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'

..

'
H - The llaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ~~rid~y. No•·. 26, 1976

Hospital

Slaughter coming to league dmner

7 Pet. per year on a 4
yea•· ce rtificate .of
depo si t.
~ 1 , 000.00
minimu m
depos1t, 1nteres t paid
quar lcrly .
(l
'&gt; llh "&gt; l rll11r,l ! pl'nlll l',' ~ ~
1nvo1&lt;c&gt;d on 1111 rcdd•&lt;: al f'
.Htour. t ~ w•th dr!lwn pr ior
to tt. c t1 .ll•• (If •nilfunly

Meigs Co. Branch

-@
1 r~t' fl lh•

"·1"''"''

n~

R

C ount y

Loiln Co

;96 ~l'tOnd Sf
Porn('rov. Ohro

LOGAN - Gene Slaughter,
head cfootball coach at
Capital University and a
rormer coach in the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League, will speak here next
Thursday at· the league's
annual football banquet.
The 6:30p-.m. dinner will be
held in the Logan High School
cafeteria. Tickets priced at
$2.f&gt;O each are on sale at
league schools. Tickets must
he purchased by Tuesday
(Nov. :W) .
Heading the list of honorees
will be Logan quarterback
Scott Gasser, selected as the
Most Valuable Player, and
Logan Coach Bill Biggers
who gained Coach of the Year
honors. Also to be honored
are members of the all·
league footba II team.
Slaughter has compiled a
73-58-3 record in his 16
seasons at Capital. Highlightmg his tenure at the school is
an NCAA Division Ill
natiOnal champion shi~ in 1910
and 2 ,.asons in which his
teams suffered just one loss
[3-1 and 7-IJ.
An
Ironton
native ,
Slaughter compiled an 114-16-3
record in high school
coaching that included a

~ ~

~TDSAVB
~- .

=--

:::::
·

AD~~RAL

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FOR YOUR HOME

titles . He was also an

assistant at Ohio State for one
yea r.
Gasser, a 5-11, 147-pound
junior, came off the bench in
Logan's second league game
and guided the team to a
come-from-behind 25·14 win
over Jackson as part of a six·
game win streaR that gained
a share of the SEOAL title for ·
the Chieftains with lronto11.
He was one of the top
passers in the league this
yea r, completing 21 of 39 for
400 yards and flv~ touch·
downs without an interception. He also rushed for
an additional 142 yards and
scored two touchdowns in 36
carries. His older brother,
John, who later played foot·
ball at Notre Dame, was the
MVP in the SEOAL in 1965 .
This season marked the
third as head coach at J.ogan
for Bill B1ggers, who led the
Chi eft ains to their fi rst
SEOAL grid title since 1964 .
His three-year ma rk at Logan
is 15-14-1 including 1 2~-1 in
league play.
It has been a rapid cl imb to
the top from a second division club that went 2-1·1
and 2-4-1 in hiS fi rst season.
Last yea r's team was 6-4 and
4·3 , whil e th e 1976 club
fini shed at 1-3 and 6-1 after
losing three of its first four
games. The Chiefta•ns
averaged 41 points a game
offensively for the final five
~· mes of the season .
Members of the all-league
team that will he honored are
Ed Pennell. Neil Berberick

Nine

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suffessful tenure at Jackson
High School in the early 19f&gt;Os
where his teams won four
consecuti ve SEOAL grid

,

MIDDLE PORT, 0 .

·f.

(Conlinued from page 10)
patrol said Nancy L.
Clarkson, 38, Rt. 4, Oak Hill,
lost control of her car on th e
snow-covered highway. Her
vehi cle left th e roadwa y
striking a tree.
Lawton Templeton, Jr , 50,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was charged
with drlvmg left of the center
following u traffic accident on
SR 124, seven tenths of a mile
east of Rt . 32!1 10 Meigs
County. Templeton 's car slid
mto a vehicle operated by
Lawrence R. Yeager, 47, Rt.

and Scott La wrence of
Athens ; Kent Shawver, Mike
Wood, Mike SU.ggs and Brian
Mink of Galli polis; Mike
Brown, Gary Lowe, Rick
Howard, Jim Colegrove and
Juan Thomas Qf Ironton;
David K. Davis and Steve
Clark of Jackson ; Gasser,
Brad Tucker, Harold Pep.
pers, and Todd Davidson of
Logan; Steven Randolph of
Meigs; Kevin Silcott and
Craig Towler of Waverly artd
Terry Dixon and Dou g
Conger of Wellston.
David P. Davis of Jackson,
sidelined by injury much of
the season, was named to an
honorary all-league spot.
Also to he honored are 16
honorable mention nominees,
VInson Yates and Mike Born
of Athens; Mike Wiggles·
worth and Paul Finnicum of
Galllpolis; Paul Unger and
Jack Rowe of Ironton ; Ken
Crawford and Jeff Fenwick of
Jackson; Butch Kellar and
Tony Poling of Logan; Ray
Wilford and Dan Buffington
of· Meigs: Greg Williams and
Jim Williams of Waverly , and
Randy Royster and Chris
Miller of Wellston .

Sheriff. • •
(Continued from page I)
the General Code of Ohio.
Accordingly, the defendant
has not had his rights of
citizenship restored as set
forth in Section 2951.09 of the
Ohio Revised Code.
The complaint further
states, the defendant is in·
competent to hold the office
of sheriff of Gallia County
and that plaintiff as well as
all taxpayers In the cou nty
will suffer Irreparable harm,
damage and'injury unless the
defendants, the Gallla County
Board of EJection s, the
Secretary of State and
Governor Rhodes are en·
joined fr?m issuing or ~igmng
a certificate of electiOn or
s1gmng a commission for
James M. Montgomery.
It further claims that if
Montgom ery is allowed to
take office, official actions of
the sheriff 's department
would be without authority
and would raise the question
in every . criminal case of
vioh1tion of the r:riminals'

civil rights, resulting in
clogging of the Appellate

2, Cheshire.

criminal process.

A smgle car a&lt;:cJdent oc~
curred at 9:35 a.m. Wednesday on Rt 320, one and
three tenths miles north of
CR I when Hoyward Myers,
56, Rt. 4, Oak Hill, fost control
of hls car which ran off the
right side of the highway over
an embankment.
A Thursday n:\sh~p occurredon Rt . 325 , one tenth of
a mile north of a bndge
where the left rear whee l on a
car driven by Robert F. Roof,
18, Thurman, came off ,
causing moderate dnmagc

An acting sheriff with no
authority to carry out his
statutory duties would place
in grave danger the property
and person ofthe plaintiff and
all taxpayers .

RETURNS 10 THE INN THIS WEEK

Receipts up

TONiGHT

"ZERPH~ BLUE"
F~ialuring

Darrell Sheppard

and

SATURDAY
10 TIL 2

Veteraas Memorial Hospital
Wednesday Admission~ Bahavarlll Gordia, Pomeroy;
Elmer Riggs, Middleport ;
Phoebe Lee , Middleport ;
Glenna Utile, Middleport;
Laura Scott, Middleport ;
Austin Newsome, Syracuse.
Wednesday Dlocharges Evelyn Landers, Sabrina
Roney , Charles Ma chi r,
Bessie Barnhart, 'Goldie
Lawson, William Buckley,
Mary Meredith , Jerry
Johnson, )losa Brady, Grace
Roberts, James Lanham.
Thursday Admissions Aaron Kelton , Pomeroy ;
Clearsie Gibson, Long Bot·
tom; Martha Taylor, Middleport; Goldie Lawson,
Minersville.
Thuraday Discharges Austin Newsome, Mary
Pugh.

i-IOMEROY
(

WINNING LOTTERY
Polo' Gold: l%5 1one-twofive) aDd 711 Iseven-ouenine), and 81ZOO (etgh!-ooetwo-zero-.ero).
Double Play: 205 (tw&amp;zero•flve), 35942 (three·
flve ·oloe·four·two) and
5%43&amp;9 (flve-two-four-tbreealx·olne ).

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
Charles Yeager , Mason ;
Point
Mary
Mullins,
Pleasant ; Robert Pore, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs . Garland
Bostic, Gallipolis Ferry ;
Ruby Smith, Point Pleasant;
Thomas Rou sh, Hartford;
Keith Hill, Jr., Point
Pleasant ; Robert Harper,
Point Pleasant; Curtis Shlltz,
Ashton; Mrs. John Johnson ,
Mason ; Edward Findley,
Racine ; Christopher Hall,
Poi11t Pleasant; Samuel
Bennett, Gallipolis ; Tina
, Platzer, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Joseph Long, Gallipolis
Ferry; Opal Blessing, Clifton, and Mrs. Alvin Bowles,
Grimms Landing.

The young ... cool ... fresh
idea In rings! Diamonds as
the center of attraction .

News
•• in Briefs
(Continued from
l)
pa~e

saw tlle shark in the water and one was almost bwnped off his
board when the shark turned rapidly and swam across a
sandbar. John McCurdy of Philadelphia and Mark Schroeder
of Coral Springs swam waid Brenneka after: bearing his cries
for help. They pulled him to shore and applied ftrsl .atd to the
wound .
"The only thing that saved him was he had a big board,"
Driver said. "He was able to stay on it after the shark hll him."

Weekend vehicle
Lyons · mishaps minor

Anna L.
died ThursdaY

Holzer Medical Center
'(Births, Nov. %4)
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mullins,
son, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Hollis Myers, son, Gallipolis.
1Btt1hs, Nov. 25)
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Williams, son, Shade.

·
Mrs. Anna L. Lyons, 6I,
Broadway St., Middleport,
diedThursdaymomingatthe
Holzer Medical Center.
A member of the Middleport
First
United
Presbyterian Church, Mrs.
Lyons was born July 31, 1915
in Racine, daughter of the .
late Edward' and Emily
Mallory Carroll.
Surviving are her husband,
Russell w. Lyons; a
daughter, Mrs. Guy (Carroll
Ann) Harper, Middleport ; a
son, David R. Lyons,
Gallipolis; a sister, Mrs. C. S·
(Rosalie ) Nichols, Rutland,
two grandsons , and a
granddaughter.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home with tM Rev. Dwight
Zavitz officiating. Burial will
be in Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may caII at the
funeral home at anytime.
SONGFEST SET
'There will he a songfest at
the Middleport Church of
Christ in Christian Union,
Pearl St., Saturday, Nov. 27,
at 7:30p.m. The Rev. Roscoe
Thome of Point Pleasant will
he guest speaker. There will
he special singing. Lawrence
Manley, pastor, invites the
public to attend.

Two a ccJ'dents were ·
reported by the Meigs County
Sheriff' s Department
Wednesday. They were :'
At 11 ' 30 a.m. In Chester
Township on CR 28, two miles
north of Chester lee caused
Patricia E. Shivers, 32, Rt. 1,
Reedsville, to go off the highway, scrape a guard rail,
recross the highway and go
up a hillside. No injuries were
reported, and no citation
issued.
And at 11 :30 p.m. in Salisbury Township, CR 3•
Michael Keith Harrison, 19,
Middleport , struck the rear of
a car driven by Harold C.
Mckenzie, 33, Celina, Ohio.
There were no injuries or
arrests.
·::::::::'::.:::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::·:
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Colder and a chance of
snow Hurries oorth Sunday
and a chance of snow

Monday. F air Tuesday.
Highs Sunday wtll be In tbe
30s or low 40s, dropping to
\be 20s Monday and
Tuesday. Lows will be 1o
the 20s or low 30s Sunday,
falling to the teens by
Tuesday morning.

Ahunni

Showers or thundershowers
tonight, lows in the upper 40s.
Showers
likely
again

(Continued from page l)
Second year coach Ron
Logan of the Mrauders is
hoping for another successful
season after coming offa 12-10
campaign last year. Once
again, Logan is hoping for
good fan support as he
believes one of the keys to
last year's success was fan
support of his boys. Only one
of last year's starters returns
this :;epson, 5'10' ' guard Steve
Randolph. He's an improved
shooter and is noted for his
scrappy defense.
.Big 6'3", 215 pound Allen
Stewan will probably be
starting ih the pivot spot
Saturday night. His strength
should offset some of that
Vinton height under the
boards.
In the forward spots will be
6'2'' senior Dale Browning
and 6'3" classmate Alan
Dodson. Browning saw quite
a bit of action last year, as did
Dodson, and if both can
mature In the early games,
they could be keys to the

E·R CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to 412
Spring Ave. at 12:40 a.m.
Thursday for Kenneth
Romine who was ill . Re was
taken to Holzer Medical
Center. The Pomeroy Fire
Department also assisted at
the fires at the Jay Hall
home , Cheshire and the Fred .
William Utile home below
Middleport, early Friday
morning.

MEIGS THEATHE
CLOSED FOR

rn 101&lt; GOICI fhngs enlarged

~ACATION

to snow aer111,

Lay-Away
For Christmas

of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities,
with the approval of Dr.
Timothy B. Moritz, director
of the Ohio Department of
Mental Health and Mental
Retardation.
Harold C. Piepenbrink,
commissioner of the D(vision assistallt director or the

ELBERFELDS IN

'

OPENING DATE

,

of Surgeons revealed here last week tllat
Dr. Morgl!ll was reelected to th• Board of
Governors for a serond term ol tllree years
at their annual me&lt;'ling,
ElecUon to tl1e governing body of this
39,000 member distinguished internalional
surgical organlzaUon
represents
a tribute
'
.

lllt'tlit'al

~···,IK' .

l'rnnmunity and a
lumur f11r

'l'llt'n· an• mt•mbcrs in92tuumries.

Dr . Morgan 's rc'CICCIIOII by his fellow

outsta nd ing

his many years
to the Amcrlttm Colleg~

~w·~('OJtc.: re~nizes

soulhCtistern Ohto.
Fowtdt&gt;&lt;l by sw-gical le;~d-.·rs in U1c
United States and f&lt;~ nmla, the &lt;'Ollege hils
lx&gt;come thr largest and most inOucntial
surgica l organitation in tht• " •lrld. Sincf'
1913 nearly 45,000 surgeoos, rcp rcsl•nling
all of the various fields of surgery , l"'vo
uwt the high standards for adnussion 10
l''dlowship. The eollcge is international in

St'f\'iCf'

LONDON (UPI) - The bell$ of
Westmlnsler Abbey pea)ed In an
unprecedented show of support Saturday
as 1~,1100 marchers wound their way from
Hyde Park to Trafalgar Square to sing for
peace in Northern Ireland.
The Archbishops of Canterbury and
Westminster, representing the Proteotanl

and Catholic churches, both showed up lo
watch folk singer Joan Baez lead a
songfest by tlle largest crowd ever wIurn
up for a Northern Ireland " People" rally.
The afternoon demonstration of
speeches and songs went off without
serious incident.

Saturday, highs in upper f&gt;Os.
Probability of rain is 60 per
ce nt today, 90 per cent
tonight, 10 per cent Saturday.

department, has been acting
superintendent at the
Gallipolis facility.
Beattie, who has been chief
of the department's Office of
Support Services, has been
with the department for 10
years in an administrative
capacity.
·

moderated a. panel in the meeting of Ute
LORAIN UNPI!Or.x n::u
Gover11ors dealing with Chapter Affa irs
I.ORAJN, Oldo .I UP!) - Only • ha nd- ami C:-9 hesiveness among Surgi&lt;: ul
ful of cily police and fire officials wer~ on Specialhcs. He also serves as a member of
the JOb Sa1urday as a "sick.out" by most of the Committee of &lt;: ovcrnors on Financtal
the 194 city safety employes went into its Affairs of liiC college
fourtll day. The Lake Erie cit y of 80,1100 hils
Jn 1975, Dr. Morga n was elected to
been without full fi re and police proJec tion mcmb£&gt;rshtp as an Active Fellow of the
since Tuesday nighl when the offi cers American Assucialion for lhe Surgery of
walked off the job in a pay dispute.
'ti·awna and is the only physician from U1is

+

ttntS
GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

sending the certificate of election w Ted
W. Brown, Secrewry of State until !he case
is heard. He further ordered that
Secretary of State Brown be restrained
from ISSuing or sending to James A.
Rhodes, Governor for the State of Ohio, for
signing, a commission for Montgomery
until the hearing and ordered that Rhodes
be restrained from signing a commission
for Montgomery as sheriff of Gallia
County until tlle Dec. 3. hearing.
Shenff-elecl Montgomery, Gallia
County's first elected Democrat to tllat
post since the late George Ehman served
in the early 50s, could not be reached for
comment late Friday night or Saturday.
Secretary of State Ted W. Brown said
Friday afternoon he had not been served
copies of the suit but that if he was part of
the suit, his office would be represented by
Ally. Tom · Martin, appointed by Ohio
Attorney General William Brown.

. GALUPOUS - Judge Thomas W.
Mitchell of Jackaon County, assigned by
Supreme Court Justice C. William O'NeiU
whear the complaint in the Nov. 2 election
of James M. Montgomery sheriff of Gallla
County, has set the ma tter for hearing at
1:30 p.m. Dec. 3.
Meanwhile, Judge Mitchell granted
temporary restraining orders requested
by the plaintiff in the action, Republican
Ray RoherfB of Rt. 2, Bidwell. Roberts
sought injunctions against the Gallla
County Board of Elections, Secretary of
State Ted W. Brown and Ohio Governor
James A. Rhndes which effectively would
stop Montgomery from taking over the
sheriff's office.
·
Judge Mitchell ordered that the Gallla
County _..-Board of Elections and its
individual members be restrained from
issuing a certifiCate of election wJames
M. Montgomery as sheri!! of Gallia County
for the term beginnillg Jan.l. l917. or from

SPECI-AL SALE PRJCES I
OPEN FRIDAY UNTIL 8 P.M.
·sALEILA'RGE GROUP IN PLAIDS. SOLIDS AND
BLOUSE
• PR,INTS. SIZES 30 to 46.
.

WOMEN'S COAT SALE! INCLUDES ENTIRE
STOCK OF WOMEN'S, JUNIORS, MISSES AND HALF SIZES.
PRE-TEEN SPORTSWEAR 'SALE! SIZES
3 to 6 to 11-14 - SWEATERS, KNIT TOPS, BLOUSES, SLACKS, SKIRTS.

and

SALE! MEN'S
BOYS WINTER
ABIG SELECTION OF STYLES, SIZES - INCLUDES
JACKETS ENTIRE STOCK.
·
GIRLS COAT SALE! SIZES 12 MONTHS TO 24
MONTHS AND 2 to 14 - YOU'LL REALLY SAVE ON GIRLS' COATS.
BOYS TROUSERS SALE PRICED·!
SIZES 3 to7 AND 8 to 18 - REGULARS, SLIMS AND HUSKIES.
WESTERN JEANS AND DRESSIER FASHION JEANS.

$7
$6

MEN'S 95 FLANNEL SHIRTS •
SALE 49 CHECKS AND PLAIDS - ALL SIZES.
POLYESTER YARD GOODS 1f2
58 INCHES WIDE· REGULAR PRICE •2.69
PRICE TO •4.99
.

ELBERFELDS IN. POMEROY

defend and is inl'ompclenl to hold the off1 cc

of sheriff of Gallia County and that the
plaintiff , as well as all other taxpa yers in
tlle county , w1ll suffer irreparable harm,
damage and injury unless lhe defendants,
Ute Gallia County Board of Elections,
Secretary of Sta te and Governor Rhndes
are enJ oined fr.om issuing or s1gning a
certificatc of election or commission for
Montgomery.
Roberts furthe r charged U1al if Montgomery is allowed w take off1ce, tlle
sheriff's department would be without
authority and would raise th e question in
every criminal case of violation of the
criminal s' civil nghts, resultin g in
ctoggmg of the Appellate criminal process.
In his suit, Roberts asked lhllt a trial
be held on the contested election, that it be
declared the defendant is ineligible to be
nominated ,
or to be elected to or to
hold such office and that the court order
that a sheriff for tlle term he ginning Jiin. I,
1977 be appointed.
'

blacken

run

Meanwhile, the traffic death count
mounted slowly. The National Safety
Council estimated it would be between 450
and 550 persons between 6 p.m. local time
Wednesday and midnight Sunday.
A Uni ted E'rJ'ss_lnternatlonal count at
2:30p.m. EST showed 322 persons killed on
the highways. A Breakdown : Traffid 322;
Fires 32; Planes 8; Total 362.
Texas numbered 34 highway deaths,
California 30, Flor1da 17, and Michigan,
New York and Ohio 15 each.

Middleport ready for

Schools'
is
$209,239 in Meigs

MIDDU:PORT -Middleportisallsel
to welcome in the Christmas holiday
season Monday evening according to Mrs.
Debbie Buck, parade chairman.
A parade at 6 p.m. will mark the
opening of the season with the appearance
of Santa the hlghHght. Units taking pan in
the parade will be at Ute Gateway parking
lot no later than 5:30 p.m. Monduy.
FoUowing the parade Santa who will he
accompanied by his elves, will be in the
drive-through at the Citizens Bank and
Savings Co. · to meet children and
distribute treats to them.
Taking part in the parade wlll he the
bands of Eastern, Southern, Me1gs and
Kyger Creek Hig~ Schools, the Middleport
Business ,and Professional Women's Club,

Thief hits trailer.

New try promised for
benefit of renters

GALLIPOIJS - G. Richard Brown
will join the staff of Buckeye Building and
Loan Co. here Monday according to Ernest
E. Null , president of Buckeye.
Brown, 42, hils 11 years experience
Wltll Capital Financial Services. Mr . Null
said, "He will be a valuable addition to
Buckeye's Loan and Savmgs department
Buckeye's substantial growth since
moving w its new building at 500 Third
Ave., m 1910 is generally credited a major
asset w tlle mortgage lendmg field in this

area.
A native of Gallipolis, Brown Is a 1952

graduate of Galha Academy High &amp;hool.
He attended Rio Grande College two years
after a lour of duty with the U.S . Army. He
wa s also a student of Capital's

the trailer heme of Eugene Jenkins located
on Firebaugh Rd., Rt. I, Northup. Entry
was gained by breaking the back door.
.. callber riDe, a .22 plotol
Missing wu a ...

:ea~.:::::ya :~
David A. Bradley, 2'7, Muncie, Ind., on two
counts of
and ba ttary .

asru''.

Management Principles Program in
connection With his former position.
Brown is past president and an active
member of the Gallipolis Uons Club; and
IS a member of Grace United Methodlsi
Church where he Is chairman of the board
of trustees . He is ma "rled w the former
Ann Hardway, and has two daughters,
. Sandy, a freshman at Rio Grande College
and Cindy, a sophomore at GAHS .
'
The Browns resided at 524 Third Ave
in Gallipolis.
.,
"Other Buckeye staff members are
Dean Davis, Mrs . Judy Clifford Pollock
Mrs. Rutll Snyder and Mrs. Jewell
.Johnson.
Buckeye IS concluding Its 80th year of
service thit) year .
G. RICHARD BROWN

Relief promised businessmen
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) _ A special
legislative committee looking into the
problems of small business plans whave a
report within a month on ways to eliminate
some paperwork and government
bureaucracy for the businessmen.
But any relief in the form of taxation
policies apparenUy will have to await an
overall study of Ohio's laXBtion situation.
The 12-member committee, which began
work last August, has completed public
hearings and 15 preparing a report of
recommendations w be released about
Dec. 23 and acted upon at a Dec 28 ·
'•
·

: ·:

Inmate back

:: '

: ,:

in custody

;::

f

~;;;~:~~c~:t ~~~~~=

.

::~~~;:~;~ ~~: ~

I:!

J

./,_!,,_. /

bu~n"es~;::. !~~d .:::eJ~n Ia~~ :.~

he said, the legislature can also •treamllnc
them, and that is what ho plans to call (or.
Celebrezze also said the sta te Officl of
Budget and Management Is studying ways
to cut down on the number of forms
required by the state admlnlstrallon su
there won't be duplicate forms put out by
various agencies .
He said he also will recommend :
-Simpllllcallon of Ohio's securllles
laws as they relate to small buainesses.
- A "clearing-house" of information for
small businessmen on their obligatiOns to
the government.
- Establishment of a permanen t small
business subcommittee in the legislature
wdeal with specific problems.
But as for U!xation policies, Celebrezie
feels Ohio's tax structure needs an in·
depth review, and he is reluclanl to
recommend any specific breaks for small
buslnesamen until he sees what effect il
wpuld' have on the overall structure.
He did say, however , tha t he favors
shifting the lax burden for all businesses
away from langtble personal property
such as invenwries and equipment, arxl
wward actual income.

It's all right, Ma, we're with you

,:,,!:i,, f.•.

:;;;;~~~ ·r.;::-wl

PRICE 25 CENTS

MAKE PLANS - Jim Frecker, stand lug, cha.irmnn of the ChristlllltS parwlt· to
be held Wednesday , Dec . lin Pomeroy that will kick off the Chrlstllius promptlun,
goes over the plans for the parade wltll Barbara Chapman, secretary of lhl'
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce. The parade will form behind Uw .'icnlur &lt;'ilizens
center, (old Pomeroy Junior High ) at 5:30p.m. start down Main Street nl ll p.001 ,.
and stop at tlte Farmers Bank and Savings Compuny parking lot where Sn nu1 will
give treats to U10 children. J'he Meigs, Souithern, Eastern and Kyger Creek bund.&lt;
will participate.

meeting.
.Sen. Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr., D·
Cleveland, chairman of Ute panel, sald last
week that all but 1,000 of Ohio's 186,000
business concerns are conafdered small
businesses; that Is, they have lf&gt;O or fewer
~uhsidy
employes.
"If you could make it possible for each of
them whire one more employe, you could
virtually wipe out unemployment In Ohio,"
tlle Big Bend Citizens Bend Radio Club,
o
Celebrezze said.
Middleport Church of Christ, the winners
POMEROY - After deductions for
The senator said that for wo long, the
of the re'cent Meigs Junior Miss Pageant, employe and teacher retirement, Meigs
government
has treated small
June Wamsley and Teresa Carr, the Big . County's three local school districts have
businessmen hke large corporations, yet
Bend Regatta Queen, Merri Ault, the Glo- received $209,233.82 for November state
they have unique problems.
ettes and the Riggs Royal Cadettes. The• school founda tion subsidy payments
One example, he said, Is the number of
cheerleaders of Meigs , Eastern and acc..-ding to State Auditor Thomas E.
government forms that must he filled out.
Southern, the Pomeroy and Middleport Ferguson .
"Alot of these businessmen serve as the
Fire Department, Middleport Boy Scouis '
Amounts received by each district :-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·: :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:::.:-:::::.:::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::;;:, sole
officer of their companies, and they
and Cubs, Syracuse Brownies 1120 and include: Eastern, $46,362.11; Southern,
:
::
'
:;:;
may
be shorthanded ·and have no
jun\ors 1204; Racine Brownies 1249; $45,964.61 and Meigs Local, $116,912.04. In
secretary w fill out forms," Celebrezze
Rutland Brownies 1293 and junior, 1292; -eddilion the count~ board of education
:::: said. "They must devote their time to
Harrisonville Brownies 1052, juniors 1105; received a direct allotment of $14,1162,52. :.:..::.
'::: generating production al]d sales, and tlley
:
Salisbury Juniors 1100; Salem Center
':': either have tO fill out the forms themselves
Brownies 1172 ; Middleport juniors 1039; :':·:·:':':':·:·:·:·:-:::':-:::::.:-:::.:-:-:-:-:::.:-:-:-:-·.-·:·:::·:·:::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::.:::: ·:·:
or hire ~n attorney to do it."
Chester juniors 1049 Pomeroy Brownies
· 1076, 1271 'll!ld 1254 ~nd juniors 1216 and
.... .
::::
118(),
'
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio
:::: is, the legislature mandstes them. Thus.
Other participants. are welcome and
are invited to contact Mrs. Buck at the .
1UP!) - Charles Wharton,
::::
Kiddie Sboppe.
56, who escaped from the
····
WASHINGTON (UPf)-B.ep. Edward
Correctional
:;:;.
Chilli
cothe
1. Koch, D·N.Y., said Saturday he will
make another attempt In the next
Institute ·Friday afternoon
They may call her "Ma Bell" but she's
was back in custody wday.
Congress to wlu approval of ajax break
no
women's
Ubber - not when It comes to
·:·:
The
inmate,
serving
a
life
il'
for renters.
separate
telephone
!._: ~·.: term for murder, was
f husbands and wives. book listings for
The New York Democl]lt said he
c•plured
by
.
correction
.;\i
again wllllnlroduce legislation to allow
1
It seems that a growing nWI)ber of
1:~;
,
officials
early
today'
' :~:
renters to deduct a portion of their '
people are complaining about the Belt
::::
hitchhiking
on
Ohio
93
just
j::
rental Pl\.Yments on 'their federal
System's policy, which Is general
Income tax returns. Under the
:-:·
Windy and cold today, light
,,.
throughout the country, of Imposing an
snow likely throughout dsy.
i'j proposal , such deductions would be 1111
·
extra
charge for a separate listing, or not
::::
High in the upper :Ws. Con:::: limited to the portion of rental
offering
double listings like "Jolui and Mary
1~j~
a carp entry work detail
~:.·l
ttnued cold tonight and
:1·
'·'&gt;A
···· paymenlithilt goes to pay property tax .
Doe."
·:·:
outside
tlle
facility
.
The congreSMman said hts iew bill
::::
He faces charges of fleeing
It's unfair, says one Long Island , N. Y.,
also wuuld allow renters lo take a tax
woman
because "It puts pressure on one of
:.:f.:
credit 11 they do not itemize their
11:.
w avoid confinement.
the
persons
In the marriage to submerge hts
dedurllons.
.
or l1f · :entity." She and her husband have
;:;;,:;:::::::::i:::::::::::::::::::::::::':':'.':':·:·:':':·:':·:·:·:·:·:·:':·:·:·:·:-:-:-:•:,:::.:::.f:!
" r complaint to the New York
t~~;:;:;:;:;::·:: :;:;.;:::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::k' ta~'

Santa Claus' season

Dr, l\1urg11n

Brown 'joins- BB&amp;L

survivors . .
PARADE PLANS RENEWED- John Werner, president of the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce and the conununlty's Retail Merchants Assn., and Mrs.
Debbl Buck, chairman, discuss plans for Monday's parade which will mark lhe
arrival of the Christmas holiday season In Middleport.

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

1976

In the protest demanding cuurl action

Tragedies

areit tu hold .such membership .
A """nber uf the Holzer Medical
r..enter Stil{f sint't' 1952 when htJ: carne to
Gallipolis from Ohio SU1lc University
Hospital in Columbus, Dr. Morgan holds
an A. B. Degree from Washington and
.Jefferson Coll~ge and his medical degret&gt;
from H• rvard Medical Scht&gt;OI. Ht•
prescmly s&lt;'rves as an Assistant Clinicul
Professor of Surgery at the Ohio Stale
U11iversity College of Medil'ine.
In addition w his many roles
IUltionaliy in tlle American College ot
Surgeons,
Dr. Mor~an served n.s
Pr es•dcnt of the Ohio CI!U pter of the
Am~ri can Collel&gt;{e of Sur~eons i11 1969 und
IS cw·renlly Councilor of the OU1 District of
tlle Ohio Swte Medical Asso~i ation . he was
one of the founders of tlle Ohio Vntley
Health Services Foundution and presently
se rves that organizati on us Vice
President.

tniittt

filed late Wednesday afternoon , Roberts,
who lost to Montgomery by 27 voles,
claims that on June 18, 1965, the defendand
Montgomery, wa·s convicted of nonsupport , a vtolalion of Seclion 3113.01 of the
Ohio Revised Code, a felony .
Accordingly, the complaml sta les the
defendant has not had hiS righls of
Citizenship restored as se t forth in section
2951.119 of the Ohio Revised Code, that the

By United Press lnternallonal
Home fires killed eight children and a
motller withi.n a day in Tennessee, part of
tlle tragedies darkening tlle Thanksgiving
holiday season drawing lo·a close Sunday.
A young mother died in a hospital at
Knoxville~ Tenn ., a few hours after her
three children died in an explosion and fire
at their small frame house in nearby
Oneida . The blaze apparently resulted
from the use of gasoline in starting a wood
stove fire.
Ahalf-day earlier, five children died in a
blaze of undetermined cause at Knoxville.
Susan l.ozano, 20, five months pregnant,
lost her baby as a resull of injuries
suffered in a 'two~ar collision Thursday
near Austin, Tex., on Thanksgiving d~y .
Five persons died in the crash, and she and
her husband Andrew, 20, were the only

I

and

SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 28,

holidays

POME~QY

SALE! MEN'S
BOYS
SLIPOVERS AND CARDIGANS - EXCELLENT
SWEATERS SELECTION

or
ur

Surgeons and to its Ohio Cha pter. He was
('/ected lo tht- Cummittee on Trawna
•aoTidental injury ) of the t'OIIege in 1971
omd present!)' serves the Committee as
Chairman of iis Subconunlltee on Huspilal
Emergency Services.
At tlle most recent Clinica l Co llege of
lhc Congress in Chicago, Dr. Morgun

Montgomery hearing date set
for Dec. 3 by Judge Mitchell

Bells give support to sing for peace

Christmas Gi't Headauarters.;·:

(

to . Lhis

''urtlinuin~

Cremeans, 1974 : Mick Childs,
1971 ; Jeff Hawley, 1974 ; Dave
Ashley, 1966 ; Tom Hawley,
1970: Bob Southern. 1961:
Duane Johnson, 1967; John'
Jeffers, 1958 ; Dennis Ault,
1969; Harvey Hoffner , 1967;
John Lehew, 1974 ; Charles
Bush, 1964 : Larry · Taylor,
1966: Mike Bareswllt, 1974;
Bill Halley, 1966; Bob Mills ,
194'1 : George Carper, 1976 ;
Mick Davenport, 1976; Tom
Lowery ; 1975 ; 'Fred Robin·
son, 1966 ; Raymond Kloes,

~~~~~nr~Y~e:. fi 6 t'" J~ ~~?

SPECIAL :SALE PRICES END SATURDAY 5 P.M.

WATCH FOR

GALUPOLIS
Honor and
recognition came again in Ocwber to
Thomas W. Morgan, M.D., Chairman of
the Department of Surgery of the Med~l
Staff of the Holzer Medical Center and a
member of the Board of Truatees of the
Holzer Hospital Foundation.
The FeUows of the American Colirge

97

GSI superintendent
COLUMBUS . -: John A.
Beattie, 42, was appointed
superintend ent of the
Gallipolis State Institute
today and took over its ad·
ministration Immediately.
Beattie's appointment was
made by Dr. Norman Niesen,

. Su~geons of America again honor Dr. Thomas Morgan

VOL. 11 NO. 144

1961.

Weather

I

(Continued from page I)
1970; Jimm y Hemsley. 1957 :
Mike Werry , 1962 ; Bob
Werry, 1971 , Lee Floyd, 1971 ;
Jim Anderson. 1976; Chuck
Fau(k, 1973; Jack Oller, 1975;
Mick
Ash . 1974;
AI
McLau ghl in, 1974 ; Ron
Couch, 1974 ; Mike Wright.
1967 ; Andy English, 1974; Bob
Stewart; 1971 : Paul Searles,
1974; Wally HaHleld, 1961 ;
Terry Pickens, 1974 ; . John
Wolfe. 1967 ; Gary George,
1974; Charles Diehl, 1974;
Faulk, 1915; Lonnie
cRandy
oa 1es. 1975 : Terry Q uall 5•
1976 ; Rick Bolin, 1974 ;
Ri chard Qualls. 1971; Charles
Neece, 1974: Robert Qualls,
19
~·1DDLEPORT PLAYE,RS
- Chip Haggerty, 1971 ;
Ronnie Carr, 1963 : Sandy ,
Clonch, 1962: Perk Au it, 1975 ;,
Ron Qu1·11 en, 19111 : Charles
Marshall, 1976 ; Gary Ault,
1962 ; Terry Whitlatch, 1975 ;
Dic k Hovatter, 1957; Lou

Marau der Beattie named new

The MEIGS INN
992·3629

;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;::;:;:;:;:;:.:;:;:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:·:·:::·:·:::::::·:·:::::::;:·

Meigs Cou nty motor
vehicle sa les tax receipts
were up 12.18 percent for
October, compared to October, 1976, and retail sales
tax receipts for the month
were down less than one
percent, accordmg to the
monthly r eport' of Mrs .
Gertrude Donahey , state MRrauder success.
Teaming up with Randolph
treasurer.
will be senior Tim Scites at
The motor vehicles sales the other guard spot. Scites is
tax receipts for October, 1976, a good shooter. but like the
amo unted to $39,668.44 other three starters, other
compa red to rece ipts of t)lan Randolph , lacks ex$35,356.35 for October, 1915.
perience. Senior Ron Coats
Retail sales tax receipfB for will he seeing some action at
llcto bet, _ ]916, totaled that guard as wlll junior
$~3,59~ . 84
com pared to Kenny .Young. Young is 6'0"
$43,681.63 for October, 1975, a and •Coats is 6'2". Senior
decrease of .21 of one percent. Brian Hamilton will be
getting into the action at that
pivot post or at one of the
forwards .
The inexperience of Meigs'
seniors and the youth of the
VIkings should add up to a
real thrlller to stan off the
hardwood season. See you
Saturday at a.

$89.95

They Play It All

.~ews

l[!

Public Service Commission.
.The telephone company argues that
granting a free separate listing to each
husband and wile would Increase tbe cost of
Its directory "substantially" and that the
cost would have to be borne by all subscrlbers. .
We hate to place: ourselves Jd the
position of supporting a monopoly, but In
this case our sympathies are with the
company. If It's Important w a spouse to
have.hls or her "Identity" In the telephone
book, then he or she ought to be wllllng to
cough up the modest charge [about a buck a
month) to defray the cost.

'

!

!
•

{.

�•
•

•
3-A-TheSWillav Tlmet-SenUnei.Sundav. Nov:'28. 1976

· 2·A- The Sunday TimelTSentln•l, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976

.! .

He moaned, just to find out if he could

h rbh:.ht·ol

p"rachu te l"il' to open en11&gt;cshed in his primary
properly on the way down ? chute.
There was nothiog Iell iu do
~ ~Y-o•f Robert Herd. has . the
answer.
but absorb llle impact.
From his hospital bed in · " I wasn't sure whether I
'
Mor~antown, the 47-year-&lt;&gt;ld. }]Cjd SurViVed or 0 0l 1H Lhe
master sergeant, one o( an Waynesburg, Pa ., college
Celite minority who lives professor said.
P Ill rough a parachutist's roost
" I landed on my feet but
' dreaded acci dent, reca lls my speed was so great I was
~only on.e thought as he immediately on my back. I
tumbled 1,100 lcet · through was in very , very great
darkness. ·
shock, bu t I didn 't lose
" I just felt a strong need to c.onsdousness. 1 moaned to
.get to work to get the reserve see il I could. I never lost
chute open," says Herd, a co. nsc.io usne ss .'' An
member of a National G'lllrd emergency .ambulance was
p uni t
which conducted waiting al the drop area,
~ maneuvers la st weekend which was a standa rd
' ncar here.
precaution . 1\ took him to the
' Popping open the reserve hospi tal where X-rays
' para chute, Herd held 'it at showed he suffered no
p arths length so the air could internal organ damage, but
~ inllate it, lllen watched in did have &lt;.1 cracked vertebra.

..,.,__~

(iA IJ.IPIH .IS
~!.6:11 .

Puhh.,lit1l t:Vt:ry wcckth:.y CWt'lllr~
U l'cpt S..tu rtll&lt;)' ~cutlll ll&lt;t liS
1 \.o!.la~c l';ord ot l i;ollipol lll, Oluu

f
f

!

1""1.Til F. DAII.V SF.NTINE I.
Ill C()url SL, PVIfll:riJy, 0 . 45769.
Wt,:d ( tilly ~·li ~·mug

Pu lll. rJ&gt;!i'"~ l ~: ve r y

Cll'tpl &amp;t!ul'lla)', Err tc~U lili :.t!t;oud
d ahl! m it rhug m&lt;attcr ·at Pvlncruy,

Ohlu Pu~ t Offl ~·c.
By ~·arnt&gt;r iliuly cmd Swu.lay 75&lt;'
per W\,.'t' k. MvlUI' ruutc $3.25 P,Cr mon·

f

MAIL
SUBSCIUPTION RATES '
The GalltptJiis D~:~,ily Tril,luue In
Ultw t~tlll West V ir~in ia une year
U2.00; .~ iK tnunth.'i Sll .SO: three tnur tu~~ s1.oo. Els~!whe•· e S
2Al.oo pet·

year i

~ ix molltiL~

113.00 : U1rec mon-

dLS $7 . ~ : Jllu tut' rou te
lilly.
The

S3~ mun·

Datly Sclt lt m:l,, Olll!

ye~tt ·

S2'l.OO : SiK monULS $11 .50 ; tll reernott·
till! 17 .00. Elsewll4!t'l: l~i.OO; .'jtx
IILOitt hs Sll.SU; three muntlr.$7.ftll.

TO OUR

The Umtcd Press l nle t·uti on&lt;~l l.s
udwtvcly enltlled lu the u.~e fo r
pu!Jik&amp;~tlurJ

uf all news

tlisp&lt;~lt:hes

ci'L'I litctl to the III:'Wsp&lt;tJ*r amll!lsv
Ut•: locl:lltttW.~ pulll isht"d ht'n:i.J 1.

CHRISTMAS '
~· Judgment ignored court told
Ji disma y

OPEN

.••

.:

as

it

hPrR m£'

( GALUPOLIS - Nation·
( wide Insurance Company,
Inc., Columbus, Ohio, and
Richard C. Geiger, Rt. I ,
p Btdwell, have bled a com' pla int in Gallia County
CCommon Pleas Court aga inst
(· William Harold Dray and
Cloda Dray, Gallipolis and
George Franklin Oray and
· William Harold Dray, 11
White Ave., Gallipolis.
Plaintlfls contend that a
ju dgment was ent ered

f
f'

HOUSE

f

SUNDAY, NOV. 28,.1976

I

.,

PM

'

·.· '

·p

•: , .

·~ r
:; ~

,•

·: •

f

•REFRESHMENTS Will BE SERVED
•DOOR PRIZES - STOP IN AND REGISTER
-NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. YOU NEED
NOT BE PRESENTTO WIN.

·f

ATHENS . - The new
Athens Social Security Office,
located at 221 "' Columbus
Road, opened its doors to the
public on Monday.
"In its three years ol
existence it has grown in staff
' from nine to sixteen em· ployees," sa id Ed Peterson,
Branch Manager.
Durin g the Federa l
Government 's fis ca l year
July 1, 1975 to June 23, 1976,
the Athens Branch Offtce
processed 2,727 claims. Social
sec urity payments in Athens
p and Meigs Counties now
9 averages$1.75milliondollars
C each month.
"To Provide better ser·

fJ

••

~\ " ·

':(
•
:,

:

·

was the lirst such olfice in the
• nation to take its services to
the outlying communities in
P their service area through

882. • 2.72 7

"·

.

"'-~-.~-C)-~-~~'I¥i!'!' ,.,..'Qi.illliill)•~et-~~~-"

~'

,.

''
'
t:

!

Model LDA 7800
• 2 washing and 2 spin speeds

'
I' '

• 4 cycles : NORMAL, GENTLE,

\

1

••

•
•
•

j

•

~

."

•l '

programs

ad-·

~~;~~~~;ed grfi~:e ~~~::

retirement , disability, survivors, and medicare benefits
under social $ecurity; aged,
•blind, and disabled benefits

95

PERMANENT PRESS and
KNIT ,

·

• 4 pushbu tton wash / rinse
energy-~aving water temp
selector .
, • 3 load-siZe water·saving
selector
• Agitator-mounted Iabrie

•

·I

1y

PRESENTS $20,000 CHECK - Michael T. Bucc.i,
·center, plant manager of the Point Pleasant Goodyear
plant, passes a $20,000 check to Bob Bazemore, Regional ·
Trustee for the Red Cross blood center. Joe Dressler , iel t,

v£)

'

SET

OFFICERS INSTALLED - Mike Buskirk, center, will be inStalled as worshipful
master or Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM Tuesday evening at 7:30p.m. Other officers to be
iru;talled will be Glen Crisp, senior warden, left, and Dallas DeBord, junior WF den, rlghf..
The installation is open to master masons, their ladies and .invited guests. Refreshments
will be served . Meigs DeMolay Jobs Daughters will take part in the program.

CO(ORS 20.00 HIGHER

softener dispenser

• Bleach dispenser
• MAGIC CLEAN" filter
• Cool·dow n care for Permanent Press fabrics
• Super SURGILATOR'
agilator
• Bac·PAk laundry lnforma·
tion Ce!~ ter

POINT PLEASANT Project Life Blood, the Red
Crosil campaign to linance a
new blood processing center
in llpntington to serve the tristate area, has received a
$20,000 transfusion from The
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber
Company.
The contribution was made
on behall of the · company's
plants in Point Pleasant,
Jackson (Ohio ) and the
enriched uranlwn plant at
Piketon, operated by the
subaidiary Goodyear AtomiC
Corporation.
"Recogfiizing the vital need
to replace the present Red
Cross Blood Program
quarters with expand ed
laboratory, distribution and

Solar heat for
Carter's feet

I

. MIDDLEPORT _.:_ The
Rev . and Mrs. William
Knittle are home !rom a II
day trip to the Holy Land
sponsored by the Middleport
Pentecostal Church. It was a
world wide conference in
J erusalem sponsor ed by
United Pentecostal ,Church
International.
Representing from all over
the world gathered lor
conferences. Following three
days or conference tours were
made to a wide area.
VIsited were Tel-Avi,
Jerusalem, Samaria,

•

1961.

.

Mr . Abra ham ma y be
re mem ber ed by Sou th easter n
Ohio L ea~ue athletic fans as
th e
off 1c lal
b ask etball
sc or ekeeper for Jackson Hi gh
School. He also served as
public address ann ou ncer at
Jackson's home bask etba ll
games.
He was a mem ber of th e
Hol y Trin"il y · Chur ch in
Jack son, Elk s Lodge an.d
Jackson American Legion .
He is .su rvive d by hi s wife,
Max i ne
Ha ll
Abra ha m ,
Ja ckson ; one son, G~ eg

Court levies 7 fines,
POMEROY

Seven Robert E. Arnott, . Racine,
defendants were fined, seven $157 .50,
driving under
forfeited bonds and a 15th revocati on; Jam es R.
defendant was bound over to Hollingsworth, Olive Hill,
the grand .jury in Meigs Ky., Barbara S. Beymer,
County Court Friday.
Point Pleasant, and Steve A.
Fined by Judge Robert E. Stone, Gallipolis, $27.50,
Buck were Robert G. Ed· eac.h, speeding; Elmer L.
wards, Reedsville, $14 and Glanemann, Corning, $27.50,
costs, speeding; Robert D. no bumper; Roger K. Gard·
Mason, Belpre, $12 and costs ner, Cleveland, $27.SO, ln·
speeding; Wayne A. Hub- sec.ure load. Mike . Pierce,
bard, Syracuse, $100 and Middleport, bou~d over to the
costs, 'possession or an grand jury, breaking
illega lly taken deer; Michae} detention.
•
E. VanMeter, Middleport, $5
and costs, unsafe vehicle ;
SON BORN
Richard J. Stettler, Chester,
SHADE
- Mr. and Mrs.
$150 and costs, three days Clarence James
Wllliarns,
conlinement, driving while Rt. I, Shade, are announcing .
intoxi cated ; Thomas R. the birth of a son on Thanks·
Qullen, Middleport, 10 days giving Day. The nine _pound,confinement~ driving Under
six ounce, infant was born at
suspensi on, 60 days con· the Holzer Medical Center
linemen!, driving while in·
and has been named Walter
toxlcated; Helen Rood, James.
Grandparents are
Racine, three counts ol theft, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Williams
30 days c.onfinement lor each
Dexter, and Mrs. Walter B.
count..
Harris, Middleport. Great·
Forfeiting bonds were grandmothers are Mrs. Ullie
Ronald W. Holsinger, Reeds· Dyke, Middleport, and Mrs.
ville,' $29.50, speeding ; Pearl Sta~ley , Pomeroy.

Tonight thur
Tuesday
Show begins at 8 p.m.

AUNIVERSAl PICIUfll ~CD
TECHNICOL0A®'P.4NAVISI()'II ®
-

CARTOON

MRS. ALLIE SIMON, who willl her husband, Pa ul, will open a gilt cent or at z:lli E. M11in
St.,
Pomeroy,
Wednesday, st~nds among some or the unusual merchandise to be fcatuml.
I

Abra ham , J ackson ; two
slsler s, Mrs. Lucille George,
Jackson and Mrs . Let ha
Thom as, Logan .
Friend s may ca ll at the
Eisena ug le Funeral Home in
Jackson any lime Sunday .
Rosary w ill be held fl p.m.
Sunday a t the f uner al home .
Funeral mass will be
celebr·ated at 10 a .m . Monday
at the Holy Trinity Ch urch In
Ja ckson wi th Rev. Fa ther
Joseph Jerabeck offic iating ,
Burial w ill follow in Mt .
Ol ivet Cemetery .

Vienna ; two sons. Frank· C. ,
Cape Canavera l, Fla., and
James Edwa rd of Co r al
Gable s, Fla .; nine gr and ·
children, and f i Ve great grandchi ldren . ·
She was preceded In dea th ,
by three grandchildren, one
son and one sister.
Funeral ser vices will be I
p.m . Tue sady at the Vaughan ,
Fune r al Home in Parkersburg w ith th e Rev. Garven
Wall s offic iating . Bur ial wi ll
be in the Rav ensw ooci
cemetery . F r iends may ca ll
at the f uneral home after 12
noon Sunday .

Volpnteers to
caH for help

takes up seven bonds

/'h,•tJ/r,·

!

Mrs. 'Simon in Pomeroy gift center

POMEROY - "We intend
to · make this the brightest
spot in Pomeroy," Mrs. Allie
Sbnon said Saturday In an·
nouncing th e opening of
Simon's Gift Center In
Pomeroy.
4
The new Sbnon entcrprtse
death .
will be located at 23S E. Main
For many years he taught
and coached In the Nelson·
St., in a bulldlng which Mrs.
CORRtNNE HALL EY
vi ll e schoo ls pr io r to World
Simon admits has not had
PARKERS6URG , W. Va .
War I I.
great success as a business
Fo l lowing U . S. Naval duty ~ Corrinne Mar ie Hall ey , 77,
•
during World War !lin wh ic h died Saturda y mornin g a t location. ·
he was a I ieutenant com . Camden Clark Hospital in
However, thi s Simon
mand er, Mr. Ab r aham Parker sburg , A form er business may well change
r esided in Was hi ngton, 0 . C., r esident of G!lllipol ls, she .
lived at 804 29th St., VIenna , the trend of the location. The
whe·re he worked for the state
interior of the building Is
depa rt me nt a n um ber p t W. Va .
years.
,
She was born In Ravens- b eing
co mpletely
wood, W. Va , fo the l ate redecorated for the opening
A 1928 graduate of Jacks on
High School, Mr. Abraham
Frank and E liza beth Dea to n.
graduated
fr om
t he
She is surviv,ed ~ her of the center on Wednesday.
University of Illi nois In 1932. husband at 61 yea rs, Edward The attractiveness of the
Stanl ey
Hal le ~ ;
two interior, prepared under the
He r eturned to Jackson in
1955 w her e he was employed daughters , Mrs. Ruth Henry, capable eye ol Mrs. Simon,
by the Gl obe Furnace Co. He Parkersburg , and Mr s.
Leonard (Grace) Dol son, will be enhanced by the plan
joined the Jack son fa culty in

Nazareth,
Be thlehem,
Bethany, Tib eria s, Caper:
naum, Fortress hill of
Massada, Dead Sea and Sea
of Galilee.
Slides were made of the trip
and will be shown at the
church in the near future. The
Rev. and Mrs. Knittle were
most appreciative of the trip
but glad to be home.

COLO'\l ·
•

.

GEORGE ABRAHAM
' JA CKSON George E .
Abra ham , 65, a r esident of 152
East South St ., Jackso n, died
in Holz.er Medical Cen ter
around 8 a .m . Saturday .
He was born IIi Jackson
County on Jul y 2, 191 1, son of
the la te Joseph and Mar ie
Abra ham . He was a former
junior hig h coach at Jackson
and was · a member of the
junior high teaching staff In
Jackson at the time of his

storage fac.ilities, Goodyear
is pleased to join other individua l and corporate
citizens in supporting Project.
Life Blood," said Michael T.
Bucci, manager of the linn 's
Point Pleasant facility.
" It is important to the
health care needs ol our
employes, their families and
the general public in this
dynamic area, " Bucci added.
The new center will be built
on urban renewal land ·in
downtown Huntington on
Second Avenue between
Eleventh and Twellth
Streets . It is designed to
serve a 52 county area in
West Virginia, Southeastern
.Ohio and Eastern Kentuc.ky.

after Holy Land trip

1

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED - Ruth
Roblnoon , Point Pleasant ;
Roge r Dovenbarger ,
Gallipolis ; Laura Hartley,
Point Pleasant; Ricky
Gleason , Point Pleasant ;
Darin Shobe, Point Pleasant;
Shelia Flora , Ga llipoils
Ferry; Bertha Plants, Point
Pleasa nt ; Donna Roslin,
Gallipolis ; Mrs. Larry
Rainey , Gall ipolis Ferry ;
Jam es
Kelley , Point
Pleasant, and Mrs. Freddie
Ash, Gallipolis Ferry.

Model LDE 5700
• Special c.ool-down care for
Permanent Press and'Knit
fabrics

Male Dog $2 .00

· selectio ns

Address ••••••••••••••••• · ·· ~ ····•••••• • ••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• : •••••

1:00 TO 5:00 PM

'

.......................................... .....................,.......... :······:·····
Fu~s

Come and sttour compl•t• Un. of what's new this yur fer Olrlstmas

Age

Including .. .
Poinsettias - Christmas al-rangements for the home - Artificial
Potted Plants &amp; Baskets - Door Sw&amp;gs - Wreaths -· Candles &amp;
Candle Rings- F.T.D. " Green Ribbon" Plants·- Dish Gardens -

Tet"rarlumsand Sand Sculptured 'Terr.,rtu ms, unlike ariy In this area.

1

'

TownshiP••••••••••••• ••• • •••• ••• •• ••••••••••• • ••• •••• •••• ••••••• •••• • ••• : •• •••••

·

• P•Js h·to-, ·:.;rt button
• Automatic door shut oft
• Bak-Pak Laundry lnforma-

Kennel Li cen se -$10.00

Female !12 .00

OWners Name •• • •••• ••••• ,,., ••••••• • ••••• •• • ••••· . ••·••••••••• •• •••• •••• •• • ••• ••

SUNDAY, DEC. 5th

• 3 d•ying temperalure
• 't UMBL E PRESS• control

Spayed Female $2. 00

:Sex

:

:Hair

COLOR

.

:Br eed:

Yr Mo .: M F • Blk .: While: Gray: Brin~l~ Tan;Brown•Velluw,Long Short!lf
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Dorothy Condee , Gatlla County Auditor

••
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SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
NOVEMBER 28 THRU DECEMBER 4

DINNER BOX
3 PIECES CHICKEN
•MASHED POTATOES
&amp; GRAVY
•SLAW No Sub!.
•ROLL No Coupons - No Limit

., ••
--

0.

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

Ready For .Cold Weather?
J

CASUAlS

j
1

$688

ARREST MADE
POMEROY - On Nov. 22,
the Meigs County Sheriff's
DepartmeQt arrested Helen
Rood , 25, Racine, for theft of
Items taken from boats
parked at Sug,r Camp,
· Reedsvll!e. ·The boats
belonged to Robert Reed, ,
· Marvin Reed and David
Reed, ail , ol Reedsville .
Friday she ·was sentenced to
90 days conllnetnent In the
Meigs County jail by county
court Judge Robert E. Buck.

DEAD L INE FOR PURCHASE OF 1977 DOG LI CE NSE IS JANUARY ?O TH . ONE
DOLLAR ($1.001 PENA LTY IF LICE NSE IS PURCHAS ED AFTER THAT DAT E .
FOR YOUR CONVENI ENCE USE THI S HANDY APPLI CATION B LANK AND
MAIL TO THE COU NTY AU DITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. F EES ARE
TWO DOLLAR S 112 .001 FOR EACH DOG. MALE OR FEMA L E . (KE NN EL
LICENSE PENALTY IS 001..
'

'

WATCH .FOR
OPENING DATE

I

1
l

WANTED
COLORS

GO ON SALE DEC. 1st

HOUSE

of Paul and Allle Simon to extendtog to the purse or the
olfer unusual gi fty items at a more affluent.
wide price range to fit the
A preview glimpse ol the
budget or the most financially stock being set In place lor
handicapped shoPPer and Wednesday's grand opening,

MEIGS THEATKE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

AUTOS COLLIDE
POMEROY - A knoc.k on
POMEROY - Medium
your . door In the nert six damages were reported to
POPIILU.
weeks may be from the two cars in an . .accident on
U'I'UY
Pomeroy Seventh-day ' Ad· West Main st .. at 4:30 p.m.
ventist Church . ·
Friday . Pomeroy Police said
2nd &amp; Olive
Gerard Seton, pastor, said a car driven by Henry Werry,
volunteers. will visit homes .Pomeroy, struck the rear of a
and businesses as part of the car driven by Sally Hughes,
once-a-year World Service Point Pleasant. Werry was
Appeal. Each year members cited for ass~red clear
of the world-wide c.hurch distance. No one was Injured.
gather
lunds
for
humHnitarian work and give .-...-....................,..~.,..,.....,..."'•"'"""~•,..l&gt;lli•,..l&gt;lli•.,.•l!.i•,..•l'ol•lliiol&gt;lliolliioWiol&gt;lliio&gt;IM..,.--.,......,,,..,
a report on how previous ,
dooations wer~ spent.' Last ·
year, members raised more
lhan 18 million ln North
America , and another $4.3
million overseas to carry on
medical, disaster relief and
other person-to-person
services. ·
Seton said several members of the Pomeroy church
will be/involved In the elfort,
some as visitors, others as
'
drivers, Christmas carolers , STOP AND GO TRACTION
and behind-the-scenes
workers. All funds are ad·
· SOLES
ministered through .existing
Reg.
church channels so there is no
problem of admlnlstration
19.99
eating up the money ear·
marked lor relief work.

THE 1977 DOG LICENSE

FOREMA.N &amp; ABBOTT
N. 2ND AVE.

! · Area Deaths

Pastoral couple home

'

39

--------------------------- ~

blood centerhy Goodyear

ELEVATORS EXPLODE
BELT, Mont. (UPI) - Two
30,1100-gallon propane tanks
exploded Friday, spreading a
stubborn fire through two
grain elevators, a farm
cooperative and several
homes. Eleven persons were
bttrned in the explosion, but
By CYNTHIA Mllll!
finned tubes, in the none was seriously, injured.
WASHINGTON (UPIJ
presid ential revie win g Most were treated and
Solar heat may keep Jinuny stands.'
released. Ambulances had to
Ca rter's feet warm when he
speed
over icy roads to get
The average Washington
watches his inaugural parade temperature lor Jan. 20 is 40 tbe injured to hospitals In
under Supplemental Sec urity from a reviewing stand in
Bem;fits and miners; widows, front of the While House, the degrees, but with the sun out Great Falls 30 miles away.
and children 's benefits under official hea ding physical the system would be able .to
keep the reviewing stand
,the Black Lung program.
preparation for the inaugural cozy.
VACCINE COUNT
Questions about these said Saturday.
ATLANTA
(UP!) - More
Some
solar
hea
t
can
be
,progra ms are answered by
Using the sun 's energy is collec\ed even on a oloudy than 25 million Americans
c.alling the Social Security one of several ways the
Office, in i\thensCounty, a92- Inaugural Commi ttee plans day, but if the day is heavily through Nov. 20 ' rec.elved
4448, in Meigs County 992- to demonstrate th e new ' overcast "you'll have ~ prob- vaccinations against swine
lem," Starobin said. He ilaid influenza, ·according to the
6622.
administration's ~ommit· sup plemental electric national Center lor Disease
ment to energy conservation heaters will be provided to Control. The agency said
and the environment.
cover lllat possibility.
Friday ·the totallnnoculalion
Other steps include.:
"Having the solar panel on ligui'e ol 25,376,438 represents
~ Placing a big half.moon
the White House land isn't the 18.76 per c.ent or all persons 18
or yellow chrysanthemums most es thetic thing/ ' years of age or· older.
SPEAKER NAMED
on Pennsylvania Avenue in Slarobin said, "but it will
TUPPERS PLAINS
front of the While House to
Brother Ed Bousman, und e r sc ore Car ter '.s illustrate a principle ."
BONES ABANDONED
founder and speaker of the comrpi tment to ecology and
ATHENS
(UP!) - The
'G od is Just a Prayer Away" the E'nvirorunent .
doorman
of
an apartment
radio broadcast will speak at
- Switching from the quar- ·
building
found
two human
STRUCK TWICE
the Tuppers Plains Church of ter-mill ion dollar presidential
skeletons
on
the
balcony
of an
POMEROY - Gary 0.
Christ this ev ening ato7 p.m. reviewing st~ n d design or the
empty
apartment,
police
said
The minister, Eugene. E. Nixon years to a structure Hostettler, Rt. I , Reedsville,
Friday.
After
a
thorbugh
Underwood, invites all to about halllllat cost which ca n reported to the Meigs County
Investigation, poll'ce
attend .
be rec.yded la ter at another Sheriff's Department that he discovered
both skeletons
was
traveling
west
on
SR
124
loealion lor permanent use by
to
Ohio
belonged
Friday
at
11
p.m.
when
his
citizens.
University
and
had
been
car
was
struck
twice
in
the
Sam D. Starobin, director
of the District of Columbia rear by another vehide. The taken home for study by two
foreign medical students who
G€n e ral Se rvices vehicle that,struck Hostettler abandoned
them on the
continued
on.
The
accident
is
Department, is in charge of ·
balcony.
under
investiga
tion
.
.
construction for the Jan. 20
parade.
Starobin
sa id
the
WRONG DEPARTMENT
suggestion for solar energy in
NOBODY HURT
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!)the reviewing stand came
GALUPOLIS - No one Policemen in.the North ·Port·
!rom Carter's stat! too late was injured in a traffic ac·
lor special 'solar heater parts cident t :30 p.m. Friday on · land precinct have been
to be built, so a search was Garfield Ave. and Ports· receiving peculiar calls
launched lor any components ·mouth Rd. where a vehicle rec.ently directing them to
on hand at . the Energy driven by Rhodera A. nonexistent addresses and
Research and Development Sturgen, 66, Freeburn, Ky. giving them uilknown c.odes.
The mystery was solved
Administration or some other pulled into the path of a truck
Friday
when investigators
agency.
operated by Richard S. discovered ·officer~ were
. "They 're slill looking," be Snodgrass, 27, Rt. I, Crown
picking up signals from the
said.
City. There was moderate Seattle (Wash.) Pollee
Starobin said the only damage. No charges were
Depat:lment, about 150 air ·
change in construction of the liled.
miles distant. Freak at·
platform needed to provide
mospheric conditions sent the
the solar heat is "just adding
signals
into North Portland.
llle plumbing."
Plans for a solar panel
about 10,000 feet square to be
laid out on the White House
SAll.ORS WARNED
CHILD INJURED
grounds behind llle reviewing
Sailors were warned of
MIDDLEPORT
- The
stanll to soak up the sun's quick-l orming ice in the
Middleport
Emergency
heat and transfer it to water. upper Great Lakes and all
The water, in turn, would ·south Dakota 's weather Squad anowered a call to the
flow into a storage tank on the stations reported zero or Mark Vstore Friday night for
While House lawn.
below readings overnight Usa Smith,' 10, Elkhart, Ind.,
Hot water from the tank Saturday, part of a wintry who had a laceration. She
would be pumped through pattern over the West and was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. ·
pipes U! radiators. made of Midwest, the UP! said.

• Extra large lint screen
• Large 5.9 cu. lt. dryinq drum
1

&lt;'hief lab technologist ol 'Pleasant Valley Hospital, Mrs.
Betty Johnson , blood program chairman for the Mason
County Red Cross, and Mrs. Barbbara Battin, right,
Building Fund Director, observe.

$20,000 transfusion given

IN
MiD.DlEPORT

'
''·

'

The

uu YOUR
CHRISTMAS
St40PPING
NOW AT
FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT .

'',.

'
''

Social Services Clinics, to
arr~nge for the Railroad
Rettrement Board to use
Social Security spa ce, thus
making it easier for railroad
benefi ciaries to conduct their
business, and to process SSJ
redet erminations ove r
television · with
the
cooperation of WOUB TV.
The SSJ redetermination
program has been used
throughout Ohio, in some
localities in Michigan, and is
expected to be used nation·
wide, to provide open evening
hours so that working parents
with disabled children can
file for SSL"

I
I

,:{
'; FORGET•ME•NOT «r
~;f
FLORIST
'~
~ ~ P.
t
(:;"'i 5TH STREET
! ~~~·~~s ~:~~:~~~.~~i~ ~;~~:
NEW HAVEN ~
~

delendant, William Harold
Dray lqcated in the ci.ty of
Gallipolis, part of lot No. 8 of
Maria L. Shepard subdivision
or 100 acre lot No. 521.
Plaintiffs asked the court
that they be found to have a
good and valid first lien on
the property, that unless the
amount due them is paid, the
delendant shall be foreclosed
and an order of sale issued to
sell the premises to satisfy
their lien.

1

" ~New office door opened ·in Athens
~

:·: .t

~~

against William Harold Dray
in the amou nt of $968.16 arid
costs in .Ga ll ia County
Common Pleas Court on Sept.
r· J, 1975. The judgment
awarded plaintifl insurance
company $868.16 and pla intiff
Geiger $100. The complaint
attest• that the defendant has
fa iled to comply with the
judgment and that by virtue
or the judgment plaintills
have a valid lien in the sum of
$968.16, interest and costs
upon thf r~a 1 estRtj) of the

I

th.

I

r

!':.wotl!l) by ;n11.:

UAII .VTKI8UNE
125 Thm! 1\ ~t' , ( ;ii lh[ioh.i , Oh1u

...,.,...... •• ..

~~

~\t·r')

11!\uV a ll~) I'UIJ h ~tom~o:~ 'lo

MORGANTOWN, W.Va . goes through the mind ol "
tUPI ) - Ever wonder what sky jumper
wh en · his

.9
''

indicates that the Sbnons are
lollowtng the plan. There are
many reasonably priced,
attractive items rang ing
!rom a dollar to two dollars
ranging to elaborately
lramed pictures, china and
Items In • more upenslve
prlce range. There are three
.Piece end table sets, glassware , bisque w.are , rain
trees, small appliances, dolls,
chinws. mixer set's. ngurine.s.
pictures end novelty articles
to only touch upon 1M stock.
. 11le opening of the shop Is •
lifelong ambition of Mrs.
Simon who has a number of
tdeas which she will put Into
effect at the ee.nter. .
The center will open at 12
-noon Wednesday . Opening
special• will be featured. The
center will maintain hours
!rom 12 noon lo 6 p.m.,
Monday through Saturday .

1

TWO ACI'IONS FILED
POMEROY - A suit for
divorce and another lor
money were filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Steve · Goody , Middleport,
filed for divorce from Emily
Goody, Galilpolis. The State
of Ohio, Department of
Mental Health an1 Mental
Retardation, Bureau ol
Support, flied suit for $1,050,
against Yvonne Scally ,
Middleport, for care and
maintenance of Thomas
Scally.

i
~
'

BOYS
OR
MEN'S SIZES TO 12

WOMEN'S FLEECE
SUEDE LIKE UPPERS

'

UPPERS.
R_UBBER
FOOT

BOOTS

. .

'

l

$44! $9!
,16.99

RUST,
- . TAN
OR BLACK

•

IJ 1;99

SIZES
. -TO 12

SIZES 5 TO 10

G. C•.
SILVER BRIDGE
STORE ONLY
. . PLAZA
. .

•

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�•
•

•
3-A-TheSWillav Tlmet-SenUnei.Sundav. Nov:'28. 1976

· 2·A- The Sunday TimelTSentln•l, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976

.! .

He moaned, just to find out if he could

h rbh:.ht·ol

p"rachu te l"il' to open en11&gt;cshed in his primary
properly on the way down ? chute.
There was nothiog Iell iu do
~ ~Y-o•f Robert Herd. has . the
answer.
but absorb llle impact.
From his hospital bed in · " I wasn't sure whether I
'
Mor~antown, the 47-year-&lt;&gt;ld. }]Cjd SurViVed or 0 0l 1H Lhe
master sergeant, one o( an Waynesburg, Pa ., college
Celite minority who lives professor said.
P Ill rough a parachutist's roost
" I landed on my feet but
' dreaded acci dent, reca lls my speed was so great I was
~only on.e thought as he immediately on my back. I
tumbled 1,100 lcet · through was in very , very great
darkness. ·
shock, bu t I didn 't lose
" I just felt a strong need to c.onsdousness. 1 moaned to
.get to work to get the reserve see il I could. I never lost
chute open," says Herd, a co. nsc.io usne ss .'' An
member of a National G'lllrd emergency .ambulance was
p uni t
which conducted waiting al the drop area,
~ maneuvers la st weekend which was a standa rd
' ncar here.
precaution . 1\ took him to the
' Popping open the reserve hospi tal where X-rays
' para chute, Herd held 'it at showed he suffered no
p arths length so the air could internal organ damage, but
~ inllate it, lllen watched in did have &lt;.1 cracked vertebra.

..,.,__~

(iA IJ.IPIH .IS
~!.6:11 .

Puhh.,lit1l t:Vt:ry wcckth:.y CWt'lllr~
U l'cpt S..tu rtll&lt;)' ~cutlll ll&lt;t liS
1 \.o!.la~c l';ord ot l i;ollipol lll, Oluu

f
f

!

1""1.Til F. DAII.V SF.NTINE I.
Ill C()url SL, PVIfll:riJy, 0 . 45769.
Wt,:d ( tilly ~·li ~·mug

Pu lll. rJ&gt;!i'"~ l ~: ve r y

Cll'tpl &amp;t!ul'lla)', Err tc~U lili :.t!t;oud
d ahl! m it rhug m&lt;attcr ·at Pvlncruy,

Ohlu Pu~ t Offl ~·c.
By ~·arnt&gt;r iliuly cmd Swu.lay 75&lt;'
per W\,.'t' k. MvlUI' ruutc $3.25 P,Cr mon·

f

MAIL
SUBSCIUPTION RATES '
The GalltptJiis D~:~,ily Tril,luue In
Ultw t~tlll West V ir~in ia une year
U2.00; .~ iK tnunth.'i Sll .SO: three tnur tu~~ s1.oo. Els~!whe•· e S
2Al.oo pet·

year i

~ ix molltiL~

113.00 : U1rec mon-

dLS $7 . ~ : Jllu tut' rou te
lilly.
The

S3~ mun·

Datly Sclt lt m:l,, Olll!

ye~tt ·

S2'l.OO : SiK monULS $11 .50 ; tll reernott·
till! 17 .00. Elsewll4!t'l: l~i.OO; .'jtx
IILOitt hs Sll.SU; three muntlr.$7.ftll.

TO OUR

The Umtcd Press l nle t·uti on&lt;~l l.s
udwtvcly enltlled lu the u.~e fo r
pu!Jik&amp;~tlurJ

uf all news

tlisp&lt;~lt:hes

ci'L'I litctl to the III:'Wsp&lt;tJ*r amll!lsv
Ut•: locl:lltttW.~ pulll isht"d ht'n:i.J 1.

CHRISTMAS '
~· Judgment ignored court told
Ji disma y

OPEN

.••

.:

as

it

hPrR m£'

( GALUPOLIS - Nation·
( wide Insurance Company,
Inc., Columbus, Ohio, and
Richard C. Geiger, Rt. I ,
p Btdwell, have bled a com' pla int in Gallia County
CCommon Pleas Court aga inst
(· William Harold Dray and
Cloda Dray, Gallipolis and
George Franklin Oray and
· William Harold Dray, 11
White Ave., Gallipolis.
Plaintlfls contend that a
ju dgment was ent ered

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HOUSE

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SUNDAY, NOV. 28,.1976

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PM

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·p

•: , .

·~ r
:; ~

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·: •

f

•REFRESHMENTS Will BE SERVED
•DOOR PRIZES - STOP IN AND REGISTER
-NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. YOU NEED
NOT BE PRESENTTO WIN.

·f

ATHENS . - The new
Athens Social Security Office,
located at 221 "' Columbus
Road, opened its doors to the
public on Monday.
"In its three years ol
existence it has grown in staff
' from nine to sixteen em· ployees," sa id Ed Peterson,
Branch Manager.
Durin g the Federa l
Government 's fis ca l year
July 1, 1975 to June 23, 1976,
the Athens Branch Offtce
processed 2,727 claims. Social
sec urity payments in Athens
p and Meigs Counties now
9 averages$1.75milliondollars
C each month.
"To Provide better ser·

fJ

••

~\ " ·

':(
•
:,

:

·

was the lirst such olfice in the
• nation to take its services to
the outlying communities in
P their service area through

882. • 2.72 7

"·

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"'-~-.~-C)-~-~~'I¥i!'!' ,.,..'Qi.illliill)•~et-~~~-"

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Model LDA 7800
• 2 washing and 2 spin speeds

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• 4 cycles : NORMAL, GENTLE,

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•
•
•

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programs

ad-·

~~;~~~~;ed grfi~:e ~~~::

retirement , disability, survivors, and medicare benefits
under social $ecurity; aged,
•blind, and disabled benefits

95

PERMANENT PRESS and
KNIT ,

·

• 4 pushbu tton wash / rinse
energy-~aving water temp
selector .
, • 3 load-siZe water·saving
selector
• Agitator-mounted Iabrie

•

·I

1y

PRESENTS $20,000 CHECK - Michael T. Bucc.i,
·center, plant manager of the Point Pleasant Goodyear
plant, passes a $20,000 check to Bob Bazemore, Regional ·
Trustee for the Red Cross blood center. Joe Dressler , iel t,

v£)

'

SET

OFFICERS INSTALLED - Mike Buskirk, center, will be inStalled as worshipful
master or Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM Tuesday evening at 7:30p.m. Other officers to be
iru;talled will be Glen Crisp, senior warden, left, and Dallas DeBord, junior WF den, rlghf..
The installation is open to master masons, their ladies and .invited guests. Refreshments
will be served . Meigs DeMolay Jobs Daughters will take part in the program.

CO(ORS 20.00 HIGHER

softener dispenser

• Bleach dispenser
• MAGIC CLEAN" filter
• Cool·dow n care for Permanent Press fabrics
• Super SURGILATOR'
agilator
• Bac·PAk laundry lnforma·
tion Ce!~ ter

POINT PLEASANT Project Life Blood, the Red
Crosil campaign to linance a
new blood processing center
in llpntington to serve the tristate area, has received a
$20,000 transfusion from The
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber
Company.
The contribution was made
on behall of the · company's
plants in Point Pleasant,
Jackson (Ohio ) and the
enriched uranlwn plant at
Piketon, operated by the
subaidiary Goodyear AtomiC
Corporation.
"Recogfiizing the vital need
to replace the present Red
Cross Blood Program
quarters with expand ed
laboratory, distribution and

Solar heat for
Carter's feet

I

. MIDDLEPORT _.:_ The
Rev . and Mrs. William
Knittle are home !rom a II
day trip to the Holy Land
sponsored by the Middleport
Pentecostal Church. It was a
world wide conference in
J erusalem sponsor ed by
United Pentecostal ,Church
International.
Representing from all over
the world gathered lor
conferences. Following three
days or conference tours were
made to a wide area.
VIsited were Tel-Avi,
Jerusalem, Samaria,

•

1961.

.

Mr . Abra ham ma y be
re mem ber ed by Sou th easter n
Ohio L ea~ue athletic fans as
th e
off 1c lal
b ask etball
sc or ekeeper for Jackson Hi gh
School. He also served as
public address ann ou ncer at
Jackson's home bask etba ll
games.
He was a mem ber of th e
Hol y Trin"il y · Chur ch in
Jack son, Elk s Lodge an.d
Jackson American Legion .
He is .su rvive d by hi s wife,
Max i ne
Ha ll
Abra ha m ,
Ja ckson ; one son, G~ eg

Court levies 7 fines,
POMEROY

Seven Robert E. Arnott, . Racine,
defendants were fined, seven $157 .50,
driving under
forfeited bonds and a 15th revocati on; Jam es R.
defendant was bound over to Hollingsworth, Olive Hill,
the grand .jury in Meigs Ky., Barbara S. Beymer,
County Court Friday.
Point Pleasant, and Steve A.
Fined by Judge Robert E. Stone, Gallipolis, $27.50,
Buck were Robert G. Ed· eac.h, speeding; Elmer L.
wards, Reedsville, $14 and Glanemann, Corning, $27.50,
costs, speeding; Robert D. no bumper; Roger K. Gard·
Mason, Belpre, $12 and costs ner, Cleveland, $27.SO, ln·
speeding; Wayne A. Hub- sec.ure load. Mike . Pierce,
bard, Syracuse, $100 and Middleport, bou~d over to the
costs, 'possession or an grand jury, breaking
illega lly taken deer; Michae} detention.
•
E. VanMeter, Middleport, $5
and costs, unsafe vehicle ;
SON BORN
Richard J. Stettler, Chester,
SHADE
- Mr. and Mrs.
$150 and costs, three days Clarence James
Wllliarns,
conlinement, driving while Rt. I, Shade, are announcing .
intoxi cated ; Thomas R. the birth of a son on Thanks·
Qullen, Middleport, 10 days giving Day. The nine _pound,confinement~ driving Under
six ounce, infant was born at
suspensi on, 60 days con· the Holzer Medical Center
linemen!, driving while in·
and has been named Walter
toxlcated; Helen Rood, James.
Grandparents are
Racine, three counts ol theft, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Williams
30 days c.onfinement lor each
Dexter, and Mrs. Walter B.
count..
Harris, Middleport. Great·
Forfeiting bonds were grandmothers are Mrs. Ullie
Ronald W. Holsinger, Reeds· Dyke, Middleport, and Mrs.
ville,' $29.50, speeding ; Pearl Sta~ley , Pomeroy.

Tonight thur
Tuesday
Show begins at 8 p.m.

AUNIVERSAl PICIUfll ~CD
TECHNICOL0A®'P.4NAVISI()'II ®
-

CARTOON

MRS. ALLIE SIMON, who willl her husband, Pa ul, will open a gilt cent or at z:lli E. M11in
St.,
Pomeroy,
Wednesday, st~nds among some or the unusual merchandise to be fcatuml.
I

Abra ham , J ackson ; two
slsler s, Mrs. Lucille George,
Jackson and Mrs . Let ha
Thom as, Logan .
Friend s may ca ll at the
Eisena ug le Funeral Home in
Jackson any lime Sunday .
Rosary w ill be held fl p.m.
Sunday a t the f uner al home .
Funeral mass will be
celebr·ated at 10 a .m . Monday
at the Holy Trinity Ch urch In
Ja ckson wi th Rev. Fa ther
Joseph Jerabeck offic iating ,
Burial w ill follow in Mt .
Ol ivet Cemetery .

Vienna ; two sons. Frank· C. ,
Cape Canavera l, Fla., and
James Edwa rd of Co r al
Gable s, Fla .; nine gr and ·
children, and f i Ve great grandchi ldren . ·
She was preceded In dea th ,
by three grandchildren, one
son and one sister.
Funeral ser vices will be I
p.m . Tue sady at the Vaughan ,
Fune r al Home in Parkersburg w ith th e Rev. Garven
Wall s offic iating . Bur ial wi ll
be in the Rav ensw ooci
cemetery . F r iends may ca ll
at the f uneral home after 12
noon Sunday .

Volpnteers to
caH for help

takes up seven bonds

/'h,•tJ/r,·

!

Mrs. 'Simon in Pomeroy gift center

POMEROY - "We intend
to · make this the brightest
spot in Pomeroy," Mrs. Allie
Sbnon said Saturday In an·
nouncing th e opening of
Simon's Gift Center In
Pomeroy.
4
The new Sbnon entcrprtse
death .
will be located at 23S E. Main
For many years he taught
and coached In the Nelson·
St., in a bulldlng which Mrs.
CORRtNNE HALL EY
vi ll e schoo ls pr io r to World
Simon admits has not had
PARKERS6URG , W. Va .
War I I.
great success as a business
Fo l lowing U . S. Naval duty ~ Corrinne Mar ie Hall ey , 77,
•
during World War !lin wh ic h died Saturda y mornin g a t location. ·
he was a I ieutenant com . Camden Clark Hospital in
However, thi s Simon
mand er, Mr. Ab r aham Parker sburg , A form er business may well change
r esided in Was hi ngton, 0 . C., r esident of G!lllipol ls, she .
lived at 804 29th St., VIenna , the trend of the location. The
whe·re he worked for the state
interior of the building Is
depa rt me nt a n um ber p t W. Va .
years.
,
She was born In Ravens- b eing
co mpletely
wood, W. Va , fo the l ate redecorated for the opening
A 1928 graduate of Jacks on
High School, Mr. Abraham
Frank and E liza beth Dea to n.
graduated
fr om
t he
She is surviv,ed ~ her of the center on Wednesday.
University of Illi nois In 1932. husband at 61 yea rs, Edward The attractiveness of the
Stanl ey
Hal le ~ ;
two interior, prepared under the
He r eturned to Jackson in
1955 w her e he was employed daughters , Mrs. Ruth Henry, capable eye ol Mrs. Simon,
by the Gl obe Furnace Co. He Parkersburg , and Mr s.
Leonard (Grace) Dol son, will be enhanced by the plan
joined the Jack son fa culty in

Nazareth,
Be thlehem,
Bethany, Tib eria s, Caper:
naum, Fortress hill of
Massada, Dead Sea and Sea
of Galilee.
Slides were made of the trip
and will be shown at the
church in the near future. The
Rev. and Mrs. Knittle were
most appreciative of the trip
but glad to be home.

COLO'\l ·
•

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GEORGE ABRAHAM
' JA CKSON George E .
Abra ham , 65, a r esident of 152
East South St ., Jackso n, died
in Holz.er Medical Cen ter
around 8 a .m . Saturday .
He was born IIi Jackson
County on Jul y 2, 191 1, son of
the la te Joseph and Mar ie
Abra ham . He was a former
junior hig h coach at Jackson
and was · a member of the
junior high teaching staff In
Jackson at the time of his

storage fac.ilities, Goodyear
is pleased to join other individua l and corporate
citizens in supporting Project.
Life Blood," said Michael T.
Bucci, manager of the linn 's
Point Pleasant facility.
" It is important to the
health care needs ol our
employes, their families and
the general public in this
dynamic area, " Bucci added.
The new center will be built
on urban renewal land ·in
downtown Huntington on
Second Avenue between
Eleventh and Twellth
Streets . It is designed to
serve a 52 county area in
West Virginia, Southeastern
.Ohio and Eastern Kentuc.ky.

after Holy Land trip

1

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED - Ruth
Roblnoon , Point Pleasant ;
Roge r Dovenbarger ,
Gallipolis ; Laura Hartley,
Point Pleasant; Ricky
Gleason , Point Pleasant ;
Darin Shobe, Point Pleasant;
Shelia Flora , Ga llipoils
Ferry; Bertha Plants, Point
Pleasa nt ; Donna Roslin,
Gallipolis ; Mrs. Larry
Rainey , Gall ipolis Ferry ;
Jam es
Kelley , Point
Pleasant, and Mrs. Freddie
Ash, Gallipolis Ferry.

Model LDE 5700
• Special c.ool-down care for
Permanent Press and'Knit
fabrics

Male Dog $2 .00

· selectio ns

Address ••••••••••••••••• · ·· ~ ····•••••• • ••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• : •••••

1:00 TO 5:00 PM

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.......................................... .....................,.......... :······:·····
Fu~s

Come and sttour compl•t• Un. of what's new this yur fer Olrlstmas

Age

Including .. .
Poinsettias - Christmas al-rangements for the home - Artificial
Potted Plants &amp; Baskets - Door Sw&amp;gs - Wreaths -· Candles &amp;
Candle Rings- F.T.D. " Green Ribbon" Plants·- Dish Gardens -

Tet"rarlumsand Sand Sculptured 'Terr.,rtu ms, unlike ariy In this area.

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TownshiP••••••••••••• ••• • •••• ••• •• ••••••••••• • ••• •••• •••• ••••••• •••• • ••• : •• •••••

·

• P•Js h·to-, ·:.;rt button
• Automatic door shut oft
• Bak-Pak Laundry lnforma-

Kennel Li cen se -$10.00

Female !12 .00

OWners Name •• • •••• ••••• ,,., ••••••• • ••••• •• • ••••· . ••·••••••••• •• •••• •••• •• • ••• ••

SUNDAY, DEC. 5th

• 3 d•ying temperalure
• 't UMBL E PRESS• control

Spayed Female $2. 00

:Sex

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COLOR

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Dorothy Condee , Gatlla County Auditor

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SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
NOVEMBER 28 THRU DECEMBER 4

DINNER BOX
3 PIECES CHICKEN
•MASHED POTATOES
&amp; GRAVY
•SLAW No Sub!.
•ROLL No Coupons - No Limit

., ••
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Ready For .Cold Weather?
J

CASUAlS

j
1

$688

ARREST MADE
POMEROY - On Nov. 22,
the Meigs County Sheriff's
DepartmeQt arrested Helen
Rood , 25, Racine, for theft of
Items taken from boats
parked at Sug,r Camp,
· Reedsvll!e. ·The boats
belonged to Robert Reed, ,
· Marvin Reed and David
Reed, ail , ol Reedsville .
Friday she ·was sentenced to
90 days conllnetnent In the
Meigs County jail by county
court Judge Robert E. Buck.

DEAD L INE FOR PURCHASE OF 1977 DOG LI CE NSE IS JANUARY ?O TH . ONE
DOLLAR ($1.001 PENA LTY IF LICE NSE IS PURCHAS ED AFTER THAT DAT E .
FOR YOUR CONVENI ENCE USE THI S HANDY APPLI CATION B LANK AND
MAIL TO THE COU NTY AU DITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. F EES ARE
TWO DOLLAR S 112 .001 FOR EACH DOG. MALE OR FEMA L E . (KE NN EL
LICENSE PENALTY IS 001..
'

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WATCH .FOR
OPENING DATE

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WANTED
COLORS

GO ON SALE DEC. 1st

HOUSE

of Paul and Allle Simon to extendtog to the purse or the
olfer unusual gi fty items at a more affluent.
wide price range to fit the
A preview glimpse ol the
budget or the most financially stock being set In place lor
handicapped shoPPer and Wednesday's grand opening,

MEIGS THEATKE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

AUTOS COLLIDE
POMEROY - A knoc.k on
POMEROY - Medium
your . door In the nert six damages were reported to
POPIILU.
weeks may be from the two cars in an . .accident on
U'I'UY
Pomeroy Seventh-day ' Ad· West Main st .. at 4:30 p.m.
ventist Church . ·
Friday . Pomeroy Police said
2nd &amp; Olive
Gerard Seton, pastor, said a car driven by Henry Werry,
volunteers. will visit homes .Pomeroy, struck the rear of a
and businesses as part of the car driven by Sally Hughes,
once-a-year World Service Point Pleasant. Werry was
Appeal. Each year members cited for ass~red clear
of the world-wide c.hurch distance. No one was Injured.
gather
lunds
for
humHnitarian work and give .-...-....................,..~.,..,.....,..."'•"'"""~•,..l&gt;lli•,..l&gt;lli•.,.•l!.i•,..•l'ol•lliiol&gt;lliolliioWiol&gt;lliio&gt;IM..,.--.,......,,,..,
a report on how previous ,
dooations wer~ spent.' Last ·
year, members raised more
lhan 18 million ln North
America , and another $4.3
million overseas to carry on
medical, disaster relief and
other person-to-person
services. ·
Seton said several members of the Pomeroy church
will be/involved In the elfort,
some as visitors, others as
'
drivers, Christmas carolers , STOP AND GO TRACTION
and behind-the-scenes
workers. All funds are ad·
· SOLES
ministered through .existing
Reg.
church channels so there is no
problem of admlnlstration
19.99
eating up the money ear·
marked lor relief work.

THE 1977 DOG LICENSE

FOREMA.N &amp; ABBOTT
N. 2ND AVE.

! · Area Deaths

Pastoral couple home

'

39

--------------------------- ~

blood centerhy Goodyear

ELEVATORS EXPLODE
BELT, Mont. (UPI) - Two
30,1100-gallon propane tanks
exploded Friday, spreading a
stubborn fire through two
grain elevators, a farm
cooperative and several
homes. Eleven persons were
bttrned in the explosion, but
By CYNTHIA Mllll!
finned tubes, in the none was seriously, injured.
WASHINGTON (UPIJ
presid ential revie win g Most were treated and
Solar heat may keep Jinuny stands.'
released. Ambulances had to
Ca rter's feet warm when he
speed
over icy roads to get
The average Washington
watches his inaugural parade temperature lor Jan. 20 is 40 tbe injured to hospitals In
under Supplemental Sec urity from a reviewing stand in
Bem;fits and miners; widows, front of the While House, the degrees, but with the sun out Great Falls 30 miles away.
and children 's benefits under official hea ding physical the system would be able .to
keep the reviewing stand
,the Black Lung program.
preparation for the inaugural cozy.
VACCINE COUNT
Questions about these said Saturday.
ATLANTA
(UP!) - More
Some
solar
hea
t
can
be
,progra ms are answered by
Using the sun 's energy is collec\ed even on a oloudy than 25 million Americans
c.alling the Social Security one of several ways the
Office, in i\thensCounty, a92- Inaugural Commi ttee plans day, but if the day is heavily through Nov. 20 ' rec.elved
4448, in Meigs County 992- to demonstrate th e new ' overcast "you'll have ~ prob- vaccinations against swine
lem," Starobin said. He ilaid influenza, ·according to the
6622.
administration's ~ommit· sup plemental electric national Center lor Disease
ment to energy conservation heaters will be provided to Control. The agency said
and the environment.
cover lllat possibility.
Friday ·the totallnnoculalion
Other steps include.:
"Having the solar panel on ligui'e ol 25,376,438 represents
~ Placing a big half.moon
the White House land isn't the 18.76 per c.ent or all persons 18
or yellow chrysanthemums most es thetic thing/ ' years of age or· older.
SPEAKER NAMED
on Pennsylvania Avenue in Slarobin said, "but it will
TUPPERS PLAINS
front of the While House to
Brother Ed Bousman, und e r sc ore Car ter '.s illustrate a principle ."
BONES ABANDONED
founder and speaker of the comrpi tment to ecology and
ATHENS
(UP!) - The
'G od is Just a Prayer Away" the E'nvirorunent .
doorman
of
an apartment
radio broadcast will speak at
- Switching from the quar- ·
building
found
two human
STRUCK TWICE
the Tuppers Plains Church of ter-mill ion dollar presidential
skeletons
on
the
balcony
of an
POMEROY - Gary 0.
Christ this ev ening ato7 p.m. reviewing st~ n d design or the
empty
apartment,
police
said
The minister, Eugene. E. Nixon years to a structure Hostettler, Rt. I , Reedsville,
Friday.
After
a
thorbugh
Underwood, invites all to about halllllat cost which ca n reported to the Meigs County
Investigation, poll'ce
attend .
be rec.yded la ter at another Sheriff's Department that he discovered
both skeletons
was
traveling
west
on
SR
124
loealion lor permanent use by
to
Ohio
belonged
Friday
at
11
p.m.
when
his
citizens.
University
and
had
been
car
was
struck
twice
in
the
Sam D. Starobin, director
of the District of Columbia rear by another vehide. The taken home for study by two
foreign medical students who
G€n e ral Se rvices vehicle that,struck Hostettler abandoned
them on the
continued
on.
The
accident
is
Department, is in charge of ·
balcony.
under
investiga
tion
.
.
construction for the Jan. 20
parade.
Starobin
sa id
the
WRONG DEPARTMENT
suggestion for solar energy in
NOBODY HURT
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!)the reviewing stand came
GALUPOLIS - No one Policemen in.the North ·Port·
!rom Carter's stat! too late was injured in a traffic ac·
lor special 'solar heater parts cident t :30 p.m. Friday on · land precinct have been
to be built, so a search was Garfield Ave. and Ports· receiving peculiar calls
launched lor any components ·mouth Rd. where a vehicle rec.ently directing them to
on hand at . the Energy driven by Rhodera A. nonexistent addresses and
Research and Development Sturgen, 66, Freeburn, Ky. giving them uilknown c.odes.
The mystery was solved
Administration or some other pulled into the path of a truck
Friday
when investigators
agency.
operated by Richard S. discovered ·officer~ were
. "They 're slill looking," be Snodgrass, 27, Rt. I, Crown
picking up signals from the
said.
City. There was moderate Seattle (Wash.) Pollee
Starobin said the only damage. No charges were
Depat:lment, about 150 air ·
change in construction of the liled.
miles distant. Freak at·
platform needed to provide
mospheric conditions sent the
the solar heat is "just adding
signals
into North Portland.
llle plumbing."
Plans for a solar panel
about 10,000 feet square to be
laid out on the White House
SAll.ORS WARNED
CHILD INJURED
grounds behind llle reviewing
Sailors were warned of
MIDDLEPORT
- The
stanll to soak up the sun's quick-l orming ice in the
Middleport
Emergency
heat and transfer it to water. upper Great Lakes and all
The water, in turn, would ·south Dakota 's weather Squad anowered a call to the
flow into a storage tank on the stations reported zero or Mark Vstore Friday night for
While House lawn.
below readings overnight Usa Smith,' 10, Elkhart, Ind.,
Hot water from the tank Saturday, part of a wintry who had a laceration. She
would be pumped through pattern over the West and was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. ·
pipes U! radiators. made of Midwest, the UP! said.

• Extra large lint screen
• Large 5.9 cu. lt. dryinq drum
1

&lt;'hief lab technologist ol 'Pleasant Valley Hospital, Mrs.
Betty Johnson , blood program chairman for the Mason
County Red Cross, and Mrs. Barbbara Battin, right,
Building Fund Director, observe.

$20,000 transfusion given

IN
MiD.DlEPORT

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The

uu YOUR
CHRISTMAS
St40PPING
NOW AT
FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT .

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Social Services Clinics, to
arr~nge for the Railroad
Rettrement Board to use
Social Security spa ce, thus
making it easier for railroad
benefi ciaries to conduct their
business, and to process SSJ
redet erminations ove r
television · with
the
cooperation of WOUB TV.
The SSJ redetermination
program has been used
throughout Ohio, in some
localities in Michigan, and is
expected to be used nation·
wide, to provide open evening
hours so that working parents
with disabled children can
file for SSL"

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,:{
'; FORGET•ME•NOT «r
~;f
FLORIST
'~
~ ~ P.
t
(:;"'i 5TH STREET
! ~~~·~~s ~:~~:~~~.~~i~ ~;~~:
NEW HAVEN ~
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delendant, William Harold
Dray lqcated in the ci.ty of
Gallipolis, part of lot No. 8 of
Maria L. Shepard subdivision
or 100 acre lot No. 521.
Plaintiffs asked the court
that they be found to have a
good and valid first lien on
the property, that unless the
amount due them is paid, the
delendant shall be foreclosed
and an order of sale issued to
sell the premises to satisfy
their lien.

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" ~New office door opened ·in Athens
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against William Harold Dray
in the amou nt of $968.16 arid
costs in .Ga ll ia County
Common Pleas Court on Sept.
r· J, 1975. The judgment
awarded plaintifl insurance
company $868.16 and pla intiff
Geiger $100. The complaint
attest• that the defendant has
fa iled to comply with the
judgment and that by virtue
or the judgment plaintills
have a valid lien in the sum of
$968.16, interest and costs
upon thf r~a 1 estRtj) of the

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!':.wotl!l) by ;n11.:

UAII .VTKI8UNE
125 Thm! 1\ ~t' , ( ;ii lh[ioh.i , Oh1u

...,.,...... •• ..

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~\t·r')

11!\uV a ll~) I'UIJ h ~tom~o:~ 'lo

MORGANTOWN, W.Va . goes through the mind ol "
tUPI ) - Ever wonder what sky jumper
wh en · his

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indicates that the Sbnons are
lollowtng the plan. There are
many reasonably priced,
attractive items rang ing
!rom a dollar to two dollars
ranging to elaborately
lramed pictures, china and
Items In • more upenslve
prlce range. There are three
.Piece end table sets, glassware , bisque w.are , rain
trees, small appliances, dolls,
chinws. mixer set's. ngurine.s.
pictures end novelty articles
to only touch upon 1M stock.
. 11le opening of the shop Is •
lifelong ambition of Mrs.
Simon who has a number of
tdeas which she will put Into
effect at the ee.nter. .
The center will open at 12
-noon Wednesday . Opening
special• will be featured. The
center will maintain hours
!rom 12 noon lo 6 p.m.,
Monday through Saturday .

1

TWO ACI'IONS FILED
POMEROY - A suit for
divorce and another lor
money were filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Steve · Goody , Middleport,
filed for divorce from Emily
Goody, Galilpolis. The State
of Ohio, Department of
Mental Health an1 Mental
Retardation, Bureau ol
Support, flied suit for $1,050,
against Yvonne Scally ,
Middleport, for care and
maintenance of Thomas
Scally.

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BOYS
OR
MEN'S SIZES TO 12

WOMEN'S FLEECE
SUEDE LIKE UPPERS

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UPPERS.
R_UBBER
FOOT

BOOTS

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$44! $9!
,16.99

RUST,
- . TAN
OR BLACK

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SIZES
. -TO 12

SIZES 5 TO 10

G. C•.
SILVER BRIDGE
STORE ONLY
. . PLAZA
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4-A-The Sunday Tililes-Sentinel,Sunday, Nov. 21, 1976

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-Two hurt
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wreck

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ARTS &amp; CRAF"fs (10..14 ' year olds) ' :.:_ 1-r, Terry
Hysell, Scott Skinner, Jamey Scally, Kathy Parker, Patty
Parker. (Beth Perrin and Chuck Davis, absent).

CHILDREN'S ART CLASS - .1st row, Mike Parker,
Jason Winebrenner ; 2nd row, Joey Parker, Missy Snyder,
Dee Dee Henderson , and Jrd row, Jim Parker, Randy
Jewel, Kevin Mow~ry , Susan Thomas. (Scott Reed ,
absent)".

Arts, crafts exhibit at Meigs Museum
POMEROY - This !aU the •classes, working hard to
Meigs County Museum of- leam techniques and skills in
fered a series of Arts and fin e arts drawing and
Crafts Classes to the com- painting or in crafts such as
munity. During the past two macrame and batik.
These people are gomonths adults and children
attended the museum ing to share their ac·

com plishments with the
community in an Arts and
Crafts Exhibit to be held ' at
the museum Dec. 5 through
19. The opening reception for
the exhibit will be held
Sunday, December 5, 2-4

p.m.

The public is invited;
The Arts and Crafts
Program will begin agairi in
January 1977. Lists oi ciasses
and registration information
will be posted at a later date.
::::::::::;:::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·::;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Monday through Wednesday, lair Monday and a
chance of snow Tuesday
and fair Wednesday. Cold
with highs in the mid 20s to
low 30s and lows 10 to 18.

McDermitts' suit given new court
' PT. PLEASANT - A
$180,000 Mason County Circuit Court suit brought
against the Appalachian
Power Co. by several
members of a family who
own property in the county
has been transferred to the
federal court In_ Huntington.
The transfer request in U.
S. District Court was initiated
by the power company, court

records show.
Frank, William E.,
Josephine, Johnnie F. and
Mary J. McDermitt, who own
287.2 acres abOut seven miles
from New Haven in Mason
County, liied sui! in circuit
court last month claiming the
power company breached a
right-of-way con tract and
"negligently" constructed
power lines on their property.

The suit said a 1972 right-&lt;ifway
,agreement
was
breached when a power line
easement wa s relocated
about 100 feet from a McDermitt-owned silo.
It also said members of the
fa mily have experienced
"electrical shock" from high
voltage lin es "in close
proximity to buildings and

structures."

CLUB TO MEET
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club wiU meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday at the hom_e of
Mrs. Harvey Eriewine with
Mrs. Vidor Nelson as co~·
hostess.

THIS IS THE WAY IT WAS.

••

By Frank HIU
GALUPOUS - In 1859 a group of local citizens who had
galhered atOur House left on a trek west to Sacramento, Calif.
Here are the names of those folks:
Erie Tucker, John Kerr, Sheriff Daniel H. Rose and sons,
E. N. Ridgeway , Gus Ridgeway, Charles Giles , Aaron Davis,
two sons of John Cheney, Charles Graha m, John W. Howell ,
and William Eagle.
The party traveled to Leavenworth, Kansas where they
joined a wagon train heading west. There were 75 people in the
train as it was too dangerous for smaller groups to travel
because of hostile Indians. Many drove oxen, and many more
walked the 2,200 miles from Leavenworth to Sacramento.
By 1930 all had passed away but E: N. Ridgeway, who was
still living, past 95 years ol~.

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GALLIPOLIS
Two
persons were injured in four
traffic accidents Friday
investigated by the GalliliMeigs Post State Highway
Patrol.
l'he Injury accident occurred at II : 15 a.m. on SR
554, three tenths ·of a mile
west of SR 160 where Rayford ·
A. Minnis, 18, Bidwell, lost
control of his car which ran
off the right side of the highway then overturned on its
top .
Minnis and a passenger,
David P. Scott, 15, Bidwell,
were taken to the . Holzer
Medical Center for treatment
of minor injuries. Minnis' car
was demolished. He was cited
to Municipal Court for speed
for conditions.
A deer was killed in an
accident on CR 50 in Ohio
Twp. one and live tenths
miles west of SR 7.
The animal ran into the
path of a car operated by
Charles P. Freeman·, 64 ,
Crown City.
No one was injured or cited
in a collision at 8:45 a.m. on
CR 2 In Clay Twp. one and
four tenths miles west of SR
7.

The patrol said vehicles
driven by John W. Haffelt, 38,
Crown City, and Donald ·w.
See, 48, Crown City, collided
in • a curve . · There was
moderate damage.
A single vehicle mishap
occurred at 3:50a.m. on CR 1
in Clay Twp. wher.e Mark T.
Epling , 23, Gallipolis, lost
control of his car which ran
off the left side of the highway
into a field. There was minor
damage .

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to Beat
the Hustles,
·Hassles and
Hoaxes

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honored

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Dateline

I1 of Athecantata
for the residents
county infirmary for

Gallra•

1 of the Infirmary on Dec. 15.

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AREA residents are reminded the 1976 Gailia County
Christmas parade is scheduled Saturday , Dec. 4, beginning at
10 a.m . Theme this year is "Christmas Carol. " Vic MullinS is
psrade chairman. The annual evenf- is co~sponsvrcd by the
Gallipolis Retail Merchanta Association and Gallipoli s State
Institute.

.I This-Christmas I
i ~!~.~: ,.,.,,. '""""" t
I Secondly, .... . f'

+++

RECEIVED a note in the mail last week which said the
grandson of a Gallla County resident played in S.turday's
Class A state championship football game between West
Jefferson and Ashtabula, in the Rubber Bowl in Akron .

f

Gulbransen organ as this Christmas
gift. For ail. of our organs are designed
to last for years and years. And each
is designed to suil any family member's

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needs.

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THE note said quarterback for West JefferSQn's
Roughriders is Jeff Merklin , a junior, who is the grandson of
Mrs. Earl Wallace .and the late Earl Wallace, Rt. 2, Crown
City. West Jefferson was cham'pions Of the Metro League. The
Roughriders are coached by Gene Keel.

+++

.

IN an effort to upgrade basketball programs for GAHS
home games this winter, Bill Gray , WJEH sports director and
Dat~line have combined efforts to produce 1hopefully) a
complete information fact st\eet for both the home and visiting
1 teams. Tom Jooes. Blue Devil Boosters membership drive
; chairman , has sold ads for the program. The "new" program
J will clintain both home and visiting rosters, !varsity and
reserves) background information on coaches and players, a
quiz, tid-bit fillers and pictures of players and coaches around
~" the Southeastern Ohio J.:eague . Two members o~th~ Varsity G
Club will sell the programs during Gallia Academy's nine
home games this winter. All proceeds will go towa rd the
Gallipolis basketball program.

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WAR~! ~~~~ARD

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Fann workers'
pay is up 6.5%
WASHING TON (UP!) Wages for hired farm
workers averaged $2.80 an
hour
in
a
sur·
vey last month, up 6.5 per
cent from a year earlier,
according to the Agriculture
Department.
1
It estimated Friday that in
October there were 1,340,100
men and women employed in
the '" hired farm labor' :
category -- down 4 percent
from a year earlier.
A similar decline was noted
in the number of farm family
workers. That category
dropped to 2,960,400 in Oc·
Iober compared )Vith 3,102 1700
a year ea rlier.

RIO GRANDE - Did read at a sixth grade level, enjoy learning/' - Mrs.:
•
someone say Johnny couldn't and he had a riew pair of Thomas said.
Now
there
are
10
children
:
read' Perhaps that's l}ecause glasses to correct a minor
he's not one of the 10 lucky _ visi?n problem discovered involved, and at no cost to "
families, since the program :
kids involved with a unique dunng the sessions.
provides
teaching experience ~
tutoring program at Rio
Why sueh . succe~s' Mrs.
for
Rio
Grande
~Udents . . ~
Grande College-Community Thomas attrtbutes It to the
College.'
fact that a child is involved in The program is not :.
The program, so informal it a one-to-one relationship with designed·to take care of more "
doesn't even have a name someone who ts not a teacher, than 12 yol!flg people at this :.,
time.
!
began quite by accident whe~ b.~t a, "fellow student."
a parent called Rio Grande's
We re able to do what most · "That's not ,a11 lot/' Mrs.:
developmental lab director, teachers would lov~ to do, Tho~""qas sald, but it's at . .,
Peg Thomas, asking for help. gove a lot o.f tn~ividual at- least one small step to help a •
The mother said her child tenllon so that children really few children enjoy reading. " ~
"
was in second grade, but
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reading at a first grade level.
Mrs. Thomas invited the
seven year old to the college
and matched him with a Rio
Grande student who worked
BUY YOURS NOWI
in the lab. The two, second
grader and college, junior,
•MARLETTE .WHITMAN
spent a few hours each week
30 Years Financing Available
together reading, using
Also:
Complete Line of Quality
teaching machines, playing
Sectional
Homes &amp; Mo,bile Homes
"hangman~~ on the black·
board and in recreation
around the campus.
That ,was a year ago. By
spring the child was able to

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REGISTER NOVEMBER 29TH
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UNTIL DECEMBER 24TH

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MODULAR HOME

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AT ·THE FOLLOWING
LAFAYETTE MALL STORES

&amp;'NAotW~

MOBILE HOMES INC. ••

See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
•
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis. Ohio

•

BERNADINE'S

THE ALCOVE

BASTILLE

THE SHOE CAFE

MY SISTER'S CLOSET

THE LINEN CUPBOARD

~-\!JII.~~~.....~-......- -......-

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Medicare paid over 10.2
million Outpatient hospital
bills totaling over $4&gt;3 million
in 1975..

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,.,....w..........~...~·--.........""'...,

......\MI.......I}. . . . . . . .~--.......... , ..

OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00P.M.

~~~!~~~~~~.:..~!;j

Gift Ideas

for Christtnas
.Y

Gifts from the General Store say Merry Christmas-in an old-fashioned. special kind of way. There are ali kinds of
originaL coun try gifts and a large selec tion of western-style
clot hing for the whole family.
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3·-'50 GIFT CERTIFICATES
8 ----'25. GIFT CERTIFICATES
5-'10 GIFT CERTIFICATES

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Winter coats and
western wear

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Wool and lea ther coats will keep
everyone ih your family warm and
looking great all winter long.
They'll also enjoy shirts.
skorts. jackets and jeans
by Lee. Lots of styles

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and sizes.

SHOP.·A-RAMA TICKETS AT ALL STORES
'

Country Christmas Gifts
Hand-crafted jewelry,
copper and wooden kitchen
ttems. jellies. cheese. toys,
and great stocking sluffin's
for anyone on your
Christmas list

FREE COFFEE
FOR ALL SHOPPERS!
INTHEMALL

Open ,seven days a week 9:00 'til 9:00.
(lift Certificates available.
Master CHarge accepted.

6vtAMS

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

FARMS~

NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN

Route 35 · Rio Gral'lde. Ohio

-l.liJ~---------------------~111-

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:SAUSAGE SHOP &amp;GENERAL STORE

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IN GIFT CERTIFICATES WILL BE GIVEN
AWAY DEC. 24TH AT 2:00 P.M.

GENERAL SIORE

II was reported that swings
have been placed at the park
and the tables have been
· chained down. The selling of
giant color ing books for
Christmas and a membership
drive was discussed.
For the membership drive
members were divided into
two teams with the captain of
the_losing .team at the end of
the drive to receive a pie in
the face.
It was decided to hold a
dance at Royal Oak Park on
Dec. 10, for toys for .lots and
to prepare for the annual food
baskets lor the needy project.
Anyone in need or anyone
kn ow in g of any needy ·
families are to contact the
Meigs J,aycees by writing to
Box 603, Pomeroy or 400
Spring Ave., Pomeroy.

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Dr. James A. Kemp, Gallia County Health Commissioner,
members of the county and city health departments and
volunteers workers are to be commended for their outsta nding
efforts during the recent fiv e-day swine flu clinics held
throughout the city and county. A total fo 2,373 persons
received flu va cc inations in Gallia Countv.
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-~~~,._.~M'l.e~~~~~~~y~~~~.... ~~~,._..._~;,t··~~~~-llt-.Y~•-II!o•Y~~..

Tutoring progran1 works

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TWENTY YEARS AGO , from the files of the Daily
Tribune and weekly Gailia Times ... Downtown Coaches Club
to sponsor All-Sports banquet in spring for Blue Devil
athletes ... Southeastern Ohio League officials. to honor the
late William &lt;Bill ) Thomas, league founder, during All.SEOAL
grid banquet in Pomeroy ... Area
hit by . wintry
weather ... Christmas Seal drive totals $1,200 thus far in
56 State Street
Galhpolos, Ohio
,9 Gallia ... Jlurley tobaccosales sets record general average of
$59.61 per hundred pounds ... George flalfinger elected
Phone 446-4372
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Southt.
'aNLern Ohio Regional CoWlcil president ... Hio Gra nd('
Across from library
(
lllueonen defeat North Gallia ~1-38 for 43rd eonst'l;u:iw Gallia
,......~,..~-"-t:l;ia't.11t-....1NI.~~--~-t·~' OJUnty i.ca ~oue basketball win .

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Sure, we could design organs for be·
ginners, intermediat es, and accom·
piished mus ici ans. But we feel that:s
a waste of-your time, money and ener·
gies. And Gulbransen, long the finest
in organs, is a fine piece of furniture
as well as a fine musical instrument.
Buy a Gu ibr.anse n organ this
Chhristmas fofr the whole fam ily, ·and
t ree years rom now, you can trade
in your car instead of your organ. So
come in now and hear for yourself lhe
fin est sound in organs - Gulbransen.
You won't be satisfi ed wilh any other
organ.

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Presents "Christmas Spirit"

TUTORING PROGRAM - Student teaches student.
Ran~y Mead,Rio GrandeCollege.COnununity College junior,
works with one of the ten children involved in the college's
tutoring program.

1 pizza party for the residents

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BELIEVE it or not, there's oro1y tl days until Christmas.
Th ~ 1976 holiday season got off to a good start in Gallia County
Thursday as Thanksgiving activities reuriited loved ones once
again.

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300 SEaJND AVENUE, GALLIPOUS. OHIO

••

1 Thanksgiving was held and
1 plans were made to hold a

By Hobart W:t'lson

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During the Civil War a group of prisoners held at the
so uthern Libby Prison in Richmond, Va . dug a 3f&gt;.foot tunnel
and escaped. They made th eir way to Washington , D. C. where
Secretary of War Stanton granted them all a much deserved
furlough . Joseph A. Donally and John H. Cherrington of
Gallipolis were in this group of escapees.
JeffersonScott, a native 6fGallipolis, lived in the 18th, 19th
and 20th centuries. He was born in Gallia County in 1794 and
died in Tiffin, Ohio in 1907 at the adva,nced age of 113 years. His
fa ther was a Cherokee Indian and his mother a mulatto.
This writer and wife celebrated their 40th wedding
anniversary Saturday , Nov . 27, 1976.
Fifty yea rs ago my friend, John Rippey, made his famous
POMEROY - Mark Oiler
90 yard run with an intercepted pass in the Gallipolis-Pl.
Pleasant Thanksgiving Day football game. This run enabled ' and Mike Mullen we•e named
the Blue Devils to win. After a ten year lapse, I am glad that Jaycees for the first quarter
For those who may be interested :
the Blue Devils and Big Blacks will be meeting each other of the year and Richard
In 1860 Joseph Force opetated a sawmill for W. H. Langley aga in, starting next year.
'
Roseberry for the second
Medicare pays for blood
oo the site nowOjOcupied by the lee Plant on First Ave.
qua rter of the year when the needed during a hospital stay
Jaycees met recently.
In l816lhere was frost, or snow, or sleet, every mon th of
The answer to last week's question:
except for the first three
the year. Old timers referred to this as the year with no
The honor was given the pints.
James Martindelllived in the Addison area , He was born
summer. Ayear later corn was selling locally for $30 a busheL in the east in 1754 and"died here in 1840. He enlisted in the m~n for their civic work in
The· first person buried tn Mound Hi li Cemeteoy was a Revolutiooary War from South Caroli na in 1780 and fou ght ut J:he city park, a project of the
child Lola Lee Collins. June 26, 1875.
.
King's Mountajn and in several other battles. He was granted a Jaycees located at Seventh
i/, 1847-48 E. H. Simmons drove a stage coach from small Pensioo in 1832.
and Mechani c Sts. in
Gallipolis to Chillicothe three times per week for A. A. French.
Pomeroy.
.Simmons also drove cattle from Ga llia County to d rai lhead
Something to think about :
A report was given on a
near Baltimore, Md. several times.
Who was. Charles Weike'
state meeting by Charles
att-ended
by
1-------------------------,I Wayland
Wayland and Bill Young in
I
Cleveland.
·

Jaycees

THE :L AFAYETTE 'M ALL

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4-A-The Sunday Tililes-Sentinel,Sunday, Nov. 21, 1976

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-Two hurt
•
m auto
wreck

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ARTS &amp; CRAF"fs (10..14 ' year olds) ' :.:_ 1-r, Terry
Hysell, Scott Skinner, Jamey Scally, Kathy Parker, Patty
Parker. (Beth Perrin and Chuck Davis, absent).

CHILDREN'S ART CLASS - .1st row, Mike Parker,
Jason Winebrenner ; 2nd row, Joey Parker, Missy Snyder,
Dee Dee Henderson , and Jrd row, Jim Parker, Randy
Jewel, Kevin Mow~ry , Susan Thomas. (Scott Reed ,
absent)".

Arts, crafts exhibit at Meigs Museum
POMEROY - This !aU the •classes, working hard to
Meigs County Museum of- leam techniques and skills in
fered a series of Arts and fin e arts drawing and
Crafts Classes to the com- painting or in crafts such as
munity. During the past two macrame and batik.
These people are gomonths adults and children
attended the museum ing to share their ac·

com plishments with the
community in an Arts and
Crafts Exhibit to be held ' at
the museum Dec. 5 through
19. The opening reception for
the exhibit will be held
Sunday, December 5, 2-4

p.m.

The public is invited;
The Arts and Crafts
Program will begin agairi in
January 1977. Lists oi ciasses
and registration information
will be posted at a later date.
::::::::::;:::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·::;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Monday through Wednesday, lair Monday and a
chance of snow Tuesday
and fair Wednesday. Cold
with highs in the mid 20s to
low 30s and lows 10 to 18.

McDermitts' suit given new court
' PT. PLEASANT - A
$180,000 Mason County Circuit Court suit brought
against the Appalachian
Power Co. by several
members of a family who
own property in the county
has been transferred to the
federal court In_ Huntington.
The transfer request in U.
S. District Court was initiated
by the power company, court

records show.
Frank, William E.,
Josephine, Johnnie F. and
Mary J. McDermitt, who own
287.2 acres abOut seven miles
from New Haven in Mason
County, liied sui! in circuit
court last month claiming the
power company breached a
right-of-way con tract and
"negligently" constructed
power lines on their property.

The suit said a 1972 right-&lt;ifway
,agreement
was
breached when a power line
easement wa s relocated
about 100 feet from a McDermitt-owned silo.
It also said members of the
fa mily have experienced
"electrical shock" from high
voltage lin es "in close
proximity to buildings and

structures."

CLUB TO MEET
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club wiU meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday at the hom_e of
Mrs. Harvey Eriewine with
Mrs. Vidor Nelson as co~·
hostess.

THIS IS THE WAY IT WAS.

••

By Frank HIU
GALUPOUS - In 1859 a group of local citizens who had
galhered atOur House left on a trek west to Sacramento, Calif.
Here are the names of those folks:
Erie Tucker, John Kerr, Sheriff Daniel H. Rose and sons,
E. N. Ridgeway , Gus Ridgeway, Charles Giles , Aaron Davis,
two sons of John Cheney, Charles Graha m, John W. Howell ,
and William Eagle.
The party traveled to Leavenworth, Kansas where they
joined a wagon train heading west. There were 75 people in the
train as it was too dangerous for smaller groups to travel
because of hostile Indians. Many drove oxen, and many more
walked the 2,200 miles from Leavenworth to Sacramento.
By 1930 all had passed away but E: N. Ridgeway, who was
still living, past 95 years ol~.

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GALLIPOLIS
Two
persons were injured in four
traffic accidents Friday
investigated by the GalliliMeigs Post State Highway
Patrol.
l'he Injury accident occurred at II : 15 a.m. on SR
554, three tenths ·of a mile
west of SR 160 where Rayford ·
A. Minnis, 18, Bidwell, lost
control of his car which ran
off the right side of the highway then overturned on its
top .
Minnis and a passenger,
David P. Scott, 15, Bidwell,
were taken to the . Holzer
Medical Center for treatment
of minor injuries. Minnis' car
was demolished. He was cited
to Municipal Court for speed
for conditions.
A deer was killed in an
accident on CR 50 in Ohio
Twp. one and live tenths
miles west of SR 7.
The animal ran into the
path of a car operated by
Charles P. Freeman·, 64 ,
Crown City.
No one was injured or cited
in a collision at 8:45 a.m. on
CR 2 In Clay Twp. one and
four tenths miles west of SR
7.

The patrol said vehicles
driven by John W. Haffelt, 38,
Crown City, and Donald ·w.
See, 48, Crown City, collided
in • a curve . · There was
moderate damage.
A single vehicle mishap
occurred at 3:50a.m. on CR 1
in Clay Twp. wher.e Mark T.
Epling , 23, Gallipolis, lost
control of his car which ran
off the left side of the highway
into a field. There was minor
damage .

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r-;;-------1
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to Beat
the Hustles,
·Hassles and
Hoaxes

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honored

II
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Dateline

I1 of Athecantata
for the residents
county infirmary for

Gallra•

1 of the Infirmary on Dec. 15.

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AREA residents are reminded the 1976 Gailia County
Christmas parade is scheduled Saturday , Dec. 4, beginning at
10 a.m . Theme this year is "Christmas Carol. " Vic MullinS is
psrade chairman. The annual evenf- is co~sponsvrcd by the
Gallipolis Retail Merchanta Association and Gallipoli s State
Institute.

.I This-Christmas I
i ~!~.~: ,.,.,,. '""""" t
I Secondly, .... . f'

+++

RECEIVED a note in the mail last week which said the
grandson of a Gallla County resident played in S.turday's
Class A state championship football game between West
Jefferson and Ashtabula, in the Rubber Bowl in Akron .

f

Gulbransen organ as this Christmas
gift. For ail. of our organs are designed
to last for years and years. And each
is designed to suil any family member's

,f
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needs.

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THE note said quarterback for West JefferSQn's
Roughriders is Jeff Merklin , a junior, who is the grandson of
Mrs. Earl Wallace .and the late Earl Wallace, Rt. 2, Crown
City. West Jefferson was cham'pions Of the Metro League. The
Roughriders are coached by Gene Keel.

+++

.

IN an effort to upgrade basketball programs for GAHS
home games this winter, Bill Gray , WJEH sports director and
Dat~line have combined efforts to produce 1hopefully) a
complete information fact st\eet for both the home and visiting
1 teams. Tom Jooes. Blue Devil Boosters membership drive
; chairman , has sold ads for the program. The "new" program
J will clintain both home and visiting rosters, !varsity and
reserves) background information on coaches and players, a
quiz, tid-bit fillers and pictures of players and coaches around
~" the Southeastern Ohio J.:eague . Two members o~th~ Varsity G
Club will sell the programs during Gallia Academy's nine
home games this winter. All proceeds will go towa rd the
Gallipolis basketball program.

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WAR~! ~~~~ARD

''r

Fann workers'
pay is up 6.5%
WASHING TON (UP!) Wages for hired farm
workers averaged $2.80 an
hour
in
a
sur·
vey last month, up 6.5 per
cent from a year earlier,
according to the Agriculture
Department.
1
It estimated Friday that in
October there were 1,340,100
men and women employed in
the '" hired farm labor' :
category -- down 4 percent
from a year earlier.
A similar decline was noted
in the number of farm family
workers. That category
dropped to 2,960,400 in Oc·
Iober compared )Vith 3,102 1700
a year ea rlier.

RIO GRANDE - Did read at a sixth grade level, enjoy learning/' - Mrs.:
•
someone say Johnny couldn't and he had a riew pair of Thomas said.
Now
there
are
10
children
:
read' Perhaps that's l}ecause glasses to correct a minor
he's not one of the 10 lucky _ visi?n problem discovered involved, and at no cost to "
families, since the program :
kids involved with a unique dunng the sessions.
provides
teaching experience ~
tutoring program at Rio
Why sueh . succe~s' Mrs.
for
Rio
Grande
~Udents . . ~
Grande College-Community Thomas attrtbutes It to the
College.'
fact that a child is involved in The program is not :.
The program, so informal it a one-to-one relationship with designed·to take care of more "
doesn't even have a name someone who ts not a teacher, than 12 yol!flg people at this :.,
time.
!
began quite by accident whe~ b.~t a, "fellow student."
a parent called Rio Grande's
We re able to do what most · "That's not ,a11 lot/' Mrs.:
developmental lab director, teachers would lov~ to do, Tho~""qas sald, but it's at . .,
Peg Thomas, asking for help. gove a lot o.f tn~ividual at- least one small step to help a •
The mother said her child tenllon so that children really few children enjoy reading. " ~
"
was in second grade, but
•"
reading at a first grade level.
Mrs. Thomas invited the
seven year old to the college
and matched him with a Rio
Grande student who worked
BUY YOURS NOWI
in the lab. The two, second
grader and college, junior,
•MARLETTE .WHITMAN
spent a few hours each week
30 Years Financing Available
together reading, using
Also:
Complete Line of Quality
teaching machines, playing
Sectional
Homes &amp; Mo,bile Homes
"hangman~~ on the black·
board and in recreation
around the campus.
That ,was a year ago. By
spring the child was able to

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REGISTER NOVEMBER 29TH
'

UNTIL DECEMBER 24TH

•

MODULAR HOME

•

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AT ·THE FOLLOWING
LAFAYETTE MALL STORES

&amp;'NAotW~

MOBILE HOMES INC. ••

See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
•
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis. Ohio

•

BERNADINE'S

THE ALCOVE

BASTILLE

THE SHOE CAFE

MY SISTER'S CLOSET

THE LINEN CUPBOARD

~-\!JII.~~~.....~-......- -......-

·.

