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12..: The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Feb. 4, 1977

Emergency plan~. for .flood reviewed
hold &lt;»0 people, Grinstead
sal d.
Two electric generators
will be coming from an
emergency hospital to the ·
National Guard Armory on
Sunday to be used by the Civil
Defense. One generator is
three kllowatta .and the other
ls 10 kilowatts. Grinstead said
the small generator C&lt;luld be
used as a portable to take
wherever it is needed.
For the benefit of the
representatives from Meigs
County who do not have a
flood plan at this time,
Grinstead ssid he gjves what
equipment he gets to the area
fire department and rescue
squads. The civil defense
works for the mayor and
council in a disaster until it is

MASON, W. Va. - Three
Bend area mayors and
representatives from lirea
Civil De~ense, fire depart·
ments, reocue squads and
·pollee departments met with
"' Dick Grinstead, Mason
County civil ~fense director,
Thursday evening to prepare
for possible flooding in the
next four weeks.
Grinstead ssid the plant
construction site above New
Haven has an empty
warehouse that has been
offered for use so furniture
could be stored. The power
company also volunteered its
parking lot at the plant site
for trailers, Grinstead stated.
The new medical building
at Lakin State Hospital, not
occupied at this lime, eould

out of their jurisdiction, and
then the defense takes over.
Grinstead ssid that action
cannot be taken during a
flood untll the governor
declares ,a state of
emergency. Then the county
commissioners have
authority over the civil

defense in county matters
and the council and mayor in
city matters.
He said the people in Mason
County would be kept in·
formed .of the high water
situation t11rough the news
media and toWII sirens. He
ssid the civil defense has

WAUGH
Jessie 0 . Waugh , 88, a
resident of 833 Tenth St ..
JESSIE

DALE L. KENNEDY

Dale L. Kennedy , 74, died
early Friday morning at his
Emergency Unit answer·ed a

call to the home but Mr.

County, daughter of the late Mayor Clarenre Andrews;
Joe Young, Mason; Clyde
Mr. Kennedy was born Thomas J. and EHzabeth
Triplett,
Syracuse Fire
FOster
Chick
.
Apr il 6, 1902 at Kyger , a son of
She married Edward C. Department;
Ralph
lhe late Lannie ·an~ · Birdie
Saddler Kennedy . Mr . Waugh on Dec . 26. 1904, at Pt. Lavender , Syracuse Fire
Kennedy was a veteran of Pleasant. He preceded her In
World War II . He belonged to death on May 23, 1963. The Department.
Mayor Charles Black,
moved
from
tfle Disabled Am. erlc~n . Waughs
Veterans
and
Feeney - Gallipolis to Portsmouth ln Hartford ; William Kimes,
Bennett Post 128. American 1924.
New Haven Fire Depart·
She is survived by one
Legion . He was employed at
ment;
Roy Ungaro , New
the Gallipolis Slate Institute daughter , Mrs. Harr y
Haven
Fire Department;
(Helen)
Mc
Guire,
11
391!2
for sev~r'al years.
Surviving . are his wife, Gallla St .. Portsmouth and Steve Carpenter, New Haven
J.
Waugh . Fire Department; Jeff
Helen Bradbury Kennedy ; C t arenc~
three sisters, Mrs . Otto Gallipolis.
She was preceded In death Mankin, New .Haven, Fire
(Phyllis) Mulford, Route l ,
Middleport ; Mrs. Jessie by two brothers and two Dep!;irtment; Charles Roush,
Fegley, Bradenton/ Fla., and sisters. Two grandchildren New Haven Fire Department
Mrs , Wayne
Annabel) and five grea t-grandchildren and Edward Johnson. Mason
Sisson, Kyger and several survive along with several Fire Department.
nieces and nephews.
n ieces and nephews.
Donald Johnson, Mason
She was a member of the
Funeral services will be
held al2 p.m . Sunday at the Temple · Baptist Church In Fire Department; James
Portsmouth.
Rawl i ngs -Coats
Funeral
Lavender, Mason Rescue
Funeral services will be
Home with the Rev . Chester
Squad;
Ross Roush, Mason;
Lemley and the Rev . Noel held 11 a.m. Monday at the
Herrmahn officiating . Burial Melcher Funeral Horne an Howard Johnson, Mason Fire
will be in the Gravel Hill Oflnere St., Portsmouth. Dep~rtment: Denver Blake.
Kennedy was dead upon the

squad's arrival .

at

·

Graveside services wi ll . be
held at 2 p.m . Monday at Pine
Street Cemetery In Galllfolis.
Friends may call a the
funeral home on Sunday from
2 until 4 p.m .

Cheshire .

Friends may call at the

funeral home from 2 to

from

how wond erfu l we think they are.

~ to 9

&lt;1

and

p.m. Saturday .

such as·

ho~1 ' l'er.l· intportanl .l'Oll are l O-ll'' . . .

ami to conl'ey our lha~lk sj()r J mlrfW!tWilJ.f!.e.

•

-TiiA~~&lt;ceYou F00 BANI(ING 'WITII US! •

Be our guests for cookies and coffee

. poii'OIIOr

rutland
b!PI*I plain•

Few er·

soc!'al

the bankd
the century

agencies to help those in

need.
No public transportation.
Oneoftheiowestpercapita
incomes in the state.
Mahy isolated persons
(especially elderly).
But, there are also many
advantages, one of which is
most important, it might be
called "neighborliness." Sunday , 1 p.m. at the Kuhner .
lewis Funeral Home, Oak
People know and care about Hill. with the Rev. Gerald
otherS in the community. For Brown offic iating. Buria l w ill

duplication of services.
Many have been helped
through the cooperation of
other
agencies
and
organ.iza tion s, through
churches, busin·esses, an'd
through the efforis of many
individuals throughout the
county. Meigs County may
Jack many things, · but one
thing is not lacking - the
willingness to help others less
fortunate than we.

Mtablllhed 1872

M•mb t r

FDIC

Lonnie LeMaster , 8, who
underwen t braif' surgery at

St.

APPEARING FOR THE FIRST TIME AT THE

INN PLACE

THE COBRAS
4 PIECE GROUP
FROM
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.
c.....--r
10 til 2

Joseph

Hospital

In

Parkersburg , W.· Va :, was
moved from Intensive care
.Thursday to r.oom 43QI., He Is
reported in good c15'flditlon
and in excellent spirits . Cards
may be sent to the hospital.
Due to the energy cru nch.
hours of the Kroger Store at
Pomeroy have been reduced
for the second time recently.
The new store hours will now
be from 9 a.m. to 9 · p.m .

Monday throug h Saturday

and from 11 a .m . to 7 p.m . on
Sunday . The new hours will
go info effect Sunday.

be i n Mor iah Cemetery .
Fr iends niay call at the
funera l home from 2:30 to 4

Cali~om•"a

1•

(Continued from page I)
-Dhio Bureau of Employment Services (OBES) Ad-'
ministrator Albert Giles
reported that more first-time
claims for. unemployment
benefits probably will be filed
by jobless Ohioans this week
than during any seven-day
period since early last year.
· Reports from OBES claims
offices throughout the state
show 48,772 individuals filed
initial benefit claims during
the first three days of this
week. Giles said 31,915 of
. those claims resulted from
ener.gy-shortage layoffs.
A total of 30,776 ou(.()f.work
Ohioans filed initial claims
for unemployment benefits
during the week ending Jan.
29, 24.8 per cent Jess than in
the preceding seven-day
period. More than 8,200 of
those claims from the week of
Jan. 23 were energy-related,
said Giles.
·
Plans have been made to
increase tbe claims staff
where needed in many
bureau pffices throughout the
state. Giles said, adding that
the OBES claims offices will
be open Feb. 21, Presidents
Day, normally a holiday for
state employes.
..,Ohio Commission on
Aging Director Martin Janis
extended hours afhls office to
handle emergency sltualions
durin~ the energy-weather
crisis. Hours will be
8
a.m. until 8 p.m. weekdays
and 8 a.m. until 5 p'.m.
Saturdays and Sundays, said
Janis.

the third consecutive day
Friday after having been
closed since )an. 5. Exceptions were the Salem

· Center School. closed due to a
sewage problem ,

and

the

Rutland School closed due to

a wafer problem.

The

Middleport

Department answered

a

Fire
call

to Pomeroy at 12:30 p.m.
Thursday to assist the
Pomeroy department with a

fire on Condor St. At 7: ts p.m .
Thursday , the Middleport
Emerger'lcy Unit was called

lor Edwin Sellers. 592 Laurel
;t, He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. ·At 9; 23
a.m. ·Thursday, the squad
went to 40 Custer St. for Mike

Syracuse residents were
without water this morning Lewis who was t"ken to
due to a pump breaking Veterans Memor ial Hospital
down . Wa1er was reported off . where he was admitted.

The E-R went to 242 Beech
at 6 a.m. and at ap' proxlma1ely 9; 30 a.m. 'the St., at 5:46 a.m. Friday for
pump was back in operat ion . Dale Kennedy who was dead
But It was

several hours

Mostly cloudy , colder, before resi de nts had full
chance
of snow flurries · pressure .
EVAN JONES
tonight and Saturday . Lows
Evan Lawren ce Jones , 7.4,
MASON - Mason VFW
died ThursdaY. at his home at · tonight between 10 .and 15, Post 9926 wjll meet Sunday at
Rt. 1, Oak Holl.
highs Saturday in the upper 1 p.m. A dihner of corn beef
Born in Galtia County, he
20s.
Probability
of and cabbage will be served to
had been a fa rmer in Jackson precipitation 60 per cent me"':l bers and guests .
County for many years.
today and 30 per cent tonight
Schools of the Mehjs Loal
Survivors include his wife,
School Distri ct were op~n for
Cardella ; th r ee sons, Wen·
and Saturday,
dell , Oak Hlll ; George, Rio
Grande ; Marvi n, Grove City ;
one
daughter ,
Janet
Mark us le, Col umbu s ; 18
grandchildren; lwo great
grandch ildren ; one brother ,
Vincen t, Oak Hill and one
sister, Elizabeth Purdy,
Cleveland.
·
Funera l services will be

notice if anything seeins and 6 to 8 on Saturday. '
unusual in a home where
persons Jive alone, or are ill
Veteram Memorial Hospital
or elderly.
Admitted - Alfred Smith,
All
Senior
Citizens
Programs in the county are Pomeroy: Judith Bailey,
coordinated. thus creating a Pomeroy ; Mike Lewis,
"network of assistance" to · Middleport; John Newell,
the elderly when they have Long Bottom.
Discharged - Jennie lies,
need of it. By .working
together more persons are Mamie Buchanan. Velma
.helped - and dollars are Parsons , George Collins,
saved - as there is no Opal Barr, Nina Yates. ·

~ror
natlona
bank

upon the squad's arrival.

The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called. to Un ion

Ave .. al5;55 a.m. Friday for
Miss Nelle Bing wh·o was Ill .

She was ~ taken to Veterans

Memor ial Hospital. The
squad wentto Cave 51 . al9: 27
p.m. Thursday to treat James
Phillips. He was not
hospitalized.

Violation
charged
James A. Stewart, 54, West
. Columbia, W. Va. was
· charged with failure to stop
within the assured clear.
distance following a traffic
accident at 6:05 p.m. Thursday on SR 124 in Meigs
County.
The Gailia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said an
auto driven by Leona J.
Hutchinson, · 18, Rt. I,
Rutland, slowed for an
emergency vehicle but
Stewart faUed to stop his car.
It struck the rear end of the
Hutchinson · vehicle. There
was heavy damage to both
vehicles.
Roger L. Lovett, Zl. Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, was cited to
Gallipolis Municipal Court
for failure to yield ihe right of
way following an accident at
I:28 p.m. Thursday on SR 325
at the junction to CR 57 B.
The patrol ssid Lovett's
auto pulled into the path of a
southbound car operated by
Merrill J. Howard, 35, Rt. 2,
Bidwell.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

CUSTOM MADE DRAPERY SALE

iJ)

~1

OUR DECORATOR INDUSTRI.ES FINE QUALITY

% OFF
SALE ENDS
FEB. 12th
MAKE YOUR
SELECTIONS NOW

.:.7

·",' ~?
.,.

&gt;.

v v.~.

;.i~/
'+&gt;"'

.. ~ .......,......

·:'tt'J;
%·.d

r':,
¥:;;,_·h\.

Bring in your measurements. Let us help you decide
on pattern and color.
1.

OPENING DATE
f

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~~close

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

SNOW REMOVED - Employes of Pomeroy Street
Department were busy Thursday and Friday removing snow

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1977

from Lynn and Second Streets. Above a crew Ia busy on
Second Street.
·
·

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.t ntmt
MIDDLEPORlPOM EROY

PRICE 2§ CENTS

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:". CMSIS

in

GALLIPOLIS
Instructional
programs were outlined in case Kyger
Creek High School and Cheshire-Kyger
Elementary School, both heated by
natural gal, are forced to close due to the
· current energy crisis at·a special session
of tbe GallU. County Local Board of
Education Saturday morning.
The possibility of transporting Kyger
Creel&lt; High School atudents to North Gallia
High School waa dlscusaed and an in·
atructional program set up. If such a plan
Ia put into effect, NorthGaUia pupila would
attend school from appto.tmately 7 a.m.
to 12:1~ p.m. and Kyger Creek would have
lnltructlon between 12:1~ and ~:30 p.m.
· Cheahlre-Kyger Elementary students
and -enth and eighth graders from KC
would be trBDIIporled to Addaville School
where there would be clw sesaions from 8
am. to 12:30 and 1:30 to $:M p.m.
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc. said Thursday that it would be nec..aary !o eontlnue
to Umlt ill curtailed industrial and corn·
merdal customers to only that gas needed
to protect plant facillti .. until al least 8
a.m. Wednelday, Feb. 9. The board
authorized the cloalnj! of Kyger Creek
. ~School Monday and Tuesday because
of tbe energy crisis. Ch..hire-Kyger, a.
..,.u gaa u.er, Ia not in any Immediate
danger.
. The board aiao gave the adrninlllraUon authorization to put any plan
into effect in c..., the energy crisis makes
it neceaaary to do 10.
"We urt~e the cooperation and support
of parenll, teachers, employees and aU
dtilenl of the dtatrict so If we must close
acboola, we can enable studenll to com·
pleta their school year under these
· emerleDCY eondlti0111," 118ld Hairston.
_
Whether or not the above plan goes
• . to effect apparently wtll depend on the
~ curtailment continuing beyond Wed·
= Aeaday.

MIDDLEPORT - Schools of the
Meigs Local School District will · dose
Monday for an indefinite period, Supt.
Charles L. Dowler said Saturday.
The district's board of education met

Friday night it was decided to keep the
temperature in the buildings at a main·
tenance level-during the closing.
Meantime, Dowler said the basket·
ball program with only two more nome
games, Saturday nighland Monday, would
be completed. The auditorium of the high
school will not be healed for either contest,

continue In operation Mood~y.
BuUdiDgs, witb on1y minor exceptions,

classes·Monday alter havlng reopened

In mid·week'.

homework.
Springs, for a brief session Friday night

NEW SCOREBOARDS DEDICATED- Gallla Academy ..
High School's two new basketball scorebOards were
dedicated during halftime ceremonies of the GAHS-Waveriy
basketball game at G'allipolis Friday nigh!. The modern
scoreboards were donated by the three Galllpolls banks, Ohio
Valley, Commercial &amp; SaYings and First National Bank; and

•'wood Brldp not to eonfllct wtth bidUIIrlal
deYII I IIMl and a lonC'""'IRt,p!anand fSoRr
!qbway !Jnpro¥tmllll from S ..
. ~to the propoMCI brldp hu been endoroed
~ the Meip Coldy ~onal Planning

comm••on.

., Tbl Matca Coltllty ftallonal Planning
• C«nml•on couldll'llllil, action by the
CommliUiel'l to bt in the bill IIWeltl
rJ, Mlip County. There II 1 posalbillty of
iiiiiUtrlll cleYelopiiMIII in the eutam part
alllllpeoaMJ and the po opolld blihway
ralatton would "be Vllry ~cia I," a
ttptlt- uld.
.

Mr . and Mrs. Don Robinson. Bank representatives left to

right are Lou Lutton, First Natiooal; Wayn·e Niday,
Commerdaland Savings and Jeff Smith, Ohio Valley. On
right is Ed Stewart, GAHS athletic director, master of
ceremonies.

and agreed on the indefinite closing.
Earlier, when an indefinite closing
was planned, It' was feU that steps would be
taken to winterize all of the buildings of the
district using natural ~as. H;owever,

Employes

called hack

Contingency plans made for major flood

.=.

· the Melp Counlf Board of Commlaaionera
..; Wlllll blihWaY nlocatlon to the Ravena-

Dowler said an announcement will be
made on when schools wtll be reopened as
soon as It is known.

in special session at the high school, Rock

• or baptism Sunday

. .
POMI!IROY - A ieaoluUon paued by

Students of the Meigs Local District
attended classes Wednesday, Thursday
and Friday - the first time since Jan. 5and were given long range homework
assignments. Supt. Dowler ssid he will get
together with building principals Monday
or Tuesday to see if other plans can be
worked out for studenta lo return

Eastern Dlstrlcl beat wtlh fuel oil.
Meanwhile, Gallipolis City Schools
were scheduled to continue holding

.

endorsed by planners

however .

in the Southern Local District and

SAnty prepared

•

I

close Monday
Otber Meigs County schools were to

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30 pe,r cerit on custom made
DECORATOR
INDUSTRIES
DRAPERIES: A large selection of fabrics
suitable for any room In your home, for
offices. churches. Antique satin, sheers,
foam back textures. fiberglas. _
This 30 per
cent off sale also il!cludes matching custom
bedspreads and cut orders.

HIGHEST PRIORITY
CARACAS, Venezuela (UP!) ·- U. S.
Ambassador Viron Vaky said Saturday he
was confident Venezuelan law en·
forcement authorities were giving high
priority to the Investigation of the kid·
naping of William F. Niehous nearly a
year ago.
Nlehous, 45, vice president of the
giassmaking firm Owen~· Illinois of
Venezuela. was abducted from his home
· by armed, Marxist extremists Feb. 'll,
1976. There has been no contact from the
kidnapers since last June.

Meigs Local to

· Commission's action

Sa~e

flood insurance.
Cain indieated he would check to see If
tbere are any short cuts to speed up the
process.

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

NO. 1

...

WAlCH FOR

Pomeroy, 0.

&lt;. VOL 12

WASJIINGTON (UPI) ..,. }'resident
Carter took t~e major respon·
::lblllty for preparing · 9-year-old Amy
.ptually for her baptism Sunda~ in the
·-tiu'lltlan !lith, their Washlngton pastor
.llld.
· - Amy and Gladys Silo Mbua, 16, from
; ~ Cameroonl, were to be baptized at the
:;liart of Sunday's morning worahlp service
· :AI Flra Bapllat Church.
-:... Dr. Charlet Trentham, the senior
•;.ator, said the Prealdent and Mrs. Carter
·)pent 1bunday night talking with their
. ~t\IUihltr abOut the meanlnC of baptism
• ..00 church memberlhlp. 1bey alao read to
; :'.\my from hil book on church mem·
: JJerabip, "Daring Discipleship.:•

VACATION

application for Oood insurance:
Prosecuting Ally. Joseph L. Cain
eonducted Friday night's county meeting.
Cain outlined procedures for
establishing eligibility for the county .
First, the county will have to adopt a
building code of minimum standards.
H~wever, before than can be done, the
p"'posed regulations must be reviewed at
two public hearings.
The hearings must be advertised one
time a week for two successive weeks
before the first hearing at a re~ular
meeting of the commissioners, with the
second hearing to be held a week after the
first one.
•
Then commissioners can adopt the
regulations and file an application for

•
tmts

::ihd Mrs.

MEIGS ntEATRE .
CLOSED FOR

THE MEIGS INN

GAWPOUS - If a flood struck
• Gallla County today, none of Its rural
, rosidenll other than Cheshire would be
elleible for Oood Insurance under the
: 'NaUonai Flood Insurance Act of 1968.
County CommlssiDners, in special
lle58lon Friday night in Galliil County
. Pleas Court Room, discussed legislation
!or Rood insurance eligibillty and application for flood insurance.
• Thlrty·flve persons attended. Ail were
''
in .favor of Oood insurance.
• At present, only Cheshire village is
qualifled for Rood insurance. The village
has been quallfied for the past 18 months.
Last Wednesday night, the city of
Gailipoiia passed a flood insurance
!llCiblUty ordinanc.e and Is making an

....

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from

The Best In Live Entertainment

992-3629

serv,·ce

example, rural mail carriers
ai way S"k eepaneyeou I" an d

on Saturday, February 5.

Weather

Local news, in brief

Help · On Call
.
(Continued from page I)

For this reason we have set aside thi s r eriod
around St.Valcminc's Day as.ou r
"Customer Appreciation Time" .. '" lei rou Allfm

MAYORS DISCUSS FLOOD PLANS - Three Bend area mayors are shoWII with Dick
Grinstead, civil defense director of Mason County at a meeting Thursday evening to make
plans in case the area would face severe flooding. Left to right are Grinstead, May~r Fred
fay lor of Mason; Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews and Harlford
. . Mayor
. Charles Black.

Portsmouth, died around 11
p.m, Thursday In a PortsJohnson ,
Mason
Fire
mouth nursing home .
She was born March 2, 1888, Departmen t ;
Pomeroy
in Harrison Twp. , Gallia

home at 242 Beech St . In
· Middleport. · The Middleport

insurance wanted in

,. rural areas of Gallia County

--------------------------- 1
!I · Area Deaths !1

Cemetery

Sometimes, in the day today operations or our bank .
we forget 10 tell our t· ustorners

~ Flood

approximately 48 hours to get
ready after the Army· Corps
of Engineers announce a
nood.
Grinstead also told 'the
group that the civil defense
was planning for the worst; .
maybe four foot under the
Oood of 1937.
·
Ali
Bend
area
organizations pledged full
help to Meigs County to help
It prepare for the flood.
Present at the meeting
were Chief Jed Webster,
Pomeroy Police -Dept. ;
Charles W. Legar. Pomeroy
Fire Depurtment; Carl

MIKE SWISHER, coordinator of
lbe Gallia County OiBUier Services
Agency, noted lbat flOOd ~reparations
underwar now will alto help wtlb future
emergency situations.

Loans promised
for all stranded
NAIROBI, Kenya (UP!) - More than
1,000 American, British and other foreign
tourisl.tt remained trapped inside Tanzania
Saturday.and U. S. Embassy officials said
they would provide emergency loans for
travelers without funds.
Kenya Saturday expressed "serious
concern" and demanded an official explanation into Tanzania's surprise cioaure
of its border wtth Kenya and the leizure of
several Ught plan.. and.tour b......

See for himself
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Agriculture
Secri!tary Bob Bergland said Saturd~y he
will make · monthly tours of rural
American to "see for myself how thin~s
reaDy are."
Bergland also said he has ordered
Aariculture Department economic
forecutera to stop making crop preclic·
U0111 "baaed on the asoumption that we
wtU have normal weather."

GALLIPOLIS - More than 50
representatives of city and county government, area agencies and organizations.
utility CQmpanies, health racllities and
other Interested groupe made contingency
plans for a major nood or similar
emergency at the Gallipolis city bitllding
Friday night.
Presiding were Mike Swiaber, director
of the Gallia County Disaster Services
Agency, and Richard T. (Dick) Mills,
Gallipolis city manager and director or the
city's diss~ter program.
The purpose of the meeting was, ac·
cording to Swisher to alert area residents
to the dangers of a flood and establish a
plan of action in case that emergency
arises. Swisher emphasiied that although
it Ia not definite a Oood will occur, people
should be prepared. Mills and Swisher
noted that any phins developed would alao
belp handle other emergencies which
could occur in the future.
"What we team from this situation
could help us in any emergency," said
Swisher.
Swisher reported that each poUtical
subdivision Is respnoslbie for problems in
Ita area .
Flooding along the .Ohio River would
be gradual with a maximum rise of sir
inches per hour, according to a report by
the U. S. Army Corps of Einglneers' The
report alao ssid there would be some Oash
nooding in the county especially near
creeks. Other nood prone areas are Crown
City, Galjipolis, Kanauga, Addison and
Cheshire.
Poaslbie problems mulling from a
.nood cited by Mills and Swisher included :
(II Water line ruptures caused by
debris or flood water.
( 2) Contaminated drinking water.
(3) The rupture of sanitary lines
creating a health problem.
(I) Isolation of particular areas and
getting services to them.
(&amp;), Storaae tanka containing flam·.
rnable or toxic llquida floating down river.
(6) Mobile homes which are not an·
chored securely.
Some preparauona which could be
made by officiaia at present are to devise
an .appropriate emergency plan and
procedure, advise the public of the
lituaUon, cbeck auxiliary generators,
make electrical and aa• Une Inspections to
prevent accidents. plan for adequate fOod,
housing and storage and c:beck auxiltary
generators.
Swisher urged home owners lo keep an.
adequate stock of food on hand along with
omergency cooking equipment, flashlights
rnlll lanterns), portable radios, first aid
kill, automobile furl, inediclnts, and
sandf&gt;!oR•, lumber and plastic meeting. He
also recommended reslde'nts store
drink!-. water in rlosed and dean con·

tainers, and H the Oood begins move
furniture to safe storage areas. If it ls
necessary to leave the home, turn off
utilities, he concluded.
Following a flood, water should be
tested and fresh food which may have
CO!Ile in contact with flood water should
not be eaten.
Several organizations reported on
their progress in making nood plans.
Reports were heard from Tim McClelland
of the Gallia County Rural Water Assn.;
Joe Alley, county ssnitation director:
Mills; Hugh P. Kirkel, executive vice
president, Holzer Medical Center; Thelma
Shaver, Gallia County Red Cross; John
Weeks , Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co.; Jake Koebel, Columbia Gas;
Clyde Ramsay, Buckeye Rural Electric
·Co.; Gary Owens, Ohio Bell; Gallia County
Sheriff Ray Roberts ; Gallipolis Police
Chief John Taylor; U. Ernest · Wiggles·
worth, Ohio State Highway Patrol :
Gallipolla State Institute: Bud Carter,
Gallia County extension agent,
agriculture; Joe Barsotti, director of the
Community Action Agency; Communi!~
Mental Health Center.
Swisher urged all agencies to eontinue
with their plans and to keep him·infomied
on their progress.

. RAVENSWOOD - The indefinite
layoff of approximately 1,000 employees at
the Kaiser Aluminum Plant wtll end
Monday as workers on the midnight shift
are scheduled to return to their joba.
According to a prepared company
statement: "All shifts beginning with the
midnight shift Monday will report to work
as usual and continue to do so until at Jeut
Wednesday at 8 a.m. On Wednesday
Columbia Gas will review its gas cur·
!ailment order.
.
Apparently, shipments of propane
have reached Kaiser, although the
statement ssid propane levels are still low.
Kaiser Aluminum like many other
industrial plants an~ large commercial
businesses in West Virginia were curtailed
by Columbia Gas, early in the "eek.
Kaiser received a 1110 per cent curtailment
,on ill operating gas and an 80 per cent of
ill maintenance gas.

I

Six men cliarged
in Davies killing
NICOSIA, Cyprus (UP!) - Police
formally charged six men, including two
DICK MILLS, Gallipolis dly former policemen, in eonnectlon with the
manager, dlscussed current flood 1974 assassination of U. S. Ambassador
preparaUono In GalllpoUs al a meeting Rodger Davies.
Friday night at the elly building. ,
Diatrlct Court Judge Joha PoytadJil
', ordered
five of the auapecta held "without
bail for eight days while pollee complete
their investigation. 1be sixth defendant,
former pollceman loannia Kllrnatlaa, Ia
alrelidy serving a prison term for lllega1
Center by the Pomeroy and Middleport possession of firearms.
emergency squads.
There was extensive damage to the
rea~ of the tractor-trailer. Chief Cremeans
said the driver will be charged with
LIKE IT AT 55 MPH
re&lt;kless operation.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Surveys
indicate most American motorisl.tt wan! to
keep !lie national speed Urnit at 55 mlla
per hour, the · Department of Trans·
porlation ssid Saturday.

Brothers of Pomeroy injured
MIDDLEPORT - Two Pomeroy
brotbere were serioualy injured in Mid·
dleport about 6:15 p.m. Friday when the
car in which they were riding craahed into
the rear of a ·tractor-trailer parked on
South Third Avenue.
Middleport Police Chief J. J.
Cremeal\l, said the car waa driven by
Bl'llce Hawley, M, Pomeroy. He and his
brother, Jtlf, 21, a passenger were taken
to Veler8DII Memorial Hoopitai, but were
later transferred to the Hol!er Medical

P1ace for criticS
NEW DEJJ!I (UPI) - Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi opened ber campaiiJI for reelection Saturday with a rally for about
100,000 penons at which she angrily
denounced critic• of the national state of
emer1ency sbe impoaedl 19 months ar.o.
Waving a clenched fiat, Mra. Gan;ihl
uid ·:Which aovemment ii1 the w"rld
would have tolerated the goings on of the
pre-emergeney dayt! U any foretan
govoi'IIJllent tria to tell us how to run
India. let ihtm go to hell."

Biggest boondoggle
maybe of all time

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Many of th~
6S world organizations to which the United
States contributes more than '' billion a
year are "ineffective, top-heavy with high.paid officials and uncertain in their putposes," a Senate report ssld Saturday.
The 110-page repOrt said U. S. lax·
payers contribute the money to an
alphabet soup of global agencies - one
quarter of their total funding - yet are
under-represented and out-voted on all.
It Is the first sweeping Senate In·
vestlgation and report on such in·
ternational organit~tiona in 2$ yean. They
range from the Aalan Development Bank
to the World Food Program and tile Well
Africa Rice Otvelopment Asaociation.

NO DANGER

Dr. Ackerman said that
cooler homos involved no
known dangers to health, u
. long as one is well-dreaseli: in
fact, because lowering Indoor
temperature
generally
raises reU.tive humidity and
the cooler air has leu drying
eflect on rnucoua membrane,
IQIIle people report 'fe"er
colda and 10re throall in cool
homea.

I
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�,f
A-2- The SliJI(!ay Times-5entinel, Sunday, Feb. 6.1977

Nine fined in county court
POMEROY
Nine
defendants were fined and six
oChers forfeited bonds In
Meigs &lt;Alunty Court:
Fined by Judge Robert E.
Buck were James R. Koenig,
Middleport, $11 and costs,
speeding ; Howard S. Shank,
Pomeroy , ·$14 and costs ,
speeding; Samuel K. Elliott,
McConnelsville, $5 and costs,
turning
left
without •
signaling; Charles W. Sam·
pon, Bere~, Ohio, $20 and
costs, unable to stop within

.,..ured clear dlstance: Tim
Bentz, Racine, $50 and costs,
aid in possession and transportation of illegal taken
deer ; Earl M. Johnson ,
Middleport, $15 and costs,
unable to stop within assured
clear distaQce; Sandra K.
Johnson, Racine, $20 and
costs, left of center; William
C. McComas, New Straitsville, $10 and costs, stop sign;
s.izie J. Province, Marietta,
$150 ahd costs, four days
confinement, driving while
intoxicated.

Young American• for
Freedom, and M. Stanton!
Evans, chairman of the
American Conservative
Unlon, told reporters they donot think there will be
$gnlficant senljment .at the
three-day · meeting to
organize a new conservative
party structure.

ON BACK BURNER
WASHlNGTON (UP! )
Sponsors of the fourth annual
Conservative Political Action
Conference said Friday they
believe conservative activists
wlll put "the third ~rty
option on the back burner" in
the first years of the Carter
·
administration.
Jeffrey Kane. chairman of

Forfeiting bonds were
Michael L. Rosier, Fairmont,
W. Va., $27.50, failure to
yield: Ket)l1eth C. Beaty,
Belpre, $27.50, speeding;
Jeffery E. Proffitt, Portland,
$11.35, aid in taking Illegal
deer : George R. Brown,
Dunbar, $27.50, stop sign;
Walter W. Benson, Jr.,
Athens, $21.50, expired
drivers license; John H.
Burgess, Cleveland, $51 .20,
no vatid operators license,
$21.50, speeding.

RIO GRANDE - The
Agricultural Mech~nics class
of the Buckeye Hills FFA
represented their chapter in
the District 14 Small gas
engines contest Feb. 3 at the
Tri-County Joint Vocational
School at Nelsonville.
Buckeye Hills placed 7th

out of 13 teams participating
in the contest. Wendell Me·
Goy of Jackson, who instructs
the junior Agriculture
Mechanics class, is the FFA
advisor in charge of training
small gas engine teams for
the vocational school. McCoy
com mented , "Th• boys

performed well due to the
many days they had to be out
of ~chool due to inclement
weather". Competing were
Jim Thevenir, North Gallia ;
Roger Downey, Jackson;
Paul Livingston and Tom
Mitchem, both North Galtia.

Each Ohioan· worked
4 months last year
to pay his · taxes
COLUMBUS (I.Jt't ) ~ The
Ohio Public Expenditure
Council reports the average
Ohioan earning between
$10,000 and $15,000 a year
worked the first four months
of 1976 to pay all of his
fede ral , state and loca l
government taxes.
That breaks down for the
• - year to two hours and 39
minutes of every eight-hour
workday - one hour and 41
minutes for Uncle Sam and 58
minutes each day for state
and local goverrunent taxes.
Futhermore, the non-profit
business su pported pub lic
agency says the average
worker had to work longer in
1976 to pay these .taxes than
for food, housing, beverages ·
and household expenses.
Ohioans paid $11 billion,
$194.4 million in federal taxes
in 1915 or 71 per cent of all
taxes colle cted in Ohio,
according to Tax Foundation,
I• • •
nationally known research
:-: . aorganization.
In state taxes
they paid $3 billion, $762.2
million and $2 billion, $956.6
million in local taxes.
Charles Calhoun, executive
director of the expenditure
council , said · that with
const antly increasing costs to
run governments at all levels,
JL bt:comes imperative that
"'ays be found to use tax
dollars more economically,
more product! vely .
Calhoun hin\self took part
in a six-month study of Ohio's
boards and commissions as a
member of Gov. James A.
Rhodes' Task Force on Commission Review. The ta sk

. .·..

.

rorce endorsed c'Ost-cutting
methods by eliminating same
age nci,es, consolidating
others.
Did Ohio get its fair Share
of federal revenues in return?
Richard G. Sheridan ,
legislative bud get officer,
said-Ohio r ece ived $124.25 per
capita in intergovernmental
revenue from Uncle Sam in
1975 - not _much when
compared to the nation
average lor states of $170.18,
placirig Ohio 41th in this
category .
The tqtal general revenue
fund in Ohio in 1915 was
$475.06 per capita, also 41th in
the nation in state general
revenue per capita.
Ohio ranked 33rd in the
return in per capita tax
burden from state and local
goverrunental taxes. Worse
yet, Ohiois tax burden per
capita from all state taxes
was estimated ·to be $282.48,
44th in the nation . The
national average state tax
burden per capita was
'
$377.37.
The loca lly -imposed
personal property tax on reai
es tate, public utility and
tangible personal property
produced $2 billion, $341.6
million in 1976, accounting for
34.9 per cent of total statelocal tax collections.
Calhoun said this is B9.6 per
cent higher than it was 10
years ago. It represents an
mcrease of $1 billion, $106.3
million in property taxes
during the past decade.

This produces the rna jor
revenues to operate Ohio's
schools
and
local
governments. Yet
elementary and secondary
schools received only 4.5 per
cent more in property tax
revenues in 1976 as compared
to 1966.
" It should be noted that the
89.6 per cent increase in total
property taxes during the
ll'JSt I0 years has occurred
despite property tax relief
granted to real property and ·
tangible personal property
owners," CalhoWl said.
Ohioans compla in about
high property taxes yet Ohio
ranked 28th nationa lly in per
capita
property
tax
collections in fiscal year 1975,
he said.
:I'he s•l•" and use taxes still
produce the most revenue in
Ohio. Net collections for the
fisca l year ending June . 30,
1916, amounted to $1 billion,
$17.9 million. In addition,
$82.5 million was levied by 32
COWlties and one transit authority and collected by the.
state.
state and local income tax
collectionS for 1976, including
the state corporate franchise
tax, amounted to $1 billion,
$433.8 million . An estimated
$540 million of this total was
imposed by cities and
villages.
The latter flat-rate tax is
paid by individuals and
business. Rates ranged from .
one fourth of one per cent to a
high of two per cent.

Editor'• note - Gtl
Doddo, wbUe lD bta prime,
vtalled GalUpoU. ill April,
IHI, a1 &amp;Uell opeaker lor
the aanual fath er-son
banquet at the Flrol
Bapllat Church In the old
French City. WhUe here
Dnddo dedicated Galltpolla:.
Memorial Field tract. A
year later, the lint auual
GalUpoU. Rotary Club's
GU Dodds MUe !tun was
held bt Dodds' honor. The
event is altll held every
spring uder the sponsonblp or· the Gallipolis
Rotary Club.

,.;;_~,.""'

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ST. CHARLES, IU. (UPI)
- GU Dodds, the lamed

..,

Sweat-Prul leothtr intoltl
Bornrord . Prul oiled ltathtr uppers
Non-Skid, non-morlling cofk 5oltl
Arch ~upportin9 stulthankl
•
A· t uu -fire value lor the mOn who Wonll hi1 monty '• worth

PRESIDENT CARTER is still ·opposed to outright controls, but intends his
administration to take an active role in curbing wage and price increases. In his economic
message, the President alerted &lt;Alngress that he intended to follow up with a strengthening
of the Council on Wage and Price Stability to enable It to "more actively" monitor price and
wage hikes.

"running parson" who once
held the world record for the
,Illdoor mile run and
pioneered the breaking of the'
four· mlnute mile barrier ,
died at St. Charles' Delnor
Hospital Friday of com·
plications following a stroke.
He was 58.
Dodds, a resident of West
Chicago, suffered a stroke .
Jan. 10 and underwent
surgery 11 dlys later, He
returned h(IJle but lapsed
into a coma two days ago and
was rehospitalized.
In recent years, Dodds, an
ordained minister, served as
a counselor at Naperville
Central High Sd)ool and was
active as a starter for prep
and coUeglate track meets in
the are.a , He previously
coached track at Illinois'
Wheaton CoUege.
A graduate o'f As'bland
College, Dodds was one of
America's' top · distance
runners during the 1940's. He
establlsbed a world record
for the indoor mile run at the
Millrose Games in 1948 whenhe clocked 4:06.3.
Dodds ro~~e to world-wide
fame as the first of the

Stock. "

JUST A WARNING
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Senate Democratic Leader
Robert Byrd said today he
has warned Pres,i_dent Carter
·that the nomination of Paul

'

Warnke as his chief arms
control negotiator "has some
prob'lems" in the Senate. But
Byrd said he did not intend
the warning as a signal that

the President should with·
draw Warnke's nomination
as director·of the U. S. Arms
Control and Disarmament
Agency.

___ __
,

+

uasa1: c"'vOR

runners of his time to dtacard 11154 and later by John Landy'
the theory that itwaa beyond
His groatelt fame (Ule In
the abtlity of a human to run a the early 11110'1 '!lhen he waa
four-minute mile. He ran in competlni for the Booton
an era which included Glenn Athletic Club. In 1944 he
Cunningham and Gene retired
from
active
Venzke1 runners who competitlm in order to study
bellevea the on)y poulble lor the mJnlltry, but he
way to run a four-minute mile returned to track following
was to run one quarter in 62 to his ordlnatiCII.
64 seconds, thus reserving
DOdcll quaUIIed for the
energy for a tremendous final Olympic trlala to pick
"kick" on the final lap.
the U.S. team In 1943 but
Dodd&amp; astounded the world suffered a pulled Achilles
of track and field by lllndon In his heel and ....
"•printing" the mile unable to compete for the
attempting to Mill lour IJO. team. In August of liMB he
second quarters. His new · retired from amateur
style caught the imgination of Competition to become track
track and Held fans of his era coach at Wheaton &lt;Alllege and,
and led to the ultimate lel'Ved in that capacity for
breaking of !be folD' minute more than a decade.
barrier by Roger Bannister in

We challenge you
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LYNECENTERSCHEDULE
Woek of Feb. 7, 1977
DATE- GYMNASIUM
Feb. 7 CLOSED
Feb, 8 CLOSED
1jo p.m. Ric vs . Mt. Vernon

Nalarene, "JIMMY NOE NIGHT"
.
hatf-tlme
Feb. 9 ~ : 10-10: IOp.m. College Rec.
9: 10-10:10 p.m.
Public Sw im
Feb. 10 l : ll p.m. JV's vs. Ol! Ch ilticothe
7-9 p.m. Publtc Rec.
7-9 p.m. Public Swaim
Feb. II CLOSED · x
CLOSED - x
Feb. 12 CLOSED
CLOSED
6 p.m. Redwomen vs. OSU Newark
Feb. 13 2-4p.m. Pub lic Rec.
2-4p.m. Public Swim
7-9 p.m. College Re c.
7-9 p.m . Public Swim
x · NOTE : Due to the energy cr isis, Family Recreat ion

Night has been cancelled unt i I Spring Quarter In March.

Boys
,
Ohio High Schoof
8asketbafl Results
United Press tnternattonat
Akron Firestone 57 Akron
South 49
Aurora IS Solon 73
Barberton

102

War ren

Hard ing ll
Barboursville {W Val 55
Portsmouth l3

CORNE.R
JtiiRD &amp; PINE
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Boardman 81 Howland 61

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Brunnerdale 83 New Phllly
Heritage 60
Buckeye South 81 Shadyside
15

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~anton Timkln 102 Jackson 6l

Carlisle 74 Dixie 611
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~n novations in local .tel evisiOn journalism. Now we re f1rst aga1 n · w1th the
TK-76.
The TK--76 is a tuliy portable, lightweigh t. color telev ision camera nO~ in use in
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Score by quarters :

Wahoma
Wayne

17 14 26 22- 79
16 27 U li)-76

i'
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i

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BLOC~t ·

Pomeroy, Ohio

27 SYCAMORE ST.

Tuscara wa s

Gallipolis
Phone 992 -3795 446-0303
Open 9 A.M. . 6 P.M. Weekdays, ,.s Sat.
NECE SSARY

GOING TO HOOP - Tim Smith (14), high point man
in Wahama's 19-76 win over vialting Wayne, drives to the
wcket for a two-pointer. The White Falcons chalked up
their fifth win of the season.

Oxford

Talawanda 61

Lima Shawnee 73 Lima Cafh
68
Logan 66 Meigs l2
Lorain Cath 77 Lak e Calh 69
Madison

68

Edgewood sa

Sears

Ashtabula

Malvern "62 Gar away 60

Massill on 56 Ni les McK inley
l2
McDona ld 68 Lowellvi lle 43
McMechen { W Va) Guernsey

Cath 6l
Medina l2 North Olmsted 48

.Y.endon .Union 71 New Knox- -

ville 61
·
Mentor 55 Willoughby South
ll
Middletown 76 Lima Sr 71
Milford B2 tCin Deer Park sa
Mogadore 78 Windham 77 (otl

'15% to 20% off

Philo 58 Maysvitl.e l~

Pike Eastern 79 Pike Western

66
Port Clinton 82 Bedford 65

Ravenna Southeast 75 Roots-

town 53
Ridgewood 87 Strasburg 71
River 87 Paden City (W Va)
70
Sandusky 69 Fremont Ross 64
Sandy Valley 69 Lake 59
Shenandoah lB Frontier 55
Sidney Lehmon 69 Bethel 62
Southington 77 Farmington 54
Springboro 82 Little Miami 60
. Summit County Day 76 Seven
Hills 41
·
Stow 4'1 Ravenna 36
•
Sylvonla No rth vlew 56
Fostoria 45
Symmes Valley 66 North
Gaffla 50
Tallmadge 54 Nordonla ~5
Tlflln Calvert 66 Sandusky St
Mary 65
Trenton Edgewood 12 New
Miami 65 ·

Tri-Valley 64 New Concord J

Gil

_.9
Valley 73 Por;tsmouth Notre
Dame 51
VandalIa Butler 6~ Fa irborn
Baker 57

Twinsburg 51 Kenston

Warren

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Northwest 64 Por tsmou th .__

Perry 67 l ouisvil le 39

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Mt Gilead 82 Marion Cath 54
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Ohio Deat 87 tndlaria Deal n
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Cut '30 to '40

kitchen cabinets

Monroe Sl Talawanda 61

Fireplace

Orde r

and brass knobs separately
below.

CUT 1!1%

#3ROO- H r arth ~ idr

on l y ...

vert ical vent chimney kit

bled i1r par:-ll v assfmbl ctl
f:tt b·

inc·li, J•urlly ~~~~l'inlll r .l

CUT 20 %

NOW

Formica brarid
countertops
cut 20%

43" Fireplace

Was

$179.99

SAVE
'30 to '35

Gas ~ater heate rs
with 3·slage
autol)latic flame

Series "55"
Was SIJ9.99
40-gat.

Ruff 'N Tuff
carpet

30 off digital
garage door open'
1

Series H7 5"
Was 5154.99
~o.gat .

499
_ . ,-11.

Was S5 .99

11()999
'

Indoor
W~! S4.99
'3~yd.
Indoor-outdoor I

SALE '154~

•11999

Oi gi1111l ~Ontrolle111 you set

~

your own privau~ code.

sio to S20 off garage doors

5q ,

66

Mathews VIenna 51
Warren Local 110 Federal
Hocking 61
Warren Kennedy 68 Poland 66
{ot)
..
Warren Western Reserve 98
Salem 62
Warrensville 60 Cuyahoga
Hts so
Wellston 82 Athens· 76
Westerville North .\9 Mt
Vernon 54
Woodsfield 89 Unl011 Local 47
Worthington 59 Westland l4
Youngs Chaney 79 Youngs

LARRY'S WAYSIDE f·URNITURE
FINE FURNITURE

Lakeland

U -l ; BroWning . 12-4; Queen. I-1·3. Totals Jl -1476.

618 EAST MAIN

lront011 74 Jackson 37
Kings Mills Kings 60 Waynes·
vi lle 52

Fenw ick 63

...

....

47

8; Perry, 4-0-8; Johnson, 3-1·

7 ; Michael

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

5'

54

Cin LaSalle 80 Cin Moeller 59
.Cin Landmark 77 Cln Country
Day 63 .
'
Cln Madeira 73 Cln Mar ie·
mont sa • .
Cin Taft 73 Cln Aiken 64
Cin Western Hills 71 Cln
Withrow 59
Chi Woodword 67 Cln Walnut
Hills ll
Claymont 74 Minerva 55 .
Cle Collinwood 70 Cle Ken ·
nedy 69
·
Cle St Ignatius 96 Cte Max
Hoyes 47
Col Brookhaven 79 Cot West
II
Col Central 63 Col South 62
Col East 7:1 Col Mohowk 69
Col Linden 96 C~l Whets lone
73 .
Col Mifflin 48 Col North land
41
Col Ridge 66 Col In dependence 36
Covington 57 Versa illes 51 {2
ot)
Defiance 75 Delphos St John
71
Euclid 69 Maple Heights 61
Fa irfield 57· Hamilton Gar field 54
Fa irport 68 Perry SO
Franklin His 56 Homllton
Twp 62
Fronklln 69 Middletown

H&amp;R

Hamilton Taft 7·5 Cin Prin-

N~wcomerstown

WAHAMA 179) - Sm ith , J.
5-19; Soyre, 6-6-18: Goldsberrvb4·l·ll ; Nlcewonder. 42-10 ; avis, 1-7-9; Tucker, 13-l ; Blessing . 0-3-3. Totals 2333-79.
WAYNE (761 - Canterbury.
8-0-16 ; S. Arrowood, 7-0-14; D.
Arrowood, 2-7-11 : Dunkle, 3 -~

People don't come to H&amp;R Block just to
have their tax form s filled out. They come
because Block can help them save
money. We dig for every honest
deduction and credit. And we see that
you get the benefit of the latest changes
in the tax law.

Groveport 78 Gahanna 58

N

•

Reason No.} why H&amp;R Block
should ao your taxes.

Girard 64 Canfield 61

ceton 69 toll
Ind ian Valley

Holding an eight point edge
going into the final period the
Wliite Falcons bad to hold on
for dear Ufe before emerging
victoriouo.
In addition to Bamltz and
Rawlings in the scoring
column lor Wahama were
Phil Hobbs with 10 markers,
Charley Zuspan with 8 anJ
Kelvin Honaker with 4.
The UtUe Falcons upped
their record to 4 and 3 on the
year and Uke the varsity are
slated to see action four
times. next week.
Box score:

"We do
than just
fill out tax
forms. We can help
you save money."

Mad ison 68
Ff Loramie 81 Houston 76
Galtlpolls 5' Waverly 4l
Garrettsville Garf ield 62
Crestwood 46

Cenlervilte 69 Stebbins 56
C~agrln Falls 43 Orange 40
Cln Elder 87 Cln Roger Bacon

'

" ~

three point lead at 19-16 with
just 16 · seconds remaining.
A last second shot by
Wayne failed to fall through
and Wahama ra n out the
clock to preserve the victory.
The White Falcons, under
the 811Spices of &lt;Alach Jim
Scherr, in his second year at
the Bend area school, will
take the court on four out of
six nlghtB next week in what
may be termed as a suicide
schedule.
On Monday, the Falcons
journey into Meigs County to
tallgle with a much improved
Meigs Marauder quintet.

SAN JOSE, Calli. (UP!) The San Jose Earthquakes
outbid a first division
Belglwn SQCcer club Friday
to sign all;North American
Soccer League midfielder
Antonio Simoes of Portugal.
Quakes owner Milan Mandaric, or! a player signing trip
to Europe, closed the deal
with Simoes, who reportedly ·
was offered a substantial
contract by the Belgium club.

Cath 48
Lakeview 53 La Brae 49
La kewood St Edward 66
Trinity 42
Lebanon 75 Mlddlel own

'

'

were
The
Marauders
scheduled to meet Wellston
"!5! night at R~k Sprin~s .
Following Monday's clash
with Meigs the White Falcons
return home on Tuesday
against Duval, who , like
Spencer, has received
mention in the Class "AA "
State rankings.
Ravenswood and Southern
close out the wee}t on con·
secutive evenings with the
Red Devils meeting the locals
on the Wahama court on
Friday and Southern en·
terteining the Red and White
on Saturday to close out the
week .
In the preliminary match
Wahama 's reserves got a 29
point performance from Bob
Bamitz and an 18 point night
from Todd Rawlings to defeat
the Utlle Pioneers by a slim
58-56 margin .

Friday's high school scores

KING

10:30 a.m. til Midnight

,j• .,

Pool
CLOSED
CLOSED

If/

Friday- Saturday

ByUARY CLARK ,
MASON - After dropping a
narrow 85-63 decision to
highly touted Spencer in their
last outing, the Wahama
White Falcons rebounded to
take a narrow '19-16 win over
the visiting Wayne Pioneer•
Friday night.
The White Falcons, in
chalking up their fifth vidory
of the year , looked everything
but impressive in the foul
inlested contest, unlike that
of the Spencer game when
they went down to defeat.
The local charges traDed
the Wayne Countians in total
'field goals 31 to 23, but more
than made up the difference
by converting a whopping 33
free throws. Wayne managed
to sink just 14 charity tosses
spelling defeat for the
visitors.
Wahama placed lour men
in twin figures with their
leading scorer Duke Smith

paving the way with 19
tallies. He was followed close
behind by Tim Sayre who
turned in one ol his best ef·
forts of the year with 18
markero.
Mike Goldsberry and Bob
Nlcewander also contributed
double scoring figures with 15
and 10 points respectively.
Wayne was led by Warren
Canterbury with 16 points
while Scott Arrowood and his
brother Dana added 14 and
11 markers respectively.
The contest went right
down to the wire with
Wahama pulling away for a

£:\UZ(

. .~. . . . . . .~~.-··~~~··...~-

Come in and let us give you the fact s about
Quasar Quallty .... and ·save you money
during the Quasar Val ue Challenge Sellathon .

Falcons chalk up fifth win

Gil Dodds, famous mile
ruTJ.ner, claimed Frithy

Ckipptwo; tht' p.ople
who btl itvt in th All
LEA THEil: boot onll tht
Goodrtar leather Wtlt

Ag·Mechanics class competed at district 14

.

C-3-The S~y Times-sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6, 1977

Wilson 59
Youngs Rayon l4 Youngs E 50
Youngs S 61 Youngs N 5'
Youngs Mooney o10 Aus tintown 1' Itch 29
Youngs Ursuline 66 Hubbard
54

'15 off aluminum
stQrm/screen door
SALE

Kenmore
dishwasher

SALE 1}1J9'5

'4418

Pre-hunp: 1inor has 2: lnU~f•,

Un\lert·(, unlt•r model li te

r
gl11t18 t1creen, aafety ~lau.

in IIDIIH' llllllC' tl l&amp; l:f. )OU r

rhan~rahl t ins~rl!

m,..

motld , . ,

c&lt;U)'

old

to im~lall .

Shippin~r, installation extra
PASADENA, CaUl. (UP!)
~The :lltb amual Slrine AUliar Football Game wiD be
played at the Rose Bowl on
Satlarday, July 23, a
apokuman for tbe · A1
Maltihh llhrlne Temple announced Friday.

oPrl~~• are Catnlo~; [&gt;rices

1

~.89

off Early
One fire detector
SALE

'21"•·

lh!si11nt'd to sen~ fir e in
iu t' tul if'ttl 8111 11t'fl.
2 alarms only S55.98 ea .

'130 off Sears Bet
2-HP paint spray~
SAL~ '259"
Powerful cnouRh to opel ~
IU~ 2 ~pro~· IUIDS •t Olll' e-i

+

For air tools, in8ectlr.ide.

Catt Clllrlle Brown ·for expert instatta'tfcin.

• 'St·nr• lin• a credi t plan lo suit moot e' 'et')' nrrd

• Now on sole

Sotis/action Guaralll f't'd or YoUr Money Back

Convenient! Sho p Sears
Catalog by Phone

446-2770
,r

Sears
StAR8, ROEBUCK AND CO.

SILVER BRIDGE

PL~

�'
A~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6, !977

A+-TheSund!l'Tlmes-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6, 1971

'

Cattle decline
WASHINGTON (UPI) An annual Agriculture
Pepartment !lUrVey shows
the number of cattle :!elined
last year at lhe fa: _.,.t ra~
since 1948, plunging 4per cent

10 reach 122.9 rnlUlon head 011
Jan. 1.
But the drop did not go as
far as expert! had predicted.
And a department specialist
said 19'17 beef . supplies will
prooobly not fall as fast as
previous forecasts indicated
and retail beef jnires will n61
rise as much as expec~.
In forecasts initially issued
last fall, experts said 19'17
beef production could drop
about 8 per cent. · Retail
prices, they said, would rise
from the $1.39 average of 1976
to a proooble record $1.49 breaking the old mark of $1.48
set in 1975.
Economist Eldon Ball said
It now appears production
may decline only 4 to 5 per
· cent, depending on weather
and forage condltiO!lB later

thts year.
·
And retail prices for all of
· 1977 may go up 6 cents a
pound instead of 10 cents reaching $1.45 for all cuts of
choice grade beef, slightly
below the old record.
Ball said retail beef prices
in the first quarter of 1977,
although up slightly from the
closing months of 1976, are
expected to average below
the first quarter of last yt..tr.
Most 19'17 cattle and beef
price increases are expectoo
to come in the Ia te part of the
year, he said.
The Jan. 1 estimate of
cattle herds was 7 per cent
below the level of two years
ago as producers continued to
trim herds. Experts predict
further decline in the corning
year because farmers have
been losing money on cattle
in past years.
· Agriculture economists,
who were softening their
meat price forecasts even
before the new cattle survey

Week-end Woodsman
prefer

HOMELITE"Chaln
.You can 11111 care ot every out

doo r woodcutting ;ob. ct ..n up
storf!'l damage, eut down d81d or
unwen'-&lt;t !lees. prune end lllilO.

clear brush and Npllng$. If you·ve
prlo ed a c ord or firewood letely,
yo u'll realln now much money
yo u can sawe wlln a Homelllt
cheln 11 w.
Come In lhle weelo.,
we'd be happy to demonstrate
one of the new lut-cuttlng,
_veruute Homel i te~al o a~a .

Chester

985-3308

POWELL'S
I

Store Hours

8 A.M.-10 P.M.

io

By STEVE GERSTEL

Mon.-Sat.

WASHINGTON (UPl )
Alta' a few days In the White
House, President Carter
learned a few things about
the Congress which, in the
long run, just might make life
~asler for him.
·
· One: The Senate moves at
its own pace.
Two: Congressional egos
are easily bruised.
Carter apparently was
miffed that the Senate
declined to confirm all
members of hts Cabinet so
they could be sworn in as a
_group at the White House on
the Sunday after the
Inauguration.
The ceremony was held
anyway - minus Attorney
General Griffin Bell, Labor
Secretary F. Ray Marshall
and HEW Secretary Joseph
Califano Jr.
But Carter used the
ceremony to take a gentle
swipe, charging that the
Senate was a "little stronger
on advice than on consent."
As It was , the Senate
approved 8 of the 11 Cabinet
members in rapid fashion the
afternoon
of
the
inauguratloo . But there were
objections to immediate
consideration of the others
and demands for roll..,all
votes.
Mayhap the Senate could
have met Friday and
Saturday- going into session
early and quitting late - to
confirm the other three.
But senators do not like to
be rushed and attempts from
the outside to speed the
process often backfire into
more delay. And Saturday off
is jus! about sacrosant.
The second lesson to be
learned from the first days is
a question of protocol in
inviting
members
of
Congress for consultations on
legislation.
The Friday after lnaugura·
tion, a White House meeting
was held to determine what
could be done about the
increasingly serious shortage
of natural gas. Carter
ordered the meeting but did
not sit in on it.
The members of Congress
invi~d to participa~ w~re

10 A.M.-10 P.M.
Sunday

•

Prices Effective
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OHIO

Thru Feb. 12th

.

'

·~

'
---~~
_..,.
A:;J W

.

•

THE wAY IT wAS - The above scene of the 1913 Oood, reproduced from a post card owned by the Mason Historical
Society, shows the effects of the high water on the town of Mason,
was issued Wednesday, said
the improved meat supply
prospects wlll help offset the
higher Rrices consumers face
for winter vegetables and
citrus products following
recent freezes.
The Agricuiture report said
the number of cows in the
country was estimated at 52.4
million on Jan. I, down 4 per
cent from a year earlier. A 5
per cent decline was
estima~d for beef cows and a
I per cent drop for dsiry .
cows.
The · 1976 calf crop was
estimated in the report at 41.4
million head·, down 6 per cent
from 1915 but about half a
million above previous forecasts. The report estimated
there were 12.6 million head
of cattle on feed for slaughter
Jan. !,down 3per centfrom a
year earlier.

