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•
10 - The-Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan 23, 1976

Wolfe named officer of area firemen
Gary Wolfe, Racine. was
elected secretary-treasurer
of the Area Volunteer
Firemen and Emergency
Squad Association at the
Pomeroy
F1re
Dept.
headquarters Wed nesday
mght.
A moment of Silen t prayer
was held 10 memory of the
late Walter Clela nd of
Racine, who had served in the
secretary-treasurer post.
Forty-f1ve m embers
representing eighl fin:

deparlments
and
fn•e
emergency sq uads braved
the snow and 1ce Wednesday
mght to attend the sess10n .
Coolville was accepted as a
new member making five
counties participating Jn the
assoc1ahon Represented al
the meehng were Middleport.
Pome roy, Ma son, New
Haven , Racine , Orange,
Chester and Coolville
State Highway Patrolman
James Sheets presented the
program using the "Do's and

Car slides
MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE THRU SUN.
JAN 23-2S
WALKING TALL
Starring Bo Svenson ,
and Luke Askew

Show Starts at 7 00 p. m .

A mm or two-car acctdent
was mv.estigated Thursday at
4 &gt;O p.m. 10 Chester Twp at
the intersection of CRS &gt;3 and

54.
The Me1gs County shenff's
department reported that
M1chael J . Evans, 37, Rt. 1,
Portland, did not see a car
dnven by J ohn A Jeffers, Rt.
I , Mmersv1lle, and 10 attemplmg to avOid hlltmg it.
shd off the road and hll it.
There was sligh t damage,
and no mjurtes or arrests

Cookie jars don't pay interest.
---::~Or offer safety.
Come see us for
a Savings Account.
Keep your
from

Webave

a better Idea.

don' ls "

f or

emergency

vehicle operations as Ius
tupi(' He conc luded his
presentation w1th a queslton
and ans" er sesswn .
The February meehng will
be in Middleport

Ohio
1Contmued

from page ])
mdustry," he sa1d
Sweet questioned why the
Federal Power Comm1ss10n
(FPC) had already taken a
prodereg ulatwn pos1t10n
before establis hin g Independent facts.
Sweet sa1d the PUCO has
tned on two occaswns to get
the FPC to undertake an
independent mvestlgation,
bu t has been turned down
" Is the natural gas industry
mampulatmg gas supp ly data
to pressure the U.S. Congress
int o deregulatiOn''" Sweet
asked . " Is the natura l gas
industry w1thholdmg gas suppiles until an opportunity to
charge a higher price is
prov1ded by the federa l
government ?"
Sweet sa1d Ohio consumers
will not accept deregulation,
or any major change in gas
regulatiOn policy, unlll they ,.
"are g1ven straight facts
from a source mdependent of
the major gas comparues "
The PUCO off1c1al sa1d he
believes the natural gas mdu stry should r ece ive
compensation which would
"cover all prudent costs and
provide a fa1r rate of return
on mvestmenl "
" However ," he added,
" there IS considerable
q u e s t 1o n
wh e t h er
deregulation and the resultmg mcreased pnces will
actually generate new supplies of natural gas
" I urge the members of
Congress to res1st mountmg
pre ss ure
to
act
on
deregulation Without the
facts," Sweet said "I hope
members of Congress w11l
have the coura ge to discover
the hard truth about the
natural gas supplies and tell
it like 1! 1s to the American
Consumer "

WINNING NUMBERS
Th1s \l eek's \\inning Ohio
Lottery numb ers:
Thret•diglt number 13S tone-thre e- fi H) .
Fo ur-digit number 1223 1one-two- two- three 1.
Fh•e- digit number 44978 i four-f o ur-nin esevcn-cight).
Six-digit number
491938 tfonr-nlne-one-mnethree-cight).
SPIRIT OF '76 "inning
numbers :
Tw&lt;&gt;-digit numbers - 4S
lforly-live), 23 (twentythree) . 63 1si&lt;ty-threr) and
70 1seventy).
Four·digit number 7664 1seven-six-six-four) .
F1vc-diglt number 8642 &gt; 1elght-six-four-tw&lt;&gt;five!.
Six-digit number 935797 ( nlne-three-liveseven·nine-seven).

Member FDIC

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs
Kenne th Turley and son,
Racme: Mrs. John Zuspan,
son, Mason ; Morgan Sayre,
Leon; Nelhe Terry, Henderso n ; Ches ter Le por t ,
Pomt Pleasant, Mrs. Jud

TONIGHT
and

'

Ronald
and
Sh~rley
Shepard, Rutland, flied a sur t
for money m the amount of
$1 ,000 rn Meigs County

Common Pleas Court against

Fred and Barbara Goeglein,
Pomeroy . claimed due on a
Pnmissorv note

Pomer oy Pollee reported
Elberfe jds and Hartl ey Shoes
business frrms m Pomeroy

broken rnlo late Wednesday
ntght or Thursday morni ng
but nothmg was repor ted
m lss rng
from
either
establ rsh men t

Middlepor t Ma sonic

Lo d~e

363, F&amp;AM, w111 meet 1n
spec1a l session at 7 p m .
Tuesday at the temple Work
wi ll be 1n the Fellowcraft
Degree All master masons
are 1nv1fed
RUTLAND - A reVI\Iat IS
be 1ng held at 7 30 each
eve n1ng a t t he Rutland
Freewtlf Baptist Church with
the Rev . John Elswick as
evang eli st On Saturday the
Gospel
Tones
will
be
featur ed The public IS invited

square dance from 8 to 11
p.m Saturday at Royal Oak
Park Archery Bulldmg . The
public is invited

HOWARD J . JOH NSON,
formerly of Dorcas, died
uneKpectedl y of a heart attack at h is home
In
Carrollton. Tex , Th ursday
nrght He was a brother of
Laura Crrcle, Lizz ie Wood,
and Wald and Douglas
Johnson , Racine

PARENTS

WITHOUT

Partners w111 meet at 7 30
this even1ng at th e Grace
United Methodist Church In
Gallipolis Rev Hawk s will
be the spea ker. Visitors are
we lcome.

GE ORGE

MEINHART ,

M iddleport, IS the f~rst to f1 ie
a petit ion w1th the Metgs
County Board of Elections
Memhart, a Republican. flied
his pet1t1on of candidacy for
central committeeman 1n
M i ddleport 's first w ard
Thursday He 1s now serving
in th e capacity Central
comm1 t t eemen f or both
part1es wtll be elected Jn June
and
Democrats
and
Republicans will nominate
candidates for county offices
at that hme .

Seminoles have
THE BEL LES and Beaus
taken $16
Squ ar e Dance Club Will
s ponsor a wes te rn s tyle
million
for Florida
I.illian Duffy died Thursday
DAVIE, Fla. !UP! ) - The
Florida Seminole tribe has
accepted a federal government offer of $16 million for
nearly all of Flonda
The Seminoles cla uned
they owned 32 million acres
stolen from them by Gen
Andrew Jackon, and lhe offer
amounts to &gt;O ce nts an acre
The government proposal
was made m a letter last
week from Just1ce Department attorney Walter K~echel
Jr of the land and resources
divisiOn
The Oklahoma
tnbe
already has accepted the
offer and th e Florida
Semmoles voted Thursday.
The cla ims date back to the
1830s and the days of the
legendary Chief Osceola, but
the Indians did not begin
cla1mmg the land unl! 19&gt;0,
when they sa1d many of the
treaties of the 1600s were
vwlated by white settlers.
"We actually think 1t's too
hltle, but we don ' t want to
fight for another 25 years to
get a little more, " said tribal
spokesman Mike Ti,!IIJ.ot.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hnspital
ADMITTED - Pamela
Imboden, Pomeroy , Daryl
Edward s , Ma so n. Dana
Hatfield, Cheshire; Evelyn
Young , Mmersvl!le: Halt1e
Swartz, Athens , Sehm Yates,
Ra cme , J ohn Hunnell,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Sam uel
Boston , Gladys Arlls, Inez
Randolph , Betty Roush ,
Howard Da1ley, Ada Harper

Local area news briefs

Wills Jr and da ughter,
Pome roy; Mrs
Ronald
McClinto c k ,
son,
Chesapeake : Mrs. Melvi n
Roach, so n, West Columbia;
Mrs. Chiton Luca::.;, Vmton;
Mrs Ancel Cross, Middleport, and Mrs Walter
Mercer, Clifton.
Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges, Jan. 22 )
Howard Cal dwe ll , Amta
CordeH, Norma Dav1s, Mrs
Ja ck Gnffith and son Vmsun
Jarrell, Jr. , Marie Jones,
Deanna Kruskamp, David
Luca s, Alva Maha ffey, Bette
Meadows, Teresa Mercer,
Wilham Mullins, Curtis Ray
Newsome, Jam es Nowlm,
Carl Reynolds, Maude R1ce,
Thomas Saunders, Michael
Shaver, Bonme Sllltn er ,
Mabel Tanner, Joyce Walker,
Mam1e Wallar, Barbara
Wh1 te, Carl E. Wh1te , Sr ,
Palric1a Wood
(Births, Jun. 22)
Mr and Mrs. John G
Black, son, Northup , Mr and
Mrs Edward T Cam,
daughter, Gallipolis , Mr and
MFs . James Farley, son,
Pomeroy ; Mr and Mrs
Jerry Hulchmson, daughter ,
Ja cks on , Mr. and Mrs .
Ronald
L
Twyman.
daughter, Ewmg ton .

SYRACUSE - Mrs John
(Lillian) Duffy, 88, Syracuse,
d1ed Thursday afternoon at
Veterans Memoria l Hospital.
Mrs. Duffy was born Nov.

23, 1887. a daughter of the late

~=·~2;;::::::::-:::=:::;;::mg.:-~

KENI,&gt;IEDY OFF BALLOT
SACRAMENTO, Calli.
I UP I) - Sen. Edward
Kennedy hal requested bls
aame be left off the
Callforala Democratic
primary ele.ctlon ballot for
President, Secretary of
Stale March Fong Eu said
Thursday.
"I am not and do not
Intend to be a candidate for
llle Democratic nomination
for President of the United
States In 1976," Kennedy
said In a letter.

Patrol files
traffic charge
Delmas Goff, 19, Rt 1,
Langsville, was charged with
drivmg left of center
followmg a traffic accident at
7.30p.m Thursday on County
Road 2 in Morgan Twp. six
tenths of a mile east of Rl.
160.
Accordmg to the Gallia Me1gs Post State H1ghway
Patrol, the Goff car went left
of center sinking a car dnven
by Thomas W. Kr1ppene, 28,
Rt. 3, Gallipolis, headon
There
wa s
moderate
damage
Slippery pavement was
blamed for an accident at
11 OS a.m Thursday on
Shively Rd. near Alice Rd . m
Huntington Twp.
The patrol said a pick-up
dnven by Marion E.
Holcomb, 27, Rt. 1, Ewwgton ,
shd black wards down a steep
grade and struck a ditch and
emban kment . There was
mm or damage to his truck

Joseph and Bertha Holmes
Matthews She was also
preceded 10 death by her
husband, John , two brothers,
Floyd and John Matthews,
and a sister , Gertrude
Samuels.
Mrs Duffy was a member
of the Syracuse Presbyterian
Mrs Wilma Stobart, 62, Church
She Is survived by five
Pomeroy, d1ed Thursday
daughters,
Mrs Inez Hill ,
afterrwnn at Holzer M edl(~al
Rac10e,
Mrs
Beatnce Blake,
Cen te r ~
Syrac
use;
Mrs . Bertha
Mrs Stobart wa s born Feb.
BOARD TO MEET
Gnmm,
Belpre
, Mrs. Ger17, 1913, the daughter of the
The board of trustees of the
trude
Neigler,
Rarmc
,
and
la te James and Clara D11l
Mrs Carne Roush , l .eta rt Corporation for Health
Sulton
She wa s a lso
Falls;
20 grandchildren , 37 Ed uca hon in Appalachia
preceded 10 death by her
great-grandchildren,
and two OhiO (CHEAOl will meet
husband, Earl and a brother, great - great-grandchildren
Fnday, Jan . 30, for a general
James Sulton
business meetwg that IS open
and a mece and a nephew.
She IS survived by a Sis ler,
Funeral services will be to lhe public for observation
Agnes Dixon, Pomeroy; her
al 2 p m all Blue Une Ave.,
brother -In -law , Herberl Sunday at 2 p.m at Ewmg Athens CHEAO 1s a nonChapel
w1
lh
the
Rev.
Dwight
D1xon; a me ce, Susa n
profit corporation concerned
Pulhns , Pomeroy, tw o Zav1tz off1c1ahng Burial will with the health educatiOn
be
m
Letart
Falls
Cemetery.
neph ews, Roge r D1xon ,
needs of the public and health
Pomeroy, and Jimmie Sut- Fnends may ca ll at the professiOnals 10 the 28-county
funeral
home
afl
r-r
7
this
ton , F t. Gay , W Va ; a sJstc rOhiO Appalachia reg ion
10-law. L01s We llman, Fl. cvemng .
Gay , and her great mece and
nephe". L1 sa a nd Scott
Pullms, Pom eroy
(Continued from page I)
Funera l se rv1ces Will be
held Monday at 1 p m at cenl decline Continue{i'clauns for persons unemployed one or
Ew wg Chapel w1 th the Rev more weeks under all benefit programs was estimated at
Menze l Sm 1th offic ia lmg ' 271,6&gt;0 - a 3.3 per cent decline from the week before.
Bunal will be m Rock Sprmgs
1'l:le total number of jobless Ohioans receiv10g benefitS for
Cemetery Fnends may ca ll the week was eslimated at 307,S28, down nearly 5 per cent from
at the fun eral hume afte1 9 the preVIous week
a.m. Sa turday.

Wilma Stohart
died Thursday

News .• in Briefs

SENTENCED TO BURN
LANCASTER , Oh1o rUPI )
- Charles Downs, :10, Lcmcaster, was se ntenced today
lo d1e 10 the electnc cha 1r
April 28 for the shotgun
slaymg of three persons The
se ntence was Imposed by
Fa1rf1 eld County Co mmo n
Pl eas Court J udge Merhn
Parent Downs was conv icted
Oct 31, 1975, for the murder
of Sieve Bailey, 25, Conme
Hodgman , 28 and Tracy
Hodgman , 7. They were fo und
dead m a rural area south of
Lancaster

FLOWERS

Railroad
!Continued from p.ge 1)
granting the first cluu ter, ~·e
railroad-building feve• ·
reached epidemic pr opor •
tions.
" Farmers, bankers, .sto ·e
owners, politicians, and land
owners shared the excitement. Ayoung state and a
young industry were joining •
hands to create an era of
unprecedented progress and
prosperity. NeighbOr communities competed lo bring
the railroad through · their
area. If• the railroad passed
them by, so did progress.
_ "The Federal government ·
aided the development of
highwaYs an'd cana ls by
making land grants, but none
was made to the railroads of
Oh1o. The Buckeye State built
1fs own railroads without land
grants, or any help fr om
Washington.
"The fll'st railroad to go
any dislance in Ohio was the
Mad River and Lake Erie,
which began laying rails at
Sandusky in 183&gt; and by 1848
it reached Spr~ngf1eld. There
1Liinked w1th the Uttle Miami
Railroad which was built up
from Cincinnati by way of
Xema ; thus two hnes created
the first cross-state ra1l route
JOining Lake Erie with Ohio's
largest r~ver port, Cincinnati .
"By 1867 following the C1vil
War, railr oads were entermg a new era of expansion. Ohio had 3,877 miles
of single malnhne track built.
at a cost of $4 2,441 per mile.
Ohio had invested $92,&gt;28,51&gt;
m rmlroads.
"North and south across
the state, the Norfolk, and
Western Ra1lway followed
the Scioto Trail This was by
far the most Important northsouth trail. Star lmg at
Sandusky 11 ran Ufl the
Sandusky River Valley,
crossed over the Sc10Lo, and
continued' southward to the
Ohio R1ver . An Important
branch from themam Scioto
Trail followed the watershed
between th e Scwto and
Hocking R1vers, then to the
mouth of the Great Kanawha
where 11 met the Greenbrier
Trail to Virginia. Along th1s
branch was the old Kanawha
and Michigan Railroad , now
the New York Central
"In 1840 OhiO had 49 m1les
of railroad In 19SO there were
8,86S m1les of railroads m the
stale In 1955 the railroads
were the state 1 s largest
taxpayers, that year paying a
grand total of $18,262,359 as
property tax alone.''

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Warehouse on Mechanic Street
Just received - big shipment of metal cabinets wardrobes - base cabinets wall cabinets
utility
cabinets - kitchen cabinets a II sturdily constructed.
Stop at the Warehouse on
Mechanic Street - select
the cabinet or cabinets you
need now while the selection
is best.

We Wiro Flowers

"

992-2039
Pomeroy flower Shop
Mrs Millard Van Meter
Ph . 992-2039
Ph . 992-1711

QUASAR
100% Solid State

Workers, payrolls up in Gallia
GALUPOUS - Increases were noted the Decembel 1974 figures . Of th1s total, fo od,
transportati on
equipment ,
m the average number of workers, em- appr oximately 10,72&gt; were employed ma chinery, tobacco, prmting and
ployer units and total payroll in Gallia (down 625 o\•er last }'Car's f1guresl wh1le pubhshmg, stone-clay-glass, furniture,
County in 1974 according to Frank 0. 1,225 \\ere out of work (up 425 persons &gt; and lumber Items produced locally inKnox, manager of the Gallipolis Area including 425 women (up 150 over last eluded meats, an1mal and manne fa ts and
Office of the Ohio Bureau or Employment year)
01ls, and upholstered furniture.
Services.
Jobseekers - Among the men who were
This means Gallla 's latest unemBased on employers ' figur es who pfoymenl f1 gure is 10 3 percent, up four seeking work through the Gallipolis office
reported to the Ohio D1vis1on of Research percent over the 1974 figure .
of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Serand Stallsties through June 1, 197S, emThe report also stated that 1n July , 1974, ·VICes, approximately three-tenths had
ploye' units in Gallia County totaled 462 in Gallia's population was an estmtated backgrounds in structural work oc1974, up 20 over the 1973 f1gure.
27,500, representmg a rt se of ap· cupations Better than"one-seventh were tn
Average nwnber of workers totaled 9,314 proximately 2,300 since the 1970 US machine trades and about one-eighth
1t1 1974, an increase of 695 over 19'13, exCensus.
possesst!d trammg for clerical, sales or
cluding agriculture.
Other stallsllcs 1ncluded :
ser vice positions Of the women
Gallia's 1974 payroll totaled $92,946,107,
Industries ~ Th e 1970 Cens us registrants durmg the reference month,
up $11,628,329 over the 1973 f1gure of tabulations revealed that one-stxth of the over two-f1fths were in the ser\'ice
$81 ,317,778
county 's resident JObholders commuted to classification One-th1rd were clencal or
According to t~e latest Ohio LabOr work in neighbormg counhes In August, ~les personnel and one-mnth were bench
Market fact sheet, Gallia County's labor one-s1xth of all workers hving in the county workers . Nearly seven-eighths of the total
foree in August, 197S, totaled ap- were government personnel and one-ten th applicants were younger than 45 years of
proxima tely 11,950 persons, down 200 over were on factory payrolls In 1974, the age. Some of these men and women had
leadmg manufacturmg mdustnes were prevJO us employment experience as
1

Weather

WERNER
RADIO &amp; T.V.

r~i~::·i:;:~;;,-;;~-.:;-~:-.::~-c~:;:~~;
Sale. Save up to so Pet. on 1tems you'll be needing
right now. Visit every department - Shop every
floor in the -Main Store.

Open Fnday 9:30A.M. to 8 P.M. and Saturday ':30 A. M. to 5 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Middleport, Ohio

By John Rice
E•t. Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - This is the hme of year
when we look back and forward. Back, to
see "hat we accomplished in 197&gt; ; forward to see what can be done in 1976. This
is&gt;also an excellent hme to take a look al
what we lhmk will be the economic condi tions for 1976 and try to gel the mos t
from the money we will spend or mvest.
First, le t us l&lt;lko a look at the overa ll
economic picture. Needless to say, our
econom1c system is )n a stale of flux
People are concerned with prices and
incomes, grain trade and foOI;i pnces : food
stamps and chealing, and energy costs and
policies
The general prospects for 1976 depend
upon many factors, some known , many
un known Non-farm in~ omes should Im prove m 1976. However, farmers w1ll be
producing more, pnqe~ will be dow ~ , _c~s.ts
up , net incotnes not as good as 197&gt; There
will be some exceptions
k c us bear 1n mind the extreme
competition within agriculture as well as
the competihon between agnculture and
other industries The grain farmer wants
more for his corn , the beef producer wants
cc;&gt;rn chea per, and so it goes
I have mentioned that net mcomes
may not be as good IQ 1976. Let's take a
look at cos t for 1976 compared to 197S.
Item , and pnces in 1976 compared to 1975 ·
Fert1hzcr, -10 per cenl.
Machmery, up 10 percent
Fuel, up 20 percent.
Pesticides, etc., up 10 percent.

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley
GALLI POLIS-POl NT PLEASANT

Wages, up 10 percent.
Interest, Slrong
Taxes, Up
Gross expenses, 10 to t&gt; percent
As you can see, the increase in costs
and pnces covenng the overall piclure
means a tighter squeeze.
Let's now take a look at en!erpnses for
1976,and compare them IQ 1975
CORN - PRODUCTION UP Our
carryovers last year (1974-7&gt;1 was the
lowesl m ten years W1th the large export
we had and catching up on some carryover
we absorbed the big corn crop of 197&gt;. We
expect corn prnducllon to be h1gh m 1976
wh1c h w11llower corn pnces for 197S-76
Corn is one of the feed gra1ns and so IS
~oyheans and whea t. These are the three
mostly grown here m the area. Of these
three crops, corn looks the most prom1smg
of a fair return .
BEEF -- THE PI CTtlRE ror beef may
be beller this year than last, II can't be
any worse . Beef numbers (c ows) may
start down (a lot of cows have been
slaug htered) As Incomes mcrease, more
meat 1s consumed Prices for feeder cattle
and market beef should 1m prove slightly.
Sl!ll 11 it a good lime to cull cows and
Improve your herd .
HOGS - "HOGS ARE beautiful" IS
the best way to say it for the present time.
Hogs have been known as the " Mortgage
Ufter ." Certamly true for 1974-7&gt;. Both the
feeder pig producer and those finishing out
hogs made money. Numbers are mcreasmg! Look out! Some money can be ·

-

Morrow expects
area to recover
with the nation
POMEROY
Fred Morrow ,
president, said Saturday tbe Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce, Is looking forward
to a good year for the commuruly as it
shares In the nation 's recovery,
Two things would greatly enhance the
picture for Pomeroy and Middleport, he
said. These would be (a l shortening of
tUne or closing Pomerov-Mmmn RdriPP for
repairs, and (b) retention of rail service.
The same sky shines over boty
Pomeroy and Middleport and we trust that
1976 will bring a greater exchange of ideas
and participation in activities, Morrow
indicated
One of these activities is the annual
Big Bend Regatta in June sponsored by the
Pomeroy chamber with cooperation from
Middleport leaders.

MIDDLEPORT - Paul Girard of The
Middleport Recreation Commission
Saturday anoounced May 30 as the opening
day olthe municipal swinunlng pool The
pool wltl be open seven days a week from I
lo 6 p m. through Sept. 6.
Additional hours for evening swimming
will be announced later.
Seasop tickets wiD be $25 for a family
&lt;n additional for each child); mdivldual
adult season tickets wltl selJ for $20 and
children wiD bt! $15. Dally walk-in rates
will be 75 centa for adults and :;o cents for
children.
The pool will he available for private
(lertles ala coli of f40. This wW be for two
hours and covers the cost of lifeguards,
llghta and other operating expenses.
AppllcaUOfll are currently being accepted
for the position of Park Manager.
AppUcallona are alao being accepted
for llfeguarda; all applicants must have
pasted their Red Cl'OM test. All appHcatlms are .'vallable at the nlflce of
Mayor Fred Hoffman .

&lt;
• I

entitte

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 12,000
Families

SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1976

Ml DOLE PORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

r Agricultural economy here, I Building firm hopeful
I-as everywhere in state of flux I- 1976 also will be good

on May thirtieth

Quasar WP-3820MU color TV
Features : 13-inch diagonal portable color
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tube ; pre -focus electronic lens. 100 Pet
solid -state chasis with three circuit boards ;
four ICs ; simulated leather vinyl finish .

tmes

RARITY - During Friday rught's GARS-Me1gs basketball game at Gallipolis
two former official Ohio State High School Basketball tournament scorers worked
Side-by-side. Donald I P1zz!e) Wolfe, Racine, left, was official scorer for the 1973
Ohl? schoolboy meet. Odie O'Donnell, nght, Gallipolis, served as official scorer
durmg the 197&gt; classic.

~lt~:*.mifi.*i.i~lm~m~~~l~~lil~~~1r:t::uu.ijj~~l~~;~ll~~~N*f~:~:~:l~=~;~;~~;~~~m~~~i~li~;~lil~t;~;l;~~l~i;~lll;m~;;~:;1;i~i;~~;~i;~~=1~:~m~m~;m~:~ir::imtn:;:::1:1:;:~:=:1:1;1:~;~1:if::1~111~1J~

Swim pool to open

Sale prices on RCA .Color Television
Whirlpool
Refrigerators &amp; Freezers Liffon Microwave Ovens _
Perfection Heating Stoves Gas and Electric Ranges _
Spred Satin Wall Paint.

+

Rain likely In southern
counties and snow m northern
areas Sunday and Sunday
rught. Highs Sunday m the 40s
in southern portions Lows
Sunday night in lower 30s
Chance of ram or snow
Monday .

VOL 10 NO. 52

ironwork ers . electnc1cms, insu lato rs.
carpenters, heavy truck drivers, concre te
runshers, operating engineers, waitresses,
electric motor assemblers. and conslruchon workers.
Shortages - In demand in the county
were physlctans, registered and hcensed
prac tical nurses , medical technolog•st.s,
social workers, computer programers,
key-punch operators, coal m1ners, accountants, and secretaries
Wage Ranges - Manufacturmg employers 1n Galha County generally offer
entry hourly wage rates which fall within
tne following limits. unsk1lled, $2 30 to
$2.9&gt;: semi-Skilled, $2.55 to $310, skilled,
$3. 40 to $6.
During the past several years, average
weekly earmngs of county factory employees covered by the OhiO Unemployment Compensahon Law have been
around one-filth below the average for the
sla te

made 1n 1976
PREDICTIONS. F1rst quarter of 1976,
mid $50s
Second quarter of 1976, low to rtud

$50s.

GALLIPOLIS - MemlJ Evans of
carter &amp; Evans, one of southern Ohio's
largest construction firms, said Saturday,
" 1976looks like a better year for us as far
as local building 1s concerned. In 1975 we
did a lot of our work outs1de the area that
we like to work in . We did jobs outside our
lemtory, and did lots of smalJ JObs we
didn't want, in order to keep our people
busy."
Mr. Evans continued, awe now have
over $1 million work under contract, and
know of several jobs to be bid early this
year
"We've devoted a lot of our tune aod
effort to Rt. 35 West of Gallipolis since
19S&gt;, and now we can see lots of things
gomg lo happen ttus year We are buildmg
the new Ohio VaUey Branch Bank, The
Western Pancake House, The big addition
to Spnng Valley Plaza and the

1'hlrd quarter of 1976, h1gh $40s.
DAIRY - NUMBER of cows or m1lk
production will not change much Compared to other food items, dairy products
are at a relahve ly favorable pn ce Some
mcrease 10 consumpllon of low-fat rn1 lk
can be expected Price of m1lk to mcrease
on ly shghlly .
LAMBS - THE SHEEP picture is one
of sU.ad1ly declimng numbers coupled w1th
a decline in the demand for wool A good
sheepman could make some money. Lamb
pnces should be about $38 the first half of
1976.
VEGETABLES AND FRUITS - when
making predH rwns there are n lot of
w1knowns. Tins Is reall y true m the
vegetable and frUit mdustry The success
or failure of these crops, especially frUit,
is dependent upon the weather. Extreme
cold weather m the wmter can hmder frw t
production or kill the trees and frosts 1n
May can be devastating Marketing of
vegetables IS very en tical and pnces vary
greatly I would rather not make any
prediCtiOn except to say - due. to rising
pestiCide and labor costs net mcome will
By TOM TOPE
probably be less in 1976.
President, Gallipolis
In summarv. beef may show a slight
Retail Merchants Assoelallon
improvement from a sad year, but feed
GALUPOUS- As 1974 was a year of
grams will be down along w1th swine. extreme progress for downtown Gallipolis
Dairy and sheep look goOI;i
retail merchants, 197&gt; was a year of
"catching our breath."
A year ago, the economic picture for
.
many parts of our country appear bleak
and uncertain but the downtown Gallipolis
merchants d1d not experience the drastic
reduction in sales that many expected. The
economtc year we experienced was most
"You just have to get the riJIIL forms likely better than a great deal of the
filled out, in time, head them toward the natwn's business.
nght off1ces in Columbus and Washington, ' Last year, we realized the completion of
our Municipal Parking Lot. This project
D. C.," he sa1d.
And he might have added, but he culminated with the placement of the signs
didn't, "And keep checking on the people and new parkmg meters. This parking
whose jobs are to approve applications for facility will certainly provide the basis for
future business expansion in Gallipolis.
federal grants. "
In any case, Syracuse's muniCipal park
is going b1g because of a block grant of
$112,000 on lhe $140,000 pool, tenn1s courts
through Community Housmg Urban
Development, and of the $28,000 remaining
cost, $14,000 will be picked up by the
Bureau of Outdoor RecreatiOn !Federal).
That final $14,000 is what Syracuse pays.
The fencing, parkmg lot and other
auxiliary facilities is a $12,750 project, half
~~ ~x~~~~
of It coming from the Bureau of Outdoor
RecreatiOn (Federal) administered by the
Oh10 Department of Na tural Resources.
The contract for the sw1mming pool1s
expected to be let early in March; for the
tennis courts later in the spring Courts
and pool should be completed by Aug. 1
lh1s year
I Jghts on the large basehall f1eld will
be Installed this spring. It will be the only
lighted baseball field in Me1gs County,
little or b1g.

Projects completed

•
Kings Park alive aga1n
SYRACUSE - Kmg's Park, which 50
years ago offered such athletic fare as the
Cincinnati Reds barns torming north
against local baseball talent, fittingly
enough thiS year will become the hub of
Meigs County's most complete and
modern recreation facility
Syracuse officials, led by Mayor Herman London, expect before the year is out
to have working on tbe property once
owned by (he late C. D. (Dode ) King:
- Two haseball fields, one regulation
and lighted, and a httle league size
diamond, both fenced .
- A completed parking Jot for 50 cars .
- A junior OlympiC swimming pool, Lshaped.
- Two standard sized tennis courts,
blacktopped.
- And later on this year plans for a
boating center at the river boundary of the
park featurmg a modern marina will be
rnllde
Where does an Ohio town which the
last census showed had fewer than 1.000
souls gel tbe kmd of money to build all
lllese things ?
"There~s no secret about it," said Bob
Wingett, president of council, who also is
editor and publisher of the Point Pleasant
Register, Point Pleasant. W.Va.

SuperAmenca Store. We have finished
recenlly or are completing the First
National Branch Bank m Vinton , The
FelJowshlp Chapel addition of Vmton, The
Mental Health Dirt Work, The Bonded Oil
Station, The CentervilJe Fire StatiOn, The
Johes Boys Addition , The V.F.W.'addition,
and the ne&gt;y Doctors Offices for Veterans
Memonal Hospital in pomeroy
"We are anllc1pating the start soon of
a new Drug Store, a new 60 unit Budget
Motel, and further expansion of Spring
ValJey Plaza. Also we are working on
plans for a new restaurant in the Me1gs
County area
"! can oow see that there will be at
'least $S million spent in the area o.f Route
35 West during 1976, even though we can't
possibly do all the work that will be done
"! think Gallia County IS slllJ very
much a growing area, even though it gets

Four new businesses started last year :
The Shoe Cafe, ,C&amp;R Pamt Center, stiffl er's, and National Fireplace. This
number represents a decline over the six
new businesses that opened m 1974,
however, substantial growth and mterest
continues in the Gallipolis business en- ·
VJronment. .
During 1976, we will present to the
merchants the downtown architectural
study which was started in 1974. This will
consist of • A plan to elimlna te the v1sua I
pollutiOn of 21h Alley, and a long term
business development plan for downtown
Gallipolis.
The merchants look toward 1976 as
being a year of growth and innovatiOn and
contmued service to the Citizens of Gallia
County and the surrounding area. Our
committment to a strong and innovative
business commun1ty will continue to
develop throughout the commg months.

tougher and tougher to make a dollar. We
should all be proud of our area and be very
thankful that even though we've got
several people out of work, things are sllll
be tter here than many, many places I've
been lately. "

Manager
• • •
optimiStic
GALLIPOLIS - Despite numerous
problems ,- Gal11pohs City Manager
Richard T (Dick ) M11ls remams opllmlsllc as the 1976 calendar continues to
unfold.
" We're takmg on our problems one at a
time ," Mills remarked Saturday as he
discussed projects commg up during the
next 11 months.
The Gallipolis native said cost studies
are currently underway on water, sewer
and f1re programs. He added plans for the
new water treatment plant are sllll m the
making, but the new swimming pool and
recreation complex remain question
marks at this time
Mills sa1d plans are underway to build
35 sen ior c1lizens housmg un1ls and that
restorahon of Mound H1ll, with community
help, IS on the agenda
During his more than a half-year in
off1ce, M1lls has improved various
programs, and adJusted garbage and trash
and cemetery rates m order to bring them
up to date
M1lls added, "Cooperation of the
townspeople has been excellent thus far .
W1th this type of athtude, we feel we can
solve many of our problems, but it's gomg
to take lime."

Proposed Sryacuse. Municipal Park

r

J

-~-

\\G\?,2:,;:-

j

017000

Overall health seen in economy
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla busmess, $4 2, 995,666 1&gt;, up $5 ,bU~,7 Jo . til ; Comindustrial and agriculture leaders are mercial &amp; Savmgs reports $27,252,486 49 m
confident the local economy w11l move total asse ts, up $3,626,933.79 over last year.
ahead for the 12th consecutive year .
F1rst Natwnal Bank reports
Desptte some riechnes m certain areas $20,663,000.00, up $1,969,&gt;70 00 over 1974.
during the past 12 months, Calha 's overall Buckeye Bu1ldmg &amp; Loan reports
ecooomic picture remained heallhy during $8,6S&gt;,162.00, an increase of $7/)6,577 37
1975.
"hile Galhpohs Savmgs and ~an Co ,
Total assets of three Gallla banks and reports $6, 796,6'73 .28, an mcrease of
two Joan companies increased more than $867 .&gt;24.30
13 percent the past year, from
DISTURBANCE QUELLED
$93,582,699.29 to $1Q6,362,987.92.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Count y
During the pasl four years, total assets
In the fiVe Gallia financial mstltullons sheriff's deputies here early. Saturday
havr Increased approximately $41 million mormng were called to the Skyline Lanes
Bowling Alley al Kanauga to quell a
ahd $77 million over lhe past 12 years .
dJstm
bance. However, when deputies
The $12,780,288 63 total asset gam
arnved
the parlles Involved had left
revealed all f1ve Galha IOStilulions were
According
lo the report, seve1al lights m
up over 1974 figures .
the
('apl ;:o m ·~ l npnr!r had brrn rl;nuaj.!f'(l
Ohio Valley Bank assets lutal
•'

l

1!171

J's.-..w

�3- The Sundav Tunes· Sentinel Sundav. Jan 25 1976

2 - The Sunday T1mes • Senllnel, Sunday, Jan. :z:;, 1976

Cash receipts down

THE NEW WATER OFFICE of the Chester-Tuppers
Plams Water DlslrJct makes for hitherto unknown ef-

flclency and economy

tn

opera lions It 1s Situated on 2 27

acres of land purchased by proceeds from a Farmers
Home AdmmiStrauon loa n

Another good year in '76 expected
CHESTER - The Tuppers
Pla1ns-Chester Water
DIStnct IS expectmg a good
year m 1976 after a solid show
of progress m 1975 accordmg
to
Harold
Blackston ,
president of the d1stnct's
board of trustees
In a special report for this
ed1hon Blackston stressed
that the diStnct added $24,870
worth of unprovements
durmg 1975 makmg a total of
~ $194 , 530 Invested In lm·
;. provements the past ftve

current sales rece1pts
Further, the board of trustees
pur chased major mediCal
msurance for all employees

makes for better orgamzat10n
and convemence
It is planned that an open
house "Ill be held this
summer after the grass has
gro\\ n ond the 01strtct has
settled do" n m its new
quarters The treatment
plant will also observe open
house at this time
The pubhc IS remmded that
the treatment plant IS open
for mspecllon and tours, and
the dlStflct especially

: several mqwnes concermng

of the system In add1l!on, the
pa1d all Its current
obligatiOns and stlll earned a
small profit durmg 1975
The district, w1th the
cooperation of Farmers
Home
Admtmstrahon,
borrowed $175,000 the past
year for the followmg purposes
1 To build a new office and
storage bUlldmg
2 To sandblast and pamt
the mtenor and ex tenor of all
storage tanks in the system
3 To ms tall a base rad1o
stahon and eqwp all the

school classes, c1v1c groups
or s1mply any other group of
mdlvlduals who would like to
tour the plant If anyone IS
mterested, they may call985·
3315m order to arrange a day

:; new extenswns and several

trucks wtth radtos

and ttme for the tour

!'!

years Wrote Blackston

;

" Personnel of the d1stmt

~~
~

are very optlmlstlc for
growth dunng the commg
:'; year There have been

d1str~ct

• taps have been purchased for
.: mstallahon m 1976 "
: The 1mprovemen ts com:;' pleted last } ear mclude only

The diStrict moved mto 1ls
new office the latter part of

:; lines were added to the
: system durmg the past year
• Nearly 32 m1les of p1pe line
: have been added to the
:: system durmg the past five
; years Th1s has been ac.. compllshed usmg personnel
1. of the Water DIStriCt on!}
!"Other pomts made
:: Durmg 1975, the d•strlct
: purchased a new one ton
• •work truck, a new 1975 one

feet wtde and

December, and the employees are as proud of 1t as
they would be of a new home
"t new mams, d1s tnbuhon and
:: serv1ce lines, fire hydrants , of their own The new
: valves, etc 18,111 feet of new bmldmg IS 90 feet long and 40
1s

sttuated on

2 27 acres of land bought from
the proceeds of the $175,000
loan This new bmldmg has a
large reception area, office
rooms for management
personnel, a large ullllty
room, a large workroom plus
a large garage and storage

space
For the ftrst hme stnce the

system was put m operahon
: .ton p1ckup truck, a new, m 1969, all the equipment,
: .heavier duty, diesel backhoe ftttmgs, tools, parts, trucks,
:: and small portable tools office. e"' have bee~ brought
t These were all pa1d for out of together m one place This

;

An operator or other offiCial of the d1slr1Ct w1ll be on
hand to explam the vanous
fWlchons of the treatment
plant eqUipment and the
entire treatment process ,
mcludmg the backwashmg of
the filters and softeners ThiS
plant and the system belong
to the people and the per
sonnel are only too happ) to
explam 1ts operahon and
funchons
The new radto system 1s
now operative It mcludes a
base statiOn at the new office
and radiOs mall the trucks It
has been an mstant success
ThiS system enables employees to be m touch w1th the
office and each other every
hour of the workmg day and
has already saved many

gas once thought

'

~.wild

..
-••

spirit from springs

GALLIPOLIS - Just 200
:; years ago when thts nat1on
• was about to be born, natural
.. gas was deemed a ' wild
::' sp1nt" as 11 bubbled up m
;' ponds from shallow geologic
: pockets and as ' burmng
""" sprmgs, '
when
those
:= seepages were 1gm ted by
: Ughtnmg or careless camp: ftres
: The ftrst gas company was
• not orgamzed until 1858 m
~ Fredonia, N Y , yet w1thm
: another hundred years the
: natural gas 10dustry was on
: 1ts "ay to becommg the
• natwn 's s1xth largest
: "Now thts valuable com; mocbty IS m short supply, m
::: relatiOn to the overwheimmg
.. deman(l for tt, n accordmg to
: J M Koedel, manager for
;: Columbia Gas of OhiO 1n the
~ Galha-Metgs area
' 1 But,
Columbia Gas System supply
'r development efforts are
;!.'expected to put Columbia Gas
::;of Oh1o m a poSI t1on of
: balance between supply and
Mdemand m the 1980's, and
:~thereafter the possibility of
:'!iftmg
exlSilng
sales
• m1tal!Ons will be a goal," he

.

:SS•d

system

Work is reviewed
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla
County Engmeer Paul Stull,
Just a year ago thls week,
proposed an ambttlous road
and bridge program for 1975
ThiS week he reviewed the
progress made
1
Much needs to be done,
but the total job Will never be
completed
because
of
changmg commercial, tn ·
dustnal, and mmmg practices In fact, unexpected
changes m these patterns of
endeavor already has caused
considerable damage to
newly constructed county
roads These changes also
provide many JObs and create
a money flow mto Gallta
County, \\h1ch IS good'
The engmeer added, "Some
progress 1s bemg made on
roadSide d1tchwg Several
large slips m roads and
several large landslides onto
roads have been corrected
'Two brtdges are of some
conce rn w1th resp ect to
safet} - Blesswg bridge 1n
Green Twp and the bndge
over the Chess•e Railroad
near the GSI m Gallipolis
Twp '
Stull added,
W1th a
limited budget, much semi·
skilled help, antiquated
eqwpment and a spiraling
economy, the total JOb 1s
diffiCUlt
' Every posSible program
for state and federal !10anc1al
asSistance has been explored

Delivery of

Another asset was the

~ Natural
••

welcomes groups such as

m1les of formerly duphcated
travel and many hours of
time
fhe tanks m the system
have been san dblasted and
pamted mSlde and out, and
should be m excellent condttlon for many years to
come In th1s respect the
personnel of the Tuppers
Pla1ns-Che s ter Water
DIStnct wiSh to thank the
people
whu were
mconventenced dunng th1s
penod for the~r splendid
cooperatwn and tolerance
D1stnct employees 1n
stalled a new fire hydrant at
the new olflce Site A !1re hne
was also run mto the bmld1ng
ThiS ne• hydrant benefits all
the nearby homes and
tr:ulers Any of these, w1th1n
1 000 feel of the h} drant, 1s
enhtled to Class 8 fire m
surance rates
The dlStnct has added
some ne" ofhce furmture for
the new bu1ldmg and has also
constructed ne• shelvmg,
tool boxes, work benches and
a ney, meter testing bench A
numher of small, much
needed portable tools has
been purchased
F1lly new taps were added
to the system durmg the past
year Th1s was a smaller
growth than lfl 1974
nevertheless, 1t was new,
solid growth, also 11 ongmal
( 1969) taps were reac tivated
from a dormant status,
helpmg to add revenue to the

GALLIPOLIS - Accordmg counties l 1n total farm
to the annual report complied productiOn and mcome 8C·
last September by the OhiO cordwg to Bryson 1Bud)
Agncultural Research and Carter, extenswn agent
In mne 1mmedtate southern
Development
Cen ler,
Wooster, OhiO, total cash OhiO counties, Galha ranks
rece1pts
from
farm second, trallmg only Scwto
marketmg m Galha County m County Only Musk1ngum,
1974 were down $318,000 Washmgton , Sc1oto and
Belmont outranked Calha m
compared to !973 figures
Cash receipts m Gallla the 19-county area
Agriculture census figures
County m 1974 totaled
$8,025,000 exdudmg $10,000 are not yet available for 1974
m gover nment payments Last report 1n 1969 revealed
compa red to $8,343,000 m Galha had 1,214 farms m
1973, excludmg $81,000 m q&gt;erahon \Uth an average
mcome per farmer at $6,686
governrhent payments
These
figures are expected to
Gallla County rema1ned
f1fth 1out of 19 southern Oh10 show a b1g change when the

:; ucolumbia Gas System
""'ompames have mvested $800
!'!rrullion smce 1970 irr the
:,". development of new gas
:;;suppUes and plan to spend up
• to f1ve billion dollars more m
;:.that effort durmg the next 10
: years," he added
: Explora hon and dnlllng
::efforts have been expanded m
-the trad1honal supply area~
..« the Appala~h1ans and the
::SOuthwest the past several
•-years And a non-histone
upply source, a $48 5 m1lllon
plan I to reform llqu1d
..hydrocarbons mto gas, has
. been operatmg at Green
::.S.,rlngs, Ohio smce April
:')974, to help offset the present
eflclency
: A series of unrelated
••'•phenomena" tn several
• iJOUihwestern stat~s . enabled
;columbia Gas of Ohw to
purchaae more than 13 billion
&gt;ruble feel of natural gas at
.Intrastate prices there to help

offset projected cnhcal
~ shortages for the winter of
1976, but ava1lab1hty of such
11
Spot" purchases IS not
completely assured durmg
thiS period or beyond
In 1977, LNG (L1quef1ed
Natural Gas) shipments by
tanker from Algena are
scheduled to arnve at the
Columb10 System's
regaSlfymg facility at Cove
Pomt, Md • m Chesapeake
Bay ThiS second non-h1stor1c
gas supply w11l travel through
an 87-mlle, 36-mch diameter
s tee! p1pehne to enter
Columbia System fac•hl1es at
Loudoun, Va It Will also help
offset the gas shortage w1th
an additional supply of 300
million cubic feet da1Iy Cost
of the termmal and connechng pipeline IS $300
million
Columbia companies w1ll
continue supply development
programs through expanded
dnlllng onshore and offshore
m the Gulf of Mex1co, and are
cooperahvely engaged m
exploratory drilling along the
outer continental shelf m the
north Atlantic off the coast of
Newfoundland
It w1ll be after 1980 before
the next major gas supply
from non-h1stonc sources IS
scheduled
to
become
Columbia IS
aval)able
parllc1pahng In the planned
construction of a $10 b1lhon,
2,800 mile pipeline system to
brmg natural gas from
Alaska and the North
American arc tic regwns to
enter
the
Columbia
dis tributwn system m Ohw
and Pennsylvama.
Later m the 1980's conversion of ~041llflto synthetic
natural
gas,
already
techmcally a reality, should
beco~ 1 commercially
feaSible for large scale
production
' Columbia researchers are
also looking mto such exotic
energy forms of solar heat
and concentrating the1r efforts and research dollars on
ways of stre"'hmg present
gas supplies and the quest for

new sources," Koebel says
They are trymg to develop
' fractunng" methods to
loosen the "super-light"
Appalachian las shale
geologiC formatwns beheved
to hold several hundred
trillion cubic feet of natural
gas, researchmg ways to
punfy and mcrease the
healing value of low BTU gas
produced from coal, and
testing snoopmg and photosensing dev1ces to help locate
and 1denhfy natural gas
reservOirs thousdands of feet
underground and under the
sea
Another d1rect10n of
today's research ts toward
1mprovwg ut1hza lion efflc1enc1es of the gas we have,
accordmg to the manager
"Until .more of our supply
developmg programs and
projects bear fru1t, we must
stretch our present short and
dwmdllng supplies by proper
utthzahon
and
conservahon.''
He noted Columbia's efforts the past several years to
encourage gas conservallon
and help customers w1th
msulatmg and weatherproofing problems, to help
reduce their energy use and
save them money
"We've had cooperatiOn
from customers and some
success 1n cuttmg back on gas
usage, but we need more/'
Koebel sa1d "The slogan of
our present program, Save
Gas, Save Jobs means JUSt
that"
As for the diStant future,
the sun may be called on, or
the wmd or ocean hdes, to
supplement the energy of
natural gas And down the
farthest road IS the possibility
of taking hydrogen atoms
from water for use as a clean,
faseous fuel
Columbia researchers are
mterested m all these novel
energy concepts and w11l,
when poss1ble, apply those
available to keep Columbia
compames strong, healthy
energy compames for all
limo•

upgradmg of approxtmately
20 domestic taps to commercial status
In the recent elect1on for
the board of trustees Harold
Blackston and Gene Yost,
Incumbents, were reelected
to the board At the regular
meetmg of the board on
January
13th,
Harold
Blackston was reelected
preSident, Howard Caldwell,
vtce prestdent, and Warren
Ptckens, secretary~
At present, the mall address of the d1stnct will
remam the same It w1ll be
changed m the not too distant
future and, at that t1me, all
patrons will be not1fled of the
new address There 1s a
depoSItory at the new off1ce
for the payment of bills alter
workwg hours and durmg the
weekend All customers are
mv1ted to take advantage of
thiS wstallat!On
In August of 1975, the tap
fee for the d1Str1ct was m·
creased to $275
Depos1ts
for
rental
properties are now $25 for
domestic use and pro-rated
on a consumptiOn basts for
commercial depos1ts The
charge for removmg meters
to dtsconhnue servtce
remams unchanged at $5
lnstaUat10n of a meter to
resume servtce to a property
IS also $5
The diStnct remmds
patrons that diStrict rules
reqwre that each water user
have a check valve and shutoff valve located on the
customer's s1de of the meter.
Th1s IS not a new rule but has
been m effect every smce the
d1str1ct as formed
The check valve IS to
prevent the water runmng out
of p1pes and hot water
heaters durmg a break or low
pressure. The shut-off valve
IS the customer's control
valve, whereby he may shut
!he •aler offal any l1me that
1t IS not bemg used , or to
make repa1rs to hiS system
The diStriCt has Installed a
com-operated automatic
water dispenser for !He
purpose of ilelhng bulk water
It will deliver 250 gallons for
25 cents, and will take only
quarters ThiS IS the same
1ate at wh1ch bulk water has
been sold smce the opemng of
the system It Is contemplated that the new water
dispenser will be m operation
by ~·ebruary 1st and th1s w1ll

•

'

mail is up

and,

some cases,
supphed or
promiSed Your county
comm iSS IOners have been
espec1ally helpful 1n buymg
what ts perhaps a record
amount of eqmpment
"Much has been achieved
tilts past year w1th the Galha
County tax dollar W1th
cooperatiOn from all concerned, and a unders landmg
publtc, much can be ach1eved
m 1976 "
m
asststance

1974 census IS completed
The dmry mdustJ y con tinues to rank number one m
ag riculture 1n Gallla County
w1tha 1974 total mcome of
$2.891,000, wh1ch IS 36 percent
of total cas h receipts 1 he
1974 f1 gure , however IS
$91 ,000 below the 1973 figure
of $2,982,000, but well ahead
of the 1972 flgur e of $2,439,000
Tobacco replaced beef
ca ttle and calves m the
number two slot last ; ear
WIth $2,028,000, or 24 per cent
of the county's total cash
receipts ThiS IS $243,000
more than the 1973 figure of
$1 ,785,000
Ca ttle dropped to tlurd w1th
a $1 420,000, or 18 percent
to!&lt;ll , down $1 ,045,000 from
Lhe 1973 figure of 12,465,000
Hog cash recc1pts Jumped
to fourth from seven th w1lh a
$532,000 figure , up $43,000
over last ye&lt;lr's mark of
$489,000 Hay ranks hfth ,~ t
$295,000 up $02,000 over last
year' s mark of $213 ,000
Poultry 1s s1xth an mcome at
$1 31,000 do"n 130 000 O\er
1973 fi gures of $161,000 wh1le
!rmts tol.aled $114,000, up
$44 ,000 over last year's mark
of $70,000
Forestry figures are mcluded tn other crops

Water association will
add 300 to 400 patrons
KANAUGA - Offl c1als of
the Galha Coun ty Rural
Water Association enter 1976
workmg for the completwn of
a 11 ,207,000 proJeCt wh1ch will
add ' 300 to 400 customers to
the system
Water hnes are bemg m
sl.alled on Rt 554 bel11een
Porter and Chesh1re, from
Eureka to Crown Cit}. on RL
1~1 , at Tycoon Lake and on
Cher ry R1dg e near R1o
Grande The additiOna l
cus tomers y, til mcrease the

~) stem s

\l.a ter c:unswncr s to

2 400
AI !he pre~ent tame there
are nu plans for ad chtwn&lt;~l
expansiOn m 1976, but lines
could be added If funds I\ ere
ava tl a ble an a sSOCI &lt;:d ! On
spokesman sta1 ed
S1nce 1970, the FH A has
loaned the Gallic~ Count~
Rural Willer A s soc l ~t1 o n
$3,748 000 for 1ls 260 mile
system Dunng 1915 64 5
mtl es \I.Ci e added

Car dealers in brighter times
GAl LIPOI IS - Although 1974 v.ere 1ssued lhr ougl1 the
the econornac picture "as Galha Coun f) Clerk of Courts
mu ch bngh ter than the office Dealers sold 368 ne11
previOus year, Gallla Count) lrucks and 153 ne\\ tra tlers
Dep uty clerks nwdc 4 774
car dealers contmucd to feel
notatiOn
of !tens .tnd ca neffects of the country s
celled
l
95
1 hens l lterc was
recessiOn
an
tncrease
rn !he s~dl' 11 r used
It wasn t all that bad 1n
car
s
and
tJ
uck
s
1975, but 26 fey, er new c o~rs
Despite
fewe
r nt. ~' C(:l l
were purchased than the
sales,
tax
coll
ectiU
ns 1n
prevtous year
creased
Clcr
ks
t
110
k
111
Durmg the year, deale! s
$532,248
85
1
n
taxes
compared
sold 1 047 new cars compared
to 1 073 m 1974 A total of to $497 t58 29 lite pre\ wus
I
14,807 titles , 140 more than year

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Poastmaster Richard Bane
reported Saturday that mall
dellvenes mcreased f1ve
percent 10 1975 over the 1974
f1gure, but that revenue ~as
down 2 4 percent over the
previous year 's ftgure
Postage revenue 10 1975
was $324,005, compared to
$331 ,996 In 1974
Dehvenes totaled 5 622 10
1975 compared to 5,355 10
1974 Broken down , Cit)
reSldenhal dehvenes totaled
2,829 1n 1975 compared to
GAl LIPOLIS - OhiO Bell
2,745 m 1974 City busmess
Saturday
announced tendehvenes totaled 439 compared to 428 and rural tative plans to spend about
dellvenes totaled 1 750 to $500,000 m Gallipolis during
1,622 gtar Route deliveries • 1976 to tmprovc telephone and
totaled 604 compared to 560 m date transmissi On serv ices
1974
Commerctal Mana ger
Post office boxes totaled R1chard Roderick qualified
the same last year as m 1974 the announcement by saymg
at 508 The post offiCe has 21
In vtew of our company s
employees compared to 22 m cloudy fman c1al outlook
1974
these plans rna} be mod1f1ed
Bane pomted oqt most of
We
can't l'ule out the
the growth 10 1975 was 10 the
posSibility
that we may have
rural area and Rt 35, west of
to
cut
th1s
figure back by
Holzer Med•cal Center
•
some
$90
000
1f our earmngs
The poshnaster added the
ptcture
doesn't
tmprove by
slight decline in revenue as
opposed
to
mcreased ear !y sprmg "
Rodenck sa id the total
deliveries can parhally be
attributed tq economic amount IS what OhiO Bell
condtllons lh early 1975 and engmeenng experts say wtll
the mcreased use of com. be needed JUSt to meet the
needs of the growmg
puler billings
Gallipolis area th1s year He
sa1d the money Will go to
work for customers m the
form
of more central off1 ce
DIVORCE ASKED
switching
equipment to
GALLIPOLIS - Charging
handle
thm
calls,
more cable
gro~ negl~ct of duty and
extreme cruelty, Justme 111 connect their phones, and
Neal, Patriot Star Rt
more customer lines
Gallipolis, here Friday filed ~
" Although demand for
petitiOn for d1vorce against service ts not as brtsk as 1t
James F Neal, same ad- "as m years when lhe
dress They were married economy was better,"
March 16, 1945 and have two Rodenck said, "expenditures
children
for our construction program
keep growmg because m
veslrnent dollars just don t
make 1t possible for tank buy as much as they used to
trucks to fill up anyt1me any Gallipolis shll 1s among the
day
fastest growmg parts of the
The new bmldmg was state and nat1on, and we want
constructed by the newly to keep ahead of the growth
&lt;&gt;rgamzed Fick &amp; Karr
ConstructiOn Company It IS "llh adequate and up-tv-date
beauhful and well con- telecommumcatwns serstructed
The
district vtces
Our
btg
(on ern."
congratulates the f1rm for a
Iludenck
added,
"IS
that we
job "ell done, especially
smce th1s was its first venture nught not be able to ratse the
tn to
lhe
constructwn 11wnr) to tlo llu JOh we knu\\
has to be done If 1•c have to
bUSiri('SS

lmproven1ents to
come in phones
cut baCk 1l "Ill shm\ up ftr st
m lengthy delays for new
servtce People mo\ mg mto
new hom es, apartments
off1ce bu1ldmgs and shopptng
center comp lexes \Oil not be
abl e to have teleph one serv i&lt;:C ms talled \\hen the) Y. ant
II
' '1he eqmpl11Uit cmd hnes
won t be th ere to se r ve
Utem, 1 ' he went 011 to cxplaan
And even Where hnes ap
peal to be accesSi ble • e
won 't have the central offJ ce
capac 1ty to wtre them tn
'We have an obhgatwn to
our extstmg cus tomers to
mamtam Lhe quality of t11e1r
se rv1cc, ' Rodenck sa1d
Add1ng too many customers
and over-loadmg our present
eqmpment would mean poor
serv1ce for everyone, and we
can't let that happen '
Projects currently p!Rnned
for Galhpohs th1s year have
been deSigned to mcrease the
effiCiency and mawtam the
rehah111ty of the present
communicatiOns eqUipment
servmg the commlmlty
Plans call for mstallat10n of
electronic eq uipm ent winch
w1ll test both loca l and long
distance c1rcuils when they
afe not m use 1 h1S equipment detects mmor serv1ce
problems and provides for
repatr before maJm serv tce
breakdowns occur
Facilities to handle calls
from sw 1tch10~ centers 10
Vmlon, Guyan, R1v Grande
and Walnut also will be added
m the Gallipolis exchange
bulldlng And new long
diStance call carrymg ca bles
along U S 35 have been
scheduled for mstallation
l&lt;~lcl lh1s year

:• '•: : :0 ,•, •: .·~· •:::•' '•' • ::·. :
&lt;;•

Miller wants
another term

Projects
about to
come on

LANCASTER
Congressman Clarence
Miller Saturday announced
he Will seek re-elecUon to a
Sixth term as Representallve to Congress from
Oh1o's Tenth DIStrict Miller
pledged, " A contmuat10n of
the full-time representatiOn 1
have always endeavored to
prov1de the people of the
Tenth DIStrict "
"My poltcy of accesSlblhty
and direct commumcahon
Will be earned forward and
expanded as we seek to
provtde area residents every
pOSSible assiStance m dealing
wtth their Government 11
M1ller sa1d
'
Elec!A!d to hiS first House
term m 1966, M1ller has been
re-elected to each succeedmg
Congress From 1967 to 1972
he served on the Huuse
Agriculture and Publtc
Works Comm1ttees before hiS
election to the House Approprtattons Commtttee m
January 1973 Presently
Miller serves as rank•ng
mmonty member an the
Treasury, Postal Service and
General Governmen t Appropriahons Subcommittee
In addition, he IS a member of
the Republican Research
Committee and Task Force
on Energy and Resources
Pnor to hiS Congresswnal
serviCe, Miller served as
Mayor of Lancaster

GALLIPOLIS
The
Buckeye Rural Electric has
several proJects earned over
[rom 1975 that Will be comple"'d and energ1zed 10 the
early part of 1976 These are
1 W10dsor Subsf&lt;JI!On on
G• easy Ridge 1n Lawrence
County ThiS w11l be a 7500
KVA StatiOn and w1ll take
some of the load off of the
Scottown Substahon
2 New transformers are on
s1te lo mcrease the capac1ty
of the Echo Valley Sub at
Jackson and the Me~gs Sub m
Me1gs County fr om 2500 KVA
to 5,000 KVA
Work plans are now bemg
updated to determme where
and 11 hen additiOnal work
\1111 be necessary to keep the
capac1ty of the system ahead
of demand
1hei e will p10bably he 8
system tmprovement out of
Sunrise Sub of heavymg Up
the poles and conductor for
about two m1les from the Sub
to the McS\\ een) mach me
shop locatiOn al a cost of
apjll ox1mately $50,000 00
'I he loU. I esttmated cos t of
the comp leted constructiOn
on the substatlorts and lane
Impr ovements wtll be tn
excess of $600 000 00
Jn 1975 BRE added 506 new
seJvi&lt;.:es , the cost of bmldmg
th ese along w1th other
1msc.:c llaneou:l constructiOn
cost was $245,000 and 11 IS
" nllC!apted that there
be
tlPP ' nxtmntely the same
number th1 s yea r at a cost of
$275 000
Pole re pla cement w1ll
amount lo about $40, 000 for
,1bou t 125 bad poles changed

f:

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

Symmes Valley team has

:::

•

• ~·

~;

third parliamentary win

:·j

No-till planting
By Boyd A. Ruth
Dtslrtct ConservatJorust
POMEROY - ' An mcreasmg number of farmers
m the Buckeye State and
Me1gs County are usmg no-till
plantmg of row crops," accordmg to Robert E
Qu1lham ,
state
conservatiOmst for the U S So1l
ConservatiOn Serv1ce tSCSJ

:.;

j5

The Symmes Valley ~'F' A , Parijamentar) P-orodure .;•
.• Team traveled to Me1gs H1gh School for the annual :;
District Parliamentary Procedure Contest w1th
''
M1ller said that one of t)Je
,:;
teams
competmg
for
ratings
of
gold,
Silver
or
bronze
.
malYI ISsues m 1976 IS the Size
•
~
After
several
sess1ons
of
study,
work
and
practicing,
the
~:.
power and cost of the Federal
l!: efforts of the Symmes Valley boys pa1doff, taking the first :
Government
"If mflallon IS to be ef :§: place gold ratmg, the third lime m three years they have ;.
~ been so successful Members of the team were Randy
fechvely
controlled
meamngfui)Obs created, and )~ Stwnbo, Andy Pinkerman, M1ke Myers, Dale Mootz
m Ohw
our econom1c freedom ~: Dav1d Carpenter, Steve Dorman, Mark Wilson, and JerrY
Use of the no-tillage
sustamed," M11Ier stated ~~ Sowards Their coach IS the Vo--Ag mstructor, Lee '? method of corn productiOn
'~ Johnson
:··
"the people's represe~tahve~ 0::
has grown from less than
{~
One
unusual
mstance
thiS
year
was
that
that
Symmes
can not continue to use the
5,000
acres m 1967 tQ nearly
government 's s pendtng ~; Valley Chapter rece1ved a perfect score of 100 pomts One
200,000
acres m 1974 No-lllllS
power for the1r political self. i:j Of the jUdges for the contest COmmented that to hiS
also bemg used on nearly
;::
knowledge
he
had
never
seen
or
heard
of
a
parliamentary
perpetuallon.
'
., 100,000 acres of OhiO land for
''Government can only gtve ~j procedure team gettmg a perfect score
plantmg soybeans followmg
that wh1ch 11 takes from the :;1 Schools partlclpatmg heSJdes Symmes Valley were .. harvest of wmter wheat In
people e1ther d!fectly by ~: Hannan Trace, SOuthwestern, North Gallla Galha ·.: many areas of the state crop
taxes or mdlfectly by the { Academy. Me~gs, Eastern, Southern, and Buck~ye H1lls :; y1elds have been as great or
:
y
mf!at10n 1! creates And ::~ Career Center
greater under the no4!llage
,:;
unless pubhc spendmg power • ;., •,•,•,•:• :- .• ··:. :· ·:- •,•, ;.:,:.;,;:.,,:.:;:.;,:;::.::;:;:;::,:., ::::,::,::!·:·:·:···:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:.:: • • •
...... method of productiOn than
1s subJected to the rule .af law
and the mf!allonary consequences
or
eac h
representative's vote for
more programs and h1gher
spendmg fully understood,
POINT PLEASANT - The Columbia from Mt Flowers Palnter, Patrtcta .to Jetcher
tendent Charles Withers,
the lesson from the New York
Mason County Board of Elementary School where he ~nd Barbara Butcher
Asststant Supermtendent
C1ty bankruptcy w11l be lost,
Education Frida} mght let was a teacher
Employed Carroll Charles Chambers, Board
on ly to be repeated at the
stand grievance filed by a
Among the other motwns Church as a substitute bus
President Harry Siders,
nahonal level
cook seeking higher wages passed were the followmg
operator , Mary Goodrute as a Board members Bill Brady,
' Besides
bemg
our
Frankie Mayes, cook at Mt
- H1red the followmg substitute cook, and Joann
Paul
Watkms,
Robert
B•centenmal , 1976 IS the
Olive ECE, asked to be pa1d s ub stit ute
teachers
H1ggmbo!ham as a substitute Adkms and Ray F1elds The
crossroads m determmmg
for a full day's work although Fredenck Chnsllan, Dav1d custodian
next board meeting IS set for
whether more control over
she works only a parual day
Dwawe Greer Broderick
Present were Supenn· February
10
our personal lives and
A full day s work for cooks
produchve capaottes IS
constltutes se\'en hours She
rehnqwshed to Government
only works f1ve and a half
or wllethe1 we reclaun the
hours
Foundm Father s belle! m
She t1ld the board she was
•ndlVldual freedom and
never properly notified of the
u•••••cuo
hmtted , controlled Crovern.
new hourly wage schedule
01 •usm CHAliCE
ment
that took effect last year To
I
further complicate her case
she was pa1d at first for a full
day s work then later cut
In tl\e Spirit
back
ot'711 · ··
In other actwn the board
Re"o'utionarV
asSigned DaVId Hill to the
Sa"in91
prmc1pal teacher pos1hon at
THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE
West Columbia Elemenl.ary
and w1ll be for sale
School The poSition was
Any Ohwan over the age of vacated at the last meetmg
60 IS ellg1ble to enter the
when W1Iham Barker was
event by contactmg hts local transferred as principal area agency on agmg Im- teacher there to assume the
mediately lor rules and entry prmc1pal's duhes at Ord·
forms The deadline to enter nance Elementary School
the pamtmgs IS February 16
H1ll1s transfernng to West
The number of pamtmgs
from each county 1s limited,
only the best ones w1ll he
for• arded to Columbus for Sunday Times-Sentinel
the show
Publ ished every Sundav

1:

l:
r.·l.·

Cook's grievance unanswered by board

""'

Sr. citizen paintings in

••II

March show and sale
RIO GRANDE - The f1rst
and largest all....semor c1hzen
art show and sale ever held m
Ohio Will run March 2 through
7 m the Statehouse Rotunda
m Columbus
John R Allen, director of
the Area Agency on Agmg,
DISinct 7, based at R10
Grande College, sa1d 54
pamtmgs done by semor
, cltlzens from hiS 10-county
area are mcluded m the show
Between 1,000 and 1,500
pamtings are expected from
all over the state
Gov James A Rhodes w1ll
launch the show when he
auci!Ons off approximately
20 pamtmgs startmg at noon,
March 2 All of the pamtmgs
are done by OhiO's elder1v

('lit

Rtght of Wd) cleanng ~os ts
for buth aerutl sprdJ anU land
&lt;utllng 11111 be approx imately
$160 000
lhc rc lta s been con
st dcrable comment about the
cust of elec ln c se rv1ce m the
past ) car .md the posstbthty
uf .tddrhonal lflt leases m the
fuiUI e Allh lS lime II IS hoped
th.1t the1e v. 111 be no need to
mcre.asc 1 Lites m 1976, but if
cos t of dom g busmess con·
tmues to grow, !hen the ob\ I OUS \\1\1 happen
One Yl&lt;l Y to measure the
cos t IS to compare the perc~nt
of 11ages be1n g used lo pay
y ()ur electnc bill !\ay m 1960,
and th e per c~ n t of wages 1t
no11 t~ kc s to p,1y the b1ll Try
11 You might be surprised to
rtnd a smc.d lcr per cent of
\\i.lges g01ng lo pi:!y the bill

ASK TOWED
POMEROY - A mamage
license has been Issued to
Marv in Clayton Rous h, 23,
New Ha ven and Marla
Neutzhng , 21, Pomeroy

fj,~

• Super Sale!
Further Reductions
on
Really Fine Brands

VEHICLES BUMP
POMEROY - A Mwersvllle man v..as arrested
fol!o11 m~ a car-truck acCident Fnday at 1 05 p m m
Syracuse T11e Me1gs County
SI1enff's Dept sa1d the car of
Kenny R Nmgler, 2.1, Rt 2,
Racme, dnven west on SR 124
m Syracuse , w~;~s struck m the
rea r by a p1ckup truck dnven
by Robert I Jeffers , 45,
Mmersvdle Jeffers 1s lodged
10 Ja il on charges of dnvmg
wh1le mtox1cated There were
no lnJun es There was
moderate damage to both
veh1cles

- .. -· c.,(,
cJ·c·"•
I

GallipoliS,

IS

popular

protec tive cover of crop
res1due IS left on at least 90
percent of the surfat-e
No&gt;-\111 plantmg elumnates
the need for plowmg, d1scmg ,
and cult!Vatwn In many
cases, the entire operation of
kilhng weeds , seeding and
fert1hzmg IS done 1n JUSt one
tnp over the held It also
allows
reseedmg
for
producllve stands of forage
on land where p!owlng would
cause severe erosiOn.
'Seedmg like most farming
operat10nstoday, has become
a h1ghly specialized and
techmcal procedure," says
Qmlllam "No-till IS a good
conservation practice," he
says " lr add1t1on to the
labor, eqUipment, and fuel
savmgs , th1s method of
seedmg really reduces wmd
and water erosiOn Increasmgly heavy demands on

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE
SUN , JAN 25

MARRIAGE ON ROCKS
POMEROY - Flllng for
dissolution of marria&amp;e In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court were Johnathlln Scott
Pomeroy, and Christina ~
Scott, Pomeroy

,

,.

,.,

Jh,·nltf

ONE WEEK
WEDNESDAY
THRU
TUESDAY
WALT DISNEY
PRESENTS

TREASURE
ISLAND
&amp;

.;md Luke Asl&lt;ew

"Al1as The

•

Scarecrow · ·

Show St~rts at 7 00 p m

C,4RTOON

BICENTENNI
FABRIC S LE

Oh~10_._ __....._..JIM

DAILY TRIBUNE
825 Third Ave GallipOliS
OhtO 45631
Published every weekday
ellenmg e~Ccept So!'turday
Second Class Postage Paid
at Galttpol s Ohto 45631
THE DAILY SENTINEL
I II Court St Pomeroy 0
45769 Publ is hed every week
day evenmg e:kcepf Safur
day Entered as second c lass
matltllQ maHer a t Pomeroy
Oh10 Post Offtce
By cerr1er dally and
Sunday 75c per week Motor
rout e SJ 25 per month
MAIL
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The
Gall tiJOI s
Datly
Trtbu1'1e n Ohio and West
V1rgmta one year 52'2 00 six
months Sll 50 three months
S7 00 Elsewhere $26 00 per
year
S1x months St3 50
three months S7 50 motor
route SJ '25 monthly
The Dally Senttnel
one
year sn 00
Stx months
Sll 50 three months S7 00
El$ewhere
S26 00
Stx
months Sll 50 three months
$7 50
The Un 1ted Press In
ter nattonal Is exclus•vely
en! tiled to the use for
publlcat1on of all news
dtspatches credited to the
newspaper and also the local
news publtshed heretn

Permanent Press
Spring Fabrics

AVRIL® RAYON/COlTON
SIRAI.ORD PRINTS

Was h .. n wear co tt ons ond
blends Bl ous e and spo rt
we ghts Sol ds pnn ls
45 w 'de fosh1on length s

1

SUPER BUY
ON SEWING
ELASTIC

I
1

1
1

1

aiG IAYIIIG 011 ,

4FOR

5

SCISSORS

1

1~! ·

Stock up o tlhts low pr 1ce
'I• 1 lf.l ond 1
31•
non r oll

S1zes

wo t s lbon d

Bent and stra1ght tr mmers
Embrotdery and sew i ng SCISsors barber shear s

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
•

~

•

•

J

••

•
ATTENPS SERVICES
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs Jack
Dav1s, a reSident of 936
Second Ave , Gallipolis,
returned
Fnday from
Warren, Oh10 where she
at tended t.IJe funeral services
of her son-an-law, Raymond
Moyer Mrs Moyer IS the
former Marjorie DaviS
daughter oi the late r Jack
Davis and Mrs UUian Davis
Mr Moyer was•a resident tof
Houston, Texas The body
was returned to Warren, Ohio
for bur1al.

COLO\) ·

DR. SYN

WALKING TALL
Starnng So Svenson

elostt c

lNSPE'CTION SET
POMEROY Annual
mspe ctwn of Pomeroy
Chapt er 80, Royal Arch
Masons, Will be held Tuesday
at the Pomeroy Masonic
remple, 7 30 p m R1ght
Excellent Compamon John T
JarviS , diStrict deputy h1gh
pnest of the Twelfth
Capitular D1stnct, Will be the
mspectmg off1cer A dmner
precedmg the degree work
Will be served at 6 30 p m
The ladles are mv1ted

farmland for food and f1her
reqUlre such conservation
practices as no-till to
guarantee fu tu re producuon," says ~ullmm "The
no-till melhool IS su1led to
over 6 m1llt on acres m
Ohw,"he sa1d

by
The
Oh o
Va l l ey
Pub I shmg Co
GALLIPOLIS

330 Second Avenue

n O\\

w1th conventwnill tillage
Last yea r. Oh1o farmers
planted over 11 mllhon acres
to row and forage crops An
tncreasmg amount of th1s
land IS bemg planted l!smg
the no-t1ll method wh1ch
sharply red uces
labor
requirements, machmery
use , and fuel consumption
In Me1gs County, an
eshmated 1,750 acres was
planted usmg the no-hll
method m 1975 There are
hundreds of addillonal acres
whlCIJ could he successfully
planted using the no-t1ll
method lfl Me1gs County
Crop res1due IS left on the
surface over wmter, Seedbed
•s prepared by breakmg the
soli 1n each row wtth a
coulter, smgle chisel, or
Sim ilar tool, and seed IS
planted m one operahon A

•

•••
•

r
•
;
:
•

JANUARY25THRUJANUARY31ST

PATCHWORK,
NEAT&amp;DENIM

DINNER BOX

Caref•ee permanent
p ress broadclo th 45
Royo n / colfon or ro yo n
and polyester b l ends
Futl bo lls no rem nants

3 PIECES CHICKEN
• MASHED POTATOi:S
&amp;GRAVY
eSLAW

REG. '1.37

Prl•t or Solid
Fasht o nobte co tto n
dentm 1n pat c hwork
pr tnt s or solid co l
ors 45 w1de

POLYIITI.
&amp;COnOII

IARPOON
CLOIH

No Subt

Nn Coupons No Ltmrt

50 % po lyester

137

and Dumplmgs •

Fnday Ntght
" Beef and Noodles "
Spectal Pn ce Sl 29
Saturdav N1ght

50 ~o

Spagheftt
'AIIYoucanEat! '

Spectal PnceSl 69

CHOICE

We have the newest Sirnpi!C tty pottern books
ond o il o f I he newest patterns SturJ now
on sprmg fosh1om for all the fomtly

All Dmners and SpeCial Pnces Ef
fecl1ve Monday , January 26 1hrough

Saturday February 21 1976
4 8 PM ONLY

'--------------------1----- --------------

I

--

Monday N1ght ts Famtly Ntght
2 Complete Otnners
Ovet aU 00 Value-Now Just SJ 89
Tuesday Ntght
' Murphy's Ptua Partv' '
Spec tal Pr.ce 97c
Wednesday N 191'11
'Beans and Corn Bread '
Spec tal Prtce He
Thursday Ntght

Spertal Pnce Sl 36

YOUR

2nd &amp; Olive

Bnng the whole famtly to
Murphy's Restaurant and en toy
these evenmg spec•als (Ser
vtng from 4 00 to a_00 p m only

' Homemade Chtrken

eoli an Fr esh new 1!:01
or~ 1n check s st r pes
tweed s o r soltds 45
w de On futl bolts

•••nu
u, ..,
'
:

REG. '1.77

DENIMS

'

•

Silver Bndge Plaza

PRINTS

•

'

MURPHY'S
RESTAURANT

REG. '1.27

•

SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA - DOWNTOWN GAlliPOLIS STORES
'

�3- The Sundav Tunes· Sentinel Sundav. Jan 25 1976

2 - The Sunday T1mes • Senllnel, Sunday, Jan. :z:;, 1976

Cash receipts down

THE NEW WATER OFFICE of the Chester-Tuppers
Plams Water DlslrJct makes for hitherto unknown ef-

flclency and economy

tn

opera lions It 1s Situated on 2 27

acres of land purchased by proceeds from a Farmers
Home AdmmiStrauon loa n

Another good year in '76 expected
CHESTER - The Tuppers
Pla1ns-Chester Water
DIStnct IS expectmg a good
year m 1976 after a solid show
of progress m 1975 accordmg
to
Harold
Blackston ,
president of the d1stnct's
board of trustees
In a special report for this
ed1hon Blackston stressed
that the diStnct added $24,870
worth of unprovements
durmg 1975 makmg a total of
~ $194 , 530 Invested In lm·
;. provements the past ftve

current sales rece1pts
Further, the board of trustees
pur chased major mediCal
msurance for all employees

makes for better orgamzat10n
and convemence
It is planned that an open
house "Ill be held this
summer after the grass has
gro\\ n ond the 01strtct has
settled do" n m its new
quarters The treatment
plant will also observe open
house at this time
The pubhc IS remmded that
the treatment plant IS open
for mspecllon and tours, and
the dlStflct especially

: several mqwnes concermng

of the system In add1l!on, the
pa1d all Its current
obligatiOns and stlll earned a
small profit durmg 1975
The district, w1th the
cooperation of Farmers
Home
Admtmstrahon,
borrowed $175,000 the past
year for the followmg purposes
1 To build a new office and
storage bUlldmg
2 To sandblast and pamt
the mtenor and ex tenor of all
storage tanks in the system
3 To ms tall a base rad1o
stahon and eqwp all the

school classes, c1v1c groups
or s1mply any other group of
mdlvlduals who would like to
tour the plant If anyone IS
mterested, they may call985·
3315m order to arrange a day

:; new extenswns and several

trucks wtth radtos

and ttme for the tour

!'!

years Wrote Blackston

;

" Personnel of the d1stmt

~~
~

are very optlmlstlc for
growth dunng the commg
:'; year There have been

d1str~ct

• taps have been purchased for
.: mstallahon m 1976 "
: The 1mprovemen ts com:;' pleted last } ear mclude only

The diStrict moved mto 1ls
new office the latter part of

:; lines were added to the
: system durmg the past year
• Nearly 32 m1les of p1pe line
: have been added to the
:: system durmg the past five
; years Th1s has been ac.. compllshed usmg personnel
1. of the Water DIStriCt on!}
!"Other pomts made
:: Durmg 1975, the d•strlct
: purchased a new one ton
• •work truck, a new 1975 one

feet wtde and

December, and the employees are as proud of 1t as
they would be of a new home
"t new mams, d1s tnbuhon and
:: serv1ce lines, fire hydrants , of their own The new
: valves, etc 18,111 feet of new bmldmg IS 90 feet long and 40
1s

sttuated on

2 27 acres of land bought from
the proceeds of the $175,000
loan This new bmldmg has a
large reception area, office
rooms for management
personnel, a large ullllty
room, a large workroom plus
a large garage and storage

space
For the ftrst hme stnce the

system was put m operahon
: .ton p1ckup truck, a new, m 1969, all the equipment,
: .heavier duty, diesel backhoe ftttmgs, tools, parts, trucks,
:: and small portable tools office. e"' have bee~ brought
t These were all pa1d for out of together m one place This

;

An operator or other offiCial of the d1slr1Ct w1ll be on
hand to explam the vanous
fWlchons of the treatment
plant eqUipment and the
entire treatment process ,
mcludmg the backwashmg of
the filters and softeners ThiS
plant and the system belong
to the people and the per
sonnel are only too happ) to
explam 1ts operahon and
funchons
The new radto system 1s
now operative It mcludes a
base statiOn at the new office
and radiOs mall the trucks It
has been an mstant success
ThiS system enables employees to be m touch w1th the
office and each other every
hour of the workmg day and
has already saved many

gas once thought

'

~.wild

..
-••

spirit from springs

GALLIPOLIS - Just 200
:; years ago when thts nat1on
• was about to be born, natural
.. gas was deemed a ' wild
::' sp1nt" as 11 bubbled up m
;' ponds from shallow geologic
: pockets and as ' burmng
""" sprmgs, '
when
those
:= seepages were 1gm ted by
: Ughtnmg or careless camp: ftres
: The ftrst gas company was
• not orgamzed until 1858 m
~ Fredonia, N Y , yet w1thm
: another hundred years the
: natural gas 10dustry was on
: 1ts "ay to becommg the
• natwn 's s1xth largest
: "Now thts valuable com; mocbty IS m short supply, m
::: relatiOn to the overwheimmg
.. deman(l for tt, n accordmg to
: J M Koedel, manager for
;: Columbia Gas of OhiO 1n the
~ Galha-Metgs area
' 1 But,
Columbia Gas System supply
'r development efforts are
;!.'expected to put Columbia Gas
::;of Oh1o m a poSI t1on of
: balance between supply and
Mdemand m the 1980's, and
:~thereafter the possibility of
:'!iftmg
exlSilng
sales
• m1tal!Ons will be a goal," he

.

:SS•d

system

Work is reviewed
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla
County Engmeer Paul Stull,
Just a year ago thls week,
proposed an ambttlous road
and bridge program for 1975
ThiS week he reviewed the
progress made
1
Much needs to be done,
but the total job Will never be
completed
because
of
changmg commercial, tn ·
dustnal, and mmmg practices In fact, unexpected
changes m these patterns of
endeavor already has caused
considerable damage to
newly constructed county
roads These changes also
provide many JObs and create
a money flow mto Gallta
County, \\h1ch IS good'
The engmeer added, "Some
progress 1s bemg made on
roadSide d1tchwg Several
large slips m roads and
several large landslides onto
roads have been corrected
'Two brtdges are of some
conce rn w1th resp ect to
safet} - Blesswg bridge 1n
Green Twp and the bndge
over the Chess•e Railroad
near the GSI m Gallipolis
Twp '
Stull added,
W1th a
limited budget, much semi·
skilled help, antiquated
eqwpment and a spiraling
economy, the total JOb 1s
diffiCUlt
' Every posSible program
for state and federal !10anc1al
asSistance has been explored

Delivery of

Another asset was the

~ Natural
••

welcomes groups such as

m1les of formerly duphcated
travel and many hours of
time
fhe tanks m the system
have been san dblasted and
pamted mSlde and out, and
should be m excellent condttlon for many years to
come In th1s respect the
personnel of the Tuppers
Pla1ns-Che s ter Water
DIStnct wiSh to thank the
people
whu were
mconventenced dunng th1s
penod for the~r splendid
cooperatwn and tolerance
D1stnct employees 1n
stalled a new fire hydrant at
the new olflce Site A !1re hne
was also run mto the bmld1ng
ThiS ne• hydrant benefits all
the nearby homes and
tr:ulers Any of these, w1th1n
1 000 feel of the h} drant, 1s
enhtled to Class 8 fire m
surance rates
The dlStnct has added
some ne" ofhce furmture for
the new bu1ldmg and has also
constructed ne• shelvmg,
tool boxes, work benches and
a ney, meter testing bench A
numher of small, much
needed portable tools has
been purchased
F1lly new taps were added
to the system durmg the past
year Th1s was a smaller
growth than lfl 1974
nevertheless, 1t was new,
solid growth, also 11 ongmal
( 1969) taps were reac tivated
from a dormant status,
helpmg to add revenue to the

GALLIPOLIS - Accordmg counties l 1n total farm
to the annual report complied productiOn and mcome 8C·
last September by the OhiO cordwg to Bryson 1Bud)
Agncultural Research and Carter, extenswn agent
In mne 1mmedtate southern
Development
Cen ler,
Wooster, OhiO, total cash OhiO counties, Galha ranks
rece1pts
from
farm second, trallmg only Scwto
marketmg m Galha County m County Only Musk1ngum,
1974 were down $318,000 Washmgton , Sc1oto and
Belmont outranked Calha m
compared to !973 figures
Cash receipts m Gallla the 19-county area
Agriculture census figures
County m 1974 totaled
$8,025,000 exdudmg $10,000 are not yet available for 1974
m gover nment payments Last report 1n 1969 revealed
compa red to $8,343,000 m Galha had 1,214 farms m
1973, excludmg $81,000 m q&gt;erahon \Uth an average
mcome per farmer at $6,686
governrhent payments
These
figures are expected to
Gallla County rema1ned
f1fth 1out of 19 southern Oh10 show a b1g change when the

:; ucolumbia Gas System
""'ompames have mvested $800
!'!rrullion smce 1970 irr the
:,". development of new gas
:;;suppUes and plan to spend up
• to f1ve billion dollars more m
;:.that effort durmg the next 10
: years," he added
: Explora hon and dnlllng
::efforts have been expanded m
-the trad1honal supply area~
..« the Appala~h1ans and the
::SOuthwest the past several
•-years And a non-histone
upply source, a $48 5 m1lllon
plan I to reform llqu1d
..hydrocarbons mto gas, has
. been operatmg at Green
::.S.,rlngs, Ohio smce April
:')974, to help offset the present
eflclency
: A series of unrelated
••'•phenomena" tn several
• iJOUihwestern stat~s . enabled
;columbia Gas of Ohw to
purchaae more than 13 billion
&gt;ruble feel of natural gas at
.Intrastate prices there to help

offset projected cnhcal
~ shortages for the winter of
1976, but ava1lab1hty of such
11
Spot" purchases IS not
completely assured durmg
thiS period or beyond
In 1977, LNG (L1quef1ed
Natural Gas) shipments by
tanker from Algena are
scheduled to arnve at the
Columb10 System's
regaSlfymg facility at Cove
Pomt, Md • m Chesapeake
Bay ThiS second non-h1stor1c
gas supply w11l travel through
an 87-mlle, 36-mch diameter
s tee! p1pehne to enter
Columbia System fac•hl1es at
Loudoun, Va It Will also help
offset the gas shortage w1th
an additional supply of 300
million cubic feet da1Iy Cost
of the termmal and connechng pipeline IS $300
million
Columbia companies w1ll
continue supply development
programs through expanded
dnlllng onshore and offshore
m the Gulf of Mex1co, and are
cooperahvely engaged m
exploratory drilling along the
outer continental shelf m the
north Atlantic off the coast of
Newfoundland
It w1ll be after 1980 before
the next major gas supply
from non-h1stonc sources IS
scheduled
to
become
Columbia IS
aval)able
parllc1pahng In the planned
construction of a $10 b1lhon,
2,800 mile pipeline system to
brmg natural gas from
Alaska and the North
American arc tic regwns to
enter
the
Columbia
dis tributwn system m Ohw
and Pennsylvama.
Later m the 1980's conversion of ~041llflto synthetic
natural
gas,
already
techmcally a reality, should
beco~ 1 commercially
feaSible for large scale
production
' Columbia researchers are
also looking mto such exotic
energy forms of solar heat
and concentrating the1r efforts and research dollars on
ways of stre"'hmg present
gas supplies and the quest for

new sources," Koebel says
They are trymg to develop
' fractunng" methods to
loosen the "super-light"
Appalachian las shale
geologiC formatwns beheved
to hold several hundred
trillion cubic feet of natural
gas, researchmg ways to
punfy and mcrease the
healing value of low BTU gas
produced from coal, and
testing snoopmg and photosensing dev1ces to help locate
and 1denhfy natural gas
reservOirs thousdands of feet
underground and under the
sea
Another d1rect10n of
today's research ts toward
1mprovwg ut1hza lion efflc1enc1es of the gas we have,
accordmg to the manager
"Until .more of our supply
developmg programs and
projects bear fru1t, we must
stretch our present short and
dwmdllng supplies by proper
utthzahon
and
conservahon.''
He noted Columbia's efforts the past several years to
encourage gas conservallon
and help customers w1th
msulatmg and weatherproofing problems, to help
reduce their energy use and
save them money
"We've had cooperatiOn
from customers and some
success 1n cuttmg back on gas
usage, but we need more/'
Koebel sa1d "The slogan of
our present program, Save
Gas, Save Jobs means JUSt
that"
As for the diStant future,
the sun may be called on, or
the wmd or ocean hdes, to
supplement the energy of
natural gas And down the
farthest road IS the possibility
of taking hydrogen atoms
from water for use as a clean,
faseous fuel
Columbia researchers are
mterested m all these novel
energy concepts and w11l,
when poss1ble, apply those
available to keep Columbia
compames strong, healthy
energy compames for all
limo•

upgradmg of approxtmately
20 domestic taps to commercial status
In the recent elect1on for
the board of trustees Harold
Blackston and Gene Yost,
Incumbents, were reelected
to the board At the regular
meetmg of the board on
January
13th,
Harold
Blackston was reelected
preSident, Howard Caldwell,
vtce prestdent, and Warren
Ptckens, secretary~
At present, the mall address of the d1stnct will
remam the same It w1ll be
changed m the not too distant
future and, at that t1me, all
patrons will be not1fled of the
new address There 1s a
depoSItory at the new off1ce
for the payment of bills alter
workwg hours and durmg the
weekend All customers are
mv1ted to take advantage of
thiS wstallat!On
In August of 1975, the tap
fee for the d1Str1ct was m·
creased to $275
Depos1ts
for
rental
properties are now $25 for
domestic use and pro-rated
on a consumptiOn basts for
commercial depos1ts The
charge for removmg meters
to dtsconhnue servtce
remams unchanged at $5
lnstaUat10n of a meter to
resume servtce to a property
IS also $5
The diStnct remmds
patrons that diStrict rules
reqwre that each water user
have a check valve and shutoff valve located on the
customer's s1de of the meter.
Th1s IS not a new rule but has
been m effect every smce the
d1str1ct as formed
The check valve IS to
prevent the water runmng out
of p1pes and hot water
heaters durmg a break or low
pressure. The shut-off valve
IS the customer's control
valve, whereby he may shut
!he •aler offal any l1me that
1t IS not bemg used , or to
make repa1rs to hiS system
The diStriCt has Installed a
com-operated automatic
water dispenser for !He
purpose of ilelhng bulk water
It will deliver 250 gallons for
25 cents, and will take only
quarters ThiS IS the same
1ate at wh1ch bulk water has
been sold smce the opemng of
the system It Is contemplated that the new water
dispenser will be m operation
by ~·ebruary 1st and th1s w1ll

•

'

mail is up

and,

some cases,
supphed or
promiSed Your county
comm iSS IOners have been
espec1ally helpful 1n buymg
what ts perhaps a record
amount of eqmpment
"Much has been achieved
tilts past year w1th the Galha
County tax dollar W1th
cooperatiOn from all concerned, and a unders landmg
publtc, much can be ach1eved
m 1976 "
m
asststance

1974 census IS completed
The dmry mdustJ y con tinues to rank number one m
ag riculture 1n Gallla County
w1tha 1974 total mcome of
$2.891,000, wh1ch IS 36 percent
of total cas h receipts 1 he
1974 f1 gure , however IS
$91 ,000 below the 1973 figure
of $2,982,000, but well ahead
of the 1972 flgur e of $2,439,000
Tobacco replaced beef
ca ttle and calves m the
number two slot last ; ear
WIth $2,028,000, or 24 per cent
of the county's total cash
receipts ThiS IS $243,000
more than the 1973 figure of
$1 ,785,000
Ca ttle dropped to tlurd w1th
a $1 420,000, or 18 percent
to!&lt;ll , down $1 ,045,000 from
Lhe 1973 figure of 12,465,000
Hog cash recc1pts Jumped
to fourth from seven th w1lh a
$532,000 figure , up $43,000
over last ye&lt;lr's mark of
$489,000 Hay ranks hfth ,~ t
$295,000 up $02,000 over last
year' s mark of $213 ,000
Poultry 1s s1xth an mcome at
$1 31,000 do"n 130 000 O\er
1973 fi gures of $161,000 wh1le
!rmts tol.aled $114,000, up
$44 ,000 over last year's mark
of $70,000
Forestry figures are mcluded tn other crops

Water association will
add 300 to 400 patrons
KANAUGA - Offl c1als of
the Galha Coun ty Rural
Water Association enter 1976
workmg for the completwn of
a 11 ,207,000 proJeCt wh1ch will
add ' 300 to 400 customers to
the system
Water hnes are bemg m
sl.alled on Rt 554 bel11een
Porter and Chesh1re, from
Eureka to Crown Cit}. on RL
1~1 , at Tycoon Lake and on
Cher ry R1dg e near R1o
Grande The additiOna l
cus tomers y, til mcrease the

~) stem s

\l.a ter c:unswncr s to

2 400
AI !he pre~ent tame there
are nu plans for ad chtwn&lt;~l
expansiOn m 1976, but lines
could be added If funds I\ ere
ava tl a ble an a sSOCI &lt;:d ! On
spokesman sta1 ed
S1nce 1970, the FH A has
loaned the Gallic~ Count~
Rural Willer A s soc l ~t1 o n
$3,748 000 for 1ls 260 mile
system Dunng 1915 64 5
mtl es \I.Ci e added

Car dealers in brighter times
GAl LIPOI IS - Although 1974 v.ere 1ssued lhr ougl1 the
the econornac picture "as Galha Coun f) Clerk of Courts
mu ch bngh ter than the office Dealers sold 368 ne11
previOus year, Gallla Count) lrucks and 153 ne\\ tra tlers
Dep uty clerks nwdc 4 774
car dealers contmucd to feel
notatiOn
of !tens .tnd ca neffects of the country s
celled
l
95
1 hens l lterc was
recessiOn
an
tncrease
rn !he s~dl' 11 r used
It wasn t all that bad 1n
car
s
and
tJ
uck
s
1975, but 26 fey, er new c o~rs
Despite
fewe
r nt. ~' C(:l l
were purchased than the
sales,
tax
coll
ectiU
ns 1n
prevtous year
creased
Clcr
ks
t
110
k
111
Durmg the year, deale! s
$532,248
85
1
n
taxes
compared
sold 1 047 new cars compared
to 1 073 m 1974 A total of to $497 t58 29 lite pre\ wus
I
14,807 titles , 140 more than year

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Poastmaster Richard Bane
reported Saturday that mall
dellvenes mcreased f1ve
percent 10 1975 over the 1974
f1gure, but that revenue ~as
down 2 4 percent over the
previous year 's ftgure
Postage revenue 10 1975
was $324,005, compared to
$331 ,996 In 1974
Dehvenes totaled 5 622 10
1975 compared to 5,355 10
1974 Broken down , Cit)
reSldenhal dehvenes totaled
2,829 1n 1975 compared to
GAl LIPOLIS - OhiO Bell
2,745 m 1974 City busmess
Saturday
announced tendehvenes totaled 439 compared to 428 and rural tative plans to spend about
dellvenes totaled 1 750 to $500,000 m Gallipolis during
1,622 gtar Route deliveries • 1976 to tmprovc telephone and
totaled 604 compared to 560 m date transmissi On serv ices
1974
Commerctal Mana ger
Post office boxes totaled R1chard Roderick qualified
the same last year as m 1974 the announcement by saymg
at 508 The post offiCe has 21
In vtew of our company s
employees compared to 22 m cloudy fman c1al outlook
1974
these plans rna} be mod1f1ed
Bane pomted oqt most of
We
can't l'ule out the
the growth 10 1975 was 10 the
posSibility
that we may have
rural area and Rt 35, west of
to
cut
th1s
figure back by
Holzer Med•cal Center
•
some
$90
000
1f our earmngs
The poshnaster added the
ptcture
doesn't
tmprove by
slight decline in revenue as
opposed
to
mcreased ear !y sprmg "
Rodenck sa id the total
deliveries can parhally be
attributed tq economic amount IS what OhiO Bell
condtllons lh early 1975 and engmeenng experts say wtll
the mcreased use of com. be needed JUSt to meet the
needs of the growmg
puler billings
Gallipolis area th1s year He
sa1d the money Will go to
work for customers m the
form
of more central off1 ce
DIVORCE ASKED
switching
equipment to
GALLIPOLIS - Charging
handle
thm
calls,
more cable
gro~ negl~ct of duty and
extreme cruelty, Justme 111 connect their phones, and
Neal, Patriot Star Rt
more customer lines
Gallipolis, here Friday filed ~
" Although demand for
petitiOn for d1vorce against service ts not as brtsk as 1t
James F Neal, same ad- "as m years when lhe
dress They were married economy was better,"
March 16, 1945 and have two Rodenck said, "expenditures
children
for our construction program
keep growmg because m
veslrnent dollars just don t
make 1t possible for tank buy as much as they used to
trucks to fill up anyt1me any Gallipolis shll 1s among the
day
fastest growmg parts of the
The new bmldmg was state and nat1on, and we want
constructed by the newly to keep ahead of the growth
&lt;&gt;rgamzed Fick &amp; Karr
ConstructiOn Company It IS "llh adequate and up-tv-date
beauhful and well con- telecommumcatwns serstructed
The
district vtces
Our
btg
(on ern."
congratulates the f1rm for a
Iludenck
added,
"IS
that we
job "ell done, especially
smce th1s was its first venture nught not be able to ratse the
tn to
lhe
constructwn 11wnr) to tlo llu JOh we knu\\
has to be done If 1•c have to
bUSiri('SS

lmproven1ents to
come in phones
cut baCk 1l "Ill shm\ up ftr st
m lengthy delays for new
servtce People mo\ mg mto
new hom es, apartments
off1ce bu1ldmgs and shopptng
center comp lexes \Oil not be
abl e to have teleph one serv i&lt;:C ms talled \\hen the) Y. ant
II
' '1he eqmpl11Uit cmd hnes
won t be th ere to se r ve
Utem, 1 ' he went 011 to cxplaan
And even Where hnes ap
peal to be accesSi ble • e
won 't have the central offJ ce
capac 1ty to wtre them tn
'We have an obhgatwn to
our extstmg cus tomers to
mamtam Lhe quality of t11e1r
se rv1cc, ' Rodenck sa1d
Add1ng too many customers
and over-loadmg our present
eqmpment would mean poor
serv1ce for everyone, and we
can't let that happen '
Projects currently p!Rnned
for Galhpohs th1s year have
been deSigned to mcrease the
effiCiency and mawtam the
rehah111ty of the present
communicatiOns eqUipment
servmg the commlmlty
Plans call for mstallat10n of
electronic eq uipm ent winch
w1ll test both loca l and long
distance c1rcuils when they
afe not m use 1 h1S equipment detects mmor serv1ce
problems and provides for
repatr before maJm serv tce
breakdowns occur
Facilities to handle calls
from sw 1tch10~ centers 10
Vmlon, Guyan, R1v Grande
and Walnut also will be added
m the Gallipolis exchange
bulldlng And new long
diStance call carrymg ca bles
along U S 35 have been
scheduled for mstallation
l&lt;~lcl lh1s year

:• '•: : :0 ,•, •: .·~· •:::•' '•' • ::·. :
&lt;;•

Miller wants
another term

Projects
about to
come on

LANCASTER
Congressman Clarence
Miller Saturday announced
he Will seek re-elecUon to a
Sixth term as Representallve to Congress from
Oh1o's Tenth DIStrict Miller
pledged, " A contmuat10n of
the full-time representatiOn 1
have always endeavored to
prov1de the people of the
Tenth DIStrict "
"My poltcy of accesSlblhty
and direct commumcahon
Will be earned forward and
expanded as we seek to
provtde area residents every
pOSSible assiStance m dealing
wtth their Government 11
M1ller sa1d
'
Elec!A!d to hiS first House
term m 1966, M1ller has been
re-elected to each succeedmg
Congress From 1967 to 1972
he served on the Huuse
Agriculture and Publtc
Works Comm1ttees before hiS
election to the House Approprtattons Commtttee m
January 1973 Presently
Miller serves as rank•ng
mmonty member an the
Treasury, Postal Service and
General Governmen t Appropriahons Subcommittee
In addition, he IS a member of
the Republican Research
Committee and Task Force
on Energy and Resources
Pnor to hiS Congresswnal
serviCe, Miller served as
Mayor of Lancaster

GALLIPOLIS
The
Buckeye Rural Electric has
several proJects earned over
[rom 1975 that Will be comple"'d and energ1zed 10 the
early part of 1976 These are
1 W10dsor Subsf&lt;JI!On on
G• easy Ridge 1n Lawrence
County ThiS w11l be a 7500
KVA StatiOn and w1ll take
some of the load off of the
Scottown Substahon
2 New transformers are on
s1te lo mcrease the capac1ty
of the Echo Valley Sub at
Jackson and the Me~gs Sub m
Me1gs County fr om 2500 KVA
to 5,000 KVA
Work plans are now bemg
updated to determme where
and 11 hen additiOnal work
\1111 be necessary to keep the
capac1ty of the system ahead
of demand
1hei e will p10bably he 8
system tmprovement out of
Sunrise Sub of heavymg Up
the poles and conductor for
about two m1les from the Sub
to the McS\\ een) mach me
shop locatiOn al a cost of
apjll ox1mately $50,000 00
'I he loU. I esttmated cos t of
the comp leted constructiOn
on the substatlorts and lane
Impr ovements wtll be tn
excess of $600 000 00
Jn 1975 BRE added 506 new
seJvi&lt;.:es , the cost of bmldmg
th ese along w1th other
1msc.:c llaneou:l constructiOn
cost was $245,000 and 11 IS
" nllC!apted that there
be
tlPP ' nxtmntely the same
number th1 s yea r at a cost of
$275 000
Pole re pla cement w1ll
amount lo about $40, 000 for
,1bou t 125 bad poles changed

f:

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

Symmes Valley team has

:::

•

• ~·

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third parliamentary win

:·j

No-till planting
By Boyd A. Ruth
Dtslrtct ConservatJorust
POMEROY - ' An mcreasmg number of farmers
m the Buckeye State and
Me1gs County are usmg no-till
plantmg of row crops," accordmg to Robert E
Qu1lham ,
state
conservatiOmst for the U S So1l
ConservatiOn Serv1ce tSCSJ

:.;

j5

The Symmes Valley ~'F' A , Parijamentar) P-orodure .;•
.• Team traveled to Me1gs H1gh School for the annual :;
District Parliamentary Procedure Contest w1th
''
M1ller said that one of t)Je
,:;
teams
competmg
for
ratings
of
gold,
Silver
or
bronze
.
malYI ISsues m 1976 IS the Size
•
~
After
several
sess1ons
of
study,
work
and
practicing,
the
~:.
power and cost of the Federal
l!: efforts of the Symmes Valley boys pa1doff, taking the first :
Government
"If mflallon IS to be ef :§: place gold ratmg, the third lime m three years they have ;.
~ been so successful Members of the team were Randy
fechvely
controlled
meamngfui)Obs created, and )~ Stwnbo, Andy Pinkerman, M1ke Myers, Dale Mootz
m Ohw
our econom1c freedom ~: Dav1d Carpenter, Steve Dorman, Mark Wilson, and JerrY
Use of the no-tillage
sustamed," M11Ier stated ~~ Sowards Their coach IS the Vo--Ag mstructor, Lee '? method of corn productiOn
'~ Johnson
:··
"the people's represe~tahve~ 0::
has grown from less than
{~
One
unusual
mstance
thiS
year
was
that
that
Symmes
can not continue to use the
5,000
acres m 1967 tQ nearly
government 's s pendtng ~; Valley Chapter rece1ved a perfect score of 100 pomts One
200,000
acres m 1974 No-lllllS
power for the1r political self. i:j Of the jUdges for the contest COmmented that to hiS
also bemg used on nearly
;::
knowledge
he
had
never
seen
or
heard
of
a
parliamentary
perpetuallon.
'
., 100,000 acres of OhiO land for
''Government can only gtve ~j procedure team gettmg a perfect score
plantmg soybeans followmg
that wh1ch 11 takes from the :;1 Schools partlclpatmg heSJdes Symmes Valley were .. harvest of wmter wheat In
people e1ther d!fectly by ~: Hannan Trace, SOuthwestern, North Gallla Galha ·.: many areas of the state crop
taxes or mdlfectly by the { Academy. Me~gs, Eastern, Southern, and Buck~ye H1lls :; y1elds have been as great or
:
y
mf!at10n 1! creates And ::~ Career Center
greater under the no4!llage
,:;
unless pubhc spendmg power • ;., •,•,•,•:• :- .• ··:. :· ·:- •,•, ;.:,:.;,;:.,,:.:;:.;,:;::.::;:;:;::,:., ::::,::,::!·:·:·:···:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:.:: • • •
...... method of productiOn than
1s subJected to the rule .af law
and the mf!allonary consequences
or
eac h
representative's vote for
more programs and h1gher
spendmg fully understood,
POINT PLEASANT - The Columbia from Mt Flowers Palnter, Patrtcta .to Jetcher
tendent Charles Withers,
the lesson from the New York
Mason County Board of Elementary School where he ~nd Barbara Butcher
Asststant Supermtendent
C1ty bankruptcy w11l be lost,
Education Frida} mght let was a teacher
Employed Carroll Charles Chambers, Board
on ly to be repeated at the
stand grievance filed by a
Among the other motwns Church as a substitute bus
President Harry Siders,
nahonal level
cook seeking higher wages passed were the followmg
operator , Mary Goodrute as a Board members Bill Brady,
' Besides
bemg
our
Frankie Mayes, cook at Mt
- H1red the followmg substitute cook, and Joann
Paul
Watkms,
Robert
B•centenmal , 1976 IS the
Olive ECE, asked to be pa1d s ub stit ute
teachers
H1ggmbo!ham as a substitute Adkms and Ray F1elds The
crossroads m determmmg
for a full day's work although Fredenck Chnsllan, Dav1d custodian
next board meeting IS set for
whether more control over
she works only a parual day
Dwawe Greer Broderick
Present were Supenn· February
10
our personal lives and
A full day s work for cooks
produchve capaottes IS
constltutes se\'en hours She
rehnqwshed to Government
only works f1ve and a half
or wllethe1 we reclaun the
hours
Foundm Father s belle! m
She t1ld the board she was
•ndlVldual freedom and
never properly notified of the
u•••••cuo
hmtted , controlled Crovern.
new hourly wage schedule
01 •usm CHAliCE
ment
that took effect last year To
I
further complicate her case
she was pa1d at first for a full
day s work then later cut
In tl\e Spirit
back
ot'711 · ··
In other actwn the board
Re"o'utionarV
asSigned DaVId Hill to the
Sa"in91
prmc1pal teacher pos1hon at
THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE
West Columbia Elemenl.ary
and w1ll be for sale
School The poSition was
Any Ohwan over the age of vacated at the last meetmg
60 IS ellg1ble to enter the
when W1Iham Barker was
event by contactmg hts local transferred as principal area agency on agmg Im- teacher there to assume the
mediately lor rules and entry prmc1pal's duhes at Ord·
forms The deadline to enter nance Elementary School
the pamtmgs IS February 16
H1ll1s transfernng to West
The number of pamtmgs
from each county 1s limited,
only the best ones w1ll he
for• arded to Columbus for Sunday Times-Sentinel
the show
Publ ished every Sundav

1:

l:
r.·l.·

Cook's grievance unanswered by board

""'

Sr. citizen paintings in

••II

March show and sale
RIO GRANDE - The f1rst
and largest all....semor c1hzen
art show and sale ever held m
Ohio Will run March 2 through
7 m the Statehouse Rotunda
m Columbus
John R Allen, director of
the Area Agency on Agmg,
DISinct 7, based at R10
Grande College, sa1d 54
pamtmgs done by semor
, cltlzens from hiS 10-county
area are mcluded m the show
Between 1,000 and 1,500
pamtings are expected from
all over the state
Gov James A Rhodes w1ll
launch the show when he
auci!Ons off approximately
20 pamtmgs startmg at noon,
March 2 All of the pamtmgs
are done by OhiO's elder1v

('lit

Rtght of Wd) cleanng ~os ts
for buth aerutl sprdJ anU land
&lt;utllng 11111 be approx imately
$160 000
lhc rc lta s been con
st dcrable comment about the
cust of elec ln c se rv1ce m the
past ) car .md the posstbthty
uf .tddrhonal lflt leases m the
fuiUI e Allh lS lime II IS hoped
th.1t the1e v. 111 be no need to
mcre.asc 1 Lites m 1976, but if
cos t of dom g busmess con·
tmues to grow, !hen the ob\ I OUS \\1\1 happen
One Yl&lt;l Y to measure the
cos t IS to compare the perc~nt
of 11ages be1n g used lo pay
y ()ur electnc bill !\ay m 1960,
and th e per c~ n t of wages 1t
no11 t~ kc s to p,1y the b1ll Try
11 You might be surprised to
rtnd a smc.d lcr per cent of
\\i.lges g01ng lo pi:!y the bill

ASK TOWED
POMEROY - A mamage
license has been Issued to
Marv in Clayton Rous h, 23,
New Ha ven and Marla
Neutzhng , 21, Pomeroy

fj,~

• Super Sale!
Further Reductions
on
Really Fine Brands

VEHICLES BUMP
POMEROY - A Mwersvllle man v..as arrested
fol!o11 m~ a car-truck acCident Fnday at 1 05 p m m
Syracuse T11e Me1gs County
SI1enff's Dept sa1d the car of
Kenny R Nmgler, 2.1, Rt 2,
Racme, dnven west on SR 124
m Syracuse , w~;~s struck m the
rea r by a p1ckup truck dnven
by Robert I Jeffers , 45,
Mmersvdle Jeffers 1s lodged
10 Ja il on charges of dnvmg
wh1le mtox1cated There were
no lnJun es There was
moderate damage to both
veh1cles

- .. -· c.,(,
cJ·c·"•
I

GallipoliS,

IS

popular

protec tive cover of crop
res1due IS left on at least 90
percent of the surfat-e
No&gt;-\111 plantmg elumnates
the need for plowmg, d1scmg ,
and cult!Vatwn In many
cases, the entire operation of
kilhng weeds , seeding and
fert1hzmg IS done 1n JUSt one
tnp over the held It also
allows
reseedmg
for
producllve stands of forage
on land where p!owlng would
cause severe erosiOn.
'Seedmg like most farming
operat10nstoday, has become
a h1ghly specialized and
techmcal procedure," says
Qmlllam "No-till IS a good
conservation practice," he
says " lr add1t1on to the
labor, eqUipment, and fuel
savmgs , th1s method of
seedmg really reduces wmd
and water erosiOn Increasmgly heavy demands on

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE
SUN , JAN 25

MARRIAGE ON ROCKS
POMEROY - Flllng for
dissolution of marria&amp;e In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court were Johnathlln Scott
Pomeroy, and Christina ~
Scott, Pomeroy

,

,.

