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                  <text>12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., ~'riday. F'eb. 10. 1978

Revision proposal to be rewritten
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
proJXlsal lo drastically revise
Ohio's school finance system
is to be rewr itten in
subcommittee early next
week and sent back to the full
House Education OJmmittee
by Tuesday.
The measure. sponsored ~
Rep. John E. Joh nson, ()Orrville, was sent to subcommittee Thursday. It sets up a
ba sic
education
fu nd
unaerwr1 Uen tly income

taxes and lottery pro&lt;.&lt;!eds.
Rep . Robert J . Boggs, ()Jefferson, chairman of the
Ed u cation
Committee,
named himself as chairman

of lhe sulx..'Ommittee, and also
appointed Reps . Larry H.
Cliristman,
D-Englewood ;
Helen H. F'ix, R.Oncinnati;
Cha rles R. ' Sax be, RMechanicsburg; and Thomas
C. Sawyer. D-Akron.
Plans call for . the
subcommittee to meet

Johnoon said he believes
Monday and report the bill
back to the full committee for . the subcommittee will make
fu rther revisions at a clatifyin g changes and
perhaps amend the school
Tuesday meeting.
Johnson said he hapes for a subsidy formula to reflect the
vote the following week so the cost of doing business in
Ways and Means Committee various school districts.
He said he hopes the biU
cah receive the measure for
study. That committee can ba acted upon by the
already is working on a Ways and Means Committee
companion constitut ional in April , although legislative
amendment
whi ch
is leaders ha ve expressed plans
necessary if the etJucation to adjourn that month .
" If we adjourn in AprU , we
fund is fo IJe establisfied.

Gallia County's Bob Evans
receives Governor's Award
Bo~

Evans received the
Governor's Award for out·
standing achi evement as a

sau sage

· ma ker,

res·

taurateur , Civic lea der,
and phila nt hropist as a
highlight of Thursday night's
45th ann ual Ohio Newspaper
Association conven tion in
Columbus.
He

wa s

one

of

21

distinguished Ohioa ns thus to
be honored.
Bob E vans sausages

also a member of the Ohio
Boa rd of Regents.
At every, Ohio State Fair
Bob Evans buys the grand
champion 4-H hog. In addi ti on, he occasiona ll v
pu rchases
t lic
gra n d
cha m pion
or
reser ve
champion steer .

Too, he is a pr eservationist,
having one of the few herds of
Spanish Barbed Mustangs,
which were verging on ex-

are

t inction. This must ang is the

sold in 12 states and the
District of Columbia , wh ile
there are 32 Bob Evans
restaurants in five states:
Ohio, Ke ntucky , West

original cow pony oft he West.
He has preserved the huge
Un ion stockyards sign which,
fo r 06 years, hung over the
.entrance to the slockya rdS in
01icagn and may be seen on
the grounds of the Bob Eva ns
restaura nt a nd the rarm
museum at Hio Grande.
Bob Evans annually con·
·ducts the largest free crafts
f~stiv a l in the world - the
Bbb Eva ns Fa rm Festiva l in
October.
Th e seventh annu al
chicken·fl ying con test will be
held May 20 in the area
across US 35 from the Rio
Grande res ta uran t - a n
event which a ttracts a t·
tcntion of national TV and

Virgin ia,
Illinois.

Mi chiga n,

a nd

He is a conservationist of
wide renown, starting with
the habitat he esta blished for
wildlife on the Bob Evans
Fanus. He is a member of the
Ohio Wildlife Council. He is
-

Special

Communication
All Master Masons
invited to Clifton
Lodge No . 23 AF &amp; .
AM, Mason, W. Va .,
February 11 at 7: 30
p.m . Oyster Stew will
be
served
after
meeting.

wire services.
,
I_n 1971 he was named the
Ohio Cnnserva tionist of the

Year.
He donated Sta nl ey L.
Eva ns Field a t Rio Grande
College to honor his late
father .

The 21 persons of distinction receiving the Governor's
Award . according to United
Press Int ernational, were:
Dr . Ernest L. Boye r ,
Dayton, U,S. Commissioner.
of Education.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Bray,
Y11 ungstown, professiona l
dance rs.
Ric ha rd G. Christian .
Day ton, presi dent , Marsteller Incorpo rated.
Joseph E. Co le, Cleveland,
pres iden t, Co le Nationa l
Corp.
Dr.
George
Crile ,
Junior, Cleveland, emeritus
consu lta nt at the CleV'e land
Clinic; surgeon and author.
Bob Eva ns, Rio Grande,
president ,. Bub Evans Farm
Sausage.
Mar ga r et Hamilt on ,
Cleveland. act ress.
The Most Rev. James A.
Hickey, bishop of Cleveland
Ca tholic Diocese.
D.
Robe rt
Laughter,
Dayton, president, Laughter
Corp.
Carl H. Lindner. Cincinn ati, president, American
Fi na ncia l
Corp .
and

publisher of The Cincinnati
Enquirer.
Milan March , Youngstown.
president , Ohio AF' L-CIO.
Jim Marshall, Columbus,
defensiv e end with the
Minnesota Vikings.
Thurm.an Munson , Canton,
catcher with the New York
Yankees.
Hugh O'Brian, Cincinnati,
actor.
· J o hnn y Paycheck ,
Green field, country and
western singer.
Susa n Perkins, Middletown, Miss America , 1976.
Ruy Ross, Springfield,
director of Region 2A of the
United Auto Workers Union .
Eamie Shavers, Warren,
hea vyweight boxing contender.
George M. Steinbrenner
III. Cleveland, chairman of
the Board of the American
Ship Building Co. and principal owner of the New York
Yankees.
W. R. Tirnken Jr ., Canton,
chairman of the board ,
Tirnken Co.
Tom Weiskopf, Massillon ,
professional golfer .

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from paae I) ·
a Transportation Department spokesman said it was "too
dangerous'' to ' lear the oozing , mud, "especially )Vith the
forecast for more heavy rains and .high ~inds . "
ATLANTA - AN ALABAMA PHYSICIAN testified Thursday that Rep . Larry McDonald, D-Ga., practiced incompetent
medicine and strayed from his proper medical field by
treating a lung cancer patient with Laetxile.
Dr. John Durant, testifying in the $6 million malpractice
suit against McDonald in U.S. Di;!lrict Cow'!, said he based his
testinnony on the medical records of the patient, John L. Scott.
GRANVIlLE. OHIO - THE UNITED STATES is "a
nation barricaded into safety," and U. S.' Rep. Shirley
Chisholm, D-New York, says government must find the causes
of crime in order W reduce it.
·
"The abatement of crime Ues not in the haoos of the police
but in reducing the stresses and strains that bring about so
much crime," Mrs. Chisholm said Thursday night in opening a
Denison University symposium on human rights.
ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA - ETiiiOPIAN TROOPS
backed by warplanes are advancing steadily in a pincer
movement against the SoiJlaJi-held town of Jijiga in their
week-old offensive to recpature the Ogaden Desert, diplomatic
sources said today.
The Ethiopians have gained more than 15 miles aoo are
ni&gt;w about halfway to the strategic former radar base captured
by Somali troops late las\ year, the sources said.

will get the message that the
leader ship
and
other
legislators around here have
decided to postpon e a
comprehensive solution on
th e education financi ng
problem until next year,"
said Johnson.
The Education Committee
heard fu rth er testimony
Thur sday fro m the Ohio
Association of Public School
Employees and the Buckeye
-Assoc iation
~f
School
Administr a tors on the
meaning of a "thorough and
efficient"· state schoo l
funding program as defined
by Hamilton County Court in
ruling the current system
unconstitutional.
Meanwhile, Rep. Myri H.
Shoemaker . D-Bourneville,
cha lrman of the House
Fin anC'e
Committ e e
introduced a $3.3 million
appropriation to make up for
state emer gency funds used
for Industrial development
projects such as the Ford
Motor Co. plant in Clermont
County.
The
measure
was
introduced at a housekeeping
session . Both the Senate and
House are in recess until next
week .
Rep. James L. Baumann,
D-Colurnbus , offered a bUI
reducing the school year by
one day for every day the
governor orders or requests
schools to close because of a
fuel shortage or the weather .
Rep . George D. Tablack,
D-Carnpbell, introduced a bill
requiring the Ohio Lottery
Commission , and not · the
governor, to appoint its
executive director .
·
Rep. Dale Locker. D-Anna,
proposed legislation allowing
a volunteer rescue service
organization that conducts a
bingo game to use the gross
receipts of the game to
provide emergency medical
services.

UMW•••

(Continued from page I)
contentS ot a magazine
article that attacked Miller 's
administration .
were
Angry
words
exchanged and others
stepped in to break up the two
men.
In West Frankfort, Ill ., the
presidents
and
vice
presidents of 23 UMW locals
in Illinois asked Miller to
ri'Sign immediately, .. and 52
local presidents of District 6
met at Bellaire, Ohio, and
said they have voted to reject
the tentative settlement. That
district covers 16,000 Ohio
and northern West Virginia
miners.

APPEARING

Sometimes. in the day today operati ons of our bank,

we forge110 te ll ou r customers

AT THE

how wonde rfu l we th ink they are.

'INN PLACE'

For thi s reason we have set asid e th is period

around S t ·V&lt;.~ I e n t iil c' s Day as our
"C ustome r Apprec iati on Ti me·: .. to IN you know
how l'l)ty imporlllll! you arr !o us .
and to com•eyour thanks}Uryourpatronagl'.

You are invited to stop in our bank
and branches on Saturday; Feb. 11
and Tuesday, Feb. 14 to have
coffee and cookies with us.

. pa~,, ·e:.:r
h,,......
nk
the bank of
....... l

FDIC .

.___._

111

iiiit.O, 1172

Veterau Memorial Hospllal
ADMITTED - Bonnie I
Rife, Middleport ; Brian
ANDERSON ROBINSON
Diehl , Ra cine ; Crystal
J . Anderson Robinson died
McCourt, Pomeroy; Marie at 3 p.m. Thursday at his
Pursley, Racine ; . Edna
home, 28 Vinton St., a utile
Roush, Racine ; Ruth Wolfe,
over three months short of his
Raci ne; , E dgar Roush,
lt)(lh birthday.
Minersville.
He was born May 24, 1878.
DISCHARGED - Martha
James Anderson RobinSearls, Fay Sauer. Gladys son 's long life was varied.
. Rumfield, David Riggs. Anna
He worked at a sawmill.
Alley, Betty Spaun, Frances
He tught school.
Mart in, Charles McCloud,
He fanned.
Lauren Hoffma n, Gwen
He worked for the old
Folmer.
Agricultural Adjustment
Administration.
Holzer Medical Center
He was an insurance agent.
IDischarges)
His birthplace was Roane
Eliza Adams, Larry Bailey, County, W. Va ., and his
Kat hy Bell, Mrs . Jackie parents were David Jackson
Berry and daughter, Farris
Robinson and Margaret Hoke
Call, Mrs. Lewis Chaltln and Robmson. He was the last of
son , Charles Colley, Golden thelf. seven children. He
Collins, Billy Cooksey , mar:r1ed Ivy Hope Tayl~r
Richard Crager, Lee Ann April ~· 1903, at her nother s
Depriest, Bobbi Dunfee, Roy horne m Roa~e Co~y . They
Eads, Ailene Head, Margaret came to Gall1poll:" m 1914, not
Loudner, Mandie Mahorn, long after a great flood, and
George Nutter. Elizabeth he wa~ here for the greatest
Phillips, Joshua Ruff, Kathy · flood, m 1937.
Sickles, Anderson Spaulding,
Anderson and Ivy h~d five
Jessie Walker, Leon Wader. children - all surv1vmg the ~1r.st three born m West
V1rgm1a . (seven miles from
Clendemn ), and the two
SQUAD CALLED
younger ones born after they
The Pomeroy Emergency
moved to Gallia County. Here
Squad was called to West
tbey bought a :100-acre farm
Main St. at 11:00 p.m. Thurs- on M1~1 Creek Roa~. ·
day for Clarence Struble who
Besides farmmg, he
was taken to Holzer Medical
worked part-tune for the AAA
Center. At 6:43 p.m. Thursnot the automobile
day the squad went to Forest
a~soctabon
- for 13 years,
Run Road for Edgar Roush w1th 10 of those
years In the
who was taken to Veterans
f1eld and three years full-time
Memorial Hospital.
~the offiCe. He then became
an agent for the Farm
Bureau Insurance Company
and its successor Nationwide, but compa~y pollcy
MAKE LIST
Among the Ohio State required his retirement at
University students making a age 80.
He sold his farm in 1944 and
grade average of at least 3.5
to be named to the autwnn hough! his home 011 Vinton St.
quarter honor were Mandie Ivy died In 1958 after 55 years
Kay Rose, Route l, Long of marriage.
James Anderson Robinson
Bottom, and Richard Alan
Co uch, Mulberry Heights, loved poetry, especially after
his eyes began to fail, and he
Pomeroy.
copied over 65,000 poems.
A Methodist since he was
14, he was a member of Grace
United Methodist Church for
more than 60 years and he
taught Sunday School.
(Continued from paae I)
The five children of Ancalls for blackouts on
selected circuits at that 30- derson and Ivy are:
Hoke Robinson married to
day level.
•
Under
procedures the former Ethel McCormick,
developed by the utility, is a machine repainnan for G
power blackouts wlll affect &amp; J Auto Parts in Point
customers, except for Pleasant.
hospitals and emergency
Sylvia, their only daughter,
service customers, on a married Clyde Coke, but she
rotating basis. Blocks of is noW widowed, lives. near
clients will be put in the dark Columbus, worked 45 years
for two hours, tWice daily for Zaner-Bloser textbook
about 12 hours apart.
publishers,
and
was
Warnings about impending secretary to the president
electrical ca tastropbe in Ohio when she retired.
has come from two highRalph is married to the
placed officials.
fonner Marjorie Moore. He is
John D. Borrows, utilities general manager of 16 of G &amp;
director of the Public Utilities J Auto Parts stores.
Commission of Ohio, said
Harold is married to the
Wednesday severe trouble former Virginia Nimrichter.
may be even closer than the He is manager of the Point
day-count of utility coal Pleasant G &amp; J Auto Parts
stockpiles indicates.
store.
Sen. John Glenn, D.Qhio,
Paul is married to the
who is pressing for former Thelma Buckle, and
presidential intervention to they live in Brilliant, Ohio. He
end the nationwide coal is an electrician.
strike, says a "~crisis of
Also surviving are 11
unspeakable proportions" is grandchildren, 13 · gre.atin the offing.
grandchlldren, and five
Borrows told state utility great-great - grandchildren.
corrunissioners that although
The St. Joha Bible Class of
most Ohio utilities have about Grace Church formerly met
40 days of coal left, trouble at Anderson Robinson's home
could come even before that the last S.inday in every
time runs out. He said as coal rnonih.
stocks drop and the quality of
Funeral services will be
the already poor storage coal held ·at 2 p.m. Sunday at
decreases, the Ukelihood of Miller's Home for Funerals,
generating unit failures in- the Rev. James V. Frazier
crease.
officiating, and interment
"Uniess the strike is settled will be in Pine Street
quickly, the slate faces Cemetery.
blackouts and a crisis of
Pallbearers wlll be David
unspeakable proportions. The Robinson, Wayne Niday,
clock is running out on Ohio," Paul
Denney, George
be said.
Morrow, Max: Tawney, and
Glenn said he hopes President Carter " will invite the
coal operators and union
leaders to the White House to
express hiS conce"- the
contract be
approved
promptly."
0

Rh0 d eSo

MARRIAGE LICENSE
Gary Lynn Nelson, 18,
Route 3, Pomeroy, and Diana
June Epple, 18, Route 1,
Minersville.

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

Hospital News

oo

-

John Nibert. Honorary
pallbearers will he the St.
John Bible Cl&amp;S!I.
Friends may call 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Saturday.
CONNIE ELLISON
MASON - Connie Beth ·
Ellison, 13, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs . Douglas Ellison,
Mason, W. Va., fonnerly of
Clothier, W. Va., died at the
Holzer Medical Center
Thursday afternoon following
an extended illness.
Surviving besides her
parents are two sisters.
Peggy Huff, Mason, and Lots
Pritt, Beverly; grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
· Korchick, Clothier ; a niece;
Stephanie Pritt; a nephew,
Douglas Huff.
Miss Ellison was a mem.ber
of the Mason United
Methodist Church and was an
eighth grader at tbe Wahama.
Junior High School. She was a
4-H club member and a '
member of the junior choir of
ber church.
Services will be at 11 a.m.
Saturday at the Mason United
Methodist Church with the
Rev. Robert Maring officiating. Her body will lie in .
state from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m . .
.Saturday at the church.
'
The body will he transported following the service
In Mason to the Handley
Funeral Home,' Davnille, W. •
Va., for services at 2 p.m. :
Sunday with the Rev. Joe ·
Lane officiating. Burial wil(
be in Memory Gardens at '
Madison.
·EU LAMBERT, SR.
Ell Cloyd Lambert, Sr.,
90, a resi~ent of Rt. I,
Thurman, died at 2:40 a.m . .
today in the Holzer Medical •
Center. He was born Sept. 8, ',
1887 in Herndo~. W. Va. son of ·
the late Jerlm1ah and Cosby
Godfrey Lambert. He married Anna Coffee Dec .
24,
1912
at
Herodon, W. Va. She surv1ves
along with one daughter,
Mrs. Hazel Clark, . Rt. 1, .
Thunilan; four sons, L!lke, .
Patriot; Duck of Lima;
Thomas of Oak Hill and
Clmton of Ottawa, 0.
He was preceded in death
by one daughter and four
Other survivors are 34
grandchildren and 63 greatgrandchildren and 19 stepgrandchildren. Two sisters,
Mrs. Cora Glover of Herndon,
W. Va . and Mrs. Ethei Ellis of
Herndon.
·
Five brothers and two
sisters preceded him. He was
a member of the Dearcreek
Baptist Church.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Sunday from
the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home at Vinton with Rev.
Uoyd Frye officiating. Burial
will be in Vinton Memorial
Park. Calling hOurs will be
held at the funeral home from
:lA and 7-9 p.m. Saturdl!y.
MARY L. LEWIS
The family of Mrs. Mary L.
Lewis will receive her friends
from 1 to 2 p.m. Sunday at
Simpson Chapel United
Methodist Church at Rio
Grahde, where services will
he held at 2 Sunday with
burial in Calvary Cemetery,
Pallbearers will be Dr.
Clyde Evans, Carl Dahlberg,
John Myers, James L. Clark,
John Wickline, and Charles
Withee.

-·-·
NORMAN HUBBARD

Norman Hubbard, 58,
Columbus, formerly of
Syracuse, died Tuesday night
at Mercy Hospital, Columbus. Funeral services will be
held at I :30 p.m. Saturday at
the J. W. Ross Funeral Home
in Columbus.

All

GROUP
FROM
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY
10 til 2
/
THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

Pomeroy, Ohio

our Friends! -~~~~•
©
1977 HaUmark C.rda, lm;:

Power.

: : ~~·:.:. " . -¢~."

••

(Continued 1rc1m Pll' 1)
purchase energy from neighboring utilities when practicable.
Under the company's
PUCO-approved emergency
plan,. more drastic steps
would be taken if and when
the stockpile of coal would
drop to a 30-day supply.
Heller suggested that
customers c.an help mend
the coal supply, thWI helping
to delay !he need for further
by
emergency
steps,
reducing lighting, by 'using
electric clothes washers and
dryers only with full loads;
by Wling smaUer, JXJrtable
cooldng appliance&amp;; · by reducing sign, display and
parking lot lighting, and by
reducing the volume of
ventilation air.

GROUND BROKEN - ))avid Holley of Holley Brothers
Construction, Inc., breaks the ground for the new $)58,520 Rio
Grande Village Water Works project. Looking on at far right
is Marshall Ca.naday, former member of the village board of

pubUc affairs for 13 years and a leader in attaining the
improvement.. Others present were F ire ~ief Bob
Brandeberry and Dan Morgan of Rio Grande and Architect
Paul Stall. Times-Sentinel Newsphoto by Catherine Benet.

- • - :..·
-.·.
· - .;.
,c. :r.-,·.•.
• .., • •"'0 •o

Valentine's Day-is
Tuesday, Feb. 14.
Why not remember
family and friends
with a loving
·
Hallmark valentine?

POMEROY - Meigs LoeMI School worsens, to conserve electricity In the
District students are already finding out district.
~'ortunalely, lhe electricity quota of
what the electricity crisis is all about.
The school district is on a 25 percent the district can be pooled so tha 1 ltilowatt
voluntary reduction of electric JXlWer hours saved by some schools can ~ ust.-d
usage now and as the coat stockpiles toward hetpinj; another school. where the
dwindle, the district will be put ou a redUction might not be as great in power
mandatory 50 percent reduction of power. usage .
As a result of the conservation
Thursday evening , Dwight Goins,
administrative assistant, mel. with the program, minimum lights are to be used in
staff of the high school, the biggest user in the gymnasiwns for physical education
the district. He discussed steps in reducing activities ahd in lunchrooms. No hall lights
electricity usage. Principal James Diehl will be used where possible. Bands of
also has asked teaChers to offer other lights along windows will not be used and
suggestions on how they can reduce the in some rooms where Hghts caMot be
amoWlt of electricity consumed . Bulk of turned off , where there are no oul.slde
the buildini!S of the district are on windows, a part of the light buli&gt;lln a room
·
Columbus a nd Southern Ohio E lectric will be removed.
Activities
In
physical
education
uut
OJmpany lines.
Goins pointed out that pumps requiring showers will be em:ouraged.
After school activities will be curtailed
circulating heat at ·the high school are
electric and use 14,000 kilowatt hours a and night lights where possible will be
month , a considerable percentage of the turned orr.
The sc hool cafeterias, while servi~
total power used.
Steps have already been taken and hot lunches, will go towards l'Old euts to
others will be taken as the situation reduce the amount of electricity inv.olved

•

u

tnttS
VOL. 13

NO. 2

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 12, 1978

in food preparatloo.
Night heating furnace temperatures of
~ wlli be maintained. There wlli be
limited use of audio visual aid equipment.
There will also be minimal use of overhead
doors and wcldi nl! classes will go to gas

we lders while the home eco nomics
department will use gas stoves only.
11te cosmetoloJ~Y deparll11ent will use
one Or' two hair dr)·ers instead or eight or ·
nine. There will possibly be only one...door _
used in buildings for entering and exiting.
11lere wlli be no use or electr ic beaten
pcnnitted ,
Goins said a ronstant monitoring of
USliMe Is being carried out ot each building
as the district tigh lcns Its belt to keep
S&lt;hools opt•ratlng in spite of Ute crl.tis.
TO MEET MARCH 6
GAl.l.JPOUS - The G~tltia COunty
Advisory Council will 1neet in the coWtty
health department ,off ke on Monday,
March 6, beginni ng at 9:30a .m. Prestdenta .
of all townships ure asked to attend .

tntintl
PRICE 25 CENTS

MIDDLEPORT - POMEROY

Settle coal strike,
plea
Ohio senator
By ROSEMARY ARMAO
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - The
regio na l energy emergency in Ohio
decla red by President Carter Saturday
along with suspension of anti-pollution
reguJations in Ohio and organization of a
task force to help workers laid off through
oower cutba cks are not enoul!h. says Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, D.Ohio.
At a Saturday news conference the
state's junior senator said he appreciated
the president's efforts but said they simply
would not solve the problem, which is to
settle the titklay-old nationwide. coal.

sons.

Send a
Little Love

~PIECE

Meigs district begins
energy reduction plan

I

ON BEHALF OF THE Gallia-Melgs Chapter 95 of the Frarernal Ocder of
Police, Ray Manley,left, secretary~reasurer, presents a gift to Middleport Police
Chief J. J . O'emeans. Th~ gift, a reversible raincQBt, was presented by the F.O.P.
in recognition and appreciation of Police Chief Cremeans' work with the young
people of the Middleport community.

Strike keeps going
at Midwest Steel
. POMEROY - A strike at Midwest
Steel CofJXlratlon is now in its 13th week
~th appar..,Uy no end In si~ht.
Union President Steven K. Little and
Bargaining Committeeman James R.
·. Miller, said in a letter released Saturday
for JXJblicatlon, tbat they beUeve the
company ~~must not be too interested in
settling the strike.''
This observation by Little and Miller is
based on the fact that company
representatives have not called for a
meeting, as had been agreed would he the
process, since a January 31 session.
.Approximately 70 persons are
employed at Midwest Steel, located on
Mair St., in Pomeroy.
Following is the letter released by
Little and Miller:
·
"Local 6197, Midwest Steel
. Corporation, has been on strike since

· Winger appeals cut,
removal at Vinton
GALIJPOLIS - A notiL-e or aweal
was filed Friday afternoon in Gallia
County Common Pleas Court by Edwin
Wilburn
Widger, Vinton
Village

November 6, 1977, making it now a 13--week
strike.
''We had a meeting .with the company
January 31, 1978, to discuss the oncoming
contract (which when signed will be a
three year contract).
. !'There were several items agreed on
in that meeting and still left many items
unresolved.
"As the meeting carne to an eoo. the
union gave the company it,s position on
certain items and the company stated they
would take those items and go over them
and get back with the union to set up
another meeting.
"The union feels that it bas come down
as far as it can. We also feel the company
must not be too interested in settling the
contract because as of yet they have failed
00 gel back with us and set up another
meeting. "
·

· Dentist plea:
no contest

GALLIPOLIS - Or. Gordoo K. Amsbary, a local dentist entered a no.
marsh~!.
.. Widger iS appealing his salary reduction contest plea to a first deiree misdemeanor
and removal as town marshal. According charge of falsification Friday in Gallia
County Common Pleas Court.
.
to the petition, the adion was taken at a
Judge Thomas W. Mitchell, sitting on
Feb. 3 council meeting.
assignmenl in Corrunon Pleas Court, fouoo
Wl~er says the actions were arbitrary;
capricious and contrary to. law and fact. A:Jtsbary guilty of the charge. A preHe asked the court 'for a hearing and sentencing report is being made .
requested tJ!at charges \against him be Maximum penalty under the law is a fine
dismissed and that the decisions to remove of not rnllre than $1.000 and six months in .
jail.
·
him also be reversed.
,
. According to P;osecuting Attorney
Joseph L. Cain, Dr. Amsbary will be
ordered to make restitution to the state
Welfare Department for · all monies
involved and will not be permitted to serve
as a provider of services for any welfare
patients.
.
JUVENILES ARRESTED
A felony count of theft and five other
GALLIPOLIS C.: Gallia County charges of falsification will be nulled.
Prosecutor.Cain said this was just one
sheriff's deputies have arrested three
juveniles in connection with the vandalism of three statewide cases involving weUare
.. and theft of a pop machine. 'I)~e.machine, falsification and that no state statute bas
taken from the Vinton area, was found on been established for procedures to follow
in such a case.
Woods Mill Rd.
Dr. Amsbary · was indicted last
The juveniles were also charged with
reckless operation and fleeirfg a police October 28 uooer section 2913.02 and
21121.13 of the Ohio Revised Code. The six
oflicer.
Deputies were caUed to the Floyd falsification charges were alleged to have
Chambers home at Rodney where occurred Jan. 9, Feb. 17, July 6, July 21,
someone shot holes In a trailer window. Aug. 2 and Sept. 30, 1976.

strike.
Glenn too has called on Ca rter to use the president 's nmHmnt'Ctncnl , bel:HU Se he had
Mct.zenbawn repeated his advice to prestige of his office to move the talks.
not lx:en ufri dally notified or it.
carter that he call United Mine Worker.s
Earlier Sa turday, Ca rter sa id 1 " 1
In other steps to help Ohio , whose
and bituminous coal company officials to cc:Hltinue to believe Umt the solution to the utilities a rc dnwn lll 3() tu 50 du y supplies of
the White House and personally mediate a strike must be worked out in free Ctml , Ca rter :
settlement.
l'Ollective bargaining by the parties. I horw · - Ordered F:ncrgy Serroturf Junl!JM
''That'swhat is called for at the moment Ltuit all those involved ·. in the strike will &amp;hlesi nger to lle nmdy to Invoke
and anything less just won't do it ," said ·abide by the law and act responsibly ." ·emergency measures to tnmsrer electric
Metzenbaum who added that his staff has
Gov . James A._Rhodes, who declarL'Ct an power from .slutes with cnuu~h eledrlcity
been directed to contact Sen. John Gle1U1, energy emergency earlier this week and lr} Ohio and other ure&lt;.u; witl1 coal
D.Qhio and the rest of the Ohio who has repeatedly called on Ca rter to sl10 rta ~es.
congreSsional delegatii;)n to compose a declare Ohio a disaster area and to
- Told the Environmentn I Protection
. joint telegram to Carter urging further intervene in the coal negotiations, said Agc n c ~ to speed up revit!W uf temporary
federal intervention in the coal strike.
Saturday he had no coroment on the relaxation of clean .air rcKulnUons which
will sovc Buckeye utilities nbout 5 percent
of U1cir coal.

Pana111a drugs co~ne
under Senate study
By NICHOLAS DANILOFF
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Frank
Church, D-ldaho, is pressing for the early
release of "sanitized" secret intelligence
documents on the allegep involvement of
Panama 's Omar Torrijos in international
drug trafflcking, congressional sources
said Saturd~y.
They said Church, a supporter of the
Panama canal treaties, hopes to get the
JUmp. on treaty opponents WhO a!'e
expected to ask a secret Senate session on
Feb. 21 to declassify the documents - and
ther~b.y create ~ swirl of embarrassing
pubhcity Ulat· might thwart ratification.
Church, who chairs the Senate
intelligence committee: wants the
documents released earlier in order to
. defuse any swelling demand for
disclosures that might appear sensational.
SoW'ces said 'intelligence committee
staff members are gearing for the release
of the docwnents, possibly by next
Wednesday.
Issuance of the documents raise
problems, the sources said, because

Injured in accident,
dies month later
GALLIPOLIS - It was learned
Saturday that a Parkersburg man. injured ·
in a traffic accident Jan. 6 in Meigs Coun.ty
died' Feb. ~ in Riverside Hospital at
Columbus..
.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State Highway
Patrol said the victinn was Edward A.
Bacorn, 44, Parkersburg. The accident
occurred when Bacorn's semi rig strucks
bridge on SR 143 near Carpenter.
The death goes on record as a traffic
fatality .

disclosure must be coordinated with the 21st, it .seems to me We've got to lay this
·
White House , State Deparlment and · issue to rest."
Sen. Jacob Javits , R-N.Y.. 'a treaty
intelligence agencies.
Executive branch officials are certain to 3Upporter touched on - the issue during
Friday 's debate.
insist on deleting references to sources and
"Is it not true," Javits said, "that even if
methods, and possibly passages of
Torrijos hnd his hands In drugs, and
substantial information as well.
nobody has that p~oof - as a matter of fact
What would be left, sources said, would
be titillating hearsay ·reports of alleged (Peter ) Bensinger (chief of the Drug
drug involvements by Torrijos family EnforCement Admlnislntion ) says no -;still the question before the American
members.
Treaty supporters then would tty people is : Is this a a good treaty for the
systematically to discredit these reports, American people?
"That is the issue. This (the drug
saymg they cannot be corroborated and
allegations
) may, in the minds of some
would neVer stand the test of evidence in
bear on it, but let us k eep our eye firm on
"court room proceedings.
Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., who raised the real issue ."
Dole contends if the drug allegations
the drug issue in Ulis week's Panama
canal debate, told·a Lincoln Day Dinner of prove to be substantial the integrity of
Republicans in Cincinatti Frlday nlght : "I Pan~anian leaders as guarantors of any
think it's in the public interest to declassify canal treaty would be in doubt.
the documents. "
" W~ may vote to release them and we
may not, but I think the public has a right
to know all about any such connections of
Gen. Torrijos before the vote on the
treaty ."
Asked if the documents implicate
Torrijos in drug smuggling, Dole replied :
"That's what we're trying to find uut I can
suggest that there is some reference to the
Torrijos family in the documents. On the

- Din-cted federal fa cili ties in the area
to immediately reduce power consumption
tn "rninimwn

m~eessary

levels ."

- ASked Just it~ DeparUnent ofllci•ls to
work close ly with Ohio authorities arxl
keep order in strike-affected nrws.
-Called for a fcderal-&lt;'itate tusk for&lt;&lt;! to ·
be based In canton and composed of
gnvernmenlal, public: utilitY und Industrial
representative• 1o IJeip people who are latd
off through power cutbacks .
Metzenbawn snid he could see no
prpblem in moving shipm e nt~:~ or coal into
und around Ohio.
Columbus und Southern Ohiu Electric
Co. has a bout ·12 days worth of coal' sitting
on stalled railroad cars and In pits waiting
tn be trucked. The threat of violent'C by
striking miners Is keeping truckers and
Norfolk &amp; Western from even attempting
delivery,
But Metzenbawn said, "Between the
governor of the state and the president, the
cou l can be moved nnd if C&amp;SOE wanl'l )t
moved , it will move under adequate legal
protection. ''
But he refused to elaborate on wtwt kind
or protection, other than to say the
National Guard couid be called up or
federal pr o ~ection could· be sought.
Adjutant Gen. James C. Cleni and Rhodes
have maintained to date that the Guard
hush'l the manpower to ta ke on such 1,m
assignment.

Malleable strik.e
ends; vote 96-45

EXTENDED FORE:CAST
Monday througb Wedaeoday, ouow
north aDd snow or .raJn south Monday.
Snow flurries Tuesday and fair
Wedneoday. Highs will be In the mld 3tlo
or lower 40s Monday and fallblg Into the
lower 2011 by Wednesday. Lows will be In
the 20o early Monday 'and near 10 by
Wednesday.

PT . PLEASANT - The long West since the 186 members of the union went on
Virginia MaUeable Iron Company strike strike Dec. 8. Two previous contracts were
came to an end late Saturday morning · rejected.
when employes voted to accept a new
i ~ two contracts were , rejected
three--year contract.
bet'S .. -3~ the union wanted a change in
The strike, which was in its eighth Wurance companies, accordtn8 to Van ·
week ended with a 96-45 vote in favor of Matre . . Apparently, the insurance
returning to work, according to Herbert comparues were sWitched In thJs latest
Van Maire, president of Lc&gt;cal 4031 of the contract offer .
Uilited Steel Workers of America.
Employes wtU return to their jobs on
the fir" ,shift Monday morning.
COMMISSION TO MEET
Vim Maire declined to release publicly
GALLIPOLIS - City Manager
the terms of the contract, although he said Christian P . Morris annQunced Saturday
they received an across~he-board pay that a. speCial city commission meeting
boost. H9wever, he said there was no cost will be held Tuesday, Feb, 14, hegiMing at
of living raise.
7:30 p.m. In the commissioners' room.
The contract accepted Saturday Among .the topics on the ageooa are the
morning was the t!llrd put before the union new SW1llll1llllg pool, sewer programs and
budget, and additional revenue sources
:rwo ordinances will appesr ou tbe agenda:

¥

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.

When you care enough to send the very best

rl

'

' Tax deadline near
POMEROY - In order to avoid a 10
percent penalty on the first half of 1977 real
estate .taxes, Meigs County residents mUst
pay these taxes by 12 noon on Feb. 18 to
avoid penalty. Books will be open March 1
lor the payment of delinquent taxeo.

BOARD TO MEI!T'
GALLIPOUS - Regular meeting of
the Ga!Ua County District Library Board
of Trustees wtll be held Tuesday, F'eb. H,
beginning at 5 p.m. in the librarian's office
in the library at th~ corner of Third Ave.
and State St.
·
.

�A-2- The Sunday Times&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Feb. 12, 1978

•

Man's probation
revoked by judge
..

GALUPOLIS - Municipal
Co urt Judge James A.
Bennett Friday revoked the
probation of Ferrell Ancel
Lanun, Rt . 2, Gallipolis, and
ordered him to serve the
remaining 17 days of a sentence imposed Jan . 4. Larnm

was arrested Thursday night
lor disorderly condu&lt;'l.
Charles Walker of Dexter
was lined $70 and costs,
sentenced to six months in the
county jail and ordered to
make restitution to The
Bastille on a petty larceny
charge.
The jail term was
suspended with Walker being
. placed on six mNnths

Cervical clinic
slated Feb. 15
MIDDLEPORT - The final
free cervical cancer clinic in
Meigs County for February
will be held Wednesday, Feb.
15, at Heath United Methodist
Church. There are st ill
several openings for Meigs
women wishing to attend .
In March there will be an
upswing in the clinics with
four afternoon events to be
held on March I, 15, 22 and 29.
Women wishing an appointment at the February clinic
or at any of the four March
clinics are asked to call 9927531, daytill!e, or 993-5832 in
. lhe evenings or on weekends.

Cattle sale
February 21
JACKSON - According to
.Rod ney
Marhoover ,
Secretary-Treasurer of the
Chillicothe Area Feeder Calf
Association, the association
will sponsor a graded Ieeder
cattle sale on Feb. 21 at the
Scioto
Livestock
in
ChilliCothe. Due to had
weather, the January 19 sale
had to be cancelled.
Consignors should notify
their county Extension agent,
agriculture, a bout consignm ents by Wednesda y,
Feb. 15. Consignors may take
the cattle to · the yards on
Monday evening, February
20, or up till noon on Tuesday,
Feb. 21.
·

probation for good behavior.
Restitution must be made
within 10 days.
Donald Gene McBride, 31,
Bidwell, and Raymond H.
Clarkson , Gallipolis, were
lined s:;o and costs each for
disorderly condu&lt;1.
Thomas M. Harmon, 22,
Westerville, was lined $10
and costs for speed.
· In cases earlier in lbe
week, Judge Bennett found
Marvin Meeks, Bidwell, not
guilty of a OWl charge and
Landolph Blackburn, Vinton,
not guilty on a warrant filed
by Edwin Widger charging
physical harm.

Valentine
candy set
for recall
WASHINGTON (UPI) The Food and Drug
Administration has ordered
recalled 16,300 cases of
chocolate - covered Valenti ne's Day candy be·
ca use of the possibility of
salmonella poisoning.
The FDA does not consider
the ca ndy, rnanufactured by
King Candy Company, a
Sib'llificant health hazard.
Salmonella, a bacteria that
can cause fever, nausea and
diarrhea, was discovered in
the candy by the FDA in
routine inspection tests that
began late last year.
King Candy ceased production after the lnitial finding,
but

resumed

production

shorlly thereafter, the FDA
sa id . The FDA found
continued contamination and
has stopped production.
An error in FDA ' s
published
method
for
detecting salmonella
contributed to a delay in
identifying ihe problem, but a
series of recalls began 'Jan.
10, a spokesman said Friday.
'(he cases have been
distibuted principally in
Texas and Oklahoma in
Valentine's Day wrappings
and are marketed under
three brand names: King

EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY
TO EARN AND LEARN

Male or Female: Join a grow.ng concern 15 a
professional photographer. Work in ~he Eastern half of
U.S. and gei paid top dollar.and travel allowances . No

experience

needed.

Paid

training

A-3-The Sunday TiJnes.Senlinel, Sunday, Feb. 12, 1978

to · qualified·

applicants. Don't miss this opportunity to btcome a
professional in • growing field. Must have dependable
transportation.
Interviews will be held week of February 13, 1978, in
Charleston , W. Va. at Eastern Photographic
LlbOratorles, Inc., 1716 Pennsylv•nia Avenue ,
Ch•rleston Office EPL Inc., Charleston, W. Va . 25302.
Please call 304-345·3479 ~tween 9 a.m. and 4 p. m.
Monda , February u &amp;nd Tuesday, February 14.

Hit-skip
probed
by patrol

·G overttor stresses energy

ATHENS, Ohio {UJ'I)-The board of t1'118ttH ol Ohio
Ualvenlty vo4ed 4-3 S.turday lo order the unlvenlty's
Investment board to remove aU scbool funds lnv..ted In
compaolea doing business In Soulb Africa.
The board told PresideD! Olarleo Plag to meet wllb
lbe soulbeutera Ohio school's Investment advlaen aDd
begin withdrawing $5%,0110 In unlverslty endowment luads
from slx companies.
.
The compaoles are: Emory Air Freight, Getty Oil,
rrr, Mobile Corp., Monsanto and TRW. No tlmelable for
withdrawing lbe !undo was sel.
The trustee action concluded lbree-D~onths of review
by the unlverslty. The move WB8 first recommended by
several student groupo as a way of pro4eRUng racial
discrlmlnallou Ia South Africa.
Ping appointed a committee composed of students,
faculty aud one trustee to study the matter aDd It
r-mmended lbe action.

GALLIPOLIS - A new
Gallia Local school tius was
involved in a hit-skip accident
at 4:05 p.m. Friday on
Paulins Hill Rd. one mile
north of SR ~4 in Meigs
County.
According to the GalliaMeigs Po•t State Highway
Patrol, the bus, a 1977 In·
ternalional operated by
Unda Freeman, 35, Cheshire,
was struck by an unknown
vehicle.
The driver told officers, Ihe
driver of the unknown car slid
on the icy roadway into the
bus. None of the six
•
passengers on the bus was
injured. There was slight
damage.
POMEROY - Beginning
Robert L. Williamson , 19, March l, fanners will no
Rutland, was cited to Meigs longer have to wait for their
County Court for failure to 1977-crop barley, oats and
stop within the assured, clear wheat loans to mature, or fqr
distance following an ac- their purchase agreements lo
cident at3:40 p.m. Friday on expire, to participate in the
SR 7. at milepost 2.
grain reserve program,
The patrol said William- according to Clarence Price,
son's vehicle struck the rear Chairman of the Meigs
end of a car operated by County Agricultural
Virgil E. Jacks, 25, Rutland. Stabilization and ConThere was minor damage: servation ( ASC) Committee.
A deer was struck in an Secretary of Agriculture Bob
.accident at 4:45p.m. onSR 7, Bergland has announced thai
one tenth of a mile south of starting March 1, these 1977
Gallipolis. The animal ran crops may be placed iminto the path of a vehicle mediately into the grain
driven by George R. Dillon, reserve. Early entry of the
27, Crown City.
1977-crop corn and sorghum
It escaped injury and ran will be announced later Mr.
from the scene.
Price said.
Douglas E. Young, 28,
The grain reserve program
Bidwell, suffered injuries as serves as a new marketing
the indirect cause of a mishap tool for fanners. "I nstead of
on the Bidwell-Rodney Rd. selling their grain at low
north of CR 4. According lo market prices, farmers can
troopers, an au to driven by place it in ihe reserve
Maureen E. Young, 18, program, receive sto rage
Bidwell, swerved to miss an payments, and wait for prices
unknown Vehicle.
to increase," Mr. Price said.
The Young car ended up in By ·using the reserve to
a ditch. Young was injured isolate supplies !rom the
while trying to push the car marketplace when they are
out of the ditch.
excessive, farmers are
A final accident occm::red helping to get grain prices up,
on SR 7 in Ohio Twp. where a he added.
dog ran into the path of a car
Under the progr·am, fardriven by Richard E. Snyder, mers enter "into a ··contract
Jr., 20, McConnelsville.
with the government for a
Snyder was unable to slop. three-year perio d, a nd
His car struck and killed the re.ceive annually ~ in advance,
dog then struck a guardrail a storage payment of 20 cents
causing moderate dama ge. · per bushel for wheat, corn,
sorghum and barley, and 15
cents per bushel for oats.
Farmers, in ieturn, must
agree t9 hold their grain off
Candy Co., Lady Charlene the market at least until the
price reaches an established
and Hostess House.
No matter what the brand level or the contract expires.
name, most of the candy has
Farmers with 1976-crop
"King Candy Co." appearing barley, oats and. wheat not
somewhere on the package. yet under loan may file a
The company sells candy to purchase ag reem ent by
both Sears Roebuck and February 28, 1978, obtain a
Montgomery Ward but the loan and immediately enter
products under recall the reserve.· The final date to
represent only about one
sixt h of the company's
ca ndied products.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slalehoose Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes is to deliver
his "State of the Stale"
address ID a joint session at
the Ohio General Assembly
this week, hitting hard 011
energy aod the economy.
The governor's assessment
of C9flditions In the state on
Wednesday will highlight the
legislative week, which
otherwise includes a full
complement of committee
hearlngs.
Rhodes is expected to focus
on the coal shortage, which
has brought Ohio to the brink
of an electricity crisis. He
also is expected to press for
enacimenl of tax incentives
for imer city redevelopment
and location of industries.
As if in anticipation, the
Senate Conservation and
Environment Committee
opens hearings Wedensday
evening on House-passed
legislation calling for
conservation of natural gas
and petroleum.
The bill, which cleared the
House almost eight months
ago, would limit the use of
gas for
luxury and
unnecessary items and
mandate conservation by the
state government in the areas

Farmers urged to use

grazn reserve program

obtain a loan and become
eligible to enter the reserve
on 1977-crop barley, oats and
wheat is March 31, 1978.
Mr. Price also announced a
change in the fann storage
facility loan program that
will increase the amount of
storage for which reserve
program . participants may
qualify. "Under the change, a
lamrer will be able to obtain
a loan for storage str uctures
to store two years' crop
p-roduction, however, in
determining eligibility,
existing capacity used to
store grain in the reserve
FUNDS RECEIVED
program will be excluded,"
POMEROY
State
Mr. Price said. Previously, in
Auditor
Thomas
E.
Ferguson
determining eligibility, all
exist ing facilities were in- reported the February
distribution of $6,148,207.44 in
cluded.
For more information on local government money to
the farmer-held reserve · Ohio's 88 counties and 388
program, contact the local cities and villages levying
local income taxes. Meigs
ASCS office. ·
County received $12,500.

NOT MEETING
POMEROY - The Meigs
High School PAT will · not
meet Tuesday as scheduled
due to the curtailment of use
of the high school building fol'
activities which do not include students during the
electricity crisis.

DIAMOND

£0£KTAIL
RINGS
1 Cara 1.......... 5495
112 Carat ........ 5295
'I• Carat,~ ...... S195

DIAMONlt

£LtJSTERS
'12 Carat........ .$295

'I• Carat........ $175

DIAMOND
WEDDING
BANDS
1 Carat. ••••••••. $550
'12 Carat ........ $295
'I• Carat ........ )195

Published every SUntlily by The

Oho

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Publishing

Co .·

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GALLIPOLIS
DAILY TRmUNE

SQUAD CALLED
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Mulberry Ave.,
at 4:25 p.m. Friday for Miss
Lydia Ehersbach who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was
admitted.

825 Third Ave ., Gallipulis, Ohio
15631.
Publisbcd every wcekduy evening
except Saturday. Second Chlss
Postage Pr~id at Gallipolis, Ohio
15631.
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy, 0 . 45769.
Publlshed every week day evening
CXt't!ptSaturtla y. E::n~rcd a.s second
c!ll~ 11Uiiling INI.tlt!r at Pomeroy,
Ohkl Po.,t Offit'e.
By l"arrier d11ily and Sunday 75c
per w~k. Mutur rouk $3.25 per

TAWNEY'S JEWELERS
424 Second Ave.
Gallipolis

month ,

MAIL

f) .

thr~

LET

t!C1.us
1

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
The Galllpul~ Du!ly .TribWJe ln
Ohio and W~sL VirKinia one yettr
$22.00; six monlhs$11.50; three mon. ths $7.00. Elsewhere $26.00 per year ;
six months tl3 .50;

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months

H11nT .1

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Th~ Daily Stmtinel, one ye1:1r
$22.00: Six months$·11.50; threcmonths 17 .00. Elsewhere f26,00; six mon-

Valemine \Day is 71tesda): Feb111(1Jy /4. 1

ll'1sll3.SO: lhreemonlhs$7.50.
The United Prt!S.." Interntionl!.l ls

SendOurFTD

exclusively entitled to the Wle for

LoveBundle®
Bouquet

publication of all news dispatches

&lt;.Tedited to the ~paper and also
the local news published herein.

[]~alal[][J

Fresh. ro'mantic flowers arranged
with ·a spray of sparkling hearts .
We can send it almost anywhere by wire. the FTD
way. But hurry ...
. Valentine's Day is
almost here. Call
or visit
us today.

P h n1u• •N6 01:176
]7::' St't:on d Avt• nuP • G .1 llip n l1•; , 0111&lt;)

I'm insulating
America against
the .high cost
of fuel bills! .

WINTER CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUES
WITH-·ADDITIONAL REDUCTIONS
La~ge

Group Men's

~

SPORT COATS
Reg. S:l'l
NOW $46.60
Reg. S9S
NOW $63.00

• NEWHOMES

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• " / mpm AI f uum " lnnlntion hrlpt •liut uut ooin
• Nn rk .. n~p Jl1~111J pt nf uuulahnn
• l'ayA lor itM]f in Mhorl l"'riod uf tim,.
• F&lt;lam4 •nto odd ahPP4' I I'II IIH aruurld p•pt l , Wlllnlf 1&gt;nd
ducbl

Stall d\l t t'l&gt; l&lt;!&amp;lt ~ nt t'lo wl tnt&lt;l~fTl'f&lt;ITntrand uv ll .l"
c .~
ho~t i l. •n~immn•ot fur rod•nt•

• p.., ,..;.tKnl

.. ,,..

~mltn~ ,

Minim~ I to• iril ~
• !:idtl)" for )"0\11 r~mlly bv MUTTOUfld!!il Clbltt lind wlrra
'"ith in.,tlatim• f,am
• Mot1ture rr.iatant
; Cbem1eall,v lt.&amp;ble
• l:111y to appl~

• p;.., '"''tam -

SAVES MONEY • FIRE RESISTANT• EASYTOAPPLY .

I

Reg. $29.95
NOW 119 .90
Reg. $55.00
NOW $36.70
Reg. 170.00
NOWS4UO

lA3 OFF

·

Young Men's

-.

. TO :

HACKm FOAM INSULATION

93 7th Ave.
Middleport, 0 .
Please send me further information on Foam Insulation .

NAME-----------------------------ADDR r;ss------------------------Cily
· Zip
Phone ____

L-------------------------1

I

will be in the church
cemetery.
A retired farmer, he was
survived by three daughters,
Mrs. Mae Stevens, Apple
Grove, Mondee Cunning,
Freedom, Pa., and Shirley
Leach, Gallipolis. In addition
to the above are four sons, ()lie
brother and several grandchildren
and
great·
grandchildren wh_o survive.

VADA MORRISON
PT .
PLEASANT
Mrs. Vada M. Morrison, 70 ,.
218 N. Park Drive, Point
Pleasant, died Saturday .
morning at the Holzer
Medical Center.
She was the wife of the Rev.
daughters, Charisse Ann anti James G. MorriBon.
Susanna Lynn, both at horne,
Funeral arrangement will
knd five sisters, Jane Selby,
be announced by the CrowColumbus; Karen Harris, HuSllell Funeral Home.
Dayton, Margaret Jones,
Pomeroy, Sherry Goodwin,
JERRY WILLIAMS
Middleport, and Shirley
MARIETTA--Sun
ul
Legg. She was preceded in f.ormer Gal lipol itans,
death by a brother, Joseph.
Gerald
T.
( Jerry )
Funeral services will he Williams, 30, died of a
held Monday at the First heart attack Friday al the
United Lutheran Church in home of hi s lather,
Harnmond, Ind . Burial will he Clar·ence Williams, WlupStar City, lnd. In lieu of ple, Ohi o. His mother, the
Oowers, the family requests fm1ncr Lilli&lt;w Shaw, who
donations to the church.
died June 3, 1975, is buried
at Ridgelawn Cemetery,
Mercerville.
·
JACQUELINE LANE
Williarns,
who
Jer·ry
GALUPOLIS - Funeral
was
bol'll
June
14,
1947,
at
services were held Saturday
wHs
the
owner
Barberton,
afternoon at Miller's Home
for Funerals for Jacqueline of the Pellit Insur·ance
M.arictta,
Marie.i..ane, stillborn child of · Company,
Jack Lane and Pamela Cadd which he purchased only
Lane. The child was born last month.
He wa.s a member of the
dead Thursday.
CoShoc ton
Besides the parents there BPOE,
Lodge,
Scottish
Masonic
are · a half-brother and two
Cambridge,
Valley
of
half-sisters surv1vmg:
Kenneth , Tammy, and Aladdin Templ e , the
Tonya ; the paternal grand· Coshocton Shrine Club,
mother, Mrs. Gail Lane, and and was past president of
maternal grandparents, Mr. the Coshocton Jaycees.
Sur·viv 0r·s; besi des the
and Mrs. Robert King, all of
father, are the widow, the
Gallipolis.
'
The Rev. Lynn D. Lahaie, fonner Sandra Fulton ; a
pastor of the Faith Baptist son,Jay Scott Williams,
Church at Rodney officiated and a daughter, Michelle
. and burial was in Reynolds Sue; two · brothers, Ruger
of Coshocton and Richar·d
Cemetery at Rodney.
Williams of Whipple; and
· his grandmother, Mrs.
GOLDEN KECK
Lula Shaw Landon, Table
PT.
PLEASANT
Rock, Nebraska.
Golden·Keck,llli, 2114 Lincoln
He was graduated from
Ave., Point Pleasant, died Salem-Liberty
High
Thursday In a Huntington School in 1965 and attended Kent State University .
hospital.
Calling hours were
,. Aformer resident of Wayne,
W.Va., he was born on Jan. 16, &amp;.turday ahd will be again
1118, a son of the .late . John Monday at Marietta 's
Wesley and Sarah Jane Hadley Funeral Home,
where the funeral will be
Cooper Keck.
He was preceded in death by held at 2:30 p.m. Monday,
his Wife, Gladys Rice Keck in the Rev . Tim Starr and llle
1927. He was a retired f~rmer Rev . William Clark ofand veteran of World War II . ficiating, with burial in the
Universalist
Cemete ry ,
Survivors Include one
Marietta.
Clyde
daughter,
Mrs.
The body will be taken to
(Lenore) Asbury, Point Coshocton today,. where
Pleasant; one grandson, Sunday ca lling hours will
Asbury, he at the Dawson Funeral
Darrell
E. ·
Morgantown, and several Home 24 and 7-9 p.m.
nieces and nephews.
Hadley buried Ius mother
Funeral services will be at Mercerville•in 1975. ·
CQIIducted Sunday u a.m. at
the Morris Funeral Home,
Wayne, with the Rev. Walter
Adkins officiating. Burial w!U
be in Mllill Cemetery, East
SORORITY
MEET
Lynn, Rt. I.
MIDDLEPORT- Ohio Eta
Phi· Chapter of Beta Sigma
CLARENCE MEAIGE
Phi Sorority will meet at 7:30
PT.
PLEASANT
p.m. Tuesday at the
Clarence• Columbus and Southern Ohio
Services for
Mealge, 83, Gallipolis Ferry, Electric Co. building. The
wiU .be conducted Sunday 2 cultural report will be given
p.m. In the Jordan Baptist by Connie Dotson. Hostesses
Church. The Rev. WUUam will be Carol Auit and Donna
Hatfield w1U officiate. Burial Dowler . ·

ro

'

.

•
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL distributive education class award winners at Wednesday's
district 13 competitive leadership events meeling from the left were Marcia Dillard, Megan
Miller, Steve Stout and Carl Gheen.

POMEROY - Ten persons
were fined and eight others
forfeit ed bonds In Meigs
Counll' Court Friduy.
Judge Robert Buck lined
the following : Ronald L..
Carr, Pomeroy, $10 and &lt;'OstS,
speeding ; Keith Krauller.
Pomeroy, S~ and costs,

Meigs tops at Nelsonville
POMEROY
Four
members of the Meigs High
Schoo l Chapter of the
Distributive Education
Classes of America won
awards at the District 13
D.E.C.A. leadership com-

pctitive events at a leader·
ship conference for D.E.C.A.
students at Tri County J .V.S.
in Nelsonville Wednesday .
Carl Gheen, president of
the Meigs Chapter and
chairman of the distri ct.

To make Delta
King restaurant
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The Delta King, one of the
last Sacramento River
steamers, will be converted
into
an
international
restaurant.
The family of M. K. Sum,
owner of the Omei restaurant
in Berkeley, bought the 52year-old paddle-wheeler
~·riday at a bankruptcy
auction for the minimum bid
of $35,200.
Sum said hi s family
planned to serve French,
Italian, Chinese and other
national dishes on the various
decks of the vessel, once a
principal means of travel bel ween San Francisco and
Sacramento.
With its sister ship the
Delta Queen, the Della King

CB radio unit
reported stolen
.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
city police here Friday invesligated the theft of a 23
channel Roby n CB radio
taken from a parked car
owned by Jerry Martin of Rt:
1, Cheshire.
Officers also lnvestigated
vandalism at the · Evans
Home Center in the 200 block
of Second Ave. A window had
been broken out according to
officers.
Arrests recorded were
Peggy Sue Grimes, 18,
Gallipolis; Sandra Lynn
Little, 18, Gallipolis; Wand~.
Lee .Johnsvn, 22, Gallipolis~
and Thomas C. · Yarbrough,
32, Rt. 2, Bidwell, all charged
with shoplifting at Jones
Boys.

TOP COATS

1L3
OFF
7~

Uve green plants,'
fresh
carnations
and a big Lollipop
arranged
in
a
beautiful reel and
white
pedes! a I
container.
An
lis
colorful as this has
to_ be knclwn as
"Lollipop Lover."

GROUP

Group Men's'

KNIT
SPORT SHIRTS

1h PRICE

1h PRICE

in the 1920s and 1930s used to
make the overnight run
carrying 40 autos and 248
pas~engfrs between San
~·rancisco and the stale
capital.
The Queen has been sold to
operators who have kept it iu
service on the Mississippi and
Ohio rivers. The Delta King
has been sold several times
since it went out of service
and has slowly been vandalized into an engineless,
paddleicss hulk.
During World War II the
Delta King moved ser-vicemen and hospital cases
around San Francisco Bay
from one base to another . II
was declar ed surplus and
!!Old by the government after
the war ended.
For awhile, the King was
used as a sight-seeing vessel
on
Puget
Sound
in
Washington state hut the
operation was unsuccessful
and it was brought hack to
San Francisco Bay in 1959.
Sum said the port of San
Francisco has promised the
family a place to moor the
vessel.

presided over the . awar·ds
ceremony at the a wards
llinner following the ·competilivc CVI!nts. Gheen
rece ive d the award fur
second pla ce in the advertisin g services series
events and will represent the
chapter and the dislril1 at the
!'!tate , leadership conference
in Columbus next month.
Other winners from the
Meigs Chapter were Megan
Miller , Marcia Dillard and
Steve Stout each of whom
won third place awards in
public speaking, sa lesmanship and food marketing ,
respectively.
Meigs High was r epresented by 14 studerrts.
Others auending were Jane
Miller, Nancy Stan ley.
Melody Snouffer, Ann Fitch,
Denise Garnes, Pat Corsi,
Ron Casci, Paula Thomas,
Dctvid Carpenter and Jim
Davis.

Vohmteers to

parking on a roadway ; Louie
Christian. Hutland, $10 and
t'Osts, stop sign violation;
Lawrence Boyd, Middleport,
$10 and costs, defective
brakes; James S. Hees, Jr .,
Racine, $10 and costs, failure
In stop within assured clear
distance; Gary E. McDonald,
l~oute 2, Coolville, $150 and
costs, three rlays in jail.
. driving while intoxicated ;
Charles Cundiff, West
Columbia, W. Va ., $150 and
custs. three davs in iaiL
driving wh_ilc intoxicated ,
and $25 and costs on a

CHESTER -

The Area
Volunt eer
FirC
and
Emergency Association will
meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
at the fire station .in Chester .
Membership dues are to be
paid at the meeting. Checks
are to be made payable to the
Area Volunteer Fire and
Emergency

Assn.,

Allen

·Richards,
sec ret a ry treasurer, in care of the
Vinton Fire Department,
Vinton , 0.

• Comfor1 padded collar and
Insole
• Leattrer lined and Insulated
• Welt construction
• Steel shank an:h support
• Cushion crepe sole and heel

$47.99

IMPROVING
POMEROY - Mrs. Wkna
Terrell, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy, is reported slightly
improved at the Holze r
Medical Center. Her room
number is 423.