YOU CAN'T DO
BETTER ANYWHERE
When It Comes

Record ·as employer of
•
• •
mmont1es gets worse
•

By BERNARD IIRENNER
UPI FARM EDITOR
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
Agriculture
Department's olie¢ritlclzed
record as an employer of
mlnorl ty Alllerlcana got
worse last year alter
improving In lll?S. But It's
going to improve again 1100n,
a-top olfldal predicted today.
"We've absolutely got to do
be~r, and we.'re working
hard at it," J.P. Bblduc,
assistant secretary of
agriculture
for
administration said In an
interview.
"I'm optimjstlc that we 'II
see Significant progress .in a
matter of three or four
months," Bolduc said.
The official's comments
came
after
equal
employment specialists told a
reporter in response to
questions
that
the
cte'partment's minority
employment percentage which includes Blacks ,
Hispanics and other radal
minorities - went from 10.9
·per cent in 1974 to 11.2 per
. cent in 1975 but dropped back
to 10.9 per cent last year.
Bolduc said one reason for

O'Leary's ideas
on·fuel given
WASlflNG TON (UP!) John O'Leary, the new
Federal
Energy
Ad·
rninlstrator, believes energy
must be addressed as a
permanent Issue.
The former director of the
New
Mexico
Energy
Resources Board was sworn
in as FEA chief Friday. He
replaces Frank Zarb as the
man in charge of supervising
all U. S,. petroleum supplies
except natural gas.
"I think it is clear we are at
a point where we ~n no
longer tinker with the
system, as. has been the
tendency for the last few
years, 11 O'Leary, 50, a Reno,
Nev., native said. "We must
now address the problem of
permanent energy policies."
O'Leary has spent 22 years
in energy·related federal
positions, including . director
of the U.S. Bureau of Mines.

.sAVING WITH GRCMnf
MD SECURITY
.tllME IMPROVEMENT
LOANS

eBUSINESS lOANS
•PERSONAL LOANS .

eBANK AMERICARD
eMONEY ORDERS

•

•

the decline was a general
retrenchment In federal
hiring coupled with a
difficulty in recruiting new
minority employes In some
rural-oriented department
agencies . .
"The fact Is that many of
our agencies ha~ minority
employment above the
federal g0verrunent average.
But 50 per cent of our IOta!
employment (of about 80,000)
is In three agencies - lhe
Forest
Service,
Soil

Low pressure
area moves

across Ohio
Unl~d Preaaln~maltonal

A small but vigorous ·tow
pressure center moved
across Ohio Fridsy , night,
dumping more. snow onto
al 'r eady snow·covered
ground, and bringing cold
temperatures back into the
state.
Increasing winds were
expected today, resulting In
drifting snow, especially in
northern Ohio counties,
where the National Weather ,
Service had issued a
travelers' advisory.
After high temperatures In
the 30s Friday, readings
dipped to the singliHIIglts this
morning in several areas as
cold air moved into Ohio.
Temperatures early today
ranged from three degrees at
Toledo to 18 degrees at
Zanesville. ·
Snow fell over eastern Ohio
sections this morning, with
only snow flurries repo~
elsewhere. Snow on the
ground ranged from 18 Inches
at Youngstown to four Inches
in Cincinnati.
A large and cold high
pressure system was to move
into the state by Sunday
morning bringing near zero
temperatures.
The weather service
predicted a slow moderating
trend during the first part of
next week.

Cooservatloo Service, and
Farmers
Home
Administration- which have
a combined minority
employment of only 7.5 per
ceni," Bolduc said.
The official said those
agencies have lagge~ in
hiring minorities because
they require college degrees
in agricultural and forestry
fields In which, historically,
there are few minority
studenta.
"llilt we're going to try lO
change this. The Fal'mers
Home Administration, for example, requires a degree in
some field of agriculture and
that's wrong. A lot of lheir
work ts not in agriculture at
all, it's dOaung with rural
housl!lg and community
loans. So we're trying to
provide that a degree In
something Uke busineas or
fiscal management would be
all right," Bolduc said. .
T h e A g r i c u It u r e
adrninistralOr said anothet
move currently underway Is
designed lO open more j~bs lO
Spantsh~g appllcants.
"We looked at jobs for
minorities In the southwest,
and SOIIUlOne aailed why not
require the ability' to speak
Spanish for some jobs In
communities where more
than half lhe populatioo ts
Hispanic," Bolduc said.
Agriculture officials
agreed, and a proposal to
adopt
the
language
requirement for some jobs In
such communities will· soon
be ·sent to the Civil Service ·
Commission for its approval.
Hit's adopted, Bolduc said, it
should result in appointments
for some applicants who
might rank below English·
speaking people on Civil
Service regtsla's.
A m e m or a n d u m
distributed to Agriculture
Department agencies,
Including a comprehensive
plan lor promoting better job
treatment for minorities in
the c~rrent fiscal year,
estimates the department baa
2$ full-time speclallsts · in
e qua I em PI o Ymen t
opportunity and has 8;459
others Involved parttlme.'

Take Home A Glass Today

eNO SERVICE atMGE
atECIUNG ACCOUNTS

For a limited time, with the purchaM

WILSON'S

SAVORY
BACON ••••••••••• ~~;.

PAR KAY
MARGARINE ... ~;.

The total price for the large drink ·and the •glass is only 49c. Start.
collecting your sets of six glasses today! (Empty glasses may be.
purchased for 39cl.

· -·Than You Can At_.__

3 LOCATIONS TO
SERVE YOU!
MAIN OFFICE · SECOND AVE.

THIRD AVENUE BRANCH
VINTON BRANCH · VINlON
'

faSt
Drive-Thru

Then It was a first-ever bull
fight aboard a string of
barges out at sea in the
middle of the winter.

Now promoter John In paying $5,000 to be married
Hollman Is offering a "giant at sea and then divorced on
wedding cruise" going for lhe the return trip by the captain
fii'St 1,000 persons interested

The big outdoors

Blue moods here for outdoorsmen
For UPI
For those who choose to
recreate as hunters and
fishermen the blue moods are
here.
Although grouse sea~on
Writ~

Mixed
1egal

•

Hinshaw gets
1 to 14

AfriCan
•
prmses
Carter

of a Uberian-regi!tered ship.
But for a promoter whooe
motto Is "Do it big or don't do
It at all," Hoffman lan't
getting much done.
The "Oying nightclub," li
747 jet Hoffman said would
carry 364 revelers over the
North Atlantic lor three hours
of. drinking, gambling and a
live floor show before
returning to Kennedy
Airport, never got off tbe
ground.
The boll fight came to a
halt Jan. 13, when two
uniformed officers of lhe
Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Animals arrested
Hoffman as he was
promoting It In front of the
Hotel Plaza.
Hoffman
aqd
his
" matador" were charged
with promoting an animal
fight , a rnisdemeaoor. The
casetsscheduiedtobeheard
Feb. 16.
A!l for the cruise, Hoffman
has not yet chartered a ship,
although he claims the 11deck cargo and passenger
liner Fairwind will leave New
York on May 14 for a trip to
Callao , Peru, and back.
Is Hollman a harmless
promoter who stays awake
nights to "dream up these
I er
th.lllgs, " or ·IS he a cev
flimflam
man
as
investigators for state
Attorney General Louis
Ldkowitz allege'
Steven Schlesinger, an
assistant attorney general,
said Hoffman owes various
New Yorkers more than
$15,000.
" All 'fast as Hoffman ts
barred legally from one
scheme, he dreams up another," Schlesinger said .
"Without the full cooperation
of the public, we just can't do
anything."
"Lefkowitz!" Hoffman
huffs. "I wish he would get off
my hack. He's malting it
rough for me. Schlesinger's
on my back trying to make a
big name for himself."
Last November, Lefkowitz
obtained ~ court order
directing Hoffman to show
cause why he should not he
punished for criminal

79~

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~

I

, .

.,

,• ·

•.
··

J

•,

•
•
,,
,.•;"

1
•

•
:

"Vorlter doesn't have the
moral atrength to force
(Rhodealan Premier Jan)
Smltb" IOwan! a Mttlement,
Y..q quoted Nyerere u
telling hbn.
Nyerere anured the
Amerkan that black Alrla!
reaUz..d that Waahlnfllon
"coola not work mlnclea

overnight."

·

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'·

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.;
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&gt;
::
'

Sears

'•

-$40°0 OFF

-.

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This lOOo/o solid state
portable color TV

•

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$35995:
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o Su 1,.., black . , ,,,;, p;&lt;·lm c tub&lt;•
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399• :

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13()D'off low-priced
portable color TV

SALE

294•

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NEW YORK (UP! ) First, he tried to bring New
Yorkers a ''flying niHhtclub."

CONTINUES•••

..
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By JUUANNE HASTINGS

CARL'S SHOE STORE

of any large 16 oz. 10ft drink you

eTRAVELERS atECKS

and Rep, John Dlngell, 1&gt;Mich, the chairman of Senate
and House subcommittees
which deal with natural gas.
On the surface, St~venson
and Dingell seem logical
choices. But Speaker Thomas
P. O'Neill and Senate Democratic Leader Robert Byrd
were rniHed at being left
out.
At a breakfast session the
following Tuesday, Byrd said
the Democratic leaders
asked that "we be included in
any future discussion" and
termetl the slight "an
oversight."
More telling was his
remark, "I suggested Uiat
certain ofher knowledgable
people be brought into the
discussion in th e early
stages."
In effeci, what Byrd told
Carter was that for his
program to have the best
chance to succeed the Democratic leaders and people Uke
Sen. Henry Jackson, ().Wash.
- the key man in the Senate
on all energy legislatioo _
have to be in on the ground
floor.
The Stevensons and the
Dingells carry the proper
titles but not the right weight.

'Giant wedding cruise' also features divorce

runs well into February and
designed for transporting
Maintenance during these
there is plenty of ice for
fir earm s. They absorb idle periods i,'l rewarding in
fishing, the weather has been moisture like a sponge . Metal two ways. It prevents the
forbiddin~ . Before giving in
storage cases with moisture rush of preparing the night
to cabin fever and the
absorbing packets are ideal before an outing and it keeps
doldrums of the TV, however, since they prevent rusting equipment in peak operating
try and make good use of tbe
and keep weapons out of conditi on. Working on
indoor period.
sight. Such cases . usually equipment now also benefits
'ct
With hunting seasons just come with a sturdy lock for in
flas hbacks
and
VI ory- over, a thorough cleaning of additional security.
· daydreams.
scatter-guns is a good idea.
The popular gun cases with
Sitting alone at the work
•
During
seasons
most
are
just
.
glassdoorsmakea
handsome
bench
cleaning the old
ill
3cllOD cleaned by running a patch
furniture fixture, but create doublebarrel , the mind
·through the bore and some problems. Guns should flashes back. Remember the
LOS ANGELES _(UP!) - applying a thin coat of oil to be oiled weekly if stored in overcast first of September
this type of case to prevent last year, the doves filled the
· Entertainer Dons Day, the exterior , Now is the time
for dismantling and complete rusting.
sky or the 15th of November
kn~wn for her love of
cleaning.
Security
is
also
a
problem.
and seven hours of up and
arumals, .won and lost. in her
All
metal
parts
·
and
Since
the
guns
are
visible,
down hill bunny hunting.
battle w1th the Dons Day
Distributing Co., wh1ch especially the bore should they can become a magnet While cleaning Oy·line the
thieves.
Firing beauty of stream fishing and
markets dog food, leashes, re ceive a good solvent for
pet collars, ammal vttarruns cleaning. Moving metsl parts mechanisills or other parts the green and liveliness of
should be checked for shiny that render the gun useless spring are nearly as clear as
and other ~t products.
A Superior Co'r judge areas caused by the friction should be removed when being there physica lly.
Now is t he time for
granted MISs Day _s request of rubbing against other sWing them in glassfronled
parts.
These
shiny
areas
cases.
Parts
removed
should
i
n
s t r uc ti ng youn g
for a temporary mjunctwn
forbidding the firm to use her should be coaled with gun restored in a separate secW'e outdoorsmen and women .
name, photo or vo1ce m lube and all metal parts location, like a meta l strong Have then at your side by the
workbench and explain what
promoting sales :-but only 1f should have oil rubbed in and box.
a
thin
coat
left
standing.
Sporting
firearms
are
a
you're doing and why. Take
she posts a $1 milhon bond to
Wood of the stock and valuable possession . If the time to answer the
cover the company's losses Ifshe loses the case when it forearm are most susceptible . properly cared for, they will questions that come as
to damage during hunting continue to appreciate m actively as feeding a school of
comes to trial.
and
require a good xalue annually and to serve bluegilis after a dry-fly.
Miss Day said the company
maintenance
program. Hard usefully for a lifetime. Very
Hunting and fishing sports,
years 1 . had broken its contract with finishes · invariably
end few consumer products like no others, can be shared
SANTA ANA, Calif. (UP! ) her, was insolvent; had not seasons with scratches.
- Former Rep . Andrew made the required payments There are many good do-it- contain both those qualities with our youth. We can enjoy
the outdoors together on an
Hinshaw, already under a to her and is in violation of yourself kiis to repair such today,
Cabin
time
can
also
be
equal
basis and not as
state
laws
governing
corsentence of 1 to 14 years in
damage and your local gun spent getting ready for the spectator and participant.
prison for bribery, was porations.
The firm countercharged dealer can recommend one. upcoming fishing seasons. , The ouWoors and outdoor
sentenced Friday lo one year
Soft oil finishes on wood do
in jail for misappropriation of that she and her husband 'not scratch as easily , but The tackle box contains hours sports of hunting and fishing
funds and fined $62.5 for petty flopped in their own pet food have a tendency to dry during of activity to alleviate the can bring you t ogether like no
bottled up feeling. Favorite other family recreational
venture, drew in the other periods of storage.
theft.
lures
need hooks sharpened activity.
Hinshaw, 54, a former company lor help, and now
Before storing, a fresh coat or replaced, fillet knives can
Republican congressman, that business has improved of oil should be rubbed be honed and excess baggage
was defeated last June when they want to back out to form thoroughly into the wood. As
can be removoo.
.
he ran for re-election despite their own company.
a carryover from service
All contents and the box
his conviction.
days I prefer linseed oil for should be cleaned and rinsed
He was convicted of ofthis purpose, but it requires thoroughly to remove human
lenses cOmmitted while he
lots of elbow grease to rub ln. odors. Also, rods and reels
NOW VOU KNOW
was Orange County tax
If the shotgun is then to
Harpo Marx sent Helen remain inactive for an should be attended to now.
assessor in 1972, including
Reels should be cleaned and
reducing an electronic Hayes a Steinway piano extended period, proper oiled and line should be
company's tax assessment crate filled with fresh stor~ge requires some replaced. Line guides should
after the firm gave him a gardenias as a . wed- consideration. Guns should . be checked for wear and
campaign contribution and ding present when she never be stored in those C!'"es replaced if needed.
By TONY AVIRGAN
stereo equipment, and married Charles MacArthur
ZANZIBAR (UPI) - Presiassigning his county-paid in 1930.
dent Kenneth Kaunda of
staff to his congressional
Zambia Saturday called on
President Carter lO "take lhe
.Se..n._A_dlai_
. St-e..
ve....
nsoniiii,IIIID-IIIImllll
.,
lead" In finding a peaceful
solution for southern Africa
and said black Africa had "a
lot of confidence" in the new
earter administration.
Speaking alter an hour's
talk wltb new U.N.
WASIDNGTON (UPI) In the past, the U.S . Amba.uador A!Kirew YoWig,
The United States Saturday
government
has not always Kaunda praised Carter's
ordered the expulsion of a
retaliated
directly
for such "principled announcementa"
In expulsion cases. It has
Soviet · journalist
some- and said black Africa was
retaliation for Moscow's
ttmea
confined
itself
lO
dl- looking 10 the President
expulsion of Associated Press plomatlc protests of the
because Britain "has not got
correspondent George Kremlin's expulsion moves. the will or the ability 10 solve
Krimaky.
On Friday, The Soviet· the problem."
, The State Department an- Foreign Ministry ordered!
••The
Ca r t e r
nounced It had notified the . Krimsky to leave the country· administration should take
Soviet Embassy
that
===NEW STORE HOURS·===
Vladimir Alekseyev, within one week, alleging he ' the lead In trying to solve lhe
had connections with the CIA, problems of Rbodeala,
Washington correspondent and had violated Soviet. Namibia (South West Africa)
for the Tass news agency,
Sorry for the inconvenience but due to extreme cold weather and
laws.
and South Africa Itself,"
must leave the country within currency
Krlmsky . and
the Kaunda told newsmen alter
one week.
energy crisis our temperature in the store is 55 degrees.
Associated Press denied hts meeting with Y~.
"We have specified our those charges as mere
Kaunda said he would ''not
expulsion of Alekseyev Is ill pretexts to expel an teil the U.S. what 10 do" but
Mon.-Tues.-Wed.- Sal 10 am til5 pm
response lO the expulsion of aggressive, Russian- ttmewasrurmingoutbothfor
George
Krlmsky .of the AllFriday 10 am til 8 pm
speaking reporter and the a peaceful solution · and lor
socIa~ Press," department State
Deaprtment said it Washington "to show Its good
spokesman Frederick Z. "deplored" the Suviet action. intentions In southern
Thursday 10 am til 12 Noon
Brown said.
Africa."
"The Uni~ States must
help us lO lind a way to solve
the situation peacefully,"
Kaunda said. "We have a lot
of confidence In them (the
Carter admlolstrallon)
because of lheir principled
announcements. But practice
will tell."
· Young ts 011 a special visit
to black Africa to hear the
views of black leaders and
report back 10 Carter.
At a separate . news
conference, Young said hts
talks 110 far with Tanzanian
President Julius Nyerere and
Kaunda sbowed "a deep
concern for a peaceful
setlement" among African
When you ask for some extra service or special they 'II find the officer ln our bank who can. W~­
leaders. He said black
information at your bank, do you ever ,get the ingness is a people •kind of thing. From the prestAfricans held "more subatantive
and even moderate"
feeling you're being "tuned out"? Instead of dent on through to each tell,er, our entire staff is
views than he hacl thought.
thinking of reasons why; "It can't be done" or committed to the philosophy that a bank earns
Relaxed and smiling,
shrugging off your question with, "I don't know," its' customers' business by helping them in every
Young l&amp;id Nyerere told him
way possible. Come in today , and see how rethat·be (Nyerere) had never
you'll find each of our tellers a good listener.
agreed
with .former
freshing
a
positive
attitude
can
be
...
at
And if -they don't have the authority to
Secretlry of State Henry A.
· h , "We W'llt
The Willing Bank.
answer your request w1t
1 •" ,
Killinger that South African
Premier Jobn Vorlter would
be .an ally In shaping a
peaceful aetUement In

'

SHORTAGE SOLVED
COVINGTON, Ohio (UPl)
- Men's wear store owner
Jim.Kinney has found a $200
answer to the energy shortage. He bQught a pot-bellied
stove, knocked open a sealed
up chimney and is burmng
coal.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

Important lessons
leamed about the
Congress are helpful

contempt and lined t1 mll1IAin
for wt11u1 dlaobedienoe of two
judgments. The cue Ia
pending,
The first
judgment
enjoined Hollman from
conveying the lmp'ellim bs
is a televtslon c11tln1
director or talent agent to
secure fees lor a "ludiCI'OUII"
training prosram. Holfmaa
also wu directed to pay I
$2,000 penalty 'for !alae
advertialng.
,
A subsequent judgment ordered Hoffman to pay
$12,117.50 to indlvlduala
victimized by lhe televlllon.training scbeme.
Federal authorltlu
became involved when
Hollman announced the
''flying nightclub" m a plaiK!
chartered from American
Airlines.
"When yo~ charter a plane
and then start selling tldl:elll
you become a common
carrier and need authority
from us," said Joaeph A•
Hamilton, chief of the Civil
A-eronautic Board'a
investigation section In Washington.
The CAB contacted Amer!can.
"He had !Old them he
represented Women's Wear
Daily and wan~ to hold a
fashion show aboard the
plane," Hamilton said.
"When we told the alrllnea
what hts true plans were,
they canceled the coo'-act."
..
Hoffman later claimed lhe
ffight was made secretly on
Dec. 4, a week ahead of
schedule, by a "British crew
moonlighting during an
Atlantic layover."
However, Hoffman finally
admitted
to
CAB
investigalOrs the fUght had
never been made. "He said'a
-lot of what he does ts
fantasy, " HarnillO!! said.
In announcing the wedding
cruise, Hoffman ldenUfled
the ticket·agent as the Rose
Roberts Tra~el Agency.
"!told that man not to use
my name," Ms. Roberts told
UP!. ''No ship has been
chartered. I've been In
business for 16 years and thts
is not a fly-by.nlght
operation."
Hoffman admitted the next
day he had not actually
chartered a ship but still wu
nesoUatlng for one.

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SILVER
BRIDGE. -~ ·

ISears I· PLAZA : '::

SEARS. R&lt;;tiiUC&amp;

AND~

�A~The Sunday Tlfnes.Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6,

Energy

8-1-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6,1m

19'n

crisis~- is

chance to play

j

woman

the political game to Gov. Rhodes
lly LEE LEONARD
UPI SilleiiOIIH Reporter
COLUMBUS (IJPI)- Gov.
Jamee A. RbodeJ hu hlndled
Ohio's enpry crllli just u he
doellllllll other major llluea
which Involve him - with an
eye toward mazlmum
polli!OO gain.
But there 1.1 a leellni!
around tbe llla!ebouae that
thla lime, lbe governor has

Ohio politics
fooled no one with hla wheelllpinnlng antics.
It I.e traditional fer Rhodes
to crab an LINe by the t~~roat,
llhake lt fer all It's worth and
modellly accept credit lor
any good 1'11111ilta.
Thll time was no different.
All me obaerver said, "It was
jUil what Jim was walling lor
- a chance to make the
Democratic legislative
leaders sit there and say
'uYes, sir."' ·
For more than two weeks,
Rhodes took -the apotllght. He
ordered hla cabinet around,
set up an energy command

,poll, fired o!! letters and

lelegrama, prayed, Plndered
to the national news media
and Ohio coal companlea,
' supervlled rescue and roadclearing opmtlw, and put
out 29 press releases,
creating the illusiDn ol doing
something ellraordlnary.
Yet when It came to hard
decisions, Rhodes pushed
them olf onto others. Think ol
lt. He decl.lred a crllll giving
himself · extraordinary
powen to act, and then faUed
to use them! .
He f..-ced the legislature
and state educators to deal
With school cloBlngs.
He forced hla cabinet membera and adviaera to answer
the dlfflctilt questions and
take the lwnpa fer errors.
The bottom line? Rhodes
made a lot ol waves, but
accomplished virtually
nothing . to alleviate the
energy crisis.
Agreed, he got Ohio coal
back in the spotlight lor
perhaps a .rosier future .
Agreed, he marshaled state
forcea to make rescues and

Sarah Carsey

open roads but that's what not want to be remembered
thay'ref..-. Agreed, he flnally as the governor who closed
secured federal "emergency
rellef, but for snow removal
mly and four days tate at
that.
Rhodes'
"do~ethlngand.publlclze-it" method
rnily work for conventional
political problems. But there
were indications that strong
Rhodes supporters were
highly disappointed with his
lndeclslve, shotgun per·
tormance this time.
"Some people wanted a
pollee state," argued Rhodes.
''They wanted the highway
patrol to wake people up at 3
a.m. and find out what the
temperature was, ln their
house. We've golten more
opoperation this way than we
would have had under a
dictatorship."
Nobody wanted a dictatorship. What they really wanted
was some leadership at the
top . .Evidently, Rhodes did

446-2342

the schools or reduced

bualness hours to save fuel.
He wanted aomebody eLie to
make the tough decislms.
Rhodes may be thinking he
looked Uke he was oo top of
things. But lf he 's listening he
might bear comments like
these:
"Something's happened to
Jim Rhodes. He Ulled to be
decislve. Maybe he's getting
old."
And from out of state,
where other governors bit
rather . than nibbled the
bullet : "What's the matter
with your g~vernor?"
·
Ironically Rhodes, the
"man of actloo,'' may well be
remembered not as . the
governor who guided ohio
through the energy crllll of
1m without closing sChools
and businesses, but as
something far worse - the
governor who did nothing.

New Energy Saving
Business Hours

POMEROY - The Meigs fleers are requested to he
County Fair Board will meet present.
in regular session at 8 p.m.
POMEROY - The Meigs
Monday at the secretary's
office 011 the Rock Springs Area Holiness Indoor Camp,
which was to begin on Feb. 7
Fairgrounds.
and close Feb. 13, will not be By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. cause in some instances is
DEAR DR. LAMB - I never established.
POMEROY
The held because of the fuel
received
a letter from my
Isoniazid is used to treat
Pomeroy • Middleport Lions shortage, the Rev. Uoyd D. brother, age
62,
who
lives
in
tuberculosis.
I do not recom·
Club will meet ln regular Grimm, Jr., announces.
the Soviet Union. He was mend taking it without close
session at noon Wednesday at
POMEROY
The hospitalized for 35 days in an supervision .of a doctor. It
the Meigs Inn. AU Lions are
·Buckeye Ra bblt Assn. is emergency hospital. It was won't cure anything but
urged to attend.
, opening its membership to determined that he had lung tuberculosis and that could be
POMEROY - Pomeroy · any rabbit grower Interested . trouble in his right lung. It the cause of your brother's il·
Chapter 80 Royal Arch ln marketing his fryers. was filling with nuid which lness. II so, lte would again
Masons wui hold a stated Anyone needing further in· was removed. He was sent need careful Supervision, not
convoc;tlon Wednesday at formation is to call 992-2513. home and stayed in bed for 10 only for the isoniazid treatdays and then went back to ment but also of his progress
7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
in overcoming the disease.
POMEROY - The monthly work as a teacher.
temple. All Royal Arch
He
continues
to
have
pain
My guess is that your brother
Masons are urged to attend. meeting of the Southeastern in his right side. When he does not have tuberculosis. II
This meeting will be followed Ohio Regional Councll on . comes home from school he he did f am sure the doctors
by a stated assembly of Alcoholism will be held at I goes straight to bed. II was in the Soviet Union would
Bosworth Council 46, Royal p.m. Thursday at the Trinity diagnosed as "wet plevrite." ·have treated him quite dif.
and Select Masters at 8:30 Chapel, Third and Woosters lie was told the only cure was fere1illy.
• ·
p.m. AU members · and of· Sts., ln Marietta.
medicine which is available
The soreneSl; is no doubt
in the United States.
from the pleurisy reaction
My family doctor gave me and pleuritic pain is
a prescription for isoniazid. associated with muscle
Since it is not Jl(lrmitted to spas\TIS involving the s~ll
send medicine to the Soviet muscles between the nbs.
Union, I found a friend who is Binding the chest sometimes
going for a visitthere and will gives relief by preventing
deliver ilfor me.
movement of the muscles.
What is the cause and what Heat applications may also
is the cure? There has never . help. The proper treairnent,
been this type of illness in our however, depends entirely
family. My father died at the upon what the underlying
age of 90 and my, uncle is still cause of nuid in the chest
living in the old country at the really is.
age of 88. I'd appreciate it lf
I am skeptical that there
you would answer my ques- are any medicines we have
lion as I am very concerned here that are not available in
about my brother.
the Soviet Union. Remember,
DEAR READER - The the Soviet doctors can get
tenn "wet plevrite" is not us- medical information and
ed in this country, but I medicines from most counasswne from your descrip- tries in the world and we have
lion it must be wet pleurisy. a fairly free now of medical ·
This means an accwnulation information worldwide.
of nuid in the chest cavity
To give you a better idea of
surrounding the right lung. how the lungs work I am senFluid in that location or on ding you The Health Letter 1
theleftsidecanbewithdrawn number 2-4, Keeping Your
with a needle which I Lungs Fit. Others who want
preswpe ls what you mean by this information can send 50
beingpuUedout.
cents with a long, ,stamped,
Fluid in the chest cavity self-addressed envelope for
may ,be caused by many dif· it. Just send your letter to me
ferent disorders including in care of this newspaper,
heart disease and even P.O. Box 1551, Radio City Sta·
cancer of the lung. It can be lion, New York, NY 10019.
associated with pleurisy - And, I hope your brother im·
inflammation of the linings of proves.
the lung and chest cavity. The

in RussiJJ

Although the majority of Heck's Stores
are electrically heated, we are reducing
store hours to cope with local, state and
federal government requests for energy
conservation.

THE STORE HOURS WILL BE
AS FOLLOWS.
I

I

-~
· ----.---------~

Peel

MR. FLUGG

@ mstrong '

by Jon Peterson

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SEA'7 1 OONT PANIC. 1
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~

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
• Point Pleasant ' Welcome
' Wagon Newcomers Club held
an. organizational meeting
Monday with Mrs. Leslie
Treleven presiding as
chairperson. ·
Welcome Wagon Hostess
TereBa Blhl ezplalned to the
members present the
organiZational structure of
the club and the purpose and
objectives .of club members.
Those present decided
meetings. will be held the
third Monday of each month
at 7:30 p.m. at the Ohio
Valley Bank Jackson Pike
Branch. Election of offlcers
was deferred untll the
February meeting.
Special Interest groups
were di8cUased and members
gave lcteas for planning many
varied · groupa. The groups
:Which will begin meeting this
)nonth are:
· Euchre, Wednesday, Feb.
· ~. 1 p.m. Phone Susie Balley,
446-7765.
Get Acquainted Coffee,
Tuesday, Feb. 15, 10:30 a.m.
Phone Pam Terrizzl 446-1485.
: Bridge and Beginners
Leslle
:Bridge. Phone
'Treleven 245-9408.
Crafts - Phone Debbie
Tipple 446-1851.
A special interest group for
.single adults will begin if
interest is shown for this by
newcomers.
Program Ideas were
discussed and Mrs. Blhl was
requested to Investigate
possible program sources for
the February meeting.
The Welcome Wagon Club
is organized exclusively for

and thank you notes were
from the family of Daniel
Thompson and Mrs. Kathryn
Knight.
.
Practice for initiation was
held. Mrs. Bessie King, ways
and means committee, gave
a report as did Mrs. Euvetta
Bechtle, cheer committee
chairman, who reported on
lhe sic~ an d those
remembered over th e
holidays. It was noted that
Mrs. Edna Maxine Gaskill is
in Riverside Methodist
Huspilal, Columbus. She
underwent surgery Wednesday for a hip injury received
ina falL

Darnell thank ed the
chapter for gifts presented to
him at the installation. A
donation was made to the
O.E.S. Hospital Circle. The
worthy matron announced in·
spection for Tuesday, May 31,
at 7:30p.m. Initiation will be
held at the March meeting .
Mrs. Wilcox "read a cer·
iifica\e of appreciation
presented to Evan~dme
Chapter for a rlor... uon to the
fire saf•~; code fund at the
Q.E.S. home. Ann Thomas
and Betty Van Meter served
refreshments.

. French City Campers gather

Area 17\Vrewcomer.·r
.
club organizes

GALLIPOLIS

_

The

field dire cto r of Gallia servation officer; Harland
and Emogene Sanders, C.B.
Officers are Art and Ruth officer ; Emogene Sanders,
Wroblewski, president , and news reporter ; Wayne Ams·
Elmore and 'Mary Flowers, bary, Harland Sanders and
The
vi ce Bill Seyfried, campout
treasurer .
president, Jack and Kathryn chairman ; Wayne and
Carter and the secretary, Gladys Amsbary, chaplain ..
Annmil dues are payable
Wilford and Gertrude Evans
and
should be in by the March
will be installed at a later
meeting
to receive the Tent
date.
and
Trail
and Smoke Signal
Committees appointed
Magazines.
Art and Ruth
were Blll and Mildred
Wroblewski
served
refreshSeyfried, chapter ·delegate;
Jim . and Goldie ·King, con- ments to the members
present.

J French City Camping Club County.

held Its monthly meeting at
the Buckeye Rural Electric
BliUding Thursday.
In the absence of the
president, Marlon and Anna
Williams, the vice president
charitable, educational and was ln.charge of the opening.
soclologlcal causes, including The January meeting had
the making of contributions been cancelled due to
to charitable organizations freezing weather so in·
and causes and-or . com· stallation of officers for the
munity and service projects. new year was conducted by
Cll\b objectives are (1) To Harland Sanders, N.C.H.A.
provide an Immediate opportunity for members to
become acquainted with
others in the community, (2)
To provide an almosphere of
friendliness, goodwlll and
helpful information for club
members ln ·the local com· ·
munity, (3) to provide an
atmosphere for the Increase
of members' knowledge '
concerning the prin~iples and
functioning of citizens in the
local community, (4) To aid
our country· and community
through the gift of our
time and energy for
worthy' purpose, (5) To
undertake and promote
charitable and human!·
tarlan projects within
l'le community and to torm
enduring frlendshlpa, (6) To
do any and all things
necessary or Incidental to the
carrying out or promotion of
the objectives of the Welcome
Wagon Club.
Following the business
meeting members enjoyed
refreshments and exchanged
addresses. The next meeting
will be Feb. 21 at 7:30p.m. ln
the bank community room.
. All Interested persons and
NEWT JONES, left, manager ol the Western Pancake House, and Earl Neff select toys·
newcomers to Gallla County
from
a catalog for the newly established Toy Fund at the Holzer Medical Center. Jones
and Point Pleasant are urged
contributed
recently to the fund.
to attend . For more in·
formation call Teresa Blhl
4-46-1937 or Nancy Ball 6751929.

Exhibit.opening
· ATHENS - "Traditions of
the Art of India," an
exhibition of worka from the
' Indian subcontinent, opens at
the Triaollni Gallery on the
Ohio University campus
Tuesday (Feb. 8) and runs
tbrolllh March 4.
'The nhlbltlon Includes
more than 100 items of
ICUipture, painting, drawing
and teltiles. Features are
objecU from both the
; clasaical and folk traditions
' dating from the 2nd century
through to the present.
• Of special Interest are a
.
•"

I

EXCELON®TILE

.
J
Pomeroy-Middleport

Charter draped at OES meet
MIDDLEPORT - The
charter was draped for
Daniel Thompson at the
Thursday night meeting of
Evangeline Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star,
held at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
Mrs. Glenna Crisp, worthy
matron, and Paul Darnell,
worthy patron, presided I at
the meeting with Mrs.
Maryln Wilcox serving as
organist. Sunshine pages
were Mrs. Marie Hawkins
and Mrs. Genevee Chesher.
Comniunications were read
from the OES Hospital Circle,
the Grand Chapt.P" of Ohio,

MEI!rr THURSDAY
POMEROY- The Meigs
Coaaty Cbapter .of the
Womea'•
Aclow
Fellowlbl' will meet
'lb......y lillie Melli Inn.
. Rill JIGhlp,. . , u l•rsy
teeblelu at tile O.rklbarl. W. Va. la..pllal wOl
1peak •• laer penoaal
'. e!lperiaaee wltb God.
' .,._ w01 be eerved al 7
· p.m. wllllllle ct.on to ope11
al erN p.m. RNemlloal
t. llle a11dear=lMUoaal
illeelliC ,llllllt be made DO
t.ter IIIIa Malday 111111
GIM'II Joblilll, 1111111;
J11e Babr, t4t·I'IIS;
J,ee Bebeek, Nt-a. or
• :nn, Ill •111a tile .
Gdlpe!IIIN. ~~~the ·
dlaerllfl.llper...-.

rare larger-thail·llfeslze
wood carving of a guardian
deity, an elaborate wall
hanging, circa 1900 and · a
19th century leather puppet
from South India.
The show was arranged by
Peggy De Lamater and Dr.
Gary &amp;hwlndier, assistant
profeasor of art at OU. The
worka on displBy come from ·
private collections ln Indiana, Michigan, New York
and Ohio.
A public opening will be
held from ~ to a p.m.
Tuesday. Regular gallery
hours are from 12 noo6 to 4
p.m. Tuesday through
Saturday.

'"

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_.._.._""""'" __________ _.._,_,_...-__.._.. _ _.._...___,_____

Sherry Short

UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE
Sick brother

·

STARTING SUNDAY
FEBRUARY ·6TH

DR. LAMB

Area news •• .in briefs

. . . Pleasant
Gallzpolts-Patnt

BETROTHED - Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Short, Jr., Jl,t. I,
Crown City, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Sherry to Scott Swain, son of Mr. and Mrs,
Verlln Swain. Both Miss Short and her fiance are high
school graduates. Wedding pian8 are incomplete .

..
...

Exciting
s World I programs
Charlene Hoeflich promised
992-2156 I1

------;------~

I

DONATION RECEIVED - James Allen, manager of the
Equipment Co.,
cresenla ·a check to provide one mmth of free television for the pediatric ward at Holzer
Medical Center, to Earl Neff, who. handles community contacts for both the television and
toy fund at the hospital.
I
·

February donations received

DAYTON ACCEPTED
GALIJPOLIS - A local check presentation to Earl
GALIJPOLIS - A 1973
equipment
company and Neff who handles the
graduate of Gallia Academy
reuurant
have
made con· ~unity contactS for both
High School, Joseph P.
tributions
to
the
Holzer the .Toy and Television funds
Dayton, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Medical
Center
Television
111 behalf of the hospital.
Robert Dayton, 1112 Adrian
·
Fund
and
Toy
Fund
lor
the
Newt Jones, manager of
Ave., Gallipolis, has been
month
of
February.
the
local Western Pancake
notified of his acceptance Into
Donating
for
the
fourth
House
on Route 35, next to the
the Recreation and Wildlife
consecutive
year
to
the
Holzer
Medical Center,
Technology Program at
which
contributed
to the newly
Television
Fund,
Hocking Technical College ln
provides
televlllon
free
for
established
Toy
Fund for the
Nellonvllle. Mr. Dayton will
tbe
patients
In
the
pediatric
hospitaL
lie
dllculled
the
becln the summer quarter,
unit
It
the
hospital
Ia
the
needs
of
the
pediatric
unit
for
19'11. Joe and hia wife, Debra,
Southeastern
.
Equipment
the
month
of
F~ry
with
will · Uve near Nellonville
after he Ia dllcharged from Company located on Route 7 · Neff, reviewing possible
the United States Alr Force ln north of Galllpolls. James R. pgrchases of lpeC~l toys for
Allen, manager, made the the very young patients under
June, 1977.

..

the age of one year and
moblles that could be ln·
stalled in the pedi~tric rooms
for the children to ~joy who
must be patients.
Any lndlvidual, business or
group wishing to donate to
either
the
Pediatric
Television Fund to provide
one mOnth of free television
for the children who are
hospitalized, or the Toy Fund
to purchase toys and games
for the playroom on the fifth
noor ln the pediatric unit and
the chilllren who are confined
to their beds, may do so by

.,.•

GALLIPOLIS - An exciting program for the annual
meeting and membership
drive ktck-()ff to be held on
Thursday evening, February
:M
at Oscar's
Restaurant
in
IJ.~Illpo
lis ,
has
been an·

nounced by the trustees of the
French Art Colony . The
social hour is scheduled for
6:30 p.m. with the dinner
following at 7 o'clock.
Coming from Colwnbus to
present a most un iqu e ·
evening of entertainment will
be Kezia Sproat, Ph.D., and
Bronwyn Hopton. Dr: Sproat
is an acknowledged authority
on Shakespeare and Ms.
Hopton is a talented actress.
Together they will present
"Shakespeare on Women."
This unusual presentation
is sponsored by the Women's
Resource and
Policy
Development Cen ter and
supported ln part by a grant
from the Ohio Program in the
Humanities, a state based
program of the National
Endowment
for
the
Humanities.
The annual dinner wlll also
mark the opening of the
membership drive, chaired
this year by Barbara Epling.
Theme for the one month
effort will be "Paint the Town
French." Mrs. Epling will
soon announce the committee
members assisting her in this
annual drive.
Reservations for the annual ·
dinner meeting of the French
Art Colony at Oscar's should
be made before Saturday,
Feb . 19, by calling Donna
Nibert at 446-4672 or by
caillng 446--1819. The cost is
$5.50 per person.

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Mrs. William K. Frazee

Jenny Elliott marries
in candlelight ceremony

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GALIJPOLIS - Hurricane were Willia m Schopis ,
lanterns denoting family Gallipolis, and Wayne Elllott
pews and two three-branch and Keith Elliott, brothers of
candelabra set the mond for the bride, Gallipolis. The
the candlelight ce remon y groom wore a solid white
uniting Miss Janet Marie tuzedo whlle the oll)er men
Elliott and William Kirk wore green Windsor tuxedos
Frazee, Dec. 18 at 2:30 P.m. W ·•th their ruffled shirts
at the Gallipolis Christian matching the color of the ··
Church.
attendants' dresses.
The bride is the daughter of
Miss Gina Elliott and
Mrs. Garnet Elliott Simms, Master Dwayne Elliott, niece
Crown City, and the late and nephew of the bride,
Carodus E. Elliott, and the served as flower girl and
bridegroom is the son of Mr. rlngbearer. Little Miss Elliott
and Mrs. William F. Frazee, wore a gown Identical to that
Gallipolis.
of -the matron-of-honor and
Vows of the double-ring · caiTied a white lace basket of
ceremony were read by talisman rose petals. Master
·:·: ~=: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Denny Coburn in a setting of Elliot\ was dressed in a ~reen
baskets of peach and yellow Windsor tuzedo with a peach
SUNDAY DEADLINE
carnations,
spider mum s, ruined shirt and caiTied a
The deadltne for wedding
white
baby's white pillow fashioned by
glad
olus,
and engagement notices
brea
and
greenery.
A
white Mrs. Ann Elliott, sister-in·
and society news items for
kneelin
nch
d
white law of the bride.
the Sunday Tlmes.Sentinel
aisle
runner
completed
the
For her daughter's wedis12 uoon oil ibe Thursday
church
decorations
.
ding
, Mrs. Simms selected a
preceding publication.
Organist
for
the
ceremony
green
gown featuring a high ·'
Inlormatlon may be turned
was
Mrs.
Addle
Wuerch,
and
neckline
and long, straight ··
ln or malled to the office of
Mrs.
LuAnn
Saunders
was
sleeves.
She
was presented a
tbe Galllpolts Dally
vocalist.
Solo
nwnbers
In·
single
long
s(emmed white
Tribune or Pomeroy Dally
eluded
·
"A
Time
for
Us,"
carnation
·
with
peach and
Sentinel. Engagement and
"We've
Only
Just
Begun,"
green
streamers
as
the .bride
wedding forms
are
"Wedding
Song,"
"Today,"
ascended
up
the
aisle.
avallable upon request.
"Annie's Song," "SUJU"lseMrs. Frazee chose a -.
Sunset ," "Somewhere," powder blue gown with .';
"The Lord's Prayer" and matching jacket. She too was :;
"One Hand, One Heart."
presented a carnation by the &gt;
The bride, escorted to the bride.
' ·:
altar by her eldest brother,
Following the ceremony a ;
Gene Elliott, was attired in a reception honoring the bride ·•
gown of white quiana knit and groom was held ln the ::
featuring
an empire waisl· church fellowship hall. The ::
GALLIPOLIS - The home
line,
wedding
ring neckline, four-tier cake, baked by Mrs. ~
of Mrs. William Jenkins was
and
full
bishop
sleeves edged Faye Rees, was composed of )
the setting for the Feb. 3
in
Venlse
lace.
Tiny seed both chocolate and white ·'
meeting of the · Thursday pearls .and venise
lace layers, and was topped with a ·:
club.
complimented
the
bodice
. heart and . wedding bells .;
Mrs. Sigismund Harder
The
A-line
skirt
leading
to
a
surrounded by greenery, :•
gave a review of the book,
formal length hemllne ex· roses and baby's breath. The ·:
Spandau : The Seeret tended to an elegant chapel bride's table was completed :;
Diartes" by Albert Speer . length ·train . The sheer with miniature hurricane &gt;
The author was Hitler's fingertip veil of .mantilla, lamps arid nosegays of peach ::
personal a rc hitect , con· edged in venlse lace, was held and green flowers. Hostesses ·:
fidante and protege ; Reich in place by a venlse lace- for the reception were Mrs. :•
Minister for Armaments, covered caplet. The bride's Constance Malone, -:
War Production; the second only jewelry were i)er Chillicothe; Miss Judie ;~
most powerful man in Nazi mother's diamond earrings. Dahse, Amesville, and Mrs. ;'
Germany at the end of World
Miss Elliott carried a Pamela Short, Rodney, Miss -~
War If. Speer was also the cascade
of
tallsman Llnds Jones of Oak Hill ;~
only defendant of the 22 top rosebuds, white carnations registered guests. Passing :•
Nazis at the Nuremberg and, lvy. She also carried a out rice nowers ' and bags ·~
trials to asswne the burden of white lace handkerchief were Masters Robert, Johil,::
guilt for the Reich's war belonging to her grand· and Dwayne Elliott, and Miss ::
crimes. He was sentenced to mother, Mrs. Ruby Meadows. Gina Elliott.
::a! years Imprisonment and
Serving her only sister as
Qut-()f-town guests Included .;
served lt ln Spand&amp;u with six matron of honor was Mrs. Mr . and ~r~ . Howard ~
&lt;ther top Nazi officials.
Roberta Saunders
of Meadows, Cmcrnnatl; Mr. :.
Mrs .
Harder
said,, Gallipolis. She woFe a gown of and Mrs. John McMillan and ·:"Spandau : The Secret bittersweet quiana . knit Melanie, Mt. Vernon ; Ju.iie ;.:
Diaries" ls an Intensely, fashioned with an A-line Dahse, Amesville; Constance ::.
powerful, moving personal skirt, hond and belled, full Malone , Chllllcothe; Mrs . .;
narrative - a brilliant In- length sleeves. The hood and Victoria Michael, Pomeroy ; ·~
dividual's effort to nitain his sleeves were edged with Sally and Linda Smith, Mt. '"
strength and sanity during :a! matcl)ing marihou feathers. Vernon; Mrs. Dorothy
years of near solitary con· She carried a single long Pierce, Jennie and Dave,
finement through ex· stemmed, green tinted Walhonding ; Mrs . Clara
traordinary feats of self· carnation, accented with Frazee, Warsaw; Mr. and
discipline and moral re· light green satin ribbon.
Mrs.
Paul
Markley,
education.
The bride's other at· Coshocton; Llnds Jones, Oak
As Speers states, "These tendants were Miss Deborah Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
thousands of notes are one Taylor, Galllpolls; Miss Kearn and Mark, Columbus,
concentrated effort . to sur· Teresa Chichester, Long and Mr. and Mrs. Roger
vive, and endeavor not only to Bottom and Mrs. EUen Wood, Meyer, Kent.
endure We in a cell physically sister of the groom, Rio
The bride changed Into a
and Intellectually but alao to Grande. They wore gowns pink and white pant suit for
arrive at some sort of moral styled idenllcally to that of the honeymoon trip to Salt
reckoning with what lay the matron-()f·honor's but in a Fork State Park ln Cam·
behind lt aU. Dlartes are pale shade of green. They bridge.
usually the accompaniment each caiTied single longThe new Mrs. Frazee, a
of a Uved Ufe. This one stands stemmed, peach tint.ed 19(4 graduate of Gallla
ln place of a life."
carnations, accented with Academy High &amp;hool, is .
Mrs. · Jenkins served peach satin ribbon.
presently enrolled as a -lor-1
members refreshments of hot
Frazee selecte~ Keith at Holzer Medical Center
spiced tea, coffee, assorted B!Jinkenshlp, Galllpolll, to School of Nursinc . Mr.
hora d'oeuvres, nuts and serve as best man. Ushers Frazee, alao a grllduate of
mints after the review. The
GAllS, attended Rio Grande
table was decorated with
College and is now a manager · 7
carved wooden animals,.
trainee for Bob Enna'
serving pieces and ' other
Farms.
artifacts from Africa. Mrs.
DATE CHANGED
Mr. and Mrs. Frazee are
Neal ~dergast slllialed
POMEROY
The now residing at 22 Henkle .
the hostess. The next meeting ministers and deacons' in· 'Ave., Gallipolis.
will be aL Ute hOme of Mrs. stltute of ~ 'Providence
The bride was honored by ·
Charles Holzer on Thuraday, District schj,ld1iled for Feb. 12 two bridal showm prior to
Feb. 10 with Mrs. Oscsr at the Union Baptist Church the wedding ln Cincinnati by ·
Cla~ke presenting the review. at Blackfork, has been Mrs. Conlllance Malone and
postponed until March 12, the Misa Linda Jones, and at the
contacting Neff at 1113 Rev. Vance Watson, prest· church by Mrs. Vicki E11lott
Teorlora Avenue ln Gallipolis. dent, announced.
and Mrl. Roberta Saunders.

reviews diary
of Hitler cohort

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�8-2-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinei,Sunday, Feb. 6, 1977

::u;m ::: :~

Community
By Charlene
Corner Hoeflich

••

~

I

Sister Joilltd "Adult" Crowd
DEAR RAP:
.
I'm 16 and unhappy with my sister. We used to go out and
have a ball. We'ddoalotoffun things we wouldn't dare leU our
parents about. II wasn't bad or sinful, just nutty and "take a
chance" stuff.
1 never told on her and she never told on me. But now
everything's changed.
She got married to a real nice guy (It Isn't his fault sbe's
different) , and now she's nothing bill a big-mouth nagger who
tattles io our folks aoout everything I do.
She's always criticizing my jeans and T.ahirts. Says I
should "dress decent." After all, she wore 'em too, and
sloppier than mine. Sbe doesn't approve of the career I've
chosen. She hates the guy I Jove, and he 's really special to me.
She's trying til turn Mom and Dad against him. ·
How could a few years (actually, Jess than two) make such
a difference? - KID SIS WHO FEELS DESERTED
DEAR SIS :
.
Your sister joined the adult generation, that's all. She now
looks on you as a "child" who needs guidance.
·
Which is a shame, because she could "guide" you so much .
better if she were still your slighUy nutty big sis. - HELEN

POMEROY- When it rains, it pours Not only have Kay and Dwight Log!IJI had to contend with the
cold and snow like \he rest of us, but they have had multitudes
of family illnesses in the past six weeks.
.
.
Dwight Is now in the Holzer Medical Center cardiac care un1t
af\er suffering another slight coronary last Sunday. Another
month of hospitaliz;ltion is e~ted , Kay tells us.
.
It all began around Christmas when Kay wa!l· coru~ed to
VeterAns Memorial Hospital for treatment of arthr111s. The
night before she came home from the. hospital, her son, Skip,
arrived with his two small sons, both s1ck. In takiing care of the
cluldren, Kay contracted whatever they had and then went iJ;r
to poeumonia. The children were then taken back to their
home in Charleston.
Afew days later, the youngest child was brought back here
for a month with his grandparents when his mother became
·quite ill and was hospitalized, A trip to California planned by
Kay where she was to explore the possibility of having further
:Surgery on her ·arthritic hands had to be postponed. Meanwhile from California came the call that the Logan's
{laughter, Shirley Cox, was undergoing major surgery. She is
·coming along fine now and is expected to go home this
·weekend.
: And you thought you had it bad.

A BRIGHT SPOT fOr the Logans these days is their grand·
'daughter, Erin Cox, a freshman at Rediand University in
:Redland, Calif. Erin is currently on lour w1th the Redland
. Choir presenting concerts in Arizona, New Mex1co, Nevada ,
.Oregon and California .
Erin was recently awarded a scholarship to study next year
in Austria. A religion and drama major, she was selected on
the basis of her grades and general abilities. Her goal is to
become a youth minister.
Because of the weather the Young Careerist contest of tl1e
Business and Professional Women 's Clubs was postponed from
Jan. 30 to Feb. 20.
Suzy Carpenter, last year's Middleport Club winner, is
chairman for the district competition which wiU be held at the
Holiday Inn in Gallipolis. Karen Goins is the Middleport Club
. . representative this year.
.
Suzy advises that reservations must be made before Fr1day
for the dinner with A! wilda Werner.
BIG BOXES seem to be in short supply.
Expecting high water in her home when the warmer
temperatures come, one Middieport ,woman set out to get
packing boxes. She came home empty-handed.
.
Seems that most businesses in ooth Middleport and Pomeroy
are storing their boxes in readiness for moving stock in the
event ole man river comes knocking at their doors.
LOCAL "SEENS" -Bob and Judy Snowden celebrating their
silver wedding anniversary ..... Rose Ginther finishing off a
quilt in less than three weeks, her pass-the-time-of-day project
for cold days .....
·College, Ashland, Ohio for the
fall semester. He is the
grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Hurl Westfall of Route I, Box
282, Gallipolis.
.
To be eligible for this
honor, a student must be
GAJ.;LIPOLIS
Freddie enrolled full time and
Westfall has been named to maintain a 3.5 or better
the Dean's List at Ashland average for the semester.

College
News

&lt;

·with us!
PLANNING APillA PARTY
PHONE
THE ALL NEW

M£1GS INN PlziA SHACK
-Enjoy three sizes of your favorite
piuas.
-Try our delicious subs while you
sip your favorite suds.
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304

Monday &amp; Tuesday Only
Just Received New Shipment

GIRLS JEANS

OFF

Anita Lynn Buckley

POMEROY
Faith
Perrin, daughter of the Rev.
and. Mrs. W. H. Perrin,
Pomeroy, has been named
Meigs High School's 1976-77
General Mills Family Leader
of Tomorrow.
Miss Perrin won the honor
by · competing with other
seniors in a written
knowledge and attitude
examination on Dec, 7. She
will r!!Ceive a certificate from
General Mills, sponSIJr of the
annual
educational
scholarship program, and
become eligible.for state and
national honors.
The State Family Leader of
Tomorrow, to be chosen
through judging centered on
perfonnance . in the Dec. 7
test, will receive a $1,500
c&lt;illege scholarship, with .the
second-ranking participant In
the state receiving a $500
grant. The state winner will
also earn for his or her school
a 20-volume reference work,
''The Annals of America/'
from Encyclopaedia
Britannica Educational
Corporation.
.In April, the 51 winners
representing every state and
the District of Columbia will
be the guests of General Mills
on
an
expense-paid

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. Six noted artists from the
Marlboro Music Festival will
present . " Music From
Marlooro", Friday; Feb. II,
at 8 p.m. at Johnson
Memorial United Methodist
Church in Huntington.
The concert, sponsored by
the Marshall Artists Series,
had originally been set for
Friday morning in Smith
Recital Hall at the Marshall
University as part of the
Convocation Series. Due to
the closing of the university,
the concert has been moved
to Friday night at the church

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RAP:

+++

MARRIED - The wedding of Miss Rhonda Cook,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cook, Syracuse, and
. Denver Ray Bush, son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Bush of
Pomeroy was an event of Sunday, Jan. 30; at the Church of
the Nazarene, Syracuse. The Rev . Dale Bass performed
the ceremony. Areception honoring the couple was held in
the parsonage fellowship hall following the wedding.

The boy I'm crazy aoout has very bad eyesight and he
could go blind. Doctors don 't know wben or if it will happen,
but he's preparing for it.
My family thinks I'm stupid to hook. up with a
"handicapped" person. It isn't that much of a burden: I'm
ready and willing to spend my life taking care of him if be
needs it. But be's SIJ smart and self.. ufficient, he won't.
How can I persuade Mom a(ld Dad to let me live my own
life? -ALMOST ENGAGED, AGE 16 .
DEAR A. E. :
Your folks are understandably worried. You would be too,
if positions were reversed. Parents want easy, secure lives for
their daughters and anything out of the ordinary threatens
that.
·
Your guy would be lbe best. persuader here. A self·
sufficient young man who is preparmg for a handicap before 1t
happens should be able tD convince adults that possible
blindness won't stop him. - HELEN AND SUE

SEEN AND HEARD
GALLIPOLIS - Edith
Wilson, 510 Second Ave .,
Gallipolis, . is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center. For
those wishing to send cards,
her room number is 214 A.

CANCELLED
+++
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
County Extensio 'n
We're 17-year-&lt;Jld identical twins. We've been dating two Homemakers Club meeting
brothers, aiSIJ twins. People get pretty confused when they see scheduled for Feb. 9 has been
us together. ·
cancelled .
The problem is, Terry says he loves Sherene, and Jerry loves
Maureen (me), and that's the exact opposite of the way we
want II. Help 1 - MAUREEN (WHO LOVES TERRY)
DEAR MAUREEN :
Too bad twins aren't as interchangeable as people
suppose. Even though they look exactly . alike, their
perSilnalities can be so different tha't they are drawn to
different partners.
Why don't you date. as a foursome for a while until yo~r ,
double troubles straighten out? (Could be you'll get confused m
the dark and end up with the wrong - or right- guys.) HELEN AND SUE

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Complete Bridal
And Anniversary
Service
Free Consultation

Ann's Bridal al!d
AnniversaiJ Services

-

Phone Anna Blackwood
98S-380S
Bron Thomas
992-2726

--

JUST RECEIVED
.

.•

.

NEW

••

SHIPMENT
OF FULL LENGTH

r-·----- ------·---- ~-1

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HIP

•

FAITII PERRIN
educational lour of Colonial
Williamsburg, Va., and
Washington, D. C. During the
tour, personal observations
and interviews will be con·
dueled to select the AU·
American Family Leader of
Tomorrow, whose scholar·
ship will be increased to
$5,000 . Second,' third and
fourth place winners will
receive scholarship increases
·to $4,000, $3,000 and $2,000,
respectively .

II
·

I

·~t;

BOOTS
American Made

I

Calendar

Exhibit for the month of February: 2'l Woodcut prmts by
Richard Kimble from the Old Bergen Art Guild. These are Pre·
Columbian prints and a representative grouping from the
January exhibits of work by students of Sarah Moshier, past
and present.
·
.
Gallery Hours: Saturdays and Sundays--. lmtu 5 p.m.;
Tuesdays and Thursdays -!Oa.m. untu 3p.m., Riverby.
Feb. 24, 6:30p.m.- French Art Colony Annual Dinner l~r
Members and Guests, Oscar's. Kezla Sproat, Ph. D. and
Broowyn Hopton of Columbus will present "Shakespeare on
Women." Official ki~ko(llf for annual membership drive,
"Paint the Towh French '' Barbara Epling, chairwoman.
Feb. 'll, 2-1 p.m. _: Parent-OIIId Workship, Riverby.
Macrame a Necklace; Helen .Null, instructor, Penny Moore,
chairwoman. •
March 24 -Close of Membership Drive for 1977.
March 'll, 2-1 p.m.- Receptloli for members at Riverby .

All Sizes
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HARTLEY'S SHOES

Middle Of Upper Block, Pomeroy • o.
Store Hours-9a.m.to·sp.m.
Monday thru Thursday ·
Open All Day Thursday
Friday Night TillS
Saturday 9 a.m. til5 p.m .

at 5th Avenue and loth Street.
Admission is $1 for aduhs,
50 cents for youth through the
age of 18, or Marshall
University Identification
card. Tickets will be
available at the·door:
Perfonning will be Lucy
Stoltzman and Yuuko
Shiokawa, violins; Kim
Kashkashian and Patricia
McCarty, violas; and Paul
Tobias and Paul Cheifetz,
CANCEIJ.ED
ceJIOfl.
POMEROY - Meeting of
The program will include
"String Trio in C Minor, Op. the Winding Trail Garden
9, No. 3' by Beethoven; Club .scheduled for Tuesday
"Quintet in B Flat, Op. tr/" by night has been cancelled.

SAFETY SHOE

.HEADQUA,TERS
·I RED WING l·qp.l
We have

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::-·
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!'·. ·

''&lt;:

,.

