas
range, 2 pc . LR su11e, sofa
bed , coffee table, portable
TYPES of . bUi1din"g' PIPES , Pipes , . P i pes , ~BD,
record player with stand, set .AlL
of table lamps .
,
materials, b·lock , br1ck , sewer,
Cherat an , BBB , Jobey,i H tl~o n
955 Second Ave.
pipes windows , lin tels , etc .
and others . Tawney s Ptpe
446-1171 .
Claude Winters , R io Gr.anriP , 'a nd Trophy House . A22 Second
Open Fridays 91o 8
0 Phnne 245 -5121 a.fter Si..
Ave .
-Plenty Free Parking
•
I
\13 ·1f
199-lf

--L-----------

--~-----:-,----·--·

I

Extra Specia I

Dodge Cars

Dodge

'

Buy -

Shop Our

New Car Specials!

.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
50

Smith Honda Sales

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

:• PLYMOUTH

•: 1639 Eastern Ave. Gallipolis 446-3273 . :
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

R·. WILLIAM JENKINS
Probate Judge
Dec . 23, 30

. So if you're getting married soon stop in and
let us help you get started o'n the right track.
Remember, you can buy a Mobile Home as
cheap as you can rent. Maybe cheaper! This
-offer good thru March 31, 1974.

•

_________________.. : If you are planning to purchase a new
• or used automobile, check with
'
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. : Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth.

~

•

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
•
: GALLIPOLIS
••
•
•
~ CHRYSLER••

STATE ST.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'

For Sale

For Sale
SEWING mat.n.nes , Bran.d new
Zig -Zag In nice walnut table .
In or i ginal cartons . Never
used . Clearance on ' 73 models
(only a few ava il able). $63.40
cash or terms available .
Plione 6f5 . 2225 .
302 -6

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

For Sale

STARCRAFT,
1974 TRAILER S and fol d
dbwns . Special Chris1m as
pr ic e.
CAMP CONLEY
STA·RCRAFT SALES
Rt . 62 N. of P1 . Pleasant
Beh i nd R e~ Carpet I nn .
675-5384
280 -tt

MOBIL~ HOMES

WE CA RRY •c omplete l ine u,
Proje ctio n bulbs . Tawney
stuq io, 42&lt;1 Sec ond Ave , 2'2 If
-~""'"'----------

......

-

4

Cor~in

&amp; Snyder .
Furniture

, Q7) l!G - ZA Gs~WIIty ""' '--rllnt.
Th is ma c hine- darnS. em ·
bro i ders , over cas t s and
MOBILE HOMES
monograms all w ithout al ·
1953 Pra i r ie SchOoner 8 x. 36. 1
tachments . Pa y balance of
bdrm .
S41.50 or pay S6 per mon t h.
1953 Peerless 8 x. 35, 1 BR
Call 446-0255.
1959 Castle 8 X 35 2 BR
26 9 - 1~
Rollahome 10 x 56 3 BR
1965 Buddy 12 x 50 2 BR
197 3 STEREO -RADIO com ~
1970 West Brook 12 x SO 2 BR
b~nat i on w i th B-track buill -in.
1969 Richardson 12 x 60, 2 BR
Take over pay ments ot S7 .SS ·
1968 Catalina 12 x 60, '2 BR
per month or pay $\01 SO. Call NEW :· Serta and Bemco mo 1
1967 PMC 12 x 60, 3 BR
446 -0255 .
1rec:s an.d box spr i ngs Ll'rg.e
1970 Monarch 12 x 60, 2 BR
269 -11 ·
se lection in sto ck. firm
8 &amp; S MOB! LE H'OMES
,...---..... ~--- .
ma ttre sses starting , a t $39 .00 .
Seco nd &amp; Viand St . ..,
67 v~''-'1--\' .. 1 o c yl Auto . R'adio
'ISS Second A11enue
Pt . Pleasant .
\
)
and W w, tir es . 446 1615 after
446-1171
ne~t to Heck ' s) ~ H
6, 44.6 lQ44 .
_
tf
_____
_:
__ - - - - ,) ll6 u
260
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED

(

75

-----.-·--t-~ '-

""'"""'---.- ........

