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un:h.
VOL 12

NO. 48

•

tmts

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

tntintl

SUNDAY, JANUARY 1, 1978

MIDDLEPORT- POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

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

'

.Crim~
.

FBI work
described
.by agent

will continue a
major problem in 1978
.

the other by a self-inflicted gunshot
BY DALE ROTHGEB
GALLIPOI.JS - As we enter the new wound), and a year-old murder was solved
year, a review of 1977 shows crime was only to have a bizarre ending to the case.
· Going into the new year, mystery still
still one of the major problems In Gallia
surrounc!s
several headlined stories of
County.
.
Although statistics show there was a 1977.
decrease In major crimes Investigated by - -ne· first fire of "suspicious nature"
the GaUia County sherifrs department last occurred Feb. 20 at the old Queen Bee
year, local authorities have yet to fix the . Hotel located on Second Ave. and Olive St.
cause of at least three big fires and solve Loss ran from between $50,000 and $100,000
numerous breaking and enterings, thefts in that blaze, the cause of which has not
been determined.
· and acts of vandalism.
Gallip&lt;ilis Fire Chief James A. NorUnlike the big city, Gallia County is a
rural fast-growing community that usually · thup and State Fire Marshal Frank
doesn't rank ,high in the area of ~e. Eisnaugle are still investigating.· Arson is
However, there were some major crimes believed to have been the cause of the,fire.
The three-sfory brick structure was
during the past year. While breaking and
enterings and grand thefts took high owned by Robert Spears of Kanauga, who
priority, the county still managed to have purchased the property from Mrs. Edith
at least three-major fires, aU of suspicious Gilkey. Spears changed the name to the
nature, and all still unsolved; an entire Colony Inn.
It housed a tavern on the north side of
family was wiped out, .(three in a fi~ and ,

'

the first floor and a pool room \m the south
side. There were also 20 rooms and four
bathrooms.
Shortly before the fire, the building
was insured for $100,000. Thus far, no insurance payment for the loss has been
made to Spears.
Three weeks later (March 3) a mother
· and her two small children died ina fire at
their horne on Neighborhood Rd.
Although autopsies performed on the
bodies of Phyllis Owens, 20, and her
cn,i.ldren, Ronnie Thomas Owens, 4, and
Valarie Lynn Owens, 14 months, showed
nothing but accidental death, cause of the
fire in the two-story frame home rented to
her father, Clarence Alonzo ,Lawson, Sr., is
still undetermined.
A month later, the entire family,
which moved to GaUia County from
Florida, was " wiped out" when Billy Ron
Owens, 23, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, the despondent
(Continued on page 2)

Crime rate down in
Gall~a

says

she~ff

MIDDLEPOH T - Searching ,for
fugitives, bunk robbers and bunk embezzlers, and arn1ed forces AWOI.s arc the
_ ~hief business of the Athens ortlce of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, tho
Middleport-Pomeroy Hotary Club learned
Friday .evening.
Max Ellis, senior resident agent of the
Athens FBI office, sp&lt;1a king fo llowing
dinner at Heath Unitad Methodist Church,
described the work of tho agency In Its
national und local responsibilities.
Ellis, a secrctarlul nsslstnnl for tho
late FBI C.1lief J . Edgur Hoover for four
years during the fifties lind notllln~· bul the
highest prulse fot· the num who is credited
with building the FBI Into the world's most
efficient lnterual secqrity fll'~anizutlon .
"He wus tough but ulwuys fair ," said
Ellis of Hoover .
EVENING SHIFT COMMANDER - Sgt. Joe Owens, seated, a veteran of the
Until recent years, according to Ellis,
Gallipolis Pollee Department, has charge·of lhe evening shift ( 4-12) . Sgt. Owens
the ba'slc directive from Congresifand the
received the Jim Mills Award lor outstanding service by a local lawman In 1977 .
Justice Department (for which the FBI Is
His testimony in an armed robbery case was important in the conviction.
the .investigative arm) wus to " do
whatever is necessary to provide for the
internal security of the United Stutes_..:•
Today the FB I operates under upproximately 200 specifi ed violations of
federal law us ..:uldcllncs. "We rnuch
prefer it this way," he sa id . ·
of a large increase in the amount of
evidence that mammals nave an
Thc 'Athens offiCI', purt of the divlslou
coal burned to produce energy
ability to inactivate some chemicals
of the f'BI bused In Cincinnut.i , is primarily
warrants further investigation to
·after they enter the body."·
engaged in huntin ~ down fugitives from
determine lhe exact ITlllkeup of fly
ChrisP. said he was Issuing a
justice (drugs, ca r U1efts across stuto
ash.
warning about the coal emissions,
lines, etc . ), bank robbers , bank
But they also said their research
called "fly ash."
·
embezzlers and AWOl.,.
"has not yet advanced to studying
"We are reporting to the scientific
The speuker described h&lt;!Wcomputers •
the
eff ect of temperature ,
community the results we obtained
have taken over in crime detoctl.on and
atmospheric
dilution.. · and ·:"·
through an accepted test method,
how rapid communiration, fa ct ~a thering
distribution, or the possible changes
perhaps raising a caution flag
and dissemination hns speeded up law
caused by sunlight or1 the fly ash ,
regarding coal emissions, but
enforcement .
"And we have not yet shown that ·
I
- drawing no conclusions to this
Joe Young introduced the speuk&lt;·r.
\
the
mutagenic
effect
on
bacteria
will
point," he said .
President Cu rl D&lt;•r&gt;lsnn pr&lt;'sld('(l I.•Hih"' "'
also occur In anin11&lt;l cell!; or result in
Th~ ash used in the research was
the church scrvecl " slcak dinner.
observable changes during animal
· collected from a power _plant
studies;"
they added .
burning high-ash coal.
Chrisp
Is
principal author of the
"We concentrated on fly ash
article. The co-authors are Gerald
pieces as Sll)&amp;ll as one ten- .
Fisher, an assistant research
thousandth of afl inch in diameter," .
environmental
chemist , and Jeanne
· said Chrisp, '.'because particles this
GALLIPOLIS - Sta le Auditor
Lammert, a staff resea rch
small can easily be-inhaled deep into
Thomas E. ••erguson's offl~'ll unnouncc'll
associate. All three are on the staff ·
the lungs and would not be dislodged
Saturday the Januury 1978 distribution of
by coughing ."
.
' · of the Radiobiology Laboratory on
over $35 million in aid to dependent
the Davis campus.
The researchers said the prospect
children ·(AOC ) to 507,068 recipients In
Ohio's 66 counties.
Ferguson noted the Janwtry payment
. went to 1,557 more recipients tllan the one
in December, an increase of $103,949.
AOC payments ure made to families
with one parent or one unemployed parent
Dec. 31, 1976.
..
.
Time capsule to be opened
on the basis of family size and flnancil!l
Gen . George E. Bush,-president of the
2076
resqurces. The AOC program is funded
historical society , reviewed the facts of the
Gallia County Historical Society
time capsule In the 35-{jegree cold breeze
primarily · by federal and state
off the Ohio River. He praised both Stanley
1976
governments.
A. Saunders and .Mrs . ,Harry K. (Eva)
He and Harry K . Mills placed the . Gallia County received $72,368 for 1,112
Mills, principals in the ceremony.
stone. Eva Mills inspired the pr]oect for families. Meigs County got $62,121 for. 984
Saunders, whose monument shop is at the stone, organized the ceremony, and families. Other counties were Jackson,
352 Third Ave., donated the stone and the helped fill the capsule with the objects $134,355 for 2,184 families; Lawrence,
work of engr:aving, which says for preserved for the great-great grand- $263,196 for 4,323 families; VInton, S.12,095
for 489 families and Athens, $165,476 for
Galllpolltans of the year 2076:
· children of today's generation .
2,555 families .

Fly ash m'!-y cause cancet- say researchers
- --.

DAVIS, Calif. (UPI.) - Tiny
particles of ash spewing from coalfired electric . power plants may
cause cancer because they are
coated with materials that alter
bacteria, according to University of
California researchers.
In an article published Friday in
the current issue of "Science"
ma gazine, researchers at the
school's campus at Davis said
, .. evidence supports a theory tllat such
cell mut~tion is a prerpquisitP. to 11
ca ncer , but 1nore rRSearl'.h ;s
needed .
"There is a 90 perce t correlation
'between compounds that cause
mutagenic alterations in these
bacteria and those compounds that
cause cancer in animals or man, but
' a causal relationship is not proven, "
wrote Dr. Clar.ence Chrisp, a UC
. veterinary pathologist . ;
But he added, ''There is some

BY DALE ROTHGEB
1976
19H
TYPE S
GALLIPOLIS - Crime of all kinds in
Gallla County was down in 1977 compared
11 8
. 2 05
256
,I
to 1975 and 1976 according to the annual
Shootin91
. report issued Saturday I&gt;Y Sheriff James
qe
117
vand.alillnl
Montgomery. · ·
· .
.
21
Sheriff Montgomery, who took office
Jan. I, 1977, expressed-his gratitude to the
'"
"'
citizens of Gallla County . for their
,,
t;nonerntlnn In helping his patrol Rystem
.' 5
1f
work. He also thankec! the Gallla County
'·
·Commissioners, Joe Alley and the CETA
program, Prosecuting Attorney Joe Cain Hotnicid ll
and the prosecutor's staff, the Ohio High- Miacal.llne oua
21 0 .
'"
way Patrol, Gallipolis City Police
Department, village marshals and · tlie
surrounding sheriff's departments and his tnattera, tir e a, prope rt y ~.mage, ~t c .
staff for their asssistance.
The sheriff said he feels that 1978 will
During !977, the department logged
show an even sharper downward trend in 302,362 miles traveled; housed 1,266
crime.
prisoners and fed them 14,400 meals.
"Together with- Joe Cain and Mike
Deputies serves 1,521 subpoenas ,
Fenderbosch's Crime Alert Program, the '
summons
and other court papers, along
patrol system wUI insure Gallla Couniians ·
wtth351warrantsforarrests.
Thesherifl's
·f1
a more law abiding county in 1978," Mo11t· office collected $2,480 in turnkey
.monies
gomery sajd.
·
GALLIPOI.JS - One year less one day
Most striking reductions, according to (feels for) boodk$ing a7nd1 fboor:invgari~~!
1117
• ·4 ro
·
after a time capsule was buried on the
the sheriff's report, were in breakings and pr soners an
park front, the board of directors of the
entertings, suicides and deaths, and thefts courts in the county ·and area.
The
Gallia
County
Sheriff's
Depart·
Gallia
County Historical Society dedicated
and larcenies.
12 fulltime deputies, an the stone marking the spot where the
Breaklngs and enterings were 256 in ment employs
i975, 205 in 1976 and 118 in 1977. The report Investigator, four dispatchers, one woman capsule lies three feet down.
The time was 10 a.m. Friday. The
showed suicides and deaths went from 26 deputy, a matron, two secretaries, two
cooks,
·a
custodian
and
one
parttune
place
was about 15 feet above the concrete
in 1975 to 2S in 1976 to 11 in 197'/.
Thefts and larcenies dropped from 242 secretary who Is In charge of uniform walk leading to the · steps down to the
In 1975 to 373 in 1976 to 236 ln 1977. The crime reoortlng. GaUls County Is the last Upstream Public Use Area. The plastic
(Contlnued on Pile 2)
tubular time capsule was placed there
report includes this table:

"

.

ADC payments over
$35 millions made

·capsWe mark er d.ed ICa
• {ed

,-

·-

)

)
MARC FULTZ

CA111Y CLIFFORD

JIM DIDDLE

I£RMA CLELAND

DEBBIE KEEBAUGH BUCK

DAVE SPENCER

·'

New year offers .fulfillment of hopes
POMEROY- For many the arriv-1 of
a new year brings vlai(JIS of new hopes and
the fulfillment of drealliS.
.
' Eight residents were asked by Sentinel
staff members Friday about the new year
and for their "greatest hopes for 1978."
Here 18 how they responded:
·.
BECKY NEASE ANDERSON - "I

want everyone to try to be happy! "
. BilL QUICKEL - "I want to see the
county prosper, not like the gold rush, but
In an orderly fUhlori. We sb9uld start by
cleaninl! up the county,~ of old junk
cars, clean up the creeks, d\lmp trash at
the dump and not the strip mine. Pomeroy
has made great strides for a facellft . -1
. would like to aee It go countywide."

-.- -

CLOSING MONDAY
POMEROY - The Gallla - JacksOn •
Meigl, Community Mental Health Center
wtU be closed Monday, Jan. 2, ln ob. servance of the hoUday. Normal hours will
· be resumed Tuesday mommg. The crislll
line - m-6554 - will be in operation 24
hours .a day u uaual.

DEBBI KEEBAUGH BUCK - "My
• greatest htpel 1ft for our family and
friends to enjoy beln&amp; fotlether and havinl!
good health, and e~~~eclally for !llY sister to
haveahealthyblby (or two) . I want Meigs
County to grow and to bl prosperous, for
our country to becmle llnanclaUy stable
and for the w"orld to know the low and
peace of God."

MARC FULTZ - "I would like to see
the people of the United States take more
pride in the performance of their jobs.

IN ROSE PARADE ·
MINERSVILLE Debra Ann
ln\boden, daughter of Roland (Skip) and
Kathy Imboden of Poway, Ca!U., will be
marching In the Rose Bowl Parade with
the Poway High School bind. The j)and
was in competition in San Dl4tgo.:.of_ whieh
it 18 a suburb, lut fall and took III'IK place
in Southern CaUfornla and IICOIId In the
state. Mlas Imboden Ia a arandda..hter of
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Imboden of )linersville .

Also, I hope our educational system will
return to be. more practical."
• ·
DAVE SPENCER, Racine, greatest
hopes for 1978 are peace on earth and love
for all man):lnd.
JIM DIDDLE, 1\acine, wisheS to drill .
50 more oilamd gas wells for Meigs County.
CATH'r' CLIF!"'ORD, Rt. I, Long
Bottom, gr«llllest hOpes for' 1978 are lots of
happiness and prosperitY for everyooe.

ERM/1 CLELAND, Chester, greatest

hopes for 1,978 are peace, that no more boys
or men wlll go fight on foreign soU and
· good health to all her lrl_ends and f~y.

BECKY NEASE ANDERSON

BILL QUICKEL

�•

..

John Flemi.itg starts
serving·.his ·sentence

.

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'
D
'
h
·
re
·
·a
eat
s
·
1.
A

•-------- .------------~-------- 1
1

.....

ll
I

· VERNE BUNCE "
GALLIPOLIS - Verne

1

C K SPIRES

Friend• may call at
C 1 · Miller's Home for Funerals
Kenneth Spires, 69 ~ res~d~~'; from 7 until9 p.m . on Sunday.
of Libby Hotel , Gallipolis.
GALLiPOLIS

Bunce , 6S , a natJ,ve of
Gallipolis and resident of
d ied at 3: 45 p.m . Friday in
Crown Point , Ind. died 5 a.m.
Thursday In St. Anthony ' s , Hplzer Medical Center.
Mr . Spires was born Sept.
Hospital , Crown Polnf.
A 1933 graduate of Gall(a . 19, 1908, at Danville In Meigs

Academy High School , Mr.

Bunce was a retired employee of the Marbon
Chemica l Co. In Gary, Ind.
Mr. Bui1Ce Is survived by
his wife, Dolly, four children.
Timmy , Kimberly, Richard
and Tony, all at home ; his
mother 1 Mrs . Verna Bunce,
Gallipolis ; two · brothers .
William E. Bunce, Columbus,
and Leo Bunce, Gary , Ind .; •
three sJs·ters, · Mrs . Colby
(Beatrice) PerkiAs and Mrs .

Jack

(Rubyl

Carcha.k.

Lowell, Ind .• and Mrs . Grant

I Ruth I Dickson, Gallipolis.
Funeral services were held
Saturday afternoon at the
Merrian and Lltfle Funeral
Home. Crown Point, Ind .

County, son of the late Hollis

'

The body was exhwned following the
arrests in July. Pathology tests taken in
Franklin County deteniunect that Thompson had died from internal hernorrha&amp;ing
due to gunshot wounds of tbe chest and
abd&lt;imen.
Following prellmtnary ·hearings in

Weather
Rain, changing to snow and
turning colder today. Cbance

Sp!res and Dora Nelson · of snow flurries Monday.
Sp~res .
High · th d1
'
He married Ruth McCalla

of Gallipolis in ·

1929.
survives, .along ·with

s rn

She • the teens.

e ~ an

ows m

Curtis

I Eloise)

-·

BOARD TO MEET
I'QMEROY - The Meigs County Fair
Board will meet at 8 p.m. Monday at the
secretary's office on the fair grounds.
TIIEFT REPORTED
GALUI'QUS - City police here
Friday investigated. a theft complaint
reported by Virglr)ia Walter, 82 Garfield
Ave. Mrs: Walter said s&lt;&gt;meone took a pair
of women's leather shoes size 9 from her
home.
tification at London, Ohio, conducted an
investigation into the .McCune suicide. The
results have not been released.
There are still several unanswered
questions~ for instance, how did McCune .
. get another prisoner's belt in his cell, and
how was it that McCune's body was not
found until. approximately eight hours
alter he was dead?

most. of

Gallipolis merchants hit by thieves the
past year included Tom's Stereo Service,
O'Dell Lumber, Efliott Appliance, and
Jones Boys, Items desired most·by thieves
were guns, CB radios, stereo equipment,
tape players, television sets and other
appliances.
· In addition, drugs were taken from
Warehime Clinic and cigarettes were
stolen in several B&amp;E's involving small
grocery stores in the city and county.
Anned robberies occurred at the Ohio
Valley Livestock Ya.rda on Vinton Ave.,
the Burger Chef on Eastern Ave. and Bill
Dowler's Market on Fourth 'Ave.
The First Natiooal Bank's drive-in
facility on Third Ave. was robbed during
the afternoon of Nov. 5.'
· lntensive·lnvestigatioris led to arrests
in three of those four robberies.
During the pilst year, the Gallipolis
City Police• officers investigated 36
breaking and enterings · and 108 theft
complaints.
Crime Slallsllco
A~cording to statistics compiled by•
Sheriff James Montgomery, 118 breaking
and enterings were investigated by his
department from Jan. 1, through Dec. 23 of
1977 C\)mpared to 205 in 1976, 256 in 1975,
and 107 in 1974.
Other figures show there were 118 acts
· of vandalism in 1977 compared to 117 in
1976; 123 in 1975, and 149 in 1974.
Grand theft cases totaled 96 in 1977, 180
in 1976, 106 in 1975 and 119 in 1974.
Miscellaneous reports ·(domestic matters,
fires, property damage complaints) were
down in 1977 from 230 to 176'. During 1975,
there lli~e 343 such complaints in- .
vestigated, a decrease of S. from the ~
previous year.
. ·
In 1977, there was a sharp increase·iJi
assaults and harassments.· Sixty cases
were investigated during the pas( year. · ·
Maybe,.as the new year unfolds·, Gallia
County residents will become involved
enough in Operation Crlme Alert to ·help
prevent crimes.
In October ProsecutiJ1g Attorney Joe
Cain announced the appointment of
Michael Fenderbosch as coordinator of
Gallia County's Crime Alert Program. The
project is almed a.t educating residents in
crime prevention techniques as well as
making· citizens aware of potential
situations which could lead to criminal
activity.
GaWa's Crlme Alert Cent~ Is located
in the proaecutor's·offlce \ot 19'.&gt; Locust St.

..
-"
. ...
""

'.
..
.....
~ ··

LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN ACI'ION - To annex or
not tD annex was the question studied above by Gallia
County CommiBsioners John Belville, James C. Saunders
and Paul Dean Niday (1-4) above, preceding a hearing in
the common pleas courtroom which attracted 39 persons,

his

Where You
Get
The
Higllest
Interest
.
.

'

.

••••
Allo~ed· By .

8 PIECE
WOOD GOURIIET
KITatEII TOOLS

Lots of fluff expected in
school financing for 1978

s cotJ;J.Jgi!m·

.

Schools to

.

establish

G~ C. MURPHY CO~
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
AND
DOWNTOWN GAliiPOUS

JANUARY 2ND

Improper tum .
patrol charge
in car crash

•

10 AM TIL 5PM

FLOWERS by GEORGE

. DELIJXE KITCHEN TOOL SET
Oishwater Safe. Heat resistant. 7 pc.

Sales Lot.

Yourt Fr11 11ith 1 deposit of 1300.•
or molt iato 1 "'" vr milling
' •nlnl•lccounl. · '··· -, · .,_.,

w1th. Foldmg handle, snap on storage cover, detachable cord, thermostatically controlled,,
UL
made. in U.S.A. .
• ,..·---c::-'---::-'::-:-::-::----'------4-l
1 tn or exsitlna
DeposH '500.• into • ne11 or miatina
snlnp accoulll rau may pun:h- raur
savinp account rou ma1 purchal raur
S.cbt For lvr . '5.•
Bucitt for oniJ '10."·

%%

%%
l

Four Year
Cerlifieat•. Of.Deposit

PnllJ for - , withdnwal of funds mm
SM9 Certlfitalel II1CI Cerllficates of Dl:4aits
are identical .fir • BMKS &amp; SAVINGS ll J.OMS

One To Two Year
CertlfiCite Of Deposit

Point Pleasant
Federal
· · ·

TWO'S mTER THAM OIIE
St. 175-250t
415 Mllitt 17UI90

,.

kCOiint
PIJS Dailr Interest

Serving M880n COunty

Savings &amp; ·Loan.
Auocl•tlon .

Replar Paabaok

Sii.Month
Certificat!l Of Deposit .·

·

'
*

Since 18921

Cifts Anllallle AI Bolli
· .hint P'-t f1dlial Llullons. ·

Year•End Sale

Save
to
on Sport Shoes

·On All Units On

•300.• or.mo11
21\ cup capacity, Teflow coated, fuli wire Fry Basket

Shoe World III

YEAR END SALE

Deluke Kitchen Tool set consisting
of 6 basic tools and rack for neatly
placing in any kitchen .

atiLTOII . BUCIET DEEP FlYER -

Walters files
coUrt appeal

Coal·negotiators in walkout

i

into 1 "'" or
mlltintu•lnp
account.

The year 1901 was an lmporlant year for the city council
elections. Republican and Democratic differences faded· ~n!D
the background as two new parties "s!Jrlaced" for t(le 1901
electioo - the "slreet paving party" and the "anti&lt;~treet
paving party". The first party won the majority .
An editorial In the Tribune in 1900 reacted to Andrew
Carnegie's prediction that tile 20th century would see the end
of wars:
'
.
" Hwoao nature must undergo a · great cbllll&amp;e to
brlPg this abolli - greater than has yet oecurred since the
birth of Christ. The love uf bravery thatllads Us greatest glory
In battle ts deeply planted In the breosts of men and wumea."
·
In an editDrlal of 1901 the author had a dream :
,;)dream of the future and the 20th century. The people are
going forward and upward upon a !rack based upon truth. The
moving power and guide Is Intellect. It passes through a
beautiful country of fields, orchards, hills and forests. There
are gas and minerals in the earU1 and eoal in the hills, rivt1r~
and creeks, ilnd from all' this we a're learning n!ore and more, ·
lessons that were never contained in ,any book ."

MONDAY

.L aw, And A . Gift· Of Your Choic~·!

Yours Free 11ilh
a d4ii'Slt of

editor of tbe Tribune in 1900.

WILL BE OPEN

'

This set is
found only in ·
Gourmet Shops.
Contains seven
Hardwood Kitchen
Tools i'n a .
Hardwood Base.

I

VINTON - William 1..
Walters, Vinton, has filed a
notice of appeal with Gallla
County Common f.leas Co urt
against Ro.bert Daugherty,
administrator of the Bureau
of Workers' Compensation,
Culumbus,
·and Loft Painting
"" By ELMER W. LAMMI
coal fields."
Company,
Inc., Portsmouth .
'"
WASHINGTON (UP!) -A
Morris Feibus c h ,
Plaintiff
Is appealing ·•
walkout by negotiators for spokesman fo"'. the BOOA,
ANY
decision
of
the Columbus
the soft coal industry has confirmed
industry
Regional
Board
of
Review
halted talks to end the negotiators had walked out,
LIVING ROOM &amp;
dated July 12, 1971 and an
nationwide miners' strike, but said they had not rejected
CMfer includes living
order
of
I
he
Industrial
., • t with
mutual recriminations issues on which tentative
and
hall only up to 300
Commission
of
Ohio
dated
.,; and no date set for resuming . agreement.had heen reached
it .
Dec
.
I,
1977,
refusing
his
talks in ~978.
claim for benefits. The upUnited Mine Workers
meaDS."
·
~
pellant says he suffered em
President Arnold Miller said
A
few
days
later
a
letter
was
received
by
the
Tribune
from
accidental
Injury in his
"' the talks ended Friday when
laying around on
"The
day
has
gone
by
wh~n
it
is
clalmed
that
a
cuurse
of
employment
with
a
woman:
m · the mine operators walked
carpets?
Get
them
woman need only know that for which sbe has a practical use." · l..oft Painting Company Inc.
:..;.. out in response to a union
steamed
so
they
'
ll
be
in
The woman was referring not to qckling, "'"'to politics.
July 12, 1976.
:.:; proposal tD continue health
great shape for winter.
"The decade !hat will close the century has been a
· • · and pension benefils for more
Furniture Stanley Stoomed I
than 800,000 miners and . By LEE LEONARD
fron!S .
.
professi~nal licensing to preparatory one for Gallipolis. In it the ancient town has been
dependents.
UPI Statebouse Reporter
Hollse Speaker Vernal- G. horse racing to home made the seat ·of a Slate institution destined to be one of tbe
DAMAGE LIGHT
GALLlPOIJS - Dumagc
""
But the Biiwninous Coal · OOLUMBUS ·(UP! ) - A Riffe Jr., D-New Bostoo, at construction to liquor to most rer~U~rkable in Ohio and the world. Gas street lighting has
given way to electricity, horse cars have come and gone, , was listed at $60 in a fire at
. ·
•
,. 1. Operators Association said little gaze into the crystal least seems eager to
PROTECTION
displaced
by electric cars, and street paVing is well advanced 5:39 p.m. . Friday lit the
ball;
what's
ahead
in.
l978
at
assemble
a
joi~t
legislative
m~gtull
Legislature
will
contract negotiations, which
Gift a Gift Certificate for
, • . began Oct. 6, broke down the Statehouse:
' committee ID find out why have 60 days to review and in itscooquest over mud, dirt and other obstacles;" so said the residence of Gerald King, 316' Christmas - · Call us about
Look for a lot of talk and no schools are going broke.
vote on the rules. U the
~:, because the ~nioo "began th
Sanders Hill. An electrical
it. MEIGS. VINTON
.,.,, back away from provisions to ·actioo oo the welliJublicized . But Senate President Pro lawmakers ,voted against 'the
sbort in the kitchen was
&amp; GAU.IA CO.
,,,., ,· curb wildcat strikes and school financing study which Tempore Oliver Ocasek', D- ruies, they may not take
blamed for the blaze. Twelve
1978.
Akron, is in no hurry to eff ct
volunteers responded to the
614:-446.4?08
,,. . restOre labor stability in the is to be taken up on several
He also noted that full . 219th alarm of the year.
·abandon the existing school
~ds are the rule-making
services for all Ohio handr-""l~,..-.~-:~----~~---~~~~~~~-"1. subsidy formula. He says it process will become political,
icapped children will be
with tbe committee holding
avaUable next year under
up rules it deems unwise.
new special educa tion
will work equitably if fully Some agencies rnay'he put tn
standards.
fund~. which woo't be unti) the position of Complaining
"Although the Ohio sc)Jool
they cannot operlile WithoUt
after 1979.
funding
issue has only
A permanent solution to the their proposed rul011. :
recently
hit
the front pages of
Another · potentially
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - Dr.
problem would require lax.
newspapers;
the department
conlxoversial
committee
just
Franklln B. · Walter, state
changes (lranslation: inore
launched
a
progr~m in
getting
·
started
Is
the
panel
public
instruction
taxes) and legislative leaders
September
to
study and
will not tolerate that in an assigned to study solutioos to superintendent, says that evaluate alternative school
racial imbalances in public "exploration of minimum
election year.
schools,
including competency requirements for funding programs," said
The court decision. hulding
Waiter. ·
the current school foundation alternatives ID busing - a Ohio school pupils will be one . · "It
will
be
our
formula uncmstitutional has, facet insisted upon by of the challenges facing the responsibility to provide
in
the Ohio
Department · of
instead of forcing the issue, conservatives
· We Wish you
information
and
Legislature.
Education next year."
given
the
lawq~akers
recommendatiol1ll
to
the
Ohio
Walter said a llknember
something to hide behind.
legislature
for
devising
a
Happy Times
Legislative
leaders
are
task force is eiamining the
T)ley will maintain the
school
finance
program
formula cannot be tinkered . trying to find a way to come question ami is expected; to whioh will provide adequate
today, tomorrow and
with while it is still under up with a pay raise foc slate make recommendations: in and equal educa\ional ·
appeal in the courts, and tbe employees, who did not get
opportunities for all learners
judicial wheels turn slowly ooe in 1977.
throughout the New Year
in such a manner that the tax
.
Although fiscal' experts
enough · ro keep things in
burden fails equitably upon
limbo for the rest of the year , clalm the cupboard is bare,
We wish to thank all our
all .citizens."
chances
are
the
mooey
can
lie
Meanwhi1e, there's no
Walter described 1977 as a
telling what shape the schools scraped up before the 1978
..
"year
of
outstanding
elections.
customers for making
will be in by the tlme the
• •..../"...(
. ;• ;
. """
o·',.
achievements
with
a
Ohio judges have also been
....'"
.. ~
entire mess is dropped in the
promising
future.
"
laps of the next governor·and awaiting a pay raise since
' 1977 such ·a success.
He said the scores pf O,hio
• y~ .
Legislature a year from now . 1972, and they may be
pupils
on standardized
included in a pay bill, along
Open Sundav I to 6 p.m.
national
tests continued to
Legislative responsibillties with state officials and
GALUPOLIS - Arthur A. improve, voters adopted 53
-r
will add a new dlmension this legislators. The big cost, Daniels, 16, Hidwell, was percent of school levies in
28 Cedar ,St.
year
- review of state though,. wowd he for the cited to Municipal Court here November - the highest
Gallipolis
agency
rules before they are · 56,000 state employees.
for
lmproper turning
Phone 446-9721
A kitty of $10 millloo is following an accident at •.: 15 percentage in nine years put Into effect.
and
the
department
A 14-memher. House.S.na te being put together by .the a.m. Friday on SR 160 at US established an Energy
committee, headed by Rep. Democrats in case Gov: :IS.
Assistance Office to help
Big Savings on Special G.-oups or Men's, Women's
Thomas P. Gilmartin, 0.. James A. Rhodes lures any
The Gallia-Meigs Post schools
with
energy
and -C hildren's footwe&amp;r. Here's Ju•t a Sa""ple... ~
Youngstown, is ready to open more e~pandlng industries State Highway Patrol said educatioo programs.
that
need
financial
help
in
shop and look at rules
tlie Daniels car made a right
proposed by agencies dealing • acquiring land oc building turn striking lin a~to
20% 40%
with everything·· from sewer lines.
operated by Roger L. Dent,
All S"l " Shoo•
M or ked w rlh
-.::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;:""":&gt;o&lt;::&gt;&lt;:?&lt;:&gt;o&lt;:;&gt;.t.::&gt;-&lt;::&gt;o&lt;::&gt;o&lt;::&gt;o&lt;::&gt;o&lt;:&gt;o&lt;:::&gt;o&lt;"' 21, Gallipolis. There was
-.
Yellow Tog
,;:
moderate damage.
John P. Roberts, 21,
out
Gallipolis, was charged with
)'OU
failure to yield one half of the
roadway following an ac,1foon
cident at 3:3S p.m. on Mill
autoinsura~
IDCOIIle I )'011
Creek Rd. one and four tenths
miles
oorth
of
SR
7.
Why are so many drivers switching
disabled~
The patrol said the Roberts
their insurance to Allstate?
car slid sideways striking p
We'll give you lots of reasons.
vehicle driven by Norma J.
Allstate offers lots of special
Ragland, 37, Gallipolis.
rates and discounts. Good Driver.
Children's...
Again,
moderate damage
24 State Street
Compact Car. Two Car. Low
Values to $9.97 ...
: resulted.
·
Phone 446-4290
Mileage. Young MarriOd. And more. , A deer was struck in an
And Allstate offers today'a !!lOOt
; accident at 8:30 p.m. on
· advanced claim handling. Coast
l Johnson's Ridge Rd. north of
to Co&amp;st. Fast. Convenient
. Georges . Creek. The patrol
We think you'll find a
' said the animal ran into the
difference with Allstate:- ·
path of a vehicle operated by
...
Larry
K. Johnson, 22,
So compare compunies. Find out
Gallipolis.
There was minor
Men's ...
why the owners of over nine
damage.
Values
to s19.99...
million carS are now in "good
hands." Call or come in.
NOW

•••

o.hio politi'cs

Wooten,

married life In Danville and
had resided In Gallipolis the

."'

By James 8uKla
_
GALUI'QLIS - There is one advantage to the highly
bureaucratized world in which we live. We know when we are
supposed to celebrate the different holidays. This was not
always true .
.
More than 70 years ago the 19th century bee Bill&lt;! the 20th ·
century, but.iri what year, 1900 or 1901 ? ConsequenUy, Gallians
. celebrated the turn of the century in both years.
A reader wrote to the Gallipolis Tribune in 1901: "When
did the present century begin?"
The editor of t1ie Tribune answered : "Our century began ·
at the Elks Hall inside of an ancient dress suit." The editor
further stated : "This is beside the subject which we paas up to
the scientific sharps of the GaWa Academy for further
investigation."
The mention of the Elks Hall was a reference to a dance
there atlended by over 400 people. The dance was entitled
"New Century Ball."
Reactions to the new century were varied. The
Presbyterian Church in Gallipolis held a "Week of Prayer for
\he New Century" in 1900.
In 1901 the General Conference of the Free Baptist Church
was held at Rio Grande College. The keynote sermon was
given by the Rev. J. M. Shaner oo the subject, "The Kind of
largely from Kanauga , The hearing was moved into
Church Needed for the 20th Century".
"executive sessioo" soon after opening, and ended when
. st. Peter's Episcopal Church took on a whole new look
Finley Cotten, chief backer of the annexation proposal,
facing the 20th century, thanks w gifts from the J.M. Kerr
withdrew the petition which called for annexation of 413
family.
The new century started poorly for buUfrogs. Jack Hart
acres oorth of Gallipolis oo SR 7.. An ,incorrect description
and Tuck Reynor fowtd hundreds of bullfrogs in every position
caused the withdrawal.
imaginable along the Raccoon frozen as stilf as Egyptian
mummies.
The first week of the new centw-y (1900) saw v. A. Gates
head of! to Washington looking for a patent on a wheelbarrow
he· had invented.
In 1901 the eyes of the world were on a court case in New
earlier.
Federal Mediation Service
York
that was really a portent of things to come in the 20th
.Federal medialors, who said only the negotiations
century,
A housewife had taken her husband to court accusing
had tried unsuccessfully to were "recessed indefinitely."
hill'
Of
tickling
her feet in bed. The Gallipolis Tribune's opinion
lmpoSe a news blackout oo
With 188,000 miners on of the matter was
Ibis :
the talks, were reluctant to strike siilce Dec. 8, Miller
"We hold that H feet lickllDg gives a buol!aad especial
talk w reporters, but one said said "it may he a tough New
he was "very discouraged" Year - but the UMWA will gr&amp;Uflcation and adds materially tD the gaiety of his life, that a
loving and faltblul wife might cheerfully put up with It and
by the break in negotiations. prevail ."
even
laugh over lt. U a man must tickle somebody'• feet In
A ·spokesmAn for the
ordertobehappy, we should say, letlt be bia wife's feet, by ail

• •
mmnnwns

He
was · a
retired
titrtekeeper for the Marietta
TNT plan!. He was also e
carpenter.
sper,t

PLEASE,PLEASE
.
The Galli&amp; County Sanitation
Department requests that . individuals
refrain from putting discarded Cbristmas
Trees in the gree~ dwnpster boxes.

'

Athens; 16 grandchildren and
four great.grandchlldren.

He

county in the state to 09mply With the
uniform crlme reportl.r)g regulation which
enables the department to receive federal
·
grants.
Five.ofthe employees are paid under the
Comprehensive Employment Training Act .
(CETA) program. In addition, the CETA
program ·employs 17 school security
guarda. Since that program began, only
one B&amp;E has occurred in a school. There
has been one r~rted gasoline theft and
apprehension and one vandalism act ·
which was settled out of court.
AI the pre'!"nt tlme, 35 persons are
enrolled in Police Training Schools, a
requirement of the state.
The table below shows kinds of crlmes
investigated during the past year com·
pared to previous years:

•

six

chi ldren, Jack , Lang·svllle;
Ronald, Lucasville ; Charles,
McArthur ;
Mrs .
Paul
(Delores) Jeffers of Crown
City·; Mrs. Walter (Marlon )
McCarley , Vinton and Mrs.

"Gwts, radios, stereos
liked by thieves .
•

as Hundetennined. it

.'

Crime rate

Gallipolis Municipal Court, Ratcliff and
McCune w~re bound over to the grand
jury . They were later arraigned (or
' .aggravated murder and trial dates were
set for December and January.
During their ·preliminary hearing,
Donna J. Leedy, Ratcliff's common law
wife, was one of the main state's witnesses. However, she could only relate the
events that occurred the nlgbt of Sept. 14,
1976 up and until the t~e she left Ratcliff
and McCune out of her car on SR 554 to
visit Thompson.
She testified that Ratcliff .was going ·
there to borrow money and squirrel hunt.
They were carrying a .410 shotgun when
they left.
When they returned early the next
morning, Ratcliff showed her a $100 bill
and had other guns in his possession.
On Nov. 2, McCune committed suicide
· by hanging himself in his cell at the Gallia
County Jail: Since McCune had agreed to
turn state's evidence, (he would have been
the main witness a2ainst Ratcllffl and for
other reasons, the prosecution had ·to ·
dismiss murder charges against Ratcliff,
Other reasons were:
- That since McCune was dead, any
statements he. made cannot he used
against Ratcliff because of the Sixth
Amendment of.the (i, S. Constitution.
- The state had only the testlmony of
DoMa Leedy, who by her own statement,
was not present at.the time nor did she see
anything that occurred that night.
. - And .finally, legal problems
· sutTounding the testimony of Donna Leedy
and the "husband and wife privilege."
Ratcliff entered a guilty plea to a
charge of grand theft to whip~! he was
sentenced to a 2-li year tenn in the Ohio
Penitentiary.
·
Prosecuting Attorney Joe Cain, Sheriff
James Montgomery and Agent Herman
Henry of the Bureau of Criminal !den-

father and husband of the March 3 fire
victims, died of a self-infiicted bullet
wound·.to the head. The shooting occurred
at his family's graveslte in Centenary
Cemetery in Green Twp.
Owens, who worked at a Gallipolis
lltrvice tlta)ion, was also employed as a
special deputy and investigator for the
GaWa County sheriff's department.
On June 20, another fire of
"suspicious" nature gutted the sanctuary
ofthe 101-year-old Grace United Methodist
Cburch located on Second Ave. and Cedar
St. in Gallipolis. ·
·
Arson Is believed to be the cause of the
lire which caused an · estimated $780,000
damage. Fire Chief Northup and State
Fire Marshal Elsnaugle are still in·
velllgating the cause . of that fire;
however, oo arrests have been milde.
Another bizarre case unfolded here in
late July when Clyde Ramey liatcUff, 50,
Athens, and Terry McCune, 28, Colwnbus,
formerly of GaUia County, were Indicted
for aggravated murder In the shooting
death of a Cheshire Twp. fanner.
They were charged one-year after the
body of Albert Thompson, 70, Rt. · 1,
Cheshire, was found near his shanty off SR
554 between Kyger and Cheshire .
Thompson's body was found 15 days
alter he was killed. At ' that tlme, no
· autopsy was made due to the decom. position of the body.
Dr. Donald R. Warehlme, GaUia
County Coroner, listed the cause of death

pas115 years.
Graveside services are
scheduled
1 p.m. Monday at
Vinton Memorial Park with
Rev. C. J . Lemley ofllclating.

MINERSVILLE - David Nease,
Minersville, a member of Huntington
Interstate Mllk Products ABIII., bu been
elected to serve on the Board of Dlrecton
' of the Notional Milk Producer.
Federatioo .
The Board hasr eaP(naiblllty ior the
management and direction of tbe
Federatioo . \t oversees the workings of the
llrganlzatlon s vario1111 committees and
helps . establish the framework for the
Federation's policy.

Rt. 2, Coolville.
-·
Roach told deputi~ Friday evening he
had stopped •t a Tuppers Plains service
station fof 10 minutes: 5:10 ID 5:20p.m.
He set the tool box down near the.door
and was waiting for h1s wife to pick hlm
up. In that short time, to go to his car and
return to where he left the tools, the red
box WjiS lifted .
Forcing open the rear door sometlme
week (between Monday and Friday ),
eone entered a house on SR 689,
sacked, the place, but took nothing,
according tD Sue Meek . Owner of the house
is Jo¥ph Nelson.

·Crime will

!IT ANLEY SAUNDERS AND EVA MILLS dedicated a stone on the parkfront
Gallipolis in a Friday ceremony. The.stone, donated and engraved by Saunders
placed by him and Mrs. Mills' husband, Harry K. Mrs. Mills inspired th~
ject and organized the ceremony. The stone marks the place of alOO year tlme
psule.
·

to national board

truck of Danford Douglas, Rt. 2, Racine,
He worked f;ut , whoever it was took
the red tool box and tools of DanJWach,

I'QMEROY - James J . Proffitt,
Meigs CountY sherllf, and Ron Hollon,
deputy' Friday took John w. Fleming to
the Ohio Corrections Medical and
ReceptiOn Cent« •t Columbus to begin hla
sentence for murder.
Common Pleas Judge John c. Baoon
sentenced Flernln8 . .to 15 years' tO Ute
Thursday.
·
In other matters : ·
Deputies are investigating a breaking
and entering at HarrilonvWe Schlol.
Nothing was taken aft« entrance· was
galried by breaking out the window next to
the kllchep between 3:15 and 6:~ a.m.
Ted Hatfield, CUBtodian, told Deputy
Dana Aldridl!e about the tndlcent.
Some took a battery from the pickup

New year 7~ years ago:
Did it start 20tfi century?

David Nease named

....

Substantial Savings If
You Act Now! Take
Advantage Of This
Current Sale And Our
Thirty Day Delivery!

9 .

