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f1~ The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-l'omeroy, u ., HIOay,

'-'""· 1.1., '"'"

HOSPITAL NEWS

()peration seen for President
l!y HELEN THOMAS
indicated the president would
UPI While Ho- Reporter
enter , Bethesda Naval
:WASHINGTON (UPI ) Hospital inunediately if the
Pl'elldent Carter's docwrs doctors decide an operation is
coosidered today whether he required .
sbould Wldergo surgery for a
The president was to be
r~currence of a painful
examined today by Dr .
hemorrhoid condition .
William Lukash, the White
·White
House
aides House physician, before a
~ -~l!li!IIIIIIIIUI:¥ 1&lt;¥"" "".,.."""' 1!&lt;:11"" Ill!
1111 """" 1!1

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decision was made on ·
whether the president should
enter the hospital.
He and Mrs. Carter had
planned to fly w Plains, Ga .,
today to spend Olristmas
with 'their families.
Carter, who has been
suffering
from
the
hemorrhoid alta ck since
Tuesday, revealed at a White
11 House Christmas party
I(
Thursday that an operation
was
"a
possibility,"
depending on what hi s
recommended.
11 physicians
•
He also said he was
"feeling much better."
I(
Press secreiary Jody
Powell told reporters that if
Carter
undergoes . the
operation, it "would not be of
I an emergency nature."
"Certaihly if the president
tt impl'oves as he has, surgery
~ •would not be indicated," he
I( said. However, he explained
that Carter feels that "lf
W surgery becomes necessary,
tl! it would be best to go ahead
R with it now in view of his
heavy schedule over the next
W few months ."
Powell said Carter was
examined Tuesday evening
W by Dr. Lee Smith, the
W hospital's rectal and colon
W specialist. His AUanta, Ga.,
tl! specialist,
Dr . Edwin
R Lo'ckridge,
also
was
W consulted by telephone.
W Carter was taking a routine
painkiller and hot baths for
tl! relief, Powell reported.
« His aggravated attack of
W· hemorrhoids , a chronic
W ailment he has had since his
~ college days, was revealed
W Thursday morning when he

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antJ ;1 n,lJXl) nrt r'-P•·r u\, .., N . ..,.,. Yt•.u

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jojning the Pomeroy National Bank

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in a Christmas Brunch on
Saturday morning, December 23

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pomeroy
rutl'!nd
tuppers pla1ns

pomeroy
national
bank

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the bank of
the century
established 1872

FDIC
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MEET DEC. 29
The Letart Township
TrUsiees wiU meet at 1 p.m.
on Dec. 29 at the town hall to
complete the year's business.

~\f:I:UN c·l-II~·rsr7\\AS

HI-LOW TEMl'S
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
highest temperature reported
Thursday to the National
Weather Service, exeluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 84
degrees at Orland, Fla .
Today's low was II degrees
below zero at Roosevelt ,
Utah.

VOL. 13

\\7f~ \\1JSl-l YOll A

unba
GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

TO PRESENT PROGRAM
A Christmas program will
he held at Pomeroy Wesleyan
Church Saturday at 7:30p.m.

MRS. MURL BOLIN
Mrs. Murl D. Bolin, 84, 717
Neil Ave ., Columbus, a
fol'l)ler resident of Meigs
County, died unexpectedly at
her residen ce Wednes day

LICENSE ISSUED
A marriage license was
issued to Jack Lee Day, 27,
Racine, and Sherry Victoria
Belcher, 19, Racine.

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TWO'S COMPANY

~

1!&lt;011!&lt;011!0:1

Joined together by the
glory and pageantry
of this sacred season
we reverently pray
that whatever

tmts

tntintl
MIDDLEPORT - POMEROY

SUNDAY, r&gt;F:CEMBER 24, 1978

.PRICE 25 CENTS

EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday through Wednesday, snow
flurri es Christmas Day and a chance of
rain or snow Tuesday, ending Wednesday. Highs will be In the 30s early
Christmas Day, warming Into the 40s Or.
low 50s Tue;doy then dropping iDto the
upper 30s or 40s Wednesday . Lows will
be In the upper teens or the 20s early
Monday and in the 20s or the lower 30s .
Tuesday and Wednesday.

·,

Lawrence of Ravenswood, W.
Va.; Bill Kanauga; Curt,
Pomeroy, and Jim , Letart,
W. Va., 16 grandchildren and
four great-grandchildren. '
In addition to his parents,
he was preceded in death by
an infant son, and two
brothers, Oris and Detner.
Services will be at I p.m.
Saturday at the Zion Free
Will Bapiist Church with the
Rev. Eddie Boyer officiating.
Burial will be in the New
Marshfield Cemetery.
Friends may ·call at \lie
Jagers and Sons Funeral
Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. this evening.
LEWIS J. SMITH
Lewis J . Smith, 62, Rt . 2,
Pomeroy, died this morning
at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Smith was born Nov. 3,
1916 the son of the late Joseph
and Zelda Sloan Smith. He
was also preceded in death by
one brother, Glen and one
granddaughter, Jody Lynn
McCarty.
Hew was a · veteran of
World War II and a member
of the DAV.
1 Ht:: is su.r vived by his wife,
Ruth, two daughters, Mary
Jane McCarty, Middleport
and Dorothy June Robbins,
Ch..e~apeake ,

Va., two sons,

Stolen
vehicle
is found

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.A{ay this
blessed season
strenKthen the
enduring love
and hope that
was horn to the
world on that
miraculous
night. long ago.
We celebrate
with rou and
give thanks.

Lost and found
Where will it end?
This is the question raised by. more

mill ions and in greater despair each. y~ar
as what was once a season to ' be

l,
· Lewis K. Smith, Pomeroy
••••
and Michael G. Smith, tl!
••••
Pomeroy, six grandchildren I('',•
and several nieces and
:·
nepl)ews.
••••
Funeral services will be
'
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held Sunday at 2 p.m. at. the
Church of Christ in· Christian ~
••
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Union, Middleport, with
Eugene Roush and O'Dell
Manley officiating. Burial
will be in Pratt Forks
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the residence after 7 p.m.
HOWARD L. ROUSH
this
evening. Ewing Funeral
Howard L. Roush, 73, New
Home
is in charge of
Marshfield, formerly of
arrangements.
MinersviUe; died Thursday
morning at O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital following ~""~""~""--~----""""""""""'""""'li¥!!&lt;:&lt;1&lt;¥1!&lt;01!YOI~-"",
a brief illness.
Born in Glarksburg, W. Va. ,
he was the son of the late
Leonard and Susan Burris
Roush .and lived most of his
life in Meigs and Athens
Counties. He was a member
of the Zion Free Will Baptist
Church, Lower Plains, and
retired from the City of
Athens maintenance
department in 1971 after 10 'ii
Ano.ther big shipment of men's dress socks- complete selection
W
years service.
1 of sizes. Hanes underwear for men and boys .- Plenty of tube socks W
He is survived by his wife,
!or men and boys. Men's dress- sport and knit shirts, all sale prices
~
Nellie Mulford Roush ; two
·
Men's
band'ana
handkerchiefs
white
handkerchiefs.
Wembley
·
~
daughters, Mrs . William 111
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Ties
Paris
Bells
Men's
Work
P-Bnts
and
.Shirts
to
matchWallets.
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(Nettie) Booker of Cadillac,
Buy cameras by Kodak or Polaroid - Sale prices now on
Mich., and Mrs. Dallas •
Polaroid and Kodak lilm . Good selection of Fanny Farmer candy (Dorothy) McQuire, Oak
Hill; a son, David L., Letart,
gift wrap paper -ribbon - cards. In the housewares department lots
~
W. Va .i a step-son, Orin,
of gift items for the home such as appliances - dishes - cooking
~
Columbus; four sisters, Mrs. W utensils - Rubbermaid- clocks - Corelle - Corning Ware.
W
Nettie Moore, Mrs . Tom I
In the home furnishings department select towels - sheets W
(Icy ) Miller , both of
bedspreads- drapes - table covers - blankets- area rugs - placematsSyracuse; Mrs. Frank 111
lA
couch and chair covers - .b ath sets .
(Neya) Grinun and Mrs.
On the second floor, big selection of ladies sportswear- dresses- 111
David (Thelma) Grueser,
II
Pomeroy; four brothers, 11 coats - blouses - sweaters - uniforms - jewelry - women's hosiery I wallets - Angel Treads - scarves - gloves - Revlon and Coty W
W Cosmetics - gift sets .
.
Plus
radios
stereo
components
- c. B.'s - records - tapes Services are
guitars - recorders.
W
111
:
Visit
the
lingerie
departmentChoose_
women's
gowns
robes
announced
•
pajamas- gown and robe sets - bras- girdles- slips. You'll like the
111
A schedule of services at ~ excellent selection.
~
Grace Church Parish, . I
The children's department suggests sleep wear- Buster Brown
I!
Pomeroy, during the holiday W · clothes - dresses- coals- jackets - snow suits- sportswear.
· Vi
season is being announced . II!
Furniture on the 3rd iloor for ·quality chairs' - living room
It includes on Sunday, the I! furniture- bedroom- tables - lamps - desks and many more .
II
fourth Sunday of advent, 11 'ii
Our Mechanic Street Warehouse for RCA and G. E. televisionsR
a.m., morning prayer and
applianc_es - carpeting - metal cabinets - linoleum .
·
sermon. At 8 p.m. Sunday
evening there will be a 11
W
Christmas pageimt by the I(
SANTA ClAUS WILL BE IN THE STORE

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Elberfelds

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ELBERFELD$

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OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS

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BIG SELECTIONS.OF ITEMS
FOR LAST MINUTE SHOPPERS

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merry

seems to degenerate further into a time o[
trial and torment.
Each year the assault upon senses and
sensibilities - canned carols, commercial
tinsel, exhortations to buy, buy, .buy begins earlier and becomes more intense.
The clink of the cash register replaces
good will to men. Instead of joy to the
wor ld , we have a struggle for sheer survival.
H.ising a[fluence, it seems, only raises
the ante, not the enjoyment .
And through it all there is an increasi ng sense that something precious

apd essential has been lost - the true
meaning of Christmas .
Where does it end '?
In a mira culous moment.
·Suddenly, just as the frenzy seems to
have reached an unbearable pitch, the
clamor is stilled and the crowds disappea r,
The world outside is deserted, at peace and for the very fo rtunate, white. The
~orld inside is wann , intimate, an oasis 01
family joy.
F'or some, the day is an occasion of
deep reli gious significance . For other s it
may have other, personal meanings.
But for all it is still something very
special, the day of all days of the year .
The meaning of Christmas has not
been lost - only, for a time, misplaced.

is meaningful.

·NEW LEXINGTON, Ohio (UP!) Edward Wilder, 25, Logan, was held in the
Perry County jall Saturday while sheriff's
deputies pondered filing a variety of
charges sterruning from a 31knile chase
through Perry and adjac"ent Fairfield
counties.
Wilder 's brother Billy, a passenger in
the pickup truck during the chase, was
released after quest ioning and no charges
were filed against him .
Perry County deputies had stopped
Wilder at a truck stop on a routine traffic
check late Friday night .

They said they saw hm1 reach under the
seal and heard him say "I' ll whip all of
you" before he sped away .
M. many as 10 cruisers joined in the
chase which at times hit speeds of 100
miles per hour. One officer fired one shot
as the truck crashed a roadblock and U1e
officer jumped out of the way of the truck.
That shot blew out a tire,
A second shot fired at another roadblock
didn't hit anything, they said .
Wilder stopped after crashin g the second
roadblock.

whatever is beautiful,
. whatever brings
happiness to you
and your dear ones

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will be yours

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Crow's Family Restaurant

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will be a service of lessons
and carols at II a.m.

11::

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS 6 TO 8 P.M.
(CLOSED ALL .DAY SUNDAY, DEC. 24TH) .

ELB.ERFELDS IN POMEROY
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GALLIPOLIS ·_ A vehicle valued at
$10,600 report~d stolen in Gallipolis last
February wa s recovered last week when
Ja ckson County, W. Va ., law enforcement
offic ers cracked a car theft ring involved
in the receiving and transrei-ring of stolen
autos from a four-state area, Virginia,
Georgia, West Virginia, a.nd Ohio.
The Gallitl&lt;&gt;lis City Police were informed
on Dec. 16, by the Ripley Detachment of
· the W. Va. State Police that a 1978 threequarter ton pickup owned by Michael
Pollock, 843 Second Ave. , had been im·
pounded as a result of a break-up of the car ·
ring.
The car theft operation allegedly cen·
tered on ~iolen vehicles altered and sold by
a Ripley based operation.
Altering the vehicle identifi cation
numbers, buying wrecked autos and
switching the I.D. numbers with "hot"
car~. stripping the stolen vehicles and
selling the parts and title fraud with the
Department of Motor Vehicles are all
alleged to have taken place.
Seven men , fo ur from J~ckso n County,
and three from Kanawha County have
been arrested in connection with the car
theft ring. A total of 30 felony and one
misdemeanor warrants were handed down
by Mag istrate Noble Adkins prior to the
arrests of the suspects. All those arrested
have been placed on bond.
Late model 1977 and 1978 four-wheel ·
drives were the main vehicles- allegedly
handled by the illegal operation.
Thus far, the in vestigati on has
recovered 12 vehicles, representing $85,000
property value.

Kucinich,
Logan man held following chase staff take
needed rest

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POMEROY

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r---A;;;;;I);;athSl

evening .
· She was born May 29, 1894
in Harrisonville, a daughter
ofthe late Delbert E. and Ola
M. Stile~ Dye. She was employed with the Ohio Bureau
of Motor Vehicles for 28 years
tl!
~-~~--M
J, ,~
U prior "to her retirement.
Vi
·_,t,
.., .' -?1;:- ..,F Vi Surviving are a daughter,
1
Leola M. Gilmore, Route I,
w
~ ;~
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· w RuUand, five grandchildren,
17 great-grandchildren, · six
great-great-grandchildren;
two ·sisters, Mrs. Dorothy
Forno! and Mrs. Irene
w
...J.._ - - ~~~ . w Robbins, both of Columbus.
Several nieces, nephews and
.
:.-i,
cousins also survive. Besides
w
-~ ~
' , . her parents she was preceded
in death by a son; Paul, in
December, 1977; a grandSa1da
you!: .... .,
.
daughter, a great-grandson,
W
with eho;o;r af thl" na"'(le tlmo:.
tl! and two brothers.
W
nmnk.,. for vour ~'""' wlJI.
W Mrs. Bolin was a member
of the McDowell Senior
Citizens Club, was active in
the Retired Senior Volunteer
W
Former L&amp;Z Dress Shop
111 ·Program and was active in
Vi
Main Street. Pomeroy, o.
~ the Democrat party of
Franklin county. She was a
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
W member of the Presbyterian
iif&lt;~g:, 10¥\!&lt;0I!YOI -~~~~~!YOI
I!&lt;OIIIIIIeO:I£1¥ -~~ Church.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Walker Funeral Home with
the Rev . Robert E. Smith,
Sr., officiating. Burial will be
in the Bradford Cemetery.
Friends may caU at the
funeral home in Rutland any
time after 2 p.m. Saturday.
The family will receive
friends from 2 to 4 and from 1 ·
to 9 p.m., Saturday.

J

SQUAD CALLED
-The Middleport emergency
squad answered a call to 108
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, at
8:30 a.m. Friday for Mrs.
Hester Black who was taken
to Holzer Medical Center.

GUARDSMAN KILLED
PITTSBURGH (UPI)- An
Air National Guard maintenance technician was
sucked into the engine of a jet
fighter and killed Thursday
at the Greater Pittsburgh
Airport.
Authorities identified the
victim as Staff Sgt. Ronald F.
Czarniecki, :&gt;.:i, o! Coraopolis.
Two
other
gu ~d .
mechanics were treated ali&gt;'a.._
hospital for superficial burns
and shock.
The three were running
tests on an A-70 single-engine
Corsair Two aJrcraft of the
112\h
Tactica l
Group
stationed at the airport.

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a * a -+-a -+-a _,.,a ... - -a *-• -* • * 1
Start your holiday festivities by •

l

canceled all his official
appointments·. However,
Carter did get a telephone
report from Secretary of
State Cyrus Vance on ·the
strategic arms talks in
Geneva .
His appointments for
today , including budget
sessions, also were canceled.
Vice · President Walter
Mondale Wok over most of
Carter's sc~eduled appointments Thursday.
Mrs. Carter told reporters
Ilia.\ her husband"was feeling
"very sick" and was
"miserable" and got no sleep
Wednesday night.
Carter's hemorrhoid attack
marked the first time in his
presidency that he canceled
appointments because of illness.
Powell said Carter . had
been in "considerable pain"
for three days, and felt so bad
he went to bed In the family
quarters after his problem
was diagnosed by Lukash, the
White House physician .
"Look, he's hurtlng, but
he 's Qot going to die from it,"
Powell said.

Veterans Memorial Hospllal Powell, son, Bidwell.
Admiited
Hubert
Pullins, Middleport.
Discharges, Dec. Zl
Discharged - Ross Kent,
Richard B"arrett, David
Gertrude Woods , Ollie Blankenship, Vernon Cash,
Yo ung, Velma . N~~~1i, Ernest Cullum, Bruce
Catherine Stefapskl.
Davidson , Jr ., Donald
Dc:·3)ass, Gabriel Edwards,
llolzer Medical Center
Ida Evans, J ohn Evans,
Discharges, Dec. 20
Teresa Farney, Frances
Lucille Bearhs, Teresa Hatfield, Lori Howeji, Leona
Cook, , Toby Curtis; Mrs. Hulls, Sybil Lanning, Alva
Bruce Davidson and son, Martin, Mrs. Earl Mattox
My rtle Dempsey, Jewel and da ughter,
Teresa
Dunlap, Ruth Evans, Mrs. McGowan, Melva Mitchell,
David Hammond and son, James Mohler, George
Kristan Heines, Lori Henry, Newlon, Jr. , Timothy Rees,
Marcia Hobstetter, Charles Roger Riggs, Mrs, Richard
Howell, Helen Kinsel, An- . Rose and daughter, Connie
thony Kitchen , Mrs. Samuel Saunders, Vicki Sawyer,
Larch and son, Shirley Mc- Kimberly Seymour, Maye
Donald, Ivan Mulford, Jerry Smith , Pearl Smith, Howard
North, James Pierce, Clara Sprague, Lafe St. Clair ,
Powell, Mrs. Jackie Riley Car ri e Stewart, Suzanne
and son, Aaron Saunders, Taborn, · Nancy Tawney,
Elsie Shaffer,
George Marvin Thomas, Ricky
Snodgrass, Carolyn Tucker, Watson, Marlene Wickline,
Mae Venekamp, Dannie JohnnY Workman.
Wagner, Jack White, Melissa
Woods, Mrs. Frederick Wray
Birth, Dec. 21
and son.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Birlh, Dec. 20
' Williams, son, Oak Hill.
Mr . and Mrs . Phill ip

MEET TUESDAY
The Meigs Area Hc•liness
Association ~ .will
me et
Tuesday, Dec. 26, at the
Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene at 7:30p.m. Dr. R.
D. Brown, pastor of the
Danville Wesleyan church,
will bring the message. The
public is invited.

FROM ONE RETIREE TO ANOTHER - Retiring president of the Ohio
Valley Publishing Co .. RichardS. Owen, (right), presents a watch to Bill Hoffman ,
reUred compositor, at Friday night's Christmas dinner in lh&lt; Point Pleasant
Moose Club, with 65 attending.
s

~--.----~~~----"""""• 1111 -• 1111 •••••••""•111111

·,

MRS. ERMEL WOODYARD , client progra m
coordinator for Cottage Bat the Gallipolls SUJte Institute,
look scraps of whet she had at home and created this
Nativity Scene . lt is on display at the main entrance to
Cottage B. Felt, silks, cotton, yarn, and even white

artifici&lt;:l! fur went into the various parts of this exhibit
which took a week of four or five hours a day to make. She
resides now a mile west of Centenary on SR 141, but 30
years ago she was Crown City correspondent for the
Galli polis newspapers. Sewing is one of her hobbies.

Tax statements will reflect
valuation increase of 20-25%
GALLIPOLIS - Ga llia County's 1978
real estate property tax statements, to be
maHed in January, wmreflect an increase
in property evaluation as mandated by the
St ate Department of Ta x Equalization .
On No v. 6, County Auditor Dorothy
Candee was ordered to submit 3n adjusted
abstract of real property in Gallia County
to comply with the requirement of the Ohio
Revised Code that such property be valued
at 35 percent of its true value.
Auditor Candee was directed to increast'"
the ta xable values of real property in
Gallia Counly by the following percentages: 23 percent on agricultural (23
percent on land, 20 percent on buildings );
25 percent on indu~"t rial. and conunercial ;
and 24 percent on residential.
The effect this incr ease will have on
Gal\la County property ow ner 's tax
statements was illustrated by the county
auditor Fr iday .
According to Condee, if a 150 acre
farm in Green Twp. had previously been
va lued at $20,680, the reevaluation would
bring that total taxable value to $25,700.
This wo uld result in a $14.70 increase in
property taxes per year.
Overall, the rate of taxation has
remained the same for 1978 as it was for
1977. The Gallia County Budget Commission composed of Prosecuting Attorney
Joe Ca in, Treasurer Frank Mills, Jr .. and
Auditor Condee set the rates of taxation
during the fall .
Under the rates established, residents
of the Gallipolis City School District will
pay 25.50 mills. Gallia County Local School
District residents will pay 15.90 for the
operation of that system.
All Gallia County property owners
must pay the county rate of 3.40 mills, as
well as .50 for the 0. 0 . Mcintyre Park '
District, .20 for the Ga llia County Health

Department, 2.00 fur the Joint Vocational
School Distric't , 1.00 for Rio Grande
Community Coll ege, .20 fo r the Gallia

County Library, .30 for the Child Welfare
Bo8rd. c.md 20 for the 648 .Mental Health
Bmu·rl .

Arrest three on charges
of receiving stolen property
MAYSVILLE, Ky. IUP! ) - Three
Franklin , Oh io, residents we.r:-e arrested
Friday on • charges of receiving stolen
property valued at more than $100 after
allegedly attempting to sell 12 head of
stolen cattle at the Maysvill e
Stockyards.
ln tile Mason CoWlty ja il in lieu of $5,000
bond each were Donald fL Ow ens, 29 ; John
D. Butt, 26, and Rena Abner, 24.
Mason County Sheriff Billy Ross said the

By ROBERT SANGEORGE
CLEVELAND (UPI ) - Mayor Dennis
Kucinic h and his City Council are taking a
much·needed rest this Christmas weekend
from Lhe pressure· cooker politics of
Cl eveland's financia l crisis.
But the troubled city remains in default
on $15.5 million in bank notes and
Cleveland's short-term fiscal problems
won't be resolved until Tuesday, at the
earliest.
About the only light moment in recent
days came when the mayor, noting city
leaders have been totally occupied with
the default debate for more then two
weeks, quipped that he has begun wishing
people a "Merry crisis!"
Kucinich and council members, battling
all the way, made a major move Friday
toward lifting their city out of default. But
only hours after the council meeting that
was supposed to end the city's inunediate
financial woes, the mayor advised that
more work is needed before Cleveland
banks will refinance the $15.5 million debt.
The council , in a tense emergency
session, overwhelmingly voted to call a
special election Fe b. !I and ask voters to
approve a one-half of one percent city Firm files lwo suils in co urt
income ta~ increase and sell the city's
GALLIPOLIS - '!'he Southeastern
debt-ridden Municipal Light Plant.
Equipment Company, Upper River Rd. ,
But Kucinich said the six banks holding filed two suits Thursday in Gallia County
Ure notes will not roll over the debt unless Common Pleas Court.
the council also approves an ordinance • In an action filed against Dyer Brothers,
guaranteeing city income tax receipts will Northup, Southeastern seeks $1 ,181 .71,
be used as collateral (security) to
plus interest from Nov. 30 , 1978.
refinance the loans.
In a suit filed against Vernon Simms,
"Not all our problems have been
doing
business al V&amp;R Remodeling,
solved," the mayor warned. "The banks Gallipolis,
the equipment company seeks
cannot yet roll over the city's notes $1 ,305,01 , plus interest from Nov. 30, 1978.
because an ordinance has.not been passed
which would gua r antee incom e tax
Volunteer firem en called
receipts &lt;J::i collateral for our debts."
Kucinich called a special counc il
meeting for Tuesday morning , at which
GAL.l.IPOLIS ·- The Gallipolis City
. time he will ask city lawmakers to approve
Fire
Departm e~t was called to Ihe scene of
"the final step" necessary to lift Cleveland
a
minor
fire at the Henry Sheline
out of default on the bank lOans.
Ku cinich al so argued there were residence, Box 68, Hilltop Dr., Friday at
"loopholes" in the legislation passed by 11 ;48 a.m.
The department reports that a short in
the council Friday and has vowed to
~
h
e
wiring
of a ~urnace motor ignited t_he
oppose the light plant ~a le issue accusing Cleveland Eleclric illuminating unit and c..·."J used an estimated $75 in
damage.
'Co. of trying to "sleai" the facility.

three admitted stealing the cattle Friday
in Warren Cotmty, Ohio, and trucking

them to Maysville.
Theft chmges against the trio also are on
file in Warren County , Ohio:
The three were arrested at the
stockyards after owner Warren Rouse
~came susptcioUS and notified Ross.
A detective and deputy sheriff from
Warren County, Ohio, assisted in tbe
arrests afler being notified by Ross.

IF ALL OF us could see Christmas through the eyes o! a child about 365 days a
year, what a great world it would be. The Times-Sentinel Christmas Child who is
pretty happy as he waits for the arrival of Santa is Travis Abbot!, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Abbott, Wehe Terrace, Pomeroy.
.

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A-~ -The Sunday Tirneh'ientinel, Sunday. Oet·. 24 , 1978

Wt.· foll mwd thl' .Jordan lhn·r thrnu:.:.h .Jt•t·idht ami thl•n ,,, 1 tu
.Jt'I'IINfl~t'm to Hit?. f-lutd . wlll•n· \\'l' \\'t•n • t1~ ·"lk'IICI tht· Jlt•xt

thn•&lt;• mghts .

Peeps~ • •
- -·

j" .
-

A. GallipoIis Diary

.,..-;
:~

after becoming ill al her home.
Friday afternoon, the Middleport
emergency unit transferred Mrs. Jessie
Cottrill from Veterans Memorial Hospital
to the Holzer Medical Center.
BOARD TO MEET
POMEROY - The Colwnbia Township Board of Trustees will hold an end of
the year meeting, at 7 p.m. Dec. 30 althe
township building.

TAKEN TO HOSPITA-L
MIDDLEPOR T - Ve)ma Keller ,
Middleport Route 1. was taken lo Veterans
Memorial Hospital al 10 :37 a.m . -Friday

House arrest stays; founder reported ill
LOS ANGELES (UP! ) Th e distri ct at torney 's
office said Friday it is not
endangering the health of
Synanon founde r Charles
Dederich by trying lo gel hun
jailed like mos.t ot her
arrested suspects.
Ded er ich is bei ng held
under house arrest at his
home in Lake Havasu City,
Ariz., awaiting an extradition
hear ing on (,o s Angeles

charges of instiguating a
rattlesnake attack on a
Synanon "enemy."
De de rich •s per s 0 n a 1.
physician and two outside
doctors said he is too sick to
be jailed, but neither the
doctors nor the sheriff, who
asked them to make the exam
would say wh&amp;t is wrong with
Dederich .
Dederich was free on
$100,000 bond until he was re-

.

arrested Wednesday on a
governors' warrant sought by
Los Angeles authorities.
Syanon called the arrest a
"deliberate, vicious attempt"
to deny Dederich's rights and
send "a seriously ill 55-yearold man" to jail, "a stressful
situation doctors said he
might nol survive."
.
"His life is al stake," said
the statement issued by the
Synanon ranch at Badger,

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THE TRAINING YOU NEED
FOR THE BUSINESS WORLD

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Executive Secretary

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ALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS
COL LEG I
ao. ,..

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t lnd 11 months Carter Programs and 11

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Months

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school
planned
GALUPOlJS - A cooking
school for lonely men is in the
offing early next year for the
Gallia County Senior Citizens
Center, according to announcement today of Vilma
Pikkoja, humanities chairman.
The Rev. Miles Hoon wUl be
chairman of the school. He
resides with his daughter,
Mrs. Roger C. Barron, 122
Bastiani Dr., Gallipolis.
Gilbert Craig will be the
"professor,,. and Dewey
Walker's recipe for apple
tarts, which took No. 2 in the
Ohio Grange contest in 1977
over ttie entire state,
be
demonstrated, she said.
Another activity, scheduled
for Jan. 12 througb Jan, 31, is
the one-person art exhibit of
Marie Utterer, according to
Mrs.
Pikkoja's
announcement. Prof. J . Donald
Pollitt's literature class will
reswne Jan. 10.

will

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Cooking

n.n-oen 1

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d;,,.,, m;u lilll! maUt•r at Pnult'rnr .
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AA .:III ' 11\tJtlil' !'t •ILh' $:!.:!5 1\WIIlhly '

Th r· - 11:111~· St•ntull'). unt• ~ · ··ar
$:!i . J~l : Six lll l ll llh.~ U4.j0; thn•t•
marolh~ f.R:.O. P.ISJ•wlu•rl• $:1:UW1 : s 1 ~
1111 •n1 h ~ $17 00 : till'l~ · nwnths ~!1 . 00 .
Thr Unih'rl" Pr1•ss lulr•mtil•tHI I i.~

ADDA JISS-------1

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t•lltlllr•rl 111 lht • tlq' fr&gt;l'

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CITY

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!In· lnr·tr l llt 'WS Jllthl b ht'tl llt'l'l'ill .

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Rotarians enjoy
MIDDLEPORT - Six
.
tensive physical therapy.
Methodist ministers of Meigs from Vicki Spencer, daughter
County presented a program of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. (Jack\
of Christmas carols for the Spencer of near Pomeroy.
Middleport - Pomeroy Rotary Miss Spencer is in Germany
Club Friday evening at Heath studying under the spanUnited M&amp;hodist Church in sorship of the District
Middleport.
Rotary. Her parlll)IS were
Ministers making up the guests at Friday night's
group
were
Robert Rotary Club meeting.
The group also discussed ·
Bumgarner, Robert McGhee,
Carl Hicks, James Corbett, Dennis Keney, a member of
David Harris and Richard the club when he resided in
Thomas who was ac- Meigs County. Keney,
companist.
seriously injured in a
During
the
meeting motorcycle accident over two
presided over by president years ago, is · making exJohn Rice, a letter was read cellent progress in California

church
served dinner to the club.

Nov . 7 al sunset we arriv-

FOR YOUR
SHOPPING
CONVEN:IENCE

No .ruling in sentence
of
death for ex-leader
HAWALPINDJ, Pakistan Bhutto•s appeal. The
(UPI) -Pakistan'sSupreme
Court ended hearings
Saturday on former Prime
Minister Zulfikar Ali Bliutto's
appeal of his death sentence
but did not .hand down a
ruling.
' Bhutto and four officials of
the nation's disbanded
Federal SecurityF&lt;rces have
been coovlcted of plotting the
murder of a political
opponent of the former- prime
minister.
Bhutto was sentenced tD
death by a lower court in
Lahpre in 1971 for the alleged
planned political murder.
The seven Supreme Court
judges ruled there was no
reason to recall any of four
prosecution witnesses in

coQI'l
also said there were no
·grounds for calling three
defense witnesses.
The cotirt did noi announce
when it would present its final
judgment. Although Its twoweek winter vacation begins
Saturday, It can deliver its,
judgment any lime.
Chief Justice t\nwarul Haq
said only that the court had
decided to end the hearings
after a prolonged discusaioo
oo points raised by both sides.
The Lahoce High Court
charged Bhutto with ordering
the murder of Alunad Raza
Kasuri, a political foe.
The four officers were convicted of carrying out the
attack on Kasuri, in which his
father, Nawab Mooanunad

' '

H.E

·'·'

WILL BE
OPEN 12 NOON
TILL 6 PM
SUNDAY, DEC. 24

.,.

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OPEN

~

~:
~:

~:

CuNT lAST WOOD

WILL TUAN YOU

'IVEAY WtiiC" WAY
IUT loOSI'
COMPA~~

SEE US FOR THOSE LAST MINUTE
GIFT ·IDEAS•• • •
'

Have A

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Christmas
~

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Silver Bridge Pja&gt;.a

Sprin9 Valley

Membor FDIC

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Decrease due
on·January 1 ·
MARION - A scheduled
decrease in the federal excise
tax next week will save
General Telephone
customers an estimated $1.6
million on their 1979 phone
bills.
The tax is assessed on all
local and long-distance phone
service.- It will drop from a
rate of four percent to three
percent on Monday, (Jan. 1).
A GenTel spokesman said
the decrease is part of a
gradual phase out mandated
by the Federal, Estate and
Gift Tax Adjustment Act of
1970.
The official said the tax
was first levied as a temporary measure during
World War I. It was reapplied
during the 1932 depression
and expanded in 1942 to meet
war needs.
During the 1950s the tax
was repealed for aU utility
service except telephones.
The rate stood at 10 percent
until the tax adjustment act,
the spokesman said.

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FOR INFORMATION LEADING TO
THE ARREST AND CONVICTION
OF PERSON OR PERSONS
WHO VANDALIZED OIL STORAGE
'

JOHN E. HAlliDAY
Chairman, Board of DirectoJS

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Merry Christmas
to all our patients

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C&amp;S Bank

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By Stale Rep.
will be able to assure the and more rigorous testing of
Ron James
regulation of water supplies . our drinking water. In adCOLUMBUS - On Nov. even to consumers served by dition, Ohio will be eligible to
28, the Ohio General small water companies. rece lve federaJ grant monies S " lo found at W ash in~ton.
Assembly completed action Before this law, only about for the administrati on of its urult ·r tht· sn mt• of Ow
Sr nit h~tllli~;tn Jn stituti\111, an
and the SJte nf Snlom!&gt;n 's tcm)Jil!. Ov~r· this the Mmil'ms have on Senate Bill 445, which the B"'· water systems in Ohio public water supply program.
signed
on were regulated ; now, the I voted for S.B. 445 because I t· ~t;t bli s l urwnt fur lhl.:' inbur it a magmfrl'entl&lt;·mple &lt;'all,,l the Otnne of Ill&lt;' Hnck. Jnsid&lt;' governor
December 15. Senate Bill 445 total is expected lo rise to believe that we need lo be f ' tT&lt;-t Sl' cmd diffusion of
we SHw the rnck where Abraham vflt•r..,)lsaac.
gives the Ohio Environ· 20,000.
assured that our drinking knuwlt·dgt! amnng mt.·n ." The
mental
Protection
Agency
The new law requires the water is safe. In addition, we hcquest tot&lt;JIL'&lt;I mon• than
NOV. ll IN THF. MORNING we motored south thrnugh thl'
the
primary
responsibUlty
to
Ohio EPA lo enforce need lo have our stale EPA in hcdf a milli t•n dulle~rs, a greeit
.Jud&lt;•an Wrlderness and alnng the Dead Sea - 1700 feel IJ&lt;olow
enforce
the
federal
Safe
.maximum contaminant control or our regulations furt urw in that day .
sea level and the lowest plaee on earth. We reached Masada
whi&lt;'h is built on S~l·h a high mountain that it can be reacheJ Drinking Water Act of 1974. levels in our drinking water without direct federal inINTERNA TIONA!. CITY
only by cable-ear·. Here the Jewish Zealots resisted the Roman S.B. 445 is important because systems. The EPA will also tervenlion.
With s .B. 445, Ohio joins
Jntcrnalional Citv Mobile.
a11ny by all committing suicide rather than to fall into slavery. it demonstrates to the federal regularly monitor drinking
After lunch we slopped at the Oasis of F.n-Gedi, where David . government that Ohio intends water, then report. the fin- approximately fort y other 1\lrt ., smnctimc~; is ~Hlled Uw
hul from Saul and had a swim in the Dead Sea . lt is 3.1 percent to control the inspection of its dings and keep records. The stales tha t have taken the ·'City of Stx flags. " Sin&lt;"e its
salt and you really have no trouble sf "Ying on top of the water. own public water systems. public must be nolif·ied if its necessary steps to assume first settlement , the cit v has
We then pr·uc"eeded to Qwnran, the City of the Essenes, and Without lhe passage or' this water system fails to meet primary enforcement of the ben nwncd by lht• French.
bill, the federal government lhe requirements and why. If Safe Dnnking Water Act
11ntish, etnrl Spa nish and hns
saw the cave where the Dead Sea scrolls were found . · ,
would have begun the at any time , certain conflown the f,lags of tlw
i\rn erican Ct llonie!-i , the C:onNOV. 12 we drove five miles suuth of Jerusalem In regulation of Ohio's drinking laminanllevels are above the
SWF.F.TSTIIRT
B.ethll'hem. We suw Rachel's Tomb, Shepber~'s field, and the water, and in addition, Ohio required levels, the public
Sugar c~m~ firs1 s prouted fl•i kr :-~ tP sLates Hnd the
hlrlhpla&lt;'l' uf Jesus. My &lt;:burch has a missionary family living would have lost the federal will be advised.
un tht• island of New Gu im•a United Stales.
funds available for this
The passage and enact- in lhe South Padfk ami was
m Bethlehem. It waa su&lt;•h a joy to s«• them and worship with
purpose. With the passage of ment.of S.B. 445 means that l'HITied north t~~ Indi CJ in kCJr " in Ara bie, "sachar" in
them In their Iiiii~ churt•h.
S.B. 445, Ohio will receive there will be more stringent prehistoric times. The In - Hussi cm , " ZUcker " in r; erNOV. 13 WF. BADE FAREWBI.J. to the Holy Land and flew $293,250 in federal matching controls on drinking water dian s gt-~vc it a n&lt;-une ; th e m&lt;-~n , ''suc:re " in French &lt;:ind
lo Athens. We had a lour of the city Hnd saw IJlany histnrical funds for Fiscal Year 1979
s u~(-lf" t11eir cr·ude methods "slwker " in Swedish . And the
. sp?ts. But best of all was climbing the Acropolis, on which the and an equal amount of
produced luukt'd likt• gnlVcl, bigger chunks prmltu:cd wh:tt
~
rums of the Parthenon sit. ll was a long way to the top, and we federal funds Fr'scal Year , ~lr~,iv,("~,('~~~
or,. in Sanskrit , "sHrke~ra, " Ind ia ns ealled ··kmmda ," or
..... ..~, •·~ v rt'{ 'OJ.!nizclbie today e~s "suk - ('C:I Ildy '
had to chmb many steps and .over rocks but we older folk 1980. For FY 1980, the additional
cost
to
Ohio
will
be
~\
·n·:l[' ;;
made' it Hlmost as well as the young ones. From this we could
«&lt;0542
··.&lt;.=~
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.
u
see Mars Hill , w, where Paul preached.
S.B.
445
basically
in&lt;
.
Rfjo!&lt;!·.
,
'
NOV, 14 WE BOARDED a bus that took us to Corinth,
corporales
lhe
provisions
of
~
~
wher·e Paul established a .church. We saw the market
the federal Safe Drinking •~
\
place of Corinth as it was in the days of Paul.
Water Act into Ohio law. With ('
NOV. 15 A FULL DAY cruise on a nice ship to three the passage of this bUl, Ohio ~
Monday, December 22,
Greek islands, ilegina, Porus, and Hydra. These places law will require that every '
were indeed a w(nnan's paradise, for we really had time to public water system that
TuesdaJ', December 26
regularly serves at least
shop in some gift shops.
twenty-five individuals be
and Monday, january 1
NOV. 16 WE BADE GOO[).BY to Greece and transfer- regulated. The Ohio EnvironDAY TO
red lo the airport for a flight into_ Geneva, Switzerland. mental Protection Agency
Dr. Berkich and Dr. Lentz witt be
CHRISTMAS
Here we had a three-hour lour of the city and some time to
shop for Swiss watches and Swiss chocolates. We arrived
on duty in the emergency room .
horne Nov . 17.
made the trip nice for me was my IJ&lt;ost girl friend and her
husband were along . We had met the first day we went lu
WE HAD A SMALL GHOUP of 17, and we learned to school in the first grade and have been lifelong fri ends.·
know each other; lhe fellowship was great. One lady fell That made the trip extra special. Truly, it was a fabul ous
and broke an ankle; she had lo hobble with a cast on. Con- trip and one that every Christian should take. I'm reading
sidering all the_ traveling and walking we did , we praise in Malthew, and it is much more meaninKf ul now thci! I've
the Lord for H1s mercy and goodness. Another thing that seen these spots.

CARTOON

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Merry, Merry

~~~~~~~~
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~ A WARN ER COMMUNI(ATIONS•COMPANY

A MALPASO
FILM
IPGi o,stnbutcd t.y WA~NE.J! IJROS

nwt·s its origin lu .lamt'!'
Smithson. a wN1Jthy F:ogli sh
~wit-n ti st whn llt'\'t'l' visih •d
t ilt· Unitl·d St;rt1 ·s. Smithson,
whn died in ltrd\' inl82~). willt·rl h1s t•nt ll'&lt;' for:t unt · to tht• U.

Hillcrest Surgical Clinic
will be closed

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25 Court Street

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View from the Statehouse

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1 P.M. til 5:30 P.M •

The Commerclal8r. Savings Bank

i

Nov. 9- one of the
highlights of the enti re
trip - our boat ride across
·lhe Sea of Galilee from
Capernaum to Tiuerias.
E
OGG
While on the boal someone
ISAB , I. 8 ' S
read the story of Jesus walking on the water. Prayer was offered, and the ride .was inspiraliQnal. We saw . the hillside
where Jesus preached the Serm?n on the Mount. Driving south

SUN DAY DEC. 24th

Save TimeBank by mail.

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IN THE
SILVER iRIDGE PLAZA

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ed at Ben Gurion airport
and were taken to our hotel
in Tel-Aviv. Aller the long
nde we were ready for a
night's rest.
Nov. 8 after· a tour of TelAviv, Israel's largest ci ty ,
we headed north along the
M~dilerra~e1:1n Sea. Our
gurde was a young .Jewish
girl named Durit. She
spoke excellent F.nglish
and was a delightful person. Our r driver was a
young Arab. His name was
so strange that I never
learned it. Our fir s! slop
was at Caesarea ; it was
here Peter baptized Cornelius and his familv . Here
Peter was impri soned two
years before being sent lo
Rome. We .continued north
to Mount Carmel, where
Elyah killed the pr·ophets of
Baal. Next we visited
Nazareth and Cana, where
.Jesus turned the water into
wine.

. r~s~~~~s~~~*~~~

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/{) l,"i IIU."I. UtH ;t;.•·•. .~III'.~I~ ·,.Jum"i.d

:., GALI.IPOLIS :- "F~tr unto to you is born this davin the dtv
or Davrd a savror, whrch is Christ the Lord." Luke 2:11 .
·
Indeed, rt was so llll'illing lo sec aml ·sland on the same
lullsrde where the shephe1·ds announced the birth of our· I .ord.
.For Ch:rsl~as !Ius yea.r I thought 1 would write you of my
lrrp to Israel and Greece,mstead of the usual card .
We departed from Cincinnati airport at 4 p.m. Munday, Nov.
fi. After chan!(lng to Swissair at
in New York
we were on our way .

. : .'- , • I

CLOSED MONDAY
Gt\LlJPOUS - Assistant Gallipolis
PostmasterJim Betz .announced Sat urday
that the Gallipolis Post Office will be
closed on Christmas Day. There will be no
mail received or dispatched Monday.
There will be no lock box service.

JOin Uu~ morning wt• vil'wt.•d llw 1·ity tlf .Tt'l'llsMh!m fmm
Uw Muunt of Olivt•s. tlw pl:1&lt;'(' H( Christ's aM't'llsiC,n . Wt• s.aw
lht•. Easlt·.rn J.! Hte ,. which i~ nuw dusl•d nntl will uo1 ht' UJK'Ill'd
until Chnl't rclums ~ Wt• tht•n prucct•dt'&lt;l to ttw nnrdt•n 11r
~t· tllscmctnl' find l11 Gl!lg~ltlm . wht•re Chr·ist W.HS t · rut·ifit·~l. This
Is also a ganlt•n. Tlll'rl' wt• hcul t•mnmunion scr·vi&lt;:e and sc.ng
hymns. Ill till' afh.•rnoun we wt•nt on H walkin~ tour of the 11ld d ~
ty . Wl' p~sscd ('Olc~rful U.tzattrs fHld c•: nnt• tu U1.- Wailing W,cdl
Ntl\' .

RriliNh PhilanlhrnJJi&lt;t
Tilt' Srnil!t"i411lietn Jnftitution

TANKS IN ADDISON TOWNSHIP,GALLIA COUNTY, ON

"Over the years, we've
made our best efforts to
provide you with the most
innovative and useful
banking services, and to
deliver those services in
a most friendly and personal manner.
"It is unwise, however,
for a bank to stand on its
merits of the past. In
recognizing this, we've
made a pledge to continue
offering you the newest
and finest banking services
as they are developed,
and to continue our
attitude of warm and
personal banking.
"'We want to be your
bank' is symbolic of this
pledge. And it stands as
more than just a state·
ment. It's a commitment

.. . not just from me. but
from our entire staff. And
it's an attitude you 'II
find in every service of
every department in our
institution .
"Let us rrove it to you."

J ohn E. Halliday
Chairman Board Di r ect ors ·

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 20th.
PHONE THE GALLIA COUNTY
SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT
446-1221
-·

•

•

r: t97L A0\'1 ,RI ISING ASSOCIAll S INC

Memhe r FDIC

�.

A-4- TheSundayTimeh'ientinei.Sun&lt;ll&lt;;·. Dt•&lt;'. 2-1. 1!'7~

.

Of the Bend ·

WASHINGTON (UP!) fipdings - that Lee Harvey were fired at Kenn edy's
The House assassinations Oswald acted alone - have motorcade in Dallas 15 years
COinmiltee spent two years · been thrown Into turmoil .
ago, an analysis showing
and almost $5. million
The reason is a new " beyond a reasonable doubt"
investigating the slaying of analysis of a police recording that at least two persons were
John F. Kennedy . Now, its made at the moment shots · involved in the shooting.
The committee,.which was
scheduled to cease existence
Dec. 31, was in the process of
putting the ·finishinR touches
on .its ."no-surprise.u , final
report earlier this week when
the reevaluation arrived with
its. ominous implications.
Committee chairman Louis
Stokes, D-Ohio, was 'out of
town this week. But ,. when
informed by staff of the
development, he called an

By Bob Hoeflich

The season has for many years been a busy one and
particularly for the cooks who turn. out those delicious holiday
treats.
Gene· Grate, who for years has spent da~s and days in
making fruit cakes (some 60 this year) and hand-dipped
cllocolates, pound after pound, is throwing it all to the winds.
Gene dld his swan song this year . Inflation has gotten to him
ani! he refuses to go along with it another year. And so the end
of his traditional homemade gift giving.
. Speaking of candy makers, Barbara Sargent has been
really in there at the county infirmary for the past week or so
turning out a variety of candies for residents there. Barbara
says she's been making candy for so long that she doesn 't even
really know how to do it- she just does it.

J. R. Hunnel, while on his way to the business section, lost .
donated funds for tbe Jaycee Toys for Tots program. An
honest, personal friend, Erma Smith, found it and, of course,
hustled to get the money back to J. R. Great to have honest
people around.
.
One of the wifortunate residents to go through the lost billfold bii this season is Margaret Neuman. Mrs. Neuman lost her
billfold containiQg not only a sum of money but the usual
valuaple papers enclosed. She would really appreciate hearing
from someone about the papers if nothing else. She has offered
a reward to· anyone .finding the billfold.

2 1" c ut size Save!

POINT PLEASANT Pleasant Valley Hospital
officials were notified Friday
th e hospital has been
awarded the maximum two
year accreditation by the
Joint Commission on · Accreditation of Hospitals
(JCAH). James L. Farley,
Execut ive Director ·of
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
sa id "This is the best Christ·
mas' present any hospital
could be awarded. "
The full two-year accreditation was achieved
following a thorough two day .
survey of the hospital by a
professional survey team of
the Joint Commission's
Hospital · Accreditation
Program (HAP) . The accreditation means that
Pleasant Valley Hospital has
voluntarily chosen to be
measured by the standards
developed by the J oint
Commission and has been
fo und to be in compliance
with them: These standards,

pu blished
cre ditat ion

in

Choose frorn a larg e' se lecti o n
of l"ovely so li d color s or prints.
fv'Cchine wa sh, no-iron. fabrics.

IYILII'
aouo~n

Twin Flat or FiHed · Full Flut

337

217

247...

,Reg.
3.67

orFIHIII

•:::,

Pillow
c
· ••••·Pr.

·•·••

Acfor

-

,...,,

·

r

··

.,_.,
2 ,~

Full Flut
or FIHtd

396
.::l;

Pillow,·r.
Cuses·

2'.•,•.6,•,·

cv;;.iua ti on

by

both

I. ou••••
•••n

1

Reg. 4.33.

TWIN
SIZE
Reg. 15.77

2"
3"

3~! Twin Flat or FIHed

Pillow ·
Cuses-Pr.

.

1'' ·'7;

297.

Save

'I

,,,
~ ...

Easy -care musl i n is durable blend of 50%
po l yester / 50% se le cted Ame r ican 'cott o n.
Mach ine wash, never need ironing . Whi te.

Save•t

Full Flat
. or Fitted

••·

Each

education.

self-evaluation,

and consultation.
The J CAH, formed in 1951,
is a private, non-for-profit

Se lf-s toc king desk trays.
9-compartment organizers.

UMITEO QUANTITIES
NO RAIN CHECKS

--------

CLIP DISPENSER
OR PENCIL CUP

117

99C
Reg. fJ,SJ

I

SELF-ADHESIVE PLASDC

.

RoU

u••, .. ,.,....,...

purpose is to promot e high
quality in the provision of
he al th ca re and relat ed
human services. Member
organizations of the Board of
the JCAH are the American
College of Physicians, the
Ameri ca n
Coll ege
of
Surgeons , th e Ameri can
Hospital Association, and the

So"Y· No Roin&lt;he&lt;ko

- ~~

84c

PKG.

Twe lve 35-yd , spo o ls p oly esl&amp;r In co lo rs . Three 250-yd .

spoo ls me rceri zed conon•or
po lyeslt! r. Wh 11e a nd block .

8%" Sclsson

PoiJester Elastic
6

'lo&gt;l08·' , '1»54",
lf. x 36 ' ', 1 ~3 0 ",
¥.!x 36' ' n on -ro ll.

For

~~:

PRICE

,_APIR IIAPKIIIS

IReg. •1.31l99C
• Pack ol300

12 Color

PAPER tOWELS
• IOO, 2-PLYSHEETS
IIJ\T SAY

"CHARGE IT"
.-1 MUII,Hl'

~

••v·

58'

188

Ex,.,.,.,

Reg. '1.59
Iooo.pc pua le, l

2 0x 2 6 - in c h s iz e .
l o ad s· o f fun f o r
ag e s 12 1o o d u l t.

Vl S.A Oit

8~-115

and pr it1)e

lb. shorn

with no . 1-:t pelts 65~7 .6&gt;: 92115 lb. wooled 64.2:Hl6.50.
Sl ~m g h te r ewe.s: Utility and
good U u-170 :b. 19 .1().31.
Feeder lam bs : Cb o1ce and
fan c1· G:f./H lb . 66. 75-72.75:

choice 611-&lt;lu 111. 62-68.

PRICE

EACH

ST ART S
8 : 00 A . M .

97.

PRICE

D E C. 26, 1978
EN DS D E C. 30, 1978

LIMIT

Sonny and Cher, Brook
Bento n, Rod St ewa rl ,
Country Hits and more!

3 PKGS.

8-IRACK
CARTRIDGE
CARRY CASE

2'4

PLASTIC TUMBLERS

38~G.

REGULAR

I SAVE $1 I

72.

THOUSANDS OF
60" &amp; 45" FABRIC

~PRICE

lUIIl l PillS. EAC• SID

LIMitH OHIIIItftl • . , . . a.tMhMII•

2"

Fllm51oot:110,126,

127, 620. O.velo~ed
and Prlnt•d

Super I or l•gular

also 35mm Slides•
20 bpos,ur~

97C

ROLL

1,139

20 or 24

SX·JO

Expa~ures

·10IXP.

ROLL

--

;..::.:.::E::.;W;;..._.J

SUN. 1 TO 6
TUES.-TliURS. 9:30-8 .

I

DEC. 25th
FRI. 9:30 TO 8.

SAT. 9:30 to.·5

..
:

l'

8 IJ(P,

MAGICUBIS
REG..

'I.A4

I
L
I

· 1 12

IU',f '&gt;"l

·CHARGE IT"

I

~~

Mt RPfH \

TYPI88 .
IIXP.

LIMII 2
I

USI YOUI
VtSAOI

MAITII CHAIIGI

LIMII2

. . LIMIT 2
G.C. MURPHY CO. - 'I'HE FAIEN

••

REG.

,•s·•'
rnG.l

~

•

,,

•

•

LV S'W'OAEW

,.

'

~

-·-~

No Layaway or .C harge
On Piece Goods :

THE FABRIC SHOP
115

2

c

10% OFF -ALL
SLANT NEEDLEl
·SEWING MACHINES

LIMtT2 EAOI SIZE

AVAILABLE ONLY AT YQUR G.C. MURPHY CO. STORE Tues.-wed'.-Th~~· 9~3~ t: s:o~~~~i. ~~o :0 s:oo
0

,.

,,

TYPII08

SYLYAIIA ILII NT"

full and GAF film Included At TheM Prices I
Some For.lgn Film Ancl Film hqulrlne Special
Proc..tlng, bcluded At TheM Low Prices,

.

AVAILABLE ONLY AT YOUR G.C. MURPHY STORE
,.

per head.
Sheep: Slaught er Jam bs
steady to 2.50 higher , fee der
lamlJs 3 higher.
Slaughter lambs: Chotce

St oc k. up on f i l m during
our Ye ar - End sa le w hil e
the pri ces are so low!

UAPHV CO. - 'W'HE

\

5(1...6{) : 1-:1, 45·53 lb . 40-40 al;

REGULAR

LOW, LOW

Selection includes hits by Ronnie Milsap, B. J. Thomas ,
The Grateful Dead and other favorites! Toke advantage ~ow
of our sUper low pri ce to add to your record c o llect1 o n!

U5l 'rOUit
MAS fl:: .ot CHA.GE

lb. :\4; 195-

68c

20 Color lxposuros

BIG BEN® PU~ZLES

LIMIT 6

30&lt;,Wl~JU

Printed

Koduc...,_ or Ek111c...•••

38C

LOW

99

I OUR

FllmSI•eoo 1 1 0 , 1 9 9
126.127.620 .
.
Oevotopod and
ROLL

LIM;T ·

3 PACKS

OIIIIA··IIMIOIOLL

Photo Headquarters For
&amp;orderless Silk-Finish
Color Prints
Developed and Printed
At One Low Price! ~---'--'----';

Ch oos e from a large select io n
of MonoQrom and Revell model
kit s. Easy and fun to a sse mbl e .

....... p . .

BIG BUY! STEREO ALBUMS

''
.':·

,_ .

SUPER BUY I
MODEL KITS

M edi c a l

11

, U7.
Reg.

~

Boars:

250 lb. :14-40.
Feeder pi~s: 1-2, 16 lb. 17 ;
21-25 lb. 21~12.50; 30-30 lb: :12·
:l9; ·H-IOlb. 38.;,0-Hi: o~:; o lh .

PAPER
PLATIS

r----------------

Honger/eoseL

,,J,

Ha ~mws and ~~ilts: 1-~. 21G-

241l lh. ;, ]71}.\2.10.
.
Sows: 1-:l. 300-400 lb. n.:.\fl .
43.60 : 401l-ll50 lb. 13.75-4490.

Pllg. of 100

3!!

I
I

regUlar gloss.

fT.9l48C .

~teadv .

oc ryl 1c/co tl on ( l iTh •No rm,
f\e e 1;e ltn ing Ma ny colors 10 c ho~se
fr om Ln n o s le ev e$ S1r es S, M,t , l.

SAVE ON
I-TRACK
TAPES

I
I
I
I
I
I

5x7" or lxiO"
P-.oTOFRAMES

148
$1

tx&gt;cu·s steady, teedt:&gt;r pigs

\st1e \ 377
I
I
I
I
I

CONTACT A·21®

2.86 Yard x ·
18" Wide Roll

Sta inle ss steel
Fo r cu lli ng poly e s t43 r doublekn it .

footage of

. MIN'S SWEATSHIRTS

Goldtone with
non-9 lare or

C.

~·,:t cn&lt;;tve

c1e s\ o n '

De co ra 1o r pnnl £ and
so l td co l o rs 0 1 r~ c h
w ood -l ook po1ter ns .

.?o";d

lb. 5().53 ; good 2-3. 75().1100 lb.
4&amp;-52.50.
Slaughter cows: Utility and
commercial 2-4, 85().1600 lb.
39-48.10 ; cutter 1-2, 75().1J00
lb. 36.50-42.50, high dressing
43-45.50.
Slaughter bulls : l's and 2's
1125-1600 lb. 46.60.,13.85.
Veal ers : Couple choice 185245 lb. 75-77.50; co uple good
205-265 lb. 65. 00 ; calve s
medium fram e holsteins B().
100 lb ; 61 -65 ·cwt . at
Wilmington 15().250 lb. 65-'13 ;
75-100 lb. 30-52 by th e head.
Feeder cattle: Steers
choice and prime 335~30 lb.
65-78 ; 650-1\00 lb. 55.51).,)9 ;
good 33().700 lb. 53-66; heifers
choice and prime 300-620 lb.
5!H&gt;B; goo d 275-ll25 lb. 47-56.
Hogs : Barrows and gilts I
higher . sows 1.25-2. fW bigher,

100% nylon or blend of nylon and polyester .
Non -slip rubber back . Many styles, colors.

~~~ ~7::,".~.~opj~~:g

THREAD

debilitating to patients .
But who wants haHway houses for mental patient.&lt;.; in their
nice r esidential neighborhoods ? Not you, mostJy likely. nur
me. Accor ding to a pSychiatns t on the show, that's because
we' ve been brought up to thin k oi mental pa tients in
stereotypes. Dr. Bob Werner explaino tt th is way:
" When I get crazy , l do not want to be crH zy, locked up ... on
a ward where 1 can 't get out of the ward or the door ur anything
else .' 1 Instead he wants to be in a more no rmal enviro rune-nt
· "where I can be as bizarre as I wan t, JUSllikt• anybody fl lse m

r eturned to farm : at Bucyr us

Regu,ar
'2.37 to 13.24

Sl•

$5.97

••••• 444

Woven blouse and dressweigh ! pr in ts and so li d
co lors. 44 / 45' ' width s.

o~:.~:;·

even at minimum stan~rds, am.l they c~1n prove &lt;'mot i onall~·

REGULAR

~l

FABRICS

'ASHION LENGTHS

41

REGULAR

----------

Ideal f or kit che ns, base m ents.
Lo ng-wearing, wipes clean , can
be cut t o f it. Smart patterns .