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...·

19th

KIDDIE SHOPPE

'

your dollars more than
ever! That's where WE
come in. We ofler t~e
highest interest roles
our savings plans . .So

money right here!

MEMBER OF FDIC

,...__

,.

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... .

Call or visit us today and
order !his fragrant, living
message ollove. A bundle
of fresh llowers arranged
. wilh a big red heart
and lovebird~ .
She'll love you
even more
for it.

11

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•••
••

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Ready to.

Serve You
• Savings
Accounts

• Savlnff
Cerflftcafes

• Checking
Accounts
• Low Cost
Loans ·••• All

fypes; Sizes

01976 FlonSis ' Transworld Del111ery

,•,,

YOUR EXTJU. TOUCH n.()MT

•

We Accept BankAmericard &amp; Buckeye Gold Cards .
,
Free Parking
·
PHONE

A

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AaltfJ/4.;
•n

••

.:

61.. ·'f'f:t • :l64&lt;4

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FLORIST

1.1'1AIN • POI1E'ROY, 01110

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• Safety De·
posit Boxes

SILVER.BRIDGE
PLAZA

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"157n

~

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(OURT STREET,

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GALLIPOLIS, 0.

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He.ad and
Shoulders
Above the
Rest ...
COMMERCIAL &amp;
SAVINGS BANK

little more for your
•

your si;ze

Middle of Upper Block. Pomeroy • O.
·
Store Hours-9 a.m. tq 5 p.m ..
Monday thru Thursday
Open All Day Thursday
Friday Night Ttl8
Saturday 9 a.m. til 5 p.m.

.CLIP AND SAVE FOR REFERENCE

you really do get a

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Complete se
ion of Red ,Wing shoes &amp;
boots. Available widths AA to, EEE sizes 6 to

MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
9 AM Tll9 PM

the law allows on ALL

,, ,

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SUNDAYS
11 AM TIL 7 PM

1igh, you have to stretch

·' '

Their

ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Edmond L. Wright of Rt.
2, Crown City, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Patrice, to RickS. Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ralston (jack) JohnSIJn of Route 2, Crown City. Wedding
plans are incomplete.
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Racine
By~rs. Francis Morrt•
Mrs. Edna Pickens, Mrs.
Ollie Mae Cozart and Mrs.
Sue Imboden went to
Columbus to see Mrs. Oretha
Snider who underwent
surgery In Doctors Hospital.
They also visited Mrs.
Ramona Toner and children.
Mr. Ivan (Dobbin) Powell
has returned home from
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch
called on Mr. Clint Birch and
Leota at Stiversville a recent
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace
spent Sunday afternoon at
Crown City with Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Brace ana family and
went shopping at Parkers·
burg Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Unley Hart
visited Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Reed and Mr. Narley Hysell
at Bradbury Sunday af·
terooon.
Weekend guests of Rev. ·
and Mrs. Don Walker were
Mr. and Mrs. Mark McClung
of Andulusla, Ala.; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry 1 • Gawthrop and
children and Mr. and Mrs.
Delbert Wal)ter of Summers·
VIlle, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Don Jr. Walker and chlldren
o!Dixle, W. ya. TheY·.~ame to
celebrate their mother's
birthday. Alter church
service S!ay evening the
congregati n honored her
with fellow Jp in the church
basement
lng cake, coffe
and Kool-Al~ .
Mrs. RalF, Badgley has
returned
home
from
Columbus aad announced the
birth of a da\lghter. oorn Jan.
4at Riverslqe HOipitalto Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Badgley. The
baby weighed 9 lbs. 2 Ozs.,
and was named Amy Jo
BadRiey. Grandparents are
Mr. and l\tflll. Ralph Badgley
and Mr. •nd Mrs. George
Sil' ''' On of Charleston, W.
Va.

l.f

SUNDAY
CLIMAX of National Youth
Week will be a youth program
presented at the Paint Creek
Baptist Church Sunday, 7
p.m. Melvin Freeman,
grandson of the late Rev. A..
G.
Freeman,
former
mo~erator of the Providence
Missionary
Baptist
AsSilciation, will be guest
speaker. Public invited .
CHURCH WOMEN United
wiU install their 1977 officers
Sunday, 3 p.m. at the
Triedstone Baptist Church.'
Special music. The public is
invited. Mrs. Herman Koby is
presesident and Mrs. Jack
Knight , vice president.
MONDAY
DEADLINE lor reservations
for dinner meeting of Meigs
Women's Aglow Fellowship,
to be held at the Meigs Inn
Thursday, is Monday. Rita
Robinson, Clarksburg, W.
Va., wili be the speaker.
Dinner to start at 7 p.m. with
doors opening at 6:30 p.m.
Meeting
is
non·
denominational and open to
the public; dinner charge,
$3.25. For reservations in the ·
Gallipolis area call Judy
Jones at 6-0046.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN Baptist Women
will meet at the Calvary
Baptist Church, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Reva EvaiL' is in
· charge of the program .
MONTHLy board meeting of
the Gallia County Unit ,
American. Cancer Society
Tuesday, 7,30 p.m. at the
Jackson Pike office of the
k
·1
Ohio Valley Ban commuru y
meeting rodm.
THE FILM, "Burning Hell"
will be shown Tuesday night
at 7:30 p.m. at the Church of
God of Prophecy on o. J.
White Rd. The public is In·
vi ted to attend . There is no
admission charge, but a
freewill offering will he
taken.
MARTHA Unit of the Grace
United Methodist Church,
9:30 a.m. Tuesday at the
church.
ABIGAIL Unit of the Grace
United Methodist Chur~h,
I :30 p.m. Tuesdliy at the
church .
WEDNESDAY ·
DEBORAH Unit of the Grace
United Methodist Church,
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Arden Dobson, 408 Hedge·
wood Drive.
ELIZABETH UNIT of the
Grace United Methodist
Church, 7:30p.m. atthehome
of Mrs. Howell Edwards, 529
Magnolia Drive.
MARY OF Bethany Unit of
Grace United Methodist
Church, 7:30 ·p:m: at 'the
church.
SPECIAL Missionary service
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at the
Church of God of Prophecy.
Rev . and Mrs. Dan Corbett
who served three years in
Korea will be the guest
speakers.
111URSUA Y
RIO GRANDE Garden Club·
at the home of Jessie
Richards, 7:30 p.m-. Thurs•
day . Co~ost•ss, Cecelia
Jenkins. J.eader, G•rnet
Wood.

are

Shows are an excellent

...
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IN TH E

in-

PLAZA

ENERGY SAVING HOURS
MON. THRU FlU.
11 AM· 8 PM
SAT. 11 AM TIL 6 PM

nia, Texas and Michigan
without traveling great
distances.
One of the most prestigious

GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizens Center ,located at 220
JuckSIJn Pike in the County
Home Building, is open
Monday through Friday from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The following
activities are scheduled for
this week :
Monday, Feb. 7- Physical
Fitness, 11 :30 a.m.; Chorus
Practice, 1·3 p.m.; Blood
Pressure Check, 1 :30·2:30
p.m . .
Tuesday, Feb. 8 - Visiting
and Quilting, 9 a.m.·3 p.m .;
Bible Study, 1:3().2 :30 p.m.
Wedne sday, Feb . 9 Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m.;
Card Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, Feb . 10 Potluck Supper, 6:30 p.m .
Friday , Feb. II - Art
Class, 1·2 p.m .; Social Hour, 7
p.m.
·The Seniors' Co-op and the
Craft Shop are open each day ,
at 12:30-1:30 p.m. for sales.
The Senior Nutrition
Program serves the following

of our local shows. U was in·
teresting to both tho:;e atten·
ding and to the exhibitors in
the show. Several of the
larger shows include a forum ·
for collectors' with lughly
qua lified speakers on a
number of subjects.
Judging from the mail we
receive, an identification
clinic would be very popular
with collectors •1111 the
general public alike. A small
li brary nook where show
patrons could spend an hour
or so doing research without
having. to purchase a number
of specialized volumes would
be helpful.
The opportunities for
education are many and we
believe would prove to be
"good busine;-s" for prom&lt;&gt;tion managers. We believe a
knowledgeable coll ector
would return a good dividend
for the investment.

platform from which to
launch a variety of educa·
tiona! programs for coll ec·
tors. Several years ago our
coll ectors' club held a
reproductions exhibit at one

merchandise from Cal ifor-

Iff::===========:::=:::::::~:~.~--·~~

;:: Coming
Events

clientele

shows in the nation will be
held in February. The 33rd
Annual National Antiues
Show at Madison Suare
Garden in New York City wiU
be a week·long event opening
Feb. 19. More than 300 ex·
..bibi!ors will be combined for
a glittering array of collec·
tors' items.
A specia l feature of the
·show will be an appraisal
clinic conducted by members
of the Appraisers Association
of America. Patrons will be
able to secure an appraisal
from a qualified person at a
nominal cost. We applaud
this effort and wish more
shows would copy the idea.

terested collectors, not just
the curious, casual looker,
Their booth space has the ·
magnetic attrotction of being
associal~d with other dealers
giving the shopper a unique
opportunity to view
specimens from aU over the
country.
Tlus works to the ad·
vant.Jge of the collector also.
Only at a show could you find

Patrice Wright

Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy Kroger Stores

Today, with prices sky-

··

lly Jean llaroes
A recent collectors'
publication listed the dates of
more than !50 antiques shows
throughout the nation for the
month of January. The Jist
continued month by month
for the full year.
Reading through a portion
of the listing left us wearied
as though we had actually
walked the miles of aisles, yet
images of treasures to be
seen and perhaps were temj}ti ng and teasing our collec·
to1·'s appetite.
The list was by no mea ns
complete, which brings us to
the contention that antiques
and collectors' shows are bi g
business in our nation today.
Small wonder. With the ex·
ception of the inconvenience
and packing and unpacking
and being on the circuit from
city to ci ty a good part of the
seasun, dealers or exhibitors
have found that shows are
good for business.

Energy Saving Store Hours

Complete Bank

: :·

Mendelssohn; "Italian
Serenade" by Wolfe; and
"String Sextet in A Major,
Op. 48" by Dvorak.
Artists series manager,
Jim Martin noted, "Several
of the artists have postponed
trips abroad In order to
perfonn for us at night and
we are grateful to !bern and
Johnson Memorial Church
for making this concert
possible."

Committee holds first meeting
RIO GRANDE - The first Advisory Committee. It was ditlonal cassett handler to be
meeting of the Data Account· decided by the members that added to the NCR 399 ac·
lng Advisory Committee was 110 specific date or time was counting machine. Fetterly
beld at Buckeye Hills Career needed for the next meeting. . stated that recruitment of
Center.
DeVeny stilted the schedule · students was the major
Members present were of classes for the day con· problem of the program at
Harold L. Walker, Earl sisted of a 3 hour lab•. one this time. Recruitment will
Walters, Dick Detty, Ph!Up and half hour related class be researched by the com·
DeVeny, Larry McGraw, and one hour academic class, mittee and Individual
Roger Fetterly, Gloria Ar· English for the junior year, recommendations equated
cadipane and Vickie Hub- Government-History. for the and analyzed lor 1m·
bard.
senior year.
plementation in the spring
Philip DeVeny, Business
Fetterly, data accounting and school year 1977-78.
and Office Education instructor, discussed
Larry McGraw, junior
Supervisor, commented on equipment needs and priority office data accounting in·
the reason and duties of an '!BS_ established for an ad· structor, and Fetterly agreed
English is not a course In
which they •re specialized to
teach. A suggestion was
made by Dick Detty to
eliminate English from the
course and give the
necessities needed of English
knowledge to the English
tea cher. Walters and Walker
commented that two things of
major importance in English
and the Data Accounting
Program were the proper
way to write a letter and
correct usage of the
telephone . Walker com·
mented that accuracy plays
the most important part of
any job.
Fetterly questioned if
math was lacking for em·
ployment. Walters and
Walker both agreed that the
basics of math were not being
taught.
"How much in-depth ac·
counting
does
local
businesses expect of students
graduating
from
our
program?" Fetterly asked.
Walker and Walters agreed
that the understanding of the
princials
of financial
statements was needed.
Fetterly asked U detailed
accounting should,be studied
or time should be spent . on
practice sets, and Walters
commented that the cost
accounting principal is set up
by each individual business
or corporation.
Detty
suggested cost accounting be
skipped and time put to in·
come tax and alSIJ practice
sets.
Fundamentals of . Data
Processing, Com·
munications, Business Law,
and Human Relations were
discussed . Fetterly com·
mented that Data Processing
I'
was mainly experimental this
'
year. It was suggested for
communications that more.
time be spent on the
techniques of writing memos.
Walters emphasized that in
the study of Business Law,
students would have enough
knowledge to know when a
lawyer Is needed.
Walker and Walters
discussed Job Interviews
with both agreeing that
appearance plays an im·
portant part in an interview.
Applications should be
completely filled out with
bonest information and be
neat.
1. w
Another meeting will be
planned .in the spring.

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.(intique shows make good business sense

OPEN THESE HOURS

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Mr. and Mrs. Denver R. Bush ..""

Six artists performing
'Music from Marlboro '

1

NE 614 Y91.JS86

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sister may outgrow tlus stage, with a little help from her
husband. How about having a talk with him? -SUE

lSHARTLEY'S SHOES
p

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Faith Perrin selected
Meigs' 'family leader'

Accumulate your · points now. Person or
persons buying the most ·merchandise will
·receive a sso gift certificate. Your
purchases count from 1-31-77 thru 2-19-77.
ALSO COME IN AND SIGN UP TO WIN A

,. •.

.,

NOTE FROM SUE: For Sllme, marriage brings a certain

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Announcement is
being made of the engagement and approaching marriage
of Miss Anita Lynn Buckley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Buckley, Pomeroy, to Thomas E. Ball, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Ball, Pomeroy. The bridHiect is a 1975
graduate of Eastern High School and is employed as a
ca~hier at the O'Bleness Hospital in Athens. Her fiance is
a 1972 graduate of Meigs High School and he is employed
at the Gavin Power Plant at Cheshire ..The wedding will be
an event of March 5 at 7:30p.m. at the Mt. Herman United
Brethern Church. The custom of open church will be
observed.

DON'T FORGETI I

PRIZE

.'

~ense of self-importance, which translates 'stuffiness.' Your

Many Savings Throughout The Store

•10 •• , . 25 • 50
TO BE GIVE..Ili _MIIAY FEB.

'"'

+++

SIZE 7
THRU 14

1

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B.J-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6, 1977

CLOSED SUNDAY

*DESIGNER STYLING
*EXCLUSIVE FASHION KNITS
* MILL PRICES

CLEARANCE
SALE
Our Entire Stock of
Fall &amp; Winter Fashion Fabrics.

$
•

Hurry! While The Selections
Last. Save Over 60%. ·

menu at 12 noon:

Monday - Braised Liver,
au gratin potatoes, tossed
salad with dressing , biscuits,
butter, cinnamon applesauce,
milk.
Tuesday -Salisbury steak
with tomato gravy, buttered
diced potatoes, buttered
peas, rolls, butter, bread
pudding with raisins, milk.
Wednesday
Fried
chicken with gravy, fluffy
rice , green lima beans,
biscuits, butter, peach short·
cake with topping, milk.
Thursday - Beef stew,
pineapple slice on lettuce,
cornbread, butter, ice cream,
milk .
Friday -Baked ham slice,
soup beans, cottage cheese
salad, cornbread, butter ,
purple plums, milk.
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.

BONUS SPECIALS

5 LB. REMNANT BAGS 591 EA.
SELECTED BOLTS 11.09 YD.

YD.

SEE OUR
NEW SPRING
ARRIVALS
*NEW STYLES
*NEW LOW PRICES

KNIT MILL STORE
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SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
PH. 446-9199 '

'

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•
•

•••.

WINTER SAVINGS
or

•

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ARMSTRONG
CONGOLEUM
(NO WAX R.OORS)
CARPETS

.;•
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(FOR HOME OR COMMERCIAL USE)

....
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CERAMIC TILE

&amp;

.

(WHITE, COLORS &amp; DESIGNS)

GENUINE VERMONT
CABINETS

~Co.

•

SLATEENT::~~:~;E~ENS)

(SCHEREICH, COUNTRY PINE
VANITIES
&amp; SHENANDOAH)
ALSO

FORMICA, MARBLE WINDOW SILLS AND VANITY TOPS, CORIAN TOPS, FAUCETS, SINKS,
MASTICS &amp; GLUE, GROUT, VINYL DRESSING &amp; CLEANERS, CARPET TAPE, TOOLS AND PAINT.
CALL FOR FREE EXTIMATES &amp; WE INSTALL

GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERING
749 3RD AVE•

PH. 446-1995'
\

�B+-The Sunday TimeS-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6, 1977

·Headaches of a 'haute co1.tture ' man tokl

Katie's Korner

By Ellle GrossiiUin
NEW YORK - (NEA) Even if we hadn't caught
John Anthony in the middle of
a crisis, he probably would
said what he did about
POMEROY - Vernon N~aae • .blood chalnnan for the have
Rosa lynn Carter.
Melga Ollpter of the American Red &lt;r~. annoonced that the
But first the crisis, which
location d the nat Bloodmobile visit In Meigs County has been
a designer's nightmare.
was
dllnged due to gas regulations.
"Did
you see bow much
Itlwi been held at the Pomeroy Elementary School for
mohair
I
used in my spring
aome time. The nell visit which will be on Feb. 14 from I.S line'" he asked
gesturp.m. will be beld in senior citizens rooms at the fonner Ing towards thesadly,
sample
racks
Pomeroy Junior High bull~ on East Main Street, Pomeroy .
in
his
showroom.
.
Neue urges all who are able to attend the Bloodmobile as
"The fabric mill has the
many unlbl are needed.
unadulterated gall to caU and
MRS, ROYAL (Ural ) Thomas, fonnerly of Syracuse, now say we won't receive it on
residing In Columbus with her ~ughter and husband, Mr. and time. I'm jw.t beside myself.
why I have gray hair,"
Mra. Raymond Miller, writes that on Feb. 3, l!KO she and her That's
hequipped. ·
late husband, daughter Margaret and Belly Maag Reibel
He does have gray hair but
walked acrou the frozen Ohio to Mason City.
it
doesn
'I age the tiny, boyish
She writes that they are having the same type of weather
man of 38 as much as his
In Coh1111bus that we are experiencing here.
Mrs. Thomas receives The Dally Sentinel and keeps up on worn featilres.
"I always use special colall the local news.
ors," he continued,. "and if
· We enjoyed hearing 11'001 you.
you don't ship spring goods in
January,
you can forget it.
HAPPYBIRTHDAYwishes (belated) go to Kerri Beegle,
N
ow
the
mill
calls and tells us
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roberi Beegle, Racine.
not
only
won't
weget it, they
Kerr! was nine years old Tlrursday.
dyed
the
mohair
green, our
Kerr! is adollandlknowher day was a luq)pyone.
least important color. Mauve
· JIM HAMM, Blanchester, Ohio, fonneriy of Meigs County, was our bestseller. We're g"'
stopped in for a visit Friday, Jim is presently teaching at ing to be eating mohair for a
year."
Blanchester High School.
Then, of course, he says,
Blanchester is located !Smiles from Wihnlngton, Ohio and
approximately 25 miles from Cincinnati.
·
Jim was a sporbl photographer fot The Daily Sentinel
when he was located In Meigs County.

By Katie Crow

''the stores will call and say
your delivery ill terrible and
the customer wbo sees the
two pages Vogue did on our
mohair in the February issue
wonl find it in the stores."
It was never like that
before. A designer could torment himself with just the
design, but now ...
"My sample tailors are 60.
What happens when they go?
I don't know anyone who's interested in sewing as a career
these days.".
And suppose you find the
skilled craftsmen, look at the
goods they may have to work
with. "I just can't lind fabrics
anymore," he lamented.
"Those in my spring collection come from one of my biggest suppliers. · Would you
believe I actually had to pass
up their line for fall because
they've gone commercial?
"If I go to Europe for Iabrie
at $30 a yard, I ~n't maintain
my price structure and I
don't want to price myself
like Geoffrey Beene."
As .it is, a three-piece matte
jersey John Anthony ensemble • retails lor $340; a
featherweight unlined gabardine coat lor·$480.
· He began to munch pretzels

Social
Calendar

OONGENIAL Ben Quisenberry, Syracuse, is keeping very
husy even in this kind of weather.
Ben has, since Jan. I, received 800 orders for tomato seeds.
and requests for his different varieties of seed.
While we are worrying about Old Man Winter and possibly
a flood Ben Is thinking of the good old summer time. Ben said
that if he lives until Aug. 24 he will be 90 years of age. And just
MONDAY
think, he operates a business and still drives his car and is
MEIGS SALON 720, Eight
forever doing for others.
and Forty, 8 p.m. Monday at
You are a fine man - Ben Quisenberry.
the home of · Mrs. Mary
Martin, Pomeroy.

Album gives winter
needleworkers
ideas
•

SUNDAY
MORNING WORSHIP
cancelled
Sunday
at
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints,
Portland-Racine branch ;
communion service, 2 p.m.
followed by Sharon Russell
speaking on stewardship.
REGULAR services at the
Hysell Run Free Methodist
Church Sunday.
MASON VFW Post 9926
meeting Sunday, I p.m.
followed by cornbeef and
cabbage dinner for members
and guests.
· MONDAY
MEIGS FAIR Board, 8 p.m.
Monday at fairgrounds. ·
SOUTHERN Athletic
Boosters, 7:30p.m. Monday,
at Southern High School,
Racine.
DEADLINE for reservations lor dinner meeting of
Meigs Women's Aglow
Fellowship, to be held at
Meigs Inn Thursday , is
Monday . Rita Robinson ,
Clarksburg, W. Va., will be
speaker. Dinner to start at 7
p.m. with doors opening at
6:30 p,m. Meeting is nondenominational and open to
public; dinner charge, $3.25.
For reservations call Gloria
Johnson, 992-5845 ; June
Baker, 949-2723 ; Joyce
Hoback, 949-2325 ; Judy
Jones, Gallipolis area, 4460946.
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club, Monday, 7:30 p.in. at
the home of Mrs. Fred
Kessinger. Miss Judy Arnold
. and Mrs. J&amp;mlS Arnold will
be co-holtesses.
RACINE Chapter 134,
O.E.S. will meet Monday at
the Masonic Temple, B p.m.
Dues are payable. Charlotte
Wamsley and Kay HUJ,
refreslments committee.

HOME iS WHERE
THE HEART !S
By JOanne Schreiber
Winter is he time for
needlework - quilting, em·
broidery, smockjng, knitting,
crochet or simple sewing.
Whichever is your own
favopte, you · will lind pat·
. terns, inStructions, ideas and
inspiration in the brand-new
edition of the Needlework
Album, available exclusively
to readers of this newspaper.
For those who want to get
staried right away on new
needlework projecbl, the new
Album features a complete
24-page pullout Gift BOOk,
which is jam-packed with Instructions for gift items.
There is a handsome fatherson cable knit sweater set, a
lovely crosHtitch afghan, a
collection of lair items, a
cross-stitch alphabet, plus
potholders, mittens, sweaters
and scarves. Of special interest is a section on beginn·
ing embroidery for little
giris, with a primer on 9as!c
stitches and instructions lor a
glngham potholder decorated
in cross stitch.
As always, there are hundreda of patterns to order.
One of the prettiest is a
flower-of-thiHilonth quilt: a
oattem with transfers for 12
different flower clusters,
from crocus in January to
poinsettia in December, ineluding lull quilt directions.
nus· would be a beautiful
quilt to work on as a wedding
present. There are also two
aamplers to embroider In the
traditional blue and white
Deerfield style. One says
"Home i.s where the heart
i.s"; the other says "God
blesa our home". They
measure a lull 16 by 21 inches.
Since quilting is such a
popular needle-hobby,

several pages of quilt pat·
terns are offered. There are
tulip appliques, Flower
Basket , Tumbling Block,
Balkan Puzzle and Hit-ilrMiss, all to he worked in thrifty ragbag scraps, oiher patterns include Windmill,
Diamonds, Star-Sparkle ,
Astronaut, Turkey Tracks,
Baby Block, Nine-Patch and
Star of LeMoyne. In addition,
th•"'l ar• 'ive smaller quilts
to Wu• ~ for youngsters - an
ABC crib cover, embroidered
and appiiqued pets, a horse
design, a Flower Girl, and
Sunbonnet Sue and Fishing
Lad.
In addition, there are toys
and dolls to stitch, items for
the whole family to knot or
crochet, afghans and gill$ to
make, plus complete lnstruclions for basic crochet slitches.
, All in all, the new
Needlework Album is a terrifle bargain and a real
WESTERN Boot CB Club
source of needlework lnspiralion. To get your copy, just meeting, 7 p.m. Monday at
send $2.000 plus your own Roush's Landing; Racine.
name, address and zip to StitTUESDAY
chin' Time, care of this
MIDDLEPORT
Chamber
newspaper, Box 503, Radio
of Commerce Thursday,
City Station, New York, N.Y.
10019. Then look through it ·12:25 at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
, and order the patterns you
like; each pattern Is 75 cents meeting room.
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter,
plus 25 cents handling.
Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
Happy Needlework!
p.m. Tuesday at ihe
Columbia Gas Co. for
demonstration by Betty
Newlon.
TO SHOW FILM
.GALLIPOLIS - The film,
"Burning Hell" will be shown
Tueaday night at 7:30 p.m. at
the Church of God of
Prophecy on 0 . J. White Rd
The pubUc is invited. There Is
no admission charge, b~t a
free will offering will be
taken .
7
SAllE 'i~ Mi~ed Girls or

For ~av casual wear
~::~ Collar.Wedye

CARPETS STEAM CLEANED

Sole Asstd.ColOrS

DIRT EXTRACTION METHOD

I

.

.

Streak less Machine Wall Washing
Upholstery - Windows - Floors
Complete Line of . . .
Cleaning Equipment &amp; Supplies

1.

ADVANCED CLEANING SERVICE

' I

1"'

L

1
I
I
I

l

84-The Sunday Tim~ntinei, Sunday, F&lt;b. 6, I9n .

FOR FRIENDLY FREE ESTIMATES

(all 675·5572 After ' P.M.

I
I

L-•----------------------~

.while someone in another
room screamed at the mill on

the phone and outside freez·
ing winds blewmercile5.'llY on
Seventh Avenue.
Still, lor a man who faced
" losi ng th ousands of
dollars," he was remarkably
subdued. Soft-spoken almost
to silence, blunt, given to
referring to himself as John;
a native New Yorker who by
I~ had graduated from the
Fas hion Institute of
Technology and aiso studied
in Partsandltaly.
For nine ·years he worked
for a "$10.75 suit house - it
was quite a drag, although I
brought the suits up to $59.76.
. Then l went to Adolph Zelinka
and worked there for two and
a half years. It was better;
those sulis started at $69."
And then in 1970, John Anthony Iorio, son of Anthony
Iorio who works with iron and
did all the fixtures in St.
Patrick's Cathedral and the
U.S. Treasury building and
elsewhere, became Jolm An·
thony, Inc.
"While many designers
such as Halston- and Diane
von Furstenberg have formulas, which Is not to be confused with style," he says,
"that's not true of Jolul. You
won 't buy the same dress
from John today and 15 years

from now as you will from
Halston."
What you will buy,
will
be
however ,
sophisticated and sleek
because "America is a
mndern country, on the go,
fast, new. The fantasy look is
wonderful for 'La Boheme'
but not for today's Jiving."
You'll find either very dark
or very light clothes in his col·
lections because "any woman
who wears screaming red or
green or, ugh , pale blue, does
not have taste.
"J love monochromatic
things," he says. " They have
such a chic about them. And
spring '77 is probably the
most modem collection I've
ever done. So pure and simple. Seasonless, weightless,
timeless."
Perfect for his customer
whom he sees as a figure
that's tall, a girl who's bodyconscious, who wants to be
cosmopolitan.
Which somehow, perversely, brought to our mind [\irs.
Carter. That's when he said,
"I don't think she could ever
be chic, but she could be very
attractive. She should be
dressed by one designer
wl)o'd give her a certain style
and if she asked, I'd do her
over from head to toe."
The White House did ask.

kind of. "They've called
every designer on Seventh
Avenue, " he said with
disgust, ''and I'm not Interested. Being dressed by
everybody is not the answer
for the first lady of the land."
It wouldn 'I be so terrible
even ~ she chose one or two
designers. "Mrs. Ford more
or Jess did that and she had no
taste. But you can't be
Halston at night and John Anthony during the day."
But John Anthony Iorio can
divide and unite like a simple
biological cell. "John An·
thony stays here when I leave
and when 1 come in in the
mornln~ . I lind him here.

Grain inspection
to cost farmers
WASHINGroN (UP! ) inspection agencies are being
Farm and grain industry eliminated and replaced with
spokellllletl fronn slx states, federal inspectors.
Including Ohio, today told a
At Inland poinis, private
Senate subcommittee that and state agencies remain In
Inauguration of a newly re- business, but stiffer federal
formed and expanded federal supervision Including new
grain inlpectton program this record-keeping regulations.
year has produced sharp cost . were imposed, and the law
Increases which will result in mandated coliection of fees to
lower prices to grain pay most of the federal
fanners.•
supervisory costs.
"We ...believe that the
Wells Hanley, president of
intent of Congress was to the Memphis Board of Trade,
correct some flaws (in the testified the supervisory fees
previous inspection system) sboilld be eliminated and
where necessary btit not to supervision ctists paid, as In
create
another
vast the past, by federal lunda.
bureaucracy," said Ailan R. Also, Hanley complained ,
Pillkerton, a Helix, Ore., new record-keeping rules are
wheat · fanner speaking for so burdensome that many
the Oregon Wheat Growers · elevators may simply quit
League.
using official federal
Spokesmen lor the Texas Inspection .
Com Growers Association,
Farm bloc lawmakers
Dimmit, Tex., added that the Thursday had announced the
Agriculture Department's introduction of legislation
new
Fetferal
Grain which would eliminate the
Inspection Service will .supervisory fees and ease the
charge f!2 to inspect a record-keeping regulation.
b·uckload of grain at Corpus
Other witnesses appealing
Christi, Tex., in place of the for changes in the new
S3 lee previously charged by inspection system today
a private agency.
included spokesmen from the
- The controversies
ToleM, Ohio, Board of Trade,
Including complaints about the Notthwest Agri-Dealers
new fees to finance Iederal Association of Mankato,
supervision of private and Minn., the Lincoln, Neb.,
state grain inspection · at Grain Exchange, the Pacific
Inland markets - arose out of Northwest Grain Deale~s
a reform law passed by Association of Portland, Ore.,
Congress last year in and· more than hail a dozen
response to charges of Texas farm and industry
bribery, misgrading and groups.
grain thefts at Gulf porbl.
Dick Potter , a country
Under the new law, state elevator owner from Morgan,
inspection agencies were al- Minn., testified that the new
lowed to remain in operation supervisory lees would raise
at porbl, but all private port his operating costs about ?JJ
per cent.

When 1 go home, I'm John:
Iorio. Is that not ·as it should
be?"
.
For John Anthony Iorio' a~
parently.

·

DAUGHTER BORN
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs . Daniel Grueser,
Pomeroy , are announcing the
birth of their first child, a
daughter ,. Kelley Jean, Jan.
:.1 at HolZer Medical Center.
Grandparents are Mrs.
Renee Stone of Middleport,
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Grueser, Minersville. Greatgrandparents are Mrs. Alva
R. Stone, Atlanta , Ga .; Mr.
and Mrs. P. N. Ohlhouse,
Aberdeen, South Dakota ; Mr.
and Mrs. William Fieida, Jr.,
Letart, W. Va., and Mrs:
George Grueser, Syracuse.
Great-grandmothers are
Mrs. Eva Ohlhouse and Mrs.
Eva Brutsman, both of
Aberdeen, s. D.

·2s% OFF
BABY SHOE
BRONZING

"When our costs for something as significant as this
increase over ?JJ per cent, the
producer will be accepting
less for his grain," Potter
warned.

By Bob Hoeflich

ROGER HOOD, left, and HANK TIIOMPSON .
'

New management team

announced for store
Gall ipolis
Morris
Haskins, president of
Haskins-Tanner Company,
announced today a new
management team for this
clothing store that has been a
part of ihe Gallipolis buslnes~
community for over 100
years.
Co-managers now
operating this men's and
boys ' cl othing store are
Roger L. Hood and Hank
Thompao~ .

Roger Hood became
associated with HaskinsTanner in 1960 after
graduating from MarShall
College with a B.S. Degree in
retailing . Roger married
Carol Jean Fowler, and they
reside at 304 Fourth Ave. in
Gallipolis along with their
four children . Roger is very

active in the first BaptiSt
Church and serves as a
deacon at the present time.
Hank Thompson first
joined Haskins-Tanner in
1964, and later worked for
Star Clothes in Ashland, Ky.
for three years, then Hank
spent the next eight years as
clothin g\~ manufacturers·
representative in West
Virginia; rKentucky and Ohio.
He represented such line
companies as Van Heusen,
Camp, Europe Craft and Lee.
Hank married Mary
Walker and they reside at 511
Main Street in Point
Pleasant.
Other members of the
Haskins-Tanner staff are
Burhl Hood, Ted Wiseman,
Gladys Maynard and Nancy
Cox.

During February

Mich·ael Lord, age 9,
heals, prays. for all
'"

31

11.25
POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center activities located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
is open 9 a.m. - 3 p.m.,
Monday through Friday.
Monday, Feb. 7 - Cards
and Games; Square Dance,
12: 31).3 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 6- Physical
Fitness, 10:45 a.m.; Chorus,
12:15-2 p.m. ·
Wednesday, Feb. 9 Social Security Represen- .
tative,.9::.! a.m.-12 :30 p.m.;
Games, 12: 31).2 p.m.
Thu~sday, Feb. 10 ~
Physical Fitness, 10:45 a.m.;
Sing-a-Long, 12:30 p.m.
Friday, Feb. 11 - Art
Class,
10·11 :30
a.m.;
Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
5enior Citizens Nutrition
Program, 11 :30 a.m.-12:30
p.m. Monday through Friday.
Monday ~ Bilked pork
chop, au gratin potatoes,
buttered, green beans, ap.
plesauce; roll, butter, milk.
Tuesday - Salisbury steak
with gravy, buttered diced
potatoes1 buttered peas,
bread p~dding with raisins,
bread, butter, milk.
Wednesday - Chicken pot
pie, fluffy rice, buttered
spinach, !shortcake (peach)
with topping, bread, butter,
milk.
Thursday - Beef stew,
pineapple slice on lettuce;lce
cream, bi'!"uibl, butter, milk.
Friday - Baked fish,

creamed corn, cole slaw,
stewed ptunes, cornbread,
butter, milk.
Coffee, lea and buttennilk
served dally. Please try to
register the day· before so
that we can serve everyone.

-t-tutp.D-in±"
DELUXE SELF-CLEANING
30" OVEN-RANGE WITH
BLACK GLASS DOOR!

Model RB737GT

SAn ·

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-t--tut:p_oi.n.
14.2 CU. FT. NO-FROST REFRIGERATOR. BIG FREEZER,
JUST 28:' WIDE. 61 " HIGH.
Model CTF1 4CT

SAVE

50

t------------.. .

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);.

~
6 CYClE BUILT-IN DISH
WASHER WITH DISH &amp;
WASHING CYCLE!
M ~d e l

62

20.96

HDA.800

SAVE

!3rlght bronze unmpunted

, shoe for $5 .96 . Plus many
others . Pr ices above for
br lghtbronzeon ly , You can

also add your child 's name,

----------....t~-----------1

birth

da te

sentiment tor

Family-Size Dryer with
18-lb. Washer with
PERMANENT PRESS a11d
RAPID WASH, HANDWASH•
SPECIAL POLY-KNIT Settirngtl
and AUTOMATIC SOAK
AND WASH Features
o Six Drying Selectlont, In·
• " R~ptd Wosn " - doeo a

complete wash-rinse-spin
cycle in 10 minutes.
• Handwash • - u1e1 aeparate
agitator, with special cyc ler
water level, and speed

~

~~~~~;Jr~~~~~7

Items
thoroughly.
setting•
to wash delicate
• Automatic Soak and Washsoak• up to 10 hours, proceeds automatically
through complete wash rinse-spin.
• Five Waih Speeds-Five

We Also Do
Silver Plating

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

I

• Removable, eaa~-to-clean,
up·tronl llnl filler.
• Timed or AutOmallc Crocles.

424 Second Ave .

• Separate Start Bulton.
• Porcelain-Enamel Top and
Drum.

Ga IIi polis, Ohio

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Water Temperatures Infinite Water levels.
Modtl OLB 17~ 0P E1 6CH' ~

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eluding two Permanent
Prell and Special Pol]r-Krtltl
settings.
• Audible, odjusloblo enol-of·
cycle signal.

or

j ust 15c a

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
DALLAS (UP! ) - Faith ·
healer Michael Lord doesn 't
understand why people think
a 9-year-oid preacher is so
unusual.
After all , he's been at it for
five years.
With the best of them , he
can shout-, strut, wave his
arms, thunder warnin gs of
hellfire to the wicked and
promise the kingdom of
heaven to the fa ithful.
Little Michael, as he is
known o~ the evangelistic
trail, rides along as the Bible
Belt's youn gest pulpit
prodigy. He has been
spreading God's word since
he was 4:
Little Michael's sermons
are simple, based on familiar
Jljble stories, but they 'are
calculated to inspire rapt
attention and choruses of
"hallelujah."
"I'm just an ordinary boy,"
he said after an unproductive
night that netted less than
$100 for Little Michael
Ministries.
"I watch
91rtoons, play baseball, play.

ssooo

• Extra Rinse and Extra Wash
Optlono.
• Automatic detergent,
bleach and Iabrie condl·
Uoner dispensers.
• Porcelain-enamel llnleh A
l'nslde
out.
r '

ON THE PAIR

BIG SAVINGS ON ~
AT OUR INVENTORY CL£ARARCE~
. HOTPOINT APPUANCES
.
.
•RANGES &amp; OVENS

•REFRIGERATORS
•DISPOSAlS

•TRASH COM
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•DRYERS

ItS atime tv remember.

•WASHERS

· ~AIR CONOITIOfftRS

POMEROY

LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties
Phooe 992·2181
8:30-5:30. Mil Closes At 5

,.
•'
•

And the easiest way to saue and preserve the beauli ful
memories of your happiest day Is wit h professional
portraits ,
We are expert~ at bridal photography. So you carl
trust us to caplure the Irue beauly of your wedding.
Remember your wedd ing for years 10 come-with
portraits.
.
.
Call today for an appointment , or slop by the stud•o
and view our bridal portrait samples and wedding
albums.

LEAR
PHOTOGRAPHY
Open TuesdaY thru Saturday 10.5;
r• 8 on TlluiSday

446-7494

Sprlftg Vailey Plazat Gallipolis

footbali. My favorite indoor
game is monopoly.
"I'm a real bookworm . I
like to read all kinds of books,
except naughty ones , of
course," he giggles.
The service opens with a
word fr om his fath er,
Michael Sr., who quit jobs as
a used car salesman and real
estate agent to promote God
and Little Michael.
"Some people are going to
say church is dull," Michael's
father says. 1t 's not dull ·at
all."
Little Michael, a cherubic,
chubby blond, enters in a
white tuxedo, bopping to the
11

Embezzlement ·
'

charged yotmg
Fitzsimmons

1

DETROIT (UP!)
Richard Fitzsimmons, eldest
son of Teamsters Union
President Frank Fitzsimmons, was indicted along
with two other men Friday on
charges of embezzling union
pension lunda to purchase
BIRm ANNOUNCED
personal Insurance policies. MIDDLEPORT - Mrs.
The alleged · conspiracy Bernice 'Grueser of Midinvolved officials of Team- dleport became great·
. sters LoCal 299 In Detroit, the grandmother again Wednespower base Fitzsimmons' day with the birth of a son,
father and James Hoffa David Bruce, to Mr. and Mrs.
before him used as a laun- Ronald Johnson of Wheelir)g,
ching pad to the International W.Va.
.
presidency. Hoffa disappeared July 30, 1975, and is
COOKIES BOYCOTTED
presumed dead.
SAVANNAH,
Ga. (UP!) . Indicted with Fitzsimmons,
Chatham
County
opponents
Who lost a bid lot the Local
of
tbe
Equal
Rights
Amend299 presidepcy in a bitter
ment
have
voted
to
Qoyrott
struggle last year, were
Girl
Scout
cookies
until
the
Anthony Sciarotta, fonner
Scoubl'
national'
board
of
Local 299 business agent, and
directors
rescinds
its
en·
attorney Stewart Sinal.
dorsement of ERA.

made simple.
N"'·town dll...,oo lido

1H1r 1 WELCOME WAGON coli •

As rt•or Hostau; It's my job to help you m1u tht
moat of your ntw ntlahbomood. Our olloPflinc 1rt11.
Conwnunlty opportunities. $JIIdllltt11Ctlont. Loti of 11ct1
to lift you lfrilt lnd moMy,
· Plus • boslot of 1iftt for your family.
I'll bo llsttnlnl for your calf.

~~~

IN POMEROY TilE CONTRACTED garbage collection
service hasn't been too r~ular in the past month. If you feel
that service coilld have .been better, keep In mind in Columbus
when the weather· gels cold -and not nearly as rold as it has
been here in the past month -the garbage collection people,
employes of the city, just leave all of it set until the weather
breaks. So, we haven't had it all that bad.

1968.

Mr. Johnson has six yea rs
experience in automotive

dealership ma nagement and
sales.
In mak ing the announcement Smith state'd,
"We feel the adding of Bill
Gene to the ma nagement and
Sllles staff of Smith BuickPontia c will make a
significant contri bution to our
policy of providing quality
sales and service to the
people of the Mid-Ohio
Valley ."
Mr. Johnson and his wile,
Janet, are the parents of two
children, Matt and Shelley.
They reside at 500 Hilda
Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio.
He is a member of Elk
Lodge 107, the Gallla Chapter
of the Marshall Alumni Assn.
and the board of directors of
the Gailia County Unit ,
American Cancer Society.

BILL GENE JOHNSON

7lmethyst

MRS. HELEN BARNHART BAILEY, Route I, Racine, is
~The deep r ich purple
so proud of her daughter, Debra Lynn Barnhart, who in
amet hyst offers t rue
natura!
beauty
at
December received her bachelor of science d~ree at Ohio
SERVICE SET
affordable
pr ices.
University. Debra Is Uving in Houston and is working at a
GALLIPOLIS - A special
bank. Incidentally, Debra graduated in coSmetology from missionary service will be Especially m ean ing ful for
Meigs High School and got her license to be a beautician before held Wednesday, Feb. 9 at the those born in February,
deciding to go oo to college lor her degree In education. Church of God of Prophecy at - See our
complete
Debra's lather was the late Samuel Q. Barnhart.
7:30 p.m . The Rev. and Mrs. select ion of genuin e
Dan Corbett who served three amethy st r ings .
TilE NEXT TWO FREE cervical cancer clinics for Meigs years in Korea will be the
area women are this Wednesday and Feb. 23, also a guest speakers.
- Also avai lable are loose
amethyst to se t in the
Wednesday. Hours will be from I to 3:30p.m. and the cUnics
mount ing of yo ur choi ce .
are held at Veterans Memmorial Hospital. There were so
AT CONVENTION
many cancellations in January but there are numerous . GALLIPOLIS - Carl
appointment openings. Feel free to call 992-3382, any time; 99Z. Brown, Gallia Roller Mills, - Discover the wonderf ul
ld of colored stones .
5832, eveJ1ings or the cancer society office, 99Z.7531 Tuesdays Inc., Gallipolis; wiU attend wor
Many other colo red stones
or Thursdays from I to 4 p.m. to make an appolniment.
the 98th Annua l Convention &amp;
Trade Show of the Ohio
G. HAROLD. AND MARGERY MARTIN, Fort Grai n, Feed &amp; Fert ilizer
Lauderdale, Fla., are traveling together and this hasn't Association of Wotthi ngton
happened too oltell during their long marriage although both Feb. 7, 8 and ~ at the Cinhave traveled frequently- and are now on a world tour. The cinnati Convention Center
last we heard they were in Indonesia.
and Stouffer 's Cincinnati
.,..
Harold is fonnerly from RoCk Springs and.although now Towers, according to OGFF A
partially retired is a prominent attorney In Florida. He's Conv ention Chairman Ha l
..JeWelers
never forgotten his old stomping grounds and has frequently Hammel , of Hamil ton . .1)41 SECON D AVENUE • .1114&amp;· \847
returned to Meigs County for visisbl over the years. Mrs. Theme of the convention is MEMBER ...MERISON GEM SOCiETY
Martin has also visited here over.the years and is well known "Fr9ntiers for Food."
locally.

Gospel strains of an organ
and a drum, and sirigs a
selection of songs he wrote
himself.
·
"I wanna pray for you
people, y'all ready' " he asks.
Despite his energy, experience and poise, Little Michael
does stumble over words and
run out of breath wheti he
shouts too emphatically. He
prefers to talk one-on-one
with his flock.
"I don't want to sound like
I'm boasting, bot God helped
me be a speaker and this is
my calling," Michael said.
'l 've neVer been nervous, I
like to get with people and
really get. in with them and
rap."
Healing is an important
part of Little Michael's
service.
· "There's a man here who
has back trouble," he
announces. "I'd like him to
come up here right now."
Little Michael touches the
man on the forehead, gives
him a shove and shouts,
"Backache, in the name of
the Lord God, I corrunand you
to leave this man."
If the man 's faith is strong
enough, Michael says he wlll
be healed.

oettlng settled

POMEROY- Far be it lrtKII me to spread gloom up to the
maximum. I mean, I try to look for the silver Uning, seek out
the sunny side of the street and hell eve that life is just a bowl of
cherries.
However, -on top of what 1977 has already brought us the experts are looking lor a big fldod . Government agencies
· are making all sorts of preparations on handling the problems
that will be Involved, I'm told. You , as an individual, might be
wise to pick up ellra noo'!l"rishables as you go to the grocery
and put them away from the regular food stock for the
predicted emergency. I know of one family doing this. In
addition the family is getting all of the flashlight$ in working
order, has picked up an ellra small cooking unit and is making
Other plans to be prepared.
Frankly , I can't grasp how such predictions can be made.
In prior years when the water has appeared threatening, as a
reporter I've had difficulty in getting much Information and
the river was much latther along towards flooding than it is at
the present time.
Well, anyways, the experts are predicting a flood and I
wanU!d to remind you to get ready a UtUe. The atra nonperishables won't spoil and if !here's no flood, so much the
better, and you can eat up the goodies later In relief.
. Of course, the experis also .predicted the swine flu
epidemic and more recently a blizzard for our area so maybe
we ought to do a little preparing but in the meantime, keep our
cairn.
·
·

GALUPOLIS - Vaught
"Doc" Smith, president of
Smith Buick-Pontiac, Inc.,
has announced the em·
ployment of Bill Gene
Johnson, a 1964 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School
who received a degree in
Busin ess Admi nistration
from Marsha ll University in

avagaa/ -~~

TilE SNOW ROLLS IN MANY PARTS.of Meigs County
. were really a conversation piece lor a few days weren't they•
Mrs. Helen Hayes, who is almost symonymous with Great
Bend - reports thst area had none of the rolls probably
because of the flatness there. It seems it takes a hill to get the
liall rolllng ..

C. H. (CHINK) WISE OF Middleport and Waverly is
wintering in Florida, (Orlando), and enjoying every minute of
it. Chink says the people are friendly and, of rourse, it's alway~
golfing time and Chink enjoys that.
APRIL SMITil, DEPENDABLE SECRETARY at the
Pomeroy Elementary School, reporbl that the school has been
open so litUe in the past couple of months that she fears the
Post cereal box top and Campbell soup label programs are
really losing out.
April wanbl to remind all people of the community to keep
saving the box tops and the labels for the school. Between now
and March IZ the school hopes to collect enough labels and box
tops to earn several basketballs, kickballs and utillty balls lor
the students. Studenis have been saving the labels and box
tops, but a concentrated effort by the whole community would
certainly be helpful. Just give what you save to a neighborhood
chlld who attends the school.
EDGAR VAN INWAGEN, LINCOLN HEIGHTS,
Pomeroy's survivor of the Bataan Death March, reports that
Dravis C. Massey, a brother to the mother of new president,
Jimmy Carter, was also among the survivors of the· hi.storic
march. MaSIIey attended the annual reunion of the inarch held
in Georgia last sununer.
·
OLOER SUFFER MORE
Older persons are more
susceptible to over-exertion
in cold weather. Well-dressed
children can generally play
safely oublide in cold weather
with periodic supervision
from adults, who should
Inspect them lor wet or

missing clothes, shivering,
paleness, or other signs of
discomfort.

Gas shortage
like a game

'.

DUE TO THE ENERGY CRISIS
MERCHANTS .IN DOWNTOWN
GAlliPOLIS Wll! BE OPEN
MONDAY......... ...... ... 10 til 5
TUESDAY ....... .. ......... 10 til 5
WEDNESDAY....... ...... 10 til 5
THURSDA Y.....10 til 12 noon
FRIDAY...... .. ............ . 10 til 8
SATURDAY ....... .. .. .... lO t115
UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE•••

THE GALLIPOLIS
MEJilCHANTS
ASSOCIATION

BE
HIS
·VALENTINE

says Glenn
WASffiNGroN (UP!)
Sen. Jolm Glenn, [).()hio,
Friday
accused. gas·
producing states of playing
"political football" with their
supplies of natural gas. "We
have a million out of work In
Ohio now, and to think we're
just going to wither on'the end
of the vine here, while other
states keep gas in their states
by other means ... that's just '
not realistic;" iaid Glenn.
"We're going to have to look
at this as a nltlonal energy
problem and solve It with
national legislation.
"And that meana we have
to make federal law applicable to energy sources
witltin a state - to the In·
trastate gas ~ then that's
what we have to do," said
Glenn. "We can't jusl dodge
this the way Congress has
dooe over the pa.'!l roupie of
year.~

NEW STORE HOURS
DOWNTOWN GAlliPOLIS
MERCHANTS

IN

NEW SPRING STYLES
FROM

THE UNIFORM
· Complete Uniform an4 Maternity IJnes
for
"The Ladf Who Works"
and

.f.
.

•

-

'

••

\

�.~::~~~~-:_Tl_m_~n~~l:_S~~!!~:!:!~1- _ -1
I
:
1
1
1
i

•
U-TheSwldayTimes&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Feb. 6, 1977

The day Ohio was horn
EDITOR'S NOTE : Tbe Congreas passed an aci exOhio Historical Society has tending federal laws to "the
prepared apd made available State of Ohio": March 1, 1803,
to news media a serlea of when the first state
articles on Ohio history. •legislature was organized;
Following Is the first of March 3; 1803; when Edward
several which will be Tiffin was Inaugurated as
published throughout the first governor. On August .7,
year u space perml18. The 1953, President Eisenhower
article Is titled, "The day signed a congresslona I
Ohio was born.''
raoluUon establishing the
March I, .1803, ·date
THEDAYORIO
retroactively.
WASBORN
,
If Ohioans find the situation
On March I Ohio will be 174 confusing, so did Congress
yeara old. But, until just a few itself. In January, 1803, when
years ago, It would have been the
Ohio
territorial
impossible to make that representative in Congress,
statement with any certainty. Paul Fearing, a Federalist,
Five different dates have was to be ousted from his seat
been cited as Ohio's natal by Jeffersonial 1\epublicans,
day; April 30, 11102, when a resoluiion was drafted
Congress . passed
tbe which claimed Ohio had
Enabling Act opening the become a state with the
door of statehood to Ohio; passage of the Enabling Act
November 29; 1802, when the and Fearing was serving
first state constitution was Ulegaily. The Committee on
signed at Chillicothe ; Elections ruled Fearing was
February 19, 1803, wMn entitled to his seat, but the
decision caused a more
serious controversy.
Former territorial officials
complained in the spring of
1803 that they had been
dropped from federal payrolls on November 29, 1802,
when the state constitution
was signed, even though
theile officials had performed
in office until March I, 1803,
when tl)e state leglsiBture
was organized. After years of
peiitioning, the former
territorial officers won their
request from Congress Qn
February 21, 1806, when that
body passed a bill which paid
GBC gives it to you
the
officials to March I, 1803,
straight. Finding a good
but
which oJI]y incidentally
job can .be tough ... Real
recognized
that Ohio had
tough ... Unless yOu hav~
attained statehood on March
business skills. Enroll in
1. Aware of its omission with
Pne of our associate degree
programs or diploma
regard to Ohio, Congress
courses
now!
admitted Indiana to the
Accounting:.. Executive
Union with a specific act of
Secreta ria I.. _. Business
December
11 ,
1816.
Administration ... General
Thereafter,
all
states
created
Office ... Secretai'ial. After
from the territory were
completing the program of
similarly brought into the
vour c:hoice, GBC ·invites
Union.
you to use our Employment
Assistance Service. After
The question of the date of
fift.een years experience in
Ohio's admission lay dor·
your community as a
mant until 1902, when it was
business college .. ,you can
time to hold the state cenbe sure we can help you
tennial celebration. Futilely,
become
"More
the Ohio General Assembly
Employable ". Call or
resolved in April of that year
visit ... Oay , Evening or
that March I, 1803, was
Altern,Jting classes.
henceforth to be regarded as
Spring Term Begins
. March lOth
"Ohio's Natal Day." The
action was .futile because the
state legislature had no
jurisdiction In the matter, but
the celebration was held in
1903, nevertheless.
36 LOCUST STREET
Historians thereafter kept
•• , :436)
the issue boiling. Former
Eligible institution for
Governor Campbell in a 1924
Federally Insured Student
speech to a Columbus club
loans
and
Basic
states,
"Congress never
Opportunit.Y Grants.
admitted the state of Ohio

YOU CAN BE

I Satellites

to
demonstrate
••
•
communzcatzo

into the Union. This fact need
not alarm you for the state
undoubtedly is in the Union
although nobody knows
exactly when It got in."
WASHINGTON ...., The congressional leaders of the
The impending celebration
Regional Region to become acquainted
of the Ohio Sesquicentennial Appalachian
in 1953 became the ap- Commission, In cooperation with the actual mechanics of
propriate time to settle the with other Federal agenciea, this region-wide demonmatter. Congressman George will inaugurate on February stration project. Each
H. Bender of Cleveland to this 11 a program that for the first representative wlll ·be able to
end Introduced House Joint time in U. S. history wilt ask questions that wiD be
Resolution 121 on January 13, demontrate how public transmitted via a satellite
1953. The resolution stated services can be delivered to telecommunications network
that pursuant to the Enabling remf;lte rural areas in to various remote sites
Act, the first Ohio Con- Appa lachia via NASA throughout the Region (See
page 3).
stitution, and the Ordinance communication satellites.
This expanded public
Programs in health,
of the Northwest Territory,
service
satellite program for
Ohio is hereby declared to be education, local government
Appalachia
follows an
one of the United States of services and services
existing
and
highly sucAmerica, and Is admitted into directed toward business and
cessful
experiment
conthe Union on an equal footing industry will be beamed
ducted
during
1974
usin
g
with the original States, in aU throughout the 13-state area
NASA's
ATS~
satellite
which
respects whatever ... This over the next foilr years.
This special Satellite provided for local involvejoint resolution shall take
Inaugural Conference on the ment in the design and
effect as of March I, 1803.
Bender's resolution fanned new and expanded Ap- .production of courses for
once again the flames of palachian Education Satellite teachers in reading and
disagreement among Program (AESP) wiil be held career education. The
historians, amateur and . on Friday, February II, at 10 University of Kentucky as an
AESP resource center
professional, and gave rise to a.m.
developed
programs that
some sly remarks on the floor
The format of the conwere
televised
via the
of the House when, on May 19, ference will include two
The
participants
satellite.
the measure was up for a panels: one will be located
vote. In jest more than one here in Washington in the received credit from twenty
congressman claimed that Senate Caucus . Room, Old colleges and universities
"there are some illegal Senate Office Building throughout the Region. Over
members of the House and (Room 318), and will be 1,200 teachers participated
Senate here." In the Senate, moderated by Sepator and the cost for this initial
presided over by John W. Jennings Randolph of West experimiml was found to be
Bricker, the resolution Virginia; and the other in relatively low, and compassed unanimously on Lexington at the .University parable to existing graduate
August I. Six days, later, of Kentucky Television courses given at these inOhio became the seventeenth Studio, Tzylor Education stitutions.
During the last year, the
state as of March I, 1803, with Building (the site of the
ARC,
with assistance from
the preaident's signature on telecast ).
the
National
Institute of
the resolution. The hubbub is
The Senate hook-up will
Education,
conducted
a needs
now history.
provide an opportunity for
assessment on the potential
use of satellites in rural areas

FUNNY BUSINESS

By Roger Bollen

LOOK ~0'5 a;ci::INce,.
.__;.;.~FOREMAN ..

f------------:::::::=----r-.:...----1

Gallipolis
Business.College

-- -

of
Appalachia. Local
meetings
were
held
throughout the Region to
identify specific needs that
could be addressed with this
type of technology. From
these meetings~ a new fouryear operational plan was
developed that calls for the
delivery of courses to a wide
range of local community
parti cipants , professional
and non-professional.
Current plans include
programs for parents and
teachers of handicapped
continuing
children ,
education for nurses and
paraprofessionals, adult
learning programs, local
government and business
planning seminars, graduate
~ourses in metric, reading
and career education,
emergency medical training
programs and programs for
the aged. Over 75 additional
communities have petitioned
ARC to participate in this
program, with the majority
of these communities willing
to commit local funds to
finan ce the cost of the
necessary equipment.

•
.,

.,·,

Instead of the shadow rnasl&lt; common in
olher color sets. Inside every Trinilron is o pot·
enred openu1e grill: designed 10 let through
more electrons And more electrons thai reach
the screen mean o brighler. sharper colq pic~
tule. rleally vibronr. And very much olive. Looll
inlo the enlire Trinltron Color System. because
in color television whor you don't see.has every·
thing ro do with what you get

PREPARING FOR DISTRICT FFA EVALUATION
- Above are students Jn. the Junior and Senior clnsses of
the !Iannan Trace FFA Preparing State FFA Degree
applications as reporters, treasurers, secretary books,
and Proftciency awards in Beef, Dairy, etc. areas. All
applications are due March 1at Alexander High School in
Atbens. Tom Pope is advisor.

MELVIN LITrLE
JOINS STAFF - .Melvbt
Little bas joined the sales
staff at Thaler Ford Sales,
Inc . In Gallipolis, Jim
:rJtaler, owner, announced
Friday. Little bas been a
Ford salesman in bolh
Gallla and Meigs counties
for several years. He and
bls wile, Catherbte, reside
In Cheshire.

I
...

I

c(

&gt;

IX
PATROLMISS NOW
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The '::::»
Ohio Highway Patrol's IOI)th
academy class gradua ted
today and for the first time
included a female trooper. IX
Patrol Superintendent Col.
Adam G. Reiss said Trooper
Dianne .L. Harris of Oberlin II.
will be stationed at the
Castalia Post on the Ohio
Turnpike.