,.,

Jh,·nltf

ONE WEEK
WEDNESDAY
THRU
TUESDAY
WALT DISNEY
PRESENTS

TREASURE
ISLAND
&amp;

.;md Luke Asl&lt;ew

"Al1as The

•

Scarecrow · ·

Show St~rts at 7 00 p m

C,4RTOON

BICENTENNI
FABRIC S LE

Oh~10_._ __....._..JIM

DAILY TRIBUNE
825 Third Ave GallipOliS
OhtO 45631
Published every weekday
ellenmg e~Ccept So!'turday
Second Class Postage Paid
at Galttpol s Ohto 45631
THE DAILY SENTINEL
I II Court St Pomeroy 0
45769 Publ is hed every week
day evenmg e:kcepf Safur
day Entered as second c lass
matltllQ maHer a t Pomeroy
Oh10 Post Offtce
By cerr1er dally and
Sunday 75c per week Motor
rout e SJ 25 per month
MAIL
SUBSCRI PTION RATE S
The
Gall tiJOI s
Datly
Trtbu1'1e n Ohio and West
V1rgmta one year 52'2 00 six
months Sll 50 three months
S7 00 Elsewhere $26 00 per
year
S1x months St3 50
three months S7 50 motor
route SJ '25 monthly
The Dally Senttnel
one
year sn 00
Stx months
Sll 50 three months S7 00
El$ewhere
S26 00
Stx
months Sll 50 three months
$7 50
The Un 1ted Press In
ter nattonal Is exclus•vely
en! tiled to the use for
publlcat1on of all news
dtspatches credited to the
newspaper and also the local
news publtshed heretn

Permanent Press
Spring Fabrics

AVRIL® RAYON/COlTON
SIRAI.ORD PRINTS

Was h .. n wear co tt ons ond
blends Bl ous e and spo rt
we ghts Sol ds pnn ls
45 w 'de fosh1on length s

1

SUPER BUY
ON SEWING
ELASTIC

I
1

1
1

1

aiG IAYIIIG 011 ,

4FOR

5

SCISSORS

1

1~! ·

Stock up o tlhts low pr 1ce
'I• 1 lf.l ond 1
31•
non r oll

S1zes

wo t s lbon d

Bent and stra1ght tr mmers
Embrotdery and sew i ng SCISsors barber shear s

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
•

~

•

•

J

••

•
ATTENPS SERVICES
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs Jack
Dav1s, a reSident of 936
Second Ave , Gallipolis,
returned
Fnday from
Warren, Oh10 where she
at tended t.IJe funeral services
of her son-an-law, Raymond
Moyer Mrs Moyer IS the
former Marjorie DaviS
daughter oi the late r Jack
Davis and Mrs UUian Davis
Mr Moyer was•a resident tof
Houston, Texas The body
was returned to Warren, Ohio
for bur1al.

COLO\) ·

DR. SYN

WALKING TALL
Starnng So Svenson

elostt c

lNSPE'CTION SET
POMEROY Annual
mspe ctwn of Pomeroy
Chapt er 80, Royal Arch
Masons, Will be held Tuesday
at the Pomeroy Masonic
remple, 7 30 p m R1ght
Excellent Compamon John T
JarviS , diStrict deputy h1gh
pnest of the Twelfth
Capitular D1stnct, Will be the
mspectmg off1cer A dmner
precedmg the degree work
Will be served at 6 30 p m
The ladles are mv1ted

farmland for food and f1her
reqUlre such conservation
practices as no-till to
guarantee fu tu re producuon," says ~ullmm "The
no-till melhool IS su1led to
over 6 m1llt on acres m
Ohw,"he sa1d

by
The
Oh o
Va l l ey
Pub I shmg Co
GALLIPOLIS

330 Second Avenue

n O\\

w1th conventwnill tillage
Last yea r. Oh1o farmers
planted over 11 mllhon acres
to row and forage crops An
tncreasmg amount of th1s
land IS bemg planted l!smg
the no-t1ll method wh1ch
sharply red uces
labor
requirements, machmery
use , and fuel consumption
In Me1gs County, an
eshmated 1,750 acres was
planted usmg the no-hll
method m 1975 There are
hundreds of addillonal acres
whlCIJ could he successfully
planted using the no-t1ll
method lfl Me1gs County
Crop res1due IS left on the
surface over wmter, Seedbed
•s prepared by breakmg the
soli 1n each row wtth a
coulter, smgle chisel, or
Sim ilar tool, and seed IS
planted m one operahon A

•

•••
•

r
•
;
:
•

JANUARY25THRUJANUARY31ST

PATCHWORK,
NEAT&amp;DENIM

DINNER BOX

Caref•ee permanent
p ress broadclo th 45
Royo n / colfon or ro yo n
and polyester b l ends
Futl bo lls no rem nants

3 PIECES CHICKEN
• MASHED POTATOi:S
&amp;GRAVY
eSLAW

REG. '1.37

Prl•t or Solid
Fasht o nobte co tto n
dentm 1n pat c hwork
pr tnt s or solid co l
ors 45 w1de

POLYIITI.
&amp;COnOII

IARPOON
CLOIH

No Subt

Nn Coupons No Ltmrt

50 % po lyester

137

and Dumplmgs •

Fnday Ntght
" Beef and Noodles "
Spectal Pn ce Sl 29
Saturdav N1ght

50 ~o

Spagheftt
'AIIYoucanEat! '

Spectal PnceSl 69

CHOICE

We have the newest Sirnpi!C tty pottern books
ond o il o f I he newest patterns SturJ now
on sprmg fosh1om for all the fomtly

All Dmners and SpeCial Pnces Ef
fecl1ve Monday , January 26 1hrough

Saturday February 21 1976
4 8 PM ONLY

'--------------------1----- --------------

I

--

Monday N1ght ts Famtly Ntght
2 Complete Otnners
Ovet aU 00 Value-Now Just SJ 89
Tuesday Ntght
' Murphy's Ptua Partv' '
Spec tal Pr.ce 97c
Wednesday N 191'11
'Beans and Corn Bread '
Spec tal Prtce He
Thursday Ntght

Spertal Pnce Sl 36

YOUR

2nd &amp; Olive

Bnng the whole famtly to
Murphy's Restaurant and en toy
these evenmg spec•als (Ser
vtng from 4 00 to a_00 p m only

' Homemade Chtrken

eoli an Fr esh new 1!:01
or~ 1n check s st r pes
tweed s o r soltds 45
w de On futl bolts

•••nu
u, ..,
'
:

REG. '1.77

DENIMS

'

•

Silver Bndge Plaza

PRINTS

•

'

MURPHY'S
RESTAURANT

REG. '1.27

•

SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA - DOWNTOWN GAlliPOLIS STORES
'

�4-TheSunday

~ - Tl)e Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
•

'·

League plans husband's night

Woman's World

Sarah Carsey 1Charlene Hoeflich
Pomeroy-Middleport
Gallipolis-Point Pleasant 1
••
..
992-2156
446-2342
••

•
:
:
•
:

Poet to visit Gallipolis schools

AT FRUTH PHARMACY

•

PRICES .IN EFFECT NOW THRU SATURDAY, JANUARY 31st
COUPON

l --~-OUP~JN

WATER PIK
SHOWER MASSAGE

l OUPON

CORICIDIN
D
TABLETS

MODEL SM2

$16

I __

99

AFRitl .

WITH COUPON

CEPACOL
32

NASAL SPRAY
2A9

1

$}29COUPON
WITH

$149COUPON
WITH

REG.
'2.17

25's

::-pebra Lypn1]aney
David E.
Christian
I

1

VALUE

·-

oz.

ol"A

.~ ;

cOUPLE BETROTHED - Tbet epgagement a nd
";: forthcoming marriage of Debra Lynn Janey to David E .
.~ :! Christian is being announced . Debbie, da ughter of Mr .
• • and Mrs . Dallas Janey of Langsville, is a senior at Meigs
'.'-; High School. David, son of Mr. a nd Mrs1Hobart Christian
~· ; of Choshocton and a 1975 graduate of Meigs High, is
·~ ~ employed at Union Boiler. A June wedding is planned.

$}29

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We wouldn 't tel l you that a flawed
diamond was an absolute ly perfect stone .
•• •
wouldn't call, a yellow d iamond b lue white .
-~.:: WeWe
wouldri't tell you a V2 carat stone weighs more .
~~.
when It comes to diamonds we tell it like it is .
And happily toach you how to choose you r diamond
;I I .
as the ~·perts do . You ' II be assured tha t ,
'
large
or s all , cara t for carat , you wi ll a lways
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· WHITE UNIFORMS. ____ ¥3 Off
Size 4-20

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Melissa jane Callahan
BETROTHAL ANNOUNCED- Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
J. Simmons, Jr. of 839 Chesler Road, Charleston, W.va.,
announce Ule engagement of Mrs. Simmons' daughter,
Miss Melissa Jane Callahan, to Thomas Ke ith Brandeberry. Miss Callahan is also the daughter of the late Mr.
James Callahan. Mr. Brandeberry is tbe son of Dr. and
Mn. Keitll R. Brandeberry of Gallipolis. Miss Callahan is
a graduate of Marietta College and is a medical
technologist at Children's Hospital .in Columbus. Mr.
Brandeberry is a graduate of Wittenberg University and
is employed at Corco, Inc., Columbus. The wetjding will
be at 2:30 p.m ., April 17 at the Bream Memorial
P)'esbyterian Church in Charleston. The gracious custom
·
of ol?"n church Will be observed.

abo ut the teacher surplus a nd ·
a ll the newly trained jobless
teac hers . On ly 6. 5 per cen t of
them pla n to be teachers,
accordin g 1.0 UP( Last
academic year, 8.2 per ce nt
were heading for classroom
careers; in 1966, the figu_re
was 21.7 per ce nt.

The new low interes t in
teac hing was among trail$
observed in college freshmen
participating in the annual
s urve y spo nso red by the
Universi ty of California a nd
tlle American Council on
Education.

SLEEPWEAR

•

I ROBES ---------------lh OFF

I
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MATERNITIES ·

I GROUP OF MATERNITY LINGERIL...:¥z PRill
II SLACKS, TOPS, DRESSES, SHELlS ___ _lf.t OFF

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Long and Short Sleeves. Size 36-42

I1- 366 SECOND AVE. ___ . _. ___
. GALLIPOLIS,

played of items in Ule Bible.
The meeting was dismissed
wi th prayer by Sharon
Hively. Sixteen members
were present.
The next meeting will be
Jan . 27 at 7. The group invites
all youths to come to the
meetings . Reporte r,
Charlene Hively .

'

BEAUTY
SALON

Scotch Patent
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Ph . 446-3353

ON. PRICE
ON OUR
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Regardless of type or condition we will
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,

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The_ response ha~ . been great! We will
conttnue our special Mon .• Tues. &amp; Wed nesday Only $9.98.

N

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&amp; Fri. 9:aG 1U8p.m.
Tues. Wed. Sat. 9: 301ir5p.m .
thur.u¥ 9:30 1il12 noon 1 •
J

OPEN AT 9 A.M.

3U SICOHO AvtHUt / .AUIPOUS. OHIO

..5631

•

\.
\

Youth group gathers
ctiESHJRE - The Old
Kyger Youth Group mel
Tue~day at 7 p.m . with Jan
Drummond leading the
Lotd 's Prayer .
Secretary 's report was
given by Cindy Price, and the
tre~purer 's report was by
Sharon Hively. New and old
business was discussed.
Questions were asked over
Acts 5:29-42. A spelldown was

,

GOWNS, PAJAMA§ ________ %OFF

men have gotten the message

'23.99

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a b reat~ of fresh air to even your most
r· 1\'~"'basic d ress looks Maybe ifs the .
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trim .. o r maybe irs simply the
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Vaughan ,

Monday night with a bridal
shower in the social rooms of
the United Presbyteri a n
Church, Middlep ort.
Hostesses were Kim Jones,
Joyce Hutchison a nd Beth
Vaughan. Pink and burg undy
were the colors in th e
decorations.
Guests were Crystal Glaze,
Zandra Vaughan , Dina Pratt,
Es the r Lowery, Julie Hamm,
Terri Russell , Bre nda Bolin,
Cindy Eads , Cindy Glaze,
Kath y Price , Stephanie
Price, Nita Rusche!, Mary
Rusche! , Sa ndy McDaniel,
Tina Duffy, Kay Via jaklijah,
"Ja yne Hutchison , Donna
Jon'es, Velma Nickinsky,

FEWER TF.ACH~~ RS
This yea r 's college fresh-

is

SEE!II AND HEARD
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Edith
Walker will celebrate her 9lsl
birthday .on Feb. 7.

Norurolizer.
'"'~
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t4 . si'' ~ 'Y:
rol~ing a
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FILLER PAPER

LOTION to oz.

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300 COUNT

Mary

legislative chairwoman for
the unit and secured Rep .
James for the spea king
engagement. He will be open
for questions following his ·
talk. Public officials as weU
as the general public are
invited t o attend . Junior
Auxiliary members wil!
provide favors, a nd refreshments will be served.

...

''

COUPON

Mrs.

Ruby Vaugha n and . Betty
Hutchison .
Games were played with
prizes bein g awarded to
Cindy Glaze, Beth Vaughan ,
Brenda Bolin and Mary
Rusche!. The door prize was
won by Tina Duffy . Sending
gifts were Sandy Carleton,
Ginger Cullwns, Mona King,
Judy Radford, Lisa Thomas,
Angie Sisson, Pam and Pat
Vaughan .

MIDDJ :E PORT Miss
Pamela Leigh Nicinsky,
brid e-elect
of
Donald

ROBES
~ --------~-----lh OFF
X-Sm , Sm ., M, Lg., X-Lg.

natural resource committees
of which he is a member .

.....

Shower fetes Miss Nicinsky

G;1llipolis Daily TribuOe or
Pomeroy Daily · Sentinel.
Engpgcmcnt .and wedding
. form s a:re also :nailaf&gt; lc ~n
request.

environment, agriculture,

!-•..-

with anything.
Mrs .
Susan
Blak er
presented Mrs. Janet Duffy
with a past president's pin . )I
was noted that state dues are

or

POMEROY - Rep . Ron
James will be the speaker at
the Tuesday night meeting of
the
America n
Legion
. Auxiliary, Dre w Webster
Post 39, at Ule haU , 7: 30p .m.
Rep . James will speak on
the homestead act for mobile
homes of whic h he is cosponsor as well as his work on
the education, energy and

~iJ selL qou a diamond

·: ~· .

to see if assistance is needed

BRIDAL POLICY
W e ddin g
a nd
engagement notices for the
Sunday Times-Sentinel
must be in our hand s by 12
noon on th e Thur sday
preceding publi catio n.
Information may he turned
In
mailed to the

to speak
-"'
....
.. "'
.....

REG. •2.65

high schools tor six years. His fer~nce tor 10 years.
In October, 1975, he was the
work with student cre~livity
featured
speaker at Ohio
has beeri publicized in Ohio
Poetry
Day
in -Colwn bus . He
Schools, Writer's Digest, the
honors
fr'om the
received
NEA Journal, and was the
Ohioana
Library
in Sepsubject of a World Wide
tember,
1975
for
his
book ,
English broa dcast from the
"
Laugh
Ughtly
."
He
has
a lso
Voice of America.
won
a
wards
in
Ohio
Poetry
In addition to his high
school teaching, Engle also Day, Kentucky State Poetry
instructs evening classes in Society and the Nationa l
composition and creativ e Poe try Saciety•s · contests .
Listed in the International
writing a t the Nor thern
Who of Poetry , his
Who's
Kentucky Corum unit y
biogra
phy
will appear in the
College.
He has published more than next issue of Contemporary
1,000 poems in leading Authors.
On Thursday evening, Feb .
nati o nal ma g azin es,
12
at 8 Engle will present "An
num erous short stories, and
Evening
of Poetry " at
is Ul.e author of two books,
Riverby
as
a special feature
" Laugh
Lig htl"y"
and
of
this
French
Art Colony
"Modern Osyssey." He has
projec
t.
The
public
is invited
participated in the Indiana
attend.
to
University · Wri ters' Con-

Rep. james

l

WITH
COUPON

· CLAIROL
NICE 'N EASY

•149

t

'

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·. ·1

13

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:fii

:i:,,.J what We WOtJLDN'T do

WINDSHIELD

HALl'S

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PANTY HOSE . :::,

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HAIR DRYER

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AMERICAN STAR

'19.95
VALUE
.. . .

~

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I

GALLIPOLIS - A well
known and recognized Cincinnati poet, J ohn D. Eng le,
Jr., will be in the Gallipolis
City Schools Ulroughout Ule
week of F eb. 9. His visit is a
project of the French Art
Colony, s ponsored by Ule
Ohio Arts Council wlth the
support of the National
Endowment for the Arts .
Mrs . Jan Tha ler, trustee of
the French Art Colony , is
coordinating the program In
cooperation
with
the
Ga llipoli s City Schools
System through Mrs. Je nnie
Whi te, head of the English
Department
at
Gallia
Academy High School.
Eng le, a teacher of English
and Creative Writing in the
Prince ton City Schools of
suburban Cincinnati, is a
native of Kentucky and s pent
his early life there . He h_old s
bo th a bachelor's and
master's degree from the
University of Kentucky, a nd
has done additional studfing
at Miami University in Ox·
ford, Ohio.
Before joining the staff of
the Princeton City Schools in
1956, he taught in Ke ntuc ky

to be sent in by Feb. 1. Secret
pals were revealed and new
ones selected.
Carrying out the bicentennial theme of the meeting,
members related
their
favorite patriotic story. Miss
Janis Schmoll of tbe Meigs
Teacher Corps was spe.aker .
She talked on Ule bicentennial
and how children's stories on
a patriotic theme are many
times more expressive and
convey more facts on events
of.historical significa nce. Sbe
she spok e of the use
of
pictures
to
con·
vey and instill
ideas
anc gave a vartety of facts
from children 's books which
a re not usually contained in
more adult versions.
The traveling prize was
won by Mrs. Sherrie Kane, a
guest. Mrs. Ann Colburn won
the hostess prize . Hostesses
were Mrs. Harris, Mrs . Helen
Blackston and Mrs . Blaker.
Attending besides those
named wer e Mrs. Peggy
Houdashelt and Mrs. Nancy
Morris.

Janet Uutty were on the
topic, "Dare to Be Happy ."
Mrs. Peggy Harris was
requested to check into the
Guiding hand School at
Cheshire where Meigs County
retarded children now attend

MIDDLEPORT
Husband's night was planned
with a dinner party to be held
at Seddon's on the Parkersburg Mall , 6:30p.m . on F eb.
15, when the Middleport Child
Conse r vation League met
TilUrsday night at Ule home
of Mrs. Peggy Sehmoll.
Mrs .. Thelma Osborne
pre sided at th e meeting
which opened with the pledge
to the ·nag and the mother's
prayer . Devotions by Mr s.

,,

�4-TheSunday

~ - Tl)e Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
•

'·

League plans husband's night

Woman's World

Sarah Carsey 1Charlene Hoeflich
Pomeroy-Middleport
Gallipolis-Point Pleasant 1
••
..
992-2156
446-2342
••

•
:
:
•
:

Poet to visit Gallipolis schools

AT FRUTH PHARMACY

•

PRICES .IN EFFECT NOW THRU SATURDAY, JANUARY 31st
COUPON

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WATER PIK
SHOWER MASSAGE

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$16

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WITH COUPON

CEPACOL
32

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$}29COUPON
WITH

$149COUPON
WITH

REG.
'2.17

25's

::-pebra Lypn1]aney
David E.
Christian
I

1

VALUE

·-

oz.

ol"A

.~ ;

cOUPLE BETROTHED - Tbet epgagement a nd
";: forthcoming marriage of Debra Lynn Janey to David E .
.~ :! Christian is being announced . Debbie, da ughter of Mr .
• • and Mrs . Dallas Janey of Langsville, is a senior at Meigs
'.'-; High School. David, son of Mr. a nd Mrs1Hobart Christian
~· ; of Choshocton and a 1975 graduate of Meigs High, is
·~ ~ employed at Union Boiler. A June wedding is planned.

$}29

." ....

WITH COUPON

'

,, ...
~; :"'
'

~·k·)Mf&lt;~i#i'U~WJ:»gfXMYt':ih::ir,,. ''''\:&lt;:':·:·:;.;):«~:@=l*i;;;,o,,
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WITH
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39~:G~~:

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REG. ·

&gt;I
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MR. COFFEE
FILTERS
99~ Willi

'2:VALUE

MENTHO LYPnJS

99~

,,

.

....
...

•

;-~-- :~to

We wouldn 't tel l you that a flawed
diamond was an absolute ly perfect stone .
•• •
wouldn't call, a yellow d iamond b lue white .
-~.:: WeWe
wouldri't tell you a V2 carat stone weighs more .
~~.
when It comes to diamonds we tell it like it is .
And happily toach you how to choose you r diamond
;I I .
as the ~·perts do . You ' II be assured tha t ,
'
large
or s all , cara t for carat , you wi ll a lways
••
•
~
receive m e value whell you buy your diam ond
'!1"~-..
from

..........

.......

WITH
COUPON

·--

I

VASELINE
INTENSIVE CARE

::~

100
OVll,·DR\"
'

5KIN

·. :l'~'

J

99

WITH ·
COUPON

.

11.59

~

. •' ·I

. :1

COLGATE TOOTHPASTE

c
g

. ..~·
•

oz..

0

•

J.

'

~~

·]
'

Reg. e1.09

I'

-~

-i:.... :J-.:s ~....
.... 1

•...-: . Y'l;.

• • • • • • • • .f\

*

*

WITH
COUPON

(; -;--;-,-;-;---:- :-. ~

::~ ,.· EPSOM SALTS

VICKS
FORMULA 44

. '.

RE(;. '3.35

., ••

.. •I

HEINZ

. 'I·

KOSHER DILL :)
&gt;t'
PICKLES

5g~

.. 'I•
·)

COUPON

Willi
. COUPON

••

.·J '.-., .·~~-J:
'
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.t.

,(

~
· ,

· _;

eE%-io

.-

'2.99

.rt:

Iif;-,

.
. '...

j

. ,.-'

TIDE

ROBITUSSIN
4 OZ.

REG. '115

1.98 VALUE

~

COUPON

$119 COUPON
WITH

WITH .
COUPON

~·~ ~ :&gt;-;---:"' ~

'. . . . . .

BIC BUTANE

LIGHTERS

9~AM

. :11

REG. 11.49

77~

: :[4 PHARMACISTS
: :r TO
·• J•

WITH

: ·!

COUPON :

:~

22

10 PM
SERVE

YOU!

PfJiltt IJ.AaMW4.('~ .CJttu.q St:M.,

2SOI Jotkson·Ave. Phon~- 675 · no3 Plint Plemnt, . Ya.
.

f

.I

COUPON

AWEEK.

.

•

oz.
dft'IH

1 DAYS
. .\

•

IVORY LIQUID

10

•

UNIFORM 'CENTER

WINTER WHITE SALE
CONTINUES
· WHITE UNIFORMS. ____ ¥3 Off
Size 4-20

l4112-241J2

HALF SLIPS----------lh· OFF
X-Sm .• Sm .• MeL Lg .

SMOCK TOPS --~----- ¥3 OFF
X-Sm., Sm., Med ., Lg .

AND COLORS TOO

UNIFORMS _s~.:.~-_:o___ .:. ___ ill OFF

Melissa jane Callahan
BETROTHAL ANNOUNCED- Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
J. Simmons, Jr. of 839 Chesler Road, Charleston, W.va.,
announce Ule engagement of Mrs. Simmons' daughter,
Miss Melissa Jane Callahan, to Thomas Ke ith Brandeberry. Miss Callahan is also the daughter of the late Mr.
James Callahan. Mr. Brandeberry is tbe son of Dr. and
Mn. Keitll R. Brandeberry of Gallipolis. Miss Callahan is
a graduate of Marietta College and is a medical
technologist at Children's Hospital .in Columbus. Mr.
Brandeberry is a graduate of Wittenberg University and
is employed at Corco, Inc., Columbus. The wetjding will
be at 2:30 p.m ., April 17 at the Bream Memorial
P)'esbyterian Church in Charleston. The gracious custom
·
of ol?"n church Will be observed.

abo ut the teacher surplus a nd ·
a ll the newly trained jobless
teac hers . On ly 6. 5 per cen t of
them pla n to be teachers,
accordin g 1.0 UP( Last
academic year, 8.2 per ce nt
were heading for classroom
careers; in 1966, the figu_re
was 21.7 per ce nt.

The new low interes t in
teac hing was among trail$
observed in college freshmen
participating in the annual
s urve y spo nso red by the
Universi ty of California a nd
tlle American Council on
Education.

SLEEPWEAR

•

I ROBES ---------------lh OFF

I
i

MATERNITIES ·

I GROUP OF MATERNITY LINGERIL...:¥z PRill
II SLACKS, TOPS, DRESSES, SHELlS ___ _lf.t OFF

I
I FALL &amp; WINTER STYLE5_ _.._______ lf.J OFF
6 20
Size .

1

SHELLS • BLOUSES

Long and Short Sleeves. Size 36-42

I1- 366 SECOND AVE. ___ . _. ___
. GALLIPOLIS,

played of items in Ule Bible.
The meeting was dismissed
wi th prayer by Sharon
Hively. Sixteen members
were present.
The next meeting will be
Jan . 27 at 7. The group invites
all youths to come to the
meetings . Reporte r,
Charlene Hively .

'

BEAUTY
SALON

Scotch Patent
Blue Patent

Ph . 446-3353

ON. PRICE
ON OUR
PERMANENT
WAVES

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Bleached ,
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Ory, .Oily or Normai
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Regardless of type or condition we will
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,

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The_ response ha~ . been great! We will
conttnue our special Mon .• Tues. &amp; Wed nesday Only $9.98.

N

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&amp; Fri. 9:aG 1U8p.m.
Tues. Wed. Sat. 9: 301ir5p.m .
thur.u¥ 9:30 1il12 noon 1 •
J

OPEN AT 9 A.M.

3U SICOHO AvtHUt / .AUIPOUS. OHIO

..5631

•

\.
\

Youth group gathers
ctiESHJRE - The Old
Kyger Youth Group mel
Tue~day at 7 p.m . with Jan
Drummond leading the
Lotd 's Prayer .
Secretary 's report was
given by Cindy Price, and the
tre~purer 's report was by
Sharon Hively. New and old
business was discussed.
Questions were asked over
Acts 5:29-42. A spelldown was

,

GOWNS, PAJAMA§ ________ %OFF

men have gotten the message

'23.99

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OPEN

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honored

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3 LB. 1 OZ.

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wa s

/{fl ' . ' ' , _

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•••

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Openly flattering t6 almost any
skirt length. this shiny dress sandal adds
a b reat~ of fresh air to even your most
r· 1\'~"'basic d ress looks Maybe ifs the .
1 ·,· ~,'--_\ "rnme r heel ... or the golden linked-chatn
trim .. o r maybe irs simply the
beautiful Naturalizer fit!
"(,,__

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TYLENOL
ELIXIR
4 OZ.

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WITH COUPON

: ·I'

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1

Vaughan ,

Monday night with a bridal
shower in the social rooms of
the United Presbyteri a n
Church, Middlep ort.
Hostesses were Kim Jones,
Joyce Hutchison a nd Beth
Vaughan. Pink and burg undy
were the colors in th e
decorations.
Guests were Crystal Glaze,
Zandra Vaughan , Dina Pratt,
Es the r Lowery, Julie Hamm,
Terri Russell , Bre nda Bolin,
Cindy Eads , Cindy Glaze,
Kath y Price , Stephanie
Price, Nita Rusche!, Mary
Rusche! , Sa ndy McDaniel,
Tina Duffy, Kay Via jaklijah,
"Ja yne Hutchison , Donna
Jon'es, Velma Nickinsky,

FEWER TF.ACH~~ RS
This yea r 's college fresh-

is

SEE!II AND HEARD
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Edith
Walker will celebrate her 9lsl
birthday .on Feb. 7.

Norurolizer.
'"'~
• ' '·r;{, ·-,.,~. );., ·;,.r.,., fashion ...
t4 . si'' ~ 'Y:
rol~ing a
i-j~_:},, (fl~~-&lt;&gt;~,
shine ro you!
;t j;' . . . "''' -

·'

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WITH

Martin

(.tt~~· 1;tf./

·'.,,

l .. . . . . . . .

COUPO

COUPON

REG. 98'

VICKS

NYQUIL

--

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5

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• I)

-

Willi
COUPON

COUPON

c

' -rlle S lo re for BrM:Ie~"

FILLER PAPER

LOTION to oz.

99~

WITH : :~
COUPON :

300 COUNT

Mary

legislative chairwoman for
the unit and secured Rep .
James for the spea king
engagement. He will be open
for questions following his ·
talk. Public officials as weU
as the general public are
invited t o attend . Junior
Auxiliary members wil!
provide favors, a nd refreshments will be served.

...

''

COUPON

Mrs.

Ruby Vaugha n and . Betty
Hutchison .
Games were played with
prizes bein g awarded to
Cindy Glaze, Beth Vaughan ,
Brenda Bolin and Mary
Rusche!. The door prize was
won by Tina Duffy . Sending
gifts were Sandy Carleton,
Ginger Cullwns, Mona King,
Judy Radford, Lisa Thomas,
Angie Sisson, Pam and Pat
Vaughan .

MIDDJ :E PORT Miss
Pamela Leigh Nicinsky,
brid e-elect
of
Donald

ROBES
~ --------~-----lh OFF
X-Sm , Sm ., M, Lg., X-Lg.

natural resource committees
of which he is a member .

.....

Shower fetes Miss Nicinsky

G;1llipolis Daily TribuOe or
Pomeroy Daily · Sentinel.
Engpgcmcnt .and wedding
. form s a:re also :nailaf&gt; lc ~n
request.

environment, agriculture,

!-•..-

with anything.
Mrs .
Susan
Blak er
presented Mrs. Janet Duffy
with a past president's pin . )I
was noted that state dues are

or

POMEROY - Rep . Ron
James will be the speaker at
the Tuesday night meeting of
the
America n
Legion
. Auxiliary, Dre w Webster
Post 39, at Ule haU , 7: 30p .m.
Rep . James will speak on
the homestead act for mobile
homes of whic h he is cosponsor as well as his work on
the education, energy and

~iJ selL qou a diamond

·: ~· .

to see if assistance is needed

BRIDAL POLICY
W e ddin g
a nd
engagement notices for the
Sunday Times-Sentinel
must be in our hand s by 12
noon on th e Thur sday
preceding publi catio n.
Information may he turned
In
mailed to the

to speak
-"'
....
.. "'
.....

REG. •2.65

high schools tor six years. His fer~nce tor 10 years.
In October, 1975, he was the
work with student cre~livity
featured
speaker at Ohio
has beeri publicized in Ohio
Poetry
Day
in -Colwn bus . He
Schools, Writer's Digest, the
honors
fr'om the
received
NEA Journal, and was the
Ohioana
Library
in Sepsubject of a World Wide
tember,
1975
for
his
book ,
English broa dcast from the
"
Laugh
Ughtly
."
He
has
a lso
Voice of America.
won
a
wards
in
Ohio
Poetry
In addition to his high
school teaching, Engle also Day, Kentucky State Poetry
instructs evening classes in Society and the Nationa l
composition and creativ e Poe try Saciety•s · contests .
Listed in the International
writing a t the Nor thern
Who of Poetry , his
Who's
Kentucky Corum unit y
biogra
phy
will appear in the
College.
He has published more than next issue of Contemporary
1,000 poems in leading Authors.
On Thursday evening, Feb .
nati o nal ma g azin es,
12
at 8 Engle will present "An
num erous short stories, and
Evening
of Poetry " at
is Ul.e author of two books,
Riverby
as
a special feature
" Laugh
Lig htl"y"
and
of
this
French
Art Colony
"Modern Osyssey." He has
projec
t.
The
public
is invited
participated in the Indiana
attend.
to
University · Wri ters' Con-

Rep. james

l

WITH
COUPON

· CLAIROL
NICE 'N EASY

•149

t

'

: :~
·. ·1

13

~

:fii

:i:,,.J what We WOtJLDN'T do

WINDSHIELD

HALl'S

.' .1'.

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COlJr&gt;nN

. ." ·I

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REG. 99' EACH

. ..,.

WITH
COUPON

. . . - . .

COUPON

PANTY HOSE . :::,

'

HAIR DRYER

-,-;- ~ ;--.-. "7" 7 ~

MYSTIC

. .,:;

1000 WATT SUPER

•9•. 9

COUPON

. . . . . . ·I .
.. 'I'
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.'

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AMERICAN STAR

'19.95
VALUE
.. . .

~

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I

GALLIPOLIS - A well
known and recognized Cincinnati poet, J ohn D. Eng le,
Jr., will be in the Gallipolis
City Schools Ulroughout Ule
week of F eb. 9. His visit is a
project of the French Art
Colony, s ponsored by Ule
Ohio Arts Council wlth the
support of the National
Endowment for the Arts .
Mrs . Jan Tha ler, trustee of
the French Art Colony , is
coordinating the program In
cooperation
with
the
Ga llipoli s City Schools
System through Mrs. Je nnie
Whi te, head of the English
Department
at
Gallia
Academy High School.
Eng le, a teacher of English
and Creative Writing in the
Prince ton City Schools of
suburban Cincinnati, is a
native of Kentucky and s pent
his early life there . He h_old s
bo th a bachelor's and
master's degree from the
University of Kentucky, a nd
has done additional studfing
at Miami University in Ox·
ford, Ohio.
Before joining the staff of
the Princeton City Schools in
1956, he taught in Ke ntuc ky

to be sent in by Feb. 1. Secret
pals were revealed and new
ones selected.
Carrying out the bicentennial theme of the meeting,
members related
their
favorite patriotic story. Miss
Janis Schmoll of tbe Meigs
Teacher Corps was spe.aker .
She talked on Ule bicentennial
and how children's stories on
a patriotic theme are many
times more expressive and
convey more facts on events
of.historical significa nce. Sbe
she spok e of the use
of
pictures
to
con·
vey and instill
ideas
anc gave a vartety of facts
from children 's books which
a re not usually contained in
more adult versions.
The traveling prize was
won by Mrs. Sherrie Kane, a
guest. Mrs. Ann Colburn won
the hostess prize . Hostesses
were Mrs. Harris, Mrs . Helen
Blackston and Mrs . Blaker.
Attending besides those
named wer e Mrs. Peggy
Houdashelt and Mrs. Nancy
Morris.

Janet Uutty were on the
topic, "Dare to Be Happy ."
Mrs. Peggy Harris was
requested to check into the
Guiding hand School at
Cheshire where Meigs County
retarded children now attend

MIDDLEPORT
Husband's night was planned
with a dinner party to be held
at Seddon's on the Parkersburg Mall , 6:30p.m . on F eb.
15, when the Middleport Child
Conse r vation League met
TilUrsday night at Ule home
of Mrs. Peggy Sehmoll.
Mrs .. Thelma Osborne
pre sided at th e meeting
which opened with the pledge
to the ·nag and the mother's
prayer . Devotions by Mr s.

,,

�-·--

.

:.

~

•

•

-

•
•

..

••

.

-'

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

SUPER MARKETS

all Items In this ad.
Prices •Hectlwe thru
Saturday, Jan . 31 ,
1976. None solei to
dealers.

GPEN DAILY 9 TIL 9 CLOSED SUNDAY
'
252 THIRD AVENUE, GAUIPOLIS, OHIO
2500 JACKSON AVENUE, PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

,

FAMILY PAK

We raMrwe tiM right
to limit quantltiH on

We , . . . , . ,.._ rlftht

to limit qUGnlltles on
all ltt1m1 In this . ..

•

PrieM affec:llll'• thru

Saturday, Jan • •11,

\

197._ None JQid to

dul••·

CHIC E ·P RTS
INCLUDES:

SWISS STYLE

1" THICK

SUPER MARKETS

· BONE-IN

-------

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
U.S. GOVT.INSP•

•

WHOLE

2 •eolt Quarters W/hcb, 2 L11 Choortors W/lecl!s. 2 Nicllf
And 2 ......... ol Glolm
,

SIRLOIN TIP
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CABBAGE

By the

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5·1.11. Bag
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FROZEN

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CHIPPED 11 •01 •
BEEF
Pkg.

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SALTINES

FUDGE STRIPE COOKIES
12.s....

l·lb. Pkg.

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PRINGLE$

POTATO
CHIPS
13.5-oz. Pkg.

"

MORTON
FROZEN

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POT PIES

STUFFED
FLOUNDER'

CHICKEN, BEEF 01 TURKEY

4·01. Pkgs.

$

.

. SHRIMP
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·

8·01.

Pkgs.

TWELVE 2-oz, Bars

ROLLED RUMP ROAST ••••• • •• ., $1.69

•

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for

WHOLE

TOMATOES
l·lb. Cans

LIM~T4

lb.

BOnOM ROUND STEAK 1011nm••• • · $1.69

TOP ROUND'STEAK IONILISS •••••. $1.79

••

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for

1

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Pkg.

.

1-lb. or More

THOROFARE

PEANUT
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fBUnER

POTA

1-lb. 8-oz. Pkg.

BONELESS

lb.

lb.

"ASH BROWN

JOAN OF ARC

FUDGESICLES

3$1
109

59 .

Boneless

SEA PAl .
FROZEN

ROAST

59

OKRAY
FROZEN

KEEBLER

DELUXE GRAHAM$

.

59c
'
$
129
29c
(
49 L~~.~~~.A $ 179
STOUFFER

CUT INTO niAKS OR ROASTS
AT NO IXTIIA CHARGE

TOP ROUND .

RUMP ROAST

BREASTS ••••••••• tb. 5109 DRUMmES ••••••• '· 69• •
THIGHS. ••••••••' . lb. 69• BACKS &amp; NECKS •••••. 19•
DRUMSTICKS •••••• lb. 59• LIVERS •••••••••••.69• ·.
"
WINGS •••••••••• 1• 49• GIZZARDS &amp; HEARTS ••.69•

~

0
APPLES

BLOCK STYLE

CUT-UP T·UR~EY ·.

JUICE ORANGES

GRAPEFRUIT

'

•

FLORIDA

.

lb.

lb.

•

~-------------------------------------------- ~
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

lb .
PINK or WHITE SEEDLESS

-..

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•,'

•

lb.

'.

Consists of
Top and
Bottom Round

Piece
Only

15-lb.
Avg.

.

2-111. 8-oz.

ARC
LIGHT RED

KIDNEY

59

WELCH'S

Frozen

GRAPE
JUICE

WHITE
EGGS

12-oz. C.

l·Dozen c.ton

BLUEBERRY

PIE
FILLING ·
1-lb. 5-oz. Can
LIMIT 2

PARKAY

MARGAR
l-Ib. ~~ Pkg.
LIMIT 3

I .

CLIP &amp; l!lDEEM
ANY "NNnAII WITH THIS

:

COU~N

CHAIMIN

: BATHROOM
TISSUE
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...,......,HIIOW,.UI,
4' _, LAlli UACII

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MIIIMIM Oflll.lll-

IIGRIIII-.-.U.CIGAIIml
, _ - .1111. liM. liMn OM Pit. i a -l'llcm.R

DOVE
LIQUID DISH

DOERGENT =~

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WAllO 'IIIII Ill. JM.II, ..,.

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�-·--

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:.

~

•

•

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•
•

..

••

.

-'

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

SUPER MARKETS

all Items In this ad.
Prices •Hectlwe thru
Saturday, Jan . 31 ,
1976. None solei to
dealers.

GPEN DAILY 9 TIL 9 CLOSED SUNDAY
'
252 THIRD AVENUE, GAUIPOLIS, OHIO
2500 JACKSON AVENUE, PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

,

FAMILY PAK

We raMrwe tiM right
to limit quantltiH on

We , . . . , . ,.._ rlftht

to limit qUGnlltles on
all ltt1m1 In this . ..

•

PrieM affec:llll'• thru

Saturday, Jan • •11,

\

197._ None JQid to

dul••·

CHIC E ·P RTS
INCLUDES:

SWISS STYLE

1" THICK

SUPER MARKETS

· BONE-IN

-------

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
U.S. GOVT.INSP•

•

WHOLE

2 •eolt Quarters W/hcb, 2 L11 Choortors W/lecl!s. 2 Nicllf
And 2 ......... ol Glolm
,

SIRLOIN TIP
•

...••-.
~

~

NEW

ORANGES

CABBAGE

By the

. I~· . ·;

~

FI,ORIDA TEMPLE

...

I

~I

•

-.

I

'-.. y
. , .,..

,•.

J..; If

""" :f. ~

n

•

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...

..

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',

' .

.

FLORIDA

5·1.11. Bag
lOME

• •• • ••• •

••

•••••

COLE SLAW • • • • • • • • • • • •
flESH WASHED

.

.

·

SPINACH ••••••••••••

· KEEBLER ·-·

3-lb. aas

s-odkg.

·
•10·01. Pkg.

FROZEN

CREAM ·
CHIPPED 11 •01 •
BEEF
Pkg.

•

.

' u.s....

ZEST A

or

SALTINES

FUDGE STRIPE COOKIES
12.s....

l·lb. Pkg.

I
•

PRINGLE$

POTATO
CHIPS
13.5-oz. Pkg.

"

MORTON
FROZEN

.

POT PIES

STUFFED
FLOUNDER'

CHICKEN, BEEF 01 TURKEY

4·01. Pkgs.

$

.

. SHRIMP
. SHAPES
·

8·01.

Pkgs.

TWELVE 2-oz, Bars

ROLLED RUMP ROAST ••••• • •• ., $1.69

•

·

for

WHOLE

TOMATOES
l·lb. Cans

LIM~T4

lb.

BOnOM ROUND STEAK 1011nm••• • · $1.69

TOP ROUND'STEAK IONILISS •••••. $1.79

••

.

for

1

\

12•01 •

Pkg.

.

1-lb. or More

THOROFARE

PEANUT
'
.
r
fBUnER

POTA

1-lb. 8-oz. Pkg.

BONELESS

lb.

lb.

"ASH BROWN

JOAN OF ARC

FUDGESICLES

3$1
109

59 .

Boneless

SEA PAl .
FROZEN

ROAST

59

OKRAY
FROZEN

KEEBLER

DELUXE GRAHAM$

.

59c
'
$
129
29c
(
49 L~~.~~~.A $ 179
STOUFFER

CUT INTO niAKS OR ROASTS
AT NO IXTIIA CHARGE

TOP ROUND .

RUMP ROAST

BREASTS ••••••••• tb. 5109 DRUMmES ••••••• '· 69• •
THIGHS. ••••••••' . lb. 69• BACKS &amp; NECKS •••••. 19•
DRUMSTICKS •••••• lb. 59• LIVERS •••••••••••.69• ·.
"
WINGS •••••••••• 1• 49• GIZZARDS &amp; HEARTS ••.69•

~

0
APPLES

BLOCK STYLE

CUT-UP T·UR~EY ·.

JUICE ORANGES

GRAPEFRUIT

'

•

FLORIDA

.

lb.

lb.

•

~-------------------------------------------- ~
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

lb .
PINK or WHITE SEEDLESS

-..

•

•,'

•

lb.

'.

Consists of
Top and
Bottom Round

Piece
Only

15-lb.
Avg.

.

2-111. 8-oz.

ARC
LIGHT RED

KIDNEY

59

WELCH'S

Frozen

GRAPE
JUICE

WHITE
EGGS

12-oz. C.

l·Dozen c.ton

BLUEBERRY

PIE
FILLING ·
1-lb. 5-oz. Can
LIMIT 2

PARKAY

MARGAR
l-Ib. ~~ Pkg.
LIMIT 3

I .

CLIP &amp; l!lDEEM
ANY "NNnAII WITH THIS

:

COU~N

CHAIMIN

: BATHROOM
TISSUE
.
...,......,HIIOW,.UI,
4' _, LAlli UACII

-

MIIIMIM Oflll.lll-

IIGRIIII-.-.U.CIGAIIml
, _ - .1111. liM. liMn OM Pit. i a -l'llcm.R

DOVE
LIQUID DISH

DOERGENT =~

--1111

Of ........ .

. -·-

DCW-·~-lilY
...-CIGUIT1B
_
WAllO 'IIIII Ill. JM.II, ..,.

-~~--

•

I

�8- The Sunday Times -Sentinel. Sunday, Jan. 25,1976

•

Miss Sigler
is honored

Dancers to present concert
GALLIPOLIS - A modern
·dance concert, presented by
the Fairmount
Dance
Theatr~ of Cleveland. Ohio.
will be held on Wednesday
evening at the Gallia
Academy High School
Auditorium at 8. The concert
will climax their three day
VlSit to Gallipolis, sponsored
by the French Art Colony.
Mrs. Vivian Kirk le
~hairwoman for the concert'
has announced that patro~
tickets for Wednesday's
:oncert, which enable the
1older to a reserve seat · a
.!sting in the program and'an
.nvitation to the private
:eception to meet the
:nembers of the dance
thea tre at Riverby following
lhe concert, are $5 each.
:::Cneral Admission tickets
&gt;re $2 for adul ts, and $1 for

MIDDLEPORT ~ Mi ss
Cheryl Sigler , bride-elect of
Greg Lane , was honored
Thursday night with a bridal
shower at the Lane home
hosted by Bonnie Scott and
Unda Lane.
A pink and blue color
scheme was featured in the
decorations . Games were

played with prizes going to
Betty Spencer, Phyllis
Spencer an d Connie Swisher.
Others attending the
shower were Bernice Darst,

Betty, Scherry and Cynthia
Lane, Beulah White, Gwinnie
White, Ardith Lane, Michelle
Scott, Norma Jean Halley,
Juanita Halley, Audrey
Holley, Melody Scaggs and
Kathryn Sigler.
Sending gifts were Susie
French, Carol Knotts and
Kay Gilmore.
The family wedding will be
an even t of Feb. 5.

~·.

soc I'aI

!l~

.

~

·

:;:,
':l
.~~

CARTER McADAMS, a dancer with the Fairmount Dance Theatre, performs "For
Betty" choreographed by Bill Evans. The troupe will perform at Gallia Academy Hlgh
School auditorium Wednesday at 8 p.m

~

I Calendar ~ FHA completes plans"_
sing, Racine First Baptist

for statewide project.

Church, I p. 111. Sunday ;
MERCERVILLE - The
groups will be feat ured and
Hanna
n Trace FHA held iIs
the public is invited.
rece nt regular mon thl y
HYMN SING , Sunday, 1:30 mee tin g in the ' Home
p. m. Free Gospel Mission at Economics Department with
Bald Knob, with local singers president Debbie Stapleton
and public invited to .bring presiding. The secretary's
songs and attend .
report was give n and apAMIGOS of Parents pr oved foll owed by th e
Withqut Pa rtn ~ r s Rollin g treasurer's report with roll
Hills Chapter 838 will hold a call being a nswered by
family potluck dinner Sunday nam ing somethin g a bou t
at 6 p.m. at Green Elemen- win ter .
Final plans were completed
tary School on Rt. 141. Bring
fo
r
the
State
FH A
two food dishes an d
Educational
and
Contribuiion
beverage . Coffe e will be
proj ec t ,
'' Chil d r en ' s
furn ished. For mor.e in - Hospital, " which is a nro iect
formation, call 446-2587 or for all FHA'ers ln Ohio .
992•3219.
Shelby Williams was named
REVIVAL AT the Fairplay chairwoman for the project.
Chapel, Meigs County Road I Sue Ross was elec!ied girl of
off 325 or 124, ior two weeks, the month by popular vote by
Sunday through Feb. 8. The the members.
Rev. Th ereon Durh am,
pastor.
MONDAY
RACINE PTO Monday at
7:30 p. m. Boy Scouts in
charge of program. Fifth
Grade mothers to serve
refreshmenls.

The progra m was "Safely
and Shelter fo r Animals."
Th e songlea der le ad the
group in singing appropriate
songs. Refreshments were
served by Lorie s tapleton and
Marsha Montgomery.
The contribution project
was carried out at the varsity
ball game Jan. 16 when the
Nor th Gallia Pirates met the
Hannan Trace Wildcats at
Ha nna n Trace. Principal
Paul Dillon made the announce ment to the aud ience

about the FHA projec t for the
Children's Hospi tal a nd
FHA 'ers ex pressed their
thanks to the North Gallia
and' Hannan Tra ce fans for

helping the Hannan Trace
FHA reach their goal in their
state projec t.

Sharon Bailey reports
on Mother's March

MIDDLEPORT - A repor t skating party to be held
IZAAK WALTON Leag ue on the Mother 's March of Tuesday at the Skate-a-Way
potluck supper · and whi te Dimes was given. by Sharon from 7 to 9•30 p.m.
elephant auc tion, 7 p.m . Bailey, serv ice chairperson ,
The house tour to be conat the Tuesday night meeting ducted this s pr in g was
Monday at the clubhouse.
SPECIAL me eting, Racine of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta discussed by Mrs. Kathy ·
Masonic Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, 7 Sigma Phi Sorori ty, held at Cumi ngs , and Lynn Cross and
p.m. Mond ay ; work in the Columbus and Southern Yvonne Butcher were apfellowcraft degree.
_ Ohio Electric Co. ·
poin t,d lo assist with the
Mrs
.
Bailey
noted
that
wur.
MEIGS Local Chapter 17
$468.88
had
been
collected
in
Mrs .. Bailey ass isted Mrs.
Ohio Associa tion of Public
School Employe s. Monday the door-to-door march in Libby Sayre with the cultural
report en titled "The Pen7: 30p.m. junior high cafteri a, Pomeroy.
A thank-you note was read dulum Swings." Serving as
Middleport.
. MIDDLEPORT PTA. 7:30 from Mrs. Vikki Gloeckner models for clothing were
p,m. Monda"y at the Mid- for flow ers during her Susan Lanning and Mrs.
hos pitalization . Ma LJri s ha Butcher. Mrs. Butcher and
dleport Elementary School.
Nelson,
soc ial chairper:-son , Mrs. Pat Shrivers served
Bicentennial program to be
reminded
members of the refreshmen ts.
presented. Third grade to
give the pledge, first grade
mothers to be greeters and
hostesses. Fatbers ' Night to
be observed:
the Meigs Inn . Lions and their
TUESDAY
ladies invited.
MIDDLEPORT
TUESDAY
POMEROY Area Branch ,
JUNIOR American Legion
American Association of Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
University Women, 7:30p.m. Post 126, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday
Tuesday at Meigs High at the home of Becky Roush
School library . Teresa Casci and Christi Smith.
In speak on "Education Down
RACINE AmericanLegion
Under," giving her ex- Auxiliary, Post 602, 7 p.m.
periences on tea ching in Tuesday at the hall. Members
Australia. Hostesses will be asked to take small gifts to be
Jeanette Thomas, Patrticia awarded ·as prizes at the
Mills, Rose Marie Jonas, junior community service
Joan S. Culp,and Grace Eich. party next montb at the
AMERICAN . Le gion Athens Mental Health Center .
Auxiliary, Drew-Webster
WEDNESDAY
Post 39, 7:30 p.m . Tuesday
AMERI CAN
Legion
with Rep. Ron James .to be Auxiliary·, Feeney-Bennett
the speaker. Public invited. Post 128, 6:30 y .m. dinner
ANNUAL Inspe ction, Wednesda y with LegionPomeroy Chapter 80, Royal naires. Meeting at 7:;l0 p.m .
Arch Masons, 7: 30 p.m . of both Auxiliary and Legion.
Tuesday, Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. John T. Jar vis ,
district deputy high priest of
12th Capitular District, inspecting officer. Dinner at
with ladies invite!! .
OLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, special
seaslon, 7 p.m. Tuesday at
temple ; work in fellowcraft
degree, all Master Masons
invited.
·

Homemakers
elect officers
for new year
TUPPERS PLAINS- New
officers were elected at tbe
Janu ary meetin g of the
Eastern Homemakers held in
the home of Mrs. Joan Smith,
Tuppers Plains.
Officers for 1976 are Mrs.
Juditb Starcher, "president:
Mrs. Pam Ha ger , vi ce
president ; Mrs. Sue Dye,
secretary-reporter, and Mrs.
Joan Smith, treasurer.
Old business consisted of
committee reports of the fruit
baskets and · gifts given to
those in the Infirmary in
Pomeroy.
·
· New business wa s a
discussion of the group 's
projects for the new year and
meetin g places and cohostess for the com ing
months. The group also made
plans to join in with the drive
for the March· of Dimes held
. the week of January 20.
After adjournment refresh-

•

'15

in term edia te

cJass

beginning Thursday night.
Both classes will begin at
6:15 in the basement of Da vis
Hall. Th e cost per class will
be $1 2. Only past studen ts
ai reaily ha vin g beg inners
cake decorating may enroll
for lhe intermedia te class
and onl y those stu de nt~
already having begin ners and
i nt e rm e di ate
ca k e•
decoratging ma y enroll for
the advan,ed class.
. Past students wi shing to
enroll in either class are to
call the instr uctor, Mrs. Betty
Carpenter , at 24ii-5363.

In 1915, lranscontinental
telephone serv.ice · was
inaugurated in a hookup
between New York and San
Francisco.

Now You Can Take Up To 48 Months To Repay
Your New Car Loan • . .
This means your monthly payments can be a lot smaller or that
. you can borrow more without straining your budget . It might ,
' easily be the differ~nce between the car yoo've been looking at
_a nd the car you really want - Stop at the Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Co. for a 48·month new car loan.
48 MONTHS
.

I

In stallment

Amount

Payment
181 .20

'
36

ot Loan
$3,000. 00

Cre d it Li fe

Ins uran ce
$93 . 54

.

Installm ent

Amount
of L oa n

Paym ents
$101.77

Sl , OOO .OO

..

Lif e To tal Amount Total F i n a ne
In sura nCe
of Not e
Ch ar ges

Cre ~ i t

$3, 663.7:2

$65 .9 .5

An nua l Pet.

Rat e

$ 597 .77

11 . 96

In st allm ent

Amo u n1

Pa y m ent

of,loan
U, OOD.OD

$ 14] . 19

c. "

Accident

' What should the ca lf he fed? Until the calf is weaned it
Should be fed milk or milk replacer. From about five weeks
until the calf is sold it should be fed a 15 percent grain conCentra te and a good quality hay. To feed the ca lf for six months
it will probably take about 500 pounds of gra in and 1,000 pounds
of hay. Records should be kept on the calf from birtb until it is
sold, as this is what will tell the member·if the project has been
a fin ancial success or failure, the learning gained from the
. experiences of r aising an animal makes this project ·a success
for the individuaL For more information on this project or
other 4-H projects and programs, stop in and visit the Extension Office on the third floor of the Courthouse or call 446~ 1 2, extensi on 32.

I

Credit L ife fi ol a l Amount T otal Fin ance Annual Pet .
I!"Suran ce
o f N ote
Rate
Ch arges
U I .'U

8. Health Insurance also

$ 3,4 ]6 .56

aval l ~ bl e

al

S3 95 . l2

add i t ion~ !

12 .02

cost .

Farmers Bank

and three women were found
guilty in the murders of
actress Sharon Tate and six

t

Pomeroy, Ohio

....

other ~rsOns.

11

FINAL'~

: PATRIOT - A potluck
~ upper
high li gh ted the
;patr iot Gra nge mee ting
:t'uesday eveni ng with Wor.thy
~as t e r Edw ard Pa rkin s
)'res iding.
• Gran ge opened In regular .
~ession and a business
meeting was held . The
:~:" harte r was dra ped for
departed member Brother
ban Nolter . Taulby Owens
·hnd Denci l Hoffman were
remembered as being sick.
The pfogram ronsis!ied of a
reading by Ed Pa rkins, a quiz·
and two games Jed
IecShenle Bur1nett.

ON SAl£ NOW
THROUGH JANUARY 31

NEW SOFAS. LOVE
SEATS, AND CHAIRS
SAVINGS TO

50 %

re adin g was by · Bonnie
Parkins.
Attend ing were Luther and
She nle Burnett , Gertrude
Davis, Edward and Bonnie
Parkins, John and Gladvs
Bostic, Walter anlj ,Phyllis
Pope , Dave and Garne t
Jones.
·

MRS. OLAN GENHEIMER, Minersville, will leave today
from Cleveland for Geneva, Switzerland where she will visit
with her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Vanica and
Johnathan.
SYRAC\JSE HAS BEEN HARD HIT with the loss of
several fine people just within a week's lime.
Certainly lost a fine friend and neighbor with the passing
of David Mills, and a dear friend and former neighbor, Mrs.
lillian Duffy.

..

Mrs. R. D. Bazemore
observes .94th birthday
GALLI POLIS
Mrs .
Robert D. Bazemore, the
forme r Katie Schar tz of
Gallipolis, ce le brated her
94 th birthday recently with a
din ner given by re latives and

I

The· Shop

l

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

1

1
l

I

.,•
~

I

FRENCH CI T Y PREMI E R BE EF

j

I
1

HIND QUARTER ----~----• lb. g54 I
J
BEEF LOIN --- - - - ~- - --- Ib. sug .I'

t
•1
One is for mi nistries and ;~
Read y for freezer . cut a nd wrapped for fa ':'~li ly of 4.
services for the aged and the 1 Good Jan. 22-25
Open 9to 5 Dai ly
other for · victims of op--~
pressive systems a nd
societies . As part of the
program the booklet entitled
"And All These Things Shall
be Added" was used. Each
member had a part in the

1.---------------

scriptures, songs a nd the

visited her on her birthday
were her nephew a nd wife,

Mr. and Mrs. John Dedrick of
Cha tta nooga, Miss Emma
Louese Wilson, Mrs. L. E.
Pierce and Mrs. 0 . C. Alley,
friends. Mrs. Bazemore now all of Dalton. Ano ther
resides in Dalton, Gal.
nephew, Bill Dedrick, resides
Older Gallipolitans may with Mrs. Bazemore.
remembre the cigar store
owned by Mr. Bazemore in
the building now occupied by
Paul Davies Jewelers. Alert
and active for her age, "Aunt
Katie" is awaiting warmer
weather and a vaca tion trip
back to where she was born
and raised in Carrollton , Ky.
Among th e gues ts who

Utany. Mrs. Uswin Nease
concluded the program with
devo tions entitled " Hope"
taken from the wri lings of
Norman Vincent Peale. Her
scripture was from the Book
of Psalms. She concluded the
program wi th prayer.
The business meeting was
con ducted by the president.
Twenty-five sick and shut-in
calls were made during the
month by the members. The

INSULATION
Blown Into Your Walls

'Free Estimates'

A DISTINCTLY F DIFFERENT
GIFT FROM

FOREMAN and ABBOIT

Peddler's Pantry

Middleport, Ohio
p 992·5321

NIC E SELECTION OF .VALENTINE CARDS ·
State &amp; Third
Gall ipolis, o .

U.S. NO, 1

YELLOW ·
ONIONS

A thought for the day :
Herbert . Hoov er ,
31st
pre sident of the United
Sta tes, said , "Older men
declare war . But it is youtb
that must fight and die."

'

a

real
52!9.
Here's an other loveseat.

From F lexsteel's Lu xury
Louhge Collect ion. Tradition al in st yling , covered in
a dur8bl e printed fl or al' vf. tvet an(! fea turing
Flexsteel's patented spr ing construction. Reg . 5468 .

vinyl. Reg . S32U5.

.Sale
'249.95
Bassett Den Room , wood arm, Ht!r-

Perhap s pla id cover s don't appeal to you. If so how .
ab:out a ~ p l~ce matching Ea rly Ameri can living
room su 1te tn a blue-green floral nylon pri nt .
Durab le coveri ng and sturd y construction pl us
wood accents ma ke this suite a real buy . Regul ar
low pri ce $688. 88 . Now Sale Priced $Sl8.88 . You Save
S150 .
Modern your bag? Contemporary styling , and a
durable plaid co ver . This so fa and com panion chair
from Flexs teel's Impact Coll ection cou ld be just
what you ' r e look ing for . Reg. low pri ce $648. For

How about thi s one? A 2 pc. matching Ea rl r.
_
Am erican su ite cover ed with -a durable m utt colored Her culon . Beau tifull y styled an d durabl y
con str ucted this suite: will go with anyth ing . Reg .

$629 .95. Now Only 5498.
Looking for a sma ll sofa or

·

S.le Pnce Sl39.9S

Here's a su per bu y ! ! A tr aditional . sofa in .a
bc&lt;tu fll ul nylon print . Coi l spring const·ru ction and
ex pert tai loring . Reg. $599 .95. Now only $399 . You
save $200.
From the Penthouse ColleCti on comes t r aditional
styling in a durable blue &amp; greeri nylon prlrit .
Treated with Scotchg uard this sofa would make an

Sale •299.00

Bolts &amp; Bolts of

Sale '229.00
1 Piece Bassett Modern Living Room Sl.!ltt, red pi• In
cover. Rev. S459.9S.

Sale '359.00

floral Herculon . Reg. 5539.95 .

Sale '439.00

Early ,AmM"iun "FiexstHI" Love Seat, green plaid

Herculon . Reg. 5430.
Flexsteel

Sale '299.00
" Magic Bed .. , brown stripe Herculon

REG. 6!r

BARGAINS
l,OOO's of Yards

2 Piece Bassett, Traditional Living Room Suite, brown

· Sale •299.00

2 Piece "Fiexst .. I" ·Troditionol Living Room Suite. (I)
Brown Velvet. t 1) Rust IMtaleH. Rog. Sl90.

~

IAK
FURNITURE

32 Ol BTL

MIRACLE WHIP

SALAD
DRESSING

Fabric Shop
SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
115 W. Second
992-2284
Pomeroy, Ohio
it HE

WAGNER

·DEL MONTE

ORANGE
DRINK

GRAPEFRUIT
OR
ORANGE JUICE

32 Ol

.HEAD LETTUCE
PKG.

CRISCO
3 LB. CAN

OF

FOR
BANQUET ·

POT PIES
FOR

QUART

McCall's, Kwick -Sew, Simplicity Patterns

' A T • ~dff1'tltic of

oz.

JAR

MOUTHWASH

New Store Houro: Friday Till P.M.
Shop Sat•rday Til 5 P.M.

I

ll

AMBER I

'

•

COFFEE-MATE

INTERNATIONAL DRUGS

Polyester Knits
Single Printed Polvester Knits
Polyester &amp;Cotton Single Knits

OFF

4 LB. BAG

ONLY

60 lNQiES WIDE
PRINTS &amp;PlAIDS

(1)

only. Something diHerent lor sooting ond bedding.
Reg, $439.95 .
.
·

SUGAR

5 LB. BAG

SUPPERS

M~ern,

Red Vinyl 3 Cushion Solo , Reg.· tn9.00.

PEAK
BRAND

LB.

KRAFT

· 2 Piec:e Early American living room suite. Brown

culon cover. Reg. 1399.00. ·

this sa le Only 5488.

•

Now Only 5299.

2 Piece

PINTO BEANS

JACK FROST
OR
DOMINO

FLORIDA
ORANGES

for'spar;e? Here's a so fa tor you. Onl y 72"
Is Early Ameri can " Mini-Sofa" is covered in
&amp; gol ~ plaid nylon. St urd y cOnstruction. A
sharp " lfttl e" sofa . Reg . $329.95. Now OnlY

spec1al buy at Only 5549.95.

eleganl addition to any living room. Reg. 5369.95.
Now Only 5259.
Oen room styling with a gold, black and grey
Herc uton cover. This sofa aj so feat ures wood accents. Real sharp. Regular $399.95. Now Only $189.
f r adtf!Onal styling in 'a blue-gr een nylon Matelese.
This sofa is a rea l good valu e. Reg S399. Now only
.
5259.
.
Ht:re's a gpod t·uy. Th i!:. trl'ldiHonal sola is covered
In o ricH nylon motelese' covQr. loose· pillow back
~ and 'lo'ms: Sturdy construction. Reg. 132'1.95. Now .
~Only $2J9.
.
.
;

***

many friends that remembered her on "he(" day.
Understand she is not feeling up to par. Certainly hope you
get back on your feet soon.
Best wishes and congratulations.

Marla Neutzling on Friday,
Jan . 30 at The Fi rst Baptist
PLANS COMPLETE
Church in Middleport . The
POMEROY - Plans have custom of open church will be
been compl eted for th e observed and the reception is
wedding of 1\:larvin Roush and also open.

Cr&lt;1m1&gt;ed

mass l.ve so fa and rocker combination . This Ear ly
,f.m encan ~ul te features heav y pine trimmings and
15 covered tn a bold Her eulan pl aid . Our r egular lao&amp;
pri c~ is $749 .95, but for th is sal e, you sa ve S200. A

~

Davis played soft music on
the piano. Prayer was concluded by Es th er Gooch
followed 'by the verse for the
year by Nevalene North . She
spoke on the word service for
the missionaries, the church,
and the Lord .
·
A tape was played of songs
sung in the church in Africa
where Arlene Spurlock is
serving. She discussed the
main points the African
preacher made . She also told
of her work since returning
there.
Volunteers signed up to
help with the dinner Feb.. 14
during the Miss ion ary
Conference.
Refreshments were served
by the commi ttee which was
composed of Carol Rupe,
Eleanor Atkins , Vi vian
Trowbrid ge, ·Eth el Stee le,
J eanne Dra y and Jack ie
Graham.

POMEROY. - Edith Hood, Minersville, celebrated her
89th birthday last week. She extends her sincere thanks to the

(;range
enjoys potluck
•

JANUARY
FROM
BAKER
FURNITURE

*
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*
*
**
*
*
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**

missi onaf.ies whil e Ferne

By Katie Crow

MINERSVILLE - The
''Call to Prayer and Selfdenial" was the program
topic of the United Methodist
Women of the Forest Run
United Methodist Church at
their meeting Tuesday
evening. The meeting was
held at the home of Mrs .
Vernon Nease with Mrs .
Richard Jarvis, co-hostess .
The "Call to Prayer and
Self-denial," is an annual
event
of
all
United Methodist Women to
make them more aware of
the needs of others. Mrs.
Russ Watson was program ·
leader and an explana tion of
the two objectives of the
offering received was given.

•

··~~~~·~+~·~~~~~~--~=

'"

• What is need ed to take this project' At least one good
quality dairy or dairy-beef cross calf. A person can have more
than orie ca lf but only one may be exhibited at the fair. Calves
born in January will be almost seven months old at fair time
!l'hich should make them about the righ t weight group . Dairy
bull ca lves are fairly cheap right now.
• What type housing is needed? Until the calf is weaned it is
recommended that it be in an individual pen about four by six
feet ( 24 square feet ). From weaning until about three months
of age the calf needs about 35 square feet of space - after three
~onths the dairy feeder will need about 50 to 60 square feet of

Tot a l F ina n ce A nnual P et
Charges
Rat e
1804 .0 6
11. 83

GALLIPOLIS
The
La d ies ·Missionary
Fellowship of the First
Ba ptist Church held its
January meeting in the
fellowshi p room of the
church.
The mee ting was opened by
prayer by Nevalene North,
president. The secretary and
treasurer reports were approved. A large bank was
placed on the table for money
for the Moffats who have held
meetings here ofte n. The
bank is available for anyone
In help fill it.
The president read news
fr om missionaries including
Ruth Co mpton, Ar lene
Spurlick, the Zimmermans,
Thibid ea us, Moffa t s,
Stocktons and Durha ms. The
members praye d for the

Alfred Yeauger, Mrs. Uswln
Nease, Mrs. Fred Nease,
Mrs. Erma Roush, Mrs. John
treasurer 's report was read Scott, Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs.
and the meeting adjourned . Russ Watson and three
A dessert course was guests, Mr . Vernon Nease,
served by the hostesses to Stanley Nease and Rev.
Mrs. Olan Genheimer, Mrs . Rkhard Jarvis.
, - - ..•J
Ph . 992.3 42 6
Pleasant Ridge Road I
J
I
1. or 992 · 3374
l

Women meet

Katie's Korner

floor space .

loveseat . Here is a
beautifully styl ed sofa· loveseat in. a durab le flar e;~ I
velvet . Real sharp! I Reg . $420. Sale Priced S299.
~ Tradi ti onal styling and beautiful blue·green velvet
"JI(" cov ering. Sturd y construction and exc ell ent
. . . . tailor in~ make thi s on e a sharp bu y. Reg . $439.95 .

CIIYITAU

veterinarian.

24 MONTHS

From the Countr y Squire Collectloi, comes a

Wlllfl

To1al Amcunt
of Note
$3, 11 97.6{1

-

MONTHS

In 1971, Charles Manson

t*
**
=

BY FREDJ . DEEL
Gallla Couaty
4-H Extension Agent

· GALLIPOUS - Last year a new 4-H project was made
available to .4-H members in Gallia County. Th is project is tbe
Pairy Beef Fee&lt;ler project and It has a lot of possibilities
-~ peclally for 4-H members who do not have beef calves
.!'vailable for the beef feeder caH project.
• This project is based upon the raising and keeping records of
.ll male dairy or dairy-beef cross animal froin birto th a weight
~ 400 to 600 pounds and selling tbe animal as a feeder calf.
~
These calves may be exhibited at the Gailia County Junior
Fair but they will not be sold at tbe fair. Calves exhibited in
.this project at tbe fair must weigh between 400 and 600 pounds,
Jvhich should make the calf between 6 and 8 months of age.
"}:'herefore, a nyone interested in taking this project and
exhibiting the calf at the fair should be acquiring their calf
IOOh. Ail a nimals except steers, that will be exhibited at the
lJallis Coun ty Junior Fair must be purchased and on the farm
before May I. Steers had to be purchased , and on tbe farm and
'registered witb the Extension Office befor e January I.
, Calves in this project must be castrated and dehornM" as
safety precautions. Castra tion should be done shortly after the
ealf is wea ned but at least by the time the calf is 10 weeks of
age. One of the best times to remove horns is when the horn
l,luttons first appear . When done early, an electrie dehorner or
the use of a caustic stick or caustic post will be successful.
When using either method be sure to follow the directions of
th e manufacturer. If a person has any questions about ·either
ijehorning or castration they should secure the help of a

NEW CAR LOANS?

bara Hensle y, Sue Dye,
Beverly Wilford, Lois Deem
and Judith Starcher. cohostess, and Joan Smith,
hostess. Mrs. Smith used the
bicentennial as th e theme.
Barbara and Sharon Hensley both received gifts from
their secret si ~ ters , and
J~dith Starcher won the door
prize for the evening. The
next meeting will be in the
home of Mr s. Sue Dye,
Coolville, Feb. 26 at 7:30p.m.
at which time the group will
have a White Elephant Sale .

HW.OWIAND

r

an

ments wer e served to Bar-

6ffi£·m.

WEDNEsDAY
WU.DWOOD Garden Club,
7:30 p.m. Wednesady, home
of Mrs. Mason Fisher with
Mrs. Paul Fisher as cohostess.
OHIO VALLEY Comma!)dery 24, regular state
• convocation , . 7:30 p.m.
Wedne!day 4t the Pomeroy
Malonic Temple.
·
POMEROY
MID·
Di !':PORT Lion&lt; Club lhdies
ni~ht , Thursday 6:.!0 p.m. at

RIO GRANDE - In ter medi ate and advanced
cake decorating classes will
be held a t Ri o Gr ande
Community College sfiii'tfilg
with the advan ced classes
beginning Tuesday night and

Co~ty

Looking For
The Best
Deal On

·Cake decoratif(:g
offered at Rio

Fellowship
has meeting

Gallia

••

Tickets are available from
.rus tees, chai rwomen and
members of the Frenc h Art
: olony. Tickets may also be
Iurchased at the county high
Jc hools, Ga llia Academy

•

SUNDAY
OLD fASHIONED hymn

High School, Rio Grande in GaiUpolts, the Fairmount
College and in downtown Dance Theatre will present
Gallipolis at l~ations in- "free lecture . demonstrations
cluding PJ's, the Uniform In the Gallipolis City and
Center, J;'eddier's Pantry and Gallia County Schools. On
Bernadine's . Further in- Tuesday evening they will
fo rmation on tickets may be teach aMasLers UasS at the
had by calling Mrs. M'Lou Elks Hall on Second Ave. in
Gallipolis·. Registration for
Morrison at 446-00'10.
During their three day slay this class is open and mav be

iludents and senior citizens.

:u:::~::::=:=::::::::::=~·=•:::o:=:•:•=·=·=::;:::=:•::;:;::~=~=:=:::·

9- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 25,1976

made by caiUng Mrs. Lyan
Tawney at 446-9308. The cost
for Ule Masters Class Is » per
person.
The three day a ppearance
of the Fair moun t Dance
Theatre in Ga ll ipolis is
another of the community
activities made possible by
the French Art Colony
through the support of the
Ohio Arts Council and the
National Endowment for the
Arts.

SfNOE'\ COM PAN V

!...........................................
'

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•

�8- The Sunday Times -Sentinel. Sunday, Jan. 25,1976

•

Miss Sigler
is honored

Dancers to present concert
GALLIPOLIS - A modern
·dance concert, presented by
the Fairmount
Dance
Theatr~ of Cleveland. Ohio.
will be held on Wednesday
evening at the Gallia
Academy High School
Auditorium at 8. The concert
will climax their three day
VlSit to Gallipolis, sponsored
by the French Art Colony.
Mrs. Vivian Kirk le
~hairwoman for the concert'
has announced that patro~
tickets for Wednesday's
:oncert, which enable the
1older to a reserve seat · a
.!sting in the program and'an
.nvitation to the private
:eception to meet the
:nembers of the dance
thea tre at Riverby following
lhe concert, are $5 each.
:::Cneral Admission tickets
&gt;re $2 for adul ts, and $1 for

MIDDLEPORT ~ Mi ss
Cheryl Sigler , bride-elect of
Greg Lane , was honored
Thursday night with a bridal
shower at the Lane home
hosted by Bonnie Scott and
Unda Lane.
A pink and blue color
scheme was featured in the
decorations . Games were

played with prizes going to
Betty Spencer, Phyllis
Spencer an d Connie Swisher.
Others attending the
shower were Bernice Darst,

Betty, Scherry and Cynthia
Lane, Beulah White, Gwinnie
White, Ardith Lane, Michelle
Scott, Norma Jean Halley,
Juanita Halley, Audrey
Holley, Melody Scaggs and
Kathryn Sigler.
Sending gifts were Susie
French, Carol Knotts and
Kay Gilmore.
The family wedding will be
an even t of Feb. 5.

~·.

soc I'aI

!l~

.

~

·

:;:,
':l
.~~

CARTER McADAMS, a dancer with the Fairmount Dance Theatre, performs "For
Betty" choreographed by Bill Evans. The troupe will perform at Gallia Academy Hlgh
School auditorium Wednesday at 8 p.m

~

I Calendar ~ FHA completes plans"_
sing, Racine First Baptist

for statewide project.

Church, I p. 111. Sunday ;
MERCERVILLE - The
groups will be feat ured and
Hanna
n Trace FHA held iIs
the public is invited.
rece nt regular mon thl y
HYMN SING , Sunday, 1:30 mee tin g in the ' Home
p. m. Free Gospel Mission at Economics Department with
Bald Knob, with local singers president Debbie Stapleton
and public invited to .bring presiding. The secretary's
songs and attend .
report was give n and apAMIGOS of Parents pr oved foll owed by th e
Withqut Pa rtn ~ r s Rollin g treasurer's report with roll
Hills Chapter 838 will hold a call being a nswered by
family potluck dinner Sunday nam ing somethin g a bou t
at 6 p.m. at Green Elemen- win ter .
Final plans were completed
tary School on Rt. 141. Bring
fo
r
the
State
FH A
two food dishes an d
Educational
and
Contribuiion
beverage . Coffe e will be
proj ec t ,
'' Chil d r en ' s
furn ished. For mor.e in - Hospital, " which is a nro iect
formation, call 446-2587 or for all FHA'ers ln Ohio .
992•3219.
Shelby Williams was named
REVIVAL AT the Fairplay chairwoman for the project.
Chapel, Meigs County Road I Sue Ross was elec!ied girl of
off 325 or 124, ior two weeks, the month by popular vote by
Sunday through Feb. 8. The the members.
Rev. Th ereon Durh am,
pastor.
MONDAY
RACINE PTO Monday at
7:30 p. m. Boy Scouts in
charge of program. Fifth
Grade mothers to serve
refreshmenls.

The progra m was "Safely
and Shelter fo r Animals."
Th e songlea der le ad the
group in singing appropriate
songs. Refreshments were
served by Lorie s tapleton and
Marsha Montgomery.
The contribution project
was carried out at the varsity
ball game Jan. 16 when the
Nor th Gallia Pirates met the
Hannan Trace Wildcats at
Ha nna n Trace. Principal
Paul Dillon made the announce ment to the aud ience

about the FHA projec t for the
Children's Hospi tal a nd
FHA 'ers ex pressed their
thanks to the North Gallia
and' Hannan Tra ce fans for

helping the Hannan Trace
FHA reach their goal in their
state projec t.

Sharon Bailey reports
on Mother's March

MIDDLEPORT - A repor t skating party to be held
IZAAK WALTON Leag ue on the Mother 's March of Tuesday at the Skate-a-Way
potluck supper · and whi te Dimes was given. by Sharon from 7 to 9•30 p.m.
elephant auc tion, 7 p.m . Bailey, serv ice chairperson ,
The house tour to be conat the Tuesday night meeting ducted this s pr in g was
Monday at the clubhouse.
SPECIAL me eting, Racine of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta discussed by Mrs. Kathy ·
Masonic Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, 7 Sigma Phi Sorori ty, held at Cumi ngs , and Lynn Cross and
p.m. Mond ay ; work in the Columbus and Southern Yvonne Butcher were apfellowcraft degree.
_ Ohio Electric Co. ·
poin t,d lo assist with the
Mrs
.
Bailey
noted
that
wur.
MEIGS Local Chapter 17
$468.88
had
been
collected
in
Mrs .. Bailey ass isted Mrs.
Ohio Associa tion of Public
School Employe s. Monday the door-to-door march in Libby Sayre with the cultural
report en titled "The Pen7: 30p.m. junior high cafteri a, Pomeroy.
A thank-you note was read dulum Swings." Serving as
Middleport.
. MIDDLEPORT PTA. 7:30 from Mrs. Vikki Gloeckner models for clothing were
p,m. Monda"y at the Mid- for flow ers during her Susan Lanning and Mrs.
hos pitalization . Ma LJri s ha Butcher. Mrs. Butcher and
dleport Elementary School.
Nelson,
soc ial chairper:-son , Mrs. Pat Shrivers served
Bicentennial program to be
reminded
members of the refreshmen ts.
presented. Third grade to
give the pledge, first grade
mothers to be greeters and
hostesses. Fatbers ' Night to
be observed:
the Meigs Inn . Lions and their
TUESDAY
ladies invited.
MIDDLEPORT
TUESDAY
POMEROY Area Branch ,
JUNIOR American Legion
American Association of Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
University Women, 7:30p.m. Post 126, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday
Tuesday at Meigs High at the home of Becky Roush
School library . Teresa Casci and Christi Smith.
In speak on "Education Down
RACINE AmericanLegion
Under," giving her ex- Auxiliary, Post 602, 7 p.m.
periences on tea ching in Tuesday at the hall. Members
Australia. Hostesses will be asked to take small gifts to be
Jeanette Thomas, Patrticia awarded ·as prizes at the
Mills, Rose Marie Jonas, junior community service
Joan S. Culp,and Grace Eich. party next montb at the
AMERICAN . Le gion Athens Mental Health Center .
Auxiliary, Drew-Webster
WEDNESDAY
Post 39, 7:30 p.m . Tuesday
AMERI CAN
Legion
with Rep. Ron James .to be Auxiliary·, Feeney-Bennett
the speaker. Public invited. Post 128, 6:30 y .m. dinner
ANNUAL Inspe ction, Wednesda y with LegionPomeroy Chapter 80, Royal naires. Meeting at 7:;l0 p.m .
Arch Masons, 7: 30 p.m . of both Auxiliary and Legion.
Tuesday, Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. John T. Jar vis ,
district deputy high priest of
12th Capitular District, inspecting officer. Dinner at
with ladies invite!! .
OLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, special
seaslon, 7 p.m. Tuesday at
temple ; work in fellowcraft
degree, all Master Masons
invited.
·

Homemakers
elect officers
for new year
TUPPERS PLAINS- New
officers were elected at tbe
Janu ary meetin g of the
Eastern Homemakers held in
the home of Mrs. Joan Smith,
Tuppers Plains.
Officers for 1976 are Mrs.
Juditb Starcher, "president:
Mrs. Pam Ha ger , vi ce
president ; Mrs. Sue Dye,
secretary-reporter, and Mrs.
Joan Smith, treasurer.
Old business consisted of
committee reports of the fruit
baskets and · gifts given to
those in the Infirmary in
Pomeroy.
·
· New business wa s a
discussion of the group 's
projects for the new year and
meetin g places and cohostess for the com ing
months. The group also made
plans to join in with the drive
for the March· of Dimes held
. the week of January 20.
After adjournment refresh-

•

'15

in term edia te

cJass

beginning Thursday night.
Both classes will begin at
6:15 in the basement of Da vis
Hall. Th e cost per class will
be $1 2. Only past studen ts
ai reaily ha vin g beg inners
cake decorating may enroll
for lhe intermedia te class
and onl y those stu de nt~
already having begin ners and
i nt e rm e di ate
ca k e•
decoratging ma y enroll for
the advan,ed class.
. Past students wi shing to
enroll in either class are to
call the instr uctor, Mrs. Betty
Carpenter , at 24ii-5363.

In 1915, lranscontinental
telephone serv.ice · was
inaugurated in a hookup
between New York and San
Francisco.

Now You Can Take Up To 48 Months To Repay
Your New Car Loan • . .
This means your monthly payments can be a lot smaller or that
. you can borrow more without straining your budget . It might ,
' easily be the differ~nce between the car yoo've been looking at
_a nd the car you really want - Stop at the Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Co. for a 48·month new car loan.
48 MONTHS
.

I

In stallment

Amount

Payment
181 .20

'
36

ot Loan
$3,000. 00

Cre d it Li fe

Ins uran ce
$93 . 54

.

Installm ent

Amount
of L oa n

Paym ents
$101.77

Sl , OOO .OO

..

Lif e To tal Amount Total F i n a ne
In sura nCe
of Not e
Ch ar ges

Cre ~ i t

$3, 663.7:2

$65 .9 .5

An nua l Pet.

Rat e

$ 597 .77

11 . 96

In st allm ent

Amo u n1

Pa y m ent

of,loan
U, OOD.OD

$ 14] . 19

c. "

Accident

' What should the ca lf he fed? Until the calf is weaned it
Should be fed milk or milk replacer. From about five weeks
until the calf is sold it should be fed a 15 percent grain conCentra te and a good quality hay. To feed the ca lf for six months
it will probably take about 500 pounds of gra in and 1,000 pounds
of hay. Records should be kept on the calf from birtb until it is
sold, as this is what will tell the member·if the project has been
a fin ancial success or failure, the learning gained from the
. experiences of r aising an animal makes this project ·a success
for the individuaL For more information on this project or
other 4-H projects and programs, stop in and visit the Extension Office on the third floor of the Courthouse or call 446~ 1 2, extensi on 32.

I

Credit L ife fi ol a l Amount T otal Fin ance Annual Pet .
I!"Suran ce
o f N ote
Rate
Ch arges
U I .'U

8. Health Insurance also

$ 3,4 ]6 .56

aval l ~ bl e

al

S3 95 . l2

add i t ion~ !

12 .02

cost .

Farmers Bank

and three women were found
guilty in the murders of
actress Sharon Tate and six

t

Pomeroy, Ohio

....

other ~rsOns.

11

FINAL'~

: PATRIOT - A potluck
~ upper
high li gh ted the
;patr iot Gra nge mee ting
:t'uesday eveni ng with Wor.thy
~as t e r Edw ard Pa rkin s
)'res iding.
• Gran ge opened In regular .
~ession and a business
meeting was held . The
:~:" harte r was dra ped for
departed member Brother
ban Nolter . Taulby Owens
·hnd Denci l Hoffman were
remembered as being sick.
The pfogram ronsis!ied of a
reading by Ed Pa rkins, a quiz·
and two games Jed
IecShenle Bur1nett.

ON SAl£ NOW
THROUGH JANUARY 31

NEW SOFAS. LOVE
SEATS, AND CHAIRS
SAVINGS TO

50 %

re adin g was by · Bonnie
Parkins.
Attend ing were Luther and
She nle Burnett , Gertrude
Davis, Edward and Bonnie
Parkins, John and Gladvs
Bostic, Walter anlj ,Phyllis
Pope , Dave and Garne t
Jones.
·

MRS. OLAN GENHEIMER, Minersville, will leave today
from Cleveland for Geneva, Switzerland where she will visit
with her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Vanica and
Johnathan.
SYRAC\JSE HAS BEEN HARD HIT with the loss of
several fine people just within a week's lime.
Certainly lost a fine friend and neighbor with the passing
of David Mills, and a dear friend and former neighbor, Mrs.
lillian Duffy.

..

Mrs. R. D. Bazemore
observes .94th birthday
GALLI POLIS
Mrs .
Robert D. Bazemore, the
forme r Katie Schar tz of
Gallipolis, ce le brated her
94 th birthday recently with a
din ner given by re latives and

I

The· Shop

l

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

1

1
l

I

.,•
~

I

FRENCH CI T Y PREMI E R BE EF

j

I
1

HIND QUARTER ----~----• lb. g54 I
J
BEEF LOIN --- - - - ~- - --- Ib. sug .I'

t
•1
One is for mi nistries and ;~
Read y for freezer . cut a nd wrapped for fa ':'~li ly of 4.
services for the aged and the 1 Good Jan. 22-25
Open 9to 5 Dai ly
other for · victims of op--~
pressive systems a nd
societies . As part of the
program the booklet entitled
"And All These Things Shall
be Added" was used. Each
member had a part in the

1.---------------

scriptures, songs a nd the

visited her on her birthday
were her nephew a nd wife,

Mr. and Mrs. John Dedrick of
Cha tta nooga, Miss Emma
Louese Wilson, Mrs. L. E.
Pierce and Mrs. 0 . C. Alley,
friends. Mrs. Bazemore now all of Dalton. Ano ther
resides in Dalton, Gal.
nephew, Bill Dedrick, resides
Older Gallipolitans may with Mrs. Bazemore.
remembre the cigar store
owned by Mr. Bazemore in
the building now occupied by
Paul Davies Jewelers. Alert
and active for her age, "Aunt
Katie" is awaiting warmer
weather and a vaca tion trip
back to where she was born
and raised in Carrollton , Ky.
Among th e gues ts who

Utany. Mrs. Uswin Nease
concluded the program with
devo tions entitled " Hope"
taken from the wri lings of
Norman Vincent Peale. Her
scripture was from the Book
of Psalms. She concluded the
program wi th prayer.
The business meeting was
con ducted by the president.
Twenty-five sick and shut-in
calls were made during the
month by the members. The

INSULATION
Blown Into Your Walls

'Free Estimates'

A DISTINCTLY F DIFFERENT
GIFT FROM

FOREMAN and ABBOIT

Peddler's Pantry

Middleport, Ohio
p 992·5321

NIC E SELECTION OF .VALENTINE CARDS ·
State &amp; Third
Gall ipolis, o .

U.S. NO, 1

YELLOW ·
ONIONS

A thought for the day :
Herbert . Hoov er ,
31st
pre sident of the United
Sta tes, said , "Older men
declare war . But it is youtb
that must fight and die."

'

a

real
52!9.
Here's an other loveseat.

From F lexsteel's Lu xury
Louhge Collect ion. Tradition al in st yling , covered in
a dur8bl e printed fl or al' vf. tvet an(! fea turing
Flexsteel's patented spr ing construction. Reg . 5468 .

vinyl. Reg . S32U5.

.Sale
'249.95
Bassett Den Room , wood arm, Ht!r-

Perhap s pla id cover s don't appeal to you. If so how .
ab:out a ~ p l~ce matching Ea rly Ameri can living
room su 1te tn a blue-green floral nylon pri nt .
Durab le coveri ng and sturd y construction pl us
wood accents ma ke this suite a real buy . Regul ar
low pri ce $688. 88 . Now Sale Priced $Sl8.88 . You Save
S150 .
Modern your bag? Contemporary styling , and a
durable plaid co ver . This so fa and com panion chair
from Flexs teel's Impact Coll ection cou ld be just
what you ' r e look ing for . Reg. low pri ce $648. For

How about thi s one? A 2 pc. matching Ea rl r.
_
Am erican su ite cover ed with -a durable m utt colored Her culon . Beau tifull y styled an d durabl y
con str ucted this suite: will go with anyth ing . Reg .

$629 .95. Now Only 5498.
Looking for a sma ll sofa or

·

S.le Pnce Sl39.9S

Here's a su per bu y ! ! A tr aditional . sofa in .a
bc&lt;tu fll ul nylon print . Coi l spring const·ru ction and
ex pert tai loring . Reg. $599 .95. Now only $399 . You
save $200.
From the Penthouse ColleCti on comes t r aditional
styling in a durable blue &amp; greeri nylon prlrit .
Treated with Scotchg uard this sofa would make an

Sale •299.00

Bolts &amp; Bolts of

Sale '229.00
1 Piece Bassett Modern Living Room Sl.!ltt, red pi• In
cover. Rev. S459.9S.

Sale '359.00

floral Herculon . Reg. 5539.95 .

Sale '439.00

Early ,AmM"iun "FiexstHI" Love Seat, green plaid

Herculon . Reg. 5430.
Flexsteel

Sale '299.00
" Magic Bed .. , brown stripe Herculon

REG. 6!r

BARGAINS
l,OOO's of Yards

2 Piece Bassett, Traditional Living Room Suite, brown

· Sale •299.00

2 Piece "Fiexst .. I" ·Troditionol Living Room Suite. (I)
Brown Velvet. t 1) Rust IMtaleH. Rog. Sl90.

~

IAK
FURNITURE

32 Ol BTL

MIRACLE WHIP

SALAD
DRESSING

Fabric Shop
SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
115 W. Second
992-2284
Pomeroy, Ohio
it HE

WAGNER

·DEL MONTE

ORANGE
DRINK

GRAPEFRUIT
OR
ORANGE JUICE

32 Ol

.HEAD LETTUCE
PKG.

CRISCO
3 LB. CAN

OF

FOR
BANQUET ·

POT PIES
FOR

QUART

McCall's, Kwick -Sew, Simplicity Patterns

' A T • ~dff1'tltic of

oz.

JAR

MOUTHWASH

New Store Houro: Friday Till P.M.
Shop Sat•rday Til 5 P.M.

I

ll

AMBER I

'

•

COFFEE-MATE

INTERNATIONAL DRUGS

Polyester Knits
Single Printed Polvester Knits
Polyester &amp;Cotton Single Knits

OFF

4 LB. BAG

ONLY

60 lNQiES WIDE
PRINTS &amp;PlAIDS

(1)

only. Something diHerent lor sooting ond bedding.
Reg, $439.95 .
.
·

SUGAR

5 LB. BAG

SUPPERS

M~ern,

Red Vinyl 3 Cushion Solo , Reg.· tn9.00.

PEAK
BRAND

LB.

KRAFT

· 2 Piec:e Early American living room suite. Brown

culon cover. Reg. 1399.00. ·

this sa le Only 5488.

•

Now Only 5299.

2 Piece

PINTO BEANS

JACK FROST
OR
DOMINO

FLORIDA
ORANGES

for'spar;e? Here's a so fa tor you. Onl y 72"
Is Early Ameri can " Mini-Sofa" is covered in
&amp; gol ~ plaid nylon. St urd y cOnstruction. A
sharp " lfttl e" sofa . Reg . $329.95. Now OnlY

spec1al buy at Only 5549.95.

eleganl addition to any living room. Reg. 5369.95.
Now Only 5259.
Oen room styling with a gold, black and grey
Herc uton cover. This sofa aj so feat ures wood accents. Real sharp. Regular $399.95. Now Only $189.
f r adtf!Onal styling in 'a blue-gr een nylon Matelese.
This sofa is a rea l good valu e. Reg S399. Now only
.
5259.
.
Ht:re's a gpod t·uy. Th i!:. trl'ldiHonal sola is covered
In o ricH nylon motelese' covQr. loose· pillow back
~ and 'lo'ms: Sturdy construction. Reg. 132'1.95. Now .
~Only $2J9.
.
.
;

***

many friends that remembered her on "he(" day.
Understand she is not feeling up to par. Certainly hope you
get back on your feet soon.
Best wishes and congratulations.

Marla Neutzling on Friday,
Jan . 30 at The Fi rst Baptist
PLANS COMPLETE
Church in Middleport . The
POMEROY - Plans have custom of open church will be
been compl eted for th e observed and the reception is
wedding of 1\:larvin Roush and also open.

Cr&lt;1m1&gt;ed

mass l.ve so fa and rocker combination . This Ear ly
,f.m encan ~ul te features heav y pine trimmings and
15 covered tn a bold Her eulan pl aid . Our r egular lao&amp;
pri c~ is $749 .95, but for th is sal e, you sa ve S200. A

~

Davis played soft music on
the piano. Prayer was concluded by Es th er Gooch
followed 'by the verse for the
year by Nevalene North . She
spoke on the word service for
the missionaries, the church,
and the Lord .
·
A tape was played of songs
sung in the church in Africa
where Arlene Spurlock is
serving. She discussed the
main points the African
preacher made . She also told
of her work since returning
there.
Volunteers signed up to
help with the dinner Feb.. 14
during the Miss ion ary
Conference.
Refreshments were served
by the commi ttee which was
composed of Carol Rupe,
Eleanor Atkins , Vi vian
Trowbrid ge, ·Eth el Stee le,
J eanne Dra y and Jack ie
Graham.

POMEROY. - Edith Hood, Minersville, celebrated her
89th birthday last week. She extends her sincere thanks to the

(;range
enjoys potluck
•

JANUARY
FROM
BAKER
FURNITURE

*
*
*
*
*
**
*
*
*
**
*
**

missi onaf.ies whil e Ferne

By Katie Crow

MINERSVILLE - The
''Call to Prayer and Selfdenial" was the program
topic of the United Methodist
Women of the Forest Run
United Methodist Church at
their meeting Tuesday
evening. The meeting was
held at the home of Mrs .
Vernon Nease with Mrs .
Richard Jarvis, co-hostess .
The "Call to Prayer and
Self-denial," is an annual
event
of
all
United Methodist Women to
make them more aware of
the needs of others. Mrs.
Russ Watson was program ·
leader and an explana tion of
the two objectives of the
offering received was given.

•

··~~~~·~+~·~~~~~~--~=

'"

• What is need ed to take this project' At least one good
quality dairy or dairy-beef cross calf. A person can have more
than orie ca lf but only one may be exhibited at the fair. Calves
born in January will be almost seven months old at fair time
!l'hich should make them about the righ t weight group . Dairy
bull ca lves are fairly cheap right now.
• What type housing is needed? Until the calf is weaned it is
recommended that it be in an individual pen about four by six
feet ( 24 square feet ). From weaning until about three months
of age the calf needs about 35 square feet of space - after three
~onths the dairy feeder will need about 50 to 60 square feet of

Tot a l F ina n ce A nnual P et
Charges
Rat e
1804 .0 6
11. 83

GALLIPOLIS
The
La d ies ·Missionary
Fellowship of the First
Ba ptist Church held its
January meeting in the
fellowshi p room of the
church.
The mee ting was opened by
prayer by Nevalene North,
president. The secretary and
treasurer reports were approved. A large bank was
placed on the table for money
for the Moffats who have held
meetings here ofte n. The
bank is available for anyone
In help fill it.
The president read news
fr om missionaries including
Ruth Co mpton, Ar lene
Spurlick, the Zimmermans,
Thibid ea us, Moffa t s,
Stocktons and Durha ms. The
members praye d for the

Alfred Yeauger, Mrs. Uswln
Nease, Mrs. Fred Nease,
Mrs. Erma Roush, Mrs. John
treasurer 's report was read Scott, Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs.
and the meeting adjourned . Russ Watson and three
A dessert course was guests, Mr . Vernon Nease,
served by the hostesses to Stanley Nease and Rev.
Mrs. Olan Genheimer, Mrs . Rkhard Jarvis.
, - - ..•J
Ph . 992.3 42 6
Pleasant Ridge Road I
J
I
1. or 992 · 3374
l

Women meet

Katie's Korner

floor space .

loveseat . Here is a
beautifully styl ed sofa· loveseat in. a durab le flar e;~ I
velvet . Real sharp! I Reg . $420. Sale Priced S299.
~ Tradi ti onal styling and beautiful blue·green velvet
"JI(" cov ering. Sturd y construction and exc ell ent
. . . . tailor in~ make thi s on e a sharp bu y. Reg . $439.95 .

CIIYITAU

veterinarian.

24 MONTHS

From the Countr y Squire Collectloi, comes a

Wlllfl

To1al Amcunt
of Note
$3, 11 97.6{1

-

MONTHS

In 1971, Charles Manson

t*
**
=

BY FREDJ . DEEL
Gallla Couaty
4-H Extension Agent

· GALLIPOUS - Last year a new 4-H project was made
available to .4-H members in Gallia County. Th is project is tbe
Pairy Beef Fee&lt;ler project and It has a lot of possibilities
-~ peclally for 4-H members who do not have beef calves
.!'vailable for the beef feeder caH project.
• This project is based upon the raising and keeping records of
.ll male dairy or dairy-beef cross animal froin birto th a weight
~ 400 to 600 pounds and selling tbe animal as a feeder calf.
~
These calves may be exhibited at the Gailia County Junior
Fair but they will not be sold at tbe fair. Calves exhibited in
.this project at tbe fair must weigh between 400 and 600 pounds,
Jvhich should make the calf between 6 and 8 months of age.
"}:'herefore, a nyone interested in taking this project and
exhibiting the calf at the fair should be acquiring their calf
IOOh. Ail a nimals except steers, that will be exhibited at the
lJallis Coun ty Junior Fair must be purchased and on the farm
before May I. Steers had to be purchased , and on tbe farm and
'registered witb the Extension Office befor e January I.
, Calves in this project must be castrated and dehornM" as
safety precautions. Castra tion should be done shortly after the
ealf is wea ned but at least by the time the calf is 10 weeks of
age. One of the best times to remove horns is when the horn
l,luttons first appear . When done early, an electrie dehorner or
the use of a caustic stick or caustic post will be successful.
When using either method be sure to follow the directions of
th e manufacturer. If a person has any questions about ·either
ijehorning or castration they should secure the help of a

NEW CAR LOANS?

bara Hensle y, Sue Dye,
Beverly Wilford, Lois Deem
and Judith Starcher. cohostess, and Joan Smith,
hostess. Mrs. Smith used the
bicentennial as th e theme.
Barbara and Sharon Hensley both received gifts from
their secret si ~ ters , and
J~dith Starcher won the door
prize for the evening. The
next meeting will be in the
home of Mr s. Sue Dye,
Coolville, Feb. 26 at 7:30p.m.
at which time the group will
have a White Elephant Sale .

HW.OWIAND

r

an

ments wer e served to Bar-

6ffi£·m.

WEDNEsDAY
WU.DWOOD Garden Club,
7:30 p.m. Wednesady, home
of Mrs. Mason Fisher with
Mrs. Paul Fisher as cohostess.
OHIO VALLEY Comma!)dery 24, regular state
• convocation , . 7:30 p.m.
Wedne!day 4t the Pomeroy
Malonic Temple.
·
POMEROY
MID·
Di !':PORT Lion&lt; Club lhdies
ni~ht , Thursday 6:.!0 p.m. at

RIO GRANDE - In ter medi ate and advanced
cake decorating classes will
be held a t Ri o Gr ande
Community College sfiii'tfilg
with the advan ced classes
beginning Tuesday night and

Co~ty

Looking For
The Best
Deal On

·Cake decoratif(:g
offered at Rio

Fellowship
has meeting

Gallia

••

Tickets are available from
.rus tees, chai rwomen and
members of the Frenc h Art
: olony. Tickets may also be
Iurchased at the county high
Jc hools, Ga llia Academy

•

SUNDAY
OLD fASHIONED hymn

High School, Rio Grande in GaiUpolts, the Fairmount
College and in downtown Dance Theatre will present
Gallipolis at l~ations in- "free lecture . demonstrations
cluding PJ's, the Uniform In the Gallipolis City and
Center, J;'eddier's Pantry and Gallia County Schools. On
Bernadine's . Further in- Tuesday evening they will
fo rmation on tickets may be teach aMasLers UasS at the
had by calling Mrs. M'Lou Elks Hall on Second Ave. in
Gallipolis·. Registration for
Morrison at 446-00'10.
During their three day slay this class is open and mav be

iludents and senior citizens.

:u:::~::::=:=::::::::::=~·=•:::o:=:•:•=·=·=::;:::=:•::;:;::~=~=:=:::·

9- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 25,1976

made by caiUng Mrs. Lyan
Tawney at 446-9308. The cost
for Ule Masters Class Is » per
person.
The three day a ppearance
of the Fair moun t Dance
Theatre in Ga ll ipolis is
another of the community
activities made possible by
the French Art Colony
through the support of the
Ohio Arts Council and the
National Endowment for the
Arts.

SfNOE'\ COM PAN V

!...........................................
'

l .

•

�• •

13 attend meeting·
of mothers club
GALLIPOLIS - Thirteen
members attended the Jan .
15 meeting of the Cradle To
College Mothers Club held at
the home of JoAnn Pitchford
with co-hostess Carol Smith .
Roll call was "Favorite
Nursery Rhyme. " Present
were Renae Bickers, Unda
Dee!, Kay Erwin , Mary
Lookado, Ruth Fuller, Betty
Hollin gs head , Sandra McFarland , J oa n Pitchfo rd ,
Sharon Sau ncters, Ca rol
Smith, Jean Smi th , Joyce

...

raising projects was held and
the Valentine pizza party at
the home of Sharon Saunders,
Feb. l4at6p.m. was planned.
Renae Bickers was in charge
of closing the meeting .
Tray favors for January
were made by Mary Lookado
and Jean Smith . They were
tak en to Holzer Medical
Center fo r the pediatrics
ward.

-~ ~~· ~ . - ~

. ~~·
- ,a .• . ' ·

, . ...- .

~ ·&lt;

•

Meeting dates given
BY RENE BROYLES
ADDISON - The Ladies
Aid of the Addison Free Will
Baptist Church will convene
Wednesday at 7: 30p,m. at the
church. All members are
reques ted to atte nd .
The church will hold its
reg ular monthly busi ness
meeting on Th ursday at 7:30
p.m. The pastor, Rev. Walter

luncheon will be served by
the ladies of the church.

Patters·on , requests that as

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. John
L. Butler, aca demic dean at
Georgetown College at
Georgetown, Ky. has announ ced that Helen Lanier,
2ll Jackson Pk ., Gallipolis,
has been named to the 4.0
Honor Roll and the Dean 's
List for the first term at
Georgetown .
To be eligible for the 4.0
Honor RolL a student must
earn an A in each class taken
during the first term. The
Dean 's Ust is composed of
juniors and seniors who have
a grade point index of 3.5 for
the sophomore year or for
any two success iv~ terms
above the sophomore level.

preac hi~g

.s ervices . A noon

ENGAGING
RINGS
For Your
Altar Ego

Columbia

Columbia diamonds fro m $150.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
" House of Diamonds
and Fine Gifts"
422 Second Ave .
Gallipolis, Ohio

College
News

I

Mrs. Robert C. Gertler

Gertler-Barney
exchange vows

WORTHINGTON - Miss•
Pa tsy Lou Barney, Columbu~, and Robert Clarence
Gertler, also of Colwnbus,
were married at the Grace
Brethren Clmrch in Worthington on Nov. 29 at 2:30 p·.m.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. W. S. Michael,
Rt. 1, MinersVille, and the
late Clifford W. Barney. The
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs . Clarence Gertler,
Columbus.
Past or Dick Mayhue
performed the double ring
ce remon y.
Music was
proVided by Mrs. Ronald
Pratt, organist, and Terry
Jewell, soloi st. A se ven branch canedlabra and a
TIME CHANGED
MASON . - A change in kneeling bench were used at'
· time has been an nounced for the altar. White satin bows
the Story Hour at the Mason marked the p&lt;:ws.
Given in marriage by her
Public Li brar y. The new hour
is 1 to 2 p.m. every Wed- parents, the bride wore a
nesday. Four and five-year- "while silk knit bridal gown
old children are welcome to fashioned with lo ng slim
come. Call773-5560 to register sleeves and a draped bodice
caught at the high rise waistthem.
line with a large appliQue of

FIRST CHILD BORN POMEROY - Sp 4-c and .
Mrs . Paul L. Rowe of
Newport News , Va. are announcing the birth of their
first child, a daughter, De&lt;:.
21 at the Riverside Hospital in
Newport New,.. The infant
weighed nine pounds and six
ounces and ha s been named
Raschal Lynn. Grand'parents
are Mrs. Ada Rowe, Letart
·Falls and Gerald Sellers,
Racine. Sp. Rowe is stationed
with the U. S. Army at Fort
Eustis, Va. The · couple for. merly resided at Letart Falls.