[Reg. •1.37 \

Box of 50 Lega l · ·Reg.
Si ze or Box of
I 00 Letter Size .

"CITATION" BLANKET

Wh1te in sizes 3 2- 36A , 32·
JBB and 34-40C Gre o1 buy !

127

SOCK PENS

til t' .Juint CommiSsion
A cc:rcr~it utiun uf I{ ,J~rv

174

157

··~rd

to lea ve the confines of

in stitutions. Institutions are expensive for society to nw intain

26x45" DECORATOR RUGS

·1ubllee"

Each

somet imes against their will -

-- -- - ----

"Springtime

WOODGRAIN METAL
PORTA®. FILE

organization whose primary

A m ·e ri can
Asso ciation .

1

VINYL
RUNNIR
Reg.
$2,47

One of the saddest, most depressing and at the same time
most relevant CBS Reports is one of the la st Bill Moyers
worked on before he left the network. "Anyploce Bu t Here" is
the tiUe ahd it goes on the air u ec . 26. IJ..9 p.m., Eastern time.
The show is about mental palie n ~s ..1·ho are being pushed -

great music.

3Ft. x 6Ft.

lOOQ·o Or ion ' ocry l1 ( precu t y a r n s. p rc - pnn tcd
ca nvas. 12 x2A" or 18K24 ·
La tch hook no t in cl ude d .

NEW YORK I UP! ) - Does Bcny Ford want w li ve in the
White House again '' Only if her husband wants it that way and pe isn't Jelling.
•
That 's among the nuggets NBC corrcsp&lt;mdcnt Belty Rollin
gleaned from "A Conversation with Betty Ford," to IJr
broadcast on NBCJan. 5, from n09n to I p.m. Easte rn time .
Tile discussion with Mrs. r ord ranges from her alcohol and
drug problems to her mastectom y - a subjeci on whic h Miss
Rollin is .Particularly "street-wise,'' having undergone the
same ordeal herself.
On drinking and drugs, Mrs. Ford says she had been a socia I
drinker who bega n to get into trouble 14 yea rs ago when she
began to Combirie alcohol and·medication. She tells Miss Rollin
· that she found it easy to give up alcohol, but nut drugs .
Asked whether she wanted her husband to return to the
White House, Mrs. Ford replies, " If he wants It, I'd want it. I
don't know whether he wants it. ' '
•

which tells of the life of Christ. illustrated b) scenes f i ~11 ed on
location and works of r eligious ar t. or ...' ht·st:.[ltt·d to the tune of

72". 90"

," Cro ss-Your -Hear! " ~ l y le
Comfortable str e tc h&lt;str ops
an d lycra111 sponde ){ bo ck

Lavel y' floral prints
on a whi te background :
Cation / polyester terry .

LREG. $7,71]

UPI Television Writer

What ma kes the show so sad i.n thl'

$2.50

Wash
(:loth

499

By JOA N HANAUER

patients st ill stUck in institution ~, ar ! ~h o ~:ie try ing _, not
always succe::-sfuUy - to make it on Lht': )llt.&lt;:,fip

SORRY, NO RAINCHECKS

Reg.137

Ma!~~cucll~prd~s~:~~r

297

Bath

Smart, contemporary look on blue or bo ne
ba ckground . Extra-durabl e, no - ir on m us l1n
is po lyester / co tton b len d . .Ma ch1 ne wa sh .

Desk Tray
or Drawer
Organizer

co m es Ni th pape r c lips .

·

Pillow
(uses

.

th e community can be. And where I am not {\uing tv get luckt.'&lt;.l
up unless I commit a cr ime .''

REGULAR

· VILOUR TOWIL
INSIMBLI

·397

Save'l

SMOKE-TONE
PlASTIC DISK
ACCfSSORifS

'2.27

COLUMBUS (UP I ) Thursday's Oh io livestock
auctions report :
Compared will) last Thursday : Slaughter steers and
heifers steady to I higher ,
slaughter cows 1-1.50 higher,
slaughter bulls steady, feeder
. catUe steady to 4 higher .
Slaughter steers: Hi gh
choice and prime 2-3, 112!i1325lb . 56.75-:iB.75; choice 3-4 ,
1025-1320 lb. 54-05;. average
and low choice 2-4, 95().1200 lb.
52.5().56.75. good 2·3, 90().1225
lb. 49.5().54.50.
Slaughter heifers :. Choice
and prime 2-3, 85().1075lb. 5456.50; choice 2-4, 85().1250 lb.
52.5().5t50; choice 5, 1000-1220

I 00% POLYISTIR

PLAID

orFIQed

either
th e · Kennedy
assassination or the murder
of Martin Luther King Jr.
However, two committee
members disclosed that a restudy of the bike tape showed
''beyond a reasonable doubt"
four shots were fired.
Rep . Harold Sawyer, RMich., a committee member,
disclosed it was now virtually
certain that three shots came
from the book b~ilding and
one from the famous "grassy
knoll "
opposite
from
Oswald 's vantage point.
"There is a 95 percent plus
probability that the third shot
of a series of fo ur shot s was
fired from the grassy knoll,"

78

PAJICY

227

Liwstock Rt•port

evidence of conspiracies in

TV • • • in R eview

For a lovelv Christmas Eve tou ch. ·\Ill' l"" TI1e World of

~.~~~~~~~~ooded poly rr~~'lvi~....__

Reg.
'3.22

Rep. Chr istopher Dodd, DConn .,
another
pa nel
member. said the new tape
analys is " is significant
ev iden ce ... there's no
question a bout that."
He cautioned, however, a
U10rough examin ation of the
finding was in order .

Jesus Christ :.A Christ mas Celebrat1Csr1. to he l;ro.:~dc:1st Dec.
24, 12:30-1: 30 p.m. 1 Eastern time. Em!~·n \\1 l!lia m~ n;;~rrate s
the program, tnken largely from Ulct ,md New Testaments,

p rop y lene p o d~ ore so ni ca l ly
·q u ille d . No th re ad s 10 s n a g .
Bo nd e? p oly es ter fill . Wh 1te.

Twin Flat 011 Fitted Full Flut

1

on

he sai d.

MAnRISS PADS

the

·nospit al and the J oi nt'
Commiss io n.
Th e
accreditation program Clssist s
hospitals in pursuing a higher
quality of health care through

emergency executive session
of the panel today and
scheduled at. least one public
hearing next week on the re,
evalution of the "bike
tape ."
The long-ignored tape
originally was anaJyzed for
the committee by the

acoustical analysis firm of
BOlt, Beranek and Newman.
During com.mittee hearings
in September , Dr. James
Barger , the fir m's chi ef
scientist , was asked: "Is it
accurate to say . there is
evidence of four shots•"
"Yes ," he responded,
carefully adding , " It is a
PJSSiQle conclusion .'
At that time, th e chances
were viewed as 5().50 that the
analysis was correct. The
more intensive re-evaluat ion
is given a 95 percent chance
of being correct .
The "bike tape" is a ·
recording from the radio
tran smitter of a Dallas
motorcycle police officer in
the rear of the presidential
motorcade who accidentally
left his microphone on at the
moment bullets started flying .
in llealey Plaza.
· All previous evidence ha s
led to the conclusion that

Oswald, an e1·ratic cx·Ma rine
who once defected w the
Soviet Unio n, alone w~s
responsible for Kenn edy's
murder, fir ing three shots
from a window
the sixth
floor of the Texas School•
Book Depository Building in
the plaza . .
Informed sources said the
committee's fin al report con. el ud ed it had found no

.Nowthrv
Sat., Dec. 30

HospitaLs, set fo rth optimal
achi eva bl e goa ls of excellence as a measure fo r

In ma kin g th e an noun cem ent of th e Acereditation Award Farley
said
, " Every employee,
SCOTLAND
Medical
Staff Member.
Scotland occupies the nor·Auxilian
and Board of
them 37 percent of the island
Trllhtees
member
deserves
of Great Britain plus the
outlying Hehrides , Orkney credit for thi s maximum,
and Shetland island chains. t wo·year accreditation. All of
TI1rce quarters of the popula - us entered the survey with
tion of more than 5 million the goal of going all th e wa y
is in one-tenth of . the land and not stopping with ~it her a
area, the•industriallowlands non-accreditation or a onejust north of the Engli sh year accreditation. The hard
work paid off and the high
l~n·der . Scotland wa s a
separah• kingdom from 1018 standards of o~r hospital has
. until 1707 when it united with 1mcc again bCen confirmed b·•
Un il Pd

lwln Flat or FIHed

Classic l ook in ye llo w or mint pastel c olor~ .
Durable, no - iron Ce l anese® Fortrel ® po lyester /c otton . .r•nEL'll .FIIU 1111. 1•. IM

Wake up your bed wi.fh this l ove l y pattern
of flowers and s1r1pes . Durable blend of
polyester / cotton . Machine wash, no-iron .

Ho ld s 800 lette r- size
doc uments. W ith lock,
ke y . 12 V1" x6 1 / B" x lO ".

th e

1:00 PM ·to
5:00 PM

9"

Regula;

'13.94

rRiCC\257
\2:!!J

Manual

Sunday, December ·25th

FULL or TWIN SIZE
QUILlED BEDSPREAD

some cases.

Pleasant Valley Hospital is
awarded 2-year accreditation

2.~••••~
•

fASHION SHilTS
SJOCK UP NOW . . . SAVEl

A very personable reader telephoned Friday io extend a
big "thank you" to police officers locally . He feels that lbe
police have done a great job lor him and he has been plagued
frol!l time to time with some burglary offenses . We're only too
happy to pass along the thanks and the compliment to a group
of people who do get more than their share of criticism
probably and who are in there pitching most of the time. Let's
face it the law seems to be most of the time in favor of the
offend~r and officers must get pretty discouraged making
arrestS and finding defendants let free without any penalty in
I'm really happy to be living on one of :11eigs County 's
friendly little streets and I do want to take thi s opportunity to
wish you the greatest holiday ever . By the way , as you ope,n
those gifts in the morning and view those "interesting"
neckties the wrong size clothes and an assortment of items
that yo~ either have three of already or no need for, just
remember that I asked you to - "keep smiling."

OPEN TODAY

PLUMP BED PILLOW
50% cruShed chicken
feathers / 50% shredded fbam fill 29 " x

It seemed that everyone at the vocal concert of the Meigs
High School last Sunday was peering around seeking the owner
of a beautiful voice presenting a vocal solo during a cantata.
No one could spot tl'.e singer, though. The beautiful voice was
that of Mrs. Paige Hunt who at the last second pulled a
microphooe to her and sang a solo for one of the choir
members who had become ill after the cantata had started.
Mary Jane Jeilkinson, daughter of Dortha and Curtis
Jenkinson Middleport, has returned from an 18 day vacation
to Hawaii' where sne was guest· of Capt. Bruce Laferriere
and his wife, Dia.ne, and their children, Stacey and Todd.
Diane is the former Diane Welsh of Middleport, daughter of
Jack and Ann Welsh who are now back in our area residing at
Bidwell.
Mr. and Mrs. Laferriere are stationed with the army at
Schofield Barr.acks near . l: ahiawa on the island of Oahu,
Hawaii. Upon her return home to Stevensville, Mich., Mary
Jane accepted·a position with the Nuclear Installation Services
Co. (a subsidiary of the Union BOiler Co., Nitro, W. Va.) as
office manager for. NISCO at the Braidwood Nuclear Power
Plant. The plant is under consiruction near Joliet, Ill., where
Mary Jane is now residing. Miss Jenkinson previously worked
for seven and one-half years for the Indiana and Michigan
Power Co. (a s'ilbsidiary of the American Electric Power Co.)
at the Donald C. Cook Nuclear Plant in Bridgman, Mich.

,

Nowthrv
Sat., Dec. 30

POMEROY - Olristmas seemed really to zoom in fa!;!
this year and it's down to a point now of ready or not.
· Locally businesses must have done well this season if
parking is·any criteria. I've never know.n us to have so much
traffic congestion foc so many days in a row here in good old
Prairie Junction:
Marcia Hobstetter arrived home from Holzer Medical
Center where she recenUy underwent some major surgery and
It's good to have her back with the iamily for the holiday.
Lewis (Smoke) Harris of Minersville was taken to University
Hospital in ColUmbus several days ago but Mrs. Harris was to
go to Columbus yesterdaY and, hopefully , would get to bring
·him heme for Christmas with the family.

~

. . . ..

• .h d
Findings on JFK death d I t c e

Beat•••

II H.'

.

A-:i- The Sunday Times,'&gt;cnti nel. Sunday. [)""· 24, 197R

~

England &lt;tS
Ki ngdom . ,..,

.

Sat. 9:30 to 5:00

w. lnd , Pom eroy. O. ,

�..

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. •.

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. .'
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A-7 --The Sundtty Ti nw.s.,."\t•nti w: I. Smn l;1.\ . l&gt;l '&lt;'. ~..t, Jl17R
TH( 'ilL ViR 8RIOG£

PQINT PL (A S AN T 'II

VA

•••

99
SLAB BACON •••••••••• ~~.
C
FRESH LEAN

STORE MADE

$ , 49

STEAKETTES•••••••••••• ~ ~ ••
8

.

THIN CUT
BREAKFAST

'

CENTER CUT

PORK CHOPS
$169

LB.

BY TOM SAUNDERS
work started before a line
GALUPOUS- The Silver was written on paper to
bridge was designed by the J. denote a eontract.
E. Greiner Co., desig0 ing
Early in the negotiations
engineers, Baltimore, Md. over the bridge Dr. Charles
During the course of Holzer and Mr. Waller
construction of the bridge 1 Windsor of Point Pleasant,
frequent trips were made to both bridge company ofthe site by J . E. Greiner, ficials, rec'eived word by
president of the company. telephone from McLaughlin
Wilson
Ballard,
vic e MacAfee and Co. bankers of
president, bad the work Pittsburgh, Pa ., that the
under personal inspection arra ngements had been
every two weeks during made to finance the project.
construction.
MacKubin, Goodrich and Co, .
The bridge was opened 380 bankers of Baltimore, Md.,
days after the first ground were associated with the
was broken in starting Pittsburgh bankers . on the
construction.
financing of the bridge. Dr.
One hundred days were lost Holzer and Mr: Windsor
on account of weather con- immediately turned down
ditions, high water and other several other offers and
unfavorable circumstances made arrangements by
so the bridge was completed phone with General Con'in 280 working days, a record tracting Corporation of Pittsfor.the designer and builders. burgh, to start the work of
Twelve hundred men were construction,
Before a contract was
employed at various times in
made construction materials
the building of the bridge.
The largest number at one were on the way and the
time working on the bridge General Contracting Corwas 200. This was when the poration had spent nearly
General Contracting Co. was $200,000 on the project.
The Silver bridge was the
working on the concrete
substructure. On the steel first in America of its parwork of the bridge the largest ticular design and the second
number of men working at in the world. The structure
was a two-way vehicular
one time was 45.
The Silver bridge was bridge of the suspension type,
financed and construction but instead of the usual

PORK CHOPS
LB. $179

BREASTS..........t~.99~ .
LEGS .
~a89~
&amp; THIGHS,.........
.

WINGS .............~.. 9~
BACKS .
.29~
&amp; NECKS......••• ~!·.
·
GOLDEN ISLE.

CHEF BOY ·AR DEE PIZZA

TOMATO
oz.
JUICE •••••••••c:~ ...

c

46

VLASIC

.

32

oz.

1
SAUERKRAUT
•••
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CHEESE .... ;......~r. 89~

PEPPERONI....!o!~.~.l
•1
09
SAUSAGE ........~:.... .

LUNCHEON 12 oz.
MEAT •••••••••~~.

marital troubles.
"Quite a few times the
same subjects came up in
th eir
fl rgum ent s,"
he
testified
.
"
Sex.
past
conversation , " Gret a sai d
Jack ( her brulhor-i n-law J relationships and ', past
forced her to have sex. What happenin ~s . That seemed to
kind. of sex l don 'I know, " be a major thread in their
arguments ."
Mrs. ;Mayo said.
Once , said Lowe , M,rs.
Lowe , 24, who lived in the
talked
about
northeast Salem apartment Rideout
above the Rideout 's, said Oregon's rape law that allows
Mrs. Rideout "denied it to a wife tiJ charge her husband
' John ," when asked whether with ra'pc .
Rideout , who was present,
she had sex with Jack Hinkle,
said
he hadn 't heard about
Rideout's half brother.
the
law.
Lowe told the jury.
Hinkle " ca togorica ll y
Mrs.
Rideout
said, '"One of
denies" he ever had sex with
Mrs. Rideout, said defense these days, J ohn , you 're
go ing to go too far and you'll
attorney Charles Burt.
Lowe also testified Mrs. rind out about it ,"' Lowe
Rideout came to his testified .
Oregon is one of three
apartment about 3 a .m , Oct.
states
that have similar rape
13 and told him , '"It 's no big
laws
.
Iowa
and Delaware also
deal, John and I had another
have
laws
allowing
a wife to
fight. John beat me up and
charge
her
hu.sband
with
rape
raped me."' Lowe added th at
and"
New
Jersey
law
is
set
to
he had previously talked with
the Rideouts about their take effect in September 1979 .

Raped wife also .beaten?
By TNOTHY K.,;NNY
SALEM, Ore. ( UPI) - The
prosecution in the trial of a
man whose wife said he bad
raped her ha s tried to
establish the fact he also had
beaten her.
The jw-y was told Thursday
Greta Rideout had a swollen
jaw, bruised lips, and blood in
her left eye when seen at, a
worn~ 's center on Oct . 12,
two days after the alleged
rape . Witnesses quoted Mrs.
Rideout as saying her
husband beat her.
John J. Rideout, 21, of
Silverton, Ore., has pleaded
innocent and is free on $5,000
bail. He is the first man in the
country to stand trial for
raping his wife while they
were married and living
together.
. Dottie Coker, 40, a student
,nurse at Good Samaritan
Hospital in Portland, Ore.,
testified she was working at
the Salem Women's Center
when Mrs. Rideout came in,
"Her jaw was very swollen,

her lips were bruised, and her
left eyeball infiltrated with
blood," Mrs. Coker said. "It
looked red·."
Another center employee,
Wanda Manthey, testified
M·• · Rideout said her
husband had raped her in the
presence of the couple's 21h year-old daughter, Jenny .
"Her jaw was swollen and
her cheek was swollen," Mrs.
Manthey said ,
Mrs , Rideout, 23, will
testify al the end of the stale's
case.
In
other
testimony
Thursday
there
were
conflicts over whether Mrs.
Rideout had sex with her
brother~n~aw .

Douglas Lowe, a neighbor
of the Rideouts, testified that
Mrs. Rideout denied to her
husband in front of Lowe that
she had sex with her brotherin-Ial".
Earlier in the day ,
Rideout's half sister, Judy
Mayo, said the Hideouts had
come to her apartment last
summer .
During
a

Peopletalk
By KENNETH R. CLARK

Unlted Press International
PLAYING DOUBLES: Whacking the ball across the net is a
way of life for tennis ace Chris Evert, and marriage isn'tlikely
tD change it. Her husband-to-be wi.elds a mean racket in his
own right. He 's British court star John Lloyd and he'll marry
Miss Evert this spring. Chris announced impending nuptials
while celebrating her 24th birthday Thursday in Dani.a, Fla . says she' mel Lloyd at Wimbledon in June. Says Lloyd, whose
birthday gift was an engagement ring, "I knew Chris was the
one for me by the third date." It 'sengagement No.2 for bothshe previously to Jimmy Couoors, he to Swedish tennis star
Isabel Larsen ,
LUKE AISLEW ALKER: Mark Hamill - Luke Skywalker in
"Star Wars" - is getting married. No, not to Princess Leia .
Hamill, 'J:/, and 23-year-old Marilou York have taken out a
marriage license in Santa Monica , Calif. They aren't saying
when or where they olan to marry. Miss York, a dental
hygienist, recently moved to California from Indiana.
QUOTE OF THE DAY : Dr. Rirbard L. Levy of San Diego,
who calls marijuana a "godsend" as an anli-oausea drug for
cancer patients under chemotherapy, on the difficulty of
prescribing an illegal substance: "The major problem with
my patients is finding it - for most patients with cancer it is
very hard work for them to go to Mission Beach and score a lid
of dope."

HE
DEC. 25

SHAWN DONLEY

. ... . . . . . . .

'
COUPON

--

PURINA

$5

GATEWAY
PRODUCE SPECIALS
- "

89
W/C

NEW

100 CT. PKG.

$}89

they are appreciated. We at Donelli's Pizza would like to take
this time to thank everyone for making this our best year ever.

and everyone of us, may you have the merriest of Onistmases

TEA BAGS

and a Healthful and Prosperous New Year.
'

.W/C

'
,,''

MIKE DONLEY
PAT SPIRES
'

ystery Coupo

DOniE GILBERT

ASK CASHIER FOR.

•

.,

'-~
I

MARY HARRIS

I'

·-'

: ·'

'

''
'

To serve you is an honor. To know you is a delight. From each

L CDUPO N TENDERLEAF

-

WHITE FLORIDA

FRESH SOLID HEADS

DOG CHOW
25LB. BAG

--

'•

WITH THEIR FAMiliES.

Holidays are a very special time to let people know how much
&lt;

~

SO OUR
EMPLOYEES MAY
SPEND THE HOLIDAY

•

'

.....: "-""
...

WILL BE
CLOSED
CHRISTMAS ·DAY,

DONELLI'S PIZZA HAS BEEN A FAMILY
TRADITION SINCE 1958 AND WE WOULD LIKE TO
INTRODUCE OUR TWO NEWEST MEMBERS - - -

160Z.

~:~
~:.; ~

'S

••

1o·~ou ~"o
·... ~

09

ARMOUR TREET

5

woven wire cable the bridge
was suspended on "healtreated" eye-bar chains.
The steel of the eye-bar
chains had a tensile strength
of 50,000 pounds per square
inch.
The bridge had a total of
2,235 feet , an anchorage of.200
feet on each side of the river,
holding the suspension chains
in anchorages of many tons of
concrete. The suspended
structure consisted of two
decks under spans of 380 feet
which span a tunnel span 700
feet long and 102 feet above
low water gauge in the river.
The bridge originally had a
sidewalk five feet in width.
Eighteen hundred tons of
steel were used in the construction of the bridge. There
were 24 eye-bar hangers. The
eye-bars were two inches by
12 Inches and from 25 to SO
feet in length. :ntey were
.especially heat-treated bars,
furnished by the American
Bridge Company.
The substructure, anchorage approaches and
piers were built by the
General Contracting Co.
Tops of the steel towers
above the piers were 190.35
feet above pool stage in the
river. Flooring of the bridge
was of 250,000 feet of
Califomia redwood.
Twelve railroad carloads of
redwood were required to
complete the floors . The
floors were laid with 2 x 6 inch
plans set on edge in
laminated construction. Each
, plank was spiked in place to
the adjacent plank with two
rows of 5 inch spikes.
Seventy-five carloads of

Superior Portland ccmonl
went into the construction or
the Silver bridge . This
amount was required for the
10,000 yards of concrete work
in the substructure of the
bridge. The cement was
by
the
manufactured
Wellston Iron Furnace Co. of
Jackson, Ohio, and was
lumished by the Plymale.
Wagner Co. of Ga!Upolls. 'l'be
number ot barrels of cement
used was 14,580.
The Plymale-Wagner Co.
also furnished a large
quantity of lumber for use in
building cofferdams, tool
houses, and construction
offices during the construction of the 'bridge.
The West Virginia Rail
Company of Huntington
supplied tl)t reinforcing steel
in the substructure of the
Silver bridge. The steel was
rolled and fabricated at mills
in Huntington, W. Va.
The lighting of the bridge
was done by Zlpp-Beckmeyer
Construction Co. of Huntington and controlled from
the toll house.
The Skene-McAipin Co.
contractors and buUders built
the toll houae of the Silver
bridge which was located in
the middle ill the roadway on
the Ohio approach.
The bridge was given a coat
of aluminum paint. This was
manufactured
by
the
Aluminum Company of
America . The aluminum
painted steel girders from a
distance gave the effect of a
web of silvery laC!!.
An estimated 10,000 attended the bridge ~cation.
Special excursion trains were
run from Columbus and
Charleston .
Judge R. J. Mauck of
.Gallipolis served as master of
ceremonies of the bridge
opening. The main address
was given by Senator M. M.
Neely of West Virginia.
A parade of decorated cars
led from Point Pleasant to
Gallipolis and anolher from
GallipoliS to Point Pleasant.
A pageant was held on the
bridge approach
that
depicted characters and
events In the history of
Gallipolis
and
Point
Pleasant.
Pictures of the new Silver
Bridge were offered at C. D.
Kerr's drugstore lor 25 cents
and$1.-.T.S., Rt.1 Box335,
Bidwell, OH., 45614.

CLIFF THOMAS
PAT THOMAS
LARRY ROBERTS
STEVE PERKINS
DAVE WILCOX

CLIFF THOMAS Ill

�1\-8- The Sunda ~· Tmws-St•nt lnt•l. S1Jru la.' . 1lt ·t · 2i . 1~ 1 71(

One person
r-------------------------1
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I
I
I
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Len ers of opinion are welcomed. They should he less
lban 300 words long tor subject to reduction by the editor)
and must be signed with the signee 's add ress. Names may
be withheld ' upon publication. However. on r equest.
aames wiU be disclosed. Len ers should be in good taste,
addressing Issues, nat personalities .

... ~~&amp;Urh:

GA LLIPO LIS
One
person was treated for in-

juries sustained durin g one uf

...l.i.-

It's all too commercialized

,

In this year of 1978 Christmas has become to
commercialized spending hundreds of dollars of toys that
won 't la st out the day and the true meaning of Christmas has
been lost.
.
Give me m y childhood days wher e I was raised in a log
cabin in Addison, Ohio. We didn't have a lot of money .
I had my d ogs and cats and m y gun which helped put meat
on t he table.
·
Lots of times we only had beans and cornbread on the ta ble
""d nothing else, but we were thankful for what we had , which
was love and warmth in our log cabin . Money can't buy t he
love and warmth of a dad and mom who gave all they could .
Kids today say give me, give me . But I wanted to g ive to
mom and dad . We thought we were rich in our love in tha t little
.
log cabin on the hill.
Thank God I'm a hillbilly and proud of it. - By Ama nda
Murray, 247 North 3rd Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760.

Two men released
after posting bond
POMEROY - J oe Watkins
and
Cha rl es
McGrath
arr est ed and charg ed in
Common Pleas Court with
trespassing in an unoccupied
s tructure were released
Friday by Meigs Count y
Common Pleas Court Judge
J ohn C. Bacon upon signin·g
their own recognizance bond.
They appea red on bills of
inf o rmation
pendin g
presentence
investigation .
Donald
S w eari n ge n
arrested on charges of
breaking and enterin~ was
bound over to the Grand

J ury. Swearingen is confined
to Meigs Co unty Jail.
Swearingen and McGr ath
had been picked up in Licking
county and were ret urned to
Meigs County to answer the
charges.
Me igs Co unt y She riff
J a m es J. Proffitt a lso
reported that a t977 Oldsm ob ile Cutt as Su pr em e
recover ed in Meigs County.
The vehicle had been burned.
It wa s found on Count y Road
12. The incident is under
invest igation.

-------------------------1
I

Area Deaths !

LEONARD C. REED
fOMEROY - Leonard C.
Reed, 61 , died unexpectly
Friday at his Route 2
Pomeroy residence.
He was a son of the late
Henry Caperton and Martha
Elliott Walkup Reed·. He was
also pr eceded in beath by
four brothers and two sisters.
Surviving are his wife,
Naomi Presley Reed ; Two
sons, Leon ard Lee of
Columbus, and David F ., of
Pomeroy; a daughter, Mrs.
J aems (Connie ) Ball, New
Haven ; six grandchildren,
Sandy , Lisa , Jennifer, Joh n,
a nd Stepha nie Reed and
Lindsey Ba ll ; A brother
Homer Reed, P oint Pleasant ,

and several

TSCmJIS

injured
in accident

I

construction iron wor ker and
was member of Local 769,
Ashland , Ky. He was a
veteran of World War II and
was
a
member
of
Harr isonville Lodge 441, Free
and Accepted Mason and a
32nd Degree Mason of th e
Scottish Rite Va lley of
ColumbuS. J-tn was a member
of Hemlock .rove Grange
and t he Di
"'d American
Veterans.
F uneral services will be
held at 3:30 p.m . Sunday at
the Ewing F uneral Home
with the Rev. William (Bud)
Hatfield officiating. Buria l
will be in Meigs Memor y
Gardens. Frie nds may ca ll at
the funer al hom e at anytime .

t wo F r iday a cc id ents in·
vestigated by the Ga !lia·
Meigs Post, Highway Patrol.
Clint Fitch. 18, Vinto n, was
trea t ed a nd r e leased at
Holzer Medica l Cent er fo r

co nt usions

and

gloriou s lidino s ol Chri st 's birth .
',,

/

mi nor

the Wi se Men sci out seeking the Newborn King .

lacer ations sustained in a
two-vehicle collision at t he
junct ion of SH 160 a nd SR 5M,
at 11 :10 p.m .
Officers report t ha t an east
bound auto on .554 dr iven by
J oe R LAJ ng, 46, Gallipolis,
st ruck the left rear of a north
bound vehicle on t60 operated
by F it ch.
·
Th e F ilch au to contin ued
off the roadway into a deep
d it ch .
U&gt;ng was cited on charges
of fa ilure to yield.
Th e pat rol was ca lled to the
scene of a one-vehicle accident on Lincoln P ik e, just
south of CR 16, at 10:50 p.m .
Officers r epo rt t hat a north
bound auto driven by Brenda
Craigo, 18, Ga llipoli s, went
off the right si de of the
roa d wa y, st r uck a t ree ,

\

/

The star led them lo where He

la ~d

there they adored Him

/

and bestowed ri ch girts UIJOn Him.
/

AI I his lime o.l jo y and cxull alion we CXIHess
our nmtilude and h011e you will be blessed
by the ritdiancc ol

lha ~

Holy Ninht.

THE "EVIL EYE" - A focal point of the music room is this evil-eye chest. The Indian
artifact was used in tem ples to store the vestme nts of holy men . It was believed to ha ve the
power to ward off evil spirits. · A medallion im pr inted with the figure of a Hindu God is
located on the front of the chest. The eyes are onyx. Pictured on the chest is an antique bras s
Chmese mcense burner, with a Fu dog motif. The chest is fla nked by the gold leaf figure of a
female bast cat. The E gyptian idol, Cao, represented the goddess of fem ininity . Draped to
the left is an evening sa ri.

passed over an embankment
and overturn ed.
There was se ver damage to
the ve hi cle. Cra igo wa s

uninjured.

VALUABLE P IE CE - This 24 piece candela brum
decora te s the living room of the Shahan home. Originally
from a castle in Car diff, Wales, Mrs. Shahan received the
cand elabrum from Mercedes Condon of Pomeroy.

''The Emporer's New Clothes .. . ''

TO SPONSOR DANCE
RACI NE
Ra cine
American Leg ion Post 602
will sponso r a dance
Sat urday Dec. 30. Music will
be provided by Guy Thoma
a nd the Countr y Ramblers.

OrH·
nf
t lH·
1lw s t
n·mark&lt;! IJ il' rnu;.;emns in lt;rly di ...; p i;J,\ :.: onl y ur n brl'i la :-:.
T lw Umhn•l b Mt!."i (' t ll ll in th v
\' i l\ r l ~ l' of [ ;j g J]('S(' i'l'CaJls lht•
d i l \ ':-; wlwn \·irt ua ll y t ill' l ' ll ·
til';' \ II WII III &lt;J dl' illld IT p~d l't'd
u m br&lt;" ll ~l.'·; rmd pa 1'&lt;-I S11I.".

BY SALLY ANNE HOLTZ
GALLIPO LIS - Early last
week, I was called upon to do
a n in te r view with Jun e
Shaha n, a well· kno wn per·
sonality in Gallia Count y. It

I

s vracu sc, o .

$10 .00

Foliage Plants
3" to 10 "
soc to $5.00
H A N G IN G BAS K E T S 4"

io"

•

to

'1.25 to '5.00

nie ces and

nephews.
Mr . Reed -was a retired

DIRECTORS

home as recruiter

OFFICERS

POMEROY - AIC Kevin
B. Willfo rd , a recent
gr aduat e of the Air F or ce
Technical Training Center at
Chanute AFB, Ill ., and a 1977
graduate of Southern w eal
High School has return ed

Th eodo re T. Reed , Jr ., President
Th e reon John son, E"ecutive Vice President
Paul E. Kioes , Vice President
Roger W. Hysell, Cashier

home to assist his recruiter
under the Recr uiter Helper
progr a m.
" AIC Willford, 19, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ha rry Willford,
Racine , has volunteer ed to
assist us in our recruiting
efforts," said T-Sgt . Gabby
Ga bbard, Air F orce recruiter
her e.
A I C Willfor d select ed
tra ining as an avioni cs
system s specialist prior to
ent er ing t he Air F or ce's
Delaye d
E n l i s tm e n t
Progr a m last May. Prior to
attending Chanute Technical
tra ining cent er, he complet ed
six weeks ' of basic military
tra in ing at •·backland Air

Force Base, Tex . He is
pr esentl y
ass igne d
to
Mounta in Hom e AFB, Idaho.

"While here," explained TSgt . Gabbard," Airman
Willford will be visiting his
old high schoo l with m e and

answerin g any quest ions
inte rested students ma y have
about the Air Force. He will
also be available at my office
a t 221 N. Columbus Road,
Athens or m ay be reached by
calling collect to 592-4592."

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1755, took sot nt:',flO,OOO l ivt ·~.

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Sharon Werry

Sharon Smith

Pam Parsons

Jo Ann Crisp

Brenda Weber

Charlene Thomas

Ch"eryl Wilson

Mary Riggs

Chris Yeauger
i

Colwnbus for Mrs. Shah an. They are carved from wood
and hand painted with a n Hawaiian motif. The shoes were
a gift from the man who made t hem to match an outfit he
saw Mrs. Sha han wearing while on a tour of her home.

'

referring to the decor of her
home, wh ich is done, both
inter ior a nd e xt er ior , in
Orienta l design.
She ha s among he r
collect ion, many replicas of
dra gons a n a nc ient
Ori ental symbol - for which
her home and cattery r egist ere d a s " Dra gonwynd," m e~nin g , literally,
" pa th shaped like the back of
a dr agon" - a re named. The
house sits at the end of a long
dri ve which winds around to
resemble just what the name
im plies.
Yes , Mr s . Sha han is
definitely an unus ua l woman.
She is a collector , a cat lover.
and a connoisseur of the
beauty life has to offer. She is
definitely a " gem " - in no
way Jess valuable than an y of
the treasures she collects.
One of the first t hings tha t
caught m y eye as we entered
t he livin g room was a
beautif ul can de la brum standing a bout two feet high .
It came, according to Mrs.
Shahan , to her home by wa y
of Mercedes Condon, a piano
t eacher from Pom er oy, who
inher ited it from her mother ,
a member of the Mercedes·
Benz bloodl ine . The '"ca ndelabrwn origina lly hailed
from a castle in Cardiff,
Wales - a monument to Mrs.
Shahan's heritage . " It has 24
moving pa rts , not counting
t he prisms," beamed Mrs.
Shahan. " We never move it ;
we're afraid too !"
She also boasts a collecti on
of Nets ukes
sm a ll
J a panese car vings made of
ivory with a brown hue,
whi ch
we r e
wo r n by
Japanese m en ·above t he

girdle to hold their money
pouches . The Nets ukes arc
val ued bet ween $50 a nd
$1 ,000 , depe nd in g on t he
ma rkings on the base and the
number of m ovable pa rts

co~ t ented , white sultan amid
his ha rem of beautiful
ladies;
Sultana,
Sing
Hosanna ,
and
Tor toya .
His ot her concubine, Xenobia,
was
in
anothe r

they po ssess.

roo m, bringing up a cham-

In her bedroom quarters
rests a beautiful geiSha girl
statu e done in Ja pa nese
porcelain and enclosed in a
glass case . She 's a bea utiful
pi ece of art work of wh ich
Ml's. Shahan sa ys, ' 'She's
beaut iful, isn 't she? A fn end
of mine found her abandoned
in a n antique shop in Flor ida
just lying in the back on t he
floor ! And just look at her
go wn ! It 's m ade of J apanese
si lk a nd tapes tr y wit h
brocade t r im.' ' Mrs. Shahan
added that no one in this ar ea
could tell her a nyt hi ng a bout
the doll, except that it • was
old , because there are no
experts in J a pa nese antiqu es
nea rby . ·
One of the · most elega nt
rooms in the Sha han ho me is
the music room, of whi ch t he
focal point is a la rge bra ss
ma nda rin ha nging over a
natura l stone fireplac e. The
ha nd-pa int ed ma ndarin was
made from a ca;i ing in
China .
"People who come here
oft en like t his room best ,"
;i ated Mrs. Shahan. " And do
you know whal I think it is '! I
think it's him ." she continued, point ing toward the
ma ndarin . " His benevolent
expression gives the . room
quiet peace not found else·
where in the house."
As we wer e a dva nc in g
thro ugh t he house , M rs.
Sha ha n t urned and sa id,
" I 've got som ethin g yo u' ll
wa nt to see. " She led m e
through a not her door , a nd,
just inside, was the most
royal-looking cat I've ever
' seen . He was sitting on the
top position uf a Ceiling-high
scratching tree, looking like a

pion litter of little sultans.
The cat was " Rubiayat ," a nd
he's Mrs. Shahan 's stud ma le
Hima laya n. worth $1,000 .
The cats lo unging In th e
cattery must be the most
beautiful cats I've ever seen .
Himalayans are a crossbreed
of Persians and Siamese ,
ha ving the soft voice a nd
personaiity of t he P er sians,
wh ile
ma intai ni ng
the
color ing and intelligence of
the Siamese. I was in love the
fir st time " Ruby" melted me
w\lh his baby blues !
In a r ecent show in Dayton,
Mrs. Shah an 's " Himmies"
too k four fir st pr izes, fo ur
best of color, and one of her
fem ales look the third. best
cat of the show out of 48
Himal a.va ns entered.
Mrs. Sha nan is not merely
a t alented coll ector and cat
person, she evidently is also a
grea t success as a mot he r ,
lao, for her da ught er ,
Meldoy, who m she describes
as, " ve ry, very talented," is
now on full schol arship t o
Oxford in England where
she's st udying. journa lism ;
a nd she a nd her husband ,
Darrell , have been married
for 27 years. She says of him ,
sm il ing se cr etly , '' He ' s
special. No one else in the
world could live with me."
Well , Mrs. Sha han , you' re
special. too . With your cats
and your collect ions and your
clothes, no one else could
ho pe to match you r unique
wannth a nd cha racter.
I co uldn ' t say it better than
Mrs. Shaha n said it herself in
an article ta ken fr om Athens
ma gazin e, fall 19iS:
" I do n ' t do a nythi ng
simple . 1 li ve intensel y."

Iris Payne

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Dottie Musser
Margaret J. Werry
Paul Reed

•

·aruce Reed

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We wish you sweet drea ms as

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lois Burt

Julie Hamm

W send wa rm greetin gs and thanks to all .

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Donna Schmoll

Jenny Smith

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Susie Abbott

George Hicks

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A JAPANESE GARDEN - Shown is the Geisha doll
which a friend of Mrs. Shahan' s found in an antique shop
in Florida. A description of the doll is in the copy . The
shoes in the foreground were handmade by a man in

than a mere interview; it
turned out to be a t rip half·
wa y a round the wo rld !
Mrs . Sha han descr ibed
herself, at first meeting, as
hav ing
'' an
int riguing
avoca tion. I Love to collect
things - jewelry, a rt work,
clothing - from all over the
world ! 11
Int ri guin g, indeed ! " In ·
t rig ued" isn't word enough to
descr ibe my feelings upon
first entering the Shahan
residence. I felt a s if I had
tum bled through the " looking
glass" and ended up in a
scene frorri "The E mperor's
New Clothes."
Butlet 's back up a bit.! had
first bumped in to Mrs .
Shahan - if it 's possible to
" bump into" som eone over
the phone - while looking for
renta l property, of which the
Shahans o•m much . In the
ens ui ng conversa t ion, we
soon discovered, as one is
wo nt to do in Ga llia County,
that we were both Welsh, and
that we both had cats. ( If you
have ca ts, that's not hard to
under stand: if yo u don't, then
It 's impossible to explain ).
We decided to get together
and discuss this furth er .
A few days la ter a s I was
entering the Shahan driv e, I
wa s met by t wo. r ather im·
posmg, large black dogs, one
of which stared da rkly into
my window and dar ed me to
depart my car. I didn 't.
Tha nkfully, Mrs. Shaha n ·
soon a ppea red , r eady t o
escort me into the house. " I

EMPLOYEES

Joan Vaughan

w

1 As its won der touches yo ung and old, we

T he grea t ear! hqua kt• in
Lisbon, P11rtugBI, WI NllV. 1.

Jon P . Karschnik , Assistant Cashier
Joanne J . Wiltiam.s , Assistant Cashier
Evelyn G. Lanning, Assistant Cashier
Addie W. Norris. Loan Olficer

EMPLOYEES

W we ce lebrate the magic of Chri stma s.
VaticHn City is an indepen·
dent stulc under tcnm of a
1929 tn•a ty with Italy.

Fe rman E. Moore
E. Robert Schellhase
C. Wayne Swisher

Fred W. Crow, Jr .
Richa rd C. Follrod
Le slie F. Fultz

Th eodo re T. Reed. Jr .
Th ereon Johnson
Dr . Fred R. Car se y, Jr .

Will ford returns

see you've met my dogs," she
la ug hed . " Chows (Ma nchuria n Chow Cho ws ) are the
only dogs I r a ise. They're
Or iental. too. yo u know. "
By " Oriental, too, " I wa s to

turned out to be much more discover, ·· Mrs . Shahan was

Hubbard's Greenhouse-_
Potted Poin setta s
$1.00 to $6.50
Ha nging P oi ns etti as
Tubs, 30 plu s bloom s

JUNE SHAHAN is pictured standing next to a Chinese Mandarin , or igina lly cast in
China . The figure hangs ~bo ve a natural stone fireplace in the music room of the J ackson
Pike residence. J une is wear ing silk satin pa jamas, lined in pure silk with ste rling silver
threads . The outfit was copied from an or igina l Ch inese design by Dan i-done in Hong Kong .

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

~-~~"*0."*~~~B¥BZ~,
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.,

~Farmers ·
--·~

FiJ DOGS - These dogs, made from Chinese porcelain, a re part of Mrs. Shahan 's Oriental collection . They
are replicas of the Manchurian Chow Chows which Mrs .
Shahan raises.

- Bank

POMEROY, OHIO
$40,010 MAXIMUM IIISUIMCl FOR EM:II D£l'OSI10W
MEMIP RIJWL DEPOSIT IIISURAIIa C!JRPOIATIOII .

ORJENTAL DFf". ~{ - Shown Is the Shahan living rnom , done in green and purple,

displaying ma&gt;•i of her eollectlon of Oriental art objects.

A ll photos by Sallyanne Holtz

HIS

ROYAI; HiGiiNESS- Rubaiyat, Mrs. Shahan's $1,000 ma le Himalayan, lounges on
his throne, flanked by one of his harem.

�' B-2- The Sw1day Times-sentinel, Sunda)'. Dw. 24, 1978

Elliott, ·Woodward wed in November
GALUPOUS - A candlelight ceremony was the
setting for the November 4
marriage of Marjorie Jane
Elliott and Robert Lee
Woodward. Pastor James
Frazier performed the doub)&amp;
ring ceremony at the Grace
United Methodist Church,
Gallipolis.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Robinson, 213 Lower River Road.
The groom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. George E. Woodward, Patriot Star Route.
Music was presented by
Mrs. Merlyn fu)ss for one half
hour preceding the 7:30 p.m.
ceremony .
Miss
Ann
Robinson, sister of the bride,
registered the guests.
The bride, given in
marriage by her father, wore
a floor length gown of ivory
sheer gauze with a high neck
and an English sheer yoke.
The cuffs of the long bishop
sleeves, yoke, waistline and
skirt were trimmed in heavy
imported Venice lace. A
Venice lace cap held a
fingertip veil and a blusher of
illusion. She carried a
nosegay of fall colored
chrysanthemums and roses
accented with evergreen.
Mrs, Lance Clifford, the
matron of honor, was attired
in a floor length gown of
yellow quiana. She carried a
nosegay of fall colored
carnations and chrysanthemums.
Miss Angela' F.ll!_ott,

Mrs. Robert Woodward

daughter of the bride, was the
flower girl. She wore an
empire style floor length
gown with a brown velvet
yoke, Venician lace sleeves
and skirt, She carried a
wicker basket of yellow rose
petals.
Mastor Trevor Kendrick,
Xenia, Ohio, musin of the
bride, served as ring bearer.
The beS\ man was George
E. Woodward, Jr ., Gallipolis,
brother of the groom. Ushers
were Scott and Dan Woodward, Gallipolis, brothers of
the groom. The groom,
groomsmen, and ring bearer
. were attired in mahogany
brown tuxedos. ·
The bride's mother wore an
emerald green crepe · floor
length gown With high neck
and waistlength overlay of
emerald green chiffon. Her
flowers were a yellow rose
wrist mrsage.
The groom's mother wore a
multi-color fall floral print
floor length gown of polyester
voile. Her wrist corsage was
ivory roses.
Following the ceremony, a
reception was held at the
church. The hostesses were
Miss Kim Woodward and
Miss Kay Woodward, sisters
of the groom.
The new Mrs. Woodward is
a teacher in the Mason
County School System. Mr.
Woodward is employed as an
engineer. by the American
Electric Power System.

Fairview News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mildred Hart were in Athens
Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel, recently to consult a doctor
daughters Donn ita and Robin · · and Christmas shopptng.
atten~ed the wedding of the
Mt:s. Margaret Glockner
latter s son, Wyatt South to visited Mrs. Carl Shultz at
Cindy Anderson at the New Mt. Moriah Sunday af·
Haven Church of God and ternoon.
reception at the Pomeroy
Mrs. Don Manuel and
Branch of the Athe~s Bank daughter, Robin, visited
Socral Room. Donnrta and Charles and Kate McNickles
Robin were flower girls at the Tuesday evening.
· weddrng.
Visiting , Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lawson Arnold Hupp Friday were
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons.
Harold Lawson, son C. J . of Sunday Michael and Mandy
Letart, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Russell visited the Hupps
Ed Lawson and family of while their parents shopped
Syracuse were Sunday guests at the Athens Mall. They also
of Mr. and Mrs.. Charles visited Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Lawson and Wilda.
Hupp.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bass
Michael Russell spent
Wednesday with Mrs. Russell and daughters shopped at the
Roush and Cindy.
Grand
Central
Mall,
Mrs. Joyce . Manuel, Parkersburg, Wednesday
daughter, Robm , Mrs. evening.

p;llt'fl
AT TttE

INN PLACE

SUNDAy I DEC. 30. 1978
FROM 6:00 TIL 2:30
YOUR CHOICE OF PRIME RIB
OR WHfi'E FISH DINNER

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT FROM

10 BYTIL 2
TIGRESS &amp; CO.
JOIN IN THE
GALA CELEBRATION
PRIOR RESERVATIONS ONLYI

,.,,IIJI!t- wot' Iwid :•1 tlrt · · a~~· ·
l'i ." u ll\' i li E·
'\1 ;t, nllit • Itill!
•. . . fHiltlWilll~ lht· \\' L•cldin l~ . Tlw
e•' 1nhlt • was I'P\'t• n ·tl wil ll whitr
]O it 'P doth :11HI ft •fl flll 'l'lf a fHUr
tit•rl'd ht&gt;;wt sllarwil t' &lt;J kl' wit h
yl'lltl\\' r ust• tri m . AI thP ha~t ·

Something

: wt•n• four ~in g l ~· lwort shHpt"(l
t·e~kt·s t• ndrt'!Pd with · i\'\'.

Mr,. r'h.,rlt'' Kuhl cut tlll'
rakt •, Miss I .i mla VonnJ.! St' IT-

ally
After attempting to buy ~
tree this year, I decided that,
at the price they were asking
for it, it must be a genuine
'fir' tree. To save money, I
tried stipending two feather
dusters upside .down from a
hanging lamp, but tile effect
was a trifle lacking. And after
hearing the poem .'Twas the
Night Before Christmas" for
the h w1dredth time, I decided
it was also lacking, so I've
added a line or two of my own
- just to make to more
realistic, of course.
,
"Twas the Night Before
Christmas .... "
Already ? Didn't I just clean
the sticky taffy left over from
Halloween out of the front
seat of the car yeasterday???
" When all through the
house not a creature was
stirring..."
There isn't room!
.. ... not even a mo)ISe ..."
Well, that's not entirely
true . He did venture out of his
hole once, but a ' dustball
rolled out from behind a
Christmas package and
frightened him back again.
"The stockings were hung
by the chimney with care ... "
I hope he doesn't find the
panty hose in the bathroom
by mistake. The candy would
f!lll __through the runs!
"In hopes that St. Nicholas
Soon would be there ...
• T wouldn't want to be in his
boots tomorrow if he doesn't
show up!
· " The children were nestled
all snug in their beds ... .''

ed lht• pmn·h. 1111d Miss Rt•t'k\'
Hc1rt senrPd tlw t·••fft•t• . Mis.~
.lulia Ght•t•n n ·gish·n·d till'

TICI(m MUST BE PICKED UP BY DEC. 30, '78 SAT.

THE MEIGS INN
'

'·

POMEROY, OHIO

Till' bridt• l'hanged intn ;t
grt•e11 f\(1\\'l' rt•cl l~·l~· t·~tt• r
I

llr•t•ss fn r ht•r lra\'l'l iug
t•nshmw. Tht• cour•lt· r't•.sidt•s

J

at Rutl;iiHI, Rouli' 1. Tht•
br·idc ~r·adtmtt•tl from Mrigs
Hi~h Sehoul and is a mem l"""
of the HmTisunvllle Ordt•r· uf
the Eastl'rll Star. Shl' is

anyway???

.... by force.·1
" .. .. while visions of
sugarplums danced in their ,
heads ... "
Well, maybe not sugarplums. These kinds wouldn't
know asugarplwn if it lodged
in their water pik!
"And Mama in her kerchief
and I in my cap, ...."
Actually, it's a curler
cover-up, but don't tell

"And he whistled and
shouted and called them by
name .... "
In the middle of the night,
yet! If he wakes up my
pregnant Siamese cat in the
basement, I never will get
any sleep!
'' Now Dasher !, Now
Dan~ er! Now Prancer! Now
Vixen ! On Comet ! On Cupid!
On Donner and Blitzen !"
Good Grief! I hope they
went before they came! I just
cleaned the lawn yesterday!
"To the top of the porch, to
the top of the wall! ! Now dash
away, dash away, dash away
all!!!
Goodness ! Isn't he· being
just a hair too theatrical???
"As dry leaves that before
the wild hurricane fly ... "
I still say there's no sense
in r.aking them up when th~y
make a darn good mulch!
"When they meet with an
obstacle, mount to the sky; so
up to the house top the
coursers tbey flew with at
sleigh full of toys and St.
Nicholas too!"
Ins't there anything for ME
in there??? Say, a cashmere
sweater or a leather coat! ! !
"And then in a twinkle, I
beard on the roof the prancing and pawing of each little
hoof.: '
I hope they take it easy up
there. I just had the shingles
repaired.
"As I drew in my head and
was turning around, Down
the chimney St. Nicholas
came with a bound ... "
Serves him right! lle
should have used the door!
"He was dressed all in fur,
from his head to his foot, ... "
Showoff!
" ..and his clothes were all
tarnished with ashes and

anyone.

soot..."

" ...had just settled down
for a long winter's nap ... "
Ha! Is be kidding? Have
· any of you with kids ever
tried to take a WNG nap???
" When out on the lawn
there arose such a clatter, 1
sprung from my bed to see
what was the matter ..."
Are the kids playing the 8track tape loud again?••
"Away to the window I flew
like a flash, tore open the
shutters and threw up the
sash ...';
I wish somebody would
dust these venetian blinds! 1
nearly choked to death from
the dust I stirred up!
"The moon on the lireast of
the new-fallen snow, gave a
lustre of midday to the obJ·ects bel ow ... "
In other words, I'm paying
an $80 month electric bill and
the street lamps burned out
again!
"When what to my wondering eyes should appear.... "
41 Watering eyes" is more
like it ! The dust again.
" But a miniature sleigh
and eight tiny reindeer ... "
At least, I HOPE it 's
reindeer! I'd hate to think we
were being invaded by
chihuauas!
" .. ,with a little old driver so
lively__ .,~d quick, ...''
I wonder what kind of

gut•st s.

vitamins he takes???
''I knew in a moment it
must be St. Nick. " More
rapid than eagles his coursers they came,... "
What the Devil is a courser,

I've got to see about
geeting
that
chimney
cleaned!
"A bundle of toys he had
flung on his back, and he
looked like a peddler jUst
opening his pack.
'.'His eyes how they
twmkled! His dimples, how
merry ! His cheeks were like
roses·, his nose like a
cherry, ... "
Yes,
he 's
definitely
wearing too much make-up!
" His droll little mouth was
drawn up like a bow, and his
beard on his chin was as
white as the snow. The stump
of his pipe he held tight in his
teeth, and the smoke, it encircled his head lik,e a
wreath ... "
He must have missed the
"No Smoking signs in the
living room.
"He had a broad face and a
little round belly that shook
when he laughed like a bowl
full of jelly ... "
If I looked like that, I'd
never hear the end of it!
" He was chubby and
plwnp, a right jolly old elf,
and I laughed when I saw him
in spite of myself..."
·
It was probably rude, but if
you had a fat man in a red
suit standing in your living
room at 3 a.m., wha\ would
you do???
"A wink of his eye, and a

PERSONAL ADVOCACY CHRISTMAS PARTY - A
Christmas party for the advocates and proteges of the
Personal Advocacy Program was held on Dec. 19, at the
Riverboat Room, Athens Collnty Savings and Loan
Building, Pcmeroy. A gift exchange of tbe JX'Oteges as
well as the advocates giving a gift to their "special
friend " along With the gifts received by the proteges from
three of our volunteers made this year's Christmas party
the best in the past five years. A decorated Christmas tree
with decorations of small red baskets with red, green and
silver candy kisses proved to be a focal point of the
evening. Three guests from the Gallia i!rea were Fran
McEwen, Speech Therapist who played the guitar for
singing of Christmas carols, Elizabeth Most, Social
Worker and Nancy Kohlreiser, Continuing Education of
the Gallia - Jackson - Mei~s Conununity Mental Health
Center, photographed the ~roup during the festivities.
Refreshments were served to the group by Mary Skinner,
coordinator, Helen Bailey, assistant coordinator and
Shelly Ward, secretary of the Personal · Advocacy
Program. Approximately 60 persqns attended.

shake of his head, .. .''
Scared me. For a minute
there, I thought he'd picked
up a flea from the dog.
" ... soon gave me to know I
had nothing to dread .
. " He spoke not a word, but
went straight to his work, and
filled all the stockings; then
turned with a jerk .... "
After all that running
around, he probably got pine
needles in his pants. It's no
wonder he's jerking!
" And laying his finger
aside of his nose, and giving
a nod, up the chimney , he

CORRECTION
RT. 35

BOB FRENCH

DAN-DEE PRETSEL AND POTATO CHIPS

-

\

POMEROY-Bouquets of
fall fl owe rs and spiral
candelabra decorated , the
altar of the Harrisonville
Presbyterian Church for the
wedding of Miss Brenda Sue,
Bishop and Glen Lee Ken nedy.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Allen D. Bishop,
Route 4, Pomeroy, and the
groom is the son of Mr. a nd
Mrs. Carl Kennedy, Route I,
Rutland.
The wedding was an event
of Sept. 30 at I :30 p.m. with
the Rf,v. Ernest Stricklin officiating at the double ring

I

I

Her headpiece was a chan·
tilly lace Juliet cap with tiny
pearl trim and held a waltz
length veil edged with chantilly laee. The bride carrieda
colonial bouquet of fail ~ol ­
ored chrysanthemums and
baby 's breath with peach ribhim streame r s.
Miss Cathy Morri s of
Rutland, Route I was the
maid of honor ami the

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mr s.
Marvin
Moss,
Gallipolis, will celebrate
their 23rd wedding anniversary on Dec. 24. They
were married in 1955 at the
Amsbury Church by the Rev.
Casto.
For her birthday, Mrs.
Moss received one-half dozen
roses, one for each child. Her
birthday was December I.

CARL FULTON
GALUPOLIS - Mr. Carl
0. Fult on o[ Route I,
Gallipolis, was honored with
bridesmaids were Sue Ken- "8n "Open House" on his 90th
nedy, sister of th.e groom, birthday. It was held at the
Route I , Rutland ; Beverly Bulaville Grange Hall Dec.
Bishop, stster of the bride, 17th.
The occasion was planned
Pomeroy. Route 4, ·and Patty
Ca rtwright , cousin of the by his children and many
bride , Zanesville. They wore friends and relatives stopped
ceremony.
formal
length gowns of by to congratulate him during
Miss Jane Wi se was
polyester
knit in soft peach the day.
organist and Sherri Might,
Carl has been a resident of
with
fall
colored
print. The
soloist. In the windows uf the
Gallia
County all his life and
maid
of
honor
carried
a
eol·
church were vases of live cut
raised
a
family of six children
flowers and the family pews onial bouquet matching the
The
Grange Hall is a
here.
were marked with peach col- bride's bouquet, while the
familiar
place
to him as he
others earried colonial bou·
ored bows.
has
voted
in
t he same
quets
of
peach
tipped
mwns
Given in marriage by her
builcting
every
year
for the
with
baby's
breath.
parents and escorted to the
past
69
years
and
was
a long
Hart,
McArthur,
Michele
altar by her father , the bride
time
member
of
the
Grange.
Route
I.
cousin
of
\he
bride,
wore a gown of white sheer
Several visitors arrived
organza over satapeau. It and Michele Rush, Alban$·
ff.om
o ut-of-town and an
Route
I,
were
the
flowel"
was fashioned with a ruffled
enjoyable
day was shared by
girls.
They
carried
wicker
lace neckline in portrait style
all.
baskets
uf
multi-colored
rose
with long sheer sleeves of
organza and lace. Chantilly petals.
Bill Amburger of Chester
lac'l! motifs decorated the
was
best man , and the ushers
skirt which was edged with a·
we
re
Tony Richards ,
wide double ruffle of chantilly
Pomeroy,
Route 4, Randy
lace.
WHAT'S UP, DOC?
Kennedy, brother of the
Ameri cans arc visi ting the ir
groom. Rutland, and Timothy
Bishop, brother of the bride, doc.:toril more frequ e ntl y, acSEE WHY
eordin g to The Cnnfcrenee
Pomeroy, Route 4.
Fur her daughter's wed- Bn;u·d. Spending un medical
RIO GRANDE
ca1·c has ben rising by 5.6 perding, Mrs . Bishop wo re a
floor length gown of light blue l'ent Cl yea r over the las t
COLLEGE
decade. If that fi gure sounds
polyester and a single carna·
lion tipped in blue with ba by's low, it 's because it doesn't
COMMUNITY
breath . Mrs. Kennedy chose a count inflation. Some reasons

COLLEGE
IS THE
BEST

beige floor J en~-,rth gown

or

polyester with a floral chiffon
coat. She wore

H

s ingle white·.

carnation tipped in peach
with baby 's breath.
A reception honoring the

for this trend : growing incomes, mnre educ.i:it ion, an
aging popuiHtion , im: reHsell

con cern with health -ami the
rise of employee health in-

sunmce progra ms.