&gt;0

;~

-&lt;' '

'.

If you' re not famil iar with Schutz Cards and books come in and let us introduce you .

Peddler's Pantry
State &amp; Third ----~Gallipolis, Ohio

SUNDAY

Dear Sir:

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Mcoch in&lt; wash , dry, .43·45 " widet
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YAID

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Incredible low price! Lorge select ion of

colors, sizes, slyles.
Reg. 30&lt; to IDe card

Entire Stock of Scissors
All our famous brands suctl as Kleen .
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slyles. Rep. J 1,79 to $15.95 pr.

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Herculon®Oiefin . -..-elvets , n.ylol'is

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Hours
Sundoy t-6

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111-6111 Avo.
Huntington, W; Vo .

~:

.ut.

'

f -.der if M. Jennings
:·· too Alloe. knowljlllll what Is
..: belt far •· To me they In!
: :.; ioctal pJIMII'I, lptlldlng
:- federal tlllliiiJ, liNch In fact
• : II our 11111111Y. Same ol their
-: ldell ... U.., IIIII llrai&amp;IC
:;.. .out ol boob. OIQjng .. for
-:: .dw •• like mii!M not add
'&gt;": 1o our ~ or weU
: :

.,. : . . _

,•__
_ -~~~·
' 1 fell' ~ some of the

..
"'~

•

..1

'

in,

I

You can cut yourself up a
big pile of firewood in a little
bit.
.
I think our courthouse is
unique arrong courthouses
and serves us well. We don't
need any day care centers, or
a new jail. If someone doesn't
Uke the jail they ought not do
anything to get put in it.
I do not want to appear to
be a reactlmat;', but I do not
think we should swallow
every do-gooder's proposals
to save us from ourselves. let
us be careful what we do in
Meigs County, and to Meigs
County, for there will never
be an undoing. At least not in
our time. - Gayle Price,
Portland, Ohio.

· The Almaaac
United Pre•• International
Today Is Sunday, Feb. 6,
the 37th day1lf 1977 wllh 3281o
follow.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are
Venus, Jupiter and Salurn.
ThOle born on this dale are
under the stcn ol Aquarius .
' Actresaea ZBa Zla Gabor
and Mamie Van Doran were
born on Feb. 6 - Zla Zsa in .
1923 and Mamie In 1833.
On thlJ day in' hlltory:
In 1778, Maasachusetts
ratified the U.S. Conltitutlon,
In 1M3, Gen. Dwight D.
Elaenbower was named commander
of ·
Allied
a:pedllkrlary force~ in North
Africa. He later became
World War n Supreme ADied
Ccmmander in Europe.
In 11&amp;7, Calllus Clay
defeatad Ernie TerrtU 1o
retain the heavyweight
boxing crown .

TUESDAY
CLOSED
1200

10/22

WINCHESTER

VINYL
PONCHO

5 ONLY

PUMP
SHOTGUN

99~

RUGER 22 AUTOMATIC
88 .

$59

'*k's Reg. tl.~
Sports Depl

Heck's Reg. '149.88

Heck's Reg. 185.88
Sports UA·nt.

Sports Dept.
DIXtll

'

SEAWAY

4 PLACE-GUN RACK
WITHDRAWER

57''

A little input not out of order
· .- When I read in Sunday's
Sentinel all of the things M.
Jennings and Associates
~ to bring about in
Meigs County I was a)&gt;'
JI'Ohenslve and wanted to
stop and think awhile. I also
read where some of our
' County Commissioners
lrolight M. Jennings and
AssQciates up short on a road
Issue. That was good, and aU '
the other proposals should be
screened thoroughly, if
pouible.
Anything I say in this letter
should not be construed as
critical of the Planning
CUnmisslon Members or of
the good intentions of anyone
else, but since I ani a long
time resident of this county
·by choice and since our roots
run deep, some input from
me might not be out of order.
Finlt I dm't think that we
are the liiOIII unfortunate or
)leg!ected place on the face of
·the earth that some people
wart us to appear to be, A few
:.times people have tried to
: psint that picture to me and It
elways brings me up on my
·hind legs with a few cuss
'. words, too. I tell them to stay
··· away, and if they don't Uke It
'· here, to leave.
:: : As a boy, .rter we moved to
: · 'the city, I ran off at every
. ·. ·opportunity to get back here
·:- and never missed an opo
· :: portunlty to come back to
:· . lAbanon Townahlp. I have
::· lxJped to Uve loog mough to
:; have notHnB to do but roam
.-" around here in the hiils,
:: -m and fields. l 'believe
"; our culture is liiOIII like that
. ,, found In the Appalachians.
;. We In! lrxlependent people,
: but not ~W~orant, and dm'
:~ Uke 1twtru1111111 or some one
· ; lilting us up in a stuffed

I

TO

HICK'S RIG.
$14.11
. .
most cherished things on
earth - our space for living,
our country ways, our friendliness and relatively good
envirorunent and . security.
We can pick up the phone and
call all over the county and
talk to most of the officials by
their first name. Our land has
reaqy buyers. People all over
the country are trying to
escape to a place like we live

MONDAY · WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY ·.FRIDAY
SATURDAY

TO

·'

.

Upholstery fabric

100% Cntton madras in soft chalky
colors - A must for spring.
v
,_..__.,.._ _ _"...,._ ___. ,____ _ _ GALLIPOLIS,

-·

WHERE ELSE-

. tnclud£:t&lt;l (or pe-r~nol viewi~

1..~ l&amp;tn C..lh

from the Statehouse rotunda. I feel It about time that our
government Is turning to God.
. Prayer Is not a Yllin attempt to change God's will; it is a
desire to learn God's will and to share it.
· I believe It about Ume the people of the United States
reallJe what we need Is faltllin oilr Lord Jesus Christ.
·· ·
. Hardships aren't lhlngs .God wanl8 for His chUdren, but
they are part of We. :When we ezperletice trouble, endure It,
and rile above It (we are) gaining more understanding and
Jove for others.
·
2nd Olron. 7:14 : "If my people, who are called by my name
shall humble themaelves, and pray, and see.k my face, and
lum from tlleir wicked ways, then will! hear from heaven and
I will forgive their Btn, and will heal their land."
'
When we ask God to change a difficult situation we must
be wUIJng to give oUI'Ielves in any way that might heip resolve
lt.
·
.
It Is time for people trying to beat the energy crisla to
reallze that ooly God is our unfailing power source.
If you've been ultlng God to intervene in problems, don't
deny Him your feet and hands. He may want to use them too,
SomeUmes it takes a-isis or scare, before ·some people ·
COOle to tlleir oenses.
·
Maybe this energy crisis, flOod wlrning, swine flu threat
may be a blessing to turn each other in a spirit of togetherness.
• As Governor Rhodea stated ''Let us all have completelaith
in the Supreme Being."
_ : Mat. 6:33: "But seek ye first the,klngdom of Gud and his
iighteoUJnesa, apd all things shall be added unto you."
· Let us pray everyday, not just In fair weather, but also
through periods of doubt and despair.
; Maybe we • a country live fully today, leaving yesterday
and tomorrow where they belong -in God's hands.
Let us pray that Go'~:!rnor Rhodes will make this DAILY
from lheStatehoUBe rotunda, with the rest of Ohio.
. : Wllh Christian love and concern,' knowing prayer Is the
apawer for me. - Name withheld on request.

6&amp;7

New Energy Saving Hours

Dear Sir:
I am writing concerning Gov. Jamea A. Rhodes' prayer

;;; -r::

~wee! 'n piclur e pr ~tlly ! 65 ~' po lye ste r/ 35 % coll on white bat iste . Ma ny embr oidery poll e fns to choose fr om .

\

PRICES IN EFFECT SUNDAY, MONDAY,

Daily job for the governor

•

0

KESSLER PROMOTED
COLUMBUS (UP! ) David · L. Kessler, 46,
chairman of the Ohio Adult
Pa.role Authority, has been
named chairman of the Ohio
Liquor Control Commission,
Gov. James A. Rhodes ali·
nounced today. Kessler will
succeed Fred Krumholz
whose term expires Feb. 8.

I ,felt it wise to go farther into what 1 emphasized in last
week s arltcle on "Helping Smokers Quit."
In 1975 the American Cancer Society conducted 23 ooo
)X'ograms In this county for adul18, and nearly 131 ooo 'for
young people, to help smokers end the habit.
'
The year before ( 1974) the Society operated ~clinics for
the same purpose. In the next two years the number of clinics ·
grew to 1,680. Such ina-euing interest is a catise for rejoicing.
And there must have been a great amount of good
acCOOlpllshed,
Oftentimes it Is true that people who know that IIley sl)ould
give up this costly and damaging habit begin, and continue to
rationalize, and make excuses for not changing
Their unwilllngne":' to face fa~l8, and recei~e help that
often would save their lives, results mprolonged suffering and
death.
~t an awful price to pay for not getting needed help .
before It tstoo late . - Rev. Linson H. Stebbins.

'

Ill

Eyelet
Embroidery

• Tnn•lron ColO&lt; Sy,tem (one gun/OI'le lens)
• 100% sdid Slole • One·bu"on co&lt;llrol for
Automofic Fme Tuntng, Color &amp; fVe • 70 detenr
UHF channel selec11 0n • No sel up odjuSirreril
• Walnut gro1n hardwood co1:&gt;~1 • Eorphor&lt;;

243 Tllird Ave.

I

z And Stephen Built
j:

Reg.13.49 yd.

O.lflpolls, Ohio
Ph. 446-7116

1

68

~'

···.

z House That Susan

'Machine w ash, dry . 44. 45 " ~i de

KV· 1510 • T11nilron
15" screen measure&lt;:! dragonolly

.

THE RECIPE FOR HOLIDAY ''DRESSING ' '

.........

Going a bit farther

...

YD.

• &gt;~•

I
I

ORn:NYTIME .

has- ·

'.

I
I

·Dear Sir :

Reg. s 2.&lt;19 yd.

'

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·•

ter / rc yon bl end s rn oke te rr if ic

unmasks
the shadow.

1

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...,

Pol ye1 te r/ co tt o n and po ly es·

330 SECOND AVENUE--.

Lelten of opiDion are welcomed. They should be
lell thlll300 wordo lone (or be oubject to reduction by
the edllor) and mut be oiaaed with the signee's ad·
dreoo. Namea may be withheld upon publlcaUon.
• Howner, on requ.,.t, aam.,. wiD be diaclooed. Letters
lbould be In lood taste, addressing Issues not personllill.,.,
•

SIOITS
IJ9T.

DOUBLE CYLINDER
LOCK

P~OJECTOR

TABLE

HICk'S RIG.

$10.14

$11''

$6''

HECK'S REG.
$15.96

Jewelry Dept,

SUNB~M

SIIIIUI
10

tuusnu•

LADIES' SHAVER

•14

99

Heck's Reg. '17.96

6' X27"
VINYL RUG RUNNERS

ASSORTED

·VINYL PLACE MATS

ASSORTED COLORS

Heck's Reg. '5.44

Heck's Reg. 77•

S333

49 e

Jewelry Dept.

ALL
TABLE
LAMPS

4 ONLY

CASSEnE
RECORDER

'

WITH MIKE

HART

•1a••

7PC. FIREPLACE
ENSEMBLE
HECK'S REG.
Housewares Dept.
SK-510

SPEAKER
SET

'

.,

GRAN PRIX

'48.81

'26

00

Heck's Reg. '27.96
Jewelry Dept.

15

STANLEY

44 QUART

HAMMER

LEMON ,SCENTED

TRASH BAGS

*2••

66e
Heck's Reg. '19.95

Heck's Reg. '1.09

Houseware Dept.

Housewares Dept.

Heck's Reg•. '4.33
Hardware Dept.

..'

,,

�· STREE1S in the Old French City resembled those of
Seoul, Korea following the Korean Conflict after last week's
thaw.

+++

CITY Manager Richard T. (Dick) Mills, using a "baH
park" figure, estimated it will cost more Ulan $100,000 In repair
battered pavement and that excludes areas purposely opened
UP to search for frozen waterlines the paat four weeks.

+++

FEBRUARY gas hills mailed out by Columbia Gas ol Ohio
cootained announcements of a change in budget payments for
subscribers. Normally, budget accounts are not reviewed until
April. However, this year, due In unusually cold weather and
new wellhead prices pennitted by producers by the Federal
Power Commission, Columbia felt it would be in the best
Interest of its budget customers to conduct an earlier review of
budget accounts.

+++

TinS is being done at this time in order tohelt; residents
avoid the inconvenience of a large payment, due With the end
of the budget year in July, or the accumulation of a large credit
· lJajance at the end of the budge~ ye;;: in July, 1977. Ano~her
pillnphlet inserted with the gas bill saLd despite higher pr1ces,
the fact remains gas is still economical. Even on the coldest
winter day, it costs the average Colwnbla customer less than a
dime an hour In heat his home with natural gas.

POMEROY - Careline,
Inc., the 24-hour crisis in·
terventlon, information and
referral telephone "hotline"
serving Meigs county
received a rerord number of
crisis calls during the month
of January.
"Severe weather conditions
have kept many at hom e,
often increasing stress,"

explained Lady Borton ,
Executive Director of Careline. "Winter is a time when

people feel down and
discouraged, but this winter
has been particularly hard.
We have had many more
calls dealing with depression,
loneliness, drug abuse and
suicide."
Miss Borton explained that
pegple call Careline with
many different types of
concerns. "Some people call
when they're down or when
something happens that
upsets them. Others call just

anD!Iymous. "We do not ask
by Gill Fox
callers for their names, SIDE GLANCES
oddresses or any other
Identifying information. Thls
allows callers to talk freely
about their probierru without
the lear that their concerns .
will travel further."
Carellne's 24·hour crisis
to talk with a friendly person intervention, Information and
w!Uipg to listen."
refeLTal telephone number is
Volunteers from the 11112'7502. C.reline is a comcommunity staff Caroline's munity social service funded
24-hoLir telephone line. AU by . the GaU!a • Jachon ·
vo-lunteers complete Mefgs Community Mental
Caroline's Intensive 00-hour Health and Mental Retartraining course In crisis in· dation Services Board.
tervention and listening skills
before working the Carellne
phones.
Miss Borton emphasized
that all Carellne calls are
I,INE ABOUT DONE
completely oonfldentlal and
ANCHORAGE, Alaska
(UP!) - Trans-Alaska
pipeline construction, in·
eluding pump staUons and
terminal facilities, is nearly
complete, Aiyeska Pipeline
at 6:15p.m., Wednesay, Feb. Service Co. announced
16.
Thursday. Alyeska officials
Dr. Robert Weinfurtner, said the pipeline Itself is 97.5
director, Southeast Ohio, per cent complete. Pump
Special Education Regional stations are 92.7 pet cent
Resource Center, and his complete and the Valdez
staff will present the terminal is 84.2 per cent
"Don't underrate this Ralph Nader. After all, ~e·s {.!"art
material.
·
enough to have remained a bachelor, Lsn t he
complete.

C.!- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6.1977

Harry Layne, Diamond Oldtimer, To ·
Be Honored At February 9.th Banquet

•

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - About the time Guy Guinther
was drawing raves at Syracuse, across the river in Ohio as a
teenage phenom on baseball diamonds, ilarry Layne was
duplicating the act here.
The story of Harry Layne's professional baseball career
is a perlect cameo of why the major league owners are fa ced
today with the option rule and the open market on baseball
talent down through minor league rosters.
Today, as a minor leaguer, Harry would make the
majQrs. He could not be buried in the high minors as
protection for a major league team that owned his contract.
Mr. Layne with other former stars of the diamonds, will
be honored the evening of February 9 at a banquet at the
Legion Hall in Pomeroy. Tickets are available at $5 each
through Fred Crow of Pomeroy, the New York Clothing House
in Pomeroy, and others. The event is sponsored by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Corrunerce.
The rem~rkable thing ahoul Harry Layne, perhaps, is
that he does not appear bitter. Many others, who lived through
his experiences in that era did.
But let Harry tell it in his own words :

Special Ed program set on Feb. 16th
ATHENS - The Ohio
School Boards Association,
South Region , this month will
present a program, "Meeting
the Challenge : Educating All
Handicapped Children."
Public Law 94-142 and State
Law HB 4SS mandates this
emphasis on this phase of

public school education.
Board

members,

superintendents, elementary
and secondary principals,
school psychologists, and
other interested school
personnel are invited to at·
tend this meeting at the
Sportsman RestaurMt h•••

Syracuse in 1927, Rochester in 1929 and St. Louis sold their
Syracuse Franchise to Montreal, Canada, and bought
Rochester Franchise in 1928. I had good records both years;
hit .327 with Syracuse in 1927 and .308 with Rochester In 1928.
Rochester won Pennant in 1928 and played in the Little
World's Se ries against Indianapolis (Indianapolis won ).
it was evident that I was being kept by Cardinals for
protection of their outfield. But there was no chance for me
since they had men like Billy Southworth, Chick Hafey,
Taylor Douthit and Watty Hoims. I was sold In Baltimore
playing the 1929 season with another good season.
"The Phillifs tried to buy me, butS\. Louis would not sell
me as they hdtl other offers.
"!finally went to the New York Giants in 1930 and played
with their farm club, Newark, N.J. in 1930 and 1931. They
offered me the player manager position of th eir farm club at
Bridgeport in the Eastern League.
"We had a good year. Finished ·second. The club and
league disbanded at the en\f o[ 1932.
"I was offered the Player-Manager position of the
Zanesville, Ohio, Mid-Atlantic League , by the Cleveland
Indians. It was a good offer, so 1 accepted . We Won two pennants, and I had excellent seasons both years 1923-1924. In
Association in 1924, assigned by Columbus to Evansville of the
Three I League, where I had an excellent season, hitting .336,
lo home runs and 30 stolen bases.
"In 1925 I was sold by Detroit to Peoria o[ the sa me
league . ~:lad a very good year, and remained Jlilh Peoria in
mid-season , a ruptured appendix caused my retirement. Thus
ended a very successful and enjoyable career in baseball."

"!began in 1921 with New Haven, the Tri-State League.
Was ; igned to a contract in the fall by the Detroit Scout, Billy
Doyle and was sent to Brutol, Tenn. in Appalachian League in
1922; had a very good year,hitting .330 for the season.
"! was recalled by Detroit and assigned to Birmingham,
Alabama in 1923, the Southern League ; another good year,
hitting 309; wa s recalled and sent In Colwnbus, American
1926. This was outstanding year. I led the League in hitting
with a .372 average. Set a league recoro for stolen bases, 72,
home runs 17, and was voted the Leagues Most Valuable
Player ; was sold to St. Louis Cardinals, who assigned me to
theit Syracuse Club in the International League. I played with

+++

DESPITE balmy weather late last week, the natural gas
emergency still exists. According In figures released by the
Federal Power Commission (FPC), the nation's pipelli!es
began last November's heating season with 1.73 trillion cubic
feet of natural gas In their storage fields. That represents
almost 10 per cent of the usual annual demand for gas all over
tlle country and was felt at tl)e time tD be more than eough tD
get the nation through the heating season, which oHicially ends
March 31.
'

EDITOR'S NOTE- Harry Layne, wllb his twin brother,
Herman, were co-managers of the Hartford Tigers in 1938.
Harry was instrumental in forming the O.V.A.. ln 1938.

Harry Layne

+++

YET thiS winte~•s demand for gas .was greater than
anyooe could have envisioned, with as much as 100 biJ!lon
cubic reet of gas consumed by shivering plants, industries and
homes on some days. By Jan. lo, the pipelines were down to
less than 1.trillioo cubic feet of gas. Just how much gas is now
in the storage fields is unknown, but some 'Officials at the FPC
guess that the tntal is less than 800 billion cubic reet. Slnce FPC
regulations require that these depleted stor~ge fields be
refilled before full service is restored to those mdustrLBl and
business customers who have had their gas supplies reduced,
it's obviously going tD be some time before gas service is back
tD anything like normal.

.

+++

'

FACTORY SECONDS

QUEEN SIZE

CHINA
TABLE
&amp;

.

6

+++

'!!

MATTRESS &amp; BOXSPRINGS

SALE $14995
.

.

HEX TABLES

invalids. Heating pads should
be in good electrical con·
dition. Never use them on top
of a wet compress. Never use
without a.cover. Be careful
not to fall asleep with heating
pad turned on.

LETART FALUl - Bert
Grimm, Letart Falls, will be
one of several oldtime
~ball players that will be .
honored at a banquet to be
held Feb. 9 at the Pomeroy
l.eglon Hall sponsored by the
Pomeroy · Chamber of

REGULAR •59.95

SALE
CB RADIOS
SALE PRICES

40 IN STOCK
ALL REDUCED

RETAIL FOR '99.95

ALSO BOX SPRINGS

SET OF 3

Send the LOV-U-BUNCH® for
St. Valentine's Day, February 14 ·

·-

.,: -- . - ' ''!

Plenty ot room In !his

20.3 cu. II . model that otters
elliclenf loftm insulation ,

safety lOck with pop-out
key,
•rhltiiOIIJICIII..;.....,.,.,,"',.....'IrdM""'- OI:'Ir_...,.....,~~fM.11.ltn.

I
I
I
I
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I

100-lh Size Mattresses

dlllendllblllt., ......,..,

•.• HOBART Wilson, Sr., Gallipolis, will be among old
\!me baaeball players honored at Pomeroy Wednesday.

SALE 2 PC; LIVING ROOM SUITES

MAPLE

SAVE!

SALE '88 00
BED PILLOWS.
PRICED TltGGID AT '5.95

SALE

'1

75

~

Pc. Brown Ylnrl LR Sul1t

2 Pc. &amp;rown Yin)'l LR Suitt

2 Pc. N"rloft FlbrlcAIIw.HiiriM Ll ~IN
2 Pc. Flor1l Priftl (Ow Nt. llllltrJ Ll hilt
2 Pc. Or•"f' Fkwtll/tMt L~ Wit
2 Pt. Pltltl (wlttt ..... triMI Lllliulft
2 Pc. , ....,, Mnt Ll hltt
2 Pc. Of..n NJIIn Lit llflt.
2 Pc. Llttlt h • NrM LIS.Itt

SALE
ON AU
WOOD DINETTES

2 Pc. ~lttrrlftNfl OnMI Ore,..Yth'lt Lit J!,!lt•
Pc. MM1ttrrt•l!llt41 YtiYtt L.fl Sutt•
2 Pc:, ,.trlllull Ll Stilt

12

.

.... ....... 5111 . . ...

-

. . .. ...... 5 ......." ·"

1t11.mus s.tlt""·"
••. IOUS SotltMU .•

......."·.."..........
...............
.....
....
.....
...... . . ............
...........
_...
.... ""·" Slit""·"

...·""·" ...........
.... IJ'!It,fl Sltt .....fl

l
,,!/

Pomeroy, 0.

EMD, 111omu, ltodney , i• une •I !It vera! arc•
·' t.Rball players who will be hr&gt;IIIJI'td by u., I~""""'Y ..
_ Ownber of Commerc.. Wednelld•y niKht Ln tho I~'""'"'Y
~ . Le&amp;lon ~1.

•

wire

•.

;;.··J,~

&lt;1",•·~~ ' .. ,,

•

~

SPORTS

-~

'

..
CARR TAGS EVANS- Jack CalT, right, third baseman; tags Bob (Hayseeds) Evans,
now of Bob Evans Farms fame, out of third base during the game between the Gilkey Queen
Bees and Gallipolis Gallians in the surruner of 1946 at the old rairgroonds diamond, located
where the Gallipolis treabnent plantis now located behind the Steak House . Legs on left
belong tD Bees lllllnager Hobe Wilson, who was coaching third at the time.

.GALLIPOLIS - Hobart
Wilson, Sr., Jack CaLT and
Emll Thomas of GaUipolis
will be among several old·
time baseball players
ho.nored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce in the
Pomeroy Legion Hall
Wednesday, Feb. 9.
.
Carr first entered basebaU
in 1930 when he joined the
Uncoin Cubs with Frank
Washington as the manager.
He played at the old
fairgrounds every Sunday.
The old fairgrounds is where
the present city treabnent
plant is on Rt. 7.
In the early 194o's, the
Spruce Street Diamond was.
established. Rev. Gibeu of the
Methodist Church was the
manager of the team called
uThe Gallians". ·The ground
was owned by ·Mr. Hill. He
decided he would like to have
a flower garden, so the team
moved over to the other side
of Spruce Street to the ground
owned by Mrs. Hortense
Epling_. She donated the
ground for the team's use and
It was dedicated in 1943 as
"Epling Field." They played
there until 1946. Over that
period there were three
Gallian manager• : Bus Lee,
Charleo "Foxy" Grant and
Forest (Brock) Borden, Sr.
Then the team barn·
lltormed, both round robin
and home to home with
Holden, W.Va., Pickerington
Creamerv

. REG. '169.95

Phone 992-2039or 992·5721

•

•

11 ~- f1, Frotl.ctMI ~ - ­
tpeclM ..eth IM'IY """' ll'ttng

Mrs. Millard VanMeter

&amp;

. ~·:

&amp;

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
We accept all major ·credit cards
flowers everywhere.

'

"

PINE

A winsome bouquet of bright spring
blooms to enchant the most discriminating damsels. .And, whether your
flowers convey your love to someone
near or far, our 14,000 fellow Tele'florists
make delivery nearly anywhere as simple
as a phone call. Please order early. Visit
us soon, or call us today:
·

106 Butternut Ave.

I
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----

HEX
TABLES

I•

•.-;
;r:

among those to be honored

on tht purdi.IHOI.J Glltllinfi'HIIrmMtl

.--------I save S60co~ZN,

· NEW MIX·MATCHEO

AND GETA
LOVE SEAT FREE

,II
.,..,_,_.lltlrn,....... ''"·1

save $35c~;~N,
FHZI~

II
I
I
I
I
I

RECLINING
CHAIRS

3 PC. UVING ROOM SUITE
SOFA &amp;CHAIR

:-r;...._

Wilson, Carr and Thomas

_____..

ON ANY.SUITE

COBRA·Zl '88.00
WHILE THEY lAST

(Conf irJued on Page 2-C)

•nw....-. ..................................

Oo!lr-~

DISCOUNT

'54.00

Commerce.
The event will honor
members of the . old Ohio
Valley Baseball Association
(OVA) organized in 1938.
Grimm was an excellent
minor league pitcher having

14 cu. H. Frost -CII•r with tntrtV
uvlnt •ilvlf linlnt tdl.1111tb!~ !lidHut 1htlv11.

$100

23 CHANNEL

COBRA·l9

95

25 NICE
BEDROOM
. SUITES·

50 IN STOCK

DON'T OVER EXERT
The basic rule on over•
exertion is: don't shovel snow
or otherwlae exert yourself In
rold weather unless you are
in good shape.

'239

'

colorful diamond career

15 CONVERTA BEDS
SALE

SALE

'"
I

Bert Grimm had long,

PER
PIECE

REG. '299.95
REG. '699.95

.

BERT GRIMM

MAKE FINE LIVING ROOM SOlTES

TWENTY YEARS AGO , from the files of the Daily
Tribune and weekly Gallla Times ... Burdell Forth named ·to
Clay School Board ... Water use here doubles in five years
according to city commission ... Ohio River expected tn crest
here at « feet .•. Rio Blue;nen drop Hannan Trace 86-40 lor
49th straight Gallia County Uague victory ... Gallipolis Blue
Devils down Middleport Yellow Jackets 58-42 in SEOAL tile.

BEA

···.~

4

LOOSE NOTES---John S. Jagers, Gallipolis and CurtiS J .
Williams, Zanesville, Friday graduates of the Ohio State
Patrol's historic 100th Academy Class, !lave been assigned In
the Gallia-Meigs Post according to a report from patrol
headquarters in Columbus.

USEGREATCARE
Use care with hot water
bottles - they must never he
used without a cover and
sliould be warm enough tD
produce a comfortable,
· soothing sensation. Watch out
for overheating; they should
never be filled with boiling
water. Remember that
they'U eventually get cold
and will absorb body heat If
left in contact; this is im·
portant with children and

•

•

•

~ear

Columbus,

Lancaster, Maysville, Ky.,
Printer, W. Va. on the other
side of Charleston and played
the GSI home team between
1946 and 1952.
In 1952, the Galllans joined
the Ohio Valley Baseball
AssoclaUon and played every
Thursday and Sunday. The
Gallians played New Haven,
'Hartford, Pomeroy and
Racine. Jack Carr was
rnallllger of the team from
1952 to 1956. There were five
teom&lt; In the league at thst
linn'; •nd 15 members on the
(lulliun leum.
'l'h" . tmun left the OVA in
1!15:t to hurnNlorm. The high
(Kiifll U( lhi ~ f:nllhms UDd

Of

.lm·k ( :nrr'1oi 1 ' /lrt~:r rnme
Wll4'11 Mllk·•hn .Jm·kt~un, us
1)41flkirrJ: u•~ •·nt, 111111 Jllrrt-tlm~
llillhUW ' f' , lll'l'jl/IJ~I·d fl I~IIHW

with the Kokonio Clowns out
From 1948-1953 Thomas
of New York, to play on played in the OVA, again for
Memorial Field. They were Gilkeys, and in 19&gt;3, was the
.on their way south. Thls was player manager of the team.
in 1954. An article in the . Then, from 1954-56, be was
Tribune reads: ·
again with the OVA In MidDONALD C. WOLFE, of Racine, will be presented a distinguished baseball service
. 'The Galllans defeated the dlepott,
playing
with
award at the O.V.A. "Old Timers Baseball Banquet" Feb. 9 at 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Legion
Kokomo Clowns Monday Helners. From 1956-59 he
Hall. Wolfe was secretary-treasurer or the O.V.A. from 1938 through 1952. He assisted in
night by 4-3 before one of the played in Pl. Pleasant for lhe
organ.izing the league, was its officlal scorer, and perlormed a variety of other duties,.
largest crowds ever tD see a OVA · and from 1959-1966
among them arranging for umpires and settling disputes. Tickets In the banquet at $5 each ·
baseball game on Memorial played in the softball league,
may be purchased from Barbara Chapman, secretary of the Pomeroy Chamber of
Field.
oo the Tribune team, and
Corrunerce ; Fred Crow, president of !lie chamber ; Richard Jones, Athens County Ssvings
The home team led 1.0 for others.
and Loan, or New York Clothing House. The event is sponsored by the Chamber.
live innings, picked up a 3-0
Hobart Wllson, Sr., was
lead In the sixth IMing, but horn Oct. 6, 1896, in Waterloo,
the Kokonio Clowns caught Ohio.
up with a three-run rally in
He began his baseball
AUSTRALIA BOUND
NORTHFIEW
SIMMONS SELECTED
the ninth.
career at GaU!a Academy
INDIANAPOUS (UPI) ['fORTHFIELD,
Ohio
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) Jack CaLT stepped to the High School as a catcher in Two veteran members of the
(UP!)
Bob
Haignare
plate in the second half of the 1914, catching Clarence U. S. Olympic Diving Team, Bob Simmons, 28, an
last inning, p9led out a Fisher, who later played pro including springboard gold assistant coach at Bowling guided Dart Van to a 4'1i
resounding home run far Into ball 18 years.
medslist Phil Boggs, will Green State University, has length win over Sllk Victory
the trees of centerfield In 1915, he played ball ivith compete later this month in been named an assistant in . the featured $2,000 ninth
football coach at the race at Northfield Park
probably the longest hit ball the OHE (now GSI) team and Australia.
University
or Toledo to coach Friday night.
on Memorial Field - but the played· games with other
The trip was coordinated
The winner, owned by
home run didn't count, ac· squads on the old fairgrounds with the National Amateur defensive ends, it was an·
William
Rohler of Mt. Ver·
nounced
Friday.
rording to Manager Malcobn diamond which was located Athletic Union, officials said
non,
Ohio,
covered the mlle in
A
Toledo
graduate,
Sbn·
Jackson, · because only ·the behind the· Bob Evans Steak at the group's headquarters
2:
10
3-5
and
returned fa. ~.
mons
was
all
Mid-American
first run counts to end a ball House. Wilson is the only in Indianapolis.
$3.20
and
$2.60.
Silk Victory
Conference
quarterback
in
game.
surviving member of the
Boggs, 27, Ann Arbor ,
paid
$4.60
and
$2.80
and the
1972
when
he
led
the
league
In
There were two runners on powerfull918-17 OJ{E squad. Mich., will be Joined by
show
horse,
Anoka,
returned
passing
and
total
offense.
base when Carr slugged the
In 1919, while with the U. S. Robert Cragg of Maple Glen,
$5.~.
ball out of the park.
Army at Ft. McHenry, Md., Pa., for the competition in the
The team disbanded and Wilson played baseball in he Australian nstional cham·
they quit playing in 1957.
Army-Navy League where he pionshlps at Melbourne, Feb.
Emil Thomas, a naUve of hit a sizzling .410 at·the plate. 18-22.
Eckman, W. Va., moved to
A shoulder injury whilr in
Cragg, 23, finished fifth in
Ohio at the age of 12. Son of service prevented Wilson the Montreal games off the
They'll Do It Every Time
the late Philip Thomas and from playing major league springboard.
Elizabeth 'J;homas who ball.
~ E""! WE'll£ SEIN6
survives and stlll resides in
Wilson played for several
~ELD CAPTIVE
Rodney, Thomas Is married. area teams In the 19~s. and
..----:ff&gt;..~LI&gt;III/ERSAA:r"\
WITHOIJT A
DERBY JUNE 19
He and his wife Edith have no was manager of the.Gallipolls
!-,..----..--...,
DRINJ:'!
NORTH RANDALL, . Ohio
children.
Gauls In the old OVA in the
While a high school student 1930s. He later manage~! Dale (UP! ) - The Ohio Derby,
at Raccoon Township High Gilkey's Queen Bees basebsll which wm have an increased
School, Thomas began his team in the OVA (1946-47). purse of $150,000 this year,
baseball career. He played
Wilson continued to play will be run at Thistledown
Independent softball from b!lll untll his 55th birthday. June 19, track chief Frank
1935 until 1941. Thomas , His final ga,nie was in Sop- Liddy, said Saturday. ·
Uddy said he expects the
graduated from Raccoon !ember, 1952 wlth the
best
field ever for the I \8 mile
Township High School in 1938. Gallipolis Merchants in .the
event
for three-year-olds. The
He alway• played first base, OVA. Wilson played two
Ohio
Derby
became a $100,000
except when he was needed seven inning games at second
event
In
1972
and the purse
lis an outfielder. Thomas .base .
In 1955, Wilson managed stayed the same until this
.played one year,1940, for Rio
Grande College. From 1941-46 the Gal!ipoUS Little League year.
be was in the OVA, playing Yankees to• the chamwith Gllke)''s Queen Bees. He plonshlp. His team won 21 of
joined the service in the fall 23 games. That was the year
of 1946 and was in service the league was organized in
sports around the area. He is
until the spring of 1948. He the Old French City.
·
'an
active member of the
was a memher of the 12th
He served as an umpire In
Gallipolis
Golf Club at the age
Cavalry Regiment ofthe U.S. the OVA and the Southor
81.
Army. In 1947 he was the eastern Ohio Athletic League
R......... OUPU..,
Wlls"~ served as an area
II WIL.MU. ST.
pl•yer mana~er of the 12th several years . Wilson, a
MJ&gt;.Dt ISON I
Cavalry Re~imcnt team in retired ()963) Galllpolis - scout fvr the CinciMatl Reds
.. . .;r.
postal employee, still follows . cturir.li the 1950s.
•lapsn.

.,._,.

.

..

.,

�,
'

C-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6, 1977
'

Southern records 11th win, 71-60
By Greg BaUey

MERCERVILLE- After a
scare by the host Hannan
Traei! Wildcats, the Southern
Tornados kept their record
clean at II~ with a strong
finish as they downed the
hosts Friday ni ght 71·60.
Senior Chip Brauer was the
dominating factor as he
scored a gam~hlgh 24 points
and hauled in 21 of his team's
36 rebounds.
Southern had a fairly
comfortable 18-11 first period
lea d, but then the hosts came
storming back to narrow it to
three at ~2 by intermission.
The Tornados looked tired
and with fi ve · minutes
remaining in the third

I quarter. Hannan Trace ac·
Besides Brauer, no other came back in the closing
tually overtook the visitors Tornado hit in double figures. minutes to tie the contest and
and went ahead 40-37." But The t""u' connected on 26 of S€!ll it into overtime, even·
then the Slluthern defense got 49 field goal attempts for 53 tually winning 51J..48. That
Itself together and held the , . perei!nt and actually made made their slate read 10.1.
Wildcats scoreless for the the point spread at the foul
Making only five field goals
next two minutes. During line as they sank 19 of 29.
the first balf and just two
that stretch Southern scored
The hosts had three men In points in the second quarter,
IOstraight u~answered points double figures but it wasn't the Tornados got their last
mostly on Wildcat turnovers, eiiough. Mooney and Witte chance when Dwight Hill
and the third period ended both had 16 while Swain ·drove for a layup and tied it
with Southern in control at 53- netted 14. The Wildcats hit on with 30 seconds remaining in
44.
25 of 49 attempts from the regulation. They went on to
But once again the Wildciits noor but conn« ted on only 10 score six In the overtime to
proved that they weren't out of 19 free throws. They had 11 put it away. Hill led his team
yet and with five minutes to turnovers and 33 rebounds. with 16 points while Tim
go in the last quarter had Ha ruian Trace is 3-5 overall Brinager netted 10. Ron Pack
narrowed it to 57-54. But then and 2-3 In loop play.
had 22 fo r the losers.
the visitors blew it open and
Jn a thri lling reserve
Box score:
actually held an 18 point lead C&lt;lntest the Baby Tornados,
SOUTHERN (711 - Roush,
with one minute to go. ·
after trailing the entire game 1-2-4; Brown, 2-3-7; Teaford ,
2-4-8; Winebren ner , 2-2-6;

Brauer , 10·4-24 ; Johnson , 4-0-

8; Dunning, 3·4·10; Findley, 20-4; TOTALS 26·19-71.
HANNAN TRACE 110) Whi tt, 7·2·16( McGui re, 1-1.3;
MoOney, 8·0·16; Ca mpbell, 31·8: Swain. 5·4-14; Gi bson , 11-3. TOTALS 25 ·10·60.

Ironton .wallops Jackson
record to 11·2 while Jackson
slipped to 3-ll in league play
and 6-7 in all games.
Jackson's 6-S Tom Dorsey
was unable to play Friday as
a result of a sprained ankle he
sustained in the loss' to
Gallipolis on Thursday night
and his absence upder the
boards simply wiped o ~t the

JACKSON - Senior Dean
Royal poured in 28 points and
grabbed off 10 rebounds in
leading the Ironton Tigers to
a 74-37 rout of host Jackson
Friday night.
The Tigers were never
headed enroute to their ninth
league win against one loss
and upped the ir season

•

.
·&gt;"·
..
.

Bert•••

WELLSTON - In an old
fashioned shoot out at
Wellston Friday night the
host
Golden
Rockets
outlasted the Athens Bulldogs
to post an 82-76 victory as 10
players scored in double
. figures.
·
The victory was the second
by Wellston over Athens in
league play while the Bull·
dogs are still seeking their
first win of the season in all
games.
Both teams came out firing
with Athens taking a 24-21
first period lead, and still
held a 45-37 halftime lead.
However, Wellston 's John

deserve

need

your

your

SAVINGS

..
•

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•

••

·.••
'.•
••

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...

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11t4ie "'e ~~ ___
Point Pleasant
Federal
Savings &amp; Loan

AN/)

Association

•
•

..

'

'

SYMME'$ VA'LLEY (66)-J. Mil ler. 6-4·16; Estep. 3-2·8;
Wi lson. 10-1-21 ; Gesweln, 2'0·
4; Ingles. 4-2-10 ; B. Mil ler. 2·
, 2-6; TOTALS 27-12-66.
·
J NORTH GALL lA (50) Loga~ , 4-0·8: Jystlce. 5-2·12;
Mlnnos, 4-3-11 : Tackett, 1·0·2:
Mundell, 5-1-11 ; Sisson, 2·0·4;
Payne, 0·2·2. TOTALSll~l ·50 .
Score by qua rters :
Symmes Val. 7 24 20 15-66
N.Reserves
Gallla -- 12
8 10 20-50
NorthGallla67
Symmes Valley 44.
'

Wellston edges Athens,. 82-76

you

you

..•

WILLOW WOOD - Mark
The winners then put the oo the year' and 2-3 inside the
Wilson poured In 21 points game out of reach with a 2Q.IO league. North Gallia hit 21 of
54 field goal attempts and
and Justin Miller added 17 edge in the third quarter.
.k
Friday· night as Symmes
Center Ralph . Ingles was piC ed Dff 51 rebounds, with
Valley chargl)(l from behind the only other VIking in · Logan picking off 18.
The Pirates played at
to defeat North Gallia, 66-50. · double figures with 10 points
The Vikings, improving and he also grabbed a game- So uthwestern Saturday ·
their record to 4-4, trailed 12-7 high 13 rebounds. Forward Tuesday, North Gallia will
after the first quarter but Nick Geswein pulled down 10 host Kyger Creek. Thursday,
outscored the Pirates 24-8 in rebounds as Symmes Valley Miller is at North Gallia and
'd
Nor th Ga II 'ta at
the second period to tak.e a controlled the boards, 41-29. F "ay,
commanding 31·20 halftim e
Norih f;allia dropped to 2-ii Hannan Trace.
lead.

Ironmen's inside game.
$core by qua rters:
Coach Buddy Bell's Tigers
18 17 18 18--71
employed a fast break and a Sou lhern
Trace
11 21 i2 16~0
tight defense to post quarter ·H.Reserve
score - Southern
leads of 22·10, 35·20, and 55-24 ~ Hannan Tr ace 48 (ot ).
as Jackson scored 'just four
points In the third period.
Royal was the only Tiger in
double figures as Coach Bell
used his subs for most of the (Continued from Page 1-CJ
winning record over the
sec ond half while Kyle ayears
he played: He is a
Buchanan was the only
Jackson player in double charter meinber of the OVA
and served as manager of the
scoring with 12 markers.
Racine Baseball Club from
Ironton pulled .down . 56
1938
to 1952.
reb ounds while Ja ckson
Grimm started his career
netted only 21 with Robin in 1921 with Lansing
Fltzpatrick grabbing 12 for Senators, Ce ntral Lea gue,
the winners arid Buchanan Lansing, Michigan. He pit·
hau!lng down seven for ched in the Michigan-Ontario,
Jackson.
Lea gue, .Grand Rapids,
Statistics show the Tigers Michigan for two years.
ripping In 33 of 75 fielders for
In 1924 he pitched in the
44 pet. and caMing eight of
Michigan.Qntario League,
nine free throws while Hamilton , Cana da and
Jackson had a miserable Peoria, Ill., 3-1 League in
shooting game on 15 of 57 for 1925 ; Scotdale, Pa., Mid
just 26 pet. and seven of 13 Atlantic Leag ue; Akron ,
charity tosses.
Ohio, Central . League;
The box score:
Beaumont , Tex!t;, Texas
IRONTON 174) - Roya l 14- League; Dallas Te~ s, Texas
0-28 ; Sesher 3-2-8; Fitzpat rick
4-1,9: Brown 1-0-2; Howard 2- League; and Blnghampton,
0-4; Wil li ams 3-n : Kitts 1·2- N. Y. Binghampton League.
4: Fields 2·0-4: Thomas 1-0-2:
An article appeared in a
Fa irchild 2-2-6. TOTALS 33'8- paper when Grimm was
74.
JACKSON (37) - Harl ess pitching ·whi ch read as
3-2-8; . McDonald 3-1-7: follows: "Bert Grimm pit·
Buchanan 5-2-12; Jones 1-1-3; ched one of those "Way Down
Butne r 2-1-S; Conger 1-0-2.
East" or '~ East Lynne "
TOTALS il-7-37.
mellerctramatic kinds of ball
Score by quarters :
JIMMY NOE, 6-5 senior
Ir onton
22 13 20 19- 74 gaf!leS Tuesda y afternoon
forward lor the Rio Grande
Ja ckson
10 10 4 13-37 with a thrill in every one of
Reserve Xore: Iron ton 63. the nine episodes and he won College Redmen, wlll be
Jackson 38.
honored during halftime .
it - which makes the story
ceremonies
of Tuesday
more enjoyable to tell. Yes
Mt.
Vernon
night's
sir, Mr. Grimm of U!tart •
Nazarene-Rio
Grande
Falls, which isn't on the map
yet but which will be about . College basketball game at
Lyne Center. Noe, a four·
the time its . most famous
year veteran for Coach Ari
famous son registers a few
l,.aoham
, was
Rio 's
more pitching triUl'llphs. It
·,~Player ol the Year" Jn
was Grirrun's J~th victory of
the season and it was served 1976. He was also a
up to the edification of Joe member of the . 1976 Mid·
(Poncho) Cantillion, former Ohio Con{ereoce " dream
boss of Minneapolis and now team" and a member of the
scout for the Cubs, and Bill NAJA l)lstrlct 22 all-star
Rourke, former owner of the team. During his career at
Omaha team in the Western Rio, Noe ha• averaged 20.6
league and now scout for the JM&gt;Ints a game and 12.1
rebounds a game. He Is a
Reds. "
of
Gallla
The artie)~ was written graduate
Academy
High
School,
when he was with the Zanes·
Gallipolis.
ville club.
Another article gave the
following report of Grimm.
"Sharing honors for the day
with these men was Bert
Grimm, the chunky right·
bander who came to Dallas
last spring from the Akron
club In the Central U!ague
and who was loaned to the
Beaumont Exporters. Beri
pulled a fast one on Manager
Atz when, a few hours after
unloading from a train that
. brought him In from his home
In U!tart Falls, he announced
that he wsa ready to pitch.
Jake was a bit dumbfounded
and wanted to know if Bert
W&amp;S!I't talking through his
hat, thinking that Grimm had
just left a lot of cold and
snow. Anyhow , he agreed to
the hurler's Wlshes. And Bert
That 's why we pay interest on all our savings
soon proved that he meant
accounts from the day you bring your money
business. He began Jogging
'el!l in to catcher Claude
in till the day you take it out. It's the best
Robertson and mixed fast
ones with a nice change of
interest pol icy around.
pace . Working four full
So save with us, where your interest is paid
frames , or an inning more
than any pitcher has toiled In
no matter when you withdraw.your money.
either of the first two In·
traclub clashes, Grimm let
Because you deserve it. '
the Yannlgans down with four
lilts and two runs, neither of
which was earned .
Playing In Charleston with
__ ,.,
,. . ....
the Zanesvllle Greys Bert
entered the baseball's ball of
fame py pitching n~hit, no
run ba~ In the seven-inning
opener. Grimm struck out
five and did not allow a base
on balls.
Grirrun played In class A
and B ieagn•s. In 1931 he was
manager of the Mid .Atlantic
League, Zanesville for three
years and in 1937 was
manager of the Mountain
State League, Logan, W. Va .
Grimm had an outstanding
career in baseball and he has
tremendous scrapbooks to
prove it.

When

.

Vikings drop Pirates 66-50

Martin cranked up in the
third period and hit 12 of his
total 13 points as the Rockets
outscored the Bulldogs 24-10
and grab the lead at 59-55
entering the fourth quarter.
Shots and rebmmds were
frequent as Athens gunned ii1

30 of 82 attempts while
At the charity stripe
Wellston· hit on 30 of 79 Wellston converted 22 of 39
fielders.
and Athens made good on 16
The Rockets pulled off 56 of 27.
rebounds as Ray GilUiand
The box score:
netted 19 and John Martin 16
ATHENS 176) - Topping 5·
while Athens gathered 54 0-10; Chonko6-3-15; Pennell·
bounds with Arthur Chonko l-4: Goldsbury J.4- IO ; Walton
8·1-18 ; Meek o. J.l: Wallace 6·
hauling In 18.
4-16; Whea ley 1·0·2. TOTALS
Gilliland led both teams In 30·11.76.
scoring with 21 points but had
WELLSTON
(82}
good help from John Royster Swingle 3-4-10; Marlin 6·1 ·13;
•
Gilliland 8-5-21; J . Royster 6·
with 16, John Martin with 13, 4-16;
Hudson. 5-6·16 ; R.
Ron Hudson's 16, and Darrln Roysfer 1-2·4; Conley 1·0·2.
Swingle adding 10.
TOTALS 30-22-82.
Score by qua rters:
AI Walton tossed Jn 18 for
Athens
24 21 10 11--76
Athens as Mark Walla ce
ston
21 16 24 21- 81
CHESHIRE Ra lph added 16, Arthur Chonko 15, Well
Re_serve score : Athens 66,
Baylor scored 31 points to and Rob Topping 10.
Wel lston 44.
lead Jl;yger Creek to a heart
stopping 64-83 victory over
Southwestern Friday night.
The Bobcats raised their
record to 4-5. John Thompson
added II points and Mitch
BUY YOURS NOWI
Salem chipped in with 10.
Ron Jackson had a game
•MARLETIE •WHITMAN
high 32 points, but it wasn't
30 Years Financing Available
enough as the Highlanders
. Also: Complete Line of Quality
dropped to 5-8. Carter had 11
Sectional
HQmes &amp; Mobile Homes
and Keith Grate added 10.
The Bobcats outscored the
Highlanders 2Q.J3 in the third
quarter after tra iling at the
hall 40.JO.
Box: score :
KYGER CR EE K IM J -

Bobcats
surpnse

SW five

MODUI.AR HOME

&amp;'/Mol~~

Salem 10, Sa nds 8, Thom pson
11 , Bay lor 31, Bai rd 4.

·SOUTHWESTERN (63) -

· . See Jim Staats or Joe Gil.es
Phone 446-9340
Galli,,iis, Ohio
17 1324 \ ~4 - lll~~~~~~~a4~~. .~~~~~~~~

Gr a te 10, Carter 11, Layton 6,
Bush 4, Jackson 32.
Score by quarters :

K . Cr ~k

S'weste rn

MOBILE HOMES -INC.

20 20 13 lQ---63

Appearing in Captain's Lounge
'

----------------------------------;

A-3--The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6, 1m

POMEROY - The Meigs
Unlt of the American Cancer
Society Is taking advantage
of the snow and cold to stage
• novel event on Mulberry
Heights ne~ Sllilday.
The event will be a sled
riding contest with youngliters throughout the county
Invited to take part. YOWUl·
liters who should have 1\td
.plenty of practice in sleddlrig
what with the rough January
weather will be divided into
age groupa for the com·
petition and there will be cash
prizes to the winners.
Only one rider will· be
permitted on a sled and all
types of sleds may be used
with the exception of
motorized ones, of course. A
runway will be marked and a
stop l'&amp;tch used to. tlrpe the
C&lt;Jntestants down the course.
Youngsters with the best time
will be the winners. A release
of liability must be signed
before any cont estant Is
permitted to make the run .
Anyone committing fouta will
· be dlsquallfied by the panel of
judges.

Prizes wW be S5 1n

the

FEBRUARY 8 • 12TH
TUES.-SAT.

9:30 . 1:30

SKYLINE LANES
GALLIPOLIS
'

.

CARTER &amp; EVANS
BUILDING SUPPLIES
Olive.Stl8et

Gpfpdi, 0.

I

through 10 age group ; $5 in
the 11-16 group and $10 for
those over 17. Adults maY
participate and they might be
fllcouraged to know that Dr.
E. S. Vlllaneuva wW be
present for the competitive
event.
The contest will start at 2
p.m. Sunday on Mulberry
Hill, In back of Veterans .
Memorial Hospital. Con·
testants wW provide their
own sleds. Registration will
begin at 1 p.m. in the cancer
society's oHice, located in the
base!llent of the former
children's home building.
Adults attending the com·
patltion are requested to park
cars to the rear of the Meigs
Medical Building so that
adequate parktng wW stiU be
avallable to hospital visitors.
A fee will be charged for
entering and there wtll be
·re!reshmtnts available .
Those wlahlng to partlclpaq,
are. to flll ·ln the appllcatlon
below, bring It with them, and
tum It In at the cancer office
beginning at I p.m.

ENTRY BLANK
SLID RIDING CONTE$T
FEARUARY 13, 1977
2:00 p . m. - 5:00 p.m.

•

his da ughter , Mrs . Elsie
Evans, Columbus, Friday at
8: 30 a .m . He had been

residing wlfh his daughter

since August,

Ali felong resident of Ga llIa

N~·--------------------------

County, he was born Oct . 4,

AGE: 0· 10._____

late Saker and Mary Arm .

11-16 - 75¢

0-10 - 50¢

ENT!!l FEE:

strong Black.
In 1910 he married Ethel
Mitchell wno died In 1974. He

17-up • $1.00

was a member of Providence

•

and Mrs. Joe (Mary Virginia)
Burke. all of Columbus. One

SIONED • PARENr OR G.UARDEN

No one hurt in

. FEBRUARY 6 THRU FEBRUARY 12

.

School• Clooed All Day Mooday, Feb. 1
Mason County Vo-Tech Center (Underground water
supply line frozen off).

Bennan honored at ceremonies
HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) -Producer Pandro Berman
will be given the Irving
Thalberg Memorial Award at
this year's Oscar award
Ci!remonles, Walter ·Mirlsch,
president of the Academy of
Motion P.lcture Arts and
Sciences. announced Friday.
The award, for "creative
produei!rs wbose body of
work reflects consistently
hlldl Quallty ," is presented
. only when the academy's
board of directors feel there

FEWER JOBLESS
WASIDNGTON (UPI)
Unemploym~nt returned to a
post-recession low of 7.3 per
cent in early January before
the severe winter weather
caused more than I million
unexpected layoffs, th.e Labor
Department reported today.
The O.S per cent decline in
joblessness from December
was evidence of a stronger
economy . But officials
conceded the report already
Is outdated.

MR. TAX
KNOWS

FEBRUARY

2Rd &amp;OUVE ST~

of o.A merica'

..,, .. vuJr'-'.n.

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

PICK-UP SERVICE PHONE Ub-·2f

For a ready-to-mail tax return,
come visit us ... just once!

855 SECOND AVENUE
GALLI POLIS, OHIO
PHONE 1614} 446-7600 .
OUR HOURS : MON. &amp; FRI . 10 A.M. · I P;M,
TUES .. WED .. THURS. UAT. IOA.Iol, · 5 P.M.
JU~T DROP IN AND SEE US

~----~-

the past

Born Oct. 12, 1911 at Hlnt011,

Church at Ashtabula . Ohio.

SLJr vivi'ng are her husband.
Le sli e ;
tour
brothers .
Howard , Gall i polis ;
Clarence, Bidwell Route 1;
James , Boomer , W. Va ., and
Lee . South Charleston , W. Va,
She was preceded ln d~ath by
two sisters and four brothers
Fu neral services w ill be 1
p m . Sunday at Miller 's
Home for Funerals w i th the
Rev . Charles T. Glassburn,
pastor of the Prospect En·
terprise Church, offic iating .
Bu rial wil l· be in Pine St .
cemetery .

NOT TillS YEAR
WASillNGTON (UPI)
The Postal Service Q·IU not
try to put any rate increase
·
Into eff ect during 1977
bec_a use recent operational
services have improved its
economic outlook, a source
said
today. Because of a 10.
COLUMBUS (UPI )
month
delay in getting apPrelim inary figures show
proval
of
a new rate schedule
that 62,0011 jobless Ohioans
by
the
Postal
Rate Com·
had filed Initial claims for
mission,
it
was
pointed
out,
unemployment benefits
the
deadline
has
passed
for
during the first four days of
seeking
any
increase
that
last week, Albert Giles,
administrator of the Ohio could go into effect during
Bureau of Employment Ser· thls calendar year.
vices said.
Giles said 41,713 of the
claims were made by persons
laid off due ID the energy
shortage. The claims marked
the largest nwnber of Initial
•
•
/'lu •IJfr,·
claims ever filed in a four day
period.
.
Tonight thru
The CincinnaU area had the
Februa
ry 15th
greatest
number
of
claimants, 16,558, of which
10,679 were due ID the energy
shorgage.
GUes said plana have been
made to increase the claims
staH where needed and the
OBES will be open Monday,
Feb. 21, Presidents' Day,
which Is nonnally a bollday
for state workers .

is ·a worthy recipient. Ber·
man will be the 21st In 411
years.
Among Berman's fllms are
11
A Patch of Blue," " Of
Human Bondage," "Black·
board Jungle, " "The Hun·
chback of Notre Dame" and
':The Gay Divorcee.

TO MEET ARAF AT
DAMASCUS, Syria (UPI )
-- U. N. §ecretary General
Kurt Waldhelm planned to
meet with guerrilla leader
Vasser Arafat Saturday to
discuss the crucial issue of
Palestinian representation at
any new Geneva peace talks.
The meeting was &amp;Mounced
by a Palestine Liberation
Organization spokesman and
confinned privately by U. N.
sources. Arafat arrived In
Damascus from Beirut
Saturday.

COLO:\l ·

MEIGS THEATRE

CLOSED FOR
VACATION

.WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

CARTOON

Dear Customer
l
Due to the energy shortage we have voluntarily
reduced our store hours. Our reduced hours are
as follows:
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday,
10 a.m. til 5 p. m.

~.GJ'ax

&amp;~altt - i~nppr

health

Jobless file
• S
more Claun
than ever

Schools Open for Two Houn Monday, Feb. 7
Sunnyside Elemen'tary School, Beale Grade School,
Central Elementary School, North Point Pleasant Grade
School, Point Pleasant High School, Point Pleasant Junior
High School, ,Ordnance Elementary School, Roosevelt Grade
School, Mount Flower Grade School, Leon Gra de School.

Mr. TaK Is current on the
1976 Tax Reform Act and its
many changes that can
afl ect your return this
year. And Mr. Tax com·
pletes your return compu ter-veri fi ed and
ready i o mail- in just one
visi t instead of two. Yet
costs no more.

2 PIECES CHICKEN
t ROLL
t MASHED POTATOES

died Sa turday m orning In the
Louisa Commu nity Hospital
in Louisa , KentuCky .
Her l a te husba nd was
EImer Dea l, Sr ., who died in
J une, 1963 . Fun eral ar ·
r angem ents will be an ·
nounced by the Crow·Husse ll
Fvner a l Home.

Scbools Opeu All Day Monday, Feb. 7
Hannan Elementary School, Hannan High School, Mt.
Ollve Kindergarten, Woods Grade School, West Columbia
Grade School, Wahama Junior High School, Wahama Senior
High School, Mason Elementary School, New Haven
Elementary School, Hartford Grade School and Letart
Elementary School.

has backfired

No
Substitutes

MONTH OF

MRS. WILLI E DEAL
AS HTON - Mrs. Willie
Pearl Deal. 84, of Ashton,

Mason County Schools

TAXES.

CHICKEN
SNACK BOX

FOR THE

W. Va., she was the daughter·
of 1he late James W. and Lula
Darling ton K ir by . She was a
member of the Grace Gospel

Green Twp . Friends may call
from 2 to 4 and 1 to 9 p.m .