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Medicare paid over 10.2
million Outpatient hospital
bills totaling over $4&gt;3 million
in 1975..

· ·

,.,....w..........~...~·--.........""'...,

......\MI.......I}. . . . . . . .~--.......... , ..

OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00P.M.

~~~!~~~~~~.:..~!;j

Gift Ideas

for Christtnas
.Y

Gifts from the General Store say Merry Christmas-in an old-fashioned. special kind of way. There are ali kinds of
originaL coun try gifts and a large selec tion of western-style
clot hing for the whole family.
•'

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~oz~
I\
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L...

3·-'50 GIFT CERTIFICATES
8 ----'25. GIFT CERTIFICATES
5-'10 GIFT CERTIFICATES

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Winter coats and
western wear

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Wool and lea ther coats will keep
everyone ih your family warm and
looking great all winter long.
They'll also enjoy shirts.
skorts. jackets and jeans
by Lee. Lots of styles

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and sizes.

SHOP.·A-RAMA TICKETS AT ALL STORES
'

Country Christmas Gifts
Hand-crafted jewelry,
copper and wooden kitchen
ttems. jellies. cheese. toys,
and great stocking sluffin's
for anyone on your
Christmas list

FREE COFFEE
FOR ALL SHOPPERS!
INTHEMALL

Open ,seven days a week 9:00 'til 9:00.
(lift Certificates available.
Master CHarge accepted.

6vtAMS

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

FARMS~

NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN

Route 35 · Rio Gral'lde. Ohio

-l.liJ~---------------------~111-

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:SAUSAGE SHOP &amp;GENERAL STORE

~

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IN GIFT CERTIFICATES WILL BE GIVEN
AWAY DEC. 24TH AT 2:00 P.M.

GENERAL SIORE

II was reported that swings
have been placed at the park
and the tables have been
· chained down. The selling of
giant color ing books for
Christmas and a membership
drive was discussed.
For the membership drive
members were divided into
two teams with the captain of
the_losing .team at the end of
the drive to receive a pie in
the face.
It was decided to hold a
dance at Royal Oak Park on
Dec. 10, for toys for .lots and
to prepare for the annual food
baskets lor the needy project.
Anyone in need or anyone
kn ow in g of any needy ·
families are to contact the
Meigs J,aycees by writing to
Box 603, Pomeroy or 400
Spring Ave., Pomeroy.

+++

Dr. James A. Kemp, Gallia County Health Commissioner,
members of the county and city health departments and
volunteers workers are to be commended for their outsta nding
efforts during the recent fiv e-day swine flu clinics held
throughout the city and county. A total fo 2,373 persons
received flu va cc inations in Gallia Countv.
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-~~~,._.~M'l.e~~~~~~~y~~~~.... ~~~,._..._~;,t··~~~~-llt-.Y~•-II!o•Y~~..

Tutoring progran1 works

1---

TWENTY YEARS AGO , from the files of the Daily
Tribune and weekly Gailia Times ... Downtown Coaches Club
to sponsor All-Sports banquet in spring for Blue Devil
athletes ... Southeastern Ohio League officials. to honor the
late William &lt;Bill ) Thomas, league founder, during All.SEOAL
grid banquet in Pomeroy ... Area
hit by . wintry
weather ... Christmas Seal drive totals $1,200 thus far in
56 State Street
Galhpolos, Ohio
,9 Gallia ... Jlurley tobaccosales sets record general average of
$59.61 per hundred pounds ... George flalfinger elected
Phone 446-4372
'
Southt.
'aNLern Ohio Regional CoWlcil president ... Hio Gra nd('
Across from library
(
lllueonen defeat North Gallia ~1-38 for 43rd eonst'l;u:iw Gallia
,......~,..~-"-t:l;ia't.11t-....1NI.~~--~-t·~' OJUnty i.ca ~oue basketball win .

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Sure, we could design organs for be·
ginners, intermediat es, and accom·
piished mus ici ans. But we feel that:s
a waste of-your time, money and ener·
gies. And Gulbransen, long the finest
in organs, is a fine piece of furniture
as well as a fine musical instrument.
Buy a Gu ibr.anse n organ this
Chhristmas fofr the whole fam ily, ·and
t ree years rom now, you can trade
in your car instead of your organ. So
come in now and hear for yourself lhe
fin est sound in organs - Gulbransen.
You won't be satisfi ed wilh any other
organ.

C

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Presents "Christmas Spirit"

TUTORING PROGRAM - Student teaches student.
Ran~y Mead,Rio GrandeCollege.COnununity College junior,
works with one of the ten children involved in the college's
tutoring program.

1 pizza party for the residents

,rP,
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BELIEVE it or not, there's oro1y tl days until Christmas.
Th ~ 1976 holiday season got off to a good start in Gallia County
Thursday as Thanksgiving activities reuriited loved ones once
again.

-~

300 SEaJND AVENUE, GALLIPOUS. OHIO

••

1 Thanksgiving was held and
1 plans were made to hold a

By Hobart W:t'lson

.

.

••

During the Civil War a group of prisoners held at the
so uthern Libby Prison in Richmond, Va . dug a 3f&gt;.foot tunnel
and escaped. They made th eir way to Washington , D. C. where
Secretary of War Stanton granted them all a much deserved
furlough . Joseph A. Donally and John H. Cherrington of
Gallipolis were in this group of escapees.
JeffersonScott, a native 6fGallipolis, lived in the 18th, 19th
and 20th centuries. He was born in Gallia County in 1794 and
died in Tiffin, Ohio in 1907 at the adva,nced age of 113 years. His
fa ther was a Cherokee Indian and his mother a mulatto.
This writer and wife celebrated their 40th wedding
anniversary Saturday , Nov . 27, 1976.
Fifty yea rs ago my friend, John Rippey, made his famous
POMEROY - Mark Oiler
90 yard run with an intercepted pass in the Gallipolis-Pl.
Pleasant Thanksgiving Day football game. This run enabled ' and Mike Mullen we•e named
the Blue Devils to win. After a ten year lapse, I am glad that Jaycees for the first quarter
For those who may be interested :
the Blue Devils and Big Blacks will be meeting each other of the year and Richard
In 1860 Joseph Force opetated a sawmill for W. H. Langley aga in, starting next year.
'
Roseberry for the second
Medicare pays for blood
oo the site nowOjOcupied by the lee Plant on First Ave.
qua rter of the year when the needed during a hospital stay
Jaycees met recently.
In l816lhere was frost, or snow, or sleet, every mon th of
The answer to last week's question:
except for the first three
the year. Old timers referred to this as the year with no
The honor was given the pints.
James Martindelllived in the Addison area , He was born
summer. Ayear later corn was selling locally for $30 a busheL in the east in 1754 and"died here in 1840. He enlisted in the m~n for their civic work in
The· first person buried tn Mound Hi li Cemeteoy was a Revolutiooary War from South Caroli na in 1780 and fou ght ut J:he city park, a project of the
child Lola Lee Collins. June 26, 1875.
.
King's Mountajn and in several other battles. He was granted a Jaycees located at Seventh
i/, 1847-48 E. H. Simmons drove a stage coach from small Pensioo in 1832.
and Mechani c Sts. in
Gallipolis to Chillicothe three times per week for A. A. French.
Pomeroy.
.Simmons also drove cattle from Ga llia County to d rai lhead
Something to think about :
A report was given on a
near Baltimore, Md. several times.
Who was. Charles Weike'
state meeting by Charles
att-ended
by
1-------------------------,I Wayland
Wayland and Bill Young in
I
Cleveland.
·

Jaycees

THE :L AFAYETTE 'M ALL

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�PRICES
IN - .
EFFECT

PRICES
IN
EFFECT

SUNDAY
AY

SUNDAY
AND
MONDAY
NOVEMBER

AND

WHILE
QUANTITIES
LAST

NO

28&amp;29

28

WHILE
QUANTITIES
LAST

29

&amp;

SUNBEAM

REMINGTON

MAN'S SHAVER GROOMER

MOWHAWK
SkiNNY DIP

_$229

22 LONG RIFLE
AMMO

DEVIl'S POTION
AFTER SHAVE

500 Round•

SJ69

STIAWIIIIY TWINS

HlCiCS IIG. $3.39

COSMETIC 1111'1.

• oz.

$6!!.

co• a•••
DOUBLE.MA11'LI
LANTIRN
Ia""'"'·, ..

HECK'S REG. $2 . 19

tOSMUIC 1191.

~orid't •"'tl ""pulor

HECK'S.REG. $9,99 Carton

HECK'S REG.
$1.78

$1.77

COSMEr/C
IJEI'T.

CfiSMITIC INI'1.

HAl
KARATE
COLOGNE

Regular and lime

$J29
' HECK'SRIG.
$1.71

HECK'S
REG.
. $1.19

-

'16''

COSMETIC

$22

6.4 oz.

Knive~, 6 Dinn e r- Forb
ipoom , 6 Teosp oons .

1

6 Tob ie ·

I

HECK'S REG.
$1.01

HECK'S lEG: $1.09

LINSEED OIL
Giv~~ g1.1n i loch high lustre finish or satin stain

finish

01 desi red.

:

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'""''"'
··-··'"''"'
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HECK'SREG.$9.88

/JIJIT.

NDUSIWAIIE IJEPT.

GUN BLUE
PASTE

~IA!m'ft

•

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..'.

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"
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NIGHTGOWNS

"

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.s. 2''.

PARTY SET

$399

..•

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IH..VTIIRPLY

$199

HECK'SIIG.
$2.99

4-SLICE TOASTER
H_
ECK'S
REG.
$19 .96

"

.

$

1599

'12''

$59.96

".

..

....
..." .

...

-~

HECK'SIIG. $2.99

aol'lillc•

.••

•'

HECK'S
REG •
99'

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D91.

whir~ ~,

ol

d~ C: OICI IO&lt; ~ hu Je.1 .. , plv 1

~&lt;H I &lt;myontt' l h:nh•. lim
co v e t ~ tn 01t tolors w tth 1u~ l

to

co&lt;ttiug
e~n1ng .

Compare HECK'S PREMIUM wirh

O&gt;ly other wall puirrt ot 011~ pri(ll YO~ W1il

Ue pl omD nl ly ltn,.u lnd

$577

GAL.

LATEX WALL PAINT .

99

ten modern colo1~ plm two while \ 111 tl11\

eo ,.Jy upplted lore• w_.ll puinl

du•o ·

b ill , Ollt OC ii'f"e.

$ ]99

HECK'S RIG.
$4.99 GAL.

CiAL .

9 INCH DELUXE
PAN &amp; ROLLER SET

JEWElRY DEPT.

NARD WAlE DEPT.

KODAK
FLIP -FLASH POCKET,CAMERA KIT

21 PC. SOCKET SET

$266
HICK'S RIG. $3.99

NARDWAIE DII'T.

All the featu res of t~e budget-pnced mode l plu s an ou· .

$

tomotic exposure cont rol

41''
,

ond f/9.51ens.

HECK'S REG.
$.53.96

I

'6''

$38

$149 .
JEWElRY DEPT.

PERCOLATOR

~r«lllr lor &lt;v&gt;lom btcoung)·eur&lt;cHK Co"'ffl•l•l r
"7'metubr• lOt oo•y deon•n; M&lt;i1&gt; J.o;tj,..,. CUI\CI ~"PI

)otw
~~

dero&lt;oou•&lt;oH..

Pee- · ,t,· P.••• ' WOU90 ,l,ow&gt;emD&lt;Ittcl

coil~ 01 " " ' "· M•n• Boow '
r~p•ol&lt;olfll

bo.. ~&gt;leh yO&lt;J

mo•~ 1u1t 2 J

99

HECK'S REG. $47.96

JEWELRY DEPI.

ARGUS
MINI CAMERA KIT
The pocket camera t~at has an f/9.5
optical glass 3 element lens for
clearer, sharper pictures' and really
fits your poc~et!

$17

HEc;K'SREG. $11 .99

HICK'S RIG. $1.09

HARDWARE DEPT.

NAIDWARE DEPT.

PRIME
GAS
DRYER

_EXTENSION
CORDS
AVA ILABL E IN BROWN &amp; WHITE.

6FT................. •a•

HICK'SRIG.

44 4

12FT. .......... :.... 66' ·.
15FT .......... ...... J6i
NARDWAIE
DII'T.
11.4 oz.

.PRESTONE
STARTING
FLUID
SPRAY

99

HECK'S REG. $22~99

66'

PRE~TONE

wotch the pictvte' de11elop·. No peel ing , no
litter ond no ti mrng . A zooming •circle dist·
once finde r hel p~ you locus fr om 3 v, feet to
25 feet. You get outomoti c e"p o~u re cont ro l
ond an elec tronic shutter .

SUNSET
120 MIN. RECORDING
TAPE

9" TWIN PA'CK ·
ROLLER COVERS

HECK'S
REG.
$1.19

AUTO
IJIIIT.
'

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PROPANE
.

CYLINDER

'128 \
HECK'S REG. 11.69
SPORTS DEPT.

&gt;

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HECK'S
' A '' Bettc 1 bu y'" ot Hcch , , d1001C ! tom

Pu~~ the -shv tter~button,turn-o &lt;ronk, and

JIWlliY DUT•

TOP

and

INSTANT CAMERA

HECK 'S REG. $2 .49

'WITH SCRAPER

"

"

1e loH it o n

'

KOD K

HECK'S REG. 115.99

PRESTONE
DE-ICER

$44

HECK'S
REG .

JEWElRY DEPT.

JIWilRYDEPT.

_MIRROR

S/WTJ,.T.

eLAII

HECK'SRIG.
$18.96

LIGHTED 'MAKE UP

HICK'S
RIG.
$1.59

CARVING SET

CUTLERY
SET
6-PIECE
STEAK KNIFE SET

' ..... '

t·loc~'• Ouo ltly

""'~l

•• JEWElRY DEPT•. ·

3 PIECE

10 PIECE

" !! &lt;&gt;~;b~&gt;.,•h

$12·99

HECK'S REG.
$16.96

T0 .'8.18
SI'OI.T t.l.

CIISMITIC

COSMETIC 1191.

" \"•ng 9'"""''"11

f&lt;&gt;a&gt;h ), 1 J O• t .Jotrt ol "1HII&lt; U11cl0&gt;od.d &gt;lo l&gt; ~~ ~ .. ,
oh~ lo"9'" b"ad ,r.,., ~o .. •'ooo ''~"~ ,~ &lt;hoi&lt;~ ct
fola.oe" Cold Ot A,a&lt;odp &lt;oklo "''" &lt;OO I,.J&gt;t i~Y iokKk
eod [X1• • h Eru1 to '"' O&lt;OI ~0"''"' od1~ " ' 100!1 "9 &lt;o
(!e,,..d •k~do or b.-o....,..,., ~rupf10, r """· b ''"' f&lt;l•
•u•r d oun•n 9

12

HICK'S RIG.

88'
HICK'SRIG.
$1.29

I

b•u•h tQ ....JJ locd1,
d' Y'"\1 wmb I&lt;&gt; '1'~"'1 " 'Y"''J '"" ~"9 ta&lt;'&gt;b lot "'Of""~
&gt;ry•ng '""'b l ~r '"'"~'~!! leu&lt;~., &gt;1)0! tl• ~~· f.:,, ~·J•&lt;I
t&lt;N(h ~p&gt; J.,o !f~lf&gt;"tD I Lr~ ~11, ng1 t\•11k lOt ll•yon~
' """ t:w 5ty~ng
~

SUNBEAM

8-lOse&lt; . reqcling

Service lor 6 - 24 pc . set. 6 Dinner

AIM
TOOTHPASTE

79c

.

STYLER DRYER

ires h alkaline batteries
Gvide No . 35 (ASA 25)

99

T084'

NORELC() MIST

Po lmalic , M &gt;ni ·Po lmo l&gt;c
Kodak T.imlt!e 18, 28, 38
o11d lelt&gt; · ln~ t omo t it 608 ,
ere. Abl. 200 ll oof..eo on

HECK'S REG.

lt.Oill

9628 FF

S)"nchron ize s with Argus,

SI'OITS
/IEI'T.

24 PC. STAINLESS STEEL
·t
TABLEWARE SET

Eye drop&amp;

"~"""

SCOPE GUN CASE

$677

HECK'SREG. $26.99 •

MURINE

. ""'

12111CM

fhe e conomy a nd portability moku rthi s. stove
popular for the lighHrovell ng comper, 2 1'1 pmt fuel

18CC

ARGUS
ELECTRONIC
STROBE

BOOT LACE
UIICM

- WITH 2 SPEAKERS
Channel indicator. Automatic
manual channel selec to r.

JIWEl·I Y DEPT.

. NYLON
413

~=
.
DELUXE STOVE .·
.

HECK'S
REG.
$21.56

SJIMTJ . .T.

88

Dtl'l.

'1699

H.c:k's Reg. '2.49

HECK'S REG. 19.99 .
SPORTS DEPT.

8 TRACK CAR STEREO

APPLE &amp; GRAPE

:'1"

Ihe " 6t1r of thO&amp;ut'"

lot eA wall p0 111 1 ov cHiab ln II\ {I wH!e

INLAND

High dome lid provid e~ for grea t·
er cooking capacity . Comp letely
immersible with control removed
for e:o sicr cleaning.

'lUCK SCENT

HICK 'SREG.
$7.99 GAL.

HECK'S PREMIUM
LATEX WALL PAINT

4 ONLY

G.E.
FRY PAN

Coleman C amp Oven,

Wo'rks on Coleman stoves, electric
hot P.lotes, gas bvrneu. Feature s od·
juslable sfeel bake rock and easy to
fl!(?d thermometer. Folds float for
eosy corryi!'lg ond dorage,
'

$599
GAL.

S-405

· CAMP OVEN

-

wh1 IC1.

$34 .88

COLEMAN

copocity,

COSMETIC
IJEI'T.

1•'

HECK'S REG.

JEWElRY DEPT.

I·IOI'Ig
.. tw01iuO&lt;dinal7
1M 11r•. '"'' • to 1t1ur •w... 011
1'10~11.

4l/&amp; oz.

.· oLD SPICE
AFTERSHAVE

s

Clct.m&gt; vo 1ill'. Drre; lo &gt;i.. Goe1 on
lmOotl+ond IHI\Y Ideo I lot wood·
wor~ tt•b+pel ~ , h,nnirt~&gt; U cmd wolh.
ColOr\ rl\Oid1 lhoo ir\ Hed : li&gt;re.
Fit:~ I ·Wall Pninl 17 (nlun und 2

,,..

lloldthiro

1

HECK'S REG . $2.88

HECK'!i
REG.
$2.64

ENAMEL

,.,.. ol fu41 •. ' ~lor 10 fo 1:1 hom

SHAMPOO

GOOD HIALTH COMBINATION

HECK-'S
SEMI-GLOSS

SCHOOL
TOBOGGA-NS

SPORTS DEPT.

WELLA IALSAM

HOT WA TEIIOnLE

Shavemaster Shave r &amp; Groo mer Adjustable Groomer
can be set to tr im sideburns, moustache or beard to
depth you choose- just turn th e 5-position dia l:

.

�PRICES
IN - .
EFFECT

PRICES
IN
EFFECT

SUNDAY
AY

SUNDAY
AND
MONDAY
NOVEMBER

AND

WHILE
QUANTITIES
LAST

NO

28&amp;29

28

WHILE
QUANTITIES
LAST

29

&amp;

SUNBEAM

REMINGTON

MAN'S SHAVER GROOMER

MOWHAWK
SkiNNY DIP

_$229

22 LONG RIFLE
AMMO

DEVIl'S POTION
AFTER SHAVE

500 Round•

SJ69

STIAWIIIIY TWINS

HlCiCS IIG. $3.39

COSMETIC 1111'1.

• oz.

$6!!.

co• a•••
DOUBLE.MA11'LI
LANTIRN
Ia""'"'·, ..

HECK'S REG. $2 . 19

tOSMUIC 1191.

~orid't •"'tl ""pulor

HECK'S.REG. $9,99 Carton

HECK'S REG.
$1.78

$1.77

COSMEr/C
IJEI'T.

CfiSMITIC INI'1.

HAl
KARATE
COLOGNE

Regular and lime

$J29
' HECK'SRIG.
$1.71

HECK'S
REG.
. $1.19

-

'16''

COSMETIC

$22

6.4 oz.

Knive~, 6 Dinn e r- Forb
ipoom , 6 Teosp oons .

1

6 Tob ie ·

I

HECK'S REG.
$1.01

HECK'S lEG: $1.09

LINSEED OIL
Giv~~ g1.1n i loch high lustre finish or satin stain

finish

01 desi red.

:

i .,

\ ,.'

,,,....-4•···
'""''"'
··-··'"''"'
"\&lt;·····

HECK'SREG.$9.88

/JIJIT.

NDUSIWAIIE IJEPT.

GUN BLUE
PASTE

~IA!m'ft

•

',;,

..'.

...'
"
'..'
•.
...
'

NIGHTGOWNS

"

.

.s. 2''.

PARTY SET

$399

..•

'

IH..VTIIRPLY

$199

HECK'SIIG.
$2.99

4-SLICE TOASTER
H_
ECK'S
REG.
$19 .96

"

.

$

1599

'12''

$59.96

".

..

....
..." .

...

-~

HECK'SIIG. $2.99

aol'lillc•

.••

•'

HECK'S
REG •
99'

••
'

AliTO
D91.

whir~ ~,

ol

d~ C: OICI IO&lt; ~ hu Je.1 .. , plv 1

~&lt;H I &lt;myontt' l h:nh•. lim
co v e t ~ tn 01t tolors w tth 1u~ l

to

co&lt;ttiug
e~n1ng .

Compare HECK'S PREMIUM wirh

O&gt;ly other wall puirrt ot 011~ pri(ll YO~ W1il

Ue pl omD nl ly ltn,.u lnd

$577

GAL.

LATEX WALL PAINT .

99

ten modern colo1~ plm two while \ 111 tl11\

eo ,.Jy upplted lore• w_.ll puinl

du•o ·

b ill , Ollt OC ii'f"e.

$ ]99

HECK'S RIG.
$4.99 GAL.

CiAL .

9 INCH DELUXE
PAN &amp; ROLLER SET

JEWElRY DEPT.

NARD WAlE DEPT.

KODAK
FLIP -FLASH POCKET,CAMERA KIT

21 PC. SOCKET SET

$266
HICK'S RIG. $3.99

NARDWAIE DII'T.

All the featu res of t~e budget-pnced mode l plu s an ou· .

$

tomotic exposure cont rol

41''
,

ond f/9.51ens.

HECK'S REG.
$.53.96

I

'6''

$38

$149 .
JEWElRY DEPT.

PERCOLATOR

~r«lllr lor &lt;v&gt;lom btcoung)·eur&lt;cHK Co"'ffl•l•l r
"7'metubr• lOt oo•y deon•n; M&lt;i1&gt; J.o;tj,..,. CUI\CI ~"PI

)otw
~~

dero&lt;oou•&lt;oH..

Pee- · ,t,· P.••• ' WOU90 ,l,ow&gt;emD&lt;Ittcl

coil~ 01 " " ' "· M•n• Boow '
r~p•ol&lt;olfll

bo.. ~&gt;leh yO&lt;J

mo•~ 1u1t 2 J

99

HECK'S REG. $47.96

JEWELRY DEPI.

ARGUS
MINI CAMERA KIT
The pocket camera t~at has an f/9.5
optical glass 3 element lens for
clearer, sharper pictures' and really
fits your poc~et!

$17

HEc;K'SREG. $11 .99

HICK'S RIG. $1.09

HARDWARE DEPT.

NAIDWARE DEPT.

PRIME
GAS
DRYER

_EXTENSION
CORDS
AVA ILABL E IN BROWN &amp; WHITE.

6FT................. •a•

HICK'SRIG.

44 4

12FT. .......... :.... 66' ·.
15FT .......... ...... J6i
NARDWAIE
DII'T.
11.4 oz.

.PRESTONE
STARTING
FLUID
SPRAY

99

HECK'S REG. $22~99

66'

PRE~TONE

wotch the pictvte' de11elop·. No peel ing , no
litter ond no ti mrng . A zooming •circle dist·
once finde r hel p~ you locus fr om 3 v, feet to
25 feet. You get outomoti c e"p o~u re cont ro l
ond an elec tronic shutter .

SUNSET
120 MIN. RECORDING
TAPE

9" TWIN PA'CK ·
ROLLER COVERS

HECK'S
REG.
$1.19

AUTO
IJIIIT.
'

.

PROPANE
.

CYLINDER

'128 \
HECK'S REG. 11.69
SPORTS DEPT.

&gt;

.•.•'
.•,
.

...."··

lr"'

·-·
I -

-...
U&lt;f'

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.•.
'

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,,
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'

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ons..

COOl .,, po•n l 111 fil~ lllOinlll{l. pOll)" l11 tfi"tt

..'

'

¥'011

HECK'S
' A '' Bettc 1 bu y'" ot Hcch , , d1001C ! tom

Pu~~ the -shv tter~button,turn-o &lt;ronk, and

JIWlliY DUT•

TOP

and

INSTANT CAMERA

HECK 'S REG. $2 .49

'WITH SCRAPER

"

"

1e loH it o n

'

KOD K

HECK'S REG. 115.99

PRESTONE
DE-ICER

$44

HECK'S
REG .

JEWElRY DEPT.

JIWilRYDEPT.

_MIRROR

S/WTJ,.T.

eLAII

HECK'SRIG.
$18.96

LIGHTED 'MAKE UP

HICK'S
RIG.
$1.59

CARVING SET

CUTLERY
SET
6-PIECE
STEAK KNIFE SET

' ..... '

t·loc~'• Ouo ltly

""'~l

•• JEWElRY DEPT•. ·

3 PIECE

10 PIECE

" !! &lt;&gt;~;b~&gt;.,•h

$12·99

HECK'S REG.
$16.96

T0 .'8.18
SI'OI.T t.l.

CIISMITIC

COSMETIC 1191.

" \"•ng 9'"""''"11

f&lt;&gt;a&gt;h ), 1 J O• t .Jotrt ol "1HII&lt; U11cl0&gt;od.d &gt;lo l&gt; ~~ ~ .. ,
oh~ lo"9'" b"ad ,r.,., ~o .. •'ooo ''~"~ ,~ &lt;hoi&lt;~ ct
fola.oe" Cold Ot A,a&lt;odp &lt;oklo "''" &lt;OO I,.J&gt;t i~Y iokKk
eod [X1• • h Eru1 to '"' O&lt;OI ~0"''"' od1~ " ' 100!1 "9 &lt;o
(!e,,..d •k~do or b.-o....,..,., ~rupf10, r """· b ''"' f&lt;l•
•u•r d oun•n 9

12

HICK'S RIG.

88'
HICK'SRIG.
$1.29

I

b•u•h tQ ....JJ locd1,
d' Y'"\1 wmb I&lt;&gt; '1'~"'1 " 'Y"''J '"" ~"9 ta&lt;'&gt;b lot "'Of""~
&gt;ry•ng '""'b l ~r '"'"~'~!! leu&lt;~., &gt;1)0! tl• ~~· f.:,, ~·J•&lt;I
t&lt;N(h ~p&gt; J.,o !f~lf&gt;"tD I Lr~ ~11, ng1 t\•11k lOt ll•yon~
' """ t:w 5ty~ng
~

SUNBEAM

8-lOse&lt; . reqcling

Service lor 6 - 24 pc . set. 6 Dinner

AIM
TOOTHPASTE

79c

.

STYLER DRYER

ires h alkaline batteries
Gvide No . 35 (ASA 25)

99

T084'

NORELC() MIST

Po lmalic , M &gt;ni ·Po lmo l&gt;c
Kodak T.imlt!e 18, 28, 38
o11d lelt&gt; · ln~ t omo t it 608 ,
ere. Abl. 200 ll oof..eo on

HECK'S REG.

lt.Oill

9628 FF

S)"nchron ize s with Argus,

SI'OITS
/IEI'T.

24 PC. STAINLESS STEEL
·t
TABLEWARE SET

Eye drop&amp;

"~"""

SCOPE GUN CASE

$677

HECK'SREG. $26.99 •

MURINE

. ""'

12111CM

fhe e conomy a nd portability moku rthi s. stove
popular for the lighHrovell ng comper, 2 1'1 pmt fuel

18CC

ARGUS
ELECTRONIC
STROBE

BOOT LACE
UIICM

- WITH 2 SPEAKERS
Channel indicator. Automatic
manual channel selec to r.

JIWEl·I Y DEPT.

. NYLON
413

~=
.
DELUXE STOVE .·
.

HECK'S
REG.
$21.56

SJIMTJ . .T.

88

Dtl'l.

'1699

H.c:k's Reg. '2.49

HECK'S REG. 19.99 .
SPORTS DEPT.

8 TRACK CAR STEREO

APPLE &amp; GRAPE

:'1"

Ihe " 6t1r of thO&amp;ut'"

lot eA wall p0 111 1 ov cHiab ln II\ {I wH!e

INLAND

High dome lid provid e~ for grea t·
er cooking capacity . Comp letely
immersible with control removed
for e:o sicr cleaning.

'lUCK SCENT

HICK 'SREG.
$7.99 GAL.

HECK'S PREMIUM
LATEX WALL PAINT

4 ONLY

G.E.
FRY PAN

Coleman C amp Oven,

Wo'rks on Coleman stoves, electric
hot P.lotes, gas bvrneu. Feature s od·
juslable sfeel bake rock and easy to
fl!(?d thermometer. Folds float for
eosy corryi!'lg ond dorage,
'

$599
GAL.

S-405

· CAMP OVEN

-

wh1 IC1.

$34 .88

COLEMAN

copocity,

COSMETIC
IJEI'T.

1•'

HECK'S REG.

JEWElRY DEPT.

I·IOI'Ig
.. tw01iuO&lt;dinal7
1M 11r•. '"'' • to 1t1ur •w... 011
1'10~11.

4l/&amp; oz.

.· oLD SPICE
AFTERSHAVE

s

Clct.m&gt; vo 1ill'. Drre; lo &gt;i.. Goe1 on
lmOotl+ond IHI\Y Ideo I lot wood·
wor~ tt•b+pel ~ , h,nnirt~&gt; U cmd wolh.
ColOr\ rl\Oid1 lhoo ir\ Hed : li&gt;re.
Fit:~ I ·Wall Pninl 17 (nlun und 2

,,..

lloldthiro

1

HECK'S REG . $2.88

HECK'!i
REG.
$2.64

ENAMEL

,.,.. ol fu41 •. ' ~lor 10 fo 1:1 hom

SHAMPOO

GOOD HIALTH COMBINATION

HECK-'S
SEMI-GLOSS

SCHOOL
TOBOGGA-NS

SPORTS DEPT.

WELLA IALSAM

HOT WA TEIIOnLE

Shavemaster Shave r &amp; Groo mer Adjustable Groomer
can be set to tr im sideburns, moustache or beard to
depth you choose- just turn th e 5-position dia l:

.

�•

8-A- The Sunday Times.Sentinel, SWJday, Nov. 28, 19'16

.

•

.

Gallipolis ond flon nn . Kay
Mathias, Rt. 1, No1thup. Thoy
were married Jan. 20, 1969
ahd have U~ree children.
GALLIPOLIS - Common was granted a divorce from
Joe Douglas Will, Ill. 3.
Pleas Court Judge Ronald R. Georgia Cook, Gallipolis, .on Galllp.,lis. and Beverly J.
Calhoun last week gra nted grounds of gross neglect of Wlll, Columbus. They were
two new. divorces, dissolved duty . They were married Oct. married Aug. 6· l950and have
eight
marriages
and 4, 197land have no children. four chil dren, all eman·
dismissed three other divorce
The following marriages cipated.
•
nctions for want of were dissolved :
Marjori e J ane Elliott ,
prosecution.
Ralph A. Bareus, Rt. I, Lower River Rd. and Larry
PHlricia Anne Harris, Gallipolis, and Cathy I. Dean Elliott, Gallipolis. They
Addison , wsa granted a Barcus, Rt. I, Patriot. They were married Dec. 9, 1967
divorce from Gordon Dale were married May 14, 1974 and have one child.
HHrris, 2216 Eastern Ave., on and have no children .
Daniel H. Lamphier, Rt. I,
grounds of gross neglect of
Carla Yvonne Clark , Northup and Donna Jean
duty and extreme cruelty. Gallipolis and Sp-ot David Lamphier, Rt. 1, Northup.
They were married Feb. 12, Clark, Fort Gordon, Ga . They . They were married March 24
1956 and have two children, were. married July 29, 1972 1975 lind have no children. ' ·
and have no children .
Lonna J. Janey, Rt. 2,
one still at home.
Burley E. Cook, Cheshire,
Raymond Arthur M Ath/ , ,&lt; Bidwell, and Ronald 1..
·~~~ty~~~~~~ftt;,tlfl~~~~~~~flt;,,,Y~V)

Lame ducks could;be stalked

10 marriages sl.mdered

MANY THANKS-

,.

To everyone who visited Sprin!( Valley Hardware
durin;; our Grand 0Mnint Celebration. We hope
you will come back often!

By DICK WF.ST
WASHINGTON tUPf l
sec a lot of nature li~11s on
television Jnd enjoy !hem all.
The animal kingdom tru1y is
an inexhaustible SQurce of
fascination.
If 1 were producing one of
!hose programs, I'd take the
cameras up 1.o Capil.cll Hill
and do a fi~n study of one of
lhe most curious creatures in
all nature . the lame duck.
The feeding , breeding and
pa rticularly the trekking
habits ·of · lame ducks are
absolutely astonishing.
Most wild fowl, as we have
learned from the Disney
studios and other nature film
makers, migrate seasonally
along fixed flyways . Lame
ducks, by contrast, flit away
biennially, on even numbet·ed
years.
Moreover, they follow no
migratory patterns, but
instead fly off in all directions

Our Special Conf&lt;ratulations To:
Mr. Smith B. RunyanFn day 's winner of the Trail Boss skillet &amp; Bla c k &amp; Decker drill set.

to divers destinations,

the lighter side
boming impulses go awry and
!hey return home by way of
Europe, the Orient and-or.the
Middle East.
Filming some of these treks
· with telescopic, stop-ac1ioo
cameras might help us
Wlderstand what causes-this
peculiar behavior. A good
place to station a nature

study 1camera would be
outside some comffiittee's

door in one of the
congressional office
buildings.
"The committees, wilh their
lush growth of travel expense
vouchers , are the chief

feeding grounds of migratory
· lawgivers.
There is a traditional overseas exodus of committee
delegations during a congres·
sional recess. According l.o
current estimates, around Th
.lawgivers
will
find
.commi ttee busine$S this

Su nday's winn er of the Black &amp; Decker Workmate .

...,j!.f!{it::::;:::;:;.'::;::.::,:::::::.::,.::,.\.

•
•

•
:.
~

PATRIOT - The Patriot
Untied Methodilt Church and
friends met at camp Francis
Albury Sunday for a bountiful fellowahip dinner.
Two sister churches,
Bethe!da and· Walnut, also
were represented, along with
the pastor of the Patriot
charge, Billy Joe Forshey,
who gave grace before the
meal.
' Attending wer; the pastor,
Billy Joe Forshey, Mr. and

Mrs. David W. Jones, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Rose, Mr. and
Mn. John C. Bostic, Vernard
Fallon, Mrs. Ada Carter, Mr.
and Mrs. Leslie Brucker,
Miss Gertrude Davis, Mrs.
Georgia Myers, Mrs. Helen
Davis, Mr. and Mrs. !Wbert
McCartney, and children
Rebecca, Deborah, Ronnie
and Roherta, Mr. and Mrs.
LeWis Milltr, Miss Patty
Knapp, Larry Fallon, Miss
Sheryl Fraser, Mr. and Mrs.

;

•

congressional eleCtion, and

Congress

Compare these great Quasar
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• Custom-Malic Pre·Set VHF Tuner
• Illum inated Channel Numbers

them winging off, hither,
thither and yon. Some lam e
ducks take their males along;
others not.
Moi·e likely the flights have
something to do with the
homing instin_c t.
Some naturalists Lheorize
th a t lame ducks are

pring {Valley

'It ~~;}: : :.:;:; ·.: :,;:.-;.;.•:.·.-:· . .. .·. . .~ ~
r

.

·Church enjoys dinner

in

mating instinct that sends

~D W "- ~

·

These groups are apt l.o
includ.e a lame duck Qr two.
With patience and luck, a
nature photographer might
he able to catch one on film as
it flutters off.
Slow motion closeups
possibly would help solve one
of nature'sdeepest mysteries ,
- what benefit do the
taxpayers derive from lame
know from previous film
d~ck trekking?
-'
studies
of flora . and fauna,
To the 1)8ked eye, It looi!s
nature
is
full of suprises.
'like wasted motion. But as we

prompts this dispersal?
Apparently it is not the

Miss Vicky Bush-

HOURS
MON.·SAT.
. 9 AM TO 8 PM
SUNDAY

Antarctica.

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

reconvenes in January.
What strange instinct

Saturday's winner of the 7 pc . Scandia Cookset .

)iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

monlh and next in points as
far removed as Finland and

1·8-TheSundayTimes-Sentinei,Sundav, Nov.28, 19'16

some cases circling lhe globe.
Natura lis ts.. mostly
arnat.eurs who observe lame
ducks for their own
amusement, say the !Ughts.
usua lly star t in ear ly
November, shortly after a

continue until

Mr. Orville Ballinger-

disurienlt"&lt;i by an dectioo
defeat. As they sUirt 1.o
migrate back to their home
stales and districts, their

VeteraDJ Memo\'lal Hotpltal
Admitted - Oscar lm·
boden, Minersville; Marjorie ;
Gibbs, New Haven; Clyde
. Ferrell, Pomeroy; George
Meinhart, Middleport; ·
Kimberly Kennedy, Mid·
dleport; Rlchal'd Hubbard, •
Racine ; Kendall Weaver,
New Haven.
Discharged
Eugene
Wilson.

.

529 JACKSON PIKE

Janey, Rl. 2, Bidwell. They
were married July 25, 1971
and have one child .
· f! . .Carol Swindler, Rl. I,
Crown City, and Norman
Swindler, Rt. 1, Crown City.
They were married March 12,
1971 and have no ohlldren.
Dismissed were the cases
of Betty Bloomer vs Kenneth
Bloomer; Michael L. Pollock
and Mary R.. Pollock and
Robert S. Warren and Clara

MONDAY, NOV. 29, 1976
OPEN UNTIL 9 P.M.
COME SEE THE
Ml DDLEPORT CHRISTMAS PARADE!
Si ARTS AT6 P.M. TOMORROW

WERNER RADIO SERVICE
992·5

172 N. 2ND AVE.

Warren .

6 TO 9 P.M.
MON., NOV. 29

BAKER FURNITURE'S

SEE THE BIG PARADE! MEET
SANTAI6:00 P.M.
TREAT THE KIDSI

MRS. KAREN BERKICH of the Gallipolis Garden Club
examines a Christmas door decoration which was one of
· several displayed at a recent meeting of the club..

Gardeners gather
at Sheets home
GALLIPOLIS
The
November meeting of the
Gallipolis Garden Club was
held at the home of Mrs.
Wyman Sheets with Mrs.
Emil Janko serving as cohostess.
Mrs. Elizabeth Phillips
read. a poein entitled "Being
Friends" written by Emily
Green. Roll call consisted of
each member responding by
·· giving the name of the
prettiest bloom in her garden
this year.
It was reported by the ways
and means committee that in
· spite of the cold , rainy
weather the craft sale was
successful.
Garden Therapy will he .
holding its annual Christmas
party for the ·GSI Garden
Club girls In December.
Mem6ers were asked to bring
small gifts before Dec. 2.
Anyone having gifts should
contact Sharon Johnson.
The program for the
evening was conducted by

RIO GRANDE - The Open
Gate Garden Club held its
November meeting at the
home of Mrs. Kenneth
Tomlinson.
·
The meeting was opened by
the president,_"Mrs. Carolyn
Thompson, and the minutes,
and treasury reports were
- teail and-approved. Roll call
-was answered with what each
member had to be thankful
lor. Mrs. Jennie Myers read

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B.eck, Mr. and Mrs. Joe W.
carter, Mrs. Virginia Dean,
. Mrs. Elva Grube, Mrs. Marie
· Jones, Mr. a.nd Mrs. Merrill
Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
caner, Mrs. Elma Rose, and
Mr. and Mrs. Melburn C.
Tackett.
The afternoon was 'Jl'lnt
visiting and singing hymns.

'Miss Hope'
to be chosen
by society

j Woman 's World

Sarah Carsey Charlene Hoeflich

446-2342

1

.

992-2156 ·

~~~:~::~:~~
.
.

Parents invited to visir school

GALLIPOIJS - Parents of administrators, counselors
all students attending Gallia and leachers are encouraging
GALLIPOLIS - Final Academy High School will all parents to call the high
have an opportWJity l.o talk school guidance office to
selection of "Miss Hope", to with the teachers of their
represent the Gallia CoWJty children concerning the ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:
'
Unit of the American Cancer . stud ent •s progress and
Society, will be held Wed· performance during the first
SUNDAY DEADLINE
nesdayevening, Dec. I, in the 12 weeks of school. School
The deadline for wedding
French Five Hundred Room
and engagement notices .
at Holzer 'Medical Center, In
and soeiety uews Items for
conjunction with the Gallia ·
the Sunday Tlmes.Sentlocl
County Unit annual meeting.
Is 12 noon on tbe Thursday
"Miss Hope" symbolizes
pre ce ding publlcallon.
the advancing quality of care
Information may be turned
.and treatment to the cancer
In or mailed to the office of
patient, whloh brings hope for
lbe Gallipolis Dally
a cancer-free world. CanTribune or Pomeroy Daily
didates may be R.N.'s,
Seolloel. Engagement and
L.P.N.'s, or students in R.N.
wedding form s are
or L.P.N. programs and are
available upon request.
evaluated on poise, per·
sonality, appearance in
uniform and a brief talk
which they give about cancer
and cancer nursing.
Anyone who has donaied to ,
the Cancer Society during the
past year is invited to attend
the a!lllual meeting. 'Besides
the Miss Hope program, the
meet ing will Include the
GALLIPOLIS - The an·
NICOLE RICHARD
annual report.
nual family Christmas party
for members of the French
Art Colony and their im·
mediate families will be on
Sunday afternoon, Dec. 5 at
CLIFTON, W.Va. - Nicole Chuckle Stewart, Ken Riverby lrom 2 until 4 p.m.
Lee Richard was honored Richard and Shelia Stewan.
Co- Chairwomen Mr s.
with a surpri se birthda y
Melissa Kearns, Matt Marge Adkins and Mrs.
party on Thursday, Nov. 18, Richard , Tony Hawkins, Beverly Walker have an·
at the home of her cousin, Darin Young, Cindy Camp, noun ce d that Marko the
Tharon Camp.
Lisa Camp and Becky Bland. Magician and Tarbaby the
Nicole is the daughter of
Stevie Bland, Mrs. Carletta Cio'!lll ·who appeared last
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Riohard Camp, Mrs. Kathy Bland, year and delighted all who
of Clifton. The party was Mrs. Blanche Jones, Mrs. came to the F .A.C. Christmas
given by JoAnne Holcomb, Jeanie Camp, Mrs . Alto party, will be entertaining at
and Diane Camp, and pany Camp and Mrs. Paula Camp. 2:30 p.m. ori Sunday af·
decorations and the cakes
Miss Jackie Camp, Mrs. ternoon . In real llle, Marko
carriedoutthe Mickey Mouse Kathy Richard and her and Tarbaby are young en·
theme.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. tertainers from·Jackson.
Game prizes were won by Arnold VanMatre.
In addition, Santa Claus
Shelia Stewart, Tony
Sending gilts were her will be making a stop at
Hawkins, Becky Bland and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Riverby and have special
Usa Camp.
Harold Richard.
treats for the children of the
Refreshments of cake, lee
cream, potato chips, and
Hospital insurance under
punch were served to
Rhonda Pyles, ·carrie Medicare pays for a
Camp, Rodney
Rich· semiprivate room and meals,·
ard,
Hollie
Camp, even special diets.

make appointments l.o talk
wlth any or all of their
children's teachers.
Conferences at Gallia
Academy High School will be
from 7·9 p.m. on Thur~
evening, Dec. 2. Teachers
wlll alsO be available for
conferences on Friday , Dec. 3
from 9 a.m.l.o 2 p.m. to allow
porents l.o make arrangements [to come talk wllh
teachers . Grade cards will be
issued at these parent·
teacher l'Onferenccs.

Parents are to call the
guidance office at Gallia
Academy High School (4~
3250or 446-3251 ) prior to Dec .
2 to set up individual
conference appointments
wilh teachers .

French Art Colony
plans holiday party
~

Mrs. Jerry Vallee on holiday
door decorations. Each
member brought a door
decoration she made to use
lor Halloween, Thanksgiving
or Christmas . . Each "door
'decoration was discussed
with ea&gt;h member telling
what materials she had used.
Christmas trees were con·
structed using hemlock
branches with tiny . cones,
wicker trees with pine woven

in along with colorful ribbons
and decoraiions.
Many fall door decorations
were displayed using dried
flowers , gourds, straw
wreaths, bittersweet, pampus
grass and colorful ribbons.
A beautiful fall flower
arrangement was bro.ught by
Mrs. Rita Frazier. It was
·announced · the December
meeting will be held at the
home of Mrs. Elizabeth
Phillips with potluck dinner.
A gilt excha nge will he held
following the meal.

Open Gate gardeners
have November meet

LANE

Ted Jones, Mrs. Leslie Beck
· and Usa, Mr. and Mrs. Tom

__. __. ,_.. l

creating a small hole. If
gourd is to be used as a
utensu;· holes may not be
desirable. The rattle of the
seeds when the gourd is
shaken indicates adequate
curing. Once well-cured the
fruit may be waxed,
shellacked or painted. A high
grade transparimt furniture
or floor wax is preferred to

shellac or varnish which may
change the natural color. A
high glossy surface does not
have a natural appearance.
Seeds saved from the
decorated gourds and planted
th e followin g year may

ding the club members what
~hould b,e done to their
gardens, flower beds and
houseplants In November and
December with tips on how to provide some interesting and
grow certain plants.
different types of gourds.
, Mrs. Vickie Powell gave
Mrs. Powell gave each
the program entitled member gourds which she
"Planting, Growing and had raised this last year. The
Harvesting of Gourds." She Decemher meeting will be
said gourds can be planted in with Mrs. Brenda Morgan.
\he garden just like a hill of
cucumbers is ;llanted or
along a fence row. You s~ould
fertilize the hill before
planting in early May and
June, plant In light loamed .
groWld. The harvesting of
gourds ill staned when the
stems begin to dry and turn
browri, or when leaves start
to die. Be sure and harvest
before frost. After harvest
wash fruit with warm, soapy
water, rinse In clear, warm ·
water and wipe dry. Discard
any diseased, bruised and
Immature fruit. Place clean,
dry fruit in well ventilated
dry place. When possible ·
prevent fruit from touching
each other.
, Avoid 'placing gourds in
Strong light aa they may fade
in color. .The outer skin
l)ardens first and the surface
color sets. This takes one or
tlvo weeks. Internal drying
t'akes at least another four
weeks. Tltls liage may be
hastened by drilling or
puabing a wire through the
blossom end of ·the gourd

Celebrates birthday

Mrs. Andrew Canale

members of the French Art
Colony. Refreshments wlll be
served to all. Mrs. Ida Thaler
is in charge of that ponlon of
the afternoon's festivities.
Riverby is bea utlfully
decorated as a result of the
hard work of the Christmas
committee, chaired by Mrs.
PoMEROY-sacred Heart Chicago, Ill. ; and John Cox·
Carolyn Htp'pensteel , who Catbollc Church, Pomeroy, ,Virginia Beuch, Vu.
have heen meeting twice was the setting for the Aug. 14
At the wetldin~ the g•·oom·
each week recently to be sure wedding of Dr. Katherine dress and had un orchid cur·
that all Is ready · for the McGowan of Mason, W. ·va., sage.
holiday season.
· and Dr, Andrew Canale,
A.. rfception honoring the
Everyone will enjoy Cambridge, Mass.
couple wus held lnunetllulely
singin g Christm as carols
The bride Is the daughter uf following ihe Wl~lding ut the
durin g the afternoon . Dr. Thomas B. Ml'Gowan, home of the bride iu Mnsou .
Members and their families Mason, .W. Va. and U1e late Music was providl'&lt;i by the
are urged to attend thls Katherine Mc-Gowan. The Gary Stcwa•'l quartet. The
Christmas get together at bridegroom ls the son of Mr. bride's table featured a four
Riv erby that Is planned and Mrs. Joseph A. Canale, ' tiered cake decorutcd wiUr u
annually for the French Art Memphis, Tenn.
border of grecu flowm·s und
Colony membership.
The 2:30 p.m. double ring tiny White rosebuds. It wus
c'eremony was perlonned by topped with u slcl'ling silver
the Rev. Fr. PHul Well.on, cross. The table was ccntm·cd
pastor of Sacred Hearl with a po~·porn d•lsy center·
Church, and the Rev. Morton piece. Mrs. Murulle lle
Kelsey of the. University of . Frecker and Jucqueline Star·
Notre Dame who gave the che'rprcsidc&gt;datthotnble.
final blessing. Ot·ganist was
Dr. and Mrs. Canulc now
Mrs. Phyllis llacke\t,1Mid· reside at 40A Pr·cntiss St. ,
student newspaper and aa a clleport. The altar bouquets (::ambrld¥e, Mass. ·
member of forensic and wereof gladioliandpom·pom
The brtde is a graduate of
debate teams. She Is also a daisies in white.
Pomeroy High School,· l007,
member of the Colleges'
Given In marriage by her St. Mary's College, Notre
Grande Chorale,
f~ther, the bride wore a white Dame, 1971, swrunu cum
Keith was chosen because sheerganza gown fashioned laude with a B.S. degree; und
of his Involvement · In a with nylon pleated wide rur· Tufts Medical School in
variety of student govern· rle at the scoop neckline, Boston, Mass., i975. She is a
ment responsibilities. As a hfmline and short sleeves. medical resident at the New
member of the . student ·,'Fhebodicewusfittedundthe England
Medic al
senate, he acted as chairman skirt cascaded Into a full CenterHospitul at Boston,
of the senate constitution and length train. A matching veil Mass.
rules committee and head of of alencon lace accented the
The bridegt·oorn Is a 1071
the parking committee, He ls lace trim aroWld the circlet grarjuute of tim University of·
also a member of Chi Beta of the waistline and the wide Notre Dame, B. A. dc~ree
Phi, honorary science ruffle of the gown. Her only magna cum laude, and
fraternity .
jewe lry wa s a pearl received both his masters and
The selection committee necklace. She carried a bou· doctor•te In co u nseli n ~
reviewed the activity of 80 quet of yellow rosebuds with psychology ut Boston Unlver·
Rio Grande seniors and stephanotis Hnd baby 's slty. He is a practicing
bonored 12 students-based on ·breath.
llSYChOiogist.
leadership activity ; par·
'lillss Celine Mc-Gowan of
Out-of-town ~ucsts at the
Uclpatlon In campus and Aringl.on, Va. served as maid wedding were Dr. and Mrs.
community service, and of honor for her sister, and Paul Vattcrott, St.
academic excellence.
matron of honor was Mrs. Louls,Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. Ar·
Miss Bradshaw is the Kandi Cook of Ravenswood, thur Eberle, Dayton ; Dr. and
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. T. W. Va. Mrs. Harriet Dorado Mrs. Joh n Barkmcie r,
Jay Bradshaw and lives at of Mt.)lope, W. Va., and Dr. Newport News, Va.; Dr. Jef·
Lower
River
Road, Jun Halle Suherman of frey Isner, Washington, D.
Gallipolis. Debbie Smith, the Chapel Hill, N.C. were the at· C., Dr. Michael' , Jaker,
daughter of ,Mr. and Mrs. tendants, The attendahts Boston, Muss.; Mrs. Mary
William 0 . Northup of wore gowns of blue, green, Nagle, Brighton, Mass.;
Gallipolis, lives at 1212 yellow and peach, fashioned Joseph Nagle, l.ouisv llle,
ExecuUve Drive, Newark. of guiana with cap sleeves Ky.; Karen Schweizer,
Barbara Wallen ls the and V necklines. They car- Louisville, Ky. Mr. and Mr.!.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. rled bouquets of multicolored Henry Mulvey, Blackwood,
Edward Wallen and lives at pom·pom daisies In yellow, N. J.; Dr. and Mrs. Tom
30 Evans Heights, Gallipolis, blue, green and peach with Wallace, Priscilla and Joan
and Cooper, son of Mr. and baby's breath, and also wore Wallace, Chesapeake, W.
Mrs. William T. Cooper, llves flowers ln their halr.
VA. ; Mary Artis, Wheeling,
at Rlo Grande.
James J. Canale, Mem- W.Va .; Mrs. Franz Reichert,
phis, Tenn. was best man, WinstonSalem, N. Carolina;
and the ushers were Mark Mr. and Mrs·, Willi am
Dellamano, Boston, Mass.; Chisler, Ca rnegie, Pa., and
David Lies, Chicago, Ill.; Dr. Mrs. Geralding Gibson and
· Thomas McGowan, Chicago, BeckeyGibson, Gallipolis.
Ill.; Dr. Thomas Hazinski ,

Nuptial vows repeated
in August ceremony

Rio "Grande students
named to 'Who's Who'

COUtJ J,eJ ts• entert-atned
,.J.

•

MIDDLEPORT - The ·George R. Thomas; Sally and
golden wedding anniversary Laura, Radnor ; Mr. and Mrs.
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smart Paul M. Smart, Bena and
was celebrated on Thanks· . Barbara, Perrysburg; Mr.
giving Day with a family and Mrs. David Kienzle,
dinner party at the Orchid Perrysburg; Herman Kloes,
Room in Pomeroy.
Albsny; Mr. and Mrs. George
.Mr. and Mrs. sinart were Siddall, Laura, Tom and Ttm,
married at Marion on Nov., Cincinnati ; Mr. and Mrs.
25, 1926. For the celebration, stephen Thomas; daughter ,
Mrs. Smart wore an orchid Jennifer, .Radnor ; Mr. and
corsage, and Mr. Smart, a Mrs. !Wbert Freebof, Susie
boutonniere.
and Joey, and Dennis
d"
1
Th
k
·
in
A tra tllona
an sglv g Jenkins , ur ba na ; Dr. Rose
dinner was served from a Marie Hackett, Dayton ; Mr.
table decorated wlth gold and Mrs. John Goodwin ,
tapers a!!d floral arrange· Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Blllments featuring gold an· Hackett and B. J., Akron;
tlqued books of poetry made Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
by Mr. and Mrs. Smart's Hackett, Mr. and Mrs.
daughter, Mrs. George George Hackett, Jr., Mr. and
Siddall. Favors were Mrs. Manning Kloes, Lori,
· 1ature vases filled WI"th Lynn and Kent, and Mrs. H.
mm
gold candles and roses. These, M. Cross, Middleport.
were made by Mrs. Paul M.
Assisting with decorations
Smart ol Perrysburg.
for the celebration were Mrs.
The anniversary eake was Don Mullen and Mrs. Paul
served by Mrs. Hoben Smart easel, Mlddlepon.
wltb Mrs. Paul M. Smart
Friday morning Mrs.
presiding at the punch bowl. Hackett entenained with a
Attending were Mr. and bfW1ch lor the out-of-town
Mrs. Robert Smart of West guests.
1.1rs.
Chicago, lll.; Mr. and

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smart

RIO GRANDE
Four
Gallia CoWJty Rio Grande
College-Commuruty College
seniors have been selected
!or Who's Who Among
Students In American
Universities and Colleges.
The honor, announced this
week by the colleges' student
development office, has been
given to Connie Bradshaw,
Debbie Smith, Barbara
Wallen and. Keith Cooper.
Connie Bradshaw, chosen
becauseofherlnvolvementin
both music and athletics
while at Rio Grande, has
played
on women's
sdftbsll
and
basketball
teams and
has

been head women 's athletic
trainer. She has been a
.member of Grande Chorale
and has served as Its
president and treasurer.
Debbie Smtih was chosen
because of her involvement in
community
service
whileShea
•udent
at Rlo
Grande.
has served on the GaUia
County Junlor Fair youth
committee, been active In
ohurch Hfe, and served on the
Centenary administrative
board. She has alllo heen
accompanist and soloist lor
the Grande Chorale.
Barbara Wallen was
ohosen because of her in·
volvement in camJ&gt;IIII jour·
nalism an&lt;l speech. She
served as co-editor of the

Ruth Thomas hosts
Philomathean Club
GALLIPOLIS - Ruth
Tliomas entertained
members
of
the
Pllilomathean Club Thurs·
day , Nov. 18 at her heme in
Rio Grande.
Jan Thaler reviewed the
hook , "Valley Forge." She
told of man¥ Interesting
events and anecdotes whloh
took place aroong so)dlers of
Washington 's army at V~lley ·
Forge . during
the
Revolutionary, War. Excerpts
were read from a young
soldier's d"\ary which
revealed what lie was like in
the Valley Forge .

. Appreciation dinner ~iven

Mrs. Thaler displayed
copies of early documents
such as the Declaration ol
Independence. This review
presented a colorful glimpse,
of what life was like for
soldiers In this perlnd of
Amerlcan,history.
MlssThomasservedacake
which had been specially
prepared lor the club with
Pllilomalhean written across
the top.
The next meeting will be a
Cllriltmas party at the home
of Betty McGinness Dec. 9 at
6:30p .m. Joyce Thaler will
have lhe program.

..

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·
GALLIPOLIS - 'i'be )fen•o
Fellowllhip ·of the Gallipolis
Christian Church held a
ll(leCial lppreciaUon dinner
for their wives Friday, Nov.
19 at the Rio Grande college
cafeleria.
The dinner was· held In
honor of tlte wlvea who had
prepared the many : fine
dishes for the men's
fellowship ' s monthly
meetings throughout the
year.
Bob Nellon, bt charce of
the delllill of the dinner,
chose llleak for the ladles, It
.'

•
was an enjoyable evening
with good lellowllhip for all.
Attending were : Mr. and
Mrs. BlU Marrah, Mr. and
Mra. Frank Kunszabo, Mr.
and Mu. Mike Johnson,
Carolyn Taylor, Debbie
Fraley, Tlm Scltes, Mr. and
Mrs. Mllt Copley, Mr. and
Mrs. John Ranegar, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Wllllams, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Nelson, Mr. and
Mrs. Sonny Miller, Mr. and
Mrs. Demy Coburn, Mr. and
Mn. Gary Noe, Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Younkin, Mr. and Mrs.
!Wy Kincaid.
.. - ,

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8-A- The Sunday Times.Sentinel, SWJday, Nov. 28, 19'16

.

•

.

Gallipolis ond flon nn . Kay
Mathias, Rt. 1, No1thup. Thoy
were married Jan. 20, 1969
ahd have U~ree children.
GALLIPOLIS - Common was granted a divorce from
Joe Douglas Will, Ill. 3.
Pleas Court Judge Ronald R. Georgia Cook, Gallipolis, .on Galllp.,lis. and Beverly J.
Calhoun last week gra nted grounds of gross neglect of Wlll, Columbus. They were
two new. divorces, dissolved duty . They were married Oct. married Aug. 6· l950and have
eight
marriages
and 4, 197land have no children. four chil dren, all eman·
dismissed three other divorce
The following marriages cipated.
•
nctions for want of were dissolved :
Marjori e J ane Elliott ,
prosecution.
Ralph A. Bareus, Rt. I, Lower River Rd. and Larry
PHlricia Anne Harris, Gallipolis, and Cathy I. Dean Elliott, Gallipolis. They
Addison , wsa granted a Barcus, Rt. I, Patriot. They were married Dec. 9, 1967
divorce from Gordon Dale were married May 14, 1974 and have one child.
HHrris, 2216 Eastern Ave., on and have no children .
Daniel H. Lamphier, Rt. I,
grounds of gross neglect of
Carla Yvonne Clark , Northup and Donna Jean
duty and extreme cruelty. Gallipolis and Sp-ot David Lamphier, Rt. 1, Northup.
They were married Feb. 12, Clark, Fort Gordon, Ga . They . They were married March 24
1956 and have two children, were. married July 29, 1972 1975 lind have no children. ' ·
and have no children .
Lonna J. Janey, Rt. 2,
one still at home.
Burley E. Cook, Cheshire,
Raymond Arthur M Ath/ , ,&lt; Bidwell, and Ronald 1..
·~~~ty~~~~~~ftt;,tlfl~~~~~~~flt;,,,Y~V)

Lame ducks could;be stalked

10 marriages sl.mdered

MANY THANKS-

,.

To everyone who visited Sprin!( Valley Hardware
durin;; our Grand 0Mnint Celebration. We hope
you will come back often!

By DICK WF.ST
WASHINGTON tUPf l
sec a lot of nature li~11s on
television Jnd enjoy !hem all.
The animal kingdom tru1y is
an inexhaustible SQurce of
fascination.
If 1 were producing one of
!hose programs, I'd take the
cameras up 1.o Capil.cll Hill
and do a fi~n study of one of
lhe most curious creatures in
all nature . the lame duck.
The feeding , breeding and
pa rticularly the trekking
habits ·of · lame ducks are
absolutely astonishing.
Most wild fowl, as we have
learned from the Disney
studios and other nature film
makers, migrate seasonally
along fixed flyways . Lame
ducks, by contrast, flit away
biennially, on even numbet·ed
years.
Moreover, they follow no
migratory patterns, but
instead fly off in all directions

Our Special Conf&lt;ratulations To:
Mr. Smith B. RunyanFn day 's winner of the Trail Boss skillet &amp; Bla c k &amp; Decker drill set.

to divers destinations,

the lighter side
boming impulses go awry and
!hey return home by way of
Europe, the Orient and-or.the
Middle East.
Filming some of these treks
· with telescopic, stop-ac1ioo
cameras might help us
Wlderstand what causes-this
peculiar behavior. A good
place to station a nature

study 1camera would be
outside some comffiittee's

door in one of the
congressional office
buildings.
"The committees, wilh their
lush growth of travel expense
vouchers , are the chief

feeding grounds of migratory
· lawgivers.
There is a traditional overseas exodus of committee
delegations during a congres·
sional recess. According l.o
current estimates, around Th
.lawgivers
will
find
.commi ttee busine$S this

Su nday's winn er of the Black &amp; Decker Workmate .

...,j!.f!{it::::;:::;:;.'::;::.::,:::::::.::,.::,.\.

•
•

•
:.
~

PATRIOT - The Patriot
Untied Methodilt Church and
friends met at camp Francis
Albury Sunday for a bountiful fellowahip dinner.
Two sister churches,
Bethe!da and· Walnut, also
were represented, along with
the pastor of the Patriot
charge, Billy Joe Forshey,
who gave grace before the
meal.
' Attending wer; the pastor,
Billy Joe Forshey, Mr. and

Mrs. David W. Jones, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Rose, Mr. and
Mn. John C. Bostic, Vernard
Fallon, Mrs. Ada Carter, Mr.
and Mrs. Leslie Brucker,
Miss Gertrude Davis, Mrs.
Georgia Myers, Mrs. Helen
Davis, Mr. and Mrs. !Wbert
McCartney, and children
Rebecca, Deborah, Ronnie
and Roherta, Mr. and Mrs.
LeWis Milltr, Miss Patty
Knapp, Larry Fallon, Miss
Sheryl Fraser, Mr. and Mrs.

;

•

congressional eleCtion, and

Congress

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them winging off, hither,
thither and yon. Some lam e
ducks take their males along;
others not.
Moi·e likely the flights have
something to do with the
homing instin_c t.
Some naturalists Lheorize
th a t lame ducks are

pring {Valley

'It ~~;}: : :.:;:; ·.: :,;:.-;.;.•:.·.-:· . .. .·. . .~ ~
r

.

·Church enjoys dinner

in

mating instinct that sends

~D W "- ~

·

These groups are apt l.o
includ.e a lame duck Qr two.
With patience and luck, a
nature photographer might
he able to catch one on film as
it flutters off.
Slow motion closeups
possibly would help solve one
of nature'sdeepest mysteries ,
- what benefit do the
taxpayers derive from lame
know from previous film
d~ck trekking?
-'
studies
of flora . and fauna,
To the 1)8ked eye, It looi!s
nature
is
full of suprises.
'like wasted motion. But as we

prompts this dispersal?
Apparently it is not the

Miss Vicky Bush-

HOURS
MON.·SAT.
. 9 AM TO 8 PM
SUNDAY

Antarctica.

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

reconvenes in January.
What strange instinct

Saturday's winner of the 7 pc . Scandia Cookset .

)iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

monlh and next in points as
far removed as Finland and

1·8-TheSundayTimes-Sentinei,Sundav, Nov.28, 19'16

some cases circling lhe globe.
Natura lis ts.. mostly
arnat.eurs who observe lame
ducks for their own
amusement, say the !Ughts.
usua lly star t in ear ly
November, shortly after a

continue until

Mr. Orville Ballinger-

disurienlt"&lt;i by an dectioo
defeat. As they sUirt 1.o
migrate back to their home
stales and districts, their

VeteraDJ Memo\'lal Hotpltal
Admitted - Oscar lm·
boden, Minersville; Marjorie ;
Gibbs, New Haven; Clyde
. Ferrell, Pomeroy; George
Meinhart, Middleport; ·
Kimberly Kennedy, Mid·
dleport; Rlchal'd Hubbard, •
Racine ; Kendall Weaver,
New Haven.
Discharged
Eugene
Wilson.

.

529 JACKSON PIKE

Janey, Rl. 2, Bidwell. They
were married July 25, 1971
and have one child .
· f! . .Carol Swindler, Rl. I,
Crown City, and Norman
Swindler, Rt. 1, Crown City.
They were married March 12,
1971 and have no ohlldren.
Dismissed were the cases
of Betty Bloomer vs Kenneth
Bloomer; Michael L. Pollock
and Mary R.. Pollock and
Robert S. Warren and Clara

MONDAY, NOV. 29, 1976
OPEN UNTIL 9 P.M.
COME SEE THE
Ml DDLEPORT CHRISTMAS PARADE!
Si ARTS AT6 P.M. TOMORROW

WERNER RADIO SERVICE
992·5

172 N. 2ND AVE.

Warren .

6 TO 9 P.M.
MON., NOV. 29

BAKER FURNITURE'S

SEE THE BIG PARADE! MEET
SANTAI6:00 P.M.
TREAT THE KIDSI

MRS. KAREN BERKICH of the Gallipolis Garden Club
examines a Christmas door decoration which was one of
· several displayed at a recent meeting of the club..

Gardeners gather
at Sheets home
GALLIPOLIS
The
November meeting of the
Gallipolis Garden Club was
held at the home of Mrs.
Wyman Sheets with Mrs.
Emil Janko serving as cohostess.
Mrs. Elizabeth Phillips
read. a poein entitled "Being
Friends" written by Emily
Green. Roll call consisted of
each member responding by
·· giving the name of the
prettiest bloom in her garden
this year.
It was reported by the ways
and means committee that in
· spite of the cold , rainy
weather the craft sale was
successful.
Garden Therapy will he .
holding its annual Christmas
party for the ·GSI Garden
Club girls In December.
Mem6ers were asked to bring
small gifts before Dec. 2.
Anyone having gifts should
contact Sharon Johnson.
The program for the
evening was conducted by

RIO GRANDE - The Open
Gate Garden Club held its
November meeting at the
home of Mrs. Kenneth
Tomlinson.
·
The meeting was opened by
the president,_"Mrs. Carolyn
Thompson, and the minutes,
and treasury reports were
- teail and-approved. Roll call
-was answered with what each
member had to be thankful
lor. Mrs. Jennie Myers read

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B.eck, Mr. and Mrs. Joe W.
carter, Mrs. Virginia Dean,
. Mrs. Elva Grube, Mrs. Marie
· Jones, Mr. a.nd Mrs. Merrill
Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
caner, Mrs. Elma Rose, and
Mr. and Mrs. Melburn C.
Tackett.
The afternoon was 'Jl'lnt
visiting and singing hymns.

'Miss Hope'
to be chosen
by society

j Woman 's World

Sarah Carsey Charlene Hoeflich

446-2342

1

.

992-2156 ·

~~~:~::~:~~
.
.

Parents invited to visir school

GALLIPOIJS - Parents of administrators, counselors
all students attending Gallia and leachers are encouraging
GALLIPOLIS - Final Academy High School will all parents to call the high
have an opportWJity l.o talk school guidance office to
selection of "Miss Hope", to with the teachers of their
represent the Gallia CoWJty children concerning the ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:
'
Unit of the American Cancer . stud ent •s progress and
Society, will be held Wed· performance during the first
SUNDAY DEADLINE
nesdayevening, Dec. I, in the 12 weeks of school. School
The deadline for wedding
French Five Hundred Room
and engagement notices .
at Holzer 'Medical Center, In
and soeiety uews Items for
conjunction with the Gallia ·
the Sunday Tlmes.Sentlocl
County Unit annual meeting.
Is 12 noon on tbe Thursday
"Miss Hope" symbolizes
pre ce ding publlcallon.
the advancing quality of care
Information may be turned
.and treatment to the cancer
In or mailed to the office of
patient, whloh brings hope for
lbe Gallipolis Dally
a cancer-free world. CanTribune or Pomeroy Daily
didates may be R.N.'s,
Seolloel. Engagement and
L.P.N.'s, or students in R.N.
wedding form s are
or L.P.N. programs and are
available upon request.
evaluated on poise, per·
sonality, appearance in
uniform and a brief talk
which they give about cancer
and cancer nursing.
Anyone who has donaied to ,
the Cancer Society during the
past year is invited to attend
the a!lllual meeting. 'Besides
the Miss Hope program, the
meet ing will Include the
GALLIPOLIS - The an·
NICOLE RICHARD
annual report.
nual family Christmas party
for members of the French
Art Colony and their im·
mediate families will be on
Sunday afternoon, Dec. 5 at
CLIFTON, W.Va. - Nicole Chuckle Stewart, Ken Riverby lrom 2 until 4 p.m.
Lee Richard was honored Richard and Shelia Stewan.
Co- Chairwomen Mr s.
with a surpri se birthda y
Melissa Kearns, Matt Marge Adkins and Mrs.
party on Thursday, Nov. 18, Richard , Tony Hawkins, Beverly Walker have an·
at the home of her cousin, Darin Young, Cindy Camp, noun ce d that Marko the
Tharon Camp.
Lisa Camp and Becky Bland. Magician and Tarbaby the
Nicole is the daughter of
Stevie Bland, Mrs. Carletta Cio'!lll ·who appeared last
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Riohard Camp, Mrs. Kathy Bland, year and delighted all who
of Clifton. The party was Mrs. Blanche Jones, Mrs. came to the F .A.C. Christmas
given by JoAnne Holcomb, Jeanie Camp, Mrs . Alto party, will be entertaining at
and Diane Camp, and pany Camp and Mrs. Paula Camp. 2:30 p.m. ori Sunday af·
decorations and the cakes
Miss Jackie Camp, Mrs. ternoon . In real llle, Marko
carriedoutthe Mickey Mouse Kathy Richard and her and Tarbaby are young en·
theme.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. tertainers from·Jackson.
Game prizes were won by Arnold VanMatre.
In addition, Santa Claus
Shelia Stewart, Tony
Sending gilts were her will be making a stop at
Hawkins, Becky Bland and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Riverby and have special
Usa Camp.
Harold Richard.
treats for the children of the
Refreshments of cake, lee
cream, potato chips, and
Hospital insurance under
punch were served to
Rhonda Pyles, ·carrie Medicare pays for a
Camp, Rodney
Rich· semiprivate room and meals,·
ard,
Hollie
Camp, even special diets.

make appointments l.o talk
wlth any or all of their
children's teachers.
Conferences at Gallia
Academy High School will be
from 7·9 p.m. on Thur~
evening, Dec. 2. Teachers
wlll alsO be available for
conferences on Friday , Dec. 3
from 9 a.m.l.o 2 p.m. to allow
porents l.o make arrangements [to come talk wllh
teachers . Grade cards will be
issued at these parent·
teacher l'Onferenccs.

Parents are to call the
guidance office at Gallia
Academy High School (4~
3250or 446-3251 ) prior to Dec .
2 to set up individual
conference appointments
wilh teachers .

French Art Colony
plans holiday party
~

Mrs. Jerry Vallee on holiday
door decorations. Each
member brought a door
decoration she made to use
lor Halloween, Thanksgiving
or Christmas . . Each "door
'decoration was discussed
with ea&gt;h member telling
what materials she had used.
Christmas trees were con·
structed using hemlock
branches with tiny . cones,
wicker trees with pine woven

in along with colorful ribbons
and decoraiions.
Many fall door decorations
were displayed using dried
flowers , gourds, straw
wreaths, bittersweet, pampus
grass and colorful ribbons.
A beautiful fall flower
arrangement was bro.ught by
Mrs. Rita Frazier. It was
·announced · the December
meeting will be held at the
home of Mrs. Elizabeth
Phillips with potluck dinner.
A gilt excha nge will he held
following the meal.

Open Gate gardeners
have November meet

LANE

Ted Jones, Mrs. Leslie Beck
· and Usa, Mr. and Mrs. Tom

__. __. ,_.. l

creating a small hole. If
gourd is to be used as a
utensu;· holes may not be
desirable. The rattle of the
seeds when the gourd is
shaken indicates adequate
curing. Once well-cured the
fruit may be waxed,
shellacked or painted. A high
grade transparimt furniture
or floor wax is preferred to

shellac or varnish which may
change the natural color. A
high glossy surface does not
have a natural appearance.
Seeds saved from the
decorated gourds and planted
th e followin g year may

ding the club members what
~hould b,e done to their
gardens, flower beds and
houseplants In November and
December with tips on how to provide some interesting and
grow certain plants.
different types of gourds.
, Mrs. Vickie Powell gave
Mrs. Powell gave each
the program entitled member gourds which she
"Planting, Growing and had raised this last year. The
Harvesting of Gourds." She Decemher meeting will be
said gourds can be planted in with Mrs. Brenda Morgan.
\he garden just like a hill of
cucumbers is ;llanted or
along a fence row. You s~ould
fertilize the hill before
planting in early May and
June, plant In light loamed .
groWld. The harvesting of
gourds ill staned when the
stems begin to dry and turn
browri, or when leaves start
to die. Be sure and harvest
before frost. After harvest
wash fruit with warm, soapy
water, rinse In clear, warm ·
water and wipe dry. Discard
any diseased, bruised and
Immature fruit. Place clean,
dry fruit in well ventilated
dry place. When possible ·
prevent fruit from touching
each other.
, Avoid 'placing gourds in
Strong light aa they may fade
in color. .The outer skin
l)ardens first and the surface
color sets. This takes one or
tlvo weeks. Internal drying
t'akes at least another four
weeks. Tltls liage may be
hastened by drilling or
puabing a wire through the
blossom end of ·the gourd

Celebrates birthday

Mrs. Andrew Canale

members of the French Art
Colony. Refreshments wlll be
served to all. Mrs. Ida Thaler
is in charge of that ponlon of
the afternoon's festivities.
Riverby is bea utlfully
decorated as a result of the
hard work of the Christmas
committee, chaired by Mrs.
PoMEROY-sacred Heart Chicago, Ill. ; and John Cox·
Carolyn Htp'pensteel , who Catbollc Church, Pomeroy, ,Virginia Beuch, Vu.
have heen meeting twice was the setting for the Aug. 14
At the wetldin~ the g•·oom·
each week recently to be sure wedding of Dr. Katherine dress and had un orchid cur·
that all Is ready · for the McGowan of Mason, W. ·va., sage.
holiday season.
· and Dr, Andrew Canale,
A.. rfception honoring the
Everyone will enjoy Cambridge, Mass.
couple wus held lnunetllulely
singin g Christm as carols
The bride Is the daughter uf following ihe Wl~lding ut the
durin g the afternoon . Dr. Thomas B. Ml'Gowan, home of the bride iu Mnsou .
Members and their families Mason, .W. Va. and U1e late Music was providl'&lt;i by the
are urged to attend thls Katherine Mc-Gowan. The Gary Stcwa•'l quartet. The
Christmas get together at bridegroom ls the son of Mr. bride's table featured a four
Riv erby that Is planned and Mrs. Joseph A. Canale, ' tiered cake decorutcd wiUr u
annually for the French Art Memphis, Tenn.
border of grecu flowm·s und
Colony membership.
The 2:30 p.m. double ring tiny White rosebuds. It wus
c'eremony was perlonned by topped with u slcl'ling silver
the Rev. Fr. PHul Well.on, cross. The table was ccntm·cd
pastor of Sacred Hearl with a po~·porn d•lsy center·
Church, and the Rev. Morton piece. Mrs. Murulle lle
Kelsey of the. University of . Frecker and Jucqueline Star·
Notre Dame who gave the che'rprcsidc&gt;datthotnble.
final blessing. Ot·ganist was
Dr. and Mrs. Canulc now
Mrs. Phyllis llacke\t,1Mid· reside at 40A Pr·cntiss St. ,
student newspaper and aa a clleport. The altar bouquets (::ambrld¥e, Mass. ·
member of forensic and wereof gladioliandpom·pom
The brtde is a graduate of
debate teams. She Is also a daisies in white.
Pomeroy High School,· l007,
member of the Colleges'
Given In marriage by her St. Mary's College, Notre
Grande Chorale,
f~ther, the bride wore a white Dame, 1971, swrunu cum
Keith was chosen because sheerganza gown fashioned laude with a B.S. degree; und
of his Involvement · In a with nylon pleated wide rur· Tufts Medical School in
variety of student govern· rle at the scoop neckline, Boston, Mass., i975. She is a
ment responsibilities. As a hfmline and short sleeves. medical resident at the New
member of the . student ·,'Fhebodicewusfittedundthe England
Medic al
senate, he acted as chairman skirt cascaded Into a full CenterHospitul at Boston,
of the senate constitution and length train. A matching veil Mass.
rules committee and head of of alencon lace accented the
The bridegt·oorn Is a 1071
the parking committee, He ls lace trim aroWld the circlet grarjuute of tim University of·
also a member of Chi Beta of the waistline and the wide Notre Dame, B. A. dc~ree
Phi, honorary science ruffle of the gown. Her only magna cum laude, and
fraternity .
jewe lry wa s a pearl received both his masters and
The selection committee necklace. She carried a bou· doctor•te In co u nseli n ~
reviewed the activity of 80 quet of yellow rosebuds with psychology ut Boston Unlver·
Rio Grande seniors and stephanotis Hnd baby 's slty. He is a practicing
bonored 12 students-based on ·breath.
llSYChOiogist.
leadership activity ; par·
'lillss Celine Mc-Gowan of
Out-of-town ~ucsts at the
Uclpatlon In campus and Aringl.on, Va. served as maid wedding were Dr. and Mrs.
community service, and of honor for her sister, and Paul Vattcrott, St.
academic excellence.
matron of honor was Mrs. Louls,Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. Ar·
Miss Bradshaw is the Kandi Cook of Ravenswood, thur Eberle, Dayton ; Dr. and
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. T. W. Va. Mrs. Harriet Dorado Mrs. Joh n Barkmcie r,
Jay Bradshaw and lives at of Mt.)lope, W. Va., and Dr. Newport News, Va.; Dr. Jef·
Lower
River
Road, Jun Halle Suherman of frey Isner, Washington, D.
Gallipolis. Debbie Smith, the Chapel Hill, N.C. were the at· C., Dr. Michael' , Jaker,
daughter of ,Mr. and Mrs. tendants, The attendahts Boston, Muss.; Mrs. Mary
William 0 . Northup of wore gowns of blue, green, Nagle, Brighton, Mass.;
Gallipolis, lives at 1212 yellow and peach, fashioned Joseph Nagle, l.ouisv llle,
ExecuUve Drive, Newark. of guiana with cap sleeves Ky.; Karen Schweizer,
Barbara Wallen ls the and V necklines. They car- Louisville, Ky. Mr. and Mr.!.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. rled bouquets of multicolored Henry Mulvey, Blackwood,
Edward Wallen and lives at pom·pom daisies In yellow, N. J.; Dr. and Mrs. Tom
30 Evans Heights, Gallipolis, blue, green and peach with Wallace, Priscilla and Joan
and Cooper, son of Mr. and baby's breath, and also wore Wallace, Chesapeake, W.
Mrs. William T. Cooper, llves flowers ln their halr.
VA. ; Mary Artis, Wheeling,
at Rlo Grande.
James J. Canale, Mem- W.Va .; Mrs. Franz Reichert,
phis, Tenn. was best man, WinstonSalem, N. Carolina;
and the ushers were Mark Mr. and Mrs·, Willi am
Dellamano, Boston, Mass.; Chisler, Ca rnegie, Pa., and
David Lies, Chicago, Ill.; Dr. Mrs. Geralding Gibson and
· Thomas McGowan, Chicago, BeckeyGibson, Gallipolis.
Ill.; Dr. Thomas Hazinski ,

Nuptial vows repeated
in August ceremony

Rio "Grande students
named to 'Who's Who'

COUtJ J,eJ ts• entert-atned
,.J.

•

MIDDLEPORT - The ·George R. Thomas; Sally and
golden wedding anniversary Laura, Radnor ; Mr. and Mrs.
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smart Paul M. Smart, Bena and
was celebrated on Thanks· . Barbara, Perrysburg; Mr.
giving Day with a family and Mrs. David Kienzle,
dinner party at the Orchid Perrysburg; Herman Kloes,
Room in Pomeroy.
Albsny; Mr. and Mrs. George
.Mr. and Mrs. sinart were Siddall, Laura, Tom and Ttm,
married at Marion on Nov., Cincinnati ; Mr. and Mrs.
25, 1926. For the celebration, stephen Thomas; daughter ,
Mrs. Smart wore an orchid Jennifer, .Radnor ; Mr. and
corsage, and Mr. Smart, a Mrs. !Wbert Freebof, Susie
boutonniere.
and Joey, and Dennis
d"
1
Th
k
·
in
A tra tllona
an sglv g Jenkins , ur ba na ; Dr. Rose
dinner was served from a Marie Hackett, Dayton ; Mr.
table decorated wlth gold and Mrs. John Goodwin ,
tapers a!!d floral arrange· Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Blllments featuring gold an· Hackett and B. J., Akron;
tlqued books of poetry made Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
by Mr. and Mrs. Smart's Hackett, Mr. and Mrs.
daughter, Mrs. George George Hackett, Jr., Mr. and
Siddall. Favors were Mrs. Manning Kloes, Lori,
· 1ature vases filled WI"th Lynn and Kent, and Mrs. H.
mm
gold candles and roses. These, M. Cross, Middleport.
were made by Mrs. Paul M.
Assisting with decorations
Smart ol Perrysburg.
for the celebration were Mrs.
The anniversary eake was Don Mullen and Mrs. Paul
served by Mrs. Hoben Smart easel, Mlddlepon.
wltb Mrs. Paul M. Smart
Friday morning Mrs.
presiding at the punch bowl. Hackett entenained with a
Attending were Mr. and bfW1ch lor the out-of-town
Mrs. Robert Smart of West guests.
1.1rs.
Chicago, lll.; Mr. and

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smart

RIO GRANDE
Four
Gallia CoWJty Rio Grande
College-Commuruty College
seniors have been selected
!or Who's Who Among
Students In American
Universities and Colleges.
The honor, announced this
week by the colleges' student
development office, has been
given to Connie Bradshaw,
Debbie Smith, Barbara
Wallen and. Keith Cooper.
Connie Bradshaw, chosen
becauseofherlnvolvementin
both music and athletics
while at Rio Grande, has
played
on women's
sdftbsll
and
basketball
teams and
has

been head women 's athletic
trainer. She has been a
.member of Grande Chorale
and has served as Its
president and treasurer.
Debbie Smtih was chosen
because of her involvement in
community
service
whileShea
•udent
at Rlo
Grande.
has served on the GaUia
County Junlor Fair youth
committee, been active In
ohurch Hfe, and served on the
Centenary administrative
board. She has alllo heen
accompanist and soloist lor
the Grande Chorale.
Barbara Wallen was
ohosen because of her in·
volvement in camJ&gt;IIII jour·
nalism an&lt;l speech. She
served as co-editor of the

Ruth Thomas hosts
Philomathean Club
GALLIPOLIS - Ruth
Tliomas entertained
members
of
the
Pllilomathean Club Thurs·
day , Nov. 18 at her heme in
Rio Grande.
Jan Thaler reviewed the
hook , "Valley Forge." She
told of man¥ Interesting
events and anecdotes whloh
took place aroong so)dlers of
Washington 's army at V~lley ·
Forge . during
the
Revolutionary, War. Excerpts
were read from a young
soldier's d"\ary which
revealed what lie was like in
the Valley Forge .

. Appreciation dinner ~iven

Mrs. Thaler displayed
copies of early documents
such as the Declaration ol
Independence. This review
presented a colorful glimpse,
of what life was like for
soldiers In this perlnd of
Amerlcan,history.
MlssThomasservedacake
which had been specially
prepared lor the club with
Pllilomalhean written across
the top.
The next meeting will be a
Cllriltmas party at the home
of Betty McGinness Dec. 9 at
6:30p .m. Joyce Thaler will
have lhe program.

..

.
·
GALLIPOLIS - 'i'be )fen•o
Fellowllhip ·of the Gallipolis
Christian Church held a
ll(leCial lppreciaUon dinner
for their wives Friday, Nov.
19 at the Rio Grande college
cafeleria.
The dinner was· held In
honor of tlte wlvea who had
prepared the many : fine
dishes for the men's
fellowship ' s monthly
meetings throughout the
year.
Bob Nellon, bt charce of
the delllill of the dinner,
chose llleak for the ladles, It
.'

•
was an enjoyable evening
with good lellowllhip for all.
Attending were : Mr. and
Mrs. BlU Marrah, Mr. and
Mra. Frank Kunszabo, Mr.
and Mu. Mike Johnson,
Carolyn Taylor, Debbie
Fraley, Tlm Scltes, Mr. and
Mrs. Mllt Copley, Mr. and
Mrs. John Ranegar, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Wllllams, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Nelson, Mr. and
Mrs. Sonny Miller, Mr. and
Mrs. Demy Coburn, Mr. and
Mn. Gary Noe, Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Younkin, Mr. and Mrs.
!Wy Kincaid.
.. - ,

�•
I

2-B-TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976

I~abelle Couch receives award .

Class enjoys turkey dinner

Sarah's

for winning competition
POMEROY-A certificate
of merit and a plaque for hav·

ing taken ·first place in '"'·

lion and scholarship progranw was presented to Mrs.

Isabelle Couch at the Tues·
day night meeting of the

Gallia Diary

American Legion Auxiliary,

tjl)-f '

II.J '~ Christmas Check List

For Gals and Their MothetS
.
JONTUE BY REVLON

n
n FASHION SWEATERS
n LEATHER HANDBAGS

446·2342

Mrs. Couch · e:cpressc~ ~ ap-­

preciation to the unit for
cooperation and to the
mayors or Pomeroy,

Mid~

dleporl and Rutland who
signed proclamations on
American .Education Week,
and also to the Elberfeld
Department Store for giving
a

window

which

UUn witnobert Morris,

JACKET

n "AIRPOT" - VACUUM
(Keeps coffee warm for hwrs)

•

.

"Infinity," "The Pioneer

Spirit.'' "Thanksgiving
Prayer, " uRecipe for
Living," ~~Myself," and "The

was

decorated in keeping with
American Education Week.
Program for Tuesday's
night meeting was on cduca·

n ELEGANT BlOUSE
.I~ SUEDE

by Sarah Carsey

Drew Webster Post 39,
Mrs, Grace Pratt made the
presenl.ations to Mrs. Couch
cmlimending herfor being an
award winher for four years.

pri n~

HANDBAGS
GLOVES
LEATHER COATS
AND JACKETS .
SMALL LEATIJEit GOODS
BOOTS

HOLDING ·BAZAAR
MIDDLEPORT - The
ahnual Christmas bazaar of
the Heath United Methodist
· Church .Women will be held
Thur8day from 9 a ,m. to 3
p.m. at the church basement.
Serving of lunch will begin at
11 a.m.

cipal of the Pomeroy and
Middleport Elementary
~chools , as guest speaker.
Morris commended the unit
for sending girls to Buckeye
Girls' Stale and spoke of the
nec'tls of youth today. He said
that while there is a definite
need for more recreation ::md
llt!xt year, Mrs. Morris ac·
companied her husband to

bl:lnd director, wus also pt'e-

sent CJ t the

mectin~

and was

given a of appr·echttion for·

THE LITTLE SUNBEAMS .
GA!.LIPOLIS - The Gallia County senior cilizetl$ are to
be commended for their recent successful pancake sale. Ethel
Robinson, the project director, reported that approximately
$850 was cleared . These proceeds will go towards keeping the ·
senior citizens center in operation .
·

WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va. -MissSharon Ann Froendt,

Childrens
ladies
Mens
lay·Aways
Ju.stin Handbag s
Justin Billfolds
Justin Bells
Bold Ties
Boot Jacks

lfrom the Shoe Cafe)

Sheboygan Boots
For Work &amp; Sport

•
•

DANS
318 N. 2nd .. Middleport
Open 9-5 Mon .· Sat.
"Prompt Service On
. Boots We Seli"

)

..

BIBLE
MARKING
BOOKS,
BIBLES and
RECORDS

PENS

340 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio

membership c&lt;Jrd to the
Junior Auxiliary .unit. M'rs.

delegate.
Dur ing the business
meeting plims were finalized

AMANA CONSULTANT
Wi II be in our
store to demonstrate
the magic of
Radarange
cooking and to
• answer your
questions
on ....

MONDAY
NOV. 29 4 P.M. TIL 9 P.M.
You 're invited to see
for yourself that the

oven is the.fastest,
safest and
most economical way
to cook today.
(saving 50%-75% of th e electricity
you normally use in cooking)

ty to be held at the hall oli
Dec. 12. The party will begin
with a 4 p.m. covered dish
dinner with Mrs. Marge
Reuter, Mrs. , Genevieve
Meinlmrl, Mrs. Faye Wilder,.
muth and Mrs. Gemma Casci
• •
in cha rge. Miss Erma Smith
and Mrs. Davis will deem·ate
the tables, and Mrs. Marjorie
Goelt' Mrs. Pearl Knapp, and
Mrs. Mary Martin will have
the program. There will be a
$3 gill eKChange.
Mrs. Casci reported on
items being collected for the
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital
party on Dec. 9. She said the
r items needed in clude
toothbrushes, tooth paste,
NATURAL SKIN care is emphasized in this display of
towel bibs' envelopes with
new beauty products al Eva's Beauty Qhop. A free skin
stamps, candy and diabeti c care ana lysis will be given any interested woman:
candy, writing paper, and
handkerchiefs. A basket has
FOR,WOMEN in terested In skin care, Eva's Beauty Shop
been placed allhe Warner hl- on Second Jive. here has at'l)uired the latest technique in
suran~e

Agency for contribu·

lions.

Mrs. Prall, Mrs. Wilder·
mulh, and Miss Smith will
serve ·un the conunittee with
olhe~· units to wrap oackal(cS
at the Athens Men' ,, Health
Centt!r. Mrs. Davis reported

that the junior party at
Athens will be held on Dec. 2.
She also noted that two flags
had been presented Monday
night to girl scout troops.
Mrs. Davis read commuhications from Mrs.
Eleahor Cullwn
It was noted that had been

BUCKLE

2·4·5 BUCKLE
ALL SIZES! .

'

992-2635
'•

,,

M

American Legion Auxiliary,
in memory o£ Mrs. Rose

Genheimer by the senior
unit, and that $5 had been
sent also in memory of Mrs.
Mrytle Walker by the j"!lior
auxiliary.

was read in which she noted
the Dec. 9 birthday party at

Chillicothe.
Mrs. Grace Prall, president, thanked those who
helped with the Veterans Day
dinner held at Middleport,
and also those who served on
the TOPS dinner, A gel-well
card was signed for Arnold
Richards, a patient at
Unjversity Hospital, Colmnbus. Miss Smith was named
co-c hairma n on the
Ame~·icaism conunillee, and
Mrs. Catherine Welsh, cochairman of the music committee. Mrs. Casci and Mrs.
Edith Sauer w"re mimed
hostesses for the January
meeti ng. Mrs. Davis and
Mrs, Couch used the
Thanksgiving moti f for
reft·esliments of cookil:!s, can·
dies, nnls, coffee and punch,

.'" :

'

.

SEEN AND HEARD
MASON, W. ' Va.
Chauncey Robert Ea rl
Brothers, (half-brotHer of
Donald E. Wright, Gallipolis)
'~d his \Vile, Ida Mae, are
vlmting her mother, Mrs.
Ro bert Shiflet, Mason , who
has bee.: ill.

..

•~ln~~n~R~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

You;re Invited To Our

•

••
'

.

. l~lfl· IWWmm
BLANKETS

We 've filled our shop with the spirit ot Christmi!s
and we know you'll enjoy seeing everything thai
is new and beautiful. for this holiday season .
Circle the date now ...

••
••
•
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. .I

Plan to be with us for our "Opening " of
the Christmas . Season

REFRESHMENTS &amp;DOOR PRIZES

992 -5721

c~rds

&amp;

77~

'3"

-~

TOBOGGANS

.'.,.
......

sso
·
SAVE

Miss
Linda
Smith
registered the guests.
The bride is a graduate of
Wahama High School, and
the groom, an Osbourn High
School graduate, served
three years in the U.S. Army,
and is now employed by
Continental Telephone of
Virglni~.

Following wedding trip to
Colonial Williamsburg,' Va.,
and
throughout
West
Virginia , th e couple now
resides at 10312 Dumfries

Off
Reg .
Price

And g e t a Flip &amp; Se W s ur/a ce
tor

se w i ng

ha rd

lo rea ch
lwo step
bu!lon llO ic r , a tr onl drop In
bObb in (e a sy lo r.uc an d
r C! pl iH:Cl. llOd bUill In 71g Hl g
~md blind nc m s t i T C I \ ~ S .

places , a b ui ll In

Mad e

In

c~rryln g

V.S.A
casr. or

C!lb lMct elt lr' I'L

MORE QUALITY:

Reg , Price
$3S9,9S

•HOLIDAY FABRICS
•NOTIONS
•GIFT CERTIFICATES

Road, Manassas, Va.

Nov. 29

JACKD:S;

Moonlight ·
moodmaker

is sunday

MEN'S TUBE

SOX, Size 10-13

f
f
f

2

COATS

SNIMSUITS

Girls- 2 thtu
6X.
Boys- 2 thru

8.

Jfj\--1- t·-'f.":,, ~

lA''*':.
,.

For ~he Holiday Party Season

Xuturalit:l'f II J Hkr~tn nc l~ ~· our il t•sirt'
for d~~&lt;11 1t di ~ tinrliou ami crL'aH•s u

GALLIPOLIS.- District 12
Ladies Auxilia,cy to Veterans
of Foreign Wars President

Boys &amp; Girls

~pcdu l

loo l' fi 1r L'\'~·.nl ng .
l'c mi nh! c . . llut tcrln,UII !Hl l'ulluf

Virginia Myers announces

PAJAMAS
And

,ll;rnrc und c i1 Hrlll 1o !'t(' C yo11 1hr()ugll

ni .u; ln .

lilt.'

ROBES
\

Also Girls'

GOLD or
SILVER

Night Gowns

BED PILLOWS

'

.
•
"
•

·-·•

y

\9

'

STRETCH

•

TOE 5Ox

•
,99•

DASHIKIS

Reg . $2 .49-$2.98
•

Sale

we wire flowers

$388

$299

LADIES

PLAID
POCKET
BLOUSES ,
Reg. $9.50..

SALE '6.66

•

•

' ' t•

centered the table, was four
tier lopped with a dancing
cherub holding two wedding
bands. The first and second
tiers were separated by a
fountain of flowing water.
The table was also decorated
with fall flowers and leaves.
Attendants at the reception
were Mrs. Bertha Adams,
Miss · Vicky Johnson, Miss
Dianne Smith, •Miss Donna
Smit h and Mrs. Wanda
Keener.

the quarterly conference will
•.
be conducted Dec. 5 at the
72x84
' .'
PR.
SALE
~
'Beayer
P?sl, Beav~r , Ohio in
1
-.
, . con]unct&gt;on
w1th
the
'
--1~ Veterans of Foreign Wars.
Registratlqrols from 9 to
10 a.m. when sessions start
.:-:f'JI-------~1--------~1-------IIill promptly. Ohio Department
:·:
COMFORT TOP
Senior Vice President Sandra
Martin will be present to
~NEE
HI
HOSE
greet
members and discuss
•
· Reg. 49c
current programs of the
·( SA LEg
·
auxiliary and plans for 1977.
President Myers requests
PR ../_7·/_j_' .
all Auxiliary presidents at·
tend , or h~ve a representative and' also urges all
4
members to . attend . A

.

Mrs . Millard Van Meter
·
106 Butternut Ave.
. Pomeroy, 0.

. We accept all major credit
ever ywllere.

ACRYUC YARN

'TYI ,J'l ' MACHINE

77 &lt;

MOND~Y, ~Conjerenc~--

Reg.$1.29

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
f'h. 992-2039

.

4 oz. Skein-13 Colors

. 12:00 AM to 5:00 PM

· • Mr. and Mrs. Ransdell Gough

PANTS
SETS

.

J-MAOMg~~

..

Sunday, December 5th

Singer has been making high quality
scwin~ mac hine ~ for 126 years. Which
mean~ when we have a sale, you get more
than a great price. You get a great machine.

9
lMDD~~fWifU f2§:E:E

•

Ouistmas

HOLIDAY

to

GLOVES by Boyce Lazarus, Kayser
Misty Harbour, Davis, Judd

SEEN AND l!EARD
GALUPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs . Brice Smith and ·
children, Wendy, Meredith
and Ryan of GaiiiJ)OliS, Mn.
Clyde Saunders, ol Lower
River Rd.,' and Mrs. Harold
Smith of Syracun spent
Thanksgiving Day with Mr.
and Mrs. Mark Smith Qr
Middleport.

The.Fabric

SALE PRICED!

$22,5

course carrying out the
Thanksgiving theme.
Others attending were Mrs.
Shirley Batey, Mrs. Mildred
Wells, Mrs. Lucy White, Mrs.
JoaiJ Hoffman, and Mrs. Bel·
ty Wehrung.

CBC meets

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
. -

I

I

Jewelry

'POMEROY-Holiday party
plans were completed at the
Wednesday night meeting of
the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club
held at the horne ol Mrs. Nettie Boyer.
,
The party will be held Dt.oc.
15at the Meigs inn. Members
drewnanics for a ~ift ex,
change. Mrs. Pandora Col·
lins presided at the meeting
with M1·s. C•rolyn McDaniel
.and Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore
giving !he officers' reports.
Mrs. Barbara MUllen receiv·
ut.l an anniversa ry gift und
Mrs. Boyer a bio1hday gift
from secret pals.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Lenora
McKnight and Mrs. Ann·
Ekowning. Mrs. ,Mmtha Hoffmun also received H ·pl'lzC.
The hostess served a dessert

GALLIPOLIS_ The Paint . read a Thanksgiving prayer;
LAY-AWAY A GIFT SOON!
Creek Regular Bapti st Mrs. Brown, an article from
Sunday School teachers and the Upper Room; Mrs. ·
officers met at the home of Gilmore, a poem, · "Come
REEDSVILLE - The
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Carr with Little Leaf"·
McCall's, Kwick ·Sew,
Mrs. Ruth Brown, hostess.
The origin of the flrBl Community Builders Club
Simplicity Patterns
The meeting was called to Thanksgivi,ng was given' by met with Mr. and Mrs .
·.
1$.W.
Second
Pomeroy',
order by Mrs. Lenore Howard Mrs. Dexter and Mr. Ripp~y Donald Myers for th e ·
and the group. sang, "Count ga~e
a
Thanksgiving November meeting.
Ph . 992-22~4
~~~~~~~::J
During the business session
Your· Blessings". Mrs .·. scnptureverse. Mrs. Howard
Do rothy GQrdon read gave quotatio~~ fro~ "A bills for Items used .at the
scripture of II Timothy, 1:6· Walk With God • by MIChael bicentennial program were
paid. The street sign repair
12 followed by prayer.
Ja~es .. ~ meeting closed
Roll call was answered by by smgmg For the Beauty of will be done in the spring.
For the December meeting
giving the names of the books the Earth" followed by
the group voted to eat out
of the New Testament in prayer by Mrs. Howard.
order.
.
The hostess served refresh· Tuesday, Dec. 28 at 7 p. m.
MONDAY, NOV. 29- 5 9 PM
Coming events include the ments with John Rippey Refreshments were served to
Gallia subdistrict Sunday giVIng the ~ole of thank~. The Mr . and Mrs. Ronald
Boy s &amp; Girls
Boys &amp; Girls
School and B.T.U. Institute of next meetmg w11l be 111 the Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Corinth Baptist Church Nov. church fellowship room at
28. Delegates named were which ·time. the group will Waller Brown, Mr. and·Mrs.
Michelle Somerville and prepare Chr iStmas treats for Denver Weber and Warren
And. .
Pickens.
Bobby D. Gordon. A group the school,
win also visit the Brooks
(Hanging &amp;
Folded)

'2 1·

LINGERIE by Kayser, Lorraine

1

Teachers, officers meet

Reg . $2 9.95
tS
FAMILY EDITION
Sale Price
PRICE EFFECTIVE
NOV. 29, 6-9 P. M.

HOSE by Hanes

......... ...
..
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...
--.·
•-·
••
., Ope
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OFF

Reg . S•7 .95
Sale Price

by Jane Colby, Queen,Casuals, lori-lynn

maintaining healthy, attractive skin. Called the Natural

sent to Depa rtment of Ohio,

CASSETTE
(KJV) .

by British lady, Nancy Frock
BLOUSES
by Lori-Lynn, Lady Arrow, Jane Colby
SLACKS

Woman's Skin Care, the pro~ram is set up to handle five' types
Continued on page B~

Mrs. Pearl Knapp reported •
on the foreign relations project this year. A thank you
note was received from [nez
Stivers and the bulletin from
, - - - - - - - - . . . , . Mrs. Florence Richards,
E1ghth District President,

ARCTICS

INGELS FURNITURE

HALF SIZE DRESSES

-·

sg98

FRAMES FOR
SNAPSHOTS
Reg . $3.59
Sale
Pric.e

ON

JARS ,

~

ADI).A.fRAME

.DRESSES
by Kenny Classics, Kay Windsor, Honteycolnb

fur the an nual Chrislmt~s par-

CANDY INGELS

20%

PANT SUITS
by Queen Casuals, Jane Colby, Bradley

for sponsoring Paula as a

bunny's tail, star flowers,
wheat, and fresh roses .
· Miss Susie Fox of Clifton
served as the maid of honor
wearing an old-fashioned
shirt-waisted gown of fall
green with a pale yellow
floral pinafore. She carried a
brown wicker llasket of dried
flowers which included
chrysantheums , baby's
breath, wheat, an.d . autumn
leaves. ·
Brides were Miss Carla·
Crookham, Manassas, Va.,
and Mrs. Karen Facemyer of
Albany, Ohio, both sisters of
the bride, and Miss Barbara
Clark, West Colwnbia. Their
gowns of burnt orange with
pale yellow floral pinafores
Chorus,'' ''Mendelssohn's were styled like that of t~e
"Wedding March," "Let It maid of honor. The gowns and
Be Me," "Sunshine On My pinafores were styled by the
Shoulders, " " My Sweet bride. They carried brown
Lady," ''One Hand, One wicker baskets of dried
Heart," "Somewhere," flowers identica l I!&gt; that of the
"Wedd ing Song" and maid of honor.
'~Whither Thou Goest."
Karen Muller, cousin of the
The bride was given in groom, and the daughter of
marriage by her uncle, Victor Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Lumpkin
Johnsof! , and war~ a satin of Spotsylvania, Va. , was the
organza gown adorned in flower girl. She wore a fall
pearls aQd Venise lace. The green printed dress with a
Queen Anne neckline and white eyelet pinafore styled
empire waist were detailed similar to the bridesmaids.
with lace, and the long, fitted
Ira Jay Zuspan, cousin of
sleeves flared into a ·lace-· the bride, and the son of Mr.
edged ruffle cuff.
and Mrs. Raymond ZI\Span of
Lace bordered the skirt and West Columbis, was t~e ring·
attached chapel train. Her bearer.
mantilla veil was trimmed
Harry Fitzwater of ~okes·
with .lace, and she carried a ville, Va. , cousin of the
dried fall bouquet of chrys- groom, was the best man.
anthemums, baby's breath, Ushers were,Larry Fitzwater
of Nokesville, Va ., cousin of
the groom; Joey Watts and
Ronnie Thomas, both of
Manassas.
The bride's · mother was
attired in a sage green gown
with rust accessories and a
corsage of yellow roses.
The mother of the groom
wore a brown gown with
brown accessories and a
yellow rosebud corsage.
A reception followed im·
mediately after the ceremony
in the church social hall. Mrs.
Laura Hess, aunt Of the
groom, catered the reception .
The wedding cake, which

Gift Certificates

"

STYLE CENTER

Paul Eichinger expressed a!&gt;'
predation to the Auxiliai'Y

daughter of Mi's. Macy E.
. Froendt of West Colwnbia,
and . Ransdell Nathaniel
Gough, Jr. son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ransdell N. Gough of
Manassas, Va., erchanged
wedding vows Oct. 2 at the
Emmanuel Baptial Church,
Minassas.
·
The Rev. 8. R. Yarbrough
performed the 2:30 p.m.
ceremony before an alllir
deci&gt;rawd with two large fall
floral ~rrangements, a
ca nd elabra, and· autumn
leaves and mums.
Robbin ' Adams, cousin of
the bride, provided the
nuptial music selected by the
bride and groom. Music included Lohengrin's "Bridal.

WESTERN
BOOTS

MISSES CHRISTMAS
GIFT IDEAS FR

his band work. Presentation
was by Pam Powers. Rhonda
Reuter gave him a gill.
SEVERAL 11lCAL ENTERTA INERS provided music
A report on Buckeye Girls' during the two day sa le, and one of the most c harmin~ groups
Stale was given by Pa ula was the "Little Sunbeams" from the Simpson Chapel United
Eichinger who included in Methodi st Church at Rio Grande. Shown in this picture
her report a re&lt;.:ordin~ of the supplied by Mrs. Robinson are 1first row, Jell to right ) Kristen
band and churus al Girls' Allen, .Jenny l.ouclcn , (second row) Diane Garber, Will
stale. She spoke of her ac· Louden, Patrick Vest, Jason Ca ll and llhird row ), Amy
tivilies at Capital University Louden, Chris Cook, Cora Wolfe and Jerry Caii .' Peggy Call is
during the week she spent the director nf th e group with assistant director, Barbara Allen
there. Mrs. Veda Davis and Jane t Jones, accompanist.
·
presented her witn a

Party plans completed
for upcoming holiday

Gough-Froendt exchange October wedding vows

"

entertaimnenl, there is a
greater need for Leaching
the meet.
· Dwight Goil" , Meigs High

3-B-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWiday, Nov. 28, 1976

•

with Mr8. Gretta Simpsdh
RACINE - The Booster Larger Ufe."
Sunday School Class of First
After group singing of presiding. The ChristmR
Baptist Church enjoyed a "Count Your Blessings" M... meeting wW be at the home or.
'Thanksgiving turkey dinner Simpson closed the program Mrs. Garnet Ervine Friday.';'
evening, Dec. 17 with a gil('
at the home of the teacher, with prayer,
.
~
Mrs. Marjorie Grimm
A business session followed exchange.
Friday, Nov. 19 at 6 p.m.
A program in charge of
Mrs. Helen Simpson followed
entitled "Father We Thank
Thee." "Praise .Him, Ji'ralse
Him" was sung by the group
with scripture, Psalm 136:1-9
and prayer by Vera Beegle.
After a talk bY Mrs. Simi&gt;'
300 Second Ave.
GalliJ)!)Iis, Ohio
son, the following readings by
members were presented :
"Today and Every Day is a
lafayette Mall .
·"
Thanksgiving Day," "A
Wonderful Burden," "Let Us
glve Thanks,', 11 Thanksgiving," upilgrim Voices,"
"First Thanksgiving,"

(

tiona! competition on educa-

-

,,

BAGS TO
MATCH

·I'·

Christmas
will
be held at gift
this erchange
meeting and
lunch will be served at 'the
Post Home ..
'District 12 Auxiliaries are
f,' Gallipolis, Jackson, Ports·
mouth
(two
Posts),
9, Chillicothe, New Marshfield,
Nelsonville, Jacksonville ,
Albany, Symmes Valley, The
Plains.

f

'

All
BoY$. &amp; Girls

JUMPSUITS

lOBOGGANS

Boys- 9mos. thru
Size 8,
Girls·- 3 thru
Size 14 .

GLOVES

Lay-Away now
I

Bo'ys &amp; Girls

And

All Sizes

SEE THE MIDDLEPORT
CHRISTMAS PARADE - 6p. m.

J'or Christmas!

'

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.FREE GIFT·WRAPPING!

•

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•

SINGERS SLATED
CROWN CITY - The
Eskew Famlly will be guest
singers at Mt. Zion Baptist
&lt;lturcb Sunday Dec. 5 at 7:30 •
p.m. The chu~ is located on
old Rt. 7 in Crown City. The
public Is invited.

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
· 102

e:. Main

Betty Ohlinger
Pomeroy, 0 .

~~~~:~:~:~t~~~:~:::~:j:~:::j:~:~~~;~ri~~:~:j~~~~~m~~~~~;l~~;l~~;r~=~~m=l=~~~:~:j:~:~:~;~~;j~~~~~;l~~;~~~~~~~~~~~:~;l;ltlt~~~~~j1;j
'

SliOPPE

17Jii. SECUfiU A¥1.,

MtDDLIPORT, 0H 45760
Pllont (614) 992·1516

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I

2-B-TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976

I~abelle Couch receives award .

Class enjoys turkey dinner

Sarah's

for winning competition
POMEROY-A certificate
of merit and a plaque for hav·

ing taken ·first place in '"'·

lion and scholarship progranw was presented to Mrs.

Isabelle Couch at the Tues·
day night meeting of the

Gallia Diary

American Legion Auxiliary,

tjl)-f '

II.J '~ Christmas Check List

For Gals and Their MothetS
.
JONTUE BY REVLON

n
n FASHION SWEATERS
n LEATHER HANDBAGS

446·2342

Mrs. Couch · e:cpressc~ ~ ap-­

preciation to the unit for
cooperation and to the
mayors or Pomeroy,

Mid~

dleporl and Rutland who
signed proclamations on
American .Education Week,
and also to the Elberfeld
Department Store for giving
a

window

which

UUn witnobert Morris,

JACKET

n "AIRPOT" - VACUUM
(Keeps coffee warm for hwrs)

•

.

"Infinity," "The Pioneer

Spirit.'' "Thanksgiving
Prayer, " uRecipe for
Living," ~~Myself," and "The

was

decorated in keeping with
American Education Week.
Program for Tuesday's
night meeting was on cduca·

n ELEGANT BlOUSE
.I~ SUEDE

by Sarah Carsey

Drew Webster Post 39,
Mrs, Grace Pratt made the
presenl.ations to Mrs. Couch
cmlimending herfor being an
award winher for four years.

pri n~

HANDBAGS
GLOVES
LEATHER COATS
AND JACKETS .
SMALL LEATIJEit GOODS
BOOTS

HOLDING ·BAZAAR
MIDDLEPORT - The
ahnual Christmas bazaar of
the Heath United Methodist
· Church .Women will be held
Thur8day from 9 a ,m. to 3
p.m. at the church basement.
Serving of lunch will begin at
11 a.m.

cipal of the Pomeroy and
Middleport Elementary
~chools , as guest speaker.
Morris commended the unit
for sending girls to Buckeye
Girls' Stale and spoke of the
nec'tls of youth today. He said
that while there is a definite
need for more recreation ::md
llt!xt year, Mrs. Morris ac·
companied her husband to

bl:lnd director, wus also pt'e-

sent CJ t the

mectin~

and was

given a of appr·echttion for·

THE LITTLE SUNBEAMS .
GA!.LIPOLIS - The Gallia County senior cilizetl$ are to
be commended for their recent successful pancake sale. Ethel
Robinson, the project director, reported that approximately
$850 was cleared . These proceeds will go towards keeping the ·
senior citizens center in operation .
·

WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va. -MissSharon Ann Froendt,

Childrens
ladies
Mens
lay·Aways
Ju.stin Handbag s
Justin Billfolds
Justin Bells
Bold Ties
Boot Jacks

lfrom the Shoe Cafe)

Sheboygan Boots
For Work &amp; Sport

•
•

DANS
318 N. 2nd .. Middleport
Open 9-5 Mon .· Sat.
"Prompt Service On
. Boots We Seli"

)

..

BIBLE
MARKING
BOOKS,
BIBLES and
RECORDS

PENS

340 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio

membership c&lt;Jrd to the
Junior Auxiliary .unit. M'rs.

delegate.
Dur ing the business
meeting plims were finalized

AMANA CONSULTANT
Wi II be in our
store to demonstrate
the magic of
Radarange
cooking and to
• answer your
questions
on ....

MONDAY
NOV. 29 4 P.M. TIL 9 P.M.
You 're invited to see
for yourself that the

oven is the.fastest,
safest and
most economical way
to cook today.
(saving 50%-75% of th e electricity
you normally use in cooking)

ty to be held at the hall oli
Dec. 12. The party will begin
with a 4 p.m. covered dish
dinner with Mrs. Marge
Reuter, Mrs. , Genevieve
Meinlmrl, Mrs. Faye Wilder,.
muth and Mrs. Gemma Casci
• •
in cha rge. Miss Erma Smith
and Mrs. Davis will deem·ate
the tables, and Mrs. Marjorie
Goelt' Mrs. Pearl Knapp, and
Mrs. Mary Martin will have
the program. There will be a
$3 gill eKChange.
Mrs. Casci reported on
items being collected for the
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital
party on Dec. 9. She said the
r items needed in clude
toothbrushes, tooth paste,
NATURAL SKIN care is emphasized in this display of
towel bibs' envelopes with
new beauty products al Eva's Beauty Qhop. A free skin
stamps, candy and diabeti c care ana lysis will be given any interested woman:
candy, writing paper, and
handkerchiefs. A basket has
FOR,WOMEN in terested In skin care, Eva's Beauty Shop
been placed allhe Warner hl- on Second Jive. here has at'l)uired the latest technique in
suran~e

Agency for contribu·

lions.

Mrs. Prall, Mrs. Wilder·
mulh, and Miss Smith will
serve ·un the conunittee with
olhe~· units to wrap oackal(cS
at the Athens Men' ,, Health
Centt!r. Mrs. Davis reported

that the junior party at
Athens will be held on Dec. 2.
She also noted that two flags
had been presented Monday
night to girl scout troops.
Mrs. Davis read commuhications from Mrs.
Eleahor Cullwn
It was noted that had been

BUCKLE

2·4·5 BUCKLE
ALL SIZES! .

'

992-2635
'•

,,

M

American Legion Auxiliary,
in memory o£ Mrs. Rose

Genheimer by the senior
unit, and that $5 had been
sent also in memory of Mrs.
Mrytle Walker by the j"!lior
auxiliary.

was read in which she noted
the Dec. 9 birthday party at

Chillicothe.
Mrs. Grace Prall, president, thanked those who
helped with the Veterans Day
dinner held at Middleport,
and also those who served on
the TOPS dinner, A gel-well
card was signed for Arnold
Richards, a patient at
Unjversity Hospital, Colmnbus. Miss Smith was named
co-c hairma n on the
Ame~·icaism conunillee, and
Mrs. Catherine Welsh, cochairman of the music committee. Mrs. Casci and Mrs.
Edith Sauer w"re mimed
hostesses for the January
meeti ng. Mrs. Davis and
Mrs, Couch used the
Thanksgiving moti f for
reft·esliments of cookil:!s, can·
dies, nnls, coffee and punch,

.'" :

'

.

SEEN AND HEARD
MASON, W. ' Va.
Chauncey Robert Ea rl
Brothers, (half-brotHer of
Donald E. Wright, Gallipolis)
'~d his \Vile, Ida Mae, are
vlmting her mother, Mrs.
Ro bert Shiflet, Mason , who
has bee.: ill.

..

•~ln~~n~R~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

You;re Invited To Our

•

••
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.

. l~lfl· IWWmm
BLANKETS

We 've filled our shop with the spirit ot Christmi!s
and we know you'll enjoy seeing everything thai
is new and beautiful. for this holiday season .
Circle the date now ...

••
••
•
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. .I

Plan to be with us for our "Opening " of
the Christmas . Season

REFRESHMENTS &amp;DOOR PRIZES

992 -5721

c~rds

&amp;

77~

'3"

-~

TOBOGGANS

.'.,.
......

sso
·
SAVE

Miss
Linda
Smith
registered the guests.
The bride is a graduate of
Wahama High School, and
the groom, an Osbourn High
School graduate, served
three years in the U.S. Army,
and is now employed by
Continental Telephone of
Virglni~.

Following wedding trip to
Colonial Williamsburg,' Va.,
and
throughout
West
Virginia , th e couple now
resides at 10312 Dumfries

Off
Reg .
Price

And g e t a Flip &amp; Se W s ur/a ce
tor

se w i ng

ha rd

lo rea ch
lwo step
bu!lon llO ic r , a tr onl drop In
bObb in (e a sy lo r.uc an d
r C! pl iH:Cl. llOd bUill In 71g Hl g
~md blind nc m s t i T C I \ ~ S .

places , a b ui ll In

Mad e

In

c~rryln g

V.S.A
casr. or

C!lb lMct elt lr' I'L

MORE QUALITY:

Reg , Price
$3S9,9S

•HOLIDAY FABRICS
•NOTIONS
•GIFT CERTIFICATES

Road, Manassas, Va.

Nov. 29

JACKD:S;

Moonlight ·
moodmaker

is sunday

MEN'S TUBE

SOX, Size 10-13

f
f
f

2

COATS

SNIMSUITS

Girls- 2 thtu
6X.
Boys- 2 thru

8.

Jfj\--1- t·-'f.":,, ~

lA''*':.
,.

For ~he Holiday Party Season

Xuturalit:l'f II J Hkr~tn nc l~ ~· our il t•sirt'
for d~~&lt;11 1t di ~ tinrliou ami crL'aH•s u

GALLIPOLIS.- District 12
Ladies Auxilia,cy to Veterans
of Foreign Wars President

Boys &amp; Girls

~pcdu l

loo l' fi 1r L'\'~·.nl ng .
l'c mi nh! c . . llut tcrln,UII !Hl l'ulluf

Virginia Myers announces

PAJAMAS
And

,ll;rnrc und c i1 Hrlll 1o !'t(' C yo11 1hr()ugll

ni .u; ln .

lilt.'

ROBES
\

Also Girls'

GOLD or
SILVER

Night Gowns

BED PILLOWS

'

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•
"
•

·-·•

y

\9

'

STRETCH

•

TOE 5Ox

•
,99•

DASHIKIS

Reg . $2 .49-$2.98
•

Sale

we wire flowers

$388

$299

LADIES

PLAID
POCKET
BLOUSES ,
Reg. $9.50..

SALE '6.66

•

•

' ' t•

centered the table, was four
tier lopped with a dancing
cherub holding two wedding
bands. The first and second
tiers were separated by a
fountain of flowing water.
The table was also decorated
with fall flowers and leaves.
Attendants at the reception
were Mrs. Bertha Adams,
Miss · Vicky Johnson, Miss
Dianne Smith, •Miss Donna
Smit h and Mrs. Wanda
Keener.

the quarterly conference will
•.
be conducted Dec. 5 at the
72x84
' .'
PR.
SALE
~
'Beayer
P?sl, Beav~r , Ohio in
1
-.
, . con]unct&gt;on
w1th
the
'
--1~ Veterans of Foreign Wars.
Registratlqrols from 9 to
10 a.m. when sessions start
.:-:f'JI-------~1--------~1-------IIill promptly. Ohio Department
:·:
COMFORT TOP
Senior Vice President Sandra
Martin will be present to
~NEE
HI
HOSE
greet
members and discuss
•
· Reg. 49c
current programs of the
·( SA LEg
·
auxiliary and plans for 1977.
President Myers requests
PR ../_7·/_j_' .
all Auxiliary presidents at·
tend , or h~ve a representative and' also urges all
4
members to . attend . A

.

Mrs . Millard Van Meter
·
106 Butternut Ave.
. Pomeroy, 0.

. We accept all major credit
ever ywllere.

ACRYUC YARN

'TYI ,J'l ' MACHINE

77 &lt;

MOND~Y, ~Conjerenc~--

Reg.$1.29

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
f'h. 992-2039

.

4 oz. Skein-13 Colors

. 12:00 AM to 5:00 PM

· • Mr. and Mrs. Ransdell Gough

PANTS
SETS

.

J-MAOMg~~

..

Sunday, December 5th

Singer has been making high quality
scwin~ mac hine ~ for 126 years. Which
mean~ when we have a sale, you get more
than a great price. You get a great machine.

9
lMDD~~fWifU f2§:E:E

•

Ouistmas

HOLIDAY

to

GLOVES by Boyce Lazarus, Kayser
Misty Harbour, Davis, Judd

SEEN AND l!EARD
GALUPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs . Brice Smith and ·
children, Wendy, Meredith
and Ryan of GaiiiJ)OliS, Mn.
Clyde Saunders, ol Lower
River Rd.,' and Mrs. Harold
Smith of Syracun spent
Thanksgiving Day with Mr.
and Mrs. Mark Smith Qr
Middleport.

The.Fabric

SALE PRICED!

$22,5

course carrying out the
Thanksgiving theme.
Others attending were Mrs.
Shirley Batey, Mrs. Mildred
Wells, Mrs. Lucy White, Mrs.
JoaiJ Hoffman, and Mrs. Bel·
ty Wehrung.

CBC meets

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
. -

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I

Jewelry

'POMEROY-Holiday party
plans were completed at the
Wednesday night meeting of
the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club
held at the horne ol Mrs. Nettie Boyer.
,
The party will be held Dt.oc.
15at the Meigs inn. Members
drewnanics for a ~ift ex,
change. Mrs. Pandora Col·
lins presided at the meeting
with M1·s. C•rolyn McDaniel
.and Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore
giving !he officers' reports.
Mrs. Barbara MUllen receiv·
ut.l an anniversa ry gift und
Mrs. Boyer a bio1hday gift
from secret pals.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Lenora
McKnight and Mrs. Ann·
Ekowning. Mrs. ,Mmtha Hoffmun also received H ·pl'lzC.
The hostess served a dessert

GALLIPOLIS_ The Paint . read a Thanksgiving prayer;
LAY-AWAY A GIFT SOON!
Creek Regular Bapti st Mrs. Brown, an article from
Sunday School teachers and the Upper Room; Mrs. ·
officers met at the home of Gilmore, a poem, · "Come
REEDSVILLE - The
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Carr with Little Leaf"·
McCall's, Kwick ·Sew,
Mrs. Ruth Brown, hostess.
The origin of the flrBl Community Builders Club
Simplicity Patterns
The meeting was called to Thanksgivi,ng was given' by met with Mr. and Mrs .
·.
1$.W.
Second
Pomeroy',
order by Mrs. Lenore Howard Mrs. Dexter and Mr. Ripp~y Donald Myers for th e ·
and the group. sang, "Count ga~e
a
Thanksgiving November meeting.
Ph . 992-22~4
~~~~~~~::J
During the business session
Your· Blessings". Mrs .·. scnptureverse. Mrs. Howard
Do rothy GQrdon read gave quotatio~~ fro~ "A bills for Items used .at the
scripture of II Timothy, 1:6· Walk With God • by MIChael bicentennial program were
paid. The street sign repair
12 followed by prayer.
Ja~es .. ~ meeting closed
Roll call was answered by by smgmg For the Beauty of will be done in the spring.
For the December meeting
giving the names of the books the Earth" followed by
the group voted to eat out
of the New Testament in prayer by Mrs. Howard.
order.
.
The hostess served refresh· Tuesday, Dec. 28 at 7 p. m.
MONDAY, NOV. 29- 5 9 PM
Coming events include the ments with John Rippey Refreshments were served to
Gallia subdistrict Sunday giVIng the ~ole of thank~. The Mr . and Mrs. Ronald
Boy s &amp; Girls
Boys &amp; Girls
School and B.T.U. Institute of next meetmg w11l be 111 the Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Corinth Baptist Church Nov. church fellowship room at
28. Delegates named were which ·time. the group will Waller Brown, Mr. and·Mrs.
Michelle Somerville and prepare Chr iStmas treats for Denver Weber and Warren
And. .
Pickens.
Bobby D. Gordon. A group the school,
win also visit the Brooks
(Hanging &amp;
Folded)

'2 1·

LINGERIE by Kayser, Lorraine

1

Teachers, officers meet

Reg . $2 9.95
tS
FAMILY EDITION
Sale Price
PRICE EFFECTIVE
NOV. 29, 6-9 P. M.

