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The Circleville Herald from Circleville, Ohio • Page 18

Location:
Circleville, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Tbc Circlevillc Herald, Fri, Dec. 12. 1989 County Blood Donors Exceed Quota For 1969 iv i Bobbie Loy sei, Thursday's is it uf the 1 bile in Circles netted 106 collected units of blood from the 114 people svho registered. The final 1969 visit along with the very successful unscheduled Bloodmobile visit in November attained 106.1 percent of the 1969 quota for i a a County. This guarantees total coverage of the blood needs of all county residents for the next three months.

REALLY BACK NOW- -The Apollo 12 astror.au' look real happy on leaving quarantine in the Space Center at Houston, Tex. From left: Alan Bean, Charles Conrad, Richard Gordon. U.S. Crime Rate Levels Off Except For Big City Holdups WASHINGTON (AP) The nation's spiraling crime rate leveled oft during the first nine months of 1969, but armed robbers became a much greater menace on citv streets. FBI Director J.

Edgar Hoover reported today. Hoover said the overall crime rate rose 11 per cent during the per cent under the increase during the corresponding months a year ago. But. in releasing the Quarterly uniform crime reports, he called attention to the 15 per rent jump in robberies, particularly an IS per cent hike in armed holdups. Hoover said street r'bberv made up more than half of all robberv offences and increased is per cent, while residential holduns climbed 22 per cent during the period.

Vmong the various types of robberies, he noted, onlv bank he'duns showed a per cent less than during the first nine months of 1968, The report came shortlv after Hoover released a statement in Gra-Y Plans Induction Of 125 Members Sunday at 2 p.m., 125 boys representing six Circlevillc schools and three county schools will be officially inducted into the MCA Gra-Y Program. The afternoon induction will be conducted at the Emanuel I nited Methodist Church, 1051 Georgia Road, and will have La whom, bead basketball coach of Circlevillc High School as guest speaker. which he predicted the soaring cent increase in the volume of crime rate in the 1970s can he crime from 1960 thr ugh 1968 to which the The optimistic prediction, ho lation has undergone in recent was based on giant strides Do mentioned assassma- professionalization of po- CLARA OESTERLE TWO-GALLON DONOR Recently there have been several area residents hospitalized in Columbus who were told by the hospitals that they would have to two pints of blood in the blood center before surgery would be performed on them. in the lice, installation of (lorn communication systems and con struction of new facilities and increased cooperation among enforcement agencies. Hoover attributed a 122 per Handling the induction phase ill be David McCullough, club adviser, and members of the Washington Township Gra-Y Club.

Membership cards will presented to all club members present, and Gra-Y charters will be presented to the principals of the two new clubs at Ashville and Williamsport. Immediately following the induction. boys and their parents are inv ited to attend a reception in the social room. Parents are asked to bring cookies, or other types of baked goods. Punch and coffee will be provided.

Gra-Y is one of the Clubs of the 5 MCA and designed bn- boys of the fourth, fifth and sixth grades. Meetings are held bi-monthly in schools and under the supervision of college age boys. Activities of the club includes bi-monthly meetings, football game trips, swims, hockey games, visits to YMCA, basketball leagues, an awards banquet and skill development. Gets Top Office SAN DIEGO, CAIif. (AC) Luis Sanchez, 15, blind since he was 3, has been elected to the top student office at Roosevelt Junior High.

Banks To Pay Taxes For Depositors Over 56 per cent of ti intangible propertv taxes ton deposits and capital) to be paid by financial institutions in Ohio during the calendar year 1969 will come from commercial banks. Tl is tact was reported i a Gail Portertield, Slate Tax Commissioner. In Pickaway county, local banks will pay $92.599 for their depositors and on their capital. Out of a total of expected to be collected from all financial institutions, banks alone will pay $30,590,856.00. The bulk of this amount, the sum of $27,331,619.00 will be paid bv commercial bunks on their deposits.

In reality, this trx is imposed by the Stale on the depositor, but practically all banks in the State absorb it for their customers. The same is true of tax on shares of ha me stock. I his will amount to $3,259,237.00 during tlx? current year, and it, i too, will be absorbed by the banks. Both the deposits tax and the share tax on commercial banks have shown a constant increase down the years, except for a brief period when a change in law was made necessary by a Supreme Court decision questioning the constitutionality of the share tax. In 1951, banks depositors the total of SI 1,152,703 as contrasted to this total of more than $27,331,619.00.

The share tax has grown to $3,000,000 per year currently from a figure just slightly more than $1,000,000 in 1951. tions, urban riots, colloce disorders and social changes. Bv classification, he said, forcible rapes increased 17 per murders and aggravated 9 oer cent and property as larecnv, auto 4 hr ft and per cent. nn 0 NoHheast. with ts crime-ravaged urban centers.

contributed perhaps the most significant statistic in the rennrt. scirt tlm overall crime in th- states onlv pioht cent riu.Un'-r ivnn months, rom- nared to a 10 nor cent hike in vrpst it oer cent in the South and 13 oer cent in the Central States. By population, cities of more tb-n 1 milli showed the lowest rise, onlv 7 per cent, of all urban areas. Mrs. Luring Leist and Mrs.