Holiday bazaar held

,I

'

MlDDLJ&gt;: POHT-The suecess uf the holidet v bazaa r
held at Hea th· United

Mr. and Mrs. Louis DePakmtis

Valentine weds
Def?alantis in june
GALLIPOLIS - The First of white s ilk ruses.
Pr es byteri a n Church,
Mus ic fo r the ce reum y was
Ga llipolis, was the scene for provided by Edie Russ, with
the doubl e-ring wedding of solos by Stephanie Hoss.
Rita Jo Valentine, daughter
Th e officiat ing m ini s te r
of Mr. and Mrs. George Leo \Yas the Rev. Jam e!i F raZie r .
Val enti ne, Patriot Sta r
A r e cc ptiun was h e ld
Route, Gallipolis, and Louis following the ceremony a t the
H. DePalatis, son of Mari a Elks Club, Ga llipolis. A buffet .
DePa latis, Gla ssport, Pa ., wa s serve(! by the ladies of
and th e lat e Mi cha el the E:mblem Club.
DePalatis. The wedding was
Th r- b rid e's tabl e wa s
·an event of June 17 at 6 p.m. adorn ed by a lour -) iered
For her wedding, the bride wedding cake topped by a
chose a sleeveless gown of bri de a nd groo m a nd
whi te quiana, with a sweet- s tream e r s of g reen ami
heart neckline, empire waist yellow. A vase of yellow a nd
and skirt gather ed in back to whit e daisies was pl aced
form a chapel length train. A nea rby.
fin gertip · ma nti lla a nd
The table was presided
blu sher were held by a uve r· by Jan Doolittle, Nancv
mat ch in g lace cap. She Groves and Margi Mclvi~.
carried a bouquet of white Nancy GrOves reg iste red
and yellow dai sies with . guests
ro sebuds
a nd
yellow
An a dditional rec e pt io n
streamers.
was held at the Sons of Italy
Th e bride's attend a nts Hall, Glassport, on June 24,
were Amy Lagusch, Mentor, following the honeymoon.
0 ., ma id -o f-h onor, Caro l
The couple went on a
Ta ylor , Gallipolis; . Mary we ddin g t rip I o Virg ini a
Lo uise DePalatis, Glassport, Beach, afte r whi ch th.ey
Pa., sister of the groom; and returned home to 1806 N. Star
Annie Valentine, flower girl, Rd., Columbus.
The bride is a gradua te of
sister of the bride.
The bride's maids' attire Gallia Academy High School
were floor-length, iced mint and Ohio State University.
gowns wit h empire waists, She is em ployed at Mt .
rounded n ec klin es~ a nd Carmel Medi cal Ce nt er,
but terf:y sleeves. Th ey Co lumbus.
ca rri ed nosegay s of yellow
The groom is a graduate uf
and whi te ro ses .
Slippery Rock State College
The fl ower girl was dressed and is a Ph. D Candidate at
in a floor-length mint dotted- Ohio University.
swiss dress covered by a
Out of town guests at the
white pinafo re. She carried a wedding were : Mr. and Mrs.
natural wicker basket w1th Paul Groves, Cleveland; Mr.
yellow rose petals.
and Mrs. Charl es Valentine.
For her daughter's wed- Pa rkersburg, W. Va.; Mr.
ding, Mrs. Valentine chose a and Mrs. Paul Va lentine,
floor-lengt h peae~ gown of Columbus; Thersa George,
quiana with a pleated skirt. &amp;·m Ant onio. Texas; Mr. a nd
She wore a matching sheer Mrs. Bascom Owens, Pedro:
cape and a mrsage of peach Mr . and Mrs. Kurt Smith .
silk roses.
New London; Capt. and Mrs.
For her son's wedding , Bill Hendrickson, and Matt,
Mrs. DePalatis wore a floor- J . R.. Chica go, Ill. ; Mr. and
length powder blue gown with Mrs. Ed Allen, Canal Win·
long sleeves and an empire chester ; Mr. and Mrs. Herb
waist , accented by a corsage Sayer, Ca na l Win chester ;

'

t

i'

Methodi st Church was nuteU
during a meeting of the
F:leanor Circle held at the
ho m e

of

M r s.

Sandy

J.uekeyduo .
P lans were di scussed for
next yern·'s be~za ar . A'l··
rangements we re mad e fu r

presenting each resident

or

the Me i ~s County Infinmrry ·
with a monetary ~ifl.
The l.uckeydou home was
extensively decorated for the
holidays. Mrs. Pauline Horton had the program using
readings from a book c nlitk'll

.. J.et ·s Keep Christmas" and
Mrs. I.uckeydou sa ng ·· Peal'C
on Earth.'' The re was gro up
sing ing of carols tuu l a gift ex change. Hostesses wcr·c Mrs.
I.uek ey&lt;loo, Mrs. Horton,
Mrs. Audrey Davenport,t,

Cheryl Roush and j ohn Cook Iff
Mr . and Mrs. Char les M. Roush, Point Pleasant, announce the en gagement of their daughter, Cheryl Lynn, to
John W. Cook lll, son of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Cook J r.
Henderson.
The bride-elect will be a graduate of Point Pleasant High
School. John is a 1976 graduate of Point Pleasant High School.
Cheryl is presently employed with G.C. Murphy's Co ..
Gallipolis, Ohio. J ohn i.&lt; employed with 1301 Construction Co.,
New Haven. WV .
The open church wedding will take place August 10, 1979
at Bellemead United Methodist Church, Point Pleasant.
'

Candle lighting higbligbts meeting
POMF.ROY·-,\

Was an cx.c han ~e of g1ft s.
Sl' Vcr al utlwr rea dings ~·n d a

ca ntll e-

li g hlin ~

service highlighted
the recent mcd.ing uf thl~
E va ngeline Missionan· Society of the Pom e ror church of

su dal

Christ.
Mrs. Holly McArthur had

ding

eharge nf tile service whith
WHS done in a cin·lto with each

members li ghting ;1 cand lt•.
She
read ' 'Ci rcle of Peace·• as
ser ved punch. sandwic hes ,
;
she
lighted her eandle and
and cook ies.
then each Hl l!llllJc r lighLt:!d
her candle as she ruad. a
scripture un t il a \\ the

CHI'tdJ.ei

DECEMBER 24 THRU DECEMBER

" lien Jones. " guest.

r-· .•.,.

~·,~.-~;;;;; ~,;;;;;.;:~

'"s'rATE

FARM

~ad ·

prayer to opel) the meeUng.

INSURANCE

Mrs. La Donna Cla rk ga ve the
secr e tcrry 's t'~' p o rt , Mrs
Evelyn Smith the missiona ry

®

.

ed for Mrs. Clenr Glcnroy

he ld at the hume of ! .erny and
Joyce Sauters. A Christmas

State Fann is there.

F:wing, Colwnbus'; Mrs. Lena
-,.
, ''' f,w
Huber. tlalifax, Mass.: and dinner ilf hHm and turkey
II· -, •i"-r ' • fl
f"''
Mrs . Ca ddi e Wi ckha m, we re served. The re were
Gallipolis. Christmas carols humorous skits. a gi ft ex· '.. -! .'bO
- -~ -- - - - - -- - were. /l ung.
rhar:tge a nd an uudion.
'

1,

1r ••

,,

PORK LOIN
$,. N.DW

XL-100
' 19"
d+ agonal

c

ncn

LETTUCE,

The Glenr+ch
MCidel

MAYoftftAit
.
REG. $1.25

FB~3

-

WILL CLOSE CHRISTMAS
tVE Af 4:00 PPA
CLOSED cHRISTMAS Q_AY _..

PHONE 446-1611

PtPiiU
I&amp;UII

· ,. Gailipolis, 0. ,

HURRY WHILE THEY LAST!

RIDENOUR
OHIO

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
BOffiE GAS

'

949-2020

·

report on Ope ra ti on. ·,~, ·, fOR INSU RAN CE CAll
precedmg the meal. Mrs. Evangelize of Chesapeake; '
I.ula Hampton had charge of Mrs. Clark on the flower
the meeting which opened fund ; a nd Mr s . Ei leen r
with group si nging of ·• Joy to Bowers on th e moth~r·
th e World '." There was . daughter banquctfund.
C. K, SNOWDEN
prayer by Mrs. Hampton and
Mrs . J a net Venoy gave fl
devotions by Mrs. Joseph . reading on Christma s. There
Couk who reH d from Psalms
. '·
9, 2 through 7 and a story
from th e Ch ri stia n Herald entitlt•d "The Boy Wltu Hid from
ATTEND MEETING
Chri stme~s. ··
MIDD LEPORT-·
It was noted that a book hetd Awroxunatd y 511 &lt;ittend ed a
been pl act•d in the library in meeting of the LadiPs Aux·
memory of J.ydi H Ebersbach. iliary of the Middleport
Like a good neighbor.
Round-robi n canis we r·c sign- United Pentecostal Church

RCA

FOOTERS

F: v ;1

sevcml script ures pc rhtining

Temperance Union was held to the birth of Christ and
CJt the home of Mrs. Robert
Wa rner.
The ho use was d ecora ted
for Uw holiday .SIJCISun , and
Mrs. Warner had grace

\1 r ~.

w c r·c

Num1u Oh!lnp,er,
Pauli lie K emu-dr, ~:~ nd Mal'\'

sang "S1lent Night, Holy
POMF:HOY -·Th e a nnual Night."
Chri.stmHs polluck of t he
Mrs. Bet1 y Spe ncer read
Pom e roy Women's Christ ian

with

01'~sam· r ,

and Mrs. Jea n Cook. They

lighted . Mrs. McArthur
Annual potluck held were
had praye r, and th e group

hour

n! frc!-ihnwnb qf ('; lk t and ('offt't'. Gcrtl e Bass. co-h(1Stess .
prt~senkd angel li&lt;•ll f;-n· or~; to
L'&lt;H'h membLT. Olht·r c;; &lt;-llkn-

CLOSING EARLY CHRISTMAS EVE
AND NEW YEAR'S EVE

RACIN

.

'

'

Filornen a Manns. Glassport . .

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY

' kennetll Mc~;unougn, R. Ph. ' Clllrlft Rlfllt, R. PI!; '
Ranold Henning, R. Pl1
Mon, thru Set, I:OOo.m, to9 p':m,
Sunday 10 :30 to 11 :30tnd Sto 9 p,m.
r'RESCRIP"I tONS
t'H.'f12·29SS
~rlendly. service
Pomtfoy., O.
E. Main
Open Nlghtst.ill 9

AS STATED EARLl ER.

''

#

1,_,

December 24 thru
December 30

WILL BEGIN AT 5:00 P.M.
.NOT AT 7:30 PM

''

. j

I

•

DON'T FORGET OUR
ANNUAL % PRICE
TABLE STARTING
TUESDAY

CHRISTMAS PROGRAM

Bishop, Kennedy wed

CHIUSTMAS ~
Eaeh year it means

CLOSED
cHRISTMAS

4 MILES WEST OF HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Mr. and Mrs. Glen Kennedy

AVERY MERRY

'

1

\

~..... '

Pam, Mansfield ; Ms. Amy
Lagusch, Columbus; Mr. J eff
Swanson, Columbus; Miss
S ilvan a Hria ncesc hi
Columbus: Miss Terri Gonya'
Cul um bu s;
Mrs . Mari~
DePala tis, Mary Louise and
Anna, Glassport, Pa .; Mrs.

,'

To celebrate
•
annzversary

•

stJII mor~~
And our gratitude
behbtd it
Is warmer th;au
before.

as a waih·pss nt

Powt• r Co .

Laying his fingers over his
nose would be more accurate.
That turkey left over from
Thanksgiving · in
my
refrigerator is getting a bit
strong!
"He sprang to his sleigh, to
lils team gave a whistle, and
away they ·new like the down
on a thistle. .. "But I heard
him exclaim as he drove out '
of ~ight, "Happy Christmas
to all, and to all, a good
night! "
Happy Christmas from me,
too!

· SUNDAY HOURS
10:30 AM . 5 PM

THE FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH

t•mployt.~tl

-....

Mrs. Ca rlos Bri anceschi a nd

rr·uw 's Stt.·ak Houc. MI-. Kt&gt;ntH.'dy olso attt&gt;mlt·d ' Mt•ig:-;
High Sl'hnol nnd is l'mp!Hyt'&lt;l
r1 t lht• America n F:lt.•ct ri('

rose ... "

SPECIAL

CALL: 992-3629
FOR RESERVA110NS

Mr. and Mrs. lluwar&lt;l Taylor,
Uc lprc; Mr. and Mrs .
Will ii:.lm Ve~l cn rinc, Nit ro , W.
Va .; Mr. wul Mrs. •· rank
Valentine, Waverly: Mr . and
Mrs.
Frank
Doo little,
Mor~a nt o wn , W. Va .; Mr.
and Mrs. llill Polinski
C•.lu mbus;
Mr.
Joh~
Sr r.aquadine, Ct1 lumbus; Miss
J.,anne Kud la, Glassport,
i'a.. Mr. and Mrs. Paul
DePa latis , Frustberg, Md.;
Mr. and Mrs. Margi Melvin,
·- Newark. Delaware; Ms. Pam
Knapp . Co lumbus; Mi ss
Mary Lee Wil kinson, Grand
Rapids, Mi eh.; Ms. Beverly
Leite, Columbus; Mr . Tom
McG uffin , Columbus; Mr .
Michael and Dr . Naomi
Berma n, Culumbus; Mr . and

�..

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R-l- Thl' Sunduy Tinws-St• ntinel. Sundn~~ , flt•r . 24, 1 ~78

rs.~~~-1 r~w-l
so~;~~~~~~ns Cente~e~gc~ I Calendar I
tivities loca ted at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
is oren R:30 a.m.-4: 30, p.in.,
:&gt;1omlay through Friday.
Munda y, Dec. 25
Christmas Day - Center
Closed.
Tu esda y, Dec. 26
Physical Fitness,l1:30 a.m .;
C~wrus. 1~ : 3().2 p.m.
Wed nesday. Dec. 27 Soda! Scf:ur ity Heprcsentative. 9:30 a.rn .-12 :30 p.m.;
Physical ~'itness , 11 :30 a.m.;
(iames, l -2::iO p.m.
Thursda y, Dec. 28 Phy sical F itness, 11 :30 a.m.
Friday, Dec. 29 -- Art
Cla ss, 10 a. m .-1 2 noon ;
Physical F itness, l1 :30 a .m.;
Bowling, 1·3 p.m.; Square
Oan·ce, 3:30 p.m.·12 midnight .
Sen inr Nulrition Program,
12 noun to 1 ~:45 p.m., Monday
thro ugh Friday.

SUNDAY
CANDLEUGHT SERVICE, ·
5 p.m. Sunday at Pine Grove
Baptist Ch urch. . .
WEDNESDAY
POM I': ROY -MID D L E·
PORT
Lion s
Clu b.

rc~ulnr.l!:l nr tn('cting W«•dru•s-

da v at tilt' Ml·igs Inn . !.ions
reinindl•d tu take H gift for a
post Chri stmas l'X&lt;:hi:!.ngc.

Christmas day.
Menu for the Satellite Site

at the Heorganized Churcll of
.1csl;s C"r,r i~=t of Latter Duy
~.':l im ;~ . L11d Tuwn t&lt;"Jats. is
~mu :.~ ~· ln lll-2 abovf.! menu.
Plt~ase
C&lt;.1\ l in your
rescrvaUnn HI: Pur1litnd , 843 ~

t\ c "l11'i :-:11nns

~~a llwr inJ' w;1 "

h ·ld Satun ltt,\' at tile · ('ah·;H'Y

Bibk t 'l1111't'h · nil PuJJH'I'ny
P 1k1· E:w h 11li'ltlill' l" hrnnt•.hl
;1 h~&gt;lid:n· dt• SSI' I"I

.•WJTt•d . \\·it h

F.VF.NlNG r.UESTS
M IDflLF: PO H T .. M i ss
Saro ll Recl!llt• mul Huss
Klnnlz, Laneuster were Friday evl'ning guests nf her
parents. Mr . and Mrs. Jack
Bechtle.

whit'h w;l."
!'nfft•t• i !IHI

k (llll;l!lh- .
C tlll!t '.S

Wl'!'t '

lht'l'l' \\'i!S

it

pliiYl'(.l

(11\ d

St' l'lll lllll'tlt• by
tlw Ht&gt;\'. J\l illl

tht· p;tslor.
. Hla("kwnod . rhildn·n trinun t•d ttll' C'hri stmas lri'l' . Mtt•nding wt.•n.• Mr. and Mi·s. F'lnyd
nr·11u· n.

n'l'f'P

111:H'kll""' "l

chalhmge of support ing and
beld Saturda;·
FUSSA, Japan - Major complex weapon system in a
.\1wlwll•· Jl iw•s . .\1r . anti Mr!". Joe P. Ford, son of Mrs. Ruth · world-wide operation.
ll•·r ht·rt H:rrkt· r. M••li."i!"OI. Ford of New Haven, W. Va .,
The major now serves at
Trw:•. irJi d Bu!Jh,-. Mr~ . Jv;-r has received the second Yokota as commander of the
Sr..:~ nn . Hnl)t'rl. . .luhu CJIId award of the Meritorious 316th
Or gani zational
Mt&gt;h~,.;; r , Mr~ . ~t'lva Ehlin. Service Medal at Yokota AB , Maintenance Squadron, a
T trn and Hill y, Mr . ornd Mr!" . Japan.
· part of the Pacific Air For·
1 -'itlllt ~s Pink . Mikt• ancl Eli ,
Ma jor Ford wa s cited for ces.
Mrs. .h•s" i( • M;u1in. Mrs. outstanding duty perform·
The major , a 1957 graduate
l .twi.llt' ff (·ndrit·h. Tirw Ht•JJ- 1 ance as a C-5 Galaxy of Wahama High School,
drt('ks, fi loria Pt·nvh•\'. .Je~v. Met;nte nance Manag~r at Mason, W. Va., received a
Vl\'kk ;rnd .Tt·ff. aiul tlit• Scott AFB, nJ . His superb B.S. degree in 1961 from West
p;r "1or. hi:-; wif1: , anti :-:o11 . management
in· Virginia
Institute
of
was
Na th;m .
strumental in the resolution Technology and was com·
of the problems fac.ed in the mlssioned in 1963 upon

.

'

The busy people at Pennyfare have a NewYear's Resoll.!tion that's sure to please
bring you even greater TOTAL DOWN Savings week in and week out with our TOTAL
harder than anyone else to keep your check-out total lower than ever before. In
we will continue to bring you weekly specials from every department in our stores.
Pennyfare TOTAL DOWN Way and save week after week after week the whole year

S1'01CILY

Sll- YElLOW SUN4J

: !'

( \.Jl

t-• .... ......... ....... ... ... ' " .' ........, . ......... ..

emergcney sit uati un ca n
occur over night. We have the
recent noodin g as a good

1urkey dinner for humeb11und

'-U HHil b

Ullllll iJ .).

ass isting with thi • plan example ~
Our thank,s tu i:!. ll uf} ou who
received inf urma t ion i:lnd
data they will need to help arr servi ng m th1s cu unly
uthers during an emcr~eney wide plan .
Ch ristmas Dinlll'r ~
situation.
Uue lo the generous and
Approxhnately 200 rwmcs
we r e distributed tt1 1he th oughtful gr ft s uf Kelly
voJuntecn; for the telephone Ma nufacturing Curnp:Jny ,
check list. 'l11c HSVP uffice Mrs . (;race Eit:h e~nd the
will cont inue to accept names Young Wives Club. the staff
for this chec k li't during the uf the Senior Citizens Center

Training Meeting
POMEROY - Twentyseven RSVP vo lunte~r s at·
tended a training meeting at
the Center in December. This
initial training session was
held primarily to acquaint
the volunt eers with the
RSVP 's
Emergency
Assistance Plan.
The volunteers who a r~

-

Resolution

senior C'Jtizcn :s uf M CJ):(S
County . '!'he dmners ~en:
deliver ~d by HSVP l'ulun·
t cers ilub McE llwmcy. I~ au!
Smart , EC:! rlv I\ 11USh , I Jnroln
Hu ssell , Hill \) u i 1·c~. Hl) the
Theiss , Cha rles DtH ul &lt;:~nd
Esta DcJvid
Aga in, our th ; rnk~ tu &lt;ill () f
you who helpt.;d mak l! thJs
prujett J)()~s iLlc
LilJra q St•n in·s
Fur tho ~c of) uu who Cll JUY
reading. tht.: Mt•igs Count}
Buu km(/bik will !J~: at tile
Senior Citizens ( 'cn1l:r frum
12 :30 p.m. unti l l :10 p.111.

.

.

'

i.'

V.a-"•
.,.c-... .LJe'
v s•
..

Ham
$
Z9

.~

lb.

'

FRESH3to5-lb.Avg.

~fa::~

v...,...._;

Bunt's
Tomato Juiee.
14-oz.
Can
•

fe·e t •••

~

Por•
Butt Roast

$

.•

29

. ...

" .

Cleanser~ ':.

,~
.

,', ·

Towels
Jumbo Roll

• • ~, • .,. •

..

~ffJY

Gra~ &amp; Sliced Beef or

Reisman
Pretzel
37&lt;
DOMINO SUGAR
LENDER'S BAGELS I:~'::, H...., .•.••••••••••••• ,., "• 44•
FRANCO AMERICAN BEEF RAVIOLIOS ............ 48•
IOXCONFICJI. .AIY
li&amp;Ht •oWN . DAII PaWN • • • • • • • • • • • • •

J.•.
....

sa•
sa•

ZIPLOCK SANDWICH BAGS ................ "•
PURINA MEOW MIX CAT FOOD ••••••••••.•:,..
BORDEN CREMORA •••••••••••••••••• ,;........ 5 1.5a
PRINCELLA SOUTHERN CUT YAMS ........... '"'6a•
BIG VALU FABRIC SOFTENER •••••••• , • , • ..,,.,
VICK'S MEDICATED COUGH DROPS ••••• ,,.,.,.. 54•
THOROFARE ASPIRIN, ••.,•••••••••• , ............... 6a•
TAMBELLINI PIZZA SQUARES ...,.......... ':,~dJ,3a
PLANTER'S PEANUTScocmllOI.DIYIOAmD., , , , , • , , ';!· 5 J,3a
HUNT'S PRIMA SALSA SPAGH. SAUCE,.•.• ":' 5 1.09
L .. :

aa•

14-oz. Bag

Fisher's.
Onion Dip

e

·

-

S J29
P&amp;D Cooked Shrimp. . ••.•• ....
,..:
Van De Kamp

Filh Fillets. • • •

0

•

0

~

12-41.
0

•

0

0

0

SJ49
-

" ' •·

SOLID CRISP

1-lb. 12-oz. Can

Lilht If' Livel~

ENCYCLOPEDIA. ALL VOLUMES
ON SALE NOW. PICK YOURS UP TODAYl

Yoeurt
5 FLAVORS 8-oz. Ctn.

lfJ OU il CPS.

,.

('

."

M~t wr.&lt;. n l l , . ;m

;m •

.

IIil !lli! L

f.! ["t '" I

Hot Dogs ·::~;· ~~~~- 5 1.1!
Hot Dogs ·::~r ~~: 5 1.a!

LEMONS or
FLOIIIDA 411a
LIMES.
••••••• ••••••
IRAIIS EFFECIIVE THIU SAT DEC.

1971 .

" I '• I'

-~

.It '

·:-k'
"·il•l ,, 11"11
,r:t.!
1.

.
\]

l1:r. 1

,

r , ·1.
, r
• :~ 1
\!:·
• •

i •·,

Apple

Sliced Bacon. ~~: 5 1t!

News Nott:~

(~row

By 1\lrs. Jlt·rlw rt Hou sh
Mr . and !\lr ~. Donald
Barnett e, ~ 1r :;. Dursh Pw·sons att cndrd funernl ~wr ­
vi ccs for \1 it l'll1ll Flowers at
the Mt Alt .~ Haptlst Ch ur·ch
Thursda) With mterm eu t iu
the church cemct t•ry
Mrs. Et,hd tl.'ioll rt.' of !'."~· 11
Haven, Mrs. I .&lt;mise Waldhnl-'.
of St. Alhc-m s wcrC' dr nner
gue sts Th ur-;·day of ~·1r :;

2!!
1
")Q

,A£

~1UUe

Potatoes

.. 3· ~ 79c
59c
GREEN ONIONS ••••••••• 3
RED RADI$HES. ............. ,.,, 39c
$1 39
ROASTED PEANUTS PSL~~~~·
,_., • I ASTIRN

MciNTOSH APPLES •••••••
POSH

kocheo

.

1-tb.

79c

I

Grill Dogs • • ~~~: 51!I!
Dinner Franks ~~: 5
· Sliced Pickle loaf or S
12-oL

l 'di:-lrll

~ 1!'
\ "II' ),
1 1". ,"ill·! 1111

(' ll!"!." l llJ' 1 t"r

U.S. NO.1 SIZE "A"

PUSH

s~

I

I IIIII

Pr~ I TH' nl\

11 ; 111\i ll

\ l r·.

dt 'I

\llfl• ,.,

IL \" n-..1
\1 r -;
1:

IIJ.

CALifORNIA liS stu

iltlll

. ! I I .I ,, ::

J1n ..: ~ ·n~ ·

$

RID RIPI

\l r

HIIJI OJ' \1 1

FRESH PRODUCE

Gree•• Cabbaee

2 49C
CARROTS ••• •. • • • • • • ......
2
99C
SALAD TOMATOES • • • • .t.

&lt;lllllll li JH't:L

LI H" b1r·rl1 pf 111,'11' "-l'('ll t;d :,,,.
Philip :\ndr·, ·· ( ;r;~ wl pit:"t•i·lt

$2 59
•

l'll.\ lFH rll'-.\lr :11H I \ fr,
T ll n !ll:L"
l! iJ!!I!II

. Dorsa Parsuns.

8-oz.Ctn.

Campbell's
Pork (:1 Beans

engagement

Bologlla. • • • • • • •P'tg.
SliCed Cooked Salami $
or old Fash. • • • • • 1::,~·

•••

FRIIH C..SP

THERE ARE TWO WEEKS
LEn TO COMPLETE YOUR
OF FUNK &amp; WAGNALLS NEW

SIB

Parts

$ J59
2...
-

Brilliant

•. 89c

Chieken

-

Veal Ptnliglana . • • .. • ... "'•·

SJ&amp;
••

•

~. Pak

~~ !~~ &amp;Beitler.. • . • . • • .....~~ SJ!!
$J19
Freezer Queen

Announce

ARMOUR "kSTAR

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

3 ..,..

for thn:..r att t•ndm g •
H ~l\ 'L' a ni t·l· '•H'C' k ;urd ,,
H rt ppy \1.'•'· \' t·.tr lrum :ill 11,.
us at t he \ h-I.~s t ant~ s, ·
Citizens Ct •n'.l':

• • • • • • • • • lb.

Franks
Shrimp Coektcil • • • • • • . . . .

dcm oi1 Str&lt;J1 l' 11 n t' \\ craft i1 k ~1

olb • .

AnJ WGJ You Prefer

I b.

~'A~«?

• • • • • ' • • • • ,... lor#~

39c

Haci nc ;\ ut r ll itl:1 Sl\1..' ll1urs·
day . Deccmh1·r· ~II. Sht· Will

79

~-----------------------~--~
1Ud.J-.

Ri·Dri

Sitt· \ 'i:-.it
t\li rr Wulrr will \·islt th •·

lb.

CUT FREE INTO Strip Steato Bone In,
Bonefen Strip Steak•, leof Stew or

PORK STEAKS • • • • • • 1•. 5 1.39

c.

s129

Strip Loins.

II ISH

10.75-ol•.

...

Pigs

ARMOUR • Veri-Best Pork

THE LEANEST PORK YOU CAN BUY • "A CUT ABOVE THE REST"

1-Qt.

LAIIL '

wurthwhil e ~er \'lce . Wt all
extend uur th anks It• the
library personn el for addi ng
the Center to the ir regul :.1r
llookmobrlc sc· hcdulc .
Films
Be g innin g tn Jan u a r ~.
film s will be 'ihown un a
weekly scht:du lc. 1\ re yuu
inlereslec! iu watchin,L; full
feat ure films ·: A sm e~ l !
_ charge wuuld b~: made to
each fJCrsu n atl cnding.
A full-len gth fdrr1 will be
shnwn in Ff• bruary i:l :Pl tl
altendance Is ~.;qod, t hc ~ e
film s cau bL• :-:. hown e&lt;rch
munt h.
Square- Daru.:c
Yuu arc all i11 vited tu the
"end- of- the- yc~r r'" squarL'
dancet u be held at the Center
~~ riday evening , J)ecem iJL• r
29, buginnm~ at 8:30 p 11 1.
R efreshmen t~ anLI i:l ~oo d
time Hrc prli\'J dl•d fr1r all
&lt;:~ttendin g!
·
'l11i s event is t1 pen to th (•
public. sq j uHl us fur a tun
ev ening.

ALL PENNYFARES WILL BE OPEN MEW TEAR'S
EVE; 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M. AND CLOSED NEW TEAR'S DAY SO THAT
OUR EMPLOYEES MAY ENJOY NEW YEAR'S DAY WITH THEIR FAMILIES.

• Nlbli.tS~rn '. . '+,
Ml•eol
•SweetP--.
• • • •r •
, .

GlitN'GIANt Fi-oaen

l .et 's U\k(' arl\'rJnt&lt; tg t• uf til l"{

SUPER MARKETS

Pea·eJaes ·•••• •·•• :••.,.:,.,.• ••.
'

mobile Sl'l"\'ltl' in .\ 1ei gs
Cuunty is providl'd juintly IJy
the Po!lleruy · M1ddk purt
Li braries :md the Ohio Vtlllcy
Arel:l L~b r &lt;:~ri&lt;•s.
The BookmobJ ie per ~,nn el
wi ll hBvc large prin1 books
ava 1iablc and cun pi'O\'lde
acCess t.n Talking Buf 1k ~.
Specia.l request:-- f11r rei:!ding
material can bt unlt:rcd from
the Stat e Library.

are

everyone- Except our competitors. · We resolve to
DOWN PRICES. In the coming year we will work
addition to our everyday TOTAL DOWN PRICES,
Make this New .Year a year for savings. Shop the
through.
·
.
· ·
·

' .

M~ l erna l

,.,

Sentor Ctttzens Scenes·:

UUERKRAUl

~·elcbrH ~ i t'ln 11 f the 74th birth·
dav t•f he r hu :~ btmd Cfia rles .

grondp(trents ;~re
Mr . ami M., . Elmer Boiley,
Darwin, and the paternal
gr(l ndparents arc Mr. and
Mr, . Rober! Heed, Pomeroy,
Rou t'.! 2. The Sargents hi:l ve a
son, .Jon, four .

::::

Whole Fresh

M l DflLE POH T '· Mr s.
,'";wi nnit· White ente rtained
-r ... epnt.! ~· with a pa rty in

!FJtll1dS,

!;!'

-

ARMOUR"kSTAR PORK

Hono red on birthday

a nd Mrs.
r.ny Sargent of Wolf Pen, an·
nounre th e birth uf a
daughter. Krista f'ae, born at
the O'illeness Memorial
Hosrital ;n Athens on Dee. 19.
The lm hy weigher! fo ur

· ;~r· ··· · -·-· .·.·.·-·· ·- ·-·.--·~······-· - ·-·. · .·.········· - · . ·~····· · - ~--········-· - ·-·-· - ·.·-·.·.·-·~·-·· ··-·.·-·.·.

' C ~orotart )

T](JEIJSTON E
Baptist
Church, annual Christmas
1ree and treats, plus a Christ·
rna progra m, 6:45 p.m .

P0~1EROY-Mr .

UIIU YlJ1 11\.

!!

dw n~ e .

Daughter
born

~

Bea:a s

r' II J&lt;l'&gt;l'MAS ~rog r a m ,
t·: ru·, k:J United Chri;;tia n
t'hu rch. 10 a.m. Gift CK·

oekcrl by f~rs. Kitty Darst.
[;ifL• were presented to the
honored guest. The 35th wed ..
ding anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. White was observed Fri·
day, Dec. 15.
Atlcmhng were Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Wel l and
J. au g hter, Amber, Mrs.
flc ulah White, Mrs. r lorence
Ha n nc~y, Mrs. Pc;.rl Hoff·
man. ,Jeff and Kitty Darst
and son, Ketth, Mr. and Mrs .
Tom O urs~ (:Jnci ~uu, Craig.

.........

, AriOC~t~ ·

Vin ton. Candleligh t and
curnmumuu service , 9 p.m.
The f{er . Br,b Maddison of the
Chu rf'h 'Jf the Naza rene in
..;-c-d ii~·'.J 1 l ~ wil! bring the

M!" V,. h t &lt;J , ~ re tired
!"tliJ;·r•:H..l.c :-, v. c-.ts presented a
blrt hd;,y cakt' m ll'ain repli ca

I

• ,,..,. ,...,_J

casserole , butter kale,
pineapple with grated cheese
sa lad,
bread ,
butter,
chocolate pudding with
whipped topping, milk .
Friday - Beef patty with
mustard and catsup, cream
of potato soup, jellied ·fruit
salad, butter, fruit cobbler,
milk .
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.
"Services rendered on a
non-discriminatory basis."

tl'l'Orl ,

Ha pl tsl Church. Main St. ,

f' YTHIA N Si"ter,, 7:30p.m.,
r.. d f' Ha ll , second
nmnwalion of officers. All
rncml:ers please attend.

1 Sr. Citizens 1
Calendar 1

· -~- .,.

RETAILS EFFEOIVE THRU SAT. DEC. 30, 1978

se rvi ce

\\'EDN~~SDAY

'
·- .. p.m.
The Senior Nutrition
Program will serve the
following menus :
Monday - Closed.
Tuesday - Chicken, gravy,
mashed potatoes, Coleslaw,
bread, butt er,
canned ·
apricots, milk .
Wednesday - Salisbury
steak, potatoes with cream
sauce, buttered green beans,
bread, butter, yellow cake
with fruit sauce, milk.

Physical Fitness, 11 : 15 a.m.;
Birthday party; 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Dec. 27 - ·
Mobile Service at Thurman,
Ohio, I p.m .; Card Games, 1·
3; McGuffey Reading Hour, 1
p.m.
.
GALUPOUS - Activities
Thursday, Dec. '1:1 for thls week at the Senior
Bible
Study, 12 :45-1 :45 p.m.;
Citizens Center, 220 Jackson .
Blood
Pressure Check at
Pike, are : ·
Vinton
Nutrition
Site.
Monday, Dec. 25 - Friday,
Dec.
29
- JAM
Closed.
order
and
money
due Tuesday, Dec. 26 delivery
January
5;
Art
10 :30
a.m.;
S.T.O.P .,

lf.24.

A New Year's

:•:164

:..Ul\. n 1\.\
i' HH I&gt;T'.:"\S !WE

The nri gi nal F.urn()N tn
populat io n of Manhattan
Jslnntl rtHJsistcd of eight men
landt•d by tile Dutrh ship
"NPw Nct ll e rl~ml " in Mct.Y of

. . ·-- .

r ....---....-··- --,

every t wu wct•k s !JeJ!-innmg
Janua ry 8, 1919. The Bou k·

Menu

Monda y - Close d for
Christmas.
Tuesday -· Sausage patty,
pancakes and syrup, cottage
cheest!, grapefruit sections,
butter, milk.
W rd n e -~day - Salisbury
ste;• i&lt;. with ~ravy , potatoes
with crea m sauce, buttered
green beans , yellow cake and
ca nned ap ricots, bread,
huttcr. milk .
1'hursd•y - Beef and pork
casserole, but1ered spinach,
pineapple with grated cheese
salad, chocolate pudding with
whipp ed t op ping, bread,
butt~r , milk .
Friday -- Salmon loaf,
baked potato, coleslaw,
c he rry C(• bblcr , bread,
butter, milk .
TJH: Pome roy Senior
CiU ·::C'n Cenler a nd th e
Satellite Site, Portland, will
be clused Monday, Dec. 25

Christmas gatbering

REC ~: IVES AWARD

completion
of
Officer
Training School at Lackland
AFB, Tex. He also received
an M.A. degree in 1976 from
Webster College in St. Louis.

FIIIH

·

.
'

2
• • • • • ::.··

•

.

Mr . and Mr s. Hrrtwr 1
Roush, Mrs. Iva Orr wen.•
shoppinR nt th e Athc11s :Ha ll
Saturday .
Mr s.
Anna
Whee le r
returned hume .Sa t unla ~
after spend ing two •r~:•c k ~
with Mrs. Fnmkic Foster and
children at Dela,\'a rc, ami
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Morris and
famil y at Buwli11g Green
Mrs. Wh eeler W&lt;iS &lt;Jl' ·
comp;mied home by her sonin- la w, Ed Moms. Mrs.
Wheeler is improving .
Don Bell s1 ill remains a
patient at Holzer Medical
Center. Mr . and Mrs. Bruce
Hart of Columb us visi ted him
Sun day .
Mr . and Mrs. ,Jeff Donoh ew
and family of Bel pre. Mr . and
Mr s. George Donohew And
family of Circl eville vi sited
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Donohew
Sunday . Mr . .anri Mrs. Wiley
Ours of Racine visited the
Donohews· Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mr.,. Roger Housh
and dau ghter Kim be rly
Cindy Roush were shopping
at the Mall at Parkersburg
Tuesday evening.
Mrs. Dallas Hill , Mrs. Dec
Spencer called on Mrs. Hoger
Roush recently .
Mrs. Cora Birch of Raci ne
i'isited Mrs. Mar~i e Hunt
ruesday.

�B-6~ The SuiHiay

Timcs.Scn!iricl. Sunday, Ore . 21. 19/R

Church wedding set
RACINF.-Thc
wedd ing

uf

UJl&lt; ' ll

Mis."

chrrr!'h
Rrl'nd~t

RoK ibcrg, darrgh!cr uf Mr . a no I
Mr, ·. Eldmr Rudbcrg. w,., t
Pa lm Bcadr. Fla .. ami i\1 /c
Kevin Wi ll for d. sorr q( Mr .
and Mrs. Harry \Villfurtl ,
R&lt;:ll'i rw , wi ll lw mr t'\'l'll l nf
De(' . 29 tt l 6 :30 p .m . ct l thl'
Ra cine We sl~yan U nit t·~!

Mclhudist Chu rch.
The Rev.
offk·ia te

O&lt;:~v i d

&lt;i l

the

H&lt;i rTis will
rercm onv

· which will fo 11uw a prugnui1
of nuptia l m usic b\· Mrs.
Ma rlem~ F isher, picmiSt .
Miss Sue R.odbt.•rg \\l·il\

ATTEND PARTY
POMEROY-Mr . and Mrs.
Chesler Knight were at
Marietta la st Sunday for a
bu'lhday celebration for their
son, Dick, hosted by his wife
ami daug hter , Stephame.

lwr sJ..;tc r'.; ma id 11f
hu nor. and Sl'lltt St~udt•rs.
l:;u·irll'. will ht.·l ht• l&gt;t·st ma n.
lrrum•ilJ;-rtd y foll owing tlw
t't T l'IIIC~IIY,

Cl

n•t ·t•ptiorr will lw lw ld in tlw
dll trTh

sorltll

1'!1(1111 .

To celebrate
anntversary
•

Mr. and
Mrs. Law rence Ma nl ey ,
Middleport, will ce lebra te
t he ir 19t h wedding a nniversary Chr istmas Day.
They were married at the
home of Mr . Ma nl ey's
pa r ent s, Mr . a nd Mrs .
Lawre nce Ma nl ey , Middleport , on Dec. 25, 1959. The
couple are the parents of four
chil dren, Dav id , Mi chael,
M IDDLEPORT ~

I
I

I

1..:

By Charlene Hoeflich ·

MERRY CHRISTMAS !
Creativity m arks the observance in home decorations by
most at this lrme of year , but few settle down to designing their
own Chr1stma s card .
Su we share with you one which we receiv~ from Roger and
Mary Radford Gibnure.
·
The design depicts the two of 'hem and their family -a dog
and two cats - and , of course , J guitar for Rqger an aspiring
songwriter.
Roger, whose talents tend toward the artistic designed the
card, and we think it's grea t '

I

Send o ne ... lake one home .

'

DUDDING GRADUATES
WICHI TA F ALl.S, Tex. ~
M r. and Mrs.
Airman Brian L. Dudding,
grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
George D. Stoba rt of Rt. 2,
Racine, has graduated at
Sheppa rd AFB, Tex., from
the U.S. Air Force techni cal
tra in ing course fo r general
accounting specialists.
Airm an Dudding, now
P0\1EROY -- I II
a
tra ined in the principles of
(':OHld
kli
~~
ht
Cl'I'
Pillnny
&lt;t1
tin•
Air Force accounting and
appropria ti on and con trol Ret lw ny Unik d l lntkd
systems, is being assigned to Mt'tlwdi st Ch urch ~t 1 Don ·;t s,
Offutt AFB , Neb., for duty 7 p .m. o n Nov. 10. Melindct
with a unit of the Strategic Sue Da il ey, .daug h ter 11 f J\·1r.
Air Command . Completion of and Mrs. Owen Dc-nlt ·,·.
the co urse earned the in- P!lrtl and. a nd R; uT\' Mo(l;.l..
dividual cr edits towards an Smit h. son of Mr . ;;nd \1 1·;-.;,
associate in a pplied science Delbl'r l S1nith. H;wil lt'. wt•re
deg ree through the Com- un itt•d i n mCJ ITi;t gt·.
TIH• bride is Ow gralld munity Coll ege of the Air
uf Mikt• Sdlw;trz
dauglltt&gt;r
Force.
and
thl'
latt&gt;
Bl'lm Schwott ·z.
The airm an is a 1977
M;.~ sun .
ThL' . dtl iiTh W&lt;t"
gradu ate of Southern High
dl'('OI'Htt•d wi th 1-I ITl-lllgl 'IJlt'lltS
School.

Barry Smith
SANTA is a busy one and tonight between 5 and 7p.m. he will
be at the American Legion hall in Middleport to give treats to
the children.
Santa comes there at the invitation of the American Legion
of Feeney-Bennett Post and has traditionally made the stop for
many , many years.

Dailey, Smith wed
in candlelight service

;,unl&gt;hini.! d~ll\l.!l"t"Li am li lllt' .
.1 hn.~1 : 1m\\he re ~

h ,r.birth-

da .. -.. anni-\..:r .....,ne .... . ,r h •r , Hl\
t' ' ~- r~lbo grft o){·-.:;t~\\111. Bri l!lll .
frv ... h fl, me r.., we ~·a n '-C lld ·
: tlrlh•~t .111 \&gt;\twr..:. rh ..: FT!J
1\,1\. C ell ;1 r
~ ~~~-p h}

W t• f't'U/~1· _gl.' l &lt;ll"lllltHJ ft lf _'.tlll'

" When Words are not
enough send ... "

FLOWERS by GEORGE
Phone 446-9721
28 Cedar St.
Gallipolis

•

West P(lint. th1• Nt•w York
milit&lt;-t n · ctc&lt;:tdcrnv, w; ts
founded. in i802. It ,.;wCJnls ct
R.S . dl'gr l:'e a nd em Army
l'o l runi .~~iPn for H 5- n-ar se rvice obli).(ftt ion.
·

NEW YEAR'S EVE

of whit t• ca rn.:1thlllS. iilld tilt'
He,· . Slt' \' l' W ilSilll J)l'l"fill'llll'd
the t'l' l't' IIJOil Y. T! H• br ide \\·a ...;
l'Scorted down 1IlL' ;tb iL• IJy
Mr. Smi tll
.
Matr!ln 11f lwnnt· W&lt;-IS D itiii\'
F.\'; ms 11f I .ong Hottom. ;tnd
PPrTy Smilh. 1\.ai:ittl' SL' n '(•d
as bl•sl ma n for ll i."i brntlll' r.
Nl'lla Sa ul' I'. a unt of 1ht·
gruorn wa s IJI'grtnist, and
Rt•t•ky Sm ith , Hal'i nl' S&lt;ltl g
'" Y ou [.i)!.ht Up m y Liflo '"

l'omp}llltl'il by Soni a Ash.
f'lo\\'l' l' girl wa s

S\TiH' IISl'.

Our traditional celebration will be Saturday night,
December 30. Only $.6.00 per person .
Price includes continuous disco dance music with two
professional DJs, plenty of noisemakers , favors and
party nats, plus our famous buffet. Festivities will be
broadcast live over WMPO-FM.

Tickets are limited so pick yours up early at the
French Quarter after 11 : 00 A. M . daily e Kcept Sunday .

FRENCH QUARTER
Kanauga , Ohio

Upper Rt. 7

&lt;It'·

Midll'l\• Hr P \\"11 , Ha cinc, and
Nl·il Manning . .Jr. of Kt•nltH' k.'. a l·ousin 11f t! w bride,
w;1s till' ring !Jt';tn•r.
lJ ~ Iw rs we n • Tern • Smith
tmd 11ill Har ris, Hadnc. ami
Slw1on K&lt;t .\" Mur phy of Hartford . W. Va. ruid Edward
Manni ng of E\' nts, K y,
cou s 111 ~
of
tlw
brid e,
di st ri hutt•d till' riet'.
c.;uests \\"l'l'l' n •gistered t&gt;y
I .isa Warnl'r &lt;tn d Rrendct Jl'lt,
Hadm·. '' n·n•plillll we~s he ld
Ill

thl' r hurd1 sot" ial ruom imfo l lt~wing
the
Sl'rving Ht the

u u•tliatd~
l'l'!"( 'lll llll~· .

Remembering others is so much a part of the Christmas

season.

It would be impossible to mention all those who have been

gen~rous with their tim~ and money. Churches are so faithful

m grvmg, not only to thetr own sick and shutin members but to
o~h~rs, and with every remembrance through the very act of
gtvmg goes the resplendent message of a Saviour born.
And that's what Christmas is all about.

Betrothal noted

bnilt's l&lt; IIJh• were Ca rla
T('£ tfon l. Sus it• Sea rbc rry,
Mt'lissa Smith and Reeky
0milh . Tilt• bride and gmom

TUPPF:RS PLAINS--Mr .
and Mrs. Dona ld Bennett are

\\'t' IT pl'l'St'lltt•d g iftS .

thei r daug hter. Shirley
Marie. to Lamar Lee Lyons,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ijmbey
I.y ons, Tupper&gt; Plains.
Miss Bennett is presently
attendin g Ea stern High
School and will gmduate midterm . Her fianee is a 1977

Tht..•

lll 'W

Mrs Smith will

g r;Hiu; tl l' fnlln SoulllCI'Il

High

St"ilnol in M&lt;:ty. \11' . S mith is a

1!1/li gnt dua tt' of SPuthc rn
Hi g\1 Sc hool and is t&gt;mployt.'&lt;-1
by Hiclmnls ttnd Suns Gravel
of l.l'la r t Fa lls .
The l'tiUpl l' rt..•l'ide in a nl'w
tnnbill' l1t1nw in Racinl'.

The. past few weeks have been' busy for everyone -all the
shoppmg, the wrappmg , the decorating , the entertaining, the
cookm .
Now relax, aqd have yourself a very Merry Christmas.

Lamar Lyons and 'Shirley Bennett

grHdua te of Eastern High
School and is employed by
Little Hocking Water and
Sewer Assoeiati urr irr Littl e
Hol'king.
The wedding ceremony will
be held on Jan . . 20 at 11: 30
a.m. at the Tuppers Plains
United Methodist Church.
The custom of open church
wedding will be observed.

annllUncing the engagemen t
and a pproa c hing marriage of

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11

roa

BEV

PAUL
I

MERRI

MIKE

• MARY

CHRISTY
KAREN

SHARON.

RITA

PAULA

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

Phone 446-7090
44 Court St.

Gallipolis
..

•

Spring Vall@y Plara
Gallipolis

BY BETIIE CLARK
Extension Agent
Home Economics
Gallia County
Holiday Safety Tips
GALLIPOLIS ~ When we
think of the Holiday Season,
all the joy of this time comes
to mind ; the sharing of gifts,
excitement of children, and
the beauty of a brightly
decorated tr ee.
ma ny
famili es however , have
Mr. and M n Worley Davis · .
somewhat grimmer Holiday
memories ~ brought on by
just one unsafe act which
caused a needless, tragic
accident .
The opening of Christmas
DEXTER- Mr . and Mrs. celebrated their 6otlr wedding reception at thl' Rutland
presents is always a specia l
Worley E . Davis. Dexter. anm ver sary on Dt:!c. ~ wilh a I .t:•gion hell!.
The r·ecept ion \'w'ct S hosted time during the holidays .
by thei r· five dril dr·en, Clyde Tak e special precautions
and Ken neth , Rutland ; when disposin g of t he
Ro be r t W., Li:l tt gs vill e; wrappings. Always dispose of
Ro nald . Sandus ky, a nd Morv wrappings immediately after
Kathryn Huller, Bashan . Ail opening . Place trash in a
RESPIRATORY SUPPORT SYSTEM
were present fo r the olt'il'r- metal container. Never burn
wrappings in the fireplace,
vcuJ ce .
Mr. J);wi s retired from the they may ignite suddenly and
COMPLETE
nlilroa cl in August. 1963. He cause a flash fire.
Burning candles can be a
was a bridge carpenter for 20
INVENTORY OF
beautiful
part of the Chr istyears and a IJri dgt• foreman
mas
scene,
but without some
RESPIRATORY
fur 20 years. ThreC of the I 'Oll ·
can
be
pit• ·.'"i :;on:; work on till' preca utions,
THERAPY ·
hazardous. Here are some
l"&lt;!ilnmd at Uu~ present time .
points
to
EQUIPMENT
· Si x t y-fi v(~ persons t~tt e nde d imp ort a nt
remember
when
using
them.
tlw ce le brati on . Friends a nd
&amp;SUPPLIES
r l'lati ves pl'esc ntt'd gifts an d Place lighted candles out of
the reach of children. Never
n mls t o the eo uple
use lighted candles on a tree
or near other evergreens.
Kee p away from oth er
decorations,
wrapping paper.
NO HIGH l'lfssUIIf CYUNDERS OR CHEMICALS- THE MARX 0&gt;
Sotn l' fu!k l';.m 't make m&lt;u·- Alwa ys use non-flammable
AND BENDIX SUPPORT SYSTEMS PEOFORM WITI&lt;OUT UQUIDS,
. ri&lt;t!,!t' work ~ cause the.\· hold~r s. Pla ce candles where
CHEMICALS, lo\ECHANICAL CHANGES, Gt.S FILLINGS, OR HIGH
PRESSURE TANKS AND THE ltGH COST OF HAUUNG HEAVY
rll' ver bol11erpd to aequai n1 they cannot be knocked down
CYUNDERS IS EUMINATED FOil THOSE PATIENTS REQUIRING
thPtn SL' IVPS with the cont rols
or blown over.
CONnNUOUS OXYGEN OR FllfQUfNT SEIMCE.
llwl rnakt• it go.
The tri mming of you r
TRKOUNTY HOME
Christmas tree is a very
Home
MmiCAL SUPPLY
im port a nt part of your
S. State Str~t
·Gallipons , o .
T hey call it " inter m li holiday festivities, Keep the
Dell vary
Mrs. Ronald L . Saunders
l't'\·enuc' ' betttllSL' they gt't il safety of your family in mind
Avallabla
Manager &amp; Sales Representative
&amp;14 .446 1856
from yo ur )leart's blood.
when selecting trimmings,
and
· your tree.
choosir'1g
th e

HOMEMADE OXYGEN

finishing touches for the tree ,
purchase tinsel or artificial
icicles of a non -leaded
materia l. Leaded materials
may be hazardous if eaten by
children or
pets.
If
youngsters are a part of your
family, take special care to:
~ Avoid any decorations
that tend to brea k ea sily, or
ha ve sharp edges.
- Keep tree trimmings
that . are sma ll, or have
removable parts, out of the
reach of your child .
Don 't
purclrase
orna ments th a t rese mble
candy or foods. A small child
may try to eat th em.
An emergency could strike
your home at any time. Here
are a few simple rules to
foll ow to help your family
through a crisis.
~ Keep fire department,
police, · ambulance, doctor,
and other emergency service
numbers posted on or near
yow· telephone.
- Keep a UL Listed in
mul t i - purpo se fir e
eKtin guisher in your kitchen
wh e n preparing holiday

. BALLED

&amp; BURLAPPED TREES

MANY ITEMS AT REDUCED
PRICES

Smeltzer's
Ambleside Gardens
453 Jackson Pike

.

Gallipolis, Ohio

r

Engagement
announced

, _ ·.~

+

POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Ross, Summerhaven
flrive, Rocky Fork Lake, announce the engagement of
their daughter, Pamela, to
Jeffrey Lyle Scholl , sun of
.Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Scholl
ARRIVES FOR DUTY
Chillil'othe Ruute 3.
'
MTLE BEACH AFB , S. C.
Miss Russ who lives at 132
~ Se rge an t
Walter G. Whaley Place, Chillicothe , is
France, son of Mr. and Mrs. a 1975 graduate of Unioto
Walter E. France of Rutland , High School and a 1978
has arrived for duty at Myrtle graduat e of the Holze r
Beach AFB , S. C.
Medical Center School of
Sergean t
Fran ce,
a Nur·sing. She is a registered
telecommunicallons systems nurse at Ross County Medical
eq uipment specialist with a Center School in Chillicothe.
unit of the Air Force Com· Mr. Scholl , a 1974 graduate of
mu n i c ati o n s Se rvice,
Unioto High School, is .
previously served at Scott employed at Kroger's in
AFB, Ill.
.
Chillicothe while completing
11re ser geant is a 1974 · a degree in law enforcement
graduate of Meigs High iechnology at Ohio Univer-s ity
Schon!, Pomeroy . His wife, Branch in Clrillicothe.
Rita , is the daughter of Alex
A March ceremony is being
Birchfie ld , also of Rutland . planned by the couple.

/I

Bernadine 's Wishes
You A Very ·
Christmas

l

1

pmdut'tion

The Best
Si).NTA COMES TO GUIDING HAND-Santa came to
the Guiding Hand school r ecently . Her e is tire old !ella
shown with pre-schooler , Anita Cordell. All gifts for the
party were donated by the Junior Women's Club
Gallipolis.
'
meals~

LAFF-A-DAY

and know how to use

Carpet Ever Had

ANY
liVING ROOM &amp; HALL
Offer includes living room
and hall only up to 300 sq.
IL

it.
- Many fir e departments
are now orrering fir st aid
classes
for
their
communities.
At least one member of the
family should be fa miliar
with simple fir st a id
procedures.
Wlmt goes !Jl' ~ t wi th

Furniture Stantev Steemecl

SCotJ.;J,Jgi)l~·
PRU I 1:.-C.. I IUN

Gallia, Meigs
&amp; Vinton Co .
614 -446-4i08

~ n·a ~L'·

t"tll lkl•d ca rr y-o ut clti&lt;"kt•n is
;m y one of thto a ntacid s.

. . . . . . . --· - ·1i.;
'

I
I:
I

I··
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11

- -~ ~-

IN THE SILVER
BRIDGE PLAZA
WILL BE OPEN
SUNDAY,
DECEMBER 24th
FROM
10 AM TO 5 PM

I

'·

CHRISTMAS DAY
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE
Wetoo exult in the divine ;,.iracle of the
Holy Birth and hope the gifts of its eternal
· message of Love, Faith and Hope are yours

now and forever. At this time of joy ana
inspiration we extend sincere gratitude to
our friends .
'

'~

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~

v.

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v.

~e hope the glowing Spiri t of

Christmas will brighten every day of
yo ur holiday and its holy light always
shine in your heart. Thanks to all.

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OFFICERS, DIRECTORS AND EMPLOYEES

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OHIO VALLEY BANK

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Kathy Allen
Vickie Allie
Tom Arrington
Chris Ba II
Joy Barlow
Pam Bates
Sat ly Bennett

-

Connie Burleson

Caldwell
Eugene Carter
Brenda
Cremeens
Jim
Dailey
Janet Davis
Priscilla Dayton
Marion

Charlene Black

Emerson E. Evan s
Bill Fadeley
Deborah Fis he r
Reda K. Fow ler

Sue Ann Bostic
Sue Bowman

Bryan Fulks
Cindy Harrington .
Morris E . Haskin s
Sharon Hively
Johnny Hood

Phyllis Berkley

Cathy Boggs
Madge Boggs
Redith Boster

GALLIA 446-5554

w

w

·-

· HAVE A PROBLEM?
NEED TO TALK IT OUT?
CALL CRISIS LINE.

lleace 6oodwill
, on toward
gartit Aten
-·---.