HOSE by Hanes

......... ...
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...
--.·
•-·
••
., Ope
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OFF

Reg . S•7 .95
Sale Price

by Jane Colby, Queen,Casuals, lori-lynn

maintaining healthy, attractive skin. Called the Natural

sent to Depa rtment of Ohio,

CASSETTE
(KJV) .

by British lady, Nancy Frock
BLOUSES
by Lori-Lynn, Lady Arrow, Jane Colby
SLACKS

Woman's Skin Care, the pro~ram is set up to handle five' types
Continued on page B~

Mrs. Pearl Knapp reported •
on the foreign relations project this year. A thank you
note was received from [nez
Stivers and the bulletin from
, - - - - - - - - . . . , . Mrs. Florence Richards,
E1ghth District President,

ARCTICS

INGELS FURNITURE

HALF SIZE DRESSES

-·

sg98

FRAMES FOR
SNAPSHOTS
Reg . $3.59
Sale
Pric.e

ON

JARS ,

~

ADI).A.fRAME

.DRESSES
by Kenny Classics, Kay Windsor, Honteycolnb

fur the an nual Chrislmt~s par-

CANDY INGELS

20%

PANT SUITS
by Queen Casuals, Jane Colby, Bradley

for sponsoring Paula as a

bunny's tail, star flowers,
wheat, and fresh roses .
· Miss Susie Fox of Clifton
served as the maid of honor
wearing an old-fashioned
shirt-waisted gown of fall
green with a pale yellow
floral pinafore. She carried a
brown wicker llasket of dried
flowers which included
chrysantheums , baby's
breath, wheat, an.d . autumn
leaves. ·
Brides were Miss Carla·
Crookham, Manassas, Va.,
and Mrs. Karen Facemyer of
Albany, Ohio, both sisters of
the bride, and Miss Barbara
Clark, West Colwnbia. Their
gowns of burnt orange with
pale yellow floral pinafores
Chorus,'' ''Mendelssohn's were styled like that of t~e
"Wedding March," "Let It maid of honor. The gowns and
Be Me," "Sunshine On My pinafores were styled by the
Shoulders, " " My Sweet bride. They carried brown
Lady," ''One Hand, One wicker baskets of dried
Heart," "Somewhere," flowers identica l I!&gt; that of the
"Wedd ing Song" and maid of honor.
'~Whither Thou Goest."
Karen Muller, cousin of the
The bride was given in groom, and the daughter of
marriage by her uncle, Victor Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Lumpkin
Johnsof! , and war~ a satin of Spotsylvania, Va. , was the
organza gown adorned in flower girl. She wore a fall
pearls aQd Venise lace. The green printed dress with a
Queen Anne neckline and white eyelet pinafore styled
empire waist were detailed similar to the bridesmaids.
with lace, and the long, fitted
Ira Jay Zuspan, cousin of
sleeves flared into a ·lace-· the bride, and the son of Mr.
edged ruffle cuff.
and Mrs. Raymond ZI\Span of
Lace bordered the skirt and West Columbis, was t~e ring·
attached chapel train. Her bearer.
mantilla veil was trimmed
Harry Fitzwater of ~okes·
with .lace, and she carried a ville, Va. , cousin of the
dried fall bouquet of chrys- groom, was the best man.
anthemums, baby's breath, Ushers were,Larry Fitzwater
of Nokesville, Va ., cousin of
the groom; Joey Watts and
Ronnie Thomas, both of
Manassas.
The bride's · mother was
attired in a sage green gown
with rust accessories and a
corsage of yellow roses.
The mother of the groom
wore a brown gown with
brown accessories and a
yellow rosebud corsage.
A reception followed im·
mediately after the ceremony
in the church social hall. Mrs.
Laura Hess, aunt Of the
groom, catered the reception .
The wedding cake, which

Gift Certificates

"

STYLE CENTER

Paul Eichinger expressed a!&gt;'
predation to the Auxiliai'Y

daughter of Mi's. Macy E.
. Froendt of West Colwnbia,
and . Ransdell Nathaniel
Gough, Jr. son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ransdell N. Gough of
Manassas, Va., erchanged
wedding vows Oct. 2 at the
Emmanuel Baptial Church,
Minassas.
·
The Rev. 8. R. Yarbrough
performed the 2:30 p.m.
ceremony before an alllir
deci&gt;rawd with two large fall
floral ~rrangements, a
ca nd elabra, and· autumn
leaves and mums.
Robbin ' Adams, cousin of
the bride, provided the
nuptial music selected by the
bride and groom. Music included Lohengrin's "Bridal.

WESTERN
BOOTS

MISSES CHRISTMAS
GIFT IDEAS FR

his band work. Presentation
was by Pam Powers. Rhonda
Reuter gave him a gill.
SEVERAL 11lCAL ENTERTA INERS provided music
A report on Buckeye Girls' during the two day sa le, and one of the most c harmin~ groups
Stale was given by Pa ula was the "Little Sunbeams" from the Simpson Chapel United
Eichinger who included in Methodi st Church at Rio Grande. Shown in this picture
her report a re&lt;.:ordin~ of the supplied by Mrs. Robinson are 1first row, Jell to right ) Kristen
band and churus al Girls' Allen, .Jenny l.ouclcn , (second row) Diane Garber, Will
stale. She spoke of her ac· Louden, Patrick Vest, Jason Ca ll and llhird row ), Amy
tivilies at Capital University Louden, Chris Cook, Cora Wolfe and Jerry Caii .' Peggy Call is
during the week she spent the director nf th e group with assistant director, Barbara Allen
there. Mrs. Veda Davis and Jane t Jones, accompanist.
·
presented her witn a

Party plans completed
for upcoming holiday

Gough-Froendt exchange October wedding vows

"

entertaimnenl, there is a
greater need for Leaching
the meet.
· Dwight Goil" , Meigs High

3-B-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWiday, Nov. 28, 1976

•

with Mr8. Gretta Simpsdh
RACINE - The Booster Larger Ufe."
Sunday School Class of First
After group singing of presiding. The ChristmR
Baptist Church enjoyed a "Count Your Blessings" M... meeting wW be at the home or.
'Thanksgiving turkey dinner Simpson closed the program Mrs. Garnet Ervine Friday.';'
evening, Dec. 17 with a gil('
at the home of the teacher, with prayer,
.
~
Mrs. Marjorie Grimm
A business session followed exchange.
Friday, Nov. 19 at 6 p.m.
A program in charge of
Mrs. Helen Simpson followed
entitled "Father We Thank
Thee." "Praise .Him, Ji'ralse
Him" was sung by the group
with scripture, Psalm 136:1-9
and prayer by Vera Beegle.
After a talk bY Mrs. Simi&gt;'
300 Second Ave.
GalliJ)!)Iis, Ohio
son, the following readings by
members were presented :
"Today and Every Day is a
lafayette Mall .
·"
Thanksgiving Day," "A
Wonderful Burden," "Let Us
glve Thanks,', 11 Thanksgiving," upilgrim Voices,"
"First Thanksgiving,"

(

tiona! competition on educa-

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BAGS TO
MATCH

·I'·

Christmas
will
be held at gift
this erchange
meeting and
lunch will be served at 'the
Post Home ..
'District 12 Auxiliaries are
f,' Gallipolis, Jackson, Ports·
mouth
(two
Posts),
9, Chillicothe, New Marshfield,
Nelsonville, Jacksonville ,
Albany, Symmes Valley, The
Plains.

f

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All
BoY$. &amp; Girls

JUMPSUITS

lOBOGGANS

Boys- 9mos. thru
Size 8,
Girls·- 3 thru
Size 14 .

GLOVES

Lay-Away now
I

Bo'ys &amp; Girls

And

All Sizes

SEE THE MIDDLEPORT
CHRISTMAS PARADE - 6p. m.

J'or Christmas!

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.FREE GIFT·WRAPPING!

•

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•

SINGERS SLATED
CROWN CITY - The
Eskew Famlly will be guest
singers at Mt. Zion Baptist
&lt;lturcb Sunday Dec. 5 at 7:30 •
p.m. The chu~ is located on
old Rt. 7 in Crown City. The
public Is invited.

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
· 102

e:. Main

Betty Ohlinger
Pomeroy, 0 .

~~~~:~:~:~t~~~:~:::~:j:~:::j:~:~~~;~ri~~:~:j~~~~~m~~~~~;l~~;l~~;r~=~~m=l=~~~:~:j:~:~:~;~~;j~~~~~;l~~;~~~~~~~~~~~:~;l;ltlt~~~~~j1;j
'

SliOPPE

17Jii. SECUfiU A¥1.,

MtDDLIPORT, 0H 45760
Pllont (614) 992·1516

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�..
4-B-The SwulayTimes-Sentinel,Slll1day, Nov . 28, 1976
~:~,.";::;:*_:!·:·,·..;:::::::· ····•···....:.:-:-:-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~=:::=::~::.&lt;:=;~:'-:Vce :: ::eo :: : :::9....::

I

«

~

!f Community
8
Corner ~~:~e

I

I

•
POMEROY - Thanksgiving, that marvelous gateway to
Christmas, is over, but the glow lingers on.
And neither cold turkey sandwiches, turkey omelets,
baked turkey , turkey hash, turkey soup, nor turkey croquettes
can lessen the pleasure of the day or weekend spent together.
For at least two families, T)lanksgiving celebrations were
combined with the observance of wedding anniversaries:
Frances and Paul Smart celebrated 50 years t~geU1er , while
Ruth and George Holman observed their 25th anniversary, For
another Meigs County c.'&lt;iu ple, Clarence James Williams and
his wite, the former Jill Harris of Middleport, Thanksgiving
Day brought the birth of a son.
.
And lor the Arnold Richards family, there was much to he
thankful for . A patient at University Hospital, Arnold
underwent surgery last Monday lor the removal of a brain
tumor . The family reports ihe surgery was successful and that
the medical team foresees no comp lications. He will , of course,
remain hospitalized lor a time. Florence will stay in Columbus
with her daughter, Janice and her family . Ann has returned to
Middleport, and lhe Richards' third daughter, Jo Keels, and
her year old so n, .Myles, have now gone back to Denver.

,,

THE SOCIAL SCENE of the Bend area was marked with
family gatherings.
Enjoying turkey with ali the tr immfn's at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Don Hunnel arid son, Artie, Thanksgiving Day were
Mr. and Mrs. John Cunningham, Johnnie, Mark and Jim of
Gallipolis; Mrs . Bernice Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Phil Ohlinger,
Phil and Laura, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Warth, Jr., David,
Darrin and Amy, au · of Pomeroy; Miss Ann Oh linger,
Columbus; Mr.and Mrs. Mike Evans, Alicia, Cindy and Ryan,
Portland ; Mrs. Andrea Owens and Shari, Marshall , Mich .; and
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Evans and dau~htcr, Megan, Harrison·
ville. Missing from the family group was Arnold Evans who is
employed with a television station in New Zealand.
Joining Mr. and Mrs. Karl Grueser and Larry , Miners·
ville, for the holiday weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Bob Grueser
and daughter, Kimberly, of Caldwell, and Mrs. Welby Whaley ,
Pomeroy, R. D.
Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs .. Lewis Sauer
of Middleport were Mr . and Mrs . Robert L. Wiley, Gahanna;
Mr. and Mrs. James Hiney and Mary Ellen, also of Gahanna;
Lois Ann Sauer of Athens ; Mr. and Mrs . Jack Satterfield, Amy
and Kelly, Pomeroy, arid Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Swanson of
Soddy, Tenn., who are here for the holidays.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert W. Crow and daughter, Lori, were
Thanksgiving guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Hendershot of Gahanna .
Making Thanksgiving a very special occasion for Mr . and
Mrs. Wayne Rowe of Letart and Mr . and Mrs. Curtis Roush of
Minersville has heen the return of their children, Mr. and Mrs.
G. E. Sellers, Michael Allen and AmyDawn , from Germany.
After thelf VISit here they w1ll go to Ca hforma .
Mrs. Barbara Offutt drove to Martinsburg, Pa. to visit her
mother, Mrs. Eva Kauffman, fo r the holiday weekend.
For Thanksgiving dinner, Mr. and Mrs. James Euler
entertained his sister , Miss Allee l':ulcr and Mrs. Walter
Athey, Middleport.
.
Mr. and Mrs: James Crow •. Syra~use, jomed her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. R1chard Neutzhng, Lmcoln H1ll , for Thanks·
giving dinner .
Traveling to Bever ly for the traditional family dinner at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Meredith were Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Weher , David, home from Ohio University, and Mark,
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pickens, and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead, Juli and Jane, home from Ohio University, all of
Reedsv ille; Dr. and Mrs. Isaac Frydman, Columbus, and· Mr.
· and Mrs. Harold Sauer, J oy and Mary Ruth , Middleport. Also
home lor the holidays were Mr. and Mrs. Meredith's sons,
Roger of Beaumont, Texas, and Chuck of . L~xington, Ky . On
Saturday Joy Sauer left lor Ph oenix, Ariz. for a 10 day visit
with ~tepha nie Minor of Ch.eshire who is now employed tliere .
Mr~ and Mrs. Arnold 8. Wilson, Sherry 'and Sabrina,
Rutland , spent Thanksgiving with his parents, Mr. aild Mrs.
Arnold Wilson at Moundsville. They also visited the children's
great.grandmother , Mrs. Velma Landers .
Mrs. Rose Ginther of Pomeroy, Route 3, is spendi ng the
holiday weekend with her son, James Ginther, and his family.
Miss Erma Smith and Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart,

Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. John McLain, l.anca~ter , were
Mr. and Mrs. Hert Grimm of Letart Falls were joined for
'l11anksgiving dinne1· guests of Mrs. Stella Kloes.
Thunksgiving by their sons and families , Mr. and Mrs. Rohert
' Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. finger Keller and family Grimm , Christy and Amy, r-0lwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Steven
were their parents. Mr: and Mr~ . Norman Rose and Mr . and Grimm, Cambridge ; and Mr. and Mrs. Russell Grimm , Paula
Mrs. Ralph Keller, anct·Mr. and Mrs. Willard Wilson and Mr. and David. St. Clairsville.
and Mrs. Paul Orr.
Thanksgiving guests of Mr . and Mra. George Freeland
Gathering at the home of George Logan and Bernice King were Ben Quisenherry, Syracuse, and Mf'. Clara Adams ,
for o Thanksgiving Day dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Milhoan, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Logan al(d Mrs. Sandy Sargent and Jooathan.
Dwight (Skip ) Logan, Jr. of Norfolk, Va., Is here for the
holiday weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Logan, Medicare's medical in·
and his two sons, Shawn and Bobby of Olarleston, W. Va . Mr. surance can help pay for
and Mrs . Logan drove to Charleston for the children Friday . outpatient hospital' services.

~B-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976

Racine.
..
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bisseli, Mrs. Mae ·McPeek and Mrs. ,
Leona Hensley , Lnng Bottom, spent Thanksgiving with Mr. · ~
and Mrs. Tom Groeneveld and son, Tommy, at Worthlngtoo. •
vLher ~"·· ·· w~re his .parents, Mr. and Mrs. William •
Groeneveld of Muskegon, Mich., and Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Bissell, Columbus.

tiALLJPOJJS - The opportunity to gather each week
day for fellowship and a hot,
nutritious noonday meal will

..

be avaDable to more senior
citizens in GaJJJa County due
to an increase in funding
received by the Col1l0ration

.'•....
·.. .·......
.
' .
'

-. : ~

'

POMEROY - Several
memhers of the Pomeroy
Seventh·day Adventist
Church, and their guests
gathe red in th e churc h
basement Sunday afternoon,
Nov . 21 lor a Thanksgiving
supper. Preceding the supper, prayer was offered by
Robert Green. The buffet
vegetarian potluck supper
was attended by Bob and
Elsie Lipscomb and c.hildren,
Eyria, Roher!, Daniel and
William , and Bo Johnson ,
Mason , W.Va., BobandDoris
Green
an d
c hlld ren ,
Stephanie, Mark and Crystal ,
Gallipolis: Conley Cole and
Burdell and Effie Black,
Pomeroy Route; Sarah
Drake, New Haven, W.Va. ;
Bob and Eloise Pickett and
children, Madolyn, Robert
and Lori , Darwin ; frma
Bales and . Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph White, Kyger.
Bob Green gave a reading,
and games were played with
prizes won by Irma Bales and
Miss Lori Pickett.

FIRST CHILD BORN
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Trotter, Mid·
dleport, announce the birth of
their first child Melanie
' Arnher, Nov. 9 at' 8:34 p.m.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Carroll
and
great•
grandmothers are Ida Carroll
and Evelyn Cooper all of
Beech Bottom w. v~ . There
is one great·great grand·
mother Stella Messer
Florida'. Paternal grand:
parents arc Mr . and Mrs.
John Trotter Gallipolis.
'

your bearings, Call me-your WELCOME WAGON Hostess
When you'Ve jusl'moved, you 're pressed for time. '

And the gilts, community and business information 1brina
will save your family time and money .

Let me hear from you soon.

. 4W~~qP,~
PH. 446· 1937

1'..·.

COAT. SALE

'

~

·:;
;

'

~·

f
f

AND JACKETS, All PURPOSE COATS

p,

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.p
'
P.
. ..
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....'

.......'.
'

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9

Use Your BankAmericard or
Prices Good thru Tuesday
Ma I
. s er Ch!rge .
OpenWeekDays
303 Upper River Rd
91il9
Across from Silver Bridge Piau
Sunday llil6
'----Get to know. us;
you11 like us. n•- - - - '
., ·

'

'.

.

. LONG COATS, PANT COATS, LEATHER COATS

,

SAV.E UP TO

5
crc
.
·
2 0

'/.

OFF

.

.

•

I

. ,''

'.'·..
' '

Lot our professional stylist give YO\l
oxpel'l attention on all tho latest
uni·sex heir styling trends , , , includ.
ing the thermal blow·slyle look.

~~~~~:;;_~:;;.~;;..• ;;.~;;;.~;.;;~~;;;_;.;;~~.:;.~;...;..;,;:. ......,.uu~~~ ··.: ~ ·
CUT &amp; BLOW-DRY
'

See Parade Mon. , -Nov. 29
Starting at6: oo p.m.

.

'

,•' '

·,.
'

MONDAY
NIGHT, NOV. 29

..

Hair-Styling
Compare. $'1.$15
Value
.

... ...

.95

,

• •

.

'

•'
'

.··,

• includes
shampoo,
&amp; style.
complete

This
weel
.:

• 1

•'

I

6

TO

9

PM·

''

'.''

.•'

!
•
••

,

$14
•
95
GIMME CURL---$14
95
FROSTING____ .~omplete

$20 Value Helene Curtis

ONLY AT INGELS FURNITURE

GED TEST SET
POINT PLEASANT - The
General Educa tion Qiploma
Test (GED ) Will be given at
the Mason County Vocational
Center in Point Pleasant
Friday, Dec. 3 from 6 p.m. to
10 p.m. and finish Saturday,
Dec. 4 from 9:30a.m. to 3:30
p.!)1. Participants must be
residents of West Virginia or
last attended a school in West
Virginia. Registration will be
conducted the week prior to
the test and participants
must show proof of age and
social sec uri ty number.
Registration fee is'$10.

ATTENDING FUNERAL
POMEROY - Gerald
Rought , Lincoln Hill,
Pomeroy, received word of
the death of his moiher, Mrs.
Guy Rough of Hesperia,
Mich. Mr. and Mrs . Rought
and children left Friday
morning to attend the funeral
on, Sunday.

·:.. ~~'w ;

-.

complete

Compare $25. Value . Pa inting or

$'9:9 5

Reg. $13-$18 Values

BUDGET PERM SALE--

,I

.,'
'
'

AND WE'VE GOT THEM ALL

1
I

MEN'S SWEATERS

Wools , Vinyls,
Corduroy ,
Nylon &amp; Leather

I

REDUCED

1.0% OFF
E2345

LADIES

•

DON and EDNA WILSON
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

NICHTOWL
t...-s_A.,..L.._E__, Now

SUBURBAN .
COATS

luxurlo1s Redl1ing Chair
...the Gift of Lifetime

B0111.E CUTIER

WESTERN AUTO STOR-ES

bread, butter, lemon cake,
lemon Icing, milk.
Thursday - Chicken and

lettuce, bread, butter, bread, butter, raisin cobbler,
chocolate chip cookies, milk . mllk.
Friday - !laked liver and
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.

· GALLJpQI.JS ...,. The Senior
Citizens Center, located at 220
Jackson Pike In the County
Home Building, Is open
Monday through Friday frolll
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule
of activities for this week is
as follows :
Monday , Nov . 29 - Olde
Tyme Chorus Practice, J.a
p.m.
Tuesday, Nov . 30 Quilting and Visiting , 9 a.m..a
p.m. ; Yam Cats and Dogs
Craft, (Gertrude Evans ,
lnstructor) , 1·3 p.m.
Wednesday , Dec . I ' Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m. ;
Card Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 2 Quilting, 9 a.m..a p.m.; Bible
study, 1 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 3 - Chair·
persons' Meeting, I p.m.;
Blood Pressure Check, 1:31).
2:30 p.m.; Art Class, 1-3
p.m.; Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Seniors' C(Kip and the
Craft Shop are open dally at .
12:30·1:30 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition
· Program serves the following
meals at 12 noon :
Monday - Braised beef
cuhes In mushroom sauce on
noodles, mixed vegetables,
bread, butter, peaches,
I'OOkies, milk.
' Tuesday
Smoked
'!"Usage, soup beans, mixed
fruit salad, cornbread,
butter, tapioca pudding . with
whipped topping , milk.
, Wednesday - Country
fried steak, mashed potatoes

•5a••

INGE·
L
S
FURNITURE
Open
9
Every Day

till p.m. MIDDLEPORT, OHif)

MON., NOV, 29

6 TO 9 P.M.

Wools &amp;
Polyester Knits

Ladies Pant Suits, Dress Suits.
S~irts , Dresses, Jackets. Coats,
Sweat.ers &amp; Blouses.

30% TO

-

DENIM

·Member of MiddlePOrt Merchants Amciation

20%

Misses 1/2 Sizes, Berkshire.
Rontini,
Kay
Hobnobber,
selection.
Wi'lidso r. An 'excellent
.

-

REDUCED 20%

ONE RACK

LAPIES BLOUSES
REDUCED 20%

REDUCED

20%

10% Discount from our regular prices
to all Senior Citizens with the
Golden Buckeye Card.

8AHR CLOTHIERS
"YOUR CHRISTMAS HEADQUARTERS"
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

brown

REGULAR PRICE
Assortment : stretch terry, T· shlrl
etc.
_ 98~
Msortment : double knits, nyester, etc.

$2N

...........

•ELNA AND WHITE
SEWING MACHINES
•CABINETS FOR HER
PORTABL~

•WISS KNIT SCISSORS
•ORITZ CUTTING
BOARDS

HURRY!
HURRY!

1J(Jr .

To The
Sewing Center.

"J4..1
~'
Mlr&gt;glf~

OPEN 6 TIL 9 PM .

NAME
BRAND

COME ONE. ; .
COME ALL - SEE THE
CHRISTMAS PARADE

FREE
DOUGHNUTS
AND
COFFEE

PAIR

SHOP
AND

SAVE
. · NOW!

IN GO
BOOTS

GROUP

DINGO BOOTS
DENIM-DENIM&amp; LEATHERLATIGO

Choose from Sever aI Styles

20%

'1499 PR..
** -li!IIr*1~*'~****~'**
*******
I GROUP

'J GROUP'-

NEW FALL

WOMEN'S
·SHOES

REDUCED 20%
LADIES
PANTSUITS

hJshed

so~ OFF

Women's Slippers

R£DUCED

\

.' LADIES DRESSES

REDUCED

MEN'S LEISURE
SUITS,
DRESS SUITS
&amp; SPORT
COATS

onions,

UNTIL9 P.M. MONDAY, NOV. 29

GREAT FOR HOLIDAY.
GIFT GIVING!

TOP COATS &amp;AU.WEATHER COATS

ONE RACK

·Sit "'"~• lean back; up comes the 1.. ,..t-Iel's ' "
rei a• ,i n the "llqatin; Cllllllorf' of thick cushioning te
relieve tired muscles e~~d rtslort ene;gy. Co•.t ..d In
ltother·like, washable •inyl. in' faYOrite color . choice.

On All Road Race
and Train Sets

MONDAY, NOV. 29- 6-9 P.M.

dumplings, buttered mixed

~

20%

·•DRESS &amp; CASUAL PANTS
REDUCED 20%

CHRISTMAS

M~N'S

JACKETS

. MEN'S
.

E2317

SUNDAY
REVIVAL at the Old Kyger
Free Will Baptist Church
beginning Sunday at 7 p.m.
Rev. Chester Lemley Is the
evangelist. Singing featured
nightly. Everyone welcome.
SPECIAL YOUTH service at
the Mercerville Baptist
church Sunday, 7:3fl p.m. A
young preacher, Rev . Randy
Templeton will · bring the
message . There will be
special singing by the youth
choir. All youth cordially
invited.
REVIVAL STARTS Sunday
at the Old Kyger Free Will
Baptist Church with the Rev.
Chester Lemley as speaker.
Special singers each night.
Services begin at 7 p.m. The
~ev. William Price, pastor,
mvites,the public.
LAFA VETTE White Shrine
rehearsal, ~ p.m. Sunday.

-GIFf WRAPPINGWe Issue Gift Certificat•s In Any Amount-

FOR

$699

~;::

6"TO 9 P.M.

EVERY SHAPE AND SIZE
CHAIR$ ~DR EVERY DECOR
STYLE·L~ADING FABRICS ....,.......

LAYAWAY

ONLY

.'.l··'·\.:;
' ,._.:

USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN
1

YES,YOUCAN

CHRISTMAS TREE
$} ~

~a~!~~!ts:l'~~rt~: s:~ic:.~

eluding transportatloo to ~nd
from the site and individual
escort assistance lot han·
dicapped persons.
Each week, reCreational
activities are scheduled as
well as a brief, voluntary
physical fitness program.
Shopping trips and rides to
doctors' and dentists'. offices
can be arranged . Nutrition
education (advise on how to
stay fit by maintalning a
healthful diet ) is offered once
a month. Also, Seniors may
refeive information about
other social services which
could be of help to them.
A limited numher of meals
can be sent out from the site
each day to elderly persons
who are ill or permanently
disabled and therefore unable
to take part in the congregate
meals program.
Volunteers play an lm·
portant part ·in the Senior
Nutrition Program, Mrs.
Casey said. They help in the

Coming
Events

POME)IOY - The au·
nual Christmas bataar of
tilt Meigs County Humane
Society wW be held Friday
and Saturdav. 10 a.m. to
4:3t p.m. at the Tbrllt Shop
across from the Pomeroy
Post Offlcr. All proceeds
will go to the animal
sheller building fund.

TOP QUALITY FASHIONS.
ALL OUR FAMOUS BRANDS

Ell04
2-GUN &amp; HOLSTER

PRE -ASSEMBLED

t

BAHRrS CLOTHIERS

you figure it, you'll delight the whole family! Come
ue our lavish
orroy of gilt choirs ... every st•le
·size t
1
I
I
s hope you d imagine . . .for every purse and purpose.
You'll find Contemporory, Colonia:, Pravinciol, Trodil·
iono!, Mediterronean dosigns .. . all expertly crafted
ond carefully toilored in exquisite decorator fabrics .

REDUCED .20%

$250

for Ohio Appalachian dining room, with trans·
Development (COAD) Senior portation, activit!.., record·
Nutrition Piokram.
keeping, and espeelally with
According to Dorothy delivering meals to homeCasey, site manager for the bound persons. Volunteers
. local Senior Nutrition may be of any age and Mrs.
Program, the congregate Casey says that many Seniors
meals site at the Senior themselves enjoy helping
Citizens Center In Gallipolis with the program. Relm·
has increased the numher of bursement for mileage Is
meals It Is able to serve from available to volunteers who
35 to 47:
use their own cars.
All persons 60 or over and
The COAD Senior Nutrition ,
their spouses are weleom~ to Program su~ontracts with
participate, Mrs. Casey said. Community Actioo Agencies
No set fee will be charged for throughout the Appalachian
the meals, but, each day they area of Ohio to serve meals to
attend, participants will be Senior Citizens at 35
encouraged to make a congregate sites In 26
donation in keeping with their counties. Its recent increase
ability to pay to help delray ln Title VII Older Americans
the cost ol their meal. Food Act funds received through
stamps may be donated in the Ohio Commission on
lieu of cash. ·
Aging bas enabled the COAD
Mrs. Casey stated that the program to open nine new
meals served at the site are congregate sites and expand
planned by a dietician existing programs, In·
provide one·thlrd of an creasing the ~umber of
elderly person's minimum elderly served daUy from
dally dietary requirements. · 1,050to1,738 - onepetcent of
They take Into account the the elderly population in each
food preferences of older folk of the participating counties.
and are planned on a six·
Persons interested In
week cycle so the same meal volunteering help or in
will not be served more than becoming participants In the
once during that period.
Senior Nutrition Program
A major goal of the Senior may ·ci•ll Dorothy Casey at
Nutrition Program, which is 446·7000 for more In·
funded under Title VII of the... formation.
Older Americans Act, is to :,;::::~:'ll
· ~~~~IIM!t!llii!81J!
assist the elderly to remain :~
lndependent In their own
homes as long as possible. A "

with gravy, sliced tomato

::::;:;::::,;::;: :;:~~,:~·:·:·:·:·&gt; salad, candied carrots, vege abies, peach halves on potatoes,. buttered peu,

ONE NIGHT ONLY - MONDAY, NOV. 29TH

Be a smarr ~onto! Choose 'o fine quality choir os the
perfect gif,t for mom or dod or for lhe home . Any way

CARDIGANS &amp; PULLOVERS

ONLY

,] •

.. · .

In your new town.
Don't waSte time wonderi ng abOut a faSt way lo eet

.,•..

Gal6polis; Ohio

300 Second. Ave.
.

'

Gallia nutrition program expanutng

:

Get a headstart

TERESA BIHL

•

PURSES

:

Values To $20.99

Save! During This ~ale

$399 ~ONLY

ALL

.

SALES

ANAL

DRESS SHOES

'999

*

1 GROUP

I GROUP
MEN'S

Pair

VALUES TO $21.99

•

~

WOMEN'S
SHOES

'9"20.99
1

~

I GROUP

MEN'S
SHOES

'4"

PAIR

YOUR THOM MeAN
SHOE STORE
I

heritage house

GIRLS'
SHOES

~

.. '3"

~

'

~*********** .......

tJ;

SELECTION

BOYS' SHOES

'3 99PAJB

BROKEN SIZES

�..
4-B-The SwulayTimes-Sentinel,Slll1day, Nov . 28, 1976
~:~,.";::;:*_:!·:·,·..;:::::::· ····•···....:.:-:-:-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~=:::=::~::.&lt;:=;~:'-:Vce :: ::eo :: : :::9....::

I

«

~

!f Community
8
Corner ~~:~e

I

I

•
POMEROY - Thanksgiving, that marvelous gateway to
Christmas, is over, but the glow lingers on.
And neither cold turkey sandwiches, turkey omelets,
baked turkey , turkey hash, turkey soup, nor turkey croquettes
can lessen the pleasure of the day or weekend spent together.
For at least two families, T)lanksgiving celebrations were
combined with the observance of wedding anniversaries:
Frances and Paul Smart celebrated 50 years t~geU1er , while
Ruth and George Holman observed their 25th anniversary, For
another Meigs County c.'&lt;iu ple, Clarence James Williams and
his wite, the former Jill Harris of Middleport, Thanksgiving
Day brought the birth of a son.
.
And lor the Arnold Richards family, there was much to he
thankful for . A patient at University Hospital, Arnold
underwent surgery last Monday lor the removal of a brain
tumor . The family reports ihe surgery was successful and that
the medical team foresees no comp lications. He will , of course,
remain hospitalized lor a time. Florence will stay in Columbus
with her daughter, Janice and her family . Ann has returned to
Middleport, and lhe Richards' third daughter, Jo Keels, and
her year old so n, .Myles, have now gone back to Denver.

,,

THE SOCIAL SCENE of the Bend area was marked with
family gatherings.
Enjoying turkey with ali the tr immfn's at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Don Hunnel arid son, Artie, Thanksgiving Day were
Mr. and Mrs. John Cunningham, Johnnie, Mark and Jim of
Gallipolis; Mrs . Bernice Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Phil Ohlinger,
Phil and Laura, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Warth, Jr., David,
Darrin and Amy, au · of Pomeroy; Miss Ann Oh linger,
Columbus; Mr.and Mrs. Mike Evans, Alicia, Cindy and Ryan,
Portland ; Mrs. Andrea Owens and Shari, Marshall , Mich .; and
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Evans and dau~htcr, Megan, Harrison·
ville. Missing from the family group was Arnold Evans who is
employed with a television station in New Zealand.
Joining Mr. and Mrs. Karl Grueser and Larry , Miners·
ville, for the holiday weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Bob Grueser
and daughter, Kimberly, of Caldwell, and Mrs. Welby Whaley ,
Pomeroy, R. D.
Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs .. Lewis Sauer
of Middleport were Mr . and Mrs . Robert L. Wiley, Gahanna;
Mr. and Mrs. James Hiney and Mary Ellen, also of Gahanna;
Lois Ann Sauer of Athens ; Mr. and Mrs . Jack Satterfield, Amy
and Kelly, Pomeroy, arid Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Swanson of
Soddy, Tenn., who are here for the holidays.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert W. Crow and daughter, Lori, were
Thanksgiving guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Hendershot of Gahanna .
Making Thanksgiving a very special occasion for Mr . and
Mrs. Wayne Rowe of Letart and Mr . and Mrs. Curtis Roush of
Minersville has heen the return of their children, Mr. and Mrs.
G. E. Sellers, Michael Allen and AmyDawn , from Germany.
After thelf VISit here they w1ll go to Ca hforma .
Mrs. Barbara Offutt drove to Martinsburg, Pa. to visit her
mother, Mrs. Eva Kauffman, fo r the holiday weekend.
For Thanksgiving dinner, Mr. and Mrs. James Euler
entertained his sister , Miss Allee l':ulcr and Mrs. Walter
Athey, Middleport.
.
Mr. and Mrs: James Crow •. Syra~use, jomed her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. R1chard Neutzhng, Lmcoln H1ll , for Thanks·
giving dinner .
Traveling to Bever ly for the traditional family dinner at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Meredith were Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Weher , David, home from Ohio University, and Mark,
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pickens, and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead, Juli and Jane, home from Ohio University, all of
Reedsv ille; Dr. and Mrs. Isaac Frydman, Columbus, and· Mr.
· and Mrs. Harold Sauer, J oy and Mary Ruth , Middleport. Also
home lor the holidays were Mr. and Mrs. Meredith's sons,
Roger of Beaumont, Texas, and Chuck of . L~xington, Ky . On
Saturday Joy Sauer left lor Ph oenix, Ariz. for a 10 day visit
with ~tepha nie Minor of Ch.eshire who is now employed tliere .
Mr~ and Mrs. Arnold 8. Wilson, Sherry 'and Sabrina,
Rutland , spent Thanksgiving with his parents, Mr. aild Mrs.
Arnold Wilson at Moundsville. They also visited the children's
great.grandmother , Mrs. Velma Landers .
Mrs. Rose Ginther of Pomeroy, Route 3, is spendi ng the
holiday weekend with her son, James Ginther, and his family.
Miss Erma Smith and Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart,

Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. John McLain, l.anca~ter , were
Mr. and Mrs. Hert Grimm of Letart Falls were joined for
'l11anksgiving dinne1· guests of Mrs. Stella Kloes.
Thunksgiving by their sons and families , Mr. and Mrs. Rohert
' Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. finger Keller and family Grimm , Christy and Amy, r-0lwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Steven
were their parents. Mr: and Mr~ . Norman Rose and Mr . and Grimm, Cambridge ; and Mr. and Mrs. Russell Grimm , Paula
Mrs. Ralph Keller, anct·Mr. and Mrs. Willard Wilson and Mr. and David. St. Clairsville.
and Mrs. Paul Orr.
Thanksgiving guests of Mr . and Mra. George Freeland
Gathering at the home of George Logan and Bernice King were Ben Quisenherry, Syracuse, and Mf'. Clara Adams ,
for o Thanksgiving Day dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Milhoan, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Logan al(d Mrs. Sandy Sargent and Jooathan.
Dwight (Skip ) Logan, Jr. of Norfolk, Va., Is here for the
holiday weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Logan, Medicare's medical in·
and his two sons, Shawn and Bobby of Olarleston, W. Va . Mr. surance can help pay for
and Mrs . Logan drove to Charleston for the children Friday . outpatient hospital' services.

~B-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976

Racine.
..
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bisseli, Mrs. Mae ·McPeek and Mrs. ,
Leona Hensley , Lnng Bottom, spent Thanksgiving with Mr. · ~
and Mrs. Tom Groeneveld and son, Tommy, at Worthlngtoo. •
vLher ~"·· ·· w~re his .parents, Mr. and Mrs. William •
Groeneveld of Muskegon, Mich., and Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Bissell, Columbus.

tiALLJPOJJS - The opportunity to gather each week
day for fellowship and a hot,
nutritious noonday meal will

..

be avaDable to more senior
citizens in GaJJJa County due
to an increase in funding
received by the Col1l0ration

.'•....
·.. .·......
.
' .
'

-. : ~

'

POMEROY - Several
memhers of the Pomeroy
Seventh·day Adventist
Church, and their guests
gathe red in th e churc h
basement Sunday afternoon,
Nov . 21 lor a Thanksgiving
supper. Preceding the supper, prayer was offered by
Robert Green. The buffet
vegetarian potluck supper
was attended by Bob and
Elsie Lipscomb and c.hildren,
Eyria, Roher!, Daniel and
William , and Bo Johnson ,
Mason , W.Va., BobandDoris
Green
an d
c hlld ren ,
Stephanie, Mark and Crystal ,
Gallipolis: Conley Cole and
Burdell and Effie Black,
Pomeroy Route; Sarah
Drake, New Haven, W.Va. ;
Bob and Eloise Pickett and
children, Madolyn, Robert
and Lori , Darwin ; frma
Bales and . Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph White, Kyger.
Bob Green gave a reading,
and games were played with
prizes won by Irma Bales and
Miss Lori Pickett.

FIRST CHILD BORN
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Trotter, Mid·
dleport, announce the birth of
their first child Melanie
' Arnher, Nov. 9 at' 8:34 p.m.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Carroll
and
great•
grandmothers are Ida Carroll
and Evelyn Cooper all of
Beech Bottom w. v~ . There
is one great·great grand·
mother Stella Messer
Florida'. Paternal grand:
parents arc Mr . and Mrs.
John Trotter Gallipolis.
'

your bearings, Call me-your WELCOME WAGON Hostess
When you'Ve jusl'moved, you 're pressed for time. '

And the gilts, community and business information 1brina
will save your family time and money .

Let me hear from you soon.

. 4W~~qP,~
PH. 446· 1937

1'..·.

COAT. SALE

'

~

·:;
;

'

~·

f
f

AND JACKETS, All PURPOSE COATS

p,

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.p
'
P.
. ..
J

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..·..
....'

.......'.
'

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'

9

Use Your BankAmericard or
Prices Good thru Tuesday
Ma I
. s er Ch!rge .
OpenWeekDays
303 Upper River Rd
91il9
Across from Silver Bridge Piau
Sunday llil6
'----Get to know. us;
you11 like us. n•- - - - '
., ·

'

'.

.

. LONG COATS, PANT COATS, LEATHER COATS

,

SAV.E UP TO

5
crc
.
·
2 0

'/.

OFF

.

.

•

I

. ,''

'.'·..
' '