"lcould.help .
Pf'O\ide with a
.regular thly
became

Find

why people all ·
over are switching to Allstate

·

C. K.Snowd~

4=0 to79o·~~~~~~

WE DEAL IN QUALlTY

MOBILE HOMES SUCH·AS
SCHULT
VICI'ORIAN ·

HOLLY PARK
GOVERNOR

K&amp;K
MOBILE HOMES
. , 675-3000

NOW AVAILABLE THROUGH
THE

McGINNESS-STANLEY AGENCY:IN
NICK JOHNSON

......
4522nd Avt

•

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE ·
Phone 446-1761

Gallipolis

NOONE HURT
GALUI'QLIS - No one
was injured or cited in a
coUisioo F~day oc the Super
America lot off Second Ave.
City police officers said cars
driven by Todd W. Johnson,
19, flallipolis, and Robert H.
McMaster, 61, Cincinnati,
sideswiped. There W88 light
da1J111ge.
·

See me about State Farm
disability income insurance.

~~~~~· 4 90 to1490
* Knee·hl Hose. Comlorl Top

Reg. 59&lt; pr...

4/51.00

NoTAll Srzes Avartabte n~ Every Style

Nobody-but nobody-saves you more.

..

'"''"~"((

IIMt fH IIUIIII ltutDn'lotlrlt lnluranct ~y
..,.. Otloet ~~o.n~ P"!MI

303 Ur»Der River Rd.

Acnas From Silver Bridge Plaza
Open Dai~ 9-9; Sunday 1-6
Master
ana
Wo rconn.:
.
Char~e

V r~K"t

�.....

•

~The. Sunday Times-&amp;nlinel, Sunday, jan. I, 1971

'

Rio Grande and Bob Evans
to offer three new &gt;classes

1977: THE -YEAR OF WOMEN.
\

By Catherine Benet
The year was 1977 ; the InLernatlonal Women's ·Year.
All across the world women
Holiday Happine=me to Carole Anderson Painter via a t"J"eated news. Names ooce
trip to South Americ'a with students ol the Engineering Depart- shunned were on the lips of
ments at Ohio State University.
, ,
all . New faces began to apCarQle works for the president pi the Civil Engineering pear and women took their
Departl11ent and was given the OP~?Drtunity for the trip through plaCf in history.
her employment. The group left Columbus on·Dec. 7 flying to
The new year began with a
Bogata , then on to Hosteria San Luis De ·!.a Ucuenga, on to new First Llldy, Rosalynn
Quito, and Equador. On Dec. 18 they had luncheon on the Carter. Once thought to be
equator. They had a da)' at the Panama! Canal , and visited just a gentle Southern lady'
Guadamalia City before returning to Columbus on Christmas Mrs. Carter proved herself to
Eve.
the public and the media. A
Next morning Ca role was out of bed and with her niece, tireless worker and crusader
Kristin Anderson , enroute to Middleport to spend Christmas of human rights, she made
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Anderson. Here also headlines with the same style
•for the holiday were Mr. and Mrs. Keith Anderson of San and importance as her husRamon, Calif. They 'll remain in Ohio until Jan. 8 visiting, band. All of the gentleness
relatJves here and m Lancaster. The family was joined for and Southern grace was still
Christmas by Mr. an ct!1rs. Tom Anderson, Middleport.
there but Rosalynn managed
ANOTHER of the happy travele'rs of Meigs County is Mark
Ha ggerty of Middleport who is visiting the Dick Rosenbaum
famil y ill Danville, Calif. He'll join them for a New Year's !tip .
to Lake Tahoe. Mark will return home on Wednesday to
reswne his studies at Ohio University. Other members of the
Haggerty family spent Christmas with Leon Saunders
Gallipolis.
.
'

JUST BACK from a semester of study abroad is Robbie Harris, student at Marshall University. ~ob was one of 30 Marshall students accompa nied by two ilistructors who traveled to
England, Gennany, Spain and Rome visiting industries and
b&lt;Jnks and hearing lectures and attending conferences on
business. He'll he in regular classes at Marshall starling in
January . ·
Before returning to the States, Rob visited in Sardinia with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Harris.
Incidentally, Ja net Harris will be returning to Ohio next
month for evaluation of a back condition and possible surgery.
Gene will foilow If the surgery is scheduled.
And Kathy Harris who has been a student at the American
College of Rome for a year and a half, will be coming back at
the end of February and will be going to the Tusculun College
in Timnessee. The school in Rome is affiliated with the Tennessee college.

.~::::::::::::.:::::-.::::::::::s:&gt;~:.-:::.~ emo~

ij

)!)
$&gt;
:
.,

',·,·,!..·..

The· Poet'S

Comer
·

· Yes, 'tis true, one of the
dearest things a child can
cherish, hold close In heart,
and he thankful for - their
parents! So, as the holiday
season has drawn near us
again it brings 'to my heart
the gladness of having
pare nts and grand parents

who shared their , wedding
anniversa ry on Christmas
Day. My parents, Donley and
Betty Reibel of Pomeroy,
we re married 31 years ago
December 25, 1946 . My
gran dpa r ents, Henry a nd

Edna Reibel, were married
64 years ago, December 25,
t913. So I felt that in
· HILDA HARRIS who moved this fall to Indianapolis, lnd . celebrating Christmas, the
.came back for a holiday visit with her daughters, J ill Williams L&lt;&gt;rd's birthday, when the
whole family gathered at my
and J ane Miller, and their families.
grandpa rents' home around
QUITE A surprise for Genevieve Meinhart and Enna Smith and about each ot her
Thursday was a visit from a cousin they hadn 't seen for 15 celebrati ng the fest ivitiCs,
years. Perry Holstein of Basking Ridge, N. J . ca lled on them · how thankful we must be for
while in the county to visit the grave site of his parents at each other and for what we
have and fqr His blessings. I
Beech Grove Cemetery.
have a lot to be than kful to
Him for. - Donna W. Shato.
HAPPY NEW YEAR !

Lamaze childbirth class:es
begin in in Athens
ATHENS- The next series
of Lamaze
child birth
·preparation classes, spQn·
sored by O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital, will begin Mortday,
January 9. This class is for
couples whose expected date
of de li ver~ is prior to March
5.

:

.

Included in the six-week
'COUrse are : relaxation and
breathing techn iq ues fo r

LESSONS PLANNED
POMEROY··The . Belles
and Beaus Western Square
Dance Club . will sponsor
western dance 'lessons starling on Thursday at the Royal
Oak Recreation building.
Cecil Sayre will be instructor
and caller for the classes to
he held from 7 tu 8:30 p.m.
Further information ma y be
obt}lined by' telephqning
992:7-477 or 882-2283 in West

labor; inst.r uctio n in the
physiological and emotional
aspects of the birth process,•
exercises for physical
preparation of the body and
familiarization with hospi, al
procedures.
.
The fee for the series is $30.
Those planning to attend, who
have noi yet pre-registered,
should call Pamela Collier,
Virginia.
593-5049.

_the White House with an i.ron ·
hand and began to do away
with most of the trappi~gs of
the Imperial First Ladyship.
Entertainment was modified
andforthelirsttimeinyears,
the White House took on an
air of down home hospitality.
During U1e winter months
Mrs. Carter kept her offices ·
at a chilling 65 degrees and
wore a coal while she worked
on her projects. Following the
steps of Be\ty Ford, Rosalynn
took a public stand on ERA
and has hegun work on·
several mental redardation
programs. In an interview
with B;trbara Walters, Mrs.
Carter broke the news of a
proposed presidential prD'
gram tor 1978; an upgrading
of the qualityuf .life with the
support of corrununities. At
the end of her first year in of- ·
fice, and tha t is what she has
turned the role of First Lady
into, Mrs. Carter has emcrged as one .of the most
political, energentic and hard
working wives of any president. Her popularity with the
country is evident. · Look for
her role to expand in 1978.
Also in the world of politics
was Dixie Ray Lee who
became gove'rno r · of
Washington state. While a
popular figure in the energy
department, she lost public
support in office and her
pol itica l future is questionable.
In Raleigh, N.C. a grandmother was elected mayor.
The trend of women holding
higher office swept the county and the precentage of
women in offke rose. One
woman who made headlines
fur herself was Midge Costan•
m, Carter's ..;Assistant for
Public Liaisofi':l! Midge once
referred to herself as a
"pushy little broad" and she
proved that over and over
again with sometime off color
remarks.
'
Barbara J ordan made the
decision not to run again in
another move to present a
low 'key image to the public.
Cornelia Wallace, once .
thought to be tlhe new Jackie,
couldn't stand George's wire
lapping and public cuts , so
after just a few years of marriage they are calling it quits.
In the jet Set world of the
heauliful people Elizabeth
Taylor developed a new im· age; one lhal even a press
agent gone mad couldn'thave
dreamed up. She became a
. fatmer's wi[e and eight by
ten glossies can bti· seen

everywhere of Liz on her opera star gave ..jhe public,
tractor. Liza took Broadway '"Bubbles, ASelf Pprlmit."
by stonn and proved she 'can
Collene McCullough broke
be a success in any medium- s.:veral book records with
with " The Act. " Faye "The l'hom Birds." She conDunaway finally got an tinued to star. on the best
Oscar, long over due, for sellers list with her novel but
~' Network ." Pat's little milk announced that the ne.t book
drinking daughter Debby won 't be quite up to par. Anne
Boone, 1nade music history Edwards wrote a Vivian
with her cover version of .Leigh bio and then fancied
" You Light Up My Life." Dol- herself to be another
ly Parton crossed over from Margaret Mitchell. She'll
country to popular music come out with a sequal to
with a new set of jet trending "Gone With The Wind," and
friends to make it easier.
it promises to be-some what
Late a utumn saw an expl"" racy. The public won't wait
sion of films for · and about until tomorrow to think.about
women. The change mefwith , buying it to see of Ret! comes
critical acclaim and cheers. hack to Tara ...
Women had at last been seen
In the world of sports,
in a realistic light. Jane Fon- Billie Jean King didn't make
da and Vanessa Redgrave the comeback she wanted to.
teamed up for Lillian . Chris Evert is still rumorred
Helman's "Julia," and the to be . with J inuny Conners.
res ults were sim ply · But the blg name was a very
devasting. Forida , now a sweet 14 year old Tracy
mellow 40, also stars in a Austin )l'ho shook the super
Vietnam epic, "Comes A cool Evert in a much watch
Horseman Wild and Free." tennis match.
Her place in Hollywood was
In Aspen, the coke capital
reassured when she cohosted of the world, Andy Williams'
the Oscar awards and was ex, Claudine L&lt;Jnget was
master of ceremonies for the given only a slap on the hand
American Film Insti ture for the shooting of her live in
tribute til Bette Davis, Anne lover Spider Sabich. Bette
Ba ncro ft and Shirl ey Midler made a big comeback
McLaine followed
and Cher continued to bore
suit and did the , "Turning the publ ic wit h her on-againPoint." Proving that a . off·aga in marriage to Gregg
woman an.d woman relation- ·Allman. Little Marie Osmond
ship could be just as sue- grew up right 'Pelore the boob
cessful at the box office as the tube eye a nd Barba ra
Redford-Newman team, the Walters proved she was
big screen promises to be worth a cool million. Ms.
alive with better films about Walters esta blished herself
women and the problems as a tough interviewer and a
native to them. Once thought journalist par excellence. She
to be a teenage for ever, Sally also showed more grace then
F ield gave a chilling prefor- some of her fellow journalists
mance as "Sy bil" and over the price tag placed on
reestablished herself . as an her talents. Of course with
actor. Diane Keaton came out her ba nk account one can af·
of Woody Allen's fu nky ford to be gracious.
shadow and got the critics
In
Europe
women
eating out of her hand with dominated the newS'. Queen
her role in " Looking For Mr. Elizabeth celebrated her
Goodba"," Talia Shire was Si)ver Jubliee Aruliversary
the woman in the arms of tlhe with all the royal splendor
man every woman dreamed that only a queen · could.
of, " Rocky." The new face to Princess Anne made the
watch was Marthe Keller, the Queen a grandmother with
Swiss bea uty in " Black Sun- the birth of Master Peter
day," " Bobby Dea rfield" and Phillips. Lady Churchill died,
''Fedora." By Hollywood ending an era of history never
standards; it ·was the year to be Seen again. And in
wome)1 finally arrived.
. Ireland, two housewives who
In the literary circles Liv made peace their mission
Ullma n the Scandiavian and hope their symbol capbeauty who turned out lured ·· the Noble Prize for
several fine prefonnances, Peace. Betty Williams and
turned out a hest seller wi th ; Mairead Corrigan won the
"C~anging . " Read the
award for their ·work in
world · over, Ullman touch- lr.e la~d's bi\)Ody civil. wa r.
ed every emotion known to Off 11\ 'the fairy tail land of
women. Beverly Sills, · the ~ante_ Carlo, Grace's little

country made more news •
tban Anita Bryant. What ·
started out as her ·desire to
keep 'the hiring practices of
private sthools just that
private, turned into a media
created battle of Anita
against the gay corrununity.
Facing death threats against
herself and her family, loss of
engagements and a trying
emotio11al battle she made it
through the year with public
reaction to her every move.
While Anita won her battle
in Dade County the war has
continued througbo~t the
country. At the end of the
year she published a book
dealing with. the issue of
homosexuality. The book has
been received wit h public acceptance arid many admit
that perhaps her stand oo t he
Dade·County issue was valid.
What .Ver continues with the
Anita Bryant issue, if will ;
continue to make big news in
1978.
So women made up a larger
percentage of the news in
1977 . They gained in the arts,
in the issue of human rights
and proved that they are to be
taken with . a serious view.
For 1978 women will no doubt
make news and make it relevant to the course of history.

princess, Caroline announced
her wedding plans witlh
French businessman Phillipe
Juno!.
Three of the biggest names
in the news were Margaret
Trudeau, ~acqueline Onassls
and Al)ita Bryant. Each
depicted woman in her most
open nature.
Margaret Trudeau fled the
political fortage of Essu
'Street 'in Ottawa , for the
nightlife of the Bii A. Her
desire was to become a work·
ing photographer while stiQ
commuting to Canada's seat
of powet. Her activities met
with harsh reaction and in the
end Pierre end ~ with three
children and no mother or
wife. Margaret.has continued
her 'ultimate freedom trip."
The two are now legally
separated and her plans to
hecome a photographer have·
gone sour. She is currently
working on a Canadian movie
liut the future . is unclea r.Margaret 's cry for
freedom
led to th e
establishm ent
of
her
own identity and not that
of just a tool for her hus"band's political career. Yet
while she vowed never to gi ve
up her children she sees them
only 10 days a month. While
Margaret might have won
her identity she lost her mar·
riage, her children and continues to face many personal
problems. A heavy price to
pay for her 'freedom trip.'
A:;

always,

Ja cquelin e .

OnaS!liS made big headlines
in 1977. Her job at Viking
Press was coming along just
fine. She edited "In The Russian Style," and had plans to
edit . Russi,an fairy tails in
French into English. Viking
then published a tacky book
dealing with a plot to kill the
president , a president whose
name happened to be Edward
Kennedy. Jackie quit and settled for a cool $20 miilion
fr om
s t e p -d aug ht e r
Christinla. The ·most in·
teresling facet of Mrs.
· Onassis' life for the year was
the reestablishment of her
identity and talents. Proving'
that she did work at Viking
and enjoyed it, Jackie set an
example for women across·
the nation. Like many she
was faced with middleage"
and the question of what do I
do now that I'm alone. Jackie
opted for a job and gained
public support. What happens
in 1978? Perhaps not even she
can answer that.
No other women in the

"When you·.e sack
or hurt and can't
· work, your car
payments don't stop~

Moore -Major vows made
in Presbyterian church
'

which includes a hlsiOI"Y of . All three classes will meet • GAJ;LIPOLIS - Vickie front and. back lace bib, high wore p1nk picture hats
the subject and experience ut tl!e Bob !'vans Fanns Lynn Moore and Robert E. neckline, and long sleeves, trinuned with pink and white
with tec)miques including Cr~ft Bam, Ria Grande.
Major were united in full flounce skirt and at· ribbon streamers wltb daisies
applique, revetse applique
A.n yone who wants to marriage in a double ring tached train. The front lace · decorating the back of the
and trapunto. Quilting with register for one or more of the ceremony at tlhe First United bib and cuffs were hand hat . They., cartied a single
frame and hoop will allo be classes may do so .~Y Pres byterian 'church in decorated by the bride with long stem white carnatio'q
taught. Ms. Barb Thomas will lelepbone. Call the conhnumg Gallipolis on August ?:1 at 7
seed pearls. The bridal lipped in pink and tic'&lt;l with a
be the instructor and the education &lt;1fflce at RGC-CC p.m. The candlelight serviee headpiece was a chapel· pink and white bow with
class wilJ;oneet Saturdays, 10 (245"-5~) · and give name, was performed by Rev . length mantilla o[ shee r streamers.
•
a.m .-noon, b egi nn ing address a•d social security Frllllk and Rev. Tura Hayes. polyester organza, trlnuned
~ :~
Miss Melinda Major, niece
January 7, for a $15 fee.
number· A check for the
·The bride is the daughter of with polyester cluny and · of the groom. daughter of Mr.
,
Mrs. Wickline will tea ch carr~ .fee must be mailed Mr. and Mrs. Freddie L. cottoo Venetian laces. The and Mrs. Martin Major Jr. of
the third class, basic lmitting withm. f1ve .daY~·
Moore of Cheshire and the headpiece was also decorated Rushsylvan ia was fl owe r
aM needlepoint, which will
Reg1strat10n m .per~n at groom is the son of Mr. and by the bride with blue daisies girl. She w9re a long pink and
meet Mondays, 7·9 p.m., RGC-CC or by mail Will allo Mrs. Martin Major Sr. of and seed pearls.
white dress.
beginning January 9: The fee be accepted.
. Rushylvania, Ohio.
The bride's jewelry was a
Mrs. Moore chose for her
is $15. ·
.
was heart-shaped, white gold daughter's wedding a long
The , church
decorated with two vases of necklace with a pearl in the pink gown with a · high
white daisies and ferns . center belonging to her " neckline, full fl ounce skirt
There were two single can-· grandmother, Anna Ker· · with long shePr sleeves.
The groom 's mother chose
dies on the table beside the wood .
The bride chose her ·a blue street length, short
vases at the front of t he
church and two seven~tief necklace as something old sleeve dress accented with
candelabras decorated with and some thing borrowed . pink &lt;!nd blue flowers . Both
light blue bows. The family Something blue was IJer mothers wore double carpews were decorat~ with garter and something new nation corsages with baby's
was the weddlng dress.
breath and ·fern .
blue satin bows.
Her
bouquet
was
of
white
The groom' s best man was
Music fo r t he ceremony
daisies,
and
pink
and
blue
his
nephew, Chuck Bland of
Mr. and M1J. Robe·rt Major
was provided by Mr. and
The
Mrs. Merlyn Ross. Selections carnations with pink, white Huntsvil le, Oh io.
groomsmen who also served
iricluded "One Hand, One and blue streamers.
The guests were registered as ushers were David Moore decorated with pink, blue and Huntin~lo n . W. Vn .; Mr. and
Hea rt ," "Time_in a Bottle/'
Mrs. Lee W&lt;&gt;od ; rtut11m~ ; M1·.
"The Way We Were," and by · Mrs. Tommy Kerwood, and Jeff Moore of Cheshire, yellow flowers with green and Mrs. Hi ck Kerw ood.
lea
ves.
aunt of the bride. Rice bags brothers of the bride. The
CALENDAR
"The Lord's Prayer.''
Mrs. Rick Kerwood of Toledo, Ohio ; Mr. ai&gt;d Mrs.
Gallery wreopen at Riverby on Tuesday, January 3 1978.
The bride, escorted to t he were distributed at the end of .croom, hest man, grooms"
Thomas E. Housh . llcu.: ine :
BEFORE
Exhibit for the mooth of January 1978, Gallia County . altar by her father and given the ceremony by Miss Kathy men and the father of the Toledo, cousin of the bride Shc1Ty Mujor, Hu shsylvt~ni a:
'Senior Citizen Art.
'
in marriage by her parents, Hager, cousin of the bride br ide wore lig ht bl ue · ami Miss Vickie Hoffman, David ll onrs ly. flcll efon·
Gallery Hours .- Saturdays and Swfdays, 1 p.m. until 5 was attired in a gown of sheer and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. tuxedoes -with black trim and maid-of-honor, helped out at tulne ; Hub)' Ann Mnjor .
the gift table.
_
.
p.m. ; Tuesdays and Thursdays, !Oa .m . until 3p.m.
polyester organza lined in Mike Hager, and Mis.:; Laura ·ruffled shirts.
1l1e
rehearsal
dinner
was nush l'ly lV HIIi41; Mike
Master Se ldom Moor e,
January 3- Deliver Senior Citizen.artwork to be exhibited acetate taffeta, trimmed with Wolfe, also cousin of the bride
given
bji
Mrs
.
Rit;ht~
rd
Me· Jo'crgu&amp;em, Lakeview : Bl'inn
to Riverby. Riverby reopens for the new year.
polyester cluny and cotton and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. cousin of \he bride, s&lt;in uf Mr.
Cartney
ill
\he
home
of
tlie Cn mpb &lt;•ll , 11 eli t·fon tll inl• :
· and Mrs . ' Ml~ e Moore ,
Januarr 24 - 7;30 p.m., F.A.C. Interdepartmental venetian laces, ~y l ed !!th Wayne Wolfe.
bride'
s
grandpurents,
Mr
. Ma rk and MPiis:-.a Blanc! ,
The mai d-of-honor wa s Ga llipolis, served as ring·
Meetmg , Riverby ; 9 p.m., F.A.C. Trustees Meeting , Riverby.
Huntsvi lle.
and
Mrs.
Halph
Kerwood
S1·.
Mi ss Vickie Hoffman of hearer.
January 29 - 2 p.m.-4 p.m., Parent-Child Workshop fn~...mew
The new Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy, who wore a sheer
The reception was held
Rlverby, Lynda Myers , Instr uctor ; Pemiy Moore'
a.A.L
AFTER
Mujor
now reside 111 Do~ 923,
lettuce-edged jacket of woven immed iately following the
Olairwoman.
.
'
By Mro. Herbert Roush
llusse
lls
Point, Ohio.
February 2.1 - 6:30 p.m. , F.A.C. Annual Dinner Me.iung
Christmas Day guests of polyest er wit h printed . cere mony in the church
Out
of
to
wn
guests were Jeff
v
neckline soc ial r oom. Mrs. I,.. arry
Oscar 's Restaurant. .Details to be announced later.
' Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush floc king
Hawley, Middleport; Mrs .
with
front
tie
.
cloCa
rp
ent
er,
Mrs.
Tom
my
·and family were Mr . and
~
•
I h•·t~lr, ·
Jack Miller · and l.u · Lu,
Mrs. Danll Lewis, Clifton; sure, long · full slee ves Kerwood a~d Mrs . . Richard
Poca
,
W.
Va
.;
Melody
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell, over a long dress of blue McCartney served . at the Neimeyer
Toni g ht lhru Thursd ay
a nd
Denise
Michael and Mandy ; Mr. and polyester, sleeveless styling reception table...A'hey wore
J a n .5
Hussell,
Poca,
W.
Va
.;
Edd
ie
Mrs. Dorsa Parsons , Mr. and with a sweetheart neckline. white single carnation t'OrCraigo
,
Plymouth.
W.
Va
.;
sages. Mints and nuts were
Mrs. Eddie Hupp, Paul Cross.
GALLIPOLIS - Three Mershon. Tuition is $22.
David Neigler called in the She wore a blue picture hat served in silver platters along Mr. and Mrs. Hichurd Me·
classes sponsored jointly by
·trimmed with long white, with punch and cake.
Cartney, Tfrnmy and Murty,
~~ Beginning Macrame" is
Drama ti ze your pruduu ~
the French Art Colony along to be taught by Sandra Steele, ·evening.
pink
an
d
blue
ribbon
Wave rl y; Be tty Haw ley,
The
four-tier
wedding
cake
Christmas Eve guests of
diam oml in ii dr ~:~ m at i{: uuw
with Rio Grande College and with in struction for both Mr. a nd Mrs. Jim Hupp, Billy streamers with da;sies was made in heart· shapes. Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Hul ling sUler:tud !"rom our
Community College will be beginning and experienced and ,Jimmy were: Mary Lou decorating the back of the The bottom layer was made · Bruce Haw ley, Pomeroy ;
Ke e p Sr~ku c&lt;t l3 lof.! .
ava ilable during a special students, meeting on Thurs- Stewart of Pt. Pleasant, Mr. hat. She carried a single long of fo ur heart·shaped cakes Mr. and Mrs. Larry Carwinter tenn and will be day evenings for eight week$, and Mrs. Charles Hupp and stem white carnation tipped with an angel playing a harp penter and Kenneth, Akron ;
tauglit at Riverby, home of starting Jan. 5, 1978. children, Marengo; Mr. and in blue and tied with a while, on top of each cake.
Barbara Che uvront, Prue·
the French Art ·Colony.
pink,
and
blue
bow
with
torville;
Rhonda Wood a nd
R~ i !itt ~ D iamond Rintc~
Registration fee Is $15.
Mrs. Eddie Hupp, Rocky
The top three ~eart-sha ped
Started on Wednesday
st
ream
ers
.~
Wood, Hutln nd;
Fhonda
On Monday, Jan. 9, 1978, Hupp, Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
cakes were topped with two
evening,_ ·J anuary 4, 1978, VIvian Klrkel will teach the B;tss, Corinna and Kemla of
Th e. bridesma.i d s, Miss kissing angels with t wo white Steve Hoover, Rutland ; June
"Crocheting" will he offered first clasa of a seven week · Loui m K
·Esther Lowery of Harrison- doves in front. There were Th omas, _Cheshire; Sherri
sv e, y.
for eight consecutive Wed- course o~ ,, Interpretive
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hupp, ·vme, and Miss Tina -Duffy of pink, white, yellow and blue Thomas, Cheshi re; Mr . and
nesdays from 7 p.m. until 9 . Floral Des1gn, for advanced Billy and Jimmy , were Pomeroy wore identical str ea mers hanging from the Mrs. Stephen Moore, Point
342 Second Ave .
p.m,, t a ught ·by Sandy studen~ s In floral design ...Mr~ ........ Olrlstmas Day guests of her gowns to the maid-of-honor's top. The cake was baked by Pleasant, W. Va .; Mr. a nd
Gallipolis, Ohio
K~rkel s cla.s s .. will meet at parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry except they wore pink. They Mrs. Denver Walker. li was Mrs. ~· 0. Bro mmer ,
RJverby frorn 7 p.m. • 9 P:m. Stewart of Point Pleasant.
for
seven
consecutive
Cliristmas Day guests of
M?nda~· evenings and .the Mr. and Mrs. Hod FrieM ·
tu111on 1s $20. Participants m were Mr. and Mrs. David
COMPL ~TE SELECTION OF
her class w1U learn ~ow tp Dmohue, Long Bottom, and
express Ideas, e~ollons, . Mr. and Mrs. Albert ·
stones and themes m floral Blackwell.
arrangements.
Mr. and Mrs. Hod Friend
Registration for any or aU visited Mr. and Mrs. Wor ley
ofthe_se three ~ourses may be . Broy at Moundsville, w. Va.,
at the College m advance or
recent weekend.
~Home Oxygen
•Oxygen Regulators
a~ Riverby on the opening
· Christmas Day guests of
rught of each of the classes. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner
-• Hospital Beds
•Aowmeters
In addition, French Art were Mr. an~ Mrs. Hoyt
•Wheel Chairs
Colony ,classes will include Fugerson, Pt. Pleasant ; Mrs.
•Bedside Commodes
Sculpture for children and Pearl Norris, Mr. and Mrs. ·
•Humidifiers
Dra.wmg for adults, taught by Scites. Mrs. Inez Roy, son
Cormne LIIIld, stag ing early Rex Racine visited the
•Respiratory Support
in January.
War~ers Sat.;day. .
•Crutches
' Systems ·
Wyatt Sou!IJ , lion of Mr. and
To the place where they've learned to
Mrs. Don Manuel , was
HOME DELIVERY AVAILABLE
expect the unexpected - the unusual - the
.discharged from tile United
greatest - in gifts .
States Army Monday. Pvt.
South had been stationed in
· WHERE ELSE
Germany for three years.
56 State Street .
Gallipoli s, o.
Mr. and .Mrs. Don Manuel,
Mrs
.
Rona'
l
d
L.
Saunde
rs
Donnita and· Robin. visited
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pyles
Manager.&amp; Sales Re prese ntative
. in Racine Christmas eve. Mr .
.614 -446 -3856
State &amp; Third1------ Gallipolis, o.'
and Mrs. Joe Manuel, Tim
and Sid, Denise Talbott,
Portland, Flossie Bush
visited
the
Manuels
Christmas Day. .
· Christmas Day guests of
TUESDAY
.
I
Mr. and"Mrs. Charles Lawson
E;NG LISH Club 'l'eettrig at 7 and Wilda were Mr . and Mrs.
p.m. June O'Dell hostess. . Bill Parsons and sons, Mr.
Dorothy Shaw program.
and Mrs. Harold Lawson and
Glenda
james
sorr, Letart, W. Va ., Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Lawson and son,
Gallipolis, Ohio
TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Leroy James of Mason are
Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
announcing the engagement of their daughter , Glenda
Mike Rhodes of Griffin Air Lawson and family , Mr. and
Lee, to James Lewi'J' Oliver Jr ., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs.
Rick
Morris
and
Force Btise, Indiana, spent a
James Lewis Oliver-&amp;-. , of Mt. Alto. Miss James is a 1977
00
· pre-Ouistmas leave from the daughter. They received a
graduate
o!Wahama
High
School
and
Is
employed
at
G.
C.
call
from
their
phone
air force base with his
Murphy's in Point Pleasant. Mr. Oliver Is a 1977 graduate
Mrs.
Gary
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob daughter,
of
Wahama High School and is empluyed by Heritage ·
(Evelyn
)
Miller
of
Beilvue,
Rhodes.
Homes Inc. in Point Pleasant. A summer wedding Is
.. o., Christmas Day. .
planned.

RIO GRANDE Rio
.Granae· Coliege and Com·
munity College ( RGC-CC)
and Bob Evans Farms are
teaming up to offer three new
continuing education classes
beginning the first week ·of
the new year.
The classes are open to
anyone who wants to learn
skills in cha ir caning, patchwork and quilting, and basic
knitting and needlepoint. •
Chair caning, to be taught
by Mrs. Mildred Wickline,
will meet for eight Tuesdays,
beginning J an uary 3, 7-9 p.m.
The course will teach
beginning chair caning using
the seven step metbod. Fee
for the class Is $15.
Patchwork and quilting,

.' J

TIME TO
HAVE YOUR
OLD
DIAMOND
RESET

\

".a

COLO'\' ·

MIKE SWIGER
9'12·7155
149 S. Third St.
MidljieP&lt;Jrt, o.

Riverby to host classes

1\-"'"
"Ob,uuu•.

Keepsake'

See me for State Farm ·
· single premium
disability income insurance.
Like acood
neichbor,
Stare Farm
Is there.
Starr h rm

IIIII! , ... . ..

~.

M~u ll ~~!omoo .r e ln~l·•ar'IC ~·

"""" • •)~.r• l\lll'-l"MQIO" I~'"P·~

\

.

,.,,

~~

. ClARK'S
JEWELRY STORE

MIERE'S EVERYONE RUSHING TO?

CONVALESCENT
EQUIPMENT
RENTAL &amp; SALES

a

•Canes

TRI-COUNTY HOME
MEDICAL SUPPLY

riA
~-

Peddler's Pantry

I

HOTPOINT

- GE -CO-OP

END OF YEAR: SPECIA·LS

~

TELEVISIONS

DRYERS

REFRIGERATORS
.

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WASHERS
.
COMBINATIONS
•

·FREEZERS

MICROWAVE O .V ENS
/

POMEROY LAN.DMAR
_)

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JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

Drive A Lime and Save A• Lot- Free Delivery Within 75 Miles-Yes! We
. Service AI Your Local Holpoint Dealer.
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5 : 3~Mill Closes at S: OO .P . M.-Serving .Meigs, Gallia &amp; .
Mason Counties.
~
...

)

SUNDAY, JANUARY 1ST
1 PM TILL 7 PM
AND

ON SALE
1 ~EK
ONLY

ALL DAY MONDAY~
·JANUARY 2ND

·FOR INVENTORY.
HAPPY NEW ·YEAR!

~~

·sHOE

v&amp;eS~~

CAFE
HAS

BOOTSI'5

WILL BE OPEN

OFF

BOOTSI '10 OFF

BOOTSI '20 OFF

co\}1,\\~

WE WILL BE CLOSED
ALL

T~E

.

W ishes to fh-ank every one for her suc cessful Open ing
and patr ionage of her gift shop. sandy Mulford (Meigs
Co. line) won the Chrl~tmas drawing, liquid silver
ea,rrlngs and neckla ce ; Jeannet1e Tate won the door
priJe for open house, ,fem In a planter. No purchase

was necessary. - -

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New Store Hrs.~ ·T hursdaysl -5 P.M:
·
January tlu:.OJ!llh February
Will open anytime ot homo or col\ 367-7709 for
appointment.
A Shaklee Distributor : Food Sllpploment• ~ Household
Products • Per-• I Coro .- Cosmetics.

AND

SHOES '5 O,Fr
SHOES '10 OFF

f~e
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY &amp;.THURSDAY
Ornaments, Cards, Candles,
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·~'I.

'~- ~

,.

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SHOES '15

,f.o;.J

..• ...;rr:i!J,

R_lngs, Wreaths, Decorations,

AT

THE SHOE CAFE

Party Supplies. TOY,S and ete.

OWI'jER, MARY DARNELL
2 m·i. weit Ches~lr e, Rt. 554or use-Roush Line.

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LAFAYEm MALL

.SPRING VALLEY PLAZA-- GALLIPOLIS
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&amp;-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. I, 1978

~The Sunday Times-Seillinel, Sunday, Jan.1,1978

•

POWE L
OPEN
NEW YEAR'S .DAY

10.7
OPEN MONDAY

10.10
Prices Effective
Thru
JAN. 7, 1978

298 SECOND ST.

-~

, SUNDAY DEADLINE
The deadline for weddlpg
and engagement notices

·r

and society news items for

the Sunday Times-sentinel
Is 12 noon on lhe Thursday
preceding publication .
Iilformatlon may be turned
In or moiled to the office of
the
Gallipolis '·:Dally
Tribune or Pomeroy Dally
Sentinel. Engagement and
wedding
forms
are
available upon re&lt;jliest.
Donald Thaler. Two are ::~:::: :!:::::;:::::::·:;:::::::::::::::::::::;::::: ::·::::::::::!::-:::::::;.
watercolors by Earl Tope, the price should be indi.cated.
one a pad&lt;jle wheel boat, the Requests from the Columbus
other a waterfall, and a third and Southern Ohio Electric
watercolor is by Polly Company and the Gallery
Trumbore of Ashland , County Court House for local
Kentucky, titled "Morning at artists to display bave been
Welles Farm." Jean Garnes received by the French Art
assisted Mrs. Thaler in Colony. Mrs. Thaler and Mrs.
hanging the Trumbore Evans may be reached by
painting. Mrs. Thaler said calling 446-1819.
that Polly Trurnbore's work
This month . at Riverby,
is being featured in the home of the French" Art
January .exhibit at the Colony, original art by the
Ashland Area Art Gallery. Senior Citiz ens who are
Local artists who are In- residents of Gallia County
terested In exhibiting their will be exhibited in both
·work in local public buildings . Galleries. Th~ p~blic is Inshould contact Peggy Evans . vited to .visit the ,Qallerles on
(J or .Jan Thaler. Their pain7
Tuesdays and Thursdays ·
lings may be placed on from 10·a.m. untll3 p.m., and
display , either on loan or on Saturdays and Sundays
available for sale. If for sale, from I p.m. until 5 p.m.

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Chamber of Commerce
receives art work
'

GALUPOLIS - Original
paintings have · been pla ced
on the walls of the Gallipolis
Area Chamber 9f Commerce

THE
WORLD
ALMANAC'S

Q&amp;A
l. The capital of Nevada is (a )
Carson City ~I Reno (c) Las
Vegas
.
2. Which is a longer distance,
one statue mile (5,280 feet) ,
of one International Nautical

Mile?
3. The Vemal Equinox is the

offices on State Street in
Gallipolis by the French Art
Colony.
Four of the paintings are
oils by Chuck and Betty
Harless of Lexington Park,
Maryland, both members of
the French Art Colony. Jan
Thaler, Curator of the
Gallery at the Fr.enc.h Art
Colony, hung the four Harless
paintings with the help of
Tom Tope, President of the
Chamber of Commerce, and
Thelma Elliott, Chamber
ExecuUve .Director.
Tope
expressed
his
pleasure in having these four
paintings which include a
mountain scene, a fishing

boat, a water scene and a
lighthouse , all of which
· first day of autumn. Truehappen to have just the.right
False.
colors to accent the newly
ANSWERS
installed carpeting in the
Chamber offices.
Sarah Carsey
3U!Jds JO,(ep )SJ!} 'as1•d · Mrs. Elliott said that she
V
·c sa11w anJJ!1S ·~n s1enba hoped local residents would
"'iiiliiiliiiilii;:!f'{J
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Dr. and Mrs. Fred
"l l••J9L0"9) Willi••• ·c; 1• 1 ·( stopintovisitthl!Chamberoi
R. carsey, Mason, W. Va ., and Qr. and Mrs. lsom C.
Commerce offices to ·see the
Walker, ,Gallipolis, announce the e!J8agement and forthnew look. She commented
L.
HERE VISITING
coming marriage of their daughter and son, Sarah Susan
.that the Chamber office is the
GALLIPOLIS - Visiting focal point for out of town
Carsey and Steven Scott Walker. Miss Carsey, a graduate
Gentlemen - ~s
Mrs. "Hetsei Russell for the visitors who seek informatlon
o( the. Univorsity of Maryland, College Park, Md., is
holidays
were
her
Christmas
employed at Holzer Medical Center. Mr. Walker, a
when they are in the
Thursday Evenings Only
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. Gallipolis area, and the
graduate of Emory University, Atlanta, Ga., is a senior at
and Mrs. Anthony Griffin of Impression made by these ·
the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. A June
From 5:00 t~ 9:00
Dallas, Texas.
wedding is planned. ·
offices would accent the great
community pride taken by
The latest In &lt;ut!ing.&amp;styling.
area residents .
PhOne Now for Appointment
In addition to the H~ ~ess
paintings that are all four
available for purchase, three
BY RUTH MILLER
workshop to repair or citizens active as well as fun other paintings have been
Middleport, O.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia refinish small articles and to ·do as a group. This hung on loan through the '&gt; 2975 Second St.
program
is
being
scheduled
County Senior Citizen Center appliances. There must be
court~sy of
and Mrs.
"-.. 9!12-3667
is busy planning activities for some men who have a talent for Tuesday and Thursday
ne:&lt;t year's programs.
for such things to occupy your but there is a possibllity we
There will ~ the old ones time . This is also good may have square dance
plus some new ones but we . therapy for .retired people. class~s also.
would like to know what you
There will be a physical . Come join In the fun with
.
.
would like to do when you fitness program starting Jan. your friends for the activities
come to the center. If you 3. These single exercises are at your center , and this is
your center.
hav~ an idea or hobby you . planned to keep . senior
would llke to share call us at
446-7000 or bring it to the ·
center an~ sho w it. We
always welcome new ideas.
We would like to have a
men's day at the center but
we need to know what men
EARLY BIRD SPECIALS!
like to do . Would you !Ike to
have some checker games~
LARGE GROUP
Maybe a pool table or a

JP'"

Senior citizens plan activities

I

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CHAMBER OF COMMERCE offlces are embeUished with paintings from the French Art Colony.
Jan Thaler is shown In both pictures wielding the hammer. Helping her In one photograph 'is Jean
Garnes, secretary in the HUD office. Looking on at the right. in· _the other photo ani Tom Tope,
president, and The !maL. E!Uott, executive.secretary of the·Gallipohs Chamber of Commerce.

Announcing
Night

J)

Dr:

FRENCH CITY TASTEE TREAT

CHUNK~':

BOLOG-NA

'"' Mr. and Mrs. D.onald Shaw

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LB.

5
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POMEROY-Peggie Faye ed in fanning with his family
Scholl, daughter of Mr. and at (he Route I address where
Mrs. Bruce Scholl, Route 3, the newlyweds are living .
Chillico the, and granddaughter of Mrs.. Frances
Scholl, Pomeroy, and Donald
E. Shaw, Jr. were married at
7:30 p.m. on Nov. 12 at tbe
First Christian Ch urch,
Chilticolhe.
The bridegroom is the son
POMEROY
Meigs
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald E.
Shaw, Sr., Rout e I , Senior . Citizens Center
• Chilticothe. The Rev . Larry located at the Pomeroy
Junior High School Is open 9
Grun~en read the vows.
Fashioned of pale yel!pw a.m. - 4 · p.m., Monday
qiana , the btide's formal through Friday.
length gown featured an emMonday, Jan. 2 - Holiday
pire waistline, stand-away - Center Closed.
mandarin coUar and elbow
Tuesday, Jan. 3 - Movie
length sleeves. The bride's "Elsa the LionesS.:', 11 a.m.
matching yellow veil was Chorus 12:45-2:15 p,rn.
beld in place by a crown of · Wednesday, Jan . 4 - Social
yellow and while flowers. She Secutity Representative, 9:30
carried a while Bible topped a.m. - 12:30 p.m. Games
with four yellow rosebuds 12 :45-2:15 p.m.
nestled in baby's breath.
. Thursday, Jan. 5 - Sing-aTeresa Stockman and Kim Long, 12:15 p.m.
Graves were maids of honor
Friday, Jan . 6 - Art Class
and wore formal length 1!1-12 noon. Crocheting Clas~
gowns of blue and yellow silk io-12 noon. Bowling 1-3 p.m.
print. Each attendant carried
Senior Nutrition Program,
a yellow rose encircled with 12 noon • 12:45 p.m., Monday
baby's breath. Best men for through Friday . HAPPY
the the bridegroom were NEW YEAR!
Mark Davis and Scott Dailey.
COAD Senior Nutriton
Guests were seated by Mike Program Menu fo~ January 2
and J eff Scholl, brothers of through January 6, 1978.
. the bride.
Monday - Closed for New
Following the wedding, a Year's.
reception was held in the
Tuesday - Beef patty,
church educational building.
creamed corn, cottage cheese
The new Mrs. Shaw is at- salad, orange and grapefruit
tending Unioto High School. sections, biscuits, butter and
Mr. Shaw, a 1977 graduate of milk.
Unioto High School, is engag- · Wednesday - MeJIIballs in
gravy, sweet potatoes,
buttered green beans; jellied
fruit cocktail salad, yellow
sheet cake, iced; bread,
butter and milk.
. ~
Thursday - Soup beans
with ham bits, canned peach
and pear salad, .chocolate
pudding with vanilla wafer,
cornbread, butter ,and milk.
Friday - Fried fish,
escalloped potatoes, buttered
peas, peach cobbler, bread, ·
JANUARY 7
butter and milk.
Coffee, tea , juice and
buttermilk served daily .
HaJ&gt;PY New Year.

.
LUNCH 'TIME GOODIE. ..
.· TRY OUR
•HOT DOG
HOMEMADE
JANUARY
1 THRU
.

·.,.
,•.•".:oow.w•."•"-'"•"•&gt;"•"···········x·»~.
....·...-.v,o;.•.•,..-.•.~~~·x'::•.•
· ··~
· .· •·

(Regular Size)

I.
Sr. Citizens
t

CH

•FRENCH FRIES

· ARGO PEAS,

-

170~

'6/$1 ;

Small Drink
of Yolir Choice

·~JB
····- -·
...

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TO

qo _OR EAT HERE

· No. 'Subt.
No Coupons ·- No limit

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JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

FRENCH FRIES

For Easy Pickup Call 446-2682
Your Order ·WiU ~ Waiting

o.

· 2nd &amp; Olive

AND
ALWAYSI

Sunday'l'imes-SenUnel
Publahed every Sunday by The

Oho Va lley Publishing
Multimedia, Inc.

Co.-

GALLIPOLIS
~

DAU.V,TRIBUNE
Third Ave., Oalllpol\5, Ohio

45631.
l
Published every 1''ef:kday ev&lt;ening
e~cept Saturday. ~'OIId C'liiS!I
Poatage Paid at Gallipolis, Ohio

...

'"'"·THE DAILY SENTINEL

ll! Court St., PomefOy, 0 . 1$~611 .
PubUshed every week day everung
exetpt Saturday. Entered liS second
r.lau mailing matter at Pomeroy,
Ohkl Post Office.
By carrier dally and SundBy 75c
per week. Motor route $5.25 per

Every day i·s Dairy Isle Day
because every day we
spacialize
in
delicious
sundaes, shakes, float~ and
cones. All kinds of marvelous, mouth-watering concoctions.
So let yourself go - - , Right To

' " ' 'SPECIAL

~':o'~~~~2R~oo JiZ

1illfz

o~

GOOD SUfLJAN. 1 THRU SAT., JAN. 7

7/$1 vue

U.

PURSES

SHOES
1 Group - Men's
~EYENBERG

.

$} 099

DRESS SHOESlOOJOFF PRESS
AND BOOTS .
10 SHOES
1 Group - Men's

DINGO

. Limit 1 Per Customer
· Good Only at Powell's

Values to $30.00

All Lad

.. Leather High
·· Fashion

s: NO. 1

WHITE POTATOES
.1.8. . 6" .g~· W/C ;
·10BAG

1 Group- Men's
WEYENBERG

~~~~O~IIe~r

Includes Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy,
Hot, ROll and Butter.
.

. R~G. i1.59

.

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,.,.,!h.

Ohlb and West· Virginia one year
f22.00; six months '11.50; three mon·
ths f7 .00. El!!ewhere f2'.10 per year ;
sU. month! $13.50; Ufte tntriths
11.50: rnoWr rvute $3.25 monl.hJy.
The Dally SenUne~ one- year
122.00: Six months tll .50: threemonJh\117.00. Ellewller&lt;PJI.OO : 11.1 mooUu $13.50; lhree months f7 JO.
·
nw Unlkd rr.s Intmldona.t 1.1
achllively ertftled to the Llle fOl'
pubUcatkm ul aU neWJ dilpltches
lTedited to the newsp~per and all!lo
&amp;he local news pubUsbed bcreln.

Locust St.
Middleport,
Ohio
Call In Your Order
and Save Time

~LL

.

FROM REGULAR STOCK

··SPECIAL .

''"

MONDAY &amp; TUESbA Y
ONLY!

\

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11 A.M. til ~ P.M. ·

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PIPIIo&amp;l .
Utili

Phone 992 -5241 ·

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MYSTERY

WOMEN'S $HOES- NATURALIZERS •
AUDITIONS • VOGUE
• JOLENE •
.

MAIL

SUBScRIPTION RATES
1 -The Gallipolis -Dally Tribune in

,. ..

~Phone. ~1611
.Ope~ 7 .Dajs a Week

Jan. 7

BOOTS 20%0FF

BOOTS

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Friday - Fried fish,
escalloped potatoes, buttered
peas, bread, butter, apricot
cobbler, milk.
Choice of beverage served
wilh each meal.
Services rendered on a nondiscriminatory basis.

SAUERKRAUT AND
·- WIEN.ERS
PLATE LUNCH

Limit1 Per Customer
G~od Only at Powel"!'s
-otter E
Jan. 1978

I GROUP

LADIES'

. ALADDIN

•

HAVE GUESTS
RACINE"-Guests of Mr.
and .Mrs. Harrison Smjth for
the holidays were Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Smith, Charlie
and a friend, Ricky and his
friend, Terri Tobin, Cindy,
Tina and Kelly, all of Middleport; . Carroll Smith and
daughter, Kim, Ravenswood,
W. Va. : Mr and Mrs. Danny
Vanilest oiRavenswood, W.
Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
Smith and Dale of Letart, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
Smith and Christi of Weston,
w: Va. ; Connie Smith of
Chillicothe; and the Harrison
Smith's children, Scottie and
Penny, at home. The family
received a telephone call
from their son, Jim Smith,
and daughter, Mrs. Mary
Weedo, of · Arr11ond Beach,
Fla.
MAKES LIST
VINTON - Michael . T.
Guthrie of Vinton qualified
for the Dean's List at The
Ohfo . State University
Newark C8mpus for Autwnn
Quarter, 1977. He Ia stlldylng
engineering.

COLEMAN
35 BTU

HAND

HEATER •

WARMER

$2588

S]99
HECK'S RIG. $5.29 .

-

Sl't»TS /J9T.

Heck's Reg. •29.99

Sporting Goods
IL

STANLEY

SAW HORSE
BRACKET

10W30

MOTORO.IL

LIMIT 6.QUAitTS

,.,_

A.,_011111

Hardware Dept•.

Torch Kit

$9''

QT.

HECK'S ltiG.
· 691 QT.