SEMI-CLEARANCE SALE
AU WEATHER

Now '39.90
Reo . 170 N
ow '46.60

LEISURE
SUITS

SHOES

COATS
1hoFF
Reg . $60

COMPLETE STOCK
OF FALL

LARGE GROUP
MEN'S

1h OFF
Now '12.00
Reg . Sl3 .95 Nowl17.00

Reg . Sll .9!

'1.1
Reg. S40 Now
Rea . 560

COMPLETE STOCK OF MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

WINTER
JACKETS
BOYS'
MEN'S

Now 111.30
Reg. m .oo Now 113.30

Ret• 1'11 .00

Reg .

GROUP OF ·MEN'S

SPORT
COAT$

lflOFF

nuo Now '21.60

Now 136.70

, S!S.OO

Now
Reg . 170 Now

Reg . 110

'30 1L oFF"
'35 7~2

COMPLETE STOCK OF MEN'S

SPORT SHIRTS &amp;
KNIT SHIRrs--GROUp OF
YOUNG MtN'S

CASUAL
·SlACKS
~PRICE
m .oo Now '6.50
115.00 Nolv '7 ,50

lARGE GROUP
BOYS'

SWEATERS -

~PRICE

1)'3

silver . Her long full skii'l fell
in graceful folds to the floor
sweeping to the back in a
chapel length train.
I
Her fingertip veil of imported silk illusion was held
to a lace cap oqtlined in pearl
trim, and she carried a
bouquet of whi te roses,
baby's breath and greenery
from which fell white satin
streamers tied in lover 's
knots.
The bride's maid. of honor
was Miss Olivia Campbell,
her bridesmaid was Miss
Patty Hinnes, and her flower
girl was Miss Susan Gertler,
all of Columbus. The maid of
honor and the bridesmaid
wore identical gowns of light
blue jersey with royal blue
jackets of velvet. The gowns
had V necklines. The atten·dants wore silver bracelets,
gifts oi the bride. They
·carried ·nosegays of lilies of
the valley, yellow roses and
baby's breath with white
streamerS'.

The flower girl was in a
long royal blue velvet dress
with long white sleeves. She
carried a small nosegay of
flowers identical to the
bride's bouquet.
Jack Groom of Columbus
was best man, and the ushers
were Ron Gertler, WesterVille, and Niles Thompson,
Ashley.
For her daughter's wedding , Mrs. Michael wore a
pastel blue gown with a
jacket trimmed with sequins.
She wore silver slippers and
matching gloves and purse.
Mrs. Gertler was in a gown of
pastel green with a floral
jacket and had matching
. !'Ccessorles. Both mothers
wore white gardenia corsages.
· ~ A reception honoring the
couple was held at . the
Olentangy Commons Clubhouse. The bride's table
featured a three Uered cake
with yellow and blue trinn,
blue tapers and a nora!

ADDITIONAL REDUCTIONS DURING OUR

COMPLETE STOCk
MEN'S

Coming
Events

Calendar

A disc ussion of money

The meeting began with the
leag ue prayer. Sharon

11 - The Sunday Tinnea- Sentinel, SWiday, Jan. 25,1976

.

r

gave
the
Sa unders
secreta ry's report, and the
treasurer's report was by
J oan Pitchford ,

Twyman and Amy Vinson.

many members as possible
attend the Harmony Quar!erly Conference that will be
held atthe Addison Church on
· Saturday, Jan. 3,1, beginning
at 9 a.m. Seven churches will
be represented with vari ous
ministers participating in the

-----·---- -·-·- -----

_4
_ _ __

10 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel. Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976 .

Exh ibit for the month of January : Polly Trumbore of
Ashland , Ky. , Acting Director of the Ashland Area Art Gallery,
Watercolors.
Gallery hours : Saturdays and Sundays, I p.m. until5 p.m.,
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. until3 p.m., River by.
.Jan. 25 - Sundav. 2o.m.-4 o.m. - Parent-Child Workshop,
Pape( mache sculpture, Instructor Sarah Moshier. Part I of a
two month .workshop, Part II on February 29, Open to nonmembers, Rtverby .
Jan . 26-28 Monday through Wednesday' - Fairmount
Dance Theatre, Monday afternoon, Tuesday all day and
Wednesdav . mornin2. free lecture-demonstrations in the
Galhpohc City and Gallia County Schools; Tuesday evening ,
Masters Dance Class, Elks· Hall, Second Ave. , Gallipolis, 7-9
p.m._;· cost $5 per p~rson. Wednesady evening, 6 p.m. at the
. Galha Academy H1gh School Auditorium, a modern dance
concert. Patron tickets, $5; General Admission $2for adults, $1
for students and senior citizens:
•
Jan. 27, Tu""day, 6 p.m. - F.A.C. Trustees Meetmg,
Riverby .
Exhibit for the month of February : Brian Allen,
photography exhibit "People and Places," Riverby.
Feb. 9-13, Monday through Friday - Poet in the Schools
John D. Engle, Jr. "Evening of Poetry" on Thursday,'
February 12, ~p . m. at River by, The public is inVited . .

GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizens Center, located at 220
Jackson Pike in the County
Hom e Building, is open
Monday through Friday from
9a .m. to 3 p.m. The sched ule
of activities for this week is
as follows:
Monday, Jan . 26
' Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m.;·
· Chorus Practice, 1-3 p.m.;
, Adult Education , J-4 p.m.
Tu• sday, Jan. 27
Vi s itin g, 9 a.m .-3 p.m. ;
Physica l Fitness, 11 :30 a.m .
Wednesday , J an. 28 PhysiCa l Fitness, 11 :30 a. m.;
Ca rd Games, 1-3 p.m.
. Thursday, Jan . 29 Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m .;
Bir thday Party, 1:30 p.m.
Friday, Jan . 30 --' Physical
Fitness, 11 :30 a.m. ; Blood
Pressure Check, l-2 p.m.; Art
Class , l-3 p.m.; Social Hour , 7
p.m . .
The Seniors' Co-op is open
each day from 12 :30 to 1:30
p.m.
The Adult Education
classes are' conducted each
day h:om 1 to 4 p.m. 'IJld on
Tuesday fr om 10 :30 a.m. to 4
p.m.
Senior Nutri ti on Me al
which is served at 12 noon is

C.P.O.
JACKETS
lf2PRICE

lARGE GROUP
IOYS

SPORT
SHIRTS

'12 PRICE
OPIN

... TILl PM
I

Aahley.

Special '

Brunicardi Music Co.

nished and expertly staffed
home for the mentally and
physically handicapped male
ol any race, creed or color.
The home was a former
school for the children of
employees of the Atomic
plan I nearby. The Catholic
Women's Club of our Saint
Louis Catholic Church will be
furnishing the gasoline for
the RSVP van for the trips to
the Manor.
The RSVP will also be
visiting a nursing home in
February with the date yet to
be decided upon . Persons
wishing to make comfort
piUows or lap robes for the
residents of these homes
should contact the Galiia
County RSVP Coordinator,
Maye Roush , at 446-3361 or
van driver Rene Broyles at .
446-0515. The RSVP office is
lqcated on the first fiOOJ: of the
Gallia Co4nty Courthouse
and the phone nwnber there
is 446-4521.

GALLIPOLIS - On Sunday, Jan . 18, Ancien l York
Lodge No. 33 honored Marvin
P . S~wart, 108 Pine St., as
Mason of the Year with a
surprise dinner at Lodge
Hall, 721 Third Ave.
Approximaiely 40 members and friends a \tended in
hon&lt;r of Brother Stewart.
Worshipful Master Charles F .
Williams presented him a
plaque and other gifts. The
award is given annually by
the Lodge In recognition of
distinguished service per-

Monday, Tuesday &amp; Wednesday
8:30 am til 3:00 pm

..

'MPmhPr of thP. Orrlr..r and wns

the first Worthy Patron . He
has served the chapter 30
years , and is presently
serving Ancient York Lodge
No. 33. as treasurer .

OPIN 6 DA Yl A WIIK

COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS BANI'.

'1

DOWGARD
ANTI-FREEZE

5-56
LUBRICATE

$37g~.

'125

Umij 2
Heck's Reg. 14.99 gal.
Auto Dept.

BICYCLE
CHILD SEAT

.,••

HECK'S REG. •2.39
AUTO DEPT.

DAISY
B. B. GUN

WILDCAT
22 SHELLS
HECK'SREG.

'9.90

HECK'S REG. '14.99

.

'799

Ez. . . . -'1...

'17.99

'12

Heck's Reg. 17.99
Sports Dept.
1

Hee~·~·

JON·E
TWIN PACK

BOX

4 Piece
MUG SET

'639
HECK'S REG. '7.99
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

Ume &amp;Orange

KITCHEN

cookies and sandwiches.
FAIRVIEW SPRING Valley
Homemakers Club Thursday
meeting, 7:30 p.m. at· the
hmne of Mrs. Ray Bloweri,
545 Hilda Drive. FealiD'ed
speaker is Dan Davies on the
topic, "Diamonds."
YE OLDE Village Garden
Club at the home Of Mrs. Jim
Stutes Thursday at 7::10 p.m .
Bud Carter will provide the
program on ferUiizlng bulbs,
plants, trees, shrubs, law~
and house plants.

'

CLOCK

· 576

Heck's

Reg. '8.99

SALT and
PEPPER MU.L

HAND
WARMER
$344

$·1 18

SJIORIIDEPT.

Reg. 12.99

Houseware Dept.

250COUNT

•1.49
lOX

Gteot to keep ye:trs of memories in.

Heck's Reg. 1139.88
Sports Dept.

22 CAL. PEUETS
HKirS

PHOTO ALBUM

'109

CROSMAN

. RIG.

1500 88's sr

Heck's Re_g. 11.14
Sporting Goods

SPORTING GOODS

88

'1439

Heck's Reg.

Winchester Model 1200
Coleman
4 lb. SLEEPING ·SHOT GUN
BAG
88

niURSDAY
RIO GRANDE Conununily
College Intermediate cakt
decorating classes begin
11turlday, 6:15 p.m. In the
buement .of Davis. Hall . For
enrolbnent, call Belly Carpenter, 241H383.
SEW AND SO Club Thursda~ ELIZABEnl Chapel Ladies .
at the home of Mrs. John Aid will meet Thursday at U ·
O.lregnn, t p.m.
IIIJO!I. Poljuck lunch at the
.DJSTRICT 14 OES tru.lneu home Of Ml'!l . John Bane .
Thursday, 4. p.m.;
aehool of illllructlon, 7 p.m. HARRIS GRANGE Thursat the Vinton Masonic Hall, ,day, 7::10 p.m. with potluck
Vinton members bring lunch.

'

Automotive

HECK'S REG. 59•
AUTO DEPT.

BY BE1TIE CIARX

,.

8:30AM T03:30 PM 8:30AM TO 6:00PM

'479
HECK'S P'.G, '5.99

Heck's Reg. '5.99
Sports

HOUSF•.tARE DEPT.
JUMBO

NUT

SCOTT

BOWL SET .

TOWELS

3"' $129

•s••

Heck's Reg. 59' each
Houseware Dept.

HECK'S REG. '7.44
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

IMAGE
MAKEUP MIRROR

INNER
TUBES

•3••

Heck's Reg.
J4.48

'3 99

HECK'S REG. •8.12
AUTO DEPT.

JEWELRY DEPT.

meettna

MIMIIII Of ~DIC
COUIIT ITIIIIT, OALLIPOLII- IILVIII IRIDOI PLAZA
................ ..._

4

So, if the weather report is "for more of the same," you'd
better start thawing your pipes. Wrap the pipes with rags and
pour hot water over the rags and be sure the faucets are open.
Start with the faucet and work back, or pressure build-up could
ca1111e an explosion in the pipes. H you have to call a plumber,
he will probably thaw the pipes with a heat coil or torch . (But
whatever you do, don't try to thaw the pipes with a torch
yourself - you could too easily juat burn your house down ! )

THURSMY .~ND SA11JRDII Y

'1.19

GAS BOOSTER
cans
for

77e

Heck's Reg.

DUPONT

HOMEOWNER'S BEWARE--PIPES DO FREEZE!
GALLIPOLIS ...: Water pipes freeze . and burst every
... winter! If it hasn't happened to you so far this winter, maybe it
::; won't happen at all, since we've been haVing some pretty
~ ro\18h winter weather. However, if you haw had some
-.. problems with pipes freezing, or if you just want to feel more
• secure for the possibility of even colder weather, you can in·
sulate your pipes for permanent protection. You can use in' sulation taping or tubing made especially for water pipes . You
can even wrap them in layers of old newspaper, tying the ends
shut, if need he - then cover the newspapers with plastic.
Or you can wrap them in batt insulation .,... just tie the
insulation around the pipes.
Or - you can wrap your pipes with special plug-in electrical heat tapes. They are thermostatically controlled and can
be turned on only in very cold weather, or when you need them.
They work beautifully as long as the electricity isn't cut off for
long periods of lime.
For upright pipes in cellars or crawl spaces, you can circle
pipes with overlapping tarpaper tubes about six Inches in
diameter and tie tubes clo~ with a string. If your pipes are
horizontal ones, you can do this also - but it Is more difficult
because they are usually quite close to the sround.
U your pipes should greeze - open faucets wide. This
stvea expansion room to the frozen water and II may keep the
·pipes !rom freezing. If you're going to be away from home,
tum oil the water line to the houae so you don't haw a flood
when the pipes thaw.
H yoll' house has a drafty cellar .or crawl spai:e a sudden
drop In temperature could cause freezing when you're not
expecting it, If you do something to cut down on the draft you
can save a lot of problems and your house will also probably be
easier to heat. The longer the extra-cold weather lasts, the
more Ukely It ls that your frozen pipes wiU burst.

KANAUGA OFFICE
MONDAY, 11JESDAY, WEDNESDAY,
FRIDAYS

DE-ICER

Hardware Dept,

Home Ee•lllllel

Thursday and Saturday
8:30 am Ill 12 noon
fri"-~·
8:30 am til 7:00 pm

.-~LOCKI~:IR
- - -=:::;;___. .,. . -._,__./i
HOLTS LOCK SPRAY

H84Ck's Reg, '24.99

Annie Anybody

, BANKING HOURS

-.a
-::,:--P-RE_S_S
:...U_R_E~s-PR
""· ""~~y'"'·_-"--- ~j

'17 99

HARDWARE DEPT• .

OFF

Mooday, Tuesday &amp; Wednesday
9:00 8111 til 3:00 pm
•
ThuiiiiiJ &amp; Saturday
9:00 am til 12 noon
Frict.,.
9:00 am tD 3:_
00 pm - 4 pm til 7 pm

vs.

l•aturlog

SPORTSWEAR NOW

DRIVE·IN WINDOWS

ALL WINTER
CLOTHING

DRILL KIT

Homemakers'
Circle

LARGE CROUP OF LADIES

IN lANK HOURS

~

sonal con tributlon of time and
effort to Masonic ideals and
to the Lodge.
Stewart is a Past Master of
the Lodge and has been a
Mason for more than 40
years . He also was in·
strumental in getUng Lucy
Ann Chapter No. 79 O.E.S.
started. He Is a charter

-PLAZA

50%

Black &amp; Decker

of the Jrear
is Marvin Stewart

becomes ehgible for stale and
national honors.
THURSDAY
The Betty Crocker Search PHILOMATHEAN CLU B
Thursday - Beef stew'
cottage cheese on pineapple is planned to. help achieve the Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the
slice, apple cobbl er with
cheese slice.
fo llowi ng goals: enhance the home of Mrs. Peggy Evans.
Friday _ Fried perch and dignity and prestige of the
America n home , he lp
baked pota to, tossed salad, students prepare for family Fami ly
Leaders
of
hving, and emphasize the Tomorrow , the U. S. Senators
pean ut butter cake with
caramel icing .
contributions to the home from th eir states and
Bread, butter' milk and
being made by high schools members of the House of
other beverages are served and their teachers and to help Representatives from their
wi th each meal.
with their important ,work . distri cts.
The 1976 Betty Crocker AllTh e sc holars hip of th e
American Family Leader of Betty Crocker All-American
Tomorrow and thre~ aational Family Leader of Tomorruw
SQUARE DANCE SET
POMEROY - The Senior .runners-up will be named will be increa~ to . $5,000.
Citizens of Meigs County will from the sta te winners at an · Scholarships of the second-,
din ner
in third - and fourth-rankin g
sponsor a square dan ce award s
Saturday, at the Pomeroy Wa sh in gton, D. C. Thi s Family Leaders of Tomorrow
E l eme ntary S c hool , qdminates the tour , which in the nation will be raised to .
Mulberr y Ave., Pomeroy , will be held in the spring. A $4 ,000, $3,ooo and 12,000 .
from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m, Music recepti on is plan ned for the respectively.
will be provided by the String
Dusters. Callers will be Glen
Lamb~rt and Cora Hilton.
CLOSED SUNDAYS
Admission is $! and children
IN THE
under 12 will be admitted free
if they are accompanied by
SILVER BRIDGE
their parents.

NOW

PRICES EFFECJIVE SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY, JAN. 25th &amp; 26th

~ason

ANNOUNCING OUR
NEW
CUSTOMER SER. VICE

$119500 Spinet Piano

61 Court St.

Maple Drive, has been na~ed

Gallia · Academy High
Sc hoo l's 1975-1 976 Betty
Crocker Fafllily Leader of
Tomorrow . Chri sti ne won the
honor by competi ng · with
other seniors- in a 50-minute
-\Vritten knowledge and attilude examination related to
family living , December 2,
!975. She will receive a
certifi ca te fr om General
Mills. sponsor of the 22nd
ann u a I
e du ca t i on a I
sc hola rsh ip progra m, and

BY RENE BROYLES
ADDISON - Bill Menshouae, Reva Evans, Mae
Lawrence, Mabel Brown,
Myrtle . Kuhn , Lucinda
Stephens, Edna Payne and
M1na Amoa were transported
to the Veterans Administration Facility by
RSVP van driver Rene
Broyles last week.
Among the 1,200 residents
,, at the hospital are two
Spanish American War
veterans. These gentlemen
who gave a part of their life
lime to their country are
· being well provided for In this
city within a city. Every
. facUlty needed to operate this
hoapltalls located on the 125
acres that constitute the VA
FaciUty.
The RSVP (Retired Senior
Volunteer Program) is
planning to vlslt the Good
Shepherd Manor in Wakefield
in the immediate future . The
Manor is a tastefully fur:

·concerned
wlaereyggie

NOTHING OOWN • 5 YRS. TO PAY
MON. &amp; PilL

Wednesday - Creamed
chip beef with potatoes and
pea's, tossed salad, ice cream.

GALLIPOLIS - Christine
Bucci, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. Michael Bucci of 512

SUN DAY
AMJGOS of Parents Without
Partners Rolling Hills
Chapter 638 will hold a family
potluck dinner Sunday at 6
p.m. at Green Elementary
School on Rl. 141. Bring two
food dishes and beverage.
Coffee will be fur nished. For
more information , call 4462567 or 992-3219.
GALLIA COUNTY Historical
Socie ty Sunday at 2:30p.m.,
Rio Grande College cafeteria.
Mrs. Francis W. Shane to
speak on the history of the
Wels h in Galli a County .
Election of officers to be held.
.ST . . PETER 'S Episcopal
Church will hold its !35th
annual Parish meeting at 6
p.m. Sunday. lljnner will be
prepared and Ferved by the
vestry ,
TUESDAY
OPEN GATE Garden Club
will meet at the home of Mrs.
Virginia Covert, Tuesday at
7:30p.m. Mrs. Janet Byers to
be the speaker.
AMERICAN
LEGION
Auxiliary Unit No. 27 meets
Tuesday at the Legion Hall ,
7:30p.m.
RIO GRANDE Community
College adva nced cake
decorating classes begin at
6: 15 p.m. Tuesday. For
enrollment, call Betty Carpenter, 245-5363. The classes
will be held in the basement
.of Davis Hall .

We're

ONLY PARENTS. MAKE IT POSSIBLE
GROUP OF

crackers.

Miss Bucci
Betty Crocker
family leader

arrangement of blue and
white carnation . Mrs. Ronnie
Elliott· presided at the guest
register; and hostesses were
In 1972, President Nixon
Mrs. Niles Thompson, Mrs.
Glenn Simerall, Mrs. Ray sa id North Vie tnam had
Whitman, Mrs. Ron Gertler, ignored a peace bid which
Mrs. Steve Woods and Mrs. included withdrawal of all
Gary Gambill ,
U.S. forces from Vietnam in
For a wedding trip to six months.
Acapulco, Mexico, the bride
changed into a three piece
light blue suit and wore the
corsage from her bridal
bouquet.
The new Mrs. Gertler is a
gradua te of Logan High
School and attended Franklin
University. She is employed
at
Battelle
Columbus
Laboratories . Mr. Gertler
gradUB ted from Olentangy
High School, served in the U.
S. Army, and is employed at
Battelle.
The couple resides at 733
Brittingham
Co urt ,
Columbus.
Out-o f-town guests included
Mrs. Oscar Wilson , Mrs.
Donald Taylor, Miss Mary
Manday, Mrs. Jack Leffler,
Logan ; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Michael and daUghter
Kimberly, MlnersviUe; Miss
Louise Michael, MinersviUe ;
Mrs.
Roger
Leifheit,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mts. Ron
Gertler, Westerville, and Mr.
and Mrs. Niles Thompson,

Every Child Has The Right
To AMusical EducatDI

Off

as follows:
- ' Baked
Monday
spaghetti, lemon gela tin
salad , banana slices in
orange juice, cookies.
Tuesday - Pork chops,
candied swee t potatoes ,
mixed fr uit salad, chocolate
pudding
with
gra ham

CHRISTINE BUCCI

RSVP travels
to Chillicothe

____ _

-,

'

••

•

'

·-

'

J

�• •

13 attend meeting·
of mothers club
GALLIPOLIS - Thirteen
members attended the Jan .
15 meeting of the Cradle To
College Mothers Club held at
the home of JoAnn Pitchford
with co-hostess Carol Smith .
Roll call was "Favorite
Nursery Rhyme. " Present
were Renae Bickers, Unda
Dee!, Kay Erwin , Mary
Lookado, Ruth Fuller, Betty
Hollin gs head , Sandra McFarland , J oa n Pitchfo rd ,
Sharon Sau ncters, Ca rol
Smith, Jean Smi th , Joyce

...

raising projects was held and
the Valentine pizza party at
the home of Sharon Saunders,
Feb. l4at6p.m. was planned.
Renae Bickers was in charge
of closing the meeting .
Tray favors for January
were made by Mary Lookado
and Jean Smith . They were
tak en to Holzer Medical
Center fo r the pediatrics
ward.

-~ ~~· ~ . - ~

. ~~·
- ,a .• . ' ·

, . ...- .

~ ·&lt;

•

Meeting dates given
BY RENE BROYLES
ADDISON - The Ladies
Aid of the Addison Free Will
Baptist Church will convene
Wednesday at 7: 30p,m. at the
church. All members are
reques ted to atte nd .
The church will hold its
reg ular monthly busi ness
meeting on Th ursday at 7:30
p.m. The pastor, Rev. Walter

luncheon will be served by
the ladies of the church.

Patters·on , requests that as

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. John
L. Butler, aca demic dean at
Georgetown College at
Georgetown, Ky. has announ ced that Helen Lanier,
2ll Jackson Pk ., Gallipolis,
has been named to the 4.0
Honor Roll and the Dean 's
List for the first term at
Georgetown .
To be eligible for the 4.0
Honor RolL a student must
earn an A in each class taken
during the first term. The
Dean 's Ust is composed of
juniors and seniors who have
a grade point index of 3.5 for
the sophomore year or for
any two success iv~ terms
above the sophomore level.

preac hi~g

.s ervices . A noon

ENGAGING
RINGS
For Your
Altar Ego

Columbia

Columbia diamonds fro m $150.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
" House of Diamonds
and Fine Gifts"
422 Second Ave .
Gallipolis, Ohio

College
News

I

Mrs. Robert C. Gertler

Gertler-Barney
exchange vows

WORTHINGTON - Miss•
Pa tsy Lou Barney, Columbu~, and Robert Clarence
Gertler, also of Colwnbus,
were married at the Grace
Brethren Clmrch in Worthington on Nov. 29 at 2:30 p·.m.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. W. S. Michael,
Rt. 1, MinersVille, and the
late Clifford W. Barney. The
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs . Clarence Gertler,
Columbus.
Past or Dick Mayhue
performed the double ring
ce remon y.
Music was
proVided by Mrs. Ronald
Pratt, organist, and Terry
Jewell, soloi st. A se ven branch canedlabra and a
TIME CHANGED
MASON . - A change in kneeling bench were used at'
· time has been an nounced for the altar. White satin bows
the Story Hour at the Mason marked the p&lt;:ws.
Given in marriage by her
Public Li brar y. The new hour
is 1 to 2 p.m. every Wed- parents, the bride wore a
nesday. Four and five-year- "while silk knit bridal gown
old children are welcome to fashioned with lo ng slim
come. Call773-5560 to register sleeves and a draped bodice
caught at the high rise waistthem.
line with a large appliQue of

FIRST CHILD BORN POMEROY - Sp 4-c and .
Mrs . Paul L. Rowe of
Newport News , Va. are announcing the birth of their
first child, a daughter, De&lt;:.
21 at the Riverside Hospital in
Newport New,.. The infant
weighed nine pounds and six
ounces and ha s been named
Raschal Lynn. Grand'parents
are Mrs. Ada Rowe, Letart
·Falls and Gerald Sellers,
Racine. Sp. Rowe is stationed
with the U. S. Army at Fort
Eustis, Va. The · couple for. merly resided at Letart Falls.

SEMI-CLEARANCE SALE
AU WEATHER

Now '39.90
Reo . 170 N
ow '46.60

LEISURE
SUITS

SHOES

COATS
1hoFF
Reg . $60

COMPLETE STOCK
OF FALL

LARGE GROUP
MEN'S

1h OFF
Now '12.00
Reg . Sl3 .95 Nowl17.00

Reg . Sll .9!

'1.1
Reg. S40 Now
Rea . 560

COMPLETE STOCK OF MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

WINTER
JACKETS
BOYS'
MEN'S

Now 111.30
Reg. m .oo Now 113.30

Ret• 1'11 .00

Reg .

GROUP OF ·MEN'S

SPORT
COAT$

lflOFF

nuo Now '21.60

Now 136.70

, S!S.OO

Now
Reg . 170 Now

Reg . 110

'30 1L oFF"
'35 7~2

COMPLETE STOCK OF MEN'S

SPORT SHIRTS &amp;
KNIT SHIRrs--GROUp OF
YOUNG MtN'S

CASUAL
·SlACKS
~PRICE
m .oo Now '6.50
115.00 Nolv '7 ,50

lARGE GROUP
BOYS'

SWEATERS -

~PRICE

1)'3

silver . Her long full skii'l fell
in graceful folds to the floor
sweeping to the back in a
chapel length train.
I
Her fingertip veil of imported silk illusion was held
to a lace cap oqtlined in pearl
trim, and she carried a
bouquet of whi te roses,
baby's breath and greenery
from which fell white satin
streamers tied in lover 's
knots.
The bride's maid. of honor
was Miss Olivia Campbell,
her bridesmaid was Miss
Patty Hinnes, and her flower
girl was Miss Susan Gertler,
all of Columbus. The maid of
honor and the bridesmaid
wore identical gowns of light
blue jersey with royal blue
jackets of velvet. The gowns
had V necklines. The atten·dants wore silver bracelets,
gifts oi the bride. They
·carried ·nosegays of lilies of
the valley, yellow roses and
baby's breath with white
streamerS'.

The flower girl was in a
long royal blue velvet dress
with long white sleeves. She
carried a small nosegay of
flowers identical to the
bride's bouquet.
Jack Groom of Columbus
was best man, and the ushers
were Ron Gertler, WesterVille, and Niles Thompson,
Ashley.
For her daughter's wedding , Mrs. Michael wore a
pastel blue gown with a
jacket trimmed with sequins.
She wore silver slippers and
matching gloves and purse.
Mrs. Gertler was in a gown of
pastel green with a floral
jacket and had matching
. !'Ccessorles. Both mothers
wore white gardenia corsages.
· ~ A reception honoring the
couple was held at . the
Olentangy Commons Clubhouse. The bride's table
featured a three Uered cake
with yellow and blue trinn,
blue tapers and a nora!

ADDITIONAL REDUCTIONS DURING OUR

COMPLETE STOCk
MEN'S

Coming
Events

Calendar

A disc ussion of money

The meeting began with the
leag ue prayer. Sharon

11 - The Sunday Tinnea- Sentinel, SWiday, Jan. 25,1976

.

r

gave
the
Sa unders
secreta ry's report, and the
treasurer's report was by
J oan Pitchford ,

Twyman and Amy Vinson.

many members as possible
attend the Harmony Quar!erly Conference that will be
held atthe Addison Church on
· Saturday, Jan. 3,1, beginning
at 9 a.m. Seven churches will
be represented with vari ous
ministers participating in the

-----·---- -·-·- -----

_4
_ _ __

10 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel. Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976 .

Exh ibit for the month of January : Polly Trumbore of
Ashland , Ky. , Acting Director of the Ashland Area Art Gallery,
Watercolors.
Gallery hours : Saturdays and Sundays, I p.m. until5 p.m.,
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. until3 p.m., River by.
.Jan. 25 - Sundav. 2o.m.-4 o.m. - Parent-Child Workshop,
Pape( mache sculpture, Instructor Sarah Moshier. Part I of a
two month .workshop, Part II on February 29, Open to nonmembers, Rtverby .
Jan . 26-28 Monday through Wednesday' - Fairmount
Dance Theatre, Monday afternoon, Tuesday all day and
Wednesdav . mornin2. free lecture-demonstrations in the
Galhpohc City and Gallia County Schools; Tuesday evening ,
Masters Dance Class, Elks· Hall, Second Ave. , Gallipolis, 7-9
p.m._;· cost $5 per p~rson. Wednesady evening, 6 p.m. at the
. Galha Academy H1gh School Auditorium, a modern dance
concert. Patron tickets, $5; General Admission $2for adults, $1
for students and senior citizens:
•
Jan. 27, Tu""day, 6 p.m. - F.A.C. Trustees Meetmg,
Riverby .
Exhibit for the month of February : Brian Allen,
photography exhibit "People and Places," Riverby.
Feb. 9-13, Monday through Friday - Poet in the Schools
John D. Engle, Jr. "Evening of Poetry" on Thursday,'
February 12, ~p . m. at River by, The public is inVited . .

GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizens Center, located at 220
Jackson Pike in the County
Hom e Building, is open
Monday through Friday from
9a .m. to 3 p.m. The sched ule
of activities for this week is
as follows:
Monday, Jan . 26
' Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m.;·
· Chorus Practice, 1-3 p.m.;
, Adult Education , J-4 p.m.
Tu• sday, Jan. 27
Vi s itin g, 9 a.m .-3 p.m. ;
Physica l Fitness, 11 :30 a.m .
Wednesday , J an. 28 PhysiCa l Fitness, 11 :30 a. m.;
Ca rd Games, 1-3 p.m.
. Thursday, Jan . 29 Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m .;
Bir thday Party, 1:30 p.m.
Friday, Jan . 30 --' Physical
Fitness, 11 :30 a.m. ; Blood
Pressure Check, l-2 p.m.; Art
Class , l-3 p.m.; Social Hour , 7
p.m . .
The Seniors' Co-op is open
each day from 12 :30 to 1:30
p.m.
The Adult Education
classes are' conducted each
day h:om 1 to 4 p.m. 'IJld on
Tuesday fr om 10 :30 a.m. to 4
p.m.
Senior Nutri ti on Me al
which is served at 12 noon is

C.P.O.
JACKETS
lf2PRICE

lARGE GROUP
IOYS

SPORT
SHIRTS

'12 PRICE
OPIN

... TILl PM
I

Aahley.

Special '

Brunicardi Music Co.

nished and expertly staffed
home for the mentally and
physically handicapped male
ol any race, creed or color.
The home was a former
school for the children of
employees of the Atomic
plan I nearby. The Catholic
Women's Club of our Saint
Louis Catholic Church will be
furnishing the gasoline for
the RSVP van for the trips to
the Manor.
The RSVP will also be
visiting a nursing home in
February with the date yet to
be decided upon . Persons
wishing to make comfort
piUows or lap robes for the
residents of these homes
should contact the Galiia
County RSVP Coordinator,
Maye Roush , at 446-3361 or
van driver Rene Broyles at .
446-0515. The RSVP office is
lqcated on the first fiOOJ: of the
Gallia Co4nty Courthouse
and the phone nwnber there
is 446-4521.

GALLIPOLIS - On Sunday, Jan . 18, Ancien l York
Lodge No. 33 honored Marvin
P . S~wart, 108 Pine St., as
Mason of the Year with a
surprise dinner at Lodge
Hall, 721 Third Ave.
Approximaiely 40 members and friends a \tended in
hon&lt;r of Brother Stewart.
Worshipful Master Charles F .
Williams presented him a
plaque and other gifts. The
award is given annually by
the Lodge In recognition of
distinguished service per-

Monday, Tuesday &amp; Wednesday
8:30 am til 3:00 pm

..

'MPmhPr of thP. Orrlr..r and wns

the first Worthy Patron . He
has served the chapter 30
years , and is presently
serving Ancient York Lodge
No. 33. as treasurer .

OPIN 6 DA Yl A WIIK

COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS BANI'.

'1

DOWGARD
ANTI-FREEZE

5-56
LUBRICATE

$37g~.

'125

Umij 2
Heck's Reg. 14.99 gal.
Auto Dept.

BICYCLE
CHILD SEAT

.,••

HECK'S REG. •2.39
AUTO DEPT.

DAISY
B. B. GUN

WILDCAT
22 SHELLS
HECK'SREG.

'9.90

HECK'S REG. '14.99

.

'799

Ez. . . . -'1...

'17.99

'12

Heck's Reg. 17.99
Sports Dept.
1

Hee~·~·

JON·E
TWIN PACK

BOX

4 Piece
MUG SET

'639
HECK'S REG. '7.99
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

Ume &amp;Orange

KITCHEN

cookies and sandwiches.
FAIRVIEW SPRING Valley
Homemakers Club Thursday
meeting, 7:30 p.m. at· the
hmne of Mrs. Ray Bloweri,
545 Hilda Drive. FealiD'ed
speaker is Dan Davies on the
topic, "Diamonds."
YE OLDE Village Garden
Club at the home Of Mrs. Jim
Stutes Thursday at 7::10 p.m .
Bud Carter will provide the
program on ferUiizlng bulbs,
plants, trees, shrubs, law~
and house plants.

'

CLOCK

· 576

Heck's

Reg. '8.99

SALT and
PEPPER MU.L

HAND
WARMER
$344

$·1 18

SJIORIIDEPT.

Reg. 12.99

Houseware Dept.

250COUNT

•1.49
lOX

Gteot to keep ye:trs of memories in.

Heck's Reg. 1139.88
Sports Dept.

22 CAL. PEUETS
HKirS

PHOTO ALBUM

'109

CROSMAN

. RIG.

1500 88's sr

Heck's Re_g. 11.14
Sporting Goods

SPORTING GOODS

88

'1439

Heck's Reg.

Winchester Model 1200
Coleman
4 lb. SLEEPING ·SHOT GUN
BAG
88

niURSDAY
RIO GRANDE Conununily
College Intermediate cakt
decorating classes begin
11turlday, 6:15 p.m. In the
buement .of Davis. Hall . For
enrolbnent, call Belly Carpenter, 241H383.
SEW AND SO Club Thursda~ ELIZABEnl Chapel Ladies .
at the home of Mrs. John Aid will meet Thursday at U ·
O.lregnn, t p.m.
IIIJO!I. Poljuck lunch at the
.DJSTRICT 14 OES tru.lneu home Of Ml'!l . John Bane .
Thursday, 4. p.m.;
aehool of illllructlon, 7 p.m. HARRIS GRANGE Thursat the Vinton Masonic Hall, ,day, 7::10 p.m. with potluck
Vinton members bring lunch.

'

Automotive

HECK'S REG. 59•
AUTO DEPT.

BY BE1TIE CIARX

,.

8:30AM T03:30 PM 8:30AM TO 6:00PM

'479
HECK'S P'.G, '5.99

Heck's Reg. '5.99
Sports

HOUSF•.tARE DEPT.
JUMBO

NUT

SCOTT

BOWL SET .

TOWELS

3"' $129

•s••

Heck's Reg. 59' each
Houseware Dept.

HECK'S REG. '7.44
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

IMAGE
MAKEUP MIRROR

INNER
TUBES

•3••

Heck's Reg.
J4.48

'3 99

HECK'S REG. •8.12
AUTO DEPT.

JEWELRY DEPT.

meettna

MIMIIII Of ~DIC
COUIIT ITIIIIT, OALLIPOLII- IILVIII IRIDOI PLAZA
................ ..._

4

So, if the weather report is "for more of the same," you'd
better start thawing your pipes. Wrap the pipes with rags and
pour hot water over the rags and be sure the faucets are open.
Start with the faucet and work back, or pressure build-up could
ca1111e an explosion in the pipes. H you have to call a plumber,
he will probably thaw the pipes with a heat coil or torch . (But
whatever you do, don't try to thaw the pipes with a torch
yourself - you could too easily juat burn your house down ! )

THURSMY .~ND SA11JRDII Y

'1.19

GAS BOOSTER
cans
for

77e

Heck's Reg.

DUPONT

HOMEOWNER'S BEWARE--PIPES DO FREEZE!
GALLIPOLIS ...: Water pipes freeze . and burst every
... winter! If it hasn't happened to you so far this winter, maybe it
::; won't happen at all, since we've been haVing some pretty
~ ro\18h winter weather. However, if you haw had some
-.. problems with pipes freezing, or if you just want to feel more
• secure for the possibility of even colder weather, you can in·
sulate your pipes for permanent protection. You can use in' sulation taping or tubing made especially for water pipes . You
can even wrap them in layers of old newspaper, tying the ends
shut, if need he - then cover the newspapers with plastic.
Or you can wrap them in batt insulation .,... just tie the
insulation around the pipes.
Or - you can wrap your pipes with special plug-in electrical heat tapes. They are thermostatically controlled and can
be turned on only in very cold weather, or when you need them.
They work beautifully as long as the electricity isn't cut off for
long periods of lime.
For upright pipes in cellars or crawl spaces, you can circle
pipes with overlapping tarpaper tubes about six Inches in
diameter and tie tubes clo~ with a string. If your pipes are
horizontal ones, you can do this also - but it Is more difficult
because they are usually quite close to the sround.
U your pipes should greeze - open faucets wide. This
stvea expansion room to the frozen water and II may keep the
·pipes !rom freezing. If you're going to be away from home,
tum oil the water line to the houae so you don't haw a flood
when the pipes thaw.
H yoll' house has a drafty cellar .or crawl spai:e a sudden
drop In temperature could cause freezing when you're not
expecting it, If you do something to cut down on the draft you
can save a lot of problems and your house will also probably be
easier to heat. The longer the extra-cold weather lasts, the
more Ukely It ls that your frozen pipes wiU burst.

KANAUGA OFFICE
MONDAY, 11JESDAY, WEDNESDAY,
FRIDAYS

DE-ICER

Hardware Dept,

Home Ee•lllllel

Thursday and Saturday
8:30 am Ill 12 noon
fri"-~·
8:30 am til 7:00 pm

.-~LOCKI~:IR
- - -=:::;;___. .,. . -._,__./i
HOLTS LOCK SPRAY

H84Ck's Reg, '24.99

Annie Anybody

, BANKING HOURS

-.a
-::,:--P-RE_S_S
:...U_R_E~s-PR
""· ""~~y'"'·_-"--- ~j

'17 99

HARDWARE DEPT• .

OFF

Mooday, Tuesday &amp; Wednesday
9:00 8111 til 3:00 pm
•
ThuiiiiiJ &amp; Saturday
9:00 am til 12 noon
Frict.,.
9:00 am tD 3:_
00 pm - 4 pm til 7 pm

vs.

l•aturlog

SPORTSWEAR NOW

DRIVE·IN WINDOWS

ALL WINTER
CLOTHING

DRILL KIT

Homemakers'
Circle

LARGE CROUP OF LADIES

IN lANK HOURS

~

sonal con tributlon of time and
effort to Masonic ideals and
to the Lodge.
Stewart is a Past Master of
the Lodge and has been a
Mason for more than 40
years . He also was in·
strumental in getUng Lucy
Ann Chapter No. 79 O.E.S.
started. He Is a charter

-PLAZA

50%

Black &amp; Decker

of the Jrear
is Marvin Stewart

becomes ehgible for stale and
national honors.
THURSDAY
The Betty Crocker Search PHILOMATHEAN CLU B
Thursday - Beef stew'
cottage cheese on pineapple is planned to. help achieve the Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the
slice, apple cobbl er with
cheese slice.
fo llowi ng goals: enhance the home of Mrs. Peggy Evans.
Friday _ Fried perch and dignity and prestige of the
America n home , he lp
baked pota to, tossed salad, students prepare for family Fami ly
Leaders
of
hving, and emphasize the Tomorrow , the U. S. Senators
pean ut butter cake with
caramel icing .
contributions to the home from th eir states and
Bread, butter' milk and
being made by high schools members of the House of
other beverages are served and their teachers and to help Representatives from their
wi th each meal.
with their important ,work . distri cts.
The 1976 Betty Crocker AllTh e sc holars hip of th e
American Family Leader of Betty Crocker All-American
Tomorrow and thre~ aational Family Leader of Tomorruw
SQUARE DANCE SET
POMEROY - The Senior .runners-up will be named will be increa~ to . $5,000.
Citizens of Meigs County will from the sta te winners at an · Scholarships of the second-,
din ner
in third - and fourth-rankin g
sponsor a square dan ce award s
Saturday, at the Pomeroy Wa sh in gton, D. C. Thi s Family Leaders of Tomorrow
E l eme ntary S c hool , qdminates the tour , which in the nation will be raised to .
Mulberr y Ave., Pomeroy , will be held in the spring. A $4 ,000, $3,ooo and 12,000 .
from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m, Music recepti on is plan ned for the respectively.
will be provided by the String
Dusters. Callers will be Glen
Lamb~rt and Cora Hilton.
CLOSED SUNDAYS
Admission is $! and children
IN THE
under 12 will be admitted free
if they are accompanied by
SILVER BRIDGE
their parents.

NOW

PRICES EFFECJIVE SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY, JAN. 25th &amp; 26th

~ason

ANNOUNCING OUR
NEW
CUSTOMER SER. VICE

$119500 Spinet Piano

61 Court St.

Maple Drive, has been na~ed

Gallia · Academy High
Sc hoo l's 1975-1 976 Betty
Crocker Fafllily Leader of
Tomorrow . Chri sti ne won the
honor by competi ng · with
other seniors- in a 50-minute
-\Vritten knowledge and attilude examination related to
family living , December 2,
!975. She will receive a
certifi ca te fr om General
Mills. sponsor of the 22nd
ann u a I
e du ca t i on a I
sc hola rsh ip progra m, and

BY RENE BROYLES
ADDISON - Bill Menshouae, Reva Evans, Mae
Lawrence, Mabel Brown,
Myrtle . Kuhn , Lucinda
Stephens, Edna Payne and
M1na Amoa were transported
to the Veterans Administration Facility by
RSVP van driver Rene
Broyles last week.
Among the 1,200 residents
,, at the hospital are two
Spanish American War
veterans. These gentlemen
who gave a part of their life
lime to their country are
· being well provided for In this
city within a city. Every
. facUlty needed to operate this
hoapltalls located on the 125
acres that constitute the VA
FaciUty.
The RSVP (Retired Senior
Volunteer Program) is
planning to vlslt the Good
Shepherd Manor in Wakefield
in the immediate future . The
Manor is a tastefully fur:

·concerned
wlaereyggie

NOTHING OOWN • 5 YRS. TO PAY
MON. &amp; PilL

Wednesday - Creamed
chip beef with potatoes and
pea's, tossed salad, ice cream.

GALLIPOLIS - Christine
Bucci, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. Michael Bucci of 512

SUN DAY
AMJGOS of Parents Without
Partners Rolling Hills
Chapter 638 will hold a family
potluck dinner Sunday at 6
p.m. at Green Elementary
School on Rl. 141. Bring two
food dishes and beverage.
Coffee will be fur nished. For
more information , call 4462567 or 992-3219.
GALLIA COUNTY Historical
Socie ty Sunday at 2:30p.m.,
Rio Grande College cafeteria.
Mrs. Francis W. Shane to
speak on the history of the
Wels h in Galli a County .
Election of officers to be held.
.ST . . PETER 'S Episcopal
Church will hold its !35th
annual Parish meeting at 6
p.m. Sunday. lljnner will be
prepared and Ferved by the
vestry ,
TUESDAY
OPEN GATE Garden Club
will meet at the home of Mrs.
Virginia Covert, Tuesday at
7:30p.m. Mrs. Janet Byers to
be the speaker.
AMERICAN
LEGION
Auxiliary Unit No. 27 meets
Tuesday at the Legion Hall ,
7:30p.m.
RIO GRANDE Community
College adva nced cake
decorating classes begin at
6: 15 p.m. Tuesday. For
enrollment, call Betty Carpenter, 245-5363. The classes
will be held in the basement
.of Davis Hall .

We're

ONLY PARENTS. MAKE IT POSSIBLE
GROUP OF

crackers.

Miss Bucci
Betty Crocker
family leader

arrangement of blue and
white carnation . Mrs. Ronnie
Elliott· presided at the guest
register; and hostesses were
In 1972, President Nixon
Mrs. Niles Thompson, Mrs.
Glenn Simerall, Mrs. Ray sa id North Vie tnam had
Whitman, Mrs. Ron Gertler, ignored a peace bid which
Mrs. Steve Woods and Mrs. included withdrawal of all
Gary Gambill ,
U.S. forces from Vietnam in
For a wedding trip to six months.
Acapulco, Mexico, the bride
changed into a three piece
light blue suit and wore the
corsage from her bridal
bouquet.
The new Mrs. Gertler is a
gradua te of Logan High
School and attended Franklin
University. She is employed
at
Battelle
Columbus
Laboratories . Mr. Gertler
gradUB ted from Olentangy
High School, served in the U.
S. Army, and is employed at
Battelle.
The couple resides at 733
Brittingham
Co urt ,
Columbus.
Out-o f-town guests included
Mrs. Oscar Wilson , Mrs.
Donald Taylor, Miss Mary
Manday, Mrs. Jack Leffler,
Logan ; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Michael and daUghter
Kimberly, MlnersviUe; Miss
Louise Michael, MinersviUe ;
Mrs.
Roger
Leifheit,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mts. Ron
Gertler, Westerville, and Mr.
and Mrs. Niles Thompson,

Every Child Has The Right
To AMusical EducatDI

Off

as follows:
- ' Baked
Monday
spaghetti, lemon gela tin
salad , banana slices in
orange juice, cookies.
Tuesday - Pork chops,
candied swee t potatoes ,
mixed fr uit salad, chocolate
pudding
with
gra ham

CHRISTINE BUCCI

RSVP travels
to Chillicothe

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�12 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel. Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976
13,- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWlday, Jan . 25, 1976

Lew Ayres ' life
•

POMEROY - Beginning ~'riday and continuing through
Feb. 8 Girls Scouts will be knocking at your door asking for
orders for Girl Scout Cookies.
The cookies come in five varieties, and .it 's an ''order now,
pay later" situation. Delivery won't be made until the week of
April 1.
Now about the cost. Each box is $1.25, but of that amount 78
cents actually goes in scout funds. The Littl_e Brownie Bakers
- and they advise that every precaution will be taken to insure
the utmost in freshness and quality - charges only 51 cents a
box.
By buying girl scout cookies, residents are actually contributing to a program which has as its ultimate objective that
of teachine eirls t.o hP.f'nmP splf-rPlii:lnf rnni"PrnPrl ::~nd com.
mitted women of lomorrow ,
So buy some cookies!
ADOALOU LEWIS believes in getting a good early start.

So these snowv cold davs. she 's workin~ on her part of the

Meigs County Fair program.
Again this year Addalou will have charge of the domestic
arts department and since this is the bicentennial year, she's
boping to make it not only bigger with more exhibits, but better
through additional classes.
And that's where you come in .
Addalou would like suggestions as to ways in which the
department can I)\! enlarged or improved. She is hopeful of
completing the schedule by about March 1. Just call her if you
have any thoughts.

RUTHLESS MUNEBRAGA cunningly forces Carlos to betray Fray Cristobal before the
Tribunal Hall in the Unusual Films ' producton, " Flame in the Wind ." The film will be
shown at the First Baptist Church audiioriwn on Saturday, Jan. 31 at 6:30p.m.

Film to be seen Saturday
GALLIPOLIS -

The Bob

Jones University two-hour,
full-color rilm production
"Flame in the Wind" will be
shown on Saturday, Jan. 31 at
6:30p.m. in the First Baptist
Church auditoriiun here .
Unfolded in a Spanish
setting overshadowed by
Inquisition cruelty, this
Christian film dramatizes the
story of Carlos, a student in
his ear ly twen ties, who
desperately searches for
truth amid tile confusion of
his times.
Bishop Gaspar Munebraga, .
Inquisitor General , is por. !rayed by Bob Jones. Fernando , a peddler who
smuggles the Scriptures to
the Spanish people, is played
by Bob Jones, III. Both a re
historical characters welldocwnented in accotints of
tl!e Spanish Inquisition .
Richard Rupp takes the
_part of Mendez, an Inquisitor

Lodge ekcts ·
new officers
GALLIPOLIS - Officers
were elected recently at the
. regular stated meeting of
Ancient York Lodge No. 33.
Elected
were
W.M .•
Charles F. Williams; s.W .,
Calvin Minnis; J.W., Risden
Miller; S.D., David Evans;
J .D.,
Floyd
Burney;
secretary, William Jamison ;
president, Marvin Stewart;
SS, Cecil Vinson; J .S., Carl
Qualls , Tyler Joe Lewi s ,
chaplain, Anglo Hickman .

.
r

·w.·· .,_,.,._,,.•.,.•.•_.•, .•.•._,,",mm,.,.. ,.

. -·~·:-=•:•:O:•.•:-:.:.-.-:.:.:•:•:o;.•:•x•:o:-:.:.:-:•.•.-.~

Sr. Citizens !t;:;:;
Calendar _ i.....

torn by divergent loyalties, the heart of the Gospel."
and Edward Panosian ap" It is fantastic! The acting
pears in the role of Fray is wonderful and the
Cristnbal, a Jeromite monk pho tography beautiful. The
who faithfully teaches the story is so realistic and
Scriptures. Other faculty and forceful ."
staff members act in sup"Undoubtedly one of the
porting roles . One thousand most stirring and touching
extras who take part in the films I have ever seen."
largest scene are faculty,
" ... music is excellent ...
staff and students of Bob color is strong and imJones University.
pressive."
Two years of research,
''Flame in the Wind" is a
writing and pre-production facul ty • student production .
Stenholm,
planning by Unusual Films, Katherine
the motion-picture Wlit of the director, is the chairman of
University, went into " Flame the division of cinema in the
in the Wind." Another two school of fine arts . The
years were expended in the cinema faculty is the
technical aspects of scene professional staff. Students
building , lighting, filming, working toward degrees in
musical scoring, recording cinema are the crew.
and editing to bring to the
Bob Jones University offers
screen not only a gripping the bachelor of science,
narrative, but also the rugged master of arts and master of
bea uty of actual Spanish fine arts degrees in oinfma.
scenery and ttJe grandeur of Unusual Films serves as a
an era long past.
labor atory for studen ts
The moving musical score , working
toward
these
composed
by
Dwight degrees. Professional
Gustafson, dean of the school training is offered in all types
of fine arts; was performed of motion-picture production
by the 55-piece Bob Jones and still photography.
University Orchestni under
Productions of Unusual
his direction. A recording of Films, among them " Wine of
the original score has been Morning" and " Red Runs the
produced
by
Unusual River," have represented the
Records.
United States at international
Reaction to " Flame in th~ film festivals and have won
Wind " has included 'these accolades for excellence in
statements:
every major area
of
" It cuts across . the con- ~· presentation .
fusi On of a ~ragic ~ra to hare

AND JUST HEARD that Karen Griffith is back full-time
working on her masters at Ohio State. Karen for some time has
been working part-time at O.S.U. Veterinarian Hospital and
going to school Jlllrt-time.

Vinton
BY MI\RlE ALEXANDER
Mrs. Paut'Dillon, Beckley,
W. Va : came Tuesday to be
with her mother-in-law, Mrs.
Effie Dillon who is ill at her
home here.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Justus

and family, Lancaster, spent
the weekend here with her
mother, Mrs . Elizabeth
Cloud .
Carl Harder is a patient in
Holzer Medical Center.
Kenneth
DeVore,
Columbus, spent the weekend
her&lt; with his sister and
husband , Mr . and Mrs. Bill

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THE MAJOR YOUNG TRIO of Chillicothe will be the special singen when the Fairview ,
.. -..J

Church of Christ in Christian Union observes National Youth Week with a revival (weather,.,
permitting) Jan. 26-31. The Rev. Donovan Blankenship will be the evangelist. He is the son ..
of Rev. Grover Blankenship, South Central District Superintendent of the Church of Christ ,
in Christian Union. He also pastor's a church in Ironton. The pastor, Dorothy Whittington, .
and congregation invites the public to these services which will begin at 7:30 p. m. Follow
Rt. 160 through Ewington, turn left on Alice Road and follow to church.
·-Daft.
Mrs. Clara Townsend,
Riverside, Calif., who came
here to see her mother, Mrs .'
Lyle Moriarity, a patient in
Holzer Medical Center,
returned to her home Sunday.
Her brother, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard
Higgins
and
daughter, Mrs. Sheila Evans,
all of Columbus , also visited
Mrs . Moriarity in the hospital
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Hartsook
and
family ,
Columbus, were weekend
guests Of Mrs. Lucy Hart.
sook.
Mr . and Mrs . David Birch,
Aurora, N.Y. were overnight
guests of her mother, Mrs .
Alice Casto, Saturd"y .
Jim Rece and son, Doug,
Gallipolis and Mrs . Kathryn
Rece , local, . spe nt the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Okey Myers , Delaware, 0.

Mr. and Mrs. George
Johnson, Gallipolis, visited
her mother, Mrs. Cora
McGhee, Sunday .
Judy Oiler spent the past
week with her aunt, Mrs.
Sally Oiler.
Mr . and Mrs. W. H. Dyer
and sons, Columbus, spent
the weekend here with his
parents , Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Dyer.
Mrs . Marianne Fitch, son,
Donnie. arrived home Sunday
from" spendi ng the holidays in
Germany with relatives.
They olso visited their
daughter and sister, Mr. and
Mrs . Doyle Crilow and family
or Shipshewana, Ind., before
returning home.
Beecher Davis is a patient
mHolzer Medical Center. Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Davis,
Carlisle, Pa., came Monday
to see him and be with his
mother, while father is

hospitalized .
,.•
Mrs. Lyle Moriarity
the misfortune to Iall on the
ice Monday and · broke her
hip. She is a patient in Holzl!r
Medical Center, Room N'o.
507.

"mm

JANUARY
CLEARANCE

SAVE

25%
to

50%
on
JEWELRY

~

~'~

811d

has

GIFTS

Spring Fashions
---EtC.

(

...

.... .

.......

Gallipolis, Ohio

.... .

•

Buckeye Building &amp; Loan Company

recreated in production

of Gallipolis , Ohio at the Close ol Busioess December 31, J$75.

SIX 'l'Ol&gt;S on each paw are what makes this kitten
belonging to Cherri Wright of Rt. 3, Gallipolis unique. The
kitten, who has been named "Ki tty Eve," was given to
Cherri as a Christmas gift. Cherri, the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Wright, is a fifth grader at Green
Elementary.

ASSETS
'1ortgage Loans • • • • - • • • - • • • • . . . - . - . $7,620,401
Rea• ' "state Sold on Contract - •••• - - ·. - - • - - • • • . • • - .• 8 259
u.s. Government Obli~ations - • • . • • - . . .' • . ; 7oo:ooo
Cash on Hand and in Banks • • • - • . . . • • • • . . . • .
• Btl 276
Office Building rless Depr.) - - • - . • • - . • . . • • . . . • 80:294
Furmture, FIXtures &amp; Equipment (Jess depr. )
• • • . . • • • 3 309
Other Assets - • - - • - - . . . • • .
• 154 ,623
TOTAL ASSETS - - - •
• • - - - . • - . • . • ·• $8,655:162

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CAPITAI.. AND LIABILITIES
Withdrawable Shares - · • • - · - - - - - • - - - •
. - $-1,220,294
Deposits - - - - - • • • • • • • • . . . . . . • •
- 3,864,180
Loans in Process · - - - - - - - - - - - - - .. - - - • • - 149,952
· Advance Payments by Borrowers
for Taxes and Insurance - - - - - - - • - - - - • - 1811
Accrued Taxes - - - . - - - · - - - • -- - - - · - .
727
Other Liabilities · · - - • - • • - - • • - • · · - - - .727
Statutory Reserve • • • - - - • · • - • - - - • • • • •
92,495
BadDebtReserve - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - . - - - • • 202,104
·•
Undivided Prolits • - - - · • • · - •
• 124,495
TOTAL CAPITAL &amp; LIABTLITIES • • • - - · · · - - - - $8,655,162

I ADVANCED a.EANING SERVICE
FORFRIENDLYFREEESTIMATES

Call 675-5572 After; 4 P.M. '

!-------------------.- -· _____ J

STATE OF OHIO, Gallia County ss :
Dean H. Davis being duly sworn, deposes and says that he is the Managill8
Officer of the Buckeye Building &amp; Loan Company of Gallipolis, Ohio and that to
the best of his knowledge and belief the foregoing iB a true statement and
correctly shows the financial condition of said institution at the close of business
December 31, 1975.

ale -

neau '

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GROUP OF WOMEN'S
DRESS &amp; CASUAL

SHOES
16.99

SHOll
SILVER BRIDGE PWA

•

MON.·SAT.

JO A.M.-10 P.M. SUNDAY

I

Prices Effective
Thru Jan. 31, 1976

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

Fellowship First aid course given
has potluck

,~1

HOSPITAL NEWS

JANUARY
SALEI

3 lb. or More

GROUND BEEF. ••• ~~79e

·s~
Mon. &amp; Fri. 10 til 9

COUPON

. J·

H.

Davis, '

•

Beautiful selection

..

of colors

...•

Sec'y.-M.O.

Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 19th day of January,1976.
Julla H. Cllffon!'
Notary Public
Feb. 2, 1976.
•

•
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CertUicate ol Three Director· or AudiUag Commlllee
I

We, the undersigned Emil Corbin, Fred Wood and William M. aarr,
Directors of the Buckeye Building &amp; Loan ComJlllny of GaiUpulis, Ohio do
hereby certify that the foregoif18, to the best of our knowledge ancl belief, is a
true statement and correctly shows the financial condition of ~~&amp;ld institution at
the dose of business December 31, 1976.
·
Emil Corbin

Fred Wood

Sunday 1 to 5

WWiam M. "'ur

Genuine Johann Haviland

(4) CoasterI Ashtrays

:: ;; : ;;;;;;;~;;;-~~ ~ ~~

"

''·
''

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COUPON

COUPON

CORONET

Finest Veg_etaD~Shortening

PAPER TOWELS
Jumbo Size
With Coupon

CAROLSUEROSS

Carol
named
uary Girl of the Month at
nan Trace F.H.A. Carol,
, s the daughter of Sadie L.
lichie and the late B. W.
of Rt. 2, Crown City.
1, a senior, has been In ·
A. the past four yean.
has earned her Junior
.d Chapter degree, and II
jteeently llei'Ying her chapter
• historian. Her hobbies are
~~~ mualc, cooklf18 and bike

3

IT

•

•

3-lb .
Can

for$}

$}29

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer Expires : 1-31 -76

'TODAY!
Hendy,

REG. VALUES

goes everywhere

COUPON

Compact,
eaay to stcre

Save More

•

T0 ' $4.98

PRICES
GOOD
THROUGH
JANUARY.

.RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

With
li&gt;

oz'.
Size

Powell's

limill Per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer
1-31 -76

i'liling.
'

CRISCO

limit 1 Per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer Expires; 1-31-76

SEE

t;irl of the
•
smontf'

1:
:tMERCERVILLE
$1• Ross has been

limil 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires: 1-31-76

BAVARIA

and styles.

e.

4$::: v;3~1c ( '·I DJ

-

Polyester
Knits

SUNDAY ONLY

1

8 AM·lO PM

io

RE
RCIAL
Streakless Machine Wall Washing
Upholstery - Windows - Floors
Complete line of .•.
. Cleaning Equipment &amp;_Supplies

VALUES
TO

STORE HOURS

Rooms, SS.OO up

STATEMENT OF CONDITION OF THE

for them to study under vocal
coaches, Nancy Beebe a nd
Margaret Stephenson of the
School
of Music and
movenlent coaches Sarah
Barker and J ane Ridley Of
the School of Theater.
"Madame Butterfly" was I
chosen over other grand
op~ras because of its musical
and artistic demands and . I
because of its theme of I
American imperialism in
Japan, which ties in with the 1
School of Theater's Season of 1
American Plays.
1
All tickets are $2.50 and
reservations may be made at
Memorial Auditorium box I
office , (594-5010), 1-4 p.m.,
:
Monday through Friday .

people who follow it , and
religious teachings.
11
The teachings, of course,
are the most important. It is
people and institutions who
have distorled the teachings
for secu1ar reasons.
"Differences in religions
aren't the reason for wars or
I ...._'l'
II
the separation of people.
. ,, .
begins
with
Bigotry
(
economics , group loyalty :
envy and resentment of
material goods which are
PRACTICING BANDAGING - Students at the 1-:.-•• eye Hills Career Center are picthen blamed on religion. "
tured practicing closed spiral bandaging under the observatiOn of Mrs. Jeannine Cunningham, RN and Mrs . Donna Conley, RN.
·
Ayres, 67, knows his subject well . He has traveled to
Japan, India, Pakistan, Hong
Koog, Burma. Egypt, Israel,
Turkey,
Jordan
and
throughout Europe studying
RIO GRANDE - The Debboe Burnette, Cathy
religion .
Multi-Media First Aid Co urse Greene, Jeannie Wills, Cindy
His " Altars of the World"
was
recently presented to the Pauley, Mandy Rece, Kay
li1._ '
tt:rms.
focuses on Hinduism, BudJunior and Senior D.H.O. Duncan, Debbie DeWitt,
VINTON - A potluck
" ' Ayres is using Los Angeles dhism,
Shinto,
Islam,
students at Buckeye Hills Shirley Chambers, Marsha
dinner
preceded the recent
as a test. If "Altars of the Sikhism,
Zorastrianism,
Career Center. Thirty-five Thornton, Dianna France,
meeting of the Vinton Baptist
;World" does well at the Los Judaism and Christianity. ·
students successfully com- Kathy Holley , Diane Jones,
: ~geles Music Center during
"Our young people· are Ladies Fellowship .
pleted the course and earned Virginia Powell , Cindy .
Following dinner, the
Thompson, Colleen Clark,
• ill three day stand - Jan. 30, turning to Asian religions to
their First Aid Cards.
: Jan . 31 and Feb. 1. - he will satisfy an inner need for meeting was called to order .
Participating in the class Jean Ann McWilliams,
~ take it to other cities in the verification of the great by Jean Moore, and new were Ralph Coyle, Christi Tammy Riley and Cathy
officers for 1976 were in::V.!itect States . ,
Cook, Carol Sue Wilcoxen , Harvey .
teachings we are asked to
stalled. They are Katherine
:-~~~ru see what the pubJic
believe in our western Evans, presidenl i Laur.a Candy West, Beth Fuller,
Pam Hoffelt, Debbie Shafer,
:response is," said the quiet, religions, " Ayres said.
Brown , vice pres ident ;
Bell, Christy Grant,
Cheryl
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
:graying actor.
" Eastern believers 'don't Sharon Neal, secretary;
'fami
Cox,
Pam
Essman,
NEW
HAVEN, W. Va. - .
: "The film is an unknown worship together like we Hazel lsacs, treasurer;
·
Barbara
Hall,
Verna
WedMr
.
and
Mrs. Robert Paige
•f'·"!Or to people . They're · not westerners do . They don't all Donna Marcum, news
•...mre whet her 1t
. 's an
dington
,
Tanya
Robinson,
Dye
II
announce
the birth of
go to temple or church at one reporter .
Pam
McDebbie
Denny,
their
first
child,
a
son, Trevor
: evangelistic effort on my time. Rather they conOld and new business was Neese,
Dora
Dur
ham,
Paige
Dye,
Jan.
15
at Holzer
: part.
template as individuals and discussed , and a tape was
Center.
The
baby
Medical
: "This picture Is a study of worship whe n they feel the heard from missionary
weighed eight pounds, eight
:comparative religions . need for it. "
Arlene Spurtock . on the
a nd a half oun ces at birth,
:People who haven't lime for a
Ayres is heedful of the conditions and problems of
and was 21 inches long.
•course in the subject at a impact of the religionless missionary work.
Phyllis Mulholand, Jean Maternal grandparents are
The meeting closed with a Moore, Leona Walters,
:University would like it very governments of China and the
Mr . and Mrs. Curtis Smith of
:much . But It is also for Soviet Union on the world and ring of prayer led by F lore nce Quickie, Cecil Parkersburg, and paternal
:!aymen.
suspecls the movement may Christina Hawks and closed Thompson, Kathryn Evans, grandparents are Mr. and
: "I hope I've made the help the diverse religions on by Jean Moore .
Elsia McCoy, Sue Ragan, Mrs . Robert P. Dye, New
Present were Pat Terry, Christi ne Hawks and Donna Haven. Maternal great:subject
palatable,
en- earth re solve their difBell
Terry,
Sharon Marcwn .. The next meeting
:tertaining, Instructional and ferences.
grandparents are Mr. and
Neal,
Marianne
Fitc~ ,
will be Feb. 19.
~authentic . "
Personally, his studies and
Mrs . Robinson Smith and Mr.
"' Ayres is a serious religious travels have given Lew AYres ·
and Mrs. James T. McClung,
•&gt;BCholar and has been for 45 a unique tr~nquil(ty, Once
all of Parkersburg. Paternal
great-grandparents · are Mr.
hars.
senses about him a deep
:· He was vilified as a coward contentment, much of which
and Mrs . William Dye ~f New
Haven.
many in World War fl he gained studying /he
and a son to Mr. and Mrs .
PLEASANT VALLEY
)vhen he deClared himself a religions of Asia .
Wallace ,
Point
DISCHARGES Mrs . Ear l
'Conscientlous objector to
" [ have a deep comPleasant.
•military service. It might mitment to God.' ' he said . Lillie Wilfong, Mrs . Howard
Greenlee, Mrs . Paul Smith,
have ended his flourishing · " Pray er is a vital part of my
Shane Johnston, Stephen Veterans Mernorial Hospital
existence.
icting career.
ADMITTED
Leota
Warner, all of Point
: Ayres' sincerity became
" I have no quarrel with the
Hubbard,
Mason,
W.
Va.;
Pleasant; Robert Busy •
Opparent, however, when he universe . I see a great
Terri
Owens
,
Pomeroy
;
Leon; James Berelsman,
~rved nearly four years in a
overspreading divine justice
Middleport, 0 . Ph . 992-2771.
Mary
Pooler
,
Middleport;
Gallipolis: Mabel Young,
noncombatant assignment as which exists in life. I have
Okey
Barber,
Reedsville;
Ashton; Sheila Perry. Leon ;
a n assistant chaplain . and found this concept a bond
Mrs. John Albright, son, West Mara bel Frecker. Pomeroy:
religions
.''
among
medic. He made three D-Day :
Co lumbia ; David Darst., Marvin Darst, Pomeroy;
l:i*achhead landi ngs, inSpecial Rates
Mason: Mrs. Dewey White, Edwin Sellers, Racine.
Lewis
Cluding the historic inva sion
Bit Parts : Butt Reynolds
Gallipolis;
Mrs . Gary ' DISCHARGED by Week
plays a cameo role in "Silent
f Leyte in 1944.
Fountain , Gallipolis and Thompson, Neva Grimm,
Irene
Haning,
Shane
Ingels,
or Month
"'These days Ayres appears Movit;C!" which stars Marly · Ronald Ohlinger, Mason .
BIRTHS Jan.
23, a Goldie Lawson, Roberta
~ a guest star four or five Feldman ... Burl lves . will
limes a year on television host NBC-TV's "The Great ·daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Marshall.
Christopher Dingess, Mason;
'-ries, now and then landing Easter Bunny" specia l in
a daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
It role in a TV movie .
April ... Carol Burnett and
Robert Chrisner, Cheshire,
:; But his passion is religion. Helen Reddy will entertain at
f!is library is crowded with a White House dinner Jan. 27.
..Oiumes on the world's faiths .
SIX REINSTATED
lie's also absorbed by
FORT LEWIS. Wash .
iSiytho logy and psychiatry.
The Almanac
1UP! 1 - Six . soldiers who
lie has read the entire works
United Pres·s Interna tional
refused to take the field in
l)r Carl Jung.
' temperatures 65 degrees
is
Sunday,
Jan
.
25,
Today
: Ayres believes in a stro:ng
below zero during a n "Alaska
the.25th day of 1~76 with 341 to
!l'rsonal God and Speaks In
training exercise l(Jst month
follow.
~fense of all religions
have been fined $50 each ana
The moon is in the last
ilthough he belongs to no
returned to duty. •
quarter.
lhurch himself .
The morning s tar s are
~ Inevitably he is asked why
Venus and Pluto .
On this day in history :
many people throughout
The evening stars are Mars
In 1890, daring young New
lilslory have been killed in the
and Jupiter.
York reporter Nellie Bly
Jllme of religion. He has an
· Those born on this date are
completed a trip around the
flSWer.
under the sign of Aquarius. world in the astounding time
"You must define the terms
Seottish poet Robert Burns of 72 days, six hours and 11
religion first," he said .
minutes.
was born Jan. 25, 1759.
;o;n~ere are three views. the
~urch as ah institution, the

La Salle
HOTEL

342 Second Ave .

Ganipolis, Ohio

By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
Lew Ayres has fulfiUed his
life as few actors have
through a deep personal
dedication to religion which
manifests itself in his new
movie, ''Altars ' of The
World."
The 2'h hour documentary
on the world's religions was a
labor of love, shot by Ayres
himself over the past 20
years, tramping from one
·continent to another at his
own expense.
The footage consists of
rites, interviews, shrines,
churches, temples, music and
chants. But more im ·~rtSntly, the philosophy of
'..religious
concepts
is
I
'presented in understandable

iJy

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE ·

Arriving Daily

japanese spirit being

ATHENS - The Japanese
spirit
that
intrigued
Americans in the early 1900s
is being recreated by Ohio
University's Schools of Music
POMEROY
Meigs a nd T hea ter for their
Senior Citizens · Center ac· production of ''Madame
tivities located at Pomeroy Butterfly,' ' in · English, on
Junior High School is open 9 February 13, 14 and 15 a t 8
a.m.-4 p.m. Monday through p.m . in Memorial Auditorium
Friday.
in Athens . Complete with
Monday, Jan. 26 - Square origina l costumes, se.t s and
Dancing, 12:30-3 p.m.
the Ohio University SymTuesday, Jan. 27
phony
Orhcestra,
this
Physical Fitness, 10:45-11 : 15 production of Giacomo
a.m. ; Chorus, 12:30-2 p .m. Puccini's popular g r and
Wednesday, Jan . 28 -· opera will be one of the rarer
Games, 12:30-2 p.m.
musical events of this scope
Thursday, Jan . 29 performed in Southeastern
Physical Fitness, 10:45-11:15 Ohio this year.
p.m.; Ballroom Dancing,
Over 180 students and eight
12:30-2 p.m .
faculty members from both
Friday, Jan. 30 Art schools are involved in the
Classes 10-11 a .m.; Bowling 1- production
under
the
3 p.m .
guidance of director Robert
Senior Citizens Nutrition Winters oi the School of
Program, II :30 a.m .-12:30 Theater ana musical director
p.m . Monday through Friday. Ira Zook of the School of
Menu for January 26 Music . " Madame Butterfly"
through January 30.
represents the third joint
MONDAY
Baked production effor t of the
spaghetti, cole slaw, banana School of Music and Theater:
slices in orange jell a, oatmeal they produced the rock opera
cookie, hot buttered Italian " Jesus Christ Superstar" last
bread, milk.
year and the light opera
TUESDAY - Baked ham "Ruddigore" two years ago.
slice, candied ·sweet potatoe.s, Adrian Gnam at the Scl]ool of
mixed fruit salad, chocolate . Music will be conducling the
pudding
with
graham Ohio University Symphony
crackers, bread, butler, milk . Orchestra for "Madame
WEDNESDAY
Hot Butterfly."
turkey sandwich w-gravy ,
The "rlis ticallv demandin~
mashed potato and buttered design qualities of "Madame
peas, jellied cranberry salad , Butterfly" will be handled by
ice cream, milk.
produc tion designer Jeff
THURSDAY - Beef stew, Walker and cos tume designer
cottage cheese on pineapple Pat Nielson , both of the
slice, apple cobbler w-eheese, School of Theater . They ha ve
biscuit, butter, milk.
adapted traditional Japanese
FRIDAY - Fried fish , art forms and rnolifs for the
baked potato, pink pear use in the sets, lights and
~~&amp;lad, peanut butter cake w- costwnes to give an aura of
carmel icif18, bread, butter , authentiticity
to
the
rDilk.
'
production.
Coffee, tea and buttermilk
As a cooperative effur! be·Bei'Vect daily. Senior citizens tween the two st'lwuls,
have no set fee . Donation " Madame Butterny" not only
basis only. All guests of exposes students to other
Senior Citizens ace charged areas of performance, but
also provides an opportunity

'I.

HAPPY TO HEAR that Ferne B. Hayman of up E;ast
Letart way is home following cataract surgery at Holzer and
recuperating satisfactorily.

fulfilled in movte

'

I

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~

,

Coupons I

•f

:J
: -r.

�12 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel. Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976
13,- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWlday, Jan . 25, 1976

Lew Ayres ' life
•

POMEROY - Beginning ~'riday and continuing through
Feb. 8 Girls Scouts will be knocking at your door asking for
orders for Girl Scout Cookies.
The cookies come in five varieties, and .it 's an ''order now,
pay later" situation. Delivery won't be made until the week of
April 1.
Now about the cost. Each box is $1.25, but of that amount 78
cents actually goes in scout funds. The Littl_e Brownie Bakers
- and they advise that every precaution will be taken to insure
the utmost in freshness and quality - charges only 51 cents a
box.
By buying girl scout cookies, residents are actually contributing to a program which has as its ultimate objective that
of teachine eirls t.o hP.f'nmP splf-rPlii:lnf rnni"PrnPrl ::~nd com.
mitted women of lomorrow ,
So buy some cookies!
ADOALOU LEWIS believes in getting a good early start.

So these snowv cold davs. she 's workin~ on her part of the

Meigs County Fair program.
Again this year Addalou will have charge of the domestic
arts department and since this is the bicentennial year, she's
boping to make it not only bigger with more exhibits, but better
through additional classes.
And that's where you come in .
Addalou would like suggestions as to ways in which the
department can I)\! enlarged or improved. She is hopeful of
completing the schedule by about March 1. Just call her if you
have any thoughts.

RUTHLESS MUNEBRAGA cunningly forces Carlos to betray Fray Cristobal before the
Tribunal Hall in the Unusual Films ' producton, " Flame in the Wind ." The film will be
shown at the First Baptist Church audiioriwn on Saturday, Jan. 31 at 6:30p.m.

Film to be seen Saturday
GALLIPOLIS -

The Bob

Jones University two-hour,
full-color rilm production
"Flame in the Wind" will be
shown on Saturday, Jan. 31 at
6:30p.m. in the First Baptist
Church auditoriiun here .
Unfolded in a Spanish
setting overshadowed by
Inquisition cruelty, this
Christian film dramatizes the
story of Carlos, a student in
his ear ly twen ties, who
desperately searches for
truth amid tile confusion of
his times.
Bishop Gaspar Munebraga, .
Inquisitor General , is por. !rayed by Bob Jones. Fernando , a peddler who
smuggles the Scriptures to
the Spanish people, is played
by Bob Jones, III. Both a re
historical characters welldocwnented in accotints of
tl!e Spanish Inquisition .
Richard Rupp takes the
_part of Mendez, an Inquisitor

Lodge ekcts ·
new officers
GALLIPOLIS - Officers
were elected recently at the
. regular stated meeting of
Ancient York Lodge No. 33.
Elected
were
W.M .•
Charles F. Williams; s.W .,
Calvin Minnis; J.W., Risden
Miller; S.D., David Evans;
J .D.,
Floyd
Burney;
secretary, William Jamison ;
president, Marvin Stewart;
SS, Cecil Vinson; J .S., Carl
Qualls , Tyler Joe Lewi s ,
chaplain, Anglo Hickman .

.
r

·w.·· .,_,.,._,,.•.,.•.•_.•, .•.•._,,",mm,.,.. ,.

. -·~·:-=•:•:O:•.•:-:.:.-.-:.:.:•:•:o;.•:•x•:o:-:.:.:-:•.•.-.~

Sr. Citizens !t;:;:;
Calendar _ i.....

torn by divergent loyalties, the heart of the Gospel."
and Edward Panosian ap" It is fantastic! The acting
pears in the role of Fray is wonderful and the
Cristnbal, a Jeromite monk pho tography beautiful. The
who faithfully teaches the story is so realistic and
Scriptures. Other faculty and forceful ."
staff members act in sup"Undoubtedly one of the
porting roles . One thousand most stirring and touching
extras who take part in the films I have ever seen."
largest scene are faculty,
" ... music is excellent ...
staff and students of Bob color is strong and imJones University.
pressive."
Two years of research,
''Flame in the Wind" is a
writing and pre-production facul ty • student production .
Stenholm,
planning by Unusual Films, Katherine
the motion-picture Wlit of the director, is the chairman of
University, went into " Flame the division of cinema in the
in the Wind." Another two school of fine arts . The
years were expended in the cinema faculty is the
technical aspects of scene professional staff. Students
building , lighting, filming, working toward degrees in
musical scoring, recording cinema are the crew.
and editing to bring to the
Bob Jones University offers
screen not only a gripping the bachelor of science,
narrative, but also the rugged master of arts and master of
bea uty of actual Spanish fine arts degrees in oinfma.
scenery and ttJe grandeur of Unusual Films serves as a
an era long past.
labor atory for studen ts
The moving musical score , working
toward
these
composed
by
Dwight degrees. Professional
Gustafson, dean of the school training is offered in all types
of fine arts; was performed of motion-picture production
by the 55-piece Bob Jones and still photography.
University Orchestni under
Productions of Unusual
his direction. A recording of Films, among them " Wine of
the original score has been Morning" and " Red Runs the
produced
by
Unusual River," have represented the
Records.
United States at international
Reaction to " Flame in th~ film festivals and have won
Wind " has included 'these accolades for excellence in
statements:
every major area
of
" It cuts across . the con- ~· presentation .
fusi On of a ~ragic ~ra to hare

AND JUST HEARD that Karen Griffith is back full-time
working on her masters at Ohio State. Karen for some time has
been working part-time at O.S.U. Veterinarian Hospital and
going to school Jlllrt-time.

Vinton
BY MI\RlE ALEXANDER
Mrs. Paut'Dillon, Beckley,
W. Va : came Tuesday to be
with her mother-in-law, Mrs.
Effie Dillon who is ill at her
home here.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Justus

and family, Lancaster, spent
the weekend here with her
mother, Mrs . Elizabeth
Cloud .
Carl Harder is a patient in
Holzer Medical Center.
Kenneth
DeVore,
Columbus, spent the weekend
her&lt; with his sister and
husband , Mr . and Mrs. Bill

•
~

~-

l

"'

~I

"

-

··1

"

...
THE MAJOR YOUNG TRIO of Chillicothe will be the special singen when the Fairview ,
.. -..J

Church of Christ in Christian Union observes National Youth Week with a revival (weather,.,
permitting) Jan. 26-31. The Rev. Donovan Blankenship will be the evangelist. He is the son ..
of Rev. Grover Blankenship, South Central District Superintendent of the Church of Christ ,
in Christian Union. He also pastor's a church in Ironton. The pastor, Dorothy Whittington, .
and congregation invites the public to these services which will begin at 7:30 p. m. Follow
Rt. 160 through Ewington, turn left on Alice Road and follow to church.
·-Daft.
Mrs. Clara Townsend,
Riverside, Calif., who came
here to see her mother, Mrs .'
Lyle Moriarity, a patient in
Holzer Medical Center,
returned to her home Sunday.
Her brother, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard
Higgins
and
daughter, Mrs. Sheila Evans,
all of Columbus , also visited
Mrs . Moriarity in the hospital
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Hartsook
and
family ,
Columbus, were weekend
guests Of Mrs. Lucy Hart.
sook.
Mr . and Mrs . David Birch,
Aurora, N.Y. were overnight
guests of her mother, Mrs .
Alice Casto, Saturd"y .
Jim Rece and son, Doug,
Gallipolis and Mrs . Kathryn
Rece , local, . spe nt the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Okey Myers , Delaware, 0.

Mr. and Mrs. George
Johnson, Gallipolis, visited
her mother, Mrs. Cora
McGhee, Sunday .
Judy Oiler spent the past
week with her aunt, Mrs.
Sally Oiler.
Mr . and Mrs. W. H. Dyer
and sons, Columbus, spent
the weekend here with his
parents , Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Dyer.
Mrs . Marianne Fitch, son,
Donnie. arrived home Sunday
from" spendi ng the holidays in
Germany with relatives.
They olso visited their
daughter and sister, Mr. and
Mrs . Doyle Crilow and family
or Shipshewana, Ind., before
returning home.
Beecher Davis is a patient
mHolzer Medical Center. Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Davis,
Carlisle, Pa., came Monday
to see him and be with his
mother, while father is

hospitalized .
,.•
Mrs. Lyle Moriarity
the misfortune to Iall on the
ice Monday and · broke her
hip. She is a patient in Holzl!r
Medical Center, Room N'o.
507.

"mm

JANUARY
CLEARANCE

SAVE

25%
to

50%
on
JEWELRY

~

~'~

811d

has

GIFTS

Spring Fashions
---EtC.

(

...

.... .

.......

Gallipolis, Ohio

.... .

•

Buckeye Building &amp; Loan Company

recreated in production

of Gallipolis , Ohio at the Close ol Busioess December 31, J$75.

SIX 'l'Ol&gt;S on each paw are what makes this kitten
belonging to Cherri Wright of Rt. 3, Gallipolis unique. The
kitten, who has been named "Ki tty Eve," was given to
Cherri as a Christmas gift. Cherri, the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Wright, is a fifth grader at Green
Elementary.

ASSETS
'1ortgage Loans • • • • - • • • - • • • • . . . - . - . $7,620,401
Rea• ' "state Sold on Contract - •••• - - ·. - - • - - • • • . • • - .• 8 259
u.s. Government Obli~ations - • • . • • - . . .' • . ; 7oo:ooo
Cash on Hand and in Banks • • • - • . . . • • • • . . . • .
• Btl 276
Office Building rless Depr.) - - • - . • • - . • . . • • . . . • 80:294
Furmture, FIXtures &amp; Equipment (Jess depr. )
• • • . . • • • 3 309
Other Assets - • - - • - - . . . • • .
• 154 ,623
TOTAL ASSETS - - - •
• • - - - . • - . • . • ·• $8,655:162

~.

~~

:

I

CAPITAI.. AND LIABILITIES
Withdrawable Shares - · • • - · - - - - - • - - - •
. - $-1,220,294
Deposits - - - - - • • • • • • • • . . . . . . • •
- 3,864,180
Loans in Process · - - - - - - - - - - - - - .. - - - • • - 149,952
· Advance Payments by Borrowers
for Taxes and Insurance - - - - - - - • - - - - • - 1811
Accrued Taxes - - - . - - - · - - - • -- - - - · - .
727
Other Liabilities · · - - • - • • - - • • - • · · - - - .727
Statutory Reserve • • • - - - • · • - • - - - • • • • •
92,495
BadDebtReserve - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - . - - - • • 202,104
·•
Undivided Prolits • - - - · • • · - •
• 124,495
TOTAL CAPITAL &amp; LIABTLITIES • • • - - · · · - - - - $8,655,162

I ADVANCED a.EANING SERVICE
FORFRIENDLYFREEESTIMATES

Call 675-5572 After; 4 P.M. '

!-------------------.- -· _____ J

STATE OF OHIO, Gallia County ss :
Dean H. Davis being duly sworn, deposes and says that he is the Managill8
Officer of the Buckeye Building &amp; Loan Company of Gallipolis, Ohio and that to
the best of his knowledge and belief the foregoing iB a true statement and
correctly shows the financial condition of said institution at the close of business
December 31, 1975.

ale -

neau '

'

GROUP OF WOMEN'S
DRESS &amp; CASUAL

SHOES
16.99

SHOll
SILVER BRIDGE PWA

•

MON.·SAT.

JO A.M.-10 P.M. SUNDAY

I

Prices Effective
Thru Jan. 31, 1976

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

Fellowship First aid course given
has potluck

,~1

HOSPITAL NEWS

JANUARY
SALEI

3 lb. or More

GROUND BEEF. ••• ~~79e

·s~
Mon. &amp; Fri. 10 til 9

COUPON

. J·

H.

Davis, '

•

Beautiful selection

..

of colors

...•

Sec'y.-M.O.

Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 19th day of January,1976.
Julla H. Cllffon!'
Notary Public
Feb. 2, 1976.
•

•
,,

·.

'

,...

CertUicate ol Three Director· or AudiUag Commlllee
I

We, the undersigned Emil Corbin, Fred Wood and William M. aarr,
Directors of the Buckeye Building &amp; Loan ComJlllny of GaiUpulis, Ohio do
hereby certify that the foregoif18, to the best of our knowledge ancl belief, is a
true statement and correctly shows the financial condition of ~~&amp;ld institution at
the dose of business December 31, 1976.
·
Emil Corbin

Fred Wood

Sunday 1 to 5

WWiam M. "'ur

Genuine Johann Haviland

(4) CoasterI Ashtrays

:: ;; : ;;;;;;;~;;;-~~ ~ ~~

"

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''

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COUPON

COUPON

CORONET

Finest Veg_etaD~Shortening

PAPER TOWELS
Jumbo Size
With Coupon

CAROLSUEROSS

Carol
named
uary Girl of the Month at
nan Trace F.H.A. Carol,
, s the daughter of Sadie L.
lichie and the late B. W.
of Rt. 2, Crown City.
1, a senior, has been In ·
A. the past four yean.
has earned her Junior
.d Chapter degree, and II
jteeently llei'Ying her chapter
• historian. Her hobbies are
~~~ mualc, cooklf18 and bike

3

IT

•

•

3-lb .
Can

for$}

$}29

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer Expires : 1-31 -76

'TODAY!
Hendy,

REG. VALUES

goes everywhere

COUPON

Compact,
eaay to stcre

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•

T0 ' $4.98

PRICES
GOOD
THROUGH
JANUARY.

.RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

With
li&gt;

oz'.
Size

Powell's

limill Per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer
1-31 -76

i'liling.
'

CRISCO

limit 1 Per Customer
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Offer Expires; 1-31-76

SEE

t;irl of the
•
smontf'

1:
:tMERCERVILLE
$1• Ross has been

limil 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires: 1-31-76

BAVARIA

and styles.

e.

4$::: v;3~1c ( '·I DJ

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Polyester
Knits

SUNDAY ONLY

1

8 AM·lO PM

io

RE
RCIAL
Streakless Machine Wall Washing
Upholstery - Windows - Floors
Complete line of .•.
. Cleaning Equipment &amp;_Supplies

VALUES
TO

STORE HOURS

Rooms, SS.OO up

STATEMENT OF CONDITION OF THE

for them to study under vocal
coaches, Nancy Beebe a nd
Margaret Stephenson of the
School
of Music and
movenlent coaches Sarah
Barker and J ane Ridley Of
the School of Theater.
"Madame Butterfly" was I
chosen over other grand
op~ras because of its musical
and artistic demands and . I
because of its theme of I
American imperialism in
Japan, which ties in with the 1
School of Theater's Season of 1
American Plays.
1
All tickets are $2.50 and
reservations may be made at
Memorial Auditorium box I
office , (594-5010), 1-4 p.m.,
:
Monday through Friday .

people who follow it , and
religious teachings.
11
The teachings, of course,
are the most important. It is
people and institutions who
have distorled the teachings
for secu1ar reasons.
"Differences in religions
aren't the reason for wars or
I ...._'l'
II
the separation of people.
. ,, .
begins
with
Bigotry
(
economics , group loyalty :
envy and resentment of
material goods which are
PRACTICING BANDAGING - Students at the 1-:.-•• eye Hills Career Center are picthen blamed on religion. "
tured practicing closed spiral bandaging under the observatiOn of Mrs. Jeannine Cunningham, RN and Mrs . Donna Conley, RN.
·
Ayres, 67, knows his subject well . He has traveled to
Japan, India, Pakistan, Hong
Koog, Burma. Egypt, Israel,
Turkey,
Jordan
and
throughout Europe studying
RIO GRANDE - The Debboe Burnette, Cathy
religion .
Multi-Media First Aid Co urse Greene, Jeannie Wills, Cindy
His " Altars of the World"
was
recently presented to the Pauley, Mandy Rece, Kay
li1._ '
tt:rms.
focuses on Hinduism, BudJunior and Senior D.H.O. Duncan, Debbie DeWitt,
VINTON - A potluck
" ' Ayres is using Los Angeles dhism,
Shinto,
Islam,
students at Buckeye Hills Shirley Chambers, Marsha
dinner
preceded the recent
as a test. If "Altars of the Sikhism,
Zorastrianism,
Career Center. Thirty-five Thornton, Dianna France,
meeting of the Vinton Baptist
;World" does well at the Los Judaism and Christianity. ·
students successfully com- Kathy Holley , Diane Jones,
: ~geles Music Center during
"Our young people· are Ladies Fellowship .
pleted the course and earned Virginia Powell , Cindy .
Following dinner, the
Thompson, Colleen Clark,
• ill three day stand - Jan. 30, turning to Asian religions to
their First Aid Cards.
: Jan . 31 and Feb. 1. - he will satisfy an inner need for meeting was called to order .
Participating in the class Jean Ann McWilliams,
~ take it to other cities in the verification of the great by Jean Moore, and new were Ralph Coyle, Christi Tammy Riley and Cathy
officers for 1976 were in::V.!itect States . ,
Cook, Carol Sue Wilcoxen , Harvey .
teachings we are asked to
stalled. They are Katherine
:-~~~ru see what the pubJic
believe in our western Evans, presidenl i Laur.a Candy West, Beth Fuller,
Pam Hoffelt, Debbie Shafer,
:response is," said the quiet, religions, " Ayres said.
Brown , vice pres ident ;
Bell, Christy Grant,
Cheryl
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
:graying actor.
" Eastern believers 'don't Sharon Neal, secretary;
'fami
Cox,
Pam
Essman,
NEW
HAVEN, W. Va. - .
: "The film is an unknown worship together like we Hazel lsacs, treasurer;
·
Barbara
Hall,
Verna
WedMr
.
and
Mrs. Robert Paige
•f'·"!Or to people . They're · not westerners do . They don't all Donna Marcum, news
•...mre whet her 1t
. 's an
dington
,
Tanya
Robinson,
Dye
II
announce
the birth of
go to temple or church at one reporter .
Pam
McDebbie
Denny,
their
first
child,
a
son, Trevor
: evangelistic effort on my time. Rather they conOld and new business was Neese,
Dora
Dur
ham,
Paige
Dye,
Jan.
15
at Holzer
: part.
template as individuals and discussed , and a tape was
Center.
The
baby
Medical
: "This picture Is a study of worship whe n they feel the heard from missionary
weighed eight pounds, eight
:comparative religions . need for it. "
Arlene Spurtock . on the
a nd a half oun ces at birth,
:People who haven't lime for a
Ayres is heedful of the conditions and problems of
and was 21 inches long.
•course in the subject at a impact of the religionless missionary work.
Phyllis Mulholand, Jean Maternal grandparents are
The meeting closed with a Moore, Leona Walters,
:University would like it very governments of China and the
Mr . and Mrs. Curtis Smith of
:much . But It is also for Soviet Union on the world and ring of prayer led by F lore nce Quickie, Cecil Parkersburg, and paternal
:!aymen.
suspecls the movement may Christina Hawks and closed Thompson, Kathryn Evans, grandparents are Mr. and
: "I hope I've made the help the diverse religions on by Jean Moore .
Elsia McCoy, Sue Ragan, Mrs . Robert P. Dye, New
Present were Pat Terry, Christi ne Hawks and Donna Haven. Maternal great:subject
palatable,
en- earth re solve their difBell
Terry,
Sharon Marcwn .. The next meeting
:tertaining, Instructional and ferences.
grandparents are Mr. and
Neal,
Marianne
Fitc~ ,
will be Feb. 19.
~authentic . "
Personally, his studies and
Mrs . Robinson Smith and Mr.
"' Ayres is a serious religious travels have given Lew AYres ·
and Mrs. James T. McClung,
•&gt;BCholar and has been for 45 a unique tr~nquil(ty, Once
all of Parkersburg. Paternal
great-grandparents · are Mr.
hars.
senses about him a deep
:· He was vilified as a coward contentment, much of which
and Mrs . William Dye ~f New
Haven.
many in World War fl he gained studying /he
and a son to Mr. and Mrs .
PLEASANT VALLEY
)vhen he deClared himself a religions of Asia .
Wallace ,
Point
DISCHARGES Mrs . Ear l
'Conscientlous objector to
" [ have a deep comPleasant.
•military service. It might mitment to God.' ' he said . Lillie Wilfong, Mrs . Howard
Greenlee, Mrs . Paul Smith,
have ended his flourishing · " Pray er is a vital part of my
Shane Johnston, Stephen Veterans Mernorial Hospital
existence.
icting career.
ADMITTED
Leota
Warner, all of Point
: Ayres' sincerity became
" I have no quarrel with the
Hubbard,
Mason,
W.
Va.;
Pleasant; Robert Busy •
Opparent, however, when he universe . I see a great
Terri
Owens
,
Pomeroy
;
Leon; James Berelsman,
~rved nearly four years in a
overspreading divine justice
Middleport, 0 . Ph . 992-2771.
Mary
Pooler
,
Middleport;
Gallipolis: Mabel Young,
noncombatant assignment as which exists in life. I have
Okey
Barber,
Reedsville;
Ashton; Sheila Perry. Leon ;
a n assistant chaplain . and found this concept a bond
Mrs. John Albright, son, West Mara bel Frecker. Pomeroy:
religions
.''
among
medic. He made three D-Day :
Co lumbia ; David Darst., Marvin Darst, Pomeroy;
l:i*achhead landi ngs, inSpecial Rates
Mason: Mrs. Dewey White, Edwin Sellers, Racine.
Lewis
Cluding the historic inva sion
Bit Parts : Butt Reynolds
Gallipolis;
Mrs . Gary ' DISCHARGED by Week
plays a cameo role in "Silent
f Leyte in 1944.
Fountain , Gallipolis and Thompson, Neva Grimm,
Irene
Haning,
Shane
Ingels,
or Month
"'These days Ayres appears Movit;C!" which stars Marly · Ronald Ohlinger, Mason .
BIRTHS Jan.
23, a Goldie Lawson, Roberta
~ a guest star four or five Feldman ... Burl lves . will
limes a year on television host NBC-TV's "The Great ·daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Marshall.
Christopher Dingess, Mason;
'-ries, now and then landing Easter Bunny" specia l in
a daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
It role in a TV movie .
April ... Carol Burnett and
Robert Chrisner, Cheshire,
:; But his passion is religion. Helen Reddy will entertain at
f!is library is crowded with a White House dinner Jan. 27.
..Oiumes on the world's faiths .
SIX REINSTATED
lie's also absorbed by
FORT LEWIS. Wash .
iSiytho logy and psychiatry.
The Almanac
1UP! 1 - Six . soldiers who
lie has read the entire works
United Pres·s Interna tional
refused to take the field in
l)r Carl Jung.
' temperatures 65 degrees
is
Sunday,
Jan
.
25,
Today
: Ayres believes in a stro:ng
below zero during a n "Alaska
the.25th day of 1~76 with 341 to
!l'rsonal God and Speaks In
training exercise l(Jst month
follow.
~fense of all religions
have been fined $50 each ana
The moon is in the last
ilthough he belongs to no
returned to duty. •
quarter.
lhurch himself .
The morning s tar s are
~ Inevitably he is asked why
Venus and Pluto .
On this day in history :
many people throughout
The evening stars are Mars
In 1890, daring young New
lilslory have been killed in the
and Jupiter.
York reporter Nellie Bly
Jllme of religion. He has an
· Those born on this date are
completed a trip around the
flSWer.
under the sign of Aquarius. world in the astounding time
"You must define the terms
Seottish poet Robert Burns of 72 days, six hours and 11
religion first," he said .
minutes.
was born Jan. 25, 1759.
;o;n~ere are three views. the
~urch as ah institution, the

La Salle
HOTEL

342 Second Ave .

Ganipolis, Ohio

By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
Lew Ayres has fulfiUed his
life as few actors have
through a deep personal
dedication to religion which
manifests itself in his new
movie, ''Altars ' of The
World."
The 2'h hour documentary
on the world's religions was a
labor of love, shot by Ayres
himself over the past 20
years, tramping from one
·continent to another at his
own expense.
The footage consists of
rites, interviews, shrines,
churches, temples, music and
chants. But more im ·~rtSntly, the philosophy of
'..religious
concepts
is
I
'presented in understandable

iJy

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE ·

Arriving Daily

japanese spirit being

ATHENS - The Japanese
spirit
that
intrigued
Americans in the early 1900s
is being recreated by Ohio
University's Schools of Music
POMEROY
Meigs a nd T hea ter for their
Senior Citizens · Center ac· production of ''Madame
tivities located at Pomeroy Butterfly,' ' in · English, on
Junior High School is open 9 February 13, 14 and 15 a t 8
a.m.-4 p.m. Monday through p.m . in Memorial Auditorium
Friday.
in Athens . Complete with
Monday, Jan. 26 - Square origina l costumes, se.t s and
Dancing, 12:30-3 p.m.
the Ohio University SymTuesday, Jan. 27
phony
Orhcestra,
this
Physical Fitness, 10:45-11 : 15 production of Giacomo
a.m. ; Chorus, 12:30-2 p .m. Puccini's popular g r and
Wednesday, Jan . 28 -· opera will be one of the rarer
Games, 12:30-2 p.m.
musical events of this scope
Thursday, Jan . 29 performed in Southeastern
Physical Fitness, 10:45-11:15 Ohio this year.
p.m.; Ballroom Dancing,
Over 180 students and eight
12:30-2 p.m .
faculty members from both
Friday, Jan. 30 Art schools are involved in the
Classes 10-11 a .m.; Bowling 1- production
under
the
3 p.m .
guidance of director Robert
Senior Citizens Nutrition Winters oi the School of
Program, II :30 a.m .-12:30 Theater ana musical director
p.m . Monday through Friday. Ira Zook of the School of
Menu for January 26 Music . " Madame Butterfly"
through January 30.
represents the third joint
MONDAY
Baked production effor t of the
spaghetti, cole slaw, banana School of Music and Theater:
slices in orange jell a, oatmeal they produced the rock opera
cookie, hot buttered Italian " Jesus Christ Superstar" last
bread, milk.
year and the light opera
TUESDAY - Baked ham "Ruddigore" two years ago.
slice, candied ·sweet potatoe.s, Adrian Gnam at the Scl]ool of
mixed fruit salad, chocolate . Music will be conducling the
pudding
with
graham Ohio University Symphony
crackers, bread, butler, milk . Orchestra for "Madame
WEDNESDAY
Hot Butterfly."
turkey sandwich w-gravy ,
The "rlis ticallv demandin~
mashed potato and buttered design qualities of "Madame
peas, jellied cranberry salad , Butterfly" will be handled by
ice cream, milk.
produc tion designer Jeff
THURSDAY - Beef stew, Walker and cos tume designer
cottage cheese on pineapple Pat Nielson , both of the
slice, apple cobbler w-eheese, School of Theater . They ha ve
biscuit, butter, milk.
adapted traditional Japanese
FRIDAY - Fried fish , art forms and rnolifs for the
baked potato, pink pear use in the sets, lights and
~~&amp;lad, peanut butter cake w- costwnes to give an aura of
carmel icif18, bread, butter , authentiticity
to
the
rDilk.
'
production.
Coffee, tea and buttermilk
As a cooperative effur! be·Bei'Vect daily. Senior citizens tween the two st'lwuls,
have no set fee . Donation " Madame Butterny" not only
basis only. All guests of exposes students to other
Senior Citizens ace charged areas of performance, but
also provides an opportunity

'I.

HAPPY TO HEAR that Ferne B. Hayman of up E;ast
Letart way is home following cataract surgery at Holzer and
recuperating satisfactorily.

fulfilled in movte

'

I

.

~

,

Coupons I

•f

:J
: -r.

�H - TheSwJdayTimcs-Sentmel,SwJday ,.la n. 25,1976 ,

Courl hears 20 ·cases
POMEROY
Eight
defendan ts were fined and 12
othe rs forfeite d bond s in
Meigs County Court friday .
fined by Judge Robert E.
Buck were Dana J . Aldridge,
Racine, and Earl C. Kauff,
Hemlock Grove, $12 and cos Is
each, speeding; Bruce A.
Kapack, Gallip olis, 110 and
cos ts, improper parking:
Marylyn S. Wi lcox, Middlepo rt , $15 and costs,
speeding; frances Sue Hill ,
Syrac use, $13 a nd costs,
speedin g; Ephriam Herdma n, Pomeroy, $25 and costs,
$15 suspended if car passes
safe ty check ih lwo wee ks,
un safe
vehicle:
fr ed
Els wi ck. Shade, 120 and
costs, failure to yield righ t of
way.
r orfieting bonds were
Robe rt C.
Cll ri semer ,
Cheshire, S22. 5U, no exhaust
system; Da vid Branham,
Loui sa, Ky., Ja mes E .
f erguson, Grove City, Robert
Gore, So uth Za hesville,
Donald W. Tackett, South
Point, Mi chael Stewart,
Cheshire. Randall E. Knotts.

Ry G. M. Craig, Jr.
GALLIPOLIS - Two days
ago WOWK -TV held a
community luncheon at our
loca l Holiday Inn. At this
meeting, different segments
of our community expressed
what they fell the comm un ity
needs. Highlighi.s were :
- Proba bly the biggest
concern was over our presen t
swimming pool disas ter. It
really doesn 't seem like so
long ag o when we were
promised the swimming pool
for the hot days of sunlmer.
Now, with temperature
dipping to the low 20's we see
visions of ow pool cracking
and the bath house sliding
down the side of a hill.
- ·There was also concern
expressed for the council on
aging which has gotten to the
end of ito limit of fe deral
grants. It was reported that
the gr oup is receiving some
Stale aid. This wo rth y
organization will be having a
lkle-lhon to support its ca use.
- Housing· for the elderly
and low-ihcome indi viduals
was also discussed. ll was fel l
tha t we now have no such
facil ities to give these two
groups decent housing at a
reasonable pt ice .
- It was also felt that &lt;)ur
schools should be offering our
youth s more education on
sex. Along this line, I would
add drug edqcation so tha t
our kids would have tr~thful
knowledge of the present
drug epidemic :
-- Minority representatives
felt that the sc hools should
introduce a comprehensive
course on Black History ..
They also agreed upon the
impo rtan ce of upgradin g
blacks on their present jobs.
(This stems from

Belpre , and Rnbert L. Zurfluh , Haddam, Kansas, $27.50
each, speeding; Michae l
Tulloh, Waverly, $27.50. left
nf center; Gar land R. Jordan,
New Marshfi eld. Johnnie A.
Cazzell. Payton, and Rober t

E . Morrison. South Poult,

dr ivi ng wl1il e intoxicated ;

Robert E. Morrison, South
Point, $t57.50, hit-skip .

GALLIPOI.IS - Nan cy
Sparkman, 26, Gallipolis, was
charged with failure to yield
right of way fo llowing an
accide nt at 4 p.m. friday on
Rt. 141, four thenths of a mile
wes t of here.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
the Sparkman car pulled
fr om a driveway into the path
of a vehicle operated by

the path of a car operu ted by
Ar turo DeLameran s, t7,
Gallipolis.
Another deer was killed at
11:30p.m. on Rt.lH , two and

James

lhree tenths m iles eas t of the

26

car on an icy area in the high-

embankment .

A deer was killed at G:30
p.m. on Rt. 160 at County
Road 4. The animal ran into

1

Gallipolis. There was minor
damage.

Vinton-Meigs Co unty lin e.
The an imal ran in to the path
A si ngle car mishap oc- of a car opera ted by Todd R.
curred at 2:50p.m. frida y on Stevens, 22, Athens.
Peter's Branch Rd. where
Verble 0 . Waugh, 43, Rt. 2,
Crown City, lost con trol of her

Upper body of
man is burned
MASON, W. Va . - Harold
J . Will, 2.1 , of Mason is listed
in satisfactory cond ition in
the intensive· care unit of
Pleasant Valley Hospital with
burns suffered Friday when
the upper part of his body
caught fire.
The Mason Rescue Squad
said his arms apparently
were covered with gasoline
and fire ignited them. The
squad rushed him to the
hosp ital at 11 :32 a.m.

exchange ideals on public
top ics.
I. personally left with a
better und erstanding of
differen t problems fa ci ng our
community . And after all,
comrnun ication is the fi rs t
part of undersl&lt;lnding .

by Dick Turner

CARNIVAL

"Chip and Dent Sale"
We Bought 10
19 cubic foot Side by Side

EL I AT R·
REFRIGER T RS
Coppertone White
s
&amp;

Regular. $595
If ·Perfect

95

DaVl"d EvanS
.
hegins law
practice

The five-year pact also
conceded after Secrewry of
State Henry Kissinger and provides for $1.22 billion ·in
Spanish Foreign Minister U.S. military, economic,
Jose Maria Areilza signed the cultural, educational and
scientific aid to Spain.
treaty.
In r eturn, the Spanish
Spain, anxious to solidify
its defense relationship with government will permit the
the United Swles, insisted on United Swtes to rewin a
a fullfledged treaty instead of naval facility at Rota and air
previous "e X e C U t i V "e force ba~e s at Torre jon,
agreements" between the Zaragoza and Moron.
Kissinger, who flew to Ma·
two countries since 1953.
drid Saturday after wlks in
Mosco w and Brus!;Cls, con-

Hearst trial
Opens Tuesday

ferred with Spain's new ruler,

Second St., in what wsa
known as the "Sanitary
Grocery" building and has
since been absorbed in additional quarters for the
Pomeroy National Bank.' The
firm was started by C, H.
Todd and U. A. Cornett of
Ga!Upolis.
.Although business was slow
at first, the Pomeroy store
grew as cars became more
common . The store was
moved to West Second St. in
what was known as the Guth
building and 195&amp;, brand new
quarters were built, also on
West Second St., by Henry
Ewing and the store is still in
that location.
· The epitome of depeh &lt;lability and stability, Graves
has been with the firm from
the day he started until this
month when he decided that
he would retire. It's not going
to be a full-time retirement,
however, because Graves has
agreed to work for one week
each month.
He's in the happy position
of being able to select the
days he wishes to report to
the store to perform his
week's duties each month .
Graves was away from the
firm one time in those 43
years, for 23 months during
World War ll when he served
in the armed forces.
Graves is well known in the
commu nity, and small
wonder. He is past master of
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM;
past high priest of Pomeroy
Chapter 80, R.A.M .; past

While

Supp~

Lasts

WITH TRADE

illustrious
master
of
Pomeroy Council 46. R. and
S.M., and a past eminent
comma nder of Ohio Valley
Commander y 24, Knights
Templar. In view of having
held the top chair in these
~roups , he is a member of the
Knights of York Cross of
Honor.
A member of the Pomeroy
Exempted Village School
District Board of Education
[or 12 years, Graves wa s the

first president of the board to
sign the diplomas of his own
child , Carolyn Graves
Thomas. He has been active
with Trinity Church, being an
elder and a past president of
the church counciL He is a
dire ctor of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce and
of the Pomeroy-Middleport
Lions Club. He belongs to
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion.
Graves married the former

Nell Proctor on May· 9, 1934.
She lived in Syracuse but
traveled to Pomerov High
&amp; hool each day for schooling
and was a star player on the
girls' basketball · team. With
both having such an enthusiasm for . basketball, it
was natural that they would
find other common interests.
They have one daughter ,
Carolyn, and four grandchildren , Melissa Kay ,
Rebecca Dawn, Daniel Lee
and Gregory Todd Thomas,
all of Pomeroy. The Graves'
son-in-law, Don Thomas, has
been named new manager of

RALPHS. GRAVES
the G. and J . store where he
has been employed for a
number of yearS.
Graves has a pleasant
outlook about his retirement.
He will now have more tirrie
to do some of the things he
enjoys such as golfing and
bowling. he and Mrs. Graves
are active members of a
da nce class and in fact, will
be joining several other club
members for ·a Caribbean
cruise Ui March. There's no
doubt that the Graves will
continue being actgive.
While Graves wishes to
extend sincere thanks to tne
many customers over the
long years , th ere also is no
doubt that he did make most
of those customer "friends."