�J

2\- Till' Sunday Ttmes- Sentmel, Sunday , Dec. 30, 1973

Many Americans believe their
politics costs far .too much
By ARNOLD B. SAWISLAK
uPI Senior Editor
WASHINGGTON tUPI ) For $400 million or more last
year, Americans got ''Come
Home AmerlCa ,"·'FoW' More
"vears,'' five bungling burglars
and several hundred thousand
reasonably capable and honest
pubhc offictals.
The $400 rmllion ts a conservative estimate for the cost
of all political campaigns in Ute
United States during 1972.
Now, as 1973lurches to an end,
some are saying Amencans
were grossly overcharged and
perhaps shortchanged to boot
last year.
The 62 per cent Ntxon landslide indicated Utat a lot of
voters did not feel they had two
good chmces for Prestdent. The
54 per cent voter turnout can be
cited as evidence that many
other cittzens felt they dtdn't
have even one good cho1ce
The other side of the com 1s
Ute fact Utat Ute campaign
process also produced hundreds of Utousands of elected
public servants- from U.S.

se nators to county commissioners-and, in the mam,

these men and women g1ve the
voters value received. It 1s also
a fact Utat campatgmng for all
the other off1ces outside the
presidency cost about three
times as much as the big show.
Polls Show Dissatisfaction
Nonetheless, the nattonal
public opmion polls show a
general dissatlsfaction wLth the
existing system of financmg
political campatgns in the
United States, wtth emphasis
on Ute huge amounts of money
collected from private sources
and
spent
on
lavish
presidential campaigns
Watergate disclosures such
as Ute use of campatgn contributions from Republicans
who would not cheat a parking
meter to finance politica l
hankyi&gt;anky - including burglary --&lt;Jbviously IS an important source of demands for
reform.
So, probably, is Ute tale of
Spiro Agnew's downfall, but
public feeling seems to run
deeper Utan mere distaste for
Ute adventures of the Committee to Re·Elect Ute Prestdent or
Ute cheap graft that rotted
Maryland state government.
The end result may be Ute
first basic change in campaign
financing since the party

system emerged ln American disclosed their finan ces for tile
pohtlcs. Political campaigmng pre-Aprtl 7 pertod, but since
finant-e by pubhc funds may be none of them had Ute kind of
in the offing.
lock on the nomtnation that the
New Loopholes
President enjoyed from Ute
But first, as LS theLr usual start , the amounts were
coqrse, the politicians are relatively smaU .
trymg to patch the existin g
Alter Apnl 17, ever~Utmg
system A ma)or effort, the was on the record and the
ftrst m 46 years, was earned General Accounting Offtce still
out in 1971 to reform campaign is plowmg through more than
financing practices. But Ute 100,000 pages of financial
legislatiOn had not even gone reports submitted by some
into effect before politi cal 2,000 ca mpaign co mmittees
managers had found its loo- during 1972.
pholes and were plannmg theLr
A Partial Total
1972 operations to explOit Utem.
It was not, in fact , until Aug.
The 1925 Corrupt Practtces 24 thts year that Ute GAO was
Act had campatgn spending able to produce even a partial
lrmtts that probably were total on presidential campatgn
Wlreahstic at the time they contribultons - $79 mlllion in
were Imposed, and require- donattons of $100 or more to all
ments for dtsclosure of cam- candidates in Ute period April
paign contributions and ex- 7·0eC. 31, !972.
penditures that permitted
To that must be added the
candidates legally to htde most pre-April 7 receipts, which
of what Utey collected and GAO is not toting up because
spent through the use of Utey are not covered bY the
committees not covered by the new law, and the so-called
law .
small contributions of under
In 1971, Congress heeded the $100 , which it still is feedmg
advice of many political intO Jts computers.
Uteoreticians and professionals
Eventually, authoritattve 1&lt;&gt;and 'dropped limitations on all tal~ of both contributions to and
campatgn spending except for spending by 1972 presidential
media adver!tsing, which could candidates will be available.ln
be pohced. Then it tr1ed to put Ute meantime, the $125 nullion
strong disclosure requirements spending estimate developed
into Ute law on Ute Uteory that by Common Cause, Ute citizens
public knowledge would keep action group, probably is as
Ute campatgns honest.
reliable as any .
A Technical Point
Common Cause, which sued
The first gross exploitation of Ute President's fundraisers to
Ute 1971law was the abuse of a force disclosure of Ute pretechnical point. The law did not April 7 figures, also monttored
go into effect until April 7, 1972, Ute 1972 congressional camand PreSident Nixon's fund paigns and found that 1,896
raisers made an a!l.out drive in candidates for Ute Senate and
Ute early months of Ute year to House spent $77.2 million on
solicit contributions on the primary and general election
selling point Utat Utey would campatgns between April 7 and
not be disclosed.
Dec. 31, 1972. Congressional
The Fmance Committee to candtdates raised $69.7 million
Re-Elect the President took in for general elections only$22.6 mil!wn before Ute new primary contributions figures
disclosure law took effect, $11.4 were not included in Ute study.
million of that total in the four
Again, addition to the total of
weeks before April 7.
primary and pre-April 7 contriThose contributions, butions woold be necessary for
disclosed when a federal court a complete 1972 figure. Comruled that they must be mon Cause estimates it would
reported under the 1925 law, be somewhere about $85 mil..
·
represented more than one .. lion .
tlnrd of the entire Nixon war
The remainmg $1!10 million of
chest of $60.2 million for Ute the $400 million total would be
1972 campaign.
for state, county and local
Sen. George McGovern and offices, and Ute figure is simply
most of the other Democrats an estimate. But scholars of
and Republtcans who figured campa1gn fmancing Alexander
m Ute presidential picture m Heard of Vanderbilt University
Ute sprmg of 1972 voluntarily and Herbert Alexander of Ute