Lot our professional stylist give YO\l
oxpel'l attention on all tho latest
uni·sex heir styling trends , , , includ.
ing the thermal blow·slyle look.

~~~~~:;;_~:;;.~;;..• ;;.~;;;.~;.;;~~;;;_;.;;~~.:;.~;...;..;,;:. ......,.uu~~~ ··.: ~ ·
CUT &amp; BLOW-DRY
'

See Parade Mon. , -Nov. 29
Starting at6: oo p.m.

.

'

,•' '

·,.
'

MONDAY
NIGHT, NOV. 29

..

Hair-Styling
Compare. $'1.$15
Value
.

... ...

.95

,

• •

.

'

•'
'

.··,

• includes
shampoo,
&amp; style.
complete

This
weel
.:

• 1

•'

I

6

TO

9

PM·

''

'.''

.•'

!
•
••

,

$14
•
95
GIMME CURL---$14
95
FROSTING____ .~omplete

$20 Value Helene Curtis

ONLY AT INGELS FURNITURE

GED TEST SET
POINT PLEASANT - The
General Educa tion Qiploma
Test (GED ) Will be given at
the Mason County Vocational
Center in Point Pleasant
Friday, Dec. 3 from 6 p.m. to
10 p.m. and finish Saturday,
Dec. 4 from 9:30a.m. to 3:30
p.!)1. Participants must be
residents of West Virginia or
last attended a school in West
Virginia. Registration will be
conducted the week prior to
the test and participants
must show proof of age and
social sec uri ty number.
Registration fee is'$10.

ATTENDING FUNERAL
POMEROY - Gerald
Rought , Lincoln Hill,
Pomeroy, received word of
the death of his moiher, Mrs.
Guy Rough of Hesperia,
Mich. Mr. and Mrs . Rought
and children left Friday
morning to attend the funeral
on, Sunday.

·:.. ~~'w ;

-.

complete

Compare $25. Value . Pa inting or

$'9:9 5

Reg. $13-$18 Values

BUDGET PERM SALE--

,I

.,'
'
'

AND WE'VE GOT THEM ALL

1
I

MEN'S SWEATERS

Wools , Vinyls,
Corduroy ,
Nylon &amp; Leather

I

REDUCED

1.0% OFF
E2345

LADIES

•

DON and EDNA WILSON
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

NICHTOWL
t...-s_A.,..L.._E__, Now

SUBURBAN .
COATS

luxurlo1s Redl1ing Chair
...the Gift of Lifetime

B0111.E CUTIER

WESTERN AUTO STOR-ES

bread, butter, lemon cake,
lemon Icing, milk.
Thursday - Chicken and

lettuce, bread, butter, bread, butter, raisin cobbler,
chocolate chip cookies, milk . mllk.
Friday - !laked liver and
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.

· GALLJpQI.JS ...,. The Senior
Citizens Center, located at 220
Jackson Pike In the County
Home Building, Is open
Monday through Friday frolll
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule
of activities for this week is
as follows :
Monday , Nov . 29 - Olde
Tyme Chorus Practice, J.a
p.m.
Tuesday, Nov . 30 Quilting and Visiting , 9 a.m..a
p.m. ; Yam Cats and Dogs
Craft, (Gertrude Evans ,
lnstructor) , 1·3 p.m.
Wednesday , Dec . I ' Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m. ;
Card Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 2 Quilting, 9 a.m..a p.m.; Bible
study, 1 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 3 - Chair·
persons' Meeting, I p.m.;
Blood Pressure Check, 1:31).
2:30 p.m.; Art Class, 1-3
p.m.; Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Seniors' C(Kip and the
Craft Shop are open dally at .
12:30·1:30 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition
· Program serves the following
meals at 12 noon :
Monday - Braised beef
cuhes In mushroom sauce on
noodles, mixed vegetables,
bread, butter, peaches,
I'OOkies, milk.
' Tuesday
Smoked
'!"Usage, soup beans, mixed
fruit salad, cornbread,
butter, tapioca pudding . with
whipped topping , milk.
, Wednesday - Country
fried steak, mashed potatoes

•5a••

INGE·
L
S
FURNITURE
Open
9
Every Day

till p.m. MIDDLEPORT, OHif)

MON., NOV, 29

6 TO 9 P.M.

Wools &amp;
Polyester Knits

Ladies Pant Suits, Dress Suits.
S~irts , Dresses, Jackets. Coats,
Sweat.ers &amp; Blouses.

30% TO

-

DENIM

·Member of MiddlePOrt Merchants Amciation

20%

Misses 1/2 Sizes, Berkshire.
Rontini,
Kay
Hobnobber,
selection.
Wi'lidso r. An 'excellent
.

-

REDUCED 20%

ONE RACK

LAPIES BLOUSES
REDUCED 20%

REDUCED

20%

10% Discount from our regular prices
to all Senior Citizens with the
Golden Buckeye Card.

8AHR CLOTHIERS
"YOUR CHRISTMAS HEADQUARTERS"
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

brown

REGULAR PRICE
Assortment : stretch terry, T· shlrl
etc.
_ 98~
Msortment : double knits, nyester, etc.

$2N

...........

•ELNA AND WHITE
SEWING MACHINES
•CABINETS FOR HER
PORTABL~

•WISS KNIT SCISSORS
•ORITZ CUTTING
BOARDS

HURRY!
HURRY!

1J(Jr .

To The
Sewing Center.

"J4..1
~'
Mlr&gt;glf~

OPEN 6 TIL 9 PM .

NAME
BRAND

COME ONE. ; .
COME ALL - SEE THE
CHRISTMAS PARADE

FREE
DOUGHNUTS
AND
COFFEE

PAIR

SHOP
AND

SAVE
. · NOW!

IN GO
BOOTS

GROUP

DINGO BOOTS
DENIM-DENIM&amp; LEATHERLATIGO

Choose from Sever aI Styles

20%

'1499 PR..
** -li!IIr*1~*'~****~'**
*******
I GROUP

'J GROUP'-

NEW FALL

WOMEN'S
·SHOES

REDUCED 20%
LADIES
PANTSUITS

hJshed

so~ OFF

Women's Slippers

R£DUCED

\

.' LADIES DRESSES

REDUCED

MEN'S LEISURE
SUITS,
DRESS SUITS
&amp; SPORT
COATS

onions,

UNTIL9 P.M. MONDAY, NOV. 29

GREAT FOR HOLIDAY.
GIFT GIVING!

TOP COATS &amp;AU.WEATHER COATS

ONE RACK

·Sit "'"~• lean back; up comes the 1.. ,..t-Iel's ' "
rei a• ,i n the "llqatin; Cllllllorf' of thick cushioning te
relieve tired muscles e~~d rtslort ene;gy. Co•.t ..d In
ltother·like, washable •inyl. in' faYOrite color . choice.

On All Road Race
and Train Sets

MONDAY, NOV. 29- 6-9 P.M.

dumplings, buttered mixed

~

20%

·•DRESS &amp; CASUAL PANTS
REDUCED 20%

CHRISTMAS

M~N'S

JACKETS

. MEN'S
.

E2317

SUNDAY
REVIVAL at the Old Kyger
Free Will Baptist Church
beginning Sunday at 7 p.m.
Rev. Chester Lemley Is the
evangelist. Singing featured
nightly. Everyone welcome.
SPECIAL YOUTH service at
the Mercerville Baptist
church Sunday, 7:3fl p.m. A
young preacher, Rev . Randy
Templeton will · bring the
message . There will be
special singing by the youth
choir. All youth cordially
invited.
REVIVAL STARTS Sunday
at the Old Kyger Free Will
Baptist Church with the Rev.
Chester Lemley as speaker.
Special singers each night.
Services begin at 7 p.m. The
~ev. William Price, pastor,
mvites,the public.
LAFA VETTE White Shrine
rehearsal, ~ p.m. Sunday.

-GIFf WRAPPINGWe Issue Gift Certificat•s In Any Amount-

FOR

$699

~;::

6"TO 9 P.M.

EVERY SHAPE AND SIZE
CHAIR$ ~DR EVERY DECOR
STYLE·L~ADING FABRICS ....,.......

LAYAWAY

ONLY

.'.l··'·\.:;
' ,._.:

USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN
1

YES,YOUCAN

CHRISTMAS TREE
$} ~

~a~!~~!ts:l'~~rt~: s:~ic:.~

eluding transportatloo to ~nd
from the site and individual
escort assistance lot han·
dicapped persons.
Each week, reCreational
activities are scheduled as
well as a brief, voluntary
physical fitness program.
Shopping trips and rides to
doctors' and dentists'. offices
can be arranged . Nutrition
education (advise on how to
stay fit by maintalning a
healthful diet ) is offered once
a month. Also, Seniors may
refeive information about
other social services which
could be of help to them.
A limited numher of meals
can be sent out from the site
each day to elderly persons
who are ill or permanently
disabled and therefore unable
to take part in the congregate
meals program.
Volunteers play an lm·
portant part ·in the Senior
Nutrition Program, Mrs.
Casey said. They help in the

Coming
Events

POME)IOY - The au·
nual Christmas bataar of
tilt Meigs County Humane
Society wW be held Friday
and Saturdav. 10 a.m. to
4:3t p.m. at the Tbrllt Shop
across from the Pomeroy
Post Offlcr. All proceeds
will go to the animal
sheller building fund.

TOP QUALITY FASHIONS.
ALL OUR FAMOUS BRANDS

Ell04
2-GUN &amp; HOLSTER

PRE -ASSEMBLED

t

BAHRrS CLOTHIERS

you figure it, you'll delight the whole family! Come
ue our lavish
orroy of gilt choirs ... every st•le
·size t
1
I
I
s hope you d imagine . . .for every purse and purpose.
You'll find Contemporory, Colonia:, Pravinciol, Trodil·
iono!, Mediterronean dosigns .. . all expertly crafted
ond carefully toilored in exquisite decorator fabrics .

REDUCED .20%

$250

for Ohio Appalachian dining room, with trans·
Development (COAD) Senior portation, activit!.., record·
Nutrition Piokram.
keeping, and espeelally with
According to Dorothy delivering meals to homeCasey, site manager for the bound persons. Volunteers
. local Senior Nutrition may be of any age and Mrs.
Program, the congregate Casey says that many Seniors
meals site at the Senior themselves enjoy helping
Citizens Center In Gallipolis with the program. Relm·
has increased the numher of bursement for mileage Is
meals It Is able to serve from available to volunteers who
35 to 47:
use their own cars.
All persons 60 or over and
The COAD Senior Nutrition ,
their spouses are weleom~ to Program su~ontracts with
participate, Mrs. Casey said. Community Actioo Agencies
No set fee will be charged for throughout the Appalachian
the meals, but, each day they area of Ohio to serve meals to
attend, participants will be Senior Citizens at 35
encouraged to make a congregate sites In 26
donation in keeping with their counties. Its recent increase
ability to pay to help delray ln Title VII Older Americans
the cost ol their meal. Food Act funds received through
stamps may be donated in the Ohio Commission on
lieu of cash. ·
Aging bas enabled the COAD
Mrs. Casey stated that the program to open nine new
meals served at the site are congregate sites and expand
planned by a dietician existing programs, In·
provide one·thlrd of an creasing the ~umber of
elderly person's minimum elderly served daUy from
dally dietary requirements. · 1,050to1,738 - onepetcent of
They take Into account the the elderly population in each
food preferences of older folk of the participating counties.
and are planned on a six·
Persons interested In
week cycle so the same meal volunteering help or in
will not be served more than becoming participants In the
once during that period.
Senior Nutrition Program
A major goal of the Senior may ·ci•ll Dorothy Casey at
Nutrition Program, which is 446·7000 for more In·
funded under Title VII of the... formation.
Older Americans Act, is to :,;::::~:'ll
· ~~~~IIM!t!llii!81J!
assist the elderly to remain :~
lndependent In their own
homes as long as possible. A "

with gravy, sliced tomato

::::;:;::::,;::;: :;:~~,:~·:·:·:·:·&gt; salad, candied carrots, vege abies, peach halves on potatoes,. buttered peu,

ONE NIGHT ONLY - MONDAY, NOV. 29TH

Be a smarr ~onto! Choose 'o fine quality choir os the
perfect gif,t for mom or dod or for lhe home . Any way

CARDIGANS &amp; PULLOVERS

ONLY

,] •

.. · .

In your new town.
Don't waSte time wonderi ng abOut a faSt way lo eet

.,•..

Gal6polis; Ohio

300 Second. Ave.
.

'

Gallia nutrition program expanutng

:

Get a headstart

TERESA BIHL

•

PURSES

:

Values To $20.99

Save! During This ~ale

$399 ~ONLY

ALL

.

SALES

ANAL

DRESS SHOES

'999

*

1 GROUP

I GROUP
MEN'S

Pair

VALUES TO $21.99

•

~

WOMEN'S
SHOES

'9"20.99
1

~

I GROUP

MEN'S
SHOES

'4"

PAIR

YOUR THOM MeAN
SHOE STORE
I

heritage house

GIRLS'
SHOES

~

.. '3"

~

'

~*********** .......

tJ;

SELECTION

BOYS' SHOES

'3 99PAJB

BROKEN SIZES

�..
,.

7·8-TheSWldayTimes-Sentinel, SWiday, Nov. 26, 1976
· '&amp;-B- TheSwiday TiJnes.,Sentinel, Swlday, Nov. 28, 1976

Gallia Diary.

Riverview club installs officers

• •

Continued from page B-2
of skin: nonnal,dry,oily ,agingand acne and blemish.
ALl. TilE PRODUCI'S are made from organic substanc"es
and work with water in order w take advantage of natural
moisture, and batance natural sebum loll) and water in the
skin. The products are scientifically' compoWided w maintain
the protective natural acid Ph balance of skin. No soap is used
because soap. is felt to be lllo drying.

LAURA MIU.ER

A FREE SKIN care analysis will be given to any
interested woman, and aU the operalllrs at Eva's bave been
trained ~ give expert advice by Margl Newton, a
representative oll..a Maur, the Minneapolis: Minn. company
that manufactures the product, WhUe Miss Newton was in
Gallipolis, she emphasized that in the United States, too many.
women tend to cover up problem areas in skin. Instead, she
said, women should try for clean, healthy skin which wUI, in
turn, help makeup enhance.

•

Speaker
announced

ASANTA's USED loy shopwiU be sponsored by the Junior
Altruriam Woman's League of Jackson. Saturday; Dec. 4.
Offered lor sale will be a large selection of barely used toys
.
including a small two wheel bike, play toys and dolls. The sale
will be held at296 East Main St., Jackson with shopping hours
from IOa.m. Ill 4p.m. Allproceedsfrom this sale will be used
.
to support the league's charities.
POMEROY - Mrs. Lsura
·
Smiley Miller of Bay Village,
Ohio. president of the Ohio
State Division, American year tei'm as state president. Teachers Association, North·
For the past 16 years Mrs. eastern Ohio Teachers
Association of University
Miller
has taught at the Association, Ohio Education
Women, will be guest speaker
Hayes
Elementary
School In Association, National
at a 12 noon luncheon to be
Lakewood.
She
is
a
graduate Education Association, Music
held on Dec. 4 at the Meigs
of
the
Lake
Erie
College
lor Educators' National Con·
Inn, Pomeroy.
ference, anci Ule Lakewood
Women
where
she
received
The Middleport • Pomeroy
Historical Society. Sbe is
her
degree
In
psychology
with
Area Branch of the AAUW
active with The Lakewood
minors
ln
music
and
drama,
will host the luncheon with
Uttle Theater in production
and
received
her
master's
their guests to be members of
and
stage managing.
degree from Case Western
the Gallipolis Branch.
Mrs. Miller has been active Reserve lri education.
in the AAUW for many years
Mrs. Miller hthroughout
.as tr. ave.led ·
,.... w
. .••
having served on numerous .extensively
committees In the Cleveland Europe. She spent a year in
.
branch of which she Is a France directing and staging
plays
lor
Special
Services,
u.
member as well as the state
S. Army, In Orleans, Fr.ance.
organization.
POMEROY - Monday,
She assisted in forming She holds, a certificate in the
National
Power
Squadron
for
·
Nov.
29, Square Dance, 12:30· Cuyahoga Cou nty Intercompletion
of
three
years'
3
p.m.
Branch CoWicil and has been
Tuesday, Nov. 30, Physical
its consultant for the past five work in navigation.
Her hobbies are swimming, Fitness, 10:45 a.m.; Gary
years. During the past year
Mrs. Miller has made ap- traveling, reading, boating Wolfe talk on "Over the
proximately 35 branch visits and gardening. She is a Counter Drugs," II a.m.;
as consultant, Divisl.on member of Delta Kappa Chorus practice, 12 :15·2 p.m.
Wednesday , Dec. I representative and speaker. Gamma Society, Women's
Equity
Action
League,
Social
Security RepresenShe served as president of the
Commission
on
the
Status
of
tative,
9:30
a.m.-12:30 p.m,;
Cleveland Branch from 1966Women,
Inc.,
Lakewood
Christmas
Bazaar,
10 a.m.-3
70 and is currently in a two

~- · · ~?1·

Sr. Ctttzens
Calendar

The Shoe Cafe
I!

,

I

L

, . .,~~
.

Mr.. and Mr.·o.
D·nn••nr
L. Kinaer11
"
"'
6 · J
V&lt;&gt;

MZS•S Vanco weds
Denver L. Kingery

·

GALLIPOLIS
The
marriage of Miss Sandra S.
Yanco, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Vanco of Rt. 2,
Bidwell, to Denver L.
Kingery, son of Mrs. Edna
Kingery of Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
p.m.; Games, 12:30-2 p.m.
Thursday , Dec. 2 Physical Fitness, 10:4~ a.m .;
Christmas Bazaar, 10 a.m. -7
p.m.; Pancake and sausage
supper, 4-7 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 3- Christmas
Bazaar, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. ; Art
Class,
10·11 :30
a.m.;
Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
The Senior Citizens Center
i.s open Monday through
Friday from 8:30a.m. to .4:30
p.m.
Monday - Braise.d beef
cubes In mushroom sauce on
noodles, tossed salad with
dressing, whipped gelatin,
bread, butter, milk.
Tuesday - Baked ham
slices with raisin sauce,
buttered sweet potatoes,
mixed fruit salad, tapioca
pudding with whipped topping, cornbread, butter, milk:
Wednesday - Country
fried steak, mashed potatoes
with gravy, sliced tomato
sa )ad, candled carrots, lemon
cake with lemon icing, bread,
butter, milk.
Thursday - Chicken and
dumplings, buttered frozen
mixed vegetables, peach
halves on lettuce, chocolate
chip cookies, bread, butter,
milk.
Friday- - Tuna salad
sandwich, potato chips,
buttered peas, raisin cobbler,
bread, butter, milk.

.

LafayeHe

Mall

SON BORN
GALI.IPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Cody R. Boothe, Eureka
Star Rt ., are aMolillcing the
birth of their second son,
Bretl Allen Nov . 19 at Holter
Medical Center. The infant
weighed eight pounds, seven
and one-hair o~~nces. Mr. and

.

Gallipolis
Ohio

8"Kt£~

The average length of
hospital stays of persons
eligible for Medicare in 1975
was 10.5 days.

and the late Mittlerd Kingery
was solemnized Friday, Oct.
29 at the Gallipolis Chrislian ·
Church on SR 588, Gallipolis.
The ~ouble-ring ceremony
was performed by the Rev,
PeMy .Coburn. · Music was
provided by Mrs. Pat Elardo.
The . bride, who was given
away by her brother, Charles
Vanco, wore a coral gown
with white lace featuring an
empire waistline and long
sleeves. Her headpiece was a
headband of Rowers con·
sisting of 'Carnations tinted
the color of her dress and
yellow daisies. She carried a
spray of carnalions tinted the
color of her dress, yellow
daisies, and baby's breath.
Mrs. Linda· Lane, friend of
the bride, served as the
matron of honor. She wore a
floor length dress of nora!
design and carried a nosegay
colored to match the bride's
bouquet.
Lsrry Lane, friend of the
groom, was the best man.
The mothers of the bride
and groom wore street length
dresses with corsages of
tinted carnations.
·A reception followed in the
fellowship room of the church
where the bride's table beld a
· four tier wedding cake with
the tradititma,I bride and
groom and decorated with
flowers to. match her bridal
bouquet. The cake was made
by her mother, Mrs. Joe
Vanco. Punch, nuts and mints
were served along with the
cake. Assisting at the
reception were~Cher.yl Yancoand Connie.Kingery, sistersin-law of the bride and Janet
Merry, sister of the bride.
Many gifts were received
and acknowledged. The
couple are at home to their
friends at Eureka. Mr.
Kingery is employed at the
Kyger Creek Power Plant
and the new Mrs. K.ingery is
at home.

~EEDSVILLE
Installation
of
officers
highlighted the November
meeting of the Riverview
Garden Club at Ule home of
Mrs. Warren Pickens.
Mrs. Walter Brown and
Mrs. Ernest Whitehead
presented a ceremony to
install the new officers who
are : co-presidents, Mu.
Gene Young and Mrs. Donald
Putman; vice president, Mrs.
David Chadwell; secretary,
Mrs.
Roy
Hannum ;
treasurer, Mrs. Gene Wilson ;
Rower fund, Mrs. R. E.
Williams; publicity, Mrs.
Lyle Balderson and librarian,
Mrs. Claremont Harris. Red
carnatlona were presented
each officer from Mrs. Brown
and Mrs. Whitehead .
Tbe club prayer and song
" Julia Howard Matheral''
were used for devotions led
by Mrs. Whitehead. Year·
·book covers were judged with
Mrs. Hannum receiving first
prize, secolld, Mrs. Harliss .
Frank; third, Mrs. Wilson
and honorable mention, Mrs.
Ronald Cowdery.
Dues were collected, and
plans made for the aMual
Christmas tree lighting.
Home made cookies were
exchanged for roll call. Gifts
were brought for Athens
Mental Health Center. Green
Thumb notes wlll be taken
care of by Mrs. Hannum for
Jan. 21. Thank-you notes
were read from the Comm•nity Builders Club for the
club's donation of the
shrubbery placed near the
historical marker, and lroin
Mrs. Harris and Mrs .

Balderson for gifts received ,
while they were patients in
the hospital.
The ChriBtmas party will
be Dec. 14 at the home of Mrs.
Donald Myers, w!Ul a gilt
ezchange ·amOng members.
For the program Mrs.
Harutum presented an article
on ways to attract birds and
Mrs. Wilson and · Mrs .
Balderson
conducted
Christmas workshop on
carolers dressed in red and
white. Each member made
one.

li:
~

serving as hostesses were
Mrs. Putman and Mrs.
Balderson. Refreshments of
banana split cake, punch and
coffee were served to Mrs.
Blse, Mrs. Brown, Mrs.
Cowdery, Mrs. Frank, Mrs.
Herman Grossnlckle, Mrs.
HaMurn, Mrs. Myers, Mrs.
Thomas Spencer, Mrs.
Whltehe.ad, Mrs. Denver
Weber, MI'S. Wilson, Mrs.
Young , Mrs. R. E. Williams, ·
and Mrs. Plcke!IJ · by Ule
hosteSses. The door prize
went to Mrs. Whitehead.

LIST WITH IITTALA IARWARI_

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a
NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY INDUCfEES - Five
seniors were inducted inw the Kyger Creek National Honor

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CHESHIRE -Five seniors
were inducted into Ule Kyger
Creek National Honor Society
following impressive
ceremo11ies Wednesday af·
ternoon in the high school
gym.
Inducted .were Tony
Shamblin, son of Mr. and .
Mrs. Jerry Nibert, Rt. I,
Gallipolis; Kay Hager ,
daughter of Mrs. Marcia
Hager, Cheshire, and Harold
Hager of Racine ; Rick
Ridenour, son of Mr.' and
Mrs. Claude Ridenour, Rt. I,
Cheshire; Carol Co1eman,
daughter' of Mr. and Mrs.
George Coleman, Rt. I,
Cheshire, and Doris Hively,
deughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Hively, Rt. I,
Gallipolis.
They were inducted
following
a program
presented by present society
members Becky Polcyn of
character; Steve Baird,
leadership, Steve Darst,
service and PaUline White,
scholarship.

:a.

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Vl

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iilt&lt;tl ,t\ llll,l d Ill' II ;lt·..,i~ n - (jJ\IS~t\ - :ntti l'l l l:H l'~ IIll' lil~ l l'
till' fu tut"L'. ( iA ISSf\ i~ m;Kk h1 1-initi.:-.h ma ~ l l'r cr:tlh nn:n
t li' lw: tl ll if Ill . 11 il-!ll·ljllillit y ~l i t :-.-. . .Ij_
, l'll~~l'li _ha-.,l' 11\1~ it) '-olli rl'd
h_\ th l' lllilllll lain -&gt;ul Laplo111d. Gi lt-pitd.:d. n:ml! i'o\1' ;!i 1in~.
T, lii:O.l lilt' :-. pl'ci; li tX' I opll' t i ll ~till !' ~I fl li '-o l 1\ i I h (;.'\ 1S\/\.
Lt h 1k f1 II' thi ~ 111ark oll. qu:tlil \ :

111'

finland

Where Else-

Peddler's Pantry

The induction also followed
Ule school's aMual Thanks·
giving program. Mrs. Barbara Stewart's junior .high
chorus .presented four songs,
"Country Roads," 11 Wbat is
America," ''Sunshine on My
Shoulders" and "Let there be
Peace." They were ac·
companied at .the piano and
on guitars played by Jeff
Abshire , Bill Abshire, Robbie
Waugh, Jeff Ward and Elaine
Ward.
Following the Thanks·
giving servit:e, a reception
was h~ld in the school's home
economics room for parents,
the new members, old
members, faculty members
and Principal Robert L.
LsMing. Former ··members
preSent were Fred Westfall,
George Thompson, Debbie
Baird, Cynthia Clarke and
Dale Rothgeb, Jr. Other
guests were Mrs. Charlene
Darst and Mrs. White.
Mrs. Fay Sauer is advisor
lor the National Honor
Society.

Gallipolis, Ohio · ,
~~

.....----..,.-----~--:-:-----; · a

A Diamond Ensemble. . .

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for the well dressed woman
She'l l always 'look her best in our coordinating
Diamond Clusters. elegantly set in white gold .
4M. (Xl5941 Pendant. 1/5 Car~! Tot. Wt. , 14K Gold. $178.75
4N. {X3373) Ring , t /2 Carat Tot. Wt.. !OK Gold, $375.00
4P.(X 15951 Earrings. 1/ 4 Carat Tot. WI ., 14K Gold, $250.00
Jewelry enlarged to show detail.

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LAYAWAY

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CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE
342 Second Ave.

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,~

We Are Participating In
Gallipolis Shop-A-Rama

Society recently . They were, left to right, Tony Shamblin,
Kay Hager, Doris Hively, Carol Coleman and Rick Ridenour.

Youth group
meets Tuesday ·

MARDI SHEETS

Birthday
observed

CHESHIRE - The .Old
Kyger YQuth Group held its
meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m.
with !\lark Price leading the
Lord's Prayer.
'The secretary's report was
by Cindy Pri ce and
treasurer's report was by
Sharon Hively. New and old
business was discussed , and
discussion held on Revelation
9:1-21. A game of Hollywood
Squares was played. Closing
prayer was by Robert Price.
1Se\'enteen members wj!re
present. The next meeting
will be Dec. 7 at 7 p.m. All
youth invited. - Reporter,
Charlene Hiyely.

LAST SUNDAY'S winner or a Black &amp; Docker Workmate
portable workbench at Spring Valley' Hardward was Vicky
Bush or Gallipolis. Vi cky, whose name was .entered by a
relative, is shown here with Llmla Ramey of llw hlonlware
stpre, Vicky is the daughter or Mr. and Mrs. GnylandBush.

It' s Christ mas ... It's Bu lova watch tIm e, th e
glfl of beauty, accuracy, depend ability
and style . We offer an unsurpassed
selection ol all the latest models ...
in every price range .

Jean Sheets, Casie Sheets,

Mr.

and

Mrs . Michael

Carleton, and Chris &lt;:md

POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. Jawn Carleton.
David L . Sheets recently · Sending gifts were Miss
entertained with a party Esther Dill, Pomeroy; Mr.
hollllring their Llaught~r. and Mrs. Ernest Mi ller, Scott
Mardi Lynn, on her second and Doug, Columbus; Mr.
· bitthday.
·
and Mrs. Eugene Smith ·a11tl
Gifts were presented to . Dallas, Mansfield ; and Mr.
Mandl, · and cake and ice arid Mr·s. Ezra E. Sheets,
cream were served lo the Reedsville.
Mrs. Franees Car leton Uf
guests, Mrs. Faye Watson
and Jim, Mt·.s. Frances Pomeroy, and Mr . Hllll Mrs,.
Carleton, Sandy Carleton, Ezra Sheets ur Reedsville are
Sally Cao·ieton, Mrs. Robert Mandi 's grHndparc11ts. Mrs.
Scarberry and Gina, Jim Christina Hall ur Kenna , W.
Carleton, Lisa Pullins, Mrs . Va. is a grcat·graiH.hnothcr.

FRYPAN WINNER - Smith B. !l unyanor Gallipoli s wa s
B recent Spring Valley Htu·dware grand pr~z e \Yinncr of· a
Trail Box skillet and a Black &amp; De cker dr ill set . Htinyan is
shown here with .Jan e Dauiel of lhe hardware store.

FREE

These enchanting letters will bring the
wonder of Santa Claus to lhe little boys
and girls in your life. They will know th e
letter is from Santa because

The Proof is in the Postmark!
. Visit our Santa Claus Posl Otlice. Select one of our gay,
colorful lette rs and envelopes, FREE! Address, stamp and
mail it in our special ma.il box. We will have il postmarked
from Santa Claus, Ind iana. This is our way of say~ng Merry
Christmas to children of all ages.
Letters available at all Gallipolis Retail
Merchant Members. Santa Claus Post
Office located in front of Haskins- Tanner

Co.

.

GaUipolis, Ohio

SHOP EARLY FOR CHRISTMAs
IN DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS ..•
LAYAWAYS INJIITED

REEDSVILLE ~ Mr. and
Mrs, Wilbert B. Roberts of
Hockingport announce ·. the
marriage of their daughter,
Lois Dian to Frederick Bise,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Bise of Reedsville.
The double ring ceremony
was held Nov. 12 in the
Evan gelical Methodist
Church at Little Hocking. The

Jeweler•
~ $ECOND AVENUI! • ~'141 tl
AMERICAN QEU SOCIETY

*

DOWNTOWN MURPHY'S STORE HOURS

Miss Roberts wed

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TilE FIRST BffiTHDAY
of Amy ' Dawn Sellers,
daughter· of Mr. and Mrs.
G. E. Sellers of German~
was observed recently at
the home of her grand·
parent1, Mr. 'and Mrs.
Curlls Roush. Attendtog
the celebration were uncles
and auati, Eddie Sellers,
Steve Sellers, JohD Sellers,
Debbie Sellers, Susie
Sellers, Jell Sellers, Ernie
Se.liera, all of Letart; Mr.
aad Mn. Paul Reltmlre,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lee, ·
and Robert Staats of
Pomeroy; Mr. aad Mn.
Curtis Roush, MlnersvUle;
Sylvia Roush, Mlnersv111e,
aad Mlebael Allen Sellers,
. brother of the honored
guest. Seadlllg gifts were
Amy's grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Rowe.

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Five seniors taken into society

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State &amp; Thir

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for tile limeofjolj

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BU.LOVA

iittala designs for the future

iittala

Mrs. Boothe have another
son, Cody Todd , age. 3.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Murray E.
Church , Cro wn City and
paternal grandparenu are
Mr. and Mrs. Olin Boothe,
Pomero)'.

FOR YOUR

minister was Carl Me· ·
Pherson .
TM bride wore a white,
long sleeve gown and carried
yellow roseliuds and white
carnations. Serving as maid
· of honor was Loretta Smith
and best man was Dale
Roberts. The flower girl was
Sibyl Foster, niece of the
groom.

OPEN UNTIL 9 PM

SHOPPING
CONVENIENCE

~---NOVEMBER -~D;...;..E..;....CE_,M~BE...__ _,__----~

Miss Eshenaur to sing
POINT PLEASANT, W. . is a graduate of Kyger Creek.
Va. - Julie Eshenaur, High School, and Gallipolis
daughter of Mrs. Wanda Business College.
For three years she sang at
Eshenaur and Dr. Oliver
"Gallla
Country" theatre.
Eshenaur, will appear before
the Point Pleasant Woman' s She is a member of the Grace
Club as guest ,soloist at its United Methodist Chu rch
December meeting. Julie, a where she is a soloist, is in the
junior at Rio Grande College, choir and band at Rio
Grande. Julie also tea ches
~ -~iano and organ.
,
Mrs. Edie Ross of
G'allipolis will accompany
MEETING SET
her.
GALLIPOLIS - The Rev.
William Midd,leswarth,
chairman of the membership
committee or the GalliaMelgs Community Action
Agency board of directors,
aMounced there will ,be a
meetin g to
elect' a
representative or low-income
groups to serve on· the hoard
of directors of the agency in
Gallia County, Nov. 30
at
7:30
o.m. ~ at
the Washington Elementary
School Cafeteria located at
450 Fourth Ave. All persons
receiving services from the
community action agency are
encouraged to participate in
this meeting.

28

Mon .
29

1 ~6

9:30~ 9

Sun.

Sun.
5
1-6

Sun.
. 12
1-6
Sun.
19

1-6

Tues.
30
9:30-9

Mon.
6
9:30-9

Tues
7
9:30-9

Mon .
13
9:30-9

Tues.
14
9:30-9

r

Mon .
20
9: 30·9

Thurs .

Fri.

1

2

3

4

9:30-9

9:30-9

9:30-9

9:30-9

Wed.
8
9: 30 ~9

Thurs.
9
9: 30-9

Fri.
10
9 :30-9

Sat.
9:30-9

Thurs.
16
9:30-9

Fri.
17
9:30-9

Sat.
18
9: 30-9

Thurs .
23
9: 30 -9

Fri.

Wed.
15
9:30-9
Wed .
22
9: 30·9

Tues.
" 21

9:30-9

Sat.

Wed

24

- 9:30-5

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CHimtM

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THE LASTING GIFT!

STRATOLOU-NGER &amp;BASSETT RECLINERS

GREAT CHRISTMAS
GIFT,;_

•U.OTHING
by Cricketteer

FLEECE liNED

•LEISURE SUITS
by Resron

BOOT

•SLACKS

by Far~h

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This great fleece lined boo!
will keep your feet nice and
warm . It can be worn as a
casual boo! or a dress boot.
Choose between tan or black
cherry.

I

•SHIRTS
by Arrow

BIRTHSTONES for
Mothers &amp; Grandmothers

by Paris

ACRYLIC ORNAMENTS
lholl

~pMkl e

w1th ever y change of light . ·
I.

Spring V.llll!y Pl,ll,l

4411-

n:u

•SOCKS

by Intenwilen

,

Made wit h the look of engraved . crystaL Each
ornarhen l cumes wifh R polished rnetal hanging loop.
W~ lnut hol 'led st and is available.
' .

in Black Cherry.

by Stetson

•BELTS
~­

Also, We Have a Fleece' Lined Chukka Boot

eHATS

~ours

Ho l dav
Mun . Sat.
1~

9.

Fare_...

•SHOES
by Freeman

•IAYA!m'

ot.IIIKAIUJCMD
•IIASIU CHAICE
OPEII FRIDAY&amp;
MOIIDAYn~ IP.M.

"

Ca pt ure her hea rl w1t h an exqu iSite
10 11:1 . or 14 k.t. ye llow or whtt o gold rmg
that embraces co lorful h1rt hs tones
Each stone represen ts a loved on e to
Mathe~ · or Gr an dmoth er tha t she 'll
tr easure ' for ever!
There 's a birt hstone ru1g M a iJ nhl e to
suit every styl e. UHiW, &lt;1nd hu1lget sliH1
1ng .as low as $32 •.50
See the labul ou ::. PA LOMAR Bortlo stone

DEADLINE TODAY
POMEROY - Members of
the CathOlic Women's Club of
Sacred Hearl Church must
phone Susan Blaker or
Barbara Smith no later than
today on their reservations
for the annual Christmas
pal1y to be held Dec. 2 at the
Meigs Inn.

REMEMBER
ASMAU. IXMN
PAYMENT WILL
HOLD ANY ITEM

SHOP

DANCE SET
CHESTER - The Chester
Rtnq Coii P.r. tt on 111
nre Department will stage a
publi c squa re dance on
Saturday, Dec. 18, at the
A~r.Ji• • • • •~~~~-~O~h~io~· &lt;.'hester Elementary School
•
beginning at 9 p.m.

TAWNEY JEWELERS

J,

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7·8-TheSWldayTimes-Sentinel, SWiday, Nov. 26, 1976
· '&amp;-B- TheSwiday TiJnes.,Sentinel, Swlday, Nov. 28, 1976

Gallia Diary.

Riverview club installs officers

• •

Continued from page B-2
of skin: nonnal,dry,oily ,agingand acne and blemish.
ALl. TilE PRODUCI'S are made from organic substanc"es
and work with water in order w take advantage of natural
moisture, and batance natural sebum loll) and water in the
skin. The products are scientifically' compoWided w maintain
the protective natural acid Ph balance of skin. No soap is used
because soap. is felt to be lllo drying.

LAURA MIU.ER

A FREE SKIN care analysis will be given to any
interested woman, and aU the operalllrs at Eva's bave been
trained ~ give expert advice by Margl Newton, a
representative oll..a Maur, the Minneapolis: Minn. company
that manufactures the product, WhUe Miss Newton was in
Gallipolis, she emphasized that in the United States, too many.
women tend to cover up problem areas in skin. Instead, she
said, women should try for clean, healthy skin which wUI, in
turn, help makeup enhance.

•

Speaker
announced

ASANTA's USED loy shopwiU be sponsored by the Junior
Altruriam Woman's League of Jackson. Saturday; Dec. 4.
Offered lor sale will be a large selection of barely used toys
.
including a small two wheel bike, play toys and dolls. The sale
will be held at296 East Main St., Jackson with shopping hours
from IOa.m. Ill 4p.m. Allproceedsfrom this sale will be used
.
to support the league's charities.
POMEROY - Mrs. Lsura
·
Smiley Miller of Bay Village,
Ohio. president of the Ohio
State Division, American year tei'm as state president. Teachers Association, North·
For the past 16 years Mrs. eastern Ohio Teachers
Association of University
Miller
has taught at the Association, Ohio Education
Women, will be guest speaker
Hayes
Elementary
School In Association, National
at a 12 noon luncheon to be
Lakewood.
She
is
a
graduate Education Association, Music
held on Dec. 4 at the Meigs
of
the
Lake
Erie
College
lor Educators' National Con·
Inn, Pomeroy.
ference, anci Ule Lakewood
Women
where
she
received
The Middleport • Pomeroy
Historical Society. Sbe is
her
degree
In
psychology
with
Area Branch of the AAUW
active with The Lakewood
minors
ln
music
and
drama,
will host the luncheon with
Uttle Theater in production
and
received
her
master's
their guests to be members of
and
stage managing.
degree from Case Western
the Gallipolis Branch.
Mrs. Miller has been active Reserve lri education.
in the AAUW for many years
Mrs. Miller hthroughout
.as tr. ave.led ·
,.... w
. .••
having served on numerous .extensively
committees In the Cleveland Europe. She spent a year in
.
branch of which she Is a France directing and staging
plays
lor
Special
Services,
u.
member as well as the state
S. Army, In Orleans, Fr.ance.
organization.
POMEROY - Monday,
She assisted in forming She holds, a certificate in the
National
Power
Squadron
for
·
Nov.
29, Square Dance, 12:30· Cuyahoga Cou nty Intercompletion
of
three
years'
3
p.m.
Branch CoWicil and has been
Tuesday, Nov. 30, Physical
its consultant for the past five work in navigation.
Her hobbies are swimming, Fitness, 10:45 a.m.; Gary
years. During the past year
Mrs. Miller has made ap- traveling, reading, boating Wolfe talk on "Over the
proximately 35 branch visits and gardening. She is a Counter Drugs," II a.m.;
as consultant, Divisl.on member of Delta Kappa Chorus practice, 12 :15·2 p.m.
Wednesday , Dec. I representative and speaker. Gamma Society, Women's
Equity
Action
League,
Social
Security RepresenShe served as president of the
Commission
on
the
Status
of
tative,
9:30
a.m.-12:30 p.m,;
Cleveland Branch from 1966Women,
Inc.,
Lakewood
Christmas
Bazaar,
10 a.m.-3
70 and is currently in a two

~- · · ~?1·

Sr. Ctttzens
Calendar

The Shoe Cafe
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Mr.. and Mr.·o.
D·nn••nr
L. Kinaer11
"
"'
6 · J
V&lt;&gt;

MZS•S Vanco weds
Denver L. Kingery

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GALLIPOLIS
The
marriage of Miss Sandra S.
Yanco, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Vanco of Rt. 2,
Bidwell, to Denver L.
Kingery, son of Mrs. Edna
Kingery of Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
p.m.; Games, 12:30-2 p.m.
Thursday , Dec. 2 Physical Fitness, 10:4~ a.m .;
Christmas Bazaar, 10 a.m. -7
p.m.; Pancake and sausage
supper, 4-7 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 3- Christmas
Bazaar, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. ; Art
Class,
10·11 :30
a.m.;
Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
The Senior Citizens Center
i.s open Monday through
Friday from 8:30a.m. to .4:30
p.m.
Monday - Braise.d beef
cubes In mushroom sauce on
noodles, tossed salad with
dressing, whipped gelatin,
bread, butter, milk.
Tuesday - Baked ham
slices with raisin sauce,
buttered sweet potatoes,
mixed fruit salad, tapioca
pudding with whipped topping, cornbread, butter, milk:
Wednesday - Country
fried steak, mashed potatoes
with gravy, sliced tomato
sa )ad, candled carrots, lemon
cake with lemon icing, bread,
butter, milk.
Thursday - Chicken and
dumplings, buttered frozen
mixed vegetables, peach
halves on lettuce, chocolate
chip cookies, bread, butter,
milk.
Friday- - Tuna salad
sandwich, potato chips,
buttered peas, raisin cobbler,
bread, butter, milk.

.

LafayeHe

Mall

SON BORN
GALI.IPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Cody R. Boothe, Eureka
Star Rt ., are aMolillcing the
birth of their second son,
Bretl Allen Nov . 19 at Holter
Medical Center. The infant
weighed eight pounds, seven
and one-hair o~~nces. Mr. and

.

Gallipolis
Ohio

8"Kt£~

The average length of
hospital stays of persons
eligible for Medicare in 1975
was 10.5 days.

and the late Mittlerd Kingery
was solemnized Friday, Oct.
29 at the Gallipolis Chrislian ·
Church on SR 588, Gallipolis.
The ~ouble-ring ceremony
was performed by the Rev,
PeMy .Coburn. · Music was
provided by Mrs. Pat Elardo.
The . bride, who was given
away by her brother, Charles
Vanco, wore a coral gown
with white lace featuring an
empire waistline and long
sleeves. Her headpiece was a
headband of Rowers con·
sisting of 'Carnations tinted
the color of her dress and
yellow daisies. She carried a
spray of carnalions tinted the
color of her dress, yellow
daisies, and baby's breath.
Mrs. Linda· Lane, friend of
the bride, served as the
matron of honor. She wore a
floor length dress of nora!
design and carried a nosegay
colored to match the bride's
bouquet.
Lsrry Lane, friend of the
groom, was the best man.
The mothers of the bride
and groom wore street length
dresses with corsages of
tinted carnations.
·A reception followed in the
fellowship room of the church
where the bride's table beld a
· four tier wedding cake with
the tradititma,I bride and
groom and decorated with
flowers to. match her bridal
bouquet. The cake was made
by her mother, Mrs. Joe
Vanco. Punch, nuts and mints
were served along with the
cake. Assisting at the
reception were~Cher.yl Yancoand Connie.Kingery, sistersin-law of the bride and Janet
Merry, sister of the bride.
Many gifts were received
and acknowledged. The
couple are at home to their
friends at Eureka. Mr.
Kingery is employed at the
Kyger Creek Power Plant
and the new Mrs. K.ingery is
at home.

~EEDSVILLE
Installation
of
officers
highlighted the November
meeting of the Riverview
Garden Club at Ule home of
Mrs. Warren Pickens.
Mrs. Walter Brown and
Mrs. Ernest Whitehead
presented a ceremony to
install the new officers who
are : co-presidents, Mu.
Gene Young and Mrs. Donald
Putman; vice president, Mrs.
David Chadwell; secretary,
Mrs.
Roy
Hannum ;
treasurer, Mrs. Gene Wilson ;
Rower fund, Mrs. R. E.
Williams; publicity, Mrs.
Lyle Balderson and librarian,
Mrs. Claremont Harris. Red
carnatlona were presented
each officer from Mrs. Brown
and Mrs. Whitehead .
Tbe club prayer and song
" Julia Howard Matheral''
were used for devotions led
by Mrs. Whitehead. Year·
·book covers were judged with
Mrs. Hannum receiving first
prize, secolld, Mrs. Harliss .
Frank; third, Mrs. Wilson
and honorable mention, Mrs.
Ronald Cowdery.
Dues were collected, and
plans made for the aMual
Christmas tree lighting.
Home made cookies were
exchanged for roll call. Gifts
were brought for Athens
Mental Health Center. Green
Thumb notes wlll be taken
care of by Mrs. Hannum for
Jan. 21. Thank-you notes
were read from the Comm•nity Builders Club for the
club's donation of the
shrubbery placed near the
historical marker, and lroin
Mrs. Harris and Mrs .

Balderson for gifts received ,
while they were patients in
the hospital.
The ChriBtmas party will
be Dec. 14 at the home of Mrs.
Donald Myers, w!Ul a gilt
ezchange ·amOng members.
For the program Mrs.
Harutum presented an article
on ways to attract birds and
Mrs. Wilson and · Mrs .
Balderson
conducted
Christmas workshop on
carolers dressed in red and
white. Each member made
one.

li:
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serving as hostesses were
Mrs. Putman and Mrs.
Balderson. Refreshments of
banana split cake, punch and
coffee were served to Mrs.
Blse, Mrs. Brown, Mrs.
Cowdery, Mrs. Frank, Mrs.
Herman Grossnlckle, Mrs.
HaMurn, Mrs. Myers, Mrs.
Thomas Spencer, Mrs.
Whltehe.ad, Mrs. Denver
Weber, MI'S. Wilson, Mrs.
Young , Mrs. R. E. Williams, ·
and Mrs. Plcke!IJ · by Ule
hosteSses. The door prize
went to Mrs. Whitehead.

LIST WITH IITTALA IARWARI_

•

a
NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY INDUCfEES - Five
seniors were inducted inw the Kyger Creek National Honor

__,

~

CHESHIRE -Five seniors
were inducted into Ule Kyger
Creek National Honor Society
following impressive
ceremo11ies Wednesday af·
ternoon in the high school
gym.
Inducted .were Tony
Shamblin, son of Mr. and .
Mrs. Jerry Nibert, Rt. I,
Gallipolis; Kay Hager ,
daughter of Mrs. Marcia
Hager, Cheshire, and Harold
Hager of Racine ; Rick
Ridenour, son of Mr.' and
Mrs. Claude Ridenour, Rt. I,
Cheshire; Carol Co1eman,
daughter' of Mr. and Mrs.
George Coleman, Rt. I,
Cheshire, and Doris Hively,
deughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Hively, Rt. I,
Gallipolis.
They were inducted
following
a program
presented by present society
members Becky Polcyn of
character; Steve Baird,
leadership, Steve Darst,
service and PaUline White,
scholarship.

:a.

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Vl

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iilt&lt;tl ,t\ llll,l d Ill' II ;lt·..,i~ n - (jJ\IS~t\ - :ntti l'l l l:H l'~ IIll' lil~ l l'
till' fu tut"L'. ( iA ISSf\ i~ m;Kk h1 1-initi.:-.h ma ~ l l'r cr:tlh nn:n
t li' lw: tl ll if Ill . 11 il-!ll·ljllillit y ~l i t :-.-. . .Ij_
, l'll~~l'li _ha-.,l' 11\1~ it) '-olli rl'd
h_\ th l' lllilllll lain -&gt;ul Laplo111d. Gi lt-pitd.:d. n:ml! i'o\1' ;!i 1in~.
T, lii:O.l lilt' :-. pl'ci; li tX' I opll' t i ll ~till !' ~I fl li '-o l 1\ i I h (;.'\ 1S\/\.
Lt h 1k f1 II' thi ~ 111ark oll. qu:tlil \ :

111'

finland

Where Else-

Peddler's Pantry

The induction also followed
Ule school's aMual Thanks·
giving program. Mrs. Barbara Stewart's junior .high
chorus .presented four songs,
"Country Roads," 11 Wbat is
America," ''Sunshine on My
Shoulders" and "Let there be
Peace." They were ac·
companied at .the piano and
on guitars played by Jeff
Abshire , Bill Abshire, Robbie
Waugh, Jeff Ward and Elaine
Ward.
Following the Thanks·
giving servit:e, a reception
was h~ld in the school's home
economics room for parents,
the new members, old
members, faculty members
and Principal Robert L.
LsMing. Former ··members
preSent were Fred Westfall,
George Thompson, Debbie
Baird, Cynthia Clarke and
Dale Rothgeb, Jr. Other
guests were Mrs. Charlene
Darst and Mrs. White.
Mrs. Fay Sauer is advisor
lor the National Honor
Society.

Gallipolis, Ohio · ,
~~

.....----..,.-----~--:-:-----; · a

A Diamond Ensemble. . .

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.....
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for the well dressed woman
She'l l always 'look her best in our coordinating
Diamond Clusters. elegantly set in white gold .
4M. (Xl5941 Pendant. 1/5 Car~! Tot. Wt. , 14K Gold. $178.75
4N. {X3373) Ring , t /2 Carat Tot. Wt.. !OK Gold, $375.00
4P.(X 15951 Earrings. 1/ 4 Carat Tot. WI ., 14K Gold, $250.00
Jewelry enlarged to show detail.

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LAYAWAY

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CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE
342 Second Ave.

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,~

We Are Participating In
Gallipolis Shop-A-Rama

Society recently . They were, left to right, Tony Shamblin,
Kay Hager, Doris Hively, Carol Coleman and Rick Ridenour.

Youth group
meets Tuesday ·

MARDI SHEETS

Birthday
observed

CHESHIRE - The .Old
Kyger YQuth Group held its
meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m.
with !\lark Price leading the
Lord's Prayer.
'The secretary's report was
by Cindy Pri ce and
treasurer's report was by
Sharon Hively. New and old
business was discussed , and
discussion held on Revelation
9:1-21. A game of Hollywood
Squares was played. Closing
prayer was by Robert Price.
1Se\'enteen members wj!re
present. The next meeting
will be Dec. 7 at 7 p.m. All
youth invited. - Reporter,
Charlene Hiyely.

LAST SUNDAY'S winner or a Black &amp; Docker Workmate
portable workbench at Spring Valley' Hardward was Vicky
Bush or Gallipolis. Vi cky, whose name was .entered by a
relative, is shown here with Llmla Ramey of llw hlonlware
stpre, Vicky is the daughter or Mr. and Mrs. GnylandBush.

It' s Christ mas ... It's Bu lova watch tIm e, th e
glfl of beauty, accuracy, depend ability
and style . We offer an unsurpassed
selection ol all the latest models ...
in every price range .

Jean Sheets, Casie Sheets,

Mr.

and

Mrs . Michael

Carleton, and Chris &lt;:md

POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. Jawn Carleton.
David L . Sheets recently · Sending gifts were Miss
entertained with a party Esther Dill, Pomeroy; Mr.
hollllring their Llaught~r. and Mrs. Ernest Mi ller, Scott
Mardi Lynn, on her second and Doug, Columbus; Mr.
· bitthday.
·
and Mrs. Eugene Smith ·a11tl
Gifts were presented to . Dallas, Mansfield ; and Mr.
Mandl, · and cake and ice arid Mr·s. Ezra E. Sheets,
cream were served lo the Reedsville.
Mrs. Franees Car leton Uf
guests, Mrs. Faye Watson
and Jim, Mt·.s. Frances Pomeroy, and Mr . Hllll Mrs,.
Carleton, Sandy Carleton, Ezra Sheets ur Reedsville are
Sally Cao·ieton, Mrs. Robert Mandi 's grHndparc11ts. Mrs.
Scarberry and Gina, Jim Christina Hall ur Kenna , W.
Carleton, Lisa Pullins, Mrs . Va. is a grcat·graiH.hnothcr.

FRYPAN WINNER - Smith B. !l unyanor Gallipoli s wa s
B recent Spring Valley Htu·dware grand pr~z e \Yinncr of· a
Trail Box skillet and a Black &amp; De cker dr ill set . Htinyan is
shown here with .Jan e Dauiel of lhe hardware store.

FREE

These enchanting letters will bring the
wonder of Santa Claus to lhe little boys
and girls in your life. They will know th e
letter is from Santa because

The Proof is in the Postmark!
. Visit our Santa Claus Posl Otlice. Select one of our gay,
colorful lette rs and envelopes, FREE! Address, stamp and
mail it in our special ma.il box. We will have il postmarked
from Santa Claus, Ind iana. This is our way of say~ng Merry
Christmas to children of all ages.
Letters available at all Gallipolis Retail
Merchant Members. Santa Claus Post
Office located in front of Haskins- Tanner

Co.

.

GaUipolis, Ohio

SHOP EARLY FOR CHRISTMAs
IN DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS ..•
LAYAWAYS INJIITED

REEDSVILLE ~ Mr. and
Mrs, Wilbert B. Roberts of
Hockingport announce ·. the
marriage of their daughter,
Lois Dian to Frederick Bise,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Bise of Reedsville.
The double ring ceremony
was held Nov. 12 in the
Evan gelical Methodist
Church at Little Hocking. The

Jeweler•
~ $ECOND AVENUI! • ~'141 tl
AMERICAN QEU SOCIETY

*

DOWNTOWN MURPHY'S STORE HOURS

Miss Roberts wed

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•

TilE FIRST BffiTHDAY
of Amy ' Dawn Sellers,
daughter· of Mr. and Mrs.
G. E. Sellers of German~
was observed recently at
the home of her grand·
parent1, Mr. 'and Mrs.
Curlls Roush. Attendtog
the celebration were uncles
and auati, Eddie Sellers,
Steve Sellers, JohD Sellers,
Debbie Sellers, Susie
Sellers, Jell Sellers, Ernie
Se.liera, all of Letart; Mr.
aad Mn. Paul Reltmlre,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lee, ·
and Robert Staats of
Pomeroy; Mr. aad Mn.
Curtis Roush, MlnersvUle;
Sylvia Roush, Mlnersv111e,
aad Mlebael Allen Sellers,
. brother of the honored
guest. Seadlllg gifts were
Amy's grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Rowe.

*•!!it•

Five seniors taken into society

0

State &amp; Thir

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for tile limeofjolj

IIC

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BU.LOVA

iittala designs for the future

iittala

Mrs. Boothe have another
son, Cody Todd , age. 3.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Murray E.
Church , Cro wn City and
paternal grandparenu are
Mr. and Mrs. Olin Boothe,
Pomero)'.

FOR YOUR

minister was Carl Me· ·
Pherson .
TM bride wore a white,
long sleeve gown and carried
yellow roseliuds and white
carnations. Serving as maid
· of honor was Loretta Smith
and best man was Dale
Roberts. The flower girl was
Sibyl Foster, niece of the
groom.

OPEN UNTIL 9 PM

SHOPPING
CONVENIENCE

~---NOVEMBER -~D;...;..E..;....CE_,M~BE...__ _,__----~

Miss Eshenaur to sing
POINT PLEASANT, W. . is a graduate of Kyger Creek.
Va. - Julie Eshenaur, High School, and Gallipolis
daughter of Mrs. Wanda Business College.
For three years she sang at
Eshenaur and Dr. Oliver
"Gallla
Country" theatre.
Eshenaur, will appear before
the Point Pleasant Woman' s She is a member of the Grace
Club as guest ,soloist at its United Methodist Chu rch
December meeting. Julie, a where she is a soloist, is in the
junior at Rio Grande College, choir and band at Rio
Grande. Julie also tea ches
~ -~iano and organ.
,
Mrs. Edie Ross of
G'allipolis will accompany
MEETING SET
her.
GALLIPOLIS - The Rev.
William Midd,leswarth,
chairman of the membership
committee or the GalliaMelgs Community Action
Agency board of directors,
aMounced there will ,be a
meetin g to
elect' a
representative or low-income
groups to serve on· the hoard
of directors of the agency in
Gallia County, Nov. 30
at
7:30
o.m. ~ at
the Washington Elementary
School Cafeteria located at
450 Fourth Ave. All persons
receiving services from the
community action agency are
encouraged to participate in
this meeting.

28

Mon .
29

1 ~6

9:30~ 9

Sun.

Sun.
5
1-6

Sun.
. 12
1-6
Sun.
19

1-6

Tues.
30
9:30-9

Mon.
6
9:30-9

Tues
7
9:30-9

Mon .
13
9:30-9

Tues.
14
9:30-9

r

Mon .
20
9: 30·9

Thurs .

Fri.

1

2

3

4

9:30-9

9:30-9

9:30-9

9:30-9

Wed.
8
9: 30 ~9

Thurs.
9
9: 30-9

Fri.
10
9 :30-9

Sat.
9:30-9

Thurs.
16
9:30-9

Fri.
17
9:30-9

Sat.
18
9: 30-9

Thurs .
23
9: 30 -9

Fri.

Wed.
15
9:30-9
Wed .
22
9: 30·9

Tues.
" 21

9:30-9

Sat.

Wed

24

- 9:30-5

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11

CHimtM

•

THE LASTING GIFT!

STRATOLOU-NGER &amp;BASSETT RECLINERS

GREAT CHRISTMAS
GIFT,;_

•U.OTHING
by Cricketteer

FLEECE liNED

•LEISURE SUITS
by Resron

BOOT

•SLACKS

by Far~h

'

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This great fleece lined boo!
will keep your feet nice and
warm . It can be worn as a
casual boo! or a dress boot.
Choose between tan or black
cherry.

I

•SHIRTS
by Arrow

BIRTHSTONES for
Mothers &amp; Grandmothers

by Paris

ACRYLIC ORNAMENTS
lholl

~pMkl e

w1th ever y change of light . ·
I.

Spring V.llll!y Pl,ll,l

4411-

n:u

•SOCKS

by Intenwilen

,

Made wit h the look of engraved . crystaL Each
ornarhen l cumes wifh R polished rnetal hanging loop.
W~ lnut hol 'led st and is available.
' .

in Black Cherry.

by Stetson

•BELTS
~­

Also, We Have a Fleece' Lined Chukka Boot

eHATS

~ours

Ho l dav
Mun . Sat.
1~

9.

Fare_...

•SHOES
by Freeman

•IAYA!m'

ot.IIIKAIUJCMD
•IIASIU CHAICE
OPEII FRIDAY&amp;
MOIIDAYn~ IP.M.

"

Ca pt ure her hea rl w1t h an exqu iSite
10 11:1 . or 14 k.t. ye llow or whtt o gold rmg
that embraces co lorful h1rt hs tones
Each stone represen ts a loved on e to
Mathe~ · or Gr an dmoth er tha t she 'll
tr easure ' for ever!
There 's a birt hstone ru1g M a iJ nhl e to
suit every styl e. UHiW, &lt;1nd hu1lget sliH1
1ng .as low as $32 •.50
See the labul ou ::. PA LOMAR Bortlo stone

DEADLINE TODAY
POMEROY - Members of
the CathOlic Women's Club of
Sacred Hearl Church must
phone Susan Blaker or
Barbara Smith no later than
today on their reservations
for the annual Christmas
pal1y to be held Dec. 2 at the
Meigs Inn.

REMEMBER
ASMAU. IXMN
PAYMENT WILL
HOLD ANY ITEM

SHOP

DANCE SET
CHESTER - The Chester
Rtnq Coii P.r. tt on 111
nre Department will stage a
publi c squa re dance on
Saturday, Dec. 18, at the
A~r.Ji• • • • •~~~~-~O~h~io~· &lt;.'hester Elementary School
•
beginning at 9 p.m.

TAWNEY JEWELERS

J,

THE •• •
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,,; ~ •.

�&amp;-8-TheSwulayTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov:"2p, 1976

1-{::--TheSunday Times-Sentinel, SW1day, Nov. 28, !976

Holmans will celebrate
25th wedding anniversary
•

CELEB RATING ANN IVERSARY - Murray and
Marie Hopkins, 137 Devonshire Ave ., Dayton, will
celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary Dec. 4. They
were married Dec. 4, 1926at Pomeroy and are the parents
of two children : Rex, Arcanum, and Mrs. Lonnie 1Betty 1
Childers, Clayton. They have nine children and five greatgrandchildren. They lived in Meigs County 35 years before
moving to Dayton. He was star route mail .carrier from
Alfred to Pomeroy.

SYRACUSE - The 25th
wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. George Holman of
Syracuse was observed
Thaobglvlnlg Day at the
Holman horri!l.
Hosting the affair for their
parents were Miss Brenda
Holman and Mr. and Mrs.
Rodney Holman, Logan, W.

REVIVAL TO START
CHESHIRE - A revival
begins this evening at the Old
Kyger Free Will Baptist.
Church with the Rev. Chester
Lemley as speaker. Special
singers will he featured each
night. Services begin at 7
p.m. The Rev. William Price,
pastor, Invites the PUblic.

Maryland
·lS upset
by Irish

Va . and Kenton, Syracuse.
Gilts were presented to Mr.
and Mrs. Holman and
following a dinner a
decorated anniversary cake
inscribed "Happy 25th Anniversary, Ge&lt;lrge and Rutll"
was served.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Roush, Letart,
W. · Va.; Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Lewis, Mary Jane
and Anna, Letart, W. · Va:;
llir. and Mrs. Fred Kaylor,
New Haven; Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Rouish, Ty and Mitchell, Mason , W. Va .; Mrs . .
Fannie Roush, Letart, W.
Va.; Mike, Dale, and Karen
Lewis, Mason , W. Va .; Doug
Dempsey, Logan, W. Va., and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crow,
Syracuse.

ONE DF several i&gt;rize winners in Spring Valley Hardware's grand opening celelration was Orville Ballinger of
Addison, left. Here he is presentffi with a seven piece
Scandia cookset by Ge&lt;lrge HeMiger, store manager.

Mr. and Mrs. George Holman .

en Sunday 1 to 6P.M.
IN THE SR.VER BRIDGE PLAZA

SPORTSWfAR
Exhibit for the momn or Novt:uuJt!r : 100 photographs by 42

local photographers, Amateur and Professiona l, Prize ribbons
are on winning entries, Susan Clarke, chairman.
. Gallery hours: Sat urdays "nd Sundays, I until 5 p.m.;
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10a.m.unlil3p.m., Riverby .
Nov. 26, 2-4 p .m. ~ Parent Child Workshop Part II, Bread

PRE-CHRISTMAS
SALE

Dough Christmas decorations, Janel Byers and Carolyn

VERY FAMOUS BRANDS
•SKIRTS •SLACKS •TUNIC VESTS •BLOUSES
•JACKETS •T-TOPS

Hippensteel, instructors, Riverby.
Nov . 30 and Dec, 2 (Tuesday and Thursday) 9-11 a.m. Christmas Committee prepar ing Riverby for the ·Christmas
season.
Exhibit for the month of December - A portion of the
photographs from the November exhibit will continue the first

REDUCED

two weeks of December .
Dec. 5, Sunday, 2-4 p. m. - Annual French Art Colony

family Christmas Party for members and their fami lies only,
Ri ver by.
Dec. 20 through Jm1. 3- River by closed for the Christn1as
holidays .
HOSPITAliZED
GALUPOLIS - Friends
here have received word that
L. Talmage Cottrell will
undergo ·surgery Monday at
Riverside Hospital In

Sp~~Groups ~. 2.

Columbus. His room number
is ~88 . Mr. Cottrell and his
wife, the form er Nellie Clark
are fanner residents of GaUia
County and well known in the

LARGE RACK OF

DENIM SKIRTS

-':/

8 to 18, 16112 to 24'12

··LADIES DRESSES

20%

To .

33%%

Regular $14.00
Sizes:
12 to 20
14 '12to 24112

Regular
522.00

Or
Full

$20 .00

..

%eNTIRE STOCK
·
OF

·

COATS

'

.

Buy Her Gifts
From The Store

$699

Where She Shops.

to

Oot~f!HIIcomfort

Um~

S]499

1 Per
Customer

TEXTURIZED
POLYESTER

- NON ALLERGENIC
DUPONT RED LABEL
21 it 27 .
Standard '
21 X 31
Queen
21 X 37
King

SAVE
;20%

DRESS COATS .,

REGULAR !70.00

Sizes: 36 to 46 In Regular and Longs
Assorted Plaid Colors

'•'if

UNDERALLS

cl't,

The Panty Hose

11,95

NOW

With The Bu iH
In Panty:

$J55

PLAYTEX
FAMOUS
18 .HOUR
'BRA &amp;GIRDLES
SALE
NOW GOING ON!

'

Miami
NY Jets
Buffal o

s 6 o 455 1961'il l
1 11 o .773134171
? HI 0 11,7 1913 160

Central
•
W l T Pd. PF PA
'9 1 0 .818 1?0 165
Cln 1=innati
1 4 0. . 6)6 11) 13.5
Pittsburgh
7 4 0 .636 173 175
Cl eveland
4 7 0 .364 191 ~1 ?
H_ou ston

· left.
Toby Knight led the Irish in
the opener for both teams
with 19 points, 14 9f them in
the second half and two in
overtime. Williams scored 16
and center Dave Batton, who
fouled out with 3:14
remaining in regulation time,
had 14. Another Irish big
man, 11-foot-ll Bruce Flowers,
fouled out with 6:04
remaining.
Lawrence Boston had 15 for
tile Terps, followed by 12 for
reserve guard Brian !&gt;{agld.
Steve Sheppard was in foul
trouble throughout and was
only :klf-13 from the floor and
seven points before fouling
out early in overtime.
The Terps alSo played most
of the second half with their
big men - Boston, Gibson
and Mike Davis - in foul
trouble.
The Terps erased a 39-36
halftl!ne deficit early In the
second half, led by Sheppard
· until he picked uP his fourth
foul with 14:58 remaining, It
was close until Knight 's two
free throws with 20 seconds
left in regulation gave the
Irish a 71..6!1 lead.
Maryland tied It when
Gibson lapped in a. Sheppard
lltiSS and Williams missed his
3D-footer just before the
buzzer.

Wes t

W l T Pet. PF PA
x Oak land
10 1 o .909 141 ?01
Derw er
7 4 0 .636 256 138
San Diego
5 6 0 .455 215 ?J l
KMsas Cily 3 8 0 .1731 11 315
Tampa Bay 0 11 0 .000 95 290
National Conference
Dallas
St . Lou is
Washington
Phila
NY Giants

Ea!. l
W l T Pel . PF PA
10 1 0 .833 156 160
B 4 0 .667 268 236
7 4 0 .636 203 187

3 8 0 .273 131 216
1 10 0 .091 104 207

, ,,,, , , , , ,}~,;~:::,,;:~:;··;::,,;::~:, ,,, ,

Central
W L T Pet. PF PA

x Minn
Detroit
Chic: ago
Green Bily

9

1

1 .864 240 140

6 6 0 .500 235 176
5 6 0 .455 189 171
4 7 0 364 11 5 743
West .

W l T Pet. PF PA

Los Angele s 7 3 1 .682 7 3~ 159
San Fran
6 5 o .sas ?16 15.!
New Orleami 4 7 0 .3M ?26 759
Atla n ta
4 7 0 .364 138 209
Seattle
2 9 0 , 182 196 JdO
)( -Cli nched d ivision title
(Only games !:.chcdulcdl

Sunday's Games
Allanta at Houston
Denver .!II New Eng l and
.Chicago at Green Bay
Kan City at San Die go
Miami a t Cleveland
New Orleans at Los Ang
NY Jel s at Baltimor e
Phil adelphia at Washington
Pittsburgh at Cin cinnati
Sea ttle at NY Giants
Tampa Bay at Oakland
(Onl y games sc hed ul ed )

Michigan
is 90-74
•
wznner

J~ckson w1thln
a?d )"ill
to a, Itmulti-year.
1 million
contract
thesign
next him
72 hours
wa s learned$.'Saturday
Upon tht• best JXISslble authority .
The 30-year-&lt;&gt;ld Jacksou, who played out his ~pllmt
,with the Baltimore Orioles last season, will become the
seco nd free agent lrom the re-entry draft signed by the
Yankees in the past two weeks at a total cost of $5 million.
The Yankees signed ex-cincinnati pitcher, Don Gullett to
'

To get Ja ckson, lhe Yunkees had to beat out the
Montreal Expos, San Diego Padr"!' and, surprisingly , the
New York Mets. Tbe Mets, who had taken a low key
approach In the free agent bidding, were ready to make a
very sizeable offer to Jackson comparable to that offered
by the other clubs.
But, where all others failed, Gabe Paul and George
Stelnbre1mer succeeded, just as they did In gettjng Jim
"Catfish" Hunter two years ago. The Yankees also were
nearly success ful in signing Andy Messersmith last spring
before lhe dea l fell through. Messersmith eventually
signed with Atlanta.
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;.;-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

McGinnis is

end Phil McClmkey in the
second quarter.
That came after Anny
scored its only touchdown on
an 11-yard run ·by Greg l&lt;lng
which tied the game at 7-7
early In the second quarter.
In addition to the two third
period touchdowns by Gattuso, Navy's leading rusher
this year , Bob Tat-a kicked a
3.1-yard field g0alln-the same
period.
.
Navy added Its finai touchdown lat e In the fourt h
quarter on a 16-yard pas
from LesZ&lt;:zynski to Dnve
King.

.., Florida trips
·M·za·.m·z·,. 19_1O

ACAPULCO, Mexico t UP! I - The New York
Yankees have reacfied agreement wilh slugger Reggie

a $2 million, six-yea r contract on Nov . 18.

row for Anny coach Homer
Smith.
Navy finished with a H
record, · including three
straight
wins
alter
sophomore Bob Leszczynski
was inserted as quarterback.
Leszczynski threw two touchdown passes in Saturday's
game.
Anny closed Its season with
a !Hl record and missed a
chance to post its first winning season since 1972, the
last tin1e they beat Navy ,
Leszczynski accounted for
the other Navy touchdown
major service academies.
It was the third loss in a with an 11-yard toss to splil

the ball, they marched in for
another score with Gattuso
going over from the one.
" He's doing .real well
today," Gattuso's father, the
outstanding player in the 1955
Sugar
Bowl,
calmly
remarked while watching his
son play,
· The victory was the fourth
straight over Army for Welsh
and enabled the Middles to
ret·atn possession of · the
Co mmander - In-Chief's
Trophy, symbolic or football
supr.emacy among the three

.
'·

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ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) Senior quarterback Jimmy
Fisher broke loose on a 48yard touchdown run in the
final period Saturday to lift
Sun Bowl-bound Florida to a
19-10 victory over stubborn
state rival Miami.
The 19th-ranked Gators,
who finished the year at 8-3
~nd will meet Texas A&amp;M in
the Sun Bowl Jan. 2, took a 12·
10 lead with 9:39 left to play
with defensive end Jeff
Kanter blocked a Miami punt
in the end zone for a safety to
break a 10-10 tie.
Florida's David Posey
missed a 42-yard field goal

wlth6:10 left and then Miami,
without sturtlng quarterback
E. J. Baker who was hurt In
the third period, turned the
hall over on downs at the
Gator 39.
Two plays later, Fisher who
completed t4 of 21 passes for
263 yMds, drUled a 15-yard
pass to wide receiver Wes

Chandler and folJowed that
up w1U1 his 46-yard scoring
run with 4:13 left.
Miami' s defe nse had
stopped Florida on the oneyard line early in the fourth
quarter with Hurricane
defensive bl1.ck Willie Jenkins
nailing running buck Willie
Wilder on fourth down . Three

plays Iuter, Mhunl klcke~·
Bryan Sickler tried to punt
out of the end zone but Kunl.cr
blocked il and the bull l'oll ed
out of the end zone.
~'loridu scored first on n
six-yard run by Wilder in tht•
iil·st period. But Miami, 3-7

with

one game

r cmll!n ln g

next . week at 7th-rank od
Houston , nmdc It 10..7 nn u

five-yard run by Baker with
13 :43 left in the hall anti a 40yard fle.ld golll by Cht·ls
Dennis with just 14 sec,mds
left before, intermission.

Florida tied It at 10-10 with
8:11 ie!t In the thi rd qututer
011 a 22-yurd field goul by
Posey.

Arkansas crushed ·30-7

hero in win

0

Arizona
teams .ma·y
P' c
]Oln

Father· thrilled
by son's play

Eastern
Kentucky
defeated

•

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GENUINE
MR. COFFEE
ALTERS
1EG.
NOW

10

ew E nglan d eyes playoff spot

ZIPoOUT PILE LINING

2 for$688
2for $788
2for $888

W l T Pc:t. PF PA
9 1 0 81~ 309 186
New England R 3 0 . 1"17 780 207
Balti more

teammate of Navy coach
George Welch , among the
n ,612 In the stands for the
nth renewal of the rivalry,
Gattuso scored on a two-vard
burst in the first !J.Uarter.
That climaxed ·a 51-yard
drive in which Gattuso, a
junior, had 32 yards.
The Middies were ahead 1410 when they took the second
half kickoff and mar~ed 75
yards on seven plays in a
drive that ended when
Gattuso burst through tackle
for a 20-yard touchdown tun
lo give Navy a 21~ 10 lead.
The next time the Midshipmen got their hands on

Warfield
to face

MEN'S

BED PILLOWS

Cont~r(!RC I!
Ea~t

American

PHJI..ADELPHIA (UPI) Joe Gattuso, son of a former
Middle hero , scored three
touchdowns Saturday to lead
Navy to a 38-10 victory over
Anny and its fourth straight
triumph in the traditional
Service Academy rivalry.
The 20-year-old Gattuso,
whose father, Joe, was the
leading rusher for Navy in
1953 and 1954 , scored on runs
of two, 20, and one and had
over 125 yards rushing in the
game in Which Navy scored
17 points in the third quarter
to turn the nationallytelevised contest into a rout.
With his proud father, a

Tech 13•10

MODEL 1119
TRIPLE HEAD

Colors: red. off. white,
royal , avoc ado, pink,
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'
.
Maryland Coach Lefty
Driesell watched the game
with his injured ~ight foot
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI )
propped on a pillow. He tore
- Guard Rickey Green, the
an achilles tendon Friday in a sparkplug in Michigan's fa st
in 7 plays, HII on the grmJnd,
AKRON, Ohio (UPI J -- ·n national chornpionship.
pickup game and was to break and pressure defense,
lo ugtlln take lhe loud . The
The
win
puts
Akron,
now
9-2
Akron University held highundergo surgery · later
scored
25
points
to
lead
the
on
the
year,
in
the
Knute
louchd
own came whe n
scoring
UniverSity o(
Saturday . ·
second-ranked Wolverines to
sophomore
qu11rlerl&gt;Hck
Rockne
Bowl
ue•t
Saturday
Nevada-Las Vegas to just 249
a 94-70 victory Saturdsy oyer
in
Akron's
Rubber
·
llowl
Mm·ty
llczba(chenko
I'M "''
tot al yards as the Zips
Western Kentucky in the·
United Press Internatlooal final period to clinch the smashed the Rebels 27-0 against the winner of the option play 4:1 yards.
season opener for both teams.
George
McGinnis , 76ers' seventh win in nine Sa turday in a semi-fi nal · Western Michigan-Delaware
Dc niss
Stroud
the n
The big push for Michigan Philadelphia 's 6-foot-8 games.
interceptl'&lt;l a pass by Hebel
game lor the NCAA Division game played Saturday .
came with just four minutes mountain of muscle, is so
Philadelphia Coach Gene
Akron scored first as they quarterback Glenn Car:mo
left in the first half as Green powerful he often doesn't Shue took pleasure in the
took the opening kickoff and and returned II 21yurds to the.
led an 11-4 burst that gave . even realize when he's been defensive job executed by
marched down to the Las I.as Vegus 49. Akron· scored
Michigan a 16-point lead, pushed or bumped by Doug CoUins on Walt Frazier.
Vega 24 where .Jim Embick II plays later with junim·
Green hit two jump shots and someone. · ' ·- .
·The Knick b&amp;ckcourt ·nee, .
· kicke\1 the fir s! of his two fullb ack Murk llovunec
a three-point play during the
Friday night, however, he averaging 19.6 points going
field goals.
socrlng his first 'I'D ever.
burst and also fed Joel took notice.
into the contest, was held to
On the next kickoff, the
Akron ru shed for 249 yurds
Thompson for another
ile scored 21 points and fo ur by Collins, who chipped • •
A
Rebels' Henry Vereen caught in fi1·st half, with Hllvunlc
UTTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) to defeat Baylor next week to bucket.
pulled down 17 rebounds in a. In with 20 himself.
.
.l':l
th e ball in the end zone, ran It getting 81 of hi s game-leading
- Quarterback Rodney clinch .a Iitle share with
Green was joined in.double 114-103 . victory for tile . Earl .Monroe Jed the Knicks
•
-·
out to tlle nine, und then Ill yards in first .half.
Allison fired three touchdown Houston.
figures by sophomore center Atlantic Divisi on-leadin g .with 29 points, while Spencer . TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI) _
lateraled to fr eshman Ken
Th e second half wus n
passes and halfback Larry
Allison, a smooth operating . Phil Hubbard with 22, guard 76ers over the New York Haywoo.d added 21.
The State Board of Regents Bowles who dashed the punting contest with winds
Isaac scored once to lead loth junior from Odessa, Tex. , Steve Grote with 11 and ' Kni cks, but gQt into a hassle
Elsewhere, Los Angeles voted Saturday to allow the remaining 91 yards for the gusting up to :15 miles per
ranked Texas Tech to a 31).7 passed eight and 17 yards to sophomore Alan Hardy with in the fourth quarter with edged Portland, 99-96, University of Arizona and score. Bowles got credit fo r a hour keep in g m ~st kicks
victory over Arkansas Godfrey Turner and 27•yard 10.
Phil Jackson and threw a stiff Cleveland kayoed Boston , Arizona State University to 100-yard return .
short and the iJ&lt;tll in the
Saturday to keep the Red to Billy Taylor. Isaac dashed
The Hllltoppers were paced right hand at Jackson 's head. 106-92, Buffalo beat DetrOit, join the Pacific-8 Conference
Akron then moved 74 yards middle of the fi eld.
Raiders' hopes alive for a three yards for his touch- by junior Bill Sclllian with 24 McGinni s
had
been 124--119, Kansas Ctty dumped If they are invited.
share of the Southwest down. Brian Hall chipped in a points and freshman Mike frustrat ed by a 6-for-20 . Denver, 120-110, Ind iana
The Regents said th e
Conference title .
25-yard field goal.
Prince with 15.
shooting mght and he took topped Milwaukee, 109-96, switch from the Western
The Bluebonnet BowlArkansas' only score came
exception to a foul committed Atlanta defeated the New Athletic Conference to the
bound Red Raiders only have with9:24leltinthegameona
·
against him by Jackson York Nets, 109-105, San PAC 8 is based on the
::;:~t!~t ru;or~~stha~~~
under the Knick basket . Antonio nipped Golden State, assumption that the con'
Jackson moved when he saw 123-121 , and Seattle beat dit1ons are "consider ed
climaxed a 60-yard five-play
the blow coming and it Chicago, 101-97.
satisfactory by the unlver~ rg~a
rlazorback drive. That was
grazed the back of his head.
Lakers99,Blazers96:
sities·and the board."
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) _ Army In tne 'f'lth renewal of
only the first lime the
"I get tired of guys hanging
Kare~m Abdul-Jabbar
The voice vote ·was 7-to-2.
Joe
Gattuso gave his father, a the service academy rivalry.
Razorbacks had crossed
all over me," said McGinnis, scored 32 points and Lucius The
dissenting
votes
fanner
star for the Middies
" It's just absolutely
midfield in 'the game.
who was called for a pun- Allen added 30 for Los reportedly came . from
1
who
wos
watching
from
the
thrilling,"
said the eldcl'
The victory improved
ching fouL "He threw an Angeles, II of them In the Regents Rudy Campbell and
stands,
"an
unbelievable
Gattuso,
a
lormer
Navy Uyer
Tech's season record to 9-1
RICHMOND, Ky. (UPI) _ elbow at my race and I lost . fina14 1&gt; minutes; locap a Los Dr. William Payne, both of
thrill
of
a
lifetime"
Saturday
and
now
a
Philadelph
ia
and to 11-1 in the conference. FreshmanquarterbuckSteve my temper. Ther~ comes a ·Angeles comeback after _the Tempe, home of ASU.
when
he
scored
three
touchbusinessman.
Arkansas dropped to H -1 Campbell scored on a three- pomt when yo~ cant let a ~.uy Lakers tra1Jed by 13 pomts
The board's steering policy
downs in. a 38-10 victory over • "I can't really describe It,"
ATHENS, Ga. (UPJ) - overall and to 3-3-1 in the yard run and Canadi!!l...!eep domg thmgs to you.
_midway In the third period. committe.e appr_QY.ed the Anny
he said, "going through thi s
Aifan Leavitt "kicked -a 33- swe~ -Arkansas~cJoses its soccer-style kicker Mike
Ja ckson, of course, saw the ilbdui-Jabba'r. abd Allen conference switch Friday,
Joe · Gattuso Sr., Navy's . th~ fir st time a nd then
yard field goal with only five season next week against McTague booted a 39-yard pi~,Y dlffe~ently.
. , sc~red 18 of the Lakl!rs last 24 and that recommendation
leading rusher !n 1953-54 Anrl · ~ehvmg It through yo~r son a
seconds remaining Saturday - Texas.
field goal to give North
, I d1dn t provoke him, ~mts .
was adopted by the full board the outstanding player in tbf;_ sec_ond t,l,me. It s un ·
to give heavily-favored ,
Allison moved Tech a 7 ~ Dakota State a 10-7 victory sa~d the yender but rough
Cavs I?~· Celtl~~92: .
at Saturday's meeting.
fourth-ranked Georgia a lead with 3:lGieft in the first over Eastern Kentucky in the Jackson. He made a muscle
Bobby
Bmgo Smtih
The admission of the two i95~ Sugar Bowl, beamed as believable.
The elder Gattuso had ,I.·
hard-earned 13-10 victory quarter, climaxing an eight- NCAA Division II First move on me and I mode a scored 22 points and provided Arizona schools is still suir he watched his 2!1-year-old
over arch-rival Georgia play, 77-yard drive with an Round Playoffs Saturday as muscle move on him ... We key final qu.arter-baskets to ject to action by the PAC 8 at son lead the Middies to their a teammate of Navy C· '
Welsh.
Tech in dense fog and steady eight-yard toss to Turner. the Bisons survived three 11_1ade ,up afterward and spark Cleveland. AW!Iln Ca~r Its meeting next month, but fourth Slrai~ht win over George
In the locker room, the .
rain.
About IJlidway in the second Eastern threats in the closing kiSsed.. .
and Campy Russell .each hit the West Coast Conference
said modestly, ''The line
The Yellow Ja ckets, q~arter Tech drove' 50 yards minutes.
. The mc!dent overshadowed for 17 pomts While Dick initiated the negotiations and
the lead backs scored th.
trailing 10~ after three in eight plays with the payoff
E-astern's Bob Landis another fme performance by Snyder added !5 and Jim has indicated it will invite the
lhree touchdowns. "
periods, had scored 10 polnllj coming on a 27-yard screen missed two field goals in the Julius Erving, who had ~4 Cleam?ns had 14 for . the two into its feld.
The younger Gattuso, wh.
in the final quarter on a 19- pass from Allison to Taylor. finalfiveminutes his first for pomts, moe rebounds, SIX Ca valters. Sidney W1 cks
ASU football coach Frank
has never scored three touchTech made it 17-0 Just 32 yarda and his ~cond for 50 , assists , thr ee steals and lopped Boston with 17 points, Kush said the move. could
yard field goal by Danny
downs in his football career,
Smith and a 26-yard run liy before halftlme on Ralls' field yards on the next-to-last play keyed , a 1 5~ Philadelphia John Havlicek had 16 and • pose problems for the two
said he was "Just thinking
Eddie Ivery to tie the score. goal which came a!ter of the game.
surge m the ftrst 4:30 of the Tom Boswell added 14.
Arizona schools.
about winning the game."
But Ge&lt;lrgia, the South- Arkansas Punter Steve Uttle
eastern Conference cham- dropped the snap on a punting~
Hoosiers make
pion, nioved down the field In attempt, .glvin. g the Red
the waning minutes Qf play Raiders the bail on the
CLEVELAND (UPI) it 33 in u row
and Leavitt booted the game- Arkansas eight with 10
.
.
The man who did the most
winning field goal, on a .seconds remaining.
dsmage to the Cleyelond
fourth-and-three situation at
A ·fumble at the Arkansas
BLOOMINGTON,
Ind.
Browns in their last playoff
UDIIed
Press
Interoatioaal
for
a
wildcard
playoff
berth
The
Steelers
began
their
six
ground
·with
Sam
the Tech 16.
two-yard line late in tile first
(UPI(
Junior
guard
W
ayne
Most of the attention this in the AFC ..
Cunningham and An dy game winning streak with a bid was Paul Warfield when
The Bulldogs will carry 8 quarter cost the Red Raiders
week in pro football has been
New England , 6-3 in the Johnson, and Don Calhoun ~ victory over the Bengals he caught ·a long pass to set Ral'ford·scored 18 points and,
10-1 record into their Sugar another scoring chance.
at Pittsburgh. That defeat up the touchdown that gave All-America center Kent
The Razorbacks never got . focused on the defending AFC East, ca n clinch a did a good job fillin g in."
Bowl match with top-ranked untracked until the fourth Super Bowl champion playoff spot with a victory
Calhoun gained 141 yards was the last for Cincinnati, the Miami Dolphins a 20-14 Benson had 17 Saturday in
leading defending National
Pittsburgh in New Orelans on
which has won five straight. playoff victory in 1972.
Pittsburgh Steelers, who coupled with losses by
New Year's Day. Tech qua,rter when the game • travel to Cincinnati Sunday to Pittsburgh and Cleveland, ' against Baltif(lore two weeks But the Bengals have been
Champion
Indiana to a 11~
The
catch
by
'the
former
llnishtd Its season at 1+1. already was decided . In the continue their battle to gain a both now 7-4. Denver, also 7-4, ago and 109 more last week struggling lately.
victory
over
South Dakotli In
Brown
started
Cleveland
on
a
against the New York Jets in.
first half, Arkansas never
the
seaSlln
opener
for both
·
three:year
slide.
The
Browns,
Elswio&gt;re
Sunday,
PhilaTech bottled up the Georgia moved past. its own 32--yard playoff spot. But in Foxboro, will keep its wild card hopes replacing the
injured
teams.
10-4,
in
1972,
dropped
to
7-5-2
delphi
a
is
at
Washington,
the
alive
Mass.,
there
will
be
another
by
defea
ting
.New
Cunnin gha m.
But
runoing attack in the first line and failed to make a first
Indfana Coach Bobby
quarter and midway through down in the second quarter. im)XIrl.ant contest between England.
Cunningham's sore shoulder Jets at Baltimore, Tampa in 1973, an abysmal 4-10 in
the second until Bulldogs
two teams, which never have
"We aren't talking much ha s apparently hea led and be Bay at Oakland, New Orleans 1974 and 3-11 for their worst Knight shuffled his lineup
almost constantly and used
quarterback Ray Goff began
played in an NFL play off about the playoffs," Denver is expected to play agaiMt at Los Angeles, Atlanta at season ever in 1975.
the throw . He connect~ on
Now Warfield is back with every player on his bench as
game.
Houston, Miami al Cleveland,
Coach John Ralston said. Denver.
hiB first lbree passes for 10, 12
The New England Patriots, "Right now, we're behind the
In Cincinnati, the Bengals, Chi cago at Green Bay, the Browns and he will be the fifth-ranked Hoosiers won
· and seven yards in an 10-yard
who se last post-season eighl-ball, so to speak."
9-2, can eliminate Pittsburgh Kansas City at San Diego and hoping to turn the tables on their 33rd straight game.
Mike Woodson scored 16
. march ior the game's first
appearance was a ~hlO
Denver is. coming off an from the AFC Central seattle at the New ' York the Dolphins Sunday . The
)XIints
for the Hoosiers, Mike
touchdown. Goff scored It on .Ge&lt;lrgia Tech at the Georgia defeat by San Diego in the unimpressi ve 14-13 viclorx Division race with a victory . Giants.
BrowM, 7-4, need a victory
Miday
and Rich V~lavicius 12
a three yard keeper.
Detroit defeated Buffalo, over Miami, 5-8, to keep their
19 ·late in the third quarter. 1963 American Football over the 1-10 New York The Steelers have been
Georgia drove 68 yards at Tech moved it to the one Leag~e champiooship game, Giants and will IJce New playing possibly the best 27-14, as O.J. Simpson set a slim chances alive for a -apiece and Derek Holcomb,
10. Woodson, Mlday and
the start of the third quarter ' where, facing a fourth down host the Denver Br~ncos, the England's highscoring football In the NFL in winning league record wl.th .273 yards wildcard playoff berth.
Holcomb
are freslimen ,
and Leavitt kiCked a 22-yard situation, Coach Pepper only f!Slablished NFL team, offe~se, led by quarterba ck their lasl six games, but four rushing and Dallas edged St .
New England, Pittsburgh
The
Coyotes
were led by
field when the drive bogged Rodgers decided to go for a which riever has pjayed in Sleve Grogan.
losses in their first five Louis, 19-14, on Thanksgiving and Denver are all in better
down at the five.
Briatt
Powers
with
18 poL~ts.
position than Cleveland to-get
"Grogan is a great player," gam~s have them in danger Day.
field goal. Smith put the any post-season game. Both
Linebacker Lucius Sanford Yellow Jackets on the board teams, ha ving th eir best Ralston sa id . "New England of bcin~ eliminated from
Ron
Penderson
chipped
in 16
the
American
F
ootball
Minnesota is at San
recovered a fumble for with a 19-yard kick .
and
Brian
McDermott
II.
se::tson$ in years, are fighting can move the ball well on the post-season play .
~·randsco Monday night.
Conference wildcard spot. . '

G

ROTARY SHAVER be'FOR MEN

NOW

Size

~·

. OfF

COLLEGE' PARK, . Md.
(UPI) - It wasn 'I Don
"Duck" WUJiams' best day as
a collegian, built ended well.
Williams, a 11-foot-3 junior
from Mackin High School in
nearby Washington, D. C., hit
a :ll).foot shot with 31 seconds
remaining in overtime
Saturday to lift Notre Dame
to an B0-79 win over Illhranked Maryland.
" He missed some he
usuany doesn't miss," sald
Irish Coach Digger Phelps.
"He was psyched to be back
home.u
Williams hit only eight of 22
shots from the floor and
· m1ssed a 3().footer just before
tile buzzer that could have
ended the ~arne in regulation
time.
"We've been up for this for
two weeks. I had to tone them
down," 5!1id Phelps . "Win·
ning here in Cole Field House
Is beautiful. We were ranked
29th by some&lt;lne and that's all
they had to hear .,- tha( Notre
Datrie was dead. We have
four games with top 10 teams.
All we want is an NCAA bid."
Williams' final shot came
after guard Brad Davis,
whose 19 points led the Terps,
had put Maryland ahead with
!Moot shot with 40 seconds to
play.
The Terps had a chance to
··- regain possession after
Davis' basket when Larry
Gibson blocked a Notre Dame
shot but the ball rolled out of
bQuncis and gave Willlanis his
oppo!'lunJty for the gamewinner. Another Davis shot
from the middle of the lane
went awry wlih six seconds

,standings

Navy rips Army 38-10

Akron smashes
Rebels, 27-6

lrt one •lectrk lho.,.. thot's .orroed 11M righl to
~1«1 o roror. 3ti
s.ll -thbrpening • urgicoldHI blodf!t, twic• 01 mony ol ..,., before. No niclct.
110 cuts, rotor close, roror ahorp, ra:a:or 1111oolh tho,...

BEDSPREADS
Twin

-

IIORILCO

UJX•s CRUSIID vnm

UNDERALL SALE
ENDS TODAY
AT 6 P.M.
Regular

•

20
•

DAYTIME DRESSES

To Make Mother Very Happy -

..

I

ENTIRE STOCK OF
Reduced

D DESK

Suite, Dining Room Suite.

PANT SUITS

$688

Values to 516.00
Famous Brands

EMPIRE'S
GIFT GALLERY
INCLUDES

Bedroom S~ite, · Livi~g Room

POL VESTER KNIT
Values of $18.00 and $20.00 ·

'

area.

0 GUN CABINETS
0 SWIVEL ROCKER
0 WOOD ROCKER
0 .RECLINERS
0 HOOVER SWEEPERS

PRICE

Large Selection

0 PICTURES
0 WALL.PLAQUES
0 MIRRORS ·
0 BEAN BAGS
D LAMPS
WHIRLPOOL
0 DISHWASHERS
WHIRLPOOL
0 TRASH COMPACTORS
LANE
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LEISURE
SUITS
REG. 141 TO '&amp;5
NOW
99

$24 &amp;
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'

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I

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old mates

•

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·'

�&amp;-8-TheSwulayTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov:"2p, 1976

1-{::--TheSunday Times-Sentinel, SW1day, Nov. 28, !976

Holmans will celebrate
25th wedding anniversary
•

CELEB RATING ANN IVERSARY - Murray and
Marie Hopkins, 137 Devonshire Ave ., Dayton, will
celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary Dec. 4. They
were married Dec. 4, 1926at Pomeroy and are the parents
of two children : Rex, Arcanum, and Mrs. Lonnie 1Betty 1
Childers, Clayton. They have nine children and five greatgrandchildren. They lived in Meigs County 35 years before
moving to Dayton. He was star route mail .carrier from
Alfred to Pomeroy.

SYRACUSE - The 25th
wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. George Holman of
Syracuse was observed
Thaobglvlnlg Day at the
Holman horri!l.
Hosting the affair for their
parents were Miss Brenda
Holman and Mr. and Mrs.
Rodney Holman, Logan, W.

REVIVAL TO START
CHESHIRE - A revival
begins this evening at the Old
Kyger Free Will Baptist.
Church with the Rev. Chester
Lemley as speaker. Special
singers will he featured each
night. Services begin at 7
p.m. The Rev. William Price,
pastor, Invites the PUblic.

Maryland
·lS upset
by Irish

Va . and Kenton, Syracuse.
Gilts were presented to Mr.
and Mrs. Holman and
following a dinner a
decorated anniversary cake
inscribed "Happy 25th Anniversary, Ge&lt;lrge and Rutll"
was served.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Roush, Letart,
W. · Va.; Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Lewis, Mary Jane
and Anna, Letart, W. · Va:;
llir. and Mrs. Fred Kaylor,
New Haven; Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Rouish, Ty and Mitchell, Mason , W. Va .; Mrs . .
Fannie Roush, Letart, W.
Va.; Mike, Dale, and Karen
Lewis, Mason , W. Va .; Doug
Dempsey, Logan, W. Va., and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crow,
Syracuse.

ONE DF several i&gt;rize winners in Spring Valley Hardware's grand opening celelration was Orville Ballinger of
Addison, left. Here he is presentffi with a seven piece
Scandia cookset by Ge&lt;lrge HeMiger, store manager.

Mr. and Mrs. George Holman .

en Sunday 1 to 6P.M.
IN THE SR.VER BRIDGE PLAZA

SPORTSWfAR
Exhibit for the momn or Novt:uuJt!r : 100 photographs by 42

local photographers, Amateur and Professiona l, Prize ribbons
are on winning entries, Susan Clarke, chairman.
. Gallery hours: Sat urdays "nd Sundays, I until 5 p.m.;
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10a.m.unlil3p.m., Riverby .
Nov. 26, 2-4 p .m. ~ Parent Child Workshop Part II, Bread

PRE-CHRISTMAS
SALE

Dough Christmas decorations, Janel Byers and Carolyn

VERY FAMOUS BRANDS
•SKIRTS •SLACKS •TUNIC VESTS •BLOUSES
•JACKETS •T-TOPS

Hippensteel, instructors, Riverby.
Nov . 30 and Dec, 2 (Tuesday and Thursday) 9-11 a.m. Christmas Committee prepar ing Riverby for the ·Christmas
season.
Exhibit for the month of December - A portion of the
photographs from the November exhibit will continue the first

REDUCED

two weeks of December .
Dec. 5, Sunday, 2-4 p. m. - Annual French Art Colony

family Christmas Party for members and their fami lies only,
Ri ver by.
Dec. 20 through Jm1. 3- River by closed for the Christn1as
holidays .
HOSPITAliZED
GALUPOLIS - Friends
here have received word that
L. Talmage Cottrell will
undergo ·surgery Monday at
Riverside Hospital In

Sp~~Groups ~. 2.

Columbus. His room number
is ~88 . Mr. Cottrell and his
wife, the form er Nellie Clark
are fanner residents of GaUia
County and well known in the

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'

Miami
NY Jets
Buffal o

s 6 o 455 1961'il l
1 11 o .773134171
? HI 0 11,7 1913 160

Central
•
W l T Pd. PF PA
'9 1 0 .818 1?0 165
Cln 1=innati
1 4 0. . 6)6 11) 13.5
Pittsburgh
7 4 0 .636 173 175
Cl eveland
4 7 0 .364 191 ~1 ?
H_ou ston

· left.
Toby Knight led the Irish in
the opener for both teams
with 19 points, 14 9f them in
the second half and two in
overtime. Williams scored 16
and center Dave Batton, who
fouled out with 3:14
remaining in regulation time,
had 14. Another Irish big
man, 11-foot-ll Bruce Flowers,
fouled out with 6:04
remaining.
Lawrence Boston had 15 for
tile Terps, followed by 12 for
reserve guard Brian !&gt;{agld.
Steve Sheppard was in foul
trouble throughout and was
only :klf-13 from the floor and
seven points before fouling
out early in overtime.
The Terps alSo played most
of the second half with their
big men - Boston, Gibson
and Mike Davis - in foul
trouble.
The Terps erased a 39-36
halftl!ne deficit early In the
second half, led by Sheppard
· until he picked uP his fourth
foul with 14:58 remaining, It
was close until Knight 's two
free throws with 20 seconds
left in regulation gave the
Irish a 71..6!1 lead.
Maryland tied It when
Gibson lapped in a. Sheppard
lltiSS and Williams missed his
3D-footer just before the
buzzer.

Wes t

W l T Pet. PF PA
x Oak land
10 1 o .909 141 ?01
Derw er
7 4 0 .636 256 138
San Diego
5 6 0 .455 215 ?J l
KMsas Cily 3 8 0 .1731 11 315
Tampa Bay 0 11 0 .000 95 290
National Conference
Dallas
St . Lou is
Washington
Phila
NY Giants

Ea!. l
W l T Pel . PF PA
10 1 0 .833 156 160
B 4 0 .667 268 236
7 4 0 .636 203 187

3 8 0 .273 131 216
1 10 0 .091 104 207

, ,,,, , , , , ,}~,;~:::,,;:~:;··;::,,;::~:, ,,, ,

Central
W L T Pet. PF PA

x Minn
Detroit
Chic: ago
Green Bily

9

1

1 .864 240 140

6 6 0 .500 235 176
5 6 0 .455 189 171
4 7 0 364 11 5 743
West .

W l T Pet. PF PA

Los Angele s 7 3 1 .682 7 3~ 159
San Fran
6 5 o .sas ?16 15.!
New Orleami 4 7 0 .3M ?26 759
Atla n ta
4 7 0 .364 138 209
Seattle
2 9 0 , 182 196 JdO
)( -Cli nched d ivision title
(Only games !:.chcdulcdl

Sunday's Games
Allanta at Houston
Denver .!II New Eng l and
.Chicago at Green Bay
Kan City at San Die go
Miami a t Cleveland
New Orleans at Los Ang
NY Jel s at Baltimor e
Phil adelphia at Washington
Pittsburgh at Cin cinnati
Sea ttle at NY Giants
Tampa Bay at Oakland
(Onl y games sc hed ul ed )

Michigan
is 90-74
•
wznner

J~ckson w1thln
a?d )"ill
to a, Itmulti-year.
1 million
contract
thesign
next him
72 hours
wa s learned$.'Saturday
Upon tht• best JXISslble authority .
The 30-year-&lt;&gt;ld Jacksou, who played out his ~pllmt
,with the Baltimore Orioles last season, will become the
seco nd free agent lrom the re-entry draft signed by the
Yankees in the past two weeks at a total cost of $5 million.
The Yankees signed ex-cincinnati pitcher, Don Gullett to
'

To get Ja ckson, lhe Yunkees had to beat out the
Montreal Expos, San Diego Padr"!' and, surprisingly , the
New York Mets. Tbe Mets, who had taken a low key
approach In the free agent bidding, were ready to make a
very sizeable offer to Jackson comparable to that offered
by the other clubs.
But, where all others failed, Gabe Paul and George
Stelnbre1mer succeeded, just as they did In gettjng Jim
"Catfish" Hunter two years ago. The Yankees also were
nearly success ful in signing Andy Messersmith last spring
before lhe dea l fell through. Messersmith eventually
signed with Atlanta.
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;.;-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

McGinnis is

end Phil McClmkey in the
second quarter.
That came after Anny
scored its only touchdown on
an 11-yard run ·by Greg l&lt;lng
which tied the game at 7-7
early In the second quarter.
In addition to the two third
period touchdowns by Gattuso, Navy's leading rusher
this year , Bob Tat-a kicked a
3.1-yard field g0alln-the same
period.
.
Navy added Its finai touchdown lat e In the fourt h
quarter on a 16-yard pas
from LesZ&lt;:zynski to Dnve
King.

.., Florida trips
·M·za·.m·z·,. 19_1O

ACAPULCO, Mexico t UP! I - The New York
Yankees have reacfied agreement wilh slugger Reggie

a $2 million, six-yea r contract on Nov . 18.

row for Anny coach Homer
Smith.
Navy finished with a H
record, · including three
straight
wins
alter
sophomore Bob Leszczynski
was inserted as quarterback.
Leszczynski threw two touchdown passes in Saturday's
game.
Anny closed Its season with
a !Hl record and missed a
chance to post its first winning season since 1972, the
last tin1e they beat Navy ,
Leszczynski accounted for
the other Navy touchdown
major service academies.
It was the third loss in a with an 11-yard toss to splil

the ball, they marched in for
another score with Gattuso
going over from the one.
" He's doing .real well
today," Gattuso's father, the
outstanding player in the 1955
Sugar
Bowl,
calmly
remarked while watching his
son play,
· The victory was the fourth
straight over Army for Welsh
and enabled the Middles to
ret·atn possession of · the
Co mmander - In-Chief's
Trophy, symbolic or football
supr.emacy among the three

.
'·

·

ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) Senior quarterback Jimmy
Fisher broke loose on a 48yard touchdown run in the
final period Saturday to lift
Sun Bowl-bound Florida to a
19-10 victory over stubborn
state rival Miami.
The 19th-ranked Gators,
who finished the year at 8-3
~nd will meet Texas A&amp;M in
the Sun Bowl Jan. 2, took a 12·
10 lead with 9:39 left to play
with defensive end Jeff
Kanter blocked a Miami punt
in the end zone for a safety to
break a 10-10 tie.
Florida's David Posey
missed a 42-yard field goal

wlth6:10 left and then Miami,
without sturtlng quarterback
E. J. Baker who was hurt In
the third period, turned the
hall over on downs at the
Gator 39.
Two plays later, Fisher who
completed t4 of 21 passes for
263 yMds, drUled a 15-yard
pass to wide receiver Wes

Chandler and folJowed that
up w1U1 his 46-yard scoring
run with 4:13 left.
Miami' s defe nse had
stopped Florida on the oneyard line early in the fourth
quarter with Hurricane
defensive bl1.ck Willie Jenkins
nailing running buck Willie
Wilder on fourth down . Three

plays Iuter, Mhunl klcke~·
Bryan Sickler tried to punt
out of the end zone but Kunl.cr
blocked il and the bull l'oll ed
out of the end zone.
~'loridu scored first on n
six-yard run by Wilder in tht•
iil·st period. But Miami, 3-7

with

one game

r cmll!n ln g

next . week at 7th-rank od
Houston , nmdc It 10..7 nn u

five-yard run by Baker with
13 :43 left in the hall anti a 40yard fle.ld golll by Cht·ls
Dennis with just 14 sec,mds
left before, intermission.

Florida tied It at 10-10 with
8:11 ie!t In the thi rd qututer
011 a 22-yurd field goul by
Posey.

Arkansas crushed ·30-7

hero in win

0

Arizona
teams .ma·y
P' c
]Oln

Father· thrilled
by son's play

Eastern
Kentucky
defeated

•

100 COUNT BOX

GENUINE
MR. COFFEE
ALTERS
1EG.
NOW

10

ew E nglan d eyes playoff spot

ZIPoOUT PILE LINING

2 for$688
2for $788
2for $888

W l T Pc:t. PF PA
9 1 0 81~ 309 186
New England R 3 0 . 1"17 780 207
Balti more

teammate of Navy coach
George Welch , among the
n ,612 In the stands for the
nth renewal of the rivalry,
Gattuso scored on a two-vard
burst in the first !J.Uarter.
That climaxed ·a 51-yard
drive in which Gattuso, a
junior, had 32 yards.
The Middies were ahead 1410 when they took the second
half kickoff and mar~ed 75
yards on seven plays in a
drive that ended when
Gattuso burst through tackle
for a 20-yard touchdown tun
lo give Navy a 21~ 10 lead.
The next time the Midshipmen got their hands on

Warfield
to face

MEN'S

BED PILLOWS

Cont~r(!RC I!
Ea~t

American

PHJI..ADELPHIA (UPI) Joe Gattuso, son of a former
Middle hero , scored three
touchdowns Saturday to lead
Navy to a 38-10 victory over
Anny and its fourth straight
triumph in the traditional
Service Academy rivalry.
The 20-year-old Gattuso,
whose father, Joe, was the
leading rusher for Navy in
1953 and 1954 , scored on runs
of two, 20, and one and had
over 125 yards rushing in the
game in Which Navy scored
17 points in the third quarter
to turn the nationallytelevised contest into a rout.
With his proud father, a

Tech 13•10

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'
.
Maryland Coach Lefty
Driesell watched the game
with his injured ~ight foot
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI )
propped on a pillow. He tore
- Guard Rickey Green, the
an achilles tendon Friday in a sparkplug in Michigan's fa st
in 7 plays, HII on the grmJnd,
AKRON, Ohio (UPI J -- ·n national chornpionship.
pickup game and was to break and pressure defense,
lo ugtlln take lhe loud . The
The
win
puts
Akron,
now
9-2
Akron University held highundergo surgery · later
scored
25
points
to
lead
the
on
the
year,
in
the
Knute
louchd
own came whe n
scoring
UniverSity o(
Saturday . ·
second-ranked Wolverines to
sophomore
qu11rlerl&gt;Hck
Rockne
Bowl
ue•t
Saturday
Nevada-Las Vegas to just 249
a 94-70 victory Saturdsy oyer
in
Akron's
Rubber
·
llowl
Mm·ty
llczba(chenko
I'M "''
tot al yards as the Zips
Western Kentucky in the·
United Press Internatlooal final period to clinch the smashed the Rebels 27-0 against the winner of the option play 4:1 yards.
season opener for both teams.
George
McGinnis , 76ers' seventh win in nine Sa turday in a semi-fi nal · Western Michigan-Delaware
Dc niss
Stroud
the n
The big push for Michigan Philadelphia 's 6-foot-8 games.
interceptl'&lt;l a pass by Hebel
game lor the NCAA Division game played Saturday .
came with just four minutes mountain of muscle, is so
Philadelphia Coach Gene
Akron scored first as they quarterback Glenn Car:mo
left in the first half as Green powerful he often doesn't Shue took pleasure in the
took the opening kickoff and and returned II 21yurds to the.
led an 11-4 burst that gave . even realize when he's been defensive job executed by
marched down to the Las I.as Vegus 49. Akron· scored
Michigan a 16-point lead, pushed or bumped by Doug CoUins on Walt Frazier.
Vega 24 where .Jim Embick II plays later with junim·
Green hit two jump shots and someone. · ' ·- .
·The Knick b&amp;ckcourt ·nee, .
· kicke\1 the fir s! of his two fullb ack Murk llovunec
a three-point play during the
Friday night, however, he averaging 19.6 points going
field goals.
socrlng his first 'I'D ever.
burst and also fed Joel took notice.
into the contest, was held to
On the next kickoff, the
Akron ru shed for 249 yurds
Thompson for another
ile scored 21 points and fo ur by Collins, who chipped • •
A
Rebels' Henry Vereen caught in fi1·st half, with Hllvunlc
UTTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) to defeat Baylor next week to bucket.
pulled down 17 rebounds in a. In with 20 himself.
.
.l':l
th e ball in the end zone, ran It getting 81 of hi s game-leading
- Quarterback Rodney clinch .a Iitle share with
Green was joined in.double 114-103 . victory for tile . Earl .Monroe Jed the Knicks
•
-·
out to tlle nine, und then Ill yards in first .half.
Allison fired three touchdown Houston.
figures by sophomore center Atlantic Divisi on-leadin g .with 29 points, while Spencer . TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI) _
lateraled to fr eshman Ken
Th e second half wus n
passes and halfback Larry
Allison, a smooth operating . Phil Hubbard with 22, guard 76ers over the New York Haywoo.d added 21.
The State Board of Regents Bowles who dashed the punting contest with winds
Isaac scored once to lead loth junior from Odessa, Tex. , Steve Grote with 11 and ' Kni cks, but gQt into a hassle
Elsewhere, Los Angeles voted Saturday to allow the remaining 91 yards for the gusting up to :15 miles per
ranked Texas Tech to a 31).7 passed eight and 17 yards to sophomore Alan Hardy with in the fourth quarter with edged Portland, 99-96, University of Arizona and score. Bowles got credit fo r a hour keep in g m ~st kicks
victory over Arkansas Godfrey Turner and 27•yard 10.
Phil Jackson and threw a stiff Cleveland kayoed Boston , Arizona State University to 100-yard return .
short and the iJ&lt;tll in the
Saturday to keep the Red to Billy Taylor. Isaac dashed
The Hllltoppers were paced right hand at Jackson 's head. 106-92, Buffalo beat DetrOit, join the Pacific-8 Conference
Akron then moved 74 yards middle of the fi eld.
Raiders' hopes alive for a three yards for his touch- by junior Bill Sclllian with 24 McGinni s
had
been 124--119, Kansas Ctty dumped If they are invited.
share of the Southwest down. Brian Hall chipped in a points and freshman Mike frustrat ed by a 6-for-20 . Denver, 120-110, Ind iana
The Regents said th e
Conference title .
25-yard field goal.
Prince with 15.
shooting mght and he took topped Milwaukee, 109-96, switch from the Western
The Bluebonnet BowlArkansas' only score came
exception to a foul committed Atlanta defeated the New Athletic Conference to the
bound Red Raiders only have with9:24leltinthegameona
·
against him by Jackson York Nets, 109-105, San PAC 8 is based on the
::;:~t!~t ru;or~~stha~~~
under the Knick basket . Antonio nipped Golden State, assumption that the con'
Jackson moved when he saw 123-121 , and Seattle beat dit1ons are "consider ed
climaxed a 60-yard five-play
the blow coming and it Chicago, 101-97.
satisfactory by the unlver~ rg~a
rlazorback drive. That was
grazed the back of his head.
Lakers99,Blazers96:
sities·and the board."
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) _ Army In tne 'f'lth renewal of
only the first lime the
"I get tired of guys hanging
Kare~m Abdul-Jabbar
The voice vote ·was 7-to-2.
Joe
Gattuso gave his father, a the service academy rivalry.
Razorbacks had crossed
all over me," said McGinnis, scored 32 points and Lucius The
dissenting
votes
fanner
star for the Middies
" It's just absolutely
midfield in 'the game.
who was called for a pun- Allen added 30 for Los reportedly came . from
1
who
wos
watching
from
the
thrilling,"
said the eldcl'
The victory improved
ching fouL "He threw an Angeles, II of them In the Regents Rudy Campbell and
stands,
"an
unbelievable
Gattuso,
a
lormer
Navy Uyer
Tech's season record to 9-1
RICHMOND, Ky. (UPI) _ elbow at my race and I lost . fina14 1&gt; minutes; locap a Los Dr. William Payne, both of
thrill
of
a
lifetime"
Saturday
and
now
a
Philadelph
ia
and to 11-1 in the conference. FreshmanquarterbuckSteve my temper. Ther~ comes a ·Angeles comeback after _the Tempe, home of ASU.
when
he
scored
three
touchbusinessman.
Arkansas dropped to H -1 Campbell scored on a three- pomt when yo~ cant let a ~.uy Lakers tra1Jed by 13 pomts
The board's steering policy
downs in. a 38-10 victory over • "I can't really describe It,"
ATHENS, Ga. (UPJ) - overall and to 3-3-1 in the yard run and Canadi!!l...!eep domg thmgs to you.
_midway In the third period. committe.e appr_QY.ed the Anny
he said, "going through thi s
Aifan Leavitt "kicked -a 33- swe~ -Arkansas~cJoses its soccer-style kicker Mike
Ja ckson, of course, saw the ilbdui-Jabba'r. abd Allen conference switch Friday,
Joe · Gattuso Sr., Navy's . th~ fir st time a nd then
yard field goal with only five season next week against McTague booted a 39-yard pi~,Y dlffe~ently.
. , sc~red 18 of the Lakl!rs last 24 and that recommendation
leading rusher !n 1953-54 Anrl · ~ehvmg It through yo~r son a
seconds remaining Saturday - Texas.
field goal to give North
, I d1dn t provoke him, ~mts .
was adopted by the full board the outstanding player in tbf;_ sec_ond t,l,me. It s un ·
to give heavily-favored ,
Allison moved Tech a 7 ~ Dakota State a 10-7 victory sa~d the yender but rough
Cavs I?~· Celtl~~92: .
at Saturday's meeting.
fourth-ranked Georgia a lead with 3:lGieft in the first over Eastern Kentucky in the Jackson. He made a muscle
Bobby
Bmgo Smtih
The admission of the two i95~ Sugar Bowl, beamed as believable.
The elder Gattuso had ,I.·
hard-earned 13-10 victory quarter, climaxing an eight- NCAA Division II First move on me and I mode a scored 22 points and provided Arizona schools is still suir he watched his 2!1-year-old
over arch-rival Georgia play, 77-yard drive with an Round Playoffs Saturday as muscle move on him ... We key final qu.arter-baskets to ject to action by the PAC 8 at son lead the Middies to their a teammate of Navy C· '
Welsh.
Tech in dense fog and steady eight-yard toss to Turner. the Bisons survived three 11_1ade ,up afterward and spark Cleveland. AW!Iln Ca~r Its meeting next month, but fourth Slrai~ht win over George
In the locker room, the .
rain.
About IJlidway in the second Eastern threats in the closing kiSsed.. .
and Campy Russell .each hit the West Coast Conference
said modestly, ''The line
The Yellow Ja ckets, q~arter Tech drove' 50 yards minutes.
. The mc!dent overshadowed for 17 pomts While Dick initiated the negotiations and
the lead backs scored th.
trailing 10~ after three in eight plays with the payoff
E-astern's Bob Landis another fme performance by Snyder added !5 and Jim has indicated it will invite the
lhree touchdowns. "
periods, had scored 10 polnllj coming on a 27-yard screen missed two field goals in the Julius Erving, who had ~4 Cleam?ns had 14 for . the two into its feld.
The younger Gattuso, wh.
in the final quarter on a 19- pass from Allison to Taylor. finalfiveminutes his first for pomts, moe rebounds, SIX Ca valters. Sidney W1 cks
ASU football coach Frank
has never scored three touchTech made it 17-0 Just 32 yarda and his ~cond for 50 , assists , thr ee steals and lopped Boston with 17 points, Kush said the move. could
yard field goal by Danny
downs in his football career,
Smith and a 26-yard run liy before halftlme on Ralls' field yards on the next-to-last play keyed , a 1 5~ Philadelphia John Havlicek had 16 and • pose problems for the two
said he was "Just thinking
Eddie Ivery to tie the score. goal which came a!ter of the game.
surge m the ftrst 4:30 of the Tom Boswell added 14.
Arizona schools.
about winning the game."
But Ge&lt;lrgia, the South- Arkansas Punter Steve Uttle
eastern Conference cham- dropped the snap on a punting~
Hoosiers make
pion, nioved down the field In attempt, .glvin. g the Red
the waning minutes Qf play Raiders the bail on the
CLEVELAND (UPI) it 33 in u row
and Leavitt booted the game- Arkansas eight with 10
.
.
The man who did the most
winning field goal, on a .seconds remaining.
dsmage to the Cleyelond
fourth-and-three situation at
A ·fumble at the Arkansas
BLOOMINGTON,
Ind.
Browns in their last playoff
UDIIed
Press
Interoatioaal
for
a
wildcard
playoff
berth
The
Steelers
began
their
six
ground
·with
Sam
the Tech 16.
two-yard line late in tile first
(UPI(
Junior
guard
W
ayne
Most of the attention this in the AFC ..
Cunningham and An dy game winning streak with a bid was Paul Warfield when
The Bulldogs will carry 8 quarter cost the Red Raiders
week in pro football has been
New England , 6-3 in the Johnson, and Don Calhoun ~ victory over the Bengals he caught ·a long pass to set Ral'ford·scored 18 points and,
10-1 record into their Sugar another scoring chance.
at Pittsburgh. That defeat up the touchdown that gave All-America center Kent
The Razorbacks never got . focused on the defending AFC East, ca n clinch a did a good job fillin g in."
Bowl match with top-ranked untracked until the fourth Super Bowl champion playoff spot with a victory
Calhoun gained 141 yards was the last for Cincinnati, the Miami Dolphins a 20-14 Benson had 17 Saturday in
leading defending National
Pittsburgh in New Orelans on
which has won five straight. playoff victory in 1972.
Pittsburgh Steelers, who coupled with losses by
New Year's Day. Tech qua,rter when the game • travel to Cincinnati Sunday to Pittsburgh and Cleveland, ' against Baltif(lore two weeks But the Bengals have been
Champion
Indiana to a 11~
The
catch
by
'the
former
llnishtd Its season at 1+1. already was decided . In the continue their battle to gain a both now 7-4. Denver, also 7-4, ago and 109 more last week struggling lately.
victory
over
South Dakotli In
Brown
started
Cleveland
on
a
against the New York Jets in.
first half, Arkansas never
the
seaSlln
opener
for both
·
three:year
slide.
The
Browns,
Elswio&gt;re
Sunday,
PhilaTech bottled up the Georgia moved past. its own 32--yard playoff spot. But in Foxboro, will keep its wild card hopes replacing the
injured
teams.
10-4,
in
1972,
dropped
to
7-5-2
delphi
a
is
at
Washington,
the
alive
Mass.,
there
will
be
another
by
defea
ting
.New
Cunnin gha m.
But
runoing attack in the first line and failed to make a first
Indfana Coach Bobby
quarter and midway through down in the second quarter. im)XIrl.ant contest between England.
Cunningham's sore shoulder Jets at Baltimore, Tampa in 1973, an abysmal 4-10 in
the second until Bulldogs
two teams, which never have
"We aren't talking much ha s apparently hea led and be Bay at Oakland, New Orleans 1974 and 3-11 for their worst Knight shuffled his lineup
almost constantly and used
quarterback Ray Goff began
played in an NFL play off about the playoffs," Denver is expected to play agaiMt at Los Angeles, Atlanta at season ever in 1975.
the throw . He connect~ on
Now Warfield is back with every player on his bench as
game.
Houston, Miami al Cleveland,
Coach John Ralston said. Denver.
hiB first lbree passes for 10, 12
The New England Patriots, "Right now, we're behind the
In Cincinnati, the Bengals, Chi cago at Green Bay, the Browns and he will be the fifth-ranked Hoosiers won
· and seven yards in an 10-yard
who se last post-season eighl-ball, so to speak."
9-2, can eliminate Pittsburgh Kansas City at San Diego and hoping to turn the tables on their 33rd straight game.
Mike Woodson scored 16
. march ior the game's first
appearance was a ~hlO
Denver is. coming off an from the AFC Central seattle at the New ' York the Dolphins Sunday . The
)XIints
for the Hoosiers, Mike
touchdown. Goff scored It on .Ge&lt;lrgia Tech at the Georgia defeat by San Diego in the unimpressi ve 14-13 viclorx Division race with a victory . Giants.
BrowM, 7-4, need a victory
Miday
and Rich V~lavicius 12
a three yard keeper.
Detroit defeated Buffalo, over Miami, 5-8, to keep their
19 ·late in the third quarter. 1963 American Football over the 1-10 New York The Steelers have been
Georgia drove 68 yards at Tech moved it to the one Leag~e champiooship game, Giants and will IJce New playing possibly the best 27-14, as O.J. Simpson set a slim chances alive for a -apiece and Derek Holcomb,
10. Woodson, Mlday and
the start of the third quarter ' where, facing a fourth down host the Denver Br~ncos, the England's highscoring football In the NFL in winning league record wl.th .273 yards wildcard playoff berth.
Holcomb
are freslimen ,
and Leavitt kiCked a 22-yard situation, Coach Pepper only f!Slablished NFL team, offe~se, led by quarterba ck their lasl six games, but four rushing and Dallas edged St .
New England, Pittsburgh
The
Coyotes
were led by
field when the drive bogged Rodgers decided to go for a which riever has pjayed in Sleve Grogan.
losses in their first five Louis, 19-14, on Thanksgiving and Denver are all in better
down at the five.
Briatt
Powers
with
18 poL~ts.
position than Cleveland to-get
"Grogan is a great player," gam~s have them in danger Day.
field goal. Smith put the any post-season game. Both
Linebacker Lucius Sanford Yellow Jackets on the board teams, ha ving th eir best Ralston sa id . "New England of bcin~ eliminated from
Ron
Penderson
chipped
in 16
the
American
F
ootball
Minnesota is at San
recovered a fumble for with a 19-yard kick .
and
Brian
McDermott
II.
se::tson$ in years, are fighting can move the ball well on the post-season play .
~·randsco Monday night.
Conference wildcard spot. . '

G

ROTARY SHAVER be'FOR MEN

NOW

Size

~·

. OfF

COLLEGE' PARK, . Md.
(UPI) - It wasn 'I Don
"Duck" WUJiams' best day as
a collegian, built ended well.
Williams, a 11-foot-3 junior
from Mackin High School in
nearby Washington, D. C., hit
a :ll).foot shot with 31 seconds
remaining in overtime
Saturday to lift Notre Dame
to an B0-79 win over Illhranked Maryland.
" He missed some he
usuany doesn't miss," sald
Irish Coach Digger Phelps.
"He was psyched to be back
home.u
Williams hit only eight of 22
shots from the floor and
· m1ssed a 3().footer just before
tile buzzer that could have
ended the ~arne in regulation
time.
"We've been up for this for
two weeks. I had to tone them
down," 5!1id Phelps . "Win·
ning here in Cole Field House
Is beautiful. We were ranked
29th by some&lt;lne and that's all
they had to hear .,- tha( Notre
Datrie was dead. We have
four games with top 10 teams.
All we want is an NCAA bid."
Williams' final shot came
after guard Brad Davis,
whose 19 points led the Terps,
had put Maryland ahead with
!Moot shot with 40 seconds to
play.
The Terps had a chance to
··- regain possession after
Davis' basket when Larry
Gibson blocked a Notre Dame
shot but the ball rolled out of
bQuncis and gave Willlanis his
oppo!'lunJty for the gamewinner. Another Davis shot
from the middle of the lane
went awry wlih six seconds

,standings

Navy rips Army 38-10

Akron smashes
Rebels, 27-6

lrt one •lectrk lho.,.. thot's .orroed 11M righl to
~1«1 o roror. 3ti
s.ll -thbrpening • urgicoldHI blodf!t, twic• 01 mony ol ..,., before. No niclct.
110 cuts, rotor close, roror ahorp, ra:a:or 1111oolh tho,...

BEDSPREADS
Twin

-

IIORILCO

UJX•s CRUSIID vnm

UNDERALL SALE
ENDS TODAY
AT 6 P.M.
Regular

•

20
•

DAYTIME DRESSES

To Make Mother Very Happy -

..

I

ENTIRE STOCK OF
Reduced

D DESK

Suite, Dining Room Suite.

PANT SUITS

$688

Values to 516.00
Famous Brands

EMPIRE'S
GIFT GALLERY
INCLUDES

Bedroom S~ite, · Livi~g Room

POL VESTER KNIT
Values of $18.00 and $20.00 ·

'

area.

0 GUN CABINETS
0 SWIVEL ROCKER
0 WOOD ROCKER
0 .RECLINERS
0 HOOVER SWEEPERS

PRICE

Large Selection

0 PICTURES
0 WALL.PLAQUES
0 MIRRORS ·
0 BEAN BAGS
D LAMPS
WHIRLPOOL
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WHIRLPOOL
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NFL

11.49

gr

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FAMOUS BRAND

LEISURE
SUITS
REG. 141 TO '&amp;5
NOW
99

$24 &amp;
.,,

'

'.
I

'

.

old mates

•

\

·'

�'
3-C-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976
2-C-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Swulay, Nov. 28, 1976

Blue Angels open
season on Dec. 2

"

Blue Derus will rely
on defense, quickness

Returning lettermen

'

Open with

GAHS VARSITY ROSTER
I 1976-771

Player -Pos
HI . Yr.
)( Brent John son, (cc ) g 59 4
)( G ar ySwain , ~ c cL I 51 1 4
x Ke1th M cGu1re, c
64 4
)( Herb Epl1ng , f g
60 4
x M 1ke Dressel. f
62 4
)t Da vid Warr en, c
6 4 4
K ~ nt Shawve r , t
63 4
M ike Skagg s, g
59 4
Kev 1n Jack son, g
5 10 4
5 10 4
Keith Jackson , g
)( Terr'( Watl , g
5 10 3
Brad Abel s, f
63 3
6- 1 3
Jeff Brown , I
)t Lelfe(men

veterans
returning

feb 10

Ath ens
Wellston

Feb 17

SEVENTH GRACE
CAGE ROSTER
Ptaver- Pos

Ht.

Mark Allen. f

~ ••

starters a yea r ngo A fourth

•
;

returnr.e, Terry Wall , saw
ronsldcrCJble actton and was

!,

a starter late

tn

the sea&lt;Jon

after Snowden suffered an
ankle InJury at Ironton in
carl) February.
Swain scored 115 potnts in
.. 21 ):!ames las\ wml t l ~md had
29 assists lor the Gallians.
Johnson scoreo ll&gt;l pomts in
• • 20 outmgs and ha d 50 assists.

• The two sem o1s \\ ill

ser ve

as

•: co-captams of the 1976-77
; • squad .
McGuire llnlshcd with
. 103 points and 17 assists, and collected Ill rebounds
• In 21 outings.
; • Wall, 111 18 games, scored 67
pomts, had 13. asSists and 13
· rebounds .
Other returnees are Herb
: • ; Ephng, who tallied 10 pomts.
~ : Mike Dressel, six points and
: : David Warren, who talli ed
' • two pomts. All are seniors.
, , Up from last year 's reserve
: team are Mtke Skaggs, semor
' Ito
, Brad Abels, J'umor
••, guard
forward and Jeff Brown,
: ., , JUntor forwa rd.
' Newcomers this ye ar include seniors Kent Shawver,
Kevm and K~ith Jackson
Coach Osborne Will enter
the 1976-77 campaign with a
92-54 overall record in seven
; .; years at Gallip_Qiis.Oshorne·
· i coached teams own a 65-33
SEOAL mark since 1969-70
for a .663 mark, second best
record In the lea gue.
O!lborne' s teams

own one

• league tiUe (1973·74 ), two
•
sectional crowns and one
district
championship
11912·73) . GAHS ha s
finished second four times
In lhe past five years In
league play.
He!ght·WISe, Gallia will be
about the same as last year
The 1976·77 Blue Devil
; edltion, however , appears
; quicker than t he 1975-76
:: qumtet.
Coac h Osborne's
··. philosophy remams the same
as it has the past seven years
- consistent shooting, hoard
. control, good ball handling, a
strong defense and hustle
., "We plan to press more this
·· year," Osborne said as the
; i Blue Devils engaged in preii season drills last week. "We
·• also hope to mix it up a little
·~ more," continued the GAHS
·: mentor.
•t Osborne th1o.ks Waverly, .: Logan and Ironton will be the
' teams to beat. Ga llipolis
·; could be in the thick of the
. SEOAL title race again this
winter "If everything fa lls
. Into place."
If the Blue Devils run their
·! offensive patterns well, wait
. for good percentage shots and
· pressure the opPOSition at aU
; times on both ends of the
· Door, It wlll be an Interesting
' season for GAHS fans.
Too, a team has to have
very few Injuries (or illness)
during the course of a season,

:i

'

1

N1 ck Robi nso n, f
Gr Pg Eutsler , f
Bil l Arm strong , g
I o~tc k Dentteld, g
,V\ark Weaver, g
Greg Alk 1ns, f
Mark Bosl1 c. c
J D Jones, g
Rand'yOrr , f
Chuck W1ckl1ne, g

59
5 10
56
56
57
5· 11
60
56
5 11
5 'l

FRESHMAN SC HEDUL E
Dec. 2
Dec. 9
Dec 16
Jan 6
Jan 10
Jan 13
Ja n 20
Ja n 24
Jan 27
Jan 31
t= eb 3
Feb 7

Feb 10

A t Meigs
Logan
Waverl.,.
Athens
AI Jackson
Wellston
fv\eig s
PI Pleasant
AI l oga n
At PI Pleasant
AI Wa verl y
Jackson

AI Alhens

Feb 17 -

At Well ston

EIGHTH GRAD E
Player -Pa s
M1ke Bu rfJer , g
Ken Caudill, g
Bobby Faster f
Ted Gi llesp1e, I
Mar k Haner , f
Bobby March1 , g
R1ck Mart1n , g
Cr atg Mason, I
Brian McDade, g

Ht
51

5'
5-6

58
57

54

53
5i

53
56

Todd Noberl , f
Andr Pl y mate , t

Ken Pric e, c
R1 cky Ree s, g
la r r y Rober ts, c
Chu ck Sanders, g
Tt mmy Skidm ore, f
M1ke Sterretl , I

56
60
5-0
60
5-1
56
5-5

EIGHTH GRACE
SCHEDULE
Dec 1
J!ltet gs
Dec 9
AI Logan
Jan 3
Jan 6
Jan 10
Jan 13
Jan 20
Jan 24
Jan 27

Jan 31
Feb 3
Feb 7

AI Ravenswood

[7th &amp;6th I
At Athens
Ja ckson

AI Well ston

At Meigs

At Pt Pl easant
Logan
Pt Pl easant
Ravenswood

17th&amp; 6th )
At Jackson

keep turnovers down. have
consistent officiating both at
home and on the road and
must be able to take ad·
vantage of all mistakes
committed by the opposition
to finish on top in the alwaystough Southeas tern Ohio
League.
The annual "Meet the
Team Night" is scheduled
Tuesday, Nov. 30, m the
varsity gym.
More than 250 youngsters
are participating in aU levels
of Gallipolis basketball this
winter.
Norm Person, who served
as freshman coach during the
1975·76 campaign, has moved
up to the reserve level this
year.
The Blue Imps Will be
seeking their first reserve
crown In 22 years.
Coach Persin ha s 12
sophomores on the 1976-77
roster seeking starting berths
for the Dec 3 home opener
against visiting Meigs.
The Blue Imps wlll play 18
games.
Blll Leedy, who served as
eighth grade coach the past .

5'

Sco tt Ar ms trong , g
Ton y Arm strong , g
Edd ie Barnette, g
Russ Bergdoll. f
Charlie Boggess. g
Doug Brown , f
Deni se Canterbur y, !

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Academy H1gh School 's Blue
Pat Cas to. g
Devils once agam will rely on
zJ ohn Cr aft , I
their defens1ve ability to
Mike Croft . g
carry them through a rugged
Randy Da1l ey, g
BLUE IMPS ROSTER
Paul Duncan, f
16-game regular season
Player. Pa s
Ht Yr
John Elardo, g
sc hedule which beg ins J1m Ha rri s, g
5 8 2 Sarah Evans, c
; Friday, Dec. 3, at home Mark Sm1th, f
6-0 1 Joe Fos ter , !
60 2 Bobby Carnes. I
· against the vlsltmg Me1gs Je ff La nham , f
E V Clarke. c
6 3 1 Paula G1 bbs, I
: Marauders
Matt Sterr ett , c
6 2 2 fv\arly Glenn , I
Coach Jim Osborne, no"
Da ve W1 ckl1ne , g
5 10 2 Bra d Graham , I
dean of Southeastern Ohio
Rick Dail ey. g
5 10 1 Cry stal Green. f
Ste ve McGhee, g
5 10 2 Scott Harnngton, g
League coaches with the
Nate Thom as, g
58 2 Rob Henderson , c
retir ement of Athens
Robbi e Jenkins , g
58 7 Ter ri Hennesey , g
Charles McAfee, is In his
Bob Kiesling , g
5 10 1 James Kmg , g
eighth year as head Blue
DanSickles, g
59 2 Ph1 l Klng, g
Devil coach. He is being
Danny Kiski s, c
VARSITY -RES ERVES
Carol Lane, g
assisted by Coach Gene
t976-775CHECULE
Tim Lani er , c
Oesch again this winter.
Dec 3
Me1gs T tm m y lawrence, g
Osbor ne ha s seve n let- Dec 10
AI logan Ly nn Logan , c
At South Po1nt Mi chael Medas, f
: termen returning from last Dec 11
I ron ton Scott Mil ler. I
: year's squad wh1ch compiled Dec . 14
Dec 17
At Waverly Danny M1tchel l , c
· a 13-8 season record The Dec 12
Portsmouth Jer ry Molnar , f
: 1975-76 Blue Devils fimshed Dec 30 PI Pl easant. at R1o Ronn 1e Myer s, c
AI Athens Malt O' Donnell. f
: second behmd champion Jan 7
Jackson M1ke Petrella, c
Ironton in SEOAL play with a Jan 11
J an 14
AI Wellston Bren t Pinkerton , I
. 10-4 mark.
Ja n 21
At Mergs Br 1an Ptnk erton, I
Gone from that squad by Ja n 22
1
Whee ler sburg Rhonda Por ter , f
Logan Ger ry Prenderga st, g
; graduation
are
Gary ' Jan 78
AI Ironton Rhonda Pushkar , c
• Snowden, Tony Folden and Feb I
4
Wa verly Steve Runyon , g
; Brent
Saun ders ,
th e Feb
Feb a
AI Jackson Bill Sergent. f
' Gallipolis top two scorers and Feb II
Athens R1chy Steel e, I
Feb 18
: rebounder.
Wellston Ronnt e Tawney , t
Tommy Teasley g
; Of the seven r et urnmg
FRESHMAN ROSTER
Ra nd y Th1vener , f
:· lettermen, three - Ga ry Player
.Pos.
Ht
Sieve Thom pson , I
~ Swain, Brent John son 110d Greg Harring ton , g
56 Jer ry Warr en, c
., Keith McG 111 re - were Jell Cam eron , c
6 J Matthew Wtthee , g

!

I

1976-77 cage rosters, schedules

Meigs; 7

J im Wonn, c

54
44

52
55

53

46
53
46

53

..

50

5-5
55

5-9
4-9
I 7

56
10

4

56

54
45

5-5
54
5-J
48

5-4
10
5-6
50
56
5-4
5-4
56
54

4

55

50

57

5'

52

59
52
47

51
•I 5
43
4- 10

50
5·6
46
54

RINKY -CINK ROSTERS
Kn 1cks- Kev1n Pull1ns, 6,
Sc ott Slone. 6. Mike Hively ,
6 , Steph en Sk i dm or e, 6 ,
Kenny Ru ssel l. 6. J1mmy
Ta y lor , 5, Jell Ra th burn , 5,
Chr~s Ell ces sor , 5: Robbte
Robbi ns, 5, Randy Sm1th , 5,
Kevt n Carl y , 4 , Berni e N1eh
m , a, Chn s Su ll1 va n, 4, Bill
Swa1 n, 4, Brett Bost1 c. 4,
Greg Bush , 4 , Chns Rhod es , 4
and Pau la Ru sselL 4
Lakers - T1m Bush , 6 ,
J1mmy ' Fanning , 6, Lynn
Shee ts, 6, Kevrn Plantz 6
ROger Sau nder s, 6, Wesley
Mull1ns, 5, Todd Sheets 5
Jimm y Beaver . 5, Jason
Hogan , 5 , Ray Tope, 5, Ry.an

Moore. 6. Mik'e Wa llen. 5.
L 1sa Woodall , 5, Berke
Lyons, 4 , Bobby S1mms, 4,
Greg P1cken s, 4; Paul S1mon ,
4 , Kelley Sa nders, 4 and
Robb te Fanning , 4
Wamors - Br yan Clark . 6.
T 1m
T awney . 6,
Er ic
Thoma s, 6; Kenny Robin son ,
5, Kev tn Ca rt er , 5, Maxte
Webb , 4 , Cor rlnla Myers, 4 ;
Paul M c Kenzie , 4, Todd

Ber gdoll . 4, Gr"9 Long. 4;

Ke nmny Owen s, 4, Kedwa r d
Gnff1n , 4, Mark Cameron, 4
and Juan McC abe, 4
Trotters - Brad Johnson ,
6 , Bar t Owens , 6. Arth ur
Ca sey . 6. Danny Hennessey ,
6 , Br~an A tkms , 6 , Pat
Ta ckett, 5 Robert Myers, 5,
Jell Sha w, 6, Danny Pres sel! ,
4, Ki m Jeff er son, 5. T1na
Jones , 5, Tra cey Hennessey ,
5, Edna Sprrnger, 5: Don
Bosley , 4 and L isa Sprlngi?r ,
4
R1o Grande Kevin
Isaa cs, 6; Chip per Young , 6,
Steve Wolfe, 5, Steve Bennett. 6; T J Owens, 6; Dav 1d
Car pen ter , 6 , Mark Hager , 6 ;
Alan Smilh, 6, Brad Smi1h , 5 ,
Jeff Meek, 5, John Owens , 4 ,
Oa vl d Garber, 5, John
Bosti c, 5, Jerry Cal l, 4, Gary
Sta ley , 4 ; Kev in W1thee, 4 and
Robbte Mor r iso n, 6
C l ay Mark BurtQ.rt,
6;
Dave
Bostic ,
6,
V i r g il B1nq , 6 , Emer son

two years, has been moved up
to the freshman level this
winter.
The GAHS frosh will play a
i4-game schedule, tncluding
12 Southeastern Ohio League
games. Ironton will not take
part m the frosh league a gam
this year. Leedy has 12
candidates seeking starting
positions.
Tbe GARS frosh open at
Meigs on Dec. 2. Home
games will be played on the
GABS hardwood.
Mike Simmons will coach
the 01ghth grade squad thiS
winter. The junior high school
team has 17 candidates. The
Little Blue Devils wlll play 14
regular season ga mes The
etghth graders open up at
home (Washington School )
against visiting Meigs on

Dec. 2.
llohn Distel, Dennis Fravel
and Vince Hlll have charge of
53 seventh, grade candidates
this winter . The seventh
graders have two games
scheduled with Ravenswood
Intramural games will
highlight acllon for these
youngsters. Fundamentals

"

Bi ng , 6. Co l tn Dr ay , 6 ;
Da r r e n Haner , 6, Aar on
Sa unders. 6. Eli zabeth Fife,
5 , Dee Mane Frankltn , 5,
Sont a McWilliam s, 5. Perry
Caldwell, 5, Charles Biars, 5,
Sean McWtlllam s. 5; TLm
Gnfllfh, 5, Malt M~ Ktnney ,

Cage standings

5. Tim Keons. 5. Phil M1t

chell , 5, K1m F 1f e, 4, Debbie
Besco, 4, Roderick Sanders.
11 R1c k y Randolph , 4, Da vi d
Putney. 4; Joel Collins . 4:
Bill y Ward , 4 , Bryan Wonn ,
4 , Randy Cr ews. 4 and Greg
F1fe, 4
· Green No 1 - Caval ier s TolYl Moore, 6 , Greg Adkms,

BRENT JOHNSON

GARY SWAIN

Tea m ·

ALL GAMES
W L P OP

Logan

I 0

Well ston
Athens

0 1 39 91
0 2 95 134

Gall ipoliS

Ga ll1an, 6; Ru st y Banks, 6 ,
Terr y Reynolds , 6; Jamie
Lane, 6 ; Shell y Dodson , 6 ,
Son 1a Pha ltn , 6, Tony Dillion .
4 · Gordon Sple te, 4, Mtl&lt;e
Keefer , 4, Mike Tawney , 4 ,
Kenny Holley , 4 ; Jeff Roach .
5, Brian O' Dell, 4; Ferrell
Miller , 4, Renee Halley , 5,
larry Sco tt, 5 and Kel l y
Joll ey , 6
Green No 2 - Trailb la zers
- Dona ld Deerms , 6 , Doug
Deens , 5, T1mmy Meadow, 5 ;
Kev1n Johnson , 5, Tony
Bauer , 5, Tommy Duncan , 5:
Max Sterre tt , 6 , L1 sa Leget,
6. Ta mm y Meadows , 6; Kei th
8arf1meer, 4, Br tan Shepley,
Pasqua le, 4, James Mon.
tgomery , 4, J 0 Ca ll ey, 4 ,
Mark Bause ll , 5
Bna n
Garre tson 5, M1ke Ru ssel l.
4 Bnan Ward , 4 and Terry
Of1ver, 5

SCHEDULES
IF!rsl Halfl

~INKY - DINK

0
0

0
0

0

0
0

0

HERB EPLING

Dec 21
At Wahama
Dec 30
Ga ll ipolis , at R1o
Grande
Jan . 4
At Hurr ican e
Jan . 7 At Parkersburg Sou th
Jan . 11
Nitro
Ravenswood
Jan 14

TERRY WAJ,L

Jan. 18

At Milton

Jan 21
Jan . 28
Feb 1
Feb 5
Feb 8
Feb II
Feb 12
Feb 15
Feb 18

Parkersburg South
At Dun bar
Ripley

Feb 25
Mar 1
M.ar 4

Wahama
Milton
Dunbar

Feb 22

At Oak Hi ll
At Ntt ro

Whee ling Central

Metgs
Hurri cane
At Ravenswood

At Ripley

PORTSMOUTH TROJANS
Dec 3
AI Russell
Dec 10
Ashland
Dec . 17
Boyd Cou nty
Dec 22
AI Ga ll 1polts

6 15

Jan . 4
Jan 7
Jan. 8
Jan. 11
Jan 14

Jan . 16

Jan 24
Jan . 28
Jan 29

KEITH MCGUIRE

Feb 2
Feb 4
Feb. 12
Feb 15
Feb 19

DAVID WARREN

At Greenup
Hunt1n gton High
Columbus Northland
Barboursville

Russell
At Ashland

Hunlmg ton East
Greenup

Af Boyd County
At Huntington High

At Barbour svifle

At Whee lersburg

At Huntington Eas-t
Ironton

WHEELERSBURG
PIRATES
Nov . 27
At Green
Dec 3
Minford
Dec 4
"Dec 10

Clay vs Green II. 7 30
,Clay vs Green II B. 6.15

Dec. 17
Dec 2~
Dec 28

Dec 16
Wamor s vs Rio Grande, 6
Warr tor s B vs R10 B 6 4~
Green I vs Kn1cks. 7 30
Green 1 B vs Kn tc ks B, 8 15
Dec 20:
Clay vs Trotters 6
Clay B vs Trotter s B. 6 45
Green II vs Lak ers , 7 30
Green II B vs Lak er s B, 8 15
Dec 12
Wamors vs Gr een I. 6
Wa r nor s B vs Green I B,
6 45
Clay vs R1 o Grande , 7 30

Jan 7

Wave rl y
New Boston

At Clay
At Northwest
Portsmouth West
At Portsmouth Wes t

Jan . 8 At Co lumbus Mohawk

Jan 14

..,..,
' ..._.,.,..

•

•

•

•

\

•

'•

•
'

•

--,•

Jan . 21
Jan 22

Jan . 28
Jan 29

Ports. Notre Dame

At Valley
At Ga ll ipolis

Nor thwest
Greenup

Feb. 4

AI Minford

Feb 12

Portsmouth

Feb. 18

At Portsmou th East

Feb 19

South Webster

SOUTH POINT
POINTERS
Dec 3
~
Oak Hill
l
- Dec ' 7
At
Coa
l Grove
I
Dec II
Ga lli polis
\
Dec 17
At Rock Hil l
Dec 28
At Ironton
COACH NORM PERSIN Jan .4
AI Milton

'

Clay B vs Rio B. 8· 15

•

MIKE DRESSEL

Jan . 7
Jan . II
Jan . 14
Jan . 21
Jan 25

Warnors vs Clay, 6
Warriors B vs Clay B, 6· 45
Green II vs Green I, 7 30
Green II B vs. Green I B, a 15
Jan 6

Jan. 28
Feb I
Feb 4
Feb 8
Feb II
Feb 15
Feb 16

laker s vs Rio .Grande, 6
Laker s B vs Rio B. 6. 45
Tro tter s vs Knicks, 7 30
Trotter s B vs . Knicks B, 8 15

(Endfirsthalfl

·

Fatrtand

At Chesa peake
Ironton St. Joe

AI Oak Hill
Coal Grove
At Lenore

Rock Hill
At Fairland

Chesapeake
At Ironton St. Joe

Milton

Ceredo Ke nova

IRONTON TIGERS
Dec. l
Wellston
Dec . 10
At Meigs
Dec 14
At Gallipolis
Dec . 17
Jackson
Dec 21
Ashland
Dec 28
South Po1nt
Jan . 7
Logan
Jan . II
At Waverly

will be stressed throughout
the season.
Action in the Gallipolis
Rinky·Dink League, under
the supervision of Coach Bill
Wamsley again this winter,
will begin on Monday, Nov.

29.

Jan 14

Etght teams of fourth, fifth
and sixth graders make up
the Class A DIVISion. Eight
teams will make up the Class
B Division . Teams ~~.re ·

Smith to start for
Packers Sunday

Warriors, Lakers, Trotters,
Knicks , Green Cavaliers,
Clay, Green II Trailblazers
and Rio Grande. One hundred
and forty youngsters . are
mel uded m this program.
To help pay for the
program Ibis winter, a 2!1cent admission fee will be
charged all individuals at
the gate.
Each team will play an
exhibition game during the
halftime intermission of the
varsity (or reserva) home
games. The exhibition
schedule follows :
Dec. 3 - Class A Warriors
vs. Class A Rio Grande
(reserve game); Dec. 14 - ·
Class A Clay vs. Gins A
•'

Ht. Yr.
5-7 .4

Barb. Ede l mann, f

Beth Abels . f

5-7 4

Karen Sprague. g

5-8 4

Tina Nibert , c .

5-10 3

Pam f!'as(! Uale, f
Ginny Young, g

S-9 3
5.4 3

Debbie Shaw , f
Kathr Daniels. g

5-8 l
5-7 2
5-7 2
5-6 2

Jane Groves, f

Shery l Shaw, g
Sara h Abels . c
Paille Nlehm , f

5-9 2

Diane Canterbury, g

Peggy Baord, g

Tam1 Fraser , f

5-6 2
5·6 2

5-l 2
5·7 2

Janie Baird, g

5-0 1

Cindy Dressler , c

5-8 1

BLUE ANGELS SCHEDULE
0 0 Dec 1
Meigs
0 0 Dec. 9
At Logan
0 0 Dec 16
At Waverly
0 0 Dec 11
At Fairland
0 0 Jan 6
At Athens

PT PLEASANT
BIG BLACKS

Laker s vs Clay , 7 30
Laker s B vs Clay B. 8 15
Dec . 1
Tr otter s vs Green L 6
Tr otter s B vs Green I B. 6 45
Kntcks vs R1o Gra nde, 7 30
Knteks B vs R 10 B, 8 15
Dec. 2:
Warners vs Laker s, 6
Warrrors B vs Laker s B. 6 45
Trotters vs Green I I, 7 JO
Tr atters B vs Green II B.

Jan . S

60

Player- Pas.

Jan 10

At Soufh Point
At Meigs

Jan 24

At Kyger Creek

Jan J1

At Ironton

Feb 7

At Jackson

Ja Q 17
Feb 3

Feb 10

Feb 14

COACH JIM OSBORNE

COACH GENE OESCH

Knlcks ; Dec. 22 - Class A
Green II vs. Class A Trotters ;
Jan 11 -Class A Green I vs.
Class A Lakers; Jan. 22 Class B Warriors vs. Class B
Trotters (reserve game),
Jan. 28 - Class B Lakers vs.
Class B. Knlcks (reserve
game I, Feb. 4 - Class B

Green II vs Class B Rlo and
Feb 11 -Class B Green I vs.
Class B Clay (reserve game)
Coaches should meet with
their players tn front of the
gym and come in as a team .
Players should be dressed!
and ready to play three
min utes before halfttme.

Aziz signs with Buffalo
SCA TTI.E IUP!) - Za1d
Abdul-Aziz, 6-foot-10 center
who last played with the
SeHtt le SuperSomcs, has
signerl i:l CQntracl with lhe
l!uffalu Rraves, his auorney
~

announced Friday .
Buffalo made room for Az1z
by waiving Clyde Mayes, a 6foot-9 reserve center with a
yea r's experience:

·'
\•

Athens

GREEN BAY, WIS . (UPI)
- Ollie Smith will start in
place of injured wide receiver
Steve Odom Sunday in the
Green Bay Packers' last
home game, in which they
host th e Chicago Bears,
Coach Bart Starr said
Friday.
'
Odom suffered a severe
charley horse last Sunday In
the Packers' game with Minnesota.
Smith, 6-foot-3, 200 pounds,
will be making his first start
in the pros.
Linebacker Tom Toner ,
who missed the Minnesota
ga me with a strained knee,
also will miss the Chicago
game. Starr said.

continued. Ke1th McGuire led
GAHS on the boards against
the Senators. Brad Abels,
after a slow start. came on
strong to help the Blue Devils
in that department.
In the aSilsiA departm en~
Gary Swalo pa ced the
GuUlaos with four. Terry
Wall bad three.
The GAHS defense, w1th
constant pressure, created 47
Portsmouth West turnovers.
"Some of our defenders are
about a half-step behind at
times on the press rtght
now ," said Osborne. "This
hastobeatotalteam effort at
aUt[jnes,"lhe GAHS mentor
continued.

I
I

Ironton

Fair la nd
Eastern

cf

Fa1rvlew, Ky.

At We llston
Meigs
Gallipoli s

f

I

A t Jackson
Waver ly.

'
llilifMliJ!IdYCI
_ tiacd ' '
)
:1""-......o;..:!r .... . ~ -,.......... ........ -·-·'

At Logan
At Athens
At Por tsmouth

t

MEIGS MARAUDERS
Nov. 27
Dec J
Dec 10

Dec 14
Dec 17

Jan 7

Vinton County

At GallipoliS
Ironton

Athens
At Logan
At Jackson

Jan 8

At V111ton County

Jan 11

Well ston

Jan 14
Jan 11
Jan 28
Ja n 29

At Waver ly
Gallipolis
At Iron ton
At Athens

Feb 4

Logan

Feb 11

Af Wellston

Jackson

Feb. 12

At Pt. Pleasant

Feb 18

Waverly

WELLSTON ROCKETS
Nov . 26

Dec. 3
Dec. 10
Dec. 14
Dec. 17
Dec. 21
Dec. 30

Jan. 7

Jan. 11
Jan. 14

At Vinton Coun ty
A t Ironton
Jackson
Logan

'

«

*!lia\!iia----lliial'&gt;-·..--". . . . -.. . . . . . . . !f---l'ioL!&gt;. .___ j

McARTHUR -

Vinton
32 points
m the final period to hand
visiting Wellston an 81·39 nonleague hardwood setback
here Friday mght. II was the
season opener for both teams.
Coach Rick Purdue's
Golden Rockets trailed 16·10,
34·20 and 49·31 at the quartermarks
The
Vikings,
who
outrebounded the Rockets 4026, were led by John Prater
and Scott Barnett, each with
14. Patterson had 11
rebounds'.
John Royster led th e
Rockets w1th 12 points.
Box score:
NELL\TON tJ•t
R
Royster (1 1 1 M M i tn . J 0 8
Gtllllnnc:l 1 o 1 J Royster 6
0 1 ' Hud son 5 0 10 Sw1 ngl e
1 0 J Pugh . .r 0 I, TOTALS
Ij t Jj

1/ !NTON COUNTY IBII

Ironton

TOTAL\ 111781

7
11
14
21
28

Jan. 29
Feb I
Feb. 4
Feb.8
Feb. II
F'eb 18

( (' nt ral

SOO
4·14

!

] 89

Dec
Dec
Dec
Dec
Dec

Wel lston
Vmton Co

10 10 11 8- 39
16 18 15 3? 81
~.,~ , .., ,.1V•'
"'core
Vinton
Count y 31 We\ lsl on 34

W l
13 .t
10 5
10 B
10 8
1 9

CleVe land

Houston
N£'w Or'!ca ns
San Al)i OOIO
Wa !; h rngiOf\

Pet
765
667
5S6

556
4]8
6 12 JJ)

AIIMii!l

Western

Confl' r~ n c e

MtdWC!II Div1 sion
W L Pel.

Df'n v. Pr
Oet r or!
Kansas Ct i Y
1na1an a

''

150

4

11

9

550

PMtlan d

W l Pet
10 ~ 661

SC it ll le

11

1

9

B

611
519
7 10 dl 'l
5 B 385

3•

GB
I .•

2

Games

T Pts GF GA
0 28 110 B6
7 24 101 80
2 21 !1 9 1
] 19 67 74

1 11 ,,

18

67 77

7 17 1

I~

Ill'&gt; Hill

Ohio High School
Basketball Resulls
United Press International
Akron Kenmore 75 Stow 63
Akron Norton 50 N Akron 49
Canton McK inley 90 Find l ay
Cl e

G l env ill e

He1gh ts 79

88

Sha k er

Ct e W Tech 64 Cl e Linc oln W

56
F os tona 68 Nor wa lk St Pa u l

'

Lex tng ton 70 Wy nford 67

Spnngfle ld N 63 Stdney 40
Twin Va ll ey S 79 Newlon 41
Vandalia. Bu tler 66 Oakwood
60 loti
Akron Firestone 58 Revere 47
Rooseve l t 53 ·
Bloom Carrol l 56 Col Wehr le
55

Buckeye Centra l 74 Old Fort
65

Day Dunbar 75 Col Cen tral 74

Day Stebb ins 64 Carrol l 57
Elyria 66 t oledo Libbey 57

Er ie M c Dowell 59 Conneaut
46
'
Fairfield Union 86 Co l Ready

68

51
58

WadswCJrth 70 Northwes t 52

Westland 55 Delaware 43
Whitehall 84 Chillicothe 75
Wooster 43 Tr lway 38

Worthmgton 60 Y.'Qstervllle N

by Chisox

'

Automalic oiling
standard equlprn.ent.
Automatic efl·w••ther slartet
for quick 'n easy starting.
Automatic Otlt•plece cl•fd the Industry's
simplest. Smooth

and reliable

oo.

IN

.

BLUE

Exp. 12-4-76
ARMSTRONG

ACCUTONE flOOR COVERING
95 SQ. YD.

'2

GOOD SELECTION OF PATTERNS
Exp. 12-4-76

CHI CAGO (UP! ) - Eric
Soderholm, former
Mlmmsota Twins' infielder,
Friday signed with the
Chicago White Sox, the
second fr ee agent from the
reentry draft signed by the
Sox in the past 48 hours.
White Sox ' President Bill
Veeck Signed former Chica go
4 Cubs' pitcher Steve Slone
Wedne sday
Soderholm, 211, underwent
knee surgery after the 1975
season and dld not play In
1976. White Sox' club
physicia n, Dr. Sid Shafer,
examined h1m earlier this
week and said he now has a
weU-fun clinning knee.

MANNING:SOWMAN

PORT ABLE ELECTRIC
HEATERS
1320 WATT

'11 95

·CAROLINA
LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

312 6TH ST.

PT. PLEASANT

PH. 675-1160

STORE HRS. MON ..fRI. 8-5; SAT. 8-12

CROS.S -HARDWARE
992-3831 71 N. 2nd Ave .

Come In and

Sll!

'3
STOCKED GREEN, GOLD, RED,

Trtmbl e 73 Federal Hock ing

64

r -,_,....__.r. inked

fo r bar and culling chain-

noo to

56 Wes ter v ille

53
Hubbard-62 You ngs North 60

Homelitef150
Automatic
Chain Saw

Just outside of carpenter
off 143. Prices r1nge from

INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET
12fT. WIDE
13 12FT. WIDE

Col Brookhaven 74 Zanesville

The Ho.l
Chain. Saw
Buv Soderholm is
·

JACKSON tRONMEN
Nov 27
Greenfield
Nov 30
Minford
Dec 3
Athens
Dec 10
At Wellston
Dec 14
Waverly
Dec 17
At lroryton
Dec . 21
VInton County
Dec 29
At Greenfield
Jan. 7
Meigs
Jan . 11
At Galllpofls
Jan . 14
Loga n
Jan 11
At Athens
Jan . 28
Wellsion
Feb \
AI Waverly
Feb 4
Ironton
Feb 8
Gallipoli s
Feb 11
AI Meigs
Feb 18
At Logan

698-1191

Rt 4, Box 188
Pomeroy, Ohio

AT CAROLINA WMBER WE HAVE
"EVERYTHING" TO BUILD
"ANYTHING".

Miami East 70 Tro y 43
New Breman 69 Sidney leh
man 58

'

APPAlACHIAN
STOVE
CO.
Christine GIQIII

C1n Princeton 71 Sycamore 60
Ctn Xavier 79 Ci n Mc N1ch olas

Norwalk 52 Edison 27
Perry 58 Yqung stown E 53
Por tsm ou th NO 90 Ironton St

Gallipol is
At Logan

.,

57 8•1 thby deserve U1c rul.i_!!~ us

1l1Cy rolled to a 27·3 hall\ime
margin over the thirct.fankt'&lt;i
Bos to n
Bu ff alo
Lions.
Tor onto
Koeg e l ' s
54 - yartl
Cle ve la nd
Fnday's Resulf s
touchdown strike to Masson~
AI! Qn !a 5 St LOUIS 2
wit[1 3·08 left m the first
Plltsbur qh J Cleveland \
quarter go1 Moeller off and
Phli tldCIPil ta 4 Colorad o 7
!Only games s ch('d u led J
rwming, und after Gaharum 's
Sund'ay ' s Ga mes
Kent Perrlll ki cked a Jl-ya1·d
M.nnesota at N Y Ra•)qer s
NY lslndr s at Ph ,lad elphla
field goal, the Crusaders
Octrorl at Bu ff alo
moved the ball almost at wlll ,
Clevela nd at To1onto
L os Angel es ot c;:o lor ado
rolling up 263 total yards In
(O nly gam es sc hedul ed I
the f1rsl hlllf to five for the
!.tons.
Moeller' s fourth touchdown
of the flrst half came w1lh one
1:it:! Co nd remuinmg on a
beautifully executed 4:&gt;-yard
dr1ve with Koegel. a threeyear starter at qm.trterback,
hittmg Condeni from four
yards out.
After !hal, there was never
any doubt. as to the outcome
Frankl in Monroe 73 Mitton .'
with Koeg~i content to ke ep
Un ion 56
his atl.llck on the ground.
Independence 66 Brook lyn 41
loll
The win was the 12t h
Lebanon 67 Waynesvi ll e 30 without a loss this year for
L or a tn A dmi ra l King 67
Moell er and gives the
Brookside 59
•
defendin
g champion 24
Matl hews 70 Jefl er son 66
Miami E 70 Troy 41
straight victories the last two

Cle Adams 62 Cle E Tech 56
Cle lg nal&gt;us 65 Cle S 45
Joseph 45
Covingtoo 61 Tipp City 55
Day Col White 74 Beaver . Reynoldsburg
S 53 lot )
creek 53

At Lan caster
Nel s· York

WAVERLY TIGERS
Nov 30
Portsmouth West
Dec. 3
Logan
Dec 4
At Wheelersburg
Dec 10
l&gt;.t Athens
Dec 14
At Jackson
Dec. 17
Gallipolis
Dec 28
Washington CH
Jan . 7
~t Wellston
Jan . 8. At Wester ville North
Jan . 11
Iron ton
Jan_14
• Meigs
'an. 21
AI Logan
Jan. 28
Athens
Feb. I
Jackson
Feb 4
At Gallipolis
Feb 8
Allronton
Feb 11
Wellston
Feb. 18
At Meigs

]4

Newark 56 Col W 52

- Ironton
Jackson