WE WILL BE

LOSE

&gt;

rnn,

Cleanin g Your

SUNDAY 1 TO 7

~~~s:s.---------------·!!r.o!""'

Pamela Ross

MEIGS 992-5554
JACKSON 286-5554

p;tckagt•s in

'"" held at ;n·mnHI 2.4 hilli nn
units si!l&lt;"l' then .

w.

111

Brian ; Bob and Hl:lzel Roy,

Minersvill e : Betty Lane,
Cr ystal. Tommy and
Clll'istophcr, Pomeroy; Fred
and Dora Har·shbarger and
D(tvid, Lar ry a nd Pat Townsen d, Trxld, Timmy and Amy,
Milton, W. Va.

Will be closed 11/on.,
Dec. 25, and wi II
remain closed until
Jan. 2, 1979.

I:
~ WE HAVE POINSETTIAS CUT FLOWERS, I:

Chri stma., Rif t~ and .Junior While and a
tree tr immin g party was he h.', holirl;1y buffet was served.
last Sunday at Ore home uf
Others joi ning in the tree
Ms.
.J ud y
Mc(; r aw, d ec&lt;Jr~tting wer e . Eli and
daug hter~. Bunn i and Tracv. Esther Vttnce, Radne; Monand Ya ~umu sa Shimizu. ·a ty Cra ig, Pa r kers burg;
foreign exchange student Jea nie Craig, Charleston,
from Tnkoyo. .lHpa n. now Linda Wise , Bud and Chris,
res idin g at the McG rctw honw Huntington ; Bill and Betty
in Racine.
MeGinnb . Chuck a nd Susie
'
Chrt.stmas
carols wl're Pa trick. Tom a mi J. J ., Colsung to the music provided b_y wn!J us; Tre.s~ i c Evans, John,
Toppe r, Dal'la . Tim, Jeff and
.J e ss i ea,
Rac ine : Kay
Warden, T)ong, Lori and

Trcasa. Jerr y Jo and Alan,

Ro;mlnntL•s. AftL•r hitting i.lll
;ill-tirrw high of t . ~ billion

962,16:1.

I

POM F: ROY-A

AUNIQUE EXPERIENCE
IN HAIR STYLING

LEAR
PHOTOGRAPHY

Tire 1 United Church of
Ca nada i' the la r gest
Protestant-&lt;lenomination in
Canada. Total membership is

PZUI!t' s c·cu ·l ', Tilt' ( 'unfcrt.'lll'l'

r······-·····------,
~ WE ARE OPEN TODAY

Tree trimming party held

Ton i Hud s on, Racine ;
F lorcnt·c Thornton and Jeff,
Letart; Shirley Wolfe, Todd
and Tara; Jacki e Zerkle,
Syrc;~ c u.se;
Jea n Gruser,

Association of St. Valentine's Day IFeb. 14 ) with
lov ers has no conn ~ction with
the Saint. It probably had its
origin in an old beli ef that on
this day birds begin to choose
their mates.

r\erns1d pn•d ud1un ha s
t; qwn•d nff in tllt' wakt• uf thl'

ft.aturi ng .
Aitnie Anybod)'

Celebrate sixtieth anniversary

•

OurFTD

Sunshiner "'
Bouquet.

~..........~-+.

E:X t.trudon A•ent,
Home EtoaomJcs

.

l\

•

BY Bt:TIIE CLARK

~

?J&lt;:,

~..........~•.

Homemakers'
Circle

I

"'!" .
l . ..

1),.,. 2~. 1~7R

Communityl
Comer I

'
•

Lisa and Susan.

•

La ncaster - ~·airfield County
Hospital.
Mr. Deckard ls a graduate
.. r Gallia Academy High
School and a gra duate of
Geo r ge
Was hing to n
University with an associate
&lt;l c~,:ee in cr iminal justice. He
all ended National Training
In st itute, Arlin gton, Va .,
where he received both his
B.S. and Masters degree in
criminology. He is currently
employed as safety director
by C.K .L. Inc., Gallipolis.
No definite date has been
set for the wedding .

LAU RELV ILLE - Mr . and
Mrs.
Robert
Ki l chen,
Laurelville, are announcing
the enga gem ent uf their
da ughter , Amy Kitchen
Gibbs, to Mr. Ken Decka rd ,
son of Mr and Mrs. Kendall
Deckard, Ga llipolis.
Th e br ide-elect is a
graduate of Zane Trace High
Schu.ol , and r ece i v~d her
associate degr ee in nursing
!rom th e Hocking Technical
Co llege . She is pre sentl y
employed as a starr nurse in
t he int ensiv e care a nd
coron a ry care 1,1nits or

Si.T\'l' ,~...,

d tll lbl t•·rin g

r----------------]

Engagement announced

Fl-7-The Sunday Tlmo•s,'ico tirwl , Surul a.l',

Keith R. Brandeberry

Michael

Brown

Connie Burchett

Oe'sie

B~•rQflo~c:

K u th ~·. . ll u Hm~n
Terri Jividen

Patty J ohnson

Larry Lee
Deb Lee

Judy Mahan

Kathryn Massie
John McNeill
Bill y J o M c,1dOW "

F rank H. Mills, Jr .
Carla Min k

Concetta Mit chell

Debbi e Nea l
Donna Neal

J e nnife r Our s
Rhortda Payne

Linda Plymale
Becky Rankin
Thelma Rees
Georgia Ri"chie

Nancy Rose
Polly Sali sbury
C. Leon Saunders

Elsie Saunders

Richard Scolt

warren F . Sheets
Jeff Smith

Vic ki Smith
Tammy Snyder

«~

W
IS!
~
~
f.(

W
W

I

Wendell Thomas

ll.

Patsy Venters

!til
f~

Wilma Webster
Se lwyn White

Sharon Whittington
Phyllis Wilcoxon
Ernest N. Wiseman
Jim Younkin

.'11.
I!!

gU
il

~ ;· .,.!OI:t&lt;O&lt; ""'~!E&lt;:U':"' 1'$&gt;11'$&gt;11'$&gt;1l&lt;:&gt;&lt;l'$&gt;11'$&gt;1-1'$&gt;1-l:l&gt;I-BI:Il&lt;:&gt;&lt;l:l&gt;ll'$&gt;11\j;!IJ!j;I[-J:0:&lt;-11¥ -1'$&gt;111¥ m1 Rll&lt;:l - - I:O:&lt;RR yt
'•

�'

R-8- The Sunday Tirnes,'it~ntint.'l , Sun41tty. I kt ·. :t.J. 1978

v- J - we~unuay

11mcs""'ienlllu.• J ,~ ullftay,

junbat .

l&gt;t&gt;t '.

24. l!flli

Pt. Pleasant snaps jinx,
whips Pirates, 50 to 35

- jmtintl
'

SPORTS
PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24, WHILE QUANTITIES lAST

Open Sunday
Dec. 24
12 noon
to
6p.m.
Closed
Christmas
Day
Dec. 25

....

1FT IDEA

BY JACK ROGERS
- Pt. PLEASANT
Well, the Point Pleasant :
Big Blacks finally broke that
Barboursville jinx.
Coach Lennie Barnette's
locals, playing b&lt;lfore a crowd
limlted by late Christmas
shopping, racked up Coach
Bill Dan Ray's rather inept
Pirates, 50-35, here Friday .
night.
The victory broke a 16game losing streak to Barboursville over the years.
Bill Dan Ray said, rather
sadly, " It is one of my weakest
teams in years. Very little
material."
A Big Blacks fan
remarked: 'It was nothing to
brag a bout, but a win is a
win.''
PPHS had too many quick
hands and feet for the visitors,
out rebounding them 30 to 22,
and out-shooting them from
the floor, 45 percent to 28
percent.
Senior Doug Workman
was outstanding for the Red·
and-Black, sinking nine goals

20 PIICI

CORELLE® DINNERWARE

. AM·FM STER&amp;O 8
COMPONENT SYSTEM
PIA)'I AM, FM. FM·Sterto brOidCII11 plul 8-II'IICk .tape car·

BY CORNING

BUTTERFLY GOLD &amp; SPRING
BLOSSOM PRINTS

SMALL, MEDIUM
OR LARGE

OVAL
PICTURES
SMALL j MIDIUM LA Rill

75' 1I s1oo

Heck's Reg.

To -27.72
Set

spo

FLOIEIYIII

tridgea. Slide controla for volume, balance, baee, treble.
5-poiltion function awitcl'l aelecta AM, FM, FM-Stareo, tape,
phono. Buih· ln AFC lor baUer FM reception. Lighted blackout
dial with FM 1tereo lndle~~tor light, 8·track playback mechanlem
with aulomatic tape program Indicator llghta and manual pro·
gram ~utton .

PLAQUE
ASSORTMENT

$3~.
HOUSEWAIE
DEPT.

BIG

5!
acrs

JEWELRY
BOX

21

5

20 PC. JEANNETTE
LEATHER COVERED

DECANTERS

$ 00

HDUSIWAIE
lfi'T.

EACH

FINLANDIA GLASSWARE SET
20·pcs . service tor tour. Four each;
dinner plate , cup , saucer, aalad
pla te, bowl.

S9!!

HOUSIWAIE
DEPT.

NOUSEWAif IJEPT.

Falcons lose
opening tilt

99

HICK'S RIG.
128.88

HECK'S RI!G.
$15.98

JEWEL., DIPT.
77H

22 PC. JEANNETTE

•

OVENWARE
ENSEMBLE

eBLUEONION
PATTERN

For speed drying results. Two power aettinga- dry tor powerful
drying and style for eaay hair atyUng . Three great grooming
, attachments • Detangllng and grooming comb
Straightenintil
and shaping two·row comb • Finished · styling bruah .

OMPACT DRYER
••l ·vou rAe ll" ' protea ·
l~lt~g dry•• e HY.lO
powef I J Ilea• lnell
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1nd 1tyh ng I L•g h ·
nd env to llendle

e

ITALIAN

:K'I
R I G . $ 1 ]·"
117.81

HECK'S REG.
$15.99

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PRO MAX

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HOUSIWAIII DEI'T.

GLASS BOTTLES

HOUSIWAII

'"'·

HICK'S RIG,
$18.81

Navy tops BYU, 23-16

euo

SAN DIEGO (UPI ) - Phil Rice in the Cotton Bowl in
McConkey, a student at the 1958.
U. S. Naval Academy
The Midshipmen found
studying to be a jet pilot, was themselves down 16·3 mid·
on the receiving end of a way in the third quarter.
borrib and the ,Academy They then broke down a tough
BYU defense to score two
couldn't be happier.
The 5·)0, 164-pound split touchdowns and a pair of field
end hauled in a 65-yard pass goals.
Fullback Kevin Tolbert
from quarter back Bob
Lesczynskl Friday night ' to pulled Navy to within six
highlight a four th-quarter points on a 4-yard burst up
comeback that carried Navy the middle. The touchdown
to a 23-16 Holiday Bowl win was Tolbert's first of the
over
Brigham
Young season and culminated a 76yard drive.
University.
Navy's Bob Tala made it
McConkey , who caught
four passes for 88 yards and 16-13 when he kicked · his
rushed twice on reverses for sec01rd of three field goals,
an additional 39 yards, was this one a 28-yarder to open
named offensive player of the the fourth quarter.
The Navy defense held the
year by sports writers.
dangerous
Cougar passing
It was Navy's first Bowl
.
attack
to
181
yards. BYU used
win in 20 years and its first
two
quarterbacks
in almost
appearance in a post-season
Marc
Wilson
equal
time.
game since 1964. Navy beat

MANNA IARBIRA

ACE MATES

"D.C."

STRETCHING FOR THE BALL- Mark Harbour (43) of Barboursville looks like he
is just about to gain access to this rebound despite the efforts of sophomore Troy Kebs (52)
of Point Pleasant.

$3~!

0 RECORD ALBUMS
FOI CHILDIEI

TIMING LIGHT

PURSE KIT

Xenon Tub., p•o"'•des o br,lhonl, blue.
"''"'e tlos h o f l,gf-11 v•s•ble '" b rood doy ·
l•gl'll Slops l•m•ng mork wlule engme os
ope1olon,a Un•l o perates d •rectly lrom em

WITH FREE PHONOGRAPH

JON•E
TWIN PAC

boiler ~

HANDWARMER

Heck's Reg . $19 .99
AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

COSMETIC DIPT. ·

Tt1a Ftinl,tonllll M11et the Orche11ra FAmily , H11n1111
and Gretel as told Oy tl\1 Fhnllton•a. Wilm1 Flint·
stone tell~ the stor~ ol 81mb•, Alu;e 1n Wonderland
Sllll1ng M11g1111 Go"lla , H~ckleblll'f Hou~d wilh 1110 ·
1111 1nd 1onga t)l Until l=rernua , Rotun Hood in 11ory
and aong w1lh Top C11. Sn1gglePuU and 1111 Wiz•rd
ol Oz . Till Jataof'll F1r11 Fllftily q.n llle Moon. YoQ•
B111r 1nd Boo Boo . L1lll1 Red Riding Hood and J1ek
and !he Beenll e lk. Oogg11 01ddy 1nd Au&amp;i1 Dogg•e
tellllltllory ot P •nOCCI'I IO

$422
HICK'S RIG.
$6.59

JIWELU JEPT.

SI'OIITS DEPT.

started and completed seven
of 16 passes for 48 yards.
Substitute Jim McMahon
com pleted nine of 19 for 133
yards and one touchdown .
McMahon also ran for a score
and was the Cougars' leading
rusher with 38 yards.
·'Our offensive line tried
very hard," Wilson said.
"They're young but despite
this they did the best job they
could."
For Navy, Lesczynski was
good on seven of 12 passes for
141 yards and one touchdown.
The Midshipmen finished
1978 with a 9-3 record, while
BYU ended with a 9-4 record.
Middlet own

Madison

59

Ealon 51

Springboro 76 -Lock land 75

Xenia 49 Lebanon 39

Day Sliv·Pal 71. Day Belman!

53

Day Kaiser 60 Day White 57

!!!!!!!~l!..li'iillllll!

GAS ALARM

• PO.,flfll pa1 nl o lt - Fitll
Cloanl Eu~• e Remo~ll ITI()III
lon•:~hes f(l)m almoll 11ny 111• ·
11 ~1 e s~);~ and elle~li'fl 101
hYndred• ot large 1nd 1m11ll
1ob! e HiQhnt quel ll~ lool ol
rl8 k1 nd . , f!1 1de ln U S A

WITH P.ARTS
Inclu des: Flat Heacl Wood Screws , Sheet Melal
Screws . Round Head Machine Screws Coller Pins
Machine Bol1s. Washers-Spirt !:"fat ' and lnternai

.~~~~n.~HAx
E~:•
$16.88
HAIIIWAIII DEPT.

$1

DUNHILL

RACQUETBALL RACKET ,

STEEL CABINET

0''

HICK'S

t4.8e
HAIDWAal DII'F.

.

•

So now the Big Blacks knock
off for Christmas. Their next
contest will be here against
the Gallipolis Blue Devils,
Saturday, De c. 30. Gallipolis
was at Well•ton of the SEOAI,.
last night, score not available
at the writing.
.RARBOIJRSVILLE 135)
Player
FG FT TP
Mark Harhbour
5 -Hi 14
Ttm H•nc man
1 0-2 2
Dwayne Jimison
2 !Hi 9
fulndy Rollyson
I 0.() 2
Mike Wells
0 0-0 0
Vic Campbell
2 0-0 4
Mark Damron
0 0-0 0
Brad Fenton
0 0-1 0
Bruce Kesler
0 0-0 0
Kerry l.usk
0 2·2 2
Todd Rogers
0 0.() 0
ChrisW hite
o 2-2 2
Jeff Ross
0 0.1 0
TOTALS
11 13·20 35
BIG BLACKS !50)
Player
FG FT TP
Ron Barnett
3 4-6 10
John Bibbee
3 6-9 12
Mark Vaugh
2 1·3 5
Doug Workman
9 0-0 18
Brian Stepp
I 0-0 2
David Raike
0 0-2 0
Jay Minton
0 1-4 I
Troy Krebs
I 0-0 2
Greg Thomas
0 0.() 0
John Chambers
0 0-1 0
TOTAI.S
19 12·25 50

Barb'vlle
· Big Blacks

Bl[i

2 13 12 8~35
11 12 17 10-50

Personal Fouls: Pirates 22,
PPHS 19 .
Foul ed Out: Pirates, Jimison;
PPHS, Raike.
Scorer: Don DeCoy.
Officials : Ramey Cundiff,

2i!
~ nr J( c

jl

' ,}

Hindu Henderson.

FROM UNDERNEATH - Point Pleasant's J ay
Minton went underneath the basket in an attempt to make
this fi eld goal, which proved to be unsuccessful. Minton
scored one point which carne from the cha irty stripe.

Little Pirates 14 12 15 13·54
Little Blacks 10 9 23 18-60
Scorer: Don DeCoy.
Officials: Paul Casto, David
Bodkin.

SWAIN FIRES JUMPER - Rio Grande 's Mark Swain (15) fires in jump shot from top
of the foul circle during Friday's non-conference battle against Marshall University in
. Huntington. Vince Phelps ( lJ l is shown on right. More than 4,000 fans attended the game,
won QY th e Thundering Herd. 117-90. See deta ils elsewhere in today 's sports section.

Fast-playing racquet with tournament-grade nylon strings,
raised leather grip.
H.CK'S RIG,
$14.411

59''

Injury problems

Made b~ P•llwav. Amtrlc• ·• lnd•ng m1k ·
er ol home a!Arm• - lhl prOI 1n hom1
securit y! Oellgned to 11n1a I)IQ91nl or
nalutal g•a b1fore 11 Cln b~ild ~p into
potanuitt r lethal concenlrationa Solid
alate eleclron•c hOtn 101.1nda 1 to~d . pitrc·
ing alarm lhll c;an 1w1k1n deep al•tpera.
Cln w1rn you wh1te lhere'a plenty Of lime
to avoid the d1nge' ot aephy•llllon , 111111
firt~ or v•olent t'lllplosion. 100% solid llllfl
tor utmoat retlebihly . No belltu iel to re·
place . Plugs into 120V AC o~ Uel . Un ique
tnl ~ w i t c h le'l a yo u c:heek uM 'I OPflll ·
Cf)."'' ''" " T101o red-glowing LED'I gl~l "' po-r
" and "'ready " •nditaUone . Trouble aiQ·
~\l/,1// ;,,, '•"r"' yoy of any lt1lur11 in 1111
1 CltCU•I OV btfiPiriQ t•PIIl.dly.

concem Shula
MIAMI (UP!) ~ Coach
Don Shula of the Miami
Dolphins could have been
speaking · for the Houston
Oilers as well as himself
when he said, "Right now,
we're sweating out our injury
problems. That's our biggest

$29"
HICK'SIIIQ,
h4.88

concern."

JIWillr '"'·

r

.

.BY Gary Clark
BUFFALO - The Buffalo Bisons pulled away in the final
quarter ofpiay Friday evening to hand Coach Homer Preece's
Wahama White Falcons a season opening 77-68 setback at
Buffalo.
The Bisons with their superior height advantage placed
four men in double figures with 6·3 John Reed leading the way
with 24 markers on 10 field goals and 4 of 8 charity tosses.'
Wahama had three cagers to hit in twin figures with senior
forward Todd Rawlings topping the list wi\h 22 points on eight
· field goals and 6 of 10 free throws. Vince Weaver and Rick
Barnitz followed Rawlings in the scoring column with 16
tallies each.
The Falcon head mentor started three juniors and two
seniors to open the 1978-79 campaign with only one of the five
having any varsity experience to speak about. Taking this into
consideration; that may be the reason for the poor shooting
night which plagued the locals throughout the contest.
Wahama shot a dismal38 per cent, 28 of 75 from the floor and ,
did not fare any',ootter at the foul line with only 12 of 24 attempts making it through the nets.
Buffalo had a respectable shooting night from the field with
52 per cent, 32 for 60 finding their mark but like the Bend Area
team it had its problems from the free throw str1pe wh1ch
probably kept the contest from being a runaway. The Bisons
hit on 13 of 23 attempts from the line.
Wahama managed to stay close throughout the first hall
with Buffalo holding on to a slim 111-14 edge after the first
period of play. The Putnam County charges added to their
lead during the second eight minutes to up their advantage to
39-32 at the half.
The White Falcons made a run at their opponents during the
third canto and managed to close the gap to four at 56,';2 but
failed to overtake the Bisons in the final minutes of play.
Buffalo won the fourth quarter by 21·16 score to emerge
victorious with a 77-68 win .
Despite a decided heighth disadvantage, the local cagers
held their own against their taller counterparts and were
outrebounded by a somewhat slim 47·35 margin which may
seem like an unusually high number. Considering the White
Falcons tallest man was just 6·2 while Buffalo sported three
starters over 6·3 tall which says a lot for the Falcons
rebounding game.
.
Reed and Jackson paced the individual Bison reboundmg
statistic s with 13 and 9 respectively, while Wahama was led
by Tim Roush with 12, Todd Rawlings with 8 and Vince
Weaver contributed 7.
Wahama conunitted 14 turnovers and 9 steals to their
credit while Buffalo turned the ball over 9 times and 13 thefts .
The' White Falcons will now take a short Christmas break
before returning to the hardwood ne•t Thursday evening
when they visit a talented Southern Tornado team to close out
the 1978 year.
·
.
The Bend Area Squad begins the new year on Jan . 5 when 1\
journeys to Kyger Creek . On both occasoons the starting
times will be 6 p.m. for the preliminary contest and a,for the
·
varsity tilt .
WAHAMA: 14 18 20 16-jj8
BUFFALO: 18 21 17 21-77

Cremeans again pwnped in
27 points (second lime in two
outings ) and Krebs canned 14
for Coach Larry Markham's
lads.
Scott Belle drilled 21 for the
losers and Jeff Goad popped in
18.
Other Little Blacks scorers:
Jeff Chambers 8, Greg
Thomas 4, David Not\ 3, and
David Sprouse and John Hipes
.
2

FIRSTAL.RT

MIRACLE STRIPPE-

RAACO

for a game-high 18 points, and third pole. and fi nally wounu
latching on to 10 rebounds. In up with a 15-point victory.
:rhe Big Blacks are now 2.()
fact, it was his shooting that
sent the locals winging 9.() in on the season, and the Pirates
the first period. And when that are 1-1.
The reserve game was a
period ~nded , PPHS led 15-2.
spirited
affair, with the Little
Did you ever see a Bar·
Blacks
rallying behind Ron
boursville team that scored
Cremeans
and Troy Krebs io
only two points in eight
the
2nd
half
to post a 60·54
minutes? But you've got to
win
over
Little
Pirates, 60·
give credit to the local defense
54.
It
was
their
second
win in
for some of that.
John Bibb ee was a
steadying factor for the Big
Blacks with 12 markers,and
Ron Barnett notched 10, Mark ·
Vaughn added 5.
Mark Harbor, a 6·3 senior,
was best for the Pirates with
14 and dragged down 9
caroms. Dwayne Jimiso n,
who foul ed out , scored 9.
Beyond that, there isn't much
to say.
Both coaches used their
entire benches, which may
have contributed to the errors,
The Pirates were guilty of 13
turnovers, the Big Blacks 12.
It was 23·15 at halftime,
locals, and they kept building
as they led by 13, 40-27, at the

THESE MEMBEIJS:vf the Meigs Marauder.Wre$tllng teani recently received first places
in the Holiday Tournament at Chesapeake. They are from left to right, Charles Whittington ,
Dave Davis, and Van WUford. WiHord also received the most valuable wrestler award. The
wrestling team l)le ~ • rourlh out of eight.

Both the Dolphins and
Houston, wild card playoff
opponents Sunday, are
worried about the health of
their quarterbacks. Miami's
Bob Griese has bruised ribs
and Dan Pastorini of the
Oilers has three cracked ribs,
a twisted knee , a sore
hamstring and a bruised
·
ankle.
Both are expected to try to
play, liut if they end up on the
sidelines, Miami would ap-

pear to have the edge with
backup Don Strock, who
started six games early in the
season whert Griese was out
with a knee injury.
If Pastorini goes down, his
replacement would be un·
proven rookie Gifford Nielson
of Brigham Young.
Houston's
outstanding
rookie rUIUling back, Earl
Campbell, the NFL's leading
ground gainer, has been
slowed the last two weeks )iY
a cracked rib. But he is expected to be able to go at full
strength Sunday.
The Dol p'lilio also were.
worried about safety Tim
Foley with a pulled stomach
muscle and guard Larry
Little with a sore knee and
ankle.

SOUTHERN High School students recently formed a new pep club ..Memoors were out
in full force during Friday's 116-69 victory over visiting Miller. See details elsewhere i ··
today's sports section.

"

,,

�.'

•

Rob Holsinger , the Tigers'
By Greg Bailey
WAVERLY - Tite MeiKS tall center ot 6'8", was held
Va rauders played the tr by the fine Meigs de fense to
·nts out and in some ways ju"i t" 0 points m the first
.rwed a very fine game, but half. but he collected a super
th e long run the height of 16 rebounds to control the
.-' ~ os t Waverly Ti gers boards. The entire Meigs
ere" garnered just 14 caroms
,p v~d too · much . Frida v a s
1 e i ~s fell victim. 16·37 .,
on the night.

amazing !i6 percent from the
field, ca nning 36 of 54 shots.
Meigs was just the opposite
as the Marauders hit a very
cold' 14 of 41 for 34 percent.
Waverly had three tall
starters. Besides Holsinger,
Joel Gordon is 6'6" and Ron
Steger is 6'4".

Altho ugh Meigs started
slowly, the Marauders did
have life and the first period
ended 20~ . By intermission,
the Tigers had gone out to a
comfortable 33-1.7 lead, and
from then on WHS was never
rea ll y threatened.
It seemed the Tigers could
dn no wrong as they hit an

The seconrl pPrioci

WR~

with 15 points, but Gordon
was the big gun as he hit for
21 markers and hauled in 14
rebounds. No other Tiger hit
de cble figures. The team hit
four of six foul shots.
Meigs was led by Greg
Becker's 13 points while TJm
Hawley added 10.

real back-breaker for Meigs
as MHS could get only ftve
shuts over the taller Tigers
and they made seven turn·
overs. The Meigs crew of
Coach Ron Logan had 12
turnovers while Waverly had
j!ISl eight.
Holsinger finished the night

th!'

Freshman Bob A8hley was
the team's leading rebounder
with four caroms. Meigs
made nine of fourteen foul
shots and committed Just
nine personal fouls.
Waverly is now 4.() in the

Meigs- Waverly box •••

Southern five whips Miller, 80-69

I C~~EG rc~ Bailey
t ea ~hi . th ro, mg the old
, ttactg b ttat ~ balanced
~wo
" e er an " one or
outh~~n T sho.'~ the host
1 ced
.
.orn a oes Pa
:c ~; men '" double figures
1 \~g~t fs t~ej downed
'; ' j"
., ~. ene
•..1 er a con club.
1
;: The t ornadoes Tun
;ha;e~ and Jack Duffy
:· a . 16 POI ~ts " hlle Dave
,. • ' ~~Y ~~d D"~ght Hill ea;h
,:··, lt ,' ~~t f~u;-man
, u f~\Crsta owe a one;
' e ort by the losers
'' •• Burgess who tossed ,.
.
.·
, t· arker ,
·h; first h: ~t the mght, t0 111 •
,,, ·
~ ~ .
.
the o"mnng lip-off to
'~ 1 '' t ~·t.tnmg
•
. , fl ' lnutes
. _of the
11
··.. " ,"' • tt ""'a
no fan
:,','.u,d"pas:1.vcly 1\~tc h . ~oth
~ dill-:- a te runn 1n g, fc~ s t••ct•aktng type cl ubs. and the
• ;tt ~Ce ftrst half saw nearly
r~t"'r y ba sket scored matchPd
l;)' the other club.

1

1

-rom

r::me

Findley drew first blood as
he netted a lay-up, but the
VISitors went r1ght down the
noor an d ued the score on a
tw o-po mt er by. Burgess .
Dw1ght Httl then hit a Jumper
for the Tornadoes of Coach
Carl Wolfe, but on the next
t~ip down the court, John
Fuch s canned two to knot the
scor e. Th e . torrid-paced
contest cont mued at that
tempo throughout the first
half, w tth Southern holdmg
the ftrst quarter edge 21·.20
and the half endmg tn a lie ,
42-42
, · .
.
fhe thtrd penod began the
same woy the half ended. But
With three mmutes left,
Southern's fine bench depth
began to be a factor. With
some fr esh recru its, the
Tornadoes pulled · out to a
four-point lead three different
times, th e last being 55-.'i L
But Coach George Gossman's
Falcons weren 't abo ut to play

dead. They reeled off six
straight points and before
anyone knew it they were on
top 51·50. Dwight Hill's drive
knotted the score as the
period ended 57-a ll.
The first two minutes of the
final period were still a
seesaw battle, the s~ore being
knotted 61 -6 1 wtth 6:00
remaining . But then the
Tornado defense st iffened
and th e Falcon's hands
turned cold and the visitors
didnotscoreapointuntilfour
more minutes ha d elapsed.
.
S h
·
By that tune out ern was m
cont rol, 72-61. Brmager,
Fmdley, and· b1g Daye
Foreman hit for four each 111
t hat span and Foreman
began hitting the boards to
ena ble the Tornadoes to put

the game away. When Jack
Duffy hit for four straight,
Southern held its biggest lead
of the night, 7il.j)4.
That was Southern's fourth
win against just one loss
while Miller fell to 4-.'l. The
gamewaswonatthefoulline
as the winners canned a fine
22 of 29 foul shots while t11e
visitors could manage only 11
of 16. Southern had eleven
turnovers while Miller made
seventeen miscues.
Miller outrebounded the
locals by garnering 33
.
caroms to 27 for the wtnners.
Fuchs had nine for the losers
as did Foreman for the
winners, Southern hit a line
'IJ 2 percent Irom the · fl oor,
hitting 29 of 56, while Miller
was a mite colder, canning

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.
( UPI) - The University of
Michigan Wolverin es,
preparing for their Rose Bowl
confrontati on with the
University of So ut hern
California , are working out
less and enjoying it much

league while Meigs fell to l-6
overall. Next Friday's game
originally scheduled for Dec.
29 bas been changed to
Saturday, Dec. 30. The opponents will be the Wellston
Golden Rockets.

Meigs Marh~trs (37)
FG-A
Player
3·6
Ashley
0.3
Ollinger
5-9
the same number but out of 68 Curfman had 13 points Kent Hawlev
Becker
5-13
attempts. That comes outto a . Wolfe had 12 and 'Terry Andrews
0-3
0.2
43 percent. Fuchs was the NcNickle ca~ed 11. The Dodson
0-2
onlY other Falcon to hit Southern reserves also sport 0' Brien
1-1
Ck. Kennedy
double ligures by getting 18 a fine 4-1 record.
0-0
Blae11nar
points.
Southern's next · game Is Yeaugei"
0-2
14-41
The reserve contest was a Thursday when they host Totals
Waverly Tigers (76)
tightonefor thefirsthalf but Wahama
Player
FT-A
after intermission C~ach
Southe;n (80) _ Dave Arnell
3·3
Howie Caldwell's Tornadoes Findley 5·3,13; Dwight Hill 6· Holsinger
7-12
4-4
got stingy and gave up only 18 1·IJ; Tim Brlnager 6·4-16; Steger
10-14
points enroute to a lopsided Dave Foreman 3-3-9' Jim GO&lt;' don
6
3-S
Dote her
16-42 win. The first quarter ~~J~~h~-~·d."e;ko~uJ:~~i, ~ Johnson
4-4
ended II·IO Southern, and the Pape 1·0·2; Dale Teaford 1·3· Noble
1-2
half was still close, 2&amp;-24. But S. T~tols 29-22-80.
0-0
Leffler
3-6
Miller scored just seven
Miller 169 1- Dave Burgess Frederick
1-4
.
.
.
.
13·3·29 ; John Fuchs 8·2-18 ; Sturgell
tunes tn the thtrd per1od and Todd Spencer 2.1.5, Drew Totals
36-54
Southern netted a big 23 in the Street 0·4-4; Ton{Davis 1-0·2 ;
Score by quarters:
final period for the win.
Bill Harvey 1·1·3; Mike Meigs Marauders
Bryan Wolfe led the win· Blaney 2-0·4 ; Kacy Cook 2·0·4 · Waverly Tigers
29 · 11 -69 ·
· t s whil e Totals
ners Wl·th 14 pom
Score by
quarters:
three other Tornadoes hit Southern
21 21 15 23--00
double digits.
Dwayne Miller
20 22 15 12-&lt;19

'

FT-A RB PF TP ·
0-0
4
1 6
2
2-3· . 0 5
0-0
3
0 10
3-3
0
2 13
2
2-2
3
1
0.0
0 0 0
I
1·4 3 0
2
0-0
0 0
1
1-2
1 0
0-0
0 0 0
9-14
14 9 37
FT-A RB PF TP
2·2
0
3
8
1·2 16
3 15
0-2
6
1
8

1-1 14
1 21
0-0 2 0 6
0·0 .

3

1

8

0-0

0

3

0

0-0
4-6

4
45

15

0-0002

0-0 0 0 6
1

•'

.
'

2

76

Michigan
a bout
some "but the pe&lt;&gt;plc there arc Wulverinc• probably would
changes in preparation fur older. Here, the people are do more passing than they
the Rose Bowl game.
more our age."
had dune in previo us bowl
"But when we approached
Schembechler also said the games.
him," Leach said, "we didn't
have to say much. He told us
'what he planned to do differently . It was everything
more.
we were going to ask and
Head coach .Bo Schcm·
more."
bechler confirmed Friday he
They said they wanted to be
is taking a new approach in
near the beach for a few days ,
preparing his 5\'z-point un·
and Schem bechler made
derdog Wolverines for the
hotel reservations in Newport
65ih Rose Bowl game New
Beach . .
NEW YORK I UP!)
It the original investigation
Year's Day.
'' Pasadena.
might turn into the biggest made a year ago.
In contra st to Schem·
and the
scandal at the U.S. Military
A spokesman •I the
bechler's four prev ious trips
Academy since dozens of NCAA's headquarters in
cadets were charged with Shawnee Mission, Kan., said
cheating several years ago, Smith's aCCUl!lltions would be
but right now Ari!IY officials reviewed - even though no
l!l'e dlsmtsstng tt as sour formal complaint against
Army has been filed .
grapes.
"It sounds like sour grapes
Smith, who compiled a 21·
to me, " said Lt . Col. Jere 33-1 record in five years as
Forbus, a spokesman for the Army's head football coach
Academy Friday in reference included among his charges;
to charges of widespread Army illegally tried out
Got a ceiling problem? Cover it up . . .
recruiting violations made by prospective hockey and
liro&gt;cc it up ... with a new Armstrong ceiling 1
Homer Smith, who was basketball players· exceeded
dismissed as Army's football by as many a~ 50 the
coach two weeks ago.
maximum number of 00•
"He (Smith) is clearly campus visits for football
upset," continued Forbus. "It
will take some time to
examine all the charges. We ·
...
can't react in specific tenns
;:--.; '; :.~ .
yet because we don't have the
'
·.~· ,.. .:
•'
text of
the specific
allegations."
LAZA
Grenoble
By MIKE TULLY
In .a statement released
• 12"'X , 2" tile
• 12" x 12" tile
UPI
Sports Writer
Thursday
night,
• two-1oned eflect
• Textured
Friday
night's
schedule
•
Washab
le
superintendent
of
the
• acoustical
Academy, Lt. Gen. AndreW J . featured two of the Nm.'s
Goodpaster said, "II is emerging teams trying to
;.pparent that Coach Smith is determine the extent of their
greatly disturbed · over the l!nprovement.
In , Atlanta , the Flames
decision not to renew his
Wlnciatone
rebounded
from
a
• 12;· x 12" tile
contract. In deference to
• Textured
loss
to
Buffalo
disheartening
Coach Smith and his family,
• Washable \liny!
the issuance of this release by scoring a 3-1 victory over
surface .
was delayed until after the the T&lt;ironto Maple Leafs, and
the Rangers in New York
funeral of his brother.
"While we extend our tuned up for a showdown with
sympathy to Coach Smith and the Islanders with their
his family and recognize his second straight impressive
PINEHURST
· stated feelings, there was a victory, a 4-2 decision over
• 12' x 12" tile
sound basis for the action the Detroit Red Wings .
··swirled-plaster
taken and the announcement
design
made. There is no basis for an
• acoustical
apology ."
h.
Nootheless, Goodpaster appointed the head of the
school's law department, Col.
Robert W. Berry, Friday to
NBA Standings
By United Press International
investigate the charges .
Eastern Confer-ence
Smith, who first brought his
Atlantic O'ivision
w. L . PC;t. GB
allegations to the Academy's
ash
23 10 .697 attention oo Dec. 13, 1977, wPhi\a
19 10 .655 2
312 Sixth Street675·1160
Point Pleasant
17 13 .567 41h
revealed the charges publicly New J.-sey
New York
16 l1 .485 7
and
accused
night
Store Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m, · 5
.m. · 12 noon ..
Bost on
12 20 .375 lO lf:~
of
up
Central Dh;islon

•

,.•

..•

354 sq.

I

""
•

I
I,

'
'
·'

II

..

-·'

I

W. L Pet.

AN unidenti fied Southern player charges into Miller' s
Bill Harvey ( 43) on this play during Friday 's non·
confer ence game a t Racine. Southern won , 00-69.

A lrt~llY ltii~IUlY
CIIIUSTMAS
Eaeh vcar
it n1eans
•

still n1ore,
And otn• gratitude
bcltind it
l!ii wanner titan
before.

WAVERLY - The Meigs
reserves scored only two
points in the first quarter and
went on to fall at the hands of
the Waverly Tigerkittens
Friday night, 48-29. Waverly
could score only eight points
the fir st quarter, but by baHtime they had streaked out to
a 23-12 lead. Dave Kennedy
led Meigs with his 14 points
while Mike Miller added 6.
Meigs did hit 9 of 12 free
throws, but only 10 of 28 floor
shots . That leaves their
record at 1-5.
Moore led the winners with
18 points while Banta added

ReserVes

(29)

Christmas
·Specials

Pacific Division

-

Snowden o.o.o ; D. Kennedy S4·14 ; Scott 2·0-4 ; Swann 1·1·3;
Judge 0·2·2; Mil le r 2·2·6.
Totals 10-9-29.
Waverly (48)- Banta 6·012; Teeters0-1·1; Moore 8·2-

1978 T-BIRD

Week of January 2, 1979

NATATORIUM
DATE-GYMNASIUM
Closed
Jan. 2 Closed
Closed
Jan. 3 Closed
..
7:30 p.m.- Redmen vs.
Central State
8-IOp.m .. Qpen Swim
Jan . 4 a.ro p.m.
Handball Court. Weight
Room &amp; Pool DNL Y
7-9p.m.. Family Night
Jan . 5 7·9 p.m.. Family Night
Closed
Jan . 6 Closed
S: 15 p.m.-JV Men vs. OSU Lima
7:30 p.m.-Redmen vs. Malone
2·4 p.m.-Open Swim
Jan . 7 2·4 p.m. -Open Recreation
J.9 p.m.-Open Swim
7-9 p.m.- Open Recreation

I

PRODUCTS

'~"'0

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NY Islander s
20 4
Phila delp hi
18 11
Atlanta
19 13
N v Rangers
18 10
Smythe Division
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10 15

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for a holiday wrapped in

2•12
7
7

Campbell Conference
Patrick Division

quarters:

wi shes a seco nd longer

GB

. NHL Standings

8-48.

an 't conceal our hearty

7 1h

By United Press tnterniltional

BUY

'

(tl t:z

sunday's Games

You Look At It, ••

'

ll/:z
2
6

( No games scheduled)

.GIBSON

0.2; George 0·2·2; Pendleton
2-2·6; Burriss 1·1-3. Toto is 202 10 4 13-29
8 ts 9 16- 48

GB

.618
li]
.618
•11
Portla nd
16 14 .533 311•
Go lden St .
11 16 .515 4
San Di ego
14 20 .412 J IJ:~
Friday's Results
Boston 124, At iMta 105
San Antonio 103, Ch icag o 92
Phoen ix 123, Kan City 103
Denver 107, Golden St. 103
L os Angeles 127. Wash 115 ·
P h ila 103, Seattle 95
Saturdav's Games
Clev eland at Atlanta
San Ant on.i o at De troit
New Y ork at Houston
New Orleans at Indiana
Ka n Ci ty at Milwaukee
Washington at PorHand

18; Robertson 2·0-&lt;1; Sams t-

Score by
Meigs
Wa verly

W. L.
20 11
21 13
21 13

Sea ttle
Phoe nix
Los Ang

PAUL R. LYNE CENTER
Rio Grande College

12. The winners were cold
from the foul line as they hit
Just 8 of 20, but made up for it
in field goals as 20 of 46 shots
went through.
Box score:
Meigs

San Anton
IB 14 .563
Houston
15 14 .517
Atlanta
16 16 .500
Clevetnd
12 20 .375
Detroit
11 20 .355
New Orlns
11 22 .333
. Western Conference
Midwest Oi~Jision
W- L. Pet .
Kan City
18 11 .621
Denver
17 15 .531
Milwauke
14 21 .400
Ch ica go
13 20 .394
Ind iana
10 21 .323

ON ALL PRODUCTS

........

recruits allowed by the
NCAA ; gave an illegal
proportion of prep-school
scholarships to athletes;
allowed players to use
at h 1e ti c department
telephone credit cards for
personal calls that reached
$950 in one case; and
exceeded by three or four the
number of off-campus
recruiters permitted by the
NCAA.
"Apparently there were
some problems with the
sophistication
of
our
accounting procedures
concerning the recruiting
program and we took correc-

"The Islanders have beaten

us twice already," said the
Rangers' Pat Hickey, who
scored two goals and assisted
on one of Phil Esposito's two
goals. "I'm sure we're gonna
beat them one of these nigh.ts.
It might as well be this one."
Against
Detroit
the
Rangers allowed only four
shots in the first period but
three were on breakways and
Dennis Polonich cashed in
ooe for a I~ lead. Hickey then
scored twice, but Dan Bolduc
put in another breakaway
shot for a 2·2 tie . Esposito's
first goal came with just five

STANDINGS

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply Co.

•~:i

Waverly reserves
post 48-29 win

234oq.lt.

294 sq.ft. : ·~·(·;~\~~~~·

"

how much passing we will do.
We don't think you have to be
5().50 with the run and pass tu
CH ach . "But I am nut sure win. lf we are 15-25, we'll be

live action where it was
needed ," Forbus said. "But I
think we're probably in super
shape as far as the NCAA
goes. There were partial
mistakes made but none that
constituted an advantag~
over another schooL I don t
think we 're in any violation of
NCAA rules ."
Forbus said the officer who
headed
the
original
investigation, CoL Edward
Hart , has left the Academy.
Maj . Gen . Raymond P .
Murphy, Army's athletic
director, was in Philadelphia
and
unavailable
for
comment.

Flames bounce back, 3-l

344sq.ft

•

" Maybe we know a few
m&lt;&gt;re ways to move the ball,"
said I he veteran Michigan

Army will examine charges
made by former grid coach

..

REAL GOOD SELECTION
·OF '79
CARS &amp;.TRUCKS
IN STOCK ••••

CARROLL
NORRIS
DODGE

to the Ro se Bowl - all un·
successful - he is not putt ing
the Wolverines thro ugh hard·
hitting, two-a-day drills.
Schemb echl er · and the
team are stay ing at the
Marriot Hotel in Newport
Beach and have been working
oul on the University of
California · Irvine football
fiel d. They will move to. the
Sheraton · Huntington Hotel
in Pasadena late Sunda y. ·
Quarterback Rick Leach
and
tailback
Harlan
Huckleby said a group of
players went to see
in
Schem be chler

Armstrong ceilings

•
'

8 9 10 1D-37
20 13 22 21 - 76

SEE US BEFORE
YOU BUY THE
NEXT CAR OR TRUCK.

working less, enjoying it more

l0%0FF

'

WE HAVE A

WHERE'S TilE BALL? - That appears to be what
players oo both Southern and Miller's high school basket·
ball teams are asking each other in this action photo.
Southern won the game, 00-69.

.

Wolv~rines

race

Tigers remain ded for first In

. ..' ...

v~ n couv er

12 20 2
26
St . L ouis
7 23 5
19
18
COlorado
6 22 6
Wales conference
Norris Oi\'ision
W. L . T . Ph.
so
Montreal
23 6 4
L os Ange les
13 13 s·
31
Pittsb urgh
12 14 1
31
Detro it
8 17 9
25
21
washington
8 21 5
Adams Di\' ision
W. L. T . P.ts.
50
Boston
22 5 6
Toron to
16 I S 4
J6
Buffalo
14 11 8
36
Min nesot a
11 17 3
25
Friday's Results
NY Rangers 4, Detroit 2
Atlan ra ·J. Toronto 1
Saturday's Games
Buffalo at Boston, aft .
Pittsburgh at Minn . att .
NY Rangers at NY ts lndr s
Ph il adelphia a! Chicago
Co lorado at Montreal
Washington at Detroit
Toronto at St. Louis
Los Ano at vancouve r
Sunday's Games
(No games sc h ed uled 1

WHA Standings
By Uni;ed Press International
W. L. T . Pts.
Qu ebe c
17 11 4 38
New Engl and
15 9 6 36
Cincinnati
1&lt;1 15 4 32
Edmonton
15 14 0 30
Winnipeg
13 12 4 JO
Birmingham
12 15 3 27
x. lndianapolis
5 18 2 12
.:-team disbanded
Friday's Results
Quebec 5. Slrnii ngha m 1
Wi nn ipeg 5, Edmonton 4
Saturday's Gam~s
Quebec at Cincinnati
Birmingham at New En g
Sunday's Games
( No gam es scheduled )
College Basketball Resu lts
By United Press International
Friday
UK 1nvltational
L e~~:i ngton,

Ky .

First Round
Ill 64, Sy ra cuse 61
Texa s A&amp;M 73. KY . 69
Dayton Classic
Dayton, Ohio
First Round
Tula ne 54, Penn St. 50
Da y ton 97 , Fla . St . 80
Illinois State Holiday
Normal , 111 .
First Round
Ill. St. 71, No . Ill. 60
Miss. 83, Loyola 75
Rebel Roundup
Las Vegas, Nev.
First Round
Neb . 15 , UC-Snta Brbra 55
Cable Ear Cla ssic
Santa Clara , Cal.
First Round
Tenn . 63. San Jose 51. Sf!
east
Geo . Wash . 96, Cath 1e
Holy Cross 17, Mass . 57
St. Fran 61, F . Dcknsn 5d
St. Jno . 100, Ten n . Tech 56
S t. Pefcr 's 67. Rutg er s 58
Queens 70, CCNY 61
South
Armstrng
51.
107 ,
UNC
Grnsbro 68
Earlham 71, Webber 60
Mr5hll 117, R io Gran de 90
Stetson 90, La Sal le 76
Wake Forest 93, R ichmond 89
Midwest
Akron 90, I U -PU I 84
Ashland 93, Tiffin so
Bel oit 70, II I. -Ci r cle 67
Chicago St . 83, Qul m;:y 53
Ind. C.ent 103. DePauw 83
Lewis 73, Ca r leton 61
Mar ian f!9, Olivet 62
Mt . Mar y 98. Black H ils 90
No .Car . 62 , Cincinnati 59
Roosvlf 96 . 111 . Bndctne 93
St Xav ier 79. Eck erd 76
S.Dak.St . 92. Northern 53
Wr igh t 51. 85. Cap ittl l !I I
South wes t
Tulsa 69, N E Okla . o.,
We st
Ariz . 107 , New M~tXi co 88 ~
Carroll 78, Lws&amp;Cirk 69
Gonzaga 63, Wis.-Mitw 61

PATRIOT- Last week the
.Eastern Junior High Girls
cage team romped over host
Southwestern 26-5. The Little
Eagles' defense did not allow
the hosts a single point in the
second hail.
Coach Pam Douthitt stated
that her Eastern team
leemed to be very nervous
the first half since it wu the
girls' first game, but the
defense stiffened in that
second baH, Eastern scored
14 big points in the last
quarter to win going away.
Four Eastern girls had six
points each - Kathy Ritchie,
Lisa Collins, Rhooda Riebel,
ll:elli Headley.
Becky
Ambrose had two. points.
Ritchie led the rebounders .
with eight caroms . while
.Collins arxl Ambrose each
'had seven. Eastern's next
game is January 4 at .
Southern.
Scoring for the losers were
Ida . St. 98. Seattle u . eo
Ore. Coli 72, Ida . Coli 63
H. Halslop and B. Holley.
UCL A 9'5, Fordha m 64
Eastern
G 4 2 14--26
UOP 89 , Itt. Wsl yn 73
Southwestern
I 4 0 0- 5
USF 79 , Sa,n Fr an St . .51

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seco nds left in t he first
period . It was the 6aoth of his
career and he added another
into an open net .
In Atlanta, Eric Vail, who
scored his 15th goal, said the
Flames are not playing
consistent hockey .
"Sometimes we seem to be
prepared arxl sometimes we
don 't," he said. "We have to
be prepared to play."
Atlanta is in first place in
the Patrick Division, but
trails
the
first-pla ce
Islanders by six points.
In th.,. World Hockey
Association, ~ebcc topped
Birmingham, 5·1, when Marc
Tardif scored two goals and
th e Nordiques broke a 1-1 tie
with three goals in the second
period . Curt Brackenbury
and Danny Geoffrion made it
3-1 then Tardif scored his
second of the game to make it
4-1.

happy . AIS&lt;J, our receiving is
better this year than in the
past.,,
Schembechier had strong
praise for Leach.
" Rich is the epitome of a
college football player. I wish
we had 95 just like him. We
rely a great deal on him. We
ask Rick to run as well as
pass and to do it an."
However, Schembechler
will sti ll call a ll the
Wolverines' plays.
Following a brisk two·hour,
non-contact drill, most of the
Wo lv er in es vi S'l' te d
Disneyland
in
nearby
Anaheim. Schembechler and
Leach stayed at the hotel to
go over films of several USC
games.

Also , Winnipeg nipped Ed·
monton , f&gt;.4, on two goals by
Morris Lukowich, the second
of which was the game·
winner . Rich Preston, Bill
Lesuk, arxl Kent Nilsson were
the other Winnipeg goal
scorers. Wayne Gretzky, Ron
Chipperfield, Dave Semenko,
and Blair MacDonald seored
for the Oilers. ·

JIGOOD

~ASONS
to see your good
neighbor agent

CAR •HOME
LU'E • HEALTH

Mike .Swiger
992-7155 .
149 S. Third St.
Middleport, 0 .
Like a good neighbor.
, Stole form Ia the~.
11AII ••••

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�C-5-The Sunday Times~'ientinel , Sunday, De.-. ~4 .

f-4 - Tht• Sunday Timt•s-Sentirlt'l. SmuiH\'. Oer •. 24 . 1 ~7R

GAHS

•
WillS

WELLSTON - After the 1hruugh tbr first !Wt • min utes
lead had changed hand:, 15 and fo rt~· srcnnds ,,f the final
times and the score tied un 10 penod cmd !he rcsuH was a
different occasions, h a r d ·l· arned ti!l -57
Gallipolis blanked Wellston s~~ uttw;tS!C' r11 Ohio At hl eti c
16-0 ove r a span of 7:23, frolll Lca,I!\H.' nctury fur l'uach Jim
Oo.; bllfll t ''~ Bha• Pedi s.
midway in the third stan·w

first league tilt, 69-57

The t riumph left GAHS
with a ~-:' season mark . The
Blue Devi ls played ddcndin...:
Cl~ ss A1\ State l'hampion
Portsmuuth

in

a

nun-

('\lnfcrcnce game Saturday

night .

Inside the SEUAI., the Blue
!&gt;evils pi cked up rheir fir st
victl •rr against three sctbacb.
Coach

Hick

Perdu.e's

Golden Rockets dropped to 15 overall -anct 0-4 in league

After

\\' t.:l l ~t(l n 's

!\o1ark

points and 15 r ebounds.

·Three uther Rio players
fini shed in double figures in
scoring. Greg J ames, making
hi s first appearance of the
1978-79 campaign, tos~ed in 14
points and picked off seven
rebounds. Mark Swain and
Dan !li se each had 12
markers for the Rcdmen,

now

3~7

on the year.

Marshall, now 5-3 . .Placed
five other players in double
fi gures. George Washington
had 21. Greg Whit e \6, Tum

Liebig 15 and' Bunny Gibson field goal attempts for 57.9
14. James Campbell tossed in percent and 29 of 39 free
throws for 74.4 percent.
12.
Rio Grande connected un 34
After t he Christm as
of 81 field goal attempts fur 42 holiday, Rio Gr a nd e will
percent . The Redmen were 22 t ravel to Defiance Wed·
uf 28 at the fo ul line for 78.6 nesday for a nun-league
percent. Rio had 35 rebounds, outing.
Friday 's box score:
H assists, eight turnovers ,
RIO GRANDE (901
seven stea Is and two blocked
Purcell 8-9·25; Swain 5-2·12 ;
shots .
Bise 6·0-12 ; Phelps 1·4.5 ;
Marshall had 54 rebound s,
Royse 2-2-6 ; McCormick 0-119.assists, 10 turnover s, three 1, Wash ington 0-2-2; Clark 1blocked sho ts and three 2-4; West 1·0-2; Nida y 2-1-5;
Boster 1-0-2;

~tea ls.

The ' Big Green hit 44 uf 76

James 7-0-14.

TOTALS 34-22-90.

Logan, outguns Jackson, 76-66
JACKSON - Logan 's high were never rea ll y in trouble
scoring Chieftains continued as they led by quarter scores
: their onslaught on the nets o! 22·20, 40-34, and 58-15.
The hot shooting Chiefs hit
Friday night at Jackson
56
percent !rom the floor on 33
where they posted a . 76&lt;i6
of
59 and canned 10 of 14 free
SEOAL win over the host
throws,
netted 34 rebounds,
Ironmen.
committed
22 turnovers.
and
Pete Clark drilled in 20
The
Ironmen,
who are now
points to pace the Chiefs to
1-3
and
2-4,
were
led in
their third victory in four
scoring
by
Norm
Sydow's
19
league outings and up their
points
with
Dave
Evans
season mark to 4-1.
Coach Skip Miller's Chiefs adding 16.
Slats show Jackson hitting
on 2!1 of 61 field goals for 46
pet., conv erting 10 of 16 at the,
charity
stripe, and getting 29
NAMED HEAD COACH
rebounds.
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) Logan's high scoring. Dave
Tom Griffey; assistant coach
Lehman
dre\V three perso_nal
of the Milwaukee Does, w~s
named head coach o! the
Dayton Rockettes of the
YOUNG
Women's Basketball League
RESIGNS
effective immediately, it was
BLUFFTON, Ohio (U P! )~
aiUloWlced Friday.
Koy Young , head football
Griffey, who succeeds coach at Bluffton College has
Linda Jo MaiUl, will be in ' resigned effective at the' end
charge when the Rockettes, 0- of the school year, it was
2, play the New Jersey Gems announced Friday.
Saturday night. Griffey, 23, , Young h~s been at Bluffton
has coached in the AI ' Sin c.e 1975 ~nd also served ~s
Maguire Industry Camps the . asststant
professo r of
past three years and also physi ca l educatiOn and
conducted several camps recreation .
Young isa l966 g d ' 1 . f
within the Milwaukee Youth
ra ua e o
Foundation.
Bluffton.

.

fouls in the tirst two minutes
of play and sal' out the entire
fir st half but finished with
eight points, his lowest output
o! the season.
The box score:
LOGAN 1761- Dillon o.o.o;
Moore1-0-2; Krieg 4-0-8; Fisk
3-0-6; R. Bell 0-0·0; Leh man 24-8; Wa lton 7 0-14 ; Clark 10-0·
20; Lovsey 4-6-14 ; D. Bell 0-0·
0; Mor9an 2·0-4; TOTALS 33·

10-76.
JACKSON 166) - waugh 0·
0-0; Neal o.o.o; Ca mpbell 1·0·
2; Stevens 2-2·6; Sydow 8-3·
19; T. Evans 5-2-12; Mart in 31·7; Barnett 1-0-2; Ghearlng
o.o.o; D. Eva ns 8·2-18 .
TOTALS 28·1 0·56.
Score by quarters :

Logan
Ja ckson

22 18 18 18- 76
20 14 11 21-66

Reserve score: Logan 45,

Jackson

36 .

Basketball Results
w aynedale 16 uanon oo
Hill sdale 83 Doylest own 59
Rittman 86 Smithvill e 76
Springfield N 87 Springfi eld

Cent Cath 59
Springfield Shawnee
North eastern 40
Kenton
Ridge

68
5.6

Nor th western 49
Tecumseh 65 Fairbanks 57
W Libe rt y Sa le m 56
Cedar vi lle 40
.
.
~:hland 83 New Phol adelph oa ·
· Mansfi e ld St Pe ters 112
Galion 51 •
Lexi~g1on
71
Sandusky
~~;~~n2af~ert 54 Sandusky St.
Mary 's 53 tol l
Collins Western Reserve 56
Mapleton 54
.
Hillsdale 83 Doylestown 80
(oi l
Willard 53 Upper Sandusky 47

Black River 70 Monroe ville 68
Jeffe rson Union 71 Utanton 62
North Canton Hoover 1' 0

Canton South 67
McKinley 52 Col Linden
McKinley 48
Barberton 85 Tlmken 63
MasSillon 68 Perry 47
Alliance 62 West Branch 49
Louisville 69 Jackson 62

GlenQak 63 Marlington 61
Minerva 73 East Cantot1 61
Cl aymon t 66 Sandy Valley 65
Lake 58 Tuslaw 55

Copley 73 Akron Ellet 68
Ham ilton Ross 83 Blanchester 67

New Miami 49 Edgewood A7

Mt . Healthy 73 Lakota 59
Ham ilton Taft 73 Hamilton

Badin 49

Ci n Princeton 76 Garfield 65
Middletown 69 Fai rfield 49
M iddlet own Fen wic k 79
Wayn es'vllle 55

c~ . uld ::ir l,r C a~-:ain
h ~1d

the thi rd peri11tl , Jim my
llarri s hit back· IIJ -ba ck
burk cts within a 20-sccunt!

(; A ll ~

MARSHALL

( 1171

Laba n owski
7 - 9 - 23;
Washington 8·5-21 ; Li ebig 6-.315 ; White 6-4-.16 ; Gibson 7-014 ; Campbell 5-2-12 ; Watson

3-2·8; Gilmore 2·2-6. TOTALS
44-29-117.
Halftime score 47 Rio 41.

N\arsha ll

Warwick gains
tennis finals
SYDNEY, Australia (UP! )
- Australia 's Kim Warwick
defea ted Texan giant-killer
Sherwood Stewart Saturday
to enter the final of the
$2110,000 new South Wales
Open Tennis championship at
White City .
With coach Jim Fannin o!
Chicago at courtside, the 26year-old Warwick won 6-7, 76, 6-4 with an inspired
performance to reach his
first final before his home
crowd. The first set went with
service to 6-6, forcing a tiebreaker in which Warwick
jumped to a qui ck 3-0
advantage .
Stewart, who Friday
defeated top seed Guillermo
Vilas of Argentina, fought
back to take the tie-breaker,
6-6, · and the set, 7&lt;i. The
second set was a complete
reversal o! the first , with four
successive service breaks
before a · tie-breaker was
again called for , which .
Warwick ·won , 7-J.
Both players held service in
the third set until Warwick
broke .ahead in the ninth
game. and held service to win ,
6-4.

.

Warwick
will
meet
American Tim Wilkinson in
Sunday's final.
Wilkinson, the former U.S.
National· under-17 champion,
overcame Australian John
Alexander with a hard-fought
6-4, 2-6, 6-4 victory.
Australians
Dianne
Fromholtz and Wendy Turnbull will meet in the Women's
Final after easy victories in
their semifinal matches.

with 5:20

ll•f! in thl' gc-nnc, Gallipolis

Sw1.ngcr kn 1,1tt·d the l'11 Uill at
~0-all i\'i,l, 1:·1:1 rcrn aining ln

Marshall finishes strong,
defeats Rio five, 117-90
HUNTINGTON - Visiting
Rio Grande College gave
Marshall a good first half
battle before falli ng 117-90 to
the Big Green in Memorial
Field House here Friday
night.
Final score was 117-90. The
Redmen , down only 41·39
shortly be!ore the in·
termission, trailed 47-41 at
halftime.
Rio's Dan Purcell led all
scorers with 25 points.
Ken Labanowski led the
Thundering Herd with 2:1

Three ll!ue 1Jcv11s fini shed

spc111 . Uclurc lhe Kuckets ·

pla y.

built up &lt;.1 5ti-40 ad~
,·:nni.lgc. Wcllst1m uutscured

17-l:l the final five
minut es 11f play.
Wr ll ston led Hi-15 after (1n c
perilld. II was Lied 32-32
during the ha lftime . in! erm iss ion . GAHS ()Utscured
the 1\iickets 16-ll in the third
period to take a 48-40 ad·
,·anlage into the last qucu1er.

in dvublc £igures ln sc,:uring:,
led by Harris' 17 markers. E.
V. Clarke tr.ssed in 14 puints
and Hig John Armstrung
addl&gt;d 10.
Matt Sterrett came off the
bench to scure seven pt~ints
for th e Gallians . Jeff
Camcn1n added seven .
lt1 1bbic N&lt;1rman was the big
gun fur Wellston with 27
points. Ted Willi.rms added 12
and Marion Spires eight.
Gallipolis connected on 26
.,f 59 field goal attempts fur 44
percent. At the foul line, the
Blue Devils were 17 of 23 for

73 percent. GAHS had 21
persona ls, 40 reboWlds, 17 by
Clarke, and 19 turnovers.
'lbe Blue Devils had 15
assists, led by Harris with
five . Clarke had four.
The Golden Rockets hit 24
uf 60 field goal attempts lor 40
percent and nine of 20 charity
tosses lor 45 percent. Wl{S
had 22 persona ls, 34
, ebounds, nine each by
.Swonger and Norman, and 23
costly turnovers.
Friday, GAHS will host
Jackson in a conference
game. Wellston plays a t
Meigs.

Cage
standings, ,' GAHS-Wellston box•••
.

, ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
portsmouth
Pt . Pleasant

4 0_ 269 202
2 0 109 83

Waver ly
Logan

5 I 418 280

Wa shin gton

5 2 373 334

4 I 368 305

Ironton
Athens

5 2 431 364
4 2 404 346

Galli pol is

2 3 257 246
2 .a 38 1 460

Jackson

Well ston
Meigs

I 5 368 452
1 5 348 471

o

Raven swood

0

Non -league result :

0

o

Pt PIP.'l&lt;;i\nt 50 BarbourSIJille

]~

GAHS BLUE DEVILS (691
FG-A FT-A PF RB
PLAYER- Pos.
2-4 2-4 2 2
Mark Smith . f
5·13 4·4 5 11
E. v. Cl ar k, t
~5
~3
5
9
Jeff Cameron , c
7-16 3-5
l
0
Jim my Harris, g
4-10 2-2
1 2
Bill Armstrong, g
2·4
0-0
2 4
Jeff Lanham. f
3-4 . 1-2 2
3
M~11 Sterrett. c
1-2
2-2 0 0
Nate Thomas. g
0-1 0-1
3 2
Rick Dailey, g
0-0 0 0 0
l
Kent Price , c
26-59 17-23 21 40
TOTALS
WELLSTON ROCKETS (57}
PLAYER-Pas.
FG-A FT-A PF RB
Lowe ll Settles , g
1-4 o.o
3 7
Marion Spires. g

2·9

4-6

2

Ted William s, g
6-15 0-2 3
SEOAL VARSITY
.
Mark
Swonger,
I
3·6
0-1 5
TEAM
W L P OP Robbie Norman, c
11· 18
5-10 3
Waverly
4 o 292 185 Jeff
Montgomery,
I
1·7
0·1
4
Ironton
4 o 262 197
Ben son , c
0-0
0·0
0
Alhens
3 1 272 209 Steve
Jerry Patton. g
0-1 0-0 2
Logan
3 1 301 261
TOTALS
24-60
9-20 22
Gall ipoli s
1 3 203 203
Score by quarters:
Jackson
1 3 245 320 Gallipolis
Blue DeVils
15
Wel lston
0 4 246 327 Well ston Golden
Roc
kets
16
Meigs
o 4 211 330
OFFICIALS- Dick Tipton and Jim Smith,
TOTALS
16 16 2032 2032
Chapter.
Friday's results :
Ironton 54 Athens 53
Loqan 76 Ja ckson 66
Waverly 76 Meigs 37
Gallipolis 69 Wel lston 57

SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
Logan
4 0 180 117
Athe ns
3 1 205 147
Wa verly
3 1 203 156
Gallipolis
2 2 144 141

TO TP
2
6
3 14
2
7
4 17
2 10
0
4
0

7

5
1
0
19

4
0
0
69

TO TP
2

2

4

4

8

2
9

3
1
3

12
6

9
1
1
1

34

5
0
5

23

27
2
0
0

57

17 16 21-69

16 8 17- 57
Portsmouth

Blue Imps top .
Wellston five

WELLSTON - Coach Rick GaUia 's 30 rebounds. GAHS
VanMatre's Gallipolis Blue had 18 turnovers.
168
Ga llipolis is now 3-2 overall
Imps, down 17-14 during the
Wellston
0 4 120 189
2-2 inside the league.
and
Meigs
o 4 124 189 halftime intermission, came
Box
score:
,
back
strong
in
the
second
half
TOTALS
16 16 1344 1344
BLUE IMPS . 1421
Friday's results:
to post a 42-30 victory over
Ironton 59 Athens 53
Wellston's rese rves in Friday Skidmore 2- 4-8; Gillespie 4-1·
Logan 45 Ja ckson 36
Boggess 1-4-6; Nibert 0-0-0;
night'
s preliminary game 9;
Wav erly 48 Meigs 27
Ro.~er1s 1·1-3; Plymale 2-0-4;
here.
Gallipolis 42 Wellston 30
Prr ce 0-3-3; McDade 2-0-4;
D.e~. 27 games :
Gallipolis led 26-21 going Marlin 2·1-5; Paulsen 0-0-0;
Vi nton County at Jack son
Sterre11 0-0-0; Rieser o.o.o.
into the final period.
Miff lin at Portsmouth
14-14-42 .
Ted Gillespie paced the TOTALS
WELLSTON {30)- Potter
Dec. lB game :
winners with nine points. Tim 1·0-2; Benson J-0-6; Dever 1-1 Washi ngton at Wa ver ly
Dec. 29 games:
Skidmore added eight. Dan 3; Jef fers 2·0-4; Parsons 0-0·
Ath ens at Logan
Loc khart had nine for 0; Lock hart 2- 5-9; Maerker 10-2; Cox l-02 ; Butcher 1-0-2;
Ironton at Waverl y
Wellston.
·
Jackson at Gallipolis
Michael 0-0·0; Griffith 0-0-0.
GAHS hit 14 of 44 field goal TOTALS 12-6-30. •
Well ston at Meigs
Score by quarters :
attempts for 31 percent and 14
Dec. 30 gam e:
4 10 12 16-42
G~llipolis at Pt . Pleasant
o! 24 !ree throws for 58 per- Blue Imps
4 13 4 9-30
cent . Gillespie picked off 10 0 f Wellston
Jackson
Ironton

2 2
2 2

200

195
179

®r£eting.'(fi.q£

,

North Carolina jolts Cincinnati

Ironton nips
·Athens ·54-53

UnitedPrc_s~. tnternational

IRONTON - A tip-in shot
Fletcher scored un a layup lu
by Ironton 's Rubin Fitz- reduce I he lead to 53-50. An 18
patrick with four seconds left
foot jumper by Keith Harvey
lifted the Tigers to a 54-53 with I :40 left made it 53-52.
SEOAL victory over the
Spencer Edwa rds of Athens
Athens Bulldogs Friday
drew a foul with I :06 left but
night.
missed the front end of the
one and une .
The game was almost a
replay of Ironton's 55-{;3 win
The clock showed just 58
over Gallipolis two weeks ago
seconds when Ironton's Jeff
when the Tigers came from
Linn also missed the first of a
one and one before Edwards
behind to win on a 15 foot shot
by Fitzpatrick with three
was again fouled .
seconds le!t. ·
With only 36 seco nd s
Friday
night,
the showing Edwards again
previously Wldefeated Bull- failed on the front end of hi s
dogs roared off to a I7-.!1 first one and one, and Fitzpatrick
period lead which gradually grabbed the rebound for the
swelled to a 21-10 margin ·in Tigers.
the second period before the
Following a time uut with
Tigers came to . li!e and
14 seconds rematning, Linn
reduced the lead to 25-23 at
hit Fitzpatrick with a feed
halftime.
pass and the 6-fl senror took
Behind the deadly shooting his shot, missed it , grabbed
o! Dickie James, the Tigers
the rebound and dropped it in
with fou r seconds left to put
grabbed the lead at 39-36
after three quarters , but the Tigers on top 54-!i3.
Athens immediately called
James was in lou! trouble and
sat out a few minutes of the time out. Alter play resumed,
a long pass went to Art
third stanza.
The Tigers managed to Chonko near midco urt . He
took two dribbles and fired at
hang onto a three point lead
the bucket from 28 feet just as
lor the first five minutes of
the horn sounded, and watthe final stanza before James
ched the ball hit the front of
fouled out
with 3: 05
the rim and bounce out as the
remaining in the contest.
Bulldogs went down to their
Mike BrWling hit an Athen s
first league defeat of the
goal and was fouled by
season.
James, who exited on the
The important victory by
play. BrWling converted the
free throw to make it 53-48 lor Ironton now sets the stage for
the crucial clash between 1HS
AHS.
and Wav erly at Waverly
With 2:20 remaining, Joe
Friday night where one uf the
two Wldefeated teams will
!all to second place.
James led the Tigers with
22 points before foulin g out
with Joe Fletcher adding 10.
Ironton hit 20 of 56 from t he
floor, canned 14 of 20 free
""' --throws, and pulled down 'J:i
rebounds with Fletcher
snaring eight.
The Bulldogs connected on
GALLIPOLIS
Dan
21 of 49 field goals, made good
Brisker, GAHS Athletic
on II of 17 at the line, and
Director, Saturday ansna red 26 rebounds wit h
nounced the remainder o! the
Chonko pulling down eight.
Blue Devils' 1978-79 wrestling
Gary Bentley was the only
schedule.
AHS player in double ligures
This is Gallipolis' first year
as he ~ored 19 points.
for wrestling. On Dec. 14, the
Friday, a ll of the teams in
Blue Devils won the school's
the SEOAL who a re tied with
' first match ever by downing
each other will fa ce . each
host Portsmouth West. The
other as lronton goes to
Gallians upped their mark to
Waverly, Athens travels to
2~ with a win over HunLogan, Ja ckson is at
tington St. Joe on Dec. 16.
Gallipolis,
and Wellston visits
Here's the remainder of the
Meigs.
schedule for Coach Steve
Box score :
Lambert's lads :
ATHENS (SJI- Bentl y 8-319 ; Hart 3-2-8; Chonko j -2-8;
Dec. 29, Meigs. Home .
Jan . 5·6, HUBCO Tour- Mathews 3-H ; Smith 2·2-6;
nament (Hunting ton) .
Bruning 2- 1-5; Burson ·0-0-0;
Jan. 11 , Athens, Home,
Edwards 0-0-0. TOTALS 21 11-53 .
Jan. 15, Meigs, Away .
IRONtON (54}-James 7-8·
Jan . 23, Huntington St. Joe,
Home.
22; Fletcher 3-4 10 ; Harvey 3Jan . 27, Wash ington C. H., 0-6; Gordon 3-0-6; Hodges 2·1Away .
5; Fitzpatr ick 2-0-.4 ; Lin n 0-1Feb. 10, .Ports mouth West, 1. TOTALS 20-14-54 .

Wrestling
card is
released

Home .

~olll~ea£Httt ·

l!'i~

North Carohna coach Dean
Smi~h re5?rted ~o some old
tactiCS Fr1da}: mght.
.Those tactiCS, combined
w1th Dave Colescott 's 21
points, helped pull out a 62-59
win for the sixth-ranked Tar
Heels over ho&amp;t Cincinnati .
" Pat Cununin.gs is so tough
to play," Smith said of the
Bearcat center. "We had to
go to a box-and~nc defense
the frrst time we did that in
years. That's a real tribute to
Cumm ings,''

ui

Athens
Ironton

open ," Smith said . " f wa~ted
Colcscutt to shm,t mure .
. Badger a lsv ~ad prai~e . fu r
Cu l E'~l·u t I, a nauve ~f Marlllfi ,
Ind., who was pla ymg ~e fure
seve n&amp;! ltUmctown fnends
and his old high school coach.
. "This kid I Colescotll is
unprovmg by leaps a nd
bounds:. He's a very smart
player. .
'11Je Bearcats, who have
only two players back from
last season, " played very
we ll fur being so inexpcrienced,'' said Badger. " l
t hoUt'""' hl if

lh f' \ '

! T ~n· r~" " 1 r 1

~~d sta yed in their reg ular
ofrcn sc we would ha ve be&lt;:~te n
them .··

North Ca rll lin a used a fouro)rncr i,ffense late in the
J~~ n)e . The win upped the Tar
Heels' reco rd It• 6-1 while
Cincinnati dropped to 2-4.
Elsewhere ~' riday nig~L
Dayton landed a berth in the
finals of its own invitational
tourney with an easy 97-l!O
victory ove r previou sly
unbeaten Florida State.
Tulane doWned Penn State
54-50 in the University iJ f

More than 10,000 on hand for
indoor soccer league contest
UNIONDALE, N.Y. (UP!)
- Fa'r Pete Rose, now a
member of the Philadelphia
Phillies, it was a bit of magic .
It was his Cincinnati Kids
against the New York Arrows
in the inaugural match of the
new Major Indoor Soccer
League. Whether the 10,386
fans tumed out to see Pete or
a new version of the foreign
game, it didn 't matter.
t'lt's a new experience for
me," said Pete before the
contest. "It's a great game
for the fans to watch, the
excitement and the lightening
quick pace really gives me a
lift. " Rose is one o! 10
partners that own the
franchise.
"Pete Jr . plays soccer and
enjoys it," explained Rose,
who
lea rned
of
the
opportunity from his agent,
Reuven Katz, "When I was a
kid I couldn't even spell
soccer. But now it's the game
and I want to be part of that "
So Pete Rose said 'yes' to
the Cincinnati Kids and he
seems to be quite involved
with the team. Just ask MISL
Co m m i ss i o n er
Ear l

r'or eman, who sat with Rose
during the game.
"He jumped up and down
when his club scored and
when he thought a penalty
should have been called he
started to yell at the official.
He gives anything he 's a part
of everything he's goL"
But that's Char ley Hustle.