HOME I SULATIO
FACID or UNFACED

ATTIC
INSULATION

10

1

Wtt 'N

CARRY

No FTD orders

to

RATIN~

5'14" x 15"x48"
UN FACED

R·ll RATING
3"

X 15" X 48"

FACED
m,r·.;h

f

;

Gallipolis
4%-1777

PLAZA

Middleport
992-55410

,,

'

A touch O'Biarney
and A HEAP O'MAGIC!

TECHNICOLOR •

".....
'
·' ·'

CAR100N

NIID·WINTER

1:

FEB. 15-MARCH 15, 1978

Convalescent Supplies
COMPARE PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY

$ 99

7

40 sq. ft. per bale

Reg. '9.99
$ 99 Save
'1.00

MISC ELLA NEOUS SUPPLIES

. CONVALEsCENT SUPPLIES
·Deluxe Ho spital Bed w. Walnut
finish $326.25, Reg . $402.50.
Fixed height (mattress not
included) '
Delu~e Hospital bed w-walnut
finish. $544.50, Reg . 5605.00.
Multiple adjustable (mattress
not included)
Mattress ·Covers (waterproof)
$10.75 Reg . $11.95
Mattress Raisers
Twin $22.25, Reg . $24.75
Full 526.55. Reg. $29.50
Slated Bed Boards, 10 Pet . cilf
Bed Cradles $8.40, Reg . $10.50
Vest Restraints $10.35, Reg.
$11.50
Sheepskin
Heel - Elbow
Protectors
Heel $5.66, Reg . $6.29
Elbow $6.75, Reg. $7 .50
~heepskln Underpads 24x30
$3 .46 each
Sheepskih Underpads 30x60
$8.70 each
Flannel Underpads $3 .33 yd .
Deluxe Disposable Underpads
23x24 $3.00 pkg .-20 .
Cervical Plllbws 4 styles
$9.00 Reg . 511.10; $10.80 Reg .
$12.00;
s7.80 Reg . $8.80
Butterfly Pillows &amp; Slip $12.15
Reg. $13.50
Flexi -For m Back . Rest $25.00
Reg . $36.00
Electric Heating Pads
·•
10 Pel. off
Incontinent Pants &amp; Liners
10 Pet. off
WALKING AIDS
Cast Boots-3 styles
$7.76 Reg . $8 .62; $7 .30 Reg .
$8.14; ·$8.45· Reg . $9.42
Metal and Wooden Crutches
20 Pet. off
3 types Crutch Tips and Pads
(all sizes) 20 Pel. off ·
Non -adjustable Walkers $15.50
Reg. $20.00
Wooden Canes-Wide Selection
$1.75-$7.00

Disposable Gloves S4.00, Reg .
$4.50 Box of 100
Air Splint Sets $42.80, Reg.
$53.50
so Mail OSHA approved First
Aid Statton $71.00, Reg . $88.80
ALL WHEELCHAIR S
10 Pet . off
HOME SAFETY SUPPLIES
Shower Stools S1l.so, Reg.
$15.00
Fool Stools S13.25, Reg . $14.88
Commode Safe! y Ralls $20.45,
Reg . $22..75 ·
Wheelchair Safety Belts $10.25,
Reg . $11.45

SURGICAL SUPPORTS
Cervical Collars 10 Pet. off
.All Elastic Supports 10 Pet. off
Shoulder Slings 10 Pet . off
Hernia Supports 10 Pet. off
Abdominal Bjl)ders 10 Pet. off
Lumbo·sacral Supports
10 Pet. off
Dorso -Lumbar Supports
10 Pet. off
Waist Watcher Gl rdles
10 Pet. off
Mastectomy Bras $13.00, Reg .
$14.50
Breast Prosthesis
Camp (gel -filled) $45.00, Reg .
550.00
Cherish (Silicone) $75.90,
Reg. $94.90
Spenco (Silicon e w - Tricot
Covering) $85.00, Reg . $94.50
HOSE
White Nurses Support Hose
25 Pet. off
Maternity Support Hose
25 Pet. off
Spenco Deluxe Insoles $3.60,
Reg . $4.00

~

---·
------,
1 Stop In, Browse and Sign Up For Door Prize
1
~---------~-----------I

To Be Given During Sale! .

I

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

line

Reg. '8.99
Save 11.00

aliliUD(i)IDl!
529 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
PHONE 614-446-2206

"Serving Patient and Physician"

7G sq. ft. per bale

Top quality insulation that helps to fight tht
rising cost of heating and cooling your
hll~sc . 5'14' or 3" thick .

t1,H!Jf'

Tonighllhru
Tuesday

disorderly conduct -c.l&gt;DrHe;
Debra Fleming, Route l ,
I.ong Bottom, $100 •nd costs
on each of two charges of
illegal deer, and Clifford
Whillington , Route
4,
Pomeroy, 125 and costs, Jell
of center.
Forfeiting . bonds were
Harold McGrath, Long
Bottom, $103 posted on a
reckless operation charge ;
128 on a speeding charge and
$103 posted on a charge of
!leelng an officer : Cash
Zinmterman, llutland, $30.50,
fullure to yield the right. of
way; Edwin K. Cle land ,
Route I, Middleport, $107.50,
reckless operation; Jimmy I..
Austin, Akron, $130.50, no
operator's license; Donald C.
Ne]S()n, Route I, Motta, und
'llromas F'iiCh. Route 1, Portland, $30.50 each, posted on
speeding charges.

hold meeting

• Green , lull grain cowhide
leather

R·l9

1

'

WOLVERINE· 9"
WILDERNESS" BOOT

slz.so

Group Men's

%

LIMITED
QUANTITIES
NO
RAIN. CHECKS

Deadline lor claSll sign up is
March I, 1978. If interested
and want more lnfonnatlun
please call 4411-2359 Gallipolis
area ; 992-7011 Pomeroy Middleport area .

15 sessions.
This class is designed to
give each student maximum
information in a mlnimwn
amount of time. The material
presented covers all basic
keys &lt;'Ontained ln the word of

10 fined, eight
forfeit bonds

1-

PRICE.S GOOD WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

LOLLIPOP
LOVER

MEN'S WOOL

Reg. $100
NOW $67

SHOES

MRS. THOMAS DODOS
POMEROY-Mrs. Thomas
[)Odds, 36, the former Jean
. Hull of Pomeroy, dit.d Thursday night. at a hospital in
. Calumet City' Ill. folluwin~ a
Ungering illneSll.
She was the daugl1ter't&gt;f the
late William Holt and Mrs.
Helen Sprouse Holt of
Pomeroy. Born on Dec. ·26,
1941, she graduated from
Pomeroy High School in 1960.
. Following her graduation she
went to Chicago where she
was employed at the Harris
National Bank and,Trusl Co.
Later she joined the Gary,
Ind. Federal &amp;.vings and
Loan Co.
Besides her mother, she is
survived by her husband, two

! II

With Dudley's ·

MEN'S DRESS

~-------------------------MAIL THIS COUPON

i ·Area Deaths

GA!.IlPOJ.IS - A Power
For Abundant I.Jving ClaSll
starting here March 13, will
run fur three weeks.
.
The Power For Abundant
Uving class is a Biblical
rest•arr h c·lass ronci!;tinJ! flf

"Say "I Love You"

¥.1 OFF

• NO OBI,.IGATION

Cash 'n Carty

---------------------------1 ••

We really get around .. . for you'

Your Choice
EST~ MATES

$15.00

I

.

SWEATERS CORDUROY
Reg. SIS
·SLACKS
NOW $9.90 lf30FF
Reg. 517
NOW $11.30

.

WINTER JACKETS
&amp; SUBURBANS

SHIRTS
FREE

•

Complete Stock of .
Men.'s &amp; Bovs'

7:30p.m. noor seaoion.
Senate President Pro Tern- .
pore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
called three week.s ago lor
hearings on the state's reimbursement system lor
nursing homes.
The Legislature hB8 not had
any noor sesalOI\8 in . two
weeks. Sessions the last week
of January were canceled
because of the biiuard. Last
week's absence of floor
activity - a few House
conunittees held hearings was planned earlier this
month.
The House Economic
Affairs Committee plans
hearings Tuesday afternoon
and Wednesday evening on
Senate.passed legislation
allowing banks to establish
branches outside the county
in
which
they
are
lncorporaled.
The House is to reconvene
at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday.

FEBRUARY
DIAMOND
SALE
SAVE 40% to 50% This Week

Sunday Times-seolioel

APPLY FOR LICENSE
GALUPOUS - · Making
application for a marriage
license Frida~ in Gailia
County Probate Court were
John Michael Denney, 21,
Bidwell, student, and Verna
Kay Weddington, 18, ·Vinton,,
ward clerk.

mOt:H;jDaJ0

of
building
design,
transportation, equipment
purchases and education.
The governor's address has
. pre-empted
further
committee work ln at least
one area . The House Finance
Committee is suspending
hearings this week on school
financing problems to work
on other bills.
But
the
Education
Committee is to receive from
subcommittee Tuesday
evening a rewritten version
of a plan to set up a basic
education fund for distribution to primary and
secondary schools.
Supporters are hoping it
can be reported out Thursday
and sent to the Ways and
Means Committee for further
study.
The Senate Finance
Committee OP!'ns hearings
Monday evening on nursing
home financing, following a

Uod that will enable the
set
students to manifest a more
March 1 deadline is
abundant life.

••

WE ACCEPT
M.,STERCHARGE

VISA

GOLDEN
BUCKEYE

�A-4-TheSundayTimes-Sentinei,Sunday, Feb.l2,1978

Racine man gets -

Dr.-Mykel
featured

30-day jail term

•

speaker

ano cinders into the yard at
the Lee residence, before
striking a tree. There was
MIDDLEPORT - Dr. Nan
heavy damage.
Mykel,
Coordinator of the
Miss Roush was taken to
Gallia-Meigs
Health Center.
Veterans Memorial by
was
guest
speaker
at a
private auto for examination
meeting
of
the
Middleport•
since she struck her head on
the windshield. There were Pomeroy Rotary Club ~" riday
night at Heath United
no citations.
Methodist Church.
Dr. Mykel outlined the
services of the Ct!nter which
Minor mishaps
range from dealing with
problems of depression to
probed Friday
marriage counseling.
Most of the work is done on
GAl.LIPOLIS - Two minor an outpatient basis but at
accidents including a hit-skip
an
accident
at
the
times staff members do go
were investigated Friday by
fairgrounds.
into the home, Dr. Mykel
According to the report, the Gallipolis police depart- said.
Estil G. Collins, 62, Rt. 2, ment.
Guests were the Rev . Paul
The hit-skip occurred at Daggett and Fay Wilson, both
Pomeroy, backed his auto
into the side of a passing car 1528 Eastern Ave. where an of the Pt. Pleasant Rotary
driven by William Eichinger, unknown vehicle struck a car Club.
owned by Janet L. Davis, 18, .
Syracuse.
Ta bles for th e dinner ,
Collins had been parked at Rt. 2, Crown City.
served by women of the
Another accident occurred church , carried out a
· the Salisbury Township
at
901 Second Ave . where a
Garage. There was moderate
Valentine theme.
damage to the Eichinger vehicle operated by Mansell
vehicle and slight damage to H. Robinson , 72, Gallipolis,
the Collins car. There were no struck a parked car o ~&lt;'11ed by Friday fire
Daniel E. Vance, Gallipolis.
injuries and no citations.
was
modrrate damages auto
Saturday morning, There
damage
.
sheriff's
deputies
investigated a one-car accident
GALLJPOLIS - Loss was
at the old " creamery corner~'
set at $550 in an auto fire at
in Racine.
9:15 a.m. Friday at the
Vickie L. Roush , 18, Rt . 2,
The first ship to cross the Lawrence Shaver residence
Racine, was traveling east on
on the Bulaville-Porter Rd.
SR 124, hit a slick icy patch North Pole beneath the Arctic
Gallipolis Fire Chief James
causing her vehicle to shde ice was the Nautilus. Aug. 3. A. Northup sa id Mrs. Naomi
across the roadway on ice 1958.
Shaver had started a 1965
Dodge and returned to her
home while the vehiCle was
446-3353
warrping up. La,ter, her
daughter found names In the
rear seat.
SILVER BRIDGE
Cause of the blaze was
listed as an electrical short.
PLAZA

POMEROY
Meigs
County Judge John C. Bacon
Friday sentenced Calvin
Mayle, 2S, Racine, to six
months to five years for a
breaking and entering last
June at the Holsum Bakery in
Middleport.
'
Judge Bacon, however,
suspended ihe sentence and
Imposed a 30 day term in the
Meigs County Jail. Mayle
was also placed on two years
probation. He had been in• dieted by a recent grand jury.
Friday afternoon, Meigs
County deputies Investigated

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial Hospita l
ADMITTED - Grace Eich.
Pomeroy; Richard ~Moss,
Pomeroy; Geo r ge Hupp,
Racine; Mathew Kinne n,
Reedsville; Lydia Ebersbach, Pomeroy; Irene
Russell, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Vivian
J ones, Pauline Brr.wer ,
William Woods , Mildred
Arnold, Cla r ence Na pper.

Henry Cunn ingham, Walter
Robinson , Viele Williams ,
James Conde.

Sears

..

l5%-25%0FF
Belmont-style cabinets

:

Plan the Belmont look
throughout your home!
Sears has over· 50 styles
and sizes including fillers,
drawers, bookcases and
kitchen-size cabinets. Assembly is quick; installation is easy. And because of
acrylic protection inside
and out, maintenance ts
minimal! Beautiful!
Fonnica®laminate
countertops

CUT23%

7900

'•""'

...-

r.

Bolt together to form
worktops. Available in
strai~ ht , cor n e r section s, 4 patterns in cluding hulcht'r block.

6800

7790

Digital control
garage door opener

SALE! Wood or'
steel garage doors

Tub enclosure

'14495

CUT '10-'20

Sears price

Choose your own oper·
ating code for sf!(: urity.
Built .in light. ''h HP.

Wlth2lranlm.llten .. 1174.88

Ga lva ni zed steel )ian ·
els, frame on stee l
doors. In!lulating wood
~oors a re pre-sllnded.

kit . . . CUT '4
White

Isears I
·

POMEROY - ~·our suits
have been filed In the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Henry W. Bentz, Racine,
has filed suit against Wilbur
N. Leifheit, Jr., Racine, and
Brian K. French, Middleport,
seeking $950 in damages to
his auto incurred in an ac·
cident at Racine. He alleges
the
defendant s
were
negligent.
James N. Grueser, Mid·
dleport, is seeking a divorce
from Diane L. Grueser ,
Middleport, charging gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty. He seeks custody of
one minor child.
Sue Gibson and Gary
Gibson, Route 4, Pomeroy,
filed for a dissolution of their
marriage .
Mary Workman, Route 3,
Albany, filed for divorce from
Kenneth Workman, Route 3,
Altny, charging gross neglect
of duty a nd extreme cruelty.
The plaintiff seeks custody of
two minOr children.
In other court actions, the
Pomeroy National Bank was
given authority to recover
$2,059.89 from Julius and
Evelyn Preston, the amount
due on a note.
·Herman Taylor
was
granted a divorce from Vona
Taylor on grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.
Dismi~sed were suits of'tOe
Pomeroy National Bank
aga inst the Ohi o Valley
Manufacturing Corp:, et al;
the Scott Lumber Co. , against

Miami increases

SILVER BRIDGE ~LAZA
PH. 444-2770
FORORDERS
PHONE 441 _1770

SEAitS, ROEIIUCK AND CO.

.,

Great American Homes;
Ruby J ones, et al, against
Opol Fitzpatrick; Mitziann
McClintock against. John F.
McClintock ; G. Dougla s
Ci rcle against Francis L.
Taylor.
Barbara Long was granted
a divorce from Matthew Long
on grounds of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cr uelty and
the maiden name of . the
plaintiff (Archer)' was
restored.
The marriage of Charles R.
Lambert ahd
Beverly
Lambert was dissolved and
the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. was given the
right to recover $1,459.26 in
its su!J,. against Darrell L.
Jones and Sheila Jon~..s.

OXFORD , Ohio (UP!)
The Ohio resident who paid
$2 ,540 to go to Miami
University this year will pay
$2,690 next year, not countin g
health insurance.
The university's board of
trustees Saturday .authorized
incr ~ses of $55 a semester in
fees for all campuses and $20
a semester in room and board
cha rges for t he Oxford
campus.
The trustees also voted to
raise the non..resident tuition
fee required of out"'f-state
students by $50.
The hikes go into effect this
falL
School. officials said the
increases were necessary to
m.aintain sta ndards in library
acqui·Sitions, classroomlaboratory supplies a nd
faculty salaries and to keep
. up wi th inflation a nd
mandated civil service pay
raises.

coverage was increased
$105,000 to help offset inflation and cover added
~uipment. and add.ed inventory of materials during
the past couple of years.
During the year 71 taps
were installed compared with
73 taps in 1976, 50 taps in 1975.

Find out why peOple all
over are switching to Allstate
•
auto msurance.
Why are so many drivers switching
their insurance to Allstate ?
We'll give you lots of reaoons.
Allstate offers lots of special
r~tes and discounts. Good Driver.
Compact Car. Two Car. Low
Mileage. Young Married. And more.
And Allstate offers today's most
advanced claim handling. Coast
to coast. Fast. Convenient.
We t hink you'll find a
difference with Allstate.
So eompare companies. Find out
why the owners of over nine
million cars are now in 11 good
hands." Call or come in.
,,,,..............-. ,.

Active customer count, as

of December 31, 1977, was
1,871, a 50 percent gro111h
during the past six years.
When the new extension
becomes a reality late In the
year 1978, customers will be
increased by nearly 300. This
extension adds another 38
miles of main lines to the
S)'Stem .
A district official said
naturally, this causes more
operational and maintenance
costs. Th.e cost of power for
the wells, ·treatment plant
and boosters has practically
doubled in the p'ast two years.
Inflation has cost the water
district too.
Wages and materials are
up, fuel, gasoline and power
have nearly doubled. Even
though the income is up, so

NOW AVAILABLE THROUGH
THE

McGINNESS-STANlEY AGENCY:INC.
NICK JOHNSON

are all expenses and costs

related to operating the water
system.
The costs are being offset
by the new groll1h each year

Blackston said the district's
annual payment to the
Farmers
Home
Ad·
ll)inistration Is $89,649.02.
Blackston urged residents to
be patient on future line
expansion .

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE

Phone 446-1761
Ga IIi polis

452 2nd Avr

I
A-&amp;-The Sunday Thnes-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 12, 1978

Senior Citizens' scenes
CENT&amp;R ACTIVrrlEs
PDMEROY - OO!y six
more weelta until Easter.
Spring is on its way. All we
can do is think positive and
promise ;never again to
romplain about bot weather!
The Senior Cltlten aMual
Easter Bauar wW be March
21, 22 and 23 here at the
Center from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
each day . Craft making
classes for Easter items will
begin Tuesday, February 14
at 1 p.m. and will be held each
Tuesday, Wednesday and
Tbursday at 1 p.m. until the
Bawr. We need your help In
preparing items for this
event. Beginning Friday,
March 3 at I p.m., candy
Easter eggs (decorated with
icing), will be prepared. You
may make these to take
home, at cost, or help prepare
them for the Bazaar. The
recipes for this project sound
delicious, so come in and
leam how it is done .
A bake sale will be held In
conjunction with the Bazaar.
We would appreciate any
help you can give us.
On Tuesday, February 14, a
knitting class for beginners
will be held starting at 10
a.m. here at the Center. The
instructor is Mrs. Rose

Ginther and this class Is open
to persons of all ages.
On Tuesday, February 21 at
II a.m., Mrs. Irene Christy
will be teaching crewel
embroidery. Persons taking
thisclassshouldhave a basic
knowledge of embroidery
stitches. Mrs. Christy 11111
explain materials needed
during the first class session.
This class is also open to
persons of all ages.
HEALTH TEAM
In · an effort to bring a
student health team to Meigs
County again this sununer,
• the Center is asking your help
in identifying a health
program designed to meet
particular health needs of the
community. Last summer a
Multiphasic Health Screening
Clinic was held with over 6011
persons being screened.
We would welcome any
suggestions you may have for
possible hea lth related
programs . The following
· ideas have been suggested:
Diabetic Education Classes,
Well Adult Clinic, and Drug
Education classes for parents
and youth.
Please call 992-7311 and
share you• ideas with Marty
Geyer. Marty was a member
of the health team based In

He's got a dozen ways to help you save when you buy your next new car or tru ck.

niE GRFAT DODGE OPTION SALE.
Just lo_ok at a random sampl ing of the option packages yo ur Dod ge
Dealers o flermg . Each comes to h1m from the factory priced so he can
pass b1g sav1ngs (l1ke the kind we describe below) on to you. Ask hi m
about these very special values .

college tuition

Gifts Of Love
.From

PEDDLER'S PANTRY
State &amp;.. Third _ _ _ _ Gallipolis, Ohio
ASPEN WAGON. Order an AM radro, d1Q1tal clock, deluxe
wheel covers. F78x14 wh1te stdewall ttres . otus a roof raCk and
root deflector Add bucket seats wrth center told·down armreSt
luxury steenng wheel txJdy srde moldrngs dual remote·controi
mrrrors. dolu)(e wtoer s. Light Package· save up to $250
' Po w er stetJf!n\) rl!Qunetl -:~1 1.'•1r &lt;~ c o s t

ASPEN FOUR· DOOR. Order thrs option package,' and you'll
get AM radro. drgl!al clock. dual horns. and dual remme-control
mrrrors. deluJCe Wlr,'ldShleld wipers., bucket seats With lold·down
center armrest. white Sidewall t1 res. lullury steenng wheel, deluxe
wheel covers. body·Side moldtngs. Light Package olus a lull
VInyl roof
' Po w~n

SIOsr•ng reQurrsa at

e~ tr a

cos t

Officer faces
forgery charge
LANCASTER, Ohio (UPI)
- A part-time Lithopolis
patrolman bas been accused
of. swearing
in new officers ,
.
stgmng some of them up at a
police training scbool and
buying new uniforms, aU
without authorization.
Richard F . Gra y, 24,
a Republican candidate for
sheriff in the 1976 primary
was indicted by a Fairfield
County grand jury Friday of
one count each of forgery
falsification arid tampering
with evidence.
Investigating deputies said
Gray bought $800 worth of
police uniforms from a
Columbus firm by signing tbe
name of lithopolis Mayor
Paul Kistler Jr.
They said he · misrepresented himself as
. chief of the LithopoliS Jlolice
department and deputited
and 5wore in people and
enrolled them in the
Reynold s burg
Police
Academy.

RAMCHARGER. You'll get a krck out of thrs Ramcharger
Prospector Package (lhere are two others you can look mto as
well ) Order upper bOdy motdmgs. avarlable wheels or wtieet
covers AM/FM radro , cloc k rear bench seat. 35 ·ga11on fuel

tank, and "Prospector decaL and you II save uo to $100

halo v1nyl roof . s111 and wheel ·lip mold1ng s. hood ornament '
premum wheel covers sports m1rrors. and G78 ~T t. whit e s•de
wall !•res Don t let lh•s one gel away from you
· ~:~,: ~~·;,.., no·.. er Sl!lO;lfoOQ ·•nd &lt;oulnmnbG lr!onsmos~or:m IOOtme o 001

Here's what we mean when we say yo ur Dodge Dealer's got it all' Omni,
the newest of all Dodges , sets th e scene. But lh ere a re a ls o a brilliant
new Magn um XE, new Diplom at luxury and value, Aspen, Monaco,
Charger, a new Challenger impo rt, and bright new 1978 Colts.

-BEA

' I•

Sen4 the LOV-U-BUNCH® for
St. Valentine's Day, February 14

$S035!
Heres the new one from Dodge th at has so m11ch go1ng lor 11
• 1 7 hire overhead cam lour cyl1nder cnq1ne
• 3.5 8 cub1c feet of storag e (roar MJal lofded)
• Fron t wheel or111€
• AM rad10
• All co l spm:tQ suspens10n
e C•gare!lr: IIQhler
• V1nyl.body Side mold1ngs
• Rack dnd 01n10n steenng
• Wn.te SldC w a:tttrcs
• Fwc doors
·
io:• -• !J!OU J u rcl ltrt•ng l ,ur ·&lt;. .t nU de '&gt;t•n&lt;tl! tJn r. hdrfl"'·
IIStH"' Illf!'&gt; f t t tu PP~HI Wilt\ l I hlt U o.!llq!"1~ IJI'l(l m~n \ t'lllr&lt;lnS rn·S\;Illn
'!'our rn lf •ltfjl! m ... , v OH~ &lt;J n.co rd r&gt;q "' ~OI " .:ar" r:onohhun ~&lt;uounm~nt
ana yOu• dr Y•hQ t\ , ,f )o!•, r,ahlorn•il m•lcago IO W\ll

GRUI'CARS . .

GIIEM'YAWES: -

..
.....,,._,_,_

•

ThiS new ore spring soectal SoeHs 'sav1ngS trom th e t ~res up

• 225 Super Sot.
·
e AM rr,~d10
·
e ·Power steertng
• Wh1te li1dewa ll r.3dlals
• Automatic transmiSSIOn
Pr1ce with th1S oqu1pmenr $5035 " tor the two door $519 1' lor
the IOU( door ltH S package With a 318 V8 111$lead of lhe well

oroven S1 x hasast1cke' onceol $5211 '1orthetwo-door $536r
lor the four door
\
·
'S I!l k u r lJ!OCI:!

~ll fl\ld•oy

.

I&lt;U l'S and d!.! SI!O&lt;J110 f1 (

hdi\-J~S

. .

TODAY'S DODGE DEALER'S GOI' rr ALLI

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
lHIRD &amp; COURT

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

County for the Season oi 1894.
He was the first boy in town to
master th~ feat ol climbing
through the frame of a .
bicycle while It was in
motion.
Odd was a good dancer and
once won a set of brass slip. rod ear muffs for piloting his
partner through an array of
eggshells placed end to end In
Shober's · Hall without
breaking a single shell. He
also won a blue ribbon for
excelling in the open contest
for "graceful gestures."
Junior and Billy were
Boston bulldogs that In·
fluenced his life. Odd wrote a
coiWJm abQut Junior being
killed by a car and received
20,000 letters of sympathy.
Billy was deaf. This dog
crossed the ocean 16 times,
the American continent tO
times, and had traveled to
Bermuda, Mexico, and most
major cities In lhe U. S.
Odd did not like school and
.frequently played hooky. He
once skipped school for a
whole term.
Cincinnati was where Odd
spent his first vacallon.
There he had such a grand

Meigs County last year. She
has since been employed by
the Ohio Commission on
Aging as a Pubtic Benefits
Specialist for Meigs County.
When
Mcintyre
was
BY TOM SAUNDERS
She Is very happy to be back
questioned
about
Ills
·
wardODD-The LlghttrSlde
In Meigs County and we at the
Most robe he estimated that he had
GALLIPOLIS Center are very glad to have
material tells of Odd 60 suits, 100 shirts, 200
her here working with us.
neckties, 36 hats. :;o pairs of
Mcintyre's achievements Emergenty Assistance
shoes, 100 pairs of socks, 60
in
this
article
I
am
going
to
During the past month the
pairs of pajamas, and 60
give
some
of
the
characCenter has tried its best I&lt;&gt;
dressing
gowns. He loved
cvntact those individuals teristics that made up the
vivid
colors
and was fond of
(a pproximately 200 calls person.
colognes.
Odd was something of a
were made) identified by
Mcintyre became so good
concerned neighbors and our dandy . He went to his favorite
at
riding a bicycle that the
files as needing fuel, food haunts wearing a c0cked hat,
League
of American Wheeltransportation, medication a crisp handkerchiel, spats, a
men
named
him Champion
·
strident
ue,
and
tine
suits.
He
and other emergency serTrick Bicycle Rider of Gallia
often
carried
a
walking
stick.
vices. There were 66 requeots
for emergency assistance
alone in January.
We are still receiving calls
for help. Tbe State Office on
Aging has provided some
funds
for
emergency
financial assistance to senior
citizens, but these funds are
very limited so each case
in time, we would fine !hat
BY JAMES SANDS
must be looked at inSaugrain
's uncle
was
GALLIPOLIS - It has
dividually to determine, inlibrarian
of
the
National
come eligibitity. The funds commonly been thought that
Library of France and that
are dwindling as more people the first settlers of Gallipolis
his
ancestor Jean Saugrain
receive help through our (the French 500 ) had no idea
was
a high official under
services. We will continue to that the Ohio country was as
Charles
IX and Henry IV.
rough
as
they
would
find
it
to
help persons in n~ed not only
After
Saugrain
left
ROOF FALLS
through our programs but be in 1790. Gallipolis,
he
lived
for
a
time
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
UNDER SAND
also by determining if they
BROOKPARK, Ohio (UPI)
are eligible for assistance French were misled as to in Kentucky . In 1800 he
St.
Louis.
In
St.
moved
to
certain
facts,
but
to
say
that
The Ford Motor Co. said a
through other agencies, such
Louis
Saugrain
became
a
had
no
knowledge
of
the
they
9-foot
section of roof at its
as the Veterans Administration , the Community "wildness" of OhiO does not Spanish post surgeon and an local casting plant caved in
under the weight of casting
Action Agency, the Welfare correlate with t he historical American army surgeon.
It was Saugraln who made
sand that had piled as high as
Department and volunteer facts.
One of the most prominent the medical supplies for the five feet because of a
organizations.
members
of the Frencb 500, Lewis aod Clark expedition. malfunctioning bopper on the
Please do not feel offended
Antoine
Saugrain,
had, · in In !809 Saugraln lolt:oduced roof.
by the need .of the individual
fact,
already
been
to the first smallpox vaccine In
No injuries were reported
agency to know your finan St.
Louis
and
offered
to
America;
had
traveled
down
and
production was not
cial siatus. It is necessary
and part of the routine to the Ohio River ; and had even vaccinate everybody tIn- disrupted when the mishap
obtain this information so been captured by Indians. All cluding Indians ) free of . occurred Friday, a company
spokesman said, declining to
that Individuals truly in need this hap~en ed in 1787 and charge.
Saugrain had been trained release a damage estimate.
will not be forgotten. If you 1788.
Traveling with Saugrain on in France in the sciences,
need assistance in some way
this
trip were Raquet and cll emistry, mineral ogy,
please don't hesitate to call.
Picque,
the philosopher. natural history, and hospital
The telephone number is 992Picque,
a
student of the work . In 1788 Saugrain
7311.
school
of worked in the service of Spain
Our appreciation goes to Rousseau
the
County
Highway philosophy, believed that the and traveled to Mexico to
study Mexico's natural
Department; Township American Indian was the
resources.
Trustees, owners of four- "noble savage."
While
in
Gallipo lis
It wasPicque' s opinion that
wheeled vehicles and to
house
became
one·
Saugrain's
everyone who Volunteered to life for man was meant to be
of
t
he
most
popular
atmuch
simpler
than
what
18Ui
help senior citizens during
tractions
for
visitors
to
the
century
Eu"
ropean
man
was
this state of emergency. It
will be a long time before we making it. Picque thought city. H. M. Breckenridge
forget the winter of '77-'78! It Europe could learn much writes :
"Many of my countrymen
hasn't been easy but we about life from the American
used
to come and stare at his
should be thankful that there Indian.
doings,
which they were half
The fa ct that Plcque was
were no serious casualties.
Inclined
to think had too near
Hope to see all of you back killed by lndlaos the same
a
resemblance
to the black
time
SaugraiD
was
captured
at the Center on a regular
art.
must
have
put
to
resl
-any
basis before long. Call us at
" The
doctor•s little
992-7886 for .transportation Illusions that settling In Ohio
phosphoric
·matches,
igoltlng
and lunch reservations, 992· was goiDg to he ·easy. ·
the
glass
spontaneously
when
Saugrain's reason for going
7311 for questions on Social
tube
was
broken,
and
from
Security, Food Stamp on this.trip in 1787-M was not
'which
he
derived
some
Program, Utility_. Discounts philosophical, but was
or .for other needs you may economic, Saugr8in was the emolument, were thought ·by
have, and 992-7884 for advance agent for a French some to he rather beyond
reporting volunteer time or land company headed by more human power.
" His barometers and
just give us a caU to let us Joseph Ignace Guillet in; the
thermometers,
with the scale
inventor
of
the
guillotine.
know how you are and if we
neatly
painted
with the pen ,
Guillotin happened to be
may be of service to you.
and
the
frames
richly
carved, •
Saugrain's brother-in-law.
were
objects
of
wonder,
and
Guillotin's company gave up
some
of
them
are
probably
their land scheme when the
Fatal Dream
French Revolution broke still extant In the West."
Saugrain, who was born in
Early in April 1865 Presi- out. ·
Rosalie
dent Lincoln told his wile and
Saugrain, who lived 'at 1763, ma rried
a friend that he had dreamed Gallipolis for six years, gives Michau of Gallipolis in 1793.
he was awakened by sobbing the "French city" a con- Saugraln died in St . Louis in
and followed the sound to the nection to an awful lot of 1820. Mrs. Sa.ugrain, born In
East Room of the White world history. Not only was July, 1776, died in 1860 also in
!louse. There he found Guilletin a brother-in-law but St. Louis. To this union were ·
mOurners surrounding a so was J ea n-Francois born a number of children,
catafaque and an honor Chalgrin - architect of the some of whom became
guard told him : "The presi- college of France, St. famous In the early hlsiory of
dent · , .. killed by an Philippe-du-Roule
church, St. Louis.
(The Rev. James Sands"s
assassin.'' Witllin two weeks and the "l'arc de triomphe de
address is Box 3, Barlow
the slain president lay in the l1Etoile.' 1
room.
If we would go further back 45712).

Dr. Antoine Saugrain
achiever, kin of great

tin1e that it was necessary lor
him to pawn his silver watch
for a ticket back to Gallipolis.
Mcintyre would mention
items of food he had enjoyed
as a child . Tbis would always
bring gifts of jellies, cheese,
and preserves. Once he
stated his idea of a perfect
gift for a man was a dressing
robe. He received fourteen of
them.
Odd and !larry Maxon were
once trapped In a henhouse
by the own.er while they were
gathering material lor a feast
In their Pirate Cave under the
river bank. Odd and Harry
set tra)l5 to catch skunks to
sell for skins. One afternoon
they discovered a captured
animal had dragged thei
trap
into
a
nearby culvert. Maxon rattled a stick in one end of it
and Mcintyre caught the
anlnial by the tail as he

waddled out. Held by the taU,
a skunk b unabl~ to use bis
strongest defensive weapon .
b:nrapt ured by their success
they hurried to Hudlln"s
saloon where the gentry of
the city had gathered for
their tustomary afternoon
pickup. Tony McHale,
barkeeper, asked tbf boys
what the~ had.
. ·
" We cau~ht a skunk!" said
Mcintyre.
"That Is not a skunk," said
McHale, " that's a jackrabbit." Crestfallen,
Mcintyre turned to Maxon
lind replied : "Harry,lf It Isn't
a skunk we don't want it."
With that, he cast the animal
into the middle of the saloon.
Pandentonlum is a mild word
for what followed. Tbe saloon
was closed for several days
· during the renovation.
At one time Mclntyre's
phone number was O.O.M.

SUNDAY ONLY
GROUP LADIES'

DRESS &amp;
CASUAL SHOES
VALUES TO 118.00

•soo

. ....

FO~PI1*1•
·
SHOES
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
OPEN SUNDAY 1 TIL 5

·-

·.

FOR THEONE
YOU LOVE ON
VA LENTINE DAY
Pendants aDd Lockets
with or without diamonds.

From

HOMEMADE OXYGEN

niEGHfAt NEW DODGE CARS.

' B~ se " 1 11

MEETING CHANGED
MIDDLEPORT - Women
of Heath United Methodist
Church will meet at 2:30 p.m.
today at the church instead of
Monday due to the darkened
condition of the streets. The
program and hostesses will
remain as announced earlier.

MONACO "GRAN COUPE:' Th's oackage' '"eludes lh,ngs
hke lu xul)l CIOih·and-v.nyl dual rer.11n1ng bucket sears Wllh center
!old down armrest. luxury steer1ng wheel. color· keved seat belts

He's got outstanding new values that beg to be driven.

f EPA

Marb lecolorscutSlO SU.88

• Sears has a credit plan to suit most every n eed
~.
• Sale prices indicated from our "YH", "X" and HL" ca talog supplcnumts
Sa&amp;ia/Gction Guara nteed oi' Your MoneiJ Back

hydrants. valves, etc.
Over 36 miles of pipe line
have been added to lhe
system during the past seven
years using water personnel
only. 12,119 feet of pipeline
was added during the past
year.
District in s uran ce

Four court actions file d

Only 5 over l uppin~r ran·
els for ea!'y ins tnllntio n.
Solid colors cufss
SSt 88

• Shipplng, installation exira • P'riccs a re catalog prices

fo• p;ck·up w;th;n 2 dava
~il'nr§e rvtce
·
Phone 4....
•• -29 02 •

The Tuppers Plains
Chester Water District added
$29,021.06 in improvements
during the year 1977. This
makes a total of $279,611 .53 in
improvements during lhe
past seven years.
Improvements listed include new mains, distribution
and service linr,; tADll . firr

*5388

Sears Authorized Installation is available at extra ,cost!

M~at merchandise available

$29,021 in improvements
m~de in water district

In selling new ta)l5 lor new
-homes.
, At the present time. no rate
Increase is anticipated according to Harold Blackston,
president of the board of
trustees of the water district.

· A winsome bouquet of bright spring blooms
to enchant the most discriminating
damsels. And, whether your flowers convey
your love to someone near or far, over 30,000
fellow wire service florists make delivery
nearly anywhere as simple as a phone call.
Please order early. Visit us soon, or call us

RESPIRATORY SUPPORT SYSTEM

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
. Mrs. Mlll.rd VanMeter

.
106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, 0 .
_
Phone 992-2039or 992-5721
We accept all major credit cards &amp; wire
flowers everywhere.

COMPLETE
INVENTORY OF
RESPIRATORY
THERAPY ·
EQUIPMENT
&amp;SUPPLIES

FREE FOUNTAIN
SOFT DRINKS wmt .
EACH PillA
EATEN ON PREMISES
EAT IN OR
CARRY OUT
SERVICE

NO HIGH PRESSURE CYUNDERS OR CHEMICALS - THE MARX 0'
AND BENDIX SUPPORT SYSTEMS PERFORM WCTHOUT LIQUIDS,'
CHEMICALS, MECHANICAL CHANGES, GAS FIUINGS, OR HIGH
PRESSURE TANKS AND THE HIGH COST OF HAUUNG ·HEAVY
CYUNDERS IS ELIMINATED FOR TI!IOSE PATIENTS REQUIRING
CONnNUOUS OXYGEN OR FREQueNT SERVICE.

.
Home
Delivery .

Available

·'

SUNDAY
SPECIAL

today.

•DISH GARDENS .
•ROSES
-cARNATIONS
•MUMS
•AZALEAS
•CUT FLOWER
•TERRARIUMS
ARRANGEMENt
•TULIPS
.
•SILK &amp; PERMANENT ARRANGEMENTS

·-·-....

Til-COUNTY HOME ..
MEDICAL SUPPLY

56 State Street
Gallipons. o.
_ Mrs. Ronald L. Saunders
Manager &amp; Sales Representative
614-446·1856

Open Sunday :4100 Til 11:00

MEIGS INN

PIZZA SHACK
PHONE 992-6304 .

�B-1-Tbe Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. Feb. 12, 1978

A~-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. l2, !978

HOOFS
••.and. • .PAWS
.
By Marton C. Crawford
Meigs Co181ty Humaae Society
POMEROY - 1 wonder if all of you know what euctiy ill
involved in the Humane Society Animal Adoption Service and
Carellne. 'Ibis week I thought I'd give you a good idea or
picture by telling you of the calls we've received just in the
past 'few days. You see, the original purpose of the Caroline
was to put people with stray and homeless animals in touch
with those people who want peill- also the Carellne ill to give
you folks someone to call when you see an anlmal being
abused neglected or that has been abandoned. But, we get all
sorts of' calls and some are frustrating, while others are Iunny,
and then there are those that are tragic. Here's what they were
most recently :
1. An elderly lady, visiting in Pomeroy over on Butternut
Street called and was quite concerned because there was a
young'cat up a tree that had been there since the day before
and was crying. Boy, we hete thill type of call because we have
one dickens of a ·lime getting anyone to help us get the animals
down. In any other.city in the world the Fire Department takes
care of incidents like this for the citizens, but the Pomeroy Fire
Department Chief says "we don't do things like thet. "
We realize that they aren't paid for that specific task, but
they do heve the know-bow and eqqlpment, whereas the young
fellas and men that end up helping out do oot. The first time
one of these young people gets killed helping out an animal,
perheps our paid officia ls will take another herd look at their
attituqes, do you think?
Anyway, we thought we had someone early thet afternoon,
after having no luck with several previous calls, but he
couldn't find the house and didn1 bother to let us know -so
here sits the cat up the tree yetlate that afternoon . Well, at this
point I got mad, grabbed a ladder and flashtight and the Major
and 1 took off for P001eroy at 7 p.m. to find the poor animal.
Thank goodness some good samaritan had come along ~artier
and got the cat down - 'cause looking at that tree, I'd have
been the one mentioned above who got killed falling out of a
tree - it was darn tall and almost without limbs.
2. Another elderly woman called stating sbe had .to find a
new home lor her nice dog because of her health. We wlli88Sist
her.
3. A woman called stating that there were wild cats under
her trailer and wanted to know what she could do to get rid of
them and their odor. We told her to throw some moth balls
under the trailer and when the cats got a whiff of them, they
would make for the tall limbers. She could then spread regular
cat litter around under the trailer and it would absorb that
aroma ... then the area would have to be boarded up good to
prevent the animals from returning.
4. Man called stating that there were cattle ruMing loose
ail over the place near Chester and that they were in pretty had
sbape. Our Road Agent picked up a gentleman who is an expert
on farm animals and they went and had a talk with the owner.
5. Woman called stating that her two animals bed
something wrong with them and described the condition. I
recommended sbe take them both to the vet right away. ·
6. Woman called from Pomeroy asking me if traps were .
legai within the city limits. She was very upset, so rtold her
She would have to call the Game Warden and inform him
where they were - which sbe did, but called me back to tell me
that sbecouldn't find him. She said sbe would continue to try. 1
really enjoyed this woman - she has a great sense of hwnor.
She was telling me about hating the type dogs that run loose
and chase cars, especially the ones that live up around her. She
said they get out of the way for her husband and everyone else,
but when sbe comes along they have her pegged and they won't
budge from the front of her car. I asked her how sbe got them
to move and sbe said "I stop, turn off my motor and just sit
there and scream." I cracked up.
7. Then I don't get enough serious calls - one night the
phone rang and this "funny" voice says "are you the lady that
writes "Hoofs and FEET?" Well, that's so,ne title, but I said
"I'm the one who wri~ Hoofs and Paws, yes." She then ~id
"well, I've got this dog in heat, and it's driving all my other
dogs crazy.! want you to take care of my dog until it comes out
of heat". 1 blew a cork ... 'cause we do get some pretty

DEADLINE MARCH 23
The
Democrat
and
Republican parties of Meigs
County w!U each elect 33

central committeemen ibis
year. Candidates must file
their petitions of candidacy

I

ridiculous calls around here and I thought thls was just some
nut, liO 1 started with my speech about not having a shelter in
Melgs_Cowty, etc.,~· and then I heard this giggling. For cryout-loud It was a friend o! mine who ls a retired Army (woman)
U . Colonel, calling from Washington, D.C. She is one of our
IIWIY friends in service who not only encourage us In ~ur
endeavors fpr animals but who don.ales money \o our Me1gs
County Humane Sociefy. So we had a good laugh over that one.
8. Got a call from Rutiand - dog found out during the
recent storm- abandoned - .wiD we help them lind a home for

Two men named Abraham
assassinated 77 ·years apart

it?

9_A man called wanting two kittens. We love this type call.
We had the kittens delivered nat day .
10. Got three more calls from folks wanting Blackie- one
living in congested area so after thinking about it for a while I
decided against this one. mackle has got to have space to run.
The other two have the space so now I've got to decide which
w!U get him - they both sound great. I'll let you know I!Oxl
week.
•
II. Awoman called and wanted to know how to get a skunk
out from under her house. Wowee, that was a problem. She was
told to call the Game Warden and we gave her the number and
wished her luck.
12. A woman called quite upset - a Doberman bed taken
upon himself to ~nd guard over her house and wasn't letting
anyone in or out. Our Road Agent drove to Pomeroy from
Harrisonvllle and oot only got the dos, but fqund its owner
before returning home.
. Now, that gives you a good Idea of some of the calls we get.
Most calls of course are from those who want animals and
from· those who have had animals dropped on them. We try to
hendle all - but bro-ther, sometimes we get some doozies.
Most people are real nice- some are real charac~s and It's
herd at limes to keep our sense of hwnor - but we re hangmg
in there .
.
Animals found, lost, and up for adoption are listed below
and are FREE to a good home;
Coondog type, male, young 446-0235.
Irish Setter, AK:C registered, male 992-7680.
Beagle type, female, 8 mo. · old, friendly with nice
·disposition 992-7680.
Mixed breed, small house dog, young, smart, female, good
with children 985-3884.
Mixed breed, very large, male, I yr. old, big baby, real
sweet 992-7680.
Scottish Terrior type, male 2 yrs. old, playful house dog,
black with white 992-3040.
Irish Setter male, AKC, 18 mo. old 9411-2751.
Labrador type, male, young, 20 lbs., black with white chest
949-2607.
Shepherd-Collie, female puppies, I~ mo. old, 1-3 mo. old,
playful 992-7680.
Coondog type, male, young 992-3446.
Collie-Spaniel puppies, 4 female, 4 male, 10 weeks old 3889367.
.
Beagle, male,'small, found hall frozen near Harrisonvllle,
nice dog, friendly 742-2949.
Shepherd-Collie puppy, female, 3 mo. old 742-2949.
Terrier type, male , medium size, 8 mo. old, cute , nice
·
disposition 742-2949.
Setter..shepherd.COU!e, female, I yr. old, also 5 puppies, 8
weeks old 245-0U04.
German Shepherd type puppies, few weeks old 742-2334.
German Shepherd puppy, male, 8 weeks old 992-3253.
Shepherd-Beagle puppies, male ·and female, 4 months old

:1.5&amp;-6537.
Kittens, long halt, male and female, real cute 9411-2093.
Cats and kittens; sbort hair, yellow and gray striped,
Catlco, all real pretty, little animals and must have home this
week OR, 992-7680.
__)__
Cat beautiful long golden hair, female· 949-2ti07.
wir: Irish Setter; female 992-3163; Pel!lngese, male,
neutered 949-:1846; ~ua·Terrier, 8lll81J brown female,
black with white on bellY 98U077; St. Bernard, II!. yrs. old 3786209; Italian Greyhound type, real thin looking, Ft. Meigs
area 742-2600.

with the Meigs County Board
of Elections by 4 p. Ill· on
March 23.

Jl ritt4·n for IJ, ·1. H .
sons were at work cleanng a elf to a nearby cabin. "Sill:· peep hole In the · cabin had
J. ,,II f.'HIII.'IN I'OH Tf:H
field at Long Run in Jeff.erson year-old Tom"-fatht:l'-t&lt;Hle aimed his shot at the shining
GAWPOUS - Two men County, when the Indian shot of the Presldent-"stooped bangle. U\Ue Torn was so
named Abraham Uncoln him from cover, says Tarbell . over his father's bleeding near he heard the ballet plug
w~re assassinated by bullet
Sandburg writes that body and wondered whet he its hole intotheredman.!'
77 years apart. One was the Abrahem Lincoln was work- could do. He looked up to see
The asaassin cl Grandgrandfather of the other. ing "in a field with his three an Indian standing over him, father Uncoln was, in turn,
They had ancestors who serv· sons, and \bey saw him in a a shining bangle hanging sboi. Another coincidence;
ed in the Revolutionary War.
spasm of pain !aU to the down over the Indian's the auauin ol Grandson
An Indian sbot and killed ground, just after the hoys shoulder close to the heart. · Abraham Lincoln was shot,
Grandfather Abraham Un· had heard a rifle sho( and the Then Tom saw the Indian's trapped by \roopl in Virglnla.
c1&gt;ln in Kentucky in 1788. A whine of a bullet."
hands clutch upward, saw The story of President LinSoutherner shot and killed
The boys yelled " Indians!" hiin double with a groan and coln 's death is well.jmown to
Grandson Abrahem Lincoln at each other. Mordec~i took crumple to the ground. everyone. Few knew about
in Washington, D. C., in 1865.
Mordecai with a rifle at a his grandfather.
Sources for thill inlonna·
tion are two books, one by Ida
M. Tarbell and the other by
Carl Sandburg. They can be
borrowed from the Gallia
County District Ubrary, and
the story is gripping, exHurrv.' Valentine :~ Day is Tuesday. Febn.wry
citing.
Eight men came to
America from western
England in the decade
1635-1645, all named Uncoln.
Three were brothers, but only
one of them bed heirs:
Samuel Linc.oln. A descendant of one of his sons, says
Ida Tarbell, was in the Boston
Tea Party, and was captain
of artillery in the Revolutionary War. Three other
descendants were RevoluWh&lt;Jt could please your Valentine more
tionary War sailors.
than a beautiful L,\VeBunclle ·Bouquet''
When you consider the
Fresh. romantic flowers arranged
primitive life into which
with a spray of sparkling hearts.
President Abrahem Lincoln ·
We can send it almost any·
was born, you're surprised to
where by wire. the FTD
read that another descendant .
way. Bu1 hurry .. .
of Samuel Lincoln--Levi
Lincoln--was a Harvard
Valentine's Day is
graduate, a minuteman .at
almost here. Call
Cambridge immediately
ur visit us today.
after the Bailie of Lexington,
helped
frame
the
Massachusetts state constitution, was attorney-general of
the United States and also
briefly secretary of state.
Levi had a son who served
in Congress and another who
was governor of Maine. Levi
Jr . was governor of
Massachusetts. Several of
these early Lincolns were
wealthy. Still another
Abraham Lincoln died rich in
Pennsylvania, but he bed a
nephew, ''Virginia Jotm'' Lincoln.
"Virginia John" Lincoln's
third son was Abraham Lin·
coin, who moved his wife and
Phone 446-9721
five children into Kentucky.
Gallipolis
27
Cedar
St.
Abraham and three of his

Two Wrecks

Reported

when we say

FREE
CHECKING
we mean

FREE
CHECKING

Member

FDIC

And that means no fee$ per check, no .monthly charges,
and no minimum balance for you ISound good? It is I

COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK

cording to Sgt. N.E. Benson.
Scott D. Hutchinson, 18, .
Milton, was Identified as the
driver.
According to Sgt. Ben11011,
Hutchinson was attempting to
pass a truck In iront of him
when he lost control o! bill car
when it llild on ice. The car
traveled off the road and 203
feet into a field where It
!Upped over. •
The car, a 1978 Dod!!•,
reportedly was demoliabed.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED. - Gillman
Grimm, .Mrs. Joe Paugh,
OileD Tharpe, Ted Stevens,
John Bartles, Helen SlmpkinJ,
and Mrs. Donald Workman all
of Politt Pleaoant. Johnny
Barnett, Roberl!burg; .Mrs.
James Ables, Syracuse;
Spencer Stutler, Leon; Clyde
Brown, and Mrs. Wllllun
Young both of Gallipolis;
Connie Nibert, Apple Grove;
Lola
Balles,
Buffalo;
Catherine Thomu, West
· Colwnbia and Mark stevena,
Winfield; Mrs. Michael Dalton
and 11011, Polllll'lluaot; Mn.

John SWpbena IJid 1011, Point

SILVER BRIDGE PWA... COURT sntEET-SPRIN.G VALLEY PWA

Pleolnt '
.- ''
Blrlha: a 1011 to Mr. and
Mrs. Henry ll.lfOe, Point

PI-t.
.'

LoveBundle®
Bouquet

FLOWERS by GEORGE

Classic Cars. . .
77 BUICK REGAL
2 DR

77 CHEVROLET
MALIBU
Buckskin finish wtth mafchlng vinyl

a~

'

SendOurFTD

interior. This 2 dr.

The Ma!on County Sheriff's
Department lnvestlgated two
traffic accidents Friday.
The most serious resulted
with an injury to a driver
when his truck flipped over on
Nine Mile Rd. near Southside ·
at 11:40 p.m., according to
Deputy Thomas E. Roush.
The driver was Identified
only as Mr. Gibson. According
to DeputY, Roush, Gibson
refused medical treatment
and asked that an in·
vesUgaUve report not be !Wed
out.
Another car !Upped over
earlier in the day while lt was
traveUng on Secondary 41

near Mason at 2 p.m.,

J4.'

hardtop

is

equipped wlfh air condlflonlng,
power ~teerlng and power bra.k.e~.
General ·Motors factory Offlc1ai s
automobile.

PRICED TO SELL AT

Super Intermediate finished in
classic black with white bucket seats
and white landau top . Equipment
includes t i lt wheel, cruise control,
console, AM radio with 8 track.

stereo and chrome p).!ted wheels·.
Only 3,289 miles. Balance of factory ·

warranty .

WE SOLD IT NEW

'4195

'5995

77 CHEVROLET
NOVA 4 DR

1972 CHEVROLET

Finished In glacier blue with
contrasting cloth interior. This 8,929
m lie. automobile has the econom leal
6-c ylinder engine, automatic transmission, power steering and radia l
tires with Rallye wheels.

·STATION WAGON
Locally .owned car fully equipped

Including factory air and three
seats. Only 45;-457 m iles makes this
car worth fhe price . If's the right
transportation for that summer
vacation.

ONLY

'3895
77 FORD MUSTANG II
GHIA
Butterscotch' finish with matching
custom Interior and a black landau
vinyl top. Equipment Includes power
steering, automatic transmission,
rear deck luggage rack, V-6 engine.
chrome styled wheels with radial
tires, 12,125 miles, New Bonnevlll~
lrade.

'1895
77 FORD LID
Champagne finish w'l th contrasting
ta~ vinyl landau roof and interior.
Equipped wlfh air conditioning, 6040 !eftt, rlldlo, power steering and
brakes, only 16,265 careful miles.
New tlmlfed frade.

·Carmel
4 DRtanDEMO
exterior with matching
· vinyl roof and contrasting custom
clofh Inferior. Equipped wlfh 350
engine, air conditioning, tilt steering
wheel, AM-FM •fereo radio, body
side mouldings and whlte. wall
radial tires. Bajan~e factory
warranty ~ .

SMITH BUICK PONTIAC
PRICED AT

77 CHEVROLET .
PICKUP
This custom deluxe model Is
equipped wlfh 6-cyllnder engine,
standard transmission, rear step
bumper, long · wide bed and only
12,175 m lies.

OFFERED FOR SALE AT

EXTRA SHARP

SAVE$$$

•4995

'3995

76 BUICK .LeSABRE
CUSTOM
This beautiful new car trade Is

76 PONTIAC

75 FORD

EXCELLENT CONDITION

finished in sterling sliver with
matching
landau
top
and
coOtrasting burgundy 60-40 Interior.
Loaded with options svch as cruise
confrot, AM. FM sfereo radio, till
wheel and chrome plated wheels .
Locally owned end only 24,314 mites.

PRICED AT

GRAND .PRIX
A 2 dr. M.T. Spec lolly hardtop from
Ponflac finished In Glacier blue wlfh
mofchlng vinyl Inferior. Equlpmenf
Includes air condlflonlng, AM-FM 8
track stereo radio and Rallye II
wheels. New Grand Prix trade.

PICKUP
This •uper cab model has fhe fwo
lone pain!, •tep bumper, 6·cytlnder
engine, camper topper, standard
transmission, and optional rear
•eaf. Only 20,000 mile•.

'3495

- ·~--

.~-

:.'.

Vema Weddington

Vicki johnston and Rick Macomber
WILL WED - Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Johnston,
Langsvllle, are announcing the enga~e~ent ~nd
approaching marriage of their daughter, VIcki, to RICk
Macomber, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Macomber,
Dexter. Vicki is a 1977 graduate of Meigs High School and
employed at Robbins &amp; Myers. Rick is a 1976 graduate of
Meigs High Scbool and employed at Gavin. The open
church wedding will be an event of February 26 at 3:30 p.
m. at the Church of Christ at Dexter with \be Rev. Charle~
Russell officiating. A half hour of music will precede the
wedding.

Washington PTA to
observe Founder's Day
GALLIPOLIS
On
February 17, 1897, eighty..,ne
years · ago, PTA lounders
Alice McLellan !lirney and
Phoebe Apperson . Hearst
gathered together a small
group of people which rapidlY
grew, to protect the neglect of
children. The Febrllilry 13
meeting .of the Washington
School PTA will be a Foun·
der's day )irQgr.am to
celebrate this beginning and
to honor its past presidents.
In observation of this event
and in honor of . these
oresidehts there will be a

ANNOUCNING ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Epple of Route I, Minersville, are announcing the engage~
men\ and approaching marriage of their daughter, Diana
Jw1e, to Gary Lynn Nelson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Nelson, Route 3, Pomeroy. Miss Epple is a 1977 graduate
of Eastern High School. Her fiance is a 1978 1nid·term
graduate of Eastern High School and is employe-d at Fren·
ch's Sunoco Service of Pomeroy. The closed wedding will
take place at the Chester United Metluxlist Church o n
Feb.l8at6:30p.m.

the friends and relatives of the couple are invited, will be

an event of Saturday, Feb. 25, at the Vinton Baptist
Church with the Rev. Jerry Neal officiating. Miss
· Weddington is a 1977 graduate of North Gallia High School
and attended Buckeye Hills for two years majoring in
DHO. Mr. Denney is a 1974 graduate of North Galtia High
School and a senior at Rio Grande College majoring in
elementary education. A reception will follow in the
fellowship room of the church.
.

This concern for children -

.

72 Mrs. Gene Wetherholt;
1972·73 Mrs. Dovel Meyers;
1973-74 Mrs. Bob Marchi;
1974-75
Mrs .
Richard
Mackenzie; 1975·76 Mrs.
Russell Wood; 1976-77 Mrs.
Robert Daniel.
This year'·s president. is

Mrs. · Donald O'Rourke.
The next meeting will be
held March 13 at which time
Harriet Kaufman, PH.D,
Director of Children's Ser·

in the Parish Hull, Monday,
MEETING PLANNED
Episcopal Churchwomen Feb. 13.
(ECW) of St. Peter's Church,
A short business meeting
Ml Second Ave., Gallipolis, will be held and two speakers
will hold a 9:30a.m. meeting will be presented: Mike
~' enderbosch, who will speak
of Crime Prevention, and

susan Davis of the Gallln
vices at the GaUia-JackS&lt;m· Christian School in Vinton.
Meigs Community Mental Children of the Christian
Health Center will present a Schuol will present a short
program concerned with program which they have
communitating with your developed.
child.

GHERKE'S'B~
GALLIPOliS, 0.

. I&lt;NIT MILL STORE

.
fc
.

life

-·,&lt;··········.,..•

,,..,.""',_,.,~
ox·!·~~·!•!·.o~:O;o;o-~,.~

..•

" - ~ ··

....... ' ·-·- ...

GO
BYWAY
OF

-

THE

WOODS
AND

TI\HV€L
Tn€
.r&gt;OTTOM
LHMD·
INTO SPRING

connie·

Citizens . l
Calendar I

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center ac·
tivities located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
is open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday, February 13 Movie "The Grizzly Bear," 11
a.m.; Squar~ Dance, 12:45-3
p.m.
•
Tuesday, February 14 Beginning Knitting Class, 10
a.m.·l2 noon; Craft Class, 1
p.m.; Chorus; l2:45-2. ·
·
,Wednesday, February 15Social Security Represen·
tative, 9:30 a.m.-11 :30 p.m.;
Craft Class, 1 p.m. i Games,
12:45·2 p.m.
Thursday, February 16 Craft Class,. I p.m.
Friday, February 17 -Art
Class, 10 a.rri.-12 noon; Ad·
vanced Knitting Class, 10
a.m.-12 noon; Bowting, 1-3
p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program,
12 noon-12:45 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Menu for February 13
through February 17, 1978:
Monday - Sausage patty,
pancakes • syrup, cottage
cheese salad, orange an'll
grapt,fruit sections, butter,
milk.
Tuesday - Chicken and
dumplings, mashed potatoes,
buttered broccoli, canned
apricots, roll, butter, milk.
Wednesday - Meatballs in
gravy, baked potato, buttered
green beans, jellied fruit
cocktail salad, yellow sheet
milk.
,Thursday - Soup beans
with ham bits, canned jieach
and pear salad, chocolate
pudding with vanilla wafer,
cornbread, butter, milk.
Friday - Fried fish,
escalloped potatoes, buttered
peas, peach cobbler, bread,
butter, milk.
Coffee, tea, buttermilk and
julce served daily.