Growers to meet
POMEROY - Meigs County
commercial vegetable growers
are Invited to participate in 1M
Meigs - Washington Area
Commercial Vegetable
Growers meeting Wednesday,
Jan. 2, at Ute Washington
County Vocaltonal School
located on Route 676, two miles
+++
west of Marietta. The program
DR. David c. Sweet, Director of Ute Ohio State Department
will start at 10 a.m. and conof Economic and Community Development, announced last week
clude at 3.
Utat a complete 1974 business 'forecast is difficult at this time
The program will uiclude
because of lack of information from Ute federal government. Dr.
Sweet predicted, however, Uta! economic progress In tile · " Cultural Practices and
Management to Improve
Buckeye State will continue during Ute new year.
Quality," William M. Brooks,
+++
Extension
Horticulturist,
DIRECTOR Sweet said Uta! momentum shown steadily
Vegetable Production, O.S.U.;
during the last three years will help soften an ecooonuc blow in
"Soil Testing and Tissue
Ohio and partially offset problems which may result from a
Analysis," C. J . Cunningtuiffi:
national economy crisis.
Washington County Agent;
++.,.
''Discussion of Var1ety Trials.''
IN UteGallia County area,1973 may have been a banner year
m all walks of life. Although figures are not available at this
time, it appears Gallia County enjoyed tts most prosperous year
ever. Naturally, a peak or leveling off period is expected. Indications are, however, Utat 1974 promises to be another good
year for Gallia County.

James Utzinger, Extension
Horti c ulturist , 0 .S. U.;
" Report 011 National Plastics
Conference held in Texas,' 1Bill ·
Brooks; "Disease Control to
Improve Income and Quality,''
Dr. Robert Partyk~. Extension
Plant Pathologist, O.S.U.; and
"Southeastern Ohio Tomato
Marketing Study" by Dr .
Charles Ingraham, Extension
Economist, Agricultural
Business Management, O.S.U.
A discussion and questions
wiD also be held.
Anyone interested in pooling
rides or Wishing a luncheon
reservation may call C. E.
Blakeslee, Meigs County
Extension agent, at his home
(99:1-2304 ) by Monday night.

Winter storm warmng
southeast and extreme south
today, freezing ram or drJZzle
changing to snow south, ac·
rumulations 1 to 3 inches
likely. Lows 16 to 24 south .

WITH the old year drawing to a close, it's time for
reminiscence, During Ute past 12 months, many local events
made headlines in the Daily Tribune and-Times·&amp;mtinel.