Schedule of classes

Cookie boycott

Jive _auto mishaps

SUNDAY thru SATURDAY

SATURDAYS

gran dchildren. numerous
great-grandchildren and a

Monday.

be late because of road
conditions or weather conditions.
Students are reminded to
dress In warm clothing and to
expect to wear sweaters or
jackets in the classrooms.
Classroom temperatures will
not be above 65 degrees In
any case. A good hot lunch Is
a great booster of morale and
helps students keep warmer
and do better work.
•

day m orning at Holzer
Med l cal Center . She had been
in f ailing
month .

friend of the fai'nlly, James
Newma n.
Funeral services· w111 be at
1 p .m . Tuesda y at Mi ller's
· Home for Funerals wi th the
Rev . Vance · Watson of .
flclating . Burial will follow in
Pro\lldence Cemetery i n

SIGNED

BEULA H E. SHELINE
GALLIPOLIS -- Beulan
Ethel Shel ine , 65, died Thurs·

son , James. preceded him In

death In 1967.
Also surv ivi ng are 23

I the undersi gned, .hereby release t he ~erican Cancer ~ocioty , The County
C~mmissioners , and '! he Hospita l of aey l""bility due to injuries received dlll'ing
the Sled Ri d i~g Contest .

tallment of gas u.se by schools High
School,
Hannan
until Wednesday, February 9, Elementary schilol, Mount
and this wiU prohibit the u.se OUve Klndergartt.11 , Broad
of these buildings until Run Kindergarten, and all
Wednesday or untll the oU the schools in the Bend area
conversion burners arrive will operate all day. Mt.
and installed. Mason County Flower and Leon Grade
Vo-tech will be closed · School students will ride the
because of a water supply buses home when the school
line, burled four · feet under bus runs from the Point
the ground which Is frozen. Pleasant area.
All other schools In th•
All school buses should be
county Including Hannan running although some may

At one

prea~her .

time, he servecf ..a·s a mlnlsttr
on t he Water loo circuit .
Later 1 he ser'v'ecl Rodne y,
Centerville and Well!ton
chu rches .
Funeral services will be
announced . The body is at
Brocks Funeral Home ln
Wheelersburg .

Charles ( Norma) Grooms

SAVANNAH, Ga. (UPI) -The decision of an anti-Equal
Rights Amendment group to
boyC&lt;Jtt Girl Scout cookies
GALUPOLis -- No serious parked on the south side of SR appears to have backfired
Injuries were reported in five 124. There wM slight damage and actually Increased sales,
accidents Investigated by the to the Medley vehicle; no· a Girl Scout official said
Friday .
Ohio State Highway Patrol citation was issued.
"We had 3,000 packages of
A snow covered road was
Friday and Saturday.
No citations were Issued bhimed !or an a"ccident at cookies in the cupboard at
following an accident at 7:35 12 :40 p.m. on TR 383, two and this time last year. This year
a.m. Friday In Gallla County six-tenths miles northeast of we have 571 packages," said.
• Sunday Times-Sentinel
on TR 39, four and eight· SR 124. A vehicle driven by Anne Jones, exec.utive
Publillhed every Sunda)' by The
tenth&amp; miles north of SR 218. Debra L. McGuire, 22, Rt. I, director of the Girl Scout
Oho VaUey Publishing Co.
The
patrol reported a south- Dexter, was northbound Council of Savannah. She said
GAWPOLIS
bound
vehicle driven by Anita arouad a curve when It met a orders for the cookies had
• DAILYTRIBUNE
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
E. Haner,l9, Rt. 2, GaWpolls, aoutllbound vehicle driven by Increased greatly during the
and a northbound auto Charles E. Jones, 22, Rt. 2, last two days . Members of the
Publilihed every weelul!iy evening
eicept Saturda)'. . Second Cia~
operated by Virgin ia R. Langsville. The McGuire Chatham County "Stop
Postage Paid at Gallipolill , Ohio
Walter, 40, Rt.1, Northup met auto slld left of center arid ERA" group voted thls week
struck the Jones auto. No to boycott cookie sales untU
THE DAILY SENTIN El,
headon at a hillcrest.
l11 Court St., Pomeroy, 0. m69.
A passenger in the Walter Injuries were reported and no the national Girl Scout board
Publlshfd every week day evening
vehicle, Rich A. Walter, 16, citations issued. There was rescinds Its endorsement of
esccpt Saturday. Entered 115 R(.'\IOd
clus mailing maller al Pomeroy,
Rt. I, Northup, had visible moderate damage to both the ERA.
Ohio Post Orrice,
signs of injury, but was not vehicles.
By carrier dlll ly and Sunday 75c
per week. Motor route 1!1.25 per monEldon C. Blake, 47, Rt. I, Carleton auto causing
Immediately treated . The
lh.
Reedsville,
was cited for the' J!lake
MAIL
Haner
vehicle
was
auto
to
paaalng
without
assured clear ntp on Its top. No injuries
suBSCRtPTIONRATF.I
demollahed and there was
The Galli pulls Dally Tribune i.n
QttJo and West Virgini11 one year
severe da mage to the W8 ltef distance following an - ac· were reported. There was
cldent at 5p.m. Friday on SR • severe damage to the Blake
f22 .00: six months,ll.50: ~1ret monvehicle.
Uu 11.00. EIJewi~re t26.oo per
Two parked cars were 7, one-tenth of a mile north of auto and light damage to
13'50 ' throo moll·
)'e&amp;r:$7.50;
six monLhl&gt;
Involved In an accident CR 32 in Meigs County. Blake
lhs
motor ' route
$3.2li monCarleton's.
U~y .
Friday at9:30 a.m. on SR 124, was attempting to pass a
An ley spot in ihe road
The Daily Senti nel, une year
U
122.00: Sl• m&lt;Jnllull1 .50; ihm i!lQnone m e west of Syracuse. A vehicle operated by Harry M. caused an accident Saturday
Uu 11.00. Eoewhere r.o .oo: six
vehicle oWned by Thomas H. Carleton, 25, Rt. 2, Coolville, at 12 :05 a.m. In Gallla
mooths ll3.50: ihree munths 17.50.
Weston
parked in a private when he saw aouthb!&gt;und Countyo
n
Fairfield·
· 1be United ~ lntemU Diwl is
ml.,ively enUU"' io Uoe use f0&lt; drive rolled SOUth OUt Of the traffic and returned ID the Centenary Rd., four-tenth&amp; of
pebU, aUon of all "'"' di3J111 lche!i
drl~eway striking a Vehicle northboimd lane. His vehicle · a mile south of SR 588. Keith
cmliled to the new.11pape r and alsO
L.::""::.:ioca::::.i;:;"":::
"': !P::ubl::ished
::::.hhe=
re=in·: ._-1, owned by .Gregorv Medley, struck the rear of the F. Moore , 38, Patriot Star
Route, GaWpolls, was northbound when hia vehicle hit an
Icy spot and going out of
control, struck an embank·
ment. There was moderate
damage to the vehicle, no
injury and no citations.

'

Methodist

In addition to Mrs. Evans. .

DISAPPROVED._ _ __

APPROV ED._ __

morning.
Rev . Hall was a retired

three daughters surviving
are Mrs. Irene Jenkins. Mrs .

PHOIIE~---------(SLED)

I

ORVAL L. tiALL
GALLIPOLIS' Rev.
Or"al L. Hall. 93, o native of
Gallia County, died In
Riverside Hospital Satyrday

Baptisf Cnyrcn.

~0~--------~--------------------------------

New tax rules, regulations
got you confused?

CLOSED AU. DAY

1886ln Springfield Twp. to the

17 -up._ _ _ __

ll- 16_ _ __

Mason .County Schools will reopen Monday
POINT PLEASANT -- All
Mason County Schools will be
open Monday, February 7,
liut not all wiU operate all
day, Supt. Lowell Cook said
Saturday.
The oU guns necessary for
conversion of Sunnyside
School, Beale School, Central
School, North Point Pleasant
and Point Pleasant S&lt;!lllor
High School had not arrived
frOm the blizzard bound north
(as of noon Saturday).
As a result these schools
along with Point Pleasant
Junior High School and Ord·
nance Elem&lt;!lltary School,
will be open for two hours on
Monday morning so that
teachers can make homework assignments, students
can sign out library books,
pick up their needed text·
books and complete these
assignments at home.
The . Col""'bla Gas Com·
pany has extended the . cur·

.

PAUL BLACK
GALLIPOLIS - Pa ul
Black, 90, . Mitchell Road,
Gallipol is, died af the home of

u

-I.
-I.

JIMMY WALKER

l Area Deaths l

Sled riding contests planned next Sunday

-----~

Thursday 10 a.m. till2 .noon and Friday 10 a.m.

I

l

til 8 p.m •

I

Since many of you were unable to come in and
take advantage of our After Inventory Sale we are
going to extend it •
Thank you for your cooperation.
Since~ly,

.

C::::· ·"J~. " ;&lt;,~.. ftl
t:asby "Skip" .Meadows III

.E mpire Furniture Co.
. 842 ,Second Ave.,

Gallipolis, Ohio

�NHL Standints

G+-The Sunday 'l'une&amp;-.Sentinel, SUnday. Feb. 6. 1977

Campbell Conferenct

Blue Devils move into
!: third place after win

Palrlck Division
W L T PI's. OF GA

Philadelph JO 10 17 n 201 140
NY lslandrs 31 14 7 69 117130
Atlanta
24 11 11 ·59 179 167

..

straight hardwood victory
over the Tigers In two years,
GAllS was paced by Senior
Co-Captain Guard Brent
Johnson who tossed in . 16
points, Senior Co-Captain
Forward Gary Swain tossed
·in 14 points and Seqior Center
Keith Me Guire tallied 14
poinl'!. McGuire also had 11
rebounds and four assists.
Johnson had four assists for
the winners. As a team,
GAHS had IS assists .
Rob Holsinger,
Waverly's 8-8 sophomore
center, led the visitors wttb
18 points and 18 rebounds.
The Blue Devils were never

'

r;AHS-Waverly box• ••

•
•
P.lAYER

WAVERLY TIGERS (45)
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO
'· Joe Davena
3-6
0-0 3 4 2
Chuck Thompson
3-12 2-2
s 4 I
I Rob Holsinger
a-13 2·2 0 1a 5
Bob Fyffe
0-1 0·0 1 1 I
Stan Crace
0-4 2-2 0 I I
. Mork Fielder
2-2 0-0
3
0 0
Hick Thomas
0-1 0-0 2 0 0
Tim Frederick
0-0 0·0 0 0 0
Randy Thomas
3-5
1-3 0 1 3
TOTALS
19-44 7-9 14 29 13
,!!AHS BLUE DEVILS (531
PLAYER
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO
Herb Epling
0-1
'1·3 2 5 3
Gary Swain
7-13 0-1 0 s
Keith McGuire
6-12 2-2 1 11 .
Brent Johnson
7-15 2-2 3 2
Terry Wa ll
3-8
1-3 2 3 1
Mike Dressel
0-1
1-2 2 4 0
Kev Jackson
,0-1
0-0 2 0 1
23-51 7·13 12 30 8
TOTALS
Score by qu• rte r1 :

.a IS 8
14 11 17

Waverly Tigers

Gollipolls Blu• O.v ils

t

I

WHA

PIONEER
MODEL P28
(Y'~
.
' •11""';....-~

W L T Ph. OF

St. Louis

21 26 6
19 25 9

Chlcogo

4S
TP
1
14
14
16

15 29 9 39 155 196

Minnesota

12 28 11 35 147 206
IS 33 5 35 1~ 6 205

wares conference
Norris OlvlsiDn

W L T Pts .
Quebec
30 18 1 61
lnd ianllpls 24 2'1 4 52
Clncl"nnatl 23 24 2 48
New Englnd 20 30 5 45
Blrmnghm 21 32 l 43
)( ·M in {leSOI tV 18 5 43
West
W L T Pts.
Houston
30 17 S 65
San Diego
29 21 2 60

Profe.sslonal type
ant1-v:ibration

I
0

Sl

W l T Pts. GF.CA
7 8 a6 259 125
23 20 9 55 '165 163

en!~n~

27 20 1 55 228 176

Co! lg ery

- 1",126 A 4'1

155169

16 " sprock et nasa bar
Heavy duty clutch

)( -Team disbanded

mumate llghtweight
chain saw Reg . S220.00-

Houston 4 New England 1
Birmingham 7 Quebec o
W innipeg 8 San Diego ' 2

Frldav•s Results

Sunday•s' Gimes
Calgary at Winnipeg

NOW ONLY '205 ·

San Diego at Edmonton
lndirmapolis at New England
Cincinnati at Quebec

HOMESTEAD HEATER

. INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) Freddie Lewis, a six-foot
guard and team captain who
led the 1ndlana P$cers to
three ABA championships,
bas ended hla pro basketball

career.
The former Ari2ona State
star, in hla IIth season as a

pro, has asked tile Pacers to
place him on the voluntary
retirement Jist, team officials
WAVERLY'S Rob Holsinger, 1).8 sophomore center
announced Friday. This was
(51
)
tallied 18 points and picked off 18 rebounds for the
his eighth season wtth ' the
visiting
Tigers Friday night but his teammates were
Pacers.
defeated
53-45 by host Gallipolis. On right is Gallia's Terry
Lewis, signed by . the
Wall
(
15).
Pacers as a free agent after
stints wtth Memphis and St.
Lo)lls before the ABA folded,
said he could no longer play
CHICAGO (uPI )- Gllorge · sports events and sports
up to the standards he and his Langford, a seven-year features, managing editor
fans set for himself.
veteran " baseball beat" Maxwell McCrohen said
writer and former Unlted Friday.
Langford, 37, a graduate of
Press International reporter,
has been named spOrts editor Vanderbilt University, began
of the Chicago Tribune, his career with uPI's fit.
IMO~,
effective immediately, the Louis bureau in 1961 and
worked as a sportswriter in,
TRUIHMi
Tribune has announced .
UPI bureaus in New York
Cooper
Hollow,
who
has
~!(eN 1 SJ..'(
and Chicago before joining
served
as
the
Tribune's
~199.00 IS
sports editor since 1966, will the Tribune In 1966.
He spent seven years
devote his full time to
covering
the Chicago Cubs
reporting
and
writing
major
VAle.&amp;. Fo«

air.

WILKINSON

SMALL ENGINE
SALES &amp; SERVICE

"~"
"w-.r&amp;R
50f1'a:MIIt~.

at your reliable local
co-operative will give
you the BEST DEAL ...

''

"

CD-DIP

Automatlc"Water Conditioner

ONLY

'35SOO

FOR ,OUR
BEST MODEL

UC-XXX 210,000 Weekly
Grain Capacity
OTHER MODELS AVAILABLE AT
PRICES AS LOWASS279.9S

LANDMARK

• Serving Me1gs, Gallia and
Mason Countits

tarsey, Mgr.- Phone 992-2181
Slore Hour&lt; , OpenB,lli-S:lO

Jack~-

CHIEFTAINS (661
FG-A FT-A
1-5 4-4
6-14 4-6
6·17 2-3
3-6 4-io
6-9
J.7
0-0 o.o
0-1 0-0
Todd Da vids on
0-3 0-2
John Kemper
4-6
0-0
Dave Dalton
23·S9 20·34
Totols
MEIGS MARAUDERS 1521
FG-A fT.A
Pi aver
6-9 0-0
Dale Browning
3-7 1-2
Alan Dodson
3-9 0-0
Allen Stewart
3-8 9-11
SteVe Randolph
2-3 0-0
Kenny Young
1-5 1-3
Tim Scites
2-2 1-3
Brian Hamilton
0-1 0-0
Dan Gra nda l
0-0 0-0
Chuck Fo ilrod
Greg Witte·
0-2 0-0
20-46 12-19
Totals

• •

~OOAN

ANAHEIM, calif. (UP!)Jack Donovan, a former
pitcher In the California
Angels' farm system and
'recently assistant general
manager of the El Paso
Diablos of the Texas League,
has been hired as administrative assistant to Angels '
minor league director Tom
Sommers.
·
Donovan, Zl, who attended
Seton Hall University,
compiled a 13-7 record wtth a
3.49 earned run average in
four minor league seasons.
He will assume hla new duties
Feb. 9.

TOO MUCH SNOW
BURTON TOWNSlliP,
Ohio (UP)) - A March of
Dimes snowmobile marathon
scheduled for Saturday at
GUARANTEE!
Pleasant Hills Country Club
was postponed until March S.
The cancellation was due to
period. It was 10-10 during the too much snow.
TRUE VALUE
halftime intermission .
Waverly led 17-14 going into
the final stanza.
Mark Smith's charity toss
tied the game at 17-all with
3:44 remaining.
Harris canned two free
throws with 2:34left, then hit
another at the :10 second
mark. Randy Johnson's goal
at the buzzer cut the final
margin to one point.
The Blue Imps hit eight of
24 field goal attempts and
four of six free throw attempts. Waverly was nine of
Z1 from the field and cine of
three at the foul line. The
Blue Imps picked off 13
r•bounds, seven by Jeff
Lanham, and had II turnovers.
Harris led the winneFS with
seven points. E. V. Clarke
had six and Mark Smith five.
Johnson led the Cubs with
five points.
Visit Our Salad Bar
Box score:
Shrimp
WAVERLY CUBS 1191 French Fries
Johnson. 2-1-S; Leffler. 2-0-4:
Holland , 0-0-0; Dutcher, 2-0-4;
Coffee. Tea or Milk
Arnell, 2-0-4; Gordon, 1-0-2.
Plus Tax
TOTALS 9-1-19.
GAHS BLUE IMPS !201 Thomas, 0-0-0; Harris, 2-3-7;
Clarke, 3-0-6; Lanham, 0-0·0;
Smith, 2·1-5; Armstrong, 1-0·
9n.3629
Pomeroy, o.
2; Oa iley , 0-0-Q. TOTALS 1-420.
Phone 992-6304
Score by quarters :
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304
.Cubs .
4 6 7 2-19
Blue Imps
6 4 4 6-20

THE INN PLACE

Monday Night Special

THE MEIGS INN

HOM ELITE·

ALSO CHECK WITH YOUR AGENT ABOUT FLOOD
INSURANCE COVERAGE

ALL GAMES
Team
WL P
Wheelrsbg . II ' 0 769
Logan
II I 1017
Ironton
II 2 744
, Pt. Pleas.
5 1 411
Gallipolis
. 6 5 626
· Portsmoulh 6 6 76a
Ja ckson
6 7 752
Meigs
5 6 689
Waverly
5 a 771
Wellslon
2 9 590
S. Poin t
2 10 6a9
Athens
0 10 SS7
Non-SEOAL results:

OP
592

W/10 INCH
BAR

NOW ONLY

$8495

WHILE .THEY

~AST

The following ad has been paid for by the following Meigs County
Independent Insurance Agents.)

MANY SP~CIALS ON OTHER MODELS

POMEROY LANDMARK
Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.- Phone 992-2181
Slore Hour&lt; , OpeM 8!30 .S,3o-Mill ClosH AIS A.M.

6 •

16
14

10
12
0
0
0
8
66

RB PF TP
4 12
8
4 7
7
I 6•
2
s 15
5
I 5 4
I I 3
I 0 5
0 I 0
0 2 0
0 I 0
25 24 52

Logan reserves
topple Meigs

g i' .sN

• Cleveland 102 Kan City 101
: Golden State 109 Phoeni)IC ~06
... Washington ID? Se.ttte 106
Indiana at Buffalo, ppd .
:lundiY'I Gemes

Buttoto 11 805ton, oft .
Lol Anoeles ol Philo, oil.

"" NY Ntts et Cleveland. aft.
Houlton 11 Now Orleons. oil.
~ NY Knlcks It San Antonio, aft .

· .. KonUI'Cily ot Ootro lt, aft.
• Chiugo ot tndtont, all. ,
•

OPEN SUNDAY
4 PM - 11 AM
Pizza Since 1958"

z
z

A
Gallipolis

_______
· ·. Middleport
992-6167

446-3800
,;,;,;.;;.;:;.__,, .

.:
DURING THE ENERGY CRISIS, WE ARE
MAKING EVERY EFFORT TO MAINTAIN
OUR REGULAR STORE HOURS. ALTHOUGH
WE HEAT ELECTRICAUY, WE HAVE
REDUCED OUR STORE TEMPERATURE
TO 60 DEGREES, AND WE ARE USING
% LESS LIGHTS.

' Milwaukee at Seatt le, aft .

ACE

may end today

Atlonli&lt; Division
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Phlladelohlo ;'t,· ~9 P~!i ~~ Meigs Baby Marauders tried
NY Knlcks 23 25 .479 6'h .to make a valiant comeback
Boston
24 27 .471 7 in the second half but it was
Buffalo
17 31 .354 1211.- '
NY Nets
IS ,. .306 IS too little, too late as they fell
·
Control Dlvtston
prey to the visiting ' Logan
wash ington ~- \Q P~~i GB Papooses Friday, S0-42.
Cleveland
21 21 .563 1 Trailing 25·20 at the half,
Houston
26
San Antonio 76 212,. .553
.520 I 31-2 Me1gs r all l'ed to ~me with! n
New Orleons 23 28 .AS1 6 1-2 two 81 34-32 at the end of the
Allonte
19 33 .365 11
third period.
,
Wet tern, conference
,.
.
MtdweSI Dlvl•lon
The Marauders ·actually
w. L. Pel. GB tied It at 34-34 to open the last
3 , u canto, but then some costly
3
3 2
: Kansos City 27 26 .s09 a turnovers gave the game io
lndlano
.AS .I 12111-2 th e viSl'tors. 'K rleg
. ' s 19led th e
· • Chtcogo
2123 2928 .&lt;20
T· Mllwoukee
IS 39 .278 ' 20 1-2 visitors, Lehman had IS, and
:
Pacific Dlvl•lon
, the team hit a hot 50 per cent
...
w. L . Pet . GB M "'"
I.
• Portland
35 18 .,j60 IN""fN,
.
• Los Angelos 33 17 .660 •;,
Meigs had no one In double
~ ~:~~~~state l~ ll :~1: .~ LJ figures, but Brent Stanley,
• Phc&gt;OMix
23 26 .A69 10 · Tim CoatS, Greg Becker, and
Frldov••
Ruulll ,
BillY Elkins e8C h h8d e Ight ·
.• Boston 99 Lo! Angeles ·98
~ NY Nets m Phliodelphlll 112
They cashed In on just 17 ofta
lhots hitting on eight of ten
• Petrol! 12• Denver 111

.,_. Denvtr If Photn lll , aft .

p
OONELLI'S

Bearcats .string

CINCINNATI (UP!) -It's
been more than four years
since the University of.
Cincinnati basketball team
lost a home game, but that
Barboursvil le 55 Portsmouth
amazing 56-game streak will
53
· Wheelersburg af Minfor d 48
be in deep jeopardy Sunday.
Fairland 64 South Po.int 63
The l)th-ranked Bearcats
(ot)
entertain
4th-rated
SEOAL VARSITY
Marquette and despite
Team
W L P OP Ci ncy 's
home
court
Ironton
9 I sa2 437
Logan
a 1 758 4117 advantage, the l :30 p.m.
Gallipolis
4 4 441 459 (EST) regionally televised
Waverly
4 5 528 545 game appears to be a tossup,
Meigs
4 5 581 603 with some ,observors even
Jackson
3 6 492 581
Welistor
2 6 433 645 giving a slight edge to AI
Athens
o 6 351 409 McGuire's Warriors.
TOTALS
34 34 4166 4166
The reason: Cincy has hit a
Friday's results:
cold spell, while Marquette is
Ironton 74 Jackson 37
burnmg
· bright.
Logan II&gt; Meigs 52
Wellstor a2 Ath•ns 45
The Bearcats, who through
Gallipolis 53 Waverly 45 ·
mid-January
were
Tuesday's games:
undefeated and ranked No. 2,
Logan at Athens
ha
Ironton at Waverly
ve lost three of their !sst
Pt. Pleasant at ~llro
six games. One loss· was to
·Chesapeake aI South Point always-tough Louisville, but
Feb. II games:
the oth•r two defeats were
Athens at Gallipol-is --~ administered by lowly
Ironton at Logan ,
Wellston ot Waverly
regarded Tulane and
Wheeling ot Pt. Pleasant
Pittsburgh.
·
South Point at Ironton St . Joe
,Wednesday night's loss at
· Feb. 12 games:
Mel~s at Pt. Pleasant
Pitt
was
especially
Gallipolis at Wellston
embarrassing because the
·Panthers came into the gaine
~
SEOAL RESERVES
with a dismal 3-14 record.
•;'lrorton
~ea m
W
L
P
OP
W'th
· 1es on1Yover West
10 o 510 321
I VIctor
...L09 an
7 2 499 381 Virginia · Wesleyan, St.
~.,Athens
s 1 289 248 Francis and Cleveland State,
5 4 340 328 Pitt wasn 't supposed to be
• Waverly
• Gallipolis
3 5 2a4 301 · able to stay on the ccurt with
Jacksor
2 7 3M 468
Meigs
2 7 302 359 Cincy.
Wellston
0 a 300 4a5
' TOTALS
34 34 2a91 2a91

g:;-;::1;

Randolph with IS and tO. The Chieftains were cold
Browning with 12. Another from the floor as they netted
factor that had played a oig only 39 percent, .!!lnklng only
role in Meigs ' victories \vas 23 of 59 attempts. Braglain
their poor rebounding as they d!lllinated the boarda u he
ccllected only 25 caroms to ccllected 12 rehounda.
Logan's 35. Meigs was also
Paced by Randolph's and
beaten at the foul line as the Browning's double ligures,
Chieftains sank 20 of 34 while \he Marauders were warm
Meigs cashed In on 12 of 19 from the floor hitting on 20 of
chances.
46 attempts. Browning also
Logan placed four men in led the rebounding wtth eight
double figures . Brian Hawk while Alan Dodson had seven
had 16, -Mike McBr09m 14, as he was held to just seven
'
Gasser 12, and Jay Braglain points.

590

350
642
756
a41
717
791
857
719
6al

NBA Standings
By United Press lntermltlonal
Eastern Conference

XL CHAIN SAW

TP

contest ended . Gasser had tO
during that first half.
It looked like at the
beginning of the third period
that it was stili going to be
Logan all the way, but by the
time the buzzer sounded
Meigs had narrowed th~
margin to six at 45,39. With
1:36 remaining in the fourth
quarter, Allen Stewa rt
ccnnected on a jumper to pull
the Marauders to within four
at 45-41. After an exchange of
baskets, the Chi•ftains took
off and never looked back as
they went on to record their
eleventh win against only one
loss. Meigs is now S.ji,
Although Meigs held Logan
way below their scoring
average, that fourth period
surge showed Logan's
strength. A big difference in
the contest was the number of
turnovers as Meigs corn'
milled 31 miscues compared · to only 14 lor
Logan. In Mei gs' rece nt
wins they had held their turnO\'ers to a minimum. Another
big difference was the fact
that Meigs placed only two
men in double figures ,

..
--·•-•
..

691

Gallipolis 20 W"'erly 19
Logan 50 Meigs 42
Athens 61&gt; Wellston 44
Ironton 63 Jackson 38

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Cage standings

Friday's results :

ON THE

RB PF
I
4
1 2
6 0
12
3
3 5
3 0
3 0
2 0
4 2
JS 20

STEWART SCORES- Meigs' Allen Stewart (30) pops in a long jumper over Logan
defenders Brian Hawk, left, and Mike McBroom, right during Friday's SEOAL battle at
Morrison Gym. (Gary Sisk photo)

BAUM

and White Sox, winning the
1911 Horseshoe Club award as
Baseball Writer of the Year
in Chicago. His assignmenta
covered all phases of sports
news and feat!D'es.

All homeowners policies do not cover loss caused by "weight of ice,
snow or sleet" and "freezing of plumbing". Please check with your
insurance agent to see if you have these coverages. ·
·

waru~

Meigs-Logan box.
PIIVtr .
Tom Russ•ll
8rion Hawk
• Mike McBioom
Joy Brag lin
Scott Gosser
John Dollison

a

GF GA
193 151
177 113

2128 2 44 180 234
11 29 2 44 140 189 .

Adams Dlvlr.lan
WLTPis. GFGA
Boston
31 17 6 68 204 110
Buffalo
29 16 6 6A 183 143
Toron to
25 20 7 57 191 168
Cleveland
15 78 9 . 39 157 189
Friday 's Result
Aflan1CI 6 Boston 3
Sunday' s G11mes
NY Islander s ~t NY Rangers ·
washington at Bos ton
Vancouver at Detr oit ·
Minnesota el Chicago
P ittsburgh at ColOrado

GALLIPOLIS - Jimmy
Rarris sank a free throw with
10 seconds remaining to give
Coach Norm
Persin's
Gallipolis Blue Imps 20-19
victory over visiting Waverly
in Friday 's preliminary
contest.
.
It was the Blue Imps first
victory ever over a Waverly
res·erve learn. Since joining
the Southeastern Ohio
League seven years ago, the
Waverly Cubs had defeated
Gallia's Blue Imps 13 consecutive tlines.
The triumph left GAHS
with a 6-5 season record.
Inside the SEOAL, the Blue
Imps upped their mark to 3-5.
Waverly dropped to 6-5 on the
season and S-1 in loop play.
Gallipolis led 6-4 after one

GF GA
219 118
165 173
214 187
176 206
185 203
136 1'19

Winn ipeg

39

Pittsburgh
Los Ang eles 19 23 10 •8 17.1 167
WashlngfM 16 29 8 AO 143 199
Detr oit
1.4 30 6 34 129 185

·Waverly jinx

53

Phoenix
Edmonton

•

Blue Imps end

7

Standln~s

East

152 18A

TOUGH DEFENSE -Gallia's Herb Epling (20) forces Wav•riy's Randy Thomss to the
outside during Friday's SEOAL hardwood battle at Gallipolis. GAHS moved into third place
in league play with a 53-15 win. (Keith Wilson photos).
·

7

45

14
11

OA
&lt;7 m 186

.a

Colorado

V5 nC:OU'o't'r

Gallipolis. hit 23 of 5I field
goal attempts for fa percent.
At the foul line, GAHS was
seven of 13 for 53 percent.
GAHS had 30 rebounds and
eight turnovers·.
Waverly hit 19 of 44 field
goal attempts for 43.1 percent. Th• Tigers canned
seven of nine charity tosses
for 11 percent. Waverly had
29 rebounds and .13 turnoverS.
Gallipolis played Jackson
Saturday evening at Rio
Grande in a makeup contest.
The Blue Devlls have six
games remaining on their
1976-77 schedule. Four of
lbe six are makeup contests.
February II, the Gallians
will host Athens. GAHS plays
at Wellston on Feb. 12. On
Feb.' 18, Wellston comes to
Gallipolis and on Feb. 19, the
Blue Devils play at Athens.
No makeup dates have
been established lor the
Wheelersburg and Logan
contests.

By United Press 1nternationat

.

Powerful 3.1 cu ln

TP
6
a
1a
0
2
4
0
0

headed in Friday's contest.
G:&amp;.HS led 14-8 after one
period and 25-23 during the
halftime intermission.
A big third period gave the
Blue Devils a 42-31 advantage
goil\g into the final stanza.
After·building up a 14-point
margin, 47-33 , with 4:41
remaining, the Blue Devils
began playing keep-away .
The lads . of Coach C. 'D.
llawhee reeled off 10 straight
points during the next three
minutes of play to reduce
Gallia's lead to four,, 41-13,
with 1:03 rema ining .
Keith McGuire's threepoint play with 15 secoods
remainlog Iced the victory
for GAHS.
Waverly's Mark Fielder
scored on a crip shot with
seven seconds left. Terry
Wall's free toss following a
technical on Waverly with
ooe second remaining, and a
goa l at the buzzer by
McGuire made the final count
read 53-15.

with a jumper and the test of
By Greg Baney
the
first half w,as all Logan as .
ROCK
SPRINGS
they
went into the locker .
Playing their third game In a
room
at
intermission leading
row, the Meigs Ma rauders
tight sc hedul~ mi ght be 32-20.
Meigs' Coach Ron Logan,
taking its toll as they fell
trying
to get as much mileage ·
Friday night to the visiting
out of his boys as possible
Logan Chieftains 66-52.
Loga n was In control most went to his bench frequently
of the first quarter but with in the slow, rough , physical
1:10 remaining, Meigs' Steve game. Steve Randolph led the
Randolph connected on a hosts in that first half with 11
jumper for Meigs' only lead points, but from there on was
of the night at ~ - But held to just four more. Along
Logan's Scott Gasser quickly with fellow guard Kenny
put his team back In the lead Young, Randolph exited via
the foul route before the

NY Rangers 18 23 13 49 188 198
Smythe Dlvlsloft

Montreol

GALLIPOLIS - Coach Jim
Osborne's Gallipolis Blue
Devils placed three men in
double figures as Gallia
Academy handed visiting
Waverly a 53-45 Southeastern
Ohio League setback on the
Qi\HS planks before a full
hfuse here Friday nlght.
· r The lrlumpb moved
f:AHS Into undisputed t!llnl
pia.., In the collferente
Jlaudlqo wttb a ._. record.
De Blue DevOs upped
ihelr seaso11 mart to 6-5.
:Waverly dropped to ~
of.erall and M _inside the
lljague.
;In picking up their third

Logan defeats Meigs, 66-52

Bv Unltt.d Preu lntern•tlonal

'

·

MEGS ·--~
21 s
"' 4 - !onley 4-

0-8: Coats 2-4-8: Blake 2-2-6:
4-0-8;

Elkins 3·2·8;

Hawlty 2-0-&lt;; Talols 17-8.42.
LOGAN 'I' (50) -

1

wan

,,

"Ac11 i~ the pla('t' whh
the Helplul Hatrlwarl' Man " 1 "'

;p·
100 WATT

GOOD FORM - Meigs' Allen Stewart shows good
form as he out jumps Logan's Jay Braglln for a twinpointer during Friday's conferenc.e ·game at Rock
Springs . The Chiefs remained in second place all alone ·
with a ~2 victory over the Marauders.

so
GUN KIT

for

FridJJy 's college scores
73
College Basketbal l
By United Press International T ufts 77 Babson 61
· W. V irginia 91 M ass achuse tts 70
Friday's Result
Ea!t
A lfred 71 St . John F1sher 64
C. W . Post 8 1 LIU 67
Cathedral 90 Cabr in i (Pa . ) 73
Columb ia 84 Dartmou th 61
Corne ll 71 Harvard 61
HO IJI Cr oss 1l4 Colgate 82
Howard 76 N .C. A&amp;T 68
Itha ca Coli. 67 Clarkson 65

Middlebury 74 AIC 60
N.Y Maritime 70 Domi n ican

IN.Y.I 65

penn 69 Brown 59 (of)

Pitt -John stown 68 Ed inboro 58
Princeton 56 Yale .42
St . Francis Coli. 76 Gordon 49
St . Vincen t (Pe. l 90 Cal. (Pa .J

Soufh
At I. Christian 83 Greensboro 77
Cen tre 11 S·.wester n -Memph is 61
Ferr um 90 Bluef ield St . 17
N. Carolina 98 Georgia Tech 74
N.C. Stat,e 98 Furman 91
NC-Asheville 82 SC -Aiken 75
Radfor d 85 ShenanCioah 77

S.C. St. 89 Delaware St , 65
s. Georgia 85 N. Geor gia Tech

66

Wis .. M il wa ukee 75 Centenary 74

(otl
Xavier 74 Rust 70
M idwest
Cen . Methodist 69 Ottawa 68
Emporia St . 82 M is souri S.
Missouri Wt&gt;stern 103 Kea rney

96
P ittsbur g St. 51 Washburn
naxt week for the first time wm
. Jewel l 56 Tarkio 55

I
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• 5ft. of ROSIN CORE SOLDER
• EXTRA TIP for PUTTY •
REMOVING and PLASTIC
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49

since 1963.

Southwest
Player finished the E . New Mexico
92 Lubbock
regulation 90 holes that year Cl'lrist . 75
tied for first witb Jack Okla . Panhandle 89 Sol Ross 75
NJcklaus, who won hla only __
West
title in the toW'IUlment the Gonzaga 63 Montana 60
Mesa Col i. 55 ColoradO Mines 51
next day.
Pa c ific Lutheran 6_. Whitman 59
Player, a South African San Fran. 103 St . Mary's (Cal.)
rancher wtth $1.2 million in 77
S. Colorado 58 Westminster so
career
winnings, has S . Oreg on lll E . OrPOon 15
i llamette 100 Pa ci fiC (Ore . )
,captured folD' British Opens, W
79
two Masten, two PGAs and
one U.S. Open.

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1-1·15; Krieg 7-5-19 ; Walton 1J.J; Key,... 1-2-&lt;;· Clar~ &lt;-0-8:

S

, PALM SPRINGS, calif.
(UPI) - Gary Player, one ol
only four men to win all lour
of the world's major golf
championabiJlll, will play in
the Bob.. Hope Desert Classic

HARDWARE

-

free throw1.
Bol score:
Becker

But
the
Panthers
outscrapped Cincinnati and
pulled off a lastsecond 65-64
upset. Bearcat boss Gale
Catlett admitted that his
squad deserved the loss, even
saying a Cincy victory
"would have been criminalbecause we played that bad."
While the Bearcats ' record
has slipped to 15-3, Marquette
is marching on with a 14-2
slate.
The Warriors' only losses
were back-to4lack defeats in
late December after McGuire
announced this would be his
last season after a decade of
leading the Marquette's successful basketball program.
But Marquette has bounced
back since those setbacks (781S in overtime to Louisville
and 66-59 to Minnesota) and
reel•d off 10 straight
v}ctories.
The Warriors are led by
highscoring, 6-l, junior guard
Butch Lee and 6-9 forward Bo
Ellis, McGuire's designated
"senior star" for the season .
Cincy boasts a couple of
dependable guards in Steve
Collier and Steve Yoder. but
must keep 6-10 Bob Miller out
of foul trouble to keep pace
with taller teams. No other
starter st811ds more than 6-S.
If Marquette beats Cincy at
home Sunday, it will be
something no other. team has
accomplished since 'Jan. 26,
191 3. That's when Drake
managed a 74-12 verdict over
the Bearcats in Cincinnati.
All seats at Riverfront
Coliseum have been sold for
th e Cincy-Marquette
matchup and barring a new
batch of bad weather, the
crowd could top the record
11,009 that piled into the
Coliseum to see the Bearcats
bop Dayton last month.

Tof11ls 20-10·SO.

' "'''

!t

'

SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA

OPEN SUNDAY
1 TIL 5

MON.-SAT.
9 AM TO 8 PM
SUNDAY

.

•

.

�•

ct-n.e Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, ~'eb . 6,1977

Steelworker·R usen runs hard
I

campaign
BY GREGG MATICS
RIVtllwood Newo
RAVENSWOOD, W. Va. Campaignlng, whether for
· the White House or for
director of Dlalrict 23 of the
United Steel Workers of
America, Lt no snap. lt'sa full
time job, wllnw Paul Rusen
rt Charleaton.
Friday he arose before 4
a.m. to drive to Ravens·
wood's Kaiser Aluminum
Works Reductlon Plant to
lihUe the hands of and talk
with Its employes from 6 to
1:30 a.m. during a shift
change. It was part of his
personal campaign for the
directorship.
District 23 takes in all of
West VIrginia, the eastern
counties of Ohio (Jeflerson
County to Scioto County) and
!he four eastern counties of
Kentucky, and eontains47,000
membera covering everything from basic steel to a
funeral parlor, according to
Rusen.
He wants his po8)tlon on all
Issues to he well understood
and without political doubletalk.
When asked why he was
I'UIIilli!g for the directorship,

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CARL'S
SHOE SlOR[
Gallipolis, Ohio

fo~

union position

By JIM ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The first forel&amp;n policy
dilemma of Jlnuny Carter's
admlnlstratlon has popped up
in an area central to his
presidential campaignmorality and human rights.
Candidate Carter often
criticized Henry Kl.tllnger's
"Lone Ranger" foreign
policies, calling · tbem
"amoral" and ''lmmorll" for
relying
upon
special
relatlonahllll with re!nlllve
regimes.
But President Carter, after

BOUGHT A DEALI
MANY MODELS TO CHOOSE PROM
AND WE ARE PASSING THE SAVINGS ON·
TO YOU.
•PRESENT STOCK ONLY. ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALEI

CANDIDATE GREETED - Shaking the hand of Kaiser Alwnlmm Reduction
employee, Kenneth Jarrett, (left) ia candidate Paul Ruaen, campaigning for the office of
Director of United Steelworkers Diatrlcl23. Pictured in the background are: (left to right)
Dick Hovatter, president of Locai56U; Henry Hunter, member olthe Local Negotiating
Committee; and Charlie Fox, chairman of the Grievance Commlttee of Local 5668.
Rosen said,
"I feel it's · a question of
leadership, I was born and
raised in the Ia bor
movement, and have been a
member of the Steelworkers
Union for 23 years. I see
things going on that I doo't
like, and It seems our
organization has lost Its light
and drive. There are hundreds of grievances piling
up."
Ruaen feels that strong,
progressive leadership is
necessary. He stated :
"! feel I can provide the
kind of leadership that's
needed." He sees problems In
the District and Locals with a
backlog of grievances and
feels that the Union is "still
doing busines~ the way we did
30 years ago. Some new and
lnovatlve ideas are needed."
He explained that the
compan~ hires educated ·job
evaluation people and others;
therefore, the , Union needs
expertise in the areas of
pensions, job evaluation,
incentives, insurance and
more, so that ihe -Union can
better represent Its mem.
bershlp. He states that
competent legal assistance
must be available at aU times
within the District, and that