DESIGNER STYLING
*EXCLUSIVE FASHION KNITS
*MILL PRICES
WE MUST MAKE ROOM FOR SPRING FABRICS ARRIVING

Final Clearance
ON ALL FALL FABRICS

Introducing our new
nne of Pangburn's
Cindy iust in time
for Va~entine's Day.
Heart Boxes $1.25 up
Miniatures
Pecan ·Millionaires
Dark Choc. Auf.
P,ll Nut Asst.
or try the l lb.
Collection · Bo• $6.00
It's extra special
candy for that extra
special girl!

SELECTED BOLTS
REGULAR

79,!
AND

'129

GOWNS AND PAJAMAS
by Gilead
Gowns
Pajamas

Robes
Baby Dolls

Sets

59.00 up
513.00 up
$20,00 up
$13.00 up
s26.oo up

Lockets For
Your Love...
Assorted styles and lengths.

$ZJ0up
Gold or Sil11er tones.
Large selection .

DRESS ·
LENGTHS

Tell
Her
"I Love
You"
Cuddly cotton knlf
sleepshlrts
trimmed and fled
fo perfecflon. The
shirt unzips to say
" I love You."
The
perfect
Valenflne glff for

YARD

"Pert 'n Pretty"

BIKINIS
100 Pet. nylon tricot with
brushed lining. By Gilead.

your special girl.

Valentine's Day
·Tuesday, Feb.

0

'

Diana Epple

ENGAGED -.Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J . Weddington of
Rt, 1, Vinton, announce the engagement of their daughter,
Vema, to John M. Denney, son of Mr. !llld Mrs. John E.
Denney of Bidwell. The open church wedding, to which all

Mrs. Raymond Gooch; 1947·
the average, gifted, han· 48 Mrs. R. E. Jenkins; 19411-49
dicapped and retarded joins Mrs. Hobart Wickline;
all members and has made 1949-50 Mrs. D. M. Elliott;
an impressive record of 1951·52 Mrs. Marcus
accomplishments for the well Magnussen ; 19~2-53 Mrs. R.
being of children and youth. D. Thomas; 1953-54 Mrs.
The following have served George Fuller; . 1954·55
as presidents of the Mrs. John L. Evans 1955-56
presentation of educational and better trained teachers Washington 'School PTA: Mrs. B. B. Matthews;
material to the school for the ... "This article appeared in a 1928-29 Mrs. Frank James; 1956·57 Edwin Edelblute;
use of the children. ln . ad· Cincinnati newspaper sixty- 1929·31 Mrs. E. Wobd Mills; 1957·58 Dr. Keith Bran·
1958·59 Mrs .
clition to the presentation, three years ago and then as 1931-32. Mrs. Ben Eachus; deberry;
1932-34
Mrs.
C.
C.
Richards;
William
Janes;
1959.00 Mrs.
Mrs. Tim Cornell will present .. now is a basic principle of the·
1934-35
Mrs.
Aldcth
RobinJames
Northup;
19~1 Mrs.
a report on the new ar· PTA. '. Each parent-teacher
son;
193~-36 Mrs. Gilbert
John
Markley;
1961-62
Mrs.
chitectural proposals - assoc1a\1qn has Its own
Busb;
1936-37
Mrs.
Starbuck;
1962~3
Mrs.
John
North,
Jr.;
presented to the Gallipolis characteristics, but the
1937·38
Mrs.
Hollis
Wood
;
Silas
Hamilton;
1963-34
Mrs.
City Schools Community underlymg . purpose of
1938-39
Mrs.
George
Lear;
Harold
Wiseman;
1964-65
Advisory Committee for promoting the welfare of
Mrs.
Dwight Mrs. Carroll Snowden; 1965·
those who couldn't be at the children and youth unites all 1939·40
Wetherholt;
1940-41
Mrs. 66· Mrs. 1. C. Walker ; 1~7
meeting and are interested in asso~la~iuns and gives
Ruth
Masters;
1941-12
Mrs. Mrs. Miles Epling; 1967-&amp;
hearing
these
recom· continUity and nationwide
1942-44
Mrs. Mrs. Donald Robinson; 1966Horace
Ecker;
mendatio~s.
The Gallia significance to their work.
Emmett
Morrison;
1944-15
69 Mrs. Russell Bibbee; 1969-.
Academy
High School PTA concern for children
Mrs.
Francis
Shane;
1945-46
70 Mrs. Eldon Thomas; 197DMadrigals will present' a begins with the infant and ·
Mrs.
Keith
Suiter;
1946-47
71
Mrs. Lewis Schmidt; 1971musical . program lor the spans the years to adulthood.
enjoyment of aU gathered.
The meeting will begin at 7
p.m. in the Washington
· School cafeteria.
·
"Thirty-four years ago the
National Congress of Parents
and Teachers was founded
for the purjJose of raising the
and for
standard of home
a better educated parenthood

cake, iced, bread, butter,

SPECIAL AT

'

:..

.

Buckskin finish with contrasting tan
vinyl interior, radio, factory air,
power steering and power brakes, V6 engine, automatic transmission
. and only 16,789 mlges.

'4295

-

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and .Mrs.
Robert L. Young of Gallipolis, Ohio are pleased to
announce the engagement of their daughter Joyce, to
Kenneth Martin Bires, son of Mr. Edward Bires of
Ashtabula, Ohio. Miss Young is a 1975 graduate of Xavier
University in Cincinnati, and is currently employed with
Sperry Univac. Mr. Bires graduated from Xavier
University in 1973 and received a masters degree in
business from the Wherton School Of Business in
' Philadelphia. He is currently employed with Arthur
Anderson and Company. Tbe wedding wlll take place in
Gallipolis on May 6 The couple will reside in Cincinnati.

77BUICK
SKYLARK 2 DR

REAL ECONOMY CAN BE
YOURS FOR

,;.;.... ~
' ··.

joyce Young

'

~4th

�---·
·1
•

School and Morehead State University, Miss Fraser, is

employed by the Gallia County Local School District at
Hannan Trace Elementary. Mr. Fallon .is a graduate of
Southwestern High School and employed by West Virginia
Insulators . The wedding , will be an event of Aprll IS, at
7:30 in the Centenary United Methodist Church. The

TO WED - Jean Sexson of Pomeroy and Demaree C.
Sex son, St. Clairsville, announce the engagement of their
da ughter, Nancy, to Robert A. Arnold, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Darrell Arnold, Albany . Miss Sexson, a graduate of
Eastern High School and Mountain State Business College, is an accounting clerk lor Southern Ohio Coal C().,
Meigs Mine No. I. Her fiance, a 1974 graduate of Alexander
High School is employed by Southern Ohio Coal Co., Meigs
Mine No. 3, as an accounting clerk. An open church wedding at the Albany Methodist Church has been set for June
!Oat 2:30p.m.

••

'

RED TAG SAL

•

I

GALLIPOLIS - This week,
the women of Grace United
Methodist Church will

H3waii 'S. ca pita]

city,

Honolulu, which means
"s heltered bay'' in the
Hawaiian language, was a
small village when visited by
westerners for the first time,

celebrate the beginning 'or
lent with an important annual observance - The Call

WOMEN'S SHOES

--

WINTER SHOES
NOW •10.00

On Racks fOr easy selection.
One Group .Women's

SPORT SHOES
NOW •8.00
Not all sires in any group but all good buys.

Group of Men's Oxfords and Slipons
Red Tag Specials

ItS a time to remember.

And the easies t way to save and preserve the beautiful
memories of your happiest clay Is with professional

Special Group Children's

portraits.

'

C&lt;K&gt;k had discovered the
islands. Honolulu's present
metropolitan population of
more than 700,000 accounts
for 82 per cent of the population of the state of Hawaii.

'

''

ano

'

'

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY

111,1',11'1 ( !J.l ijt
..._~ kl-.. ..

•

01'10

•

We are experts at bridal photography. So you can
trust us to capture the true beauty of \K)Ur wedding.
Remember your wedding for years to come-with
portraits.
Call today for an appointment, or stop by the studio
view our bridal portrait samples and wedding
albums.

BmERSHOES
N W •4.00

Ill IICONO loYINI,II I

'
'

44~7494

Spring Valley Plaza, Gallipolis

custom of open chu rch will be ol:riervcd with a recep tion
immediate ly following at the church.

Wednesday, Feb. ·J5, Card
Games.
1-3;
Movies,
" Brats",· " Alberta Sunshine" , " He-lp Is'\ 1:30-2:30.

Thur sday,
Feb.
16,
Physicn l Fitness, 11:15 p.m.:
Co unci l Meeting, 1:30 p. m.
Friday, Feb. i7, Art Class,

and

syrup, cheese sticks, potato

chips, buttered peas , ice
cream, milk.
Tuesday - Chicken wit h
mushroom sauce on rice,

and pear sa lad, cornbread,
butt er, chocol ate pudd ing
with vanilla wafer, milk.
~'riday - Sa usage links,
creamed corn. co ttage
cheeje, biscuit, butter, peach
co bbler, milk.

Sally Deal
· The state of New York has
been handing sa lt to Indians
for 187 years . Under a treaty
with he Onondagas in 1788,
New York is obligated to give
• bushel of sal t every October

"

3 In Stock

25"

25"

Sylvania Suggested Price, 5669.95
ALLJSON
SAL ~ PRICE

CLEARANCE SALE

·

LA·Z·BOY
25"
Sylvania Suggested Price, $679.95

ALLiSON
· SALE
PRICE

ALL STYLES AND COLORS

CHAIRS

70% OFF

STEARNS AND FOSTER
EXTRA FIRM

ALLISON
DISCOUNT PRICE

Furniture
Galleries

ONE OF A KID

•

FLOOR SAMPLES

Y2

Many Other Mode is
to Choose From

Second and Grape St.

OFF

Gallipolis, Ohio

Hours:
9:30-5 Dai~
9:30-8 Mon.

'

1--------------~-..,;&amp;o.;F.-ri.••

.t

' '-

I

218 Third Ave.

Value
To

1f2 PRICE
Long Styles and Pant

• Low Power Consumption

Sylvania Price. $995.00
.

Fall and Winter

SPORT COATS
25% OFF
Values to $70.00

•Optional Black &amp; White sound video camero
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WINTER

ONE GROUP
LONG SLEEVE

•

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SPORT
SHIRTS

ENTIRE

STOCK
LADIES

19'~

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AND

ONE GROUP

eBuiit-in VHF / UHF tuner ... you con record one
program while watching another

Buy a 25 " for price of 23"

IN
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AND MATCHING BOX SPRINGS

ON SALE

'59995

12

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FALL

$140.00

•Auto-Dubbing Button ... sound from onother
source con be recorded on the tape in place
of the original sounc;l during playback mode

Sylvania List Price, 5650.00

~kt~S~~ICE '599 95

MEN'S

Sizes
6 to 18

• Manuol Pau se button to temporarily slop tape · •
movement in either recording or playback
modes. Remote Control Unit provided.

Buy a -25" tor price of 23"

Model CL6253K

TO

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The first collection of underfashions
especially for extra la'rge sizes.
•
Big Gals Controllers with Dynastretch.'
I''" •tt•w ·l•qtllw•·• 1tt1ltHtt ,t• h• Ltl "" th.&gt;l, ,.ntt,,l·~ '''tt'''''l
1'1!1 1• 1') lN";t• llo'111 lil t! f t'.l\1 1\ ,ol~\ q••tllt'!o 11'111 I'
It o'd It 11\1\ Ult' llijltl i.oliPI •·lil'li • ,-t11it(ollt•" · \tiU \lit 'Ill
t •t•l,.··.t• Uu• l 111.j 1 t•llhHI 01 •,I tlltltt&gt; jt,,·,··.rtt.llt q:olltlt•f11 ljiVt'"
\•~&gt; lll!ij , !lu h\' tl11fl All/\ II 1 0I1ttt1 ,-t~tlf.lll o l,o!(h

•
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ot tillt

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'

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IN
STOCK

4

IN

11

t l\ ull)llt'U •"•Pt'(

&lt;li ly IUt

\'1!!11 lhtfllo'-\·\t H't ,i ll Ill! ·

...

25"

Sylvania List Price. $319 .95
ALLISON
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'30995

Model CA6111BN

$9.00

List Price, $679•95
ALLISON
DISCOUNT PRICE
Model CU258P

'59995

•

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Value
Sizes

Lots of
Styles and
Colors

141h to
17.

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ALLIS-O N ELECTRIC CO.
••WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL"

Sires
S-M-L·XL

A Reg.

'

:

••

$700

50% Polyester 50% CottO!) in

Seteral

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lh. PRICE

I•

.. '• ,
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"

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CLASSIC"

Grace took a tumble Thtu'&amp;'
day night oo the icy street In
front of the home of Dale and
Margaret Dutton In Middleport, aailj was 'taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the emergency squad. She
has a skull fracture and some
other Injuries.
February has National
Dental Health Month,
American lleart Month, Nac
tiona! Pay Your Bills Week,
and Valentine's Day. The
leu! important of thele Valentine's Day, perhaps .
But bow often we nellect to
expraa our love. Now the
rackS alid shelves in lhopa
everywhere are filled With

t' ~lt , l

\.

.

with tilt Niw
Health-0-Matic' total
support system featurin,
e.dllsiwll'ol~ FrtmeS
for li-s and SllpflOI1
whele J11U lllld It most.

'

'

1,, o!on • ". ~ CIU 11&lt; 11'11 ll• •, tl ltk&gt;th ~ 1l.I PI ' oll )t ! lunl \'l &gt;lll
1 lto-,11u ll ' on 1111,11 ~· utlliO II

ahead, be sentlmental.

After our report of Amanda
Murray Seeing a deer . on
Walnut St. in Middleport last
week, we had another call
from a Third Street resident.
Seems there were three deer
oo Third in the vicinity of
Meigs Junior High School one
morning. •
·

.

,,

I I I 1K•

Big Gals All-Around Stretch Support Bra

sentimental messages that
lend themselves so well to the
romantic feelings that too
often, go unexpressed. Go

DUANE MCLAUGHLIN,
stationed at Orlando, Fla.
with the U. S. Navy, has just
completed the first segment
of his naval nuclear power
schooling and canie out with
a 3.41 average, enough to
make the merit list. That's
good and his parents, Ken
and Carol McLaughlin, are
delighted.
Duane lind his wife, Debby,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Williamson, are both
1977 gradutes of Meigs High
School. They live at 718 Daetwyler Drtve, Lot 31, Orlando,
Fla.

colnHlll.

, •

\

Our wishes for a speedy
recovery to Grace Eich, Lin- .

STOCK

19"

Stella Smith, a Pearl St.
resident in Middleport for
many years, is celebrating
her 93rd birthday today. For
the past seven years she has
been a patient at the Russell
Nursing Horne at Albany. She
is bedfast and blind but
thoroughly enjoys canb and
letters which the aides read
to her.
Today several members of
the family are visiting Mrs .
Smith with a decorated cake
lind gifts. Cards J1111Y be mailed to her at the nursing home.

'"·

.. '· ' '".

'

,

By Charlene
Hoeflich

E. E. STILES, better
known to his friends as "Ed",
retired Feb. 5 from his duties
. as an engineer on ConRail
after 3S years with the New
York Central System, Penn
Central Railroad and ConRail:
Incidentally, he is now at
home recuperating from
those injuries he suffered in a
fall from a ladder at his home
. oo Jan. 21. He just lhia week
got home from Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

• Built-in electronic timer for unattended
video rec~ rding

Not Pictured - 3 In Stock
25"
Model CL722'7P

3 In Stock

.

• 4 hours of continuous recording and playback

Model CL7200W

Model CL7238P

RECLINERS

INSTANT REPIA Y'"
COLOR VIDEO RECORDER SYSTEM

·•489 95

·6
· 2995

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SALE PRICE

TO

Model VC2400.

Sylvania List Price. $629-95

TO 1j3 OFF

LADIES'
WINTER
COATS

3 In Stock

ONLY 6 DAYS REMAINING

TO lf2 OFF

'40.00

Fabrics

Not Pictured - 5 In Stock
25."
Model CL7226P

SOFAS

'

I SAVE

Other

Choice of beverage served tu any member of the tribe
with each meal. . who req uests it. In r eturn
Services rendered on a non* New York received 15,000
discriminatory ba~is.
acres of sa lt lands.

GOOD SELECTION

STOCK

Leathers,
Wools
and

TO CELEBRATE - Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Thomas,
Route 1, Box 194-A, Long Bottom, will celebrate their 25th
wedding anniversary on Sunday, Feb. 19. Open house will
be observed at their home from 2 to 4 p.m. Relallvcs and
friends are invitt.'&lt;l to call.

Monday - Turkey salad

ENTIRE

ONE
LARGE
GROUP

'' .

Look Them Over and Compare

..

Prog ram will. serve the
following men u at 12 noon .

·buttered green beans, jellied
ftuit cock tail salad, bread,
butter, chocolate cake with
icing, milk.
Thursday - So up beans
with ham bits, canned peach

ult(7 tf7A\ L§'

::::

SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA

Socia l Hour, 7 p .m .
The Senior
Nutrition

canned apricots, milk .
Wednesday - Meatballs in
toma,to sauce, baked potato,

Introducing

•

,.

1 -:i~

berry ga rnish , roll, butter ,

serviL't:' at 6 p.m .

c·
.
.
N . Orner

IN THE

Allison Electric Reduces Every Color Set In Stock
For 26th Anniversary (FEBRUARY oNLY)

I: 15·2 : 15.

buttered lima beans, cran-

worship service, 7 p.m. with

Rev. Ronald Nicholas. Youth

Christian Union '1: 30 p.m.

f

SYLVANIA BEATS THEMALLII

11: 15 a.m .; renter Hostess
Meeling, 1 p.rn.; Bible Study, ·

sa ndwich , pan cakes

to Prayer and Self-Denial.
This first UMW meeting of
1978 will he held at 7:30p.m .
on Wednesday, February 16
at Shaw House, 618 Second
Avenue.
.

. The Suet Canal was
reopened on June 6, 1975 to aU
but Israeli ships, eight years
after Egypt closed it during
the 1967 Aralrlsraell war. It
was cleared of debris mainly
by the u. S.

J "'

GA l:urous - Activities
for this week at the Senior
Citizens Center , 220 Ja.ckson
Pike arc as fo llows :
Monda y, Feb. 13, Chorus,
1:15-3; Sewing Class 1-3.
Tuesday, Feb. 13, STOP
(Seniors, Ta ke Off Pounds )
10:30 a.m.: Physical Fitness,

·

BRIGHTER SlOE Quartet ul
Fajrview Church of Christ in

... in honor of a very special lady , Mary Lewis, who died
thb week. Mrs. Lewis was a warm, deUghtf\!1 person with a
QUickmlndanda ..,..,., or humor. Hirst "mel" her at Simpson
Chapel Church. Although she was petite and fragile she stood
out in the crowd. I watched her throughout the service. At
limes her eyea would gently clo~ yet I could tell She was .
draWillg strength .fr&lt;m the servtce. Something about her
inspired me to wrate a brief character score on the back of
· bulletin. She had to be a very sweet grandmother I decaded .
Shewasgracefulandmovedllkeahauntingmelody. . . .
Services ended, and I feeling a. bit R!lllty for wr11lng an
church, stuck the paper In a purse wath the promise to finish at
mMoraday. Aweekoroolaterwemet - lormally - lnchurch.
!was surpriaed when during the service she slipped a piece of
paper to me with her name and a brief bit of infonnation.
Suddenly wrlting notes in church became a less guilt riddl!l\
activity. She liked the fact that I lived in Chicago because she
had a family member who lived In down state Illinois. She ·
Invited me to tea and 1was deeply touched.
The next meeting with Mrs. Lew!! involved that very Issue
-tea. M secretary for the communicative arts chairperson,
Dr. Jack Hart,! nusked to help plana tea for the retirement
of Zelma Northcutt. Dr. Hart and I knew litUe ahout tea
parties. My experience with them amounted to one year of
engaging In the activity In a home economics cl&amp;IS. I was
elected to vialI Mra. Lewla and plan the day,
Mrs. Lewiscouldn'thavebeenmore·chilnn.ing as she gave
measlnceretalkon the virtues of strong lea. We found several
lorily tea cupo and china plates and served ourselves in the
living room. She told me about her life and how she filled her
Ume. Never before have I met a more organized lady.
New York's Radio City Everything was written down and put in a proper place. I felt
Music Hall, one of the world's like a lost cause CQII!pared to her. I w11511 't surprised when she
largest indoor theatres, seats . told me abo\11 the other CQllese girls who wouid come to visit .
6,000 and has a stage 144 feet She made you want ·to come back again and again.
wide and 57 feet deep.
We ended. up In the kitchen and casually talked about
history and plsns for the new church to be CQnstructed In Rio
Grande. I wanted to hug her when !left. She was ooe of the few
queenly kind graploua ladles I bad ever met. She could giggle
like a school girl but atill manage to carry herself with dignity.
I'D always be thankful for our morning tea. She enriched my
life and the lives of the people she touched . We shall all be
much better for knowlnl! her.
::=~~-;::::*::::.::::;:::::::::::::;~:::!:::::::::~==~=::::::::::::::::w..::::::::~::::::::~m.e..
~~:e'&lt;l'o1&gt;111:l.ll:l
' • :~

One Group Women's

in two British s hios in 1786,

SUNDAY

around the hymn , "Be Thou
My Vision" and Zelma Northcutt will lead group singing of
this famous old Irish hymn of
invocation.
Phyllis Sheets is in charge
of the program and wiU introduce two speakers. Bernice McMahon will present
the needs of Mission Service
in the United States, with
special reference to building
needs in Puerto RiCQ and the
Virgin Islands. Dorothy
Jon•s will ta lk about
"Children and Youth in
T0 d 's w ld" and the
ay
or .
specaal offering wall he sentto
help m this area of world
hunger.
About .one · and a half
million _women in 35,000 local
~ethodast churches an ~II
lafth states, will be united an
this observance.
.
Mary ol Bethany. Urut,
under the chaarmanshap of
Mald_red Jenkirls and Bonnie
Sw•ndler wall hostess the
evening, and a wa rm
welcome is extended to all.

CHECK THE RED ·rAG PRICES

SPECIAL singing al ,Vln\on
Fellowship Chapel 7 P- m.,
Leonard Bucklej•,
E LIZABI;TH Chapel Church

)

•

The service is organized

eight years afer Capt. James

Honolulu

Grace UMW to observe Lent

One Large Group Winter

Exhibit lor the mooth ol February, 1978 - Elsie Kay
Harria, Lexington, Kentucky, Oila on canvas and Graphite
Drawings.
Gallery Hours - Saturdays and Sundays, I p.m. until S
p.m.: Tuesdays and Thlll'!ldays, 10 a.ni'.!mtil3p.m.
February 14, 12:30 p.m. - Television appearance on
WSAZ, Channel3, Huntington, West Vir!!lnla of Sandra Wilkin,
C. L. "Johnny" Ecker and Anne Fischer, a preview of the
program for the Annual Dinner on February 23.
Feb. 17, 8 p.m.- "The Fantasllcks," with Broadway cast
at Pt. Pleasant Junior High School Auditorium. Reception
foUows the tWO hour perforinarlce. Brought to this area by the
Mason County Arts and Humanities Council.
· · Feb. 23,6:30 p.m.- F.A.C. Annual Dinner Meeting, Oscar's
Restaurant, $6.50 per person. Telephone reservations to W&gt;1819 or 446-9700 by Monday, February 20.
February :IIi, 2 p.m.-4 p.m. - Parent-Child Workshop.
Lynda Myers, Instructor; Penny Moore, Chairwoman.
Children will make sachets, all supplies furnished .
Membership in French Art Colon~ not necessary, open for all
children who are interested. Riverby.
February 28, 7:30 p.m. - F.A.C. Interdepartmental
Meeting; 9-p.m. - F.A.C. Trustees Meeting, Riverby.
March 6-17 - Poet in the Schools program featuring d
steven conkle, well-known poet from Millfield, Ohio.
March 16, 8 p.m. - An Evening of Poetry with d steven
conkle. Riverby . A reception will follow.

Nancy ~exson and Robert A mold

PLANS TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Irwin R. Fraser,
Gallipolis, are proud to rumpunce the engagement and
forthcoming wedding of their daughter, Sheryl to Larry
Fallon, so n of Mr. Verpand Fallon, Patriot, and Mrs. Hope
Burnett , Wellston. A graduate ol Gallla Academy llig~

0

'

•
••

Sheryl Fraser

11-3- TheSundav Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 12, 1978

per piece

twin or full

.

•

�l-I- The Swl&lt;laY Times-Sen!inei ,Sunday, Feb. 12. 1978

Marianne Campbell tO address clubs
GALUPOUS - The Pilot
Club of Huntington will host
the Annual Joint Meeting of
the women 's classified
service clubs on Monday
evening, Februa ry 20 at 6:30 ,
in the Huntington Women's
Club, including Altrusa ,
Quota and Pilot Clubs.
In addition, this year for
the first time, invitations
have been extended to the
men'·s service cl ubs in
Huntington.
They
a re
Civ itan . Kiwanis, Li ons,
Optimist and Rotary. ·
Featured speaker will be
Marianne B. Ca mpbell of
GaUipolis. Mrs. Campbell.
who wa s a broadcast
executive for twenty·two
years 1 is presently associated
with the Holzer Medi ca l
Center in Gallipolis, as the
direct or of the communi.t y
relations and development
programs of the hos~ital.
A native of Pittsburgh, Pa.
and a graduate of Penn·
sylvania College for Women ,
Mrs. Campbell put WJEHAM-FM in Gallipolis on the
air in 1950 and served as
General Manager of those
stations until 1967 when she
became the corporate
Director of Community Affairs for the seven radio and
five television stations of the
Avco Broadcast ing Cor,
poration in Cincinnati , Ohio.
In 1972 she r eturn ed to
Galhpolis and became af·
filiated with the Holzer
Medical Center.
Mrs. Campbell was the first
woman to serve as a member
of the Radio Code Board of
the National Association of
Broadcasters, as a member
of the Board of Directors of
the National Association of
Broadcasters. as President of
the Ohio Association of
Broadcasters.
She was the National
Pres id ent of Am erica n
Women in Radio and
Television
in
1971-72,
Chairman of the Educationa l
Foundation of AWRT from
1972-74 and a member of the
Board of Directors of the
International Radio a nd
Television Soc iety Foundation from 1973-75. A past
Secretary-Treasurer of the
Advertising Club of Huntington, she is also a past
state president of the Ohio
Federation of Business and
Professional Women 's Clubs.
Presently Mrs. Ca mpbell
serves as a Trustee of the
Ohio . Division of the
American Cancer Society and
of the South East Ohio
Emergency Medica l Service
(SEOEMS ), a regional
volunteer advisor on mediGJ
for the National Foundation

- --------=. .) r.

March of Dimes. is on the
Public Relations Committee
of the Central Ohio Heart
Association and the Public
Relations Chairwoman for
the Fr enc~ Art Colony in
Gallipolis . She Is active in the
National Associ ation of
Hospital Development a!ld

the Ohio Association of
Hospital Development.
Mrs. Campbell was the
recipient of the 1971 Out·
;tanding Achievement Award
of the I.adies Auxiliary of the
Veterans of F'oreign Wars,
presented at their National
Convention in Dallas in 1971.

She and her husband Bill.
who is associated with the J .
J . Blazer Construction
Compa ny or Wheelersburg.
Ohio, live on the family farm
just south of Gallipolis.
Reservations for the
February 20 dinner at the
Huntington Wome n's Clu b

should be made before
Tuesday , February 14, 1978,
by caUing Nancy Paules at
5~-9752 or Ann Emick at 529
4768. Miss Emich is the
President of the Pilot Club of
Huntington. The program for
the joint meeting will be
handled by Maxine Hoke,

McFarland, Irene Ju!li5 and
Virginia Gr!Mtead.
Barb McDaniel, Pat,Debble
and Beth ·Wibon, Jan
Eichinger, Jody Noble, Lois,
Unda and Kathy Test, Carla
and Mary McFarland, and
Bonnie McFarland.
Delores Taylor, Catherine

Stewart, Becky Reed, Cindy
Bwzard, Donna Grinstnd,
Denise GriMtead. and Pat
Laudennilt.
Linda
Donna Fowler,
Zuspan and Rebecca, Dot
Swartz, Jane Morris, Kim
Harbrecht, Dorothy Hatcher.
and Coral Alexander.

Kathy Zuspan, Johnny and
Donny Zuapan, Glenna Fruth,
Crystal Fruth, Kathy Farr,
Janice Reynolds , Cindy
Wamer and Vicki, and JoAnne
Harbour .
Bess Ingles, Eleanor
Jarrell, Patty and Guyla
Jtoush. Irene Fisher, Venedla

GALLIPOLIS - A preview
o( the pr o~ra m for the Annual
Meeting of the French Art
Colony to be held on Thur•·
day evening, February 23, l1t
Oscar's Rcstuurout
In
Gullipolls. fe aturing three

ARMOURi:!:STAR BEEF

BROUGHTON

lee
Sirloin
Tip
Cream
teak

Retails Effective thru
Sat., Feb. 18, 1978

IC~ CII.~"M

••••••••••
• •••••••••
••••••••••

We re•"n the right II ll'"lt •~~nlitill
'" .!1 it..u in thl1 d . Ntnt Mi4 II
oheltn . Not ruptnl iltlt fo r
ffpotr•pll icaltnarl .

••••••••••
..........

uut st a ndin ~ musicians of the
areu , will be see n on WS1\Z
Tel ev ision , Cha nne l ~l.
Huntington , W. Va ., ut l2 j,30
on Valentine's OU)'. February
14 , 1978.
'111c three performers arc
Sn nd ru Wilkin , C.
1..
".Johnny" Ecker urid Anne
Fischer . They will · present.
" The 1'clcphunc" by Ghm·

OPEN
DAILY

8-9

Carlo MenottL Jonnnc JHcgur

SUNDAY

will interview these three
outstanding musicians in the
special interview p01tlon of
the noun news nn Channel :t
Mr s. Fi scher who will
acl'om pany Mrs. Wi lkin und
Ecker ut the pia no. is the
voca l music director of Ga iHu
Academy High Sehoul . Slw
studied for two yems ut the
Eastman Schuul of Music n n~l
holds B.M. and M.M. de~r ces
fruJn
West
Virginin
University. She studied opcru
with
Bori s
Goldovs kl,
Director of Opera at l11 C New
Eng la nd Co nservut ory qf
Music.
Thi s is the 14t h· ycur thut
Mrs. Fischer has been with

SUPER MARKETS

1().6

Retails Effective Thru Sat., Feb. 18, 1978

BONELESS

;~

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

%-Gal.

Ctn.

PRINCE

ElbOIV

Maearoni

ION!l£55 .

CUBE STEAK •· •

3-lb. Pkg.

CHIPPED

... .... . ......•..

·. IOnelea-Fiat(ut

Filling
rm&amp;Ramm

Beets
1-lb. Jar

BAKING SODA
5' OFF LABEL

. l -Ib.

$

lb.

• Pickled Sliced
• Pickled nny
Whole

Pkgs.

REGULAR meet in g of
GaUipolis Chapter No. 283
O.E.S . Masonic Temple. 7:30
p.m . Special program and
refreshments.

Jergens.

. THOROFARE

Strawberr,
· Preserves

BATH SOAP

TUESDAY
RIVERSIDE Study Club at
the home of Mrs. Ruth
Mullineaux, I p.m.
WEDNESDAY
GET Acquainted Coffee,
Fran Shaw's, 10 a.m.
THURSDAY
EVENING BRIDGE, Fran
Shaw's, 7:30p.m.
FRIDAY
WELCOME Wagon Night at
Little Theatre, 8 p.m.
(couple's night ).

4.75·11.
Bar

~

£

BEEF FOR STEW • • • • • ••••••••••••••••
*" ..W

to .....n • ..., ,..,....,... tor ~le-I""""'·

PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH

Noodle
Plus
5 Varieties
4.S-oz.
to

5-oz.
Pkgs.
THOROFARE

L3JSOI

AppleSauee

THOROFARE Seedless

Raisins
15-oz. Pkg.

18-oz. Aero Can

$

~···
.

PRINGLES
ht1111..1. or

OritiMI , ....

6 POINTS

,,

CRISCO
OIL

........,.

12 POINTS

DUNCAN HINES

•

..~~~.~!~~L
l•llt. 2.S .. I . " ' •·

4 POINTS

/

"SUNKIST"

NAVEL ORANGES

LARGE 72 $11£ ••••••••• ••• • • •• . . •• • • •. •
"CHAlY BRAND"
MciNTOSH

APPLES

!0% Cash Rebate

.
I

JIF
PEANUT aunER
er.., _. er..ar

Academy Hi gh School. It will
be "Oklahoma" on May 12
a nd 13.
A special word of apprecia ti on has bee n
pressed by Mrs. Wilkin, Mrs.
Fischer and Ecker to Bi ll
Quickie and his staff ut Ohio
Bell for their generosity and
assistnnce in preParing the
telephone equipment needed
to do the comedy , "The
Telephone." The equipment
will be used both for the
television
program
nn
Valentine's Day and at the
French Art Colony's Annuul
Meeting .
Reservations . for th e
French Art Co lony Annual
Dinner may be made by .
calling 44 6-1819 or 446-9705 by
Monday, Fe brua ry 20. The
cost is 16 .~0 per person. ·

ex-

League to meet

Coolllne

SIE IN-STORE DISPLAY FOR COMPLETE DI!TAILS

$J.J.!

symphonic choruses of Ga ilia

.

MILD YELLOW

ON YOUR GROCERY BILL MAXIMUM RElATE S3.50

o • o o o o o olb.

Gullia AL'udemy High School,
com inA to GalllMiiS from
Oak Hill . She was the fir;t to
direct the Community Chorus
in Gallipolis to present the
Messii1h, and this ·year was
the co&lt;litect o•·· She a lso fs the
DirCclnr of t h ~ Hol7.c r
M&lt;'&lt;llcu l Ccntel' School of
· Nursing Glee Club.
At present Mrs. J•'ischcr Is
busily planning for her un·
nual musica l produl1ion to
featur e the concerl a nd

•

SPRAY

1-lb. Can

a1ne

Tomato
Puree
15-oz. Can

'
STOKELY

•

U.S. No. 1
BLUE GOOSE

!!

2-lb.$
Jar

.1.!

BON IIIII
th 1'illrt to Wt ~It• M Ill 11 ... il tills 114.

Z

• Harvard·

lb.

SIRLOIN TIP ROAST • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Olb. $~~

1-lb. 5-oz:. Can
STOKELY

.......... . $ I

ROUID

Cherr~Pi

MONDAY
LA LECIIE League, 7:30 p.m.
at the home of Mary Hen·
dricks. Call Mrs. Bev. Splete
446-4010 or Mrs. Betsy Crank
675-2776.
WASHING TON School PTA
Founders Day Program. 7
p .m. , school cafete ri a.
Babysitting not provided.

~

SANDWICH STEAKS • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • lb. SJ!!
.