•At Waverly
Meigs
AI Wellston
Logan
At Gallipoli s
Iron ton

63 73

lima Cent. Cath. 75 Elida 60 Ak ron Gar field 58 Ken t

Middletow n 84 Ltma Sr. 68
Northwes tern 72 Tecumseh 57
Perr y 50 Farmmgton 41 .
Ri ver Valley 75 Buc'(rus 63
Southeestern 50 Shawnee 49
Spnngfleld &lt;19 Green 43
Spnngfleld S 85 Hamilton

Bex le y 78 Ptcken ngton 60

Wellston
At Meogs
At Athens

Jan . 28
Feb 1
Feb. 4
Feb 6
Feb 11
Feb 16

17 73

yea rs. Gahonna , whi ch
By GENE CADllES
0\/Crpowcrcd
Lakewood St.
Ul'l Sports Writer
-Edward
28-0m
the semifinals
AKRON , Ohio C UPI) a
week
ago,
finished
the year
Quarl erb ack Tim Koege l
tossed three t ouchdown AI l\l-1.
Gahanna 's Tim O'Caln ,
p11sses and tuilhack Sieve
Gtvens scor ed t wlce to lead who gained nearly 1,400 yards
tt wesome Cmcmnali Moeller during the re~'lilar season,
to a 43-5 victory over was held to eight yards In 16
Ga hanna Lincoln Fr1day carries by the swarming
night. giving the Crusaders Moeller defense.
their second s\raight Clo ss
Score by quartirs :
Cln Moeller
1 20 9 7- .:!
AAA stat e !ugh school
Gahanna L.
0 3 2 0- 5
foo tball championship .
ln .- M~ssong
S4 pau
Koegel. a 6-4, 19f&gt;.poUnd fr Com
Koegel (Nabe r klckl
rlfle·armed senior . fired
Gah . ~ FG Perrlll 31
Cln - Givens 19 run (Naber
touchdown passes of 54 yards
.
to Bob Ma ssong and 19 and klckl
Cln - Condeni 1Q pasa from
four yards lo Dave Condeni.
Koegel INabef klckl
Givens , a hard-running,
Cln. -Condenl 4 pasa from
167-pound ta1lback, streaked K""9el (k ick foiled)
Cin ."":&gt;"Gi vens 19 run (Nabe r
19 yards for both of his scores
kick
I
as ilie Crusaders overcame
Gah - Sa fe ly ,
Con denl
some early mistakes to tum tack led In end 1one
the game into a rout.
Cln.- Salefy , To e ll er
ll.'lckted In end 1one
Moeller, a neur-unanimous
Cln .·- E imtl nger 1 run
chOice as the slate's No 1 !Naber
ktckl
team, left little doubt tl1111
A- 7,46!1

school scores

51

Nels York

At Ironton
jackson

LOS Ange les 8 9 7 2 ~

Pt!lsbur gh
8 Q 5 ?1
Detroit
7 11 •I 18
w as htngton 6 13 2 14
Ad tHllS Dlvh •on

Ar can um 74 Preble Shawnee Col Wes11 and 55 Delaware 43

Af Gallipol is

Jan. 14
Jan 21

14 ~ 3 31 17 J8
11 a 5 77 ·86 78
II 7 &lt;I 26 76 63
8 t l J 19 78 83
Smyth11 Oivt s1on

NY ISiandrs
A llantc'l
Ph1la
N V Ra nger s

Str ongsvllle 65 N Royalton 63 Col Franklin Hei ghts 61
Teays Valley "
(ott
Tiff1n Columbian 69 Sandusky Col Linden 90 Findlay 67
Col Wa lnu l Ridge 65 Col
Per ki ns 54
Versa i lles 54 Marl on Local 49 Hartley 61

At Ja ckson
Waver ly

Lancaster

6S
89

Friday's high

Northeas tern 62

Athens

Dec 30

11

9)

Palrrcll Oivt SIOn
W l T Ph GF GA

6S

mauls
Gahanri_a, 43-5

W L T Ph GF GA
18 3 1 J7 97 60
I \ 5 J 25 65 J8
B 9 4 20 77 76
6 10 6 18 60 71

At Ironton

At Jackson
At Ma rietta
Waverly
At Meigs
Well ston

79 61
109 !B

W l T PIS GF GA

East

Brrn11nghn1

'}7

I ?7

St Louis
11 10 1 23 70 BS
Ch•cago
10 1l 1 12 76 64
Mmnesota
5 14 3 IJ 59 98
Col or ado
5 15 2 I? S4 74
Vancouv er
S 17 2 1? 60 96
Wales Co(! ter ence
NOrriS DIVISIM
W l T Pi s GF GA
Montr eal
18 4 J 39 130 55

WHA Stand ings
Bv Untie d Press International

Mmne$ota

1

NHL Sl;tnd • ng ~
By ')Jn• tcd Pru s tnt ernatronal
Campb ell Co nl£1renc e

4
4

Golden 51a te at Atl anta
Bull ala at New Orleans
Philadelp tll a atKan C1IY
Chica go at Los Angeles
lnd1ana i'll Penla nd
wash1ng1an a1 seatil e
l Pnly games schedu led!

WL
Quebec
14 9
Cmcinn att 11 8
lnd1anap 1s 10 10
New E ng ln d 8 9

1
Q

G8

10 10 SOO &lt;~
B 9 471 J 1 ?
2 11 154 8' J
J 17 no 11

CIIIC~go

I'}

13

II 8 ? ?J 1~
G B Sa n OIC(IO
P110en1X
I I 9 7 ?&lt;1 80
'}
t aiQMV ·
9 10 ? 70 6 ~
?'
fd mon lon
8 ~ ~ 0 1e 63
Fr i da y ' !~ RL
' \ Uih
J' •
4 1 ~ wmnlpcg 1 Hou ston I , Ill'
Mmnesota 4 Quebec 1
GB PI'IOcn•lt ot Ed mon! Oll?
(Only games sc Md uiC'dl
i
Su!lday ' i U~ m c s
)• J ~ an Olt&gt;qo at Edmonton
Jl. lndio1napol 1S 11 1 New Enq
51 1 PM cn11t ai wmn tpcq
71 1 Mtnncsota a t 6!r mlmlll am
· !Only gam es sc hed uled )

Garf&gt;eld 70
Spnngfield Cen t. Cath 77

At Jackson
• At Logan
Athens
Me1gs
AI Waverly
At Gallo polls

3
4
10
14
17

Jan. 7
Jan II

II

DI VI Si On

ATHENS BULLDOGS
Nov 23
Nov 24

5?9

9 8
9 9
a 10

61

'i• 111• • hy qu.H! P.(S ·

LOGAN CHIEFTAINS
Nov. 24
Hill iard
Nov 30
At Lancaster
Dec.l
At Waverly
Dec. 10
Gallipolis
Dec. 14
At Wellston
Dec. 17
Me 1gs
Dec. 16
At Nels York

Jan
Jan.
Jan
Jan
Jan

N Y N ('IS

6~7

67

1 'l
Pn tt erson ,
6 1 13
Brook 5 6 0 1; , Be~rn e ll 6 1
lt Gill ) 3 7 Evelimd, 1 3 5
John son 1 0 J Hngg erty I 5

At Meigs
Gall ipolis

At Alexander

NY l&lt;'nJ ( ii S
Av lf a!o

Su nd ay ' ~

Vinton County
Waverly

Jan. 21

~O~IOil

Pet .

~

Clev eland 108 Bos lon 9'1
Plu ta 11 4 NY Kntc k.s 103
Allan! a 109 NY Nets 105
Buflalo 124 Oelro+l1 19
lnd •a na 109 MllWtlUKCC 90
Kan Cit y 120 Den ver 11 0
San 1\n lonto 1?3 Golden Sl 17 1
Lo s Angeles 99 Pori land 96
Seatt le 10 1 Chicag o 97
COnl y gam rs scheduled )

At Athens
Rock H1ll

Jan. 15

Jan. 28
Feb 1
Fe b. 4
Feb.8
Feb. II
Feb. 18

~-

II

Fnday ' ~ R e~ ull s

County exploded for

I

W l

Ph dadt'lphta

Golden Slate
Pho£&gt;n ix

81 to 39

I

HOU&lt;;IQn
WliUl iPt'&lt;!

fl tt ani l(' OIVI \ 100

Lo s Angeles

J Pu ll er o 'J 11 · WC\ II ace )

g

Wahama

Feb I

Feb 8

I

N-M-Width s
Open Monday
til8 P.M.

W e- ~ I
W l T Ptr. GF GA

Nf\ f1 S l &lt;l!tdm q ~
Bv U n rlt•d Prt• \.\ lltl t' rnil l! onal
E oH I1•r n Con l l'rt 'f1 C('

Mil waukee
Pact ftc Dtvts1on

Jdefeated

Athens.·

Feb 24
Feb 28

t 'rom lh• field Friday ,
GAHS, during the eight
period session, canned 48 of
102 field goal attempts. The
final ,two periods both teams
played against a zone
defense. In one stanza, GAHS
coonected on 11 of 19 from the
field .
The Blue DevOs wUI return
lo the GAHS gym Moodoy to
resume dliUs for Friday's
home opener against visiting
Meigs. The GAHS gym was
rellillshed over the holidays.
Tuesday wlll be "Meet the
Team Night" m the GAHS
gym.

If

J Moeller

Pro standings

. . . .-------------.. q·---.. . ,. ,_. . ___.. .__.I, Rockets

Waver ly

Nels York

Feb 1
Feb 4
Feb. 8
Feb 11
Feb 18
Feb 19

not attend the scrimmage.
AU 10 boys dressed got to
see plenty of action. Osborne
got a chance to see what Kev
Jacksoo and Mike Dressel
could do under pret~~ure wfth
the absence of Epling and
Johnson.
Osborne said the Blue
Devils "got a lot of movement
out there today," but added,
"our defensive play is just
about average at this stage of
the season."
The Blue Devil mentor was
pl eased, however. with
Gallia's eight offensive
rebounds. "That's one phase
of the game we've really got
to improve on," Osborne

Logan

Feb. 17

Jan 15
Jan. 21
Jan 28

'

GAL!JPOLIS
"We're
lltlU looking for more in:
tensity , We don't have that
determined attitude at all
times," remarked GAHS
basketball Coach Jim
Osborne Friday afternoon
after his Gallipolis Blue
- Devils wound up pre-season
play with a scrimmage
against Portsmouth. West in
Rlo Grande College's Lyne
Center.
The Blue Devils were
minus two players during the
eight-quarter . practice tilt.
Herb Epling relnjured his
ltn~ In drUls last week and
dld not dress ; Brent Johnson,
veteran guard, was Ill and did

Jackson

Jan 13
Jan 20

SEO cage schedules

6 45

Jan . ] Green II vs Kntcks , 6
Green II vs Knlcks B. 6 45
laker s vs . Tro1ter s, 7 30
Laker s B vs Trotters B, 8: 15

0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0

99

Last weeks r esults .
lancaster 67 Athens 50
l ogan 99 Hllltard BO
Nel s York 67 Athens 45
Vmton County 81 Wel lston 39
Tue sday 's gam es:
Logan at Lancaster
Portsmouth West at Waverly
Minford a t Jackson

Nov 29
War n ers vs Green II. 6
Warnors B vs BGreen I I B,

Dec . 6:
Kn1cks vs Clay , 6
Knicks B vs Clay B, 6 45
Gr ee n I vs Rto Grande, 7 30
Gr ee n I B vs R1oo B. 8' 15
Dec B
Warriors vs Trollers, 6
Warners B vs Trotters B,
6&lt;5
Kn1chs vs Lak ers , 7 JO
Kn icks B vs Lakers B, 8 15
Dec 9·
Gr ee n II vs R1o Gr ande. 6
Gr ee n II B vs R1o B. 6 45
Clcty vs Green L 7 30
Clay B vs Gr een I B, 8 15
Dec . IJ:
Warnors vs Kn 1ck,s, 6
Warriors B vs Kn i cks B. 6 45
R1o Gra nde vs T ra tt ers, 7 30
R1o B vs Tr ot ters B. 8: 15
Dec . 15·
Green I vs Laker s, 6
Green I 8 vs Lak.ers B, 6. 4~

0 0

0 0

Whee l ersb u r~

John D1 ddle, 4, T. J .

4:

0 0

Me1gs
Ironton
Jackson
Waverly
Pt Pl easant
Portsm outh
South Po1nt

6. M1ke Edlemann. 6. Kelly

5-6

52

GALLIPOLIS - Coach
Ja ck~e Knight's Gallia
Academy High School Blue
Angels will open their 1976-77
basketball campaign at home
against Meigs on Thursday,
pee. 2.
The GAHS girls will play an
18-game regular season
schedule this winter.
Seventeen girls make up
this year's roster. Three are
seniors, fo ur juniors, ~ig ht
sophomores and two are

freshmen candidates.
Home games will begin at 6 .
p.m.
Here's the 1976-77 roster
and schedule:
BLUE AN~EL.S ROSTER
( 1976-111

GAHS cagers end pre-season play

Middleport , 0.

try 1he150wor1d's best
chain saw value!

It has all fhe
features you'd e~tpect
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ONLY 5

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

_ -~ESTE'R , 0. -

...

•.

"

Circular .Saws

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Grinde.s
Mitre Boxes
Sabre Saws

Tool Boxes
V"JSes

Drills
: -Socket Sets

0

�'
3-C-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976
2-C-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Swulay, Nov. 28, 1976

Blue Angels open
season on Dec. 2

"

Blue Derus will rely
on defense, quickness

Returning lettermen

'

Open with

GAHS VARSITY ROSTER
I 1976-771

Player -Pos
HI . Yr.
)( Brent John son, (cc ) g 59 4
)( G ar ySwain , ~ c cL I 51 1 4
x Ke1th M cGu1re, c
64 4
)( Herb Epl1ng , f g
60 4
x M 1ke Dressel. f
62 4
)t Da vid Warr en, c
6 4 4
K ~ nt Shawve r , t
63 4
M ike Skagg s, g
59 4
Kev 1n Jack son, g
5 10 4
5 10 4
Keith Jackson , g
)( Terr'( Watl , g
5 10 3
Brad Abel s, f
63 3
6- 1 3
Jeff Brown , I
)t Lelfe(men

veterans
returning

feb 10

Ath ens
Wellston

Feb 17

SEVENTH GRACE
CAGE ROSTER
Ptaver- Pos

Ht.

Mark Allen. f

~ ••

starters a yea r ngo A fourth

•
;

returnr.e, Terry Wall , saw
ronsldcrCJble actton and was

!,

a starter late

tn

the sea&lt;Jon

after Snowden suffered an
ankle InJury at Ironton in
carl) February.
Swain scored 115 potnts in
.. 21 ):!ames las\ wml t l ~md had
29 assists lor the Gallians.
Johnson scoreo ll&gt;l pomts in
• • 20 outmgs and ha d 50 assists.

• The two sem o1s \\ ill

ser ve

as

•: co-captams of the 1976-77
; • squad .
McGuire llnlshcd with
. 103 points and 17 assists, and collected Ill rebounds
• In 21 outings.
; • Wall, 111 18 games, scored 67
pomts, had 13. asSists and 13
· rebounds .
Other returnees are Herb
: • ; Ephng, who tallied 10 pomts.
~ : Mike Dressel, six points and
: : David Warren, who talli ed
' • two pomts. All are seniors.
, , Up from last year 's reserve
: team are Mtke Skaggs, semor
' Ito
, Brad Abels, J'umor
••, guard
forward and Jeff Brown,
: ., , JUntor forwa rd.
' Newcomers this ye ar include seniors Kent Shawver,
Kevm and K~ith Jackson
Coach Osborne Will enter
the 1976-77 campaign with a
92-54 overall record in seven
; .; years at Gallip_Qiis.Oshorne·
· i coached teams own a 65-33
SEOAL mark since 1969-70
for a .663 mark, second best
record In the lea gue.
O!lborne' s teams

own one

• league tiUe (1973·74 ), two
•
sectional crowns and one
district
championship
11912·73) . GAHS ha s
finished second four times
In lhe past five years In
league play.
He!ght·WISe, Gallia will be
about the same as last year
The 1976·77 Blue Devil
; edltion, however , appears
; quicker than t he 1975-76
:: qumtet.
Coac h Osborne's
··. philosophy remams the same
as it has the past seven years
- consistent shooting, hoard
. control, good ball handling, a
strong defense and hustle
., "We plan to press more this
·· year," Osborne said as the
; i Blue Devils engaged in preii season drills last week. "We
·• also hope to mix it up a little
·~ more," continued the GAHS
·: mentor.
•t Osborne th1o.ks Waverly, .: Logan and Ironton will be the
' teams to beat. Ga llipolis
·; could be in the thick of the
. SEOAL title race again this
winter "If everything fa lls
. Into place."
If the Blue Devils run their
·! offensive patterns well, wait
. for good percentage shots and
· pressure the opPOSition at aU
; times on both ends of the
· Door, It wlll be an Interesting
' season for GAHS fans.
Too, a team has to have
very few Injuries (or illness)
during the course of a season,

:i

'

1

N1 ck Robi nso n, f
Gr Pg Eutsler , f
Bil l Arm strong , g
I o~tc k Dentteld, g
,V\ark Weaver, g
Greg Alk 1ns, f
Mark Bosl1 c. c
J D Jones, g
Rand'yOrr , f
Chuck W1ckl1ne, g

59
5 10
56
56
57
5· 11
60
56
5 11
5 'l

FRESHMAN SC HEDUL E
Dec. 2
Dec. 9
Dec 16
Jan 6
Jan 10
Jan 13
Ja n 20
Ja n 24
Jan 27
Jan 31
t= eb 3
Feb 7

Feb 10

A t Meigs
Logan
Waverl.,.
Athens
AI Jackson
Wellston
fv\eig s
PI Pleasant
AI l oga n
At PI Pleasant
AI Wa verl y
Jackson

AI Alhens

Feb 17 -

At Well ston

EIGHTH GRAD E
Player -Pa s
M1ke Bu rfJer , g
Ken Caudill, g
Bobby Faster f
Ted Gi llesp1e, I
Mar k Haner , f
Bobby March1 , g
R1ck Mart1n , g
Cr atg Mason, I
Brian McDade, g

Ht
51

5'
5-6

58
57

54

53
5i

53
56

Todd Noberl , f
Andr Pl y mate , t

Ken Pric e, c
R1 cky Ree s, g
la r r y Rober ts, c
Chu ck Sanders, g
Tt mmy Skidm ore, f
M1ke Sterretl , I

56
60
5-0
60
5-1
56
5-5

EIGHTH GRACE
SCHEDULE
Dec 1
J!ltet gs
Dec 9
AI Logan
Jan 3
Jan 6
Jan 10
Jan 13
Jan 20
Jan 24
Jan 27

Jan 31
Feb 3
Feb 7

AI Ravenswood

[7th &amp;6th I
At Athens
Ja ckson

AI Well ston

At Meigs

At Pt Pl easant
Logan
Pt Pl easant
Ravenswood

17th&amp; 6th )
At Jackson

keep turnovers down. have
consistent officiating both at
home and on the road and
must be able to take ad·
vantage of all mistakes
committed by the opposition
to finish on top in the alwaystough Southeas tern Ohio
League.
The annual "Meet the
Team Night" is scheduled
Tuesday, Nov. 30, m the
varsity gym.
More than 250 youngsters
are participating in aU levels
of Gallipolis basketball this
winter.
Norm Person, who served
as freshman coach during the
1975·76 campaign, has moved
up to the reserve level this
year.
The Blue Imps Will be
seeking their first reserve
crown In 22 years.
Coach Persin ha s 12
sophomores on the 1976-77
roster seeking starting berths
for the Dec 3 home opener
against visiting Meigs.
The Blue Imps wlll play 18
games.
Blll Leedy, who served as
eighth grade coach the past .

5'

Sco tt Ar ms trong , g
Ton y Arm strong , g
Edd ie Barnette, g
Russ Bergdoll. f
Charlie Boggess. g
Doug Brown , f
Deni se Canterbur y, !

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Academy H1gh School 's Blue
Pat Cas to. g
Devils once agam will rely on
zJ ohn Cr aft , I
their defens1ve ability to
Mike Croft . g
carry them through a rugged
Randy Da1l ey, g
BLUE IMPS ROSTER
Paul Duncan, f
16-game regular season
Player. Pa s
Ht Yr
John Elardo, g
sc hedule which beg ins J1m Ha rri s, g
5 8 2 Sarah Evans, c
; Friday, Dec. 3, at home Mark Sm1th, f
6-0 1 Joe Fos ter , !
60 2 Bobby Carnes. I
· against the vlsltmg Me1gs Je ff La nham , f
E V Clarke. c
6 3 1 Paula G1 bbs, I
: Marauders
Matt Sterr ett , c
6 2 2 fv\arly Glenn , I
Coach Jim Osborne, no"
Da ve W1 ckl1ne , g
5 10 2 Bra d Graham , I
dean of Southeastern Ohio
Rick Dail ey. g
5 10 1 Cry stal Green. f
Ste ve McGhee, g
5 10 2 Scott Harnngton, g
League coaches with the
Nate Thom as, g
58 2 Rob Henderson , c
retir ement of Athens
Robbi e Jenkins , g
58 7 Ter ri Hennesey , g
Charles McAfee, is In his
Bob Kiesling , g
5 10 1 James Kmg , g
eighth year as head Blue
DanSickles, g
59 2 Ph1 l Klng, g
Devil coach. He is being
Danny Kiski s, c
VARSITY -RES ERVES
Carol Lane, g
assisted by Coach Gene
t976-775CHECULE
Tim Lani er , c
Oesch again this winter.
Dec 3
Me1gs T tm m y lawrence, g
Osbor ne ha s seve n let- Dec 10
AI logan Ly nn Logan , c
At South Po1nt Mi chael Medas, f
: termen returning from last Dec 11
I ron ton Scott Mil ler. I
: year's squad wh1ch compiled Dec . 14
Dec 17
At Waverly Danny M1tchel l , c
· a 13-8 season record The Dec 12
Portsmouth Jer ry Molnar , f
: 1975-76 Blue Devils fimshed Dec 30 PI Pl easant. at R1o Ronn 1e Myer s, c
AI Athens Malt O' Donnell. f
: second behmd champion Jan 7
Jackson M1ke Petrella, c
Ironton in SEOAL play with a Jan 11
J an 14
AI Wellston Bren t Pinkerton , I
. 10-4 mark.
Ja n 21
At Mergs Br 1an Ptnk erton, I
Gone from that squad by Ja n 22
1
Whee ler sburg Rhonda Por ter , f
Logan Ger ry Prenderga st, g
; graduation
are
Gary ' Jan 78
AI Ironton Rhonda Pushkar , c
• Snowden, Tony Folden and Feb I
4
Wa verly Steve Runyon , g
; Brent
Saun ders ,
th e Feb
Feb a
AI Jackson Bill Sergent. f
' Gallipolis top two scorers and Feb II
Athens R1chy Steel e, I
Feb 18
: rebounder.
Wellston Ronnt e Tawney , t
Tommy Teasley g
; Of the seven r et urnmg
FRESHMAN ROSTER
Ra nd y Th1vener , f
:· lettermen, three - Ga ry Player
.Pos.
Ht
Sieve Thom pson , I
~ Swain, Brent John son 110d Greg Harring ton , g
56 Jer ry Warr en, c
., Keith McG 111 re - were Jell Cam eron , c
6 J Matthew Wtthee , g

!

I

1976-77 cage rosters, schedules

Meigs; 7

J im Wonn, c

54
44

52
55

53

46
53
46

53

..

50

5-5
55

5-9
4-9
I 7

56
10

4

56

54
45

5-5
54
5-J
48

5-4
10
5-6
50
56
5-4
5-4
56
54

4

55

50

57

5'

52

59
52
47

51
•I 5
43
4- 10

50
5·6
46
54

RINKY -CINK ROSTERS
Kn 1cks- Kev1n Pull1ns, 6,
Sc ott Slone. 6. Mike Hively ,
6 , Steph en Sk i dm or e, 6 ,
Kenny Ru ssel l. 6. J1mmy
Ta y lor , 5, Jell Ra th burn , 5,
Chr~s Ell ces sor , 5: Robbte
Robbi ns, 5, Randy Sm1th , 5,
Kevt n Carl y , 4 , Berni e N1eh
m , a, Chn s Su ll1 va n, 4, Bill
Swa1 n, 4, Brett Bost1 c. 4,
Greg Bush , 4 , Chns Rhod es , 4
and Pau la Ru sselL 4
Lakers - T1m Bush , 6 ,
J1mmy ' Fanning , 6, Lynn
Shee ts, 6, Kevrn Plantz 6
ROger Sau nder s, 6, Wesley
Mull1ns, 5, Todd Sheets 5
Jimm y Beaver . 5, Jason
Hogan , 5 , Ray Tope, 5, Ry.an

Moore. 6. Mik'e Wa llen. 5.
L 1sa Woodall , 5, Berke
Lyons, 4 , Bobby S1mms, 4,
Greg P1cken s, 4; Paul S1mon ,
4 , Kelley Sa nders, 4 and
Robb te Fanning , 4
Wamors - Br yan Clark . 6.
T 1m
T awney . 6,
Er ic
Thoma s, 6; Kenny Robin son ,
5, Kev tn Ca rt er , 5, Maxte
Webb , 4 , Cor rlnla Myers, 4 ;
Paul M c Kenzie , 4, Todd

Ber gdoll . 4, Gr"9 Long. 4;

Ke nmny Owen s, 4, Kedwa r d
Gnff1n , 4, Mark Cameron, 4
and Juan McC abe, 4
Trotters - Brad Johnson ,
6 , Bar t Owens , 6. Arth ur
Ca sey . 6. Danny Hennessey ,
6 , Br~an A tkms , 6 , Pat
Ta ckett, 5 Robert Myers, 5,
Jell Sha w, 6, Danny Pres sel! ,
4, Ki m Jeff er son, 5. T1na
Jones , 5, Tra cey Hennessey ,
5, Edna Sprrnger, 5: Don
Bosley , 4 and L isa Sprlngi?r ,
4
R1o Grande Kevin
Isaa cs, 6; Chip per Young , 6,
Steve Wolfe, 5, Steve Bennett. 6; T J Owens, 6; Dav 1d
Car pen ter , 6 , Mark Hager , 6 ;
Alan Smilh, 6, Brad Smi1h , 5 ,
Jeff Meek, 5, John Owens , 4 ,
Oa vl d Garber, 5, John
Bosti c, 5, Jerry Cal l, 4, Gary
Sta ley , 4 ; Kev in W1thee, 4 and
Robbte Mor r iso n, 6
C l ay Mark BurtQ.rt,
6;
Dave
Bostic ,
6,
V i r g il B1nq , 6 , Emer son

two years, has been moved up
to the freshman level this
winter.
The GAHS frosh will play a
i4-game schedule, tncluding
12 Southeastern Ohio League
games. Ironton will not take
part m the frosh league a gam
this year. Leedy has 12
candidates seeking starting
positions.
Tbe GARS frosh open at
Meigs on Dec. 2. Home
games will be played on the
GABS hardwood.
Mike Simmons will coach
the 01ghth grade squad thiS
winter. The junior high school
team has 17 candidates. The
Little Blue Devils wlll play 14
regular season ga mes The
etghth graders open up at
home (Washington School )
against visiting Meigs on

Dec. 2.
llohn Distel, Dennis Fravel
and Vince Hlll have charge of
53 seventh, grade candidates
this winter . The seventh
graders have two games
scheduled with Ravenswood
Intramural games will
highlight acllon for these
youngsters. Fundamentals

"

Bi ng , 6. Co l tn Dr ay , 6 ;
Da r r e n Haner , 6, Aar on
Sa unders. 6. Eli zabeth Fife,
5 , Dee Mane Frankltn , 5,
Sont a McWilliam s, 5. Perry
Caldwell, 5, Charles Biars, 5,
Sean McWtlllam s. 5; TLm
Gnfllfh, 5, Malt M~ Ktnney ,

Cage standings

5. Tim Keons. 5. Phil M1t

chell , 5, K1m F 1f e, 4, Debbie
Besco, 4, Roderick Sanders.
11 R1c k y Randolph , 4, Da vi d
Putney. 4; Joel Collins . 4:
Bill y Ward , 4 , Bryan Wonn ,
4 , Randy Cr ews. 4 and Greg
F1fe, 4
· Green No 1 - Caval ier s TolYl Moore, 6 , Greg Adkms,

BRENT JOHNSON

GARY SWAIN

Tea m ·

ALL GAMES
W L P OP

Logan

I 0

Well ston
Athens

0 1 39 91
0 2 95 134

Gall ipoliS

Ga ll1an, 6; Ru st y Banks, 6 ,
Terr y Reynolds , 6; Jamie
Lane, 6 ; Shell y Dodson , 6 ,
Son 1a Pha ltn , 6, Tony Dillion .
4 · Gordon Sple te, 4, Mtl&lt;e
Keefer , 4, Mike Tawney , 4 ,
Kenny Holley , 4 ; Jeff Roach .
5, Brian O' Dell, 4; Ferrell
Miller , 4, Renee Halley , 5,
larry Sco tt, 5 and Kel l y
Joll ey , 6
Green No 2 - Trailb la zers
- Dona ld Deerms , 6 , Doug
Deens , 5, T1mmy Meadow, 5 ;
Kev1n Johnson , 5, Tony
Bauer , 5, Tommy Duncan , 5:
Max Sterre tt , 6 , L1 sa Leget,
6. Ta mm y Meadows , 6; Kei th
8arf1meer, 4, Br tan Shepley,
Pasqua le, 4, James Mon.
tgomery , 4, J 0 Ca ll ey, 4 ,
Mark Bause ll , 5
Bna n
Garre tson 5, M1ke Ru ssel l.
4 Bnan Ward , 4 and Terry
Of1ver, 5

SCHEDULES
IF!rsl Halfl

~INKY - DINK

0
0

0
0

0

0
0

0

HERB EPLING

Dec 21
At Wahama
Dec 30
Ga ll ipolis , at R1o
Grande
Jan . 4
At Hurr ican e
Jan . 7 At Parkersburg Sou th
Jan . 11
Nitro
Ravenswood
Jan 14

TERRY WAJ,L

Jan. 18

At Milton

Jan 21
Jan . 28
Feb 1
Feb 5
Feb 8
Feb II
Feb 12
Feb 15
Feb 18

Parkersburg South
At Dun bar
Ripley

Feb 25
Mar 1
M.ar 4

Wahama
Milton
Dunbar

Feb 22

At Oak Hi ll
At Ntt ro

Whee ling Central

Metgs
Hurri cane
At Ravenswood

At Ripley

PORTSMOUTH TROJANS
Dec 3
AI Russell
Dec 10
Ashland
Dec . 17
Boyd Cou nty
Dec 22
AI Ga ll 1polts

6 15

Jan . 4
Jan 7
Jan. 8
Jan. 11
Jan 14

Jan . 16

Jan 24
Jan . 28
Jan 29

KEITH MCGUIRE

Feb 2
Feb 4
Feb. 12
Feb 15
Feb 19

DAVID WARREN

At Greenup
Hunt1n gton High
Columbus Northland
Barboursville

Russell
At Ashland

Hunlmg ton East
Greenup

Af Boyd County
At Huntington High

At Barbour svifle

At Whee lersburg

At Huntington Eas-t
Ironton

WHEELERSBURG
PIRATES
Nov . 27
At Green
Dec 3
Minford
Dec 4
"Dec 10

Clay vs Green II. 7 30
,Clay vs Green II B. 6.15

Dec. 17
Dec 2~
Dec 28

Dec 16
Wamor s vs Rio Grande, 6
Warr tor s B vs R10 B 6 4~
Green I vs Kn1cks. 7 30
Green 1 B vs Kn tc ks B, 8 15
Dec 20:
Clay vs Trotters 6
Clay B vs Trotter s B. 6 45
Green II vs Lak ers , 7 30
Green II B vs Lak er s B, 8 15
Dec 12
Wamors vs Gr een I. 6
Wa r nor s B vs Green I B,
6 45
Clay vs R1 o Grande , 7 30

Jan 7

Wave rl y
New Boston

At Clay
At Northwest
Portsmouth West
At Portsmouth Wes t

Jan . 8 At Co lumbus Mohawk

Jan 14

..,..,
' ..._.,.,..

•

•

•

•

\

•

'•

•
'

•

--,•

Jan . 21
Jan 22

Jan . 28
Jan 29

Ports. Notre Dame

At Valley
At Ga ll ipolis

Nor thwest
Greenup

Feb. 4

AI Minford

Feb 12

Portsmouth

Feb. 18

At Portsmou th East

Feb 19

South Webster

SOUTH POINT
POINTERS
Dec 3
~
Oak Hill
l
- Dec ' 7
At
Coa
l Grove
I
Dec II
Ga lli polis
\
Dec 17
At Rock Hil l
Dec 28
At Ironton
COACH NORM PERSIN Jan .4
AI Milton

'

Clay B vs Rio B. 8· 15

•

MIKE DRESSEL

Jan . 7
Jan . II
Jan . 14
Jan . 21
Jan 25

Warnors vs Clay, 6
Warriors B vs Clay B, 6· 45
Green II vs Green I, 7 30
Green II B vs. Green I B, a 15
Jan 6

Jan. 28
Feb I
Feb 4
Feb 8
Feb II
Feb 15
Feb 16

laker s vs Rio .Grande, 6
Laker s B vs Rio B. 6. 45
Tro tter s vs Knicks, 7 30
Trotter s B vs . Knicks B, 8 15

(Endfirsthalfl

·

Fatrtand

At Chesa peake
Ironton St. Joe

AI Oak Hill
Coal Grove
At Lenore

Rock Hill
At Fairland

Chesapeake
At Ironton St. Joe

Milton

Ceredo Ke nova

IRONTON TIGERS
Dec. l
Wellston
Dec . 10
At Meigs
Dec 14
At Gallipolis
Dec . 17
Jackson
Dec 21
Ashland
Dec 28
South Po1nt
Jan . 7
Logan
Jan . II
At Waverly

will be stressed throughout
the season.
Action in the Gallipolis
Rinky·Dink League, under
the supervision of Coach Bill
Wamsley again this winter,
will begin on Monday, Nov.

29.

Jan 14

Etght teams of fourth, fifth
and sixth graders make up
the Class A DIVISion. Eight
teams will make up the Class
B Division . Teams ~~.re ·

Smith to start for
Packers Sunday

Warriors, Lakers, Trotters,
Knicks , Green Cavaliers,
Clay, Green II Trailblazers
and Rio Grande. One hundred
and forty youngsters . are
mel uded m this program.
To help pay for the
program Ibis winter, a 2!1cent admission fee will be
charged all individuals at
the gate.
Each team will play an
exhibition game during the
halftime intermission of the
varsity (or reserva) home
games. The exhibition
schedule follows :
Dec. 3 - Class A Warriors
vs. Class A Rio Grande
(reserve game); Dec. 14 - ·
Class A Clay vs. Gins A
•'

Ht. Yr.
5-7 .4

Barb. Ede l mann, f

Beth Abels . f

5-7 4

Karen Sprague. g

5-8 4

Tina Nibert , c .

5-10 3

Pam f!'as(! Uale, f
Ginny Young, g

S-9 3
5.4 3

Debbie Shaw , f
Kathr Daniels. g

5-8 l
5-7 2
5-7 2
5-6 2

Jane Groves, f

Shery l Shaw, g
Sara h Abels . c
Paille Nlehm , f

5-9 2

Diane Canterbury, g

Peggy Baord, g

Tam1 Fraser , f

5-6 2
5·6 2

5-l 2
5·7 2

Janie Baird, g

5-0 1

Cindy Dressler , c

5-8 1

BLUE ANGELS SCHEDULE
0 0 Dec 1
Meigs
0 0 Dec. 9
At Logan
0 0 Dec 16
At Waverly
0 0 Dec 11
At Fairland
0 0 Jan 6
At Athens

PT PLEASANT
BIG BLACKS

Laker s vs Clay , 7 30
Laker s B vs Clay B. 8 15
Dec . 1
Tr otter s vs Green L 6
Tr otter s B vs Green I B. 6 45
Kntcks vs R1o Gra nde, 7 30
Knteks B vs R 10 B, 8 15
Dec. 2:
Warners vs Laker s, 6
Warrrors B vs Laker s B. 6 45
Trotters vs Green I I, 7 JO
Tr atters B vs Green II B.

Jan . S

60

Player- Pas.

Jan 10

At Soufh Point
At Meigs

Jan 24

At Kyger Creek

Jan J1

At Ironton

Feb 7

At Jackson

Ja Q 17
Feb 3

Feb 10

Feb 14

COACH JIM OSBORNE

COACH GENE OESCH

Knlcks ; Dec. 22 - Class A
Green II vs. Class A Trotters ;
Jan 11 -Class A Green I vs.
Class A Lakers; Jan. 22 Class B Warriors vs. Class B
Trotters (reserve game),
Jan. 28 - Class B Lakers vs.
Class B. Knlcks (reserve
game I, Feb. 4 - Class B

Green II vs Class B Rlo and
Feb 11 -Class B Green I vs.
Class B Clay (reserve game)
Coaches should meet with
their players tn front of the
gym and come in as a team .
Players should be dressed!
and ready to play three
min utes before halfttme.

Aziz signs with Buffalo
SCA TTI.E IUP!) - Za1d
Abdul-Aziz, 6-foot-10 center
who last played with the
SeHtt le SuperSomcs, has
signerl i:l CQntracl with lhe
l!uffalu Rraves, his auorney
~

announced Friday .
Buffalo made room for Az1z
by waiving Clyde Mayes, a 6foot-9 reserve center with a
yea r's experience:

·'
\•

Athens

GREEN BAY, WIS . (UPI)
- Ollie Smith will start in
place of injured wide receiver
Steve Odom Sunday in the
Green Bay Packers' last
home game, in which they
host th e Chicago Bears,
Coach Bart Starr said
Friday.
'
Odom suffered a severe
charley horse last Sunday In
the Packers' game with Minnesota.
Smith, 6-foot-3, 200 pounds,
will be making his first start
in the pros.
Linebacker Tom Toner ,
who missed the Minnesota
ga me with a strained knee,
also will miss the Chicago
game. Starr said.

continued. Ke1th McGuire led
GAHS on the boards against
the Senators. Brad Abels,
after a slow start. came on
strong to help the Blue Devils
in that department.
In the aSilsiA departm en~
Gary Swalo pa ced the
GuUlaos with four. Terry
Wall bad three.
The GAHS defense, w1th
constant pressure, created 47
Portsmouth West turnovers.
"Some of our defenders are
about a half-step behind at
times on the press rtght
now ," said Osborne. "This
hastobeatotalteam effort at
aUt[jnes,"lhe GAHS mentor
continued.

I
I

Ironton

Fair la nd
Eastern

cf

Fa1rvlew, Ky.

At We llston
Meigs
Gallipoli s

f

I

A t Jackson
Waver ly.

'
llilifMliJ!IdYCI
_ tiacd ' '
)
:1""-......o;..:!r .... . ~ -,.......... ........ -·-·'

At Logan
At Athens
At Por tsmouth

t

MEIGS MARAUDERS
Nov. 27
Dec J
Dec 10

Dec 14
Dec 17

Jan 7

Vinton County

At GallipoliS
Ironton

Athens
At Logan
At Jackson

Jan 8

At V111ton County

Jan 11

Well ston

Jan 14
Jan 11
Jan 28
Ja n 29

At Waver ly
Gallipolis
At Iron ton
At Athens

Feb 4

Logan

Feb 11

Af Wellston

Jackson

Feb. 12

At Pt. Pleasant

Feb 18

Waverly

WELLSTON ROCKETS
Nov . 26

Dec. 3
Dec. 10
Dec. 14
Dec. 17
Dec. 21
Dec. 30

Jan. 7

Jan. 11
Jan. 14

At Vinton Coun ty
A t Ironton
Jackson
Logan

'

«

*!lia\!iia----lliial'&gt;-·..--". . . . -.. . . . . . . . !f---l'ioL!&gt;. .___ j

McARTHUR -

Vinton
32 points
m the final period to hand
visiting Wellston an 81·39 nonleague hardwood setback
here Friday mght. II was the
season opener for both teams.
Coach Rick Purdue's
Golden Rockets trailed 16·10,
34·20 and 49·31 at the quartermarks
The
Vikings,
who
outrebounded the Rockets 4026, were led by John Prater
and Scott Barnett, each with
14. Patterson had 11
rebounds'.
John Royster led th e
Rockets w1th 12 points.
Box score:
NELL\TON tJ•t
R
Royster (1 1 1 M M i tn . J 0 8
Gtllllnnc:l 1 o 1 J Royster 6
0 1 ' Hud son 5 0 10 Sw1 ngl e
1 0 J Pugh . .r 0 I, TOTALS
Ij t Jj

1/ !NTON COUNTY IBII

Ironton

TOTAL\ 111781

7
11
14
21
28

Jan. 29
Feb I
Feb. 4
Feb.8
Feb. II
F'eb 18

( (' nt ral

SOO
4·14

!

] 89

Dec
Dec
Dec
Dec
Dec

Wel lston
Vmton Co

10 10 11 8- 39
16 18 15 3? 81
~.,~ , .., ,.1V•'
"'core
Vinton
Count y 31 We\ lsl on 34

W l
13 .t
10 5
10 B
10 8
1 9

CleVe land

Houston
N£'w Or'!ca ns
San Al)i OOIO
Wa !; h rngiOf\

Pet
765
667
5S6

556
4]8
6 12 JJ)

AIIMii!l

Western

Confl' r~ n c e

MtdWC!II Div1 sion
W L Pel.

Df'n v. Pr
Oet r or!
Kansas Ct i Y
1na1an a

''

150

4

11

9

550

PMtlan d

W l Pet
10 ~ 661

SC it ll le

11

1

9

B

611
519
7 10 dl 'l
5 B 385

3•

GB
I .•

2

Games

T Pts GF GA
0 28 110 B6
7 24 101 80
2 21 !1 9 1
] 19 67 74

1 11 ,,

18

67 77

7 17 1

I~

Ill'&gt; Hill

Ohio High School
Basketball Resulls
United Press International
Akron Kenmore 75 Stow 63
Akron Norton 50 N Akron 49
Canton McK inley 90 Find l ay
Cl e

G l env ill e

He1gh ts 79

88

Sha k er

Ct e W Tech 64 Cl e Linc oln W

56
F os tona 68 Nor wa lk St Pa u l

'

Lex tng ton 70 Wy nford 67

Spnngfle ld N 63 Stdney 40
Twin Va ll ey S 79 Newlon 41
Vandalia. Bu tler 66 Oakwood
60 loti
Akron Firestone 58 Revere 47
Rooseve l t 53 ·
Bloom Carrol l 56 Col Wehr le
55

Buckeye Centra l 74 Old Fort
65

Day Dunbar 75 Col Cen tral 74

Day Stebb ins 64 Carrol l 57
Elyria 66 t oledo Libbey 57

Er ie M c Dowell 59 Conneaut
46
'
Fairfield Union 86 Co l Ready

68

51
58

WadswCJrth 70 Northwes t 52

Westland 55 Delaware 43
Whitehall 84 Chillicothe 75
Wooster 43 Tr lway 38

Worthmgton 60 Y.'Qstervllle N

by Chisox

'

Automalic oiling
standard equlprn.ent.
Automatic efl·w••ther slartet
for quick 'n easy starting.
Automatic Otlt•plece cl•fd the Industry's
simplest. Smooth

and reliable

oo.

IN

.

BLUE

Exp. 12-4-76
ARMSTRONG

ACCUTONE flOOR COVERING
95 SQ. YD.

'2

GOOD SELECTION OF PATTERNS
Exp. 12-4-76

CHI CAGO (UP! ) - Eric
Soderholm, former
Mlmmsota Twins' infielder,
Friday signed with the
Chicago White Sox, the
second fr ee agent from the
reentry draft signed by the
Sox in the past 48 hours.
White Sox ' President Bill
Veeck Signed former Chica go
4 Cubs' pitcher Steve Slone
Wedne sday
Soderholm, 211, underwent
knee surgery after the 1975
season and dld not play In
1976. White Sox' club
physicia n, Dr. Sid Shafer,
examined h1m earlier this
week and said he now has a
weU-fun clinning knee.

MANNING:SOWMAN

PORT ABLE ELECTRIC
HEATERS
1320 WATT

'11 95

·CAROLINA
LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

312 6TH ST.

PT. PLEASANT

PH. 675-1160

STORE HRS. MON ..fRI. 8-5; SAT. 8-12

CROS.S -HARDWARE
992-3831 71 N. 2nd Ave .

Come In and

Sll!

'3
STOCKED GREEN, GOLD, RED,

Trtmbl e 73 Federal Hock ing

64

r -,_,....__.r. inked

fo r bar and culling chain-

noo to

56 Wes ter v ille

53
Hubbard-62 You ngs North 60

Homelitef150
Automatic
Chain Saw

Just outside of carpenter
off 143. Prices r1nge from

INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET
12fT. WIDE
13 12FT. WIDE

Col Brookhaven 74 Zanesville

The Ho.l
Chain. Saw
Buv Soderholm is
·

JACKSON tRONMEN
Nov 27
Greenfield
Nov 30
Minford
Dec 3
Athens
Dec 10
At Wellston
Dec 14
Waverly
Dec 17
At lroryton
Dec . 21
VInton County
Dec 29
At Greenfield
Jan. 7
Meigs
Jan . 11
At Galllpofls
Jan . 14
Loga n
Jan 11
At Athens
Jan . 28
Wellsion
Feb \
AI Waverly
Feb 4
Ironton
Feb 8
Gallipoli s
Feb 11
AI Meigs
Feb 18
At Logan

698-1191

Rt 4, Box 188
Pomeroy, Ohio

AT CAROLINA WMBER WE HAVE
"EVERYTHING" TO BUILD
"ANYTHING".

Miami East 70 Tro y 43
New Breman 69 Sidney leh
man 58

'

APPAlACHIAN
STOVE
CO.
Christine GIQIII

C1n Princeton 71 Sycamore 60
Ctn Xavier 79 Ci n Mc N1ch olas

Norwalk 52 Edison 27
Perry 58 Yqung stown E 53
Por tsm ou th NO 90 Ironton St

Gallipol is
At Logan

.,

57 8•1 thby deserve U1c rul.i_!!~ us

1l1Cy rolled to a 27·3 hall\ime
margin over the thirct.fankt'&lt;i
Bos to n
Bu ff alo
Lions.
Tor onto
Koeg e l ' s
54 - yartl
Cle ve la nd
Fnday's Resulf s
touchdown strike to Masson~
AI! Qn !a 5 St LOUIS 2
wit[1 3·08 left m the first
Plltsbur qh J Cleveland \
quarter go1 Moeller off and
Phli tldCIPil ta 4 Colorad o 7
!Only games s ch('d u led J
rwming, und after Gaharum 's
Sund'ay ' s Ga mes
Kent Perrlll ki cked a Jl-ya1·d
M.nnesota at N Y Ra•)qer s
NY lslndr s at Ph ,lad elphla
field goal, the Crusaders
Octrorl at Bu ff alo
moved the ball almost at wlll ,
Clevela nd at To1onto
L os Angel es ot c;:o lor ado
rolling up 263 total yards In
(O nly gam es sc hedul ed I
the f1rsl hlllf to five for the
!.tons.
Moeller' s fourth touchdown
of the flrst half came w1lh one
1:it:! Co nd remuinmg on a
beautifully executed 4:&gt;-yard
dr1ve with Koegel. a threeyear starter at qm.trterback,
hittmg Condeni from four
yards out.
After !hal, there was never
any doubt. as to the outcome
Frankl in Monroe 73 Mitton .'
with Koeg~i content to ke ep
Un ion 56
his atl.llck on the ground.
Independence 66 Brook lyn 41
loll
The win was the 12t h
Lebanon 67 Waynesvi ll e 30 without a loss this year for
L or a tn A dmi ra l King 67
Moell er and gives the
Brookside 59
•
defendin
g champion 24
Matl hews 70 Jefl er son 66
Miami E 70 Troy 41
straight victories the last two

Cle Adams 62 Cle E Tech 56
Cle lg nal&gt;us 65 Cle S 45
Joseph 45
Covingtoo 61 Tipp City 55
Day Col White 74 Beaver . Reynoldsburg
S 53 lot )
creek 53

At Lan caster
Nel s· York

WAVERLY TIGERS
Nov 30
Portsmouth West
Dec. 3
Logan
Dec 4
At Wheelersburg
Dec 10
l&gt;.t Athens
Dec 14
At Jackson
Dec. 17
Gallipolis
Dec 28
Washington CH
Jan . 7
~t Wellston
Jan . 8. At Wester ville North
Jan . 11
Iron ton
Jan_14
• Meigs
'an. 21
AI Logan
Jan. 28
Athens
Feb. I
Jackson
Feb 4
At Gallipolis
Feb 8
Allronton
Feb 11
Wellston
Feb. 18
At Meigs

]4

Newark 56 Col W 52

- Ironton
Jackson

•At Waverly
Meigs
AI Wellston
Logan
At Gallipoli s
Iron ton

63 73

lima Cent. Cath. 75 Elida 60 Ak ron Gar field 58 Ken t

Middletow n 84 Ltma Sr. 68
Northwes tern 72 Tecumseh 57
Perr y 50 Farmmgton 41 .
Ri ver Valley 75 Buc'(rus 63
Southeestern 50 Shawnee 49
Spnngfleld &lt;19 Green 43
Spnngfleld S 85 Hamilton

Bex le y 78 Ptcken ngton 60

Wellston
At Meogs
At Athens

Jan . 28
Feb 1
Feb. 4
Feb 6
Feb 11
Feb 16

17 73

yea rs. Gahonna , whi ch
By GENE CADllES
0\/Crpowcrcd
Lakewood St.
Ul'l Sports Writer
-Edward
28-0m
the semifinals
AKRON , Ohio C UPI) a
week
ago,
finished
the year
Quarl erb ack Tim Koege l
tossed three t ouchdown AI l\l-1.
Gahanna 's Tim O'Caln ,
p11sses and tuilhack Sieve
Gtvens scor ed t wlce to lead who gained nearly 1,400 yards
tt wesome Cmcmnali Moeller during the re~'lilar season,
to a 43-5 victory over was held to eight yards In 16
Ga hanna Lincoln Fr1day carries by the swarming
night. giving the Crusaders Moeller defense.
their second s\raight Clo ss
Score by quartirs :
Cln Moeller
1 20 9 7- .:!
AAA stat e !ugh school
Gahanna L.
0 3 2 0- 5
foo tball championship .
ln .- M~ssong
S4 pau
Koegel. a 6-4, 19f&gt;.poUnd fr Com
Koegel (Nabe r klckl
rlfle·armed senior . fired
Gah . ~ FG Perrlll 31
Cln - Givens 19 run (Naber
touchdown passes of 54 yards
.
to Bob Ma ssong and 19 and klckl
Cln - Condeni 1Q pasa from
four yards lo Dave Condeni.
Koegel INabef klckl
Givens , a hard-running,
Cln. -Condenl 4 pasa from
167-pound ta1lback, streaked K""9el (k ick foiled)
Cin ."":&gt;"Gi vens 19 run (Nabe r
19 yards for both of his scores
kick
I
as ilie Crusaders overcame
Gah - Sa fe ly ,
Con denl
some early mistakes to tum tack led In end 1one
the game into a rout.
Cln.- Salefy , To e ll er
ll.'lckted In end 1one
Moeller, a neur-unanimous
Cln .·- E imtl nger 1 run
chOice as the slate's No 1 !Naber
ktckl
team, left little doubt tl1111
A- 7,46!1

school scores

51

Nels York

At Ironton
jackson

LOS Ange les 8 9 7 2 ~

Pt!lsbur gh
8 Q 5 ?1
Detroit
7 11 •I 18
w as htngton 6 13 2 14
Ad tHllS Dlvh •on

Ar can um 74 Preble Shawnee Col Wes11 and 55 Delaware 43

Af Gallipol is

Jan. 14
Jan 21

14 ~ 3 31 17 J8
11 a 5 77 ·86 78
II 7 &lt;I 26 76 63
8 t l J 19 78 83
Smyth11 Oivt s1on

NY ISiandrs
A llantc'l
Ph1la
N V Ra nger s

Str ongsvllle 65 N Royalton 63 Col Franklin Hei ghts 61
Teays Valley "
(ott
Tiff1n Columbian 69 Sandusky Col Linden 90 Findlay 67
Col Wa lnu l Ridge 65 Col
Per ki ns 54
Versa i lles 54 Marl on Local 49 Hartley 61

At Ja ckson
Waver ly

Lancaster

6S
89

Friday's high

Northeas tern 62

Athens

Dec 30

11

9)

Palrrcll Oivt SIOn
W l T Ph GF GA

6S

mauls
Gahanri_a, 43-5

W L T Ph GF GA
18 3 1 J7 97 60
I \ 5 J 25 65 J8
B 9 4 20 77 76
6 10 6 18 60 71

At Ironton

At Jackson
At Ma rietta
Waverly
At Meigs
Well ston

79 61
109 !B

W l T PIS GF GA

East

Brrn11nghn1

'}7

I ?7

St Louis
11 10 1 23 70 BS
Ch•cago
10 1l 1 12 76 64
Mmnesota
5 14 3 IJ 59 98
Col or ado
5 15 2 I? S4 74
Vancouv er
S 17 2 1? 60 96
Wales Co(! ter ence
NOrriS DIVISIM
W l T Pi s GF GA
Montr eal
18 4 J 39 130 55

WHA Stand ings
Bv Untie d Press International

Mmne$ota

1

NHL Sl;tnd • ng ~
By ')Jn• tcd Pru s tnt ernatronal
Campb ell Co nl£1renc e

4
4

Golden 51a te at Atl anta
Bull ala at New Orleans
Philadelp tll a atKan C1IY
Chica go at Los Angeles
lnd1ana i'll Penla nd
wash1ng1an a1 seatil e
l Pnly games schedu led!

WL
Quebec
14 9
Cmcinn att 11 8
lnd1anap 1s 10 10
New E ng ln d 8 9

1
Q

G8

10 10 SOO &lt;~
B 9 471 J 1 ?
2 11 154 8' J
J 17 no 11

CIIIC~go

I'}

13

II 8 ? ?J 1~
G B Sa n OIC(IO
P110en1X
I I 9 7 ?&lt;1 80
'}
t aiQMV ·
9 10 ? 70 6 ~
?'
fd mon lon
8 ~ ~ 0 1e 63
Fr i da y ' !~ RL
' \ Uih
J' •
4 1 ~ wmnlpcg 1 Hou ston I , Ill'
Mmnesota 4 Quebec 1
GB PI'IOcn•lt ot Ed mon! Oll?
(Only games sc Md uiC'dl
i
Su!lday ' i U~ m c s
)• J ~ an Olt&gt;qo at Edmonton
Jl. lndio1napol 1S 11 1 New Enq
51 1 PM cn11t ai wmn tpcq
71 1 Mtnncsota a t 6!r mlmlll am
· !Only gam es sc hed uled )

Garf&gt;eld 70
Spnngfield Cen t. Cath 77

At Jackson
• At Logan
Athens
Me1gs
AI Waverly
At Gallo polls

3
4
10
14
17

Jan. 7
Jan II

II

DI VI Si On

ATHENS BULLDOGS
Nov 23
Nov 24

5?9

9 8
9 9
a 10

61

'i• 111• • hy qu.H! P.(S ·

LOGAN CHIEFTAINS
Nov. 24
Hill iard
Nov 30
At Lancaster
Dec.l
At Waverly
Dec. 10
Gallipolis
Dec. 14
At Wellston
Dec. 17
Me 1gs
Dec. 16
At Nels York

Jan
Jan.
Jan
Jan
Jan

N Y N ('IS

6~7

67

1 'l
Pn tt erson ,
6 1 13
Brook 5 6 0 1; , Be~rn e ll 6 1
lt Gill ) 3 7 Evelimd, 1 3 5
John son 1 0 J Hngg erty I 5

At Meigs
Gall ipolis

At Alexander

NY l&lt;'nJ ( ii S
Av lf a!o

Su nd ay ' ~

Vinton County
Waverly

Jan. 21

~O~IOil

Pet .

~

Clev eland 108 Bos lon 9'1
Plu ta 11 4 NY Kntc k.s 103
Allan! a 109 NY Nets 105
Buflalo 124 Oelro+l1 19
lnd •a na 109 MllWtlUKCC 90
Kan Cit y 120 Den ver 11 0
San 1\n lonto 1?3 Golden Sl 17 1
Lo s Angeles 99 Pori land 96
Seatt le 10 1 Chicag o 97
COnl y gam rs scheduled )

At Athens
Rock H1ll

Jan. 15

Jan. 28
Feb 1
Fe b. 4
Feb.8
Feb. II
Feb. 18

~-

II

Fnday ' ~ R e~ ull s

County exploded for

I

W l

Ph dadt'lphta

Golden Slate
Pho£&gt;n ix

81 to 39

I

HOU&lt;;IQn
WliUl iPt'&lt;!

fl tt ani l(' OIVI \ 100

Lo s Angeles

J Pu ll er o 'J 11 · WC\ II ace )

g

Wahama

Feb I

Feb 8

I

N-M-Width s
Open Monday
til8 P.M.

W e- ~ I
W l T Ptr. GF GA

Nf\ f1 S l &lt;l!tdm q ~
Bv U n rlt•d Prt• \.\ lltl t' rnil l! onal
E oH I1•r n Con l l'rt 'f1 C('

Mil waukee
Pact ftc Dtvts1on

Jdefeated

Athens.·

Feb 24
Feb 28

t 'rom lh• field Friday ,
GAHS, during the eight
period session, canned 48 of
102 field goal attempts. The
final ,two periods both teams
played against a zone
defense. In one stanza, GAHS
coonected on 11 of 19 from the
field .
The Blue DevOs wUI return
lo the GAHS gym Moodoy to
resume dliUs for Friday's
home opener against visiting
Meigs. The GAHS gym was
rellillshed over the holidays.
Tuesday wlll be "Meet the
Team Night" m the GAHS
gym.

If

J Moeller

Pro standings

. . . .-------------.. q·---.. . ,. ,_. . ___.. .__.I, Rockets

Waver ly

Nels York

Feb 1
Feb 4
Feb. 8
Feb 11
Feb 18
Feb 19

not attend the scrimmage.
AU 10 boys dressed got to
see plenty of action. Osborne
got a chance to see what Kev
Jacksoo and Mike Dressel
could do under pret~~ure wfth
the absence of Epling and
Johnson.
Osborne said the Blue
Devils "got a lot of movement
out there today," but added,
"our defensive play is just
about average at this stage of
the season."
The Blue Devil mentor was
pl eased, however. with
Gallia's eight offensive
rebounds. "That's one phase
of the game we've really got
to improve on," Osborne

Logan

Feb. 17

Jan 15
Jan. 21
Jan 28

'

GAL!JPOLIS
"We're
lltlU looking for more in:
tensity , We don't have that
determined attitude at all
times," remarked GAHS
basketball Coach Jim
Osborne Friday afternoon
after his Gallipolis Blue
- Devils wound up pre-season
play with a scrimmage
against Portsmouth. West in
Rlo Grande College's Lyne
Center.
The Blue Devils were
minus two players during the
eight-quarter . practice tilt.
Herb Epling relnjured his
ltn~ In drUls last week and
dld not dress ; Brent Johnson,
veteran guard, was Ill and did

Jackson

Jan 13
Jan 20

SEO cage schedules

6 45

Jan . ] Green II vs Kntcks , 6
Green II vs Knlcks B. 6 45
laker s vs . Tro1ter s, 7 30
Laker s B vs Trotters B, 8: 15

0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0

99

Last weeks r esults .
lancaster 67 Athens 50
l ogan 99 Hllltard BO
Nel s York 67 Athens 45
Vmton County 81 Wel lston 39
Tue sday 's gam es:
Logan at Lancaster
Portsmouth West at Waverly
Minford a t Jackson

Nov 29
War n ers vs Green II. 6
Warnors B vs BGreen I I B,

Dec . 6:
Kn1cks vs Clay , 6
Knicks B vs Clay B, 6 45
Gr ee n I vs Rto Grande, 7 30
Gr ee n I B vs R1oo B. 8' 15
Dec B
Warriors vs Trollers, 6
Warners B vs Trotters B,
6&lt;5
Kn1chs vs Lak ers , 7 JO
Kn icks B vs Lakers B, 8 15
Dec 9·
Gr ee n II vs R1o Gr ande. 6
Gr ee n II B vs R1o B. 6 45
Clcty vs Green L 7 30
Clay B vs Gr een I B, 8 15
Dec . IJ:
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Warriors B vs Kn i cks B. 6 45
R1o Gra nde vs T ra tt ers, 7 30
R1o B vs Tr ot ters B. 8: 15
Dec . 15·
Green I vs Laker s, 6
Green I 8 vs Lak.ers B, 6. 4~

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5-6

52

GALLIPOLIS - Coach
Ja ck~e Knight's Gallia
Academy High School Blue
Angels will open their 1976-77
basketball campaign at home
against Meigs on Thursday,
pee. 2.
The GAHS girls will play an
18-game regular season
schedule this winter.
Seventeen girls make up
this year's roster. Three are
seniors, fo ur juniors, ~ig ht
sophomores and two are

freshmen candidates.
Home games will begin at 6 .
p.m.
Here's the 1976-77 roster
and schedule:
BLUE AN~EL.S ROSTER
( 1976-111

GAHS cagers end pre-season play

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H:-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976

5-C-The StUtday Time~ntlnel, SWlday, Nov . 28, 1976

Panther ~ce
sets records

Sooners surprise
e b sk a 20 17

Den Talk

.

By Greg Bailey

POMEROY - There were 1,500 free antlerles&lt; pernuts N
distributed through the pubhr drawmg aoo I pe rsona lly know
~'IJ
of only two people who applied that didn't receive one .
PITTSBURGH l UP! I ymls or more in a season
Estima teS by the Department of Natural Resources
Pittsburgh 's Tony Dorsett II, tying Archie Griffin.
finished his regular season
Most 100-yard games in a predict that only 1&gt;0 of these antlerless permits will actually be
college career in the ·career - 33, also tying used. This 30 per cent harvest will come about because of three By TRACY . RINGOLSBY
reasons. Number one, many of the permit holders will fill their UPI Sports Writer
Panthers ' 21·7 victory over' Griffin .
LINCOLN, Neb. !UPI) .
• PeM Slate with a flair Friday
Most touchdowns scored in bags with bucks. Number two, some people applied for the
and
will
choose
not
to
use
them
just
because
they
don't
I
Jke
every year £or the past
permits
night, rushing for 224 yards, a career - 59, tying Glenn
want
to
kill
a
doe.
They
applied
for
a
permit
just
to
have
it
in
fi
ve
years, Oklahoma beat
two touchdowns and five Davis' record set at Army
case
they
choose
to
use
it.
Thirdly
,
some
of
you
will
go
home
Nebraska.
And like every
more NCAA records.
from 1943-46.
skunked.
·
year for the past five y~a r s,
But Dorsett; who became
Mus[ p0ints · scorflll ill a ·
. Judge Robert Buck would like to remind you hunters of the viclOr¥ gave the Sooners
the first collegian to crash the career - 356, brea king
some
o£ the problems that have been corning into his court. at least a share of the Big
6,000-yard rushing mark and Davis' record of 354.
Remember
that il is illegal to spotlight deer. Reports from E i g h t Con I e re n c e
was named the game's most
Most yards gained in a
local
game
protector
Andy Lyles and Judge Buck indicate that championship:
valuable player, said the new career - 6,082.
this
new
law
is
very
~ffective
.in that they are now catching the
Bu t there was nothing ordirecord&lt;; meant nothing.
Most seasons gaining 1,000
hard
core
game
VIOlators
mstead
of
spending
their
lime
nary
about the way the
''Being ll-0 means more.to yards or more : four .
chasing
innocent
shiners
who
arc
out
just
to
see
deer.
Sooners
pulled out their 20-17
me than anything, " he said.
Most seasons gaining 1,500
He
also
asks
us
to
remember
that
we
are
allowed
only
one
upset
of eighth·ranked
Pill's victory achieved that yards or more : three.
deer
per
season
and
that
all
deer
must
be
checked
at
an
official
Nebraska'
Friday before
goal tjlat Dorsett said last
Most rushes in a career :
,
even
if
it's
a
deer
bagged
on
your
own
land.
A
lso
76,257
fans
who braved
station
summer was his lop priority. 1,074 .
remember
that
hunting
hours
are
7
to
5.
subfreezing
temperatures
His second goal, to become
Most yards gained by a
I hope many of you have noted all of the arrests and and a 30 mile per hour wind.
the NCAA's all-time leading freshman in one game: 265
that Andy and Judge Buck have brought about.
Trailing 17-13 with 3:3Q to
convictions
rusher, and his third, to be against Northwestern on
Public,
show
your
support
and
approva
l
to
Andy
and
.Judge
play
, Oklahoma had the ball
named an All-America again, Sept. 29. 1973.
Buck.
Give
them
a
call
or
a
'good
word
or
write
a
.
on
its
own 15 and the Sooners
was accomplished when he
Most yards gained by a
complimentary
note
to
the
Depar
tment
of
Na
tural
Resources
knew
they
were going to have
was put on Kodak 's all-star freshman In a season : 1,586.
Wildlife
Division.
'
to
come
up
with somethifig
team earli er this week.
Most ya rds gained on an
new
service
to
deer
hunters
this
season
will
be
provided
special
if
they
wanted to
A
His other goal, to win the average per game by a
by
the
department
through
the
cooperation
of
local
radio
share
the
·conference
Heisman Trophy which will freshman · 114.2.
be announced Nov. 30, is
Co il egia te al l-le vels stations. Emergency daily broadcasl.s will be made by Ted c h amPions hip w i t h
Dean of the departmenta l !: IOp.m. Monday through Saturday Oklahoma
Sta te
and
within reach, considering the rushing : 6,082.
through
the
cooperation
of
WMPO
.
It
is
mainly
for
emergency
Colorado.
marks he has left in the
All purpose running
''Defenses try blitzing and
1ya rdag e
by
ru shing, messages to hunters, i:lnd yow- fa milies can nmke connections
record hooks.
by
calling
WMPO
at
992-5355
or
Andy
al
965-3947
or
by
calling
stunling
and different things
His records include :
rece iying and all runbacksl :
the
Highway
Patrol,
Sheriff's
Office,
or
the
Wildlife
Office
in
when
they
are behind, hoping
Most yards gained in a 6,615.
season - 1,9!8, surpassing
Do rse tt's fin al ca ree r Athens. Ted ~ ill also use this broadcast spot to give you an up- they can shake up an
Ed Marinaro's 1971 record of statistics : 6,082 yar ds to.&lt;!atc huntmg report, such as a ny unusually big bucks or offen se, " said Ok lahoma
halfback Elvis Peacock, who
1,1181.
. rushin g, 106 by receiving , i27 other news.
One
last
note
a
new
law
permits
the
courl
to
confiscate
scored
all three Sooners'
Mast . games gaining 100 by kickoff returns .
any firearm use~ in connection with a g;:~ m e violation if the touchdowns. "So when the
~~-~~~~~.~-~-~tl-.tl-a..~:~.-.~ Qo!JI. ~-·~"\i per5Qn is found guilty, plead&lt;; no con test, or pleads guilty. or
offense has the ball and it is
~
course, this is left up to the discretion of the court , but in my be hind , it has lo try to do
I believe this is an effective tool in combating lots of someth in g to catch th e
&lt;
.~ opinion
wildlife crimes.
defense of£ guard."
Fight U1at buck fever , good luck, an d have a safe hunt. Oh
And the 13lh·ranked
yes, save me a piece of steak 1
Sooners did just that. On the
first play or their final
~

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possession,

• THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
1UPI ) - Policy Premium ran
the 7' , furlongs in 1: 38 3-5
COLLEGE PARK , Md . Friday to win the $4,6011
lU PII - The first injury of featured ninth race at This!·
'the
197ti-77 Maryland
ledown.
Terrapins' basketball season
The four -year-old filly paid
b was suffered by Coach Lefty $24, $10.60 and $4.20. Vlnces
Driesell , who' was playing
Dream was second and Hi
basketball with .his teen-age
son and· tore the Achilles Proof was third .
The 1-5~ tenth race tci£ecta
tendon in. his right leg.
of Foolish Spirit, Wading
Dr. Stan Lllvine, the team
physician, will operate on Navajo and It's Brownie was
Driesellloday at Washington worth $105.20 and the 1·3 daily
Hospital Center immediately do uble of Molly Sees and Hi
Officer returned $29.60.
o alter the Terps' season
opener against Notre Dame.
Dri esell was ex pected lo
coach at the game.

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FRAME.

quarterback

Thomas Loll handed off to
reserve halfback Woodie
Shepa rd who hit Steve
Rhodes with a pass and gave
Oklahoma the ball on the
Nebraska 37. ·
Minutes later, reserve
quarterback ·Dean Blevins,
fa ced with a third and 19 from
the Nebras!Gl 34, went into
the Sooner bag of tricks for
another bit of razzle dazzle
when he threw a short pass to
Rhodes and the freshman

Scenes "from Rio Lions. cag~ tourney
..
, ,,

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-

·

'

run in the first quarter and a

50-yard scoring jaunt earlier
inthefourthperiod,scoredon
the next piay.
"I never thought we would
lose," said Shepard . " It's just
tradition, I guess." .
Ne~raska got
33-yard
fi eld goal from AI Eveland in
the £lrst half and took a 17-3
lead in the third quarter when
Curtis Craig scored on a
seven-yard run to cap a 67yard drive in eight plays and
Richard Berns scored on a
four-yard run three plays
after the Huskers recovered a
Loll fumble at-midfield.
The win put Colorado in the
Orange Bowl · at Mianii
against Ohio State and left
Nebraska, which would have
gone to the New Year's Night
game.· if it had won, in the
Astro·Biuebonnet Bowl on
New Year's Eve. Earlie r,

a

Oklahoma accepted an
invitation to the Fiesta Bowl
and Oklahoma Sla te agreed
lo play in the Tangerine
Bowl.
"The players ga\.e it a good
effort and we felt we had it
won but . we didn't," said
Nebra ska
coac h Tom
Osborne, who is winless
against Oklahoma in four
years as head coach. "We
needed to gel another touchdown in the fourth quarter
and when we didn't we let it
slip away ."
Nebraska had plenty of
chances to get more points.
The Cornhuskers laced fourth
downs on the Oklahoma 23
and 34 in the first quarter but
when the wind forced them to
pass up field goal attetl)p[s,
Vin ce Fer ra ga ino passes
were dropped both limes.

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had a onc.ya rd touchdown

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jinxed by the Uons and lose a only a handful of times
chance to play for th e before.
national championship when
"The game broke well for
it meets fourth-ranked us ," said Lions' Coach Joe
Georgia In the New Year's Paterno. "But Pitt showed a
Day Sugar Bowl
lot of class by staying in the
Gator Bowl-bound Penn ga me.
State took a 7-ll lead on Chuck
"They went to the un·
Fusina's 21-yard scoring pass balanced line a nd it helped
to Bob Torrey before Pitt them a great deal. They put
~tiled back to a 7-7 halftime us In a position where our
tie. Pitt and Dorsett were kids were playing different
lhw.arted in spries after blocks when they had in
serres.
practi ce,. We practi ced
But
th e
l'antners against the unbalanced line,
regrouped al halftime, but I guess we didn 't spend
switching the offense to an enough lime with it."
unbalanced line and Dorsett
But
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But Long stretched hls
string of' perfect extra-point
attempts by three to 11 and
kicked a 47-yard field goal
Friday night and was so
excited by his success he did
a ntp in the air on his way off
the field . His joy was
multiplied when Majors gave
hi111 the game batt. . .
"What he's. done for iour
years for Pitt, he deserves
it," Majors said.
It looked in the first half
that Pitt might continue to be

or hand you some cash!

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said, "you can inlagine how
long a season It 's been lor
him."

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standings.
Wake Forest, two-time def e nding tournam e nt
champion, heat Duke, 81~0.
in the other first-round game.
The Wolfpack led most of
the game, a season-opener
for both teams , ·but was
unable lo get back in ~o the
contest after the Tar Heels
moved ahead, 63-SB, with nine
minutes left and Coach Dean
Smith ordered his foultroubled tea m into the "four

·Away to our window s,

OFF

fACTORY TRAINED HOME ECONOMISTS

,.~

JAM ES FOULED - Rio's Greg James (40, on right) was fouled by Indiana Tech's
Tyrone Stewart (55) on this play during Friday's Thanksgiving Holiday Tournament at
Lyne Center. On left is Warrior Larry O'Connor ( 5.~ ) and Rio 's ,Jimmy Noc r22),. Ri o .won,
120-76, to advance to the tournament finals played Saturday night .
'

North Carolina look the
·lead for good, 57-56, ori Ford's
basket with 11:23 remaining.
LaGarde, Ford and O.'Koren ·
each had four louls midway
th rough the second half when
Smith ordered the "four corners."
By POHLA SMITH
The ballhrndling o£ Ford,
UPI Sports Writer
John Kuec ,. a;,d Davis in
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - No
the dela y · · 1p caused North
one, said Pittsburgh Coach
CarolinaS·:., • to foul and left
Johnny Majors , needed
O'Koren OP&lt; o under the
success over cross-state rival
basket. The freshman scored
Penn s't ate as much as
nine
of North Carolina's final
cor ners.''
ruMing back Tony Dorsett
Senior
center
Tom 15 points.
and kicker Carson Long.
Junior Coward Kenny Carr
LaGarde and senior forward
Yes, Pittsburgh lans had
led
the Wolfpack with 16 hungered to break the Lions'
· Walter Davis.ea ch scored 16
points, followed by junior point~.
10-year win streak, and the
Elsewhere in opening night Sugar Bowl-bound team
guard Phil Ford and
freshman guard Mike action, No . I UCLA beat San
needed the 24-7 victory . it
Diego State, 74.jj4, No. 7 earned Friday night to
O'Koren wiih 15 each.
Nevada-Las Vegas trounced
protect its No. I rating and
Nevada-Reno, 102~7, No. 9 become the first unbeaten
Arizona edged Arizona Slate, Panther team since 1929.
92-91, in ov ertime , San
But Dorsett and Long had
Francisco down ed San scores to settle.
Fran cisco Stale, 125-81 ,
"I'm so happy £or the whole
Southern
Illinois surprised school, the city of Pittsburgh
Why pay $40,000 for a si1e buill home when
Missouri, 68-55, and Alabama and this football team ," said
you can bu¥ an FHA , VA, and Ohio Building
upset Purdue, 97~0.
Majors. "But I'm parCode approved modular home for less than
Senior forward Marques ti cularly happy for Tony
521,000 delivery and set up included. We are
.Johnson scored 28 points as Dorsett and Carso~ Long.
. talking about the PENT HOUSE by Fuqua
UCLA opened its second They. deserved to have great
Homes Inc. with 3 bedrooms, 2 full . baths
season under Coach Gene games against Penn State."
and island kitchen. All house type
Bartow wi th a victory . Mike
Dorsett had waited a long
Glenn scored 17 points and time to pay back PeM State
consfruclion . For just a bit more we will do
Corky Abrams added 16 to
all1he site preparation. See our display at ·
for a slight.
lead Southern Ulinois over
1100 Eas1 Main St. , Pomeroy .
"Four years ago when I
Big Eight favorite Missouri.
was
in high school , I wanted
Bill Ca,twrighl's 24 points
t]l
go
to Penn State,". Dorsett
he lped San Francisco set a said, "but I wasn't recruited
single game school scoring
the way I wanted to be by
record. Sophomore Reginald
King scored 22 points and them."
He got his revenge Friday,
sparked a second-half rally
rushing
for 224 yard&lt;;, two
as Alabama overcame an 11·
touchdowns
and his second
point defici t against favored
straight
James
H. Coogan
Purdue. T.R. Dunn had 21
Award
as
the
.
game's
most
points for Alabama, while
valuable
player,
although
the
"QUALITY ALWAYS'
Walter Jordan paced Purdue
Lions
keyed
on
him
the
entire
with 24.
. r··
contest and he was forced to
switch positions . In the
meantime , th e leading
Hours : Mon ., Tues., Thurs., Sat - 9-J · JO
Wedllosday' Friday - 9:00-9: 00 ; .S~nday Closed
candida
te for the Helsman
Pomeroy
992.7034
Oh'
You can consult 11Vour Trophy became the first
10
Pearl Ash 992-3323, Roger Davis 99 2. 7671
Medicare Handbook" to find collegian to crash the 6,000out how to submit a claim for yard rushing mark (6,082)
Part B services.
and added five more NCAA
record&lt;; to the nine he had
alr.eady broken or tied . .
•
Long, the NCAA's all-time
leading scorer, for a year had
carried the burden of feeling
responsible for Pitt's 7-jj loss
to the 20th·rauked Nittany
Uons last year, for he had
had an extra point blocked,
and missed three fourth,
quarter field goal attempts
well within his long range.

United Press International
North Carolina found the
solution to a difficult game
against North Carolina State
Friday night in the "four
corners" delay offense, but
Stale Coach Hugh Sloan
thinks he has a solution for it .
HThe more I see of the four
corners, the more I see a rule
change. I'd definitely like lo
see a 36-second clock.
11
'lbe four corners reminds
me of a bean bag gam~ on the
playgrmmd," Sloan said after
the No. 3 Tar Heels beat
North Carolina State, 71HJ6, in
the first round of the Big Four
Tournament in Greensboro,
N.C. Th~ tournament does
not, however r count in the
Atlantic Coast Conference

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'••

and Dan Bea ver, Illinois,
off ensive lin eman Connie
Zclcncik, Purdue, defensive
back George
Abzick,
Minnesota and li nebacker
Scott Sludwell ,. Illinois .
Purdue running back Scott
Dierking was se lected last
week.
Two non-Bi g Ten players
tapped for U.e game were
Rob Carpentet·, running bad&lt;
from Mlmni of Ohio and Keith
Jenkins, defensive back Iron\
Cincinnati.

'. DOUBLE cLUTCH - Rio's AI Robinson (42) does a double clutch before scoring a twin
pomter agaUlSt lpdiana Tech durmg Fnday night's Rio Grande Uons Tournament at Lyne
Center. On left is Rip's Ron Burr~ll. ~ Keith Wilson photos.

..

NEW YORK 1UP!) - The
National Foot.ball League ailnoUJiced f'riday five Sunday
Spring Valley Plaza , Gallipoli s
Open Tues. 1hru Sal . 10-5 Till8 :00 Thurs . . ' games were sold out 4B hours
before kickoff arid will be
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·

STAN.' ORD, Cali£. IUPI)
~ Seven Big Ten playe rs
have been added to Ute l':ast
team for the 52nd Shrine
i':ast-Wcst Gnme at Sl&lt;lnford
Sta dium Jan . 2, it was
announced .Friday .
Tony Dungy of MIIUlesota
and Northwestern's Hn ndy
Dell n
were
nanled
quarterba('ks for the r.usl
team. The ot her Big Ten
pla yers were wide rcc:ei vers
Mike Co bb, Mi chigan Stale,

••

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Add seven Big 10 players

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I. ·LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY
,
447-7494
IC.. .

MARK SWA IN , left, Ri&lt;)'s sophomore gua rd, tossed hi
10 points to help pac&amp;the Hedmen l&lt;! Utcir second wln in
two start• ~-rl day night . Defender on right Is Indiana
Tech's Bruce Calloway.

~

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H:-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976

5-C-The StUtday Time~ntlnel, SWlday, Nov . 28, 1976

Panther ~ce
sets records

Sooners surprise
e b sk a 20 17

Den Talk

.

By Greg Bailey

POMEROY - There were 1,500 free antlerles&lt; pernuts N
distributed through the pubhr drawmg aoo I pe rsona lly know
~'IJ
of only two people who applied that didn't receive one .
PITTSBURGH l UP! I ymls or more in a season
Estima teS by the Department of Natural Resources
Pittsburgh 's Tony Dorsett II, tying Archie Griffin.
finished his regular season
Most 100-yard games in a predict that only 1&gt;0 of these antlerless permits will actually be
college career in the ·career - 33, also tying used. This 30 per cent harvest will come about because of three By TRACY . RINGOLSBY
reasons. Number one, many of the permit holders will fill their UPI Sports Writer
Panthers ' 21·7 victory over' Griffin .
LINCOLN, Neb. !UPI) .
• PeM Slate with a flair Friday
Most touchdowns scored in bags with bucks. Number two, some people applied for the
and
will
choose
not
to
use
them
just
because
they
don't
I
Jke
every year £or the past
permits
night, rushing for 224 yards, a career - 59, tying Glenn
want
to
kill
a
doe.
They
applied
for
a
permit
just
to
have
it
in
fi
ve
years, Oklahoma beat
two touchdowns and five Davis' record set at Army
case
they
choose
to
use
it.
Thirdly
,
some
of
you
will
go
home
Nebraska.
And like every
more NCAA records.
from 1943-46.
skunked.
·
year for the past five y~a r s,
But Dorsett; who became
Mus[ p0ints · scorflll ill a ·
. Judge Robert Buck would like to remind you hunters of the viclOr¥ gave the Sooners
the first collegian to crash the career - 356, brea king
some
o£ the problems that have been corning into his court. at least a share of the Big
6,000-yard rushing mark and Davis' record of 354.
Remember
that il is illegal to spotlight deer. Reports from E i g h t Con I e re n c e
was named the game's most
Most yards gained in a
local
game
protector
Andy Lyles and Judge Buck indicate that championship:
valuable player, said the new career - 6,082.
this
new
law
is
very
~ffective
.in that they are now catching the
Bu t there was nothing ordirecord&lt;; meant nothing.
Most seasons gaining 1,000
hard
core
game
VIOlators
mstead
of
spending
their
lime
nary
about the way the
''Being ll-0 means more.to yards or more : four .
chasing
innocent
shiners
who
arc
out
just
to
see
deer.
Sooners
pulled out their 20-17
me than anything, " he said.
Most seasons gaining 1,500
He
also
asks
us
to
remember
that
we
are
allowed
only
one
upset
of eighth·ranked
Pill's victory achieved that yards or more : three.
deer
per
season
and
that
all
deer
must
be
checked
at
an
official
Nebraska'
Friday before
goal tjlat Dorsett said last
Most rushes in a career :
,
even
if
it's
a
deer
bagged
on
your
own
land.
A
lso
76,257
fans
who braved
station
summer was his lop priority. 1,074 .
remember
that
hunting
hours
are
7
to
5.
subfreezing
temperatures
His second goal, to become
Most yards gained by a
I hope many of you have noted all of the arrests and and a 30 mile per hour wind.
the NCAA's all-time leading freshman in one game: 265
that Andy and Judge Buck have brought about.
Trailing 17-13 with 3:3Q to
convictions
rusher, and his third, to be against Northwestern on
Public,
show
your
support
and
approva
l
to
Andy
and
.Judge
play
, Oklahoma had the ball
named an All-America again, Sept. 29. 1973.
Buck.
Give
them
a
call
or
a
'good
word
or
write
a
.
on
its
own 15 and the Sooners
was accomplished when he
Most yards gained by a
complimentary
note
to
the
Depar
tment
of
Na
tural
Resources
knew
they
were going to have
was put on Kodak 's all-star freshman In a season : 1,586.
Wildlife
Division.
'
to
come
up
with somethifig
team earli er this week.
Most ya rds gained on an
new
service
to
deer
hunters
this
season
will
be
provided
special
if
they
wanted to
A
His other goal, to win the average per game by a
by
the
department
through
the
cooperation
of
local
radio
share
the
·conference
Heisman Trophy which will freshman · 114.2.
be announced Nov. 30, is
Co il egia te al l-le vels stations. Emergency daily broadcasl.s will be made by Ted c h amPions hip w i t h
Dean of the departmenta l !: IOp.m. Monday through Saturday Oklahoma
Sta te
and
within reach, considering the rushing : 6,082.
through
the
cooperation
of
WMPO
.
It
is
mainly
for
emergency
Colorado.
marks he has left in the
All purpose running
''Defenses try blitzing and
1ya rdag e
by
ru shing, messages to hunters, i:lnd yow- fa milies can nmke connections
record hooks.
by
calling
WMPO
at
992-5355
or
Andy
al
965-3947
or
by
calling
stunling
and different things
His records include :
rece iying and all runbacksl :
the
Highway
Patrol,
Sheriff's
Office,
or
the
Wildlife
Office
in
when
they
are behind, hoping
Most yards gained in a 6,615.
season - 1,9!8, surpassing
Do rse tt's fin al ca ree r Athens. Ted ~ ill also use this broadcast spot to give you an up- they can shake up an
Ed Marinaro's 1971 record of statistics : 6,082 yar ds to.&lt;!atc huntmg report, such as a ny unusually big bucks or offen se, " said Ok lahoma
halfback Elvis Peacock, who
1,1181.
. rushin g, 106 by receiving , i27 other news.
One
last
note
a
new
law
permits
the
courl
to
confiscate
scored
all three Sooners'
Mast . games gaining 100 by kickoff returns .
any firearm use~ in connection with a g;:~ m e violation if the touchdowns. "So when the
~~-~~~~~.~-~-~tl-.tl-a..~:~.-.~ Qo!JI. ~-·~"\i per5Qn is found guilty, plead&lt;; no con test, or pleads guilty. or
offense has the ball and it is
~
course, this is left up to the discretion of the court , but in my be hind , it has lo try to do
I believe this is an effective tool in combating lots of someth in g to catch th e
&lt;
.~ opinion
wildlife crimes.
defense of£ guard."
Fight U1at buck fever , good luck, an d have a safe hunt. Oh
And the 13lh·ranked
yes, save me a piece of steak 1
Sooners did just that. On the
first play or their final
~

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A PORTRAIT
GIFT
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possession,

• THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
1UPI ) - Policy Premium ran
the 7' , furlongs in 1: 38 3-5
COLLEGE PARK , Md . Friday to win the $4,6011
lU PII - The first injury of featured ninth race at This!·
'the
197ti-77 Maryland
ledown.
Terrapins' basketball season
The four -year-old filly paid
b was suffered by Coach Lefty $24, $10.60 and $4.20. Vlnces
Driesell , who' was playing
Dream was second and Hi
basketball with .his teen-age
son and· tore the Achilles Proof was third .
The 1-5~ tenth race tci£ecta
tendon in. his right leg.
of Foolish Spirit, Wading
Dr. Stan Lllvine, the team
physician, will operate on Navajo and It's Brownie was
Driesellloday at Washington worth $105.20 and the 1·3 daily
Hospital Center immediately do uble of Molly Sees and Hi
Officer returned $29.60.
o alter the Terps' season
opener against Notre Dame.
Dri esell was ex pected lo
coach at the game.

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BEARER WILL RECEIVE AN

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FRAME.

quarterback

Thomas Loll handed off to
reserve halfback Woodie
Shepa rd who hit Steve
Rhodes with a pass and gave
Oklahoma the ball on the
Nebraska 37. ·
Minutes later, reserve
quarterback ·Dean Blevins,
fa ced with a third and 19 from
the Nebras!Gl 34, went into
the Sooner bag of tricks for
another bit of razzle dazzle
when he threw a short pass to
Rhodes and the freshman

Scenes "from Rio Lions. cag~ tourney
..
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run in the first quarter and a

50-yard scoring jaunt earlier
inthefourthperiod,scoredon
the next piay.
"I never thought we would
lose," said Shepard . " It's just
tradition, I guess." .
Ne~raska got
33-yard
fi eld goal from AI Eveland in
the £lrst half and took a 17-3
lead in the third quarter when
Curtis Craig scored on a
seven-yard run to cap a 67yard drive in eight plays and
Richard Berns scored on a
four-yard run three plays
after the Huskers recovered a
Loll fumble at-midfield.
The win put Colorado in the
Orange Bowl · at Mianii
against Ohio State and left
Nebraska, which would have
gone to the New Year's Night
game.· if it had won, in the
Astro·Biuebonnet Bowl on
New Year's Eve. Earlie r,

a

Oklahoma accepted an
invitation to the Fiesta Bowl
and Oklahoma Sla te agreed
lo play in the Tangerine
Bowl.
"The players ga\.e it a good
effort and we felt we had it
won but . we didn't," said
Nebra ska
coac h Tom
Osborne, who is winless
against Oklahoma in four
years as head coach. "We
needed to gel another touchdown in the fourth quarter
and when we didn't we let it
slip away ."
Nebraska had plenty of
chances to get more points.
The Cornhuskers laced fourth
downs on the Oklahoma 23
and 34 in the first quarter but
when the wind forced them to
pass up field goal attetl)p[s,
Vin ce Fer ra ga ino passes
were dropped both limes.

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wide receiver Ia teralled to

Peacock, who raced to the
two-yard line. Peacock, who
had a onc.ya rd touchdown

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jinxed by the Uons and lose a only a handful of times
chance to play for th e before.
national championship when
"The game broke well for
it meets fourth-ranked us ," said Lions' Coach Joe
Georgia In the New Year's Paterno. "But Pitt showed a
Day Sugar Bowl
lot of class by staying in the
Gator Bowl-bound Penn ga me.
State took a 7-ll lead on Chuck
"They went to the un·
Fusina's 21-yard scoring pass balanced line a nd it helped
to Bob Torrey before Pitt them a great deal. They put
~tiled back to a 7-7 halftime us In a position where our
tie. Pitt and Dorsett were kids were playing different
lhw.arted in spries after blocks when they had in
serres.
practi ce,. We practi ced
But
th e
l'antners against the unbalanced line,
regrouped al halftime, but I guess we didn 't spend
switching the offense to an enough lime with it."
unbalanced line and Dorsett
But
Pat er,n o ' was

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But Long stretched hls
string of' perfect extra-point
attempts by three to 11 and
kicked a 47-yard field goal
Friday night and was so
excited by his success he did
a ntp in the air on his way off
the field . His joy was
multiplied when Majors gave
hi111 the game batt. . .
"What he's. done for iour
years for Pitt, he deserves
it," Majors said.
It looked in the first half
that Pitt might continue to be

or hand you some cash!

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said, "you can inlagine how
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standings.
Wake Forest, two-time def e nding tournam e nt
champion, heat Duke, 81~0.
in the other first-round game.
The Wolfpack led most of
the game, a season-opener
for both teams , ·but was
unable lo get back in ~o the
contest after the Tar Heels
moved ahead, 63-SB, with nine
minutes left and Coach Dean
Smith ordered his foultroubled tea m into the "four

·Away to our window s,

OFF

fACTORY TRAINED HOME ECONOMISTS

,.~

JAM ES FOULED - Rio's Greg James (40, on right) was fouled by Indiana Tech's
Tyrone Stewart (55) on this play during Friday's Thanksgiving Holiday Tournament at
Lyne Center. On left is Warrior Larry O'Connor ( 5.~ ) and Rio 's ,Jimmy Noc r22),. Ri o .won,
120-76, to advance to the tournament finals played Saturday night .
'

North Carolina look the
·lead for good, 57-56, ori Ford's
basket with 11:23 remaining.
LaGarde, Ford and O.'Koren ·
each had four louls midway
th rough the second half when
Smith ordered the "four corners."
By POHLA SMITH
The ballhrndling o£ Ford,
UPI Sports Writer
John Kuec ,. a;,d Davis in
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - No
the dela y · · 1p caused North
one, said Pittsburgh Coach
CarolinaS·:., • to foul and left
Johnny Majors , needed
O'Koren OP&lt; o under the
success over cross-state rival
basket. The freshman scored
Penn s't ate as much as
nine
of North Carolina's final
cor ners.''
ruMing back Tony Dorsett
Senior
center
Tom 15 points.
and kicker Carson Long.
Junior Coward Kenny Carr
LaGarde and senior forward
Yes, Pittsburgh lans had
led
the Wolfpack with 16 hungered to break the Lions'
· Walter Davis.ea ch scored 16
points, followed by junior point~.
10-year win streak, and the
Elsewhere in opening night Sugar Bowl-bound team
guard Phil Ford and
freshman guard Mike action, No . I UCLA beat San
needed the 24-7 victory . it
Diego State, 74.jj4, No. 7 earned Friday night to
O'Koren wiih 15 each.
Nevada-Las Vegas trounced
protect its No. I rating and
Nevada-Reno, 102~7, No. 9 become the first unbeaten
Arizona edged Arizona Slate, Panther team since 1929.
92-91, in ov ertime , San
But Dorsett and Long had
Francisco down ed San scores to settle.
Fran cisco Stale, 125-81 ,
"I'm so happy £or the whole
Southern
Illinois surprised school, the city of Pittsburgh
Why pay $40,000 for a si1e buill home when
Missouri, 68-55, and Alabama and this football team ," said
you can bu¥ an FHA , VA, and Ohio Building
upset Purdue, 97~0.
Majors. "But I'm parCode approved modular home for less than
Senior forward Marques ti cularly happy for Tony
521,000 delivery and set up included. We are
.Johnson scored 28 points as Dorsett and Carso~ Long.
. talking about the PENT HOUSE by Fuqua
UCLA opened its second They. deserved to have great
Homes Inc. with 3 bedrooms, 2 full . baths
season under Coach Gene games against Penn State."
and island kitchen. All house type
Bartow wi th a victory . Mike
Dorsett had waited a long
Glenn scored 17 points and time to pay back PeM State
consfruclion . For just a bit more we will do
Corky Abrams added 16 to
all1he site preparation. See our display at ·
for a slight.
lead Southern Ulinois over
1100 Eas1 Main St. , Pomeroy .
"Four years ago when I
Big Eight favorite Missouri.
was
in high school , I wanted
Bill Ca,twrighl's 24 points
t]l
go
to Penn State,". Dorsett
he lped San Francisco set a said, "but I wasn't recruited
single game school scoring
the way I wanted to be by
record. Sophomore Reginald
King scored 22 points and them."
He got his revenge Friday,
sparked a second-half rally
rushing
for 224 yard&lt;;, two
as Alabama overcame an 11·
touchdowns
and his second
point defici t against favored
straight
James
H. Coogan
Purdue. T.R. Dunn had 21
Award
as
the
.
game's
most
points for Alabama, while
valuable
player,
although
the
"QUALITY ALWAYS'
Walter Jordan paced Purdue
Lions
keyed
on
him
the
entire
with 24.
. r··
contest and he was forced to
switch positions . In the
meantime , th e leading
Hours : Mon ., Tues., Thurs., Sat - 9-J · JO
Wedllosday' Friday - 9:00-9: 00 ; .S~nday Closed
candida
te for the Helsman
Pomeroy
992.7034
Oh'
You can consult 11Vour Trophy became the first
10
Pearl Ash 992-3323, Roger Davis 99 2. 7671
Medicare Handbook" to find collegian to crash the 6,000out how to submit a claim for yard rushing mark (6,082)
Part B services.
and added five more NCAA
record&lt;; to the nine he had
alr.eady broken or tied . .
•
Long, the NCAA's all-time
leading scorer, for a year had
carried the burden of feeling
responsible for Pitt's 7-jj loss
to the 20th·rauked Nittany
Uons last year, for he had
had an extra point blocked,
and missed three fourth,
quarter field goal attempts
well within his long range.

United Press International
North Carolina found the
solution to a difficult game
against North Carolina State
Friday night in the "four
corners" delay offense, but
Stale Coach Hugh Sloan
thinks he has a solution for it .
HThe more I see of the four
corners, the more I see a rule
change. I'd definitely like lo
see a 36-second clock.
11
'lbe four corners reminds
me of a bean bag gam~ on the
playgrmmd," Sloan said after
the No. 3 Tar Heels beat
North Carolina State, 71HJ6, in
the first round of the Big Four
Tournament in Greensboro,
N.C. Th~ tournament does
not, however r count in the
Atlantic Coast Conference

.

SAVE 1450

to see a liw demonstration

~~

CHRISTMAS CLUB

Sears 36 battery
now on sale ·

. If y.o u own a microwave oven, Ql.you're
thinking about ·buying a microwav~toven •. ,

,:
r•

F otir corners delay o(fense blasted

SAVE THOUSANDS

Unless You Book Early.. .It Won't Be! If You Aie Planning
A Easter Holiday...Make Your ReseiValions NoW!

·!
'••

and Dan Bea ver, Illinois,
off ensive lin eman Connie
Zclcncik, Purdue, defensive
back George
Abzick,
Minnesota and li nebacker
Scott Sludwell ,. Illinois .
Purdue running back Scott
Dierking was se lected last
week.
Two non-Bi g Ten players
tapped for U.e game were
Rob Carpentet·, running bad&lt;
from Mlmni of Ohio and Keith
Jenkins, defensive back Iron\
Cincinnati.

'. DOUBLE cLUTCH - Rio's AI Robinson (42) does a double clutch before scoring a twin
pomter agaUlSt lpdiana Tech durmg Fnday night's Rio Grande Uons Tournament at Lyne
Center. On left is Rip's Ron Burr~ll. ~ Keith Wilson photos.

..

NEW YORK 1UP!) - The
National Foot.ball League ailnoUJiced f'riday five Sunday
Spring Valley Plaza , Gallipoli s
Open Tues. 1hru Sal . 10-5 Till8 :00 Thurs . . ' games were sold out 4B hours
before kickoff arid will be
~-~~1.\-~Q I)...~-~-~-~tl-~-1.\-~-~-~-~ televised locally.
·

STAN.' ORD, Cali£. IUPI)
~ Seven Big Ten playe rs
have been added to Ute l':ast
team for the 52nd Shrine
i':ast-Wcst Gnme at Sl&lt;lnford
Sta dium Jan . 2, it was
announced .Friday .
Tony Dungy of MIIUlesota
and Northwestern's Hn ndy
Dell n
were
nanled
quarterba('ks for the r.usl
team. The ot her Big Ten
pla yers were wide rcc:ei vers
Mike Co bb, Mi chigan Stale,

••

..'"

I

Add seven Big 10 players

••

f

I. ·LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY
,
447-7494
IC.. .

MARK SWA IN , left, Ri&lt;)'s sophomore gua rd, tossed hi
10 points to help pac&amp;the Hedmen l&lt;! Utcir second wln in
two start• ~-rl day night . Defender on right Is Indiana
Tech's Bruce Calloway.

~

Gallipolis; Ohio

STORE H!)URI
MD.t .-Frl. 7:30 A. M.· S P .M.

S.turdlv 7!30 A.M.·4 ,,M.

PHONE 441-4464

CASH &amp; CARRY
"FREE PARKING"

wi CAll lHI

WHOLI YIAII LONG
••

\-··••••••••••••••••••-~;~;;;;.:::
"

II[)][$:
;;;;;;;;;;.~
•

,.

�&amp;-C- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976

7-c-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976

Golden Bears, Redmen gain finals
Rio has

•

I· Jobless benefits up
COLUMBUS - In itial
claims for unemployment
benefits under the regular
Ohio Law increased 2.7
percent during the week
ending November 20 compared. to the previous week ,
according to an announcement today by Albert
G. Giles, Administrator of the
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services.
·
Administrator Giles said
that 19,368 jobless Ohioans ·
filed initial claims last week
under the Ohio Unemployment Compensation Law

•
m

SIX

double figures
RIO GRANDE - Powerful
West Vi rginia Te~h 'a nd
speedy Rio Grande advanced
to the finals of the First
· Annual Rio Grande Lions
Thank sg iving
Holid ay
Tournament with opening
round triumphs before a()proximately 900 fans here
l'rida ·y
n. i g ht .
Coac h Pete Phillips'
We.st Virginia Tech Golden
Bears outlasted Coach Ken
Triv ett e's Cumberland
Indians , 63-56, In th e
opening contest.
Coach Art Lanham's Rio
Grand e Redmen bombed
Indiana Tech, )20-76,. ih the
nightca p.
·
Indiana Tech and Cumberland clashed lor consolation honors in· last night's
first contest. The Redmen
and Bears collided for the
championship ln Saturday 's
nightcap.
In Friday's first 'contest,
West Virginia Tech stormed
to a 32-16 halftime lead. a nd
never looked.· ba ck in posting
its second win in three starts.
Cumberland dropped to 1-2 on
lhe season.·
The Bea rs led anywhere
from 10 to 16 [J'Oints
throughout the second ha lf
until the Indians rallied to
pull withinfive - 61-56 - on a
charity toss by Bill Brooks
with 10 seconds left. It was
too little too late for Cumberland .
Wes t Virginia Tech
placed three men In double
flgurf'S in scoring.

Dan
popped In 19,

Bnrker
Matthew Watts 16 and Jock
McClinton 10.
Tony Wilburn 's 10 points
pa ced the Indians scoring
attack.
Tech hit 23 of 51 field goal
attempts fo r 45 percent. The
winners canned 17 of 28
charit y shots for 53 percent.
The Indians hit 25 of 64 field
goal attempts for 37 percent
and six of 12 fre e throws for 50
percent.
West Vlrginia controlled
the boards, 43-26. Ken Phelps
pick ed off 15 rebounds and
John Mollohan 14 for Tech.
Steve Banks had five caroms
and Billy Brook four for the
'losers. Tech committed 18
tumovers, Cumberland 11 .
AII 12 men to see action

scored for Rio Gr·ande as
lhe Rectmen plied up a 28-S
lead during the first 10
minutes to play to win
go ing away. The Redmen
led 51-30 during halltlme,
Rio upped its season mark
to 2&lt;!. Indiana Tech dropped
to 0-4 on the year.
Six Redmen finished in
.double figures in ' scoring.
Jimmy Noe tossed in 21 for
ga me honors. Gil Price added
17 , Greg Jam es. 16, AI
Robinson 14, Dale Royse and
Mark Swain each fini shed
with '10.
Dean Fi tzpatrick added
eigh t, Ron Burre ll, Don
Gibson and George Vickroy
each had six for the winners.
Dun Bise added four and
Brett McCormick two.
Rio Grande hit 55 of 98 field
goal attempts for 58.1 percent. The Redmen sank 10 of
19 free throws for 51 percent .
Rio picked off 63 rebounds, 13
by Jimmy Noe. The Redmen
committed 22 turnovers.
Indiana Tech hit 28 of 75
field goal attempts for 37
percent. Th e Warriors
conned 18 of 21 free throws
for 89 perce.nt , · had 30
rebounds, five by Quincy
Noel, and committed 20

Box scores:
RIO LIONS
INVITATIONAL

t Fi rs t Game )
WEST
(631
-

VIRGINIA TECH
Bark e r , 7·5-19 ·

Mol lohan, ~ - 1 : 9 :· Wa tt s, 6_,1:
1~ ; Ra m sey , 0 J. J: Ph ~ Ips, 1-

Steelers all set for Bengals tilt
PITTSBURGH 1UP! ) The Pittsburgh Steelers
Friday held tbeir final heavy
practice for their SUnday
clash with Cincinnati.
Coach Chuck Noll said he
expects to have his entire
'

squad in uniform for the
game, altllough quarterba ck
Terry Bradahaw,, tight end
Benny Cunningham and
cornerback Jimmy Allen
were not fully recovered from
injuries.

GOOD ·FORM - West Virgini.a Tech's 6-9 sophomore
Ken Phelps (51) shows good form with a shot over
Cumberland 's Steve Banks 135) during Friday night
action in the First Annual Rio Gra nde Lions Thanksgiving
Tournament. Tech won , 6:1-56 over the Indians. - Keith
Wilson photos.

' COMING TO POMEROY
· POMEROY - Harold E.
Ash, 52, Pomeroy, Who died in
.a house fire at Downington
euly Wednesgay morning
'alter saving the lives of four
people, was enroute to
Pomeroy when the fire
began. Ash had started to
Pomeroy when his car broke
down. He returned to the
home of Mrs. Bessie Boring
when he discovered the house
on fire and saved Mrs. Boring
and three children before
losing his life. Ash resided ·at
202 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy.

\'

2 4; Wc1 lso n, 1-2-4; M cC linton

d-2 10. TOTALS 23 · 11-63
.
CUMBER LAND &lt;si J
Pe~ tt on , '1 0-8,· Wilburn , 5-0-10

Hough , 1-/ -J; Bank s, 2-1-5;
Long worth , ') 0 4 ; Clare, 1_0_

Ha lftime sca re -

Cumber l and 16.

I

~;.~o~~oes RED WING

Tech 3/

(Second Game )
.RIO GRANDE 11201
Bur r ell, 3 0-6; FitzpC\ Ir ick , ·1-

PRICE HOT - Rio's Gil Price (:14) slams tllrough
Indiana Tech's defense for a layup during Friday's Lions
Tournament at Lyne Center. On left is Jimmy Noe.
Warrior onright is Joel Fillman.·Price finished tile game
with 17 pomts. Noe was high with 21. Fillman had nine for
the losers. '

0 8; Gib Son, 3-0-6; James. 8-016 ; Noe . 8 5-?1; Bise , 2-0-4.
Price , 8 1 17 ; Robin son . 6-2IJ ; . Royse , 5-0 10 : Swa in, 5-0-

10 : Vi c kr o y, i 2 6 ; Me
Cormick , 1-0-'l . TOTALS 55 -

10·120.

INDIANA TECH

(761 --

Fillman, 3 3 9; Noel, 8-0-16 ;

College cage scores
College Baske1ball Results
United Press International

70x14 Mansion

Tournaments

Southwest
Central Okla . 58 USA Okla ·57

Gene Lyons, fourth quarter .•
Mrs. Marga ret Lewis is the
secretary. The offi cers will
be installed at the December
meeting.
Attending were Chester V.

King, American Red. Cross ;
Vernon Nease, Red Cross
blood program ; Cha rles
Russell , Lendin g Creek
Co nservancy District; the
Rev . William Mlddleswarth,

BUILDERS AND REMODELERS. • •

lr.OWEST -PRICED
GE
l- ·
CYC -LE. 2-SPEEO WASHER
WITH M I~I - BASKE T ! HC'i\Y V

MONDAY, NOV. 29
at Gallia Academy
HiRh School
7:30 P.M.

GE EXTRA -LARGi! .( APA(tT Y
AUTOMA"'f''IC DRYER wiJh J

hu etl !&gt;t) ll ing!. .. 4 cvc h.•s Jnc: tv clln o
pP r mA n rnt press an {j tl mlld cyc l e

Out v tB l b c ~oa ci t y! se t for
Nor m n t, Perman ent Pr~ss w ith

l or 60 m rnu tos drv lnq t En d of
Cv c_tl' Si gnal ( Wi111 on Or! s wit c h l

Cooldown . Acti vated Soak E"x tr,,
Was h

or

De l ic a t e!

tempe ra t ur e

water

't

\\li'l l f' r

com h i n~ ti o ns

ends .drvcr

·wa lc hln.g l •.S~ par a t~
Saf et y Star t But to n. Big up tr ent
ea!'.'r' c lean Lint TrolP In door
po rr 1

. .1

lev els. r ill er Flo rc n1oves

ti nt t u11 Mini Ba sk et Sf'vcs on
hand wa s h r

0

,

E N CRU STI E ST POT S.
· CA S:) fROLES

lN G

CL El\ N !

Por l~tbl f'

.now bu ilt In l8 l1lr ! "'Pu shbutt on
WMh Cyc l es : Nor ma l , R inse &amp;
Sho r'-t Was h it nd Pow er
Sc ru b! P o w er ful J .tcvt•l wa sh
l't( t1 on A uconill tic Rt! ll ~l' G lo
D is pe nse r . So ft Food Dis poser
( no pr e ri ns ing or scr{t pinu l
Mll plc Cu tlin y Boltr rf Work i OI&gt;'
Hold

$174,267

·into schools

MAGIC
HOLIDAY
FANTASY

rROZEN F'OO D IN SLIM ?9 "
WIDTH
fits mos t anywhe r e

pr••ented by

Wood Co. Sports Assoc.
~ I ldvaooe Tickets
~
Sho•sDay
S2.00
p,·

""'suo

...

keeps ev er yth ing (II l in~e r !ip s! &lt;1
~he l ves plu s to p pla te ea&lt;.h ,1
lreez in q surf ace' Tempe ratur e
Contro L 5 doo r stle tvc s bu l l~ in ·
Tum bl er lo ck with sel f eicc t lnq
k.cy•

lUI

let

Ch i ld

GE ELECTRIC RANGE WITH
P -1
AUTOMATIC
SELF 'c L EANING OVEN SYSTEM
c tc.l ns ent ir e ov en shel ve s, lin er .
oven door . su rfa ce unit r e tl cc tor

~T~OR1 ~56 Ac~ .IA~i- :o:~·~lEoRr

7:30P.M.
Monday, Nov. 29

GE BUlKT -IN AUTOMATIC
DISHWASHER
'l Leve l Tt.o ro
washing with So tt roo d Ol!posr.(

po n s !
Ea s y c l ean
· I pie c e
coo_ ktop ! Clock .Auto m ali c Oven

3 Cycl.e st
Quie t P e rlorn1ancc

Timer! Infi n i te Ro ta ry Sur f ace
Un it Con tro lS!

GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERING

Galli a Academy
High S&lt;hoo l

FR.EE ESTIMATES AND WE INSTALL
749 Third Ave.
. Phone 446·9295

Spo!'t sored by Blu e
Oevtl -, Boo st er Club

W. Va . 89 Mass . U.

n

O'Conne r , 4 5 13 : s ;mpson, o.
Q. Q;
Roberson ,
1 0 2:
.Ca ll oway , 5-2-12 ; Eac ker . 2-l

5;

Rya n. 1 4-6; Cobb , 1 2 4;

Simpson, 4 1-9; Stewar t, Q,Q.O.
TOTALS 29 -18-76.

Halftime

Tec h 30.

score :

Ri o 51

-tn iN IMI• o·n ;-.1 Hockey
L c .-.gu ~ S tand1n g~

Umi C'd Pr ess lnl c rn.liiOIMI

North
·
W l f P I"&gt; GF GA
Kn lama . 11 7 1 ?J 9S 73
Sng ina w 9 lfl
Muskcgon9 9
PI Hu r on 9 10

Flint

) JO B~ 8&lt;l
1 19 78 74
I 19 78 80

8 10 J

19

Colum.

8

a o n

82

"

I

Okla Baptist 84 Sam Houston
63
Okla Christian 93 La ngston 86

•

•

FREE

West

'
•w

HOLIDAY HAM

5n g i n .=~w 6 Tol ed o 1

l on l y Qolmcs scheduledl
'i. und,l y '' Gilrn('"

UCLA 74 San Diego St.

results. ..
Saturday's College

East

Football Results

Ga ll audet 108 Sl. And rews 79

United Press lnterna1ional

NCAA Coli. Div. Playoffs

South

Div. II Semifinals
Akron 27 Neva da-las Vegas 6

Al abama 97 Purdue 80
Auburn 92 Jac ksonv il le 67
Li nc oln Mem . 74 W . Va . St. 67
Pikev l. 84 Ath . In Action 80

West

Navy 38 Army 10

Div . II Quarterfinals

No. Dakola St. 10 E. Kenlucky 7
Georgia 13 Georgia Tech 10

Ashland 88 Oberlin 63 ·
Bradler 89 Quincy a1
Centra Sl. 83 W. Ill . 76
Neb .. Omaha 64 E . Ill. 63

Florida 19 Miami 10
Bos Ion Coil. 59 Hoi y Cross 6

Cincinnati 20 Louisville 6
Texas Tech 30

Southe rn Il l. 68 Missouri 55

Arkansas 7

.WORK SHOES &amp; OXFORDS

t11

LEATHER UPPERS
90

Ko:'llnm itJov

( nl umbus a t Toledo
ronl'f Qitmes
., ~cherluled l

WALKON WAIVJ&lt;;RS
NEW YOR.K (UP! ) - 'l ~e ·
New York Knicks placed
ve\eran center Neal Walk on
waivers Saturday to mAke
room on the ros ter for
Spencer Haywood, who had
been on the injured reserve
lbt with a bruised left ca lf.

\ '12

.. *~

.

'

SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA
I

·"l

•••
••"

That You Borrowed
from us for Christmas

•.

~

••

•'
••

N

eed some Christmas green ery-the money it takes to .
b11y holiday gifts? Come in and
talk to one of our l~a~ people.
They want you to have enough
, cash at hand to make things
merry and bright at your house.

•
•

••

•

"••
••
••
••
••
••
••
•

MEMBER
FDIC

MAIN BANK - SECOND AVENUE
AUTO BANK - THIRD AVENUE
BRANCH - VINTON

NOW, BUILD-IN LATER!
Mnd• l

Model

SAVE

csF22Ei· ~

$100

••
••
••
••
•
••
~

SAVE

'70

•••
••
•
•••
••
•
-• '

FREE

HOLIDAY
HAM I

SAVE

•101
ON MODEL RE930
:· . ' ... ~ICROWAVE OVEN

ON MODEL 926
MICROWAVE OVEN

llul1 •·«:»i..._.,___I_
FOR l"HE BEST HOLIDAY SELECTION .
COME IN 'SOON!

·-

or 20.7 No-Frost
Retrigerator-Freezers .

15.7, 17 .7,

'

MONDAY
AND
TUESDAY

Just JOlt~" Wide!

CARE

SAVE

SAVE

,. •-!

'

••

P~US

DELUXE 2 SPEED, WASHES UP~,.,.~
TO 181ba. HEAVY MIXED
10 DE LUXE PERMANENT-PRESS .
DRYER
POLY- KNIT CYCLE .

• 'o

lWO MORE DAYS!
TO SAVE BIG ON THIS
20 CU. n. CO-{)P CHEST
FREUER

TRASH COMPACTOR

•

••
••

.

MON. THRU SAT. 10.5
SUNDAY 1-4

. ·•

. .
5 CYCLE CONVERTIBLE
. DISHWASHER .PORTABLE

DELUXE 21.9 CU. FT. NOFROST .SIDE-BY·SIDE
,ROLLS OUT ON WHEELS!

•
••

Be smart, apply now in time for the
Christmas shopping -se~son .

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!

COOKS YOUR FOOD TO THE EXACT
DEGREE YOU WANT. .. AUTOMATICALLY!

•

Values to •24.95

FO~l11'T

sso

ON THE
PAIR

HOTPOINT
AUTOMATIC
TEMPERATURE
CONTROL

•••
,,.,

Wright State Classic

M.uskogon il l Flint
Port H uron

'

64

Virginia Invitational

SAVE

SAVE '50

•

Richmond 59 Navy 49

SUNDAY SPECIAL
.ALL MEN'S 6"
•

•"

57

Cen. St. U.O. 83 We ill. 76
Slippcy Rock 77 Wr ighl St. 75

5 71 81 15

•

'

59

G. Washington 96 Dartmouth

SAN FRANCISCO 1 UP!] The San Francisco 49ers said
Frida y qua rte rbac k Ji m
Plunkett pulled a ribcage
muscle in praclice, but is
listed as probable for Monday
nigh1's game aga inst the
Minnesota Vikings.
If Plunkett is unable to
perform , Coach Monte Clark
said he will starl Arka nsas
rookie Scott Bull instead of
ve1eran ba ckup Marty
Domrc'!&lt;. It will be Bull's
inilia l pro start.

To ledo
B 10 J 19 8,1 95
Ft . Wiiyn e7 9 •I 18 73 8!
Fn d ,t y '' Resu lt s
Fl int 5 Knla mnloo 3

,,

,,•

Northern Colo . 82 Adams St.

Spider Classic

Virginia 88 Roanoke 48
VMI 85 Madison 77

ij t

'•'

•'

79 83
79

We Won't Tell

BYU 102 Idaho St. 84
Carroll 94 Lewis &amp; Clark 77
Loyola 65 S. Calif. 64
Nev .-IV 102 Nev .-Reno 87

St. John 's 79, Brown 65
Fa irfield 92 Nrthwstrn 74

Plunkett hurt,
plans to start

W L r Pis. GF GA
11

,,

New /1/re'll. . 121 N.M. Hilands

South
D&lt;•yt on

'.' '·•

Ar izona 92 Arizona St. 91

Joe Lapchick
lnvi1ational

HAS GOOD NIGHT - Rio Grande's Dale Royse i 12,
left ) had a good nighl aga inst lndian&lt;~._Jech with 1Q points
Friday. On right is Warrior ace Quincy Noel, who tossed
in 16 points for the losers.

324 SECOND AVE. · GAU.IPOLIS .., •..J

SE Okia 66 SW Texas 50

IPTAY Invitational
Clem son 104 Y.a le 50
Flori da St . J O Toledo 66

Was $9,995.00

'

NW Ok la . 78 Ab Christian 77

Syracuse 75 Harvard 48

3 Bedrooll), Bay Window, Carpet
Throughout, Storm Windows , House Slider
Windows, Completely Furnished .

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON

LSU 94 Tulane 85

Hall of Fame

Delivered and Set Up

150 applicants, mostly women
betw.een the •ges of 18 and 25
whose husba nds. hnve left
tnem wi1h children. Some, he
said, are in the 50 to 60 year
old age group , either
widoWed or divorced without
income after . their children
have become of age, and
before ~h ey rea ch social
security age.
·
Russell said In his opinion
u0 employmeot In M&lt;•lgs
County Is niore like 11 or· 12
percent rather than the five
percent as listed by the stole.
Chester King presided at
the meeting' when officers for
1977 were elected . The
presidi ng off ice r changes
every three months; for 1977
they are Mrs. Mary Skinner,
first quarter; Glenn a Crisp,
serond quart er ; Vernon
Nease, third quarter ; and

POMEROY LANDMARK and HOTPOINT'S

IVI

Houston 96 Texas luth 69
H. 97 Sui Ross 69

1st Round
Big Four
Wake Fores t 81 Duke 80
North Car olina 78 -66

Total Elodric

_S-8 99 soo

Charles Russell,
an
e•eo;utive
in
the
Leading
while 18,851 had flied the
previous week. Initial clainJS Creek Conservancy District
under all other programs with main offices in Rutland ,
numbered 3,419 for an overall was guest speaker at recent
meeting of the r.jeigs Co unty
initial claims total of 22,787,
representing a 4.6 percent - Hum,an Resources Council at
increase over the previous the Meigs Inn .
Russell li sted watershed,
week's total of 21,788.
Continued' cla ims for those water services, and adult
unemployed one o.r · more employment as the three
weeks were estinJated at main compon ents of the
142,6?4, up 5.5 percent over district program.
the 130,270 total for the week
Abou t · · the watershed
program, he said this inending November 13.
The number of jobless volves facets of the park and
Ohioans filing claims under Jake, noting that there are
all programs were estimated . cabins for rent and room for
at 185,461, a 5.4 percent in- ma ny campers and trailers.
crease over the week ending Curren tly the need is for
November 13 when the total more land for Forest Acres
was t57 ,058.
,
Park.
Administrator Giles stated
Russell rev iewed the
that 2,443 jobless Ohioans had history of the rural water
exhausted their benefits program: Planning began in
under all pr0grams for the 1968 and the $4 million project
week ending November 13. actually started in 1972. Over
Subtotals were Ohio Law 89 miles of pipes have been
1,179; Title 5 (government laid leading to Harrisonville,
employ ees
and
ex- Wilkesville , Point Rock and .
servicemen J 80 ; Special Radcliff. The system also
Unemployment Assistance 'furnishes the water to the
(SUA) 37; Extended SUA 31; Meigs Mines. The main lines
Extended Benefit s (EB ) run along 10 miles of the coal
1,045; Trade Acts (1962 and conveyor belt to the
1974) 71 .
purification plant whi ch is
loca ted at Mine No. 1.
There are now 850
customers serviced by the
put
District.
The adult work ex perience
- progr am, acco r:ling to
Russell , involves pl acing
GALLIPOLIS - CiJecks people in jobs in public
totaling $174,267 were mailed places, and then tries to get
to Gallia County's two school them -onto unsubsidized
systems Friday by State wages. As of Oct. 1, Russell
Auditor
Thomas
E . reported , there were 35
people on the program and
Ferguson's office.
four
of these have )Jeen
Gallipolis City Schools
placed
into regular jobs
reeelved $96,711 under the
since.
state foundation program and
C~rrently there are over
Gallia County LocaL got
$77,557. In addition , the state
paid $43,400 to the .State
Teachers '
Retirem ent
System , $10,152 to the School
Routine nursing ca re
Employ,ees '
Retirement
received
in a hospital is
System , and the Gallia
cove
red
und
er Medicare's
County Board of Education
hospital
insurance.
received $12,8_30.

Say "So long
to cold feat"

7; Huston , J-0-6; Marsha lL 1
0 'l ; Nel son, 2 0-4; Ferguson ,
r I J; Joh n son . o 1 1; Brooks.
d I 9. TOTALS 2S-6 -S6

1977 Model

NOW

Holiday Tournament. On left is Tech ace, John Mollohan
I 41 ), In background are Indians Steve Banks and Tony
Wilburn. On far right is Tech guard Matthew Watts (II )
who pumped in 16 markers for tile winners.

MAO SCRAMBLE - West Virginia Tech's Ken
Phelps (on floor in center of picture) and Cumberland's
Jim Ferguson 134) battle for loose ball in Friday's first
round action of lhe Rio Grande Lions Tbanksgiving

turnove rs.
Noel led the Warriors
attack with 16 points. Larry
O' Conner added 13 und
Bruce Calloway 12.

BUILDING BURNS
RUTLAND . - A small
building . used for the
taxidermy business of
Howard Birchfield, Rutland,
was destroyed by fire
Wednesday , All of the sur&gt;plies, several animal beads
on which Birchfield was
working, and tools were lost
in the lite. The .building was.a
total loss. No monetary figure
was set. The Rutland Fire
Department was on the
scene.
The Rutland Fire bept.
also extends thanks to the
Pomeroy and Middleport
Fire Departments for aid
given during the Brumfield
house fire recently .

Russell tells -Con~ervan.cy 's ·story

and Referral ; Sandy Brown,
GaUia-Melss Co. Head start;
Hazel. McK elvey , GaUia Melgs Community ·Action
Agency ; Helen William,
retired teacher; W. H.
council secre tary ; · Gene Perrin, Meigs County Alcohol
Lyons, Meigs County Health Pro gram ; Hank Cleland ,
Dept. ; Leafy Cha ste en , Bureau of Vocationa l
Senior Citizens Information Rehabllitatim\.

Meigs Ministers ; Phylli s
Bea rhs , Plann ed Parenthood ; Barbara Chapman ,
Chamb er of Commerce;
Mary F. Skinner, personal
Advocacy ; Mrs.· Lewis ,

SERVING
. MEIGS, GAWA AND MASON COUNTIES - JACK W. CARSEY
'
, MGR . PHONE 992·2181
STORE HOURS: OPEN 8:30·5:30. MILL CLOSES AT 5 P.M•

.. SAVE

$69

�&amp;-C- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976

7-c-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 28, 1976

Golden Bears, Redmen gain finals
Rio has

•

I· Jobless benefits up
COLUMBUS - In itial
claims for unemployment
benefits under the regular
Ohio Law increased 2.7
percent during the week
ending November 20 compared. to the previous week ,
according to an announcement today by Albert
G. Giles, Administrator of the
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services.
·
Administrator Giles said
that 19,368 jobless Ohioans ·
filed initial claims last week
under the Ohio Unemployment Compensation Law

•
m

SIX

double figures
RIO GRANDE - Powerful
West Vi rginia Te~h 'a nd
speedy Rio Grande advanced
to the finals of the First
· Annual Rio Grande Lions
Thank sg iving
Holid ay
Tournament with opening
round triumphs before a()proximately 900 fans here
l'rida ·y
n. i g ht .
Coac h Pete Phillips'
We.st Virginia Tech Golden
Bears outlasted Coach Ken
Triv ett e's Cumberland
Indians , 63-56, In th e
opening contest.
Coach Art Lanham's Rio
Grand e Redmen bombed
Indiana Tech, )20-76,. ih the
nightca p.
·
Indiana Tech and Cumberland clashed lor consolation honors in· last night's
first contest. The Redmen
and Bears collided for the
championship ln Saturday 's
nightcap.
In Friday's first 'contest,
West Virginia Tech stormed
to a 32-16 halftime lead. a nd
never looked.· ba ck in posting
its second win in three starts.
Cumberland dropped to 1-2 on
lhe season.·
The Bea rs led anywhere
from 10 to 16 [J'Oints
throughout the second ha lf
until the Indians rallied to
pull withinfive - 61-56 - on a
charity toss by Bill Brooks
with 10 seconds left. It was
too little too late for Cumberland .
Wes t Virginia Tech
placed three men In double
flgurf'S in scoring.

Dan
popped In 19,

Bnrker
Matthew Watts 16 and Jock
McClinton 10.
Tony Wilburn 's 10 points
pa ced the Indians scoring
attack.
Tech hit 23 of 51 field goal
attempts fo r 45 percent. The
winners canned 17 of 28
charit y shots for 53 percent.
The Indians hit 25 of 64 field
goal attempts for 37 percent
and six of 12 fre e throws for 50
percent.
West Vlrginia controlled
the boards, 43-26. Ken Phelps
pick ed off 15 rebounds and
John Mollohan 14 for Tech.
Steve Banks had five caroms
and Billy Brook four for the
'losers. Tech committed 18
tumovers, Cumberland 11 .
AII 12 men to see action

scored for Rio Gr·ande as
lhe Rectmen plied up a 28-S
lead during the first 10
minutes to play to win
go ing away. The Redmen
led 51-30 during halltlme,
Rio upped its season mark
to 2&lt;!. Indiana Tech dropped
to 0-4 on the year.
Six Redmen finished in
.double figures in ' scoring.
Jimmy Noe tossed in 21 for
ga me honors. Gil Price added
17 , Greg Jam es. 16, AI
Robinson 14, Dale Royse and
Mark Swain each fini shed
with '10.
Dean Fi tzpatrick added
eigh t, Ron Burre ll, Don
Gibson and George Vickroy
each had six for the winners.
Dun Bise added four and
Brett McCormick two.
Rio Grande hit 55 of 98 field
goal attempts for 58.1 percent. The Redmen sank 10 of
19 free throws for 51 percent .
Rio picked off 63 rebounds, 13
by Jimmy Noe. The Redmen
committed 22 turnovers.
Indiana Tech hit 28 of 75
field goal attempts for 37
percent. Th e Warriors
conned 18 of 21 free throws
for 89 perce.nt , · had 30
rebounds, five by Quincy
Noel, and committed 20

Box scores:
RIO LIONS
INVITATIONAL

t Fi rs t Game )
WEST
(631
-

VIRGINIA TECH
Bark e r , 7·5-19 ·

Mol lohan, ~ - 1 : 9 :· Wa tt s, 6_,1:
1~ ; Ra m sey , 0 J. J: Ph ~ Ips, 1-

Steelers all set for Bengals tilt
PITTSBURGH 1UP! ) The Pittsburgh Steelers
Friday held tbeir final heavy
practice for their SUnday
clash with Cincinnati.
Coach Chuck Noll said he
expects to have his entire
'

squad in uniform for the
game, altllough quarterba ck
Terry Bradahaw,, tight end
Benny Cunningham and
cornerback Jimmy Allen
were not fully recovered from
injuries.

GOOD ·FORM - West Virgini.a Tech's 6-9 sophomore
Ken Phelps (51) shows good form with a shot over
Cumberland 's Steve Banks 135) during Friday night
action in the First Annual Rio Gra nde Lions Thanksgiving
Tournament. Tech won , 6:1-56 over the Indians. - Keith
Wilson photos.

' COMING TO POMEROY
· POMEROY - Harold E.
Ash, 52, Pomeroy, Who died in
.a house fire at Downington
euly Wednesgay morning
'alter saving the lives of four
people, was enroute to
Pomeroy when the fire
began. Ash had started to
Pomeroy when his car broke
down. He returned to the
home of Mrs. Bessie Boring
when he discovered the house
on fire and saved Mrs. Boring
and three children before
losing his life. Ash resided ·at
202 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy.

\'

2 4; Wc1 lso n, 1-2-4; M cC linton

d-2 10. TOTALS 23 · 11-63
.
CUMBER LAND &lt;si J
Pe~ tt on , '1 0-8,· Wilburn , 5-0-10

Hough , 1-/ -J; Bank s, 2-1-5;
Long worth , ') 0 4 ; Clare, 1_0_

Ha lftime sca re -

Cumber l and 16.

I

~;.~o~~oes RED WING

Tech 3/

(Second Game )
.RIO GRANDE 11201
Bur r ell, 3 0-6; FitzpC\ Ir ick , ·1-

PRICE HOT - Rio's Gil Price (:14) slams tllrough
Indiana Tech's defense for a layup during Friday's Lions
Tournament at Lyne Center. On left is Jimmy Noe.
Warrior onright is Joel Fillman.·Price finished tile game
with 17 pomts. Noe was high with 21. Fillman had nine for
the losers. '

0 8; Gib Son, 3-0-6; James. 8-016 ; Noe . 8 5-?1; Bise , 2-0-4.
Price , 8 1 17 ; Robin son . 6-2IJ ; . Royse , 5-0 10 : Swa in, 5-0-

10 : Vi c kr o y, i 2 6 ; Me
Cormick , 1-0-'l . TOTALS 55 -

10·120.

INDIANA TECH

(761 --

Fillman, 3 3 9; Noel, 8-0-16 ;

College cage scores
College Baske1ball Results
United Press International

70x14 Mansion

Tournaments

Southwest
Central Okla . 58 USA Okla ·57

Gene Lyons, fourth quarter .•
Mrs. Marga ret Lewis is the
secretary. The offi cers will
be installed at the December
meeting.
Attending were Chester V.

King, American Red. Cross ;
Vernon Nease, Red Cross
blood program ; Cha rles
Russell , Lendin g Creek
Co nservancy District; the
Rev . William Mlddleswarth,

BUILDERS AND REMODELERS. • •

lr.OWEST -PRICED
GE
l- ·
CYC -LE. 2-SPEEO WASHER
WITH M I~I - BASKE T ! HC'i\Y V

MONDAY, NOV. 29
at Gallia Academy
HiRh School
7:30 P.M.

GE EXTRA -LARGi! .( APA(tT Y
AUTOMA"'f''IC DRYER wiJh J

hu etl !&gt;t) ll ing!. .. 4 cvc h.•s Jnc: tv clln o
pP r mA n rnt press an {j tl mlld cyc l e

Out v tB l b c ~oa ci t y! se t for
Nor m n t, Perman ent Pr~ss w ith

l or 60 m rnu tos drv lnq t En d of
Cv c_tl' Si gnal ( Wi111 on Or! s wit c h l

Cooldown . Acti vated Soak E"x tr,,
Was h

or

De l ic a t e!

tempe ra t ur e

water

't

\\li'l l f' r

com h i n~ ti o ns

ends .drvcr

·wa lc hln.g l •.S~ par a t~
Saf et y Star t But to n. Big up tr ent
ea!'.'r' c lean Lint TrolP In door
po rr 1

. .1

lev els. r ill er Flo rc n1oves

ti nt t u11 Mini Ba sk et Sf'vcs on
hand wa s h r

0

,

E N CRU STI E ST POT S.
· CA S:) fROLES

lN G

CL El\ N !

Por l~tbl f'

.now bu ilt In l8 l1lr ! "'Pu shbutt on
WMh Cyc l es : Nor ma l , R inse &amp;
Sho r'-t Was h it nd Pow er
Sc ru b! P o w er ful J .tcvt•l wa sh
l't( t1 on A uconill tic Rt! ll ~l' G lo
D is pe nse r . So ft Food Dis poser
( no pr e ri ns ing or scr{t pinu l
Mll plc Cu tlin y Boltr rf Work i OI&gt;'
Hold

$174,267

·into schools

MAGIC
HOLIDAY
FANTASY

rROZEN F'OO D IN SLIM ?9 "
WIDTH
fits mos t anywhe r e

pr••ented by

Wood Co. Sports Assoc.
~ I ldvaooe Tickets
~
Sho•sDay
S2.00
p,·

""'suo

...

keeps ev er yth ing (II l in~e r !ip s! &lt;1
~he l ves plu s to p pla te ea&lt;.h ,1
lreez in q surf ace' Tempe ratur e
Contro L 5 doo r stle tvc s bu l l~ in ·
Tum bl er lo ck with sel f eicc t lnq
k.cy•

lUI

let

Ch i ld

GE ELECTRIC RANGE WITH
P -1
AUTOMATIC
SELF 'c L EANING OVEN SYSTEM
c tc.l ns ent ir e ov en shel ve s, lin er .
oven door . su rfa ce unit r e tl cc tor

~T~OR1 ~56 Ac~ .IA~i- :o:~·~lEoRr

7:30P.M.
Monday, Nov. 29

GE BUlKT -IN AUTOMATIC
DISHWASHER
'l Leve l Tt.o ro
washing with So tt roo d Ol!posr.(

po n s !
Ea s y c l ean
· I pie c e
coo_ ktop ! Clock .Auto m ali c Oven

3 Cycl.e st
Quie t P e rlorn1ancc

Timer! Infi n i te Ro ta ry Sur f ace
Un it Con tro lS!

GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERING

Galli a Academy
High S&lt;hoo l

FR.EE ESTIMATES AND WE INSTALL
749 Third Ave.
. Phone 446·9295

Spo!'t sored by Blu e
Oevtl -, Boo st er Club

W. Va . 89 Mass . U.

n

O'Conne r , 4 5 13 : s ;mpson, o.
Q. Q;
Roberson ,
1 0 2:
.Ca ll oway , 5-2-12 ; Eac ker . 2-l

5;

Rya n. 1 4-6; Cobb , 1 2 4;

Simpson, 4 1-9; Stewar t, Q,Q.O.
TOTALS 29 -18-76.

Halftime

Tec h 30.

score :

Ri o 51

-tn iN IMI• o·n ;-.1 Hockey
L c .-.gu ~ S tand1n g~

Umi C'd Pr ess lnl c rn.liiOIMI

North
·
W l f P I"&gt; GF GA
Kn lama . 11 7 1 ?J 9S 73
Sng ina w 9 lfl
Muskcgon9 9
PI Hu r on 9 10

Flint

) JO B~ 8&lt;l
1 19 78 74
I 19 78 80

8 10 J

19

Colum.

8

a o n

82

"

I

Okla Baptist 84 Sam Houston
63
Okla Christian 93 La ngston 86

•

•

FREE

West

'
•w

HOLIDAY HAM

5n g i n .=~w 6 Tol ed o 1

l on l y Qolmcs scheduledl
'i. und,l y '' Gilrn('"

UCLA 74 San Diego St.

results. ..
Saturday's College

East

Football Results

Ga ll audet 108 Sl. And rews 79

United Press lnterna1ional

NCAA Coli. Div. Playoffs

South

Div. II Semifinals
Akron 27 Neva da-las Vegas 6

Al abama 97 Purdue 80
Auburn 92 Jac ksonv il le 67
Li nc oln Mem . 74 W . Va . St. 67
Pikev l. 84 Ath . In Action 80

West

Navy 38 Army 10

Div . II Quarterfinals

No. Dakola St. 10 E. Kenlucky 7
Georgia 13 Georgia Tech 10

Ashland 88 Oberlin 63 ·
Bradler 89 Quincy a1
Centra Sl. 83 W. Ill . 76
Neb .. Omaha 64 E . Ill. 63

Florida 19 Miami 10
Bos Ion Coil. 59 Hoi y Cross 6

Cincinnati 20 Louisville 6
Texas Tech 30

Southe rn Il l. 68 Missouri 55

Arkansas 7

.WORK SHOES &amp; OXFORDS

t11

LEATHER UPPERS
90

Ko:'llnm itJov

( nl umbus a t Toledo
ronl'f Qitmes
., ~cherluled l

WALKON WAIVJ&lt;;RS
NEW YOR.K (UP! ) - 'l ~e ·
New York Knicks placed
ve\eran center Neal Walk on
waivers Saturday to mAke
room on the ros ter for
Spencer Haywood, who had
been on the injured reserve
lbt with a bruised left ca lf.

\ '12

.. *~

.

'

SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA
I

·"l

•••
••"

That You Borrowed
from us for Christmas

•.

~

••

•'
••

N

eed some Christmas green ery-the money it takes to .
b11y holiday gifts? Come in and
talk to one of our l~a~ people.
They want you to have enough
, cash at hand to make things
merry and bright at your house.

•
•

••

•

"••
••
••
••
••
••
••
•

MEMBER
FDIC

MAIN BANK - SECOND AVENUE
AUTO BANK - THIRD AVENUE
BRANCH - VINTON

NOW, BUILD-IN LATER!
Mnd• l

Model

SAVE

csF22Ei· ~

$100

••
••
••
••
•
••
~

SAVE

'70

•••
••
•
•••
••
•
-• '

FREE

HOLIDAY
HAM I

SAVE

•101
ON MODEL RE930
:· . ' ... ~ICROWAVE OVEN

ON MODEL 926
MICROWAVE OVEN

llul1 •·«:»i..._.,___I_
FOR l"HE BEST HOLIDAY SELECTION .
COME IN 'SOON!

·-

or 20.7 No-Frost
Retrigerator-Freezers .

15.7, 17 .7,

'

MONDAY
AND
TUESDAY

Just JOlt~" Wide!

CARE

SAVE

SAVE

,. •-!

'

••

P~US

DELUXE 2 SPEED, WASHES UP~,.,.~
TO 181ba. HEAVY MIXED
10 DE LUXE PERMANENT-PRESS .
DRYER
POLY- KNIT CYCLE .

• 'o

lWO MORE DAYS!
TO SAVE BIG ON THIS
20 CU. n. CO-{)P CHEST
FREUER

TRASH COMPACTOR

•

••
••

.

MON. THRU SAT. 10.5
SUNDAY 1-4

. ·•

. .
5 CYCLE CONVERTIBLE
. DISHWASHER .PORTABLE

DELUXE 21.9 CU. FT. NOFROST .SIDE-BY·SIDE
,ROLLS OUT ON WHEELS!

•
••

Be smart, apply now in time for the
Christmas shopping -se~son .

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!

COOKS YOUR FOOD TO THE EXACT
DEGREE YOU WANT. .. AUTOMATICALLY!

•

Values to •24.95

FO~l11'T

sso

ON THE
PAIR

HOTPOINT
AUTOMATIC
TEMPERATURE
CONTROL

•••
,,.,

Wright State Classic

M.uskogon il l Flint
Port H uron

'

64

Virginia Invitational

SAVE

SAVE '50

•

Richmond 59 Navy 49

SUNDAY SPECIAL
.ALL MEN'S 6"
•

•"

57

Cen. St. U.O. 83 We ill. 76
Slippcy Rock 77 Wr ighl St. 75

5 71 81 15

•

'

59

G. Washington 96 Dartmouth

SAN FRANCISCO 1 UP!] The San Francisco 49ers said
Frida y qua rte rbac k Ji m
Plunkett pulled a ribcage
muscle in praclice, but is
listed as probable for Monday
nigh1's game aga inst the
Minnesota Vikings.
If Plunkett is unable to
perform , Coach Monte Clark
said he will starl Arka nsas
rookie Scott Bull instead of
ve1eran ba ckup Marty
Domrc'!&lt;. It will be Bull's
inilia l pro start.

To ledo
B 10 J 19 8,1 95
Ft . Wiiyn e7 9 •I 18 73 8!
Fn d ,t y '' Resu lt s
Fl int 5 Knla mnloo 3

,,

,,•

Northern Colo . 82 Adams St.

Spider Classic

Virginia 88 Roanoke 48
VMI 85 Madison 77

ij t

'•'

•'

79 83
79

We Won't Tell

BYU 102 Idaho St. 84
Carroll 94 Lewis &amp; Clark 77
Loyola 65 S. Calif. 64
Nev .-IV 102 Nev .-Reno 87

St. John 's 79, Brown 65
Fa irfield 92 Nrthwstrn 74

Plunkett hurt,
plans to start

W L r Pis. GF GA
11

,,

New /1/re'll. . 121 N.M. Hilands

South
D&lt;•yt on

'.' '·•

Ar izona 92 Arizona St. 91

Joe Lapchick
lnvi1ational

HAS GOOD NIGHT - Rio Grande's Dale Royse i 12,
left ) had a good nighl aga inst lndian&lt;~._Jech with 1Q points
Friday. On right is Warrior ace Quincy Noel, who tossed
in 16 points for the losers.

324 SECOND AVE. · GAU.IPOLIS .., •..J

SE Okia 66 SW Texas 50

IPTAY Invitational
Clem son 104 Y.a le 50
Flori da St . J O Toledo 66

Was $9,995.00

'

NW Ok la . 78 Ab Christian 77

Syracuse 75 Harvard 48

3 Bedrooll), Bay Window, Carpet
Throughout, Storm Windows , House Slider
Windows, Completely Furnished .

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON

LSU 94 Tulane 85

Hall of Fame

Delivered and Set Up

150 applicants, mostly women
betw.een the •ges of 18 and 25
whose husba nds. hnve left
tnem wi1h children. Some, he
said, are in the 50 to 60 year
old age group , either
widoWed or divorced without
income after . their children
have become of age, and
before ~h ey rea ch social
security age.
·
Russell said In his opinion
u0 employmeot In M&lt;•lgs
County Is niore like 11 or· 12
percent rather than the five
percent as listed by the stole.
Chester King presided at
the meeting' when officers for
1977 were elected . The
presidi ng off ice r changes
every three months; for 1977
they are Mrs. Mary Skinner,
first quarter; Glenn a Crisp,
serond quart er ; Vernon
Nease, third quarter ; and

POMEROY LANDMARK and HOTPOINT'S

IVI

Houston 96 Texas luth 69
H. 97 Sui Ross 69

1st Round
Big Four
Wake Fores t 81 Duke 80
North Car olina 78 -66

Total Elodric

_S-8 99 soo

Charles Russell,
an
e•eo;utive
in
the
Leading
while 18,851 had flied the
previous week. Initial clainJS Creek Conservancy District
under all other programs with main offices in Rutland ,
numbered 3,419 for an overall was guest speaker at recent
meeting of the r.jeigs Co unty
initial claims total of 22,787,
representing a 4.6 percent - Hum,an Resources Council at
increase over the previous the Meigs Inn .
Russell li sted watershed,
week's total of 21,788.
Continued' cla ims for those water services, and adult
unemployed one o.r · more employment as the three
weeks were estinJated at main compon ents of the
142,6?4, up 5.5 percent over district program.
the 130,270 total for the week
Abou t · · the watershed
program, he said this inending November 13.
The number of jobless volves facets of the park and
Ohioans filing claims under Jake, noting that there are
all programs were estimated . cabins for rent and room for
at 185,461, a 5.4 percent in- ma ny campers and trailers.
crease over the week ending Curren tly the need is for
November 13 when the total more land for Forest Acres
was t57 ,058.
,
Park.
Administrator Giles stated
Russell rev iewed the
that 2,443 jobless Ohioans had history of the rural water
exhausted their benefits program: Planning began in
under all pr0grams for the 1968 and the $4 million project
week ending November 13. actually started in 1972. Over
Subtotals were Ohio Law 89 miles of pipes have been
1,179; Title 5 (government laid leading to Harrisonville,
employ ees
and
ex- Wilkesville , Point Rock and .
servicemen J 80 ; Special Radcliff. The system also
Unemployment Assistance 'furnishes the water to the
(SUA) 37; Extended SUA 31; Meigs Mines. The main lines
Extended Benefit s (EB ) run along 10 miles of the coal
1,045; Trade Acts (1962 and conveyor belt to the
1974) 71 .
purification plant whi ch is
loca ted at Mine No. 1.
There are now 850
customers serviced by the
put
District.
The adult work ex perience
- progr am, acco r:ling to
Russell , involves pl acing
GALLIPOLIS - CiJecks people in jobs in public
totaling $174,267 were mailed places, and then tries to get
to Gallia County's two school them -onto unsubsidized
systems Friday by State wages. As of Oct. 1, Russell
Auditor
Thomas
E . reported , there were 35
people on the program and
Ferguson's office.
four
of these have )Jeen
Gallipolis City Schools
placed
into regular jobs
reeelved $96,711 under the
since.
state foundation program and
C~rrently there are over
Gallia County LocaL got
$77,557. In addition , the state
paid $43,400 to the .State
Teachers '
Retirem ent
System , $10,152 to the School
Routine nursing ca re
Employ,ees '
Retirement
received
in a hospital is
System , and the Gallia
cove
red
und
er Medicare's
County Board of Education
hospital
insurance.
received $12,8_30.

Say "So long
to cold feat"

7; Huston , J-0-6; Marsha lL 1
0 'l ; Nel son, 2 0-4; Ferguson ,
r I J; Joh n son . o 1 1; Brooks.
d I 9. TOTALS 2S-6 -S6

1977 Model

NOW

Holiday Tournament. On left is Tech ace, John Mollohan
I 41 ), In background are Indians Steve Banks and Tony
Wilburn. On far right is Tech guard Matthew Watts (II )
who pumped in 16 markers for tile winners.

MAO SCRAMBLE - West Virginia Tech's Ken
Phelps (on floor in center of picture) and Cumberland's
Jim Ferguson 134) battle for loose ball in Friday's first
round action of lhe Rio Grande Lions Tbanksgiving

turnove rs.
Noel led the Warriors
attack with 16 points. Larry
O' Conner added 13 und
Bruce Calloway 12.

BUILDING BURNS
RUTLAND . - A small
building . used for the
taxidermy business of
Howard Birchfield, Rutland,
was destroyed by fire
Wednesday , All of the sur&gt;plies, several animal beads
on which Birchfield was
working, and tools were lost
in the lite. The .building was.a
total loss. No monetary figure
was set. The Rutland Fire
Department was on the
scene.
The Rutland Fire bept.
also extends thanks to the
Pomeroy and Middleport
Fire Departments for aid
given during the Brumfield
house fire recently .

Russell tells -Con~ervan.cy 's ·story

and Referral ; Sandy Brown,
GaUia-Melss Co. Head start;
Hazel. McK elvey , GaUia Melgs Community ·Action
Agency ; Helen William,
retired teacher; W. H.
council secre tary ; · Gene Perrin, Meigs County Alcohol
Lyons, Meigs County Health Pro gram ; Hank Cleland ,
Dept. ; Leafy Cha ste en , Bureau of Vocationa l
Senior Citizens Information Rehabllitatim\.

Meigs Ministers ; Phylli s
Bea rhs , Plann ed Parenthood ; Barbara Chapman ,
Chamb er of Commerce;
Mary F. Skinner, personal
Advocacy ; Mrs.· Lewis ,

SERVING
. MEIGS, GAWA AND MASON COUNTIES - JACK W. CARSEY
'
, MGR . PHONE 992·2181
STORE HOURS: OPEN 8:30·5:30. MILL CLOSES AT 5 P.M•

.. SAVE

$69

�S:C- TheSundayTime..Sentin-.1, Sundav. Nov. 28. 1976

.~::

a

By Bob Hoefilch ·

Draft evader pardon readied
.

i~

POMtcROY- Quite a complimen t for the owners and staff
of the Meigs Inn l'Oming from Malcolm Hartley, former
Pomeroy mayor, now associated with the Lorain Jo1Jrnal ,
resUlting from his recent visit.
Malcolm came especially to speak at the appreeiation .
ttinner held for E. F. Robinson and stayed at the Meigs Inn.
After leaving Pomeroy Malcolm wrote his long·liJne friend,
· • Ti!&lt;l Diiwnie, Pomeroy, that .the accommodations and servire
at the Meigs ]rui were "tremendous" and far surpassed

Store Hou!S:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sun.day 10 am·lO pm .

298~ Second/St.

facilities in Lorain .

That's a real compliment since Lorain has some 80,000
tJ€Ople and should be better equipped to handle visitors,
compared to the some 3,500 people in Pomeroy.
WITH THANKSGIVING OUT of the way, the big
emphasis, of CO \fie, is on Olristmas.
And - there 31e a couple of places which you might want
to remember either as an individual or along with your
organ ization .
11'1ecount y infirnwry this Christmas has eight women and
eight men who will be observing Christmas without very much
for thcoming (rom relatives or friends. If you'd like to
remember someone at the infirmary, call !192-5469, and
someone there can fi ll you in on what's needed or what the
residents would like.
·
Also Meigs County has 13 me n and nine women confined to
the Sout heastern Ohio Mental Health Center at Athens. The
deadline for rece iving gifts to go 1D these people is Dec . 11 and
a box has been set up at the Davis Insurance Agency where
gif ts can be left . The gifts for the center are not ID be wrapjled
uut wrapping paper and ribbon can be le£l with the gifts.
Mary Martin is in cha rge of the project and gifts that are
.1 uitable for the center include halt rollers, perfumes,
cosmetics, headscarves, gloves, nightgowns, brushes, combs
Hncl shirts. There are a number of other sa tisfactory items and
1f you have o quest ion give Mrs. Martin a ring.

NO SALES TODEALERS
QUANTITY' RIGHTS RESERV?.D

Prices Effective Thru
Dec. 4, 1976

VOL 11

BABY .....a

•

•

T-BON E STEAK ••••L~.•••

BABY ~EEF

$}29

·

Sl RLO IN STEAK •••L~~..

'111e fair as approved by the Ohio Department of

Agricult ure willlle Aug. 16·20 which is the same week as the
OhioState r'air wh ich was moved to an earlier time than usual.
The complications evolve from the fact that the Concession.
ni res annuall y move from the Meigs Fair to.the Ohio State Fair
lind from'thc usual procedure of namit\g young tJ€0ple Of the
junior fa ir to tak~ part in stale fair level competitions.

.

•
"

"

•

5
CHUCK ROAST ••••••L:·.
BABY BEEF

l·II': Htc 'S A LITTL!l' THOUGHTFUL, bul inexpensive,
good deed you might Jl€rform .
The Mail for Tots, located in Boston, Mass. and designed
for getting mail for SJck and handicapped lots, advises us of a
problem. It seems the concern has little trouble getting people
to send mail to children under 12. However, the Mall for Tots
ha s a 19-year-&lt;Jid boy for which little is happening.
The bey, since January, 1973, has had three operations for
a cancerous brain tumor . He is bedridden due to paralysis and
since .June has suffe red some loss of vision . The doctors give no .
hope for rer6very .
The approaching holiday season may be the young man's
last Christmas and Mail for Tots hopes that you will help in
seein g thalthe cancer victlm gets a "bUnch of mail.'' Cheerful
hell.os from readers do brighten the young man's life.
Greetings and notes can be sent to John Pinto, 916
Birmingna m St., Bridgeport, Conn 116606.

BABY BEEF

ARM ·ROAST •••••••••L!·.
BABY BEEF ·

ENGLISH ROAST ••• ~s~

'11ll': EN8RGY CRISIS STILL exists . Recommendations

7

~

Colwnhusite, 105, marries
woman 77 years his junior

BANANAS••••••••••••L2:

Friday In a brief ceremony
otJ€n to photographers and
court stliff'members just
minutes after another judge
issued them a license and
waived the five-day waiting
period.
Miss Newell, ,who said she
shared Post's feelings of love,
embraced and kissed her new
husband as the judge
pronounced them man and
wife.

•

8 PAK 16 OZ. BTLS.

Suit asks
for ·new·

Plus Tax
and Deposn

FLAVORITE

BABY BEEF

. . ..

LB.

BREAD••••• ~o. ~z.••

$}19

RIB STEAK •••••••••••••

KRAft INDIVIDUAL

. . .

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COUPON
'

&lt;

DIAL SOAP

Visi t Our Sa lad Bar
Lasagna
Vegeta ble

.

Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

,... :-.--: / I

,. :"f;;:..f&gt;£."4'., ·

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COUPON

:.:;~..:... ,,

i!. ORANGE DRINK

·~! ,

:~

i~ ,(::: 54 OZ. 2/$100
w;ct.'
, W/C .· ,.

:: BATH4/79¢

.: : SIZE
•·
. ·
·:

.

. Limit I Per Cuslome;
Good Only At Powell s
Offer Expires 12 4 76

I

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·

: ·

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1
•

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Limit 1 Per Cuslome;
Good Only At Powell s
Offer Expires '2-4-76

:. : 1.

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120Z.

COUPON

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WAGNER'S

4'-

CXJLUMBUS (UPI) - A
class action suit was filed In
U. S. District Court Friday
seeking to overturn the Ohio
presidential vote.
The suit asks that the
results, · which
gave
President·elect Jimmy
"Carter a 9,333 vote margin
,over President Ford, be
declared void and that a new
election be ordered.
Named as "defendants are
Secretary of State Ted Brown
and electors to the Ohio
Electoral College pledged to
Jimmy Carter. The college
meets Dec. 13.
Plaintiffs are Republican
party electors Ross E. Conn,
Canfield, and WiUiam A.
.Keslar, Zanesville ;
American party electors
Wayne St . John, Upper
Arlington, and Edwin 0 .
Williams, Port Clinton;
Labor party electors William
L. Ryan and Randolph A.
Wedler, both of Cleveland
and Michele Magraw ,
Cleveland.
·
,
The ~t claims there was
voter fraud in the election
:and that Brown failed to
"Insure Uial aU unqualified
persons would be prevented
from registering and-or

CHEESE· SLICES·····

CUBE ·STEAK •••• ~~.... ··

...:.-.
- . ..r
'

. election

.d

$'}19

BABY BEEF

PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

~

PEPSI-COLA •••••••••

THE
PLACE
Monday Night Special

Pomeroy, o.

CXJLUMBUS 1UP!) - Ohio
Highway Safety Director Donald Cook says Gov. James
A. Rhodes has "been led to
believe" that problems in the
Ohio Bureau of Motor .
Vehicles are "a mere
personality conflict" ~etween
CooLand State Registrar

17~

GOL-DEN RIP.E

·======
INN

992-3629

/'
"'

·-'

GOLD MEDAL

~~?.~.~

5B·ALGB.

2/$}00W/C

limit J Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
12-4-76

·;~=~~~~~~~~~:!

SPECIAL
I

GOOn SUNDAY ·
"

AND
MONDAY ONT.Yr
Limil1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 12-4-76

:voting."

•

OGDEN, Ulha (UPI) Tbls Item on tbe pollee
blotter caused manv a
double take:
''M~n requests au officer
to stand by while his girlfriend removed her
elothlng."
This was followed by an
equally lnlrlgulng entry
which said;: "GlrUrtend
removed her things . No
problems. No further
action."
·
Pollee Cbi~f Joe Ritchie
didn't know wbal all the
fuss was about. He said his
patrolman was merely
standing by whtlc a girl
was removing her suitcase
lull of clothes from au
apartment.
·

THANKSGIVING DAY CONTEST. WINNERS - At the Thanksgiving Dny !tx•lbnll
game between Pomeroy and Middleport , penny a vote method, Henry Rider wns nnm,~l
king and Lisa Rider queen . They are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Fred llidor. (icorge
Cooper, son of Mr . and Mrs. George Cooper, was nam~prln•"C, and MclisSit Tyt·ec,
daughter of Mrs. Jo Tyree, princess. Runner-up in the prlnt"C contest wns Jer·cnty !l ys~tl .
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Hysell and runner-up In the king contest w11s Ccne Mnnkin.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Mankin. Shown are, front, l.r , Gene Mankin, .kt·cmy Ilysl'll:
second row , George Cooper and Melissa Tyree, third, Henry Rider nnct Lisa Ritlcr.

Carter team hit by sniffles ·

By MIKE FEINSD. BER
dozens of bills dealing with
WASHINGTON (UPI J
land Lise, planning, parks"
Barbara Blum wears the true and.the like during work as a
i~gnia" of President-elect lobbyist 'in Atlanta and
Jimmy Carter's transition Washingtqn .
team. She has the sniffles·.
Asked i.! she ha s ever felt
Mrs. Blum says cold germs any · misgivings · about
found fertile ground among Carter's ability to be
the Carterites who are setting president, she replies : "I
up camp In Washington after wouldo 'l have worked as
working together ID elect the hard for him as I have for the
next president.
last three years if f did ."
,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:,:1::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;:&lt;:&lt;:;·:::::,;,:,1
All along the corridors on
As she describes it, the
. the fifth floor of the Healtl1, lransition team is busy
Education and Welfare producing thick black
Department headquarters looseleaf notebooks to be
building, where the transition given to each new cabinet
team lS ensconced, sneezmg offirer and high government
is heard and people are more official when he or she lakes
likely to talk in nasal twangs
· than Southem accents .·
. Besides sharing the
common
cold, Mrs. Blum, 37,
Carter 's Office announced
has
other
characteristics that
th e FBI will conduct
inay
be
typical
of lite people
"customary" investigations
VAN . Turkey (UP!) - The
who
will
run
government
of all of Carter's cabinet death toll from Turkey's
after
January.
appointees. llu! a spokesman worst earthquake in nearly 40
She is confident , brisk,
· rei(erated ~ .trl:.-r's promise years may reach 7,000 when
intent,
a rapid speaker and an
that no · &gt;ek, would be rescue workers finally are
early
believer in Jimmy
SAN FRANCISl'O t UP!) co nducte · without the able to count casualties in
Carter.
A
native
of
Patricia
Hearst is out on ball,
P&lt;rmissiori · ' Ute person villages cut off by landslides
Hutchinson,
Kan.,
she
lives
in
but
the
22-year-&lt;Jld
involved. •
••
and a . blizzard , Turkish
Atlanta
and
considers
herself
newspaper
heiress
is almust
His office aiso ann'ounced ncwspaP.,rs said Saturday.
a
southerner.
a
'prisoner
in
a
luxury
that in addition to $4.7 million
Burhan Yavuz, deputy
She was Carter's deputy apartment atop Nob Hill,
in loans from the National governor o£ Van province,
· Bank of Georgia, the Carter announced that more than campaign manager. Now she. with the tantalizing sights of
peanut ·· warehouse has 4,000 persons were confirmed directs his transition opera- San Francisco fanning out
tions.
below her window.
·
borrowed funds from the · dead.
Like
thousands
.
of
·
.As clanging · cable cars
Citizens Bank of Americus
Officials at a makeshift aid
jobseekers
whose
loaded
with tourists lurch up
and from the Fulton National and rescue headquarters in
applications
now
are
Powell
Street near her high
Bank of Atlanta.
Van said an estimated 1,200
descending
upon
transition
rise
sanctuary
protected by a
personS were seriously
headquarters
,
Mrs
.
Blum
force
of
bodyguards,
it seems
injured , at least 20 ,000
would
like
a
position
In
the
likely
that
cranks
and
former
homeless, and 60 mudbrick
\
new
administration.
But
she
radical
underground
villages confirmed deis uncertain what she wants. associates also may be
stroyed.
Her job reswne fills four walching and waiting.
Relief officials said a fleet
typed
pages and says she was
Miss Hearst, 22, convicted
of 25 U.S. CJ30 turboprop
"instrumental
in
passing
of
robbing a bank with the
transport planes began
Symbionese l.Jberatlon Army
delivering relief ~upplies to
that kidnaped her almost
lncirlik airbase in southern
three years ago, is getting
Turkey Friday night . Other
"used to-" death threats and
see that the laws are strictly planes hauled the supplies to
adhered to. Governor Rhodes Van for tru cking into the
Ford returns to
has appraently been led ID devastated areas.
believe this is a mere
Another seven U.S. Cl30S
tending store
personaHty conflict.''
were maintaining an air
Cook said he will document bridge from Pisa, Italy,
COLUMBUS (UP!)
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI)
all charges against Andrews directly to Van, loca,led on the Members of the city's police
Nearing the end of perhaps
when he meets with Rhodes . eastern shore of Lake Van. SWAT team, posing as pizza
h1s
last holiday at this tigh!)y
He aecused Andrews with- More~ than !iOO of those delivery men, shot and kllled
guarded
presidential retreat,
"delieberate attempts to killed ~ere !rom the town of a man they said tried to rob
President
Ford bade farewell
impede the state patrol's Muradtye, where only three one of them Friday night..
to
visiting
relatives Saturday
investigation of the deputy burldmgs were lef! standing.
According to police, an
and
got
back
to work on 1978
registrar shortages" but did . Other ha:d-htl towns employe of a near-Northeast
not elaborate as to how mcluded Caldll'an, Isqiyadm Side pizza parlor called them ' federal spending proposals.
Andrews interfered with the and Ercis, all near the after receiving a phoned~n ' Bright, wa.rm sunshine
investigation which was or- epicenter of Wednesday's . order from an area where ·flooded the mountaintop
dered by Rh~des.
quake which measured 7.6 on Several delivery men had Camp David compound and
Cook also said Andrews has . the open-ended Richter scale. been robbed recently. An Ford swam In the heated pool
refused to take action agai1&lt;;t
Rescue officials said strong employe of the restaurant outside hls rustle lodge before
thousands of persons illegally wmds, blizzards, landslides said it sounded' as though the meeting for aimost four hours
operating vehicles in Ohio ; and temperatures from 32 call was placed from a phone with budget experts and
White House aides who flew
resisted improvements in the degrees down to 14 degrees booth.
bur e au 's computer hampered army rescue
PollcesentaSWATteamlo up from Washington by
·operation; cutback on the 24- colwnns which still had not deliver the pizza. The officers helicopter.
The session with chief
hour computerized Jaw reached dozens of remote said when they arrived at the
economic
advisor Alan
enforcement assistance Vlllages tn the quake zone address, Thomas Watkins, 22,
system; and has failed · to near the Soviet and Iranian Coiumbus, pulled a gun and Greenspan, Budget Director
solve personnel problems in frontiers.
put it to the head of one o! the James Lynn and others
similar
the bureau
A number of nations men and demanded . money. followed . two
Andrews' served in 1974 as besides the United States
Anothrr officer shouted meetings Friday designed to
Rhodes' campaign finanre were sending In such aid as "holdlt"andWatkins.ran .He help Ford draft the ll.scall978
chairman :
Cook
was bl ankets , heatable tents, was shot three times and died spending proposals he must
send Congress in January.
Columbus safety direct or ~asoline and mediCine.
early Saturday morning.
'
when Rhodes was mayor of
the city and served as liquor
department dir!'Ctor during
Rhodes previous terms as
governor.

President-elect tapes
television interview
bad. Thanksgiving Day was
mild and sunny , but a steady
li gh t rain pelted Plai ns
Friday and much of the area
was foggy Saturday.
Car. ter re-viewed th e
cabinet information with aide
Hamilton Jordan, who had
compiled the. material with
Hie assistance . of Vice
President ,elect Walter
Mondale.
Carter's only · other
weekend appointmenis were
with Barbara Walters of
ABC·.TV, who taped an interview Saturday, and Walter
Cronkite of CBS-TV who
scheduled a Sunday taping.

'that the president-elect will
address the Denver meeting
of .the National Black Caucus
of Local Elected Officials by
telephone Sunday night at
10:30 p.m. est.

fussing was about

Death. t 0 II
climbs

•

• .

•

I

'

'eurlis Adnrews.
.And, Cook said in a
statement issued Saturday,
"The Governor ha s been
sheltered from the truth
concerning the operation at
the BMV."
Cook suspended Andrews
Tuesday, .cha rgin g~him with
insubordination. Rhodes la ter
reinstated Andrews and set
up a meeting this week
between Ure two men and two
of the governor's executive
assistants.
Rhodes said the problem
was apparently due to the a
personality . difference
between Cook and Andrews,
both of whom are close
associates of Rhodes.'
But in a statement issued
Saturday , Cook leveled
several charges at Andrews,
including interfering with an
Ohio · Highway
Patrol
investigation into money
missing from the bureau's
license plate fee department.
And, he said, "Andrews has
bro~~ght about the situation in
which he finds himself as a
result of a newspaper
interview Nov . 4 in the Elyria
Chronicle: Telegram. He was
quoted as admitting . the
destruction of official state
records pertaining to the
depuly registrar accounts."
Cook said following the
interview he asked Andrews
to make a full report
concerning the missing
records. ·
"He refused to do so
thereby forcing me to take
effective steps to obtain the
facts on an obvious violation
··of law," Cook said. r '&gt; ·
"1 will explain all of this ID
the governor In person. I feel
Governor Rhodes has been
sheltered frrom the tru~
conrerning tbe operation at
the BMV. Always the
governor has Insisted his
appointed cabinet officials

office in eight weeks.
The black books will tell
about the structure oi each
agency ' legislation that tnay
have to go to Capitol Hill in
the first weeks, potential
candidates for job vacancies,
reorganization concepts and
other governmental Ideasthe best thinking of several
hundred experts hlred by the
administration-in -walling.
The books also will remind
cabinet officials of commit·
ments Cat·ter made during
the campaign.
The 250 paid transition
staffers also must COtJ€ with

40,000 pieces o! 11\UlJ shJppL"&lt;i
up (rom Plains, Ga. , and
Atlanlll .
All U1is keeps Mrs. Blum
busy·. She says she comes In
at 9 a.m ., unrl is lucky to
Ic!tve by 11 p.m. She occupies
a plain grey · ste el
goverm11ent-issue desk.
Mrs. Blum left het·
buslnessnum~10 sband
unci
U1eir four children behind In
Atlanta to move temporarily
in to a friend's borrowed
Washington upartment. But
the family arra n~ed 11
Thanksgiving we ekend
reunion in Washington .

Newspaper heiress is

prisoner in own home

'sheltered from truth '

YOU JUST HA Vtc TIM8 to gef a birthday card in the mail
to Mrs. Alma £lupe, for merly of Rutland, at the Angel of Mercy
Hest Home in Albany, Ohio , Mrs. RUtJ€ will be observing her
9:!rd hirthday Monday.

THE MEIGS INN

Immediate lsraell-Syrian
confrontation .
The informanls said the
Syrians ·are now , bent on
consolidating their presenre
in Lebanon and will do
nothing to risk a setback .
Reports from Beirut said
the Syrians have agreed to
curb Palestinian operations
on the Israeli fr.onlier. In
return Israel promised to
condone the movement of a
Ioken deta chment of the
Syrian.·dominated Arab
League peace-keeping forces
into the port of Tyre, 18 miles
north of the harder, and to the
Inland crossroads town of
Nabatiyeh, abcut 10 miles
from the border.

Carter 's office .announced

(Jook says Gov. Rhodes ·

on the problems are outlined m a pamphlet which will be
included wiU1 your next electric bill from The Ohio Power Co.
Custome rs are asked ID read the pamphlet so that they will be
generally well-informe d on the problems.

suitors but not Glen D. Post of
suburban Columbus.
Po'l\, 105, Whitehall, said he
fell in love with Velma Marie
Newell, 28, also of Whitehall,
the minute he la id eyes on
her. A few months later he
proposed and she accepted .
They were married by a
Mun ic ipa l Court judge

radi o, the re inforcements
now include self-pr ope lled
long-range artillery. Military
sources said they can fire
shells against targets along
the Litani River, believed to
be the Israeli-set limit for
hostile Arab forces. The state
te levision had previously
shown films of tank and
armor uni Lcl in position at key
points in the herder area.
The radio report indicateq
the military command is
unlikely to call off the partial
alert for some time.
Despite Israeli efforts to
sustain tenSion over the
southern Lebanon issue,
Weste rn diploma ts excluded
the possibi lit y of an

. PLAI,NS, Ga .· t UP!) President-elect Jimm y
Carter spent a rainy day
indoors Saturday , taping a
television interview and
reviewing information on the
cabinet appointments he
must make.
• Carter has remained at
home Since returning from
Washington . Tuesday ,
relishing what may be o0e of
the last quiet times he and his
family have before the final
rush to name a goverrunent
and •"'!ume power Jan. 20.
South Georgia 's. weather
has offered the future First
Family a mixture of good and

~

.

SUNDAY,NOVEMBER 28, 1976

NO. 144

TEL AVJV, Israel (UPI) Israeli
mi l i tar y
reinforceme~ts, in cIuding
mobile Iongo!'ange artilltiry
capable of hitting targets up
to 15 miles away, have
completed their deployment
along the frontier with
Lebanon, the state radio
reported Saturday.
The unusually highly-publi·
cized military ' buildup was
,arried out despite reports of
a Syrian agreement to
. restroin
Pale s tinian
guerrillas from resumin g
attacks from southern
Lebanon against the Jewish
state.
According to the Israe l

$}39

BABY BEEF

LOOKS AS THOUGH the Meigs County Fair Board may
hav e some pro blems with the dates approved for the annual

prospective

1)

Jluildup complete