King Juan Carlos, before
signing the treaty and a
package of supplemental ac·
cords.
U.S. officials said the
agreement amounted to a
. .
I
. .
treaty on economic a nd
miliwry cooperation and did
' not constitute a new defense
commitment by the United
SAN H\ANCISCO (UPI) Randolph A. Hearst, is
The time of reckoning finally president of the San Fran- States.
A key section of the treaty
has come for Pairicia Hearst. cisco Examiner.
restric
ted the use of
Just one week less than two
The government 's case
American
bases in Spain in J,,,,C
,,,,,;:;,:'''''':'='x==;,,,,,,,,,;,h
=:======'::a===:='''=c''''' :'k==::::;:;:,s,, :=:=:=:&gt;.==U
=':=:========''d=':
':':'='a
;:;;:,:;:·:,,,,
l l...,.,.ii::
years after she was'ki~naf)ed against Miss Hearst is based
ca!iC
of
external
threat
or
by the Symbionese Liberation primarily 'on the evidence of
and
1,200 attack against the security of ~~~
'
'
@i .
.
Ameri ca n Bar Association, Army, she goes on trial this witnesses
the West."
law student division, Delta week for armed bank robbery photographs wken by bank
Thel&lt;l Phi Legal Fraternity, before a jury that will be . camera s durin g the 10:!y RICHARD TAFFE Jr.
Udall said he valued
Grading · Committee, Dean called upon to dec ide once minu le holdup of a neighBOSTON
!UP!)
Former
endorsement
because Cox
agricultural
and
Search Committee and was and for all whether she borhood Hibernia Bank
COLUMBUS (UP! ) -Real for
watergate
S
pecia
I
was.:,'the
symboloflherule
of
J.a w Day Coordina tor . He became "Tania," the darling branch six blocks south of
residential
land
to
be
taxed
w&gt;
'on
and
utility
estate
Prosecutor Archibald Cox law smce he stood up to
the
American Golden Gate Park.
ul,su served as vice president of
ratemaking will be in the on 25 per cent of its value,
abandoned
more than two Nixon.
More than 90 secret subpaof
th e Student
Bar revolutionary -left, because
"Trust in politics does not spotlight when the Ohio rather than the current 35 per
years of political aloofness
she wanted to or because ·she enas have been issued to
Assoc iati on.
Sa tun)ay to formally endorse co~e,.ror the asking," C~x General Assembly recoil.- cent. The resolution would be
gover nrn~nt
witn·e sses ,
placed on the Ohio ballot next
He was selected for feared for her life.
the presidential candidacy of satd. Only a m~n ltke MorriS venes this week,
The trial, expected to last although only about hair are
nwmbersh ip in the Willis
November.
The
House
Ways
and
Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz. Uda ll with hts openness,
A similar resolution giving
Socie ty (honorary ) an d about ' eight weeks, is expected to testify, accorcling
Means
Committee
meets
at
·
"This is not a time for mtegr tty and honor can do
homes
tead owners a . tax
Om icro n Delta Kappa , a scheduled to begin Tuesday to the chief prosecutor, U.S.
1:30
p.m.
Tuesday
to
patch
hanginglooseorsitting on the that," the Harvard law
break
is before the Senate
leader ship fraternity , an d after a day of hearing defense Attorney James Browning.
together
an
atte
mpt
by
fence," said Cox who has professor told a news conln a summary prepared by
Ways
and
Means Committee
was a Delta Theta .Ph i motions Monday . Arguments
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Gov.
majority
Democrats
to
roll
shied fr om politics since ference.
.
and
wiU
receive
an airing
Sc holars hip Ce rtifi cate on the motions were delayed prosecutors for Judge Carter, James A. Rhodes Saturday
back
real
estate
tax
es
"He is youn~ enough to .
go vernment' s
in - a·sked the · Ohio General being fired as Special
Monday
night.
,·ecipie nt. · EvaJ&lt;S graduated last week because the judge, the
without
affecting
revenues
Prosecutor in Oct. 1973 by the seek new solutions, yet old
The House Utility Comin tlie upper fi ve per cehl of U$ . District Judge Oliver J . terpretation of the ho)dup Assembly to pass emergency
Nixon administration in the enough and experienced tu available to local governCarter , undefwenl min or pho(ographs - which have leg islation which would give
mittee
is to meet at 2 p.m.
his Class.
'ments
and
schools
.
"Saturday Night Massacre." not buy any sn'!ke .oil," the .
been put together in movie Ohio property owners 60 days
Evans received his un - surgery .
· In addition , the House Tuesday to continue amenbow-tied,
bushy-haired
Cox
For months after her kid· form ~ was described :
p&lt;•rgraduate educ ation a t
to pay their bills. instead of
grinned over his half-frame Ways and Means Committee ding a bill changing the utility
naping,
Patty taunted police
"Miss Hearst first appears the current 30 days.
Ohio Northern whe re he
is scheduled to consider a ratemaking formula. The
glasses.
graduated 'in 1971 with a B.A. and the FBI, her family and a on a frame simultaneously
"I am asking the General
constitutional
amendment measure originally was
Two promoted in Wednesday classifying real designed to restrict the
degree In Business Ad- fasCinated public with wlth Camilla Hall (one of the Assembly to pass this legisla-·
revolutionary
rhetoric SLA members ). Miss Hearst
m,nistration.
tlon immediately so that it
property for taxation pur- factors favoring utilities, but
delivered on tape r ecor(ijngs is seen to take up a position in
restaurant chain
it was watered down in
can
be
effective
in
time
to
poses.
that turned the tiny SLA Into · the middle of the bank lobby
committee last week.
help Ohioans who currently
The
amendment,
spansored
COLUMBUS - Bob Evans
America 's most notorious facing in a southerly direc- have tax bills due," Rhodes
Across the way in the
by Rep. Rocco COlonna, DFarms, Inc., the sausage and Brook Park, would provide Senate , the Ways and Means
radical
group .
But tion so as to cover customers said. "Thirty days may have
r es t a urant company
throughout , her family , and lying on the floor a nd on the been sufficient time in the
Connnil tee plans .a hearing
.hea dquartered here, has
since her arrest h~r defense officer's platform.. . ·
for Wednesday morning on a
past when taxes were low .
announced appointment of
attorneys, have insisted that
"Subsequent frames show But with huge hikes being
CALLED TWICE
more liberal version of the
she was a .victim of her Hearst moving her . weapon
By RICHARD E. LERNER two additional division
POMEROY
The utilities formula. That bill
tacked
on
due
to
reappraisal
managers, Don Bostic and Pomeroy E-R squad an - jus t emerged from subca ptors , not a soldier from time to time and when a and annual updating, people
WASHINGTON (UPI) comrad e who willingly young white male enters the need more time to rai!iC the President Ford had his an- Bob Brinkmeyer, for Its chain swered a call to Chester Road committee l.asl week.
carried automatic weapons bank during the robbery she
nual medi cal checkup of 20 family-size res- at 1:40 p.m. Saturday for
Tuesday 's House floor
and wlked of fighting for points her weapon at him as money to meet ,property wx Saturday and declared taurants.
Daniel Davidson, who was ill. session features legislation
payments, or to file protests.
Bostic is in the Cincinnati He was taken to Veterans requiring elementary schools
revolution.
he is placed by the others on
'1 am asking that himself "fit to be President ."
POMEROY - Two Meigs
Miss Hearst, the 21-year- the floor . She is also observed
area
and Brinkmeyer ls
His personar physician
Couin ty Democ rats hav e old granddaughter of famed to point her weapon toward legislators help Ohio tax- described the President's working in the northeastern . Memorial Hospital. At 2: 50 in Ohio to teach the metric
announced their candidacy publisher WiUiam RBndolph two elderly white males as payers now With this health as "excellent," and Ohio district where there are p.m. the squad was called for measuring system.
The Senate reconvenes at
for county ofrices in June, E. Hearst , is charged with they enter the bank , her emergency legislation, and also said First Lady Betty units in Youngstown, North Gilbert Mees, W. Main St.,
who
was
suffering
pains
in
his
1:30
p.m . Monday night,
then
go
on
to
do
a
thorough
A. Wingett, party committee wking_ part in the $10,680 weapon being then turned
Ford appears to have won her Canton and two in Cleveland. side. He was also taken to while the House meets at II
job
of
overhauling
the
tax
chairman, sa id Saturday.
holdup of a San Francisco away from them, but at lh.e
battle with cancer _
Veterans Memorial Hospital. a.m. Tuesday.
The two are James Proffitt, bank on .April 1.5, 1974, 10 time they are shot by others system to prevent sky-high
Rear
Adm.
William
a retired navy veteran of weeks after she was kid- perpetrating the robbery , her equalization adjustments and Lukash, the White House ;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:;:::;:~:~::!:;:::;:::;:!:=:!:::;:;:~:::::::::::::::::K&lt;-:~::::;;;::;:;:::::::=:i::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::~
near Pomeroy, who will seek naped , along with 'four weapan is returned toward annual updates in property doctor, said he and four other
values ,'~ he ~aid.
the Democratic nomination members of the SLA who their general direction. '
Navy doctors concluded after
to run for sheriff, and James were killed the next month in
"At the moment of the
extensive tests that the 62Bailey, Long Bottom, a a fire a nd shootout with Los shooting Hearst's mouth is
year-old chief executive had
veteran of the U. S. Air Corps Angeles
police .
Two open and her facial excome through 18 months of
and former superin'tendent of bystanders were wounded as pression is subject to the
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI)
or group on any topic" may
life in the White House in fine
the Ohio Department of High- the bank robbers Oed to two interpretation of the viewer
be prese nted at thos&lt;
shape and "should have no - Moslem and Palestinian
ways in Meigs County, who waiting getaway cars.
meetings to the committee 's
of the photo. She is also seen
difficulty with any of his gunmen stormed tl1c fortress
will seck nomination to run
The formal charges against' in the film as either directing
residence
of
Interior
Minister
Washington
headquarters.
responsibilities this coming
for Meigs County Com- her are armed bank robbery or signaling persons on the
Camille Chamoun Saturday
year.
missioner, the Jan . 3 t.!rm. and use of a firearm to noor with her left hand .or
and set it ablaze in the worst
DALLAS (UP II A
GALLIPOLIS - Rudolph - Ford spent just over th"ee
A,t a meeting of Democrats cominlt a felony. A bank · checking her watch."
violation of the cease-fire
thoroughbr
ed
fil)
y
s
tolen
hours
at
the
National
Naval
M. Gordon, Jr ., 19, Gallipolis,
held in Pomeroy Thursday robbery conviction carries a
from Nelson Bunker Hunt,
But her defense attorneys, was charged with DWI Medical Center in suburban declared two days ago.
night , William' Lavelle , maximum sentence of 25 who concede she was in the
The attackers loot.!d the
son
of the late Texas oil
Bethesda,
Md.,
arriving
by
Both Gaston and his wife ,
Athens, a member of the years in prison and-or a bank, say that what is im- following a traffic mishap car just after sunrise without sprawling villa at Saadyat, 19 Minnie, 65, were reported in multimillinaire H. L. Hunt,
Friday on Chillicothe Rd. at
miles south of Beirut, before guarded condition at a local has been found in Milan,
national Democrat com- $10,000 fine, and she could be partant is what the photoHenkle Ave. City police said a coat despite temperatures
mittee: spoke on ge neral sentenced to an additional graphs cannot show - what an auto driven by Herbert in the 20s .. He told reporters · putting it to the torch, a hospital with multiple scalp Italy, in the backyard of a
matters perwining to the one to 10 years on the firearm was going on in her mind at
spokesman for Chamoun 's
Brown, Rt . I, Bidwell, was · .ori his way out: "I feelfit as a right-wing National Liberal lacerations. Mrs ..Gaston was butcher who was about to
party and on the selection of charge.
the time.
fiddle
and
I'm
·getting
found beate n and un - slaughter her for meat, a
turning left on to Henke Ave.
delegates to the National
The long search for
Party said .
"Putting it simply , it when it was struck in the side healthier every day."
consc_ious , suffering a fam il y spo kesman said
Democratic Convention.
Patricia Hearst was probably amounts to the defense that
Saturday.
ford
was
asked
if
he
dislocated shoulder.
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A
A poll was taken among 44 . the most embarrassing in the 'somebody put a gun at my by Gurdon 's car.
The horse, Carnauba, a 3passed
the
physical.
"I
think
Gaston was rescued from
A passenger in the Gordon
De mocrats attending the FBI's long history. More than head and I did what they told
compromise agreement the back seat of his car,
year-old
bay, was taken four
I
did
with
flying
colors,"
he
meeting on their preference 8,500 agents spent mJIUons of me," is the way chief def~nse auto, Frank Rutherford, 19, said. When asked if he was fit reportedly was reached in,the where he was handcuffed and months ago after she had won
for presidential candidates dollars looking for the JIJO. counsel F . Lee Batley Gallipolis, suffered minor for the palitical struggle with dispute between Unit.!d Mine covered by a blanket, when $60,000 on the Italian racing
injuries. There was moderate
with Humphrey receiving 25 paund coed whose father
describes it.
·
'Republican rival Ronald Workers Presiden~ . Arnold sheriffs deputies spotted the circuit. "She was in the back
damage
to both vehicles.
votes. Carter, who had a
'
'
Reagan, Ford replied: "Fit to Miller and UMW Dis trict car a fe)V blocks from his yard of the · butcher shop
representative
at
the
representative Lee Roy home. The driver of the car , about to be slaughtered,"
be president."
meeting, received. eight;
· Ford said the only advice Patterson, it · was learned Charles Lewis Clayborn, Jr., said Hunt's wife, Caroline .
George Wallace, 3; Muskie
doctors gave him was to SatJifday.
44 , of Birmingham , was "She was in terrible conand Baugh 2, and one each for
The tentative agreement charged with kidnaping , dition. In ·Italy horse meat is
"keep doing all I'm doing Byrd, Kennedy, Harris and
like rabbit or a ny other sort of·
recreatlon , exerCise, a was not final, it was learned, burglary, and robbery.
Jackson. Present for the ·
but ii appeared that Patwa tching the cu1ories."
meat."
meeting also was Rep. Ron
terson would accept Miller's
HONG KONG (UP!) nuclear testing site near Lop announced . by
Indian
WASHINGTON
(UP!
)
James of Proctorville.
suspension 1of him for not The Democratic National
Vowing to break the "nuclear Nor in the remote Sinkiang monitors. Most of the
LOUISVILLE, Ky . (UP!)
going to Alaska· to survey a Committee said Saturday it - An estimated 1,100 singing
monopoly " of the super- region of northwest China. previous tests ·were initially
mine, and Miller im- will hold public hearings opponents of court-ordered
TOP PATROLMAN
powers. China said Saturday
It was not known whether reported by the U.S. Atomic
mediately would lift the across the nation in the next racial busing in the Jefferson
COLUMBUS !·UPIJ
its scientists have suc- the test was conducted in the Energy Commission.
'
STRACHAN BEFORE BAR suspension .
Patrolman James H. Reed, cessfully conducted a new • atmosphere or underground.
'"l'he · c·onducting
of
few months to let party County schools marched
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)
31, Friday was named the atomic test.
The magnitude of the . ex- necessary and limited
members help shape the 1976 through one of jlhe wealthiest
BIRMINGHAM ,
Ala . Democratic party platform. sections of town Saturday to
1975 Ohio State Highway
The official New China plosion was also unk~own . nuclear tests by China is - Former W.hite House aide
Patrolman of the Year.
News Agency, in a r~ort
The announcement marked entirely for the purpose of Gordon C. Strachan, an early (UP!) - A. G. Gaston, a
Rhode Island Gov . Philip seek support for their cause.
from Pekin!!, said the lettt- the first time China reported defense and for breaking the casually of Wa tergate, told wealthy 83-year-old black Nee!, temporary chairman of
The march, sponsored by
state
Bar Commissioners
businessman
and
friend
of
llle
18th
since
China
became
a
one
of
its
nuclear
tests
before
Union
Labor Against Busing
NOW YOU KNOW
nuclear monopoly by tbe
the pla tform committee, said
considering
his
application
to
tile
late
Dr.
Martin
Luther
nuclear
power
in
1914-took
outside
monitoring
agencies
(ULAB),
was the first largeThe most balls a juggler
superpowers
and
for
there will be at least one
practice
law
in
Utah
that
King
Jr.,
was
rescued
by
place
Friday
.
The
an·
since
joining
the
"nuclear
scale
antibusing
protest in
has successfully kept in the
hearing in each of the four
ultimately abolishing nuclear
"my
ambition
took
control
of
sheriff's
deputies
SatUrday
nouncement
gave
no
details.
club"
in
October,
1964.
Louisville
sin
ce
classes
air at one lime is 10, a feat
weapons,'' tlle announcement
IN C regions and one in
my
jl'dgment
,
..
and
it
two
hours
after
he
was
beaten
The
explosion
apparently
The
last
previous
test,
con:
resumed
after
the
holiday
said.
·
accomplished by Enrico
Washington . Noel said
wouldn't
happen
again
."
and
kidnaped
Iron
.
his
home
.
took
pl.ace
at
China's
main
dueled
last
Oct.
'
1
:1,
was
first
break.
testimony "fr om any person
Rastelll in !920. ,

GALLIPOLIS - Da vid T.
E:vans of Holcomb Hill, a 1975
~ raduate of the Ohio NorUJern University College of
Law in Ada, will begin his law
practice here Monday in
Suite 204 of the Business and
Pr·ofessional Buildi ng , 414
Second Ave.
·
The son of Mr . and Mrs. J .
Tim 1Betty) Evans, Evans
received his J. D. degree in
May . While at Ohio Northern,
he was a member of the
National Moot Court Team,

Taxes, electricity has

41

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60 days

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Out of Distributor Warehouse

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cettlng ready
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'

DAVID EVANS

By NICHOLAS DANJLOFF
MADRID, Spail} (UPI) ~
The United Swtes and Spain
Saturday signed a treaty
pledging the pullout of U.S.
nuclear weapons from Spain
and restrtcttng the use of
America's bases in Spain in
case of an atwck against the
West.
\
"The Spanish drove a hard
bargain, " a U.S. · offi cial

l!y !lob Hoefllch
POMEROY - "I tried to
work with the motto to make
friends out of customers and
not customers outoffriends,"
sa id Ralph S. Graves,
papular Pomeroy resident,
who has retired after over 40
years service with tbe G. and
J . Auto Parts Co. in Pomeroy.
And people who know the
pleasant Lincoln Terrace
resident are aware that
Graves lived up to that motto
during his long tenure with
the firm that swrted in
Pomeroy in August, 1932,
with one employe -Graves and today has 12.
A 1928 graduate of Mid·
dlepart High School where
recorqs show he was a super
basketball star, Graves attended Ohio University for
one year but quit due to the
costs involved to his father .
Alter working briefly for
Covert's Bakery and the
Russell Auto Sales Agency in
Middleport, Graves began
working at the G. and J . Auto
Parts which had just opened
in Pomeroy.
The following_ month in
Sep tember, 1932, he was
made the manager of the
operation. Being the only
employe he had no problems
. with workers ; some days, not
one item was sold. When
lunch time came, Graves
closed the establishment for a
half hour and reopened after
a quick lunch.
The first G. and J. Auto
Parts store was located on E.

pay tax

industries not hiring Blacks
until the later '60's therefore, limi tin g Blacks
from higher jobs which
comes with seniority.
The WOWK-TV News staff
set in on, and in many instances , led tl1e discussions.
They pointed out that they
were not expec ting to solve
local problems - but to open
the doors or communication.
It seemed a general conthat local groups
organi zati ons meet

U. S. agrees to
leave Spain if
West is attacked

way. The vehicle left the
r·oa dway and slid over i:Hl

of Pomeroy retiring

PAGE 15

SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1976

VOL. 10 t'IO. 52

$:157 .50 e01ch. driving while
intoxicated; Hubert H.
Stewart, Middl eport , $350,

Driver charged

Pa rsons,

·· --

From th·eDistributor Warehouse To You

G &amp; J manager Graves

on compromise

Chinese shoot A-bomb

\

•

�H - TheSwJdayTimcs-Sentmel,SwJday ,.la n. 25,1976 ,

Courl hears 20 ·cases
POMEROY
Eight
defendan ts were fined and 12
othe rs forfeite d bond s in
Meigs County Court friday .
fined by Judge Robert E.
Buck were Dana J . Aldridge,
Racine, and Earl C. Kauff,
Hemlock Grove, $12 and cos Is
each, speeding; Bruce A.
Kapack, Gallip olis, 110 and
cos ts, improper parking:
Marylyn S. Wi lcox, Middlepo rt , $15 and costs,
speeding; frances Sue Hill ,
Syrac use, $13 a nd costs,
speedin g; Ephriam Herdma n, Pomeroy, $25 and costs,
$15 suspended if car passes
safe ty check ih lwo wee ks,
un safe
vehicle:
fr ed
Els wi ck. Shade, 120 and
costs, failure to yield righ t of
way.
r orfieting bonds were
Robe rt C.
Cll ri semer ,
Cheshire, S22. 5U, no exhaust
system; Da vid Branham,
Loui sa, Ky., Ja mes E .
f erguson, Grove City, Robert
Gore, So uth Za hesville,
Donald W. Tackett, South
Point, Mi chael Stewart,
Cheshire. Randall E. Knotts.

Ry G. M. Craig, Jr.
GALLIPOLIS - Two days
ago WOWK -TV held a
community luncheon at our
loca l Holiday Inn. At this
meeting, different segments
of our community expressed
what they fell the comm un ity
needs. Highlighi.s were :
- Proba bly the biggest
concern was over our presen t
swimming pool disas ter. It
really doesn 't seem like so
long ag o when we were
promised the swimming pool
for the hot days of sunlmer.
Now, with temperature
dipping to the low 20's we see
visions of ow pool cracking
and the bath house sliding
down the side of a hill.
- ·There was also concern
expressed for the council on
aging which has gotten to the
end of ito limit of fe deral
grants. It was reported that
the gr oup is receiving some
Stale aid. This wo rth y
organization will be having a
lkle-lhon to support its ca use.
- Housing· for the elderly
and low-ihcome indi viduals
was also discussed. ll was fel l
tha t we now have no such
facil ities to give these two
groups decent housing at a
reasonable pt ice .
- It was also felt that &lt;)ur
schools should be offering our
youth s more education on
sex. Along this line, I would
add drug edqcation so tha t
our kids would have tr~thful
knowledge of the present
drug epidemic :
-- Minority representatives
felt that the sc hools should
introduce a comprehensive
course on Black History ..
They also agreed upon the
impo rtan ce of upgradin g
blacks on their present jobs.
(This stems from

Belpre , and Rnbert L. Zurfluh , Haddam, Kansas, $27.50
each, speeding; Michae l
Tulloh, Waverly, $27.50. left
nf center; Gar land R. Jordan,
New Marshfi eld. Johnnie A.
Cazzell. Payton, and Rober t

E . Morrison. South Poult,

dr ivi ng wl1il e intoxicated ;

Robert E. Morrison, South
Point, $t57.50, hit-skip .

GALLIPOI.IS - Nan cy
Sparkman, 26, Gallipolis, was
charged with failure to yield
right of way fo llowing an
accide nt at 4 p.m. friday on
Rt. 141, four thenths of a mile
wes t of here.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
the Sparkman car pulled
fr om a driveway into the path
of a vehicle operated by

the path of a car operu ted by
Ar turo DeLameran s, t7,
Gallipolis.
Another deer was killed at
11:30p.m. on Rt.lH , two and

James

lhree tenths m iles eas t of the

26

car on an icy area in the high-

embankment .

A deer was killed at G:30
p.m. on Rt. 160 at County
Road 4. The animal ran into

1

Gallipolis. There was minor
damage.

Vinton-Meigs Co unty lin e.
The an imal ran in to the path
A si ngle car mishap oc- of a car opera ted by Todd R.
curred at 2:50p.m. frida y on Stevens, 22, Athens.
Peter's Branch Rd. where
Verble 0 . Waugh, 43, Rt. 2,
Crown City, lost con trol of her

Upper body of
man is burned
MASON, W. Va . - Harold
J . Will, 2.1 , of Mason is listed
in satisfactory cond ition in
the intensive· care unit of
Pleasant Valley Hospital with
burns suffered Friday when
the upper part of his body
caught fire.
The Mason Rescue Squad
said his arms apparently
were covered with gasoline
and fire ignited them. The
squad rushed him to the
hosp ital at 11 :32 a.m.

exchange ideals on public
top ics.
I. personally left with a
better und erstanding of
differen t problems fa ci ng our
community . And after all,
comrnun ication is the fi rs t
part of undersl&lt;lnding .

by Dick Turner

CARNIVAL

"Chip and Dent Sale"
We Bought 10
19 cubic foot Side by Side

EL I AT R·
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DaVl"d EvanS
.
hegins law
practice

The five-year pact also
conceded after Secrewry of
State Henry Kissinger and provides for $1.22 billion ·in
Spanish Foreign Minister U.S. military, economic,
Jose Maria Areilza signed the cultural, educational and
scientific aid to Spain.
treaty.
In r eturn, the Spanish
Spain, anxious to solidify
its defense relationship with government will permit the
the United Swles, insisted on United Swtes to rewin a
a fullfledged treaty instead of naval facility at Rota and air
previous "e X e C U t i V "e force ba~e s at Torre jon,
agreements" between the Zaragoza and Moron.
Kissinger, who flew to Ma·
two countries since 1953.
drid Saturday after wlks in
Mosco w and Brus!;Cls, con-

Hearst trial
Opens Tuesday

ferred with Spain's new ruler,

Second St., in what wsa
known as the "Sanitary
Grocery" building and has
since been absorbed in additional quarters for the
Pomeroy National Bank.' The
firm was started by C, H.
Todd and U. A. Cornett of
Ga!Upolis.
.Although business was slow
at first, the Pomeroy store
grew as cars became more
common . The store was
moved to West Second St. in
what was known as the Guth
building and 195&amp;, brand new
quarters were built, also on
West Second St., by Henry
Ewing and the store is still in
that location.
· The epitome of depeh &lt;lability and stability, Graves
has been with the firm from
the day he started until this
month when he decided that
he would retire. It's not going
to be a full-time retirement,
however, because Graves has
agreed to work for one week
each month.
He's in the happy position
of being able to select the
days he wishes to report to
the store to perform his
week's duties each month .
Graves was away from the
firm one time in those 43
years, for 23 months during
World War ll when he served
in the armed forces.
Graves is well known in the
commu nity, and small
wonder. He is past master of
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM;
past high priest of Pomeroy
Chapter 80, R.A.M .; past

While

Supp~

Lasts

WITH TRADE

illustrious
master
of
Pomeroy Council 46. R. and
S.M., and a past eminent
comma nder of Ohio Valley
Commander y 24, Knights
Templar. In view of having
held the top chair in these
~roups , he is a member of the
Knights of York Cross of
Honor.
A member of the Pomeroy
Exempted Village School
District Board of Education
[or 12 years, Graves wa s the

first president of the board to
sign the diplomas of his own
child , Carolyn Graves
Thomas. He has been active
with Trinity Church, being an
elder and a past president of
the church counciL He is a
dire ctor of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce and
of the Pomeroy-Middleport
Lions Club. He belongs to
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion.
Graves married the former

Nell Proctor on May· 9, 1934.
She lived in Syracuse but
traveled to Pomerov High
&amp; hool each day for schooling
and was a star player on the
girls' basketball · team. With
both having such an enthusiasm for . basketball, it
was natural that they would
find other common interests.
They have one daughter ,
Carolyn, and four grandchildren , Melissa Kay ,
Rebecca Dawn, Daniel Lee
and Gregory Todd Thomas,
all of Pomeroy. The Graves'
son-in-law, Don Thomas, has
been named new manager of

RALPHS. GRAVES
the G. and J . store where he
has been employed for a
number of yearS.
Graves has a pleasant
outlook about his retirement.
He will now have more tirrie
to do some of the things he
enjoys such as golfing and
bowling. he and Mrs. Graves
are active members of a
da nce class and in fact, will
be joining several other club
members for ·a Caribbean
cruise Ui March. There's no
doubt that the Graves will
continue being actgive.
While Graves wishes to
extend sincere thanks to tne
many customers over the
long years , th ere also is no
doubt that he did make most
of those customer "friends."

King Juan Carlos, before
signing the treaty and a
package of supplemental ac·
cords.
U.S. officials said the
agreement amounted to a
. .
I
. .
treaty on economic a nd
miliwry cooperation and did
' not constitute a new defense
commitment by the United
SAN H\ANCISCO (UPI) Randolph A. Hearst, is
The time of reckoning finally president of the San Fran- States.
A key section of the treaty
has come for Pairicia Hearst. cisco Examiner.
restric
ted the use of
Just one week less than two
The government 's case
American
bases in Spain in J,,,,C
,,,,,;:;,:'''''':'='x==;,,,,,,,,,;,h
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;:;;:,:;:·:,,,,
l l...,.,.ii::
years after she was'ki~naf)ed against Miss Hearst is based
ca!iC
of
external
threat
or
by the Symbionese Liberation primarily 'on the evidence of
and
1,200 attack against the security of ~~~
'
'
@i .
.
Ameri ca n Bar Association, Army, she goes on trial this witnesses
the West."
law student division, Delta week for armed bank robbery photographs wken by bank
Thel&lt;l Phi Legal Fraternity, before a jury that will be . camera s durin g the 10:!y RICHARD TAFFE Jr.
Udall said he valued
Grading · Committee, Dean called upon to dec ide once minu le holdup of a neighBOSTON
!UP!)
Former
endorsement
because Cox
agricultural
and
Search Committee and was and for all whether she borhood Hibernia Bank
COLUMBUS (UP! ) -Real for
watergate
S
pecia
I
was.:,'the
symboloflherule
of
J.a w Day Coordina tor . He became "Tania," the darling branch six blocks south of
residential
land
to
be
taxed
w&gt;
'on
and
utility
estate
Prosecutor Archibald Cox law smce he stood up to
the
American Golden Gate Park.
ul,su served as vice president of
ratemaking will be in the on 25 per cent of its value,
abandoned
more than two Nixon.
More than 90 secret subpaof
th e Student
Bar revolutionary -left, because
"Trust in politics does not spotlight when the Ohio rather than the current 35 per
years of political aloofness
she wanted to or because ·she enas have been issued to
Assoc iati on.
Sa tun)ay to formally endorse co~e,.ror the asking," C~x General Assembly recoil.- cent. The resolution would be
gover nrn~nt
witn·e sses ,
placed on the Ohio ballot next
He was selected for feared for her life.
the presidential candidacy of satd. Only a m~n ltke MorriS venes this week,
The trial, expected to last although only about hair are
nwmbersh ip in the Willis
November.
The
House
Ways
and
Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz. Uda ll with hts openness,
A similar resolution giving
Socie ty (honorary ) an d about ' eight weeks, is expected to testify, accorcling
Means
Committee
meets
at
·
"This is not a time for mtegr tty and honor can do
homes
tead owners a . tax
Om icro n Delta Kappa , a scheduled to begin Tuesday to the chief prosecutor, U.S.
1:30
p.m.
Tuesday
to
patch
hanginglooseorsitting on the that," the Harvard law
break
is before the Senate
leader ship fraternity , an d after a day of hearing defense Attorney James Browning.
together
an
atte
mpt
by
fence," said Cox who has professor told a news conln a summary prepared by
Ways
and
Means Committee
was a Delta Theta .Ph i motions Monday . Arguments
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Gov.
majority
Democrats
to
roll
shied fr om politics since ference.
.
and
wiU
receive
an airing
Sc holars hip Ce rtifi cate on the motions were delayed prosecutors for Judge Carter, James A. Rhodes Saturday
back
real
estate
tax
es
"He is youn~ enough to .
go vernment' s
in - a·sked the · Ohio General being fired as Special
Monday
night.
,·ecipie nt. · EvaJ&lt;S graduated last week because the judge, the
without
affecting
revenues
Prosecutor in Oct. 1973 by the seek new solutions, yet old
The House Utility Comin tlie upper fi ve per cehl of U$ . District Judge Oliver J . terpretation of the ho)dup Assembly to pass emergency
Nixon administration in the enough and experienced tu available to local governCarter , undefwenl min or pho(ographs - which have leg islation which would give
mittee
is to meet at 2 p.m.
his Class.
'ments
and
schools
.
"Saturday Night Massacre." not buy any sn'!ke .oil," the .
been put together in movie Ohio property owners 60 days
Evans received his un - surgery .
· In addition , the House Tuesday to continue amenbow-tied,
bushy-haired
Cox
For months after her kid· form ~ was described :
p&lt;•rgraduate educ ation a t
to pay their bills. instead of
grinned over his half-frame Ways and Means Committee ding a bill changing the utility
naping,
Patty taunted police
"Miss Hearst first appears the current 30 days.
Ohio Northern whe re he
is scheduled to consider a ratemaking formula. The
glasses.
graduated 'in 1971 with a B.A. and the FBI, her family and a on a frame simultaneously
"I am asking the General
constitutional
amendment measure originally was
Two promoted in Wednesday classifying real designed to restrict the
degree In Business Ad- fasCinated public with wlth Camilla Hall (one of the Assembly to pass this legisla-·
revolutionary
rhetoric SLA members ). Miss Hearst
m,nistration.
tlon immediately so that it
property for taxation pur- factors favoring utilities, but
delivered on tape r ecor(ijngs is seen to take up a position in
restaurant chain
it was watered down in
can
be
effective
in
time
to
poses.
that turned the tiny SLA Into · the middle of the bank lobby
committee last week.
help Ohioans who currently
The
amendment,
spansored
COLUMBUS - Bob Evans
America 's most notorious facing in a southerly direc- have tax bills due," Rhodes
Across the way in the
by Rep. Rocco COlonna, DFarms, Inc., the sausage and Brook Park, would provide Senate , the Ways and Means
radical
group .
But tion so as to cover customers said. "Thirty days may have
r es t a urant company
throughout , her family , and lying on the floor a nd on the been sufficient time in the
Connnil tee plans .a hearing
.hea dquartered here, has
since her arrest h~r defense officer's platform.. . ·
for Wednesday morning on a
past when taxes were low .
announced appointment of
attorneys, have insisted that
"Subsequent frames show But with huge hikes being
CALLED TWICE
more liberal version of the
she was a .victim of her Hearst moving her . weapon
By RICHARD E. LERNER two additional division
POMEROY
The utilities formula. That bill
tacked
on
due
to
reappraisal
managers, Don Bostic and Pomeroy E-R squad an - jus t emerged from subca ptors , not a soldier from time to time and when a and annual updating, people
WASHINGTON (UPI) comrad e who willingly young white male enters the need more time to rai!iC the President Ford had his an- Bob Brinkmeyer, for Its chain swered a call to Chester Road committee l.asl week.
carried automatic weapons bank during the robbery she
nual medi cal checkup of 20 family-size res- at 1:40 p.m. Saturday for
Tuesday 's House floor
and wlked of fighting for points her weapon at him as money to meet ,property wx Saturday and declared taurants.
Daniel Davidson, who was ill. session features legislation
payments, or to file protests.
Bostic is in the Cincinnati He was taken to Veterans requiring elementary schools
revolution.
he is placed by the others on
'1 am asking that himself "fit to be President ."
POMEROY - Two Meigs
Miss Hearst, the 21-year- the floor . She is also observed
area
and Brinkmeyer ls
His personar physician
Couin ty Democ rats hav e old granddaughter of famed to point her weapon toward legislators help Ohio tax- described the President's working in the northeastern . Memorial Hospital. At 2: 50 in Ohio to teach the metric
announced their candidacy publisher WiUiam RBndolph two elderly white males as payers now With this health as "excellent," and Ohio district where there are p.m. the squad was called for measuring system.
The Senate reconvenes at
for county ofrices in June, E. Hearst , is charged with they enter the bank , her emergency legislation, and also said First Lady Betty units in Youngstown, North Gilbert Mees, W. Main St.,
who
was
suffering
pains
in
his
1:30
p.m . Monday night,
then
go
on
to
do
a
thorough
A. Wingett, party committee wking_ part in the $10,680 weapon being then turned
Ford appears to have won her Canton and two in Cleveland. side. He was also taken to while the House meets at II
job
of
overhauling
the
tax
chairman, sa id Saturday.
holdup of a San Francisco away from them, but at lh.e
battle with cancer _
Veterans Memorial Hospital. a.m. Tuesday.
The two are James Proffitt, bank on .April 1.5, 1974, 10 time they are shot by others system to prevent sky-high
Rear
Adm.
William
a retired navy veteran of weeks after she was kid- perpetrating the robbery , her equalization adjustments and Lukash, the White House ;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:;:::;:~:~::!:;:::;:::;:!:=:!:::;:;:~:::::::::::::::::K&lt;-:~::::;;;::;:;:::::::=:i::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::~
near Pomeroy, who will seek naped , along with 'four weapan is returned toward annual updates in property doctor, said he and four other
values ,'~ he ~aid.
the Democratic nomination members of the SLA who their general direction. '
Navy doctors concluded after
to run for sheriff, and James were killed the next month in
"At the moment of the
extensive tests that the 62Bailey, Long Bottom, a a fire a nd shootout with Los shooting Hearst's mouth is
year-old chief executive had
veteran of the U. S. Air Corps Angeles
police .
Two open and her facial excome through 18 months of
and former superin'tendent of bystanders were wounded as pression is subject to the
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI)
or group on any topic" may
life in the White House in fine
the Ohio Department of High- the bank robbers Oed to two interpretation of the viewer
be prese nted at thos&lt;
shape and "should have no - Moslem and Palestinian
ways in Meigs County, who waiting getaway cars.
meetings to the committee 's
of the photo. She is also seen
difficulty with any of his gunmen stormed tl1c fortress
will seck nomination to run
The formal charges against' in the film as either directing
residence
of
Interior
Minister
Washington
headquarters.
responsibilities this coming
for Meigs County Com- her are armed bank robbery or signaling persons on the
Camille Chamoun Saturday
year.
missioner, the Jan . 3 t.!rm. and use of a firearm to noor with her left hand .or
and set it ablaze in the worst
DALLAS (UP II A
GALLIPOLIS - Rudolph - Ford spent just over th"ee
A,t a meeting of Democrats cominlt a felony. A bank · checking her watch."
violation of the cease-fire
thoroughbr
ed
fil)
y
s
tolen
hours
at
the
National
Naval
M. Gordon, Jr ., 19, Gallipolis,
held in Pomeroy Thursday robbery conviction carries a
from Nelson Bunker Hunt,
But her defense attorneys, was charged with DWI Medical Center in suburban declared two days ago.
night , William' Lavelle , maximum sentence of 25 who concede she was in the
The attackers loot.!d the
son
of the late Texas oil
Bethesda,
Md.,
arriving
by
Both Gaston and his wife ,
Athens, a member of the years in prison and-or a bank, say that what is im- following a traffic mishap car just after sunrise without sprawling villa at Saadyat, 19 Minnie, 65, were reported in multimillinaire H. L. Hunt,
Friday on Chillicothe Rd. at
miles south of Beirut, before guarded condition at a local has been found in Milan,
national Democrat com- $10,000 fine, and she could be partant is what the photoHenkle Ave. City police said a coat despite temperatures
mittee: spoke on ge neral sentenced to an additional graphs cannot show - what an auto driven by Herbert in the 20s .. He told reporters · putting it to the torch, a hospital with multiple scalp Italy, in the backyard of a
matters perwining to the one to 10 years on the firearm was going on in her mind at
spokesman for Chamoun 's
Brown, Rt . I, Bidwell, was · .ori his way out: "I feelfit as a right-wing National Liberal lacerations. Mrs ..Gaston was butcher who was about to
party and on the selection of charge.
the time.
fiddle
and
I'm
·getting
found beate n and un - slaughter her for meat, a
turning left on to Henke Ave.
delegates to the National
The long search for
Party said .
"Putting it simply , it when it was struck in the side healthier every day."
consc_ious , suffering a fam il y spo kesman said
Democratic Convention.
Patricia Hearst was probably amounts to the defense that
Saturday.
ford
was
asked
if
he
dislocated shoulder.
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A
A poll was taken among 44 . the most embarrassing in the 'somebody put a gun at my by Gurdon 's car.
The horse, Carnauba, a 3passed
the
physical.
"I
think
Gaston was rescued from
A passenger in the Gordon
De mocrats attending the FBI's long history. More than head and I did what they told
compromise agreement the back seat of his car,
year-old
bay, was taken four
I
did
with
flying
colors,"
he
meeting on their preference 8,500 agents spent mJIUons of me," is the way chief def~nse auto, Frank Rutherford, 19, said. When asked if he was fit reportedly was reached in,the where he was handcuffed and months ago after she had won
for presidential candidates dollars looking for the JIJO. counsel F . Lee Batley Gallipolis, suffered minor for the palitical struggle with dispute between Unit.!d Mine covered by a blanket, when $60,000 on the Italian racing
injuries. There was moderate
with Humphrey receiving 25 paund coed whose father
describes it.
·
'Republican rival Ronald Workers Presiden~ . Arnold sheriffs deputies spotted the circuit. "She was in the back
damage
to both vehicles.
votes. Carter, who had a
'
'
Reagan, Ford replied: "Fit to Miller and UMW Dis trict car a fe)V blocks from his yard of the · butcher shop
representative
at
the
representative Lee Roy home. The driver of the car , about to be slaughtered,"
be president."
meeting, received. eight;
· Ford said the only advice Patterson, it · was learned Charles Lewis Clayborn, Jr., said Hunt's wife, Caroline .
George Wallace, 3; Muskie
doctors gave him was to SatJifday.
44 , of Birmingham , was "She was in terrible conand Baugh 2, and one each for
The tentative agreement charged with kidnaping , dition. In ·Italy horse meat is
"keep doing all I'm doing Byrd, Kennedy, Harris and
like rabbit or a ny other sort of·
recreatlon , exerCise, a was not final, it was learned, burglary, and robbery.
Jackson. Present for the ·
but ii appeared that Patwa tching the cu1ories."
meat."
meeting also was Rep. Ron
terson would accept Miller's
HONG KONG (UP!) nuclear testing site near Lop announced . by
Indian
WASHINGTON
(UP!
)
James of Proctorville.
suspension 1of him for not The Democratic National
Vowing to break the "nuclear Nor in the remote Sinkiang monitors. Most of the
LOUISVILLE, Ky . (UP!)
going to Alaska· to survey a Committee said Saturday it - An estimated 1,100 singing
monopoly " of the super- region of northwest China. previous tests ·were initially
mine, and Miller im- will hold public hearings opponents of court-ordered
TOP PATROLMAN
powers. China said Saturday
It was not known whether reported by the U.S. Atomic
mediately would lift the across the nation in the next racial busing in the Jefferson
COLUMBUS !·UPIJ
its scientists have suc- the test was conducted in the Energy Commission.
'
STRACHAN BEFORE BAR suspension .
Patrolman James H. Reed, cessfully conducted a new • atmosphere or underground.
'"l'he · c·onducting
of
few months to let party County schools marched
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)
31, Friday was named the atomic test.
The magnitude of the . ex- necessary and limited
members help shape the 1976 through one of jlhe wealthiest
BIRMINGHAM ,
Ala . Democratic party platform. sections of town Saturday to
1975 Ohio State Highway
The official New China plosion was also unk~own . nuclear tests by China is - Former W.hite House aide
Patrolman of the Year.
News Agency, in a r~ort
The announcement marked entirely for the purpose of Gordon C. Strachan, an early (UP!) - A. G. Gaston, a
Rhode Island Gov . Philip seek support for their cause.
from Pekin!!, said the lettt- the first time China reported defense and for breaking the casually of Wa tergate, told wealthy 83-year-old black Nee!, temporary chairman of
The march, sponsored by
state
Bar Commissioners
businessman
and
friend
of
llle
18th
since
China
became
a
one
of
its
nuclear
tests
before
Union
Labor Against Busing
NOW YOU KNOW
nuclear monopoly by tbe
the pla tform committee, said
considering
his
application
to
tile
late
Dr.
Martin
Luther
nuclear
power
in
1914-took
outside
monitoring
agencies
(ULAB),
was the first largeThe most balls a juggler
superpowers
and
for
there will be at least one
practice
law
in
Utah
that
King
Jr.,
was
rescued
by
place
Friday
.
The
an·
since
joining
the
"nuclear
scale
antibusing
protest in
has successfully kept in the
hearing in each of the four
ultimately abolishing nuclear
"my
ambition
took
control
of
sheriff's
deputies
SatUrday
nouncement
gave
no
details.
club"
in
October,
1964.
Louisville
sin
ce
classes
air at one lime is 10, a feat
weapons,'' tlle announcement
IN C regions and one in
my
jl'dgment
,
..
and
it
two
hours
after
he
was
beaten
The
explosion
apparently
The
last
previous
test,
con:
resumed
after
the
holiday
said.
·
accomplished by Enrico
Washington . Noel said
wouldn't
happen
again
."
and
kidnaped
Iron
.
his
home
.
took
pl.ace
at
China's
main
dueled
last
Oct.
'
1
:1,
was
first
break.
testimony "fr om any person
Rastelll in !920. ,

GALLIPOLIS - Da vid T.
E:vans of Holcomb Hill, a 1975
~ raduate of the Ohio NorUJern University College of
Law in Ada, will begin his law
practice here Monday in
Suite 204 of the Business and
Pr·ofessional Buildi ng , 414
Second Ave.
·
The son of Mr . and Mrs. J .
Tim 1Betty) Evans, Evans
received his J. D. degree in
May . While at Ohio Northern,
he was a member of the
National Moot Court Team,

Taxes, electricity has

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'

DAVID EVANS

By NICHOLAS DANJLOFF
MADRID, Spail} (UPI) ~
The United Swtes and Spain
Saturday signed a treaty
pledging the pullout of U.S.
nuclear weapons from Spain
and restrtcttng the use of
America's bases in Spain in
case of an atwck against the
West.
\
"The Spanish drove a hard
bargain, " a U.S. · offi cial

l!y !lob Hoefllch
POMEROY - "I tried to
work with the motto to make
friends out of customers and
not customers outoffriends,"
sa id Ralph S. Graves,
papular Pomeroy resident,
who has retired after over 40
years service with tbe G. and
J . Auto Parts Co. in Pomeroy.
And people who know the
pleasant Lincoln Terrace
resident are aware that
Graves lived up to that motto
during his long tenure with
the firm that swrted in
Pomeroy in August, 1932,
with one employe -Graves and today has 12.
A 1928 graduate of Mid·
dlepart High School where
recorqs show he was a super
basketball star, Graves attended Ohio University for
one year but quit due to the
costs involved to his father .
Alter working briefly for
Covert's Bakery and the
Russell Auto Sales Agency in
Middleport, Graves began
working at the G. and J . Auto
Parts which had just opened
in Pomeroy.
The following_ month in
Sep tember, 1932, he was
made the manager of the
operation. Being the only
employe he had no problems
. with workers ; some days, not
one item was sold. When
lunch time came, Graves
closed the establishment for a
half hour and reopened after
a quick lunch.
The first G. and J. Auto
Parts store was located on E.

pay tax

industries not hiring Blacks
until the later '60's therefore, limi tin g Blacks
from higher jobs which
comes with seniority.
The WOWK-TV News staff
set in on, and in many instances , led tl1e discussions.
They pointed out that they
were not expec ting to solve
local problems - but to open
the doors or communication.
It seemed a general conthat local groups
organi zati ons meet

U. S. agrees to
leave Spain if
West is attacked

way. The vehicle left the
r·oa dway and slid over i:Hl

of Pomeroy retiring

PAGE 15

SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1976

VOL. 10 t'IO. 52

$:157 .50 e01ch. driving while
intoxicated; Hubert H.
Stewart, Middl eport , $350,

Driver charged

Pa rsons,

·· --

From th·eDistributor Warehouse To You

G &amp; J manager Graves

on compromise

Chinese shoot A-bomb

\

•

�17-Tbe Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. ~. 1976

16 - Tbe Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. ~. 1916

-

AUTO DAMAGED
POMEROY - Extensive
damage was caused Co a car
driven by Beverly Smith, 17,
Pomeroy , al 1:10 a.m.
Saturday on Union Ave .
Police said Miss Smith had
gone through the traffic
signal on green when her car
skidded in cinders, wert over
the curbing, and struck a
utility pole. There was no
charge and no injury.

Regional group will reorganize

POMEROY - The Meigs and Nursing Homes for designee), two county Manager of Meigs Mines and
County Regional Planning example, Is tarsely financed members-at-large, County Soil Conservation Service .
Municipal Membership
Commission has announced by a srant of $2,500 from the Treasurer , three citizen
its annual meeting to Economic and Community members-at-large, and ex- includes Mayor , Municipal
reorganize Tuesday at 3 p.m. Development Program of the offic io County Engineer, Member and Alternate
Jan . 2:1, in the ASCS Con- Jackson Area Mlnbilerles, Audi tor, Prosecuting At- Municipal Member of the five
ference room, 2nd Street, United Methodist Church.
torney, Extension Agent , municipalities. Each of the 12
Pomeroy. In line with regular
County membership is Superin tendent of Schools, townships is represented by
pollcy all interested parties made up of the three county D.O.T., Deputy Director of the Chairman of the Board of
a re invited .
commissioners (or their Division
10, PropeTly Township Trustees or his
designee.
The Regional Planning
Input into planning and
Commission was organized in
goals may be made in person
1962 and reorganized in 1967 f;:::::::;::::;:::?:::::::!:~8::::~-:::::::::::::::~::!:!:~:::;s:s:::::::::::::=:::::.~::::::::&amp;::8~ 3E
: 19 any member or in writing
with community membership
from the coun ty, villages and
to Box 551, Court House,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
townshi ps under enabling '·
The commission works
legislation as set forth in ®!
POMEROY - Mrs. Jean Blazewicz of
GALLIPOLIS - Eleven
closely with Buckeye Hills.- true bills of indictment were
Ohio's Revised Code. The :,::
Pomeroy may be the first woman ever lo
Hocking Valley Regional returned against foUr persons
purpose of the Meigs Coun ty
the Meigs County Board of
Development District, Meigs- here Friday in the first
Regional Planning Com- .
Gallia Community Action session of the January term,
mission is to advance and
.
Thursday night the Meigs County
support an orderly growth ····
Democratic Central Committeemen
~ Agency, County and area Gallia County Grand Jury.
and development of the -,.~ ;_:~[.
meeting at the parish house of Grace
~~ councils on Aging and other There were nine regu lar
region in general and each of .
Episcopal Church in Pomeroy recom~ planning and development indictments and two of the
the individual communities *~
mended Mrs. Qlazewlcz f_or appointrne'!t
?:: groups.
four persons were secre tly
through physical and social i:&lt;
to the board of elections by Secretary of
-:-:
indicted.
planning activities.
1@
State Ted W. Brown.
Nursing homes,
Indi cted were David
Operallog wltb limited ::::
Holdov·er members of the board of
::::
Johnson, aka Pete Johnson ,
funding, the commission i::
elections are E. A. Wingett, D., and Leslie
;:;: elderly clients
20, Scottown, charged with
depends largely
upon
F. Fultz, R. Republicans have to appoint a
posse~ion of narcotic drugs,
volunteer workers and ;~;
second member to replace James Quivey
,:,; workshop's topic
pnrtlclpallon for Its support. ~;;
who resigned last night,
~
-@.i;:i.03i{~m~mmll8S!III:mso:~=:;:~-r~~·~!lll::m:::m:.•:m.=:::~:::s-:;:::::::::i RIO GRANDE- The Area
The current study on Housing ··:~~~~s:&gt;:s::::::~?,l
Agency on Aging District 7
here will conduct a one day
GALLIPOLIS - Too much
workshop on nursing homes
fuel
oil was blamed for a fire
and elderly clients at Rio
at
3:50
p.m. Friday at a
Grande College-Community
MIDDLEPORT - Three club, made an impassioned
The
club
approved
mobile
home
owned by Larry
senior high school students, case for the exchange unanimously a resolution of College Jan . 27 from 10 a.m. Russell at 2104 \!z Chatham
one from each district high program, Indicating his intent to host a student this to 2 p.m. with the main Ave.
school in ihe county, wjll be . family has had three such summer and next sc.hool speaker Mrs. Cathy Worley,
Gallipolis fire chief James
sponsored .to the World Af. students, "a most rewarding term. Ladies of the church Nursing Home Omsbudsman
A.
Northup said there was no
from the Ohio Commission on
fairs Institute in Cincinnati in experience in each case," be served a steak dinner.
damage
to the 1961 Fleetwood
Aging.
mid-April by the Middleport - said.
trailer
.
According to the
Representatives from the
Pomeroy Rotary Club.
---------------------------,
report,
too
much fuel oil in
Members decided Friday
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be 1 Ohio Hea lth Department will
evening following dinner at
less than 300 words Ions (or be subject to reduction by I be availabl e to discuss
Heath United Methodist
the editor) and must be stcned with the slpee's ad- I lice nsin g procedures for
homes .
The
Church
to
increase
dress. Names may be withheld upon publication. I nur sing
works
hip
is
,
available
representation from two to
However, on request, names will be dloclooed. Letters :
staff
workin g
three and to urge schools to
should be in good taste, addressing Issues, not per- 1 to
in
Title
III'
and
Title
VII
have the boys make apsonalltles.
,
1
programs
under
the
Older
pearances before appropriate
\
student groups each spring
£l ~~ ~
1 American Act, as amended,
upon their return.
,(/~P41/h
I R.S.V.P. programs and other
The institute, a project of
tfhl.t.
·•
· 1 serving agencies. An yo ne
the Greater Cincinnati area
• ·• • FFI/l• .
. •
I interested in attending the
POMEROY -- The coun ty
should notify the
Rotary Clubs, brings together
M · C
·
: workshop
engi
neer's department
Area Agency un Aging
recognized world experts on Open letter to
ergs ountrans
received
an appropriation for
District 7, P. 0. Box 978, Rio
international problems.
Dear Meigs Countians :
1976
for
the amount of
Grande Coliege, Rio Grande,
President Vern Weber
This is an important letter about an important matter. It is Ohio 45674, .or by calling (614 ) $679,800 which is $300,000 less
proposed the club look our environment. What is environment?, you ask. II ·is
than last' year, according to
seriously into sponsoring and everything around us, the birds, the trees, the land. But it is 245-5353, Ext. 26.
Wesley A. Buehl, county
having in Meigs county, a possible that the environment in Meigs County is dying.
engineer .
foreign exchange high school
When was the last time you took a nice ride along a country
Last year the county sealed
student. A guest, Tom Boyd, road and saw no trash on the edge of tbe road, no beer bottles
53 miles of existing· black top
of the Huntington, W. Va. and cans in the road? II has probably been a.very long time. ·
roads and paved 15 miles of
We all help create these problems but we can also help clean
new hard surface and
the mess up.
replaced five bridges.
Trash pollution is a large problem in Meigs County. Trash
Thls ye,ar the county plans.
POMEI;!OY - A car driven to maintain all roads and
receptacles help clean up some of the trash off roads, but at
times thev look almost as ·bad. Peonle hov• tn m1t. t.h•ir Por- by Mitchell C. Halley, Jr. , • bridges to keep them in good
hage on the ground near tbe receptacjes instead of inside it Route 1 Minersv ille, caught condition and again replace
wben they are full. Perhaps a schedule could be published, fire at 2 p.m. Saturday as one or two structures . There
letting people know when trash Is plcl\ed up or maybe more Halley·was backing out of the are several other structures
receptacles could be-placed where they are needed; maybe tbe driveway of his Eagle Ridge ·that should be replaced but at
resid~nce . The Bashan Fire
trash could be picked up more often than it is now.
present it is not known which
Dept.
went to the scene. but is the most urgent, according
i\notber problem our club is concerned about is strip
POINT PLEASANT - The
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber mining. One of the ugly sites we know Is to go down a country the 1968 auto was destroyed. to Buehl.
At 3: 45 p.m. the departCompany's polyester resin road and see a high wall left as a scar. A strip mine kills trees,
Buehl ~lso reported that the
men
l · of Sheriff Robert
plant here paid $5,627,000 in land, animals and anything else in the way. We feel it is time to Harwnbach investigated an county expects to complete
the Federal Aid Project on
employee earnings in 1975, do something about it.
accident on a township road
We plan to do more than sit around and complaint.
county
road one fr om Salem
plant manager Michael T.
We are willing to make sacrifices and work hard to make in Sulton . A car driven by Center to the Salem Center
Bucci annol!llced. Average
Charles M. Canter, 20,
employment during .the year this county a beautiful one. We plan a tree-planting ~roject for Syracuse, fishtailed, went off School lot. This includes
stripmine areas, an aluminum can recycling drive and any
modification of several sharp
was 525.
other projecta we can find. We hope we have everyone behind the right of the road, hit an
In addition to employee us. Let's have the majority of peopl~ working for a good cause embankment and turned over turns, humps 1 berm and
ditching and resurfacing.
earnings, Goodyear con- this time Instead of· the minority who wreck the land for on its side.
Application has been m~de
tributed to the Point Pleasant everyone else.
Canter, who will be
with
the State for assistance
area economy through the
The next time you go down a country road and need to get charged with reckless under the Off Systems
purchase of $3,575,000 worth rid of that one pop can, look over in the ditch at aU that ugliness operation and driving while
Program to help with County
of goods and services from of trash - you might just change your mind. - The En- intoxicated, according to the Road One south of Salem
201 firms within a 50-mile vironmental Club (E;VA), Meigs High School, Jean Shaver, Sheriff's dept., was taken to Cenlfr.
.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
radius of the commllflity. The Advisor.
·Buehl also expects lo work
· by the Racine E-R squad.
company paid $532,000 in
on improving the alignment
Clerk-treasurer
position
open
local taxes.
and grading on county road 28
" Despite the depressing
in Letart Township . Work on
MIDDLEPORT - The commensurate with execonomy ln 1975," Bucci said,
TWO CALLS RUN
an
access road to county
" Goodyear co ntinued. Meigs Local School District perience and qualifications.
RACINE
The
Racine
Eproperty
above Veterans
Letters of application and R squad answered a call to
building new polyester resin announces that applications
Memorial
Hospital in conare . being accepted for the
capacity at the Point position of clerk-trea:rurer in reswnes should be sent to Route 1 Racine , at 9 a.m. nection with the new senior
Charles
L.
Dowler, Saturday for Clois! Badgley,
Pleasant plant. The Point the district.
Superintendent of Meigs who was ill. He was taken to citizens building is in 'the
planning stage. Men under
Pleasant e xpansion
This is a full-time 12 Local School _District, South
scheduled to come on stream months position with two Third Avenue, Middleport, Veterans Memorial Hospital. the CETA program have been
At 4:30p.m. Friday the squad clearing brush on the hill
in 197Hwill increase resin weeks ' vacation . It is 45760.
took Edwin Sellers, Racine , where the road will be
capacity to approximately preferred that applicants
to Veterans Memorial located.
•300 million pounds annually have previous experience in
Hospital
where he was adand assures Goodyear a the areas of school finance,
GERMAN MEDALS WON
mitted
for
treatment of in- Coin .cluh will
continuing position as one of accounting,
payroll ·u.s. Air Force Chief
juries
from
an earlier fall .
the nation's leading polyester preparation , local govern· Master Sergeant Darrell D.
meet on Monday
ment work, etc. Salary will be Drenner, son of Mr. and Mrs.
producers.''
IN HOSPITAL
Lee Drenner, Union Terrace,
Tilt! Oh-Kan Coin Club will
MIDDLEPORT - Harry
Pomeroy, was recently Walburn , formerly of Mid- conduct its fir s t regular
awarded the German Marks- . dleport, now of Colwnbus, is meeting of 1976 Monday
manship Award and the .· a patient at Mercy Hospil&lt;il evening in the social rooms of
German
Military Physical i there following an industrial the Columbus and Southern
I
·
.
·
I
Efficiency
Badge during acciden t sometime ago. His Ohio Electric Company
I
ceremonies at Frankenstein room nwnber is 421.
building on Mill Street. A
IRA EDWIN RIGGS
Home
with
the
R1&gt;v.
George
Kaserne
in
Darmstadt,
social
hour .and tradihg
MIDDLEPORT Ira
officiating. Burial will Germany. Sgt. Drenner, an
the 8 p.m.
session
precedes
Edwin Riggs, M , Columbus, Oiler
be in Gravel Hlfl Cemetery at
died Fr iday evening at Cheshire. Friends may call at air traffic control supeririLEG INJURED
business meeting , when
University
Hospital
In
the luneral home from 2 to 4 tendent, is assigned with the ·
POMEROY
The several out-of-town colri
Columbus.
and
7 to 9 p.m. Sunday.
1945th
Communications
Pomeroy
E-R
squad
was dealerswill be present to buy,
·M r. Riggs was born Aug .
BERNICE COE
Group at Rhein Main Air called ·t'o Route 7 near sell, or trade collector items.
11, 1909 In Harnord, W. Va .,
the son of the late John
RACINE - Miss Bernice Base, Germany. A 1~50 Pomeroy Friday afternoon Planning will commence for
Robert and Mllanda Kearns Coe, 85, formerly of Racine, graduate of Pomeroy High for Della Norton who had
Riggs. He was also preceded died Thursday at the Arcadia · School Sergeant Drenner 'fallen at the home of her son, the club's 13th annual coin
show to be held at the Holiday
In death by a sister, Sara ManOI" Rest and Nursing
Riggs, lwo half sisters and Home In Cincinnati.
en tere.d' the .Ai' r F orce the - Harold . She was taken to Inn at Gallipolis on Sunday,
one ha lf brother.
Miss Coe jjraduatt~~ as a foilowang year. _
Holzer Medical Center with a March 7th.
- Surviving
are
. fwo nurse from General Hospital
possible fractured leg.
Following the meeting, a 50
daughlers,
Mrs . Jack In 1916 and worked thereuntil
lot coin auction will be held,
(j.oralne) Neff, Wilkesville ; severar years ago. She was
ATIENDS SERVICES
FREE CLOTHING
and
refreshments wlli be
Mrs .· A llison
Thomas , the daughter of the late
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Jack
CHESHIRE - The Gallia served. Area resld'ents are
Crooksville; two .sons, Homer and Lucllle .Coe .
Michael of Crooksville. and Preceding her In death also Davls a resident of 936
Meigs Community Action
Dr, Keith Riggs of Pomeroy; were lwo brothers, Wilber Seco~d ' Ave., Gallipolis, Agency will hold a free invited said Ed. Burkett,
three slslers, Mrs . Cecil and Kelly Coe.
returned Friday from clothing day for low income president.
•(Laura) Hoffman, Colum .
Miss Coe Is survived b'( a I
'bus; Mrs. Dale (Lucille) sister, Mrs . Ray (Josephine) Warren, Ohio where she persons from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
,Jacobs and Mrs . Harold Relthmlller. Sarasota, Fla., a attended the funeral services Wedoesday et the clothing
'Evans, both of Mlddleporl ; sister-In-law, Mrs. Ann Coe, or ber son-in-law, Raymond center in the former Cheshire
lwo brothljrs, John A. Riggs, Racine; a niece, Mrs . Moyer. Mrs. Moye~ Is the
WORKERS TO MEET
Roseville, and Charles M. leonard (Josephine) Pearle. former Marjorie Davis, · High School here. ·
RACINE
- There will be a
Riggs, Letart, W. Va . Also Brewster, N. Y.
daughter of the late Jack
mee«ng
of
the non-academic
·iurvivlng are sever a I
REVJV AL TONIG..-r
Funeral services will be
Ullian
Davis.
Davis
and
Mrs.
grandchildren, great . held at 11a.m. Tuesday al the
RUTLAND - Arevival will employees of Southern Local
grandchildren. nieces. and Johnson Funeral Home In Mr. Moyer was a resident of
be held at 7:30 this evening al School District 7:30 p.m.
nephews.
'
Cincinnati . Miss Coe was a Houston, Texas. The b~y the Rutland Freewill Baptist Monday at Southern High
' Funeral services will be at member of Rac ine Chapter,
was returned to Warren, Oh1o Church with the Rev. John School when Important lssue,s
'2 p.m. Monday a! the Order of Eestern Star.
will be discussed .
RawllnQs -Coa.ts Funeral
for burial. .
·Elswick spea king.

~

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i

i·

I

RACINE - Southern Local standards the base salary for budget of $923,000 for the
School District teachers were every Ohio teacher must be . ca lendar year of 1976 a~d
voted a raise from $7,500 to $7,900 this fall. Teachers also entered into a contract w1th
$7,900 in their base salary have been in negotiations on · Edwin Davis and Son, Langsbeginning Jan . 20 by the their hospitalization in- ville, for a new 66-passenger
district's board of education surance about 80 percent of bus body at a price of $5,650.
which i~ paid by the board . Mrs. Vinas Lee was named a
Thursday night.
The salary increase is No change was made in that full-time business and office
education teacher having
effective until Jan. t, t977. percentage.
The
board
approv
ed
a
been working recently as a ·
According to the new stale
substitute in that field. Added
to the substitute teacher list
were William Young and
Jennifer Hill. Blance Biggs
was employed as a custodian
at the junior high building.
The board approved the
and Thomas Ray White, 22, during Friday's session.
closing of Southern Schools
Waterloo, charged with four
The jury cond ucted its on Jan. 8, 9 and 12 as
counts of breaking and en- annual tour of the County Jail calamidy days due to the
tering and four counts of facilities and made the snow and icy roads. Mrs. Lee
grand theft. Names of in- following ·recmnmendations ; Lee was authorized to attend
dividuals secretly indicted
(1) Rewire cells for radios . the Ohio Music Educators
( 2) Improve lighting for seminar in Columbus, Feb. ~
will be released upon their
arrests.
reading purposes.
6 and .Mrs. Joyce Thoren,
Arraignments were
(3) Set deputies' pay of $150 district nurse was authorized
scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. minimum per week .
· to attend a session on idenFriday in Gallia County
( 4) Furnish wash cloths tification of the handicapped
Common Pleas Court. Six and towels.
on Jan. 27 at Nelsonville.
(5) Launder all bed sheets Miss Sandra Booth was
witnesses were exa.mined
and blanl&lt;ets weekly .
authorized to attend a Title
(6) Provide a gaso lin e IX coordinator's workshop at
supply, so it is available at ali Kent State Universi ly, Feb. 1·
times for the sheriff 's 2. The board enwred into a
department.
contrac t with the Athens
the furnace bowl ignited soot.
The recommendations will Coun ty Board uf Education
Thirteen men and two trucks be sent to Gallia Coun ty for an educable mentally
responded to the lOth alarm Commissioners .
retarded classroom superof the year.
· Members of the jury were visor .
carroll E. Baker , foreman;
Attending the meeting were
Donald J.. Hammond, Sally Supt. Bobby Ord, Clerk Jane
OAPSE TO MEET
MIDDLEPORT - The D. Icard , Karen Wray Wagner, Boa rd members,
Meigs Local Chapter 17 Ohio · Ellyson, Griff C. Cook, Jr ., Jack Bostick, Robert Sayre,
Nancy
E.
Campbell, Denny Evans, Roger Adams,
Association of Public School
Georgene A. Plantz , Erv in L. Dallas Hill, delegation from
Employes will meet Monday
at 7:30 p,m. at the junior high Morris and Ronald M. Miller. the teachers association of
Alternates were James A. the district, and Larry Wolfe,
cafeteria in Middleport.
Rife and Carl Cameron.
Portland principal.

Indictments ret11rned

First ever on hoard

~~:~o~~-

Southern Local pay raised

i

Fire blamed on excess. oil

Rotary adds students to Institute

Money for

--

roads less

says Buehl

DWI charge ·

Goodyear paid

facing driver

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NGW ORLEANS (UP! ) Forget the thrill and tbe
sheer fun of playing in tbe
Pro Bowl. Linebacker Jsiah
Robertson of the l,os Angeles
Rams thinks its tbe perfect
time to take notes on his
regular season opposition in

the National Football Conference .

"'I just try to take away
thlugs lha t the other team
does bfSt," he said . "Take
Chuck Foreman. He'll give
you a move the same maybe
twice in a row, then the next
time he'll change up and try
to confuse you.
"I study him and try to find
some key to know which
move be's going to come up
with."

missioner Pete Rozelle was
resolved Thursday but it was
too late to save the ticket
sales. New Orleans Saints
ticket · manager Henry
Simoneaux said a crowd o(
about 30,000 is expected for
the game - slightly more
than one-third tbe capacity of
the Superdome.
Small ~rowds, however,
have become a habit for the
Pro Bowl, usually looked
upon as an afterthought to tbe
football ·season.
Less than capacity crowda
have watched the game the
past few years and although
discussions have been held at
various owners meetings
concerning the game, no
·alter3tioil in the 'game is

During the week leading up
to Monday night 's Pro Bowl
in the Louisiana Superdome,
Foreman, the star running
back of the Minnesota

four times before Minnesota

opened a 45-40 halftime lead.
Minnesota's spectacular
shooting - 69 per cen t on
field goal attempts - left
lndiana behind even thoug h
the Hoosiers shot 58 per cent.

Minnesota might have
opened up an· insurmountable
lead had it not turned the ball
Jver 10 times in the first half.

·

•

GALLIA'S Tony Folden (10) slipped inside for a layup
aga inst visiting Meigs in a Southeastern Ohio League
basketball game Friday night. Gallipolis held on to outscore the Marauders 67-60. MHS defenders on left are
Dale Browning and Mick Davenport. Folden finished the
game with 16 points. Steve Wilson photos.

MOST aggressive player on the floor du:rlng Friday's
GAHS-Meigs basketball game was Marauder scrambler
Steve Randolph, 5-10 junior guard (15). Although limited
to four points, Randolph was outstanding on defense and
was responsible fo r causi ng many GAHS turnovers.

planned.
Suggestions have been
made to hold the game
before the start of the
season, but the threat of
Vikings, and Robertson were serious injury to a star player
teammates.
that would leave •Jiim out for
Next season il will be the year eliminated that
Robertson's business to possibility.
hanuner Foreman. The notes
A proposal to have the
will come in handy.
game played during the
The Pro Bowl, featuring lbe "dead week" between the
best talent in the NFC and Confere nce Cham pionshi s
AFC, will be televised and the Super Bowl has .also
nationally, but local viewers been turned down because
will not see It because it was the players for the two teams
not a s~llout .
playing for the NFL
The threat of a player Championship would not be
boycott because of a pension available for the Pro Bowl.
di~spute with NFL ComSee Our Big Display Of

Dantley gets 30 in Irish wm

PRINCETON, N.J. (UPI)
- Armond Hill scored three
points in the last I :23 of
over.lime SaltJrday to lead
Princeton to a 58-55 upset
victory over lOth-ranked St.
John's .
Hill, who finished the game
with 13 points, put tl10 Tigers
ahead lor good in the overtime perioo with a lay up with
l :23 left. He added a fr ee
throw with 45 seconds left .

SOUTH BEND, Ind. ( UPI )
All-Ame rica Adrian
Dantley scored 30 points and
the Notre Dame sialled the
fin al 5:30 · of the game
Sa turday to pace the 16thranked Irish to a 95-85 upset
of No . 7 UCLA .

The victory raised Princeton's record lo il-3 while
St. John 's record fell to 14-2.
George Johnson of St .
John's tied the game with ts
seconds left in the regulation
play to force the game into
overtime.

The Tiger$ were ted by
Barnes HauplfUhre~ , whose
20 poin ts helped Princeton to
a 30-27 halftime lead.
Sophomore Bill Omellchenko
added ll points for the
winners .

The Redmen were led by
Beaver Smith with I~ poinl&gt;j.
Frank Alagia and Johnson
each added 12 points.

lliram makes
it four in row

The victory wets the 11th in
H games for Notre Dame and

the third defeat in 17 ga mes

for the Bruins .
Th e v ic tory , exten ding
Notre· Dame's win ning s treak

to six games, also avenged an
earlier 86-70 defeat by UCLA
on the Bruins· fluor.
Jl was a see-saw game for

For real home cookin' the
whole family will enjoy anytime, come to the ·Bob Evans
Steak House. Where once
again , 'round the clock
,11ervice is .a Gallia County_
tradi!ion.

•

C7~&amp;'tf- .
MOBILE.HOMES INC.
See Jim Staats or Joe GiiH
Phone 446-9340
·
GeiU,•UL Qllie

Wolfpack

A New Car

·
OUt} asts

But Don't Have

Duke five
RALEJGH, N. C. (UP! ) Forward Kenny Carr tossed
in 44 points and grabbed 13
rebounds Saturday to lead
13th-ranked North Carolina
State to a 106-101 Atlantic

The Cash On
Hand? .

Coast Confe re nce win over

Duke.
Carr, who scored 45 points
earlier in the year, was the
game's lea ding rebounder
and scorer as the Wolfpack
pulled its AAC mark to 3-1
and went to 13-2 overall. The
loss drorped Duke to 2-3 in
the A ~ C ,rnd 9'7 overall.
Forward Phil Spence added
20 _points for the Wolfpack,
while AI Green had 18.
The Blue Devils were led by
guard Tale Armstrong , who
tallied 34 points. He was
followed by forward Willie
Hodge, who fouled out with 26
points and only 2:42 left to
play. Jim Spanarkel added 15
and Mark Crow had 12.
North Ca rolin a Sla te
trailed In the first period by
as many as five, but pulled
back to even the score at 3333 with 6:37 remaining in the
half when Carr hit ari ·oulside
jumper.
·
The two teams swapped
baskets until Steve Walker
connected wil,h 1:19 to play,
and an outside shot by Green
gave the Wolfpack a 50-46
halftime edge it never
relinquished.

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points came on fre·e-throws as

DAN
I

forward,

Dantieyfrom the field with 14
lield goals compared to 12 for
the Notre Dame star and also
Nound up with 30 points.
Nilliams scored 18 and five .
&gt;ther players were in double
'lgures for the fighting ]rish.

These hornes Qualify for. Most Federal Loan
Programs .

two
points
only
the Irish
went
intoonce
theirbefore
semi- · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
sl&lt;ill with a ~ ix point lead,
Ten of Notre Dame's last 14

NO LACES!

•Closed Sunday night at 10:00 p.m.

MARLETTE
ELCONA
REDMAN
WHITMAN
Also: A Full Line of Quality Mobile Homes .

the Irish used their "fourcorn er offense ," · playing
kee p-away with the ball, ·
forcing UCLA to foul in order
to get possession.
Rich Washington, UCLA's
juni or

was four , at 44-40.

A short-lived rally tied the
score at 65-135 in the second
befo re Notre Dame con- half when the Bruins tallied
nected for il straight points .. eight straigh l points, but
Noire Dame broke out of the
tie with baskets by Duck
Williams and Dantley an d
UCLA thereafter came within

Waverly nips
Logan, 57-56

,

climaxed by Da ntley's three
point play wi th 5: 15left in the
halfto boost Notre Dame to a
35-26 lead. ·
The closest · the Bruins
could come in the first half

the first 12 minu tes and the
score was Ued eight times

WAVERLY
Rub McBroom and SeeL
Holsinger's layup with 33
Wa verly hit 26 uf 56 field
seconds
left
in
the
game
goa
l attempts for 46 percent.
PITISBURGH (UP!)
carried
Waverly
to
a
57-56
The
Tigers were five of 10 at ·
Ted McDivitt scored 22 po ints
and Grnie Pasqualone added · Southeastern Ohio League the foul line. Waverly had 36
17lo lead Hiram to its fourth victory over visiting Logan·. rebounds, 16 by Holsinger.
Wave rly is at Ir on ton
straight Presidents Athletic' Friday night.
The
victory
left
W
averly
Tuesday.
Con ference victory by
Box score :
downing Carnegie-Mellon, 78- with a 9-4 season mark. InSEOAL,
Waverly
LOGAN (56 ) ~ Mul ho lland .
side
the
67.
remainedtiedforsecondwith 20 -.4 ; SeeL 8-3- 19 ; H awk , 31
Mar ly Costa was high for G3llipolis with a 7-2 . mark. ~:o~.c~Oo-r,;nLs 1 ~L 2.~~.Myers .
6
the Tartans with 22 points Logan dropped to 4-8 overall
wAvERLY ( m - M
followed by Larry DiCicco and 3..f3 ins. ide the league.
Thomas , 1-0-2: Holsinge r , 10
· 1-21; Davena , 4-0-8; Thomp
with 18 as CMU dropped to 2-8
Waverly led 15-12afler one ·son , 5-2- 12 ; W hal ey , '2 -'1 6 :
overall and 2-3 in conference period. Logan held a 31-29 Workman . 2 0 ' ' Shoemaker.
2.Q. 4. TOTAL S 26 -S- 57 .
play.
halftime advantage . The
Score by quarters ;
Hiram held a 47-35 ad- Tigerswerebackon top 19-47 Log an
1119 16 9~ 56
vantage at the intermission going into. the final period.
waver ly
15 14 10 8- 57
and Jed by as many as 18
lip in with 1:15 DePaul humbles
points midway through the leftBillputSeel's
Logan
on top 56-55. f
· second half. Hiram is now 4-0 Then came Holsinger's
goal oe, 102 to 70
in the PAC and 7-5 overall. witti 33 seconds left.
.
CHICAGO I UPI )- DePaul
Kev Hawk 's shot with one University co mpletely
second left feil short.
dominated the backboards
Logan hit 25 of 32 field goal Saturday to defeat St. Xavier
attempts for 48 percent. The of Chicago , 102-70, and give
BRUINS TRIUMPH
Chiefs were six of 12 at the Coach Ray Meyer his 520th
DETROIT
(UPI)
Veteran · Johnny Bucyk foul lin e. Logan had 28 career basketbail win.
scored two power-play goals rebounds, nine each by Mike
De Paul, now 11-5 on the
season, snapped a threein the game's firsllO minutes
ga me losi ng streak by
- his 22nd and 23rd of the
outrebounding
St. Xavier 71season - Saturday to spark SW girls nip
20.
the Boston Bruins to a 6-1
Three DePaul players were
victory over the Detroit Red
in
double figures in rebounds
foe, 29 to 27
Wings.
- forward Joe Ponsetto with
PATRIOT - Coaclf Lois 15, forward Curtis Watkins
Sheets' Southwestern girls with 13 and center Dave
edged Hannan Trace, 29-27 Corzine with 12.
St. Xavier center · Greg
here Friday night.
Reed
was the game's high
Cheryl James led the HT
scorer
with 22.
girls with 14 points. Christi
Corzine
had 21, Ponsetto 19,
Banks topped the winners
Watkins
16, and Randy
with eight markers.
Ramsey and Andy Pancratz
Southwestern trailed 5-2 aI
the end of the first quarter 10 each for the victors.
With 9:05 left in the first
and 11-10 at the half but
half
the game was tied at 21pulled away, in the third
21,
but
DePaul ran up a 20-4
quarter. SW 2-1 will host
slrea
k
to
take a 48-30 halftime
Symmes ·valley' Mqnday,
edge,

OPEN 24 HOURs::c

MODULAR &amp; SECTIONAL -HOMES

•

·u pset winner

CLAIMED BY CANCER
NEW YORK (UPI ) :Former St. John 's Basketball
:Captain Greg C!euss died
;Friday night after a
~prolonged bout with ca ncer,
! The 6-foot-9 Cleuss, 26, was
, the second of three brothers
;to play basketball at .St.
John's. Upon graduation, he
•went on to play pro basketball
:with the New York Nels of the
'American Basketball
Association.
Cleuss is survived by a wife
and daughter.

Q

Pro bowl is
set Monday

the league record set by Ohio
State from 1960-62.
Guard Bob Wilkerson, who
held Williams lo five secondhalf baskets, made a fast
break layup after a steal by
May to give Indiana its first
lead at48-47 with two minutes
gone in the second half.
All five Hoosiers scorers
finished in double figures
with Kent Benson scoring 16,
Wilkerson 14 and sophomore
guard Jim Wisman 12.
Mike Thompson finished
with 17 for the Gophers,
followed by Dave Winey with
II and Osborne Lockhart with
10.
For the first time this
season, Indiana failed to lead
at some point in the first half
of a game . The Hoosiers
managed to tie the score on ly

Princeton is

eighth win in 15 starts, a 67-4&gt;4
,victory over Navy,
Nick Daniels got 20 points
. for Xaiver, which iook the
lead for good at 61-60 with
· 3:12left in the first half. Mike
Plunkett got 16 points, while
Gary Whitfield added 13 a nd
Joe Sunderman got 11.
Xavier, shOoting 51per cent
'from th~ field, held a 39-33
adviiJltage at intermission.
Navy, shooting 41.9 per
cent from the field, was
.paced by Kevin Sinnett with
~ points, Mark Alfers with 12
11nd Hank Kuzma with 12.
Navy is now 7-8.

"'~Q~
r:n

l:o&lt;

games, are just one short of

CINCI NNATI fUP l)
Xavier placed four men in
doubl e fi gur es Sat urday

- =
Ql

lead over a seven-minute

stretch.
Minnesota's Ray Williams,
who led both teams in scoring
,with a career high of 34, made
his first six shots and 9-of-11
in the first half match wh ich
saw the Gophers make 18-of26 field goal attempts.
May then led the India na
comeback with 14 points in
the second half b~lore fouling
out w1th 4:01 to play.
Without May, Indiana
immediately went into a ball
control offense to protec t its
79-70 lead.
The lioosiers, who have
won 26 straight conference

afternoon, en route to their

"'"'
1..1
Q~\,.1

I

MINNEAPOLIS ( UPI J • Tom Aberne thy scored 22
points, All-America Scott
May added 21 and No. J
ranked Indiana overcame a
14 point deficit by making its
first eight second-half shots
Sat urday to defeat Min-.
nesota, B:&gt;-76, in Big Ten
.action.
The Hoosiers made 12 of
their first 14 after the intermission in turning a 55-40
halftime deficit into a 64-53

Nary, 67 to 64

=
0
= r:n

~
~

Indiana rally
trips Gophers

Xavier defeats

c::

5Q 5Q
~

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·~

r:n

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r:n

==

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M
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50 ...=

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::

year payroll

•

Ill

.~

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. $5,627,000 in

r --------------------------,
l · Area Deaths
:

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MEMBER FDIC

I
I

�17-Tbe Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. ~. 1976

16 - Tbe Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. ~. 1916

-

AUTO DAMAGED
POMEROY - Extensive
damage was caused Co a car
driven by Beverly Smith, 17,
Pomeroy , al 1:10 a.m.
Saturday on Union Ave .
Police said Miss Smith had
gone through the traffic
signal on green when her car
skidded in cinders, wert over
the curbing, and struck a
utility pole. There was no
charge and no injury.

Regional group will reorganize

POMEROY - The Meigs and Nursing Homes for designee), two county Manager of Meigs Mines and
County Regional Planning example, Is tarsely financed members-at-large, County Soil Conservation Service .
Municipal Membership
Commission has announced by a srant of $2,500 from the Treasurer , three citizen
its annual meeting to Economic and Community members-at-large, and ex- includes Mayor , Municipal
reorganize Tuesday at 3 p.m. Development Program of the offic io County Engineer, Member and Alternate
Jan . 2:1, in the ASCS Con- Jackson Area Mlnbilerles, Audi tor, Prosecuting At- Municipal Member of the five
ference room, 2nd Street, United Methodist Church.
torney, Extension Agent , municipalities. Each of the 12
Pomeroy. In line with regular
County membership is Superin tendent of Schools, townships is represented by
pollcy all interested parties made up of the three county D.O.T., Deputy Director of the Chairman of the Board of
a re invited .
commissioners (or their Division
10, PropeTly Township Trustees or his
designee.
The Regional Planning
Input into planning and
Commission was organized in
goals may be made in person
1962 and reorganized in 1967 f;:::::::;::::;:::?:::::::!:~8::::~-:::::::::::::::~::!:!:~:::;s:s:::::::::::::=:::::.~::::::::&amp;::8~ 3E
: 19 any member or in writing
with community membership
from the coun ty, villages and
to Box 551, Court House,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
townshi ps under enabling '·
The commission works
legislation as set forth in ®!
POMEROY - Mrs. Jean Blazewicz of
GALLIPOLIS - Eleven
closely with Buckeye Hills.- true bills of indictment were
Ohio's Revised Code. The :,::
Pomeroy may be the first woman ever lo
Hocking Valley Regional returned against foUr persons
purpose of the Meigs Coun ty
the Meigs County Board of
Development District, Meigs- here Friday in the first
Regional Planning Com- .
Gallia Community Action session of the January term,
mission is to advance and
.
Thursday night the Meigs County
support an orderly growth ····
Democratic Central Committeemen
~ Agency, County and area Gallia County Grand Jury.
and development of the -,.~ ;_:~[.
meeting at the parish house of Grace
~~ councils on Aging and other There were nine regu lar
region in general and each of .
Episcopal Church in Pomeroy recom~ planning and development indictments and two of the
the individual communities *~
mended Mrs. Qlazewlcz f_or appointrne'!t
?:: groups.
four persons were secre tly
through physical and social i:&lt;
to the board of elections by Secretary of
-:-:
indicted.
planning activities.
1@
State Ted W. Brown.
Nursing homes,
Indi cted were David
Operallog wltb limited ::::
Holdov·er members of the board of
::::
Johnson, aka Pete Johnson ,
funding, the commission i::
elections are E. A. Wingett, D., and Leslie
;:;: elderly clients
20, Scottown, charged with
depends largely
upon
F. Fultz, R. Republicans have to appoint a
posse~ion of narcotic drugs,
volunteer workers and ;~;
second member to replace James Quivey
,:,; workshop's topic
pnrtlclpallon for Its support. ~;;
who resigned last night,
~
-@.i;:i.03i{~m~mmll8S!III:mso:~=:;:~-r~~·~!lll::m:::m:.•:m.=:::~:::s-:;:::::::::i RIO GRANDE- The Area
The current study on Housing ··:~~~~s:&gt;:s::::::~?,l
Agency on Aging District 7
here will conduct a one day
GALLIPOLIS - Too much
workshop on nursing homes
fuel
oil was blamed for a fire
and elderly clients at Rio
at
3:50
p.m. Friday at a
Grande College-Community
MIDDLEPORT - Three club, made an impassioned
The
club
approved
mobile
home
owned by Larry
senior high school students, case for the exchange unanimously a resolution of College Jan . 27 from 10 a.m. Russell at 2104 \!z Chatham
one from each district high program, Indicating his intent to host a student this to 2 p.m. with the main Ave.
school in ihe county, wjll be . family has had three such summer and next sc.hool speaker Mrs. Cathy Worley,
Gallipolis fire chief James
sponsored .to the World Af. students, "a most rewarding term. Ladies of the church Nursing Home Omsbudsman
A.
Northup said there was no
from the Ohio Commission on
fairs Institute in Cincinnati in experience in each case," be served a steak dinner.
damage
to the 1961 Fleetwood
Aging.
mid-April by the Middleport - said.
trailer
.
According to the
Representatives from the
Pomeroy Rotary Club.
---------------------------,
report,
too
much fuel oil in
Members decided Friday
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be 1 Ohio Hea lth Department will
evening following dinner at
less than 300 words Ions (or be subject to reduction by I be availabl e to discuss
Heath United Methodist
the editor) and must be stcned with the slpee's ad- I lice nsin g procedures for
homes .
The
Church
to
increase
dress. Names may be withheld upon publication. I nur sing
works
hip
is
,
available
representation from two to
However, on request, names will be dloclooed. Letters :
staff
workin g
three and to urge schools to
should be in good taste, addressing Issues, not per- 1 to
in
Title
III'
and
Title
VII
have the boys make apsonalltles.
,
1
programs
under
the
Older
pearances before appropriate
\
student groups each spring
£l ~~ ~
1 American Act, as amended,
upon their return.
,(/~P41/h
I R.S.V.P. programs and other
The institute, a project of
tfhl.t.
·•
· 1 serving agencies. An yo ne
the Greater Cincinnati area
• ·• • FFI/l• .
. •
I interested in attending the
POMEROY -- The coun ty
should notify the
Rotary Clubs, brings together
M · C
·
: workshop
engi
neer's department
Area Agency un Aging
recognized world experts on Open letter to
ergs ountrans
received
an appropriation for
District 7, P. 0. Box 978, Rio
international problems.
Dear Meigs Countians :
1976
for
the amount of
Grande Coliege, Rio Grande,
President Vern Weber
This is an important letter about an important matter. It is Ohio 45674, .or by calling (614 ) $679,800 which is $300,000 less
proposed the club look our environment. What is environment?, you ask. II ·is
than last' year, according to
seriously into sponsoring and everything around us, the birds, the trees, the land. But it is 245-5353, Ext. 26.
Wesley A. Buehl, county
having in Meigs county, a possible that the environment in Meigs County is dying.
engineer .
foreign exchange high school
When was the last time you took a nice ride along a country
Last year the county sealed
student. A guest, Tom Boyd, road and saw no trash on the edge of tbe road, no beer bottles
53 miles of existing· black top
of the Huntington, W. Va. and cans in the road? II has probably been a.very long time. ·
roads and paved 15 miles of
We all help create these problems but we can also help clean
new hard surface and
the mess up.
replaced five bridges.
Trash pollution is a large problem in Meigs County. Trash
Thls ye,ar the county plans.
POMEI;!OY - A car driven to maintain all roads and
receptacles help clean up some of the trash off roads, but at
times thev look almost as ·bad. Peonle hov• tn m1t. t.h•ir Por- by Mitchell C. Halley, Jr. , • bridges to keep them in good
hage on the ground near tbe receptacjes instead of inside it Route 1 Minersv ille, caught condition and again replace
wben they are full. Perhaps a schedule could be published, fire at 2 p.m. Saturday as one or two structures . There
letting people know when trash Is plcl\ed up or maybe more Halley·was backing out of the are several other structures
receptacles could be-placed where they are needed; maybe tbe driveway of his Eagle Ridge ·that should be replaced but at
resid~nce . The Bashan Fire
trash could be picked up more often than it is now.
present it is not known which
Dept.
went to the scene. but is the most urgent, according
i\notber problem our club is concerned about is strip
POINT PLEASANT - The
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber mining. One of the ugly sites we know Is to go down a country the 1968 auto was destroyed. to Buehl.
At 3: 45 p.m. the departCompany's polyester resin road and see a high wall left as a scar. A strip mine kills trees,
Buehl ~lso reported that the
men
l · of Sheriff Robert
plant here paid $5,627,000 in land, animals and anything else in the way. We feel it is time to Harwnbach investigated an county expects to complete
the Federal Aid Project on
employee earnings in 1975, do something about it.
accident on a township road
We plan to do more than sit around and complaint.
county
road one fr om Salem
plant manager Michael T.
We are willing to make sacrifices and work hard to make in Sulton . A car driven by Center to the Salem Center
Bucci annol!llced. Average
Charles M. Canter, 20,
employment during .the year this county a beautiful one. We plan a tree-planting ~roject for Syracuse, fishtailed, went off School lot. This includes
stripmine areas, an aluminum can recycling drive and any
modification of several sharp
was 525.
other projecta we can find. We hope we have everyone behind the right of the road, hit an
In addition to employee us. Let's have the majority of peopl~ working for a good cause embankment and turned over turns, humps 1 berm and
ditching and resurfacing.
earnings, Goodyear con- this time Instead of· the minority who wreck the land for on its side.
Application has been m~de
tributed to the Point Pleasant everyone else.
Canter, who will be
with
the State for assistance
area economy through the
The next time you go down a country road and need to get charged with reckless under the Off Systems
purchase of $3,575,000 worth rid of that one pop can, look over in the ditch at aU that ugliness operation and driving while
Program to help with County
of goods and services from of trash - you might just change your mind. - The En- intoxicated, according to the Road One south of Salem
201 firms within a 50-mile vironmental Club (E;VA), Meigs High School, Jean Shaver, Sheriff's dept., was taken to Cenlfr.
.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
radius of the commllflity. The Advisor.
·Buehl also expects lo work
· by the Racine E-R squad.
company paid $532,000 in
on improving the alignment
Clerk-treasurer
position
open
local taxes.
and grading on county road 28
" Despite the depressing
in Letart Township . Work on
MIDDLEPORT - The commensurate with execonomy ln 1975," Bucci said,
TWO CALLS RUN
an
access road to county
" Goodyear co ntinued. Meigs Local School District perience and qualifications.
RACINE
The
Racine
Eproperty
above Veterans
Letters of application and R squad answered a call to
building new polyester resin announces that applications
Memorial
Hospital in conare . being accepted for the
capacity at the Point position of clerk-trea:rurer in reswnes should be sent to Route 1 Racine , at 9 a.m. nection with the new senior
Charles
L.
Dowler, Saturday for Clois! Badgley,
Pleasant plant. The Point the district.
Superintendent of Meigs who was ill. He was taken to citizens building is in 'the
planning stage. Men under
Pleasant e xpansion
This is a full-time 12 Local School _District, South
scheduled to come on stream months position with two Third Avenue, Middleport, Veterans Memorial Hospital. the CETA program have been
At 4:30p.m. Friday the squad clearing brush on the hill
in 197Hwill increase resin weeks ' vacation . It is 45760.
took Edwin Sellers, Racine , where the road will be
capacity to approximately preferred that applicants
to Veterans Memorial located.
•300 million pounds annually have previous experience in
Hospital
where he was adand assures Goodyear a the areas of school finance,
GERMAN MEDALS WON
mitted
for
treatment of in- Coin .cluh will
continuing position as one of accounting,
payroll ·u.s. Air Force Chief
juries
from
an earlier fall .
the nation's leading polyester preparation , local govern· Master Sergeant Darrell D.
meet on Monday
ment work, etc. Salary will be Drenner, son of Mr. and Mrs.
producers.''
IN HOSPITAL
Lee Drenner, Union Terrace,
Tilt! Oh-Kan Coin Club will
MIDDLEPORT - Harry
Pomeroy, was recently Walburn , formerly of Mid- conduct its fir s t regular
awarded the German Marks- . dleport, now of Colwnbus, is meeting of 1976 Monday
manship Award and the .· a patient at Mercy Hospil&lt;il evening in the social rooms of
German
Military Physical i there following an industrial the Columbus and Southern
I
·
.
·
I
Efficiency
Badge during acciden t sometime ago. His Ohio Electric Company
I
ceremonies at Frankenstein room nwnber is 421.
building on Mill Street. A
IRA EDWIN RIGGS
Home
with
the
R1&gt;v.
George
Kaserne
in
Darmstadt,
social
hour .and tradihg
MIDDLEPORT Ira
officiating. Burial will Germany. Sgt. Drenner, an
the 8 p.m.
session
precedes
Edwin Riggs, M , Columbus, Oiler
be in Gravel Hlfl Cemetery at
died Fr iday evening at Cheshire. Friends may call at air traffic control supeririLEG INJURED
business meeting , when
University
Hospital
In
the luneral home from 2 to 4 tendent, is assigned with the ·
POMEROY
The several out-of-town colri
Columbus.
and
7 to 9 p.m. Sunday.
1945th
Communications
Pomeroy
E-R
squad
was dealerswill be present to buy,
·M r. Riggs was born Aug .
BERNICE COE
Group at Rhein Main Air called ·t'o Route 7 near sell, or trade collector items.
11, 1909 In Harnord, W. Va .,
the son of the late John
RACINE - Miss Bernice Base, Germany. A 1~50 Pomeroy Friday afternoon Planning will commence for
Robert and Mllanda Kearns Coe, 85, formerly of Racine, graduate of Pomeroy High for Della Norton who had
Riggs. He was also preceded died Thursday at the Arcadia · School Sergeant Drenner 'fallen at the home of her son, the club's 13th annual coin
show to be held at the Holiday
In death by a sister, Sara ManOI" Rest and Nursing
Riggs, lwo half sisters and Home In Cincinnati.
en tere.d' the .Ai' r F orce the - Harold . She was taken to Inn at Gallipolis on Sunday,
one ha lf brother.
Miss Coe jjraduatt~~ as a foilowang year. _
Holzer Medical Center with a March 7th.
- Surviving
are
. fwo nurse from General Hospital
possible fractured leg.
Following the meeting, a 50
daughlers,
Mrs . Jack In 1916 and worked thereuntil
lot coin auction will be held,
(j.oralne) Neff, Wilkesville ; severar years ago. She was
ATIENDS SERVICES
FREE CLOTHING
and
refreshments wlli be
Mrs .· A llison
Thomas , the daughter of the late
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Jack
CHESHIRE - The Gallia served. Area resld'ents are
Crooksville; two .sons, Homer and Lucllle .Coe .
Michael of Crooksville. and Preceding her In death also Davls a resident of 936
Meigs Community Action
Dr, Keith Riggs of Pomeroy; were lwo brothers, Wilber Seco~d ' Ave., Gallipolis, Agency will hold a free invited said Ed. Burkett,
three slslers, Mrs . Cecil and Kelly Coe.
returned Friday from clothing day for low income president.
•(Laura) Hoffman, Colum .
Miss Coe Is survived b'( a I
'bus; Mrs. Dale (Lucille) sister, Mrs . Ray (Josephine) Warren, Ohio where she persons from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
,Jacobs and Mrs . Harold Relthmlller. Sarasota, Fla., a attended the funeral services Wedoesday et the clothing
'Evans, both of Mlddleporl ; sister-In-law, Mrs. Ann Coe, or ber son-in-law, Raymond center in the former Cheshire
lwo brothljrs, John A. Riggs, Racine; a niece, Mrs . Moyer. Mrs. Moye~ Is the
WORKERS TO MEET
Roseville, and Charles M. leonard (Josephine) Pearle. former Marjorie Davis, · High School here. ·
RACINE
- There will be a
Riggs, Letart, W. Va . Also Brewster, N. Y.
daughter of the late Jack
mee«ng
of
the non-academic
·iurvivlng are sever a I
REVJV AL TONIG..-r
Funeral services will be
Ullian
Davis.
Davis
and
Mrs.
grandchildren, great . held at 11a.m. Tuesday al the
RUTLAND - Arevival will employees of Southern Local
grandchildren. nieces. and Johnson Funeral Home In Mr. Moyer was a resident of
be held at 7:30 this evening al School District 7:30 p.m.
nephews.
'
Cincinnati . Miss Coe was a Houston, Texas. The b~y the Rutland Freewill Baptist Monday at Southern High
' Funeral services will be at member of Rac ine Chapter,
was returned to Warren, Oh1o Church with the Rev. John School when Important lssue,s
'2 p.m. Monday a! the Order of Eestern Star.
will be discussed .
RawllnQs -Coa.ts Funeral
for burial. .
·Elswick spea king.

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RACINE - Southern Local standards the base salary for budget of $923,000 for the
School District teachers were every Ohio teacher must be . ca lendar year of 1976 a~d
voted a raise from $7,500 to $7,900 this fall. Teachers also entered into a contract w1th
$7,900 in their base salary have been in negotiations on · Edwin Davis and Son, Langsbeginning Jan . 20 by the their hospitalization in- ville, for a new 66-passenger
district's board of education surance about 80 percent of bus body at a price of $5,650.
which i~ paid by the board . Mrs. Vinas Lee was named a
Thursday night.
The salary increase is No change was made in that full-time business and office
education teacher having
effective until Jan. t, t977. percentage.
The
board
approv
ed
a
been working recently as a ·
According to the new stale
substitute in that field. Added
to the substitute teacher list
were William Young and
Jennifer Hill. Blance Biggs
was employed as a custodian
at the junior high building.
The board approved the
and Thomas Ray White, 22, during Friday's session.
closing of Southern Schools
Waterloo, charged with four
The jury cond ucted its on Jan. 8, 9 and 12 as
counts of breaking and en- annual tour of the County Jail calamidy days due to the
tering and four counts of facilities and made the snow and icy roads. Mrs. Lee
grand theft. Names of in- following ·recmnmendations ; Lee was authorized to attend
dividuals secretly indicted
(1) Rewire cells for radios . the Ohio Music Educators
( 2) Improve lighting for seminar in Columbus, Feb. ~
will be released upon their
arrests.
reading purposes.
6 and .Mrs. Joyce Thoren,
Arraignments were
(3) Set deputies' pay of $150 district nurse was authorized
scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. minimum per week .
· to attend a session on idenFriday in Gallia County
( 4) Furnish wash cloths tification of the handicapped
Common Pleas Court. Six and towels.
on Jan. 27 at Nelsonville.
(5) Launder all bed sheets Miss Sandra Booth was
witnesses were exa.mined
and blanl&lt;ets weekly .
authorized to attend a Title
(6) Provide a gaso lin e IX coordinator's workshop at
supply, so it is available at ali Kent State Universi ly, Feb. 1·
times for the sheriff 's 2. The board enwred into a
department.
contrac t with the Athens
the furnace bowl ignited soot.
The recommendations will Coun ty Board uf Education
Thirteen men and two trucks be sent to Gallia Coun ty for an educable mentally
responded to the lOth alarm Commissioners .
retarded classroom superof the year.
· Members of the jury were visor .
carroll E. Baker , foreman;
Attending the meeting were
Donald J.. Hammond, Sally Supt. Bobby Ord, Clerk Jane
OAPSE TO MEET
MIDDLEPORT - The D. Icard , Karen Wray Wagner, Boa rd members,
Meigs Local Chapter 17 Ohio · Ellyson, Griff C. Cook, Jr ., Jack Bostick, Robert Sayre,
Nancy
E.
Campbell, Denny Evans, Roger Adams,
Association of Public School
Georgene A. Plantz , Erv in L. Dallas Hill, delegation from
Employes will meet Monday
at 7:30 p,m. at the junior high Morris and Ronald M. Miller. the teachers association of
Alternates were James A. the district, and Larry Wolfe,
cafeteria in Middleport.
Rife and Carl Cameron.
Portland principal.

Indictments ret11rned

First ever on hoard

~~:~o~~-

Southern Local pay raised

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Fire blamed on excess. oil

Rotary adds students to Institute

Money for

--

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says Buehl

DWI charge ·

Goodyear paid

facing driver

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NGW ORLEANS (UP! ) Forget the thrill and tbe
sheer fun of playing in tbe
Pro Bowl. Linebacker Jsiah
Robertson of the l,os Angeles
Rams thinks its tbe perfect
time to take notes on his
regular season opposition in

the National Football Conference .

"'I just try to take away
thlugs lha t the other team
does bfSt," he said . "Take
Chuck Foreman. He'll give
you a move the same maybe
twice in a row, then the next
time he'll change up and try
to confuse you.
"I study him and try to find
some key to know which
move be's going to come up
with."

missioner Pete Rozelle was
resolved Thursday but it was
too late to save the ticket
sales. New Orleans Saints
ticket · manager Henry
Simoneaux said a crowd o(
about 30,000 is expected for
the game - slightly more
than one-third tbe capacity of
the Superdome.
Small ~rowds, however,
have become a habit for the
Pro Bowl, usually looked
upon as an afterthought to tbe
football ·season.
Less than capacity crowda
have watched the game the
past few years and although
discussions have been held at
various owners meetings
concerning the game, no
·alter3tioil in the 'game is

During the week leading up
to Monday night 's Pro Bowl
in the Louisiana Superdome,
Foreman, the star running
back of the Minnesota

four times before Minnesota

opened a 45-40 halftime lead.
Minnesota's spectacular
shooting - 69 per cen t on
field goal attempts - left
lndiana behind even thoug h
the Hoosiers shot 58 per cent.

Minnesota might have
opened up an· insurmountable
lead had it not turned the ball
Jver 10 times in the first half.

·

•

GALLIA'S Tony Folden (10) slipped inside for a layup
aga inst visiting Meigs in a Southeastern Ohio League
basketball game Friday night. Gallipolis held on to outscore the Marauders 67-60. MHS defenders on left are
Dale Browning and Mick Davenport. Folden finished the
game with 16 points. Steve Wilson photos.

MOST aggressive player on the floor du:rlng Friday's
GAHS-Meigs basketball game was Marauder scrambler
Steve Randolph, 5-10 junior guard (15). Although limited
to four points, Randolph was outstanding on defense and
was responsible fo r causi ng many GAHS turnovers.

planned.
Suggestions have been
made to hold the game
before the start of the
season, but the threat of
Vikings, and Robertson were serious injury to a star player
teammates.
that would leave •Jiim out for
Next season il will be the year eliminated that
Robertson's business to possibility.
hanuner Foreman. The notes
A proposal to have the
will come in handy.
game played during the
The Pro Bowl, featuring lbe "dead week" between the
best talent in the NFC and Confere nce Cham pionshi s
AFC, will be televised and the Super Bowl has .also
nationally, but local viewers been turned down because
will not see It because it was the players for the two teams
not a s~llout .
playing for the NFL
The threat of a player Championship would not be
boycott because of a pension available for the Pro Bowl.
di~spute with NFL ComSee Our Big Display Of

Dantley gets 30 in Irish wm

PRINCETON, N.J. (UPI)
- Armond Hill scored three
points in the last I :23 of
over.lime SaltJrday to lead
Princeton to a 58-55 upset
victory over lOth-ranked St.
John's .
Hill, who finished the game
with 13 points, put tl10 Tigers
ahead lor good in the overtime perioo with a lay up with
l :23 left. He added a fr ee
throw with 45 seconds left .

SOUTH BEND, Ind. ( UPI )
All-Ame rica Adrian
Dantley scored 30 points and
the Notre Dame sialled the
fin al 5:30 · of the game
Sa turday to pace the 16thranked Irish to a 95-85 upset
of No . 7 UCLA .

The victory raised Princeton's record lo il-3 while
St. John 's record fell to 14-2.
George Johnson of St .
John's tied the game with ts
seconds left in the regulation
play to force the game into
overtime.

The Tiger$ were ted by
Barnes HauplfUhre~ , whose
20 poin ts helped Princeton to
a 30-27 halftime lead.
Sophomore Bill Omellchenko
added ll points for the
winners .

The Redmen were led by
Beaver Smith with I~ poinl&gt;j.
Frank Alagia and Johnson
each added 12 points.

lliram makes
it four in row

The victory wets the 11th in
H games for Notre Dame and

the third defeat in 17 ga mes

for the Bruins .
Th e v ic tory , exten ding
Notre· Dame's win ning s treak

to six games, also avenged an
earlier 86-70 defeat by UCLA
on the Bruins· fluor.
Jl was a see-saw game for

For real home cookin' the
whole family will enjoy anytime, come to the ·Bob Evans
Steak House. Where once
again , 'round the clock
,11ervice is .a Gallia County_
tradi!ion.