+++
FOR tis impact and news worthiness, we feel Ute top local
news story of 1973 was Ute consolidation of Gallia County's four
rural schools. Consolidation was approved Nov. 10. It will
become effective Jan. 7, 1974. The consolidation issue proved to
be Ute top news story of the day many times throughout Ute
calendar year ..Dn Nov. 6, initial school board members for Ute
new Gallia School District were elected: Fred Greenlee, Dick
Cremeens and Bruce Stout.

+++

CONSfRUCTION progress at the Gavin Power Plant,
Cheshire, ranks second while the one-day strike by Gallipolis
City School Teachers on Sept. 4 ls third. Purchase of Ute
Lafayette Hotel by Hoyt and C. R. Mullins from William O'Brien
on April6 is our fourth choice. Election of Dr. Oscar W. Clarke as
president of the Ohio State Medical Association on May 9 ranks
fifth on this year's list.

+++

MIDDLEPORT- Jerry Fry
of Middleport, stationed with
Ute U. S. Navy at the Eglin Air
Force Base in Florida, has
been promoted to master
sergeant.
He was also recently
awarded his second Air Force
commendation
meritorious
service medal and a medal
from Ute Philippine Republic
Presidential Unit. Earliet this

Now You Know
Until 1751, New Year's was
celebrated on March 25.

'.

Devoted To The lntere.l$ Of The Meigs-Mawn Area

POMEROY·MIDOLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXV NO. 177

Fry promoted toM-Sergeant

+++

-

Weather

PHONE 992·2156

MONDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1973

TEN CENTS

Nixon signs bill giving
cheaper ood insurance

month, M. Sgt. Fry was
selected to allen~ a group
meeting of distinguished Air
Force men from throughout
Ute world held in Chicago.
Sgt. Fry spent several years
In the Philippmes. He and his
wife Ute former Chetyl Ebersbach, and Uteir two children,
Marc, eight and Mandl, Utree,
,live at Shalimar, Fla.

'

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

MRS. VINCENT KNIGIIT

DENNIS KENEY

They want
peace here
and abroad

Special Sale Prices!
Men's Lee Tech Twill

WORK UNIFORMS
Pants in waist sizes 29 to 44- choose your
correct length.
Shirts in neck size 14112 to 17'12. Sleeve
lengths 32, 33, and 34 inches.
Charcoal grey - navy blue dark olive .
suntan and forest green.

Ed. Note · A new year is about to
arrive on Ute scene. All of us undoubtedly
have concerns, hopes and dreams for the
future . Our staff asked five restdents to
reveal ' My hopes for 1974." Here are thetr
answers :

T&amp;: -'1',

~(

1

MRS. VINCENT (SUE) KNIGHT,
(housewife), Pomeroy - " I hope the
nation remains at peace and the people
wiUt Ute President,
"The President has done more good
Utan harm for Ute United States. He should
not be responsible for indirect mistakes by
party associates and should not be impeached for taking a stand on policy
concerning his Offlce.
"I hope the energy crisis gradually
dirninlshes due to conservation efforts by
Ute people including recycling and conserving utilities as much as posstble.
"I hope legislation is passed to place
an equal share of burden on the oil companies and the consumer to keep pnces
within reason until the shortage is over."
DONALD DIENER, (hospttal administrator ), Pomeroy - "My hopes are
that we can once again obtain a childlike
innocence Utat will allow us to look upon
our neighbor without prejudice and
suspiclon, and that with this renewed
innocence, faith and confidence in our
government will be restored. "
!\:IRS. RACHEL McBRIDE, (retired
school teacher ), Syracuse - "My hopes
are Uta! as individuals we wtll recall what
Micah, one of Ute Old Testament prophets,