Heck's. Rag. •5.09

Brazi~g

~-··

4

•2••/

....

with vaniUa wafer, milk.

••

Hack's Rag.
"54.60

Fitness, 11:15 a.m.; Quntlng,
9-3; Bible Study, 1:15-2 :15.
Friday, Jan .· 6, Advisory
Coilncil, I p.m.; Art Class; I·
3; Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The menu for the Senior
Nutrition Program served at
12 noon is:
Monday - Closed.
Tuesday - Sausage patty,
creamed corn, cottage cheese
salad, biscuits, butter, fruit
cocktail, milk,
Wednesday - Meatloaf,
mashed potatoes, buttered
green.
beans,
jellied
vegetable salad, bread,
butter, yellow cake with
icing, milk.
Thursday - Soup beans .
with ham bits, canned peach
and pe8r salad, cornbread,
butter, chocolate pudding

U~IU

TOMATO SOUP

0

1 GROUP

BENCH GRINDER

Intr oducing the world ' s fir st double Insulated ben ch
grinder. bclu1ive feohm~s ir~dude coo belt drive . super·
~ truct u re to increase durability, dynam ic bro~e for fast
~tops . break resi1ton.t hou1ing. 6' two conductor cord.

.

(STARTS TUESDAY, JAN. 3-9 A.M.

SUNDAE,
MONDAE

61NCH

, ~
.
Tbuhdaf,' Jan. 5, Physical

.

SURFORM
$ 44

1800

GALUPOLIS '-- Activities
for the Senior Citizens Center
this week are as follows :
1\'londay, Jan. 2, Closed.
Tuesday, Jan . 3, Physical
Fitness, 11:15 a.m.; Arts,
d qarden Club, 1-3.
day, Jan. 4, Card

POPULU

Limit1 Per Customer \YlC
Good Only at P.owell's ·
Ex
Jan. 7, 1978":.

.

PROJECT PLANNED
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Hthe
· state Health ~ pa rtment
· approv.es, Mt . Carmel
Medical Center will spend
$19.7 million to replace its
north wing and renovate its
south wing by 1981.

STANLEY .

:.:::: · Ctilendar
!·:0

MARGUERITE'S

WllH PURCHASE OF ANY SANlMICH

NEW YEAR'SDAY SALE

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY 'ONLY

. SPRITE OR ·4$}
~\} . COCA-COLA •• :~2~ •.

BRENDA'S ..BOUTIQUE

Miss Scholl weds

'

100 CT.

MR.
COFFEE
FILTERS
Hack's
Rag.

Heck's Reg. '14.88
Hardware Dept.

79•

Jewelry Dept.

GlLLmE

MIST SUPER CURL

COMPAQ CURLER
The fast,' easy way

.fo curl your hair ·

almost anywhere.

e

e

Cordell forl
and easy to use
- hiloh in about

mi nutes .

e

5

11"

HECK'S ftiG. $14.96

-SlY IJII'T.

SNAP
STARTING
FLUID

66~
. . Hack'• ~·a• 99•
Automotive Dept.

-.eotn•

REPLACEMENT

CARAFE

'399

Jewelry
Dept.

H.cl't R-e.

$&gt;' .99

SNAP

GAS
ANTI~FREEZE

29~BlL
•

Heck's Reg. 39•
Automotive Dept.

HECK'S WILL BE CLOSED
.ALL
MONDAY, JANUARY 2nd
... DAYFOR
INVENTORY

�• I()... The Swulay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan . 1. 19'18
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French City

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.vlgllett~s
By Tom Saunders
GALUPOUS - One of the unsuccess{ul ventures •
Into Gallipolis ba nking ended here in June, 1918, when
the small private Farmers and Merchants Bank closed
its doors . ·
Orga nized .by the two Howa rd brothers ,
newcomers to Ga llipolis connected with the then active
and successful Gallipolis • Pt. Street Railway in
approximately 1908, the institution, operated ln a sound
financial basis until state bank examiners found that it
had been made a 'dispository for fundll from a state
ED, NOT E - The author of th is contribution,
Thoma s Allen Saunders. Is a 1975 graduate of
Morehead State Uni versit y with a major In History . He
w~s graduated f rom Gallia Academy High School in

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1970. For a yeo5r after college. Tom Saunders was a

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subst itute tea cher, but sklce then has been employed
by Kroger's a t the Silver Bridge Plaza In Kanauga .
While in college he worked summers at the Kyger
Creek Power Plant where hi s father has been an·
employee for 23 years. Tom . 25, resides with hl$. fatner
and mother , Roy and Ruth Saunders, on the Fairfield-

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Ce ntenary Rd ., near Centenary. Hi s brother, Larry,
was graduated fr om Ohio State Un l versl tv lfl August
1977, and his mater nal grandmothe r, Helen Wil coxen'
is a school teacher .
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bank in the central part of the state, also property of
the Howards.
·
The Farmers and Merchants Bank, being a private
institution, under the laws of the state of Ohio could not
accept deposits from a state bank .
The Howard lx'others, John and L. S., were given
approximately 10 hours to return the money to the
state bank. They protested the time, claiming that it
was not sufficient, but receive&lt;l no edens!Qil.
When they found that they could not secure the
money in the'i:Une allotted them they disappeared from
the county leaving the bank to be closed.
In all fairness to the Howards, the time given them
by the state was not sufficient for the return of the
money; had they been granted an extension the
Farmers and Merchants Bank might have been made
solvent and still with us today .
The bank operated on few private deposits, being
mainly supported by the Street lfailway. Deposits in
the ,bank ' fluctuated with the railway company's
business and the temperament of the Gallipalis and Pt .
Pleasant voters for when one of the towns was dry, and
the other wet, .the transportation company enjoyed a
thriving bqslness.
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The banking rooms of \he institution were located
on the corner of Second Ave . and Locust st .

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SENIOR CITIZENS SCENES

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SILVER ·
BRIDGE
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PLAZA
WE WILL CLOSE

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SATURDAY
AT 5:00PM
HAPPY NEW YEAR

City's
strike ended ·

By ROBERt' SAI'IGEORGE
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Cin·
cinnati.area bus riders had ·
their New Year's wish come
true two days early, as the
city 's long and bitter transit
strike ended,
Queen City Metro transit
·system buses ·were to begin
rolling again today, following
a vote late Friday by striking
bus drivers and mechanics to
return to work after a 2J.&lt;Iay
wildcat walkout.
The strikers, members of
the Amalgamated Transit
Wor~er s Union Local 627,
voted 437-to-185 to accept the
firth contract offer !rom
management.
lnunedjately after the "Vote
was announced, mechanics
began returning to Metro
garages and prepared buses
to hit the streets I or the first
time in.· more than three

union."

-;-.
•

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:
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=
~

l"i

E

J
i
s
~

f .
ii'

and

urge

union

membership to do the same,
Asked if any of the strikers
would be punished, Metro
General Manager Ed Harvey
replied, "No, in l~ct to the ·
contrary. We have advised
the union leadership that
there is amnesty from .
activities on the line, to the
ex'tent that we can provide
them - including these six

·

But Blanton said both sides
in the often-angry labor rrten· .J ~
dispute "have to share the · Matthews also was lining
blame" · for leaving the city · the union ·$500 each day the
. without bus service for so strike continued. The fine
long. "Any situation like this totaled $4,500 on Friday. And
bas to resu\t from gross the judge has not ruled on a.
misunderstandings, and motion by Metro attorney
finally these misunder, James Ryan to rrlake the
standings have been at least union pay damages IQ the
partially resolved ,'·' he company for lost revenue.
added.
.
The bus strike forced some
The fifth contract offer was 70,000 weekday riders of the
not subst~ntially different Metro system to lind other
from some of the earlier means of transportation. Cfu.
cinnali s\reets, particularly
In the downtown area; often
were clogged with heavy
tr.affic,
and
school
administrators reported
attendance was reduced as
mu~h as one-third on some

'
RegardlessofH9w
Figured It...
You've
Really Can't
You
Free Checking
Beat

...3..
-.-..
..
••=-~·

"

Metro management
vigorously and successfully
oppo sed a · pre-Christmas
expiration date .
The strik.ers agreed , to
return to work as Metro
officials were tighiening a
legal noose around the necks
of the union and its
membership.
Hamilton County Commoo
Pleas Court Judge William R.
Matthews concluded a
hearing Friday Into whether
six strikers should be found In
contempt of court lor defying
Matthews'
back-to-work
order
and
allegedly
encouraging others to continue the walkout.
The judge deferred a
decision In · the matter until
Tuesday morning . The six
men lacing coo tempt charges
. had announced through their
attorney they would vote In
faror ol the latest contract .
offer

days when buses· weren't

rolling .
·

Since Metro workf;!rs are

considered public employees,
the strike was illegal under
Ohio's Ferguson Act. .Metro
management, however, did
not attempt to invoke the stiff
penalties of the act choosing ilistead to obtain the
back-to-work injunction and
contempt citations against
the union and strikers, ·

Warren may
be unprotected
by fire fighters
There's no doubt about
it ... our tree checking system beats all! With no per
check charge .•• no
minimum balance to tie
up your account ...
and no monthly fee to
worry about ..•
·you're actually
saving even ·white
you're spending!
Open yours
today!

..

• FDIC

COMMERCIAL &amp;·, SAVINGS BANK
.3.Loc:ations To Serve You
Spring Valley Plaza-.:- court Street-Silver Bridge Plaza

~~~. ------~------~------

ews:

•

WARREN , Ohio (UP!) The city of Warren could be
without lire protection during
the New Year's weekend •
Negotiations between the
farefighters and city broke off
Friday, With no rnw progress
reported .•city officials have
suggested the talks be
resurne&lt;l Wednesday,
But the firefighters'
contract runs out • at
midnight. During a mass
meeting
Friday; they
~·nanimously authorized a
str~e al that lime.
The firefighters want a
reduction of t'Ieir work .week
to 40 hours, or a $1
adjustment for every · ho\11'
over 40 worked.

.

decorati ng techniques Includ ing

MIAMI, Fla. (UP!) Arkansas Coach Loti Holtz
will be wearing a microphone
for Mooday night's Orange
Bow 1 game between the
RazOrlJ!Icka and Oklahoma
Sooners, which will allow a
nationwide audience the rare
opportunity t-6' hear the
coach's comments·during the
live telecast.
Both coaches were ap·
proached with the Idea, but
Oklahoma's Barry Switzer
declined the offer.
,;

bilsic

flo wers ;

~glng . and design .
Time: 7-9:30. Mondays, begin ning January 2
Location: 56 High Street
Cost: S25

Instructor: Lee Miller

ADVANCED CAKE DE CORATING : Advanced
techniques of cake decorating using concepts ot

color flow and rolled fondant. A complete wedding
cake will be con9tructed and decorated.
Time: 7·9:30 p.r:n., Tuesdays, beginn ing January 3

Cost : $25

INTERPRETIVE FLORAL DESIGN: Flower arranging

Location: 56 High Street

Instructor : Lee Miller

which expresses Ideas, suggests emotions, tells
stories or Interprets themes .

.BEGINNING GERMAN : A ba~ic course In the

Time: 7·9 p.m., Mondays beQinnlng January 9
Cost: $20
Location: French Art Colony

German languagEt .

Instructor: VIvian Kirkel

Tim e: 7·9 p.m .. Thursdays , beginning January 5
Location : Jackson High School
Cost: $20

2001 AND BEYOND, AN INTRODUCTION TO
!!CIENCE FICTION: A sludy of major writers ,

Instructor: Bernard Goldstayn

FUN WITH

MAGIC' M

tv pea of science fiction using films and

themes and

Introduction to the

other recorded material .
•
.Time: 7-10 p.m ., Mondays, beginning January 9
Cost: $15
Locallon: Multi Purpose Room.
Mental Health Center

mysteries of magic . Panl cpants will learn basic
tricks using readiiV ii!VB.II'able materials.

Time: 7·9 p.m., .Mondays , beginning January 9.
COst : $10
'
Location : Jackson High School
InstrUctor: Marko the Magician

lnstructqr: ~arrv Ewing

. SECURITIES AND INVESTMENTS: A basic un-

e·EGINNING KNITTINt;l : A bas ic course In knitting

derstanding of securities and Investment principles .
Time: 7 -9 p.m., Mondays, beginning January 9
Cost : $20 location : Above Price &amp; Sons Pharmacv
Second Avenue
Instructor: Bryce Sm lth

principles and practice .

Time: 7·8:30 p.m., Mondays, beginning January· 9
Cost: $20
· Location : Senior Citizens Center
Instructor: Geraldine
1

'
BEGINNJNG MACRAME: A basic course
In
macrame. Students will work with 17 knots and
t
make a, wall ha.nging.

RIO GRANDE
MIDDLE EAST DANCING: To develop and enjoy

Time: 7·9 p.m., Thursdays, beginning January 5
Cost: $15
·
Location:· French Art Colony

muscl e control and proficiency In middle eastern

Instructor: Sandy Steele

danc ing (belly dancing) . .
Time: 8·10 p.m. , Thursdays , beginning January 5
Cost : $25
" ln ~truclot:

people! industrv and citizens that made

Hall225

PSV,CHDCALISTHENICS: 26 exercises lor men and

Time:

·
begi.n ning

SPECIAL YEAR-END

OF

,CROCHETING : A course lor both beginning and
advanced students which will Include both basic
and advanced stitches a11d pattern reading.

QUAliTY

Time: 7·9 p.m., ,Wednesdays, beginning January 4
Cost: $22 .
Location: French Art Colony

PATC.HWORK AND QUILTING: History ot pal·

lnstr~cton

chwork and qulltinQ @nd experience with techniques
including appllque, reverse applique and trapunto .
Quilting by frame and hoop wUI be done .
Time: ,0 a.m . ~ Noon , Saturdays , beginning
January 7
Cost: $,5
Location : Bob Evans Farms Craft Barn
Instructor: Barb Thofn as ·
..

Sandy Mershon

·

Admiral color
TV with the
ERA II Color .
System

.POMEROY.
,ASSAULT PREVENTIOf:l. AND SELF DEFENSE: A
· bas1c weapon and self-defense . course with' em·
phasls Qn medical Implications and legal re·

CHAIR CANING : A beginning course In chair caning

sponslbllltles of defensive action.

usi ng the 1 step method .

.

Time: 7-9:30 p.m., Thursdays, beginning January 5
Cost: $25
Location: American Legion Hall
Instructor: Richard Erll'c Charnb'"'

Time: 7·9 p.m., Tuesdays, beginning January 3
Location: Bob Evans Farms Craft Barn

lnstruclor: Mlldred Wickline
Instruction '" knitting and needlepoint .
7·9 p.m ., begirinlng January t"
·,
·cost : $15
lOcation: Bob Evans Farms Craft Barn
In structor: Mlldied Wi ckline
Time~

BEGINNING AND ADVANCED 1/I!EAVING : Par·

tlc lpants will learn ~ic principles and make a'n
: ocean scene weaving with a macrame frame
suitab le for framing.
,
•Time : 12:30-2:30 p.m., Thursdays, beginning
January 5
·
Cost: $15
LQcation : Vinton County Community

SIGN LANGUAGE FOR BEGINNERS: Learn to talk
with deaf persons using the simultaneous method ,
a combination of flngerspelllng and . signs.
Time: 7·10 p .m. , Thursdays , beg inning January 5

Welcome ,Wagon
club activities

.F loor sessions
•
· be~ Tuesday

By I,.EE LEONARD
·
UP! Statebouae Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohw General 1\ssembly wW
waste no ~e getting started
m 1~78, w1th the first floor
·sesSions scheduled lor
Tuesday af!"rnoon .
There is.Uttle m the way of
:'j&lt;r business h8l)glng over
om the first year of the
. 112\h se~on. but comnuttees
are hemg &lt;;OUII\ed on to
ge~erate
s~me·
new
legislabon durmg January.
. The Senate reconvenes at 1
p.m. and the House at 1.:30
•
.
p:m. .
. The fll'st rorder of business
~ the House l)"ill be to swear
m a new member • Demoerat
Robert Regula of Canton,
who has been chosen by the
Stark . County Democratic
Committee to succeed Rep.
Irene B. Smart, also a Canton
Democrat, who IS resigning
to become a judge.' .
.In the Senate, PreSident
Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek,
!).Ak~n, plans to vote withiJ)
the first two weeks to
override Gov. James A.
Rhodes' veto of a coUective

.

•
Classes are filled on a "f!rst-come" basis. Some classeS have enrollment limits, these llmlts are noted in the
course description. Registrations are accepted lp. order that they are received until the class Is filled The
Office of Cont inuing Education reserves the right to cancel any class due to Insufficient en' ~ollment .
·

YOU CAN REGISTER BY MAIL, IN PERSON OR BY PHONE
. BY MAIL:

or

money orde~ for the correct amount
payable to Rio Orondo College. Send application form AND check by January 2, 1978.
'
. '
BY PHONE :
.
.
.
.

Use the form provided. Fill in ALL spaces thlit apply. Enclose a check

•'

•
"•

Ca\1245·5353 e~~:tentlon 299 . You will be asked your name, address, social securlt'J number ~nd which class (or
· cla~ses) vou want to take. Space In those classes will be heJd for you pro~idlng your check for the ap ro rlat
registration feels received by the Continuing Education Olflce ol Rio Grande College and communlt Pc 0PI! e
w1thin live days following your telephone ca" .
·
.
Y
ege

IN PERSON :
You may register In .person Monday lhrough Friday from 9:00· a.m. to 4:00p.m In the Ollice ol Continuing
Education, located on the 'Second floor of Allen Hall.
.
·
Registrations will also be accepted On the first meei iQg of th~class If space is ava\Jable.
For further inform

.
'

Ext.

•

'

PLEASE PRINT OR TYPE
Name .... .. . .. , ..... : . . .. , .. . ... ... : . ... ... Social Security #
Address . . .. ... . . .• . .. .. .... . .... . : ·. . .

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

= . : . ... . . .. . . . . . ,. . . . • . . . . . • . . . . • • • . . • . . .

City .. .. ..... . .. .. ...... . State ... ... ...... Zip ....... .. Phone .(

')

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

. . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . ... . ... ... ... ..... : ... . .. . . . ..
. . . . . .... .•. ..... . . ... .... . . . . . .....
. I. .. . . . .. fee$ .·. .' . . .. . . ... . .
.
. .
· ~ · · ····· · ·· · · ·· · ·· · · ······ ···; .. . . .... . .• . .... fee$·. . ". ... . .... . .. ...
.
· ~ · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · · · .,.. .. ~... . . ..... .. . • • .... fee . $,. . .. . . . . .... . .

Course Name: 1 .
'

Course Name: 2.

0

~

.

0

0

0

O

0

o o o

'"

o

0

FREE FOUNTAIN
SOFT DRINKS W11H
I .
EACH PillA
' EAtEN ON PREMISES

o o

I

o

o t

o.o o o

• • •

•

o • &lt; • • •

• o

• •

•

•

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I

. . . . . $ . . . . . . .. . .. .... . .

·Checks and Money Orders payable to Rio Grande College
Send form and payment to : Continuing EduCitlon
Rio Grande Collegt/Rio Grinde Community College
Box 453,. ·Rio Grande, Ohio 45874 .
·

EAT IN OR
CARRY OUT
SERVICE

.,

•

•

''•

••

•
Your signature

SUNDAY
SPECIAL

'I

. . . ..

Business Phone (

•

•
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•

\

\

"" MEIGS
.
INN

PIZZA SHACK.
. PHONE 992-6304

•
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7 PIECE

UVING ROOM

.&lt;·WOOD· DINETTES

·SU.ITES

Regular '299.15

Reduced From

WELCOME WELCOME WAGON CAL
· Jan. 4 - Morning bridge at Mary Ann Jamison 's. Ca ll 24:..
9406. .
Call J::~~alts at 1pm. To6hirt maklng ·at Pam Terriui •s.

Instructor: Sandy Steele

Anniversary H811111

Big Discounts All Over The-Store
January Is .The ·Month.To

slve!

Building

Location : Rio Campus ,

Instructor: Sherry Cain

Ad,..IraI.

Gives you

BASIC KNITTING AND NEEDLEPOINT: Beginning

Cost: $25

By Ualted P,...slnternatloul
WASHINGTON (UP!) ...... A MOVE TO SAVE the jobs of
5,000 workers at Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co. will include a ,
hard look at the possibility of workers and the local
CO!JllllUnity , lncludlng:church groupo, joining together to buy
the ag~g steel plant.
The question of worker ownership wsa raised Friday when
the Department of Housing and Urban development signed a
t300,000 contract with a Washington-based research group Jo
explore a full range of possibilities lor maintaining operations
of the plant at Campbell, Ohio, on the outskirts o1 youngstown.

employment and factory production won't keep pace, and the
overall result will be growing pressure for President Carter's
-.,_promil!ed tax cut. These conclusions could be drawn from

January 11
Cost : $1.5
Local ion: Sl. Pelers .Eplscopal Church
Instructor: Frank Hill

women wh ich work to harmonize and develop the
hum.an body .
Time: 8·9 a .m. , Mondays and Wednesdays,
beg l ~ning Jan uary 2
Cost: $20 .
Lo caton : Rio Campus,
Moulton Hall Basement
InstruCtors : . Ted Chaffin and Debbie Maples

Cost: S15

p.m. , W~dnesdays,

7:3()..9:30

Brief~l

WASffiNGTON - FOOD PRICES AT GROCERY stores

Gallipoll~.

Field trips included.

in

· ' •'--, will probably begin risin8 laster ·in the coming year, but

GALLIPOLIS CITY HISTORY · PEOPLE AND
PL'ACES: Area and county hiii\ory: The river ,

location : Rio Campus, Anniversary

Brltlina Green

e e

·®

WASIUNGTON - A WALK,OUT BY NEGOTIATORS for
the soft coal industry has halted talks to end the nationwide
mine~' strike, with mutual recrbninatlons and no date set lor
·
restlllllllg talks lrL 1978.
Jan . II - Get Q.Cqu~lnted coffee 10 a.m . at Nora Ttolke '24:..
United Mine Workers President' Arnold Miller• said tbe 5359
ta~ ended-friday when the mine operators walked out In ·
Jli!l· 13 - Couples bridge at 7::W pm. Call Joy At \'Food lor
response to a union propoSal to continue health and pension more. mlormation at 446-8W9.
.
benefits for 'Jnore than 800,000 miners and dependents. .
But the Bituminous Coal Operators Association said
contract negotiations, which began Oct. 6, broke down ~cause
the union "began to back away fr~ provisions to curb wildcat
eConomic reports the government Issued Friday.
strikes and restore labor stability in the coal fields."
The Agriculture Department said farm priceli rose 1
CHICAGO- A REW1\RD OF $100,1100 is being offered to percent In December for the third consecuti~ month. Prices
anyooe who can find missing candy Iieiress Helen Vorhees lo~ hogs, cattle and corn led the Increase. Farm prices are
QUtckly passed along the production line to consumers. Lower
Brach, who vanished last Feb. 21.
farm
prices last spring and swruner helped keep inflation
Charles Vorhees, the lrother and sole beir of Mrs Brach
under
conlrol.
62, said the reward mooey would be taken from his sisier's Jlli
mlllion.estate If she is fownd . Mrs. Brach allegedly left her
TEHRAN,IRAN -SHAH MOHAMMED REZA Pahlavl's
subur~ Glenview estate Feb. 2l to board a plane at O'Hara
International Airpqrt for Florida. However, there is no record chefs chilled heaps of golden Beluga caviar today for
President Carter's New Year's ij;ve dinner and palace so.trces
she ever boarded the plane .
"
de rued any JlOSSibllity of a Middle East summit during Carter's
7-hour slay .
.
LOU!SVU.LE, KY. :_ IT WOuLD OOST $5 bUUon to
lr~nl~ . officlala accentuated the festive aspects of
upgrade coal hauling roads lg Appalachia If President Carter's
goal of doubling coal production by 1985 is to be mel, it s Carter s VISit, the second stop on his six-nation 18 ooo.mJ.Ie
reported Saturday. The report, in the Courier.Journal,
it world tour, and tried to defuse speculation that Ca~ter and
would cost at least $1.2bUUon just In Kentucky to improve,coal Jordan's King H~ might be joined by Egyptian President
baullng roads. to the poin! where. they would be capable of Anwar Sadat or Israeli premier Menshern Begin.
handllrtg !he additional tonnage.
· ·
~ study by the App8lachia Regional Cominission, which
studies Jroblems facing the mountainous region, suggested
'
that the federal government impose a coal severanceito
•
pay for the cost of improving coal hauling roads. The r rt, •
conducted for the commission by the Research Tr'
e
Institute in North Carolina, studied coal hauling road
conditions in Alabama, Kentucky, Maryland . Ohio ·
Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virgin!~. ' '

BEG INNING CAKE 'DECORATING : Bas ic cake

Course Name: 3.

MEMBER

;:.,""'~~':'·;l'··s·~--.~

Rio

proposals,
with
one
excepti on. The pact will
expire on Jan. 7, 1981. ·unioo
leaders bad wanted the new .
contract; like the old me, to
expire .during the Christmas
season - believing it would
give them added bargaining
leverage. ··

11- The Sl!JldayTimes-Senlinel, Sunday, Jan .' 1, 19'18

•

Quee~

:::

..
:

Late". Let 's have a ·winner
from Meigs ~eounty again .
Mrs. Lula Hampton was a
state winner two years ago.
If you have any queBtioM,
call 99:1,.7884.
Plans are already being
made for the second annual
statewide Retired Senior

Volunteer Program luncheon
to be htld at the Sheraton
Hotel in ColumbUl on April
17th. Lunch will be served at
II :30 a. m. ·
Each .local program is
limited to the number ol
volunteers who may attend,
so reservations will be ac·
cepted on a first come • first

.

"' ·

i:s;

Qward iJ " It's Never Too

POMEROY - The final
entrY date lor'lhe 1978 Lucille
Loy Kuch Uterary Award ill
January 5, 1978. If y:ou have
composed an entry lot this
ye.ar's contest for senior
citizens, please submit It as
soon as possible. One ol the
staff will be glad to type your
entry for you.
The theme lor this year's

weeks. Metro officials said
mechani cs would work
through the night.
.
"'
. The
Southwest Ohio
Regional Transit Authority
Board formally approved the
new pact _in an emergency
meeting after the union vote
wa s announced . SORTA
controls the Metro system.
"I was very pleased and
relieved;" said John Blanton ,
.president of the SORTA
Board. Blanton gave some
credit for ending the strike to
· recently elected Cincinnati
L-------------------- Mayor Gerald Springer. He
termed
Springer
" an
•
excellent catalyst - he kept
pressure on us and on the

,,'s.
•
••

seiWed basis. If you are a copies of the United Mine George AdallliiOn.
member ofthe Retired Senior Workers Association for · , Remember the New Year's .
Volunteer Program and those lnter. .ed and will be Eve party here at the Center
would like to attend ' thla available to help with Black December 31from 1 :30 p. m.
to 12 :15 a. m. Admiallon l.s
luncheon , call 992-71184.
Lung cases.
$1.00.
Beginning In January, Mr.
Tuesday, January 3 at 11 a.
The Center will be cloHd
Hubert Stafford will be at the m. the film Elsa the Uoness
Monday,
January 2 but will'
Center the third Monday ol ....will be shown. Thla film was
each month lrom 12:00 p, m. popularized by the movie be open to all on Tuesday. ·
to 2 p. m. to discuss Black " Born Free" and documents Come In and join ua.
Happy New Year from the
Lung Legislation and answer the •mazing relationship
Meigs
County Senior Citizens
questions concerning Black between Elsa the Uoness and
Center.
Lung. Mr. stafford will have her human family Joy and

r ~.. -, .. ..,,. ...... ~·-:----....;---~---.ro~--..:..-

· bargaining bill l&lt;r pubiic
employees.
.J'l.have the v~tes; " Ocasek
stated last week.
. But his counterpart, HoUBO
Speaker Vernal G, Riffe Jr ..
!).New Boston, says candidly
he doesn't have the votes to
override at present.
Attention may he 00 the
Senate for much of the early,
legislation. Hearings wlll
commence on House· Bill 7
requiring hand...tamplng oi
prices ln computerized
supermarkets - ·a bill which
took an entire year to get
through the Hou.!e. '
And Ocasek says he hopes
that by .March the Senate will
bave acted on a Housei&gt;assed .
propoSal to limit the number
of years a manufacturer or
retailer Is liable for defective
products
That ,;.easure cleared the
House by a topheavy margin
last June, but has not budged
since then
Ocasek • also hopes for
. Senate action 00 a "sunset"
bill limiting the life of state
agencies which no longer
serve a useful purpose •
The Housei&gt;assed measure
sets up a six-year review
.period for ·. all agencies,
terminating those which are
not renewed by the General
Assembly. The Legislature
has already
attached
usWUJet" p-ovisiops to some
rnw agencies It created In
1977.
. .School finance · will be a
· maj&lt;r topic in 1978, and Rifle
and Ocasek are c.:lling for
different apJroaches.
Riffe favors a joint
legislative ciJmmlttee to find
·out why Ohio public schools
·are in financial difficulty and
make recommendat!ona for
more solid support. He said
he will be ready the first or
· second week in January to
appoint members to such a
committee.
But Ocasek said he favors
conUnuln@ independent work
• by exlstinl! committees, such
as the legiSlative Education
Review Committee and ,the
standing education panel.t in
the Senate and House.·
In any event, progress Ls
likely to be slow on the
e&lt;lucatlori financing Qllel!lion.
House .
and
Senate
Democratic leaders have
placed a pay raise for state
employees at the to'p of their
priority list In the upcoming
election year. ....._],
. Such a raise - could
accmtpany similar Increases
for Ohio judges, state
ol!lciala and state legislators.
The lawmakers l1lll)' use
money currently earmarked
for residential heating
discounts if the . federal
government agrees to
underwrite that program.
Senate leaders also are
planning to scrape up •10
million lor a special
Industrial development lund
to spend on firma locating or
upandlng In Ohio, such as
the ~on• of F&lt;rd Motor
Co . .and Honda Motor Co.,
which
were
partially
subsidized by the state.

$239.

Reduced
T~

•

Only

$} 00.00 $'200.00
ro

95

.OFF

l . .

Bia Selection To Oloose Fram.

MAPLf ANISH, TABU, 2 LEAVES, AND
6atAJRS ·

EQmple: Sofa, ...... ,Sell, And Qllir

WllH EVERY

ALL

'599.95

BEDROOM SUITE

399.95

1

QiAIRS

You Get A

FREE

Reduced

_. M-ATTRESS .And
·Matching Box Springs

PONTIAC · ·BERKLINE • NORWALK
• TW CITY • MD OTHER MAKES
t

ALL ELECTROPHON IC

SAVE ON 25"

.STEREO'S

ZENITH
·COLOR T.V.

'

'

.

On Sale

Every 25'' Reduc8d ·

·'

Save '50. On Eve.Y
00

00

Console Model. All With Eight
Track Tape Player, And. Most
With Recorder.

•

ALL

MAYTAG
'

LAMPS

WASHER &amp; DRYER
Buy The Pair
For Only

DISCOUNTED

$599.

00

REMEMBER IrS AMAYTAGI

7 PIECE ·BASSETT
'MAPLE

ALL METAL

DINING ROOM SUITES

DINffiE SETS

Something Extra Nice
Regular '995.1111

DisCounted

•

!

NOW
ONLY

·We Have Only.One

unoN
MI,CROWAVE OVEN
I

'·

CHEST FREEZER

Regular '299.•

Regular '399.•

00

Sale

•

.•

ONLY ONE
20 QJBIC.FOOT
KELVINATOR

SAL£ PR!CED .
AT ONLY

$Jso.oo

.'

-'
Mason Furniture
SALE BEGINS JANUARY 3, 1978 .

. MASON; W.

~A.

HERMAN

GR~TE,

Owner
&gt;'

773-5592

•

�·-··

,..
I

\

12- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. I, 1978

•

,

13-TheSunday .Times-Sentinel, SUnday, Jan. 1,1978

PRf·_INVfNTORY AND JANUARY

GABS defeats Pte Pleasant, ·60-52
•

•
Blue Devils m
best defensive
..
showing of ye~
,

•

.•

DRIVE A LITTLE AND SAVE -· A LOT• ·· .LOWEST PRICES EVER

RIO GRANDE - GawJ Academy lUgH School rallied
from a ~15 deficit midway In the second period to hand Pt.
Pleasant's Big Blacks a ~2 non-conference setba,!'k before
approximately 1,1100 spectators In Lyne ·center here Friday

PLATFORM &amp; SWIVEL
ROCI&lt;ERS
McCALL .BRAND CHAIRS
.
Regular 589.95

AMERICAN .......... ~~~-. ~~:~~:0•0••s.~~-~ ...' 7 9 995
2 PC. SAWYEk
REG. 1799.95 SALE ' 4 9 9 9 5
EARLY AMERICAN ............................. ..
3-PC. BASSETT

.

REG 1900 00 SALE

2 PC.

VELVET

'

REG . 1839.9$ SALE

'79995

· ONLY 2 IN STOCK

'49995

EARLY AMERICAN .... ~~~·..'~~~:~~ •. $16995

PAUL SUNY AN...... ................................
.
EARLY AMERICAN ............ ~.~~-. ~~:·.'~.:~~~ .. ' 6 4 995
2 PC.
REG. 1699.95 SALE
'48800
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2APC.

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'29995

'2 PC. . .

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'49995

.·

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6 SMALL

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8 ROCKERS ..'.....~~~:.·.~~~·~~.}119 95

ALE •74995

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HOOVER SWEEPERS UPRIGHT

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•29995

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$179.,

1869.~&lt;

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4 PC.- OAK ...........................................
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·

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SALE

6 69"

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.
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EACH

SOFA BEDS

.$99

SEALY 2 PC.

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CHEAP

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SALE

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•
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7-Pc. Dark P!_ne
with 2 _L;_eaves .

449

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42" CHINA ' GLASS FRONT
ONLY 3 LEFT
REG.

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REG. !600.00 SALE .

t - n:v, cu. ft . . Green Friqidaire

TV's ZENITH

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Model REG. 1999.95
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2 CONSOLE
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SALE
' 1 9 99 5
2 CONSOLE
REG. 1399.95
SALE
'27C)"
COMPONENTS-----...;---------- '18995

. REG . ·n5o.oo

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2~BASSm

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REG. 1249.95 • 1 6 9 9 5

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·

SETS

PC. OAK

.

.

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4

REG. 1129.95
SALE
Free Package of Bags.

3
TABLE

4

COLLINS

Vinyl

TABLES-BASSffi-RIVERSIDE-MERSMAN

REG.

BASSEn 3 WAY.. ..... :.: ............... ~~-~~.........
•

3 SWIVEL

'

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REG. RECLINER ............................
~~~-~ ........ .
•
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·
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OTHER ROCKERS

.

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REG. 1699.95 SALE ' 4 3 9 9 5
2 .PC. VELVET .........................
...... .... .....,.
. .

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AND 3-WAY·()STARTING AT•••••••••••••••••••••• '99.95 UP
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0

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REG. 1109.95

'58

SALE

nlghl
.
.
It looked like Coach LeMie Barnett's quln~t was going to
walk all over Coach Jim Osborne's Blue Devils In the first half
as Doog Gheen, Ed Nibert, Artie Vaughn and Scott Howard
hit from both ala~ and undtrneath and at the charity line .

\

•39995

'64995· .•

COLOR TV.• 23"
REG. !799.95
SALE

'599

MAPLE
23" TV ·
REG. !749.95
SALE

'599

95

95 '

3-19" PORTABLE

'439

95
UP

1-17" PORTABLE

'17995 COLOR · '39995

PPHS ·maintained anywhere from a two to eight point
advantage over the Ohioans In the early going.
After l~lldlDI 17·11 following the lint whlalle stop, JeD
HollaDd's drlvluilayup at tbe 5:39 1l18l'k In the second s~
put the Big Blacks on lop by lt for the lint time, %3-U. Two
free tjlrows by Holland made It ~15 with 5;}10 left Ia tbe second
period.
Then it happened. Pt. Pleasant committed several tumovers and missed three or four shots in a row, giving the
GalUaris a second chance.
The Osborne men took advantage of Pt. Pleasant's lapse.
Brad Abels drove for two and sank a free throw at the 3:29
mark, Jeff Brown, who came off the bench, drilled In two with
· 2:361eft. Abels got a tap-in at the 2:06 fllll10is,)D redu~ P~int's
lead to five , 2'1·22.
· ·
Mark
Smith;
also
of!
the
bench,
drove
for
two.
Abels
.·
followed up with another tap.ln. It was 2'1·26 with 34 seconds
showing oo the clock.
Big Ed Nibert drilled two free throws (Pt. Pleasant sa_nk 10
In a row before mJ.sslng two charity tosses In the final period)
with 18 seconds left to give PPHS a ·29--26 lead. Smith's long .
jumper cut it back to oM, 29-28, with six seconds left in ll)e first
half.
.
· 'lbat • ..,ood peri~ comeback seemed lo aparli: the Blue
DevUa. Jim Harrti opened second half play with a Iolii jamper
to pill GAllS bact on lop, 30-29. The c.Jllana had led oaly oae
other lime, 1.., oo Terry Wall's free throw In the lint period.
After Harris' goal, the Blue Devils never relinquished tbe
lead .
Smi\h, Brown, Matt Sterrett and Wall kept the Gallians
In front anywbefe from three to five points. It was 42-.19,
GaltipollS, going Into the final period.
Sterrett, starting his firSt varsity game, got a taP:In IAJ
• open the final period. Nibert and Holland scored back-to-back
goals to cut Gallia's lead to ope, 4+43, with 6:35 left in the
game.
Wall hit a1S.footer (6:14) and a IG-footer (4:43) to give
GABS a 48-44 advantage.
Smith scored on a beautiful back-handed layup at \lie four
minute mark. It was 50-44.
Howard popped in two more long jumper~ but Smith made
it52-48 on a short jumper with 1:571elt .
Brad Abels, who sat out most of the tblrd period and five
minutes of the Unal stanza wltb four personals, came hack In to
score what proved to be the game's winDing polata, two charity
tosses, '!l'lth 1&lt;33 remaining.
.
The remainder of the contest was spent at the foul Une ds
Pt. PleaSant defenders fouled repeatedly in an eftort lo pull it
'
out ol the fire.
Wall's two free throws with two seconds left completed the
game'~ scoring.
'
'
It was the Blue Devils' best defe!1$1ve team effort of tbe
season.
.
I
.
·
· GAHS Jilt 25 of 50 field goal attempts .for ·50 percent. The
· Blue Devils were 10 of'l6 .at the foul Une.- GAHS had 28
reboonds,ll bjl Abels and seven by Brown. TheGalliarls had 10
turnovers.
.
Junior Forward Mark Smith led the Blue Devils pttack
with 16 points. Wall had 15 markers and Abels 1~ fpr GAHS,
now 3-4 on the year.
.
.
. Scott Howard led the Big .Blacks with 20 points. Artie
Vaughn, who left_the game early In the final period with a
sprained ankle, and Doug Gheen each added 10.
Pt. Pleas11111 bit %1 of 44 field goat attempts for n percent.
'The Big Blacks, oow Z.Z, were 10 of 12 at the fool/line_. Pt.
Pleuut had 20 rebounds, 1Z by Gheen who played his llest
game of the UTI-78 campaign.
Gallipolis will host Ironton at 7:30 p.m. -Tuesday In a
SEOAL coolest. Pt. Pleasant will host Hurricane.

GALUPOUS won the battle of the boards Friday (2&amp;20) but Pt. Pleasant's Doug Gheen (40) 'captured
individual rebourid honors with 12. Next top reboWldei-

&lt;luring the non-eonference tilt at Rio's Lyne Center was
Brad Abels (30) of the Blue Devils. On righl is Matt
Sterrett (40). Jeff Lanham (25) and Jimmy Harris (12j
look on ..

Cage

Standings
All GAMES .
TEAM
W l P OP
Waverly
7 0 462 J64
Logan
7 1 S57 433

. FridJJy's high

school scores
Friday's Ohio
H lgh School
Basketball Results
United Press lnler~atlonal
· Akron Cent Hower 74 Bar·
be rton 57
'
Akron
Eliot8553Trimble
Stow 5268
Alexatlder

Col Brookhaven 90 Lancaster ·
61 ·
col Walter_"?n 65 Col DeSales
62
Col Wehrle 72 Chillicothe
Flegel 611
Col West. 80 Col Ready 68
Col Westland 69-Weotervlile S

Alliance 66 Tallmadge 56
~evington 54 Bethel 50
Ayersvllle 72 Continental 60 East Knox 85 Centerburg 78
?:"!lsvllle 89 Meadowbrook Euclid 58 Upper Arlington 57
Berne Union 73 Col Beech- Fairbanks 58 Mechanicsburg
56
·
croft 47
Bexl.,y 81 Dublin 51
Franklin His 52 Col Briggs 40
Bloom Carroll 45 Hamilton.. . Garfield His 59_Parma Valley
Twp 39
Forge 56
•
Boardman 69 Col Linden 64 Geneva
71
Asntabula
Buckeye Valley 70 West
Edgewood 50
JillirsOn 63
· Grandview 73 PlckerlnglonJ19
Canal Wlncbeoter 74 Miller 47 Graenevlew 55 Bellbrook 54
Chillicothe 55 Gahnna 54 ·
Groveport 74 Worthington 58
(In Becon 64 Forest Perk 46 Guernoey Calh 54 . Z..nHvllle
Cln LaSalle 51 Cln Elder 45
~osecrans 49
.
·cln Xavier 77 Flnne,rown 52
Indian Valley S 92 Bettsville
t;:!rclovllle 103 Logan Elm 50 53
cp ~o:ns 61 Cle Loil10:59
Jonathan Alder 61) New

5 1 08 351

Portsmouth

Washlnglon
Pl. Pleasanl
Gallipolis
Wellston
Alhens
Meigs

5
2
3
3
2
2

Jackson

2 499 419
2 269 276
4 418 425
6 590 654
6 503 558
6 454 573

2 6 425 517

Ironton

1 6 375 398 ·

Ravenswood

a · 1 40 45

Friday's results :
Galli po l is 60 Pt. Pleasant 52

Jackson 59 Greenfield 57 !oil

Vin ton Coun ty 82· Wellston 6Q

Tuesday's games :
·. Hurr:icane ll!1 Pt: Pleasant
Spencer at Ravenswood
Athen s at Meigs

logan at Well ston

Waverly at Jackson
Ironton at Gallipolis

Jan. ' ga me5:
Meigs at Gallipolis
W~llston at Ironton
Jackson at..A'thens
Logan at Waverl.y

Washlnglon CH at Miami
Trace
·

GAHS-Point box··
PT. PLEASA~T BIG BLACKS (521
PLAYER-Pas.
FG-A FT.-A PF RB TO TP
Artie Vauyhn, g
4-7
2-2
o 2 • io
Doug Gheen, f
. 4-6
2-3
3 12
1 10 .
Ed Nibert , c
2-8
2-2
3 .4
A
6
Scott Howard, g
10-17 0-0 3 1 2 20
JeffHolland. f
1-5 •·• • 5 1 •
6
MlkeMartin.g
0-1 0-1 •
0 o o
Jeff Martin, g
o.o o.o o -o o o
• TOTALS
21-44 10-12 18 20 15 52
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS (601
.
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT-A. PF RB TO TP
JeH Brown, I
, · 3-6
0-0 2 7 2 6
Jeff lanham, f
1·3 0-0 1 2 3 2
Brad Abels, c
5-10 3-5 5 11
o 13
Terry Wall, g
6-14 3-6 2 ·. 2 2 15
Jimmy Harris, g
2-6 0-1 2 1 1 •
Mark Smith, f
6-8 4-4 0 2 2 16
Matt Sterrett, f
2·3 0-0 2 3 o •
TOTALS
25:50 10-16 14 28 10 60
· Score by quarters:
Pt. Pleasant Big Blacks
17 12 10 13-52
GAHS Blue Devils
11 17 1A 18-60

TAKESCHARGE - Gallla'sJeff Lanham (25 ) stands
gl'oWld as Pt. Pleasant's Scoti Howard (14) Is called for
charging on this play In Friday's cage tiatue at ltlo
· Grande.

Portsmouth at Greenup
Parkersburg South at Pt .
Pleasant
Jan. 7 games :
Portsm quth at Ironton
Ravenswood at War ren Loca l

SEOAL VARSITY
Team
W l P OP
Logan
5 0 345 238
Wa verl y

Wellston
Gallipolis
Alhens
Ironton

Me.igs
Ja ck-son
. Totals
sMITH DRIVES FOR TWO.- Mark Smith, 6-0 junior forward (left) drives In for layup
against Pt. Pleasant. Smith came off the bench to pace GAHS _In scoring with 16 ~in~. On
left is Artie Vaughn (10). Watching from undern011th is Matt Sterrett (40) of Gallipolts and
Doug Gheen (40) of Pt. Pleasant.

Jackson upsets Tigers, 59 to 57
JACKSON - .Rich Harless
caMed a pair of free throws ,
and a clutCh field goal in the
final minutes of overtime .
Friday night to pull Jackson
to a thrilliag 59~7 victory
over Greenfield McClain.
While Harless, who tallied
17 points,' was the hero In the
final seconds, th'e entire
Jackson team performed will
under severe pressure in the
second half by hitting on 13 of
14 free throws, Including the
final 12 in succession and six
straight' in the overtime. '11
. Jackson Jed .~ after one.
period then Greenfield broke ·
on top 2'1·20 ai halftime, and
the score was deadlocked at
39.,'19 after three quaners.
· Rob ·McCray fired In 22
points and pulled down 13
rebOUnds to pace the losers
willie Jim Everhart added 13,
and Troy Hull 10 in -a losing
CBU~ .