•

C7~&amp;'tf- .
MOBILE.HOMES INC.
See Jim Staats or Joe GiiH
Phone 446-9340
·
GeiU,•UL Qllie

Wolfpack

A New Car

·
OUt} asts

But Don't Have

Duke five
RALEJGH, N. C. (UP! ) Forward Kenny Carr tossed
in 44 points and grabbed 13
rebounds Saturday to lead
13th-ranked North Carolina
State to a 106-101 Atlantic

The Cash On
Hand? .

Coast Confe re nce win over

Duke.
Carr, who scored 45 points
earlier in the year, was the
game's lea ding rebounder
and scorer as the Wolfpack
pulled its AAC mark to 3-1
and went to 13-2 overall. The
loss drorped Duke to 2-3 in
the A ~ C ,rnd 9'7 overall.
Forward Phil Spence added
20 _points for the Wolfpack,
while AI Green had 18.
The Blue Devils were led by
guard Tale Armstrong , who
tallied 34 points. He was
followed by forward Willie
Hodge, who fouled out with 26
points and only 2:42 left to
play. Jim Spanarkel added 15
and Mark Crow had 12.
North Ca rolin a Sla te
trailed In the first period by
as many as five, but pulled
back to even the score at 3333 with 6:37 remaining in the
half when Carr hit ari ·oulside
jumper.
·
The two teams swapped
baskets until Steve Walker
connected wil,h 1:19 to play,
and an outside shot by Green
gave the Wolfpack a 50-46
halftime edge it never
relinquished.

PULL·ON PECOS

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points came on fre·e-throws as

DAN
I

forward,

Dantieyfrom the field with 14
lield goals compared to 12 for
the Notre Dame star and also
Nound up with 30 points.
Nilliams scored 18 and five .
&gt;ther players were in double
'lgures for the fighting ]rish.

These hornes Qualify for. Most Federal Loan
Programs .

two
points
only
the Irish
went
intoonce
theirbefore
semi- · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
sl&lt;ill with a ~ ix point lead,
Ten of Notre Dame's last 14

NO LACES!

•Closed Sunday night at 10:00 p.m.

MARLETTE
ELCONA
REDMAN
WHITMAN
Also: A Full Line of Quality Mobile Homes .

the Irish used their "fourcorn er offense ," · playing
kee p-away with the ball, ·
forcing UCLA to foul in order
to get possession.
Rich Washington, UCLA's
juni or

was four , at 44-40.

A short-lived rally tied the
score at 65-135 in the second
befo re Notre Dame con- half when the Bruins tallied
nected for il straight points .. eight straigh l points, but
Noire Dame broke out of the
tie with baskets by Duck
Williams and Dantley an d
UCLA thereafter came within

Waverly nips
Logan, 57-56

,

climaxed by Da ntley's three
point play wi th 5: 15left in the
halfto boost Notre Dame to a
35-26 lead. ·
The closest · the Bruins
could come in the first half

the first 12 minu tes and the
score was Ued eight times

WAVERLY
Rub McBroom and SeeL
Holsinger's layup with 33
Wa verly hit 26 uf 56 field
seconds
left
in
the
game
goa
l attempts for 46 percent.
PITISBURGH (UP!)
carried
Waverly
to
a
57-56
The
Tigers were five of 10 at ·
Ted McDivitt scored 22 po ints
and Grnie Pasqualone added · Southeastern Ohio League the foul line. Waverly had 36
17lo lead Hiram to its fourth victory over visiting Logan·. rebounds, 16 by Holsinger.
Wave rly is at Ir on ton
straight Presidents Athletic' Friday night.
The
victory
left
W
averly
Tuesday.
Con ference victory by
Box score :
downing Carnegie-Mellon, 78- with a 9-4 season mark. InSEOAL,
Waverly
LOGAN (56 ) ~ Mul ho lland .
side
the
67.
remainedtiedforsecondwith 20 -.4 ; SeeL 8-3- 19 ; H awk , 31
Mar ly Costa was high for G3llipolis with a 7-2 . mark. ~:o~.c~Oo-r,;nLs 1 ~L 2.~~.Myers .
6
the Tartans with 22 points Logan dropped to 4-8 overall
wAvERLY ( m - M
followed by Larry DiCicco and 3..f3 ins. ide the league.
Thomas , 1-0-2: Holsinge r , 10
· 1-21; Davena , 4-0-8; Thomp
with 18 as CMU dropped to 2-8
Waverly led 15-12afler one ·son , 5-2- 12 ; W hal ey , '2 -'1 6 :
overall and 2-3 in conference period. Logan held a 31-29 Workman . 2 0 ' ' Shoemaker.
2.Q. 4. TOTAL S 26 -S- 57 .
play.
halftime advantage . The
Score by quarters ;
Hiram held a 47-35 ad- Tigerswerebackon top 19-47 Log an
1119 16 9~ 56
vantage at the intermission going into. the final period.
waver ly
15 14 10 8- 57
and Jed by as many as 18
lip in with 1:15 DePaul humbles
points midway through the leftBillputSeel's
Logan
on top 56-55. f
· second half. Hiram is now 4-0 Then came Holsinger's
goal oe, 102 to 70
in the PAC and 7-5 overall. witti 33 seconds left.
.
CHICAGO I UPI )- DePaul
Kev Hawk 's shot with one University co mpletely
second left feil short.
dominated the backboards
Logan hit 25 of 32 field goal Saturday to defeat St. Xavier
attempts for 48 percent. The of Chicago , 102-70, and give
BRUINS TRIUMPH
Chiefs were six of 12 at the Coach Ray Meyer his 520th
DETROIT
(UPI)
Veteran · Johnny Bucyk foul lin e. Logan had 28 career basketbail win.
scored two power-play goals rebounds, nine each by Mike
De Paul, now 11-5 on the
season, snapped a threein the game's firsllO minutes
ga me losi ng streak by
- his 22nd and 23rd of the
outrebounding
St. Xavier 71season - Saturday to spark SW girls nip
20.
the Boston Bruins to a 6-1
Three DePaul players were
victory over the Detroit Red
in
double figures in rebounds
foe, 29 to 27
Wings.
- forward Joe Ponsetto with
PATRIOT - Coaclf Lois 15, forward Curtis Watkins
Sheets' Southwestern girls with 13 and center Dave
edged Hannan Trace, 29-27 Corzine with 12.
St. Xavier center · Greg
here Friday night.
Reed
was the game's high
Cheryl James led the HT
scorer
with 22.
girls with 14 points. Christi
Corzine
had 21, Ponsetto 19,
Banks topped the winners
Watkins
16, and Randy
with eight markers.
Ramsey and Andy Pancratz
Southwestern trailed 5-2 aI
the end of the first quarter 10 each for the victors.
With 9:05 left in the first
and 11-10 at the half but
half
the game was tied at 21pulled away, in the third
21,
but
DePaul ran up a 20-4
quarter. SW 2-1 will host
slrea
k
to
take a 48-30 halftime
Symmes ·valley' Mqnday,
edge,

OPEN 24 HOURs::c

MODULAR &amp; SECTIONAL -HOMES

•

·u pset winner

CLAIMED BY CANCER
NEW YORK (UPI ) :Former St. John 's Basketball
:Captain Greg C!euss died
;Friday night after a
~prolonged bout with ca ncer,
! The 6-foot-9 Cleuss, 26, was
, the second of three brothers
;to play basketball at .St.
John's. Upon graduation, he
•went on to play pro basketball
:with the New York Nels of the
'American Basketball
Association.
Cleuss is survived by a wife
and daughter.

Q

Pro bowl is
set Monday

the league record set by Ohio
State from 1960-62.
Guard Bob Wilkerson, who
held Williams lo five secondhalf baskets, made a fast
break layup after a steal by
May to give Indiana its first
lead at48-47 with two minutes
gone in the second half.
All five Hoosiers scorers
finished in double figures
with Kent Benson scoring 16,
Wilkerson 14 and sophomore
guard Jim Wisman 12.
Mike Thompson finished
with 17 for the Gophers,
followed by Dave Winey with
II and Osborne Lockhart with
10.
For the first time this
season, Indiana failed to lead
at some point in the first half
of a game . The Hoosiers
managed to tie the score on ly

Princeton is

eighth win in 15 starts, a 67-4&gt;4
,victory over Navy,
Nick Daniels got 20 points
. for Xaiver, which iook the
lead for good at 61-60 with
· 3:12left in the first half. Mike
Plunkett got 16 points, while
Gary Whitfield added 13 a nd
Joe Sunderman got 11.
Xavier, shOoting 51per cent
'from th~ field, held a 39-33
adviiJltage at intermission.
Navy, shooting 41.9 per
cent from the field, was
.paced by Kevin Sinnett with
~ points, Mark Alfers with 12
11nd Hank Kuzma with 12.
Navy is now 7-8.

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games, are just one short of

CINCI NNATI fUP l)
Xavier placed four men in
doubl e fi gur es Sat urday

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lead over a seven-minute

stretch.
Minnesota's Ray Williams,
who led both teams in scoring
,with a career high of 34, made
his first six shots and 9-of-11
in the first half match wh ich
saw the Gophers make 18-of26 field goal attempts.
May then led the India na
comeback with 14 points in
the second half b~lore fouling
out w1th 4:01 to play.
Without May, Indiana
immediately went into a ball
control offense to protec t its
79-70 lead.
The lioosiers, who have
won 26 straight conference

afternoon, en route to their

"'"'
1..1
Q~\,.1

I

MINNEAPOLIS ( UPI J • Tom Aberne thy scored 22
points, All-America Scott
May added 21 and No. J
ranked Indiana overcame a
14 point deficit by making its
first eight second-half shots
Sat urday to defeat Min-.
nesota, B:&gt;-76, in Big Ten
.action.
The Hoosiers made 12 of
their first 14 after the intermission in turning a 55-40
halftime deficit into a 64-53

Nary, 67 to 64

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Indiana rally
trips Gophers

Xavier defeats

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�19 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976

Southern humbles Bobcats, 92-48

.-

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after a rebound to give the stoppable while the BObcats
hosts a 12-10 lead. The Tor- couldn't seem to , find the
nados went on to score six range . When the smoke
more before the visitors could cleared and the teams hellded
find the range again, and the lor the locker rooms, the halftime score read 39-2~.
quarter ended, 18-14.
Southern' s Chip Brauer Southern. Kyger Creek's
sc&lt;&gt;red the first bucket of the Met;ner sank one at the
second canto, but Baylor kept buzzer.
In that first half, Baylor
U1e boys of Coach Keith
and
Met;ner both had ten
Carter within reach as he
points,
while the hosts' Danny
connected to make .the score
Brown
matched that with ten
21).16. But then, the Tornados
of
his
own.
When the teams
took off and seemed untook the floor for the second
half , Brown ·and Mike
Roberts connected for
Southern on two quick ones,
and from then on, it was all
downhill. The Tornados
scored28bigooesm
' thethlrd
period, while Kyger hit only
seven. The visitors lost the
services of Metzner with 1:17
remaining In that period due
to an lnj'ury.
Southern was led by a
balanced scorina attack. with
~
-~
•OUr men hitting in double
figures : D. Brown 18, Roush
15, Roberts 14 and Brauer 13.
As a team, they hauled In a

Dave Roush . But seconds
RACINE - The fa vored later, Kyger Creek's Bill
Southern Tornados c ame Metzner sank a jumper to
away with a SCO!Jling)y easy knot the score at 2-2. Roush
92-48 victory over the visiting retaliated bY. canning one of
Kyger Creek Bobcats, but the his palented corner shots, but
scrappy Bobcats ga ve the U1e Bobcats' Ralph Baylor
much taller hosts all they sank one of his own to tie the
could handle in the first score again, this time at the
5:00 mark.
quarter.
Although KC never had the
So uthern got the opening
tip , and at the 6:00mark drew lead, they kept pace until the
first blood when senior Da!lllY 2:11 mark when junior Joe
Bro"n sank a short one Brown threw in two points
following an assist by junior
BY GREG BAlLEt

~

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whopping 59 reboWlds with
Brown and Brauer catching
17 and 1&amp;, respectively. They
hit a sizzling 5I percent from
lhefield ( 44-81 ), and sank 4-12
free throws. They had 19
turnovers, but 14 assists.
Their record is now '-3.
Kyger Creek . was led In
scoring by Baylor's 16 points
and 11 rebounds. Metmer had
14 points, and Tim Lucas
added 10. The Bobcats hit a
warm and respectable 19-12
shots from the field lor 4&amp;
percent, but managed to haul
In only 20 rebounds. They had
11 turnovers. Their record is
now 2-9.
The reserve contest was a
little closer. The half-time
scorestoodat24-22, Southern.
The third quarter started the
same way, and at ill! end, the
hosls led, 32-31. But in the
last canto, the Baby Funnel
Clouds outscored the visitors
25-12 to pick up a &amp;7-43 victory.
Teaford and. Sayre share
scoring honors as they each
chipped in 18 points for

Tatte~~on injured

the victors. The siory
was
told
at
the
foul line, as Southern hit
21-31 free throws. They bit 21
percent from the field ( 111-«1),
and collected 45 cii'Oms.
They bad 24 tumovers.
The Bobltittena were led by 1
Mollahan's II points, am!
Thompson's eight of his
team's 21 rebounds. They bad
20 turnovers, but could hlt oo
only ~17 free throws.
Officials for the two games
were: Felix Hamllt&lt;&gt;n,
charles LeMaster, and Tom
Durbin, all from the
Chillicothe Chap_ter .
Box .COre:
Kyur Cr ook 1.. 1 - sands,
1-0 · 2 ' Metzner, 7·0-!4 ; Arm bruster, 0 -1-1; Thompson , 1-02; Lucas. 2·4-10 ; Kern. 1-1-3
and Baylor , 6·4-16. Totals 1910-41 .
sout~ern (121 - Johnston .
• ·0 ·8 : Roberos, 7-0-14 ; D.
Brown , 9-0-18 ; Brouer, 6-1-13 ;
Roush , 7-1-15; Flndle v . 3-0 -6 ;
cross , 3-0-6; J . Brown, 4-0·8
and Dun nino . 1-2·&lt;. Totals 444-92 .
BY Quarter"
K. creek
14 10 9 15'-&lt;8

:in Big·Blacks loss
PARKERSBURG - The
Point Pleasant Big Blacks,
'~playing without star Senior
•Jim Tatterson after the
; opening minutes and missing
on an unbelievable number of
' foul shots, suffered a
disheartening 73-55 loss to
ohost P.arkersburg So~th, .
··Friday night.
" Tatlerson; a 6-3 senior who
was high scorer lor the Blg
Blacks in the 64-58 win 'over
the Patriots on Jan. 2, was
·forced to leave the game
after suffering a painfully
, sprained ankle, with less than
·'a minute gone in the first
.. Qu31:ter.
Coach Lennie Barnette's
cage team, which opened the
..game with a juggled lineup

Kyger Creek 43.

\

,,
"
'

',- ..

SOUTHERN'S Joe Brown (24) eludes Kyger Creek's
Jim Armbruster (15) for a layup during Friday 's SVAC
contest won by the Tornados on the Racine planks.

Meigs wrestlers
SHOT BLOCKED - Southern's Chip Brauer (44 ) blocks attempted layup by Kyger
Creek's Ralph Baylor during Friday's SVAC contest al Racine. On right is Southern's Rick
Findly 122). - Jim ·Hamm photos.

defeat Wahama
MASON - Meigs wrestlers
turned back host Wahama 56·
17 In a match here Friday
a!ternoon.

six .

By GORDON ,SAKAMOTO
SAN FRANCISCO I UP! ) Until the National League
knows whe ther the Giants
•
period .
will be laying in San Fran112-pound class - Neither
cisco or Toronto it will not
team had en try .
release the 1976 schedule.
119-poUnd class Kev ·
A leag ue spokesma n
Mclaughlin. decisioned Vince
Friday sai d two sets of
Roush, 18· 1.
126-pound class Greg
schedules have been worked
Fi e ld s de cls ioned · Ga r y
out, but until a court · rules
••
Priddy, 18·6. •
•
132-pound class - Mike Feb. 2 on an injunction issued
In the dty . of San Francisco
Harrison pinhed Rick Stafford with 1:05 left in second
forbidding th e sale of the
period.
Giants to Toronto interests,
138-pound class Butch
RIO GRANUE - 'file Rio
where they will play remains
Rou
sh
decisioned
Joe
Par
Grande
Redwomen sons, 12-7.
a mystery.
basketball team has suffered
145-pound class - Duane
The Giants were so ld 1.0
lOsses In its first two en- Mclaughlin pinned Da n Canadian interests last week
counters of the season Stodola with 1: 43 lef t in th ird for $13.25 million , prompting
against Glenville State and · period.
167-pound class .Tom
Mayor George Moscone of
Wright State last week.
Foreman pinned Dan Buf Sa n Francisco to seek co urt
On Tuesday, Rio lost to fington with 1; 49 lett in first action.
Glenville 67-M. Four Red- period .
The league had the
185-PQund class ~ Dan
women starters fouled out of Starcher
pinned Dave Rqush
tills game which saw the lead with 20 seconds
l ef t i n f irs t
change hands several times. period.
·
GAINS FINAUi
Heavyweight class - Ray
Pam Eshenaur led Rio in
BALTIMORE
&lt;UP!)
Wilford pinned Dw ayne
" scoring with 16 points while · While wit/1 1:00 left in first Tom Gorman of Seattle easily
•• Clare Flelcher added 13 and per i&lt;&gt;&lt;!.
breezed past Miami 's Eddie
•., Deb Seay 12 .
Monday . Meigs will host Pt. Dibbs, 6-4, fi.. l, Saturday to
•
Last Saturday, the Red- Plea sa nt in a 2 p .m . match. advance to Sunday's final
• women
lost 85-42 to Wright
championsh ips .
• State. Rio's 42 points was the
"
: . lowest offensive showing In
•
• almost two seasons. Deb Seay
•• grabbed 16 rebounds and
scored 23 points for the
•• lledwomen .
Rio has three players
••
averaging
double figures this
.
•
: year : Deb Seay ( 14.8) Terri
• Koster ( 11.8) and Clare
" F1etcher ( 10.8) . Deb Seay
'•• needs only 13 rebounds to
• break the all-time career
•'• rebounding record ol185 held
• by Sharon Vannoy . Seay is
•• just ll sophomore .
Rio Grande played Urbana
••
':"' CoUelje Saturday afternoon
: at Lyne Center.
90 pound class J o~n
Eblin won by for:fe it.
lOS-pound c lass - Mickey
Lyons pinned Gre9 Stodola
wtth 1: 03 left i n secon d

: drop first
:.. two games

.

!'

':
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I

65x14
_.

schedule
completed- with
the Giants In San Franciscoand ready for a nnouncement
on the usual release date of
Feb. 1, but the conditional
sale of th e team forced
schedule-maker Fred Fleig to
work up a new one.
"If the Giants stay in Sa n
Francisco, there is no prob. lem, " the spokesman said.
"But if Tordnto, or somebody
else who doesn't keep the
them here , gets the Giants,
there are problems."
Because of travel problems
and local commitments,
• schedules for the Giants as
well as three or four other
teams- the most notable

Ja~ .

27- 7-8: JO p.m. College Rec.

Jan . 28- 7 p .m . Redwomen vs . Marietta

Jan . 29- 7-8:30 pl.m. Coli . Rec.
Jan . 3&lt;f-1-8: 30 p.m . Open Rec .
Jan . 31 ~2 - 4 p .m . Open Rec .

.

6 p .m .

JV ~ s

•

~

•••
••
••
••

:

United-Press lriternational

• · DePaul 102 St. Xavier 70
:
ll!dlana 85 Minnesota 76
• Rhode Is. 63 Connecticut 60
:
Texas Tech n SMU 69
• Milone 69 Ohio Dominican 62

:• .~~=~oo;':
~~n:leK~~~C:, ~
Uteh 76 Brigham Young
74

:
•
:
•
-

Princeton 58 St. John's SS (ot)
South Carolina 84 Davidson 70
No. Car. St. 106 Duke 101
Xavier (Ohio) 67 Navy 64
Michigan Tech 90 St. Cloud172
., Carnell (Iowa) 82 Carleton 64
• . Welt VIrginia 69 Penn St. 64
:
Rutaers 113 Lafayette 79
~ Atbrll'l 71 Adrian 69
:
Miami IOhlol 86 0111o U. 63
Kent St. 68 Cent. Michigan 62
W. Michigan 62 Ball Sf. 57
- Defiance ·87 Taylqr 83
: Hlnover 13 Mancheslet- 76
: .t-Y.Bible 97 Grand Rapids

'·

FREE
LOOK WHAT YOU

CAN GET. • •

.•••
...•••

An

MESSAGE
from
Emerson E. Evans
President

Closed

Closed
7-8: 30 p.m. Open Swim
2-4 p .m . Open Swim

OhioValley

2-4 p .m . Open Swim

7-8:30p.m. Coli. Swim

Bank

I

-

L- Pet.

GB

30 13 .698
27 16 .628

3

31 .,

Buffalo
28 18 .609
New York
23 23 .SOO
Central Divisi on

W. L.

a u2

Pet. GB

Washing ton

25 19 .568

Cteyeland

24 20

. 5~5

1

All&amp;nfll

21

.SOO

3

21

New Or le•ns 19 22 .463 41h
Houston
19 22 ,463 4'h
western Conference
Midwest D ivision
W- L . Pet. GB
Milwaukee
19 24 .442
Detroit
17 u .415 1
Kansas Cltv
l4 30 .318 5'1:1
Chicago
12 JO .286 6Vz
Pac ific Div ision
W- L . Pet. GB
Golden Sto!lte
32 10 .762
Los Angeles
23 23 .500 11
Seattle
:22 :24 .478 12
Phoenix
18 24 . 429 14
Portland
l7 27 .386 16
Friday's Results
Bosto{'l 108 Detroit 91
Buffalo 119 Atlanta 104
New York 104 Philadelph ia 92
M ilwaukee 113 Kansas C ii V 97
Phoenix 124 Houston 11 5
Portland 119 Los Angeles 96

"REMODEL" ..... NOW!
(Prices Effective To Jan. 31st)

Sundav•s Ga,es
Buffalo at Boston , a ft .
Chicago at Kansas City , af t.
PhiladelPhia 'a t Atlan ta
Washington at Los Ange les
Am eriu n Ba sketb all

Association Standings
&amp;v United Pres s International
W L Pet. GB
Denver
32 11 .744
New York
28 13 .683 3
San Antonio
23 18 .561 8
24 20 .545 8 11~
Ken t ucky
Ind iana
24 20 .545 8'11
St . LOUiS
19 26 .422 · 14
Virgin ia
6 35 .146 25

S

2 99 per sheet
''LUAN''

F_riday ' s Res ult s

New York 115 Kentucky 111
Ind iana 132 St. Louis 128 (ot)
Denver 131 San An tonio 123
s·undav's Game s
San Anton io at New York , aft .
V irginia at St. Louis
.
Ind iana at Kent~cky

1ST
QUALITY

lnternati'onal Hockey
League Standings
United Press International

PANELING

1ST QUALITY

North

w I f pts . gf
Sag ina w 24 16 6 54 189
Pt . Huron 23 \6 $ .$] 171
Muskegon21 l7 7 49 140
Flin t
18 17 10 46 159
Kalama
13 24 7 33 142
South
w I t pts. gf
Day t on
26 16 4 56 17&lt;1
Ft. Way n e l8 20 9 45 17 2
Tol edo
15 2~ · 9 39 .154
Co l um.
16 26 S 37 139
Fridav's Results
F l int 6 Columbus 6
Fort Wavne

s Muskegon

Ka lama zoo 5 Tol edo 2
Port H uron 4 Sag inaw 3
Sunday's Gam es
Cayton at Fort W a ',lne
Toledo at Port Huron
Sag inaw at Flint
M uskegon at Kalamazoo

ga
164

148
132
145
198
ga
137
1 6~

156
194

4x8 Sheets

J

CARPET

Cr islip , 6-2-14 ; Daugherty , \ .
0-2 ; Burge , 7-3-17 ; Shep pard ,
0 -0 -0 ; Moore , 1 -0 -2 : C a r .
penter. 1-J -5 ; Mundy ,· 2-0-4;
Shanibl in . 1- 1-3; TOTALS 31 ·

22· 11 · 55.

11 · 73 .
BV QUarters :

PARKERSBURG SOUTH
(73) · M c:C iead . 12-2·26 ;

Sou lh

~ig

Blacks

'

6 17 11 21 ----. 55

15. 23 13 22- 73

,.

••
~

• RUBBER BACKING INCLUDED
• RUBBER BACKING INCLUDED
• MANY COLORS TO OIOOSE FROM
PERFECT FOR KITCHENS, BATHS, OR FAMILY ROOMS

••

"·'
·'
.,•••

Super Shef ,"Golden Brown Fries
and regular..:size soft drink
!

••
••
••
••
••
••
••
·'

KITCHEN

PWA I 241NCH

-VANITIESWITH CULTURED MARBLE TOPS

KOMPACT
CABINETS

40%

••
••
••
•'
••

::
•:..

JANUARY 26 ·- 30
10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.

1 would like to take this opportunity to Inform you of a recent
action of our Board of Directors. We are now able to offer to our
Individual Retirement Account Customers a new Investment vehicle
with in your Ohio Valley Bank retirement account . Deposits of
$1.000.00 or more may now be transferred from your I;R.A •
·· Passbook to a Special I.R.A. Certificate of Deposit which can earn
up to 7'12 per cent If Invested lor slx years. Certificates of Depj)slt of
shorter maturity are also available. When these certificates mature,
they can be reinvested at the prevalllng rate at that time. Interest
from the 1. R. A. Certificates of Deposit wlll be credited to your 1. R.A.
Passbook . .
We at Ohio Valley Bank hope that you will be as excited about
the new development as we are. Your retirement dollars can now
earn the highest Interest that we are allowed to pay, and earn II taxfree .
·
.

•Dishes •Pots and Pans .can Opener
THE OHIO VALLEY BANK CO.

Emerson E. Evans
President .

LESS FIXTURES

2x4 STUDS--89~

••
••
••
••
••
••
•·~
••

EA.

INSULATION
-UNFACED

EA .

t=
~:
I·
••
••

..

8 Y2

5/8x4x8 PARTICLE

••
••

,.·',.••

,,..

BOARD-$379

"r:

.OFF

• GLENNWOOD

Offer good Monday - Friday

,.••
••
~~

31h~23

EA.

SQ.FT.

BAITS-184 Sq. Fl

3"1zxl5 BATTS-120 Sq. Ft.

••
••
••
••

••
••
••
••
,.••

:_ ,' l'.tt.l
11 Yankton 60
Millon 94 N'wstrn (Wis.) S8

lot)
Tennessee S6 Mississippi 53

Boston
Phil adelph ia

l ..
,,••

:I

llenfley 66 St. Michael 's 59

Division

w.

•

=
•
:

Atlt~nt i c

..
••

Slnc!lrel y ,

elron •Cannister Set and More

PT . PLEASANT ( S.S) Hess , 13·3&lt;29 ; Tatterson . 0-2
2 ; McDerm i tt , 2-0 -.d ; Wi lson ,
0-2-2 ; Vaug ha n , 1-0 -2 ; Fri ar .
0-Q.Q;
Browning ,
0-0 -0 ;
Holl"&amp; fld , 0·0-0 ; M c·carm ic k , 04-4 , N iber1, 6-0-12 ; TOTALS

Eastern Conference

'

.

•Coffee Pot •Silverware Set •Mixer

was Sophomore Ed Nibert
who scored 12 points, on si•
fi eld goals in a substitute
role. Junior Steve McDermitt
started in place of Nibert
because of a neck injury
suffered by the standout
sophomore, earlier in the
week in the loss against
Nitro.
South, meanwhile, had
three players connecUng for
double figures .
The Patriots were led by 6-3
Senior Randy McClead who
went lor 26 points on 12 of 19
field goal tries and two of two
charity losses.
Bob Burge, fi..2 Senior, and
Joe Crislip, tH Senior, scored
17 and 14 respectively, for the
most.
Overall , the Palriots hit on
31 of 62 shots for an impossible SO per cent average
while governing their eighth
victory of the year against
three setbacks .
Faltering Point Pleasant,
while going over to their
fourth loss in 11 regular
season games, hit on a
respectable 44 percent of 50
shots from the field but
managed to sink only 25 at the
charity stripe .
Point Pleasant rebounding
was led by Hess wi th 16 while
Nibert pulled down 10 of the
· Big Blacks cantos.
Big Blacks Captain, Andy
Wilson, left the game with
five fouls early in the fourth
quarter.
Point committed 16 turnovers compared to 22 by
South.
The Big Blacks will host
Parkersburg Big Reds
Tuesday night.
The Little Blacks won the
preliminary contest 57-55 in
the close fought contest. The
Little Blacks were led by
Paul Crump with 16 on· eight
field goals. Also hitting in
aouble figures were Dan
Porter and Jeff Holland, each
with 10.
The Mini-Pats. were led by
Crook with 14 while Wilson
netted 10.

••
••
••
••
••
••
•
'
•••

•'j;

:

INJURED ON ATTEMPT - Point ' Pleasant's star
forward Jim Tatterson (45 ) suffered a sprained ankle as
he took this shot early in the game Friday night against
host Parkersburg South and the injury -!so· dea lt a
crippling blow to the Big Blacks as they wentdown to their
fourth defea t of the season.
. /
.

"
••
••
••••
••

•AM-FM 8-Trac:k Stereo System with Turntable

St~ndlngs

.,

MOBILE HOME

Te~n

Nat ional Basketball Association

::,...

Honeymoon Special!

el9" Color

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'949

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•

POOL

TOTAL ELECTRIC-:- TWO OR THREE BEDROOMS
With The Purchase of This
Home You Will Receive

·'·'
•
·'·'
•
'
'

••:'

Closed

Saturday's
cage scores

•

,.

.

nashua.

..

•'

vs . Ky . Chri st ian

Feb. 1- 2.·4 p.m. Open Rec .
7-8.30 p.m. Coli. Rec.

0.
M

~

·::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::~:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-J.::::::::::;::~:::S*::::&amp;:~::::"(SiWm

Ja n . /. 6- 7 p .m . J V ' s vs . M a ri ett_a JV's

·,

Fitzpatrick and Ed Howard .
Ray Barnett led Wellston's
attack with 16. Ed Howard
led Ironton with 14.
Irontoo will host Waverly ''
Newhart winner Tuesday . Wellston .is at
NORTHFiE CD,
Ohio - McigL
•
( UP!) Baron Newhart
Box score :
stepped the mile In 2:09.4
WELLSTON 1461 - Gill , 4
Barne tt.
6 -4- 16 ;
Friday night to score an easy 0 -8 ;
, 1-1-3; Peoples , J .
three-length triumph over McKinnln
0-6 ; Ar nold , 2-7-ll ; Brooks , 01-1; Derrow , 0-1-1. TOTALS
Hello Meadow In the featured
14-46 .
ninth race at Norlhlield Park. 16 ·IRONTON
t711
E.
The winner, driven to his Howard , 5-A-U ; crockret , 1-1·
first victory of the year by 3; Ro yal , 5-0-10 ; Flt:z pa t rick ,
S-2-12 ; C. Bra wn , 5-0-10 ; R .
Dale Ross, paid "'.80, $5.20 Howard , 6-P· 12; M . Brown ; '2 and $3.80. Francis Time was 0-4; Fa i rchild , 0-2-2; Houston .
0-2-2. TOTALS 29-U -71.
third.
Score by quarters :
The 1-3-2 tenth race Big Wellston
6 - 19 9 12- 46
1.4 19 17 2 1- 71
Triple combination paid Ironton
Reser v e\ Ir on t on . 69
$600.
Wellston 32 .

being Houston and Atlantawill be drastically altered.
"The schedules are worked
out on the basis of travel
expense, travel mileage and
various dales that have to be
hon ored ," t he spbkesman
said.
"There are certain dates
that Houston cannot use the
Astrodome and Atlanta has
certain dates that it has to he
out of.town or in town. Other
clubs have simill!r dates .
" II Toronto were located
where Vancouver is, it
wouldn 't be that much of a
problem. But Toronto is in lhe
east and it creates quite a lew
problems."

LYNECENTERSCHEDULE
Week of Jan. ~6 , 1976
DATE- GYMNASIUM

,...
..

Ironton hil29 of 52 field goal
attempts and was 13 of 23 at
the foul line. IHS picked off 41
rebounds, 12 each by Dean

'76 NL .schedule delayed

Here are the resul Is:

Redwomen

i

IRONTON - Coach Buddy
Bell's Iron ton Tigers fell
behind !HI during the first two
minutes of play, then ripped
off 20 straight points enroute
to a 71 -46 victory over visiting
Wellston Friday night.
The SEOAL leaders, now
12-0on the year, led 14-6,33-25
and 50-34 a t the quartermarks. Ironton is 9-0 in
conference play.
Wellston • dropped to 3-8
overall, and 2-7 inside the
league.
Wellston hit 16 of 58 field
goal attempts and 14' of 21
free throws. WHS· had 23
rebounds. Terry McKinniss
and Steve Arnold each had

that
. left usual starters ' Ed
Nibert and Bret McCormick
on the bench, was literally
never in the game.
In fact, the Big Blacks were
never ahead.
The only time PPHS was
tied with the Wood Countians
was alter Senior Larry Hess,
6-6, who turned in an outstanding
performance
despite the losing cause, hit
on nn outside shot at 6:05 in
the first period to make the
score 2-2.
Hess, hitting on 13 of 19
•!tempts· from the field. and
lllree of nine from the foul
line, finished up with a gamehigh 29 poin"ts.
The only other Big Black
eager to hit in double figures

,,...

~ I

' . Pro 'I
IStandin~s !
I

By United Press lnternat'ional

•

so~•:,•;:',. ;, 1 ; 0'~~~:r~-;~

r------------,

.••
••
."

1503 Eastern Ave.,
Gallipolis

.'

Hardlhans
Home
Center
THAN A LUMBER

...,_....;¥: ~;......__,"MORE
Store Hour s
Min., Tuts .. Wed. 9 to 6

.m. Thurs .• Fri ., Sat. 9 to
p.m. Sunday 1 to 1 p.m.

!I

Y.n..~.~....,

"LOTS MORE"

RT. 2 BYPASS, POIN'f

I,

~-

)

�19 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976

Southern humbles Bobcats, 92-48

.-

~

•w
•

.......

after a rebound to give the stoppable while the BObcats
hosts a 12-10 lead. The Tor- couldn't seem to , find the
nados went on to score six range . When the smoke
more before the visitors could cleared and the teams hellded
find the range again, and the lor the locker rooms, the halftime score read 39-2~.
quarter ended, 18-14.
Southern' s Chip Brauer Southern. Kyger Creek's
sc&lt;&gt;red the first bucket of the Met;ner sank one at the
second canto, but Baylor kept buzzer.
In that first half, Baylor
U1e boys of Coach Keith
and
Met;ner both had ten
Carter within reach as he
points,
while the hosts' Danny
connected to make .the score
Brown
matched that with ten
21).16. But then, the Tornados
of
his
own.
When the teams
took off and seemed untook the floor for the second
half , Brown ·and Mike
Roberts connected for
Southern on two quick ones,
and from then on, it was all
downhill. The Tornados
scored28bigooesm
' thethlrd
period, while Kyger hit only
seven. The visitors lost the
services of Metzner with 1:17
remaining In that period due
to an lnj'ury.
Southern was led by a
balanced scorina attack. with
~
-~
•OUr men hitting in double
figures : D. Brown 18, Roush
15, Roberts 14 and Brauer 13.
As a team, they hauled In a

Dave Roush . But seconds
RACINE - The fa vored later, Kyger Creek's Bill
Southern Tornados c ame Metzner sank a jumper to
away with a SCO!Jling)y easy knot the score at 2-2. Roush
92-48 victory over the visiting retaliated bY. canning one of
Kyger Creek Bobcats, but the his palented corner shots, but
scrappy Bobcats ga ve the U1e Bobcats' Ralph Baylor
much taller hosts all they sank one of his own to tie the
could handle in the first score again, this time at the
5:00 mark.
quarter.
Although KC never had the
So uthern got the opening
tip , and at the 6:00mark drew lead, they kept pace until the
first blood when senior Da!lllY 2:11 mark when junior Joe
Bro"n sank a short one Brown threw in two points
following an assist by junior
BY GREG BAlLEt

~

,_

•
••

-M

-..

whopping 59 reboWlds with
Brown and Brauer catching
17 and 1&amp;, respectively. They
hit a sizzling 5I percent from
lhefield ( 44-81 ), and sank 4-12
free throws. They had 19
turnovers, but 14 assists.
Their record is now '-3.
Kyger Creek . was led In
scoring by Baylor's 16 points
and 11 rebounds. Metmer had
14 points, and Tim Lucas
added 10. The Bobcats hit a
warm and respectable 19-12
shots from the field lor 4&amp;
percent, but managed to haul
In only 20 rebounds. They had
11 turnovers. Their record is
now 2-9.
The reserve contest was a
little closer. The half-time
scorestoodat24-22, Southern.
The third quarter started the
same way, and at ill! end, the
hosls led, 32-31. But in the
last canto, the Baby Funnel
Clouds outscored the visitors
25-12 to pick up a &amp;7-43 victory.
Teaford and. Sayre share
scoring honors as they each
chipped in 18 points for

Tatte~~on injured

the victors. The siory
was
told
at
the
foul line, as Southern hit
21-31 free throws. They bit 21
percent from the field ( 111-«1),
and collected 45 cii'Oms.
They bad 24 tumovers.
The Bobltittena were led by 1
Mollahan's II points, am!
Thompson's eight of his
team's 21 rebounds. They bad
20 turnovers, but could hlt oo
only ~17 free throws.
Officials for the two games
were: Felix Hamllt&lt;&gt;n,
charles LeMaster, and Tom
Durbin, all from the
Chillicothe Chap_ter .
Box .COre:
Kyur Cr ook 1.. 1 - sands,
1-0 · 2 ' Metzner, 7·0-!4 ; Arm bruster, 0 -1-1; Thompson , 1-02; Lucas. 2·4-10 ; Kern. 1-1-3
and Baylor , 6·4-16. Totals 1910-41 .
sout~ern (121 - Johnston .
• ·0 ·8 : Roberos, 7-0-14 ; D.
Brown , 9-0-18 ; Brouer, 6-1-13 ;
Roush , 7-1-15; Flndle v . 3-0 -6 ;
cross , 3-0-6; J . Brown, 4-0·8
and Dun nino . 1-2·&lt;. Totals 444-92 .
BY Quarter"
K. creek
14 10 9 15'-&lt;8

:in Big·Blacks loss
PARKERSBURG - The
Point Pleasant Big Blacks,
'~playing without star Senior
•Jim Tatterson after the
; opening minutes and missing
on an unbelievable number of
' foul shots, suffered a
disheartening 73-55 loss to
ohost P.arkersburg So~th, .
··Friday night.
" Tatlerson; a 6-3 senior who
was high scorer lor the Blg
Blacks in the 64-58 win 'over
the Patriots on Jan. 2, was
·forced to leave the game
after suffering a painfully
, sprained ankle, with less than
·'a minute gone in the first
.. Qu31:ter.
Coach Lennie Barnette's
cage team, which opened the
..game with a juggled lineup

Kyger Creek 43.

\

,,
"
'

',- ..

SOUTHERN'S Joe Brown (24) eludes Kyger Creek's
Jim Armbruster (15) for a layup during Friday 's SVAC
contest won by the Tornados on the Racine planks.

Meigs wrestlers
SHOT BLOCKED - Southern's Chip Brauer (44 ) blocks attempted layup by Kyger
Creek's Ralph Baylor during Friday's SVAC contest al Racine. On right is Southern's Rick
Findly 122). - Jim ·Hamm photos.

defeat Wahama
MASON - Meigs wrestlers
turned back host Wahama 56·
17 In a match here Friday
a!ternoon.

six .

By GORDON ,SAKAMOTO
SAN FRANCISCO I UP! ) Until the National League
knows whe ther the Giants
•
period .
will be laying in San Fran112-pound class - Neither
cisco or Toronto it will not
team had en try .
release the 1976 schedule.
119-poUnd class Kev ·
A leag ue spokesma n
Mclaughlin. decisioned Vince
Friday sai d two sets of
Roush, 18· 1.
126-pound class Greg
schedules have been worked
Fi e ld s de cls ioned · Ga r y
out, but until a court · rules
••
Priddy, 18·6. •
•
132-pound class - Mike Feb. 2 on an injunction issued
In the dty . of San Francisco
Harrison pinhed Rick Stafford with 1:05 left in second
forbidding th e sale of the
period.
Giants to Toronto interests,
138-pound class Butch
RIO GRANUE - 'file Rio
where they will play remains
Rou
sh
decisioned
Joe
Par
Grande
Redwomen sons, 12-7.
a mystery.
basketball team has suffered
145-pound class - Duane
The Giants were so ld 1.0
lOsses In its first two en- Mclaughlin pinned Da n Canadian interests last week
counters of the season Stodola with 1: 43 lef t in th ird for $13.25 million , prompting
against Glenville State and · period.
167-pound class .Tom
Mayor George Moscone of
Wright State last week.
Foreman pinned Dan Buf Sa n Francisco to seek co urt
On Tuesday, Rio lost to fington with 1; 49 lett in first action.
Glenville 67-M. Four Red- period .
The league had the
185-PQund class ~ Dan
women starters fouled out of Starcher
pinned Dave Rqush
tills game which saw the lead with 20 seconds
l ef t i n f irs t
change hands several times. period.
·
GAINS FINAUi
Heavyweight class - Ray
Pam Eshenaur led Rio in
BALTIMORE
&lt;UP!)
Wilford pinned Dw ayne
" scoring with 16 points while · While wit/1 1:00 left in first Tom Gorman of Seattle easily
•• Clare Flelcher added 13 and per i&lt;&gt;&lt;!.
breezed past Miami 's Eddie
•., Deb Seay 12 .
Monday . Meigs will host Pt. Dibbs, 6-4, fi.. l, Saturday to
•
Last Saturday, the Red- Plea sa nt in a 2 p .m . match. advance to Sunday's final
• women
lost 85-42 to Wright
championsh ips .
• State. Rio's 42 points was the
"
: . lowest offensive showing In
•
• almost two seasons. Deb Seay
•• grabbed 16 rebounds and
scored 23 points for the
•• lledwomen .
Rio has three players
••
averaging
double figures this
.
•
: year : Deb Seay ( 14.8) Terri
• Koster ( 11.8) and Clare
" F1etcher ( 10.8) . Deb Seay
'•• needs only 13 rebounds to
• break the all-time career
•'• rebounding record ol185 held
• by Sharon Vannoy . Seay is
•• just ll sophomore .
Rio Grande played Urbana
••
':"' CoUelje Saturday afternoon
: at Lyne Center.
90 pound class J o~n
Eblin won by for:fe it.
lOS-pound c lass - Mickey
Lyons pinned Gre9 Stodola
wtth 1: 03 left i n secon d

: drop first
:.. two games

.

!'

':
'I

'

I '

I

65x14
_.

schedule
completed- with
the Giants In San Franciscoand ready for a nnouncement
on the usual release date of
Feb. 1, but the conditional
sale of th e team forced
schedule-maker Fred Fleig to
work up a new one.
"If the Giants stay in Sa n
Francisco, there is no prob. lem, " the spokesman said.
"But if Tordnto, or somebody
else who doesn't keep the
them here , gets the Giants,
there are problems."
Because of travel problems
and local commitments,
• schedules for the Giants as
well as three or four other
teams- the most notable

Ja~ .

27- 7-8: JO p.m. College Rec.

Jan . 28- 7 p .m . Redwomen vs . Marietta

Jan . 29- 7-8:30 pl.m. Coli . Rec.
Jan . 3&lt;f-1-8: 30 p.m . Open Rec .
Jan . 31 ~2 - 4 p .m . Open Rec .

.

6 p .m .

JV ~ s

•

~

•••
••
••
••

:

United-Press lriternational

• · DePaul 102 St. Xavier 70
:
ll!dlana 85 Minnesota 76
• Rhode Is. 63 Connecticut 60
:
Texas Tech n SMU 69
• Milone 69 Ohio Dominican 62

:• .~~=~oo;':
~~n:leK~~~C:, ~
Uteh 76 Brigham Young
74

:
•
:
•
-

Princeton 58 St. John's SS (ot)
South Carolina 84 Davidson 70
No. Car. St. 106 Duke 101
Xavier (Ohio) 67 Navy 64
Michigan Tech 90 St. Cloud172
., Carnell (Iowa) 82 Carleton 64
• . Welt VIrginia 69 Penn St. 64
:
Rutaers 113 Lafayette 79
~ Atbrll'l 71 Adrian 69
:
Miami IOhlol 86 0111o U. 63
Kent St. 68 Cent. Michigan 62
W. Michigan 62 Ball Sf. 57
- Defiance ·87 Taylqr 83
: Hlnover 13 Mancheslet- 76
: .t-Y.Bible 97 Grand Rapids

'·

FREE
LOOK WHAT YOU

CAN GET. • •

.•••
...•••

An

MESSAGE
from
Emerson E. Evans
President

Closed

Closed
7-8: 30 p.m. Open Swim
2-4 p .m . Open Swim

OhioValley

2-4 p .m . Open Swim

7-8:30p.m. Coli. Swim

Bank

I

-

L- Pet.

GB

30 13 .698
27 16 .628

3

31 .,

Buffalo
28 18 .609
New York
23 23 .SOO
Central Divisi on

W. L.

a u2

Pet. GB

Washing ton

25 19 .568

Cteyeland

24 20

. 5~5

1

All&amp;nfll

21

.SOO

3

21

New Or le•ns 19 22 .463 41h
Houston
19 22 ,463 4'h
western Conference
Midwest D ivision
W- L . Pet. GB
Milwaukee
19 24 .442
Detroit
17 u .415 1
Kansas Cltv
l4 30 .318 5'1:1
Chicago
12 JO .286 6Vz
Pac ific Div ision
W- L . Pet. GB
Golden Sto!lte
32 10 .762
Los Angeles
23 23 .500 11
Seattle
:22 :24 .478 12
Phoenix
18 24 . 429 14
Portland
l7 27 .386 16
Friday's Results
Bosto{'l 108 Detroit 91
Buffalo 119 Atlanta 104
New York 104 Philadelph ia 92
M ilwaukee 113 Kansas C ii V 97
Phoenix 124 Houston 11 5
Portland 119 Los Angeles 96

"REMODEL" ..... NOW!
(Prices Effective To Jan. 31st)

Sundav•s Ga,es
Buffalo at Boston , a ft .
Chicago at Kansas City , af t.
PhiladelPhia 'a t Atlan ta
Washington at Los Ange les
Am eriu n Ba sketb all

Association Standings
&amp;v United Pres s International
W L Pet. GB
Denver
32 11 .744
New York
28 13 .683 3
San Antonio
23 18 .561 8
24 20 .545 8 11~
Ken t ucky
Ind iana
24 20 .545 8'11
St . LOUiS
19 26 .422 · 14
Virgin ia
6 35 .146 25

S

2 99 per sheet
''LUAN''

F_riday ' s Res ult s

New York 115 Kentucky 111
Ind iana 132 St. Louis 128 (ot)
Denver 131 San An tonio 123
s·undav's Game s
San Anton io at New York , aft .
V irginia at St. Louis
.
Ind iana at Kent~cky

1ST
QUALITY

lnternati'onal Hockey
League Standings
United Press International

PANELING

1ST QUALITY

North

w I f pts . gf
Sag ina w 24 16 6 54 189
Pt . Huron 23 \6 $ .$] 171
Muskegon21 l7 7 49 140
Flin t
18 17 10 46 159
Kalama
13 24 7 33 142
South
w I t pts. gf
Day t on
26 16 4 56 17&lt;1
Ft. Way n e l8 20 9 45 17 2
Tol edo
15 2~ · 9 39 .154
Co l um.
16 26 S 37 139
Fridav's Results
F l int 6 Columbus 6
Fort Wavne

s Muskegon

Ka lama zoo 5 Tol edo 2
Port H uron 4 Sag inaw 3
Sunday's Gam es
Cayton at Fort W a ',lne
Toledo at Port Huron
Sag inaw at Flint
M uskegon at Kalamazoo

ga
164

148
132
145
198
ga
137
1 6~

156
194

4x8 Sheets

J

CARPET

Cr islip , 6-2-14 ; Daugherty , \ .
0-2 ; Burge , 7-3-17 ; Shep pard ,
0 -0 -0 ; Moore , 1 -0 -2 : C a r .
penter. 1-J -5 ; Mundy ,· 2-0-4;
Shanibl in . 1- 1-3; TOTALS 31 ·

22· 11 · 55.

11 · 73 .
BV QUarters :

PARKERSBURG SOUTH
(73) · M c:C iead . 12-2·26 ;

Sou lh

~ig

Blacks

'

6 17 11 21 ----. 55

15. 23 13 22- 73

,.

••
~

• RUBBER BACKING INCLUDED
• RUBBER BACKING INCLUDED
• MANY COLORS TO OIOOSE FROM
PERFECT FOR KITCHENS, BATHS, OR FAMILY ROOMS

••

"·'
·'
.,•••

Super Shef ,"Golden Brown Fries
and regular..:size soft drink
!

••
••
••
••
••
••
••
·'

KITCHEN

PWA I 241NCH

-VANITIESWITH CULTURED MARBLE TOPS

KOMPACT
CABINETS

40%

••
••
••
•'
••

::
•:..

JANUARY 26 ·- 30
10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.

1 would like to take this opportunity to Inform you of a recent
action of our Board of Directors. We are now able to offer to our
Individual Retirement Account Customers a new Investment vehicle
with in your Ohio Valley Bank retirement account . Deposits of
$1.000.00 or more may now be transferred from your I;R.A •
·· Passbook to a Special I.R.A. Certificate of Deposit which can earn
up to 7'12 per cent If Invested lor slx years. Certificates of Depj)slt of
shorter maturity are also available. When these certificates mature,
they can be reinvested at the prevalllng rate at that time. Interest
from the 1. R. A. Certificates of Deposit wlll be credited to your 1. R.A.
Passbook . .
We at Ohio Valley Bank hope that you will be as excited about
the new development as we are. Your retirement dollars can now
earn the highest Interest that we are allowed to pay, and earn II taxfree .
·
.

•Dishes •Pots and Pans .can Opener
THE OHIO VALLEY BANK CO.

Emerson E. Evans
President .

LESS FIXTURES

2x4 STUDS--89~

••
••
••
••
••
••
•·~
••

EA.

INSULATION
-UNFACED

EA .

t=
~:
I·
••
••

..

8 Y2

5/8x4x8 PARTICLE

••
••

,.·',.••

,,..

BOARD-$379

"r:

.OFF

• GLENNWOOD

Offer good Monday - Friday

,.••
••
~~

31h~23

EA.

SQ.FT.

BAITS-184 Sq. Fl

3"1zxl5 BATTS-120 Sq. Ft.

••
••
••
••

••
••
••
••
,.••

:_ ,' l'.tt.l
11 Yankton 60
Millon 94 N'wstrn (Wis.) S8

lot)
Tennessee S6 Mississippi 53

Boston
Phil adelph ia

l ..
,,••

:I

llenfley 66 St. Michael 's 59

Division

w.

•

=
•
:

Atlt~nt i c

..
••

Slnc!lrel y ,

elron •Cannister Set and More

PT . PLEASANT ( S.S) Hess , 13·3&lt;29 ; Tatterson . 0-2
2 ; McDerm i tt , 2-0 -.d ; Wi lson ,
0-2-2 ; Vaug ha n , 1-0 -2 ; Fri ar .
0-Q.Q;
Browning ,
0-0 -0 ;
Holl"&amp; fld , 0·0-0 ; M c·carm ic k , 04-4 , N iber1, 6-0-12 ; TOTALS

Eastern Conference

'

.

•Coffee Pot •Silverware Set •Mixer

was Sophomore Ed Nibert
who scored 12 points, on si•
fi eld goals in a substitute
role. Junior Steve McDermitt
started in place of Nibert
because of a neck injury
suffered by the standout
sophomore, earlier in the
week in the loss against
Nitro.
South, meanwhile, had
three players connecUng for
double figures .
The Patriots were led by 6-3
Senior Randy McClead who
went lor 26 points on 12 of 19
field goal tries and two of two
charity losses.
Bob Burge, fi..2 Senior, and
Joe Crislip, tH Senior, scored
17 and 14 respectively, for the
most.
Overall , the Palriots hit on
31 of 62 shots for an impossible SO per cent average
while governing their eighth
victory of the year against
three setbacks .
Faltering Point Pleasant,
while going over to their
fourth loss in 11 regular
season games, hit on a
respectable 44 percent of 50
shots from the field but
managed to sink only 25 at the
charity stripe .
Point Pleasant rebounding
was led by Hess wi th 16 while
Nibert pulled down 10 of the
· Big Blacks cantos.
Big Blacks Captain, Andy
Wilson, left the game with
five fouls early in the fourth
quarter.
Point committed 16 turnovers compared to 22 by
South.
The Big Blacks will host
Parkersburg Big Reds
Tuesday night.
The Little Blacks won the
preliminary contest 57-55 in
the close fought contest. The
Little Blacks were led by
Paul Crump with 16 on· eight
field goals. Also hitting in
aouble figures were Dan
Porter and Jeff Holland, each
with 10.
The Mini-Pats. were led by
Crook with 14 while Wilson
netted 10.

••
••
••
••
••
••
•
'
•••

•'j;

:

INJURED ON ATTEMPT - Point ' Pleasant's star
forward Jim Tatterson (45 ) suffered a sprained ankle as
he took this shot early in the game Friday night against
host Parkersburg South and the injury -!so· dea lt a
crippling blow to the Big Blacks as they wentdown to their
fourth defea t of the season.
. /
.

"
••
••
••••
••

•AM-FM 8-Trac:k Stereo System with Turntable

St~ndlngs

.,

MOBILE HOME

Te~n

Nat ional Basketball Association

::,...

Honeymoon Special!

el9" Color

I

·l.,

IMPORTANT

7-8: JO p.m. Open Swim

'949

I

•

POOL

TOTAL ELECTRIC-:- TWO OR THREE BEDROOMS
With The Purchase of This
Home You Will Receive

·'·'
•
·'·'
•
'
'

••:'

Closed

Saturday's
cage scores

•

,.

.

nashua.

..

•'

vs . Ky . Chri st ian

Feb. 1- 2.·4 p.m. Open Rec .
7-8.30 p.m. Coli. Rec.

0.
M

~

·::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::~:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-J.::::::::::;::~:::S*::::&amp;:~::::"(SiWm

Ja n . /. 6- 7 p .m . J V ' s vs . M a ri ett_a JV's

·,

Fitzpatrick and Ed Howard .
Ray Barnett led Wellston's
attack with 16. Ed Howard
led Ironton with 14.
Irontoo will host Waverly ''
Newhart winner Tuesday . Wellston .is at
NORTHFiE CD,
Ohio - McigL
•
( UP!) Baron Newhart
Box score :
stepped the mile In 2:09.4
WELLSTON 1461 - Gill , 4
Barne tt.
6 -4- 16 ;
Friday night to score an easy 0 -8 ;
, 1-1-3; Peoples , J .
three-length triumph over McKinnln
0-6 ; Ar nold , 2-7-ll ; Brooks , 01-1; Derrow , 0-1-1. TOTALS
Hello Meadow In the featured
14-46 .
ninth race at Norlhlield Park. 16 ·IRONTON
t711
E.
The winner, driven to his Howard , 5-A-U ; crockret , 1-1·
first victory of the year by 3; Ro yal , 5-0-10 ; Flt:z pa t rick ,
S-2-12 ; C. Bra wn , 5-0-10 ; R .
Dale Ross, paid "'.80, $5.20 Howard , 6-P· 12; M . Brown ; '2 and $3.80. Francis Time was 0-4; Fa i rchild , 0-2-2; Houston .
0-2-2. TOTALS 29-U -71.
third.
Score by quarters :
The 1-3-2 tenth race Big Wellston
6 - 19 9 12- 46
1.4 19 17 2 1- 71
Triple combination paid Ironton
Reser v e\ Ir on t on . 69
$600.
Wellston 32 .

being Houston and Atlantawill be drastically altered.
"The schedules are worked
out on the basis of travel
expense, travel mileage and
various dales that have to be
hon ored ," t he spbkesman
said.
"There are certain dates
that Houston cannot use the
Astrodome and Atlanta has
certain dates that it has to he
out of.town or in town. Other
clubs have simill!r dates .
" II Toronto were located
where Vancouver is, it
wouldn 't be that much of a
problem. But Toronto is in lhe
east and it creates quite a lew
problems."

LYNECENTERSCHEDULE
Week of Jan. ~6 , 1976
DATE- GYMNASIUM

,...
..

Ironton hil29 of 52 field goal
attempts and was 13 of 23 at
the foul line. IHS picked off 41
rebounds, 12 each by Dean

'76 NL .schedule delayed

Here are the resul Is:

Redwomen

i

IRONTON - Coach Buddy
Bell's Iron ton Tigers fell
behind !HI during the first two
minutes of play, then ripped
off 20 straight points enroute
to a 71 -46 victory over visiting
Wellston Friday night.
The SEOAL leaders, now
12-0on the year, led 14-6,33-25
and 50-34 a t the quartermarks. Ironton is 9-0 in
conference play.
Wellston • dropped to 3-8
overall, and 2-7 inside the
league.
Wellston hit 16 of 58 field
goal attempts and 14' of 21
free throws. WHS· had 23
rebounds. Terry McKinniss
and Steve Arnold each had

that
. left usual starters ' Ed
Nibert and Bret McCormick
on the bench, was literally
never in the game.
In fact, the Big Blacks were
never ahead.
The only time PPHS was
tied with the Wood Countians
was alter Senior Larry Hess,
6-6, who turned in an outstanding
performance
despite the losing cause, hit
on nn outside shot at 6:05 in
the first period to make the
score 2-2.
Hess, hitting on 13 of 19
•!tempts· from the field. and
lllree of nine from the foul
line, finished up with a gamehigh 29 poin"ts.
The only other Big Black
eager to hit in double figures

,,...

~ I

' . Pro 'I
IStandin~s !
I

By United Press lnternat'ional

•

so~•:,•;:',. ;, 1 ; 0'~~~:r~-;~

r------------,

.••
••
."

1503 Eastern Ave.,
Gallipolis

.'

Hardlhans
Home
Center
THAN A LUMBER

...,_....;¥: ~;......__,"MORE
Store Hour s
Min., Tuts .. Wed. 9 to 6

.m. Thurs .• Fri ., Sat. 9 to
p.m. Sunday 1 to 1 p.m.

!I

Y.n..~.~....,

"LOTS MORE"

RT. 2 BYPASS, POIN'f

I,

~-

)

�21.- The SW'Iday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976

WILLOW WOOD - North league-leading Pirates
Ga!Ua 's 6-4 senior guard Greg returned home last night
James,
continued
to after four straight road
terrorize the opposition here games .
North Gallia will have its
Friday night collecting a
-son high 32 points, a work cut out this week. The
IIChool record of 36 rebounds Pirates entertain Eastern of
. while blocking four shots and Pike County Tuesday night
s~aling the ball five times . and Southern Friday .
Eastern of Pike inflicted
James' effort led the
Pirates to a lopsided 83-511 the Pirates' only loss. a 75-70
SVAC win over the hast · defeat at Beaver. Friday's
game should be a hard-fought
Symmes Valley Vikings.
James, an Ali-SVAC player battle too since the Tornados
the last two years, left the have been playing aggressive
game with 3:20 to play in the ball with great teamwork
final quarter .. He broke a lately.
Friday night, Coach Jim
school record of 29 rebounds
set in November 1971 by the Foster 's 11th ranked Pirates,
Conner Pirate great Arthur jumped into a fast-breaking
Clark: Clark Is now grabbing tB-,11 lead and were never
rebounds for the Marietta headed . North Gallia put 22
points on the board in the
Pioneers.
. James now has 994 points in second period, 22 in the third
his high school career and and finished strong with 21
was expected to break the points.
Besides James' great Of1,000 point barrier Saturday
night against Eastern. The fensive effor t which included

13 offensive rebounds and 23
defensive rebo unds ,' North
Gallia 's other scoring threat,
junior forward Fred Logan
had another good performance.
Logan ripped the nets for 24

points to keep his sea son
average intact. Rayfo rd
(Spoon) Minnis was the other
Pirate in double fi gures with
10 points.
Coach
Gary Salyers'
Vikings saw their two game

s trectk come to an
e nd . Symmes Valley was led
offensively by Frank Cain's
19 points . Justin Miller, 5-10
junior , had 10 poin ts.
North Galiia connected on
39 of 99 floor attempts for :19
winn i ng

Ohio High School

United Press International
Akron Buchtel
North 51 (4 ot&gt;

59

Akron

Akron Central Hower
Akron s 52
Alliance 55 Niles 32
Amherst 84 Clearview 66

58

Ashland 6J Wooster 50
Barberton
96
Warren
Reserve 58
·
~enevue 62 Upper Sandusky

3
iBexley
erne Union~ 6B. Millersport 53
B7 Miami Tra ce 78

Bowling · Green 84 Port
Clinton 72
Buckeye Valley 53 Car .
dington .44
Caldwell 77 Wa ter ford 63
Canal Winchester 64 Lan .
caster Fisher 54
canton c c 87 Akron St.
Vincent 85
Canton McKinley 8 t Canton
Lincoln 60
Canton South 55 N . Canton
Hoover 44
Canton Timken · 61 Canton
Lehman 48
Celina 62 Van Wert 55
Cin LaSalle 49 Cin St. Xavier

48

Cin

Moeller 69 Cin Roge r
63
Cln Purcell 72 Cin Elder 70
Cln Wlth_row 52 Cin Hughes 44
Cln Woodward 57 Cin Aiken 52
Cle, Benedictine 80 Unlveq ity
School 57
Cle CoiUnwood 70 Cle Jo hn
Hay 57
Ba~on

Hannan
toppled

9lto 38
'

FRAZIER'S BOTTOM Nine Wildcats pounced on
Buffalo of Putnam County
Friday around 8 p.m . but
moments later the. growling
cats were turned in to purring
kittens as their opponents
opened up a quick 20 point
lead and continued to hammer away as Buffalo went on
to win by an overwhelming
91-38 score.
·
Head
coach
Bogart
Napora's Hannan team lost
their fifth game in a row or
their eighth oui of nine games
this ~ason.
Apparently
both
the
Wildcat offense and defense
feU apart as high scoring
guards Wayne Richardson
and Mark Villars were each
beld to .g and 8 points
respectively. The Wildcats
were led by Greg Hill's 12
points.
While Hannan found it hard
to find the hoop Buffalo could
not miss as everyone of their
players scored including five
In double figures.
The Buffalo team was led
by Chuck Noffsinger's 24
points with Mike Bowles and
Doug Greenlaw each adding
14.
Buffalo was able to jump
off to a monstrous 27-7 first
quarter insurmountable lead
by the ha!Rime the lead was
larger at 49-16.
All the starters for Buffalo
· were brought out of the game
for the second half but the
first half tempo continued
into the second half although
Hannan was able to shoot a
little better and hold Buffalo's scoring pace down by a
few points.
While Hannan found the
boards hard to detect from
the field it was almost as bad
from the charity line as they
shot a lowly 6 for 14 or 42
percent. In this category
Buffalo was worse as it shot 5
for 17 or 20.9 per cent.
HANNAN
1381
Rlchirdson, 3-3 ·9; M . Villars,
•:orl: Hill, 6· 0-12; St~vens, Q.
0 -0 ; Edmonds, 0-0-0 ; A .
Chapman, 1-1-3; Blake . 1·2·4;
VIllars, Q.Q.Q; M . Chapman, 1
0-1: Tololo 16-6-ll.
BUFFALO (911 - Boles , 7·
o.u; B . Whittjngton , 5-2-12 ;
C. NOffsinger, 10-4-24; Stone ,
2 · 1-5.: Greenlaw, . 1·0 · 14 :
Burch, 1-0·2; A . Noffsinger , 1.
0·2 ; Martin, 1·0· 2; Mays, 2·0·

4; Little, 4·0·8; R•vburn. 0·2·

J . Whittington, 1·0 · 2;
Tetals, CI·S·t1 .
Score lty Quarters:
Hannan
7 9 13 9- 38
2:

Bufl•lo

27 22 22 20- 91

.,

78

.

Lancas1er 73 Newark 66 ·
Landm ark Christian 100 Ohio
Deaf 78
Logan Elm 59 L i berty Union

5'

Loveland 81 Mariemont 59
Mad ison Plains 67 South .
eastern 57
•
Mansfield Madison 60 Dover
47
Man sf ield 72 L orai n Admiral
King 71
Massil lon 78 East L ive rpool
75 (otJ
·
Maumee 58 Anthony Wayne

49

Medina 59 NOrth Olmsted 57
·Morgan 66 Crooksville 56
Napoleon 73 Bryan 55
Nelsonville York 52 Warren
Local 38
New London 62 Sout h Cent ral
60
Newark Cath 94 Licki ng Hts .
6'
Normandy 49 Berea 39
Ontario 62 Loudonv i lle 61
Picker ingt on 86 Amanda
Clearcreek BO
~ iverv i~w 56 Sheridan 54
Rocky R i ver 85 Fairv iew 57
Rossford 91 Springf ield ~2
Sandusky 59 Lor ain Sen ior 57
Shelby 98 Bucyrus 41
Sidney Lehman 55 Graham 48
51. Clairsville 82 .B&amp;rnesville'

70

Tiff in 65 Norwalk 60 .
Tri Valley 56 Philo 46
Upper
Arlington
41
Chillicoth~ 39
.
. UrJ;lana 79 Northeastern 53
West Musklngum 77 New
, Lexington 69
Washington C. H . 111 Un io to

45

Waynesville
62
Clinton
Massie 58
west Jefferson 88 Olentangy

reserve game, 64-26. Doug
Sisson had 12 points, Mark
Wheeler. 11 Rn n Dl .-, nfo ~nri
Rex Justice, nine each for the
LitUe Bucs.
Symmes
Valley
2-10
overall, 2-5 in the SVAC
visited
Hannan
Trace
Saturday night. North Gallia
· is 9-1 overall and 8-{1 in the
SVAC.
Box score :

North
GAIIII
(13)
Runyon , 3·1-7; C. Minnis, :z.o.
4 ; Logan , 11 -2-24; Tackett, Q.
o.o; James , 15-2·32 ; Nul, 2·0·
-4; S. Minnis. 5·0-10; Theiss, 1·
0-2. Totals 39-S-tl.
Symmes valley (51) Estep , 2-0·•• Ingles , 3·3-9 ;
Wilson , 3·2·8; Miller. -4 -2·10 ;
Cain , 9-1. 19! Schaefer, 1·0·2 ;
Nance , 0-1·1 and Clary , 2·1-5.
Totals 24-10-SI .

By

Qu~rters:

18 22 22 21-83
a 11 11 12- sa

N. Gall la

s. vattey

Reserves : North Galllll 64
Symmes Valley 26 .

h. Y TD

ere JFK 68 Cte Glenv i lle. 57
Cle St . Ignatius 68 Cle Johh
Marshall 48
Cot Hartley 68 Co l Ready 55
Col .Brookhaven 75 Col
Whetstone 63
Col Central 80 Col Mohawk 58
Col East 84 Co l West 67
Co l Eastmoar 67 Mifflin 57
Col Linden 59 Col South 52
Col Marion -Franklin 74 Col
Walnut Ridge 67
Col Northland 73 Col Nor th 53
Col St. Char l es 73 Col WiJL
terson 42
Col Wehrle 11 Col DeSa les 52
Colerain 75 NorwOod 65 Col)
Columbia 78 SOI,J ih Amherst

Coshocton
53
Mansfield
Malabar 52
Crestline 58 Fredericktown 57
Cuyahoga
He ights
55
Stron gsville 50
Danville 58 Centerburg 55
Dayton Aller 83. Lima C C 60
D"y ton Co l White 76 Dayton
Kiser 68
Defiance 75 St. Marys 60
Delaware 64 We511and 56
Delphos Sl. Johns 91 Lima
Bath 52
East Cle . Shaw 69 Garfiele1
Heights 59
Ea·stlake North 61 Eu(:lid 60
Edon 75 North Central 62
Elyria 75 Filld lay 58
Fairless 56 Marlington 48
Fairview 71 Day to n Wrigt:lt 55
Firetands 75 Keystone 57
Forest Park 57 Oak Hill s 56
Franklin He ig hts 63 Dubl in JJ
Fremont 51 Marion 40
Geneva 60 Conneaut 48
Genoa 66 woodmore 57
GranQview 14 Marysville 66
Granville
82
Watkins
Memorial 50
Greenh i lls 79 Taylor so •
Groveport 70 Whitehall 58
Ham i l ton Twp . 72 Teays
. Valley 64
Hilltop 63 Edgerton 61
Ind ian Valley
Sout h
5'4
Strausburg 32
Indian Valley North 48 Tusky
Valley 47
New Concord Glenn 52 Mays
ville 46
Johnstown 65 Utica 58
Lakewood 61 .L ic king Valley
55 "•
LakeWood 81 Shaker Heigh t s

Symmes Valley sank 24 of
67 attempts for 35 pet . and 10
of 21 free throws . The Pirates
had 67 learn rebounds, 36 on
the offensive boards . NG
committed just I~ turnovers
while SV had 17.
North Gallia took the

35 honored

Basketball Results
Basketball Scores

pc t. and five of 10 free throws .

Tim

SAYRE GETS A WORKOVER Sayre ( 20) of the white. Falcons popped this one
up from outside whic~ was good but received a somewhat modified karate chop from 45,
Gary McClanahan and a punch from 21, Mark Willard.

Poca hands ·Wahama
87-51 cq,ge defeat
By GARY CLARK
White Faicons especially on
MASON - As if Tuesday the offensive boards.
Po c a
com p I e t e I y
night's clash with the secondranked team in Class "AA" dominated the shooting
wasn ' t enough, Coach Jim percentages by hitting for a
Scherr and his Wahama blazing 65 percen t on an in·
White Falcon cage team had credible 39 of 60 attempts
to face Jim Dagostine and his fr om the field . Wahama
third-ranked Poca Dots meanwhile hi t on 25 of 76
Friday night on the locals' attempts from the floor for a
home court.
respectable 33 percent.
Against r[losl learns a
Even though the end result
was evident the local red and shooting percentage such as ·
white made a gallant effort the . Whit e Falcons had
befrire going down to defeat Tuesday evening wquld be
by an 87-51 margin .
. .considered poor but when you
The loss was the fourth in a give away as much height,

roW for the star-cross€d and have to shoot over such a
White Falcons and their tenacious zone defense , as
eighth of the year against two was the case aga inst Poca, no
victories.
one could fault the Wahama
Wahama goes to the hard- team.
The Dots also held the edge
court three times this w.eek
with a journey to Buffalo at the charity stripe by
Putnam first on the agenda converting 9 of 15 for 60
slated for Tuesday night. percent. Wahama went to the
Then the bend area team free throw line only four
returns home to take on times hitting on one of those
·
Southwestern and Meigs on for a flimsy 25 percent.
Friday and Saturday nights
For Wahama individual .
respectively .
scoring honors went to 5-10
The final statistics in the junior Tim Sayre who conencounter with Poca ·sums verted 8 of 15 field goal at- ~
the whole s tory up in a nut- tempts and one of two free
shell. To begin with the throws for 17 points in his best
tall'er Dots held a 43-28 outing of the season. He was
rebounding edge which took followed by Terry Tucker and
its toll on the undersized Tim Davis with 10 and eight

pomts respectively.· Marty
Holbrook was the lead in g
Falcon rcl)otmder with six to ·
his credit .
WAHAMA (51) - Sa yre , 8l 17 ; T . Tucker , 50 10 ; Dav is,
• &lt;~ 0 ·8 ; Holbrook , 7 0 4 : Sm i th ,
20-4 ; J . Tucker . 204 ; R.
Tucker , 1 0 -2 : La m b ert , 1 0 2;
Riggs , 0 0 0 ; Nic ewand er , 0 0
0 ; Totals 25· 1· 51.
PO Ch (87)
Wil lard , 12 I
25 ; Atkin son , 9 .s 22 : B
McClan ahan ,
7 0 14 ;
G
Mc.Cianahan . 52 12; Lloyd , 3
0 6;
Baile ~.
• 2 0 4,
Facemey er , 1 2 4; Chaney , 0
0 -0;· Lanham i 0 0 0 ; To1a! s 36·
9-87 .
Store b y Quarters :
Wahama
6 20 6 19 - ,Sl
Poca
24 16 20 .27 87
R e!!erve Score ; Wahama 55
Poca 50 .

COLUMBUS,Ohio(UPl)The Columbus Touchdown
Club honored 35 outstanding
athletes from across the
country at its 21st annual
awards banquet Friday
night.
Football dominated the
show with major awards
going to O.J . Simpson,
honored as the outstanding
player in the National
Football League; Oklahoma,
awarded the Robert Zuppke
trophy as the best college
team playing the most
demanding sched ule; and
Oh io. State coach Woody
Hayes; collegiate coach of tbe
year.
Other major awards went
to two-time Heisman Trophy
winner Archie Griffin of Ohio
Slate, who accepted his
second Chic Harley trophy as
th e outstanding college
football player; Toledo's
Gene Swick, the Sammy
Baugh trophy winner as the
best college passer; Pete
Rose of the Cincinnati Rerl• ,
winner of ihe John W.
Galbreat11 trophy as baseball
player of the year; Leroy
Selman
of
Oklahoma,
honored as the best college
defensive lineman and given
the Otto Graham trophy.
Other grid winners were
Ernie Holmes of the PiUsburgh Stelers, .J im Otis, St .
Louis Card inals; Golden
Ric hards , Dallas , Otis
Sistrunk, Oakland a nd four
greats from the past - 1936
Heisman · Award winner
Larry Kelley of Yale, Paul
Giel, Dante Lavelli and

SAVE .32%
Radial36
Tires

GAWPOLIS - Coach Jim
Osborne's Gallipolis Blue
Devils defeated Coach Ron
Logan's Meigs Marauders 6760 In a Southeastern Ohio
Lea1ue basketball thriller
here Friday night.
Both teams shot wen from
the field. GAHS hit 25 of 44
field goal attempts for 56.8
percent. Meigs connected on
24 of 55 attempts for 43.6
percent.
I~
I be · first half,
GaUlpoUa shot a aizzUng 66
percea&amp; (It of 21) while
Meigs coaaected on 13 of 28
field 1oa1 attempts for an
• eiceDenl SO pe...,ent.
At the charity line,
Gallipolis connected on 17 of
, 23 free throw attempts for
. 73.9 percent. The IAganmen
• canned 12 of 17 attempts for
; 70.5 percent. GAHS com; milled 18 personal fouls,
' losing Gary Snowden in the
: final period . Meigs com: milled 19 personals, losing
i Terry Qualls and Steve
• Randolph in the final stanza.
: Each team had three !Jlen
• in double figures in scoring.
~ For the winners , Gary

:

;Blue Imps

4 rayon
t:o\d belts a nd ~
polyest e r radial

ct

l

plief-1. In sizes to fit.

jedge Meigs

most cnrs.

~

~ GALLIPOLIS -

Coach
:Buddy Moore's Gallipolis
111ue Imps rallied from a one
point halftime deficit to
'defeat Coach Bob Oliver's
: visiting Meigs reserves 39-30

SAVE 5400

~in

Sears 42
Battery
Was SJJ.45
trade-in

With

Was $1.49

Credit Plnn to Sui t Moat Every Need

11.

• Shop by Phone, Just Call446·2770
• Now on Sale • l,riccs aro Cal.alotF PricuiJ
• Shipping , ln !lt.A IIat~6n Extra

floor conference room of

Sal is/action Guu.ranteed or Your M oney Back

·

sHoP AT sEAHs
•ND SAVE ·

,.,

~

Sears

Silver Bridge

Plaza
Ph. 446-2770

• • • • • • • st;AHS , Hot:tltlt:K A Nil (.:0,

••
•

County Audit~r b~ ·mulliplying the ou•uoble wolue .of the hOuse trailer by the-"tall' rc:~le of
COMPUTED the ta:o:irog di1trid in wh"h the h o ule trailtr ha l ill 1itu1. The minimum leur ;, $36 00 per
AND
y1 a1 HoweYflr , if tlu mi'"limum tax of th ir l y •tiM dollar"t is oppliulbl~ Ia a hau te h ailer not
ASSESSED
localed
in thi1 Uate on !ht fir" da y of January , the to" it determinfld by mullipiY1119 three
BY doH&lt;.~n by the ftumbtr of full montlu remo ining to the fo llowi ng thiny-flnt of December
tomme"cing wi1h the dati! of ocqu i1it ion or entrance into th i1 1tate

County Treasurer's Office, Courthouse.
.
.
Please register first at Meigs County Auditor's OffiCe . If tratler ts not the
same as last year, bring title.

PAYABLE
AT-

Westerv i lle South 57 H i lliard

56

When • house tr~il•r hu 11; situ• In this st1te, •n pravid•d in this ••etlan, on the ht
cley of J.nu.,y tho full 1mount of the pr;, r•l• till it due •nd P•y•f?l• on or befor•
TAX DUE . the lht d•r of hnu.,y .
AND
P~ YA BLE - W.heft 1 houso - ~railer .cquit.es a situs in . thi1 stale as provided in this section, after
the flnl day af January and on or ' prior to the 3111 day o~ D•umber,_ the full
emount ·of the pro r~te 11111 it duo and payaltle immediately upon tho up~rltlon of
1 lO ilf•y . ptrlollf commendne whh tht d1to tho tltul It acquired.

Wheelersbur~

36
Reynoldsburg 66 Mt . Vernon

65

GAINS FINALS
B'iRMINGHAM,
Ala.
( UPI) - Roscoe Tanner beat
Poland's Wojtek Fibak, 6-3, 7- .
5, Saturday to advance to
Sunday's final round of the
$50,000 Birmingham In·
ternational Indoor Tennis
Tournament.
Tanner, the No .2 seed who
now plays out of Charleston,
S.C., will meet the winner of
Saturday night's match between top-seeded Jimmy
Connors·of Belleville, Dl., and
Erik Va11 Dillen of Palos
Verdes , Calif.

If 1he payment of the to• is not m.:.~de as .providr:d Gbove a penalty of fi v-e dollars

Mr. Tax is computerized to do your return
accurately and fast. Even with the new exemption changes and low income allowances
and tax credits-one visit is all it takes. And
you take your return with you-short form or
long form-ready to mail.

PENALTY- or ten percent of the taus due, whiehever is greater, shall be impoud and
c:ollected in addition to the taa due and owing .

855 Second Ave.
Galipolis, Ohio
HOURS

ReoOfpoHns

Tra~ler

Sunday

12 Til s P.M.

Mr.11Xaf

Ph. 4~6-7600

The tax service people. lor the people.

ibll't
1

ouse

9 to 6 Daily

Evenings
by
Appointment

Th~ Count.-

Ttenurer . in addition to any other remedy prov ided by Law for
the: colleetion of tue1 .and penalties . sh11i enforct collection of such fnes
.tnd peultin by civil action in thr n.ame of such treasurer .against the owner
for the rcconry of the unpaid hxet. .

, Dellnciuenl
TIXII-

All/)

I IOU.

......... Mllr
7:30 • • 1'1111111

All ewnors ef heuse trail~n hewing 1 situs
the Stalo of Ohio •nd subie(l to tho
tu n pro"lded 11a.o•• MUSt retilllr 1uch trailer with the County Auditor on or
prior to the date , th• tax is du• •nllf payeble.

i';,

y

.

•

.

, Owner-

Ne ,.,.•• whe is Jhe • .,;,ner of 1 houu trail., and who is roqwired to regimr •
he... lfaller shall fall te dlspla~ on the front of such tr~iler the urtiflcafe or "Decal"
1...... lty the County Troa1urer.

OPERATOR
,
OFA
HOUSE
TRAILER
COURT-

for such purpose wtren thcrt it no oper~tor shall keep .a re1it.ter of 111 houu
tr1ilers which m1k1 use of the court, p1rk , or property.

'.

(very opcr1fo; of • house tutilcr ,caurt or p1rk or every owner of property ~o~ud

HOWARD E. FRANK
COUNTY AUDITOR
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

"~:$.\1'"~;;:::-~.,:w-§~
tf:
..::::::~~d?U.::::W.Q//&amp;t,:;:
MEIGS MARAUDERS 1601
FG- A FT-A PF RB TO TP
PLAYER-Pos.
2 14
2
6-11 2·2
l
Terry Qualls, f
1
8
3-9
2·2
1
5
Jerry Cremeans, f
2 19
7-14 5·6
2
8
Mitch Meadows , c
1
11
7
5· 11 1-4
2
Mick Davenport, g
4
1
2
2-7
0-0
l
Steve Randolph. g
2
0
2
0
0-1
2-3
Dale Browning , f
0
0
0
0-0
0-0
0
Allen S1ewar:-t, c
0
2
0
1-2
0-0
0
Alan Dodson, f
0
0
0
0-0
0·0
2
T i m Scl1es, g
60
24 -SS 12-17 19 23
TOTALS
GAHS BLUE DEVILS 1671
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
PLAYER-Pos .
1
3 16
5-10 6-8
4
Tony Folden, f
2
5
2-5
1 ~2
0
8
Brent Saunders, f
2
6
l
2-l
2-4
2
·Keith McGuire, c
A
4
11
4·5
3·4
4
Brent Johnson, g
27
1
l
11 -16 5-5
5
Gary Snowden, g
2
0
0
1-2
0-0
3
Gary Swa ln. f
1
0
0
0~ 1
0-0
0
Terry Wall , g
25-44 17-23 18 23 13 67
TOTALS
.

'

Score by quarters :
Meigs Marauders

GAHS Blue Devils
OFFICIALS -

Friday's
·college results

C ~onko. Jackson, using a runand,gwl offense against the
bigger Athenians, hit 21 of 54
field goal attempts and
canned nine of 19 charily
tosses. The Ironmen had 26
rebounds, six each by Tom
Osborne and Jeff Conroy ,
Osborne paced the Iron men
with 15 points . Conroy added
14andGeorgeSchmid 11. Jim
Heady led Athens' attack
with 14 .
Tuesday, Jackson will host
GAHS. Athens is idle .

Box: score:
ATH .ENS {40) :.,.:_ Faulk n er,
1-0-2 ; Heady . 7 0 14 ; Chonko.
3·0·6 ; Greer , -3 ·0·6; May, 0·2·
2; Meek , 3 0-6 ; Blackford , l Q.
2; Whea lc y , t -0-2. TOTALS
111·2-40 , '
JACKSON (5 1) -· Coop er ,
J.Q. 2 ·
Osborne ,
1· 1· 15 ·
Conroy , 7-0-l&lt;l ; Schmid, 4-3·
11 ; Morrow , 1 3·5; Jones, 0-1
1; Dorsey , 1-1-3. TOTALS 21 9. 5 I .
Score by quarters :
Athens
6 12 6 16- 40
Jackson
12 13 10 16- 51
Reserves ~ Athens 47
Jackson 37 .

WINS POLE POST
SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI)
- James Hunt of Great
Britain won the pole .position
Saturday for the Brazilian
formula one Grand Prix that

East
Connecticu t 63 E. Conn. 47
-Itha ca 90 Clark son 49'
No. Adams 102 Mass. Maritime

70

14 18 • 11 17 19 16 10 22 -

60
67

J . Weber and R. Davis, Ironton Chapter .

Reason 5. If the IRS should call you in
for an audit, H &amp; R Block will go with
you. at no additional cost. Not as a legal
representative ... but we can answer all
questions about how your taxes were
prepared..
·

'H&amp;R BLOCK®
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
27 Sycamore Street
Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph. 446·0303

618 East Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph . 992-3795

.

R .I. Coll . 104 Maine -P.- Gorh;am

68

..

Rochester 82 St. Lawrence 76
(OI)

Stony Brook_62 King's Po int 53
~ridgewater'

86

South
102 Va . Wesleyan

Rose Hulman 86 U of South 84
W. Maryland 91 Johns Hopkin s
79

Midwest
~ethel 69 Si oux Falls 67 (O t )
Buena Visla 59 Wartburg 52
Central 100 Upper' Iowa 67
Corne ll (lowal 94 Grinnell 88
Kan .. Pjllsburg 65 No . Colorado

"Lawren ce 69 Chicago
.

56
Mankalo St . 70 No . Dakota 67
No . Dakota St . 71 No _ Iowa 70

Southwest
._Midwestern 8.t Wayland 80 (ot)
New Me)(ico 65 Arizona State 63
Okla Baptist 68 Okla . Chrstn 66
Texas -EI Paso 61 Ar i zona .t2
Texas Southern 80 Wiley 61
West
Bakersfield 10 Cal SI. ·LA 68
ChiCO 51 51 Humbo ldt 51. 41 ·
E . Oregon 89 So. Oregon 15
Gonzaga 70 IdahO 61
Idaho Coli. 52 Pacific (Ore.) SO
Occidental 78 Wh ittier 58
San Diego 91 Point Lama 83
Seal lieU . 82 Pepperdine 64
Tulane 77 Air For ce 6"4
w . Montana 68 Grea t Falls 60

will open the 1976 International Auto Racing
season on Sunday on the
lnterlagos Track.

NOW IS THE TIME TO TRADE
YOUR USED MOBILE HOME
ON ANEW 12 WIDE,

KINGSBURY.
Forget the Blue Book, your home is
worth more at KINGSBURY. Call us
for a Free Appraisal today or drop in
and see our lot display at IIOQ East
Main Street in Pomeroy .

KINGSBURY MOBtU HOMES
SA·-1FS
. AND SERVICE
992-7034

Hrs.: 9a.m . lits:JOp .m . Closed Sun.
Pearl Ash 992 -3323, Roger Davis , 992-7671

've

cut the red
~

. tape ·,. _.. .,

Our loan officer knows his business! II you're in need of a home
loan, to buy or build, he'll
do his darndest to see that you
get one ... with a payment plan that suits
you best. And we charge the lowest rates permitted by law. Come
in and talk to him today!

14 WIDE OR DOUBLE WIDE
AT

Pomeroy

.

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.

FAVORITE POP GONE
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Pink
.pop may replace red pop and
grade
pop
may
just
fade away as the result of the federal ban
on Red Dye No. 2, officials qf Borden, Inc., said
THIS action-packed photo of tbe Gallipolis and Meigs basketball game shows Meigs .ace
here Friday. Researchers at
Mitch Meadows (right, 33) reaching over Gallipolis' Gary Snowden, [12, tn m1ddl~) for the
the firm 's headquarters said
bali. On left is Meigs' J erry Cremeans . .Behind Snowden IS Gaiha s Ke1th McGutre 125).
the dye had been used in such
Snowden finished the game with 27 points, Meadows tossed in 19 for Meigs,
items as pie fillings, soft
drinks, and ice cream. They
have been working for
several months to find a
substi lute for the banned.
substance. " But you don 't get
the same color intensity,"
Ft:'iday's College
Basketball Maurice O'Reilly, a 'Borden
Results
By United Press International spokesman said.

Revised Code Seclions 4503.06 and 4503 .061 as amended by
Sub. ji.B. No. 330 and Elfeclive Augusl 26, 1969

Olive Street

46

75 Val!ey 59
Willard 52 Gallon 49
worthington 65 Gahanna 64
Zanesville SJ Grove Ci ty 54
Zanesville Rose.crans 69
Indep ende nce 43
Brush 81 Maple Heights 73
Cle St . Joseph 78 Wickliffe 7 ·
Oberlin 37 No r lh Ridgeville 31
Pymatuning Valley 83 Granc
valley 35
Valley Forge 71 Cleve1an1
HeightS 69
Westlake 86 Avon Lake 49
,
Willoughby South 38 Bedford

ALL GAMES
Team
W L
P OP
Ironton
12 0 670 553
· W.heelersburg 11 0 772 578
waverly
9 4 733 704
Portsmouth
a 3 702 646
Gallipolis
8 4 674 609
Pt. Pleasant
7 4 69 1 660
South Point
. 6 6 707 754
Meigs
4 6 571 590
Logan
4 8 689 776
Athens
4 8 553 616
Wellston
3 8 566 646 '
Jackson
3 10 684 715
Non-SE OAL results :
Wednesday :
Nitro 84 Pt . Pl easant ao
Friday :
Park ersburg South 73 Pt .
P!easan t 55
Wheelersburg JS Lucasville

HOUSE TRAILER
OWNER'S
TAX PAYMENT CHANGE

BUILDING SUPPUES

Western Reserve 65 Mapleton

Meigs controlled the
tempo of the game In tile
third stanza, reducing
Gallla's lead to two, 45-43,
on Meadows' layup with 22
seconds left in the perlud.
Gary Snowden's two goals
early in the final period
upped Gallia's lead to six, 4943 but Qualls countered to
make it 49-45 at the 6:25
mark.

c ut it back to eight on a
driving layup before Johnson 's charity toss gave GAHS
a 58-49lead at the 3:53 mark.
GAHS went Into a sem~
stall. Meigs employ•d a
full-court press, forcing
four GAHS turnovers. The
Marauders, behind Allen
Dodson and Meadows,
pulled within four, 62-58,
with 51 seconds lei!.
Tony Folden's layup and
free throw at the 39-second
mark assured Gallipolis the
victory.
GAHS played at Wheelersburg last night. Meigs battled
Federal-Hocking in a nonleague encounter.
Tuesday, Gallipolis is at
Jackson. Meigs will host
Wellston .

STRIKE SPREADS
FRANKFORT, Ky.
(UPI) - A strike at Peabody
Coal Co. mine locations in
Ohio
and
Muhlenburg
counties in Kentucky has
spread to .10 mine facilities,
idling nearly 2,400 miners in
the state.
The strike began earlier
this week when 44 supply
clerks waiked off the jobs.
United
Mine
workers
members honored the pickets
set up by the supply clerks
who are members of the
newly organized Service
Employes
Internation al
Union, local 557.

:game on the GAHS boards .
• The victory snapped the
; Blue Imps nine-game losing
59
:streak and left them with a lSOuth Point 76 lrOI'JIOn St . Joe
' 9 season mark , Meigs
Portsmouth 6) As hland , Ky .
: dropped to l-7 o~erall . lnsirl.e
•; ihe SEOAL, GAHS is 3~. 57 SEOAL VARSITY
.• Meigs is 2-7. ·
T ea m
W L
P OP
.: After a 5-5 flrst.period tie,
1 r on ton
9 0 489 392
Gallipolis
7 2 51:2 449
~ the Baby Marauders held a
Waverly
7 2 48 7 455
• 16-15 halftime lead . Gallipolis
Athens
4 5 398 436
. ; led 25-23 going into the final
Meigs
J 6 5051 5JO
Logan
3 6 518 501
. period .
.
Wellston
. 2 7 449 52]
• Mike Skaggs paced the
Jackson
1 a 441 503
TOTALS
36 36 3799 3799
: winners with 18 points . Brian
Fr iday ' s results :
; Hamilton led Me1gs with 13
Jackson 5 1 Athens 40
Gallipol is 67 Meig s 60 .
• points.
Ironton 71 We l lston 46
; Meigs hit 13 of 42 field goal
. Waverly 5'1 _: ~:_n 56
,; attempts for 31 percent . The
SEOAL RESERVES
. visitors were four of mne at
Tum
W L
P OP
·• 111e foul line and had , 16 Waverly
. .JACKSON _: Coach AI
8 1 399 322
Ironton
7. 2 444 309
·•
rebounds
13
by
.
Hamilton
.
Burger's
Jackson Ironmen
c.
1
'
Athens
7 2 426 323
• Meigs ha~ 10 turnovers .
six-game losine
sna
pped
a
Logan
5 4 316 354
streak Friday night by turnGal lipol is
J 6 343 422
'; GAHS hit 15 of 36 field goal
Jackson
J 6 341 405 ing back Athens, 51-40.
• attempts for 41 percent. The Meigs
2 7 317 Ji4 -.
.• winners canned nine of 13 at wellston
It was the Ironmen's first
1 a 334 471
36 l6 2980 2980
-: the foul line and picked off 26 TOTALS
Southeastern
Ohio League
· Friday ' s results :
:: rebounds, II by Brad Abels. A1hens 47 Jackson 37
win in nine star ts. Athens
Ga l lipol is 39 Meigs 30
'• GAHS had 12 turnovers.
dropped to 4-8 overall a nd 4-5
Ironton 69 Well ston 32
Box score:
inside the SEOAL. The loss
Waverly 47 Logan 39
MEIGS;:;.;
R;;E~S~E~R~v~es 1301 Tuesday 's games :
exten ded Athens' losing
W inebrenner , Q.Q.O; Wilfe , 1
Gallipol is at Jackson
streak to four straight.
: 0·2; Stanley, 0·0 ·0 ; Young , 2
Waverly a t Iron ton
0·4 :
Hamilton ,
53 13 ;
Jackson jumped off to an 8wellston at Meig s
Follrod , D· l -1; T . c~ais , 1-0 2;
Parkersburg at Pt . P leasant
0
lead
and was never headed .
Halley, -4 ·0-8. TQTALS 13-4· 30 .
Oak Hil l at South Polnt
led 12~. 25-18
The
Ironmen
GAHS BLUE IMPS (J91 ~
Friday' s games :
•' Abels, 3· 2-8 ; Staggs , 0·0-0 ;
Waverly at Athens
and 35-24 at . the quar Hawk, ·o.o.o : Edelmann , o.o.
Logan o)t G" llipolis
termarks .
o ~ Grahem , 4· 1·9 ; Gi-oth , 0:0Meigs et Ironton
;t- 0 ; Skaggs, 6·6· 18 ; Jones , 2·0·4.
JacksOn at We l lston
AThens hit 19 of 50 field
• TOTALS 15· 9· 39 .
Ch illic oth e at Portsmouth
goal
attempts and two of four
Score by quarters :
South Poin t at Coal Grove
free
throws. AHS picked off
Melgs'B '
5 11 7 7-. JO
Whee:e r sburg at Northwest
Blue Imps
5 10 10 14 ..:... 39
Pt. Pleasant AI Dunbar
37 rebounds, . J3 by Afnic

CARTER &amp; EVANS

81

Brent Johnson and Mick
Davenport exchanged goals
before Qualls tallied on a
driving layup at the 4:44
mark to make it 53-47, Galli a.
Qualls was called fo r
charging on the play . Meigs
was charged with two
technicals. Gary Snowden
sank four consecutive free
throws . That gave GAHS a 5747 advantage .
Aggressive Steve Randolph

intermission.

Jackson snaps
-losing streak -

Heavy-Duty
Shocks

St•anr. H aM

Friday's preliminary

points , 14-11 , o n a long
jumper by Terry Qualls at the
2:50 mark. GAHS, behind
Tony Folden, Gary Snowden
and Keith McGuire, tallied
the final eight points. of the
first stanza.
M~igs, behind the strong
inside play
of Mitch
Meadows , bounced back to
take a 24-23 advantage with
4;2lleft in the half. Gallipolis
led 35-32 during the halftime

Standings

"

SAVE 52'5 .

ATHENS - The annual
Wildlife District Four Fish
and Game Hearing will be
held today at. I .P· m. in the
meeting room of the Ohio
Depa.tment of Natural
Resources Building, 360
East State Street, Athens.
All persons interested In
possible changes in tbe
hunting
and
fishing
regulations ·are urged to
attend.
The state .fish and game
hearing will be held Feb. 6
at 9:30 a.m. in the first

Snowden was high with 27 .
Tony Folden added 16 and
Brent
Johnson
11.
Mitch Meadows, 6-8
senior center led the
Marauders attack witll 19
points. Terry Qualls added
14 BDd Mlck Davenport 11.
Each team picked off 23
rebounds. Meadows hauled in
eight for Meigs . Brent
Saunders snagged eight for
GAHS.
Meigs committed only
eigh\ turnovers. Gallipolis
had 13.
Gallipolis upped its season
mark to 8-4 . Inside the
SEOAL, the Blue Devils
remained tied for second
place with Waverly with a 7-2
mark. Meigs dropped to 4~
overall and 3-S inside the
conference.
GAHS hit nine oi II field ·
goal attempts and · Meigs
seven of 13 in the first period .
GAHS held a 19-14 advantage
at the first whistle break .
Meigs' first lead was 10-8 on
Jerry Cremeans' short
jumper with 4:01 left in the
period. The Marauders
biggest spread was three.

'

F~aturing

Lenny Moore.

the Division of Wildlife
Headquarter s,
1930
Belcher Drh:e, Fountain
Square,
Building
C,
Columbus.

Blue Devils slip by Marauders,67 -60

Ohio

Home Loans to Buy, Build or Remodel
Mon.- Wed., 9to 3- Thursday 9-12
Fridlly 9-5- Saturday 9-12

.. ......... -...- ....
RlciWd E. - · Me.......

•'

�21.- The SW'Iday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976

WILLOW WOOD - North league-leading Pirates
Ga!Ua 's 6-4 senior guard Greg returned home last night
James,
continued
to after four straight road
terrorize the opposition here games .
North Gallia will have its
Friday night collecting a
-son high 32 points, a work cut out this week. The
IIChool record of 36 rebounds Pirates entertain Eastern of
. while blocking four shots and Pike County Tuesday night
s~aling the ball five times . and Southern Friday .
Eastern of Pike inflicted
James' effort led the
Pirates to a lopsided 83-511 the Pirates' only loss. a 75-70
SVAC win over the hast · defeat at Beaver. Friday's
game should be a hard-fought
Symmes Valley Vikings.
James, an Ali-SVAC player battle too since the Tornados
the last two years, left the have been playing aggressive
game with 3:20 to play in the ball with great teamwork
final quarter .. He broke a lately.
Friday night, Coach Jim
school record of 29 rebounds
set in November 1971 by the Foster 's 11th ranked Pirates,
Conner Pirate great Arthur jumped into a fast-breaking
Clark: Clark Is now grabbing tB-,11 lead and were never
rebounds for the Marietta headed . North Gallia put 22
points on the board in the
Pioneers.
. James now has 994 points in second period, 22 in the third
his high school career and and finished strong with 21
was expected to break the points.
Besides James' great Of1,000 point barrier Saturday
night against Eastern. The fensive effor t which included

13 offensive rebounds and 23
defensive rebo unds ,' North
Gallia 's other scoring threat,
junior forward Fred Logan
had another good performance.
Logan ripped the nets for 24

points to keep his sea son
average intact. Rayfo rd
(Spoon) Minnis was the other
Pirate in double fi gures with
10 points.
Coach
Gary Salyers'
Vikings saw their two game

s trectk come to an
e nd . Symmes Valley was led
offensively by Frank Cain's
19 points . Justin Miller, 5-10
junior , had 10 poin ts.
North Galiia connected on
39 of 99 floor attempts for :19
winn i ng

Ohio High School

United Press International
Akron Buchtel
North 51 (4 ot&gt;

59

Akron

Akron Central Hower
Akron s 52
Alliance 55 Niles 32
Amherst 84 Clearview 66

58

Ashland 6J Wooster 50
Barberton
96
Warren
Reserve 58
·
~enevue 62 Upper Sandusky

3
iBexley
erne Union~ 6B. Millersport 53
B7 Miami Tra ce 78

Bowling · Green 84 Port
Clinton 72
Buckeye Valley 53 Car .
dington .44
Caldwell 77 Wa ter ford 63
Canal Winchester 64 Lan .
caster Fisher 54
canton c c 87 Akron St.
Vincent 85
Canton McKinley 8 t Canton
Lincoln 60
Canton South 55 N . Canton
Hoover 44
Canton Timken · 61 Canton
Lehman 48
Celina 62 Van Wert 55
Cin LaSalle 49 Cin St. Xavier

48

Cin

Moeller 69 Cin Roge r
63
Cln Purcell 72 Cin Elder 70
Cln Wlth_row 52 Cin Hughes 44
Cln Woodward 57 Cin Aiken 52
Cle, Benedictine 80 Unlveq ity
School 57
Cle CoiUnwood 70 Cle Jo hn
Hay 57
Ba~on

Hannan
toppled

9lto 38
'

FRAZIER'S BOTTOM Nine Wildcats pounced on
Buffalo of Putnam County
Friday around 8 p.m . but
moments later the. growling
cats were turned in to purring
kittens as their opponents
opened up a quick 20 point
lead and continued to hammer away as Buffalo went on
to win by an overwhelming
91-38 score.
·
Head
coach
Bogart
Napora's Hannan team lost
their fifth game in a row or
their eighth oui of nine games
this ~ason.
Apparently
both
the
Wildcat offense and defense
feU apart as high scoring
guards Wayne Richardson
and Mark Villars were each
beld to .g and 8 points
respectively. The Wildcats
were led by Greg Hill's 12
points.
While Hannan found it hard
to find the hoop Buffalo could
not miss as everyone of their
players scored including five
In double figures.
The Buffalo team was led
by Chuck Noffsinger's 24
points with Mike Bowles and
Doug Greenlaw each adding
14.
Buffalo was able to jump
off to a monstrous 27-7 first
quarter insurmountable lead
by the ha!Rime the lead was
larger at 49-16.
All the starters for Buffalo
· were brought out of the game
for the second half but the
first half tempo continued
into the second half although
Hannan was able to shoot a
little better and hold Buffalo's scoring pace down by a
few points.
While Hannan found the
boards hard to detect from
the field it was almost as bad
from the charity line as they
shot a lowly 6 for 14 or 42
percent. In this category
Buffalo was worse as it shot 5
for 17 or 20.9 per cent.
HANNAN
1381
Rlchirdson, 3-3 ·9; M . Villars,
•:orl: Hill, 6· 0-12; St~vens, Q.
0 -0 ; Edmonds, 0-0-0 ; A .
Chapman, 1-1-3; Blake . 1·2·4;
VIllars, Q.Q.Q; M . Chapman, 1
0-1: Tololo 16-6-ll.
BUFFALO (911 - Boles , 7·
o.u; B . Whittjngton , 5-2-12 ;
C. NOffsinger, 10-4-24; Stone ,
2 · 1-5.: Greenlaw, . 1·0 · 14 :
Burch, 1-0·2; A . Noffsinger , 1.
0·2 ; Martin, 1·0· 2; Mays, 2·0·

4; Little, 4·0·8; R•vburn. 0·2·

J . Whittington, 1·0 · 2;
Tetals, CI·S·t1 .
Score lty Quarters:
Hannan
7 9 13 9- 38
2:

Bufl•lo

27 22 22 20- 91

.,

78

.

Lancas1er 73 Newark 66 ·
Landm ark Christian 100 Ohio
Deaf 78
Logan Elm 59 L i berty Union

5'

Loveland 81 Mariemont 59
Mad ison Plains 67 South .
eastern 57
•
Mansfield Madison 60 Dover
47
Man sf ield 72 L orai n Admiral
King 71
Massil lon 78 East L ive rpool
75 (otJ
·
Maumee 58 Anthony Wayne

49

Medina 59 NOrth Olmsted 57
·Morgan 66 Crooksville 56
Napoleon 73 Bryan 55
Nelsonville York 52 Warren
Local 38
New London 62 Sout h Cent ral
60
Newark Cath 94 Licki ng Hts .
6'
Normandy 49 Berea 39
Ontario 62 Loudonv i lle 61
Picker ingt on 86 Amanda
Clearcreek BO
~ iverv i~w 56 Sheridan 54
Rocky R i ver 85 Fairv iew 57
Rossford 91 Springf ield ~2
Sandusky 59 Lor ain Sen ior 57
Shelby 98 Bucyrus 41
Sidney Lehman 55 Graham 48
51. Clairsville 82 .B&amp;rnesville'

70

Tiff in 65 Norwalk 60 .
Tri Valley 56 Philo 46
Upper
Arlington
41
Chillicoth~ 39
.
. UrJ;lana 79 Northeastern 53
West Musklngum 77 New
, Lexington 69
Washington C. H . 111 Un io to

45

Waynesville
62
Clinton
Massie 58
west Jefferson 88 Olentangy

reserve game, 64-26. Doug
Sisson had 12 points, Mark
Wheeler. 11 Rn n Dl .-, nfo ~nri
Rex Justice, nine each for the
LitUe Bucs.
Symmes
Valley
2-10
overall, 2-5 in the SVAC
visited
Hannan
Trace
Saturday night. North Gallia
· is 9-1 overall and 8-{1 in the
SVAC.
Box score :

North
GAIIII
(13)
Runyon , 3·1-7; C. Minnis, :z.o.
4 ; Logan , 11 -2-24; Tackett, Q.
o.o; James , 15-2·32 ; Nul, 2·0·
-4; S. Minnis. 5·0-10; Theiss, 1·
0-2. Totals 39-S-tl.
Symmes valley (51) Estep , 2-0·•• Ingles , 3·3-9 ;
Wilson , 3·2·8; Miller. -4 -2·10 ;
Cain , 9-1. 19! Schaefer, 1·0·2 ;
Nance , 0-1·1 and Clary , 2·1-5.
Totals 24-10-SI .

By

Qu~rters:

18 22 22 21-83
a 11 11 12- sa

N. Gall la

s. vattey

Reserves : North Galllll 64
Symmes Valley 26 .

h. Y TD

ere JFK 68 Cte Glenv i lle. 57
Cle St . Ignatius 68 Cle Johh
Marshall 48
Cot Hartley 68 Co l Ready 55
Col .Brookhaven 75 Col
Whetstone 63
Col Central 80 Col Mohawk 58
Col East 84 Co l West 67
Co l Eastmoar 67 Mifflin 57
Col Linden 59 Col South 52
Col Marion -Franklin 74 Col
Walnut Ridge 67
Col Northland 73 Col Nor th 53
Col St. Char l es 73 Col WiJL
terson 42
Col Wehrle 11 Col DeSa les 52
Colerain 75 NorwOod 65 Col)
Columbia 78 SOI,J ih Amherst

Coshocton
53
Mansfield
Malabar 52
Crestline 58 Fredericktown 57
Cuyahoga
He ights
55
Stron gsville 50
Danville 58 Centerburg 55
Dayton Aller 83. Lima C C 60
D"y ton Co l White 76 Dayton
Kiser 68
Defiance 75 St. Marys 60
Delaware 64 We511and 56
Delphos Sl. Johns 91 Lima
Bath 52
East Cle . Shaw 69 Garfiele1
Heights 59
Ea·stlake North 61 Eu(:lid 60
Edon 75 North Central 62
Elyria 75 Filld lay 58
Fairless 56 Marlington 48
Fairview 71 Day to n Wrigt:lt 55
Firetands 75 Keystone 57
Forest Park 57 Oak Hill s 56
Franklin He ig hts 63 Dubl in JJ
Fremont 51 Marion 40
Geneva 60 Conneaut 48
Genoa 66 woodmore 57
GranQview 14 Marysville 66
Granville
82
Watkins
Memorial 50
Greenh i lls 79 Taylor so •
Groveport 70 Whitehall 58
Ham i l ton Twp . 72 Teays
. Valley 64
Hilltop 63 Edgerton 61
Ind ian Valley
Sout h
5'4
Strausburg 32
Indian Valley North 48 Tusky
Valley 47
New Concord Glenn 52 Mays
ville 46
Johnstown 65 Utica 58
Lakewood 61 .L ic king Valley
55 "•
LakeWood 81 Shaker Heigh t s

Symmes Valley sank 24 of
67 attempts for 35 pet . and 10
of 21 free throws . The Pirates
had 67 learn rebounds, 36 on
the offensive boards . NG
committed just I~ turnovers
while SV had 17.
North Gallia took the

35 honored

Basketball Results
Basketball Scores

pc t. and five of 10 free throws .