PORTERHOUSE ••• ;~·•••
STEAK

some

nn it ."

S&lt;tid Carter would "make
some basi c sort
of
determination" at the first of
U1e year, after he has seen
what is happening ID the
economy at that lime.
Once during the campaign
Carter said a tax cut was
"inevitable," but he almost
immediately backed down .
~'ederal Reserve chairman
Arthur Burns and various key
congressmen · have warned
against a
premature •
rlecision.
Powell also said present
plans do not call for formulation of a "Carter budget" to
replace the one now being
formulated by Pre.sidenl
Ford . He said prese nt
PAGE 1-0 thinking
calls
for
amendments to the Ford
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:::::::;:::;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::·:&lt;· budget, and th~ extent of
those .amendments is yet to
Didn't know what be dec ided,

Powell said, however , that
Carter still believes deserters
- as opposed to those who
ducked the draft - should be
dealt with '&lt;In a case-by-case
basis.
"He sees the need to make
,a · di stinction between
· desertion and Selective
Service violations," said
Powell. "There are varying
degrees of circumstances."
On the tax cut·issue ; Powell

iitntintl

$}49

slow

Jordan , was cane&lt;'led afiPr
Jordan became ill.
Powell said Carter will
move quickly to follow up on
his campaign promise to
pardon draft evaders. He said
the president-elect already
has a group of staff members
preparing the pardon order.
"He said he wa s going to do
it during the first week , and
he 'll do it," said Powell:
" We've got some people

POMEROY, OHIO

BABY BEEF . _ .

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A 77year age . difference might

the first of the year whether ·
to ask Congress for a tax cut .
He said, however, it may be
later before Carter decides
specifically what to ask for
should he decide on a cut .
Carter himself spent a
foggy , rainy South Georgia';' day at home working on his
new administration and
taping a television interview.
His only other appointment of
the day , with aide Hamilton

workin~

MI':MBERS OF the Uni ted.Methodist Women of the Racine
Methodist Churc h have been hard at it for weeks preparing for
a Christmas ba1.aar to be staged Friday and Saturday.
Thp sale items will include rugs, flower arrangements.
cr:tfi items, macrame, und even comforters . Incidentally , one
of tlw comforters was made by Mrs. Edoa Roush whois 90. The
sa le on Friday will include a soup sales and hours, at the
church annex. will be from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.·on Saturday, the
bmnar will include a bake sale from lO a.m. to 4 p.m.

fair next August.

.

.

By DON PHilLIPS
PLAINS, Ga . (UPI )
Jimmy Carter's chief spokesrruin illlid saturday the president-elect, following through
on a campaign promise, is
preparing a blanket pardon of
Vietnam draft evaders and
will issue it during his first
week In office .
Preas Secretary Jody
Powell said Carter also plans
to make the basic decision at

Police.shoot,

kill robber

is steadfastly attempting a
life with some semblance of
normali\y because she ha&amp;no
place to hide, a !amlly
spokesman says.
She was released Nov. 12 on ·
$1 .25 million and still faces
trial in Los Angeles Jaq.'iO on
charges stemming from a
llh9otlng incident with SLA
members Wllllam and Emily
Harris.
Her family reportedly is
puylng more than $700 a day
for her private bodyguards.
She has the luxury that can be
provi~ed by her parents, with
whoffi U.S. District Judge
Willlani Orrick Jr . ordered
she must live pending appeal
of her conviction.
The family can offer her
other residences than the Nob
Hlll apartment, Including a
castle on a 66,IJOO.acr~ estate
at Wyntoon near the
California-Oregon border.

Automobiles in
s]acker demand
.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A·slackemng demand for
automobiles led to a I per
cent decline In retail sales
figures In September, the
Commerce Department
reported Friday.
The monthly federal retail
sal.es report sh~wed an
estunated $53.9 billion worth
of retail gooda were sold In
September, one per cent
below the AugUBt level.
But
"excluding, the
automotive group,
the
re~ort said, the sales
esttmates for September
"were virtually unchanged
from August."
New and used car sales
declined 7 per cent ·in
September from August, the
report said, but still
rennained 16 per cent abcve
the September !975 level.

a source concede'!! that her
mov ement s may well be
under constant scrutiny by
cranks and enemies, so the
idea of a "hideaway" Is
virturilly out of the question .
Her ' lawyers say she hus
"no plac-e to run," and one of
her attorney s',
Albert
Johnson, said she "will not
run away" from fear .
She tested her situAtion last
Monday night when, three
days after her release on bail,
she walked across the street
from the family apartment,
with
Johnson
and
bodygurirds, to the famous
P&lt;nthouse cocktail lolUlge In
the Mark Hopkins Hotel, the
Top of the Mark; for an after.
dinner drink .
She was barely there when
the hotel began receiving
homb threat calls from a
gruff-voiced mAn who said he
belonged to the SLA. Miss
Hearst and her party
returned to the apartment,
but those close ID her say she
will make- and perhaps
already has made- other ·
public outings.
But her movements and
protection are shrouded in
the utmo st secrecy. An
executive of the Ma rk
Hopkins Hotel, where
sel:urlty was increused afte r
her visit; said the newspaper
helri)Ss' "security Is really
incredible. We understand
they 're working In close
contact with the 'San
F r a n c l s c o p o II c e
Department.''
Miss
Hearst
who
admittedly Is co~peratlng
with law enforcement
officials in giving Information
about her former associates,
is a potential wllness in other
government cases, but her
security arrangements have
been made by her family on a
strictly private basis.

~ewspapers are more influential than XV

DAYS TO
:CHRISTMAS

INDIANAPO.US (UP!)
Preliminary . findings · of ir
national study on voters'
choices in the 1976
presidential election indicate
newspapers exert more ·
influence than television on
what people think Is
important, but television is
better at arousing interest.
David Weaver , associate
professor of journaliSm at
Indiana University,
Bloomington, one of the
researchers , said in an

interview that the formal
report on the study, which
hcgan in January and go&lt;'s
,,

through December, will not

·be ready until ·next year.

A preliminary report from
Weaver and M a x w e I I
McCombs, professor of
journalism at Syracuse
University, contained some
tentative l'Onclusions liased
on i~-depth Interviews
through JUly. At.o working
on this research project is
Lee Becker, assistant
professor of journaltsm at
Syracuse.
The Syracuse and IU
schools of journalism and the
University of Illinois,
Chicago Circle campus, are

the three units spOnsoring the Newspapers seem to have a
TV," Weaver said; '~That
study . . Indianapolis, more powerful effect on tljeir suggests newspapers have
Evanston, Dl., and Lebanon, concern over certain l1111ues
lnfl uence on what
N.H ., are the interview than does television," more
people think are important
locations for the study.
Weaver said.
does TV. But you find .
"In this study we have been
"People who relied most on than
that those people who relied
asking what issues are most newspapers for political news mainly on TV are the most
important to them and also had very stable issue-agenda . highly Interested. It seema
asked about the candidates, Those who relied mainly on
TV. Is especially good at
what kinds of things they · television had the least stable raising people's Interest In
would tell a friend that has issue-agenda. The issues they politics.''
been away for a long time," were concerned about tended
Weaver said.
to change from month to
"What we found was that month."
those people who relied most
"Thole who rely maln1y on
NOW YOU KNOW '
on newspapers for political hath t new\ll)lpers and televi·
llolpital expenses are paid
news tended to be concerned ston) were closer to the by Medicare but does not pay
about the same Issues. newspaper people than to lor priyate duty nurses .
rl

)

'

�S:C- TheSundayTime..Sentin-.1, Sundav. Nov. 28. 1976

.~::

a

By Bob Hoefilch ·

Draft evader pardon readied
.

i~

POMtcROY- Quite a complimen t for the owners and staff
of the Meigs Inn l'Oming from Malcolm Hartley, former
Pomeroy mayor, now associated with the Lorain Jo1Jrnal ,
resUlting from his recent visit.
Malcolm came especially to speak at the appreeiation .
ttinner held for E. F. Robinson and stayed at the Meigs Inn.
After leaving Pomeroy Malcolm wrote his long·liJne friend,
· • Ti!&lt;l Diiwnie, Pomeroy, that .the accommodations and servire
at the Meigs ]rui were "tremendous" and far surpassed

Store Hou!S:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sun.day 10 am·lO pm .

298~ Second/St.

facilities in Lorain .

That's a real compliment since Lorain has some 80,000
tJ€Ople and should be better equipped to handle visitors,
compared to the some 3,500 people in Pomeroy.
WITH THANKSGIVING OUT of the way, the big
emphasis, of CO \fie, is on Olristmas.
And - there 31e a couple of places which you might want
to remember either as an individual or along with your
organ ization .
11'1ecount y infirnwry this Christmas has eight women and
eight men who will be observing Christmas without very much
for thcoming (rom relatives or friends. If you'd like to
remember someone at the infirmary, call !192-5469, and
someone there can fi ll you in on what's needed or what the
residents would like.
·
Also Meigs County has 13 me n and nine women confined to
the Sout heastern Ohio Mental Health Center at Athens. The
deadline for rece iving gifts to go 1D these people is Dec . 11 and
a box has been set up at the Davis Insurance Agency where
gif ts can be left . The gifts for the center are not ID be wrapjled
uut wrapping paper and ribbon can be le£l with the gifts.
Mary Martin is in cha rge of the project and gifts that are
.1 uitable for the center include halt rollers, perfumes,
cosmetics, headscarves, gloves, nightgowns, brushes, combs
Hncl shirts. There are a number of other sa tisfactory items and
1f you have o quest ion give Mrs. Martin a ring.

NO SALES TODEALERS
QUANTITY' RIGHTS RESERV?.D

Prices Effective Thru
Dec. 4, 1976

VOL 11

BABY .....a

•

•

T-BON E STEAK ••••L~.•••

BABY ~EEF

$}29

·

Sl RLO IN STEAK •••L~~..

'111e fair as approved by the Ohio Department of

Agricult ure willlle Aug. 16·20 which is the same week as the
OhioState r'air wh ich was moved to an earlier time than usual.
The complications evolve from the fact that the Concession.
ni res annuall y move from the Meigs Fair to.the Ohio State Fair
lind from'thc usual procedure of namit\g young tJ€0ple Of the
junior fa ir to tak~ part in stale fair level competitions.

.

•
"

"

•

5
CHUCK ROAST ••••••L:·.
BABY BEEF

l·II': Htc 'S A LITTL!l' THOUGHTFUL, bul inexpensive,
good deed you might Jl€rform .
The Mail for Tots, located in Boston, Mass. and designed
for getting mail for SJck and handicapped lots, advises us of a
problem. It seems the concern has little trouble getting people
to send mail to children under 12. However, the Mall for Tots
ha s a 19-year-&lt;Jid boy for which little is happening.
The bey, since January, 1973, has had three operations for
a cancerous brain tumor . He is bedridden due to paralysis and
since .June has suffe red some loss of vision . The doctors give no .
hope for rer6very .
The approaching holiday season may be the young man's
last Christmas and Mail for Tots hopes that you will help in
seein g thalthe cancer victlm gets a "bUnch of mail.'' Cheerful
hell.os from readers do brighten the young man's life.
Greetings and notes can be sent to John Pinto, 916
Birmingna m St., Bridgeport, Conn 116606.

BABY BEEF

ARM ·ROAST •••••••••L!·.
BABY BEEF ·

ENGLISH ROAST ••• ~s~

'11ll': EN8RGY CRISIS STILL exists . Recommendations

7

~

Colwnhusite, 105, marries
woman 77 years his junior

BANANAS••••••••••••L2:

Friday In a brief ceremony
otJ€n to photographers and
court stliff'members just
minutes after another judge
issued them a license and
waived the five-day waiting
period.
Miss Newell, ,who said she
shared Post's feelings of love,
embraced and kissed her new
husband as the judge
pronounced them man and
wife.

•

8 PAK 16 OZ. BTLS.

Suit asks
for ·new·

Plus Tax
and Deposn

FLAVORITE

BABY BEEF

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4'-

CXJLUMBUS (UPI) - A
class action suit was filed In
U. S. District Court Friday
seeking to overturn the Ohio
presidential vote.
The suit asks that the
results, · which
gave
President·elect Jimmy
"Carter a 9,333 vote margin
,over President Ford, be
declared void and that a new
election be ordered.
Named as "defendants are
Secretary of State Ted Brown
and electors to the Ohio
Electoral College pledged to
Jimmy Carter. The college
meets Dec. 13.
Plaintiffs are Republican
party electors Ross E. Conn,
Canfield, and WiUiam A.
.Keslar, Zanesville ;
American party electors
Wayne St . John, Upper
Arlington, and Edwin 0 .
Williams, Port Clinton;
Labor party electors William
L. Ryan and Randolph A.
Wedler, both of Cleveland
and Michele Magraw ,
Cleveland.
·
,
The ~t claims there was
voter fraud in the election
:and that Brown failed to
"Insure Uial aU unqualified
persons would be prevented
from registering and-or

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~

PEPSI-COLA •••••••••

THE
PLACE
Monday Night Special

Pomeroy, o.

CXJLUMBUS 1UP!) - Ohio
Highway Safety Director Donald Cook says Gov. James
A. Rhodes has "been led to
believe" that problems in the
Ohio Bureau of Motor .
Vehicles are "a mere
personality conflict" ~etween
CooLand State Registrar

17~

GOL-DEN RIP.E

·======
INN

992-3629

/'
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2/$}00W/C

limit J Per Customer
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SPECIAL
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GOOn SUNDAY ·
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AND
MONDAY ONT.Yr
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Good Only At Powell's
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:voting."

•

OGDEN, Ulha (UPI) Tbls Item on tbe pollee
blotter caused manv a
double take:
''M~n requests au officer
to stand by while his girlfriend removed her
elothlng."
This was followed by an
equally lnlrlgulng entry
which said;: "GlrUrtend
removed her things . No
problems. No further
action."
·
Pollee Cbi~f Joe Ritchie
didn't know wbal all the
fuss was about. He said his
patrolman was merely
standing by whtlc a girl
was removing her suitcase
lull of clothes from au
apartment.
·

THANKSGIVING DAY CONTEST. WINNERS - At the Thanksgiving Dny !tx•lbnll
game between Pomeroy and Middleport , penny a vote method, Henry Rider wns nnm,~l
king and Lisa Rider queen . They are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Fred llidor. (icorge
Cooper, son of Mr . and Mrs. George Cooper, was nam~prln•"C, and MclisSit Tyt·ec,
daughter of Mrs. Jo Tyree, princess. Runner-up in the prlnt"C contest wns Jer·cnty !l ys~tl .
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Hysell and runner-up In the king contest w11s Ccne Mnnkin.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Mankin. Shown are, front, l.r , Gene Mankin, .kt·cmy Ilysl'll:
second row , George Cooper and Melissa Tyree, third, Henry Rider nnct Lisa Ritlcr.

Carter team hit by sniffles ·

By MIKE FEINSD. BER
dozens of bills dealing with
WASHINGTON (UPI J
land Lise, planning, parks"
Barbara Blum wears the true and.the like during work as a
i~gnia" of President-elect lobbyist 'in Atlanta and
Jimmy Carter's transition Washingtqn .
team. She has the sniffles·.
Asked i.! she ha s ever felt
Mrs. Blum says cold germs any · misgivings · about
found fertile ground among Carter's ability to be
the Carterites who are setting president, she replies : "I
up camp In Washington after wouldo 'l have worked as
working together ID elect the hard for him as I have for the
next president.
last three years if f did ."
,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:,:1::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;:&lt;:&lt;:;·:::::,;,:,1
All along the corridors on
As she describes it, the
. the fifth floor of the Healtl1, lransition team is busy
Education and Welfare producing thick black
Department headquarters looseleaf notebooks to be
building, where the transition given to each new cabinet
team lS ensconced, sneezmg offirer and high government
is heard and people are more official when he or she lakes
likely to talk in nasal twangs
· than Southem accents .·
. Besides sharing the
common
cold, Mrs. Blum, 37,
Carter 's Office announced
has
other
characteristics that
th e FBI will conduct
inay
be
typical
of lite people
"customary" investigations
VAN . Turkey (UP!) - The
who
will
run
government
of all of Carter's cabinet death toll from Turkey's
after
January.
appointees. llu! a spokesman worst earthquake in nearly 40
She is confident , brisk,
· rei(erated ~ .trl:.-r's promise years may reach 7,000 when
intent,
a rapid speaker and an
that no · &gt;ek, would be rescue workers finally are
early
believer in Jimmy
SAN FRANCISl'O t UP!) co nducte · without the able to count casualties in
Carter.
A
native
of
Patricia
Hearst is out on ball,
P&lt;rmissiori · ' Ute person villages cut off by landslides
Hutchinson,
Kan.,
she
lives
in
but
the
22-year-&lt;Jld
involved. •
••
and a . blizzard , Turkish
Atlanta
and
considers
herself
newspaper
heiress
is almust
His office aiso ann'ounced ncwspaP.,rs said Saturday.
a
southerner.
a
'prisoner
in
a
luxury
that in addition to $4.7 million
Burhan Yavuz, deputy
She was Carter's deputy apartment atop Nob Hill,
in loans from the National governor o£ Van province,
· Bank of Georgia, the Carter announced that more than campaign manager. Now she. with the tantalizing sights of
peanut ·· warehouse has 4,000 persons were confirmed directs his transition opera- San Francisco fanning out
tions.
below her window.
·
borrowed funds from the · dead.
Like
thousands
.
of
·
.As clanging · cable cars
Citizens Bank of Americus
Officials at a makeshift aid
jobseekers
whose
loaded
with tourists lurch up
and from the Fulton National and rescue headquarters in
applications
now
are
Powell
Street near her high
Bank of Atlanta.
Van said an estimated 1,200
descending
upon
transition
rise
sanctuary
protected by a
personS were seriously
headquarters
,
Mrs
.
Blum
force
of
bodyguards,
it seems
injured , at least 20 ,000
would
like
a
position
In
the
likely
that
cranks
and
former
homeless, and 60 mudbrick
\
new
administration.
But
she
radical
underground
villages confirmed deis uncertain what she wants. associates also may be
stroyed.
Her job reswne fills four walching and waiting.
Relief officials said a fleet
typed
pages and says she was
Miss Hearst, 22, convicted
of 25 U.S. CJ30 turboprop
"instrumental
in
passing
of
robbing a bank with the
transport planes began
Symbionese l.Jberatlon Army
delivering relief ~upplies to
that kidnaped her almost
lncirlik airbase in southern
three years ago, is getting
Turkey Friday night . Other
"used to-" death threats and
see that the laws are strictly planes hauled the supplies to
adhered to. Governor Rhodes Van for tru cking into the
Ford returns to
has appraently been led ID devastated areas.
believe this is a mere
Another seven U.S. Cl30S
tending store
personaHty conflict.''
were maintaining an air
Cook said he will document bridge from Pisa, Italy,
COLUMBUS (UP!)
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI)
all charges against Andrews directly to Van, loca,led on the Members of the city's police
Nearing the end of perhaps
when he meets with Rhodes . eastern shore of Lake Van. SWAT team, posing as pizza
h1s
last holiday at this tigh!)y
He aecused Andrews with- More~ than !iOO of those delivery men, shot and kllled
guarded
presidential retreat,
"delieberate attempts to killed ~ere !rom the town of a man they said tried to rob
President
Ford bade farewell
impede the state patrol's Muradtye, where only three one of them Friday night..
to
visiting
relatives Saturday
investigation of the deputy burldmgs were lef! standing.
According to police, an
and
got
back
to work on 1978
registrar shortages" but did . Other ha:d-htl towns employe of a near-Northeast
not elaborate as to how mcluded Caldll'an, Isqiyadm Side pizza parlor called them ' federal spending proposals.
Andrews interfered with the and Ercis, all near the after receiving a phoned~n ' Bright, wa.rm sunshine
investigation which was or- epicenter of Wednesday's . order from an area where ·flooded the mountaintop
dered by Rh~des.
quake which measured 7.6 on Several delivery men had Camp David compound and
Cook also said Andrews has . the open-ended Richter scale. been robbed recently. An Ford swam In the heated pool
refused to take action agai1&lt;;t
Rescue officials said strong employe of the restaurant outside hls rustle lodge before
thousands of persons illegally wmds, blizzards, landslides said it sounded' as though the meeting for aimost four hours
operating vehicles in Ohio ; and temperatures from 32 call was placed from a phone with budget experts and
White House aides who flew
resisted improvements in the degrees down to 14 degrees booth.
bur e au 's computer hampered army rescue
PollcesentaSWATteamlo up from Washington by
·operation; cutback on the 24- colwnns which still had not deliver the pizza. The officers helicopter.
The session with chief
hour computerized Jaw reached dozens of remote said when they arrived at the
economic
advisor Alan
enforcement assistance Vlllages tn the quake zone address, Thomas Watkins, 22,
system; and has failed · to near the Soviet and Iranian Coiumbus, pulled a gun and Greenspan, Budget Director
solve personnel problems in frontiers.
put it to the head of one o! the James Lynn and others
similar
the bureau
A number of nations men and demanded . money. followed . two
Andrews' served in 1974 as besides the United States
Anothrr officer shouted meetings Friday designed to
Rhodes' campaign finanre were sending In such aid as "holdlt"andWatkins.ran .He help Ford draft the ll.scall978
chairman :
Cook
was bl ankets , heatable tents, was shot three times and died spending proposals he must
send Congress in January.
Columbus safety direct or ~asoline and mediCine.
early Saturday morning.
'
when Rhodes was mayor of
the city and served as liquor
department dir!'Ctor during
Rhodes previous terms as
governor.

President-elect tapes
television interview
bad. Thanksgiving Day was
mild and sunny , but a steady
li gh t rain pelted Plai ns
Friday and much of the area
was foggy Saturday.
Car. ter re-viewed th e
cabinet information with aide
Hamilton Jordan, who had
compiled the. material with
Hie assistance . of Vice
President ,elect Walter
Mondale.
Carter's only · other
weekend appointmenis were
with Barbara Walters of
ABC·.TV, who taped an interview Saturday, and Walter
Cronkite of CBS-TV who
scheduled a Sunday taping.

'that the president-elect will
address the Denver meeting
of .the National Black Caucus
of Local Elected Officials by
telephone Sunday night at
10:30 p.m. est.

fussing was about

Death. t 0 II
climbs

•

• .

•

I

'

'eurlis Adnrews.
.And, Cook said in a
statement issued Saturday,
"The Governor ha s been
sheltered from the truth
concerning the operation at
the BMV."
Cook suspended Andrews
Tuesday, .cha rgin g~him with
insubordination. Rhodes la ter
reinstated Andrews and set
up a meeting this week
between Ure two men and two
of the governor's executive
assistants.
Rhodes said the problem
was apparently due to the a
personality . difference
between Cook and Andrews,
both of whom are close
associates of Rhodes.'
But in a statement issued
Saturday , Cook leveled
several charges at Andrews,
including interfering with an
Ohio · Highway
Patrol
investigation into money
missing from the bureau's
license plate fee department.
And, he said, "Andrews has
bro~~ght about the situation in
which he finds himself as a
result of a newspaper
interview Nov . 4 in the Elyria
Chronicle: Telegram. He was
quoted as admitting . the
destruction of official state
records pertaining to the
depuly registrar accounts."
Cook said following the
interview he asked Andrews
to make a full report
concerning the missing
records. ·
"He refused to do so
thereby forcing me to take
effective steps to obtain the
facts on an obvious violation
··of law," Cook said. r '&gt; ·
"1 will explain all of this ID
the governor In person. I feel
Governor Rhodes has been
sheltered frrom the tru~
conrerning tbe operation at
the BMV. Always the
governor has Insisted his
appointed cabinet officials

office in eight weeks.
The black books will tell
about the structure oi each
agency ' legislation that tnay
have to go to Capitol Hill in
the first weeks, potential
candidates for job vacancies,
reorganization concepts and
other governmental Ideasthe best thinking of several
hundred experts hlred by the
administration-in -walling.
The books also will remind
cabinet officials of commit·
ments Cat·ter made during
the campaign.
The 250 paid transition
staffers also must COtJ€ with

40,000 pieces o! 11\UlJ shJppL"&lt;i
up (rom Plains, Ga. , and
Atlanlll .
All U1is keeps Mrs. Blum
busy·. She says she comes In
at 9 a.m ., unrl is lucky to
Ic!tve by 11 p.m. She occupies
a plain grey · ste el
goverm11ent-issue desk.
Mrs. Blum left het·
buslnessnum~10 sband
unci
U1eir four children behind In
Atlanta to move temporarily
in to a friend's borrowed
Washington upartment. But
the family arra n~ed 11
Thanksgiving we ekend
reunion in Washington .

Newspaper heiress is

prisoner in own home

'sheltered from truth '

YOU JUST HA Vtc TIM8 to gef a birthday card in the mail
to Mrs. Alma £lupe, for merly of Rutland, at the Angel of Mercy
Hest Home in Albany, Ohio , Mrs. RUtJ€ will be observing her
9:!rd hirthday Monday.

THE MEIGS INN

Immediate lsraell-Syrian
confrontation .
The informanls said the
Syrians ·are now , bent on
consolidating their presenre
in Lebanon and will do
nothing to risk a setback .
Reports from Beirut said
the Syrians have agreed to
curb Palestinian operations
on the Israeli fr.onlier. In
return Israel promised to
condone the movement of a
Ioken deta chment of the
Syrian.·dominated Arab
League peace-keeping forces
into the port of Tyre, 18 miles
north of the harder, and to the
Inland crossroads town of
Nabatiyeh, abcut 10 miles
from the border.

Carter 's office .announced

(Jook says Gov. Rhodes ·

on the problems are outlined m a pamphlet which will be
included wiU1 your next electric bill from The Ohio Power Co.
Custome rs are asked ID read the pamphlet so that they will be
generally well-informe d on the problems.

suitors but not Glen D. Post of
suburban Columbus.
Po'l\, 105, Whitehall, said he
fell in love with Velma Marie
Newell, 28, also of Whitehall,
the minute he la id eyes on
her. A few months later he
proposed and she accepted .
They were married by a
Mun ic ipa l Court judge

radi o, the re inforcements
now include self-pr ope lled
long-range artillery. Military
sources said they can fire
shells against targets along
the Litani River, believed to
be the Israeli-set limit for
hostile Arab forces. The state
te levision had previously
shown films of tank and
armor uni Lcl in position at key
points in the herder area.
The radio report indicateq
the military command is
unlikely to call off the partial
alert for some time.
Despite Israeli efforts to
sustain tenSion over the
southern Lebanon issue,
Weste rn diploma ts excluded
the possibi lit y of an

. PLAI,NS, Ga .· t UP!) President-elect Jimm y
Carter spent a rainy day
indoors Saturday , taping a
television interview and
reviewing information on the
cabinet appointments he
must make.
• Carter has remained at
home Since returning from
Washington . Tuesday ,
relishing what may be o0e of
the last quiet times he and his
family have before the final
rush to name a goverrunent
and •"'!ume power Jan. 20.
South Georgia 's. weather
has offered the future First
Family a mixture of good and

~

.

SUNDAY,NOVEMBER 28, 1976

NO. 144

TEL AVJV, Israel (UPI) Israeli
mi l i tar y
reinforceme~ts, in cIuding
mobile Iongo!'ange artilltiry
capable of hitting targets up
to 15 miles away, have
completed their deployment
along the frontier with
Lebanon, the state radio
reported Saturday.
The unusually highly-publi·
cized military ' buildup was
,arried out despite reports of
a Syrian agreement to
. restroin
Pale s tinian
guerrillas from resumin g
attacks from southern
Lebanon against the Jewish
state.
According to the Israe l

$}39

BABY BEEF

LOOKS AS THOUGH the Meigs County Fair Board may
hav e some pro blems with the dates approved for the annual

prospective

1)

Jluildup complete

PORTERHOUSE ••• ;~·•••
STEAK

some

nn it ."

S&lt;tid Carter would "make
some basi c sort
of
determination" at the first of
U1e year, after he has seen
what is happening ID the
economy at that lime.
Once during the campaign
Carter said a tax cut was
"inevitable," but he almost
immediately backed down .
~'ederal Reserve chairman
Arthur Burns and various key
congressmen · have warned
against a
premature •
rlecision.
Powell also said present
plans do not call for formulation of a "Carter budget" to
replace the one now being
formulated by Pre.sidenl
Ford . He said prese nt
PAGE 1-0 thinking
calls
for
amendments to the Ford
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:::::::;:::;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::·:&lt;· budget, and th~ extent of
those .amendments is yet to
Didn't know what be dec ided,

Powell said, however , that
Carter still believes deserters
- as opposed to those who
ducked the draft - should be
dealt with '&lt;In a case-by-case
basis.
"He sees the need to make
,a · di stinction between
· desertion and Selective
Service violations," said
Powell. "There are varying
degrees of circumstances."
On the tax cut·issue ; Powell

iitntintl

$}49

slow

Jordan , was cane&lt;'led afiPr
Jordan became ill.
Powell said Carter will
move quickly to follow up on
his campaign promise to
pardon draft evaders. He said
the president-elect already
has a group of staff members
preparing the pardon order.
"He said he wa s going to do
it during the first week , and
he 'll do it," said Powell:
" We've got some people

POMEROY, OHIO

BABY BEEF . _ .

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A 77year age . difference might

the first of the year whether ·
to ask Congress for a tax cut .
He said, however, it may be
later before Carter decides
specifically what to ask for
should he decide on a cut .
Carter himself spent a
foggy , rainy South Georgia';' day at home working on his
new administration and
taping a television interview.
His only other appointment of
the day , with aide Hamilton

workin~

MI':MBERS OF the Uni ted.Methodist Women of the Racine
Methodist Churc h have been hard at it for weeks preparing for
a Christmas ba1.aar to be staged Friday and Saturday.
Thp sale items will include rugs, flower arrangements.
cr:tfi items, macrame, und even comforters . Incidentally , one
of tlw comforters was made by Mrs. Edoa Roush whois 90. The
sa le on Friday will include a soup sales and hours, at the
church annex. will be from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.·on Saturday, the
bmnar will include a bake sale from lO a.m. to 4 p.m.

fair next August.

.

.

By DON PHilLIPS
PLAINS, Ga . (UPI )
Jimmy Carter's chief spokesrruin illlid saturday the president-elect, following through
on a campaign promise, is
preparing a blanket pardon of
Vietnam draft evaders and
will issue it during his first
week In office .
Preas Secretary Jody
Powell said Carter also plans
to make the basic decision at

Police.shoot,

kill robber

is steadfastly attempting a
life with some semblance of
normali\y because she ha&amp;no
place to hide, a !amlly
spokesman says.
She was released Nov. 12 on ·
$1 .25 million and still faces
trial in Los Angeles Jaq.'iO on
charges stemming from a
llh9otlng incident with SLA
members Wllllam and Emily
Harris.
Her family reportedly is
puylng more than $700 a day
for her private bodyguards.
She has the luxury that can be
provi~ed by her parents, with
whoffi U.S. District Judge
Willlani Orrick Jr . ordered
she must live pending appeal
of her conviction.
The family can offer her
other residences than the Nob
Hlll apartment, Including a
castle on a 66,IJOO.acr~ estate
at Wyntoon near the
California-Oregon border.

Automobiles in
s]acker demand
.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A·slackemng demand for
automobiles led to a I per
cent decline In retail sales
figures In September, the
Commerce Department
reported Friday.
The monthly federal retail
sal.es report sh~wed an
estunated $53.9 billion worth
of retail gooda were sold In
September, one per cent
below the AugUBt level.
But
"excluding, the
automotive group,
the
re~ort said, the sales
esttmates for September
"were virtually unchanged
from August."
New and used car sales
declined 7 per cent ·in
September from August, the
report said, but still
rennained 16 per cent abcve
the September !975 level.

a source concede'!! that her
mov ement s may well be
under constant scrutiny by
cranks and enemies, so the
idea of a "hideaway" Is
virturilly out of the question .
Her ' lawyers say she hus
"no plac-e to run," and one of
her attorney s',
Albert
Johnson, said she "will not
run away" from fear .
She tested her situAtion last
Monday night when, three
days after her release on bail,
she walked across the street
from the family apartment,
with
Johnson
and
bodygurirds, to the famous
P&lt;nthouse cocktail lolUlge In
the Mark Hopkins Hotel, the
Top of the Mark; for an after.
dinner drink .
She was barely there when
the hotel began receiving
homb threat calls from a
gruff-voiced mAn who said he
belonged to the SLA. Miss
Hearst and her party
returned to the apartment,
but those close ID her say she
will make- and perhaps
already has made- other ·
public outings.
But her movements and
protection are shrouded in
the utmo st secrecy. An
executive of the Ma rk
Hopkins Hotel, where
sel:urlty was increused afte r
her visit; said the newspaper
helri)Ss' "security Is really
incredible. We understand
they 're working In close
contact with the 'San
F r a n c l s c o p o II c e
Department.''
Miss
Hearst
who
admittedly Is co~peratlng
with law enforcement
officials in giving Information
about her former associates,
is a potential wllness in other
government cases, but her
security arrangements have
been made by her family on a
strictly private basis.

~ewspapers are more influential than XV

DAYS TO
:CHRISTMAS

INDIANAPO.US (UP!)
Preliminary . findings · of ir
national study on voters'
choices in the 1976
presidential election indicate
newspapers exert more ·
influence than television on
what people think Is
important, but television is
better at arousing interest.
David Weaver , associate
professor of journaliSm at
Indiana University,
Bloomington, one of the
researchers , said in an

interview that the formal
report on the study, which
hcgan in January and go&lt;'s
,,

through December, will not

·be ready until ·next year.

A preliminary report from
Weaver and M a x w e I I
McCombs, professor of
journalism at Syracuse
University, contained some
tentative l'Onclusions liased
on i~-depth Interviews
through JUly. At.o working
on this research project is
Lee Becker, assistant
professor of journaltsm at
Syracuse.
The Syracuse and IU
schools of journalism and the
University of Illinois,
Chicago Circle campus, are

the three units spOnsoring the Newspapers seem to have a
TV," Weaver said; '~That
study . . Indianapolis, more powerful effect on tljeir suggests newspapers have
Evanston, Dl., and Lebanon, concern over certain l1111ues
lnfl uence on what
N.H ., are the interview than does television," more
people think are important
locations for the study.
Weaver said.
does TV. But you find .
"In this study we have been
"People who relied most on than
that those people who relied
asking what issues are most newspapers for political news mainly on TV are the most
important to them and also had very stable issue-agenda . highly Interested. It seema
asked about the candidates, Those who relied mainly on
TV. Is especially good at
what kinds of things they · television had the least stable raising people's Interest In
would tell a friend that has issue-agenda. The issues they politics.''
been away for a long time," were concerned about tended
Weaver said.
to change from month to
"What we found was that month."
those people who relied most
"Thole who rely maln1y on
NOW YOU KNOW '
on newspapers for political hath t new\ll)lpers and televi·
llolpital expenses are paid
news tended to be concerned ston) were closer to the by Medicare but does not pay
about the same Issues. newspaper people than to lor priyate duty nurses .
rl

)

'

�'.

2-D- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov . 28, 1976

Agriculture and
•
our community
By Bryson R. rB ud ) Carter
Gallia County EK lension Agent
GALUPOL!S - This is a
second of a series of articles
add ressing the question,
"Should you form a farm
partnership?" One of the
essentials for success in the
· farm partnership is: " An
Adequate Size M Business."
The size of the farm
business must be adequate if
the partnership is to succeed.
Often it may be necessary to
modernize and enlarge 'the
buildings. How is the money
to be obta ined ~ nd who is

1600 will
attend 58th
convention
CO LUMBUS (UP! ) About 1,600 persons are expected to attend the 58th
annual Ohio Farm Bureau
F edera tio n con ve nt io n
Monday through Wednesday.
Dr. James McQuigg of the
University of Missouri will
speak Monday on progress
being made in predicting the
weather Glen n Kruecher,
director of the Nebraska
Department of Agri culture
will speak on the latest
developments and advances
in methods used to convert
grain mto alcohol for use as a
motor fuel.
Walla ce Hirschf te ld,
president of the Ohio Farm
Bureau, and Richard Anderson, consultant for Bat·
telle Memorial lnstitule, will
also spea k Monday af·
ternoon.
Dr. Glenn Olds, retiring
president of Kent State
UmverSity, will address the
banquet guests Monday
evening . Robert T Secrest,
retiring state senator from
Cambridge, and Lloyd
Flower , re tired Col umbia
County extenSion agenl, will
receive th e federatlon's
distinguished service award.
C.
William
Swank,
exec utive direct or of the
federation, said he plans to
1ssue a statement expressing
concern about the mcreasing
gove rnment
rol e
in
agriculture.

responsible?
Financing the expanded
prog ram may run In to
trouble unless properly
thought In terms of income
and expense, Often the junior
member· is willing to help
fin ance chattel purchases
a Uowing the se nlo ~ partner to
invest In added buildings and
other improvements. The son
or junior member should
safeguard his Investment in
rea l estate Improvements
through suitable legal
agreement.
The size of business should
be sufficient to keep the
projected la bor suppl y
productively employed and to
provide the desired family
income for all of the purtners.
The size can be measured
imtia lly by the budgeted
gro,ss incom e per man
available. If volume of
business is not large enough it
may be important to replan to
see If either more resources
can be brought under control
of the partnership or tf some
off·farrn employment is
available to provide needed
income. Genera lly there
should be at least 14().000
gross income generated per
full·tirne man ava ilable.
When the pte is too small,
the partners will be hungry
and dissatiSfied. No matter
how equitable an operating
agreement may be, the farm
business can be successful

only if fa rm ea rnings are
adequate.

Three named to
delegate meeting
PO MEROY -:- The Metgs
County Farm Bureau will
send three representatives to
the 292-&lt;lelegate session at the
Ohio
Farm
Bureau
Federatio n's 58th annu al
meeti ng Nov. 28-Dec. I In
Columbus.
Oris Rou sh , Langsville ;
Henr y Frank, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, and George Holter,
Minersville, were elected by
the local Farm Bureau to
he Ip determine business and
pohcy matters at the state
level for the Farm Bureau's
67,000 member families .
Oris Roush, Meigs County
Farm Bureau president, said
the deliberations will
determine
the
slate
organization's official policy
for 19n.

County agent's Your Wayne National
corner
By John C. Rlee
County Ext. Agent, Agriculture

POMEROY - The important thing in house plants 1s not
the fact that they need air, bght, water, ferWizer, and suitable
temperature, but how the plant uses these various element s.
Air is often taken for granted unless it becomes polluted
but in the horne it is iinp.rtanl that plants do not sit in a draft:
Impurities in · the air, especially gases escaped from
incomplete combusion of manufactured cooking gas, can
make house plant growing almost impossible.
All plants do not require the same amount of li~ht. but
plants utilize light in the same way . The green pigment
chlorophyll found in leaves is the catalyst by which plants
manufacture sugars and starches within their leaves in the
presence of hght. Without light, plants starve because they
burn up sugars and starches in darkness and soon exhaust
their strength. When light is dim, be especially careful not to
overfertilize plants. They cannot assimilate much food without
abundant light.
Too much water is often the cause of plant trouble. Most
plants do best when allowed to become slightly dry before
water is added. Soil for plants must contain air as well as
water, and too much water forces out the atr.
House plants do best when fed weak solutions of fertilizer.
In the.home where fast growth is not deSirable, feeding can be
qwte tnfrequent, especially for foliage plants which may need
food only lwo or three Limes a year .
Generally speaking, our homes are too warm for best
growth of flowering plant~ . Try to find a cool window sill for
most of your flowering plants and bring them mlo the warmer
areas only when you want to display them .
Prevent Basement Seepage
Ftllm "pot holes" or low areas next to the outside walls of
your home, particularly on basement walls. By filling these
areas with good soil and sloping it away from the wall, you
prevent winter rains and melting snow seeping down and
through basement walls. At the same time, you have prepared
the flower and shrub beds for next sprmg's plant growth .
Very often, shrub beds around the house settle or the
grassed area bwlds up causing the soil level next to the house
to be lower than the level of the yard. II this has happened,
bnng in enough soil to raise the entire bed area above the soil
level of the grassed area .

Steer registration changed
GALLIPOLIS - Fred Deel,
Gallia County Extension
Agent , 4-H , said Saturday the
for . steer
deadline
registration in thts coming
year's 4-H Steer Feeding
projects nas been changed to
January 15, 1977.

New hay
system
liked
GALLIPOLIS- Packaging
hay m large, round bales or

New 4·H members, or old
members who did not receive
a registration blank through
the mail, should stop by or
call the Extension Office at
416-4612, ext. 32. No ex·
ceptions will be !])Ode after
the January 15 deadline.

HELPFUL HINTS
GALLIPOLIS - If you
bag a buck this deer season
and plan a venJsoo least,
th ere Is an Extension
publication, Bulletin 581,
" Success -

You Have

Your Deer" that offers
helpful hints and varlatloos
on preparation of. this wild
game specialty, says Bud
Carter, County Extension
Agent, Agriculture .
Besides cooking
specifications, the bulletin
outllnes fleld dressing
procedures and methods of
preservation.

stacks is drawing the interest
of a growing number of lleef
Cattle Producers in Cow-Calf
Country according to Bud
Carter, Gallia County Ex·
tension Agent, Agriculture.
The system fits Into part· can, Marion Caldwe ll~
time beef cow-calf operations George Woodward and Fred
because time and labor can Vollborn have agreed to
be reduced, handling and explaui their views about
storage costs 1n the field are large round bales and con·
less, and manure hauling Is ventional regular bales for
feeding in beef cow-calf
elimmated.
A good many fanners in operations. Area Animal
our area are using this Industry Extension Agent
system; others remain un· Jim Clay will moderate lhe
discussion and folks will also
decided
Carter, therefore, is en· ha ve an opportunity to
couraging Gallia and neigh· discuss overall beef cattle
boring county beef cattle management practices with
fanners to attend the "Round the farmers and Clay.
Carter satd fanners , farm
Table Discussion" Tuesday
wives,
children, friends and
evening, Nov . 30 at 7:30 at the
neighbors
in Gallla and
Jack so n PCA Buildin g.
surrounding
counties are
Gallia County far·
rners, including C. A. Dun· welcome.

Coolville men charged
with illegal hunting

PERFEcrGI
the Outdoorsman

LIST

SALE
PRICE

Mini Mac 25 w-10" Ba r (one
only
·
114.95
97 .50
Mini Mac JO w-12" Bar (one
only)
134.95
114.75
Mini Mac 35 w-case &amp; accessories (one
164 .95
139.95
only)
Power Mac 6 Aw-14" Bar (one
152 .95
only)
179.95
Super Pro 40 w-14' ' Bar (two
only)
179.95
152 .95
Pro Ma c 55 w-20" Bar (on e
onl )

E[J(INS, W. Va . (UPI) - Levering.
Ten Springfield, Ohio, area
Charged
only
with
men have been arrested for possession of illegally kllled
possession of five Illegally deer were Joe Straight, John
killed deer and fmed $3,280 Pence, Jr., Willis Levering,
and four Coolville, Ohio men John
Certain,
Robert
face charges of illega lly Levering and Ed Lenson.
hunting deer in West Four does and button buck
Vlrglnla.
weighing an average of 50 to
Four of the Springfield men 60 pounds were among the
were handed 10-day jail illegally killed deer, Painter
terms.
said.
The five deer they illegally
Of the four Coolville men,
killed were hidden under Edward M. Scott was
newly fallen snow near a assessed
$200
for
hunting camp at the in· replaeernent of an illegally
tersectlon of Middle Moun· killed deer and fined $50 for
lain and Sporting Lick Ro~ds Its unlawful killing.
near Glady , Randolph
Miran Ratlisaall, Stephen
County, according to Sgt. W. Starr and Ed S. Huluck
Kenneth Painter 'of the West were fined $50 aptece for
Virginia Department of hunting ,without ·a llcense.
Natural Resources.
· The men were arrested by
"We had these peopl e Department of Natural
under surveillance fo~ some Res ources officer George
time," Painter said~ 11 and we Armstrong and fined by
belleved they had the deer in Justice of the Peace Gay
their possession, but It took Duke.
the help of other hunters in
the area to give us the in·
formation we needed to move-·. , in."

•·our of Ute Springfield
Ohioans pleaded guilty to
killing deer illegally, and
were sentenced to jail for 10
days. They were Bruce
Len son, Ernest Baker, James
M. Levering and Marv in

J

T. Allan Wolter
District Ranger
IRONTON - In 1950, a frightened , badly burned black bear
cub was rescued from a forest fire
by rangers on tile Lincoln National
Forest in New Mexico. Twenty·
seven years later this same bear
died In his sleep from old age - not
an uncommon occurrence for black
bears. .
But this was not the average
bear, It was Smokey the Bear. And
' what a swath he cut, and what a trail
he left on his 25 year march through
conservation history.
Although I never met him, I
considered him a friend, as did
millions of Americaos who knew
him better than any other per·
sonage, fictional or real, so great
\\'Sa his impact on the publi c.
. I've accompanied Smokey in
VIsits to schools, churches and
publlc events, and his presence was
electric.
I remember the first tune I rode
in a parade with Smokey. People of
..

ail ages Instantly recognized him a
block away and greeted him with
"HI Smokey"; Howya doln ',
Smokey, and "Hey there Smokey."
Most vivid in my mind however Is
how parents would hold their tod·
dlers aloft for a better view and
wave their tiny arms for them as
Smokey passed by.
'
Smokey's fecord as a con·
servationlst Is unequaled, to be
envied by all human beings.
lfe served adlvely at his post for
25 years before being retired at the
National Zoo In May of 1975. Since
the lncepUon of the Smokey Bear
Forest Fire Prevention Campalga,
Smokey Ia credited with saving
United States more than $IS bllllon
In timber that didn't burn, In
recreation areas that weren't
destroyed, and In watersheds that
weren't blackened.
Man-caused fires dropped from
lll2,000 In 1942 to 146,000 in 1974,
remarkable, considering the Increases In papulation and forest uses
during that time. Forest acreage
burned annually dropped 9{1 percent,

,.

Forest-~

•~0-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SUfldaY. Nov . 28,1976

Forulms 10; Newsmaker '76 13

Cleophus Robinson 13 .
7:30--This Is The Ll le 3, Your Heallh
Bible Class 13 .
7:5S....B1ack Cameo 4

Presents10: Rex Humbard 13 : Open B&gt;ble 15
9.00--Gospel Singing Jubilee 3: Hour of Power 4; Re&gt;
Humbard 6,

For your fine feathered

friends HEATH bird feede~·

and Central Soya bird feed. ·......
:~::

absorption is to be achieved.
Results from a large
number of OARDC. digestion
!rials have shown that unless
a positive phosphorus
balance is maintained ,
vitamin D feeding does not
increase intestinal absorption
of calcium ai; it does when
there is adequate phosphorus
in the diet. On the other hand,
high intake of phosphorus is
now kno wn to suppress
kidney formation of the
active form of vitamin D
(1,25
dihydroxy· '
ohlolecalciferol) need·
ed for the production of
calcium binding protein.
In efforts to maximize
calcium
absorption,
ALMA, NOT ELMERexcessive
dietary
intake or
MIDDLEPORT ~ Alma
calciurp
should
also be
Riggs, Middleport, was
avoided
.
When
high
dietary
admitted to' Veterans
intake
of
calcium
during
the
Memorial Hospital, not
dry
period
results
in
elevated
Elmer Riggs as was repor·
~lo"'l calcium levels, kidney
ted .

.WILD·BIRD FEED
100 LB. '13.95
50 LB. •6.95
25 LB. '3.95

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SUNFLOWER SEED
50 LB. '11.75
25 LB. '7.00
1 LB. 28'

('1

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lloo

IDTUL-

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If IIIII, IlL,
G!pols, Olllt

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77 PONTIAC

Sesame Street 70.
JO · ~Human Dimension 3; Church Service 4, Leroy

GRAND PRix ··

J enklns6; Christian Center 8; ) lmmy Swaggart 13;

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Faith For Today 15
lO ·Jtl-- Big Blue Marble 3; Garner Ted Armstrong 4,13;

"

WITH A NEW DODGE•••

Rex Hu mbard 8; Jimmy Swaggarl 6: This Is The
Life IS: Zoom 20.
11.00--TV Chapel '3: OSU Footba ll Hlghltghts 4, Ho· ·
Fudge 6: Rex Humbard 15: Rev. Henry Mahan 13:
Rebop 20.

eGOOD COLOR SELECrJON
. •SIX IN STO(;K
e48 MONTHS FINANCING
•'OFFER GOOD TTL NOV. 30

11 .30--At Issue 3, Animal s, Anima ls, Anima ls 6,· Fac e

FROM

The Nallon 8; Test imony Ti me 13: Once Upon a
Classic 20.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

:~ore than $54 million

" .

:::~wed

to Ohio treasury

••:.coLUMBUS (UP!) - A
"total of $54,342,148 was owed
"tHe state at the end of October
•including over $40 million in
~sales taxes, according to
~state
Auditor Thomas
' Hrguson.
' ' Ferguson noted Friday that
·•the state Office of Budget and
· Managemen t predicted
"earlier this month the state
ma'y be short from $50 million

'' ...

'"" ' CLEANUP BEGUN
" ·wASHINGTON (UP!)
"'l'he House ha·s quie tl y
·.:~ ppotnled seven pnvate
· citizens
and
ei ght
...Congressmen to study the
strange ways it conducts its
business, propose reforms and help erase the unpresswn
• that· Congress is overpaid ,
•. oversexed and underworked .
;:::e:,unost unnoticed , th is
:.:;utorm corrimission ts

,;~ady off~ring . suggestions

• ll8iigned to produce less talk

' ':::Dljl mor~ action in the House.

to $80 million in meeting its
financial obligations in
November.
"In light of the state's
money problems collection of
any amount of the money
would help the state pay its
bills this month," the auditor
said.
Ferguson said the state Tax
Department " made every
attempt within its power to
collect the
enormous
amount" owed in delinquent
sales taxes.
"Most corporations would
go bankrupt if they had a
similar de bt collection
record," said Ferguson.
Ferguson noted the tax
depa rtment had an excellent
state income tax collection
record with only 1104,324
outstanding.
·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:..:·:·: :::-'·:·:::::·:::···:·:·:·::·::::::·:::::-::·::::

Metered rhyme
in

BAD YEAR, THIS
WASHINGTON (UP!) - At
· · leJlst 35,000 persons - and
' •possibly two or three limes
··· that number - have died in
.. earthquakes around the
.world this year, the U. S.
. Geological Survey reported
·Saturday. USGS officials said
the dea th toll makes 1976 the
worst year for earthquakes
since 1970, when 67 ,000
persons died in quakes in
Turkey and Peru, and
perhaps the worst in more
than 50 years .

-

' r

..

011

the clouds

l-.

SINGER'S BLUES
MEMPHIS , Tenn. (UP!) l" Entertainer Jerry Lee Lewis,
~; arrested Tuesday on charges
, !;' of brandishing a gun when he
l. demanded to see Elvis
l: Presley, says he meant no
! harm.
;~
"It's so rldicu!ous to think
1: that I would be gotng up to
•· Elvis Presley's home to do
•· anything," Lewis said Friday
:: from his hospital bed, where
' · he Is being treated for a
'· pepUc ulcer. .
•,
:: Lewis, 40, was arrested for
•. the second time In two da¥s
•.
•. outside Presley's mansion
. and charged' with carrying a
·· .Jii&amp;Ol and public drunken·
ness.'
•.,

12 .0Q-M eet The Press 3,4,15; Issues and Answers 0;
Rev. Robert Schule r 8; Evangelist ic Outreach 13;

Infinity Factory 33.
1:30--Aware 6: Wildlife in Cris is 10. Zoom 33.
2.0D-Polnt of VIew 6: NFL Football 10: Issues and

Answers 13, In Perfor man ce At Wolf Trap 20 , Once

Upon A Classic 33.

.

2 3D-Dav id Niven's World 6, Town Topics 13, Rebop

defensive ace
SAN DIEO (UP!) - The
San Diego Mariners of the
Western Hockey Association
have acquired defenseman
Larry
Hornung
from
Edmonton in exchange for
Greg g Boddy , it was
announced Friday.
Hornung played with the
Winnipeg Jef.'; four years
before he was acquired by
Edmonton in the 1976 reverse
draft. He was a second team
all.WHA chmce in 1973 and
was wtth St. Lows m the NHL
in 1971 and 1972

J3
J ·OO-Mov1e ''l...uv" 6; Ned Genera tion 13; L 1ve from
Linco ln Center 20 ; VIsions 33
3·30-Amer lcan Lite Style 13
4·00---NFL Football 3, 4, 15; Formby's Antique Fur .
nlture Wor kshop 8; What It Mea ns To Be Green 13.
4:30--Responslble Dr inking 8; M ov ie " Bachelor
Flat" 13: Getting On 33
S:Oo-Witness to Yes terday 6; Lawrence Welk a,·
M ovie " The Naked Prey " 10; To Be Announced 20;

The Way It Was 33.
5 3Q--S pace . 1999 6, Agronsky At L arge 20; Consumer
Survival Kit 33
6:QO--F il m 8; Fran Curci Football 13, Sesame Street

20. Wall Street Week 33.

a.

6·3o-News 6; 30 Minutes
World Press 33,
Newsmaker '7 6 13
7: 0D--World of Disney 3,4, 15; Brady Bunch 6, 13, 60
M1nutes
10,· Crockett 's VIcto ry Garde n 20;
Onedln Line jJ

a,

8:00-Columbo 3, 4,15; StM Million Dollar Man '6,13;

Patriot ace put
on injured list
FOXBORO, Mass. I UP! ) Veteran New England
Patriots linebacker Jim
Romantszy.n Friday was
pia ced on the injured
reserved list with a separated
shoulder suffered in last
week's game with the New
York Jets.
Assigned to the 43·man
roster
to
re place
Romaniszyn, 25, was rookie
linebacker IJQnnie Thomas.

LOS ANGELES (u.PJ ) The Los .Angeles weather
bu ~eau har bors a poet.
Twice In the past week, the
weather reports to offices R d f
dh
of local · news media have
ea tre Y'
been augmented by ver·
stons In rhyme. A partial Oregon officials
sample from Friday:
Th
EUGENE , Ore . iUPII
" e East PacUic Ridge
Is sharp and strong and The University of Oregon has
fired IJQn Read as head
warm.
football coach, following his
Providing the driving
force for a developln2 third losing season. He had a
winter storm.
year to go on his $30,000
Strong winds wlll develop conlracl.
over the ocean and over the
Athletic Director John
land,
Caine Friday issued a
Creating In tbe deserts .' statement, which read, ''Don
areas of blowln -dust-and - Read, head coach oL the_
sand.
g
University ol Oregon football
I' ed f
te.am, tod
If you are planning a
. ay was re tev 0
desert trip, our advice Is- his duties. The search for a
do not go,
s uc c es so r
be g 1 n s
And saUors batten tbe immediately."
hatches, for the wind will
surely' blow."
01SOn •S COnt raet

"We Want Your

Soun9s1age 20
12 :36-Grarldstand 3,15; News Conference 4 4;
Directions 6; N FL Today 8; The Issue 10; Lower
L tghthouse 13
1:00--To Be Announ ced 3,15 ; NF L Football 4; Commun ique 6; NFL Football 8; Fa ce The Nation 10;
College Football '16 13: Adams Chronicles 10:

Mariners acquire

·•
JILL AND JOHN
:;, BISHOP, Calif. (UP!)
~ ; Jill Kinmont, the crippled ex·
• ; skier whose story was told In
:·, the movie "The Other Side of
; . the Mountain," was married
·• Fridsy in a private ceremony ·:·:::·:·:·:·.;.·:::·:·::::-;·:=::::;.;:·:;.;:;. ::·:·:·:·:·=:·:=.=:·:·:=.:::
: : to John Gary Booth, a
extended 2 yearS
• ' trucker
:·: Miss ' Klnmont, 40, and
HE'LL RESIGN
IOWA CITY , Iowa (UP!) : Booth, 35, knew each other as
COLUMBUS (UP!) - C. The contra ct of Iowa
: children, but their romance Luther Heckman, chairman
• . did not begin until he rented a of the Public Utilities basketball Coach Lute Olson
:.; house to her and her mother Commission of Ohio, said has been exletlded two years
thrOUgh June 30, 1980, athletic
;;· three years ago.
Friday he wUJ resign as director Bump Elliott
•· Miss Kinmont was a top adviser to a private research
· •: competitive skier at 18 when group that is financed by announced Friday.
Olson led the Hawkeyes to a
•• she broke her back while electric utllitles. Gov. James
; ·, trying out for the U. S. A. .Rhodes asked Heckman 19-10 record last season, the
: Olympic team and wa1 left Wednesday to resign from the second best tn school history .
; abnost completely paralyzed. Electric Power Research He begins his third season at
The movie told the story of Institute to avoid the ap- Iowa Saturday night when. the
1: her struggle in the years that pearance of impropriety Hawkeyes open at Nebraska.
; ,; followed.
because the group is funded
'•
by utllltles which the PUCO Giants manager
'
regulates.
'

'.

.....

Ora l Roberts 10;

Repass a, A Belter Way 15: Mister Rogers 20.
9.30--Whal Does The Bible Plainly Say? 8: Movie "The
Music Man" 10: Jim Franklin 13, Ins ight 15:

Charlie Webste1, Buster Sprague, .Don Harden, Tom Norris

....

·

Caravan 6, Day of Discovery 8; James Robison

••

... your farm operation!

DISCOUNT

Bullwlnkle 6;

8:JO--Oral Roberts 3: Yours For The Asking 4; Gospel

•
••

over weighing
grain at port

0

a·oo-M ormon Choir 3; Day Of DlsCO'I(ery 4; Tenessee
Tuxedo 6; Church Servtce 10; Happiness Is 13;
Sesame Stree t JO

Research into milk fever prevention :

F eds to take

4;

Jerry Falwell 8, I t is Wr itten 10; Amazing Grace

•
•
•

formation of the acltve for m either vitamin D or proper vitamin Dwas fed for at least
BY BOYD A. RUTH
of vitamin D, as well as regulation of calcium and 3 days before parturlili n.
Soil Cons. Service
POMEROY - I have parathyroid activity, are phosphorus intake was used Protection fell off rapio!y
talked to dairymen lately who suppressed. This further successfully to prevent milk after vitamin 0 feeding had
been completed.
.•
have had milk fever m their reduces the ability of the fever.
1~
The
main
difficillty
wi
cow
to
meet
the
parturient
The
first
experiment,
a
her d , which sometimes
results in the death of the sudden demand for milk field trials conducted on Ohio this method of prevention is
animal. So upon reading a calcium. Any sa'fe procedure farms, mvolved feeding the accurate prediction of.the
re cent article on the that wtll enhance calcium l'llamm ·D2 1n rnasstve doses due date within the reqllir..ed
absorption or help mamtain (15 oo 20 or 30 million units limitations . In using this
prevention of milk fever , I
thought it might be helpful to normal feed intake before per day ) for at least 3 days method, it is suggested tonal
discuss the latest research and after parturition wtll help before parturillon and not vitamin D feeding be starlod
conducted through the Ohio avoid milk fever in milk feve r more than I day after 5 days before the predil:l~
parturition with a safe due date, with a 7-day J.ilnit
Agmultural Research and prone cows.
Three
experiments
have
maximum limitation of 7 for vitamin D feeling. Post
Development Center. Th e
been
conducted
at
the
Ohio
•
dsys
feeding. Mature Jersey mortem examination showed
foll ow ing article will be
Agricultural
·Research
and
cows
with previous history of that 7 days is the maximum
printed in two parts, the
second part appearmg in next Development Center in which mfik fever were selected for safe feeding period for ,(his
the trial. The 20 and 30 million high dosage of vitamin IL
week's column. It was
umt levels of feeding based on
printed in the Ohio Report
Next week's column will
64 :1 percent milk fever explain the results of 2 other
magazine and written by
expected in the control cows, experiments and provide a
John W Hibbs, William E.
were about 80 percent summary showing how ·¥OU
Julian and H Russell Conrad.
effective in reducing milk ca n reduce milk fev;er
It follows :
fever mcidence where incidence in your own herp.
Although questions still
remain regarding Ule basic
cause of parturient paresis
! milk rever ), recent research
WASHINGTON- (UP!)
points the way to effective The Agriculture Department
preventio n. Despite the announced Friday that
evidence t ha t par athyroid federal agents will take over
activity is at a high level in inspection and weighing of
milk fever cows, mobilization grain at the Lake Erie port of
of calcium reserves from Toledo, Ohio, Jan. 12.
bone and soft tissues can not
The action is the first step
maintain their normal blood in carrying out a .ecently
calcium in competition with passed law under which a
the demands for beginning new department grain in·
lac tation
followin g spection was created to take
parturition
• over
among other
Aside from mobilization of assignments - all inspection ·
"
calctum stored m bone and currently performed at ports
With
a
long-term
,
reasonable
cost
loan
ftotn
soft tissues, the only source of by federally licensed private
the Federal Land Bank you can finanoo .:a
calcmm for blood is through agencies.
absorption of dietary calcium · The law allowed an 18- wide variety of farm needs . . . such as new
from th e gastrointestinal month phase·in period for the
bu1ld1ngs and land improvements-and:"a:jtr act. This requires th e changeover, but officials said
most anythmg else that can make your farm
formation of calcium-binding the Toledo Board of Trade,
prot ein in the intestinal which currently conducts operation more profitable .
mucoisa. The formation of inspection In
Toledo,
"'''
228 Upper River Road ....
.
calcium-binding protein is requested qutck action in its
P.
O.
BoK207,Gallipolis
..
..
.
dependent on the presence of case. It will become the first
446-0203
...
:
Phon'
e
adequate amounts of the private agency replaced by
active form of Vitamin D federal gram mspection
Clyde B. Walker. Mgr. "~ '
(1,25
dihydroxy· agents.
ehlorecalciferol)
produeed in the kidney and
regulated
by
blood
calcium, blood _phos}l_horus,
and hydroxylase enzyme.
Smce rnobtlizalton of stored
ca lcium is for soma reason
' "''
ln.9ufficient in milk fever
cows, they must depend to a
greater extent on intestinal
absorptiOn of dietary calcium
" '
Utan non-milk fever cows. A
"'
sound approach to milk lever
prevention, therefore , 1s to
provide
conditions to
maximize the absorption of
'
calcium from the intestinal
tract.
Aside from adequate intake
of calcmm and vitamin D in
the diet, it is important to
regulate phosphorus intake
within a relatively narrow
range, especially during the

·

7·DO-Chrlslopher Closeup 3; Th inking in Black 8; Rev

••

points to effective ways of control

'700°

6:Jo---Jerrv t-=alwell4; Talking Hc.nd s 8; Public Policy

us ! R.I.P.
:
Footnote - Tbe current living ~
symbol Smokey Bear lives on •
happily at the National Zoo in ;
Washington, D. C., ca"rrying on the
work of Forest Fire Prevention. '

.

Log

SU NDA Y, NOV EMB ER 18 , 1916
6:oo- This Is The Lite 10

million.
..
It's alsoufe to say that he llived .:
the lives of firefighters tn fires that :
never burited. During his lifetime he :
earned $1.5 million tn royalties from :
keychalns, dolls, lltterbags and :
•
other paraphemaUa.
Smokey was burled Nov. 9 at the :
Smokey Bear Historical Park at :
Capitan, N. M., notfann from where :
be was found as a cub. Memorial •
services were held Nov. 17 ·tn :
Capitan. State dignitaries attended , :
Including Congressman Ha rold .:
Runnels wbo was responsible for a •
Jotnt' Resolution of Congress on :
August 29, 1974, that required :
Smokey's rernaln.9 he transported :
from the National Zoo In ~
WaShington, D. C. to' Capitan.
:
We salute you Smokey - All of •

.

dry period , i f maximum

Televi~ion

•
•
from 31 mlUlon acres to iesa than 3 :

Luci lle Ball 8,10: Evening al Symphony 10,33
9:00-Masterpiece Theatre 20.33

3, 4, 15
10 00--Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13: Koiak B. 10: Theater in

9 . 3~ uincy

America 20; Live From Lincoln Center 33.

11 OD-News 3,4,8,10. 13, 15: Peter Marshall 6.
,11 15-CBS News 8,10: Music Hall America 15.
11 '30--S tar Trek 3, Movie "T he Secret War of Har r y
Frlgg " 4, Movie "Gir ls ! Gir l ~! Girls!" 8, Movie
" The Sheriff" 10, Ironside 13.

12 :00--News 20: Janakl 33
12 :30--ABC News 6,13
I :00--Peyton Place 4.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER l9, 1976
oo-sunrlse Semester 10
·
6·15-Engllsh 3: Farm Repor t 13.
6·20--Not fo r Women Only 13
6:30--Col umbus Tod ay 4: News 6. Sunr ise Semester 8:
Ounce of Prevent ion 10
6 45-Mornlng Reporl 3.
.
· 6.50--Good Mornnlng, Wesl VIrg inia 13.
6 55-Good Morning, Trl Slale 13
1 OO--Today 3, 4,15 , Good Morning, Amer i'ca 6,13: CBS
News 8: Chuck White Reports 10.
7 05-Bugs Bunny 10.
I 30--School&lt;es 10
I 45-Sesome 51 33
8 00--Lassle 6, Capt Kanga roo B, 10
8·30--Big Valley 6
9:00--A.M 3: Phil Donahue4,15, 13: Lucy Show 8: Mike
Douglas 10
9 30--Cross.Wifs 3: Movie "My Girl lisa" 6: Good Day
6

B.

10 ·00--Sanford &amp; Son 3, 4,15: Price is Right 8,10: Mike
Douglas 13.
10 :30--Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15.
11 :DO-Wheel ot Fortune 3, 15: Weekday 4: Gambit
~ 8.~0 , Morning with D J . 13: Elec. Co. 20.
11 .3&lt;F-Stumpers 3,4,15, Happy Days 6,13 : Love ot Life
8,1 0: Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :S5-Take Kerr 8: Ms . Flxlf 10.
12:0Q-News 3,6 ,8, 10, Don Ho 13: Bob Braun 4; so
Grand Slam 15.
12:30--Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13, Seorch
for Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :55-NBC News 3, 15.
1:DO--Somerset 3: Ryan's ope 6,13: Concentration 8:
Young &amp; the Rs tless 10; Not for Women Only 15.

I 30--D,ays of our Lives 3,,4,15; Family Feud 6,13: As
The World Turns 8,10.
2.0D-$20,000 Pyramid 13: Dinah 6.
•
2 30--Doctors 3,4,15: One Life to Llve 13 : Guiding
Light 8,10.
3:oo-Another World 3,4,15, Alt In The Family 8,10:
Getting On 20.
3 15-General Hospital 13.
3:30--Max B. Nimble 6: Match Game 8,10: Lil ias Yoga
&amp; You 20.
4.0D-Mister Cartoon 3: Marcus Welby, M.D 4;
Somerset 15; Howdy Doody 6, Mickey Mouse Club
8; Sesame St. 20,33: Movie "Those DarinQ Young
Men In Their Jaunty Jalopies" 10: Dlnah · IJ
4:30--My Three Sons 3: Emergency One 6: Partridge
Family 8: Fllntstones IS
5:00--Big Valley 3: Merv Grll tln 4: Brady Bunch 8:
Mister Rogers 20.33: Star Trek 15.
5 30--News6. Family Altair 8: Elec. Co. 20,33: Adam .
12 13 .
.
6.0D-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20:
Education In Transition 33.
completes staff
6 30--NBC News 3,4,15: ABC News 13: Andy Grltt lth 6:
CBS News 8,10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
JOB OFFER
SAN FRANCISCO 1UP)) l:oo-T~uth or Cons. 3, To Tell the Truth 4; Bo~llng tor.
PLAINS, Ga. (UP!)
Joe
Altob elli,
newly
Dollars 6; News 10: To Tell the Truth '13: My Three
Rosalynn Carter plans to appointed manager of the San
Sons 15: The Way It Was 20: Know Your Schools 33.
appoint Madeline Macbean, Francisco Giants, completed I 30--That Good Ole Nashville Music 3. Bobby VInton
4: Muppet Show 6: Gong Show 8, MacNeil-Lehrer
ber assistant the past six
Report 20,33:Prlcels Right 10; Candid Camera 13:
years, to he social secretary his field staff Friday with tt(e
appointment of former All·
Friends of Man IS
and possibly staff director at
Star Giants' catcher Tom 8·1l0-Lillle House on the Prairie 3,4,15: Capta in &amp;
the White House , according to Haller as bullpen coach.
~nnllle 6,13; Rhoda 8,10: Adam s Chronicles 20,33
sources.
Earlier, Herm Starrette 8·30--$128,000 Question 8: Phyllis 10.
Mrs. Macbean, a former wasnamedpltching coaoh by 9·00--Movle "ThO' Front Page" 3, 4,1 5: NFL Footboll
airline stewardess, was Mrs, Altobelli, who kept base co·
6,1 3: Maude 8,10: ,In Performarce at Walt Trap
Carter's Jiersonal assistant
' 9 . 3 ~~i · F 1 810 '
when Juruny Cartet· was achesBobbyWinklesandJim
Davenport
from
last
year's
s a.
r 'Su ·ile 8, 10; News 20: Soundstage 33.
t If
10· OD-Execu
hve
governor of Georgia.
10 30- Farm Dloesl 20
,
Mrs. Macbean, a native of sa ·
11 .00--News 3,4,8,10, 15: Mac. Nell Lehrer Reporl 33.
Newton, N. C., ls married to
Atlanta architect Neville , Dtlabled people who have ll. 30--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Mov ie 'Don't Go Near the
Water" 8: Mary Hartman 10: ABC News 33.
Macbean. She Is Mrs. Car· b..n· receiving So&lt;:lal 12 .00-News 6.13: Movie "Two Loves" 10: Janaki .JJ.
ter's transition staff director Security checks for at least 12 . 3~ollego Foolball '16 6: Ironside 13
and will move to washing\"" two . years are eligible for 1.oo-- Tomorrow J ,.t.,
in January.
'
Med1care.
I:30--News 13. · ·
'

Bu .~inPs~ ''

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC

1~11 ~STERN AVE.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

CUTS STIJOIED
WASHING'I'ON iUPl )
Carter admini stration
planners are looki ng at
uf
Aga ~c ' s
four -yea r
rnllitary personnel costs
contract '
" Th is was a di fficult includln~ such "sacred
decision to make in many cows" as the $8.5 bllllon
respects," said Hansen in his yearly retirement system prcpured
state nlc nt , as an urea where defense
1
'al'rived at only Hflcr much spending can eventually be
and
ca reful cut, informed souree~ !lllld
though t
Sa turda y. Military and
delibenttiuns. ''
He lauded Agase for his civ ilian payrolls, retirement
integrity and honesty, but his and nlluted costs such as
military housln ~ und schools
fourth cunsec uUvc losing
for
se rvice dependepts
seaoon here, 18-25·1 overallincluding 5.j) this season-a nd comprise ubou\55 per cent of
ut limes saggin!! altendum:e this your's $11.09 bllll on
Defense Departme nt budget.
of home games hml tn ken
their toll .
Agase thus llccamc the
second Big Ten c'Oach this
week to be diSmissed . Bob
Blackman of Illinois lost his
JOb after six years.
Purdue Athletic Director
Geor ge
Kin g
said
applicatiOns would be taken
until Dec 10.
" It Is my hope that a
reco mmendation for lhls
position wlll be forthcoming
in the very nea r future," said

Purdue fires Coach Agase
WES'l' I.A F'AYE'I'TE , In d.
- Less than a month

1UPI J

ago, Alex Agase was the tonst

of the t'Ollege football world,
foll owin g Purdu e's 16· 14
upset of Rose Bowl-bound and
then-top ranked Michigan.
Today, the latest major
victim of a losing record, he
was looking for a JOb.
The ax fe ll un Agase on this
Thanks g i v i ~g holi da y
weekend in a briefly worded
announcemen t Friday by
Ar thur Hansen, Purdue's
pi'CS!dent.

Citing th e "grow mg
probl ems"
' fin a ncial
assoc11Hed with maintaming
a str ong cumputltivc r ole in

intercollegiate competition,
Hansen sa id 1l "seemed
p(udent
to make a
change .. .al Utis time. "
Hansen's

armouneement

had been expected It came
just six days after the
Boilermakers dropped the ir
tradi \ional seaso n·ending
go me to arch·rival Indiana,
2()..14. It also came at the end

Hunsen . '

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
SUNDAY. Nou. 28, 1976
ACROSS

rulhemum

69 Pou,n•v•
I Wooden shoe
6 HuH•ed
10 Abo und
14 MO!ol un pleaunl
19 PlA Ce lor
keflptn g bnds
2 1 Posa£159
22 Grate

piCI'Ioun
70 Ntckp iec e
71 Fru it c aKe
73 E!ocu len I
75 FOfCe!o air
throug h nose
7 7 Facial

:?3Chii.S11Sfl

78Garmont

24 Most dame

e~ores~uon

32 Cl t•ze~ ol Rome

80 Swnpteton
a 1 Out ~: h town
82 R1ppmg
84 Liqu id measu re
86 Tried
87 T1dler
89 Ooctrme

33 Pain ful

92 Mov1 ng

:?6 Me'nds
2 8 Mete ·
29 S ulll ~ l()fmlnQ
ad)e cl lves

30 S t a~e

.

3 4 A r,m~ officer
3? Ob lrg ahons
payable
37 Female ru111
38 The sun

40 Olapatch
-4 1 Marrlea

-4 2 God of lo~•
4o41mpose u
oe cuur 't'

95 Ardent

98 Fat ol swine
99 veoetab te
1J 1 Enthus 1esm
103 Tlasue
10 4 Poue ssrve
pr onoun

-------------,-Os-Fjlnt
.
106 Right (abbr)

result
4 6 1mltated
4 7 Veh Ietas
4 6 M idday
50 A month
52Ptos

53Mar.sn tcknama
55 Metallastener
67 Atllle(abbr,)

10 7 Psrenf !colloQ I
108 Wile ol Ge reln t
110 Obscure

111Hebrew lettet
11 2Word ot aorrow
113 Cerem ony .
115Sur. o oct
117 Merr y

119 Con1unctlon
t ~OSer ve r

,

58 Ch imney carbon

12 I Pralae
12 4 F1laeh oods

6 0 Meuu re ol
we1ght (etlbr I
62 Recent

126 Ch1111e \collOQ I
12 7 St un ted pafson
128 Want by
130 Clan
132 Skin oll rul t
13 3 Foo tbellklck
13 4 Old t ~oell

58 Cuts

64 1n addi110"1
66 Footbell poSitiOn
(abbr I
fiB Symbol l or

1n n arl'!ea of
diUIMI
litO Slern
abbre~laUon
t 1 SlOgan
u or oil dl es
t2 Snake
14 1 Poslt r'le pole
93 E•t ( al
14 3 M&amp;IBI WU111
94 NOie or tcele
1• 5 Anglo · Suon
98lamb 't ptn
money
36 Anoo
name
148 Stays
37 Slllk
97 Male lhiiP IDU
148Cut ot
40 BarraCLidl
100 SymbOl for
cnaracters
41Movet lrom elele
· tellurium
150 lnst ruci Of ·
to Bide
102 Caatl drawer
152 Makes Into law
.4 3 Cle aning
' 1015 Damp tlrth
153 Lure
lubel&amp;nc•
109 Platform
154 Buebllllteam
45 God ol manly
1 12 811 In Alia
158 Strike 0111
youH1
11 3 L1111
157 Erues lprl nllngl 4 6 Teem
I lA Ute
158 He raldr Y'
47 Farm animal•
116 Handle
gr elted
49 Ri ~e r 11'1 AlriCI
1 t8 Profound
159 Marlo\ te ll by
b 1 In 'Jenlor ol
.120 Warm
wound
tllegrlptl
12\ Hurr lu
160 Mine ~elna
52 Quedru;~eds
122 Enraon
53Emmeu
123L&amp;Ir s
DOWN
6-4 Etcape 11rough 126 Courted
cravlc_e _ _12.6 Calm
1 Cui
!OAld lcu loua
127 Wha•llraotte
2 Thoroughllt8
59 Grumbling ,
129 StupiCIJ*IM
3 Heronllke blrd
60Cutolmea1
13 1 Cyllndr ltal
61 l oud no •at
• Grain
132 PHII&lt;I
5 Span Ish IOI
63 AuthOr a
1 33 WtiiU
" three"
66 Teke one's part 134 Growin g out ol
7
6 Qulett
6 Obt&amp; l!
136 Solkenerd
7 Equal ity
69 ConJunciiM
138 B lbl lc11 weeds
8 W ithout end
70Span nld
140FrultMtd•
8 PIIC:II
12 Groop Oil Mit&amp; 14 1 Landed
10 Teat
14Prelllt twlct
132M1n'1n1mt
11Merll
76 Feroe It land•
144(rlehm•n
12 Worm
whirlwind
147 High c1rd
13 M embarol
77 M aaslve
148 Shallowv&amp;s ..l
Par liament
79 Numbe1
149 N11h oor al'le10
(abbr )
83 De~oured
151 tnl!llf nat lmal
14 E11l1tad
85 Pla y over ag&amp;ln
L abor
16 WorthIBIS
88 Wear y
Organll:l!lon
Ianing
87 FootbBII
(abbr 1
18 Forest wardens
1nlracl lon
153 E1tlll
17 Sp lrl18dh0rael
88 TardY
156 Teu tonic: delly
81f Sull lll occurring

135 Leier
137 Bard
139 Tlme t• ble

18 Gull -like b1rd1
20 A rver 1n Be lgium
23 Pot!
26 Woody plant
27 So1p plan ts
28 B ody ol water ,
31 Mara hea ,
33 Rroph 81

�'.

2-D- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov . 28, 1976

Agriculture and
•
our community
By Bryson R. rB ud ) Carter
Gallia County EK lension Agent
GALUPOL!S - This is a
second of a series of articles
add ressing the question,
"Should you form a farm
partnership?" One of the
essentials for success in the
· farm partnership is: " An
Adequate Size M Business."
The size of the farm
business must be adequate if
the partnership is to succeed.
Often it may be necessary to
modernize and enlarge 'the
buildings. How is the money
to be obta ined ~ nd who is

1600 will
attend 58th
convention
CO LUMBUS (UP! ) About 1,600 persons are expected to attend the 58th
annual Ohio Farm Bureau
F edera tio n con ve nt io n
Monday through Wednesday.
Dr. James McQuigg of the
University of Missouri will
speak Monday on progress
being made in predicting the
weather Glen n Kruecher,
director of the Nebraska
Department of Agri culture
will speak on the latest
developments and advances
in methods used to convert
grain mto alcohol for use as a
motor fuel.
Walla ce Hirschf te ld,
president of the Ohio Farm
Bureau, and Richard Anderson, consultant for Bat·
telle Memorial lnstitule, will
also spea k Monday af·
ternoon.
Dr. Glenn Olds, retiring
president of Kent State
UmverSity, will address the
banquet guests Monday
evening . Robert T Secrest,
retiring state senator from
Cambridge, and Lloyd
Flower , re tired Col umbia
County extenSion agenl, will
receive th e federatlon's
distinguished service award.
C.
William
Swank,
exec utive direct or of the
federation, said he plans to
1ssue a statement expressing
concern about the mcreasing
gove rnment
rol e
in
agriculture.

responsible?
Financing the expanded
prog ram may run In to
trouble unless properly
thought In terms of income
and expense, Often the junior
member· is willing to help
fin ance chattel purchases
a Uowing the se nlo ~ partner to
invest In added buildings and
other improvements. The son
or junior member should
safeguard his Investment in
rea l estate Improvements
through suitable legal
agreement.
The size of business should
be sufficient to keep the
projected la bor suppl y
productively employed and to
provide the desired family
income for all of the purtners.
The size can be measured
imtia lly by the budgeted
gro,ss incom e per man
available. If volume of
business is not large enough it
may be important to replan to
see If either more resources
can be brought under control
of the partnership or tf some
off·farrn employment is
available to provide needed
income. Genera lly there
should be at least 14().000
gross income generated per
full·tirne man ava ilable.
When the pte is too small,
the partners will be hungry
and dissatiSfied. No matter
how equitable an operating
agreement may be, the farm
business can be successful

only if fa rm ea rnings are
adequate.

Three named to
delegate meeting
PO MEROY -:- The Metgs
County Farm Bureau will
send three representatives to
the 292-&lt;lelegate session at the
Ohio
Farm
Bureau
Federatio n's 58th annu al
meeti ng Nov. 28-Dec. I In
Columbus.
Oris Rou sh , Langsville ;
Henr y Frank, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, and George Holter,
Minersville, were elected by
the local Farm Bureau to
he Ip determine business and
pohcy matters at the state
level for the Farm Bureau's
67,000 member families .
Oris Roush, Meigs County
Farm Bureau president, said
the deliberations will
determine
the
slate
organization's official policy
for 19n.

County agent's Your Wayne National
corner
By John C. Rlee
County Ext. Agent, Agriculture

POMEROY - The important thing in house plants 1s not
the fact that they need air, bght, water, ferWizer, and suitable
temperature, but how the plant uses these various element s.
Air is often taken for granted unless it becomes polluted
but in the horne it is iinp.rtanl that plants do not sit in a draft:
Impurities in · the air, especially gases escaped from
incomplete combusion of manufactured cooking gas, can
make house plant growing almost impossible.
All plants do not require the same amount of li~ht. but
plants utilize light in the same way . The green pigment
chlorophyll found in leaves is the catalyst by which plants
manufacture sugars and starches within their leaves in the
presence of hght. Without light, plants starve because they
burn up sugars and starches in darkness and soon exhaust
their strength. When light is dim, be especially careful not to
overfertilize plants. They cannot assimilate much food without
abundant light.
Too much water is often the cause of plant trouble. Most
plants do best when allowed to become slightly dry before
water is added. Soil for plants must contain air as well as
water, and too much water forces out the atr.
House plants do best when fed weak solutions of fertilizer.
In the.home where fast growth is not deSirable, feeding can be
qwte tnfrequent, especially for foliage plants which may need
food only lwo or three Limes a year .
Generally speaking, our homes are too warm for best
growth of flowering plant~ . Try to find a cool window sill for
most of your flowering plants and bring them mlo the warmer
areas only when you want to display them .
Prevent Basement Seepage
Ftllm "pot holes" or low areas next to the outside walls of
your home, particularly on basement walls. By filling these
areas with good soil and sloping it away from the wall, you
prevent winter rains and melting snow seeping down and
through basement walls. At the same time, you have prepared
the flower and shrub beds for next sprmg's plant growth .
Very often, shrub beds around the house settle or the
grassed area bwlds up causing the soil level next to the house
to be lower than the level of the yard. II this has happened,
bnng in enough soil to raise the entire bed area above the soil
level of the grassed area .

Steer registration changed
GALLIPOLIS - Fred Deel,
Gallia County Extension
Agent , 4-H , said Saturday the
for . steer
deadline
registration in thts coming
year's 4-H Steer Feeding
projects nas been changed to
January 15, 1977.

New hay
system
liked
GALLIPOLIS- Packaging
hay m large, round bales or

New 4·H members, or old
members who did not receive
a registration blank through
the mail, should stop by or
call the Extension Office at
416-4612, ext. 32. No ex·
ceptions will be !])Ode after
the January 15 deadline.

HELPFUL HINTS
GALLIPOLIS - If you
bag a buck this deer season
and plan a venJsoo least,
th ere Is an Extension
publication, Bulletin 581,
" Success -

You Have

Your Deer" that offers
helpful hints and varlatloos
on preparation of. this wild
game specialty, says Bud
Carter, County Extension
Agent, Agriculture .
Besides cooking
specifications, the bulletin
outllnes fleld dressing
procedures and methods of
preservation.

stacks is drawing the interest
of a growing number of lleef
Cattle Producers in Cow-Calf
Country according to Bud
Carter, Gallia County Ex·
tension Agent, Agriculture.
The system fits Into part· can, Marion Caldwe ll~
time beef cow-calf operations George Woodward and Fred
because time and labor can Vollborn have agreed to
be reduced, handling and explaui their views about
storage costs 1n the field are large round bales and con·
less, and manure hauling Is ventional regular bales for
feeding in beef cow-calf
elimmated.
A good many fanners in operations. Area Animal
our area are using this Industry Extension Agent
system; others remain un· Jim Clay will moderate lhe
discussion and folks will also
decided
Carter, therefore, is en· ha ve an opportunity to
couraging Gallia and neigh· discuss overall beef cattle
boring county beef cattle management practices with
fanners to attend the "Round the farmers and Clay.
Carter satd fanners , farm
Table Discussion" Tuesday
wives,
children, friends and
evening, Nov . 30 at 7:30 at the
neighbors
in Gallla and
Jack so n PCA Buildin g.
surrounding
counties are
Gallia County far·
rners, including C. A. Dun· welcome.

Coolville men charged
with illegal hunting

PERFEcrGI
the Outdoorsman

LIST

SALE
PRICE

Mini Mac 25 w-10" Ba r (one
only
·
114.95
97 .50
Mini Mac JO w-12" Bar (one
only)
134.95
114.75
Mini Mac 35 w-case &amp; accessories (one
164 .95
139.95
only)
Power Mac 6 Aw-14" Bar (one
152 .95
only)
179.95
Super Pro 40 w-14' ' Bar (two
only)
179.95
152 .95
Pro Ma c 55 w-20" Bar (on e
onl )

E[J(INS, W. Va . (UPI) - Levering.
Ten Springfield, Ohio, area
Charged
only
with
men have been arrested for possession of illegally kllled
possession of five Illegally deer were Joe Straight, John
killed deer and fmed $3,280 Pence, Jr., Willis Levering,
and four Coolville, Ohio men John
Certain,
Robert
face charges of illega lly Levering and Ed Lenson.
hunting deer in West Four does and button buck
Vlrglnla.
weighing an average of 50 to
Four of the Springfield men 60 pounds were among the
were handed 10-day jail illegally killed deer, Painter
terms.
said.
The five deer they illegally
Of the four Coolville men,
killed were hidden under Edward M. Scott was
newly fallen snow near a assessed
$200
for
hunting camp at the in· replaeernent of an illegally
tersectlon of Middle Moun· killed deer and fined $50 for
lain and Sporting Lick Ro~ds Its unlawful killing.
near Glady , Randolph
Miran Ratlisaall, Stephen
County, according to Sgt. W. Starr and Ed S. Huluck
Kenneth Painter 'of the West were fined $50 aptece for
Virginia Department of hunting ,without ·a llcense.
Natural Resources.
· The men were arrested by
"We had these peopl e Department of Natural
under surveillance fo~ some Res ources officer George
time," Painter said~ 11 and we Armstrong and fined by
belleved they had the deer in Justice of the Peace Gay
their possession, but It took Duke.
the help of other hunters in
the area to give us the in·
formation we needed to move-·. , in."

•·our of Ute Springfield
Ohioans pleaded guilty to
killing deer illegally, and
were sentenced to jail for 10
days. They were Bruce
Len son, Ernest Baker, James
M. Levering and Marv in

J

T. Allan Wolter
District Ranger
IRONTON - In 1950, a frightened , badly burned black bear
cub was rescued from a forest fire
by rangers on tile Lincoln National
Forest in New Mexico. Twenty·
seven years later this same bear
died In his sleep from old age - not
an uncommon occurrence for black
bears. .
But this was not the average
bear, It was Smokey the Bear. And
' what a swath he cut, and what a trail
he left on his 25 year march through
conservation history.
Although I never met him, I
considered him a friend, as did
millions of Americaos who knew
him better than any other per·
sonage, fictional or real, so great
\\'Sa his impact on the publi c.
. I've accompanied Smokey in
VIsits to schools, churches and
publlc events, and his presence was
electric.
I remember the first tune I rode
in a parade with Smokey. People of
..

ail ages Instantly recognized him a
block away and greeted him with
"HI Smokey"; Howya doln ',
Smokey, and "Hey there Smokey."
Most vivid in my mind however Is
how parents would hold their tod·
dlers aloft for a better view and
wave their tiny arms for them as
Smokey passed by.
'
Smokey's fecord as a con·
servationlst Is unequaled, to be
envied by all human beings.
lfe served adlvely at his post for
25 years before being retired at the
National Zoo In May of 1975. Since
the lncepUon of the Smokey Bear
Forest Fire Prevention Campalga,
Smokey Ia credited with saving
United States more than $IS bllllon
In timber that didn't burn, In
recreation areas that weren't
destroyed, and In watersheds that
weren't blackened.
Man-caused fires dropped from
lll2,000 In 1942 to 146,000 in 1974,
remarkable, considering the Increases In papulation and forest uses
during that time. Forest acreage
burned annually dropped 9{1 percent,

,.

Forest-~

•~0-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SUfldaY. Nov . 28,1976

Forulms 10; Newsmaker '76 13

Cleophus Robinson 13 .
7:30--This Is The Ll le 3, Your Heallh
Bible Class 13 .
7:5S....B1ack Cameo 4

Presents10: Rex Humbard 13 : Open B&gt;ble 15
9.00--Gospel Singing Jubilee 3: Hour of Power 4; Re&gt;
Humbard 6,

For your fine feathered

friends HEATH bird feede~·

and Central Soya bird feed. ·......
:~::

absorption is to be achieved.
Results from a large
number of OARDC. digestion
!rials have shown that unless
a positive phosphorus
balance is maintained ,
vitamin D feeding does not
increase intestinal absorption
of calcium ai; it does when
there is adequate phosphorus
in the diet. On the other hand,
high intake of phosphorus is
now kno wn to suppress
kidney formation of the
active form of vitamin D
(1,25
dihydroxy· '
ohlolecalciferol) need·
ed for the production of
calcium binding protein.
In efforts to maximize
calcium
absorption,
ALMA, NOT ELMERexcessive
dietary
intake or
MIDDLEPORT ~ Alma
calciurp
should
also be
Riggs, Middleport, was
avoided
.
When
high
dietary
admitted to' Veterans
intake
of
calcium
during
the
Memorial Hospital, not
dry
period
results
in
elevated
Elmer Riggs as was repor·
~lo"'l calcium levels, kidney
ted .

.WILD·BIRD FEED
100 LB. '13.95
50 LB. •6.95
25 LB. '3.95

.

SUNFLOWER SEED
50 LB. '11.75
25 LB. '7.00
1 LB. 28'

('1

'.

~ ,~

'

.'"

1 1'" 1

· "'
I ~'

"

.......
lloo

IDTUL-

' '

If IIIII, IlL,
G!pols, Olllt

. ...

......

..... . .

.
. .....

~

I

,.

~ev .

Leonard

77 PONTIAC

Sesame Street 70.
JO · ~Human Dimension 3; Church Service 4, Leroy

GRAND PRix ··

J enklns6; Christian Center 8; ) lmmy Swaggart 13;

.

Faith For Today 15
lO ·Jtl-- Big Blue Marble 3; Garner Ted Armstrong 4,13;

"

WITH A NEW DODGE•••

Rex Hu mbard 8; Jimmy Swaggarl 6: This Is The
Life IS: Zoom 20.
11.00--TV Chapel '3: OSU Footba ll Hlghltghts 4, Ho· ·
Fudge 6: Rex Humbard 15: Rev. Henry Mahan 13:
Rebop 20.

eGOOD COLOR SELECrJON
. •SIX IN STO(;K
e48 MONTHS FINANCING
•'OFFER GOOD TTL NOV. 30

11 .30--At Issue 3, Animal s, Anima ls, Anima ls 6,· Fac e

FROM

The Nallon 8; Test imony Ti me 13: Once Upon a
Classic 20.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

:~ore than $54 million

" .

:::~wed

to Ohio treasury

••:.coLUMBUS (UP!) - A
"total of $54,342,148 was owed
"tHe state at the end of October
•including over $40 million in
~sales taxes, according to
~state
Auditor Thomas
' Hrguson.
' ' Ferguson noted Friday that
·•the state Office of Budget and
· Managemen t predicted
"earlier this month the state
ma'y be short from $50 million

'' ...

'"" ' CLEANUP BEGUN
" ·wASHINGTON (UP!)
"'l'he House ha·s quie tl y
·.:~ ppotnled seven pnvate
· citizens
and
ei ght
...Congressmen to study the
strange ways it conducts its
business, propose reforms and help erase the unpresswn
• that· Congress is overpaid ,
•. oversexed and underworked .
;:::e:,unost unnoticed , th is
:.:;utorm corrimission ts

,;~ady off~ring . suggestions

• ll8iigned to produce less talk

' ':::Dljl mor~ action in the House.

to $80 million in meeting its
financial obligations in
November.
"In light of the state's
money problems collection of
any amount of the money
would help the state pay its
bills this month," the auditor
said.
Ferguson said the state Tax
Department " made every
attempt within its power to
collect the
enormous
amount" owed in delinquent
sales taxes.
"Most corporations would
go bankrupt if they had a
similar de bt collection
record," said Ferguson.
Ferguson noted the tax
depa rtment had an excellent
state income tax collection
record with only 1104,324
outstanding.
·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:..:·:·: :::-'·:·:::::·:::···:·:·:·::·::::::·:::::-::·::::

Metered rhyme
in

BAD YEAR, THIS
WASHINGTON (UP!) - At
· · leJlst 35,000 persons - and
' •possibly two or three limes
··· that number - have died in
.. earthquakes around the
.world this year, the U. S.
. Geological Survey reported
·Saturday. USGS officials said
the dea th toll makes 1976 the
worst year for earthquakes
since 1970, when 67 ,000
persons died in quakes in
Turkey and Peru, and
perhaps the worst in more
than 50 years .

-

' r

..

011

the clouds

l-.

SINGER'S BLUES
MEMPHIS , Tenn. (UP!) l" Entertainer Jerry Lee Lewis,
~; arrested Tuesday on charges
, !;' of brandishing a gun when he
l. demanded to see Elvis
l: Presley, says he meant no
! harm.
;~
"It's so rldicu!ous to think
1: that I would be gotng up to
•· Elvis Presley's home to do
•· anything," Lewis said Friday
:: from his hospital bed, where
' · he Is being treated for a
'· pepUc ulcer. .
•,
:: Lewis, 40, was arrested for
•. the second time In two da¥s
•.
•. outside Presley's mansion
. and charged' with carrying a
·· .Jii&amp;Ol and public drunken·
ness.'
•.,

12 .0Q-M eet The Press 3,4,15; Issues and Answers 0;
Rev. Robert Schule r 8; Evangelist ic Outreach 13;

Infinity Factory 33.
1:30--Aware 6: Wildlife in Cris is 10. Zoom 33.
2.0D-Polnt of VIew 6: NFL Football 10: Issues and

Answers 13, In Perfor man ce At Wolf Trap 20 , Once

Upon A Classic 33.

.

2 3D-Dav id Niven's World 6, Town Topics 13, Rebop

defensive ace
SAN DIEO (UP!) - The
San Diego Mariners of the
Western Hockey Association
have acquired defenseman
Larry
Hornung
from
Edmonton in exchange for
Greg g Boddy , it was
announced Friday.
Hornung played with the
Winnipeg Jef.'; four years
before he was acquired by
Edmonton in the 1976 reverse
draft. He was a second team
all.WHA chmce in 1973 and
was wtth St. Lows m the NHL
in 1971 and 1972

J3
J ·OO-Mov1e ''l...uv" 6; Ned Genera tion 13; L 1ve from
Linco ln Center 20 ; VIsions 33
3·30-Amer lcan Lite Style 13
4·00---NFL Football 3, 4, 15; Formby's Antique Fur .
nlture Wor kshop 8; What It Mea ns To Be Green 13.
4:30--Responslble Dr inking 8; M ov ie " Bachelor
Flat" 13: Getting On 33
S:Oo-Witness to Yes terday 6; Lawrence Welk a,·
M ovie " The Naked Prey " 10; To Be Announced 20;

The Way It Was 33.
5 3Q--S pace . 1999 6, Agronsky At L arge 20; Consumer
Survival Kit 33
6:QO--F il m 8; Fran Curci Football 13, Sesame Street

20. Wall Street Week 33.

a.

6·3o-News 6; 30 Minutes
World Press 33,
Newsmaker '7 6 13
7: 0D--World of Disney 3,4, 15; Brady Bunch 6, 13, 60
M1nutes
10,· Crockett 's VIcto ry Garde n 20;
Onedln Line jJ

a,

8:00-Columbo 3, 4,15; StM Million Dollar Man '6,13;

Patriot ace put
on injured list
FOXBORO, Mass. I UP! ) Veteran New England
Patriots linebacker Jim
Romantszy.n Friday was
pia ced on the injured
reserved list with a separated
shoulder suffered in last
week's game with the New
York Jets.
Assigned to the 43·man
roster
to
re place
Romaniszyn, 25, was rookie
linebacker IJQnnie Thomas.

LOS ANGELES (u.PJ ) The Los .Angeles weather
bu ~eau har bors a poet.
Twice In the past week, the
weather reports to offices R d f
dh
of local · news media have
ea tre Y'
been augmented by ver·
stons In rhyme. A partial Oregon officials
sample from Friday:
Th
EUGENE , Ore . iUPII
" e East PacUic Ridge
Is sharp and strong and The University of Oregon has
fired IJQn Read as head
warm.
football coach, following his
Providing the driving
force for a developln2 third losing season. He had a
winter storm.
year to go on his $30,000
Strong winds wlll develop conlracl.
over the ocean and over the
Athletic Director John
land,
Caine Friday issued a
Creating In tbe deserts .' statement, which read, ''Don
areas of blowln -dust-and - Read, head coach oL the_
sand.
g
University ol Oregon football
I' ed f
te.am, tod
If you are planning a
. ay was re tev 0
desert trip, our advice Is- his duties. The search for a
do not go,
s uc c es so r
be g 1 n s
And saUors batten tbe immediately."
hatches, for the wind will
surely' blow."
01SOn •S COnt raet

"We Want Your

Soun9s1age 20
12 :36-Grarldstand 3,15; News Conference 4 4;
Directions 6; N FL Today 8; The Issue 10; Lower
L tghthouse 13
1:00--To Be Announ ced 3,15 ; NF L Football 4; Commun ique 6; NFL Football 8; Fa ce The Nation 10;
College Football '16 13: Adams Chronicles 10:

Mariners acquire

·•
JILL AND JOHN
:;, BISHOP, Calif. (UP!)
~ ; Jill Kinmont, the crippled ex·
• ; skier whose story was told In
:·, the movie "The Other Side of
; . the Mountain," was married
·• Fridsy in a private ceremony ·:·:::·:·:·:·.;.·:::·:·::::-;·:=::::;.;:·:;.;:;. ::·:·:·:·:·=:·:=.=:·:·:=.:::
: : to John Gary Booth, a
extended 2 yearS
• ' trucker
:·: Miss ' Klnmont, 40, and
HE'LL RESIGN
IOWA CITY , Iowa (UP!) : Booth, 35, knew each other as
COLUMBUS (UP!) - C. The contra ct of Iowa
: children, but their romance Luther Heckman, chairman
• . did not begin until he rented a of the Public Utilities basketball Coach Lute Olson
:.; house to her and her mother Commission of Ohio, said has been exletlded two years
thrOUgh June 30, 1980, athletic
;;· three years ago.
Friday he wUJ resign as director Bump Elliott
•· Miss Kinmont was a top adviser to a private research
· •: competitive skier at 18 when group that is financed by announced Friday.
Olson led the Hawkeyes to a
•• she broke her back while electric utllitles. Gov. James
; ·, trying out for the U. S. A. .Rhodes asked Heckman 19-10 record last season, the
: Olympic team and wa1 left Wednesday to resign from the second best tn school history .
; abnost completely paralyzed. Electric Power Research He begins his third season at
The movie told the story of Institute to avoid the ap- Iowa Saturday night when. the
1: her struggle in the years that pearance of impropriety Hawkeyes open at Nebraska.
; ,; followed.
because the group is funded
'•
by utllltles which the PUCO Giants manager
'
regulates.
'

'.

.....

Ora l Roberts 10;

Repass a, A Belter Way 15: Mister Rogers 20.
9.30--Whal Does The Bible Plainly Say? 8: Movie "The
Music Man" 10: Jim Franklin 13, Ins ight 15:

Charlie Webste1, Buster Sprague, .Don Harden, Tom Norris

....

·

Caravan 6, Day of Discovery 8; James Robison

••

... your farm operation!

DISCOUNT

Bullwlnkle 6;

8:JO--Oral Roberts 3: Yours For The Asking 4; Gospel

•
••

over weighing
grain at port

0

a·oo-M ormon Choir 3; Day Of DlsCO'I(ery 4; Tenessee
Tuxedo 6; Church Servtce 10; Happiness Is 13;
Sesame Stree t JO

Research into milk fever prevention :

F eds to take

4;

Jerry Falwell 8, I t is Wr itten 10; Amazing Grace

•
•
•

formation of the acltve for m either vitamin D or proper vitamin Dwas fed for at least
BY BOYD A. RUTH
of vitamin D, as well as regulation of calcium and 3 days before parturlili n.
Soil Cons. Service
POMEROY - I have parathyroid activity, are phosphorus intake was used Protection fell off rapio!y
talked to dairymen lately who suppressed. This further successfully to prevent milk after vitamin 0 feeding had
been completed.
.•
have had milk fever m their reduces the ability of the fever.
1~
The
main
difficillty
wi
cow
to
meet
the
parturient
The
first
experiment,
a
her d , which sometimes
results in the death of the sudden demand for milk field trials conducted on Ohio this method of prevention is
animal. So upon reading a calcium. Any sa'fe procedure farms, mvolved feeding the accurate prediction of.the
re cent article on the that wtll enhance calcium l'llamm ·D2 1n rnasstve doses due date within the reqllir..ed
absorption or help mamtain (15 oo 20 or 30 million units limitations . In using this
prevention of milk fever , I
thought it might be helpful to normal feed intake before per day ) for at least 3 days method, it is suggested tonal
discuss the latest research and after parturition wtll help before parturillon and not vitamin D feeding be starlod
conducted through the Ohio avoid milk fever in milk feve r more than I day after 5 days before the predil:l~
parturition with a safe due date, with a 7-day J.ilnit
Agmultural Research and prone cows.
Three
experiments
have
maximum limitation of 7 for vitamin D feeling. Post
Development Center. Th e
been
conducted
at
the
Ohio
•
dsys
feeding. Mature Jersey mortem examination showed
foll ow ing article will be
Agricultural
·Research
and
cows
with previous history of that 7 days is the maximum
printed in two parts, the
second part appearmg in next Development Center in which mfik fever were selected for safe feeding period for ,(his
the trial. The 20 and 30 million high dosage of vitamin IL
week's column. It was
umt levels of feeding based on
printed in the Ohio Report
Next week's column will
64 :1 percent milk fever explain the results of 2 other
magazine and written by
expected in the control cows, experiments and provide a
John W Hibbs, William E.
were about 80 percent summary showing how ·¥OU
Julian and H Russell Conrad.
effective in reducing milk ca n reduce milk fev;er
It follows :
fever mcidence where incidence in your own herp.
Although questions still
remain regarding Ule basic
cause of parturient paresis
! milk rever ), recent research
WASHINGTON- (UP!)
points the way to effective The Agriculture Department
preventio n. Despite the announced Friday that
evidence t ha t par athyroid federal agents will take over
activity is at a high level in inspection and weighing of
milk fever cows, mobilization grain at the Lake Erie port of
of calcium reserves from Toledo, Ohio, Jan. 12.
bone and soft tissues can not
The action is the first step
maintain their normal blood in carrying out a .ecently
calcium in competition with passed law under which a
the demands for beginning new department grain in·
lac tation
followin g spection was created to take
parturition
• over
among other
Aside from mobilization of assignments - all inspection ·
"
calctum stored m bone and currently performed at ports
With
a
long-term
,
reasonable
cost
loan
ftotn
soft tissues, the only source of by federally licensed private
the Federal Land Bank you can finanoo .:a
calcmm for blood is through agencies.
absorption of dietary calcium · The law allowed an 18- wide variety of farm needs . . . such as new
from th e gastrointestinal month phase·in period for the
bu1ld1ngs and land improvements-and:"a:jtr act. This requires th e changeover, but officials said
most anythmg else that can make your farm
formation of calcium-binding the Toledo Board of Trade,
prot ein in the intestinal which currently conducts operation more profitable .
mucoisa. The formation of inspection In
Toledo,
"'''
228 Upper River Road ....
.
calcium-binding protein is requested qutck action in its
P.
O.
BoK207,Gallipolis
..
..
.
dependent on the presence of case. It will become the first
446-0203
...
:
Phon'
e
adequate amounts of the private agency replaced by
active form of Vitamin D federal gram mspection
Clyde B. Walker. Mgr. "~ '
(1,25
dihydroxy· agents.
ehlorecalciferol)
produeed in the kidney and
regulated
by
blood
calcium, blood _phos}l_horus,
and hydroxylase enzyme.
Smce rnobtlizalton of stored
ca lcium is for soma reason
' "''
ln.9ufficient in milk fever
cows, they must depend to a
greater extent on intestinal
absorptiOn of dietary calcium
" '
Utan non-milk fever cows. A
"'
sound approach to milk lever
prevention, therefore , 1s to
provide
conditions to
maximize the absorption of
'
calcium from the intestinal
tract.
Aside from adequate intake
of calcmm and vitamin D in
the diet, it is important to
regulate phosphorus intake
within a relatively narrow
range, especially during the

·

7·DO-Chrlslopher Closeup 3; Th inking in Black 8; Rev

••

points to effective ways of control

'700°

6:Jo---Jerrv t-=alwell4; Talking Hc.nd s 8; Public Policy

us ! R.I.P.
:
Footnote - Tbe current living ~
symbol Smokey Bear lives on •
happily at the National Zoo in ;
Washington, D. C., ca"rrying on the
work of Forest Fire Prevention. '

.

Log

SU NDA Y, NOV EMB ER 18 , 1916
6:oo- This Is The Lite 10

million.
..
It's alsoufe to say that he llived .:
the lives of firefighters tn fires that :
never burited. During his lifetime he :
earned $1.5 million tn royalties from :
keychalns, dolls, lltterbags and :
•
other paraphemaUa.
Smokey was burled Nov. 9 at the :
Smokey Bear Historical Park at :
Capitan, N. M., notfann from where :
be was found as a cub. Memorial •
services were held Nov. 17 ·tn :
Capitan. State dignitaries attended , :
Including Congressman Ha rold .:
Runnels wbo was responsible for a •
Jotnt' Resolution of Congress on :
August 29, 1974, that required :
Smokey's rernaln.9 he transported :
from the National Zoo In ~
WaShington, D. C. to' Capitan.
:
We salute you Smokey - All of •

.

dry period , i f maximum

Televi~ion

•
•
from 31 mlUlon acres to iesa than 3 :

Luci lle Ball 8,10: Evening al Symphony 10,33
9:00-Masterpiece Theatre 20.33

3, 4, 15
10 00--Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13: Koiak B. 10: Theater in

9 . 3~ uincy

America 20; Live From Lincoln Center 33.

11 OD-News 3,4,8,10. 13, 15: Peter Marshall 6.
,11 15-CBS News 8,10: Music Hall America 15.
11 '30--S tar Trek 3, Movie "T he Secret War of Har r y
Frlgg " 4, Movie "Gir ls ! Gir l ~! Girls!" 8, Movie
" The Sheriff" 10, Ironside 13.

12 :00--News 20: Janakl 33
12 :30--ABC News 6,13
I :00--Peyton Place 4.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER l9, 1976
oo-sunrlse Semester 10
·
6·15-Engllsh 3: Farm Repor t 13.
6·20--Not fo r Women Only 13
6:30--Col umbus Tod ay 4: News 6. Sunr ise Semester 8:
Ounce of Prevent ion 10
6 45-Mornlng Reporl 3.
.
· 6.50--Good Mornnlng, Wesl VIrg inia 13.
6 55-Good Morning, Trl Slale 13
1 OO--Today 3, 4,15 , Good Morning, Amer i'ca 6,13: CBS
News 8: Chuck White Reports 10.
7 05-Bugs Bunny 10.
I 30--School&lt;es 10
I 45-Sesome 51 33
8 00--Lassle 6, Capt Kanga roo B, 10
8·30--Big Valley 6
9:00--A.M 3: Phil Donahue4,15, 13: Lucy Show 8: Mike
Douglas 10
9 30--Cross.Wifs 3: Movie "My Girl lisa" 6: Good Day
6

B.

10 ·00--Sanford &amp; Son 3, 4,15: Price is Right 8,10: Mike
Douglas 13.
10 :30--Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15.
11 :DO-Wheel ot Fortune 3, 15: Weekday 4: Gambit
~ 8.~0 , Morning with D J . 13: Elec. Co. 20.
11 .3&lt;F-Stumpers 3,4,15, Happy Days 6,13 : Love ot Life
8,1 0: Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :S5-Take Kerr 8: Ms . Flxlf 10.
12:0Q-News 3,6 ,8, 10, Don Ho 13: Bob Braun 4; so
Grand Slam 15.
12:30--Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13, Seorch
for Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :55-NBC News 3, 15.
1:DO--Somerset 3: Ryan's ope 6,13: Concentration 8:
Young &amp; the Rs tless 10; Not for Women Only 15.

I 30--D,ays of our Lives 3,,4,15; Family Feud 6,13: As
The World Turns 8,10.
2.0D-$20,000 Pyramid 13: Dinah 6.
•
2 30--Doctors 3,4,15: One Life to Llve 13 : Guiding
Light 8,10.
3:oo-Another World 3,4,15, Alt In The Family 8,10:
Getting On 20.
3 15-General Hospital 13.
3:30--Max B. Nimble 6: Match Game 8,10: Lil ias Yoga
&amp; You 20.
4.0D-Mister Cartoon 3: Marcus Welby, M.D 4;
Somerset 15; Howdy Doody 6, Mickey Mouse Club
8; Sesame St. 20,33: Movie "Those DarinQ Young
Men In Their Jaunty Jalopies" 10: Dlnah · IJ
4:30--My Three Sons 3: Emergency One 6: Partridge
Family 8: Fllntstones IS
5:00--Big Valley 3: Merv Grll tln 4: Brady Bunch 8:
Mister Rogers 20.33: Star Trek 15.
5 30--News6. Family Altair 8: Elec. Co. 20,33: Adam .
12 13 .
.
6.0D-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20:
Education In Transition 33.
completes staff
6 30--NBC News 3,4,15: ABC News 13: Andy Grltt lth 6:
CBS News 8,10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
JOB OFFER
SAN FRANCISCO 1UP)) l:oo-T~uth or Cons. 3, To Tell the Truth 4; Bo~llng tor.
PLAINS, Ga. (UP!)
Joe
Altob elli,
newly
Dollars 6; News 10: To Tell the Truth '13: My Three
Rosalynn Carter plans to appointed manager of the San
Sons 15: The Way It Was 20: Know Your Schools 33.
appoint Madeline Macbean, Francisco Giants, completed I 30--That Good Ole Nashville Music 3. Bobby VInton
4: Muppet Show 6: Gong Show 8, MacNeil-Lehrer
ber assistant the past six
Report 20,33:Prlcels Right 10; Candid Camera 13:
years, to he social secretary his field staff Friday with tt(e
appointment of former All·
Friends of Man IS
and possibly staff director at
Star Giants' catcher Tom 8·1l0-Lillle House on the Prairie 3,4,15: Capta in &amp;
the White House , according to Haller as bullpen coach.
~nnllle 6,13; Rhoda 8,10: Adam s Chronicles 20,33
sources.
Earlier, Herm Starrette 8·30--$128,000 Question 8: Phyllis 10.
Mrs. Macbean, a former wasnamedpltching coaoh by 9·00--Movle "ThO' Front Page" 3, 4,1 5: NFL Footboll
airline stewardess, was Mrs, Altobelli, who kept base co·
6,1 3: Maude 8,10: ,In Performarce at Walt Trap
Carter's Jiersonal assistant
' 9 . 3 ~~i · F 1 810 '
when Juruny Cartet· was achesBobbyWinklesandJim
Davenport
from
last
year's
s a.
r 'Su ·ile 8, 10; News 20: Soundstage 33.
t If
10· OD-Execu
hve
governor of Georgia.
10 30- Farm Dloesl 20
,
Mrs. Macbean, a native of sa ·
11 .00--News 3,4,8,10, 15: Mac. Nell Lehrer Reporl 33.
Newton, N. C., ls married to
Atlanta architect Neville , Dtlabled people who have ll. 30--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Mov ie 'Don't Go Near the
Water" 8: Mary Hartman 10: ABC News 33.
Macbean. She Is Mrs. Car· b..n· receiving So&lt;:lal 12 .00-News 6.13: Movie "Two Loves" 10: Janaki .JJ.
ter's transition staff director Security checks for at least 12 . 3~ollego Foolball '16 6: Ironside 13
and will move to washing\"" two . years are eligible for 1.oo-- Tomorrow J ,.t.,
in January.
'
Med1care.
I:30--News 13. · ·
'

Bu .~inPs~ ''

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC

1~11 ~STERN AVE.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

CUTS STIJOIED
WASHING'I'ON iUPl )
Carter admini stration
planners are looki ng at
uf
Aga ~c ' s
four -yea r
rnllitary personnel costs
contract '
" Th is was a di fficult includln~ such "sacred
decision to make in many cows" as the $8.5 bllllon
respects," said Hansen in his yearly retirement system prcpured
state nlc nt , as an urea where defense
1
'al'rived at only Hflcr much spending can eventually be
and
ca reful cut, informed souree~ !lllld
though t
Sa turda y. Military and
delibenttiuns. ''
He lauded Agase for his civ ilian payrolls, retirement
integrity and honesty, but his and nlluted costs such as
military housln ~ und schools
fourth cunsec uUvc losing
for
se rvice dependepts
seaoon here, 18-25·1 overallincluding 5.j) this season-a nd comprise ubou\55 per cent of
ut limes saggin!! altendum:e this your's $11.09 bllll on
Defense Departme nt budget.
of home games hml tn ken
their toll .
Agase thus llccamc the
second Big Ten c'Oach this
week to be diSmissed . Bob
Blackman of Illinois lost his
JOb after six years.
Purdue Athletic Director
Geor ge
Kin g
said
applicatiOns would be taken
until Dec 10.
" It Is my hope that a
reco mmendation for lhls
position wlll be forthcoming
in the very nea r future," said

Purdue fires Coach Agase
WES'l' I.A F'AYE'I'TE , In d.
- Less than a month

1UPI J

ago, Alex Agase was the tonst

of the t'Ollege football world,
foll owin g Purdu e's 16· 14
upset of Rose Bowl-bound and
then-top ranked Michigan.
Today, the latest major
victim of a losing record, he
was looking for a JOb.
The ax fe ll un Agase on this
Thanks g i v i ~g holi da y
weekend in a briefly worded
announcemen t Friday by
Ar thur Hansen, Purdue's
pi'CS!dent.

Citing th e "grow mg
probl ems"
' fin a ncial
assoc11Hed with maintaming
a str ong cumputltivc r ole in

intercollegiate competition,
Hansen sa id 1l "seemed
p(udent
to make a
change .. .al Utis time. "
Hansen's

armouneement

had been expected It came
just six days after the
Boilermakers dropped the ir
tradi \ional seaso n·ending
go me to arch·rival Indiana,
2()..14. It also came at the end

Hunsen . '

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
SUNDAY. Nou. 28, 1976
ACROSS

rulhemum

69 Pou,n•v•
I Wooden shoe
6 HuH•ed
10 Abo und
14 MO!ol un pleaunl
19 PlA Ce lor
keflptn g bnds
2 1 Posa£159
22 Grate

piCI'Ioun
70 Ntckp iec e
71 Fru it c aKe
73 E!ocu len I
75 FOfCe!o air
throug h nose
7 7 Facial

:?3Chii.S11Sfl

78Garmont

24 Most dame

e~ores~uon

32 Cl t•ze~ ol Rome

80 Swnpteton
a 1 Out ~: h town
82 R1ppmg
84 Liqu id measu re
86 Tried
87 T1dler
89 Ooctrme

33 Pain ful

92 Mov1 ng

:?6 Me'nds
2 8 Mete ·
29 S ulll ~ l()fmlnQ
ad)e cl lves

30 S t a~e

.

3 4 A r,m~ officer
3? Ob lrg ahons
payable
37 Female ru111
38 The sun

40 Olapatch
-4 1 Marrlea

-4 2 God of lo~•
4o41mpose u
oe cuur 't'

95 Ardent

98 Fat ol swine
99 veoetab te
1J 1 Enthus 1esm
103 Tlasue
10 4 Poue ssrve
pr onoun

-------------,-Os-Fjlnt
.
106 Right (abbr)

result
4 6 1mltated
4 7 Veh Ietas
4 6 M idday
50 A month
52Ptos

53Mar.sn tcknama
55 Metallastener
67 Atllle(abbr,)

10 7 Psrenf !colloQ I
108 Wile ol Ge reln t
110 Obscure

111Hebrew lettet
11 2Word ot aorrow
113 Cerem ony .
115Sur. o oct
117 Merr y

119 Con1unctlon
t ~OSer ve r

,

58 Ch imney carbon

12 I Pralae
12 4 F1laeh oods

6 0 Meuu re ol
we1ght (etlbr I
62 Recent

126 Ch1111e \collOQ I
12 7 St un ted pafson
128 Want by
130 Clan
132 Skin oll rul t
13 3 Foo tbellklck
13 4 Old t ~oell

58 Cuts

64 1n addi110"1
66 Footbell poSitiOn
(abbr I
fiB Symbol l or

1n n arl'!ea of
diUIMI
litO Slern
abbre~laUon
t 1 SlOgan
u or oil dl es
t2 Snake
14 1 Poslt r'le pole
93 E•t ( al
14 3 M&amp;IBI WU111
94 NOie or tcele
1• 5 Anglo · Suon
98lamb 't ptn
money
36 Anoo
name
148 Stays
37 Slllk
97 Male lhiiP IDU
148Cut ot
40 BarraCLidl
100 SymbOl for
cnaracters
41Movet lrom elele
· tellurium
150 lnst ruci Of ·
to Bide
102 Caatl drawer
152 Makes Into law
.4 3 Cle aning
' 1015 Damp tlrth
153 Lure
lubel&amp;nc•
109 Platform
154 Buebllllteam
45 God ol manly
1 12 811 In Alia
158 Strike 0111
youH1
11 3 L1111
157 Erues lprl nllngl 4 6 Teem
I lA Ute
158 He raldr Y'
47 Farm animal•
116 Handle
gr elted
49 Ri ~e r 11'1 AlriCI
1 t8 Profound
159 Marlo\ te ll by
b 1 In 'Jenlor ol
.120 Warm
wound
tllegrlptl
12\ Hurr lu
160 Mine ~elna
52 Quedru;~eds
122 Enraon
53Emmeu
123L&amp;Ir s
DOWN
6-4 Etcape 11rough 126 Courted
cravlc_e _ _12.6 Calm
1 Cui
!OAld lcu loua
127 Wha•llraotte
2 Thoroughllt8
59 Grumbling ,
129 StupiCIJ*IM
3 Heronllke blrd
60Cutolmea1
13 1 Cyllndr ltal
61 l oud no •at
• Grain
132 PHII&lt;I
5 Span Ish IOI
63 AuthOr a
1 33 WtiiU
" three"
66 Teke one's part 134 Growin g out ol
7
6 Qulett
6 Obt&amp; l!
136 Solkenerd
7 Equal ity
69 ConJunciiM
138 B lbl lc11 weeds
8 W ithout end
70Span nld
140FrultMtd•
8 PIIC:II
12 Groop Oil Mit&amp; 14 1 Landed
10 Teat
14Prelllt twlct
132M1n'1n1mt
11Merll
76 Feroe It land•
144(rlehm•n
12 Worm
whirlwind
147 High c1rd
13 M embarol
77 M aaslve
148 Shallowv&amp;s ..l
Par liament
79 Numbe1
149 N11h oor al'le10
(abbr )
83 De~oured
151 tnl!llf nat lmal
14 E11l1tad
85 Pla y over ag&amp;ln
L abor
16 WorthIBIS
88 Wear y
Organll:l!lon
Ianing
87 FootbBII
(abbr 1
18 Forest wardens
1nlracl lon
153 E1tlll
17 Sp lrl18dh0rael
88 TardY
156 Teu tonic: delly
81f Sull lll occurring

135 Leier
137 Bard
139 Tlme t• ble

18 Gull -like b1rd1
20 A rver 1n Be lgium
23 Pot!
26 Woody plant
27 So1p plan ts
28 B ody ol water ,
31 Mara hea ,
33 Rroph 81

�••
4-D--The Swtday Tizne:&amp;.SenUnel, Sunday. Nov, 28, 1976

DAN

FORD

THOMPSON
FORD

The closer you look,
the better we look.

LAFF- A- DAY

· lnlroducin8 .
anew dimenston
in Luxury.

That:s the
all-new

1972 FORD PINTO WAGON •••••••••'1495
4 cyL auto tr ans

6 Cyl , auto trans

V a, auto tra ns

1972 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX •••••• '2895

'

discovered he was really a
bore "

for you.

1970 DODGE DART ••••••••••••••••'1295
1970 FORD RANCHERO SQUIRE ••••'1795

" So after yean of not com ..
municalmg, we ftnally started
to communicate and I

Cadillac

1971 CHEVELLE 4 DR.••••••••••••• '995
6 Cyl .. std trans .

L..,---""=="-'==;:=-- -=

NOW IN STOCK

Kyger

1-1977
Sedan Deville

Very Cle.an

1972 CHEVY IMPALA 2 DR •••••••• '1995
One owner

' ~ «':S~

1.0•©

Fully

1973 CHEVY IMPALA 2 DR •••••••••'2695

Equ 1pped

One owner . low mileage

1974 FORD GRAND TORIN0 ••••••• '2695
V8PS , PB

1973 CHEVY VEGA ••••••••••••••• '1295
11

-if

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
Cadillac Oldomobtle
992 5342

Cy\ , auto trans

1973 FORD PICKUP F-100 •••••••• 12595
V 8, sld trans

1974 FORD PICKUP

f·100 ......... 12995

v a std tr ans

\iMC Financ1ng Ava1labl!

Pomeroy

" You'll Ltke Our Qua llty Wav of Ooln~ Bu siness"

Open Eves. Til h Til 5 p.m. Sat.
See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burris
Lloyd, Me Laughlin
Mar.llin

1972 FORD PICKUP F-1()() .........'2195
Heallh insurance

V 8, sld tran s

Call ·

MANY MORE
Save Now on a 1976 Pinto, Mustang, or Maverick.
See: Pal Hill, Rocky Hupp
or Darrel Dodrill
For a good deal on a new or used vehicle

C K Snowden
14 State srreet
Galhpolls, Oh io
Phone 446 -42'90

servlCes.

5-0-The Sunday Times-SenUnei,Sunday, Nov. 28,1976

from

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DlAOLINES

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

UGULATIONS

Sportabout, 6 cyl , automatic. power steering, deluxe

,. he Publisher reserves
the rig ht to edit or relect
any ads deem ed ob
Jectlonet The publisher
will not •be respons ible tor
more than one mcorrect
Insertion

equipment, whitewall tires, luggage rack, dark green
finish , less than 9,000 miles, showroom clean.

1975 CHEVEUE ..................... S4295
Estate Wagon , locall owner csr, white radial tires, air
conditioning, V 8, automatic, power steer)ng and

!

brakes, radiO, dark red fintsh , blk . vinyl Interior

1975 CHM EL CAMINo ....... }3995·
Class 1c, 3SO. V 8, automat1c, power steering and
brakes, rallw wheels, radio , black and very attractive.

1975 WV PICKUP.................. 3295
1

CARD OF THANKS

W1th topper, low mileage, radio, w-w tires, clean

&amp; OBITUARY
S2 OQ for
50 word
'-minimum.
Ea"'ffl adi:flTTonar- word 3
cents

1975 CHEVROLET BWER
4 wheel drive. large tires, alum wheel, 350 V 8,

BLIND AOS

automat1c, power steering &amp; brakes, deluxe trans .,
rad1o

Additional 25c Charge
per Advertisement

1975 CHEVROLET ClO PICKUP '4295

to 5 00 p m ,
Daily, 8 30 a m to 12 oo
Noon Saturday
Phon e toda't' 992 2156

OFFICE HOURS

8 30 a m

8' Fleetslde, 350 V 8, aulomatlc, power sleerlng &amp;
brakes, Silverado trim, large hub caps &amp; loaded with
chrome trim Sliding rear glass, 36" alum . Insulated
bed cover Truly a prem1um unit &amp; the low mileage
shows 1t

NOTICES
ATTN ·!f

ALL HOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sales, Rummage,
Porch and Basement Porch
and Basement Sales, etc
must be paid m advance
Ge t -..ours In earl,v by
stopping by our off1 ce
The Dally Sentmel.
11
Co urt St or wntlng Box
729, Pomero-.. Ohto 45769
w•th your r em• ttan ce

t''

DATSUN ....................... '2195
2 door, local car, 4 s. peed trans, 44,200 mJles, good
II'""'' dark green finish , real economy
l

1973 CAPRICE 4 Oft HT

'

,

I' 2995
5

.......

IN LOVING MEMORY of Charles
A Woode who passed away 2
years ago Nowember 28 1974
Lovmg memones ne~Jer die
As years roll on and days pass by
In our hearts, a memory 1s kept
Of one we lowed and w1U never
forget
Sadly mtssed by hts wtle Audrey
daughter Els1e
son m low
Wtllard and grandsons Roy and
Roger and the1 r fa m1l1 es

~:(~!~~~-~10 ,0 wner
car, blk vmyl root, green4:terlor,
tires, a ir, automatic, power st ring &amp;
1

Chevrolet V-8, 4 door.
Chevrolet V-8, Bel Air, 4door.
111:1q:7n Ply. 2 door, 6 cylinder,
VW 2 door, radio, good tires.
""""Mustang Cpe.

NOiHa::::_=----::. -

Rev 8 17 73

ONCE THE KGB E)( TilA C T,
I H~ MIND R!: ADIN(; DRUG FROM
I ~E'% PLA.&lt;Jrs NO O~i I~ I&lt;:USSIA

WILL. 6E

===-=---

New 1976 Chevy Van ConveiSions
New 1976 Chevy Mini Homes

DIRECTOR

SPECIALS AT D &amp; J FABRICS
Foke fur tn pteces regular
$2 50 lb now Sl 50 lb Lorge
blanket p1eces $1 50 lb. 1 to ble
of poly double kn11 and poly
blend s, Va lues to $2 49 now
$1 DO y'brd Red Hearl Wm tuck
yarn, 4 oz sketn 9B 1 eoch I
m1le sou th of Middleport on
SR 7

.

Nov 28 Dec 5

READY TO TRAVEL

'

DAN THOMPSON ·fORD
Middleport

Hurry In For A Good DEAL

...

AstroGrapn
.,. _,,~-

Bernrce Bede Osol

For Sund1y, Now. 28, 1976

ARIES (Morch 2t -Aprll t9)
You'll be dllllcul t to reach today
because you re not apt to tell
others what s on yo ur mrnd
Open up l e t your hatr down

FREE
TURKEY

•

'

molehillS today You're a b1t too
senSitiVe and you' re prone to
treat m inor mlrac t10n s too
ser iously

Sole sponsored b't' Me1gs Co
Humane Soe~e t y , across irom
Pomer oy
Post
Offtce
December 3 and 4th

POMEROY MOTOR CO

CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22)

ALTHOUGH 81rchfu;, ld s Tox1der
my has burned , work STILL WILL
BE DONE 1n temp orar-..
quarters Have your lropht es
mounted Ieday and troosure
them tomorrow BIRCHFIELD s
TAXIDERMY eost of Rutland
mde on Rt
124
Ptlone

"Your Chevy Dealer"

Others are like ly to lmd fa ult w1tt't
your v•ews today because of the
way you plead your case Don 't
be apologe tic 1f trying to sell bold
daring •deas

free turkey . Don't forget to check wtfh us
before you buy any car, new or used We
have the sharpes1 pencil m town .

Pos1t1vely No Hunt~ng any
kmd on the

Amberger Farm
In Nease Settlement
Area , M1n ersv tlle , 0
Wallac e Amberg er

992-2126

FISHERMAN
&amp;HUNTERS

A towboat crew member ts
m1s stng from the M V
OKAW stnce Nov 14 , 1976
1n the area of mtle 232 of the
Oh1o R1ver A reward ot
$250
for
Information
leadrng 1o the location of
th1s man. If you have any
mformat1on please call614

Pomeroy
Open

Put aSide tho pursw1 ol prottt

_jMITH NELSON MOT9RS

Just have some fun _ _ _-cc_

500 E. Mam St.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)
You're not very cooperative today particularly w1th those you

Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2174

care the most lor Oddly enough

You'll

feel thetr requests lnfnnge
upon you r time

By
United
Preu
JDtemaUonal
Today is Sunday, Nov. 28,
the 33:k'd day of 1976with 33 w
follow.
The moon is in its first

qu,arter.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23)
Concentrate on what you do today especially If working with
sharp tools You must be extrasatety-consc1ous

WIN AT BRIDGE
27

NORTH
• 9 B7

.. J 74
t A 86 3
o!oA K4

WEST

EAST ID)

• AQ

• 10 6 4

1P 9 6 2

IPAKQ 53

• 92
.10 86532

t 75
.J9 7

SOUTH
• KJ532
.. 10 8
t KQJl04
o!oQ
Both vulnerable
West

Pass
3•
PasJ

North East
I"

24
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

South
lA

Pass
3•

Opemng lead - Ace •

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The late Waiter F Wyman
of Boston was a regular contributor to the early Bndge
World magazmes Not only
was he a ftne player and
wnter, but a dehghtful person
and a great gentleman
The bidding may be explatn·
ed in part by the fact that
North and South had a 40-pomt
part score, so that two spades
made game.
/);orth really sho'l)d have bid

thfee spades Over the last-

dttch th.ree clubs btd by Mr ~LI.SNER
Wyman who sat West, but thts
was 1930 and people were
arratd of overcalls Anyway ,
North did pass and South trted

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
The long shot may be more
appeallng to you to day tha n the
sure thrng Reai1Sl1cally th1s w1ll

ALL AJ..I =;AID Wl6 AI-I'D LIKE'
HER 10 OX!K /l#i c:ROC/&lt;ACiU..O
CHON~

F0'1H' RESf 0'

MAH NO.KHERAL. LIFEf'-

only got you a bunch of losing
tickets
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
2t) You have a low boiling potnt
today Laugh off the 1tlvlal like
you usually do
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. ti)
Instead of looki ng lor
meantngs take peoples'
more at lace value
reading more Into them
really there

hidden
actions
You're
than IS

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fib. li)
Leave your credit cards at home
today If you 11 be out with high
rollers , or you 'll wind up In the
def1cl t column

Almanac

The morning stars are

Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Sagittarius.
British poet William Blake

born N 28 177'
was
OV. '
11.
On this day in history :
In
1520,
Ferdinand

Magellan entered the Pacific
Ocean on his way around the
world. He was the first
European to saU the Pacific

from the east.
In 1958, the United StateS
fired an lntercontlnenial
ballistic miuUe at fuU range
for the first time.
In 1963, Cape Canaveral,
the space center ·In Florida .
was renamed Cape Kennedy'
honor the as..-at~
president. It now !a chang~
back to Cape Canaveral.
In 1971, Jordan Premier
Wafsl Tel was assasslnared In
Cairo by three 81111J1le11.

Nov. 21, 1171

govenunent."

""111&lt;1111 1 1

Un&amp;crambleth.,. rour Jumbl..,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinar1 words.

Some basic cha nges In your life
style are In the offing tor you thrs
year Some of them may be unsol•c•ted on your part, but they
will be beneficial
(Are you a Ssg1ttBrtu.s? Berntce
Osol nas wrtflen a spec1al As froGraph Letter lor you For your

copy send 50 cents and a seffsddresssd, stamped envelope to
Astro-Grsph, P 0 Box 489,
Rsd1o O ty Statton, New York,

NY 10019 Ba sure ro ask for
Sagittarius Volume 1 }

t
I I ]

GATEA

IBILGEOj
tl I I
IVALBER ~ ] [ )
I I
:=¢::::==~~~:;::_::, ••R&lt;IIed

RICHARD D JACK SO N
DIRE CTOR
Re"J 81773

111J"

11~1 6,

Mil .. - - . . .

J....,..., IIIRCY

Ye•lenlay'•

•

I

LO

(Aoow'"

NIECE HIATUS PROm

AMw.., Fellt•••l&amp;f lu eoolr-41ECIPES'

llontfo,t

40

•

..

•:
•

••

1971 NOVA 32? stondord sh1f1
candy apple red good fires
runs good Thrush std e p1pes
$600 Phone 949 24 43
1975 MUSTANG II , p s , p b
deluxe 1ntenor excellen t con
d1flon Phone 992 2426

e.miplng_~m&lt;;nl

3 A ND 4 RM lur n1shed ond un
lunlll;hed op ts Phone 992
5434
COUNTR Y Mobtle Home Pork Rt
33 ten miles north of Pomeroy
Lorge lots w1lh concrete pol1os
s1dewo lks runners and off
street pork1ng Phone992 7479
FURNISHED two bedroom op t
adult s only No pots M1 d
,dleport Phone 992 3674,
2 be droom unfurntshed opt tn
Mtddl eport Ph one 992 3129 or

Pomeroy Forest Pro
ducts Top pnce fo r stand ing
sawltmber Call Kent Honby

I 446 8S70
-COIN S CUR RENCY

742-2331
USEDPoP cooler upnght prefer
red Coli after 7 p m I (3CM)
773 5157 or onyt1me 992 7330

AVAILABLE at Rwer slde Apart
menls 1 bedroom $100 per
montk 2 bedrooms $133 An
Equal Houstng Opporluntly
Phone
3273

m

1974 GMC PICKUP p'

pb,

auto new hres low mtleoge
Pkone ~92 3288

MALE DOBERMAN or Bower pups
Phone 992-3750 after 5 p m

10~~ch alumm; ;or steel spoked

nms to ftl three-fourth ton
ford . Phone 992 72~ -WANTEO OLD upnght p1anos tn
any Cond1hoH W1-l pay $10
eQ(h Ftrsl lloor only Wrtte gtvlng directions to W1t1en P1ono
Co
Box 188 Sard1s Ohto

43946
WA-NTED - u sED ftfth wheel
camper Wnle gt vmg de to lls Ia
P 0 Bo.~e 666 , Pomeroy oH1o

'
~-------

Wtll do odd 1obs roofing , pam
tm g gutter work Phone 992·
7409
WILL DO HOUSE cle anm g Call
after6p m 742 2152
SEWING AND A lterat1on s
rea sonqble 572 South Th1rd
Ave M1ddleport 992-6306
WANT WORK m gos statton or
garage, domg rmnor work an
cars tun e up ond body work
Coli Randy P Smder , 992-5972
WILL DO ,babysitting doyttm e In
my home tn Rocme oreo Phone

949 2322

Business'Oppoffimiti@e

GOOD USED portable eleclnc
_ ty~nter P.h~n_e ~

GROCERY STORE. rec reation
room , gas serv1ce, l1 vtng
quarters wtrh or without sup
pltes and oaeoge Mus I sell
Soon leo ~J mg state See ot 1n
l erseclton of 248 &amp; 124 Ph one
IF YOU howe o serwtce to offer ,
98S 3306
wont to bUy or se ll somethmg,
oe looktng for work
or
whate~Jer
you'll get results
Mubile Humes
Side
foster w1th o Sentmel Wa nt Ad

??80_

for

MOBILE home for sole or rent. 3
bedrooms ol ullllttes po •d
Phone 992 7751
10.1150 RICHARDSON , 2 bedroom

PLEASURE HORSI:S and pon1es
also w1ll buy horse s and
pomes Phone (614) 698·3290
""" "'"
Ruth Reeves

"Good Neighbor"

'

A

3891
1971 HONDA CL ·450

12 000

m1les, sissy bor crash bo1 s
pull back llandle bars new ti re
and se als Scrambler stde
p1pes $650 Call 949 2480
F"OT ATOES ond pumpkm s C W
Protfill Portland Oht o Phone
COAL lor sole Open b doys per
week and evemngs For fu rth er
mformol ton call !614) 3b7 7338

APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
WIL KESVILLE, (614)669 3785
FULLER Brush Produ cts for sole
Phone 992 3410
CAMPER , $600
Also
hor se
trotlor $450 Phone (614 ) 698
3290

SMALL lartn lor sole, 10•. down
owner finont:ed Monroe Coun,
ly W Vo Phone (304 ) 772·
:J l02or (304 )77 2 3227
COUNTRY farmland w ith seclud.
ed woods, woler ontt good oc
c.es s 111 Monroe County W Vo
$1 ,000 down cal l (304) 772.

' 3102 " (30•)772-32&lt;7
ComrnetC IOI property appro• 17
acres le'.lel lo nd located at
1 uppe rs Plom s on Ohio Roule
7 Phone (614) 667 6304

TO GIVE AWAY Mole dog part
' "' " '""'~
Collte and Beagle obout 2
years old Good watch 'f9
Phone949 2816

fully carpeted
Phone 992 7562

unfurn tshed

CLARINET, good condil lon, $65
307 Locu51 Sl
M1dd leport
OhiO

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

bull w1th or wtthoul papers
Phone 949 2115
REGENCY Mobtle C B wtth fl oor
mounl and Pacer antenna m
eluded Used opprox1motely 5
hours m EXCELLENT cond tlton
Ongmol pn ce $155 wi ll sell for
$100 Mus I sell Ph one 992 3742
any tune
Coli

USED WASHER an d dr,er
Pomeroy Home an d Auto
Phone 992 2094
2 GUERNSEY COW! $375 ea ch
One regu lar Guernsey cow
$400
one bred Guermey
hetfer 5275 Phone 949 2179

JOCK&gt; WAXED CABBAGE boxes
sos box each. New Ho lland 1
row pion! setter $250 One
John Deere 3 pmnt h1tch
spray er $100 Phone 843 24S I
MENS USED clothing lor sole
Open 4 1tl l 9 everydO)I Profflt1 s
Recreatton Cer'l ter Por tl and
OhiO
SEAR S 19cu ft deeplreez.e 17
h r~fngera l o r Phone (304)
773 S370o r(61&lt;)992 2661

FOR SALE
One good used chain

saw.

11 so.oo
good used Gtbson Stdeby Stde Refrigerator
On~

RACINE
CARPET SHOP
Racine, Ohio

Square Yard Installed
David Par50ns, Owner

7 month old Purebred Chorolols

BRICK&amp; FRAME - about

FREE ESTIMATES
Blown
Insulation Services
STORM

112 ACRE w rth late model
mob1le home, 12x60 has
alum sto r age bulldtng,
large
l 1v mg
r oom,
exce l lent co ndil1on

WINDOWS l DOORS

REPL.IIl¥EN1
WINDOWS
llUMINUII

SIOING SOFfiTT

Walk to

GUTTEI~IWNINGS

shop 3 bedrooms , bath,
panelmg, lots of storage
space
A buy at 1ust

I.JIRRt~J.~~DER
· Ph. !92 ml 11~1 mo

18,500 00
MIDDLE PORT - 2112 story
frame , corner lot , garage , s
bedrooms, bath, carpeting ,
porches Natural gas heat

18.500 00
LOVELY 6 yr old home. 3

Jack

w. Carsey, Mgr

Phone 992 -2181

CHRISTMAS TRE ES! On 0ld Rf 33
between Co Roo ds }8 and 19
Tag now and cut lresh when
destred Prtced $2 00 to S8 00
Opho ond Borboro Offutt
Phone 992 3296
STEREO AM FM rad1 0 a !rock
tope combtnalton
Balance
Sl 0640orlerms Coll 9923965
ONE BROWN pl a1d rockmg cho1r
1n good cond11ton One 40 mch
gold range hood w1th l1ght and
fan Ph one 949 2692
REGULATION SIZE pool toblo like
new Pharte 992·6030
BOAR HOG for serv tce or se ll
Phone742 2014
BEET CATTLE 30 cenls lb Also
hoy rakes, e.~ecellent cond1t1on
Phone992·7201 ,

USED FORESTRY

EQUIPM EN T

Ttmbeqock 360 Sk1dder John
Deere 540A Sktdder, 42 tnch
Tower BuiiEdger Fronk ltn 130 8
Sk tdd er , Oovtd Brown Troclor·
Loader Contac t Don Graves or
Lyons Equtpment, Co , Inc
C1rclevtlle Ohto 431 13Phone 1

992-2259

TRUMPET IN case, lod1es 511e a
Chtcogo ro ller skates J97J
Chevelle Mal ibu, good cond1
han
low mtl eoge
$1000
Phone 992 2260

let us
Free.

test

your water

:r:.:Pomeroy Landmark

Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Phorie 992-2181

Rm~N~s.,
NEAR~Y n~~ -~1:-elec

home full
basemen t for sol e by owner
Rutla nd oreo , Phone 742 2531

TUPPERS PLAINS OHIO Three
bedroom house fom1ly room
ftreploce 2 boths cl1shwosher
range
garbage d1sposol
carpet sun deck Iorge lol
6 ' '1 acn~s 7 rooms and bath fur
mture, appliances I mtle from
Longsvtll e Oh1o on C R 10
Pnced $19,500 Pifne 742

2681

POL.Y.fOAM
UPHOLSTERY

sotf.~!~ 1 £shlons,

For
mollresses. padding. ldeol
for

campers. Verlety of

sizes.
Velvets ,

nylon prints,
horculons. vinyl solido. ond

faney prints, accessories.

..

DIR£~8 ~!~~~ ~LES

Phone 992-3321
- - 'HUNTING LAND -

~

115

up often. $30,000

• ••llftl AIUiftiMTm $Nil ..

.. Wllh

~:..

.. "' ...,"'·

·~"'""•'" ,~
10 3 1 mu

MONTGOMERY

PROFESSIONAL

TRAILER SALES

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

PHOTOGRAPHY

leo,.

Route
121
Longo,vtlle,·Oh•o 4f'74
669 42.t5 evtM\QI
fAIRMONT
S!lttlf'loduth, tnt: ~
f~trm:ool Mtnp ~Silll.
•
•
10 27 · 1

RUTLAND -

4 bedroom
home on 124 near school &amp;
c hurch All utilities and
garden
5 ACRES - 4 room house
that sds in the country
whtch need s a heap of
dotng
Dug we l l tho ,
el ectric and gravel road

by.

v, acre $40,000.

Th is grocery store, house
and apartment Is located

on slafe highway , 3 miles
frOm mine area 7 room
frame house
condition , live
apartment
Income large

Is In good
In It, use the
for
extra
garden spot,

garage and utility building,
feed building and post

2428

off ice now located Inside

LIKE NEW - 2 bedrooms,
hobby and ut lll ly room
Ni ce bath, nat. gas FA

store Equipped with pop

furnace Carport and large
garden space $37,500

machine, adding machine,
meat cooler. freezer, cash
register and stock in store
at time of Inventory

MIDDLEPORT

$40.000
No 167 - This hardware

3

apartments with baths
Near shopp ing, school and

churches '120,000
33 NORTH - 6 room house
with - T P water , garage
and one acre. 55500

bus iness Is on a JOxiOO lot

on the main street of town ,
good 1260 sq. 11. building

There' s
a Iso
living
quarters for the owner, 4

rooms and a bath Good

GRAVELY SERV ICE - Sove 25 Pet
on labor by ho'.ling your Grove· •
ly Tractor repaired or servi ced
now Gravely Troclor Soles ,
Pomeroy, Ohio Phone (61 4)

992-297S
Will TRIM or cu llrees and shrub
bery Ph one 742 3167 or 949·

2S45
FROSTY S C 8 RADIO Equip
ewerythtn g In two·woy rodto
antennas and acces Phone
843 2855 Por tland

HOWERY

AND

KEN GROVER
PHOIIXiKAI'HT
(6141 9U-41SS
Chester, Ohio
10·17·1 moiPd)

EXPERIENCED

1 V CLINI C New
TV shop Eleclron 1c T V Cl1nlc
Ser'JICe cel l $5 95 Color a &amp; w
onl enno systems stereos etc
572 South Third Middleport
Ph one 992 6306 Corry in and
save money

$43,000
No, 18l -

•

........ ,.,•• 14

SEPTIC 1 ANKS cleo ned Moderf1
Sont tatton qrn 3954 or 9'n

No 188 :._ 92 8Cres, 7 room
house. bath, own water
system , lots of road
frontage , good buy at

o.t.. n

o......"''

Ph .m -3461
9·30.S:OO Dally
Tlll8:000 Frldayo

ELECTRONIC

acres of pasture, woods &amp;
ft sht ng country
Th tnk
fw1ce , as thi s doesn't come

MARTIN

Ex·

coveting
sept ic syste ms
dozer ba ckhoe dump truck ,
lt mestone grovel
bl o£ktop
povlng Rt 143 Phone I (614)

698 733 1
GAS AND OIL lurnace repair
sales and serv1ce 24 hours
Phone 8A3 2165

Radiator
Service
f.... lht iat(lllll

l•diatot tol~umlllnlllll~~~:

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

,.....,

lit. HZ·ZI14

Business Sl!niuco
BRADF ORD Aucl lonoer Corn
plele Ser'&lt;~tce Ph one 949 2487
or 949-2000 Roclno Ohio Crill
Bradford

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Sweepers toas ters , rrons oil
small appliances Lown mower
ne~et 10 Stole Highway Gorogo
on Rout e 7 Phone (614) 985·

3825
REMODELING Plumbing hear ing
and oil lypes of general repo1r
Work guaronleed 20 yoors 0.11
perlence Phone q92.2409
SEWING MACHINE Repolrs, u r
'liCe all makes ~92 2284 The
Fobrtc Shop
Pomer oy
Aufhorlz ed Singer Soles ond
Serv1ce We sharpen Sciuon
EXCAVATING dozer, loader cmd
backhoe work, dump trucks
and lo·boys for fllfe, wi ll houl
fill dirt to soil lim estone and
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jol
fer5
day phone 997 7ooq
mg ht phone 992 3525 or

m

5232

t'XCAVA liNG dozer , bock hoe
and dltcher Charles R Hot
FRALEY's Lumber Company of
lteld
Bo ck Hoe Service ,
tuncfton of 346 and 50 W
Ru tland Ohio Phone 742 2008
Alba ny Ofllce .Phone (614)
698 6700 or residence (614) SEPTIC
Sysfoms instolled by
698 5310 or 69a-8a90 Open 7
licensed m ~t loll e r
Shepard
om
Controctorr. Phone 747 2409

'

site for a variety of
bus iness ventures , use it

fhe way It'll please you the

Ibest ,

804 W.

Matn

PUBLIC SALE

Pomeroy
992-2298
After Houn Coil

THEY
GET
EVEN
HIGHER SEE US FOR A
REAL BUY

9:30A.M.

CONTACT
lots Pauley
Branch Miluger

This is the sale of the chattles of Ethel
Wtlliamsbn of 174 Mulberry Ave. in
Pomeroy . Ohio.
"HOUSEHOLD"
3 pc. sect iona l living room suite, round gla ss

SAT., DEC. 4, 1976
1:00 P.M.
As I am moving into a mobile home so will
sell the personal properly. Location, lake
Slate Route 143 appros. lf2 m1le S. E. of
Harrisonvtlle, Ohio to Co . Rd. 18, go 1f4 mile
to Lewis Harper residents . Watch for Sale
Signs.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Refrtgerator &amp; freezer combination,
Cuslom lmperi~l electric stove, Hoover--- ·portable washer, 2 pc . living room suite,
dinette set w-6 chairs, coffee &amp; end tables,
bookcase &amp; twin beds, swivel chair, eleclric
stove, dressers &amp; chest of drawers , Philco
refngeralor, loot stooL library table. oak
chest of drawers with mirror &amp; buffet.
65.000 B. T U. bottle gas stove w-fan , nat.
gas stove, draw bar lot M. F., misc . hand
tools
'
Owners: Mr. &amp; Mrs. Lewis Harper
Terms : Cash
Dan Smtih
Lawrence Donohue
Jim
Carnahan
742-3048

SAT., DEC. 4, 1976

9'12-7133

PUBLIC SALE

949-2033

eAit~lftilllllll

P1 Pleasant

HOMESITES for sole 1 ocre ond
up Mtdd leport neor Ru tland

V1rgrl B. Sr., Real1or •.,
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0

843 2834

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condlllon your
waler UC-XVI
ONLy •279,95

We Oellver •
7 28 d lllO !

11 11 1 mo

Du8incee Scrvicce

TEAFORD '

8 MODEL Alhs Chambers trac
tors goad tlfes ond runs well
Cuh1votors and plow •ncluded
Must hove $800
Phon e

HARD WATER
PROBLEMS?

Ph {614) 747 · 2409

99'1 S8SB

MIDDLEPORT - Near
H&amp;N DAY OLD startd leghorn
pool
5 rooms , 2 baths, gas
pu llets Both lloor or cag e
grown a~J o1lo ble Pou ltry Hous 11 furna ce, baseme nt and
large garden $18,000
mg ond Automol!on Modern
Po ultry 399 W Mom Pomeroy 1
BUY NOW BEFORE
Ph one 992 2164
6% ft deluxe ort 1ftdol Chnstmos
tr ee flame proof $20 Phone

Rutland , Ohio 45775

WILL do roofing cons l rucllon
HOUSE FOR SALE tn Mm envtlle 6
plu mbmg ond heating No tob
rooms and balh 1 ond 2 ten fh s
too la~ge or too small Phono
ocn~s PI-tone 949 2563
742·2348
5 ROOM house w11h both SO CARPE NTER ll oorlng celltng,
ocre5 on hordlop rood Good
pon eltn g Phone 992 2759
location for hous tng develop
DOZER
work ond weld ing Con
men! Good born and out·
loct James Parsons Rt t
bu tldmgs 2 locohon s lor gal&gt;
Roc 1ne, on Carm el Rood
and 011 Well s Own wo ler
syslem no reasonab le offer MOBILE Horne Repotr Elec
refused Phone 992 5795
plumbtng and heol!ng Phono

WE HAVE GREAT NEED
FOR NEW HOMES LET
US SELL YOURS
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER

1349.00

9._

Located in Langsville
Box 28-A

Il eal Jo:,tate fur Sale
Coll 992-7481

nice BR w1th large closets,
2 baths very ntce dm e rn
kitchen
d is hwasher ,
di sposal, ca rp ef1 ng , full
basement, central gas heat
and a1r cond $29 800 00

120~

6iA

Truss Rafter Co.

fln1ncM11 Aw.tlable
Blown mlo W1.1 I AIIIU

126 000 00

17.SOO 00
POMEROY -

Southeastern Ohio

Phone 992-2594
Middleport, o.

11 ·4 I mQ.
4 years old
3 ntce
bedr oom s. bath , modern
kitchen wtth range and
dishwasher,
car peting
garage about 1 acre