the expertise in the areas . people thinking for other
above should be handled by a · people are just about over."
lull time staff.
Also, he stated that a new
Rusen also advocates a full generatlon Is taking over this ·
time Safety, Health and In· Unionwiththeaverageageof
Plant Environmental the members of. the Union's
Coordinator.
Executive Board shifting
"By putting to work lull from about 63 years to
time people In this District, somewhere around 47 with
we can put ourselves on an the "new breed."
even keel with the company
To further a more
people we have to deal with," democratic Union, Rusen
he added. ·
intendS if elected to establish
Rusen discUssed the a District Polley Committee
"serious economic" within the District of
problems that Union mem· members from District
bers are .facing . He will work Locals. This committee willfor a lower work hour week meet aMually lor the purwith the same pay, and would pose of reviewing the working
Uke to be able to help function of the Union, and so
members thrpugh ·the that conununtcation will be
slluatlon of unemployment. direct between the District
In a wide ranging in· Director and Union members
terview, Rusen said he would lor a better idea of the
act on the fact that35 percent problems and desires of the
of aluminum, steel and can workers.
industry workers don't have. "My leadershJp can turn
the right to ratify their own. things around and give the
COI\tract. He feels that the people the
kind
of
workers have the intelligence representation they pay for
to decide what they want In with their dues dollars ,"
their contract, and should Rusen stated.
,
have the right to affirm or
The candidate also lists the
reject a proposed contract by right to refuse overtime
secret ballot.
work, right to refuse unsafe
Rusen wants a more work without loss of pay,
democrat!~ organl~at)on, peoaltles payments a~ainst ·
statlng that "the days · of companies for contract
violationS and the halt of
heavy·handed harassment
and discipline of Union
members -as causes he will
fight for.
Rusen Is originally from
Steubenville, Ohio. He
worked out of the Pittsburgh
Steelworkers Union Office
from 1956-1964. From 1964 to
.1~72, he worked in the ,
Wheeling office as a staH
REG.
representatlve. He has been
assigned to the Charleston
'5.99
Office from 1974 ·to the
present as the SulrDirector of
Area Four.
WHITE · BLACK · TAN
A 23 year member of the
Uilited Steelworkers Union,
Rosen states that he has
served in .about every
capacity in the Union. He has
had special assignments in
· pensions, Insurance and
more, and was assigned for ·
several years as a technician
in big steel negotlatlons.
Rusen is a resident of South
Charleston. He Is married
and he and his wile, Loretta,
are the parents of five
~~~ lj~;:;1l;i;:;~~~i;iiii.i••-t children. They are: Greg, age
20; Michelle, age 19; Karen,
~ L•..;~LI.IE.JL----1 age 18; Joe, age 16, and
Jeanie, age 15.
MAN MADE
Rusen states that he would
MATERIALS
.
appreciate the support ol a11
DURABLE
REG.
Ravenswood Works Union
members, and is being en·
'SCUFF
'&amp; 99
dorsed by Dick Hovatter,
.
•
prealdent of United Steel
· RESISTANT
GREAT FOR WORK
Workers or America, Local
5868 and Charlie Fox,
OR CASUAl WEAR.
chairman of the Grievance
OIL RESISTANT
Committee of Point Pleasant.
The upcoming election for
CREPE SOLES
which Rusen is eafupalgnlng
is set for Tuesday at every
or
plant and Union hall In
Dl.ttrict 23.

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'

PAGE l ·D

By DONAlD LAMIIItO
Reagan, who narrowly lost
WASHINGTON (UP!)
the
1976
Republican
Wolverines blow
Ronald Reagan urged presidential nomination, said
Republicans Saturday to the new GOP he envisioned
Bucks right
buUd a "New Republican "will not, and cannot, be one
-'
Party"
based
on Umlted to the country club'
out of the gym
conservative principles but big business Image that, for
'
open to aU who take the reasons both fair and unfair,
.,
ANN ARBOR, Mleh.
party. s label.
it is burdened with today ."
(UPI) - John Robison and
Speaking at the 4th annual
He specifically called on
Rickey Green combined for
Conservative Political Action the party to seek the support
43 points Saturday to lead
Conference, the fonner Cali- of "working men and working
The Columbus Dispatch
gas-heated school will go one
COLUMBUS (UPI ) lUth·ranked Michigan to a Columbus public school day a week to classes at one has also agreed to carry some
fornia governor repeated his women" not just by "making
93-72 Big Ten victory over
earlier rejection of a third room for them but by making
officials have come up with of the non e-gas heated lnstru.ctions for the children,
Ohio State. With guards several plans to keep schools. Teachers will travel while teachers will broadcast ·••
party approach, and said : certain they have a say in
Green and Steve Grote students learning while their along with theit classes.
Ray Marshall Is taking the
"Our task now is not to sell what goes on in the party.''
over student station WCBE· ·••
playing superb defense,
Reagan also urged the
a philosophy, but to make the
lead over fellow cabinet
Elementary students will FM, and commercial WBNS
schools
are
closed
because
of
Michigan conver)ed 17 fast
majority of Americana, who party make a fresh appeal to
membero as the new ad·
the energy crisis from , be in session from 9 a.m. to 3 radio and TV .stations.
break baskets and left the Monday through March 7.
blacks.
ministration's
first
high·
galready
share
that
p.m. while the secondary
Buckeyes gasping
phUosophy, see that modern
"We offer trlnciples that
level eenter of controver8y.
Students will be sent to a students will meet from 8:30
tbroughout the game.
·
conservatism offers them a black Americans can and do
Remarks by the former
THEY'LL TRY AGAIN
different school one day a a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Michigan rolled to an week for instruction . Another
support, " he said. ~~we
political home.
Universlly of Texas
CINCINNATI (UP! ) Students who live too far
early 11·point lead but Ohio plan is to prepare lessons that from the substitute schools Jurors In the obscenity trial
"We are not a cult, we are believe in Jobs, real jobs; we
economist crttlcal of the
State managed to narrow will be carried over a student will be bused.
members of a majority. Let's believe in educatlon that Is
President's ecoiiOmlc
of
Hustler
magazine
the gap to 41-18 oae minute FM radio station, a
really education; we believe
program, supporting the
act and talk Uke it."
publisher Larry Flynt will
Into the second half. Then conunercial radio station and
In his prepared speech, in treating all Americans as
right of public workers to
begin a third day of
Green and Grote put on TV station and In a citY'
UnJted·Presslnternatlonal
Reagan , who in the past has individuals and not as
strike and favoring repeal
deliberations Monday . The • ·
their show and the newspaper.
President Carter Sall!rd!ly called for a GOP free of stereotypes or voting blocks;
ol the right-to-work
Continued cold. High todliy seven-man, fiv e-woman •
Wolverines outscored the
declared snow-smothered "pastel colors," was and we believe that the long
provision oi the TallBeginning Monday, classes In the 20s. U&gt;w tonight to Hamilton County Common Buckeyes 30-10 In the next will be held. in 33 different zero. Cold and clear Monday, Pleas Court jury wound up •
Buffalo and nine western conciliatory toward range Interest of black
Hartley act have raised
10 minutes to ' blow the schools which do not use high about 25. Precipitation eight hours of deliberations New York counties a "major Republicans ''who do not America lies in looking at
questions In a number of
game wide open.
disaster area." Cold Arctlc identity themselves as what each major party has to
quarters, Including the
natural gas for heatil)g. The probability is 20 pet. today , Friday without reaching a
air flo.wed ,into the east and .conservatives."
· offer."
White House.
zero pel. Monday .
verdict.
;:·.:::::::::::;::::::::::::.;.;:::::;.;.;.;.;.;.;.:.;.;.;.:.:·:·::::::::::::::. entire student enrollment of a
northeast, areas hardest hit
"I want tho-record to show
by the record cold of the that I do not view the new
winter.
revitalized Republican party
New snow borne along with as one based on a principle of
the latest gusts of cold air exclusioQ," he said . "After
mlased the Buffalo area lor a · all, you do not get to he a
•change, but 2 to 3 inches of majority party by searching By PATRICK ·J . KILLEN
elevated train crash in trains jammed with more feet over the Loop.
'
the CTA's costly modern pedestrians were crushed by ;
snow fell .in the New York · for groups you won't
CHICAGO
(UPI) _ Chicago history.
. th,an . 1,100 rush hour
The collision caused little salety system which provided the Jailing cars but
.:City metropolitan area, associate or work with.
Federal, city and regional
Police and !"edlcal au· passengers in Chicago's Loop damage to the lead train, a motol'ItWI Steven A. ~arlin, authorities could not conffrm :
bringing out the snow plows
"U we truly believe in our transportation authorities thorlties, working thro~gh Frtday evening.
m-car Ravenswood Line wtth a flashing red light, a them. Rene! Conner, 25, an
and the salt trucks to care for principle, we should sit down opened Investigations the night, finally agreed that
The rear end collision commuter train heading beeper sound and auloniatic attendant at a nearby
·the slippery roads.
and talk. Talk with anyone, . Saturday to find out why $25 the final death toll was 11 In knocked the four lead cars ot west But the the chain braking within 21'.! seconds parking garage, said, "I saw
· Along the Ml&amp;slaslppi River anywhere, at. any time . if it million in safety equipment the slow speed collision an eight-car Lake Street-Dan . reactlon Impact knocked the when close to another tra.in. a couple of people who were
below St. Louis and . above means talking about the faUed to prevent the deadliest between two commuter Ryan train off the tra cks 20 first and third cars of the Dan The absolute speed limit on Wlderneath the Clll' trying to ..
Cairo, IU., an Ice gorge began principles of the Republican
Ryan train ovei' the side.
the elevated loop Is IS miles run, but they didn 't make it. " ··
breaking up, and U.S. ArmY Party.
The second car dangled an hour, authorities said.
Workers, operating in tern- . ·.
engineers, already gearing
"Conservatism Is not a
precariously from a coupling
"The only way a motonnan peratures close to zero Satur· •
for the possiblllty of floods narrow ideology nor Is it the
and the fourth car ended up at can get that close, is to brake day, used cranes to
later in the year, warned that exclusive property of
a 45 degree angle, one end on when the beeper starts, then · manuever the four derailed
floating ice was pushing conservative activists."
the street.
start again and nudge cars onto Oat bed trucks and
art
along a surge of water 12 feet
Workers smashed windows forward some mote, then move them away from the
high along a !+mile stretch of
ADS PAYING OFF
and used cranes and brake again, and so on," Lake Street-Wabash Avenue
By JACQUELINE IIUARD
the plsce and date of the first execution in
·the river.
COJ.UMBUS, Ohio (UPI)gasoline-powered saws to McDonough said."
intersection.
,•
AMHERST, Mass. (UP!) - Jannes
the United States In more than one decade.
- :'The combination of the Advertising placed by the
rescue passengers in the . Martin, 34, a nine-year
The deadliest previous CTA , . :
Bozony saya the ooly thing more absurd
Emblazoned on the back are the words,
· IIUI'ge and the heavy running state to Identify available
bitter cold.
veteran of the CTA, was In crash occurred Nov. 24, 1936, · •
than
the
Gaty
Gilmore
T
..tllrts
he
Is
reportedly
·Gilmore's last, "Let's do it."
ice will incur major damages sources of natural gas 'in
· "We brOke every goddamn the intensive · care wtit at when 10 were killed and 234 :
seWn~ is the person who wean it.
"!got the idea when I was in New York
:'lo structures in the river southwestern states is getting
window to get people out," Wesley Memorial Hospital Injured when a Qhicago, :
Bozony Is selling Gilmore T-shlrts for
from
looking at · the headlines about
.channel .and along banks results, according to Robert
said Fire Commissioner with multiple fractures. and North Shore and MUwaukee •
$5.95 each -bearing the convicted
Gilmore. Once i read he had a target on his
·downstream," said the S. Ryan, state energy head.
Robert Quinn. "The firemen serious internal injuries . Railroad train smashed into ·· :
murderer's name and the date he faced a . shirt, that gave me the idea for the T•wll'ning. There are no major
AdS placed in Saturday
worked like hell."
Questioned before he the rear of a rapid transit •
flrtng squad.
shirt," Bozony said.
~ towns in the area, but the
UPI
count
of
nine
underwent abdominal train at the Granville Station • •
A
morning newspapers, he
"It's a nice conclae piece of satire, the
Bozony said he himself believes in
·engineers warned that said, have resulted In several
hospitals
showed
that
187
surgery
late Friday, Martln on Chicago's North Side.
::
shirt itaelf," said Bozony, 23, a flctlon
capital puniahment and felt Gilmore "had
•special care should be taken phone calls from independent
persons
were
taken
in
for
gave
"only
vague
answers,"
The
city's
worse
commuter
,
writer and graduate student at the Univer·
a ri&amp;hl to die and deserved to die."
for oil barges in the path of gas producers. "We will
treatment
and
47
were
McDonough
said.
train
accident
occured
in
•.
ally of Malllehlllelts.
.
The decision to begin marketing the T•
the ,surge.
admitted, some in serious
Blood tests determined · 1972, when 45 persons were •
attempt to verily these offers
"The only thing more abaurd than Gary
shirts
came when he realized "It had to
A brief warm spell to help from these producers
and
critical
COI!ditlon.
Martin
was not under the kllled when an Illinois Cen·
Gilmcli'e's death lllelf, Lt the T..tlirt, and
happen. Someone had to do It and it's me,"
;p-eceded the latest cold air and circulate the infonnatlon
Chicago
Transit
AuthorUty
Influence
of drugs or alcohol, tral Gulf train hit the rear of ,.
/ thim the person wearing II," he said.
·Bozony said .
•wave moving eastward.
C
h
a
i
r
m
a
n
J
a
m
e
s
authorities
said.
another train at the line's 27th •
first to Ohio's gas utilities so
Bozony, a Scotia, N.Y., natlve, on Jan. 28
He said making the T-ehlrts doesn't
McDonough
said
the
Dan
There
were
reports
that
street
station.
::
. they·can make arrangements
test-marketed 15 T..tllrts, which he aUkbother him, but "the obect!fle phone calls
Ryan
train
was
equipped
with
•
to secure . enough _gas to ,
screened hlmseU, at the UMua student
have just started. Some say I need a
protect the residential and
•.
unioo.
psychiatrist, or 'you're sick.'"
,.
•
human needs customers in
The shirta made under his newly.formed
"! write black humor. The T-shirts a
the state."
company, "In Poor Taste," _sold
much more convenient medium to make
lmmedtately. Bozony made 100 more and
my point, sell my short storiea. !look at
•''
REFORM PROMISED
said he Is already talking to distributors
the shirt as a kind ol piece of historical
'
:
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia
nationally and in Ja~an and Canada.
joumallsm," Bozony said.
(UP!)
Ethiopian
1be black T-ehlrt has Gilmore's name in
"I think one of the absurdities and one of
MASON _: Minor damage strongman Lt. Col.. Menglstu
· two inch letters acrou the front. To the
the things I'm satirizing Lt this senae of
resulted in a t~ar collision Haile Mariam, who escaped a
left, over the heart, Is a four inch white 1 ethics that allowed us to save a inan'sllfe ·
early Saturday on Rt. 33, near coup attempt Thursday, has
aquare with a black bull's eye or target in
twice and then to execute him," he said
here all2:30 a.m. according prom ised sweeping
the cenwr.
"Where's our sense of values If we're
to Mason· County Sheriff's democratic reform and
UP! Auto Writer
Street firm of Sanford C. to Eisenberg. With the lull·._
Below Gilmore's name Is in'ilten "Point
wtmng to aave a man's Ufe twice only to
Deputy Frank Crump.
DETROIT
(UP!)
The
Bernstein &amp; Co., agrees that effectsoftheenergysituatloo :
establlshment of a workers'
of the Mountain, Utah, January l7, 1977," . publlcly encute him?"
Jannes Dwight Riley, 20, party in a bid to consolidate
financial reports the "Bit! much of the industry's hopes still partly unknown, ~
.'CIIIton, and Robert C. Bailey, his positlon.
'lbree" automakers will Issue this year rest on a return to Elaenberg says GM may earn
50, Rt. I, Pomeroy, Ohio,
in the nut three weeks will nonnal tr!dlctlon and an $3.4 blilloo this year.
•
were the drivers.
reflect their strong rebound expanding economy. ·
In contraat, Exxon in late :
Both were traveling west
in 1978 with combined profits
"A lot will depend oo how January reported Its 1978 •
with the Bailey car in the
apected to hit a record $4.3 . much of the lost troductlon proftt totaled ~.64 blillon.
lead. Riley·attempted to pass
billion- nearly 211 times and sales they can make up
Ford rebounded In 1978 :
Bailey but due to the Icy road
their 1975 earnings.
lhia mooth," Eisenberg says. with an estimated profit of
conditiODI JOlt control of his
Financial analysts who "But over the entire year, $994 mlllllln, three times Us •
The bureau sent Its parent, cluoe relauve or children at home unattended.
car which IJIUn aroWld and By RONAlD E. COHEN
Teach
them
to
call
pollee
if
expect
General Motors, Ford they should be able to make earnings a year earlier and •
guardian
could
answer.
Call
· WASHINGTON (UP!) guidelines to aU field offices
struck the Bailey car.
strangers
lurk
outside.
Avoid
and
Chrysler
to each report up anything they loee during topping the record $908 •
pollee If loiterers cannot
An estimated f)50 worth of The FBI has Issued and circulated them throush explain their presence obvious lndicatlons, such aa record earnings for the year the winter."
million In 1973. It could lop :
damage occurred tO each car. guidelines on what your the news media. It credits the utiafactorUy.
leaving
garage
doors
open,
don't
antlclpate
any
major
Industry
executives'
the
fl blillon lhl.s year for the ,.,:
. !aniuy and !ilendl should &lt;!o poln\erl with helping cut
that
you
not
home
and
letdown
in
1977
despite
the
predictions
for
new
car
sales
first
time in its bistory with · :
Baolae11
olflclala:
Tell
·
if you are kidnaped for down .kidnaping.
your
chlldrt!fl
may
be
inside
rough
winter
that
cut
deeply
lhia
year
have
ranged
11'
0
01
a
an
estimated
profit of $1.6 •
ransom4nd what you can
Some are obvious: Notify relatlves and associates not
unprotected.
Into
productlons
and
sales
in
low
oll0.6
million
to
a
near
biWon.
~
do to avoid becoming a the FBI Immediately; don't to give lnformalfoo about you
Cblldreu:
Travel
in
groupe
JlliiUIIry.
Comlilned
ell'lltngs
recordl.l.25mllllon,
butiiOIIlll
Chryaler,
which
lost
a
,
disturb a-+hloa at the llce!le to strangers . Vary dally
vic11m'
~ .. ~-··
ft•••
U
h
vU
tr
led
fOI'
the
three
C11111J)811iea
this
now
say
the
recent
._d
record
f259,6
million
in
lJ76,
FBI · offlclall 14Y their o( the kldnapJn·g; don't routines to avoid , habitual
J!'J':ted year could hit nearly $5.6 weather
makes
any Is expected to rtpOrl a record ::
that
entice
Velerul Memorial Hotpial nationwide efforts have handle ra1110m letten; be patterns
areas.
Refu1e
rides
from
biWon,
prediction
"~~~~~pect.''
$427 million profit this year. ~
kidnapers, Ductuatlng times
• ADMISSIONS - Nellie reduced the n11mber of · calm.
and
don't , "Obviously, the harsh
Eisenberg expects the 1976
F.
Bing, l'oma'oy, Abna Riggi, kidnap cases drutically and . But here are 10111e other and routes betWHn home and . slrangera
office.
Refuse
to
meet
accompany
strangers
wlnterl.tgoingtoaf!ectthelr
l'llpCll1l
to
lhow
GM
Is
the
•
• Middleport, Mildred Bates, increased sharply· the tlps for specific categories of
stra~en
In
secluded
or
unanywhere
on
foot.
Call
the
earnings
In
the
111'
1
1
quarter
most
profitable
Industrial
HE'LL
WIN
ANYWAY
~
Middleport, Olear Johnson, convictlOill for n:tot:tton and potential victims:
HOMESTEAD, Pa. (UPI) ~
Sebool autborltlel: famUiar locations . Lock nearest authority of the year,'' uys Arvid C!J~porallon In the United
,. Clifton, Mark Markham, kidnaping.
doors
and
windows
of
your
lnunediately
if
someone
moJouppi,
an
independent
States
despite
Its
No
.
2'
·
_
United Steelworkers ~
, l'oma'oy, Florence Frank, · In fiscal 1978, ldclnap cases Whenever .,_tble, telephone
'
car
while
driving.
lelts
or
annoya
you.
Use
cityfinancial
analyst.
.
position
behind
Exxon
In
presidential
candidate Ed- •,
l'mleroy, Bill Brewer, Port· reported to the FBI dropped Jlll'tllts or guardians before
Lock
windows
Parente:
approved
play
areu
where
He
said
the
":eathef
could
terms
of
total
sales.
ward
Sadlowski
contendS the ~
by 2&amp; per cent, and the ratio rt releaslna a child to anyone
)and.
and
doors
at
night.
Keep
the
supervlsers
are
present.
cut
10
cents
•
share
from
The
GM
report,
due
this
opposition
Lloyd
McBride
to
cuea bealdea them. Confinn the
DISCHARGES- Florence convictions
door
open
to
your
child's
Never
leave
home
without
General
Motors
and
Chryaler
&lt;roling
week,
shOUld
lhow
forces
will
cheat
at
the
union
- WtrTY, Cberyl lAng, Mike lnveatlpted jumped 15 per Identity of callers who ask
room
ao
unusual
noises
can
telling
perenta
where
you
will
earnings
In
the
first
qUBJ1er
the
giant
automaker
earned
polls
next
week
but
that
he'
• l.ewll, Pltlline Derenblrger, cart. Recuwry of J'8JIIOJII that. a child be . releued
be
heard,
and
m1ke
sure
the
be,
who
Lt
wltb
you
and
when
and
might
coet
Ford
up
IIIII
nearly
t2.9
bUUon,
up
132
per
wiU
win
his
uphill
ra~
by
a
2- ~
· · l..aara Jowlier, · Roberta llllllCif lolaled ·~• mUIIGD- from ochool early.by asking
room
II
not
readily
accessible
you
wiU
return.
cent.a
share,
cent
from
Jut
year
and
well
margin
anyway.
.,
1
;Manblll, lltmlc, Molden, nearly double the previous intimate quelltionll only a
from
outdoors.
Never
leave
Dlivld
ElaenberR.te\lllll'ch
allove
the
tnvious
high
of
:'
year.
.
A1fnd Smith.

Plans offered to
keep up lessons

..

..

•

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Kremlinologist who may effeclthata return to the high
If the human rights luue Lt
become Secretary of State moral tone of the late John to be a condiUon for dotng
Foster Dulles' 195&amp;1 foreign business with the Soviet
Cyrus Vance's chief Soviet
affairs adviser, makes the poUcles could also mean a Union, what about China, or
same point In Foreign Affairs return of Cold War tensions, South Korea or Cblle? And so
magazine.
inside and outside the Soviet on.
"It seems reasonable to Union.
Well. said Carter in hiJ
The
" ora~matlc" "fireside chat" Wedneaday,
believe," Shulman wr ites ,
''that easing of repression is Kissinger theory~lned with two weeks of e%perlenee
more likely to result from Carter lis candida~oes as President and the
evolutionary forces ... under further and warns that rigid Sakharov Dap under his belt :
prolonged cond itions of morality in foreign poUcy can "We will contlnue to express
reduced international tension lead down a treacherous our concern about vlolatlona
than from external demands slope in a world where there of hwnan rights, as we have
for change and · the siege are relatlvely few popularly done during lhia past week,
mentality they would elected, democratic without upsetting our efforts
reinforce.···
governments, but many au• toward f!:ieOOiy relatlonahlpa
Like Kissinger , he holds In thorltarlan ones.
with other countries."

VOL. 12 NO. 1

SECRETARY
Joeep~ Calllaoo Jr.'s lint
order of b1181neso will be
removlag abuses and
maklag present welfare
programs more elllcleut.
Lar1e-ecale reform
measaree, lncludhig
federal usumptlon of a
greater &amp;bare ol direct
. paymenll, may come later,

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Authorities seek reason for tragedy

-60NLY-

.

Creator of Gary Gihnore T -shirts
. sees his
as absurd satire

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statement- while expressing observe hun the ootslde is
his sentiments-was not that there are some
meant to criticize the experiments that statesmen
Kiemlln.
cannot .try, because the
The effect was to soften the consequences of their failure
tone of moral Indignation would be too profound."
cooveyed in the first place by
Kissinger 's point was that
the State Department.
things look different from the
What has ha~ned to Iring White House. A )resident
about the subtle change In must balance the need for
Carter's attitude might have ·.progress in U.s.-Sovlet
been summed up best by nuclear disarmament, for
Kissinger, who said In one of example, against the
his last public speeches as satisfaction of expressing
secretary of state:
moral
indignation at
''The difference between !reaches of human rights.
statesmen and those who
Marshall Shulman, a

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two weeks In ol!lce, lw
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When pressed to take a
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the State Department's
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dissident Andrei Sakharov's
hwnan rights-but he also
questioned whetlter the
department had been wise to
speak out in that fashion.
On Tuesday, holding hl.t
first official confert!flce with
Soviet Ambassador Anatoly
Dobrynin, he was elaborately
courteous and assured the
dlpl 0 mat the Sakharov

Reagan stresses
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•

�().2-The Swldav Times-Sentinel, Swulay, Feb. 6, 1977

County agent's
comer. • •

By Jobll C. Rl""
Ext. Agelll, Agrlcullure

POMEROY- Cattle Uce are a real problem in late winter
and early spring. They cause Itching, driving cattle to rub and
scratch against stanchio118, ··fences, and other objects. The
animals' skin becanes lull of scabs and hairless as well as raw
· . and bruised frwn rubbing.
Cattle may be infested wllh both biling and sucltil1g lice.
: Biting Uce, or ''red llce" are about oiiMixteenlh lo onM!lghth. inch long and a yellowish-white color with red heads and dark
· bands aero&amp;'! !heir bodies. They feed by chewing the skin.
· "Biue lice," the sucking variety, are larger and a bluisiH!Iate
· : color. They pierce the skin and feed by sucking the animal's

Agriculture and Conseroation
.

.
our community

By Bryson R. (Bud) Carter
Gallia County Extension Agent

GALUPOLIS - This is the reasonable one. Second, this
tenth of a series of articles type of arrangement should
addressinft the. question, be considered very tern.
"Should you form a farm porary. Since the son does not
partnership?" Today's ar- have a direci interest in the
ticle deals with starting a succesa of the buslne&amp;'l, be
will lose interest in farming if
family joint operation.
Most exisling family farm he is forced to work on a wage
blood.
unils are sole proprietor- basis for an extended period
lice hatch from eggs or ''nits" deposited on cattle hairs. ships. Most families have had of time. One approach Is to
lice breed cootinuously and produce a new generation about llttle or no experience in pay the son well in excess of a
every :.1 days. Most species of animals have their Own species operating a
business hired man's wage. This would
of lice, which do not infest other animals. For example, lice together. The son may be keep the son motivated, test
from pigeons or sparrows in the bam do not cause catUe to uncertain as to whether he the financial adequacy of the
becane lousy.
.
really wants to farm. bUsiness, and insure that the
·· lice are most often found on poorly.fed and housed Therefore, it is recommended arrangement will not last
81)imals. Cattle should be kept in top physical condition and in that the father and his son unduly long.
Incentive Plans
clean and well-ventilated barns to aid louse control.
(8011-in-Jaw) first enter a soWage
incentive plans often
n lice do become a ~roblem, a munber of effective called testing stage. The
insecticides are available for beef and other non-lactating family's objectives at this are used to encourage a
cattle; l!ndane, toxaphene, coumaphos, roMe!, malathion, and point should be to det.ermine farming son to take a more
methoxychlor. Crotoxyphos and coumaphos only may be used whether the son really wants active interest, and adon dairy cattle.
to farm, whether the parties ditional .responsibility, in the
Sprays are more effective than dusts and should be used in can work together, and if so, farm business. For the
the fall before cold weather. Crop sprayers with gear.or roller- what type of joint arrange: employee, the compensation
should be in addition to his
type pumps can be equipped with a spray gun for treating ment would be b&lt;ist.
cattle. To avoid clogging, use only the emulsifiable
Some alternative basic wage, not a substitute
concentrate formulations in this type of sprayer.
arrangements for use during for a reasonable wage,
When applying insecticides, spray the catUe Wttilthey are the testing stage are agreeable working consoaked. Repeat the application wilhin two or three weeks, if described as follows:
ditions, and adequate
housing. It is assumed that
needed. Clean your building and spray with the same
Wage Agreement
materials, being careful not to contwninate water or feed.
the
result of an incentive plan
Many families find the
Dusts cannot be depended upon to give complete louse easiest way to start a son in will be increased returns to
control. They must be applied thoroughly and may need to be the business is to pay him . the father as well as the son.
reapplied often. Back rubbers charged with any of the above ' wages. This is probably a
There are basically two
mentioned insecticides will help hold lice in check if used good place to start the testing types of incentive plans. In
continuously late in the fall.
process. However,· two notes the first one, payments are
"To prevent reinfestatlon, do not introduce Wttrelited of caution are in order. First, based upon the physical
animals into your herd," warn the specialists.
the wage shouid be a output of one or more of. the
enterprises regardless of
cost. The second. plan is a·
share of profits or gross income ~rrangement.
In a sound incentive
program, the son knows that
By John-Cooper
Washington. The District when the thawing occurs, he can influence the size of
SoU Cons. Service
checked with several land- that is when the danger will payment he receives by the
work he performs . The
POINT PLEASANT
owners and found various be imminent.
Brrrr! Wbo wants the oldtime stages of condition. Most of
VISITS THAT we have payments are sufficiently
winter? This winter has been the larger farmers were not made to farms substantiate large and attainable to enthe coldest one on record, having any great problem this information . Thomas courage extra effort. And, a
according to the weather except that water pipes were Bumgarner at Southside was written agreement is
bureau information. It has froze~ and Where livestock one whom we visited and he developed describing the
been very costly to everyone depended on open water, such said that his greatest purpose of the arrangement,
in some way or other. It has as ponds or streams, water JI'Oblems were caused by e.mployee responsibilities,
been most costly to people was becoming quite a freezing , but that milk method of calculatiDg and
problem.
production had remained making the payment, and
provisions for arbitration,
A few people reported that constant.
Wage, Income Sharing
calves had been born outside
George Hoffman of Letart
A
wage and income-sharing
in the snow and had frozen . was another.
plan
Is particularly wellwho are out of work because Others reported that calving
It has been reported by
adapted
as a beginning
c( the weather.
had been carried out suc- several folk that the earth is
agreement
when the son is
Farmers are affected cessfuUy.
frozen to a depth of from four
severely because of the
We heard of one instance to six inChes under snow not sure of continuing in
greater amount of feed that where a horse walked out on a where covered by sod, but to business on the home farm,
they have had to provide and pond, broke through and was a much greater depth wh~re or when he does not want to
in some cases by actual loss drowned because it could not IJ!Ire ground prevails such as become too involved financ( livestock.
be puUed saiely to shore. We on road banks or road berl)l~r ~ ciaUy. From a legal standThe Western Soil Con· fear other losses such as this
ED RAYBURN of mtfrown point, a wage and incomeservation District ha'd a because several have Creek reported that he had sharing, but not Joss sharing,
request from Charleston to reported that cattle are fed much more hay than plan establishes an employermake a report so that walking on ponds covered normal and that if the winter employee relationship rather
Governor Roc~efell~r would with ice. The ice generaUy 'continued at the present than a partnership. The
·have up-to-date information will hold them until the ice condition, that he would be employee and employer thus
before his recent visit to starts to thaw. However, short of feed before spring. would avoid some of the
Another evidence of the lla bility aspects associated
• severe winter is the fact that with the genernl partnership.
Under this plan the father
we saw a few redpoll birds at
typlcaUy
furnishes the farm,
our feeding station in our
back yard. We had never seen the housing for the son, all of
this bird before and our bird the farm personal property,
book describes it as an arctic and his own labor and
bird that occasionally management, He also pays
reached the northern United all ' farm expenses. The son
States in its winter migration. works on the farm fuUtime
We talked to Robert Towry, and receives a guaranteed
McClintic Wildlife Station, monthly wage and a share of
and he said that he had ob- net farm income. The wage
served snow buntings and the rate could be comparable to
snow bunting has about the current wages for similar
same habits as the redpoll. services by hired h~lp in the
area .
Some of the advantages of
wage-based
types of business
THOMAS ASSIGNED
organizations
inc! ude: (I)
GALLIPOLIS FERRY
determining
if
the
son really
Army Specialist Four Joseph
wants
to
farm
and
If the
C. Thomas, 21, son of Mr. and
father
and
son
can
,
g
et
along
Mrs. Frank Thomas, Route I,
well
when
farming
together:
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.,
recently was assigned to the (2) giving the son experience
lOis! Airborne Division at Ft. and Hknow-how" about
farming and (3) starting and
Campbell, Ky.
· . stopping easily as there is no
jointly held property, etc.
A.mong the disadvantages
are : (I ) the son's rna jor interest In the farm may be his
monthly paycheck; (2)
payment in wages does not

Costly winter to everyone

lay of the land

•

On Jotm Deere
Lawn and Garden Equipment

Buy now and save!
no finance charges till April,
no monthly
payment
till May
,
.

.

.
11

'

WISHER IMPLEMENT CO.

•

RT.7

KANAUGA, OHIO

Hihinger
on usmg
'o nds £or
P
livestock
•

.

By Steve Hlblnger
District ConservaUonllt
GALIJPOLIS. - Keeping
water supplied to livestock
has been a full time job the
past month. Frozen water
lines and frozen troughs or
ponds have forced you to
· carry water or use the axe on
12-IBinches of lee. Not only is
It hours of hard work, it's a
nuisance, too.
We never recommend
letting livestock water
dlrecily from a pond area.
Any ponds boil! with SCS
B&amp;'listance are constructed
with fencing 'for livestock
exclusion and a trough downstream from the fill for a
watering source.
One primary rea.On for this
practice is that during the
summer livestock can foul
the water. This can stagnate
the water and induce growth
of disease organisms. This
stagnation also appears to
make algae problems more
severe.
In addition, 'cattle or hogs
wandering into the water to
cool themselves or rid
themselves of flies can
become trapped and perahps
sink into the mud. Several
head of livestock are lost this
way each year.
Durjng the winter, if ice
forms; cattle will wand~r
onto pond ice. Often they
break-through and are lost.
·Seldom can an animal
recover itself once It has
fallen through the pond ice. If
a farmer , sees his animal
break through ice, invariably, he'll try a rescue
attempt and then he's risking
his own life.
Tanks being filled from a
pond have a control valve. In
this case, a daily tum of the
handle can water the stock or
the valve can be left open and
a continuous flow to the tank
will usually eliminate
freezing: Turning the valve
once a day is much easier
than chopping into 18 inches
of ice.
In spring developments, a
key to success depends on
insuring the feeder lines are
buried deeper than the usual
freezing depth. (This is
generally 18-24 inches.)
Once the ·water is in the
trough it must not be allowed
to freeze. If the spring· is
relatively strong, there
should be enough movement
to keep the water from
freezing.
One way to• create an
"artificial" flow is to cut the
Intake pipe 8-10 Inches ·
shorter than the outlet pipe.
This' will give a constant
upwaro surge and create
some water movement.
The local soil and water .
conservation district has
trough forms for rent. These
forms make a 550 gallon
reinforced concrete tank. The
tank is bevelled on the Inside
I.e. the lower wallis thicker
than the upper wall. Occasionally, if the tank freezes
the Ice will Uft out of the tank.
Sometimes however, there
will be damage to the tank. It
is better to reduce the risk

ByBoydA. Rulh
Conservationist
POMEROY - Severe
winter conditions have hit
this area. Most farm ponds
are covered with thick ice
and heavy snow. If these
-conditions continue, winter
fish kills are expected to
result, especially in small.

Revival of

/

interest plaQ.
is suggested
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Rural electric leaders today
urged ·the agriculture
secretary to consider
reviving a dormant federal 2
per cent interest . credit
program to finance energysaving Insulation of rural
homes. and buildings aod
solar equipment for heating
home water supplies.
Robert Partridge, vice
president of the National
Rural Electric Cooperative
Association, told Secretary
Bob Bergland In a letter that
a potential tool for promoting
energy conservation may
rest in a Rural Electrification
Administration program
dormant since the Nixon
administration suspended It
in 1969:
Under the program, the
REA had loaned cooperatives
more than $47 million at 2 per
cent interest to finance
purchases' of electrical
equipment and wirilig by
their memher...:onsurners in
rural raeas.

shallow ponds.
Such ponds include ponds
less than 8 feet deep over at
least 25 percent of the pond
area, or without perennial
d
flow, such as a spring; pon s
with severe equatic weed
infestation and die off last
summer or faD , and previous
summer or winter fish die off
when sluggish fish that stay
near an ice fishing hole (not
easily spooked) may indicate
oxygen stresse~ fish and a
potential for winter fish kill.
When the water surface
does not have contact with
the air, oxygen can be
replenished in the water only
by photosynthesis carried out
by aquatic vegetation. When
snow covers the ice, light
penetration to the quatic
.plants is greatly reduced or
eliminated, with the result
that
photosynthesis
decreases or stops entirely.

The end result is an oxygen
deficiency in the water,
which, if severe enough, w111
cause fish to die .
Some prevention measures
be taken that may
can
prove.
effective in combating winter
kill In smaller farm ponds of
generally two acres or less. If
the ice prevails, keeph!g a
large hole open, or several
smaU ones, and ex~ to
lhe air will be helpful, where
wind JWill !"IP to keep the
water movmg.
Removal of some of the
snow cover, especially over
known. weedbeds may
provide plants with sufficient
light to carry no photosynthesis. Water can be recirculated and areas kept Ice
free by pumping or aeration.
Tiiis method Is expensive but
effective.
Before deciding on any .
winter
kill
control
procedures, it Is best to have
· some knowledge of the pond ·
under consideration. If :
winter kills have beeh severe
inthe past, then control may
BE MODERATE
If you are over :IS, be be merited. If fish numbers
moderate; dress warmly. killed have not been
Don't· smoke - that hurts noticeable over past winters,
circulatiOn. If you are a heart then minimal · control
patient, don't do any work procedures or no control may
outside
without your be adequate to safeguard the
fish population.
physician's OK.

fl..3-. Tho Sunflav Times-Sentinel, SWtday, Feb. 6, 1977

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
MY HEART felt thanks to the
Holzer Medical C•n tar . Stoff ,
Meigs Churches and oil of the
people who ex tended help and
encouragemenT to me in my

il·

you .

Howk .
WE WISH to try to e.preu o ur op- .
The Marion R. (Hammer )

i .e., cords , flowers, visit$,
coils, prayer and concern . Our
prayers are for you also. Thank
you . .
SyrocusePcstmoster, &amp; Mrs. F. A.

NEW '76 COLTS

Enoch.

1 AUTO. TRANS &amp; 3 STANDARD TRANS.
CLOSING OUT AT

99~ ~

vanc!KI students. Coli

2270 .
NOTICE ,

Pratt's

Mea t

Mkl.

pro&lt;:eulng . Retoil , who lesal e ~

No appoinment necenary . Coli
(61_.) 593-8655, hours , 9:00 till
6:00 7 Pomeroy Road . Ath&amp;ns,

Oh,:...-

CARROLL ·NORRIS DODGE ·INC.

c----:-

GUN SHOOT at the Ra cine Gun

Club

every Sund&lt;Jy .
Assorted meot5,

I

- -

l igion Hall. Sunda y. start ing at

~~n.

---~~

SHOOTING MATCH , just off Rt . 7
ef·poss. Every Sunday at noon .
Will ha ve heof .

Extra low miles, 13,835 t ilt
wheel. factory A- C, vin yl
landau top, as good as new.

FEMALE OVER Counter Soles ,
small amount of bookkeeping .
'Apply in person , 0 B: 0 Meoh ,
In c., 830 E. Ma in St ., Pomeroy ,
Ohio .

----lAD IES

(PREFERRED ). Need~ for
good paying te mporary office
like work
No ekper ience
necessary . Also, ladies needed
with cor for light delivery work .
Apply tO Mrs . Carter, DAV Hall ,
124 Butternut, 9 to 9:30 a .m.
--~~s9o y , February 8.

HELP WANTED
REPAIR MAN

KORLAN 2
INSECTICIDE

Refrigeration and
Washers &amp; Dryers
BillfOlD in Middleport or
i'onne"&gt;v. Pleas e retu r n
· ftopers : Pllone 9n,702B or

llll2-3122 .

and try to keep the water
from freezing in the trough.
Hopefully, the above article
can help alleviate or
minimize the lnconventences
of this winter. It's been rough
so far and there's no
prolonged end in sight. Any
thing you do to help keep the
animals watered - and
reduce the back-breaking
labor - will be time well
spent.

•

SAUl&gt;! ARABIAN Oil

Mlnlsler, Sheillh Ahmed
Zakl Vamani, dlredln&lt; hlo
country'• oppooltlon to
prlce-ralolng movt•s by
other oil ?roduelnR &lt;tate.,
says thr West must pa"
IH:'nt•flt,; on tO ronsum('rN .

Good pay &amp; benefits . Send
resume .to Box 729 -G, c-o
Daily Senlinel ( Pomeroy~
Ohio 45769. ·

~lllpollt

THE

lllvtr flood

Ph. 44..0203

Clyde B. Walker Mir.

•

•

1·446·8570.
COINS, CWRRENCY , tokens , old
pocket watches and cha ins ,
silver and gold. We need 1964
and older silver coins , Buy , sell ,
or trade' Coli Roger Wamsley ,

742-2331.

742·208 1.

IF YOU hove a ser;~ ice lo offer ,
wont to buy or sell something,
oe looking for work . . . or
whatever , . , you 'll get results
faster with a Sentinel Want Ad .

Ca ll992·2156.

•

e

!

(pi,)
78 Dip In mlddlll

77Sttt

78 Deltll
78 Of (11'111alzt
82Chull•

1315 Exitttd
131 AocMnt
138S.Cretwr1Ung
140 lntelltct
1•1 S~lx : tlkt

142Niaht(tbbr.)

17 Vtntllat•
18 NtgtllYI l)feftx

tiOnl

81 FCK)f le¥1r1

18Ciol•aaecurttr 80Draln
20 RorunoHICtal 11 Alnt
27 Ant~tr

U Additional

20FUI'IIOn

UA...

1.. 3 Htl:lrtw month 31 Ortln
· 815 Knockt
815ZIII
1-4-4 Trlnktt
38 Filii blhlncl
88: Wild thllp
88 Ptrult
1oCI5 Powerful perton 37 Yut throng
87 Fur of mllttn
3 Filr1htr doWn
88 Surrtlllst
I oCT Lawful
38 Bondloe
80iollltry
4 LW&gt;ri&lt;Jatlld
pa)nler
loCg NlhOOI' INIHP · 40 T11r
101 Unit of.currency
e; SWill rlvtr
89 Your.g ulman 1150 En~hulllltiC
oCI Mark left by
1015 Tltlll of rtaptOI
90 lnc:Hnt
1152 Unrtttrelnld
wound
108 Stockinet
e Fragmtnl
18 Enttrllin
02 MortintiM
I !4 Dtmun
oC2 PIICtl for com- 107 H1rv1111
!0 BtllOW
9. Frightful
1158Commonptace
1 tl Flying c:r..tuftl
2 Thret·lotd tloth 98 lampreya
1&amp;8 Place In line
-43 Fruit IMda
112 Rtvtll
3 S~",.,llol fortln
99ihttlrebox
169Goln
oCoCVtrYt
113CYI
4 Unl. ot Por·
I OOC utlllon
t80Efta
•eAtlatt(abbr,.) 115CI'Itlttmu
.,. tugviSe curr~- 1()2 Prepartd
I 01 Wtb·foottd
.&amp;8 Mountalnl of 118 Pour forth
.,.. cy
103NtwDlltagen·
blrdl
Europe
118Partofllreplact
~15 Poem
C.Y Hnlt.)
.&amp;9C"anenoe
11 ~ ShHt of 01111
:318Burdon
104Exllltd
501rtltnd'
'121 Wtlrdllt
17 Evtryon!J
tOHMrnlng
51 Separall
123 Hlbrew ..tter
t8 Plgptn
toe Awtrd
!52 Hindu ot.~ltar
126 Ctntet
tJO t..• ~t n
108 R"ort
53 Staring open* 128 Aoater
~2 Fruu drink
1091n lhtatmt
DOW":!
mouthtd
127 Stovn
43Secllon
pllceltbbr.l
515 Plttdld
120Macaw
""Gaelic
11 0 Plurtltndlng
1 Oenert
58 Aemu,.rattd 130 Conaplrtoy
,.SNatlvemtta l
til POiaon
2Ltughlng
570rowlngoutol 131 ElllnctfllghU. .,
'ItT Ftatln
112 Contalrtere
3 Organ of hear· 158 Erat.. (printing)
bird
10 Excavtttl
1U Cratty
lng
e 1 MutiCII
132 Potualum nltr ·
Qo Shade tr&amp;e
118 Saldlum
4 Artlelt
organization
111
" 1 Inquiring
chtorkle
5 CMrt
03 Stltlch
134 Mllfnoon party
4-4 Ctlallenge
117 Swtlt
e Smoottl• the
0-4 Walking tllck 138 Colnt of lndll
5 Ftvtng mammtlt 11 aFr.. llckel
tuthtrt of
88 SaltkltPinQ
137 Vapid
6 SuppiWattd
120 Ptlh
Nlrrttld
70 Rltrtltl
138 01¥1 up
Q Biker'• product 122 Flt~tlblt
8 Maturt
71 SQontor
, oCO Sagacloul
0 BltPliMr
1 24 Lift with lever
Q Symbol for tan- 7 3 Element•
144 Stor-ae com·
42 Forttt warden• 125 Feme It hOI'"
tatum
74 Shut up
ptrtmlnt
84Bono1Adam
126Sword
10Guldo'•htoh
75Undrtllldkld 1411Smaltchltd
015 comp111 point 128 Conledlf'tll
nett
7 7 Bravery
148 Glrl'l niCkname
-'e NNr
general
11 Etcape
78 Otfllcult
147 Ordlnanca
;J57 Dane• IIIP
12QCauatlc aube·
12 Be dtlllttd
80 Provldlacr.-w 1"8 Carry wtti'I•Hort
~Q Hugt
ttnce
13 Revtrtnct
81 Mourntul
1oCQ Petttlon
131 Underground
14 SymbOIIof
83 Chaer
151 Prefix twk:t
..,.0 Prtclpltltlon
txCt'ltllon
ttllurlum
8-4 lnOt!lnltt
1153 Prtpotltlon
=r1,crony fcolloqJ
;}2 Malt aiMIP "'
132 Conjunction
t 5 t.flttlkll
•mount
11115 Exlat
.i14llquld mflaure t 33 Talk Idly
18 HlgllwiY
87 Railroad 1111157 CoMI)III point
8-4 Ptrtr'!trt

1
i

,CENTRAL SOYA
of Ohio, Inc.,
Gallipolis, Ohio

TAURUS.(Aprii20·May 201 You

1

as.t

r

•

DON'T WAIT. ORDER NOW BEFORE
· THE PRICES GO UP. FROM .THE AREA
WAREHOUSE AT POMEROY, 0,

POMEROY LANDMARK
M11on Counties

PHONE 992·2181
Store Hours: Open 8:30-5:30. Mill CloH11t 5 P.M.

1,

....., "'"'

'

6 cyl.,

auto ..

radio, brown with

roof &amp; Interior .

73 CHEVY

Burgundy ,
full
powe r
equipment, new rad ia l tires.
Priced to sell.

CORVETTE

Convertible, 4 spd,
PS, radio,
super sharp.

'2995
1973 VW Beetle

5295 .

5

Po wder blue, 4 speed , good
clean car, priced to se ll.

74 AMC

HORNET

ISportaootut 6 c~. .·~ -··~
PS, Radio, Air, Less
Than 38000 Miles,
Road Wheels, I.Qcal~
Owned

$2495
73 CHEVY .PICKUP
Long bed, V-8, standard .
P.S .• red &amp; white.

be ne rvo us loday regarding the
outcome of events . You're a
shade or two luckier than you
realize .

74

MONTE

VB, Auto, PS, P8,
Air, Vinyl Roof

Decisions y·ou make today are
deslined to be both wise and
practical . You look at IssueS

from both sides. You'll pick the
winner .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Your

PLEASURE HORSES and pon ies.
also will buy horses ond
ponies. Phon e (614 ) 698·3290,
Rulh Ree;~es .
·

chances lor gain are extremely
promising again t oday , par·
Ucularly where you carl use your
ex.pertlse in plotting your moves.

AKC . COLLIE Pups . Sable and
white , S75. Phone 949 ·2571.
after~ p.m.
RiSING STAR -K
-e-nn_e_l -B-oo-rd7 i-ng-.
Indoor-Outdoor r uns, grooming
all breeds, cle on sanitary
facilit ies. Che sh ire . Phone (614)

I. NILER
I KJ

help ing others by working
behind the scenes. It's better if
your moves don 't become evi*

367-0292.

5
L:;.l:.:.;K.;....:;"';;---.j.'--~rll.
_A

dent .

AKC REGISTERED Cocker Span iel
Puppies , 3 month s Old . Phone

favorable - and lasting . When
you ' re discussed in absentia
later. it will ~e In glowing terms.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee.
21) Even th o ugh It's not a

business day, don'l sel aside

JNGRJF

I I I

t

IAMPJGE ·1
I

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 111

l

,A

V "'\J
1\_

A

0

Now arrange the circled \etters to
fonn the surprise answer, as SU9*
gested by the abOve cartoon .

Print surprise answer here:

A few encouraging word s from
you when deserved wil l work
wonders. If someone has earned
a compliment. lay it on them with
gusto.

1969 CHEVROLET 8isq uoine; 1966
BUICK Electro , 225 ; 2 Rokan
triolb ikes . •Phone 949-2432.

.

idea s you have to Improve your
financi al base. Call others who
could be on your wavelength .

11

(

l XI XJ"

(Answers Monday)

.

Junibles: FEVER TWICE HIDING BUNKER

Yesterdays 1 Answer: Lawyers have been known to win cases when

they gave thelurorslhist--EVlDENCE

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Ftb. 19)
You can score In joint endea\lors
today providing you let others

lake thelead. ll's no11halyourWIN
Ideas aren't good , it' s just that

AT BRIDGE

olheiS' are boner.
•rr::ea-:r-=
a-=n:-:aruwua:;:r.ld;r.y::--:;;s;~;h~o:-;w:;,'r.;:e-;;m;;-,h!;';o~w;;;PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 201 Today your jUdgment is especially . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ; - - ,
keen. You know all the r ight
NORTH
5
things to say to evoke a positive
• K g 32 .

kings. A lesser player might
say to himself, "I have a
minimum positive response. I
response .
w9 6 2
should sign off at lour
• K9
spades."
.
4 B6 54
Not
Waldy.
He
realized
that
WEST
EAST
hls king and one diamond had
.104
.1
to be worth their weight in
.'Q 10 5 3
• K J B7
gold,
and bid five diamonds to
+1066
+ 5 32
o~&gt;Kl092
4AQJ13 ., show second round controL
Fob. I, 1177
Ted continued his explora .
SOVTII (D i
't'bu will fare well this coming
tion
with the five-heart cue
o~&gt;AQJ965
year If you pursue activities that
.bid
and
at this point Waldy
.A!
benefit all the family. · You can*
+AQJ
1
1
realized
that
Ted could not be
not think in singular t~rms If you
trying for a slam if he had two
want to achieve best results.
Both vulnerable
club losers . His four trumps
(Are. you an Aquarius? Ber*
looked mighty good and he
nice Osol has Written a special West Nortb Easl South
jumped to six spades.
Astro-Graph Letter for you. For
your copy send 50 cents end a Pass 3 •
Pass H
!"ow Ted bid seyen, since he
seft-addressed, stamped Pass 5 t
Pass
felt certain that Waldy would
envelops to Astra-Graph, P.O. Pass &amp; •
Pass 141&gt;
show up with just what he did
Bo• 489, Radio Cltr Station, New Pass Pass Pass
hold and that it would be
York, N,Y. 10019. Bo sirre ro ask
Opening lead - 4 4
possible to discard any losing
lor Aquarius Volume 4.)
·'::"'"7-:-:-:-:--;-:-:;::---' hearts i1l Waldy 's hand on the
By O.wald &amp; James Jacoby
ifiEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
long diamonds.
In Monday's article we
.mentioned that Ted Lightner
and Waldemar von Zedtwitz
were two of the three players
A New York reader wants
who.invented the forcing two- to know if expert players use
bid. Today they are in their the aces over two-bids conven·
80s and , while they don't play lion.
much bridge, they still do
The answer Is they don't.
mighty well when they come Once in a blue moon you may
to the table.
find a hand that suits this con·.
They bid today 's hand about vention. but those hands don 't
forty years ago, but their bid- come up often enough to make
ding may well ' serve as a the convention of any real
model today.
v::olue.
There was nothing wrong
(For a copy ol JACOBY
with Ted's two bid and wh~n
MODERN.
send $1 lo: "Win
Waldy gave him an immediate
al
Bridge
," cl o this
raise Ted decided to explore
for the slam. Hence his rebid newspJper. P. 0 . sox 489,
Radio Cily Srarlon. /lew York,
to four diamonds.
Waldy looked at his two N. Y. 1001:Q)

fit1ctiTiy)

2.

'

75

1972 GRAND Tori no , ps ., and
p . b .,
a ir
to ndit ion ed ,
automat ic, new A·l condition .
$1400. Phone 742-2006.

1974 FORO RANGER XLT FlOO

CONTINENTAL

MARK ·J.Y
2 br, Full Power, Air
AM, FM, Was '9295

74 CADIUAC

ELDORADO

7.42·2648 anyt ime.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) The , . . - - - - - . - ,
impression you make loday Is

,.

TAKE ADVANTAGE

Sport,

GEMINI (May 21-Junt 201 Don'l

·-

-

'5395
1973 Buick Electra
Limited 4 dr., HT

"Choose from Several Colors and Trims"

have a marvel ous kna ck today
for recognizing opportunity . You
can even gauge ttl,e ex.tent of the
profit from a particular enter*
prise.

LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 231 You're
exlraordlnarily etteclive loday .----Y-:-K:-A.,..,.H-:--,1

ACFIOS8

74 DODGE

BUICK CENTURY REGALS- SEVEN IN STOCK

•

. tChoklePirt
.. e -Talk Idly
t 1 ~alta thtaplrlt
" of
Ltft
I Cli mbing plant
12 Royal

'1420
.
GAU.ON

While. others dream o~ relax.ing
today, your m ind will be on
business matters. You'll reap the
rewards of your concentration.

~ SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

:

LASTS FOR WEEKS

tape .. 12,882 miles. split 40-40
vinyl ' seal. super sharp .

Fully Equipped - "Ready To Go"

For Sunday, Ftb. 8, 11177

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 181

Where often you think about do*
ing nice things lor others, today
you'll follow through . The senti*
ment is enh"-nced because you
have no selfish motives

SI/NllA Y. Jl'tb. t1, lf11

•LONG TERM EFFECTS -

Bernice Bade Osol

$2995

A-C, power windows, AM-FM·

CANCER (Juno 21-Julr 22)

•

No need to wet the whole
animal - One gallon will
treat 80 lb. to 800 lb. animals.

· o&lt;#,

Standard, ~om,
Radio, Chrome
Sharp

Landau

VIRGO (Aug . 23·Stpl. 22)

JACK W. ·CARSEY, MGR.
Serving Meigs, Gtlll1 1nd
221 Uppor

TIMBER, Pomeroy For.est Pro ducts . Top price for standing
sawti mber. Cal l Kent Hanby ,

•

encourage savings nor does
the arrangement permit the
son to gain an equity in the
bosiness; and (3) such plai!S
are often kept In force long
after the son Is ready to
become a full-fledged
member of the business.

You would if you borrowed from the t=ederal Land'Bank
... because he 's one of our member-owners. You
see. despite our name, the Federal Land Bank is
not funded by the federal government. Each
Land Bank Association is farmer-owned
and operateo and has been lor
generations.
Our funds come from the sate of
bonds. And the board of directors of -!1~~..,
each Association is elected directly
by the farmers who -borrow. and
consequentllfOWn the Association.
So, if you need long-term farm
credit, consider your local
.. Fede1 al" Land Bank Association.

CASH paid for all makes end
models of mobile home s.
Ph one area code 614-423·9S31 .

Long Wheelbase,
Pickup 6 cyl.,

1976 Monte Carlo

'179
'4495
PONTIAC TRANS AM'S - THREE IN STOCK

AstroGrapn

OLD fur ni ture , ice boxes, brass
beds , waH telephones and
ports, or complee hou-seholds .
Writ &amp; M. 0 . Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Call 99'2·7UIJ.

CASH \ !! for junk · cars . Frye 's
Truck and Auto . 2A HOUR
WRECKER SERV ICE! Phone

APPLIANCE

OUTGOING Democratic
Cbalrman Robert Strauss
presided over a complete
turnaround in party fortunes. A Te&lt;Bn with a
reputation as a moneyraiser and concUiator, he
took over In the shambles
following the McGovern
deleat In 1968.

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

THIRD &amp; COURT

'

•LOW TOXICITY

1975 Buick Century
Custom 2 dr.

pm

·--SHOOliiNV !\1\ATCH of Rutland

~--

•LONG RESIDUAL EFFECTIVENESS

brown heavily padded landau
top. Fully equipped, one very
careful owner .

DEALERS COSTI

(Pieoscinton Meot Processing ,
Inc.) Cu5tom slaughtering , and

4 DR.

'6295
1974 Buick Limited
2 dr.
Cream colored with midnight

READY FOR DELIVERY
NOW accepting piano students,
beginners , intermediates, od·

BUICK LIMITED

Sterling Si lver wi th 60 -40
custom burgundy cloth interior ,
Power windows . sea t s, tilt
wheels, cruise co ntrol , AM· F M
stereo tape, low miles. Expecl
the finest.

oc:cldent ond hospitolizotlon,

AT STUD: 1. Phoebus, 16 1H. If
y•u wont o good performance .
A"holter col t w· bl oodlin es that
sciiiL 2. TRI BAL CHIEF APHC ,
li .2 H. has sired SOfTie of th e
tQp performance ond holter
h•rs&amp;s , (Tribal Wi n, Tr ibal Fool,
etc.). Also, horses sold, tra in ·
etl, cond itioned, boarded. Cole
S ~bles , Home o f Champi on,,
BQ)( 25, Tupper:o. Plains, Oh io
4J783. Phone (614 ) b67·3A05 .

KILLS LICE ON CAmE
BY POUR-oN TREATMENT

1975

40NLY

prMiation for the services
rendered by many during my

1974 CHEVY C-10

don't let this opportunity pasS you by. Sunday ShoppeJS
are welcome. - Come mand browse.

WHILE THEY LAST

lness. I reo lly apprec iate all of

RACINE FIRE Dept. will hove a
G\.ln Shoot every Sotu rdoy night
6 p .m. &lt;1f their bui lding in
Boshon , Ohio.

r

These are the finest used caJS offered for sale' in this
area. If you've been looking for a good late model car

FOR THE MONTH OF FEBRUARY.

Pomemy Emergency Squad, the

Wouldyou borrow ·
mon£y from this man?

Buy any new John Deere Lawn &amp;Garden Tracto r
or Rrd 1ng Mower now and you'll make big savrngs 1
Plus you can save now on JoMn Dee re attachmen ts
for !riling a garden . t&gt;aul1 ng din and many
other JObs
.
When you buy before March 31 . 1977, no
finance charges writ be imposed until April 1.
1977. And !here w111 be no monthly payrnents until
May1 . 1977
This preseason offer applies to any new John
Deere Lawn and Garden Tractor, Riding Mower. or
John D!Jere ariae-hment. .. such as a front blade.
tiller. mower. dumpcart. sweeper. and snow
thrower sold w1lh tracto r or rider. A small down ..
payment is requ1.red. See us now lor th1s
l1m1ted· trme offer on John Deere lawn
and garden equrpment.

.

Fish kills likely in ponds

Full Power, Air,
2 Dr, Was '6495

74 CADIUAC
COUPE DEVILLE

Full Power, Air,
Was '6495

Pickup, 360 V-8 automa tic, p.s ..
am-f m roclio , .tape deck , 3'ii ,OOO
miles. Ex ce llent condition.
A lso , 1968 Plymou th GTX A4 0
V·B .I speed , 56,000 m il es. ex·

$5995

cellent condit ion. Coli after 5

p.m. 9'12·'1'167.
1970 F-2SO · CAMPER Sp ecia l,
outomotic , p.s., p.b., new ti re$ ,
metOI tool boJoC , heavy duty -

hileh . E" ellent

Ph one 992-7201.

condition .

1968 FORO PICKUP , e.cellenl run·

. nin g&lt;ondllion . Phone 992-7663.

SPECIAL
. . . .__

73 n.JUNDERBIRD
n
•

Full Power, Air,
Was 14295 Now.

1973 FORD LTD for sole. Call

$.

992-5758.
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
c;:olumbus, Ohio .
January 28 , 1977

Contract Sales Legal

74

AMC GREMLIN

6 Cyl., 4 Speed,
Radio REDUCED.

$159§.

, Copy No . 71 -126

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be
rece ive d a t the oft ice of th e ....-!!lf!!l!'l!lllis•JIIIJIIIIII~

Oireclor 'ol the Oh io Depart .

men t of
Tran spor t at io n ,
Co iJJmbus , Ohio , unti l 10 :00
A .M . , Ohio standard Ti m e,
Th ursdav . Februory 24. 1971 ,
tor imp roveme nts in :

Gallia Cou nl v. Oh io. on
,.rlous seer ions . GAL · State

Routes 21 6 and 790, by
resurfacing with asp halt
concre te.
Paivement W idth -. Varies
Project and Work Length 50,477 feet or 9.56 mites .
'' The date set for comp le t ion
of ! his work shall be as set
t or th in the bidding propose I. "
Eo~~ch
b i dder shall be
required to file with his b id a
certi f ied check or cashier's
check for an a moun! equa.l to
five per cent of his bid. bu t In
no even t more than f i fty
thOusand dollars , or a bond fbr
ten per cent of his bid. payab.le
to the Direct or .
Bidders must apply , on the
prroper forms . for qual ification
at least t en deys pr ior to 1he
da te set tor opening b ids In
a cc ordance w i th Chllpter 5525
Oh io Revised Cod e.
Plan s· e n~ specifications ere
on f ile in the o ·epartment of
Transpbrt atlon and the ofticEo 1
of
the
D ls 1rict
Deputy
Oire ctor .
The Direc tor reserves the
rig ht to reject anv and all b ids
DAVID L. WEIR:

Rev . 8-11 -73

Feb . 6, 13

DIRECTOR

74 8. U .ICK

.R IVIERA

2 Dr• HT1 Full
PowerI Reduce
From 4995JO

$4595
.

74 PLYMOUTH
SA.JELLITE·

8 Passenger , .t dr .. station
wagon,

318,

auto.,

Cruise

P.B.,
luggage:

P.S..

Control ,

'rack ,

power

windows. Aflo-FM radio.

$3295

70 caorice
68 '
70 Challenger Torino
70 AMC Rebel GT
MOUNTAIN STATE

See Melvin Mooney
or J.S. Red O.ncan

6.7S-5170

�0+-The SUnday 1'iJnes.Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6, 19'17

04--The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Slinday, Feb. 6, 1977

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
~~~~~~