Tim

SAYRE GETS A WORKOVER Sayre ( 20) of the white. Falcons popped this one
up from outside whic~ was good but received a somewhat modified karate chop from 45,
Gary McClanahan and a punch from 21, Mark Willard.

Poca hands ·Wahama
87-51 cq,ge defeat
By GARY CLARK
White Faicons especially on
MASON - As if Tuesday the offensive boards.
Po c a
com p I e t e I y
night's clash with the secondranked team in Class "AA" dominated the shooting
wasn ' t enough, Coach Jim percentages by hitting for a
Scherr and his Wahama blazing 65 percen t on an in·
White Falcon cage team had credible 39 of 60 attempts
to face Jim Dagostine and his fr om the field . Wahama
third-ranked Poca Dots meanwhile hi t on 25 of 76
Friday night on the locals' attempts from the floor for a
home court.
respectable 33 percent.
Against r[losl learns a
Even though the end result
was evident the local red and shooting percentage such as ·
white made a gallant effort the . Whit e Falcons had
befrire going down to defeat Tuesday evening wquld be
by an 87-51 margin .
. .considered poor but when you
The loss was the fourth in a give away as much height,

roW for the star-cross€d and have to shoot over such a
White Falcons and their tenacious zone defense , as
eighth of the year against two was the case aga inst Poca, no
victories.
one could fault the Wahama
Wahama goes to the hard- team.
The Dots also held the edge
court three times this w.eek
with a journey to Buffalo at the charity stripe by
Putnam first on the agenda converting 9 of 15 for 60
slated for Tuesday night. percent. Wahama went to the
Then the bend area team free throw line only four
returns home to take on times hitting on one of those
·
Southwestern and Meigs on for a flimsy 25 percent.
Friday and Saturday nights
For Wahama individual .
respectively .
scoring honors went to 5-10
The final statistics in the junior Tim Sayre who conencounter with Poca ·sums verted 8 of 15 field goal at- ~
the whole s tory up in a nut- tempts and one of two free
shell. To begin with the throws for 17 points in his best
tall'er Dots held a 43-28 outing of the season. He was
rebounding edge which took followed by Terry Tucker and
its toll on the undersized Tim Davis with 10 and eight

pomts respectively.· Marty
Holbrook was the lead in g
Falcon rcl)otmder with six to ·
his credit .
WAHAMA (51) - Sa yre , 8l 17 ; T . Tucker , 50 10 ; Dav is,
• &lt;~ 0 ·8 ; Holbrook , 7 0 4 : Sm i th ,
20-4 ; J . Tucker . 204 ; R.
Tucker , 1 0 -2 : La m b ert , 1 0 2;
Riggs , 0 0 0 ; Nic ewand er , 0 0
0 ; Totals 25· 1· 51.
PO Ch (87)
Wil lard , 12 I
25 ; Atkin son , 9 .s 22 : B
McClan ahan ,
7 0 14 ;
G
Mc.Cianahan . 52 12; Lloyd , 3
0 6;
Baile ~.
• 2 0 4,
Facemey er , 1 2 4; Chaney , 0
0 -0;· Lanham i 0 0 0 ; To1a! s 36·
9-87 .
Store b y Quarters :
Wahama
6 20 6 19 - ,Sl
Poca
24 16 20 .27 87
R e!!erve Score ; Wahama 55
Poca 50 .

COLUMBUS,Ohio(UPl)The Columbus Touchdown
Club honored 35 outstanding
athletes from across the
country at its 21st annual
awards banquet Friday
night.
Football dominated the
show with major awards
going to O.J . Simpson,
honored as the outstanding
player in the National
Football League; Oklahoma,
awarded the Robert Zuppke
trophy as the best college
team playing the most
demanding sched ule; and
Oh io. State coach Woody
Hayes; collegiate coach of tbe
year.
Other major awards went
to two-time Heisman Trophy
winner Archie Griffin of Ohio
Slate, who accepted his
second Chic Harley trophy as
th e outstanding college
football player; Toledo's
Gene Swick, the Sammy
Baugh trophy winner as the
best college passer; Pete
Rose of the Cincinnati Rerl• ,
winner of ihe John W.
Galbreat11 trophy as baseball
player of the year; Leroy
Selman
of
Oklahoma,
honored as the best college
defensive lineman and given
the Otto Graham trophy.
Other grid winners were
Ernie Holmes of the PiUsburgh Stelers, .J im Otis, St .
Louis Card inals; Golden
Ric hards , Dallas , Otis
Sistrunk, Oakland a nd four
greats from the past - 1936
Heisman · Award winner
Larry Kelley of Yale, Paul
Giel, Dante Lavelli and

SAVE .32%
Radial36
Tires

GAWPOLIS - Coach Jim
Osborne's Gallipolis Blue
Devils defeated Coach Ron
Logan's Meigs Marauders 6760 In a Southeastern Ohio
Lea1ue basketball thriller
here Friday night.
Both teams shot wen from
the field. GAHS hit 25 of 44
field goal attempts for 56.8
percent. Meigs connected on
24 of 55 attempts for 43.6
percent.
I~
I be · first half,
GaUlpoUa shot a aizzUng 66
percea&amp; (It of 21) while
Meigs coaaected on 13 of 28
field 1oa1 attempts for an
• eiceDenl SO pe...,ent.
At the charity line,
Gallipolis connected on 17 of
, 23 free throw attempts for
. 73.9 percent. The IAganmen
• canned 12 of 17 attempts for
; 70.5 percent. GAHS com; milled 18 personal fouls,
' losing Gary Snowden in the
: final period . Meigs com: milled 19 personals, losing
i Terry Qualls and Steve
• Randolph in the final stanza.
: Each team had three !Jlen
• in double figures in scoring.
~ For the winners , Gary

:

;Blue Imps

4 rayon
t:o\d belts a nd ~
polyest e r radial

ct

l

plief-1. In sizes to fit.

jedge Meigs

most cnrs.

~

~ GALLIPOLIS -

Coach
:Buddy Moore's Gallipolis
111ue Imps rallied from a one
point halftime deficit to
'defeat Coach Bob Oliver's
: visiting Meigs reserves 39-30

SAVE 5400

~in

Sears 42
Battery
Was SJJ.45
trade-in

With

Was $1.49

Credit Plnn to Sui t Moat Every Need

11.

• Shop by Phone, Just Call446·2770
• Now on Sale • l,riccs aro Cal.alotF PricuiJ
• Shipping , ln !lt.A IIat~6n Extra

floor conference room of

Sal is/action Guu.ranteed or Your M oney Back

·

sHoP AT sEAHs
•ND SAVE ·

,.,

~

Sears

Silver Bridge

Plaza
Ph. 446-2770

• • • • • • • st;AHS , Hot:tltlt:K A Nil (.:0,

••
•

County Audit~r b~ ·mulliplying the ou•uoble wolue .of the hOuse trailer by the-"tall' rc:~le of
COMPUTED the ta:o:irog di1trid in wh"h the h o ule trailtr ha l ill 1itu1. The minimum leur ;, $36 00 per
AND
y1 a1 HoweYflr , if tlu mi'"limum tax of th ir l y •tiM dollar"t is oppliulbl~ Ia a hau te h ailer not
ASSESSED
localed
in thi1 Uate on !ht fir" da y of January , the to" it determinfld by mullipiY1119 three
BY doH&lt;.~n by the ftumbtr of full montlu remo ining to the fo llowi ng thiny-flnt of December
tomme"cing wi1h the dati! of ocqu i1it ion or entrance into th i1 1tate

County Treasurer's Office, Courthouse.
.
.
Please register first at Meigs County Auditor's OffiCe . If tratler ts not the
same as last year, bring title.

PAYABLE
AT-

Westerv i lle South 57 H i lliard

56

When • house tr~il•r hu 11; situ• In this st1te, •n pravid•d in this ••etlan, on the ht
cley of J.nu.,y tho full 1mount of the pr;, r•l• till it due •nd P•y•f?l• on or befor•
TAX DUE . the lht d•r of hnu.,y .
AND
P~ YA BLE - W.heft 1 houso - ~railer .cquit.es a situs in . thi1 stale as provided in this section, after
the flnl day af January and on or ' prior to the 3111 day o~ D•umber,_ the full
emount ·of the pro r~te 11111 it duo and payaltle immediately upon tho up~rltlon of
1 lO ilf•y . ptrlollf commendne whh tht d1to tho tltul It acquired.

Wheelersbur~

36
Reynoldsburg 66 Mt . Vernon

65

GAINS FINALS
B'iRMINGHAM,
Ala.
( UPI) - Roscoe Tanner beat
Poland's Wojtek Fibak, 6-3, 7- .
5, Saturday to advance to
Sunday's final round of the
$50,000 Birmingham In·
ternational Indoor Tennis
Tournament.
Tanner, the No .2 seed who
now plays out of Charleston,
S.C., will meet the winner of
Saturday night's match between top-seeded Jimmy
Connors·of Belleville, Dl., and
Erik Va11 Dillen of Palos
Verdes , Calif.

If 1he payment of the to• is not m.:.~de as .providr:d Gbove a penalty of fi v-e dollars

Mr. Tax is computerized to do your return
accurately and fast. Even with the new exemption changes and low income allowances
and tax credits-one visit is all it takes. And
you take your return with you-short form or
long form-ready to mail.

PENALTY- or ten percent of the taus due, whiehever is greater, shall be impoud and
c:ollected in addition to the taa due and owing .

855 Second Ave.
Galipolis, Ohio
HOURS

ReoOfpoHns

Tra~ler

Sunday

12 Til s P.M.

Mr.11Xaf

Ph. 4~6-7600

The tax service people. lor the people.

ibll't
1

ouse

9 to 6 Daily

Evenings
by
Appointment

Th~ Count.-

Ttenurer . in addition to any other remedy prov ided by Law for
the: colleetion of tue1 .and penalties . sh11i enforct collection of such fnes
.tnd peultin by civil action in thr n.ame of such treasurer .against the owner
for the rcconry of the unpaid hxet. .

, Dellnciuenl
TIXII-

All/)

I IOU.

......... Mllr
7:30 • • 1'1111111

All ewnors ef heuse trail~n hewing 1 situs
the Stalo of Ohio •nd subie(l to tho
tu n pro"lded 11a.o•• MUSt retilllr 1uch trailer with the County Auditor on or
prior to the date , th• tax is du• •nllf payeble.

i';,

y

.

•

.

, Owner-

Ne ,.,.•• whe is Jhe • .,;,ner of 1 houu trail., and who is roqwired to regimr •
he... lfaller shall fall te dlspla~ on the front of such tr~iler the urtiflcafe or "Decal"
1...... lty the County Troa1urer.

OPERATOR
,
OFA
HOUSE
TRAILER
COURT-

for such purpose wtren thcrt it no oper~tor shall keep .a re1it.ter of 111 houu
tr1ilers which m1k1 use of the court, p1rk , or property.

'.

(very opcr1fo; of • house tutilcr ,caurt or p1rk or every owner of property ~o~ud

HOWARD E. FRANK
COUNTY AUDITOR
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

"~:$.\1'"~;;:::-~.,:w-§~
tf:
..::::::~~d?U.::::W.Q//&amp;t,:;:
MEIGS MARAUDERS 1601
FG- A FT-A PF RB TO TP
PLAYER-Pos.
2 14
2
6-11 2·2
l
Terry Qualls, f
1
8
3-9
2·2
1
5
Jerry Cremeans, f
2 19
7-14 5·6
2
8
Mitch Meadows , c
1
11
7
5· 11 1-4
2
Mick Davenport, g
4
1
2
2-7
0-0
l
Steve Randolph. g
2
0
2
0
0-1
2-3
Dale Browning , f
0
0
0
0-0
0-0
0
Allen S1ewar:-t, c
0
2
0
1-2
0-0
0
Alan Dodson, f
0
0
0
0-0
0·0
2
T i m Scl1es, g
60
24 -SS 12-17 19 23
TOTALS
GAHS BLUE DEVILS 1671
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
PLAYER-Pos .
1
3 16
5-10 6-8
4
Tony Folden, f
2
5
2-5
1 ~2
0
8
Brent Saunders, f
2
6
l
2-l
2-4
2
·Keith McGuire, c
A
4
11
4·5
3·4
4
Brent Johnson, g
27
1
l
11 -16 5-5
5
Gary Snowden, g
2
0
0
1-2
0-0
3
Gary Swa ln. f
1
0
0
0~ 1
0-0
0
Terry Wall , g
25-44 17-23 18 23 13 67
TOTALS
.

'

Score by quarters :
Meigs Marauders

GAHS Blue Devils
OFFICIALS -

Friday's
·college results

C ~onko. Jackson, using a runand,gwl offense against the
bigger Athenians, hit 21 of 54
field goal attempts and
canned nine of 19 charily
tosses. The Ironmen had 26
rebounds, six each by Tom
Osborne and Jeff Conroy ,
Osborne paced the Iron men
with 15 points . Conroy added
14andGeorgeSchmid 11. Jim
Heady led Athens' attack
with 14 .
Tuesday, Jackson will host
GAHS. Athens is idle .

Box: score:
ATH .ENS {40) :.,.:_ Faulk n er,
1-0-2 ; Heady . 7 0 14 ; Chonko.
3·0·6 ; Greer , -3 ·0·6; May, 0·2·
2; Meek , 3 0-6 ; Blackford , l Q.
2; Whea lc y , t -0-2. TOTALS
111·2-40 , '
JACKSON (5 1) -· Coop er ,
J.Q. 2 ·
Osborne ,
1· 1· 15 ·
Conroy , 7-0-l&lt;l ; Schmid, 4-3·
11 ; Morrow , 1 3·5; Jones, 0-1
1; Dorsey , 1-1-3. TOTALS 21 9. 5 I .
Score by quarters :
Athens
6 12 6 16- 40
Jackson
12 13 10 16- 51
Reserves ~ Athens 47
Jackson 37 .

WINS POLE POST
SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI)
- James Hunt of Great
Britain won the pole .position
Saturday for the Brazilian
formula one Grand Prix that

East
Connecticu t 63 E. Conn. 47
-Itha ca 90 Clark son 49'
No. Adams 102 Mass. Maritime

70

14 18 • 11 17 19 16 10 22 -

60
67

J . Weber and R. Davis, Ironton Chapter .

Reason 5. If the IRS should call you in
for an audit, H &amp; R Block will go with
you. at no additional cost. Not as a legal
representative ... but we can answer all
questions about how your taxes were
prepared..
·

'H&amp;R BLOCK®
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
27 Sycamore Street
Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph. 446·0303

618 East Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph . 992-3795

.

R .I. Coll . 104 Maine -P.- Gorh;am

68

..

Rochester 82 St. Lawrence 76
(OI)

Stony Brook_62 King's Po int 53
~ridgewater'

86

South
102 Va . Wesleyan

Rose Hulman 86 U of South 84
W. Maryland 91 Johns Hopkin s
79

Midwest
~ethel 69 Si oux Falls 67 (O t )
Buena Visla 59 Wartburg 52
Central 100 Upper' Iowa 67
Corne ll (lowal 94 Grinnell 88
Kan .. Pjllsburg 65 No . Colorado

"Lawren ce 69 Chicago
.

56
Mankalo St . 70 No . Dakota 67
No . Dakota St . 71 No _ Iowa 70

Southwest
._Midwestern 8.t Wayland 80 (ot)
New Me)(ico 65 Arizona State 63
Okla Baptist 68 Okla . Chrstn 66
Texas -EI Paso 61 Ar i zona .t2
Texas Southern 80 Wiley 61
West
Bakersfield 10 Cal SI. ·LA 68
ChiCO 51 51 Humbo ldt 51. 41 ·
E . Oregon 89 So. Oregon 15
Gonzaga 70 IdahO 61
Idaho Coli. 52 Pacific (Ore.) SO
Occidental 78 Wh ittier 58
San Diego 91 Point Lama 83
Seal lieU . 82 Pepperdine 64
Tulane 77 Air For ce 6"4
w . Montana 68 Grea t Falls 60

will open the 1976 International Auto Racing
season on Sunday on the
lnterlagos Track.

NOW IS THE TIME TO TRADE
YOUR USED MOBILE HOME
ON ANEW 12 WIDE,

KINGSBURY.
Forget the Blue Book, your home is
worth more at KINGSBURY. Call us
for a Free Appraisal today or drop in
and see our lot display at IIOQ East
Main Street in Pomeroy .

KINGSBURY MOBtU HOMES
SA·-1FS
. AND SERVICE
992-7034

Hrs.: 9a.m . lits:JOp .m . Closed Sun.
Pearl Ash 992 -3323, Roger Davis , 992-7671

've

cut the red
~

. tape ·,. _.. .,

Our loan officer knows his business! II you're in need of a home
loan, to buy or build, he'll
do his darndest to see that you
get one ... with a payment plan that suits
you best. And we charge the lowest rates permitted by law. Come
in and talk to him today!

14 WIDE OR DOUBLE WIDE
AT

Pomeroy

.

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.

FAVORITE POP GONE
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Pink
.pop may replace red pop and
grade
pop
may
just
fade away as the result of the federal ban
on Red Dye No. 2, officials qf Borden, Inc., said
THIS action-packed photo of tbe Gallipolis and Meigs basketball game shows Meigs .ace
here Friday. Researchers at
Mitch Meadows (right, 33) reaching over Gallipolis' Gary Snowden, [12, tn m1ddl~) for the
the firm 's headquarters said
bali. On left is Meigs' J erry Cremeans . .Behind Snowden IS Gaiha s Ke1th McGutre 125).
the dye had been used in such
Snowden finished the game with 27 points, Meadows tossed in 19 for Meigs,
items as pie fillings, soft
drinks, and ice cream. They
have been working for
several months to find a
substi lute for the banned.
substance. " But you don 't get
the same color intensity,"
Ft:'iday's College
Basketball Maurice O'Reilly, a 'Borden
Results
By United Press International spokesman said.

Revised Code Seclions 4503.06 and 4503 .061 as amended by
Sub. ji.B. No. 330 and Elfeclive Augusl 26, 1969

Olive Street

46

75 Val!ey 59
Willard 52 Gallon 49
worthington 65 Gahanna 64
Zanesville SJ Grove Ci ty 54
Zanesville Rose.crans 69
Indep ende nce 43
Brush 81 Maple Heights 73
Cle St . Joseph 78 Wickliffe 7 ·
Oberlin 37 No r lh Ridgeville 31
Pymatuning Valley 83 Granc
valley 35
Valley Forge 71 Cleve1an1
HeightS 69
Westlake 86 Avon Lake 49
,
Willoughby South 38 Bedford

ALL GAMES
Team
W L
P OP
Ironton
12 0 670 553
· W.heelersburg 11 0 772 578
waverly
9 4 733 704
Portsmouth
a 3 702 646
Gallipolis
8 4 674 609
Pt. Pleasant
7 4 69 1 660
South Point
. 6 6 707 754
Meigs
4 6 571 590
Logan
4 8 689 776
Athens
4 8 553 616
Wellston
3 8 566 646 '
Jackson
3 10 684 715
Non-SE OAL results :
Wednesday :
Nitro 84 Pt . Pl easant ao
Friday :
Park ersburg South 73 Pt .
P!easan t 55
Wheelersburg JS Lucasville

HOUSE TRAILER
OWNER'S
TAX PAYMENT CHANGE

BUILDING SUPPUES

Western Reserve 65 Mapleton

Meigs controlled the
tempo of the game In tile
third stanza, reducing
Gallla's lead to two, 45-43,
on Meadows' layup with 22
seconds left in the perlud.
Gary Snowden's two goals
early in the final period
upped Gallia's lead to six, 4943 but Qualls countered to
make it 49-45 at the 6:25
mark.

c ut it back to eight on a
driving layup before Johnson 's charity toss gave GAHS
a 58-49lead at the 3:53 mark.
GAHS went Into a sem~
stall. Meigs employ•d a
full-court press, forcing
four GAHS turnovers. The
Marauders, behind Allen
Dodson and Meadows,
pulled within four, 62-58,
with 51 seconds lei!.
Tony Folden's layup and
free throw at the 39-second
mark assured Gallipolis the
victory.
GAHS played at Wheelersburg last night. Meigs battled
Federal-Hocking in a nonleague encounter.
Tuesday, Gallipolis is at
Jackson. Meigs will host
Wellston .

STRIKE SPREADS
FRANKFORT, Ky.
(UPI) - A strike at Peabody
Coal Co. mine locations in
Ohio
and
Muhlenburg
counties in Kentucky has
spread to .10 mine facilities,
idling nearly 2,400 miners in
the state.
The strike began earlier
this week when 44 supply
clerks waiked off the jobs.
United
Mine
workers
members honored the pickets
set up by the supply clerks
who are members of the
newly organized Service
Employes
Internation al
Union, local 557.

:game on the GAHS boards .
• The victory snapped the
; Blue Imps nine-game losing
59
:streak and left them with a lSOuth Point 76 lrOI'JIOn St . Joe
' 9 season mark , Meigs
Portsmouth 6) As hland , Ky .
: dropped to l-7 o~erall . lnsirl.e
•; ihe SEOAL, GAHS is 3~. 57 SEOAL VARSITY
.• Meigs is 2-7. ·
T ea m
W L
P OP
.: After a 5-5 flrst.period tie,
1 r on ton
9 0 489 392
Gallipolis
7 2 51:2 449
~ the Baby Marauders held a
Waverly
7 2 48 7 455
• 16-15 halftime lead . Gallipolis
Athens
4 5 398 436
. ; led 25-23 going into the final
Meigs
J 6 5051 5JO
Logan
3 6 518 501
. period .
.
Wellston
. 2 7 449 52]
• Mike Skaggs paced the
Jackson
1 a 441 503
TOTALS
36 36 3799 3799
: winners with 18 points . Brian
Fr iday ' s results :
; Hamilton led Me1gs with 13
Jackson 5 1 Athens 40
Gallipol is 67 Meig s 60 .
• points.
Ironton 71 We l lston 46
; Meigs hit 13 of 42 field goal
. Waverly 5'1 _: ~:_n 56
,; attempts for 31 percent . The
SEOAL RESERVES
. visitors were four of mne at
Tum
W L
P OP
·• 111e foul line and had , 16 Waverly
. .JACKSON _: Coach AI
8 1 399 322
Ironton
7. 2 444 309
·•
rebounds
13
by
.
Hamilton
.
Burger's
Jackson Ironmen
c.
1
'
Athens
7 2 426 323
• Meigs ha~ 10 turnovers .
six-game losine
sna
pped
a
Logan
5 4 316 354
streak Friday night by turnGal lipol is
J 6 343 422
'; GAHS hit 15 of 36 field goal
Jackson
J 6 341 405 ing back Athens, 51-40.
• attempts for 41 percent. The Meigs
2 7 317 Ji4 -.
.• winners canned nine of 13 at wellston
It was the Ironmen's first
1 a 334 471
36 l6 2980 2980
-: the foul line and picked off 26 TOTALS
Southeastern
Ohio League
· Friday ' s results :
:: rebounds, II by Brad Abels. A1hens 47 Jackson 37
win in nine star ts. Athens
Ga l lipol is 39 Meigs 30
'• GAHS had 12 turnovers.
dropped to 4-8 overall a nd 4-5
Ironton 69 Well ston 32
Box score:
inside the SEOAL. The loss
Waverly 47 Logan 39
MEIGS;:;.;
R;;E~S~E~R~v~es 1301 Tuesday 's games :
exten ded Athens' losing
W inebrenner , Q.Q.O; Wilfe , 1
Gallipol is at Jackson
streak to four straight.
: 0·2; Stanley, 0·0 ·0 ; Young , 2
Waverly a t Iron ton
0·4 :
Hamilton ,
53 13 ;
Jackson jumped off to an 8wellston at Meig s
Follrod , D· l -1; T . c~ais , 1-0 2;
Parkersburg at Pt . P leasant
0
lead
and was never headed .
Halley, -4 ·0-8. TQTALS 13-4· 30 .
Oak Hil l at South Polnt
led 12~. 25-18
The
Ironmen
GAHS BLUE IMPS (J91 ~
Friday' s games :
•' Abels, 3· 2-8 ; Staggs , 0·0-0 ;
Waverly at Athens
and 35-24 at . the quar Hawk, ·o.o.o : Edelmann , o.o.
Logan o)t G" llipolis
termarks .
o ~ Grahem , 4· 1·9 ; Gi-oth , 0:0Meigs et Ironton
;t- 0 ; Skaggs, 6·6· 18 ; Jones , 2·0·4.
JacksOn at We l lston
AThens hit 19 of 50 field
• TOTALS 15· 9· 39 .
Ch illic oth e at Portsmouth
goal
attempts and two of four
Score by quarters :
South Poin t at Coal Grove
free
throws. AHS picked off
Melgs'B '
5 11 7 7-. JO
Whee:e r sburg at Northwest
Blue Imps
5 10 10 14 ..:... 39
Pt. Pleasant AI Dunbar
37 rebounds, . J3 by Afnic

CARTER &amp; EVANS

81

Brent Johnson and Mick
Davenport exchanged goals
before Qualls tallied on a
driving layup at the 4:44
mark to make it 53-47, Galli a.
Qualls was called fo r
charging on the play . Meigs
was charged with two
technicals. Gary Snowden
sank four consecutive free
throws . That gave GAHS a 5747 advantage .
Aggressive Steve Randolph

intermission.

Jackson snaps
-losing streak -

Heavy-Duty
Shocks

St•anr. H aM

Friday's preliminary

points , 14-11 , o n a long
jumper by Terry Qualls at the
2:50 mark. GAHS, behind
Tony Folden, Gary Snowden
and Keith McGuire, tallied
the final eight points. of the
first stanza.
M~igs, behind the strong
inside play
of Mitch
Meadows , bounced back to
take a 24-23 advantage with
4;2lleft in the half. Gallipolis
led 35-32 during the halftime

Standings

"

SAVE 52'5 .

ATHENS - The annual
Wildlife District Four Fish
and Game Hearing will be
held today at. I .P· m. in the
meeting room of the Ohio
Depa.tment of Natural
Resources Building, 360
East State Street, Athens.
All persons interested In
possible changes in tbe
hunting
and
fishing
regulations ·are urged to
attend.
The state .fish and game
hearing will be held Feb. 6
at 9:30 a.m. in the first

Snowden was high with 27 .
Tony Folden added 16 and
Brent
Johnson
11.
Mitch Meadows, 6-8
senior center led the
Marauders attack witll 19
points. Terry Qualls added
14 BDd Mlck Davenport 11.
Each team picked off 23
rebounds. Meadows hauled in
eight for Meigs . Brent
Saunders snagged eight for
GAHS.
Meigs committed only
eigh\ turnovers. Gallipolis
had 13.
Gallipolis upped its season
mark to 8-4 . Inside the
SEOAL, the Blue Devils
remained tied for second
place with Waverly with a 7-2
mark. Meigs dropped to 4~
overall and 3-S inside the
conference.
GAHS hit nine oi II field ·
goal attempts and · Meigs
seven of 13 in the first period .
GAHS held a 19-14 advantage
at the first whistle break .
Meigs' first lead was 10-8 on
Jerry Cremeans' short
jumper with 4:01 left in the
period. The Marauders
biggest spread was three.

'

F~aturing

Lenny Moore.

the Division of Wildlife
Headquarter s,
1930
Belcher Drh:e, Fountain
Square,
Building
C,
Columbus.

Blue Devils slip by Marauders,67 -60

Ohio

Home Loans to Buy, Build or Remodel
Mon.- Wed., 9to 3- Thursday 9-12
Fridlly 9-5- Saturday 9-12

.. ......... -...- ....
RlciWd E. - · Me.......

•'

�23 - Tbe SWlday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976

, . , ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _... course, is president of the Meigs Coonty ~·ann Bureau:

Television Log

KI!:N STARR WHO IS CURRENTLY riding high ~

; popularity with his song, "The Blind Mind 111 the _Bleachers
board has
' will be appearing at the Meigs County Fatr. The
; booked Starr and his band for the fliUil mght s grandstand
entertainment.
. Ia · b ki g. · d
Incidentally ' the fair board also 1S p nnmg . a n an,
canning competition for Meigs County women durliJ8 Aug":t~
fair The events will be in what is known as the seruor . ~
buildi with the flower show and . domestic arts. exh1hlls
proba;:fy to be moved to the building fonnerly occupied by the
Meigs Athletic Boosters.

!•,.

...

t~::
~
~

~

~
~~
-~

:;:

~
=::

t~::,..

i:;:

:~l
:~:~

:-~

:jj
:i:i
~:

·~:i
v

r
::;:

~::

~::

:,l.:,j.

::::
:·,:_.: _:.,
'':

•

;:;:
.;:;:

~,-_',.~_:~':.

•

By T. Allan Wolter
Distrir l Ranger
.
IRONTON - !£){jay 's ar ticle Is
writ len by Lacy Johnson, forester on
the Athens
District of the
Wayne Na tiona l Fores t stationed a t
Marie tta . Lacy wri tes ct weekly
column for ne wspa pe rs in the
Ma rie tta area for which he recently
received an award .
Lacy has en joyed a '' ari~d
career. Born , raised and educated 1n
Penn sylvan ia, he se r ve d a s a
bomber pilot with the Army Air
Corps during WWIJ and has worked
on Na tional Forests in Alaska,
Minnesota an d now Ohi o. As Lacy
puts it, "I :.:I prefer to hunt, fish and
tra p but sin ce that doesn 't pay
enough to support a family I chose
the next bes t thin g - working as a
forester .''
I've invited Lacy t.o write this
column so you kn ow wha t's happening on the ottler half of the
Wa yne.Much ofwhathedescribes is
occurring throughout the Fores t
Service includin g the · Ir onton
District .

Ran~er

BY LACY JOHNSON
THE OTHER evening a former
employee stopped by the house and
showed some movies he had taken uf
fore~ in Californ ia . They were
· quite s ctacular , especially wkhen
he showed the close up shots ta en
with a zoom lens.
Fighting forest fires is part of
the work of the U .S Forest Service
which has been more h ig hl y
publicized than other activities. One
ques tion often asked of forester and

winiRr, when there is snow on the
gr ound a11d no forest fires to rig~t?"
The ~ rultlis tlui l fi ghting forest fire~.
th ough impor·tan ~ duri ng fire sea son,
U('cupies " min or par t uf most
fo resters' time during the yectr .
On the Wayne National Forest
winter is the best time of the year to
accomplish ~ome or the work . For
unc thing the hea t, humid ity, insects
and sila kes of summer 'are gone.
Gone too are tl1e leaves a nd lush
annual vegeli:ltion which ma kes
Surveying, li ne location and timber
crusing most diffi cult in summer.
There is an old saying about the
fe llow who couldn't see the woods
because of all the trees . The forester
doesn' t exac tly ha ve th is pro~lem
but, in summer , has a hard time
seeing through the fores t because
of all the leaves.
This win ter some foreste rs Hre
worki ng on what is called compartment survey . Compartments
are uni ts of ll•e forest, usually
bounded by fea tures of na tural
t.errain such
a wa tershed. The
exa mine s all timber ,
pl anta ti ons, cut-over a reas and
fields wi thin the compartment to
de termine th e best use of the la nd.
He looks not only a t the timber
needs, but makes observations for
wildlife and wcttershed purposes.
He uses instruments to taker
sys tem a ti C measurements o
sample trees and records the da ta.
Later . back in the office , he will use
the data and fi eld notes to compile a
repo r t recorilmcndin g fulure
trea tment of the land.
Out of these recommendations

~1s

forest~r

cs~•blish

or prune some trees :
Wildlife pcmd.s, openings Hnd plitn~
tings ; contr ol e rosion, provide water
barri ers and protec t stream s .
Some times th e decisiOn is tha t the
best use Of a par ticular compartrnen t is to Jet the tim ber grow,
untouched for an other ten yea rs, and
then take another look at it.
Another job for es te rs and
forestry technicians on the Athens
Ranger District are c urtenll y
working on is timber cruising,
timbe r marking and sale layout.
Timber cruising is using scientific
methods to measure the volume of
timber useable for wood products, in
a given tract. The forester has to
fight the cold a binn winl&lt;!r but most
prefer this to fighting the heat , brush
and copperheads.
One summer on a fire line, a
forester shook off a copperhead
coiled around his leg . He claims that
leg is still one in ch longer.
Last but not least of the happenin~s on the Athens Ran~er
District is the transfer of Forester
George
Free land
to
the
Wise
Ranger
Dis·
trict, Jefferson National Forest,
in Virginia . We are sorry to see
George go, bu t federal fore sters are
subje ct to transfer and also George
couldn 't turn down the offe red and
well deserved promotion .
Georg e is no t only an able
foreste r but is kn own for his in·
fectious, ever present smile. He is
the kind of guy who could ·slip in a
mud hole in his best Sunday suit and
come up laughing. We will miss
George, his wife Shirley, and the

;~:i

•&gt;'

·-'

POMEROY - The i976 paper will l&lt;llk to us on his
Beef Cattle Clinic f.or favoril&lt;! subjec t. Followi ng
purebred and commerc ial him , will be Dr . Max Brunk ,
cat tleme n
is
planned Pr ofess or of Marke tin g,
Saturday, February 21 at the Cornell University, Ithaca ,
Salt Fork Lake Lodge .near New York who will speak on
the topic of " Producing is but
Cambridge, Ohio.
In the moming , Dr. Harlan Half the J ob ." We will plan to
Ritchie , Professor of Animal again have a question and
Husbandrv, Michigan Sl&lt;!te answer session foll owing the
UniversitY, will discuss the speaking program .
This 1976 Clinic is spondifference in ca ttle type over
the past years . Following him sored by the Cambridge Area
Cred it
will be Dr. Earle Klosl&lt;!rman, ProduCtion
Associate Chairman, Animal Association, The Ohio Beef
Science .Department, Ohio Marketing Program , and the
Sl&lt;lte University who will ta lk Ohio Cooperative Extension
Ohio
State
to us on the su bject of feed Service,
efficiency as rela ted to size Uni versity.
and breed of ca ttle.
Prior re servi:lliOn s are
At noon, we will have a required and will be accepted
delicious luncheon prepared on a firs t received, fi rs t
basis .
Th e
by the Lodge . After lunch, accept ed
Mr. Jim Comstock, Editor, registration fee of $7.50 inWest Virginia Hillbilly news- cludes the luncheon. Anyone

intere sted in attending should

contact Lorin Sanford , Area
Extension Center, Route 6,
Caldwell, Ohio 4:!724 or th~
local County Extension Office.
The slxth annual Power

Show Ohio will be held at the
Slate Fair Grounds on

01 Jall'

POMEROY - Phyllis Eva ns Given, daughter of Mrs. Ray
:~;: Evans and the late Ray Evans , Pomeroy, has announced her
:~;; candidacy for the office of Secretary of Smte in West Virginia.
Mrs. Given has been ou_ite successful In the pohllcal f•eld
:;:::
::;: and has been serving in the West Virginia House of Delegates.
~! A Democrat Mrs. Given has a knack in tbe field and well could
§:: be the next Secretary of State in our neighboring smte.
;:;:
MEMBERS OF THE YOUNG ADULT CLASS of the
~::
~;~ Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church are again sponsoring a
·:::: sound movie in color, at the church tonight at 7:30p.m. and
:;:; they invite y~u to attend. This film is entitled "Sound of the
:::: Trumpet" and sh ows many Holy Land scenes. The film runs
~;: about 70 minutes and special musical numbers have been
,;;;: prepared for the presenmtion .
:,;:;
:::l
JOHN MOHLER, ROUTE I, Middleport, who dabbles in
::::: the music business some, needs a helping hand. John IS badly
~~: in need for record mailing cartons for long play recordings.
j;l People who belong to record clubs would receive these mailing
:;;j cartons frequenlly so if anyone m Middleport, Hobson or lo~er
i;j Leading Creek has any of the cartons, John would apprec1al&lt;!
;$ hearing from you. He will be glad to trade gosp_el or pop
::::: recordings for a few !&gt;lrtons. Anyone can phone him at 992-

;:;;

~~;

~

----·
--....
-..=.
-.....
-~

f.:::

:;:;

BY JOHN C. RICE
Ext. Agent, A~riculture

-....
~

MINI MAC25
•

Cut s logs up 1o
20" t h ick
• 1. 8 cu. in. engine
• 10 " bar &amp; chain
• A ut o matic oil ing
• Super lightweight

EVEN THOUGH THE WEATHER has been pretty unpleasant, members of Bem Preceptor Chapter o~ Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority are moving ahea~ for their sprm_g plans to
sponsor the third annual Silve~ Slipper. The group IS h ~p 1ng to
work out an April24 presenmt•on date for the event which will
feature a musical by the Bfg Bend Minstreal Association a~d .a
candy sale - with many , many prizes awarded. Jane Walton ~
again chairing the "slipper" and Rose Sisson Is this year s
sorority chapter president.
.
·
UBBY LOCHARY CHASE, Dayton, here for an extended
visit with relatives ha s been rewarded for her honesty.
Recently Mrs. C~se found a bank deposit book with
something like $180 stuck a way in it. She turned it over to Ted
Reed at the Farmers Bank and Savings Co. The owner ha s sent
Mrs, Chase a $25 reward.
·

I

•
•

u

•

••
••

SUPER PR040

~.

..•

• 2.3 cu. i n.
•

engin e .
14" bar cuts
l og s u p to

he manager of your local Federal Land
Association is there to help you He
the loca l agricultural situation. He 's
'liar with the mon ey market. He 's an
ribusine ss man who talk s your language .
Get to know him .
228 Upper River Road
P.o. Box 207, Gallipolis
Phone 446 -0203
Clyde B. Walker , Mgr.

•

ALL MODELS ON SALE NOW!

MEIGS EQUIPMENT 00.

PURITY MILK REPLACER .

eAGRANITE
Buy Now -

.

Search for Tomorrow 8, 1Q.
12:4~Eiec .
12 : 5~NBC

Co. 33.
News 3.15 .

.

1 :OQ-News 3; Ryan 1S Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;

Young &amp; the Restless 10; No! For Women Only 15.
1: 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13:
As the World Truns a,10.
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13.
2:3()-Docfors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding Light
8, 10 .
3:00-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6, t3; All

To Be Announced 15 ; American

Issues Forum 33.
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,15; High School Bowl 8; Wor ld
Press 33.
7:0!\-World of Disney 3,4,15; Swiss Family Robinson

•

tO:l()-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Catch-33 33 .•
11 :00-News 3,4,8.10,15 ; AFC -NFC Pro Bowl 6; ABC
News 33.

11 :Jo-Johnny· Carson 3,4,1.5; News 6,13; Movie "The

Sandpiper" 8; Movie " Requiem for · a Secret
Agent" 10; .Janak! 33.
·
12:00-Night Peopl~ of Las Vegas 6,t3 .

1:oo-- Tomorrow 3, 4.

t'!_ASJ

9;3()-Wyatt Earp
10:0D-Washlng!on Debates (c)

-.
-•.

,.
~

At Pomeroy

..
•

ACROSS

••

.

·1 Wooden shoe
8 Hurr iad
tO Golf mounds
14 Grl.t 1n g
19 Place for
keep in~ blrda

,...
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LliTI_,E ORPH.&amp;.N

•••

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LITTL. OI •• AJI 41111111-·IIG 0' ~···· BIIAaT

~

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A

LIL ABNER

AstraGraph

ruthenium
69 Posseaa!ve
Pronoun
70 Neck piece
7 1 Fruit cake
73 Esculent

132 Skin of fruit

133 Search t01
t 34 Old (poet.)

135 later

t37 Bard

139 Timetable
•bbreviation
1400ampens
141 Positive pole

20 River in Belgium

23 Poet
25 Woody plant
27 Soop planta
~6 Body Of WIIOr
31 MarShes

33 Prophet

Be•rni&lt;:e Bede Osol
92Snoka
93 Extooa
94 Note of ocate

75 FOICOS air

36 Early on

For Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You're like ly Ia ex per ience a
few m1no r frustrations tod ay .
bu t you shou ld be able to cop e
handrly.

96 Lamb's pen n•mf

91 Knocks

100 Tuberculosis

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

10~

So meon e w ho m y ou ' ll be
c losely assoc iated wrth today
m ay lay a few suggesti on on
you worth y of consi deration .
Lis ten caref ul ly.

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) If

y ou put your mind to il today
y ou·u come up with cle.ver ways
l o sa ve money on some·thing
t hat needs doing

CANCER (June 21-Juiy 22) Let
your ha ir d p wn a bit tod ay. Try
to see the les s senous sid e of
eve nts. Be11eath til e su r.face
t here are a few chuck les.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Several
fam ily matte rs may need im~
mediate attention today. Once:
th ey·re disposed of. pu rsue
ligllter in!erests.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)
Companion s who are a bit too
fr ivolous ·are likely to turn you
off today. Seek company that's
into someth ing heavier.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) In formation of limited va lue may
filter down to you th rough a
fri en d today. You 'll be able to
apprai se it fo r its worth .

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nav. 22)
real istic stance
toda y on matters directl y affeG·
ling your se lf - interests~ Speak
out fo r you r rights.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0oc,
21) Keep what is told you in
co nfid ence today strictly to
Take a firm and

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.

19) You could make an older
pe rson very happy tod ay if
you 'd Phone and let her know
you 're thi nking about her .

...
.:!
.•
•··

AQUARIUS (Jim. 20-Feb. 19)
Yo u 're not

shun

others.

t:
••

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)

y

Your word s w ill carry a lot
more . weig ht today than you
may realize. Use them wisely .if
advi sing anoth er .

eiw~

••

•

Jon. 25, 1976

.. 't\[3.):::/!
...
•"

..
..

•• 1/1

Set realistic. w orlh'!l'hi!e goats
yourself th is coming year.
Begin now to formulat e plans
by lay1ng str o ng founda tion s
and moving in a positive directi on .

~

for

·w

..
,,,,..
..
....,.,..
..
~
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....."'
.,.....
...
o.
'

Hkely to

res ponsibilities today. Your acti ons will win th e admiration of

;'\

One Stop Store

FRANKLIN

.yo ursel f. If others were to have
be en let in on it. they would
know alread y.

~

AII Your Needs.

68 Symbol for

.

BEN~

!abbr.)
Tip
21 Flutter
through nose
36 Stalk
t05 Tatoo
22 Reckteoe
77 Facial
143 Metal waete
40 Barracuda
tea Ptatf01m
23 Chastise
exprlssion
t 45 Angto·S••on
4 t Ugly, old women t t2 Sea in Aala
24 Moat damp
78 Garment
money
43 Cleaning
t t3 Twilled
26 Mends
SO Simpletoo
148 Stays
1 t4 Use
aubst•ntt
28 Mate
81 Ou tch town
148 CompetltOis
45 GOd of man ly
t t6 Handle
29 Suffl,l( forming
82 Ripping
150 Instructor
t 16 Profound
foutli
•d)ICti'ftS
84 LIQu id measure 152 Makea into law
48 oem
120 Worm
:lO Slave
88 Tried
t53 Badger
47 Cuta
121 ..,urriea
32 Citizen Of Rome . 87 Tidier
154 Location
49Rtver In Alrlca
122 Moat lnoane
33 Palnlul
89 Doctrine
158 Strike aut
5 t Inventor ot
123 Lalra
34 Man's n1me
92 Moving
157 Eraaea (printing)
tetegroph
125 Mode '"""
(abbr.)
· 95 Ardent
156 Heraldry:
52 Qultdrupoda
(along)
35 Obllgallons
98 Difficult
53Emmeta
128 Cetm
rc•flad
payable
99 Vegetable
1!59 ormer Russian
54 Btrd·a bill
127 WhHIIrocks
37 Female ruffs
101 Enthusiasm
ruler
56 RldiCUIOUI
129 Stupid penon
39 The sun
103 Tlasue
180 Mine valna
59 Improving
13 t CyllndriCOII
40 Dispatch
t04 World War II
DOWN
60Cut otmaet
132
Peeled
41 Flock
•oency .(inlt.)
6t Zeal
133
Chickens
4 2 God ollove
t05 Mace
1 Cut·
63 AulhOfa
441mpose aa
t06 Football POsition
2 Thorough fare
85 Take one'a part t34 Growing out ol
neceaaary
t 36 Spikenard
(abbr.)
3 Heron like bird
67 Obtain
· resuu
t 07 Parent (colloq.)
4 Grain
t 36 Biblical weeds
69 Period ol time
46 Im itated
106 Wile of Geratnt
5 French for
(obbr.)
140 Humorists
47 Planet
t 10 Plunge
" ver y"
70 Spanned
141 L•nded
46 Midday
1 11 Postscript
6 Compass point
72 Group ot tliree t42Goddeaaol
50 Amonlh
labbr.J
7 EQua llly
7 4 Prefix : twice
dlacord
52 Pigs
112 Word ol sorrow
6 Without and
76 Faroe lsl•nds
144 1rlshman
5~ Hebrew month
tt3Ntp .
9 Pl•ce
whirlwind .
t47 Mlgh cird
55 Metal fastener 1 t5 Sun god
tO Teat
77Maaalve
57 Astate (abbr.) 117 Marry
148 Shallow vessel
t t Merit
79Number
58 Chimney carbon t 19 Coojunction
149 Music ; aa written
t2 Worm
83 Devoured
59 Nods
120 Server
13 Quiet ! ·
85 Play over aga in 151 International
60 Army officer
121 Pra ise
t 4 At this p lace
B6Woary
labor
labbr.)
124 Crav•ts
t5 Skill
87 Mince
Organ
iration
62 Recent
126 lrtsh playwriQht
16Forest wardens
88 Young girl
(abbr.)
34 in addition
127 Slunted person
17 Guides
89 Noun au Ill•
153 Exist
36 Football posit ion t26 Went by
18 Procurator ol
90 Severe
t55 Teutonic deity
!abbr. I
130 Clan
JUdea
9t Slogan

~ [:::::::=;--;;

Let Us Be Your

ih.e4

SUNDAY. January 25, 1976

....

or Buck for

· ---------"'1
helped Rose but there was l'"on· nothing they could do . The
ambulance was called but she
was dead. She was taken
'back up to a funeral home
near Bell, W. Va . for the
funeral and burial.
Mrs. Virgie Huffman , 80
years yotulg, took her first
airpla ne
ride
from
Charlesto n, W. Va . to
Baltimore, Md . to visi t her
son Bob and wife . Bob came
by plane to meet his mother
and be with her . She sl&lt;!yed a
month and Bob's wife .Donna
new back to Charleston to be
with her and then back to
Baltimore . Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Invented the
Clarence Huffman took her to "ARMONICA!' ThiS
the plane and went after her
was glasses filled
to bring her home. She says
with water at
the flight was wonder!ul .
various levels,
Otto Heister of Canal
when fingers pt&amp;SWinchesl&lt;!r recently helped
ed
over the r1m 1
and sent balloons up in the
sweet tones soundsky to see how far they would
go. The balloons were filled
ed. Beetho~en and
with gas. It was the third
Moza
lll\JSIC.
grade classes that did this.
On the second day one hoy
received a telephone call that
his balloon was found noating
in the water off shore from ·
New · Jersey, A newsman
came and interviewed the lollililiiiioi.iiioio;;;;;;,;;,ioiii
class and took pictures of

~

...

•

PRICED RIGHT!

their class and he and the
principal were on TV. The
second was round In New
York., The third one was
found near Vinton, Ohio, Otto
is still thrilled waiting In see
who might find his , and see
how far th~y go.
Mr . and Mrs . Warren
Skidmore had all of their
children home lor Christmas
vacation Mr . and Mrs. Ron
Skidmore and children, Mr .
and Mrs . Larry Skidmore and
daughter Kim of Braz·n ,
Indiana, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Skidmore and children , Mr.
and Mrs . Robert L. Ratliff
and famil y, Becky Skidmore
and Chris. Also Mr. and Mrs.
David McCarley, Piqua, 0 .
and family came a few days
late because ol school work .
They hoth teach there .
Mrs . Louise Morris is in
Holzer and is to be operated

family .
Mrs . Agnes Myers new to
California to spend a month
with her daughter and
family . She has returned and
had a wuriderful vacation.
Patsy, Mary and Ja y
Skidmore of Lancaster , 0. ,
children of Junior Skidmore ,
have been here for a few days
vacation with their graddparents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Skidmore of Evergreen.
Mrs. Dyke ·Garrett spent
Sunday afternoon with her
daughter, Mrs. Linda North
and family of Kerr .
Mrs. Phyllis Hancock, age
49 , of Witc~er Creek, W. Va .
and two children were here
recently visiting her sisl&lt;!r,
Mrs. Rose Huffman. While
here she had a heart attack
a nd died very suddenly .
Clarence Hoffman, Rose 's
husband, and David Hager

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

•

p

T

ON HANDeLAMPS
eCOLTS

6.

11:00-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Hollywood Squares 4;
Gambit 8,10; Elec . Co. 20.
12 :00-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15: Let's Make
a Deal t!; Bob Braun's 50-SO Club 4; News 6,8, tO.
12:3()-Take My Advice 3,15 ; All My Children 6,13 ;

9: [)().-...()ufdoorsman (c)

Area Warehouse

eCALVES
ePIGLETS

5:00-Bonanza 3; Fami ly Affair 8; Slar Trek 15.
5;30-Adam. 12 4
6 : ~News 3,4,8, 10, t3, 15; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20;
,Special Education 33.
.
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13: Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; In-School Programs Preview 20.
7:00-Tru!h or Cons. 3; To Tell !he Truth 4; Bowling
for Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; News 10; Candid
Camera 13; Family Affair 15; On Aging 20; Mete
Hawaii 33.
7 : 3()-That Good Ole Nashv ille Musi c 3; Do Adams
Screen Tesl4; Match Game PM 6; Price Is Rlaht 8;
Evening Edition with Marlin Agronsky 20; High
Road lo Adventure 10; To Tell the Trulh 13; Friends
of Man 15; Marco Sportlite 33.
8;00-Movle " The Day of the Jacka l" 3,4,15; On the
Rocks 6, tl; Gun smoke 8; Rhoda 10; Onlv Then
Regale My Eyes 20,33.
8:3()-AFC -NFC Pro Bowl 13; Columbus Slate lnsfitufe
6; Phyllis 10 .
9.:00-College Basketball 6 ; All In The Family 8, 10;
Bolero 20; W~lk a Country Mile 33.
9 :3Q-Maude 8, 10; World Press 20; · Emphasis 33.
10 :0()-CBS Reports 8, 10; News 20; BI-Ways 33 .

7 : ~Pixa,nne le i
7:3()-Meigs-GAHS Basketball

From Our. • •

Rep lacer must be easy and
economic&lt;~ I to feed. Here is one which is all
.of that because of its easy to mix qualities,
high nutritional value and low c.os': Calves
like its fresh taste, its palat•bll1ty and
naturalness.

5:00-Bonanza 3

sys t em

and mints were served . Th ose
sending gifts were Mrs .
Frances Bryant, Mrs . Archie
Meadows, Mrs. Jeanne Ross,
Mrs. Anna Ruth Pack, Mrs.
Nancy Mooney , Mrs. Ben
Janey.
Mr . - and Mrs . Thomas
Randolph a nd family have
returned home after spending
several days in tbeir place at
Florida . ·

Milk

Rogers 20,33; Movie " Oh. You Beauflfut ·Doll" tO;
Dinah 13.
4 ,J()-Bewl!ched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame Sl . 20,33; Get Smart 15.

t :3()- News 13.
CHANNELS

Serve You

eSEED eBROM.Q.GAS
eFUMIGATION COVERS
eCOTTON &amp; NYLON CANVAS

Cou ntrv " 10;

4:DO-Mister Car toon 3; Somerset 15; M erv Griffin 4;
Max B. Nimble 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister

Anti ·vib r;~ t io n

LET LANDMARK

A

6 : t~Farm Report 13.
6:2()-Good News 13.

28 " th ick

BYRUBYSAUNDERS
(STOCK ON HAND)
Mrs. Anna Ruth Pack is a
January 31 and February J.
Both days from 9 a.in. to 5 patient at Pleasant Valley
Save! Cut Your Own Firewood!
p . m. you'll see constru.;tion , Hospital at Point Pleasant,
W. Va . where she recently
recreational,
agri~ulturaJ,
PRICES START AT •99.50
and l ~w n a nd garden underwent surger y. She is
getting along satisfactorily.
equipme nt .
.
Mr. and Mrs. Cline ·
Also on both days, the
Agricu ltu ral Engineer in g Thompson of Grove City
Department of The Ohio Sta te spent the weekend with her
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-2 176
University, will feature a film parents, Mr. and Mrs. Brady
program in the . Lausche Sheets. While they were here
Building, say Byron Nolte
they all helped Mrs. Thomp- 'mother, Mrs , . Marybelle , ]IMICICIICICI~IKMIICIIINIMMIDIMNMIOINMI•IMNMI•IMNMI•NNMII
and .
Delbert
Byg , son to celebrate her birthday. Mooney and her mother, Mrs. I
Agricultural Engineers at Her mother, Mrs. Darlene Bertha Cra ig.
The Ohio State University, Sheets, made a cake for the
Mrs. Kay Saunders and two
who will man the film occasion.
·children, Nils and Jamey,
program . The following
Mrs. Kennison Saunders spent a lew days with her
movies and a slide-type show and two chlldren, Nils and parents, Mr. and Mrs. James
will be shown:
;
Jamey, spent an afternoqn Moore , Parkersburg, W. Va .
Expert . Soybean Har- with Mr. and Mrs . .Craig
Mrs. Lucy Hun t was taken
vesting - " Run For The · Belleville of Bidwell .
· to a nursing home near
Money ," 10 a .m. ; Timely
Harold Saunders and Marietw , Ohio.·
Planting and Harvesting , 11 family have been assisting
Mrs. Carolyn G. Chapman
a.m. ; Unfinished Miracles Melvin Craft with his tobacco entertained recenily with a
History of Research in the U.
·
stork shower in honor of he r
tymg.
,
S., 12 noon ; Exper t Corn
Margare
t
Johnson
daught
er, Mrs. Danny
Mrs
.
Harvesting - ' 'Hole In The
son
Denver
Johnson
have
Johnson.
Those present were
and
Pocket ,1' 1 p.m -. ; Tjm el:Y
home
after
spending
Mrs
.
Gladys
Layn e and
returned
Plen ling and Harvesting, 2
about
three
weeks
with
her
daughter
Becky,
· Mr. and
p.m.;
and
Unfinished
son,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rome
Mrs
.
Melv
in
Clagg
and
Miracles, 3 p.m .
J
ohn
son
and
family
of
·
family
,
Mrs.
Sue
Campbell
There will be fashions ,
foods and crafts programs for Tucson, Ariz. They said they and children, Mrs. Verba
the ladies, so bring them enjoyed the visit very much Waugh and daughter Linda,
and visited many interesting\ . MisS Bea Jam es , Mrs .
along.
Lawrence Craig, Mrs. Jean
Besides seein g millions of . places.
Mr . and Mrs . George ' Waugh, Mrs. Betty Meadows
dollars of new equipment,
you have a chance at hourly Sheets · and two c hildren , and son Dickie, Mr. and Mrs.
and
prize dra wings . So come, Monte and Amber, en- Jimmie Chapman
browse around. You are sure tertained with a dinner dsughter Tami, Mrs. Gypsy
to see something in the way of recently in honor of Mr . and Chapman .. After she had
equipment or new techniques Mrs. Homer Porter 's birth- opened and acknowledged
that will help you .be more days . Mr. Porter . was her gifts, refreshments o'
efficient in your operations. celebrating his 82nd birthday cake, ice cream, punch , •·
A few free passes to the
show are avallable at the

Tobacco Supplies

In The Family 8,10; Woman 20 ; Business 33.

3:3Q-One Life to Live 13 ; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Malch
Game 8, 10; Consumer Surviva l Kit 20.

6: DO-Sunrlse Semester 10.

Zoo Revue 13 .

5:3()-Gupples to Grouper' 33 .
6:00-News 4; WCH S-TV Report 8; Mov ie "Cougar

Holzer Medica l Cen ter after a
long sl&lt;!y but is getting so he
can eat some foods by mouth
instead of by a tube.
Stephen Stout visited his
. aunt Wednesday, Mr . and
Mrs. Gilmer Knotts.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Skidmore and family of High
Point , N. C, spent the
Chrisbnas vacation with his
mother, Mrs. Naomi Skidmore and relatives and
friend s.
Mrs. Hazel Persinger and
children , Debbie and Andy,
spent a day with her sister,
Mrs. Ruth Ann Fuller and

MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1976

10 :1»-Celebrlty Sweepsta kes 3,4, t5 ; Edge of Nig ht 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10; Mi ke Douglas 13.
IO :Jo-High Rollers 3,15; 1 Dream of Jeannie 4; Dinah

C.&amp;.Pl'AJN

FERTILIZER?

. with your agribusiness needs!

· 1:3.5--Peyton Place 4.

~

NEED

•

Movie "The Ind ian Fighter" 10; Ironside 13 ; Don
Klr'l_bner's Rock Concert 15; Soundstage 20.
t2 , ~Janakl 33.
12 :3()-Bonanza 4; ABC News 13 ; News 20.
t :3()-FIIm 4.

I :3()-Aware 6; NBA Basketball 8, 10 .
2:00-Supers!ars 6, 13; Onedln Line 33.
3:00-Movle " Hor~e Feathers" 3; Bobby VInton 4;
Rivals ol Sherlock Holmes 33; Wrestling 15.
3:3()-Wtcte World of Sports 6,13 ; Probe : The World

· "Ten From YoUr Show of Shows" 4; Faces of Hope
15 ; A Blth Wl!h Knll 33.

~

11 : J~Salnt 3; Bonanza 4; Sammy and Company 8;

I : ~»-Co llege Basketba ll 3,4,15; Communique 6; Film
8; Face The Nation 10; Good News, America 13;

Basketball 8,10.
4:00-FB I J; Beauty Pageant 4; To Be Announced 15;
Know Your Antiques 33.
4:3()-Wha! To Do Til The Wrecker Comes 33.
5:00-l,lovle " The Wild Season" 3; Golf 6,13 ; Movie .

~

9:3tf-Movie " Lou ts Armslrong . Ch icago Style" 6, 13.
10 :00-Bronk 8; Bill Moyers' Journal20,33; Window on
the World 10.
1t :00-News 3,4,8,10. 13.15; ABC News 6 ; M0 n!y
Python' s Flying Circus 20; Kups Show 33.
1t : t~Big Valley 6; CBS News&amp;. 10; PMA Pulse 15.

8 :00--Lassle 6; Captain Kangaroo 8, 10.

Around us 4.

~

20,33.

8:3o-Btg Valley 6.
9:00-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4, IS ; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:3()-A.M. 3; One Life to Live 6 ; Taf!le!ales 8; New

3 : 4~NBA

~

9 :0G--McCoy 3,.4, lS; Koj ak 8, 10; Maste r piece Theatre

Farm!lme to.
6:4Q-Ounce of Preve~llon tO.
6:4$-Mornlng Report 3.
6 : 5~Chuck While Reports tO ; Good Morning, Trl
Stale t3 .
7 : ~Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends tO .
7 ;3()-Schoolles tO.
7 : 4~Sesame S!. 33.

Adams Chronicles 33.

.••""
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.,

Big 3 .3 cu .
in . engine
Big l 6"ba r &amp;
chain
·
Cut s logs
nea rl y 3' i tiick

By Kathryne Knotts
Mr. and Mrs . Robert L.
Ph ill ips are the proud parents
of a baby da ughter called
Sarah Brooks horn J an . 3,
1976. Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Hash and
Mr. and Mrs . Holzer Gregory
and great-grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs . Lowell Fish and
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Myers,
Bidwell , also a great grandmother , Mrs. Cordellia
Waters of Circleville.
Carl Meeks is still in the

Spirt! 6, 13; Addle and the King of Hearts 8,10 No va
20,33;

6:30--Columbus Today 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;

Survival 8; Garner Ted Armstrong 13.

....

PRO 10·10

A PHOTOGRAPH OF Meigs County 's Bill Carr is among
Extension Offi ce . If you are
86 pictures in the current issue of Buck~ye Fa.rm N_ews : The
interested in goin g, give us a pictures are of county Farm Bureau presidents m OhiO, Bill, of
call and we 'll be glad to let
"
you have. them.

Blue Lake

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3911.

and Mrs. Porter . her 84th
· birthday.
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Patterson of Henderson, W.
Va . were recent Sun day
guests of her father , Mr: and
Mrs . Emmit Halley.
Mr s. Margar et John son
and Mr. and Mrs.. J immie
Chapman visited Mrs. Anna
Ruth Pack at Pleasant Valley
Hospital at Pleasant, W. Va.
recently.
Maryln and Nancy Mooney
were recent guests of his

8; Jimmy Sw0 ggart .13; Fal!h For Today 15.
10 :3()-Vege!able Soup 3; Garner Ted Armstrong 4;
·.- Jimmy Swaggart 6; Thinking In the Black 8; Blue
Ridge ·o uar!e! 13; This Is The Life ts.
t1 :00-TV Chapell; Doctors·on Call4; Poln! of VIew 6 ;
Rex Humbord 8, t5 ; Rev. Henry Mahan 13.
11 :3()-Human Dimension 3; Make A Wish 6; Focus on
Columbus 4; Rev . Calvin Evans 13.
t2 : ~A! Issue 3; Flshln' Hole 4; Issues and Answers
6; Face !he Nation 8; Columbus Town Meeting 10;
Lower Lighthouse t3; To Be announced 15.
t2 :3()-Meet the Press ·3,4, t5 ; Directions 6; World of

r

: !~

;:;;
:;:;

Jenkins 6; Movie " Ransom! " 10; ,Christian Center

~

MR . AND MRS. E. A. WINGETT were in Toledo recently
to
attend
the state convention of the Ohio election boards. They
:;:::
enjoyed the experience tremendously •.E. A. serves on the local
::~: election hoard in Meigs and Mrs. Wingett 1S a new member of
.:, .: &gt;
::::: Racine Village Council.

:~:;
::~

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Kerr News

S : ~tllery Queen 3,.4, 15·; Ce lebration : Tl'le Amer ican

SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1976
6 : ~FIIm 4; This Is The Life 10.
6:3()-Th ls Week 4; Vlewpolnl 8; Public Polley Forum
tO.
7 ; ~Jerry Falwell 4
7:1»-Church by the Side of !he Road 4; Talking Hands
8; Spring Slree! USA tl.
·
7:3()-Thts Is The Life 3; Film 4; Revival Fires 6;
Jerry Folwell 8; Camera Three tO; Newsmaker '75
13.
&amp; : ~Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery 4: Gospel
Caravan 6 ; Church Service 10; Mamre Church 13.
8:3Q-Oral Roberts 3; .Yours For The Asking 4;
Kathryn Kuhlman 6; Day of Discovery 8; James
Robinson Presenls 10; Rex Humbard tl ; Open
Bible 15.
9:00-Gospet Singing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 4; Oral
Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass ·
8; Thankful 15.
9:3()-Wha! Does fhe Bible Plainly Say? 8; It Is Written
10; Christ Is the Answer tl; Insight 15.
tO : ~Big Blue Marble 3; Church Service 4; Leroy

-:...-·.

:;~

:\ t, ,: ,: ,:,:,:,:,:;~ ~:~&lt;: : , ;,:,: ~: , :,:,,::,~,,:,:~:;:;:;: : ; ; :;: : :,: ~,:,~:, : ,~,:~;,;,:,:, :;, ,:;,:,:,: ,:,:;, ,~: ,~:;: : : : ;: ;:~'~': ,~~::;,,, , ,;: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :;: : : ;: : ':j~

County agent's corner

1

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::::

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;

IJ . ~~ h U

·:-:
:;!: '

6,tJ; 60 Mlnules 8, tO ; Cap itol Seal 33; Aust in Cl!y
Llml!s :zo.
,
·
7:30-WIId, Wild World of Animals 33.

DICK TRACY - - - - - -

1

Get A Jump on Spring

See Our
.Caifiecl Ad

SHOW ANIMALS

POMEROY

Top dress the grain mixture and-or pellets
with one or two measures of Milk Replacer
for each animal daily . It provides the
special benefits of milk to assure m~re
vigorous animals , silky hair coats and b•g,
sturdy frames.

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE
VINE STREET

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

'
~lltck

w.

Serving Meigs, Galli a
&amp; Mason Counties
Carsey, Mgr. .
Ph. 992-21•1

Slott HIIUrt: Slllro Opon 8: JU lo 5:30 ~ Mill

ServinM Ohio A~riculture
for over ·h' Years

Clost• ol 5:00p.m..

"

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~OI.Lfi"'US
'

\\

�23 - Tbe SWlday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976

, . , ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _... course, is president of the Meigs Coonty ~·ann Bureau:

Television Log

KI!:N STARR WHO IS CURRENTLY riding high ~

; popularity with his song, "The Blind Mind 111 the _Bleachers
board has
' will be appearing at the Meigs County Fatr. The
; booked Starr and his band for the fliUil mght s grandstand
entertainment.
. Ia · b ki g. · d
Incidentally ' the fair board also 1S p nnmg . a n an,
canning competition for Meigs County women durliJ8 Aug":t~
fair The events will be in what is known as the seruor . ~
buildi with the flower show and . domestic arts. exh1hlls
proba;:fy to be moved to the building fonnerly occupied by the
Meigs Athletic Boosters.

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•

By T. Allan Wolter
Distrir l Ranger
.
IRONTON - !£){jay 's ar ticle Is
writ len by Lacy Johnson, forester on
the Athens
District of the
Wayne Na tiona l Fores t stationed a t
Marie tta . Lacy wri tes ct weekly
column for ne wspa pe rs in the
Ma rie tta area for which he recently
received an award .
Lacy has en joyed a '' ari~d
career. Born , raised and educated 1n
Penn sylvan ia, he se r ve d a s a
bomber pilot with the Army Air
Corps during WWIJ and has worked
on Na tional Forests in Alaska,
Minnesota an d now Ohi o. As Lacy
puts it, "I :.:I prefer to hunt, fish and
tra p but sin ce that doesn 't pay
enough to support a family I chose
the next bes t thin g - working as a
forester .''
I've invited Lacy t.o write this
column so you kn ow wha t's happening on the ottler half of the
Wa yne.Much ofwhathedescribes is
occurring throughout the Fores t
Service includin g the · Ir onton
District .

Ran~er

BY LACY JOHNSON
THE OTHER evening a former
employee stopped by the house and
showed some movies he had taken uf
fore~ in Californ ia . They were
· quite s ctacular , especially wkhen
he showed the close up shots ta en
with a zoom lens.
Fighting forest fires is part of
the work of the U .S Forest Service
which has been more h ig hl y
publicized than other activities. One
ques tion often asked of forester and

winiRr, when there is snow on the
gr ound a11d no forest fires to rig~t?"
The ~ rultlis tlui l fi ghting forest fire~.
th ough impor·tan ~ duri ng fire sea son,
U('cupies " min or par t uf most
fo resters' time during the yectr .
On the Wayne National Forest
winter is the best time of the year to
accomplish ~ome or the work . For
unc thing the hea t, humid ity, insects
and sila kes of summer 'are gone.
Gone too are tl1e leaves a nd lush
annual vegeli:ltion which ma kes
Surveying, li ne location and timber
crusing most diffi cult in summer.
There is an old saying about the
fe llow who couldn't see the woods
because of all the trees . The forester
doesn' t exac tly ha ve th is pro~lem
but, in summer , has a hard time
seeing through the fores t because
of all the leaves.
This win ter some foreste rs Hre
worki ng on what is called compartment survey . Compartments
are uni ts of ll•e forest, usually
bounded by fea tures of na tural
t.errain such
a wa tershed. The
exa mine s all timber ,
pl anta ti ons, cut-over a reas and
fields wi thin the compartment to
de termine th e best use of the la nd.
He looks not only a t the timber
needs, but makes observations for
wildlife and wcttershed purposes.
He uses instruments to taker
sys tem a ti C measurements o
sample trees and records the da ta.
Later . back in the office , he will use
the data and fi eld notes to compile a
repo r t recorilmcndin g fulure
trea tment of the land.
Out of these recommendations

~1s

forest~r

cs~•blish

or prune some trees :
Wildlife pcmd.s, openings Hnd plitn~
tings ; contr ol e rosion, provide water
barri ers and protec t stream s .
Some times th e decisiOn is tha t the
best use Of a par ticular compartrnen t is to Jet the tim ber grow,
untouched for an other ten yea rs, and
then take another look at it.
Another job for es te rs and
forestry technicians on the Athens
Ranger District are c urtenll y
working on is timber cruising,
timbe r marking and sale layout.
Timber cruising is using scientific
methods to measure the volume of
timber useable for wood products, in
a given tract. The forester has to
fight the cold a binn winl&lt;!r but most
prefer this to fighting the heat , brush
and copperheads.
One summer on a fire line, a
forester shook off a copperhead
coiled around his leg . He claims that
leg is still one in ch longer.
Last but not least of the happenin~s on the Athens Ran~er
District is the transfer of Forester
George
Free land
to
the
Wise
Ranger
Dis·
trict, Jefferson National Forest,
in Virginia . We are sorry to see
George go, bu t federal fore sters are
subje ct to transfer and also George
couldn 't turn down the offe red and
well deserved promotion .
Georg e is no t only an able
foreste r but is kn own for his in·
fectious, ever present smile. He is
the kind of guy who could ·slip in a
mud hole in his best Sunday suit and
come up laughing. We will miss
George, his wife Shirley, and the

;~:i

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POMEROY - The i976 paper will l&lt;llk to us on his
Beef Cattle Clinic f.or favoril&lt;! subjec t. Followi ng
purebred and commerc ial him , will be Dr . Max Brunk ,
cat tleme n
is
planned Pr ofess or of Marke tin g,
Saturday, February 21 at the Cornell University, Ithaca ,
Salt Fork Lake Lodge .near New York who will speak on
the topic of " Producing is but
Cambridge, Ohio.
In the moming , Dr. Harlan Half the J ob ." We will plan to
Ritchie , Professor of Animal again have a question and
Husbandrv, Michigan Sl&lt;!te answer session foll owing the
UniversitY, will discuss the speaking program .
This 1976 Clinic is spondifference in ca ttle type over
the past years . Following him sored by the Cambridge Area
Cred it
will be Dr. Earle Klosl&lt;!rman, ProduCtion
Associate Chairman, Animal Association, The Ohio Beef
Science .Department, Ohio Marketing Program , and the
Sl&lt;lte University who will ta lk Ohio Cooperative Extension
Ohio
State
to us on the su bject of feed Service,
efficiency as rela ted to size Uni versity.
and breed of ca ttle.
Prior re servi:lliOn s are
At noon, we will have a required and will be accepted
delicious luncheon prepared on a firs t received, fi rs t
basis .
Th e
by the Lodge . After lunch, accept ed
Mr. Jim Comstock, Editor, registration fee of $7.50 inWest Virginia Hillbilly news- cludes the luncheon. Anyone

intere sted in attending should

contact Lorin Sanford , Area
Extension Center, Route 6,
Caldwell, Ohio 4:!724 or th~
local County Extension Office.
The slxth annual Power

Show Ohio will be held at the
Slate Fair Grounds on

01 Jall'

POMEROY - Phyllis Eva ns Given, daughter of Mrs. Ray
:~;: Evans and the late Ray Evans , Pomeroy, has announced her
:~;; candidacy for the office of Secretary of Smte in West Virginia.
Mrs. Given has been ou_ite successful In the pohllcal f•eld
:;:::
::;: and has been serving in the West Virginia House of Delegates.
~! A Democrat Mrs. Given has a knack in tbe field and well could
§:: be the next Secretary of State in our neighboring smte.
;:;:
MEMBERS OF THE YOUNG ADULT CLASS of the
~::
~;~ Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church are again sponsoring a
·:::: sound movie in color, at the church tonight at 7:30p.m. and
:;:; they invite y~u to attend. This film is entitled "Sound of the
:::: Trumpet" and sh ows many Holy Land scenes. The film runs
~;: about 70 minutes and special musical numbers have been
,;;;: prepared for the presenmtion .
:,;:;
:::l
JOHN MOHLER, ROUTE I, Middleport, who dabbles in
::::: the music business some, needs a helping hand. John IS badly
~~: in need for record mailing cartons for long play recordings.
j;l People who belong to record clubs would receive these mailing
:;;j cartons frequenlly so if anyone m Middleport, Hobson or lo~er
i;j Leading Creek has any of the cartons, John would apprec1al&lt;!
;$ hearing from you. He will be glad to trade gosp_el or pop
::::: recordings for a few !&gt;lrtons. Anyone can phone him at 992-

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:;:;

BY JOHN C. RICE
Ext. Agent, A~riculture

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MINI MAC25
•

Cut s logs up 1o
20" t h ick
• 1. 8 cu. in. engine
• 10 " bar &amp; chain
• A ut o matic oil ing
• Super lightweight

EVEN THOUGH THE WEATHER has been pretty unpleasant, members of Bem Preceptor Chapter o~ Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority are moving ahea~ for their sprm_g plans to
sponsor the third annual Silve~ Slipper. The group IS h ~p 1ng to
work out an April24 presenmt•on date for the event which will
feature a musical by the Bfg Bend Minstreal Association a~d .a
candy sale - with many , many prizes awarded. Jane Walton ~
again chairing the "slipper" and Rose Sisson Is this year s
sorority chapter president.
.
·
UBBY LOCHARY CHASE, Dayton, here for an extended
visit with relatives ha s been rewarded for her honesty.
Recently Mrs. C~se found a bank deposit book with
something like $180 stuck a way in it. She turned it over to Ted
Reed at the Farmers Bank and Savings Co. The owner ha s sent
Mrs, Chase a $25 reward.
·

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SUPER PR040

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• 2.3 cu. i n.
•

engin e .
14" bar cuts
l og s u p to

he manager of your local Federal Land
Association is there to help you He
the loca l agricultural situation. He 's
'liar with the mon ey market. He 's an
ribusine ss man who talk s your language .
Get to know him .
228 Upper River Road
P.o. Box 207, Gallipolis
Phone 446 -0203
Clyde B. Walker , Mgr.

•

ALL MODELS ON SALE NOW!

MEIGS EQUIPMENT 00.

PURITY MILK REPLACER .

eAGRANITE
Buy Now -

.

Search for Tomorrow 8, 1Q.
12:4~Eiec .
12 : 5~NBC

Co. 33.
News 3.15 .

.

1 :OQ-News 3; Ryan 1S Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;

Young &amp; the Restless 10; No! For Women Only 15.
1: 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13:
As the World Truns a,10.
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13.
2:3()-Docfors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding Light
8, 10 .
3:00-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6, t3; All

To Be Announced 15 ; American

Issues Forum 33.
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,15; High School Bowl 8; Wor ld
Press 33.
7:0!\-World of Disney 3,4,15; Swiss Family Robinson

•

tO:l()-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Catch-33 33 .•
11 :00-News 3,4,8.10,15 ; AFC -NFC Pro Bowl 6; ABC
News 33.

11 :Jo-Johnny· Carson 3,4,1.5; News 6,13; Movie "The

Sandpiper" 8; Movie " Requiem for · a Secret
Agent" 10; .Janak! 33.
·
12:00-Night Peopl~ of Las Vegas 6,t3 .

1:oo-- Tomorrow 3, 4.

t'!_ASJ

9;3()-Wyatt Earp
10:0D-Washlng!on Debates (c)

-.
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At Pomeroy

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ACROSS

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·1 Wooden shoe
8 Hurr iad
tO Golf mounds
14 Grl.t 1n g
19 Place for
keep in~ blrda

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LliTI_,E ORPH.&amp;.N

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LITTL. OI •• AJI 41111111-·IIG 0' ~···· BIIAaT

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A

LIL ABNER

AstraGraph

ruthenium
69 Posseaa!ve
Pronoun
70 Neck piece
7 1 Fruit cake
73 Esculent

132 Skin of fruit

133 Search t01
t 34 Old (poet.)

135 later

t37 Bard

139 Timetable
•bbreviation
1400ampens
141 Positive pole

20 River in Belgium

23 Poet
25 Woody plant
27 Soop planta
~6 Body Of WIIOr
31 MarShes

33 Prophet

Be•rni&lt;:e Bede Osol
92Snoka
93 Extooa
94 Note of ocate

75 FOICOS air

36 Early on

For Sunday, Jan. 25, 1976
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You're like ly Ia ex per ience a
few m1no r frustrations tod ay .
bu t you shou ld be able to cop e
handrly.

96 Lamb's pen n•mf

91 Knocks

100 Tuberculosis

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

10~

So meon e w ho m y ou ' ll be
c losely assoc iated wrth today
m ay lay a few suggesti on on
you worth y of consi deration .
Lis ten caref ul ly.

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) If

y ou put your mind to il today
y ou·u come up with cle.ver ways
l o sa ve money on some·thing
t hat needs doing

CANCER (June 21-Juiy 22) Let
your ha ir d p wn a bit tod ay. Try
to see the les s senous sid e of
eve nts. Be11eath til e su r.face
t here are a few chuck les.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Several
fam ily matte rs may need im~
mediate attention today. Once:
th ey·re disposed of. pu rsue
ligllter in!erests.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)
Companion s who are a bit too
fr ivolous ·are likely to turn you
off today. Seek company that's
into someth ing heavier.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) In formation of limited va lue may
filter down to you th rough a
fri en d today. You 'll be able to
apprai se it fo r its worth .

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nav. 22)
real istic stance
toda y on matters directl y affeG·
ling your se lf - interests~ Speak
out fo r you r rights.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0oc,
21) Keep what is told you in
co nfid ence today strictly to
Take a firm and

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.

19) You could make an older
pe rson very happy tod ay if
you 'd Phone and let her know
you 're thi nking about her .

...
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AQUARIUS (Jim. 20-Feb. 19)
Yo u 're not

shun

others.

t:
••

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)

y

Your word s w ill carry a lot
more . weig ht today than you
may realize. Use them wisely .if
advi sing anoth er .

eiw~

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Jon. 25, 1976

.. 't\[3.):::/!
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Set realistic. w orlh'!l'hi!e goats
yourself th is coming year.
Begin now to formulat e plans
by lay1ng str o ng founda tion s
and moving in a positive directi on .

~

for

·w

..
,,,,..
..
....,.,..
..
~
1:
....."'
.,.....
...
o.
'

Hkely to

res ponsibilities today. Your acti ons will win th e admiration of

;'\

One Stop Store

FRANKLIN

.yo ursel f. If others were to have
be en let in on it. they would
know alread y.

~

AII Your Needs.

68 Symbol for

.

BEN~

!abbr.)
Tip
21 Flutter
through nose
36 Stalk
t05 Tatoo
22 Reckteoe
77 Facial
143 Metal waete
40 Barracuda
tea Ptatf01m
23 Chastise
exprlssion
t 45 Angto·S••on
4 t Ugly, old women t t2 Sea in Aala
24 Moat damp
78 Garment
money
43 Cleaning
t t3 Twilled
26 Mends
SO Simpletoo
148 Stays
1 t4 Use
aubst•ntt
28 Mate
81 Ou tch town
148 CompetltOis
45 GOd of man ly
t t6 Handle
29 Suffl,l( forming
82 Ripping
150 Instructor
t 16 Profound
foutli
•d)ICti'ftS
84 LIQu id measure 152 Makea into law
48 oem
120 Worm
:lO Slave
88 Tried
t53 Badger
47 Cuta
121 ..,urriea
32 Citizen Of Rome . 87 Tidier
154 Location
49Rtver In Alrlca
122 Moat lnoane
33 Palnlul
89 Doctrine
158 Strike aut
5 t Inventor ot
123 Lalra
34 Man's n1me
92 Moving
157 Eraaea (printing)
tetegroph
125 Mode '"""
(abbr.)
· 95 Ardent
156 Heraldry:
52 Qultdrupoda
(along)
35 Obllgallons
98 Difficult
53Emmeta
128 Cetm
rc•flad
payable
99 Vegetable
1!59 ormer Russian
54 Btrd·a bill
127 WhHIIrocks
37 Female ruffs
101 Enthusiasm
ruler
56 RldiCUIOUI
129 Stupid penon
39 The sun
103 Tlasue
180 Mine valna
59 Improving
13 t CyllndriCOII
40 Dispatch
t04 World War II
DOWN
60Cut otmaet
132
Peeled
41 Flock
•oency .(inlt.)
6t Zeal
133
Chickens
4 2 God ollove
t05 Mace
1 Cut·
63 AulhOfa
441mpose aa
t06 Football POsition
2 Thorough fare
85 Take one'a part t34 Growing out ol
neceaaary
t 36 Spikenard
(abbr.)
3 Heron like bird
67 Obtain
· resuu
t 07 Parent (colloq.)
4 Grain
t 36 Biblical weeds
69 Period ol time
46 Im itated
106 Wile of Geratnt
5 French for
(obbr.)
140 Humorists
47 Planet
t 10 Plunge
" ver y"
70 Spanned
141 L•nded
46 Midday
1 11 Postscript
6 Compass point
72 Group ot tliree t42Goddeaaol
50 Amonlh
labbr.J
7 EQua llly
7 4 Prefix : twice
dlacord
52 Pigs
112 Word ol sorrow
6 Without and
76 Faroe lsl•nds
144 1rlshman
5~ Hebrew month
tt3Ntp .
9 Pl•ce
whirlwind .
t47 Mlgh cird
55 Metal fastener 1 t5 Sun god
tO Teat
77Maaalve
57 Astate (abbr.) 117 Marry
148 Shallow vessel
t t Merit
79Number
58 Chimney carbon t 19 Coojunction
149 Music ; aa written
t2 Worm
83 Devoured
59 Nods
120 Server
13 Quiet ! ·
85 Play over aga in 151 International
60 Army officer
121 Pra ise
t 4 At this p lace
B6Woary
labor
labbr.)
124 Crav•ts
t5 Skill
87 Mince
Organ
iration
62 Recent
126 lrtsh playwriQht
16Forest wardens
88 Young girl
(abbr.)
34 in addition
127 Slunted person
17 Guides
89 Noun au Ill•
153 Exist
36 Football posit ion t26 Went by
18 Procurator ol
90 Severe
t55 Teutonic deity
!abbr. I
130 Clan
JUdea
9t Slogan

~ [:::::::=;--;;

Let Us Be Your

ih.e4

SUNDAY. January 25, 1976

....

or Buck for

· ---------"'1
helped Rose but there was l'"on· nothing they could do . The
ambulance was called but she
was dead. She was taken
'back up to a funeral home
near Bell, W. Va . for the
funeral and burial.
Mrs. Virgie Huffman , 80
years yotulg, took her first
airpla ne
ride
from
Charlesto n, W. Va . to
Baltimore, Md . to visi t her
son Bob and wife . Bob came
by plane to meet his mother
and be with her . She sl&lt;!yed a
month and Bob's wife .Donna
new back to Charleston to be
with her and then back to
Baltimore . Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Invented the
Clarence Huffman took her to "ARMONICA!' ThiS
the plane and went after her
was glasses filled
to bring her home. She says
with water at
the flight was wonder!ul .
various levels,
Otto Heister of Canal
when fingers pt&amp;SWinchesl&lt;!r recently helped
ed
over the r1m 1
and sent balloons up in the
sweet tones soundsky to see how far they would
go. The balloons were filled
ed. Beetho~en and
with gas. It was the third
Moza
lll\JSIC.
grade classes that did this.
On the second day one hoy
received a telephone call that
his balloon was found noating
in the water off shore from ·
New · Jersey, A newsman
came and interviewed the lollililiiiioi.iiioio;;;;;;,;;,ioiii
class and took pictures of

~

...

•

PRICED RIGHT!

their class and he and the
principal were on TV. The
second was round In New
York., The third one was
found near Vinton, Ohio, Otto
is still thrilled waiting In see
who might find his , and see
how far th~y go.
Mr . and Mrs . Warren
Skidmore had all of their
children home lor Christmas
vacation Mr . and Mrs. Ron
Skidmore and children, Mr .
and Mrs . Larry Skidmore and
daughter Kim of Braz·n ,
Indiana, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Skidmore and children , Mr.
and Mrs . Robert L. Ratliff
and famil y, Becky Skidmore
and Chris. Also Mr. and Mrs.
David McCarley, Piqua, 0 .
and family came a few days
late because ol school work .
They hoth teach there .
Mrs . Louise Morris is in
Holzer and is to be operated

family .
Mrs . Agnes Myers new to
California to spend a month
with her daughter and
family . She has returned and
had a wuriderful vacation.
Patsy, Mary and Ja y
Skidmore of Lancaster , 0. ,
children of Junior Skidmore ,
have been here for a few days
vacation with their graddparents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Skidmore of Evergreen.
Mrs. Dyke ·Garrett spent
Sunday afternoon with her
daughter, Mrs. Linda North
and family of Kerr .
Mrs. Phyllis Hancock, age
49 , of Witc~er Creek, W. Va .
and two children were here
recently visiting her sisl&lt;!r,
Mrs. Rose Huffman. While
here she had a heart attack
a nd died very suddenly .
Clarence Hoffman, Rose 's
husband, and David Hager

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

•

p

T

ON HANDeLAMPS
eCOLTS

6.

11:00-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Hollywood Squares 4;
Gambit 8,10; Elec . Co. 20.
12 :00-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15: Let's Make
a Deal t!; Bob Braun's 50-SO Club 4; News 6,8, tO.
12:3()-Take My Advice 3,15 ; All My Children 6,13 ;

9: [)().-...()ufdoorsman (c)

Area Warehouse

eCALVES
ePIGLETS

5:00-Bonanza 3; Fami ly Affair 8; Slar Trek 15.
5;30-Adam. 12 4
6 : ~News 3,4,8, 10, t3, 15; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20;
,Special Education 33.
.
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13: Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; In-School Programs Preview 20.
7:00-Tru!h or Cons. 3; To Tell !he Truth 4; Bowling
for Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; News 10; Candid
Camera 13; Family Affair 15; On Aging 20; Mete
Hawaii 33.
7 : 3()-That Good Ole Nashv ille Musi c 3; Do Adams
Screen Tesl4; Match Game PM 6; Price Is Rlaht 8;
Evening Edition with Marlin Agronsky 20; High
Road lo Adventure 10; To Tell the Trulh 13; Friends
of Man 15; Marco Sportlite 33.
8;00-Movle " The Day of the Jacka l" 3,4,15; On the
Rocks 6, tl; Gun smoke 8; Rhoda 10; Onlv Then
Regale My Eyes 20,33.
8:3()-AFC -NFC Pro Bowl 13; Columbus Slate lnsfitufe
6; Phyllis 10 .
9.:00-College Basketball 6 ; All In The Family 8, 10;
Bolero 20; W~lk a Country Mile 33.
9 :3Q-Maude 8, 10; World Press 20; · Emphasis 33.
10 :0()-CBS Reports 8, 10; News 20; BI-Ways 33 .

7 : ~Pixa,nne le i
7:3()-Meigs-GAHS Basketball

From Our. • •

Rep lacer must be easy and
economic&lt;~ I to feed. Here is one which is all
.of that because of its easy to mix qualities,
high nutritional value and low c.os': Calves
like its fresh taste, its palat•bll1ty and
naturalness.

5:00-Bonanza 3

sys t em

and mints were served . Th ose
sending gifts were Mrs .
Frances Bryant, Mrs . Archie
Meadows, Mrs. Jeanne Ross,
Mrs. Anna Ruth Pack, Mrs.
Nancy Mooney , Mrs. Ben
Janey.
Mr . - and Mrs . Thomas
Randolph a nd family have
returned home after spending
several days in tbeir place at
Florida . ·

Milk

Rogers 20,33; Movie " Oh. You Beauflfut ·Doll" tO;
Dinah 13.
4 ,J()-Bewl!ched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame Sl . 20,33; Get Smart 15.

t :3()- News 13.
CHANNELS

Serve You

eSEED eBROM.Q.GAS
eFUMIGATION COVERS
eCOTTON &amp; NYLON CANVAS

Cou ntrv " 10;

4:DO-Mister Car toon 3; Somerset 15; M erv Griffin 4;
Max B. Nimble 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister

Anti ·vib r;~ t io n

LET LANDMARK

A

6 : t~Farm Report 13.
6:2()-Good News 13.

28 " th ick

BYRUBYSAUNDERS
(STOCK ON HAND)
Mrs. Anna Ruth Pack is a
January 31 and February J.
Both days from 9 a.in. to 5 patient at Pleasant Valley
Save! Cut Your Own Firewood!
p . m. you'll see constru.;tion , Hospital at Point Pleasant,
W. Va . where she recently
recreational,
agri~ulturaJ,
PRICES START AT •99.50
and l ~w n a nd garden underwent surger y. She is
getting along satisfactorily.
equipme nt .
.
Mr. and Mrs. Cline ·
Also on both days, the
Agricu ltu ral Engineer in g Thompson of Grove City
Department of The Ohio Sta te spent the weekend with her
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-2 176
University, will feature a film parents, Mr. and Mrs. Brady
program in the . Lausche Sheets. While they were here
Building, say Byron Nolte
they all helped Mrs. Thomp- 'mother, Mrs , . Marybelle , ]IMICICIICICI~IKMIICIIINIMMIDIMNMIOINMI•IMNMI•IMNMI•NNMII
and .
Delbert
Byg , son to celebrate her birthday. Mooney and her mother, Mrs. I
Agricultural Engineers at Her mother, Mrs. Darlene Bertha Cra ig.
The Ohio State University, Sheets, made a cake for the
Mrs. Kay Saunders and two
who will man the film occasion.
·children, Nils and Jamey,
program . The following
Mrs. Kennison Saunders spent a lew days with her
movies and a slide-type show and two chlldren, Nils and parents, Mr. and Mrs. James
will be shown:
;
Jamey, spent an afternoqn Moore , Parkersburg, W. Va .
Expert . Soybean Har- with Mr. and Mrs . .Craig
Mrs. Lucy Hun t was taken
vesting - " Run For The · Belleville of Bidwell .
· to a nursing home near
Money ," 10 a .m. ; Timely
Harold Saunders and Marietw , Ohio.·
Planting and Harvesting , 11 family have been assisting
Mrs. Carolyn G. Chapman
a.m. ; Unfinished Miracles Melvin Craft with his tobacco entertained recenily with a
History of Research in the U.
·
stork shower in honor of he r
tymg.
,
S., 12 noon ; Exper t Corn
Margare
t
Johnson
daught
er, Mrs. Danny
Mrs
.
Harvesting - ' 'Hole In The
son
Denver
Johnson
have
Johnson.
Those present were
and
Pocket ,1' 1 p.m -. ; Tjm el:Y
home
after
spending
Mrs
.
Gladys
Layn e and
returned
Plen ling and Harvesting, 2
about
three
weeks
with
her
daughter
Becky,
· Mr. and
p.m.;
and
Unfinished
son,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rome
Mrs
.
Melv
in
Clagg
and
Miracles, 3 p.m .
J
ohn
son
and
family
of
·
family
,
Mrs.
Sue
Campbell
There will be fashions ,
foods and crafts programs for Tucson, Ariz. They said they and children, Mrs. Verba
the ladies, so bring them enjoyed the visit very much Waugh and daughter Linda,
and visited many interesting\ . MisS Bea Jam es , Mrs .
along.
Lawrence Craig, Mrs. Jean
Besides seein g millions of . places.
Mr . and Mrs . George ' Waugh, Mrs. Betty Meadows
dollars of new equipment,
you have a chance at hourly Sheets · and two c hildren , and son Dickie, Mr. and Mrs.
and
prize dra wings . So come, Monte and Amber, en- Jimmie Chapman
browse around. You are sure tertained with a dinner dsughter Tami, Mrs. Gypsy
to see something in the way of recently in honor of Mr . and Chapman .. After she had
equipment or new techniques Mrs. Homer Porter 's birth- opened and acknowledged
that will help you .be more days . Mr. Porter . was her gifts, refreshments o'
efficient in your operations. celebrating his 82nd birthday cake, ice cream, punch , •·
A few free passes to the
show are avallable at the

Tobacco Supplies

In The Family 8,10; Woman 20 ; Business 33.

3:3Q-One Life to Live 13 ; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Malch
Game 8, 10; Consumer Surviva l Kit 20.

6: DO-Sunrlse Semester 10.

Zoo Revue 13 .

5:3()-Gupples to Grouper' 33 .
6:00-News 4; WCH S-TV Report 8; Mov ie "Cougar

Holzer Medica l Cen ter after a
long sl&lt;!y but is getting so he
can eat some foods by mouth
instead of by a tube.
Stephen Stout visited his
. aunt Wednesday, Mr . and
Mrs. Gilmer Knotts.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Skidmore and family of High
Point , N. C, spent the
Chrisbnas vacation with his
mother, Mrs. Naomi Skidmore and relatives and
friend s.
Mrs. Hazel Persinger and
children , Debbie and Andy,
spent a day with her sister,
Mrs. Ruth Ann Fuller and

MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1976

10 :1»-Celebrlty Sweepsta kes 3,4, t5 ; Edge of Nig ht 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10; Mi ke Douglas 13.
IO :Jo-High Rollers 3,15; 1 Dream of Jeannie 4; Dinah

C.&amp;.Pl'AJN

FERTILIZER?

. with your agribusiness needs!

· 1:3.5--Peyton Place 4.

~

NEED

•

Movie "The Ind ian Fighter" 10; Ironside 13 ; Don
Klr'l_bner's Rock Concert 15; Soundstage 20.
t2 , ~Janakl 33.
12 :3()-Bonanza 4; ABC News 13 ; News 20.
t :3()-FIIm 4.

I :3()-Aware 6; NBA Basketball 8, 10 .
2:00-Supers!ars 6, 13; Onedln Line 33.
3:00-Movle " Hor~e Feathers" 3; Bobby VInton 4;
Rivals ol Sherlock Holmes 33; Wrestling 15.
3:3()-Wtcte World of Sports 6,13 ; Probe : The World

· "Ten From YoUr Show of Shows" 4; Faces of Hope
15 ; A Blth Wl!h Knll 33.

~

11 : J~Salnt 3; Bonanza 4; Sammy and Company 8;

I : ~»-Co llege Basketba ll 3,4,15; Communique 6; Film
8; Face The Nation 10; Good News, America 13;

Basketball 8,10.
4:00-FB I J; Beauty Pageant 4; To Be Announced 15;
Know Your Antiques 33.
4:3()-Wha! To Do Til The Wrecker Comes 33.
5:00-l,lovle " The Wild Season" 3; Golf 6,13 ; Movie .

~

9:3tf-Movie " Lou ts Armslrong . Ch icago Style" 6, 13.
10 :00-Bronk 8; Bill Moyers' Journal20,33; Window on
the World 10.
1t :00-News 3,4,8,10. 13.15; ABC News 6 ; M0 n!y
Python' s Flying Circus 20; Kups Show 33.
1t : t~Big Valley 6; CBS News&amp;. 10; PMA Pulse 15.

8 :00--Lassle 6; Captain Kangaroo 8, 10.

Around us 4.

~

20,33.

8:3o-Btg Valley 6.
9:00-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4, IS ; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:3()-A.M. 3; One Life to Live 6 ; Taf!le!ales 8; New

3 : 4~NBA

~

9 :0G--McCoy 3,.4, lS; Koj ak 8, 10; Maste r piece Theatre

Farm!lme to.
6:4Q-Ounce of Preve~llon tO.
6:4$-Mornlng Report 3.
6 : 5~Chuck While Reports tO ; Good Morning, Trl
Stale t3 .
7 : ~Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends tO .
7 ;3()-Schoolles tO.
7 : 4~Sesame S!. 33.

Adams Chronicles 33.

.••""
...•••
.
.,

Big 3 .3 cu .
in . engine
Big l 6"ba r &amp;
chain
·
Cut s logs
nea rl y 3' i tiick

By Kathryne Knotts
Mr. and Mrs . Robert L.
Ph ill ips are the proud parents
of a baby da ughter called
Sarah Brooks horn J an . 3,
1976. Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Hash and
Mr. and Mrs . Holzer Gregory
and great-grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs . Lowell Fish and
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Myers,
Bidwell , also a great grandmother , Mrs. Cordellia
Waters of Circleville.
Carl Meeks is still in the

Spirt! 6, 13; Addle and the King of Hearts 8,10 No va
20,33;

6:30--Columbus Today 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;

Survival 8; Garner Ted Armstrong 13.

....

PRO 10·10

A PHOTOGRAPH OF Meigs County 's Bill Carr is among
Extension Offi ce . If you are
86 pictures in the current issue of Buck~ye Fa.rm N_ews : The
interested in goin g, give us a pictures are of county Farm Bureau presidents m OhiO, Bill, of
call and we 'll be glad to let
"
you have. them.

Blue Lake

-......
--.....
...
••

3911.

and Mrs. Porter . her 84th
· birthday.
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Patterson of Henderson, W.
Va . were recent Sun day
guests of her father , Mr: and
Mrs . Emmit Halley.
Mr s. Margar et John son
and Mr. and Mrs.. J immie
Chapman visited Mrs. Anna
Ruth Pack at Pleasant Valley
Hospital at Pleasant, W. Va.
recently.
Maryln and Nancy Mooney
were recent guests of his

8; Jimmy Sw0 ggart .13; Fal!h For Today 15.
10 :3()-Vege!able Soup 3; Garner Ted Armstrong 4;
·.- Jimmy Swaggart 6; Thinking In the Black 8; Blue
Ridge ·o uar!e! 13; This Is The Life ts.
t1 :00-TV Chapell; Doctors·on Call4; Poln! of VIew 6 ;
Rex Humbord 8, t5 ; Rev. Henry Mahan 13.
11 :3()-Human Dimension 3; Make A Wish 6; Focus on
Columbus 4; Rev . Calvin Evans 13.
t2 : ~A! Issue 3; Flshln' Hole 4; Issues and Answers
6; Face !he Nation 8; Columbus Town Meeting 10;
Lower Lighthouse t3; To Be announced 15.
t2 :3()-Meet the Press ·3,4, t5 ; Directions 6; World of

r

: !~

;:;;
:;:;

Jenkins 6; Movie " Ransom! " 10; ,Christian Center

~

MR . AND MRS. E. A. WINGETT were in Toledo recently
to
attend
the state convention of the Ohio election boards. They
:;:::
enjoyed the experience tremendously •.E. A. serves on the local
::~: election hoard in Meigs and Mrs. Wingett 1S a new member of
.:, .: &gt;
::::: Racine Village Council.

:~:;
::~

"

~

;;::

!:r:

.,

Kerr News

S : ~tllery Queen 3,.4, 15·; Ce lebration : Tl'le Amer ican

SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1976
6 : ~FIIm 4; This Is The Life 10.
6:3()-Th ls Week 4; Vlewpolnl 8; Public Polley Forum
tO.
7 ; ~Jerry Falwell 4
7:1»-Church by the Side of !he Road 4; Talking Hands
8; Spring Slree! USA tl.
·
7:3()-Thts Is The Life 3; Film 4; Revival Fires 6;
Jerry Folwell 8; Camera Three tO; Newsmaker '75
13.
&amp; : ~Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery 4: Gospel
Caravan 6 ; Church Service 10; Mamre Church 13.
8:3Q-Oral Roberts 3; .Yours For The Asking 4;
Kathryn Kuhlman 6; Day of Discovery 8; James
Robinson Presenls 10; Rex Humbard tl ; Open
Bible 15.
9:00-Gospet Singing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 4; Oral
Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass ·
8; Thankful 15.
9:3()-Wha! Does fhe Bible Plainly Say? 8; It Is Written
10; Christ Is the Answer tl; Insight 15.
tO : ~Big Blue Marble 3; Church Service 4; Leroy

-:...-·.

:;~

:\ t, ,: ,: ,:,:,:,:,:;~ ~:~&lt;: : , ;,:,: ~: , :,:,,::,~,,:,:~:;:;:;: : ; ; :;: : :,: ~,:,~:, : ,~,:~;,;,:,:, :;, ,:;,:,:,: ,:,:;, ,~: ,~:;: : : : ;: ;:~'~': ,~~::;,,, , ,;: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :;: : : ;: : ':j~

County agent's corner

1

h

,IJ·

;;;~

•
't

,l'

::::

•
;

IJ . ~~ h U

·:-:
:;!: '

6,tJ; 60 Mlnules 8, tO ; Cap itol Seal 33; Aust in Cl!y
Llml!s :zo.
,
·
7:30-WIId, Wild World of Animals 33.

DICK TRACY - - - - - -

1

Get A Jump on Spring

See Our
.Caifiecl Ad

SHOW ANIMALS

POMEROY

Top dress the grain mixture and-or pellets
with one or two measures of Milk Replacer
for each animal daily . It provides the
special benefits of milk to assure m~re
vigorous animals , silky hair coats and b•g,
sturdy frames.

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE
VINE STREET

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

'
~lltck

w.

Serving Meigs, Galli a
&amp; Mason Counties
Carsey, Mgr. .
Ph. 992-21•1

Slott HIIUrt: Slllro Opon 8: JU lo 5:30 ~ Mill

ServinM Ohio A~riculture
for over ·h' Years

Clost• ol 5:00p.m..

"

~

~OI.Lfi"'US
'

\\

�.......,

24- The Sunday Tunes. Sentmei,Sunda} , Jan 25, 1976

~ For

Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
WANT ADS

~l!!J~!1~&lt;r lkJ ~-li.J .-1 ,_.
Unatramble thts~ four Jumbi('S.
one letter to earh square, to
form four ordinary words

INFORMATION
DEADliNES
5
P M
Day
Before
Publ ic a t ion
Monday DeatJi mc 9 a m

~

Cancel! atr on

'

m

REGULATIONS

The Publisher reserves the
rant tn edt! or nnect any !!i dS
deemed
ob ect•onal
Tn e
publtsher
w !I
not
be
respons•b!e for more than one

I I

"fprrect msertlon

r

,

r

RATES

For want Ad Sennce
5 ce n ts oer word one ins ertiO n
M1ntmum Charge $1 00

:1

ILURBIAj
1

Corrections

W•!! be acce p ted untd 9 a
for Day of Pubt•cat•on

STYTE

1

~

14 ce nts p er wo rd lhree
consecutive •nse rt. ons
26 ce n t s pe r word stx co n
secur ve nser!rons
25 Per Cent Drscoun• on pa •d
ads and ads pad w l th rn 10

'IOU CAN EAT W ITH

IT E.VEN IF IT&amp;NOT
ON THE TA!!ILE

I

CHERAG

I:==:b.::::£1======:L:::d'_::""~'~'estH.
V

V

1'--=Priii::..=Uit.:..:;SIII=ISI=ANSW!II-""---'IIen~

l

above cartoon

r xx x xr J

I

In Memory

WIN AT BRIDGE

th 5 life

Signal void in Blackwood
NORTH fD J

24

•AK J98
¥ A J 32

•

+K 8

o~o'K 5

\lEST
• 53

EAST
• 10 4 2

·--

Norlh Eas t

Sout h

3•

IA
Pass
4 N T Pass
7 'I
Pass

2¥
6 •

to h1s partner s Blackwood
But h1s m1ssmg su1t happened
to be clubs and West had bid
clubs So South JUmped nght
to SI X diamonds to show one
ace and an apparently 1mpor
It easy for North to bid seven
hearts and 1t was JUSt as easy
for South to wrap up 13 tncks
' \ .:Od " ''i •

-:. ""'•OU..:.

~IN •• '~ IOIWN~'&gt;.IiiiJ!!:::

A Mame reader wants to
know 1f It ts ever correct to he

Both \ ulneooble
\\est

simply respond five diamonds

tant vmd
Thts six dwmond btd made

" 65
4 J 9
· . "• Q
. 107ti2
• A Q J 10 8 7 2 • 9 6 4 3
SOLfH
A Q 76
¥KQ 10987
+A 54 3

Pas s
Pas s
Opemng lc~d - A ""

m respond1ng to a Blackwood
four notrump call
There are times when
everyone has felt that he has
overbtd and that he wants to
discourage h1s partner b}
respondmg to show one ace
less than he actually holds

Pass

but we don t recommend th1 s
procedure If you do respond
wrong and do m1ss a slam

By Os\\ald &amp; James Jacoby

When yo ur partner uses your partner
Blackwood and you happen to forgn. e you

Will

never

be \iOJd of some su1t you

sltould

some way of

(Do you have a quest1on
showmg that you have that for the experts? Wnte AsH
spec1f1c f1rst round control
the Jacobys care of fh1s
The Jacoby method of newspaper The Jacobys will
handlmg such a s1tuat10n IS to answer mdmduat questiOns
b1d SI X not fl\ e m the sUIt you If stamped self addressed
would normally respond m 1f envelopes ar.e enclosed The
you consider that your vo1d IS most mterestmg quest1ons
a valuable one
w1ll be used rn fhrs column
If South were vmd of either and will rece1ve cop1es of
ha\e

FABR I C SA LE Brggesl and
Best sate Stnce openmg of
our busmess All mater, al tn
shop on sa le one w eek only
Monda y Janu ar y 26 lhru
Sat
J an 31 Ftrsl qua lity
krut s s•art a t Sl 98 per yard
Open 9 a m
to 7 p m
Monday !hru Fr tday- and 9
am 10 s p m Saturday
Carolina Fabrics on Route 7
one ha l f rrple n o rth o f
Ches ter Oh o Henry and
Mary Hun ler owners
1 25 6tp
SHOO TIN G Match at Cor n
Hollow Gun Club 1 mile
pa st
Mt l es
Cemete ry
Rutland
1 p m
Sun d ay
January 25
I 25 He

spades or diamonds he would JACOBY MODERN)

Jan

24

1972

Dear Bob Just an other year
And we have m •sse d you dear
But your memory ts as dear
today
As the hour you passed away
Thai memo r y IS every day
And the years ca nno t take t ha t

away

Generation Rap
B) llt'lc·n and ~lll' Botti'!

That shoc k t hat I r ecetved that

dav

! S\11 remember well
I oflen s 1 and th mk of h tm

When I am al alone
For memor tes 1S the only
fr end
Tha t gr ef c an cal tis own
Ltk e 1vy and the wdhered oak
When al! thtngs decay
My lov e tor htm wtl still keep
green
And never fad e away
Sadly m sse d by wte
Eltzabeth
25 li e
I N MEMORY of John C
Proffdt who passed !hts I fe
January 24 1974
A precto us one from us has
gone
A VOICE' we OVE'd IS Sl tll
A place s vacant In our home
Whtch never can be fli ed
Sadly mtssed by hts Wtfe
Pearl
Chtldren
and
Grandchi l dren
1 25 ll c
--.~

----------•

Card of Thanks

1 25 11p

What A ''Mlxed Marriage'''

DEAR RAP
We have a' mLxed marnage' I m male she's female'
I'm begmnmg to thmk men and women weren t meant to hve
together
What I like, she hates What I hate, she 'loves ' That
mcludes everythmk from dancmg to !JShmg tnps
She won't even cook the food I like She goes for Chinese
restaurants I like Italian shes a sk1er, I'm a golfer Forget
mov1esorTV' She thinks my fnends are crude and I won't tell
you how I feel about hers'
We don't even talk the same language, and I notiCe most
married people are the same At parties men are m one group
women m another At home- she's bored With • my day, and
I'm turned off w1th hers, so It's mostly qutet
Itell you, H and S, sex JSn t enought to make you want to
hve With someone the rest of your life I was happier m college
where I bunked With three other guys and saw g~rls only on
dates, etc
No wonder mamage Is gomg out of style 1 - BORED,
TIED DOWN AND READY TO SPLIT
DEAR BTRTS
Wbo says marriage Is going out of style• Speak for
yourseU, man, but don't assume ALL couples are as
mismatched as you two - SUE

+++
NOTE FROM HELEN Marriage Isn't for everyone Funoy
how often bachelor-types don't realize this until they try It
Also strange how two such different persons could ever have
gotten together You evidently didn't talk much before the
wedding either 1

+++
RAP
The editor of our school newspaper called me and asked
me to be one of hiS editors I knew he was gomg to do th1s , and
I'd been trymg to makeup a refusal - 1even wrote 1t down
But then I had to suck my fool m my mouth and accept the
job ' Now I'm chicken to qwt after sa)'tng yes What should I
do ? - NO I CHICKEN
DEAR CHICKEN
Keep editing' It's good experience and not all that dif·
flcult - HE"EN

+++

NOTE FROM SUE If you really hate the Job, suggest a better
writer to replace you The way I figure, why stay wllh
something you dlollke when someone else might enjoy 1t?