~~~\
ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

DAILY RENTALS
ON
NEW '77
PLY MOUTHS

''9-2814

Water Softeners for Sale

Pomeroy Landmark

TOM RUE MOTORS

Phone •n S7U
SyratU$e, OhtO

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING
'6.95

1971 HONDA 750 Good co ndt
!ton phone (304) 882 25\4

$26,500 Phone (614) 667 6304

f'llfSale '

oo

59 acr es 6 room house bolh,
po rtly carpeled
two out·
bu1ldtngs
dug basement
one 1h 1rd ttlloble
mtnerol
nghls locoled neor Donvtlle
Reduced far quf ck sole
$23 500 Phone 742 2766

CHOICE ear corn $2 00 bushel
Phone 742 2359

BEEF CATTL E
992 not

NOTICE

FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR
YOUR HOME In pols and
hanging ~askets frqm 75c
to IS
Also , lay away
POI~SETTIAS now for
CHRISTMAS.
6000 to
choose from
PERFECT
FOR GIFTS In red , wh ite
and piftk , SJ 00 to $6 00 20
pet off on 10 or more

tng roq •n d1n mg 100m and ktl
chen tully corpeled Phone
992 3129, or 992 5.4 34

pm

30c lb

Business Services

3 bedrooms I' , balhs Iorge ltv

PEARCE SIMPSON C 8 base lifo
!ton Ph one '1A7 2684 after S

992 2747

-----

CASH I I 1 for 1unk cars Frye's
Truck ond Auto 24 HOUR SER·
VIC E! Phone 742 20a1

Co ll992 2m

21c

HOUSE FOR rent , furnt shed
Depot St Rutland Utll tttes nol
potd
Phone
742-24B4or
_992 7364~fter 5 p.m

USED
ELECTRIC
dryer
reasonabl e Phone992 6161

4S769

COAL limestone and colc1um
chlonde ond calc1um brtne for
dust control and spectol m1xmg
soil for lormers Mom Street
Pomeroy Ohto or phone 992

NEW 3 bcdropm house 2 baths
oil e l~c I ocre , Mtddlepolt,
ctos c IO Rutland Phon e 991
7461

(614)S96 4769or47&lt; 6028

tokens old
pocket watches ond cha1ns,
stlwer ond gold We need 1964
and older stl ver coms , Buy , sell
or trade Coli Roger Wamsl ey

----

LOCUST POSTS , round or !&gt;pi tt
Phone~-49 '277-4.
•

992 S434

-- -

"'

bJ the oboYe C111&lt;14n.

I t 1 1I I I

1968 , VOLKSWAGON CAN be
seen at 747 Broadway , Mtd
dl eparl or ca11992·321 1

5 ROOMS and both basement
basement one ditld accepted
no pels or drunks John Sheets
3,% mtles south of M1ddleport

-TI MBER ,

Now arranp the drcled leL;:..
lo fonn the ....,.... AIIIWtrr U

I

cylinder outomohc Also , 1969
Ford LTD V 8t~utomotte Both'"
good cond ll1on See at t05
Umon Avenue or call992 3293

HUNTERS I Furntshed cobm m
Dexter oreo Coll742 2169

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

A thought for the day:
President George
Washingtoo said, ''The baaia
of our poUIIcal system Is the
right of people to malre and
alter • the1r fonn
of

6

5 ROOM HOUSE and bo th 1n
Roetne or eo Phone 992 5858

Sealed pr oposal s w tll be
received at the offtce of th e
D•rector of the Oh io Depart
ment of
T ran sporta tio n ,
Columbus. Oh 10, unt 1l 10 00
AM 1 Oh 10 Slandard T 1mes
Tuesday , Dec 14, 1976, tor
Improvements m
Parts l to 29 mctustve ar e
offered as one con tract and
will be co ns1dered on the basis
of the total amount bld
Parts 1 to 19 •nclu s1ve
Athens, Gallla, H ocki ng ,
Me1gs, Monr oe, Noble , VInton
and Washington Counties ,
Oh1o, on br1dgcs on va rrou s
rou tes and sect1ons, by
cteantng and pa tntmg
Ty pe of Str uc tures - See
Plans
"T he date set for co mpl etton
of lhtS work shall be as set
1
for th In the b1ddm g proposa l "
Each bidder sha ll
be
required to file wllh h1:. bid a
cert1 f led check or cashier 1s
check for an amount equal to
five per cent of hts bid, but 10
no event more than f1hy
,thousand dollars , or a bond tor
ten per cent of tus b1d, payabl~
to the Director
Btdders mus t apply, on
pr oper
forms ,
for
qualifications at l eas t ten days
pr ior to the date set for
openrng bids In accordance
wllh cnapter 5525 Ohio
Revised Code
Plans and spec1f1Catfons are
on file in the Depart ment of
Transportation and the off tce
of
the
Dlstr1c t
Depu ty
Director
The Director reserves the
r ight to re(ecl any and all bids

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)

- ~~~~~day

1972 CHEVROLEl NOVA

1

DEPARTMENT OF
TR_ANSPORT AT ION
Columbus , Ohfo
November 19 , 1976
Contract Sales legal
Copy No 76 -984

~!]]~~[£®~==!!:! _,

You'll lee! uncom fortable among
aggressive people today Seek
the company ol frie nds who have
no axes to grmd

m

--------

STATE OF OHIO

w

hyiH!'..IHt"II"'IHI&gt;

1969 FORO LTD, A new fires good
cond1tton Coli
6137

, ONE BEDROOM Apts ol VILLAGE
MANOR m M1ddleport fo r $104
GUARANT EED JOBS
$374 40
monthly plu s elec or $130 tn
sing le $502 80 mamed Army
cludmg elec LOWER RATES lor
Recru1flng , 593 3022 , coli col
SE NIOR CITIZENS Convement
lecl
lo shoppm g on Thtrd and M1ll
HOUSEKEEPER WANTED lo l1 ve m
Sts tn Mtddleport Brand new
room and board, woges open
h1gh quality aporlmenls See
Phone 992 3923
the manager at Apt 2a or col!
992-7721 An Equal Housing
Opportunity

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

Ht•al EsCnte fur Salt·

843 22S&lt;

1975 TRA VEL Trol ler, Colvolcode
25 ft comp lete mcludes 20 ft
Caref ree own
13,500 btu
duotherm otr cond1t1oner self
conlomed tv, antenna sway
control
sleeps 6
Phone
LOST OR STOLEN 2 Female AKC • 992 3629 oher 6 00 p m
Bo:ocer pupt es 9 weeli:s ol d Lost 1976 CAMPER
20 ft
sell
or stolen from the home of Mrs
contotned
$3800
Phone
Ann James Rt 1, Long Bottom
98S 4245
Oh to Reward Please ph one
(614) 992-3742 concermng the
wkereabouts

742 2178

Tbe

98S-3S5•

247,22 11

LEO (July 23-Aug, 22) Mtxtng
busmess and pleasure Is an ell X·
1r th at wilt turn bi tter tn the glass

1968 JEEP WAGONEER 4 wheel
drtve lockout llub 6 cyl St19S,
Also , f·250 FORD 10 wheel
dnwe p1ckup good Harold
Brvwer, Long Bollom or call

1976 FORO FIOO Explorer 1300
mdes V 8 slondo rd sh1 ft sl•de
INTER VIEWS wt ll be held Mndoy,
tn reor wmdow sport wheel
N0\1 22 1976 stortmg at II 00
covers am fm rod lo , stdl under
o m o cloc~ m the office of the
warranty $4200 Also 1969 VW
Me1gs County Comm1sstoners
bug
wtlh
new
eng1ne
Court House Pomeroy, Ohto
automoftc st1ck s~ 1h reor wt n
fo r arch itects who ore an the
dow defr oster $600 Phone
approved hst of Stole Ar992·2280
chitects (Pubhc Works State of
Oh1o) lor the proposed mull!· 1966 FORD LTD osktng S200
purpose fac1l1ty for Metgs
Good fo r work cor Phone
Coun ty Pleose coil for appomt
742-2427 or 742 2405
S=:c-:::-men! 992 289:'
1976 MAROON CAMARO Ll 4800
PIANO INSTRUCTIONS Cht ld ren s
mtl es console au toma tic om
and adults June VanVranken
fm stereo lope player bu tlt tn,
992 2270
stee l be lted rad ial t1res w tth
chrome mags $4700 Contact
992 5516
Sus1e And rew's
onyltme after 3 p m dun ng
wee kdays and onyttme on
wee kends

LOST STRAYED or STOLEN o
small red Chihuahua w1th a
croo kfM:I loti lost Sunday If
ABSOLUTELY ' NO hunting or
found please coll thts number,
trespossmg do y or ntght on the
742·2523 Answers to the nome
cnarles E Yost and the Ivan
of Red
Wtll Forms
FOUND St Bernard puppy m
DEER HUNTERSII Ha ve your
M1ddleporl oreo Must 1dent tfy
troph1es mounted todoy and
10 d a1m and poy for food
tresure them tomorrow BIR·
Phone 992 311 0 or after 4 30
CHFIELO's To)udermy east of
p~9~~6S _
Rutland , one fourth m1l e on Rt
LOST BLACK ond While Dolma
124 Phone 742 2178
t1on 1 year old Mole nam ed
SHOOTING MATCH Just off Rl 7
Ch1co Losl seen at Pomeroy
by pass by Ro ck Sp nngs
Elementary School
Phone
1
Ceme"tery , 12 noon deer slugs
992-3S61
and shots
LOST 1972 Ford hubcap lost on
NO HUNTING or trespassmg on
Success Rood If fou nd, call
1
the Orv d Holter an d John Rose
Howard Lorkt ns 843-2211
forms without wntten permts
SIOn

CHRISTMAS BAZAAR AND Bake

wise man once sa1d, " It Isn't
whether you win or lose, It's how
A good
you play the game
th mg tor you to recall today

over SSOD Oo for you to be ehg1b le for the

Notice
to Hunters!

~-

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20) A
From Sm1th Nelson Motors when you buy
anv New or Used car durtng the month of
December The used car must be pr1ced

THE RACINE F1re Deportmenl wtll 1969 'Novo extra sharp new
hove o gun shoot Saturday at
pomt bucker sects o1r shocks
6 30 p m ot their bu1ldmg In
mog1 Phone 949-1A80
Bas han
69 CHEVELLE MALIBU yellow w1th
NOW occ~~tptmg pto no sludeniS ,
block wtnyl root and block Ill
begmners mtermedtote5 od
lvrtor 307 engu\e 2 door
vanced $,tudents Colt
992·
outomot lc, power steering
2270
tope player and new exhaust
system fair condttl on $ t 000
Phone 9&lt;19-2574

---

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)
Don 't make mountams out of

t'ur Sale

Autu Salus

_

The Otrec tor re!erves the
nght to reje ct any and ll ll btds

CAPTAIN I!:ASY

RATES

For Want Ad service
S cen ts per word one
tnserllon
Minimum Charge s1 oo
14 cents pe r word three
consecut ive lnserttons
26 cents per WOII"d six
consecut Jve Insertions
25 Per Cent Otscourn on
paid aas and ads paid
within 10 days

r-------------- --- ~------------- ~

I

Notitte

S PM .
Dl't'
Before
Publlc•tlon .
Cancell•tlons ,
correc
!tons accepted first day ot
publlcet1on

1976 AMC HORNET...............'3895

.es.

Sunday dinner guests of
, Mr and Mrs. Harold Wells
and' family were Mr and
Mrs. Roscoe Fife, Mr and
Mrs . Glenn Young and
chtldren, Michelle and Ltttle
ttve per cent of his •••· but on
Glenn, and Red Justus. other
no
event mo r e than f 1fly
Sunday vtsitors were Betty tMusand
dollars , or a bond tor
ten per cent of hts btd , payable
Young, Butch Russell , to the Dtrector
81dders must appl y, on the
Columbus, Robert Ramsburg
forms , for QUal•f tca t •on
and Chrtstt Hysell Vistting proper
al least len days prior to the
the Wells famt1y on Tuesday date set for opening bidS tn
accordance w1 fh Chapter 5525
were Elatne and Rtcky Ohto
Revised Code
Ramsburg.
Plans and spec •t•c allO ns are
Mr and Mrs Joseph Whtte on f1le 1n the Department of
Transportatton and the offtce
were calhng on Mr and Mrs of
the
D 1st rlct
Depu t y
Leo Rupe Tuesday evening Dlr ec1or

For Best R ·esults Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

SELECT YOUR NEXT
CAR OR TRUCK

RICHARD 0 JACKSON

Open Even1ngs T1l6 00
Except Thurs. and Sat.
Ctos~d Sunday

,-

Mrs
Tom
Erickson,
Newark, spent several days
here to be near her father ,
Hortie Roush , a patient at
Holzer Medtcal Center at this
wntmg.
A revival ts scheduled to
begm at the Old Kyger Free
Will
Baptist
Church,
November 28. The Evangeltst
wtll be Rev. Chester J
Lemley The public is cordtally mvtted to attend these

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbia , Ohto
November 19, 1t76
Co"tract Sales L.eul
Copy No. 16-911
UNIT PAICE CONTRACT
Sea led propOSitls w ill be
rece tved at the office of rne
Olrector of the Ohto Depart
ment of
Transportatton .
Columbus, Ohio , until 10·00
o. M , Oh to Standard Time.
Tuesday , December 14 ~ 1976,
'or tmpro vements In
Athens , Gallla , Guernsey ,
-tock rng , Meigs , Monroe ,
V.ol"gan , Noble, VInton and
Nash~,ngton Count tes, Ohto, on
1arioussect 1onson ATrt . u s
::routes J J, JJF end SO Slate
~outes 7, 13 56 , 78, 124, \43,
d4 ,
278 , 329
]46, 35 6.
.n , sso , 681. 682 .
690 and 691 .n Athens
:ounty , GAL U S Route 35,
Stale Routes 7, 1&lt;11 , 160, 218 ,
233, 279, 325 , 554, 588 and 7JS tn
Gallia County , GUE
Sta te
Routes 8J , 146, 340 and 821 m
Guernsey County . HOC U s
Route 33, State Routes 56, 78.
93 . 180, 216 278, 327 , 328 , 374,
595 , 664 and 678 tn Hocktng
County MEG U s Route ~JJ
State Route! 7, 124, U3 , 248,
338, 346, 681 , 684, 689 and 692 1n
Metgs county , MOE
State
Ro utes 7, 26, 78 , 145 , 379, 556,
724 &amp;nd BOO m Mpnroe County ,
MRG State Routes 37, 60, 78
83 266 284, 329, 339 316 317
555 and 669 m Morgan Cou nty ,
lnl ersiate Route 17 ,
NOB
State Routes 78, 83 , 145, 146,
147, 215, 260 , 285 , JIJ, 339, 340,
564, 566; 574, 724 , 761 and B21tn
Noble County , V IN
u s
Route 50. State Routes 56, 93 ,
124, 160. 278. 324. 317 , 356, 671.
677 , 683 and 689 m Vtnton
County , WA S . I nterstate
Route 77 , U s Route 50, State
Routes 7 '16, 60, 83 , 124 145,
260, 339 , 530, 550, 555, 618, 676
and 821 tn Washmgton Coun t y ,
by applytng center l1nes and
la n~ l tnes
Pawemen t W1dth - Va r 1es
Work Length - Va r ies
'The date set for comp let1on
ot th ts work shall be as set
for th m the b1ddtng proposa l"
Each b1dder sha l l be
requtred to fil e W1 lh htS btd a
cert1 f 1Cd check or cash•er 's
check for an amount equa l to

949-2708

"Not responsible for accidents or loss of
properly"

lop coffee table, Westinghouse stereo,
swivel rocker, misc. stands, lamps, clocks,
chairs, G E. electric dryer (like new), AMC
Eighteen auto. washer, Phil co ref., 1 LOOO
B.T.U Whirlpool air cond. (like new&gt;. 3 pc.
maple bedroom suite, Hollywood bed.
Queen Ann dresser, 2 pc . maple bedroom
suite, cedar chest. lady's chair, misc.
dishes. qu ilts. bedding, curtains &amp; drapes,
card table, oak stands &amp; tables, portable
sewing machine.
"Antique or Collector's Items"
Duncan File drop-leaf table w-8 chairs,
china closet. lea cart. gate leg table, wing
chair, smoking stand, marble lop stand,
mahogany sectional glass door bookcase,
mahogany library table, maple table w-4
c~airs, glass door china closet. misc. oak
r :lure frames, lin bread bvx, wairtul stand,
· spindle back chairs.
· Misc.
Oak desk w-chair. 4 drawer filing cabinets,
ext. ladder, misc. hand tools.
Lunch
Terms: Cash
Dan Smith
Lawrence Donohue
Jim
Carnahan
949-2033

742-3048

949-2708

"Nol responsible for accidents or loss of
property" v
,1

�••
4-D--The Swtday Tizne:&amp;.SenUnel, Sunday. Nov, 28, 1976

DAN

FORD

THOMPSON
FORD

The closer you look,
the better we look.

LAFF- A- DAY

· lnlroducin8 .
anew dimenston
in Luxury.

That:s the
all-new

1972 FORD PINTO WAGON •••••••••'1495
4 cyL auto tr ans

6 Cyl , auto trans

V a, auto tra ns

1972 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX •••••• '2895

'

discovered he was really a
bore "

for you.

1970 DODGE DART ••••••••••••••••'1295
1970 FORD RANCHERO SQUIRE ••••'1795

" So after yean of not com ..
municalmg, we ftnally started
to communicate and I

Cadillac

1971 CHEVELLE 4 DR.••••••••••••• '995
6 Cyl .. std trans .

L..,---""=="-'==;:=-- -=

NOW IN STOCK

Kyger

1-1977
Sedan Deville

Very Cle.an

1972 CHEVY IMPALA 2 DR •••••••• '1995
One owner

' ~ «':S~

1.0•©

Fully

1973 CHEVY IMPALA 2 DR •••••••••'2695

Equ 1pped

One owner . low mileage

1974 FORD GRAND TORIN0 ••••••• '2695
V8PS , PB

1973 CHEVY VEGA ••••••••••••••• '1295
11

-if

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
Cadillac Oldomobtle
992 5342

Cy\ , auto trans

1973 FORD PICKUP F-100 •••••••• 12595
V 8, sld trans

1974 FORD PICKUP

f·100 ......... 12995

v a std tr ans

\iMC Financ1ng Ava1labl!

Pomeroy

" You'll Ltke Our Qua llty Wav of Ooln~ Bu siness"

Open Eves. Til h Til 5 p.m. Sat.
See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burris
Lloyd, Me Laughlin
Mar.llin

1972 FORD PICKUP F-1()() .........'2195
Heallh insurance

V 8, sld tran s

Call ·

MANY MORE
Save Now on a 1976 Pinto, Mustang, or Maverick.
See: Pal Hill, Rocky Hupp
or Darrel Dodrill
For a good deal on a new or used vehicle

C K Snowden
14 State srreet
Galhpolls, Oh io
Phone 446 -42'90

servlCes.

5-0-The Sunday Times-SenUnei,Sunday, Nov. 28,1976

from

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DlAOLINES

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

UGULATIONS

Sportabout, 6 cyl , automatic. power steering, deluxe

,. he Publisher reserves
the rig ht to edit or relect
any ads deem ed ob
Jectlonet The publisher
will not •be respons ible tor
more than one mcorrect
Insertion

equipment, whitewall tires, luggage rack, dark green
finish , less than 9,000 miles, showroom clean.

1975 CHEVEUE ..................... S4295
Estate Wagon , locall owner csr, white radial tires, air
conditioning, V 8, automatic, power steer)ng and

!

brakes, radiO, dark red fintsh , blk . vinyl Interior

1975 CHM EL CAMINo ....... }3995·
Class 1c, 3SO. V 8, automat1c, power steering and
brakes, rallw wheels, radio , black and very attractive.

1975 WV PICKUP.................. 3295
1

CARD OF THANKS

W1th topper, low mileage, radio, w-w tires, clean

&amp; OBITUARY
S2 OQ for
50 word
'-minimum.
Ea"'ffl adi:flTTonar- word 3
cents

1975 CHEVROLET BWER
4 wheel drive. large tires, alum wheel, 350 V 8,

BLIND AOS

automat1c, power steering &amp; brakes, deluxe trans .,
rad1o

Additional 25c Charge
per Advertisement

1975 CHEVROLET ClO PICKUP '4295

to 5 00 p m ,
Daily, 8 30 a m to 12 oo
Noon Saturday
Phon e toda't' 992 2156

OFFICE HOURS

8 30 a m

8' Fleetslde, 350 V 8, aulomatlc, power sleerlng &amp;
brakes, Silverado trim, large hub caps &amp; loaded with
chrome trim Sliding rear glass, 36" alum . Insulated
bed cover Truly a prem1um unit &amp; the low mileage
shows 1t

NOTICES
ATTN ·!f

ALL HOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sales, Rummage,
Porch and Basement Porch
and Basement Sales, etc
must be paid m advance
Ge t -..ours In earl,v by
stopping by our off1 ce
The Dally Sentmel.
11
Co urt St or wntlng Box
729, Pomero-.. Ohto 45769
w•th your r em• ttan ce

t''

DATSUN ....................... '2195
2 door, local car, 4 s. peed trans, 44,200 mJles, good
II'""'' dark green finish , real economy
l

1973 CAPRICE 4 Oft HT

'

,

I' 2995
5

.......

IN LOVING MEMORY of Charles
A Woode who passed away 2
years ago Nowember 28 1974
Lovmg memones ne~Jer die
As years roll on and days pass by
In our hearts, a memory 1s kept
Of one we lowed and w1U never
forget
Sadly mtssed by hts wtle Audrey
daughter Els1e
son m low
Wtllard and grandsons Roy and
Roger and the1 r fa m1l1 es

~:(~!~~~-~10 ,0 wner
car, blk vmyl root, green4:terlor,
tires, a ir, automatic, power st ring &amp;
1

Chevrolet V-8, 4 door.
Chevrolet V-8, Bel Air, 4door.
111:1q:7n Ply. 2 door, 6 cylinder,
VW 2 door, radio, good tires.
""""Mustang Cpe.

NOiHa::::_=----::. -

Rev 8 17 73

ONCE THE KGB E)( TilA C T,
I H~ MIND R!: ADIN(; DRUG FROM
I ~E'% PLA.&lt;Jrs NO O~i I~ I&lt;:USSIA

WILL. 6E

===-=---

New 1976 Chevy Van ConveiSions
New 1976 Chevy Mini Homes

DIRECTOR

SPECIALS AT D &amp; J FABRICS
Foke fur tn pteces regular
$2 50 lb now Sl 50 lb Lorge
blanket p1eces $1 50 lb. 1 to ble
of poly double kn11 and poly
blend s, Va lues to $2 49 now
$1 DO y'brd Red Hearl Wm tuck
yarn, 4 oz sketn 9B 1 eoch I
m1le sou th of Middleport on
SR 7

.

Nov 28 Dec 5

READY TO TRAVEL

'

DAN THOMPSON ·fORD
Middleport

Hurry In For A Good DEAL

...

AstroGrapn
.,. _,,~-

Bernrce Bede Osol

For Sund1y, Now. 28, 1976

ARIES (Morch 2t -Aprll t9)
You'll be dllllcul t to reach today
because you re not apt to tell
others what s on yo ur mrnd
Open up l e t your hatr down

FREE
TURKEY

•

'

molehillS today You're a b1t too
senSitiVe and you' re prone to
treat m inor mlrac t10n s too
ser iously

Sole sponsored b't' Me1gs Co
Humane Soe~e t y , across irom
Pomer oy
Post
Offtce
December 3 and 4th

POMEROY MOTOR CO

CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22)

ALTHOUGH 81rchfu;, ld s Tox1der
my has burned , work STILL WILL
BE DONE 1n temp orar-..
quarters Have your lropht es
mounted Ieday and troosure
them tomorrow BIRCHFIELD s
TAXIDERMY eost of Rutland
mde on Rt
124
Ptlone

"Your Chevy Dealer"

Others are like ly to lmd fa ult w1tt't
your v•ews today because of the
way you plead your case Don 't
be apologe tic 1f trying to sell bold
daring •deas

free turkey . Don't forget to check wtfh us
before you buy any car, new or used We
have the sharpes1 pencil m town .

Pos1t1vely No Hunt~ng any
kmd on the

Amberger Farm
In Nease Settlement
Area , M1n ersv tlle , 0
Wallac e Amberg er

992-2126

FISHERMAN
&amp;HUNTERS

A towboat crew member ts
m1s stng from the M V
OKAW stnce Nov 14 , 1976
1n the area of mtle 232 of the
Oh1o R1ver A reward ot
$250
for
Information
leadrng 1o the location of
th1s man. If you have any
mformat1on please call614

Pomeroy
Open

Put aSide tho pursw1 ol prottt

_jMITH NELSON MOT9RS

Just have some fun _ _ _-cc_

500 E. Mam St.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)
You're not very cooperative today particularly w1th those you

Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2174

care the most lor Oddly enough

You'll

feel thetr requests lnfnnge
upon you r time

By
United
Preu
JDtemaUonal
Today is Sunday, Nov. 28,
the 33:k'd day of 1976with 33 w
follow.
The moon is in its first

qu,arter.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23)
Concentrate on what you do today especially If working with
sharp tools You must be extrasatety-consc1ous

WIN AT BRIDGE
27

NORTH
• 9 B7

.. J 74
t A 86 3
o!oA K4

WEST

EAST ID)

• AQ

• 10 6 4

1P 9 6 2

IPAKQ 53

• 92
.10 86532

t 75
.J9 7

SOUTH
• KJ532
.. 10 8
t KQJl04
o!oQ
Both vulnerable
West

Pass
3•
PasJ

North East
I"

24
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

South
lA

Pass
3•

Opemng lead - Ace •

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The late Waiter F Wyman
of Boston was a regular contributor to the early Bndge
World magazmes Not only
was he a ftne player and
wnter, but a dehghtful person
and a great gentleman
The bidding may be explatn·
ed in part by the fact that
North and South had a 40-pomt
part score, so that two spades
made game.
/);orth really sho'l)d have bid

thfee spades Over the last-

dttch th.ree clubs btd by Mr ~LI.SNER
Wyman who sat West, but thts
was 1930 and people were
arratd of overcalls Anyway ,
North did pass and South trted

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
The long shot may be more
appeallng to you to day tha n the
sure thrng Reai1Sl1cally th1s w1ll

ALL AJ..I =;AID Wl6 AI-I'D LIKE'
HER 10 OX!K /l#i c:ROC/&lt;ACiU..O
CHON~

F0'1H' RESf 0'

MAH NO.KHERAL. LIFEf'-

only got you a bunch of losing
tickets
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
2t) You have a low boiling potnt
today Laugh off the 1tlvlal like
you usually do
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. ti)
Instead of looki ng lor
meantngs take peoples'
more at lace value
reading more Into them
really there

hidden
actions
You're
than IS

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fib. li)
Leave your credit cards at home
today If you 11 be out with high
rollers , or you 'll wind up In the
def1cl t column

Almanac

The morning stars are

Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Sagittarius.
British poet William Blake

born N 28 177'
was
OV. '
11.
On this day in history :
In
1520,
Ferdinand

Magellan entered the Pacific
Ocean on his way around the
world. He was the first
European to saU the Pacific

from the east.
In 1958, the United StateS
fired an lntercontlnenial
ballistic miuUe at fuU range
for the first time.
In 1963, Cape Canaveral,
the space center ·In Florida .
was renamed Cape Kennedy'
honor the as..-at~
president. It now !a chang~
back to Cape Canaveral.
In 1971, Jordan Premier
Wafsl Tel was assasslnared In
Cairo by three 81111J1le11.

Nov. 21, 1171

govenunent."

""111&lt;1111 1 1

Un&amp;crambleth.,. rour Jumbl..,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinar1 words.

Some basic cha nges In your life
style are In the offing tor you thrs
year Some of them may be unsol•c•ted on your part, but they
will be beneficial
(Are you a Ssg1ttBrtu.s? Berntce
Osol nas wrtflen a spec1al As froGraph Letter lor you For your

copy send 50 cents and a seffsddresssd, stamped envelope to
Astro-Grsph, P 0 Box 489,
Rsd1o O ty Statton, New York,

NY 10019 Ba sure ro ask for
Sagittarius Volume 1 }

t
I I ]

GATEA

IBILGEOj
tl I I
IVALBER ~ ] [ )
I I
:=¢::::==~~~:;::_::, ••R&lt;IIed

RICHARD D JACK SO N
DIRE CTOR
Re"J 81773

111J"

11~1 6,

Mil .. - - . . .

J....,..., IIIRCY

Ye•lenlay'•

•

I

LO

(Aoow'"

NIECE HIATUS PROm

AMw.., Fellt•••l&amp;f lu eoolr-41ECIPES'

llontfo,t

40

•

..

•:
•

••

1971 NOVA 32? stondord sh1f1
candy apple red good fires
runs good Thrush std e p1pes
$600 Phone 949 24 43
1975 MUSTANG II , p s , p b
deluxe 1ntenor excellen t con
d1flon Phone 992 2426

e.miplng_~m&lt;;nl

3 A ND 4 RM lur n1shed ond un
lunlll;hed op ts Phone 992
5434
COUNTR Y Mobtle Home Pork Rt
33 ten miles north of Pomeroy
Lorge lots w1lh concrete pol1os
s1dewo lks runners and off
street pork1ng Phone992 7479
FURNISHED two bedroom op t
adult s only No pots M1 d
,dleport Phone 992 3674,
2 be droom unfurntshed opt tn
Mtddl eport Ph one 992 3129 or

Pomeroy Forest Pro
ducts Top pnce fo r stand ing
sawltmber Call Kent Honby

I 446 8S70
-COIN S CUR RENCY

742-2331
USEDPoP cooler upnght prefer
red Coli after 7 p m I (3CM)
773 5157 or onyt1me 992 7330

AVAILABLE at Rwer slde Apart
menls 1 bedroom $100 per
montk 2 bedrooms $133 An
Equal Houstng Opporluntly
Phone
3273

m

1974 GMC PICKUP p'

pb,

auto new hres low mtleoge
Pkone ~92 3288

MALE DOBERMAN or Bower pups
Phone 992-3750 after 5 p m

10~~ch alumm; ;or steel spoked

nms to ftl three-fourth ton
ford . Phone 992 72~ -WANTEO OLD upnght p1anos tn
any Cond1hoH W1-l pay $10
eQ(h Ftrsl lloor only Wrtte gtvlng directions to W1t1en P1ono
Co
Box 188 Sard1s Ohto

43946
WA-NTED - u sED ftfth wheel
camper Wnle gt vmg de to lls Ia
P 0 Bo.~e 666 , Pomeroy oH1o

'
~-------

Wtll do odd 1obs roofing , pam
tm g gutter work Phone 992·
7409
WILL DO HOUSE cle anm g Call
after6p m 742 2152
SEWING AND A lterat1on s
rea sonqble 572 South Th1rd
Ave M1ddleport 992-6306
WANT WORK m gos statton or
garage, domg rmnor work an
cars tun e up ond body work
Coli Randy P Smder , 992-5972
WILL DO ,babysitting doyttm e In
my home tn Rocme oreo Phone

949 2322

Business'Oppoffimiti@e

GOOD USED portable eleclnc
_ ty~nter P.h~n_e ~

GROCERY STORE. rec reation
room , gas serv1ce, l1 vtng
quarters wtrh or without sup
pltes and oaeoge Mus I sell
Soon leo ~J mg state See ot 1n
l erseclton of 248 &amp; 124 Ph one
IF YOU howe o serwtce to offer ,
98S 3306
wont to bUy or se ll somethmg,
oe looktng for work
or
whate~Jer
you'll get results
Mubile Humes
Side
foster w1th o Sentmel Wa nt Ad

??80_

for

MOBILE home for sole or rent. 3
bedrooms ol ullllttes po •d
Phone 992 7751
10.1150 RICHARDSON , 2 bedroom

PLEASURE HORSI:S and pon1es
also w1ll buy horse s and
pomes Phone (614) 698·3290
""" "'"
Ruth Reeves

"Good Neighbor"

'

A

3891
1971 HONDA CL ·450

12 000

m1les, sissy bor crash bo1 s
pull back llandle bars new ti re
and se als Scrambler stde
p1pes $650 Call 949 2480
F"OT ATOES ond pumpkm s C W
Protfill Portland Oht o Phone
COAL lor sole Open b doys per
week and evemngs For fu rth er
mformol ton call !614) 3b7 7338

APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
WIL KESVILLE, (614)669 3785
FULLER Brush Produ cts for sole
Phone 992 3410
CAMPER , $600
Also
hor se
trotlor $450 Phone (614 ) 698
3290

SMALL lartn lor sole, 10•. down
owner finont:ed Monroe Coun,
ly W Vo Phone (304 ) 772·
:J l02or (304 )77 2 3227
COUNTRY farmland w ith seclud.
ed woods, woler ontt good oc
c.es s 111 Monroe County W Vo
$1 ,000 down cal l (304) 772.

' 3102 " (30•)772-32&lt;7
ComrnetC IOI property appro• 17
acres le'.lel lo nd located at
1 uppe rs Plom s on Ohio Roule
7 Phone (614) 667 6304

TO GIVE AWAY Mole dog part
' "' " '""'~
Collte and Beagle obout 2
years old Good watch 'f9
Phone949 2816

fully carpeted
Phone 992 7562

unfurn tshed

CLARINET, good condil lon, $65
307 Locu51 Sl
M1dd leport
OhiO

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

bull w1th or wtthoul papers
Phone 949 2115
REGENCY Mobtle C B wtth fl oor
mounl and Pacer antenna m
eluded Used opprox1motely 5
hours m EXCELLENT cond tlton
Ongmol pn ce $155 wi ll sell for
$100 Mus I sell Ph one 992 3742
any tune
Coli

USED WASHER an d dr,er
Pomeroy Home an d Auto
Phone 992 2094
2 GUERNSEY COW! $375 ea ch
One regu lar Guernsey cow
$400
one bred Guermey
hetfer 5275 Phone 949 2179

JOCK&gt; WAXED CABBAGE boxes
sos box each. New Ho lland 1
row pion! setter $250 One
John Deere 3 pmnt h1tch
spray er $100 Phone 843 24S I
MENS USED clothing lor sole
Open 4 1tl l 9 everydO)I Profflt1 s
Recreatton Cer'l ter Por tl and
OhiO
SEAR S 19cu ft deeplreez.e 17
h r~fngera l o r Phone (304)
773 S370o r(61&lt;)992 2661

FOR SALE
One good used chain

saw.

11 so.oo
good used Gtbson Stdeby Stde Refrigerator
On~

RACINE
CARPET SHOP
Racine, Ohio

Square Yard Installed
David Par50ns, Owner

7 month old Purebred Chorolols

BRICK&amp; FRAME - about

FREE ESTIMATES
Blown
Insulation Services
STORM

112 ACRE w rth late model
mob1le home, 12x60 has
alum sto r age bulldtng,
large
l 1v mg
r oom,
exce l lent co ndil1on

WINDOWS l DOORS

REPL.IIl¥EN1
WINDOWS
llUMINUII

SIOING SOFfiTT

Walk to

GUTTEI~IWNINGS

shop 3 bedrooms , bath,
panelmg, lots of storage
space
A buy at 1ust

I.JIRRt~J.~~DER
· Ph. !92 ml 11~1 mo

18,500 00
MIDDLE PORT - 2112 story
frame , corner lot , garage , s
bedrooms, bath, carpeting ,
porches Natural gas heat

18.500 00
LOVELY 6 yr old home. 3

Jack

w. Carsey, Mgr

Phone 992 -2181

CHRISTMAS TRE ES! On 0ld Rf 33
between Co Roo ds }8 and 19
Tag now and cut lresh when
destred Prtced $2 00 to S8 00
Opho ond Borboro Offutt
Phone 992 3296
STEREO AM FM rad1 0 a !rock
tope combtnalton
Balance
Sl 0640orlerms Coll 9923965
ONE BROWN pl a1d rockmg cho1r
1n good cond11ton One 40 mch
gold range hood w1th l1ght and
fan Ph one 949 2692
REGULATION SIZE pool toblo like
new Pharte 992·6030
BOAR HOG for serv tce or se ll
Phone742 2014
BEET CATTLE 30 cenls lb Also
hoy rakes, e.~ecellent cond1t1on
Phone992·7201 ,

USED FORESTRY

EQUIPM EN T

Ttmbeqock 360 Sk1dder John
Deere 540A Sktdder, 42 tnch
Tower BuiiEdger Fronk ltn 130 8
Sk tdd er , Oovtd Brown Troclor·
Loader Contac t Don Graves or
Lyons Equtpment, Co , Inc
C1rclevtlle Ohto 431 13Phone 1

992-2259

TRUMPET IN case, lod1es 511e a
Chtcogo ro ller skates J97J
Chevelle Mal ibu, good cond1
han
low mtl eoge
$1000
Phone 992 2260

let us
Free.

test

your water

:r:.:Pomeroy Landmark

Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Phorie 992-2181

Rm~N~s.,
NEAR~Y n~~ -~1:-elec

home full
basemen t for sol e by owner
Rutla nd oreo , Phone 742 2531

TUPPERS PLAINS OHIO Three
bedroom house fom1ly room
ftreploce 2 boths cl1shwosher
range
garbage d1sposol
carpet sun deck Iorge lol
6 ' '1 acn~s 7 rooms and bath fur
mture, appliances I mtle from
Longsvtll e Oh1o on C R 10
Pnced $19,500 Pifne 742

2681

POL.Y.fOAM
UPHOLSTERY

sotf.~!~ 1 £shlons,

For
mollresses. padding. ldeol
for

campers. Verlety of

sizes.
Velvets ,

nylon prints,
horculons. vinyl solido. ond

faney prints, accessories.

..

DIR£~8 ~!~~~ ~LES

Phone 992-3321
- - 'HUNTING LAND -

~

115

up often. $30,000

• ••llftl AIUiftiMTm $Nil ..

.. Wllh

~:..

.. "' ...,"'·

·~"'""•'" ,~
10 3 1 mu

MONTGOMERY

PROFESSIONAL

TRAILER SALES

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

PHOTOGRAPHY

leo,.

Route
121
Longo,vtlle,·Oh•o 4f'74
669 42.t5 evtM\QI
fAIRMONT
S!lttlf'loduth, tnt: ~
f~trm:ool Mtnp ~Silll.
•
•
10 27 · 1

RUTLAND -

4 bedroom
home on 124 near school &amp;
c hurch All utilities and
garden
5 ACRES - 4 room house
that sds in the country
whtch need s a heap of
dotng
Dug we l l tho ,
el ectric and gravel road

by.

v, acre $40,000.

Th is grocery store, house
and apartment Is located

on slafe highway , 3 miles
frOm mine area 7 room
frame house
condition , live
apartment
Income large

Is In good
In It, use the
for
extra
garden spot,

garage and utility building,
feed building and post

2428

off ice now located Inside

LIKE NEW - 2 bedrooms,
hobby and ut lll ly room
Ni ce bath, nat. gas FA

store Equipped with pop

furnace Carport and large
garden space $37,500

machine, adding machine,
meat cooler. freezer, cash
register and stock in store
at time of Inventory

MIDDLEPORT

$40.000
No 167 - This hardware

3

apartments with baths
Near shopp ing, school and

churches '120,000
33 NORTH - 6 room house
with - T P water , garage
and one acre. 55500

bus iness Is on a JOxiOO lot

on the main street of town ,
good 1260 sq. 11. building

There' s
a Iso
living
quarters for the owner, 4

rooms and a bath Good

GRAVELY SERV ICE - Sove 25 Pet
on labor by ho'.ling your Grove· •
ly Tractor repaired or servi ced
now Gravely Troclor Soles ,
Pomeroy, Ohio Phone (61 4)

992-297S
Will TRIM or cu llrees and shrub
bery Ph one 742 3167 or 949·

2S45
FROSTY S C 8 RADIO Equip
ewerythtn g In two·woy rodto
antennas and acces Phone
843 2855 Por tland

HOWERY

AND

KEN GROVER
PHOIIXiKAI'HT
(6141 9U-41SS
Chester, Ohio
10·17·1 moiPd)

EXPERIENCED

1 V CLINI C New
TV shop Eleclron 1c T V Cl1nlc
Ser'JICe cel l $5 95 Color a &amp; w
onl enno systems stereos etc
572 South Third Middleport
Ph one 992 6306 Corry in and
save money

$43,000
No, 18l -

•

........ ,.,•• 14

SEPTIC 1 ANKS cleo ned Moderf1
Sont tatton qrn 3954 or 9'n

No 188 :._ 92 8Cres, 7 room
house. bath, own water
system , lots of road
frontage , good buy at

o.t.. n

o......"''

Ph .m -3461
9·30.S:OO Dally
Tlll8:000 Frldayo

ELECTRONIC

acres of pasture, woods &amp;
ft sht ng country
Th tnk
fw1ce , as thi s doesn't come

MARTIN

Ex·

coveting
sept ic syste ms
dozer ba ckhoe dump truck ,
lt mestone grovel
bl o£ktop
povlng Rt 143 Phone I (614)

698 733 1
GAS AND OIL lurnace repair
sales and serv1ce 24 hours
Phone 8A3 2165

Radiator
Service
f.... lht iat(lllll

l•diatot tol~umlllnlllll~~~:

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

,.....,

lit. HZ·ZI14

Business Sl!niuco
BRADF ORD Aucl lonoer Corn
plele Ser'&lt;~tce Ph one 949 2487
or 949-2000 Roclno Ohio Crill
Bradford

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Sweepers toas ters , rrons oil
small appliances Lown mower
ne~et 10 Stole Highway Gorogo
on Rout e 7 Phone (614) 985·

3825
REMODELING Plumbing hear ing
and oil lypes of general repo1r
Work guaronleed 20 yoors 0.11
perlence Phone q92.2409
SEWING MACHINE Repolrs, u r
'liCe all makes ~92 2284 The
Fobrtc Shop
Pomer oy
Aufhorlz ed Singer Soles ond
Serv1ce We sharpen Sciuon
EXCAVATING dozer, loader cmd
backhoe work, dump trucks
and lo·boys for fllfe, wi ll houl
fill dirt to soil lim estone and
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jol
fer5
day phone 997 7ooq
mg ht phone 992 3525 or

m

5232

t'XCAVA liNG dozer , bock hoe
and dltcher Charles R Hot
FRALEY's Lumber Company of
lteld
Bo ck Hoe Service ,
tuncfton of 346 and 50 W
Ru tland Ohio Phone 742 2008
Alba ny Ofllce .Phone (614)
698 6700 or residence (614) SEPTIC
Sysfoms instolled by
698 5310 or 69a-8a90 Open 7
licensed m ~t loll e r
Shepard
om
Controctorr. Phone 747 2409

'

site for a variety of
bus iness ventures , use it

fhe way It'll please you the

Ibest ,

804 W.

Matn

PUBLIC SALE

Pomeroy
992-2298
After Houn Coil

THEY
GET
EVEN
HIGHER SEE US FOR A
REAL BUY

9:30A.M.

CONTACT
lots Pauley
Branch Miluger

This is the sale of the chattles of Ethel
Wtlliamsbn of 174 Mulberry Ave. in
Pomeroy . Ohio.
"HOUSEHOLD"
3 pc. sect iona l living room suite, round gla ss

SAT., DEC. 4, 1976
1:00 P.M.
As I am moving into a mobile home so will
sell the personal properly. Location, lake
Slate Route 143 appros. lf2 m1le S. E. of
Harrisonvtlle, Ohio to Co . Rd. 18, go 1f4 mile
to Lewis Harper residents . Watch for Sale
Signs.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Refrtgerator &amp; freezer combination,
Cuslom lmperi~l electric stove, Hoover--- ·portable washer, 2 pc . living room suite,
dinette set w-6 chairs, coffee &amp; end tables,
bookcase &amp; twin beds, swivel chair, eleclric
stove, dressers &amp; chest of drawers , Philco
refngeralor, loot stooL library table. oak
chest of drawers with mirror &amp; buffet.
65.000 B. T U. bottle gas stove w-fan , nat.
gas stove, draw bar lot M. F., misc . hand
tools
'
Owners: Mr. &amp; Mrs. Lewis Harper
Terms : Cash
Dan Smtih
Lawrence Donohue
Jim
Carnahan
742-3048

SAT., DEC. 4, 1976

9'12-7133

PUBLIC SALE

949-2033

eAit~lftilllllll

P1 Pleasant

HOMESITES for sole 1 ocre ond
up Mtdd leport neor Ru tland

V1rgrl B. Sr., Real1or •.,
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0

843 2834

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condlllon your
waler UC-XVI
ONLy •279,95

We Oellver •
7 28 d lllO !

11 11 1 mo

Du8incee Scrvicce

TEAFORD '

8 MODEL Alhs Chambers trac
tors goad tlfes ond runs well
Cuh1votors and plow •ncluded
Must hove $800
Phon e

HARD WATER
PROBLEMS?

Ph {614) 747 · 2409

99'1 S8SB

MIDDLEPORT - Near
H&amp;N DAY OLD startd leghorn
pool
5 rooms , 2 baths, gas
pu llets Both lloor or cag e
grown a~J o1lo ble Pou ltry Hous 11 furna ce, baseme nt and
large garden $18,000
mg ond Automol!on Modern
Po ultry 399 W Mom Pomeroy 1
BUY NOW BEFORE
Ph one 992 2164
6% ft deluxe ort 1ftdol Chnstmos
tr ee flame proof $20 Phone

Rutland , Ohio 45775

WILL do roofing cons l rucllon
HOUSE FOR SALE tn Mm envtlle 6
plu mbmg ond heating No tob
rooms and balh 1 ond 2 ten fh s
too la~ge or too small Phono
ocn~s PI-tone 949 2563
742·2348
5 ROOM house w11h both SO CARPE NTER ll oorlng celltng,
ocre5 on hordlop rood Good
pon eltn g Phone 992 2759
location for hous tng develop
DOZER
work ond weld ing Con
men! Good born and out·
loct James Parsons Rt t
bu tldmgs 2 locohon s lor gal&gt;
Roc 1ne, on Carm el Rood
and 011 Well s Own wo ler
syslem no reasonab le offer MOBILE Horne Repotr Elec
refused Phone 992 5795
plumbtng and heol!ng Phono

WE HAVE GREAT NEED
FOR NEW HOMES LET
US SELL YOURS
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER

1349.00

9._

Located in Langsville
Box 28-A

Il eal Jo:,tate fur Sale
Coll 992-7481

nice BR w1th large closets,
2 baths very ntce dm e rn
kitchen
d is hwasher ,
di sposal, ca rp ef1 ng , full
basement, central gas heat
and a1r cond $29 800 00

120~

6iA

Truss Rafter Co.

fln1ncM11 Aw.tlable
Blown mlo W1.1 I AIIIU

126 000 00

17.SOO 00
POMEROY -

Southeastern Ohio

Phone 992-2594
Middleport, o.

11 ·4 I mQ.
4 years old
3 ntce
bedr oom s. bath , modern
kitchen wtth range and
dishwasher,
car peting
garage about 1 acre

~~~\
ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

DAILY RENTALS
ON
NEW '77
PLY MOUTHS

''9-2814

Water Softeners for Sale

Pomeroy Landmark

TOM RUE MOTORS

Phone •n S7U
SyratU$e, OhtO

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING
'6.95

1971 HONDA 750 Good co ndt
!ton phone (304) 882 25\4

$26,500 Phone (614) 667 6304

f'llfSale '

oo

59 acr es 6 room house bolh,
po rtly carpeled
two out·
bu1ldtngs
dug basement
one 1h 1rd ttlloble
mtnerol
nghls locoled neor Donvtlle
Reduced far quf ck sole
$23 500 Phone 742 2766

CHOICE ear corn $2 00 bushel
Phone 742 2359

BEEF CATTL E
992 not

NOTICE

FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR
YOUR HOME In pols and
hanging ~askets frqm 75c
to IS
Also , lay away
POI~SETTIAS now for
CHRISTMAS.
6000 to
choose from
PERFECT
FOR GIFTS In red , wh ite
and piftk , SJ 00 to $6 00 20
pet off on 10 or more

tng roq •n d1n mg 100m and ktl
chen tully corpeled Phone
992 3129, or 992 5.4 34

pm

30c lb

Business Services

3 bedrooms I' , balhs Iorge ltv

PEARCE SIMPSON C 8 base lifo
!ton Ph one '1A7 2684 after S

992 2747

-----

CASH I I 1 for 1unk cars Frye's
Truck ond Auto 24 HOUR SER·
VIC E! Phone 742 20a1

Co ll992 2m

21c

HOUSE FOR rent , furnt shed
Depot St Rutland Utll tttes nol
potd
Phone
742-24B4or
_992 7364~fter 5 p.m

USED
ELECTRIC
dryer
reasonabl e Phone992 6161

4S769

COAL limestone and colc1um
chlonde ond calc1um brtne for
dust control and spectol m1xmg
soil for lormers Mom Street
Pomeroy Ohto or phone 992

NEW 3 bcdropm house 2 baths
oil e l~c I ocre , Mtddlepolt,
ctos c IO Rutland Phon e 991
7461

(614)S96 4769or47&lt; 6028

tokens old
pocket watches ond cha1ns,
stlwer ond gold We need 1964
and older stl ver coms , Buy , sell
or trade Coli Roger Wamsl ey

----

LOCUST POSTS , round or !&gt;pi tt
Phone~-49 '277-4.
•

992 S434

-- -

"'

bJ the oboYe C111&lt;14n.

I t 1 1I I I

1968 , VOLKSWAGON CAN be
seen at 747 Broadway , Mtd
dl eparl or ca11992·321 1

5 ROOMS and both basement
basement one ditld accepted
no pels or drunks John Sheets
3,% mtles south of M1ddleport

-TI MBER ,

Now arranp the drcled leL;:..
lo fonn the ....,.... AIIIWtrr U

I

cylinder outomohc Also , 1969
Ford LTD V 8t~utomotte Both'"
good cond ll1on See at t05
Umon Avenue or call992 3293

HUNTERS I Furntshed cobm m
Dexter oreo Coll742 2169

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

A thought for the day:
President George
Washingtoo said, ''The baaia
of our poUIIcal system Is the
right of people to malre and
alter • the1r fonn
of

6

5 ROOM HOUSE and bo th 1n
Roetne or eo Phone 992 5858

Sealed pr oposal s w tll be
received at the offtce of th e
D•rector of the Oh io Depart
ment of
T ran sporta tio n ,
Columbus. Oh 10, unt 1l 10 00
AM 1 Oh 10 Slandard T 1mes
Tuesday , Dec 14, 1976, tor
Improvements m
Parts l to 29 mctustve ar e
offered as one con tract and
will be co ns1dered on the basis
of the total amount bld
Parts 1 to 19 •nclu s1ve
Athens, Gallla, H ocki ng ,
Me1gs, Monr oe, Noble , VInton
and Washington Counties ,
Oh1o, on br1dgcs on va rrou s
rou tes and sect1ons, by
cteantng and pa tntmg
Ty pe of Str uc tures - See
Plans
"T he date set for co mpl etton
of lhtS work shall be as set
1
for th In the b1ddm g proposa l "
Each bidder sha ll
be
required to file wllh h1:. bid a
cert1 f led check or cashier 1s
check for an amount equal to
five per cent of hts bid, but 10
no event more than f1hy
,thousand dollars , or a bond tor
ten per cent of tus b1d, payabl~
to the Director
Btdders mus t apply, on
pr oper
forms ,
for
qualifications at l eas t ten days
pr ior to the date set for
openrng bids In accordance
wllh cnapter 5525 Ohio
Revised Code
Plans and spec1f1Catfons are
on file in the Depart ment of
Transportation and the off tce
of
the
Dlstr1c t
Depu ty
Director
The Director reserves the
r ight to re(ecl any and all bids