THANK YOU

~~~-"'~·~~ri,i;;.,w;~1.. '

,,

MASON - Mrs . Chris McFarland, and assisting
Refreshments were serveo
Kearns,
the
for· were MM. John Zuspan and to the guests. Games were
mer
Mindy Raynes, was Mrs. William McFarland.
played with prizes being
honored recently wtth· two
The second shower wa .. held awarded at both gatherings.
baby showers, the first being . Fri., Feb. 3, at the home of
Those attending or sending
held at the M11on Fire Station Mrs. Tom Roach, Henderson , gifts to the showers were
on Tuesday, Jan. 31.
with Mrs. Roach and Mrs, Gladys Stewart,
Robin
Hoatesaes pere Mrs. David Gary Cochran serving as Stewart,
Gerry
Gibbs,
Keams and Mrs. Raymond hostesses.
Carletta
Gibbs,
Anna

Bertha Elliott, Wendy
Frieder, Jean Warner. F'rbara Van Maire, Travis
McFarland and 'j'rtcey
McFarland.

moorn
Anne Fischer
to accompany
performers

[)1;/lm~4L

,,

Mindy Kearns honored with showers

Keams and Brad, Ella Ford.
and Mamie Noble.
Sharon Kearns, Velml
Zuapan, Sarah Shields, Pam
Keams, LIVera Yeaaer. Sally
ROM and A8J&gt;es Rou.sh.
Mrs. Dayton Raynea,' Becld
McFarland, Eileen Duncan.
Judy McWhorter, Phyllis
Roach, Shari Cochran. and
Robert Winsett.
Janice Veazey.
Wilia
Veazey, Katherine Raynes,
Flo Smith, Nancy Smith, Tony
Keathley"and Cozy Halstead.

ANNE

~~

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
·Deimey, Eureka Star Route,
Gallipolis, are proud to announce the birth of their first
child,
l:harles
Heath,
January 27 at 7:24 a.m · at
Holzer Medica! Center. Hc,.th
weighed 9 lbS. and was 20\2
inc hes
long.
Maternal
grandparents are Mrs.
Charlotte Tussey, Eureka
Star Route, Gallipclis, and
the late Charles R. Tussey ,
Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Denney, Route 2, Bidwell, Ohio.
Maternal great-grandparents
are Mr . ;md Mrs. James A.
Hammond Sr., 135 Kineon
Avenue, Gallipolis.

B-5-The Sunday Times-Sentinel: Sunday, Feb . 12. 1978

st udents at the First
Presbyterian Church;
- Provision of newspapers
and personal attention for
nursing home patients;
Entertainment and
reading
materials
for
students at Green Acres;
- Financial and volunteer
service hours for the
American Red Cross and the
Multiple Sclerosis chapters;
- Financial support on
behalf of the Marshall
University Medical School.

friendshi p and service.
Locally the Pilot Club of
Huntington is involved in a
multitude of community
service projects:
- The Oral Cancer
Coordinator of the Outreach Clinic, co-sponsored with the
Division of Pllotand Dorothy Huntlng(on
Dental
Goo dman , Ass1s1ant Coo r· Association held aMually at
dinator.
the Cabell
Huntington
Pilot International is a Hospital Clinic;
classified service club for
- Lip Reading CIIISI' at
execu.tive business and Marshall University ;
professional
wo men ,
- Annual entertainment
dedicated to the pr4lclples of for the International House

••••••••

GARDIN CIISP

1... 2..1.

.CUCUMBERS.

Whatlls Ctrtal

79~

•••••

LAIGIGRIIN

••• . , .., . Jer .

I

PEPPERS •••••• •••

6 POINTS

,v

GALLIPOLIS - La Leche
League of Gallipolis cance ll ed their meet ing last
week due to bad weather.
They · have replanned the
third meeting of the current
series at 7:30 p.m . Monday ,
February 13, at the home of
Mrs. Mary Hendricks, 2124
Madison
Ave.,
Point
Pleasant, w. Va .
Topic of disc ussion will be
"Baby Arrives ; The Family ;
and the Breastfed Baby," led
by Mrs . Bev Splete. Some
questions that may arise in
your mind are How will your
famil y react to that new
bundle of joy? How ca n you
handle -that first child when
the second one is born ? How
can the new father help
support you. a n urs ing
mother ? These questions will
try to be answered at this
meeting and ~I~Ore .
The meetings are open to
aU women, young or old, that
· are interested in good feeding
of their babies to come or
already have .
For more information
please call Mrs. Bev Splete
446-4010 or Mrs. Betsy Crank
615-2776. Babies are always
welcome to accompany their
mothers. Final meeting of the
series will be March 13 on
" Nutrition and Weaning''
'

,,

.

�Wells-Horne vows repeated
GaillpoiJJ - SWlday af·
ternoon, December 4, Con·
stance S. Welb and Robert
Winston Horne were united in
marriage. Constance is the
daughter of Mra. M~~Xine
Wtlls of WUkesvllle and the
late Walter M. Wells. Winston
is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Percival Home of Wanganul,
New Zealand.
The wedding took place at
St. Peter's Episcopal Church,
Gallipolis. The Revs. Frank.
and Tura Hayes performed
the ceremony.
The organist for the
wedding was Mary Lucas.
Musical selections were " My
Own True Love," "Fill the

'

I

World With Love/• "More, 11

''What Is a Woman" 1
"Brian's
Song"
and
"Because''. The Processional
was "SoWld of the Trwn·
phets" by Handel and the
Recessions 1 ·~ sunrise ,
Sunset" from Fiddler on the
Roof.
The bride was escorted
down the aisle by ber uncle,
Travis Kessel , Shawnee
Estates, Winfield, W. Va. ,
and given in marriage by her
uncle and her mother.
The bride 's gown was ivory
guiana knit with a scoop
neckline accented by venice
lace. The sMtly gathered
skirt with a self train was
trimmed with miniature
blossoms of venice lace. The
veil fell from the matching
headpiece of ivory venice
.\ace. She carried a bouquet of

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Home

·room . The Mary WiUis Circle
of the Methodist Church
served the reception . The
table was decorated with
green candles, green punch
and two-tier wedding cake
topped with a bride and
groom.
The bride is a graduate of
Morehead State University in
speech and theatre. She, was
formerly associated with the
Commercial and Savings
Bank, Gallipolis, and more
recently the City National
Bank of Columbus. The
groom is a graduate of
Ca nterbury University,
Christchurch, New Zealand,
from which he also holds an
honors masters in lnduillrlal
Psychology. He was formerly
with Batelle Memorial
Research Institute and Ohio
State University. Currently,
he Is employed with the
United Nations Development
Program ·in India, as a Seniur

Training Expert for the In·
ternational

Telec om-

mUnications Union.
Following a wedding trip to
tlje Greenbrier in White
Sulpher Springs, W.Va., Mr.
and Mrs. Home returned to
India via Tokyo, Japan and
Hong Kong, spending a few
days in each city. The couple
will reside at D-6S Defense
Colony, New Delhi, India
Out of town guests were
Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Kessel,
Dunbar, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Travis Kessel, Winfield,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Walter
L. Kessel , Canton, Ohio; Ms.
Kay Cooper and Brent,
Lexington, Ky .; Mr. Daniel
Levi Kidd, Midway, Ky.; Mr .
and Mrs. Timothy McKenney
and son, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Ott, Columbus ,
and Dr. and Mrs. R. ,C. Smith
and family , Dublin, Ohio.

Spring
With

Feb 15 - Get acquainted coffee at Fran Shaw's at 10 a .m.
CaU 24f&gt;.5359 or 448-7393.
Feb. 16-Evening bridge at 7:30p.m. at Fran Shaw's. CaU
448-21f&gt;3 or 448-7593.
Feb. 17 - Night at Little Theatre 8 p.m. can Pam Terrizzi
448-M83.
Feb. 20 - General Meeting Jackson Pike Branch Ohio
Valley Bank 7:30 p.m. Inatallation of officers. Kingsley
Meyers, director of recreation at Bob Evans Farms.
Feb. 21 - Pinochle Lois Pblegar's RSVP I p.m. Call 24&gt;-

JODIE T. ROUSH
TURNS TWO - Jodie
Todd Roush eelebraled bls
second birthday on Jan. Z8
at his home In New Haven.
A " Donald Curk" rake was
enjoyed by all. Those

5641.
Feb. 22 - Crocheting 1 p.m. Teresa Bihl's. Call 446-1937.
Feb. 25 -Gourmetdinner 7p.m. RSVP Pam Terrizzi. CaU
446-4485.
.Feb. 28 -Canasta RSVP 7:30p.m. Joy Atwood's. Call446-

March 2-Crocheting 1 p.m, Joy Atwood's. RSVP.
March 6- Boardmeeting 7:30p.m. Cyndy Potter 446-4460.
March 10 - Couples Bridge 7:30p.m. CaU 446-1937.
Welcome Wagon is open to any newcomer who has lived in
the area for three years or less. Call Joy Atwood at ~99 or
Mary Ann Jamison at 446-2649 lor Information.

.........................
.
.
.
: FOR THE BEST DEAL IN :
: ·QUALITY MOBILE HOMES :
:•

IT'S

!
~

:•

K&amp;K

MOBILE HOMES

/.~c,%·4NNU~l !\'H

FIXED THE WAY
YOU UKE 'EM
PHONE

c

CLARK'S

JEWELRY

343 Semncl AYt,
O.lllpoll&amp;, Ohio

,.,...... a...

.' '

MeXico City was founded
by the Aztecs in 1321 as
Tenochtitlan and was their
capital untU conquered by
Cortex in 1519.

••

NOTE: The anniversary is
determined by the date of original
purchase from the bank, not when the
"bearer" acquires it. .

l 7.6J'

They're as good as gold.
provide a unique savings
opportunity. First of all, the interest
rates paid on the two types of( ( 1.''
1 ~· 1-l
are the highest permitted by law
and the interest is compounded daily .
The faee value of the certificate
. remains unchanged. You don't have to
listen to the radio or read small pi"int in
a newspaper to find the asset value of
your investment. The interest rate
l is positively
printed on the c•
fixed as far as twelve years into the
future. There's no guess
work, no
.
.
questions about future earnings, no
'&lt;::hanging conditions to consider - the
bank will honor the h he, 1 as .
agreed for the face value plus interest.
That'sa guaranteed investment. It's
even insured by the FDIC like all other
bank deposits.

.fJMPQUN0£0. PAILY

I (,,&lt; 'IIJo.lts, Ot\10

IN

TheGold Bond. can be
transferred to anyone . .

FROM

!HE UNIFORM

SinceGold Horirh are "bearer
· bonds", the only record the bank keeps
is the bond serial number and the
amount. That means the bond can be
transferred from one owner to another
-just like cash- without notifying
the bank. They can be used as gifts or
to pay debts. Upon presentation and
surrender of the bond by the bearer,
the bank will pay the face amount,
along with accumulated interest, during ·
aten-day redemption period at
maturity (annually on one-year bonds
and each four-years on four-year
bonds). Final maturity occurs at the
end of twelve years and the bond earns
no additional interest from that time
on. Gold Bonds may be cashed
anytime at any of our banking offices,
subject to federal regulations covering
early redemption.*

Complete Unifomi and Maternity lines
for
"The Lady Who W arks "

and
"The lAdy Who

Sl!NDAY thru SA TURDA f .
FEBRUARY 12 THRU FEBRUARY 18

CHICKEN
rDn. 1D
.
DINNER BOX .1)1\0ASTED

99

"
G
.
. rQ~. Q
(

~

{'- ·..

• &lt;. ~ •

·.' · ' Nci ·~ -.~ · ·.ALl : ~HITE
•·

•

Sub$titutes
. e3 PIECES CHICKEN
tiROLL
'
eMASHED POTATOES

. . ) . OR' ALL DARK
'
MEAT

sr..

Sine~~ no name appears on the bond

and no customer identification number
is required, the Gold Bond you buy is
completely anonymous. For that
reason, no 1099 tax reporting form
can, or will, be issued by the bank. The
person holding the bond is. honor
bound to report the interest received.
, (Because the bank keeps no records,
we recommend you keep your Gold
Bonds in a safe deposit box.)

CHARGE

are another great
way to save.
o

multiples up to $10,000 per bond with
a minimum of $100 for the one-year
· certificate and $1,000 for the four-year
certificate. The two bonds work under
slightly different ground rules.
As its name suggests, the
one-year bond matures annually.
Unless redeemed, it will automatically
renew each year and continue to earn
interest for a period of twelve years.
That means, from the first anniversary
of its purchse on through the twelfth,·
you can redeem it on any anniversary
date for the face amount and all
interest earned to date. Or you can
leave it in the bank and let the interest
accumulate. After twelve years, the final
maturity date, the bond stops earning
interest . .

·Gl' ''POU.s,

, QUICK PICK-UP SERraCE PHON~. 44ti-~

' .

1.

Our bank has nearly a dozen ways to
save money, including the regular
passbook savings plan and rnany
different Certificates of Deposit. The
' 1
has special appeal for
customers who particularly want the
ease of purchase and the total
transferability. It is an ideal investment
certificate for customers who
occasionally receive larger sums of .
money. Elderly customers, particularly,
should find the transferability of special
appeal. The highest possible interest
rate and variable m.a turities should be
helpful to all our customers.

You may wish to purchase multiple
certificates in different denominations
and maturities. There is no limit on
the number of ]Jonds that can be·
issued to an individual.
•federall;w and regulations pr'ohiblt tht payment cJ e time deP051t pnor to
maturity unless thre~ months of inte rest ic; forfeited ~:md Interest on the
amount 'Nithdrewn Is reduced to th e passbook rate.

3 LOCAnONS TO SERVE YOU!

They're easy to buy.
Both types of Gold Bonds can be
purchased in one hundred dollar ·

•

~·

{•
•...

"•
~

~

"••

••

•

•'
•

..

•

ADDITIONAL
I

.~4ntJpi store on~ .
2nc1 &amp;ouvE

The Bank will not issue an
ms 1099 form.

••
&lt;:
•'

BE
HIS
VALENTINE

CLARK'S
JEWELRY

February 12 thru 18

f

"'irst N llon&amp;l Bark

SPECIAl.

Sunday thru Saturday

:
~

earn interst for two additional
four-year periods. By law, the tour-year
bonq can earn a higher rate since it
has a longer maturity.

The, olt f;ond issued only in
"bearer" form -without a customer
name, has just been introduced by our
bank. It is available in two types- a
one-year bond paying 6% annual
interest (6.27% when compounded
daily) and a four-year bond paying
7.25% annual interest (7.63% when
compounded daily). Both wil.l earn
interest for up to
twelve years.

:•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
675·3000
:

NEW SPRING STYLES·

,

AND IT'S NOBODY'$
BUSINESS
.
BUT YOURS.

were a cousl!l, Kelly
Yollker; uncle and aunt,
Nathan and Michelle
Yonker; brolher, Jamie
Roush and parenls, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Roush'.
Sending gHis were Mr. and
Mrs. C.harles F. Yonker,
Mr. and Mrs. WUUe Joe
Grlnslead and SFC and
. Mrs. Ronald L. Roush.

March ! - Bridge 9:30a.m. Lois Phlegar's RSVP.Call 241&gt;-

Rhode Island
Rhode Island is distinguish·
ed ' liisturicaUy for i1s contributions to freedom of conscience and action, begun by
Roger Williams, founder of.
Providence, who was exiled
from Massachusetts Bay Col·
ony in 1636, and Anne Hutchinson, exiled in 1638. The
first Baptist church in the
United States was founded in
Providence the same year.
Rhode Island gave protection
to Quakers in 1607 and to
Jews from Holland in 1658.

'

present· for the occasion

5641.

roses with green velvet
ribbons. •For her something
old she wore a gold heart
necklace that belonged to her
great-grandmother, Martha
Mitchell Wells.
Elizabeth Spires Benson of
·Manhattan, New York,
formerly of Wilkesville,
served as the matron of
honor. Keeping with the
holiday theme she wore a
· green velvet skirt with ivory
blouse. She carried a long
stem red rose with green
velvet ribbon .
The junior bridesmaid was
Miss Amy - Cooper of
Lexington, Ky. Miss Cooper
also wore a green velvet skirt
and ivory. long sleeved
blouse. She also carried a
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hayes
long stem red rose with green
velvet ribbon.
Miss Stephanie Jean Wells,
Wilkesville, niece of the ·
bride, was the flower girl
wearing a cranberry velvet
skirt and ivory blouse. She
carried 'a nosegay of white
carnations and red roses with
MIDDLEPORT--Mrs . Ia w of the couple, were the at·
green velvet ribbons.
Thebna
Farnsworth of Long tendants . They wore streetThe bride's mother chose a
Bottom
and
Clifford R. Hayes length outfits of ultra-suede
two piece street length dress
.
of
Middleport
were married with Mrs. Case in light blue
of beige trbnmed in navy blue
on
Nov.
'!/
at
the
Middleport and Mrs. Hayes in light
with blue accessories. She •
First
Baptist
Church.
green. Each carried a single
wore a pink-throated cymThe
2:30
single-ring
ivory rose .
bidium orchid.
J . Gregory Hayes, son of
The best man was Larry ceremony was performed by
Welling of Columbus. Serving the Rev. Frank Cheesebrew the bridegroom, Middleport,
as ushers were.Ron Morrison of Shawnee before the altar was best man and the ushers
of Colwnbus and Michael decorated with autwnn bou- were Gerald Anthony and
quets and candelabra. Mrs. Willis Anthmiy, Middleport.
Corbin of GaUipoiJJ.
·
A reception honoring the
As a part of the marriage Dorothy Anthony of Middleport
was
the
organist
and
couple
was held .in the church
vowels the bride Sang to the
soc1alroom.
Donald·
Bennett
of
Minford,
- The bride'S table
groom "You and I" from
the · soloist. During the featured a three tiered cake
"Goodbye Mr. Chips".
.White poinsettias were the ceremony he sang "The topped with white wedding
LOrd's Prayer.,
bells and accented with light
flowers lor the church.
The
bride
was
given
in
blue trim. Arrangements of
The wedding reception was
marriage
by
her
son,
Frank
blue
carnations and ivory
held in the church social
Case of Middleport. She wore mums were used on either
a blue velvet skirt floor side of the cake. Serving as
length with a matching cape hostesses were Mrs. Kathryn
and an ivory colored blouse. Metzger, Mrs. Fran Parker,
She carried a bouquet of blue Mrs. Rosemary Lyons, Mrs:
carnations with ivory mums Leora Sigman, and Mrs. Sue
. and roses.
Imboden.
Mrs. Jackie Case and Mrs.
The . couple now reside on
Cindy Haye s, daughters-in- Route 248 three mile east of
Chester. Mrs. Hayes is
retired frorn Ohio University,
.Mr. Hayes is semiretired
from the Rick. Valley Ice
Cream Co.
Guests at the wedding
registered by Mrs. Frank
Cheesebrew included from
Choose from
out of town Mr. and Mrs.
our collection Steve Rouinelote, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. A. F . Wilson,
of matching
Point Pleasant, W. Va.; the
Rev.
and Mrs. Frank A.
KEEPSAKE
Cheesebrew, Shawnee; Mrs.
Barbara Ritchie, Grove City ;
WEDDING
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
RINGS .
Woode , Coolville; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Cornelius and
son, Claude: Cheshire; Mr ..
and Mrs. Paul Card, Racine;
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Parker, Syracuse; Mr. and
Mrs. Kennit Me Elroy,
·Dayton .and Virgil McElroy,
MlnersviUe; Miss Josephine
Ritchie and Mrs. Floyd
CARIB
Weber, Long Bottom; Mrs.
Beautifully crafted to
JOhn Hayes, Mrs. Oris
symbolize your lo Ye ; ..
Frederick, Mrs . John
444~1611
de5igned in l4K yellow
Wickham, Mrs. · Tom Nice,
or white gold . . . with the
Mrs. Mabel Van Meter,
Keepsake assurance of
Chester; Mrs. Mary Buck,
timele u quality.
Mrs. Nancy Peltil and Jeff
Smith, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Betty Farr.ar, Chester.

TRODUCI G
E
AY TOE R
A HIGH I TEREST RATE.
s.

Welcome Wagon
club activities

8599.

Farnsworth-Hayes
wedding· vows made

Think

•

110024.

white carnations and red

Accent
the
Positive

®

The four-year bond matures in
four years. It too, if not redeemed, will
automatically renew and continue to

MAIN BANK-SECOND AVE.
•
llfiRD AVENUE BRANCH

VINTON BRANCH-VINTON

••
!

•

'

••

''

••

''·
·'
••

•''

.,'·
•

�C-1-The SWldav Times-Sentinel, Sunday. Feb. 12, 1978

MeigS comback falls shOrt,
GAHS captures 68-59 victo

gather

..

PIKES .IRKT 511.

a•-., Fll. 12 &amp;13, WHILE OUAIITITIES LAST

.. ROCK
SPRING.S
Gallipolis buUt up a 15-polnt
advantage midway in the
second period, then held off a
fired-up Meigs quintet for a
68-59 Southeastern Ohio
League basketbaU triumph in
Morrison Gym here Friday
night.
Down 26-11 with 5: 17 left in
the first half, the Marauders,
l&gt;ehlnd 5-11 senior Kenny
Young, outscored the visiting
Blue Devils 23-8 during the
next seven minutes to knot
the count at 34-all with 6:03
left in the third stanza . From
there on out, It was a close
ball game.
Gallipolis outscored the
Marauders 18-8 in the first
period. Both teams tossed in
16 in the second stanza,
leaving the visitors on top 32·

KATHLEEN FORGEY
GALLIPOLIS
The
·Homemakers Council met at
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. community room
Feb. 8 with· several ladies in
attendance . Mrs . Elaine
George, president, opened
the meeting; Ethel Robinson
led the group in singing and
Mary Jo Shaver had
devotions reading I Corln·
thians 13.
Elaine George appointed
the nominating committee,
Dorothy Toler, Gladys Ams·

MCGRAW EDISON

DUAl WAn BASEBOARD HEATER

Bertina Smeltzer gave the
se·cretary's report and
Gladys Amsbary gave the
treasurer's report.
Kathleen
Forgey
of
Chesapeake gave a report on
the Associated Cou ntry
Women of the World con·
vention in Kenya, Africa. She
showed slides of her trip.
Twenty'ilne ladles went from
Ohio. T~ey stopped in Rome,
Cairo, Egypt , Ethiopia and
Nirobi before going to Kenya.
The ladies attended
Kenyota Day where a half
million people were, in· ·
eluding the President. The

.$1788

assures even distribution throughout the room. Thermostatically con·
trolled .

$33.66 .

66

$

two teamo traded 18 points.
Gallla led 50-42 to start the
. last period.
Meigs pulled to within four
points of Gallip&lt;Jiis in the final
stanza, 56-52 on a long }~rnper

Perlectio n'$ modern all-metal heater has o
polhhed ~ le.e l uppe r drum. block boked
eoome l lower drum c:.1d top; zinc -coded
\fee l re\er Yoir ; bu ilt-in meta l floor troy,
doub le saf ety lot ch; oi ~· caoled hand le .

Keep your home worm during the cold winter ahead with thi s dual watt
baseboard heater. 1320 walt nr 1000 watt selection. Fan forced heat

HECK'S REG.

In the third quarter, the

PORTABLE
HEATER

3240-22

bary and Irene Smeltzer.

HECK'S REG. $29.99

SPDmDEI'T.
'

!Twas a happy bunch of Logan Chieftains who left tbe Old
French City last Tuesday night following a hard-fought 34-32
Southeast'ern Ohio League basketball victory over Coach Jim
Osborne's Blue Devils.
·

730

HAIDWAIIIHPT.

display there making a
from different countries told
of their customs and had
native danceS. There were
several coffee and tea
- plantations near there .
Donna Agnes, the national
president, .was present. Miss
Forgey sho-wed slides of
fl owers, animals and the
lovely countryside of Kenya.
A potluck lunch was served
at noon by Dorothy Toler.
Mrs. Maurice J11omas, Mary
Jo Shaver, Dorothy Tyo,
Gladys Rife and Mary
Elizabeth Darnell.
The afternoon program
was conducted by Jane Yoho
who had on display valentines
and hearts for Valentine's
Day and Easter eggs she had
made from sugar moulding
and Icing. She demonstrated
how they were made . The
groUp paid eager attention to
Mrs . Voho's · program.
Bertino Smeltz~r and Mary
Jo Shaver received the door
prizes Mrs, Yoho gave.
The meeting was closed by
the group repeating the club
collect.
:i:,.-&amp;:~'*m: e .m
. _··l'inor

One Stet:' is~ ~~~ tonly 15 o unces) and easy
Avtomchc vcrmble ~rlure and !.huller speed.
you ore out of f ilm, or the film if -,.ou ore out of
attO(hed neclutrop. And, (ITioog many other
a utomatically

HECK'S REG. $1.77

SPOITS DIPT.

3 DECKS

$1~0

.

.

..
-.•. .,

"•

. I
'I

'\.,t '

SPOITSIJII'T.

')

c

Social
, Calendar

DURO

10" TEFLON II

·.

AVOCADO e GOLD eBROWN

SUNDAY
SPECIAL MEETING of the
Amerlc•n Legion Auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39,
· Pomeroy, 2 p.m. Sunday
afternoon at the post home .
MONDAY
BABY SITTING Workshop
session 6;30 p. rn. Monday at
St. Paul Lutheran Church ,
Pomeroy; Last chance to
enroll in the program.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
Monday, 7:30 p.m . at

HECK'S REG.

$3.29

.

3

for

$}

HECK' SREG. $11.99

AUTOMOTIVE
IJIIIT.

Heck's Reg.

CLEANER
Heck's Reg.
'1.39

89

#I
....

59'
Houseware Dept.

70Z.
ALBERTO BALSAM

SHAMPOO

e REG. e DRY e OILY ·

25COUNT

AlKA SELTZER
HECK'S REG.
79•

59c

COSMmC•r.

,j

TICKLE

ilid, 60-46).

+++

.

.

HECK'SREG. $1.38

toSMmtiHPr. · ·

HECk'S REG. $1 .79

lOSMI'I1t. , ,

'·

Ironton

Athens
Gall ipoli s
Wel lston

B B 981

906

6 12 1221 1291

Jackson
3 14 891 1080
Meigs
2 14 904 1183
Non-SEOAL results :
!Thursday)
I Friday)
Pt . Pleasant 65 Wahama 35

Miami Trace 57 Court House

=========~=============================

SEOAL VARSITY
TEAM
W L P OP

Ironton smashes Wellston

55

Logan

12

0

742

582

Waverly
10 4 848 740
lronlon
a 4 795 666
Athens
8 5 824 789
6 I 767 743
Gallipolis
Wellslon
6 a 959 974
Meigs
1 12 704 984
Jackson
1 12 678 844
TOTALS
52
52 6317
Wednesday 's result
: 6lll
Waverly n Wellston 54

ppnd,

Feb. 16 game:

A!hens at G~llipolls .

Blue Imps

WID

SW five

fourth in row
ROCK SPRINGS - Coach
Rick Van Matre's Gallipolis
Blue Imps defeated Meigs 43·
31 for their fourth straight
Southeaslt;rn Ohio League
win here Friday night.
The victory left Gallipolis
10~ overall and 9-4 inside the
league. Co&amp;ch Bruce Wilson' s
Little Marauders dropped to
1-12 in league play.
Gallipolis led 10-4, 16-8 and
26-16 at the quarterrnarks.
Greg Atkins paced the
winners with II points. Britt

Fairland
topples

•

PROCTORVILLE - Joey
Stuart scored six of
Dodson had II lor the losers. Fairland's eight overtime
points here Friday night
Box score:
leading his team to an 86-78
BLUE IMPS (43) non-conference victory over
Robinson 5:0-10 ; Harrington
the Southwestern Highlan0-3-3; Weaver 2-0-4; Atkins 35-11 ; Bostic 3-'1-7; Orr 0-0-0;
ders.
Oerifield 3-0-8; Warner Q.Q.Q;
The win snapped a four
Beattie o.o.o; Wickline 0-7-7; game wimlng streak lor
Golji 0-0-0. TOTALS 16·11·43.
Coach Wayne Bergdoll's
MEIGS RESERVES 131) ifiomat'·r::r.-s;--ale&lt;l'lf'nai' tro. Highlanders. It . lilted the
O; Ohlinger 2-0-4; Dodson 4-J.
Dragons' overall record to 7·9
11 ; Kennedy 1-0·2; O'Brien 4.
while SWHS dropped to 10-7.
1·9. TOTALS 12·7-31 .
Stuart
scored midway In the
Score by quarters:
Blue Imps.
10 6 10 17- 43
overtime to give Fairland an
Meigs ' B'
4 ·4 6 17- 31 80-78 lead.
Tim Nichols who had 34
points in the game, sank two
technical foul shots and an
speak at Rio
intentional foul with 45
: seconds left giving the
Dining Hall and is open to the Lawrence Countians a sixpublic.
point lead.
· Bob Bragg had 17 points for
Coach Carl York's club,
Marshall Daniels, 11 and
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI) Stuart 10.
Buffalo Sabres forward Rick
Leading the HighlanMartin was released Friday der attack were Larry Carter
from
Buffalo
General and G011e Layton with '!I and
Hospital after slriklng his 19 points respectively.
bead on the ice Thursday
Southwestern led 21·19 at
night during a game against the end of the first period only
the New York Rangers.
to see the score knotted at 10·'

SPORTS

Portsmouth 71 Huntington

East ·sa

Jackson .at Athens,

GAME'S lop two scorers are pictured in this photo.
Gallla 's Terry Wall; with ban; led GAHS with 22 points
Friday while defender on right, Kenny .Young, top the
Marauders with 32 points.

iunba)l ~imts • jtntintl

8 a 1014 1023
7 9 935 924

reset- Feb. 14.

Each and every member of the Chieftain varsity squad has
shared In the achievements of a highly-remarkable season that
has seen Logan register 13 consecutive victories since losing
its opening at Hilliard in NJ&gt;Vemher.
Whenever anybody had an off-night, or was sick or '
injiU'ed, another player and ofttimes several players stepped
In to do the job.
And Logan's first championship since Coach Dwight Gordy ColemaQ to
Diller's J95().,?! titllsts Is cm·tainly a tribute to the all-out efforts
RIO GRANDE - The Rio
of Coacb Scott Fitzgerald .and his staff.
· Filz, MW in his sillth season as the LHS cage mentor, Grande Lions Club will have
started his coaching career here without so much as a single Gordy Coleman, former first
baseman and team spokesyear .of experience.
Scott suffered through some tough lessons In the early going man for the Cincinnati Reds,
at the handB of the old masters, such as Dlarlie McAfee at · as guest speaker at their
Athens and Carroll Hawhee at Waverly, and premier pilots regular meeting Feb. 14.
Qoborne at Gallipolia and AI Burger at Jackson, bu_t he learned
His topic will be highlights
well.
·
of the 1977 season and answer
.. Fitzgerald has taken his place among the top ranka tbe questions on the future of the
jlaat two le8!JOIIS with his clubs posting at combined~ record Reds 'in 1978. Mr. Coleman's
to date and ~ of course- Logan's first championship in nearly talk will start at 6:41 p.m. in
)hree decades.
the Rio Grande College

ROLL-ON·DEODORANT

99c

had this to

It was a 1-o-n-n-n-n-n-n-n-n-n-n-n-o-n-n-n-n..n-n-n-n-n-n-n.;~­
n-n-n-n-n-j! time coming, but Coach Scott Fitzgerald's gallant
band of Chieftains .threw off sickness and injuries Tuesday
night to clinch at least a share of Logan's first Southeastern
Ohio League basketball championship in 27 years.
The Chiefs walked (some hobbled) into Gallipolis, where
Jim Osborne's belligerent Blue Devils were licking their' chops
Uke the lions waiting oo the Christians.
And why not ? Hadn't these same Devils derailed
cootending Waverly 52-00 just three days earlier to give Logan
a two.game margin over the Tigers?
The Gallians started the contest like a kamikaze squadron.
And Logan ,.... colder than Sunday dinner's mashed potatoes made anly I of 8field goal attempts in the opening period to fall
behind 12-2.
But the gritty Chiefs, displaying the same mental
toughness typical of Logan's football champions, weren't
about to fold up.
Back they came, cutting Gallia's lead to 22-18 at halftime ·
and 26-25 after three cantos before taking the lead for the first
time at 31-30 with just 1:49 to play on center Jay Braglin's
layup off a fine feed by guard Scott Gasser.
There were still quite a few hairy moments before the
Chiefs and their wrung'ilut fans were able to celebrate a 34-32
splnechllling victory.
• A3 the players and coacbes were preparing to head for
mrne, word carne through that Athens had upset Waverly to
clinch a title share for Logan, and another celebration ensued.
The Chiefs still have three SEOL games to play, but
pothlng could be sweeter than to put the 1977-78 crown on ice at
mme 1111ainst Waverly Friday night. (Editor's note - Tljey

LESTOIL

SOLID AIR FRESHNER

19~1 ,

By JIM MYERS

metol , rubber .

AUTOMOTIVE IHPT.

WIZARD

POMEROY PTA, 7:30 Moil·
day night at the school.
Founder's Day to be observed
with the recognition of past
presidents. There will be a
prugran1 by the jazz band and
an art display. Mrs. Mary C.
Wiley will have a nursery lor
the pre'scnool children.
TUESDAY
SYRACUSE PTO 7:30
Tuesday at the ~chool. All
parenls and teachers invited.
HAR!l!SONVI!.LE
Chap ter , Order of the
Eastern Star, 8 p.m. Tuesday
night al the Teinple.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
the home of Mrs. Marilyn
Wisecup. Mrs . Jacki e
Brickles Will have the program on macrame hangers.
The arrangement topic will
be a study in red and white
with green foliage to be judg·
ed by Mrs. Cora Beegle.
Members are to take a
"sweet" recipe suitable for
Valentine's Day.

year or two before Logan's championship in
say In a page one editorial Wednesday:

1112TON

SUPER GLUE-3

HECK'S REG.
$1.49

SJ99EA.

NDIISIWAIIIII9T.

clubhouse ; refreshments.

JIM Myers, Editor of the Logan Daily News, who played a

. Super fast! Super Strong! Dries to o door,
permanent bord. Repair jewelry, china, glass,

SKILLET

-~

+++

UNIVERSAL

HYDRAULIC
.JACK

SflllfR CI.UH

*;

enroute to a stunning 58-28 victory over the Shridermen. More
than 1,000 fans crammed their way into the old Logan gym to
Witness that championship game:

&amp;q ...... .,: . .....

\~ - ~If

+++

KENNY Young (4), still recovering from a bout with the flu, jwnps high to block a
Jimmy Harris (12) shot during Friday's SEOAL game against visiting G111llpolls . Young
ripped the cords for 32 points and picked off nine rebounds for the MarHuders. Harris tullled
!Opoints for lheGallians. GAHSwon , 68-59. (Keith Wilson photo ).

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Logan
14 1 957 777
Waverly
· n S 1097 971
Portsmouth 11 6 114 1 1037
Pt . Pleasant
9 4 788 736
Wash ington
9 5 933 813
Ravenswood 5 S 620 59 1

SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
Ironton
10 2 507 464
Gallipolis
9 4 525 480
Athens
9 4 ·652 554
Waverly
9 5, ~ 650 522
Wellston
7 7 662 645
Logan
6 6 472 461
Meigs
1 12 453 572
Jackson
1 12 394 617
TOTALS
52 52 4315 431S ·
Wednesday's result:
Wellston 48 Wa verly A.:l
Friday's results :
Gallipolis 43 Meigs 3 1
Athens
Ironton s.s
37 Jackson
Wellslon 3736
Waverly 42 Logan 37
Monday's games:
Logan at I ronton
Gallipolis at Athens
Tuesday's games:
.
Courl House at Greent ield
Jackson at Ironton
Pt. Pleasant at Huntington
~avenswood at Ripley
SEOAL FROSH
TEAM
w L p OP
Athens
7 I 428 321
Gallipolis
7 2 377. 339 ·
5 3 304 3' 2
· Wellston
Logan
4 4 376 338
Meigs
1 6 204 289
Jackson
o 8 330 390
TOTALS
24 24 2019 2019
Thursday's result:
Gallipolis &gt;O Meigs 26

LOGAN scored on the opening tip and never looked back

h -~,6; '4 j ~
)~

~~ ...._

HECK'S REG. 59' EA.

.

Cage
standings

Friday's results:

+++

PlAYING
CARDS
CHOia

68

rauders were cool at the
foul line, hitting only seven of
16 tosses. ~ei g s had 26
rebounds. led by Young's
nine caroms. The Marauders
had 22 costly turnovers.
Coach Ron Logan' s lads
dropped to 2-lf overall and
1-12 inside the SEOAL.
Last night, Meigs played at
Logan in a makeup game.
GAHS traveled to Ravenswood for a non-league game.
Monday, the Blue Devils
travel to Athens lor a makeup
contest.

Gallipolis 68 Meigs 59
Athens M Jackson 56
Ironton 90 Wellston 69
Logan 60 Waverly 46

THE Blue Devils and Chieftains entered that post.,season
contest with identical!();! conl~rence records. II. was ''winner
take all;" Gallipolis starters for Coach Richard (Dick)
Shrider's Blue Devils were Phil Boggs, Steve McKean,
guards; Bill Hogan , center; Ken Curry. and Torn Halliday,
forwards. Logan starters were Ned Shaw and Eddie Joe
Grandy, guards; Jobn Cottrill, center; Bill Voris and Wardwell Myers, fcrwards . DWight (Killer ) Diller was the LHS
coach.

Jewelry Dept,

BRIDGE OR POKER

0
0

16 16 ~8 18-68
8 16 18 17- 59

+++

'44.96

2173

JIWB.IY IHPT.

TP
2
12
19
22
10
1
0
2
0

RB TO TP
3 9 3'
7 3 ·a
9
3 32
I
0 0
I
0
0
I
0 0
I
2
3
4
I
5
0 0 10 .
25 22 59

GAllS had defeated the Chieftains 48-32 at Gallipolis that
cold winter nearly three decades ago . The two teams were
scheduled to play at Logan around the first of February in a
rematch, but due to an "ice storm" which completeiy
·paralyzed the area, the game was postponed and reset for
March 9, after both teams had been eliminated from
tournament play.

~eg.

99c

Score by quarters:
Ga llipolis Blue Dev i ls
Meigs Marauders

RB TO
3
0
6 0
8
J
8 0
I
3
1
0
2 0
3
0
0 ·o
0 0
0
1
31 6

crown. Oddly enough, that 1951 championship came with a big
victory 9ver the Blue Devils, only it was a post-tournament
affair and the game was played on the ancient Hilltop court.

Heck's

$34.96

FLASHUIJIT

GAHS BLUE DEVILS (68)
FG-A FT-A PF
Jeff Brown, f
1·2 0-0 2
Jeff L anham . f
5-14
2-2 3
Brad Abels, c
8-10
3; 3
3
Terry Wa lt, g
9·22 4·5 3
Jimmy Harris, g
S-9 0-0 2
o.o
Bill Armstrong, g
1·2
E. V. Clarke. f
I
0·2 o.o
Matt Sterrett , c
1-2 0-0 2
Rick Dailey , g
0-0 0-0 'o
o.o 0-0 0
Nate Thomas, g
Dave Wick line, g
0·0 0-0 0
Totals
19-61
10-12
17
MEIGS MARAUDERS(59)
PLAYE R-Pos .
FG-A fT.A PF
·Greg Becker, g
1-5
1-3 3
3·5 . 2-4 3
Brent Stanley, c
Kenny Young , f
14·22 4-5 2
Bill Elkins, g
o.o 0-0 0
Ray Andrews, f
o.o 0-0 0
David Blake, f
0-1 0-2 0
Tom Hawley, c
1-2 0-1
2
T im Coats, g
2-4 0-1
2
Chuck Kennedy , g
5-9 0-0 2
Totals
26-48 7-16 14
PLAYER- Pos.

• •

+++

STEREO PHONO
W/AM/FM RADIO

HECK'S REG.

DISPOSABLE

GAHS-Meigs box.

WE clearly remember the Chiefs' last SEOAL cage

2000

to corry cr.d u ~e. There is no fo cusing .
f1II-Aosh capo city. Inhibiting of the fla sh if
fiash6. Aulom:Jiic dale- sl ide ejection. An
featu res- The picture is handed to you

b,. the motor-a-iven comer a.

.,

61 field goal attempts for 57
percent. GAHS was 10 of 12 at
the foul line for 83 percent.
sinking nine In a row before a
miss. GAHS had 31 rebounds,
eight each by Lanham and
Brad Abels. The Blue Devils
had six turnovers.
The Blue Devils had 12
steals, eight by Terry Wall.
GAHS was credited ·with 13
assists, lour each by Brad
Abels and Wall .
Meigs hit 54 percent from
the field, sinking 26 nf 48 field
goal attempts . The Ma ·

AND they had a right to be happy. After edging GAHS lor
their lith straight league win, the Chiefs learned Athens had
·· knocked off nmnerup Waverly 64,49, thus assuring tbe Logan
quintet of itS first hardwood title in Zl years.

CONCEPT

ONE STEP CAMERA

stirring scene. The ladies

goal attempts and sank four
free throws in five trips to
capture the game' s scoring
honors with 32 points.
Chuck Kennedy was the
only othtr Marauder in
double ligures with 10.
Four Blue Devils finished
In double figures. Terry Wall
led the attack with 22 points.
Brad Abels added 19, Jeff
Lanham 12 and Jimm y
Harri s 10.
The lads of Coach Jim
Osborne. now 7-9 overall anrl
6-] lnside theSEOAL, hit 29 Of

+++

POLAROID

flags of 74 countries were on

•,

24.

PEIFEaiOI

by Young with 5:12left in the
game and 58-04 with 3:21
showing on the clock on Brent
Stanley's turnaround jumper.
Terry Wall's three-point
play at the 3:07 mark upped
Ga!lla's lead to 61-54.
Greg Becker's layup cut it
back to five, 61-56, with 2:26
remaining In tbe game.
Another three point play by
GAHS, this· time by Brad
Abels with 2:12 left, all but
wrapped up the win for
GAHS.
Several members of the
Meigs team were still
showing the effects of colds
and flu. On the other side, It
was learned Friday that
Mark Smith, Gallia 's 6·0
junior forward, is out for the
season with a fra ctured
ankle. The injury was sui·
fered in the Logan game
Tuesday night. .
Young , who tallied only two
points at Gallipolis before
fouling out in that contest on
Jan. 6, was in top form
Friday. The Marauder ace
connected on 14 of 22 field

WELlSTON - Dick James
and 'Joe Fletcher combined
efforts for 57 points Friday
night as the Ironton Tigers
smashed the Golden Rockets
t by,a ~9 score.
at Well son
James, a sophomore,
ripped in 32 points and
Fletcher, an other so ph·
d 25
-omore, adde
more as
the Tigers dropped in 40 of 70
lleld goal attempts.
Coach Ri ck Perdue's
Rockets led 20·19 a It er one
quarter and the teams traded
t~e lead · five times tn the
second oeriod until Goach

So uth. em ga
· l~
faSfe de•.fnut'
J'-" .
RACINE- .:_ The Southern
Girls Basketball team,
·
'th t th e serviCes
·
p1aytng
WI ou
of leading scorer Jean Ann
Ritchhart, lost their first
rt'!gular season game in 53
contests last week when they
fell to host Eastern, 44·22. The
flu bug, as it has many cage
teams, didn't pass up the
Tornadoettes as two other
starters were playing ill also.
But It was Eastern all the
way as the hosts jumped out
to a 22~ lead at half and were
never threatened. B. Windon
led the winners with 15 points
while Weber chipped in with
10. Hannum added nine,
Batey eight~ and Young two
to round out Eastern's
scoring. Eastern rnlide 8 of 16
free throws.
Jaye Ord led Southern with
seven points while Roseberry
had five. Both were starters
whom were -hit by the bug,
The team made 4 of II free
throws.
The Southern Junior High
continued to be hot as they
won 24·20. Melanie Weese led
all scorers with 14, Salser had
eight, and E. Smith two.
Goebel led Eastern with
eight.
J aye Ord put toget.her a
fine night Thursday as South·
ern bounced back into the win
column by downing visiting.
North Gallia, 43·29. Ord hit
the nets for 13 points and
controlled the boards with 17
rebounds. Ritchhart returned
to the lineup for limited action to net 12 points while
Roseberry carne back with
ten . Southern made 15 of 31
free throws.
North Gallia was led by
J en nell Oiler who had nine
points. The Pirate ladies hit
just 5 for 24 charity tosses.
Next Souththern game · Is
Monday at Kyger Creek.
40 at the half.
Fairland enjoyed a three
point lead going into the
fourth perlo,d, but was outscored 22-19 !o send the game
in overtime.
Box score:
SOUTHWESTERN (78) Carter 27, Baker 7, Jordan 9,

Blanton 8; Layton 19, Jackson

8.

FAIRLAND (86) - Nichols
34, Hamlin 6, Love 8, Stuart
10, Daniels 11, Bragg 17.
By Quarters:

Southwestern 21 19 16 22 o78
Fairland
19 21 19 19 8- 86

Buddy Bell inserted &amp;.6 junior· of 1. 18 rrcc throws, und
Hobiri Fitzpatrick into the grabbed :10 rebounds, led by
Tiger Lineup.
John Martin's 10 snores.
Sparke\1 by the lank y
MHrtin ulso led the
junior, the Tigers scored 27 Well ston offe nse with 19 ·
points to take a 46-38 halftime points with Ted Williruns
lead . ·
adding 15.
Th e running and gunning
The box scure :
spilled over into the third
IRONTON (901 - Lutz 2·0·
period as Ironton. outscored '4; linn 1 0-2; Fle tc he r 11 -3; Hodges 4 1 9 ; James 14..4- •
Wellston 25·16 as the nets ~5
J2 ;
Fl lz pal ri d ;
4 2-10 ;
sjzz ted 'and . the Tige rs Wil lia ms 4·0.6. TOTALS 40·10emerged with a 71·1i4 lerrd 90.
WELLSTON
(691
after three quarters.
The triumph evened Roy ste r 4-2· ) 0; Martin 7-5-19 ;
Gill iland S 2-12 ; Montgom ery
Ironton's season record at 8-8 4-0 8 ; Williams 7 1-!S ; Nor and their league mark stands _man · 1-0-2; Swonger 1 - 1 ~3 .
at 8-4. Wellstqp enjoyed Its TOTALS 29·11 ·69.
Score by quarters :
best season in 10 years with a
Iranian
19 27 25 19- 90
final record of 6· 12 and We ll ston
70 18 16 15- 69
finished league &lt;'Ornpetition
Reserve score : Ironton 37,
with a 6-8 mark.
. Well sto-n 36.
Ironton hit 40 of 70 field
goals, cashed In 10 of 16 free
throws, and pulled down 3ii
LEBANON RESULTS
rebounds with James getting
LEBANON , Ohi~ (UP!) 12.
Wellston put the bUll up 72 Sncnkcn Deacon took over at
times and hit 29, converted 11 the three·quartcr mark
Friday night and pulled away
to a l 'f• length vit1ory over
Medella In the featured ninth
PLAY TODAY
r~ cc at I.cbunon llucewQy .
RIO GRANDE - Coach
The winner covered the
Art Lanham's Rio Grande
mile in 2:13 1-4 and returned
College Redmen will hoot
$4.40 to win ond $2.40 to show.
Ohio Dominican In a Mid·
'i'here wa s no place betting
Ohio Conference makeup
because of a mutuel
contest, starting at 2:30
mairunction .
.
this 'afternoon a t Lync
Saucy Slndy llnishcd third.
Center. Prior to the varsity
!he 2-1 nightly double
tOt, the Rio Jayvees will
combination of Willie Dyn 0
host Marietta In a makeup
Mile and Rose Princess was
contest, sturtl~g at 12: 15
worth $40.60.
p.m.
A crowd of 1,475 wagered
$140,109.

Otieftain gals top MHS 69-67·
LOGAN - On Thursday the
Meigs Girls travelled to
Logan and won every battle
except the one on the
scoreboard. The hosts carne
out on top 69~7 alter a fan tastic second hplf and fourth
quarter rally fell just short.
Logan was strong the first
hall and led by a seemingly
comfortable margin at In·
termisslon, 39·17. Meigs
couldn't seem to get off the
ground in that first half. but
Coach Joy Bentley must have
had a few right things to say
In the locker room, because
when the Meigs gals came out
for the second half, Logan
knew the game wasn't over
yet.
Meigs fouod the range and
scored 16 points the third
period, but the Meigs defense
couldn't seem to hold the
hosts' offense in check as
they still led, 57-33. But then
Meigs came alive and netted
a big 34 points the last period
while holding the Chieftains
to just 12. But the damage
had been done In the first half
and the rally fell short.
Meigs scored one 1rnore
field goal than Logan and had
a better. free throw average,
but the Marauder gals tossed
in seven of fifteen foul shots
while the hosts made 11 of a
big 29 attempts. That proved
the margin of difference.
Meigs even won the battle of
the boards, 54 reboundB to 43.
Meigs, due to that hot

second half, shot a sizzling 56
per cent from the lleld,
carmlng 30 of 54 shots. Vicky
Epple led all scorers with her
26 points while Gienda Brown
had a hot night with 19
markers . Brown had an
outstanding night and took
honors under the boards with
. an amazing 26 rebounds to
star the game. Dorothy
Chapman came off the ben~h
to add eight points and collect
. eleven rebounds .
Kuhn led Logan with 18
points, Jameson had 17, and
Kellar had 16. The team hit a
. good 44 per cent, hitting 27 of
61. Logan earlier in the year
handed Meigs · one of its
losses. Meigs Is now .IH, with
two of those losses coming at
the hands of Logan.
The Reserves blew an early
lead to fall to the hosts 25·20.
A~rii King led Meigs with ten
points. Meigs led aU the way
until midway through the
lin~l quarter. The difference
was once again at the foul line
where the hosts got 15
chances and cashed in on five
while Meigs shot just eight
limes and made good on two.
Next Meigs game Is Monday
at Athens.
Box Score:
MEIGS - Brown 9·1-19,
Vaughan 3·0-6, Burdette 2-0·4,
Epple 11 ·4·26, Chapman J -2·8,
Wilson 2·0·4. Totals 30-7-67.
Logan - Kuhn 7·4·18,
· Jameson 2·3-17, Kellar B·0-16,
Mara 3·0·6, Galllgar 1-0-2,
Cassady 3-3-9, Huffman 0-1-1.
Tota Is 29-11-69.

�•

C-2- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 12, 1978

North Gallia snaps
losing spell, 75-62

Pt. Pleasant
tops Falcons

Southern drops 53-49 contest
•

By Greg Bailey
RACINE - Trimble's Greg
Holbert poured in 21 points
Friday night as the visiting

VINTON
Coach tlon first period, North Gallia will host Southern Monday
By JACK ROGERS
The Jayvee contest also
Twyman
'
s
North
Gallia scored six straight points and go to Wahama TUesday.
PT. PLEASANT - Point
went against the Little
Pirates snapped a three- early in Ute $et0nd stanza to Hannan Trace will host
Pleasant, with a distinct edge Falcons. Larry Markham's
game losin g streak here lake the lead which stood the Kyger Creek Monday.
' in height , experience, and Utile Blacks won a spirited
Friday night with a 7~ rest of tlie way .
Box ecore:
firepower, turned back Coach tussle, 6()..49, their lith win as
H,-nn.. n Trace (i2)
SVAC win over the second
The win left North Gallia
Homer Preece's hustling against one defeat. The
place HaMan Trace Wild· with a 7·7 record while Swain, 5-1-11; Mooney, 2·0-4;
Wahama White Falcons, 65-35 visiting youngS\ers are now 77-6-20; Beaver 1-5cats.
and-3.
HaMan Trace dropped to 8,6. Campbell,
Fridav nieht.
.
7; Pack, 7·1-15r Webb, 1-5-7.
The win lifted the Big
Sepior forward Rex Ju.stlce
The Pirates' Sam Smtih, a Totals 24-14-62.
Gary Richards led all
Blacks record to 9-and-4 and scorers in that game with an
North Gallla 1751
paced the attack with 27 junior guard, and Henry
the IQSs dropped ·the Falcons impressive 25 laDles. Ron
points and 19 rebounds.
SieWert , a senior guard, Justice. 11·5·27; Minnis, 4-0-8;
McComas, 1-0-2; Winston, 4-1to 4-and..!l.
Down 15-12 at the end of1he caMed 14 and 13 points . 9;
Barnette 17 and Jay Minton
Smith, 5-4· 14; Siewert, 6-1There were 18 boys in the 15 were t ops for the Uttle
respectively.
13 ; Shaw, 1-0-2. Totals 32·11 ·
., game, 10 for PPHS and eight Blacks.
Leading the Wildcats of 75 .
8y Quarters:
:: lor Wahama, and all scored.
Coach Dan Cornell was senior
Also scoring for the Uttle
Hannan Trace
15 29 42 62
•· But only two were in double Falcons: Tim Roush 8, Vince
David Campbell with 20 North Gallla
12 32 55 75
·· ligures.
points. RoMie Pack, a junior,
Weaver 6, Fred Smith 6,
::
Guard Jeff Holland rattled Kreig Sayre 4.
who usually comes off Ute
•· home 14for Big Blacks and
bench , canned 15 points.
Next outing for the Big
:: fo rward Artie Vaughan Blacks will be Tuesday when
Dave Swain, hot-shooting
dr illed 12. Scott Howard they hit the pike . for
center, was held to 11 points.
PIULADELPHM (UPI) • canned 6.
Statistic-wise, North Gallia
Hurricane.
COLUMBUS- Ohio's 1978
Julius
Erving was admitted
Greg Blessing was best lor
Box score :
fishing licenses are .now on sank 32 of 89 field goal atto
Temple
University
.. the losers, swishing 8.
sale at over 4,000 locations In tempts and 11 of 15 foul shots.
WAHAMA (351 - Barnitz.
Hospital
Friday
night for
Sophomore Rick Barnitz 3-1·7; Blessing, 4-0-B; Buz• the state, according to the HaMan Trace hit ·24 of 69.
treatment
of
superficial
pumped in 7, Kevin Honaker zard, 2-0-.4 ; Zuspan, 1-0-2:
Division ol WildUfe of the from the floor and 14 of 23 at
phlebitis of the left calf.
6, while Rick Buzzard and Honaker, 3-0-6; Hobbs, 0-2·2;
Ohio
Department of Natural the foul circle.
Rawl ings, 1-0-2: Weaver. 2-0A team spokesman, who
Vince Weaver were dividing 8 4.
The Pirates held a large
Resources (ODNR).
TOTALS t6-3-3S .
made
the announcement,
bet ween them .
PT. PLEASANT (651 The new licenses are rebounding edge grabbing 48.
said
Erving's
condilion woold
Tim Newberry and Ed Vaughan, 6-0-12 ,· Newberry,
North Gallla won the
required as of March 1 to take
' · Nibert, the tallest boys on the 2·1-S; Nibert, 2-0-4; Howard,
be
evaluated
oo
a day-to-&amp;ty
reserve
game,
but
no
score
fish, frogs , -turtles and
Holland , 6·2-14 ;
basis
and
.he
possibly
could
co urt , played scarcely more 3-0-6;
was
avallable.
mussels from all Ohio waterS.
Nichols. 2-0-4; Bibbee, t-t-3;
at
h&lt;me
against
play
Sunday
•. than a half and accounted for Minton , 4-0-8; M. Vaughan, 1The Pirates traveled to
Licenses can be purchased at
··. 5 and 4 points, with Newberry 1-3; Workman , 3·0·6. TOTALS
Miller Saturday night. They Seattle.
many
retail
outlets,
including
ONE LAST ATTEMPT - Artie Vaughan (10) of Point Pleasant pUBhes his ar111 through
~ pulling down 11 rebounds and . 30-l -65.
most hardware and sporting
Score by quarters :
Ute outstretched arms of Charlie Zuspan (34) of Wahama in an attempt to stop Zuspan 's
•. Nibert 7.
•
goods stores.
·
Wahama
6 8 9 12-35
shot. It was hustle like this oo Ute part of Point Pleasant's defense which resulted in a 65-35
Surprisingly, Point's bench Pt. Plea s.
Don't Forget Your
IS 18 14 18--65
"Ohio
fishing
continues
to
win for tbe Big Blacks Friday night.
;; supplied 24 points between 1 Reserve score Pt.
get better and better," said ·
Fine Feathered Friends!
•. them. J ay Minton hit 8, Doug Pleasant 60 Wahama 49.
Dale Haney, Chief of the
Workman 6, Ed Nichols 4,
Wildlife Division . "Over 21
SPECIALLY PRICED HEATH REDWOOD·
:: with Mark Vaughan and John
million fish from our hat·
Bibbee splltting 6 equally.
cheries were stocked in
GALLIA GIRLS WIN
•.. When likable Nicholas
public fishing waters in
MIDDLEPORT
••. connected twice the crowd
1977 ."
Gallipolis junior high girls
roared ils approval.
Haney said new fishing
262 FEEDER 5.95
·. In the vital rebounding beat Meigs 21-16 in the
areas
and facilities are
Middleport junior high gym
. department, the Big Blacks
constantly being developed.
LOGAN - The basketball place with a 9-4 · slate and
Ideal tor post or wall
Waverly connected on 16 of . He noted that the 2,83()..acre
corraled 41 to Wahama's 31, Saturday morning. Top
mounting
. Holds 2
scorer
for
the
WiMers
was
championship
of
the
SEOAL
12·a
in
all
games.
stands
at
42 from the floor for 38 pet. Caesar Creek Lake in Warren
with lea ping ability and
pounds of seed and one
Sarah
Evans,
with
14
points.
for
1977·76
belongs
to
the
Friday
night
Waverlyand made 14 of 23 gratis shots
qui ckness accounting for
sue1 cake. Top hinges
Top scorer for Meigs was K. Logan Chieftains who Friday enjoyed a 4-2 lead befo\e the while snaring 21 rebounds. County will open this year for
for easy filling.
most ol the Falcons total.
fishing
and
boating,
and
that
John Albert, a 6-2 senior,
Honaker grabbed off 8 and Anderson with eight points. It night thumped rUMer up Chiefs ripped off nine
was Gallia's season opener. Waverly 60-46 before an unanswered points to make it rippled the n·ets for 21 points EaSt Fork Lake in Clermont
Blessing picked off 6.
County will open in 1979,
There was a distinct dif· Next :,;aturday, GA11S will · overflow crowd at the LHS 11-4 and the title clinching to psce the wiMers while adding 2,160 acres of water
gym.
game proceeded into the end Scott Gasser added 14.
ference in the marksmanship host Meigs.
open to public fishing .
65$ FEEDER . 7.90
of
the first period with Logan
·Celebrating
con\inued
into
Mark Fiel~er and Joe
!rom the flo or. The Big
"
We
think
the
fishing
the wee boors of Saturday atop a 13-6 lead.
Davena each tallied 14 points license is one of the best '
•
Blacks shot 40 percent (3()..
Our most popular seed
By
intermission
LHS
had
in
Logan
as
fans
morning
lor
the Tigers.
for-75 ) while th e hard·
and suet feeder . Holds
bargains going, '' Haney said.
celebrated the first Chief· increased it to 31-23, and after
2'h pounds or more
Friday's victory marked · A license is $4 for Ohio.
pressed Fa lcons were 27 lisbon 58 Crestview 53
tains basketball cham· three cant os it was 45-34.
seed and two -suet
the 34th consecutive SEOAL residents ages 16 through 65.
percent (16-lor-60).
Little Miami 65 Mason 62
cakes. Roo( slIdes up
In notching their eighth athletic victory for Logan
plonshlp in 27 years, since th e
What hurt the Falcons logali 60 Waverly 46
Nonresidents can. get a sevenon rod for easy filling :
SEOAL
cage
crown
the
195()..51
season.
London
64
Spr
ingfield
North
dating back into the 1976-77 day tourist's license for $7
much, however, were errors.
41
Under Coach Scott Fitz· Chiefs led by 14 points on season .
They committed 23 turnovers eastern
and 8!f aMuallicense for $14.
L_
o rain King 55 Sandusky 48
gerald's guidance a group of three occasions as they
Through baseball, A writing fee of 50 cents Is
to 15 for PPHS.
lora I~ Sr 74 Marion Harding
kids without a superstar at finished the contest with a 49 basketball, and football charged for each license.
Pt. Pleasant led 15~ at 'the 6J
Louisville
59
Springf
ie
ld
any position sewed up the pel. shooli!Jg average on 24 of Logan has a 34-game winning
,&lt;62 FEE.DER 9.95
quart er and opened the Local SB
On the wholesale comspread to 35-14 at halftime. Madi so n Plains 70 Hillsboro title with a 12~ mark in 49 : They also dropped in 12 of streak against league teams. mercial market, eight
Eight to te ~ Pounds
leag ue play and own a 19 free throws and hauled
The Chiefs beat Jackson m bluegill 6-7 inches long sell for
capBcity combined
It was 47-23 at the third 56
sparkling 14·1 season record. down 29 rebounds.
with easy filling feathe finals . of the 1976-77 $5.84; eight crappie 8-9 inches
Malv_
e rn 73 Ridg,e wood 65
period.
Waverly still owns second
tures make this one ·
basketball season, won aU 14 long go for $7.28; and eight
of our most popular
baseball games, posted a 7~ catfish 11-12 inches in length
mod els (or the con- ·
mark in football, and own a cost $6.24.
firmed bird lover.
' 12~ basketball record this
A copy of the publication,
season to arrive at 34.
"1978 Fishing Regulations,"
"It's been a long way for is provided with each license
us, after last year being so sold. The regulations also are
close", stated Coch Filz· · available
from · the
gerald. "These kids may not
Publications Center, Ohio
be as talented as three or four Department of Natural
tea)nS in the league, but they Resources,. Fountain Square,
play with determination and Columbus 43224. A fishing
pride and never give up. " ·
license is not required ol a
JACKSON - The fast · markers. ·
Around
the
SEOAL
it
is
the
'
resident who is 66 years of
Rich
Harless
canned
1:;
improving Athens Bulldogs
age or older or a person who
broke out of a 10.10 first points before fouling out late year of the Chieftain.
CENTRAL SOYA
The box score :
is Jeso '!lan 16 years of age.
period tie Friday night to post in the contest to lead Jackson
of OhiD, Inc.,
a 66-56 victory over the host with Greg Forsyth adding 14,
WAVERLY (461 - Arnett Additional individual license .
also a peroonal foul · victim. 1-0-2;
F Ieider
4-5· t3; exemptions are explained in
Jackson Ironmen.
G1lipols, Ohia
The lronmen were great at Thompson 2-5.. 9; Rick the fishing regulations
The game was marred by
Thomas
2-0-4;
Davena
6·2·14;
47 personal fouls with .the two the charity line as they Holsinger 1·2·4. TOTALS 16- brochure.
teams attempting 50 free converted 22 of .26 on 23 14-46 .
LOGAN (601 ~ Gasser 6-2throws and Jackson losing Athens personal fouls , The
14
; Krieg J.J.J; Lehman 2·2·
Bulldogs
were
14
of
24
at
the
three players via the personal
Braglin 2-2-6; Kemper 2·0·
stripe a·s Ja ckson wa s 6;
foul route.
4; Dalfon 1-0-2; Albert9.3-21;
· After battling to a 1()..10 first whistled 24 times.
Tucker t-2-4. TOT'ALS 24-12·
Rebounding favored the 60.
period deadlock Athens
Score by quarters :
drilled 'l:t points in the second taller · Bulldogs 4()..32 with
Waverly
6 17 11 12- 46
period to take a 37-20 halftime David Evans snllging six for Lo.gan
13 18 14 15-60
lead. After lhr~e quarteJ:S !fie Jackson.
Reserve store : Waverly 42,
Coach AI Berger's Ironmen Logan 37.
score stood at 48-33· and the
Bulldogs mounted a 20 point are now 1·12 in league play
PURCHASE ANV ONE OF OUR LAWN AND GARDEN
and 3-16 in all games.
lead with 4:30 remaining.
The box score :
At this point Coach Fred
TRACTORS-WITH 15% DOWN-AND YOU CAN DELAY
Gibson removed his starters
ATHENS U61 - Bentley •·
only to see the scrappy 4-t2 ; Topping 5-1-II; Haller I·
YOUR FIRST PAYMENT UNTIL MAY 1ST, 1978. THAfS
Ironmen reduce the lead to 10 2-4 ; Mathews.- 7-2- 16; Chonko
4-4-12; Bruning 1-0-2; Sm ith •·
points with 2:15 left.
0-0; HarlO-t-I, TOTALS26-14·
.
RIGHT, NO PAYMENTS DUE UNTIL MAY 1, 1978.
The AHS starters returned 66.
JACKSON (56) - Harless
and staved off Jackson to up
their season record to 8..!1 and 4-7-15; Conger 2-0-.4; Dorsey
1·5-7; For sy th 7-0-14; D.
STOP BY SOON FOR COMPLETE DETAILS AND A
show an 8-5 SEOAL . record. Evans 2-6-10 ; T. Evans 1-0-2; There's money to be made in
David Mathews scored 16 Martin 0-4·· · TOTALS t7o22· raising dairy bull calves.
. Larry S.wain of Land
GOOD DEALI THIS OFFER LASTS ONLY 'TIL
points and pulled down 11 of 56.
Minneap·
O'Lakes,lnc.,
Score
by
quarters
:
the 40 Athens rebounds while
Athens
10 27 11 18-66 olis,says the dairyman is in a
FEBRUARY 28, 1978.
Gary Bentley and Arthur Jackson
10 10· 13 23-56 unique situation. He raises .
Chonko each chlped in 12
Reserve score : Athens 54 , animals that not only ·
It's Royal Oak, the first susJa ckson 37.
produce milk, but also have
pended ceiling designed to in'
the capability of producing
beef. In utilizing his bull
corporale Ar'llstrong . Supe r
calves,
the dairyman can
NORTHFIELD
RESULTS
Wh ite grid into the overall
WINS BY DECISION
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio raise the calves to tbe 200·
design of the ceiling . Now all
DETROIT (UPl) _: Detroit (UP!) - M~m~ Key captured 250 lb. range and seU them
the advantages of a · suswelterweight Danny Paul, Friday night's featured $3,500 to feeders or he can feed his
makin g his professional open mile at Northfield Park, buD calves as steers , to
pe nded ceiling, including easy
weight and sell
b.oxing debut, won , a covering the distance In 2:08 finishing
access, eas y installation, and
them as beef animals at 800
unanimoUB decision in six for a one-length victory over to 1200 lbo . This could be a
quick replaceability, can be yours-in a ceilrounds Friday night over Somethin Fancy.
profitable war to go, Swain
ing that offers a beautiful wall -to-wail look of
Johnny 11 Ace" Smith of
The winner, driven by Don says. The cal market today
handsome wood and piaster. See Royal O~k today.
Detroit at Olympia Stadium. McKirgan , returne.d $9.60, is better than · it .was six
Charley
Johnson
of $6.40 and $5.40. Mountain months ago and raising
them for feeders could mean
Alliance, Ohio, defeated Hawkeye came in third.
fairly decent profits lor you.
Dwain Bonds in. a split
Sylvan Lane won the first , Over 4.5 inillioo calves could
decision in eight rounds in the race, kicking off a 5-1()..1 big
be raised for dairy beef
heavyweight class.
triple combination that paid aMuaUy in the U.S., and
Mickey " Sneakey Pea" $1,104. Gay Bubbles finished Holstein ' steers or bulls
Goodwin of Detroit won a second
FOR A 10' x 15' ROOM
and
Janidawn generally out gain most of
unanlmous decision in six showed.
the regular bred animals .
rounds over Eddie Phillips of
Pinky Wick teamed with
POMEROY, 0.
Stamford, Conn., in a mid· Biloons Adios Girl in the
dleweight bout.
fourth race for a 7·1 perfecta
PHONE 992-2176
Thomas Hearns of Detroit combinalton worth $1,606.20
scored a TKO at 2:45 in the - second largest in the
312 6th Street
Point Pleasant third
Spring Ave.
round over Robert track's history.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Slore Hours - Moa. • Fri., 8 a.m. - 5 p.m., Sat., 1-12 uooa.
Adams of P~iladelphia in
A crowd of 3,313 wagered
II'"
.. ,. •.. ' ..~:"::
:"111111111
another welterweight bout. $417,089.
1111'II II••
11,,:!, :•:'
t. r.rl

Tomcats avenged an earlier

season two point loss and
handed host Southern a 5349
defeat. That was Southern's
fourth loss of the season
against II wins.
Southern never led during
the first period although they
lied it at 11-all with 3:50 to go
in the first period. Southern
trailed by as much as seven
in the sec-onrt omttril'r ~ ..... r.,r "

.

Improved Athens.

••

GALUPOLIS - Off to a
smooth start is the best way
to describe the men's winter
basketball program spon·
sored by the 0 . 0 . Mcintyre
Park District with the
COoperation Of the Gallla
County Local School Distn·ct.
Working coOperatively, the
County Board of Education,
Superintendent of Schools
. ston, Prm·ct' psls
Thomas Half
Paul Dt'llon and Robert
Lanning , and the Park
District have aU worked hard

to

Kyger Creek High Schools to
a greater extent.
Late last fall the Park
Dlstrict

CAROLINA LUMBER
&amp;SUPPLY co-:675-_1160

M'EIGS EQUIPMENT CO.

FUllON·OOMPSON
TRACTOR SN ES

FOR PROFESSIONAL RESULTS,
TRUST A SEASONED HAND •••

•

•

J

·..

.'

th.e

warm

approval

proposal

as a Step to

h
been providing 80 men wit a
weekly opportunity to participate in officiated basket·
ball contests.
Eight learns ar e participating in the program
with
team . members
representing a 11 parts oI th e
. 1
county from Crown CltY o
Vinton , Gallipolis, Bidwell,
and Rio Grande. The teams
and their members are listed
below.
0 . o . MciNTYRE
PARK DISTRICT
Official Roster
Men's Winter
Basketb.alt Program
BigWheel Carry Out
Ken Wamsley , Caplain.

greater

Tom Young, captain, John

utilization of the schools and
Weeks, Dave Brown, Bill
'd
·
ed
·t·
Lemley, Brad Watts, Keo ltl
.to prov1 .e mcr.eas
c~_Izen -,. Burdette, Mark New , Bill
oppc)rtumty fo'r recreatiOnal

activities.

The

proper

supervision

and

.1. 1.
th
h
ut11za
10n o1 e sc oo 1
gymnasiums on a weekly

Sh·~rpshooters

Mike

Principals, the contests were
rescheduled ·and have since

Sands, Fred Hastwell , ·Lee

N BA Stanti1Rg1i

By United Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic DI'Jlsion
W. L

Ph rt a
· New '(ork
Boston
Buffalo

35
27
18
11

16
25
·Jt
32

w.

L

Pet. GB

l

U

K.C. LIGHTS

LJ HIGH LIFT

U

j PUSH BARS

. ACCESSORIES
WHEEL AND .TIRES IN STOCK

Also "tia&amp;le .
WINCHES
I j HUSKY PRODUCTS

LJ
U HICKEY PRODUCTS l .-1
Ll ETC.

R~BBER

FENDERS

BETl HONDA SALES
'phone 446-2240
Upper Rl . 7

Gallipolis

JIGOOD
AtllEASONS
to see your good
· neighbor agent

Bushwackers
Hager , captain ,

Stout, Patrick Stout,. Larry
Justus , Dav1d Robm e tte,
Gary Crosswhite , Mike
Camden.
·
Gray Streaks
Duane . Phlegar, captain,
.Mark Bailey, James Splete.
Richard Tipple Jack Me Peak , Frank Fetty, Doug

Pro· · · II
·
I
:Standings \

ROLL BARS

Brown, Bill Armstrong, Ron
.Morr is, C_h arles Pe.ck, Osc~r
Clark, and Steve Mu_ndell .

The program almost did
not gel off to a start when the
severe weather forced the
cancellation of the first
· scheduled contests but
..
'
through the dthgent efforts of
the Superintendent and the

·-

LJ

~~~~~~ 111 aM4t,~:rr_v ~~~e~~

James Gi~son~ David Hager .
· Rodney Wellington, Timothy

I
I
I

0·6; Andrews, 2-0-4; Jones. 3 ·

0 6: McE IIresh. o.o.o. Totals
14-l-H .

Thumper Johnson, captain.

, basls for ·a two month period.

r---:-----:----.,

' t

Schopis, Don Carter .

Superin·

tendent of Schools the
~inc_ipals, and , the- ' P~rk
Dlstrlct met and scheduled
tbe ·contests, and provided for

Hilt , , .o., , B•ker, 0· 0-0:
Souder, I 0-2; Tot•b 21-7-49.
Trimble (lll - Meade , 7-2
16; Holbert, 9-3-21: Roba ck. 3·

Darrell Boggess, Don Wells, .
Ma&gt; Wells , Rayford Minnis, Charles Gullett and Randy
John Dolson , Jr .. ·.George F'riend with 4 points e.ach.
Garnes and John Garnes .
The .&lt;;ubs next outing will _
Foster's Grocery
R'
Dean Rees, capta in, be in the Lyne Center at 10
Dw ight Rees , David Rees. Grande College, F~bruary 16
Duane Rees , Terry Ward, at 12 noon, to battle the Hills
Larry Stephens, Ronnis - - - - - - - - - - ,
Bea ch, Charles Thom~son, r

Danny Mayn~rd, and , teve
Saunders .
·.
Joint. Effort ·

to

G~ lllpolis, 0.

Southern (49) ...._ Teatl)rd, 2
7·6; Winebren ner 5 " " 12 :
Brinager 8·2·18 ; s,~re. 3- 1· 7;

ACCESSORIES CENTER

O'dell lumber Co.
Vine St.

Freshman Dale Teaford led
the losers with 15, Jac~ Duffy
had 12, and Dave Foreman
had 10. l..ast nighl Southern
hosted Symmes Valley, and
Monday they go to North
Gama .
Box Score:

rebounders with 16 of his
team's 36. The Tomcats hit 22
of 45 shots from the field for
48 per cent and canned~ of 10
free tosses.
Southern 's
Reserves
dropped their second loss to
the Tomkitlens this year, 44·
43 in a nip and tuck contest.
Southern trailed fur three
quarters before taking tjte
lead 35-34 at the third boner.
A torrid fourth period gave
the visitors the win as Mike
Roback threw in 23 points to
J&gt;'!Ce the win.

Haven school were shared by

John Frazier, Arnold Cooper.

the

Board of Education gave

Harris , and Kent Hanby .

---·-~ . J

CAR . .. hOME
LIFE "' hEALTH
C. K. SNOWDEN
24 Stat~ Slr~t
Gallipoi :s. Ohio
Phone ,46-42-90

nreot••'
.lteG
tlote SnoW

Power losses,
Street f\ooding

Result from StonnQil7J!m

\NTERS'T ATE
CLOSED SY .
VY SNOW

Roads•Account

Pony Keg
Like u ~uQcl neig hb or,
Lewis Bush, capfct !n, Gary
S ture furm i!:J there .
Lan e, Paige Humph re ys ,
Gene Hall , Wesley Hurt.
HAll IA•Jii
Donald Bush , Daniel Mahan ,
Keith Grate, James Niday
and Ja ck MaHhews.
Tony's Pizza
Dave Beaver·, captain,
Roger Foster, J erry Bur st.\Tl FMM
·
fl'll.tiiJIIA}IIC£ CO~ IE8
N
Dw
B
cham,
o
apora ,
.;11n
"•·~ OM....., "'•••••.,..•· •••••h
Beaver , George Dillon , Larr y 1.---~-----.J
Dillon , Ke ith Weddington and
·Ca lvin Warren .

For 10 Fatalities

A

.686
.519 81!2 ---~~---------,;,_ _ _ _ __ ,
.367 16
.347 17

New Jersy
11 42 ·.:208 26
Central Division

33
27
26
:25

Atlanta

24 29 ,453

Houston

19
24
26
26

Pet. GB

San Antoni
Wshng tn
New Orlns

. Clevelncl

A Suspended
Ceiling That Doesn't
LookLikeA
Suspended Ceiling

$12.00

approached

County Board of Education
proposing to conduct a men's
basketball program in some
of the high school gym·
nasiums as an evening activity. Recognizing the fact
that recreational activities in.
. the county are limited, the

BUY NOW•.PAY LATER.

Only

utilize Hannan Trace 8nd

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!)
- Freshman Earvin Johnson
scored 25 points and senior
Bob Chapman .added nme
second·half points to help
Michigan State retain sole
possession of first place in the
Big Ten Saturday with u 73-62
victory over Michigan.
Junior for ward Greg
Keiser scored 21 points, 15
while Michigan State was
cruising to a 37-28 ha lftime
lead over the team which
defeated it on its oWn home
court , 65-63, less than twu
weeks ago .

GALLIPOUS - Behind a
42 point performance by Don
Saxon and 34 points from
Paul Winston, the Guiding
Hand School Cubs crushed ::;:~:}~:~:~f:~:~:{:~:~:~~~:~:~:~:~:~t:~:}~:}~:~:~:))
the Hope Haven School of
JACKSON - The SEOAL
Jackson 98-10, Friday ut the
SportswrJt e·rs
nnd
B.roadcastero Association
Guiding· Hand School in
Cheshire.
meeting to select the all·
WEST POINT, N.Y. (UP!)
The Cubs took a demanding
league basketball team will
bel
Bob Tl!urnton, an assistant
. be Sunday, Feb. 19 at 1
lead from tipoff never
ng
football
coach a t the
b f th
p.m. at Jolly Lanes lu
in any serious trou Je or . e
Area seven victory.
Jackson. Head coaches are University of Nebraska the
All four stanzas of play
asked to be preseal if past three years, has joined
we)e led by tire Cubs with
possible to offer comments the coaching staff a l West
.
f
Point.
on their lop players.
bench strength coming rom
A 1973 Nebraska graduate,
Ken Shaver with 6 points, and
ThQrnton wa s a starting
Maurice Smith with 4 points.
Gene Shaver du!fiped in 8 &amp; Dales School of Hillsboro. safety . in the Cornhusker
,
. h The game is open to the secondary during Ute 1972
points for the wmners
w1t
and '73 seasons .
Dale Tucker and Eugene public. Admission is Cree.
Roach scoring 2 each.
Top honors for the Hope

to smooth start

Seed and Millet Just for the birds.

Sale Priced

Cubs crwh foe
by 98-10 count

·cage program off

BIRD FEEDERS

NO PAYMENTS 'TIL MAYI

IMiiiL"'S GREG HOLBERT (35) drops in two of his gam~-high 21 points against
Southern in non~eague tUt Friday. Southern players·are Kelly Winebrenner ( 42) who had 12
points and Scott Souder (34). Greg Bailey photo.
·

'

And Wild Bird Seed in 25 lb, ·so lb.
and 100 lb. lois. Also Sunflower

tops JHS, 66-56

battle the rest of the way with
the hosts staying within four
and two points until with live
minutes to go, Trimble went
into a four-mrners offense.
l'hc score ttien stood at 47-4:;
but the visitors widened il to
team dose with 12 rini half 5(1.47, then 52-47 on a bucket
points. The score read 33-27 at by Holbert . Tim Brinager
lhen brought the Tornadoes
the end of the half.
Southern immediately cut back to within three at 52-49,
the led tu open the second half but Holbert sank a foul shot
and pulled to within two of 39· with five seconds to go to put
37 at the end of the third the game out of reach .
The Tornadoes were cold
quaner. It was a seeas .. w
from the fluor , hitting just 21
of 60 shots for 35 per cent and
~of 8 foul shots., Brinager led
l.C JUB the scoring ~ith ta points
~'
while Wtnebrenner added 12.
Freshman forward Mike
incbrenner led the hosts in
McGee scored 24 points. for 1 bounding with nine as the
Michigan but was held to just Jeam had just 27.
two . ln the last 7:30 of th e
Trimble's Kev in Meude
game as Mich igan Sta t e ulso hit double figures with
ex panded a three-point edge t6 . Holbert ul so Jed all
to the even tual winning
·
margin .
The IOth·rated Spa rtan s
raised their Big Ten record to
a 10·2 and are 18·3 overall
while the defending Big Ten
cha!llpion 'Wolverines slipped
lo 7-5 in the league and 1 2~
overall .
The Spartans led 45-4 2 with
12:30 w play but Chapman,
sco reless the first hall,
scored six of his points to help
Michigan State pull out to a
!i!l48 lead with 7:40 to play.
coming back to take the ir
only lead ul the night at 25-24
with three minutes to go in
the first half. In that !irs! half
Holbert tossed in thirteen of
his points while Southern's
Kelly Winebrenner kept his

· ' d e!fieat M • h. •
S•nartans
I'

Fishing
licenses
go on sale

Logan undisputed
sEO cage champion

•

. . 635
.529
.500
.490

SV2
7

7'h
9'h
19 33 .365 111

Western Conterence
Midwest Division
W. L

Denver

Pet. GB

Chicago

33 20 .623
29 25 .537

Indiana

6
23 29 ..442 9\17
19. 34 .358 14

Kanss cry

19 l4 .358 14

Milw
Detroit

28 27 .509

4'h

Pultlc Division ·
W. L Pet . GB

Portland
Phoeni ~~:

Seattle
Los Angels
Golden St. .

42

35
28
27
27

8 .8&lt;10 -

16 .686 . 7'1:1
23 .549 14'12
26 .509 l6'1a
'17 .500 l7

Fri"ay•s Aesulls
New Orlns at Bsn, ppd .

Buffi!IO 116, Phlla 110

r

New Jers,y 117, Detroit 112
Portlanel 112, Indiana 108
Milw 108, Cleveland 98, ot
San Antonio 125, Houston 11 ~
Kansas City 106, Chicago 93

Los Ang 135, Golelen St , 107
Seattle 126, Denver 123. ot
Sunday'S Gilntel
Cle ve land at Kan City, aft,.

Milwaukee at Boston. aft.
N.Y . at New Jersey, aff.
Seattle at Phi Ia , an.·.

Go to work·
.in quality
Outdo orsman . .. work shoes

• for workmen . Quality buill
lo slay "on duly " when
you 're "on duty."
Designed to keep you
comfortable a ll' day ...
and deliver the
kind of lOng wear

yo u expect for your

Chicago a1 tndiana, aft .
Wash at PhOeM I)(, aft .
Denver at Portllmd , aft.

as .,
seen on
national

~70

• T,.veler's Aid Machine
for Winter Driven

TRC..24

• ·S.Cked by f8 Yeats of

21 ·tS22

R«&lt;io Sh.:k Know·How I

CHARGE IT
(MOST STORES)

. SEATTLE (UP)) - The
Seattle Mariners reported
·· Friday that three more
. players )\ave been signed lo

Reg. 16911

Your Key to highway safety and security with noise blanker. bright LED
channel imdcator, ·lighuid S/ RF meter and modulation indicator. Positive /
· negative ground for use in any vehicle . With plug ·in' mike, mounting
bracket and power cables . A solid bargain at a fantast ic 41% off!

WHEREVER YOU LIVE. WORK OR PLAY. THERE'S A RADIO SHACK STORE NEAR YOU/.

new cootracts.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

catcher Bob Stin8on was
Signed to a two-year C9fllr&amp;ct.

one-year contracts.

SAVE
TV

Atlanta at Los Ang, aft .
Houston vs. NeVIl Orleans
at Bilox i

Rick Baldwin, a right-banded
relief pitcher and left-ltander
Shane Rawley were signed lo

DON'T
"GET STUCK.. BUY A REAl-ISTIC®!
.