And this year he'll be
playing lor the Philadelphia
Phillies. Where, he doesn 't
know.
" I really don 'I like third
base anymore," said Rose .
" And i! you ask me why, I'll
say Mike Schmidt . He's going
to be there fur Philly in '79 . .

"/\n· io, the plllcP u:it h
rl w l!t•lpfullbrdwilrt' M.on "

PRICE ANO
SERVICE

3 HOURS OF
MADNESS
TM

CHRISTMAS SALE
ALL TOYS

FROM 12:00 TO 3:00 SUNDAY,
DEC. 24 AT ACE HARDWARE

DOUG'S

MARINE
(614) 992-5652

MEIGS PLAZA

808 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 4S7J."'

Athens 53.

~s we remember t hat first Chrtstmas ntght, so long ago,

MEIGS TIRE ·CENTER, INC.

we are moved by tts wonder and hope that Hts eternal life
and presence will conttnue to enrich our ltves .

WE WILL MOUNT TIRES SOLD DURING THIS SALE AT
NO EXTRA CHARGE TO YOU!
SALE STARTS TUESDAY, DEC. 26 AT 8:00 AM - ENDS DEC. 30, 1978 AT NOON!

CASH ONLY!

SALE GOODYEAR

Any Road King Passenger Tire
In Stock
ONLY!
.

.

,

LO.R,E·
.

··.;

.

0 FF

.

ALL
TIRES

SALE OF SALES - NEVER BEFORE!

PRICE

NEW! NEW I NEWI NEWI

KIDS USE YOUR CHRISTMAS MONEY!

Goodyear, regular tread tubeless,
extra . special on Goodyear sizes.
Polyester only ,

DOES NOT INCWDE SLEDS, WHEEL GOODS,
BICYCLES, TRICYCLES, OR WAGONS.

C78x14-078X14, E78X14,
F78x14, ,G78X14, H78x14

SALE RUNS DEC. 26 THRU DEC. 30, 1978

( Black or white)

Y NOW ·FOR -NEXT .

A.NY TIRE IN STOCK. REGULAR
OR MUD &amp; SNOW. Black or
Amazing price of

'26~~

F. E. T.

I•

5 95
e
MOTOR 0IL. ~~~~...........~~~~~. 59
'1395
IOW-40 NO .

EXTRA SPECIAL
ON 13" RECAPS ONLY········ .. ••••

NEED FARM TIRES?- YES, SIRI THEY'RE ON SALE, TOOl
Chri ~ ·""1as

From The Staff'&amp; Management Of ·

.

.

Carolina Lumber ( Supply
675-1160

Co~

Point Pleasant

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
POMEROY, 0.

JOHN FULTZ
MANAGER

'4495

ANY PASSENGER SIZE IN STOCK
REGULAR OR MUD &amp; SNOW
.,
Plus FET &amp; Recapable Tire •••••••••••••••••••••••

CHECK OUR PRICES- SALE- SALE- BUY WHILE PRICES ARE LOWI

Merry

ONLY!

RECAPS - EXTRA SPECIAL - ON RECAPS

VALV()LINE

ONLY I

ROAD KING

Road King Steel Belt Radials

AT
BARGAIN

.

SALE

white, tubeless.

.

Regular or mud &amp; snow, black
or white, tubeless belted tires in cluded. 70 series and 60 series.
"Except Radial"

ORIGINAL PRICE

'

AND CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS

Starcraft,
Mercury
Outboa .rds
&amp;
Mercruiser, Johnson
Bass Hawk.

Reserve score: Ironton 59,

Dayt on Invi tati onal T () Ur· 1mpn1 \'[' its r t''ct~rd to :J-4 .
nament·'s other semi-final
Th e Gr ee n WiJ ve l ~&gt;d
game Friday night tu set up thrt ,ughuut the ga me, bul saw
t(Jni ght's champH1nship ball le a 10-puint bulge dwindle in
between the Flyers and the the second ha1f when Penn
Green Wave
Statt' d osed t!J within two
Dayton's ;ta r senior guard with 1:49 left.
Jim Paxson scored 25 points,
But Nittany Lion guard
cent er Richard Montague Cra rg Buffie missed a laSl
p4oured in 21 , and guard Jack second shut and Tulane's
Wirnmerma n added 18 as the Mik e Blunt was fouled and
Flyers upped their record to made both free throws fur the
()..2
fin&lt;-11 rn&lt;.~r g in
Dayton jumped out to a 4:11n other Ohio colleg&lt;'
30 halft ime lead and was ba sket ba II action Fr ida y
neverserjouslythrcatenedin ni~ht , Wright State· trir ped
the second ha lf . rL'lorr·da capt
· ·1iJ 1. uu-o
a&lt;. 'I • In
· OVf~rt ·Lme :
State, now 5-1. was led by Ashland downed Tiffin 93~0 ;
forward Murray Lruwn with Marsh&lt;:~ll overwhelm ed Rio
19, guard Ed ChamJan with Grande , 117-90 : and Grove
18 and subst itut e guard City 1Pa .r besled Ba ldwin·
Bobby Parks with 16.
Walla ce.
' 66-60,
and
In the first game, forw ard ll erdelberg defeated Muunl
Car lo s Zun iga sc ored 12 Uniun . 89-78. in the sem ipoints and Jam es Hol ston fin als of the Hei del ber g
added 11 to help Tulane 11oliday Tournament

Oakland Stompers, also
received a bundle of money
for his signature.
" I think thi s is th e greatest
game around. It's the game
of the future," said Shepping.
And Rose agrees . " It 's the
greatest game Jive ever seen
- a game Lhal fans will
surely enjoy ."
And if Rose were to play
soc cer " "I'd like to be a
goalie. They make the best
money - just ask Shep."
But most of all the orange
soccer ball has an effect on
Rose: "It's easy to see and
you know what? It looks like a
Tom Seaver fastball ."

1j3 0FF

A Grea1
Combinat ion
For Southea stern Ohio

17 B 11 17- 53
8 15 16 15--54

' Til play anywhere lhev
want. I'm just happy to be in
Phi ladelphi a . If I'd bee n
broke I'd have taken the
Atlanta deal. And I'd be a
millionaire for the rest of my
life. But that's not everything
in life ."
Rose was at the &gt;\rrows
game to kick out the fi. ·st ball ,
and the recrpient of that first
boot was none other ttr.n New
York goalie Shep Me" .ng.
Messing and Rose might be
two of a kind. Messing, who
signed with the Arrows after
a brilliant career in the North
Ameri ca n Socce r Lea gue
with the Cosmos and the

HARDWARE

~--'- · ----

Score by quar1ers:

Feb. 17, SEOAL Meel at
Meigs.
Jan. 23, Sect ionals.

. cummin~ s scored .a ~a~e~
high 28 po mt ~ for Cmc~ nnat1
~:nd kc~t . the. Bcurc~ts 1 ~ the
game, as ne1t~ ~r ~e;am l:O ~ld
mouf!,t murc t.han a tw~J-pumt
lead wr the f1rst 30 mmutes.
North Caro lina led 61 -59
~rth ~~ seconds left, but
Crncmnatr Coach Ed Badger
~as called for a technrcal foul
and Colescott s~nk the free
th~.o w fo r the ftnal margtn.
UC was leamng towards
O'Koren (Mike O'Ko~en), the
Tar Heels' All-Atlantic Coach
Conferenceforward,andthat
left I he rcsl of nur player$

FED Excise Tax from 1.42 to 169
per .tire.
No charge for mounting
Special on Balancing with
Weig ht S2.SO per Tire

�f

~- Tht&gt; Sunday

T i mt·s-.St•nt illf•l . Sr 11ultr~·

J li •r · ' 1.t 111/}t

Bobcats drop 76-49 tilt

New Clemson coach
'had butterflies'

Major.
Hc;&gt;ople•s

JACK SONVILLE, Fla . named Ford as head coach a saw MISso uri topple the
Crunscn T1de, 3!&gt;-10, m 1968
(UP! )- What a way to make few day s later.
and last year, as Pell 's
a debut as a college football
~'ord said his players, who
head coach !
w11l have practiced for a ass1sta nt, he wa tched
Danny Ford, who took over week a t Day tona Beach l'lttsburgh destroy Clemson,
from Charley PeU at th'e helm before their a rri va l at 34-3.
"! hope the thll'd time is the
of the seventh-ranked J ackscnville Beach Sunday,
charm
," he said . " I know we
Clemson Tigers three weeks have gotten over the change
stunk
up
the place last year
ago, gets his baptism of fire ·in coaches and are serious
going to do our best
and
we're
against Woody Hayes' Ohio about wantmg to beat their
to
redeem
ourselves.
State Buckeyes in the Gator "' Big Ten OPIX/nent .
"It's not a do or die
Bowl Dec. 29.
" All the play ers want to do
"I got the butterflies the is win ," he said . "They're not situation , but since we do
second I got the job and I'll wor ried about who's coaching need more national exposure,
probably have them until the the darn thmg. The only thing it's important for Clemson
game," the 3~yea r-old Ford they are worried about IS · that we play well. I' m ·
confident we Will. I know a
said. "If we win, they'll Oh10 State.
·
probably go away . If we Jnse
"You've got to remember win would move us up ' our players have had a Jot of probably m the top hve."
they'll stay for awhile "
Referrmg to h1s )I).I Tigers,
Ford was still an assistant ups and downs. The se niors
Ford
said " We're a better
head coach to PeU ea rlier th1s have been through thr ee head
team
than
you saw last year,
month when Pell dec1ded to coaches
(Red
Park er
both
offensively
and defen accept an offer to coach pr eceded Pelll . They all
SIVely.
Florida.
really want this game."
"But Ohio state is the best
PeU recommended Ford, a
So fa r, the Gator Bowl has
fellow Alabama alunums to been a bad scene for Ford. As team we'll have faced all
be his successor and 'the a tight end a t Alabama . he year long ."
1

university admintstration

Friday's high school scoresOhiO H1gh School

Basketball

United Press International

Minford
43

71

Lu casvill e Vall ey

Portsmouth Notre Dam e 67 S
Webster 46
Mansfield

Mad1 son

Coshocton 51 (ot)

Newcomerstown

Valley South 42

49

53

lnd1 an

Tusky Cathol ic 26 H rghland 24
Findlay 62 Loram Ad miral

King 52
Ada 77 Delphos Je fferson 51
Lima Perr y 67 Bl uffton 52
64 Ka lida 62
Arcadia 66 Ottov 11l e 65
R1verdale
69
Ha rdrn
Northern 62

Continental

N Baltimore 82 Bettsville 62
Elgin 62 Kenton 51
Black R iver 70 Monroevill e 68
Pauld ing 57 Linco lnv iew 56
Crestv 1ew 65 Upper Sc1oto

Valley 52

Wells v ille 74 Bea ve r Local 69
East
Palestine
63 Co-

lumbiana 35
United Local 67 Spnngfield

Jefferson 47
Lima Sr 95 Tol edo Woodward
60
Delta 74 F ostor1a 66
Springf ield 66 Perr ysbu rg 5 ~

Ottawa Hills B3 Old Fort 67
Elyria 67 Manon 64
Lorain 72 ManSfield 60
Tiffin Columb tan 76 Sh elby 59
Lorain Cath 93 Elyri a W 74
Lorain Clearview 76 Brook side SS
Amherst 94 Vermilion 44

Westlake 83 Avon Lake 61

Edison 68 Norwalk St Paul 56
Cardington
61
Morrall
Ridgedale 59

Mt

Gilead

56

Colonel

Cr aw for d 51
Morrow H ig hland 56 Mans-

54

Lo udon v ill e 65 F rede n c k town 60 (2 ot l
M arietta 82 Newark 60
Nelson v ill e York 82 Wa r ren

Albany 63

fiel d Chr ist 50

Local 61

Garaway 72 Jewett -Sc1o 69
{ot I
R ive r 72 Wh eeling (W Va l

Cath 64

Bellaire 65 Steuben vi lle 58
M eadowbrook 59 Ba rnesv ri le

58

Fr ont1 er 70 Beallsvrll e 52
Stra sbu rg
77 · Fr ee port

Lakeland 60

Norm andy 63 Berea 45

Ba y 69 Olmsted Fall s 54
Lora in Cath 93 El yna West 74
Mog adOI'e 102 Cuyahoga Hts
67

Cloverleaf 70 Highland 67 {at)
Wic k li ffe 74 Genev a 54
All1 an ce 62 West Bran ch 49
Y oung sto w n Rayen 78 Cle

Ca th edral Latm 55

Bucy rus 88 Nor walk 82
Mt
Grl e ad
57
Co lo nel
Crawford 51
Buckeye Central 60 Plymouth

48

Riv e rda le

69

Hardin

North ern 6 2
E lg1n 62 Kenton 51

Col Hartley 69 Col Ready 63
Chillicot he 51 Worthi ngton 50
Gahanna 65 Westerville S 45
Groveport 57 West la nd 46
Delaware 64 Hilliard 50
Mt Vernon 54 Reynoldsburg

49

Marysv ill e .19 North Un1on 39
We st Jeffe r son 67 New

Col South 86 Fran klin Hts 66
Ca nal
Wi nC hes t e r
78
Farrbank s 71
· c ardington 61 R idgedale 59

Loudon vllle 65

Fr edr~cktown

60 (2 otl
Highland
56
Man sfiel d
Christian 50
Triade 57 Yell ow Spr ings 52
Greenan 56 Bell efontaine 48
Shawnee 68 North eastern 40
Alexander 59 Vinton 50
Youngstown Rayen 78 Cle

Cathedral Latin 55

Mad ison
Coshocton 51 (otl

Man sfield

53

Ashland B3 New Philadelphia
74
Coll ins

Western

Rsv

56

Mapleton 54
Tiff 1n Columbi an 76 Shelby 59
Man sfield Sf Pet er s 112
Galion Northmor 51
Norwalk 89 Bucyrus 82
Sparta H1ghland 56 Mansfreld

Christ 50

Ga l1on 59 Bellevue 53

Mansfield Temple 68 Cle
Heritage 28
Willard 53 Upper Sandusky 47
New London 74 South Central
44
We1rton (W Val 85 Winters.
v 1lle 76
Jefferson Un1on 71 Stanton 61
Buckeye S 56 Bridgeport 55
Carrol l ton 61 Northw est 52

Canal

Winchester

78

Fa 1rbanks 71

Whitehall 73 Westerv rll e N 56
Olentangy 67 Col Academ y 49

Spr ingfield N 87 Springf1eld
Cath 59
Copley 73 Akron Ellet 6B

Grandview 52 Jonathan Alder

(13

Bex ley 68 Big Walnut 50
Buckeye Valley 50 Dubli n 49

C-7-The Sunday Titn eh'&gt;t·ntllll'l . Sllrll la) . 0 ,.,._14_1 ~ 78

Barberton 85 Canton Timken

.

.

Football
@i~id:~;:; ~ ~ :t;:~:;: ;:;:t{:~:~: : : : Forecast

CHI !.I.I COTHE - With
Kyger Creek's top two
scorers. Jon Thompsen and
Von Taylor on the bench
ea rly in the third perlbd with
five perscnal fo uls, host Zane
T&lt;. ce rolled to a 76-49 non-

Barnes was high man w1th 12
Randy Adkins and Ed Shreve
each had 10.
~'o r Kyger Creek, John
Westfall was top scorer with
16 points. Graig Smith added
10 .
conference v i ctory over the
Kyger Creek hit 15 of 62
Kyger Creek Bobcats Friday fi eld goal attempts for 24
mght.
percent. The Bobcats were 19
A third Ky ger Creek of 33 at the lout hne for 58
player, Vi c VanSickle, fouled percent. Kyger Creek had 40
out in the final stanza.
rebounds, eight by Thorn[&gt;The Pioneers led \8-11, 3717 and 55-28 at the quartermarks.
Ohio College Basketball
For the winners, David

Ry Major Amos R. Hoople
Father of the Bowls
F.~&lt;HI , frie11ds, the ;ear ..end matchups m the Bowl gmrw~:
leave little to be des1red. Nine of the top 10 d ubs will be m acKidron Christ 72 Cle Baptist
hon - \\lth eight of them buttmg heads m four &lt;'Ontests. Talk 6B
abo ut a schedulemaker 's dream 1
Woo s t er
70
Mansfield
Highlighting the schedule is the Sugar Bowl contest featur- Mala bar 52
North Canton 70 Canton South
mg No I l'anked Penn Stale against No. 2 Al abama . wlueh 67
1may dedde the national championship . fin the game, Bama Carro!lton 61 Canton Fulton
looks - kaff-kafl - like a winner 'l
NW 52
Not far behind in national interest ure the Ruse Bowl pall'lng Mine r va 73 East Canton 61
of No. 3 Southern Cal vs. No. 5 Michigan: the Orange Bowl Hart v rlle Lake 58 Tuslaw 55
69
Twinsburg
l'epeat lor No. 4 Oklahoma against No. 6 Nebraska ; and the Solon
Chamberlain 62 ~
Cotton Bowl fray , p1tling No.9 Houston against No. 10 Notre
Dame
Clemson, No. 7, takes on No. 20Ohio Stale in the Gator Bowl ·
No. II Georgia meets No 19 Stanfonl in t he Bluebonnet Bowl. '
Fo1· the stallstle-mmded, here 's the Hoople reeord for 1978
R1ght, 476; wrong, 202; lies , l5, pet. , .703.
Not bad, you say' Let me remind you - kaff-kaff -that excellent ratmg was ac hieved while prugnosllcating the top 50to..()(} maJ Or tontests each week - har· nnnph 1
Here's the wa y the Hoople System calls the B1g Bowls
Friday, Dec. 29
GATOR ROWL at Ja&lt;·ksonville, Fla.
Clemson 28 Ohto Stale 24
The Clemson Tigers, 10-1-&lt;1, will be making thei r first start
under new coach Danny Ford, handed the assignment when
Charle; Pcll accepted the Florida !'Oaching pos1tion at the end
of the season .
· Ford hat&gt; _the unenvmi.Jle ~:~ s.s ign ment uf going up agcunst one
of the wmmngesl coaches in the business, Woody Hayes. In 33
years as head coach, Hayes has a record of 238 VIctories, 71
defeats and 10 t1 es .
The hunch here IS that Danny Ford and the Clemson club,
out to start the new re1gn on a high note, will deal the Bu,ekeyes
a 28-24 defeat. Keep your e)'e on Clemson's Steve Fuller who
has averaged 182 yards per game l'Unnmg and passmg thiS

thts year .

Monday , Jan. I
COTfON BOWL at Dallas
Notre Dame 31 Houston.20
Appearing in the Cotion Bowl will be no new experience for
Notre Dame. thi s marks their fourth trip to Dallas in the past
10 years. And me~ling a nother Bowl opponent won't be a new
experi ence for thiS Irish. No less than seven of their 1978 foes
have rated Bowl bids - Missouri IL1berty Bowl): Navy I holiday I: Pittsburgh (Tangerine) ; ,Purdue (Peach 1; Gem-g~a
Tech !Peach ); M1ch1gan !Rose) ; Southern Cal (Rose l. F:gacl,
that must be a record!
Th1s w1ll be a most mterestmg contest as qua1terbacks Danny DaviS of Houston and Joe Montana of Notre Dame both
have the mtestinal fortitude of " riverboat gamblers ". They
can be expected to shoot the works at any time and from any
place on the held .
We look for the Imh combinallon of runners Heavens and
Fcq~uson ~nd

thrower Montana to outscon• the Cougat·s by

·
Monday, Jan. I
SUGAR ROWL at New Orleans
Alabama 35 Penn Slate 27
Penn State, IHI-&lt;1, is the only undefeated collegiate club in
the eountry. Alabama has a classy 10-1-&lt;1 record, havmg lost to
only m1ghty Southern California . So this game shapes up as the
one that could dec1de who 's entitled to No. I.
You can add in the sparkling achievements of the coaches
two uf the foremost 111 the business. In 34 years . Alabama·~
Bear Bryant has won 283 games, lost 77, and tied 16. In 13
seasons, Joe Paterno at Penn State has 123 V!clones, 24 defeats
and ! lie - a wmnmg percentage of .836. Unbelievable '
In

e~

game of coachmg bnlliarace, we fOresee Bear 's Bama

tht!m 111-- ~ 1lln·l&lt;!!mph 1

overs.

KYGER

•,

Akr on Hbb;;m 83 Coventry 79
Cl over l ea f
70
M ed in (l
High l and 67
,
Sa lem 77 R.wenn a 76

Mogado•e 102 Cuyah6ga Hts

..

67

Linden 48

Nor'th Olmsted 68 M ed rna 67

,.

AM
FUEL
MEDICINE
SHADE
SCENIC VISTAS
OXYGEN
SWING SUPPORTS
FALL
CHRISTMAS
EROSION CONTROL
AIR PURIFICATION
LUMBER
FURNITURE
FOOD FOR WILDIJFE
TO SIT IN SHADE OF
PAPER
SOUND BARRIERS
HOMES FOR PEOPLE
SCREENS FoR UNSIGHTLY AREAS
MODIFICATION OF CIJMATE
CHEMICAI..S
HOMES FOR WILDIJFE
SOIL STABILIZATION
PSYCHOLOGICAL PEACE OF MIND
ESTHETICALLY PLEASING SURROUNDINGS
COLOR TO TilE LANDSCAPE
OBJECTS FOR UTILE BOYS TO CIJMB ON
TO WATCH GROW AS YOUR CHILDREN GROW
TO REMIND US THE SEASONS CHANGE
WOOD
BEAUTY
SPRING
You have a need. Plant a tree this coming sprmg. Meigs
County has many acres of idle land which could be made more
valuable by the planting of quality trees
. Seedlings are available through the Division of Forestry,
Ohio Department of . Natural Resources, for reforestation
purposes. These seedlmgs cost $28 per thousand (larger windbreak plants are 16 cents each) from the Division of Forestry~
However, Westvaco of Summerville, South Carolina (a
pulp and paper company) will match you tree for tree if you
order at ~~~st 1,000 trees. So you could get twice as many trees
at no additional cost. They do this as a service to the public.
There IS no obhgahon on your part to sell to them or anyone
else. Also, ASCS can pay 75 percent of the total cost of the trees
and the planting of· them.
Minimum orders are 50 windbreak plants or 250 seedlings.
You can select fro~ 15 different hardwoods, including
varieties such as Tultptree, White Oak, Black walnut, Silver
Maple and Green Ash . For most hardwoods a spacing of 12ft. x
12ft. Is recommended, which means about 300 trees per acre .
Or you can choose from 6 different conifers including varieties
such as White Pine, Red Pine, and Norway Spruce. Most
conifers are planted on an 8ft. x 8ft. spacing, which requires
681 trees per acre.
Pick up your order blanks now at your local Soil
Conservation Service office (in Meigs County - 2nd floor of the
Fanners Bank Building .)
Plant a tree that will become a living testimony of your
effort!
MERRY CHRISTMAS from the SCS and Meigs SWCD
staff and Meigs SWCD Board of Supervtsors.

CREEK

uOBCATS {491 - Gilmore 1u-2; Taylor 2-3-7; Thompson
4-1-9. Smith 1-8-10 ; Springer
0-3-3; VanSickle 0-0-0; Misner
0-0-0; Russell t-0-2; Westfall
6·4-16. TOTALS 15-19-49.
ZANE TRACE {761 Adkins 5·0-10 ; Davis 1-0-2;
Dumm 1·4-6 ; Hayes 1-1 -3;

Jones 0-0-0; Shreve 2-6-10;
Stump 4 0-B; Barnes 6-0-12;
Greenwalt 3-t-7; Hupp 3-3-9;
Heidelberg
KutsLhback 2 0-4; Mallow 1-3·
Holiday Tourney
Grove City (Pal 66 Ba ldwin - 5 TOTALS 29-18-76.
Score by quarters :
Wallace 60
Kyger Creek 11 6 11 21 - 49
Heidelberg 89 Mt Union 78
Zane Trace t8 19 18 21- 76
Dayton Invitational
Tu lane 54 Penn State 50
Dayton 97 Fl o rida St 80

score-

Reserve

Zane

Trace 58 Kyger Creek 28.

TURN BACK
THE CLOCK
SPECIALS
Car sales are good again and
we'.vegot more cars in stock. To
· sell-off this speeial shipment,
we make this special offer. Who
knows when a time to save like
this will come again. So come in now.

.O.u 1omatr c trans. power slcer 1ng ,
lugQ,, gc r&lt;t cK, a1 r conclil loner . dua l
SP&lt;Jr l m1rrors. d forged ollummum
whee ls body s•de m!dg
~lk NCI 11l

w..

6 cyl e ng1 ne powe r s le enng
olU iomall c tr a ns , w 10.,., I .r es
corwe nicnce group luggage rac k..
power br!lkes. alf cond•tr oner , AM
FM s• ereo rad •o
Sl~ No 112

NOW '5640

Now*5070

~56 09

1979 FORD
PINTO

1979 FORD PINID
2 DR SEDAN

~ cyl e ng1nc IIU ioma hc Irons
w!
w r&lt;Jdi&lt;JI l i r e~ power s l ee~ lng ,
luggage rack a rr co nd iiLOfiN dua l
spo- 1 mr rrors. ~wore wheel co~crs .
body s•de m ld g
Stk No 111

w..

I ty l engine 1~ peed lrans. e lectnc
10.lnd ow defr os ter loJpe sl npe
accen t, 6 R70~ IJ ra d1ar 11res , po 111er
slecr •ng dua l sporl m1 rrors 4
ill um •nur1l ,. •1cel ~
r ~r

4 cyl eng1 ne, 4 ~ pe ed Iran ~, w s w
l1res vrny l mser l body s•de mldj ,
a il vlnvr buckel se~ti S mln1 conso o
Stk NO 271

•

our community

1979 FORD
PINID

1979 FORD PINTO
PONY STATIONWAGON

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

sport m1 rrors
Slk N o 4

Slk No 191

w..

NOW *4190

U S78

1979 FORD PINTO
3 DR RUNABOUT
4 ql engme. power sleenng du.1 l
!,pOri m.r ron 4 lorged alumi num
wheels , .1ccen1 1ape slr~ pe

NOW *4180

SPECIAl

1979 MERQJRY
COUGAR XR7

1979 MERCURY
GRAN MARQUIS
3Sl engine power sleermg. power
braKes, a uloma llc trans , con v
group, corner1ng lam p$ 111 t and
speed POwer seal , elec rear wtndow
de l ro~ le r, a or condd ioner . pr ol
group. v1s1ble 11 g111 gr oup, rocK
group, lull:u ry wheel coven

w..

"'·'"
Slk

2&lt;10

No .

NOW

'879""
!'! ";

'i~l
,.,,,.n• · prwwr ~ I• • 1 mu 11111
orak es.. au romil!IIC lrans , til l wh~ l .
speed con trol. power seat i. bumper
ljrou p. lv. •n conlror seats elec rear
del roster. a ir cond , r !ld io AM· FM
s tereo ta pe Slk No 17&amp;

w..
~619

NOW

'741

-- -4---_,;,,;.;;....

1979 MERCURY
BROUGHAM 4 DR

1979 MERQJRY
ZEPHYR

1979 MERCURY
ZEPHYR Z·7 BlACK

301 eng ine . po.ver sleertno;j .;~nd
ora Kes . a ulom !ll lc t rans , · 1wl n
com tor t ' sea l!&gt;, w ~w llr es . conv
group, cornering lamps lil t wheel.
speed conl rol. power seat , elec
delroslcr . a ir cond , AM FM rad!o,
prot group, tinled gl ass, ll51hl group

Light bl ue, dark bl ue roof, 6 cyf
en gine, a utomat ic lr ans, power
steerin g a nd br a ki!S a ir con .
d il1 on!n g . s peed contr oL l lnlcd
gra ss. dua ! m • rro r ~ . wi re wheel
covers Slk . No !2

6 cyl engine power sleer lng a nd
brakes, a utoma tic trans , spaed
contro l, b\.im per protec!!on gr oup
clcc r ear de!rosler ll lr cond , prot
group, hnled gl ass, dua ! mirrors,
vme wheel covers, rock er o11 nel
mould1ngs AM FM s tereo e track
Slk No 20~

Slk
Wu ' ho
UU2206

NOW

*7690

w..
Ulll

NOW

4 cyt eng ine , powL'r s !eer~ ng and
brakes, speed control console, rea r
window delro!.ler , a ir condrllonrng .
!nlerlor 11ccent !,roup, tlnled glass,
AM FM s tereo
ln u: k ta p!l . n gh l
ha nd remole mirror HD ba11erv.
sporl wheel cover s Stk . No. 239

w..

'""

•

NOW

•5900

NOW '5790

Med blue . 8 cyl. eng111e automal lc
lrans . power sl!lerlng 11nd brilkl!s,
speed con lrt&gt;l COflsole, power l ronl
d 1sc brake!.. air cond d tonlng , AM
FM ~ l !l r eo 9 tr ack lape , Inter ior
accen t tr nred gla H, dual mirrors,
w1re wheel covers Stk No. 14C

1979 FORD
MUSTANG

1979 FORD
MUSTANG

Ful l vi ny l roof, A cyl engme cloth
se al l r lm , power s tee r ing oJ nd
brl'k es. aulomahc lrans , AM rad1o.
tn lerlor a ccenl and u le rlor accenl ,
l•nted glass, dual remote m •rror. •
wort • whl'r l cOY('rS ~ tk N o l H

cy l. e n! ine , powe r sleer ing ,
auloma tlc rans , !lntetl gra ss. dut'l l
remole m irrors, 4 cu i atu m1num
wheels, wide body ~I de mldg Slk .
No 209

307 V 8 e1191 nc, clolh sea t 1r1m ,
powe r s teermg 11nd brllk es, 4 $ ~d
lr un s, a ~r cond llionlng s peed
conlro1, interior acctn t ex terior,
accent , dua l mirrors, wire wheel
covers Slk No 216

A

\S42S

50 TRUCKS NOW
,
IN STOCK
10-4 WHEEL DRIVES
2-F-100 IN STOCK

1-F-800 IN STOCK

1979 ~DLID
4 DR SEDAN

w
..
t7~72

NOW

..
..

GALIJPOIJS- First of alii would like to wish all of our
readers a very Merry Christmas and a most prosperous New
Year!! lhopetbat his Holiday weekend is a very happy one for
you and your family .
We are ha':""g a l!leeting on appraisal of farmland for tax
~herem Galila C&lt;Junty this coming Thursday, Dec. 28,
7.30 p.m. at the PCA buildmg, Upper River Road, Gallipolis.
The Ga1lia-La~~ence Farm Bureau, in cooperation with
our office, Steve Hibm~er of the Soil C&lt;Jnservation Service, and
Dorothy Condee, Gallia County Aud1tor, is sponscrmg this
meeting.
_ It is a public m~ting but I believe it will be of most
mterest to anyone ownmg farmland, which can be a farmer or
a n_onfanner. ~e're g?ing to be talking about a relatively new
Oh1~ law Taxalton of Land According to its current
Agricultural Use Value."
Items to be discussed durmg the meeting include the
following;
(1) A brief background and updating of the CAUV
program since its beginning in 1975.
(2) Will the CAUV program be of benefit to you?
(3) Usc, howe~ you go about making an application?
( 4) If not at this tune, would CAUV benefit you at some
future lime?
I don't believe that many Gallia C&lt;Junty farmland owners
will want to have thetr farmland reappraised under this CAUV
system, but, if you own land near a urban area, or an area that
Is bullding up, or have a lot of woodland on your property, you
may want to attend the meeting then make your decision as to
whether or not to apply.
If f~r som~ reason you cannot attend , then contact us at the
ExtenSion Office, P. 0 . Box 72, Gallipolis for a copy of bulletin
No. MM-349, concerning the CAUV orol1!'am '1'&gt;!ere is no
Continued on C-11

-•.

1979 FORD
LID

released Thursday.
"This amount is far short of
the current aMual demand
for 10.6 million tons of
commercial fertilizer
nitrogen," the repcrt said.
In 1977 Congress mandated
a report on the feasibility of
using more of the nalion 's 1100
million dry tons of organic
wastes for fertilizer. The
finished document also was
sent to President Carter.
The
Agriculture
Department has
been
criticized by organic farmers
for having a bias toward
commercial fertilizers and
pesticides.
But the large scientific task
force which worked on the

report said three-fourth of generate a value of $&amp;10
two organic fertihzers, crop million a year, the report
residue and animal manure estunated.
However, the task force
already are returned to th~
continued , a " lack of
soil.
Last year organic wastes suffic1ent organic materials
returned to the land equaled to supply all the nutrient
85 percent of nitrogen needs of a n expanding
provided by commercial agriculture and the dramatic
fertilizer , 56 percent of yield responses to inorganic
phosphorus and 150 percent of fertilizers have resulted in
increased reliance on
potassium.
The task force said orgaruc commercial fertilizer s on
wastes benefit farmers by most farms ."
The r eiX/rt said the trend
holding down their costs for
toward inorganic fertilizer
commercial fertilizers
Improving the handling of use , which has doubled since
manure to decrease loss of 1969, lS expected to cootinue.
AdaptatiO n of orgamc
nitrogen , applying wasted
waste
s as a complete
manure and crop residue and
using more sewage sludge alternative to commercial
and municipal refuse would fertilizers in unlikely to occur
except under local conditions
where farmland is close to
the scurce of organic wastes,
the report said.
The task force said when
AVAILABLE AT THE EX- organic and commercial
TENSION OFFICE - The fertilizers are used together,
C&lt;Junty Extension Office has they improve sci! structure,
farm account books available fertility, aeration and water
(both the small book and the retentton .
Commercial Farm Account
"In fact , most orga mc
Book 1. Now is the time to wastes are not complet.e
start thinking about your fe1 tilizers but must be
record keeping system. We supplemented by commercial
also have most of the forms fertilizer to achieve the
you will need in regards to balance for most effective
income tax. These can be crop production," the report
picked up or mailed out by said.
calling our office.
The task force admitted
· We also now have avallable there was considerable
"The Farm.e r 1s Tax GuLde. " ev1dence mdlCating that
Anyone wishing a copy can organic matenal adds to soil
drop by our office or g1ve us a quality , but found insufficient
call.
data to quantify the benefits.
Some possible organic
fertilizers - sewage sludge ,
food processing wastes
industrial wastes , Jogging
wood manufacturing
and
Sider additional costs that
wastes and municip,al refuse
might not be accounted for in - usually are not suitable for
the listed price.· These may
soils because they have
in clude cost of cutting,
higher value as fuels , the
wrapping and quick-freezing.
report said.
If the list price does not mOther drawbacks are high
clude these costs, add these to
costs of processing and hanyour total cost of processmg dling or unsuitable chemical
Also ask 1f costs apply to the
or physical properties of
carcass weight or to the reta1l
organic alternatives.
weight. If the meat 1s purThe task force called for a
chased on credit, the interest
national
survey of the
charges must be figured in,
amounts of organic waste s.
tQO, of course.
Research is needed on the

County agent's corner
BY JOHN C. RICE
ExleDBion Agent
Agriculture
Meigs County
POMEROY - STEER
WEIGH-IN - The 4-H and
FFA steers must be freeze
branded and weighed in on
Saturday, December 29, from
9 a.m . to 12 noon. The weighin will be at the Horace Karr
Farm, located near Five
Points. All steers must be
castrated and dehorned prior
to weigh-in.
FARM RECORD SCHOOL
- Training for farm record
keeping will be conducted on
December ?:1, January 3, and

January 9. The course will
consist of what ezpenses can
be used, capital gains, capital
improvements, taking inventories, how to figure
depreciation, investment
credit, and what can be
deducted.
This should be a good
school that a husband and
wife can take together. The
meetings will start at 7: 3G
and conclude around 9 or 9: 3G
each night. 'l'he meetings will
be held at the Meigs County
Elctension Office. Please call
if you are interested. (9923895).
FARM RECORD BOOKS

WASHINGTON (UP! ! The Agriculture Departinent
expects winter
wheat
production next yea r to
increase by 15 percent.
Growers seeded 51 .5
million acres this fall and
anticipate a harvest of 1.44
million bushels
Plantings are up 8 percent
in excess of the 47.7 million
acres seeded in 1977 for the
1978 crop, but are 9 percent
lower than 1976 sowings.
Wheat acreage lS up m all
major wheat -prod ucin g
states except Oklahoma and
where
South
Da kota,
r emaine d
p l antings
unchanged from last year
The government indicated
Thursday that wheat farmers
continued to participate in
the set-aside program under
which they receive federal
price supports in return for
idling 20 acres for ever y 100
planted.
According
to
th e
Agnculture Department ,
farmers will harvest 85.8
percent of the crop for gra in ,
. compared to 81.8 percent last
year.
Total1978 wheat production
of 1.798 billion bushels was 12
percent below the 19n crop
and the first crop below 2
billion bushels since 1974 .
The size of th ~ winter crop
apppeared to be larger than
thiS year 's because whe at
prices were higher at seedmg
tune.ln the fall of 1977, wheat

Buying meat for free'Zer
ranges from 20 to 30 percent
BY DIANA S. EBERTS
of the carcass weight, said
Extension Agent
il&lt;Jb VanStavern, Elctension
Home Economics
meats specialist at Ohio
Meigs County
POMEROY - Increasing State. Some local regulations
food prices are encouraging require the seller to also state
t'Onsumers to cut food costs in the retail weight at the time
many ways. In some cases, of sale.
Yield grades given an Inbuymg meat in quantity can
save money, said Lois S. dication of the cutability or
Hungate, economist with yield of retail cuts. These
Ohio State Umversity ' s grades range from Yield
Cooperat&gt;ve Extension Grade I to Yield Grade 5. A
carcass with Yield Grade I
Service.
Meat may be purchased in has exceptionally high value;
. quantity by the carcass, the Yield Grade S would be low
side, the quarter or by value. Yield grades may be in
wholesale custs. When small print in the admakmg quantity purchases vertisements but are of
importance
in
consider cost, quality and major
family
needs
and determining the actual
preferences, Hungate said. amount of meat received.
Families with preferences
Meat is federally inspected
for
certalll cuts can save
for wholesomeness. In adby purchasing specific
money
dillon to this, beef is usually
retail
or wholesale cuts.
quality graded U. S. Prime,
C&lt;Jnslder
tbe amount of each
U.S. Choice, U.S. Good, or U.
retail
cut
reeeived from a
S. Standard. U.. S. Choice and
U. S. Good meat are most carcass to decide if buying
common in retail stores. specific cuts ·is more
Quality grades are deter- economical.
Percentages of retaU cuts
mined by texture, marbling,
fat cover and color, since from beef and pork carcasses
these affect taste and con- are as follows:
From half a beef· carcass
sumer desirability.
Potential buyers need to (300 pounds), about 25 perknow the actual number of cent or 75 pounds are steak
pounds 31 usable meat that cuts; about 25 percent or 7l5
they will receive. Quantity pounds are roast clllS; aboat
meat is sold on the basis of 25 percent or 75 pounds are
hanging weight, a wetght ground beel and stew meat;
which is greater than the and about 25 percent or 75
weight of retail cuts a buyer pounds are waste. Half a pork
will receive. Th1s is due to carcass (70 pounds) yields
bone, fat, trim, and other about 55 to 60 pounds of retaU
cutting losses. Total cutting cuts.
When buying meat, conloss on a choice carcass

owners were dis coura ged

from planting because prices
had hit bottom at $2 &lt;1 bushel.
After the 1978 winter crop
was
already
pla nted ,
Congress
passed
an
emergency farm bill, leading

to

increases in the t arget

price of wheat to · $3.40 a
bushel
and
handmg
producers incentives to plant
more wheat.
Ear lier m December the
Crop Reportmg Board
esti mated a 1978 winter
wheat crop of 1.25 billion
bu shels, the spring crop at 417
m1 lhon bu she ls and the
durum crop at 133 mU!ion
bushels
The winter wheat crop
usually a·ccounts for 75
percent of the total Amencan
wheat
pr oduct ion . l'o
fo recasts were made of othe r
wheal whi ch iS planted m the
spring.

The report estunated th at
fa nners planted 3 1 mU!ion
acres of rye, 3 percent more
th an last year.

search on how pr ocessing

might improve the value of
organic wastes as [ertihzers
and how organi c wastes

might be used more widely on
small farms .
The task for ce suggested a
thorough study comparmg
the economic, soctal and
environmental effects of
or ganic

farming

ver su s

conventional agriculture.

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boorn g o'! Sine~ l ~1 :.!9.
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·:Jhou t do uh ll' J e\er v lfl
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'.\.orld prot('~s i ng ca pa ~l l )'
I I ( ' -..; f.1 r 1Jlt•ro.; prvdu t. •· .til
l h•" ' ndd rl r• •ncd '- CJYh" LIIl ~
\\.I 'll l lt't d d ( l( ljl ;)t l j 'j
!J iiil• · n hu.,hel'- h\ 1; n·::~ /'!11
tPt!IH&gt; Il
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l-':1 \ ' l'll
pr1 'S t nl
d\t:r UJ! l
'1 \' ld-.. •..; 11.: k l h )"L' . cha u nl.t n.

r ad1

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u n1d

lh l·

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S11 \ 'h !

an

\ '-'-!I • I,JIIn ll. "IJ,! '- ! h ell ' ]U '-1

tti iJ:,t·r\ ii l i Vt
dL'Ill.IIlJ ~I l l\\ ( h
111 lulf ..1 doJ.'I ' Il mfl)f lr 1. 1:- r· r gn
lll :J"' k" l'- V. t ' LOIIl f.' up 'l'. 1t h ;J
J h , tr111U d l ~rnw th rrdr '
tl ~ rn ;..:

t''it 1111:1\ 11"&gt;

\\ ll h

crillcal ISSUe of unpact of
organic wastes on soil eroston
and productivity.
The report suggested r e-

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d m ng-e 111 pt:&gt;r r:&lt;i pi1 d

rr Lti '-lr 111 p lH •"
p1 1p UIH II11 ll
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111L'1 · , ~ t tn '-ll\ h •' &lt;l11". Hc.-.t
lo11~ Jn~
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:ruLTON-OOMPSON'
TRACTOR SALES
Spring Ave.
Pomeroy , Ohio

,.,

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ATTENTION
FARMERS!
During the month of December
Meigs Equipment Company of
Pomeroy will refuse no reasonable
offer on any Item presently on
their Inventory. Some Items are
only one In number so
don't delay, stop by today
and take advantage of this.

YEAR END
SALE

•.'
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con
rea r
dua l
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Thaler Ford Sales, Inc.
SALESPERSONS
Tom Sprague, Melvin Litlle, Deb Hamma,c)c. ~Garv R~do l ph , ,

Pete Somerville, Nancy Fowler, Everett Saunders.
Sales Nlanagers, Bob Ross af\cl Jack Roush
2A Hr Wrecker Se r vi ce Phone: 446-357 5 Day + 446· '~'." "'lgh t. .

PH. 446-3575

By SONJA HILLGREN
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Greater use of organic
fertilizers on American
farms could not take tbe
place
of
commercial
fertilizers, the Agriculture
Department
has
told
Congress. ,
The department said
organic fertilizers are best
used in combination with
commercial
inorganic
products.
Nitrogen, the major
fertillzer component, found in
organic wastes not already
applied to land totals 4.5
million tons nationwide, the
department said in a report

...:

Expect increase in
winter wheat crops

NOW

NOW '4970

4 dr , sedan lui! vtny! roof
P 8 , aul orrud lc lrens , air
dlli on lng sp.. d con lr ol .
detrosler, pr otection group,
mir r o r~ Slk , No. 265

"

NOW '5990

~:fs

1979 FORD
MUSTANG

w..

"

1979 FORD
MUSTANG

1979 MERCURY
CAPRI

1979 MERCURY
ZEPHYR 2 DR SEDAN
4 cyl eng11'1e . bench sea l, power
s leenng li nd brakes !l uloma l rc
trans , lin ted g!an . diJal m irrot'"s,
~ ly l ed wheel covers, 1nterror accen t
group. prolec tlve body si de m ldg
Stk No. 144

NOW '5590 ::;:s

~l

Organic fertilizers will not
replace commercial products

Agriculture and

Now*4880

~Sl81

362 JACKSON PIKE-RT. 160 &amp; 35
Mass ill on 68 Mc. ss i!lon Perry ·
t.7
.
A.ll li:n cc: 62 W~st Bra nch 49
Can t on Mc Kinley 62 Col

I

Zane Trace h1t 29 of 73 field
goal attempts for 40 percent
and 18 of 30 foul shots for 60
percent.
Kyger Creek , now 1-5, will
host Wahama In its nelct
outing on Jan. 5.
Kyger Creek lost Friday's
reserve game, 58-28.
Varsity box:

1979 FORD PINTO
CRUISING VAN

1979 FORD PINID
STATION WAGON

some 11 pnmls.

Boys shadmg the N1ttany Lions in a down-to-the-wire struggle.
Monday. Jan. I
ROSE BOWL at Pasadena
USC 30 Michigan 21
The Southern California TroJans have sort of made the Rose
Bowl their private: preserve in recent' years, having won the ·
four contests 10 wh1ch they have participated in since 1970
For M1ch1gan , the record has been just the reverse Bo
Sehembechler has taken his Michigan club out to the Rose
Bowl four times since 1970 and they have lost all four gamestwo of them to Southern California.
The Trojans _are the only team to whip Alabama this season .
W1th that 10 m10d , we look for Southern Cal to pull out all stops
In the1r effort to whip Mich1gan . A Trojan win coupled wit h a
so-so performance by the winner of the Alabama-Penn Stale
contest could put John Robinson's club at the top of the ratings.
In a spectacular duel between So . Cal's Charles While and
the Wolvts Rick Leach, we seethe Trojans as victors.
Munday, Jan. 1
ORANGE BOWL at Miami (N)
Oklahoma 28 Nebraska 14
The sweet smell of Orange blossoms turned into the bitter
taste of lemon for Nebraska 's Com huskers . They wound up in
a rematch w1th Oklahoma instead of the showdown for No. 1
they had hoped to have against Penn State
For Oklahoma it's ' an unexpected chance to redeem
themselves for the 17-14 defeat at the hands of Nebraska the ,•
only blemish on their 11).1 slate in 1978. Nebraska is 9-2 and' between the two clubs they hold the leadership in the offense
departinents.
How are these for slats? Rushing: Oklahoma, 427.5 yards
per game: Nebraska, 337.7. Total offense : Nebraska, 501.4
ya~ds per game: Oklahoma 48!l.3. Scoring: Oklahoma , 40
pomts per game; Nebraska , 38.2. Jove! What powerhouses !
Be that as 1t may, the Hoople nod goes to Oklahoma to win by
two touchdowns . Beatmg any te~m twlce·m one season is very
dlfflcult. . And the letdown suffered by the Nebraska team
following U1e annow1cement of the rematch is enough to do

59
Wright Sf 85 Capilal 81 (ot l
Ashland 93 Tiffin 80
Marshall 117 Rio Grande 90

BY BOYD A. RUSH
Meigs SoUCuus. Service

son. The losers had 26 tum-

Big discounts from out of the
past. .. this week only!

Se"c:l SOil

Sunday, Dec. 31
BLUEBONNET BOWL at Houston
Georg ia 27 Stanford 22
Playing under the lights, this should be a close hard-fought
contest with Georgia outlastmg Stanford.
'
Georgia , 9-1-1, better not be fooled by the Cardinals 7-4
record . Those four defeats came by one-touchdown mcu gins to
Oklahoma andSouthem Califorma, a one-point lo'" to UCLA,
and~ three-pomt defeat at the hands of Washington"" total of
16 pomts differen ce m the lour games. Jove 1Those are tough
ones to lose.
But luugh or not - kaff-kaff - Stanford IS m for another
squeaker as Georgia w1th Willie McClendon leadmg the way
puts more pmnts on the board than the Cardma1s and the1r
talented passer Steve Oils, who has accow1ted for 2,943 yards

United Press ln1ernationa 1
North Carolina 62 Cl nc;innati

What are trees for?

On fann front

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

IY takes aminute to get abattlr dial

.,.
I

•

.

'

•'

.,"•
•I

•{

ds men
hand in hand let us
offer thanks for the promise of
Peach on Earth. Your patronage
is greatly appreciated.

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE
10 Vine

Gallipolis

·'

�,._. .,..~, . . ~.-· . sy;acuse, Kentucky, upset in tourney
By MICHAEL SHALIN
UPI Sports Writer
Syracuse and Kentucky,
rated ninth and 12th,
respectively, will go at each
other, as expected, in the
Kentu cky
Invitational
tonight . The only hitch is
they 'll be playing for third

·
champions and home team,
' Rob 73-69,
·
·
· h
four free throws by
m the rug leap.
Judson in the final minute
"Our defense really wanted
. •· I-ll mols
' . coac h Lou
. ' lt,
defeated Syracuse, 64-lll, m
the llrst game and Texas Henson •ald. "I 1\'aS qmte
A&amp;M behind Vernon Smith's impressed by Syracuse. They
22 points and David Britton 's were the best defensive team
20 dumped Kentuc ky ' t he we ' ve seen a. 11 yea r . "
d ~fend in g ;_ na ti on a I
Eddie Johnson and Mark
UmMc&lt;~ted Illinois riding

place .
It 's not often that a fourteam tournament draws four
top-rated entrants. But this
mie did and Illinois and Texas
A&amp;M came away victorious
in last night 's opening round
before a capacity Rupp
Arena crowd of 23.472.

Kings' coa~h says loss
could have been worse
By MICHAEL SHALIN
UPI Sports Writer
The Phoenix Suns soundly
defeated Kansas City Friday
night, but it could have been
worse according to Kings'
Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons.
"They beat us in every
phase of the g AmP ."

bacK 52 years."
Wa s h i n g t on ,
12 7- 115 ,
Phoenix turned 1/le ball Philadelphia beat Seattle,
over 20 times in the first hall 103-95, and Denver downed
and 36 times overall. If 1/Jey Golden Sta te, 107-103.
had been able to hold on to the Celties 124, Hawks 105:
ball, the margin of victory
Cedric Maxwell scored a
would have been even wider. career-higlj 33 points and
Phoenix Coach John Mac· Dave Cowens added 22 to
Leod, accusing his team of pace Boston over Atlanta.
"just nbt staying in our Spurs 103, Bulls 92:
game, " recognized a problem
George Gervin scored 15 of
early and callep a timeout his game-high 33 points in the
just 44 seconds after the start first period to lead San
of the game, with the Kings Antonio to its sixth straight
ahead, 4-0 . "We were doing victory .
exactly the opposite of what Lakers 127, Bullets 115:
we had planned to do," he . Norm Nixon scored 20
said. "We just passed and points, handed off 12 assists
stood. we called the timeout and made seven steals to
to remind them to move and spark Los Ange les over
not just stand there."
. Washington.
Alvan Adams, who missed Sixers 103, SuperSonics 95:
three games with a sprained
Caldw ell Jones with eight
right ankle, scored 32 points points and eight rebounds in
and grabbed 14 rebounds to the third period, ralli ed
Philadelphia over Seattle for
lead the Suns.
Paul Westphal had 24, Walt the
SuperSonics' fifth
Davis 13 and Ron Lee added straight loss.
12 for the Sw1s. Bill Robinzine Nuggets 107, Warriors 103::
led Kansas City with 18.
George McGinnis scored 12
In other games, Boston of his 29 points in the final
trounced Atlanta; 124-105, San 5:40 as Denver overcame a
Antonio defeated Chicago, nine-point deficit and edged
103-92, Los Angeles topped Golden State.

Fitzsimmons said, after his
Midwest Division-leading
Kings had taken a 123-103
defeat. " If they had not been
so
sloppy
in
their
ballhandling we would have
had to go home at the half.
That first half set ba sketball

Agriculture

One gift ... greater :1:
than any other ...
given by God that
Holy Night Thanks
for your fai th.

K&amp;K

MOBILE
HOMES

Continued from C-7
Production meeting, to be held during the daytime on
Wednesday, Jan. 10, 1979,9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Holiday
Inn , here at Gallipolis.
The meeting is for Gallia and neighboring counties'
farmers in Ohio and West Virginia. I do need your reservation
if you plan to -attend by Jan. 5. A meal is included in the day's
program and will be provided courtesy of several Agribusiness firms. ·
I;ll be sending more information to most farmers in a
letter later on .
No-Till Corn Production offers a lot of advantages and
savings to fanners, particularly if they are not growing corn in
river bottoms. The purpose of this meeting is to reacquaint
producers with these advantages and savings , as well as
explaining 1/le procedure for effective No-Till corn growing. I
think 1/lat most farmers will be interested in the meeting and
we'll be glad to have you attend.
charge for this publication and I'll be glad to mail you a
copy.
.
I want to alert corn producers of a No - Till Corn

·
.
·
Snuth scored 16 pomts ap1ece
· ""·
• n L oms
·
to pace the Ill''"'·
Orr, with 16, was the only
.doubl e-f'lgure scorer f.or the
Oronge.
"We did not lose 1/le game
defensively, we just didn't
shoot we ll ' " Syra cuse Coa"h
,
Jim Boeheim_ said. "Bot/1
teams made b1g play_s late '"
1/le game but lllmo1s made
~~ . big play when they had

Peter's 67 Rutgers 58 ·· St Florida State 80 in the first
J hn'
•T
T
' h. roun· d of the Dayton
o s H100l, ennessee
56·
C
. ec
77 Invitational· Nebraska 75,
0
M'
h Ytt • rossG
' Santa Ba~bara 55 and
assac use 96s Celholic
• 7;
eorge
.
.
Washington
78· Nevada-Las Vegas
95, Middle
w k F
·t93 R' h
ds9 Tem\esseeState83int/lefirst
. at e ore\ ' '_cTm~n 69 round of 1/le Rebel Roundup ·
Nm wtho ?vetr o'mkels;h u a 63: illinois State 71 Norther~
or eas 90 LaS
a oma
'
Stet
II
76' illinois 60 and Mississippi
83
Ari,;~~ 107 , 'New M~Jco 88 ; Loyola 75 in the opening
Idaho St. 98 Seattle 80 and round of the illinois State
S F
'·
Festival and
79 S . Holiday
~~ncis~:~';;.~~ 051 ·' an Tennessee 73, San Jose State
In other tournament 68 and SetO!) Hall 79, Santa
Kentucky Coach Joe Hall games , it was Tulane 54, Clara 68 in 1/le first _round of
was quick to praise his Penn State 50 and Oayton 97, 1/le Ceble Car ClaSSIC.
opponents, who won their
ninth straight game after a
season-opening loss.
"We played a hard ballgame," Hall said. " I think
A&amp;M has a great team. They
•
kept their poise and played
well. They deserved to
win."
Why are so many drivers switchingIn , other top-rated games
their insurance to Allstate?
No_ 3-ranked UCLA thumped
We'll give you lots of reasons.
Fordham , 9a-ll4, and No. 6
All state offers lots. of special
No rth· Caroli na defeated
rates
and discoun ts. Good Driver .
Cincin nati , 62-59.
Compact
Car. 'rwo Car. Low
Roy Hamilton and David
Mileage.
Young
Married. And more.
Greenwood combined for 39
And Allstate offers today's most
points to pace UCLA, 5-l. ·
Hamilton hit llklf-14 from the
advanced claim handling. Coast
held for 20 points and
to coast. Fast. Convenient.
Greenwood hit 8-of-12 in
We think yo u'll find a
registering
19.
Ki ki
difference wi th Allstate.
Vandeweghe added 16 for the
So compare companies. Find out.
Bruins while T.K. Tripucka
why the owners of over nine
led Fordham with 20.
million
cars are now in ~'good
Pat Colescott scored 21
hands."
Ca ll or come in.
points and AI Wood added 18
to lead North Carolina, 6-1,
over Cincinnati. Cincinnati ,
led by Pat Cumm!hgs with a
NOW AVAILABLE THROUGH
game-high 28 points, pulled to
THE
within 42-39 and briefly took
McGINNESS-STANLEY AGENCY: ·
1/le lead with seven minutes
iNC,
left in the game . But the Tar
NICK JOHNSON
Heels, who led 30-29 at the
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE
hall, regained the lead with
Phone 446-1761
6:30 left and never again
2nd
A"
·
452
Gallipolis
trailed.
.
'
Elsewhere it was, St.

Find out why people all
over are switching to Allstate
auto msurance.

~

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[ I
-· ~: ·

- ~ .

1978 PiiNfiACGRAND.
PRIX ''DEMO"
bl ue with while

Loaded . Light
landau top .

1978 BUICK ELECTRA
UMITED COUPE
DEMONSTRATOR
Mrs. Smith'S: personal car .
RETAIL LIST 510,000

RETAIL LIST 17511

IS YOUR GAIN
On Jan. 1 we have to pay personal property tax
on all cars In Inventory. Rather than do this we
are closing out our inventory and passing the
savings to you.

Sale '6298
Sale '8000
1975 FORD 250
~---·----..a.......;,~~.;..;.~1 s:--tsUPERCAB r liP
1978 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE
WAS
Seats si x, heavy duty .
Hatchback , •

~

· stripe.

'

3495

$2980 ;~~; SIS!tS

Six cyl., au1oma1ic, green . Runs
WAS 11095

SALE

$780

1978 BUICK CENTURY
4 DR SEDAN "DEMO"

Air , AM. fM , 6,900 mil es.
RETAIL LIST 16191.54

Power ever yfhing, LoadRETAIL LIST 18082 .54

good, mag wheels.
WAS $1495

SALE

$879

j

"''f

Sale '6299

1974 PINTO

1972 DODGE

9

1978 PONTIAC LEMANS
COUPE "DEMO"

11976 FIREBIRD FORMULA

WAS

One very careful local owner, AM-FM-tape,
power windows, appearance pkg.

IS

'4995

1976 VQLKSWAGON DASHER

1978 CHEVROLET MALIBU COUPE

Ohio politics

Despite ·denials, reports say deal attempted
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Although there are stout
denials, reports persist that
Gov. James A. Rhodes tried
to make a deal with
Democratic legislative
leaders in which they would
okay money for an out-ofcourt settlement in the Kent
State case in return for his
approval of. a legislative pay
raise .
If there was any deal, it fell
through after the legislators

got 1/leir pay raise.
something to give him in wraps, the governor, through
But here's why such an return. If his attorneys could an aide, communicated the
agreement made sense and arrange an out -o f-court possibility of an out-o f-eourt
how it could have bee n settlem ent of the $46 million settlement for $600,000 to topaccomplished :
civil suit in 1/le 1970 Kent rank e d
Demo c raH c
First, there was SOlllething State shootings case, state legislative leaders.
in it for bot h parties. Majority money would be needed to
There woul d be no
Democrats had stuck their ba ck it up.
settlement unless the money
ne cks out on the pay raise
Who controls th e state was there , and a retrial of the
bill, cu tting acruss both pur se
strings ?
Th e Kent State case would go
publi c wrath a~d the Democratic majority in the forth , bringing about tne
indignation of. 1/le Certer L eg islature,
mor e possibility of additional civil
administration in specifi.cally a tight little fiscal liability to Rhodes , state
Washin gton. Rhod es was agency called the Controlling military officials and Ohio
their only friend .
Board.
National Guard officers.
Second,
they
had
Keepin g everything under
Meanwhile, Rhodes signed

By WIWAM H. ALLEN

United Press International
Last-minute Christmas
shopping comes but once a
year, and despite the threat
~! a recession, holiday gift
buyers were out in Iorce
Saturday in aid of Santa
Claus.
·
As people hustled and
bustled through the crowds at
stores, children made their
lith-hour requests of the jolly
old man with the long, white
beard. Millions turned their
thoughts to celebrating the
birth of Jesus Christ in
Bethlehem and to finding the
spirit of Christmas.
Even though the cost of
living is soaring ·and a
recession has been predicted,
shoppers turned out in great
numbers at the nation's retail
stores. .

William Phippa, executive
vic e pr esident of the
Retailers Association of
Massachusetts , said sa les
were up 3 to 4 percent over
last year. New York retailers
said sales volume was equal
to or greater than that of
ChristmaS 1977, with jogging
gear, cosmetics, jewelry and
electronic games in heavy
demand .
.
But others pointed out the
holiday means more than
buying presents .
One Santa Claus in Maine
said he enjoys listening to the
children who come to sit on
his knee and tell him their
wishes.
" Children's eyes are
honest," he said. "!look into
a child's eyes and he says, '!
lo ve you' without even
speaking a word . I want to
tell th em I love them ''

Other Santas, like 84-yearold Jim Yellig of Santa Claus,
Ind., had no thoughts of
retiring. Yellig has had the
job nearly hall a century,
Insteads of 1/le dolls and
fishing poles be was asked for
when he sta rted, ch ildren
now want r oc ket ships,
airplanes and mi crowave
oven s.
'"Star Wars' toys are No.
1," he said.

In White Plains , N.Y.,
attorneys for S. Claus and
Environmental
Protection
Agency officials reached an
out-of-court settlement on a
complaint about a new
"pooper-scooper" law. As a
result, Santa will not have to
stop to clean up after Rudolph
and the other reindeer.
'"The motion by the EPA
was withdrawn after Mr.

'5495

Californi a Association of
Highway Patrolmen added
$5, 000 and the California
State Employees Association
$1,000.
The victims, killed early
Friday, were Roy Blecher,
50, and William M. Freeman ,
35, both shot in 1/le head
beside their !'lack and white
cruiser.
One was hand cuffed and
killed by a shot fired point·
blank. " This was an
execution, pure and simple,"
said a CHP officer at the
scene. ·
The bodies were discovered
along fog-shrouded Interstate

house and the second und'lf a
By JACK LESAR
portion of the concrete floor
CHICAGO
(UPI)
in
the ga rage," Stein said.
Investigators are preparing
"They
were just skeletonized
to search for more bodies at a
remains
.n
house located In an area near
Besides
the two ba gs
O'Hare Airport northwest of
containing
the
two skeletons,
Chicago owned by a
Stein
said,
he
was given
convicted sex offender.
another
human
bone
at about
Two bodies were found in
when
midnight
Thursday
1/le crawl space under the
house Thursday and "there is the bodies were first
reason to believe" there are discovered.
"But this, as I say, was just
more bodies buried under the
ranchstyle house, Cook a bone," Stein said. "So, I
County Medical Examiner prefer to say just two bodies
(were found )."
Dr. Robert J. Stein said.
Searchers removed all of
' Investigators said more
1/le
furniture from 1/le bouse
bodies might · be found in
Friday
night. They planned to
"mounds of earth" under the
resume
their work at the
crawl space of the house . One
house
at
8 a.m. Sheriff's
said the count could rise to 32,
poli
ce
deputies
were
by the admission of the
to
guard
1/le
house.
stationed
accused killer, John Wayne
Gacy formally was charged
Gacy,
36,
a . stocky
oonstruction firm operator . Friday with the murder of a
" We found two bodies; one ·teen-ager who vanished the
In the crawl space of the same · day his mother

'3195

r

11977 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO •4995
Good clean

1978CAMARO

~ion~ulomatic, 6.000

m iles, showroom

1976 CHEVROLET VEGA SW

'2195

Locally owned, complete se rvi ce records.

car, metallic blue.

SALE
'5495

1971 BUICK
LESABRE 2 DOOR

SALE

1971 BUICK

1974 NOVA 4 DOOR
6 c'yl., automatic,

'1795

green.

80 by a patrolling Yolo County
Sheriff's deputy who heard
the shots in th e early·
morning darkness.
Blecher, a 21-year veteran
of the for ce, and Freeman,
who served 12 years and
whose two brothers are
patrolmen, were
both
married and fat/lers, the CHP
said.
An arrest warrant was
issued for a suspect identified
as Anthony P. Carlo or Carbo,
but authorities said th ere was
a chance tlle name was
ficticious.
The suspect was described
by a passing motorist as 5-7,

reported he planned to ask
Gacy for a job. Gacy
operated PDM Construction
Co. from his home .
. Gacy, sporting a mustache
and the beginnings of a
beard, hung his head and .
spoke softly as he appeared
before Cook County Circuit
Associate Judge ·Marvin
Peters.
He was ordered held after
Assistant State's Attorney
Terry Sullivan argued
"numerous bodies" have
been found in 1/le crawl space
under Gacy's house.
Peters issued two search
warrants' to investigate
Gacy's house and garage.
Des Plaines Police Chief
Lee Alfano said the house
would be dismantled In the
sea rch for more bodies.
"They ~ ll rip out anything
necessary," he said.
One investigator, who

'1797

'1995

in his early 20s, with bushy
brown hair , wearing a
sweatshirt and perhaps
driving a light-colored
compact car.
Information
for
the
warrant was based on a
temporary . driver's license
i8sued the day before in
Vallejo, Calif., and found at
the scene. But the CHP said
the address listed on the
license was not valid.
Investigators at the scene
said evidence, including the
way 1/le CHP cruiser was
parked, indicated the two
officers were ma king a
routine traffic stop.

asked not to be identified,
was quoted in 1/le Chicago
Tribune as saying Gacy had
said th ere were at least 32
bodies beneat/1 the crawl
space, garage flo or, and in
the nearby Des Plaines
River.
"He has confessed that he
had sex with 1/le boys and
1/len strangled 1/lem," the
investigator was quoted .
"They were all young boys,
and 1/le sex occurred in his
home, after he got 1/lem there
through
promises
of
employment. "
The bodies were so badly
decomposed
it
was
impossible to determine ages
or sex. Investigators said
1/ley believe the victims were
boys in their late teens.
A check of missing persons
reports showed at least two
other employees of Gacy's
firm disappeared two years
ago, officers said.
Authorities said Gacy was
convicted on a sodomy
charge in Waterloo, Iowa , in
1968 and served time in state
prison in Anamosa unttl his
parole in 1971.

name in tussle

SALE

28.722 low miles, radio, runs good.

$295

'1595

$1100
.

ITH BUIC -PO TIAC
EASTERN AVENUl

..

"Come In And Browse Around"

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

A CLOCK FOR CHRISTMAS- The staff the Ohio Valley Publishing Co., which inC
chides The Point Pleasant Register, The Gallipolis Tribune, The Pomeroy Sentinel and The
.Belpre Observor, presented Its publisher Richard Owen with a regulator clock for Christmas at its annual Christmas dinner-dance Friday evening. The.event, which was hosted by
the Register staff, was held at the Moose Hall . Also pictured or·e Steve Halstead, center, and
Jitr.IFisher, both of the Point Pleasant Register .

i.&gt;e~Jl.

Majority Democrats on the
Controlling .Board were put
Wlder tremendous pressure
to go along with the request
for $600,000 plus $75,000 in
legal fee s and court costs.
·It was noon by the time the
board convened for business,
and the retrial was to begin at
1:30 p.m. Members were told
by a lawyer for Rhodes and
by state Attorney General
William J . Brown that the

settlement would fall through
if the money were not
approved in 90 minutes.
As I :30 arrived, th e board
dumped the settlement .
Democrats were irritated at
being put under the gun. They
wondered aloud who leaked
th e news of 1/le settlement,
comp lained that the full
Legis lature should take
responsibility for providing
1/le money and chafed at the
possibility that they could be
sued
themselv es
for
mi sappropriation of ·fun ds.

WASHINGTON (UP! )
Norval Morris, avoiding a
bitter fight with 1/le gun lobby
and Senate conservatives,
has agreed to withdraw as
President Carter's nominee
to ·head 1/le Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration .
The National Rme Association · and conservatives
opposed the nomination of the
Univer•ity of Chicago law
school dean because be
advocat~s tough federal gun
licensing regulations and
favors removing , criminal
penalties for so-called
victimless crimes - such as
gambling,
public
'drunkenness, use of drugs
and abortion.

Though the idea of saving
th e state seve ral million
dollars through an immediate
settlement was tempting, the
board members reasoned
thay could _gamble ; that if
Rhodes were held for
damages, it might also be
proven 1/la t he exeeded the
powers of his offi ce and could
be held personally liable.
In 1/lat event, James A.
Rhodes, millionaire, would be
foo ting the bill and not the
governor and 1/le taxpayers
of Ohio. No deal.

VOL. 13 NO. 47

~

SUN DAY, DECEMBER 24, 1978

PAGE 1-b

- - - - - - --

Claus' attorneys furnished ·
evidence to show the reindeer
would comply with the laws,
as 1/ley fly through the air
deliv e ring Ch ri s tm a s
presents," said Chief Clerk
Francis Marin of the New
York Supreme Court in
Westchester County.
Third graders of St. Luke's
School in New York took a
giant Christmas card across
1/le street to Engine Co. 83
and Ladder Co. 29.
" Dear firemen ," the card
said. " TI1ank you for saving
our church . It would have
been a sad Christmas if we
had no St. Luke Church to
pray in . God bless you.
(signed) Third graders."
Firemen had kept a blaze in
a vacant building adjacent to
the church from spreading to
the church itself Su nday
night.

Nominee removes

'1695

1973 KINGSWOOD ESTATE