Utudncs!!i ~:nirt·s

Pinto, Mustang, Maverick
lHE BETrER IDEA FROM

OIL, GAS Furl)oces, o1l burners,
repo~r , and porfl tor tro•len
and hom'" 2111 ~ur ser'tlce
Phone 843-2165
-,.---HOUSE PAINTING , 1nter~or and
e~~:tenor .
Quality work at
reasonable rotu
Phona
7•2·2328
FROSTY S C.B Radio Equip.,
everything m two-way Rad1o's,
Antennas, and e~ccvs Phone
~~~~ -~,:2l:~B.;;l.c__
-~-

~-

SELECT YOUR NEXT
CAR OR TRUCK

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Complete Service. Phone 949-2487
or 949·2000 . fitocine . Ohio. Critt
BradtQrd.
-ELW
- 00-D= BO
= W
:::E::RS: :-R
:-:E-:PAIR sw..pers, toosters. iron •• all
smoU opplionces Lawn mower,
next·to State Highwar Gorag.
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985·

from

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
1976 AMC HORNET............... S3795

~2~5~
· ---=--~~--~-­

REMODELING. Plumbing, healing
and oil typet of 9enerol repo1r.
Work guarantee&lt;t 20 y-ors 8K·
perience Pkone 992-2409.

Sportabout, 6 cyl. , automa1 1c;, power steering, delu)(e
equipment, whitewall tires , luggage rack, dark green
finish , less than 9,000 miles, snowroom cl eJI"'-

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ler~ice . oil makes . 992-2284 The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Authorir&amp;d Singer Soles and
Sarvtce. We sharpen Scissors
~

EXCAVATING. do1er, loader and
backhoe work . dump trucks
and lo·bays tor hire; will haul
fill dirt , to soli. limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jvf
fers . 'Clay phone m 1089•.
night phonv 99:2-3525 or 992·

House Overlooking River
J bedrooms. full
basement, new heat 1ng ,
plumbing and wlrelng on
double lot Pnce $40,900
We" have several business
properties for sale Call for
further tnformatlon

Np, 184- Tavern business,
rea l estate all stock
Inc luded. has apartment
and other business, lady
wa nts to retire Pr1ce
$50,000.
No . 167 Tile block
business butldmg lof 30x 100
w1t h 12,060 sq . ft. has liv ing
quar"ters Prrce S20,000

9 MUSTANG~ 6 PINTO~
6 MAVERICKS IN STOCK.
READY TO ROU AT NEVER
AGAIN LOW LOW PRICES

No. 193 - 33 Acres has
modern 3 BR home. also
l2x60 mobile home 35x27
barn, close in , Pr ice
$37.500
804 EW Moin
Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours Ca II
992-7133
CONTACT·
LOIS Pauley
Branch Manager

See: Pat Hill, Roclty Hupp
or Darrel Dodrill
For a good deal on a new or used vehicle.
Open Evenings Til6:00
Except Thursday and Saturday
Closed Sunday

DAN THOMPSON FORD
992 -2 196

Middleport,

o.

74 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille
Full

power and air, vinyl roof .

'5500
73 Cadillac Cpe. Eldorado
Cpe., lull power and air.

'4895
NOW IN STOCK
3-1977 SEDAN DEVILLES
&amp;

2-1977 COUPE DEVILLES
ALL FULLY EQUIPPED
See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete
Burris, Lloyd Me Laughlin or Marvin
Keebaugh .

t'or Rent
WANTED TO RENT or lease with AVAILABLE AT R1verstde Apts . 1
bedrm . apartment, $100 per
option to boy form 20 to 50

month , 2 bedroom opts $133
house, 3
~r month. Equol Opportunity
~roomt with both,
out·
Hous1ng Phone 992-3273.
building, 10 to 15 acres tillable,
balance posture or woods . 2 bedroom unfurn~thed apart Phone 1 (803) ~~ · 3756 after
ment In Middleport Phone
5:30p.m. ·
992-3129or992-SI34.
'
NICE COMPLETR Y furnished I
bedroom apartment ~1th lorgt~
patio , porck overlook1ng rwer
3 AND 4 AM. furnisked and un Adults only Pkone 992-2606
furnllhed apts. Phone 992MOBILE HOME, unfurnished m
counf ry .
Needs
sma ll
543&lt;
::::=.::.::-:-':':-:-::--::-- _COUNTRY Mobllo Homo Peri&lt; . Rt.
maintenance. Coii992·63J7 .
33. ,., mll81 nMth of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots wUh concrete poUoi,
s~lks, runners and off
ltreet porklng. Phone 992-7.,79.
ONE lfDIOOM Aprs ot VIllAGE
IMNOII In Mlddlopa&lt;t lor t 10&lt; Will do odd 10bs , roofing, pain·
monthly plus ef«. or $130 In·
ting , 9\JH•r work. Phone 992·
' · cludlne oloc. LOWER RATES for
7409.
...
-......--"' SENtOft CtfiZENS. Convenient
lo tholoolng on Thl.! ond Mill SEWING · .AlTERATIONS :
Upholster i ng .
drapu
Stl . In· Mktdleport Brand new
r•&lt;Hionable
572
South
'-ifh quality oporfment• . s.. Ave ., M1ddlepor1. PhThird
one •
the matMipr at Apt. 28 or call
992-6306.
992-772L An Equol Housing

acres ,

li'loble

SN;~~ :::~-~

--

•

_____
Opporfunlly.

( ' lf~ooM. lra li~r - ; ; ; .nl;-,
Phone
992-3324, oduhs
_.
- only .

--

INCOME TAX Service, Wallace
Ruuell ,
8roclbury
Co li
992·7226

WILL do roafmg, construction ,
plumb1ng ond heotlng No jOb
too large or too small. Phone
742·2348.
.

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .
NEW
LlSTlNG
Excellent netghborhood, 6
room, l lh sto ry frame
house with Ph baths 3
bedrooms. family room
w1th open sp1ral stai rcase.
Carpeted throughout and
remodeled ni ce ly . N G.
F.A furnace Located on a
corner
lot.
All
for
$23.935 00
NEW LISTING - This 3
room house has a porch
and basement. Needs some
rep air Loc~ted on a large
lo t with garden. space
Asking IUS! $6,500.00
NEW LISTING
2
bedrooms, basement and
large lot . All in good repa 1r
Only $14,SOO.OO.
MIDDLEPORT -1'1, story
brick . 2 or 3 bedroom,
enclosed back porch. 1 car
garage on level lo t
$8,900.00 .
COOKS DELIGHT - The
large kitchen 1n th1s 2 story
brick has everylhlng. A
total of 12 rooms, several
fireplaces even one in thp
kitchen. 2 co rner lots close
to stores. If you spend most
of your time cooking this is
lor you ONLY $20,000.00.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
ACREAGE AND NEWER
HOMES. LET US SELL
YOUR PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992-2259- 992·2568
985-4112

TEAFORD
Virgil B. Sr., Reollor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone "2-3325
NEW
nicely
!rome
Plains

LlSTING : Old, bul
localed, eight-room
house In Tuppers
on Rt. 1, $5,000.

TUPPERS PLAINS - 1'1'
acres ol land right on Rt. 7.
Large old 7 room frame
house. Good Commercial
sile . Better lhlnk about th is
at only $12,000.
'
MlODLEPORT -"40x]20'
corner lot . Large 8 roOm
home with 2 baths. All
utilities and garage Just
$12,000
DO YOU WANT - An
Investment. We have' one
that hOS 4 apartments and
a
recreation
center
furnished with a good
1uture.
1
PAGEVILLE - 7 rooms, 2
balhs. 3 bedrooms. front
porch and garden In back .
How's tor J7SOO
THIS SPACE
FOR YOUR AD
THIS COUNTY IS ABOUT
TO MAKE A GOOD
GROWTH. WANT YOUR
SHARE, THEN LI,ST
WITH 1 HE ONES Wl;rH
THE MU Sc i.F ~0 SEll .

Local car, clean vinyl Interior. green fmish , good tires,
rad1o, 351 v.a, automatic, P S and brakes .

Was 53595 Now 13275
Wasl4595. Nowi419S
Was 14695 Now 14295
Wasi4S9S . Nowi429S
Was 13895 Now 13595
Was 13895 .. Now 13695
WaS!1995 Now 11695
Was 12995 . Now $2695
Was 12695 Now 12295
Was $2995 .. Now 12795
Was S1995 . Now S1695
Was $1995 .. Now$1695

Check with us before you buy any car new or used.
We are "The Fnendly Oealer 1 ' We have the
sharpest pencils in town. See or ca ll one of these
friendly salesmen . Ceward Calvert, J. D Story or
Bill Nelson .

CARPENTER , floormg ce1lmg,
panel1ng Pkone 992-2759.
MOBILE Home Repa1r, Elec ,
plumb1ng and keotmg Phone
992·58SB.

1975 CHEVEu.E..................... 54195
Estate Wagon , local l owner car, white radial tires , air
condltion tng, V 8. automatic, power steering and
brakes, radio, dark r ed fini sh, blk . vinyl ln1enor .

1975 CHEVY EL CAMJNo........ ~3995
Cla'ssic:. 350, V·8, automa1 1c, power steering and
brakes, rally wheels, radto, black and &gt;~ery attract ive.

1973 MONTE CARLO .............. s3495
Local 1 owner car, Landau moi:lel, dark blue. blue v!nyl
top, like new tires. v a, automatiC, 'P s. p B, factory
a1r. Really outstanding

1973 VW 2 DR.......................'1695
Clean v•nyl Inferior, good tires. runs fine , r adio.

1973 CAPRICE 4 DR. HT ........ s2995

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS

ELECTRONIC T. V ' CLINIC , New
T V shop, Electron1c T. V Clm1c
Serv•ce ca ll , $5 95 . Color, B &amp; W
antenna srstems stereos etc
572 South Tk1rd, M1ddleport
P~one 992-6306. Carry 111 ond

.:··

Local 1 owner car, blk. vinyl roof. green Interior.
white wa ll tires, a ir. 'automatic, power steering &amp;
brake

1972 AMC HORNET ............... s1695
Sport -a -bovt wagon, clean interior, good tires, radio, 6
cyl., automatic trans .

500 Main St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
Phone 992- 2174

::

•

292 Eng~ne . 15,000 lb .. 2 speed R. axle. 108" ca b to
clean cab, like new 825x20 tires

1971 Chevrolet 1h Ton ....... s1995

Business Services

' 1 owner, good hres, custom cab, 8' Fleets ide

Roofing &amp; Siding
Room A4dimns
Garages
Homes Built

PROFESSIONAL

PHOTOGR~PHY
Aerial
Commercial
Schools Weddings

KEN GROVER

AL TROMM
CONST.
Free Estimates

PHOTOGR~PHY
(614) 985-4155
Ch.. ter. Ollio
10-17-1 mo (Pd)

Work Gucuanteed
742·2128

FREE ESTIMATES
.

SWAIN'S

Blown
Insulation Semces
Floon&lt;•oc-blo
Blown into Willi &amp; AttiCS
STOIIM
WliiDOWS I DOORS
IEPI.ICt,EIIT
WlNIIIIIIS
ALUMINUM

Automatic
Transmission Service

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANTEED

REASONABLE

~DIIIC-SGfFllT

RATES

GUTTEIIUIIIIIN6S

lARRJ,~eDER
Ph. ltl-1193

~10- 1

mo.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
W i n d o·w s
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals

BISSELL SIDING CO.
A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860
Free Estimates
No Sunday Calls Pltaoe
1·30·1 mo

NEW 3 bedroa~ house, 2 baths,
all vlec. , I acre, Middlvport,
close to Rutland Phone 992·

7~81 .~.--;--,-,::c--,--

SMAU form fo r sole, 10~. down,

owner financed, Monroe Coun·
ty, W. Vo. Phone (300) 7723102 0' (300) 772·3227.
COUNTRY farmland w1th 5edud·
ed woods. wot•r and good access in Monroe County , W. Va.
$1,000 down. 1011 (300) 7723102or (304) 772·m7.

Commercial property approx 17
acres, level land. located at
Tuppers Plam• on Ohio. Route
7. P~one (61&lt;) 667-630&lt;.
3 bedrooms. 1/f. bath1, lar"e liv·
lng room, dining room and kitchen, fully carpeted. Phone
992-3129. or 992·543-4 .
59 ocre1, 6 room houH , both,
partty carpeted , two out·
butldings , dug batement ,
one-third tillable , mineral
rights located neor Danville .
Reduced for quick tale,
$:!3.500 Phone 7&lt;2-2766.
NEW 3 bedroom hou1e , built·m
kitchen , bath and 11•, Phone
742-2306 or cantod MilO I . Hut·
_
_ ch11o~R~~· Ohio.
BUILDING SITES , 3 11 ocr;!, cit
8oshan T. P.. water tap , gos
lop, minimum iOII /lmltotions .
Phone 985·&lt;102
2 STORY FOUR Bedroom brtck
home In Middleport Phone
992·3457.
ONE LOT in Syracuse . Phone
992-3714

Reedsville, 0. Ph . J78-6250
1·23·1 mo. Pd .

~LY..fOAM

UPHULSTERY

IN LOVlNG MEMORY OF OUR
BELOVED
LAWRENCE J.
(DUTCH) MILLER MY koorllo 00
full In this my time of 1orrow.
How comforting to know that
Dutch and I bath ha~• so mony
friends, neighbors, business
ouO&lt;:iates and especlotly both
of our families who care so
much ond sa deeply The entire
family thanks: Rev . Damon
Stapleton fOf his message from
GOd to ble11 our hvorls ond to
help them heal a littla fatter,
Opal M. lloyd , wt-lo always
chooses words to lift our hearts
ond minds to o higt\ar plane,
Rev , and Mrs. Glen Carmon
and E~eiyn Miller for thetr
musit to soothe u1 , Tke men
who dug fhe grave and clear&amp;d
the roads. Our Thanks TO·
PHILLIPS FUNERAL HOME lor
their klndne1t and understanding . to those who honored our
lo~ed one br svrvmg as po ll
bearers. to all ot tkose who
sent beautiful flowvrs : to those
who broulijht 1n food ; to those
who ha~e helped fmonciolly; to
those who sent their sympathy
in cordi to mspire us ond to
upl ift our 1pirits, to those of
you who Phoned to let us know
you care to those who ko~e offered many prayers in our
befalf. And above all, thanks to
God for His love tkot has
shielded us and will susto1n us
m the fu ture. Thanks from kis
/o&gt;Jing wife. Be,_erly D1an4;t and
Dutch's most precious possession his son M1ke From h1s
dear mother Gladys cOnng
brothers and sister Russ, Jack ,
Evelyn and Ardella; Mather and
father In-lo w: brothers and
Sister -in -law, neices ond
nephews

1974 Chevrolet 8' Aeetside .. !3295
V-8, std trans., radio, mirrors, R. step bumper , I

Kingsbuay Home
Sales Inc.
We handle only lhe besl in
manufactured housing .
Double wides &amp; modular
homes by Skyline &amp; Fuqua .
Homes In&lt; .
1100 E. Ma~n
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·7034
Hrs. 9:00a.m.
To Dusk

sr.

1-9-n 1 mo.
ECONOLINE HOME
lNSULATlON, lNC .
1815 Washington BIYCI .
Belpre, Phone (614) 4237564 day. or 992-6039
evenings.
Blown '" fiberglass walls
and att1cs. 20 Pd. Savings
on Vinyl and Steel Sidings.
Replacement and storm
windows. 33 years actual
expe1rence.
Financing Available
C. A. Newman, Pres.
1-25-1 mo , pd

1971 Ford Crew Cab Pickup...~1495
a.4 Ton, 4 speed trans

1970 Ford Crew Cab Pickup}1295
a.4 Ton , 4 speed trans .

New Chevy Van ConveiSions
New Chevy Mini Homes
Chevy Short Sporty Pickup
. Chevy Sport Van
TERRAPIN 'The Swingin' Turtle"

Hurry In For AGood DEAL.

OMEROY MOTOR CO.

PASQUALE Electncol
.446 2716doyorn•ght

Pomeroy
Evenings Until&amp; p .m.

sizes.

Velv,ts, nylon prints,
htrcutOns, vinyl solids, and
fancy prints, acc:essories.

DIRECT -FARRIC SALES
-- m M.T.istreet
Pt. Pleasanl

Ph. 675-3469
9:30·5 :00 Dally
Till8:000 Fridays

NOTICE! ! !
STRIPPING, REPAIRING
REFINISHING &amp;
UPHOLSTERING
Phone
MODERN CHEMICAL
614-992-2798
AI 100 K•rr St.
Pomeroy, 0.
1 17 1 mo

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

Located in Langsville
Box 28-A
Rutland , Ohio H175
· Ph . (6141742-2409
We Den~er
12.22-4 mos

12 GAUGE SAVAGE pump
shotgu n, vent rlbl , double
s1gh ts. Sell for $100 . Phone
2&lt;7- .
1971 MOBILE HOME, 60' • 12', 2
bedrooms , very good cond1·
lion , pay off. 19M Chevelle
Conv .. 327 4 speed , $750 870
Remi ngton. 12 go., 2 barrels ,
30" · 3&lt;" lull. $200 Coli (6U)
667·3866 betwven 5·30 and 8·00
evtW'IIngs.

GOOD QUALITY corn ted freezer
beef, approx. 1000 lbs. Steers
EAR- CORN , $2.00 bu . Hove &lt;OO· USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
Will deli~er to your proceu•ng
buohelo Phone (61•) 667-3961
Timberfack.240 Skidder , Hough
plant. Phone 843-2111
before 9 a.m R Cheval1er.
Skiddor Model S7B, David
brbwn Tractor loader Model TWO HR78steel rodial1now tires,
GOOD EAR Com . Phone (61&lt;)
very . good . Harold Brewer,
990; 60' 8ush Metallurgical
667-35.44 or contact Paul L1fe,
long Bottom , Ohio Phone
(kipper; Contact Don Graves
on Succe11 Road near Tuppers
985·3554.
Phone (61•) 596·&lt;769
Plains.
- -·-"-.-- TWO HOLSTEIN Hereford Helfars
to freshen . Also , 2 Holstein
Nl fiJ A
Helftr calves. Phone 843 -2353.
3 NICE HOLSTEINS
Phone
O.e good usod Gibson sldt\'ddlh \!HIINIR'
992·5W .
by-5lde refrlgerotor ... SlSO
ANTIQUES"-:'I-wo~l::'lr-oo71do
:--c:-ho~lr-s,
New
Co -Op
. w•ter
Let PvmtrOy Landmork
dishtl,
Winchester
Smgle
bor.
soH1n &amp; condHion your
softtt1trs, model VC. SVI.
rei
37
shotgu"·
desk
,
straight
Wiler and 1 Co-op woter
o/tly S279.9S
bock chain, R.R. lattern , old
soHtntr, Model UC-XVI .
O.e good chlln Homehlt
watches. Phone 992 3098 .
Chlln Sow . . . . . . SllO.OO
1
Now O.ly 1
STEREO, new am·fm fm sfereoSave SSO.OO on 1 new
radla combination 1129.95 or
Let us ltlt your wotor
Holpoinl Rtlrlgerolor.
term
t. Call 992·3965.
Frtl.
---~~~~~~~--~-­
COMPLETE CERAMIC Outlll,
everything to start your awn
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr,
bu~l neu . Phone 992-2718 after
991
-2181
·
Phono
Phont "2-1111
:~~m~------------

FOR SALE

279,95

Z:~k":Jea':~~·

Pomeroy Landmark

DIRECT
COMPANY

DISTRIBUTORSHIP
PROFIT ,
MARK-UP 100%
VERY HIGH
VOLUME
BUSINESS
Comp;my matll~llnQ dltltCI
I tom Natrona I Manutacll.. rer
w11h 12 year recoro ot suCcess
1n,,4 BILliON dOtl~r lnduslry
Sll"k$local OISirlbulor

NO SELLING!
ACCOUNTS SECURED
BY COMPANY
~UNOAEOS ­

AVAILABLE IN T~IS
AREA
'tou may ~1111111e tatiOf'l' ano
131k IO Olor 011Jflbi.JU)IS
IMMEDIATE INCOME
WIT~ MONEY BACK
RE-PURCHASE
AGREEMENT
Men or Women. full or
pan time Thts •s not a
franchise
CASH REQUIRED.
$4250
For tree b1ochur1 till
l.WO.fi•J-5596 (loll""
anvhme\ 01 Hfld Nwne,
Allllru~ ;~nd lelephone
Num~t to
'

WELCO INC.
~tO Plal:a West BuiiCing
L1nte Rock . 4rktnsae
722QS

SLEEPING rooms for rE!ht, Gall1o
Hotel

·-=--~-:-~~~-

OFFICE space, downtown , 514 Se ·
cond Ave. 4.46·0008
TRAILER SPACE, large lot on Rt 35
near shopping area $50 mo
Phone 111•6·1909
BRADBURY FURN , A.PTS, Adults
only, no pets , dep req 729
2nd A~e , Ph 446-0957
2 BEDROOM for n Mob1le Home in
Crown C1ty, Ph 256-647ll
1 or 2 Bedroom Apt 1n Rio
Grande, gas heat call 245 5386
3 BR MH , good condition , private
lot, located near HMC on 160 ,
no pets , Ref Req Ph 4-46·2995
4 room house at Gallipol is, Ph
446 2876
TREAT C~
RU'-'G:CS:-R:-I·G~-:c~::T.-cT::-H::E:-:;
Y'II be o
delight If cleaned w1th Blue
lustre Rent electriC shampooer
$1 Centro I Supply Co

TARA
TOWNHOUS
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townshuses
1112 Baths
Pay Only One Utility
Addison. Ohio
For Information
Call Shirley Adkins

367-7250

-"-~-

DEAD Stock removed No charge.

THURMAN HOUSE, ont1ques , Fur·
mture stnppmg, repon an·
dref inlshed County Rd.8 oH35.
~rvtii !Y._• IIage 245· 9-479
INCOME TAX
RETURNS
PREPA RED,
STATE - AND
FEDERAL , DAY OR EVENINGS.
15 rrs.' Exp. Wolter Wh1te,

~5050 --:-----:--cc--

8RING YOUR MOWERS &amp; tillers to
avo1d o surv rusk . All types ot
saws &amp; tools sharpened 562
4th Avd , Ph 446-156'2
NOW TILL Feb. 11 1977.
.
10c Free goods on all Vernon Ex ·
dus1ve Specialty •tErms calen·
don , and promotional giffs ,
Call Dh::k Roberts after 5 pm
61•·446-7612

NEWGMC
Truck Headquarters
l- 1970VW
1974 If, T GMCP•ckup
1973 IJ, T Chev PU
l'n4 1/ 1 T GMC P1ckup
J&lt;ns 11, T Chev PU
1971 Che\1 Impala
1973 1h Chev P1ckup
1974 1h T GMC PU
1975 Ford Musta ng ll
1972 1/1 T Ch.ev p• ckup
1- 1973 1h T Cke'll PU
1- 1975 three·fourlh T Chev PU
SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS, INC
133PmeSt
446-2532

---73 MACH
0

I MUSTANG 70 Olds
Cutless Suprem e 69 Newport

Chrysler. Ph 388·8'-'6:-50'--:----:-:-1969 (AMARO , good cond , Ph
446·0212
1968 PLYMOUTH FURY I11, 2 dr
hordfop runs exc P S , auto
trans, S17 5. Pk 245c·5-'5-'-35-:----:1971 PlY . FURY Ill. Good co nd
$750 , Ph . 367·05•1
1970 MACH ONE Mustang , 1969
Opo l Cadet, both good cond
Ph 245-506
74 LEVI GREMLIN X auto, PS ,PB
LOST .
BLAC~ .
M~LE ,
V 8 2 new snow t1 res , e~~:c
SCHNAUZER', SPRI NG VALLEY
cond . Ph. 4.c•:.:6..:0=
0 88'---'--~
AREA. NAME JlGGS REWARD
CALL"6·9403

Happy Birthday

-----

Beth Salisbuay

JUNK auto ond scrap metal. Pk

:JaB-8776.

EXPERIENCED
COAL , ilmesfone. and calctum FOR SAlE Rabbits, dressed or on
chlo ride and calcium brine for
loot for rneat or pels Also , 50
dust con trol and spec1al mixmg
go! drums . Phone992 2513.
salt for forme rs. Mom Street
Pomeroy , Oh1o or phone 992 SOFA BED and recliner lor sale.
Phone 992 7!178
3891.
COAL for sale , Open 6 days per REDUCE SAFE &amp; Fast with Go8ase
Tobleh &amp; E-Vop "water pills"
week and evenings. For further
Nelson Drug'
mfor mahon call (6 14) 367-7338
APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD H &amp; N DAY Old or storted leghorn
pullets Both floor or cage '
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE
Pft. !9Z.Z174
PgroWn ovoiloble Poultry Hous· ...
WILKESVILLE . (614)669 378S
ing ond Automation , Modern
FULLER Brush Products for sale
Poultry 399 W Main, Pomeroy
Phone992-3410
992·211&gt;4
. CAMPER, $600 Also , horse
lraller1 $450. Phone (614) 698·
3290.
POlATOES . C W Proff1tt ,
ANY PITCH
Portland , Oh 1o
Phone
6&lt;].2254 .
At-lY SIZE

1 &amp; 2 bedroom unfurni shed,
immediate occupancy.
Ph . 446-1599

Serv1ca

FABRit'- .
sota, cna~r Cilshtons,

For
-mattresses, paddin9. Ideal
for campers. V1netr of

--

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APARTMENTS

JI\NUARY CLEARANCE SALE ,
BARGAlNS GARLOR , CAMP
CONLY STAR CRAFT SALES, Rl
62N, of Po1nt Pleasant

2 BEDROOM parltally furnished,

12 x 60 1973 Parkewood mobile
home . underpinmng porch and
awni ng . $6800
Phone

-~~1..:2•.;;·--~-----

"Good Neighbor"
for Ill ~r iiiiUIIIICI

nttd1 IH,

c.t&lt;.Snowden
24 Statt Street
Giillipolis . Ohio
Phone 446-4290

IM ' EDIA TE OPENING-ELECTRIC
· 'STEM MANAGER. System
s rves 4800 metvrs Cool fired
generating plonl
Requ1re
m1n1mum of ten year$ ex·
perience w1th at least three
yeors in responsible super·
v1sory position Salary com ·
mensurate wit h capabilities
ond exper~ence Wr1te Box 465
'Gallipolis Dally Tribunv.
OFFICE CUSTODIAN - Dispatcher ,
spilt sh1ft. Partllme good
working cond itions, vxcvllenl
fnnge benefils
BUCKEVE
RURAL ELECTRIC COOP, 143
Thi rd
OWNER OPERATOR wanted ,
Unlon•d , 2 way haul . Call
Broda Mtller 1·61111·532-9731
MALE ·FEMALE
If you gre Interested 1n earnmgs
like these, LM $401 96, 1·8·77.
199 70 , 1·15·77 , 107.79, 1-22-77,
M.M, $4«.76 , 1·8-77, 17' 33,
1· 15-77, 256 24,1 ·22·77 For
personal Interview, or,ply ol
lowe's Motor Inn , Pt P eosont,
W. Vq. Mon. Feb 7th, 7 pm

QUALITY
ENGINEER
Robbins · &amp; Myers Inc. -has an
immediate opening for an individual
experienced in sampling plans,
warranty, and production problem
solving and quality methodology. A
degree in lndu,strial Mechanical or
Electrical Engineering is preferred
with a solid quality control
background. Excellent salary and
benefits. Applicants should send
resume and salar·Y history to Mr.
Donaldson at P.O. Box 502,
Gallipolis, 0. 45631.
An Equal Opportunity Employer

M- F

VS REALTY

REALTOR

LIGHT houJekeepmg roam , Pork
Centro! Hotel.

8EGIN your sp r•ng cleonmg by
hov ~ng your carpets cleaned by
besf method known Remove
all the d~rt Make your carpet
look new ogo1n For free
est•ma'e coll379-2b82

-- --

RUSSELL WOOD

LOW weekly and monfhly rates at
Libbr Hotel , -446· 1743.

SWEEPER and sew1ng mach1ne
repair. parts and supplies P1ck
up and delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner '1, mile up Georges
Creek Rd Ph 446-0294

" Your Chevy Dealer "
992-2126

SlEEPING Rooms, weekly rotvs .
_ !ark Centro I Hotvl.

-

Coll2•5·5514

than 16.000 miles, moss qreen finish

Quality Work At
Reasonable Rates

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
''You'll Like Our Quality Way
Of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Tii6:00-Til5p.m. Sat.

76 Sunb~rd
75 Buic:k lesabre
75 Buick Royal
75 Olds Cull ass
74 Pontiac Ftrebird
74 Camaro2 Dr.
74 Plymouth Duster
73 El Camino
73 Ford Mach I
7!0pel GT
72 Chrysler Newport
73 Chev . lmp . Cusl

P steering.

1975 FORD TORINO 4 DR..... .'2895

SPRING. PRICE RAISE ·

~~---~~--~~­

~~emoney.

Grn. llnlsh , good tires. v.8, automatic,
radio, fadory air

BUY NOW&amp; BEAT THE

EXCAVATING. dozer batkhoe
and ditchvr. Charles R Hal·
f1eld, Sack Hoe Serv1ce ,
Ruth:md, Ohio . Pkone 742·2008.
SEPTIC Systems installed by
hcensed installer
Shepard
Confroctors. Phone 7.42-2409
SEPTIC ' TANKS cleaned . Modem
Son•tahon, 992-3954

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex ·
cova t1ng , septiC systems
dozer, backhoe, dump truck
l1mestone , grovel , blocktop
pov1ng, Rt 143 Pkori'e I (6 14 )
698·7331

1976 CHEVEUE MALIBU CPE. s3395

FEBRUARY
USED CAR SALE

p

No 190 - Country store
and home , has 4 ad1oinmg
lots, living quarters has 10
rooms and all equipment
and inventory In store.
under present owner far 35
years, wants to retire
Price $33,000

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Br11nch

BUD McGHEEManager

446-1066
Here's your opportu nily to
go in busmess tor yourself
we have a retail store
w1lh act1&gt;Je bus~ness , plus
two rentals, Si tuated an a
80'lC150' tot w1fh•n the C1 t y
of Galllpolt'i Call for more
mformahon
Bedroom Home , 3 car
garage , s•tuated on 6 22
acres IUSI outsrde the City
of Ga ll ipOlis C1ty water
and sewer , larg e !1\11 ng
room , wood bu rn ing
t •ret:Jiace 1n basement
Pnce · upper S20's.

,-4

5 Acres Vacant Land. R10

Grande area ca ll for more
•nformat 1on
'
House and tot , nea r R•o
1m m ed 1at e
Grande,
for
only
possess •on
17,SOOOO
2 lots , w1lh well wa ter
R 10 Grand e. call for
more mfor mall on

n~a r

3 Bedroom, carpet ed home,

tenced . •n yard, F-A nat
gas furnace, •n Ka nav
area S21.DOO 00

B(!it!JIItUI Ranch Style, 3'"'
bedroom , brrck . 2 car
frn1 shed garage, Iota ted on
Watson Rd , GallipOliS Clly
S-0 . heat pump , rural
wat e r . cen tral sewage
co ll ect 1on , new 11
lm
med1ate po ssession Pr•c e
$.ol4,000
Com tortable
R et.remcnt
Home , sm;;~ l l
lol , 3
bedroom , r;;~nch style .
con nected garage . Located
on V•nlon co urt , Wllh.n the
c1 ty of Gall iPOliS Pnce
s18 ,000
Large, Renovated Farrn
Hom e, located in Addison
Twp w1 lh la r ge barn and
severa l other outbuildings
86 acres 1n complete tarm
Gas well on property
prov1des tree natural gas
heat approx•mately 400 lb
loba cco ba se Pr•ce $53.000
Cam pa ct and Com fort~bl e
3 Bedroom, carpeted hom e,
appra.ctmatcly &lt;1 m1les
north of Holte r Hosp•tal ,
adtacent to Rt 160 , price
517 ,000 Also . rental m ob 1le
ho'me .wadable for $9,600 .
R emo del ed Home On
Eastern Ave., natural gas ,
crly water Price $10.500
Low Ma 1ntenance. Ranch
Style. 3 bedroom . carpeted
hom e. Situated 1n the
Meadow Look S D on
100 'x l50 ' .mproved lo t
GallipO!IS C1ly S 0 Only 5
m•nules tr o m Gall•polis
Shoppm g D•strr cl Pn ce
S&lt;l5 ,000
Nestled W1lh1n A Wooden
Area on J Acres of Land
adtacenl to Orchard Hill
Rd . This 4 or 5 bedroom
home wou ld be the pnde of
any ow ner Two., wood
burn 1ng f1replaces grace
both the living room and
fam ily room Heated and
cooled by lhe modern
econom •c al h eat pump
system Ga llipolis C1ty S D
con crete dnveway cam
p lete ly surrounds s111a ll
pond al th e en trance to th e
prop erty Shown by ap
po•nlment only
Call Wood Insurance &amp;
Real Estale 446-1066
Evemngs Russell Wood
446-4618
Ken Morgan 446-0971

Two · Bay Bus•nes~ Butldtng
in Ewingtofl, alan~ Rt 160
Buy now for 515 ,000
91' Frontage Along Rt. 7 1n

Crown City, 21ols 1n Crown
M&amp;nor S 0 Pn ce 55 ,000
B Acres

of Land below
Eureka , su•lable for mob1le
home S1le, rural water .
wel l, mablle home hook up
Prrce SS,JOO
JO A(res of Level to Rol l•ng
Land , frontage on Rt 160
and F loyd Clark Ret near
Parler Rural waler ad
1acent to properly C:all for
more mformat 1on

for in\lestment
Lana in &lt;;all•a Co 'l.,, w e
have 56 acres . fenced , 20
acre.s of t1mber , pl enty of
road frontage , off Rt 160,
near Vinton Price 525 ,000
Lo~,king

Or Invest 1n 10 Acres 1n
Morgan Twp, road fron
tar;~e on
Rowlesvd le Rd
Pi.ce · S17.000
We Hav e Only One 150'x 96'
lot on L1ddy Ho llow Rd far
$4,000
Dwelling and Contents of
home lo ca ted on MadiSOn
Ave, plu s a 26'.c32' block
budd 1ng , wit hi n th e Cl l)l ot
Gallipolis Pr. ce $20,000
R1ght Now 11!! S20 ,00000
wt11 buy a modern , one
tloor . 3 bedroom . al l
electr.c home m Gall ipolis
Cily
School
Disl11cl
S11 ual ed on 120'x7S' lot
Carpeted except for kit
chen and bath
new.
co nd rt•on, rural water.
central sewage ro tl ect•on,
hlttckloo streets
·
161 Acres of Tillable Land ,
plus
com fortable
5
bedroom farm house , barn ,
toaf•ng shed, ma chinery
s hed . sdo. mdk ho use ,
several other outbu•ldlngs
Silua led in Huntington
Twp near Tycoon Lake
This •S a rollmg fo level
ta rm . excellen t for crops
and pa s ture~ Good fence.
easy to i!ccess , su rr ounded
by coun ty road system An
e~ce 11ent
pur chase for
e1ther th e futu re farm cr, or
lhe 1n&gt;Jesto r Call for more
•nfnrmat1on

In B1dwe1t, 4 bedroom . 2
story , c arp et ed home ,
storm windows and dOors ,
large garden area , good
locat1on on corner lo t
Pr •ce $22 ,000
In B1dwell. 2 bedroom
hOm e Situated on 217 acres .
newly 1nstalled hot water
heat Bf' d F A furnac'e
Pr ice onlv. 514 ,000
l Bedroom Home lo cated
on ChdiiColhe Rd , w•thl n
c1 ty of GallipoliS , natural
gas F A furnace , ci ty
water and sewer , 11 1 baths,
basement , pr1ce
ful l
$26,900

Two Bedroom Cottage , .n
c •ly , on Spruce Street.
Natura l gas fuel. ~rty water
and sewer Within easy
walk•ng d1stence to stores
Nice ar ran gement for
Srflgle person , or couple .
Pr1cea $11 ,00000

COUNTRY HOME WITH PIZZA BUSINESS -. At '
Mllke an excellent opportunity fa 1
appo,ntmenl to see th is 4 som e bus• ness m 1nde•
\lr old br.Qk located about person Tl'l •s large corne
7 mi frO"m HMC . Th is 101 W1ttr a modern br lc
beallfy 1S Situat ed on 104 build•ng •s a good place h
acres of land in the city Sl1'lrl Clln be bought will
or w.thout equipment Cal
school d•!l w1th J~ ml
fron tage on
Raccoon for appo1ntment
Creek
Other
spec 1l!l THURMAN S15 . 000
features are 4 SR's, 3112 Good 'SOlid 6 rm and bath
baths , fam•IY rm W1lh we -home teat ures formal
fireplace . format dm1ng din 1ng rm , large • LR and .
rm , form&amp;! entrllnce . k•tchen 3 .BR's , 01 1 fur .1
laundry
rm ,
large rta ce well or city water ,
screened 1n pat•o and 2 car
new ai um•num Sld mg and
garage . Over 5100.000
fla t lol
4 BEDROOMS IN TOWN N1ce comfortab le J1;, story TAVERN - Operated by
family for 40 yrs '
home on Evan s Height s same
offers room to spare for Good equ 1pmen I , excellent'
loc&amp;tion terms and rn ~ ome
, your growing faml ly
available
to
Where else ca n you get a ftgures
quat1f1ed buyer -call for
fu ll basernenl , fam ily rm
wi th gas ftreplace . large appomlmenl
k1tchen and dinmg area far
EDGE OF TOWN - Good 2
only S25,500
BR
home is nart1lllly
JUST THE RIGHT SIZE 1 remode!P SQ\P a n1ce1
Looking for someth.ng not · ~•!Chen &amp;1
•aundry
too small to live 1n &amp; not too rm , gas f
_.. ..,, concrete
large to mamta1n'l See H11s dr.&gt;Je and new sewage
lo vely ran ch style home sys tem Bargain pnced a.t
featur1ng 3 bdrms , p , Sl'l ,OOO
ba ths , d1ning . family
combo , garage EnJOY the FIFTH AVE - $18 000
economy of gas heat &amp; lhe bargain prtced 6 rm and
com torr of cen tra l a~r All ' bath sl ucco fea tur es 2 Br's
for only SJ2,900
up and '1 dawn , large back ·
porch and almost new s leel
VACANT
LAND
IN
garage
HARRISON TWP - 11 5
BAR BUSINESS &amp; HOTEL
acres rollin g land , mo st ly
~ Be yaur own boss w1th
wooded . tob
base 8o
th•S once •n a llt elt me in
m•neral r•ghts mcludcd
vestment Lo ca led on a
$26.000
co rner lot •n Middleport
Call for more informat.on
BEEF CATTLE COUN ·
TRY - 300 acres mostly CITY - VACANT LAND clea n r olling paslore land , ApprOlii S'h acres runn•ng
fenced &amp; tross fenced 3 tram Fourt h Ave
to
barns . tob base, old hom e, Ch •ckamau-ge
Creek,
S250 per acre
S6 ,500 Don 't wa lt to buy.
buy and wa•t
BEST
BUY
IN
RIO GRANDE THE
ONE YOU'VE
BEEN
GALLIPOLIS If you
want to liv e neer down . WAITING FOR - Lovely
brick ranch offers O&gt;~er 2100
town , be th e fi rst to see th•s
sq ft of mod ern i1VIfl9
lovely rem odeled 2 story
This attreo~"· R home wh1ch mcl ude s 3 BRs , 2
feat ures
Siding , baths , comp lete k•tchen
w •t h microwave o&gt;~en ,
modern ki
... , n1rge LR,
din1ng rm, fam ily rm , formal d1n1ng room, for-mal
laundry. W-W carpet , part foyer, lerge family room
basement &amp; garage . Won't w ith fireplace , heat pump ,
la rge patio and 2 cer
be on the market long at
garage
m.5oo.
BUILDING OR MOBlLE
CHEAPIE - Perf ec t for
HOME SITE - Approx . 5
weekends, IS acrPc; of land .
acres about 13 r'ni from
town L&amp;nd 1S fla t with
·
and 1 ~
about 11 ~
woods y,
age on
frontage on a BT rd and
L•t11e Ra.
.... reek plus
county water l!vailable .
an old L s lory home,
55,000
$1 1,900
MOBtLE HOME PARK Small, close to town. good
tncome, euv to lake ure
RIO GRANDE AREA of, call for more 1ft·
Approx 53 acres flat &amp;
tormat1on .
r oll•ng land w1th lots of
VACANT
LAND
IN
fronlage on us 35 A good
RACCOON TWP
100
1nvestmen t
acres prl,.~
·
i275 per
acre Ver
,., about
1
1;, tll lablt
'"' / 2 woods
NEW liSTING
10 rrl
w•th fron tage on Raccoon
out , 3J 1 acreS lev el I!Ind .
Creek .
lot s of rd fron tnge. nice
comfor:tab ie 6 rm !nd bath
NEEDED - ·
cotrage W1lh new roof. 01 1 LISTINGS
WE
ADVERTISE
furnace and county water ,
NATIONALLY - WE BUY
S20,000
- SE~~- TRADE .
EVERYTHING ~

LET THE
GALLERY SELL
YOUR PROPERTY .
WE MAI&lt;E BUYER AND

SELLER
CONTACTS
THROUGH
OTHER
B-USINESS
EN
TERPRISES AS WELL AS
THE
REAL
ES TATE
BUSINESS .
NEW LISTING
Complete ly remodeled 3
bedroom redwood frame
1nsld e city lrm1ts Home •s
only 15 yea rs old. bu t yet
h as all new copper
plumbing and a 3 year old
100 .000 B T U furnace
system Utll 1ties are very
reasonable ' 7'~ 10' meta I
building on concr·~He as an
&amp;dded ex ira All this pr iced
far I he low price of 521 ,000
call m today for more
detai ls.
NEW LISTING
85 Acre farm wllh very n ice
3 bedroom I')Omt:l which has
been remodeled recently
Outs1de buildings and
fences are in QOQd con
dillon some equ,pment
and livestock go with sale
Coal &amp;nd m rnere t rlghfs ere
untouched . All of this is
setting in the Gallipolis
School District and can be
bcwght for the bargain
pr)te at $43 ,000 Call In for
more details today

IF YOU'RE PLANNING
TO SELL. CALL US , WE
HAVE
A
LIST
OF
PROSPECTIVE BUYERS .
AND WE ' RE
ANXIOUS
TO SERVE YOU .

TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN
BUYING OR SEWNG REAL ESTATE

IM MACULATE'-Y kept 3
bedroom 1n Gallipolis City
Sc hoo l District
near
hospitaL shopp ing center ,
and short drive from
downtown Jus,t picture
yG1.HUif sitting In front ot
your fir e pla ce In thi!
home's b ea u ti ful famll~
roam Call in torta'r' tor
mort details.
OTH~R COUNSE~ORS :

CROWN CITY
Joe Crans
256·1456
Nltion•l Advertising wtth
~llery .DI Homes.

-'-----4

(WORLIYS LARGEST REAL ESTATE SALES
ORGANIZATION)

BROCHURES TO lHEIR CUSTOMERS
FOR OVER 50 YEARS.
1

LIST NOW WllH ACOMPANY WHOSE
EXPERIENCE AND REPUTATION
SPEAKS FOR ITSELF.
STOP BY THE LOCAL OFFICE AT

GREEN ACRES - Lovely
bedroom ranch with
family room , nice bath
w1th snower , r&amp;nQe In
kllctien , b~autiful new
carpet S26,900
IN TOWN Good in ·
vestment or commercial
site, 2 houses on &amp;full city
lot Priced reduced to
126.500
IN TOWN - Older br ick
name nes 6 rooms. bath .
full basement. very nice
lot, gOOd I::IUV for $19 ,500,
owner will hel p financ~
10 ACRES - Good form
w!th a 4 bedroom hOuse,
'"'"w bath . forced air fur
nac:~t , large barn &amp; garage,
t.,rc;~e taba~co base. Call lor
more infor,matl~n
WE BUY . SELL
(,\R TO AOE

Fuller

!:L•e_J_~~·'••n
'

&lt;146-432~

2S6-67•o
~"· 3121

q Wetherllo\t liJ 446-414•

Inside the city lim 1ts and priced lh the low $20's That's
hard to bel 1eve. It's ready far occupancy ngh t now '

you are Interested 1n th1s home, you had better call
now! It w ill never be any cheaper Located near HMC

Compare with ather homes in the ne1ghborhood and
you w1 II see that the home at 288 LeGrande Dr is one of
the best buys on the local real estate market today
Full basement, n•ce flat lot, and a well built home Call
now for details.

'.
•
•

If youare s1ncere about buymg a trueiy fme home, thiS
very likel y could be it . Formal entrance , formal
dining, ex:cept 1onal kitchen , three large bedroom s,
s unken living room w1 th fireplace, twa bath s Superbly
finished basement w1th f ireplace , bu 1lf-1n bookshelves.
play room , kitchen with laundry area . bar room {thts
you must see) Plus extra bedroom, We will show this
fine home to qua/1f1ed buyers on ly
Build to suit yourself on 3 1 4
acres m Add1son Townsh•P 18 Portsmouth Rd needs a
new owner and 1f could be
,The pr 1ce is right
you 1 ~uv now and save UiS

HAS OFFERED PHOJO.ILLUSTRATED

ranch
w•
ms. 1'1,.. baths . w1fe
oO&lt;&gt;rO''"d ki tchen. d ivided
• ~.•.s~'~-''n!; 1 car ga rage
"
r transferred anti
•~·""'" to sel l quickly . Low
of S3•.500

NEW LISTING - Good
frame home, 3 bedrooms,
balll , full basement. large
lo t Located close to town
Ke lton Rei S18 ,500

T

NOTICE

IF YOU DON ' T SEE THE
PROPERTY YOU WANT
lN THIS AO , CA~L. WE
MAY BE ABLE TO FIND
lT FOR YOU .

NEW LISTING Nice
ranch w1th J bedrooms .
la rge k itchen , t1in1ng room ,
nat ur a l gas h eal with
central alr, 1 car garage ,
'
k shop Immediate
y e~:.·:~~s~~ · located &amp;t 205
t
or tor S29 ,500

...

RANNY BLACKBURN,
BRANCH MANAGfR

STROUT REALTY
BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER&gt;
855SECONDAVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHfO
Office
446-7900
Home
446-1049

v..

On Rt. S81
mile from
I
corporat ion One
acre lot with a J BR home, large LR, eat in kitchen. full
basement with 2 ca r garage. natural gas heat Hookup
for mob1te home on back of lot . Call for an appomtment
now

514 SECOND ~VE, AND ASK
FOR A FREE CATALOG.

THOUSANDS OF VALUES N~TIONWIDE
~BSOLUTELY NO OBLIGATION
514 SECOND

61~

~VE.

lANNY BLACKBURN
BRANCH MANAGE._

•

We have the lookers, l1st
w1th VS Realty today
Our listings are growing, and we thank you very much.
Perhaps you do not see your future home in our ad, if
this Is the case, call VS Realty anyway , we will be
happy to assist you 1n ftndmg 1us1 the right home far
you.

LIST WITH VS REALTY TODAY. We devote full
lime to selling your property. Real estate is our
on~ business.

PHONE ~52-ANYTIME
428 2nd AVE. GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

19 ACRE FARM. with 7 room
HOuse both on Lincoln P1ke ,
NOrthup, Oh io , small barn ,
~~~~
Sl~~--~~~­
outbldg. Ph. 256-1318
WANT TO OWN BUT NEED
' OWNER LEAVING AREA 3 Br .
HELP IN FINANCING?
brick. Lg. living room and dm ·
Nice 2 bedroom form home
ing room , 2 baths , :il cor
which hos been completely
r•modeled recently large born ' garage Lg . lot , Ph . 446·1892.
in good condition , oil this sit- 3BEDROOM HOME $17,750. II
ting on approximately 17 acres
you're ready to build that new
near town. Mobile home renta l
home on your lot. We may have
spot on property Good Investjust what your fomily wonts. A
ment Jenta l opportumty Call
well buill , carpeted HOUSE on
446· 1~9after6p m
a solid foundation. For more In·
formation. Ph 379-2617 or sn
Potrlot Home Builders , Patnot,
Ohio

VA·FHA-30 yr hnoncing , Ireland
Mortgage , n E State Atkens,

----~-

NEWllV . RM. SUITE SALE
SET OF WHEELS, 15" Nlkl Thomp ·
SAVE UP TO 33~. - All NEW
son mags , Chev. $60. also WANTED 10 RENT OR LEASE WITH
SUlTES REDUCED. NEW EA. UV .
firewood for sole, Ph . 446-6639
OPT10N TO BUY , Iorm, 2Qio 50
RM. SUITES. REG. $299.95 .
,
acres,
li~eable hou te , 3 Br. and
NOW $199.95, NEW EA. UV . LlKE - NEW. SPANI~ . LIVING
bCith, outbuilding, 10 to 15
ROOM SUlTE, ONE CHAlR AND
RM SUITE . (ONLY ONE) REG
ocres tillable. balonce pa1ture
One ~ ft. couch, Orlg Prtce
$499 .95, NOW $349 95 . RICE'S
or woodo, Ph 1 ·803-~0756
$750 .. will sell for $300. axe.
NEW AND USEO FURN . SS. 2nd
after 5:30 PM. ,__
COIIrt,
Ph4~6
-37
12
AVE. PH •U.·952~
- ...,
_.,......._...,...__
-

---·---.

-~--

-

______ __

~

•

I '

�Of-The SUnday TinJeii.SenUnel,Sundav. Feb. 6, 1977

TYPES of butld•ng mgt•nals

block brick sewer pipes wm
dows

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

hnt•ls

etc

2~5

5121 after 5
US!D "PPLIANC!S

~

-

.

: . :.

dryer

-..

tSlh Locust St.
Gilllpolls, Ohio
446-3636
DON ' T
WAIT
T1
' PLANTIN ' TIME " let us
show you this farm now
wfti.le the price- is nght' 75
ICres, fenctd puture wtth
pond some tillable land ,
timber . ltuneral rights ,
1400 lb
tob11cco bue
(shcks lncl ), lg barn ,
good 2 story hort,1e.
bllclltop road Hannan
Trace Schools Otst U7 ooo

EATHTAKING V'tEW
OhiO R 1ver and
l•urr·ounding area from the
of 1/l •s 2 story 3
Formal DR
gas forced a1r turn
but lots of prtvacy 1

Must Be Sold This Month
Mov ing out of state and
earnestly des1res to sell
qu ick ly 1 have never
walked Into a hOmt where 1
was more pleasantly
surprised
This r~chly
appo1nted 4 bedroom Earl y
Amer ic an homt hliS ha d
the touch of an '"expert 1n a
recen t remodeling
&amp;
redecorating It s elegant
charming
and
so
pleasant ly homey you
won't want to leeve It
Family room 1ncludes w B
fireplace
the
wife
approved kitchen (range &amp;
refrlg }, modern gas
turMce Pr1ced well uncte r
market

Outstlndlnt Bug1in
Owner must sell and has
bargam priced this home
and 11 beautiful acres
Very , very ni ce 1 yr old 3
bedroom heme
Iaroe
fam1 IV room 1111 baths
w1fe approved kitchen
(range dish w l, 2 cH
garage and full basement
Be sure to see th 1s home
before vou buy because we
know its the best bargatn
on the market

Bi§lger Than It Looks
Pnced Under UO,OOO
We think this Is one of t he
best you 11 see tor the
money Well kept~ yr old
ranch wtth low heating
bil ls a large 11vl ng room
prefty k it che n
large
fa m dy roo m Ill? ba ths
Super location - ovt!r an
acre of ttat land offers goOCI
garden spot and country
atmosphere

524 , 500.

NT MINDED~
court w•th d
y new mobile homes
water natural gas
t co n"
Gallta
noun'" s fas test grow~ng
Act ua l 1ncome
orl&gt;ufrHes prov e 1h•s .. a
•
'n vest men 1

Bonnie Stutes
Associate
1Ph. Home 446-2885

One of the Aru '1
Finest
Th1s 1S your mvltation to
VISit another world A
brand new 2 story 3
bedroom colonia l with all
the charm and elegance
you have ever dreamed
about Central hall formal
li ving and dmlng rooms
attract 1ve well pla nned
kitchen- most handsome
w b fireplace 3 large
bedrooms, 2 bathS , over
s1zed 2 car garage plus a
huge flat lot

COLONIAL BI-LEVEL
This home Is only 3 yrs old and has been
Immaculately kept Features 4 bedrooms. 2'12
baths nice large Jiving room with w b
fireplace modern built In kitchen with
garbage disposal, stove and dishwasher,
dining room rustle family room with w b
fireplace double car garage wlth concrete
drive City wafer and sewage City School
District This home Is located off Route 35
Act now, this home will only be on the market
for e short time
COUNTRY MANOR
WITH AN
Arhst.c setftng
One of Gai l1a County s best
3 200 sq ft over ali ap
prox1mately 8 acres of
land n1ce pond House
cons1sts of 8 rooms 3 or 4
bed rooms 3 full baths 7
showers s un ken l1 vtng
room 16 &gt;&lt; 19 wilh mass 1ve
stone f1r eptace Kitchen 1S
beyond words You will
have tq see to believe nice pantry bay window
took mg out over valley
Heat pump for heating and
coolmg 28 x e deckmg
runnmg length of house 2
ca r garage and many more
featur es Th1s good famtly
Is leav ing co unty Call
1oday for appo1n1m ent

FOR THE SMALL
INVESTOR
L1ve In One Untt
And Rent the Other
Each S1de of th is Dup lex
has l1v1ng room dming or
fam1ly room la rge kttchen
2 bedrooms , bath and
torced a1r na t gas Por ch
Really 1n good condit ion
Bnd renta l tncome Is good
Let us show you how th1s
propert y can prov ide a ta x
shelter to reduce your
present mcome tax

NICE COMFORTABLE
8 ROOM HOME
Bnck 3 or 4 bedrooms w1lh
walk 1n
c losets
full
basement Bu d! 1n back
porch mce larQe front
porch Ca r pettng modern
k,ilchen ctty water J~ acr e
of good garden land Lots of
shrubb ery Beautiful hom e
a1 a low pr~ce

VF' &lt;TMF

PRICED TO SELL' Very
197~ M1dway double
I&gt;Yid,e. J BR modern kitchen
range oven hood and
ngerator
carpeted
20 add1t1on attached 6
I
from c1ty J from
I
Hosp 1 acre lot

Don't Be Spooked By
1
Cold Wealher
Brand new ,. bedroom spl1t
level wtth 2 full baths
fabulous kitchen luge
llvmg and d1ning area
fu ll y carpeted with central
air and garage Unf1n1shed
fa mi ly room Mid tort1es
buys th1s fantastic home
Hilt Way To Heeven
One of the cleanest
room test .t1 bedroom homes
vou II see for $43 900 oo
Formal double door en
trance, large living &amp;
d in1ng btg f(l m1 ly room 4
bedrooms 2 baths 2 car
garage and fenced tn yard

Y'S
WORTH ,"
II electr1c ful l
lcarpelel
BR ranch m
rang e and
carport storage
lot S26 500

INCOME
INVESTMENT
4apts 4 room s each apt 2
bedrooms k1lchen (bu tll n
cabtnets
st o ve
refrtgcrator l dmmg room
pius bath and ultl tly room
Has a good rental .ncome
could pay for the butldmg
w1 thi n a few years A
relat ively new ap1 home
Do you need a good mcom e
property' Don t wa1 t 1o see
this

Cozy wood Burning!
F1t'epl1ce
Cut those heating costs and
en 1oy comfortable co n
venient qu 1et 3 or 4
bedro om home Large
llv mg room famtly room 1
baths luge famll'f , kit
chen , huge screened 1n
porch C 1t y water ans
SChOOlS lf1 Mile frJ)m
downtown

WE NEED LISTINGS'
ROUTE 160 J BR home •n
good cond
lg garage
ce llar house 1 acre lot
rural water fuel od heat
$26 000
GEORGE'S CREEK - l 05
ecres w1th 1974 two BR
mob1le homes rural water
septic tank Kyger Creek
Sc hOOl 0 1SI All1n e)(ceilent
cond SIJ900

RON c:ANADAY
REALTOR '
Audrey unada~
Realtor Associah!

Mike Us An Offer
If 11 s reasonable you'll own

this beaut1ful split level
Features Jlarge bedrooms
fa m ily room wife ap
proved kitchen
large
living and dln1ng area 11h
baths
and
overs ized
garage Large landscaped
lot

Imagine
For S27 ooo 00 you cen own
tl'l ls attract 1ve ranch 3
bedrooms large k1tchen
and dini ng Plus a b1g
fam11y room Owner wt H
help finan ce a qualif ied
buyer Close to town

446-3636
Hour

Ph. 446-1998

A. A. Nibert, Broker
ACRES
Small
repairable hOuse several
old bulld i.Q gs all m 1n
rights 12 A ti llable 6.&lt;1 A
1'1111 Less than SJOO per
acre
h

11 ACRES - 2 sm out
bulld 1n gs , electric and
Water on site Ideal for
mobile home
BUILDING LOTS - VIn ton
'l very Iaroe lots , approx 2
~ each
BUILDING
LOTS
Gallipolis area N1ce lots
tar the home btJIIder We
also have lots close to
GalllpO!IS See us to r
details
VACANT LAND - App 3
A well frnced with 2 good
bu lldlng lots
• YR olD - 3 br brick
rancher. elec heat heavy
lntul built In kitchen , n1ce
femnv room 6 ml from
town 5 ml from hosp ital

Your own private world
witt! wrap around deck That presen ts pr ivacy
beauty dlgn1ty and that
wonderful fe eling you get
liv ing m the country Th1S
outstanding 2 vear a id
residence
offe rs
4
bedrooms 2 fireplaces,
family
room
formal
dmtng huge rec room . 3
bathS a study and a crow•s
nest 15 to 18 acres rolling
wooded
wonderland
surrounding thiS beau ty in
c1ty school district

.

n A af gontly r otllng land
uver11acn1 tl 1~bit older
8 rm fr~me home with
Mvtral outbuildings and
POt~ltry house
Mineral
rlgnts Intact
"'

One of the Area's
Most Beautiful
It 's a year old but looks and
IS better than new 3 large
bedrooms forma l dln 1ng,
fantast1c fireplace In the
family room, 2 beths , extra
n• ce carpeting plus 2 car
garage Vo u also have the
use of e pool and club house
for pr1vate part1es or
ga therings If's a neck of a
good buy

BRICK HOME
ThtS IS a MICe hOme OM 2nd
Ave
n
Gallip OliS
.d
Bed roo ms basement 2
wood bu rn 1ng ftreplaces
nat gas FA furnace Th1S
home could be us ed as a
two apt rental bu1ldm9
Close to bu1sness sect on
Look lh1s over
COMMERCIAL
BUilDING &amp; SITE
Slate Highway 7 North
Masonry Buil d ing wllh
brt ck front bu ldmg like
new Ap pro&gt;&lt; Stze 30 :-:24 2
story Lev el tot front s 175
It on State H1gh way 7 Ca ll
now
SMALL FARM
LIVING
Today s choice - ap
prQx 1mately 25 acres of
pasture and farm mg land
N1 ce
1
rooms
full
basement 3 bedrooms
good barn two other
ou ts1 de bU 1I d1ngs fences
fa 1r p le nly wa ter for
catt le
small tobacco
acreage we are read y to
seH
SPRING VALLEY
SUBDIVISION
Vacant tots - n1c e size
bu tldtng lo ts with all
uti1 1t es there Lot s1ze
101 8 by 171 2 BeVer get
um now
ISO ACRES PLUS
Vacant - A woodla nd
wonder la nd
som e
pasture and t1l lable land
Less than $160 per acre

BRICK HOME LIKEN
6 rooms plus l'h baths, family room, 3
bedrooms, patio, garage with concrete
driveway, Rural Water System, central air,

nice modern kitchen with dishwasher Steel
outside doors &amp; thermospane windows This
home Is less than a year old In G'lilllpolls City
School System close to H M C Located on a
landscaped 112 acre lot Priced low
MILES FR:OM
GALLIPOLIS
ROUTE141
3 bedroom hom e w th
cabtnets ali bu •lf tn '"
k tchen and modern beth
S-torm doors wh1te pnme
s1d1ng
Fuel o il heat
coppe r
plumbing
Gallipolis School D1sfr1ct
won t 1as1 long Only
Si950000
4

lSOACRES
S3SO OOPER ACRE
Th1s 1S a good Hil l Farm
Lots of possibilities 85
acres of pasture JO ac res
or more tillable some
t1mber Line fences are
good 10 rooms rl"mod eled
2 sto ry house 3 we ll built
barn s 2 sheds and other
outbulldtn gs
Call for
appomtment

MODERN AND
APPEALING
Th1s new home MS a very
d1St1nct modern design
usmg natural wood sidmg
Fron t and side decking
1ns1de 3 bedrooms Mth ,
modern bu il t m kitchen
w th e&amp;t area ntce living
roo m h:aturmg paho doors
to decki ng thermo pane
w1ndows and metal doors,
doub le ca r garage with
elect r iC door opener In
C1ty School 01strtct ap
prox 1ma tel y 1 m lie from
Gall1po!ts C1 tv Modern
conven1 en ce for you r
tamtly

17ACRESRT 325
Near Me gs M1nes has
barn s torage buddmg
Presently has one traile r
rental space Th s can be
developed nlo a n ce •n
come
prop erty
On ly
$10 000

NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD
GREEN TOWNSHIP
6room home bafh moder n
k1tchen natural gas for ced
a r furnace
a~r
con
dtltoner
Washer and
dryer Pnced only Sll 900
Th 1S ca n be bought on a
la nd contract

7ROOMS

LOOK THIS OVER
Acre Farm modern s1x
room home good barn ,
new tool shed util1ty bldg
Line fenc es all woven w~re,
42 acres B G p~sture 10
acres woodf)d 22 acres
meadow and • t1llable,
pl enty of locust trees 1200
lb tobacco base Th1s farm
IS In the Gall1polis Schoo l
"ltStr•ct Cal i now

76

,....

BEDROOMS
GallipO li S Schoo l District
basemen 1 1 ,
bathS
rnodern kttchen co mpl ete
Wllh b1rch cabm ets FA
furnace . carport 2 wood
burn ng fir ep la ces family
room large loJ w th fru11
trees and a large s torag e
but ldtng Wi th in 5 mties of
Gall tpolts Nice home at a
good pnce
4

GOOD BUY
This newly f n1shed home
sho uld and must sell it has
a master bed roo m with
bath beautiful kitchen all
built 1n ta ble top range,
wall oven House fully
ca rpeted Attached garage
Ga li!polls School D1str lct,
best of workmansh ip
Owner wtll he lp fiMnc e
qual1f1ed buyer What else?
Come and see
ONLY THREE
YEARS OLD
Th1S hOme is prtced well
below rep la cement CQst
ideal for most family
11v1ng
Featur es
3
be droom s large bllth
li ving roo m modern kit
chen and d n1ng room full
basement 2 600 sq ft
ncluding garage Located
off State Highway
lm
med 1ate possessi on Priced
only $26 900 00
HOME AND
~USINESS

Located on Sta te H1ghway
7 3 Bedroom home w1th
bath 11vmg room eat ln
k1tchen Th1s nome was
com pletely ref in ished last
year and looks very nice
Garage
ce llar
extra
burld 1ng tot Also wtlh this
property
Is
a
we ll
esta blish ed groce ry store
wh1ch ht~s done business
for at least 40 yrs ~ouse
and busl n e~s each has new
roof Th is property co uld
be a good nvestment
prop erty Ca ll now 1

GALLIA COUNTY'S FASTEST GROWING REAL ESTATE AGENCY: LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
AFTER A VERY SUCCESSFUL YEAR 1976 IS PROUD TO BE

THE FIRST IN THIS AREA TO OFFER
THIS .NEW SERVICE

Wood Burning Fireplace
Move to town In a nice cozy
3 bedroom home with w b
fireplace mod!'rn kitchen
and family room Modern
gas furnace - now No
maintenance sld1ng small
lot l mmedt~te occupa ncy

! 'PHOTO-ILLUSTRATED BROCHURES"

A BUYER'S GUIDE TO

SERVE BOTH THE SELLER AND BUYER.

UST NaN WITH US AND WATCH OUR AGGRESSIVE PHOtO POWER ACTION
GO 10 WORK FOR YOU IN OUR NEW P.I.S. SERVICE
(Photo-illustrated Sales Service)

~~Oft~
FARM TRACTOR REPAIR and
weldtng thow oul woterhnes
Ph 379 2&lt;03
PLUMBING
ELECTRICAL
-·c-:-:~-:-:--,~-,HEATING
Taylor 1 Home
PASQUALE Insulating 103 Cedar
Momtenance Ph 256 6651
St Golllpol" Ph &lt;~6 2716 or SANDY AND BEAV!R INSURANCE
= «6
=1:.:0c::-:==---=---c:-:--92
f'o.
co no. offered services for
CUSTOM REMODELING, 20 years
Fire ln1uronce coverage In
e;.:perlenct 388 8308 New dry
Gollta County for almost o can
wall ctll1ng with swlrl or te;.:
tury Farm1 hom11 and per
ture d.. lgns Other dry woll
sonol property coverages ore
available to meet indlvtduol
rtpa.r vinyl wallpapering new
baths new kitchens Anythmg
ne.ds Contact Foster lewis
In remo4tllng or repair
your neighbor and agent

Sautheastlm.Ohio
iruaR.rt.fAL
lox 21A
Rtltlaftd, Olllo 45n5
Pllont (6T4) 741240J

Also Locattcl
In Longlvlllt
Any$tyltor Silts

,,.,.211•

P"ont
tamto5pm
Evenlngs91.2·1l20

ALLIN S G!N!R"L CONTRAC
TORS remodeltng house wlr
ing house plumbmg Free
estimates -4..6 2910
C&amp;R PAINT &amp; WALLPAPER
CENTER ReSidential commar
clal Interior extenor fast
etonom1col reltoble bruth
alrless spray oil types of wall
co'w'ertng no job too lor.ge or
small Personalized service by
owner We carry a completeltnv
of Benjamm Moore palntt
4•6 '9A58
Insured
free
tttimates 2.. -4 2nd
EHMAN WATU D!LIV!RY S!R
VIC! Ph 379 2326 o• 379 2133
STUCCO plastering and plaster
repair Textured cttllng 1w11l
float or brvsh de51gn 32 yr
exp Work by the hout or by the
1ob If you pre going to build or
remodel stucco the outside ol
your home save half on heat
stucco 1s 05 strong os brick
co~ts less Commerlcal and
Res all work gart Ph. Tn Co
Plostenng Stucco Ph 256 1182
&lt;t--

-

Seni~~&amp;i!il
CALL ABLE BuiiD!RS
CONCRET• WORK
patios
For new homes and remodeling
sidewalks basement etcz
of any kind Special prices on
Louis Cox -446 3396
storm windows and doors No
job too small Free esttmate1
Roof ing - weekends call col FOR the best in architectural
design and building of new
loct Columbus Oh 61-1-263
home1 small commercial
2669 Ph 675 6392 C..no•
building• opt , or remodeling
Fred lahriM'r
with slote approval of pions
SMITH EXCAVATING
doter
1111 Walker -loll&gt; 21-16 or ~6backhoe trencher dump truck
11652
work done of reasonable rates
Ph .tl-46 3981 John Smllh Jr
SEPTIC Tonks Cleaned Plcmts
BACKHOE dozer dttcher and
Septic Tonk Service Ph •All
dump truck Concrete work
1972 o• 675 26&lt;7
Holf1eld Backhoe Ser Rutland
0 Ph 742 2008or.C.e6 2786
BORDERS GAR ...G! DOOR SE" 808 S CB Radio !quip
ever1thing In Two Way Radlo
VICE Co,nmerlcol and reslden
Ant.,nnas and ocus G•org..
llal Spf~Ciolizlng In operators
Co•ok Rd Galli~! -146 ~517
Lacai2S6 6&lt;72

------

New hous• on Debbie
Drive, all
brick. 3
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
central air. range. ~lspa111
and electric garage door 1
opener. Ph. «6 1304 or 4463132.

JANUARY &amp; FEBRUAftY 1977
.:~ptn.o.ll .. M.~ Jn upholstering
furruture Call now for ht•
estimate
Mowrey 1
Vr.l.olstery Rt l lox 12-4 Polnt
~ easant, W Vo Ph 675 &lt;154

SWAIN
AUCTIOI SEIVICE

deltvered For the f1rst week or so durmg the
month, most of the calls that come mto the
office are related to checks As est_unated 50
percent mcrease m normal telephone traffic
takes place dunng the first week to ten days
of each month
So the Important thmg to remember Is 1f
your socwl secunty busmess 1s not urgent that IS, 1f 11 doesn't affect your check or
entitlement in any way - It may be eaSier
for you to call durmg the latter half of the
month Chances are that compchhon w1ll be
a lot Jess and you'll be able to get quicker
serv1ce Also, Soc1al Secunty workers w1ll
probably have more hme to devote to your
problem
If you have urgent busmess and must
contact Soc1al Secunty durmg 1ts busy
period, the best hme to call IS m the late
afternoon rather than m the mornmg hours
Also, the latter hall of the week tends to be
Jess busy
Another good thmg about conductmg your
busmess w1th Social Secunty from vour
home 1s when ) ou ask for mformat10n you
seem \o always forget to brmg w1th you 1t's
available w1thout making an extra tr1p to
the off1ce
Try to keep your spmts up and remember
the "Wmter of 7&amp;-77" w11l be a top1c of
conversabon for many years to come And
you were there when It happened 11

First water witch
still in business

-~re lpm

COAL FOR SALE WE DELIVER PH
379 2::5.::
36=---~----

FIREWOOD FOR SALE Ph
&lt;&lt;6 -1660
197-4 Troll90 Femole Reg Basset1
Hound Ph 36? 7560
USED FURNITURE
I Br su1te with box sprmg and
mottren I double size mot
tress l1ke new 1 5 pc wood
d1nette set 3 5 pc metal
d~nefle iets 2 end tables 1
coffee table
2 Platform
Rockers 1 2 pc l1v rm sulte 1
bookcase bed 1 hobby horse
RIC! S N!W AND US!D FURN
854 2nd Ave Ph 446 9523

BOARDING
K &amp; P Kennels 388 8274
55-t 1/r mfle east of Porter

ever smce
A water WI\Ch IS one who
clalffiS he bes a myst1cal gift
for fmdmg wells, and that's
the best kind of w1tch to be m
nearby
drought-stncken
Marm County, where water
ratlomng has begun for
169,000 residents
Fana , 80 had been m
retirement from h1s dairy
busmess when the drought
came and a fnend told a
newspaper photographer
about his witchery
" Word
spread
h~e
wlldftre,'
Faria
said
Thursday "Now I do three or
four wells a day, and I've
found water for 75 or 80
people on their property with 100 per cent success "
Here's how he works
He takes hiS divining rod
" and you just hold 11 upnght,
and II you have something m
you, when you get to a strata
- an undergroiUld creek, you
might call 11 - 11 goes nght
down and you can't hold 11

" Sctence doesn't know
what It IS It's m you, that's
all And With thiS dry spell,

CENTENARY Woods Kenne l Pet everyone wants a well ''
groommg foclllt1es Hove your
Faria sa1d the w•tchery
pet groomed undeer san1tary also helps hun measure the
cond All breed~ accepled ,
depth of a well
-~ 02
= 31" - --------'--"The rod goes up aild down
HILLCR!ST KENNEL
a
certam
number of times,"
AKC DOBERI.)ANS quality pup
he
said
"Say
the well IS 100
from Champion blood line
stock pup usuall~ available feet -It'll go up and down 100
rvds or blocks stud ser11ice Ph times and sh1ver each time
"46 465-t
before it starts agam "
-AK ;:S:=A=:M
_o" v,.E
" 'D
" s=--c" o'_c_k_e -r ,

c

Ca1rns Mm Schnauzers also
for sole or trade breechng
stock tn Schnauzers Cockers
and SOmoyeds K &amp; P Kennels
Ph 388 827~ Bodwell Ohio
BRIARPATCH Kennels Board1ng
Groammg AKC Gordon set
ters Engllsh Cocker Spaniels
Ph &lt;~6 -1191
DRAGONWYNO ( Hfery Kennel
AKC CFA Siom11e and
Himalayans (Perslons)Chaw
Chows (Chlnesel1on dogs) Pup
p1e1 now O'w'01Ioble Stud ser
'lice and litter valuat1on Ph
DACHSHUND PUPPY malo '"II
,.cj $75 Ph &lt;ol6 -1999
BOARDfNG AND "KC YORKSHIR!
AND WIST Highland Wh1lo To'
ners C~rde l Kennel Ph
446 •824
AKC BLACK AND RUST OOB!R
• MAN PINCHER PUPS Ph
• 388·'1991

US!O MOBILE HOMES
CALL 576 2711
TO ECONOMIZE 011 fuel underpm
your mob1le home and anchor
for safety Foster Mobile Home
ServiCe ~46 2783 or Elmer Sktd
more ~40 3479
1971 Buddy 12x60 w1th lip out 2

-- - - -

-

-

He gets $50 a JOb, and,
"mcludmg
the
whole
shebang, takes about an

hour

II

Fana, who hves m San
Rafaelm Marm CoiUlty, ~d
he first learned of his
power 43 years ago wh1le
renting a ranch m nearby
Santa Rosa for h1s da1ry
busmess
"We needed a well, and JUSt
out of curiOSity I got a w11low

w1tch st1ck - a dlvmmg ru&lt;l
- from a weepmg wlilo"
tree And 1t worked " he sa1d
'We got 375 gallons of
water m a mmute- that was
an ~rngatmg well And the
stick was shaped hke a V hke
a fork But water-witching
wasn't my bus mess though I

did some over the years '
Now m tune of CriSIS, he
sa1d , lOU got to do your

Thinking In Black 8. Rev Cleophus Robinson 13
7 311-This Is The L1fe 3. Your Health 4, Bullwlnkle 6,
Jerry Falwell 8 Porky P1g 10, Amazing Grace

Bi ble Class 13
7 55-Black Cameo 4
8 Oil-Mormon Choir 3 Day of Discovery 4 Com
munlque 6, Church Service 10, Happiness Is 13
A

Sesame Street 20
1fl-Oral Roberts 3 Yours For The Asking 4 Gospel
Caravan 6, Day of DlscQvery 8 James Roblson

Presents 10, Rex Humbard 13 Open B1ble IS

9 oo-Gospel SlngmS~ Jubilee 3 Hour of Power 4, Re)(

Humbard 6 Rev Leonard Repass 8 Oral Roberts
10 A Beller Way IS MISter Rogers 20
9 311-What Does The B1ble Plamly Say&gt; 8 It IS
Written 10 J 1m Franklin 13 This Is The L1fe 15.
Sesame Street 20
10 OG-Christ Is The Answer 3 Church Service 4
Leroy Jenkms 6 Chnsttan Center B Mov1e
Northwest Passage' 10 J1mmy Swaggaft 13

Rev Robert Schuler 15
10 lii-B 1g Blue Marble 3, Garner Ted Armstrong 4
J 1m my Swaggarl 6 Rev Robert Schuler 8 The
Wor ld Tomorrow 13, Zoom 20
11 OII-L1dsville 3 Doctors on Call 4, Hot Fudge 6 Rex
Humbard 8 15 Rev Henry Mahan 13 Eledn c
Company 20
II 311-TV Chapel 3 An1mals Ani mals An 1mals 6
Focus on Columbus 4, Test 1mony Time 13 Once

Upon a ClasSIC 20
12 OG-At Issue J, News Conference 4 .4 Issues and
Fate the Nat1on 8, Evangel1sttc
Answers 6

Outreach 13 InSight 15 Soundstage 20
12 30-Meet The Press 3 4 15 Direct ions 6
p1onsh1p F1shmg S
The Issue 10

.