Harless paced the Ironmen
11rlth 17 points and John

Dorsey chipped in 10 more for
Coach AI Berger's team. ·
Neither team shot well as
Greenfield hit 27 of 69 for 39
pet. and Jackson wa~ 19 of 51
for37 pet.
ilowever, the Ironmen
converted 21 of 26 free throws
. reenft'cld was three of
While G

Friday'S

Central Coii01Jiale

Hockey Assn Results
United Press International
Cornell Tourney

Championship

Cornell 5 Bowl)ng G_reen 3
· RPI Tourney
Championship
x-RPI 5 qhlo State 5 (tiel
Broadmoor Tourney

ConSolation
Colorado Colri!IJe 7 St.

four at the line.·
.
· Jackson is now U on the
season while Greenfield is I·
6.

The .box score:
GREENFIELD (571
Wood 1-0-2; Hull 5-11-10 ;
. Everharl 5-J-13; McCray 11·0·
22 1 Cannon 3'0-6; Smllh 1-0-2 ;
Barnharl 1-0-2. TOTALS 27-357.
JACKSON
159)
- .
Harless 6-5- 17 ; Forsyth 2-3-7;
Dorsey 4-2-10; D. Evans 3-2·8;
Conger J-2-8; Martin 1-7-9.
TOTALS 19-21-39.
Score by quarters:

Greenfield 6 21 12 12 6-57
Jackson . 9 11 19 12 8- 59
Reserve score : Greenfield

.

53, Jackson
22.
.

West Hoi mes 69 · Loudonville
A6

•

Wesl Mi lion Union 59 Edon 45
Louis 4 West Musklngum 95 Philo 63
Western

Bt own

60

&lt; - ·. RPI deClared the Georgetown S2
champion on rMJmber of goals Westfall 60 Teays Valley 56
scored in the tournament. 21 - Westlake 63 Fairview 53
:!0.
•
W il ~lngton 63 Lebanon 62
\)'

4

a

259

186

1

J . 243

220

3 2 · 328 · 337
2 2 250 244
2 3 313 324

.ITMMY Harris attempted a n underhanded layup cin
this play again~! Pt. Pleasant Friday night. In foreground
js Big Blacks Doug Gheen (40) .
'

1 4 254 374

o 4 212 281

18 18 2204 2204

SEOAL RESERVES
Team
W L P OP
Gall ipolis
3 1 166 141
Waverly

3

Wellston
Athens
Logan
Ironton

1 192

151

3 2 241 229
3 2 243 225
· 3 ' 2 193 183
2 2 165 160
~ackson
· 1 3 124 186
Meigs
o 5 167 216
Totals
18 18 1491 1491
SEOAL FRDSH
Team
· W l P OP
Gallipolis
J 1 170 153
Logan
J 1 203 172
Athens
3 1 208 151
Wellslon
2 2 128 154
Meigs
1 3 120 168
Jackson
o ·4 140 171
TOTALS
12 12 969 969
Jon. 5:
.,
Gallipolis at Meigs

Little Blacks rally,
trip Blue Imps 46-32
.

RIO GRANDE - Coach Raike added 10.
Nick Robinson's 12 points
Rick Van Maire's Gallipolis
lllue lmpa jwnped off to a !(). paced the ,Blue Imps.
GAHS hit H of 40 field goal
21ead eatly in the first period
but visiting Pt . Pleas~nt attempts for 35 percent. The
came back strong to lnOiet'a , Galllans were a cool four of 13
46-32 loss on the Ohio team. at the foul line. G,allia had 28
The ·victory, left Coach rebounds, seven by Boo
Jackson at Athen s
.. Latry Markham's '-Little Weaver , The losers had eight
Bla.~!l. ~ .....unbeaten In four turnovers.
GAHS will host fronton alB
starts. The Blue lmp-8
p.m.
Tuesday in a SEOAL
.dropped to 5·3 on the year.
sPqrts Tran,action'S .
'
By ,United Press International
Jeff Cameron; Gallia's fine tUt.
Friday
Box
score:
6·4
sophomore
center,
Hockvy
N ~w York Ranoers (N HL) reinjured his knee with 3:51
LITTLE BLACKS '(46)
Assigned defenseman · O•ve remaining in the first period
Farrish to New Haven of the
Chambers 0-0-0; S!epp 3·1-,71
and did not see any more Workman 2-0-4: Ralke 3-4-10 ;
American Hockey Leagu~.
Football
action .
Vaughan 6-3-15; Bibbee 1·2-6;
Cleveland Named Ji m
Gallipolis led 1().7 after one Mlntbn 2-0-4. TOTALS 18-10Garrett, defensive backfield
.
c:oich tor New Orleans , a·s an period. It was tied l:i-all 46.
BLUE IMPS . (321 - ·
offensi ve coach. ·
Robinson S-2-12 ; Harrll"!gton
New England - Named Jim during · i he halftime In·
Ringo as offensive l ine cOach .
termission . Pt. Pleasant 3-1-7; Weaver 2-0-4 ; Atk ins 1New York Jets - Announced
1-3; Cameron 1-0-2; Orr Q-0-0;
forg~ ahead by three, 27-24,
resign&amp;tlon of General Man.~~~ger
Bostic 1-0,2; Warner 0-0-0;
after
three
periods
of
play.
AI Ward .
'
•
Beattie 0-0-0 : Wickl ine 0-0-0;
College
The West Virginians out· Galli 0-0-0; Derlfleld 1-0-2.
AIT
Force
Academy
scored
GAHS 19~' In the ftnal TOtALS 14-4-32.
Harned Wa lt Harris, an assistScore by quarten :
ant football ~ olich at the stanza.
University ot California . In
Little Blacks 7 8 12 19- 46
Mark
Vaughan
led
the
Berkeley, u defensive second· Blue hnps
.10 5 9 8-32
arv coach.
winners with
. 15 points. David
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15"!-'J'!le Slllld8y Tim.es-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. !,-1978

'
14--The Sunday1'1mes-.Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. !,l978

Vinton
County
rips
Wellston
Ironton visits
.
r
GABS Tuesday ':82-60 for· ninth win .in row

Pitt .- humbles
Clemson, .3 4-3
JACKSONVILl.E, Fla. down pau went 10 yarcla to Florida against Penn State in
( UPI) - Matt cavanaugh, junior split end Gordon 1962.
Two additional Gator Bowl
puaing bla way into the Jones, ·who made a total of 10
records also were set Friday
Gat&lt;r· Bowl' rec&lt;)fd boob rece~for 183 yards.
Early the third quarter, night, The attendance of
riddled Clemaon'a usually
Jones
br e the Pitt alngle- 72,289 broke the 1969 record of
stlngy.defense for 317 yartb
and four touchdowns through seuon r Ol'd for receiving of 72,248 set In the Florida·
the air Friday night to lift 732 yards - aet by Bob Lonzo Tennessee match. The money
ninth-ranked PlttJburgh to a In 1966- with a 12-tame total going to each team from the
~ victory over the No. 10 of 793 yirda on 45 receptions Gator Bowl profits also hit an
all-time high ,.. $356,1100.
for nine touchdowns.
Tigers.
Mark
Schubert
kicked
field
.
The Pttt defense ruined the
The '-foo\·2, 215-pound
Cavanaugh, playing his last goal! of 24 and 21 yarda for usually dangerous passing
of
Clemson
game as a Panther, the victors and three of four game
completed 23-of-3&amp; passes extra points. David Trout, !he quarterback Steve Fuller, the
with no interceptions as he Pl\1 klckofl specialist, booted Atlantic Coast Conference
broke tlle Gator Bowl rll!'ord the · final point after player of the year. The
Panthers ' intercepted four of
of 382 yards passing set by touchdown.
ClemBon's
ooly
bright
spilt
Fuller's
passes and sacked
Florida
State's
Kim
of
the
nlght
was
a
Gator
Bowl
him
several
times.
Hammond over Penn State in
reoord-llrealdng 49-yard field
Fuller completed 11k&gt;f-23
1967.
Three of Cavanaugh's TD goal by Obed Arirl In !he passes lor 148 yards.
The Panthers rolled up 566
passes were caught by senior second period . The three·
running back Elliott Walker, pointer broke the 13-yard yards in total offense while
who also gained 56 yards oo record set by Bobby Lyle of allowing Clemson only 258.
15 carries to beconie only the
second player in Pitt history
to gain more than 1,000 yards
In a single season. His total
for the yellr was 1,033 in 12
games.
Walker's scoring
receptions were for 39 yards
In the ·opening quarter, 10
HOWARD DRIVES -;- Pt Pleasant's Scott Howard ( 14) drives while GaWa's Jimmy
yartb in the second and for 25
Hams (12) apphes pressure m this action photo of Friday's GAHS·Pt Pleasant game at yards in the final period.
Lyne Center.
Walker finished with six
By 'JAMES LAWRENCE
said.
•
receptions for 121 yards.
DENVER (UPI) - There
"That's how we heat them
:r'he victory gave Pttt, the was no New Y"'!r's Eve the first time. You have to
defending national champion, partying last. night for the pressure him to be successful
a ~Z.1 record while Clemson Denver Broncos, who hope to and that's what we have to ·
closed the year at ~1 with become the new American do." ·
their fir !It bowl appearance in Football ..,C onference
Meanwhile, Jim Marshall
19 years.
Champions apd possibly the • celebrated his 4oth birthday
Cavanaugh's fourth touch· . world · champions
of Friday PY flying more than
1,000 miles and lh~n knocking
professional football.
,/...-----~- Coach Red Miller's squad heads
with his teammates on
By United Press International
worked out briefly Saturday a plot of wet grass.
FridJ:r,'• Tournaments
cage morning and then retired to a Today he will line up In his
Big.E .1ht. Tournament
Kaiuai City, Mo.
mote) for an evening of fifth N ~ C championship
Iowa St ..83, Colo. 79
relaxation before today's game.
.
Mo . 87, Okla. St. 75
1
AFO Championship game
Marshall, the oldest active
Neb. 7S, Oklahoma 68
KaMas 67, Ken . St . 62
against the Oaldartd Raiders player in the · National
AII · C~IIege Tournament
at Mile !Ugh Stadlwn.
Football League, has already
. Oklahoma City 1 Okla.
, mric stliilliiNos
Texas A&amp;M 84. Ok . City 79
For the Raiders, the AFC aMounced he 'will he back for
TEAM
· W L P · OP
A. Pear so~ a . Rob~rts 7J
Hannan Trace 3 2 326 JJ5 game will be their' fifth while another go·rou.nd next
Bsn Co I 81, Miam i 0 . 76
Southern · ·
3 3 362 355 the Broncos, who clinched the sea~n. !le expects a most
Sa n Fran 102, Arll . St . 90
Southwestern
3 3 405 382
Far West Classic:
Symmes Valley 2 4 348 3Bl ·AFc West title with a 1Z.2 difficult afternoon in the
Portland. Ore.
Championship
NortlrGallla
2 4 370' m record, will be getting their . conference title game against
Co lo. St . .A 9 ore . St. 4A
Eastern
· 0 1128 183 first shot at a conference the favored Pallas Cowboys.
consolation
Kyger Creek
o 5 270 328 crown after 18 years ·of "There is. absolutely no
.Wash. St . 62, Vllnva 56
SV.AC ONLY
lobo lrtvitatlonai
weakness in the Cowjloys,"
TEAM ·
W l P OP eXistence. . ·
Albuquerque. N.M ..
Lyle
Allado
one
of
five
said
Marshall. " They have·
Hannan Trace
3 0 198 187
. . Champ.tonshir
• Southern
3 1 262 2._. Bronco defe~slve players been doing a lot of things
Svrac vse 96, N.M. 9
consolation
North Gall Ia
2 2 :i58 2._. sel~ed to the Pro Bowl offensively an~ Roger
Miss . St . 79, VI . 50
SouthWestern
2 2 2,.7 2A9
.
Old .D ominion Classic
Symmes
Valley
1 2 204 ' 184 game, said a key.factor 1n a Stauhach ls having an out·
Norfolk , Va .
Eastern
0
2 SA 138 Del)ver victory would lie standing year."
Championship
Kyger creek
0 3 183 204 controlling the Raiders' star
The fact that Dallas is a 11lMich. St . 102, New Hamp . 65
SVAC RESERVES
Consoi.Jtian
quarterback
Ken
Stabler.
point
favorite obvioiiSiy does
TEAM
W l P OP
Old Oom iniOn 86. SMU 78
"It's for all of us to force not bother Marshall. He has
Sugar Bowf Tournament
Southern
3 O· 189 m
New orte.Jns, La .
t'lorth Gall1a
i t 185 111 Kenny Into mistakes " h¢ · heard that before, llke last
Championship
'
SymmesValley 3 1 186 157
Monday in Los Angeles when
Va . 85, So. Ca l. 8:2
HannanTrace 1. 2 97 14.5 C'n~e
Consolo~tlon
theViklngsupeettheRamsin
Southwestern
1 3 139 155
Temple .74, Auburn 73
the opening round of, the
Eastern
0 2 58 89 ~'
Cibr'illo Clnsh:
playoffs.
Kyger C.reek
o 3 60 162 Albany 60
, San Dltgo, Clillf.
.
.
Championship
Lilt week's rtsult1 :
"Who is favored going in
lorain Catholic 76 Bedford really doesn't matter," said
S.D. St . 9~, Purdu e S4 .
Wahama 76 Southern 71; Chane!
71
·
consolilllon
Huntington St. Joe 68 Kyger
P' iH 80, Fordham 76
lorain Southview 56 Elyria 51 Marshall. "No 'team has ever
Creek
37.
Rainbow Classic
Mansfield Madison 53 Dover advanced in the playoffs on
This wtek's games :
At HoooluiU
52
what a newspaperman
Tuesday
Symme•
Valley
C!1ampionship
at Kyger . Creek; South- Middletown 83 Hamilton Taft predicted · the score would
N.Car . 92, S tanford 61
conSotatlan
western at Ironton St. Joe and 51
be."
P'rov 53, Texas Tec·h 52
Hannan ,Trace · at Fairland. Montpelier 78 Ridgemont 6~
-tr:
(FirstRound)
!
Frld1y - Hannan Trace at Mt. Vernon 68 Hlltlard 60
Pillsbury Tournament
Symmes Valley; South. Nelsonville York 73 Federal·
Bloomington, Minn.
western at .North Gallla ; Hockof.l

GALLIPOLIS
Coach
Buddy Bell's Ironton 'llgers
will visit GaWpalls Tuesday
night · as play ln the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League resumes following
the aMual hoUday break.
Reserve action starts at 6.
The varsity tip Is set for 7:30
p.m.
,
The defending conference
champions are 1~ inside the
league and I~ overall.
Coach Bellis still searching
for a winning combination
following the graduation of
five starters from last year's
squad which gained the Class
·AA Regional finals at Athens
before bowing out with a 2lh'i
record.
The Fighting Tigers only
win thus far was' over Meigs,
79,30, in their conference
opener .on Dec. 2. The

Pro playoffs
.
resume SUn da Y

Lawrence County five has
lost to Athens, Waverly,
Ashland (twice), Portsmouth
and Logan.
Ironton has been in every
gaine with the exception of
the 68-40 tosa to Portsmouth.
Coach Bellis expected to
go with Keith Harvey, ~10
)uruor and David · Lutz, ~10
senior at the guard positions.
Bob'Willlams, 6-0 senior and
Dick James, 6-3 junior wW
probably open at the forward
slots. Robin Fitzpatrick, 6-6
junior, will open at ceriter.
Expected to see plenty of
action are ~elf Linn, 6-0
junior guard; Tim Hodg~s. 'I ~phomore forward and Joe
Fletcher, 6·1 sophomore
forw•rd .
Other members of the
varsity squad are Juan .
Thomas, 5·9 senior guard;
Tom Gordon, 8-1 sophomore
center pnd Mark Erwin, 5·10
· MIAMI (UPI) - Heavy. junior guard.
weight champ Muhammad.
GAHS ls Z.2 in cOnference
Ali became a .father for the play. Prior to Friday's
sixth time Friday -his fifth COI\test with Pt. Pleasant, the
girl.
'
, Blue De~lls were 2-4 overall.
His wife, Veronica, gave
In other games Tuesday,
birth to a 7-pound, Jlk&gt;unce Athens is at Meigs, Logan at ·
bah~ atl0:12 a .m. at Mount ·_ Wellston and Wav~rly at
Sinal hosp1tal. . .
Jackson.

-e,u
·-

DOUG GHEEN (40) played his best game of the
season fOI' Pt. Pleasant Friday night Here, the Big Black
se.nior drives f&lt;r a layup. GAHS defender Is ·Matt Sterrett.
Gheen had 12 rebounds and 10 points.

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Am Inti 89, Cent Conn . 80
Ed inboro 73, Ga . St . 70
Geneva 77, Walsh 0 . 73 .
Lncln 86, Stcktn ~t ..82
Ma ine 74, Canlslus 67
Morgan St . 77 , G11nnon 64
Ph i Ia . Tu 69, Mrv ien 55
Pratt' 80. Sfvn' s Tech 73
Scrntn 67, Ind. Pa . 64 •
S. Fla . 84, R . Morris 79
South
Detro it 89, Manhlt 8.t4
Lamar 87, Centenary 62
L . Owen 80, Tenn . St . 78
Mrehed St. 80. Denvr is
Sthrn Tech 93, Andrsn .78
Va . Tech 81. G. Wash . 79'
Win .·SI':'" 83, Del. St., S6
Midwest
Akron 92, Malone 78
Denls~n 67 , Mt t.Jnion 59
Ill. St . 93 , LIU .61!
lnd .. Prde 86; St . Jno. 80
Iowa 89, Drake 87
Navy 67 , Butler 65
Wayne St . 59, Hlr:am 36
W.Va . 76, Cl~ve St. 66
West
Azusa Pe~c : 66 , Cai. · Rtvrs 62

Calif 83, Cal, .. lrvlne 50 ,
Cat. . Davis 78, Chm lnd~ 73
E. Mont. 67 , N.C.·Char 65
Grt Falls 82, ~ac . Luth 70
linfi~ICI 108, So. Ore. 69
Mont .St. 84. Kent St . 64
NW Naz 97, Whtmn 81
5.0 . 67, Hayward St . 58
S,F . Sf. 11, Columbia 69
Utah 80. Idaho St. 73
Weber Sf . 82, Sac to Sf. 74
Wllmtte 107, LaVerpe 88
Whittier 62 , Pt. Lorna 60

•

. every good ••L,,.
for your

New Year/

· From The Staff And Management Of

RELATIVE TO PLAY
GALLIPOLIS - ·Ron
Calcognl, a relative of the 1
w,yne Amsbary family of
Gallipolis, will quarterback
Arkansas Monday In the
Ora~ge Bowl game at Miami,
Fla. Coach Lou Holtz's
Razorbacks will battle the
Oklahoma Sooners. Coach
Holtz haa made recent head·
lines because of his
suspenaion of three stars on
the 1977 9quad.
·

OOVINGTON, Ohio (UPij

- Thomas . O'Domell, 13,
Dayton, died of an apparent
heart attack Friday night
while officiating at the
,JJ2 &amp;tb Street
championship game of the
..;._ _ _ _...:;6::,;75;,;·,;11:,;6:;;0.·_..__ _ _., · Miami County Holiday
Tollmament. ; ·
1

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

Point Pleliant

NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
(UP!) -Joe Cole knocked off
ihe favcirltes in ·the first
feature of Northfield- Part's
new season Friday ·night,
winning the $3,500 ninth race
In 2:09 3-S• .
Joe Cole, a 11·1 long shot
driven by Tom Brinkerhoff,
took the early lead and stayed
on lop the rest of the way In
picking' up his lith win .of the
season a!KI returning f24,
f1 .20 and $3.60.
Favored Ace E~press came
In ~nd and paid f4:2(l and
· $3, while Marne Key finished
third and kicked back ~.80.
Bit Style wlin the loth race,
starting a big triple combination of 3-7·2 that returned
1573. sd Oacar Belmont was
second and Pure Crystal
third.
A crowd of 4,035 wagered •
ftl4,702.
. .

~ Patterson

Reserve score: Vinton Co.

' 43 , Well ston 36.

..,,
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in quality
Outdoorsman ... work .shoes

for workmen. Quality built
to stay "on duty" when
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Pro
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IStandings !

WELDING
SERVICE

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Large lathes a~~ boring

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and

Steel fabrication, complet~
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Opper tcou.te 7
Kanauga, Ohio .
614 ... , &lt;I;~Gol, '

•i•

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•••

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NHL Standings_

~-

By United Press 1nternatlonal
Campbell Conference
Patrick Olvisloli

W. L. T.

PhiladE!Iphia
24
6
NY Islanders
20 8
Atll!lnta.
11 14
NY Rangers
12 16
Smyth.e Division

.

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MOntretJI

w.

On himd to wish rou a

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e

CARTER &amp;.EV:ANS, '-INC.

5

27

=
••
:
•
•••

rousing New Year filled
.
'
wHh tlte testf11e spirit ot

~

Its (fusplclous start.

••*
Q
••
i
c
••

Tom Casey
Na'ncy Cox
Burhl Hood

=
=
~

.......ol!"'--

Roger Hood ·
Gladys Maynard
John Sauaders
Hank ThD"!PSOn

Carl Waugh
Ted Wiseman
Mike Wolle

12
17
17
21.''

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE

IIATE

• P1y1bl1 Qu rl~t lr • MIRimum 11 .000.00

• Plrtbt' Qmllrlr •

Mln l mu~t~

SI ,OOO.OO

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&amp;·YEAR CERTIFICATE

7 1A%

7 r,:~,%

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Mifllm~trn

$1,000.00

, 1nonthl y or

Qua1lerl y mcome . 11a1d Oil one. two . l hree .
lout . or six year w1111catn ln!e1eSt pav·
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w1th. race amount ot S ~ . DOD 00 or more

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Fede ral Regul at!dn s reQuire a ~u!)s latlrla l
penally l or pran1a1we wllhdt awal ol cerl lll·
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Adams Division ·

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W. L. t . Pts •

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Pittsburgh •

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2· YEAR CERTIFICATE

4-YEAR CERTIFICATE

Alllt\IAL .
IIATE rj"

Chicago
12 u 10 3-i
vancouver
10 15 f 29
Colorado
8 16 8 2•
Minnesota
9 22 4 22
St . louis
7 24 4 18
Wales conference
NOrris Division
w. L. T. Pts.

;

and high hopes. for a
calendar year of i?-appy days!
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MODULAR HOMES

5 ~l 5:.~.~%
1·YEAR CERTIFICATE

•

42

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE

,,

'~

. RichmOnd Heights 75 lake
Perry 54
Rlttman 71 Doylestown 69
River View 93 Morgan 61
Sandusky 9S lorain Sr. 83
Slaney lehman 58 Russia 54
Sout~ Central 62 Plymouth 59
South Rnge 96 Lisbon 67
·
South Webotar 71 Clay 49
Springfield Coth 55 Urbano 55
Springfield N 71 Spring
Shawnoe tt
Springfield Mahonlng 65
Beaver local '16
Stark ~erry 54 Louisville 41
Sylvania Southview 74
Oregon Strttch 62
Tecumseh 78 Troy· 55
Triad 46 West Liberty Sa Iem

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

•

..•••.

Reynoldsburg 67 Weste.r vllle
N. 59
:

PASSBOOK SAVINGS

RATE

•

!Pa.) 53

·Gallipolis, Ohio

· S'l'OP! - That appears to be the signal being given by Pt. Pleasant ace Scott Howard
(14) ·as he and GaWa's Jimmy Harris battle for a loose ball at Rio's Lyne Center Friday
night. GAHS won , oo-52. Howard popped in 20 points for the West Virginians.

PORTABLE

••
••
••

and deliver the

-.Work shoe. dollars.

MACHINE
SHOP
SERVICES
'

•·
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59 Fairfield 42
·
Pymatunlng 56 ' Lakeview

See Jim Staats or Joe Giles ·

on your

12 19 11 18~0
19 30 17 16-82

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Phone 446-9340

Tourney
Consol•tian
Geneva (Pa .) 77 Walsh 73

Score &amp;y quarters :

I
0 A

Princeton

MOBILE HOMES INC.

lndlonoStoSe(P~ . l

7-6·20 : Prafer 8·3·

Wellston
Vinton Co .

•••

59
Parma Normandy 53 Prma
Sr . 4.1
·
. Poland 68 East Palestine 52

g~ -~...

Championship
Akron 92 Malone 78
Con5olation

dll pay You the

•"

.,

Akron Holid•y Tourn1Y

Mount Union
HolidaY :ro~~~~Y

AII.Colteoe Tourney ~

Conso .. tion

Capitol 107 Sl Francis ('till 69

~ I

North Ridgeville 69 Avon
Lake 67
·
Northmor 53 Crestline 34
oak Harbor 49 Genoa 48
Orange S9 West Geauga 5r 12
Of)
Pandora Gilboa 68 Arlington

BUYS. IN HOMES

Montana Sf a. Kent Sl 64

Wisconsi n·

59

2-8; J. Kruger 2·2-6; Young 3'

•

South

TODAY'S BEST

KOA Classic
Consoll1ion

·--

Rod etdor Clnslc

...,19 ; Wallace 1.· 4·18; Gi-aves 3·

:

Newbury 62 Berkshlre -60
Niles 81 Baavar !Pa.) 63

Northfield results

_ ConJOiation
Denison 67 MI. Union

Way ne~\, IMfc~l 59 ~ Htram

36

VINTON CO. IU21 Allmon 1·0·2; Gilt 1·0·2;

,
•

New Bremen ·68 Minster 38

New london 85
Amherst 78 • ··

71

a. .

'

60.

:

standings

at Eastern ; and
Trimble at Kyger Creek .

St

Champtons:htp

Bethany (W Val 74 Urbana 58

o-· 1-7. TOTALS 32-18-82.

SVAC

Southern

QshkOISh

McARTHUR- The Vinton
County Vikings extended
their unbeaten skeen to nine
Friday night In an 82.00 romp
over the. Well!ton Golden
Rockets.
.
!lig Mike Patterson poured
in 20 points while hls team·
mates John Prater and David
Wallace added 19 and 18 as
the Vikings upped their
season mark to a perfect 9-0.
• Vinton County led by
quarter scores ol19·12, 49-31,
and 66-42 as they hit on 32 ~f
66 shots for a 49 pet. average.
They also caMed 18"of 23 fre'i!
throws and pulled down 44
rebounds.
The Golden Rockets, now 36, were led in scoril)g by Ray
GillUand's 28 poiltts with
Mark Swonger adding 12.
Wellston connected on 24 of
67 field goals for 36 pet . and
converted 12 of 22 free
throws.
The box score:
WELLSTON C6i))·:.:. Martin
3·0-6; Royster 1·2·4; Gilliland
10·8·28 ; Norman 1·0·2;
Swonger 5-2·12; Williams 2·0·
4; Pugh 2-0·4. TOTALS 24· 12·

r

Colleg!3
scores

Fla . St. 71 . ,Tulane 56
M inn. 66, Air Force so

"Baskttbatt Atsults .
UniNct P"'ss International
West Virginia 76 Clove land St
66
Wri ght

'

Third Plact

B05ton College 81 Miami 76

&gt;

.

Scores.

Frluy·s
Ollio Coltogt

6
8

38
28

20

L. T. Pts .

Boston
22
7 6
Buffa lo
21 7 6
Toronto
21 9 4
Cleveland
10 22 ~
· Friday's Results
NY Rngrs 3, Washington 3
Toronto s, Cleveland o
Colorado 2, Vancouver 2
Sunday's Games
Atlanta at Buffalo
Vitncouver at Chicago
Colorad.o at Los ~no

OhioValley:Sank

50

48
46

24

·

.•

Why settle for less than the best?
When it comes to your savings, you
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of

on reaSO!lab.le notice wj thdfawal.
This is exactly .. what Ohio ,Valley
Bank wants and promises their depositors: No wonder savings deposits ~ontinue to be at' ari
all-time high.

cw~
Will!

WHA Standings
By United Press lntern'atlonal

.

New England

W. L. T. Ptl.

8 3 49
1·· 43
Quebec
12 1 ' 33
Edmonton ·
15 1 33
Houston
16 3 31
Birmingham
17 2 30
Cll)clnnatl
19 2 '2e
Indianapolis
'9 22 4 22
· Friday's R•sutts
EdmontOfa 1. lndpls 5
New En0' 6, Birmingham 2
Clncl 5. 1-touston 5, ot
y
Sunclay•s Gamltl
'
New Eng at Cincinnati
Houston at "Edmonton
Quebec at Birmingham
Soviets at lnd i ane~lll
Winnipeg

23 ·
21
16
16
U
U
13

12

~ OhioValley Bank
•

Gallipolis, OhiO

Membo• FOIC

.'

!he leading savings plans are. at the leading savings. bank.
.I

.'

..

�.'
16- The Sunda~ Times-Senlinei,SWJday, Jan . l . l978

•

Soil _s urvey proposed
•
•
as upcommg proJect
•

•

County agent's
. corner

HOOFS. • .and. •• .PAWS

1

Band Member, To March ·
.

In 8ose Bowl Parade '
Area residents were urged today by a McDonald's
official to watch for Mason, West Virginia's' own Mary
McFarland as she marches in the Tournament of Roses
Pa.rade, January 2.
,
Pat Sauber, owner and operator of McDonald's in
Athens, Ohio, said the parad.e will be teleca~t on NBC
and CBS television networks, giving hometown viewers a
•
chance to see Mary perform.
Ml.u McFarland will be participating _in the colorful
parade as a member of the 11177 McDonald's AllAmerican High School Band, conducted by Paul r...valle,
internationally renowned musical diJ:ector. The band
conaists of the top 102 high school muslclana In the
country-two from each sta,te and the District of
Columbia.
·
The dlstringulshed m~sical unit performed in the
Macy's Tbanksg!ving Parade in New York City and has
.made appearances at special concerts at City Center In
New Yorkand at Orchestra Hall in Chicago.
.The McDonald's All-American High SChoOl Band was
started In 1967 by ' McDonald's CorporiU,on to ~ring
recognition to outstanding high school mualdana, much
In the same way thatathl,les are honored, All of Mary's
expense• to New York and Callfornla are paid by
McDonald's.
. Mary, the daughter of Mr.and Mrs. George
McFarland, of Third and Anderson Street, Is a clarinetist
at Wahama High School. She was ·nominated for All·
American honors by Band Director Charles Yeago.
"It ·~a such .
·
. .
"Ii 1a such a great honor to be a member of.,Me·
donald's AU-American Band," Mary,said upon returning
from New York. "McDonald's has .given me a cbance to
see New York, Chicaogo, Callfomta-:places I've never

By Boyd Rulb
Soli Coos. Service

The oil·burning fu,rnace
needs attention more often to

Animal Shelter. We have over $7,000 in our fund; We have a

builder, we are meeting with some people the second week in
January with the end result (we hope) being the land we need
to build· on, and after conversations with ccngressional
representatives from both the Republican and Democratic
parties, our needs are itow being discussed in Washington and
we bave every reason to believe tbat we will get the necessary
assistance to build within the year.
Lastly I would like to tell you a little about the Humane
Society Animal Adoption and Caretine Servic~ that Major
Miller and I started in May of 1977.
,,
,

maintain its highest efficiericy . If you are using a
1

converted op burner or a
ccnverted .gas burner over a
long period of time, you could
gain Sjlme efficiency by installing' a
new
unit
specifically for oil burnln• or
.specifically for gas furnaces.
The efficiency of the new
In just seven months we have placed over 200 dogs, 80units are much hlllher than
some cats and kittens, and been unsuccessful in finding homes the oil ccnverted ones.
for only 20 dogs and30 cats. TNs brings us to the sad part of our
aSsociation with the society. There are some that just are not
"plat:eable". They are either too feisty, too mean, too ugly, too
old, too pregnant, or too female, and so no one !&lt;'ants them.
They didn't ask to be born, but through neglect or carelessness
' On this day in 'history:
their mothers were allowed to have them and so with no one to
In 1893, President Abraham
care for them, we.had to don our black hats and take them to
Lincoln
signed
the
the vet to be humanely euUianized.
Thank God we haven't had to do it as often as might have Emancipation Proclamation.
been if there hadn't been so many great people in the county
who stepped In at the last minute. For those of you who took
animals, THANK YOU FROM THE BOTTOM OF OUR
' HEARTS.
.
,
So that ahout covers our accomplishments In 1977 - we
can only state that we will continue in 1978 and perhaps have
even more good news at this time next year. A1Happy New
Year to each of you readers and to your hundreds of pets and
.

Animals avlilable for adoption this week are:
· DachahWJd, standard, 5 yrs. old, female, black 949-2726.
Cockapoo, female, 2 yrs old, black and white and her. I yr.
old !em. ptip, 742-3162.
Terrier • Poodle, male, neutered, 3 yrs old, black, 13
pounds, housebroken, 992-3097.
Beagles, female 2, very nice dogs, 742-3162.
Collie puppies, 4 female, 7 weeks old, 742-3162.
German shepherd type pup, 4 mo. old, black and brown
992-3367.

Cats, cats, cats, 742-3162,
P.S. As you know, the Humane Society places doggie and
kitten banks in business estabUshments and it is one of the few
I , ways we have of getting money to support our efforts with the
seen before." · .
homeless animals of the county. Would you believe that every
"I certainly appreclste the opportWJity Mr. Sauber
and McDonald's have given me to traveland meet and once In a while real "crumbs" steal these banks? We had two
stolen over the Christmas holiday, one in Pomeroy and the
perforin with my peers from ac1'0811 the country. It's
• other in Middleport, II the guilty party is reading this column
really a terrific experience!"
mw: "A Happy New Year from the hungry animals of your
county;"

Our

pasture and l)ayland plllnting
and 743 acres of pasture and
hayiand
management ..
Assistance on 33 acres of tree
planting, 2,015 acres of
wildlife hatitat management,
40 acres of timber · Bland
improvement and 29 acres of
woodland Improved harvesting plus 30 acres of
livestock exclusion was also
provided by SCS.
We provided 22 "Inventory
and evaluat,ion" reports.

These Included proposed
Individual
hOJT)esites,
existing drainage ,problems
and pond repair recom·
mendations,
SCS so il scientist , Bill
Shumate,
serving
14
southeastern Ohio ccunties
walked over 2,364 acres In
Meigs County making
detailed soil survey maps.
These maps are ,used In
determining the limitations
and potentials of the snil for
crop rotations, pasture
production, · homesite
locations, etc.
These figures are informative as an indication of
quantity, however they do not
show tbe standard of quality
at which the assistance wsa
provided. But considering the
cooperation and appreciation
shown .by · you folks
thro~ghout the year, we
sincerely believ.e our high
quality standard to be met.
SCS assistance Is available

FRANK HAMILTON OF Western and Soutbern Life
Ins, A8ency presents the National Quality Award for
Excellence to Don Thomas of the Den Thomas Insurance
A8ency.

Bronze, tan, vinyl r90f, leather interior. full power and

air, cruise control. AM-FM stereo face .

76 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille ............... ;... 17900
Red with white vinyl roof, wl'llte leather lnterior. full

Association meeting at the

rert;~a,i~

fuH1llmg the persona_! and
busmess fmanc1al ob)ecttve
lor whtch they ~redeSignated
to meet. Thts award IS
espec!ally important because
this was the. agency's tenth
year to qualify.
Attending the. presentati~n
were Btll Qutckel, Davts
Insurance Agency; Walter
Grues~r. Mtdland ll'llutual;_
Ken Reynolds, National Ltfe;

This unique citation was

established in 1944 by the
National Association of [;ife
Underwriters, and the Life
In s u r a n c e A g en c y
Management Association. It
is given to underwriters who
are so outstanding' in their

in

force,

thus

Frank. Hamilton, Wes.tern

. 76 CadillaC Sed. DeVille

Light blue. blue vinyl · roof, de-elegance inferior, full
power and air, AM-FM ste reo with tape. T&amp; T steer,ing
wheel.

75 Cadillac-Coupe DeVillE was

S6SOO

32 ,000

Located on W.Va . Side
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

miles.

(304~

16300

Full power. air, leather trim, white, loW mileage.

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille 'was

moo ro~ov.

BOSSARD

'2900

LIBRARY

"You'll Uke Our Quality Way
Of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Eveoings Til6: 011- T'l ~p.m. Sat.

•

New Year!
c~J
· oy, hea!th, contentment"
... our toast to you and your
loved ones in the bright New·. Year.

Jan

DAN THOMPSON FORD
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

LEO (July 23-Aug.22) Back your
fa_vo~ ite

" Bowl " team with your(
cheers , but not too much
money today . They may be the
favori.tes but your luck isn't all
that super.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.22) Try to

SEE THE

light touch if you 're telling a
story. today You have a tend ency to el(aggerate . You could
trip on your tongu~ If you ca rry ·
it too far.

SCORPIO. (Opt

Large Selection of '78 Dodge

* STRIPPING ROOM

priate .time to salute the
greatest producer of food
and fiber in the world-

AND PRICED At ONLY

American farmers.
Sixty years ago, the Land

Bank
established to help the farmer by
providing dependable. long·term

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

*GARAGE

'2750 ·

~1(/(i)QJ~

W' Q]lwlli~m\7.
· Jan. 1,1978

A rise in status is likely for you
thjs comtng year. but there
could be some roadb locks. If
you have your sights set on
something , don't despair. Second effort will get

•t.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan.19)

.

We ·ve changed a lot over those
years. but our purpose has remained

the same , .. to. provide larmers with
the crediuo produce that food
Clyde I. Walker Mgr..

THE BANI( OF
GENERATIONS

- Gallipolil Ph. 446·111«1

CDTRAL SOYA ~
af OlriD, Inc.,
Gilp ... Ohio

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l.

For Moaday. Ja~. 2, 1971
Hns coming year your greatest
gains will come from unpromising beginnings . From the humble acorn , the mighty oak
grows.

·DODGE
GALLI POUS, 0.
COURT &amp; THIRD
For Sunday, Jan. 1, 1971

·There is a career-type opp~ntu­
nity' around you today, but you
may either fail to recognize It or
discover it too tate to take full
advantage. Find out more
about yourself by sending for
your co(ly of Astra-Graph Letter Mail 50 cents for each and a

If-.

23·Dec.21~

Unfortunately, you can't rely
on prom1ses made to You by
another today. THe ability to
deliver may be lacking.

CARROLL NORRIS

WARMTH WHENEVER

*BASEMENT

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.

Trucks In Stock;
Cars and
•'
Sea them today•••

HEATERS

24·Nov. 22~

Someth ing that looks like an
interesting proposition today
may not hold water in the cold
light of dawn . Sleep on it
before you commit yourself.

-!(

Portable Kerosene

*SHOP .

$

SPECIAL

Wo • ll49S ·
SPECIAL

995

CAPRICORN

(Dac.22-Jan . 19~

Be cognizant of t he odds and
don'1 get into situations where
long , self-addressed, stamped you are overmatched . Today,
e nvelope to Astra-Graph , P.O. - you tend to think you have
Box 469, Radio City mote clout than you actually
Station,N.V. 10019. Be su ~e to ' have. Like to find out more of
what lies ahead for you? ?end
specify your birth s1gn.
your copy of Astro:Graph
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21J.Fob.19~ A lor
L'elter by ma il ing 50 cents for
fi nancially troubled pal may
each and a tong ,' self .
co me to you today. Think twice ~
addressed, stamped envelope
before you jump in , because to Astro-Graph, P.O. Box 489 ,
you may jeopard•ze yourself Radio C1ty Statton. N Y. 10019.
wh ile bailing him out temporariBe sure to specify your birth
ly
stgn.
.

PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) Per- AQUARIUS
mit no one to do your thinking
for you today . Others may
recommend what's good for
them but unwise for you .

ARIES (March 21-April

19~

In

things that ·require judgment
today , you 're &amp;p timistic. That's
rine . TrouQie Is, you see only
two good sides and that can be

bad.
'
TAURUS (April 20-May 20~

You're industrious todav , but
voiJ 're also quite wasteful. It's
ltke you might prepare a sump ~
tUOIJS holidav dinner and then
throw away the leftover caviar .

to

(Jin.20-Fob.19~

Failing to face your responsibilities today will lead to future
complications What is swept
under the rug now will tater
cause a small dust storm .

1977 FORD
PINlD

•1195

S\r led wheels. ·

tlres. tape stripe s.

Was Sl1fS

1976 FORD F-250
4X4
V·B engine. power steering

Was $3795

Was $1995
NOW * 3 4 9 5

NOW * 3 1 9 5

GRANADA
GHIA 2 DR

Was S269S

Was S4995

1977 CHEVROLET C-10

1972 FORD MUSTANG

SCOITSDALE

MACH I

Flares l de, V -8 engine, power
steering and brakes , automatic
frans ., AM radio, w-s-w tires, styled
wheels . 7,000 m iles.
Was S499S

V·B . engine, 'power · steeri ng and
brakes, automatic tran s., AM radio,
good condition .

Now*4495

•1495

1975 MERCURY
MONARCH
.
2 Dr .. dark brown, 6 cyl. engi ne.

4 Dr ..

v.eeng ine, power steering and

brakes, automat ic trans .. AM ra dio,
good tires .

NOW • 2 9 9 5

' SPE;,CiAL

1975 FORD F-250
4X4

95

V -8 engine , pow ~ r sle!! ring and
brakes, automati c trans ., AM ra d io,

Qood !ires .
Was S219S

NOW • 1 6 9 5

1974 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER SW

1969 FORD F-100

6 CYL

9 Passenger . V.fl eng inc, pOw~r
st eeri ng and brak es, au t omatt c
tr ans .• AM-F M radi o, luggage rack .
'
Wa s S329S

cyl . engine, automaf!c tr ans
mission, AM ra.dio .and good tir es.
topper , rear step bumper .

6

V'Jas $1i19S

Now

2 PWS 2
v.a cngtne , power steering a nd
bra k es. au tomatic tran s., AM radio,
w -s-w ti res, . 11 .000 m i les.

V-6 engil'l'C, red . power steer ing and
bra kes. automati c tra ns.• AM rad i o.

V-8 engine. ·power steer ing and
brakes, aUtomatic tran s., .AM radio,
W·S· W tires, new car . only 200 miles .

Autoniali c t ransmis sion , AM radi o,
W·S·w ttre s, tape stripe s, low
mileage .

1977 FORD F-250
4X4
'

•3795

1973 DODGE D-100
PICKUP
318 engine1 power steeri ng

V-8 engine, PQwer and brakes, 4
speed tran s .• AM 'rad io, fr ee running
hubs, white spQ.ke wheel s and tires.

bra kes, au torn ollc tran smission, ·AM
radio, good !ires, rear step bumper ,
A-1 condi ti on .
Was S279S

NOW • 2 1 4 5

1975 FORD
MUSTANG

1976 FORD P,INTO
2 DR

2 Dr ., 4 speed trans.. AM radio,
white side wall tires. low ~ i lea ge .

4 cyl. engine, .1 speed tra ns , AM
r ~dio, good tires. low m i leage.
Was S299S

WasS319S

Was 13295
NOW ' 6 4 9 5

SPECtAt'

•2795

Now*6435

1976 MERCURY BOBCAT
3 DR RUNABO~T

Was S679S

.

Was S699S

1977 BUICK LESABRE
4 DR

11295

1977 MUSTANG
2 PLUS 2

SPECIAL

Was S249S NOW * 1 9 9 5

•5195

1972 FORD F-250
3
~ TON PICKUP

~ow*4495

•

•995

v.a engine, power steeri ng and
brakes. 4 speed trans .. AM radio.
good tires, low mileage.

V-8 engine, .power steering' and
automatic transmissior:~ , air
conditioning, AM radio, mud &amp; snow
tires, topper.
.
a·

*4

NOW

6 cyl. eng l ne, power st eering and
brake s, automatic tran s., air
condition ing , AM r~dlo , luggage
ra c k . W·S· w fires . like new condition.

1973 CHEVROLET
% TON PICKUP'

brak~ ,

Was 15495_
·
NOW

Was SS995

1972 MAVERICK .

power steering and
brakes ,
automattc . tran s, AM radio, W·S·W
t ires, 23,000 miles .

Was$3495

V-8 engine. power steeri ng ant.1
brake !&gt;, automatic !rims ., a i r
conditioning, AM r Adio. w s vv t ires.

Now'5995

Was S5195

SPECIAL

and

.Was S661S

NOW ·• 2 0 9 5

NOW ' 4 4 9 5

1977 CHEVROLET
IMPAUA 2 DR

1977 PLYMOUTH
VOlARE WAGQN

4 c yl. engine. 4 speed transmissi on ,
air conditioning , AM· radio, w ·s-w
tires .

'3195

NOW

brakes, 4 speed transm ission. lo ck in
and lock Qut h ubs, aluminum spoke
wheel s and tir es, topper for
camping , AM -FM stereo. tape ,
13,000 m1les.

1974 DODGE COLT
2 DR.

302 en'gine, power s.teer i n~ and
brakes, automatic trans ., AM stereo
11·ap.e, air conditioning , low mileage.

U'i'9~

Was

NOW • 3 6 9 5

'795

2 Dr ., 4 cyl . engine, automatic trans·
mission. AM rad io, white side.wall
tires,. li ght blue.

engine, power steering and
brakes , automatic trans .. lock in
lock out hubs. AM r&amp;d io.

V-B engine, power steer ing and
brakes. automatic transmlssiM . a ir
condit ion ing. AM r~dlo . w s w !Ires,
low mileage .

Wa s S399S

PINTO

•
V-8

1975 CHEVROLET
IMPAlA 4 DR

2 Dr , 4 cyl. engi ne, automatic
trans., AM radio, white side-wa ll

NOW

NOW • 2 7 9 5

NOW • 2 7 9 5

NOW • 2 4 9 5

THALER FORD SALES

LIBRA (Sept , 23·0c1.23) Use a

TIOCioR.SALES

.I

•1995

V-B engine, power steeri ng
brakes, automati c tr ans., AM radio,

1974 FORD BRONCO
4X4

observe ttle social grapes
today. It's not genefally good.,
policy to ignore them even
though you feel with good
reason that you should.