WAGON Qle owner . 9, passenger,, brown . ·

.

,· ,.....__..

•1·
1
m•
}
g
Reward offered in cops' k
By REBECCA LaVALLY
SACRAMENTO,
Calif.
(UP!) - Rewards totaling
$16,000 have been offered for
infonnation leading to the
killer of two California
Highway Patrolmen whose .
bodies were found alongside a
fog-shrouded freeway.
Authorities have only a
vague description of the
gmunan who left behind a
driver's license which may be
phony . They said he is
believed to have bushy hair
and to have been wearing a
sweatsh lrt .
Gov . Edmund G. Brown
offered a $10,000 reward, the

ment money was out on the
table, the trial was about to

junbau ~imts - itnfintl

Holiday gift .buyers
out in force Saturday

More dead sought by probers

1977 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO

the legislative pay bill wit/1
lightning speed, only two
hours after he received it,
ostensibly to "g ive the
legislators time to change
their minds " and reenact it at
a lower figure. Odds on 1/lat
possibility were the same as
1/lose on Cleveland finding
surplus money.
Then things went awry .
Word of the impe nding
settlement leaked out . The
day of the retrial approached .
And by the time the
governor 's reque st for settle-

THE L&amp;Z DRESS Shop on E. Main St., Pomeroy , is
now under new management. The shop held a contest to
rename the store which will now be called "Two's

...

Company ." Pictured are left to right, Donna Hatfield, coowner, f'racy Riffle, and Denise Riffle, winners of the
contest, and Brenda Roush, co-owner.

Jim Jones murdered,
coroner jury decides
GEORGETOWN , Guyana
- The Rev. Jim Jones was
murdered and did not die by
his own hand in the mass
suicide he ordered for more
1/lan 900 of his followers in in
a jungle co mmune in
Guyana , a coroner's jury has
ruled.
The jury, handing down its
verdict Friday after six days
of hearings in the jungle town
of Matt/l ew's Ridge near the
Jone stown commune, did not
explain its decision that
Jones was murdered.
The jury of four men and
four women also did not

elaborate on the ev1den ce
1/lat led it to conclude Jones
had did not commit suicide
despite testimony from a
patholo gist that the cult
leader s'
death
was
"consistent with every case
of suicide I have known.
But the jury did rule that
the charismatic Jones was
criminally responsible for the
deaths of 912 members of his
Peoples Temple commune,
mo si of whom died by
drink ing a.cyanide-laced fruit
punch from a large vat on
Nov. 18.
•
Jone s ordered the mass
suicide the night California

Rep . Leo Ryan and four
others were murdered as
they tried to leave the
Jonestown commune with 16
Peoples Temple defectors .
Jones was found with a bullet
wound behind his right ear.
Dr. Leslie Mootoo, a
pathologist who exma in ed
Jones' body, testified at the
hearing that Jones ' wound
was in the "suicide area '· of
the brain, above and slightly
behind his ear.
"This is consistent with
every case of suicide that I
have
known in
my
expe rience," Mootoo sa id.

Flexibility new rule set by EPA
By EDWARD K. DELONG
WASHINGTON (UP!) The
Environmental
Protection Agency, departing
from its old techniques of
rigid regulation, has issued a
mpre flexible set of air
pollution rules und er which
industries can create their
own cleanup programs.
Officials
say
the
experimental "bubble "
cleanup plan, as they call it,
should reduce pollution just
as effectively as the old
techniques but should cost
much less. ·
.
.They say the experiment is
iln attempt to reduce the
amount of inflation caused by
clean air programs.
An EPA spokesman said
fi'riday the new plan allows
such industries as steel
producers,
chemica l
companies, ~uta makers ,
electric utilities and oil
refiners to determine 'how
much pollution to allow from
each process. Under the old

technique, rigid standards
were set by the EPA for each
process.
The name " bubble" was
given to the new program
because a theoretical dome of
air is identified over each
plant and 1/le air in 1/lat dome
must meet the original total
pollution standard.
Officials gave as an
example of the potential
savings an oil refinery in
which it might cost $4,300 to
clean up a ton of pollution
escaping from leaks in pipes
but only $50 a ton to eliminate

th e same amount of pollution
by tightening up storage tank
and
preventing
roofs
evaporation.
By placing strict controls
on the tanks and less rigid
ones on th e pipes, th e
com pany might meet its
goals and at 1/le same time
save $4,250, officials said .
Such saviitgs could be passed
on to conswners - a major
advantage at a time when
th ere are concerns about
potential conflicts between
air pollution and economic
goals.

Th e coroner 's finru report
said all bu t three of Jones ' 912
followers died of "acute cyanide poiso nin g' ' an d the
others perished from bullet
wounds.
In Georgetown, 120 miles
away, another hearing
inv estigating Ryan's death
heard testimony that Jones
at first refused to allow
Rya n's party into the
commune.
Ne ville Annibourne, a
Guyanese reporter who was
with Ryan's party, said that
when they arrived at the Port
Kaituma airstr ip the day
before the massacre, Jones at
first refused to allow them
into hi s cornmWle.
But Temple lawyers Mark
Lane and Cha rles Garry
inter vened, however, and
persuaded Jones to admit
them, Annibourne said.
Annibou rn e's test imony
came on the seventh day of
hearings on charges aga inst
cult member Larry Layton,
who is accused of five counts
of murder in 1/le deaths of
Ryan, NBC staffer s Bob
Brown and Don Harris, San
Fr a ncisco
Examiner
photog rapher Greg Robinson
and temple defector Patricia
Parks.
The hearing . recessed for
the Christmas holidays.

•

Weather
Rain today, with highs in
middle or upper 40s.

PLANS TREATS
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse fire station will
have treats for Syracuse
community youngsters 12 and
under at 2 p.m. today. This
event is sponsored by the
Auxiliary of the fire department.

- ~
PICTURED ABOVE ARE the remains of the restroom facilities at the roadside rest in
K.anauga . Restrooms at the SR 7 park were destroyed by vandals Thursday nlght.-'l=lle Ohio
Departmento!Transportation reports that the fixtures needed to repair the damage are not
currently in stock. The facillty has been closed for an indeterminate period of time. Thursday evening's act of vandalism is a violation of state law.

•

•

�0~3 - The Su11day T iiiil'S,'\t·rlt int·l, Stuu lav . llt't ·. :~~ . 1\Ji ll

D-2- TheSunday 'fimes.Senmei,Sunday, DeC. 24, 197R..

It seems that since 19 19 .
stories, unsubstant iated by
medical fur scientific fat1,
have been busy drc ula lin ~
about the belov ed plant.

Poisoning the
Poll,.settia myth

According to these rumurs.

t he ' poinsettia can be
hazardous to your healt h!
To resolve the charges
against
the poinsett ia , and to
which will induce thos e
BY SAU..YANNE HOLTZ
ldleviate
public concern over
GALUPOUS - Red is fur sm iles.
its
alleged
toxicity, the floral
Santa Claus suits and ChristAh, poinsettia plants. The
indu
s(ry
launch
ed an in mas and little girls' noses un
jolly red nowers which are
cold, winter days. Red is for nearly the epitome of Chrisi- tensive investigati on. The
candy canes and warm,
mas . But, according to the Society of American Florists,
woolen stockings hung over a Florist Information Com- horticulture's national trade
festive fireplace . But red is mittee, the poinsettia seemJ. association representing
also for smiles and the to have been getting quite a. 50,000 U. S. industrymen,
thousands of poinsettia plants bit ol bad press In the last. 50 collaborated with The Ohio
State University on a poin·
given as gifts this Christmas years.
seltia research project. The
objective was to ·determine
whether there was any trutli
to the allegation that the
poinsettia is a poisonous
plant.
11le study, conducted .bY
.HOW CHRISTMAS CAME TO THE POORHOUSE
Hobert P . Stone and W. J .
As Told by the Rose that Grew In the
Collins, members of the
Poorhouse Window
Academic Faculty of EnBY EDEN E. REXFORD
tomology,
established that
One day there came to the poorhouse a woman whose head was
when
given unusually
rats,
white
high
doses
of
various portions
With the snows of sixty odd winters, and never a sadder sight
the
poinsett'ia
plant ,
of
Have I seen--and I've seen lull many! than the poor old
no
mortality
, no
showed
wrinkled face,
symptoms
of
toxicity,
and
no
All wet with. tears as they left her in the pauper's lodgingchanges
of
dietary
intake
or
place.
general behavior pattern.
Animal tests are accepted
"I don't want to die in the poorhouse," she said with a heartas valid by the United States
breaking moan.
'
Consumer Products Safety
And the grlef of the poor old creature would have touched a
Commission in determining
heart of stone.
whether any product or
" Why couldn't they let me stay there?-it wouldn't be long 1
natural growth is hazardous
!mow!.
'
to
human health.
And end my days in the old home? Oh, how can they ireat me
1975, approximately
In
so?"
25 ,000,000 poinsettia plants
were found in American
By and by she told me her story. Her husband had long been
homes.
dead.
The poinsettia derives its
"He.died when Benny, my youngest, was ten years old,'' she
· name from Joel R. Poinsett ,
SBld.
.
American Ambassador to
"An'l've been so glad, so thankful, that he didn't live to know
Mexico in 1851. He introduced
What was in the hearts of the.children that be ioved and trusted
the plant into the U. S. so that
so.
. Americans could enjoy its
seasonal loveliness. The
" 'My children, be kind to your mother, • he told 'em the day he
poinsettia has also been
died.
called
the Eastern flower,
'I know you will care for her always,' an • he called 'em to his
lobster
flower , Mexican
sideflame
leaf,
and Christmas
Robert an' Marthy, an' Sarah, an' 'Promise me, children,' said
·flower.
As
a Christmas
he;
flower,
it
has
been popular
An' they promised that they would be kind to an' always take
for
generations
in American
care o' me.
homes and churches. It has
"Robert, the oldest, was twenty when his father died, in May,
won a special place in the
An' he took things into his own hands in a masterful kind 0 •- · hearts of American people.
·. •
Poinsettias offered lor sale
way.
An' if I tried to adv~ him he wouldn't lis'en to me,
. ' In our country are cultivated'
'For women don't understand b'ishness, though they think they
and grown in greenhouses.
do,' said he.
Because of concentrated
plant breeding and selection,
these
plants are very hardy.
"So it wasn't long afore Robert had everything all 'is own way.
are now available in
They
An' ruther than live in a jangle, I didn'thave much to say.
colors
ranging
from
An' itseemedasifMarthy an' Sarah had somehow got the idee
to
wlilte,
traditional
scarlet
That they knew better than I did, an' they wouldn't lis'en to
pink and variegated.
me.
II you receive one of these
"BeMy an'l--poor Benny, who loved me better than they- . plants for Christmas, be sure
to:
We !mew that ·we wasn't wanted, we felt we was both in the
Place it In a room with
way;
sufficient
natural light to
But we just hel' fast to each other, an' he'd tell me of many a
read
fine
print.
plan
Avoid any drafts or excess
That was goin' tu make things diff'rent when he got to be a
heat
from 'appliances,
man.
radiators and ventilating
"It seemed as if Robert jest hated the boy for his share in the
ducts. Select a place to put
farm.
the plant which is up and out
An' he blamed him for this thing an' that thing, tho' he never
of traffic, keep out of the way
of unmonitored children and
was guilty of harm;
An' at last I said, "Benny, don 't stay here' It'll kill me to have
animals.
P ut plant In a water-proof
you used so.
It'll be awful lonesome without you, but I'll stan' it-jest pack , . container to protect furup an • go.'
, nishings.
Water plant thoroughly
"An' he went. 'Run away ,' Robert told 'em. 'Good riddance,'
when soil is dry to touch,
.. always discard the excess
says Marthy, says she.
But it seemed as ther'd ben a lun 'ral an' the only mourner was '-water.
me.
Ideal temperatures should
Oh, BeMy, my Benny, my baby ' He loved me, an' what would never exceed 72 degrees day
he say
or 60 degrees night to
If he !mew I was here in the poorhouse, an' they called me a prolong the color of
When bracts fade, cut plant
pauper ~ay?
hack to eight inches to grow
"By an' by, when Robert got marri'd, the girls said that they as a foliage plant. It may be
placed o ut-of-doors when
wouldn't stay
To be bossed 'round by his wife; an' left home, an' they live in outside temperat ures are
warm. Avoid temperatures
the city to-day.
Marthy marri'd a man that's got money - they say he's as below 50 degrees at night
throughout the summer.
rich as can be;
·
Return to a room to direct
But she'll let me die here in the poorhouse-an' Sarah's as
light 6-8 hours dally, with ti0cruel as she.
70 'd egree night tem"Robert's wife~e was allus ag'inst me, an' Robert would peratures. For reflowering In
the winter, starting Oct. I,
say she was right,
An' I couldn't do nothin' to suit 'em-lt was lind fault from avoid artificial light at night.
morln' to night.
I tried hard to make 'em no trouble, I wanted to earn my own

A Christmas Poem

J\nd when they were come

el

into the house, they saw
young child with Mary, His m

I

er, andI

fell down, and worshipped Him:
and when they had opened
their treasures, they presented
unto Him gifts; gold, and
frankincense, and myrrh.
Matthew 2:11

r•'\

'•

We too exult in the divine miracle of the
Holy ~irth and hope the gifts of its eternal
message of Love, Faith and Hope are yours

now and forever. At this time of joy and
inspiration we extend sincere gratitude to
our friends.

The Sunday Times Sentinel

That y o u ' re no t really go ne
.
But
wh en Christma s comes
without you
We Know that we w ere wro ng
A nd as we tri m our Christmas

"I wonder if Robert, an' Marthy, an' Sarah'll think today
Of the mother they sent to the poorhouse, to get her out o' the
way.
AB they're eatin' their Christmas dinner? God grant they may
never know
What it i8 to have their children turnin' ag'inst 'em so.

tree

With lights of every hue
The brightes t star on th e very top
Will sh ine wi th love l or you
~~u~h!e~ S~o:o~ . __ .

''I wlah I could hear from Benny, jest a word from IBm to-day,

~M&lt;t~~~ ; ' t

To say that ·he loves his mother as he did when he went way.
Us'en! There'ssomebodylmockin'! I'll go to the door an' seeMebbethe chlldren are sorry, an' aresendin' after me!"

lOST : BLACK , shi ny ladi es billfo ld
fJomeroy busi ness section.
'l.J Need papers in it badly . Libera'
The door swung hack on its hlnl{es to let the vlsltor oaat.
rewo rd . Please cal l Margaret
"Mother! My poor, old mother, it's Benny come back at laBt!" · Neuman . f,lq7-3450 .
She felt his strong arms round her, his kl.sa on her wither~

FJ.i.~".~

8

sob that choked her, she Whispered, "0h, my
.,.

;,

'

Thank God 1 1sh8 •0 •t d'1e in the poorh0\lle,1" And tbe bells all ·
rang f« joy!
·
· '
('Ibis poem Is eighty years old. Besale ~rk. GaWpoli ~ , •\.
Qblo)

•

•

' ' ' ;.~.

·
. . RUTL AND HAHDWAH[ . Rutland ,

Y

•

n

.,:.r.- in

speak.
'Olen, with
bo 1

•·

Ry Rcrnard t ·. Nichm,
Ph .D.
GALLIPOLIS- Christmas is
a difFi cult t im e for ma ny fulks
to get throul!,h, an.,r ding I ll
clinicians at the t:a llia ·
J LickS-un · Meigs Co mmunity
Menta l Hea lth Center .
F or some, the l11ristmas
depress ion has to d ~o with
loved ones who are absent.
For other s, Christmas wa s a
di sappointi ng, hurt ful ex perience in youth.
" Tho u~ full y grown , we
usually remain a child at
heart." acco rding to Dr .
David DeRita, Director of
Clinic al Ser vices at th e
mental health center. "This ,
Is especially true at Christ-

. mas. "
The mystique of the perfect
family Ch r ist ma ~ ham.;s 11n.

•

'·

Oh1a. New Year's lnll'e rrtory
Sale . All wood and coo l !&gt; tove!i
elect• ic and ~ ero~ene heat er s,
tool box OS , ll'I C"C hOI'Iir ol toOlS.
SO(' ~ e l se t wrcnt h 0 11 d (•l ccl rk
ap p!i(m ( ('!. . Dro.;l i&lt;n lly re-riu r
ed .

C.SlJl!ctany tllUse
whose ho liday memories &lt;JI' C
pai nful. nml whu tw vc yet tu
~i v c up secret fan tasic.s abl tut
San1a . .he said.
In u u .~:.t t·ascs, ;n:t'u rding tu
Dr. IJcH itJ, the holidays only
amplify existing problems.
" Fulk s whu feel sumcwhat
wit hdr awn an d a li enat ed
during the rest uf the year are
more apt to feel cvcryune el se
is home with loving family
and presents while they arc
o uts id e wit h their nose
pressed aga inst the window
depres!'ilng

the Chr istmas blues include
ta king especially good care of
yo urself, perhaps _g ivin g
y ourself a Chri stmas present.
Go
t11
church ,
.I hat
fee ls
goo d
iI
fn!· yuu. Heaching out to
a fr iend whom yo u know to be
u~d e r st t~ n d in g . and
s up·
pot1ive is often helpful.
C.u un sc l in g r e m a i ns
available around the clock
through the Crisisline and
Bill Kiser urges those lonely
and hurting lu usc thi.!:i free
"A
t ele phone se rv ice.
p ane."
t'ri endly voice ias as close as
Bi ll Ki se r, Cn sisli ne your phone, " he said .
Coordinator, pointed out that
Coun seling n!J..mbers are
in some ways Christmas is a 446-5;54 in Gallia , 992-5554 in
sel-up for disappumlmcnt. Meigs and 286-5554 in
" It 's id ea lize d bcy und .Ja ckson .
rea lity," he sa id
Sugge.'Jti !Jns for handling

POMEROY
Eight
defendant s were fined and 13
other s for.fei ted bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Robert E.
Buck were Stephen Jewell,
Pomeroy , $5 and costs, no
headlights; P earl Hutchison.
Wellston, $10 and costs ,
assured clear di st anc e;
Densil Dodson, Cheshire, $150
and cost s, spotlighting, $50
and costs , shooting deei from
pu blic road : Charles W.
Bak er , Seven Hills, Ohio, $14
and cost s, speeding; Vernon
B. Allen, Barnsville, $12 and
costs, spe,eding; James W.
Clifford , Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $13 ·
and costs, speeding ; John J .
Maley, Middleport, $20 and
costs, illgal pa ssing; William
S. Bentley , Jr., Rt. I, Shade,
$35 and cost s , expired
operator's license.
Forfeitin g bond-s were
Donnie Barrin ger , Rt. 1,
Reedsville , $30, 50, no license
plates; .James McHaffie, Rt.
I, Portland, $360.50, OWl ;
Marion Snider, Racin e, $53,
disorderly conduct ; William
Barnhart , Rt. 3,' Pomeroy,
$34 .50 , spee ding; Patri cia
Hamm , Colum bus, $35 .50,
speeding; David A. Johnston ,
John son . Ohio , $45.35,
overload :
Edward
J.
Burgwin, Belpre, James H.
Barclay . Je llico , Tenn .,

Final winners
are named

Visiting priest
here two days

POMEROY - Scred Heart
Church in Pomeroy will have
a visitng priest, the Rev.
Father
Leo
Gillen,
Steubenville, who will help ·
with services at the church
Sunday and Monday.
Father Gillen will celebrate'
the Sacrament of Reconciliation on Sunday with the
schedule includin g : 7:30-8
a.m .; 8:3{1-9 a.m. ; 9:30-10
a.m:; 11-11 :30 a.m .; 7-7:30
p.m. and 8-9 p.m.
Father Gillen will celebrate
the Saclflce of Mass at 7:30
p.m. on Sunday.
The masses for Christmas
Eve are 7:30 and 12 midnight
and the 9 a .m. on Christ ma ~
Day.
·

Terry L. Groves, (;a lllpolis,
F rederick C. Woods, Kirkersville, Ohio , Lucille Holden,
Athens, and Douglas Allen,

ea ch,
$3U .o0
Racin e,
speeding; J ohn E. Craig,
Kennesa w, Ga, $32. 50 ,
speeding.

,

'

'

6.t3;

Peach Bow l 8. 10; Not For Women Only IS; P iccad illy Ci r cu s 33.
1 : 3~D a y s of Our Lives 3, 15; 2:PG--One Lite To Li ve

6,13; 2 : 3~ D octo rs 3. 15; Si ng 'We Nbel 33.
3:liD--Hollywood Squares 3,1 5; General Hospital 6,13 :
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Movi e " The Bells of St.
M ar ys " 17 ; Messi ah 33 .
3 · 3Q--, F iesla Bowl 3, 15 ; Over Easy20.

4 Oll-Mer v Griffin 6; NB A Basketbal l S, 10; Sesame St.
20,33 : M ovie " A Christmas Car ol" 13.
5:0G--M ister Roger s 20,33 .
5 : 3~ N ews

6; Elec. Co. 20.33; Beverly Hi llbillies 17 .

5:45-Songs l or Chris t mas 13.

8,10.13: ABC News 6; Zoom 20 ; Andy
Gr ifl ith 17; Studio See 33.

6 : 0~ N ews

6: 3(}-NBC News 3, 15; Car ol Burnett &amp; Frie nds 6 : CB S

News 8,10; My Three Sons 17; Over Easy 20,33.
7:0G-Cross.Wi ts 3; New lywed Game 6; Marty Rob -

bins' Spotl ight 8; News 10 ; Johnny Cash : Concert
Behi nd P rison Walls 13, Jack Van lmpe 15; Carol
Burnett &amp; Fr iends 17 : Alman ac 20; K no w Your

Schools 33,.
7:31)-That Nashv i lle M usic 3; Muppet Show 6; M atch
Game PM 8; Wild Klrqdom 10; Santord &amp; Son 17;
MacN ei l-L ehr er Report 20,33 .

'

B OD-e Little House On The Pr air ie 3, 15 ; Pilot 13;

Harps 20 .
10:QO- Lou Gran t 8, 10; To Be Announ ced 20.
10 :3D-Crocke tt ' s Victory Ga r den 20 .

ll :IJQ-News 3,6, 8,10,1 3,15; Dick Cavett 20 ; Hogan 's
Heroes 17; Vi sions 33 .

TUESDAY , DECEM8ER 26, 1978
5:3D-World at Large 17; 5:•5-Farm Repo rt 13; 5:50PT L Club 13; 5:55-Sunr i se

Sem es t~r

10

6 : 2~
Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6:31)-Romper Room 17; 6:45-M orning Report J ;
6: 5Q--Good M orning , West Vi r ginia 13; 6 : 55~ Chuck White Reports 10; News 13 .

6:01l-PT LC iub 15; 700 Club B: 6:11l-News 17 :

7:oo-Toda y 3,4.15: Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; _ Sc hoolles 10 ; Thr ee Stooges Litt l e
l&lt;ascal s 17 .
7:15-Weath er 33; 7: 30- Fam i ly Affair 10; B ig B l ue

Swaoaar l 15; Chri st lor the World 17.
8: 00--Mor mon Choir 3; Grace Cathedral 6; Reviv al of
Am erica 7; Chri st for the World 13 ; Little White
Church on th e Hill 15; Three Stooges &amp; Friends 17 ;

Marble 33.
a:oo--Capt . Ka ng aroo 8.10; Leave It To Beaver 17;

Sesame St. 20.

Sesame 51. 33 .

8:3G-Ora l ROberts 3; Celebrat ion of Praise 6,· Day of
Di scovery 8; J am es Robison Presents 10; Willard
Wilcox 13; Open Bi ble 15.
9:0o-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3 ; Rex Humbard 6; 'Rev .
Leonard Rep ass 8; Oral Roberts 10; T r uth That
Marches On 13; Er nest Angl ey 15; Lo st in Space 17;
Mi ster Rog er s 20.
.
9: 30- lt Is Wr itten 10; Let The Bible Speak 13 ; Sesame

8:3D-Hazel 17 ; 9 : 00---M erv Griffin 3; Emer genc y One
6; Hogan ' s Heroe s 8; M.atch Game 10 ; P hi l
Do nah ue 13 ; Lucy Show 17; M ar ie Cr ur 1e 33 .
9:3D-- Brady Bunch 8; Hogan's HeroeS 10; Gr een Acres ·

17.
10 IJO-Card Shar ks 3,15; Edge of ~ghU ; Alt In The
Family 8, 10 ; LJ atlnO Game 13-t M oVh! " CbCkleshell
Heroes" 17 .
10 :30-Jeopardy 3, 15; Andy Griffith 6; P r ice is R i ght

.

lo .oo=-chri st is the Answer 3; Chur ch Ser v ice 4; Kids
Ar e People Too 6 ,· Chr istian Center B; Mov ie " The
L adies' M an" 10 ; Jimmy Swaggart 13 ; Gospel
singi ng J1bi lee 15; Haz:el 17
10 : 30--Re x Humbard 3; Yours for the Asking 4; Ernest
Angl ey 8; World To morrow 13; Movi e " Mr . Smith
, Goes to Wa sh ington " 17; Fr eestyle 20.
11 :00--0octors on Ca ll 3; Re x Hum bard 15; Rev .

8,10: $20.000 Pyramid 13.
11:oo-High Rol lers 3, 15; Hap py Days 6, 13 ; Wil d
Hor ses , Broke n W i ngs 33 .
11 :3o-Wh eel of Fortune 3,15; F amil y Feud 6, 13 . Lo v e
of Life 8,1 0; 11: 55----CB S News 8; House Call 10;
News 17 .
12 :00-Newscenter 3; News 6,10 ; Young &amp; the Re s Hess
8; Midday Magazine 13; Am er ica Al ive 15 ; Love,
Amer ican Style 17 : F indhorn 33
12:3Q-Ryan ' s H ope 6, 13; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10;
Elec . Co. 20 ; Movie "The M an Who Fin al l y D ied "

Henry Mahan 13 ; Elec. Co. 20.

11 : 3().-At I ss ue ~; Anima ls, Ani!Tlals·, Animals 6; Face
the Nation 8; Wild Kingdom 13; Zoom 20 ; 1.1: s ~
NFL F unnies 10.
12 :0G-Meet T he Press 3,1 5; Golf High l ights 6; NF L
Today 8,10; Rev . R. A. We st 13; Prisoner ~0 .
12:3().- Voyage to t he Botfom of the Sea 3; D i rections 6;

17.
1:00-Hollywood Squares 3; A ll M y Ch i ldren 6, 13 ;
Young &amp; the Re stless l O; Not For Women Only 15;
Piccadilly Circus 33 .
I :3(}-0ays of Our Lives 3, 15; A s The, World Turns 8, 10;

NFC Play Off 8, 10; Evange li sti c Outreach 13; This
Is The Lite 15.
1:Do-Steeping Beauty 13 ; In sight 15: Simple Gifts : Six

2:oo-Qne Life to Live 6,13 ;

Ep isodes fo r Chri stmas 20.; Chris tm as Heritage 33.
30--Movie "S ilen t Night. L onely Night" 3; America ' s
B lack Forum 6; Better Way 15; Movi e " That's My

2 : 2~ News

17 .

2:3G-Doctors3,15; Gliidingllgh18 .10: I Lo ve Luc y 17.
Great Performances 33 .
3 : 0~A nolher Worl d 3,15 ; General H osp ital~ ' loJ; Li lias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Speed R&amp;eer 17.
3:3G-Mas h 8; J oker ' s Wild 10; Fl ints1ones 17; D ic k
Cavet1 20; F r eestyl e 33.
4:0o-Mi ster Ca rtoon 3; Holly w ood Squa r es 15; M ev
Griffin 6; Pork y Pig &amp; F ri ends 8; Sesame S l

Boy" 11.
2:oo-Paragon Drum &amp; &amp;· Bugle 6; Gilligan 's Is. 15;
Chr istmas E ve 20,33.

2:3G-In Search Of 6; Abbott &amp; Costello 15.
3 .00--Jack Van lm Re 4; Movi e " A l ice's Adven t vres in
Wonderland " ,6 ; Little Ras cals 15.

20,33; Bat ma n 10; Dinah 13 ; Space Gi ants 17.

3:3D-·NFL '78 3,15; Fa ce the Nation 10 ; Vi ewpo int 8;

4:3D--Bewi tched 3; Gilligan 's I s. 8; Br ad y Bu nch 10 ;
Petticoat Junction 15; Gi ll igan's Is . 17.
S:OQ-Star Trek 3; Be verl y Hill billies 8: Gomer Py le.
USM C 10, Mi ster Rogers' Neighborhood 20.33 ;
E mergen cy One 13; Brady Bunch 15 ; I D r ea m at
Jeannie 17.

M ovie "E sther &amp; the K i ng" 17.

4:1JQ-AF C 3, 1,5; Helen Reddy 8; Little Brown Burro
10; M ovie " Whit e Christmas " 13; Percus sion Noel

20: Li ve From The Met 33.

9· 3o-Qne Day At A T i me 8,10; Chr istm as F est i val of

" Saul &amp; Dav id " 17 .

8, 10 : Amazi ng Grace Bibl e Class 13: Jimmy

•

4:30-- Mov ie " A Christma S Carol" 10 ; Eli zabehthan
Chri stma s Ce lebratio n 20.
S: QO--Music of Chri stm as 6; Merry Chr istmas with
Love, Julie 8; Wonder AneW 20 .

5:3()-News

Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary

6:

Tyler M oore 10; Odd Couple 15; Bever ly H illbillies

17.

ot Christmas 6; The Promi se 17.
Midn ight Mass 6; Last of th e Wild 8;

6:00-Ne ws 3.4.8, 10, 13, 15; AB C News 6; Feeli ng Fr ee
33; A ndy Griffith 17 ; Feel i n g Fr ee 20.

6 : 0~ Vati c a n

New s 10; Wr estl inQ 17; Christmasti me w ith Mister
Rog ers 20.
6 ·Jo-C oncern 8; CB S News 10; Birthda y P ':'ai ses 13 .
7 : 0~GE

,

f/IYchildren

ch ant ment" 17 .
12 :30-- News 8; 1:00-Tomorrow 3; l . lG- News 13
1:Jo-Mo vi e " Rancho Notor ious " 17 ; 3: 30--Movie

Ame ric an Probl em s &amp; Chal lenges 10; Public Po lley
Forum s 17 .
'6: JD--Chr isl opher Closeup 3; Thi nking in Blac k 8;
T r eehouse Club 10; T his I ~ T he Lie 13.
7:00--Thi s Is Th e Life 3; Eddie Saunders 6; Dr. Thea
Jones B; Urban Lague 10; Newsmaker ' 78 13;
Cartoon Carni v al 17.
7:3o--T V Chapel 3; Show My People 6; Jerry Falwell

5 : 3~ Joy

1:0D-Holl ywood Squares ' );_ 'All

11 : 3~ J o hnn y Ca rson 3.15; Police Story 6, 13; 700 Cl ub
8; M ovie " Best Foot Forw ard" 10, Mov ie "E n -

SUIIIDAY, DECEMBER24, 1978
USA 17; 6 : 0~ For You... Bl ack Woman 8;

St. 20.

Hope 6,13: 5e;lt'Ch lo r Tomorrow 8 tO ·

M ov ie " Whit e Chrl stm as' ' '17 .

" Green Eyes" 6,1 3; Mash 8, 10.

TELEVISION
VIEWING
5 : 3~A G

1 2 : 3~ Rya n 's

Restless
Child 's

Unknow n War · 6 ; Jac k Van l mpe 8; Chr istmas
Ce lebrat ion 10 ; Movie " Fl ower Dr um Song " 17;
Evening at Sy mphony 20; M ovi e " Oklahoma " 33.
9:00- M ovie "S uns hine Chr is t ma s" 3. 15; Movie

Eight defendants fined

POMEROY
Final
winners in the Gold Star
promation sponsored by the
Chamber
of
Pomeroy
Commerce Alice Freeman,
Pomeroy, $10 ~i.ft certificate
from Elb erfields ; Velma
Taylor. Pom eroy, $10 gift
certifi ca te from Stiffl ers ;
James Euler , Middleport , $10
gift certificate from Cruw's
Family Restaurant; Brenda
Pratt. Athens, $10 gift certificate from Moores; Connie
Gi lk ey , Rutland, $10 gift
certificate from New York
Clothing ; Edna Grimm , New
Haven, $10 gift certificate
from K&amp;C Jewelers; Inez
Hill , Racine, $10 gift certifica te fr om PomeroY
Flower Shop; Glenn Cundiff,
Syra cuse, $10 gift certificate
from Nelson's Drugs; Andrea
Riggs, Pomero y, $10 gift
certifica te from Po well s
Super Valu ; • Roge r Carpenter, Lon g Bottom, $10 gift
certifi cate from Swisher and
Lohse ; Sally Lambert,
Pomeroy, $10 gift certificate
from Pomeroy Pastry ; Dan
Dailey, Middleport , $10 gift
certifi cate from Crow 's
Family Restaurant ; Karen
Stanley, Pomeroy, $10 gift
certifi cate
from
Ben
Franklin; Beckie Pulli ns,
Long Bottom, $10 gift cerway,
tificate from Kroger Store ;
But I coundn't an' that is the reason I'm here In the poorhouse
Karen Walker, Racine , $10
to-day,"
gift certificate I rom Pomeroy
Flower Shop; Judy Crooks.
It was the morning of Christmas, and we heard the glad bells
Racine,
$10 gift certificate
I~ lOVING mem ory of my dear
ring
Daddy , Haro ld 0 . Evans at from Moores ; Barb Karr.
In the joy that comes at the bir(hday of Christ, our Saviour·
Christmas time .
Pomeroy, $10 gift certificate
Some days, it seem s so long ago
King.
Fabric Shop; Ray
from
"The. day'U bring gladness to most folks," she said, with a _ .Since we lo st so w yo ur sm ile
Adams,
Racine, $10 gi ft
·And other times liKe yesterday
,
sorrowful sigh,
certificate from New York
Sin ce we talked awhil e
"But when one's homeless an ' friendless it's the best of all Someti mes we feel that you'll Clothing House.
return
blesain's to die.

~::·one long, happy moment it seemed that she could not

'

Blues at Merry Christmas???

l.i .lJO-- Newscenter 3; News 6; Young &amp; the
8; Dwi ght 10 : Americo! Alive 15; A
Chri st mas i n Wa les 33.

6:3D-NBC News 3, 15: ABC News 13; Carol. Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over
20,33; My
Thre e Sons 17.

Theater 3,3, 15; 60·Minutes 8,10; Christmas

7:1l0-Cross-Wits 3: Newe~lli

with the Lennon Si sters 13; Star Trek 17 ; Christmas
Eve on Sesam e S. 20; Ch mielewsk i Family 33.
7: 30--Movie "A Chri stmas Carol" 33.

The Country 8;

N~ws

Duchess of Duke St. 20,33.
9:31l-Ali ce 8,1 0; . 1:

Carol Bur nett &amp; F.rlen(ls' 1,1, ,...... , .. ~,...,.
20; Econom ic ally Speoklhg.
.
7 : 3~Holl y wood Squares 3: Let's
To The Races 8;
Cand id Camera 6 ;. Price is Right 10; DO(lna Fargo
13 ; Sanfo rd &amp; Son \J; M~cllleii - Le hrer Report 20,33.
8:1JQ-Grandpa Goes To Washington 3,1 5; Happy Days
6, 13 ; CB S Reports 8,10; Let ' s Go To The Races 17;
Soundstage 10; City Notebook 33.

lO :DO-Sword of Justi ce 3, 15; Dallas 8, 10; E vening At

8:3o-Laverne &amp; Shir ley 6, 13 ; When The Boat Comes In

8:QO--Mov ie " Huc kl eberrY Finn " 3,1 5; Battlestar
Galac ti ca 6, 13 ; T he Nutcracker 8,10; Chrlstmil~
H eritage 20; Mov ie " How Gr een wa s m y Valley" 17
9 : 0 ~ Movie " It Happened One Chr istmas " 6,13;

33 .

Symphony 20,33.
10 :30- Rufl House 17: 11 :DO- New s 3,4,8,1 0,15 ;

9 ·00---Mov ie " Chris tma s M irac le in Cauf ie l d, U.' A "
3,15; Three' s Com pany 6,13; M ov ie " Terror Ou t of
the Sky" 8, 10; Girl With the In credible Feeling 20.

Christma s M us ic 17.

News 8,10; PMA Pulse 15.
11:20- ABC New s 6; News 13 : 12:30- Movle
1 U ~CBS

'fl\1\f'\.\.ft \e)'\1

" Christmas In Connecticut" 3; Next Step Beyond 4;
Mary Lou Wil l iam s 0,10 ; The Savior 17 .

Partner the Ghost 6; 11 : S~PTLC\ub 13.
1 2 : 0~Chrlstm a s Rome·1978 4,15; Chr istmas Festival
8,10: 12 : 0~S weet Hour of Prayer 4.
l :OQ-Movie " The Love God? " 17; l : l~Marcus
Welby , M.D. 4 ; 1:5D-ABC News 13; 3 : 0D--Movt~ .
" Stella" 17; 4 : 5 ~ Maveri c k 17.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~~ ®

11 : 3 ~My

byHenriArnotct and Boblee

Unsc1amble these loUI Jumbles,
one letter to each square . to form
four ordinary word s.

t

MONDAY, DECEMBER 25,1978
Report 13; 5.51l-PTL Club 13.
6 oo-PTL Club 15; 700 Club 6,8; 6 : 3~Romper Room
17.
5 : 4~ Farm

6 : 4~Morning Report 3; 6 : 50--Good Morning , W€-st

V irginia 13; 6: 55-News 13.

7:oo-Today 3,4, 15 ; Good Morning, Amer ica 6, 13; CBS
News B; Schoolles 10; Joy of Chr istmas 13; Three

Stooges·Little Rascals 17.
33; 7;31l-Family Affair 10: Five Hours
of Christmas 13; Sesame St. 33.

7 : 1 ~Weather

8:QO-Capf. Kangaroo8,10; Leave It To Beaver 17.

8:31l-Hazel 17; Christmas Celebration 33. ·
9:0D--Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4; Billy Graham

I I

r

ITHORAUI

T HE l'A')&lt;. PEOPLE

I rJ

lAKE WHAT
iHEY HAV E!

Fa mily Ch ri stmas 7,15; Hogan' s Heroes 8; Joker's
Now arrange the ci rcled leners !O
form
answer. as sug·

Wild 10; A Special Time 17; Christmas Heritage 33.
9 : 3~ Brady Bunch 8;
10:0D--Chr istmas at Washington Cathedral 3,15;
Edge of Night 6; Alj In The Family 8 , 1Q;
" It' s a Wonderful Life" 17 ; Simpl e Gifts:
Episode s for Christmas 33.
10 31l-Andy Grlflllh 6; Price is Right 8,10; Five
·

of Christmas Continues 13.
11 : O~High Rol lers 3,4,15 ; Boys

Town Choir 33; Elec.
Co. 20 .
11 :3D-Wheel ol Forfune 3, 15; News 4; Family Feud 6;
Love of life B, 10 ; Christmas Snows, Christmas

Winds 33; Sesam e St . 20.
11: 5~CB S News 8; House Call 10 .

.lumttlt Book No. 13.conttlnlng 110puulea, IIIYII11btelor$t .75 pottpald
from Jumble, clo thla newap':r.:, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648.1nclud•your

ntrne, lddreas, zip cadt en make checks p1yabl1 to Newapaparbookl.

'

�M - The SundHy Tunes..sentmel , Sunday, flee 24, 1978
Sundoy, Deo 24
Monday, Doc. 25
•·

"'-""F~;B;~; :R'esults Use-Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
'
I ~ Mem_OrjC _

Pets ,for Sale

_I'! Me_mory
fi~ C,

HlJNI&gt; OAt H ~ U I'I D
l 1lJPPII--S Otilqnrr dl llCl trm pr1
om nl nn.-1 rl ~r o~ tlo mo
Vnc
(llla h~d a1 1.-l W("' llllf'rl ld Pol l nr
( hrr .,lm o .,
~1 ll &lt;:
(oil
1114 7Hf&gt; I J~I cu 61 4 :t'Hb JO(J(J

AK l

Lll\~(

lU G

( HIHUAHU A o nd lny

l 'f'NHrp11J'Ipr &lt;~ loll446 0 ~ ~ ~

Dl-l AGO NWV NO CA TTtRY
K~N
NH AKC t hnw L hC'Iw d rrg~
( I- A Sromr &lt;o f' ond H1mo loyon
r ol o, Ho n oloyo n lo 1llon.;; OIP
lrf' f(' 1 Only 4 lpf l
Hurr y 1
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1-li ~ING Sf Afl Kf'nnel &lt;.

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onrl q• oo nHng
all
( hf't;, lliJ R :Jb I Q')(/1'
AK &lt; PI=GIST I ~ f O 1:\m:t" l p u pp• C'~
t;, wC'f• l&lt; ,. c- ld A mre C h n s l mo~
q 1h !; 1 ~5 (•a (o il Q~'2 2720

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GHOOMI NG ~A C II I Ttl- S Pr o
ff'&lt;;!. IOilO I SNVICPS 0 lf N cd oi l
hr t"£&gt;ci~ oil o; tyi P!i Ph 446 U73 1

t fNHNARY

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nnrl 9r('lomtn g
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(on vr
r if'ntlv poci&lt;Prl rn .do lh h n:r~ ...
1, ociy IC'I qo N o !l'H'~!. N o fu!t s
Lnw o sh no '&gt; t~ l ph u f H1gh BTU
SKIDMORI- I OSHR c OAL CO
p 1 Puw St Gn ll1p q lr ~ Oh n
Ph f'ne 44 b 7183

W VA

F~r sa-le

- - For
- - Sale
-----

For Sale

P e ts tor _Sale

&lt; CINDiliO NB D hov S I o
&lt;.!&lt;tt.l 21{1H

O UA IIT Y &lt; O NDITIONW rn1•f'd
ho y Woll d (l/ IVfl l (,!~'} not
Ht J• JI\ CO LL KTO R ~

IH S~ In ttfl~
H1 o,1or 1f'S a11 d ~fht'ol book s
Al ~ o
ql t'lso.
on.-1 p(l !l er y
l4?n55

RUTlAND HARDWARf !:In M atn
St 742 '1155 We ha"'e to moke
tnom l or spnng merchond1 se so
oil &lt;: l oc i&lt; rn sto re 10 per c~nt
off Th 1s rncons sP II1119 so me
rnNchondrsc ol cos! So g e t
yn11 r Chnstrno s gilt &lt;. now Open
H 'J thru Chn slmm. Nf' p or k mg
rr ob i e m ~

-----------'"'1

H &amp; N Ooy old or ~ torl ed legh o r n
p ull e l s ho lh tl oo r or fOg c
grown avo1lobl e Poult ry H,.,us
111 9 an d A utomatiOn Mode n
Poultry 399 W Moon Pomeroy
Ph oneQ9'12 1M

lGAlUPOLIS

l

Dl\ltRSIFIED
CONSTRUCTION CO.

We, the Auctioneers, would

like to thank all the helpers

~

W

and buyers during the past

W

~

year and wish everyone a

Merry Christmas and Happy

~

W

New Year.

W

DAN SMITH
W
JIM CARNAHAN
LAWRENCE DONOHUE
w
!:11:~-~~~-~BI(~==~·.... ~~==~d
W

I

R.N ' s

( Diploma
As s oe~ate Degree o~
Baccalaureafe
De gree ) New and Recent Graduates.

12-23·A
NORTH
+A K 6 3
• J 94
t A 75
• Q6 2
EAST
WEST
• 85 2
• 9
•AKQ 7 6 • 5
• 96 32
t K J 10 4
+108 743
+A J 9
SOUTH
• Q J 10 7 4
• 10 8 3 2
t Q8
+K 5

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer West
West North East South

ACROSS
1 Dot
7 Pamphlel
12 Honor
17 T~re
21 D1splace
22 Warnmg de-

6 1'1 41'16 5500
Prf' vrou s psychtatnc eJC
p enen c e
not
requ1red
M edrcd l
Surgrcal C)j.
penencc des rra bl e Two
weckc nd 5 pe r month otf
Salary a nd fnnges eM'
cel l ant W e a r e ~ n ,:.qua l op
p or1u n 1ty ,.m p !oyer

VICe

OUTDOOR

EQUIPMENT SA! ES
490 Upper R1ver Road
Jet Rts 7&amp;35
Ga lhpoh5, Oh10
(614) 446·3670
YOUR DEALER FOR
Grav ely
Tractors,
Sno w
Blades
&amp;

!12_~!.5~------,

------------Snapper Mowers

B elter
'N
Ben's
F1 re placl' Stove

-----------W oodm a ster
Mob1le
Home
heating
syste m s

------------·
W oosma ster supplem •?J1 t a 1 fu r naces to
altilch to your present
warm a1r heat1ng
system.

-----------f iberglas
Mohawk
a nd
canoes
accessories

-----------·
S Tues Sat
Closed Sun &amp; Mon.

Open'! tu

! ·

23 Frolic
24 Matures
25 Negallve
prel1x
26 G1rl 's mckname
28 Hmdu garmen&lt;s
30 Senous
32 Near
33 Manuscn pts
(abbr )
35 Foray
37 Pu zzle
39 Tun e m
40 Poem
41 Stx pomts
Abbr
43 G'rounds
45 Tnals
47 Man s nickname
48 --=-olllfe
49 Fmch
52 Shower
54 Rums
56 Anadem
57 Draw oul
59 1980, e g
61 Evil S
62 As•an sea
63 F1sh
64 ln teqect1on
66 Secrel agent
67 Bed
68 Map
69 Courl figure
Abbr
71 S1amese curren cy
72 Develop
74 Oye
76 Fale

77 Everybody s 135 Jog
uncle
136 Fren c h arti78 Compass p&lt;
cle
79 Seesaw
137 W•gwam s
81 Al so
eg
82 Nerve net139 Repeat
work
141 Greek letter
83 Rock f1sh
t42 Soak
84 Expense
t43 Remamder
85 R1ver 1sland
145 Walks
87 Beaks
147 Nobleman
89 Cha1rs
149 Newt
90 Te ll
152 Diphthong
92 Nic hola s.
153 All
eg
155 Caravansary
94 TransactiOn
157 Hastens
95 Gapes
159 Babyloman
96 W1pe out
de•ly
97 C1ty m
160 Be aware ol
Greece
162 T1pslers
99 Number
164 Hmdu pnn ·
100 Covers
cess
101 Stat1on
166 Ass
102 Fal sehoods
168 Slave
103 Farm an 1mal 169 Scofl
105 Bands
170 Stnct
107 T1me un1t
171 Lates t
Abbr L
DOWN
109 Hard -wood
1 Pnssy
tree
2 Moray s
110 Equal
3 Room (abbr )
4 Electrll1ed
111 Essen1 1al
particle
113 Food f1 sh
5 Above
114 G1rl's name
6 Stall
115 O ld pronoun
7
Editor' s
116 Wn tes
abbr
117 Chart
8 EthiOpian
118 Obstruct
1111e
120 ExiSt
9 Hebrew
121 Egg-shaped
month
122 Hurl
10 Proofreaders mark
123 Pers1an la~ry
11 Band s
124 Short Jacket
12 T1me penod
126 Bndge term
Abbr
128 Game
13 Ex1sted
tJO Flowers
14 Footless
132 Goddess ol
15 Depe nds on
d1scord
16 Fear
134 Sounds
17 Proh1b1t

2+

3+

Pass

Pass

Pass

1+
Pass
P ass

Openmg lead • K

N EW LI STIN G /\ pprOx11n a tc l y 1 i'OO .:.q !1 1n lllr&lt;., J
fJr oom c o rp1 ed ,1nd ro m t ort a blt hom, 1 lr l/L l i1m
ly room w rtll w b J1rt p l.1 ce l 1Jatl1 "' 1 &lt;"~lO'Nr r H&lt; 11
11 • milt s I rom 11os pllal S llOV..n lw ,tppopl1•TI( 111

S TATELY HOME
J brclrcro m &lt;:. d own , IIJ•ctruom up
t o r nl rl l d1 n 1nq r oo rn L1mr l y r oom ltV1nu 100rn &lt;~n c !
many ki1 c l1en IJutlt trl';
H ell t ed S'NIIltm rnq prJ(! I will\
IJcllll hOU SP IJCr1UidUI Vlf' N Ol lhl' Qh, o ] 1 VIr
\,Of rt
IJU rlll ll(l f lrt"' plil rf"\ If VO LI r (' mOVIJ HI Il l () 111
HI l I I
~y ou v...i)n l t o o; h p 11p lpt u s nld kL til •PP&lt;l!PII Ill nl 1 r
yO u I O 5( 1 I I IS f Oll1l j)ri CC' ll&lt;lS bl't 1 I I (IIJr 1 t 0 \\ l I
lllX OUS to S0 11

You hold
12-23-B

L ___________j

'

+ AK Q

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

• A8 4
t K QJ

+AQ10 7
Today's

hand

was

played

m a r eally expert dupbcate
The players were so good

An Oregon reader asks If
we open two clubs
No We have 25 pomts and
nolrwnp d1stnbut10n and
make the standard Amen·
ca n call of three notrump

rounds of hearts Each de~
clarer trumped the fourth
one htgh In dummy, led a
trump to hiS quee n and a low
club toward dummy West
would make hts best play
and duck so dwnmy's queen

!Nt: WSPAP id~

that every South wound up 10
thre e spades and everyone
but one made It
West started wtlh four

WOU
I

ld h ld th t trtck Each
8

Q

declarer WOUld COntmue by
playmg out all hts trumps to
produce a three-card end~

NEW LI STIN G Bc.1ut l ui 3 1Jctlr oom r 11 p ' ' tl 110tTI
:; il u &lt;Jicd on Lo wPr Rtvr r Rd ovc rl oOkllCI l hr "-&lt; 01)1C
O h tO rtu s ~wmc hil S rn.1 n 1 ,1mc n I re~ 11111 1
h •I
prcc (l\ (' Owne r,Jn )( IOUStOSf' ll Pr CC'S/1 r,{I,)JI( )
- -&lt;~--

ENTERPRISE ASSN I

220

FRIDAY, DECEMBER -29, 1978
1:00 P.M.
"Anttque or Collector Items"
• Fainting couch, pte safe, wood cabme1, hand
wringer, trunks, iron teakett le, dresser , chests, p icture
frames, wood baby buggy wheels. walnut cabmet,
wood comb rake. Iron stove, cha i rs, stand, treadle
sewing machine &amp; m1s c

97 Stalemates
98 Drunkard
102 Cam era
pari
104 Ford
106 Steal
107 Proverb
108 Men
110 Nu1sance
111 Allers
112 Tardy
114 Street
116 Harbor
117 Thaw
119 Further
121 S1benan nver
122 Honk
123 Greek letter
125 Fme
127 Latm con·
1unc11on
128 Golf shOt
129 Pnmps
130 ln1ury
131 Gu1des
133 - of Iran
136 Latv1an nallves
138 Flal fish
140 Con stellation ·
143 Dr 's asst
144 Exacl
146 Rat1onal
148 Unasp~rated
150 Tolls
151 Sour
153 Female
sheep
154 Summer . Fr
156 Comparative
end1ng
158 Proverb
161 Above
163 Jr ' s dad
165 Pnnter's
measure
167 Earth goddess

chair. T V , beds. plano, porch 5w1ng. garden plow,
ladders, horse scoop, and

mtsc

hand tools

Gilbert Beegle, Executor of Myrtle

D. Smith

NOI1010S

McBrtde Estate, Case No 22562
Auctioneers
J. Carnahan

949-2033
949 2708
"Not responsible for acctdents or loss of property "
"Ltcensed and Bonded m 3 States"

Mam Street,

Calt992711l
ror Free Esttmafe s

PHONE 992·2772

11 9lmo

11 3 1 m o

H. L WRITESB.
ROOANG

Building Suppl1es

ESTATE SALE

E

Pomer oy , 0

(Do yo u have a quest10n for
the eKperfs? Wnte Ask the
Experts clJre of th1s newspa
per IndiVIdual quest1ons w1/J
be ans wered 1f accompanted
by s tamped self·addressed
envelopes The most 1n1erest
1ng questiOns w 1ll be used 1n
thiS col umn and Will rece1ve
copies of JACOBY MODERN/

Gas stove, refrigerator , table and chairs, couch,

18 Kmg of
Bashan
19 Schoolbook
20 Regard
27 Fibber
29 Hunches
31 Roman number 1,050
34 Slern
36 Cart
38 Runner
40 Spoken
42 Gammg
cu bes
44 Exp~res
46 Sed1ment
48 Con1unct1on
49 Car style
50 Gladden
51 Symbol for
mckel
53 Scruff
55 Place of the
seal Abbr
56 Stufl
56 Cyltndncal
60 Hindu
peasant
62 Agave
65 Decay
68 Vessels
69 Italian poel
70 Collect
72 ExpiOII
73 - the storm
75 D1s1ress s •gnal
76 Pawls
77 Scorches
79 French80 Ascends
82 RegulatiOns
83 Harvests
84 Collide
86 Flap
88 Gram
89 Mine excavation
90 Seltle a debt
91 Worn away
93 Rece1vers
95 Musller

Mose Cant erbury
446 340FI

IH

COLLINS BUILDING PRODUCTS
1515 Woshrn gl on Blvd Belp re
Oh ro off ers a ne w se rv1ce lo
the Ga lt poli s ore o Over 6 000
bu ddrn g pro ducts del vered
each weelo. 10 Belpre an d
ovorlabl e to you each week ot
drscount pr1ces 1 Ca ll Coll m s
Bu ddtng Prod ucts or p re ~ up o
lr ee Pe ase Ca tal og today
Hu smess hou rs M en lhru Fn 1
8om
to
5pm
Ph one
614 423 6881

~~Household"

G itl lipoll s, OH 45631 or call

K.ng
Atlanta Coal
Woo d Stoves

Pass
Redbl

Located 1n Syracuse, Oh1o out College Road left on

SUNDAY PUZZLER

E ~5 1 1.; Tarr R N
, , ·, .:! !ten t Coordmator
G J VI CVIHC
P 0 Box 292

·----------&amp;
&amp;

I•

DbI
Pass

mg Poor West would have to
discard down to kmg-,ack or
diamonds and ace o clubs
whereupon declarer would
lhrow h1m m w1th the ace of
clubs and make h1m lead
away from h1s d1amond
kmg
As st ated ea rli er, th1s was
• very high-l evel event, but
one East player turned out
to be even a higher level
player
AI Irick three Bob Hammann of Dallas ruffed hiS
partner's good heart and led
back a dmmond ' Bob had
seen that he had th1s one
chance to gam the lead to
play that d1amond and took
advantage of the opportumty. Now West was sure of
three hearts, one diamond,
one club and a plus score

Bndgeman Sf , then left mlo Rose Valley Follow sale

m d eve 10p1ng
new and mnovat1ve pro
gr &lt;tm s') Wou ld vou hke to
b~c:on1 f• r1 pa rr of a d ev e lop
1n g m :l\l"l l mental heal1h
ce r t ~; r&lt;:&gt; II so, contact

446-1066

Phone 992· 2181

signs.

1 n1 e r~; ~ t ed

REALTOR

JACKW.
CARSEY
Mgr

Really expertise playing

I

~

SALE PRICES

Osw&lt;;lld Jacoby and Alan Sontag

~

~

WOOD

Appliances

BRIDGE

W
~

~

RUSSELL

Holpolnl

Saturday, De&lt; 23

-·

,

T.V 's &amp;

GUN CA BINET HOLD S ten guns
Remm g ton '122 w1 th scop e
Ph o ne '}Al 3 1'1J al t e r~ r&gt;rn

9 ... _

NCT~CE

LANDMARK
Headquarters for all your

Pomeroy Landmark

~
~

POMEROY
GE

t

SNOW
TIRE SALE

,.,

APPLES fiTZPA TRICK Orchard
Slate fU 689 Ph o ne W•j~esv1ll e
669 3!85
Mom Sl
l HRISTMAS TRI:t:S
Rull ond

RH RIG l:RA TORS WASHfR S AND
DRY~W S WRING ER WA~H~RS
t"
RANG ES
A LL SOl D WITH
GUAf.I A NTH W~ Al SO SER
V IU
APPLIANCf S SKAGGS
APPLIA Nt.ES
141 H f.A SH~ N
AVf [o ll44 6 lJ9H

I!U.Y _ _

,,u

R ea I E sta t e for Sal e

- - F=or Sale - - -

HW T H~ B~ ST IN FURNI TUHl:
UPHO LSH RING frf1 P h t~rnol e"'
P• r k up ond Ot'livNy se rv1c e
ro ll M ow t f'y s Upholste ry Pt
Pl f&gt; oo,on t W Vo 61 5 41 54

~-------

"'

Real E stat e lor Sale

----- -- - -

It·,/ 0341

-- ---------

R ea l Estat e lor Sal e_

All 1 vpf ~ nl h¥u1lrl1nQ mo1Pf1als COAL LIMf STON f sand grovel
co lc•um rhlondc fen•lr:re r dog
h lod• hri C ~ &lt;;CW('r r P~"' " Wl/1
d n w~
! ntel s ('t r Claud e ~ food and a ll type s of salt h
W 11 l f'f '- ~.o Gr ond r 0 Phon ~
ce f ~ 1 or Salt Wo rks Inc f Mom
) t Pome roy I.Jq2 31:191
~45 51 ~1 oftf'r 5

hair

JOHN OHil PLANTHI 4 row 110
GT dryr&gt;r 'li'J NH bal er qqo &lt;I PfA HAULER S CB Soles l:qu1p
mer I no w on sol e ott m ~ l o c k
HH lCRl-ST KEf1NH S bno rrlrng
II ln !rrn otron o l M ( Kuh n hoy
Ra dros and occessorrE:&gt;s thr ough
Yard Sale
Al .. n AK( Rf'g Dobc rrn oM r ed
In l o v 1ng mem ory of our lovmg mother, Alma Ellis
trrl Oo, 7 II lnt hoy ro loP 1
Ch11stmo s Open avery doy ex
onci hlcn lo s t oll44 6 7795
Beller, who passed away Dec 27. 1976
r nw N f'w ldf'O p rl&lt;&lt;&gt; r f o:.o: ch o p
IF YOU hove o ser v1ce to off e r
r ~ pt
Sun day a nd Monday
l'r
r
on
d
hlowP
n
nrl
45
S
il
O
wont to buy or se ll c,.o melh 1ng
EVen mg s by oppmn t ment
r pe 10 It lnt rliM
e
" There ss a beaut 1ful place called Heaven,
oe look mg l or work
CH
I' o r tlo nd
O h1 o
Ph on e
MORGAN S WOODlAWN f ARM
It IS hidden above the br ight blue,
w hn l~ ver
,- ou II gel rc~ u ll s
Hlt3 20M
_ vya_nt~C!_ t~
Rt
J5
Pl1
ny
WV
Where the good, who from earth hes are riven ,
lasle• w oth a Sr&gt;n t1 nel Wont Ad
615 I :JHtr N 1 5]3 1000
1'J, 10 1q15 Sc hull7 rnob .lc ho rne
&lt; HIP
WOOP
Poles
mo&gt;&lt;
l1 ve and love all eternity through
&lt;.: n il qq')1 JS6
Two bedroom tw0 fu ll b aths
d1omeler 10 o n la rges t end
f&gt;&lt;lr1o mc e on tJ1&lt;.1dC
Co l i
S1i' pl!.'r ton Bundled slob $10
Above the bnght blue, the beautiful blue,
USED f' URNITUIU
661 :NU t or see on Rl 7 South
per !on Pe lwe red to Oh 1o t ovps eo l drypr and Top po n hurl !
Je sus 1s wa 1tmg for me and for you ,
Tuppe ro;; Ploon s
Pol le t Co
Ht 2 Pom eroy
111 el£&gt;r lr rr ron gP Corb1 n ond
H eaven IS the r e not far from our sight
'J'Ji' 161:19
Snyde1 ~u rn11 u r t" ~ 55 Second PIGS I O R sol e 949 "85/ alter 5
Bedutoful c1ty of light
A vr- 446 11ll
T I MBE:~
POMEROY Fores t Pro
Nohces
SMITH ANO Wes!'ron model Jd 2'2
Th1 s l and of sweet rest awaits us,
du el s Top pnc e for stand ng
USfU fUR NIT UI-!1:
S160 f o res t Su m mer s 5b:J 4S SH
~W
I
fPfR
and
~P
W
I
Il
9
modl•n
P
Some day 1t w1ll break M our view ,
sow tr m ber Call 992 ~ qf:r~ or 1 WOOD PIN!::TT E SET WITH
1'J d Por llond 45770
r
Pro
oJ
par
h. onrl sup plr ps Prck
Ke-nt Hanby 1 4A 6 8570
It IS prom1sed by Chnst the Redeemer
PfDf S)AL TABU:
I I Pl
up and rlo l1 very Dovt s Voruu m
To H1 s followers . fa i thfu l and true
Mfl AL OINI:TTE SFT 1 3 PC M IX fD HAY 94'1 3709
Ucaner
, mdc up Gemges OLD fURN ITUR E ICe bo• es brass
END
TA lH f SH 1 S!::T SP RING Htl TH IC fURNAO: new Bl ofk
•
bed s rron beds desks etc
( rf'ck Hd Ph 446 0294
We know not when He will call us.
wa lnut
S 10
IQ
Co l i
fom pl e te househo ld s Wnf e I AND MATTRI:SS OOUBLD S i t~
1 HURMAN H O U S ~ antrqu es ~u r
I
S!::W IN G MACHIN~
IN
b ld 59'1 ?151:1
3.3
To wnsen d
Whether soon the glad summons Will be,
M 0 Mill er Rl 4 Pom e roy o r
nrl ure stnpp111g re pmr a mi
CA BINfl RoO 5 NfW AND US
Pl ace Athe n s Oh1o
Bu t we know when we pass o ' er the rtver
rc ii9'J1 llbO
rr&gt; f m o, h Pd Coun ty Rrl 8 o il J5
fL&gt; fU~NITUR~
8S d SKO ND
The bea uty of Jesus we 'll see "
I &lt;.I n L HAPPARAl - l H tt boot w 1th
Cer !f' r vd lll
Vd l og e
ClosuO OlD COINS pock et w atches
&lt;146 ~523
Sadly m1ssed by all who knew and loved her and
class rrng s we dd1 ng bond s
l ro1I Pr 1978 new 140 HP Mer
M
onday
&amp;
Tue
sday
f
ven1
ng!;
the Ellis family
d10monOs G old or s1lver Co li t ~ n HONDA Gold W1ng 1000
cury eng1 ne Co li d4b 704A
hy oppornlmen t 745 94 /9
~ ro mf' m ou nted fa1rmg $11'00
flo~ e r Wams ley /42 733 1
~OR
DfAD STOCK R~MO VAL
t .. r fo nd Call :J 67 ?S41
'N I\ II ~'Of&lt;'Y o f o ur paren t s
WA NT TO buy o ld 45 a nd 7H
LA ll :t'45 55 1&lt;1
p,(!:-~, l l ~r. d Ronrn o Rowe
pho n0grop h r ecor d s
Coli STOKFR AN D HOU SE COAL Up
Not1ces
,-1 1 ~ 11 'i rd 1 I yt or tl rough ond
ANTIQUf~
bouqh t and s. o lrl
J'lf'f R1 ver Rrl Ph 4d6 1408
U9'J 6J70 or Lon to Cl Mort 1n fur
p -.\ &lt; I( rf ,
ol
tlw
Ho l1doy
Wh I(' &lt;.
Anii("JIIPS
Rt
G UN SHOOT Ron ne Gun Uuh
nrl ur e
HV TRALTOR w1t h o t
V
RAV
':tf-•nsnr
Rr&gt;dney Co ll1'4 5 5050
h ery Sun day 1 p m !-=or t01 y
tor hem nt Colt fl/5 b96J
I 11 lri 1f I U11d ! (11ft Jm~
car
s
Wr
cc
ke
n
LASH
f
O
R
tu
nK
rho ke guns o nly
fO R THf !:l t ST buy Ill d to mor1 d s
serv tre hyes Rutl and Oh1o ' HfN j.: RAN KL!N SfOV~ l1l&lt; e new
SNOW TIRES
Go I n Tawn ey JcwP iers 422 Se
Ch , q mvn or y o l o u r so n
GUN SHOO T Rocme Vo lunt eer
ld] ?081
s
..
ll O f trad e Co li 38H 844J
ON SALE AT
cn
11d
Avf?'
C.ol
l,p
o
ll
~
Co
mpur
p
~a • II' H Bl' o"m w ho po ~~e d
I 11e Dep t !:very Solu rdoy 6 3U
olh" r 6prn
POMEROY LANDMARK
Wf 1-' ICK up 1unK o ulo b od1 ftS b uy
J"
ICC'S
o
nywhNP
o " 1 l t~ly ' l 19 /U
prn o l the n bu1ld1ng Ill Boshon
SERVICE STATION
ng 1unk f or s scrcp ore n bot
TWO SMAL L Bt ACK HOW:ii:S a nd 1
H n \. " 111 t h( lu 111 ly c uclr
I octory cholo.. e g uns on ly
HIGl!::Y S BARB HI SHOP
l e&gt;r~es
and metal s
R1der s
( 1, r dr m on P IS p o ~~l"d away
Iorge
hor!ie
Co
ii
?St&gt;
Q)OJ
Open M on l hru ~ r1
BA i lEYS
STORE
331
Sal vage
SR 1 'ld
Pome roy
P , ..,~ , d f tl m roo• rh o r~ rl c o r1 hly
ClosC'd )o l ond Su n
MISCE ILANf OUS rt ems ol the o ld
N 7nd AYe
Middl e por t Ohro
CJ92 546fj
d (J ri-ne &lt;.
44
6
000:1
l1 bro ry bu1IOrn g co rner ol Th rd
W1ll
be
close
d
lJec
25
to
Jon
'l
l 1to h ~q hl o 1d !l (.' rl ec t day
WA NTEL&gt; TO buy old jewe- lry
onO Stot e St On Decemb er :lEI
But v ro il" tJ I l l uc ~,; ' '' loqgur~ h
RA CI NI: GUN Cl ub meet1ng Dec
Ca ll 99'1 S~b'l or wrlie Kay
ot 4 30 AM A ll purchases mus t
Jack W. Carsey , Mgr
WANTI:D
tandem
or
In
o•le
0 Pr 11f' g HJ Vt 0 1 f ,m w~ lovE'
:lH I :m p m Elcclr on of of
CeCil 1:1 7 S 'ln d M1ddl eporl
hf' re movPd ! rom bud dmg by
dump
l
r
u
r
~
l
o
hau
l
slog
or
~ I IIV t I l hC' r rt. p l1f r(l I O Ill P e t hun
l1 cer s Due s S'20 mu st be pod
OH
.
.
.
Phone 992-2181
d UOPM Dec 2~
~ hole
Coli IS6 6 ]63
or
1 thF- b "" n f', ,..,o , ld obo.-c
bPio re Jon I
WANT TO BUY NEW O R USE.O
HHt&gt; HHliO
lrJ (&lt; 1 r1 11~ rr l ~'- f"d AAon Cl lrl
FIRE WOOD SJ O pe1 pKKup food
PARASO l
l:lOUTIQUE
Beouly
PlA STIC MOL OS QQ') 3269
Dl"l vN ed om! ~ loc lo.. e cl Co li PENOU: 1ON RH!Uil T ~A TT!:: RY
Sa lor announ ces M a1y Newfll l BUYI NG A ll Unrte&lt;1 S lol o~ s lvN
Sll:l 00 p lus l aiC and eu han ge
121'1 12'2602 l0ST YHLOW g rey
( C't ~ Tt'p p r ccs H1ghcr pt res
756
1~1 2
, , mr: y c
1 ~ !olh u
!:: fgon
hn s rel urn ed 10 work Ne w
G uoron teed New ones S33 00
and
w
h
1
1
e
col1
co
co
t
weonng
o
l
0
•
~
rl
vN
w
llors
o
nO
£&gt;orl
y
"olrt
w! n
p o'- •ed
away
Yeat s ~pec1o l ~r ee ho•r cond o
NEW AND USI:D
We rf&gt;po u cases C.oii381:J 8596
(I'll~
MTS { nrn Shop (oil yell o w foli ar 1n the lower M d
D• ,, '~ l, "r 'l l tiJH
honer to eve ry cus tomer 1h1 u
LOGGING fQUIP
d lepo rl 1-'('l ol area 992 JJIO aft er
llb 1H4:l or 44b Ob~U Poy r ash
1cll' o " ! 1no! • ~r w l 01 c w e gn
HRfWOOO
SP LI TTERS E( ho cho n
Oef
Jl
Phon e
91:1 5 .JI J I
UsrO
sk 1drler eC] u1pmenl
9
5pm
' d ,., 'lll•fl r- r \Jho! w~:; do
sows
power
generators and
lorn
bf&gt;
q
oc"s
d
John
Oe
e
r
Ps
J
Ope rat or s Sa nrlro K&lt;&gt;rn s Mor y r - - - - - - - - - ' - - ,
fhrr , jl -. IN 1y~ h r- •o mr- l h1n gs
fi rewood l &amp; J Power Equ p
N1well located nc &gt;&lt;t l o S ~ o ! C&gt;
h
onkh
ns
I
r
ose
See
us
fo
r
o
il
JUNK
au
to
a
nd
scrap
melal
Ph
r, nm~" ~ 11 111 ~ ,,J you
&lt;140 941t1
1\ Way Ro ller Ru1~
REWARD'
your
loggm g an d sowrn ll
IHH Hl?f:r
lU 'J"f tl n r vo•r f' o •~ f rru;h lfl
cO
PP f RTONf REF RI G 13 Cu Fl
11t"
l"dS
L
yen
s
f
qutprn
en
t
lo
Old English Sheepdog
SKA H AWAY an nounce s New
rn r 1
VOOL&gt; U~f::L) ~URN I TURf
not ~b(J S.':r US :J i S
Yf'or
s
l'
orly
Sat
DPc
301h
Answers to the name of
o, nall lmgP t
uph n lo, i f'fe d and opp honceo,
''~' , r
585 t 2d S~~c:o Ps~~;; 9 1\'~es
Cu rl(' \.n l le Oh1 o 43 113
Skolrng I 10 l o 12 IS R o( P~
t ~
II fPlt
I rn !h&gt;" r &lt;1 0) yeo • ~
Ph &lt;l&lt;l 6 0372
" Peaches" Family pet.
rnC'Iun c
C c~t llo c l In (~rcle v dl e Jell El ec t..
r
IZV
S
bal
loo
m
Open
W(ld
q n I)
$100 r eward; no questions
ol 614 414 6018 In Add 1son
TIMB FR Top pm t? l or top quol dy
h
1
Sot
evemng
7
30
1
0
10
00
Ou l (lVI ~ ~ ' 11 h yo u olwoy 5
~rn tt Geo11 g 614 361052 1
1-'mneroy Fnres t Prod uc ts l o ll
L AV N~ S N~W AND USED FUR
asked. Call 379-2317
9e5 39:.:'9 o r 985 9996
W\ c hC'r1~h ~f rnu~ h I he lro(hlng 5
4Q2
5905
NITUR'
\' GU (l0\1"
N'W
1/1 n dr&gt; O il hnn•'-1 mod ul'r oghl
L.AHGI: qu onfl t1es of F1rewood USfD TRA CTO R ~
-~~~~w~~~w~~~~~~~~~~
M~ 135 D1 Psel
Mf230 D1 ese l
Baby bPds Sb5
Sofo h~d a nd
nlr
Phone 615 d4 :t'6
MFI 50 Owse l Mf i':JS D•e'!.el
cha n
S150
so l o
ch o n
SlRAP IRON and coppe r Ba l
MHOS 01C' sel Mf 285 D esel
rnrker
o ll om an
3 tob los
lpry !; a nd rod1al0r s
$1 50
Ml 11 35 DI CSC'I Co b 01r o nd
ssuo
ij c dr o o m
suit es
Nollces
I"Ofh l oil ll 46 35tr0
Hf'al e r
5165 S:/ 50 5300 5500 !:o r Am
so lo and ch 01 r SJOO m od e rn
N~ W 8 USED IMPLEMENTS
MF 4 Bo l er M ~ lO Bol er Mfl 'lO
sr&gt; la r ho Jr loveseot S'l/5
Haler M onhews Ro lo ry Scythe
rN I1nerc; $100 and up Tab les
M~ H BO Sem1 Moun ted 6 bott 0m
S60 eoch Swtvel rock e rs $00
BARN BURNS
pl ow
MF57U l :t' d1 sc Mf') 7
Maple or prne ta bl e 4 fh mr s
row dwpper
MF3'1 'l row
1 pc
PICKERINGTON, Ohio
S:/25
Hutch
S300
r lonl e r s
m ec hont col
Custom Dozer &amp; Backhoe
Om c tte S109
S Pf d nelle
(UPI ) - A f1re Fnday
tr an sp l an ter SHINN S TRAL
work by h our or by 10b.
w1t h 5w tvel rh mrs SJOO B un~
destroyed a large barn
bPdS rom plele $150 $225 $L/5
lOR SA l ~S
Trans1t &amp; Lay out work.
mattre sse s Of bo. sp r ngs f 1rm
containing 6,500 bales of hay Phone 4 5A 1b30
General Contract•ng, all
S50 S60 510 eof h
wpto1n s
and various units of farm lfON W VA
types
construction,
bed 5125 quee n sets S1 75 5
hou s 1ng , commercial,
machinery on the farm of
ritOW OI chest $49
mdust r1a l
budd ng
Robert Southard near Pick· &lt; HIMNfY Bl O CKS
GOOD USED
W a I ke r - Park e r sbur9
m ol e nols Gol ltpol 1s Bl ofk Co
enngton
Ches l
n1g h1 ston d
01yer s
Steel8utld1ng Dealer
d4b L?!:lJJ
ranges coll ee a nd end l abl es
Southard said he had
Phone 446 4440
heOs
tabl es
l amps
TV
Offlce-li60lf2 2nd
several pieces of large farm l~ H HONDA L B SSO K ClCcell enl
cone! IIO fl
5 1300
fiRM Cal l
' relngerolor o ther terns Ca l!
8-5 Mon Fro
machinery in the barn whiCh
4&lt;lb 97 3 1
d46 032'2 Monday lhru fr doy 9
was also used to store hay
l rr Bprn Sat urday 4 to Sp m 3
1n 1 oul Bu lovrlle Rd

Tunday, Doc 26

---- wan"teltTooil
- - - - - --~-

o pen l or p ro l css •o no l doy co re
If rnl erested col i th 1!'. numbe1
44b75Q8

-~ _ ~uto Sa_l_es _ _

Coll&lt;~46

LIV~ IN COUNSHOR fo r trans1s

tr o n ol
fa c llrty
f or
8
developm enta ll y
di sabl e d
oduhs m G allr pot' s Contact
Joyce M1 llllo:en P 0 Box 906
Gallipo lis
Oh1o
or call
d46 1642 ex t 3J2 Eq ual Op
po! lun~t~ E ~ pl oyer
NH O MAN 1o run 1ron s1t on
survey JOb Must be expen enc
cd
$5 00 per hour
Colt
256 12lb

ASSISTANT MOTEL MANAGfR
id eal poSition for retrred cou
p ie Send resume to P 0 Box
301 Golltpo lrs Oh1o _
fUll AND PART TlME help wonted
m l ou nge o nd co rryou 1 App ly
tn person afte r 1 I am dorly ex
cept Sunday French Quarter
Konougo Oh1o
BABYSITTER 1n my hom e
367 0349

Co li

BABY SITTER hol1 doy s a nd dos ed
school days lall446 3958
The Ga lho ·M~1Qs Commum ty A c
horr Age ncy w1ll be o cc.ept mg
apphcahon s l or a Fo oq Stom p
Outreach Wo rker Postf1 on Ap
ph cohon s wtll be rec e1ved onO
mtervtews held on Thur tJody
December 2B 1978 at 2 OOPM 1n
the Cheshrre Cenlro l Off iCe
Appl 1conts must hove a cor
val id dnver s hcense e nd be
sympatheti c to those 111 need o l
ass1stonce
PART TI M ~I o;m hel p ne eded Co li
1 4.4 61 2.412

•

THRE !:: LO N G
9ll5 31:101:1

1976 GRAN PRIX e&gt;&lt;cel lenl cond
fu lly equ1pped l1k e new 1n
every way New 11 r es 3E! 000
mt $4400 Co n be seen ot Gr~f
fo n s Gulf at Konou go Co lt
4 46 0391 ofler 4 p rn

1976 L&gt;OOGt: A SPt:N WAGON
spectol e011to n good sha pe

3sao

197J TOVOTA LAND CRUISt:R 4
whl dnve factory w 1nch exc
cond Lo i i446051Safter5pm
1971 CAMARO need s wor k or fo r
pc rts $400 Coll38 8 9E!32

1' , T 1970 INTERNATIONAl 12
ft fl atbed Ca l l ors 6963

19/4 CHI:VY NOVA 350
5 1950 lall 38 8 q(}2 1

2 bbl

1910Pl YM OUTH DUSTUI
slant
e ng Clectrtc g u11ar ornp Co li
3bl 11%

.

19 71 DOD Gl: D!::MON new heav y
du ty o 1r shacks all new Dayton
11res w•th ch rome slo t w heels.
low m1le ogE&gt; rn g ood cond Coli
367 0401

1qn FORD f= 150 l'kkup lruclo: PS
4 spd b loc k !::x&lt; rand 3800
Coli 3bl ~bib

1972 DATSUN PICK UP with 1n
sulot e d
top p e r
$1700
'1'12 5082
19/5 DATSUN PICKUP G ood ton
d1t10n
Good t1res
1rro r s
9B5 3919
1~14

MU STANG II 4 (yl
Bee; I oller 992 76H 5

4 ~peed

1969 CHEVY NOVA ' 'J dr
P5
aut o
6 cyl
Good shape
304 713 5707
19 12 FORO l TO Very good &lt;ondl
11011 3 04 675 31 19
1q.4 8 Pl V.MOUTH BUSINESS cour
OrtQino l m oto r on cl trono:.
Qf'od sho pP $700 99/ t 11"

~

New or Repa1r
Gutters and
Downspouts

ANV 1-' I:R!iON who has onyt hrng to
g1ve away and doc!&gt; nl'1 1 rrll er or
aile npt to offer ony o lh f! f th1 ng
l or sol e rnoy pl ace- on ncl rn lh1 s
Ther e wd l be no
&lt;olumn
rhorge l o 1h e o dve&gt;r t 1ser

AlJVANC~D R~ G I ST RAT I ON now

Lost and Found
1965 CHEVY I ) T p•ckup 6 cy l 3
LoOS T at Jones Boys
b rllfold
spd S30U Ca ll d4b 0515 offer
Reword or lo. eep m oney L1kc to
5p rn
have per sona l 1te m !'. bact..
1911 NOVA .307 eng PS auto
992 301 8
•g ood cond ( all 4461654 o r
FOUND
CO LLI E pup
Near
446 3865
Bowmon s Ru n Rd q49 27 41
1 l r/1 FORD F 100 RANG!::R p1 c~ u p
Co ll145 9167
RI:WARD
LOST OR STO LEN O ld l:ngh sh 19/6 Olds Cu tlo ss Sup reme fully
lo ll
equ1pped
good fond
Sheepdog
Answers to the
7&lt;5 5533
nam e of Peaches ~omdy pe t
Reword $100
no qu est1 o ns 1 1976 CHEVY 4 )( 4 l • T good
ask ed Co ll379 731?
cond $4000 Coli 4A 6 7'184

Help wanted

___ ~1'-!_e_!IW~.Y._ - _ _

&amp; HOME MAINTENANCE

ha1red

k1flens

-

-

- -- - -

eo.

I

MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

Carpentry, Electncal ,

Pamtmg

Construction
Maintenance
" GIVE US A TRY
Reasonable Pr1ces
References Avatlable

Phone 742 2029

Sloe ~

old

THfUt: M ON THS old bea ut lui
healthy hou seb ro kP.n ~ rff e n ~
llullv tobb1es one blod Me 1g s
Co Hu rn one Sonety 992 2SQ2
or 99'2 5 427

-

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING &amp; HOME

11-17-1 mo

SHEPAR D TO g ood horne
a nd
yellow
()
mo
Q9'} 63 51

-MObile Homes

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

fT.R.COOstruction

~--

-

for Sale
-

-

c--

1911 Homette b(hi7 2BR
1 %&lt;~8or o n Sh:l0 7 BR
tqlO Amh er st SOx 17 2 BR
1910 Chomp1 on b0x 12 '2 BR
1q65 Genera l bOx 12 'l BR
196E! PMC S2x 12 2 BR
1955 Pro1n c Sc ho one r 7BlCil 1 BR
1970 Sy lv a b0K I2 2 BR
1470 V1llo ger b0 x 12 2 BR
1910 Krrl.w ood 17x6U J8H

B&amp; S MOBilf HOMf SAlfS
flT PUA SANT W VA
615 4424
MOBIL !: HOME 'l bdr g ood cond
$'23Q5 Call 446 1409 between
dpm on d 6pm
1973 M OBI LE HO MI:
53500 Co ll 361 017 0

II' )( 50

19!1 RITZCRAFT 1'l 11 60 2 bdr
s!ove refr1g u n 1l m r cnn d
total el e cl
good cond Co li
446 6678 oiler 5pm
1976 NA SHUA 14 JC 05 J bed room
1' 1 ba th u nder p1nn1ng $1500
and ossum e loon 9A9 2683 o r
843 33 11
1970 Amhers t 50•17 2 l:lR
I Ci7Q Chomp on b()lC 12 2 BR
1965 Gen e ral bOx 12 2 BR
196fl PMl52xl2 2 BR
I Q55 Pro11 1e Schooner 28K8 1 BR
1913 Royo l l:rnboss y 68x 1d 3 BR
19SQ Star 50x10 2 BR
1913 Star b0x14 2 BR
1961:1 Star 60:.: 127 BR
19!0 Sylva 60x1? 2 8R
IQbf:l V1 ll oges 60x 11 'l B~
19bd Wtndsor 5hl0 1 BR
l9l0 Ktrkw ood 12)160 3 BR
8&amp; 5 MOBilt HOM !: SAL ES
I'T Plt-:ASANT W V A

Sweeps Gu•ld
Insured

'f• m1le off Rt 7 by-pass on
Sl , Rt 124 toward Rutland,

Don ' t lel

0.

a damper on your life

Auta&amp; Truck
~epair
,!l;lso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992·5682

4-:JG.IIc-

For The Best
Pnce In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