RACHAEL MeBRIDE

t: \

ROBERT BUCK

i

DONALD DIENER

satd to the people to whom he was Tensions in that part of the world are so
speaking ( 74~97 BC). Micah asked, 'What great that world war could erupt of which
doUt the Lord require of thee?' Then he no one would be a winne"r .
answered the question - by givmg to Utem
"I hope m early 1974 that Ute Arab oil
three statements which are just · as embargo to the U. S. will be lifted so we
relevant today as then:
will not have to suffer a severe energy
"God expects and reqUtres His people 15hortage. The last Uting we want is an
(1) to deal justly with each oUter, (2) to economic recession as a result of the lack
love mercy and (3), to walk humbly with of energy.
him.
"It is also my hope that in 1974, this
"If mankind follows this advtce faith- great country can acquire the technology
fully, I see a solutton to most of the to create new energy sources, so that we
problems which face and vex us; be they will not be dependent on any foreign power
the mmor or even the more tragic things for our energy needs
that come to each of us individually, or the
"Finally, I hope that Meigs County can
bigger thmgs wh1ch face us as a natwn. n making sigmficant strides toward imDENNIS KENEY, ( banker ).J&gt;omeroy proving its housing and roads in 1974; and
Route 4- "My hopes for 1974 are that Ute Uta! the peop'" of this county will take
Watergate scandal surrounding President more pride m their homes and businesses
be resolved qUtckly and Uta! those who are by improving thetr appearances so Utat we
guilty be punished. It is so essential that all can be proud to be Meigs Countians."
our political leaders, including the
BOB BUCK, (lawyer), Pomeroy President, get back to the more pressing "My hopes for 1974 include a true and
problems of our country.
lasting peace and prosperity for our nation
"I also hope Utat the current peace and Ute world; and for the people of the
negotiations between the Arabs and world to forego their petty bickerings so
IsraeliS wtll be successful and that real that Utey may grow to appreciate the true
peace can finally come to Ute Middle East. beauties which surround us."

SAN CLEMENTE , Cahf.
( UPI) - President Nixon
today signed a bill allowmg
millions of homeowners and
small businessmen to buy
substanttally more flood insurance protection at federally
subsidized rates.
Under the measure, called
Ute 1973 Flood Disaster Protection Act, flf.Jrneo,mers are free
to purch".ll! up to $3s;ooo worth
of flood insurance at a rate of
25 cents per $100 of coverage
and merchants can buy a
maximum $200,000 of coverage
at reduced costs. The new
ceilings are about double the
ones available previously.
• A shorttime earher today,
Nixon stgned legtSlation
authorizing the government to
sell nearly $900 mtllion in
stockpiled materials, particularly
copper
and
aluminum, on grounds that the
federal supply far exceeded
national defense needs.
The White House 'announced
Nixon's actions as he contmued
to whittle down the pile of
about 50 bills sent to his desk by
Congress before it adjourned 10
days ago for a month-long
recess.
About 25 measures still were
awaiting Nixon's okay, including a $73 billion defense appropriations bill and another
measW'e to increase Social
Security benefits by 11 per
cent.
Nrxon also was expected to
turn h1s attention to mternational issues today during
conferences with Secretary of
State Henry A. Kissinger, who
joined Nixon at his bluff-top
villa after flying from
Washington to Los Angeles
aboard a conunercial airliner .
Sunday night.
In signing the flood
protection bill, Nixon said
more than 90 per cent of all
property damage caused by
natural disasters result from
floods and that the new law

"wtll permit us to prepare
more adequately agamst thiS ·
threat.' '
In a statement, Nixon said
the bill wou1d help the
government move faster to aid
flood vtcttms as well "by
substituting msurance indemniftcalton --speedy, dtrect and
with minimal red tape for the
current system of disasters

loans ."
Provisions of the act also
extend for two more years an
emergency program set up in
1969 to help make adequate
flood insurance available to
res idents and merchants in
hazardous areas who might not
be able tohobtain it otherwise .
But under the new bill, people
living or doing business in such

places will cease to be ehgible
for future federal assistance
Wlless their commwnties take
specific steps to reduce potential flood losses.
The legislation granting the
government power to sell off
almost $900 million stockptled
defense materials was requested by Nixon and went mto
effect when he signed it.