A DIVISiaN O f TANOY C()"RPORAliQN

Uosl items

' also available al
Radio

S~k

Oe~tefs .

look tor thiS

olg\" yow

noogN&gt;OthOOd ~~~a.,•~'"-•.,•~~·
PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES
11

L.-,;,_--:-----....,..--:---------...,1
.·

�I
}.4-The Swl&lt;iay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. l2,1978

mont 60

Kyger Creek
tops Eagles
CHESHI-RE - Host Kyger
Creek outscored visiting ·
Eastern 22·13 in the final
stanza here Friday night to
post a 57-SO SV AC victorY;.
The win gave KC a 2·12
record with both wins coming '

over East·ern.
The Bobcats played Coal
Grove in a non-league contest
Saturday night and will
travel to Hannan Trace
Monday in their season
finale .
Pacing the Bobcat attack
during the final eight minutes
Friday night were senior
forward Fred Helms with
nine points and junior for-

ward Von Taylor with eight
points.
Jon Thompson, the game's

KC

injured,

coach

misses Friday tilt
CHESHIRE
Ky ger
Creek head basketball coach
Keith Carter was forced to
miss Friday's game agairist
Eastern because of injuries
suffered Thursday night in a
fall at his farm in Cadmus.
Carter was injured when he
fell from a silo. He suffered
muscle puUs in 'the back and
shoulder and an injured knee .
During his abSence the
team
which
defeated
Eastern, 57-50 was coached
by Gary Minton, the school's
guidance

counselo r

and

reserve coach. Minton is a

LYNE CENTER GYM &amp; POOL SCHEDULE
Woekot Ftb. tJ, 1971
DATE- GYMNASIUM
POOL
Feb. 13-1-10 p.m.• ()pen Gym
8·10 p.m. Ooen Swim
Feb. tol--8 .to p.m., College
8-10 p.m.• College Swim
Feb. 15--Ciosed--lnlromuro Wrestl ing
Closed
Feb. 16--Ciose&lt;J--Intromurals
Closed
Feb. 17-7-9 p.m. Fam. Rec. Night
7-9 p.m. Fam. Rec. Night
Feb. 18-Ciosed--Basketboll
Closed

Grm

leading point-maker with 18
points tossed in a basket as
did sub George Willis. The
Bob&lt;:ats held a 1~11 lead at
the end of the first period then
fell behind 28-26 at the half.
Eastern's Dave Brown and
Jeff Goebel led the second
period scoring.
Other Bobcats hitting
double figures were Helms
with 17 and Taylor with .16
points. Getting double figures
.for Eastern were Goebel with
14 and Dan Spencer with 12
points.
The loss left Eastern with a
1-14 record.
According to the charts,
Kyger Creek sank 24 of 59
attem pts for 41 pet. and nine
of 22 at the foul circle.
Eastern hit 20 of 56 from the
field for 36 pet . and IQ of 16 at
the charity stripe. KC held a
41)-22 rebounding edge as
17
Thompson grabbed
rebounds.

Eastern
took
the
preliminary game, 50-30.
Mark Norton and Joe Bowers
led the winners with II points
each . Bruce Gilmore find

Steve Russell scored 10
apiece in a losing effort.
Box score:
Eastern (50) - GoebeL 5·4·
l-4 ; 'Spencer , 5-2- 12; Bissell , 2-

3-7; Brown . 4-0-8: Wfgal , 4-1-

Totals 20-10-50.
Kyger Creek (57) ~ Taylor,
7-2·16; Smi th, O.Q.Q; WilliS , I·
1-3; Helms. 6-5-17 ; Thompson, 9-0-18 ; Westfal l, 1·1·3.
9;

Totals-2~ -57 .

By Quarters '

Eastern
K. Creek

11 11 9 13- 50

15 11 9 22- 57

MY OFFICE
WILL BE
CLOSED
February 18th
March 2nd

J. J. Davis M.D.

9 p.m .-12 Midnight, Intramural!

Bov• High School
Basketball Resulls

Hocking 43

Amner st 57 Wellington .46
Antnony Wayne 79 Lake 74
Antwerp 49 Wayne Trace · 47
Arcanum 10_. Newton 68
Arcnbo ld 61 Wauseon 57
Ashland 56 Coshocton 54
Ash ta bula 95 Ashtabula
Edgewood 47
Barberton 67 Lorain Southview 51
Ba tavia 58 New Richmond 52
Bellaire Sf Johns 81 Cadiz 62

Benedictine 69
Cle Sf Joseph 74 Mentor Lake

Rsv SS

Bellaire SJ Wheeling (W Val
Cent Sl (ot)

Kenton

Bellevue 65 Norwa lk SS
Berea 55 Parma Normandy

53

Berea Midpark 67 Parma 63

Bettsville 81' New Riegle 80
Bex!ey 67 Dublin 60
Big Wa lnu t 78 North Union 68
Boardman 78 Ca mpbell 50
Bowling Green 74 Fostor ia 41
. Brunnerdale 76 Elyr ia Christ
66
Brunswick 75 North Royalton
49

Bu ckeye Valley 40 Marys vi lle

38

Bucyrus 60 Upper Sand usky
44

Cambridge 82 Marti ns Ferry

72

Canton Cent Ca th 69 Akron

Hoban 51

Ca nt·on Glen Oak 66 Louisville
6J
.
Canton McKi nley 75 Massillon 53
Ca nton Timken 81 Akron

Buchtel 53

Cnagrln Falls 55 Kenston 40
65 Badger 38
demise of the four-year-&lt;&gt;ld . Champion
Chardon 57 Twi nsburg 37
franchise, plagued by poor Chillicothe 58 Worthington 46
attendance and a last-place Cin Aiken 64 Cin Walnut Hil ls

said, in announcing the

62

team .

Cle Collinwood 58 Cle East 55
Hts 80 Parma Valley
Forge 61 ·
Cle Marsha ll
75 Cle

Cie

Ridge 35

Houston 43 Ft Loramie 41

Hudson 54 Green 4i

Indian Hlllo 45 Glen Este oW
Indian Valley N A8 Lakeland

39

Ironton 90 Wellston 69

Johnstown 93 Licking Hfs S2

Springfield

County Agent's Corner

Wlnches1tf' 6.ol

Lima Bath 76 Elida 73
Lima
Senior
56 Lima
Shawnee SO

By JOHN C- RICE

Cin Elder 69 Cln Moeller 54

on your savings?

Calh 46

Clearfork 54 Ashland Crest .
view 41
Clinton -Mas sie 70 Greenview
64
Col Brookhaven 68 Col Mifflin
64
Col East 90 Col Mar ion .
Frankl in 85
Col Hartley 46 Col Desa tes 44

"When you·.e
or hurt aad can't
woo, yOur car
payments don't

Col Independence 60 Co l
Sou th 56
Col Northland 51 Col Central

.-

48
Col Ready 80 Col Wa tterson

•

65 -

Co l Walnut Ridge 81 MOhawk
55
Col Wehrle 55 Col St Charles

&lt;

51

••

Col West 83 Col Eastmoor 68

•

•

Col Whetston 71 Col Br iggs 62 .

•

Co ldwater 64 Minster 52
Continental 83 Miller City 71
Day Alter 96 Hamqton Taft 79

Day

Cham -Jul 65

Ca thol ic 64
Day Meadowdale
Kiser 65

•

•

Lima

•

Day

•
•

86

Day Roth 68 Day, Dunbar 66

Delaware 49 Htlliard 47

· See me for State Farm
single premium
disability income insurance.

Delphis St John 73 Defiance
70
.
Delphos
Jefferson
73
Paulding 68
Delta Sl Swanton 49
Dover 54 Wooster 53
East Cle Shaw 68 Garfield Hts

67

East Kn.ox 108 Lucas 96
East Liverpool 63 Salem 59
Eaton 72 Twin Valley S 48
Edgerton 70 Ayer sville 66 (2

ot )

Elyria 66 Fremont Ross 43
Elyr ia Cath 76 Cle Holy Name
57
Elyria
West 55 South
Amherst 37
Euclid 50 Mayfield 42
Fa irborn Baker 79 North-

•

•

no matteiwhat you~ looking
for in savings or investment
.certificates~··

.•
•

~

.••
..

~

~

•
•
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

,

.-

SPI&lt;IAL PlYMOUTH VOlARE VAWE PACKAGES.
SAVE UP TO

$250.

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

.
}.:,~,%
5

• Compounded Dailw!

• Payallll IJIIIrll!lrly • Minimum $1,000 .00

~

5 }.:'~,%
"ATE

UTE

rti:LO

•

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE

5 ~, s~.1.~%
UTE

Mllllltlllft 11 ,toO.OO

• P1y1b11 Qlllr1trly •

4-Door

These special Volares, 2-door. 4-door:

1-YEAR CERTIFICATE

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

6 ~l

6~l

and America's No. 1 selling wagon over
·I he past two years, come w ith up to

$663 worth of popular opt 1ons at a $250
savings o'ff the sticker price! Features

• Peyablt Q111rttrlW •

ot hers. t What a Volare value!

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE

.6 ?.::~,%

t P1y1bi1

• Payablt QmttriY • Minimum $1 ,000.00

Mlnlmu.1n St ,obD.DO

Qllrtlrty

t

and

INTRODUCING THE NEW
PLYMOUTH FURY GRAN COUPE.

SAYI$250.
size
A ful l

6-YEAR CERTIFICATE

4-YEAR CERTIFICATE

optional custom ex teriors .

7~?-l%

7':,%

.

savtng s is yo urs on t his special Fury.

• Plylble·Quarter!y • MllllmLitn S1 ,000.00

• Pewabte Qulrltrfy • Mh1imum $1,.000 .00

And In IUidition .to all th is ... .monthly or

quarteriy income ... paid on ana, two, three.
lour. or sir year certillcatn. lntaresl PlYable monthly il yoo desire on certiiiC1111
with lace amount ol $5.000.00 or more.

Federal

Rr~ulations

PT. PLEASANT - Fletcher Conley, an engineer of
Soil Conservation Service.
was in Mason County looking
at some of the engineering

construction of practices that
we had helped with in the last
year· or so. He found all of
them to be functioning
properly and doing the job for
which the work was intended.

He was particularly impressed with some work at
the Paul Sayre place on
Route 2 near Flatrock. We
had helped the Sayres with
water disposal around their
home. The major part of the
work involved proper handling of surface water. This
was done by means of a
diversion ditch and waterway
to intercept water that had
been rWUling down around
their home. from a nearby
hjllside . We also sloped the
soil in such a way that wattr
wUI drain away from the
foundation . Some tile drains
were also installed to provide
additional assistance through
the disposal of subsurface

water.

"Nick" Burleson inspecting some steers in his feedlot.

Know your superoisors
GALLIPOLIS - T. F .
(Nick) Burleson has been on
the board of supervisors of
the Gailia Soil and Water
Conservation District since

Extension Advisory Board
and 12 years on the Farm
Bureau Board. He helpod
start the well-known Gallia
County Junior Fair, too.
Being active in all this
organizational work made
!ann labor a real problem .
But, the two S&lt;Jns he and
Georgia raised, Ka)J..!!nd Jim,
remedied this problem. Both

1972. Ni ck is presently
treasurer for the S. W.C.D.
Nick brings a broad perspective . into the District
program. He has first hand
knowledge of farming activities since he ha s 50 acres sons now have their own
of hay, 15 acres of corn, and fanns . Kail is in a dairy
30 heads of cattle to feed from en terprise while Jim raises
his 210 acre fann . Nick has beef cattle a nd teaches at
farmed since 1934 .
North Gallia High SchooL
You can't tell by watching
The board perspective goes
beyond practical farm ing, him but Nick retired from
too. He has held every office fanning last year. Kail now
·
in the Grange organizntion, operates his .!ann.
T. F. Burleson was the
including Master. He and his
wife, Georgia, have been second man to sign his !ann
active in 4-H work since it under cooperative agreement .
came to Gailia County. Nick with the Gailia Soil and Water
has ·served 16 yepr~ o~ thr Conservation District.

The weather continues to
be of foremost interest in our
thou ghts and of c"Ourse, it Is a
restriction to everyone's
activities . We did some
mathemati ca l figuring in
regard to the amount of water
on the surfac'e of ground in
Mason County . According to
our figuring, if there were
three inches of water on the
surface there would be
21 ,862,148 ,413 gallons of
water. It is anyone's guess
how much water there is at

any one place because the
snow has drifted. Some
places the snow Is two or
three feet deep, and other
places the ground is almost
bare at this time.

We were at the Albert
. Roush (arm near New
helping
Albert
Haven
and
his
son
Tom·
my with a plan revision

on 1helr - farm. ""Tommy
graduated from agricultural
school four or five years ago
and since that time has been
with .his father working lhe
dairy. Albert said that with
his son's " book leamin' 11
that they had been able to
incr~ase their hard average

requl11 a substantial

penalty !Of premature wllhdrawal of certlll·
ute lunds.
·

.

...
~

992.3795

27 SYCAMORE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
446· 0303

....•

Open 9:00 to 6:00 Weekdays
9:00to5:00 Saturday

~.

No Appointment Necessary

.."

from about 12,000 lbs. per cow
to about 15,000 lbiJ. per cow.
This past swnmer and fall
they cleared all of their woodland in harvest cut and sold it
for chipwood. Much of the
woodland areas were class II
and Ul land and are s uitable
for cropland.
We have noted in the last
week or so another item
having to do with the weather
and nature that Is S&lt;Jmewhat
In teresting, During our
travels around the county we
have noticed hawks, owls and

birds do nut have much of a

natural enemy. They are the
birds that destroy thousands
of dolla-rs worth of crops each
year and are known also to

ca IT)' discuses.

CLOSE OUT

ELCONA
24X56

&amp;'~~~
MOBILE HOMES INC.
See Jim Slaats or Joe Giles
Phone 446 -9340
Gallipolis , Ohio

NOW IN STOCK!
E ALL NEW

MINGTON
Mighty Mite 300

CHAIN

SAW

with

UGGtSTIO .

tax fonns•

618 E. MAIN ST.. POMEROY, OHIO

other birds of prey perehed in
trees much more commonly
than we have ever noted
before. Weare sure that these ·
birds are in search of food
since their normal food
supply consisting of mice and
o!her sma ll animals are hard
to s~ure a1 this time. This Is
ail part or the balance of
natute. and is nature's way of
keeping each animal from
becoming over abundant. We
would have to add that it
appears a shame that black-

Projects functioning properly

BY JOHN COOPER
Soil Cons. Service

"The new

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Mlnklllll$1,080.01 .

+Val ue Bonus Package requi res optional power s1eer1ng.

Vol ares shown with Value Bonus Pa ckage

Lay of the land

H&amp;RBLOCit

RAYI

~UE

UTE

li ke AM rad io, digital clock, ma ny

Program. County agents
have details.
POMEROY - Have your
Winter als&lt;J biings on a lot
dairy animals had their
of health problems for both
vitamin " piU" today? Winter
replacement heifers and
bringS 011 extra management
cows. Not enough or improper bam ventilation is
problems fo~ dairymen. One
in particular Is feed However,
under most usuaily the cause of these
management, says Donald E. situation s, supplemental problems. The tendency is to
Pritchard, Extension dairy vitamin feeling is not close dairy buildings as
speclaUst at the Ohio State necessary.
tightly as possible as the
University. Many dairymen
Slill. many dairymen add weather gets colder, and this
wonder if they need to feed extra
vitamins,
and is normally the wrodg thing
supplemental vitamins to veterinarians, feed Company to do.
their cattle during the winter, representatives and many
€attle give off a large
he says. The answer Prit- Extension people rl\(:ommend volume of moisture in the air
chard normally gives is ''no,' ' additional vitamin A and they exhale. Moisture also
because most commercial D
to
dairy
cat- gets into the air through
protein supplements dairy- tle
from
the
rations ,
especi- eva poration
men add to their concentrate ally during the _'!inter. animal's body and from the
already contain some added "I, too, usually suggest ad- urine IIJld feces. If. this
vitamins. Also, under most ding extra vitamin A and D moisture-filled air is not
roughage feeding programs, with the reasoning that the removed from the building, it
there should be adequate ration may be deficient, that condenses on cold surfaces.
amounts of vitamin A in the the extra vitamin A may This also occul'S in heated,
roughage to supply the promote better animal health insulated b~ildings. Besides
animal's daily
needs. (re produ ctive
and causing deterioration of the
Vitamin A is the principal respiratory, primarily) and building, this moisture keeps
the cost is relatively cheap animals' hair coats wet. Wet
SJCl
for the possible benefits that coats cause chilling and
may be derived, " Pritchard reduced animal resistance to
many respiratory and other
says.
So, it really bolls down to diseases. Also, ammonia
making your own decision on buildup In poorly ventilated
stop~ whether or not to add extra structures causes irritation of
vitamin A and D to the winter an animal's respiratory tract
Ration . If you do, be sure to and mak es it susceptible to
• MIKE SWIGER
add the proper amount so many diseases. So, get those
992-7155
cows will receive about 30 to barns ventilated.
1495. Third St.
A general guide Is 100 cubic
60 thousand units of A and
~lopart,o.
7,500 to 15,000 units olD daily. feet of air exchange per
Ii cows get several hours minute for each 1,000 .pounds
exposure to .sunlight nearly of animal body weight in the
every day or good quality, building. 01 the total amount Sllf1 cured hay, eJtra vitamin of air exchange required for a
building, about one-fourth the
D is not very critical.
amount
should be moved by a
Corn silage which has no
additives will require extra continuously running fan .
protein and calciwn in the The remaining air exchange
ration to balance ~ lactating should be moved by one or
cow's needs for
top more other fans set on timers
production. Rations high in and thermostats. There is
hay or haylage are going to more to proper ventilation
need extra energy (con- than just running a fan, so
centrate) and maybe some seek assistance before ineirtra mineral and protein vesting your money.
Uce and mite probl~ms
supplementation to support
maximum' milk production . multiply during the winter
.Ukeacood
Check the quality of forages months. Infested cattle , rub
nd&amp;hbor,
you are feeling. Don't assume against fences and buildings
State Farm ·
relieve
irritation.
a-certain quality. Have them to
II there.
of hair
Frequently,
patches
analyzed through the Ohio
Sllllf f arm l.lulllf' ,o,uomoo•" 111\r · •~l'l(t
••••
off
from
the
neck
are
rubbed
Livestock Ration Evaluation
..,..,. •!"·'• w..........u•?&lt;&gt; .. - .~~"
and shoulders. Heavily infested cattle may be
weakened from loss of blood
and production drops.
I
To treat cattle, spray
animals with a recommended
insecticide, using enough
water with the insecticide to
cover the animal thoroughly.
Repeat treatment in about 3
weeks, since ··new lice ~ill
hatch. Avoid spraying in
extremely cold weather .
Dusts may be used instead
of sprays, but they !J!ay not
be as effective. Be sure dusts
are applied between legs and
on the belly of the animal.
Use care in dusting lactating
cows . Dust bags
or
backrubbers are effective
with heifers. BuUetin 473,
At H&amp;R Block, we understand these new
Pesticides for Livestock and
fonns we know the laws. We11 do everyFarm Buildings, contains
thing :.Ve can to save you money. And that's
detailed information . Ask
your .local county 'Extension
. Reason No. 1why you should let H&amp;R Block
agent for one. They'll be
available about the last of
do' your tax~e,;,;s·~~~~~~
February.
vitamin of roncern. Pritchard says.
When bleached hay, heat
damaged hay or haylage,
year old hay , or mature corn
silage is fed, deficiencies in
vitamin A may occur.

ED. Aceat, Acrtrulture

bdll pay you the

Allen E 74 Lincolnv iew 65
All iance 68 Warren Western

47

•

C6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 12,1!118

1-3 p.m., Open Swim
7-9 p.m., Open Swim

United Press International
Cin Landmark 82 Seven Hills
Ada 75 Crestview 71 (ot)
56
Akron Central Hower 6 1 Cin Roger Bacon 51 Cln
Akron N 51
LaSalle 53
Akron South 83 Akron East 69 Cin Turpin 66 Cin·Anderson 57
Akron Springfield 76 Field 66 Claymont 73 Lake 53
Ale~tander
fl8
Federal Cle Latin 81 Parma Padua 70

Bellefontaine

6S

Arlington 50

Kenton 72 Celina 41
Kirtland SB Berkshire 61
t.akewood 77 Northridge li9
La'kota 72 Monroe 66
Latonia 75 Stanton 49
Lexlngtoo 69 Loudonville 50
Uberty Un ion 81 Cona l

Cin Hughes 65 Cin Western
Hi lls 64

52
HAMPTON, Va . (UP! ) The Hampton Gulls of tbe
American Hockey League
folded Friday after a
. prospective buyer withdrew
from a tentative deal to buy
the
financially
ailing
franchise,
the
team
announced .
"It's goodbye," Gulls' business manager Tom Imperato

Greenon

Frichy's high
school scores

Bryan 55 Napoleon 47
Buckeye Central60 Riverdale

former head coach at North
Gallia .

Fenw ick 58

12 noon- JV Rtdwomen vs. OSU Network
2 p.m .-Redwomen vs. Xavier

Feo. 19- 1·3 p.m .. Open Gym
7-9 p.m., Open Gym

Shawnee S6
Grettnvllle 81 Bellbrook 66
Grove City SS Upper

Gahanna 62 Westerville S 60

Fairborn Park Hills 43 W Galloway Wl}$ttand 56
Carrollton 49
Groveport 51 ·
Fairfield 67 Hamlllon Gar· Geneva s; Ash St John A8
field 58
Girard 55 Ubertr 49
Fairview 40 Day Stlv-Pat SJ G05hen 48 Bothe 47
(ot)
Grandview A8 Col Academy
Findlay 74 Mansfield Sr S9
46
Finneytown 63 Wyoming 55 Granville 41 Utica 50
Franklin 72 Middletown Greenhills 48 Taylor 42

• CHAIN BRAKE
• AUTOMATIC OILING
• ANTI-VIBRATION

Here's an all new Remington chain sa w
that gives you new styling · and all the
finest features available for only $000.00 .
The all new Remington 300 offers chain
brake, automat ic oiling , anti-vibration
and a new low -tone muffler. This lightweight easy to handle chain saw also
offers a big 14" sprocket nose guide bar. a
powerful 1.9 c u. in . engine that will cut
trees or firewood up to 28" thick . Thi s
quality constructed chain saw is ele ctronically tested and tuned to give you the
finest chain saw built today .

THE ALL NEW

International City
Mobile, Ala., sometimes is
called the "City of Six
Flags." Since iis first settlement, the city has been owned by the French, British, and
&amp;mish and has flown the
flags of hte American Colonies, the Confederate sta tes
and the United States.

REMINGTON
Mighty Mite 400

c~:~N

$680 worth of options 1or $430. ln c lud mg : hal o vinyl
ro of , reclini ng bu ckets. much

more :"'~

A savings of

$250 off lhe stic;ker price I

you'll find it at

"78.Plymouth Fury
2-Door Cou pe

fu ry Gran Coupe Pa ckage requ ires optiona l V-B
engine , p o ~ttl!r stee ring aM automatic tra n9m i ssion .

ALSO SEE THESE OTHER GlUT VALUES

OhioValley Bank

CHRYSLER LeBARON '5'

$55501

"

~ Man u fac t urer's

Suggested Retail
Price excluding
wh itewall tires
( $48 . 25~ . taxes and
d8st ina tion

7 8 Ch r ys le r Cordob.a

c h:~rgeS .

' 78 Chrysle r

When

LeBaron

W .OF THE YEAR! NEW PLYMOUTH

39' 25t

Why settle for l ess than the best?

•M an ufa cturer's
Sugg;ested Ret~il
Price eKcluding
taKes and destinati on c h arges .

it comes to your savings, you

want a fair return, the highest le-

---

gally possible, with
PAA ICI OAA

CAROF THE YEAR . .
riiiiYSL[R

safety for your funds, and ac·
cessibility to these funds

-·•

1978 Plymo uth

$3706*
Horil:on

'Manufa&lt;;tu rer'9 Suggested Retail
Prfce exclud ing taxes and destination ' charges.

IT'S AGROT TIME TO BUY AT YOUR CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALERS!

GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH

,.

•
••

1639 EASTERN AVE.
•

•

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

of

This is exactly . what Ohio

Announces

'·

•

• CHAIN BRAKE
• AUTOMATIC OILING • ANTI-VIBRATION

• •

Bank wants and promises their de-

•

positors. No ·wonder savings deposits continue

cw~

FOR lHE LATEST
IN GENERAL ELECTRIC T.V.'S

·&gt;

all-time

to be at

I

an

·•'
'-..J ,
·.,I •

··'

high.

OhioValley Bank
Gallipolis, Ohio

CONSOLE- TABLE MODELS- BLACK &amp;

'·.·
'

cw~

Athens ·county
Savings and Loan

Valley

Will!

MP6 HWY I MPG CITY
tE PA m ile11ge estimates, based on Horizons
manual t ransmission . You · actual mileage
may differ "depending on y•1ur dri¥1n g
hab1ts , your car's conditicn , and its
optional equipment .

a guarantee

on reasonable notice of .withdrawal. .

with

Member FDIC

The leading ~avings plans are at the leading savings bank.

'

WHITE-COLOt-ALL MODELS IN STOC

.

DISCOUNT PRICES
withdrawn prior to the date

ol

maturitY.

MEIGS BRANClf
AlHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN

296 W. 2nd St.
Pomeroy. 0 .
RICHARD E. JONES, Manager

..L---------------~-------------------~
J

POMEROY

LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Drive A Ltnte and Sllve A Lat-Fr" Dollvory
within 75 Mlleo-Ynl W. Strvlc. At Your Locol
Hatpolnt ON ...
Store Hours: 1:30toS:30--Mlll Closeut 5:00P.M.Serving Mtlga, Gallla &amp; Maaon Counlloa.

The Remington Mighty Mile 400 is the fine st
lightweight chain saw built today .. lt' s all new
in design and offers all these featu res you
want in a chain saw.
• Chain brak e stops moving chain in a
split second to reduce hazard from
" kick-back".
• Exclusive ant.i-vibralion system suspends en tire engine on heavy rubber
mounts.
• Powerful 2.3 cu . in. engine.
• Fully automatic oi ling .
• Big 14" sprocket nosegu idebart ocu t
trees and firewood up to 26" thick.
• Ouiet operation- from new low-tone
muffler.
If you're thinking of. bu!{ing a chain saw be

:ure you check the new Rem ington Mighty
Mit e 400 atWe have four Warm fhlrnlng Stoves in
stock.
·

CARTER &amp; .EVANS
BUILDING SUPPLIES
GALLIPOUS, Q.

\

�D-1 - TbeSundayTlrnes-Sentinei,Sunday, Feb. l2, 1978

Times-Sentinel, SwlCiay, Feb. IZ, 1978

Several
Agriculture and proJects
•
our comm1Jllity discussed
By Brys on R. &lt;Bud) Carter
Gallia County Ex lens ion 1\gent

GALUPOUS - It will soon be lime to sow toabcco beds
and prepare for this year's tol;lacco crop. Here are some
reminders about disease problems to guard against and a
S@lection of Burley Tobacco varieties.
Black Shank
Black Shank is a serious disease of tobacco. The disease
lives on the roots of tobacco plants and as tile soil is moved the
organism is carried witlllhe soil, so ills easily spread.
If your tnbacco patch is in an overflow creek bottom, then
you should be guarding against Black Shank disease by using a
resistant variety - Kyl7 is tile best. This disease can also
occur In upland fields. Kyl7 will also solve a lot of black root
rot problems.
Black Root Rot
Black root rot is caused by a fungus which attacks the
tobacco roots either in the plant bed or the field, rolling them
and eventually turning them black. The above ground parts of
the plant are stunted and, in severe cases, the plants will will
on hot days and turn yeUow. The disease is present on most
farms. A four year rotation involving two or three years of
forages will greatly reduce the effect.&lt;! of black root rot .
The most effective and cheapest control is the use of
resistant varieties such as KylS and Ky17. These varieties
have a high level of resistance to tnbacco mosaic, wildfire,
black root rot and a medium level of resistance In fusarium
wilt. In addition, Ky 17 has a medium level of resistance to both
race "0" and "I" of black shank. Yield and quality of Kyl5
and Kyl7 have been comparable to other high yielding
varieties such as KylO.
Anyone growing tobacco on the same ground two or more
years in a row should be using Ky14, Ky15, or Ky171n order In
avoid Black Root Rot ~ase ,
Tobacco Varieties
Selecting the tobacco variety you grow is an important
step. There are many different varieties to choose from .. The
tnbacco varieties consistently doing the best over lhe years in
the variety tests at Ripley, Ohio are KyiO, B·21xKyl0, B·
21xKy9, B-21xKyl4, Kyl4, Ky15 - all averaging over 3,000 lbs.
per acre.
Kentucky 10 - is a high yielding variety of medium quality
leaf. This variety is not resistant to wildfire and should not be
grown where this disease has been a problem. It has falr
resistance In other diseases .
Kentucky!!- - is a standup variety uniform in growth. The
leaves are a little shorter and wlder than B·21. Plants are
about the same.height as B-21 but mature 7 to 10 days later hOlds bottom leaves well. Quality is slightly lower than B-21.
Yields have averaged well above B-21 in teats at Ripley, Ohio,
Black root rot and Fursarium wilt resistant.
Burley 21 - Produces a very high quality leaf, but yields
less than other recommended varieties. It Is resistant to
wildfire ilnd mosaic, but only moderately resistant to black
root rot.
MS Burley 21 x Kentucky 9 - is a hybrid similar in acre
value toMS Burley 21 x Kentucky 12. It has a greater tendency
to lodge due to wind than most varieties.
MS Burley 21 x Kentucky 12 - is a hybrid with good yield
and quality. In tests at the Southern Btancl), acre value has
been more than MS Burley 21 x Kentucky 10; however\ the
yield has been less. I lisa lat.! maturing hybrid which has good
disease resistance:
Kentucky 14 x U- Is a new hybrid rapidly gaining in
popularity because of relatively high black root rot resistance
and high yields of good quality leaf. ·
Don't Guess -son Test
Asoil test is extremely important, especially In determine
the amount of Liffiestone needed to grow the crop this year.
Apply the necessary lime as soon as you can get it to the field.
Acid develops from use of high levels of commercial
fertilizer. Soil pH near midaeason often is one full pH unit
lower than prior to fertilizaUon. Raising soU pH to 6.4 prior to
fertilization should Insure that
soli pH doesn't fall below 5,4
· during the growing ~.sen:-""

Ohio politics
,

BY BOYD RUnl
Soli Coos. Servl•e
POMf;ROY - A diversity
of projects were discussed
when the Meigs SoU and
Water Conservatioo District
supervisors and their guests
met in the conference room of

the Farmers Bank Building

FEBRUARY FURNITURE SALE
DRIVE A LlnLE AND SAVE A LOT

on Wednesday evening.

\ ~

Some of the priority
projects to be included in the
1978 Annual Pian of
Operations are : To wprk
toward getting a soils survey
for Meigs County ; To
cooperate with Middleport

GROUPS NOT
ALWAYS AS
SHOWN.

tlj
I

[( i

Village in recreation area
development on the Ohio
River bank; To assist in
developing a workable plan of
projects which could utilize
Civilian Conservation Corps
labor ; Offer technical
assistance to township
trustees; Assist with hunter .
in
safety
edu cation
cooperation
with
the
Department of Wildlife ;
Identify and locate on a map
specific 208 Water Quality
Management projects ; Assist
landowners in applying for
cost sharing on reclaiming

land from off-site strip mine
pollution. ·
The District wiU continue
its ongoing projects of con·
servation education for

. elementary students through
. the use of film presentations,
booklets distributed and a
poster contest. For adults
thl!re will be tours, field days,
publication of newsletters,
news articles and progress
reports, and public displays.
The District will also sponsor
scholarships to 4·H Con·

I'

mittee last week that Ohio's seven« nt ercise tax on a gallon
of gasoline has not been raised since 1959. A hike .would be
required to pa y off the bonds.
Rep. Fred B. Hadley, R-Bryan, told the eommittee that
Ohio's aulD registration fee s cost more in the 1940s than they do
oow. He recommended a sales tax on gasoline and a charge of
$25 to register a motor vehicle.
" I think we ought to tell the people it doesn't make sense to
bring their high.priced cars in here and drive ·'em through
·
chuckholes," S.id Hadley .

that the U.S. Supreme Coort has ruled In a Tennessee case that
while it is unconstitutional to give nonpublic schools direct
financial assistance , any overall educa Uonal package must
include all pupils. And that means nonpublic school pupils.
Young w"" testifying against a school district income tax in
the House Ways and Means CommitU!e, pointing out nonpublic
school parent.&lt;! would not share in the benefits of such a tax .
He said Ohio provides only $175 per pupil in aUJtiliary
assistance to nonpubllc schools, while public scbools receive
$1 ,200 per pupil .

tmk for the Ohio Catholic Conference to a ttempt to get
oonpublic school pupils Included in the new education finance
package now undergoing Initial discussions in the General
Assembly.
·
David J. Young, attorney for the group. testified last week

Gov. James A. Rhodes received generally high marks for
mobilizing state personnel and equipment during Ohio 's
blizzard, but the governor has not been content to sit back,
Last week he declared an energy emergency, badgered
President Carter to end the coal strike, awlied for more

- - .

'

~

VOL. 13 NO.

z

MOSCOW (UP! )- Two of
President Carter 's top
military advisers got a
chauffeur-driven look at
Soviet mHit.ary maneuvers
Saturday and said 'they were
impressed with t he Red
Army's improved mobility historically one of Russifs
military weaknesses.
The two ·were among a
group of Western military
observers provided with
caviar and heated tents In a 4·
below zero snowstorm during
the West's first close look at

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" enemy zone " \\tithin 50
minutes,
one
Western

observer said.
Security specialists said
after
the
three-day
observation tour that they
were impressed with the
Soviets' improvement in

mobility -one of the Russian

armis weakest points since
the times of the Napoleonic

wars.
The observers included
U.S. Gen. Richard Larkin and
Col. William Odom of
Carter's National Security
Soviet army maneuvers since Staff and British Maj. Gen.
Edward Burgess and Brig,
the end of World War II .
Ge~.
Pavid Wilson, the
They witneSsed a massive
B~itish
military attache in
airdrop in which some 1,300
paratroopers carried in Iran- · Moscow.
The airdrop t&gt;ccurred in the
. sport jets parachuted into a
snowstorm and cleared an · middle of a snowstorm .
Soviet paratroops wearing

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dropped from jet transports
at some 2,000 feet, firing their
automatic weapoos as they
floated to earth.
One of the observers said

he was impressed with the
toughness and efficiency of
the Soviet troops .
The Western military representatives said they came
to the manuevers, which
lasted for four days, prepared
to "rough it."
But one said they were
given comfortable rooms in
hotels, were chauffered from

one site to another, and were
given heated tents stocked
with vodka and caviar at the
battle front. ·
They said the format for
the manuevers was unusual
by Western standards, where

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MARY LEWIS shared her hlstnrical collection with members of Rio Grande College's
Atwood Club meeting in Davis Library.

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"Because of the number of
fed e ral agencie s whose
actio ns
influence
coal
investments by producers,
transporters and users, a
national coal strategy can

only be formul a ted and
coordinated at the White
House."
J ackson 's

letter l sent
earlier in the week, said the
administration should give
"top priority" to increasing

coal production becau se
about two-thirds of plann ed
reductions in oil imports by
1965are based on greater use
of coal.

"Our legislative goal of
doublinK the utilization of
coal by 1985 can be achieved
if current plans by coal
producers as well as electric
utility and industria I users
proceed on schedule,"
Jackson said.
" Howe ve r,

evid e nce

suggests · tha t regulatory
uncertainty and delays (rom
existing and proposed laws

and regula tions
eould
significantly delay, if nut
prevent,
the
s iting,

planned
cou l
facilities."
J ~ck son

said a White House

stra tegy
a lso
should
"expedite lmplenwntatlon of
ledernl poli cies on coal
uUlizuUon clean air, water
pollution &lt;i&gt;ntrol and surface
mine rech.lma tion mi well as

cuse.by -&lt;.·a$e
r o ~ul a tory
decisions ."
"I urge you to gi ve this
problem your personal
attention In order that our
expe&lt;:tatiQns for co al use can

ur ess
nr
scorns
•
Rhodes 28 perish m flash .flooding
construction and operation ,

as well as substantially
inc rease the t'ost.

reiHted

be

r culi7.cd ,"

J ackson

ctmdudcd .

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1

RIO GRANDE - "She
often said she lived in a house
by the side of the road, and if
she stayed there long enough'
she would probably meet the
wbole world," Martha Foster
said, as she described her
friend, Mary Lewis.
This weekend Mary's whole
world is remembering her,
with love.
Mrs: Foster, Gallipolis, is
only one of the people who
recalled that Mary Lewis was
a "wonderful person who
loved Ufe. :•
During the 55 years Mary
lived in Rio Grande, and until
her death last Thursday, she
made an unforgettable im•
pact on her world.
She ~ame to Rio Grande in
1922 as a home economics
teacher at the old Rio Grande
High School. In 1923 she
married William A. Lewis,
who \Vas then dean of Rio
.Grande College and later
became
its
seventh ·
presiden\.
.Mary was · a collector.
She fell Ia love with a~d
colleeled people.
"She was always baviDC
students Ia to visit her,"
Rio faealty me111ber Ruth
Tbomas 11id. ·
Another professor, Luther
:Tracy, recalled the days
Mary sponsored the In·
ternatlonal Relations Club :
"She Invited students
together whO were interested
in otber countries ·and she
cooked up special In·

.

'

ternational meals for them." thing she did was tell me the
Mrs. John . Wickline, Rio story of the 1937 Atwood Hall
Grande, noted that Mary had fire," one college ·staff
a special interest in foreign member recalled.
students.
Just before her death she
"She wanted to make them was in the process of sharing
feel at home and a part of our her historical collection with
country," Mrs. Wickline said. the College's Atwood Club, a
"She was always concerned group dedicated to preservwith other's feelings."
ing the heritage of the school
Mary Lewis liked to · whohonoredMarybymaking
celebrate anniversaries and her a life-time member. In
birthdays, Several of . her fact, Mary w~s the first
friends noted that Mary curator of the Heritage Room
never forgot either.
in Davis Libary, where many
"She gave people poetry for of the college's artifacts were
their birthdays," Mrs. on display.
Wickline said. "On every one
"She was devoted to the
of my birthdays I'd receive a memory of her husband,"
poem that she had selected Mrs. Thomas noted. "She had
for me."
a terrific sense of loyalty to
Mary's concern for people the campus." .
.
helped her remember Rio
Jean Cooper, Rio Grande
Grande College's alumni, too.. College Board of Truslees
"She got people together. secretary, said, "Mary will
She'd write to everybody and
be p~rllcularly remem·
keep them in touch with the
bered for her Interest In
college, " another friend,
preserving the history of
Nellie Scarberry, said. "She
Rio Grande College. It wa'&gt;
did more for alumni than
a labor of love."
anyone . ~'
Mary Lewis enjoyed people
It was most likely her
and history, so much in fact
love for people that also that it appears the whole
made Mary Lewis a world did visil her at her
collector of Information
house by the sidf of the road
about her friends. When ... and loved every minute of
anyone around Rio Grande
it.
wanted to know something
about the history of the
Mostly sunny today, with
college,. they'd ask Mary.
highs in the mid 20s or lower
"I remember when I first 30s. Partly cloudy tonight,
c,me to work at Rio Grande, with lows between 15 and 20.
just over a year ago, one or Cloudy Monday, with snow
the first people I met was developing during the afMary Lewis and the first ternoon.

Weather

.,

·

currently

One of them pleaded with
the small resort community streets lUlU canyons.
LOS ANGELES (U.PI ) the
pilot us they bourd&lt;'ll the
COLUMBUS (UPI)
More than 150 persons of Hidden Springs Friday
It spun off . two brief
, ''Wfilt, don't
helicopter
Gubernatorial candidate and searched through twisted currying away 21 persons.
!Drnados, one of which ripped
leave.
Get
rily
dHddy."
Ohio House Minority Leader tiees and muddy ravines of
Seven other people were through a trailer park ,
Their
father
had been
Charles Kurfess charged the Angeles National Forest unaccoun ted for in three
The deluge of rain, more
Gov. James A. Rhodes Saturday for the bodies of 28 nearby camp areas below Big than 3.5 inches Thursday swept awa y a nd was
Saturday with failing to take persons ffiissing after a nash Tujunga Dam . Hidden night and Fridlly morning, presumed dead . 1'helr
strong action in dealing with , flood destroyed a mountain Springs Is above the dam .
collapsed a cemetery hillside mother survived .
The storm ripped . boats
the slate 's coal-electricity hamlet and coursed through
In other areas, eight flushing about 30 bodies from
moorings,
crisis.
camp areas nearby.
persons died as the storm their gra ves down onto H w ay from
battered
und
sank
them . It
"The governor is fidQling
A wall of water, spawned lashed the lower part of the Tujunga . Eight of the bodies
smashed
piers
and
closed
the
with the press while Ohioans by one of the most destructive state, washing away roads, were recover ed and th e
por~&lt;
of
Los.
Angeles
and
face joplessness," Kurfess storms
in
Southerrt crushing houses and hurling . sear~ for others .l'Onlinued
Long Beuch. It cancelt!(l u
· said. "He is holding a lot of California's history, crushed mud and debris through city Suturday.
press conferences, but he has
The worst onslaught of tbe nuclear test in the Nevada
not taken the positive,
storm, hoWever, was the 20.. desert a nd hulled the Bob
substantial action needed to
loot high wall of water and Hope Desert Clussic golf
protect the people :of Ohio and
mud that roared down Big tournament .
It smash&lt;'!!· unlmal cages
their jobs."
Tujuuga Conyon 50 miles
The
Bowling
Green
north of here smashing and and seven lions cscuped .
Republican added , " We are
w.Shing away the cabins, Three were gunned down
now facing the prospect of
trailers and the lodge at alter frightening some
firemen and causing panic In
cold homes, cold nursing
H.idden Springs.
a
trailer park. The other lour
homes, closed schools and no
The missing were not imwere
caught and returned to
jobs. We carmot wait while
medi'ately identified .
the governor tries to shift the By STEPHEN C. KIDNEY . meet Saturday .
Sheriff's deputies said It was their cages.
On Friday with inore than
WASHINGTON (UP! ) 1'he storm drove about 700
responsibility and waits for
doubtful there would be
200
angry c(lal miners Outside
President
carter'
warning
per,.ms from their hom.es In
Washington to decide on our
survivors.
ev~n greater hardship may calling for rejection, the
fate."
Another 25 persons were the 111s Angeles area and in
Kurfess specifically be ahead before the 6lklay council voted informally 3:;.3 stranded lor hours before · the Sun Jouq.uin Valley .to the
criticized Rhodes for not coal miners' strike is settled, to disapprove the ·proposed they were rescued by north flooding caused the
emergency settlement announced last helicopters.
evacuation of 500 perSons in
offering "lawful protection ordered
for movers of coal to measures Saturday to keep Tuesday . Miller stayed away
In a group rescued by a Tulare County. ln the town of
elec.trical generating energy flowing to . Ohio and from the . meeting , saying helicopter chartered by Orosi, a 611-fool section of the
there cou ld be no collective
other hard-pressed states.
facilities."
United Press International Sand Creek !~vee crumbled
bargaining
!(until this
Carter
also
permitted
the
Friday, two legislative
were two children, Kim sendin g water through
energy experts urged Rhodes Environmental Protection irresponsible action Hinterberg, 10, and h'e r homes .
to use the ' 'full potential' ' of Agency to suspend air ceases."
sister, Jennifer, 5.
In ' charting a course of
his powers under the terms of pollution regulations for Ohio
the energy emergency he to relieve potential power action, Cqrter steered . clear
shortages . and instructed of invoking the Taft-Hartley
declared.
Rep. Thomas J. Carney, D- Attorney General Griffin Bell Law which impowers him to
Boardman, and Sen. Nea!F. to work with strikebound order the miners back to
Zimmers Jr. , D-Dayton, states to prevent outbreaks of work for a cooling off period.
"I have asked the secretary
chairmen of the energy trouble.
The United Mine Workers of labor , working in close
committees
in
theit
By JOAN MOWER
therapy from McDonald. The
respective houses called on bargaining council, divided cooperation with the Federal
ATLANTA
(UPI)
suit
against McDonald and
the governor to take over whether to accept a new Mediation and · Conciliation Despite U.S. District Judge
Doctors-Memorial
Hospital
Service,
to
continue
efforts
to
advantage of such powers as contract negotiated by union
C.
Freeman's
gavelRichard
argues
that
Scott
may
have
facilitate
the
collective
ordering utilities to sell elec- president Arnold Miller and
banging
insi
stence
that
lived
longer
had
he
received
bargaining
process,''
Carter
tricity or coal to alleviate soft coal operators, did not
said. "I continue to believe Laetrile is not on trial, · co nv entional cancer
hardships, getting
medical experts agree the treatment.
that the solution to the strike
emergency coal supplies,
outcome
of the $6-rnillion
A ruling against McPonald
must be worked out in free
restricting ele!Oirical . use by
rnalpracti&lt;;e
case against could have the "psycological
collective bargaining by the
industrial and governmental
con gr'essman · · physician effect of turning a lot of
parties."
offices, 'mobilizing civil
Even when a settlement is Larry McDonald will have a people off to Laetrile," said
defense, National Guard and
achieved, officials said coal significant national impact Richard Krause, an attorney
emergency services.
for the powerful American
operations might take 25 days on the drug's future .
RhOdes' office said Friday
The
trial
of
McDOnald,
a
Medical Association.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - John to return to normal. Ratificathe
governor
prefers
Georgia Democrat who was a
"Regardless of what the
·
lion
of
any
couneil:.approved
Shoemaker,
head
ofthe
state
voluntary measures to avert
urologist in Marietta until his major legal iSSQeS are, If the
Adult
Parole
Authority,
has
settlement
will
take
at
least
an electrical disaster and has
election In Cpngress in 1974, jury comes ou I agqlnst
contingency plans ready to fired Robert Corder as coor- 10 days and officials estimate
has been under way for McDonald a lot of people will
implement ' if hardships dina tor of the authority's it will take another 15 days to
reintegratiOn • program , open mines closed since Dec. nearly two weeks, and may say Laetrile has been found to
result .
last for two more.
be an inferior. treatment,"
because of Insubordination 6, when the strike began.
It
is
believed
to
be
the
first
Krause said.
and negleet of duty.
0 h i o·, I n d i a n a ,
legal
action
ever
taken
.Such a ruling could also
Shoemaker said Friday Pennsylvania, Illinois and
against
a
physician
for
trigger
other lawsuits across ·
that Corder, appointed in other states .in the East
the nation, another AMA
1972, was relieved of his central region were reported treating with Laetrile.
The plaintiffs are the spokesman said.
duties as part of a continuing nearing crisis levels on their
family
of John L. Scott, a
On the other side of the
Investigation of improper coal, triggering energy
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohioo activities at the Cleveland cutbacks and threatenin g B:ifmingham, Ala ., postman ledger, the AMA fears a
(UP!) - Circleville police Rein.tegration Center last industry closings,
who died of lung cancer In ruling in favor of the urologist
were back on the job year.
" Those in areas most 1974 after receiving Laetrile could create more interest In
Saturday after a one-day sick
the substance, which already
Last month, John Lander, affected by &gt;he strike have
In inspired by a contract
has an estimated 40,IJOO.OO,ooo
made, great
former superintendent, and already
dispute.
users na tlonwide .
Milton Bugg, treatment coor- sacrifices," Carter said. ,
Police assigned to the II dinator 'at Cleveland, were uBefore the strike is over,
"You can only expect this
p.m. shift reported In work as dismissed on charges of using and for several weeks
would loosen up Laetrile in
usual late Friday and state facilities for political thereafter until the normal
PAINESVILLE, Ohio those states which have not
a
police
spokesman purposes.
flow of coal is restored, even (UP!) - James Jones, 9, died legalized it," a AMA spokessaid lack of communi·
Corder was accused of greater hardship will occur. early Saturday morning In a man said.
cations with the city and failing . io " insure . a
Laetrile, also· known as
"I urge all those in areas · fire at his home.
between governmental comprehensive trealment threatened
Vitamin
817 or amgydalin, is
by
power
Firefighters said a resident
bodies had caused the program at the reintegration cutbacks to conserve energy of the two-family house:tried a subotance derived from
. walkout.
center," and failure to so that these sacrifices are to rescue the boy from a apricot pits. Its supporters
The sick .calls began after a est a b listi accounting shared equa lly, and so that no second floor Window with a claim that, · used
In
Thursday night meeting of procedures or drug control one will suffer unfairly or ladder 1but the attempt failed. conjunction with a special
the city . councll's finance programs.
unnecessarily.''
The blaze, which did about diet, it acts to correct
committee that has been
State corrections officials
Carter's orders were issued $15,000 damage, was blamed metabolic imbalances and
working on the 1977 city said they would have no by the White House while the on a defective refrigerator. attack cancer cells. The
budget. It was also touched further comment on the president worked on a
Three firemen suffered proponents believe cancer
off by news that Plckaway. allegations, pending appeals weapons sale policy at his smoke inhalation and a fourth may result from a nutrltonal
County sheriff's deputies had before the Ohio Personnel Camp David. retreat In suffered a broken rib in a fall, deficiency.
been granted pay raises.
Board of Review.
Maryland,
but none were hoopitalized.

are anticipated

'In 1963, a jetliner crashed
into the Florida Everglades,
killing 43 persons.

c 1978 FIOrilf8' Tran.,l'loriCI 0e11very

.
opposing a rmies stage ba ttles
in a realistic setting.
The Soviet manuevers were
held in front of reviewing
stands, almost like parades,
they said. ·

WASHINGTON (UPI ) Sen. Henr y J ackson , D·
Wa sh., Saturday urged
President . Carter to cut the
bur eaucrati c r ed tape
entangling the coal mining
indust ry and deveitP " a
national strate gy" for
increasing coa1 produC'tion.
Jackson, chairman of the
Energy
and
Natural
Resources Committee, told
Carter that he should seek to
redu ce · " re g ul a t o ry
restraints and bottlenecks
which now, or \VIll, jeopardize
critical coal...related investments.

More hardships

t ..

I

PAGE 1-D

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1978

''I LOVE YOU" WITH

Give flowers to the
one you love for
Valentine's Day.
We have a lovely
assortment of cui
flowers, long
stem roses,
potted flowers, plants
and hanging baskets.
Delivery service
available.

•

.

Rex

Shenefield, Thereon Johnson,
Ro'y Miller, Joe Bailey, Jim
Bush, Fred Hoffman, Andy
Lyles, Boyd Ruth, Reid
Young and Leota Young.
1'he Meigs SWCD meetings
are held the fourth Wednesday of each month and are
always open to the public.
Meetings are held in the
conference room of the
Farmers Bank at 6 p.m.

federal aid a nd took reporters on a llymg trip of a flooded area .
At the Ohio Newspaper Association , Rhodes praised the
editors and publll!hers for their work during the blizzard.
"The news media did it all to protect our people during the
darkest hours of this state," said the governor . Then hf asked
them to write to the president to inU!revene in the coal strike.
Two major labor leaders lauded the governor for his efforts .
" I might be a Democrat," said Milan Marsh, president of the
Ohio AFi ~J O, "but you are my governor also, ang you did a
good job during the blizzard."
"I commend you for the great manner in which you
functioned during the blizzard," echOed Ray Ross of the Ohio
United Auto Workers.
"Not for one moment are we going to permit the destruction
of this great slate,'' Rhodes told the editors. ' 'It's a matter of
saving this state, and this state is worth saving."

iunbatt ~imts - itntintl Jackson urges action·
Top_advisors are impressed

Camp, Careers Day and
. Youth &amp; Science Day.
Their wildlife planting
packet program is underway
now until February 24.
Anyone wanting more in·
formation may call the
District office at 99U647.
attending
the
)'hose
were

By LEE LEONARD
UPI StateboUJe Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! )- If winter ever breaks, Ohio is going to
' be faced wltll a massive job of repairing buckled and pothOled
roads.
Already there is talk, but only talk, around the State bouse
about asking for an increase in the gasoline tax or motor
vehicle registration fees. .
The Rbodes administration has some repair money at its
disposal, but that is likely to be reserved for highway and
bridge projecta In areas crucial to the 1978 electioo.
·
Rep. Arthur R. Bowers, ~teubenville has proposed a $300
million bond Issue for road and transportation projects, but it
won't get to the voters until at least June, and probably not
even then.
Bowers pointed out to the House Ways and Means Com-

. ;·II ;:
. I (

servation Camp, Forestry

meeting

Buckled, potholed roads may cost more taxes

Suit will have
national impact

Corder-

is fired

Circleville's

police return

Saturday fire
kills youth

�&gt;-2- The Sunday Tlmes.Senunel

~ewsmen
By DICK KIMllllNS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
noted Menmnger Clime
psychtatmt told the closmg
banquet of the 45th annual
Ohto Newspaper Assoctatlon
convention Fr1day rught that
the stress felt bJ all
rep orters
edttors and
publishers ts created by
themseh. cs and IS not
avotdabl e
Dr Tobtas Brocher a
German born
psychiatnst
"tth the Topeka Kan chmc
told the SeSSIOn th.1t stress IS
'a natura l reactiOn It s a
questton of bow you deal wtth
II
The last thmg we do IS
look rnstde whe re all stress
ong mates
sa 1d Brocher
Bracher satd he developed

h1s theorms on stress after
thousands of mterv tews and

psy choa na lytt cal sessions
his patients, many or
"hom
are
tn
the
\l.lth

cornmun1cahons

mdu stry

Who causes stress? We
are responstble We tmght
thtnk of slo" mg do"n to
avmd dtfferent ways of ktlhng
ourselves, ' satd Bracher
Brocher told the edttors
and publi sher s so met hmg

they alread) knew - that
deadlines and a quest for
accuraq we re the ch!ef
causes of stress wtthtn the
newspa per mdustry
Bracher sa1d o1 her factors
which tnduce stress mclude
connlcls between IdealistiC
edttors and thetr pubhshers
who ar(' under pressure fr om
the
Jot:a l
bu s1ness

Sunday F"b 12, 1978

make own stress
commumty
and gutlt
feelmgs when a journahst IS
forced to choose between the
duttes of hts profession and
the responstbthues of hts
famtly
Ear her Frtday, Rtchard B
Tullts chatrman of the
Harns Corp of Cleveland,
told the ONA that tt won t be
long until everybody wtll be
able to draw upoo a world
wtde 'da ta base from thetr
homes
" Very soon
tt w1ll be
techmcally posstble to have
tn!ormauon when you ~ ant tt
and where you want tt and
how you want tt ' sa td fulhs,
the luncheon speaker at the
4!itll ON A conventiOn gtven
the toptc of I he future of
Commumcattons
Tulhs f1rm IS the acknowl
edged world wtde leader m
commumcations equtpment
and last year sold $850 mllhon
tn mformat1on processing
equtpment Tw e nty- two
years ago
the firm
manufacturerd and so ld
prmtmg presses
rulhs sa td wtthtn ftve
years a world-wtde data
base" wtll be estabhshed
hnk mg mformat10n centers
through satelltte relays

crash of a World War If.
vmtage DCl pl.me tn north
east Uruguay the neilton s
worst arr dtsaster offlctals
satd tod 'Y
I h e A met 1c an bullt
Uruguay Mthtar y Atr Tt ans
port pla ne cxplotled tn flames
Frtday dfter noon on ranch
lands less tha n two m ties
fr om the atrpm1 tn Arhgas
360 mtles northeast of
Montevtdeo

YOUTH CONV IC1t; U
NEW YORK (UP! ) - A 17
year old ) outh has been
convtcted of ktllmg 25 per'-.ns
by setting ftre to a crowded
soctal cl ub m October 1916 1!
was one of the largest cases
of m ass m urd rr 111 Umt£'d
Stal.~s fu'iiJJ v

,

JASON BARNETT
CHILD BORN- Mr and
Mrs Wayne Barnett,
Vlrgmia Beach, Va arc announcing the b1rth of thc1r
son, Jason Wayne He was
born on J an 10 at the
Holzer Medtcal Center,
Galllpohs and weighed six
pounds,

14 oun,ces

Sd me Snore£

/
WILLIAli!S PROMOTED
II was aooouoeed
Saturday by James A.
SIUfler, President of The
Jones Boys, Inc , thai Jack
Wllllams has been assigned
addlll...al dulles as Store
Supervisor
for
the
Gallipolis and Pomeroy
stores He ha s been with
the Jones Boys 8 years and
has worked in many
capacities in lhe Gallipolis
office and Gallipolis store
In addillon to the Store
Supen Is or duties Mr
Wllliams also holds the
posJtlon of Grocery Buyer

•
1ne
l

ci gar ettes

The stud)

also

found that th ere ts a general
belief amon g teachers that
mformataon

&lt;:~bout

smokmg

and health should first be
Introdu ced m elementary
school Tins observation IS
bolstered by other studtes
whtch have mdtcated that tt is
best to begm anlt smukmg
education early to prevent a
dangerous habtt rather than
watt unll!It IS a reahty If you
are Interested m class
projects or anti smokmg
matertals for use tn the
classroom please contact
your local Am er1can Cancer
Soctety Umt
The wtfe of a cancer patten!
writes • 'My husband has
been treated for early colon
cancer We were told that his
future looks brtght, but "hen
I read survtval stallsttcs I
become
conf used
and
worned Who ts telling the
truth?'
ANSWERhne It IS ex
t re mely unn erving and
perhaps mlsleadtng to try to
r e l at e general
surv1val
stattsttcs to any tndtvtdual
patten! parttctcularly when It
comes to cancer because so
m uch depends on the exact
stage m whtch the cancer was
t reat ed and other very
complex medtcal con·
stderatlons Your husband's
phys1c1an
knows yo ur
hu sband's sttuatwn best
Please remember that
survtval statistics mdicate
averag es
for
large
populattons of pauents What
may be true for that large
gro up may not be true for
your husband And early
colon cancer 1s one of the
more eastly cured forms of

TOO CLOSE INDECENT
CLINTON, Conn (UP! ) Rtchard ADen Mailes, 33,
found out you can carry
cleanlmess a btt too far
He was washmg hiS clothes
Frtday m the Clinton Laundromat When he got down to
his socks, that was all he was
wearing
Pollee charged Matles wtth
pubhc mdecency
OFFlCIA LS WORKING
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!i
- Lebanese and Syrian offtcta ls Saturday worked
fevertShly to strengthen an
uneasy truce between Synan
peacekeepmg troops and
Lebanese nghltsts followmg
four days of bloody warfare
r

To Whom tt may concern
POMF.RDY - I am wrtlmg In regard to aU property
owners I heW'd over the radio today where they are gomg to
put a lllx levy on our property to pay for the new packer and
more dumpsters
1
Personally, I tlunk' people are taxed beyond thetr
measures now All of us poor people have had a hard time
paymg for our homes There are a lot of people who feel as I do
Let those that use Ute dumpsters pay That way t! would make
the rounty more money My husband has hauled garbage for 20
years The dwnpsters hurt hun, but that's not my marn

Feb 9,1978
There are many people who have come to the poor rounties
of Ohto from the bt g ctttes of the northern counties and other
states They found the hvmg a little slower , the people a htUe

F m re le 1o sc

~a t u rda\

Hum bard 6 Rev Leonard Repas! 8 Oral Roberts
9

10 ()0-Christ Is the Answer 3

the Cross 8 Garner Ted Armstrong 13

11 OQ-Doclors on Call 4 Big Blue Marble 6 ErnHt
Angley 8 Rex Hum bard 15 Rev Henry Mahan 13
Inflnlly Factory 20
)

Marshall Plan
The famed post World War
II Marshall Plan ongmated
tn a J une 5 1947 proposal by
Secte!ary of State George C
Marshall to extend U S
fmanctal atd to all European
counlrtes " Wilhng to asstst m
the task of recovery ' Durtng
the next 3 5 years Congress
authoriZed the spendmg of
some $12 btllwn on MarshaU
Plan atd whtch was credtted
with 1 est01mg et:onmm c
health t o Western Europe

•

J 43

WEST

I 10 8
+ A43
"' AK92
EAST

• 7

• 10 965

•+

9 KQ 9705
Q 10 9
J 8 52
... 863
"'J J0754
SOUTH

+

.