Richard Ewing. Red Cross Volunteens Mrs. Herman Will, Mrs. Lewis Dean, Mrs. Lewis Young, Mrs.

B. B. Deffenbaugh, Mrs. Richard Crist, Mrs. John Ankrom, Mrs.

Howard Huston, Mrs. Royce Woolever, Mrs. Robert Dahl, Mrs. Clarence Linn, Mrs. Howard Judd, Mrs.

Charles Walker, Mrs. Ben Brian. Mrs. C. S.

Dille, Miss Mary Howard and Miss Katherine L. Mead. Red Cross Yolunteens were Judy Snook. Joyce Stevens and Judy Schein. Nurses who aided were RNs Mrs.

Donald Archer, Mrs. H. W. Fraas, Mrs. Michael Fields, Mrs.

Robert G. Smith. Mrs. Stanley Jones, Mrs. C.

C. Schwarz, Mrs. Arthur Bowman. Mrs. Ralph Bryant and LPN Mrs.

William Gardner. Doctors on duty were E. L. Montgomery, Frank Moore, William A. Myers, Robert G.

Smith, H. H. Swope and Carlos Alvarez. i 1 i 11 High School students Fred Harris, Bill Waugh, Richard Connolly and Ronnie Davis unloaded equipment and Ed Ebert furnished ice. Thursday's donors and the organization they represented are as follows: T-Carl Mader, William Bower, Sam Sberna, Richard Sill, Edward Herd, Carl R.

Smith. David Skinner, John Wort man, Garry Ruff, Larry Thompson. David Sparks, Ernest Martin, James Krinn, Hewitt Harmount, James Marshall, Wilbur Storts, Hugh Duffer. Boyd Barr. Phillip Hendershot, Roger L.

Hammond. Dennis Erwin. Wallace Hatfield. Robert Vollmar, Paul E. Bowman, Gary Hinton, Fred Shires, Robert Court right, a 1 Christy, Robert Francis, James Justice, Fred Likens, Paul Wickline, James O.

Sowers. Bennie Huffer. CONTAINER CORPORATION Gene Jordan, Dean Martin, David Montgomery. YATES BUICK Emmett Hinton Turner I AND Rcbeca Wolfe, Arthur Wolfe THIRD NATIONAL BANK- Nancy Hartley, Sara Jane Parcels 1 I HIGH SCHOOL Gregg White. 1 Don Repp, Dale DeLong, Dr.

Carlos Alvarez, Dr. Robert G. Smith KIWANIS Dr. II. W.

Frass, Robert Wilson CIRCLEVILLE Susan Haucnstein YMCA Dorothy Hr wilt WW Lawson KNIGHTS OF Frank Pleseia ST. Mary Margaret Rhoades Bids To Be Opened On Mojor Highway COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Bids will be opened here Dec. 16 on a 2.3-milc section of the Appalachian Development Highway System in Jackson County. State Highway Director P. E.

Mashetcr said the section is part of the main Appalachian artery which will connect proposed interstate 275 in Clermont County with Belpre on the Ohio River. Covington Soldier Dies In Vietnam WASHINGTON Spec. 4 John J. Sexton of Covington. Ohio, died recently in Vietnam, the Defense Department reported Thursday.

Sexton, whose daughter Hazel at 725 Forrest Lane in the Miami County community, was lister! as having died of combat injuries. ST. JACOBS LUTHERAN Anne Jones, Nelson Jones PRESBYTERIAN Robinson TRINITY Judd, Patricia Bauer ST. PAUL I 1) DeLong a rlcs Hemming Barr Robert Josephine Dille, Robert Woltord I 1 BIBLE Benninger IF DEPART Widmar GUILD Owens 11 A II I TOWNSHIP FIRE Chiropractor Attends Seminar Dr. D.

M. Boyer, 122 W. Franklin recently returned from attending a two-day clinical seminar at the Lincoln Chiropractic College. Indianapolis, Ind. a st developments in diagnosis and treatment methods were presented at American Ohiroprac tic Association seminar, which fc alur two California chiropractic orthopedists.

Dr. Leonard J. Savage, Studio City, and Dr. F. Maynard Lipe, North Hollywood.

The chiropractic program included the newest techniques in the non-surgical treatment of spinal disc problems and a new method for the management of calcium deposits in the shoulder and other joints. Adv anced x-rav diagnosis and conservative treatment of knee injuries also was in the chiropractic program. LcatliV rwood, Bobbie Bruce Sanipsiil RPi LOCAL 200- I WiP.ams, lanua Williams RESIDES I I' Hat- 11 Kerns, Mi ohat 1 Wilson, fTara Oesterlo, It.r.r. Don Blevms, Lester Hartman. lv.

Miller. William A. Evans. Ethel La Fallett Continued iruni Page 1 1 nosed to the provisions of the V( Thursdav he could not be a conferee. Sen.