Cham
Lower

Lighthouse 13
I Oil-Grandstand 3 4,15 Americas Black Forum 6,

--

Challenge of the Sexes 8,10 Issues an d Answer s 13

FULL AGREEMENT Silver Bndge Plaza
merchants had a special meeting tins psst Thursday and
are m full agreement to conserve as much energy as
poss1ble Some of the energy conservlllg steps bemg taken
are
The mam entrance s1gn to the Plaza has been turned off
(See above )
Thermostats have been lowered durmg aU business
hours
IndiVIdual store hghlmg has been reduced
Most merchants Will be cuttmg back store hours
(Temporary store hours Will be posred at each store )
S1lver Bndge Plaza merchants apologiZe for any
mconveruence to their customers, but feel these measures
are necessary durmg the energy shortage

Nova 20 Infinity Factory 33
1 311-College
Basketball 3 4,15 Eldon Miller
Basketball 6 College Basketball IS Town Topics
13 Zoom 33
1 45--NBA Basketball 8,1 0
2 DO-Superstars 613 Track Meet 20. Once Upon a
Classic 33
2 311-Rebop 33
3 011-The Creation 33
3 3o-Grandstand 3 415 W1de World of Sports 613
4 Oil-Star Trek 3 Movie • Jo urney to Shi loh " 4 NBA
Basketball 8 10 Wrestlmg 15
4 311-Third Testament 20. Montage 33
5 011-Movlf 'The Love God'' 3 Golf 6,13 Con
versat 1on w1fh Prof Sydney Ahlstrom 15 The Way
11 Was 33
5 311-Agronsky at Large 20 Consumer Survival K1t 33
6 DO-News 4 Andy Wil l1ams 8, Hogans Heroes 10
Fr~ends of Man 15 Sesame Street 20 Wall Slreet
Week 33
6 311-NBC News 3 4 15 30 M1nutes 8 Wor ld Press 33,
$25 000 Pyramid 10
7 00 - Wor ld of DISney 3 4 15, Nancy Drew 6 13 60
Minutes 8 10 Crockett's V1clory Garden 20 Lowell
Thomas Remembers 33

7 311-Antlques 20 Stud10 See 33
8 oo-Mov1e Tall Gunner Joe 3 4 15 S1x M1ll1on
Dollar Man 6 13 Rhoda 8 10 Evenmg at Symphony
33 Play of the Month 20
8 311-Phy ii iS 8 10
9 Oil-How The West Was Won 6 13 Sw1lch 8 10
Masterp1ece Theatre 20,33

Nelsonville will be sold

'

w

CAREt:H
OIPLOMAT
John E Reinhardt Is the
new director of the U S.
lnformallon Agency An
expert on African affairs,
he previously served as U
S ambassador to Nigeria.
MEDICAL PATIENTS

WEST COLUMBIA
Gladys Blessing , West
Columbia, w.as taken to
Pleasant Valley Hosp1talas a
medical patient on Fnday, by
the Mason Rescue squad
Odessa Greenlee, Point
Pleasant, was taken as a
medical patient to Pleasant
Valley Hospital, by the Point
Pleasant Squad

NELSONVILLE - The
State plans t o sell t he land
and bUlldmgs of the old
Nelsonville Children's Cent er
m Nelsonville on Apnl 5,
Richard D J ackson, director
of the Ohto Department of
Admm1Strat1ve Services, sa1d
Fnday
The property cannot be sold
for less than the appraiSed
value of $1 ,050,000, he sa1d
The state w1ll accept sea Jed
bids for the sale unit! noon
Aprll5 m the Bureau of Real
Estate office on the 35th floor
of the State Off1ce Tower, 30
E Broad St , m Columbus
fhe s1te mcludes a three-

story, 77-bed hospital w1th
60,670 square feet, a two-story
adm1mstrat10n bmldmg w1th
6,030 square feet , and a one

story d1rector' s restdence
w1th 2,172 square feet of
livmg area Also mcluded w1ll
be two garages w1th a
combmed area of 4,000
square feet
~ackson sa1d the 15 3 acre
Site
w1th
20-year-old
buildmgs, would be 1deal for a
nursmg home
The localton served as the
Southeast OhiO TuberculoSis
Hospital unlll It became the
Nelsonville
Ch ildre n' s
Hosp1tal 1n August 1973

Terms of the sale mclude
five per cent down on April 5
and the balance Within 30
days The bu1ldmgs w1ll be
open for mspect10n by
prospective buyers from I
p m to 3 p m on February 10,
17 and 24 and other times by
appomtment
Proceeds from the sale w1ll
be turned over to the Ohio
Department of Mental Health
and Mental Retardation, the
agency ownmg the NelsonVIlle fac1hty
Hou se B1ll 1475, which
became Jaw on January II,
authonzed the sale of the site

Energy shortages not eased
By MICHAEL ROSENBAUM
United Press Iotematlooal
Energy shortages and
layoffs were eased only
shghtly, 1f a t all, by the short
warm spell Some workers
were back at work after gas
shortages forced layoffs m
the East, but a Umted Press
International survey still
Indicated temporary layoffs
at about 2,928,000 as a result
of the shortages

Scholarships on
merit proposed

'

Forums 10. Newsmaker 77 13
7 DO-Christopher Closeup J , Tennessee Tuxedo 6

Old children's center in

AULT MOBILE HOMES SERVICE
Skirting onchortng and patios
call ~-16 ~-•!tor 4
__
DOUBLE WID! AND LOT 3 mile
from HMC owner fill help
COLUMBUS
State
46 1502
RISING STAR KENNEL Boeding ___!lnancePh '
Representative Ron James
• Indoor outdoor runs Groom· USED MOBILE HOMES public (D·eroctorvllle) , has in·
~ lng Qll breda, elton santlory
'h~olesol e p'i1ce5 Tn Stole
' fadlltles Chesl11rt Ohio Ph
Mob1le Homes 1220 Eastern troduced legislation In the
• 367-0292
Ave Golhpol1s
Ohio Houae to create an Ohio
'
AKC REG AUSTRALIAN TERRIERS
1971 12 x 60 2 b• Shull! MH Merit Scholarship Program
Ph &lt;446 0513
eliC cond coll446 7261 after 4 that
wlll provide $600
pm
•
scholarshlpa
to 2,000 Ohio
REG OLD ENGLISH SHEEP DOGS,
OWN!R MUST SELL
college students each year
PH ~ol6 0974
1970 KIRKWOOD MOBILE HOM!
"Although Ohio already
THEY FINNALL V ARRIVED Deb
12 x 50 2 br noturol gos lurn
bies collies AKC rtg 1able &amp;
con be conlo'trted to LP Coli has one program, the Ohio
trl ckomplon blood lines $100
Instructional Grant
onytime .t46 2135
and up &lt;46 4709
197&lt; DOUBLEWID! MOpiLE Program , it only offers
HOME 20 • 43 lolal electriC assistance to Ohio students on
eMC cond Ph 675 3073
the basis of need,'' James
sald.
"The Merit Scholarship
Program
will
offer
CARTERS PLUMBING
2 BR MH IiilO 3 BR MH $125
AND H!ATING
scholarships to thoee students
Ph ~&lt;6 0175
Cor Fourth I Pine
who have demonstrated
Phone«&lt;&gt; 3888or~&lt;6 &lt;4777
MOBILE HOMES LOTS
ll
l
GRHN TERRACE MOBIL! COM eJ:CI! ence n their scholastic
STANDARD
MUNITY
performance. There have
Plumbing Heating
located
on
Rt
141
City
water
Cit~
been
sitUIUons where middle
21 S Thord Ave «&lt;I 3782
schools 5 mm from GoH1pol1 s income Ohioans cannot get
GENE PLANTS I SON
end Holter Hospllol
Jnatructlonal grants because
PLUMBING - H.allng - Air
Conditioning 300 Fourth Ave 12 x 50 TP~I LtR on edge ol cll1 they are jUSt OVer \he
on 5 ~ no on, at dt~:p req m i n i m u m
In com e
, Ph «6'1637
1115 pvt ru Ph •1460822
- DEWITT S PlU!.\IlNG
ONE B!DROOM TRAILEM NICHV quaUflcatlonl They find It
AND Hf"TING
•
FURN P"TIO GOOD tOCA difficult flnancJaUy to help
Route160 at Evergreen
liON IN CITY ~h "6 , 1~9
'- !lend a Child to school. despite
' Phone 446 2135

-

fS tLVEfl BRIDGE;.
PLAZA

•

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6, W77
6 OO...:Thls Is The Life 10
6 311-Jerry Falwell4, Talking Hands 8. Public Polley

part"

b•

1968PMC 12x60 28'
1968ELCONA 12x60 3B'
1969CHAMPION 12x60 2Br
BandS MOBIL! HOMES
Pt Pleasant W Vo

-

COUGHENOUR WATER DELIVERY
446 3962 or 446 4262 anyt1me
DOZER WORK excavating land
clecmng PI'! 4.. 6 0051

..

1975 INHR COAL TRUCK "'
axle 10b goes w1fh truck Ph
388 8754 or 245 5647
LAYNE S NEW &amp;USED FURNITUR!
N!W
M«hterronean sofa and lo"'e seat
$325 Ear Am sofa &amp; choi r
wood tnm $275 modern sofa
cho1r loveseat $275 sola bed
wtth motchmg cho1r $i50
Reelmen S100 and up Tables
Coffee end Hexagon maple or
p1ne $.50&amp;och magazine rocks
maple$28 bookcase $20
Boston Rocker $55 maple
table 4 chatrs $175 dmelte
tobl, and 511( chatrs $89 dinette
table and four cha1rs $55 Bunk
beds complefv $150 mattress
and box spnngs $50 vo queen
size $130 set maple b gun
cabinet $155 chest of drawer
$50 moplv desk &amp; cha1n $140
GOODUSW
TeleiiiSions calor &amp; block wh1te
consoles &amp; portables washers
dryers
ranges copper
O'w'ocodo gold refr gerotors
copper avocado gold war
drob&amp;s I metal 1 cedar !med
dtnelt&amp; set bedroom suttes
beds chests dressers tables
lamps chairs other Items us
ed desk and smoll stereo call
446 0022 day or everjmg 3 m1
out Bu la111lle Porter Rd off Rl
160
-~·---,-:-------FRESH cor lood of W Vo Chunks
quality cool lowosh Put a
sparkle 1n your fireplace dunng
the holidays Sk1dmore Fosler "You Got to Do Your Part .. "
Coal Co 4&lt;6 27B3
By RICK DU BROW
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Ph
388
FIREWOOD
9930 Even1ngs
Forty-three years ago, King
FUZZBUSTER
POLICE RADAR Fana cut a V-shaped branch
DirECTOR SHL OR TRADE lo' from a weepmg w1llow tree ,
22 auto pt51ol Ph 379 2469 and he' s been a water Witch

«&lt;I~·

CALL 446-3643
P1cture Tube Spec1altsts
HARTW!LL HKTRONICS
TV Repolr
2&lt;5 5365

Information ADd Referral
POMEROY- Tbe weather of the past
few
weeks hav really rearranged the
priorities
for
some of
ua We have realized afresh that food
water and a warm olaet&gt; to stav are
really blessings and not to be taken for
granted When the fury of wmter gives way
to the joy of spnng (which 11 will sooner or
later) we may all find we have a deeper
appreciation of the good things In hfe, and
may be a little less Inclined to find fault
A tip to those of you the slick roads and
zero weather really turn off, If you are
considermg a trip to the Center to see the
social security man, maybe your problem IS
something that can be taken care of over the
phone
"TELESERVJCE" Is a new service bemg
offered by the Social Secunty office You
can uae this number for mformat10n, assiSt
ance With filling out forms , report changes,
or apply for dllferent benefits
Like any other service there's a key to
how It can best be used - an~ that key IS to
avoid the "rush hours " When you go to the
bank or supermarket you try to avoid those
times when they are most crowded, the rush
hours, the same 1s true when callmg Soc1al
Security
Social Secunty's rush hour IS at the
beglnmng of tbe month when checks are

3 BEDROOM

LOOKI LOOKI WHAT'S NEWI

THE LEADER IN GALLIA COUNTY
REAL ESTATE NEEDS LISTINGS

NEW ' AM Br ick Ran
cher, 3 BR, thermopane
windows, carpet, cop
plumb close to ho~p!tal
NEAlL Y NEW - 3 Br
brick and frame rancher
Kit and dining room
combined , elect heat,
rur1l water. lg garegt

ACREAGE
BUILDING SITES
65 Acres , loca ted m Gre-en
&amp; Perry Twp
Smel l
amount of t1mber 50 A
tillable , 2 barns 40'x30' and
40 xi4 If you are 1ook1ng
for valuable land for tn
vestment here It Is Call
today

Looking For A
Fine Home?
Lots of elbow room ? 2 95
acres lays well paved
road 3 bedroom frame
with full d1vl ded basement
Large living and family
room each with firepla ce
Carpeted throughout
Formal dining room and
nice k1tchen 1 car garage
Also large garage and shop
unatta ched

MASSIE
REALTY
32 State Street

__

Ph. Home 379-2114,

Gallia County's Fastest Growi.n.g Real Estate Agr-acy

A GREAT

LIVIN 1 Only a few
fro m ctty park 2
3 BR , family rm
al DR e)(fertor very
kept tnter1or needs
e dec o ra t~ng nearly
furna ce extra IO lot
S25 000

••6•m

NOW fS THE TIME TO BUY

WE NEED LISTINGS'

l

LINK AND WOOD F!NC!S
NOW at REDUCED Pr1ces
SAVE Ray Houck Fence Center
1 776 2237

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

RANCH ' tn th~
heart or Gall1a County
Cattle Country ' 190 acres
100 ac pasture fenced 2
pond s 60 a c ttllable
t1m ber tob case 3 barns
outbldg 4 BR mod
e ftrep lace In L R ful l
basm garage S95 000

o.-n 6 day• a week and

eventngs Dellv on Soturdavs
J:or further mformotton call

WISE

G SIZED for a k1ng
1a mily 1 custom built 4
frllevel forma l OR
rec rm • 2 ba ths ig fam ll y
kitchen w1fh rang~ 011~n
full y carpeted
electnc hea tf a ir
:;;;~;;;~lil;2 car garage on 4
D'
I woocted acres

PLACE TO
LIV ' 3 BR spac1ous
1
1 ' baths lg mod
• ' '" cner w1th range oven
d1sposai all electr c
~::~rcarpeted
lg
for 2 caca
rs rpor1
garden
and a workshop for
d 1 1 8 acres fenced Wtth
wh1te rail fence $32 000

wo1herl

Gene Skaggs

12'9.. Easern Av• Ph _.,.6 73q&amp;
-

REALTY

r anges

r -· . _J"'J '
__..,._

Senior citizens' scenes

Claude

W1nters Rio Grande 0 Phone

REFRIGERATORS
~

I

Television Log

the ch1ld bem~ a h1gh
achiever,'' he added
The scholarships Will be
awarded on the basis of a
formula , whiCh weighs
factors of achievement, m·
eluding grade point average,
and ablllty, as demonstrated
by a competitive examination
specified by the Ohio Board
of Regents
Each candidate receiving a
scholarship rnust mamtaln
achievement standards
established by the board and
send a copy of his scholastic
record to the Board of
Regents each July
If a student maintains an
academic record satisfactory
to the board, he may be
eligible
to
have
the
scholarship renewed
However, the bill shpulates
that no recelpent shall
receive the scholarship for
more than four academic
years The bill 1s now before
the Fmance • Appropriations
Committee of the House

•

The cold that brought the Atlanllc coastal area, with as
shortage m the first place much as four
mches
was due back today, w1lh predicted for parts of north·
highs expected to average 10 eastern Pennsylvanw, southto 20 degrees Jess than eastern New York, northern
Fnday's over much of the New Jersey and southern
Midwest and Northeast
New England
In snow-stunned western
Prospects for a general
and northern New York state, resumption of normal m·
rune collDties, blanketed last dustry were uncertam
week by almost SIX feet of Despite new supphes of gas,
snow, were on tap for federal much of It was headed for uae
disaster-area
designation m homes , and lndustnal
Even as Sen Darnel P supplies remained under
Moynihan , D-N Y , an· curtallment orders
nounced
Friday
that
In Ohio, the East Ohio Gas
PreSident Carter planned to Co of Cleveland said it has
make
the
disaster extended nearly 100 per cent
declarallon today, another cutdown for 1,100 lndustnal
blizzard threatened the customers until Tuesday
area's I 8 m•lllon reSldehts because of predicted subzero
The Nat10nal Weather temperatures this weekend.
Serv1ce predicted winds up to Originally restrictions were
40 miles an hour would roar put on gas uae on Jan 17
off Lake Erie Into Buffalo Columbia Gas of Ohio, also
already strangling on snow cul'la!Ung gas use by big
dnfts 18 to 20 feet deep - and industry and commerce, said
off Lake Ontario Into Jef- 11 was considering possible
ferson and Lewis counties on elrten•ion beyond its present
the Canadian border.
date of 8 am. Wednesday.
After a tour of Buffalo,
New York State remained
Moymhan said, " This is under stringent curtailment
somethmg without precedent ' orders for industrial and
In tbe history of the records of commercial operations, but
the weather service"
Gov. Hugh Carey Friday said
Friday's front dumped four gas-heated schools could
Inches of snow on Chicago, reopen Monday. The Publlc
South Bend, lnd
and Service Coriunlssion said the
Columbus. Ohio, and three gas shortage had idled 231,000
Inches on Fort Wayne, Ind., Industrial workers and beand Dayton, Ohio.
tween 10,000 and 100,000
commercial employes In the
Delays of about one hour Empire State
In the nation's capital, the
were reported at Chicago
alrporta and travelers ad- National Park Service
vlsorid were posted for switched off outside Hghts at
Friday and Saturday over such places as the White
parts of Illinois, Michigan, House, Washington
Indiana, Ohio, West Vlrglnla, Monument and Lincoln
Pennsylvania, !)1aryland, Memorial The program was
more stringent than the one
Virgmla and North Carolina
s,now was expected to unposed during the 1973 Arab
ml embargo.
spread Into the northern

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1977
DO-Sunrise Semester 10
6 15--Farm Repor113
6 211-Not For Women Only 13
6 J(}-Columbus Today 4 Arthur Smith 6 Sunr 1se
Semester 8 Medlx 10
6 45-'--Mornlng Report 3
6 511-Good Morning, West V~rglnla 13
6 55-Good Mornmg, Trl Sate 13
I OG-Today3 4 15 Good Morning Ame r ica 613 , CBS
News 8, Chu&lt;k Wh 1te Reports 10
7 05--Porky Pig 10
7 311-Schoolles 10
7 45--Sesame S 33
8 Oil-Howdy Doody 6, Capt Kangaroo B 10
8 311-B lg Valley 6
9 011-A M 3. Phil Donah ue 4 13,15 Andy Griffith 8,
Mike Douglas 10
9 311-Cross W1ts 3. Edge of Nigh t 6 Concentrat ion 8
10 DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3 4 15, Dinah 6 Price IS Right
8 10. M1ke Douglas 13
10 311-Hollywood Squares 3 4 15
'
11 DO-Wheel of Fortune 3.4 15 Double Dare 8,10,
Elec Co 20 Morning Show 13
11 311-Shoot for the Stars 3,4 15 Happy Days 6 13.
Love of L1fe 8.20 Sesame St 20 33
11 55-CBS News 8, Ms F 1XI11 0
12 Oil-News 3,4,6,810. Don Ho n , Name That Tune
15, D1vorce Court 8
12 311-Lovers &amp; Friends 3,15 Ryans Hope 613 Bob
Braun 4 Search for Tomorrow 8,10
I DO-Gong Show 3 All My Ch ildren 6, 13, tlews 8
Young &amp; lhe Restless 10 Not For Wo'llen Only 15
1 311-Days of Our L1ves 3,415. Family Feud 6,13 As
The World Turns 8 10
2 011-$20 000 Pyram1d 6 13
2 311-Doctors 3,4,15 One L1fe to Live 6.13 Guiding
Light 8,10
3 Oil-Another World 3,4,15 All In The Family 8,10
Lowell Thomas Remembers 20
3 15--General Hospital 6,13
3 311-Match Game B,10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
4 011-Misler Cartoon 3 Little Rascals 4, Gong Show
15 Mickey Mouse Club 6 Lucy Show 8 Sesame St
20,33, Movie 'Don t Ra ise t he Bridge, Lower the
River" 10, Dinah 13
4 15--Little Rascals 4
Partridge Family 4
4 3o-My Three Sons 3,
EmergencyDne6. Partridge Family 8 Fllntstones
IS
'
5 DO-Big Va)!ey 3 My Three Sons 4 Brady Bun &lt;h 8
Mister Rogers 20 33 Star Trek 15
5 311-Adam 12 4, News 6, Family Affair 8 Elec Co
20,33 Adam 12 13
6 oo-News 3,4 6,8,10, 13,15, Zoom 20
6 311-NBC News 3 4,15. aBC News 13, Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News 8,10 Vegetable Soup 20
7 011-Truth or Cons 3, To Tell the Truth 4, Bowling for
Dollars 6, Buck Owens B. News 10, To Tell the Truth
13 My Three Sons 15, Charactetlstlcs of Learning
Disabilities 20, Know Your Schools 33
7 311-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3, In Seorch of 4
Muppet Show 6 Gong ShoW B. MacNeil Lehrer
Report 20,33 Pr ice Is Right 10, Candid Camera 13
Nashville on the Road 15
8 DO-Hall of Fame 3,4,15 Capt &amp; Tennille 613, Jef
fersons 8,10, Meeting of Minds 20,33
B 311-Bustlng Loose 8,10
9 110-How the West Was Won 6.13 , Maude B,10,
Polllsers 20,33
9 311-Movle "Night Terror" 3,4,15, All 's Fair 8,10
10 OCh-Andros Targets 8, 10, News 20. Soundstage 33
10 311-Farm Digest 20
'11 Oil-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15. Monty Python's Flying
Clrcuo 20, Black Journal 33
11.311-Johnny Carson 3 4,15, Streets of San Francisco
6. Kojak 8. Mary Hartman 10, College Basketball
13, ABC News 33
12 011-Movle ''The Little Foxes" 10, Janekl 33
12 411-Dan August 6
1 oo-Tomorrow 3.~
1 311-News 13
10 011-Delvecch!o B, 10 Palllsers 33, Great Per
formances 20
11 Oil-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15, FBI 6
11 15-CBS News 8.10. Music Hell America 15
11 3o-Star Trek l. Movie "The War Lord" 4, Movie
Cotter" 8 (ace The Nation 10. Ironside t3
Janak! 33
•
12 011-ABC News 6. Hawaii Five 0 10: News 20
12 3~-ABC News 13
~

�D-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 6, 1977

TV•• •in Review

Scientists· will
decide
plan

By JOAN HANAUER
UP! Televlllaa Wrller
NEW YORK (UPI) -The pudcy Marine aal behind ihe &amp;WI
mount In a CfOWided bonlber lllld ma~ the palm
traes oo a Pacific iahond, firing a record number of roundl at
the cocoouta .
A pair of World War n war COl'l'fiiPOndenll lhouilht It waa
fwlny and wrote a story a~t the reccrd number of rounds,
without mentioning that the plane wun't alrborne and the
enemy was vegeiable, not animal.
That waa how Joe McCarthi got the nlclmame "TaU Glll\ll&lt;r
Joe" and helped him project the Image of retuming war bero
that he parlayed into election as junior senator from

flu

•

)VASHINGTON .(UP!)
Sdentl.IU will converge on
Wa!hington Monday for an
emergency meeting with
HEW Secretary Joseph
Calllano to confront an outbreak of A-VIctoria influenza
- a flu Slraln which claimed
11,000 Hves In this country
last year.
·
All flu shots have been
suspended since the $135
·million · swine
flu
Immunization program
.ran Into trouble, and
Calllano says he needs to
know If inoculations to
combat the A-Victoria strain
can reswne.
Califano called the meeting
after the first cases of the flu
were reported Friday.
The Department of Health,
Education and Welfare
received word that 57 of the
176 residents and staff
members ·of a Miami nursil1g
home had the flu, and the first
several tested were AVictoria.
All flu vaccinations were
stopped· Dec. 16 because of
what the U. S. Public Health

Service called "a statistical
association" between the
shots ,and a sometimes
paralyzing disease known as
Guillain-Barre Syndrome.
"We now have the first
reported outbreak of AVIctoria flu," Califano said.
"II is .important to resolve
· the future of this program
quickly because we are In the
midst of the flu season,"
Califano said . .

EXPENSES NOTED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio
National Guard
estimated Friday its expenses through Feb. 6 for
snow removal and other
emergency services provided
during Ohio's extraordinary
winter were $152,840. The
Ohio adjutant general has
submitted a biU for that
amount to the state Controlling Board which will
meet Monday to consider the
request.

SEE US FOR
ALL YOUR

SUPPLIES
You 'll find uerything you need for
When you villi ypur ne1rby
Amer ican Handler.attl . . . prints, WC'Iod
items, paint, tacauer and ' best of 1!1,
persona l now-to . See u1 fo r 111 thue
other craft supplief too :
d!co&gt;Jp~ge

• C andl tmaklng

~ Plutic Cuti n!l
• Coj) per Tooli ng
• and ma ny mort! !

HOUSING, SOVIET STYI.,E, stW has a look of old
· Russia. This hou.Se on Moscow's Pogodlnskaya street was
built in the middle of the last century. Recently restored,
it now houses offices of the All-Russian Monument
Preservation Society.

THIS IS THE WAY IT WAS
By FRANK HILL
QALUPOIJS- Generel Edward W. Tupper of Gallipolis
commanded 1,0110 troops In the War of 1812. These troops were·
from Gallia, Lawrence, and Scioto·counties.
fupper 's home was located on the lots now occupied by the
· present Park Central Hotel, and hia yard also Included the lot
to the rear of the hotel on Stale St. where now stands the old
home of ·banker, Herbert Henklng .
Tupper married the widow of Dr. W. P. Putman, a· direct
descendant of Gen. Isreal Putman who served In the
Revolutionary War, Tupper died in 1823 and left tiM&gt; hnmd•Aln•
and lots where the Thaler Ford Co:is located o~ ~·~- .• Y'!:;
and $15,000 in money to his widow. She later was a benefactor
of the Presbyterian Church, and the old Gallia Academy on
Second Ave.
·

FOR THOSE WHO may be interested:
I had a ·Phone call from Denver Yoho who Informed me
that his .gramllalher, Charlie Yoho and another man by the
name of Newt Cupp raised the first tobacco in Guyan Township
in the 1680s. They .raised this tobacco along a small stream
Cj!lled Stillhouse Run.
During the Civil War Salley and Robinson had a wholesale
THE ANSWER TO LAST week's question:
grocery located oo Court St. They were later succeeded by
The steamer Liberty was the last packet boat to stop at
Henking-Bovie in the same. location. The Commercial and ·
Gallipolis on a,regular run.ln later years the Liberty towed the ~=====:::;:;=.:;:=:,
Savings Bank now occupies this location.
c!lor CHOP
In 1870 Hamilton and Abshire operated a large wharf boat showboat Golden Rod for a while.
Cllar c~or
here at the park front.
&amp;JME'THING TO think ahout:
On Jan. 21, 1893Collln Thivenen died at Thivener at the age
Who was Albigence' Waldo Putman?

.

804 W. Main Sl .

Pomeroy, 0.
JUST BELOW THE JONES BOYS IN

Monday on closing
OHIO'S NEW BUDGET
GALLIPOLIS
The
amount of money state
government now spends
averages out to nearly $850
each two years for every

TREMENDOUS SAVINGS
NEW MIX-MATCHED

100-lh SIZE MATTRESSES
RETAIL FOR '99,95

•

WAIT!
0011'1 ~OP
ME THERE!!
DON'T!
DON'T!
DON'T!

Decision is due

CRAm LADIES
HANDICRAFTS
'

Wlaconlln.
The themes of deception, ambition and greed run through
"Tall Gunner Joe," a dtama about the life and career o.f Joe
McCarthy - Conununlatoi!WJI« or wltchobunter, depending on
your viewpoint -that NBC wllllx'oadcut Feb, 8, &amp;-11 p.m., as
a Big Event.
As a drama, ''TaU Gunne!' Joe" takes off with the creaky
device of a yOWlg televisioo reporter who II told to ..-arch a
retrospective story on McCarthy, but once the lhow lllh the
air, it rues.
Peter Boyle perfocma aa a combination impei'IIOillltor..ctor
mimicking the McCarthy speech pattern but putting life and
some fire into the man, also. The big Oaw, for which the script
can be faulted more than Boyle, is that from all ael!ounta
McCarthy could be mremely per80118ble. Not this time
around.
·
HOUSING, WESTERN STYLE, has a Far E.as~m
Burgess
Meredith
aa
attorney J088pb Welch In the Armylook in this case. This houseboat ill moored not in Bang.
McCarthy
hearings
of
1954looks
nothing like the Bolton lawyer
kok's floating city ,hilt at Salisalito, Calli.' Owner David
did,
but
he
will
recall
the
old
gentleman
for everyone who saw
Brooks built it on top of an old Navy utility boat.
those .televised hearlnp.
Patricia Neal makes a noble Sen.'Margaret Chale Smith, RMalne; Roy Cohn with plastered down black hair II played by
George Wyner, Andrew Duggan plays Dwight Eisenhower,
and a number of other notables of the time are on the IICI'een,
lnclW!ng Harry Trwilan, George Marshall and Dean Acheson
in a scene the actors in thole roles obvloualy enjoyed.
This being a Big Event, tbe cast II too long to llst, e:reeplto
note that the per(.ormancea are etcellent and the history is
accurate.
of 101 years. He was the son of Nicholas 'l'hlvenen, one ,of the
The inlel'JI'etat!on of that history will draw strong .disa6riginal French settlers, an early sherUf of Gallia County, arid greement from those who still admire Joe McCarthy, and !rom
a personal friend of Gen. Lafayette.
those who scorned his methods but believe hia ends justified ·
In 1893 Gallipolis had 27 saloons, a brewery, and two them.
wholesale liquor houses.
On June 22, 1893 John Ernest Halliday, son of John T.
AnotherNBCspeclalofnote is '~. Emily,'' a Hallmark'
HaiUday, married Miss Maude Dunbar, daughter of Captain Hall of Fame productim that continues a story ftrst told In the
·
Samuel A. Dunbar. Halliday was a local merchant and ~ 1969 specie!, "Teacher, Teacher."
The
shows
deals
with
a
Freddy,
a
retarded
boy
a
child
In
graduate of Ohio Wesleyan College. Captain Dunbar was the
the early version who now baa grown to be 19. It will be on the
local postmaster.
In 1910 A. C. Saffcrd sold the Bovie Fruit Farm on MIU air Feb. 7, 8-9:30 pm., Eastern time, and is recommended by
Creek Road to FrankL. Janes, a student In horticulture at the tbe Natimel Education Assl .
Ohio State University. The farm contained 115 acres.
C~OP
On April10, 1910a fire destroyed the foDowing buildings on
C&gt;IOP
Court St. : The A. E. Smeltzer greensware store, the old Frank
(fj(jp
Cromley frame saloon building, the John Hawk's saloon
CHOP
wilding and the brick building occupied by J , ·o. Cowden, the
C&gt;IOP
barber.
In 1910 John W. Rankin's big tobacco bam burned In
Cro'wn .CitY. John LeVisay lost his entire crop of green tobael!o
in the barn. He had no Insurance.

I

man, woman and child in
Ohio - for schools, roads,
parks, prisons, mental
health, welfare aid and other
programs. It will he the job of
your representatives in the
Legislature In the next
several months to determine
how your money - in record
amounts - Is to be spent over
the next two years.
Governor James A. Rhodes
has · just submitted to the
General . Assembly hls
proposed budget for the state
for the two-year period
beginning this JulY 1.
Proposed expenditures for
the biennium amount to $14.5
billion, a 14 percent Increase
over the present budgetary
spending levels. These additional funds are expected to
be reallzed from increased
revenues from present tax
sources and increased
economic activity.
Most legislative attention
will he given to general fund
'eXpenditures. That is the fund
from which most governmental activity Is financed,
including education, welfare,
mental health, and local
government aid.
The
Governor proposes eKpenditures from this general
fund in the amount of $8.77
billion.
The budget Is a very
detailed , and complex
.document, and several items
already have attracted attention.
The
Governor
has
recommended expenditures
approximately $1 billion
below the total requests from
the various state agencies
and school authorities for
primary, secondary and
higher education . To have
recommended higher e'xpenditures would ha Ve
required Increased taxes.
While total expenditures
.are projected to be nearly
$1.8 billion higher for all
programs than the present
biennium, the major dollar
increases are in the areas of
primary and secondary
education , higher education
and welfare, areas which
historically take up the lion's
share of all· state spending.
The Governor's bud~et
en lis lor an increase of $283.6
million in .~ tate a ld to

CLEVELAND (UPI) 'VIsiting Common Pleas
Judge Paul Perkins is to
decide Monday whether to
Invoke
a
temporary
restraining ·order 5ought by
suburban Bay Village schools
against Columbia Gaa of
Ohio, which has threatened to
terminate natural gaa service
to the district.
The Bay Village Board of
Education
sought
a
temporary restraining order
last Friday, but Common
Pleas Judge Francis E.
Sweeney denied the motion
and set a hea~ for 9 a.m.

Monday at whicll time
Perkina, of Carroll CoWity,
will hear the case.
School Board President
Kenneth A..Hook said schools
woUld remain closed, pending
the outcome of the court
hearing.
Columbia Gas already haa
Informed the board If Its
schools do not remain closed
through' Wednesday mour
notice will lle given and then
· a crew will be sent out to shut
off the heat.

';::;;::::::;:;:::;::;::;::;;:;::,

)?
f{

'-S'
OUR BOARDING HOI,ISE
5AY. MY KNEE
HASN'T, FELT THI~
GOOD SINCE

i\ANK HOWITZER
CHECKED ME
INIO 1HE NET !
SOME!&gt;\ lNG
MU~TvE SNI'J'PED

BAC K WHEN
'I FELL !

CU~6D

HIM
WIT~

MY

~TI GK
I

In 1971, Apollo 14 began its
trip home after a moonlanding mission:

130,000 fewer students in our
A thought for the day:
public school~ two years from
American historian Henry
now.
For many years, the Aid to Brooks Adams said, "He too
Dependent Children prOgram serves a certain purpose who
was the biggest expenditure ooly stands and cheers."
in the welfare area. It is now
projected that the Medicaid
program will exceed the ADC
program in costs. .
Obviously the General
Assembly will be giving a
good deal of attention to the
appropriation bill it should
pass by the end of June, and
will have to review the
Governor's suggested
priorities and make its own
judgments. But it is clear if it
decides to increase overall
appropriations beyond the
UL!- BED SIZE - Single and
Governor's recom ..
Dua I contro I styles - solid co lora,
mendatlons, new tax
per cent polyester and 20 per
revenues will have to be
cent acrylic blend nylon
found .
.
binding.
·
The real dlseussion in the
Home Furnishings Dept.
Legislature should center on
Main Floor
whether some appropriations
should be made at all, at the
Just received Men's Department on the 1st floor
same time priorities for
- men's 100 per cent cotton long sleeve ankle
allocating funds are conlength union suits in sizes medium (38-40), litrge
sidered. There Is growing
(40-44),
extra large (46-48) and men's and boys'
support for the concept of
brown jersey gloves.
.
zero·base budgeting making agencies justify their
budg~ from the first dollar
up. We should not just be
looklhg at ho.w much more
Women's Dresses .' women~s Coordinate Sportswear- Wrangler Blue
money is asked for by a ·
Jeans - Slouses - Infants Dresses.
department, but what they
Men's Dress Shirts - Sport Shirts- Knit Shirts - Western Shh1s are doing with what they've
Pre-Washed
Wrangler No Fault Denim Blue Jeans· Boys Blue Jeans.
got. We should be finding .
some programs that can be
· Men's Dress Slacks- Sport Coats - Boys Knit ~hlrts.
eliminated .
Slop in·right away, look around- See .what's new for Spring 77.
Hovering over these
deliberations
Is
the
recognition that this· winter's
ener~y crisis could affect the
primary and secondary •tale's t~1 revenues adeducation. even thmo~h it I" vef1M'ly and therefore .unanticipated that thcrl' will be "" l"'l' •e t hi• propoBt'&lt;l hnd•l"' .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY.
AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC
BLANKETS

NEW SPRING MEROONDISE ARRIVING DAILY.

ELBEREELDS· IN POMEROY

Large Ohio industry to get more gas
United Praa ~tluaal
Eaat Obio Gaa Co. of Clevelaild ami&lt;uiiCea today It was
lilting Ita near 100iler cent curtaUment lor large lndusbiPl
usen Wedneaday and would spread a 10 per cent cw1allment
among 11101t Industrial and CCilliDei'Cial customers.
Meanwhile, Gov. James A. Rhodes has asked President
Carter for a $90 million grant to help needy Ohioans "avert the
penonal tragedy" of Increased heating bUls and In a separate
request, again asked the president. to declare the state a
dlaaster area because of the weather.
•
East Oblo President Dudley Taw said the · curtiabnents
would range from a 1110 per cent cutoff for gas used to fuel
large boilers and for ll'ocesae8 In which other fuels can be
substituted to 10 per cent cuthacka for gas where, no
subsUtullons can be made.
.
A total of ahoul320 firms w!U'be affected by the 1110 per cent
cutoff and the 10 per cent curtailment will affect all other large
uaers, said Taw.
"We are lilting the maintenance level curtailment that has
'been in effect since Jan. 17 on the basis of a prediction that we
will not have extreme cold during the balance of February,"
said Taw. "The new curtailments are severe, but we hope thst
they will put some people hack to work.
"How much more gas we can make available to industry to
put more people back tO work depends almost entirely on the

weather and the ·conservation efforts of our residential and
conunerclal customers," said Taw.
Columbia Gas of Ohio waa expected to annouunce either
today or Tuesday whether it would continue near 100 per cent
curtiaiments for large Industrial and commercial users paat .
Wednesday.
Dayton Power and Light Co. said last week about 16,000
large users would be without gas for production for the rest of
the winter.
·
Meanwhile, State Development Director James Duerk
revised downward hia estimate of the nwnber of persons who
were templirarily unemt&gt;loyed laat week because of the gas
shortage and weather to between 8110,000 and lliiO.OIIO.
Duerk had said about I million Ohioans were out of work and
Rhodes had estimated up to 1.5 million had been temporarily
laid off,
''The job situation is an on again-off again silua tion," State
Development Department spokesman Ken Drwn said today.
"Any industry that Is contingent on natural gas probably won't
go back to work this week.
"We have to get more fuel oil and propane In here," he said.
Rhodes sent a telegram to Carter Sunday and said ahout
300,000 Olilo families ''with extremely limited Income" will
require $300 each to pay for fuel and other home-heating
necessities.

•

at y

e

..
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 7, 1977

"This one-time assistance benefit of $90 million will avert the
personal tragedy that these people are now facing," said
Rhodes.
Although ulliHties in the state will not cut off fuel to families
unable to pay bils, needy nature! gas customers ''won't be able
to pay their bill when winter ends any more than they are able
to now," said deputy Ohio Welfare Director Raymond
McKenna.
McKenna said the $90 miillion figure was arrived at from
county welfare d~partment reports.
"We think the ($90 million ) should he a grant because there
is no way these people could pay this money back," said
McKenna.
The governor also asked Carter to declare the state a
disaster area because of the weather.
Carter last week declared a weather emergency in Ohio
which made direct fflleral asslsiance available to the state for
the clearing of snow-covered roads
But Rhodes feels ihis Is not enoui:h.
"It is becoming increasingly clear that the economic impact
of this winter storm represents a major disaster for the state of
Ohio, for its coWJties, cities and townships as well as for its
citizens," said Rhodes. ·
In other energy related developments :
-The Federal Power Commission has authorized Columbia

uas Tansmisaion, serving markets In Ohio and seven other
states, to buy 60 million cubic feet of natural gas a day from
California. A Colwnbia spokesman said the gas will not effect
current curtailment levels in Ohio but will ensure "better
deliverability" in meeting residential heating needs.
-State Energy Chief Robert Ryan said that ads placed by
the state in Saturday morning newspapers throughout the
southwest have resulted in several offers from independent
producers in Texas. "We are concerned with getting some gas
for industries and putting people back to work and keeping
them working all winter and summer," Ryan said.
- The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio said an Informal
survey has shown there is some untapped gas available in the
state but not enough to make any signlficant dent in the overall
gas shortage.
- Nine more Ohio counties have been made eligible for
federal aid In clearing snow-covered roads, the U.S. Disaster
Assistance Administration said Sunday. The l)ine brings to 21
the nwnher of Ohio counties getting federal money to clear
roads that have been blocked hy snow. The new connlles are
Carroll, Clinton, Colwnbiana, Harrison, Holmes, Huron, Portage, Richland and Tuscarawas.
- Barges loaded with fuel oil and coal have started moving
slowly on the ice clogged Ohio river.

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol 28, No. 207

IN;;;;::::::,,:,::,,,,,,,:,,,i;;::::::li;i;/;\1 Nightgown
w

~

By UDited Preas InlerQatlooal
CHICAGO - THE AMERICAN MEDICAL Association
has asked 10 major corporations to stop sponsoring violent
television shows because they "pollute" the airwaves, accord·
ing to Dr. Richard Palmer, president of the AMA. Palmer said
&amp;mday Sears Roebuck and Co. agreed to stop t.oying ads for
the most violent prime time shows. But an AMA spokesman
said the company's decision was made before the AMA
approached the subject.
''TV has been quick to raise questions of' social
responsibility with industries which pollute the air," Palmer
said. "In my opinion, television through its access to air waves
n'U!Y he creating a more serious problem of air.pollution." The
AMA chief said, "If tile programming a child is exposfll to
consists largely of violent content, then his perceptions of the
real world may be significantly distorted.''

b

COLUMBUS -NINE MORE omo COUNTIES have been
made eligible for federal aid in clearing snow-covered roads,
the U. S. Disaster Assistance Administration said Sunday. The
nine counties brings to 21 the number of Ohio coWJtles getting
federal money to clear the roads ~t have remained blocked
since the heavy snow two weeks ago.
The counties are Carroll, Clinton, Columbiana, Harrison,
Holmes, Huron, Portage, Richland and Tuscarawas.
Previously named aa eligible were: Ashtabula, Crawford·,
Fayette, Hancock, Highland, Lorain, Medina, Paulding,
,Putnam, Seneca, Van Wert and Wayne.
POSSIBLY 350,0110 WORKERS IN UPSTATE NEW YORK
and northern New Jersey, victims of the brutal winter which
has siphoned off precious supplies of natural gas, began their
treks back to work today thanks to bOth citizen conservation
efforts and a genUer Mother Nature. Most of the 220,0110 ,
Industrial workers and 500,000 school children In upstate New
York are expected to return to their normal routines this week.
New Jersey Gov. Brendan T. Bryne decided over the
weekend to allow Industries In North Jersey to reopen, giving
jobs hack to about 150,0110 workers. But lndwitries In the south
will remain closed for at least another week while utilities try
to store up a cache of reserves.
Resl.dents In snow-battered western and northern New
York dug out sufficiently to piece their dally routines together,
but a ban on driving in Buffalo threatened the business cllmate
in the state's second largest city.
(Continued on page 8)

'

.

urns child
.

.

Christina Smith, 11, was
seriously burned Sunday
morning when her nightgown
.caught fire at the home of her
grandparehts, Mr. a!KI Mrs.
Albert RMo.lh, near Pomeroy.
Christina, a fifth gra~er in
the claas of Mrs, Mary Hysell
at· the Pomeroy Elementary
School, was in the den of the
home where the fireplace is
located, alone, when other
family members heard her
scream. She ran from the den
to the living room where she
was caught by her grandfather, who put out the fire.
Christine's hair and nightgown were burning.
She was taken to the
Veterans Memorial Hospital
as was her grandfather by the
Middleport Emergency
Squad, which had been called
to the home at 8:45 a.m.
Christine was later moved
to the Columbus Burns
. Center, Children's Hospital,
Columbus.
Fifty percent of her body
had suffered third degree
bums and five percent first
and second degree bums.
Almost all of her hair was
burned but according to word
received P,ere Sunday night

One' more
·
~·~~ ~

her face is not expected to be
scarred.
Skin grafting will be
required and she is ·expected
to be hospitalized for about
three months. Cards may he
sent to the center but flowers
are not received there. Mrs.
Albert Roush is in Columbus
with Christina.
Albert Roush is confined to
Clyde Tripplett, fire chief, reviewed plans Friday night at
DISCUSS FI:.OOD PLANS - Left to right, Ralph
Veterans Memorial Hospital
the Syracuse Municipal Buildiog In case their community
Lavender,
emergency
chief;
Mayor
Herman
London,
and
with second degree burns on
is hit by a severe flood this spring.
both hands, received when he
put out the fire on his granddaughter. Roush only
returned to his employment
with the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
last Thursday after having
By Katie Crow
made so that residents will
THERE WILL BE ad- should be certain they have
been injured in a fall from a
SYRACUSE - Emergency have water. Water wells will dilional police protection. All an ample supply on hand.
utility pole several weeks plans for this cdmmunity in be sealed, and there will be members of the · volunteer
Mayor London sa I d
ago.
case of severe flooding were water for cooking and , departmen ts may be residents are offering the use
reviewed by the . Syracuse drinking only.
'deputized.
of tractors, trucks and boats
Fire Department and E-R
A UST SHOULD be made
Storing of furniture will be in case they will be needed. It
unit at th e Syracuse of persons to be evacuated In garages.
TOPLAYTWICE
was suggested that traffic
first. Persons in danger of
MEDICAL SUPPLIES over the flood road be
Meigs High's Marauder Municipal Building.
The program, headed by high water will be forced to WILL be provi ded by limited. Residents are urged
haskethall team will play
Veterans Memorial Hospital. to fill containers with water
at home against Wabama Mayor Herman London, move.
Persons taking medication to have on hand.
this evening ID a makeup indicate what steps can and
game wltb the reserve will be taken.
Major provisions are :
I
contest slarliug at 6:30 p.
•
m. It will be tbe fifth game
THE ELEMENTARY
In six days for tbe SCHOOL will be available to
Marauders coached by Ron house approximately 100
persons. There will be
.
Logan,
Tomorrow evelling the provisions to feed pers.ons in
'
.
Marauders
play
In the building. Wlien arid if the
Wellston, their sl:llh game Army Corps of Engineers
announce a flood the
ID seven days.
residents will have 48 hours to
:::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::·:::::·:·:::::·:::::::::::·:::::·:::::::::·: evacuate their homes.
PERSONS
OW~1)NG
Martin Pedigo, spokesman would begin looking at the
l.DUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!)
TRAILERS in the flood area
should put wheels on them. - The Army Corps of for the Army Corps of situation today, but it had
and
local Engineers in Louisville, said already warned local
Persons with trailers will he Engineers
Sunny Tuesday. Highs In the advised as to what they are to government officials along the warmer weather ''will governments along the river
low 30s. Probability of snow do In order to move them. the ice-bound Ohio River will obviously help the thaw, and when the Icing first began to
10 per cent today, near zero Members of the fire and begin monitoring lhe river as undoubtedly cause some ice be on the alert for high water
per cent tonight and 10 per emergency departments will rain and temperatures In the break up . But if we don't have when the river thawed.
rainfall and faster current, it
Pedigo said the real danger
cent Tuesday.
~ are forecast by the end of
assist, if possible.
won't
be
as
had.
So
it
is
too
probably
lies in formation of
the
week.
SHUT-INS HAVE been
ice gourges - ice In effect
listed as have persons who Meanwhile, barges loaded early to tell! '
Ice along the 981-mile river, building up a dam by
with much needed fuel oil and
live alone.
which
had been eight inches becoming jammed upon itself
coal
continued
to
move
slowly
'
EVERY EFFORT will be
up the ice-clogged river In some places, had already in tlle river.
begun to soften last week and
Pedigo also noted that faat
&amp;mday .
About a dozen barges Pedigo said the sunny skies moving large chunks of ice
moved through the McAlpine help prevent any further could damage wooden piers
RACINE - The Racine
Lock and Dam on the Ohio at icing on the river despite near and boats in th'e river,
Gas and Service Co. has been
Louisville Saturday and zero temperatures over the although he felt the danger to
placed under drastic
highway and railroad bridges
another half dozen ma\le it weekend.
Pedigo said the Corps and the Corps' dams was
restrictions of gas supply
throllj\h Sunday.
during this winter's severe
slight.
weather conditions, according to Gerald Simpson,
The facUlties of the Meigs
· president.
The firm is asking Bookmobile are especially at
everyone to do all he can to the disposal of students In the
conserve natural gas. Meigs Local School District
Memorial Hospiial and at
Damages were estimated early Monday morning.
Commercial customers are at this time, Mrs. Vilma
The
Pomeroy
Fire 12:22 p.m. took Everett
asked to reduce their con- Pildtoja, director, said today. at ~bout $12,0110 as the result
Mrs. Plkkoja said the book- of a fire which destroyed the Department, called to the Dailey, Breezy Heights, to
sumption to 47 pet. of base
volumes. Residential mobile headquarters has two story frame home of the !K:ene at3 :38 a.m., was joined Veterans Memorial Hospital.
customers are asked to lower received many new books. Don Bradley family on CR 163 by the Chester and Mid- AI 2:31 the squad was called
dleport Departments. The to Butternut to extinguish a
the thermostats In their She suggested students who
fire fight was hampered by car fire , The vehicle was
homes to 80 deg. F. or lower, may be weary of reading
owned by Connie MuHord. At
lack of water.
fiction should be interested in
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
11 posaible.
6:04
p.m. the squad went to
€ause of the blaze was a
"how to" books which the
Wednesday through
the
New
Lima Road lor Mrs.
defective flue. The property
Friday, fair Wedaesday.
unit has.
Roger
Holman,
an obstetrical
was owned by Charles
As long as weather permits Chance of rain or snow
who
waa
taken to.
patient
Pickett. There was no lnthe bookmobile will be Thursday and Friday.
Holzer
Medical
Center.
s~rance on the contents but it
traveling and especially on lllgbs mostly · in the 30s
was believed that the house
Wednesday
and
40s Thul'!l·
the
main
highways
and
POINT PLEASANT was Insured.
students
as
well
as
all
day,
and
Friday.
~-Gws in
Heck's Store tnanagement
WOMAN KILLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
here today said store hours residents are invited to step the ZOs.
CLEVELAND
(UP!) - A
Squad at 12:12 a.m. Sunday
tomorrow - Tuesday - will on to the unit wherever they
woman
perished
SWJday
In a·
took Sam Logan to Veterans
see It stopped. There is no
be iO a.m. to 7 p.m.
$25,0110
fire
of
undetennlned
PTOTOMEET
The store Sunday an- limit on the number of books
origin at an East Side
SYRACUSE
The
nounced shorter hours In which a person can take from Syracuse PTO will meet
HAWLEYS
BETTER
apartment building, eighth .
response to the national need the unit and persons wanting Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. Steve
Jeff
and
Bruce
Hawley,
battalion firemen said . .
to conserve natural gas. special books are invited to Dawson will speak on b&lt;th injured in an accident Theodor~ia Singleton , S9 ,
ReevaluaUon of the store's drop a nne to the unit solutlor.s to drug problems In Friday In Middleport, were Cleveland, found In a
allocation of· gas made the headquarters, Pomeroy, or elemer.tary schools. Third reported in good cond!Uon bedroom, was dead on arrival
return to the earlier schedule phone in, 992-3745 and request grade mothers will serve today at Holzer Medical at t~e .Cuyahoga County
special books be put on the
posalble.
Center.
coroner's office.
refreshments.
unit for them.

Plans for emergency reviewed

•
•
R Iver mon1tormg
begins this week

Magic box makes day (now) Clea~n:~~~~5tol0.
ofbrrrr
new .natural gas
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)As Ohioans slt shivering
, tbrou8h another bitterly cold
week and contemplate the
disasterous eflects the
natural gas shortage Is
having on the ecommy, a
Dallas businesaman says he
has the answers to the

problems.
Pau!J. Venus, a retired Air
Force lieutenant colonel, told
officials In the Statehouse last .
week thlt he has a little white
bol which, he saya, through a
secret !I'OCt!IS, produces synthetic natural gaa.
"You may II8Y that dog
won't lunt, but III teD a man
I can heat hll boiler, and he'D
pay me when I heat It, I can't
~d any skeptlcllm,"
aays V111111, the chlirman of
Free World Energy Corp. of

Dellu.

He says Free World, a
bualne11 started by sit
former mllltary officeri, baa
formulated a nonpetroleum
llquld fuel that burns without
odor or pollution.
The llquld fuel II converted
by Ven111' ''White bo•" Into
• equally,cleu, but potent,
synlhellc ....
"You Clll lDbale tbla llluff
all da)' June and it won't hurt
JW," hi18JI.
•
· Yet v- dllmllllle Uquld
hu men 111111 twice tile hell
'9llue Ill piOIIDe lnd, when
pelf!ed, burna hotter thin
llrGIJIIIt.
rr.e World Clll produce Ill
llquld laellor about 110 cenlla

I'

gallon, he says, cheaper than
gasoline.
The regulated, interstate
price is a maximum $1.42 per
thousand cubic feet for
natural gas this winter and
unregulated, intrastate
market, gaa is selling for $2
or more per thousand cubic
feet.
Ve!Uis says his gaa would
sell for $2.75 a thousand cubic
feet, but his company would
give clienta a 10-year
guarantee the fuel cost
couldn't Increase.
But you first have to tiuy a
'50,1100 converter, which
changes the liquid fuel 111to
pa, which Venus says makes
tbe system practical now only
for business inc! industry.
He says Free Wo~ld is just
concluding ita research and
development, .bavlng apent
$2118,0110 to come up with the
pilot plant capable of making
a half dozen gallOIII of liquid
fuel a day and BIJlall-ecale
demonstration conversion
unlll.
Ve111111111Dt •ylng eucUy
what is In the magic fuel,
other than It's largely air and
water J)iu* "a Uttle key that
llllkelll aU work.''
"It's so simple It would
rock your mind," be sa)'ll.
"Somebody else has got to be
workiDC on the process.
1\Wbe they ( tbe big boys)
have got It and don't want to
put it on the market. I know
we'n~ aolng to market It
someplace."
Ill

United Preas International
Temperatures dipped
below zero In parts of Ohio
again overnight with
Cincinnati reporting a record
low for this date of sll below

zero.
The National Weather
Service said Dayton and
Toledo reported lows of four
below zero.
The Weather Service said a
cold high pressure )lystem
waa centered over Iowa early
today and the high will move
to Eastern Kentucky
Tuesday.
Snow flurries wiD end and
clouds will gradually clear In
most sections this afternoon
as the high approaches.
Forecasters said It would
be cold again today with
highs In the teens e~cept in
southern Ohio where the low
20s are likely.
Clearing skies torilght wiD
see the mercury dip to
between zero and five above.
As the cold high moves out
Tuesday temperatures will
start to climb •nd . by
llfternoon ~ In the
upper 20s are e~pected with
the low 30s poaalble In
Southern Ohio.
The ellended outlook for
Wedneaday . lhrougll Friday
calls for lair weather
Wedneaday with a chlnce of
rain or 111ow on11unday and
Friday.
Highs wiD be mOitly In the

3011 Wednesday and 4011 on
Thursday and Friday with
lows in the 2011.

Racine placed
under drastic
restriction
Bookmobile

is available to

idle students

Losses of $12,000 in fire

Hours revised

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