AKQ82

9

A 432
K 76

+

"'Q

Vulnerable Bol h
Dealer :;outh
SARAH NEWBERRY
HAS BIRTHDAY
Sarah Newberry, daughter
of Mr and Mrs David
Newberry, Letart ,
celebrated her first birth·
day Saturday
Her grandparents are
Mr and Mn Tom Lewis
and Mr and Mrs Delmer
Newberry all of Letart
Great-graodpareots are
Mr and Mrs J E
MeKemy, Melbourne, Fla
nod Mr and ll!r11. Robert
Newberry, Ripley Rd,
Point Pleasant

North Eust South

Pass

P as&lt;~

Pass

Pass 3 :-IT

Pa&gt;S

Pass 6•

Pas.•:;
'

t•

29

clubs and came to h1s ham)
w1th th e ace of hearts
Operation squeeze followed He cashed one trump
to d1scard a dtamond fr om
dummy and hts last trwnp to
force West to unguard hts
Queen of d1amonds tn order
to hang on to the htgh heart

had done 1ts work and could
be dtscarded Now the mne
of clubs squeezed East He
had t o unguard hts Jack of
dtamonds to make all the
dtamonds good

Pass

Openm g lead ' K
By Oswald Jacotiy
and Alan Sontag I
Curtts Cook of Btrmmg
ham was qmte pleased w1th
the opemng heart lead It
looked as tf tt would solve all
hts problems Then East
v.; ent a nd trwnped 1t Now
Curtts rou1d only see 11
tncks, but tl did look as tf a
squeeze could be developed

As Curbs sa1d, ' The cards
seem to be crymg Double
squeeze '
HOSPITALIZED
'
It wasn't a certait\ty If
SYRACUSE
T e West
held four clubs he
Syracuse Emergency Squad could guard both clubs and
answered a call to Ractne at 7 hearts Olherwtse only West
p m Thursday for Mrs could guard hearts only
(,Jordon Wolfe who was taken Easl could guard clubs and
to Veterans Memonal no one could guard dtaM
monds
Hospttal

•

hearts on the ace a nd kmg of

Dummy's Jack of hearts

West

Pass

tnck

two Curbs took hts ace a nd

kmg cashed the queen of
clubs entered dummy wtth
!he Jack of spades dts·
carded his last two ltttle

'

13 Elec Co 20
12 00--At Issue 3 News Conference 4 Issues &amp; An
swers 6 Face the Nation 8 To Be Announced 13
This Is The Life 15 Rebop 20
12 30--Meet the Press 3 4 15 Direct ions 6, Christian
Broadcast 8 The Issue 10 Evangelist Calvin

Suhrlse Semester

Readers keep asking us if
tt 1s better to overbtd or
underbtd
B1d perfectly, tf you can
Smce no one can do that,
tend to overbid your good
hands and underbid your
bad on es
! NEWSPAPER F.NlERPRiSE ASSN I

roo you have a questton for
the t~xperts ' Wnte Ask the
Experts care of thts newspa
per Individual questton s wt/1
be answered d sccompamed
by stamped self addressee/
envelopes The most mterest
mg quesltons wtll be used m
rtus column and wfl/ receive
cop1es of JACOBY MODERN )

500 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

PO ITA ILl

BRAND NEW '78'

LOW
INTEREST
RATES
SAVE
YOU
MORE$

DGISrrAIL

$81 ~~r

DOLLAR
FOR
YOUR
TRADE·
IN

Month

udtng Cred1t L1fe Ins
Selling Price

$3186 00
127 44

Ohta T•x

Title Fee
Tot• I Price

$3322 44
J22 44
$3000 00

Unp•id Bot•nce
Credo! Ufe Ins
Tot•l of Payments
Deferred pay metol
price
Annual pet r•te

$4222 44
118Jpcl

No of Payments

MAR. 25

or Too Sm•ll

48
181 25

••

NOTICE TO

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENTOF
TRANSPORTATION

fu rmshed
543.1\

opts

Pho ne

SLEEPING Rooms weekly rates
Pork Central Hohtl

992

ed 2 bedroom I partly !u rn 3
bedroom 742 3122
MASON TWO bedroom opt Per
holly furn Fully carpeted No
pets DepOSit requ1red $200
per mo Alter 5 p m col i [304)
882-3356
.-

SLEEPING rooms for ren l Gall o
Hotel
FURNISHED EFFICIENCY su table
for 1 adult Coll446 0339
FURNISHED APT one bdr
Ut l1t es pd
very
4464416ofler 3p m

$185

1968 GREGORY mob le hom.,
$5 000 for every th ng but
couch TV end stereo Call
446 7666

MOBILE HOME located 1n Kyger
Cleek Sc hool School D1 st Col
367 7350

IDEALlY SUITED
FOR DOCTORS OR
OTHER
PROFESSIONALS

1969 12x50 2 bdr house trmler
Pnce Myer Co $2 500 1973
Ledgerwood
dual
w hee l
camper 22 ft self coniO Jf"'ed
l1 ke new used approx 2
weeks SJ 000 Call OS2 7974
after 4 p m or Saturday

BRADBURY RENTALS Furn Elf
Apts Adults only No pets
Oep req 7'19 Second Ave Co li
446 0957
TWO BEDROOM :fRAILER
n
Che-5 t'ur e A dulls Ofl ly Coli
367 7329

of

off1ce
space
w1th a
conventent wathng room
Ca 1144&amp; 4905

TWO BDR MOBI LE HOM E com
plete ly turn shed UtI t es pod
No pets Ad ults preferre-d Coli
446 4170
FU RNISHED 3 ROOM COTTAGE n
town Iorge enough for 1 or 2
adults No peh Adulls only
Dep req Coli 446 25 43
TWO BEDROOM
tur n shed
mob te home very n ce Col i al
10 Old Fort Troll dose to rod o
stafton
BE GENTLE be kmd to that e)C
pens ve carpe t clean t w lh
Blue Lu stre Rent electri c sham
pooer $ 1 Cen tro I Supply

PUB~IC NOTICE
Notice Is llereby given tha t
on Febr ua ry 201 h 1978 at
10 00 A M a pu bl c se le will
be held at lhe Farmer s Bank
&amp;
Sav 1ngs
Co mpany
Pom eroy OhiO to sell tor
cash the f ollowmg collateral
tow t
19 75
Ch ev ro l et
N o-va
Couple Sena 1 No 1X27D5
W184771 Mode l 1XX27
The Farm er s Bank 8.
Sa-vtngs Company Pomeroy
Oh10 res erves the nght to btd
at thts sa le

(2) 12

15

19

2

12 x 68 Holly Pork Tro1ler w1th
expondo washer end dryer
d1shwosher undarp nn ng 12 x
12 outbldg Ph 606 638 4060

n ce

HOU SEKEEP ING RO OMS $75
uiJ !Jiles pd
S ngle StoOJe
refrg 44b4416ofter3p m

FLOOR SPACE

ft

BANOS MOBILE HOMES
PT PLEASANT W VA
1973 Broadmore 14•6-t 2 br
1973 Don on 14lC60 2 br
1972 V cl or on J.o!Jo:67 3 br
baths
1972 Coventry 12x65 3 br
1%9 Slotesman 12•60 2 br

LIG HT housekeepmg room Pork
Cen lrol Holel

TWO TRAILERS lor rent 1 fu rn sh

We have 3,000 sq

AULT MOBILE HOMES SERVICE
Sk1rll ng anchor ng and pot os
ca ll 4&lt;16 3608 after 4

LOW weekly and monthly rates ol
L1bby Hotel 44 6 1743

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
Lorg e lois Calf 992 7479

1973 FLEETWOOD 70 • 14 3 bdr
l 'h baths total electnc fur
n shed or unfurn shed Set up
on pnvo le lol neor hos p to I l ot
moy be rented CaH Johnson s
Mob le Homes 446 3547

1q74 SKY LINE 14 x ~ 3 bedroom
toto l electnc )7500 992 2019
TWO BEDROOM Tro1ler 8 x A5

Furn1shed $1495 992 332.4

3tc

January :n , 1t71
Contract Salt1 Ltflll
Copy No 71 SA
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
R R p OOtsC30)
SitS OOOS(•n
Sealrd propouls wil l be
rece iv ed at the office of the
D i rector
ot
t he
Ohio
Department
of
Trans
THURMAN HOUSE
F
portatlon Columbus Ohio
..,
ont tques ur
until
10 00 AM
OhiO
Mllure stripping repo1r and
Standard T im e
Fr 1day ,
re lmt shed County Rd 8 of! 35
February 7 1978 for im
Cenlerv 1lle Vtllog e
Closed
pro-vements in
Monda-y &amp; Tuesday Evemngs
Athens Gall Ia
Hocking
by opp o1ntmen t 245 9479
Me i gs
Morgan
Noble,
V i nton and
Wnh1nQton TREE HAVEN CERAMICS green
Counties Ohio on various
wora cuslom Hnng hmshed
sections
by
applvlng
productorders Coll 38888 11
preformed plasf1c railroad
crossing symbol a
HIGLE Y S BARBER SHOP OPEN 8
The above proJec t was
to 5 CLOSED SUNDA Y 8: MON
scheduled for the letting of
DAY GIFTS BOOKS 8. POTTERY
February 7 1978 which has
been postponed and bidS Wi ll
GRAPEFRUIT PILL w 1th D1odox
now be received until 10 00
plan more conven ent than
AM
FriQay February 17
grope fru 1is
Ea t sohsfy,ng
1978
mltQi s and lose we 1gh t Revco
The OhiO Department of
o~rR
Transportation
hereby
notif ies all bidders that It will
SAIL THE SEVEN SEAS
afflrmalt-ve l y Insure that I n VISit Hong King, Spam the
any contra~t entered Into earn bean we 11 pay you to
pursuant
to
th is
ad
vertlumen t
minority do 1f an the US Na-v, H1gh
business enterprises will be school grads 17 to 31, call or
afforded full opportunity to 1ft
submit b JdS In response to
221 Columbus Rd
this lnv tatlon and will not be
Athen.s-593 3566 (Collect)
d1scrlmmated
against
on the
grounds
of race
color
or ' - - - - - - - - - - - - '
natural or 1g l n In
con
slderatton for an award
Minimum wage rates for
this project ha-ve been
predetermined as required
by law and are set forth In the
b1d proposal
The date set for com
I II
t thl
k Sh 1 11 b e
P e on 0
S wor
set forth In the b ldct l ng
proposal
Each bidder shall be
required to ftle W1th hiS bid a
cert1fled check or cashiers
check for an amounl equal to
five per cent of his bld1 bu t in
no event more ttlan ftfty
thousand dollars or a bone!
for ten pnctnt of his bid,
p~yabte to the Director
S1dders must apply , on the
proper
forms
for
Qualification at l•ast ten days
pr ior to ttle date set tor
opening bidS 1n accordance

••

r:~~~ ;"c"o~~·r

sm

Ohio

Plans and specifications
are on file In the Department
of Transportation and t he
office of the D!Sfr 1ct Deputy
D1rec t or

1975 14x70 mob le home oil elec
tr c centro I mr cond11 on ng II
mter ested call 247 2821 offer
b 30 p m
e-venmgs
or
weekends

right to relect any and all

1971 LIBERTY TRAILER 12 x 60
Two bedrooms 2 acres Colt
992 5943 after 5 00 or 742 2768
onyhme

Rev a 17 73
Feb 12

INCOME TAX Serv1ces Federal
and State Taxes
Wallace
Ru ss ell Bradbury 992 7229
ANNOUNCIN G TH E open ng o f
the pubIc occount ng off1ce of
Roger Luckeydoo
l1 censed
P"bloc acco"nlano fa, accon hng
..
u
and boakkeepong serv ces ond
preporol! on of federal and
slola to K relurns ot 29 1 Waln ut
St
M1ddle po rt
Oh 1o
992 2b66 Hours bv oppo nt
men t
CLEARANCE SALE beg ns Man
Feb 13 at Sew N Sew Oul let
Mom Streel
Ro c1ne
All
polyester double kn1ts reduced
-40"'o ond 50% Thread b g spool
Sf Sl
or

Morning Dawn lodge
N0. 7

F•&amp;AM
• •

The Dlrecto• reserve• the

Mon., Feb. 13
7:30 p.m.
M.M. Degree

bids
DAVIDL WEIR
DIRECTOR

•

w

SUNDAY CROSSWORD

Robert C Fleshman, W M
G Gordon F1sher , Sec

ACROSS
1 Tolls
6 Fur bear ing
mammal

11 Blem1sh
18 Lasso

'

Heroes 10 Emergency One 13 To Be Announced

15
5 30--News 6 Elec Co 20,33 Mary Tyler Moore 10
Hogans Heroes 15
6 oo-News 3 .t.8 10 13 15 ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6 30-NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13, Carol Burnett &amp;

2 1 D1sm ss
22 Handle
23 Art1cle of
furr.tture
24 Command
2 5 Devoured

28 Long lor
28 L.eaaen
30 Opening 1n
ren ee
32 A continent

(abor I
33 Ra ilroad lilbbr I
34 Nagnto

4

'

36 Bitter vetch
38 Enclosure tor
antmais
37 Prepoatt10n

38 Young boY
40 Impel onward
42 Largo tu.b
43 Nerve networ.k
44 Untt of Italian
currenc,.
45 Period of t•me

'

n

'

•'

70Dry
71 Female relat1-ve

!colloq I

27 Organ of hear

132 Genus of ca!!le

ong

133 Walk pompously
t 35 Greek letter
138 Native metal
74 Carnes
139 Evergreen trees
76 Wheel track
71 Former Russian 140 Posed for
portra1t
ru ler
141 ome
7B Quarrel
142 R1ver 1n Siberia
79 Hmdrances
82 Cease
143 Note ol scale
84 European
144 Unadulterated
85 Hastens
1 45 Peels
B6 River ISlands
14 7 Item of proper1y
88 Accomplished
149Cryolgoal

72 Cypnnotd l 1sh

89 Scorch
90 Separate
92 Moves about
furl vely
94 Mantpulator

98 Shoe! ot glass
99 Small rugs
100 High ,card

102 Denude
t OB Goll mound
, 04 EXISt

29 Tnnket

wound

95 Region

44Conduct
46 Sun gOd
48Lucre

11 2 Winter pre clpltatlon

l'q

150 Showy llowar

49 Penod oIfaa t ong 113G 0d oIIovt

jl&gt;b

154 Adhes ive sub·

51 Sw1tt
52 Wear away

I"

1 s2 Proverb

40 Troptcal fru1t
~ 1 Great lake
42 Thtn cover

50 Grant use ol

stance

156 Astray
158 Chairs
159 Eats
160 CoUect
161 Refuse

~~;~~~·powder

115 Temporary
shelter
116 Surfeit

118 Ripped

53 Transgressrons 119 Proeeede
55 Defeated
12 1 Bears wUneaa to
561nhentor
1 23 Symbol for
57 Mans name
ruthenium
58 Rema ms at eaae 12 !'i Scatter
61 Memorandum 126Lavish tondneu
63 Girls name
on

DOWN
1 Gem
2 Spare
3 S1mian
4 French arttcle

84 Unruly child

I 27 Expunges

6 8 Occupants
70 Decl ares

1 29 Soft drinks
•
130 Worn away
131 Title of respect

71 Enthus1asm
73 Colorless gas
74 Al lo wance for

5 Cralty
6 Qulesoent

waste

7 Attamment
8 Mans nickname
9 Note of scale
10 Greek letter
11 Beg1n
1 2 Makes tace
1 3 Man s nickname
14 Nega11ve pretDc

I 5 NUJ11Iy
1 6 Repetition
17 Anger
1 8 Pa 1d nohce

75 Pogpena
77 Shades
76 Booly
80 Ireland

armadillo
91 European
ca pttal

19 Stng1ng voice

2 0 Macaw

w

1~8

&lt;5

I"

I'~

Indian
136 Brown aa bread

'

144 Fondle

talum
157 Parent (colloq

'

~ 1"7

I"T

.

~

~

l•o

~

I''"

r·~

~ I'""

I'""

I"'

CATALINA

red with whit e
top air local car

'1595
1972 DODGE
Ollly

CORONET WAGON

Good body runs real good
needs tw o w indows

'695
1972 CHEV.

IMP. CUST.

.,

~
...
~

1''1 l'.s-

,. "

~ 1'0 13'
~

l'b

~

f0:

I,,
.

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~
101

l"lO

'Ob

~

~
.,

144

I'" I'"'

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007

I···

1''9
U•~l r

by

I

~

.
Untl~d

GRANH TTORINO

2 Dr

llufa

PS

P B real good body need
enqlne
A stea l

'795
1972 CHEV.
at

MONTE CARLO

Ex t r.n lo w mileage for 72
one of the cleanest

n

models In town•1995

1972 CHEV.

CAPRICE WAGONa

Local car air makes
nice family ca r

1

129

ltzo

~
jl27

~ I•••
"

•n

~

p•s

l)t c 211 Th e par ty won t rea lly
get rolling unlt l you put 1n an
appeara nce You have th e g1fl
lo r llh ng lhe Sp1nts ol o thers
today

CA,PHICOHN iDee 22-Jan 1'1
lad y luck tends to fa-vor you
today 1n ma tt ers where dollar
s gns are mvolved She s an)l
tou s to see that you get a slice
o f th e p1e
!NEWSPA PE R E NTE~PRISE A.SSN!

"'

"" ~'"

48~

I''• j•S7

I'""

I'"'

'"'

With

SAG ITTAHJtJS I Nov 23

""

;• &gt;&lt; I''"

Ha !ut •

one s your ij lly locJay You 11
make all you dea l w1th lee t
Impor tant You 1e lh e type o l
pan ncr they II wanlt o hook up

!Oct Z4 Nov 22 1
EYcn tnoug h you may be In a
pl ay ful mood today you 11 drop
whatever you re domg 1! you
see way s to ut1 l1 ze your eff o rt s
lor someth1 ng pr oft table

.109
I";

II

sconr•ro

~IOl _

~ 1••8
"~
~ ""

JAu" 21Scpt 22i

LIIIHA !Sept 23.(11! 211 Eve•y

.

002

.12b

~on

~ I'""
~ I'"•

'795

Sale Pnce

vnu.o

I!;a

I••

9w

10 :''"

,119

PS

some 1hn1g can be changed lor
lhe beu er th rough a sen s1ble
adju sl rne nt whe re wo rk IS co n
ce rn ecJ d on 1 ru st stu d y lh e
SlhJal lon acl on 11

I! Z

j?7

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aulo

11&lt;&gt;

9b

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a 1r runs f ine

ASTRO·GRAPH

,,

.,

.~

P B

NEWPORT

1972 FORD

2 Dr H T

I•B

~

~
i'"

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Don't forget you owe tt to yourself to check

~ I"~

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PS

In memory o1 th e best porent s
wtlh us be fore you buy any car, New or
ever ' Coro S Sco tt (Feb 12
Used We can SAVE YOU MONEY We are
1968) ond V'lllhom F Scali [Feb
9 1929) Daugh ters Ernest. 10
The Fnendly Dealer See or call one of these
Cun n ngha m Mary and tsobel
Fnendly Salesmen , J D Story, Ray
Grondch ldr vn
Evgene and
Carol Hunler Lee Brenda and
Douglas, or Btll Nelson
Tammy Great grandch1 ldren
H h
Joson
ea t cr !lnd S!erho •
Lee Sons n low Luothe Cunn
For Sunday t~eb 12, 197~
yo u ITIQY ber o l 11 miJiertally I rom
lnghorn Chesler Scott and
lwo (! ll orcnt sources l od ay
Robert E Lee deceased
One c "annr. l wrl ll~c co mple te ly
r.:=:~=====~~;:.:::_-:7"1
•n lo -v 1ng m emory ol
UI ICk p CC \CCI
Gerald1ne
How e
who
/\lUIS \Murdt 2l · Aprll J9J
paned away Feb 1:1 191S
You It lle In a r.Hilor jo vlt~ l u ood
Berntce Bede Osol
A mother mean s 50 muCh
to hcgl n w1111 lnda y hu t you !I
to one
Ft h 12 1978
bB e'.'~n III UIC e ntert mnlng
1t s hard to say her lit e Is
Se veral good llu ng s Will come nile 1 &lt;:~tlrac lt vu member s o ll he
done
lo you th1s yc&lt;J I 11 small pac k
Now 1t s been three long
op pOSit e Sf.;JX are aro und
years
ages bu t yo u co u ld a so gel IAUI\US !April 20-Muy 201
and sttll our hearts are
one bu ndl~;: lha1 s really b1 g
Th e percentages for ge t11 ng a
t 111ed w 1th tears
Yo u II wqt e lh e scnp1 yo ur se ll
lavora l&gt;l c response are on yo ur
Sadly m 1sscd by daughters
bu t luck w111 Qel top b llu 1g
stde tod ay reoard mg requ es ts
tom'" "
MIUAHIUS 11un 20 Feb 191 you ml'lke tor ca rcm o lmancJal
Cusl ome rs w11 ha ... e l1ttte sales assts lance
PUBLIC NOTICE
res tstance wltcn you t:Jive lhem t.l' MINI I Moy 2 1 Jun~t 20 )
Not1ce 1S her eby g1ven that
th e p11Gh !oday Yo ur cl1 arm Co d1 !1v ns tn gen era l are e11
an Feb ruary 15th 1978 at
10 00 AM a pub l c sale w1 1
and enlhU SiaSIIl wor k li ke a tr emely p om1 s1n g lor you
be held at The Farmers Bank,
one two pu nch Fin e! out mora lod ay Yo u rt! especially luc ky
8.
Sa vm gs
Company
&lt;~bou t yoursc ll by ._.entl ng lo r
at lh1ngs you maug ura le or
F'omeroy Ohio to set for
your cop y ol A str a Graph Lei
promote
Co'JSh the follow,n g col later a l
ter Ma1I SO ce1 ts fo r eac h and a CANt.: I! It (June 21 July 22 1
tOW If
1974 F'onllac 2 Dr
Mlr
ong self ad dre ss e d stamped P1ece s that wo uldn t go to
ser1al no 2V 87T4N 16242 1
envelope to Aslro G aph P 0
ge1he1 ye ster day wil l seem to
The Fllrmer s Bank &amp;
Box 489 RacJ~o C ty Sta t1 o n
blei1 d qu1t e mag tca fl y today
Sa vmgs Compa ny Pom eroy
N Y 100 19 Be \s ur e to &amp;pec lfy MHk e yot.r move no w 11 sorn e
Ohio reserves the r 1g ht to bid
your btrth stgn
at th1S sale
lh1 ng b1g 1s n n 1he burner
J»J S&lt;.:ES !Fe b 24J..M.Irc h 201 I f' () f July 21 Au~ 22) Thing s
12l 10 12 ll Jt c
Th e re s a s11onu pnss1h11 1ty- ha'.'e a way at work ng oul
loclay so hang l oo~e Fru s tra
t o ns w•ll be 1obbed ol l he u
loq
'1
,10
power II treat(:cJ plllosoph tcal
ly

"

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!05

"".....

a uto

onty

ISS

~

~

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I' :!II

151 SymbOl tor tan·

153 Roman gods
155 Par! ot to be

I"

1•8

11~

lq

std

P B air
Sale Price

THE FAMILY ot Amos Leonord
would Ike lo e•lend o Thanks
lo the sr ofl ond r'lurs es of
Ve terans Memor ol Hasp to l
Drs R1dgwoy Telle and Con
de To tl-)e Pome1oy Emergency
Squod Rev Jam e~ Corbttl
mm1ste r
Lou se Ra dford
organ sl
and lhe Ew ng
Funeral Home l or the serv ces
Also lhanks to the pa llbearers
and the town sh1p trustees A
speool lhonks Ia !he mony
ne1ghbo rs ond fnends who
brought food ond sen! flowers
the Roclo.spr ngs na ghborhood
George~ Creek and Kyger Corn
munll',' God Bl ess You for your
prayers ond kmdness tha t con
never be re ptud
W fe
Ch ldren Grondch ldren
ond Bro ther

"'~13&lt;

I'"

180

!37 Demotn
139 Animal coate
1 40 W111 person

•

1972 CHRYSLER

NEWPORT

4 Dr

1972 PONTIAC

~I'" 1'9

IH

18S

1'1&lt;&gt;

77

~~~

1100

t 32 Reveals
134 Southwestern

l'b

1~1

I"'"

81 MU SIC aswr!l 145 Shallow vesael
146 Resort
len
83 D1stress s.gnat 147 Mans name
84 LeeK through 1 48 Game at marbles
67 Flat lloh lpll
149 PrelL• Wrong
89Sew

90 Three banded

~

IU

43 Lease

37 Decree

39 Amount owed

7

27

I"

93 Mork left by

31 Mature
36 Cou,

lo

21

92 Rational

96 Part of f lower
97Warm
99 Girl s nickname
lOt Omits from pro
nunc1atlon
105 Man a ntckname
106 Shoe~

105 Provides crew

1os vap1d
108 Depos it
1 oq P1amsslmo
11o Astate (abbr I

1 1 1 DOmesticate
47 Caviled
1 1 2 U I produ c tive
49 Unasplrated
1 14 Perform
1 1 6 Capuchtn
50 Meadow
monkey
51 Relund
54 Hold on property 1 17 Clever
119 Afncan an
55 Twos led
!e lopes
56 Werm 1ng dGYICB
59 Skoll
120 G~rl s name
122 Harbmger
60 Sea eagle
124 Worthless leav
62l~grodlont
lng
64 TWISt
125 Anon
66 French arUcle
RIVer in Italy
126 S1gntfy
67 Decay
128 Hard shelled
fru it
69 SumptuOU!i
129 Slave
meal

ee

131 Pour forth

• •

I•

PUZZLER

1972 CHRYSLER

•••

SUNDAY February 12 1978
.A

BIG SAVINGSI

5
WEEPER ond s~twmg mochme THE RACINE Volun leer F rc
repair paris ond supples P ck
Oeponmenl w1ll spon sor o gun
up and delivery Oo.,,s Vacuum
sl ool eve1y Solurdoy ot6 prn at
Clean er :;, m1le up Georges
the r bulld1ng Jn Boshon Foe
Creek Rd Ph 446 0294
~ tory ch~ke guns onl y
PASQUALE Elect nco! Serv1ce THE RACINE Gu1 Club Gun Shoo t
4462716doy orngh t
eve ry Sunday olt arnoon Foe
·"-""'':::- : - tory choke guns onl y Assor ted
DEAD Stock removed No charge
meal
s
Coll245 5514

Columbus, OhiO

Ph 446-3575

3 AND 4 RM furr,1shed ond un

Gallipolis, Oh 10

CONTRACTORS

Across from Holzer
Medical Center

Rt 35&amp; 160

Comer of Third &amp; Court

444~96

614

THALER IS FORD

M

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

Upper Routt 7
K•naug•, Ohio

BIG SAVINGS ON All MODELS
INCLUDING FIESTA &amp; FAIRMONT

H

See It Today At . • .

M&amp;G MACHINE
SHOP

THE BEST
SERVICE
IN
TOWN

13900 00

1972 MODEL
SALE

FrM Eallmaltl

ALWAYS

104 45
95 55

Fmence Charge

We are stocked on good 1972 model
used cars, some are gomg to have a
SALE that will really save you
money

No Job Too Lart•

900

Down Payment

PH: 992-2174

l"u-llc walk tn ilual-a,
lllllutlr!al or conltructlon
ilull_. wtlcomH
Lar.. tallltt and boring
milia .
Mttallzlnt. wetdlnt and
llallllittng
SIMI fallrlcation , complete
atock of tteel rounda,
ptatH and alructuala

TOP

PINTO PONY

FIRST
MONTHLY
PAYMENT
NOT TIL

••

Gill igan's Is 8 Sesame St 20 33 Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10
4 30--Llttle Rascals 3 15, Gilligan sIs 4 Brady Bunch
8 10 Mary Tyler Moore 13
5 00--Here Come The Brides 3 Star Trek 4. Gun smoke
8 Mister Rogers Neighborhood 20 JJ· Hogan's

10 00--Love Boat6, 13 Lou Grant 8 10 News 2Q, Close
Up 33
10 3D-Farm Digest 20, 11 oo-News 3.4,6,8,10 13,15,
Dick Cavell 20. MacNeil Lehrer Report 33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Pollee Story 6, 13, Movie
The Legend of Valentino" 8, ABC News 33, Movie
Tortilla Flat" 10
12 00--Janakl 33 12 4Q-News 13, 1 00--Tomorrow
3,4
C.b!e Channel 5 6 30 P M - Testimony Time
7 00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fltnoas Show
7 30 ~ Pt Pleasant Wahama Basketball
10 00--700 Club

GALLIPOLIS

I

Merv Griffin 6

Friends &amp;, CBS News 8 tO Over Easy 20
7 DO-Cross Wits 3 Cross-Wits 4 Liars Club 6, Marty
Robbins' Spotlight 8 Capitol Beat 33, News 10 To
Tell The Truth 13 Gilligan sis 15 , Daniel Foster,
MD 20
7 15--Labor News 33 7 Jo-That Nashville Music 3, In
Search of 4 Nashville on the Road 15, Muppef Show
6 Match Game PM 8 MacNeil Lerhrer Report 20
Wild Kingdom to, Candid Camera 13 Know \'our
Schools 33
8 00--Bob ]-lope 3,4, 15. Six Million Dollar Man 6, 13,
Good Times 8 10 Consumer Survival 20,33
8 3D-Baby, I m Back 8 10 Turnabout 20 33
8 00--Klng 3 4 15 Honeymooners Valentine Special
6, tJ Mash 8, 10, Hard Times 33 Adams Chronicles
20 9 JQ-One Day AI A Time 8 10

SERVICES
WILDING
IIRVi.::ii

8 6 45-

1 00--For Richer For Poorer 3 All My Children 613
News8 Young &amp; the REstless 10 Not For Women
Only 15
1 3D-Days of Our Lives 3 4,15 As The World Turns
8 10 2 OO-One Life to Live 6,13 2 30-Doctors
3 4 15 Guiding Light 8 10
3 oo-Another World 3,4, 15, General Hosptfal 6 13
Adams Chronicles 33 Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 3 3DAli In The Family B 10 Prime Time 20 4 00-Mister Cartoon 3 Edge of Night 13 My Three Sons
For Poorer 15

IN

SMitH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

SHOP

OUR PRICES
OUR PAYMENTS

~

Famtly 4 Love of Life 8,10, Sesasame St 20 33

For Richer

FORD

••

Mornlng Report 3, 6 50-Good Morning West
Vlrgln la13 7 00-Today 3 4 15 Good Morning
America 6 13 CBS News 8 Bullwlnkle 10
7 JD-Schoolles 10 7 45--Schoolles 10
1 45--Sesame St 33 8 00'-Capt Kangaroo 8 10 9 00-Merv Griffin J, Phil Donahue 4,13 15 Edge of Noght
6 Fam ily Affair 8 Match Game 10
9 30-Emergency One 6, Andy Griffith 8 Family
Affa~r 10
10 ClO-Sanford &amp; Son 3 4 15 Tattletales 8, Jokers Wild
10 Not For Women Only 13
10 30--Holiywood Squares 3,4 15 Andy Griffith 6
Price Is R1ght 8,10, Rick Foucheux 13
11 OD-Wheei of Fortune 3,4, 15 Happy Days&amp; 13 Elec
Co 20
11 3D-Knockout 3 15, Family Feud 6 13 Partridge

4

BEAlS

-.,...--..
--..
--.-.-..
--.
---

20
1 DO-College Basketball J 15 4 Communique 6, Bob
Jones 8 Washington week In Review 33 Challenge
of the Sexes 10 Issues &amp; Answers 13 Tennis 20
1 3o--E JdonM oller Basketball6 To Be Announced 8,
Wall Street Week 33 Town Topics 13
1 45--NBA Basketball 8
2 00--Supersta rs 6 13 Advocates 33 3 oo-star Trek
3 Truth or Cons 4 Pro Soccer 20 Great Per
formances
33
3 15-- Boxlng 6 13 3 3o--Llttle Rascals 4 4 00--Golf
3 4 15 NBA Basketball 8 10 Live from Lincoln
Center 20 33
4 15--Spor!s Magazin e 6 13 • 3D-Wide World of
Sports 6 JJ
6 00--News 3 Newsmagazine 4 Let s Deal With If 6
Champ ionship Fishing 8 Voyage to the Bottom of
the Sea 10 Parent to Parent 13 Music City 15,
Zoom 20 Turnabout 33
6 3D-NBC News 3 15
News 6, 30 Minutes 8
Newsmaker 78 13
1 00--Movle The Great Wallendas" 3 4 15 Hardy
Boys Nanc y Dew 6 13 60 Minutes 810 Crocketts
VIctory Garden 20, FlrlnQ Line 33
7 ~Antiques 20 8 00-How the West Was Won 6 13
Allin The Family 8,10 Evening at Symphony 20,33
8 3D-Rhoda 8 10 9 oo- King 3 4 l5 Movie "Gator'
8.10 Anna Karenlna 20,33
10 OD-Nova 20 Erk Hoffer The Crowded Lifo 33
11 00-News 6 13, 11 05--News 3 4 15 11 15--ABC
News 6 News 8 10
11 2o--PMA Pulse 15 11 3D-Second City TV 6 CBS
News 8 10 PTL Club 13, Monty Pythons Flying
C~rcus 33
11 35--Movle 'The Ambushers ' J Movie The Long,
Hot Summer • Movie ' Spectre" 15
11 45--700 Club 8 Face the Nation 10
12 00--Soul Train &amp; Janak! 33 12 15--Movie " Edison
the Man 10 12 3D-ABC News 13
Movte Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 PM - Pipe Dreams (PGJ
9 &amp; 11 PM - I Will, tWill
For Now ( R)
MONDAY , FEBRUARY 13, 1978
5 45--Farm Report 13 5 50-PTL Club 13 s 55Sunrise Semester 10
6 00--PTL Club 15 6 2SJ.-Medlx 10 6 30--Columbus

MACHINE

NOBODY

•

Evans 13 Characteristics of Learning Disabilities

Today 4 News 6

"

~

Search for Tomorrow 810 Elec Co 33

Curtis cooks on double burner
East led a spade a t

11 Jo-Qutdoors w1th Julius Boros 3
Animals
An1mals An imals 6 Focus on Columbus 4 Medlx

11 55-'CBS News 8 Loving Free 10
12 oo-Newscenter 3 $20 000 Pyramid 13 News 4,6 10
To Say The Leas! 15 Gambit 8
12 3D-Ryan s Hope 6 13 Bob Braun 4 Gong Show 15

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

:.! II -\

Church Service .t

"-ware 6 Christian Center 8 , Sesame St 20, Movie
"The Heroes of Te!emerk" 10, Jimmy Swaggart 13,
Gospel Singing Jubilee 15
10 3D-Rex Hum bard 3 Yours for fhe Asking 4 Way of

Februarv LI IY7 H

NORTH

10 Jim Franklin 13, Ernest Angley 15 Mister
Rogers 20
3D-What Does The Bible Plainly Say&gt; 8 It is
Written 10 Church Service l.li""'"Zoom 20

BRIDGE

For
mformatton
on
prog rams a nd mat ert als
avatlable call 446-7479

--.-.
---.--.
.-.-..
-------..
--...
--.-.
.-.-...

Wilcox 13 Open Bible 15

more friendly
They hke ''assome have put It,'' our quamt ways and stay
Some of Ut ese people hke our ways so we ll they settle tn and
are ftne Citizens and netghbors
Others soon get bored and start tryrng to change everyone
and everythmg to make It a httle more like Cleveland,
Chtcago, New YorkCity,and-&lt;&gt;r Detrott They left home to get
away from It all, then dectde they want to brrng tt all here
for monUts now, l have read ' Hoofs and Paws wtth
much mterest It would seem Ms Marton Crawford has set
herself up as Savtor of Metgs, Vmton, and Gallia counties For
months tl has been these backward, Ignorant cruel, htcks of
Metgs County She has downed our law enforcement our dog
warden, our wildltfe offtctals and fatally our volunteer
firemen (January 31 , Sentinel J Our ftremen are not patd btg
salartes like btg ctty ftremen They work fuU time and get
called from thetr homes or JObs to protect hves and property
They may be cat lovers but JUSt can't leave thetr JObs to get a
kitty off a pole I am sure most of us rn the county apprectate
Utese men gtvmg of thetr tune and think they do a great Job
In one arttcle Ms Crawfordsatdshe was gomg to pray that
hunters and trappers be turned mto fur bearmg anunals I m
sure He must have looked on her wlth ptty, smce anyone
pra)'lllg for such thing must have a SICk mmd
I have seen no mentton of where th e cat was caught 1 Jan
3larttcle" I helteve if tt was caught man unauUtomed area or
trap the person setting Ute trap should be punished On the
other hand tf the cat was out '" the woods and helds Uten tt
could have been one of thousands that yearly destroy countless
numbers of quail, young rabbtts, young sptrrel and song btrds_
birds
I am a ftrm beltever that no srumal should be tied , penned,
or caged wtthout adequate food water and shelter I can
understand Ms Crawford s stand on Utts But tt seems she
would like to see our wild!Ue become so abundant they wiD
suffer the same hunger pangs as the unattended domestic
anunals
Perhaps she has double standards hke the people who
condemn hunters as,' barbartc savages' for eatmg thetr kiD
of coon, groundhog, squirrel, or deer Then stt down and eat
Utetr ftll of bacon, ham, steaks, hamburgers and lamb chops,
because no rnnocent anunal had to die for thetr meat They _
bought it in the supennarket - Lawrence A Donohue Rt 4,
Pomeroy, Oh10
CLOSES PLANT
DETROIT
(UP! I
Struggling Amenca n Motors
Corp ts closmg down tis U S
and Canadtan passenger car
assembly operations next
week m an effort to recover
from a maJor sales slwnp
AMC announced Its plant
closmgs Frtday at the same
tune tt discussed tts second
vehtcle recall campaign tn
JUst two days

..••

'
SUNDAY , FEBRUARY
12,1971
AG USA 4, For YO&lt;J
Black Woman 8, This Is The Life 10
6 30-This Is The Life 3 Jerry Falwell • · Talking
Hands 8 American Problems &amp; Chal!engH
7 00--Big Blue Marble 3 Eddie Saunders 6 Thinking
In Black 8, Troehouse Club 10. Newam•ker ' 7113
7 3D-TV Chapel 3 Your Health 4. Show My People 6.
Jerry Falwell&amp; Urban League 10 Amazing Grace
Bible Cass 13
! DO-Mormon Choir J, Day of Dl~very 4, Grace
Catl)edral 6 Dr E J Dan iels Presents HapplnHs
Is 13
8 J()-{)ral Roberts Jimmy Swaggarl 4 Celebration
9 00--Gospel Singing J ubl!ee J, Robert Schulte" Rex

Those tax levtes are too much, so I think all taxpayers
better rally out and vote Utts levy down - Thank you Marte
Manley

Native voices opinion

X

ol Praise 6. James Robison Presents 10, Willard

concern

cuncer

the mtnunwn-securaty pnson

wtll not be allowed tn unhl
March 1 - after doors and
locks are mstalled

s
Feb 9, 1978

DOORS MISSING
PRISON UNOPEN
MEDICAL LAKE, Wash
(UP!) - A delay m recemng
some ttems essential for a
prtson facthty - namely
doors and locks - has
delayed operung of the new
Pme Lodge Co rrectio nal
Center
The new $900 000 state
facthty was to go tnto
operation next Wednesday,
but Supenntendenl Tom
Rol Is satd Fnday (he ft rst of
the 80 uunates to be housed at

Black and White peppu
r.:ornc ft om the SdtnC red

E1 ghteen olher perso ns ben v that gruws 111 du:-;turs
were also scn ousll InJUred m on a p~ttmma l chmbmg vme
the bla.e - one of the worst Fm black pepper the berry ts
ftre dtsasters tn ctty htstory ptcked before tl ts fully npe
FranciSco Mendez was also The resulting drted berry ts
convicted Frtday of arson the famt har httle black outand assault charges He faces stde and while tnstdc Whtte
25 years to hie m prtson when pepper ts the matured berry
he Js sentenced on March 7 with Its outer husk removed

•

I
,
A gamst
any mort! ("

12, 1978

~ For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

TELEVISION
VIEWING
6 DO-Chr istopher Closeup 3

I

'Or
,;J 1'1/1:-1 .

A
reg ular
feature
prepared by the Amencan
Cancer Soctety to help save
your hfe (rom cancer
A secretary explams 'J
am worrt ed about takmg the
btrth cont rol pill because my
mother ha s ha d cancer
Shoul d l take t!'
ANSWE Rltne Thts ts a
matter t o be caref ull y
d tscussed
wtth
your
phystctan who IS famtltar
"tth your health and your
f•mtly hea lth htst or y In
general many doctors advtse
aga mst ustn g the btrth
control p1ll when there 1s a
famt ly htstor) of breast or
genttal ca ncer There ts no
established scientific proof
that the ptll causes cancer but
an alternative method of
birth con t rol may be
preferable 111 you r partwular
case
A htgh school pnnctpal
notes Smce teachers are so
Importa nt m mfluencmg the
young I would ltke to know
about thetr smokmg habtts
and what teachers m genera l
thmk aboUt smoktng
ANSWERitne A 1976 study
cumml sswncd
by
the
Amen can Ca ncer So cte l y
showed that ctgarette
smokmg IS less comm on
among pub he school teachers
than the general pubhc and
that the teachers surveyed
reported a marked declme m
the1r ctgarette smokmg over
the past 10 years As mtght be
expected ctgarette smoktng
1s t he lowest among sctence
and
he alth
educatiOn
t eachers who are most
fam1har wtth the lnedtcal
hazards of the tobacco habtt
About four out of ftve
teachers surveyed sa1d they
beli eved that teachers should
play a role tn mformmg
students about the danger s of

I

I
I

~A

Mrs

Barnell is lhe former
Sharon lllllllron of Letart
Falls Maternal gra nd
parents are Mr and Mrs
Delbert Milliron, Letarl
falls, and the paternal
grandparents are Mr and
Mrs Alvm Barnett, Route
4, Pomeroy

1

I

American Cancer Society

(X r oons m ay have d!Cd Ill the

1
1
I
I
:

information

at thetr le1sure
Both Uruted Press Interna
\tOnal and the Assoctated
Press now use such a system
ltnktng
tnf or matton gathertng bureaus word processmg computers and
client or member newspapers
and broadcast outlets
But even wtth mformahon
tnstantly avatlable on hmne
vtdeo screens, Tulhs satd the
datly newspaper sltll had a
future, smce the human bratn
was capable of assuntlattng
far more lnforrnation
We haven't begun to approach the lumt we ca n
absorb
collate
sort,
compare
and
utthze
informatton satd Tulhs
1 o tllustrat e what wtll
happen Tulhs outlmed the
r evolution In newsrooms over
the last ftve )ears wtth
masstve conversiOn to vtdeo
teruunals for the wntmg and
edtttng of newspaper copy

An

P I ANE CRASHES
MONTEVIDEO !Jruguay
(UP i l - As many as 44

Jztten of oplalon are welcomed They should be
less lhan IOIIwanlo loal (or be oubjed to re ...&lt;UOII by
, the editor) aod m•l be sl&amp;ned with lhe sipee'o lddren Nama DillY be withheld upon pubUcallon
However, 011 request, names wlU be dlscl01ed. Letten
llhould be iD 1ood lute, addresaiD&amp; lllues, not per80DIIIItl...

I
I
I

CANCER

Lunch Menus
Gallla County
Local Schools
February 20 - No school
February 21 - Hog dog
wtth bun ba sked beans
rna ca rom salad pears mtlk
F eb 22 - Beef and
potatoes peas cornbread
wtth butter .tpp lesa ucc
REV JOHN LANIER
nulk
TO PREACH - The Rev
February 23 - Pizza
John H I anler will be
tossed salad ft wt cocktm l
speaker at specml services
cook1e mllk
February 24 - Ham burger
to be held at the
Rock Sprin gs United
on bun buttered ta rr ots
sliced peaches brt wn1 es v. 1th
Meth odist ~hurc h at
7 30
eac h
eve ning
nuts rmlk
Monday through Feb
Feb 2i - rut ke) and
~ e b 26
Rev Lanier is
noodles ~ r een beans red
)clio wtth fruit pean ut butter currently In his 17th year
as a minist er and
sandwtch mtlk
February 28 - Barhecue evangelist In the Church ol
beef bu ttered co rn cole th e Nazarene He has
conducted approdmately
slaw streusel cake milk
70
0 revivals and camp
Breakfast Menus
meetings
throughout the
February 20 - No school
Unit ed Sta tes and ha s
February 21 ~ Apntots
traveled over one million
Apn cot s, cheese cubes toast
miles In addition lo his
mtlk
Fehruary 22 - Pmcapple speaking Rev Lanier is a
musician playing various
JU ICe cerc.1l m1 lk
February 23 - Orange types of str in ged Instruments Preceding each
JU ICe biSr UJt sa usage \Inks
meeti ng there will be a
mtlk
February 24 - Grapefrutt prayer serv ice at 7 in the
basem ent of the church
sectwns doughnut nulk
Feb 2i - Frtut cup, Special mu sic will be a
feature each evening The
deviled egg toast milk
Febcuat) 28 ~ asso rted public is ln\lled to allend
all of the services
JU ICe, cerea l m 1lk

Immedi ately determmed

gover nm e nt s,
the
communtcattons 1ndustry
and hbrarles wtll merg~ thetr
resources trlto the dat a
ba se,' and t hat 11 was
fea stble for people to
someday ' 1lnterrogate' thlS

--~-':""-~--::~'--""::'""'"~--1'--------

Lunch Menus

FIRE VICTIMS
TA LLADEGA Ala (UP! 1
- Ftve children rangmg m
age from 4 years to 6 months
died Fnd•y mght tn a blaze
that swept throu gh t hetr
mobtle home
The vlcllms were th e
ch ildren of two SISters who
"ere hv mg together m th e
t ratl er park They were
tdentlfled as Carol Lenette
Dark 4, Astrtd Cleo Dark, 2
Danny Aundry Da rk 3
Oct avtus Terrell Dark 6
months and Dynamic Da mel
Dark, 3
Cause of the blaze was not

He predicted universities

vast p oo l o f

~'J'Iwo Snnrl•v'l'imes-Senlinel, Sunday, Feb

~---------------------------1

1
1

.... I'"
I''"

~OI.l.l~OS

�D-4-TheSundayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, Feb . l2,1978

•

For Best Results Use Sttnday Times-Sentinel Cla,ssifzeds

[J.,'j-The SWlday Times-Sentinel, Sunday,

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

'

l"r'S THE BUY.. OF..THE ..YEAR
1976
OLDSMOBILE

li'Ji \~e

. PAINT

PONTIAC
GTO

Clifton

OFF ON
2 DR. LTD'S

Auto Sales

locat ed on W.Va . Side ·
Pomeroy.Maso n Bridge
(3$4) !J.J-5777

for~'~'~ "-=~~-=f~,==COAL, lime~tone . and calcium
chlor 1de and cold um brine lor
dust control ond s'pecio l mixing
sol! lor formers , Excelsio'r Soil
Works Ma in Street, Pornero;o.
5'hio or p_l2.~ne 992 · 3B9L _ ........,..
ECO NOMY TRACTOR wifh all otlochmenh. Uke new , asking
$2250 . Phone (614) 698·32q(),
RUGS , WALL Ho ng1ngs and
algans . Nice for Chr is tmas.
Reasonable. Coll992 ·2214 .
8 8. S MOBilE HOME S, Pt . Plea ·

sen t, W, Vo . besid~ Hetk"s .
1973 Broadmore 14 x 64 2
bedroom
\973 Dorio11 14 K 60 2 bedroom
1972 Vi cto rian 14 ~ 67 3 bed;oom .
i both
!972 Coventrv I '2 x 65 3 bedroom
1969 Stat esman 12 x 60 1
bedroom .

·
Ope n Eve n i ng s Til6:00
Exc e pt T h urs. and Sa t . t:l o sed Sun d ay

M idd le port

Auto tiales

'9700

Cadillac Cpe. DeVille • • .. • • • • .. .. .. ..

DeVil~!! ............. ... ... '7500

Red wi t h wh ite v iny l roQ t, white leather interior. lu l l
Power and factory a ir , ful l stereo, .crui se control. T&amp; T

Wheel.

76

Cadillac Sed. DeVille. was '"oo NOW

'7900

Light bl ue, bl ue viny l r oo f; de-elegance: interior . f.ull

power and a ir , AM-FM stereo with tape. T&amp; T stee rmg
wheel .

75

5600

Cadillac Coupe DeVille was s68oo Now ' 1

Fu ll power , fa ctory air, leatl'1er seats. T&amp; T wheeL

's tereo, 32 ,000 miles .

76

Cadillac DeVille Cpe.......... · • ...... ·

'6300

Full power,,air , leafher 1rim , D. brown, tan roo1.
Exte nd e d W ar r a.nt y 12,000 m i les or 12
months a v ai la bl e i f d esi re d on 75-76 &amp; 77
Cadi llacs.

73

Cadillac Sedan DeVille .................
Vin yl fOOL alr .
. , See one

of

'2495

the se c ou rteo u!; sa les m e n : P e1e

Bu~ri s , Ma r vin K eebauqh o r George H arns.

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
" You'll Like Our Quality Way
Doing Busi n ess"
992·5 3 42
GMC FINAN C ING
Po meroy
Ope n E ve~ing s T ii6 : 0" - T ; I 5 p .m. Sat .

Of

Aur..&amp;lli!;:
1970 MERCURY COMET. 429 eng.
' C-6 ovto . transmiss ion . 4 new
tires . New .brolo.es , $900.
9.t9-2411.
1973 VW SUPER Beetle . Runs good
$1200 or hest offer . At ~ o 1969
Chevrolet 'r, ton pickup. 6 cy l. ,
std. Runs good . $550, 992 ·2't92.
1974 ~ORO LT O Country S•1:;:;
station wagon. Cood conditio n.
Phone 949-2008.
1969 CAMARO. $400 . 9'12·530 1.
1964 RAMBLER WAGON . 6
cylinder. 3-speed trans·. Body
a nd engine in fair condillo'n .
985·38 18.
l973GRA NO PRIX . A·.c.. P.S.,
P. B., AM 8-rrack . 55,000. miles,
985-3969.
1961 OL D$ 98. Good condition,
Con be seen ot 655 Sycamore
Street, M iddlepor t, Ohio. Ask·
ing$125.
·

•

•

·=-

--

....___

_......_

TRUCKS

NEW WV TRUCK

NEW '76 CHEVROLET
MINI HOME

4 cyl ., auto . trans., wh . tires,
AM radio, ext. decor p kg ..
M ikado cust om trim .
S ALE PRI C E

TEC

$4099

2 2'12' fully
Travel On.

4 DOORS
Full. equipment , air , p r iced m uch
less than 78 m odel p lus :

6 cy l .. s td . tran s .. P.S., r a dio ,
r adia l t ires .
REDUCED TO

$3995

OFF DISCOUNT

OF RETAIL STICKER

v.a,

--

992·2206 or 992·7630
''The OriJinatc rs
Nat The lm ito~ tan

DEWX
SPORT PICKUP

22J.lma

Jso. v.a,

CARTER

Step s ide,
a uto., P.S. ,
P. B., Scottsda le. light blue,
ra di a l W·W t ires. ro ll b a r .
Dea le r Pri c e $6658

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

$5549

..

Will Drive You Happy

CHOICE Of 2
CHEVrnr4 DRS.

'

1977 COUGAR XR·7. l oaded.
7 ,000 mil es . $8700. Cor- mak e
. olle~ . (~11 446 · 2064 .
1950 FORO HEA V'f D.UlY
WRECKER. ..,... Dodge Van ,
ccir pe t·ed . eq u ipp ed . Co li
245-5034 alter 5pm.
1970 FORD PICKUP, good condi tion. $150. 1968 Dodge R-4140
Magnum , 4 spd., mog wheels.
Rea l sharp , $700. Co/1245·5 106
before 6prn .

9-49·2129 .
HAY FOR soltt. 992·7306 .
1973 DODGE PO LARA . 9
passenger. Wogan . 318 engine.
Wit h extras. Ver y good condi tion. $1000. 742·307-4 .
PICTURE WINDOW . Both tub.
Aft e r 6. col1992-3401.
HAY FO Rsole. 949-2870.

12 x 12 chain link lenc'e with gate,
pos ts . and Iorge dog house . I
1975 CHEV ROlET MONTE CARL O,
year old. Call 992 ·2967 otter
go?d con~ili ~Coi l 446 · 291 1
5:00pm ,
1963 WIL LY'S JEE P, 4 whl. dr .. 4
· cyL $1800. Co li 446· 1024 after EAR CORN $2.1 0 bu . Ground ear
corn $75 ton. Minimum ·I ton .
5pm
. __ __ - - - - ,
Call after b pm 985 -3581 ~
1975 liN COl N MARl&lt; IV , block ,
si lver vinyl top. sillier lea ther
interior . CB phone, best offer
or tra de. Coll6 14.446·?745.
1975 CHEVY MON ZA. V·B. PS . PB ,
AT. very low mileage. Call
446-6011 .

POMEROY
LANDMARK

!975 MAZDA RX ·4, 4 spd ., e ~tl l' o
sharp. Plush 1n terior. ·Possibl y
toke over . pay ments . ·c all
446-7340.
....
_,. --~
1971 FORD GAlAXIE SOO. l Ocal
, Qwner. A,( , rdd1al tires. First
5995 . toke-s it . Cobra 21 C.B.,
onte nno . and quick re lease •
$50. Coli 446· 1325.

--

(

.. ,,

y.

'

H ·t ll

·''

"

I

·.. Ill

,,''I' .'

'' v

,I'HI
'I 'Ill I ,\Ill

' I,,
I

1 "11 .'.- c .11
J'I I'' II • 1')}

'
r.~ 11 ,
,' ) ii

)

1
STRING OF 98 groduo1ed cultured
"Figi " pearls . Brougl·d bdclo.
fr om Jopon dur ing Wor ld War
II. Appraised at $250. Call
675-32-42 .
COUCH AND CHAIR , good co nd i·
lion. Coll .t,.6-151.t , if noons. ,
coll446-7071.
GOOD HAY, Iorge boles , $1. 50
per bole. Coll675-2377 .
ORIGINAL BOURBON BARREL
CHAIRS . Red no ug hyde cbvering. Alstt lamp table . Coli
256·1267 eveni ngs .
AN TI QUE Pt AYER PIA NO, Call
245-5050.
12 x 65 TRA~
Il::
ER"".""'2-;--:bd"7,-..-2-:--:ba~t-:-h~
s.
Also lincoln Conteniento l, between 30,000 ond 40,000 miles
Col/ 388-6735 .

300 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992 ~6282
or 992-6263
8A.M. Io4 :30P.M .
SALES AND SERVICE
·
11 -9-tfc

SAVE .. ........ STICKER

RNR

l: s lal ~

for :s.lc

PH.

AV E.

446.0552 AN YTIM E

·

773-5955
Lo kln, W. Vo .

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION

Sy ra cuse, Oh io
Free E stimates
'
Phone 992 -3993
1-18- 1 mo .

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
Ce llulo s ic (wood fib e r )
The rm a l In s ul a tion
sa .... e Jo pc1. t o so pet ,

on ll ea ting cost

Ellperie n ce a nd

t ull y ins u red
F ree Est .
Call ; 667 -64711 or 992 ·381.5
l -16-lmo .

f(&lt;

Immediate Ponession - This lowety hOme
is loca fed on Debby Dr . and it 's less than
one year old . Three large BR 's, one and a
hal f baths , l a rg~ LR . bui ll ·in kit c hen in·
e lu di ng range, dishwasher , disposal a nd
bar . This fi ne home includs a ll dra pes, and
it is carpe ted th r oughOut exce pt kit .

.... """

Th in k ahettCI t o next spring a nd I am su r e
you wi ll see rhe potentia l ol r111 s well car.e d
for hOme . Situated on .82 of an acre, wt fh
river frontage . Lots of room for a boat
dock plus other recreafional ac t ivit ies .
Ca ll now for an
to see thi s
home, tomorrow

, BOB L AN E
BRANCH MANAG ER
85 5 SE C OND AVENU E
GAL LIP OL IS, O HIO

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
POMEROY,

0.

446-7900

LISTlN~MILL CREEK

- 2 yr . old Modular 3

BR .. Lg . metol bldg .. W· lull bas• .• 6 A.
CENTERPOINT - Bri c k nm~h. 3 BR .. fam . rm .,
Frpl.. c,rport on 6 A.
BIDWELL -

N.lce mobi le home on one third a c . lol.

Syra ~ use. Ohio
Ph. 992 · 3993
1-18· 1 mo.

EUREKA _ Service stat·loh and res1 a ur.!'n1 .

lS to 40 acr es of fa nd sur rou ndi ng one of

th e ni cest homes in the area. The above
descr ibed is located on ly two mil es from
down lown Gal li polis . Call n9w lor an a ppo intm e nt .

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
R esi d e n tia l
a nd
Co mm erc ial . Call
l or
estimate, 24 hou r service.
Anyd ay, an vt ime.
Phon• 985- 38011

Jack's Septic
Tank SeiVice

.

,.;

.

.. .

Live close to town and at I he same time en ·
joy co un try atmoSphere. You wi ll lov'e t his
modu lar hOme t ha t includ es ajl Ol the ex:. tra s, inc luding ce ntral air, formal dining,
lam ily room a nd m uc h more . Low$JO 's .

J BR .. tam . rm .. swimming pool. If's a

CHES HI RE - 3 BR . mod ular home, lam . rm ., mete. I
bldg. on B ac .
GALLI POLIS - Resid en ti a l and commercia l - B rm .
home, a going business t or 35 vrs . lind a "J Cl'lr garage
renta l apt.

1,•-.w~~ ~fi
.

Chest.er, Ohio
10-JO.c

F or S22, 500 vou can bu y a. 2 or three . B~
home situated on ,96 of an a c re lot. ThiS ts
a n older hom e tha t
had exce llent c are.
Call now tor an

BIDWELL good buy .

BIDW E LL lot .

3 SR . ranch , Jl 2 bath s, base . on

p,, a c.

GAL LI POLIS - 3 BR . frame home on 2 A.
VAC AN T L AN D -

a
with acreage? II ~o
give a cal l r igh t now . We are offering a
very nfce old e r home tha t has been
remode led from top 10 bottom , Thi s fine
home has a fu ll basement . A lso you wil l .en
loy near ly JO acres of hi ll la nd ius t r igh t tor
grzing a few ca 11 1c, al.so for h1kinl?. T.lliS
prpe rtv oilers an a malJng p a noram 1c vtew
of t he beau t if ul Ohio River . Ca ll now for an
appo intment .

Dl lf ~rent

slte.s throug hou t county .

AT HOME :
BOBLAK E
446 - 1049
WALTLANE
446 -0458
BECKY LANE
446 -0458
DENVER HIGL E Y 446 -0002
KENNY RATLIFF367 -7529
VICKIE HAULDR E N
446 -4042

CAT , FEMALE. l onghC?ir ed . dog
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex ·
Lobrodor type. Both very
cdvoting . septic . sys tem s.
friend ly . l oveable . Ni ce·
Remodeling
do zer. backhoe. dump !ruck .
looking pels . 949· 2607 .
Room Additions
linieston e. grovel. block top FEMALE SHE PHERD. C~lie mixed
p011 ing , Rt . 143. Phone 1 (61-4 }
· Garages
1 terr1er
puppy . YolJng mae
~98_.·7~3_
31..:..___
Small rriole beag le. 742-2949.
BATHRO OMS AND Kitchens
remodel d . ce ramic fi le . plu rn · PUPPIE S-TO give owe,- . 949j'65~
bing , car pen try . and gcne~ol LONG - HAI RED kitte~o .good
moi ntehonce. 13 year~ E!'K ·
horne . 949-2093 .
742·2328
Tired o f pay ing la rge .ut ility . bi lls? If t he
perience. 992 · ~685 . ___ -· _ C..
Free Estimate s
answer js yes, give us a ca ll ngh~ now. We
Wor k Gua ranteed
PULLIN S EXCAVA TING. Comple te
are
altering a 4 BR home that ha s the
2.1o. ttc
Se rvice . Phon e. 992-2478 .
economy of na tura l gas hea t . $~5,900 .
· New Li s tin g - Own er is very _anx iou s to
·-----·--NE IG LER"S FOR b ui lding houses ,
sell th is very lovely hom e. II 1s a fram e
ANY
PERSON
who
has
anything
to
bathroomS , oil kinds of repair
ran c h· including three BR '~ ( lOx IJgive owo;o and does nO t alte r or
work ·ond whot hove rou . Guy
EXce lle nt building site. Three m iles from
10x: 11- 13x 11 ). 1'12 baths, l.argc living r oom
qtte mpt to offer 011y other thing
Neigler', Ra cine . Ohio. Coli
HMC . 1.40 acres surrounded by very ni ce
(16x20) wit h foye r. You w ill also e njoy a ,
lo
r
sole
may
ploc~
on
odin
th
is
homes . Call now .
BRA DFORD, Au ctionee r, Com949· 2508 eve~ i ng~ . ..,,-~spacio us eatin kit che n with se lf cleaning
collJmn There wil l · be no
plete Se~vice . Pho ne 949·2487 MAGGIES UPHOLSTERY . Refin ish ,
eye· level ove n a'nd a tab le top range pJu s a
_ ~ha r§te to the odvert!_se r
· or 94.9·2000. Racine. Ohio . Crill
Business Location - 742 Third Av e. Store
dishw a sher. Al so lois of wood cabinets {not
reup hOistery ,
rebui ldin g
room wi th lot s of storage. Cou ld be used
p las t ic) ' in c lud ing tormi ct~ tojlped
Beautiful selection of mole riol TWO YEAR Ol D DOG, housetroin ·
, ~B'.':'a~d~fo~':!.
d':.==:-c:::::-:-:::-for re t a il ou tlet, s uch a s grocery store or
ed. Wil l gi ve to good ho me,
coun te rs . This all e lec tric home has for ce.d
and viny ls. Free estimate . Tel.
El WOOO BOWERS REPAIR resta ur ant. It was used most recenfly as a
a ir heat and centr a l air condi tioning . Th ts
pre-lerrably in the co untry . Ca ll
742 ·2852 . l oca t io n: Solem
Sweepers , toast ers . irons, oil
produce house. Pri ce has .been reduced to
446.9635.
li ne hom e a ls o has a n overs ized two ca r
Cen ter .
smoll appliance s. lawn mower .
.. _..
$11.000
~--·
~--···ga r age th at has fi nishe d wa lls a n~ a _tex ·
next to Stole Highway Garage TUR
LEY 'S WRECKER Service . FRIENDLY LARGE OUTS IDE DOG .
tured ceiling p lus overhe ad stor,age W1111 a
on ·Rou te 7. Ph o n ~ {61-4) 985·
6 mos. old. Chi ldren 's pe·t. CO li
Recine , Ohio . Day or nigh t
New Lis t ing: 2 storv older home, s itua ted
_::::.:,:_
.
pull dow n ladder tor a~ce ss. There are
3825 .
446-3822.
949 ·2657 .
on·2 acres of nearlv t la t rand . Ju st righ t for
severa l oth er fine fea t ures. City sc hool s.
the handyman . Low $20's.
REMODELING, Plumbi ng, heating J;,Ny- Si:wiNG machine clea ned. FEMALE BEAGLE . Coli a ft e r 5prn .
Call now for fu rt!le r de tails .
and oi l rypes of gen e ral repair.
367·0137
oiled &amp; adj usted. $5 .98-. FREE
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
~~-~----~
pickup ond deliverv . Belpre, BLACK
We Are Offering Financing Through VA, FHA and Conventional Loans.
PUP. 6 mo. old. make
perience. Phone 992·2409 .
Ohio. 1-423-5497 .
good pet. Coli 446-0254 aft er
··--·--··;----,-SEWINC MACHINE Repai rs , ser· FEBRUARY IS the mon th to ho ve
Spm.
·Check With Us Before
11ice, oil makes, 992 ·4'26.4 . The
your upholstering done·bef ore sEvEN MONTH OLD . fema le Pu p·
Fobrrc Shop, P o m e roy .
the spring ru sh. Visi1 us lor
py, good with childr en. Call
Auth grized Singer Sales and
good se lectiOn of fabric s·
446·9319.
Ser11ice. We sharpen Scissors.
Reasonable prices and good
workmonsh 1p ,
B ob ' s
OWN E R WI LL VA · FHA ,....... Edge of town, th is home has
EXCAVATING , doze r, loader ond
Uphol ste ry , Main St ree t ,
thr ee bedroo m s a nd liv ing room fu ll y car p efcd, lull
boc:khoe work; dump trucks
ba th w it h showe r, beautif ul ki tc hqn with lots of
Rociile. In bock of Sew ·N· Sew
and lo· boys for hire : will hau l
~C'~·
ca bi nets, love ly di n ing room, lh ree ,:.lhe r room s. F ~r c,
fi ll dirt, to soil, lime!. tone and
_~
O_
ul_
le_I.~S.::
I o::.&lt;:.
•·:___ _ _ _ _
ed air furna ce, c ily waf e r and sewer, ci ty sc hoo l s~ .J rd
grovel. Coli Bob or Rog er Jcf· WINTER GEl lo your house? l et us
LIME STONE . grovel and sand . All
sta1e 11 ig hway wi t h a mp le park ing make 11 a br1rg.111.
fers , day phone 992 ·7089, nigh t'
make neces~ary repa irs . AI
siles
.
At
Richards
ond
Son.
Up
phone 992-3525 or 992- 5232 .
OWNER • OPERATORS
Tromm . Construc tion. 742 -2328.
per Rive r Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio .
LU XURY HOM E - Three mile s out. this love ly home
EXCAVATING , ' dozer , backho e
Coli 446· 7785.
has tour bedroom s, two lull ba th s, two half baths, lots
WANTED
IMMEDIATELY
and di tcher. Charles R. Hot·
of storage, cen tr a l air , patio, cove red d.ec.k, su nk e~ llv·
A A A CO NTRACTORS. Backhoe ,
Geo rge 5. Hobste tter Jr. ,
fie ld , Bdck Hoe Service ,
ing r oom, wood-burn tng tire pla_ce, la m1ly rO?m , drning
dozer , dump truck. Work done
MORGAN DRIVE AWAY, INC •
Rutland. Ohio . Phone 7-42 ·2008 .
Broker
room. lo ts ot livi ng area. Beauti fu l r~ra l settmg .
by the hour or by the iob . For
Freight Division Is in need of owner-operators to
101 1.12 Sycamore St .
HUFFiNE'S INTERIOR
Will do roofing , constructi on ,
fl ee estimates , Coll 256·1921.
~- -------~~operate throuQhout Midwest and So~h. Payload to
Pomeroy , Ohio
LA.RGE RURA L HOME ........, Three bedroom wi t h lull
DECORATING
plumbing ond heal ing , No jpb
PASQUAl E insula ting, 103 Cedar
42,000 lbs. Scheduled loading and unload•ng advance on
Coli JB8·8847 .
PHONE m -6333
basement located se ve n mi les ou t . Thi s hom e ha s large
too Iorge or too smell. Phone
St . Ga ll ipolis . Ph -4 46-27 16 or
beau t ifu l kitc he n, a ll room s spa cious. lo ts of srorage,
742-23-48.
~ach 'rip and final pay upon completion.
Office Hours : 9 A .M. to •'
367·0398 alter 5
two full baths 1 doub le ga rage, cou nty water, close to
_
For Full Details Contact :
P.M.
BILL'S MOBILE HOMES ond Home
Spring Va ll e y .
Close
Thu rs d illys a nc
Improvements. Free estlmoles .
MORGAN FREIGHT DIVISION
Saturd ay~ at noon .
w E NEE D LI STINGS - Lis t with us for a_c tion on vovr
Coll 446·2642 .
28651 U .S. 20 w .. Elkhart, lnd. 46515. Call 1-800.348·7421 ,
property . W e have buyers a~d le nde rs to hand le your
We have Two Tra ilers w lth
WATER WEll DRilliNG, Willia m
Out of Slat• 1·800·552'7609 Indiana.
·
prope rty. Li s t wit h us for act ton . ,
T.
Grdnt.
Ph
7422879
or
lots
ln
Tuppers
Plain
s.
An Equol Opportu nlty E mp loye r
Ohi o.
WE HAV E OTH ER L IST IN GS &amp; P ICT URES OF AL L
2&lt;S·5.,
JO'CO-::-:--:-:-:=-=-:==1 hom e In Tuppers P lains ,
OUR LI STI.NGS IN T H E O FFICE . COME l N &amp; L ET
TWIN RtVER.S MARINE 307 Upper
Ohio.
·
River Rood , Chrysle r Soles 8.
US HELP WITH YOUR R E AL ESTATE N EE OS .
4 Used Dryers. .. .... .. .. .... . .... $50. 00 and up
SWAIN
Ser11ice. Complete Hull Repqir .
1 ho m e on West Shade,
1 Maytag Autom,tic Washer..... . .. .. $150. 00
WE BU Y, SE LL OR TN ADE
Custom bul l! trailers. Phone
JUNK auto and sc rap metal. Ph.
AUCTION BARN
near Ch est er , Ohio .
1 Green Double Oven Range ....... .... $169.95
Dougl as We ther holt - Broker, 446-4244
446-8655
388·8776 .
Crow
l ho r:ne. New,
We se ll · a ny t h in q t or
SAL ES ASSOC IATE
1 Elec. Hot Water Heater.. .............. 50.00
an vbod v at ou r Auc tion
Subd iv ision , Rt. 7 near
GOOD USED FURNITURE; no t TRI·STATE UPHOlSTERY SHOP ,
Earl Wiht e r s 44,·3828
Barn
or
in
yuor
h
om
e
,
F
or
upholstered: and applian ces .
Five P oin ts .
1163 Sec . Ave., 446-7833 , even·
1 Green 42" Sink. ......... ..... . .... . .. . . $100.00
John Caudill ' 7 5 -416~
. n t o rm a t ion a nd pic ku p
Ph. 446·0322
__, ings .' .4.t6 ~ _1833.
4 K itchen Cabinets
Cha r les Kiesling 446· 3964
se rv ice call 256·11167
Look over our li stings
Sa le Eve r y Satu r da'l
LEie J
2S6·6740
GOOD USED REGRIGERATOR RE ESE TRENC HI NG SERVICE .
24~'... . .... ...... ... ......... $29.95 metal
Ni g ht a t 7 p,m·.
before you buy .
wa ter, sewer. electric gas li ne
AND FREEZER UPRIGHT OR
wood
or ditches . 12 inches wide to 5
CHEST . Ph. 446 · 03~2 .
Cheryl Le mle y
ft . deep. Wate rline hookups
42".. ......... .... . ...... .... .. $59.95 metal
SWAI""
TIMBER
Associate
after
4
p.m.
367
-7560.
Co!l
42".... .. .. .. .. . .............. . 589.95 meta·l
.Top prices for
--_,-·---·---~--Home Phone 742-2003
RUSS &amp; MAX Elli OTT
Top Quality
AUCTION SERVICE
1 White Baby Bed .............. .. ....... $49.95
Hilt011 Wallo, Sr.
len nox: Heating and air conditionPOMEROY FORREST PRODUCTS
K cn net h Swa in , Au ct.
2 Good Sets of Bunk Bets
Associa t e
-~----------·· WILL CAR E lor the e lderly in our
Call qq2 .5965
·
ing
Ropco
foam
insul
olion
.
Corn e r Th ird &amp; Oli11e
home . Pho11e 992·73 1-4 .
Home
Phon•
949-2519
446-85
15
or
&lt;1
46·0445.
Co
lt
after
$149 .95 &amp; $ 16M5 complete
~-ATTENTI ON MARE Owneq; :
Several Chest &amp; Dressers ...... .. ... $29. 95 up .
Snow Blade lcir k'!-t . Cub Cadet .
0 ' -::=-:::-:-:-::-:--:' :3::
A0 HA !tud serv1ce . lntrod ut: ing
SANOY
AND
BE
AVER
Insurance
245·534B
4 P c. Pecan King Size
to So ut hern o'h io , Cortoko, So r·
Co . hos offered services tor fire
DEP RESS ION
GLASS .
Coll
re B son al Otoe . Breed for col·
Bedroom Suites, complete .......... $599 .95
in~v r an c e coverage in Gallic
CAS H paid lor oil mokes" ,9nd
4-46·4149.
or, con ~o r mot lon ond di sposi ·
19" Color TV's
w e have e nla r g e d o ur
Coup ty lor a lmost a centurv .
mode ls of mob ile homes .
lion . Phone 69$-62-41 eve nings
Farm . home. and personal pro· BORDER'S GARAGE DOOR SER ·
BODY PARTS for '69 Chevrolet
sende e d e part m e nt an d
Phone areo code 6 i4 · 423·~53 1 .
1 to 2 years old .. .. .. ...... • .. • S2 50 to $300
'
or
write lqr breeding con tract.
perty coverages ore ava ilable
truck. Coli 446·3413.
will se rv ice Hotpolnt and
VICE . Comme rlcol and residen ·
Bel le Echd Ouorler· H or!t~JS ,
TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest ProRed Maple Coffee Table ................. $5.00
to meet indi vidual needs .Con ·
tiol, apeciolizing in operators-.
othe r bra nd s .
.t0225 SR 6rn , Pornero'l , Ohio
ducts . Top price for stOnding CHIP WOOD
tact Charles Neal , your
Poles mo )l' .
3 New Tables .. ...... ...... .... . ... $59 . 95a set
l ocal 256-6.472.
45769.
sawtimber. Co li 9q2.5965 or
neighbor and age nt ..
diometer 10" on largest end , SB
5 Wringer Washe r..... ............. $99.95 &amp; up
DOZER WORK , excavot inQ, land
,~_. Ke~anby , 1 · 44~-857 0 : ___ ,
per ton. Bundled slob, S6 pe r
cleo ring , Ph . .t46·005 1
Pomeroy Landmark
Several Oak Desk~.............. .. 539. 95 each
ton. Delivered to Ohio Pallet
COINS . CURRENCY . tokens . old
Co., Rt . 2, Pomeroy . 992·2689.
pocket wa tches ond chains .
Green SOla............ . ... . ....... ........ $25.00
STAN l EY
STEEMER CARPET
·~.Jack W. C..rsey, Ma r .
silver and gold . We need 1964 GOO D USED tractor with
Cl EANER , Any living ro-?m and
Hotel Chairs with oak frames. .. ...... $10 ea .
,
...
Phone992·2 111
and olde r silver coins. Buy, sell ,
ha ll $29 .95 up to 300 Sq, Fl ..
hydraulic. 3 pt . hi tch . 742-3074 .
2 Used Funbusters
or !rode ' Call Rog er ·Woms ley .
Southeastern 01-)io No. I
SILVER DOllARS and coins . Top
742·23:11.
Carpet Cleaners. Ask about our CARPENTR'f -room odd 11i ons.
with Beepers. ... .. .. .. ..... ... 5 59. 95 each
Storm
Windows.
dollar po fd . Co!l 742-2316.
Christmas gift certifictes . Ph ,
An c horing , Skirting,
roofing . siding. and general
OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes, 'bra ss
4208.
6l.t-.t46·
Storm
Doo rs .
bed~ . iron beds, etc. 1 comp lete
repairs . Colt 37q:::·2~63
~5·;-~
A w nings,
Pat i o
households . Write M. D. Miller,
Repla cement
W in ·
CHAIN liNK FE NCINC , WOO DEN SANOY A.NO BEAVER . Insurance
Cov er s ,
Carpor t s,
Rt. 4 , Pomeroy, dhia or coli
FENCING , AWNINGS. Pat io
Co. hos offered fire insurance dows , Patio Cove r s ,
992-7760.
. Roof ,P ili nt, Set- up
co'w'ert , Auh's Home lm·
coverage in Golllo County 'or
Aluminum S iding and
provemenls. Ph. 4146·3608 after
and Re· leveling Call .
olmost a centurv. Form . home
~0 IT.EM TOO Lorge or tQo small . DACK TERMHING SPECIAliST ,
.
.
A ccessories. Call
ond
pe
r
sonal
property
Will bu y 1 piece or complete
PEST COt&gt;; JROl . l icensed . IN·
co11eroges ore ava ilable to
sured ,
~ree
Ins pecti o n .
household. New , us&amp;d , or onti ·
BACK HOE, DOZE R. OITCHER and
mee t ind ividu al nee~s . Contact
ques . Morfin's FlJ r"'i ture . 20 N.
Member NPCA ond OPCA . C.
dump !ruck. Concrete work .
lewis Hughes , your neighbor
2nd 51. , Middl€porl. Phone
M. Hall .- Wilkesv ille , Ohio. Ph:
Hatfield Bo1..kh6e Ser ., Rutland .
and ogeht ,
, -·
669-4914 ,
~92 - 6370 .
Oh . Ph. 7.t2-200a or 446·2786 .

______

Open Evenings Til 8 : 00. 5:00 P . M . on S at . ·

'

SECOND AVE . - 5 ren1al units . All presently occ upied
- Prlce Redu ced.

AI Tromm
Construction

I

tiale

RIVERVIE W DRIVE - Two story , ' BR . from •. w.b.
Frpl. . 2 car garage on 280' river fron ta ge

LARRY LAVENDER

So .:: 34

for

NEW LISTING-CHESHIRE Lovely all brick
ranch. w-fec . rm . in base .. 3 BR .. 2 bl!l ths , 2 car oerag!.

t
2·5· 1 mo .

FREE ESTIMATES
Stor m
W i ndow s &amp; Doors
R e pla c eme nt
W indows
Alum inum
Sidi ng· Soffit.t
Gutte rs· Awnings

lt..aJ i:•lah·

Office

.,.,

Rooting

992-2126

Real.l!:s tatelor Sal••

REALT~

Tom White, Salesman. Home Phone 446-9557

'110

FIREWOOO,. SPliT and delbte red.
S-45 o cord or $35 a truckload.
All hordl(&gt;'ood. '843·2933 or ·
992·6295.'

-FIREWOOD . S25' per pickup load .

and ~ttics
-save Fue l &amp; Money-

ll

.J49 · ~660 . Ro ~!rf.s se_II,--

----

PomtfOJ

Blown Into Walls

Carpel i Uphols1e1J
Phone Mike Young

$53'85

PRICED AT

992-2174

· Cellulose Fiber

Roull l Pomt111f, 0.

ba r , Scottsda le . S ALE PRI CE

SALE PRICE

Ellraclion

Young's
Carpeting

Si l ver, 305
aut o. 1r ans.,
P.S .. P . B., radia l tires, ro l l

Let's

NEW '77 CHEVELLE
MALIBU CPE.

'77 CAPRICE

' 1000

equipped

~

You Buy.

SALE ENDS FEB. 28TH

WE NEED LISTINGS

SAVE$ SAVE$ SAVE

-

NEW GMC
Truck Heodquoners
197-4 ' , T. GMCPic kup
1974 1,, T. GMC Pickup
1973 11 Chev. Pickup
1974 1, T. GMC PU
CARTER 'S PlUMBING
1- 1971 11 T. Chev. PU
AND HEA TING
197-4 1 ~ T. C h ~v . PU
Cor. Four th&amp; Pi ne
1973 EICornino with lop
Phone 446·3888 or 446-44777
1974 ', T. Fo rdPU
STANDARD
1974 three-lour th Che'(. PU
Plumbing - Heeling
197 1 GMC 9500 Tractor,
215 Third Ave., 446-3782'.::-:c: - 1974 '1 T. Ford Pic kup
1975 I, To':' Chevrolet Pickup
, GENE PLANTS 8 SONS
1975 ', T. Chevrolet PU
P LUMBING ~ Heating - Air Con1973 1 • T. GN.C PU
di tioning, 300 Fourth Ave . Ph .
197ll Ford •·7 T. Pickup
446· 163 7.
1973 F700 Ford Dump Truck .
OEW~IT.~l.~
S~.P~
LU_M_B~IN_G
_ __
197-4 F2SO Ford Super Cob PU
AND HEATINC
1973 lnlernolionol 1600 Series,
Route 160 at Evergreen
cob &amp; chassis, tandem dr ive
Phon e -446 ·2735
'
SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS. INC. ool
DRAIN &amp; SEWER ClEANING SER·
1.13 Pine St.
VICE , Open 24 f-ir 7 days o
446-2532
week . Starcher &amp; :;on. Ph
256-139 1
'

.

$3683

S1eam

~

1976 FORD MAV ERICK , vi n,-1 ro of' NICE PIGS for sole. Coli alter 5.
PS, new tire s, 10,000 miles.
949-2857 .
QKt, CO!ld. $34 95 · Co ll 4 ~ 6 · 4610 · SEL LI NG our dlJe to il l health :
1962 FORD GAlAXY , good cond iSmol! grocery ~ lor e and gas
tion . slicK shift . Also 1967 Buic k
station wi th :r. tock and equip·
Special. auto .. for ports. Ca ll
ment . locat ed at Long s11 ille on
44b · ~304 or 446·9014
Route .124. Very .good buy. COli
1977 DODGE STREET VAN , e Ktro . J.;_~ · 586B or'7 42 · 90_
&lt;5_
. ~-'--'---"
sharp Coli b75.3J80 offer 5 THR EE BROWN Belevedere shOm ·
P·'' '
poo bow ls. 992-3829 af te r 6 or
(30&lt; }773-5352.
1907 FOR O lTD in good
mechon i.;.ol con d,, good body . ROUND BA l ED ho v for sole. Call
Also 1969 ChEtvy '1 P ic ~ up ,
843-2524 .
C· IO Flee ts1d!l , w1 lh 183 motor ,
ONE
3 pl. hit ch 2 row Powell plant
32 .000 mile:r. . 4 spd . trans . Coli
S(!lfer , $200 . 1 '6 cyl. Chev .
388·8465.
engine . 4 sp. tran smission.
1970 OLDS CUTLA SS, 6 cyl., au to ..
Runs good . $95, 247·2 192.
good co nd . , snow tires .
HA Y fOR SAL E. 1500 boles
44b,3827.
T ~o thy hoy . 992-7573 .
1
1977 FORD 1 T. PIC KUP, 302
auto ., Slide..reor -wi nd ow . PS. HAMMERMIL LS FOR ce llu l o ~~e in ·
sV Iolion monu foclur ing. 16" Ia
CB and tope dvcl&lt;. . 9,000 miles ..
48" ovoiloble . Thermco In·
MUST
SEll.
Take
ove r
duslr ies , 1-412-922 -4'853.
poyrnenls . Call 446-1064 .

-- -

S AL E PRICE

MOTORS, INC .

Blown Insulation

Superior

NEW DEWX
6%' SPORT PICKUP

Dea ler P rice
56450 .60

.;·

!te al

NEW

RE DUCE SAFE &amp; fa st with GaBese
Tablets S E-Vop "wdtci" pills'"
Ne lson Drug '
-·._._.
MIXED HA'f lor sole . $1 .25 bole.
~--

-

1976 Ch e vy l uv outo sl1ding boc.k
gloss. f'h 446·0109__ ~ . ....,..
1972 CHEVY PICKUP Skidmore Foste r Cool Co,, Pine St .,
Go ll1p ohs, 0 .

Br onze, ;an . vlnYt r oof/ leather interior, full power anrl
air-, cr uise control, AM-FM stereo t&lt;"'oe .

Dea ler list $46 48

NEW '78
1h &amp; %TON

• .

for tialc

BUD McGHEE

·428 S ECOND

. .

SMITH NELSON
p~

._-,;·

~
:· · ::

~cu

IN .. ,.,. te tM

2-2~ tfc

1965 CHE'V El lE. 4-dr ., A.C.. 283
e ng 2 bbl. , Ol.llo . tr·o11s, Excellent condit ion . T r ue~ topper ' ·
std 8 ft . bed, 28 in . high.
7-42-2485 .
. HA 'f FOR SALE
HAY FOR SALE. 985·3849 or
985·4248 .

DAN THOMPSON FORD
992· 219(

GOOD SELECTIDN

While, AM radio, 4 cyl ., std.
trans .

'1000

See: P at H i ll , R oc k y Hupp
or Darre l Dod ri ll
Fo r a g o od d eal o n a _new or used ve h icle

•r-the'-e-t

BRANCH