+++
RAP
This is to " Almost HIS Wife' who IS havmg an affa1r With
roamed man for whom she prevwusly baby-sat I wonder tf
this guy IS the same one I had an affrur w1th three years ago,

a

+++

SHOO TIN G Match
Sunday
Jan 25 12 30 p m J us! off
Rt 7 by pass Sponsored by
the Luc k y 7 G un Cl u b near
Ro ck Sprtngs Ce met e ry
Ca ll 992 5335 fo r f urther
details
I 22 Jlp

Wanted To Buy
WANTED old upnght p tan os
rn any condltlon Will pay
$10 each F Jrst t oor only
Wrde g1vtng direction s to
Box 188
Wtl len Ptano Co
Sa rd 1S 01110 43946
1 2 1 101p
H ALL S Sa l vage Ol d autos
with frames and bodtes wtt h
or w llh ou!
motors
$1
hundred Ttn 50 hundred
Wtll buy met;;~l s and scrap
tron On old Rt 33 rust
across
f rom
Grueser s
Ch1pper
Monday through
Fr1day
9
tllf 4 p m
Saturday 9 1 II noon
1 21 lfc
U S

CO I N 5 Curr ency Ca ll
Rog er Wamsley Rutland
Ohio 742 233 1
1 25 1tc

WANTED old upngh! ptanos
1n any c ond l! ron Wtll pay
S10 each Ftrsl f loor only
Wrtre g1vtng dlrecttons t o
Witten Ptano Co
Box 188
Sard is Ohro 43946
1 25 IOtp
HAY Ph one Greg Roush 992
7583 Syracuse Oh to
1 20 6! p
DEA LER S
n scrap
tron
metals 1unk autos R der s
Sav age Phone 992 5468
1 2 29!p

-------------Auto Sales

--------

---

'INCOME

1974 SKYLINE Mob ile Ho me
2 bedrooms b ue and whtt e
Phone 949 2860
1 2J 6! c

TR A ILE R spa c e
J•
m ile
nor t h of Metgs H tgh Sc hoo !
o n old R t JJ Phon e 992 294 1
1 25 li e
1 B EDRM traile r
112 1

1971
350
RA LLY
N o va
standard 4 cra ga r mags
Con t acl 9d9 26J6
1 20 SIC

T ax
ServiCes
Fe deral and state ta xes 19J 1 CHEVROLET Ptck up
Good con d llto n Call 747
Phon e 992 7228 or see
2991
Walla ce R uss etl Bradbury
I 20 7!c

Ph one 992
1 16 I C'

HOU SE rn Rulland

SBS B

Ca !! 992
I 4 I 1c

S TEREO r ad o
mode r n
destgn am tm radr o 8 tra ck
! ape com btnat on Balance
S98 10 o r terms Ca ll 992
396 5
1 20 t t c
1965 FO RD L TD N ew 12 ga
W nches ter 37 A S ngle st1o!
Phone 742 2359
I 13 761p

TRAILER space t or r en t
phv ale lot m the co untry
Phon e ( 614 ) 98 5 4210
1 25 41p

H OS P I T A L bed ltke n ew a ll
postlto ns Phon e 992 2826 or
992 5565
I 25 Me

H

ONE bedrm apartm e nt all GOOD hay for sale Sl t;&gt;ate
e lec Pomeroy Home and
Phone 742 3108
Leadtng
Auto
600 E
Matn 51
Cree~ Road
Pomeroy
1 25 41p
1 25 61 c
6RM HOU SEto rqu c k sa te n
F'REE RENT A T VI L LAGE
Lelart Falls A l so poodle
MANOR
IN
MID
pups
for sale
che ap
OLE PORT We are so sure
Wa lla ce Haynes restden ce
t ha i you wtll lov e our
second house on le f t after
apartments that we g tve vou
you pass And re w Cross
two weeks RENT FRE E
Farm
Just pay your St&gt;curl! y
1 25 3tp
depos rand stay six mon ths
an d I he f tr st 2 weeks s fr ee
1973
PORTAB L E
Stnger
You wtll en10Y mon thly
Sew tng mach 1ne
Good
leases all e!ecl r• c 1 vm g
c ond Jt on S90 Phone 99 2
carpe tt ng
rang e
a nd
3844 afT er 5 p m
ref rr geralor
f ree !rash
1 21 4IC
p ckup cab le TV ( opltona l )
a n d l a undr y
f ac 1 l tes
ANT IQ UE Vtclortan Lo ve
Conven i ent to shopptng on
seat - eltcellen! cond lion
Th rd and Mtll rn Mtd
SISO
Portabl e
Hoover
d l eport VILLAGE MANOR
washer and dryer harvest
tS yours tor o ne bedroom
gold good condition S150
apartments slar!tng at $104
P o rtable
dtshwa~rer
monthly plus elec We pay
avocado good cond on
for e\lery !h ng else See the
$50 Phone 992 5236 or 99 2
Manager
a!
R t v e r slde
59 10
Aptrtments or call 992 3273
1 21 8tp
Thts offer w tl! end soon so
move In now and save SSS$
GA S h ea rtng s t ov e wtth blower
10 23 !lc
tor sale S15 c oppe no ne
range hood Phone (6 14) 985
AND 4 RM t urn tshed and
-4222
unfurn•shed apts Phone 992
1 25 4rp
5434
11 9 fc TWO hardro ck ml!pl e t wtn
beds and mattresses A lso
COUNTRY
Mob ! e
Home
match ,ng double dre sser
Park Rr 33 ten miles north
$175 Kttcnen t able with 6
of Pomeroy Large lots w th
ma ! ch l na
c hair~
nP.w
ccncre•e pattos s idewalks
con d lho n $85
10 speed
runn ers and o ff street
AMF Scorcher B ic ycle
parktng Phone 992 7479
excellent condlt on
S60
12 J 1 t fc
Phone 992 5606
1 25 6\c

BED dre ss er manresses
Salem map le ftnlsh good
condtt on Want S200 Phon e
992 5833
1 23 4tp
BE D blankets and spreads
m tcrophone Gtr ! s b k e
pla rn gut!ar elec ho! p l ate
Phone
2 burner dress er
742 2078
1 23 2tc
f! RC O H ef t fi RC w eld ng
rnach n e new e le c
al l
accessor es tn clu ded Phon e
9923 110
1Q 28 I f(
TWO 14x7 slot mag~ 41• b c
Ford
mopar
Exce len!
co ndt!ton $40 Phone 992
72 10 .........
1 22 4tc
PACE 123A CB radto t urner
pow er mtke All like n ew
$140 Phone 992 5616
1 22 41p
1975 YAMAHA 360 MX E~t
ce ll ent condd tOn
Phon e
( 614) 985 3301
1
61 c

n

MAPLE
Twin
beds and
dresser w th maf!ress and
box spnngs S200 Ltk e new
Phone 992 2627
...
......_
I 2~ 4t c

______ _

1970 350 JOHN Deere dozer
new engine Jransm rsslon
steenn g cl utches and under
car r ag e roll ca nopy 6 11
blade S6 500 Phone (614 )
985 3594
I 18 71p
1964 10 10 DOZER
w nch
canopy
6 fl
blade a l l
rebuilt S5 ooo Phone (6 14)
985 3594
1 18 7tp
,__

____ _

COA L I m es tone and all types
of salt and rock sal! tor tee
and snow removal
Ex
ce lstor Salt Works
East
Mam Sf
Pom eroy Ohto
Phone 992 J891
12 7 lfc
~------------

.....

MODERN destgn stereo 8
track tape
am fm rud to
combrnal •on Balance S96 60
or ! erm s Call 992 3965
1 7 lfc
COAL FO~ SALE C/\B Coa l
company 1 mile ndrth of
Cheshtre on Rt 7 Ptck your
own S20 per ton Open 6 days
per week or call l l 1J J 367
1330 'or f urther mfor mat ton
1 78tc

a

Pomeroy

8 Pass_ Sta Wagon Sharp Air

I 12 t mo.

lARRY WHOBREY
PUBLIC
ACCOUNTANT

Blown
Insulation ServiCes
Blowrf tnto Walls &amp; Att1cc

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING §OFF ITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS
S*acuse Oh1o

Rill Estate for Sale
J BR Br ick hdm e 6 yrs 21 ~
balhs garage on 2 8 acres
on paved ro ad near Forked
Run S• a•e Forest
Ph one
(6 14) 667 3787 S38 000
I I 5 27 l p
3

BEDRM
home
tust
ftntshed remodeltng Salem
St Rulland Pt1one 742 2306
after 4 p m or see M to B
Hut c htson
9 23 !fc

HOUSE on L inCO l n Hgts 2
bedrm
large k tchen full
bas ement exce llenl buy for
SB 900 Wtlh n ew turn lure
on y 510 JOO Phone 992 7648
1 6 26tc

VIrgil B Sr Brol&lt;or
119Mechonlc Pomeroy 0

Phoneffl 3325
20 ACRES - 2 houses one
new 3 BRs 2 baths stove
barn

farm pond S31 000
RUTLAND 8

---

new J UST A LOW $8000
5 YEARS OLD &amp; over looks
the va lle y 3 BR
ba th
d ning R hard wood floors
full basement
abou t 3 .&amp;
acre s 19 500

A MONEY MAKER - Live
1n the l arge 4 BR apart
menta nd ren t the 2 smal ler
fu rn ished apartments ( all
are alway s rf'nt ed) This IS
a brick w ith low upkeep
and has space tor a large

garden S22 000
FOR
THE
LARGER
FAMILY 4 BR 1'1&gt;
baths lovely new cab inets
In the k1tchen coal or N
gas heat full basement
with $hewer Walk to shop

$8 500
REFRESHINGLY
ROOMY - 4 n1ce BRs

992 2259 or 992 2568

hot wa ter heat mod k1l
full basement
vlew of
n ver S29 500

MASSIVE - 10 rooms 2
lull baths mod k1t wood
burning fireplaces gas
furnace f1sh pond and db!

bath mod k•f
gas fur
nacto f ull ba se m ent and
garden S 17 500

COUNTRY

HOME

-

Strout~

157 ACRES -

Really

NO

tll -

72 a

3 BR

ranc h mod kitchen built
In elec range, dishwasher.
refr igerator Fovr trailer
lot s w wa ter &amp; sewage
hookup close to new mme
area $40 000 00

NO t46 - 3 BR all elec
home fully carpeted, full
basement 2 acres S25,600

Have buyer for lot on
nver. Do you have
one? Call us.

3

BRs
gas furnac e bath
alummum sldtng on one
acre S25 000

Gooo older

house bath .4 BR s wood
burning tlreplaces porch
barn and some t•mber

BEAT INFLATION BUY
NOW SELL I HER

1

V 8 88 2 Dr

804 W Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours Call
992-7133
CONTACT
Lots Pautey
Branch Manager

HT

A~r

one loca l. owner

70 Maverick_ _________ sggs
6 cyl 2 dr

R&amp;J COINS
Roger Wamsley
l2Jlmo .

MANY MORE

Open Eventngs Ttl6·00
Except Thurs and Sat. Ttl5:00

Phone
992·2196

.

1975 DfEVROLET SUBURBAN .. !&amp;895

$4 7g5

sharpest cars on our •
lot •••.••••••••••..••••.•.••••....•••..•.•••• ,•••••.•

Red &amp; whrte flntsh double air load ed wtth every Ct,ev
oot1on low mdeaQe never titled Co Demo
~~l~~tr Qver 18 000 00 SALE PRICE U89S

1970 Ford Torino
1974
DATSUN 260-2

:a::. ~-~~: ....... ~1295

Auto , a1r cond ,
chrome wheels,

1971 Dodge Polara

1975 PINTO MPG. ...................s2995
Wh tt e 2 dr

Local 1 owner automat•c blk vr nyl tnt tnm sr lver
fm•sh good ttres radto rea l economy Book Value
Pnce $287.5 00 - Clearance

1975 DIEV. ESTATE WAGON .......'6295

1969 Ford Mustang
Auto PS , PB
'1095
1974 Pontiac Gran Prix

Dark red simulated wood tnm 3 seat fully equ 1pped
wtth every Chell opt•orr low mtles new tttle boss s
wl1e car

Slicker S7300 00 SALE PRICE 16295

1974 PLY. CUDA .....................52695

$AVE

Dark maroon frn1 sh blk bucket v1nyl seats rad1o V 8
eng rne automa t rc power steer mg good ftres a
sportsman s dream

NEW-4-Wheel Dnve Trucks In Stock

)2995
;

3A

PB, local owner

BRADFORD Auctioneer
Complete S~ rv tc e
Phone i
949 2487 o r 949 2000 Racine ,
Ohro Crill Bradford
~

------------~--~t~0~9~1~1c~ ;

... fltlte for Slle
"R:""M HOUSE bath

2 acre
full basem~nt util i ty room
buill I n porch
garage
Phone 99 2 7733
12 30 uc

-------------HOU SE in Rufland 8 rms

full and v, bath attache&lt;:~
oar age extra workshop and
garage
remodeled": large
garden
space
Ward s
restdence
Salem
S)
~ulland
2 lots S14 500
Phone 742 U37
t 21 61c

______ _

3 11 ACRES building site In
Bashan
Water and gas
$5 000 Phone Chester (614)
985 4245
I 25 4tp
LOT
Fairview Hgts
With
sepllc tank and water tap

S2 000 Phone 1614 1 985 41l3
evenlnos

7 RM HOUSE on 30 acres m
country
Back of Letart
01"110 Phone 247 2286
1 25 6tc

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
992-2126

I
I
I
I

AM FM radio full

'6295
73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

I
I
I

I

'4795
72 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

II

I

Wh•fe w1fh brown vmyl roof, brown leather lnt T&amp;T
wheel AM FM radto radial hres power &amp; air

'3895

II
I

RETAIL
MANAGER TRAINEE

Pomerov

I

Open Eves. Tll6-Til5 p.m. Sat.
"You 11 Like Our Quauty way ot Uotng Business"
See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burns
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvtll Keebaugl&gt;

1
1
1

L-----------~~~----~
A,uto Sales
1974 AMC Hornet hatchback
auto
v 6 a i r cond
exc
cond pr tce d to sell Ph 675
5272

IS 6

-72--------CH E v 6 cyl Step van

GERMAN
Shepherd pup
reddiSh orange collar In
11icinlty of 707 Third .446
7397

19 1

oood
motor
hres body, etc
make Ideal service tru ck or
small motor home '1 795
Will trade 256 14 56
156

--------.........-----6V F 750 FO R tractor nearly

Auto Sales
1973 NOVA SS

Ph

446 J712

- - --- -1973 P.LYMOUTH Duster
-

~

19 3

~-- --

Wlll

tilkt best offer 245 5089
new
sleeved
e ng ine
- - - - --- ~ 9 3
complete sendee records ..L 1970 OPEL good condrtlon
good 9 x 20 tires 5 spd
S700 Ph 446 4627
forward 2 sod
R E duel
20 6
!.tep tank&amp; saddle t anks
goocl radio air horns West -~-- - ---~----o- 13
PORD
RANGER
XL
T
PS
Coast m•rrors
ST air
PB arr
R tires thrush
brakes S2 295 also 40 tt
pip es t opper $3 200 379
slrdlng tandem trailer good
2196
ttret plywood line a cargo
hooks
S2 295
gooct 30'
... ~ .... ~--~-- 403~
1tot11t trllltr Sl ~o ftlltd
with r\'IIXId hiY ~5c a bale 69 CH EV Vln custom In
62 Ford cab and chassis
ter l or
shsg
c~ rpe r, ng
good eng tne end t tr es S595
throughout mag wheels
2l6 U56
4~6 3632

........ __ -

15 6

_....

!6 6

BOWMAN AUTO SALES

Pomeroy, Ohio Ph. 992-2174

Wanted To Do

Wanted To Do
TONY S Decor&lt;urng painting
wa ) l papermg paneling
Free esltm ales 67 5 5689
53 !f

Mobile Homes for Sale

20 I TR I STATE

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
C.dilloc Otd•moblle
GMAC F1nancma Available

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

•

MAKEMOAEMONEY
IN 1976
FULL OR PART TIME Show
ou r New 1976 L me of
Promot ional
A d vertlstng
Calend•rs and Business
Gtfls
Every bustness a
potential cuslomer
No
investment or coltect•ons
Prompt
friendly
c oop eration with 67 year old
low pressure firm rated
AAA 1
Weekly
com
m•ss l ons Liberal Bonus No
ex per ence necessa ry Wr te
John McNeer
Dept
338
Newton Mfg co
N ew ton
towa 50208

DUE to re ce nt promotton
and expans1on we have an
openmg tor a manager
tratnee 1n th•s area Rad1o
Shack Is a world l eader In
retatl elec tron iC field w1lh
our b1gges t growth Still
ahead Of us If you want to
be part ot a wrnnlng team
•ha t offers advancement
base pay wh tc h mcrf'ases
wtlh sales Ql!lnS and a
bonus plan computed on
prof I! We would like !O t alk
to you Our benefits tnclude
hospl t allzatton
life '"
surance stock an&lt;l savmgs
Investment plan
Cand•&lt;:lates wtth a 4
year degree preferred or 2
4 years of hard retail or
sates e~eper •en ce Elec
tr ontc
knowledge
not
necessary Applr can t must
be fleJCible to relocate after
tntftal traini ng period
Se le cted tnd l v l du&amp;l s wtll
train 6 12 months then be
assigned srore manager
My t op tout of 24) average
SIB 000 per year For 1n
rervlew
Cl!l ll

RADIO SHACK

M obt ! e Home
Clearance Sa l e us ed mobile
homes 8 10 12 wtdes Ph
446 1572 Bank 1 nancmg
306 If

1974 GOVERNORS Mans ton
Mobt!e home
3 br
I "
ba•hs 367 7747

16.

MOBILE home 4 m1tes from
hosp tlal on b lack top road
school bu s and mall rt 446
381 2
20 If
11

OF DOUBLE
cen trally
located 6 rooms and bath (3
bedroom s) fully carpeted
Phon e 446 0254

446-2142

An Equal Opportun tty
Employer

19 3

SAVE OFF Se ason Specta l
now !ttl March 1 W II cl ean
any Stz e L tv mg room and
hall tor S24 95 We use only
the Best Dry Foam Method
Ca ll
M tracle
Carpet
Cle antng 379 2662
19 If

4 U SED mobile homes Must
see to apprec.ate Joh nson
Mobile Homes 446 3547
20 J
TO ECONOMIZE on fuel,
underp•n your mobrle nome
and anchor tor safety
Fo,ter Mob1le Home Ser
v1ce, 446 2713, or Elmer
Sktdmor~ 446 3479
274 If
8&amp;5 MOBILE HOMES
1976 NOV A 12x60 3 br all
etectnc
1976 Nova 12x60 2 BR all
1969
1970
1968
1967
1971
1968
1959

Rt!zcrafl 1h60 1 Br
Kif 1211-H 2 Br
Style Ma r 12)(52 2 Br
FleeiWOOd 12lC60 2 Br
Concord l2x6S M H
Commodoge llx5 2 M H
Colon Jal lO KSO M H
B&amp;S MObile
Home. sates
Pt Pl eas ant W Va
231 If

SPRING VAI.J.EY
GREEN
APARTMENTS

Pets
REG IR !SH St"'tler 10 months
old house t ratned 446 2675

19 6

F EMALE
poodle puppy
bla c k 525 446 7878

113
IR !SH seller pups unreg
wks S25 367 0160 afler

--

..----.....
For Rent

8
4

16 l
-----~---

For Rent
OFFICE space for r ent
downtown Ph 446 0008
231 If

MOBILE home space at
Rodney Oh o Phone H6
20 6
3~3 4 or 4.!6 4321

~lect rrc

SILV~T~ s
LAD

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves T1l 8
Pomeroy

"Your Friendly Dealer

FULLorpartt1me w e need 10
saleswomen to Show your
fr i ends
!hIS
beauftful
product It you have a few
spare hours a week we can
he!p yau make money
Pleast! ca ll .446 9585 betw een
9 30 and 5 before Jan 28

1 _____________ :_oa

White blue vinyl tOp blue cloth interior fiJII pgwer
equip, atr T&amp; T wheel, full stereo, radial tires one
own er

•
1 2 26tp '

I'

* Reliable SeNice after the deal

ton, auto , PS,

SAVE

power facto ry air radial t1res one owner low miles

.

EXCAVAT ING
AND DOZER LARGE AND '
SMALL
SE PTIC TANKS 1
IN STALLE D
BILL'
PU L LIN S PHONE 992 2478 t
D AY OR NIGHT
I
11 11 78tp !

* We have the right deal for you

GMC Pickup

Dark green matchtng mter lor AM FM radio full
power equipment factory arr radial t i res 1 owner

Dark green wlfh matching lnt

radto body mouldmgs w s

1974 DATSUN 710 CPE. ............52695

Wagon, auto.

1974 Ford
Mustang II

4 speed trans

w h res I ts likeneww•th !ess thanS 200m lies

p~~:·. ~:~: ........$1695

low miles

I

\ USED CAR BUYS

4 Dr HT. One of the

SAV E DOLLAR S on new
l tvtng room furnitur e buy
dtrect k'om factory to vo•
256
For nformatton ph
658 6 atter 6 p m
20 3

220 1f

I

000

New '76 4 Wh . Dnve Models tn Blazer,
Suburban, '12 ton and l/4 ton P1ckups.

1974 BUICK ELECTRA

JUANITA S PoOdle Parlor
exp groom lng will do all
breeds Ph 446 7878
306 If

For MaK•mum Secunty use
Tte
Down
Anchon.
to
Protect Your M0b1l e Hom e
Complete Serv•ce Cal! Ron
Sktdmore 379 2152 or 446
17S6

461 S. 3rd
Middleport

102 C A heavy duty sprmg:; 292 6 cyl engine 15
tb 2 speed rear a)(le foam seat m trrors clean cab

Beautiful car ...............

272 If

ll lf

'8995
75 Cadillac Coupe DeVille
'7500
74 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

bulld tng ,
d erri c k

- -~--

SAVE

White with white vmyl roof whtfe leather Interior AM
FM radro rad1al tires full power (It mate Control air

- ----------·
BACKHOES ~

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

am

1972 DfEV. 2·TON C&amp;C ........... '2995

$3395

DEAD Stock removed
No
cha rge Call 245 5514 before

75 Cadillac Eldorado Cp.

----------~~3~~1c •

---..._.

HEAT
Pumps
centra l
systems refrtgeratton and
appltance service
Gall ra
Refngerat ton Co 446 ~066
272 If

-~-------------~--------

0 &amp; D TR EE Tr i mm i n!, 20 1
yea rs exp1nence I nsur ed •
free est m ates Call 992 2384 1
or (6 14) 698 7'157 A lb&amp;ny
:
1015ttc ,
---- ~ -----...---'
SEW ING MACHINE Repatrs l
service all makes 992 2284 ,
Thf' F abrtc Sh op Pomeroy
Authortzed Si nger Sales and '
Se r VIc e
We
sharpen
Sc ssors
:
J 29......!fC I

~-

1972
FORD
THUNDERBIRD

t1nted glass Clean mt

102 c ab to a x le 2 speed R axle 6 speed good 900x 20
t tres fram e reinforced V 8 eng me heater, ready to
work

Auto , 4 cyl less than
12,000 miles

AKC WESTY

KENNEL RT 141 4464824
281 If

9

8 engtne std trans

ASTRE

AND PUG PUP CIRCLE L

FLEETSIDE.~2695

H duty t•res spnngs. booster brakes step bumper V

1975
PONnAC

SWEEPER
and
sew1ng
macme repai r parts and
supplies
Ptck up and
del1very Dav is Vacuum
Cleaner ' 2 mile up Georges
Creek Rd Ph 446 0294
163 If
BOARDING,

Delv)(e cab custom v.nyl seats delu xe body
grille chr frt bumper &amp; guards H duty
H D 750x16 ttres step bumper JSO V 8 P
&amp; brak es automattc rad1o cab l1ghts co lor
moss green . new trk appearance

1973 DIEV. 1fz TON

p 8 ............

E&gt;&lt;CAVATtNG
dozer •
backhoe
and
dll c her :
Charles R Half le ld Back:
Hoe Servtce R ulland Oh io.
Phone 742 2008
•

-

iHURMAN
House F urn
Strlpptng Antiques bougtll
and sold
pickup
and
delrverv Paul Burnett 245
9479 Marlln Rose 245 95J2
2 II

Automatic, PS,

---------------

6

Custom
mldgs
springs
steenng
wl1tfe &amp;

307 If

For Sale or Trade

REMODEL I N G
Plumbing '
heallno and a ll lypes rif
general
repatr
work :
gua rant eed
20 years ex ,
per l ence
Phone 992 2409 1
5 1 tfc •

_____________

1974 DIEV. % TON FLEETSIDE '3895

Sable

BOBB I s Poodle Bou!tque
Prot essro n at groom tng by
appomtment
Ph 4J 6 1944

DAN THOMPSOI\1
FORD

- --'""""-'- ~~-- ----

C

AKC Reg COllie pups
and while 256 1267.

VACATION OVER We offer
greatest savmgs ever on
trailers
and
fo l dow n s
Guaranteed and service what
we sell 9th yea r wt!h Star
craft Cam p Conley St ar c ratt
Sales R! 62 N P! Pleasa n t
6 ,,

SEE. Fred Blaellnar, Pat Htll, Melvtn Little,
or Dan Thompson

E XCAVAT IN G dozer lo.iut:
and ba ckh oe work
sep t tc '
tanks
ins t a lled
dump .
Tru c ks and to boys for hrre
will hau l f i ll d ir t t or so li 1
lmestone and grave
Call ,
Bob or 'Roger Je ffers day
p hone 992 70 89 n lgt)t phone ,
992 3525 or 992 5232
2ll tt c;

Ct.(ANE Service
e re c: l to n 40 ft
Phone 992 5468

-- PINER
---------IDGE COLLIES

BOARDING&amp; At&lt;C PUPPIES
K &amp; P Kennels 388 8274 R!
554
m 1 east of Porter
305 If

Call Rutland, 742 2331

--

3 BR s

Charger a1r extra sharp

FOR SALE
8tcentenntal Cotns
,~915S Proof Set (6 pes)
S25 00 1975 Mint Sel 19 00 ;
1976 S1lver Proof Set (3
pes) S15 00
1976 Stiver
UNC Sel IJ pes) S8l0

----- - ~---

BR

NEW LISTING - 3 acres
on 124wlthdrlfled well and
2 mobile homes 516 500
OLDER HOME - 3 BRs

garage Sll 000
MIDDLEPORT -

2

NOT VERY OLD 130 000
THE SIG N OF KNOW
HOW IS HERE - LET US
SELL YO ~ R PROPERTY

house bath nat gas heat 2
ca r garage and garden

3

--------------

----------------

and

renovated home
good
garden land gas tvrnace
barn tn town $29 500

Buv Sale or Trade

NEW HOME or re mod eli ng by
hour or cont ra ct P hone 99 2
3511 or 992 1523 aff~r 5 p m
1 25 l21p

AS TIME GOES ON YOU

2 dr H T A1r Nice

Atr, new Ford Trade m

HO US E
'2 bed r ms
ba Jh
hardw oo d f l oo r s pane l 1ng
new ther m o pane w indows READ Y M I X CON- ~~-c
sr or m doors arum stdlng
de! l vereCI r1g111 t o your
co ncret e porchf'S new g as
p r o1ect Fast and easy Free
furnace c los e to tow n
es t tm at es
Phon e 99 2 3284
H hool
and
chu r ches
Goegle n Read y Mtx Co
$10 500
Phon e ( 6 4J 985
M ddlepo n Oh o
4145 Chester
6 30 lfc
1 20 Sip
ELWOOD BOWERS R EP AI R
Sweep er s toa ster s 1rons
HOM E
n Middl e port
3
all smal l app li anc es Lawn
bedroom s
ltvlng room
mower neMt to St ate High
d n ng roo m
1 2 k tchen
way Garage on Ro ute 7
bat/1
f ul l b as ement and
Phone 985 3825
storage area ms•de and ou t
4 16 He
Ph one 992 3 6 ~7
1 23 3tc -~-----...------- ....
SEPTIC T A NKS ' leaned
Moder n Santlatlon 992 J9Sd
2 BEDROO M m obile home
or 99 2 7349
w th J J~ ac r es of ground
9 18 rt c
Pho ne 247 2161 Letart OtitO
1 23 121C
WOU LD YOU BELIEVE 7
Bu ld an ~II sleet b uil d in g a1
1 ACRE b!g garden 5 rooms
P ol e B~rn prt ces? Golden
aMd balh hom e new dr r! !ed
Gran ! All St ee l Butldrngs
well and furnac e
n ew
R t 4 SOK 146 Waverly
bathroom 2 f re p laces good
Oh (o Phone 947 2296
loc atr on In J_etart Fa ll s
7 24 t f c
Ohto s1 soa Phone 247 385 3
1 23 121 c
0 D ELL A I nemen • loceted
beh in d
Ru!lana
G rad e
School
Tuneup
brakes
wh ee l balancing .:tlmemenl
Phone 742 700J
11 16 tf c

WILL be paying more and
more rent WHY not buy
now Here Is a ntce 3 BR
horne
bath The sldmg
roof and ca rport are near ly

8 Fteetsl de Custom Deluxe 3SO, V 8 engrne std
trans power steering &amp; brakes radm 0 S mirrors
gauges L78 t Ires Now Reduced

HIGLEY S earDer Shop
Hours 8 7 Ph 446 0002
306 "

LeSabre 4 dr Arr good care

Currency and Supplies

APPROXIMATELY 20 ac re s
abo u• one th rr d l1mber
ba l an ce d c l e an
roll tng
l and Very n ce homes i te or
w II d eve op
Water and
elec availa b le See Eskey
H II
Flatwoods Road 26
Pom eroy Ohro
l ')2 31 c:

room

$12 000
!2 ACRES

Catalina

COINS

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

baths ntce large k1fchen
pa rt basement wrt h rec R
Hot wa t e r heat
larg e
enclosed pat1o
garage

TEAFORD

refrtgeralor

r

Gal 500 • dr Sedan

.

3 BR HOME
!US! finiShed
remodel rn g
Sa l em
Sl
Rutland
Ph one 742 2306
afte r 4 p rn or see M lo B
Hufcht nson
1Q 9 t f c

local owner

2 Dr Clean

1.22 1 m o .

Real Estate

NEW 1975 DIEV. C-10 ............'3829

Notice

1

PH. 992-6173

Ph 992 3993

Dr One

4 Dr DeVIlle Really sharp Loaded

Now ac;ceptmg cltents
for bookkeeping and
tax serv1ce

LARRY LAVENDER

For Sale

RENT OR SALE
3
bedrm mob le home un
furnrsheCI utll t t es POtd on
Rl 33 1n Bu rl ngham P11one
q9 2 7751
12 31 lfc

_______

MOTORS, INC.
Ph 992 2174

FREE ESTIMATES

&amp; N day old or started
Leghorn p u!!ers Both f oor
or c age grown available
Pou l try
hous rng
and
au•oma • on
Modern
Pou ll ry
399 W
Matn
Pom eroy 992 2164
I 25 lie

For Sale

Catalina .t dr Atr one owner

Ca II 992-7537
Pomeroy, OhiD

4 10 1 mo

~ oR

-

SMITH NELSON

Pomerov Oftrce
l OS Butternut
992 334S
Formerly weed Wllolesale
Fe atunng
De lux Ze ro X Copy 5erv ce
Off i CE'
Supplte$o
Mi meograph
Su pp lres
larges t selec!ton of w ed
dtng supp tes 1n So ulh
eastern Oh o
The Prrnt 511op Complete
I Still tn bust ness tn Mtd
d rep ort )
l:l82mo

H OUSE Tra tern ear Racm e 3
BR I bath no pets 1 sm a!
chtld o k SSO d eposit $100
p l us util rt es
Pl1on e 949
20 93
I 22 ]I C
RM HO USE Wtlh garage
For more rnf orma!ton call
992 25 02
1 25 61 C

Gran Torino 4 dr One local owner

Kuhl fale Decor

Quality Pnnt Shop

2 BEDRM sma ll doubJ e wrCie
modular furntsh ed ut d llte s
patd No ctllldren or pe t s
N ea r Pomeroy Ph one 992
7017 or 992 7666
1 20 Stc

d

.C dr like new

Ltcensed
baker
and
decorator
t&lt;1tchen State Inspected

·

--------------

Lm __________ '4395 54195
74 Ford va __________ '3295 52995
73 Pontiac:-----------'2995 52595
73 Ford LID----------'3195 52795
73 Ford Gran Torino_____ '2695 $2395
72 Cadillac ----------.13695 53195
72 Opel 4 cyl._ ________ 1995 51695
72 Ford YB----------· '1895 51495
72 Pontiac YB--------· '2195 $1795
12 Buick va __________ '2195 $1995
72 LID 4 Dr. Hl------- '1995 51695
72 Dodll! 2 Dr. --------'2495 52295
71 Oldsrnobile. ________ 1995 51595
4

For Rent

CAS H paid for al l makes and
m odel s of mob ile home s
Phon e ar ea code 614 .J23
9531
4 I3 l f C

Pets

Notice

Free estimates on car pettng and mstallatton .
We 11 brmg samples to your
Rome wtth no o&amp;hgatton .
See how you can really
save
M•ke Young Manager
Sales and lnstallahon
Rt 3, Pomeroy Ohto 45769
Phone day or ntght
614 ~9'2 2206
1 14 1 mo .

20 I

NOW

75 Ford

Cakes, Baked
and Decorated
To Your Order

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

Mobile Homes For Sale

Wanted

WE WISH to eK pres s our
Stncere thanks to frtends
relattves and r'IE't9hl:lors
who gave thetr k i ndness GIN SENG Sl'i per l b Phon e
(611 ) 378 62~9
sympathy and beautiful
I 16 fC
flora! offerings When our
be loved husband and fa ther
OLD f urn t ure
1ce boxes
Wdltam Wallace Chaftn
brass beds stone tars or
passed away Spec tal thanks
complete households Wrtte
!o Dr
Rtdgway and l he
M
0
M ll er
Rt
2
nurses
of
Veterans
Pomeroy Ohio
Cal! 992
Memorta ! Hosp ta l Rev
7760
Herb ert Grate the Ewmg
10 ] 7 4
Funeral Hom e and the
Laure l Cliff H ealth Club
Madel n e Chaftn
and
Fam ll y
1 25 l!p
DAINTY AKC R eg T iny T oy
WE WISH to exp ress our
Poodles
also loy and
deepest th anks and ap
mtnlatures
silver
whtte
prec t&amp; lton for the lond ne ss
champagne 8 weeks old
shown us a1 the death of our
Wormed first shots Ph one
dear brother David Mil ls
( 61 4) 696 1297
Deepes t ! hanks to the
l 21 4!p
Sy ra cuse
Emergency
Squad fnends ne ghbors
re latrves for food flow ers
ca rd s and te ephone cal ls
Holzer Med ca l Center staff
1969 MERCURY wagon $395
Dr Harder and nurses on
Runs good
Ca I 992 3619
the second floor t h e Rev
before 2 p m
Dwtght Sav1t2 to r htS con
1 25 4t p
sol rn g words and vtstts Wtth
Dav td at home and In th e 1Y75 CHEVY 1
on 4 whee l
hosp ta l to Ewtng Funeral
drrve p ckup
Bala nce of
Ho me for etf tc tent servrces
fa ct ory war r an t y Check
and
t h e l ovely
musr c
lhtS be fo r e you buy a new
provtded by Ge r ald Pow e ll
one Phon e a f !er 5 p m or on
A I those wonderful ex
weekends 992 3196
ptess•ons will be remem
1 9 tic
ber ed gratef ul l y and may
Gods r ichest blessmgs
follow each and every one 1968 MERCURY runs good
Si sl er
Rachel McBnde
Phone (614l 985 3565
Brother the Rev Delbert S
1 25 Jtp
M liS
-197
5
DODGE
'
1
ton
PICkup
I 25 11 c
w ell equtpped 5000 m res
n ever worked Se lltn g under
WE WI SH to express ou r deep
book N e w truck commg
t hank s and apprectat on ~or
Phone 992 7210
the kt ndness shown us at the
I 22 3tc
lime of llness and death of
our beloved mother Elste
H addox To the Pomeroy 1971LTD 4 dr pb p s a c
radtal t•res
$1 995 Also
Emergency Sq u ad
Dr
1966 Mustang 2 dr lots of
Ha rder and the n ur ses of 4th
goodies 5595 Call F r es tone
floor east
Rawlmgs and
St or e 992 2238
Coats Fun eral Home Mr
1 23 61C
Mer! n Teets fo r hts co n
soltng words and for all th e
prayers fl owe r s food and 1966 CHE VROLET Ptckup
latr co ndr t to n
f trst $210
lo ve grven us fr om ~ our
takes t Phone 949 2379
ne tghbors and tr ends G op
1 23 3tc
bless all of vou
Mr
and Mrs
Waller
Morrts &amp;nd Famt l tes Mr
1962 WILLY S Jeep wagon 4
and Mrs Charle s Smrth and
wheel drive !n good con
Fam til es Mr and Mrs Dale
dtlton Cal! 992 226 8 after 5
Goodn t t e and F arn 1 es Mr
pm
and Mr s George Haddox
I 20 6tp
and Famd es
......
I 25 ltp 3 ~ TON ptck up h eavy duty
sprmgs Phone 992 7017
I 20 5tc

when I was 17?

We "really and truly loved each other" too, and he made
all sorts of promises to leave h1s wife Then one n1ght one of the
kids saw Ull together and told h1s mother
•
I have not seen or heard from my' true love smce
My word to AHW ts that she get out NOW before shes hurt
any worse - BEEN THERE

NCOM E T AX
pre~ared
Federa l an d st ate laxes
W I be done by app! only
P ease p hone 992 2272 or see
M r s Wanda Eb 1n L au r e!
Cl f f Rd Pom eroy
12 31 JO!c

PARA SOL
Bou!tque
an
nounc: es
P er manent
Spec a l s I Unfp erm r eg $20
now $17 50 R eg $17 SO now
1 25 ltc
S15 Reg $15 n6w S13 50
Spec q ls from Jan 20 1h hru
IN MEMORY of my husbpnd
31st L oca te d next !o Ska l e
Gntf Archer who passed
A Way Roller Rmk. Open
away Aug J 1974
Tue s thru Saturday Phone
Owner
( 614 )
985 4141
Th e pearly gates were opened
Sa ndra
( Tru ssell\ Ke rn s
A g ent l e votce satd
Come
I 18 l2!c:
And wt!h tar ewe l! unspoken
H e gently entered home
.,
Fo r sad and lonely years have
passed

W SH to thank Dr Teel and
the
staff
of
Vetera n s
Memorial Ho sp1!al for the
u.cellent care I recetved
durJng my hospital zatton
Spec al thanks also for ! h e
ones remembenng me 1n
praver Also spectal thanks
to all my re l atPo~es and
frtends who sen t cards and
flowers and for the food
after I returned home
Helen Kennedy

......

j

YOUR GAIN
WAS

BABYSITT ER needed In my
home p r eferably l tve 1n
Phone 147 2821 a tier 6 p m
1 25 4lp

MAKE SURE you get every
posstb l e deduct to n thts year
Have y o ur Federal and
State In come Tax re tu rn by
an ac c ountarrt Phone 992
6173
1 21 52tc

Loved and sorr owful y
m•ssed by Wt f e
Mabel
daugh te r s
lrts
Aldtne
Dona
and grandchildren

S•nce m y g reat so rr ow fell

Business Services

NET IRED or seml ret rred
lady 10 l tve 1n r ree room
and boa rd and smatt wages
for !t ght dultes See a1 308
Page St Mtddleporl Ohio
1 t life

PM C Mob le Home 12 x 52 2
bedrm
wtth
a•r
con
dt t rontng washer and dryer
I W ILL beg vtngptanolesson s
metal storage build ng
1n my home startmg Feb 1
furnts hed or unfurntshed
~or
rnformat ton ca 1 992
Fo r more mformallon ca l l
3178
992 7523
12 18 sore
I 20 61C

da ys

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Now uran1• the mcled l•tt•n
S700 for 50 word mmnl1um
~
~ to form the 1urpr1se answer, u
Ea ch add 11ronat word 3
cents
by the
BLIND ADS
Add I rona! 2Sc Charge per
A dver! rsement
.....
OFFICE HOURS
(Antw~rt ~ood•Y)
B 30 a m IO 5 00 p m
Oat y 8 30a m 101 2 00 Noon
Jumblr• EXERT PIECE LADING WEDGED
Salurday
l'r•lrrd•y 1
Answ•r Wll~n! you maghf f1nd younelf uhf.'n
JOu ·r~ fiiiGRtloUy embarraut'dIN' DEEP WATER'
I N LOVING memory of our
Clear h usband ann fnth Pr
Char l es
Robert
W ne
brenner
who departed

Help Wanted

Notice

SAVE
OUR LOSS

'

~-,r-~~*******************

IN MEMORY of Lawr~n c e
Lundy who passed awav
.:1 an 26 1971
11 h as been f1vfi year s SIMc e
our loved one went away
we remember and miss htm
s t tll t oday
M rssed bY lovrng wife and
ch1ld ren

5 II
CR /\ DBUR Y elf apt
l SI
l loo r su •able tor 1 person
d ep r eQ ulil l l t~ S pd Ph
'16 0957
I II

Rent Starts At
$129 Per Month
Apartments
Ava1lable
1 Bedroom F urn
One Bedroom Apt.
Two Bedroom Apt

rates

306 If

---------------

MOBILE home space 1 m le
from HM C Ph 446 3805
20 I I f

20 6
TRAILER 3 miles f ro m town
Ph 446 0851 446 1052

20 6

FU RNI SHED apart nent all
utrl ttes pad ad ul ts only
Ph 446 952 3

296 If

-------!:o L ( E PING Rotlm
rate Gallla Hol e!

weekly
203 II

_._ ....

Grande,

183
--- ---- ...... ---

TRAILER SPA CE
Harrisburg Rd
hookup available
9190

P S

PB , a•r con

1914 CHEVROLET 2 dr hardtop a uto P S P 8 a1r
1913 OLDS 98 4 dr hardtop fully equopped
1913 IMPALA CHEVROLET, 4 dr hardtop P S,
brak es and a rr
1973 PLYMOUTH Grand Coupe2 dr hardtop auto

PS

atr

and P B

1972 FORD 4 dr hardtop auto

P S, brake s and a tr

1972 DODGE Demo 2 dr auto P S
1972 CHEVROLET Nova V 8 standard
t97t CHEVROLET Chevelte 2 dr hardtop standard 6
cyl
19!1 CADILLAC De v 111e Sedan fully equ1pped
19!0 DODGE SWING,.ER , 2 dr hardtop V 8 standard
!972 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT, 4 wheel drove
1974 FORD P1ckup FlOO

For Rent

2 BR MOBI L E hom e for Sl OO J, 1 BEDROOM tra1ter roc. a ted m
br mob d e home $125 446
Cheshire Flh 367 050 5
01 75
16 If
267 If

3 RM FURN ap1 dep req
602 Fourth Ave 446 2796

EFF A PT al Rto
S75 Ph 446 0157

auto

dttronlng

For Rent

For
tnformation
tnqu1re at office or
ph. 446-1599.
Located % mile west
of Holzer Hosptlal on
Rt. 35

Room s wee!c.ty
Park ce ntra! Hole!

4 Qr

Ivan Bowman, Owner

OPEN DAILY

S LE~PIN G

Phone 669-3351
1974 MERCURY

on Kerr
Ut l tl •es
Call 245 ,

18 J
12x60 MOBILE Home adults
m•le from hosprtal Ad ults
Oep req Ph &lt;146 38V5
14 If

2 BR MOBILE Hom e co unty
wi'ller all uti! pa 1d Ph 446
TR I I L ER space s m C tC Sh re
0294
Ph or e 367 76JJ
10 12
14 'f

AVAILABLE
GA LLIP O LI S f1nest apt for
tease Color TV
gas
ce ntral heat
cen t ral atr
condtl•oned
Mob1le home
overlook ng fiver Sma ll etf
apartment on e person t wo
bedroom turn Ish ed house
PhOnf! 446 0338
275 If

g floor
FURN 3 rm apt
re t 6 mos yr l ease $15 0
Utll l l leS pd 4th and Cedar
446 0952
16 If
N ICE c ountry home fru 1t and
garden Wrtte Box 393 c o
Gallrpolts Tr i bune
16 !f
-~------------

NEW Regency
In c apart
ments 2 BR Ph 675 5104
675 538G 675 2608 S119 per
78 If
month Sand Htlf Rd
Pt
Pleasant w va
2 TR A ILER spaces located m
4tf
Cl"jeshlre ready for hook up
Phone 367 0505
302 If BRADBURY furn1sheCI ef
ftcrency apt No 4 a~allabl e
trrst of mont h Adults only
no pets ~ 729 Second Ave
.446 0957
30.4 If

LIGHT housekeepmg
Par k Centra l Hotel

room

-------------TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARtMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhtluses
1'12 Baths
Pay Oply One Ultltty
Addtson, Ohto
For lnformatton
Call Sl'ltrley Adktns

367-72$0

~--------- ----

LOW weekly and m l}nthly
rates. a l Libby Hotel 446
1743
MOBILE home sp&amp;ce for re n t
446 0008
237 I f
LARGE rtlom fa cmg parto;
l t ght
housekeeping
elevator
tact! 111es
tor
rei! red pers on Park Centra l
Hot el
96 !f

�.......,

24- The Sunday Tunes. Sentmei,Sunda} , Jan 25, 1976

~ For

Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
WANT ADS

~l!!J~!1~&lt;r lkJ ~-li.J .-1 ,_.
Unatramble thts~ four Jumbi('S.
one letter to earh square, to
form four ordinary words

INFORMATION
DEADliNES
5
P M
Day
Before
Publ ic a t ion
Monday DeatJi mc 9 a m

~

Cancel! atr on

'

m

REGULATIONS

The Publisher reserves the
rant tn edt! or nnect any !!i dS
deemed
ob ect•onal
Tn e
publtsher
w !I
not
be
respons•b!e for more than one

I I

"fprrect msertlon

r

,

r

RATES

For want Ad Sennce
5 ce n ts oer word one ins ertiO n
M1ntmum Charge $1 00

:1

ILURBIAj
1

Corrections

W•!! be acce p ted untd 9 a
for Day of Pubt•cat•on

STYTE

1

~

14 ce nts p er wo rd lhree
consecutive •nse rt. ons
26 ce n t s pe r word stx co n
secur ve nser!rons
25 Per Cent Drscoun• on pa •d
ads and ads pad w l th rn 10

'IOU CAN EAT W ITH

IT E.VEN IF IT&amp;NOT
ON THE TA!!ILE

I

CHERAG

I:==:b.::::£1======:L:::d'_::""~'~'estH.
V

V

1'--=Priii::..=Uit.:..:;SIII=ISI=ANSW!II-""---'IIen~

l

above cartoon

r xx x xr J

I

In Memory

WIN AT BRIDGE

th 5 life

Signal void in Blackwood
NORTH fD J

24

•AK J98
¥ A J 32

•

+K 8

o~o'K 5

\lEST
• 53

EAST
• 10 4 2

·--

Norlh Eas t

Sout h

3•

IA
Pass
4 N T Pass
7 'I
Pass

2¥
6 •

to h1s partner s Blackwood
But h1s m1ssmg su1t happened
to be clubs and West had bid
clubs So South JUmped nght
to SI X diamonds to show one
ace and an apparently 1mpor
It easy for North to bid seven
hearts and 1t was JUSt as easy
for South to wrap up 13 tncks
' \ .:Od " ''i •

-:. ""'•OU..:.

~IN •• '~ IOIWN~'&gt;.IiiiJ!!:::

A Mame reader wants to
know 1f It ts ever correct to he

Both \ ulneooble
\\est

simply respond five diamonds

tant vmd
Thts six dwmond btd made

" 65
4 J 9
· . "• Q
. 107ti2
• A Q J 10 8 7 2 • 9 6 4 3
SOLfH
A Q 76
¥KQ 10987
+A 54 3

Pas s
Pas s
Opemng lc~d - A ""

m respond1ng to a Blackwood
four notrump call
There are times when
everyone has felt that he has
overbtd and that he wants to
discourage h1s partner b}
respondmg to show one ace
less than he actually holds

Pass

but we don t recommend th1 s
procedure If you do respond
wrong and do m1ss a slam

By Os\\ald &amp; James Jacoby

When yo ur partner uses your partner
Blackwood and you happen to forgn. e you

Will

never

be \iOJd of some su1t you

sltould

some way of

(Do you have a quest1on
showmg that you have that for the experts? Wnte AsH
spec1f1c f1rst round control
the Jacobys care of fh1s
The Jacoby method of newspaper The Jacobys will
handlmg such a s1tuat10n IS to answer mdmduat questiOns
b1d SI X not fl\ e m the sUIt you If stamped self addressed
would normally respond m 1f envelopes ar.e enclosed The
you consider that your vo1d IS most mterestmg quest1ons
a valuable one
w1ll be used rn fhrs column
If South were vmd of either and will rece1ve cop1es of
ha\e

FABR I C SA LE Brggesl and
Best sate Stnce openmg of
our busmess All mater, al tn
shop on sa le one w eek only
Monda y Janu ar y 26 lhru
Sat
J an 31 Ftrsl qua lity
krut s s•art a t Sl 98 per yard
Open 9 a m
to 7 p m
Monday !hru Fr tday- and 9
am 10 s p m Saturday
Carolina Fabrics on Route 7
one ha l f rrple n o rth o f
Ches ter Oh o Henry and
Mary Hun ler owners
1 25 6tp
SHOO TIN G Match at Cor n
Hollow Gun Club 1 mile
pa st
Mt l es
Cemete ry
Rutland
1 p m
Sun d ay
January 25
I 25 He

spades or diamonds he would JACOBY MODERN)

Jan

24

1972

Dear Bob Just an other year
And we have m •sse d you dear
But your memory ts as dear
today
As the hour you passed away
Thai memo r y IS every day
And the years ca nno t take t ha t

away

Generation Rap
B) llt'lc·n and ~lll' Botti'!

That shoc k t hat I r ecetved that

dav

! S\11 remember well
I oflen s 1 and th mk of h tm

When I am al alone
For memor tes 1S the only
fr end
Tha t gr ef c an cal tis own
Ltk e 1vy and the wdhered oak
When al! thtngs decay
My lov e tor htm wtl still keep
green
And never fad e away
Sadly m sse d by wte
Eltzabeth
25 li e
I N MEMORY of John C
Proffdt who passed !hts I fe
January 24 1974
A precto us one from us has
gone
A VOICE' we OVE'd IS Sl tll
A place s vacant In our home
Whtch never can be fli ed
Sadly mtssed by hts Wtfe
Pearl
Chtldren
and
Grandchi l dren
1 25 ll c
--.~

----------•

Card of Thanks

1 25 11p

What A ''Mlxed Marriage'''

DEAR RAP
We have a' mLxed marnage' I m male she's female'
I'm begmnmg to thmk men and women weren t meant to hve
together
What I like, she hates What I hate, she 'loves ' That
mcludes everythmk from dancmg to !JShmg tnps
She won't even cook the food I like She goes for Chinese
restaurants I like Italian shes a sk1er, I'm a golfer Forget
mov1esorTV' She thinks my fnends are crude and I won't tell
you how I feel about hers'
We don't even talk the same language, and I notiCe most
married people are the same At parties men are m one group
women m another At home- she's bored With • my day, and
I'm turned off w1th hers, so It's mostly qutet
Itell you, H and S, sex JSn t enought to make you want to
hve With someone the rest of your life I was happier m college
where I bunked With three other guys and saw g~rls only on
dates, etc
No wonder mamage Is gomg out of style 1 - BORED,
TIED DOWN AND READY TO SPLIT
DEAR BTRTS
Wbo says marriage Is going out of style• Speak for
yourseU, man, but don't assume ALL couples are as
mismatched as you two - SUE

+++
NOTE FROM HELEN Marriage Isn't for everyone Funoy
how often bachelor-types don't realize this until they try It
Also strange how two such different persons could ever have
gotten together You evidently didn't talk much before the
wedding either 1

+++
RAP
The editor of our school newspaper called me and asked
me to be one of hiS editors I knew he was gomg to do th1s , and
I'd been trymg to makeup a refusal - 1even wrote 1t down
But then I had to suck my fool m my mouth and accept the
job ' Now I'm chicken to qwt after sa)'tng yes What should I
do ? - NO I CHICKEN
DEAR CHICKEN
Keep editing' It's good experience and not all that dif·
flcult - HE"EN

+++

NOTE FROM SUE If you really hate the Job, suggest a better
writer to replace you The way I figure, why stay wllh
something you dlollke when someone else might enjoy 1t?

+++
RAP
This is to " Almost HIS Wife' who IS havmg an affa1r With
roamed man for whom she prevwusly baby-sat I wonder tf
this guy IS the same one I had an affrur w1th three years ago,

a

+++

SHOO TIN G Match
Sunday
Jan 25 12 30 p m J us! off
Rt 7 by pass Sponsored by
the Luc k y 7 G un Cl u b near
Ro ck Sprtngs Ce met e ry
Ca ll 992 5335 fo r f urther
details
I 22 Jlp

Wanted To Buy
WANTED old upnght p tan os
rn any condltlon Will pay
$10 each F Jrst t oor only
Wrde g1vtng direction s to
Box 188
Wtl len Ptano Co
Sa rd 1S 01110 43946
1 2 1 101p
H ALL S Sa l vage Ol d autos
with frames and bodtes wtt h
or w llh ou!
motors
$1
hundred Ttn 50 hundred
Wtll buy met;;~l s and scrap
tron On old Rt 33 rust
across
f rom
Grueser s
Ch1pper
Monday through
Fr1day
9
tllf 4 p m
Saturday 9 1 II noon
1 21 lfc
U S

CO I N 5 Curr ency Ca ll
Rog er Wamsley Rutland
Ohio 742 233 1
1 25 1tc

WANTED old upngh! ptanos
1n any c ond l! ron Wtll pay
S10 each Ftrsl f loor only
Wrtre g1vtng dlrecttons t o
Witten Ptano Co
Box 188
Sard is Ohro 43946
1 25 IOtp
HAY Ph one Greg Roush 992
7583 Syracuse Oh to
1 20 6! p
DEA LER S
n scrap
tron
metals 1unk autos R der s
Sav age Phone 992 5468
1 2 29!p

-------------Auto Sales

--------

---

'INCOME

1974 SKYLINE Mob ile Ho me
2 bedrooms b ue and whtt e
Phone 949 2860
1 2J 6! c

TR A ILE R spa c e
J•
m ile
nor t h of Metgs H tgh Sc hoo !
o n old R t JJ Phon e 992 294 1
1 25 li e
1 B EDRM traile r
112 1

1971
350
RA LLY
N o va
standard 4 cra ga r mags
Con t acl 9d9 26J6
1 20 SIC

T ax
ServiCes
Fe deral and state ta xes 19J 1 CHEVROLET Ptck up
Good con d llto n Call 747
Phon e 992 7228 or see
2991
Walla ce R uss etl Bradbury
I 20 7!c

Ph one 992
1 16 I C'

HOU SE rn Rulland

SBS B

Ca !! 992
I 4 I 1c

S TEREO r ad o
mode r n
destgn am tm radr o 8 tra ck
! ape com btnat on Balance
S98 10 o r terms Ca ll 992
396 5
1 20 t t c
1965 FO RD L TD N ew 12 ga
W nches ter 37 A S ngle st1o!
Phone 742 2359
I 13 761p

TRAILER space t or r en t
phv ale lot m the co untry
Phon e ( 614 ) 98 5 4210
1 25 41p

H OS P I T A L bed ltke n ew a ll
postlto ns Phon e 992 2826 or
992 5565
I 25 Me

H

ONE bedrm apartm e nt all GOOD hay for sale Sl t;&gt;ate
e lec Pomeroy Home and
Phone 742 3108
Leadtng
Auto
600 E
Matn 51
Cree~ Road
Pomeroy
1 25 41p
1 25 61 c
6RM HOU SEto rqu c k sa te n
F'REE RENT A T VI L LAGE
Lelart Falls A l so poodle
MANOR
IN
MID
pups
for sale
che ap
OLE PORT We are so sure
Wa lla ce Haynes restden ce
t ha i you wtll lov e our
second house on le f t after
apartments that we g tve vou
you pass And re w Cross
two weeks RENT FRE E
Farm
Just pay your St&gt;curl! y
1 25 3tp
depos rand stay six mon ths
an d I he f tr st 2 weeks s fr ee
1973
PORTAB L E
Stnger
You wtll en10Y mon thly
Sew tng mach 1ne
Good
leases all e!ecl r• c 1 vm g
c ond Jt on S90 Phone 99 2
carpe tt ng
rang e
a nd
3844 afT er 5 p m
ref rr geralor
f ree !rash
1 21 4IC
p ckup cab le TV ( opltona l )
a n d l a undr y
f ac 1 l tes
ANT IQ UE Vtclortan Lo ve
Conven i ent to shopptng on
seat - eltcellen! cond lion
Th rd and Mtll rn Mtd
SISO
Portabl e
Hoover
d l eport VILLAGE MANOR
washer and dryer harvest
tS yours tor o ne bedroom
gold good condition S150
apartments slar!tng at $104
P o rtable
dtshwa~rer
monthly plus elec We pay
avocado good cond on
for e\lery !h ng else See the
$50 Phone 992 5236 or 99 2
Manager
a!
R t v e r slde
59 10
Aptrtments or call 992 3273
1 21 8tp
Thts offer w tl! end soon so
move In now and save SSS$
GA S h ea rtng s t ov e wtth blower
10 23 !lc
tor sale S15 c oppe no ne
range hood Phone (6 14) 985
AND 4 RM t urn tshed and
-4222
unfurn•shed apts Phone 992
1 25 4rp
5434
11 9 fc TWO hardro ck ml!pl e t wtn
beds and mattresses A lso
COUNTRY
Mob ! e
Home
match ,ng double dre sser
Park Rr 33 ten miles north
$175 Kttcnen t able with 6
of Pomeroy Large lots w th
ma ! ch l na
c hair~
nP.w
ccncre•e pattos s idewalks
con d lho n $85
10 speed
runn ers and o ff street
AMF Scorcher B ic ycle
parktng Phone 992 7479
excellent condlt on
S60
12 J 1 t fc
Phone 992 5606
1 25 6\c

BED dre ss er manresses
Salem map le ftnlsh good
condtt on Want S200 Phon e
992 5833
1 23 4tp
BE D blankets and spreads
m tcrophone Gtr ! s b k e
pla rn gut!ar elec ho! p l ate
Phone
2 burner dress er
742 2078
1 23 2tc
f! RC O H ef t fi RC w eld ng
rnach n e new e le c
al l
accessor es tn clu ded Phon e
9923 110
1Q 28 I f(
TWO 14x7 slot mag~ 41• b c
Ford
mopar
Exce len!
co ndt!ton $40 Phone 992
72 10 .........
1 22 4tc
PACE 123A CB radto t urner
pow er mtke All like n ew
$140 Phone 992 5616
1 22 41p
1975 YAMAHA 360 MX E~t
ce ll ent condd tOn
Phon e
( 614) 985 3301
1
61 c

n

MAPLE
Twin
beds and
dresser w th maf!ress and
box spnngs S200 Ltk e new
Phone 992 2627
...
......_
I 2~ 4t c

______ _

1970 350 JOHN Deere dozer
new engine Jransm rsslon
steenn g cl utches and under
car r ag e roll ca nopy 6 11
blade S6 500 Phone (614 )
985 3594
I 18 71p
1964 10 10 DOZER
w nch
canopy
6 fl
blade a l l
rebuilt S5 ooo Phone (6 14)
985 3594
1 18 7tp
,__

____ _

COA L I m es tone and all types
of salt and rock sal! tor tee
and snow removal
Ex
ce lstor Salt Works
East
Mam Sf
Pom eroy Ohto
Phone 992 J891
12 7 lfc
~------------

.....

MODERN destgn stereo 8
track tape
am fm rud to
combrnal •on Balance S96 60
or ! erm s Call 992 3965
1 7 lfc
COAL FO~ SALE C/\B Coa l
company 1 mile ndrth of
Cheshtre on Rt 7 Ptck your
own S20 per ton Open 6 days
per week or call l l 1J J 367
1330 'or f urther mfor mat ton
1 78tc

a

Pomeroy

8 Pass_ Sta Wagon Sharp Air

I 12 t mo.

lARRY WHOBREY
PUBLIC
ACCOUNTANT

Blown
Insulation ServiCes
Blowrf tnto Walls &amp; Att1cc

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING §OFF ITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS
S*acuse Oh1o

Rill Estate for Sale
J BR Br ick hdm e 6 yrs 21 ~
balhs garage on 2 8 acres
on paved ro ad near Forked
Run S• a•e Forest
Ph one
(6 14) 667 3787 S38 000
I I 5 27 l p
3

BEDRM
home
tust
ftntshed remodeltng Salem
St Rulland Pt1one 742 2306
after 4 p m or see M to B
Hut c htson
9 23 !fc

HOUSE on L inCO l n Hgts 2
bedrm
large k tchen full
bas ement exce llenl buy for
SB 900 Wtlh n ew turn lure
on y 510 JOO Phone 992 7648
1 6 26tc

VIrgil B Sr Brol&lt;or
119Mechonlc Pomeroy 0

Phoneffl 3325
20 ACRES - 2 houses one
new 3 BRs 2 baths stove
barn

farm pond S31 000
RUTLAND 8

---

new J UST A LOW $8000
5 YEARS OLD &amp; over looks
the va lle y 3 BR
ba th
d ning R hard wood floors
full basement
abou t 3 .&amp;
acre s 19 500

A MONEY MAKER - Live
1n the l arge 4 BR apart
menta nd ren t the 2 smal ler
fu rn ished apartments ( all
are alway s rf'nt ed) This IS
a brick w ith low upkeep
and has space tor a large

garden S22 000
FOR
THE
LARGER
FAMILY 4 BR 1'1&gt;
baths lovely new cab inets
In the k1tchen coal or N
gas heat full basement
with $hewer Walk to shop

$8 500
REFRESHINGLY
ROOMY - 4 n1ce BRs

992 2259 or 992 2568

hot wa ter heat mod k1l
full basement
vlew of
n ver S29 500

MASSIVE - 10 rooms 2
lull baths mod k1t wood
burning fireplaces gas
furnace f1sh pond and db!

bath mod k•f
gas fur
nacto f ull ba se m ent and
garden S 17 500

COUNTRY

HOME

-

Strout~

157 ACRES -

Really

NO

tll -

72 a

3 BR

ranc h mod kitchen built
In elec range, dishwasher.
refr igerator Fovr trailer
lot s w wa ter &amp; sewage
hookup close to new mme
area $40 000 00

NO t46 - 3 BR all elec
home fully carpeted, full
basement 2 acres S25,600

Have buyer for lot on
nver. Do you have
one? Call us.

3

BRs
gas furnac e bath
alummum sldtng on one
acre S25 000

Gooo older

house bath .4 BR s wood
burning tlreplaces porch
barn and some t•mber

BEAT INFLATION BUY
NOW SELL I HER

1

V 8 88 2 Dr

804 W Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours Call
992-7133
CONTACT
Lots Pautey
Branch Manager

HT

A~r

one loca l. owner

70 Maverick_ _________ sggs
6 cyl 2 dr

R&amp;J COINS
Roger Wamsley
l2Jlmo .

MANY MORE

Open Eventngs Ttl6·00
Except Thurs and Sat. Ttl5:00

Phone
992·2196

.

1975 DfEVROLET SUBURBAN .. !&amp;895

$4 7g5

sharpest cars on our •
lot •••.••••••••••..••••.•.••••....•••..•.•••• ,•••••.•

Red &amp; whrte flntsh double air load ed wtth every Ct,ev
oot1on low mdeaQe never titled Co Demo
~~l~~tr Qver 18 000 00 SALE PRICE U89S

1970 Ford Torino
1974
DATSUN 260-2

:a::. ~-~~: ....... ~1295

Auto , a1r cond ,
chrome wheels,

1971 Dodge Polara

1975 PINTO MPG. ...................s2995
Wh tt e 2 dr

Local 1 owner automat•c blk vr nyl tnt tnm sr lver
fm•sh good ttres radto rea l economy Book Value
Pnce $287.5 00 - Clearance

1975 DIEV. ESTATE WAGON .......'6295

1969 Ford Mustang
Auto PS , PB
'1095
1974 Pontiac Gran Prix

Dark red simulated wood tnm 3 seat fully equ 1pped
wtth every Chell opt•orr low mtles new tttle boss s
wl1e car

Slicker S7300 00 SALE PRICE 16295

1974 PLY. CUDA .....................52695

$AVE

Dark maroon frn1 sh blk bucket v1nyl seats rad1o V 8
eng rne automa t rc power steer mg good ftres a
sportsman s dream

NEW-4-Wheel Dnve Trucks In Stock

)2995
;

3A

PB, local owner

BRADFORD Auctioneer
Complete S~ rv tc e
Phone i
949 2487 o r 949 2000 Racine ,
Ohro Crill Bradford
~

------------~--~t~0~9~1~1c~ ;

... fltlte for Slle
"R:""M HOUSE bath

2 acre
full basem~nt util i ty room
buill I n porch
garage
Phone 99 2 7733
12 30 uc

-------------HOU SE in Rufland 8 rms

full and v, bath attache&lt;:~
oar age extra workshop and
garage
remodeled": large
garden
space
Ward s
restdence
Salem
S)
~ulland
2 lots S14 500
Phone 742 U37
t 21 61c

______ _

3 11 ACRES building site In
Bashan
Water and gas
$5 000 Phone Chester (614)
985 4245
I 25 4tp
LOT
Fairview Hgts
With
sepllc tank and water tap

S2 000 Phone 1614 1 985 41l3
evenlnos

7 RM HOUSE on 30 acres m
country
Back of Letart
01"110 Phone 247 2286
1 25 6tc

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
992-2126

I
I
I
I

AM FM radio full

'6295
73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

I
I
I

I

'4795
72 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

II

I

Wh•fe w1fh brown vmyl roof, brown leather lnt T&amp;T
wheel AM FM radto radial hres power &amp; air

'3895

II
I

RETAIL
MANAGER TRAINEE

Pomerov

I

Open Eves. Tll6-Til5 p.m. Sat.
"You 11 Like Our Quauty way ot Uotng Business"
See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burns
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvtll Keebaugl&gt;

1
1
1

L-----------~~~----~
A,uto Sales
1974 AMC Hornet hatchback
auto
v 6 a i r cond
exc
cond pr tce d to sell Ph 675
5272

IS 6

-72--------CH E v 6 cyl Step van

GERMAN
Shepherd pup
reddiSh orange collar In
11icinlty of 707 Third .446
7397

19 1

oood
motor
hres body, etc
make Ideal service tru ck or
small motor home '1 795
Will trade 256 14 56
156

--------.........-----6V F 750 FO R tractor nearly

Auto Sales
1973 NOVA SS

Ph

446 J712

- - --- -1973 P.LYMOUTH Duster
-

~

19 3

~-- --

Wlll

tilkt best offer 245 5089
new
sleeved
e ng ine
- - - - --- ~ 9 3
complete sendee records ..L 1970 OPEL good condrtlon
good 9 x 20 tires 5 spd
S700 Ph 446 4627
forward 2 sod
R E duel
20 6
!.tep tank&amp; saddle t anks
goocl radio air horns West -~-- - ---~----o- 13
PORD
RANGER
XL
T
PS
Coast m•rrors
ST air
PB arr
R tires thrush
brakes S2 295 also 40 tt
pip es t opper $3 200 379
slrdlng tandem trailer good
2196
ttret plywood line a cargo
hooks
S2 295
gooct 30'
... ~ .... ~--~-- 403~
1tot11t trllltr Sl ~o ftlltd
with r\'IIXId hiY ~5c a bale 69 CH EV Vln custom In
62 Ford cab and chassis
ter l or
shsg
c~ rpe r, ng
good eng tne end t tr es S595
throughout mag wheels
2l6 U56
4~6 3632

........ __ -

15 6

_....

!6 6

BOWMAN AUTO SALES

Pomeroy, Ohio Ph. 992-2174

Wanted To Do

Wanted To Do
TONY S Decor&lt;urng painting
wa ) l papermg paneling
Free esltm ales 67 5 5689
53 !f

Mobile Homes for Sale

20 I TR I STATE

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
C.dilloc Otd•moblle
GMAC F1nancma Available

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

•

MAKEMOAEMONEY
IN 1976
FULL OR PART TIME Show
ou r New 1976 L me of
Promot ional
A d vertlstng
Calend•rs and Business
Gtfls
Every bustness a
potential cuslomer
No
investment or coltect•ons
Prompt
friendly
c oop eration with 67 year old
low pressure firm rated
AAA 1
Weekly
com
m•ss l ons Liberal Bonus No
ex per ence necessa ry Wr te
John McNeer
Dept
338
Newton Mfg co
N ew ton
towa 50208

DUE to re ce nt promotton
and expans1on we have an
openmg tor a manager
tratnee 1n th•s area Rad1o
Shack Is a world l eader In
retatl elec tron iC field w1lh
our b1gges t growth Still
ahead Of us If you want to
be part ot a wrnnlng team
•ha t offers advancement
base pay wh tc h mcrf'ases
wtlh sales Ql!lnS and a
bonus plan computed on
prof I! We would like !O t alk
to you Our benefits tnclude
hospl t allzatton
life '"
surance stock an&lt;l savmgs
Investment plan
Cand•&lt;:lates wtth a 4
year degree preferred or 2
4 years of hard retail or
sates e~eper •en ce Elec
tr ontc
knowledge
not
necessary Applr can t must
be fleJCible to relocate after
tntftal traini ng period
Se le cted tnd l v l du&amp;l s wtll
train 6 12 months then be
assigned srore manager
My t op tout of 24) average
SIB 000 per year For 1n
rervlew
Cl!l ll

RADIO SHACK

M obt ! e Home
Clearance Sa l e us ed mobile
homes 8 10 12 wtdes Ph
446 1572 Bank 1 nancmg
306 If

1974 GOVERNORS Mans ton
Mobt!e home
3 br
I "
ba•hs 367 7747

16.

MOBILE home 4 m1tes from
hosp tlal on b lack top road
school bu s and mall rt 446
381 2
20 If
11

OF DOUBLE
cen trally
located 6 rooms and bath (3
bedroom s) fully carpeted
Phon e 446 0254

446-2142

An Equal Opportun tty
Employer

19 3

SAVE OFF Se ason Specta l
now !ttl March 1 W II cl ean
any Stz e L tv mg room and
hall tor S24 95 We use only
the Best Dry Foam Method
Ca ll
M tracle
Carpet
Cle antng 379 2662
19 If

4 U SED mobile homes Must
see to apprec.ate Joh nson
Mobile Homes 446 3547
20 J
TO ECONOMIZE on fuel,
underp•n your mobrle nome
and anchor tor safety
Fo,ter Mob1le Home Ser
v1ce, 446 2713, or Elmer
Sktdmor~ 446 3479
274 If
8&amp;5 MOBILE HOMES
1976 NOV A 12x60 3 br all
etectnc
1976 Nova 12x60 2 BR all
1969
1970
1968
1967
1971
1968
1959

Rt!zcrafl 1h60 1 Br
Kif 1211-H 2 Br
Style Ma r 12)(52 2 Br
FleeiWOOd 12lC60 2 Br
Concord l2x6S M H
Commodoge llx5 2 M H
Colon Jal lO KSO M H
B&amp;S MObile
Home. sates
Pt Pl eas ant W Va
231 If

SPRING VAI.J.EY
GREEN
APARTMENTS

Pets
REG IR !SH St"'tler 10 months
old house t ratned 446 2675

19 6

F EMALE
poodle puppy
bla c k 525 446 7878

113
IR !SH seller pups unreg
wks S25 367 0160 afler

--

..----.....
For Rent

8
4

16 l
-----~---

For Rent
OFFICE space for r ent
downtown Ph 446 0008
231 If

MOBILE home space at
Rodney Oh o Phone H6
20 6
3~3 4 or 4.!6 4321

~lect rrc

SILV~T~ s
LAD

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves T1l 8
Pomeroy

"Your Friendly Dealer

FULLorpartt1me w e need 10
saleswomen to Show your
fr i ends
!hIS
beauftful
product It you have a few
spare hours a week we can
he!p yau make money
Pleast! ca ll .446 9585 betw een
9 30 and 5 before Jan 28

1 _____________ :_oa

White blue vinyl tOp blue cloth interior fiJII pgwer
equip, atr T&amp; T wheel, full stereo, radial tires one
own er

•
1 2 26tp '

I'

* Reliable SeNice after the deal

ton, auto , PS,

SAVE

power facto ry air radial t1res one owner low miles

.

EXCAVAT ING
AND DOZER LARGE AND '
SMALL
SE PTIC TANKS 1
IN STALLE D
BILL'
PU L LIN S PHONE 992 2478 t
D AY OR NIGHT
I
11 11 78tp !

* We have the right deal for you

GMC Pickup

Dark green matchtng mter lor AM FM radio full
power equipment factory arr radial t i res 1 owner

Dark green wlfh matching lnt

radto body mouldmgs w s

1974 DATSUN 710 CPE. ............52695

Wagon, auto.

1974 Ford
Mustang II

4 speed trans

w h res I ts likeneww•th !ess thanS 200m lies

p~~:·. ~:~: ........$1695

low miles

I

\ USED CAR BUYS

4 Dr HT. One of the

SAV E DOLLAR S on new
l tvtng room furnitur e buy
dtrect k'om factory to vo•
256
For nformatton ph
658 6 atter 6 p m
20 3

220 1f

I

000

New '76 4 Wh . Dnve Models tn Blazer,
Suburban, '12 ton and l/4 ton P1ckups.

1974 BUICK ELECTRA

JUANITA S PoOdle Parlor
exp groom lng will do all
breeds Ph 446 7878
306 If

For MaK•mum Secunty use
Tte
Down
Anchon.
to
Protect Your M0b1l e Hom e
Complete Serv•ce Cal! Ron
Sktdmore 379 2152 or 446
17S6

461 S. 3rd
Middleport

102 C A heavy duty sprmg:; 292 6 cyl engine 15
tb 2 speed rear a)(le foam seat m trrors clean cab

Beautiful car ...............

272 If

ll lf

'8995
75 Cadillac Coupe DeVille
'7500
74 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

bulld tng ,
d erri c k

- -~--

SAVE

White with white vmyl roof whtfe leather Interior AM
FM radro rad1al tires full power (It mate Control air

- ----------·
BACKHOES ~

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

am

1972 DfEV. 2·TON C&amp;C ........... '2995

$3395

DEAD Stock removed
No
cha rge Call 245 5514 before

75 Cadillac Eldorado Cp.

----------~~3~~1c •

---..._.

HEAT
Pumps
centra l
systems refrtgeratton and
appltance service
Gall ra
Refngerat ton Co 446 ~066
272 If

-~-------------~--------

0 &amp; D TR EE Tr i mm i n!, 20 1
yea rs exp1nence I nsur ed •
free est m ates Call 992 2384 1
or (6 14) 698 7'157 A lb&amp;ny
:
1015ttc ,
---- ~ -----...---'
SEW ING MACHINE Repatrs l
service all makes 992 2284 ,
Thf' F abrtc Sh op Pomeroy
Authortzed Si nger Sales and '
Se r VIc e
We
sharpen
Sc ssors
:
J 29......!fC I

~-

1972
FORD
THUNDERBIRD

t1nted glass Clean mt

102 c ab to a x le 2 speed R axle 6 speed good 900x 20
t tres fram e reinforced V 8 eng me heater, ready to
work

Auto , 4 cyl less than
12,000 miles

AKC WESTY

KENNEL RT 141 4464824
281 If

9

8 engtne std trans

ASTRE

AND PUG PUP CIRCLE L

FLEETSIDE.~2695

H duty t•res spnngs. booster brakes step bumper V

1975
PONnAC

SWEEPER
and
sew1ng
macme repai r parts and
supplies
Ptck up and
del1very Dav is Vacuum
Cleaner ' 2 mile up Georges
Creek Rd Ph 446 0294
163 If
BOARDING,

Delv)(e cab custom v.nyl seats delu xe body
grille chr frt bumper &amp; guards H duty
H D 750x16 ttres step bumper JSO V 8 P
&amp; brak es automattc rad1o cab l1ghts co lor
moss green . new trk appearance

1973 DIEV. 1fz TON

p 8 ............

E&gt;&lt;CAVATtNG
dozer •
backhoe
and
dll c her :
Charles R Half le ld Back:
Hoe Servtce R ulland Oh io.
Phone 742 2008
•

-

iHURMAN
House F urn
Strlpptng Antiques bougtll
and sold
pickup
and
delrverv Paul Burnett 245
9479 Marlln Rose 245 95J2
2 II

Automatic, PS,

---------------

6

Custom
mldgs
springs
steenng
wl1tfe &amp;

307 If

For Sale or Trade

REMODEL I N G
Plumbing '
heallno and a ll lypes rif
general
repatr
work :
gua rant eed
20 years ex ,
per l ence
Phone 992 2409 1
5 1 tfc •

_____________

1974 DIEV. % TON FLEETSIDE '3895

Sable

BOBB I s Poodle Bou!tque
Prot essro n at groom tng by
appomtment
Ph 4J 6 1944

DAN THOMPSOI\1
FORD

- --'""""-'- ~~-- ----

C

AKC Reg COllie pups
and while 256 1267.

VACATION OVER We offer
greatest savmgs ever on
trailers
and
fo l dow n s
Guaranteed and service what
we sell 9th yea r wt!h Star
craft Cam p Conley St ar c ratt
Sales R! 62 N P! Pleasa n t
6 ,,

SEE. Fred Blaellnar, Pat Htll, Melvtn Little,
or Dan Thompson

E XCAVAT IN G dozer lo.iut:
and ba ckh oe work
sep t tc '
tanks
ins t a lled
dump .
Tru c ks and to boys for hrre
will hau l f i ll d ir t t or so li 1
lmestone and grave
Call ,
Bob or 'Roger Je ffers day
p hone 992 70 89 n lgt)t phone ,
992 3525 or 992 5232
2ll tt c;

Ct.(ANE Service
e re c: l to n 40 ft
Phone 992 5468

-- PINER
---------IDGE COLLIES

BOARDING&amp; At&lt;C PUPPIES
K &amp; P Kennels 388 8274 R!
554
m 1 east of Porter
305 If

Call Rutland, 742 2331

--

3 BR s

Charger a1r extra sharp

FOR SALE
8tcentenntal Cotns
,~915S Proof Set (6 pes)
S25 00 1975 Mint Sel 19 00 ;
1976 S1lver Proof Set (3
pes) S15 00
1976 Stiver
UNC Sel IJ pes) S8l0

----- - ~---

BR

NEW LISTING - 3 acres
on 124wlthdrlfled well and
2 mobile homes 516 500
OLDER HOME - 3 BRs

garage Sll 000
MIDDLEPORT -

2

NOT VERY OLD 130 000
THE SIG N OF KNOW
HOW IS HERE - LET US
SELL YO ~ R PROPERTY

house bath nat gas heat 2
ca r garage and garden

3

--------------

----------------

and

renovated home
good
garden land gas tvrnace
barn tn town $29 500

Buv Sale or Trade

NEW HOME or re mod eli ng by
hour or cont ra ct P hone 99 2
3511 or 992 1523 aff~r 5 p m
1 25 l21p

AS TIME GOES ON YOU

2 dr H T A1r Nice

Atr, new Ford Trade m

HO US E
'2 bed r ms
ba Jh
hardw oo d f l oo r s pane l 1ng
new ther m o pane w indows READ Y M I X CON- ~~-c
sr or m doors arum stdlng
de! l vereCI r1g111 t o your
co ncret e porchf'S new g as
p r o1ect Fast and easy Free
furnace c los e to tow n
es t tm at es
Phon e 99 2 3284
H hool
and
chu r ches
Goegle n Read y Mtx Co
$10 500
Phon e ( 6 4J 985
M ddlepo n Oh o
4145 Chester
6 30 lfc
1 20 Sip
ELWOOD BOWERS R EP AI R
Sweep er s toa ster s 1rons
HOM E
n Middl e port
3
all smal l app li anc es Lawn
bedroom s
ltvlng room
mower neMt to St ate High
d n ng roo m
1 2 k tchen
way Garage on Ro ute 7
bat/1
f ul l b as ement and
Phone 985 3825
storage area ms•de and ou t
4 16 He
Ph one 992 3 6 ~7
1 23 3tc -~-----...------- ....
SEPTIC T A NKS ' leaned
Moder n Santlatlon 992 J9Sd
2 BEDROO M m obile home
or 99 2 7349
w th J J~ ac r es of ground
9 18 rt c
Pho ne 247 2161 Letart OtitO
1 23 121C
WOU LD YOU BELIEVE 7
Bu ld an ~II sleet b uil d in g a1
1 ACRE b!g garden 5 rooms
P ol e B~rn prt ces? Golden
aMd balh hom e new dr r! !ed
Gran ! All St ee l Butldrngs
well and furnac e
n ew
R t 4 SOK 146 Waverly
bathroom 2 f re p laces good
Oh (o Phone 947 2296
loc atr on In J_etart Fa ll s
7 24 t f c
Ohto s1 soa Phone 247 385 3
1 23 121 c
0 D ELL A I nemen • loceted
beh in d
Ru!lana
G rad e
School
Tuneup
brakes
wh ee l balancing .:tlmemenl
Phone 742 700J
11 16 tf c

WILL be paying more and
more rent WHY not buy
now Here Is a ntce 3 BR
horne
bath The sldmg
roof and ca rport are near ly

8 Fteetsl de Custom Deluxe 3SO, V 8 engrne std
trans power steering &amp; brakes radm 0 S mirrors
gauges L78 t Ires Now Reduced

HIGLEY S earDer Shop
Hours 8 7 Ph 446 0002
306 "

LeSabre 4 dr Arr good care

Currency and Supplies

APPROXIMATELY 20 ac re s
abo u• one th rr d l1mber
ba l an ce d c l e an
roll tng
l and Very n ce homes i te or
w II d eve op
Water and
elec availa b le See Eskey
H II
Flatwoods Road 26
Pom eroy Ohro
l ')2 31 c:

room

$12 000
!2 ACRES

Catalina

COINS

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

baths ntce large k1fchen
pa rt basement wrt h rec R
Hot wa t e r heat
larg e
enclosed pat1o
garage

TEAFORD

refrtgeralor

r

Gal 500 • dr Sedan

.

3 BR HOME
!US! finiShed
remodel rn g
Sa l em
Sl
Rutland
Ph one 742 2306
afte r 4 p rn or see M lo B
Hufcht nson
1Q 9 t f c

local owner

2 Dr Clean

1.22 1 m o .

Real Estate

NEW 1975 DIEV. C-10 ............'3829

Notice

1

PH. 992-6173

Ph 992 3993

Dr One

4 Dr DeVIlle Really sharp Loaded

Now ac;ceptmg cltents
for bookkeeping and
tax serv1ce

LARRY LAVENDER

For Sale

RENT OR SALE
3
bedrm mob le home un
furnrsheCI utll t t es POtd on
Rl 33 1n Bu rl ngham P11one
q9 2 7751
12 31 lfc

_______

MOTORS, INC.
Ph 992 2174

FREE ESTIMATES

&amp; N day old or started
Leghorn p u!!ers Both f oor
or c age grown available
Pou l try
hous rng
and
au•oma • on
Modern
Pou ll ry
399 W
Matn
Pom eroy 992 2164
I 25 lie

For Sale

Catalina .t dr Atr one owner

Ca II 992-7537
Pomeroy, OhiD

4 10 1 mo

~ oR

-

SMITH NELSON

Pomerov Oftrce
l OS Butternut
992 334S
Formerly weed Wllolesale
Fe atunng
De lux Ze ro X Copy 5erv ce
Off i CE'
Supplte$o
Mi meograph
Su pp lres
larges t selec!ton of w ed
dtng supp tes 1n So ulh
eastern Oh o
The Prrnt 511op Complete
I Still tn bust ness tn Mtd
d rep ort )
l:l82mo

H OUSE Tra tern ear Racm e 3
BR I bath no pets 1 sm a!
chtld o k SSO d eposit $100
p l us util rt es
Pl1on e 949
20 93
I 22 ]I C
RM HO USE Wtlh garage
For more rnf orma!ton call
992 25 02
1 25 61 C

Gran Torino 4 dr One local owner

Kuhl fale Decor

Quality Pnnt Shop

2 BEDRM sma ll doubJ e wrCie
modular furntsh ed ut d llte s
patd No ctllldren or pe t s
N ea r Pomeroy Ph one 992
7017 or 992 7666
1 20 Stc

d

.C dr like new

Ltcensed
baker
and
decorator
t&lt;1tchen State Inspected

·

--------------

Lm __________ '4395 54195
74 Ford va __________ '3295 52995
73 Pontiac:-----------'2995 52595
73 Ford LID----------'3195 52795
73 Ford Gran Torino_____ '2695 $2395
72 Cadillac ----------.13695 53195
72 Opel 4 cyl._ ________ 1995 51695
72 Ford YB----------· '1895 51495
72 Pontiac YB--------· '2195 $1795
12 Buick va __________ '2195 $1995
72 LID 4 Dr. Hl------- '1995 51695
72 Dodll! 2 Dr. --------'2495 52295
71 Oldsrnobile. ________ 1995 51595
4

For Rent

CAS H paid for al l makes and
m odel s of mob ile home s
Phon e ar ea code 614 .J23
9531
4 I3 l f C

Pets

Notice

Free estimates on car pettng and mstallatton .
We 11 brmg samples to your
Rome wtth no o&amp;hgatton .
See how you can really
save
M•ke Young Manager
Sales and lnstallahon
Rt 3, Pomeroy Ohto 45769
Phone day or ntght
614 ~9'2 2206
1 14 1 mo .

20 I

NOW

75 Ford

Cakes, Baked
and Decorated
To Your Order

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

Mobile Homes For Sale

Wanted

WE WISH to eK pres s our
Stncere thanks to frtends
relattves and r'IE't9hl:lors
who gave thetr k i ndness GIN SENG Sl'i per l b Phon e
(611 ) 378 62~9
sympathy and beautiful
I 16 fC
flora! offerings When our
be loved husband and fa ther
OLD f urn t ure
1ce boxes
Wdltam Wallace Chaftn
brass beds stone tars or
passed away Spec tal thanks
complete households Wrtte
!o Dr
Rtdgway and l he
M
0
M ll er
Rt
2
nurses
of
Veterans
Pomeroy Ohio
Cal! 992
Memorta ! Hosp ta l Rev
7760
Herb ert Grate the Ewmg
10 ] 7 4
Funeral Hom e and the
Laure l Cliff H ealth Club
Madel n e Chaftn
and
Fam ll y
1 25 l!p
DAINTY AKC R eg T iny T oy
WE WISH to exp ress our
Poodles
also loy and
deepest th anks and ap
mtnlatures
silver
whtte
prec t&amp; lton for the lond ne ss
champagne 8 weeks old
shown us a1 the death of our
Wormed first shots Ph one
dear brother David Mil ls
( 61 4) 696 1297
Deepes t ! hanks to the
l 21 4!p
Sy ra cuse
Emergency
Squad fnends ne ghbors
re latrves for food flow ers
ca rd s and te ephone cal ls
Holzer Med ca l Center staff
1969 MERCURY wagon $395
Dr Harder and nurses on
Runs good
Ca I 992 3619
the second floor t h e Rev
before 2 p m
Dwtght Sav1t2 to r htS con
1 25 4t p
sol rn g words and vtstts Wtth
Dav td at home and In th e 1Y75 CHEVY 1
on 4 whee l
hosp ta l to Ewtng Funeral
drrve p ckup
Bala nce of
Ho me for etf tc tent servrces
fa ct ory war r an t y Check
and
t h e l ovely
musr c
lhtS be fo r e you buy a new
provtded by Ge r ald Pow e ll
one Phon e a f !er 5 p m or on
A I those wonderful ex
weekends 992 3196
ptess•ons will be remem
1 9 tic
ber ed gratef ul l y and may
Gods r ichest blessmgs
follow each and every one 1968 MERCURY runs good
Si sl er
Rachel McBnde
Phone (614l 985 3565
Brother the Rev Delbert S
1 25 Jtp
M liS
-197
5
DODGE
'
1
ton
PICkup
I 25 11 c
w ell equtpped 5000 m res
n ever worked Se lltn g under
WE WI SH to express ou r deep
book N e w truck commg
t hank s and apprectat on ~or
Phone 992 7210
the kt ndness shown us at the
I 22 3tc
lime of llness and death of
our beloved mother Elste
H addox To the Pomeroy 1971LTD 4 dr pb p s a c
radtal t•res
$1 995 Also
Emergency Sq u ad
Dr
1966 Mustang 2 dr lots of
Ha rder and the n ur ses of 4th
goodies 5595 Call F r es tone
floor east
Rawlmgs and
St or e 992 2238
Coats Fun eral Home Mr
1 23 61C
Mer! n Teets fo r hts co n
soltng words and for all th e
prayers fl owe r s food and 1966 CHE VROLET Ptckup
latr co ndr t to n
f trst $210
lo ve grven us fr om ~ our
takes t Phone 949 2379
ne tghbors and tr ends G op
1 23 3tc
bless all of vou
Mr
and Mrs
Waller
Morrts &amp;nd Famt l tes Mr
1962 WILLY S Jeep wagon 4
and Mrs Charle s Smrth and
wheel drive !n good con
Fam til es Mr and Mrs Dale
dtlton Cal! 992 226 8 after 5
Goodn t t e and F arn 1 es Mr
pm
and Mr s George Haddox
I 20 6tp
and Famd es
......
I 25 ltp 3 ~ TON ptck up h eavy duty
sprmgs Phone 992 7017
I 20 5tc

when I was 17?

We "really and truly loved each other" too, and he made
all sorts of promises to leave h1s wife Then one n1ght one of the
kids saw Ull together and told h1s mother
•
I have not seen or heard from my' true love smce
My word to AHW ts that she get out NOW before shes hurt
any worse - BEEN THERE

NCOM E T AX
pre~ared
Federa l an d st ate laxes
W I be done by app! only
P ease p hone 992 2272 or see
M r s Wanda Eb 1n L au r e!
Cl f f Rd Pom eroy
12 31 JO!c

PARA SOL
Bou!tque
an
nounc: es
P er manent
Spec a l s I Unfp erm r eg $20
now $17 50 R eg $17 SO now
1 25 ltc
S15 Reg $15 n6w S13 50
Spec q ls from Jan 20 1h hru
IN MEMORY of my husbpnd
31st L oca te d next !o Ska l e
Gntf Archer who passed
A Way Roller Rmk. Open
away Aug J 1974
Tue s thru Saturday Phone
Owner
( 614 )
985 4141
Th e pearly gates were opened
Sa ndra
( Tru ssell\ Ke rn s
A g ent l e votce satd
Come
I 18 l2!c:
And wt!h tar ewe l! unspoken
H e gently entered home
.,
Fo r sad and lonely years have
passed

W SH to thank Dr Teel and
the
staff
of
Vetera n s
Memorial Ho sp1!al for the
u.cellent care I recetved
durJng my hospital zatton
Spec al thanks also for ! h e
ones remembenng me 1n
praver Also spectal thanks
to all my re l atPo~es and
frtends who sen t cards and
flowers and for the food
after I returned home
Helen Kennedy

......

j

YOUR GAIN
WAS

BABYSITT ER needed In my
home p r eferably l tve 1n
Phone 147 2821 a tier 6 p m
1 25 4lp

MAKE SURE you get every
posstb l e deduct to n thts year
Have y o ur Federal and
State In come Tax re tu rn by
an ac c ountarrt Phone 992
6173
1 21 52tc

Loved and sorr owful y
m•ssed by Wt f e
Mabel
daugh te r s
lrts
Aldtne
Dona
and grandchildren

S•nce m y g reat so rr ow fell

Business Services

NET IRED or seml ret rred
lady 10 l tve 1n r ree room
and boa rd and smatt wages
for !t ght dultes See a1 308
Page St Mtddleporl Ohio
1 t life

PM C Mob le Home 12 x 52 2
bedrm
wtth
a•r
con
dt t rontng washer and dryer
I W ILL beg vtngptanolesson s
metal storage build ng
1n my home startmg Feb 1
furnts hed or unfurntshed
~or
rnformat ton ca 1 992
Fo r more mformallon ca l l
3178
992 7523
12 18 sore
I 20 61C

da ys

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Now uran1• the mcled l•tt•n
S700 for 50 word mmnl1um
~
~ to form the 1urpr1se answer, u
Ea ch add 11ronat word 3
cents
by the
BLIND ADS
Add I rona! 2Sc Charge per
A dver! rsement
.....
OFFICE HOURS
(Antw~rt ~ood•Y)
B 30 a m IO 5 00 p m
Oat y 8 30a m 101 2 00 Noon
Jumblr• EXERT PIECE LADING WEDGED
Salurday
l'r•lrrd•y 1
Answ•r Wll~n! you maghf f1nd younelf uhf.'n
JOu ·r~ fiiiGRtloUy embarraut'dIN' DEEP WATER'
I N LOVING memory of our
Clear h usband ann fnth Pr
Char l es
Robert
W ne
brenner
who departed

Help Wanted

Notice

SAVE
OUR LOSS

'

~-,r-~~*******************

IN MEMORY of Lawr~n c e
Lundy who passed awav
.:1 an 26 1971
11 h as been f1vfi year s SIMc e
our loved one went away
we remember and miss htm
s t tll t oday
M rssed bY lovrng wife and
ch1ld ren

5 II
CR /\ DBUR Y elf apt
l SI
l loo r su •able tor 1 person
d ep r eQ ulil l l t~ S pd Ph
'16 0957
I II

Rent Starts At
$129 Per Month
Apartments
Ava1lable
1 Bedroom F urn
One Bedroom Apt.
Two Bedroom Apt

rates

306 If

---------------

MOBILE home space 1 m le
from HM C Ph 446 3805
20 I I f

20 6
TRAILER 3 miles f ro m town
Ph 446 0851 446 1052

20 6

FU RNI SHED apart nent all
utrl ttes pad ad ul ts only
Ph 446 952 3

296 If

-------!:o L ( E PING Rotlm
rate Gallla Hol e!

weekly
203 II

_._ ....

Grande,

183
--- ---- ...... ---

TRAILER SPA CE
Harrisburg Rd
hookup available
9190

P S

PB , a•r con

1914 CHEVROLET 2 dr hardtop a uto P S P 8 a1r
1913 OLDS 98 4 dr hardtop fully equopped
1913 IMPALA CHEVROLET, 4 dr hardtop P S,
brak es and a rr
1973 PLYMOUTH Grand Coupe2 dr hardtop auto

PS

atr

and P B

1972 FORD 4 dr hardtop auto

P S, brake s and a tr

1972 DODGE Demo 2 dr auto P S
1972 CHEVROLET Nova V 8 standard
t97t CHEVROLET Chevelte 2 dr hardtop standard 6
cyl
19!1 CADILLAC De v 111e Sedan fully equ1pped
19!0 DODGE SWING,.ER , 2 dr hardtop V 8 standard
!972 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT, 4 wheel drove
1974 FORD P1ckup FlOO

For Rent

2 BR MOBI L E hom e for Sl OO J, 1 BEDROOM tra1ter roc. a ted m
br mob d e home $125 446
Cheshire Flh 367 050 5
01 75
16 If
267 If

3 RM FURN ap1 dep req
602 Fourth Ave 446 2796

EFF A PT al Rto
S75 Ph 446 0157

auto

dttronlng

For Rent

For
tnformation
tnqu1re at office or
ph. 446-1599.
Located % mile west
of Holzer Hosptlal on
Rt. 35

Room s wee!c.ty
Park ce ntra! Hole!

4 Qr

Ivan Bowman, Owner

OPEN DAILY

S LE~PIN G

Phone 669-3351
1974 MERCURY

on Kerr
Ut l tl •es
Call 245 ,

18 J
12x60 MOBILE Home adults
m•le from hosprtal Ad ults
Oep req Ph &lt;146 38V5
14 If

2 BR MOBILE Hom e co unty
wi'ller all uti! pa 1d Ph 446
TR I I L ER space s m C tC Sh re
0294
Ph or e 367 76JJ
10 12
14 'f

AVAILABLE
GA LLIP O LI S f1nest apt for
tease Color TV
gas
ce ntral heat
cen t ral atr
condtl•oned
Mob1le home
overlook ng fiver Sma ll etf
apartment on e person t wo
bedroom turn Ish ed house
PhOnf! 446 0338
275 If

g floor
FURN 3 rm apt
re t 6 mos yr l ease $15 0
Utll l l leS pd 4th and Cedar
446 0952
16 If
N ICE c ountry home fru 1t and
garden Wrtte Box 393 c o
Gallrpolts Tr i bune
16 !f
-~------------

NEW Regency
In c apart
ments 2 BR Ph 675 5104
675 538G 675 2608 S119 per
78 If
month Sand Htlf Rd
Pt
Pleasant w va
2 TR A ILER spaces located m
4tf
Cl"jeshlre ready for hook up
Phone 367 0505
302 If BRADBURY furn1sheCI ef
ftcrency apt No 4 a~allabl e
trrst of mont h Adults only
no pets ~ 729 Second Ave
.446 0957
30.4 If

LIGHT housekeepmg
Par k Centra l Hotel

room

-------------TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARtMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhtluses
1'12 Baths
Pay Oply One Ultltty
Addtson, Ohto
For lnformatton
Call Sl'ltrley Adktns

367-72$0

~--------- ----

LOW weekly and m l}nthly
rates. a l Libby Hotel 446
1743
MOBILE home sp&amp;ce for re n t
446 0008
237 I f
LARGE rtlom fa cmg parto;
l t ght
housekeeping
elevator
tact! 111es
tor
rei! red pers on Park Centra l
Hot el
96 !f

�:IIi - The SWJday Times - Sentinel, Sw1day, Jan. 25,1976

'l'imes

....

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds ...-·.....
Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale

,.
:

Real Estate For Sale

THE ALL NEW DODGE ASPEN

Rul Estate. For Sale
...........................................................
s ..."..
-...•"' ..
--.•- ......
LEADINGHAM
-.. ..•
a
. • Jl:f.c..
REAL ESTATE
..• "•••
..
Willis T. Leadingham
..
:...
512 2ND AVE. 446-7699 GAWPOUS
..
. •..

RUSSELL WOOD
REALTOR

11 GAGE 870, new , Snw 357
mag . W inches te r , :143 and
scope. J x 9, 12 auto . r ifle .
A ft er S ph . 367 011 82
19 3
LIKE new , beby bed . mat
tress , and match lng ch est o f
drawers . Ph . 446 3712.

~

~

~

446-1066

19 '
1

w

··.· ~+"-l'l

.. ·,

~

ALl TYP ES Of b Ui ldin g
malerials , block 1 brick,
sewer
pip es,
w in dow s.
lintels , etc . Cla·ud e Winters .
Rio Grande •• 0 . Phon e 245 ,
5121 after 5 .
123.f f

~

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

....-...•
-...
...

Home
A UL T ' S MOBILE
Service ,
Skir tirfg , roar
coaling , patio s , awnings ,
anchors , ce rt:~ e nt work Free
es1imates . Call 2.45 -9411 or
245 9412 after 4: 30 p .m .
215 tf

~

...
~

~

~

GOOD clean l ump and stoker.
coat. Car l Winters . Rio
Grande . Ph . 2115.5 115 .

..•
.,..

...

'

PRICE REDUCED - Owner says sell this lovely 3 .BR
brick ranch with almost 1,.$00 sq . f1 . of ll"''ing area plus
a full basement and 2 car garage. All this plu s a large
flai well landscaped lot wi th 2 large shade trees.
R.ARE COUNTRY HOME
- Anyone .would be pro ud
to own !his moder n 3 BR
brick ranch and enjoy l he
large LR with fireplace ,
eQuipped k i t ch en , d ining
rm _, 21 1 baths , la r ge familv
rm . wilh f irep la ce and
built -in bar , cen t. air and
garage . A nice dr i ve lo the
mines or Ga\li n . -Call for
appo intment.
CENTENARY LOTS
FOR SALE - 80 X 180 with
county water available .
T hese != 80 be used for
mobil e hom es or bu ild ing .
ONE
OF
GALLIA
COUNTY ' S
BETTER
FAR' MS There is n ' t
another like th is on the
market today . 196 A . fl at ,
produ ctive land can b e
yours for approx . $635 per
a cre Speci al fe at ur es are 2
si los, 128 f t. metal pol e
barn , hog barn . corn c ri bs ,
tP well and coun t y wa te r
and lo ts o f rd . fronta ge .
LOW DOWN PAYMENT New do u b.l e wide mobile
home offers' 3 BRs. lar ge
LR . OR , kikhen with sl ave
and· ref ., and nice ca bin ets,
shag carpets and a flat lot .
VVit l trade for farm .
NEW L~STI~G- Sl9 ,500 nice mod~ni 3 SR ,home
features
w .w c arp et.
cattJedral ceiling. ga!l heat ,
garag~ and a large corner
lo t at th e ectge of town .

BUY AND DEVELOP - 6
vacant lo ts on Chestn u t St.
Zoned resident ial. $12,000 .

-~

RIVER VIEW 3 BR
RANCH , H AS LOT S T O
OFFER
F OR
ONLY
515 ,000
Special featur es
are
dwood si ding . cedar
linea
c lo set~ .
m oder n
kitchen , basement and a
large lo t over looking the
Ohio River ,n the edge or
!own .

65
acres of wooded hills with
0
1
5
9
HARRISON

TWP .

Thr ee
bedroom
home
loca t ed on Vinton Av.enue
N~wly r cmodel'ed kifcheri
W1 th buill in ca bin ets , bar .
tra.s h
com pa cto r ,
refrtg erator , an d range .
Gas h ea t . c i1y wate r and
se~ _e r .
Sh own
by ap
por n tment on l y . Pri ce d
$]0 ,000.

-

~~ (,.!f, frg~ t6~~~ $ 1~~9~~~

·

Spring is l ess than ninety
days away and we rave a
seven ac re tra c t or land in
Har rison Twp ., incl uding a
20 re e t r i ght otway to
Raccoon Creek . id ea l ror a
summe r weekend ·rc t r (':' at
Price s·3, 000
.

NEAR RIO GRANDE- SS
acres ot roll ing land offers
lo ts of potential. Part of
thiS land is in the ci ty limits
and utilities ere available .
Thi s properly fr'o nts on 2'
h ig hwa ys and c an be used
f o r
comme rc i al ,
agr ic ultura l or residential
p urposes .

F:our room h ouse , .'· locate d
west o f driv e in th eater on
Route 7, c arp eted , garage
on e mobile hom e hook .up'
Priced $16 ,00 0
·

COMMERCIAL.·
BUILDING WITH LIVING
QUARTERS. 2 garages,
offici:! , showroom and lf:2 .
bath downs t airs plus a
lo -vely 6 rm . apt. upstairs .
Loca~ed about 2 m i le s from
to wn .

Business Property located
at l he i n lerscction in
Ce n t·erpo int. Large store
buildi n g ,
w i th
l i ving
quar l ers
and
some
equ i pment , si tuated on 1,
acre lot , can be purchased
for $17 ,900 .00 . A dditionally .
one 14 ' .: 70', three b ed room
mObile home can b e pur
chased separare t v . or with
th e 'business property . tor
$7 ,000 .00. Tota l pri ce for
btJSin ess property ar1d
mob i le home , $24 ,900 .00 _

CAMPSITES - Loarge flat
lo ts on the longest creek in
the world . These lotS have
lots of sh&amp;de trees and
l arge
garde.n
spaces .
Located on a private road .

PERRY TWP. - 218 acre
farm , COrr"~ Pie!"ely fenced ,
so A . 1i llabl e, 2 ponds. 2
barns , c or!:\ cr i bs , good 7
rm .. home . S:60 ,000 .

Ac tiv e restaurant bus iness
located on busy downtown
Gallipplis_ co rn er . Begin
operat1ng 1m mediately ; all
equrpment n ~cessary to
co~t1nue on go ~ng business .
Pr1ced StJ,500 .00.
1

DAIRY FARM- 222 A ., 45
A . bottom , balance is
mostly clean rolling land ,
new milking parlor , 20x60
silO , 2 berns , 2 rm . house,
large ~ond and tob . base .
NEAR VINTON 20 A .
plus a 2 BR mobile home .
The 'and is mo!tly tillable
and fronts on 2 roads ,

REALTY

-,2.

.~

•

•

I
j ..,

f

t

WE NEED LISTING

91 ACRES

Three b edroom . ca rpeted
homes loca t ed on 75' x 120 '
lots , attach e d ga r age .
modern ki l che n
$10 .000 .
Ga ll ipolis
City
Sc hool
Di strict

NEW LISTING
47 ACRES IN VINTON
City water . 7 room ti l e
b loCk nice home, f orced air
f urn ace , basement , st_orm
do ors, · Storm windows ,
f ireplace ,
woot't ·bu rnin g
s t ore building , m i lking
house &amp; pa rl or . co rn cr ib ,
24ACRESJBEDROO~ S
B l ock
hom e .
.b arn , 25 acres bottom l ilnd . Rea l
ma c hin er y bldg _, f ences . nice f arm .
1700 lb . tobacco allotment ,
r olling l and . good pa sture
or f arm i ng , all m ineral
r ights goes . On l y Sl2 ,000 00 .

· Call Wood In suran ce &amp;
Real Estate446 -1066
Evening s Ru sse ll wo od
~46 · 4618

Ken Morqafl 44,. -0971

" LIST TOCiAY . PAY . "

IT WILL

ALL new ro ra t etec1ric house,
located on Georges Creek
Rd ., tow doWn pay m en t,
terms, land c on tract . Ph .
446 ·4021.
16 17
.....:.._.._;._
____:.:._

___ ___

LIME STONE: to r i dr ivc wo ys .
Car l W inters . P hone 2115
5115 .
270!1

------------"'-CHIMNEY Blocks , W . Va .

&amp;
Oh io Lump Coal. Gallipolis
Block Co ., -446 2783 .
273 ff

---------------

I a m getting inquiries on
small tarm s and . vacant
lots . If you hav e th is t ype of
p ro p er t y to li st, Call TOda'y.
LOVELY 11 1 yr . br i ck on 2' 4
acre.s in a Pr est i gious
deve lopmen t. large room s,
very moder n , 111 miles from
Holur Hospi ta l . Upper
40 S. 446 'J6 ! ~ .

17 •

J ACRES
12' )C 65 ' 3 Bed r oom Mobile
Home
231' frontage on
Bu1aville Ad d iso n • Rd .
Level
Gas cook st ove ,
rural water , pa tio. OnlY
Sl0 ,900 .00 .
4 81;; DROOM 2 LOTS
2 80 )( 150' lot s i u st outside bt
c i t y lim its on R t. 14 1 wilh a
6 room house. basement
a'_ld gar ag e . Ni ce hou ~e .
ntCf' lnr-)ltlnn ,.,,..,.. ,.., r , 1 ~
tor on l y 519 ,900 . See now .
Nat gas for ced air f ur
nace .
BABY FARMS
5 acres or mor e . Ho me
buildi ng sites , l evel l and ,
approx .. 4 mile off R t. 35,
r ur:al
water , ca ll
for
d et a ils .

50 STATE STREET

A BEAUTIFUL
NEW HOME
Lo'ca t ed In a Restr ic ted
Meadowgre~n
Estate .
. F amily room w ith wood .
burning .~ firepla ce,
2'12
bath s. 2 c ar garage , dish washer . Located on a large
lot Buy tt'tls home .