Jack Miller. R-lovva, was named to replace Williams. Wallace F. Bminett, 71. a Salt Lake Citv businessman.

in outlook and serving his fourth term in the Sen to. Republican Bennett once was president the National 'ciation of Manufacturers. With Williams retiring. Bennett becomes i Republican numittee. and would in line for the i cap: tore eontrol in the 1970 sen tors on the confer- ot'i i eonim 'tee are Albert Gore.

D-TJiin author of the inn i a personal income from $600 to 1880(0 TP-ninn F. DI Clinton P. Anderson, ''i and Carl T. Curtis, Ri Neh. mb Mills and Bvrnes.

are Hale Rf James R. Utt, R- 1 R- Ohio. and lUlman, D-Orc. Choir Vates Yule Concert An afternoon of Christmas music will be presented this Sunday at the Good Shepherd United Methodist Church when the Circleville Choir will be heard in concert. The program which begins at 2:30 p.m.

is open to the public and will be directed by the founder-di rector, Paul M. Dunkle. The program is divided into sections consisting of: Christ- a Carols. Animals of "'hristmas. Familiar Songs, and Happy Melodies.

Many of the numbers to be sung by the 30 member choir will feature solos by 17 of the boys. Included in the solos will Mike Lawter, Scott Willoughby, Paul Porter, Marc paid for their and Kevin Rogols. This concert will be the fourth one for the choir since its organization in September. JACK THOMAS TWO-GALLON DONOR Thse were misinformed and were subjected to an unnecessary problem of getting two people to donate blood for tlrem. Pickaway County is well above the minimum blood donor quota of 90 per cent necessary for total benefits under the blood program.

Therefore, all residents are eligible to receive Red Cross blood free and without having to Jack Mader. local blood program chairman, advises that whenever there is a question regarding the receipt of blood in any hospital, or otherwise regarding the blood program, the person or persons involved should call the local Red Coss chapter office at 474-5736. Any misinformation can thus be quickly cleared up. Adding their names to the two-gallon donor list at Thursday's bloodmobile visit were Clara Oesterle and Jack Thomas. One-gallon donors were Richard Jeffries.

Eldon Bailor, Wilbur Storts, Gerald Thomas and Charles Henning. The Thursday canteen was sponsored by Washington Grange-Mrs. Boyd Stout, Mrs. D. A.

Marshall, Mrs. David Bolender, Mrs. Ralph DeLong, COLUMBUS Veda Susi GENERAL Paul Adams A JoAnn Davis, Walter Wheatley, Carol Reynolds. Carol Bailey, Donald Ott. Patricia Herron.

Mary E. Smith, Betty Morrison. Melodee Greenlee, James Stout. Joyce Thomas ESPIELM ter- ron, Creed Stonerock, Robert Walisa Robert Patterson. Danny Moore, Eldon Bailor.

I Jack Thomas PYTHIAN Eccard OWENS ILLINOIS -Richard Jeffries, Eugene McGill. Ruth Carney, John Stebelton, Thomas Hutchinson, Larry Hollar, i Gerald Thomas CELLAR Bailev MOATS MOTOR Moats First class compartments for all your jewels lady buxton Jewel Cases Lcit: Rich rayon velvet lines the 10 tray compartments andThe big compartments below. Notice the necklace bars and ful width pocket in the top. Right: This special case swings out so you see everything, folds in for easy carrying or standing in a small space on your dresser. RISCH DRUG STORE 1271 N.

Court St. 474-6011 I4KT GOLD OVER L.A> Florentine circle with blue forget-me-nots and Cultured Pearls. See our selection of fine jewelry bv krementz. T. K.

BRUNNER (x 11!) W. Main St. Est. 1854 FOR THE HURRY! BOB HOLIDAY BONUS OFFER ENDS SOON. Si0.0(1 BONUS RETURN OF YOUR PURCHASE PRICE OF A GE DISHWASHER Does the dishes while you join the family! Mobile Maid Portable Dishwasher with 3-Level Thoro-Wash and Soft Food Disposer No plate-scraping, no just tilt-oii large or hard food scraps PIZZA PEOPLE LOVE TASTEE PIZZA Phone 474-6315 Write This Number In Your Plume B'mk TASTEE SHOPPE Lancaster Pike Shopping Center Mary Carter Rol-Latex SHOP Dries in 20-30 minutes Covers walls with a beautiful flat finish Easily applied with brush or roller Clean up with soap and water.

Maple cutting board top 3 Loads, Pots Pans, China Crystal Easy-Loading Lift-Top Rack BUY TWO AND SAVE $049 juiariv $3.98 oer gallon when Model SP-3911) per gallon when you buy two gallons. Regularly $3.98 per gallon. ankamericard we service! 3 Cycles! Maple cutting board top! 3-Level and Soft Food Disposer Converts to Built-in later! OPEN to MONDAY mut SVTURUAY 10 TO r. SUNDAY PAY SAVE 100 N. Couri.

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About The Circleville Herald Archive

Pages Available:
156,412
Years Available:
1923-1979