Gasoline goes up
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Federal energy chief William
E. Simon said today that
gasoline pnces wtll go up
another one-cent a gallon to
reimburse dealers for reduced
sales due to Ute fu el shortage .
Annowtcement of the rise
may come later today, Simon
sa1d, and follows a meeting he
held with offictals of the Cost of
Living Council. It would be the
fir st In crease outs1de the
wholesale price in creases
currently alJowable under
President Nrxon's Phase IV
program Simon, in an
pearance on a television
program (NBC's Today Show),
also said Uta! the long lines of
motorists reported at most
service statiOns during the
weekend were generally
limited to metropolitan areas.
He blamed the situation on
holiday traffic and satd it
should ease after Wednesday.
Most of the nation's gas
stations are closed until after
New Year's Day, and there
were some temper·snarling
scrambles Sunday for the last
drops of gasoline.
A 17-year.old gas station
attendant in betroit was held
by police Sunday after he
admttled fatally shooting a
motonst who refused to pay for
-gasolme . Police said Ute youth
told them he thought the

ap.

customer was reaching for a
gun when he put his hand in his
pocket after refusing to pay.
Spot checks across Ute nation
bY United Press International
Sunday found that service
stations open for--business
ranged from about a.dozen of
Ute 1,200in St. Louis, Mo., to as
high as 30 per cent in parts of
Ohio, Ute South and West.
Most dealers said Ute pumps
would stay locked up until after
New Year's when Ute they get
Ute ftrst supphes for 1974.
Gasoline was scarce around
New York City. There were
waiting lines outside the few
servtce stahons that were
open, and short-fused tempers
ocasionally exploded into
harsh words.
Dwindling gas supplies
prompted the New York City
Police Department, left with
just over a day's supply on
hand, to cut down on the use of
patrol cars and send more
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Partly cloudy and cold
with a chance of snow
Hurries mainly northeast.
Highs In the teens and lows
20s Wednesday, rising to the
20s and low 30s by Friday.
Lows three to 12 Wednesday
moderating to 8 to 18 by
Frlday.

officers ou t on foot patrol
A police spokesman said
there were 35,000 gallons in
police tanks, about 10,000
gallons more than a normal
day's usage, and the department was 11 nervous" about
getting fresh supplies.
"In the past, we could JUSt
call up and be sure of getting
deliveries the next day," sa1d
the spokesman . • "Now we
can't. So we're not taking any
chances."
Police across the the nation
said Utal traffic was extremely
light on Ute fourUt gasless
Sunday of Ute energy shortage.
Among those caught in Ute
squeeze was vacationing Gov.
Tom McCall of Oregon who
was refused gasoline at one
station in Lincoln City, Ore .,
because he wasn't a regular
customer Uten had to wait at
Ute end of a long line of cars at
another station to fill up
President Rtchard Nixon has
given up one of his favortte
pasttimes, too. White House
aides said he hasn't hit the San
Diego Freeway near his San
Clem~nte, Calif., vacation retreat f()r a scenic drive because
of the gas shortage.

And in Tempe, Anz., a
motorist who unexpectedly ran
out of gas found a $5 bill tucked
under his car's gas cap, apparently left by the driver who
siphoned out his fuel.

Jll:j~o:&lt;t~~::-.::=:-x;;::=:=:=:=:=:=:--:=:=:::=-;:=:=:=:=:=:=:::=:::=:::=:::::~:::::::::~:::::::::·:·~:::·:::::-:-:·:·:-:::::::::;~.

ews .• in

Tech-TwUis~ ••

But Not Very Oftent
Since Tech-Twills defy wear and tear of even the
rou&amp;hett, toughest, dirtiest jobs, they take their own
aweet time in wearing out. There'a no reason (or buying
new work c:lothea until you need to is there?

Shouldn't you occasionally buy Lee- Prest Tech-Twills
• • • and buy oomethin11 else with the money you save?

NOW YOU KNOW
The air-filled ceUs of cork
cootain as much as 35 per cent
fatty acid, making II inipervious to liquids.
'