~~~.::~::·

ROGER HYSEU.
GARAGE
Coli

a chtmnel' f1re p u t

MOORE'S

THE SWEEP

Muffler - Brakes .
Shocks . T1res Battery .
InstallatiOn Serv1ce

19th Century serv1ce wt1h
lOth Century Know How
Specializing tn

Woodstovt, 011 Furnace
&amp; Fireplace Flues
Phone 741-3110
Ktm White, Proprietor

I

Ph 992 2848

I

Pomeroy, 0

3 15 lfc

I

~

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic ( wood'fiberl
Therma I insulation
Save 30 pet. to 50 pel.
on heating cost
Exp•rltnce and

fully Insured
Free Est. ~
call992-2772
11 -3 1 mo
BR ADFORD
Au ctioneer
Com
ple iP Serv rcc Phone 949 7AB7
or 94q 2000 Roc1ne Oh o Cntt
Bradf ord

ELWOOD BOWf~S ~fPAIR
Sweeper s too slers 1rons all
small opp ltonces lawn mower
ne• t to Stote Ht ghway Gara ge
on Rout e 7 Ph onP (61.4 ) 985
IB&lt;S
SfWINq. MACHINE Repo1r! se r
vtr e all m akes yq2 2284 The
f=o briC
Sho p
Pomeroy
A uthon ze d S1ngcr Sol es 0 11d
SNv1ce We ~ horpen SCi ss nro,

I-X&lt; AVATING doz er loader or1d
backh oe work d ump tru cks
and l o boy s fo r hlfe w II ha ul
!11! d1rt to so1l hn,es to ne and
I ', ACHF 12 x 60 mo b1le hnme
w ave l Coil Bob or Roger Jet
!1(!-0 r Delt' l e r 9q') ~8S E!
l orlro doy phon e Qq') /Oll'1 mnhl
19t17 TOTAL Ell: ( TRI C tno briP
r hone 9q'l 3525 or 9Q2 5232
homt--'
fu rnrshed
3 hPrlr
wn-.her end d r ycr A1 r (Ondt
H O NAK ~ R S U:l on d n lr.,.tron &lt;
Ironed l In! 210 ft l rnnl a(lf:'
( l"j lrtpmPnl ~~ 13 ~{}t, h,rf ') t
MO .. I1 11 wv 2511611
Sl" 000 Phone_. ~ 4 2 78/f

ES
700--15-1 Ply Hwt
S37 .31
700-U-6 Ply Deep Lug
S42 45
Mounted &amp; Balanced Free
Phone 742-2328

f XC A VAT ING clou"
bac ~hoe
ond d1tcher Chm f ~&lt;; R Hal
f 1e td
Ba(k Hfl r
Servtf e
Rutl and Oh10 Phone 742 2008
W ill do--, oofrng cons tru cl ton
plumbm g and heolln g No 1ob
too Iorge or too small Ph one
/ 42 ']:JAij
HOWtRY
AND MARliN
1:&gt;&lt;
co vel ng
se p t ic
sys te m s
dmer bor~hoe clum p lrucK
l11,e"tone
grovel
bloc lo.tnp
pov 1ng Rt 143 Phcme I (014 )
t1 ~ H 733 1
~ATHiolOOMS

ANO
Klt &lt;hens
rernocle l ed ce rorn 1c td c plum
b1ng carpentry ond gene ral
11lOinl+&gt; r,once
13 years PIC
pe11enr P 99'} 3bW:i

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
I'll. 992 2171

PomtiOJ

HAMMOND&amp; LOWERY
ORGANS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
(NEW&amp;USEDl

PETE SIMPSON
SALES REP
FOR
SUNDINS HAMMOND
ORGANS
Rac1ne , Oh1o

Phone 949 2118
Allers P.M
11261mo

M &amp; M Hon1£.' ln1p•rw p IH,Ill ~e r v
mq C olh r o l• !&gt; on&lt;1 orN1 We
~ IH' ( I dltt f'
111
"' r1 yl
and
ol 11 ll iiH II 1 ~ t rl lll !J
In
lr e&gt;c
,AUTOMOHilt: IN~lWAN C f h r r n
r •lm {tlf' &lt;&gt; ro ll 61 J ,J67{Jl/8
t opp •llmf? losl y ruH ,.,,,.,rotPrs
l'· n lhrnl !&gt;
1
l t ( l" n HJ II' h n nf"~Q J
111
PUl liNS fXC AVATIN G lomplrh
'im vH (' Phnnc Qt/2 74 l !:l

�[).6- The Sw1day Timt:s-&amp;•IJlin,•l . ~und&lt;-t y ,

D-7- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, fle&lt;.·. 24, 1!178

f&gt;t•c.·. 2-1 . l! li fl

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
~

~

Real
- Estatefor
---- - Sat. e

~

Real
tor Sale
- Estate
- --~

Real fi=s!a_!e for Sale

- - --

~

~

- -

---

-

~

Sale
-Real
. Estate
-·---for- ---

~a!e _

Real Esta!e _tor

--- -

·----,-----=c-,--

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
-·

Real Estate for Sale

. Real Estate for Sale

•· ~

-

-

Real Estate tor Sale

Rea l E state for Sale

Rea l Estate for Sale

-

Rea l Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale
.
'

~

-

Real E stat e for Sale

-----

CANADAY REALTY

IB

446-3636

"'E A-LtOif

992-3325

l16 ·E. Second Street

LOCATION

2511, LO,CUSo ST.
Gallipolis, Ohio

-

~

T. Leadingham.
Insurance Agent

bedrooms, formal d ining ,
new nat . gas furnace , P/ 2
baths, full basement and 2

porches . 525,000.
REALLY NICE -

3
bedrooms, on the edge of
town . City like water , new
oil furnace and one acre.

$23,000.
BARGAIN -

3 bedroom
renewed home with nat.
gas, ci t y water; bath, in
Racine . Only $12 ,000 .

-

Ruth Ann Yeauger
Secretary
Insurance A~nt

Frame

ranch. 3 bedroom in the
cou ntr y . Sliding glass dQOr
in ·din ing area . Garage and
1 acre of privacy . $35 ,500.

NEW

LISTING

Doug Enoch
ReaHor Associat,e

G r ee~ t l ocr~tion 11 1 miles from c ity overlooking Debby
D r . G r~cio us ')'.).' long living rm . with pi cture wi ndo w .

lillie upkeep . $44,500.
MERRY
CHRISTMAS,
HAPPY NEW YEAR,
YOUR
FREE
1979
CALENDAR IS HERE.
G. Bruce Teaford ·
Helen L Teaford
Sue P. Murphy

Formcl! clining c1re.:'1 , c ustom kit chen ca binets, 2
&lt;"('r(lmic t i Ieel bc1ths. 3 B R, fully Ci! rpet ed, cen . iiir , lore
Nl rlir gns furne~ ce with ii budget in the S10's . 'J c;rr
l in i ~ h c d
Concrete drive, Ci t y schools. Thi s

•

--- -- - - - -

'

Lorg e

l o t ~.

Hom e PoriL
nor!h ol Pomeroy
Call qq2 . fJJ ·tq

$34,000

furnished one! un·
opt s
Ph o ne
f u r nrs h e d

9Q1. 543 .1
("ld
o pt.
99'1 '118 /:l .

~ r! rlw n

lu rni shbel orp 8 om

Co lt

$52,000
Rambl in ' bri c k ran ch comes complete with washer ,
dryer, r ange and r efrig . J BR, ll/2 baths, fully
carpe ted. For ma l dining area . 2 ca r finished garage.
Concrete drive.

R~NTfR S AS S ! ~ TANC£

l or ~c n i or
C11r1ens. You mi:ly be ahl c ro
li ve in our opor!m cnt for less
, tha n S5U. Village Ma nor Apmt ·
lllf'll h 99'2 -7787

H+ . AP T

l or one
Pven i ngs .
1'1

Commerc ial building with good sc t ·up for auto repair
and body shop , will hold seven . auto s. Has ho is t , a,ir
comp ressor nnd good forced a rr furna ce . Plenty of
~arking, loca ted in small v illage on good highway .

60 mo b ilf' h o me near Wo cinP
9 97 -5058
k"

N~AW

SYRAC USE Pork . S/00
r-no n th lrY'Ir pcdiotely ncc up"on ·
r y J hpclrno m double cor por i.
R(.• l e r e n c e .
No
Pet .;.
JO ~ 751. 4665 or 752 -1049.

$28,000
Twc· tamily r entaL d rm . a nd ba th on fir st floor 3 rrr 1.

and ba th on sec ond . 1n city .

w,

baths, fr ame ranch •. nea t as a pin . Centra l
heat and air cond ., paneled gar age, famil y kitchen
wi th r ang e . Ci ty School s.

3 BR ,

AND

r oo m ~

$30,000

$11,500

AND•••

light

HJ RNI ':! Hl: O

S170 .
Adu lt s
Call

MOHIU H OM ~ NrcE' loca tron
Arlul t&lt;; only Col i 4 ~b -O JJB
f- Uf.iNI~ H fD

A PT
3 rr n!&gt; . ond
horh All urrlr trf's rrl Good
INO i ron
Adul Ts 0111')1
( o\1
4 4b · J810 or 446 1340

Lt A Sl4 bdr I ' 1 bo th!&gt; utd rty rm gar
hPC11 cer, l ral 01r ch1ldren yes
Prot ~ no . $775 per mo ~ ro cu r oly
bond and re f req . Cr ty school
dr &lt;. trr cT Phorr c only b&lt;' tween
lOom and 12 44 6 ijbUJ
~O R

J BDR HO U~ l- IN KANA UG A Ph
:mij -HH 11

7

roam hou&lt;,P &amp; bo th on
Nrrghbo rh ood Rei S150 mnnth
44 6 J42J
~ ('d r oom

l urnr!, hed Tror iPI S 1bO
a mon l h wat er pard Noo1
ho.;prlol J46 431 5
k ept ca rpe ts ~how th p
r P~u l! !, al rPgular ~lu f' l u~ t ro
~po t
cleon rn g RPnl Plf'ctr rc
~ ho mp ooN $7 Centra l ~u pply .

WHL

_

~~I\f_ic_e s_ OHered_ ...

MOBil I H O M!- 'I one! Ho rn rf rf'f' ..,, t r m a l f'~
Coli 44 6 / 64/

Hill - ~

I P1r r ovctn('n l ~

ll~l ~l AH

UPHO L~r un

l l bJSer Avern gs. &lt;l 46 lfO:i

Sl ANDARO

Pl umb ing Heati ng
215 Third Ave 446 . 37 8?
Gf N f PI ANT S H. SO N ~
PtufliBINC
Heating
A ir Con
di tionin g . 300 ~ ou rt h AvC' Ph .
..tA b · I O'J7 .