~~~?1:

Nil

C..r•,

O pen
9:00 til9 : 00 Mon .• Friday
9 ;00ii l 6 ; 00 S.tur doy
12:00til6 :00 Sunday

NEW CHEVROLET CARS ·- TRUCKS
MODEL CARRY OVER CLEARANCE
NEW WV TRUCK

OFF ON
ECONOLINE
VANS

-=-=

Radiator
Service

R c all:slalc

VS

Wood Stoves

EX PERl

ME I GS P L A ZA
Mi dd lepo rt, Oh io

1974

•1000

&amp; SUPPLIES

Louted In The

Automatic , P. S.. P . B., air .

Cadillac Cpe.

WAUJAPER.

ACE HARDWARE

4 DR. ~
LTD'~S~~::;

· 76

Business Services

low mileage. sharp.

OFF ON

77

R ea l .Estate for Sale

Saluting A. R. Knight's Birthday

WE'VE GOT 'EM!
BIG FORDS! •
ROOMY FORDS!
'1000

Feb. l2, 1978

----

All TYPES of building materials,
block , brick . sewer pipes, win·
dews , lint els. etc. (:laude
Winters , Rio Grande . 0 . Phone
_
24_
5t ~1- ~l of ter ~S'. ---~­

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

SCANDI NAV IAN HEALTH FOOD.
Loos~ng, gain ing , ma intenance .
Pa tsy Fitch , cons ul tan t. Call
-4 46-420 4.
RECO NDIT IONED RAZORS .
Norelco, Su nbea m ~. Re ming ton
and Sch ick . $9.50 to $17.50 ,
Tawney Jewelers , 424 Second

EASTER BASKETS , mode to prder
by Mar ch 15. Co ti256 ."J496 a fter
3:30pm.
HOUSE COA L
De livered , $37 . a lon . limestone ,
delivered . Water line s thawed .
Coll446-3477 ,

LAYNE'S NEW &amp; USED FURNlfURE
NEW
.
Swivel rOck ers (gold , green or
SAWMILL SLABS
b1 ow n) $125; Solo, choir
. PENNIES , DIMES , quar t ers,
rocker , ottoman, 3 tables,
A BUNDLE
0
$500 : Bedroom suite , rnople or
:-"A'C':-'::.·:"c":~c--=c-:-:=-c=--:=--::
halves. For coin co llectors.
$100 TRADE· IN ON .YOUR OLD - bate fr om 1B60 to 1950. Townev
pine. $ 150: 30" electri c ranges,
SUIT E, (NO MATTER WHAT TH E
Jewelers, 42-4 Second.
$200 . 'Baby beds $65 : Baby bed
CO NDITION) WHEN YO U BU Y
·
f
mattresses $20: Bedroom suite
ANV NEW li VING ROOM SUIT E MARY KAY COSMETICS, ree
while, $250; SJOO , wh ite, maple
(S OFA BE DS NO T INCLU DED.)
fecio l. Patsy Fitch , consuh ont.
or pine., $300: Sofa &amp; Choir
EXAMPLE : NEW 2 PC. UV. RM .
Coll 446·4204 .
$200: Medit erranean !iofa and
Baile y Run Road
SUI TE, $399.95. $100.00 TRADE·
love sect $325: Ear Am solo '&amp;
Phon• H2.5965
IN AL LOWANCE FOR YOUR
choir, $300: modern solo: choir .
OLD SUITE . YO U PAY ONLY
loveseot $275; 50io bed with
$299 .95 . RICE 'S FUR NITURE . 854
matching choir $150; Reclin ers GRAIN FED FREEZER BEEF , Ph
FOR SAL E or Trade : 1973 Ford
SECOND. -4 46-9523.
$100: ond up: Tables, Coflee ,
F· 100 pickup. In good condition .
446·0760 --~-,-,­
oak He xagon , maple or p1ne
12 ·HP JOHN DEERE and bel!y
46,000 miles . For o station
COAL
AND
liME
~TONE
delivered.
$60 each ; Rocker $55: maple or
mower . Call 367·7878 after 4
wagon of eq ua l val ue .
Co t! David Vaughan of 245·5309
pine table, 4 choirs $225 ; Hutch
p.m.
. 9&lt;9·2322 .
$275; 7 pc. Dinette , $109; 5 pc. FIREWOOD $25 . pickup load ,
LOWREY ORGAN wi th Tenie
Dinette $55 .00. Bunk beds co m367 -0586
Genie feature. Five mOnths
plete $150: chest of drawer ,$38 ,
old. Coll 446 -7736ofter 5 p.m.
Queen size mattress &amp; box spr· ' NEW FURf'IIT URE SALE : Bemco
Twin Sets : mattress and bp~t
ings set $1 30, Reg. or: Twin $60
SPliT FIREWOOD . Call 367-7431 .
spring, $119.95: Map le or
ea.
walnut fini sh beds. $69.95; QUARTER HORSE , blaCk stall ion, 3 .
GOOD USED
yrs. Old. $100. Co l/ 256-6602 .
woode n dinett e choirs, $11.95 .
Table. 6 choir s 8o china. dryer s,
AI Corb in ond Snyder Fur·
ranges. 2 draw file cobinet:r., 3
niture . 955 Se&lt;;ond Avenue,
sets of coff ee and end toble s.
Gollipoli .s , 0 .
TV's , Freezer s bedroom suites,
desks , beds , ches ts , dr eii~ers , HAY FOR SALE by the bole or
tables, lam ps. choirs , other
drucklood. Coli 256-6535 .
Items. book case . coil 446-0322
.
I
HAWKS INS . AGENCY
Monday thru Friday 9 fo 8 p.m ..
Saturday 9 to 5 p.m . 3 mi out FOR Al l YO UR INSURANCE
NEEDS, coll446-2300
Buloville Rd.
FOR THE BEST IN FURNITURE 1 REFRIGERATORS . WASHERS AND
is currently accepting applications for the following
DRYERS, WRINGER WASHERS,
UPHOLSTERING , Free Estimates
positions ; Ptrsonal Advocacy Coordinator for Gallla
RANGES , All SOL O WITH
Pick up and de livery service .
County and Personal Advocacy Coo rdinator tor
GUARANTEE. WE ALSO SER·
ca ll Mow rey's Upholstery, Pt .
Jockson
County ; Will provide prevention services to
VICE APP LI ANCES . SKAGGS
Pleosonl, W. Vo. 675--4 154 .
lnd lvlduols with developmental disabilities such os
APPLIANCES. 191B EASTERN
men,ally reta rded, cerebral palsy, ep ileptics. autistic,
'AVE., Coll446-7398 .
NEED A WATER
emotionally disturbed and hlndlcoppod persons. Tills
SPLIT FIREWOOD. Col/36'7·0612 or
will be ca r ried out lttrough the use of community
SOFTENER?
367 ·05) 1.
· volunteers. Coordinate Center tervices for the
dovelopmenlolly di sabled w llll all external programs,
FREEZER , lARGE CAPACITY, douLet Pom eroy Landmark
agendas and development Individuals, os well as wllll
ble chesfl, 256· 1-467
·soften &amp; condition your.
internal Center program s. Quallflcalions - Ba che tor' s
wa ter with Co-op water
HOUSE COAL, B.B. &amp; M. Coo l Co ..
degrH
In a related f ield or equivalent experience In
softene r , Mode l UC-SVf,
ESR. Goll ipolls Coll 256·1567.
lll is typo of work.
W.VA. CHUNKS. FirAploce cool.
Now On ly '•279.95
Sk.ldmore -Foster Cool Co ., Pine
The Mental Hnlth Center Is a private, non.prolll
'
St., Gallipolis . 0 .
corporation and on equal opportunity employer.
l:,et us test you r water Free :
Pleose cantoct tho Centor Porsonnel Office at lilt
PEN DEl TON REBUILT BATTE RlES
-----~ .....-.
Community Mental Htollh Confer In Gallipolis,
$18 with e xc hange, new onea
Pom~ Landmark
Tt lophono; 446·552t, if quollfltcl and lnlertsttd.
~uo ronteed . 386-8596
Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
AdcliHonol information Is avollablt lllrough lilt Ohio
FEEDER
PIGS
,
40
to
bO
lbs
.
Coli
~hon• 992-2 181
Burnu of Employment Sorvlc.s.
256· 13$2. '

$5.00

POMEROY FOREST
PRODUCTS .

THE GALLIA-JACKSON-MEIGS
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER

,,
L

. '

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

RUTLAND FURNITURE
BARGAIN CENTER .

30". .... .. ................. ... . . $49.95

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

-

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE

...

______________

BILL'S

~

446-2642

BIU'S

-·--.

. .::.==---- -

446-2642

�•

~-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. l2,1978

J&gt;.7- The Sunday 'J'imes.Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 12, 1978

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Real 'Eotate f.,.. Sale

.
tleal ~!: •lat e fur Sale

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
I

~~-.,.,:.
- -

-

Ileal ~!:•tale f« Sale

- - - -~

Jtea.l Eotate

THE WISEMAN REAL
ES.TATE AGENCY

" JUST LISTED" Beau"Wut .spacious 2 yr ol d r anch, 3
BR, 2 full baths You' ll fee I It ke you're lea f ing through
a de~or a t o r magaz1ne when you look at th 1s hom e, f ull y
~ a r peted, co lor coordtna t ed d rapes stay, B'x 13' Ba trh tll
Sandst one fi r eplace, 2 car ga rage, ex tensive tandsca p

•ng, cobblestone Stdewa lks, outdoor barbecue ptt, over
tha lf

acre

Unbe l tevable buy at $52 .500

NEW HOME TOUR

We have F I VE BRAND NE W

HOME S pr iced fr o m S32,000 All a re q ua li ty bud t w tth
energy savmg construct ton, al l have ft r ep laces, e,ct ra
lg lot s, 1 or 2 car garages, 1 or 2 ba th s, full y c arpeted,
bea ut 1f ull y decor aTed and l andsca ped Ca ll for an a p
pom t ment TAKE TH I S MO NE Y SAVI NG TO U R !
TWO BEDROOM w1 t h space to ex pand, bn ck and

fr am e, has we i! pla nned ktfchen w ith ran ge 1 ca rp eted,
all e lec t rrc, Ig. 100'x 150' level lot , trees Gr ea t starter
hom e, $22,000
SSS ... Don't let l h ts be one of the opportlmt l les tha t
passes you by , r est auran t dotng grea t bus•ness tn

DOWNT OWN GALL I POLIS pr esen tl y sea ts 48
Modern ell rcien t equ tpm ent, b ill i ar ds and r ec rea tt on
rm Ca ll or stop by t ile Off iCE' and l et us show you th l!
Can m ake money for you
TURN OF THE CENTURY , COLONIAL BaSICall y
sound home needs a handy man 's touch bu t wh at a buy!
4 BR , Lg l1vmg rm , f amil y rm , form a l d•n•ng, cha r m
mg foyer w1th open sta•rway, plus ext rq tg lot w rtt·
plenty of r oom f or a ga r de n Your s for S22, 000
CROWN CITY AREA, 11!2 story hom e, lr am e "wrth
alumtnum Sld.ng, 3 BR , garage, storm doors and w 1n
dow s, 2acres $17,500
LOOKING FOR SOMETHING SPECIAL., We
homes $59,000 an d up Shown by appomtmen t onl y

o.a...

LOG CABIN - Large ston e
fir epla ce , modern b ath ,
lolt , togs ar e hand hewn , H
wooded acres, great p lace
to get awav

INCOME PROPERTY 22,000 SQ
ft
bull dtng
loc ated m M iddleport. rent
potenflal ot over SJO, OOO per
year Call lor mor e In
format ton .
MORGAN TOWNSHIP
36 acres near Me1gs Mmes ,
s acres level, most of
balance could be pasture ,
small stream , townsh iP
road, S11.900

VACANT LAND NEAR
RODNEY Approx 55
acr es of lev el &amp; rol tmg
farm la nd w1 l h POI'I d tob
base , barn &amp; co wat er
Th is property fronts on 2
rds tn a ver y des.rable
1qc at 1on Lo ts of po ten ttal
for sss,ooo

NEAR TYCOON LAKE
38 S acre f arm is level &amp;
rol ltng land w1 lh abou t 15
acres ltllable &amp; the ba la nce
1n wOods fl '1 story home
ha.s been ntcety rery~octe t e d
&amp; off ers 4 B R's. nice kt l ·
cMen w 1th stove &amp; r efr 1g,
oil fur nace 8. w w ca roet
MINI FARM ..- 14 acres
roll tn g l and , com pl ete l y
remode led , 1•'1 story home ,
tog ba r n and pond loca ted
on Hannan Trace Rd In
Ha r nson Twp

OVERLOOKING RIVEt&lt;
- Nice 2 BR cottage 1s
loca ted on Rou te 7, 4 ml
south of town on 97 acre
Drive by this one &amp; you'll
adm1t It 's ba r gam pnced at
115.500

~ISTI .NOS NE~DED · ~'

f'IO
ADVE~TIS
IIATI!)NALLY- WE IU
~ SELL - TIACIE. -

EXCElLENT. DAIRY FARM

Near ly new full y equ ipped mllkmg parlor , pipeline,
tank , approx 95 acr es, J pond s, land lay s good for
da.ry f arm 1ng 3 B R re m odeled farm home, family rm
Th is f ar m can be boug ht w tth all f arm eQUipment In ·
crud•n g a f•n e her d of ca tt le Also 127 add' l ac r es
av a il abl e for lease J UST LI STE D SHOWN BY AP
POIN TM E N T ONLY

P'RIME DEVELOPMENT LAND near proposed toter change new Route 35 Th1s would be an 1deal location
for motel, apartments, r estaur an1. etc . owner w•ll
finance, ca ll fnr mnrP rtPt ;:u lc:

MAIN
POMEROY,

RUSSELL WOOD

REALTOR
446-1066
Mose canterbury
446·3408

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

446-3636
ANY HOUR
OR BETTER YET ... STOP BY AND SEE US AT2S'h
LOCUST H., GALLIPOLIS, 0

Realt~r

Associate

Evenm

446·3005

KANAUGA: On 5th Ave, 2 bedrooms , large lot ,
natural gas Pnced$18,500

IB

RODNEY: We have 2 r anch styl e, 3 bedroom ,
carpetedall electr •c homes for sale now for $25 ,000
S1tuated on 75' x120 ' lots These are rea l bargain s on to
day's market. Call for more info

.-.u o~ I

MILL CREEK RD. : New, 3 bedroom ranch style hom e,
manv amen•l•es, only 3 miles from downtown
GalliPOliS Everythtng new $47,500

RON CANADAY, REALTOR
Audrey Canaday
Realtor Assoc•ale
Lou Lutton

NEW LISTING : New home cons1stlng of l•v•ng room ,
kitChen d1n1ng area, ut1l1t'{ room, 2 bedrooms, bath w
shower , rural water, wrap around porch, carpeted,
garbage disposal. all the com forts of home Call for
more .nformat1on Pri ce $35,000

"' t

PLANTZ SUBDIVISION on C.rcle Or , 3 bedroom
car peted home, rural water, 2 extra lots, total size
180'x140'. FA, nat gas heat, only 5 min utes from
GallipoliS or hosp1tal. $39,500

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY
i218 EASTERN AVE.

GAUIPOLIS, OHIO
"We Sell Better Livin~"

OFFICE 446 7013
HOME WITH RENTAL- Buy thlS 3 bedroom nome
bath, d1n 1ng room , encl osed back por ch and let the
rent f rom a 2 bedroom garage apartment help make
your payment Good locat ion In town
home, 3
bath, d ining room . almost new furnace,
a little work but is a good buy for $12,800 Owner
to sell toda y. Nice lot m Bidwell

MILL CREEK- Good hom e wilh 3 bedrooms, bath ,
room , 1h basement, good r ental for $10,500
ACRES - Good r ol ling land suitable for hunting or
camping w1th cab1n, $14,500 .
PONY KEG - Th• s wel l know n Carry Out Is one of the
area s best A mo r.~y mak lng business that includes
the pr(.lperty , nice lot to Oh ro R1ver, fixtures and
Business has a very good net tncome per
Stop tn and let u ~ gtve you all the defa lis

FOR
FRIENDLY
PROFESSIONAL
WITH
YOUR
REAL
ESTATE
CALL OR STOP
IN
AT OUR
PLilNTYOF FREE PARKING.

Evenings Call
Oscar Baird; Realtor 446 4632
fuller, Realtor 446-4327

CLIPPER MILL: Newly renovated , 3 bedroom home
wtth w b . f.repla ce, carpeted , nver frontge &amp; vi ew , 2
car garage, must see to apprec1ate Pn ce $30,000
GALLIPOLIS CITY: 5 Bedrooms, located 1n center of
downtown, can be used as 2 apartments, n1 cely fmi sh
ed, some furn1ture mcluded $35,000
NEW LISTING. 3 bedroom , 24' )(60' , 1972 Bo1xe
Cascade mobile home, su .. :• ·I)\M.G'6 acre lot, 2 mil es
from Holzer, wo .,.., c
'love, electric fa
furnace, rural w;. ~Lio . ....~ 1ncludes furniture. washer
&amp; dryer, many other amenities Buy for $19,500 00

pl:,l\

•

NEAR VINTON : 151 acre farm, 4 bedroom home,
100' x20' equipment shed, corn crtb, ba r n, tillabl e,
woods and pasture acreage Pnce $75.000
NEAR GALLIPOLIS CITY LIMITS: Small cottage, C! ·
tv water, c1ty sewer , fenced in yard, small orchard,
detached garage, natural gas Prke $23,000
GALLIPOLIS · For sale or tease, 151000 sq . ft., 1-f loor
bnck building w1th room for 40 autos in pa r k1ng area .
No steps, 1deal for profess1onal of f ices Call for more
1nformat1on.
EWINGTON : Corner lot w station bu 1ldmg, plus addttmnallot across street Call for more Information

NEAR PORTER: (Whealon Rd .) Modern 3 bedroom
home, plus 30 rolling acres, finished basement A nice
place to move the famllv Prtce $59,000
NEW LISTING: 4 rm. home , located Ol'l Mad1son Ave.
1n city . Clty water and sewer. Pnce $7500
LOT . 110'&gt;&lt;230' located in F v,·rq t ... t. drea, ca n be pur
chased for $5,900 Also, acrea ge up 1o 15 acre s for S1 ,000
per acre Call for more info

OLDER STORE BUILDING loc ale&lt;! on uppe r 2n&lt;l
Aenue, 1n c•ty Buy now for $14,500 00.
WE NEED LISTINGS : IF YOU ARE THINKING OF
SELLING GIVE US A CALL .. LET US HELP YOU!
IF YOU ' RE PLANNING
TO SELL, CALL US , WE
HAVE A LIST OF PRO·
SPECTIVE
BUYERS,
,AND WE'RE ANXIOUS
TO SERVE YOU .
I

IF YOU DON ' T SEE THE
PROPERTY YOU WANT
IN THIS AD. CALL, WE
MAY Be ABLE TO FIND
IT FOR YOU.

446-6610

Ph. H. 446-9539
Gallia County's Fastest Growing Real Estate Agency

CALL 446-3643

REALTO~

We Need Your Home or Farm To Sell
Bonnie Stutes
Evenings

LIST
WITH

0.

NEW LISTING - J yrs old
brick &amp; frame ranch,
equipped li 1tch en, fC'rmal
dining , 2 baths, uf tllty,
carport , 1 j evel a cr e .
$33,000 .00
NEW LISTING - Approx
14 a cres , several build tng
sties. close 10 oh good road
$10,000 00
BRAND NEW Lovely
r anch type located on
corner, 1 level acre , 3
bedrooms , bath , formal
d1nmg , f~replace . carport &amp;
storage
BUY
NOW
$35,900 .00
BUSINESS BUILDING - 2
story bnck , 2 rooms down ,
2 apartment s up, good
locafton , needs repa~r .
$6,900.00
POMEROY - Older home
but lovely .J be~rooms,
bath ,
formal
d•nmg,
hardwood f loors , 2 porches,
overlook s
the
r.ver
$12,000 00
Put yourself m our hands.
Whether you're house
hunting, selling or both
- Your 1nteresfs are OUR
tnlerests!
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992-2259- 992 -6099
992· 6191

lH
HALIO~

TEAFORD[g
VIRGIL B. SR.

NO DOWN PAYMENT
WITH VA LOAN
6 Room s, 3 BR approx Ph mt from
Galltpoh s Elec tri c FA furnace With cen
tr al a.r. modern k•tch en. Galltpol•s C1t y
Sc hool Di st Fully car petd , Gallipo liS C1ty
water, sewage sy stem M et al outs1de
doors &amp; thermopan e w t ndows Sma II
children go to Gr een School N!Ce level
landscaped lot Only $34,900 00.
YOU CAN STOP
DREAMING
Ranch style home wtlh a 11
the room and beauty you
could dr eam of Formalliv·
.ng room &amp; d1n . room. lg,
k1tchen With eat ·m bar, lots
of cab1nets, d•shwasher
and range. Family room
has a r ustc se ttmg , stone
w .b f.reptace and sl1dmg
pat•o dpors , J lg. BR, 2 full
baths upsta 1rs Downstatr s
mcludes a rustiC looking
fam •IY room w1th wood
burner. lg. ec room,
bath, ut1l 1fy r oom and sew
room or poss 4th BR THIS
HOME WAS DESIGNED
WITH LIVNIG IN MIND
HOME &amp; INCOME
PRODUCING PROPERTY
6rooms, 3 BR home located
on old R t 160 in Porter with
1974- 14' x72 ' mobile hom e
J BR with com tete k •tchen,
electric cook stov e &amp;
refrig F A furnace, cen
tral air Home has a stoker
coal stove L111e m one
rent the oth er Gatlia Rural
Water System llf? lot All
for on l y $27,000 00 Call
Now
8 ROOM HOUSE
IN CITY
Th1S is a very mOdern at
tract i ve
brick
home
1
d only a short
o-i,;tai1Ce from city schools,
shower. very
nice kl
lots of
cab•net s &amp; almost all ap·
phance s possible included .
Basemen t, nat. gas F .A.
turn , central air, very mce
carpet Many more 1fl111t1ng
features Including new car ·
port &amp; cha i n Hnk fence
ThiS home is in top cond1
lion .
SELLING
REA SONABLE
7ROOMHOME&amp;
PROFITABLE
RESTAURANT
W1th 37 11.. A of level land
Home has 3 B. R .• base
ment, formal din1ng room ,
living room with woodburn
mg fireplace, modern ktt chen All rooms have wall
to wall carpeting. Storm
doors an9 w1ndows Mllt&lt;. lng house &amp; parlor, corn
crib RESTAURANT - 40
ft x52 ft with all equipment
needed Approx. 50 ft. from
home City water system.
All mineral nghts goes
w1th property A nice home
w1th an excellent 1nvest·
ment building CALL NOW.
8 ACRES-LOTS
OF PINE TREES
Deep well. Electnc pump
Well house, epttc tank. 411:2
m•les to M1ne No. 1 Ap prox. S acres of timber All
8 acres level Ia ncl ,

RIVERFRONT HOME
3BEDROOMS
Beautiful v1 ew on the OhiO R1ver nght
from your 11ving room . L 1ke to boat , fi sh
and relax ea ch even.ng on you r own n ver front" 6 r oom s remodeled home , mce
modern kit chen , F and B porches, nat gas
forced a1r furn ace, all r ooms are n1 cely
carpeted Your own w a ter syste m Wh1te
alum outside covering, 2 large n• cely
shaded lots w lth cherry tree s and one
peach A very econom ical place to l111e.

NICE COLONIAL HOME
IN GALLIPOLIS
One of the attractive older
two story
homes in
GallipoliS, 7 rooms, 4 BR ,
2•h baths, bui lt In k it, F . A
nat gas furnace, nice large
front porch, screened in
ba ck porch, n 1ce tot with 4
car ga r age •n back, c lose to
church and bus1ness sect
downtown. Th iS property IS
.n good cond1t1on and pric
ed to sell .
123 A. CLEARED
ROLLING LAND
Approx 40 A . tillable, 60 A .
pasture. Nice til e block
barn, approx
40 ' x60 ',
equ1p shed and tots of
other build , 5 cherry trees,
3 apple, grpe harbor
Stream flows through property All mineral rights
goes l room home, J BR,
basement. Storfl"l doors and
windows Built 1n kitChen
cblnets, cook stove &amp; elec.
refrlg. Fuel o!l forced a.r
turn Plenty of water. 2
garages . A real goOd farm,
only 11h miles to bank and
grocery store CALL NOW.

Merrill Carter
Ennings
379·2114

ONLY 122,000
N1ce 3 bedrooms, bath , l iVIng room , modern eat in
kitchen
w•th
bu 11f- m
cab inets Full basement,
a!most new gas for ced air
furnace &amp; hot water heater.
Located within the c1ty
limits Looking for a niCe
clean home, close to shopp
•ng area A Buy , Call Now

39 ACRES-NEW HOME
On Scott School Rd , 4 BR,
eat-In k1tchen , large l1vin~
room - 12 ft x 28 ft 2nd
house has 6 rooms , 3 B R,
barn {block) , &amp; lots of
other build ings
2 car
garage separate from
home Approx 27 A of
timber- some pines. 12 A
tillable . Good line fences.
All minerai rights goes
w•th land

3.34 ACRES-RT . 588
Rural water, cistern.
Garage 12'X24' . was a
trailer hookup . Lots of
pmes, dogwood &amp; redbud.
Peach, apples &amp; plum
trees. Nice bU1Id1ng spot on
a good h1ghwav. CALL
FOR MORE DETAILS.
19'12 ACRES
ROLLING LAND
Well with electric pump.
Septic tank Concrete pad
for mobile home hookup .
Cellar house. Lots of apple
trees. some timber Good
ltne fences. All mineral
rights goes. Won't last
long.
CALL
NOW
$15,000.00.

BUSINESS LOT - On the
corner of Rt. 124 Has
bustness room , residence
of 9 rooms, 2 baths , and
double
garage .
Only
$35,000
NEW 6 room ranch
home Equ1pped k1lchen,
dtn 1ng room , 2 full baths ,
full basement, carport and
2 a cres. $36,500
TUPPERS PLAINS
Over two.fhtrds of an a cre
is this 3 bedroom home
w1th Oak f loors, uti lity
room , bath , breezeway and
garage .
9 ROOM BRICK - Natural
gas, city water , 2 lots , front
and ba ck por ches . $5,500.
CORNER LOT - 7 room
tncome property One apt.
rented, owner lives In one,
another to be renovated.
On I y $9,600.
TOWARD ROCK SPRINGS
- 6 room stucco block
hom e. Has natural gas
furna ce, city water , 2
baths. and almost ~ acre
Want 520, 000
Don't be caught '" another
snow storm. buy near town .
•
Caii992·332S
Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
G. Bruce Teaford
Realtor Associates

SELL

ACREAGE
Six acres on blacktop road.
Half of area or more Is
wood lot Selling at a
reasonable prtce Hannan
Trace school d1st Lots of
firewood- Call Now
VACANT LAND
If vou want vacant land for
mvestment or a small
farm,
how
can
you
overlook th1S - twenty-two
acres, 10 ttllable, 12
pasture, older
barn
repatrable for tobacco base
of 1300 lbs Good fences,
plenty water. 700 ft. road

6ROOM
REMODELED HOME
2 or more bettrooms, alum
S1d1ng , lots of built 1n
cabmets , c1ty water, one car
garage, nice shady front
wrch
Bath w1th shower .
Partial basement w1th cellar
Shingle roof. Large lot. A real
buy for the money .

ATENTION BUILDERS
Cho1ce building sights ad·
jo1n1ng Porterbrook Sub·
diVIS ion. Five acres lev~l
land
all
perfect for
building. VERY MUCH
DESIRED LOCATION

WILL

GOOD INVESTMENT OR
RENTAL PROPERTY
12 acres more or less of va cant land mostly level, has
a small pond on 1t and a
well Poss1ble hook up for
two mobile homes Close to
mmes.

frontag~$11 , 500

'LAND FOH
DEVELOPMLNT
over 27 acres within four
m•les of Gallipolis. Ideal
buildmg s1tes, etther level
land or wooded area,
Getilpolls school system,
blacktop road and rural
.vater

KYGER CREEK
SCHOOL DIST .
MOdern 6 room ranch
home . Th1s n1ce rhome has
an ex tra large eat·ln kitchen w1th lots of bUilt-to
cabinets &amp; appliances. , 3
spacious S.R . &amp; n 1ce bath. •
Has lots of closet space.
Concrete driveway &amp; '
garage. Natural gas F A.
furnace. Extra large nicel y
landscaped lot This home
IS priced nght. CALL
NOW

VACANT LAND
FOR SALE
22 Acres of good fertile'
level land, has been t1lled .
20 acres or more timber,
cut out in 1922) the rest ts
pasture- 48 acres in all Good Investment, $25,000.
SMALL FARM
PRICED LOW
E1ght acres, about all
tillable Very nice take for
water or recreation Lg
country home, s BR, 4
rooms with carpet, running
water with bath
Lg
strawberry path, other out
bldgs Can't last 123,000

4 ACRES MORE
OR LESS
Wooded lot Some p1ne
trees Approx 1 mile from
Centenary on Herman·
Northup Rd P1ck your own
bldg s•te

MOBILE HOME

~~~~e;~g,m~~~~ r~~~~~i~~
bath. Good cond1f1on. 1500
gal septic tank and drilled
water furnished Rural
water close by Hookup all
ready for extra mobile
bome. This can be a good
kl'lestment Own two, l•ve
1n one, will go a long ways
towar~
payment
Rent
them both, shouldn't be any
pl'bblem. Coli now S13,SOO:

30 ACRES
WOODED AREA
Vacant land, all mtneral
nghts goes A good pla ce to
r etreat Hunt or tust be by
yourself ONLY $14,900 00,

SPRING VALLEY
SUBOIVISION
Vacant lots, n• ce size
budding lots with all
utilitieS there. Lot size
t01.8 ' by 171 2' Better get
'umnow

MODERN
3 BEDROOM HOME
Owner must sell im
mediately
Ran ch type
N1ce srze rooms
Com
fortab1e eat-in k1tchen,
bUilt-in cab1nets One car
garage Lg level lot Plen
ty open space for children
to play, end of street
MAKE USAN OFFER

LAND CONTRACT
6 room~ . 2 story, woodburning fireplace, city
water on a large lot In Vmton $2,000 down payment
and S133 34 per month. Just
like rent. Call for more In·
to1 mation

IIE"- l TOR

216 E Second Streel

US

WE

v,

ONE OF GALLIA COUNTY 's FINEST FARMS,
beaut •ful se tt.ng , land lays gently rollm Q w1th a few
acres wood ed hil lSide, excellent development land, or
htghly produ ctiV e farm Spac1ous 4 yr old ran ch home
has .c BR , 2 full baths, fo r m al d tni ng , family rm , plush
c:~~·•;,:~i:~o~?o"'~~!; 2 car garage w 1th work shop Dairy
b
To sell Gr ade A milk. . other outbldg 1800
also has older home suitable for r. entmg
o d a no coal r •ghts m et. w1th farm . 117 ACRES.

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

23 LOCUST STReET

Realtor

LOCATION
VALUE
APPE.Al - 24 acr e f ar m 1S
mostl y f 1l l ab te &amp; featu r es a
very ntce 2 stor y home w 1t h
8 rms
&amp; bat h
Th e
downslatr S 1S br and new
Al so tnc lu ded are a 50)( 60
bar n , sdo &amp; J sma ll
bu ll dmgs ThtS propert y Is
l oca ted J'4 m1 north of
H MC on Ro ute 160

RACCOON CREEK -

13
acres of flat l and w tth
appro)( 1500 tr of cr ee k
frontage , sandy soil , barn
located 1n Northern Gall 1a
Co S1 3,0QI)

Leadingham

.46·2885

h av~

190 ACRES, 60 ttllabl e, 100 acr es pasture fenced , 2
ponds, tob acco ba se, some t•mber, J barns, other
outbldg 4 B R bn ck home, nearly comt eted Fireplace
m LR , full basement, garage Perfect for beef cttle
Call tor appOintment
PROSPECTIN' ? Th1 s farm has good potent1al for gas,
011 or coa l 77 Acres, A pprox 1200' Rd frontage, 22
acr es timb er , 25 acre s tillble, 30 acres fenced pasture,
streams, 5 rm frame home, other outbldg . SJ2,000.

Arthur A. Nibert
Senior Ml!mDer
Americln Society
of Appraisers

Willis T.

EDGE OF TOWN - Lov ely
2 BR ra nch is clel! n as a p1n
and off er s 11 12x20 f amily
r m ., L R. mod ern kttchen ,
laundry r m ., st eel s tdtn g,
storm door s and wmdows,
nt 111r and over 1 acr e of
LOT FOR SALE - 80 )t 180, ce
lend Shown by app omt .
flat ,
co un ty
water ment
avail ab le, m obile homes
w el co m e ,
l oc at ed
In
Cen)ena rv on t..mc ol n P i k e, OWN
YOUR
OWN
$3, 500
CAMPSITE
tn
t he
wild ern ess of the Wi!tyne
S19S PER ACRE 180 Nat1on al For es t s to 8 acre
acr es of w ilderness, fro n ts tra cts of woodland now
on town sh i p rd , good lllv adabl e
a d t o tn t n g
w ithin
the th ou sa nds of a cr es of
h u nt.ng ,
bound ,Hies on the Wayne goyern men t l!llnd . P ub lic
Na ti on al Forest An ex hunt 1ng,
f ish in g
and
ce ll ent hedge agam st •n · camp in g perm1tt ed Pr iCes
f ta f lon
start a t S2500 w ith fina n
c1no ava •l abl e
GREENFIELD TOWN ·
SHIP - 18 acr es , st eep,
roc k y brush tand , good for
hunt ing and c.smplng only . fiiEAR LECTA - 10 1 ac r ~o"
$5 .500
farm wit h 45 A t1ll able ~ S
rm hou se, 3 barn s, sev er at1
TWO MILES OUT - Route oth er outbu ilding s, c ellar
160, epprox S acr-es l ev el
spr 1ng water &amp; a
land , good Inv es tm ent f or house,
JSOO lb tob ba se $50,000.
only '510,000

llea.l &amp; tate f~ Sal.,

Real l:.tat" for Sale

'

446-3636
27 ACA ES - Level and
gent l y roll lnQ tend , ra ccoon
Twp ..
Ga lli p ol is
Cit y
Sc hool Oiu , fronts on 2
rd s , wat er l 1ne on 2 si de~ .
po tent u1 1 pl us

tor Sale

A LOVELY COUNTRY HOME
AND8ACRES
Story and a half complet ey r emodeled 1n
Side and our - w1th new Sldtn g, dryw all,
walt paper , and carpeting Very del1ghtful
ly decorated. J bedrooms, open sta1 r case,
n 1ce balh , la l'ge k•f chen and dming area
w 1th qual1fy built cab.nets Good water
supply, log barn, g arag e, hay sh ed, and
co al ut11ify butldmg Bea ut •fu il y re ftnt sh
ed . it's JU St tops for the m oney 1 Ca ll l or
more deta tls - TOD AY !

BEAUTIFUL BRICK RANCH
owners are an x1ou s t o se ll fhiS ver y n •ce
nome •n an tdealloca t•on, St al e Rt 35 Thi s ,
area IS r eally bOOmm g •n g r owth and
valu e. T he matn feature of tn1s hOme •s a
huge spac •ous k• tc hen and d 1f11 ng area
whic h the lady of the house would a pp rove
of. over a r eas of tn teres t, 11v •ng r oom , 3
bedroo m s. 111~ ba th s, utiltfY r oom , p lenty
of closet and sto r age space, 2 car gar a9e
w •th elec tnc eye opener Newly paved
dn ve ar ea and cha.n link. fence ar ound t he
lol

CEDAR-A FRAME
Locted on a one acre wOOded lot Th is
beauty s1tttng 1n the woodlands f eatures
three bedrooms , liiJ baths, liv.ng room,
modern k1tcheo, open f•repla ce and open
sta.rway leadmg to the 2 upstair
bedrooms. Electnc heat Th1S type of
home 1S m very much demand! Call Now•

COMFORTABLE BRICK
AND FRAME
Th1s new home IS settmg on 10.3 acr es of
ground . Th 1s home has 3,200 squ are f ee t
over all Forma l foyer, J bedroom s, 3 verv
modern baths, sunken large 11vmg roo m
w 1th wooden plank. ftoormg and a large
beautiful Colorado stone fireplace, tam•I Y
room, very modern large kitc hen w •th
large pantry, elaborate oak cab1r1ets, Cor
mng stove, dishwasher, trash compactor,
also utility room wtth oak cabmets, formal
din1ng are a 2 car garage w1th automat1 c
opener
Many more features
v er y
tastefully decorated' One of t he most
gracious homes 1n Gall1a County w •th a
fantastic view!

BRAND NEW RANCH
Located m an 1deal location. State Route
No 141 approx 4 miles from town tn Cit'{
school d istrict, on a nice si ze lot. S1x room
home , n tc e comfortab le conservat1ve
home Th1sone1 s fortheeconomy mmded 1
NEW MODULAR HOME
1400 SQUARE FEET LIVING SPACE
Located at the edge of R1o Grande V1llage
- State Rt No. 325 on a nice s1'Ze lot and
add 1t1onal lot c an be pu rchased . Very
scen1c view overlooking Bob Evans
Farms Features formal entry, liv1ng
room and d•ning room Modern island kitchen all bult m, 2 baths w•th a sunken luv
tub . Tot~ I elec tnc - Smoke alarm. ·Can
use many facilft1es available through R1o
Grande College.
WINTER SPECIAL
15 Acres . Good fences, small pond and a
strong spnng for water Approx 970 lb!.
tobacco - two years base Some good
bldg lots a net some t ~ mber Priced to sell.
PRoiiiicTIVE FARM
Recently
remodeled
home 25 ac of tillable
land,
tiled,
11med,
r~ady
for top produc
tton 56 ac. clean per.
pasture . 10 ac . timber.
One ig barn, new tool
shed or loafing barn.
1800
lbs
lob
bose.
House has new bath,
utilitY
rm.,
furr1ace,
water
system ,
in ·
lUiated , two good wood·
burning fr . pi Thlr IS a
good
listing. Good
Family
Farm
well
taken ci.tre of Guyan Twp.
NEW FARM LISTING
JO Acres. 16 ac. good fen1l£:
.JOttom land, 10 ac . Wo'od1
ot. The rest m pasture
and. Plenty water, ntee
,tream runs through farm
.g. country home, 2 story ,
~~~ rooms. 2 porches, new
loors downstairs Shade
rees in nice country set
ing, also chicken house,
ellar and house, ntc:e slze
•arn in good cond. Tob
1ase New on the market at
;35,000

RESPONSIBLE
EXPERIENCED
SECRET ARV needed of local
Rutland Light housework and
busmess Typ.ng ond some
" cooking no laundry. More for,
bOCTkkeeptng required. For per
Coli
home thon woges
sonol mtervtew contact Mr
7•2·2078
McGutre 01 446-.4378 between
1'1 o.m ond2p m
NEEDED
by
SALESPERSON
Midwest manufacturer to toll EXPERIENCED
TEACHER
or
an estobllthctd businenes
busmess penon Wtth BA
~ Commin•on soles. $:225 and up
degree to assume respon
per sole Call1 ·800·247-2446.
s•btltties o~ director of educot•on and f1nonc•ol otd off 1cer
TEXAS OIL tampon'( needs
Pleose contoct Mr MtGu~re al
moture person for short frlpsGall tpohs Bustness College,
•urrounding Pomeroy Contort
446-4373
c;ustom•rs We trotn Wrtta T V
Olc;k, Pres., Southwestern FIVE LADIES NEEDED Porl· ttme
Petroleum, Ft. Worth , TX
poslltons avolloble Must hove
t ron5portat1on and phone For
PART·TIME BOOKKEEPER. Expersonal
tnfervtew ,
coli
Send
perienced preferred
..
6·
1S22.
r••umel to Bo)l( 999 c·O
Gallipolis Colly Trtbune. 82S
Third A·1e ., Goilipohs
tn and cora for oged lady m

CALL NOW . OHIC E 446 -7699 HOME 446 -9539

HOOF HOLLOW HQrses Buy, sell
trade or tratn New and used
saddles RutM Reeves Albany
(6 14)698·3290

BRIARPATCH Kennels Boarding ,
Grooming. AKC Gordon sat
lers, English Cocker •Spontels
Ph. 446-4191

speCIO I!ZinQ
tn
qublity (hom·
p1on blood lmes 1 R~d &amp; block
4'46-7795

RISING STAR Kennel , Boording
Indoor · and outdoOf runs .
Groomtng 9!1 breeds Clean
sontlory loctllties Chesh~re.
Phone {614) 367 -0292.