'78 DODGES

FUL10N-1HOMPSON

22~

Some people are " takers " by
nature : The more you give , the
more they want. You lmight hnd
one among your guests when
you're serving the potables

harder,

YOU NffD IT

I, 8, 15, 22

CANCER (Juno 21-July

spend ing more money anrl

NEW SHIPMENT JU_ST ·ARRIVED

Minn i e W. Mackenzie
Clerk -Treasurer
Gall i a County
District Library
Board of Trustees

yourself today , but don 't leave
something tmportant until the
last minute. II JUst mtght not get ,
done.

From The Friendly folks AI

producers. Farmers and
ran chers will be doing 'more;
than their share because they

problem,
The Almanac
killing ·38 aboard
and
THE ALM,ANAC
Abraham ·--Beame
was
Uolted Press laternallonal
inaugurated as the first
· Today Is SWJday:Jan. I, tbe Jewish mayor of New York
Spring Ave.
first day of 1978 with 364 to City.
Pbmeioy, Ohio
follow . .This is New Year's
1111111!11!11111111111111111111111111!11
Day.
The moon is approaching
its last quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Saturn apd ·
Mars.
The evening star Is Jupiter. ,
Those born on this ~ te are ·
Wider the sign of Capricorn,
The· late FBI Director ·J.
Edgar Hoover and actor
Dana Andrews were born
Jan. 1- - Hoover in 1895 and
Andrews in 1912.
In 1974, ah Italian jetliner
crashed near Turin, Italy,
'

IAL

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Enjoy

world ... then everyone must
share the cost. Not just the .

the

MEMOA

Sealed proposals will be
received unt il 12 : 00 Noon ,
Local Time , January 24, 1978
at the Galli~ County Distr ict
Library, Thjrd &amp; State
Streets, Gall ipol is, Oh io .45631
tor the furnishing of Millwork
for the Dr . Samuel L. Bossard
Mem_oriflll
Llbrer· y ,
Gallipolis.. Ohio In ar:: corclltnce with the drawings,
specifications and other
contract document! prepared
by Robert L . Grant &amp;
Associates., Architects.
Proposals will be opened
Immediately thereafter and
publ ic ly read at the office of
the Clerk -Treasurer .
The Instruct ion to Bidders,
Drawings, Specifications,
Proposal Form..s and other
Contract Documents may be
obta i!'led at the office of
Robert
L.
Grant
&amp;
Associates, Architects, 1515
Bettjel Road. Columbus. Ohio
43220, (614) 457 -4141. Deposit
sha ll be $25 .00 per set, which
wi ll be refunded providing
the documents are returned
shipping charges prepaid, in
good. condit ion within ten (10)
days after the receiPt of bid.
All bidders must. be in
conforma11ce with State
Equal · Employment Dp ·
portunity requirements .
A certified check payable
·to ' 'Gal!ia County District
Library ," or a properly
.secured AlA form of Bid
Bond, in an amount equal to 5
percent of the total -bid shall
be submitted with the bid.
No !aids may be withdrawn
for at least thirty (30) days
after the scheduled closing
time for receipt of blds .
The Owner reser ... es the
right to accept, or relect , any
or all p~rts of any b1ds .

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

world. if we want to feed the

to even' consider solving

773-5777 .

"NOTICE TO BIDDERS"

See one ni these courteous salesmen : Pele·Butris, Marvin Keebauqh or George Harris.

the malnutrition around t~e

abilities have made it possihle

1400 .mJles, new conditi on .

2 dr .. v.e engine, power ste~ring and
brakes . automatic trans .. AM r8d lo,
air cnnQi t lonin9 . w s w !Ires .

1972 PLYMOUTH
DUSTER

SPECIAL

PRO:.JECT : DR . SAMUEL L.

Full OOWJ!r , air, stereo.

solve the world's hunder pro·
blems. If we w;mt to eliminate

and SOuthern; Gene Rtggs, taking- greater r is ks . Dis· .
John
Hancock;
~oy . cussions of possible solutions
Shepherd , Prudenttal; will be included in upcoming
George Crump, Weste'!' and deCJ isi ons. on agricultural
Southern; Terry Shirley, poli cies. Hopef~;~lly, those deWestern and Southern, ~nd cisions will be fair to the men
Emory Monroe, Nationwide. and women whose agrarian

SPECIAL

NOW ' 3 7 9 5

brakes , automa1ic transmission. air
cond i tioning . AM ra d io. low
mileage, A· I eond ition , one owner
car.

Auto Sales

NOW SS90C

75 Cadillac DeVille Sedan

blem is not lack of food. It is
lack of money. Therefore, it is
a common error to look to the
farmers of t·his country to

working

495

4 cyl. engtne, power steering and
brakes. automatic tran s.. AM radio,
w.s.w t ires.

1972 DODGE
DART
2 Dr., V -8 engine, power steering and

Clifton

Full power, factory air, ·leather seats. T&amp;T wneel.

stereo,

Most sim ply stated the pro-

be

WasS4

'2495

Was sll9oo NOW 17900

These are worthy and re·
spt'cted ambitions. To be ob·
L~ ined , causes and sol)Jtions
need to be better defined.

will

1951 cc.4 cyl. engine, 5 spee-d trans
mission , AM· FMstereo radio, w-S·W
tires, 4200 miles. local owner car.

1976 t¥,)NOA
MOTORCYCU CB 500 T

1974 DODGE
CHAllENGER

wheel .

the malady of malnutritien,

Skyline Lanes Bowling Alley
In Kanauga for lunch and
business discussed social
security benefits to the
public.
A highlight of the meeting
was a presentation to Don
Thomas Insurance Agency
the "National Quality
award" In recognition of his
high
standards
of
professional . achievement.

1974 FORD
MUSTANG

200 sx

4 SPEED,
4 CYL.

power and factory air , full stereo, cruise c~trbl , T&amp; T

Eliminating -h unger , .. te;!~
ing the world . .• wiping out

KANAUGA - Ten mem· service that 90 percent of a
bers o! the . Meigs • Gallia • · stipulated number of policies
Mason Life Underwriter sold over a two year per1od

1977 DATSON

1976
PINTO

77 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille ............... -110,000 ·

;I! I: 11! 11!111111!11111111111111! IIIII II

to Don Thomas

eo~th~~~~~~~~5~~
Is an appro·

22•Uppor Rlvor Rood

'2695

aurl·
Award presented lacIs

~ersary

and fiber.

AT, PS

432 1 Pomeroy, Ohio 4li769 or
1
call !JY2~7.

"-

financing .

GTO

assista'nce, contact us at Box

HERE'S WISffiNG one
and all a HAPPY NEW
YEAR! from SCS staff, Boyd
Ruth and Reid Young; office
secretary Leola Young, and
)lleigs SWCD supervisors Rex
Shenefield, Roy Miller, Dave
Gloeckner, Thereon Johnson
and Joe Bailey.
..

END OF YEAR

'74 PONTIAC

eel or, national origin, se• or
religion. If you need our

farmer deserves:.----..
alot Ofcredit.
..

-~"'-'

BEST BUVS

to anyone regardless of race,

The American

other animals U.at you care for daily.

to the needs of the land and
the landuser, for, adequate
resource protection and mor~
rational land use.
Meigs SWCD has a total of
59(&gt; ccoperators with 84,654

POMEROY -With the end
of 1977, we can look back and
reflect
on · the
ac·
compiishments of the past
~c·res . By becomiog
a
year.
.
o\5 with any businesS, we cOoperator you receive free
reduce the amount of heat look· at the quality and consulting service on - land
used will give UB a savings In quantity of work ac- management and technical
fuel and In dollars. This Is compllshed. Our assistance- help·on the sb.Vey and design
directly ~elated to the tern- . was requested by many of of conservation practices.
perature m the house and the you nice folks (271 to be SCS t«:hnicians provided 766,
temperature outside. For exact). Hopefully we have. services to Meigs landoWners
example, tbe 8 hours at rught helped you deal with your and users who applied 127
ts probably more umportant conservation problems and ·ccnservatlon practices.
than the 8 hours d~rmg the land treaiment decisions in
During 1977, scs helped
day because the mght tem- an effective maniler.
Individuals install 13,535 feet
.peratures outside are always
Sixty-ooe new cooperators of underground drainage,
ccnstderably lower than the signed up 8,970 acres with the five ponds, three acres of
daytume temperatures,
Meigs Soil ·and Meigs Water grassed waterways, 700 feet
Although some people have Conservation District (Meigs of open ditches, 2,741 feet of
claim~ t_hat the walls cool SWCD) to obtain assistance pipeline and five livestock
down With the l~wered for their land. SoU eon- tanks.
then:'oBtat and that tt takes, servatlon Service (SCS)
Minimum tillage, Including
cotllllderable heaUo warm up personnel helped 17landusers no·till farming, continued to
the watts and ceiling again In develop or revise con- be one of the fasteSt-groWing
the morning, Miller does not servatlon plans. These plans conservation practices. An
belie-:e this a problem, covered various land uses , estimated 2,000 acres of cropespec,tally since most of including crops, pasture, hay, land is under minimum
.today
s . hous~sH have some
.
't woo ds an d wildlife . They tillage which conserves fuel
1
1
ms~ _alton; · e says
established conservation as well as soil.
defm1tely ts not a problem
s1
'ted
SCS also has helped with
with fully insulated b.ouses. management sy ems SUI
the application of 163 acres of
He points out that an im·
poriant part of managing the
home heating system is In·
stalling adequate insulation.
When we tum the lher·
mostate down 8 degree, the

Gallla County is in woodlarfd,
very little Is managed so as toPOI!iEROY - Tile heat's
produce qualitY. timber. The on! And it~.• ccstlng you
board felt that this is a major money! At present fuel
meeting, we reviewed l~e information .
problem and increasing price~. the heat is probably
More requests for services assistance to anyone in- ccBtlng you a good bit more
ccntract between the Gallia
Soil and Water Conservation are beginning to ·come from
terested in establishing or than you would like to pay.
District and the Soil Con· units of government and
improving timber stands is a
One way to save some of
servation Service - U.S.D.A. urban-related sources every high priority item.
that l•ei, says Roger Miller,
This document is used as a week. Years ago, when the
In every major inventQry Extension agricultural
"fact of life" and is con- Gallia
S .W.C.D.
was done on Gallia County's land engineer at The Ohio State
tinually followed ; but oc· organized most requests for
use, hayland and pastures University, is to shut the heat
casionally it is good to review assistance was from a farshow as a grossly neglected off- at least part of the time.
it an4 be assured of the in· mer. Many requests are
area .,Since hay and past~re For example, lowering the
termingled , yet separate, received from farmers, yet,
constttute a major part of temperature at night can also
duties and responsibilities o! but other Interest groups are
Gallia County agriculture, lower the fuel bill.
the Gallia S.W.C.D. and the now requesting help. The the supervisors want to stress · Miller says (hat reducing
s.c.s . .
board felt that these people Improvement of these areas the temperature when no one
In the review, the board must ~ assisted in any way
and proper management to is in the house and during the
noted that no long-range possible under present policy them .once they are im- s leeping period can, indeed,
programs and goals have format.
proved. _
save fuel. During the 8-hour
been established or revised
The information and
The board of supervisors period while you are sleeping,
since 1963. In the light that education programs needed saw a great potential to you don't need the house at 70
Ga ilia County is changing strengthened . Schools ad· receive
planning
and degree. You can turn the
and growing so rapidly, a new ministration will be assisted fhlaftcial assistance fi-om the
thermostat• down to say 62
list or work priorities and more in helping to teach the Ohio Valley Resource and degree and save the amount
goals was discussed. ·
proper basics and principles Dev'e iopment ( RC&amp;D) of fuel needed to maintain
One item of a high priority of
natural
resource CoWJcil. Several projects are those 8·extra degrees. Also
was to try to get a soli survey management. Clubs and "in the mill" for assistance when you leave the house for
started In this county. Soli church groups wlll also be and future projects will be several hours, you can reduce
surveys !jive valuable in- given assistance In any · ccntlnually introduced.
fuel use by turning down the
formation to land developers, resource conservatiOn in·
Any public assistance thermostat.
'
farmers, prospective home terests.
organization must con·
For people who are on a
builders and buyer.s, striP:".
Strip mining has expanded tinuaUy progress and change definite schedule, It Is system "coasts" for :the next
mine compan_ies, planning or In the county recently. The with Its .clientele. If . no possible to have a thermostat
half hour or so, using the heat
agencies ,
and board or supervisors felt that changes are made, evenzoning
controlled by a time clock ; reserved In the house itself.
recreation area planners.
many
.e rosion
and -tuaily, the services egress however, it is just as effective
Then we maintain at 62
Actually, very few people sedimentation
problems from valuable to stagnant to to do this manually.
degrees for 7 hours. When the
will ever have p. use for soil could be
avoided by ' useless. If oUr se'rvices and
In the past, the idea of thermostate is returned to 70
survey information . Some assisting mine operators.
goals don't change with local turning down the thermostat degree in the morning, the
people could use it more often
Much wilflife habitat has needs - eventually no one at night was not well ac· furnace will bring the temor in more detail than others, been destroyed by changing will see a value to our ser- cepted, admits Miller. The perature back to the 70
too. With a published soil land uses which is a concern vices. The board of super- . main reason it is being en· degrees in about half an hour .
survey, there is very little to the S.W.C.D. They want to visors feel that their goals to couraged today is the In- · The energy used In the setup
information on soils, within a assist with or instigate plans natural
resource
creasing price of fuel and the is about equal to the energy
county, that Is not available to continually re-establish or management
are
too
total cost of heating a house. not used In the setback, and
for improve wildlife habitat.
Immediately
and
valuable to grow useless.
So anythihg we · can do to Miller points out, we have
Even though almost half of
been heating for 7 hours at a
reduced temperature,
Another way to save fuel is
with zone heating. Most
electrically heated homes are
planned so one or more rooms
By Marlon C. Crawford
can be shut off without
bothering the rest of the
Meigs CuWIIy Hu""ne Society
. ·
POMEROY - This picture shows just a few of the animals
house. The heat is merely
we are trying to find good homes for with folks that wiU love
turned off in those rooms, and
the doors are closed. ·In
and care lor them. And prior to going into the New Year we ·
would like to summerize for you euctly what the local
forced air heated houses, one.
Humane Society accomplished during the year 1977, besides
thermostat controls the whole
looking out 1or the best Interests of a II animltls that we came in
house.
*'
contacl with or heard about.
With this central heating
This column started with the first subject being my
system, one way to reduce
deceased Ko-Ko last March. Using this SIJ'!Ce each Sunday we
fuel use is to reduce the
have been able to pretty much keep our members and people of
amount of heat used. in
southeast Ohio up to date on the status of animals. Yoor
·. various areas. For example,
response to this column has been just wonderful and so I will
the bedrooms do not need to
continue to write the facts up each week through 1978:
be maintaiiled at a 70 degree
1977 brought us a van as a gilt from . the Parkersburg
temperature during the 16
Humane Society ; it is old and rusted out in spots and we had to
hours they are not occupied.
put some new tires on it, but by golly, it has been a God-&lt;~end.
Therefore the ·registers ~an
We have transported many an injured animal to tbe vet,
be closed in those rooms, and
pick:ed up many strays, taken homeless animals to new homes,
by closing the doors, the heat
and made many other runs with our 1 'blue mess''.
will be considerably reduced,
Two women, besides Major Miller and myself, have had to
Or, the dampers In the heat
utilize this means of transportation at a moi1).ell.t's notice and it
.
ducts leading to these rooms
has always gotten us to our destination and back which is what
DEBBIE ESTEP HOLDS some of the amrnals who
can be adjusted to restrict the
counts. -our former Humane Agent Joan Browning made what .. need homes very badly. They will be kept a few more days
heat ccming into the rooms.
seemed Uke hundreds ol runs investigating neglect and cruelty (we've had them for some time already) and then if no -one
Experimenting can help you
calls · and now Debbie Estep makes the many, many runs comes forward, they will have to be eutharuzed. If you
get the heat adjusted· trr the
necessary daily when the welfare of anim.a ls is at stake.
think an animal in this picture is what you want please
desired temperature.
Also during 1977 Debbie Estep started recording w·eekly call Debbie Estep· at 742-3162.
Miller says there are two ·
' for a short radio program Wednesday evenings on WMPO-FM ·
·
basic heating units: gas
during which time she tells of animals looking for·homes, talks
.
furnaces and oil furnaces.
iJo t r er care of animals and many other inieresting of you who have d?fiated 1tems and also tho~e of y~u w~o haye The gas furnace needs snme
a b1~ ~ op
shopped at our thrtft shoppe. We hope you .wtll continue m 1978. adjustment to make sure it is
su ~rThi-iltShoppe, whichloralongtimewasonlyopentwo Anoth~r thing th~t happe~ed in 1977 tbat we are most burning property at its most
days a week, is now open three days, Thursday, Friday and pleased wtth ts the. mcrease tn membership of tbe Me1gs efficient rate , Tnerefore,
saturdays ; and ccme spring we have already lined up people County Humane S~tety. We are now the orgamzation with t~ Miller suggests having , It
to open the shop on Wednesdays. The more often we are open, largest membershtp m the county and tbat can have tt s checked' by service persopnel
of course the more profits we have to devote to the animals. advantages m many many .ways.
•. .
.
who can adjust It for peak
Th sh ' ha d
ll during 19n and we want to thank all
The most lmportant thing that we accompliShed durmg- efficiency.
e oppe s one we
1977 tllough, folks is tllat we are much closer to our dream, an

Mary _McFarland, Wahama

SCS · h~hlights for 19'17

By Jollll c. Rice
E1L Ageat, Acrtculture

By Steve Hlblllger
everyone. With Gallla's
District Conservalloolsl ·
future growth projected, the
GALLIPOUS- During the board of
supervisors
. last board or supervisors recognizes a need for this

.

17-TheSunday Times-Se.nUne1,Sunday, Jan. I, 1978

'

362 JACKSON PIKE-RT. l60 &amp; 35 ACROSS FROM HOllER MEDICAL CENTER

•

r

For a good deal See Tom Sprague, Melvin
Little , John Koe-hn , ,..,orris Stleets . Terry
Hamilton, Gary

PH. 446-3575
,..., Saturday, Dec. 3 ,

help .

TAURUS (April 20-May

20~

A

-- --

disagreement could arise to·
day regard tng ttle way a jotnt
venture is to be hand led . You
party .

GEMINI (May 21-June 20~ lc.
cepl your friends lor whatthey

.

CANCER (June 21-July

22~

----~- -

·-

NUIC'fH

'

+

AKQ-.JV87 64 2

·-,9 ·-

SCORPIO

(0ct . 24-Nov. 22~

In

PISCES (Feb.21J.Mirch 20~ This order · to gain your ends tod ay
should be an enjoyable day for' . you may employ tactics oth ers
you provided you don't permil will find unbecoming . 'This will
another to, saddle you with tti~ make them feel obHgated or
problems . Be· careful far he Is Indebted to you . .
apt to try .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.23·Doc . 21~
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl19~ Plans This Is a dav when you could do
that seem reasonable to you a good turn . .butlose a friend in
are likely to be rejeCted by your the process. Think twice becompanio ns or as.sociates fore lending money to a pal.
today . Forcing the issue w'on 't
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

...•

from jack-lo, etc . .Declarer

.....,..._,.... __

plays th e Queen from dum~

-

my , third hand the king and
declarer the ace.

As a result, South decided

+-

Auction Bridge
North East
''
2•1'

3'

Pa.s~

s•
s•

r as.«

7•

••

Pa ~~

Poiss

Pass · Pass
(lpemn .~ lead : King of dia·

ntond s.

accompanied by conside r able profanity. Neither one
appreciate&lt;~ the fact that his
(l'lrtner k ept bidding his own
suit an.d when South fmally

SOUTH
• t\KQ •.1 10!11&gt;ft,il4:J2

·-

J-la ,"~

It seerrw !hat the las t bids
by North and South were

bid seven spades North said,
"You hqd best make it, or

'foWest

JNF. WSI'/1./'I•: U

. ,\ Q,I t0865

... 97 4 32

LIBRf\ (Sepl.23-0c1.23) You 're H
54

a pleasant person IO be 8fOUnd
today when thing s are going
smooth ly , but when faced wilh
any lorm ol opposition your
tess desirable tratts could surface :

"J
+

+

VIRGO (Aug.2J-Sept .22) There ·
is a posslbil tty that only small
numbers will be chalked up tn
the profit carutnn _ today because of be1ng pennywi se but
pound foo lish. .

----.- ·

_,______,

A
minor tSsues , you and your
... K
male are likely to be In com-·
EAST
plele accord today . However , WEST
regarding something that realty
matters , you're apt to be poles
apart .
.
K Q J 9 7 5 :1
10 B 6 4 2
have an uprising to contend
with If you treat subord inates
arrogantly A bad day to th row
your weight around :

•

The a nswe r is that it h as
happened many times . The
- - - - lead to trick one is the jack

d own on grand s Iam
ne
____ - --- - took a trick .

On

LEO (July 23·Aug.22) You will

·

played on lhe.same trick.

Oswald and J1m Jacoby

·Q

are today . Don 't try to ch~nge
them . They won't appreciate
any more than you wou ld ir
they tried to change you .

queen nnd jnck o£ a suit

BRIDGE

- - - ··----.

may teet that you're th e in jured

---~-...1

By Oswald &amp; James Ja coby.
F'or our last hand o( the

year we present a bid of
whimsy from the long ago.
This concerns the de cia rer

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

eJst! ." l

,

to really annoy his partner

.and his opponents by playing
th e hand out slowly . , ·
If West had opened a club

1-: NTI-~ IfPU! SE

ASSN. )

'itft\lN'tfii&gt;'if

(DO you f1a ve a qucsfron l or
/he experts? Wn te "Ask 1/w
JacotJys ~ care of lh1s newspa
PFJ' Tho Jacobys wdl Jnfl wur it
stamped. se/1-adcJr:ess(uJ enve lopes are en c losP.d The mos t
mreres rlng q tiestions wilf be
used tn fh1 s co lumn and w111
recieve copies o f JACOBY

MODE RN./

~ntATICAAioi8LEDWOADGAME

~· ~ ~~ s

by Hemi .,.mafd and Bob Lee

Unscramble these four Jumbl",
one tetter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

t,
H

I. VARNE
I -~ I
I PRUTE

_

'V"i

A

.A

~ 1 "'"'""c.._,,...., .v•~Pt&gt;.__

th ere would have been no

/

(

)

story but West opened the
'
king of diamonds. Nort!l"'
slapped his cards down on r~-0~1-P-TU--N--,1
the table so hard that they - .

~~r~r~ed s~lt~~~le T'~e~im~;
played his ace of dJamonds

L-'x.r. .I~. . .)&lt;:L_.L._..II...... Jl

of West's king. South studied

LRQSIAL l

a while and trumped

his

:;~~i;p;~.~~~ rJ I I l ~l:J

he could even tak e '"
tr,ick . . _
•

lh~

A.;......, THE

nl~wal.

:.,.,.,,.._,,. , ,._ j "" ''"'~'i)1..1l..-.
.....,..,ill'
"' ili:l ~ ,

iHE'r' DID'-1' 'T
QUITE WIN "THE
1-lii-1- C:.I-!M13.

e••tOd by

rrrn
·
I
~

y

~

_

J" u

aJ

1

in an auction bridge g;~rrie in
A New Mexico reader y 8 sterday·s
Dry Gulch~ Arkazona; who
wants to know if we have
held J3 trumps and never . ever seen the . ace, king,

,,

I

•· ·

''

(Anawerh•O_ncta, J
Jumbtes: TRULY ' OFTEN BONNET NOODLE
Answer: Mtght be "put dQwn" when lhere.,. klo

manybllatofoot-VOURFOOT

�Ill-'- The Swl(!ay Times-&amp;!ntinel, Sunday. Jan. 1, 1978

19-TheSundayTimes-&amp;!ntlnei,Sunday, Jan. l,l978

:

Anti-U.S. demonstrators in Iran prot~st Carter's visit

First Meigs County ·b aby and parents will receive many gifts·
POMEROY
Meigs
· County's first baby of 1978
will be off to a good start what
with the number of gifts of·
lered to the infant and its
parents .. by Big Bend
businesses taking part in the
annual Daily Sentinel's 1978
Baby Derby.
The winning baby must be
born to parents wha are legal
residents. of Meigs County
and the exact time or birth
must he specified in writing

from the attending physician
at The Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
by midnight on Jan. 10.
Gifts being offered by the 32
participating businesses this
year will include :
A $10 savings account from
the Pomeroy National Bank;
a case of baby food from
Mark V Super Market ; a

brown teddy

bear from

Moore's Store, Pomeroy; ·a
free meal to the mother from
Crow's Steak House; $5 off on
anything ordered from the
Pomeroy Sears Store; a $10
savings account from the
Citizens National Bank; a
pair of haby shoes from
Hartley's Shoes; three boxes

of Newborn PamP1lrS from
the Village Pharmacy; 10
gallons of gas'oline from
Welker's Ashland Service
Station; a two-piece baby set
lrom .Goessler's Jewelry ; a
free meal lor the parents at
the Meigs Inn; a S5 gilt
certificate from the Kiddie
Shoppc; a crib toy from

Western Auto, Middleport; a
flO gift certificate from
Powell's Super Valu; a free
meal to th.e parents from
Country Cousins
Cook
Shopp&lt;:; a $10 girt certificate
from Elberfeld's Department
Store.
Two cases of baby food
from Waid Cross and Sons; a •

Marguerite's Shoe Store; a Newborn Pampers from the
baby planter from Francis Racine Food Market; a baby
Flotist; a baby bunting from planter !tom the Pomeroy
Landmark; a three-piece · Flower Shop; three boxes of
Ieeder set from K. and C. Newborn · Pampers from
Jewelers; a $10 savings Swisher-Lohse Phannacy; a
account from the Racine case of baby food from Twin
Home National Bank; a $3 Cities Gateway Supermarket,
gilt certificate from The and a cut nower arrangement
Fabric Shop; three boxes of from Dudley'S:

$5 girt certificate from the
Hefitage House o{ Shoes; a
case of canned milk from
Krogers ; a package of Birds· '
eye diapers from Stiffler's
Stores, Inc., Pomeroy; two
toboggans and two cases of
Royal CroWn from the Royal
Crown Bottling , Co.; !louse
slippers lor mother from

By HELEN THOI\lAS
TEHRAN, Iran (UPI)
President Carter arrived
Saturday in Iran 'lor talks
with the Shah and King
Hussein of Jordan on a visit
marred by outbreaks of anti·
American
demonstrations ·
proteSting lils visit.
Heavy security had been

~

~nngfar~

POMEROY
Ten
defendants were ,fined and 12
others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday,
Fined by Judge Robert E.
Buck were Benjamin Patterson, Pataskala, 120 and
costs, hunting deer on land of
another without permission;
Robert Willis, Sy racuse, $19
and costs, speed; Dana Fick,
Long Bottom and Bobby
Patterson, Pomeroy, $13 and
costs each, speed; Keith
Bradford, Racine, fl2 and
costs, speeding ; William P.
.Rizer, Rt. 3, Racine, $10 and
costs, left of center; Penni V.
Lyons, Middle(lQrt, · $27 and
cost s, speedin g; Virginia
Sayre, Rt. 2, Racine, $150 and •

79e
Grapefruit •••• ..g .
·
.,~

JACI UIIIT

.

.,

7, 1978

I

Jumbo

,,

Bologna
.

'

$..

'

~,

39
Stew Beef ••••• .• •••••••••• lb. $..
&amp;•

.

By The Piece

lb.

IOIIIUIS

.

OONiliSS

'

"'-.,

Heel of Round Roast • • •• " . lb&gt;
$9 An
Ground Round •••••••••••• lb. .&amp;ev..,.

htn l - Crellllll ..., ftrMify

.c uf

•

49
.&amp;•

$..

I

MILD TitlOW

.

.

~ ~t

·

Coo•ing Onions 'B.fo~~

6
.
$1
Green Peppers • • • • • • • • • •

CRISP IRISH

'.

.

.

1.. ·

5
$4'
. Fan:e;» Cucumbers •••• ~ • • '"
IRISH

.

.

•

.&amp;

armaments,

is

movi ng

som e where thr,ough the
North Atlantic
its
destinatio~ a mystery to the
Pentagon:
.
The carrier, catled by in· ·
telUgence e~perts the world's
most heavily armed warship,
was reported somewhere
. southwest of Ir.&lt;~]and Friday
- ' on its first extended voyage
since It moved to a Soviet port .
on the Barents Sea 18 months
. ago .

It was not clear whether the
Soviet Navy deliberately
chose to display "their
maritime might
when
President Carter is traveling
overseas and · Middle 'East
peace negotiations are in a
delicate stage.

FIREMEN CALLED
CHESTER ·- The Chester
Fire Department was caUed
Tuesday, Dec. '!/, at 7:30p.m.
. to the Charles Vaughan
residence on TeJBs &amp;ad. No
infonnation was given as to
the extent of damages or the
cause.

.
'

l have every expectation

v.enison and (ruit ·souffle ,

I·

.pinlt

an open news conference in a

1.• Frozen Foods • .
Orange Juiee.

L!GHT N' LIVELY

Yogurt.

TROPICANA

•

5·FLAVORS 8-o:i. Ctn.

GREEN GIANT

·Vegetables
•NtamscotiNZ
oSWinCORN

VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMITTED - Thomas
McKay, Sr., Racine; Hobart
Raub, Pomero y;
Ollie .
Boston , Racin e; Sylvia
Zwilling, Syracuse; Fannie
Miller, Rutland.
DISCHARGED - Connie
· Tucker, Everett Roush,
Linda, La mbert, Elmer
Blankman, Eugene Fisher.

TWO FIRES DOUSED
POMEROY- The Pomeroy
Fire Department answered .
two callS Friday etening to
extinguish fires at trash
collection points in the
county. The first was to
Danville at 4:33p.m. and the
second to Kingsbury. at 6:12
p.m .
;,&lt;7

11

that this year will bring
suceess. We want. to prevent
the development ,of new and
more powerful weapons and
also prevent any test of
atomic explosions."
A joint communique illl!ued
alter the dinner a nd surnn\lng
up the trip said ' both Carter
and his
host, Polish
Communis t Party leader
Edward Gicrt..'Ck, ''e_xpressed
their satisfaction with their
talks ."
Ca rter
invited
Giereck to visit Washington
and the Polish · leader
accepted ~&gt;w ith plea sure,"
The dale was to be fixed
later .
The visit was a suceess
from the Poles' standpoint.
Talks between Curter and
Giereck resulted in the
United Sta tes' grunting
Poland's request for $200
mjlllon In agricultural credits
to buy food and groin .
As the president dined on
smoked salmon, Polish ,pate,
mushroom soup, saddle of
Wlll!hed down with Chablis
.and champagne, millions of
Poles watc hed a taped
. telecast or the president 's
riews c"Onference, held joinUy
lor White House a nd Polish
r eporters earlier in the ·day.
lt was the first lime an
American president had held

heads where?
WASillNGTON (UPI)
The Soviet aircraft carrier
Kiev, bristling with modern

of atomic war.'·'
With dozens of dissident
Poles outside shout ing
"Carter save us! Carter save
us 1," the president praised
Poland 's human rights
record and said he · was
convinced neithe·r PoiWld nor
the Sov iet Union would start a
war
unlttss
thro ugh
"profound provocation or
misunderstanding."
In . a re ference to the
continuing strategic arms
limitation talks, Carter said :

Cube Steak ••••••••••••••• lb . .&amp;•:::11
i;;'e of Roun.d Steak ••• ~· ••• lb. SJ.99
ii':mp Roast •••• • •••••• ~ •• lb. SJ.49
i:'ttom Round Roast .••••• lb. SJ.49

·'

pa,£\,.~t-t£

Red carrier

and Sadat bu~ added that
Carter has a standing
invitation from Sadat to visit
Egypt and Sadat would
weiccm~ such a visit.
At his Warsaw news con· ·
ference,
Carter
also
mentioned
the
Sadat
invitation but said he had no
plans now "or a.t any other
time on this trip" to visit
Egjll ' even though his
schedule is " nexible."
Carter capped a 12-hour
day in Warsaw Friday at a
stat" dinner hosted by
Poland's Communist leaders.
In a toast to his hosts Carter
predicted 1978 will br ing •
success hi eliminating " the
constant and horrible threat

-'·Met,.,,..,... ftr ..,....,.a~"*-· "'- ..Wll 4Mittt .

Ill.

!9

. ARMOUR *: STAR" ·

. . 49~

'·"· 59"'...

·•·
C.-rrots
.
• • • • • • . • • .• •
...
kg
~ IIC
Popeorn ••••••••••• • ••• 2-1... ...-;w.,
Potting Soil • ••••••••••• ,,_., 69~

CAllfO.MIA

RnAILS EFFECTIVE

WI rfnrn rtM rftlll te Wt ~itler Ml .. 1tt"w11ll"-lt

1-lb. Pkg.

Any Sil8 Pleee

a meeting between Carter

SUPER MARKETS

·Round Steak

•

Baeon

unseJawei

!-lb

In Cairo, E!!yptlan officials
say they know of no plans lor

are

~nng

Beef-U.S.D.A. Choice

JOMIUIS

'

pl,ace.' ~

•

Slieed

HYGRAD~ .

scotched all such rwnors and
one government official said,
" There is no possibility
wha(S()ever that this will take

Cut From Bottom Round

. ARMOUR -f:: STAR

1........

FLOIIIDA·PfNKorWHIT£

Speculatlon immediately
centered on the Tehran vi~ it,
a 17-llour stop which Includes
a one-hour talk with Hussein
Sunday morning . There a(S()
was speculation . Israeli
Premier Menahem Begin
might join them for an
impromptu summit.
However, Iranian officials

~~ oown

with America!" as pollee
husUed them off in vans.
'l'he demonstrations - and
the extremely strict police
security precautions followed a bomb blast last
Wednesday which ripped out
a wall at the America-Iran
Society academic center.

Ill.

ARMOUR -tr STAR
HOT
DOGS • • •
BEEF
~
HOT DOGS
99

.

Forfeiting bonds were Alan
L. Dodson, Middleport, $30.50
stop sign; Ely L. Young,
Glenn
Buckeye
Lake,
Howard, Williamstown, W.
Va ., Rick P. Slaven, Poland,
E lizab~th
Ruth
Ohio,
Thomas, · Pompane Beach,
Fla ., Tho·mas Green , Jr:,
Gordon, W. Va., David B.
Rock, Hebron , Harry J .
Cunningham, Pomeroy, a nd
·Charlene Yonker, Hartford,
$30.50" ea ch, speeding;
Willia m McComas •.• Huq·
lington, $30.50,
illegal
passing; Anthony L. Salens,
Rt . I, Middleport, $38.50,
speeding; Elza E . Stoyer,
Apple
Grov e,
$35 .50,
speeding.

A·m ericans! " and

near tbe Hilton Hotel - the
headqUarters of the White
House advance party. About
40 students attempted to
march on the hotel waving
baQriers and shouting antiCarter slogans but were
driven off by police.
The students screamed
"Carter go home! We hate

Boneless

Whole

restricted driving lor 30 days,
attend schooling , DWI;
· Henry 0 . Smith, Rt.l, Reeds·
ville, $25 and costs, failure to
yield ; James C. Morton, Rt.
1, Long Bottom, · $100 and
cost s, 175 suspended, no

operators license.

"~" Armour-trStar

Chieken Legs

costs, license sUspended and

demonstrators were reported
outside the U.S. Embassy in
dontown Tehran.
A group ·of 15 students
ransacked the American
Friends of the Middle East
building, where ,Iranian stu·
dents who wish to study in the
United States are advised .
The worst battle broke out

leftist students in a dozen
different locations in the
capital.
Police said more than 100
students '"outing antiAmerican slogans hurled
rocks and broke windows in
the Agricultural Society of
Iran and America.
Several do•en other

.

U.S.D.A.INSPECTED • ·FRESH

RETAILS EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JAN. 7, 1.978.

put into ~fleet and the capital
was patrolled by policemen •
armed with submachine guns
long before C8J'Ier new in
from Warsaw lor a New
Year's Eve dinner of golden
caviar and possibly the most
important talks of his nineday, six-nation trip.
Iranian police battled

'
'

Fines ·
levied
on ten

.

.,
. ....
A
10-n.
Pllgh

• MIXED

YIGnABLES

•

•

•

·:J SJ

Tomato
Ketehup
'

sqe

41~

jtu

6-ai. Cans

THOROFARE

.

. Non·Didr31 · 2•1b. 2
Creamer ••••• ''"'· /M
STOUFFER

· Garlfe ·
to...
Bread ••••••••••• Pke.'

TASTEOSEA

HEINZ

79e

14-01.

Bat.
[

TASTEOSEA

"Batter Dipt" ·

l·lb.

Pkg.

SJ.39

s,.
. ms
.
, . qqe
49
Laundry Detergent~.!~~iox.&amp;- J..fqui·d Dete~een·t.,~~::
.

CHEER

I

GINlLE

COLGAtE

Toothpaste•••••• 1.... '"""

. ASPIRIN Fill

Anaefn

.

•

• fl • • • •

it • •

60-ct. ,Pitg.

,~.,

:J1

SJ H

1-Pt.

qqe
Food Wrap •••••• ,s..,....,.
· .

BAGGIES .

•

,

Cat Litter •• • • • • • 25-lb. Bat ~1

TIDY CAT

'

49

,j

J

...

•

.·

live on in our ,conscience~,"
Carter said.
Later , aBked Whether hla
visit to the Ghetto monument ·
gave
him
better
understanding why the
Israelis feel so strongly about
defending their homeland,
· -'"'"~r replied softly:
" Yes, it does."
INN&lt;K;ENCE PLEADED
CINCINNI\.Tl (UPI) Attorneys lor actress Judy
Came have entered innocent
. pleas on her behalf to charges
of drug abuse and passing a ·
forged drug prescrlptfon .... ... .
Miss Carne; who g ained
famed as television's "sock·
it-to-me" girl on the old
Laugh-In show, was not
present in court Friday far
the arraignment b~ lore
Hamilton County Coffi!llon
Pleas Court Judge William
Morrissey . ·

Perch Fillets

FISH PORTION .... "" ,~, s 1. 39
FISH STICKS ...... , " r~,. 5 1.09
FISH &amp;CHIPS ..... lib .. , SJ.19

f -3

Communist country, and a
minor flap developed when a
group of dissident Polish
journalists were barred from
attending. Later, Carter said
the di sside nt journalists
could submit questions to him
In writing and he would send
them writte n answers.
Carter spent il. busy day
laying wreaths at the tomb of
Poland's Unknown Soldier
and visiting the monwnent at
the Warsaw Ghetto uprising
of 1943 In which 300,000 Jews
were annihilated in three
weeks of flghti!l!: Nazi troops.
Descending the steps of the
monwnent, adorned with a
Star of David , Carter hailed
the ''great courage and
bravery of those who fought
and died In the Ghetto.
•'They died alone, but they

II

•

EDITOR NAMED .
· MIAMI (UP!) - Miami
Editor
Howard
News
Kleinberg Friday announced
the appointment of Gloria
as
Brown
Anderson .
managing editor of the Cor
chain newspaper. Ms. An·
derson, 33, sueeeeda Otia
Wragg, ·who resigned.

�•

,.__,.F;;;"B';t'· Results Use Sunday Times~Sentinel Classifieds
Nim..,if=

Its here• The e lecrr on c watch
that changes the I me bel o1e
your ~es Hand some cc:u rote

Center and the many fnends 1n
Gall a and Me•gs County who

Never needs w1nd•ng 'rh"'
perfect g It for the man '" your
I le At l owney J•welers now!
4'24 Second Ave

hoYe n •nt flowers a nd cords
and altered proyers dur ng my

and

'

WHAT Will THEY thmk of nellf?

1 would l1ke to thank the doctors
and nurses at Holzer Med cal

hosp to lh:o llon

-~

-~

con

volesce nce

S ncerely Marth a E

NOW GIVING PI AN O l ESSONS
0 1367 7814

W ISH to thank everyone who

sen t me
Chmt mos

the nony lovely
tords dunng th e
t1 olrdays Your though tf ulness
was greatly opprecto ted Mn
Clodys Houdosheh
Taylor

Los! Mole lmh Se tier I year old
Colo r has Lakewood phone
number Los t 1n Mvlberr-, Hgt5
area Coll991 59 17

-

Mar etta Chr stan An chorage

-

------~-~

FOUND DOC. m Oorwm Coli to
descnbe 992 6087

N ursm g Hone

- --

POCKETBOOK 1 AKEN ou t of cor
on lmco ln Street m M•ddlepor!
qq2 2994 or 949 2386 Rewar d

RACINE GU N Club has dtuon

-~

-

LOST l od •e s good blo ck w •n!Qr
coat Left at demonslral on
type pariy
n
M• ddluporl
somo t me 111 post couple o f
m~anihs
Anyone know ng
whereobout.s
!) lease coli

hnued gun shoot ng un l I Joh
8 1978
BeHy s Co rryou t ;;ow~p~
bus ness 3m les sout h of Mtd
dleport on_! r_7_

LOST n the v clnlly of Rio Grande
and Everette Denne)! 1 black
and tan and 1 walker coon
hound REWARD Coll245 9 120

DEAD Stock removed No charge

Co~ 24~ s:_14:.:-=::-....,----:,THURMAN HOUSE onhques Fur
slrtpp tng

r epo r

and

WOMAN OR couple to I vu ""th
m ddle aged lady n PI Plea
sen t W Vo Salary •ego t able
Phone 1 304 675 69~

refm1shed County Rd 6 oH 35

Centerv lie
Vtllage
C osed
Monday &amp; Tuesday El!enlngs
by oppo n tmen t 245 9479
TREE HA VE N CERAMICS

---

DAY GIFTS BOOK S &amp; POTTERY
W E WILL BUY y our old d•omoncl s

Also go ld co ms
lown ey
Jeweler s 424 Second Ave
BEGINNERS 8 lnt &amp; Novell coke
de&lt;orohng classes beg nn mg
soon at Be tty s Coke Creo tton s
Rodney Oh10 Coll245 5363 for
de t01l s Betty Corperlte r In

Only

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Supenor

Slum Exlrat110n

... 1522
LADIES
Help pay Chr stma s bllls Pas•
hans open w•lh Sarah Coven try
Jewelry No mveslm enl No
co lee! ng No d ~l ve r y For 1n
ter vew co li 4&lt;160041

SUNDAY,JANUARY 1, 1978
6 oo-AG USA 4 6 311-"-Jerry Falwell 4 Agriculture
13
7 oo-Mormon Choir 3 Eddie Saunders 6 Talking

Young's
Carpeting

Hands 8 Treehouse Club 10

Newsmaker 77 13

7 3G-TV Chapell Your Heallh 4 Show My People 6
Jerty Falwell 8, Urban League 10 Amazing Grace
Bible Class 13
a oo--Blg Blue Marble 3 Day of Discovery 4 Grace
Cathedral 6 Church Service 10 Dr E J Daniels
Presents Happiness Is 13 Sesame St 20
a JG-Oral Roberts!: Jimmy Swaggart 4 Celebration
of Praise 6 Day of Discovery 8 James Robison
Presents 10 Willard Wilcox 13 Open Bible 15
9 0&lt;1-Gospel Singing' Jubilee 3 Robert Schuller 4
Oral Roberts lQ Rex Humbard 6 Rev Leonard
Repass a Jim Frankl in 13 Ernest Angley 15
Mlster.. Rogers 20
9 Jo-Miracte of Dellverance 4 What Does The Bible
Plainly Say? 8 It I s Written 10 ChYrch Service 13
Zoom 20
10 00--Christ Is The Answer 3 Church Service 4
Aware 6 Sesame St 20 Christian Center 8 Movie
Assault on a Queen 10 Jimmy Swaggart 13

Gospel Singing Jubilee 15
10 3D--Rex Humbard .J Yours for the Asking 4 Hot
Fudge 6 Blue Rl!lge Quartet 13
11 oo-Doctors on Call 4 Big Blue Marble 6 R ex
Humbard 15
Rev Henry Mahan 13 Infinity
Factory 20
11 Jo-At Issue 3 Animals Animals Animals 6 Focus
on Columbus 4 Medix 13 Elec Co 20
12 oo-Meet the Press.3 4 15 Issues &amp; Answers 6 Bob
Jones
To be announced 13 Showdown at the
Hoedown 20
12 Jo-To be announced 3 8 10 15 New Conference 4
D irections 6 Rev Calvin Evans 13
1 00--To Be Announced 4 America s Black. Forum 6
1ssues &amp; Answers 13 Pro Soccer 20
Jo-Communlque 6 Wall Street Week 33 Town

a

Topics 13 2 QO---Movle The Big M6ufh 6 Publi c
Polley Forums 13 Greenpeace Voyages to Save
the Whale 20 M1crobes &amp; Men 33

-

3 oo-oance In America 20 Tony the Pony 13 Dance
In Amer ica 33 3 30---CIIffwood Aenue Kids 13
4
To Be Announced 3 4 8 10 15 Movte Robinson
Crusoe &amp; the Tiger 6 Movie A Star Is Born 13
To Be Announced 20 In Performance at Wolf Trap

oo-

.4 JQ-Sneak Previews 20

s OG-Rebop

20

Nova 33

s JG-Eiec Co 20
6 oo-Energy A National Issue 6 Fred Rogers Won t

You Be My Neighbor' 39 Wild Kingdom 13 Zoom
20
6 30-News 6 French Chef 20,33 Newsmaker 11 13
Nancy Drew 13
7 oo-world of D 1sney 3 4 15
Crocketts VIctory Garden 20 Firing Line 33
7 30--Ant lques 20
8 0&lt;1-SIK Mil lion Dollar Man 613 RhOda 8,10
Evening at Symphony 33 Fred Rogers Wont YD\J
Be My Neighbor 20 B 31)..-()n Our Own 8 10
Reflections on Rail $ 20
9 DO-Movie • The Four Feathers
3 4 15 Movie
Serpico 6 13 Allin The Family 8,10 I Claudius
20 33 9 3G-AIIce 8 10 10 0&lt;1-Carol B ~r nett 8 10
VIsions 20 33
11 0&lt;1-News 3 4 8 10 1l 11 15--CBS News B 10 PMA
Pulse 15
11 3o-Movle' P J 3 Night Bird 4 Movie Ransom
tor All eelS N@ws 6 t3 700 ClubB Face the Nation
10 Monty Python s Flying Circus 33
11 45--ABC News 6 12 0&lt;1-Second C lly TV 6 Movie
Spanish Affair" 10 PTL Club 13 Janak! 33
' 12 3o-Movte Company of Killers' 4 FBI 6 1 ooABC News 13

MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1978
5 45-Farm Repor113 S 5()..-PTL Club 13 S ss--News
6 6 0&lt;1-Nashvllle Scene 6 PTL Club 15
,
6 3G-Columbus Today 4 6 45-Mornlng Report 3
6 5()-Good Morning West VIrginia 13 6 Ss--News
13
7 oo-Today 3 4 15 Good Morning America 6 13 CBS
News B Bullw~nkle 10 7 JO-.-Schoolles 10
1 4s--Sesame Sl 33 B ~apt Kangaroo 8 tO

9 00---Merv Griffin 3 Phil Donahue 4 13 15 Family
Affair B. 10
9 3G-Edge of N1ght 6 Andy Griffith 8 Jokers Wild
10
10 00--NBC Star Salute to 1978 3 15 Sugar Bowl Ex
press.c BlgValley6 Cotton Bowl Festival Parade

8 tO, Mike Douglas 13

commercia I

Htlmate, 24 hour servtce
Anyday anyt1me
Pho11e 98S J806

ROllo I P-fiiJ· 0
AI

992 2206 or 992 7630

Jack's Septic
Tank Setvice

'

ThtOri~naton

8ox34

Not"" lnolb...