Lee
Elberfelds In Pomeroy

WASHINGTON (UP!)- The wholesalers and end users of
goverrunent has launched an · crude oil or refined products."
investigation into possible
Simon also announced a
crackdown
on
hoarding of petroleum supplies general
and has stepped up enforce- violators of any part of Ute fuel
men! of fuel allocation regula- allocation 'program. "Willful
!tons across Ute country.
vtolators of the mandatory fuel
Federal
energy
chief allocation regulations are subWilliam E. Simon announced ject to criminal penalties," he
Sunday : "We are concerned said. "False or fraudulent
over the possibility of fuel activities regardmg Ute allocabeing stockpiled in e~cessive lion program will be
and unreasonable amounts, prosecuted and could lead to
which could create local substantial fines."
PORTSMOUTH - REP. WILLIAM H. HARSHA, R.Qhio,
plans to talk to party leaders in his 6th District Utis week about ·· shortages and disrupt normal Surveillance Has Begun
distribution patterns."
He said surveillance of Ute
whether he should not seek riH!Iection in 1974 after serving 14
..Simon
said
his
Federal
mandatory
allocation
years in Congress. Harsha said he was considering taking a
Energy Office (FEO) 1s check- programs for propane and
position wiUt a Washington firm which would pay more than the
ing
for any "abnormal stock- middle dfstillates- malnly
$42,500 he now makes. He said It was a financial matter, made
ptling" by refmers, unpotters, heating fuel- has already
acute by the fact he has Utree sons now in college.
Harsha, ranking Republican member on the House Public
Works Committee, has had -little tr~winning since his first
victory In 1960. He has had no Dcmocra opposition in his last
four elections. Republican leaders were e peeled to encourage
Harsha to run again, since the district could easily go
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. launch an impeachment
Democratic. One of the leading opposition contenders could be
(UP!)President Ni~on looks inquiry.
state Rep. Vernal G. Rlffe Jr., New Boston, who is House speaker
back on his accomplishments
The President looking forpro tern.
of the past year with a personal ward to the new year and is
"sense of satisfaction~ ' despite "absolutely determined" to
NEW YORK- DIMMER LIGHTS and half-empty gas tanks
the shattering blows of continue in office, uraithful to
may keep many New Year's revelers closer to home tonight.
Watergate, according to White the mandate Ute American
Still, the annual happening in Times Square is expected to draw
House Chief of Staff Alexander people gave him in November,
up to 300,000 persons to scuffle with Ute pickpockets. They'll
M. Haig Jr.
1972," Haig said.
watch Ute lighted ball descend at the stroke of midnight from Ute
"Under
no
circumstances"
"! Utink you can only capture
Expo America Building - previously known as Ute Allied
will
Nixon
restgn,
Haig
said
the President 's mood and
Chemical Tower - in memory of 1973 and in tnbute to 1974.
today
in
a
year-end
stockatt1tude
when you view it in the
Another 15,000 or so are expected to dare the muggers for a free
taking, and a look to Ute future. context of his personal
jam oeasioo in Central Park.
When asked If Nixon would realization of what he has
Revelers can spend $125 to join Sanuny Davis Jr., at Ute
resign if impeached, Haid said achieved .. . his sense of
Century Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles or pay $2 to watch female
~~r don't think it's a con- satisfaction. And he has no
inipei'IIOIIator Charles Pearce at San Francisco's Gold Street bar.
tingency we're going to have to reason for self consciousness
And in moot cases, organizers said that tickets for New Year's
face ." The House Judlelary about these achievements,''
(Continued on Page 10)
Committee is preparing to Halg added.
•
f

Nixon is content

Tech-Twills give a comfortable fit and a neat, permanent preued appearance, at a down-t&lt;H!arth price.

Special Sale Prices!

Simon smells hoarding of petroleum supplies

By United Press International
CLEVEIJAND - U. S. SEN.-DESIGNATE Howard M
Metzenbaum says the amount spent on his 1974 campaign will
depend on how much opposition he has, and not on the $1.5 million
limit Gov. John J. Gilligan voluntarily imposed on his own reelection bid.
"! can't really say with any certainty what I will spend
because I don't know what my opposition will be,' ' Metzenbaum
said here Saturday. "I've said before Utis is a difficult time to
raise money. I'm under a handicap because people seem to
perceive me as a millionaire candidate. It's more difficult for me
to raise money.''

Bow come
Smart Workmen
Buy Lee-Prest

Lemley and Larry Spencer.
Buck was presented a gift by
the participants in appreciation of his instruction.

B~iefsf

'·

.