Df WITT S P L UM~ lNG
AND H ~A TIN C
l-l outf' _160 at F\lergreen
Ph one 4Ab· 2i'J5
DI-IA IN &amp; Sf WfR Cll:A N/NG Sfh'
VfCE, Op('n 14 Hr. ., dqys a
wecf.: . !)to1 ch CH ~ Son, Ph
75fJ· 139 1

44 671:133 f' lf('-Jl

I f'l ll oo • HPoli ng nne! air fnndolion

h'opco foorn r n~ ul o tio11
d•l b ·8515 nr dd b (Jd.t:, (a ll of tor
d 30

rny

~T ANl~V

~ HA¥1-Ii

Ca r pet

CIP o ncr · ~f'Prng
11,
bPftPYrng
whon ~ t nniP y ~ h ' ornrnq . Cal l

d•H1

J/O!l

Conventiona~

f X T~ MI N A TI NG ( 0
[lmonr&gt;r ly F a in ·~~ ~ 0 dl' ll ) Oo~
Hoi I Oh Ca ll co ll f-' r t bfl'l·6"14 4

CO NUn rt- AND ~l OC K WOWK
llo np rf&gt;Oo,on ohly hy hour or 1ob
h .,~
("I I

eslt rno h'S . Ca ll Jbl -07%
Jb., 07J 1

O t-NN ~ Y

C.tA~ S

Chain li n ~
fr'n&lt;e ~r pP vc. lim ol('!&gt;. Co li
/ •t5 911J Kf'n SoiP••. Gofl,pol r~
AND

RO N S TV ';, ~R V I(F ~ r Ni Oli 1 in q
111 Zcntth
H OU!,f' W ll&lt;,
Co fl
I -JU4-510 7::.!118 &lt;n 44 b 2•15 4.
typ{'~

HROlH EHS GAIJAGE
o f re po i1 Upper 1?1. J

Coll 446 244 5

SH'T IC ~Y~ HM tN :,T All~O . Corn
l' lf' ll' b y quolii1Nf lic r•n &lt;.l'cl rn
~ !nll f' r
frl l d ir! hnuiNf ~ I nn,-:.
LJrrivrl PIC AAA ((lll lro ctoro.;
roll / ~fl . 14) 1
m AN S IIOO FINC. HOMF l(ff'A IR
Or scnrrll l l n1 H'llror cr ti, on s
Call 44(l 4 ~ U I lorn to 4p tn
Mn11 thr u 1-rr
BUlLD Ol H o'
BA ( KHOF
li rn e~ t nnt~ ... r·plrc IC! rr ~ ln!&gt;lalla·
(jl'llPr a l rnr,., trul lion
l inn
MrNPol Cordroctiro \1 Co
Jl!J /'15t-! .
Bill · ~ /&gt;,~OB it

f

H O M ~\

I J r • pr OVC IT' (' nl ~

Coli 44tr

f If'('

and H(' rn"
,., ~ II P1 0 I (' ~

--

Services Oll ered
tq r d

HACK HOI- LJO ZI: H" OITCHI ~ or ·d
rlrrrnp !r u r ~ Cn nr 1r-1(' wn1 ~
Hotl r(' lrl ~ o dd rrlf' '-,p, Hu11or d
O h P h ""/. t') 7UOH or J.JO :ll tltr
LIM~ ~T OI·J r ~J'" O \I P I nnrl !&gt; nrorl
~r l(' '&gt; . At Ri c hard ~ a11d !:ion

pPr Rrvr1 J?rl

All
Up
Ohr o

G n ll r pn l1 ~

( c111 44 b TIH~

A A A (0N Hl A C101"'~ U oc~h "c'
dilllllllru&lt;~

rl n t CJ

Wor ~

$14,000

$6,500

$39,500
F ive ac r es, good 2 story frame home, other outbldg . Ci ·
ty schools, VA · FHA Financing available .

283 acre farm , over 60 acres tillable . ba lance wood and
rolling pasture. 1473 lb . tobacco base. Mineral r ights to
be sold with farm . Comfortable 2 story farm home in
very pi ctu resque setting surrounded by giant trees . 3
barns, other outbldg.

FHA, VA FINANCING AVAILABLE

doPf'

SERVICE

Bill'S

446-2642

i1h:j~q
..1 4() 1 ff.J:l

lllrj ~

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
We sell anyThing for
anvbody at our Auction
B1rn or in your home. For
information and pickup
service call 256-1967.

Sale Every Saturday
NighTat7p.m .

lTiTi .,.-~- lNSUIAHiJN . rnsul spro y
frrur1 in ~ ul n t io n by Har den.
N!' w ho rm •~ ro le! homes, com "" 'frrol &lt;,trt tCftHf'S . For fr f'e
pcl rm ntf'~ to lt44b· l4ll
\M All APPliANO'
·t d-0 0001

AUCTION SERVICE
Corner Third &amp; Olive

repai r.

Ph

PAIN f iNC. fl c&lt;.i dcn tiol interior
nrrd !" l' ICriar " born onr! mobi le
hnrnP ron !:, ~ 10(' es ti mate s. 15
yr l'~ p
(ofl
361 -T/H4
or
:\l:J/ /160
JI M " ~
~ IOIN G
~ ~ri MA 1 b~ 446

SWAIN

CO
·; 67 3

F~H

NOW t ~ A GOOD l iME to ho ve
Y(' l!f l trenl ar&lt;· nml rhi rm rpy
rl.-.c • I
Co li till"' C:h i_ mn ~ y
~WI'I' fl

.ll:

C:--

lll

.c

1-

.

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&gt;+-

-

·'

"FA(TORY ON WHEELS"

CONTINUOUS
NO LEAK GUnERING

'lb ~'l

698-8205

AlBANY, OHIO

+-

Ol

c:

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·--"'
c:
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1,

RETI~EO? NEWLYWEDS? - Id ea! location if you
need close to tow n . Th e hom e is in verv qood co nd ition.
It has 2 brs. , dini ng rm ., cozy kit ch en, ba th , small
spare rm . Nat . gas hed l . Only $1"9 ,000.
·

'
'
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GROWING

with water tap- $4,500.
OFF OF BU LAVILLE RD . - 6 or q building lo t s - pl at ·
ted - one with a sept ic tank - On l y 518,000.
BULAVILLE RD . - ld building lots - tl,. ac . each ,
col!!.!.!_y water and sewage .
RT. 141 - 2 1ots- 11,. a c. eac h .
UPPER RT. 7 - 14 lots - engineer platted - builder s
delight, $~,!&gt;99 each .
LOWER RT . 7 - Around E ur~- 2 sites with river'
frontaQ e.

.c
+-

RACCOON CREEK - 2 bui Iding siles.
AFRICA RD . - 11 2 ac. !ret wi th so m e rd . f ro ntage.
130,000.

Blu.'S

446-2642

COLONIAL LIVING AT ITS BEST -

E.
MAIN
POMEROY, 0-

Loca led in a

highly desired neighborhood on Rt. 35 . Thi s l g , bri ck
home has 5 br s., family room wi th frpl. , love l y ki t chen ,
2 full baths an·d a 2 ca rg araagc.

START THE NEW YEAR ·
RIGHT - In this lovel y
home .
wood
burning
f ire pla ce,
patio ,
n ice
kit c hen, lo ca ted in th e
coun tr y close to Pomer oy.

LARGE FARM - Short distance from Rt. 35 and
H.M.C. 169 acres wi th lots of plu sses. Th is property can
be purchased seve r a l differ ent ways . New ranc h home.
remode led farm house, barn and severa l outbuild ings .
Lots of timber, all m ineral rig hts ahd road f ron t age on
2 roads. ~a ll toda y .

$20,500.
NEW YEAR -

446· 9753
446· 4042
446· 1049
44 6·0458
446·0458

w
w

..

$31.600.
WHY PAY

&amp;

shopping . ONLY $11,900.
WANT TO BUILD? - Here
is 21 acres of the most

Iw

beaut i fully
secluded
property
around.
Electricity and water on a
town sh ip road c lose to

Pomeroy . ASKING $23,000.
EXPAND - 3 bedrooms,
for ma l
dining.
f ull
basement with rec . r oom,
two large porches, . natural
gas forced air hea t, large
t wo ca r garage and work ·
shop. One-third acre. You
can walk to shop . S2J ,500.

HAPPY NEW YEAR!!
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E. Cleland Jr .

••
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Associates

Kathy Cleland
leona Cleland
992-2259, 992-6191, 992-2568

I

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DARVIN BLOOMER

ROBERT FRANCE
LEE JOHNSON
1218 Eastern

z
I

Beautiful 3 bedroom, 1'12 bath, family room
in basement, equipped kitchen and laundry,
-8 of an acre of ground on Fisher SL $35,000.
Will consider a mobile home in trade.

i

DOWNING-CHILDS
BROKER

BRANCH MGR.

OFFICE 992-2342
iVE. 992-2449

,,

R~ al

f:state lo! SaJe_

fHA &amp; VA HOMt lOANS Mcl[N ·
DON MOIHGAGI:: COMPANY
Lo011
Re rr r ('~ (&gt;rllat l v &lt;'
Vi olf&gt;t
(ool&lt;i C'.. Vi N~ 40:l S&lt;'cond
/1 ..,(' SNnnd ll o0 r Gollr po li ~
t) h in 456:11 . Coll4 46 nn

STROUT REALTY

DOWNING-CHilDS
REAl ESTATE

I·

I 514 SECOND AVE.
446.()()()8 1
I
1
I HANNY BlACKBURN, BRANCH MANAGER I'

'-------~-----~-·p••
I

charming 2 slory s lone home in Moddl eflo rl
must sell now so s he is offering thi s tine
hom e for a low, low price of S2 0.UOO . The re
ar e 2 bedrooms (1 is extra largeL s pa cious
liv ing room w-fireplace, formal dining , ea t in kitch en, bath w-shower , garage &amp; a king
sized yard . Good loca.tion on Mill St. Call the
Wiseman Real Estate Ag ency , Gallipolis,
446 -3643.

--Real Es tate for Sale
Estate tor Sale
-Real
- -· -- - - - - - -- -- -----·~·

give lh &lt;t nks tor t
J
y unch;mging nn ci cll c' ri sll c&lt;l
ltr&lt;H litions of tiK' llolid&lt;ty &lt;11ld yo ur
l
cvcrlos tin ~ fri c ll&lt;lsllip.

MIDDLEPORT

r---0-W__N_E_R
__M
__U
__S_
T_S-_E
__l_l----1-,-.c-·--U-W-1-1C-r--o-l-t-h-is--1

.-:OR ~ A L f BY OW NE R
l( \'}6 1irs t Ave r,uC' R"iv er.., iew pro
r ~ ' '' Y wi th h ontage o n Fir ~ ! and
"\f'ro nd Avenue!'. H rooms. ') ' •
ho th s. 1 cor goToge. Ca t! week
cl oy ~ 44 0·4383. ovf'nings o ne!
Sundo.,. 4&lt;16 0 1:!9 . Shown by op
rn i ntr11(' 11t ron ly

z

on

BAIRD-FUUER
REALTY
OSCAR BAIRD
JOHN FULLER

-

I
I

I
I
I
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1l
I
,I

May the radiance and gift of ·His
love light your way to· everlasting
peace and contentment.
Best wishes for a joyous Christmas.

RENT?

Whe ther you ren t , or
w hether you buy - you pay
for the home you o ccupy .
Cal l on this home - c lose to

•
FOR SALE

New roof,

br ick ho me, wood burning
fireplace, l'h baths, 3
bedr ooms , d i ning room ,
many features . Cheap at

A THOME
SUE ROUSH
VICKIE HAULDREN
BOB LANE
BECKY LANE
WALT LANE

31:16·9857

PH _446 -7440 ANYTIME
Complete Modern Service
ESTATE SETTLEMENT SERVICE
CCMPLETE FARM DISPERSAL SALES
LIQUIDATION SALES
HOUSEHOLDSALES&amp;ETC .
We.Go Anywhere To Serve You
"BUD" McGHEE. REALTY
GENE OESCH, ASSOCIATE

Tom White, Salesman, 446-9557 Eve.
Gtme Oescn, Salesman, 446 -7440, Eve

SECLUDED - If you like your priva cy, you will fal l in
love with this new redwood ranch home. 3 br ., p re tt y
kit chen with form a l dining, l.r., 1 full bath with built·in
. vanity and m arbl e l av., 12 'x20' base ment and 2 deck
porches. Ca n be purchased with 2" 2 or 20 ac r es . Wood ed location .

JAY MARCUM roofing . spouting.
onrl sidin g
30 years e• ·
perience. h.:oe e!&gt;limote. Cofl

•

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

GLENN SUMMIT RD . - d2 acres wi th o lde r mobile
home, pl e nty of timber $18,000
ON PROPOSED RT . 35 - 5 b uilding si t es, restr icted to
$60,000 hom es.

IMPROVEMENTS

!iANDV AND BEAVI:H Insurance
Co . has altered services for lire
insurance cove rag e in Gollio
County for almost a cen tu r y.
~arm . home and per sonal pro·
perty coverages oren availabl e
to meet indi vidual needs. Con·
to e! f mmc tt Churrh , you r
neighbor ond agen t.

WITH

M . L ~ (Bud) McGhee, Brok~·
446~ 0552 Anyt1me

HOME

Storm
Windows,
Storm
Doors,
Replacement
Windows, · Patio.
Covers,
Aluminum
Siding
and
Accessories. Call

&gt;-

+-

All
TYPES Of MA SO NA~Y (OA t HAULING . By ton or truck .
S l o~er or furnp. Reasonabl e
WO RK . fir eplace s. bl ock
rol es . Co li 367 -0195 o r
th imneys . stone . bricl&lt; block
:167-0'131
w nr ~
f"rpe es li mot es. LOG UE
CONTR ., 38B·Y93'1
MUlliNS HOM!: IMPHOVI:MI:NTS .
Siding : ... inyl , alumi num, an d
.-----;-::-;:-::-::-::-----,
steel :· gutters . doors , wi11dows ,
roofing , wi th optional in sula·
l ion . Low cos t. Free estimates.
Call.r146 -lUU9

Gene Oesch, Auctioneer

ADVANCED SEAMLESS

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Ill

CUSTOM HACKHOI: and dm~ r BABV SITHH . TENDER laving core
gi ve n to your children .
w a r~ l icensed :sept ir ton~ in·
Reasonabl e roles. Tuppe rs
!. toller . Grode wor t.:
yard
Plain s or~ o . 667 -30!:18 .
wror ~
clriv ewoy s and loyou l.
Colt · C.A lli POLIS DI VI::RSifltD
STUCCO f'LA SH I-I , pla ster r~poir~
(ONSTRU CTI ON CO
l e&gt;r tur cd
ce iling s.
hee
.ri4Q.4440
estima tes. ( a ll 256·1H12.

I J7~ - tl0!J i'

GUTTER CO.

Real Estate for Sale

--

Anchoring, Skirting·,
Awnings, · Patio
Covers,
Carports,
Roof Paint. Sel-up '
and Re-leveling. Call

l iPHOI\ l"IRY &lt;; ft()l'
Av0 4•11J lf&lt;;(1 " ' ' '"

Real Estate for Sale

Services Offered
Will CAHE for the elderly in our
I'ASOUAL~
HfC THI C bl own
home. Phorw 9'11·73ld .
rP iu losP insulation . " Ou rs
.
WATER
WHL drilli ng. Will iam T.
rlnP :s n' r shrink and no olf &lt;'n sive
Cranl. 7A'l·'lffl9.
odor. .. Phone 44 b -'l716 .

MOBILE HOME

hy !hr· hour (H hy lhl' 10h I f H
fr rf' P'&gt; lr'nO!f''&gt; foil 'J'::JIJ 19'}1

Kenneth Swain, Auet.

·--- --

Services Offered

UOZ H? WO RK E'K(O ..,. o t rnq
rlr-(H rn'l Ph 4J to ~JO'll

l" f.:t \ TA. T!

HOGG~

All
CA RTER S !JlUMBING
AND Ht ATI NG
Cor f ou rth 8 Pm c
Phunf' 446 -JB8B Of 4-46-447i'7

~HO P

R U~~ ~MAX ~lli O T"r

I-1 0 ~H~T" S

Plu_"lbLn9_ &lt;!_n_&lt;! l_!ei!t!n9

Surrounded by the warmth and love
of an old fashio ned holiday we send

~

lap-$4,000 .
.
1- 2 acre tra c t , &lt;:: fea red- bea utiful bu ildin g site

INSURANCE AGENCY

1-f" n CI~N ~ Y

UTrli ! r ed~
pd
.1-lt• .1 &lt;1 1 b al rcr ~prn

b

Good. c leared, flat to rolling lot loc ated in Gr een Twp.
on State Rt . 141 with l t;J Acres. Id ea l building or mobile
ho me site w i th rural water availabl e. F 1RST AD .

.THE LEADINGHAM

~ 0 1-i R~NT

LorqC' 10 roo rn hemP in Ri o
Gr&lt;1nde. 1-omrl y roo m w rlh WB
lr rprloce J bo t h~ 4 bedrooms .
'''l l11p pPd ~rlrh r&gt; n g arog r&gt; . ( all
ThF&gt;
Wr ~Pi liO n
AgPn(y
.1.11'.1 Jb-1 J

0

town , 3 Brs., bath, pretty living r oom . for m&lt;'tl entry ,
kit . w ith birc h cabinets, family rm . wi th fir eplace, lull
bc:1 sem e nt, nat . gas heat, c.a . e~nd double c arport
Situated on ov er an acr e of l an d . For the fam il y who
needs in town conve ni ence.

One story frame . 4 rms. and bath with drilled well on
large level lot in village of Thurman .

$115,000

PA~K

TWO BDR MOI: mf HOM E Coli
440 050~

..."' .

ICK HOME - Locat ed right outside

VACANT LAND
OFF OF 160 - 2 ac r es tr ac t s, need to be c lea r ed, wafe r

Si&gt;&lt; ace wooded lot with dug well, septi c tank and hook
up tor mobile home. 17 miles from town in North Galli a
Sc hoo l Di str ic t .

Downtown n ea r shoppin g sc hoo ls, etc . Very nice :t BR
frr~m e,_ 1!'? bc~ths , cute as a button , ki t chen , plu s
CC'Ir PCftn~ thro ughout . Formal dining, love ly foy er with
open s!.:'lJrway . Lg . spacious r ooms . Low S40 00 gas
budget .
·

l or rent C. oll io

RO O M~

+-

WE AT THE GAllERY OFFICE WOULD LIKE
TAKE TltiS OPPORTUNITY TO THANK All OF
OUR FINE FRIENDS. AND PATRONS FROM
PAST. YOUR FRIENDSHIP AND P"mu
HAS BEEN GREAnY APPRECIATED AND
ALWAYS BE.

$9,000

wooded . On blacktop road, 10 miles from c ity Rural
water availabl e. Better see, won't last long .
·

$40,000

Hotel
houscl&lt; eep1n g
O NTI-iAL HOTEl

45 acr es. Approx . 35 timber , rest til l&lt;'lble. l 242 lb . Tobac co b&lt;lSe, bar n , oth er outbldg . Ha nn&lt;'ln Tr ace Schools.

17 ACRES vacant land with 2 acres flat , remainder

Call Bob at Toney Realty ,
GalleFY ef Homes tor more
d etails. . 446· 7900 .

~ U b PI N C

·c:

$23,000

Commercial b~ilding , 200 block of city, presently leas·
ed. Needs repatrs . Cat! for more information .

fJ A CRES . Fi ve room home needs h;mdymi! n ' s tou ch .
Good bnrn , oth er oulbuil dinqs . Tob&lt;'KCO ba se. Ci t y
sc hools.

Very n ice 3 bedroom brick
with a family room . wood ·
burning fireplace in the liv ·
ing room and spacious 2
car carport setting on
acreag e with a farm pond
apx . halt way between Rio
Grande and Oak Hill . This
is a very scenic, secluded,
and quiet location . Monthly
rent 5400.00 and landlord
will be pavina utilities!

~l HPIN G r oo n1~

·-+-

Over an acre parli ~lly wooded , country se tting , 1978 2
BR mobi·le hom e, filmily rm ., tir epla c'e, eaf ·in kitc hen
wit h r i'tngc and r efrig ., cen . air. Sidewa lk , patio . Thi s is
,, bciluty! ~ yge r Creek SchD?Is.

$25,000

$19,500
FOR RENT

Spac ious li ving and dining r ooms . 2 BR, attic suitable
· tor third BR, eat · in kitchen with r ange, refrig ._ and
dishwasher . Full basement , good gas furn ace. In ctty.

$26,900

$29,500

Mr ddl epo rt. ~ullabl e
Kcry Cec il 99')-S'}b'l

111

2 g lass enclosed porches for the indoor gardener .

0 le-I f &lt;lS hionecl c irculilr porch is high! ight of I his counlry
h omr . On l clcre sloping lot surrounded by trees.
Sprl c ious _liv ing clncl filmily room s, 1 BR, fr. mil y si2c
krt_c hr n wtth rr=~ nfl,c n nd r et rig . Gn rn ~C' . Cel li lor nn clp
no rnt mf'nt yDu ' ll· lr kP th is one!

3 A ND 4 RM

TWO BtDROOM

THI S WEEK'S SUPER BUY! 3 BR fully carpeled
frame home has nearly new for ced ai r gas furnace,
storm doors and windows, carpor t . Private fenced
back yard with storage bldg. In c ity .

$17,500

MQ~I l f

33

$23,700

Choice loca tion from Davi s Hall. in Rio Grande. l 112
stor y, 3 BR , 1 bath , electric heat and com pl ete ly in·
sulated on doubl e lot with garden spot and large trees.

For'Rent

~ o ute

•

.c

$30,000

~

( 0 UNTHY

BOB LANE
BRANCH M~NAGER,
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
GALLI POLIS, OH 10

"MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A
HAPPY PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
TO All."

$57,750

Housing
Headquarters
~

OFFICE 446-7900

Double door entry Into toyer adds to the uniqueness of
this brick and cedar L · shaped ran ch . Sep arate
bedrOom wing with 3 spacious bedrooms, 2 ful l baths .~
F am ily rm . with firepla ce. Family sized kitchen and
di ning area, 2 c ar finished garage . Heat pump, fully
equipped kitchen, J4 acre lot surrounded b y beautiful
pines. Brand new nearing complet ion .

Asso(;iilfes

-

to

Ol

Phyllis
Loveday
Realtor Associate

From All Of Us,
To All of You: Joyous
Season's Greetings And. •

5

incomes on thi s one . 4 - 2
bedroom
apts ..
over.
busi ness rooms. Brick with

-

Near city, like new 3 BR , 1t;, bath brick and fram e
ranch . Family room with fireplace , attached garage, .
patio. Gas furnace, cen. air . Beautiful trees and
shrubs.

-

529.500 .
RENOVATED

NEW

$59,900

Lou Lutton, Realtor Assoc., Eve. 446-3005

New 3

bedroom ranch . Bath , city
water , family room with
sliding
g la ss
door ,
carpeting and kit. range.

LIKE

TONEY REALTY

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636

3 large

WANT TO SE LL ? Call us
for &lt;m &lt;~ppraisa l and why
you should li st with us .
WANT TO BUY? COlli us. If
we clon ' t have it th en we'll
find it fo r you .

WHEN

OPPORTUNITY

KNOCKS, you s1ill hav e to
net up and opcn- th l' door .

De r' no w.
Office Y'n -2l'12
Ev(' . Y9 7-'1449
Rodney Downinq , Broker
t!tll Chi ld !-&gt; , M.1n &lt;t 9er

f OR ~ Al f ~y OWNER
'· nrr P r·u1nl ~"'OI&lt;'I tor nil h't
100 . g r1nrl hu y A l'&gt;n ho rne- nn t"i
· ro th (' l orr.-.o q" ln r 'o k• Coli
.l olt&gt;l"/1 1.

l ' · ACH ES . n•ro l wo le 1 top, o il
lo' : 160 , (]Nld huy . A l~o h('me

011d othf' r ClftNI ~J(' !(, o..nlf' Ccrl l
.j.J l:J - 1771
HIAILH~

AN D I O f Rural \':Cl i N . ·;
rnrlf' 'i t'l\1 1 011 HI 1 ~1 ( oi l

~' I' ·'

.11" ,. , T lfl ) 11:1

I U \ 1/ .J LIR HPtr to. t~n u~ ~ I nl&lt; f' Dr .
Rr o l '",r o11 rlP I rn r qn1ngf' f I'
:1 b(J1h!- , 'J c.-.rnrlf'lf' hf'nting
~ y~l (' ll' ~ , f' IN Il l!
li rpplor ro l ur
naC&lt;' lf' w !.J(_l '· f'h ") ' " 'ill:!«

..

HOMtSITES l or snl u . 1 acr e ond
up . Middlepor t nco1 Rutland
Cn11992 -·/.rllJI

THRft Bl-DROOM fron 1e home in
Mtcldl epo rt. Cot! 9&lt;;1 2·3457
FAfiM FOR sol £' H ou~C - 2 bor n!.
h oil e&gt; r l or 9e p crnd 10 00&lt;'~ 01·
11"1rr n 0'~ 741'l':J6b

NFW TH RH h.. cl roorn home.
f" ireplnr 4:' . ~ un rl&lt;' l k . 11 , acre
wooded lor 6 14-4b7 -J890 , Tu p·
per· ~ P f o in~

camp ~ng Equipme_n ~

GO CAMPING AM~ RICA
VA
No
( l'l r gr b le Wi! h (oochr11e11 RV" Or~ o! i! y ·
hllrl l prrc('r! right Ornens Cll
V elE' f en~ ) ~HA
As low o ~ 3, ...
rnodol s wrt h a wr dc range o f
down (all nor, Vctt"'r ens and
lorn dy -pleo!\ing Hoorplon s. Sec
9&lt;'ncral publ ic) To purchase
rhcm Today' Apple City Recroo ·
rpol £'State or rc frnonce. :JO
l iOIIOI Vehicle\ . HI 35 . 1 mi.
Yl:AHS fff-IM ~ lf-I ~ L A NU MOR ·
wN I
ol
Jock s- on
Oh .
TC.AGE CO 11 f . Stnl&lt;' St. .
tr1 4·7!J6 5700 .
Athl'P ". !' hCl nPf'old 5 Q~ &lt; IU 5 1

R~Al E~ TA1f L O AN ~

mnn f'y

rl('lwn

'

.

�0-,'1- Th&lt;• Sunday Timt•s ,~&lt;·ntin!'l . Sund"r . n,., ·

2~ . 1~78

•

Christmas zn 1944; 'First it blew, .
next it snew, then by heck she friz'
(Third of a four part series
on Christmas Past ).
BY JAMES SANDS
1944
GALLIPOUS - "First it
blew, next it snew and then by
heck she fm ."
Th e big news of 1944's
Christmas season was the
weather. Six inches of snow
fell on December 14 and f1ve
inches of the white stuff came
down on Decem ber 20.
"And how the fresh snow
and frost· laden trees and
w1res ghstenM and sparkled
as the sun extended his

Ovur 1$0 folk braved the
first sturm to attend the
Baptist
Ch urch
In
Gallipolis where the
Eureka Jubilee Singers
were

appearing.

Twenty·one Galllans In
t944 lost their lives In the
war - II of those died In
France. This brought the
total number of Galllans
who had died In WW II to
37.
There were at least two
canteens for soldiers in
Gallipolis - one was run by
the BPW and the other by the
Htgh School Girls Reserves.
The girls, the week before
Christmas, held a dance to
ralSe money. They had a juke

Also

several people walked to
Gra(e Church later In the
week to hear the Christmas
r ec ital of Grace ' s four
choirs : regular choir,
cadet nurs es choir, junior

choir, and verse-speaking
choir . The Rev. Scott
Wes terman

was

th e

director of all four.
At Rio Grande the Hobbies
and Craft s show was held.
There were rag dolls,
homemade violin s, hooked
rugs and crocheted spreads.
The people were entertained
by Mrs. Dana Wicklme on the
accordion and Sydney Fadely
on the violin. Persons at·
tending wer e also shown
three Rio Grande .community
enterprises : the pasteurizing
plant run by Bill Ball, the
loom operated by Faye
Roberts and Mrs. John
Ree se, and the cannery
operated that day by Joseph
Clark and Mrs. Ed Troth.
Despite the weather no one
could easily forget that the
US was then at war. Gallia
was Ul the midst of its sixth
War Loan Drive. Morgan and
Springheld Twps. were the
first to reach their quota , and
82·year·old Alonzo Cameron
Safford wa s one Of the
champi on sa lesmen in
Ga llipolis. Other county
leaders were Pearly Me·
Carley and Edna Ward.

box , a woodwind orchestra

and a burlesque on the
warmtng and welcome rays
football team
Barb
over the top of the West
Wheeler played Co ach
Virginia hills and mist
Swanson.
shrouded Ohio River , It
A rather strange oc·
was a be·dtamonded wonder·
currence of the Lafayette
land at least for a little while
Hotel set minds to working.
after 9 a.m. But despite the
Why had SlK quail flown in
beauty of the shimmering
unison into the side of the
landscape, the populace was
hotel ? Deer season in 1944
yearning for more moderate
was discussed by some. Only
weather and better chances
one deer had been snagged in
to do their Christmas shop·
1943, that by Earl Tawney.
ping and bring home the
Jumor Sims had hit.one too in
bacon a nd other provender."
1943 but somebody had stolen
(Tribune ).
the carcass from him. Deer
Temperat ur es hove red
huntington , of course, had to
around the zero mark for
be done out of state.
several days that December.
A good deal of ex·
The weather slowed things
&lt;ltement was stirred up
down a bit, but did not bring a
when Ada Brown came to
halt to the Christma s
Gallipolis to spend the
celebration.
holidays. Ms. Brown was
Cadmu s basketball fan s
visiting Mrs. Oma Brown
were upset that a couple of
of 762 First Avenue. Ada
home games had to be can·
Brown had starred In the
cellM. Cadmus, between 1930
movie HStormy Weather"
and 1938, had never lost a
along with Lena Horne. She
home ga me and only rarely
had just returned from a
did it lose between 1938 and
trip overseas to · entertain
1944.
the troops.
Movies were in 1944 a great
• • • · escape from the realities of
• • •...., • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
·t the world. Some of the movies

Cf.~al

that played Gallipolis around
Christmas, 1944 were:
" The Oklahoma Kid"
(Cagney and Bogart),
(~: "Arizona Whirlwind" (Hoot
.
'-A • Gibson ), "Scarlet Claw"
( Ba~il Rathbone and Nigel
t Bruce), " We Meet Again"
By
1 {Ray Milland, Barbara
Willis T. Leadingham 1 Britton), "Marriage Is a
Realtor
I
Private Affair" (Lana
,--.
I
Turner), ."Arsenic and Old
Lace" (Cary Grant), "West
• · of the Rio Grande" (Johnny
The decision on whether
be deducted from anything: Mack Brown) 1 "Larceny with

·

•••
••
••
••

but the check ing account.
Mustc" (Allan Jones and
When yo u own your own • Kitty Carlisle), "Henry
ho me, there I S no fea r of a •
raise in rent , your monthl y e Aldri ch
Plays
Cupid"

mortgag e

mortgage 1nterest can be
dedu cted f rom income
taxes . Thi s can be a sizable
taz
deduct1on, es pecia ll y
duri ng
the ea rly years of

payments• (Jimmy l,yden) , "1Abroad
with Two Yanks" (William

remain the same for the •
life of the mortgage .
Fmall y, where el se can you •
find an in vest ment that•
you and your your family •
can li ve in whil e 1ts value•

First . an equity (cash
valu e) is built up as you
pay tor the home over the
yea rs And , its resqle value
can increase greatly (as
has been the case 1n recent

• times) with r·ising real
• estate pr ices
e Also , propert y ta xes and
•
·e
'•

•

ADVANTAGES Of BUYING A H9USE '

• thoughts to consider.

e

t
#S a

Today •

•
e to rent or buy a hom e is one
• that eventua ll y confronts
• almost every family . If thi s
I S you r case, here are a few

•
•
•
e
•

·.

mcre&lt;! ses?

•
•

children and the news thai
the 34 kid; at the Children's

If there 15 any 1hing Wf! •
can do to help you in the •
field of r ea l estate please •

Home would have a merry
Christmas was greeted
with joy and peace. The
Tl mes repo rted : "II' s a

• th e mortg age when about
• 90 pe rcent ot the monthly

phone or drop &lt;n at •
8
LEADINGHAM
REAL
ESTATE, S12 Second Ave., •

e interest on the loan. Rent,

We' re here to help

• pa yments

rep resents

d
W k
d
Ben ix, Helen
al er, an
Dennis O'Keefe) and '~ This is
the Life" (Donald O'Connor.)
Christmas was and Is for

Gallipolis. Phone 446·7699. •

•

8 on the other hand , cannot

f

..-• • • • • • • • • • • e e e e e e e e e e • • • e

.

I

of attention.,.

And we also notice a lot of
weddings around Christmas,
1944. But then it must be
remembered that 1944 was a
leap year.

two persons for DWI
liALLIPOLIS
Two
pc1 sons were cited Friday by
the Gallipolis City Police on
charges of DWI. Cited were
Robert L. Stern, 33, Bidwell,
and Roger W. Taylor, 32,
Gallipolis.
Gallipolis City Police in·
vestigated eight accidents
Friday.
20,
Trilla
Roberts,
Gallipolis, was cited on
charges of failure to control
following an accident in
which the car she was
operating struck the home of
James Dobenbarger, 1225
Second Ave.
Officers, who were called to
the scene at 5:08 p. m.,
reported that the Roberts
auto •went out of control on
Second, crashed through a
fence, and struck the
Dobenbarger home.
Police report severe
damage to the Roberts auto,
damage over $150 to the fence
and residence .
An auto operated by Robert
R. Blain, 26, Gallipolis, in·
curred severe rlomo gc during

POMEROY
Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, voted to purchase
American
flags
for
classrooms of the Eastern
and Meigs Local Schools at a
recent meeting. During the
meeting presided over by
Rod Karr, commander, Steve
Schmucker, son of Clarence
sChmucker, home on leave
from the Marines, was Ul·
traduced and reported on sick
call were Mike Fry at his
home m Syracuse, and
Charles Wildermuth and
Clint Birch in Holzer Medical
don't eat what Mama puts on
the table. I wiD not do these
things any more."
One little girl asked that
Santa bring her Grandfather
a Brahrna bull. To which Mr.
Peeps cautioned: "Santa
may have a little trouble
getting a hump-backed bull
down the chimney ."
Another hoy did away with
the ·social amenities and
simply listed the dozen or so
things that he wanted and
signed it, "I've been good and
thiS is what I want, so "GoOd
old American pragmatism
was far from dead in 1952."

Three ·couples

evidently doing a good job

seek licenses

children who need that kind

SHORT TERM

6 Month Certificate Of Deposit

HIGH INTEREST
Point Pleaeant Federal Savinge I!! Loan A••eiation
Rates Effective December 21, 1978 to December 27, 1978

%*
•10,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

a t wo.vehicle collision at the
intersection of Third Ave. and
Locust St. at 4:08p.m.
Officers report that autos
operated by Blain and Tony
J . Garlic , 17, Gallipolis,
collided at the intersection.
No citation was issued. The
Garlic vehicle incurred
moderate damage.
Police were called to the
scene of a three-vehicle
accident on First Ave. at the
junction of Mill Creek Dr., at
1:11 p.m.
Officers report that north
bound autos operated by
Kenneth A. Wroblewski, 36,
Gallipolis, and Kenneth
Fellure, 31, Gallipolis, had
stopped in traffic at the in·
tersection.
A vehicle driven by Evans
L. Scott, 77, Vinton, failed to
stop and struck the Fellure
auto in the rear. The Ioree of
impact pushed the Fellure
vehicle into the rear of the
Wroblewski auto.
Police report moderate
damage to the Fellure and

Legion plans to
purchase flags

goodplacetollveandMaw
and Paw Sprague are

serving as parents for 34

Cent'er. A memorial was held
for departed members and
the death of Carl Durham, a
World War I veteran, was
noted.
Karr reported on the
district conference held in
Lancaster which he attended
along with Frank Vaughan,
Edgar Van Inwagen and John
Zwilling. The post is ex·
tending an invitation to
veterans to join the post. The
eligibility dates for World
War II veterans is Dec. 7, 1941
to Dec. 31, 1946; Korean
veterans, June 25, 1950to Jan.
31, 19:i:i, and Vietnam
veterans, 'Aug. 5, 1964 to May
7, 1975.
A New Year's Eve party
was announced for Dec. 31 for
members and guests starting
at 9 p.m. Refreshments will
be provided along with live
music.

Refreshments following the
meeting were served by Eliza
Gilmore.

Scott vehicles, no damage to
the Wroblewski auto . No
citation was issued.
John C. Franklin, 43, Kerr,
was cited on charges of
faUure to yield foUowing a
two·auto collision on .F irst
Ave. at Sycamore St. at I :11
p.m.
Officers report that a
vehicle traveling south on
First operated by Franklin
attempted a right tum onto
Sycamore and struck an east
bound auto driven by Ethel G.
McPherson, 34, Gallipolis.
Police report IJloderate
damage to both vehicles.
Ali eta L. Spencer, 35,
Bidwell, was cited on charges
of assured clear distance
following a two-vehicle
mishap on SR 7 at 12:25 p,m .
According to the police, a
north bound auto, traveling in
the left lane, operated by
Spencer swerved into the
right lane and struck the left
front of a north bound vehicle
driven by Gwinn P. Perry, 43,
Cutler, 0.
Officers report slight
damage to both vehicles.
Police investigated a twoauto accident on Upper.River
Rd. at 12:03 p.m.
Officers report that an auto
operated by Shirlene A.
Ward, 23, Galllpolls, had
stopped in traffic. A v~hicle
driven by Doris L. Duke, 38,
Crown City, failed to stop and
struck the Ward auto in the ,
rear.
There was moderate
damage to the Ward auto,
slight damage to the Duke
vehicle. No citation was
issued.
Police were called to the
scene of a two-auto coUision
at the junction of First Ave.
and State St. at I :45 p.m.
Officers report that an east
bound auto on State operated
by Julia F. Lanier, 18,
Southside, turned left onto
First and struck a north
bound vehicle driven by
Terry QuaDs, '21, GaUipolis.
There was moderate
damage to the Qualls auto,
slight damage to the Lanter
vehicle.
At 4:30p.m. autos operated
by Mary A. Kerns, 68, Port·
land, and Thelma L. Cox, 31,
Rodney, incurred moderate
damage when they collided
on the parl&lt;ing lot at ·the
Silver Bridge Plaza.

ELBERFELDS
SALEI '10995
EUREKA
UPRIGHT SWEEPER

r.:::'Y/II •

GALLIPOLIS - Three
couples filed for marriage in
Gallia County Probate Court
Wednesday.
Filing on Wednesday were:
Gary Lee Carter, 27,
Gallipolis, boilermaker, and
Ann Elizabeth Wood, 18,
Gallipolis, student.
Randall W. Lane, 18,
Gallipolis, manager and
Dreama L. Eddy, 17, Vinton,
student.
James R. Adkins, 24,
Patriot, unemployed, and
Debra Cox, 22, Gallipolis,
retail sales.
Two couples flied for
marriage license Friday.
Filing in Probate Court were:
Doyle B. Minnis, 39,
laborer , Bidwell, and Nina F.
Peck, 51, Bidwell, housewife.
Billy Joe Harrington, 26,
Bidwell, machine operator,
and Cheryl Ann Merrick, 22,
Galllpolls, unemployed.

alii 1JtlO (Your 197t tu relurD)

Point
Federal
Savings &amp; Loan
Association

612 Viand Street
675·2500
'

I

.

415 Main Street
675-6890

• Federal replallou reqalre a nllltalltlal Ialerelt ·penally tor nrly wlllldnaL

WORKER Klu.ED
WASHINGTON C.H., Ohio
(UPI) - One construction
worker was killed and
another injured critically
Friday in a cave-in on the
north side of Washington
Court House.
Officials said Jim Prebble,
28, Canal Winchester, died in
the accident. Ronald Stanley,
24, McConnellsville, suffered
several fractures ·and was
taken to Mt. Carmel Medical
Center in Columbus. He was
in critical, but stable,
condition in the intensive
care unit. ·
Officials said the two were
working on a sewer project '
when equipment slipped into
the ditch and feU on ~hem,
trapping them for 30 minutes.
Sma11 people bury the hat·
ehrl - hut leave cnou~h han· .
clll' ttnt'nvcred sn thcv can
gn &lt;Sjl it in a.hurry , if ne~d be. ·

By SAJID RIZVI
TEHRAN, Iran ( UPI ) - Troops shot and killed a professor
and opened fire on antiollhah demonstrat.ors rampaging
·throiJ8h !buttered-up downtown Tehran today. A strike by oil
workers puahed crude production to a record low.
Profesaor Kamran Nejatollahl, ?:1, of Tehran's troubled
Polytechnic, was shot by a soldier as he strolled on the roof of
the science ministry, scene of a four.&lt;Jay sit.Jn by 100
professors.
· It Willi the first army killing of a teacher since the teachers
joined student protests following the abortive start of the new
academic session in earlv October.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, December 26, 1978

Neja!.ollahi, a civil engineer, was rushed I.o a hospital but
died shortly afterward, colleagues said.
The shooting occurred as rioting youths swept through the
town burning army trucks and jeeps and setting bonfires in the
middle of the streets I.o block troops sent to disperse them.
The fourth straight day of violence in the capital led tO large
pile-ups of traffic and a renewed oil scarcity scare brought
huge queues to gasoline filling stations and to shops selling
heating fuel.
Behind the scenes, meanwhile, political leaders intensified
their efforts to forge a political compromise to end the

e

By
United
Press
International
The National Safety
Council's prediction that
between 400 and 500 people
would die on the nation's
highways
during
the
Olristmas holiday weekend
has been borne out.
And In addition the
highway carnage, at least 15
fire deaths during the holiday
weekend were attributed to
faulty Christmas tree lights.
The worst of the fires killed
eight children in New
Orleans.
As miJllons of homeward·
hotmd visitors jammed highways, the death loU pushed
well above the cotmcil's lower
limit for the period that
began at 6 pm. local time
Friday and ended at midnight
Monday. During last year's
Christmas holiday 520
fatalities were reported .
United
Press
A
International count this
morning showed at least 449
people had been killed in
traffic accidents in the nation

during the holiday weekend.
the breakdown :
Traffic
449
Fires
64
Planes
2
515
Total
Texas reported 54 traffic
fatalities and California 32.
Michigan and Georgia each
reported 25 traffic deaths,
Ohio had 22 and F1orlda and
North Carolina each reported
20.
Six people were killed by a
hit-and-run driver in a
speeding car in Brooklyn,

.
.
N.Y., Monday. The victims,
including a father and his two
children, apparently were
killed instantly when the car
plowed into them at an
intersection, police said.
The car's . alleged driver,
Edwardo Coba , 27 , was
arrested about an hour later
at his Brooklyn home,
officials said.
In another Brooklyn
accident Monday, at least
three people, including two
young girls, were killed and
four others injured when a

Man rescued from Ohio River
-- · The Syracuse and Pomeroy Emergency Units jomM ef·
forts to rescue a man floating downriver on a dock Saturday
afternoon.
It was reported the mari had been on the river dock when it
broke loose.
A Minersville resident spotted the dock floating down river
with the man on it. The two squads combined reports and
.
rescued the man who was not identified.
First reports s;~id the man was in an outbord motorboat
and the motor had apparently quit running. However, the
rescue teams disclosed that he was floating downriver on the
dock.

room of the one-story, wood
Fire officials attributed a
frame home. Three victims short circuit on the gaily
- Olarles Chambers, 37; his trimmed artif.icial tree with
wife, $berry Lee, 26 ; and sparking the blaze. Six of the
their son, David Wayne, I - · victims were Mrs. Perkins'
were dead at the SCflle from children and two were her
burns. Another child who grandchildren.
lived at the home, Bryan
Mrs. Perkins, who is unemSanders, 10. died a half·hour ployed and on welfare, moved
later of probable smoke in with a relative Sunday
inhalation.
after her apartment was
The New Orleans fire took gutted on Christmas Eve
little time Sunday to sweep morning.
through Ida Perkins' small
"Everything I had was
apartment, part of a two- totally lost," Mrs. Perkins
story franw house near the said Monday. "I didn't save
French Quarter. Eleven ,anything. I didn't have
residents of the apartment anything."
were at home when the fire
Assessing her tragedy she
struck, and eight of them said, "I didn't have any
between the ages of I and 18 insurance, I have eight kids
- died. Others miraculously to bury and I'm trying to get
escaped injury.
some help."

UDIIed Pres&amp; International
An eastern Ohio driver was
k.IUed Monday night in a
threecar colllsion at an East
Uverpool street intersection,
boosting the long Christmas
bol!day weekend traffic toll to
22 in 20 accidents.
The weekend period started
at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at
midnight Monday.
.'lbe death count included
two men killed in an auto
accident SundaY on Ohio
Route 22 near Circleville in
PlckWay County. The only
other weekend multiple
fatality accident occurred
Friday night lit a Cleveland
!&amp;reel intersection colliBion
which k.tUed a w~man
and an
.
'
lilfant.
Ohioans k.IUed in other
states include Charles Scott
Turner, 14, of Fairborn, who
died Sunday In two-car
colllmon in Wolfe County, 4.6
mlles lllUth of Campton, Ky.,
on Kentucky 15.
An Ohio couple was k.IUed
Chrllltmas Eve in a one·
vehicle accident
near
Richmond, Ind. Wllllam
Malden, 48, Hollandsburg,
Qblo, and his wife, Delores,
died when their car skidded
on an Icy Wayne County road
Rtchmood and struck a

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HOME FURNISHINGS
1st FLOOR

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

car collided head-on with a
city bus.
Four relatives - three
children and a woman - died
late Christmas day in a one·
car accident near Waco ,
Texas, on State Highway 84 .
The c ar carrying eight
passengers apparently went
off the road, struck an
embankment and came to
rest in a stock pond,
submerged in the water.
Five people were killed and
one was critically injured in a
two-ear collision in Michigan
Sunday .
A parachute became
tangled in a plane from which
parachute drops were being
made near Phoenix, Ariz.,
Monday, tearing away a
section of the tail assembly
and sending the plane
spiraling into the ground .
Two men were kiUed, police
said. A third jumped to
safety .
Officials
said
two
parachute drops seconds
earlier went smoothly but a
third triggered the crash.

near

tree.

'lbe weekend toll included
two ·pedestrians and one
motorcyclist . .Six persons

,
1

·

died in Ohio accidents Friday
night, seven Saturday, seven
Sunday and one Monday.
The fatalities by day:
Friday Night
Zanesville:
Dean
Shepherd,
39,
South
Zanesville, killed when hit by
a vehicle as he walked along
U.S. 22 in Muskingum
County.
West Union : Debra L .
Cruea, 18, Sinking Spring,
killed in a two-vehicle
accident on Ohio 41 in Adams
County.
Youngstown : Alfred S.
Baughman, 31, North Lima,
killed in a one-vehicle mishap
on Qhlo 626 in · Mahoning
County.
Cleveland: Doris Houchins,
18, and an infant identified
orily aa "baby girl" Houchins,
both of Cleveland, in a twocar cra!b at a Cleveland
intersection.
Akron : Robert Clark, 28,
Akron, k.IUed in a one-vehicle
accident near .here.
Silturday
Warren: Timothy J .
19,
North
Warner,
BlOQIIIfleld, killed in · a onevehicle accident on Ohio 87 in
Trumbull County.
Tipp City: Douglas Kelley,
23, New Carlisle, killed in a
onevehlcle accident on
DBytonBrandt Rd. in Miami
County.
Akron: Virgil Cope, 60.

Akron, killed in a two·vehicle
crash 5outh of Akron.
James
L.
Dayton:
Turlington, 2!i, Union, killed
in a motorcycle accident in
Dayton.
Garfield Heights : William
Gutermuth, 71, Garfield
Heights, killed in a two-ear
accident oo a city street.
Troy : James Millhouse, 21,
Troy, kiUed when his car
apparently ran off the road
and flipped into a creek in
Miami Cotmty.
Sidney: Daniel Asher, 18,
Houston, killed when he lost
control of his vehicle, hit a
telephone poll and and
knocked down a tree In
Shelby Cotmty.
S!lnday
Warren : Olarles Barowski,
?:~,Sharon Pa., pedestrian,
killed in Trwnbull County.
Troy: William B. Shannon,
35, Piqua, killed jn one-car
accident on County Road 2!iA
in Miami County.
Circleville: F1oyd J. Wood,
40, New Holland, and Howard
R. Wood, 37, killed In a one·
ear accident on Ohio Route 22
east of County Road 36 in
Perry Township in Pickaway
Cotmty.
Willoughby Hills: Dennis J.
Wilson, 23, Willoughby, killed
when his ear hit a tree on a
city road.
Xenia: James Poston, 14,
{Continued on page 12)

Christmas tree lights also
were suspected as the cau5e
of an early Sunday blaze in
Central Islip, N.Y., on Long
Island. Fire officials said
three people were killed 90;
Elizabeth
Boone,
Elizabeth Stietzel, who was in
her 50s; and her husband,
Frank, also in his 50s - and
the home was gutted.
A fire which destroyed a
two·story
downtown
apartment building and killed
three people in Salt Lake City
early Monday was not known
to be Christmas-related.
Police said two people - Leo
E. Allres, 42, and an
unidentified man were dead
at the scene of apparent
smoke inhalation, and
another man, Henry M.
Cotton, died of an apparent
heart attack while on the way

:te~p::':o
~~:~.~ after
Many of the residents

jumped from windows to
escape the fire, and 12 people
were treated for burns,
smoke · inhalation and.
lacerations. Two were
seriously burned.
The fire department today
was investigating the cause
of the blaze, which left 33
people homeless.
A NashviUe, Tenn., woman
and her week-()Jd son died
early Monday in a closet
where they had sought safety
as a fire swept through their
trailer home. The woman's
husband was hospitalized
with moderate burns, and her
two
brothers
escaped
tmharmed.
Preliminary Investigations
indicated
a
heating
thermostat was at fault.
ApredawnfireStmdayata
Barnesville, Ga., home k.tUed
the
three
occupants,
identified
as
Dewey
Nicholson; his wife, Pauline,
and her brother, Red Berry.
No cause had
been '
determined.
The daughter of a Cody,
Wyo., man who remained in
critical condition at a Salt
Lake aty burp treatment
center, died in the Christmas
· Eve blaze at their Utah
trailer home . ·
Preliminary
reports
indicated the. flames started
U1 or near a k1tchen area . The
child would have been :;
Wl!dnesdav.

Iii Tehran I.oday troops fired on hundreds of anti-shah
demonstra!.ors who wore signs reading, "The struggle will end
this weekend."
There were no official casualty figures but hospital sources
and witnesses said five demonstra!.ors were killed in Tehran,
mcluding a youth of 18 whose head was blown off by a bullet at
downtown Shahbaz Avenue. The capital's death toll Sunday
was at least 13 with another 30 reported wounded .
In the Kurdish town of Sanandah, troops shot and killed at
least three demonstra!.ors. A dozen others died there Saturday
in an attack on the town 's prison that freed about 100 inmates.

en tine

at

Trees,
decorations
purveyors
.
.
of tragic Christmas fires
UDIIed Presslnlernallonal
Christmas trees and
decorations, usually a source
of joy during the holiday
seaaon, were the purveyors of
tragedy in at least three highfatality yuletide fires this
year.
By early today, 60 fire
deaths had been reported,
many of them children.
An entire family of four
died in Dallas early Monday,
and eight children were killed
Sunday · tn New Orleans ,
bringing Louisiana's · fire
death toll to the highest in the
nation. Both blazes were
blamed on Christmas
decorations.
Dallas officials said a fire
in the Oak Cliff residential
area destroyed the living

violence.
.
Sociology professor Gholam Hossein Sadighi conferred with
hesitant politicans, urging them to join him in a civilian
government - the fourth in five months - to replace the
military Cabinet now governing the country .
The Senate met today behind d osed doors . and political
sources said it would discuss proposals to transfer many of
Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi's vast powers to a prime
minister and a strong parliament.
The sources said this discussion could lay the grotmdwork
for the 73-year-()Jd Sad!ghl to amounce a new government that
mil(ht be more acceptable to the shah's onro.itinn

•

Christmas death count
could exceed forecast

22 die on Ohio highways

1

'1'1111 lldP yield eerllllcate malum In I months.
.
Once you invest, your interest rate ftl'NIInll the Slllle, during the knonlh term, no matter
wbat bappe111 to the •moving rate'
Ralember, POINT PLEASANT FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN A8110CIA'IION J.
- t i l certificate malaret after December. Income tax oa lhe lllterelt will 11'11 be l'tfOI'Ied

Tehran professor killed, rioting continues

Gallipolis police cite

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 29, No. 177

SEEK DISTRIBUTOR
WELCH, W.Va. (UPI)West VIrginia and Kentucky authorities were
looking for a mao today
who sold a case of
f'lrecrackers
with
premature fuses that sent
many people to hospitals,
some with fingers blown
off.
Known as M80 's, the
over·shed noisemakers
had short fuses thai burned
too quickly for the handlers
to throw.
In the Welch area, at
least 14 persons, ages 15 to
50, wound up wllh Injured
hands In separate In·
cldents. A surgeon at
Stevens Clinic spent
.Christmas Eve amputating
fingers.

Fire
levels
home
A hre of undetermmed
origin
destroyed
the
residence of Franklin Eugene
Lemley, Rt. 1, Portland,
Sunday at 3:40 p.m. The
residence was the Old Great
Bend Grange building owned
by Florence Wilson.
The Racine fire department responded with two
trucks. The Meigs County
sheriff's department went to
the scene when the owner
could not be located. His
vehicle was parked at the

IS SANTA SfiLL AROUND '?- Santa Claus arrived at most places late Sunday night
or early Monday morning. In this Sentinel news photo old St. Nick was arriving tn Syracuse
aboard the village fire truck with Fire chief Bob Willis serving as his chauffeur.

Six holiday weekend
wrecks are reported

The Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, investigated
residence.
six weekend accidents.
Deputies began checking
Officers were called to the
n~arby
homes
before scene ofthree traffic mishaps
beginning a search of the · Saturday.
ruins. Lemley was located
At 3:03 p.m., the patrol
later that evening, safe and investigated a two·vehicle
sound.
collision on TR 158, one and
The fire department was five-tenths of a mile south of
called back later Sunday SR 681, in Meigs County.
evening. Amount of loss has
Officers report that a north
not been determined nor is it bound vehicle drtven by
known if there was any in· Robert L. Keat on,· 30,
surance.
Pomeroy, and a south hound
ln other matters, Meigs pickup truck driven by
sheriff's
deputies
in· Matthew
Dillard,
20,
vestigated two breaking and Pomeroy, collided when they
enterings late Saturday met at a narrow bridge.
night. Dale Barr's Ashland
The
patrol
reports
Station at Reedsville was moderate damage to the
broken into by going through Dillard
pickup, slight
a back door. Taken were a damage to the Keat on
timing light, racket and some vehicle.
sockets.
At 9:10 a .m. , an auto
Also entered was the operated by Phillip C.
Pomeroy Gun.Club located on Shepard, 21, Portsmouth ,
County Road 2&gt;. Missing was incurred slight damage when
a 19 inch color TV. Entry was
made by kicking in the hot·
tom of a door panel. Both
incidents are under investigation.
Deputies are also in·
vestigating a hlt·sklp ac·
cident
that
occurred
sometime early Sunday
United Press International
morning . Officers said a
A storm system that
vehicle owned by Roger L.
dumped
upwards of 22 inches
Adrian, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
of
snow
in
parts of New York
parked at Tall Timbers Night
and
New
England
headed for
Club, was struck in the rear
New
Brunswick,
Canada
by an unknown vehicle. There
today,
and
a
high-pressure
was moderate damage.
area stretching from the
Pacific Northwest to the
Southeast gave much of the
Meigs response
rest of the nation clear to
partly cloudy skies.
very successful
The winter storm that hamExcellent public response pered holiday travelers, shut
spelled out another suc· down airports throughout up·
cessful program for state New York and spawned
remembering 21 patients of a crust of ice which snapped
Meigs County confined to the . power lines in western
Southeastern Mental Health Pennsylvania still hung on ,
Center in Athens, Mary Mar· however. Snow continued to
lin, chairman, reports.
faD in the eastern Great
Mrs. Martin said contribu· Lakes region and northern
lions from individuals and New England .
groups provided nice
Strong winds blasted the
Christmas remembrances for area, with gale warnings out
patients.
along the North Atlantic
Making major contribu· Coast. Late Monday evening
lions were Racine Grange Providence, R.I., recorded
2602, the Riverview Garden
Cluh at Reedsville, the
Gosney Furniture Store, the
Martin Furniture Store and
R"ulah Hayes, Middleport.
Partly cloudy and colder
Tbe Davis Insurance Agen·
tonight
and Wednesday, with
L'Y in Pomeroy WliS thL' r •He&lt;:low
temperatures
In the
tion point for the gift• with a
and
the
highs
middle
teens
\' " dety of lh'l liS being 1'011·
near 30. .

it struck a cow owned by
Orian Roush , Langsville, on
SR 124, four·tenths of a mil e
west of milepost 3, in Meigs
County.
At 3:45 p.m., an aut o
operated by Alfred K. Cor·
dell, 51, Bidwell, incurred
moderate damage when it
struck a deer on SR 160, two·
tenths of a mtle north of
milepost :;.
The Galha· Meig s Post

t !·t ' ' UI crl

scene of a t wo-auto co!Jision

on SR 681, one·tenth of a mile
west of milepo;t 24, in Meigs
County .
The patrol reports th at an
east bound vehicle driven by
Carol
lowe, 17, Akron,
passed off the n ght sill!!'of the
roadway , came back onto the

high way , went left of center,
and struck a west bound a uto

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday through
Saturday, fair and cold
through the period. High
temperatures will be In the
20s or low 30s Thursday,
warming slightly to the
middle 30s by Saturday.
Lows will be between five
to 1:i Thursday , and 10 to 20
by Saturday.

Heavy snow hits
eastern states

Weather

investigated two accidents

Sunday .
Officers we re ca ll ed to the

winds close to :;o mph , and
winds over 40 mph were
reported at Albany, N.Y., and
Boston.
Scattered hght snow fe ll
from portion s of North
Dakota across the upper
Mississippt Valley and the
remainder of th e Great
Lakes.
Skies were clear to partly
cloudy over large areas from
the Great Basin through the
central
and
southern
Rockies, over portions of the
Great Plains and Mississippi
Valley and fr om the central
and southern Mississippi
Valley to the south and
Middle Atlantic Coast region .

WIN ACTIONS

Two employes of.the Meigs
County Health Departm ent
hiwe won their court action
against the Meigs County
Board of Health for paym ent
of back salary for a two
month period.
According to an entry in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Gary Aspin was
awarded $1,761.52, minus
deduction, and Gene Lyons
was ~warded $2,461.52, minus
. deductions.

operated by Melbd T Nelson,
59. Coo lvtlle.
LJ we was cited on t'harges
of left of cent er.
Both vehicl es incurred
moderate damage .
At 4:55 p.m .. an auto
operated by Blake M. ~o r ·
thup, 25, Ga llipolis, in curred
moderate damage when it

struck a deer on U.S. 35, two
mtl es east of SR 32:i.
Monday at II : 20 a.m ., an
auto operated by Gary K.
Snowden , 20, Gallipolis, in·
curr ed moderate dama ge
when it struck a deer on SR 7,
thrce·tenths of a mile north of
mil epost 17.

Middleport
emergency
unit busy
S e v e ral c a l ls were
answered over the holiday

weekend by the Emergency
Unit of the Middl eport Fire
Department .
t\1 11: 10 p.lll . S,nut'c!Jy, the
.squad

wen!

to Houtc 2,

Pomeroy , for a medical pa-

tient, Brenda Robbins, who
was taken tu Holzer Mcdtcal
Center.
At 8:32 p.m Sunday, the
unit went to 7 0'~ North Se·
com! Ave., for Wanda ~wis,
13, a · medical pahent, who
was

taken

to

Veterans

Memori al Hospital.
At 9:30 p.m. Sunday, the
uni t was again called for
B•·enda Robbins. She was
t·et urn ed to thP H&lt;tlzer
Medt cal Center .
Monda)' flt 12::!6 p.m., the
squad went to Route I,
Cheshire, for Terry Misner
who had lacerations received
in a fall into a window glass.
He was taken to Hol~ er
Medical Center.
)

...

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