10 30

STOIIM
WINDOWS l DOORS
REPIAClMENT
WINOOIIS
AlUMINUM
SIDIIIG-SOFIIIT
GUTTUUWNINGS

ne1ct to State H1ghwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985
3825

,
1

Family Feud 6 13 Sesame St 20 33

12 oo-$20 000 Pyramid 4 News 6 Midday 13 12 3GRyan s Hope 6 13 E lee Co 33
1 00:--AII My Children 13 Meet Me In New Orleans 6
2 oo-For Richer For Poorer 3 Sugar Bowl 6 11

•Mobtle
Home
Underpmnmg..."
• Roof Coa hng
•Tte Downs
• Awntngs - Carports
•Insurance
Repatrs

Blood Sweat &amp; Cheers 4 Cotton Bowl8 10 Not For
Women Only 15

3 4 15

Mountain Heritage 33

3 3G-Prlme Time 20 4 0&lt;1-Litlle Rascals OtJr Gang
4 FOr R1cher For Poorer 15 Sesame St 20 33
4 J~Rose Bowl Pregame Show J 4 15 4 4s-Rose
!!owl 3 4 15
•
~ GO-Bewitched 6 Festival of Ltvely Arts for Young
People 8 10 M1ster Rogers Neighborhood 20 33
Emer~ncy One 13
5 3G-News 6 E lee Co 20 33
6 oo-News 8 10 13 ABC News 6 Zoom 20 33
6 3D---ABC News 13 Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 6 CBS
News 8,10 Over Easy 20 33
7 0&lt;1-Liars Club 6 Marty Robbins Spotlight 8 News
10 To Tell The Truth 13 Daniel Foister M D 20
Know Your Schools 33
7 30--Muppet Show 6 Match Game PM 8 MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20 33 Wild Kingdom 10 Candid

BOB'S
TRIM SHOP IN RACINE

Hometowr1

11 OG-News 3 4 6 B 10 13 15
..

10 President Carters Trip 8 ABC News

33
The Longest Night

33
12 4G-News 13
3

1

oo- Tomorrow

8
4

12 00---Janakl

1 3()-... Tomorrow

• TUESDAY, JANUARY 3,1978
5 45--Farm Reporl1 3 5 5()-PTL Club 13 5.55--News
6 Sunrise Semester 10
6 0&lt;1-Nashvllle Scene 6 PTL Club 15 6 25--Concerns
&amp; Comments 10 6 30-Focus on Columbus 4
Sunrise Seme$fer S 6 45-Mornlng Report 3 6 5~
Good Morning West VIrginia 13 6 55-Chuck
White Reports 10 News 13
7 oo-Today 3,4 IS Good Morning America 6 13, CBS
News 8 Bull winkle 10
7 Jo-Schoolles 10 8 DO--Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesame

St 33
9 00--l.l•rv Griffin 3 Phil Donahue 4 13 15 New
Mickey Mouse Club 6 Match Game 10, Family
Affair 8
9 3G-Bewlfched 6 Andy Grlf~fh 8 Family Affair
10 10 IX&gt;-'Sanford &amp; Son 3 4 15 Big Valley 6
Tattletales 8 JoRer s Wild 10 Mike Douglas 13
10 3G-Hollyw00d Squares 3 4 15 Price Is Right B 10
11 QO---Wheel of Fortune 3 1l Happy Days 6 13
Marcus Welby MD 4
11 3G-Knockout 3 15 Family Feud 6 13 Love of Life
8,10 Sesame St 20 Microbes &amp; Men 33
11 55--CBS News 8 Loving Free 10
12 00--Newscenter 3, News 4 6 10 To Say The Least
15 Divorce Court 8 Midday 13
12 3G-Ryan s !lope 613 Bob Braun 4, Gong Show 1S
Search for Tomorrow 8 10

Botlers Furnaces Heat
Pumps &amp; Auto Controls
GAS--OIL- COAL

PHONE

742-2570
12 18 1 mo

BATHROOMS AND K1tchens
remodeled cerom c tile plum
b ng carpentry ond general
mo ntenonce 13 .,-ears ex
penence 992 3b8S
PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
Ser¥ ce Phone 992 2478

~-lit

We Str1p Patnt Varmshes

etc

Wood Metal Plashes
Anttques &amp; Modern

Upholstering Servtce
Custoth
Professtonal
Rehntshmg
Repatrtng
Antiques Bought &amp; Sold

01ck Seyler
Phone 992 2798
100 Kerr St

Pomeroy Oh1o
12 30 1 mo

WETHERAU CONCRETE

I

Mtddleport, Ohio

11 9 tfc

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY
SALON

300 Main St
Pomeroy Oh1o
Pomeroy 992 6282

or 992 6263
8 A, M to 4 30 PM
SALES P,ND SERVICE
11 9 tic

992 3978

Contractors
Phone 949 2801
or 949 Lll60

A thought for the day
Brthsh wrtter Walter Lander
satd, ' Children are what the

No fondest

father care can faSiuon so the
infant heart

.

tho ron
69Tear
70 Greek letter
71 Sailors (colloq )
73 Nattonataong
75 Science ol mora l
duty
77 City In Runia
78 Bundle of grain
"cts
81 Disti ngUished
Servtce Order
(abbrl
82 Indian tents
84 Enthusiasm
86 Passageways
87 Hoped lor
89 Underworld god
92Rod
95 MaliCIOus burn
'"0
98 lm•taled
99Potentlal
101 Enact
103 Danish Isla nd
104 Thmga 1n taw
105 Partner
1ae Symbol for tan
tatum
107 Pt'onoun
108 Leash
1 10 Make lace
111 Compass po1nt
112Doom
11 3 Rocky hills
115 Hebrew etter
1 17 Staljc,
119 French arttcle
120 Tranaacl on
121 Pierce
12.C. Oceana
126 W•thered
12t Baked etay
128leased
130 Face of watch
132 Paper measure
133 W fd buffalo or

India

134 Moccasin

135 Beverage (pi )
137 FalsehOods
139 Hostelry
140 Nervous setzure
141 Binds
143 BI'Shoprlos
145 Unit of Lah1a n
~urrency

148 Buttertly

146 Ductile
150 Intend
152 Chooses
153 Evergreen tree

154 European
156 More comely
157 Remalns at ease
158 Emmets.

159 Rip
160 Out ol date
DOWN
1 Is concerned
2 Occurrences
3 Iterates
4 Before
5 Heavenly body
6 Pronoun
7 Harvest god

de sa

B Baker 9 prod
ucts

9 Sills
10 South Amenoan
mammal
11 Foretoken
12 Afl irma t1we
13 Symbol lor l m
14 Condescencltng

1-

15 French tor
summer
16Reacnes
17 Sowed
18 Singing 1101ce
20 Bri dge term
23 Sir ke !colloQ I

NEW LISTING In Kanauoa 2 bedroom sttua ted on
l arge lot plenty of room for expanston Pr •ced to sell

room

HANDYMAN

lf2

basement

SPECIAL -

Elec Co 33

News 8 Young &amp; the Restle" 10 Not For Women

8,10 2 0&lt;1-$20 000 Pyramid 6 13
2 3G--'Doctors 3,4,15 One Life to Live 6 13
Ltg~f B 10

RACINE,O

4 oo-Mister Cartoon 3, Little Rasca•s Our Gang -4

Merv Griffin 6 Gilligan s Is B Sesame Sf 20 33
Gomer Pyle USMC 10. Dinah 13
4 3G-My Three Sons 3, Partridge Family 4 Brady
Bunch B 10. Little Rascals 15
s OCI'--Bonanza 3 My Three Sons 4 Gunsmoke 8
Mlsh!r Rogers Neighborhood 20 33
Hogan s
-Heroes 10, Emergency One 13 My Three Sons 15
S 3G-Odd Couple 4 News 6 Elec Co 20,33, Hogans
Heroes lS 6 QO--News 3 4 8 101 13 15 ABC News 6,
Zoom 20 33
6 3G-N BC News 3 4 IS ABC News 13 Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6 CBS News 8 10 Over Easy 20,33
7 00--Gotn Home 3 Cross Wits 4, Liars Club 6 Pop
Goes The COIIntryB News 10 To Tell T-he Trulh 13
Gilligan s Is 15 French Chef 20 Treasures of
Tt~tankhamun 33

.f

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
"'

w e sell anythtng for
inybodv ill our Auctton
Bonn or In yuor hom e For
•nfo rmaho n and PICkup
se r ,•,.ce can 256 1967
S tie E v~rv Saturday
Ntghtat7p m

SWAIN

AUCTION

SERVIC~

Auct
Corner Tf'llfd &amp; Olive

K~nnethSwatn

3

Good

Route bu si ness wtth un ltmded potential 1f you want to

be mdependent and have a money maktng business
stop tn at our offtce for more details

NICE LOT - Suttab!e for a Aguse or mobt!e home
located m Cheshtre VIllage only S2 500
18 ACRES - Very ntce land suttable for tnvestment or
development smalf farm or home stte Located close

to Adda vl lle School

35 ACRES - Good rol lmg landsuttable for hunttng or
campmg Has a small diNelll ng on property $14 500

In 1959, .the Cuban
revolution led by Communist
Ftdel Castro ended as
dictator Fulgencto Battsta
fled the u;land

91 Look flltedly
92 Seed
93 Surgical saw
94 Paid notice
98 Spoken
97 Memorandum
I 00 Symbol lor
tellUrium
1021naec:tegga
105 Masculine
109 Want
11 2 Cultivated land
II 3 Tlasiflt
114 Strips of leather
116Girl sname
11 8 Post
120 Spiritualists
meettngs
121 Color
122 Recipe
123 Morays
125 Seamen
126 Perlatn•ng to old
age
127 Ci ty In New York
129 Profound
131 Rents
132 BOdy or water
133 Man a name
134 Sheets or gl8ta
136 Sla'o'e
138 Cubic meter
140 Academic sub
jeets
141 TemPOrary
shelter
142 Wild plum
144Cieantngaub
slance
f 4 7 Comb form
without
148 Metal
149 Guido s high
note
15t Eastlndtan Plerb
153 Parent (colloq)
155 Teutonic deity

57 ACRES - N tce rolltng land several pme trees
beauttful home sites good locatton on Rt 554 East of
Porter

FOR
FRIENDLY
PROFESSIONAL
HELP
WITH YOUR
REAL ES'TATE NEEDS,
CALL OR
STOP
IN AT OUR OFFICE
PLENTY OF FREE' PARKING

Evenings Call
Oscar Ba1rd, Realtor 446-4632
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

'~~~·-~~

IB

cnALTOit

'.

COAL ltmestone and calc 1um
chlonefe ond calc1um bnne for
dust con trol ond spec ol m1 xmg
salt for formers Excels1or Salt
Works Mo n Street Pomeroy
Oh o or phone 992 3891
CAMPER
$600
Also
horse
tro ler $&lt;150 Phone (614) 698

1290
ECONOMY TRAClOR wtth oil ai
toc hments l ke new osk ng

12250 Phone(6 14) o98 3290
APPLES FITZPATRICK Orchards
Stole Rouie 669
P hon ~
W1fkesvllle 669 3765
RUGS
WALL Hong ngs and
afgons N ce for Chmtmos
Reasonable Co!l992 2214
l'n6 FORD F 250 Custom 17 50 x
14 DO hres wmch Onty 14 000
m• Header"s CB Tope deck
Over $3 OXI 1n ex tras Senaus
calls only after 12. noon

ROUND Bole feeders
mode of squore tubtng $76
Vermeer Iorge round bot r
$250 D Kount unt1l Fe~ I
1976
Woodmoster cobtnet
wood heaters thermostat ash
pan h1nged top for cooking
bnck hned $242 Coolmaster
some as above bvt Shaker
grote tor coal $26.4 Blower for
ettller $48 Merrill Chose (614)

698 3021
t-iAV $1 25 and $1 50 per bale
(6 14) 378 6311
THREE ElVIS nkord s collectors
ttems Con be seen at Clifton
W Vo ask for Roger Kle n
ONE GAS range hke new $75
J97Jil 250 CR Husky excellent
cond•tton newer raced Ex
c•llent motocross btke Pr1ced
Yery reasonably 949 2692 or
9.ol9 2028
FIREWOOD
SPLIT
del1vered
stocked $25 per Iorge piCkup

__

_,
_
1oad
7•2 2250

\

.

-

UNIQUE HOME WITH S ACRES - Sttuated on Sugar
Creek Rd near Crown (:1 ty 767 lb tab base a ll new
constru ctton Needs some completton P'nce only

OUTSTANDING FARM

NEW LISTINGS 3 bedroom, carpett!'d homes a ll e flt:
tn c Situated on 75 x12D lots Avatlable for one year
tease or buy for S25 000 00. conven ttnal loan or tand
contract Call for more tnformat1on

NEW LISTING

on

located on Mtll Creek Rd
Just comple ted you can be
the f1rst occUpant butlt
w1th quat ty an mtnd Call
tor more tnformat1on
NEW LISTtNG
- ThreP
bedroom carpeted home 1n
Plantz Subd1 v
two extra
lot s
tota l d 1menstons
180 x l-40
F A
nat gas
f urance $23 00 monthly
b.udget

FOR SALE OR LEASE
Modern one story brtck
butldmg over 14 000 sq ft
part basement nat gas
centra l atr cond1tlonmg
Large recept i on room over
60 rooms vanous stzes
Idea l locatton
parj&lt;. tng
area accommodates excess
of 40 autos Located ad1a
cent to Gall i pOliS Golf
Course Call or stop 1n for
more tnformatJOn

BURROUGHS SENSI MATI C ac
co unt ng mach ne Hos been
under serv ce contract and •n
good cond1t on Con be seen ot
The Dmly Sent nel Il l Court
St Pomeroy oH

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; cond1hon your
water With Co-op water

softener

Madel

UC SVI,

Now Only

•279.95

446 288S

Located

Low er R1ver Rd
a
beauttful v•ew w1th nver
frontage 3 bedroom new
ty renovated ca rpe ted
you must see to appreetafe
wood burnmg f1r eplace
new hot water tank F A
fuel ott furnace , 84 acre
lot all for SJO 000 00

BLDG SITES
Black
top road
rura l
water
Gii lllpolls school
system 10 acres or more of
almost level land - rural
water runs length of 1t The
res t Is wooded area take
your choice 27 acres tn all
w1thm four mtles of C1ty
Owner w tl not d tv de up
grou nd Better ca ll today

NEW LISTING 40 acres
w1th three bedroom house
garag e a nd two out
butldtngs rura l water and
well Located near Cora on
Tom Wood Rd
Pr•ce

LOOK THIS OVER•
We c annot fmd v e ry many
good farms for sale and
they are sellmg fast Th ts
fa rm has six rooms bat h
f ull
basement
c arpet
st orm wmdows
rural
water or dnlled w.ell 1500
lbs tob acco base barn
other out b ldg s 30 acres
tillabl e land some 50 acres
pa stiJre m os t all tr ac tor
a nd Good wood lot some
saw ttmber 100 ac r es 1n
al l Thts wt ll se ll we d ltke
to se ll1tto you

$28 000 00
FIVE BEDROO• ....ri~•j
trally loca ted along 400
block of Second Ave Ho
,5 d1v1ded to make re al
apartment f des1red 2 11
chens 2 bathrooms f iJ r
port full basement s am
hea t Wtthm easy wal 1ng
d 1stance of downtown
Pn ce $35 000 00

SOUTHERN HILLS
SPECIAL
ooktng for someth ng
North 1ts money? 33 Ac
,orne t1llabl e so,.... 'la stur e

...,. \.•0 ot S1x
s""'··
""dThs N ce
k ttct .:n futt basemen t

v

1nd a "
oom h\

$39 500 00

g
Real n1ce barn other Qut
Jldgs Good area to build
NOoded or c lea r Should
,el l qUICk

WE !'IcED LISTINGS IF YOU ARE THINKING OF
SEL r i V E US A CALL
LET US HELP YOU'

SMALL FARM
PRICED LOW
1ght acres
abou t all
111\a ble very ntce lake for
Nafe r or rec r e at•on Lg
ovntrv hom e 5 B R 4
rooms w1th carpet runnmg
water wtth bath
Lg
strawberry patc h
o ther
out bldg s
Can t l as t

IF 'fOU RE PLANNIN~
,rt) SELL CALL liS WE

IF YOU DON T SE~ I HE
PROPERTY YOU WA.,N1
HAVE
A
LIST
OF IN THIS AD CAlL WE
PR:OSPECTtVE BUYERS MAY BE ABlE TO -F INO
AND WERE
ANXIOUt JT FOR YOll
TO SERVE YOU

$23 000 00

All TYPES of bu1ld1ng motenols
block bnck sewer p•pes w in
dows
I nlel s
etc
CloudE!
W1nters R o Grande 0 Phone
245 5121 ofter5
LAYNE S NEW &amp; liS ED FURNITURE

NEW

Let us test your water Free

Pomeroy Landmark

.

HOUSE COAl B B &amp; M Coal Co
ESR Qa-llipolls CoH 256-1 567

Evemngs

3

$23 500 00

CUSTOM FRAME h1tch lor late
model Chevrolet or G M C
truck 992 7066

Bonn1e Stutes

151 ACRE FAR'M Nea r
v.nton
tnctuc.Jes ftllabl e
acres, pl us new fireplace and timber land Al so 4
( ftrewood already cut ) , bedroom home equ •pment
16 x17
ltvtn9 room
3 shed Bottom land borders
bedrooms car peted
700 Raccoon Creek Call .. for
feet of road frontage
more Information
Gall 1pol s C1ty School
o 1st n ct Pnce $35 000 00
MtNI FARM
-4 bedroom
house wtfh 17 acres near
NEW LISTING Small co t
1nton property borders
tage to~ated on Rt 160
Rt 325 and Rac c oon C r ee~
1ust outstde c1ty 11mtts ntce
Inc ludes one large o~Jf
garden area
fenced tn buldtng 20 x100 and corn
yard garage Prtced to sell
c rtb Buy now for only

NEAR TYCOON LAKE

'92

POMEROY
LANDMARK

.

$1850000 ..

NEW J BEDROOM hom&lt;

••

211 a c r es cl eafl and we ll
kept Mob hpme tn good
cond Good water suppl y
sprmg dev w tfh new e lec
tn c pump Garage w1th
handy worK benches built
1n some trees a round to
add t o the beauty of th e
acreage Good loca tion f or
mor-e homes of ._any type
you m ay destre Th1 s and
more tor $13 500

0
HAY FOR SALE by the bal e or
t ru~ klood
Co lt 256 65.35
or 446 0307
PEN DEl TON REBUILT BATTERIES
$15
and ell:;cho nge
Cal l
.388 85%
USED FURNITURE Omette Set co1l
spr ngs IJ §ed portable stereo
(orb n and Snyder Furniture
955 Second Ave Golhpol1s 0

Kennels Board ng
Groom ng AKC Gordon sei
ters English Cocker Spontels
Ph 446 &lt;1191

HAWKS INS AGENCY
ALL YOUR INSURANCE

NEEDS call446 2.300

•.

A c res 16 ac good fert1le
bottom tan~ 10 ac wood
tot the r es t In pa sture
tan d Plenty water n1ce
stream run s through f arm
WI country home 2 story
sa room s 2 porches new
floors downslat rs
Shade
trees m n1 c e country set
tlng al so c htcken house
ce ll ar and house n1 ce .S IZe
barn In good con d Tob
base New on the m arket at

135 000
TWO BEDROOM HOME
Prtced low tor 1mm ed •ate
sa le Has kttc hen n•ce stz e
dtn rm breakfast rll). and
bath 2 outs•de porches
basement and iurnace All
rooms pan eled
Alum
storm doors W1red for
!:lect rlc stove washer and
dryer N 1ce garden space
avatlable good location Ct
ty water sewer Owner wttl
he lp f 1nance qualtft.edt
buyer

GOOD WINTER SPECIAL
46 Acres Spr.ngfteld Twp
10 ac r es very product•ve
land
Campatgn
level
Creek 36 acres permanent
pa sture and WOI'"
1 lots
of good "
A,.\.• __. ma ll
pond c.
water ing
trough bt. 1f ngh l w1th Sod
conservat1on SUpe rvi SIOns
Good fences 6 r09m house
which •s repatrable Close
to Bulavdte Por t er Rd
Good Loca l toni

O

Ac
good
l eve l
lt llabl.e land to b base
30 ac
n r.mber Th e
rest
IS
pa s tu re w•tll
plenty w a ter for calllc
Lg two story house Si x
rm s
thr ee be droom s
two
porch es
S am ~
rcmodc l tng
has
been
done Lg barn m ~ood
rc pa tr o th ~ r oll l bldqs
se t li ng
N 1ce co u 11r y
Blk top road

OWNER SAYS SELL
This far m will sell below to
days market va lue 150
acres
3 good b a rn s
se veral other ou tbu1ldmg s
M et al root s Dnl!ed we ll
rural w ater
avat lab le
Large two st ory hOuse
blJ 11 tn k tchP.. f t wood
burn1n ..,
A,.\...V s 40
acr es ot
n ab le la nd
Toba cco oa se pl ent y of
pa sture good wood ot
Owner wt ll help I narKC
qua ltft ed buy er
II you
want a good ca ll lc and
tobac.co IMrn or WI S ~ In
vest m ent - Ct=~ ll now any
r easonab e otl er w dl be
cons tdered

-rt""'

SMALL INVESTMEN T

LOTS OF COMFORT
N1 ce 2 BR home tor sma ll
fam1 l y 2 porches new
storm wtnd ows a nd door s
ut t. ty bldg
Ve ry goQ(I
garden a r ea L ow ut tlll cs
Lot 40 x l 70
gas hea t
$3 000 wort h of new It r
n•ture goes wtth sa le Good
home for older couple or
moderate •n co m e lamtly
NEW LISTING
BRICK HOM E a nd 3 acre s
more or less L oca ted one
m le fr o m R1 0 Grande Th ts
modern home f eatu r es
th ree bedrooms 1If:&gt; baths
moder n k 1fr- "'
ltvl ng
room '
one
sma ll b
~ a n1 ce larg(&gt;
hor se b a rn
S t o r AQ e
bu ldlng Lots of f ru t trees
on the prope rty and a ntec
garden spot
Th• s s a
beau tiful area and a pr m e
loca t•on

D
.0-\.·

S ...

JUNK outo and scrap metal Ph
388 8776

TIMBER
Top pme5 for
Top Qual tv
•
POMEROY FORREST PRODUCTS
Coll992 5965

2bedrobmmob•l e homo co uple
on lv references avo lable Jon
I 256 129.3
FOUR ROOM
Adult s only
446 2220

GARAGE APT
No pets Co li

CASH po•d for all mokes and
mode ls of mob•le homes GOOD USED troc1o r with
hydraulic 3 pt hitch 742 307~
Phone area code 614 &lt;123 9531
WANT TO Buy Mobile Home with
2 or 3 bedrooms Older iype

742 3074

CASH FOR Junk Con Fryes Truck
ond Auto Wrecker Serv ce
Phone 742 2081 or Penmo I
Ru tland 742 tJ575
-~~

•lie•

VACANT LAND
II vou wa n t va Cil nt lan ett or
•nvest m ent or il sn;all
f arm
how
c an
you
overlook t his - twcr1t y two
acres ~ 10 t I :tb l c
1 '1.
p as tur e
old e r
IHirn
r epa trabl e lor tolncco brl SP.
of I JOO lbs Goocl ! 1 ncf' S
plenty water 700 I I ro.1cl
frontag e !. 11 500

VACAN T LAND

FOR SALE
21 Acres of qood ier 111 e
cvel land has bee n t 111 cct
more I mi11 r
cut ou 1 1n l9n 1llC r coo t •s
pa stur e - 4U ~ c r cs m r~ tt
Good Investmen t $.7 5 000

20 ac r es or

3 AND 4 RM furrmh qd und un
lurn1shed opt s Pf one 992

543&lt;
FOUR. ROOMS and bolh Adu lts
only ~o pe ts 91i2 5901,3
COUNTRY MOBILE Horne Pork
Rou i e 33 nor th of Po noroy
~~lots Coil 992 7479

MOBILE HOME 1n Gall 1pol1s Coli
4-46 U09

TRAil ER SPAC E for renl Cou nl r y
4 m fes from lown Rl 7 N
Phone 61&lt;1 247 7911

KEEP ca rpet dean ng p1 oblems
5mall use Blue Lustre wall to
wo ll Rent el~tn c shornpooer

HOUSE FOR leosc on Lmcoln H1ll
n Pomeroy
5 bedroo ms
Dopos1i mqu rod
992 .3-489
olier 5 pm

NOW RENTING

OLDE COURT
Executlye &amp; Commercial Center

SLEEPING Room s weekly rates
Pork Central Hotel
LOW wee kly ond monthly rate s ot
L•bby Hotel 446 1743
LIGHT housekeeping room Pork
Central Hotel

G .:_9'1:::2~
77~60
~-~----cc SLEEPING rooms for rent Gall o
NO llEM TOO Lorge or ioo smoll
W•ll buv I piece or complete
household New used or ont t
ques Morttn s Fu rn iture 20 N
2nd St
M•ddleport Phon e
,~9'1~2':63
~7~0~-::---::--;---::-::--CH i P WOOD
Po les ma x
dtametar 10 on largest end $8
per ton Bundled slab S6 per
ton Deli vered to Ohm Pallet
Co At ~ Pomeroy 992 2689

CITY PROPERTY
Loca ted on f111r d Ave
Spa ctou s 2 story wl ll1 1cw
alum num s ding
storrn
w nclow s '1 or 3 bc&gt;droorn:;
The m as l cr bcctroorn 1ncf
dl nmg rm bo th tcM urt:
fi re pl aces 1 11 brl th s hull I
•n k i tc h en lg utllll y rm
Th is 110mc 11a'&gt; b cC' n re cen t
l y remode led I f you Me
looking lor il yood n1vesl
menl prvpcr ly or
horne
&amp;lop by or Crt l l
RtJasonably Pr c;,cd ,.

Call

TWO BEDROOM HOUSE
446 2709 or 446 0326

_S~e~o~upply

COINS CURRENCY iokens old
pockef watches and cho ns
s1lver and gold We need 1964
and older silver cons Buy sell
or !rode CoU Roger Wamsley
__c7c_:•~2_::2~3~3~1'----....,-----,-OLO FURNITURE •ce boxe s brass
beds 1ron beds e tc cot11pleie
households Wnte M 0 M1ller
Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh Q or ca ll

NEW HOUS E
Just waht ng for you rtnd
your tam ly l An atf ord&lt;'lb lc
one story 3 bt::d r oom rclllCil
tUSI com pl eted ThiS hOI'ne
fea lures a n ice cA t •n 1&lt;11
chen Hvl ng room billll
lovely t arpef and ph.: n y 01
closet s pa ce LoCa l cd 1n ''
good devc lopmcnl \"l r e3 In
th e c ity of M lddlC I&gt;ort We ll
constru c ted - a t r. ny lllc
tnvcstm ent Prf't::t d llclow
repl ace m ent cost

REAl ESTATE

AUTO BOQIES ond scrap metal
R der s Salvage 992 5~b8

Forest Pro
for stondmg
Cil92 5965 or
8570

house new ga rage
24 x30
bu il t " ' kllctu~ n
hardwoOd
l loo r s
c t~r pe ltn CJ nice ba fll...,.por r h
pt~ ft o
f orced a1r l utnl cc
a nd county wa ter GMngt
has pane led wa lls t ext ured
cc1 1tng very n1ce One LlCrt.:
tot almost lcvc l Th s 1S
niCe .;~nd well wor ltl Its
pri ce

$18 000 00

GOOD USED REGRIGERATOR
AND FREE ZER UPRIGHT OR
CHE ST Ph 446 0322

TIMBER Pomeroy
ducts Top pr c_e
sovy t 1mber Call
Kent Hanby 1 446

NEW LISTING

GODDBARN 40ACRES

Boordmg Indoor Outdoor Ruhs
GroorTJmg All Breeds Clvon
Santtary foe I ties Chesh1re Ph

MEIGS COUNTY Humane Soc1ety
Carehne and pdoption Servtee
992 7680 7&lt;12 3162 992 5427

u

s Rrn

128 ACRES
FAMILY FARM

Som e good level t tl lable
!and Tobaco base pa s tu re
wood tot plent y of water
Low pnce d so you can
develop as you so des re

RISING STAR KENNEL

G-ENTE NARY
WOODS PET
"* GROOMING FACILITIES Pro
fess o nol Services offered all
breeds oil siyles Ph 446 0231

GOOD USED
TV sand stereos w1th tope player AKC REGI~TEREO pekmgese pup
Upnght Freezers ond smoll
ptes Phone (304) 8S2 2b83
ARliFICAl FLOWER BASKETS for
washers
2
chesl freezer
ceme tery Call 256 1496 after
bedroom su1!es desks dryers RISING STAR Kennel Boordmg
3,30pm .
"
Indoor and outdoOf runs
ranges bedroom su1tes bed s
DAVIDSON
Grooming all breeds Clean
1973 1 HARLEY
table s
chests
dressers
good cond 11 on
SPORSTER
sa mtary focil1he$ Chesh~re
lamps cha•rs other 1tems
$2000 Call 245 5259 ofter 4
Phone {614) 367 0292
book cose co lt 446 0322 Men
day 1hru Frtdoy q to a~ p m
P'l'
,
Sa turday 9 fo 5 p m 3 m1 out DRAGONWVND CATTERY KEN
HOMEUTE XL 10 2 mo old $60
NEL AKC Chow Chow dogs
Rd
Bulov•lle
446 1853
CFA S1omesc ohd Htma loyan
FOR THE BE ST IN FURNITURE
cats
(P&amp;rslans) Ch
s1 red
REWOOO w•ll deh ver $25 p1ckup
UPHOLSlERING Free Est1motes
H 1moloyon k 1ttens only one
ruck load 388 8755
Ptck up and delivery serv ce
left Flame Pt moles (wh•te
5 AGGS APPliANCES
ca ll Mowrey s Upholster)! Pt
pers•ons)
Call 446 384&lt;1
1bson refr g coppertone 2 dr
Pleasant W Va 675 4154
LABRADOR RHRIEVI;R male 6
exc con d $125 Apart s1ze
mo old Coli 446 3964
refng
$75 gos range $65 iARM FENCE POSTS All SIZES
over 6 000 to choose from •
Call446 7998
$1 99 and up shmgles $14 95 DRAGONWYND CA TTE~Y KEN
NEL AKC Chow Chow dogs
W VA CH UNKS f•replace coo l
per sq Anderson windows
CFA S1omese and Ht,..loyan
Sk 1dmore Foster Cool Co P•ne
studs ~ other bu1ldmg meter al
cats Best wishes &amp; 99 od"heolth
St Goll•pol•s 0
Open dally 9 7 Franks Bargo n
to oil our Chow S•amese &amp;
Center Rj 160 Porier Oh1o
COAL FURNACE $150 a1r &lt;:om
H1malayan owners &amp; pets
pressor $75 Call367 7187
GRAIN FED FRj;:EZER BEEF Ph
Thank you 1 Orders are now be
446 07()(}
TWO HOGS '6 mo old Call
tng accepied for spt~mg lo:. ttens
367 0676
HORSES FOR SALE R•dmg horses
&amp; pupp1es Call.o146 384.4
work horses pontes and toc;:k BIRO DOG male 3 yrs old $25
1975 HARLEY DAVIDSON
of olf k•nds Coll367 7533
Rabb 1t Beagle .oil mo old $15
SPORSTER low mtfeage Coli
Call 367 0676
4.ol6 0654 after 5 p m
COAL AND LIMESTONE dehvered
.:..::::...==---::---;- ~-~
Coli Dcv1d Vaughcn at 2&lt;15 5309 MINATURE
blown Dachshund
F!RfWOOO Will delt ver Col!
Call446 4610
JBB 8470
FIREWOOD $25
p1ckup lood
367 0586
1973 DODGE 316 wtndow van
FOUR TIRES 675 K 14 Ike new
mounted $80 Catl367 7 ~ FIREWOOD PHONE ..6 4'199
_c~a_tt _
••-•_1_
522----. ~------

ao

NEW FARM LISTING

GOOD liSED FURNITURE no t
upholstered ond appl•onces
Ph 4•b 0322

367 0292
HOOF HOLLOW Horses Buv sell
trade or trom New and used
saddles Ruih Reeves Albany
(614) 696 3290

This one I must make
sound good tor 11 IS nothmg
else 25 ac ot tillable land
owner says h as grown 200
bu co rn per acre t1t ed
1 med and h1g hly produc
t 1ve sweet c orn tomatoes
watermelon s tobacc o you
name 11 - tak e ca re of It
and tt will ra se them 56
acres of c lean permanent
pasture 10 acres t1 mber
one large barn and toaftng
shed
1800 lbS toba cc o
base owner says land ts
be l1eved to ''ave severa l
acres of coal - local area
most all leased or bemg
mtnded
H ouse a lm ost
compl e t e ly
remodeled
New bath furna ce water
syste m
1nstJiate d
tw o
good op e n f1reptaces
Pl e a se c all or wnte
Broker won I allow me fa
w nte more We are proucl
of all our l 1s t mgs ThiS one
no e~~:ce phon

!t'""

SMALL ACREAGE
MOBILE HOME

NEW FURNITURE SALE Bemco
Tw1n Sets mattress ond bo)(
sprng
$119Cil5
Maple or
walnut fm•sh beds $69 95 At
Corbm and Snyder Furntture
955 Second Avenue Gall•pol 1s

FOR

446-6610

I

Merrill Carter
Evtnings
17?2114

n1ence of modern J1v1ng, you should look at thts Pnce
$59 000 00

Gun co bmets $250 Magozme
rock $29 lamps $20 &amp; up
Maple Desk $135 Ta ble w1ih 4
sw1vel chmrs $175 Sofa cho r
rocker otiomon 3 iobles
096 1072 $6 BOO
Jack W Carsey, Mgr
$500 Bedroom 'SU ite maple or
Phone
2181
p1ne $11)0 30 electr c ronges
8 &amp; S MOBilE HOMES Pt Plea
$200 Bob-, beds $65 Boby bed
sent W Vo bes1de Heck s
mattresses $20 6edroom su !e
1973 Broadmore' 14 x 64 2
REFRtGERATORS WASHERS AND
$300 whtte maple or pane
bedrbom
DRYERS WRINGER WASHERS
$250 Med1terroneon sofo and
1973 Donon 1&lt;1 )( bO 2 bedroom
RANGES
ALL SOLO WITH
love se at $325 Ear Am sofa &amp;
1972 V•cto~10n 14 l :; 67 3 bedroom
GUARANTEE WE ALSO SER
cha1r S300 Love seot $150
2 bath
VICE APPLIANCES SKAGGS
modern solo cha ir loveseat
1972 Coventry 12 l :; 65 3 bedroom
APPLIANCES 1918 EASTERN
$275 sofa bed wlfh matching
1969 Statesmen 12 )( 60 2
AVE C0 II 446 7398
cha1r $150 Recliners $100 and
bedroom .
up Tabtes Coffee oak He~e
10% OFF
DECEMBER SAlE
ogon maple or pme S60 each
EVERYTHING !STOREWIDE )
Rocke r $55 maple or pme
654 SE
RICES FURNITURE
table 4 cha1rs $225 Hutch
COND CALL446-Q523
$275 7 pc Dmette $109 5 pc
SPliT FIREWOOD Coli 367 0612 or
D nette $55 00 Bunk bed$ com
.
3b7-05 11
plete $1 SO chest of drawer $38 ,'
Queen sn:e mattress &amp; bo)( spr
FREEZER
LARGE
CAPACITY
dou
For All Your
1ngs se t $130 Reg or Tw 1n $60
ble chest 256-1467

lARGE

3 0&lt;1-Another World 3 4,15 Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 15--General Hospital 6 13
3 3G-AII In The Family 8 10 Consumer Survival Kll
20

Good older home

EXCELLENT BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY -

Jack W Carsey. Mgr
Phone 99~ -2181

Guiding

low down

bargain for St2 SOO

Only 15
1 30--Days of Our llves 3,4 15, A s The World Turns

wtth

CROWN CITY - Excellent building for busmess or
office bulldtng Is set up for a beauty shop and a barber
shop both with eqwpment located on a n tce lot A real

General Eleclrtc T V 's
and
Hotpotnt Appliances
Sale Prtces

1 00--For Richer For Poorer 3 All My Children 6 13

buy

"

$9 000 00

bedr'ooms ba)h , dmmg room almost new furnace
needs a Uttle..:Work butts~ good buy for $12 800 owner
wants to sell today

'SINCE 194l
12 11 1 mo

25 Ae mtin
27 Gotten up
28 Melody
31 Walk
33 Twist
38 Part of skeleton
38 Mer~t
40 Hold on property
41Statlon
4~ Brazilian estu
ary
45 Ra ised
48 Gymnastic:
e\lents
47Wardolf
49 Fiber plant
51 Famed
52 Part or camera
(pi)
53 Dines
54 Oriental nurse
56 Nomtnee
59 Corrects
SO Old pronoun
61 Lubneates
63 Locks of r.atr
65 let It stand
67 Pnnter s
tneasure (pi )
69 A state (abbr)
70 Kind of lantern
72 sa ... ory
7 4. Pronoun
76 bclamafiOn
77 Musical drama
79 Evergreen tree
83 Guido s high
note
85 Tell
86 At a dlatance
87 Me11d w1t h cot
ton
88 Fencmg sword
89 Prefix down
90 Chan!

NICE &amp; ROOMY Attractive frame home 3
bedrooms new bath new k1tchen fam l ly room good
buy for S22 800 Owner wit I hel p finance

payment Only SIO 500

INSULATION
SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES

MODERN J BEDROOM CARPETED HOME Locatea
oft Rt 554 near Porter :)0 acres roll1ng land 1 500 sq
tt of hvtng space on f1rst floor plus f lntshed full base
ment It you ltke pnvacy of the country plus conve

dln1ng

WOOD AND WOOL FIBER

.No Sunday Calis Please
11 211mo

CLOSE TO TOWN - lovely new ceda r rancl1 3
bedroom 2 baths range dtsposal &amp; dishwasher In
kitchen beauttful carpet heat pump rad1o tntercom I
car garage Call for an appo1ntment

72 MILL CREEK -=.Cood home wlfh 3 bedrooms bath

RACINE
PlANING MILL

Storm Wtndows
Call ProfessiOnal
Butlders

21 PORTSMOUTH RO - N1ce family home w1th 3 or 4
bedroom s large ltvmg rm
new lotchen forma l
dmlng full f1mshed basement all th1s for less than
SJO 000 Call today

your payment Good locatton in town

••

LIST WITH US

WE WILL SELL

BE THE FIRST - to move trtto thts newly constru cted
2 bedroom ca rpeted home a long Bear Run Rd St t ua ted
on 1112 aae lot near ru st• c Raccoon Creek Idea l r et ire
m en t or 2nd home modern ktt c hen w d tsposal ba th
w shower rural water large c; omfortabl ~ wrap
around porc h Everyth.ng new and only S35 000 00

HOME WITH RENTAL - Buy t his 3 Q&lt;!droom home
with bath dining room enclosed bacl( porch and let the
rent from a 2 bedroom garage apartment help make

Corner Umon Ave
and Sf Rl 7
Pomeroy, OhiO
Change of
Phone Number
Phone
992 7608
Closed Jan 10
T1l181h 1978

&amp;Aluminum
S1d1ng

mothers are

for you Has 3 bedrooms 1•h baths mce carpet full
basement w tth ftreplace large carport located on P /4
acres of n ce wooded land Very good buy for $33 500

step

NOTICE

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

RUSSELL WOOD REALTOR
446-1066

LOVELY NEW RANCH - Just completed and waiting

MEIGS PLAZA

CARTER

Arthur A NIbert
Realtor
Sentor Appraiser

OFFICE' 446-7013

Located In

Harlford
Henderson
8822175
675 1582
UNIOto OPERATED
mo

Vin~

by

SUNDA¥ CROSSWOIW PUZZLER

ao

1218 EASTERN AVE. GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
"We Sell Better Living"

ACE HARIMARE

General

CHEMICAlS

FULLER
.REALTY

5-27 TFC

Euy step
tnsfrucflonc

Bissell Siding Co.

e

11 3G-College Basketball3 pollee Story 6 13 Johnny
Carson 4 1~ Movie
Love wdh the Proper
11 45-Movle

OHIO
HEATING SE_RVICE
REPAIR &amp; SERVICt

ACROSS
1 Goddeaaot
growtng wegata
lion
Be the open•ng of the In
Cleaning
door seuon tor you with
devices
your old furniture re
10 Playthings
upholstered In beautiful
u Smallest amount
warm colors &amp; pattern•
19 AIIOidS
from Bob s If you are
looking tor savtngs •f w•ll
21 Hero c event
pay you to pay us a v1slt
22 So be Ill
Located m back of the Sew
23 Sola
N 5ew Outlet on Ma1n St
24 Amends
Racine 0
26 Mexican shawls
1110'1mo
28 Mollify
29 Campau pomt
30 Rodents
32 Euro1J9an finch
SEWING MA CHINE Repa r!. ser
v1ce all makes 992 2284 The 33 W1ld hog
3-' Fuss
Fa br c
Shop
Pamer oy
35 Pierce
Author1zed S1nger Soles and 37 Pertner
Serv ce We sharpen Sctssors
39 Goddess of
hlltallng
EXCAVATING dozer ladder and
AD Period of faa ling
backhoe work dump 1 trucks
41 Dock
and lo boy s lor htre wtll hou
42 Halt
Ill d r l to SOli limestone ond u Longs tor
grovel Co li Bob or Roger Jef
46 Warble
lers day phone 992 70t'l9 ntght 47 Infatuate~;~
phone 992 .3525 or 992 5232
(8 Break au&amp;Jenly
50 Gave
EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
52 Fewer
and d tcher Charles R Hot
53 Babylon ia n
f eld
Sock Hoe Servtce
(jelly
Rutland Oh1o Phone 742 2006
55 Man a nam,
57 A continent
WILL do root ng , constr ucti on
(abbr)
p umbmg and heotmg No to b
too Iorge or too small Phone , 58 Midday
59 Lease
742 2348
00 PrepositiOn
82 Danish land dlvt
HOWERY AND MARTIN
alan
covahng
sep t c svstem s
041ndonaalan
dozer backhoe dump truck
trlbeemen
grovel
blacktop
I mestone
86 Note at scale
pov~ng Rt 143 Phone 1 (6 14)
68 Symbol fo r
698 73.31

9 JG-Betty White 810 10 00--Swttch 8 10 N ews 20
Great Performances 33

Stranger

call 667 6479 or 992 3815
\11Slmo

See us at 1100 East Matn
Street Pomeroy Oh1o or
Phone 992 7034 10 29 1mo

Camera 13
\
8 OO-Orange Bowl 3 ~ lS Luca n 6 13 Logan s Run
8 10 Skating Spectacular 20 American Short Story

Dick Cavett 20

fully Insured
Free Est

h- e: :r:-:· · ~-::fF!...4.

.: .· .:·. :..

BAIRD ~&amp;

ALUMINUM SIDINo_
SDLIDVINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CEL INGS
• GUTTERS&amp; DOWN
SPOUT

Thermal lnsulatton
Save 30 pet to 50 pet

H -25·1 mo

Kingsbuty
Home Sales

10 30---NBC Star Salute to 1978 4 11 Oo-Happy Days
6,13 Elec Co 20
11 30-Tournament of Rose-s Parade 3 4 8 10 1S

10 3G-Farm D1gest 20

CONTINUOUS
GUTTER SERVICE

.