'I

\

begun, and 1,000 Internal
and diesel retail dealers to
In other developments:
degrees of self-sufficiency.
Revenue Service agents are
--Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan.,
advise the government on fuel
being mobilized to enforce
- Dixy Lee Ray, chairman of said Sunday he is recompolicy.
existing allocation rules and Dealers Uve with Problems Ute U.S. Atomic Energy Com- mending to Simon that
those which will go into effect
"Local dealers are hving mission, said it would take members
of
Congress,
Jan. 15.
with the problems created by until1985 for the United States governors and other offictals
The Justice Department anUte fuel shortage and we Utink to be completely self-sufftcient get the same ration as any
nomtced, meanwhile, that it it is essential Uta! represen- in ~nergy. She was interviewed other citizen under the standby
obtained its ftrst temporary
tatives of these dealers helP' us on CBS' 11 Face the Nation." She gasoline rationing system
restraining order Sunday formulate the programs !bat denied there was any conflict Simon's office has announced.
against a gasohne station
will affeCt their operations," between her estimate and Ute The energy agency told UPI
accused of price gouging. It
that
doctors,
Simon said. A public briefing goal of energy independence by Saturday
said U.S. Distnct Court Judge
will be held in Washington Jan. 1980 set by President Nixon. clergymen and even congressWilliam J . Bauer in Chicago 9 to explain how the group will She said she and Ute President men wlll get the same ration as
signed the order against Mcmay be talkmg about different ~veryooe else.
be chosen.
Bride's Shell Service, located
on Chicago's SouUt Side.
''The IRS agent who accom- tr=::=:::::::=x=:=::=-~::::::::~===:=:=:=:::::=:=:=:::=:::·:::=:·:=:;:::·:":·:-=·=·=-===·=·=~:=====::::=:=:::::=:::::::::::===========:=:·:=:::·:=i=:..-:-=:::..'&lt;!=:=========::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:::::::::::::::::!!:.!
panied the assistant U.S. at- ~
¥
torney to the judge's house
testified that he was sold five
gallons of gas, one rabbit's foot
Five defendants were fined license, and Walter Lee, Jr., 45, Medical Center. At 11 :30 a.m.
and one blank will form-as iP.
two forfeited bonds in the Canal Winchester, $50, petty Bertha Diehl, Racme, Rt. 2,
and
last will and testament- for
who had !alien and sustained
$10.05," said Justice Depart- court of Middleport Mayor Uteft.
John
Zerkle
Friday
night.
back and head injuries, was
ment spokesman Jack Hushen.
k d
d
Vandalism was reported at taken to Pleasant Valley
Hushen said the government
wee
en
roun
up
Ute
roadaide park on Route 33 Hospital. Sunday at 9:20 p.m.
was acting under the Economic
Stabilization Act, which sets "Fined were Robert B. Morris, going north over Ute weekend. Clara Gibbson, Long Bottom, a
ceding prices for gasoline. 21, Charleston, W. Va., $5 and Storage rooms were broken medical patient, wa~ brought
Veterans
Memorial
Judge Bauer scheduled a costs, speeding; Perry F. into, restrooms were damaged, to
Hoffman,
19,
Middleport,
$10
trash
barrels
were
overturned
Hospital
hearing for Jan. 9.
Simon also announced that and costs, assured clear and toilet tissue strewn about,
Medium damages were
his office, working with state distance; Joe Neal. no age or the Departmenl of Sheriff
address,
$10
and
costs
Robert
Hartenba'ck
reported.
to two cars in an
reported
and local officials, had settled
more than 15,00Q hardship profanity in a public place: The offense s under in- accident on Rutland St. In
Middleport at 11:59 a .m .
cases involving individuals , Dallas Blevins, 54, MiddleP,ort: vestigation.
$25
and
costs,
assault
and
---!---'-Sunday
Middleport police said .
businessmen, farmers and
battery,
and
Bonnie
K.
Whitt,
The
Racine
E-R
squad
anA car driven by William B.
industries who said they
Is Saturday and Slack, Middleport, failed to
needed more fuel Utan they had 25, Crystal Lake, Ill., $10 and swered two
costs, no operator's license
me Sunday.
yield the right of way and
been allocated.
Forfeiting
bonds
w~re
At
3
a.m
Utey
transported
Simon also announced plans
struck a car drtven by George
to establish a "gras~ roots" Wtlliam Kelly, 32, West Milton, Ethel Jo&gt;~son, Portland, a Meinhart, Middleport . There
(Continued on Page )0)
group ,representing gasohne $25, havi ng no operator's medical alieni, to Holzer

~

5 Fined in mayor's court

~

•

~

'

I

'

1

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