RISING STAR KENNEL •
Boarding. tndoor:Outdoor Runs
Grooming, All Brands Clean
Son1tory fociltt tes Cheshire, Ph
31&gt;7·0:jq2

AKC REG. cocker sponte! pupp1es.
Coll675 3686

REGISTERED BLUETICK pup s
mo old. ( 328

CENTENARY WOODS PE~
GROOMING FACiliTIES, Pro·
fess1onol Serv1cet offen~d . oft
breeds , all styles Ph . 446-0231 .

6

MEIGS COUNTY Humane Sott ely
ammo! c;oreime and adoption
service (free animals.) 992-7680
or evemngs and Sundays
992 -5427 . Moll . c-o M .
Crawford Rt. 4, Box 326 ,
Pomeroy Oh1o 45769 Memberships and donat 1ons PO Box
682, Pomeroy , Oh1o 45769
REGISTERED BLUE T1ck pup!. , 6
mo old (304 )882·3328
FOB: SPECIAL people AKC Doberi'non Ptnscher pups Red and
rust Good pe(hgrees $125 and
up. (614} 797 -4500 or {61.C}
797 4197.

DRAGONWVND CATTERY· KEN·
NEL, AKC C:how Chow dogs ,
CFA Siamese and Himalayan
cots (Also wh1te Perstons.)
Orden ore now betng accepted
for s'f&gt;nng luttens ond puppies.
Call446·3844.
AKC REGiSTERED Boxer pups
Have been wormed, ht shot•.
'1'12·2726
AKC REGISTERED Doberman
pups 8 weeks old , hove he-olth
certtftcote.
$75 .
Phone

11-43·3053.
J

AKC CAIRN TERRIER PUPPY, 8
mos · old. femole, oil shots.
$100. Coli 245·5182 alter
5 30pm.
AKC REG. COCKER SPANIEL . S
mo . old housebroken $1001
Coll2•5·9236.

IF YOIJ hove , o service to offer;
want to buy or seilaomethtng.
oe lookmg for work . or
whotever , , . you 'll get resultS
foster with a S.nt ln•l Wont Ad:
Coll992 ~156

Exceptional opportunity
to earn and learn
Male or Feme•: JDtn • gnrwln1 concern as a
profonlonol phatograpltor. Work In II'! Eutern holt of

,W
i

U.S. ond got paid top dollar ond tra . .lallowoncos. No
oxperlonc:e noedod. Paid trolnlng to qualified
opplcants. Don't min ttsls opportunity to become 1
profonlonolln 1 growing flold. Must hlvo dopondablo
tronoportotlon.
lnt.rvlows will be hold on Fobruory 13, 1971, In
Chorloston, W. Va. at Eoslern Phologrophlc
Leboratories, Inc., 17U Pennsylvania Avenue,
Charleston Offlc:e, EPL Inc., Cltorloston, W. Vo. 25302 .

•1
t

·1

..

..,

.

r ·1 ~Ill
- ___.__

Please call :104·145-3479 b o - n 9 a.m. and 4 p. m.
-day Flbruorv t3 end r . - y February t4.
I.

-

1184 MILL ST 2 st or y b lock house fea l unng 2
large bed room s) l1vmg r oom wtfh w b f1r eptace,
for mal d .nmg, bath &amp; ga rage, large lot for k•ds
M ake us an off er

N e~ r Jllnc t •on of R t 114 and Rl 7
Sm all f(am e house In good cond1t 10n 8 acre lol
mc l ud ing ~ trailer sp ots w1th septic l ank mak e
t hts propert y a p oss tb le ren ta l mvestm ent
$20,000

8 ACRES -

OLDER HOME &amp; 11 ACRES - Her es '(our
chance for a r ea l barg a•n A large 4 bedroom
home that n eeds some r epa.rs bur •s liveable
The 11 aues are exce ll ent and fr onts on Rr 325
Wt t h 1ust a little wor k 1htS could m ake you so m e
money S20,000

SMALL ACREAGE
MOBILE HOME
2•12 acres c lean and well
kept Mob hom e 1n good
cond Good wat er supply ,
spring dev wi t h new elec
·Inc pump Garage wi t h
handy work benches bu11f
m Some t r ees around to
add to th e b eauty of the
acreage Good locat1on for
more homes of any type
you may desire Th1 s anc
more to r $13,500

68 ACRE FARM - Red uced to $46,900 Co m
pletely r em ode led 4 bed roo m fa rm hom e Tll1s
large 2 story hom e has la r ge ea t 1n k1tchen, d.n
mg roo m , Ph bath s etc There 1S som e e&gt;:cell ent
bottom land w•th th e ba la nce m ro ll•n g p as tu re &amp;
wood land Good fence and lar ge barn The house
an d 5 ac r es ar e worth aSk ll'l9 pnce Near M etgs
M•ne No 1

SMALL INVESTMENT
LOTS OF COMFORT

LARGE OLD BRICK ~ 2 story , 10 room home 1n goo d
r epa tr Incl udes 4 bedroom s, l 1v1ng room , dtning room
&amp; famdy room Wtth f.r epl ace 2 bat hs, k •tchen upst airs
&amp; dow nsta .r s for poss •ble re nta l Beaut tful yard fe nced
1n b ac l&lt; , M ake u s an offe r

EAS~ERN AVE~UE

N1ce 2 BR home for sm all
family 2 porch es, new
storm Windows and doors,
utilitY bldg . Ve ry good
garden area . L.ow utl!•t •es,
gas heat
Lot 40'x 110'
$3 ,000 worth o4' new fur
nlture goes w1th sale Good
home for older coupl e or
rnoderate tn come famil y
$14,000

BRICK &amp; FRAME RANCH ~ 1500 sq ft ~ L oc at ed
nea r Addavlll e Sc hool on a 112 ac r e lot, tht s hom e offer s
12x1 s 1•v •ng room , large famt l y r oom w •Th F r ank l m
f •replace, J bedroom s, eat -1n k•t chen &amp; bath Ca rpet
th rough out $31 ,900
NEAR VINTON - Cou ld be t he home YOU ar e IOOk tng
tor Fra me r anch hom e w1th verv n .ce k •t chen m
cludtng ( re fr i ger ator &amp; range ) 2 large bedroom s, 10x30
famil y room , l 1v1 ng room &amp; garage 5 ac r e wooded lot
$29, 500 Call D an E vans at J88-811 1.

VINTON - Sol 1d 2 story hom e on Jackson !11 Fea ti.Jr es
eat m kitc hen. lar ge 11v1ng room , 4 bed room s and ba th
L of front s on Jackson Str eet On l y $18,500

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO
Spectoi i:Emg 1n FHA ond VA
Home loons. Al so Ref monctng
463 2nd Ave locat ed 2nd floor
Goll 1polts, Ph 446 7172
lOTS FOR SALE Blacktop
ut1 httes. Co!l446 01b8

\

4TH ST , MIDDLEPORT - Own er w an ts l h1 s 3
bedr oom home sold 1mmedlale! y Th 1s l arge 2
stor y h om e otter s spac• ou s il11 1ng r oo m , di n1ng
r oom. ce ll ar &amp; ga r age w it h J room ap t
overhead , Good locat •on nca r churclles &amp; sllopp
1ng 1Will acce pt l si reas onabl e off er

BARGAIN PRICED - L ar ge &amp; roomy , 4 bedroom
hom e, 1 mile f rom downtown F eatures a 12'x2 4' l1vm g
r oom , spac •ou s k 1tchen &amp; d1nmg area, 2 bath s &amp;
garage, ec onom !c al g as hea t Pn ce d at $28, 800

JACKSON-WELLSTON
GALLIPOLIS AREAS
LEADS MAKE IT EASIER TO HAVE
A SALES CAREER'
Make the most by sellmg the be st
nght tn your own commun 1ty
with our h1gh commiSS IOn pro
gram .
01rec t In - hom e
for
Eo
repre5en t oti ves
cydoped1o Brttton1co ore need
ed In Southern Ohio Call Col
umbus ofhce. 86.4 -0331 bet
ween lOam ond 2pm. Mon Frt

ES - Nei:lrty new 2 stol"y Col
on1 a l wi th 1954 sq ff of luxurio us liv mg 3 large
bedroom s w i t h an enor mous wa l k. In c lose t In m as ter
bedroo m Forma l entra nce &amp; d1n 1ng, ver y .!lttr ac tlvc
fam il y roo rn w tth w b I .replace, 2 1~ batt1s &amp; s pa c lou ~
ktt cllen &amp; lar ge 1 cM ga r .1gc A very c lean &amp; desi r able
home $63,900

MEIGS CO. PROPERTY

MOBILE HOME
PRICED TO SELL
12' x65' - 1973 model ThtS !S in ver y good
cond . 3 bdrms Most all appliances goes
Heated w1th fuel 011 Well underp inned good water syste m , 44 acre wooded ar ea
Near Rappsburg, Lawrence Co T h1s one
wtli be ha r d to beat at $8,000

LOOK THIS OVER !
Th•s farm house ha s six
rooms, bath , full ba sem ent,
· carport, storm wmdows,
rural water or dnlled w e ll
1500 lbs
tobac co base,
barn, other outb ldgs 30
Acres t illable land, some 50
ac pasture, most all trac
tor land . Good wood tot,
some saw t•mber , 100 ac r es
m all Th1S wtll sell , w e'd
like to sell1t to you.

---

NEARLY NEW BRICK RANCH - 4 year old hom e In
Su nk 1st V1ll age You must see the exce llent care ttu s
att rac t 1ve home has nad Fea tures a beautiful lar ge
l•v •ng room. d1n1ng roo m, 4 bedroom s, n1ce k1lchen &amp; 2
ba ths, l arge 2 car garage &amp; hea t pump $46,900

AUTHENTIC LOG CABIN
This home was bu11t from anginal logs,
sitt1ng in five acres of woodland · w 1th a
beautifUl v1ew Th •s home features a l arge
l•vmg room Wl th ·a f1 e ld ston e f1 re place, an
• open sta.rway leadjng t o upsta 1r bedroom,
n1ce mod ern k •tchen , on e bath a nd full
basement . Call for more part icul ar s •

COMFORTABLE
AFFQRDABLE RANCH
JUS T LISTED! Only 2
years old , J bed r oom
modern home w1th conv e
n•ent modern k•t chen and
dm1ng area wtth several
built m cabtnets N•ce lg
bath, 1111tng room . T otal
electnc and a wood burner
Located off Stae Rout e 7
Reasonably pr iced. Ex
cellent starter nome. Ca ll
for moredeta•ls

~

BEST BUY ON TODAY ' S MARK E T
ma culate 1 storv .Colon ia l tw s to be one ol the I
cons tru cted homes on ttlc m arket ~ la rge bed rooms,
bca ut rfu lt atn d Y room Wtltl w ll It rep l ace, tormal di n
tng , perfect kllchen, 3111 ba ths , rcc room , sundec k and
co\lered patiO En1ov usc ot·comm unlty pool. $68,500

I ,.I 1.1

10 ACRE BUILDING SITE
Good rolling land on
blacktop road Most all
tillable ~ fences are fa1 r
spr1ng availble for water
development
Close to
church GOOD BUY!

~ RESPONSIBLE OLDER lady to ltve

We're Out To Sell The Earth.·

PARKLANE SUBDV - 5 mile from town A Hrac llve
bn ck &amp; frame ra nch •n excel lent cnd1 t1on Th1S ftne
home features J bedr ooms , bu1 tt In ki tchen, family
r oom Wi th a ver y prett y w.b firep lace, dmtn g ar ea, 2
baths &amp; 2 car gar age. E n10Y t he econom y ot nar.ur11 l
gas hea t &amp; cen tra l atr Nt ce lot&amp; pat•o $41 ,900

12] ACRE FARM - 4 mil es out Exce llent l arm at a
dcs 1rabll' loca t ion w1lh plenty ol front age on a good
bl acktop road 40 to 50 nc r es of fl a llo ro l ling land ( most
wh 1ch cou ld be developed mto bu ild m gs to ts) plus 70
acres of pr~s t u r e &amp; some woods Charmin g old 2 story 4
bedroom colon w l w ith ~ modern w b f irepl aces , l ar ge
fa m il y r oo m and hu •lt In k ll chcn Lorge dairy barn
pl us severa l other good ou tbutldmgs Good view &amp; e x·
ccll entl ocalt on Catl i ke Wl semrm

SPRUC E ST . - 4 vr old home •n town con veni ent to
shOpp.ng &amp; schoo ls ThiS nt cc 3 bed r oo m irame h om e
ott ers 11v1ng room, eat In k. tt chcn, b a Th and car pet
throughout Garden space tn ya r d $15, 000
UNIQUE 2 STORY
6 m t. f r om town on Rt 141 Th is
11nc home fea tu r es &lt;1 bedr oom-s, 1 2'~~:2 4 ' 11vlng room ,
eat 1n kt fchen &amp; 2 ba th s Inc ludes a beauttful n,.tst1 c
fam ily room w• lh over stzed t •r epl ace nd ba lcony sup
por ltng mc"lSier bedroom &amp; ba th E nl ov the 1 ac r e lot
an d fenced '" sw •mmmg poo l Ca ll tor m or e info
NICE COUNTRY HOME - Plent y of pn Vii CY Wtfh th iS
4 bedroom tlom e on 1111 ac r e lot •n Cen terv •ll e Has a
spac 10us liv .n g room. 1111 b&lt;t l hs &amp; catpc t lhroug hou1 1
24x36 una ll ached ga r age &amp; n1 ce ga r df:n spot \ 50,000
IN TOWN - 4 BEDROOMS - 2 story b r tck hom e on 2nd
Ave Includes a large f am ily room , l1v lng room With
f.relace, d m mg, ea l · 1n kitchen &amp; 2 ba ths Basem en t &amp;
stor aye bul d mg $3 4,900
ARCHITECT OESfGhiED RANCH - 22 acres of qulet
&amp; sec luded woods w rth a panoram ic v1 ew ol th e Ohio
Va lley An attrac t •vC Y shaped residence with a large
liv ing r oom an9 beautiful famil y room with firepl ace J
bed room s, el( tr a n1ce k1t chen and 2 1/ 7 bath s Only 2
m• les from town Ca ll tor appomtment
MODERN 81 -LEVEL - Owner tran sf erred w•ll accept
any r cas 0r1abl e olfer an thi S fine 4 bedroom homo
Fea tur es a hu ge f in iShed family r oom , bUilt In k itchen,
2 baths and 2 car garage Loca t ed •n an excellent
ne•ghborh ood () fl Rf 35 5 m11 es f rom town

WE NEED LISTINGS

oil

CARRYOUT Call any time 10 AM
lo 10 PM do •ly . Ph 367 7672

LAND AND 8UILDING
30 x 40 newly constru t led
bu tldmg, situated on 2
located on Rt. 7, Crown
Good bu siness locot1on
256 WO .

steel
lots
Ctly
Coli

LOTS IN CITY Of Goll1 polts. olso
Gol l1pol1s Townshtp Add1son
Town sht p ,
o nd
G uyo n
Town sh tp Coli Robert Queen
4.t6-0168

THE CHOICEST PRICE IN TOWN
STARCRAFT FAll Sole
M1n1 FIVE YR OLD. ottrocllve 3 bdr
ranch style home on a I 3 acre Hou se ts lototed by Ook Htll
motors , 20 and 22' TraVel
From Hwy 93 &amp; 279 toke 279. 2
flor lot located 1ut A mtles I rom
Trotlers , 18 5" $3 ,799. 25 7
mtles to Co Rd 4 Turn lett on 4
the c•ty Electn c heot pum p,
Bunkhous~ $4 ,875 Fold-down
ond follow to Hickory Grove
cenlrol 01r therm o guard wtn ·
$1 ,700 up We sell ser.,1ce e~nd
Churc h Take drlve wor about
dows laundry room , I cor
quality Open Sundays Comp
30 feet po sl church to housn
garage k11chen Includes all op Conley Storcrofl Soles. Rt 62.
Th1s 3 bedroom house on o n1ce
pltonces Carpe t throughou t
N. of PI Pleosanl
lot hos oH the mokmgs 10
Coll-446·4434 ofter 5 p m.
beco me
o
beo u ttful
ST ARCRAFT WINTER SALE
home with som a poundtng
M1n1 ·motors, trotters , fold -downs
and pomt We ve gal to sell 1t
Some 77 models ond usec;l untf5
no w I I So the bes1offerwtll get
1n stock Where you get serv 1ce
it Motenoh. to fin•sh ( On be
and quol1ty at the nght pnc~~t FOUND SET of keys. At Kiddie
Shoppe Chrysler and GM pro
mode a'o'01labte lmmedtole
Camp Conley Storcroft Soles.
duds Must 1dentlfy by gold tog
possess ton w11h smoll down
Rt 62 N of Pt Pleasant ,
number
992 3586, Ktddte
payment and low monthl y
poymen ts No closmg cos ts or
Shoppe: :':;;---;-;-;-;- ; - comm1sston to poy . See 11 and
LOST· RUST and block shaggy
lhen gt\"e us your offer Contact
femole med 1um terrtor Recent(612 ) 588 9758
ly spoyed Red collar Pteos e:
return ch1ld·s pe1 Been gone 4
MOBILE HOMES LOTS
GREEN TERRACE MOBILE COM· ~eeks Skyrocuse, 992·2897
MUNITY
LOST IN
Tuppers Pla1 ns TWO STORY 3 bedroom frame
located on Rt 141 , c1 ty water, ctty
house F, A furnoce storm win ·
Norweg1on Elkhound Answers
5chool s, 5 min from Golllpolt5
dows ftreploce In M1ddJeport
to the nome ' Kmg ' Reword
ond t-lolr:er Hospttol
Phone 992 3.t5? or 992-5867
614·667 -3900.

HOMESITE S for sole 1 acre and
up Mtddleport, nnor Ru tlan d
Coll992 7481
NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 boths,
all elec . 1 acre M1ddleport ,
clos e lo Rullortd Phone 9'9274::_
81'7--:---c-'-:-::':::
SMALL fo•m fo &lt; •o le. i O~."do;J;;:
owner f1nonc; ed Monrotit Coun ty W Vo Phone (304) 7723102 or (304) 772·3227
COUNTRY fa rmland wtlh secluded woods, water and good oc
cess tn Monroe Countr W Vo,
$1,00) down coli (3Q..t ) 77 2
3102 o· (304) 772 3227.
CommeJcto l properly opproK. 17
acres le,.el land locoted ol
Tupper 5 Pld1n• on Ohio Route
7. Phone (61.,) 667 630.4
VA FHA 30 r . fmanctng, olso
rehnondng . lrelond Mortgoge,
77 E State Athans. phone (61• )
S92 3051

I I

,--,,..-,U,...,..,F"'A..,.....R,...-_,6

0

1 1 1

TEPLES

It; I I

'

~~

_.J·--'·--'--"1:,,_~u

'-c-L.

LAKLIA

WHA1 A Fl!itTFIISHT
AT ii-4E HOU5E OF ~Ri~.J
Mli&amp;Hi INVOLVE.
Now arr•noe the cirded letttr1 to
fonn the aurprise anawer, u tug•
gestod by lho obove eo,_,

I [J

Print answer here:

NICE THREE bedroom house w1 th
go roge
tn Rus l tc Htl ls .
Syracuse $27 000 992 5541
JUST COMPLETED new haute tn
Mtddleport For more lnformo.
tton coii992·223S or 992·5304

r

'TIIXXJ~
(~~i

Vestercfav s

Jumbles BATCH

I Answer

•

SCOUT

POTENT MAROON

How to le•rn to be • chtimplon mounwln
climbor - STAATATTHE 80TTOM

�energy and should be temperature as possible for per minute to 3.
repaired immediately. The the wash cycle of your clothes
- Take quick showers
replacement of washers is a washer. Use cold water for all instead of hatha. Baths take
as much as 30 to 50 gallon• of
simple operalion described in rinse cycles.
every basic home owner's
- Presoak heavily soiled water. Shower! UJe 5 to IS
maintenance and repair clothes before washing .
gallons of water per minute.
guide. Afaucet that leaks one
- Scrape dishes before
-Cut down on the number
drop per second wastes 2,400 placing them in a dish- of showers taken. Replace
gallons of hot water each washer . If rinsing is some of them with sponge
year. That's enough to run 160 necessary, use ccld water. baths using a small amounl of
full cycles on an automalic
- Try to run your dish- water in a basin.
dishwasher.!
washer no more than once a
- Limit shower lime to 2
A simple rule of thumb day or only when fully loaded. minutes or less.
applies to energy con- · Between meals, store soiled
- TUm off shower water
servation and hot water dishes in the unit.
while you apply soap to body
every time you use cold water
- When washing dishes by or lather hair.
instead .of hot you save hand, ftll a pan with hot water
- Don 't let bath water run
energy dollars. The following for rinsing. Don't let hot continuously when you shave.
lips will help remind you of water run ccntinuously.
Close the drain and fill the
ways to reduce hot water
- A flow restrictor can be basin with water instead. '
consumption.
purchased for as little as
- Tum down your water
- Wash only full loads of $1.50. Easily installed in a heater thermostat to a
laundry. Use water level or shower head, this device ·~linimum setting if you plan
load size devices on clothes reduces the amount of water to be away from your home
washer.
flowing from the pipe (but not . for an extended period of
Use as low a water the pressure) from 5 gallons time.

Water heating:

Use and conservation
By DIANA S. EBERTS
County Ext. Agent,
Home Economies
POMEROY - Hot water is
taken for granted and looked
upon as an integral part of
most American households.
Uttle thought is given to the
cost of heating water because
its use is constant rather than
seasonal, as with a central
healing system.
The heating of water ac·
counts for a whopping 15
percent of your total energy
bill. You can't do without hot
water, but there are several
ways to conserve it so that
energy requirements and
costs will be less.

WALTER Salamacha, right, is welccmed to the Pt
Pleasant . Fi~ld Office by John Cooper, Districi
C&lt;lnservauomst.

~

Mason Corinty post

1978
NASHVILLE
AND THE
GRAND OLE
OPRY
TOURS
TWO DAY TOUR
DEPARTS
GAU.IPOOS
JACKSON
WAVERLY
FEB. 18-19
®WORLD-WIDE

j

GAWPOLIS

~ mAVEL AGENCY
l3 Court Street
Gallipolis, 0 . Ph. 446-Hf9

••

:e

attended high school there. At
the present time, he lives on a
fam1 in Ohio where he and his
wife raise tobacco and hogs.
Past experience of related
nature include three years in
the SUrveyor's Office in
TilE ESTELLA PIERCE FAMILY, 608 North St.
Washington. D. C. Prior to ·
Woodville,
Ohio is looking for a friend who might he in Meig~
that he served in the U.S. Air
C&lt;lunty.
If
you
khow him would you advise the family. Mrs.
Force in the Strategic Air
Pierce.
writes:
.
C&lt;lmmand and served in the
"!am
sending
you
this
request
about a friend that my sims
Vietnam . theater
of
would
like
to
know
where.
he
is
how.
operations in 1966 and 1967.
· "He worked for us on a farm in Woodville in 1936 and 1937.
Mr. Salamacha said, "I am
He
was about 19 or 20 years old then. His name is Harry
thrilled. to be working in
Johnston.
Out letters rome back to us so we apparently do not
Mason County where ther'e
have
the
correct
address.
are large [arming operations
"!hope
someone
reads this in your paper and he writes to
and many full-time farmers .
us.
He
was
like
a
son
to
me and a brotber to the boys."
I am looking forward to
helping landowners carry out
AND THOSE GENEALOGISTS hand right in there. Qur
conservation work on their
latest
request comes from Mrs. Emily Smith, 1040 Richey
(anns."
Road, Zanesville, Ohio 43701. She writes: ·
"I am seeking iilfonnation ahout my ancestors the
Nebergalls (various, speUings such as Neighborgall' and
Nevergall) who Uved in Meigs C&lt;&gt;Unty around 1840 and later.
George and Juliann Nebergall had children, Andrew, Nancy,
Mary, Elizabeth, George, Jane, Fanny Suzann and John
Lewis.
'
"!would appreciate if you would print this letter and my
request that anyone reading it in the paper who has' any
knowledge of any of tbe ahove people or tlleir descendants

SElliNG lHE STAG£

•

e

:

trac:tion to hom e buyers . •
A large mirror ca n'make •
a room look larger .. . •
Properly placed, It can •
reflect and magnify many e
of your best sellir)g points . e
Defini tely turn off lhe TV

• happy. inviting look. Don 'l
e just sell a house - sell a and

turn

on

e

sqft •

e home!
e
Far evening Inspection,

background music on the •
hi ~fi to create that subtle · •

• brighten yo_
u r home from
• the front porch light on

lived -in atmosphere. Your •
prospects are buying more

• througha lltheroomsinthe than a house ~ tlley are
• house . Little decoratori)lbuyinganewwayof!lfe. S(:'
• touch-es - a vase of make your home LIVE .
flowers, a plant small
· • pillows ~ can ,;~dd much to
• the comfortable feeling of a If there is anything we
• ho~e.
can do to help you in the
•
If you are having you'r field of real estate please
e home shown In the winter , phone or drop m at
e a crackling lire in the LEADINGHAM REAL
e fireplace adds irreslstable ESTATE, 512 Sec... .,d Ave..
e allraction . A working GolllpOiis. Phone 446-7699.
• fireplace Is a malar at- We're here to ~elpl

•
•
•

please contact me."

'

MRS. RUTH SNODGRASS of Racine advises that her
brother, Robert Arix who has lived in Miami, Fla., for
perhaps, the past 20yearsand is now living in the Racine area
has a patent on an invention which will stop car thefts. Interest
has been shown by major business.in the invention. In this day
and age, with one good patent you can strike it rich -so lotsa
luck, Robert Arix.
MRS. DANA COVERT i~ confined to O'Bleness H~spital
Athens, wtth neck and back mjuries. Last wei!k the CQver~
were in all auw accident in C&lt;lhunbus and thought everyone
was o.k. They started home and Mrs. Covert became ill. She
went w a doctor locally and was sent to Atllens for further
examination and then was hospitalized. Cards can be·sent to
Room 339.
·
MEANTIME, HOSPITALIZED in Columbus wbere she
has undergone major surgery is Mrs. Thurston (Phyllis)
Slone, Jr . She's expected to he confined at University Hospital
(or quite some time. You can send cards to room 841.

•

ALSO PERHAPS, you can remember four year old Perry
Levacy, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Levacy who underwent
heart surgery Tuesday. He's doing well. His address is
e open
ej RainQoW Baby and Children Hospital, University Hospital, 2
e South, 2065 Adelbert Road, Cleveland, Ohio,

e
•

e

................... ...•.
·(~···

•

•

• REMEMBER THOSE beautiful candles that you haul out
of storage each Christmas to use as decorations. Better he
looking them up. It appears that you might have to burn them.
Meantime, keep smiling.

"IT·TAKES A HEAP OF .LIVING
TO MAKE A HOUSE A HOME!"

IT tAKES SOME FURNITURE TOOl
,.

for the Tot~! Development
Fund.
The campaign, which is
planned to run through April
30, will have 2,000 volunteers
seeking pledges payable
during a 36-month period.
Four basic pledge divisions advance gi rt s, pacesetter
girts, special girts, and family
girts - are being organized.
Campaign funds will
provide nee ded camping
facilities for currently
enrolled Scouts, including ·
handicapped Scouts, and will
provide 'ror anticipated
growth of the co uncil's
program.
Kelley, a member of the
• Kentucky Bar Association
• and
American
Bar
Association, is a partner in.
Kelley, Galloway &amp; Company
of Ashland. He received the
Kentucky Bar Association's
outstanding Service Award in
1968.
Former chairman of the
Kentucky Public Service
CommiSsion, . Kelly is a
member of the Kentucky

:g
.=3

Quite a surprise the other day to walk into the vocal music
depariment at Meigs High School and hear tbe young people
rehearsmg some of the wonderful songs from Meredith
Wilson's ' 1Music Man.''
Mrs. Paige Hunt, vocal music supervisor, pointed out that
the students are going to stage the Broadway musical on
March IOand ll , Duel&lt;! the terrible weather and no school the
m\lsiCal will be cut just a bit because students baven'thad Ume
wgel it all together. Must admire Mts. Hunt for tackling the
ambitious project, however. Promoters of the new high school
some years back spoke brllliantly on all of the wonderful
things that woilld happen with the new consolidated high
school. One of the seUing points was the &amp;uadway musicals
and plays. They haven't been forthcoming . "Music Man" will
really he a "first". at the high school.
Incidentally, the young people taking part will be looking
for ccstumes of the early l!lrol in order to make their musical
really effective. If you have some clothing which you would
loan from tbe period, do contact Carrie Bearhs, at 992-5036,
Mrs. Hunt at 992~197 or Laura Hoover, 992-7379 right away.
They:ll need to know. Inc(dentally, Laura, a senior at Meigs
· H1gh ts belpmg Mrs. Hunt w1th direction of the show.

Today
:e
By

. ·When preparlr1g your
home to be shown to
prospect i ve buyers , use
subtle showmanship to help
set the right a'mosphere.
Give your home a restful.

it

_

He was born near Pitts·
burgh, Pennsylvania, and

Willis T. Leadingham
Realtor

tlllilecl Preu lnteraatloaal
Ohio enters the 70th day of
the United. Mine Workers
strike today in an energy
emergency witll utilities
desperate lor coal - and
miners determined they
wm 't get it, despite a pledge
of
federal
help
in
transporting shipments.
The last faint hope of a
strik,e settlement ended
. Sunday when the UMW
Bargaining C&lt;luncil voted 3M
W reject a tentative strike
settlement. There was no
indication when UMW President Arnold Miller and the
Bituminous C&lt;lal Operators
would resume negotiations.
Ohio meanwhile is fast

"'" "'

j'

By Bob Hoeflich

Cooper,

District Conservationist of
scs.
r. Salamaeha previously
worked for Soil Conservation
Service in Cabell and Wayne
Counties for three years.
During his period or work. he
has served the cooperators of
the Guyan Soil and Water
Conservation District. He has
received se veral training
courses to better qualify him
to work with cooperators of
the Western District in Mason
County .

•
•

•
•
•
•

&lt;"

~stat&amp;.

:
:

~:

King as
conservation
technician for Mason County,

·~r~

i
:

1

as a replacement for Okey R.
announced John

A thermostat setting of no
degrees to 120 degrees F. on a
water heater Is sufficient if
you do not have an automatic
dishwasher. A setting of 140
degrees F. is recommended if
you do have one. Ternperatures over 140 degrees F.
shorten the life of glass-lined
tanks.
·
Once a month run a bucket
of water from your hot water
storage unil. This will help
remove sediment which
insulated the lank from the
source of heat and wastes
energy .
A leaking hot-water faucet
is an enormous waster o(

A hi
on~~~ ~~~~e~~g;eo~~~·i~d: ;.,i~~ ~~~s~~:~~ank
s and attorney
to headname~Boy
Scout drive
•
.. .._. . .... .
.
HUNTINGTON ·An tified public accountant
campa&gt;gn general ~late Racing C&lt;lmmittee. He
~~""'01
•~mey "" ~- ...mW K'''"'· ... ,.,.,; ::::,:::':.'2m':::~ ~.::::.:!:':.'r'w'!:
.
.
raise $861,480 for if!lproving Kentucky University in 1947.
·
;
:
,
area Scouting facilities, arid his law degree from the
acccrding to Orin E. Atkins, University of Louisville in ,
. Of· the Bend j;(J~..' . ;!~:;
Campaign Cabinet Chainnan 1950. He and his wife, Rui.e,

Salamacha named to
PT. PLEASANT - Walter
Sa lamacha has been selected

household, the number of
bathrooms, and on the
presence and regular use of a
clothes washer and-or
automatic dishwasher. Water
heating units, usually using
gas, electricity, or oil, are
specified in terms of tank
size, · rate ol water input,
maximum estimated hot
water usage per hour, and
recovery or reheating cap- ·
city, rated in gallons per
hour. An over~ized unit uses
energy to keep unneeded
water hot; an undersized unit
cannot supply a sufficient
amount of hot water. A
reliable heating and plum·· ·
bing contractor can deterneeded in

Utilities

The Finest Selection
And The Best Values
ANYWHERE!
BUY NOW&amp; SAVE
DURING OUR
MID-SUMM-ER SALE

KER FURNITURE
IN MIDDLEPORT

have three daughters.
Orin E. Adkins, chainnan.
of the board and chief
executive officer of Ashland
OiJ, Incorporated, was namedas
campaign
ca binetchairman of the Total
Development Fund by
Council President Leo M:'
MacC&lt;lurtney.
•
The Tri-State Area CouncU
recently was rated the top
council in membership, units,'
and quality programs 31l]ong_
78 councils in the Eas~
Central Region of the Boy
Scouts of America, which.
includes the states of West
Virginia, Ohio, Indiana 1..
Wisconsin, 1Uinois, Michigan
and portions of four other
states.
IncorPorated in 1935, the
council serves ten counties in
Kentucky, Ohio, and Wesi
Virginia. The Tri-State Area'
Council is a member agency.
of the Cabell-Wayne United
Way, the Boyd. · county
.Community Chest, and t!&gt;e
Lawrence County, Ohio,
United Way .

HAROLD E. KELLEY

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

FEBRUARY APPLIANCE
CLEARANCE

ELBERFELDS MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE
---------..-..-..--.-...._...._...~-----------17.6 CU. FT. GE REFRIGERATOR · FREEZER
j GE

$499

Heavv dutv . perm press cycle . 3
dryirig temperatures . gold finish ..

I

REG.S249.9s ................... SALE

$224

~:6cu~FT.GE'iEFRi"GE"RATiiR"~FREu£R--1-GE'A"uro"M"ATicw"AsHEi___
No frost· adjustable she lves . power saver switch

.

·
REG.

White
Finish
.

SALE

S5 09 , 9.S~··••••••••••••••••••·••·· ·······

REG. sm. ......

ld f'
h
mlsh · eavy duty - perm press . 3
water
levels.
REG. S319.95••••• • •••••••••••••SALE
G

$449
·

.

o

~

.

,~~~~.~-i-~i.~~ ..... ~.~-~~-~A I;Q

95
1---_.._.._.._.._.._..._.._...,...,.._..._.._._..._.~.JI..i!

.

-----------------,._·--·

GE AUTOMATIC WASHER
Perm press cycle · 2 speeds · gold

1

14.2 CU. FT. GE REFR_
IGERATOR · FREEZER

$285

.

~~t.'mu5 ..................

$299

SALE

. Power saver switc h · adlustabte shelves • rolls on
.,.._..._._._._.,......,..__u,.,....,.._.__.._.._..__.._.._
wheets.
·
MAGIC CHEF ELECTRIC RANGE
REG
White Finish SALE
439~ ·JOinch
- conffnuousclean - auto-cooklngconfrol - clock
· l499.9s ••• -................... .. ...... .
t l mer · lfghted oven and black splash . old r
avocado.
g
O

$

. .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . $4. 49 h

REG 5509 95

Gold Finish

SALE

-...--.-_.._.._.._..~---------------

GE AUTOMATIC wAsHER
Heavy duty · per :n press cycle. White
finish .

A EG. $309.95 ••••••••••• • ••••• , SALk:

$274
.

r---~~----~-~-----------GE ELECTRIC DRYER
.
Perm Press cycle · white finish . 3
drying temperatures.

REG 5479 95
•

•

.
...... 0

0

$385

SALE

•••• 0

M'A'Gic"CHEF'ELiC1iiC'i'AN'G"E_ _ _

$

~nt';.,c.h . large oven . storage - white

259

REG,$317.00·········••••••••• SALE

------------------GE ELECTRIC RANGE
JO Inch · lighted oven : auto-cooking control . clock &amp;
timer.

REG. 5239.95 ••••••••••••••••••• 5ALE

for piU)lphlet
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Hustler Magazine owner
Larry Flynt has been indicted
by a Hamilton County grand
jury for mailing ccpies of a
pamphlet depleting chi ld
abuse to thousands of
Cincinnati-area home.J and
authorizing tile sale of his
magazine at a downtown
storefront.
Flynt was indicted Friday
on 16 counts of 14 recklessly
furnishing" . w juveniles an
illustrated child abuse
• pamphlet last Ocwber. ThO
material
included
photographs vividly
depicting victiins of child
abuse . .
Flynt also was indicled on
two ccunts of cootrolling
''certain obscene material ...
Hustler Magazine, Ocl&lt;lber
and November 1977 Issues ...
with purpose to sell or
pubUcly disseminate."

. GE PORTABLE DRYER
Perm Press cycle · works on household
current . compact size.
REG.I189.95 ................... SALE

White Finish .......... , •••••• SALE

169

$

')25

$

REG.
Sl59.95
Gold Finish ................. ,SALE

~

~-~---L-~--------------~------~~~-~---~~--~
GE AUTOMATIC W~SHER
. .
GE ELECTRIC RANGE
Heavy duty . large capaci ty tub . perm
$
20 Inch apartment size. stain less top.
$
press . white fin ish.
.
.
I
white finish .
·. .
REG.S329 .95
SALE .
. . 1'01 I REG.S259.95 .................. SALE
.-~

235

295

-~---~-.._.._.._.._ _____ '1"""_____ ~-------

I GE ELECTRIC RANGE
I auto-cooking
36 inch · gold finish . self-cleaning oven .
controls . clock _ timer

WHIRLPOOL ELECTRIC DRYER

'
Heavy duty · 5 cycles · 3 temperatures.

$

. .................. .
·-_____..;._. _.235
. .,. ___ --·... .-.-..-----....

--REG. 5259.95 ................... SALE
r-.--~------

·----------~
· ---1

~REG '479 95

~:vyE~~~T~I~yc~~Y~~omatlc
~.EG.mus

SALE.
J

1

$429
--·-....
$324.

$235 ~ ,~~v:~E ~LECTRIC
~~~~~~:.~'::'~~.:?.~ ?.:~~~:.hSALE
G-;~;;;0-;-;;K;-M;;-----+w-....RLPOoLPORTABLE-------,
I
$ 9
$299
........................ .
RANGE
me . au.to c~klng controls. lighted
1
.•

sensor White finish .
,
................... SALE

Hea vy du'y .i8lb. iub 2 spee&lt;l&gt; n 1ni
b? skel
bleach .&amp; fabr ic !&gt;Oflt,ner

d1spenser . white ftn ls h.

.

REG, 5379.95., ................. SALE

··~-

__..,- -

'

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

I

-

DISHWAS HER
5 cy des fE!aturing super s~:our. 2 speedS
\ . gold finish.
.
. LREG $•• , 95
SALE

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

I

_

_.._,;WI

I

I

----~~--"~--~-----~

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
' ,.

•

jlhodes have maintained up

Carter to call both sides
in
th e
coa l dispute
to . the
Wh ite
House
to negotiate . Rep . William Harsha , R-Ohio, has
demanded invocation of the
Tart-Hartley Act to get
miners back to work .
The
Columbus
a nd
Souther" Ohio Electric C&lt;l.,
down to a 45-&lt;iay supply has
repeatedly asked for such
protection. It has about 12
days worui of t'Oal stashed
around the state in trucks and
train cars. But truckers and
rail employ~s do not want to
risk an encounter withUMW
members ,
Ohio Edison , base d in

w now that the Guard, which
is undel'SUlHed. would not be
called on to protect l'oal
shipments.
But thi~ weekend, Sen.
Howard . Metzenbaum , D·
Ohio, said he could see . no
reason why the President or
the governor could not assure
legal prbtection to utilities
that want to ship in coal.
Metzenbaum .. and other
members .of the Ohio
congressional delegation
were mostly dissastified with
the.President's action, saying
it wasn't enough and was too
late. "
Sen. John Glenn, ~hio,
and Metzenbaum want

.

at y

Akron, is one or the most
stra pped of the utilities .
Down to under a ~y
supply, the uUlties says it will
probably have to impose a 50
pert'efll across tbe board
power cutback by the end of
tile week .
The Ohio Power Co, serving
eastern Ohio, has a :i!kla)'
supply and expects curtail·
mcnts eurly next week. The
Mooognltela Power Co., Fairmont, W. Vu ., with !12,000
eastern Ohio cusiQmers has
ooly 26 days or &lt;'Dill left.·
Cleveland
Electric
Illuminating and the Toledo
Edison Co with 50-day
supplies, expeet to rely on

en tine

some nuclear power to get by.
Cutbac ks
or
some
proportion . now · seem
ine ,•itable since officials
estimate it will t(lke about 20
duys (rom the day or
settlement to get coal moving
again.
Businesses and institutions
arow&gt;d the state are stealing
themselves .for that . Ohio
Stute University officials In
Columbus, for exumple, will
decide this 11fternoon whether
the school's athletic program
this week will be held .
Internationa l
Harvester
employees in Springfield got
notil'es this week warning of
U1e chanl'c of layoffs.

~' ifh! o•n

Cents
Vol. 2X,
No. 211

-

Rejection ·could speed
up strike settle~nent
•

approval by Illinois miners. sooner,'' Hollen said.
Officials in several states
"It would bave been a
Rank-and-file members of
expressed
concern over the
if
anybody
would
surprise
tile United Mine Workers say
rejection of the coal have sent it (the proposal) growing ' energy cr1s1s
industry's contract proposal back to the field," said resulting from dwindling
may help speed tile eventual Michael Bunton, a member of utility coal stockpiles.
West Virginia Gov. Jay
settlement of their 71H!ay the District 12 executive
Rockefeller
said he was
board.
strike - if new negotiations
Do
uglas
Arrington
,
"very
disturbed
and
are not delayed.
secretarytreasurer
of
UMW
the
entire
_
concerned
about
Some industry sources
agreed wltll the appraisal, District 28 in Virginia, said "! situation.''
In Indiana, William J .
acknowledging that if the haven't heard the first person
agreement
had
been say · he's for it. In fact,
sub!pitted to \be rank-andfile everyone I've talked to or
for ratification -a procedure heard from is totally against
requiring 10 to 14 days ~ it · it."
"The miners didn't want
EXTENDED FORECAST
would have been turned
any part of it. They were 100
Wednesday · through
down.
Friday·
The tentative agreement percent opposed to the entire
said
Ronald
LockMostly fair, but rather
package,"
was rejected by the UMW
of
UMW Local
cold
Wednesday and
hart,
president
bargaining
council : in
6003
at
Beckley,
W.Va.
Thursday
and a little
Washington Sunday by a ~
Doo
E.
Hollen,
general
warmer
Friday.
Highs will
vote.
manager
of
Monongahela
he
in
the
ZOs
Wednesday
Kennetll Dawes, president
and Thursday and In the
of UMW Districtl2 in IUlnois Power, ~ West . Virginia
utility,
agreed
the
rejection
.
·
30s
Friday. Lows wtll be
and a member of the UMW
from zero to 10 Weduesday
btirgaining council, said .be "probably was a good thing."
"It ll)eails they can get
morning, ristug into the
voted against the contract ·
hack
to
the
bargaining
table
teens
and low 20s by
because it would have heen
Friday.
"impossible"
to ' gain
United Press International

Watt, aide to Gov. Otis R.
Bowen, said the contract
rejection left most of the
nation in a worsening
position.
"I gues~ that means we're
hack on square one and
sinking," said Watt, who
serves as Bowen's assistant
(or energy matters.

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By United Press International
COLUMBUS- OIDO STATE UNIVERSITY officials are
considering what to do about athletic events in the face of a
coal strike tim\ is caWng for strict. electric conservation.
Options are ·cancelling the events or moving them to
opponents' facilities.
Athletic officials are expected to make a strong effort to
retain Thursday's basketball game against Indiana. In greater
jeopardy are the Feb. 23 basketball game with Northwestern
and Feb. 25with Minnesota. OSU swinuning and fencing meets
set MarCh 2-4 are also being reevaluated.
PAINESVIllE, . OffiO ~ NINE·YEAR.OLD JAMES
JONES died in a house fire Saturday morning when a rescue
attempt failed. A resident of the two-family house where the
boy lived tried to get w the child through a second-floor
window with a ladder but was unable to reach him, firefighters
said. Adefective refrigerator was blamed for the $15,000 blaze.

RALEIGH, N. C. - LESLIE "IKE" ATKINSON,
convicted of running a drug smuggling ring from North
Carolina and later his prison. cell, has now been accused oft
controlling another drug operation from prison. ·This time ·
Atkinson is accused of being tile brain behind a drug
smuggling ring which centered around Akroo, Ohio.
Jerry Sloan, Swrunit County, Ohio, assistant prosecul&lt;lr,
said in a telephone interview that 30 persons have been
charged in the drug smuggling operation, which funneled $1
million in drugs throngh Akron a week.
YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO - AUTHORITIES ARE looking
for whoever hurled a JO.pound rock off an expressway onto the
city's Madison Avenue Expressway Saturday night. That rock
smashed through tile windshield of a car and kllled a 3-year-old
boy.
JuHan Morales, Campbell, died of a iractured skull. He
was riding with his grandfather, Julian Morales, 48, when the
rock came hurtling into the car, smashing first ·inw his
grandfather's arm and then Ollto his head.

United Press International
Relentless wmter storms
haltered Southern California
with more earth-loosening
rains and the Great Plains
~d Midwest with snow and
1ce today.
The Northeast, still days or
weeks short of recovery from
last week's record-shattering
blizzard, braced for the approach of niore snow.
Searchers looking for more
than . a dozen persons still
m1ssmg from Friday's
deluge, .flash floods and
mudshdes were forced to qwt
Sunday when a new rain and
snow storm moved into the
hills and mountains north of
Los Angeles.
At least 11 bodies have been
recovered, a dozen people
were still missing from the
flooded Hidden Springs area
and three others were
unaccounted lor in other
sections
of
Southern
California since Friday.

SQUAD RUN
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad took Keith
French, Middleport, a
medical patien.tt to Veterans
Memorial Hospital at 6:30
p.m. Saturday.

•&gt;

,,

Fifteen people previously
reported missing at Hidden
Springs were found safe
&amp;mday.
1
'Those mountains are
saturated now," a Sheriff's
Department spokesman said.
"The danger of slides is
greater. Some of the boulders
are j~st hanging there
waiting to fall."
The Nation.a l Weather
Service said Southern
Calif~rnia which only
months ago was suf'fering
from drought - could expect
st&gt;ll more rain today .
Los Angeles Mayor Tom
Bradley declared a state of
emergency in the Sunland
and Tujunga canyon areas
where damage was estimated
at more than ' $22.5 million.
The county flood control
district said it had spent $5 to
$7 million clearing debris and
repairing dams.
The system Swept onto the
Plains Sunday but failed to

••

Six_hurt m
Rt. 35 crash ·

Six persons were injured,
none S£riously, in a three
vehicle collision at 11:55 p.m.
Saturday . on US 3li ai tlie
OTTAWA, OHIO - SEN. ROBERT DOLE, R-KAN, junction to SR 325 in Rio
discussed his !ann bill, the Panama Canal treaties and Grande.·
allef!lltlons that Panamanian leader Gen. Omar Torrilos Is · The Gallia - Meigs Post
involved in drug dealing in a speech Saturday night at Ohio's State Highway Patrol said an
auto driven by Joe W. Lin·
¥lfth C'!"gr~ooal District's ~ual Lincoln Day Dinner.
damood, Jr., 19, Rt. 2, Vinton,
Dole said his farm bill has " potential· to -save the farm failed to stop for the stop sign
eccnomy." His "flexible pority farm act" would adjust target at the SR 325 intersection to
prices for ~rains and cotton, he said, adding It would allow US 35. His car shot across the
farmers w choole the target price they need, up to 100 percent highway striking a pickup
. par!ty, if they scale dowt: production accordingly.
truck driven by Richard W.
Smith, 23, Princeton, W. Va.
COVINGTON, KY.- NORTHERN KENTUCKY POLICE
The impact. flipped Smith's
officers expect as many as 40 m:rests after weekend raids truck in the area causing it to
wbere omclals looked for persons allegedly involved in drug land on a vehicle driven by
tramcking. Thirteen pereons had been arrested by.Satui-day. Dennis Fraley, 24, Oak Hill.
"We'll get them arrested and then take tllem straight to
All drivers were injured,
tile grand jury, said Kenwn County, Ky., Commonwealth along with two passengers in
Attorney Frank Trusty. Tbe raids climaxed a live-month
th~ truck,
Harvey and
inv!!Siigatlon of alleged &lt;!rug selling in the area.
Barbara Phlegai, both of
Princeton, W.Va . and O!eryl
' LOUIS -- ANHEUSER-BUSCH
.
ST.
INC., tile world's Ball, 18, Bidwell, a passenger
in the Fraley car. They were
(Contlnaed on PIP
taken to the Holter Medical

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TAPE PLAYER FOUND
Sheriff James Proffitt
advises thai the Molorola
tape player stolen from the
auto of John Mark Sayre last
Tuesday evening at Racine
parking lot (Southern High
School lot) has been
recovered . 1t was round in a
baiJl in the Dorcas area .

SV AC CAGE CHAMPIONS .:._ Following Saturday
night's big victory over visiting Symmes Valley, the
Southern Tornadoes clinched their Secor'ld consecutive
Southern Valley Athletic Conf~rence basketball
championship. Southern i.s now 10-1 in league play with

Relentless storms hit again

~ Three firemen suffered smoke inhalation and a fourth
suffered a broken rib in a fall.

•••••

seen from labor and I hate to
see it," said tarfy Harper,
34, acting president of UMW
Locall340 in New J.exington .
He said members of his
union would block trucks to
keep any coal shipments
from passing through Perry
C&lt;lunty.
Deputies in the Belmont
County Sheriff's Deparlment
and ~ir.''
Carter also said he has · in Bellaire, headquarters of
asked
the
Justice UMW District 6, said they
Department to work with would he on Ihe lookout for
state officials in seeing that · possible violence this week .
non-union coal could get to They said whether it
hard-pressed utilities.
developed will depend on ttte
"If they try w get the
weather, and if the National
National Guard or the FBI, Guard is called up .
Adjutant General James C.
you will see one of tile worst
civil wars that you have ever Clem and Gov . James A.

-.

ELEcrRicoruR---..,----

i

Adiustable she l ~es · on wheels fOr easy cleaning
cower saver sw1tch · no frost.
REG: $559.95 Gold Finish ...... SALE

federal-state task force to
come up with ways to
ccmhate electrical shortages.
The force will start work
Wednesday in Canton a
location the White House ~id
was chosen because "clearly
Ohio is the hardest hit, is
centrally located and Canton
is accessible by road, train

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 13, 1978

'

REG. 5349.95

Flynt indicted

'

running out of time. During
the weekend mOil electric
utilities reported they were
nearing the 3jkjay coal limit
that will signal severe
cutbacks of power to major
industries - and resulting
layoffs.
President Carter, glumly
predicting greater hardships
ahead, declared Ohio and
much of the Midwest an
emergency Saturday .
He ordered cutbacks of
power at all federal
installations and threw out aU
pollution control standards so
that utilities can drag every
possible megawatt from the
coal they have left.
Carter also set up a

are desperate for coal

Center.
There was moderate
damage to the Fraley and
Lindamood cars and heavy
damage to Smith's truck .
Lindamood was cited to
Gallipolis Municipal C&lt;lurt
for OWl.
Georu Washineton
McHaffie, 37, Middleport ,
was charged with OWl
following an accident ·at 5
p.m. Saturday on US 33, four
tenths of a mile south or the
Athens County line.
State patrol officers said
McHaffie lost control of his
southbound car. It ran off the
left side , of the highway
striking. a guardrail then
ovetiumed. There was heavy ,
damage.
McHaffte .was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
then was later transferred to
t~e Holzer Medical Center for
treatment
of
injuries
sustained.

live up to its billing by lbe
NWS as possibly lhe season's
worst. Still, up to 6 inches of
snow fell in western Kansas
and Nebraska and heayy
snows were foreca~t for
Missouri, Southern Illinois
and southern Indiana as the
system moved eastward.
Rain fell heav,ily in some
parts of Oklahoma 81\d into
Texas, where thunderstorms
spread
eastward
into
Louisiana and southern
Arkansas. A tornado touched
down west of Cameron, La.,
but there were no reports of

dama~e

Deputies
checking

IJ 111 b~tl Press I ntcrnatlonul

Ohio: A heavy snow
warning Is In effect In the
soulh and west •:cntrol this
aftcrnoou and tonight. A
winter storm wa\ch ts In
effect lu the cast central
tonight.
Snow spreading north
eustwurd over the slate
today, becnmlng m·lxed ut
· ·umes with siCe\ or raln and
becoming heavy In the
central and south tht• of·
ten&gt;oon and tonight. Ac·
cumulations of four to Hlx
lnrhes are possible in the
west and south by early
tonight. Hlghs will be In the
30s and lnws tonight from
10 to ZO In the north and
near 20 In the south. Snow
flurrtesTuesday wllh highs
· from the upper 20• to low
30s.

or injuries. Winds
damaged three houses at
Schertz, Texas, and blew
down at barn at Beaumont.
Traveler's . advisories
extended from Montana
Meigs Cou nty Sherif;
through the Texas Panhandle James J. Proffitt report s
and eastward through deputies inves tigated four
Kentucky ,
. accidents over the weekend.
The eastward movement or
The fir&amp;1. acclden~ ol.'Curred
the system aimed It ·toward at 5:30p.m. Saturday at the
the Northeast, where there old "creamery c;orner'' in
were scant few residents
Racine.
ready towelccme more snow.
Emer C. Swank, 58,
The NWS predicted at least Newark, was traveling east
light snow by Tuesday .
into Racine and slid on an icy
patch, losing control or his
car which struck a west
bound auto driven by Judith
A. Roberts, 22, Athens.
Swank had minor abrasions
to the chin and a bruised lip.
~. · Norris, W. Arthur Orr,
George Neigler, J . W. He was not treat ed im·
·
Weaver, Jr. and Charles mediately.
Swank
was
cited
for left of
David Yost.
center.
Assets and liabilities have
The second accident oc~
grown from $3,638,500.88 to
$10,608,149.86 . This the curred al 8 p.m. Saturday
bank attributed to the evening on SR 124 appeople it serves, stock- proximately six miles east of
Snow mi&gt;ed at times with
holders, and the con· Racine. It is still under in- sleet or rain, becoming heavy
tinued effort of the officers vestigation. Deputies said tonight . Accum ulations of
and staff to be a service to the auto driven and owned by around four inches possible
Larry L. Griffin, RI. I, Long
community.
by early tonight. Highs todoy
Extensive remodeling was Bottom, struck and broke orr will be in the mid to upper
completed In 1977. The public a utility pole. The third ac- 30s ; lows tonight near 20 .
is invited to visit the facilities cident report taken occurred Snow flurries Tuesday with
Saturday morning but· was
at any time.
highs in the low ·3os.
(C&lt;lnlinued on page 10)

Stockholders hold meeting
· RACINE - The Racine
Home National Bank held its
annual Stockholders
meeting
recently .
It
marked the lOth anni·
versary of the merger of
The Racine Home Bank and
the First National Bank.
Fifteen directors were on
the board at the time of the
merger. Eleven were elected
to serve for 1978 including ·
Charles Hayman , chainnan i
John T. Wolfe, president ;
Clarence
Pri ~e.
vice·
president and secretary;
Earl Cross, Albert Hill, Jr.,
Carroll R. Norris, Freeland

one makeup game remaining to be playL'll. Front row, left
to right are Steve Baker, John Sayre, Dave Dindley,
Dwight Hill, Tim Brinoger and Ool)llie Du~dlng,
manager. Rear - Coach .Carl Wolfe, Perry ·Hill, Richard
Teaford, Scott Souder, Jim O'B~ien, Kelly Winebrenner
and Howie Coldwell, assistant.coach.

CONTRIBUTING greaUy to the ccmedy of Meredith
Wileon's Music Man, a Broadway production and later a
movie, is a group known as the 11 dance committee".
Taking the roles in tile Meigs High School Music
Department's presentation of the musical will be, left to
right, Susan Wright, Unda Eason, Cath)\IBlaettnar and

accidents

Weather

Laura Hoover. The group is featured throughout the
presentation which has a "River City" setting. Miss
Hoo~ is also helping with the direction of tile first
Broadway show at the Meigs High Scllool. Show dates
have been set for March 10 and n. Also a committee
member will be jlrynda Black.
:,.
~

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