33
9 oo-ABC Theatre 6 13 Maude 8 10
Saturday N1ght 20 Fall of Eagles 33

Cellulostc (wood hberl

Dave Parsons
Owner

SrrKnt Dh111
Ph 9923!93

3 0&lt;1-Another world

c

Thtrd Street
Aacme, Ohto

LARRY LAVENDER

REMODELING Plumb ng heoi ng
and oil types of general repa"
Work guaranteed 20 years e~o:
_gene nee Phone 992 7409

12 1.1 mo

Expertence and

IOCINE CARPET
I·
SHOP

ln111llt1011 St"k:IS
ftnin~;tnJ llnitablt
llow11 lnlo Wills I Attlt;l

Were '" Carpenter jUSt off
Rt 143 Phone 698 7191

on heating cost

Chester Oh1o

t2J tmo

FREE ESTIMATES

Lilias. Yoga &amp; You 20

and
Calf for

Rtstdenttal

Carpel &amp;Uphottlety
t' Phone Mtke YCNtng

G1ft Shop
5 000
terns upper State

2 Jo-Doctors 3 4 15

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES r• 37UZ50
0

complete selectton
of Coal &amp; Ctrculahng
Healers at low pr~ces
Fully stocked

"Get A load Of Tins"

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

:~.· E .-.~=-

Tra-s.mce

12 7 1 mo

J&amp;L

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

•

•

AuiMnltie

PHONE
992-5705

ll 25lmo

7 PC WOOD DINETTE SET BUFFET
8 HUT CH 2 LIV ING ROOM
CHAIRS
2 LIVING ROOM
SUITES CHEST OF DRAWERS
COUCH lARGE METAL CHINA
CABINET 3 PC END TABLE SET
SET OF BOX SPRINGS &amp; MAT
TRESS RICES FURN 85-4 SEC
446 9523

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasters trans all
sma ll oppl onces Lawn mower

Elec ,
plumbing,
carpenter
work,
patnltng,
paneling ,
any tab that needs to
be done around your
home.

Phone 949 2814
Dave Parsons,
Owner

9!12 ll74

_Co_l!_9_92_2_1_5~iiiii
6

LADIES NEEDED pori lime o r lull
li me pos•t ons ovatloble Call

TELEVISION
VIEWING

3i

aDSED FOR WINTER

'"''
,~

BRADFORD Aucttoneer Com
p lete ServiCe Phone 949 2487
or 949 2CXXI Roc me Oh a Cn tt
8n:1dford

Home Service

Spectill Order5 or Showtng
bf Carpeb by Appotntrrient

IF YOU hove o stuviCe to offer
w ont to buy or se ll some thmg
oe lookt ng for work
or
w hatever
you II gel rttsult s
faster w th a Sent nel Wont Ad

LADY OR COUPLE to l•ve •n w th
e lderly lad.,- n Crown C ty
Roo m ond board pl us weekly
salary Call 256 6541

st r u t l or

•

Service

,,.... the '-"'"'
....t.. . . . . tho.

st...

OPEN 8

to 5 CLO SED SU NDAY &amp; MON

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

--~-

BABYSI TTER NEEDED Ref re
q~.' ~ Co11 2~ 9~
WANTED
Man to work n mens wear $lor e
Ell:;penenc~t preferred bu t not
neces5or y Sf3nd res ume lo Boll:;
850
c o Goll1pohs Do ly
Tflbune
825 H urd Ave
Golhpolls

HIGlEY S

SWAIN

A

9 e Qn

wor e custo m f n ng f n1shed
produ ct o rd ers Call 388 8811 1

HIGLEY S BARBER SHOP

fEX A S Oil. COMPAN Y needs
mature per son for shert tnps
su rrounding Goll polis Contoc t
customers We tro n Wr ite K
U
Dick
Pres
Southwes t
Petroleum Ft Wonk lx

USED

PASOU ALE EIec tm o·'CI:..:..c,S~e-:-,-:"~e
-446 2716 day or n1 ght _ _ __

n lu re

Busi'ness Services

SALES POSITION Call toll fr ee
1 B00327 96% for o reco•ded
menoge

992 2038

SWEEPE R a nd sewmg mach ne
repo1r parts and supplies Ptck
up and d elt very Dovts Vacuum
Cleaner ;, m le up Georges
Creek Rd Ph 4-ib 0294

Appalachian
, Stove Company

n-F'o";B:St'"Res~lts Use SundBy Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Professtonal Offtces
Restaurant •
etc

Retatl Stores

-UNLIMITED OFF-STREET PARKING-

Hotel

2 BOR mob le home Adult s only
No pe ts he cond $130 a
month 2 m tle! from town Coli
446 2300
2 BDR FURNISHED mobile home
3 miles from town exc cand
Adults no pels S130 Call
••6 2300

From 300 to 14,000 sq feet to choose from

ALL ON GROUND FLOOR
IN HEART OF GALLIPOLIS
•

TWO BDR unlurn apt tn Crown
C1ty Call 256 64 7~
2 bedroom Mob1le Home couple
onty relerencel avo1foble Jon

1 256 1293

THE WISEMAN AGENCY

�.
~

•

I

•

22-'-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jarr.l,l978

.

_

F(Jr ·Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

-

.THE WISEMAN REAL
.
ESTATE AGENCY

Branch

GALLIA COUNTY•s lARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
.. CALL 446-3643

AN EYE CA
i
&amp; spacious 2 story
Colonial home just l/:2 block from grade school and only
a few blocks from shopping, Thf~ fine home features .a
large liv ing room and fami ly room, breakfast nook and
kitchen, 41argebedrooms, 2lf::~ ba1hsand full basemen t .
Plenty of storage In walk":: in ~ttic. and last but .not least.
a beautiful fenced in private swimming pi
backyard. $49,500.

In

REALTOR

Near Centerville -

NEAR TYCOON LAKE aEAUTY IN THE WOOD!
OWN
YOUR
OWN
38 . 5 acre fllrm i s level &amp;
- Quality buil t ranch stvte
CAMPSITE
in
the
rolling, land with about lS
home Is si1ullttd on .;
w i lderness of the Wayne
ecres t i llable &amp; the balance
acres of plAes overlook ing
NAtional Forest. 5 to~ llcre
ln woods . 11 1 story hom e·
tracts of woodland now · has been ni cely remodeled . U .S·. 35 approx . 4 mi . west
of Rio Grande . This low
liVailable
adio l nlng
&amp; offers -4 BR 's, nic e kit - · maintenance
hOme Is
thousands of acres of
chen with stove &amp; refrig .•
co vered · with brick &amp;
government lan d . Public
oi l fur11ace ·&amp; w-w carpet.
aluminum &amp; features 3.
1'1unflng , ,fishing
and
B R's, large LR with stone
RA.CCOON CREEK ' 13
camping pei"mitted . Prices
firep lllce, n ice klt cf:'len &amp;
acres of tla t Ia nd with
st art lit $2500 with f inan dining are,. , 2 garage! &amp; a
approx . 1500 H. of creek
cing ava lleb le.
cell ar house. First time on
fronta ge . sandy soil. ba rn
the market. $50's . ·
located in Nort he rn Ga ll ia
Co. SlJ,OQ~ BE YOUR OWN BOSS with
MINI FARM - U acres
NEAR LECTA - lO l acre
th
is well
establ ished
rolling
land.
completely
tarm IN ith 45 A. tillable , 5 '
remodel~d. 11;, story 1'1ome, · grocery bus i ness. Perfect
rm . house , 3 barns , sever al'
for a famllv operation .
log barn and pond located
.other outb.lldings, cellar
L iving quarters are at.
on Hannan Tra ce Rd . In
'house , spring wafer &amp; a
ta c 11e~ . Co~~ I\ for details.
HarrisOn Twp .
3500 lb , tob . base . sso.ooo.
OVERLOOKING RIVER .
LOCATION • VALUE
- Ni ce 2 BR collage Is
APPEAL - 24 acre fa rm ls
located on Route 7, 4 mi .
mostly t illa ble &amp; features a
south of town on .97 acre.
VACANT LAND NEAR
very nice 2 story home wlfh
ROD f.! EY 'Approx . 55
a rm s. &amp; bath . The Drive by this one &amp; you'll
acres of level &amp; ro ll ing
admit it's barga in p~lced at ·
downsta irs is brand new .
farm lend w ith pond, lob .
Also i ncluded ~tre e 5tlx60 _. $15.500.
base, barn '· &amp; co. water .
'bar ri ', silo &amp; 3 sr;n a11
1.!1ST1N.GS NliiiDIID '' Thfs property fronts on 2
bu ildings . This proper t y is
IlfWE
ADVIIRT1S.
rds . In a very desirable
loca ted J ~ mi. ' north of
., .ATIONALLY- Wll
lqt:e t ion. lots of poten tia l
HMC on Route 160.
'1- I ILL - TIIAQa.
.
tor ss5.oon.

N ic e bi ·

level on Ph ac re lot .

&lt;1

large

bedrooms, 1112 baths, interior
very
atfrac"f l ve.
24x36'
garage . Super garden spot .

Ca ll for deta ils .

.u.,.

Good Sta.; tcr Home-

••'

-···

-.

Cozy 2

bedrm . rancher w i th la,roe
liv . rm . &amp; fami ly r m., ea t-in
kitct'!en (with range 8.
refrig .), very scen ic 5 acre
wooded lot on Rt . 160. Good
op-port un i ty for $29 ,000. Ca ll
Dan Evans at 388 -8111 .

our
l
Dr . This
lovely homf!: is less than one year. old .
are three
BR 's, tlt1 baths ; a large LR ! 14x20). a ve ry lovely
kitchen including range, disposal arid dishwasher plus
lots of built-in cabinets with formica top. You will also
like the bar separa ti ng the ki tchen and the dtning
room . You wil l find carpet throug hout (except the kit.),.
also
at e11ery window. Th is home is all
a Lennox heat pump for efficient
ne;Hir&gt;g and
11

736 2nd Ave.· New L i st ingAttractive 2 ·st ory , br i ck
colon ia l f eaturing 4 !pllclous
bedrooms , dini ng and fllmily
room , eat-in kitchen, 2 baths,
divided basement &amp; ca r ·
peted throughout . U4,900 .

Lovely 3 Bedroom Ranch- a
fi ne brick &amp; fr.!lme r ·a ncher
with 3 ni ce 6R , large fam .
rm .• ni ce kitchen and carpet
throu ghout. Excellent neigh borhood rigl'1t across from
Addav i tte Sc hool. 531 , 900 .

•
Brick &amp; Fam e Rancn - ~n
aflra ct~ve 3 BR rancher w• ~t:l
large kttchen &amp; fam . rm .. _1 I?
baths &amp; garage . Beaull_fUI
c arpet throughout , n •,ce
sun d eck
and
pa rt tal
basement . PoSsible VA or
FHA. 531 ,900.

your
is an ol
home t hat ha s had very
ca re and it is
situat ed on .96 of an acre. There are two SR . LR , FR,
bath and k itchen, fuel oil furnace and you will f ind
ca rpet throughout . There Is an endosed back porch
plu mbed for W&amp;D, also a very J1ice storag e building.
Ca ll now l or a n appoin~m .e nt .
-;

CANADAY REALTY
.
446-3636
'

1.3 ACRES ON l eoding
Rood. 992· 7066 .

sife, corner of· O.J. Wh ile and Bethel
Church Rd. 1.40 acres· surrounded by modern homes .
Call now.
•
Excellent location at th e edge of town. Three BR 's, LR,
FR. bath and kitchen with range , Cwen and refrig . Also
.a large rea r cover ed deck over looking the Ohio River.
Thi·s.. propert y has river frontage. Call now tor an
appointment . $35,000.

R.A~L·

LOCATION Nice 3 BR h om~
loca ted i an e)(cellent area on Rt. 588. err.
ioy the nice 1 acre lot , large eaH n ki tchen,
att r acti ve living room ,. divided basement
with rec. room and c arpefed throughout.
Just what ydu' ve been looking f or at
$33 ,900.

Located 2•12 miles from Gallipolis on St . Rt. 588 . You
w il l find 5.80 acre_~ .of land with a house In need of
re pair . Take a look at this one, it i ust might be .a good
investment for the r ig ht person . $21.000.

QUALITY PLUS - You
1 year old home
today for several thousand
I . less than . it can ~e
built tor . Thi s bea1.1fiful quality b!JIIt 2 story Si tuated 1n
Ta ra Estates features 4 bedroom s includ ing a master
bedroom that is out of this world, formal entrance and
dining, superb k itchen. attract i ve family room with
w .b. fireplace, full basement and finished r ec. rm ,,
plus larg~ 2 ·car g.ar~ge. Call today . •$68,500 .

GRACIOUS
2 story
&gt;I
that will set your heart astir . This flne home features
formal entrance and dining , attractive living room and
-fam ily room with 'w.b. fireplace·, beaut iful bu·ilt-in
ki tchen, 3 · sp~clous bedroprns with enormous closet
space in the master bedroom, 2V~ baths and large 2 car
garage plus the use of a community swimming pool.
Localed
lovely Tara Eslates. $63,900.

B.RAND NEW QUALITY BUILT HOMES - All on 1
acre or 18rger, fireplaces. 2 ca r g!]rages. plush
carpeting, heat· pump, cen. a ir , well decorated
kitchens, sqme with range, dishwasher, dispo sa l, 2 car
~·~:.~i~'~ .Wf!ll planned community w ith lots of space for
!
I $45 ,900 and ·
·

An

E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-3796
E. N. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-4500
CALL 446-3643

DON'T

We have other listings, if you don' t see w hat yo u wa nt .
give us a call. We will help you find 11 .

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t
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..
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"-~

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

''
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Don 't

AULT MOBILE HOMES SERVICE ,
Skirting, anchor ing, and patios .
CJJ II 446-3608 after 4

Unusual but beautiful ho'm e with
800 set. ft . of rustic living in the family rOOm . {Has a
balcony that supports master bedroom &amp; baths) . &amp;
w .b. fireplace . · There are 3 other bedroom s, eat-in
kitchen and extra bath . Enjoy the fenced In · swimming
pool and large 1 acre tot in City Sch . Dist . on Rt. 141.

8 AND 5 MOBI LE HOMES
PT. PlEASANT, W. VA .
1973 Brood more 14~e64, 2 br .
1973 Dorion 14x60 1 br .
1972 Victorian 14)(67, 3 br .. · 2
bot l-Is
1972 Coventry 12x65, 3 br.
1969 Stotesmon 12)(60 2 br ,

We have enlarged · our
se rvice. department and
will service Hot point and
other brands,

Tr uck Headquar ters ·
1974 ' ·, T.GMCPickup
197 4

•,l

OIL AND
GAS SERVICE
CALL US

Pomeroy Landmark
~ock
Alii&amp;

---

----,-..-~--

,___ .

Think Real Estate
Think Strout Realty

T, GMC Pickup

1973 ", Chev. Pickup
1974 •; , T GMC PU

446-0008

1- JinJ 1/d. Che .... . PU

9a _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
Phone992·2181

~'The only

1974 •; , T. Chev . PU

Pomeroy Landmark
·

try

Broker you'll ever need ''

1973 EICom1no with lop
1974 •;, T, Ford PU '
P174 three·fourth Che11 . PU
J&lt;nJ GMC9500Tractor

197..4 ~ORO GRAN Torino stat ion
wagon. V·8. auto ., a.G-., P.S.,
radial tires , C. B. radio. $1 ,800,
Coll992·2776, after 6 pm .
19~

DODGE POLARA. Good running c:ondiJion . Good tires.
992,2455 .

1976 GRAN'o PRIX SJ. Al l extras.
LPw mi!eoge . Tom .Anderson,
~2-3348 , after" pm .

STARCRAFT FALL S.::.le . Mirll - ·
motors . 26' and 21', Tra Vel
Traile rs, 18' 5" $3,799, 25 ' 7"
Bunkhouse $4 ,875. F.old-down .
$1 ,700 up . We sell Htrvice and
quality . Open Sundays . Camp
• Conley Storcroft Soles , Rt . 62 ,
N. of Pt. Pleasant,
21 FOOT TERRY 1976. Eqli\ ppe~ .
992-7066.

OTHER
&amp; PICTURES
OUR LISTINGS
THE OFFICE . COME
&amp; LET US .HELP W_iTH
REAL ESTATE

NEED. A special built unit to pork
or to travel in. See Codner 's
Campers on Rainbow · Ridge .
long Bottom . OH , Col!
6 14·843-2621.

WE BUY,: 5ELL
OR TRDE
Douglas Wetherholt
, Broker, 446~4244
Earl Winters 446-3828
John Caudill675-4161

21 FOOT TR"VEL lroiler. Sell·
conJoined . .Tonde~ wheels _.,,. .
tra ni'Ce. 992-5254 . ·

SALES ASSOCIATES
Lee Johnson 256~6740

CLOSED FOR VACATION. Dec. 19
to Jon. II Camp Conley Stor ..
croft Sales , Pt . Pleasant , W.Va.

----

AUCTION }ALE, every Tues . and
1... ot 7 pm . New end used
merchandise at Ohio lttver Auc·
fion , Meigs Plaza, Middlepo~ l .
Ohio . Home Phona (304)
773·5&lt;71.
~--~----.~~

3 or 4 bedroom attroc-t~ve home.,
within ·CII)I school district .
Please call Joe Schemenauer ot ·

446-&lt; 093::0=
. --~~~-:---

MEDIC:::Al STUDENT. Need room
for February. Coll61.4·377 -2118
or write, Med . Student , Route 5
8o.11: 29, South Point,. · Ohio
45680.

12 x 68 Holly Pork Troil9r, with
e~e po n do , washer ond dryer,
dishwasher, underpinning . 12 x
12_outbldg., Ph . 606·63B·4060.

TEAFORD[H

.

to

sell it
yourself .
Let
a
professional do it for ·
you. It may save you
tim,e and money!

. NEWGMC

1974 '1, T. Ford Pickup
1975 '/, Ton Chevrolet Pickup
HUFFINES
&amp;
SONS
FIX
·IT
SHOP
WILL" CARE lor the elderly fn our
1~75 •;, T. Chev role t PU
BORDER'S GARAGE DOOR SER~
Ap'plion ces , S'lectricol wiri.ng 1973 ~. T: GMC PU
home. Phone992 -73 14 .
VICE , Commericol and residen ond plumbing . Coli 388-8847
197.ol Fod Von
PIANO TUNING . lone Daniels.
1ial, specializing in opergtors , • o
P--'
A'=SQ
="U
" 'A
7. 'LE=in--'s"ul--'
o-;
ti-ng- .--:1:03::--:
C:-e-d:-'oc 1972 LBOO Ford Qump Truck
New phone number . 992 -2581
Locol 256-6472.
St. Ga llipOlis. Ph 440-2716 or 1973 F700 Ford Dump Truck
~ If nO answer , coV 992 -2082 .
.,
1974 F250 Ford Super Cab PU
DOZER WORt{, e:J~:cov'oting , lor:'d
367-0398 after 5
WILL DO typing . Mcn uspip ts.
1973 International 1800 Series,
dearing.
Ph.
i44
,c
6
..:
·00
=
S'I
~--,.,=
BILL
'S
MOBILE
HOMES
and
Home
statis tical , resum es, et c. Coli
cob &amp; chouis , tandem drive
CARPET
Improvements. Free es timates.
992·3827. e... enlngs alter 6 and STANLEY STEEMER
SOMMERSGMC
·
CLEANER
.
Anv
·living
room
ond
Coll
4&lt;46-26-42
.
weekends .
TRUCKS. INC .
hall $29.95 up to 300 Sq, Ft. , WA'rER WElL DRILLING, William
133 Pine St.
MOBIL E HOME repa irs_. 992 -5858 .
South ea! tern Ohio No. I
T. Grant. Ph 7422879· or
446-2532
Carpet Cleaners. Ask about our
.
00
245 51
Chris tmas gilt cert ifictes . P~ .
61&lt;1 -446-4208.
JEFF'$ GUNS AND AMMO Located 1q76 Chevy Luv , au to sliding back
WeAre Now
Ot 406 LeGrande Bl.,.d ., Green
grOss . Ph446-0109
CHAIN LINK FENCING . WOODEN
Taking New
Acres Subd . Open 9am to 5p~ "" 1973 NOVA. 350. 4 spd. , $1400. or
FENCING, AWNINGS . Polio
M~n , thru Thur. : 9om to Spm
best offer Coli 675-6679 .
c o ~ers .
Ault's Home lm ·
Customers For
Fn. thru So,t . Owned. and
provements. Ph . 446-3608 offer
operated by M. 0 . and N ormo. 73 V-8 GMC pickup . outo. PS , -re:or
4.
Jefl en . Call446-7022
siding win d(lw , radio $'21'00. Ph
BACKHOE . DOZER, OIT CHER and
675·5081
'
dump · truck ,' Concre te work .
lWIN
RIV
ER
S
MARINE
307
Upper
1972
PLYMOUTH
Country
Sur·
Hatfield Backhoe Ser .. Rutland .
River Rood. Chrysler Soles &amp;
burban srorion wagon . gruise·
Oh, Ph . 742 · 2008or . '!i~86 .
Ser ... ice . Comp lete Hull Repair.
O·motic , power , air , good conCustom built troijers. Phone
DACK TERMITING . SPECIAliST '
dition . one ow ner . Co li
PEST CONTROl , licensed, IN 440-8655
675- 126S.
sured ,
Free
ln spec!io'n ,
TRI -STATE .UPHOLSTERY SHOP. ~1972 CHEV'( PI CKUP . Skidmore·
Member NPCA end OPCA . C.
1163 Sec. Ave .. 4ol!b-7833 , evenFoster Cool Co., Pine St. ,
M.
Hall
,
WiiJ.c.esville
.
o'hio.
Ph.
.......
W. Cafsey, Mgr.
. irlgs, 4-46-1833.
Gollipoli! . 0 .
669-4914
.
Phone 992-2181
jq72 CHEll~ IMPA LA , air, very
L IM ESTO~E . gra.,.el ond .sond . All
ceosonable
pcice . Call
sizes. At Richards ,a nd Son, Up per River Rd ., Gall ipolis , Ohio . ANY, PERSON ...-ho h~s anything to
446-3560.=:-'----::"--::---::--':-CONCRETE &amp; - BLOCK WORK .
·
Coll446-7785.
give O"VOY and does not offer or CHEAP WQRK
CAR. Dodge
Carpen ter work , 30 yrs exp.
Oftl! mpt to ofler any other thing
Lancer . be mech . cond . See at
DUTY'S
BU
ILDIN
G
AND
REMODEL
Free es timates . 367-0295 or
lor sole moy place on ad in thi s
ING . FREE ESTIMATES . Call
• 367·06
,::7_;6:______- : - - - - - colunin . Th erw will be 110 -~~-~-----r-----2~
__
-13~~·-------,~~~~
eMerge to the odv~rtiser
SANDY AND BEAVER lnsuronce __
Co. t\o s offered services for fi re TV SERVICE . Electronic TV Clin.k , ·ONE FEMALE DOG, port yomero- 1~71 Elcomino. au tom atic, PS and
756 Second A'o'enue Hours 9am
PB , air, new, po int , tir~s .
insurance co¥eroge in Gallic
'llion , port hound . 2 '11 years
to 5pm', Monday thru Soturdoy .
crogf&lt;m, wilt sell ar !rode cor of
County for almost o century.
Coli
o4.oi6
-IS62
.
old
.
Closed Thursday . Coll.41d6·3980.
~q uol ... olue , Coli 949-2885'.:_~
Form, home and person al property coverages ore available . A A A CONTRACTORS . Backhoe.
1970 OLDS CUTLASS &lt;-d&lt; ., V·B.
to meet individua l needs . C.op ·
doz~r . dump truck . Work done
auto., P.S., P.B., eKiro tires and .
tact Emmett Church, rour
by the hour or' by the iob. For PUPPY . 7 wks. old, mole , port
whee ls. Very good condition .
nvighbor and-oger;tt
- .
' •ei! fJStimq tes. Call256·l921 .
_B.eogle . Co/1446 -3926.
Co~92- 277b , ~ter 6 pm.

~EL

THREE BEDROOM , both and" •;,.
TotOI electric . Brick front .
Carpel5id. 1 acre of jond . Priced
t~.r qui ck sole . PH . 992· 3667 or
992·3312.
house. F.A..Iurnoce , storm win ·
dews, fireploce . In Middleport,
Phone 992·3457 or 992-5867.

&lt;Ti'ii&gt;'t -

YOUR ttOME MAY
BE WORTH MORE
THAN YOU THINK...

GIVE
IT AWAVIII

...

..•,

SIX ROOM house, all efectric, ,
t orp~ ted , car port . $26 .000. Ar row ca mper , $600. 992-7885 , 10
· om to 6 pm . No Sundov coli! .

TWO STORY 3 bedroom frame

Building site I rom me ·to two acres-. You name what
you want . Call now .

,..

Cree~

WE NEED LISTING-S

Now's the time to take a look at this one. Thi s lovely
older home has recently been remOdeled and carpeted .
Also 'a new kit chen and bath . You will find three BR 's,
LR , DR and a BR on th e fi r st t" loor, two BR 's and a
large wa lk -In closet pn the second floo r. also a sma ll
play room . There is a full d ivided basement. Rural
water, a lso a 10,000 gallon water cistern , forced air foe l
oil furna ce. This propert y also incl udes nearly JO acres
of land . -Ca l l. now , fo( an appointment . $35,000 ,

'446-0552 ANmME
428 2nd AVE.
GALliPOLIS, OHIO

COUNTRY for mlond with !oeclud·
ed woods, water ond good ac cess in_ Monroe County , W . Vo .
$1 ,000 down, call (304) 772·
3102 or (304)772·3227 ,

VA -FHA, 30 yr . financing . Ireland
M ortgag e, 77 E·. State, Athens ,
phone (b1 4) 592-305 I .

E~cellent b~ilding

WE NEED USTINGS

(• SMALL form for sole, IO'Y. down ,
ownllifr fina nc&amp;d . ¥onrollif Coun ·
ty , W Vo . Phone (304) 712·
3102 ., (304) 772 ·3227'
'

Commer.cial property opprox . 17
acres , level land , located at
Tuppe rs Plains on Ohio , Route
7. Phone (614) 667-6304..

Investment prope rty at 742 Jrd . Ave .. Could be used as a
stor e, or stOrage area . Thi s property is 43 feet wide a nd
175 teet deep. Pr i_ced hl se ll $11.000 .

ARE YOU CONCERNED ABOUT" FINANCING? IF
YOU ARE CHANCES ARE YOU CAN GET YOUR
CHOICE OF HOMES WITH ONLY A 10 PCT. DOWN
PAYMENT. PROVIDING YOU · HAVE 'A GOOD
WORK RECORD AND GOOD CREDIT. CALL NOW
LET US HELP YOU .

=

·'="-

•

----

'

BUD McGHEE

'

:--- ;: -

·=··=-~·

•

: VSREALTY

,,
.··..

•

-For Best Results Use Sunday Ti~es-$entinel Cla.s sifieds
.:. ,: .~:·

_:

••

23--TheSundayTimes-Sentinei,Sunday, Jan.l.~978

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
BEHIND THESE DoORS
-you 'w ill find features
galore . lovelY modern
kitchen, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
insulation. storm windows
&amp; doors , nat . gas hot water
heat , carport. Asking
$31 ,915.00 .
NEAR BASHAN - About
10 nice laying acres on
bla cktop
road. Water
availabie. $13,000 .00.
NEAR
NEW
HYD~O
UNIT - 2 nice lots with
river fron ta g e·. 2 stoi-y
f.r am.e home. 3 bedrooms,
bath, 2 fireplaces, coal
furna ce. Just $6,800 .00.
YOUR DREAM &lt;ome true .
3 yrs . old, 1 mile but, lovely
equipped
kitchen.
3
bedrooms, 2 bat hs, storms,
storage bldg . ' acre .
$37,300.00. '
JUST
LISTED
3
bedroom home. equipped
kitchen,
le~ttel
yard.
carport, electric baseboard
heat , many other features.
$17,200.00.
'
PUT YOURSELF IN OUR
HANDS.
WHETHER
YOU'RE
HOUS.E
HUNTING, SELLiNG, o·R
BOTH
~
·YOUR
INTERESTS ARE OUR
INTERESTS!
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR

· HUFFINE'S INTERIOR
DECORATING
Coll388-8847.

HAllOR

3 LOTS· -7 room house,
bath, city water, nat ural
gas
central
h ea t .J ng .
$16.500.
SYRACUSE - 3 bedrooms.
bath, natural gas furna ce,
city water, aluminum
si ding. and corner lot .
Asking S16.SOO.
17,500 - 2 bedroom frame
home. be ing overhauled .
Firepla ce,
cistern,
2
porches, and large lot of
almost an acre.
'
NEW LISTING 3
bedroom home in Pomeroy
out of flood area. 2 baths,
dining
room,
full
basement . natural gas
cen tral
heating,
and
garage . S27,SOO_
~10,500 .-. For this 2
bedroom , frame home near
stores. All cl)y uti I ities .
40 ACRES With all
minerals, soni ~ of the land
lays nice, that could be sold
In 5 acre lots . Small barn .
45 ACRES - In the slicks
with water tap, septic tank,
and ele&lt;trlc. All this at a
price that anyone can
afford.
NO)N IS THE TIME TO
SElL THAT BIG FUEL
EATING HOUSE .
'Helen L. Teaford
G. Bruce Teo lord
Realtor Associates

HOUSE IN COUNTRY, 2 ,bd•. Sell
on land contract, 10 % down
or will rent, $135. month, 3
miles from hospital. Call Jock
Nea l, 4.46-0157.

~tr·3265.

FAMIL'I: ROOM with fireplace plus · ' ~r~:~~~,~~·~~~~
stove. Th is 3 ·eR all electr lc ·brlck is one of ·
homes on the market . Well planned kitchen with snack
bar, separate dining area plus range, disposal and
dishwashe r . JA acres wooded lot. $37,500.
NEW LISTING! n 'ACRES. 30 acres part ia lly wooded
pasture, good fence, 25 acres t il lable, 22 acres timber,
stream s, 5 rm . frame home, other outbldg ., blacktOp
rd ., lots of road frohtag e, goodin vestment' property,
,$32,500.
'
NEW LISTING! Two acres, 3 BR frame home has
alum . si ding , storm doors and windows . Crown City
area . $17,500.

.'

,,

197&lt;4 NEW MOON mobile hom e. 2
. bdr .. eXtras. Coll446 -4179.,
1972 GLENWOOD 12 x 64, 2. 1g.
bdr, liv rm 26', oil carpeted, glr,
$3800 . Call 367·0676.
1974 SHUL:TZ in exc . cond. 12 x 65,
dishwasher . washer and dryer,
under penning. Call367-7521:__

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth &amp; Pine
Phone U6-3888 or .-46--4"'7n

GENE PLANTS &amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heating - · Air Conditioning , 300 Fourth Ave. Ph.
&lt;46-1637.

44 OLIVE STREET - Wllhfn' wa lki ng d istance
downtown, ·3 BR ' frame . Nice eat -In kit~hen . GC)r~ge .
-Natural gas furnace . Good 'cond. $28,.000.

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 ot E'o'ergreen
Phone 446-2735

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING SPECIAL? We have
homes. $59,000 and up. Shown by appointment only.

3BEDROOMHOME
Kvaer Creek School s .. Modern, approx . 2 112
';e.!lrs old . Thermopa ne windows, ,s torm
(,!Qors. F .A: furna ce w ith central air. Kif·
Chen ha s range·, ,r efr ig., lots of b'-'llt ~ in
cabinets . Full basem ent with pat io doors.
Rural water system .· Garage . JUST
LISTED . CALL NOW.
SPRING AND SUMMERS
COMING '
8 ROOM HOME WITH
HEATED
SWIMM I N G
.POOL. N ow is the ti m e to
buV thi s home in pre para·
tion for su mmer. 3 BR. all
nicely carpeted, modern
eat-in kitchen family room
with patio dOOrs to swlmm ·
ing pool, Ben Franklin
wQodburning stove. On
level lot . Natural ga s, F .A.
furnac e. Within 1'12 miles of
G·allipolis. Green . Twp.
owners say to SELL NOW
FOR ON LY $37 ,000,
NICE COLONIAL HOME.
IN GALLIPOLIS
One of the attractive older
tw o · s tory
homes in
-Gallipolis, 7 room s, 4 BR ,
2112 baths, bullt·ln kit., F .A.
nat . gas furnace, ni ce large
front porch, screened i n
back porch, nice lot with 4
car garage in back, c lose to
church and business sect.
downtown. Tt:Jis proper ty is
i n good' condition and 'Pri c·
ed to sell .
(
RIVERFRONT HOME
3BEDROOMS
Beautiful v iew on the Ohio
River right from your liv·
ing room . Like to boat, f ish
and relax eaCh evening on
your own riverfront? 6
rooms remodeled home,
nice mod"ern kitchen , F .
and B. porches, nat gas
forc ed air furnace, all
rooms are nicely ca rpeted .
Your own water system .
White alum . outside cover·
ing , 2 large nicely shaded
lotS: with cherry trees and
one
pea ch . A very
economical place to live.
8 ROOM HOUSE
IN CITY
This is a very modern a t·
tractive
brick
home
located only a short
distance from city schools,
3 BR, b'ath, shower, very
nice k itche.n,
lot s of
cabinets and almost ull ap·
pliances possible i ncluded.
Basement, nat. rn•s F .A .
turn., centrlll ai· . .... :v nice
carpet. Many more Inviting
features includlno new car·.
J:X&gt;rt &amp; chain link fence .
This home is in top condi ·
tion .
SELL IN G
REASONABLE .

8 ACRES- LOTS .
OF PINE TREES
Deep well. Electric pump .
Well house, eptic tank, 4 1/~
miles 10 Mine No . 1. Ap·
prox . 5 acres of t i mber. All
8 acres levelland ,
·

t.

14 ACRES
6 ROO"l HOUS E
5 miles from Ga ll ipolis.
· Nice 3 BR home , 2 baths.
' · Nice modern kitchen with
electric range and relrlg .,
garbage disposal. Rura.J..
water system. Ni ce sett ing
- house ne!rtl ed In c leared
area in woods. Must see
thi s home or. the inside.

. ..

19 1J:~

ACRES .
ROLLING LAND
Well with elec tric pump.
septi c ta nk . Concrete pad
tor mobile hOme hookup.
Cella r house. Lot s o'f apple
trees. Some ti mber . Good
line f ences . All mmeral
rights goes. Won ' t last
lon g .
CALL
NO'o'/
$15,000.00.

12 ACRES - BARN MOBILE HOME
1987 lbs. tobacco base, ap·
prox . 7 ac:res tillabl e, 5
acres timber . Cl ay Twp.,
Gall ipolis City Sc hool Oist .
Klrkwood;2 bedroom home
has Its own water system .
1,000 g cil. septic t ank. All
mineral right s goes, 1'1 ?
miles off State Highway 7 .
Ca ll for more deta ils.

4ACRESMORE
OR LESS
Wooded lot . Some pine
tr ees. Appro&gt;C . 1 mile from
Centenary on" H erma.n·
Northup Rd . P ick vour own
bldg. slle.
6 ROOM
.
REMODELED HOME
2 or more bedrooms, alum . .
siding,
lots Ot built-in
cabi net s, city w a ter. One
car garage, nice shady
fr ont por t h. Bath with
shower . ' Partial basemen t
with cellar. Shingl e roof.
Large lot : A r ea l buy for
the money .

MOBILE HOMES LOTS
GREEN TERRACE MOBILE COMMUNITY
. l ocated on Rt. 141 ,'citv water . ci ty
schools. 5 min. trom Gallipolis
end Holzer Hospital .

NEW LISTING
YOU CA N STOP
DREAMING
Ranch Style nome wit h all
the room and beau t y y ou
~o ul ddreamof . Formall ill .
room &amp; din. room, lg . kit
chen with ea t-In bar, lots ot
cabine t s, dishwasher a nd
and range. Filmily r oom
has a rustic sett ing, ston e
w .b. fir eplac;:e and· sliding
paflodoor s,·3lg , BR. 2 1ull
bath s upsta irs. Downs tairs
includes a rusti c looking
t;;~ mil y
room with _wood
burner , lg . rec. room , lh
bath , utilit y room and sew .
room or ;ll:&gt;!s. 41h BR , THIS
HOME WAS DE SIG N ED
WITH LIVING IN M IN D .
&lt;

30 ACRES
. WOOD EO AREA
Va can t land, all m ineral
rights goes. A goOd pl ace to
r etreat. Hunt or iust be by
your self . ONLY $14,900. 00.

~

location wi th a pond l"!nd surrounded by pine
w scenic
trees . This home has a 2 ca r CMport , a large
w comfortable living room wi th a firep lace, large kl l . and
w din ing area , l~ily room and J BR .
w VACANT LA ND - We a l so have vacant land and
w wooded sites which would be suUt~ble for building ,
i le hom es; hun'ttng , et c. Ca ll lor locatiOfls and
w mob
delalls .
w TOMORROW'S NE STEc:l&gt; - 5 unit aporlment

SU BDIVISION
Vacan t lots, ,_ nice size·
building lots with all
uti lit ies ther e. Lot size
101.8' by 11 1.2' . Better get
'um now .
NO DOWN PAYMENT
WITH VA LOAN
,
, 6 Rooms, 3 BR approx . 1•12
mi . fro m Ga llipol is . Elec·
trk F .A . furna ce with cen·
tra t ai_r, modern ki tchen,
Ga llipolis City Sc hool Dist .
Fully carpeted, Gallipolis
Ci f y water. s~w ag e system .
Meta l outside doors &amp; ther ·
mopane wi ndows . Small
c hild r en go to Green
School. Nice level land·
scaped lot.
LAND CONTRACT
6 room!., 2 story, wood·
burning fir epl ace, City
wa ter on a large lot in Vln·
ton . $2,000 down payment
and $133 .3"4 per month. Jus.t
IH&lt;.e rent . Ca ll fo r more in form ation.
·
CIT Y PROPERTY
NICE COTTAGE
·5 rooms, 2 or 3 bedrooms,
bafh, _ partia l basement.
nat. gas F .A. furan ce, one
floor plan . Close to super
markel, drug store, .laun ·
dry, wa lking disTa nce of.
downtown stor es.
backyard . garden space.
Call now if you want in
Galli poli s. Price ONLY
$23 ,900 .00.
'
ONLY S22,000

Nice J b ed r ooms. ba th, liv·
ing room , modern ea t ·ln
ki tehen
with
Puilt · in
cabinets . Full basement,
almost new gas forced air
f urnace and hot water
heater. Located wi thi n the
city limits. Look ing · for a
nice clea n hom e, close to
shopp ing area? A Buy . Call
Now.

Tht Wileman

w

i
i

w
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bu il ding on Upper Second ·Avenue in Ga ll ipolis. There
much demand In th is erea by r ,nters for
apartments. If- you are the tyPe of Investor who l ikes
res idential rental prOpertv th is ta x she lter could offer
you an excellent hedge against taxt~tlbn and Inflation .

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IMAGINATION - We h•ve • 2 sl ory , 7
w roo m YOUR
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horT]e overloo~ · .0•'-"D Rl~.~er that Is In need
w of e~ tensi 11e remodt. S .. . -.~tJI coUld be made Into a W
.
w beau tifu l home. Call In today tor more deta ils.
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HAVEN FOR TWO -

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Rio Grande area . Like your

W privacy? Nice 2 bedroom horne with hardwood fl oors
W and paneled wa ll s sit uated on ~ver 1117 acres of wooded
W' land . Priced al 523.900.00 .
ROOM TO ROA.M - Like new J bedroom , !I t) bath,

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24'1c77 ' Vlndale. Modular home with B acres· of land In
Kyger Creek School Distr ict. Kitc hen appl l.!lnces go
with sate. Th is Is a large comfor tabl e home offering
central air and the bes t of cons tru cti on . Priced al on l y
$29,000.00

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YOUR OWN BUSINESS - Service stallon and
r est auranlln a prime location In an area that Is going
to boom over the following yea r s, If you are In the
market lor SQfnethlng big , yoU shou ld check Into lhls!

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SPACE TO GROW- If you enJ oy boating' In the
summer and a warm fire In the winter, you shOuld look ·
at this hom e. This is a 2 story w ith a fireplace In the
living r oom , 4 bedrooms, a comple te kitchen. dlnln9
room . util ity room. basement wi th a 2 ca r garage
setting 0!'1 280' of r hier frontage.
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APPROVED &amp; APPRAISED - 3 yr. old cozy
ranch seHi ng on a I I.- ;~ acre lot In Bidwell. Eaf· ln
kitchen equ ipped with range and rel rlg ., 3 bedrooms,
1111 baths, V;~ basemen I ..

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COMMERCIAL SITE - Corner lot on· Second Avenue
where the ol d Qtleen Bee was locl'll ted . Office building
on r ear of tot. Pr iced at $50,000.00 .

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NATIONAL ADVERTISING
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WITH THE ·
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GALLERY OF HOMES
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CALL AT HOME
w VICKIE HAUlDREN
446-4042
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BOB LANE
WALTLANE
BECKY LANE
DENVER HIGLEY
KENNY RATLIFF
TERRY O'DELL

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446-10.9
446·0458
&lt;46·0458
446·0002

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_256.6831 or256·6402

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HOBSTffiER
REALTY
GeQrge S. HobsteHer Jr.,
Broker
107'12 Syeamore St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
PHONE 992-6333
OHiC:e Hours : 9 A.M . to ·•
P.M.
Close
Thursdays anf
Saturdeys at noon.
New 4 bedroom, 2500 sq. II
li ving space, 21!1 baths,' 1:
roo m ran ch brick . Locate·&lt;
3 miles from Rt. 7, up Wes ·
Shade River . Ca ll for ar
appoln tm'ent.

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
855 SECOND AV~NUE
G ,A LLIPOLIS , OHIO

Office

446-7900 '

LET THE GALLERY
SEL L YOUR PAOPERT"(
CO UNTRY RETREAT

Uke new l bedroom , 11h
beth,
24'x,7r
V i ndel~
Modular home with 8 e~cres
of ·I end in Kyger, Creek
Sc hool Distr ict . Kitc hen
app l iances go With sa le .
Thi s I! lt l"' rge comf o rtabi~
home offering centr al ll lr
and th~ best of c on struction . Prlctd . at only
$29,000 .00,

t•.' .

FHA APPROVED &amp;

APPRAISED

.ESTATE

-SALE

huting, now ca,.P.t &amp; kllchon) . Some
lind, bolonco In rolling pastun
-dlond. The
ho-, born end 5 ocrn' olone on worth tho osklng
price of $45,900. Owner In 1 bind ond mull 1111. Contocl

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SPR ING VALLEY

HOMESITES for sole , 1. ocre &lt;:~nd By owner, lorg~ brick On Mart in IRELAND
MORTGAGE CD .
up .- Mlddlaport , near Rutland.
Specio l i.zing in FHA and VA
Or. Near hospitol. oil e11 iros. Ph
C~ll 992-7&lt;81.
Home loons. Also Refinancin g.
446·1171 or 446.-4305
463 2nd Ave. l oco ted 2nd floor .
NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,
13 AC~ES with mobile home.
Gol~ lp'o li s , Ph, 446-7172. '
oil ele&lt;:.,. 1 gcre, Middl eport, ', garage and other buildings in
close to Rutland. Phone 992·
LOTS FOR SALE . Block top. all
Buloville &lt;:~reo . Coil 367 -7419.
. 1481.
lllilil ies . Coil446·0168 .

ANY HOUR ,
OR-BETTER YET •• . STOP lSY AND SEE US AT
LOCUST ST .. GALLIPOLIS, 0.

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NEW LISTING - We have jusl llsled the perfect hom e
w for
children . Th is hom~ is only 4 yrs . old wltJl 3 BR ., kit .
w equipped
with O.R.• ref . and dishwasher. separate
din
ing,
tam
,md a sw imm ing pool situated on a
w nice size lot .Inroom
~
Bidwell , Pr iced at only S33,SOO.
w
~
w GETAWAY FROM ITALLI -" Enjoy lhe. peaceand
relaxat ion of the quiet surroundi ng s of thi s S ye111r old
w brick
located on J acres of land halt-way between R io
w Grande and Oak Hill . Your new home se ts In a very ~

Home Phone742·2003'
Hilton Wolle, s~,
Associate
Home Phone 949-2589

•

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LET Tl;lE GALLERY SELL YOUR PROPERTY

Associate

(Prlco
· Roducodl
61
romodolod
• bodraom
lorm. ..,mo
(now
GROW EARTHWORMS lor profit .
F•ee lloto · WORM WORLD ,
1810 S. Josephln•. Denver, Col·
orado 80210 ,or call Mr . James
· collocl(303) 778-1026.

ROLLING LAND ·
ApProx. 40 A, till able, 60 A.
pasture. Nice til e block
barn , app rox. 40'x60' ,
equip. shed and lots ot
other· build., 5 fne'rry trees.
J apple, grpe harbor .
Strea m flows Through pro·
pert y . ,A ll · m ineral rights
goes. 6 room home', 3 BR,
ba sement . Storm doors and
window s. Built-in kitchen·
cbinets, cook sto ve &amp; elec .
ref r lg. Fue l oil for ced air
turn. Pl en t y of wa ter . 2
garages . A real good farm ,
only 1lh miles to bank and
grocery store . CALL NOW .

!

II

OFFICE 446-7900

We !lave· need of li~llllfi S,
all tv. ae~, homes, lan~,
comm4ftl'ctal, etc.
Cheryl Lemley

WE HAVE MORE FARMS, HOMES &amp; BUSIN
PROPERTY AVAILABLE, CALL
'

446-3636

PRICED RIGHT
Ranch style home with 5 room s and bath .
Large ki lchen w i th buill in cabinets, retnge
and refrlg . Sing le car garage . Nat . gas
heat . CALL NOW .,

123 A , CLEARED

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HAPPY NEW YEAR!

STANDARD
, Plumbing · Heating
215 Third Ave ., 446-3782

DOWNTOWN RESTAURANT Well established
restaurant seating 48 and recreation hall with up to
date equipment, present owner has bui-lt this int9 a
· t~&gt;rlvllng bus i ness, potent i al unlimited!
Priced '
re••sonal&gt;le . Call soon for more details.