.'

•'

-D O YO U. have a ho rne to rent
or lease?. Two peop le in my
f amily will pr6tec1 and
improve you r pro p erly .
Need ro loca t e i n Ga ll ipolis
Sc hool D1stric t area . 367
7338 . 4 &lt;1 6 2032 even ing s.

OHIO RIVER

*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*ltf*
Jt
...__
..-

Jt

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....._
....-

Realty Inc.

446-3434

Owner Very Anxious - to
sell th i s love l y 3 bedroom
. br ic k ho m e l oca t ed ' on a
w e ll . landscaped
lo t
overlooking
the
ci ty ,
walk in g distanc~ to scho ol.
Features a h uge family
room with w b fire~pl ace, 2
baths, buill · in kit ch en , 2
ca r ga rag e, basemen! .

WE NEED ' LISTING

We'.r e goi ng·to sell or Trade
this h ome t his mon1h to the
first
qua l ifi e d
buyer
making a reason a ble offer .
owner
will
guarantee
financing ,
A
huge.
bedrooms, family ro om for
din ing, 3 baths , ov erlook in!;l . ....,
the riv er . Very c lose lo "?'"
town . Oon ' t miss th is on e
·
great chance .

ir
il

j

I.'

.t..

WE NEED LISTING
176 A c. River Bottom Farm
1200 ft. river front~oe .
.10.000 ft . highw.!!ly and twp .
road f rontaQe, 90 a c .
t illabe. 60 a c. pa s ture , 60
ac . wood , 3 b.!!lrns , l ar ge
tobacco base . Excellent l d
t l rne brick home ( n ew roof ;
wi r in g, insulation , win
.dO!f'S , k itche n . plumbin g ·,
pa in t in g , etc.)
Beautifu l
kit chen , 6 bedro oms. 4
f ir ep laces . II 'S a good ol d
comfortab l e home .
Witt sp ttl the above farm as
fo ll ows :
36 ac . Ohio Riv er bottom
w ith 1200 fl . fr Qnting t h e
ri ver and h ighway . 47 ac .
excellent o ld brick hom e
and 3 barn s .

Value , Quality , Affordable ....,
- S2 8.'~ 00 buYs th is very , 'l"
very nice , 3 bedroo m Bi level loc ate d on Jl ~ lots in
ci ly schoo l distr i ct . Jl·~ iC
bat hs . large buil t -in ki l ch en . 2 t ar garage , ful l ~
lower l eve l tor p l ay are a or "?»
fu 1ur e family roo m .

it
Nearly New
country Hom e
Here's a lot of house for the
,money . 3 Bedrooms. dining
room. f ami ly room . lovely
ki tc hen
(double
oven
rangeJ. 2 baths , 2 acres Of
lan d. loactedabout n mile s
out of town on good b1a t k
top road .
Acres
i n Morgan
Township, 30 to 40 acres
tillable,
farm
pond ,
tobacco base .
ye ars old
modern 1 story hQme with
full basemen t . Pr ice In elu des · Ford tra ctor, brush
hog , plows , corn plan ter ,
'mo w i ng mach in e. blade
and scoop . A lso a deep
fre eze . 545 ,00 0 .

117

s

....._ 93 ac . So me bottorn land,
....- pa st ure and woods'.
....._ ·
· First Decent Offer
.,-- Buys t his very good 3
bedro om home in excelle nt .
co nd Oio n . Full basement
f&amp;m ily and garage . Pri ced
in lw e nt i~s . Mak e o ff er .

*
*
*•

Good Home tn Town
Very n ice small 3 b edroom
•.at. with kit. and ulil ilyToom, 2
qcar g arage . 52'2.000.

W e need ll !&gt; t•ng !&gt; . Call tne
Wiseman Ag ency . 446 3U3
Gallia~o .• s largest Rtal
Est,.e Sate s Agtltcy
Office 446 -JUJ
E 11eninqs Call
IN C W ise man 446 -379t
E . N.' Wiseman 446 ·4500
Bud McGhee 411' -1255

• • • • • • • ••••• ••

_.....
"?»

Oscar Baird
John Fuller
Doug Wether holt
-.,.1.,;1452 Second
Gallipol is, Ohio
614 -446 · 3434
lOVELY BRICK RAN
You' l l lilc.e t his hom
w it h 3 bedroom s. full
ca r peted . ce nrr.at a i r , 1
garage . Pri ce SH,500 .
IN TOWN - Lovely
w it h l bedroom s, n ice
utility r oom. cen tral a i
car garage . Locat ed al
Kin eon Dr . Price $29,
CHILLICOTHE · RD .
Nic e 3 bedroom ho m e w it h
ba t h ,
fu ll
basement,
garag~ .
Hou se
h
aluminum si d ing , good bu
for ~\'1 . 800
LOW DOWN PAYM E NT ·
Good 3 bedroom hom e wi
bath , new furna ce.,
insu l at ed , garage 1
le 11 e1 lo t . Localed at
w ell. Pr.ice $14 .400 .
21 2 ACRES electr i c ran ch, 3
large f amily
fir ep lace . f u ll y
larg e g arag

beclroom

on r..,, ;;,;

ce $31 ,600.
A.CRE - It you ha-ve
for a build ing
h is. Ve ry nice 1
to build a
to
c lo se
in City Sch

..;:
...;:

_.....
"?'"
~

~

Pealty, 32 State St.
Tel. 614 446-1998
JAY DR . ~ 2 yr young . 6
rm s . 1' :· baths . ce n air .
se lf clean 011en , dish
washer .
d is po s ~;~l
and
drap es B lg lot Don ''l i udg~
fr om outs:idc .app earance
P r ice ,;J t .900
ST . RT . lS ~ Bargain . '&gt;
rm
fram e ranctl wilh
carpor l
H . W . · ll oors ,
drap es and air co ndil ioner
Lar ge lot Easy financ in g
1o r ight
parry
P ri ce
$2/ ,'iOO
PATR IOT ~

7 rm frame . 'l
stor y hom e with base , 1ur
h eal , cen
air , F P
,
hea r. cen a i r . F _P . , car pet
and
25 '
nice
ki l c h en
cabinets Has barn , gar
an d 1~ A . 101. Pr ice $ 19.000
CENTENARY E.:t r a
n ice 6 rm home , 1 1 , baths ,
n ew ca r pel over H.W.
co pp er plumbing . f ami l y
rm pan e l , metal Storage
bld g . ltat lot . 80' x 250' .
"GoO d i es "
in c lude air
cond , drapes anu stai n less
stee l stove II you wanr
qual i ty. locat ion and price .
ca l! now Pr ice r educed ro
!1,')9,500 .
TAWNEY SUD · DIV . Good 6 rm home , 3 bdrm .,
large li v . ' rm .. b i g roomy
kit and din . ar ea . Ex_rra
nice family rm , with F .P .
Prit;:e r educed ro !.n,.soo.
GEORGES CR . - Nice 6
r m . hou se all c arpel , pl enty
k i tc hen cab inets , 2 b at hs ,
na t . gas heat , st orag e bld g .
an d larg e lor.
As ki ng
$2 5. 500 .
' MILL CR . - Large &lt;I rm .
h ouse willl bath , s torm drs .
and win Id ea l tor r en i al or
economy liv ing . ss .soo.

.

it

MASSIE

WE BUY , SELL, TRADE
Even i ngs Call
John Fuller U6. 43H
L ee Johnson 256-6740
Doug Wetherholt 446 -4244
Earl T. Win1e rs 446 -3821

...;:

KNQns
School of
uctloneerlng
by the Ohio

Board ol School

an
· college
Regi51r.tlon
at
Columbus, Ohio.

Registration No. 71-120286H
Phone Gallipoli5
44'·

II

BLADEN ' 72 model
mo b ile h om e , on .8 A . river
front lot Elec.furn . air ilnd
underpinned . Only $9 ,500 .
CITY 821 2nd 1\ v e. 2
sto r y , 6 rm older home ,
Hie blo ck st orage bldg . and
gar L oca red ·on a lar ge lot .
/1 good buy at $17 ,000 .
HEDGEWOOD DR . Owner
says sell now 7 rm . fram e
on large lot H .W floors ,
P ~ baths , base ., storm dr's .
an ~ Win . Pri ce Sl6 ,000 .
FARM 26 1 /\. ., 70 II .
till abl e , 20 /\. ·bortom . 4.61!0
l b . rob . base. 30 /1. . coa l , 3
barns , silo and
some
limber . 7 rm modern Lrick
hom e v ·ou can't go wrong
on I his one . Potential plus .
Pr ice SR9 ,000.
·
HAVE A LUCM:ATIVE
BUSINESS FOR
SALE:
COME IN AND DISCUSS
WITH ME .
ANY HR . &lt;46 , 1998

Neal Realty
home o n seven
II lo t near city
Tota l
e le c tri c ,
20';.;12'
outbui l ding \24 ,500

3

BR

t ~n t hs

3 8 R hom e n_ea·r Rio
Gra nd e
lota t e l ectri c ,
il c , 2 1~ baths , ba sernen t
l ir epl ace . $45 ,000 .
S m i les from Hol ler 3 BR
h om.e
lot . _l.16 ,500 .
Villager' , 65'x t 2' , ) BR M .
Mome and lot S1 1, SOO. · ' 69
Kirkwood . 55' x 17' , J B R M .
Home with at tached roOms
on 1 1 ~· a to 1 lor \ 15. 000 .

a.

S rooms and ba th in city .
\ 3, 000
.

Office Ph . 446 · 16f4
E ve ning s
Chttr l es M . N eai446 - IS46
J . M ich ael Neai446-1SOJ
Sam Neal. 446 ·7358

For lease
14.-t SQ . 'F T . o ff i ce i·n lobby of
L i bb,. Hotel. S75 m o . Call
446 .1743.
28 3-lf

-·-"'--·

---~ -~-----'

LOTS Bldg . lOIS Mobtlo\ home rots . We got
them . We bu i ld your pl ans
ttr ours .

N

CENTRAl. SOYA
OF OHIO, INC. ·

••

t

Real Estate

AUCTION SERVICE

Kenneth Swain. Auct.
Corner Third &amp;

HELP WANTED

COUNTER
WAITRESS
We offer paid vacation~, profit
sharing, paidj hospital insurance
pleasant working conditions. Apply
•n person.

BOB EVANS DRIVE IN

needs , come to Sea r s T ir e
S.hop in T he SliVer Bridge
Pl ll za : ·
]) .If

73

25112 Locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-3636

?~~~~
.... __ _

48 ACRES - N o bui ld in gs ,
locate d P erry Twp .. 10
miles
tra m
!own
on
blacktop road .

8S
ACRES
Mostly
w ooded , 18 mi tes trol'!1town
witt1 mobi le h Ome .and
atta c h ed n ~w 20X40 ad dition with large f irep la ce .
room co v ered log ·
Also
dw elling an d some out ·bu ll dlngs . Sh own by ap .
pointmen t .

4MALL BUSINESS - bait
store at Tycoo n Lake doing
~good
bus i ness .
B loc k
,bui lding
with
liv in g
q u ar t ers and inv ento ry .
A lso two room cabin on
1
rear ,o f lot .

1

.
I

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

21r

19 3

6torSl.OO

825 Third Ave.

'---·

Gallipolis,

· - · · -- ~

"Maybe a hurricane DID hit

it. ..

VETERANS Why pay
r~nt when you can buy wllh
no doWn payment a tull
a cre lot with all e lectric
double wide mobile h o me .

GROCERY BUSINESS be Ideal for coup le,
lr11e upstairs , work down ,
' Inc ludes land, buildings .
equi pment. and lnvenlory
.ptus one family ren1al
dwetllno . Sh own by ap .
;iJiintmenl on l y .
~ would

:C LOSE TO TOWN six
lilf ooms e nd bath , t.u ll
asement . • L,aro e
lo t.
mmediate possession .

~AND tdNT~ACT

In
own 6 rooms •. ba f h, and
arport . Big lot 'wilh trees .

~HREE

BEDROOM
OBILI
HOME
ompJetely furnished on
lear'ed one acre lot with
ood block one car garage .

UILDING SITES - have
everal to choose fr.o m that
en be bought with small
awn payment .

RON CANADAY

REALTOR

EuternAve.

444-3636-

AIIy Hour

_

___.

TOYOTO Coron~ sta t ion
wago n , air , ·aut o . trans . ,
exc. cond ., $2 ,000 . Call .446 ·
8639 after 6.
11 ·5

M .G B . 73 ex.c. con d .• 1ow
mileage, .British ra cing
green , wi th l uggage rack ,
53,525 . 67 5·4059.
17 ·6

•

~.;

___ _

-·

·-·-

VINTON, O .H IO

388-8179
Will take orders on any of the below listed
automotive oils by the case on Janury 26·
and 27. Delivery date will be approximately
4 Weeks. DEALERS Welcome . Prices include 36 cents per case Federal Excise Tax.
They do nol include state sales tax .
24-1 qt. Quaker
24-1 qt. Quaker
·\ 24-1 qt. Quaker
24-1 qt. Quaker
24-1 qt. Quaker
24-1 qt . Quaker

Per Case
$17 .98
State Deluxe
16.36
State Sup·e r Blend
16.43
State Racing Oils
14.54
State Reg. &amp; HD
State A. T. Fluid Dex II 15.~0
State A.T. Fluid-.Ford 14.74

--------------

-----

24-1 qt. Pennzoii10W30
24-1 qt. Pennzoil Racing Oil
24-1 qt. Pennzoil Reg. &amp; HD

16.36
16.36
15.20

24-1 qt. Gulf Multi-G

15.91

· 24-1 qt . .Valvoline All Climate ·
24-1 qt. Valvoline Racing Oil
24-1.qt. Valvoline Reg. &amp; HD

15.20
15.39
14.48

-------..-~-·

;.. 1 stick. 1 au toma ti c, both 6 cyl.
:engines.
.lt

-~-

-- - -- - ~---~-

::

•

, Automatic
tran smission ,
cy linder engine.

i

'1995 00

'3995 00

i

6 ;

74 FORD % TON PICKUP

,..

69 CHEVROLET CAMARO

70 DODGE MONACO 4 DR.

Automatic, P.S.; P. B.,. vinyl top,

.

i

$

NEW CAR SPECIALI

! 1976 P~mouth Duster
1 3 Speed, 6. Cylinder
Over

•

:
34751i

It

t

,.

New paint. Only

:.
:

:

Automat ic trans ., P. S., P. B., .only .:
10,000 m1les .
·
It

!t.- ----

50 Nice Clean Late Models To

Choose From

:

•**********************************************
SeNices Offered

SeiVices Offered
CUSTOM •REMODELING . 20
yea r s experie n ce . 388 8308 .
N ew dry wall ce'iting with
swirl Or texture designs.
Ot her dr y wall , repair . vin yl
wa llpaper ing , new balhs ,
new k i t c hens ., A nythi'n Q in
remodeli ng or repair .
11 t f

-·

-·

·----.----____,; ·------'·

THE TOP SHOP
Custo m Bu i ll Roof Trusses .
Form i ca Counte rt ops &amp;
Cabinets, Cool vi ll e , · Ohio ,
667 ·3186
256 .t f
COUGHENOUR
Wate r
Delivery . 446 3961, &lt;146 -4262
any l ime .
244 -lt

D. DAY
REFRIGERATION
REGR I GAR.AT I O N . heal ing ,
e lectric , 17 years e)(p . JBR ·
827 4.
258 ·1f
-"-'--·-,-.-

---

SenitiS Offered

SPEC I AL off seaso n _p r ices on
Fur niture Upholstering now
to fi r s t of rnarch 1976. Cal l
now . Save $.. Mowrey 's
Furniture an d Up holstering .
Phone 675 4154 .
306 -t t
--,--~·-- --...--- --.-- -- ..:.. .....
APPLIANCE
REPAIR SERVICE
WAS H ER S.· dr ye r s . elec tri c
rang e . L&amp;A A pp liances 446
7)98 , 2JS 5640 .
6· 1f

-

GENERAL Con lrac to r . Room
additions , hou se ra zing and
leve l ing. a lum inu m or vinyl
Si d ing , carpentry of all
kinds , roo fing . 367 059 1.
Pa ul walke r .
_.
._....._
. 2511 ·1f

____

______ ___

SAFE WAY
ALARM CO.
OF GALLIPOLIS
BURGLAR an d tire a l arm for
home , b usiness , In dustry .
Ph . 446 -860 3 or 388 830B
302 -tf

CARP EN -:- E R work. house
r ernode li ng ,
w1r1ng ,
pl umbing , p a in11n g Ph . '4d6 · -"·--------.--~~..,_-'--BORDER 'S GARAGE DOOR
29 10 .
Service . Co mm ercia l and
259 ·1f
Residential , Specia liZ ir1g in
'-·-.,.. "--------~-----.opera t ors . L oca l . 256 -6472 .
DOZER wo,_r k , excava t i n g ,
land clearrng . Ph . 11116 ·0051.
20 t t
290 I f
SA NO Y AND BEAVER In ·
WAll
PAPER ,
VINYL
suran ce Co . has o ff ered
HANGING , AND PAINT services lo r Fire Ins ur ance
ING ,
FAST
AND . cove rag e In Gallla Coun ty
RELIABL E . CALL 25&amp;-6342 .
for
almos t a
centu r y .
264 1r
F arm s, homes and personal
property coverages arc
RO OF IN G and gu11er o f a ll
a va ilabl e to mee1 individual
need s. Conlac 1 E mmell
kinds , h o1 asphalt . We fix;
Church , your n eighbor and
th e f l at ones . Phone 36 7 0591.
agent.
P a ul Wa l ker ,
20 ·6
25-l ·lf

-

·--- - -- -...------""'--

WA Y RadiO!! ~ a le s &amp;
Service. New 8. Used CB 's.,
police m on i to r s, an tenn&amp;s.
et c . Bob ' s Citizens Band
Radio
E~uip ..
Geor'ges
Creek Rd . , Ga ll ipolis, Ohio.
446 ·451 7.

TWO

1

74 AMC JAVLIN

-------------1*
00
,

:2 Dr . H.T ., 340 engine, automatic .
It

20·3

24-1 qt. Kendall Superb 10W30
24-1 qt. Kendall Racing Oils

!

*

-- -

SMt, LL .2 BR . a11d bath mobnt
hon·le, turn . bottled
furnace and k it chen. stove,
perfect f or c amp ing , S1.950
256 1456
15·6

'2895 00

72 DODGE CHALLENGER

20 . 12

17.08
16-04
17.26

4-

00

f

1965 FORD W indow Van , E)CC .
co nd ., 6 cyl . aut o ., new
motor , new painL 245 -5583 .

S69S .

;f:

Compare At . . . .

a¢------+---.;...;...;;;...;.
~~~I~E 1595
'2395 __,i

20 '

24-1 qt. Castro! GTX20W50
24-1 qt. Castro! G. P. 2-Cycle
24-1 qt. Castro! G. P. 4-Cycle

.,

2-72 CHEVY NOVAS

245 ·

_

10.85
10.85

.,._

:

-------------~

17.08

24-1 qt. Warren, Reg. 30
24-1 qt. Warren Type-A ATF

'2295 00

HAY for s~ l e . 446 ·9697 .

24-1 qt. Havoliile 10X30

16.36
16.36

:

-:----...--

LOCUST Posts . Phone
5-478 after 5 p .m '.
·

.

P.S.• :

a
--------~-----:
74 FORD GRAN TORINO 2 DR. HT. 1

1 owner. automatic, P.S., vinyl
:top.

Plumbing &amp; Heating

Sel'iices Offered

BROWN'S HARDWARE

0.

GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMB IN G - Heating - Air
Conditioning . 30 0 F ourth
19.t7 JEEP Un i ve r se~ l. ve r y
A ve . Ph . 446 · 16 37.
good con dition Phon e .t.16
48 tf
4999 .
12 I f
...... ____ .........
DEWITT ' S P LUMB IN G
A ND HEATING
PA SQUAL E Eleclric Por 1able
RoUte 160 at l;vergreen
Elecrj· ic A lt e rnator a n d
Ph one 44 6 2735
Power P l ant s . Ph . 446-27 16
187 tf
126 -t f
-··---·-~~ ---- ---·- ... ~ ~--- -"----·--CO RN led Freezer Beef. Car l
CARTER'S PLUMBING
w ·lnters . R lo Grande . 245
AN D HEATING
51 ' 5
Cor . F our t h &amp; Pi.ne
287 t f
Phone A46 ·J889 or 446 4477
165 -1f
CORN tor sale . 25 6 ·6184 .
20 -3
ST ANDA RD
Plumbing . H eating
1 15 Th ird Ave ., -1116·3792
187 . t f
COA L. C.A . B Coa l Co rp . I
---~- ---mile north of Ch eshire, on R t . ---·--·
7. P ic k you r own , S20 per to n .
Open 6 days a wee k , 367 73 30
fo r further infoi'ma t ion .
6 II PASQUALE
E l ec trical &amp;
In su l at ing . 103 Cedar Sr .,
Ga llipoli s . Ph . 4&lt;16 ·27 16.
USED FURNITURE
· 126·1(
ROC K ER ,
'1
STUFFED
CHA IR S, HIDE.AWAY ·BED
'A LBERT EHMAN
WITH MATCHING CH AIR .
Water De livery Se rvice
COUCH, 4 LAMPS. TV ,
Patr iot Sta r , Gallipol is
MATTRE SS • . LIVING
Ph . 379 -2133
ROOM SUI TE . RICE 'S
I
243 -lf
NEW &amp; US EO FURN I 854
SECOND AVE . 44 6·9523.
15 -tf
KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
RIO GRANDE , OHIO
· CERAMIC f i r ing kiln . 446 · COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE
LANDSCAPING
1618 .
20·3 SHRUB S, TR EES , ROCK
GAR DEN S .
ALL
GUARANT EED . Pat io and
MI X ED hay for sa l e, $1 an d
poo l la n d sc ap i n g. Stone
$1.25. 379 .2 \1 5.
sand .
too l ,
shrubbery
20·6
tr i m ming . Dump
truCk
------~----- - -ser-vices . 245 ·9131.
ONE of the rin er things of l ife
187 ·If
Blue Lustre Carpet and
upho ls t ery
cleaner . S1 .
Centra l Supply .
20·6

----- -.-

1 owner, air, automatic
P . B., vinyl top .
'

Gallipolis
! GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PlYMOUTH!•
.: t
Daily Tribune :
1639 ·EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, 446-3273
:

--------------

r,o R your Tire an d Bal t erv

CANADAY
REALTY

at

'

--

19 7-4 F OR 0 _Maverick 6 cyl.
auto . 4.46 ·9861 afte r 5.
11 3

Auto Sales

LAFF- A. DAY

s

anything far
our Auction
in your home . For'
lnlorJ'IIalion and pickup
ltrvl&lt;:e call 2 56 - 1967 .
Sale Every Slturd1y
Night •17 p.m.

Aluminum
Sheets

For Sale

13 ACRES - Wi th mod ern
all e l ectr i c home , six
rooms , bath and a half .
co mpl e t el y carpe ted . Has
c arpet w ith sto rag e room .
Shown by ap pointment.

Br•ok''"- Builders

SWAIN

----- --"-·--'----

•\Jt

FERTILIZER
11 -11 -17
8.11gged Prices 144.00 Tan
H -12 -12
11:119.15 Ton
10-20· :10
SIS3 .25Tan
8· 3:1 · 16
1119. 50 Ton
6· 24-:14
1156.10 Ton
33·0·0 Ammonium Hitro~te
1140.00 Tan

U SED p iano . ~-46 - 0671.

"'I

BI · LEVEL
Th ree bedrooms , bath , -·
kitct1en
dining room .
living room and deck on'
up ~er level . Garage. ut iHt v
~rea . and spa ce for your
rec . room or 4th bedroom ,
,on low ~ r leve l. less than 2
y ears old . This is another. •
Rancho value pr iced below .
rmarket . Call , for
ap t N
pointment or llformalion . '

~.;.:._-

TR ucK, B ft . iop per , 1146.· 761.8 .
.
20 -3

t••

ACREAGE - We got i t. All
pr lC'. e
ran9 es.
good
loca t ions .
· "'~':!
Br ic k rlanc h ho me, 3 BP
bOi h , kjtcheh w rlh ha r 1
wood
c.a b i n ets . rang L .
l arger
L R,
carpele d 1
pane led and w ell in sula ted ,
garage, front oorch , p at io
, door . Spa cious 11 acre lu r
J&gt;n Mitchell
Roa(l ..
4 BR Ran ch Home , on R 1
325 . 15' )( 32' LR , with
lirepla ce and hardwood
flo o r s , kitchen d i n ing
room , ba t h , uli l ity room .
F . A . furn ace, well in
s ul at~ d ,
s oft
water ,
beauttfUI le11e l 11 -. acres
with larg e garage and '" ~
grap e
arbtlr .
fenced .·
Ano tehr Ran c ho value .

.::..- .....

73 DODGE DART SWINGER

lt m ag wheels.

36 •'x2J'.'. x..009

12.

-- .:. ' Wanted To Buy

••

.

Wanted

0

[I

i

74 DART CUSTOM 4 DR.

'289500

i*

.---~l::-~r~Sa
-l-e--. ·:

-~----- ·----- -- ----~~~

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC

--,-.---~

--'

3 P A IR use d I S" studded mud
and sno·w
tires . .uo &lt;1406
ev en ings .
18·3

3 BR Hou se. with basement ,
in east en d ot town, large
l awn • .may co n sider land
con tra ct . P h . 446 -:315 .
20 3

;:::_-

--'-

1970 . OLDSMOB I LE . Been
w r ecked . Has good parts .
Call 245 ·9190 .
18 3

For Rent or .Sale

BEAUTIFUL HOME SITE
Just olt 160 ·Evergreen, 36
acres , atmos t att tillable
Nic e hump of land ,
·

---

ca·rry on Flight Bags.
New . Never used . Perfec t
g ift for travel er . Phone 245
5620 after S
29] I f

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

Eng lne
with New Su n
Equipment
a Cer t if i ed

I,

rw o

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

VACANT LOTS
In Restricted Su b -Div ision .
,Call f or d etai l s .

New GMC
Truck H ead quarters
1 1 T. Chev . Pickup
Ford Pick up
Monte Carlo
Ford Econoline Van
1 ~ T . GMC P ick. up
t 1 T . Chevrole t
Pickup
T . GMC Pickup
3 T . Chev . Dump T ruck
t -. T . P ickup
·
GMC Suburban
F600 Ford Dump
F60 Fo rd Dump
' 7 T . P ickup
F 1000 Ford Trac lo r
SOMMERS GMC
Trucks, In c.
133 Pine St.'
446·2Sl2
16·If

- ---

See Charlie Webster • Safes Manager

• Ful l basement with a large fam i ly room , 2 baths,
garage , central a ir , nice carpeting, real n ice kitchen .
Loca t ed on a large lot . Approx . 2 years old. You m ust
see the inside of thi s house to appreciate It .
·

CITY SCHOOL
DISTRICT
7 L arge roo ms, 3 bedr oo m ,
old st y l e remod el ed hou se
Fam i ly room , b asement ,
nat. gas forced air f urna ce .
city wa t er , g ar age , larg e
fen ced in yard . Jusl ou t o f
Gall ipolis City li m fts on R I .
t4 t .. Modern kit chen A r eal
barga in ·. Ca ll n ow .
'
NEW LISTING

WE NEED LISTING

4371 1 Second Ave .
(ac r oss from Post Office)
Ga llipolis , Ohio

N ow taking listings in thi s
area . Evening hours for
yo ur conv enience . Call thi s
numb.er anytime.
446 · 1900
2 BEDROOM
MOBILE HOME
73
model 1 completely
f urnishe d . 1 acre lot ,
s t orage
bui l ding ,
on
Georges Creek Road . N ice
tor first hom e
BEAUTIFUL
THREE ~EDROOM
Ex c ell enr tr ame home on
Route 218 . TOp qualify
interior .. Baseme n! .com pl e te ly tin ist)ed Int O livin g
quarters . F ir e pl ace In
li vi n g r oom a n d b.J sement .
2 car ca rport plus garage .
Lot size 308 ' widex208'
d ee p . Th is hO:me is pr i ced
to sell .
EXCELLEN'T
THREE BEDROOM
BRICK
Ten mi nute drive fro m
c i ty
Spacio us
roo m s .
beauti ful hardwood floors ,
ca rp ete d liv i ng room , two
baths , two car garage . Wi,ll
sel l
wilh
or
witho u t
acreage . Truly a st ep up
lor most homeow n er s.
SMALL FARM
On Route 7 18 . 47 1 1 acres . 60
p el . level , 6 r oom hOuse ,
lar ge barn . timber and c o&lt;~ .l,
rights .
Priced
very
reaso nable .

NEW COMPACT - Dodge int~oduces an all-l)ew compact car line for 1976.
Called the Dodge Aspen .- the new car is available as a two-door coupe, a fourdoor sedan and a four-d oo r wagon. The coupe is built on a 108.5 Inch wheelbase,
while the sedan and wag on have a wheelbase of 112.5. The Aspen models are
available in standard, high and premium trim levels and provide the motorist with
ride qualities s1.1perior to previous Dodge compacts. Engin ~ c hoices are a 225 :Cl.lbic
inch slant si x, 318 V-8 and 360 c1.1bic inch V-8 with twc&gt; barrel carburetion.
Beautifull Bedrooms

You won ' t find a better buy
til an th is very beautiful 3
bedroom brick and fra me .
Format
d in in g,
lovely
l iving roo m. p erfec t family
room " This is a charmi n g
home that will be hard to
mat c h . Owner r ea dy to
sell
im
m ove . Must
mediately .
...

~

1969
1970
1970
1969
1974
1974
1974
1970
1969
1971
1969
1970
1969
11 967

"'

Call Now.

Two bedroom home on
Se cond
Avenue , large
finished room u p st ai rs,
garage basement. centra l
a ir conditio ni ng , three
room with bath r en tal on
rear ol propert y . p r i ce d
$35 .000 , shown by ap
poi n tment o n l y .

REALTOR

BOB LANE.
BRA NCH MANA.G ER

--

'

Picture of Your Home.

Off. 446-3643

barn . ou tb u ild in g. tobacco
b ase , all minera l right s, all
mac h ine r y and cattle .
Lo ca t e d
10
mi . f.rom
Gal lipolis .
82 ACRES
Located ju st 2 mi . fr om
c ity . A n i ce all electr i c
hOm e w.ith many ex t ra
fea tures Large barn . This
is extra nice development
, land with c ity wat er . Cal l
f or mo r e ln form allon .
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION
Ch ar mi ng ranc.h . 3 BR , 2
bath , OR , f u ll basem en!,
attached garage , wetl
lan dscaped
t o!
n e ar
Mspitat .
2 LOTS
Located in Gallipoli s school
distric t . Ideal to r mobi l e
home or home building .
Can help f inance . Pr ice
S1,800 to $'2,200.
THIRD AVE .
Large two s tory ,home in
good condit ion , 3 BR , DR
and bu i lt in k ilcllen . Extra
good 2 BR apa r 1ment on
r ear of lot . L i ve in one and
tel the other he lp make th e
J)ay ments .
MOBILE COURT
·I d eal
li ving
quar t er s.
nalural gas, good location ,
real income for the in
vestmenL Ca ll for mor e
informat ion .
DOWNTOWN
Large two story br ick nice for the large tam i l y , or
could rent the " room apt.
with privat e ent ran ce . N e w
fenced lot , double carport .
Quick oossession .
WALK TO SCHOOL
Fro m rn 1s two s1o r y. 3 BR
hom e. nice l ivin9 and
tam ily rm ., dry basement.
gas heat. deep lo t w i th
gatd en spot .

.....

The WISEMAN Agency

RANNV BLACI&lt;BURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

S ROOM house wi t h ba t h

garden space. A real b u y for ohly $15,000.

...
••
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"

01

.....,.'"

73 FORD PINTO SOOIRE

Washers and dryers. ~ - 1 cond . ...
S40 and up . L&amp;A Appl i ances , ........
300 4th Ave .• Rear . Ph . 446 ~
7398 .
18 ·1f

•••••••••••••

LISTINGS NEEDED WE
ADVERTISE
NAT.IONAl,LY - WE 8\JY
- SElL ,.- TRADE.

25 i..oc u st St.
Howard Brannon , Broker
Office 446 ·2 67 4
Lucille Brannon
Eve . 446·)2 26 or 446 ·26 14

3 Bedrooms
7 rooms and bath , full basement, garbage disposal, city
wa ter , carport , n ice level lot, garden space. porch . ~
clean and nice· home. Pr iced to sell now. Only ~12.900 .

Space Reserved for a

Four bedroo m home in th e
cou n t ry . 1 118 a cres located
on Rt 141. a pprox i ma t ely
s even
mi l es
f ro m
Gal l ipolis . L a rge garden
l?t : Modern kitchen , large
hvmg ro om and dining
room , two baths . on e up
stai r s .
o ne
down,
renovat i.on in p r ogr e ss .
Ga l lipo l i s
Ci ty
Sch oO l
D is trier

New. m o d e rn , insu l ated
a nd
curpe t e d .
t hr ee
bed r oom
b ri c k 'hom e,
e t ect r i·ca lly
heate d ;
,. located on St ate R r. 588 ,
n ear the U S. R t 35 in
tersec!io n a t Rodney ; 11 0'
frontage a l ong RL 588 ;
Ga ll i pOli S City
Sc hool
Distr i c t . Priced $3 1. 600 .00 .

OWNER
WILL
HELP
FINANCE - . ~5 acres
ad io lnlng th e city l im its of
Rio
Grande .
Lots
of
potential for SSS ,OOO.

In Ga IIi polis
S room house on a peaceful street . Porch, nat . gas ,
furnace, built -in ca binets, fenced in yard, plenty of

:

:Auto. tra11s ., a ir cu.1a. , AM·FM,
w" ·,. radio wit h stereo tape, extra
--- -· - - - - -It- sharp .
USED APPLIANCES
It-

.."' ..•·..
.t ..

..::

AEDROOM
atf
gas
hou!ielrailer . S2 . 100 Ph 367
76 3A
JO 12

212
_ • _ _ ....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ""!- _
_ ·1f

on

.21 f T

PONTOON hea t, red
wood deck, stee l Styrofoam
fil led pontoon. like new
snap on camping t op, steel
storage ben seets, SO hp,
elect ri c start
J o hn so n
motor. all for s 1.595. no
· trailer . 25 6 loi56 .
IS 6

.!

~OO FI NG ,

alum inum . sidlr\g ,
fr ee est im ates . Ca ll 2S6 .63M .
256 I f

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

FOR
THE
best
in
ar chitectu r al design ot new
homes , sm.al t com m ercia l
bui l di n gs,
apts. ,
or
remodeling . with state ~ P ·
proval of plans . Ca ll coll ect
Bi ll Wa lker . 1-682 7498 .
268 -t f

--'""'--·----'--·-----

HOWARD
P ec.k
wa ter .
Del i ve r y dav or n ig ht 24 59315 or J88 .B262 .
292 .f f

- ---- --------~

BOB L ane's Comple1e Book keeping and Tax Se rvice .
1137 1 1 - second Ave. (Acro ss
from
Post
Office ).
Gallipolis . Ph. 11116 .79p0 .
Week l y and monthly ser:v tce
for co m' me r ci al o3ccou n1 s .
Incom e Tax Pr eparalion .
19 3
__ __;_
,_______

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___

TRAILERS
FOR SALE
Roycraft 8x30
VanDyke 10x40
Phone 245-5098

Best Offer

..

�:IIi - The SWJday Times - Sentinel, Sw1day, Jan. 25,1976

'l'imes

....

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds ...-·.....
Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale

,.
:

Real Estate For Sale

THE ALL NEW DODGE ASPEN

Rul Estate. For Sale
...........................................................
s ..."..
-...•"' ..
--.•- ......
LEADINGHAM
-.. ..•
a
. • Jl:f.c..
REAL ESTATE
..• "•••
..
Willis T. Leadingham
..
:...
512 2ND AVE. 446-7699 GAWPOUS
..
. •..

RUSSELL WOOD
REALTOR

11 GAGE 870, new , Snw 357
mag . W inches te r , :143 and
scope. J x 9, 12 auto . r ifle .
A ft er S ph . 367 011 82
19 3
LIKE new , beby bed . mat
tress , and match lng ch est o f
drawers . Ph . 446 3712.

~

~

~

446-1066

19 '
1

w

··.· ~+"-l'l

.. ·,

~

ALl TYP ES Of b Ui ldin g
malerials , block 1 brick,
sewer
pip es,
w in dow s.
lintels , etc . Cla·ud e Winters .
Rio Grande •• 0 . Phon e 245 ,
5121 after 5 .
123.f f

~

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Home
A UL T ' S MOBILE
Service ,
Skir tirfg , roar
coaling , patio s , awnings ,
anchors , ce rt:~ e nt work Free
es1imates . Call 2.45 -9411 or
245 9412 after 4: 30 p .m .
215 tf

~

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~

~

~

GOOD clean l ump and stoker.
coat. Car l Winters . Rio
Grande . Ph . 2115.5 115 .

..•
.,..

...

'

PRICE REDUCED - Owner says sell this lovely 3 .BR
brick ranch with almost 1,.$00 sq . f1 . of ll"''ing area plus
a full basement and 2 car garage. All this plu s a large
flai well landscaped lot wi th 2 large shade trees.
R.ARE COUNTRY HOME
- Anyone .would be pro ud
to own !his moder n 3 BR
brick ranch and enjoy l he
large LR with fireplace ,
eQuipped k i t ch en , d ining
rm _, 21 1 baths , la r ge familv
rm . wilh f irep la ce and
built -in bar , cen t. air and
garage . A nice dr i ve lo the
mines or Ga\li n . -Call for
appo intment.
CENTENARY LOTS
FOR SALE - 80 X 180 with
county water available .
T hese != 80 be used for
mobil e hom es or bu ild ing .
ONE
OF
GALLIA
COUNTY ' S
BETTER
FAR' MS There is n ' t
another like th is on the
market today . 196 A . fl at ,
produ ctive land can b e
yours for approx . $635 per
a cre Speci al fe at ur es are 2
si los, 128 f t. metal pol e
barn , hog barn . corn c ri bs ,
tP well and coun t y wa te r
and lo ts o f rd . fronta ge .
LOW DOWN PAYMENT New do u b.l e wide mobile
home offers' 3 BRs. lar ge
LR . OR , kikhen with sl ave
and· ref ., and nice ca bin ets,
shag carpets and a flat lot .
VVit l trade for farm .
NEW L~STI~G- Sl9 ,500 nice mod~ni 3 SR ,home
features
w .w c arp et.
cattJedral ceiling. ga!l heat ,
garag~ and a large corner
lo t at th e ectge of town .

BUY AND DEVELOP - 6
vacant lo ts on Chestn u t St.
Zoned resident ial. $12,000 .

-~

RIVER VIEW 3 BR
RANCH , H AS LOT S T O
OFFER
F OR
ONLY
515 ,000
Special featur es
are
dwood si ding . cedar
linea
c lo set~ .
m oder n
kitchen , basement and a
large lo t over looking the
Ohio River ,n the edge or
!own .

65
acres of wooded hills with
0
1
5
9
HARRISON

TWP .

Thr ee
bedroom
home
loca t ed on Vinton Av.enue
N~wly r cmodel'ed kifcheri
W1 th buill in ca bin ets , bar .
tra.s h
com pa cto r ,
refrtg erator , an d range .
Gas h ea t . c i1y wate r and
se~ _e r .
Sh own
by ap
por n tment on l y . Pri ce d
$]0 ,000.

-

~~ (,.!f, frg~ t6~~~ $ 1~~9~~~

·

Spring is l ess than ninety
days away and we rave a
seven ac re tra c t or land in
Har rison Twp ., incl uding a
20 re e t r i ght otway to
Raccoon Creek . id ea l ror a
summe r weekend ·rc t r (':' at
Price s·3, 000
.

NEAR RIO GRANDE- SS
acres ot roll ing land offers
lo ts of potential. Part of
thiS land is in the ci ty limits
and utilities ere available .
Thi s properly fr'o nts on 2'
h ig hwa ys and c an be used
f o r
comme rc i al ,
agr ic ultura l or residential
p urposes .

F:our room h ouse , .'· locate d
west o f driv e in th eater on
Route 7, c arp eted , garage
on e mobile hom e hook .up'
Priced $16 ,00 0
·

COMMERCIAL.·
BUILDING WITH LIVING
QUARTERS. 2 garages,
offici:! , showroom and lf:2 .
bath downs t airs plus a
lo -vely 6 rm . apt. upstairs .
Loca~ed about 2 m i le s from
to wn .

Business Property located
at l he i n lerscction in
Ce n t·erpo int. Large store
buildi n g ,
w i th
l i ving
quar l ers
and
some
equ i pment , si tuated on 1,
acre lot , can be purchased
for $17 ,900 .00 . A dditionally .
one 14 ' .: 70', three b ed room
mObile home can b e pur
chased separare t v . or with
th e 'business property . tor
$7 ,000 .00. Tota l pri ce for
btJSin ess property ar1d
mob i le home , $24 ,900 .00 _

CAMPSITES - Loarge flat
lo ts on the longest creek in
the world . These lotS have
lots of sh&amp;de trees and
l arge
garde.n
spaces .
Located on a private road .

PERRY TWP. - 218 acre
farm , COrr"~ Pie!"ely fenced ,
so A . 1i llabl e, 2 ponds. 2
barns , c or!:\ cr i bs , good 7
rm .. home . S:60 ,000 .

Ac tiv e restaurant bus iness
located on busy downtown
Gallipplis_ co rn er . Begin
operat1ng 1m mediately ; all
equrpment n ~cessary to
co~t1nue on go ~ng business .
Pr1ced StJ,500 .00.
1

DAIRY FARM- 222 A ., 45
A . bottom , balance is
mostly clean rolling land ,
new milking parlor , 20x60
silO , 2 berns , 2 rm . house,
large ~ond and tob . base .
NEAR VINTON 20 A .
plus a 2 BR mobile home .
The 'and is mo!tly tillable
and fronts on 2 roads ,

REALTY

-,2.

.~

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•

I
j ..,

f

t

WE NEED LISTING

91 ACRES

Three b edroom . ca rpeted
homes loca t ed on 75' x 120 '
lots , attach e d ga r age .
modern ki l che n
$10 .000 .
Ga ll ipolis
City
Sc hool
Di strict

NEW LISTING
47 ACRES IN VINTON
City water . 7 room ti l e
b loCk nice home, f orced air
f urn ace , basement , st_orm
do ors, · Storm windows ,
f ireplace ,
woot't ·bu rnin g
s t ore building , m i lking
house &amp; pa rl or . co rn cr ib ,
24ACRESJBEDROO~ S
B l ock
hom e .
.b arn , 25 acres bottom l ilnd . Rea l
ma c hin er y bldg _, f ences . nice f arm .
1700 lb . tobacco allotment ,
r olling l and . good pa sture
or f arm i ng , all m ineral
r ights goes . On l y Sl2 ,000 00 .

· Call Wood In suran ce &amp;
Real Estate446 -1066
Evening s Ru sse ll wo od
~46 · 4618

Ken Morqafl 44,. -0971

" LIST TOCiAY . PAY . "

IT WILL

ALL new ro ra t etec1ric house,
located on Georges Creek
Rd ., tow doWn pay m en t,
terms, land c on tract . Ph .
446 ·4021.
16 17
.....:.._.._;._
____:.:._

___ ___

LIME STONE: to r i dr ivc wo ys .
Car l W inters . P hone 2115
5115 .
270!1

------------"'-CHIMNEY Blocks , W . Va .

&amp;
Oh io Lump Coal. Gallipolis
Block Co ., -446 2783 .
273 ff

---------------

I a m getting inquiries on
small tarm s and . vacant
lots . If you hav e th is t ype of
p ro p er t y to li st, Call TOda'y.
LOVELY 11 1 yr . br i ck on 2' 4
acre.s in a Pr est i gious
deve lopmen t. large room s,
very moder n , 111 miles from
Holur Hospi ta l . Upper
40 S. 446 'J6 ! ~ .

17 •

J ACRES
12' )C 65 ' 3 Bed r oom Mobile
Home
231' frontage on
Bu1aville Ad d iso n • Rd .
Level
Gas cook st ove ,
rural water , pa tio. OnlY
Sl0 ,900 .00 .
4 81;; DROOM 2 LOTS
2 80 )( 150' lot s i u st outside bt
c i t y lim its on R t. 14 1 wilh a
6 room house. basement
a'_ld gar ag e . Ni ce hou ~e .
ntCf' lnr-)ltlnn ,.,,..,.. ,.., r , 1 ~
tor on l y 519 ,900 . See now .
Nat gas for ced air f ur
nace .
BABY FARMS
5 acres or mor e . Ho me
buildi ng sites , l evel l and ,
approx .. 4 mile off R t. 35,
r ur:al
water , ca ll
for
d et a ils .

50 STATE STREET

A BEAUTIFUL
NEW HOME
Lo'ca t ed In a Restr ic ted
Meadowgre~n
Estate .
. F amily room w ith wood .
burning .~ firepla ce,
2'12
bath s. 2 c ar garage , dish washer . Located on a large
lot Buy tt'tls home .

.'

•'

-D O YO U. have a ho rne to rent
or lease?. Two peop le in my
f amily will pr6tec1 and
improve you r pro p erly .
Need ro loca t e i n Ga ll ipolis
Sc hool D1stric t area . 367
7338 . 4 &lt;1 6 2032 even ing s.

OHIO RIVER

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Realty Inc.

446-3434

Owner Very Anxious - to
sell th i s love l y 3 bedroom
. br ic k ho m e l oca t ed ' on a
w e ll . landscaped
lo t
overlooking
the
ci ty ,
walk in g distanc~ to scho ol.
Features a h uge family
room with w b fire~pl ace, 2
baths, buill · in kit ch en , 2
ca r ga rag e, basemen! .

WE NEED ' LISTING

We'.r e goi ng·to sell or Trade
this h ome t his mon1h to the
first
qua l ifi e d
buyer
making a reason a ble offer .
owner
will
guarantee
financing ,
A
huge.
bedrooms, family ro om for
din ing, 3 baths , ov erlook in!;l . ....,
the riv er . Very c lose lo "?'"
town . Oon ' t miss th is on e
·
great chance .

ir
il

j

I.'

.t..

WE NEED LISTING
176 A c. River Bottom Farm
1200 ft. river front~oe .
.10.000 ft . highw.!!ly and twp .
road f rontaQe, 90 a c .
t illabe. 60 a c. pa s ture , 60
ac . wood , 3 b.!!lrns , l ar ge
tobacco base . Excellent l d
t l rne brick home ( n ew roof ;
wi r in g, insulation , win
.dO!f'S , k itche n . plumbin g ·,
pa in t in g , etc.)
Beautifu l
kit chen , 6 bedro oms. 4
f ir ep laces . II 'S a good ol d
comfortab l e home .
Witt sp ttl the above farm as
fo ll ows :
36 ac . Ohio Riv er bottom
w ith 1200 fl . fr Qnting t h e
ri ver and h ighway . 47 ac .
excellent o ld brick hom e
and 3 barn s .

Value , Quality , Affordable ....,
- S2 8.'~ 00 buYs th is very , 'l"
very nice , 3 bedroo m Bi level loc ate d on Jl ~ lots in
ci ly schoo l distr i ct . Jl·~ iC
bat hs . large buil t -in ki l ch en . 2 t ar garage , ful l ~
lower l eve l tor p l ay are a or "?»
fu 1ur e family roo m .

it
Nearly New
country Hom e
Here's a lot of house for the
,money . 3 Bedrooms. dining
room. f ami ly room . lovely
ki tc hen
(double
oven
rangeJ. 2 baths , 2 acres Of
lan d. loactedabout n mile s
out of town on good b1a t k
top road .
Acres
i n Morgan
Township, 30 to 40 acres
tillable,
farm
pond ,
tobacco base .
ye ars old
modern 1 story hQme with
full basemen t . Pr ice In elu des · Ford tra ctor, brush
hog , plows , corn plan ter ,
'mo w i ng mach in e. blade
and scoop . A lso a deep
fre eze . 545 ,00 0 .

117

s

....._ 93 ac . So me bottorn land,
....- pa st ure and woods'.
....._ ·
· First Decent Offer
.,-- Buys t his very good 3
bedro om home in excelle nt .
co nd Oio n . Full basement
f&amp;m ily and garage . Pri ced
in lw e nt i~s . Mak e o ff er .

*
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*•

Good Home tn Town
Very n ice small 3 b edroom
•.at. with kit. and ulil ilyToom, 2
qcar g arage . 52'2.000.

W e need ll !&gt; t•ng !&gt; . Call tne
Wiseman Ag ency . 446 3U3
Gallia~o .• s largest Rtal
Est,.e Sate s Agtltcy
Office 446 -JUJ
E 11eninqs Call
IN C W ise man 446 -379t
E . N.' Wiseman 446 ·4500
Bud McGhee 411' -1255

• • • • • • • ••••• ••

_.....
"?»

Oscar Baird
John Fuller
Doug Wether holt
-.,.1.,;1452 Second
Gallipol is, Ohio
614 -446 · 3434
lOVELY BRICK RAN
You' l l lilc.e t his hom
w it h 3 bedroom s. full
ca r peted . ce nrr.at a i r , 1
garage . Pri ce SH,500 .
IN TOWN - Lovely
w it h l bedroom s, n ice
utility r oom. cen tral a i
car garage . Locat ed al
Kin eon Dr . Price $29,
CHILLICOTHE · RD .
Nic e 3 bedroom ho m e w it h
ba t h ,
fu ll
basement,
garag~ .
Hou se
h
aluminum si d ing , good bu
for ~\'1 . 800
LOW DOWN PAYM E NT ·
Good 3 bedroom hom e wi
bath , new furna ce.,
insu l at ed , garage 1
le 11 e1 lo t . Localed at
w ell. Pr.ice $14 .400 .
21 2 ACRES electr i c ran ch, 3
large f amily
fir ep lace . f u ll y
larg e g arag

beclroom

on r..,, ;;,;

ce $31 ,600.
A.CRE - It you ha-ve
for a build ing
h is. Ve ry nice 1
to build a
to
c lo se
in City Sch

..;:
...;:

_.....
"?'"
~

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Pealty, 32 State St.
Tel. 614 446-1998
JAY DR . ~ 2 yr young . 6
rm s . 1' :· baths . ce n air .
se lf clean 011en , dish
washer .
d is po s ~;~l
and
drap es B lg lot Don ''l i udg~
fr om outs:idc .app earance
P r ice ,;J t .900
ST . RT . lS ~ Bargain . '&gt;
rm
fram e ranctl wilh
carpor l
H . W . · ll oors ,
drap es and air co ndil ioner
Lar ge lot Easy financ in g
1o r ight
parry
P ri ce
$2/ ,'iOO
PATR IOT ~

7 rm frame . 'l
stor y hom e with base , 1ur
h eal , cen
air , F P
,
hea r. cen a i r . F _P . , car pet
and
25 '
nice
ki l c h en
cabinets Has barn , gar
an d 1~ A . 101. Pr ice $ 19.000
CENTENARY E.:t r a
n ice 6 rm home , 1 1 , baths ,
n ew ca r pel over H.W.
co pp er plumbing . f ami l y
rm pan e l , metal Storage
bld g . ltat lot . 80' x 250' .
"GoO d i es "
in c lude air
cond , drapes anu stai n less
stee l stove II you wanr
qual i ty. locat ion and price .
ca l! now Pr ice r educed ro
!1,')9,500 .
TAWNEY SUD · DIV . Good 6 rm home , 3 bdrm .,
large li v . ' rm .. b i g roomy
kit and din . ar ea . Ex_rra
nice family rm , with F .P .
Prit;:e r educed ro !.n,.soo.
GEORGES CR . - Nice 6
r m . hou se all c arpel , pl enty
k i tc hen cab inets , 2 b at hs ,
na t . gas heat , st orag e bld g .
an d larg e lor.
As ki ng
$2 5. 500 .
' MILL CR . - Large &lt;I rm .
h ouse willl bath , s torm drs .
and win Id ea l tor r en i al or
economy liv ing . ss .soo.

.

it

MASSIE

WE BUY , SELL, TRADE
Even i ngs Call
John Fuller U6. 43H
L ee Johnson 256-6740
Doug Wetherholt 446 -4244
Earl T. Win1e rs 446 -3821

...;:

KNQns
School of
uctloneerlng
by the Ohio

Board ol School

an
· college
Regi51r.tlon
at
Columbus, Ohio.

Registration No. 71-120286H
Phone Gallipoli5
44'·

II

BLADEN ' 72 model
mo b ile h om e , on .8 A . river
front lot Elec.furn . air ilnd
underpinned . Only $9 ,500 .
CITY 821 2nd 1\ v e. 2
sto r y , 6 rm older home ,
Hie blo ck st orage bldg . and
gar L oca red ·on a lar ge lot .
/1 good buy at $17 ,000 .
HEDGEWOOD DR . Owner
says sell now 7 rm . fram e
on large lot H .W floors ,
P ~ baths , base ., storm dr's .
an ~ Win . Pri ce Sl6 ,000 .
FARM 26 1 /\. ., 70 II .
till abl e , 20 /\. ·bortom . 4.61!0
l b . rob . base. 30 /1. . coa l , 3
barns , silo and
some
limber . 7 rm modern Lrick
hom e v ·ou can't go wrong
on I his one . Potential plus .
Pr ice SR9 ,000.
·
HAVE A LUCM:ATIVE
BUSINESS FOR
SALE:
COME IN AND DISCUSS
WITH ME .
ANY HR . &lt;46 , 1998

Neal Realty
home o n seven
II lo t near city
Tota l
e le c tri c ,
20';.;12'
outbui l ding \24 ,500

3

BR

t ~n t hs

3 8 R hom e n_ea·r Rio
Gra nd e
lota t e l ectri c ,
il c , 2 1~ baths , ba sernen t
l ir epl ace . $45 ,000 .
S m i les from Hol ler 3 BR
h om.e
lot . _l.16 ,500 .
Villager' , 65'x t 2' , ) BR M .
Mome and lot S1 1, SOO. · ' 69
Kirkwood . 55' x 17' , J B R M .
Home with at tached roOms
on 1 1 ~· a to 1 lor \ 15. 000 .

a.

S rooms and ba th in city .
\ 3, 000
.

Office Ph . 446 · 16f4
E ve ning s
Chttr l es M . N eai446 - IS46
J . M ich ael Neai446-1SOJ
Sam Neal. 446 ·7358

For lease
14.-t SQ . 'F T . o ff i ce i·n lobby of
L i bb,. Hotel. S75 m o . Call
446 .1743.
28 3-lf

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LOTS Bldg . lOIS Mobtlo\ home rots . We got
them . We bu i ld your pl ans
ttr ours .

N

CENTRAl. SOYA
OF OHIO, INC. ·

••

t

Real Estate

AUCTION SERVICE

Kenneth Swain. Auct.
Corner Third &amp;

HELP WANTED

COUNTER
WAITRESS
We offer paid vacation~, profit
sharing, paidj hospital insurance
pleasant working conditions. Apply
•n person.

BOB EVANS DRIVE IN

needs , come to Sea r s T ir e
S.hop in T he SliVer Bridge
Pl ll za : ·
]) .If

73

25112 Locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-3636

?~~~~
.... __ _

48 ACRES - N o bui ld in gs ,
locate d P erry Twp .. 10
miles
tra m
!own
on
blacktop road .

8S
ACRES
Mostly
w ooded , 18 mi tes trol'!1town
witt1 mobi le h Ome .and
atta c h ed n ~w 20X40 ad dition with large f irep la ce .
room co v ered log ·
Also
dw elling an d some out ·bu ll dlngs . Sh own by ap .
pointmen t .

4MALL BUSINESS - bait
store at Tycoo n Lake doing
~good
bus i ness .
B loc k
,bui lding
with
liv in g
q u ar t ers and inv ento ry .
A lso two room cabin on
1
rear ,o f lot .

1

.
I

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

21r

19 3

6torSl.OO

825 Third Ave.

'---·

Gallipolis,

· - · · -- ~

"Maybe a hurricane DID hit

it. ..

VETERANS Why pay
r~nt when you can buy wllh
no doWn payment a tull
a cre lot with all e lectric
double wide mobile h o me .

GROCERY BUSINESS be Ideal for coup le,
lr11e upstairs , work down ,
' Inc ludes land, buildings .
equi pment. and lnvenlory
.ptus one family ren1al
dwetllno . Sh own by ap .
;iJiintmenl on l y .
~ would

:C LOSE TO TOWN six
lilf ooms e nd bath , t.u ll
asement . • L,aro e
lo t.
mmediate possession .

~AND tdNT~ACT

In
own 6 rooms •. ba f h, and
arport . Big lot 'wilh trees .

~HREE

BEDROOM
OBILI
HOME
ompJetely furnished on
lear'ed one acre lot with
ood block one car garage .

UILDING SITES - have
everal to choose fr.o m that
en be bought with small
awn payment .

RON CANADAY

REALTOR

EuternAve.

444-3636-

AIIy Hour

_

___.

TOYOTO Coron~ sta t ion
wago n , air , ·aut o . trans . ,
exc. cond ., $2 ,000 . Call .446 ·
8639 after 6.
11 ·5

M .G B . 73 ex.c. con d .• 1ow
mileage, .British ra cing
green , wi th l uggage rack ,
53,525 . 67 5·4059.
17 ·6

•

~.;

___ _

-·

·-·-

VINTON, O .H IO

388-8179
Will take orders on any of the below listed
automotive oils by the case on Janury 26·
and 27. Delivery date will be approximately
4 Weeks. DEALERS Welcome . Prices include 36 cents per case Federal Excise Tax.
They do nol include state sales tax .
24-1 qt. Quaker
24-1 qt. Quaker
·\ 24-1 qt. Quaker
24-1 qt. Quaker
24-1 qt. Quaker
24-1 qt . Quaker

Per Case
$17 .98
State Deluxe
16.36
State Sup·e r Blend
16.43
State Racing Oils
14.54
State Reg. &amp; HD
State A. T. Fluid Dex II 15.~0
State A.T. Fluid-.Ford 14.74

--------------

-----

24-1 qt. Pennzoii10W30
24-1 qt. Pennzoil Racing Oil
24-1 qt. Pennzoil Reg. &amp; HD

16.36
16.36
15.20

24-1 qt. Gulf Multi-G

15.91

· 24-1 qt . .Valvoline All Climate ·
24-1 qt. Valvoline Racing Oil
24-1.qt. Valvoline Reg. &amp; HD

15.20
15.39
14.48

-------..-~-·

;.. 1 stick. 1 au toma ti c, both 6 cyl.
:engines.
.lt

-~-

-- - -- - ~---~-

::

•

, Automatic
tran smission ,
cy linder engine.

i

'1995 00

'3995 00

i

6 ;

74 FORD % TON PICKUP

,..

69 CHEVROLET CAMARO

70 DODGE MONACO 4 DR.

Automatic, P.S.; P. B.,. vinyl top,

.

i

$

NEW CAR SPECIALI

! 1976 P~mouth Duster
1 3 Speed, 6. Cylinder
Over

•

:
34751i

It

t

,.

New paint. Only

:.
:

:

Automat ic trans ., P. S., P. B., .only .:
10,000 m1les .
·
It

!t.- ----

50 Nice Clean Late Models To

Choose From

:

•**********************************************
SeNices Offered

SeiVices Offered
CUSTOM •REMODELING . 20
yea r s experie n ce . 388 8308 .
N ew dry wall ce'iting with
swirl Or texture designs.
Ot her dr y wall , repair . vin yl
wa llpaper ing , new balhs ,
new k i t c hens ., A nythi'n Q in
remodeli ng or repair .
11 t f

-·

-·

·----.----____,; ·------'·

THE TOP SHOP
Custo m Bu i ll Roof Trusses .
Form i ca Counte rt ops &amp;
Cabinets, Cool vi ll e , · Ohio ,
667 ·3186
256 .t f
COUGHENOUR
Wate r
Delivery . 446 3961, &lt;146 -4262
any l ime .
244 -lt

D. DAY
REFRIGERATION
REGR I GAR.AT I O N . heal ing ,
e lectric , 17 years e)(p . JBR ·
827 4.
258 ·1f
-"-'--·-,-.-

---

SenitiS Offered

SPEC I AL off seaso n _p r ices on
Fur niture Upholstering now
to fi r s t of rnarch 1976. Cal l
now . Save $.. Mowrey 's
Furniture an d Up holstering .
Phone 675 4154 .
306 -t t
--,--~·-- --...--- --.-- -- ..:.. .....
APPLIANCE
REPAIR SERVICE
WAS H ER S.· dr ye r s . elec tri c
rang e . L&amp;A A pp liances 446
7)98 , 2JS 5640 .
6· 1f

-

GENERAL Con lrac to r . Room
additions , hou se ra zing and
leve l ing. a lum inu m or vinyl
Si d ing , carpentry of all
kinds , roo fing . 367 059 1.
Pa ul walke r .
_.
._....._
. 2511 ·1f

____

______ ___

SAFE WAY
ALARM CO.
OF GALLIPOLIS
BURGLAR an d tire a l arm for
home , b usiness , In dustry .
Ph . 446 -860 3 or 388 830B
302 -tf

CARP EN -:- E R work. house
r ernode li ng ,
w1r1ng ,
pl umbing , p a in11n g Ph . '4d6 · -"·--------.--~~..,_-'--BORDER 'S GARAGE DOOR
29 10 .
Service . Co mm ercia l and
259 ·1f
Residential , Specia liZ ir1g in
'-·-.,.. "--------~-----.opera t ors . L oca l . 256 -6472 .
DOZER wo,_r k , excava t i n g ,
land clearrng . Ph . 11116 ·0051.
20 t t
290 I f
SA NO Y AND BEAVER In ·
WAll
PAPER ,
VINYL
suran ce Co . has o ff ered
HANGING , AND PAINT services lo r Fire Ins ur ance
ING ,
FAST
AND . cove rag e In Gallla Coun ty
RELIABL E . CALL 25&amp;-6342 .
for
almos t a
centu r y .
264 1r
F arm s, homes and personal
property coverages arc
RO OF IN G and gu11er o f a ll
a va ilabl e to mee1 individual
need s. Conlac 1 E mmell
kinds , h o1 asphalt . We fix;
Church , your n eighbor and
th e f l at ones . Phone 36 7 0591.
agent.
P a ul Wa l ker ,
20 ·6
25-l ·lf

-

·--- - -- -...------""'--

WA Y RadiO!! ~ a le s &amp;
Service. New 8. Used CB 's.,
police m on i to r s, an tenn&amp;s.
et c . Bob ' s Citizens Band
Radio
E~uip ..
Geor'ges
Creek Rd . , Ga ll ipolis, Ohio.
446 ·451 7.

TWO

1

74 AMC JAVLIN

-------------1*
00
,

:2 Dr . H.T ., 340 engine, automatic .
It

20·3

24-1 qt. Kendall Superb 10W30
24-1 qt. Kendall Racing Oils

!

*

-- -

SMt, LL .2 BR . a11d bath mobnt
hon·le, turn . bottled
furnace and k it chen. stove,
perfect f or c amp ing , S1.950
256 1456
15·6

'2895 00

72 DODGE CHALLENGER

20 . 12

17.08
16-04
17.26

4-

00

f

1965 FORD W indow Van , E)CC .
co nd ., 6 cyl . aut o ., new
motor , new painL 245 -5583 .

S69S .

;f:

Compare At . . . .

a¢------+---.;...;...;;;...;.
~~~I~E 1595
'2395 __,i

20 '

24-1 qt. Castro! GTX20W50
24-1 qt. Castro! G. P. 2-Cycle
24-1 qt. Castro! G. P. 4-Cycle

.,

2-72 CHEVY NOVAS

245 ·

_

10.85
10.85

.,._

:

-------------~

17.08

24-1 qt. Warren, Reg. 30
24-1 qt. Warren Type-A ATF

'2295 00

HAY for s~ l e . 446 ·9697 .

24-1 qt. Havoliile 10X30

16.36
16.36

:

-:----...--

LOCUST Posts . Phone
5-478 after 5 p .m '.
·

.

P.S.• :

a
--------~-----:
74 FORD GRAN TORINO 2 DR. HT. 1

1 owner. automatic, P.S., vinyl
:top.

Plumbing &amp; Heating

Sel'iices Offered

BROWN'S HARDWARE

0.

GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMB IN G - Heating - Air
Conditioning . 30 0 F ourth
19.t7 JEEP Un i ve r se~ l. ve r y
A ve . Ph . 446 · 16 37.
good con dition Phon e .t.16
48 tf
4999 .
12 I f
...... ____ .........
DEWITT ' S P LUMB IN G
A ND HEATING
PA SQUAL E Eleclric Por 1able
RoUte 160 at l;vergreen
Elecrj· ic A lt e rnator a n d
Ph one 44 6 2735
Power P l ant s . Ph . 446-27 16
187 tf
126 -t f
-··---·-~~ ---- ---·- ... ~ ~--- -"----·--CO RN led Freezer Beef. Car l
CARTER'S PLUMBING
w ·lnters . R lo Grande . 245
AN D HEATING
51 ' 5
Cor . F our t h &amp; Pi.ne
287 t f
Phone A46 ·J889 or 446 4477
165 -1f
CORN tor sale . 25 6 ·6184 .
20 -3
ST ANDA RD
Plumbing . H eating
1 15 Th ird Ave ., -1116·3792
187 . t f
COA L. C.A . B Coa l Co rp . I
---~- ---mile north of Ch eshire, on R t . ---·--·
7. P ic k you r own , S20 per to n .
Open 6 days a wee k , 367 73 30
fo r further infoi'ma t ion .
6 II PASQUALE
E l ec trical &amp;
In su l at ing . 103 Cedar Sr .,
Ga llipoli s . Ph . 4&lt;16 ·27 16.
USED FURNITURE
· 126·1(
ROC K ER ,
'1
STUFFED
CHA IR S, HIDE.AWAY ·BED
'A LBERT EHMAN
WITH MATCHING CH AIR .
Water De livery Se rvice
COUCH, 4 LAMPS. TV ,
Patr iot Sta r , Gallipol is
MATTRE SS • . LIVING
Ph . 379 -2133
ROOM SUI TE . RICE 'S
I
243 -lf
NEW &amp; US EO FURN I 854
SECOND AVE . 44 6·9523.
15 -tf
KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
RIO GRANDE , OHIO
· CERAMIC f i r ing kiln . 446 · COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE
LANDSCAPING
1618 .
20·3 SHRUB S, TR EES , ROCK
GAR DEN S .
ALL
GUARANT EED . Pat io and
MI X ED hay for sa l e, $1 an d
poo l la n d sc ap i n g. Stone
$1.25. 379 .2 \1 5.
sand .
too l ,
shrubbery
20·6
tr i m ming . Dump
truCk
------~----- - -ser-vices . 245 ·9131.
ONE of the rin er things of l ife
187 ·If
Blue Lustre Carpet and
upho ls t ery
cleaner . S1 .
Centra l Supply .
20·6

----- -.-

1 owner, air, automatic
P . B., vinyl top .
'

Gallipolis
! GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PlYMOUTH!•
.: t
Daily Tribune :
1639 ·EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, 446-3273
:

--------------

r,o R your Tire an d Bal t erv

CANADAY
REALTY

at

'

--

19 7-4 F OR 0 _Maverick 6 cyl.
auto . 4.46 ·9861 afte r 5.
11 3

Auto Sales

LAFF- A. DAY

s

anything far
our Auction
in your home . For'
lnlorJ'IIalion and pickup
ltrvl&lt;:e call 2 56 - 1967 .
Sale Every Slturd1y
Night •17 p.m.

Aluminum
Sheets

For Sale

13 ACRES - Wi th mod ern
all e l ectr i c home , six
rooms , bath and a half .
co mpl e t el y carpe ted . Has
c arpet w ith sto rag e room .
Shown by ap pointment.

Br•ok''"- Builders

SWAIN

----- --"-·--'----

•\Jt

FERTILIZER
11 -11 -17
8.11gged Prices 144.00 Tan
H -12 -12
11:119.15 Ton
10-20· :10
SIS3 .25Tan
8· 3:1 · 16
1119. 50 Ton
6· 24-:14
1156.10 Ton
33·0·0 Ammonium Hitro~te
1140.00 Tan

U SED p iano . ~-46 - 0671.

"'I

BI · LEVEL
Th ree bedrooms , bath , -·
kitct1en
dining room .
living room and deck on'
up ~er level . Garage. ut iHt v
~rea . and spa ce for your
rec . room or 4th bedroom ,
,on low ~ r leve l. less than 2
y ears old . This is another. •
Rancho value pr iced below .
rmarket . Call , for
ap t N
pointment or llformalion . '

~.;.:._-

TR ucK, B ft . iop per , 1146.· 761.8 .
.
20 -3

t••

ACREAGE - We got i t. All
pr lC'. e
ran9 es.
good
loca t ions .
· "'~':!
Br ic k rlanc h ho me, 3 BP
bOi h , kjtcheh w rlh ha r 1
wood
c.a b i n ets . rang L .
l arger
L R,
carpele d 1
pane led and w ell in sula ted ,
garage, front oorch , p at io
, door . Spa cious 11 acre lu r
J&gt;n Mitchell
Roa(l ..
4 BR Ran ch Home , on R 1
325 . 15' )( 32' LR , with
lirepla ce and hardwood
flo o r s , kitchen d i n ing
room , ba t h , uli l ity room .
F . A . furn ace, well in
s ul at~ d ,
s oft
water ,
beauttfUI le11e l 11 -. acres
with larg e garage and '" ~
grap e
arbtlr .
fenced .·
Ano tehr Ran c ho value .

.::..- .....

73 DODGE DART SWINGER

lt m ag wheels.

36 •'x2J'.'. x..009

12.

-- .:. ' Wanted To Buy

••

.

Wanted

0

[I

i

74 DART CUSTOM 4 DR.

'289500

i*

.---~l::-~r~Sa
-l-e--. ·:

-~----- ·----- -- ----~~~

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC

--,-.---~

--'

3 P A IR use d I S" studded mud
and sno·w
tires . .uo &lt;1406
ev en ings .
18·3

3 BR Hou se. with basement ,
in east en d ot town, large
l awn • .may co n sider land
con tra ct . P h . 446 -:315 .
20 3

;:::_-

--'-

1970 . OLDSMOB I LE . Been
w r ecked . Has good parts .
Call 245 ·9190 .
18 3

For Rent or .Sale

BEAUTIFUL HOME SITE
Just olt 160 ·Evergreen, 36
acres , atmos t att tillable
Nic e hump of land ,
·

---

ca·rry on Flight Bags.
New . Never used . Perfec t
g ift for travel er . Phone 245
5620 after S
29] I f

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

Eng lne
with New Su n
Equipment
a Cer t if i ed

I,

rw o

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

VACANT LOTS
In Restricted Su b -Div ision .
,Call f or d etai l s .

New GMC
Truck H ead quarters
1 1 T. Chev . Pickup
Ford Pick up
Monte Carlo
Ford Econoline Van
1 ~ T . GMC P ick. up
t 1 T . Chevrole t
Pickup
T . GMC Pickup
3 T . Chev . Dump T ruck
t -. T . P ickup
·
GMC Suburban
F600 Ford Dump
F60 Fo rd Dump
' 7 T . P ickup
F 1000 Ford Trac lo r
SOMMERS GMC
Trucks, In c.
133 Pine St.'
446·2Sl2
16·If

- ---

See Charlie Webster • Safes Manager

• Ful l basement with a large fam i ly room , 2 baths,
garage , central a ir , nice carpeting, real n ice kitchen .
Loca t ed on a large lot . Approx . 2 years old. You m ust
see the inside of thi s house to appreciate It .
·

CITY SCHOOL
DISTRICT
7 L arge roo ms, 3 bedr oo m ,
old st y l e remod el ed hou se
Fam i ly room , b asement ,
nat. gas forced air f urna ce .
city wa t er , g ar age , larg e
fen ced in yard . Jusl ou t o f
Gall ipolis City li m fts on R I .
t4 t .. Modern kit chen A r eal
barga in ·. Ca ll n ow .
'
NEW LISTING

WE NEED LISTING

4371 1 Second Ave .
(ac r oss from Post Office)
Ga llipolis , Ohio

N ow taking listings in thi s
area . Evening hours for
yo ur conv enience . Call thi s
numb.er anytime.
446 · 1900
2 BEDROOM
MOBILE HOME
73
model 1 completely
f urnishe d . 1 acre lot ,
s t orage
bui l ding ,
on
Georges Creek Road . N ice
tor first hom e
BEAUTIFUL
THREE ~EDROOM
Ex c ell enr tr ame home on
Route 218 . TOp qualify
interior .. Baseme n! .com pl e te ly tin ist)ed Int O livin g
quarters . F ir e pl ace In
li vi n g r oom a n d b.J sement .
2 car ca rport plus garage .
Lot size 308 ' widex208'
d ee p . Th is hO:me is pr i ced
to sell .
EXCELLEN'T
THREE BEDROOM
BRICK
Ten mi nute drive fro m
c i ty
Spacio us
roo m s .
beauti ful hardwood floors ,
ca rp ete d liv i ng room , two
baths , two car garage . Wi,ll
sel l
wilh
or
witho u t
acreage . Truly a st ep up
lor most homeow n er s.
SMALL FARM
On Route 7 18 . 47 1 1 acres . 60
p el . level , 6 r oom hOuse ,
lar ge barn . timber and c o&lt;~ .l,
rights .
Priced
very
reaso nable .

NEW COMPACT - Dodge int~oduces an all-l)ew compact car line for 1976.
Called the Dodge Aspen .- the new car is available as a two-door coupe, a fourdoor sedan and a four-d oo r wagon. The coupe is built on a 108.5 Inch wheelbase,
while the sedan and wag on have a wheelbase of 112.5. The Aspen models are
available in standard, high and premium trim levels and provide the motorist with
ride qualities s1.1perior to previous Dodge compacts. Engin ~ c hoices are a 225 :Cl.lbic
inch slant si x, 318 V-8 and 360 c1.1bic inch V-8 with twc&gt; barrel carburetion.
Beautifull Bedrooms

You won ' t find a better buy
til an th is very beautiful 3
bedroom brick and fra me .
Format
d in in g,
lovely
l iving roo m. p erfec t family
room " This is a charmi n g
home that will be hard to
mat c h . Owner r ea dy to
sell
im
m ove . Must
mediately .
...

~

1969
1970
1970
1969
1974
1974
1974
1970
1969
1971
1969
1970
1969
11 967

"'

Call Now.

Two bedroom home on
Se cond
Avenue , large
finished room u p st ai rs,
garage basement. centra l
a ir conditio ni ng , three
room with bath r en tal on
rear ol propert y . p r i ce d
$35 .000 , shown by ap
poi n tment o n l y .

REALTOR

BOB LANE.
BRA NCH MANA.G ER

--

'

Picture of Your Home.

Off. 446-3643

barn . ou tb u ild in g. tobacco
b ase , all minera l right s, all
mac h ine r y and cattle .
Lo ca t e d
10
mi . f.rom
Gal lipolis .
82 ACRES
Located ju st 2 mi . fr om
c ity . A n i ce all electr i c
hOm e w.ith many ex t ra
fea tures Large barn . This
is extra nice development
, land with c ity wat er . Cal l
f or mo r e ln form allon .
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION
Ch ar mi ng ranc.h . 3 BR , 2
bath , OR , f u ll basem en!,
attached garage , wetl
lan dscaped
t o!
n e ar
Mspitat .
2 LOTS
Located in Gallipoli s school
distric t . Ideal to r mobi l e
home or home building .
Can help f inance . Pr ice
S1,800 to $'2,200.
THIRD AVE .
Large two s tory ,home in
good condit ion , 3 BR , DR
and bu i lt in k ilcllen . Extra
good 2 BR apa r 1ment on
r ear of lot . L i ve in one and
tel the other he lp make th e
J)ay ments .
MOBILE COURT
·I d eal
li ving
quar t er s.
nalural gas, good location ,
real income for the in
vestmenL Ca ll for mor e
informat ion .
DOWNTOWN
Large two story br ick nice for the large tam i l y , or
could rent the " room apt.
with privat e ent ran ce . N e w
fenced lot , double carport .
Quick oossession .
WALK TO SCHOOL
Fro m rn 1s two s1o r y. 3 BR
hom e. nice l ivin9 and
tam ily rm ., dry basement.
gas heat. deep lo t w i th
gatd en spot .

.....

The WISEMAN Agency

RANNV BLACI&lt;BURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

S ROOM house wi t h ba t h

garden space. A real b u y for ohly $15,000.

...
••
.....
"

01

.....,.'"

73 FORD PINTO SOOIRE

Washers and dryers. ~ - 1 cond . ...
S40 and up . L&amp;A Appl i ances , ........
300 4th Ave .• Rear . Ph . 446 ~
7398 .
18 ·1f

•••••••••••••

LISTINGS NEEDED WE
ADVERTISE
NAT.IONAl,LY - WE 8\JY
- SElL ,.- TRADE.

25 i..oc u st St.
Howard Brannon , Broker
Office 446 ·2 67 4
Lucille Brannon
Eve . 446·)2 26 or 446 ·26 14

3 Bedrooms
7 rooms and bath , full basement, garbage disposal, city
wa ter , carport , n ice level lot, garden space. porch . ~
clean and nice· home. Pr iced to sell now. Only ~12.900 .

Space Reserved for a

Four bedroo m home in th e
cou n t ry . 1 118 a cres located
on Rt 141. a pprox i ma t ely
s even
mi l es
f ro m
Gal l ipolis . L a rge garden
l?t : Modern kitchen , large
hvmg ro om and dining
room , two baths . on e up
stai r s .
o ne
down,
renovat i.on in p r ogr e ss .
Ga l lipo l i s
Ci ty
Sch oO l
D is trier

New. m o d e rn , insu l ated
a nd
curpe t e d .
t hr ee
bed r oom
b ri c k 'hom e,
e t ect r i·ca lly
heate d ;
,. located on St ate R r. 588 ,
n ear the U S. R t 35 in
tersec!io n a t Rodney ; 11 0'
frontage a l ong RL 588 ;
Ga ll i pOli S City
Sc hool
Distr i c t . Priced $3 1. 600 .00 .

OWNER
WILL
HELP
FINANCE - . ~5 acres
ad io lnlng th e city l im its of
Rio
Grande .
Lots
of
potential for SSS ,OOO.

In Ga IIi polis
S room house on a peaceful street . Porch, nat . gas ,
furnace, built -in ca binets, fenced in yard, plenty of

:

:Auto. tra11s ., a ir cu.1a. , AM·FM,
w" ·,. radio wit h stereo tape, extra
--- -· - - - - -It- sharp .
USED APPLIANCES
It-

.."' ..•·..
.t ..

..::

AEDROOM
atf
gas
hou!ielrailer . S2 . 100 Ph 367
76 3A
JO 12

212
_ • _ _ ....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ""!- _
_ ·1f

on

.21 f T

PONTOON hea t, red
wood deck, stee l Styrofoam
fil led pontoon. like new
snap on camping t op, steel
storage ben seets, SO hp,
elect ri c start
J o hn so n
motor. all for s 1.595. no
· trailer . 25 6 loi56 .
IS 6

.!

~OO FI NG ,

alum inum . sidlr\g ,
fr ee est im ates . Ca ll 2S6 .63M .
256 I f

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

FOR
THE
best
in
ar chitectu r al design ot new
homes , sm.al t com m ercia l
bui l di n gs,
apts. ,
or
remodeling . with state ~ P ·
proval of plans . Ca ll coll ect
Bi ll Wa lker . 1-682 7498 .
268 -t f

--'""'--·----'--·-----

HOWARD
P ec.k
wa ter .
Del i ve r y dav or n ig ht 24 59315 or J88 .B262 .
292 .f f

- ---- --------~

BOB L ane's Comple1e Book keeping and Tax Se rvice .
1137 1 1 - second Ave. (Acro ss
from
Post
Office ).
Gallipolis . Ph. 11116 .79p0 .
Week l y and monthly ser:v tce
for co m' me r ci al o3ccou n1 s .
Incom e Tax Pr eparalion .
19 3
__ __;_
,_______

---,--

___

TRAILERS
FOR SALE
Roycraft 8x30
VanDyke 10x40
Phone 245-5098

Best Offer

..

�-

,

28 - The SlUld•yTimes -lientinel. Swtdav. Jan. 25. 1976

Miss Samuels will tour

Mobile home

State seeking
h
atD~~:~~o;e~e f~!ti:a~~ s orter bridge
I
r· epair C OSIDg

Europe with wind band
POMEROY
Suzy
Samuels, 536 W. Main Sl.,
Pomeroy, has been accepted
for membership in the United
States Collegiate Wind Band,
se lected
musical
a
organization which will make
a concert tour of seven
European countries in July
and August. Suzy's mother is
Mrs. Mary Alice Samuels.
Suzy plays sousaphone in the
local Meigs High School Band
directed by Dwight Goillll.
The invitation to tour with
the United States Collegiate
Wind Band was received
from Prof. AI G. Wright,
Director of Bands at Purdue
University (Lafayette, Indiana) and conductor of five
·previous US Collegiate Wind
Band Tours since they were
started in 1971. The associate
conductor, Gladys Wright, is
the founding president of the
Women Band Directors
National Association.

'

-

[
f

-

.--~;-

'.

1

-

..

·--

•

Feltman's Corner

ONCE A BEEHIVE of commercia l activity, a ne w_genera ti on of commerce - the
modern branch bank - soon will enhance the economy and beautify the \•illage of Vinton .

Pomeroy.

Business comer is revitalized
VINTON - , With the
completion of th e Vmton
branch of the First National
Bank buildmg on the Feltman
corner at Vinton near at
hand, the community's old
timers have been reminisci ng
about ' the day s at the
beginning of the century or
earlier when the corner was a
beehive of activity.
This picture, found
among personal treasures of
Mrs. Garland Elliott, lhe
former ,Jenrue RusseU of

Vinton, shows the size of the
onginal structure. All who
have discussed the picture
agree that the genera l dry
goods store of the John H.
Feltman family occupied the
lower, or left hand· side with
the double doors and windows. The next room was
where one went to fit shoes,
buy arctics or gum boots.
Some say Ed Mc-Ghee's
barber shop was next in line;
others, that Almond Baker 's

MRS. John R. Ed,;..ard~, of 5oJO Terrace Heights Dr., ·
Yakima, Washington, is seeking informa tion on a G::.llm
County area pioneer couple . ·

+++

IN a letter to the Daily Tribune earher this month , Mrs.
Edwards wrote: ~'Do you have any mformahon on the
marriage of Rebecca M. Willson (or IVilson) and Henry Wilson
McGath ' They were married (a pproximately ) on April 16,
1868, in Ga i!ia County. This couple was pioneers of that community. They raised their family in Gallipohs (although
Rebecca was born in New York ). Henry was the son of Ehas
and Sarah Hartsook McGath of Raccoon Twp. "

an d
living
meat shop 1the latter druve a restaurant
quarter
s.
huckster wagon about the
Th e hardware store was
rom mumly a lso with fr eshly
butchered meat) . Anyway , owned by " Unc ie Will"
both were in this next section , Butler but la ter a post office
~&lt;as installed there with the
along with a restaurant.
Among the names of those names Ed Beggs, Harold
con nected
with
the Sa nsbu ry. and Mr : and Mrs.
restau ranL were Charles and Har tley DeVore meritioncd as
Molly Davis, Mrs lda Buker, postmaster s. Too. Karl
Mr . and Mrs. CarliVard, Mr . Koontz w::J s one of lhe ear her
and Mrs. Frank P erkins. Mr. ones, with h1s s1slcr , Nola,
a nd Mr s. P e rr y Fisher and Kat e Port er as his
j V irgje
Hartsook ) , Mrs . asststants.
Upsta1 rs, over th e Fellman
Mirmie Gray assisled bv Ra v
Quickel. Mr
and Mrs . store were cloth mg and wall
Dumo it , Mr. and Mrs . paper of all des cr iptions
William Quic kJe, und Mrs. readv for the customer's
chooSing Charles Robinson
Minerva Warren .
After the north half of the was rnen't10ned as an ear ly
bm ldmg was torn down m dentist using an upstairs
recent years, Mr . &lt;md Mrs offi ce, but Or. Colby Feltman
Glen Brown t Grace Baker ) h::J d tins location In la ter
bUJit a bloc k building on the years. Acr oSs the ha ll from
site , hous1n g
boti1 a his offi ce was the Vinton

Special guests will be their
corps commanding officers ,
Oper&lt;:~ House where some yet
today recall roller skating or
dancing on the spacious floor 1
or enjoying silent movies

shown th~re .

There
was
a
~ ' Mr.
Whealdon" had a studio up
there too, about 1900, which
laler was taken ov~r by Mr.
and Mrs. George Mye rs,
assisted by their son, Wayne .
Someone has recalled there
w::Js a cream sta tion in t he
block under the control of
Mrs. Cora Quickie McGhee ;
also a doctor's office with Dr.
Alfred Clark a nd his brother,
Dr. Joh n Clark, answering
ca lls from there.
Fm ally, a Dr , wa tts came
to Vinton. Dr. D. K. Matthews
remembers as a lad in high
school he earned the sum of
$6 per week fur the da iiy
cleaning of Dr. Watts' office
and preparing the doctor's
mstruments for the next day,
a n eaPiy expenence lh a t

encouraged him to study
medicine and become an
M.D. hunself !
After Mr. Feltman 's health
fa iled, his daughter Beryl and
her husband, Newton Rees,
took over the store. With his
death later, Mrs. Rees moved
to Florida and the building
was purchased by a Mr.
Long , who had living quarters for his . family upstairs
and a furnace and repair shop
downstairs. Now he too is
gone.
So are the hitching ra cks on
both sides of the building, and
the wooden porch in front .
Completion of the modern
brick bank building will be a
sib'Tlificant asset to the Vinton
co mmunity, and cer tainly
beautifying .the once famous

corner!

fire Sunday

London, Paris, Lucerne,
Altdorf, Innsbruck, Lugano,
Munich, Amsterdam, Aix les
Baines and Heidelburg.
The group will assemble in
New York City for rehearsals
prior to their departure on
July 25. While in New York
City the group will play ·invitational concerts at the
lincoln Center for the Performing Arts and In the Plaza
of
the
Americas
at
Rockefeller Center:
· Acceptance for membership in this highly talented
group of college and high

school musicians is con·
sidered a musical honor of
national importance. A
maximum of 100 musicians
are chosen from the entire

Praise meeting called
POMEROY :_ Envoy and
Mrs . Ray Wining , com·
manding officers of the
Pomeroy Outpost, are announcing a special praise
meeting for comrades,
soldiers and the public on
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Hall
at 115 Butternut Ave .,

' damaged by

The band will travel for
three weeks in England,
France, Gennany, Austria,
Ilaly, Holland and Switzerland . Concerts will be
performed in the cities of

Lt. and Mrs . Daniel Griffin or
Athens . A carload of Athens
soldiers will also attend.
Cornets, piano, drum, and
tambourines will be played,
p1us testimonies and a
message. All past soldiers
and friends of The Salvation
Army are urged to attend .
Local soldiers, along with
Major Glenna Rumme l
(retired) and Eloise Adams,
YPSM, have gone over many
names of the 1940s and 1950s
who have been connected
with the work, salvation,
soldiership, Home Leag ue
and League of Mercy in the
past.
Ministers and supporters of
lhe work here and in Athens
are invited.

mobile home of Mr . and Mrs .
Jeff Karr, Naylor's Run,
Pomeroy, at 7:35 p .m .
Sunday.
Pomeroy
Fire
Chief
Charles Legar said the cause.

:te~~v:;~ys:~\c~a~:~~

the hvmg room and heavy
smoke and heat damage to
the remainder of tbe mobile
home, was undetermined.
Mr. and Mrs. Karr were
visiting his parents in Middleport at the time of the fire ,
which was discovered by
neighbors. There was some
insurance.

SUZY SAMUELS
United States once each year.
Students from 41 of the 50
states participated in the 1975
USCWB Tour.
The 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974
and 1975 concerts by the
U.S .C. W.B. in Europe,
England and Russia were
received with great critical
acclaim with standing
ovations the rule.
In addition to performing
concerts the Wind Band
g'roup will visit musi cal

shrines, museums and places
of musical interest such as
Richard Wagner's house in
Lucerne, Mozart's m Sa lz..
burg and Boethoven's in
Bonn, and attend selected
concerts and performances in
European concert ha ils ancl
open houses .

_vo_L_XX_V_II_

worth, or
just for what
it cost you .•?"

CARROL K. SNOWDEN
24 State Stree'
Gallipolis
Phone .:146-429 0
Hom e H6 · 4S1B

CARRY OUT ONLY

. Like a cood

""" ,.....

StareFann

llll4ltl

neichbor,

Crow's
Steak House

islhere.

.itiL

STATE FARM FIRE
AND CASUALTY COMPANY

Pomerov, Ohio

Home OffiCe

+++

Bloomulg!On, Illinois

P-7449

\Eiberfelds In Pomeroy January Furniture Sale!

BOWLING
OAN THOMP-SON FORO
BOWLING LEAGUE
W eek of Jan . 20, 1976
Team
Won Lost
No . I
30
10
No . 3
JO
10
No . 5
26
14
No 8
26
14
No . 2
24
16
No . 4
24
16
No. 9
22
18
N o. 12
18
22
No 16
18
22
No 6
16
24
No . 10
16
:14
No 11
16
'24
No 14
16
'24
No . 15
16
24
No . 13
14
'26
No . 7
8
32
Team 1 loo~ 8 po i n ts from
Team 4 Harold Lookado was
high for Team 1 wit h 517 pins ,
and Mer i da Shaw was high
for Team 4 with 520 pins
Team S took 8 poinh from
T ea m 11. Burl Coo k was hig h
for Team S with 601 p ins, and
F rank Krauller was h i gh fl;)r
Teem 11 With 45 1 PinS .
· Te am a took 8 points from
T earn 15. Joe Will was high
tor Te am 8 w i th 500 pins , and
Debbie Daves was high tor
Team 15 wi'h 444 p ins
Team 2 took 6 point s from
Team J. Jack Mink was high
ror Team 2 wlt, 529 pins . and
Ri c t'lartl Smrth wa s h tQt'l for
T eam 7 with 465 p ins
Team 6 took 6 Points from
Team 1-4 . L1nda Northup

WASHINGTON (UPI) The country is graduaUy
recovering from the worst recession since World War II but
Inflation will remain at about 6 per cent through 1976 and
unemployment will remain "distressingly high " despite some
improvement, President Ford's chief economists said today.
"Even under the bes\- of circumstsnces, the return to fuU
employment camot realistically be accomplishe&lt;l this year or
next," Ford 's Council of Economic Advisers said in its annual
report.
But food and energy price increases should be moderate,
housing construction should increase significantly, consumer
spending should rise and the nation's total "real" output of
good&amp; and services should climb into plus figures .after two
years of declines, it said.
Ford, in a brief report accompanying the council's report,
said, "The underlying fact about our economy is that it is
steadily growing healthier."
The council painted a cautiously optimistic picture or an
economy that is experiencing a solid, slow recovery but still

Gallia not

[News. . .zn Brzefs\\1
.

.

By Uolted Presslnternatfooal
.
DETROIT - DETROIT BEGAN A UMITED court·
ordered school desegregation plan today with about 15,000
elementary pupils traveling to new classrooms by bus. There '
were no reports of trouble .
Fewer than 10 per cent of the city's 247,000 students were
involved in the busing program in the city, the nation's fifth
largest public school system and the largest to Integrate under ,
court order. Tbe rest of the desegregation plan, which calls for
busing of an overall 21,853 students, goes into effect Tuesday
when middle and high schools open classes for the second .
~~e~~~ester . Another 30,000 will walk to new schools as part of the

.·..·

plan.
IVARREN, OHIO - TEACHERS IN THE Brookfield
school dlalrict went on strike today In a contract dispute.
The members of the Brookfield Federation of Teachers
voted to stay off the job until an agreement could be reached on
a new contract. The systeni has 101 teachers, 2,200 students
and three schools.
TEL AVIV, fSRAEL - PRIME MINISTER Yitzhak Rabin
United States today with a promise of Israeli
wllllngnas to make "far-reaching territorial compromises" in
return for peace with the Arabs.
But official sources said Rabin carried no dramatic new
propoll8ls for a Middle East settlement on his 11-day official
vlslt.

new to the

IVASHINGTON - INDIRECT SUBSIDIES paid through
!be tax system willcost the government $88 billion this year nearly ... much as the defense budget and a $4 billion increase
over 1875. These subsidies, 77 in number, are called "tax expenditures"~ taxes the government chooses not to impose on
incoole which is put to purposes It wanls to encourage or
reward.·
The budget shows the largest tax expenditure in 1976 will
be !be f6.15 blllioo corporations will save in taxe.s by taking
lldv111tage of the investment tax credit, which allows them to
lubtrllcl part of the cost of new plant and equipment from
tuea due. The purpose is to stimulate and modernize the
bullness ecooomy. The 1978 cost is nearly $2 btllion higher than

-

Come to the Third Floor
Furniture Department
Now For These Special Savings

Kroehler Uving Room Suites
Chairs, Love Seats and Rock-or-Lounges
.

.

1175.
Another big tax expenditure is tbe deduction taxpayers

claim on the interest paid on home mortgages. Those able to
take advantage of lt will save $4.5 billlon in 1976. Those unable
to will pay more in taxe.s than they otherwise might.
I
CINCINNATI -FffiE CAUSED ABOUT $55,000Sunday to
alll\'11'11 owned by IVUllam Poulus, a witness in the grand jury
lnveetlgatlon Into aUeged pollee ml8conduct.
Firemen and Poulos suspected arson. U . Ed Klayer of the
I1IIINrbln Groe.sbeclt Ftre Department said the blaze In the
Ccme On To My House bar, open less than. one year, was
"deliberately set."

I

Main Store, Annex and Warehouse Open Monday lhru Thursday and Saturday 9:30 to 5:00, Friday 9:30 to 8:00.

!Continued on page U)

r

.'

oacing many pitfalls .
The report was laced with warnings that attempts to overstimulate the economy would bring greater inflation and
threaten Ute recovery . It said increasing federal deficits to
create jobs would squeeze private investment funds out of tbe
economy and "the expansion could staU some time before
employment returns to an ac ceptable level. "
· "What we need is a durable recovery - not a boom that
carries the seeds of renewed instability in prices, incomes and
employment,'' the council said.
Inflation should moderate somewhat during 1976, the council
said, dropping from its high of 12.1 per cent in 1974 and 7.3 ]ler
cent in 1975 to about 6 per cent during this year.
The price of food and energy will not continue their meteoric
rise of the last three years unless some unpredictable problem
arises, lhe council said .
Preliminary indkations are for increased food production
this year, and "food prices are not likely to add to inflationary
pressures during the first half of 1976."

...

Special Purchase and Solei

enttne

on the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge this spring and
summer has high priority.
Mayor Hoffman , who has
also corresponded with
Congressman Clarence A.
Miller and State Senator
Oakley Collins on the point of
shortening the proposed
repair schedule (March lo to
Nov . 1o), said Jackson has
indi cat ed
negotiations
already are underway with
the contractors.
Following is Jackson 's
letter :

special steps were taken to
expedite the work and
s horten the closure time
while work was in progress
last fall.
We
are
presen tly
fl!!gotiating with the contractor to accomplish that
same objective when the
br idge is closed for the
completion of !YOrk this
spring. At this time,
discussions have not been
completed. lt is expected that
final a~reement will be
reached tn the near future. At
that time we will info~m you
Dear Mayor Hoffman :
of the accelerated schedule
IVe ·have received your for completion of the work. letter of January 7, 1976 (Signed) Richard D. Jackson,
concerning
the , re con. P .E. , Director of Transstruction of the Pomeroy. portation.
Mason bridge.
The Department is aware
The public will be notified
of the importance of this of further developments on
s tructure to your area as the project, the mayor said.
evidenced by the fact that

_19:....76:.__~----'-_:_P_:_RIC.:..:::.E_:_FI_:_FT.::.::EE_:_N.: .: CE::.:. :.:. : NTS H urn p hrey sure

_:_.NO_._19..:...9_ _
PO_M_ER_O_Y-M_ID_D_LE_PO_RT..:_,.:_OH_:IO_-,--_ _ _M_O_ND_AY_._JA_NU_AR_Y_26_:_,

·w~,,,,,,,,::;,,,,;,,,;:;,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,.,,,.,.,.,.,., ,.,.,.,.,.,.,.~.,.,.,.,.,.,,,,,.,.,,,.,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,\:'

DESPITE all the snow and sub-freezing temperatures,
baseball is returning to the sport pages across the country .
Th~ITsday, Gallipolis Dale Rothgeb and Bill Gray and other
local news re presentatives will travel to Huntington to take
part in the Cincinnati Reds annual media caravan. Expected
to be on hand for the 1975 World Champions bes ides manager
Sparky Anderson, are Gary Nolan, IVill McEnaney , Rawly
I&lt;:astwick, Pete Rose, Don Gullett, Ken Gnfrey and Jack
...
Gillingham.

(~u b) was high for Team 6
with 450 pins , and Marsha
Bush was high for T eam 14
w1 th 467 pins
T eam 12 took 6 points fr om
Team 16 Fonn i e Fleshm a n
was h rgll for T eam 12with 5 10
pins , and Bell Bechtel was
h igh fo r T eam 16 wi th 519
prns .
T eam 9 sp lil 8 po int s with
Team lJ Jim Powell was
h igh for Team 9 With 446 pms ,
and George Roach wa s 1'1igh
for Team 13 W1fh 463 pins .
T eam 3 sp l it 8 points with
Tea"m 10. Bev Ho udashcl t was
h ig h for Team 3 with 535 pins.
and L . Ke rwoo.ct (sub) was
high fo r Team 10 with 473
pins . .
Geor gra Coo k had high
gllme tor t h e ladi eS wrth 199
pins, and Bev Hoodash el t h ad
hig h series wit h 535 pins·.
Burt Cook h&amp;d h1gh game
fo r the men wr th ·246 p i ns , a nd
also had high series with 601
pins
On January 20 . other h1gh
games rolled w ere · Jack
M ink , 203; Bruce Jenks, 20 1
and Bill Bechtel. 203
On J.inua ry 13, bow l i ng
r esults d id n o t ma k e th e
papers dtle to absence ot the
Sec re tary, but rt shou ld be
reported that severa l high
sing l es an d series w ere
r ecor d ed Belly Merry t)ad a
208 game and series ot 541 to
lead her team to winnin g all a
pO tnls . Ot h er lligh g ames
· were : · Tom Roettker, 201 ,
Jack Ja n ey, 209 , Harold
Skidmore , 203 : . Geo r ge
Roach , 206 and Jim Ctat
wortl:ly , 214 ·
Skyline Lane$ 1S award ing
a Bi Centenntal 200 pa tc h to
each bowl er who bowls over
the 200 mark !hiS year in
ob servan t"e o f the N arron ' s
celebrati on

at y

•

e

Nation in gradual recovery Wallace won't
get on ticket
say President's economists

See me abo ut Stale Fa rm' s
aulomatlc infl atio n
coverage thai can increase
with the v~tue of your home .

90~PINT

•

e

"Is your home
insured for
what it's

Fresh Ham Hock
Navy Bean Soup

Ohio Department of Transportation · Director Richard
D. Jackson has assured
Middleport mayor Fred
Hoffman an accelerated
schedule for completing work

LOSSES HEAVY - Losses were estimated at $12,000
from fire that gutted the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Bass,
Liberty Ave., lower Pomeroy, _about 8:10p. m. Saturday .
Both Pomeroy and Middleport Fire Depts. were on the
scene. Mr. and Mrs. Bass were next door visiting neighbors when the fire broke out. Much of tbe damage was in
the street level noor of the two story frame home and in
the attic. The first floor which is below street level had
less damage. There is some insurance. Pomeroy Fire
Chief Charles Legar said cause of the blaze was apparently electrical.

+++
IF anybody has any information on the above request, they
can forward it to Mrs. Edwards. The ZIP code in Yakima,
Washington is 9~901. The Daily Tribune's files go back to 1893,
thus the information sought above is not avmlable on the
paper 's microfilm .

e

•

extending
•
servtces

Senator Hubert Humphrey,
non-eandidate presidential
hopeful, says that no matter
During 1975, the unemployment rate peaked at 8.7per cent in what happens in the
the spring , then settled slightly to 8.5 per cent at the end of the primaries Alabama Gov.
year. The council said this rate should drop by about one George Wallace is not going
percentage point during 1976.
to be on the Democratic
The "real" gross national ,product, or Gl\lP - the total · ticket this year.
output of goods and services after inflation Is taken into ac·wanace virtually ruled out
count - should grow by 6 to 6'h per cent in'1976 compared with another third party race this
declines for two straight years, 1.8 per cent in 1974 and 2 per year, and a new poll showed
cent in 1975.Ronald Reagan leading
Greater consumer spending - a projected 6 per cent in- President Ford in New
crease compared with a 3.9 per cent increase during 1975 -is Hampshire.
"expected to impart considerable strength to the economy,''
On ABC-TV's "Issues and
the council said.
Answers" Sunday, HumThe projected increase in new automobile producti~n " could phrey was pressed on
become steeper in the second half of this year," and1sales of whether he would support a
furniture and household equipment should be spurred by an Wallace ticket.
expected increase in housing completiollll, the repor\ said .
"He is not going to be on the
ticket this year,'' he replied.
''You know it and I know
it, II
Wallace campaigned in
Florida even as returns
showed him with an impressive victory in the
precinct caucuses of Mississlwi Saturday. He had some
n per cent of the first..-ound
selections to 18 per cent for
Jimmy Carter, his nearest
c. '11petitor, and around 13
per cent fur Sargent Shriver.

The Meigs County Commissioners Monday put In the
record a letter from Gary
Barton , superintendent of the
Gallia County Board of
Mental Retardation, that
pointed out the existing
· contraet for services for the
mentally retarded will expire
next Aug . 31.
The letter also stated that
the Gallia Board is not
prepared to offer an extension of sen'ice. Barton
commended the help given
them by Judge Manning
Webster. The Commission
took no action.
Citizens appointed to the
WINNER OOMES HOME - Stephen Matthew IVood - in the arms of his mother Meigs County Regional
came home Friday from Children's Hospital, Columbus, where he has been confined since
Planning Commission were
shortly following his birth at Holzer Medical Center at 1:04 a.m. Jan. 1, good enough to ·
Carl Qualls, ' a
reapmake him the winner of The Daily Sentinel's First Baby of the Year Contest. Stephen is
poin~~Dent ; Eleanor Thomas
doing fine. The parents are Mr. and Mrs. Stephen MichaeiiVood. He holds the couple's
daughter , Ketley ; age 3.
who replaces Carl Barnhill,
and Lindsey Lyons as an
alternate.
· The board adopted fees for
indigent counsel and approved payment of bills .
Attending were Henry Wells,
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) system, swept six gold-plated
All tlie other movie awards
Bernard Gilkey, and Warden
"One
Flew
over
the
Cuckoo's
statuettes
in
the
·
awards
were
singles, including AnnOurs,
commlssioners;
Next"
and
"The
Sunshine
sponsored
by
the
Hollywood
Margret
as Best Musical or
IVesley Buehl, engineer, and
Boys,"
two
top
contenders
In
Foreign
Press
Association.
Comedy
Actress
for
Martha Chambers, clerk .
this year's upcoming Oscar
Louise Fletcher was chosen "Tommy," Brenda Vaccaro
race, won the major honors in Best Drama Actress, Milos as Best upportlng Actreu
33rd annual Golden Globe Forman won as Best for "Once Is Not Enough,"
Rain changing to snow Awards presentatiOn during Director, Brad Dourlf was Marilyn Hassett as Best
named Best Male in an Ac- Female in an Acting Debut
tonight. Lows Ill mid -31b. the weekend .
The t"'o Rims were cited as ting Debut, and Laurence for "The Other Side of the
Cloudy, chance of snow
Tuesday, highs to mid Jib. the Best Drama and Best Hau ben and Bo Goldman won Mountain,'' John IVilllams
Probability of precipitation Musical or Comedy of tbe the Best Screenplay award for Best Original Score for
90 per cent today, 80 per cent year, and stars Jack for their adaptation of the " Jaws,'' Keith Carradlne for
Best Original Song for "I'm
tonight, 50 per cent Tuesday . Nicholson and Walter Mat- Ken Kesey novel.
tliau won the Best Actor
"The Sunshine Boys,' ' tbe Easy I' from "Nashville."
awards in the same two story of two retired
"ties My Father Told Me"
LOCAL TEMPS
categories.
vaudeville stars reluctantly fr.om Canada was named
The
temperature
in
"Cuckoo,'' symbolicaUy set brought together for one last Best Foreign Film, and
downtown Pomeroy at II in a mental asylum to demon· performance, also gnrnered " Youthquake" won the Best
a .m . Monday was 46 degr...es strate the struggle of the the BJSt S11pporting Actor Documentary honor.
under cloudy skies.
individual against
the award for Richard Benjamin.

TWQ films get top awards

Weather

Final retur!lll in Mississippi
will not be available for a
week or more, but the early
results made the March 9
primary in Florida crucial to
Carter's claim that he is tbe
only Democrat who can
compete against IVallace in
the South.
Addressing an overflow
crowd in Plant City, Fla.,
Saturday night, Wallace all
but eliminated the chance of
a third party effort this year .
"I believe you could say I
have ruled out the probabillty
of running as a third party
candidate," be said. It was
the closest he had come to
rullng out a repeat of his 1968
run on the American Independent Party ticket.
On tbe Republican side,
Newsweek magazine
reported Sunday Reagan
"has built a significant early
lead" over Ford in the first
phase of the New· Hampshire
primary campaign.
"The situation is volatile at
this early stage," Newsweek
said, but " ... If the Feb. 24
primary were held today,
( Continued on page 8)

Surgery. figures
show off waste
WASHINGTON (UP!) plications and 35 per cent of
Doctors performed about 2.38 the deaths studied were
mlllion unnecessary preventable.
operations in 1974, causing
The panel arrived at its
l1,900 needless deaths and conclusions on the basis of a
costing the publlc nearly $4 report by the American
billion, according to a House Hospital Association saying
subcommittee.
14 million operations were
''Unnecessary surgery performed in 1974, and on
wastes lives and dollars," the other studies showing a 17 per
oversight and investigations cent rate of unnecessary
panel said in a report procedures and a 0.5 per cent
released Sunday.
surgical morta),ity rate.
Included in the total was
Its cost estimates were
more than $1 billion spent for based on an average $1,650
unnecessary surgery on for each procedure among all
needy Medicaid or elderly types of surgery performed.
Medicare patients, according
The subcommittee recomto a report of the House mended :
oversight and investigations
- HEW require second
panel, issued on the eve of a professional opinions to
bearing today with Health, confirm tbe need for elective
Education and Welfare or nonemergency surgery
Secretary David Mathews. among
Medicare
and
"To the extent that HEW Medicaid patients.
has failed to implement cost
- HEIV study whether
control procedures mandated there are different rates of
by Congress, it can be said surgery between salaried
HEW Is responsible for waste group practice surgeons and
of rpore than $1 billion,'' the surgeons paid on a fee-forreport said.
service basis .
It estimated Americans
Congress consider
spent · $3.92 billion for requiring states to adopt
operations they didn't need minimum standar ds for
twice what tbe government cei-tification ant.l rec er ..
pays for aU health research tification of physicians
financed
through
the performing surgery. ~
National Institutes of. Health .
- The government step up
The report said a recent its timetable for establishing
survey of surgery in 95 .doctor watchdog agencies on
hospitals found nearly half ' the care of subsidized
the post-operative com- patients.

I

)

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