BEFORE YOU BUY I See this new 3 BR all electric
home: Lg. country klfc;:hen, lots of cabinet space, r ange
and disposal. F ireplace in LR, fully ca rpeted . Garage.
Nice level lot. $35,000 .
·

We ·Need Your Home or Farm To. Sell

Ac~";·~~~=~E~!

c::c::-c:-:--:cc=---:::-:-::-:-=:--'O'C:
CLEAN OUT GARAGES and
basements , etc. Call-4-46 -4415.
WILl BABYSIT in my home . Tad.dlen preferred . .Warm meals.
Bob McCorm ick Rd.. Coli

1972 INDY, 12 x 60, TV and air
condition ing, completely fur~
nished. CCIII 446-9272.

'

V,IRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy,·Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

Willis T.
.'Leadingham
Ph. H. 245-9114
Realtor
H. 446-9539
Gallia County's Fastest Growing Real Estate Agency

BOB LANE, BRANCH MANAGER
ass SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

The residence o_f 1he late .
L•o C. Kennedy , Sr .
located at 651 Beec h Street,
Middleport, Ohio , is oHered
for sale at the price of
S.t7 ,500.00. Property in
ucellenl lo«:ation . One
additional large lot to ~~
with house.
'

For Information contact
either Fred W. Crow, Jr.,
Attorney , 992· 2692
or,
Barbaro Knight• Allorney,
992-2186, ~""t"roy, Ohio.

l vr . old cozv ranch setting
on a iV? ll cre tot In Bidwell.
Eat -In kltche.n equipped
w ith range and refr tg .. 3
be'droom s, 1111 baths , 111
· base mer,t .
YOUR OWN BUSINESS
Service
s tation
a nd
restal1T !I. n t in a p ri me
locatio" In .!I n area fttat Is
going to bOOm "o ver the
follow i ng years . If you lire'
in
the
mllrke t
f or
som efhi ng bio , you should
check into th is ~
' CALL
:"~~LCJR"ieri
VI'CKIE
HA

BOB LANE

WAL.T
BECkYLANE
LAN I
DENVER HIG'LE
KENNY RA !;C LI
TERR"'O'OELL

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24- The SundayTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. I,197S

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News highlights of the
past year in Gallia Co.
reviewed for readers of
The Sunday Times-sentinel

Nation's biggest liar
had quickie hamburgers
BURLINGTON,Wis. (UPl) ~ InOdon,lnd ., it got so
hot last sununer "you could take a fa&lt;ozen hamburger
patty out of the freezer, toss it into the air, and when it
came down you had one that was cooked well done." •
That was the barefaced lie that ,won Charles Porter
of Odon the ~tie of ''World Champion Uar for 1977"
from the B\ll'lington Uar's ClUb Friday night.
·
W. R. Ancler'son, of Chicago, won an h'onorable
mention in the annual event with a story about some
skyscraper elevators.
"The elevators are so fast ," he said, "that in going
up to the top floor, the watches of Jll!&amp;sengers lose !pur

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AS has be en our custom t he past!5 years, toda y s co umn
is devoted to outstanding news events which occurred in Gallia
'County during the past 52 weeks .

destroyed by fire .

Hotel • farm pond near Raclue ..

10- 0hlo

2.C- Water level reaches
criti cal po int second t ime In

Gov.

James

Rhodes discusses city , county
problems with local leaders.

Probe launched into

..

Youn.g father slain in Middleport

destruction 'of tugboat
ELEANOR. W.Va. (UP! )
- A U.S. Coast Guard
investigation has been
launched iQ an effort to learn
the cause of Friday's fire that
destroyed a tugboat as it
!"lshed six barges on the
Kanawha River.
·.
,..Flames enveloped " The

.

explosion in the fire, since the
barges were hauling salt
brine .
FireJllen
were
hindered by the lack of small
boats with which to keep ihe
burning tug stationary .
Firemen spent about 2~
hours battling the blaze
before bringing ·ll under

A

VOL XXVIII. NO. 182

By United Press lntemadonal
NEW YORK - PRICES OPENED THE NEW YEAR
mixed Tuesday in active trading of N"'l' York Stock Exchange
issues. The Dow Jones industrial average, which gained 0.78
point Friday, was off 0.87 point to 830.30 shortly after the
opening. The Dow, whlch gained 1.30 points overall last week,
feU 173.48 points last year .
Advances led declines, 182 to 166, among the 518 issues
crossing the tape In the early going. Turnover amounted to
about 910,000 shares. The market was closed Monday for the
New Year holiday.
Investors have shown little response to the government's
rep«! that its leading economic indicators fell 0.2 percent in
November, the first slide in five months. The news, taken with
tile recent decline in automobile sales, indicated the economic
oudook was uncertain·.
BISMARCK, N. D. - THE BUREAU OF INDIAN Affairs
has announced that .t he Devils Lake Sioux Indian Tri~e has
been paid $8.35 mllllon by the u&lt;s. government for land taken
from the Fort Totten lndl8n Reservation.
Earl Asher, Aberd!!OD, N.D., said nearly $6.69. million of
the setdement was paid to 2,673 enrolled members of the
lrlbe. Ee,.ch member got a payment of $2,500. A001rdlng to
Asher, the tribal council in~sted about $1.66 million in order to ·
finance future tribal p-ojects.
·
A ~wsult was IUed earlier on behalf of the SissetonWahpeton bands of Siou:i Indians for the taking of nearly
171,000 acres of reservation land between 1880 and 1890.
BOMBAY ,INDIA- THE INDIAN NAVY TODAY ordered

its oceanographlc survey ship into shallow, muddy waters off
Bombay tooaearch for the wreckage of an Air India jumbo jet
liner that crashed Sunday, killing all 213 people aboard,
including two Americans. Airline and rescue of(idals haye
given up hope that any of the 190 passengers and 23 crew
members 11board the plane slirvived the crash, the third worst
in aviation history.
Air Indian spokesman said 13 bodies had been recovered
by navy and pollee boats and helicopters: Anxious relatives
contln11ed a vigil at the Bombay morgue, where the bodies
were laken. All but 11 of those aboard tbe huge Boellng-747
were Indian. of the 11 fodeigners, spoke8men said, 9 were
citizens of Middle East nations and two were Saudi Arabianborn Americans living in Dharan.

PROSPERITY

OUR BEST TO EVERYONE.

1976 Grand Prix•••• ~.}4695

HAPPY NEW· YEAR FROM ALL THE

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
· OF ' GALLIPOLIS

'

John Halliday
Janice . Hanna
Judy Hartenbach
Janice Hively
~rlln Kerns
Ltwls Lutton
Mackenzie .

ao;

Pat McDaniel
Mary PUllins
Dana Rance
Debbie Rhodes
Sue Richards
Linda Roe
PaHy Skidmore

u

.1974 Scout 11 .•.•.•... ~. s2895
Travel top, 258 cU. ln. 6 cy l. engine, auto. trans ., like
11ew tires. radio, 2 wheel dfive.

.
Rosalie Bostic ~
Ruth Casto
Patty Clark
De Iores Coffee
Barbara CUrnutte
Tina. Day
Jerry Hack lor

102 inch clb to axle, extra good, 825x20 tires, 15,000 lb .,
· 2 speed, rear axle, 292 cu. In engin·e .

Roma Smith
Sharron Smith
Ruth Stanley
Evalene Thacker
Joan Thacker ·
Harold Thompson

1974 Chev. 8'•..•• ~ .• :.~ s3495
Fleetsi,de :::heyenne cab, , full chrOme trim , · step
bumper, 454 engine, automat ic power steering &amp;
brakes, rally wheels, air condition ing, color white, real
sharp.

I

'

Huny In For AGood Deal

3 LOCATIONS 10 SERVE YOU!

Special of the Week
Tuesday, Jan. 3 thru Saturday, Jan. 1

ALL BEEF
HOTDOGS

...

CHEESE OOG
(Meat sauce an!l melted cheese)
Reg, 6oc
SPE.CIAL
PRICE

4Qe

Footleng Cheese OQg
Reg. 95c

I

·'

· SPECIAL
PRICE

I

60C

·This special is offered to acquaint rou with the
goodness of our Government Inspected wieners
and our homemade sauce.
'
No limit to quantity of purchaSe. Offer good for .
Drive-In or carry.Out Service Only.
·

MAIN BANK\ SECOND AVENUE
THIRD AVE. BRARCH - HURD AVENUE
VINTON BRANCH ·- VINTON •
"Your Full Service People To People Bank 1'

·POMEROY MOTOR· CO.
'92-2126

"Your Chevy

'

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~aler."

_

Pomeroy

' Open E"venings Untit• P.M..

..·'..

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the AII.SV ~C Dream team
and was named · Kyger
Creek's Best Defensive

Lineman.
Funeral services wlll be
held at II am . Wednesday at
the Ra wllngs-Coats Funeral
Home with the Rev . Olester
Lemley officiating . Burial
will be In the Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire .
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6 to 8 this
evening.

'

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Meigs County Sheriff's
Department Investigated
three accidents over the. New
Year's weekend .iu whlch one
person was injw-ed and two
arrested.
.
The first accident occured
at 1:14 a.m. Sunday on Union
Ave. when 'Randy L. ·Ran. dolph, 18, Rt 2, Pomeroy,
traveling west went off the
road on the right side and·
overturned. • Randolph '·was
transported to Veterans
Memortal Hospital by private
auto.
•
The second accident occurred at approximately 4
a.m. but was not reported
untll 9 a.m. on Nease Hollow
Road In Sutton•' Township
approximately fo\11' tenths of
a mUe east of OR 28.
James Lee Allen, :16, Portland, traveling east on the
narrow townahlp t'oad got hili
'76 Olda In ao(t berm and the
vehicle went to the right,
overturned on Its top in a
creek that was 712 feet below
the level of the road.
The vehicle overturned on a
natural gas line and ruptured
a tine owned by Eugene
Ervin, Rt. 3, Racine. Allep
wu cited to M~gs County
Court for expired operator's
litense.
·
The third accident occurredSunday at'l:30 p.m. on
SR 7-1:14 at ths ·Union Ave.
Intersection. Shelby Dye,
MCArthllf,lraveling south on
SR 7-1:M, waa turning left onto
Union when Homer Lee
lf;vana, a, Ravenswood, ' w.
fa., atarted pasaing and

collided l!'ith the Dye vehicle. ·
· Deputy Dana Aldridge who
was on patrol came upon the
accident. He arrested Evans
for OWl and placed him in the
· cruiser. When the wrecker
arrived on the scene to
remove the vehicle, Deputy
Aldridge got out of the cruiser
to Ialli to the wrecker driver,
and Evans jiUDped out of the
cruiser, got In his pickup
truck and lied the scene.
Aldridge gave pursuit and
fiual!y stopped him near the
Texaco Station below HObson. ·
.
Evans has been charged
with reckless operation,
, eluding an officer, and
driving while under the inHuence. He posted bond and·
was released pending hearmg
in Meigs County Court later
this week.
Brooks Sayre, . Syracuse,
~nd · Burdell McKinney,
Middleport, reported that
sometime Saturday ni.ght or
early Sunday they had six
sets of harness and related
items stolen .from a horse
bam at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds. The value was
set at between $1500 and
$2,000.

Weather
Fair tonlglit, lows in the
teens. Cloudy Wedlieaday,
highs in the upper 30s.
Probablllty of precipitation
30 pet. today, near zwo pet.
tonig .. t, 10 pel. Wedthday.

,,,, ~iii~~,i~';~;':~,~~;,:,:/· ·

~~l~~~d~f:a;;i:·:·~~~ .

rafu or suow Saturday .
Hlgho will be iu the 30s
Tburoday aud Friday and
1u the upper 30s or low 40s
Stha tu rd a,y. Lows will be iu
0 208

;:':':':':':':':·:·:':&lt;·:':·:':':':':':-:::::':':':':':':·:·:':':·,·:·:·:·:·:
CAIRO, Egypt (UP!) President Anwar Sadat today
sald President Carter should
!"lt pressure on Israel to
make additional concessions
for Middle East peace,
especially on the deadlocked
Palestinian issue ; But IsraeU
'Prime Minister Menahem
Begin said such pressw-e
would be 11incmceivable."
Sadat said he would ask
Carter at their . meeting In
Aswan Wednesday to take a
more active ~ole in medl.!'ting..
the deadlock between Egypt
and
Israel
over
the
Palestinian iSsue.
Carter arrived today In
Saudi Arabia where much the
same poSition W"!! expected
to be expressed by Saudi
Arabian· leaders. The Saudis
have given Sadat's peace
efforts 111ly quiet support,
preferring to maintain · their
role as medlstor among the
_ various Arab factions.

"With friendship and
respect, I would like to say
that I never asked the United
States government to use
pressure on Egypt," the
Israeli prime minister said.
"Therefore, I may ask
President Sadat not to appeal
for American prOSllure on
Israel," Begin said in
Jerusalem.
"Pressw-e is inconceivable
to - turn
fairness
into
unfairness," he said.
Sadat, in sta~e~pents pub·
llshed by Cairo newspapers
today said, "Ainerica should
mo~t pressure. on Israel-,
par+Jcularly regarding the
Palestinian question, which is
,the core of the problem."
Sadat repeated Egypt's de. mands that israel withdraw
from all land it occupied
during the 1967 Middle East
war and the establislunent of
a Palestinian state. But
without going into detail,'·the

Horten Brown is dead
Dept., until his retirement in
1970.
. Survivi!lg are his wife,
Lera R.
Browni
two
daughter'!&gt;- Mrs. George
(June) F~y. Columbus, and
Mrs. Richard (Eleanor i
Quelette, Worthlngton;. four
granddaughters and four
great:grandsons .
· Mr. Brown was a membjlr
of the Linworth United
Methodist Church.
Funeral services will be
held at 1:30 p.m. W~esday
at the Rutherford-Corbin
Fune.ral HQme, 515 I'Ugh St.,
Worthlngton. Burial will be in
Kingwood Memorial Park,
Worthington.

Three ·auto accidents reported

1977 Monte Carlo•••••• s6100

1975 Chev. 60 Series ••s4395

u rg'ed to
p re s sure .·I· sraeI

Horten Brown, 13, of Ill E.
Beechwold Blvd., Colilmbus,
a former Meigs County and
l,fiddleport Village official,
died Saturday at Riverside
Hospital in Columbus.
Mr. Brown was former
HONG KONG -CAMBODIA SAID today there could be no
negotiations with Vietnam to end the border war between the deputy probate judge in
two countries until Vietnam with!lraws its troops . . The Meigs County and was a
govenunent-run Radio Phnom Penh was answering on appeal · former clerk of courts in the
by Vietnam Sunday - the day after Cambodia severed county. He was a former
· relations with ita Communist neighbor - to work out the mayor of Middiepprt and
border dispute "ill a brotherly spirit."
during hls residency here
"Democratic Cambodia ablolutely refuses such friendship also served on Middleport
and solidarity," the Phnllll Penh radio broadcast said. "Now Village Council.
again Vle.lnam has launched a large-scale offe1111ive on
He managed the Meigs
Democratic Camllodla and has pretended to ask Democratic Motor Co. in Middleport
. Cambodia to hold tall\s. "This is another' attempt to mislead before moving to Columbus
world Pllblic opinioil and also another attempt to deceive where he was associated with
Democrati~ Cambodia."
the State of Ohio, Use Tax

DURING THE COMING YEAR.

EMPLOYEES OF

TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1978

r ~ews. . • •~n Briefsl Cart~

WE HOPE THAT YOU WILL

'

A PROSPEROUS ONE.

and mother4n-law, Mr. and
Mrs .
Leslie
Hawley ,
Middleport, and several
aunt.!, uncles, nieces and
nephews.
.
Mr. RUe was employed at
Cromaloy Steel Co., Bucyrus.
Rife enrolled at Kyger
Creek High School In 1m
after hls family moved back
to Gallia County from
Columbus. He played football
for the SVAC champion
Bobcats.
In 1973, he was named to

en tine

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORl, OHIO

r;:;w.&lt;:·.¥1.~;;~~'&lt;,%%&lt;..%&lt;..~&amp;~'..%'lli'&gt;'&gt;'*'-'~'*--'~'%.~"-'$

Happy New Year!

WE HOPE, TOO. THAT WE MAY
PLAY A PART IN MAKING IT

Mr. RUe was 'born April 24,
195S at Gallipolis, a son of
Herb R. and Betty Sturge111
Rife of Hendel'!llll , W. Va .
&amp;lrviving bedies his parents
are his ..Ue, DeniSe Hawley
Rile; a daughter, Penni
Dawn, and a son, Chip Alan,
at horne; three brothers,
Michael Rife, Cheshire;
Ularles and Jeff, and a sister,
Terry, all of Henderson; his
grandparents, Mr . .and Mrs.
Raymond Rife, Rt . I,
Gallipolis; hls father-ln~aw

·~----------------~~~----~----------------------------------~----------------------------~----------~~~;;;;.:;.;::;;.:;:.~·

HAPPY NEW

1977 Chev. Impala ••••• s5495

Incident ,..,.e U . George
Mlller and Capt. Sid Utile of
the
Middleport
Pollee
Department and Deputies
Ron Hollon and Duane Wlll of
the sheriff's department.
HawleN was arrested
following the shooting and
was rele8oed shortly later
under• $50,000 bond. The
charge was s eported as
voluntary manslaughter.
Polipe Chlef J . J. Cremeans
said,
howe.vel",
the
investigation is Cllltinuing.

e

···~····················~·~

FIND PEACE ·

whlch was in a ditch in an
l!lley between Broadway and
High Sl,l.
Police said that Rife had
been~t with a .32 ea1lber
-plato! the back yard of the
Hawle residence. Hawley Is
a fa er4n~aw ol the Rife
who ·was taken to Velera1111
Memorial Hospital by the
Middleport Emergency
Squad.
Officials were notHied that
Rife died at 11:44 a .m ;
. Assigned to investigate the

·-

k

.MAY YOUR DREAMS COME
TRUE AND 1978 BRING YOU.
.A .GENEROUS HELPING OF
GOOD HEALTH AND
HAPPINESS.

argument

Bucyrus, .ln Middleport Ill
N~ Year's Day.
_
At
4:20
a.m.,
the
Mlddl'eport
Police
Department answered a call
to the borne of Les Hawley,
459 Broadway, Ml.Weport,
where an argument was
rep&lt;rted undenlay. l?olice
said RUe, shot in the
stomach, apparently tried to
leave the "!C"Re In his car

····~r~
CE:stat&amp;.•

HAPPY NEW YEAR

family

resulted In the gunshot death
ol WWiam Alan Rife, 22,

+

Today ••
•••
A BEITER BUY
••

•

•

less than a month .
13- John and Rosebud
MARCH
Baker killed in auto mishap J effers on ," a Cincinnati ~ control.
3--City Water supplr, down near Wellsv ille, Ohio .
based craft, but no one was
However. Bill Reed, a
to 63 Inches In reservo r from
20- G r a c e
U n I I e d · injured.
m
ember of the Eleanor
++ normal capacity of 12'1a feet . Methodist C~vrch hit by
Volunteer
firemen
rowed
Volunteer
Fire Department, ·
FOR ·ita ·drama and news worthiness with a continuing Leaks continue . Three per- S780,000 fire .
sons , Phyllis Owens. two
26-WYPC .FM stereo goes the crew members of the said the fire appeared to have
effect on nearly every resident of the city and county, the children d ie In . Rt . 2, on air following dedication GNC Towing Co, to safety started · in the front, in the
" Winter of '77" Is our&gt; top choice,. From Jan. 6 through early Gallipoli s fire .
ceremonies at Buckeye Hill s after the fire ·broke out below engine room beneath the
March, city and county residents suffered through sub-uro
13- WJ E H Radio ah · Career Center .
seconds."
.
cabin .
weather, 26 lnches of snow, and an energy crisis due to the nounces 5150,000 expansion
27- Walt e r Rife , retired the Winfield Locks .
There was one dog story and one cat story among the
There was no danger of ·
project .
county educator, succumbs .
' honorable mention winners.
shortage of natural gas. Roads, streets and highway~ were all
!4- Leak In cltr water
JULY
"My hunting dog is so slow he was.-crushed to death
but destroyed by tne area's · worst winter in modern system found. bu traffic
2- Pam McMahon crowned
tirnes. Schoolsandbusinesses.wereforeedtodose,automobile mishap at Th ird and Pine 1977
Gal li polis
River
in a turtle stampede," said Mel Hart, Waynesburg, Pa .
THREE KILLED
· h
d h dr ds f
lin
d for ces city to continue
Recreation Festival Queen . Betz as 8,621 Gall ia ns go to
uff
ed
" A cat was playing with a ball of yarn and swallowed
:NEWARK, N. J, (UP!) owners s er rug tmares an un e o water es an
emergency use
.
4- Jaycees Independence poll s.
it," said Mildred Malmquist, of Burlington . ...The next
pipes were frozen . Numerous ruptures in the city's water lines
APRIL
Day
parade
attract s
9- R lo Grande Red men Three people were killed
day she had nine ldltens and they wer.e all born with
t- Th irtr ·three persons
thousands to Old French City . defeat Republic of China Friday night in a fire that
forced city commissioners to declare an emergency in
February a s water in the main reservoir dropped from its attend fina public hear ing on
6--Silver Memor ia l Bridge basketball team 92·89 before destroyed a 75-year-&lt;Jid hotel ·
sweaters."
. he
tw diff
t
l
A OOM Park District project. cl osed for repairs.
2, 4001ans at Lyne Center .
j
st63
al
2
r
norm 112 eetto u
lllC son o eren occasons.
4- Tom 's StereoCenler hit
8'-00MParkDistrictsign s
10- Paul Pope , -Rt. 1. housing mostly transients,
near panic • touched off by a blizzard Jan. 2S will be by th ieves, more than $3,000 optlonlobuy643acresofland Patriot, named Gall ia's authorities said. Fire officials
remembered here for years to come .
worth of items stolen .
in Perry and Green Twps ..
OJtstanding Conser'w'ationist. said additional bodies might
+++
. . ._
6-0id Holzer Hospital
10- J ones Bo ys strike SEORC honors Or . Thomas he found inside the four-story
•
underway .
Morgan a s Gallio 's " Man of Lucerne Hotel, but only one
OTHER top ·news stories 00 the local sc.ene included a building sold to Judge Ron
Calhoun and wife. Ohio River
18- Mercu ry hits century the Year .' 1
$780,000 fire which destroyed the Grace United Methodist . crests here at 47 .2 feet. well
mark here first ti me this .
13- Andrew Lemley named body was removed Friday
Chw-ch sanctuary on June 20 ; the Feb. 20 blaze which below flood stage .
summer .
Distric t Deputy Grand night because firefighters '
destroyedtheoldQueenBeeHotel ; Gallipolisswimmingpool
7- Ric hard Mills an ·
2o--City School s Supt. Don Master for 12th Masonic feared parts of the building
crisis (fQC the first time in nearly 40 years the city had no pool nounces resignation as city
Staggs awarded 5· year Di st rict .
. would collapse. Workers
·
manager . Kiwanis Club contract.
"
15~B i ll Qu ickie assumes
because the old tank failed to pass a state health department observes JOih anniversary .
23-Gallia teachers, board duties of Ohio Bell Teleppone hoped t o remove the
inspection and the new poolattbe recreation complex was still
14- S EO EMS
awarded
resume negotiations :
· Co. business office .
remaining bodies today.
EAS contratt .
2&gt;--Ciyde Ramey . Terry
17- S2 .5
million
GS I
under constructiori ).
+++
19- M. Harold Brown
McCune
charged
with building project in full swing .
appointed city manager for
murder of Albert Thompson ,
22-Ground broken for new
THE 1977 primary and general elections created lo.t s of remainder of'vear .
Rt . 2, Chesh.ire. Ma ssiv e SJOO,OOO Dr . S. L. Bossard
HOLD IT!
»-Joel Oennjs to heed water teak repaired at Meniorial Llbrary .
interest last year and in November, Gallii Countians used a
By
WASI'UNGTON (UP!)
!"lOCh card type voting system for the first time ever. The OOM Park District .
Womeldorff &amp; Thoma s
25- Rio Grande Lions host
Willis T. Leadingham
Hardware.
annual holiday tournament at
Gallia County Teachers Association strike and the miners . Jo-Bo!J Spears found not
Take one deep breath before
'Realtor
guilty of robbery complicity .
26-Grant Lang , veteran Lyne Center . Right.of-way
you s hout "Happy -New
strike in September and December created local news
MAY
·
Gallia lawman, dalmed by purchases for completion of
- 1978 will arr.lve one
Year"
headlioes. And the annual July Fourth celebration, Gallla . &gt;-City commission favors
death .
Rt . 15 begin .
AUGUST
27- Roger L. Nibert , 18, second later than you think.
County JWlior Fair and Bob Evans Fall Festival round out our annexation of upper Rt. 7
In this sense, real estate • top 10 news ·stories of 1977. There were many others, including territory ·
The Commerce Department
Sure mortgage Interest
1-Gallia's first six day tal r Ga 11 ia' 5 e ighth highway
Is
the
most
worth
.wh
ile
.•
·
8Mrs.
Arnold
Glassburn
,
5o h vidlm .
·
r ~ t es are hlgh~r than they
said time will stand stlll for
fires; eight highway fatalities and drownings, plus ground- B•' dwell,
named
begins
.
Pam
Miller
of
ut
·
30Terrl
Short
named
Were, but so are the market Investment you can make, • b ak .
· foc new 1ac11
·1·t·1es thraug hou t the Cl·ty an d "Mother-of-the-Year." 1977
eastern
crowned
19]7 junior Na II on a I 4· H winner. G'tnny
one second· on New Year's
re mgeeremomes
fair queen
.
).!a lues of&lt; homes and land . and your best protection •
eve
so
ole
world's
county
.
14$1.6
million
Pinecrest
3-City
applies
for
federal
.
Powell
named
·
Ohi~
winner
.
Please believe me when 1 against Inflation . And don't •
timekeepers
can
adjust
"+
+
+
Care
Center
dedicated
.
and
state
funds
on
recreation
OECEMBE
the
priceless •
say that even at today's forget
17. More .than . 200 attend , "Omplex
.
l-· Or, .· Geor'Qe
. h rna de
HERE is a b.rief summary of activities wh1c
•
d
t Greaves
'th 648 clocks with a "leap second"
infla1ed pr ices and l.nterest . dividends your family will •
spe~t~! Se~mr Citizens Day ...
ll - E iahty Gallia Coun - restgns tn espu e wt
to coordinate them with the
rates, real estate Is a better e'nioy as you live· in your e headlines during 1977:
acttvdtes tn Public Square.
tians tile petitions for board .
earth 's spin, which slows one
GAHS
t
fJ t S.EOAL
J...... Yule parade launches
buy than anything else you growing investment.
~
JANVART · c.ap _ures rs .,
November elect ion .
1977 Chr.ls tmas season .
can go after with borrowed
•
second each year .
Montgomery
.17- EIE!drlc off In city 21!2 tenms htle. .
, 18.-&lt;:ity school board , CEA
1- James
takes
over
as
Gall
ia
County
hour$
after
power
failure
.
18Herb
Rtfe
found
guilty
agree
on
terms
.
James
Dieh
l
Ga
vin 's three mines closed .
dollars.
e
Record loW of minus 15 on complicity in aggravated
named SEOAL president. .
\l -One-half mill ion dollar
Financing for other
• Sheriff . Michae l HarrisOn
Gallla County baby of degrees recorded here . Ice robber.y ch.a rge. gets 4-25
2o-Arth ur J . Fooce, 33 ~ Rt . enterpr ise to be built in
purchases often costs twice ·
• first
t;:logs river . Activities gr ind years m Oh.•o Pen.
2, Patriot. drowns in Oh io Kanaug~
for
selling ,
as much - and these things
e 1977.
5- Taxpayers suit . filed to a halt.
22-0ftlc•als report new
River while fishing at Up · rerairing
re c reati o n
depredate while a house
..
• against
county
com 19- City water ~ t critical , swidmming pool won ' t be
stream Public Use Area ..
wal3~c$rla, 36. 3 , 311 sou' ght '•n
L·irna , named new ·city
.
' point after tw·o ruptures .
rea y for 1977
24 s
t
t k
usually grows in ~alue .
If there .Is anything we •
I
manager.
ss•oners
.
'
26-~allia
snowfall
totals
25_.:_01d
s·
w
..
lmmlng·
pool
area-.
.
evere
s
orm
.
s
n
es
·
judgment
suit
a~a
.
inSf
city
.
m
Check the trade·in val_u_e of can· do to help you In the. •
....,
5 G
db
f
6- Snow blamed in five of
. 27-Dr.. Francls W. Shane
26 Inches for month , falls state health inspection .
SEPTEMBER ·
.1 - roun ro en ._or new
YOI.!r car when yOu tu.rn it In field . of real ~estate please • seven area mishaps.
ann01.~nces retlrment.
aFour
.
below
zero
establ
ishing
a
new
all
-time
City
may
not
have
Mthing
school
te·
a
(:hers
CR1o
,
Gr~.
nde
CCol
County
1ege
·
for a new one. "'I so for the phone or drop In .at e
7
2a- Rio Careers Center
t d dl · It
markforacc!Jmulation .
facilities this summer. Tom
trike
·
.om':"un1ty
ol 1ege
past .ten years, real estate LEADINGHAM . REAL e
28- New
storm
hits Cable , ·21, G$1 . res ident.
s 9_ c:), 10 Va lley Publishing· Technical . Car:eer_s . Center . deed ls sl.gned .
values have doubled !he ESTATE, 512 Second Ave., . • re,g~~lnnt;r Y· onslaught
Jo-New city commission ,
continues, schools rema in .~ Buckeye state.
drowns in Qnio River .
Co . bfcomes
parf of
19-Famlly of four m P~_rry
InCrease in the Dow Jones Gallipolis. Phone 446-7699 .
solicitor and municipal fudge
29- Cri'sis eniergency plan
26- Kyger Creek High
Multimectia. County teachers Twp . left homeless after f~re.
average.
~e'rt here to h~lpl
• closed .
·1 4 - Fresh snowfall
ready in Gallla as resul1 of School baseball team. ad ·
end' strike .
C. P. Morris, 47, native of sWorn in .
blankets area .
energy crisis.
vances to Class A Reg1onal
ll- Gallipolis firemen host
Jo--Roof at Ga'lllpolis Boat tournament. Dr . John H.
Hocking Valley Training
Club.collapses, causesS10,000 Budd , ,Pt esldent .elec.t of
School in ali-day session .
- TWENrYYEARSago,fromthefilesoftheDailyTribune
damage to boat doc k Am e " ·can
MedIC a I
14-Jones Boysstrike ends . and weekly Gallia Times ... Dr. Ella Lupton called oldest seal
facilities.
Associat1on, guest speaker
16- 0on Cox elected to
i 1
-GSI
FEBRUARY
during fiflh anniversary
Galli a County Junior Fair · saler in United States at age 95. , . Dr. R. A. N P e, 47, ex
2- Store hours cut . bac~ celebration of Holzer Medical , board .
. staff member, dies in Columbus ... Ethel Armstrong, director
18- Gilbert Beard, · 71, of Holzer School of Nursing, says 13 graduates pass state
here due to gas shortage . Center .
Schools remain closed .
JUNE
retire-d banker , dies.
examination .. . Noel Houck, 66, Bladen farmeti, claimed :;·.
4-Break In weather shor1.
1- $600.000 loan approved
21 - Carter &amp;· Evans low Dr. Jay Bradshaw to head Gallipolis Youth Canteen . . .,D. 0.
lived , Flood Insurance plans . tor Buckeye Rural Electric
bidder for !'leW library
. ..
approved by ctty com . Improvement projects ..
. project .
..
Taber in charge of Gallia County Historical Society actiVIties
3- Sgt. Joe OWns of city
28- Thompson. murder trial . . . RobertS. Betz sworn in as new county court judge,
mission . Thieves busy despite
.
.
natned
begins
. OCTOBER
·------~~~~!"'~~~~~~~----,
freezing
weather.
public
force
12- Armed rObbery probed . " Lawman-of-the-Year ."
,.
at Stock yards.
7'- Recreatlon program In
3- David T. ·Evans named
u ..:.. Riq Grande ColleQe jeopardy folloWing'. loss of
assistant prosecuting at ,
captures Mid -Ohio Con - swimming pool revenue.
torney .
Frank ~orter , 7J,·. drowns in
4- Federal Mogul an .
terence basketball title .
nounces eKpansion project .
· 6- Gallipolis Com .
missioners oppose State Issue
2.
10- Aut omat ic traffic
signal sought at Silver Bridge
•
Plaza Shopping Center .
May we thank you for all our
12- City receives petition
for Upper Rt . 7 annexaJion ..
dealing the past year. Stop in
14- Bob Evans F"arm
Festival underway . GAHS
golf team advanc;es to state .
today and inspect and driv.e
tournament.
17- City observes !87th
~NO
·anniVersary.
our. fine selection of cars and . ...:
20- Ci·t y , county to get
$260,750 for park and
·trucks
recreation comp lex . Mike
Fenderbosch named Gallla
Crime Alert Coordinator.
23- City receives $15,000
gift for new swimming pool.
29-Five persons kil led in
4 dr., 11,000 miles by careful owner. Beautiful white
plane dash at Green Couoty
over dark red finish, 305 V-a, ·automatic, P.S.. P.B., air
Parachute Club , Bidwell .
conditi_oned. spare never used, showr~)m clean . S'a ve.
Thomas Clothiers buy s New
York Clothing firm .
31- F. B. Cornwell , 77 ,
Bidwell, killed in auto ac ·
Red with White vinyl top, carefully driven and loaded
cident .
NOVEMBER
with every option Inc. air, tilt whe:eL speed and cruise,
!- Concrete apron installed
full power . COmpany" car, never titled.
around new
municipal
swimm ing_pool. .
.
a- James Bennett unseats
. Mur icipaJ JudQe RobEirt s .
sPort wheels, air, cri,Jise, tilt power ~lndows, cloth .
interior, bucket seat. AM-FM radio, coiCJr silver with
matching landau top: A really clean sharp car .

••
••
•••
••
•••
•
••

TODAY is the first day of 1978, with 364 more to follow .
Happy New Year ! .. :

2o-&lt;Jveen . Bee

= --

Deputies also are investigating the entry of the
Jake Lee home in Racine.
The Lee family had been

vacationing in Florida. The
entry was discovered Mon·
day afternoon . The case Is
still pending.

BI·ssell
h eadm•g
h oar
·d

MEIGS COUNTY TUBERCULOSIS NUHSE Jane
Brown, R.N . was given special rtoco~nition at the recent
community se rvice recogniti on program or the Modern
Woodmen o£ America. She is ·pictured here with he r
husband , Russell . They live iD Pon1cr oy.

Service ·marked
•
to communzty

Egyptian pr"'!ident also said
he was ready to re-evaluate
the security guarantees
demanded by Israel.
Community service WlHI cnmrl membership post While Carter has warmly ·
•
(ecognized
when the Modern marked in 1921 . Pam ela
endorsed Sadat's peace ·
Woodmen
of
America , Cump HundCrson, ' nursing .!!uperinitiative, he told reporters· on
10900, Christmas party held visor at Veterans Memoriul
the eve of his overseas trip
at the Senior Citizens Ha ll in ·'Hospital, Pomeroy, rc,!!eived
that
he
opposes
an
her 25 yea r membership ph\.
Coolville.
independent Palestinian state
.
Honored
were
Jane
Brown
,
Presented a gift wu~ Ml•s
in the area, prompting a
Anne Walden, II.N., Coolville,
EAST
MEIGS
_
The
R.N.,
tuberculnsis
nurse
£or
, strong respoose froin Sadat.
retired,
with the record. of
Eastern
Local
School
District
Meigs
County
ami
director
or
Sadat will meet Carter for
having
cured
rnr 28,000 bubies
Board
of
Ed.
u
catiop
Meigs
County's
Tubl!rculosis
45 minutes Wednesday in
·
durlng
her
ycHrs
of service In
organized
and
cmiducted
Clinic
wHich
is
Paid
£or
anri
Aswan, in the shadow of the
the
nursery
ul
St. JoNe51h:
business
Monday
:
operated
from
thc
T.
B.
levy;
huge Soviet-built Aswan ·!lam
HospilRI
in
Pnrker sbur~ .·
Deryl
Well
and
James
·
Phyllis
C.
Jackson
,
R.N
..
that· became a symbol oT
. Th e Woodm en's pledge
Soviet prosence in Egypt in Caldwell, new board mem· Athens City-County ilcnilh
service
was c•ondu¢tt!d by
hers,
and
Dorsel
Larkins,
Dep.artrncnt,
and
.
L
or
et
iu
the 1950s and 1960s.
Egyptian officials said reJected, were given their Hedd Auvil, M.D. with orri&lt;'es Charles Woodc und ·C. ·IA.'e
Sadat was certain tO urge a oath of o£fice by Eloise in Parkersburg. W. Va . a nd · Henderson . Aflc1' the dirutef
Cl1rist1n.a s (.'nrols wetc sun~ ·
Coolville.
more active American role in Boston, clerk-treasurer.
led by Mrs. Myrl Cuoklcy ·und
The
board
reelected
Doug
A
"Hal£
Century
Club"
pin
the Middle East peaceSnntu
distributed treats rmd
Bissell
president
£or
tlie
next
.
and
membership
certifi
cate
making process.
year and Larkins was named were awarded to Arthu r presents to children. A {'hct!r
·
.· vice president. Regular Shanks, Coo lville , who group dcHvcrcd r Cf rc Nh·
meetings will be at 7:30p .m . displayed to the g~oup his 56- .. ments and trcuts tt.J shut·tn
(Continued on page a}
on the second Tuesday of year~ld MWA invitutlu11 1lo
each month with pay to be $40
a month for new members
'
e
and $20 for old members.
Mrs. Boston was given a four
year appointment as clerk,
treasurer.
,
During
the
regular
meeting, Mrs. Boston was
Mayor Fred Hoffman said authorized to secure an adtoday income derived from vance draw-on local taxes or .
his court and administrative, borrow money i£ necessary to
WASHINGTON iUPI ) ]u'diciary ."
fees during 1977 totaled meet the January bills. Julia ·Sen. Robert Dole asked the
A cow-l s t&gt;okestnan said the
$25,868.50 which is more than Vaughan was named a Supreme Court today to Issue reque st would be considered
half of what Middleport's substitute
te,acher. an emergency order blocking by .Juslic't! Byron White, who
total operating budget was 30 Graduation was set for June 4 llie return of the historic is responsible for the lOth
years ago.
with baccalaureate at 2 p.m. Crown o£ St. Stephen to ·u.s. judicial Circuit in which
Biggest source of income and commencem~nts at 8 Hungary .
h qie originated his suit .
was the mayor's court which p.m .
"The transfer of the Holy White may re£er the " petition
produced $11,484.40 In fines,
The board approved a CroWn or St. Stephen is ;i for emergency relief" to the
$2,~.60 in costs, and $9,226
substitute driver for the route r.natter of sl).ch international full court to decide or he may
In forfeited bonds.
of Frank Upton, driver and significance tha.t it may only acl on the rLaques~ ~ himself,
Other sources of income, mechanic, during the rold
be accomplished pursuant w' U1e spokesman said .
all of which goes into the . months. Dennis Eichinger a treaty" requiring approval
Dolo has joined effortB by
• was nalned assist.ant ju'nior:,- by a . two-thirds vote of the anli-eornmunist · HUh~arian­
general fund, were:
T~xi ' licenses, $112 .50; . high basketball coach .
Senate ,
the
Kansa s Arncricaos to prevent return
zoning permits, $62; bilUding
The board authorized Republican argued.
u! l he l ,OOO.year&lt;&gt;ld c rown to
permits, $229.50i parking transportation for one han·He asked the court to issue Budapest, but all of his
permits, $270; · merchant dicapped student. The board · an order "restraining the appeals to a series of l'Ourts
police, $1,544; demolition joined the Ohio State School president ·and all of[icecs, have only resulted in brief
permits, $14;
accident .Boards Assn., and purchased employees and agents of the de lays, He said Monday he "
reports, $84.50; turnkey fees, liability insurance for board United States acting under was " rlot all that optimistic"
· $95; soliciting permits, $20; members. It was agreed to his direction from dispos ing ~bout his chanc-es £or success
trash hauling permits, $50; secure rot\! repair estimates. or the crown .. , until \he in the Supreme Court.
poster permits, $30, and Bills wete approved for underly.ing · cons titutional . Secretary o£ State Cyrus
miscellaneous, $60.
conflict ... is resolv\'(1 by the Vance now plans to deliver
payment.
the crown to Budapest
Friday, breaking away !r~m
the presideniial trip in Paris,

Mayor puts
$25 868.50

in treasury

Dole says crown
of treaty

~eight

Saudis welcome •American .President

Log home razed
by fire Sunday

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia :Marharji Desai. The accord
(UPI) - President Carter said the ·spread'-of nuclear
arrived today in Saudi Arabia weapons muSt be halted, but
for some of the more did not specify a means to
important talks of his seven· that end.
.,
nation tour.
There were no crowds at
Carter was greeted at the the airport, and women were
airport by King Khaled alter conspicuously · absent - a
!lying here from New Delhi tradition of this desert
where he signed a joint U.S.- kingdom of oil and Islam Indian ·declaration with , and there will be none at .the
state dinner hosted by the
Indil'n Prime Miinister
.

king and Crown Prince Fahd. be unto you," Carter prepa~ed to press for more
At the airport, Mrs. Carter responded. "The primary U.S. arms sales and to ask
walked a respectful six . feet purpose of my trip and this Carter to apply pressure on
behlnd her husband as is the ..visit Is peace .
Israel for a Middle EBSt.:
"The first meeting between settlement and to ooften his ' 'f. two slory log home at
Moslem tradition.
Bald Run was destroyed by,
"Mr. President, I welcome the leaders of Saudi Arabia stand on the Palestine issue . fire
Sunday morning at 2:13
you In our country as a great and the United States was . Carter wa~ unlikely to Will' a .m. Charles Legar Pomeroy
friepd and I thank you for when President Franklin D. open Saudi endorsement or , Fire Chlel reported .
your eH&lt;rta in finding a just Roosevelt came to the Gulf of Egyp~an Pre:nd~nt. An.w ar
Legar said the horne was
and lasting solution ... in .the Suez and met King · Ibn Sadat s ~ace mitiative smce ., engulfed in flames when the
Middle East," the king said. Saud," Carter "'!id.
the ·~Udis prefer to act as firemen arrived. It is
"Salaam Aleikum, peace
Saudi Arabia is the world's mediators between . the believed that the fire ·started
largest sow-c~ . of oU and It moderate.• and hard.Jmers. ·either in the laundry room or
was
Instrumental
in
Ind1a Carter and h1s the kitchen.
. ·
.
.
preventing a prlce.rise for at W1fe, Rosa lynn, strolled, ,· Firemen feared there may
least six months attlie recent · . ~mong .
th~, . so-&lt;:!'lled . be bOdies in the house as the
untouchables m the v1llage , "alarm was called in by a .
meeting of the Organization
of Petroleurp Exporting of : Daulatpur-Nas~rabad IS ·passerby . It was later
A count by United Press between 300 and 400. persons Countries in
Caracas, mileseastofNewDelhl. They discovered that the family
International at 5:30 a.m. could be killed in traffic
did so alter Desai urged him , was in Carrolton, Ohio. The
Venezuela. ,
EST showed at least 304 accidents during the 711bowpeople died In traffic mishaps holiday weekend, which to Caask~twthouelteezbee ~=:::: to see rural India, wrn;re 80 home wsa owned by David
perc:ent of the country s 625 . McEwen .
during the holiday weekend. began at 6 p.m . local time indefinitely as a means of million ~pie hve.
'
A breakdown of accidental Frtday and ended at bolstering the faUing dollar
An American Em)lassy
deaths:
midnight. ·
,
abroad but agreement on this staffer described Carter' s
304
Last year, 339 persons died . could be difficult. The U.S. · visit to India as "a huge love · ' E-il. UNIT CAlLED
Traffic
Fires
51 in traffic accidents during the balance of payment deficits feast" and Carter agreed . The PomerQy Emergency
Planes
)3 New Year's weekend, faF are blamed on the billions of · with the description .
'"'squad answered a call io
'
368 below the National s8fety dollars the . United ~tates
Toial .
Carter was. driven in a Beech st. , at .6:23 a .m.
California reported 31 • Council estimate .
. must P!'Yfor imported oil and motorcade to the memorial to Monday for Roy Reuter who
traffic deaths and Texaa 25.
A safety council spokesman . this driVes the dollar down in Mohandas Gandhl, architect was taken to Veterans
No fatal .aecldents were said Americans traveled less w.o rld markets. The Saudis' Qf India's independence from Memor~l Hospital where he
reported in Alaska, HawaU, last New Year's ·&gt;weekend annuallncomeof$40billion in · Britain 30 years ago, and said .was admitted. At 10:18 p.m ..
Idaho, NO!'th Daliota and the than In
past years. U.S. dQ)lars could face a loss !ater Gandhl's prlnciples . of Monday the fire department
District of Columbia.
Americans ~ppeared to be
U the dollar problem is not nonviolence shaped th~ went to' the home of Mrs.
The
National ·· Safety cmtinuing that trend last solved.
phi10110phy of the late Martin Norma Wilson, E. Mair!!lt., to
Council had ~i estimated weekend.
Khalelt .and Fahd were Luther King Jll:
extingulii a grass flrf.

!"

It's back to work fu a new year
Uulled Presolntematloaal
The calendar said the new
year began Sunday, but for
mllllons of Americans today
marked the first day of work,
school or shopping in• 1978.
The Holiday season, which
began with Thanksgiving and
stretched through Christmas
and New Year's Day, has
ende(l. Government offi~s.
· stores and schools re\UI1led ro
JlOrmal sesai111s and revelero
fP,t away their hata and horils
undl Dec. 31.
Hallday weekend travelers
poured 111to the highways late
Monday In a last-minute rush
homeward .

,

.

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