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)

- ~~~~~day

1972 CHEVROLEl NOVA

1

DEPARTMENT OF
TR_ANSPORT AT ION
Columbus , Ohfo
November 19 , 1976
Contract Sales legal
Copy No 76 -984

~!]]~~[£®~==!!:! _,

You'll lee! uncom fortable among
aggressive people today Seek
the company ol frie nds who have
no axes to grmd

m

--------

STATE OF OHIO

w

hyiH!'..IHt"II"'IHI&gt;

1969 FORO LTD, A new fires good
cond1tton Coli
6137

, ONE BEDROOM Apts ol VILLAGE
MANOR m M1ddleport fo r $104
GUARANT EED JOBS
$374 40
monthly plu s elec or $130 tn
sing le $502 80 mamed Army
cludmg elec LOWER RATES lor
Recru1flng , 593 3022 , coli col
SE NIOR CITIZENS Convement
lecl
lo shoppm g on Thtrd and M1ll
HOUSEKEEPER WANTED lo l1 ve m
Sts tn Mtddleport Brand new
room and board, woges open
h1gh quality aporlmenls See
Phone 992 3923
the manager at Apt 2a or col!
992-7721 An Equal Housing
Opportunity

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

Ht•al EsCnte fur Salt·

843 22S&lt;

1975 TRA VEL Trol ler, Colvolcode
25 ft comp lete mcludes 20 ft
Caref ree own
13,500 btu
duotherm otr cond1t1oner self
conlomed tv, antenna sway
control
sleeps 6
Phone
LOST OR STOLEN 2 Female AKC • 992 3629 oher 6 00 p m
Bo:ocer pupt es 9 weeli:s ol d Lost 1976 CAMPER
20 ft
sell
or stolen from the home of Mrs
contotned
$3800
Phone
Ann James Rt 1, Long Bottom
98S 4245
Oh to Reward Please ph one
(614) 992-3742 concermng the
wkereabouts

742 2178

Tbe

98S-3S5•

247,22 11

LEO (July 23-Aug, 22) Mtxtng
busmess and pleasure Is an ell X·
1r th at wilt turn bi tter tn the glass

1968 JEEP WAGONEER 4 wheel
drtve lockout llub 6 cyl St19S,
Also , f·250 FORD 10 wheel
dnwe p1ckup good Harold
Brvwer, Long Bollom or call

1976 FORO FIOO Explorer 1300
mdes V 8 slondo rd sh1 ft sl•de
INTER VIEWS wt ll be held Mndoy,
tn reor wmdow sport wheel
N0\1 22 1976 stortmg at II 00
covers am fm rod lo , stdl under
o m o cloc~ m the office of the
warranty $4200 Also 1969 VW
Me1gs County Comm1sstoners
bug
wtlh
new
eng1ne
Court House Pomeroy, Ohto
automoftc st1ck s~ 1h reor wt n
fo r arch itects who ore an the
dow defr oster $600 Phone
approved hst of Stole Ar992·2280
chitects (Pubhc Works State of
Oh1o) lor the proposed mull!· 1966 FORD LTD osktng S200
purpose fac1l1ty for Metgs
Good fo r work cor Phone
Coun ty Pleose coil for appomt
742-2427 or 742 2405
S=:c-:::-men! 992 289:'
1976 MAROON CAMARO Ll 4800
PIANO INSTRUCTIONS Cht ld ren s
mtl es console au toma tic om
and adults June VanVranken
fm stereo lope player bu tlt tn,
992 2270
stee l be lted rad ial t1res w tth
chrome mags $4700 Contact
992 5516
Sus1e And rew's
onyltme after 3 p m dun ng
wee kdays and onyttme on
wee kends

LOST STRAYED or STOLEN o
small red Chihuahua w1th a
croo kfM:I loti lost Sunday If
ABSOLUTELY ' NO hunting or
found please coll thts number,
trespossmg do y or ntght on the
742·2523 Answers to the nome
cnarles E Yost and the Ivan
of Red
Wtll Forms
FOUND St Bernard puppy m
DEER HUNTERSII Ha ve your
M1ddleporl oreo Must 1dent tfy
troph1es mounted todoy and
10 d a1m and poy for food
tresure them tomorrow BIR·
Phone 992 311 0 or after 4 30
CHFIELO's To)udermy east of
p~9~~6S _
Rutland , one fourth m1l e on Rt
LOST BLACK ond While Dolma
124 Phone 742 2178
t1on 1 year old Mole nam ed
SHOOTING MATCH Just off Rl 7
Ch1co Losl seen at Pomeroy
by pass by Ro ck Sp nngs
Elementary School
Phone
1
Ceme"tery , 12 noon deer slugs
992-3S61
and shots
LOST 1972 Ford hubcap lost on
NO HUNTING or trespassmg on
Success Rood If fou nd, call
1
the Orv d Holter an d John Rose
Howard Lorkt ns 843-2211
forms without wntten permts
SIOn

CHRISTMAS BAZAAR AND Bake

wise man once sa1d, " It Isn't
whether you win or lose, It's how
A good
you play the game
th mg tor you to recall today

over SSOD Oo for you to be ehg1b le for the

Notice
to Hunters!

~-

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20) A
From Sm1th Nelson Motors when you buy
anv New or Used car durtng the month of
December The used car must be pr1ced

THE RACINE F1re Deportmenl wtll 1969 'Novo extra sharp new
hove o gun shoot Saturday at
pomt bucker sects o1r shocks
6 30 p m ot their bu1ldmg In
mog1 Phone 949-1A80
Bas han
69 CHEVELLE MALIBU yellow w1th
NOW occ~~tptmg pto no sludeniS ,
block wtnyl root and block Ill
begmners mtermedtote5 od
lvrtor 307 engu\e 2 door
vanced $,tudents Colt
992·
outomot lc, power steering
2270
tope player and new exhaust
system fair condttl on $ t 000
Phone 9&lt;19-2574

---

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)
Don 't make mountams out of

t'ur Sale

Autu Salus

_

The Otrec tor re!erves the
nght to reje ct any and ll ll btds

CAPTAIN I!:ASY

RATES

For Want Ad service
S cen ts per word one
tnserllon
Minimum Charge s1 oo
14 cents pe r word three
consecut ive lnserttons
26 cents per WOII"d six
consecut Jve Insertions
25 Per Cent Otscourn on
paid aas and ads paid
within 10 days

r-------------- --- ~------------- ~

I

Notitte

S PM .
Dl't'
Before
Publlc•tlon .
Cancell•tlons ,
correc
!tons accepted first day ot
publlcet1on

1976 AMC HORNET...............'3895

.es.

Sunday dinner guests of
, Mr and Mrs. Harold Wells
and' family were Mr and
Mrs. Roscoe Fife, Mr and
Mrs . Glenn Young and
chtldren, Michelle and Ltttle
ttve per cent of his •••· but on
Glenn, and Red Justus. other
no
event mo r e than f 1fly
Sunday vtsitors were Betty tMusand
dollars , or a bond tor
ten per cent of hts btd , payable
Young, Butch Russell , to the Dtrector
81dders must appl y, on the
Columbus, Robert Ramsburg
forms , for QUal•f tca t •on
and Chrtstt Hysell Vistting proper
al least len days prior to the
the Wells famt1y on Tuesday date set for opening bidS tn
accordance w1 fh Chapter 5525
were Elatne and Rtcky Ohto
Revised Code
Ramsburg.
Plans and spec •t•c allO ns are
Mr and Mrs Joseph Whtte on f1le 1n the Department of
Transportatton and the offtce
were calhng on Mr and Mrs of
the
D 1st rlct
Depu t y
Leo Rupe Tuesday evening Dlr ec1or

For Best R ·esults Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

SELECT YOUR NEXT
CAR OR TRUCK

RICHARD 0 JACKSON

Open Even1ngs T1l6 00
Except Thurs. and Sat.
Ctos~d Sunday

,-

Mrs
Tom
Erickson,
Newark, spent several days
here to be near her father ,
Hortie Roush , a patient at
Holzer Medtcal Center at this
wntmg.
A revival ts scheduled to
begm at the Old Kyger Free
Will
Baptist
Church,
November 28. The Evangeltst
wtll be Rev. Chester J
Lemley The public is cordtally mvtted to attend these

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbia , Ohto
November 19, 1t76
Co"tract Sales L.eul
Copy No. 16-911
UNIT PAICE CONTRACT
Sea led propOSitls w ill be
rece tved at the office of rne
Olrector of the Ohto Depart
ment of
Transportatton .
Columbus, Ohio , until 10·00
o. M , Oh to Standard Time.
Tuesday , December 14 ~ 1976,
'or tmpro vements In
Athens , Gallla , Guernsey ,
-tock rng , Meigs , Monroe ,
V.ol"gan , Noble, VInton and
Nash~,ngton Count tes, Ohto, on
1arioussect 1onson ATrt . u s
::routes J J, JJF end SO Slate
~outes 7, 13 56 , 78, 124, \43,
d4 ,
278 , 329
]46, 35 6.
.n , sso , 681. 682 .
690 and 691 .n Athens
:ounty , GAL U S Route 35,
Stale Routes 7, 1&lt;11 , 160, 218 ,
233, 279, 325 , 554, 588 and 7JS tn
Gallia County , GUE
Sta te
Routes 8J , 146, 340 and 821 m
Guernsey County . HOC U s
Route 33, State Routes 56, 78.
93 . 180, 216 278, 327 , 328 , 374,
595 , 664 and 678 tn Hocktng
County MEG U s Route ~JJ
State Route! 7, 124, U3 , 248,
338, 346, 681 , 684, 689 and 692 1n
Metgs county , MOE
State
Ro utes 7, 26, 78 , 145 , 379, 556,
724 &amp;nd BOO m Mpnroe County ,
MRG State Routes 37, 60, 78
83 266 284, 329, 339 316 317
555 and 669 m Morgan Cou nty ,
lnl ersiate Route 17 ,
NOB
State Routes 78, 83 , 145, 146,
147, 215, 260 , 285 , JIJ, 339, 340,
564, 566; 574, 724 , 761 and B21tn
Noble County , V IN
u s
Route 50. State Routes 56, 93 ,
124, 160. 278. 324. 317 , 356, 671.
677 , 683 and 689 m Vtnton
County , WA S . I nterstate
Route 77 , U s Route 50, State
Routes 7 '16, 60, 83 , 124 145,
260, 339 , 530, 550, 555, 618, 676
and 821 tn Washmgton Coun t y ,
by applytng center l1nes and
la n~ l tnes
Pawemen t W1dth - Va r 1es
Work Length - Va r ies
'The date set for comp let1on
ot th ts work shall be as set
for th m the b1ddtng proposa l"
Each b1dder sha l l be
requtred to fil e W1 lh htS btd a
cert1 f 1Cd check or cash•er 's
check for an amount equa l to

949-2708

"Not responsible for accidents or loss of
properly"

lop coffee table, Westinghouse stereo,
swivel rocker, misc. stands, lamps, clocks,
chairs, G E. electric dryer (like new), AMC
Eighteen auto. washer, Phil co ref., 1 LOOO
B.T.U Whirlpool air cond. (like new&gt;. 3 pc.
maple bedroom suite, Hollywood bed.
Queen Ann dresser, 2 pc . maple bedroom
suite, cedar chest. lady's chair, misc.
dishes. qu ilts. bedding, curtains &amp; drapes,
card table, oak stands &amp; tables, portable
sewing machine.
"Antique or Collector's Items"
Duncan File drop-leaf table w-8 chairs,
china closet. lea cart. gate leg table, wing
chair, smoking stand, marble lop stand,
mahogany sectional glass door bookcase,
mahogany library table, maple table w-4
c~airs, glass door china closet. misc. oak
r :lure frames, lin bread bvx, wairtul stand,
· spindle back chairs.
· Misc.
Oak desk w-chair. 4 drawer filing cabinets,
ext. ladder, misc. hand tools.
Lunch
Terms: Cash
Dan Smith
Lawrence Donohue
Jim
Carnahan
949-2033

742-3048

949-2708

"Nol responsible for accidents or loss of
property" v
,1

�l·D-lbe Sunday Times&amp;ntinel, Sunday, No!__ 28, 1976

For Best Results Use SundJJy Times-Sentinal Classifieds

&amp;-0-lbeSundayTimes-Sentlnel,Sunday Nov 28 1876

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
For Sale
SWEEPER and sewtng machtne
repo r ports and suppl et P ck
up and del very Oovls Vacuum
Cleane r Y1 m le up Georges
~e~~~

Ad Ph

PASQUALE

.uo 0294

Electr col

Serv ce

446 2716doy or n ght

dows

I ntels

etc

Claude

W nten R o Grande 0 Phon•
24S 5121 alterS
USED AJ'PLIANCES
REFAIGEIIATORS
wa1hen

VACATION
PLANS· 1977
Learn about

All TYPES of bu1ld ng mater ol5
block bnck sewer ptpe• w n

dryer ranges Gene Skaggs
1294 Ease n A~e Ph 446 7398
COAL

AAA tours for

1917 to Hawaii Las Vegas,
San Juan and Bermuda.
Send for free tour tn·
formation
Brochures
today Auto Club of Southern Ohio 710 Waller St ..
Portsmouth Ohto 45661 or
phone 354 S614

open 6 days o week ol"'d

even ngs For further nformo
ton coll367 7338
1970 TRIUMPH 650 Choppel' new
po nl JOb good cond . Ph 992
6192
l C.Hl we gkt ch mney blocks

Gall pols 81ock Co Ph

446

2783
MUST sell Ike new 2 pc Span sh

I v ng room su te

e~C c

cond

.u6 3712
FIREWOOD
ngs

Coli 388 9930 even

BEGIN your spr ng cleaning by
hov ng your carpets cleaned by
bes method known Remove
150 BALES of hoy ca ll J H N do
245 5814
all the d rt Make your carpel
look new ago n For fr ee
GAS &amp; FUEL OIL furnaces wood
es t mat e caii37_~
9_:2.::
68,2~-~-burners oven un Is po nl
pane l ing
pl ywoo d
DEAD Stock removed No charge
bu ld ngmalertols of ol k nds
Coll245 5514
tlv ng room su tes ce t ng t le
THURMAN HOUSE an tiques Fur
elec
I ghh I usses many
n lure sir pp ng
epa r on
other t erns Up to 50,-. d s
dref n shed County Rd 8 off
count on most tems Franks
35 Centerv lie V lloge 245
Barga n Cen ter St Rt 160 at
9479
Po r er
GRAYS TAXIDERMY
LAYNE S USED AND NEW FUR
Rl 2
NITURE
Lefor W Vo
Bunk beds Mo t ess &amp; box spr
,. Ph 304 B95 3386
ngs tab le 6 cha s &amp; bullet
CLOSED ON SUNDAY
mahogany onges woshe &amp;
d yers modern sofa loveseat
and clto r coppertone s de by
s de refr g Bas on Rockers
sofa beds and match ng cho r s
Early Amer can l v ng room
s u tes
eel ners
tabl es .o4
bedroom su es beds chest ol
.
d ewers
Maple table and
cha s d nette se ts co nsole
and por table TV s other tems
446 0322 dey o even ngs 3
m les out Bu ov lie Prier Rd
offStR 160
All Hatr Cut $2 00

-------

Bicentennial
SpecUJI

HIGLEY'S

BARBER SHOP

Now thru Dec 31st
Open 6 Days

CHAIN LINK AND WOOD FENCES
NOW at REDUCED Pr ces
SAVE Roy Houck Fence Cen ter
I 776 2237 or I 353 4b68

Bam Opm
Ph 446 0002

WE HA VE TH E NEW POL ORO D
AND KOOACK ns ont cameras
oy on e awa y now fa
Chr stmas TAWNEY STUDIOS

LAS VEGAS

MEN s AND LADIES elec t c
shove oil brands also !weds
and access We ho ve o ful l I ne
of So ny
od cs and TV s
Taw ey Jewe lers Ph 44b IbiS

FOR

FIREWOOD Ph 446 4qqq

NEW YEAR'S
Jotn our specuJI tour ta
spend NP 1 Years Eve m
Las Vegus Tour deJNrts
December 29
return!
January 2 Phone AAA 354
5614

---

NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE
All kin ds of used cool stoves See
Howa rd G een ot H &amp; G
Bargo n Cen ter Add son
DISHWAS HER $100 Ph 446 91&gt;87
EAR CORN AND GRAIN FED
FREEZER 8EEF PH 388 9991
SMALL Upr ght cho d organ w th
bench Ph 446 1206

SLEEPING Rooms weekly rotea
Pofk Central Hotel

LIGHT housekeeptng roam Pork
Cel'ltra l Hotel
SlEEPING rooms for rent Gallic
Hotel
OfFICE apace downtown 514 Se
cond Ave 446 0008
TRAILER lot one m le from HMC
Phone .4.46 3805
RENTAL avo fable f rst of October
now occup ed by Central Soyo
ttl the north s de of Sycamore
Street between Second ond
T~ud Aven ue recnonoble rent
Iorge parktng oreo c.o ll for on
oppo ntment Ph 446 1066
TRAILER SPACE large lot on Rt 35
near shopp1ng area $50 mo
Phone 446 1909
MOBILE HOME space Upper R ver
Roa d Phone .4.46 0008
BRADBURY FURN APTS Adulh
only no pets dep eq 729
2nd Ave Ph 4.46 0957
TRAILER SPACES $50 Raccoon
T a ler Pork Rl 141 379 2469
NEW MOBILE HOME n Gall pol s
I or 2 adu lts on ly Ph 446 0338
TRA LER SPACE 3 'I m les Irom c
ty I m Is on 218 Coll256 6689
FOUR ROOM APT 2 odult s o I
ut I t es upst01rs Ph 446 2906
FURN APT $150 pe mo ut,! t es
paid
adult s f1nt floor
446 4.416 of &amp;r I pm

2 BR garage apt on Chatham
446 1875 afte

5

RIVERVIEW 3 Br House w th
we I to wall carpet very cl ean
l or nterv1ew ca ll U 6 2404
FOR A JOB WELL DONE FHLIGN
deo carpels w th Blue Lu stre
Rent electr sc_ shompooer $1
Ce tr.ol Supply Co

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APAR~ENTS
1 Bedroom unfurnished
tmmechate occup1ncy
Ph 446 1599

Sei'Vtceo Ottered
P c u e Tube Spec ol sis
HARTWELL ELECTRON CS
TV Rep o
245 536S

440

--

----

NICElY FURN 2 Br Apl
ler¥1ew call .4-46 2404

Ph
lo

n

NEW LISTING
IMMACULATELY kept 3
bedroom In Gslllpol s City
Sc hool
O lstrl!: l
near
hOsp tat sho pp i ng center
and short driv e from
down to wn Ju st plclurt'
yourself sitting In front ot
your firep l ace
n thl ~
homes beautiful tam II '
room
Call In today for
more details
In Town
Near the corner af Th rd
and Vme Str ee ts Th sIs a 2
stor y 3 bedroom home that
ha s
been
remod eled
r ecently Just th nk of the
ease
n gett ng to th e
shopp.ng d str ct schoo ls
chur ch es etc off er ed 10
you at a very r easonabl e
pr ce of Sl9 000
97 1 Acre Rt 7 Farm
With m n r gh s and coa
seams us t 20 m n from
Gall pots 8 acres r ver
bottom brick home end
guage c ty water me a
barn
obacco barn
800
lb
obacco base f ence d
pa sture Only Sb5 ooo w 11
lak e S20 000 to 530 00 home
n trad e f oca t an sgood
Larg e assumab le loan an
ba an ce

Vacant Land
l1 Acres
Ju st ott R ou t e 16 0 on
Thomp son Road Beau fvl
bu il d ng s l es w th wooded
area s Bu ld yo ur hom e
her e and ge l away from
&amp;II Pr ced we ll b e ow fa r
market va lu e at SIO 000
OTHER COUNSELORS
GALLIPOliS
Denver K H gley 444 ooo 2
CROWN CITY
Joe Crans
156 qu
National Advert smg With
Gall ery of Hom es

lronch

APPLIANCE SERV CE
All lead ng makes $6 00 for se
v ce ond est mo es 30 '! s e;l(
P PH 256 6776 osk fo Bob

446-3636
COUNTRY LIV:IN
(Jus
outs de city 1 rn1ts 4 BR 2
batns family room with
II rep ace modern k tchen
I ll I
basemen!
J car
garage 6 2'1 acres good
pa!.lurt fe nced 530 000

CALL ABLE BUILDERS
For ne~ homes and remodel ng
ol any k nd Spec1ol pr ces on
storm w ndows ond doon No
JOb 00 smon Fre e es moles
Roof ng - weekends co 1 col
lee! Columbus Oh 614 263
2669
Ph 675 6392 Owner
Fred Lohrmer
SANDY AND BEAVER INSURANCE
CO has offe ed serv ces for
F re Insu rance c:ove age n
Gall o County to ol mos 0 cen
tu y Farm s homes and pe r
sana ! property coverages 0 e
ova loble to meet nd v dual
needs Contact Fos le Lew 5
your ne ghbor and agent

l BR s could be four lamlly room lois of carpel
natural gas heat 4 acre lot This house was $23
Call today for new pnce

PRICED FOR ACTION ! 2
story br ck d BR 2 baths
natural ga s heal w1thln
walk1ng d slan ce schools &amp;
sh op p ng F 11 II up yourse f
and save S17 000

It ts unhkely that you would ever
a
complete home Th s lovely home has 3 large BR s
forma l entrance f amtly room with fireplace formal
d1n ng room ea t m k tchen wtth double s nk dispo sa l
and d shwasher 2 car garage full ba seme nt natural
heat and central air All of this ts on a well

FULLY
FURNISHED
mobile home on 6 acre
Pat o outb u d ngs fue l 011
furnace h ea T Sl2 000
ATTENTION MINERS! 3
B R home n good cond at
Par ter on I acr e Ru ra l
wa ter fuel o heat North
Gall a Schoo s S2B ooo
VINTON VILLAGE N ce 3
BR home w th lg barn 3 3 ~
acres l eve l t o rol l 1ng
ne ar y all fe nced Walk ng
d stance to elem sc hool
ban k &amp; groce ry SIB 000

New Haven - Commerctal bu1ldmg - 30x50r 2 story 2
apartments upsta1rs Ideal restaurant or p1zzena
locatton
Mason - Restaurant, equtpment &amp; mventory Upstatrs
apartment

Pt Pleasant - 2 offtces downstairs. 2 apartments
upstatrs Fmancmg i!Vatlable
Mason - 2 story, 4 bedroom house m good conditton New
large lot $24,900
Rtver Lot - 205 ft nver frontage Older 8 room -bouse
needs renovation

We have nice residential listings In
Pt. Pleasant, Mason, N3w Haven.
Sandy Nichols, Broker
I
Caralyyn Thome

675-4053

Paul "SSIo9kf Smith
67~294

882-2447
Mary fowler

EXECUTI VE SECRETARY
M ust ltov• !lihorthond typ ng ond
ab hty to handle tedm col
mater ol st able Mature In
d vidual nteresled 10 0 &lt;oreer
des red Sa lary sarnmensuro te
w1th ob1f ty and exper ence
Send esume to Ba~e .461 •t.
Gall pol1s Do ly Tr bune

6 24
ACRES
perfect
bu ld ng s tes p c u resQ ue
coun rv surr ound ng s c1ty
sc hools
rural
water
$10000

If you have thoughts about the br ck home at 100
Chtlllcothe Rd perhaps you should ca ll today f not
sold soon thts housew1ll be off the market
F ve miles from town on
Rt 41 The own er wants 1f Two story hou se lots of
sod soon Th s litt le beauty outs de stor age In cludes J
IS s If ng on 2 9 acres of out bu d ngs w th concr ete
wa lks plus a 20x30 bar n
mostJy clean and 2 BR s w lh concre te floor AI of
(cou d be Jl v ery n ce
h s nclud ng 6 acr es of
k t chen
tut
d v d ed
basement Pr ce reduced to gro und s la ca ed at h e
south edg e of v nt on Ca ll
$27 soo
today only S21 500 No 020

lOTS OF ROOM at a
reaso nable pr ce
4 BR
ho m e on 2 4 a cr es c 11y
sc hools 5 m les rr orn town
on bla cktop road $20 soo
SEVENTY FlVE ACRE
FARM 2 story l BR w bath
hOme good ba r n oth er
outbu ld ngs go od pas tur e
f en ced pond tobacco ba se
mbe r on bla cktop raad
sso 000

S31 900 w II buy 8 very n ce
3 BR home w th a tu
basemen t
Th s hom e
features carpet n the LR
and hall plu s good so d
hardwood floor s n the c ty
school d str ct Nalu ra l 9as
heat

S5 500 BUYS a 2 story hom e
n he c ty - c t y water
sewage an d gas
Needs
some r epa1r but you cant
go wr ong a th s pnce

We ha n had seve ral calls
concern ng our st ng ne ar
HMC Th e pr ce s only
$27 900 and th e 1ocat1on IS
grea YoU mt,~ st see ns d e
to r eally apprec ate th e
quality Ca l toda y

REDUCED
Rental n
vestment 2 fu lly fur
nl sh ed a r cond tra ler s on
lg lo Geo r ges Cr ee k Rd
Now priced at Sl3 500

W lh n the c1ty of Ga l po s
on R t 14 he r e s an older
home n nee d of repa r t
s ts on a ~ acre lot n an
excel en!
ne ghbarhaod
Th s choic e lac a I on w II
not ast long

- ROfCANADAV'~
REALTOR--

Pr ced n the low S20s
tns lde the c ty natural gas
heat
alum
s d ng
full
d vlded basement w1th
f r e p a ce
deta che d
g&amp;rage
just r ghl for
newl y weds

Audrey Canaday
Rea Itor Assoc tate
4463636
Any Hour

743 Jr d Ave Cou ld be u sed
for many d ffer en l pur
poses perhaps yo ur 1d eas
are be tt er than m ne Why
not tak e a look today N o
021
New I st1ng at 38 N e 1 Ave
New roof v ny s d ng 3
bed oams bath Ut room
lot s o f s or age na ural gas
he a t $15 500
t s No Secret th er e are
ots ot. new fam lte ~ mov ng
n GaIa Co VS Realty IS
ook1ng tar hOm es to sat sty
hese needs If you are
p an n ng to se 1 Now s he
I me

we have other 1st ngs 1f
you are buy tng or selling
call VS Really Today
All of our I stmgs are
shown by appo1ntment
only

PHONE 44&amp;0552-ANYTIME
428 2nd AVE. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

JUNK au to and scrap me ol Ph
3B8 8776
OLD FURN TURE AND m sc ant
ques Ph 245 5050

Sound o lder home full basement
ul I t es lo ge lawn and garden
Ph :W... 364 5630 wrtle Box
14 A
Fromvtwon
R
Gassaway W Vo 26624

MANAGERS/MANAGER TRAINEES
FEMALE • MALE
())r Company a AAA rated ratall chain AMEX listed
company has over 285 shoe outlet! currently In
operation with 50 60 new stores opening eac h year
Compare these benefits
- Above average salary
-S ubsta ntia l lncent ve Bonu s- pad semt
·~nually

- Company pa id group Insurance mcludtng mat or
medtcal
~ Profit sharing
- Paid vacations
- Rapid advancement promotion from wlthtn
- Job secur lly
To quollfy we osd lhal you have a minimum of high
school or equlvelent good personal background
fl exlb lil y to relocate and the desire lo be above
average
If you qualify or w3nt to c ompare your present posl11on
to fhls opportunity call Mr Tom Bush at •46 9099
Mon Tues Wed 29 30 I betw een 9 am and 12 p m
tor a confide"tlal Interview .

OsMOl
VfORLD
M Eoatl iloonltiiY

GAWA OOUNTY'S
LARGEST
REAL ESTAT~
Brand New 4 Bedroom
Split Level - And you II
love t L arge fancy kll
c hen beautiful carpet 4
large be d r ooms 2 full
ba hs lar ge IIV ng front
por ch garage and a tam ly
room wail ng to be f inished
bv you
11 Acres
owner Verv Anx louJ
TO Sell
Owner moving to Northern
Oh o and des1res to sell this
very n ce J bedroom home
wh ch ncludes 1 ' ba ths
large family room forma l
d10 full dry ba!em ent 2
car garage loca ted on 11
acr es of wooded rolling
country side w lh farm
pond
s2s no oo Buys r hts
Well Cared For
81 Level
You be the tud ge You can I
buy more ho~se for the
money 3 bedroom s n ice
k !chen tu rmshed fi!lm ly
room p us garage II s a
barga n why not be lsi lo
look
- Extra Spec1al Buy Br ck and ston e ranch
forma l entrance &amp; din ing 4
or s bedroom s fam ly
roo m w B f repla ce 2
ba th s In town
Pri c ed
$39 soo
One Block from Park
Th s s a so d o der 1 2
st ory 3 bedroom hOme 2
baths
f rep ace
ni ce
kitchen S31 900 00 Y ou It
like t If you wa n n tow n

Dan t MI SS Seeing
Th s Dutch Colonliil
L ove ly w ei bullf home an
coun ry lan e lust 5 m ties
from
down town
4
b e drooms
2112
bat h s
fam l y room n ce k tc hen
full
basemen t
an
a
beaut ful J a cr e estate

KEMPER HOLLOW _ 7
m es fr o ~ c y
3 BR
fram e ra nc h on tg Ia
f n st th s yourself and
save S2 1 000

APARTMENT S ZE GAS COOK
stove and electr c clothes
dryer Ph 446 0893

AGENCY

LISTINGS

R IO GRAND~ AREA
Jus t ott R t JS b oc k ranch
y pe home features 20 x24
LR w th f r eplace all mod
con v J0x 40 barn 25 ac res
leve l to roll ng
pa stur e
fenced po d $37 sa o

MOTHERLESS home ne eds li ve n
s Iter f or 2 sm all ch ldren
pr vote room etc Mathe w th
ch ld welcome Plea se wr te
Sow 452 ReyCloldsburg Ohio
43068

E WISEMAN

WE NEED

BRAND NEW - Very well
cons r u cted 3 Br
home
fu y carpet ed all el ectr c
bea u t fu modern k !che n
carpo rt S26 SOO

WE NEED LISTINGS

EX PER IENCED
AGGRESSIVE
sa lesperson to sell for Cojum
bus based tobber Comm 55 ons
POd on d reel and tobber sa te 5
Cal l 614 443 4852 9 5 for ap
polntment

Includes equtpment &amp; mventory

00

S$$ FOR YO U I Mob le
name part on Rl 35 near
shapp1ng
ce n te r
and
Ho zer s 11 pads 4 late
mod el fully furn mob le
hom es Look ng tor a solid
nvesTmenP A good re turn
on your money? Call fo r
mor e dets Is and an ap
pa ntment to see th s soon

Help Wanted

RUSSELL WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066
Bonnie Stutes

NEWGMC
Truck Headquarters
2 1970VWs
1974 1: T GMCP ckup
1969 three fourth T GMC PU
1973 It T Chev PU
197.4 ;, T GMC P1ckup
]974 /, T Chev PU 4 WD
1975 YJ T Chev PU
1971 Chev Impala
1973 Yt Chev P ckup
1974 , T GMC PU
1972 1 T Ford Stoke Body
1975 Ford Mu stang II
1975 three fou th T GMC PU 4 w
dr
1975 I Ton Chev Stoke
1q72 ;, T Chev p ckup
SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS INC
133PneSt
446 2S32
69 FORD P ckup one ha lf T
3712

n

------

446

--

Chev custom camper three
fou rth T PU 350 4 barrel
stock $1300 coll379 2403

1974 PLYMOUTH SCAMP exc
cond $2000 coll388 8666
73 MACH I MUSTANG 70 Old•
Cufiess Sup eme 69 Newport
Chrysler Ph 388 8850
62 CORVETIE wh1te 317 4 speed
Callforn a ccr $4500? 256 68&lt;t I
75 PLY OUSTER 6 ely sttk ahtft
mag wheals and 8 track 23 000
miles lnqu1re at 300 Cth Ave
Apt 2
1970 GMC Truck 20 II bed Ph
367 7329

Vac ation the Year Around
Ve ry n ce well built 2
b edroo m fu ll y car p eted
hom e w th Raccoon Ck.
frontage 1 m 1 off Rt 7 n
C1ty Schoo l o st r ct
The One You ve
Wa1ted For
Large 81 l evel w th 3 or 4
bedro oms Iaroe family
room 2 car garage flat lot
exce llent ocatlon n ci t y
school d str ct SJ9 900 buy s
th1s bea ut

Older 2 story 3 bedroom
fram e n go od cond 1 on on
almost an acre of tert e
ga r den tend near Cora
Do xo l gas heat dr li ed we ll
for water
cellar cel lar
house and storage bu ld ng
P t' ced to sell

Call us nght now.
'we need L1sttngs Calt the
WIS&amp;IJian Ag ency 446 3643
Gall a Co s largest ~;teal
Estate Sales Ag ency
Ofhce 446 3643
Ike W 1!5eman 446 3796
c N Wluman 446 4500

1967 CAMARO RS 4 spd 327 eng
completely rebuilt
a sk ng
$800 .446 1977
1969 PONTIAC F eb1rd Conve t
Power tap V 8 350 PS good
cond Ph 446 3856

----

VE RY
RARE
1970
Dodge
Challenger &lt;lAO Magnum e•c
cond
al l extras $2 000
367 OS79
72 CHEV CPARICE fu ll power o
exc co nd Ph .446 6611
70CHEV

4 spd Ph ~ 11-

1971 VEGA ~ATCHBACK 1967
Pontoc GTO PH 44630 18 or

388-8282

"'

LOST Hereford cow no ho ns
los t n Kerr ond Evergreen
vlcln ty
Call .245 5142 0
46 3812

~
=
CARTERS PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Co r Fourth &amp; P ne
Pho ne 4.46 3888 or 446 44777
STANDARD
Plumb ng Heat ng
215 Third Ave 4.46 3782
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMBING - H~llng - Air
Cand1t10n ng 300 Fourth Ave
h 44l. 1.....
DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Rout&amp; 160 at Ev ergree n
Phone 4.46 2735

CLOSE TO HOSPITAL - Thts lovely home 1s almost
new has 3 bedrooms I\\! balhs mce k1lchen Wllh
range refrlgeralnr disposal fully carpeted 1 car
garage Nice level lot $33 000

I
I
New Ltshng 40 Ac r es w tth 3 Bedroom hom e 3
outbutldmgs 1 200 tobacco base s tuated on county
road appr ox matel y 4 m les fr om R1 o Grande near
Cora M i ll Call for more nformatlon

NEW - 3 bedr oom carpet ed r an ch style br ck home
2 car garage lots of concrete mmedtate posses s on
Pr ce

Low 40

s

NEW LISTING Bo Acre far ms luated In AddiSon Twp
Large farm hou se wtfh 5 o r 6 bedrooms Gas well on
property f urntsheslow cost hea t ng We 1 wa ter Wtred
for 110 &amp; 220 volts Large barn and other outbu ld1ng s
Approximatel y 400 lb tobacco base Pr ce $53 000

2 Bedroom home s tua ted an 2 2 acr es n 8 1dwell Full
bath w shower new ly nst alled forced a r l urnac e and
hot water tan k Heres a gooq bu y for onl y $14 000 oo
BUILD A HOME Along
Rt 7 Crown City we have
2 lots with a tota Of 91
frontage Buy bo th for only
S5 000
NEW - 3 bedroo m car
peted r anch s yle br ck
home 2 car garage lot s of
conc rete
lmm e d a t e
possess 1on
Pr ce
l ow
40 s
THREE
BEDROOM
ca r peted home located on
Sa nders H II A dd tan only
f ¥e m nutes tr om down
town Gall pol s S tua ted on
a 90 x os mproved lot n ew
F A netural g as furnace
Galflpol s C t y water
shown by appo ntm en l
Pr ce S23 000
LAND
Budng o t n
Porter Cal l tod a y for mo e
nforrl).allon
LAND Bu d ng or mob le
ho me lot s m Eureka area
Buy as m any a s 8 acr es far
only
S5 300 00 Has ru ral
water and wei

LAND 56 acres fenced
w1th 20 acres of t mbe r
r lo se o N orth Ga l l a H 1gh
Sr h ool
ocated
on
Thompson Rd
ots of road
fran age
Buy
f or
$25 000 00
LAND 20 acres Loca ted n
Mor ga n Twp lo caT ed w th
road fro ntage on Raw es
VIlle Rd
Spr ng water
ava la ble
Buy for
$170 00 00
LAND
150 x 96
lot
ocated on L1dd y Ho low
Buy for Sd 000 00
DWELLING and 26 x 32
block bu ld ng Sit ua ted on
dO X 132 lot n Ga po l s
rad1,1d ng
co n ten ts
of
dw el l tnQ
Bu y
tor
$20 000 00
NOW S'2 0 000 00 wil l buy a
modern
one floo r
3
bedroom a ll etectr c home
In Ga ll pol S C ty SCh OOl
dl str ct S tua te d on 120 x
75 lot Carpeted excep for
k chen and bath
new
cond lion
r u r al wa t er
centra sewage col l ect on
black top streets
Ca for
more nforma t on Can be
V A and F H A finan ced

PR1CE REDUCED on
double w1de home
3
bed rooms
c a r p e t ed
modern k tchen
rur&amp;l
water
n c l udes refrlg
range llvmg 8. d n ng room
tur n lure washer dr yer centra l ;olr Pr rr&gt; $19 lintl

80~-R-D-IN-~sly Pu_p_p--.~,--Cor

CENTENARY Wood5 Kennel Pet
groom ng fcc• lites Hove your
pe t groomed undeer son/tory
cond All breeda accepted
446 0231
DRAGONW'I'ND Callery Kennel
A K C C F A H malayan (Per
s on ) ond S omese Only 3 left
446 38&lt;14 after I p m
RISING STAR KENNEL Boarding
Indoor outdoor runs
AKC
Shetland Sheep dogs (Sheltles
m ma tu re co lli es) Cheshire
Ph 367 0292
BRIAR PATCH Ke nnels Boarding
AKC Gordon Sette s Engl sh
Cocker Spomels 446 4191
--

~

--~-

Ar.l.. OOBERMANS S Redt and
Blocks 3 block moles 7 wks
ol d I r ed female 11 wks old
w th eo Is c opped Ph 446
4654
GERMAN SHEPHERD pupa 3 left
$45 256 6841
READY FOR CHRISTMAS Dobor
man P ncher Pups Chomplon
blood I ne AkC Rtg Block ond
rust olao Reg Australian Ble
Healer Ph 388 9991
TRA INNEDBRm:A
c:-:N::c
Y- $7_5_ P_h
440 2914

'

Ph Home 37!1-2184

Gal!ia County's Fastest Growing Real Estate Agency

FIVE BEDROOM car
pe ed home to ci.'l te d d m les
tr am downtown Gall pol s
Twa w b f replaces two
baths w showers beaut fu
woode d 3 acre lo heate d
and coo ed
w lh h ea
pump
Gall polls City
School Dstrlct Ca ll for
more nformat on
NEW LISTING
86 Acre
far m s tuated n Add son
Twp
Large farm house
w th 5 or 6 bed rooms Gas
we ll on property turn shes
tow cos t hea t n g We 1
wa te r W red f ar 110 &amp; 220
volts Large barn and other
out b u ld ngs
Ap
prox mately 400 lb tobacco
base Pr ce S53 000
FOR
THE
LARGE
FAMILY we ha \le a 9 room
A bed room 2 story home 1M
B dwell only 20 minutes
from coal mines storm
windows and doors F A
fuel oil furnace
nice
gerden area can be yo urs
w th n 30 day s for on l y
$22 000 Ca ll for an ep
oolntmen t
I BEDROOM CARPEHb
HOME located tn Harr son
Twp Macedon a Rd F A
furnace moder n k !ch en
rure water and c !terns a
peaceful ho me n a rural
sett ng Price S21 000
4 BEDROOM CARPETED
HOME n ear Clay School
Galllpa l s
C ty
s
situated on 1 a~re lot w b
fireplace unique llvtno lnd
d n ng room Call fo r more
nformatlon

o

THREE
BEDROOM
ca r pe ed all e ec tn c ho me
s u a t ed on 120 x 7S lot
lran1 ng on Twp blackt op
Rd Cou nty wa er &amp; sewer
Pri ce S22 500 00
BUSINESS Pr ce r educed
on 2 bay bus ness bu ld ng
and land ocated on Rt
160 n Ew ngton Buy now
for ~; 15 000 00

tli't¥

IN CJTY NEW Ll
2
bedraorfoi/)"1
1ta ge located
c 1t y water
on Spr
andse
Jwm an
te nance
ural
gas
Ga I pol s t ty
Scho ol
D str c Pr ce $ 1 000

•

IF YOU R:E PlANNtNGI
TO SELL CALL US WE
HAVE
A
LIST
OF.
PRci"SPECTIVE BUYERS
AND WERE
ANXIOUS
TO SERVE YOU
IF YOU DON T SEE TH~
PROPERTY YOU WANT
IN THIS AD CALL WE
M AY BE ABLE TO FINO
IT FOR YOU
Call Wood Insurance &amp;
Real EstateU6 1066
Evenmgs Russell wood
U6 4,18
Ken Morgan 446 0971

BOARDING &amp; AKC PUPPIES
K &amp; P Kennels 38B 8274 Rl
554 :;, m1le east of Porter

de L Kennels 2 m les from
town 446 4824

Assoc~

Ph Home 446-2885

LAND 30 acres of level o
to l l ng gr o und on both s des
ot Sta te Rt
160
n ear
Porter Ru r a water fr ont s
on Floyd Clark Rd and Rt
160

30 Acre Farm
Near R o Grande n C ty
Schoo l D1str c good
r o I ng l&amp;nd av er age o d
t me 2 story ho me w th
seve r al ou t b u ld ngs
P r ced under S30 000
land &amp; Bu1ldmg
Lots
1 Any size lo t you w ish at
R1o Grande Star t at $4 ooo
No mob le home s
c ty
2
Bu ld ng lot water sewer co ne street
near hosp ta
l
60 ac of tree s st reams
h s &amp; excellen hunt ng
4 76 Ac
no bu ldmg s
la rge stream 12 ac bo
I om

Mlrtll Ca!Nr

A5SOCtate

Mi£NCY

CIRCLE THIS AD' If you
have been toalc, ng for a
n ce home w t h some
acreage J BR ranch 1
balhs lg k tch~n w buill
In range hood oven and
lots of counte r spa ce
Carport lg enough fo r lwo
cars f ul v ca rp eted e11cept
1&lt; tcnen and ba lhs
1a
acres U2 000

SOMEONE o help afternoons 9 n
KOTALIC lond:!&gt;tOp ng res dent ol
motor roule co1 1256 1555 afte r
&amp; Ccmmerc ol shrubs tree s
7p m
rock gardens all nstolled &amp;
guaranteed Ph 245 9131 446 BABYSITTER needed m med ately
446 8583
3100

675-5540

BUD McGHEEManager

Galhpolls, Ohto

WANTED Port t1 me baby s t e
Ph 446 7327 after 4

2411 JackDI Ave.

•

COMMERCIAL SITE or
.. u table tor r es dent at 38
acr es 400 tron la ge on Rl
7 400 Oh o R ver fro ntag e
J water taps S2S 000

CONCRETE
WORK
pat ios
s dewo lk s
basement
etc
Lou s Co x 446 3398

HOMES
Bakery -

GALLIPOLIS
AREA I,.JSTINGS

ARE YOU COOL MAN? The n you
need th e nsulo t ng exper 5 at
LAWRENCE HEATING AND
ELECTRIC TO g ve you o free
t&gt;sl mote on blow n n nsulo
I on Coll675 3099

For'RI!Ilt

DOWNTOWN

LET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY
EASY, LONG-TERM
AVAILABLE

VS REALTY

25 112 Locust St

444,_7900
446 1049

CUSTOM REMODELING 20 years
e•per ence 388 8308 New d y
wall celltng w th sw rl o tex
fu e des gns Other d y wall
r epa r v nyl wa llpope ng new
baths new k tchens Anyl h ng
n remodeh ng or repair

c

EFF
APT
4.46 4905

Office
Home

1092

w

CHIMNEY Stocks W Va g Oh 0
Lump Cool Ga ll pol s Block
Co .446 2783

101 LANE
BRANCH M.r.N.r.GER
855 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS OHrO

PASQUALE Insula! ng 103 Ceda r
St Gall pel s Ph 446 27 16 o

COUCH VELVET TRAO STYLE
EQOIPMENT FOR RENT
use d 2 weeks
p 1te .446 Jq.t s
T actor mounted I awood spl 1
or446 3874
er spl t cord of wood per hr
FOR the best n arch teet ural
Sh nn s T actor Soles Leon
SEASONED FIREWOOD ALL DIF
des gn and bu ld ng of new
Vc 458 1030
FERENT TYPE S OF HARD WOOD
home s
smell commerc a
WE DELIVER
388 ~46 or
THE PlRFECT GIFT
bu ld ngs apt o emodeltng
245 58 12
A Po I o l g ftCe tf cote
w th state approval of plan s
LEAR PH OTOGR APHY
B II Walke 446 2146 o r 446
Hoy opprox 700 boles 992 2877
Ph 4.46 7494
8652
even ngs
Open Tu esday thru Saturday 10 to
BUESCHER TRUMPET $150 Only SEPTIC To nks Clean ed Plants
5 t II Bon Thursday
Sept c Tonk Serv ce Ph 446
been used 3 mos Ph 4~6 3343
LOOK NG FOR THE FIFE WHO IS
1972 or 675 2647
THE OWNER OF a n Earl er 1968 Ford Ranger P ck up mpro v
ed cyd borrell lor model 37 STUCCO plosle mg ond plaster
odve t sed Da tsun 240 z f sf II
re pa r Te~et ur ed ce I ng sw rl
Etco20go Ph 446 4149
lo r
sole
p l ease
co 1
lloo t o bru sh des gn 32 yr e:~~:
1 614 992 5957 ask far J m
2 BR Sutes one dnng su le
p Work by th e hour or by the
co np ete 2,. 5 9479
TAXEOERMIST SPECIALIZING
256 1182
All wok
ob
n deer head mounts Bob
ne
guaranteed
PONY 42 mare ve y gen e~
R 2 Pt Pl easant Ph 675 1448
yrs old Ph &lt;146 3870
HUFFINES and Sons F x t Sho p
Plu nb g
elect col
small
CUSTOM MADE BAR w th I glt s
oppl was her ond d ye carp
mo ch ng m rrow shell w h 3
epa r5 ond gene ol epa rs
stoo ls sma ll secreta ol desk
Bu•lMi!S'St!li~e••
Ca ll 388 88.47 over 15 yrs ewp
w th leathe sw vel cho1r Ph
446 3344 0 .446 0156
GRAVELY SERVICE SAVE 25 PCT
HOWARD Peck Wote Del very
on l obo
by hov ng you
2.45 9315 o 388 8262 day or
Gravely rector repo red or ser
n ght
v ce d now G ave ly Tro c or
BOBS
CB
Rod o
Equtp
Soles Pomeroy 6 4 992 2975
everyth ng tn Twa Way Rod1o
Antenna ~ and Cci~es Georges
NICELY FURN 2 Br Apt- for n
Creek Rd Galltpol s 446 4517
terv ew co ll4.46 2404

For sale

CANADAY
REALTY

LOW weekly ond monthly ales at
Libby Hotel .44~ 1743

Ave
Ph
446 3408

Rcall!:elate lor Sale

Real &amp;t..teiur Sire

f()l' Rent

FOR SAlE
LIMESTONE FOR DRIVEWAYS
CARL WINTERS PH 24S 5115

Real &amp;iate for Safe

kcal Eolate for Sale

MASSIE
REALTY
32 State Street
Ph 4411 1998
A A Ntbert, B(oker
Mtni Farm 11 acres 2
sm out bu ldlngs E lectri c
and wate r are there
4 yr aid 3 br br ck ra n
cher electric heat bu It In
kitchen n ce fam l y r oom
5 miles fro m town
Mobile home lot on Rl 141
- a ll ut•lltl es n place lg
se ptl ~: tanl4 lot s ze ~PP 55
X 250
Vacant tend ap p 3 a 2
good bv I ding sites
Centerpoint
Store
bu ldlng
w th
some
equ pment
I vlng
quarters in re ar
Building lots - Galllpo s
area verv ni ce lots for
those who wen t to build
t he ir own home we also
have other bUilding lot s
close to GaiOpo l $ See us
tor de t a il$
Bulldmg lots v nton
are~ 2 ve-r..L!!rg_!~ ots

a,,.l Estate for:Sale
VA f.HA 30 y I none ng I ela nd
Mortg age 77 E Sta e A he s

592 305 1
WAN T TO OWN BUT NEED
HELP IN F NANCING?
N co 2
bed com Ia m home
wh cit has been completely
remodeled recently lo ge bo n
n good cond hen o I th s s t
I ng on opprox mately 11 ac res
neo town Mob le home rental
spo t on property Good nvesl
ment en ol opportun ty Call
446 I 049 after 6 p m
120 x. 180 lot n Par erb rook Sub
dlvls on Coli alter 5 pm Ph
446 7866
DOUBLE WIDE and lot wood
burmng I eploce pot c ce
lrol o r 3 m les I om HMC Ph
446 15D2
HEALTH APPROVED SEWER ED lots
upper R ve Rd
100 x 120
ready to bu ld Ph 446 2906

tor Henl or :S.1le
LOT JUST OUTSI DE CITY LIM rs
su able fo M ob le home o
house All u I cs ns oiled Pt
446 0168

FAMILY LIVING - E11tra
n ce ren ch 3 bedrooms
for m al d n ng fa.m ly room
w th f rep ace cove r ed
pat o lave y 1&lt; chen w th
bu It ns ex a roa m tor
dt~n or off ce Call l or rnolt.e
Informal on

CLOSE TO TOWN
Lovel y 3 bedroom ranch
w th fa m y
oam
bath
w th shOw er n ce k tchen
an ge natura
gas
w th
heat beaut fut new ca r pet
n \J ng r m &amp; bedrooms
P. ce d to sell

LOVELY BRICK RANCH
T h s attract ve home h as
J bedrooms 2 ba hs fan l y
room w h f replace n ce
k chen
w th range and
d s hwa she r
beau fu l
carpet oca ed on 1 acres
of n ce land SJ9 800

BIDW EL L
N ce
3
bedroom home bath w th
shower
fam t v
room
beaut ful ca pet eKcel en!
cond I on On y S24 900

NEW LI ST NG
Lov e y
double
w de
w th
3
bed ooms
2 fu t baths
beau ful ca r pet n atura
ga s hea l w h cent r a a r
loca ed c ose o hasp tal &amp;
Sp r ng Va l ley Ve y n ce
and pr ced to se
N EW LISTING
L ke
t sh ng., Look at th s n ce 2
bedroom mob le home w th
t urn tu r e coun t y wa er
1
ac r es of n ce and
Located c ose o Tycoon
La~e

CROWN CITY
Lov ely 3
bedroom
hom e
w th
1 r eplace
n den
fut
bas em ent n ce k chen
w h ran ge
car gar ag e
5.15 800

8Pct FHA&amp; VA
FINANCING
AV:A ILABLE NOW
WE BUY SELL
OR TRADE

N TOWN
Good
n
vestm en t
property
or
com mere al s c 2 houses
O{la t ulcty lot Locatcdon
0 1 v e s iJ2 ooa
MERCERV I LLE
Good 5
room hom e w h f r ep la ce
pa I a
ca rp e
2 ca r
garagE,'
o I er bu d ngs
Located 011 '1 acres Pr ice
educed ca l oday
CHESH RE
N ce J
bed room home w h t am y
room
IO\JC y
bath
basemen
na tural gas
heat 1 car garage L o ca cd
on 3 n cc lot s $29 500
34 ACRES
N ce 5 roan
house vs t remade t'.'d new
bll h new k ! ch en
new
car pe t n ce f r epla ce has 1
arg e barn and 5 s a ller
bu ld ng s
Located
o
Fa rv ew Road c o ~:~e
o
Merce v lie

Even m gs Call
John Full er 446 4J27
Le e Johnson 156 6740
Earl Winters 446 3828
Doug W etherho t 146 4244

STROUT REAL TV
World's largest, the leader
s1nce 1900 in serving the
nation's buyers and sellers.

Ph. 446-0008
514 2nd Ave.
JUST THE RIGHT $1ZE
Look ng for so melt ng not
oosma ll tolve n&amp;no too
large to manta n '&gt; See h s
lo ve l y ra nch sty le hom e
fe.a ur mg J bdrm s
1 ,
ba th s
d n ng
f am t y
com bo garage En oy he
economy of g as h ea &amp; the
co m tort of central a r A
for on l y S32 900
CITY - VACANT LANDApprox S h acres ru nn ng
F ou r t h Ave
to
f r om
Ch i ckamauga
Creek
S6 500 Don t wa t to buy
buy and wa1t
lOTS FOR
SALE Lo ca ed ..on N e ghborh o6d
Rd L ncoln P k e George
Creek Rd
and Rod ney
Harr sburg Rd F nan c ng
ava lab e
-4 BEDROOMS IN TOWN-

N ce cah1 for tabl e 1 2 story
home an Evans He gh ts
offers room o spar e fo r
your
grow no
ta m l y
Where else ca n you get a
full basement fam ly rm
w th gas f r epla ce lar ge
k chen and d n ng erea for
only $25 500
LAND
CONTRACT
A lmost 12 A of evel and
ro I ng and w h a sma 2
BR and ba th home po nd
and lo ts of pr vacy loc a te d
n Mor gi)n Twp
CHEAPIE Perfect fo r
week ends 15 acres of and
about 1 7 clear ed and
2
woods w th f a nlage on
L 11tle Raccoon Cr ee k p us
an ol d 2 sl or y home
$II 900
BUILD NG OR MO'BILE
HOME SIT E - App ro11 S
a cres ebout 13 m
from
town
Land s flat w th
fron tage an q,. BT r d and
cou n ty wa te r avallab e
$S 000
MOBILE HOME PARK smal close to tow n good
ncom e easy to t ake ca r e
of
ca I f or more
n
for ma t on
R IO GRAN D E THE
ONE
YOU VE
BEEN
WAITING FOR - Love l y
br ck ranch off er s ov er 2100
sq tt at modern I v n g
wh ch nc lud es 3 BRs 2
baths comp e tc k t ch en
w h m crowave oven
f ormal d n ng room formal
toyer
la rge fa m y rm
w th 1 r eplac.e heat pump
arge pa o and 2 ca r
gar age

BAR BUSIN~SS &amp; HOTEL
- Be your own boss w th
th s o11ce n a llfe f me 1n
vest m en t
Lo ca ed on a
Corn er lo t n M ddleport
Call for mare In f ormal on

ba sement Bu I n back porch n ce larg e f ront porch
• --- --"--1 ng moder n k tchen c•ty w11ler J acre of good
land Loi s of st r ubbery Bea ut lui home Ql a
pr ce
SMALL FARM
ANOT H ER QUALITY
LIVING
HOM E OWNER
B E ING TR A N SFERRED
Today s choice
ap
pr o11 ma tely 15 acres ot
Be au f ul B r oom house
pasture And tnr mlng and
188 SQ f
I v ng spa ce
N ce
7
ro oms
tul
Featur ng J BR w 11 delux e
basement
3 bedroon s
walk. n c osets 2 ba hs L&lt;l
good barn
wo o her
q r ctcl ve F R
beaut t v
outs Cl e bu d ngs
f en ces
ro c k 1 e d sto e f repla ce
Ia r
plen y water lor
Forn a t OR
Bu I I k I
chen
mpo t~;&gt; d 1 gh f x
Ci'l tic
s n al
to bacco
ltcr eage we are r ead y a
ures a n ct pe w er door
so
hAr dwar e A lso en oy 1 e
SPR NG VALLEY
u sc of Cub Hou se &amp;
SUBDIV SION
Sw n
ng
Pool
CElli
today
Vacan lot s ~ n ce s ze
26 ACRES
bu ld ng lots w th a t
N I CE B R I CK H OME
u
es
here
Lo
she
9 ooms 4 bcdwo ms ba tt
10 t 8 by 171 2 Better get
{!. shower tu
ba se {I
vm now
fr ont &amp; ba c k porches
JBEDROOM
mod ern k chen garag€ 2
JUST COMPLETED
lied we s 3 bar ns n lk
Qu e ne ghborhood
Tt s
5 to
B G pas ure
hOme swell constructed on
IObacco ba se Look th s
a n ce I eve at 1&lt;1 0 :~~: 160
over Ha s bee
a
F rame constru ct on w h
t arn
brck
fen
maser
bed r oon w th bah N ce
WELL CON STRU&lt;.. TEO
bu II n k chen tab e top
HOM E
eie c r c r ange and wa
Th s s on e ot he b e er
bu I homes n V nlon 0 2
oven The 10use s t u y
carpe ted and MS a tach ed
stan 7 rooms J n cc s ze
garage Th s one you w
bedrooms 1
baths t u
Ike
m cd um
p r ce d
basemen K chen a ll bu 1
Owner w II he p f nance
n ve y n ce L v n g r oom
Qua l f leet bUyer Ca ll now
14 x22 w th
ce f rep lace
Wonderful le vel lot s ze
PRICED
ap pr ox 97 x497
La r ge
TO SELL
garden space Th s home
Are ¥OU oa k ng for a good 3
bedroom hou se., C osc o
wou ld no be for sa e exc~p l
for
heal h con d t ans
town") Over 1 ac r e o f go od
Show n by appo n tm ent
lanrP I you dr vc truck s
on y
tot s ot spa ce o park. Roon
to keep your fav or te pet s
BROOMS
horses orca leJ Th ese ar e
2ACRES
a t ow th ng s you mny
Th s s a very attr ac ve 3
cons de r T he re ar e n any
bedroom horne bv 1 n
n or e for o tv S18 OOQ
~ ! chen
Includ es garba ge
d sposal cou nter top stove
BR I CK CO N STRUC TION
wa l o.ve n r e f r gera or
- GA LL POLIS
w lh ce maker F n she d
We are p eased to ott er tar
Beau tu larg e
basemen
sale th s 8 room n ce o der
rees n background Th e
home n one ot the bes
com fo rt of c y
fe
he
loca l ons o l Ga po s 4
beauty and en 1oyment of
bedroo 1S ba sement N a t
coun Y I v ng a I h s c los e
o Ga po son Sta e H gh
g.'ls torced a r furn ace
way
Th s ho me ha s h ad a
180 ACRES PLUS
Be auty Salon ope r at 1on n
V a can
--. A wood and
for years Own h s n co
wonderla nd
horne
a nd
your
own
and
business now
• oo

CHUR CH OR BU SINESS BUILDING
Approx 18 50 sq II one roon Str eet leve l wi ll 5 roorn s
plu s batt and st ort1ge room n ba se n ent Loc.'\IOd o ,
hlghwMy 35 West Cor ner ot s11e 70 x 1?0 Naturllt l gll s
t un a ce air cond tton ed c ty wili er block bulld ng
Won I la st 101'1g a t sale pr ice Hll ~ lo t s of users Call t

4 MI LESOF
GALLIPO LI S ROUT E 141
3 bedraon han c w i th
cab nets a
bu 11 n
,
k I c hen and "odcn bafh
S or -n door s whlte pri m e
s Olng
Fuel 0 1 h ea t
coppe r
plumbing
Ga P.O 15 SCI oo l d strict
Won t
!IS
ong
On l y
1 1950000

2 ST OR Y
CO UNTR Y HOM E
MUST SELL
~:~cres
5 11 les fr on
Gallpo l s 7
Qons
4
b ed rooms
pa rtia l
~&gt;as emcn
ru el oil farced
air t unace rura l water
Gat !pa l s Sc hoo
Dlst
Garden space fr onla gc o n
Raccoon Creek
COMMERC IAL
BUILDING &amp; SITE
St ale Hlghwav 7 North
Masonry Build no w th
brick tront building 1 k e
new Approx !!Ire 30 x24 ~
story Leve lot front&amp; 175
ft an S t~tt e H ghway 7 Call
now
7 ROOMS
4 BEDROOMS
Gelll po Is School O l!ltrlcl
basem en t
1\7
bethl
modern k ll chen co m~&gt;~•
wlth b rch cabinet!! F A
furn ace c arport ~ wood
burn no fir eplaces famlty
r oom large lol wllh fruit
rees
and
a
s torage
bu ding With n 5 miles ot
Ga ll po s Nice hOme at 1
good pr ce
1 ACRE ON
HIGHWAY 35
1 Homes 7 Rental
Trai l er s space s all wi h n
wa l ki n g
d l sla11ce
to
I 10me has 2
hasp tal
baths and 3 bedroo m s
d n n g roo m lar ge livi ng
r oom
modern kll c h en
second home
2 ba hs
J
bedrooms with basemen
P r ced o sell

IBE O-OOM
Acre Pful - l t vtl ftP
prox
1
mi les from
hosp ta l on b tacklop r&lt;1
P t:l'\ Y ot garden spfl te
rural wt~tcr courllry I Vlng
C osc to Ge l lpo Is Pric ed
onlySBOOO
L09K THIS OVEI.I
76 Acre FlHil
1':'1 od~rn s li
roon
h one
good bor
new too l ~ h ed ullllly b ctg
Line fen ces al wovtJn win.;
41 acres B G pesturo 10
ac r es woodrd
72 ~teres
melldow
and
ll l~t ble
plen y o r oc u!t trees 1?00
tb tobe cco biiSt'! TII (S tl'r n
s n th e Gll lpo S S!:hOOI
D slrlct Cll ll no w
A CREAGE
BUILDING SITES
65 Acres acatcd t Groen
&amp;
Per rv
Tw p
Sn al
amou n ot
mbcr SO A
1 li ab le 2 ba rn s 40 x :IO Md
dO x'l J It yo\ are ookl g
l or v.!l uabl c a d l or
vestm en
hQ rf II Is
Co li
toc,tay
COUNTRY MANOR
WITH ~N
ARTI STIC SETTING
One of Gellltl Count y !i
bes t 1200 sq fl ov er "
approxlma oly
acres ol
land
n ice po1 tl
House
consists of 8 room s l or t
be d roo 1 s 3 ful b!l h s ?
show e r s sunk c• I vlng
r oom 6 x 9 w lh lH ,. slvc
stone f r ep ace K t el en s
beyond ward s You wll
hav e to see to llol levc
n ce pan ry b 'ty wl 'dow
ooking ou t over veltey
He-a t p u mp t or l')cellng Mtl
coollno
28 xB dec k ny
r uf'th ng eng h of hOuse ?
car ga r age a nd ner y more
featur es This good f amily
Is l eaving county ca 1
IOCHI'V tor 8ppoln tm ent
I A 3 RM
HOUSE&amp;M HOM E
Dr led we ll with elec r c
pump N co 1 acre w It 3
r oo m house a nd 2 bedroo'
mob le home App r o~ 2 ~
m iles from VInton Very
pr etty

a

PIZZA BUSIN ES S An
exce tent appor un t y fo
some bus ness m n ded
perso n Th s larg"e corner
ot w th a modern br ck
bu ld ng s a good p ace a
st ar t Can be bouohl with
or w thou equ pmen t Call
for annolntmen
COMMER(. ,...._ ;:, tIE - 5
ots and o der home on
Sate Route 7 n Ka nau ga
L o so t po ten l a l tor $3 4 000
N EW LI STING 10 n
ou 3
acres leve l lan d
ontag c n ce
o s of rd
co n tor tab le 6 rn and ba h
co age w lh new oa f o
f urnace and coun ty wa er
$20 000
NEW
LISTING
T HURMAN - $15000 Good
sold 6 r m and ba lh home
tea ures f orma t d n ng rm
larye LR and k tchen 3
BR s o I fu nac e we 1 or
c Y wa er new ct um num
s d ng and fla o
TAVERN - Operated by
sa me f am l y tor 40 yrs
Good equ pmen excellent
ocat on ter ms and ncom e
I gu r es
ava l ctb l e
o
Ca
for
qua f ed buye
appo ntm en
EDGE OF TOWN - Good 2
BR hom e
s par ally
emod e l ed w h a n cc
k chen and ba lh laundry
rm gas f urnace conc r e e
dr ve and new sewage
svs em ba ga n pr ccd at
s 2 000
COUNTRY HOME WITH
EVERYTH IN G - MaKe an
appo nt men l o see th s 4
yr old br c k loc a ted abou
7 m
from HM C Th s
b eau Y s s t uaTcd on 10 ~
acres Of and n th e c ty
sc hool d s t w h J
m
fr on ta ge
on
Raccoon
Cre e k
O tl'l er
spec als
t e~turt:~ are d BR s
3
ba hs t am l'y r m w II WB
I rep l ace
orma l d n ng
rm
for na
e rane e
laundr y
rm
lar ge
scree ned n pa t o and 1 car
garag e Over $100 ooo
FIFTH AV E
- S18 000
Barga n pr ced 6 rm and
bah stu cco feat u res 2 BR s
up and 2 down large ba ck
por ch and a lm os new ste el
ga r age

RANNY BLACKBURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

FOR SALE

Campmg Eqmpmenl

2 BR MH $100 3 BR MH $125
Pt 446 0175

STARCRAFT FALL SALE
On m n mo tors o ers and lold
dow ns o lso used ro lu ond
12 x 60 MOB LE HOME 0 e m le
fold clown p ced o go We se ll
lrom HMC adu lts o ly Ph
se
vlc-1 01 d quo lty CAMP
446 3805
CONLEY STAR CRAFT SALES
12 • 60 2 8f( Mob le Home Ph
RT 62 N PI PLEASANT W
4.:16 23 7 or 44b 4!i74
VA

2 Rl? M b lo Ho o Ph 3b7 732Q

mce subdiVISIOn w1th
J br
hvmg room,
dmmg area. large
kitchen
w1th
dishwasher
range
and disposal, 2112
baths, 2 car garage, 4
lg rooms downstairS
all carpeted Tot a I
electnc w1th central
a1r c1ty schools s mt
from town on Rt 35
$39 000 Ph 446 0088

25 Locust Sf
Howard f\rannon Broker
011 ceU6 2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve 446 1226 or44.6 1674
HOUSE BEAUTIFUl
'A PEAK
of PER FEC T ON
awa s you n s d~
h s
bea ut f u 4 BR twa s or y
home Deep pile go ld tone
carpc n th e spa c ous LR &amp;
mus c room
a
m os
we lcome f ormal DR &amp;
hea rt wa rmi ng k ! c hen 7
I r ep ace s gas I urn
new
roo f aumn um sdng
ove r s ze lot q9
w de tra m
2nd Ave to the rver Tr u l y
th e home one n us t see to
app r ec a e
CREATIVE
OWN E'R WANTED
Try you r ow n de as n
decora nq h 54 BR 2s ory
nome Aluminum s d ng
gas furn 2 R bsm
deep
lo garage ma urc shade
tr ees
ocated down own
t rom sc ho o s
one m n
Pr ce reduced to S25 000

\'4 anled lo Uo
GENERAL Co trocto ~
Do ol
na sonory co pen ter &amp; p umb
g I sta ll a d
epa
ol
d vewoys Ph 446 9587

~1vbilc

Home • for ~ale

USED MOIII LE HOMES
CALL 576 271 1
TO KONOMIZE on fuel undetp n
you nob le 1 ome o d oncho
lor sa fe y Foste Mob le Home
So v ce 446 27B3 o El ner Sk d
nore 446 3479
END OF YEAR
CLEARANCE SALE
USED MOB LE HOMES
TR STATE M H
Bonk F non e ng
Gal pols 0
:!20 Eoste n Avo
t.opol s Oho
2x60 w th t p au

2

b
196BPMC 12xb02 B
1968 EL CON A 12•60 3 8
1969CHAMPON 12x60 2Br
B ondS MOBILE HOMES
Pt P eosont W Va
AULI MOB LE HOMES SERV CE
::.k t g o cho g o d pol os
o I dJb 3b08 of e 4
&lt;111) 'l

\

REALt:Y~

2 year old bt level m

197 Bu ddy

Mobil" Homes for Rent

Realtor

NICE COMFORTAB

B ck 3 or 4 bedrooms w tlh wa lk n c losets full

Bk 1 o I"'

P

367 7329

MAN I F I CE NT
VIEW
1 vable home n c ly
1 s ory la.rge room"
3 Bed r ooms &amp; bath
4 b locks to sc ho ol
A th s on over s ze lot
r educed P.r ce

a.

FOR SALE
4 bedroom home large living rtom dlnln~ fOOM llrao
kitchen 1112 boths 2 wood-lllomlng Hre~etl full
hasement 2 car garqt Located wllllln w•log
""lance of town Very rononably priced Cell44~1010
446 2265 or 446 BS75

a

1q0A FARM
Ve ry nic e .:1 BR br c k &amp;
s to r:~e home F P n LR ti.J tt
bsm
a I elect c 3 m
I rom hOsp tal Good far ll J
barns loo t shed
plenty
water &amp; pas tu re Owner
w II help f nan ce
LOTS LOTS LOTS
J very good lots 110
w de 6 m from awf1 Buy
one or a I
hree .,
e
reduced price

•
hrd tialc
MOVING OUT SALE ( ns de) Sun
Nov 28 th ru Thurs Dec 2
W fer cloth ng tools co pet
flrep ace screen
X nos dec
and occes
oys Lots of m sc
tems 2
m les out Bulo vll e
Rd oli 160Wotch lo s1gn s

•

New brick hom e just completed 3 BRs 2 balhs la rge
ltvmg room famtly room ftreplace nice large ktt&lt;:hen
dtshwasher di sposal double oven Tappan ranga 2 car
garage wtth electrtc operttor carpet throughout
centra l atr heat pump located on old Rt 35 wtthtn 1
m1les of HMC on SunkiSI Drive Pr~ced rlgh1 to sell
lnqu1re at Corbm &amp; Snyder Furniture 446 1111 44'
2S7l after s

•

�l·D-lbe Sunday Times&amp;ntinel, Sunday, No!__ 28, 1976

For Best Results Use SundJJy Times-Sentinal Classifieds

&amp;-0-lbeSundayTimes-Sentlnel,Sunday Nov 28 1876

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
For Sale
SWEEPER and sewtng machtne
repo r ports and suppl et P ck
up and del very Oovls Vacuum
Cleane r Y1 m le up Georges
~e~~~

Ad Ph

PASQUALE

.uo 0294

Electr col

Serv ce

446 2716doy or n ght

dows

I ntels

etc

Claude

W nten R o Grande 0 Phon•
24S 5121 alterS
USED AJ'PLIANCES
REFAIGEIIATORS
wa1hen

VACATION
PLANS· 1977
Learn about

All TYPES of bu1ld ng mater ol5
block bnck sewer ptpe• w n

dryer ranges Gene Skaggs
1294 Ease n A~e Ph 446 7398
COAL

AAA tours for

1917 to Hawaii Las Vegas,
San Juan and Bermuda.
Send for free tour tn·
formation
Brochures
today Auto Club of Southern Ohio 710 Waller St ..
Portsmouth Ohto 45661 or
phone 354 S614

open 6 days o week ol"'d

even ngs For further nformo
ton coll367 7338
1970 TRIUMPH 650 Choppel' new
po nl JOb good cond . Ph 992
6192
l C.Hl we gkt ch mney blocks

Gall pols 81ock Co Ph

446

2783
MUST sell Ike new 2 pc Span sh

I v ng room su te

e~C c

cond

.u6 3712
FIREWOOD
ngs

Coli 388 9930 even

BEGIN your spr ng cleaning by
hov ng your carpets cleaned by
bes method known Remove
150 BALES of hoy ca ll J H N do
245 5814
all the d rt Make your carpel
look new ago n For fr ee
GAS &amp; FUEL OIL furnaces wood
es t mat e caii37_~
9_:2.::
68,2~-~-burners oven un Is po nl
pane l ing
pl ywoo d
DEAD Stock removed No charge
bu ld ngmalertols of ol k nds
Coll245 5514
tlv ng room su tes ce t ng t le
THURMAN HOUSE an tiques Fur
elec
I ghh I usses many
n lure sir pp ng
epa r on
other t erns Up to 50,-. d s
dref n shed County Rd 8 off
count on most tems Franks
35 Centerv lie V lloge 245
Barga n Cen ter St Rt 160 at
9479
Po r er
GRAYS TAXIDERMY
LAYNE S USED AND NEW FUR
Rl 2
NITURE
Lefor W Vo
Bunk beds Mo t ess &amp; box spr
,. Ph 304 B95 3386
ngs tab le 6 cha s &amp; bullet
CLOSED ON SUNDAY
mahogany onges woshe &amp;
d yers modern sofa loveseat
and clto r coppertone s de by
s de refr g Bas on Rockers
sofa beds and match ng cho r s
Early Amer can l v ng room
s u tes
eel ners
tabl es .o4
bedroom su es beds chest ol
.
d ewers
Maple table and
cha s d nette se ts co nsole
and por table TV s other tems
446 0322 dey o even ngs 3
m les out Bu ov lie Prier Rd
offStR 160
All Hatr Cut $2 00

-------

Bicentennial
SpecUJI

HIGLEY'S

BARBER SHOP

Now thru Dec 31st
Open 6 Days

CHAIN LINK AND WOOD FENCES
NOW at REDUCED Pr ces
SAVE Roy Houck Fence Cen ter
I 776 2237 or I 353 4b68

Bam Opm
Ph 446 0002

WE HA VE TH E NEW POL ORO D
AND KOOACK ns ont cameras
oy on e awa y now fa
Chr stmas TAWNEY STUDIOS

LAS VEGAS

MEN s AND LADIES elec t c
shove oil brands also !weds
and access We ho ve o ful l I ne
of So ny
od cs and TV s
Taw ey Jewe lers Ph 44b IbiS

FOR

FIREWOOD Ph 446 4qqq

NEW YEAR'S
Jotn our specuJI tour ta
spend NP 1 Years Eve m
Las Vegus Tour deJNrts
December 29
return!
January 2 Phone AAA 354
5614

---

NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE
All kin ds of used cool stoves See
Howa rd G een ot H &amp; G
Bargo n Cen ter Add son
DISHWAS HER $100 Ph 446 91&gt;87
EAR CORN AND GRAIN FED
FREEZER 8EEF PH 388 9991
SMALL Upr ght cho d organ w th
bench Ph 446 1206

SLEEPING Rooms weekly rotea
Pofk Central Hotel

LIGHT housekeeptng roam Pork
Cel'ltra l Hotel
SlEEPING rooms for rent Gallic
Hotel
OfFICE apace downtown 514 Se
cond Ave 446 0008
TRAILER lot one m le from HMC
Phone .4.46 3805
RENTAL avo fable f rst of October
now occup ed by Central Soyo
ttl the north s de of Sycamore
Street between Second ond
T~ud Aven ue recnonoble rent
Iorge parktng oreo c.o ll for on
oppo ntment Ph 446 1066
TRAILER SPACE large lot on Rt 35
near shopp1ng area $50 mo
Phone 446 1909
MOBILE HOME space Upper R ver
Roa d Phone .4.46 0008
BRADBURY FURN APTS Adulh
only no pets dep eq 729
2nd Ave Ph 4.46 0957
TRAILER SPACES $50 Raccoon
T a ler Pork Rl 141 379 2469
NEW MOBILE HOME n Gall pol s
I or 2 adu lts on ly Ph 446 0338
TRA LER SPACE 3 'I m les Irom c
ty I m Is on 218 Coll256 6689
FOUR ROOM APT 2 odult s o I
ut I t es upst01rs Ph 446 2906
FURN APT $150 pe mo ut,! t es
paid
adult s f1nt floor
446 4.416 of &amp;r I pm

2 BR garage apt on Chatham
446 1875 afte

5

RIVERVIEW 3 Br House w th
we I to wall carpet very cl ean
l or nterv1ew ca ll U 6 2404
FOR A JOB WELL DONE FHLIGN
deo carpels w th Blue Lu stre
Rent electr sc_ shompooer $1
Ce tr.ol Supply Co

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APAR~ENTS
1 Bedroom unfurnished
tmmechate occup1ncy
Ph 446 1599

Sei'Vtceo Ottered
P c u e Tube Spec ol sis
HARTWELL ELECTRON CS
TV Rep o
245 536S

440

--

----

NICElY FURN 2 Br Apl
ler¥1ew call .4-46 2404

Ph
lo

n

NEW LISTING
IMMACULATELY kept 3
bedroom In Gslllpol s City
Sc hool
O lstrl!: l
near
hOsp tat sho pp i ng center
and short driv e from
down to wn Ju st plclurt'
yourself sitting In front ot
your firep l ace
n thl ~
homes beautiful tam II '
room
Call In today for
more details
In Town
Near the corner af Th rd
and Vme Str ee ts Th sIs a 2
stor y 3 bedroom home that
ha s
been
remod eled
r ecently Just th nk of the
ease
n gett ng to th e
shopp.ng d str ct schoo ls
chur ch es etc off er ed 10
you at a very r easonabl e
pr ce of Sl9 000
97 1 Acre Rt 7 Farm
With m n r gh s and coa
seams us t 20 m n from
Gall pots 8 acres r ver
bottom brick home end
guage c ty water me a
barn
obacco barn
800
lb
obacco base f ence d
pa sture Only Sb5 ooo w 11
lak e S20 000 to 530 00 home
n trad e f oca t an sgood
Larg e assumab le loan an
ba an ce

Vacant Land
l1 Acres
Ju st ott R ou t e 16 0 on
Thomp son Road Beau fvl
bu il d ng s l es w th wooded
area s Bu ld yo ur hom e
her e and ge l away from
&amp;II Pr ced we ll b e ow fa r
market va lu e at SIO 000
OTHER COUNSELORS
GALLIPOliS
Denver K H gley 444 ooo 2
CROWN CITY
Joe Crans
156 qu
National Advert smg With
Gall ery of Hom es

lronch

APPLIANCE SERV CE
All lead ng makes $6 00 for se
v ce ond est mo es 30 '! s e;l(
P PH 256 6776 osk fo Bob

446-3636
COUNTRY LIV:IN
(Jus
outs de city 1 rn1ts 4 BR 2
batns family room with
II rep ace modern k tchen
I ll I
basemen!
J car
garage 6 2'1 acres good
pa!.lurt fe nced 530 000

CALL ABLE BUILDERS
For ne~ homes and remodel ng
ol any k nd Spec1ol pr ces on
storm w ndows ond doon No
JOb 00 smon Fre e es moles
Roof ng - weekends co 1 col
lee! Columbus Oh 614 263
2669
Ph 675 6392 Owner
Fred Lohrmer
SANDY AND BEAVER INSURANCE
CO has offe ed serv ces for
F re Insu rance c:ove age n
Gall o County to ol mos 0 cen
tu y Farm s homes and pe r
sana ! property coverages 0 e
ova loble to meet nd v dual
needs Contact Fos le Lew 5
your ne ghbor and agent

l BR s could be four lamlly room lois of carpel
natural gas heat 4 acre lot This house was $23
Call today for new pnce

PRICED FOR ACTION ! 2
story br ck d BR 2 baths
natural ga s heal w1thln
walk1ng d slan ce schools &amp;
sh op p ng F 11 II up yourse f
and save S17 000

It ts unhkely that you would ever
a
complete home Th s lovely home has 3 large BR s
forma l entrance f amtly room with fireplace formal
d1n ng room ea t m k tchen wtth double s nk dispo sa l
and d shwasher 2 car garage full ba seme nt natural
heat and central air All of this ts on a well

FULLY
FURNISHED
mobile home on 6 acre
Pat o outb u d ngs fue l 011
furnace h ea T Sl2 000
ATTENTION MINERS! 3
B R home n good cond at
Par ter on I acr e Ru ra l
wa ter fuel o heat North
Gall a Schoo s S2B ooo
VINTON VILLAGE N ce 3
BR home w th lg barn 3 3 ~
acres l eve l t o rol l 1ng
ne ar y all fe nced Walk ng
d stance to elem sc hool
ban k &amp; groce ry SIB 000

New Haven - Commerctal bu1ldmg - 30x50r 2 story 2
apartments upsta1rs Ideal restaurant or p1zzena
locatton
Mason - Restaurant, equtpment &amp; mventory Upstatrs
apartment

Pt Pleasant - 2 offtces downstairs. 2 apartments
upstatrs Fmancmg i!Vatlable
Mason - 2 story, 4 bedroom house m good conditton New
large lot $24,900
Rtver Lot - 205 ft nver frontage Older 8 room -bouse
needs renovation

We have nice residential listings In
Pt. Pleasant, Mason, N3w Haven.
Sandy Nichols, Broker
I
Caralyyn Thome

675-4053

Paul "SSIo9kf Smith
67~294

882-2447
Mary fowler

EXECUTI VE SECRETARY
M ust ltov• !lihorthond typ ng ond
ab hty to handle tedm col
mater ol st able Mature In
d vidual nteresled 10 0 &lt;oreer
des red Sa lary sarnmensuro te
w1th ob1f ty and exper ence
Send esume to Ba~e .461 •t.
Gall pol1s Do ly Tr bune

6 24
ACRES
perfect
bu ld ng s tes p c u resQ ue
coun rv surr ound ng s c1ty
sc hools
rural
water
$10000

If you have thoughts about the br ck home at 100
Chtlllcothe Rd perhaps you should ca ll today f not
sold soon thts housew1ll be off the market
F ve miles from town on
Rt 41 The own er wants 1f Two story hou se lots of
sod soon Th s litt le beauty outs de stor age In cludes J
IS s If ng on 2 9 acres of out bu d ngs w th concr ete
wa lks plus a 20x30 bar n
mostJy clean and 2 BR s w lh concre te floor AI of
(cou d be Jl v ery n ce
h s nclud ng 6 acr es of
k t chen
tut
d v d ed
basement Pr ce reduced to gro und s la ca ed at h e
south edg e of v nt on Ca ll
$27 soo
today only S21 500 No 020

lOTS OF ROOM at a
reaso nable pr ce
4 BR
ho m e on 2 4 a cr es c 11y
sc hools 5 m les rr orn town
on bla cktop road $20 soo
SEVENTY FlVE ACRE
FARM 2 story l BR w bath
hOme good ba r n oth er
outbu ld ngs go od pas tur e
f en ced pond tobacco ba se
mbe r on bla cktop raad
sso 000

S31 900 w II buy 8 very n ce
3 BR home w th a tu
basemen t
Th s hom e
features carpet n the LR
and hall plu s good so d
hardwood floor s n the c ty
school d str ct Nalu ra l 9as
heat

S5 500 BUYS a 2 story hom e
n he c ty - c t y water
sewage an d gas
Needs
some r epa1r but you cant
go wr ong a th s pnce

We ha n had seve ral calls
concern ng our st ng ne ar
HMC Th e pr ce s only
$27 900 and th e 1ocat1on IS
grea YoU mt,~ st see ns d e
to r eally apprec ate th e
quality Ca l toda y

REDUCED
Rental n
vestment 2 fu lly fur
nl sh ed a r cond tra ler s on
lg lo Geo r ges Cr ee k Rd
Now priced at Sl3 500

W lh n the c1ty of Ga l po s
on R t 14 he r e s an older
home n nee d of repa r t
s ts on a ~ acre lot n an
excel en!
ne ghbarhaod
Th s choic e lac a I on w II
not ast long

- ROfCANADAV'~
REALTOR--

Pr ced n the low S20s
tns lde the c ty natural gas
heat
alum
s d ng
full
d vlded basement w1th
f r e p a ce
deta che d
g&amp;rage
just r ghl for
newl y weds

Audrey Canaday
Rea Itor Assoc tate
4463636
Any Hour

743 Jr d Ave Cou ld be u sed
for many d ffer en l pur
poses perhaps yo ur 1d eas
are be tt er than m ne Why
not tak e a look today N o
021
New I st1ng at 38 N e 1 Ave
New roof v ny s d ng 3
bed oams bath Ut room
lot s o f s or age na ural gas
he a t $15 500
t s No Secret th er e are
ots ot. new fam lte ~ mov ng
n GaIa Co VS Realty IS
ook1ng tar hOm es to sat sty
hese needs If you are
p an n ng to se 1 Now s he
I me

we have other 1st ngs 1f
you are buy tng or selling
call VS Really Today
All of our I stmgs are
shown by appo1ntment
only

PHONE 44&amp;0552-ANYTIME
428 2nd AVE. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

JUNK au to and scrap me ol Ph
3B8 8776
OLD FURN TURE AND m sc ant
ques Ph 245 5050

Sound o lder home full basement
ul I t es lo ge lawn and garden
Ph :W... 364 5630 wrtle Box
14 A
Fromvtwon
R
Gassaway W Vo 26624

MANAGERS/MANAGER TRAINEES
FEMALE • MALE
())r Company a AAA rated ratall chain AMEX listed
company has over 285 shoe outlet! currently In
operation with 50 60 new stores opening eac h year
Compare these benefits
- Above average salary
-S ubsta ntia l lncent ve Bonu s- pad semt
·~nually

- Company pa id group Insurance mcludtng mat or
medtcal
~ Profit sharing
- Paid vacations
- Rapid advancement promotion from wlthtn
- Job secur lly
To quollfy we osd lhal you have a minimum of high
school or equlvelent good personal background
fl exlb lil y to relocate and the desire lo be above
average
If you qualify or w3nt to c ompare your present posl11on
to fhls opportunity call Mr Tom Bush at •46 9099
Mon Tues Wed 29 30 I betw een 9 am and 12 p m
tor a confide"tlal Interview .

OsMOl
VfORLD
M Eoatl iloonltiiY

GAWA OOUNTY'S
LARGEST
REAL ESTAT~
Brand New 4 Bedroom
Split Level - And you II
love t L arge fancy kll
c hen beautiful carpet 4
large be d r ooms 2 full
ba hs lar ge IIV ng front
por ch garage and a tam ly
room wail ng to be f inished
bv you
11 Acres
owner Verv Anx louJ
TO Sell
Owner moving to Northern
Oh o and des1res to sell this
very n ce J bedroom home
wh ch ncludes 1 ' ba ths
large family room forma l
d10 full dry ba!em ent 2
car garage loca ted on 11
acr es of wooded rolling
country side w lh farm
pond
s2s no oo Buys r hts
Well Cared For
81 Level
You be the tud ge You can I
buy more ho~se for the
money 3 bedroom s n ice
k !chen tu rmshed fi!lm ly
room p us garage II s a
barga n why not be lsi lo
look
- Extra Spec1al Buy Br ck and ston e ranch
forma l entrance &amp; din ing 4
or s bedroom s fam ly
roo m w B f repla ce 2
ba th s In town
Pri c ed
$39 soo
One Block from Park
Th s s a so d o der 1 2
st ory 3 bedroom hOme 2
baths
f rep ace
ni ce
kitchen S31 900 00 Y ou It
like t If you wa n n tow n

Dan t MI SS Seeing
Th s Dutch Colonliil
L ove ly w ei bullf home an
coun ry lan e lust 5 m ties
from
down town
4
b e drooms
2112
bat h s
fam l y room n ce k tc hen
full
basemen t
an
a
beaut ful J a cr e estate

KEMPER HOLLOW _ 7
m es fr o ~ c y
3 BR
fram e ra nc h on tg Ia
f n st th s yourself and
save S2 1 000

APARTMENT S ZE GAS COOK
stove and electr c clothes
dryer Ph 446 0893

AGENCY

LISTINGS

R IO GRAND~ AREA
Jus t ott R t JS b oc k ranch
y pe home features 20 x24
LR w th f r eplace all mod
con v J0x 40 barn 25 ac res
leve l to roll ng
pa stur e
fenced po d $37 sa o

MOTHERLESS home ne eds li ve n
s Iter f or 2 sm all ch ldren
pr vote room etc Mathe w th
ch ld welcome Plea se wr te
Sow 452 ReyCloldsburg Ohio
43068

E WISEMAN

WE NEED

BRAND NEW - Very well
cons r u cted 3 Br
home
fu y carpet ed all el ectr c
bea u t fu modern k !che n
carpo rt S26 SOO

WE NEED LISTINGS

EX PER IENCED
AGGRESSIVE
sa lesperson to sell for Cojum
bus based tobber Comm 55 ons
POd on d reel and tobber sa te 5
Cal l 614 443 4852 9 5 for ap
polntment

Includes equtpment &amp; mventory

00

S$$ FOR YO U I Mob le
name part on Rl 35 near
shapp1ng
ce n te r
and
Ho zer s 11 pads 4 late
mod el fully furn mob le
hom es Look ng tor a solid
nvesTmenP A good re turn
on your money? Call fo r
mor e dets Is and an ap
pa ntment to see th s soon

Help Wanted

RUSSELL WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066
Bonnie Stutes

NEWGMC
Truck Headquarters
2 1970VWs
1974 1: T GMCP ckup
1969 three fourth T GMC PU
1973 It T Chev PU
197.4 ;, T GMC P1ckup
]974 /, T Chev PU 4 WD
1975 YJ T Chev PU
1971 Chev Impala
1973 Yt Chev P ckup
1974 , T GMC PU
1972 1 T Ford Stoke Body
1975 Ford Mu stang II
1975 three fou th T GMC PU 4 w
dr
1975 I Ton Chev Stoke
1q72 ;, T Chev p ckup
SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS INC
133PneSt
446 2S32
69 FORD P ckup one ha lf T
3712

n

------

446

--

Chev custom camper three
fou rth T PU 350 4 barrel
stock $1300 coll379 2403

1974 PLYMOUTH SCAMP exc
cond $2000 coll388 8666
73 MACH I MUSTANG 70 Old•
Cufiess Sup eme 69 Newport
Chrysler Ph 388 8850
62 CORVETIE wh1te 317 4 speed
Callforn a ccr $4500? 256 68&lt;t I
75 PLY OUSTER 6 ely sttk ahtft
mag wheals and 8 track 23 000
miles lnqu1re at 300 Cth Ave
Apt 2
1970 GMC Truck 20 II bed Ph
367 7329

Vac ation the Year Around
Ve ry n ce well built 2
b edroo m fu ll y car p eted
hom e w th Raccoon Ck.
frontage 1 m 1 off Rt 7 n
C1ty Schoo l o st r ct
The One You ve
Wa1ted For
Large 81 l evel w th 3 or 4
bedro oms Iaroe family
room 2 car garage flat lot
exce llent ocatlon n ci t y
school d str ct SJ9 900 buy s
th1s bea ut

Older 2 story 3 bedroom
fram e n go od cond 1 on on
almost an acre of tert e
ga r den tend near Cora
Do xo l gas heat dr li ed we ll
for water
cellar cel lar
house and storage bu ld ng
P t' ced to sell

Call us nght now.
'we need L1sttngs Calt the
WIS&amp;IJian Ag ency 446 3643
Gall a Co s largest ~;teal
Estate Sales Ag ency
Ofhce 446 3643
Ike W 1!5eman 446 3796
c N Wluman 446 4500

1967 CAMARO RS 4 spd 327 eng
completely rebuilt
a sk ng
$800 .446 1977
1969 PONTIAC F eb1rd Conve t
Power tap V 8 350 PS good
cond Ph 446 3856

----

VE RY
RARE
1970
Dodge
Challenger &lt;lAO Magnum e•c
cond
al l extras $2 000
367 OS79
72 CHEV CPARICE fu ll power o
exc co nd Ph .446 6611
70CHEV

4 spd Ph ~ 11-

1971 VEGA ~ATCHBACK 1967
Pontoc GTO PH 44630 18 or

388-8282

"'

LOST Hereford cow no ho ns
los t n Kerr ond Evergreen
vlcln ty
Call .245 5142 0
46 3812

~
=
CARTERS PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Co r Fourth &amp; P ne
Pho ne 4.46 3888 or 446 44777
STANDARD
Plumb ng Heat ng
215 Third Ave 4.46 3782
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMBING - H~llng - Air
Cand1t10n ng 300 Fourth Ave
h 44l. 1.....
DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Rout&amp; 160 at Ev ergree n
Phone 4.46 2735

CLOSE TO HOSPITAL - Thts lovely home 1s almost
new has 3 bedrooms I\\! balhs mce k1lchen Wllh
range refrlgeralnr disposal fully carpeted 1 car
garage Nice level lot $33 000

I
I
New Ltshng 40 Ac r es w tth 3 Bedroom hom e 3
outbutldmgs 1 200 tobacco base s tuated on county
road appr ox matel y 4 m les fr om R1 o Grande near
Cora M i ll Call for more nformatlon

NEW - 3 bedr oom carpet ed r an ch style br ck home
2 car garage lots of concrete mmedtate posses s on
Pr ce

Low 40

s

NEW LISTING Bo Acre far ms luated In AddiSon Twp
Large farm hou se wtfh 5 o r 6 bedrooms Gas well on
property f urntsheslow cost hea t ng We 1 wa ter Wtred
for 110 &amp; 220 volts Large barn and other outbu ld1ng s
Approximatel y 400 lb tobacco base Pr ce $53 000

2 Bedroom home s tua ted an 2 2 acr es n 8 1dwell Full
bath w shower new ly nst alled forced a r l urnac e and
hot water tan k Heres a gooq bu y for onl y $14 000 oo
BUILD A HOME Along
Rt 7 Crown City we have
2 lots with a tota Of 91
frontage Buy bo th for only
S5 000
NEW - 3 bedroo m car
peted r anch s yle br ck
home 2 car garage lot s of
conc rete
lmm e d a t e
possess 1on
Pr ce
l ow
40 s
THREE
BEDROOM
ca r peted home located on
Sa nders H II A dd tan only
f ¥e m nutes tr om down
town Gall pol s S tua ted on
a 90 x os mproved lot n ew
F A netural g as furnace
Galflpol s C t y water
shown by appo ntm en l
Pr ce S23 000
LAND
Budng o t n
Porter Cal l tod a y for mo e
nforrl).allon
LAND Bu d ng or mob le
ho me lot s m Eureka area
Buy as m any a s 8 acr es far
only
S5 300 00 Has ru ral
water and wei

LAND 56 acres fenced
w1th 20 acres of t mbe r
r lo se o N orth Ga l l a H 1gh
Sr h ool
ocated
on
Thompson Rd
ots of road
fran age
Buy
f or
$25 000 00
LAND 20 acres Loca ted n
Mor ga n Twp lo caT ed w th
road fro ntage on Raw es
VIlle Rd
Spr ng water
ava la ble
Buy for
$170 00 00
LAND
150 x 96
lot
ocated on L1dd y Ho low
Buy for Sd 000 00
DWELLING and 26 x 32
block bu ld ng Sit ua ted on
dO X 132 lot n Ga po l s
rad1,1d ng
co n ten ts
of
dw el l tnQ
Bu y
tor
$20 000 00
NOW S'2 0 000 00 wil l buy a
modern
one floo r
3
bedroom a ll etectr c home
In Ga ll pol S C ty SCh OOl
dl str ct S tua te d on 120 x
75 lot Carpeted excep for
k chen and bath
new
cond lion
r u r al wa t er
centra sewage col l ect on
black top streets
Ca for
more nforma t on Can be
V A and F H A finan ced

PR1CE REDUCED on
double w1de home
3
bed rooms
c a r p e t ed
modern k tchen
rur&amp;l
water
n c l udes refrlg
range llvmg 8. d n ng room
tur n lure washer dr yer centra l ;olr Pr rr&gt; $19 lintl

80~-R-D-IN-~sly Pu_p_p--.~,--Cor

CENTENARY Wood5 Kennel Pet
groom ng fcc• lites Hove your
pe t groomed undeer son/tory
cond All breeda accepted
446 0231
DRAGONW'I'ND Callery Kennel
A K C C F A H malayan (Per
s on ) ond S omese Only 3 left
446 38&lt;14 after I p m
RISING STAR KENNEL Boarding
Indoor outdoor runs
AKC
Shetland Sheep dogs (Sheltles
m ma tu re co lli es) Cheshire
Ph 367 0292
BRIAR PATCH Ke nnels Boarding
AKC Gordon Sette s Engl sh
Cocker Spomels 446 4191
--

~

--~-

Ar.l.. OOBERMANS S Redt and
Blocks 3 block moles 7 wks
ol d I r ed female 11 wks old
w th eo Is c opped Ph 446
4654
GERMAN SHEPHERD pupa 3 left
$45 256 6841
READY FOR CHRISTMAS Dobor
man P ncher Pups Chomplon
blood I ne AkC Rtg Block ond
rust olao Reg Australian Ble
Healer Ph 388 9991
TRA INNEDBRm:A
c:-:N::c
Y- $7_5_ P_h
440 2914

'

Ph Home 37!1-2184

Gal!ia County's Fastest Growing Real Estate Agency

FIVE BEDROOM car
pe ed home to ci.'l te d d m les
tr am downtown Gall pol s
Twa w b f replaces two
baths w showers beaut fu
woode d 3 acre lo heate d
and coo ed
w lh h ea
pump
Gall polls City
School Dstrlct Ca ll for
more nformat on
NEW LISTING
86 Acre
far m s tuated n Add son
Twp
Large farm house
w th 5 or 6 bed rooms Gas
we ll on property turn shes
tow cos t hea t n g We 1
wa te r W red f ar 110 &amp; 220
volts Large barn and other
out b u ld ngs
Ap
prox mately 400 lb tobacco
base Pr ce S53 000
FOR
THE
LARGE
FAMILY we ha \le a 9 room
A bed room 2 story home 1M
B dwell only 20 minutes
from coal mines storm
windows and doors F A
fuel oil furnace
nice
gerden area can be yo urs
w th n 30 day s for on l y
$22 000 Ca ll for an ep
oolntmen t
I BEDROOM CARPEHb
HOME located tn Harr son
Twp Macedon a Rd F A
furnace moder n k !ch en
rure water and c !terns a
peaceful ho me n a rural
sett ng Price S21 000
4 BEDROOM CARPETED
HOME n ear Clay School
Galllpa l s
C ty
s
situated on 1 a~re lot w b
fireplace unique llvtno lnd
d n ng room Call fo r more
nformatlon

o

THREE
BEDROOM
ca r pe ed all e ec tn c ho me
s u a t ed on 120 x 7S lot
lran1 ng on Twp blackt op
Rd Cou nty wa er &amp; sewer
Pri ce S22 500 00
BUSINESS Pr ce r educed
on 2 bay bus ness bu ld ng
and land ocated on Rt
160 n Ew ngton Buy now
for ~; 15 000 00

tli't¥

IN CJTY NEW Ll
2
bedraorfoi/)"1
1ta ge located
c 1t y water
on Spr
andse
Jwm an
te nance
ural
gas
Ga I pol s t ty
Scho ol
D str c Pr ce $ 1 000

•

IF YOU R:E PlANNtNGI
TO SELL CALL US WE
HAVE
A
LIST
OF.
PRci"SPECTIVE BUYERS
AND WERE
ANXIOUS
TO SERVE YOU
IF YOU DON T SEE TH~
PROPERTY YOU WANT
IN THIS AD CALL WE
M AY BE ABLE TO FINO
IT FOR YOU
Call Wood Insurance &amp;
Real EstateU6 1066
Evenmgs Russell wood
U6 4,18
Ken Morgan 446 0971

BOARDING &amp; AKC PUPPIES
K &amp; P Kennels 38B 8274 Rl
554 :;, m1le east of Porter

de L Kennels 2 m les from
town 446 4824

Assoc~

Ph Home 446-2885

LAND 30 acres of level o
to l l ng gr o und on both s des
ot Sta te Rt
160
n ear
Porter Ru r a water fr ont s
on Floyd Clark Rd and Rt
160

30 Acre Farm
Near R o Grande n C ty
Schoo l D1str c good
r o I ng l&amp;nd av er age o d
t me 2 story ho me w th
seve r al ou t b u ld ngs
P r ced under S30 000
land &amp; Bu1ldmg
Lots
1 Any size lo t you w ish at
R1o Grande Star t at $4 ooo
No mob le home s
c ty
2
Bu ld ng lot water sewer co ne street
near hosp ta
l
60 ac of tree s st reams
h s &amp; excellen hunt ng
4 76 Ac
no bu ldmg s
la rge stream 12 ac bo
I om

Mlrtll Ca!Nr

A5SOCtate

Mi£NCY

CIRCLE THIS AD' If you
have been toalc, ng for a
n ce home w t h some
acreage J BR ranch 1
balhs lg k tch~n w buill
In range hood oven and
lots of counte r spa ce
Carport lg enough fo r lwo
cars f ul v ca rp eted e11cept
1&lt; tcnen and ba lhs
1a
acres U2 000

SOMEONE o help afternoons 9 n
KOTALIC lond:!&gt;tOp ng res dent ol
motor roule co1 1256 1555 afte r
&amp; Ccmmerc ol shrubs tree s
7p m
rock gardens all nstolled &amp;
guaranteed Ph 245 9131 446 BABYSITTER needed m med ately
446 8583
3100

675-5540

BUD McGHEEManager

Galhpolls, Ohto

WANTED Port t1 me baby s t e
Ph 446 7327 after 4

2411 JackDI Ave.

•

COMMERCIAL SITE or
.. u table tor r es dent at 38
acr es 400 tron la ge on Rl
7 400 Oh o R ver fro ntag e
J water taps S2S 000

CONCRETE
WORK
pat ios
s dewo lk s
basement
etc
Lou s Co x 446 3398

HOMES
Bakery -

GALLIPOLIS
AREA I,.JSTINGS

ARE YOU COOL MAN? The n you
need th e nsulo t ng exper 5 at
LAWRENCE HEATING AND
ELECTRIC TO g ve you o free
t&gt;sl mote on blow n n nsulo
I on Coll675 3099

For'RI!Ilt

DOWNTOWN

LET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY
EASY, LONG-TERM
AVAILABLE

VS REALTY

25 112 Locust St

444,_7900
446 1049

CUSTOM REMODELING 20 years
e•per ence 388 8308 New d y
wall celltng w th sw rl o tex
fu e des gns Other d y wall
r epa r v nyl wa llpope ng new
baths new k tchens Anyl h ng
n remodeh ng or repair

c

EFF
APT
4.46 4905

Office
Home

1092

w

CHIMNEY Stocks W Va g Oh 0
Lump Cool Ga ll pol s Block
Co .446 2783

101 LANE
BRANCH M.r.N.r.GER
855 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS OHrO

PASQUALE Insula! ng 103 Ceda r
St Gall pel s Ph 446 27 16 o

COUCH VELVET TRAO STYLE
EQOIPMENT FOR RENT
use d 2 weeks
p 1te .446 Jq.t s
T actor mounted I awood spl 1
or446 3874
er spl t cord of wood per hr
FOR the best n arch teet ural
Sh nn s T actor Soles Leon
SEASONED FIREWOOD ALL DIF
des gn and bu ld ng of new
Vc 458 1030
FERENT TYPE S OF HARD WOOD
home s
smell commerc a
WE DELIVER
388 ~46 or
THE PlRFECT GIFT
bu ld ngs apt o emodeltng
245 58 12
A Po I o l g ftCe tf cote
w th state approval of plan s
LEAR PH OTOGR APHY
B II Walke 446 2146 o r 446
Hoy opprox 700 boles 992 2877
Ph 4.46 7494
8652
even ngs
Open Tu esday thru Saturday 10 to
BUESCHER TRUMPET $150 Only SEPTIC To nks Clean ed Plants
5 t II Bon Thursday
Sept c Tonk Serv ce Ph 446
been used 3 mos Ph 4~6 3343
LOOK NG FOR THE FIFE WHO IS
1972 or 675 2647
THE OWNER OF a n Earl er 1968 Ford Ranger P ck up mpro v
ed cyd borrell lor model 37 STUCCO plosle mg ond plaster
odve t sed Da tsun 240 z f sf II
re pa r Te~et ur ed ce I ng sw rl
Etco20go Ph 446 4149
lo r
sole
p l ease
co 1
lloo t o bru sh des gn 32 yr e:~~:
1 614 992 5957 ask far J m
2 BR Sutes one dnng su le
p Work by th e hour or by the
co np ete 2,. 5 9479
TAXEOERMIST SPECIALIZING
256 1182
All wok
ob
n deer head mounts Bob
ne
guaranteed
PONY 42 mare ve y gen e~
R 2 Pt Pl easant Ph 675 1448
yrs old Ph &lt;146 3870
HUFFINES and Sons F x t Sho p
Plu nb g
elect col
small
CUSTOM MADE BAR w th I glt s
oppl was her ond d ye carp
mo ch ng m rrow shell w h 3
epa r5 ond gene ol epa rs
stoo ls sma ll secreta ol desk
Bu•lMi!S'St!li~e••
Ca ll 388 88.47 over 15 yrs ewp
w th leathe sw vel cho1r Ph
446 3344 0 .446 0156
GRAVELY SERVICE SAVE 25 PCT
HOWARD Peck Wote Del very
on l obo
by hov ng you
2.45 9315 o 388 8262 day or
Gravely rector repo red or ser
n ght
v ce d now G ave ly Tro c or
BOBS
CB
Rod o
Equtp
Soles Pomeroy 6 4 992 2975
everyth ng tn Twa Way Rod1o
Antenna ~ and Cci~es Georges
NICELY FURN 2 Br Apt- for n
Creek Rd Galltpol s 446 4517
terv ew co ll4.46 2404

For sale

CANADAY
REALTY

LOW weekly ond monthly ales at
Libby Hotel .44~ 1743

Ave
Ph
446 3408

Rcall!:elate lor Sale

Real &amp;t..teiur Sire

f()l' Rent

FOR SAlE
LIMESTONE FOR DRIVEWAYS
CARL WINTERS PH 24S 5115

Real &amp;iate for Safe

kcal Eolate for Sale

MASSIE
REALTY
32 State Street
Ph 4411 1998
A A Ntbert, B(oker
Mtni Farm 11 acres 2
sm out bu ldlngs E lectri c
and wate r are there
4 yr aid 3 br br ck ra n
cher electric heat bu It In
kitchen n ce fam l y r oom
5 miles fro m town
Mobile home lot on Rl 141
- a ll ut•lltl es n place lg
se ptl ~: tanl4 lot s ze ~PP 55
X 250
Vacant tend ap p 3 a 2
good bv I ding sites
Centerpoint
Store
bu ldlng
w th
some
equ pment
I vlng
quarters in re ar
Building lots - Galllpo s
area verv ni ce lots for
those who wen t to build
t he ir own home we also
have other bUilding lot s
close to GaiOpo l $ See us
tor de t a il$
Bulldmg lots v nton
are~ 2 ve-r..L!!rg_!~ ots

a,,.l Estate for:Sale
VA f.HA 30 y I none ng I ela nd
Mortg age 77 E Sta e A he s

592 305 1
WAN T TO OWN BUT NEED
HELP IN F NANCING?
N co 2
bed com Ia m home
wh cit has been completely
remodeled recently lo ge bo n
n good cond hen o I th s s t
I ng on opprox mately 11 ac res
neo town Mob le home rental
spo t on property Good nvesl
ment en ol opportun ty Call
446 I 049 after 6 p m
120 x. 180 lot n Par erb rook Sub
dlvls on Coli alter 5 pm Ph
446 7866
DOUBLE WIDE and lot wood
burmng I eploce pot c ce
lrol o r 3 m les I om HMC Ph
446 15D2
HEALTH APPROVED SEWER ED lots
upper R ve Rd
100 x 120
ready to bu ld Ph 446 2906

tor Henl or :S.1le
LOT JUST OUTSI DE CITY LIM rs
su able fo M ob le home o
house All u I cs ns oiled Pt
446 0168

FAMILY LIVING - E11tra
n ce ren ch 3 bedrooms
for m al d n ng fa.m ly room
w th f rep ace cove r ed
pat o lave y 1&lt; chen w th
bu It ns ex a roa m tor
dt~n or off ce Call l or rnolt.e
Informal on

CLOSE TO TOWN
Lovel y 3 bedroom ranch
w th fa m y
oam
bath
w th shOw er n ce k tchen
an ge natura
gas
w th
heat beaut fut new ca r pet
n \J ng r m &amp; bedrooms
P. ce d to sell

LOVELY BRICK RANCH
T h s attract ve home h as
J bedrooms 2 ba hs fan l y
room w h f replace n ce
k chen
w th range and
d s hwa she r
beau fu l
carpet oca ed on 1 acres
of n ce land SJ9 800

BIDW EL L
N ce
3
bedroom home bath w th
shower
fam t v
room
beaut ful ca pet eKcel en!
cond I on On y S24 900

NEW LI ST NG
Lov e y
double
w de
w th
3
bed ooms
2 fu t baths
beau ful ca r pet n atura
ga s hea l w h cent r a a r
loca ed c ose o hasp tal &amp;
Sp r ng Va l ley Ve y n ce
and pr ced to se
N EW LISTING
L ke
t sh ng., Look at th s n ce 2
bedroom mob le home w th
t urn tu r e coun t y wa er
1
ac r es of n ce and
Located c ose o Tycoon
La~e

CROWN CITY
Lov ely 3
bedroom
hom e
w th
1 r eplace
n den
fut
bas em ent n ce k chen
w h ran ge
car gar ag e
5.15 800

8Pct FHA&amp; VA
FINANCING
AV:A ILABLE NOW
WE BUY SELL
OR TRADE

N TOWN
Good
n
vestm en t
property
or
com mere al s c 2 houses
O{la t ulcty lot Locatcdon
0 1 v e s iJ2 ooa
MERCERV I LLE
Good 5
room hom e w h f r ep la ce
pa I a
ca rp e
2 ca r
garagE,'
o I er bu d ngs
Located 011 '1 acres Pr ice
educed ca l oday
CHESH RE
N ce J
bed room home w h t am y
room
IO\JC y
bath
basemen
na tural gas
heat 1 car garage L o ca cd
on 3 n cc lot s $29 500
34 ACRES
N ce 5 roan
house vs t remade t'.'d new
bll h new k ! ch en
new
car pe t n ce f r epla ce has 1
arg e barn and 5 s a ller
bu ld ng s
Located
o
Fa rv ew Road c o ~:~e
o
Merce v lie

Even m gs Call
John Full er 446 4J27
Le e Johnson 156 6740
Earl Winters 446 3828
Doug W etherho t 146 4244

STROUT REAL TV
World's largest, the leader
s1nce 1900 in serving the
nation's buyers and sellers.

Ph. 446-0008
514 2nd Ave.
JUST THE RIGHT $1ZE
Look ng for so melt ng not
oosma ll tolve n&amp;no too
large to manta n '&gt; See h s
lo ve l y ra nch sty le hom e
fe.a ur mg J bdrm s
1 ,
ba th s
d n ng
f am t y
com bo garage En oy he
economy of g as h ea &amp; the
co m tort of central a r A
for on l y S32 900
CITY - VACANT LANDApprox S h acres ru nn ng
F ou r t h Ave
to
f r om
Ch i ckamauga
Creek
S6 500 Don t wa t to buy
buy and wa1t
lOTS FOR
SALE Lo ca ed ..on N e ghborh o6d
Rd L ncoln P k e George
Creek Rd
and Rod ney
Harr sburg Rd F nan c ng
ava lab e
-4 BEDROOMS IN TOWN-

N ce cah1 for tabl e 1 2 story
home an Evans He gh ts
offers room o spar e fo r
your
grow no
ta m l y
Where else ca n you get a
full basement fam ly rm
w th gas f r epla ce lar ge
k chen and d n ng erea for
only $25 500
LAND
CONTRACT
A lmost 12 A of evel and
ro I ng and w h a sma 2
BR and ba th home po nd
and lo ts of pr vacy loc a te d
n Mor gi)n Twp
CHEAPIE Perfect fo r
week ends 15 acres of and
about 1 7 clear ed and
2
woods w th f a nlage on
L 11tle Raccoon Cr ee k p us
an ol d 2 sl or y home
$II 900
BUILD NG OR MO'BILE
HOME SIT E - App ro11 S
a cres ebout 13 m
from
town
Land s flat w th
fron tage an q,. BT r d and
cou n ty wa te r avallab e
$S 000
MOBILE HOME PARK smal close to tow n good
ncom e easy to t ake ca r e
of
ca I f or more
n
for ma t on
R IO GRAN D E THE
ONE
YOU VE
BEEN
WAITING FOR - Love l y
br ck ranch off er s ov er 2100
sq tt at modern I v n g
wh ch nc lud es 3 BRs 2
baths comp e tc k t ch en
w h m crowave oven
f ormal d n ng room formal
toyer
la rge fa m y rm
w th 1 r eplac.e heat pump
arge pa o and 2 ca r
gar age

BAR BUSIN~SS &amp; HOTEL
- Be your own boss w th
th s o11ce n a llfe f me 1n
vest m en t
Lo ca ed on a
Corn er lo t n M ddleport
Call for mare In f ormal on

ba sement Bu I n back porch n ce larg e f ront porch
• --- --"--1 ng moder n k tchen c•ty w11ler J acre of good
land Loi s of st r ubbery Bea ut lui home Ql a
pr ce
SMALL FARM
ANOT H ER QUALITY
LIVING
HOM E OWNER
B E ING TR A N SFERRED
Today s choice
ap
pr o11 ma tely 15 acres ot
Be au f ul B r oom house
pasture And tnr mlng and
188 SQ f
I v ng spa ce
N ce
7
ro oms
tul
Featur ng J BR w 11 delux e
basement
3 bedroon s
walk. n c osets 2 ba hs L&lt;l
good barn
wo o her
q r ctcl ve F R
beaut t v
outs Cl e bu d ngs
f en ces
ro c k 1 e d sto e f repla ce
Ia r
plen y water lor
Forn a t OR
Bu I I k I
chen
mpo t~;&gt; d 1 gh f x
Ci'l tic
s n al
to bacco
ltcr eage we are r ead y a
ures a n ct pe w er door
so
hAr dwar e A lso en oy 1 e
SPR NG VALLEY
u sc of Cub Hou se &amp;
SUBDIV SION
Sw n
ng
Pool
CElli
today
Vacan lot s ~ n ce s ze
26 ACRES
bu ld ng lots w th a t
N I CE B R I CK H OME
u
es
here
Lo
she
9 ooms 4 bcdwo ms ba tt
10 t 8 by 171 2 Better get
{!. shower tu
ba se {I
vm now
fr ont &amp; ba c k porches
JBEDROOM
mod ern k chen garag€ 2
JUST COMPLETED
lied we s 3 bar ns n lk
Qu e ne ghborhood
Tt s
5 to
B G pas ure
hOme swell constructed on
IObacco ba se Look th s
a n ce I eve at 1&lt;1 0 :~~: 160
over Ha s bee
a
F rame constru ct on w h
t arn
brck
fen
maser
bed r oon w th bah N ce
WELL CON STRU&lt;.. TEO
bu II n k chen tab e top
HOM E
eie c r c r ange and wa
Th s s on e ot he b e er
bu I homes n V nlon 0 2
oven The 10use s t u y
carpe ted and MS a tach ed
stan 7 rooms J n cc s ze
garage Th s one you w
bedrooms 1
baths t u
Ike
m cd um
p r ce d
basemen K chen a ll bu 1
Owner w II he p f nance
n ve y n ce L v n g r oom
Qua l f leet bUyer Ca ll now
14 x22 w th
ce f rep lace
Wonderful le vel lot s ze
PRICED
ap pr ox 97 x497
La r ge
TO SELL
garden space Th s home
Are ¥OU oa k ng for a good 3
bedroom hou se., C osc o
wou ld no be for sa e exc~p l
for
heal h con d t ans
town") Over 1 ac r e o f go od
Show n by appo n tm ent
lanrP I you dr vc truck s
on y
tot s ot spa ce o park. Roon
to keep your fav or te pet s
BROOMS
horses orca leJ Th ese ar e
2ACRES
a t ow th ng s you mny
Th s s a very attr ac ve 3
cons de r T he re ar e n any
bedroom horne bv 1 n
n or e for o tv S18 OOQ
~ ! chen
Includ es garba ge
d sposal cou nter top stove
BR I CK CO N STRUC TION
wa l o.ve n r e f r gera or
- GA LL POLIS
w lh ce maker F n she d
We are p eased to ott er tar
Beau tu larg e
basemen
sale th s 8 room n ce o der
rees n background Th e
home n one ot the bes
com fo rt of c y
fe
he
loca l ons o l Ga po s 4
beauty and en 1oyment of
bedroo 1S ba sement N a t
coun Y I v ng a I h s c los e
o Ga po son Sta e H gh
g.'ls torced a r furn ace
way
Th s ho me ha s h ad a
180 ACRES PLUS
Be auty Salon ope r at 1on n
V a can
--. A wood and
for years Own h s n co
wonderla nd
horne
a nd
your
own
and
business now
• oo

CHUR CH OR BU SINESS BUILDING
Approx 18 50 sq II one roon Str eet leve l wi ll 5 roorn s
plu s batt and st ort1ge room n ba se n ent Loc.'\IOd o ,
hlghwMy 35 West Cor ner ot s11e 70 x 1?0 Naturllt l gll s
t un a ce air cond tton ed c ty wili er block bulld ng
Won I la st 101'1g a t sale pr ice Hll ~ lo t s of users Call t

4 MI LESOF
GALLIPO LI S ROUT E 141
3 bedraon han c w i th
cab nets a
bu 11 n
,
k I c hen and "odcn bafh
S or -n door s whlte pri m e
s Olng
Fuel 0 1 h ea t
coppe r
plumbing
Ga P.O 15 SCI oo l d strict
Won t
!IS
ong
On l y
1 1950000

2 ST OR Y
CO UNTR Y HOM E
MUST SELL
~:~cres
5 11 les fr on
Gallpo l s 7
Qons
4
b ed rooms
pa rtia l
~&gt;as emcn
ru el oil farced
air t unace rura l water
Gat !pa l s Sc hoo
Dlst
Garden space fr onla gc o n
Raccoon Creek
COMMERC IAL
BUILDING &amp; SITE
St ale Hlghwav 7 North
Masonry Build no w th
brick tront building 1 k e
new Approx !!Ire 30 x24 ~
story Leve lot front&amp; 175
ft an S t~tt e H ghway 7 Call
now
7 ROOMS
4 BEDROOMS
Gelll po Is School O l!ltrlcl
basem en t
1\7
bethl
modern k ll chen co m~&gt;~•
wlth b rch cabinet!! F A
furn ace c arport ~ wood
burn no fir eplaces famlty
r oom large lol wllh fruit
rees
and
a
s torage
bu ding With n 5 miles ot
Ga ll po s Nice hOme at 1
good pr ce
1 ACRE ON
HIGHWAY 35
1 Homes 7 Rental
Trai l er s space s all wi h n
wa l ki n g
d l sla11ce
to
I 10me has 2
hasp tal
baths and 3 bedroo m s
d n n g roo m lar ge livi ng
r oom
modern kll c h en
second home
2 ba hs
J
bedrooms with basemen
P r ced o sell

IBE O-OOM
Acre Pful - l t vtl ftP
prox
1
mi les from
hosp ta l on b tacklop r&lt;1
P t:l'\ Y ot garden spfl te
rural wt~tcr courllry I Vlng
C osc to Ge l lpo Is Pric ed
onlySBOOO
L09K THIS OVEI.I
76 Acre FlHil
1':'1 od~rn s li
roon
h one
good bor
new too l ~ h ed ullllly b ctg
Line fen ces al wovtJn win.;
41 acres B G pesturo 10
ac r es woodrd
72 ~teres
melldow
and
ll l~t ble
plen y o r oc u!t trees 1?00
tb tobe cco biiSt'! TII (S tl'r n
s n th e Gll lpo S S!:hOOI
D slrlct Cll ll no w
A CREAGE
BUILDING SITES
65 Acres acatcd t Groen
&amp;
Per rv
Tw p
Sn al
amou n ot
mbcr SO A
1 li ab le 2 ba rn s 40 x :IO Md
dO x'l J It yo\ are ookl g
l or v.!l uabl c a d l or
vestm en
hQ rf II Is
Co li
toc,tay
COUNTRY MANOR
WITH ~N
ARTI STIC SETTING
One of Gellltl Count y !i
bes t 1200 sq fl ov er "
approxlma oly
acres ol
land
n ice po1 tl
House
consists of 8 room s l or t
be d roo 1 s 3 ful b!l h s ?
show e r s sunk c• I vlng
r oom 6 x 9 w lh lH ,. slvc
stone f r ep ace K t el en s
beyond ward s You wll
hav e to see to llol levc
n ce pan ry b 'ty wl 'dow
ooking ou t over veltey
He-a t p u mp t or l')cellng Mtl
coollno
28 xB dec k ny
r uf'th ng eng h of hOuse ?
car ga r age a nd ner y more
featur es This good f amily
Is l eaving county ca 1
IOCHI'V tor 8ppoln tm ent
I A 3 RM
HOUSE&amp;M HOM E
Dr led we ll with elec r c
pump N co 1 acre w It 3
r oo m house a nd 2 bedroo'
mob le home App r o~ 2 ~
m iles from VInton Very
pr etty

a

PIZZA BUSIN ES S An
exce tent appor un t y fo
some bus ness m n ded
perso n Th s larg"e corner
ot w th a modern br ck
bu ld ng s a good p ace a
st ar t Can be bouohl with
or w thou equ pmen t Call
for annolntmen
COMMER(. ,...._ ;:, tIE - 5
ots and o der home on
Sate Route 7 n Ka nau ga
L o so t po ten l a l tor $3 4 000
N EW LI STING 10 n
ou 3
acres leve l lan d
ontag c n ce
o s of rd
co n tor tab le 6 rn and ba h
co age w lh new oa f o
f urnace and coun ty wa er
$20 000
NEW
LISTING
T HURMAN - $15000 Good
sold 6 r m and ba lh home
tea ures f orma t d n ng rm
larye LR and k tchen 3
BR s o I fu nac e we 1 or
c Y wa er new ct um num
s d ng and fla o
TAVERN - Operated by
sa me f am l y tor 40 yrs
Good equ pmen excellent
ocat on ter ms and ncom e
I gu r es
ava l ctb l e
o
Ca
for
qua f ed buye
appo ntm en
EDGE OF TOWN - Good 2
BR hom e
s par ally
emod e l ed w h a n cc
k chen and ba lh laundry
rm gas f urnace conc r e e
dr ve and new sewage
svs em ba ga n pr ccd at
s 2 000
COUNTRY HOME WITH
EVERYTH IN G - MaKe an
appo nt men l o see th s 4
yr old br c k loc a ted abou
7 m
from HM C Th s
b eau Y s s t uaTcd on 10 ~
acres Of and n th e c ty
sc hool d s t w h J
m
fr on ta ge
on
Raccoon
Cre e k
O tl'l er
spec als
t e~turt:~ are d BR s
3
ba hs t am l'y r m w II WB
I rep l ace
orma l d n ng
rm
for na
e rane e
laundr y
rm
lar ge
scree ned n pa t o and 1 car
garag e Over $100 ooo
FIFTH AV E
- S18 000
Barga n pr ced 6 rm and
bah stu cco feat u res 2 BR s
up and 2 down large ba ck
por ch and a lm os new ste el
ga r age

RANNY BLACKBURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

FOR SALE

Campmg Eqmpmenl

2 BR MH $100 3 BR MH $125
Pt 446 0175

STARCRAFT FALL SALE
On m n mo tors o ers and lold
dow ns o lso used ro lu ond
12 x 60 MOB LE HOME 0 e m le
fold clown p ced o go We se ll
lrom HMC adu lts o ly Ph
se
vlc-1 01 d quo lty CAMP
446 3805
CONLEY STAR CRAFT SALES
12 • 60 2 8f( Mob le Home Ph
RT 62 N PI PLEASANT W
4.:16 23 7 or 44b 4!i74
VA

2 Rl? M b lo Ho o Ph 3b7 732Q

mce subdiVISIOn w1th
J br
hvmg room,
dmmg area. large
kitchen
w1th
dishwasher
range
and disposal, 2112
baths, 2 car garage, 4
lg rooms downstairS
all carpeted Tot a I
electnc w1th central
a1r c1ty schools s mt
from town on Rt 35
$39 000 Ph 446 0088

25 Locust Sf
Howard f\rannon Broker
011 ceU6 2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve 446 1226 or44.6 1674
HOUSE BEAUTIFUl
'A PEAK
of PER FEC T ON
awa s you n s d~
h s
bea ut f u 4 BR twa s or y
home Deep pile go ld tone
carpc n th e spa c ous LR &amp;
mus c room
a
m os
we lcome f ormal DR &amp;
hea rt wa rmi ng k ! c hen 7
I r ep ace s gas I urn
new
roo f aumn um sdng
ove r s ze lot q9
w de tra m
2nd Ave to the rver Tr u l y
th e home one n us t see to
app r ec a e
CREATIVE
OWN E'R WANTED
Try you r ow n de as n
decora nq h 54 BR 2s ory
nome Aluminum s d ng
gas furn 2 R bsm
deep
lo garage ma urc shade
tr ees
ocated down own
t rom sc ho o s
one m n
Pr ce reduced to S25 000

\'4 anled lo Uo
GENERAL Co trocto ~
Do ol
na sonory co pen ter &amp; p umb
g I sta ll a d
epa
ol
d vewoys Ph 446 9587

~1vbilc

Home • for ~ale

USED MOIII LE HOMES
CALL 576 271 1
TO KONOMIZE on fuel undetp n
you nob le 1 ome o d oncho
lor sa fe y Foste Mob le Home
So v ce 446 27B3 o El ner Sk d
nore 446 3479
END OF YEAR
CLEARANCE SALE
USED MOB LE HOMES
TR STATE M H
Bonk F non e ng
Gal pols 0
:!20 Eoste n Avo
t.opol s Oho
2x60 w th t p au

2

b
196BPMC 12xb02 B
1968 EL CON A 12•60 3 8
1969CHAMPON 12x60 2Br
B ondS MOBILE HOMES
Pt P eosont W Va
AULI MOB LE HOMES SERV CE
::.k t g o cho g o d pol os
o I dJb 3b08 of e 4
&lt;111) 'l

\

REALt:Y~

2 year old bt level m

197 Bu ddy

Mobil" Homes for Rent

Realtor

NICE COMFORTAB

B ck 3 or 4 bedrooms w tlh wa lk n c losets full

Bk 1 o I"'

P

367 7329

MAN I F I CE NT
VIEW
1 vable home n c ly
1 s ory la.rge room"
3 Bed r ooms &amp; bath
4 b locks to sc ho ol
A th s on over s ze lot
r educed P.r ce

a.

FOR SALE
4 bedroom home large living rtom dlnln~ fOOM llrao
kitchen 1112 boths 2 wood-lllomlng Hre~etl full
hasement 2 car garqt Located wllllln w•log
""lance of town Very rononably priced Cell44~1010
446 2265 or 446 BS75

a

1q0A FARM
Ve ry nic e .:1 BR br c k &amp;
s to r:~e home F P n LR ti.J tt
bsm
a I elect c 3 m
I rom hOsp tal Good far ll J
barns loo t shed
plenty
water &amp; pas tu re Owner
w II help f nan ce
LOTS LOTS LOTS
J very good lots 110
w de 6 m from awf1 Buy
one or a I
hree .,
e
reduced price

•
hrd tialc
MOVING OUT SALE ( ns de) Sun
Nov 28 th ru Thurs Dec 2
W fer cloth ng tools co pet
flrep ace screen
X nos dec
and occes
oys Lots of m sc
tems 2
m les out Bulo vll e
Rd oli 160Wotch lo s1gn s

•

New brick hom e just completed 3 BRs 2 balhs la rge
ltvmg room famtly room ftreplace nice large ktt&lt;:hen
dtshwasher di sposal double oven Tappan ranga 2 car
garage wtth electrtc operttor carpet throughout
centra l atr heat pump located on old Rt 35 wtthtn 1
m1les of HMC on SunkiSI Drive Pr~ced rlgh1 to sell
lnqu1re at Corbm &amp; Snyder Furniture 446 1111 44'
2S7l after s

•

�8-D-Th• S•mday Times-Sentinel, Swulay, Nov. 28, 1976

Scholarship of Rotary reviewed
.

MIDDLEPORT
Rotarian Ed Baker reviewed
the Rotary Foundation
system of scholarshiPs lor
international st udent exchanges in a talk Friday
evening to the Middleport ·
Pomeroy Rotary Club at
Heath United Methodist
Church.
In a related action, the club
voted u~animously approving

a Rotary District 669 proposal
(o participate Jn. an In·
ternational exchange of
teams of visitors from foreign
countries in groups of five,
each to be "led" by a
Rotarian.
Under the plan a member
of the local club would lead
five non·Rotarians of District
669 to Australia, or another

part of the World where there
are Rotary clubs (all nations
except China, the Soviet bloc,
and the emerging n~tlons of
Africa ) to visit for a
stipulated period of time
studying the customs,
political beliefs and social
system of the host countr~ .
Similar groups from 'foreign
countries would be guests in
this Rotary distrirt .

'

I

Aguest for dinner, William
Knight of Point Pl easant,
explained in detail how the
system works as the Point
Pleasant club ha s ext
perienced the visit of such a
By Ray Cromley
gr~up - and has elected to host
WASHINGTON - There are hinl• in the news which
more groups in the future.
indicate that China Wlder Chairman Hua Kuo-feng may he on
Acting President Bill the verge of opening ~p slightly to the outside world .
Buck presided. Ladi es of the
For one, reports suggest Peking ruay soon take on once
church served a stea k dinner. more the large-scale import of foreign technology, abandoned
some time back because .of fears the practice might lead to
dangerous dependence on foreigners. The Chinese were
burned , tl will be recalled, by their experience with the .
Russians. Moscow , after moving in technicia:ns and equipment
heavily for a few years, withdrew abruptly· when Peking
refused to knuckle under to Moscow's demand for complete
alignment of Chinese foreign policy with the Soviet.
'l'he rapid withdrawal of the Russian personnel and
equipment did severe damage to the Chinese economy , which

China opens door to West's know-how

DR. -LAMB

Cold doesn't cause colds

took years to recover .

Renewed interest in importing technology and equipment
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - How
can a person prevent l'Oids?
Will vitamin C prevent them
or not 1 Will it cure a cold if
you get one? And how can I
tell the difference between a
simple cold, the flu or
bronchitis' I'd like to get
through most of this winter
with a minimal number of
colds if at all possible.
DEAR READER - The
cold and flu season is already
here. There are three big
wa ves of respirat ory in·
fections - in the fall , mid·
winter and again in the
spring. However, colds and
related illnesses can occur at
any time.
One of the most important
concepts to understand is that
these illnesses are all con·
tagious illnesses. They are
spread from person to person
like oth er contagio us
diseases. They are not caused

by exposure to cold weather.
A number of years ago a
group of scientists decided to
study the Eskimos because of

their e.posure to cold. The
Eskimos were aU free of
colds and had been for ·years
until the scientists arrived to
study them.,Then the village
came down with a whopping
epidemic of colds. They l)ad
been Infected by the visiting
team of scientists ~
demonstrating dramatically
the difference between the
genn and the environment as
a cause for the common cold.
The best way to avoid a
cold is to avoid people who
have one . Unfortunately
people begin sheddilig the
viruses that ca use these Ill·
nesses several days before
there are any apparent
symptoms. But you can avoid
exposure to people you know
have a cold.
There is an oddity in
labeling what is a cold, flu,
bronchitis or other related ill·
ness. The same vi~us can
cause a cold, laryngitis,
bronchitis
or
even
pneu monia . The diagnosis
depends upon how the virus
affects the body. If the virus

illness involves the nose and
sinuses with a mild , sore
throat and limited fever, it is
a cold.
If the same virus invo.Jves
the bronchi In the lungs, it is
bronchitis and the illness
may be much more severe.
The same germ can even
cause pneumonia, meaning
the lungs are involved.
No , vitamin C does not
prevent colds despite all the
public attention il has gotten.
Properly design ed experiments have failed to show
any protection aga inst colds
at ali by taking large doses of
vitamin C. Moreover one
can't abort a cold with large
doses once he has been in·
fected . There are some
questionable results that
suggest . large amounts of
vitamin C will shorten the
duration of symptoms and
their severity - but other
studies fail to show this.
You should know that
antibiotics are useless in
treating any of the cold-flu

group. They are hel pful in
treating a secondary bac·
terial infection - such as
bacterial pneumonia as. a
complication of a cold or flu
episode.
Many people do not realize
that ·a good way to transmit
these illnesses is by the
hands. Keep yo ur hands
clean. If you are out, wear

'

~u

To give you more in·
formation about the Cold-Flu
group, I am sending you two
issues of The liealth Letter
dealing with these problems,

numbers 3·1 and 3·2. Others
who want these issues can
send 50 cents for each with a
long ,
stamped,
self·
addressed envel ope. Ju st
send your request to me tn
care of this newspaper, P. 0 .
Box 1&gt;51 , Radio City Station,
New York , NV 10019.

Secondly, there has been in the upper echelons of China 's
political hierarchy a belief in the benefits of American
industria l production methods. This conviction was sha red by
ChHirmtm Mao Tse·tun~ in his Yena n days.

as the West ts concerned.
·
Now what ·will this move, if it eventuates, mean to the :.
United States?
:
American technology and equipment sold to China, and .
American know-llow in the form of trainmg, would most
certainly strengthen a totalitarian country whose aims are nm .
parallel with our own in much-'of the world , tbe Far East m 1
particular.
·
•
The detriment to the defense of the United States would nm
by any means be as !ierious as our sellin~ technology and
equipment to Russia , whose military growth m the next decade
could well threaten the security of the Umted States and the
free world,
·
There is however, evidence, tenuous though it may be, that
China will continue to be a rival of, and a balance against, the
Soviet Union for a goodly period of time to come . The~e are
national rivalries and deep sore points whtch now and m the
·foreseeable future may well ~r any real conciliation bet~een.
the two nations. For one, China oannot be comfortable wtth a
strong military power next door working year in and ye~ out
to e&gt;pand its military • political influence across China's
southern aod northeastern borders - a technique which
Peki,ng calls encirclement.
·
·
U (,'hina should, in fact, continue to be a counter balance to .
Russia it is to the benefit of the United States, with proper
· preca uiions, to strengthen the Chinese economy within limits,
with special emphasis on aid improving the lot of the Chinese ·
people as distinct from the Peking military establishmen.t.
Anote of warning : Closer economic relations with China
should not imd must not lead us to default on our relationship

like it!

nthe war JOU like it!

V. Twelve Big Money Saving Coupons Good For All Of Our Fine Fixins
use ~~ twelie coupons and save a IoLII of $2.76
AI Count~ Cousins' eating otit !lites not cost a iortune. No tipping adds to '"" g~al" ,..;ngs.

Until The End Of The Year!

011

rour ;ating out en"'ment.

. TRY THE ALL NEW DELICIOUS

BREAKFAST MENU
AT

Country Cousins' Cnokshoppe
EliG IILIGHJ

I .75

A !lrtl.llll $'~~· diOIIO)t ·~ ol ~Cllmtllfij £11•. Boo: on ,.d 1~&lt;..10 11 I IC ISIU

'IGGS
"" 100 SAUSAGI

Sl.2~

PANCAKES ~MD ~USAGE
11.25
lei ME fRIES
~ho Awatllblt Ortnlt Juitt, Dani!ll hstrr, and M' tO\II'M, JGIId hot

""

cofl•l

r'ENiov-ioU'R'Fiioo~N-;;~;;;G'Riio;·J
OR USE THE DRIVE THRU WINDOW.

·--~-·-- -·---------------

2 TRIPLE TREATS

Triple trt11, fnea, rr(llilr drink.

,.,.o ~"' beef paUla, cheelf,
ldtuc. 111d the Cou.t.IN' ~J~rt"l

$130

With Coupon

BIG BHf

SALAD BAR

PLATTER

Come inlnd fil lithe WI)' )'Oilli).e 11
fllnillll rout~ only.

39~11hCoupon

Onf-tl'lrd lb. Ground Bed Steak wlth

solden lreneh frlea or biked Idaho
PoLito, oolon ~·· 11ot bLtterrd

brud .00 ulld.

$1 ~~h Coupon

12-31-76

2 DOUBLE

2 DOUBt!

CHEESEBURGERS
Two purt bell ~Wea lrilh
ch- wit h lb lna ..tded.

mated

$1 zo

LARGE

HAMBURGERS

FRENCH FRIES

Two 1111" bnf palll• lrith 011r fil.inl
oddol.

$1 ~~h Coupon

With Coupon

H" IO!Getl brtl!rll lmeh fr\ea In a
lafCt C01'411ntr .

2-ple&lt;.'el ol deep frltd lllet With
fnneh frM!a or baked poUIO, hot
btltitrecl btnd and ~ole 111'11'.

$1 4 ~11hCoupon

39CWIIh Coupon

EXPIRES 12·3~1·7iiSinoio•t-•"ooiEiiXoip IRES1~1~2-~31~·:7~6 • -I~-oi~~:;~

1 1

BREAKFAST

EGG DELIGHT
A \:Jrtllkfut llndwleh madl \lp !II
acra mblecl t«(l, bacon &amp;ad Lomal.o
on fl hot touled bun.

BOCWith Coupon

SAGE SAN

SPECIAL
Your tflolct Of qp or ]111\etka and

•

lOcated at 698 Wesl Main Street
• Nell to the Jones Boys in

$1QO

With Coupon

••••

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

YOUR CHOICE

A wiiDM lq patiy on 1 tolsc.ed bin
with tana:r mililani.

&amp;O~ith Co upon

Save U ctnu on a lriple treal,

double chn••bur1er or do11ble
hamblfiU. Not lobe Ulfd wllh Ill)'

othtr coupoo.

SUNDAY 9'00

~M, lo 9:00 P.M.

0~PE~N~:---~MON1Dt1Y th1u THURSDtiY 6:00A.M. to 9:00 P.M.

United
Press California with 40, ~'lorida
International count showed at counted 25 truf(ic deaths,
least 480 persons were killed · Michigan, New York and
in traffic between6 p.m. local · Ohio ea ch had 21, and North
lime Wednesday
and Carolina , Virginia and
Peunsylvania 17 each .
midnight EST Sunday.
Th e ·National Safety
Fe de r a l
.Av ialion
A breakdown of accidental
Administration official said . deaths:
Counc il est im ate d, in
480 . advan ce of the holiday
Although the holiday Traffic
officially ended at midnight Fire
6!&gt; weekend, that between 45(1
local time Sunday, la te Plane
20 and :;:;o persons would be
reports of dea ths th ai Total
565 killed on the nati on's
occurred prior to midnight
Texas and California were highways .
would b9ost the tota l number far out in front .i ~ traffic
Nunrerous minor traffic
of fatalities .
fataliti es - TeXlls with 42and

rerouted to · airp orts in
Louisv ille and Cincinnati.
"The weather at the time of
U1e c;ni.~h Was overcast , with
dr izzle, freezing drizzle, light
ice pellets and fog," a

air gripped mos\ of the rest of
the na llon.
· Four members of a Lexington ; Ky ., family were killed
and two were injured Sunday
· night when their twin-&lt;!ngine
private plane crashed while
trying to land in a sleet storm
al Bluegrass Fie ld near
Lexington .
Airport Manager James
Brough ordered the field
sealed off and said incoming
flight s wer e temporari ly

NO, 157

A

•

at y

e
VOL. XXVII

•

enttne

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1976

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

accidents were reported in
Alabama, · Luulsi&amp;na,
Mississippi, Tennessee and
Texas because. of lt'Y' or wet
roads.
·
A small foreign car collided
headon with a church bus on 11
rain -slicked highwa y in
southeast Texas Sund ay,
killing the driver or the car
a nd Injurin g 11 persons .
aboard the bus. Nolle of II••
injured were beli eve d
l'l'ilically hurt.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS
I

.

:;:.:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::

Crime wave by
juvenile ended

TOM TIEDE

A dishonorable"abuse of power
governors have a way of
Not that AndersOn should other in Minnesota has the ·
By Tom Tiede
WA SHINGTO N
No worki ng them selves into be confused with Wallace. power to name himself
And yet his decision Is of the senator, one would hope no
sooner had the Democrats obscurity.
And so, by golly, it is not same odor. Public office Is other would do so even if he
seized the White House with
promises· oF restoring con· just for the good of Minn esota not given so that holders can did. Power is a trust. Power
fiden ce m the politica l system that Wendell Anderson is use it for their own ends. is a duty . And power abused
that one of their own was using his office for personal Besides, surely the people is seldom directed to any
blackeningthat system anew. gain , it is in effect for the should have something to say good end and or purpose.
But Anderson is apparently
Wendell Anderso n , good future of America. This about their congressional
no
doubt
Is
the
same
rationale
representation;
Walter
detennined.
It Is possible that .
governor of Minnesota, is the
used
by
George
Wallace
in
Mondale
was
himself
a
Lt.
Gov.
Perpich
could stlll
culprit. Hisses and fie on him.
Faced With the duty or 1966, when, forced out of political appointee to the change his mind about his
the murky
namin g
·a
Senate office by Alabama law, he Senate, and thus Anderson part in
replacement for Walter threw his ca ncer-stricken will only continue that un· collaboration, and yet it's not ·
Mondale, who is stepping up wife into the political arena fortunate way of making likely: Despite Democratic
campaign· . promises, honor ·
to lower things, Ander·son so that he would continue to stars. ·
In the end the issue is still seems something of the
decided there was only one selflesslv rule the people.
power, and its proper use . No remote political future.
man in the state with enough
competence and en ough
stature to replace Mondale:
Wendell Anderson.
Ergo the governor has
conceived an unhappy plan to
further his own interests. He
will resign his present office,
allowing Lt. Gov. Rudy
Perpich to take over. Perpich
will then select Anderson - · ,
who, after all, will be out of
work and essentially a ~~~·--~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~
· wasted resource 7 to be the
Modern technology has virtually
for children which were unknown a hundred·
new junior senator from the eliminated disease as the major cause of
years ago. In iacl, instead of making their
land of 10,000 lakes.
. death among children, only to replace it
lives more secure, it has created for
Anderson is aware there with a more lethal thre&lt;~t - the automobile .
children
an environment bristling with
will he criticism of his action.
Nearly half of all childhood deaths in
deadly danger."
Already a poll has been industrialized countries are caused by
In the United States in 1974, motor
conducted indicating that' 55 traffic accidents, reports the Journal of
vehicle
accidents led all causes of death
per .cent of the Minnesotans Insurance, a publication of the Insurance
'from
age
one through 24 . The National
questioned do not want the Information Inst itute. And the percentage is
Safety
Council
reported 20,559 fatalities for
governor to elect himself to rising.
this age group.
the Senate. But since the polls
A study by the European Economic
It js adults, not children, who must lake
have no authority, and since Community found that c~ilrlren's deaths
responsibility
for making the automobile the
politics Is often the art of from traffi c accidents rose from 39 per cent
number
one
childhood killer, says the
pre venting people from to 45 per c~nto f all child fa talities during the
Journal.
Children
simply are not sufficiently
engaging in what is their own 1960s.
.
developed
physically
or mentally to cope
business, Anerson insists ail
The 1'automoblle epidemlc" is most
with traffic dangers.
•
skepticism
will
be vtrulent between the ages of 6 and 14, says
Merely
instructing
children
about
disregarded.
the EEC study, which is when children leave
traffic
hazards
has
only
a
limited
effect
it
"Jlm sure some will react the securit y of home life, but prior to when
says,
since
children
do
oot
and
cannot
~ct
negatively," the gove rnor they attain the experience essential fo r
predictably . Safety campaigns should
says, '"but I hope that my survival amid the hazards of traffic.
include
adults, and driving schools should
work in the Senate will earn
A Swedi sh -study concluded that
teach drivers the special problems posed by
their supPQrt and justify my "modern mechanized society presents risks
children.
election to aAull term in
1978. " Displaying no shame
at all , Anderson is already
campaigning for a Senate
career, and what with the
incumbent's advantage he is
bestowing on himself he'll
MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE
likelr get it.
That the Minnesotan has
' .
yearned for a national pulpit
· has been apparent for years.
A one·time Olympic hockey
player and attorney, he has
been In polltical office for 18
of his 43 years, and has been
FEATURING:
'touted as a comer since ea rly
this decade. Curly haired,
blue eyed, moderate in all
-Permanent Press Cycle
things including philosophy,
timed Cycle (up to 140
he is a prodigy of Hubert
min.)
Humphrey and a ripening
favorite of his mighty party.
-3 Drying Temperature
He is a bit loo Democratic,
Selections
perhaps. At the past party
'-Cycle Indicator Light
convention, as chairman of
-Easy to Clean Lint Filter
lhe platform committee,
Anderson fought hard for a
-4 . Direction Exhausting
rule--a loyalty oath, reallywhich would force all can·
didates to promise allegiance
to the eventual nominee.
Thus he wanted Jimmy
Carter and company to swear
fidelit y even if · George
Wallace was the pick. This he
.argued was for the good of the
We have just received another large shipment of
party ; hence the Republic.
But extremism in defense
General Electric Appliances including: Washers,
of Democratic tinil Isn't a
Dryers, Refrigerators, Fr~ezers, Compact Washer and
vice,-n.Jt to those who can add
Dryers , Dishwashers and Electric Ranges.
·
registration figures. And it is
this sort of devotion which
Stop by Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic St. in
has led Democrats to believe
Pom eroy and look over this fine line of appliances for
Anderson is too big for a mere
your home.
·
gubernatorial chair. With
his good looks and fortuitous
attitude, they say , he could be
president some day. But not
by ·staying in Minnesota:

ELB.ERFELDS IN POM

Specilll Purchase

GE Electric Dryer

TRIPLE MEAL

Millions of Thanksgiving
holiday trave lers headed
home Sunday night bu.t many
had to contend with a Mother
Nature ·gone mad, and tlje
traffic !atality toil surpassed
last year 's total of 394 persons
killed.
Freezing rain mixed with
sleet and snow spread ice on
roads from lf'exas to
Tennessee , rain covered most
of New England and the
Carolinas, and unusually cold

with Taiwan .

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

IV. Onion Rings, Vegetable Soup, .Baked Beans, large French Fries,
and Baked Potato. eount~ tousins' Cooksltoppe • the complete 1estaurant lor b10akfast, tunch and dinn ..._,._.•·

L

returning to China.

•

.

you can.

~plete Meals For Your Evening Out. Our lot&gt; of the line comp~te mea~. A \1 pound GIOUnd Btel
S!eill&lt; or Deop f1ied rl!h Allot, dh your choice of goldori f1ench hies or baked idaho Potato, Onioit Rings, hot butt01ed b~ad, and a
Clop ,.lad horn ou1 .. ~d b11. En"' a comp~le ...n~l meal at Count~ C.usi111'.

AWhoi&lt; liD&amp; Sausage patty on a toasted bun wkh Musta1d 01 trdef inside i\ld fix

that most of the outstanding scientific leaders of China are
basica lly oriented toward the West - and psrticlilarly toward
the United Slates, Great Britain, Japan and West Germany. A
goodly share of the U&gt;p men have their degrees from these
countries. Some have had Influential posts in the We,&lt;l before

, In ~he stormy years since Yenan, there has been pressure
to o(len Chinese industry to Western technology and
equipment. But political differences and the experience with
counters. Don't touch your . Russia kept the door closed. These fears may be easinc as far
hands to ·your face. And
above all avoid crowds when

II. Two

Ill. A Delicious Whole Hog Sausage Sandwich.

most certainly wHl [ocuson non..Communist nations. Note here

gloves to avoid picking up
germs from door knobs and

I. AComplete Do-lt-Yourself Sandwich Bar.
· Order ,our sandwich inside "wittutul fb;ins" and p1epare ,our DWn special mul the way

Holiday weekend blackened
by ice and snow last night

RAY CROMLEY

ELBERFELDS IN POM·EROY
J

,.

'•

EXTENDED OUJI,OOK
Wedn es day through
Friday, fair and cold. High
Wednesday In teens and
low 20s, and lows 5 to 15,
moderating by Friday to
highs In mid 30s to low 40s
and lows In ·20s.

I .

Roads dangerous
.

.

temperatures Ewington, was charged with
and I% inc hes of snow reckless operation following
Sunday night creat ed an accident at 9:55 p.m.
baza rdous driving conditions Sunday on Rt. 35. Grant lost
Middlep.ort Police and juvenile earlier had been
in the Galiia-Meigs County control of his car which
county juvenile authorities , tri'ed and found guilty aiso of
GOING FOR TWO - Tim Scites drove here for two
area the Gailia·M eigs Post struck a concrete ce nter
after long investigation, have an entry at the Kelly
sure points Saturday night against the Vinton County
Stale Highway Patrol warned divider In the highway . There
apprehended and cited a 15· Manafacturing Co.
Vikings. Scites was' three for seven from the fi eld and six
was moderate damage.
today.
The youth has been
year-old juvenile for grand
for six from the foul line, a good night's work . But it
Sev en tra ffi c accid ents · John M. Brooks, 31 ,
larceny at the Middleport transferred to the Ohio Youth
wasn't enough as llie Marauders went down 6().51 in their
were investigated over the Amanda , was charged with
football stadium on Oct. 16 Commission on a permanent
first game of the 1976-77 high school basketball season.
weekend, some of course, falling to yield at a hillcrest
Picture by Gary Sisk. See account of game and more
with some $2,000 worth of basis.
attributed indirectly to the foll owing a traffic accident at
The Middleport Polic ~
watches and other valuables
II :50 p.m. Sunday on SR 143,
pictures on page 8 today.
road conditions.
being removed from the Department is now turning
A single car accident oc· three miles west of SR 692 In
its full attention to the theft of
clothing of players.
curred on Rt. 35 where Mary Meigs County .
citizens band radios. Three
M. Adkins, 36, Upper. San- Brooks' tractor-trailer rig
radios have been removed
dusky, lost control of her car sideswiped a vehicle driven
.from three vehicles in the ·
on slick pavement . Her by James L. Phalen, J:i,
town over the past three
vehicle struck a guardrail, Pataskala. There was minor
·
:::·
·:&lt;
Junior High School. The weeks.
then slid across the highway , damage.
United Press International
l;'I'ITSBURGH I UPI) Aseml-rlg loaded with 1,200
jumping the guardrail on the
DENVER - PRESIDENT-ELECT JIMMY CARTER told
Bethlehem Steel Corp., the opposite side of the highway turkeys overturned at 6:20
delegates to the National League of Cities convention he
na tion's No. 2 producer , before stopping in a fi eld.
p.m. Sunday on Rt. 143 in the
supports their request to make the revival of urban America a
today joined other major · Kandall •D. Grant, 20, Carpenter area of Meigs
manufacturers in ratsing its
·top priority ·or the new administration, officials said Sunday .
The NLC board of directors, headed by Jacksonville, Fla.,
prices an average .of 6 per
Mayor Hans Tanzler, said the Carter administration should
•
•
cent, effective Wednesday .
give Spl!\!ific altenliop to the nation 's cities because "[rom the
Si• major firms last week
announced siiriilar pri ce
problemsofitscitiesand-their peop!e h.ave come the problems
of the whole country."
boosts on sheet and strip
Santa has been "snowed
However, due to the snow products commonly used to
or 49.5 1 per cent; Taft
Carter, speaking to one convention gathering six hours
COLUMBUS IUPI)
later by telephone from Plains, Ga., made a nearly identical out" for his appearance in . which fell overnight and manufacture au tomobiles Certified figures from
1,823,774 votes, or 46,52 per
statement. "\Vhat happens to cities and towns of America Mid,dleport this evening but promised dipping tern· and home appliances.
Secretary of State Ted W. ·cent.
happens to America ," Carter said in -a six-minute speech to a aU signals are "go" for a peratures I h'ts evenIng, th e
However • there
John O'Neill of Cleveland,
. was no Brown's offi ce showed todily
-raising
banquet
for
the
National
Black
Caucus
ol
Locally
f
word
from
Uruted
States
fund
Socialist
Labor candidate, rethat
Democrat
Howard
M.
moonlight sale by Middleport parade and appearance o
.
·
Elected Officials.
merchants ,
Santa have been postponed , Stee l Corp., _ the largest Metzenbaum of Cleveland ceived 53,657 votes, or 1.37
·
t producer and mduslry trend· defeated U.S. Sen. Robert percent; 'Donald fl . Babcock,
Caucus Pr esident Maynard Jackson,the mayor of Atlanta,
A parade at 6 this ~vening until next Monday evenmg a
.
Ga., said Carter renewed a ca mpaig n promise to "make his is scheduled to welcome in 6
setter, whether tt would Taft Jr., R.Qhio, by 117,339 Bay Village, American
. istration one of excellence and compassiOn and
· Middleport mere hants , follow suit ·
admtn
. voles in the Nov. 2 election. Party, 36,979 or 0.94 per cent ;
dedicated to all of the people all of the time and not just some of the holiday season and Santa,
· h ·
If US Steel goes along tt
The final written canvass of Emma Lila Fundaburk,
appearing in the parade, was offering specials m t etr
. · ·
~
the people some of the time."
to have greeted youngsters in moonlight sale, will proceed wtll mea n steel . prt ce vo tes in c r eased Bowling Green, independent,
the drive-through area of the with that part of the planned mcreases \his year ": 111 total Me tzenbaum 's margin of 33,285 or 0.65 per cent; and
SYDNEY, AUSTRAUA - A RECORD 17.5 per cent Citizens National Bank to holiday season activity from 12 per cent. It also wtll mean victory from the 115,880 Melissa Singler, Cleveland,
devaluation of the Australian dollar today triggered simila r · distribute treats following the 6 to 9 tonight.
htgher pnces lor . cars, originally tallied the day Socialist Workers, 31 ,IIO{i or
devaluations o! the currencies o! neighboring New Zealand '
ranges, refngerators, home after the election.
0.81 per cent.
and Papua New Guinea.
parade.
and business constru ction
Meanwhile, the 88 county
The official canvass
The devaluation pegged the Australian dollar at 1.017
and other goods which use boards o! election began a slightly reduced the margin
against the U.S. dollar , compared with Friday 's closing qu ote
steeL
recount of the presidential by which former Cleveland
of 1.230, making the two currencies roughly equal in value on
baliotin'g in which Democrat Mayor Ralph S. Locher
international monetary markets. Australia 's announcem ent of
Jimmy Carter defeated. defeated Republican William
the devaluation Sunday prompted a 'l2.5 per cent 'devaluation
Pr eside nt Ford by 9,333 J. Morrissey Jr . of Clni:innati
Fair and cold tonight and votes .
of the currency of Papua New Guinea against the Australian
for the Ohio Supreme Court.
Tuesday. Low tonight near
dollar and 7.25 per cent against other world currencies.
Brown ordered figures to
Locher had won by 28,616
BEIRUT, Lebanon IUPI) has been no official decision !0. High Tuesday near 20. be submitted by Dec. 9, but a votes in the unofflcfal count.
VAN TURKEY - COMMERCE SECRETARY Elliot - Oil experts predict an oil to postpone the meeting of oil Chance oE snow 60 per ~ent spokesp~an for the secretary His margin was cut to 27,268,
Richarct.:,n has flown to Turkey on orders from President price increase of aboutlO·per ministers in Qatar. "As far as . today and 10 per cent !_lll'tghl . of stale said most. counties or 0.94 per cent, in the official
Ford !Oo versee American aid shipments to earthquake cent when the Orga nization of we are concerned, the date is anti Tuesday,
would have their recounted count.
victims in the coWltry's remote eastern sections, where snow Petrol e um Exporting still
Dec.l5,"
chief
totals certified by the end of
Fidnl figures gave Locher
and bitter cold were hampering rescue efforts. .
the week.
1,459,632 votes, or 50.47 per
·Countries meets in Doha, spokesman Hamid Zaheri
Richardson broke off a six-nation European tour Sunday Qatar next month , the Middle said. "If there is a cbsnge, we
Final official figures in the cent, and Morrissey i,432,364
TAKENTOHOI2ER
and !lew to Ankara from Belgrade. He was scheduled to meet East Economic Survey said will announce il ." )
The Pomeroy Emergency U.S. Senate race ga ve votes or 49.53 per cent.
IOOay in the capital with Prime Minister Suleyman DemireL today .
"Most seasoned observers Squad answered a call to the Metzenbaum 1,941,113 voles,
Democrat A. William
Demirel, wtio Saturday visited the rerpote, mountainous
The journal said the date of are now placing their Marion Hawk residence ,
disaster area on the borders of Soviet Armenia and Iran, said the OPEC conference has speculative bets on an Welshtown Hill, at 7r37 p. m,
the latest official death toil from Wednesday 's quake was 3,024 . been postponed five days increase of about 10. per cent Suoday.· Hawk, a heart
However,-local officials said they feared that many who from Dec. 15 to Dec. 20, "to at Doha, if only because this patient, was taken to Holzer
survived the quake itself may die of exposure and the iinai leave plenty of time for the is the publicly declared Medical Center.
death toll may be double the offictal estimate.
out com e of the Paris ceiling of the member with
conference on International the most oil power, Saudi
LONDON - BRITISH OFFICIALS have br'iefed Treasury Economic Cooperation, or Arabia," the survey said.
SQUAD CALLED
Secretary William Simon on the tough, new economic package north&lt;;Outh dialogue, to be
Until the conference conthe labor government is assembling to win a $3.9 billion known before any decision is venes, however , OPEC and
The
Middleport
International Monetary Fund loan and rescue the ailing pound. taken on oil prices."
Emergency
Squad was called
tbe Western countries are
Simon met with Chancellor of the Exchequer Denis Healey at
to
near
the
Kings
Anns Nlte
lin Vienna, an OPEC playing "an intricate poker
the Treasury for two bours Sunday morning.
Club
on
Route
7
below
Mid·
(Continued on page 12)
spokesman said today there
dleport at 6:39 p. m. Sunday
A U. s. Embassy spokesman said Healey gave Simon a
complete fill-in on the Britisl\ economic and financial sit.uati~n,
Sarah McCarty, who was
:,,~~:,;:i':,,:;::,,;:;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,\::i for
but there were no agreements and It was "not a negottating
Ill. She was · treated and ad·
session." Simon arrived Friday for what was officially
vised to see her doctor
described as a private weekend visit enroute to Moscow , where
Monday. AI B: 40 p. m.
he was to address the annual meeting of the Soviet-American
Saturday, the squad was
Trade and Economic Council today.
called to the American
!I;
·..
Legion ·Hall for a person
FREEZING RAIN MIXED. WITH SLEET AND SNOW
spread ice on roads !rOll,l Texas to Tennessee and rain fell ;:::. ARIEL, Wash. (UPI )- They threw a beer and baffalo :;:: reported ill but help was
throughout most of J&gt;jew England, making the trek home :i:i: stew party for D.B . Cooper, but the guest of honor was a :;:: refused .
:::: \
dangerous for many Thanksgiving holiday travelers. Cold or :·:·: ''no show "
TWo
pa~achutists
even
made
perfect
landings
to
get
t)te
iiii
very cold air dominated most of the natton Sunday from the
}
party,
staged
behind
'the
Ariel
Store
and
Tavern,
under
iiii
lower Great Lakes to the Gulf, and west across the Mississippi
g: way .
•
;;;;
Valley to 'the Pacffic coast.
The Texas "Citrus Belt" was sprinkled with snow and :;;;: Ariel, in a (emote wooded area of southwestern ;:~
·sleet giving thousands of persons their first view of the white .;') Washington, is'near the spot where Cooper parachuted :;:;
stuff: The National Weather Service at Brownsville, which is ;:; from a Northwest Airlines 7'!1 Thanksgiving Eve, 1971 ;:;:
farther south than Miami, said the last measurable snowfall in ,;:: with $200,000ransom in $20 bills. He disappeared fullowing ;:;;
the lower Rio Grande Valley was In the 1880s. Freezing rain :i:i Ute jump and the FBI believes Cooper is dead.
iii::
and sleet also covered northern and central Louisiana, much of ':': About 100 persons attended the party Saturday, and ·::::
.Mississippi, northern Alabama ·and west and .central :;:; much of the cash crossing the tavern bar was in $20 bills. ·:;;:
:m Many of the party goers wore T-shirts of the D.B, Coop~r n,
Tennessee.
1
:::: fan club.
:·&gt;
' BEIRUT, LEBANON - THE SYRIAN PEACEK!CEPING . :;:( The party was sponsored by Vince Tricola and his wife, ::i ·
force has encountered stubborn leftist and Palestinian 'i': Germaine, owners of the store. Tricola said of Cooper : ::;:
"I've got itr For our 'token Republican' how
resistance to its plan to confiscate heavy weapons from
"This guy is something of a hero around here. Everybody
about
appointing Joa Garagiola?" '
Lebanon's militias, leftist sources said today. The sources ::: seems to wish him luck, wherever he is." ,
:::;
(Continued on page 12)
.;:t:-:::-:::·:::·:::::::::::::::·::~::::%:::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::j{

r;v;,;;,,:,,,.,:,,,,:,,i·;::::n;i;/;1

~ul.-freezlng

More
steel
raised

~r:i~~~~;:~~:::~i:rl

Moon1•tght Sale
IS

m, san(a 0 ut

Taft lost by 117,339

Experts prediCt hik.e

Weather

of 10% in oil prices

Berry's World

::r,,,,,,,; :;_
f
t
give~ for missing U&gt;oper \,'

·-~ - ·

County when the weld on a
wheel came off, cu usl n ~ tho
trailer to overtunt.
The rig was dnvcn by
Charles Staggs, J:i, Fleming·
burg, Ky. Staggs was not
injured.
Another single car accident
was Investigated a\5 :30 a.m.
Sunday on Rl. 160 where Kirk
E. Pennington, 18, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, lost control of his
car which run off the right
side of the hlghwuy striking u
fence.
A Saturday nceld cr•• occurred at 9:45 p.m. on 111 . 325,
four tenths of a mil e soutlt of
Mile Post II where George 11 .
Glbnore, 20, Kitts liili, lost
control of his cur whi ch run
off·the right side of the hl ~ h ·
way over un embankment.

Sweeney of Cincinnati
received 1,622,903 votes, or
54.73 per ce nt, and
Republican Don P. Brown of
Cleveland 1,342,187 votes, or
45.27 per cent, in the other
Supreme Court contest.
Tite official canvass also
confirmed
that
thr ee
constitutional amendments,
including one on a plan for
repla cing
a di sabled
governor, passed by more
than 2-1, while four other
amendments, three of them
utility-related, wero defeated
by 2-1 margins.

Gov. Rhodes is

in Washington
WASHINGTON (UP!) Gov. James A. Rhodes of
Ohio- was among the nation's
50 governors attending a
meeting of the National
Governors Conference here
IOOay.
Rhodes, who fl ew to
Washington from Florida,
following a Thanksgiving
vacation, was to attend u
White House ,reception with
·the other governors looight.
A spokesman said Rhodes
would return to Columbus
following the reception and
be In his office Tuesday.

Twelve dead in
train accident

J: .

?

-

1\

i'l

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

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

NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI ) The Mombasa-Nairobl express, crowded with hun·
dreds of Kenyans and foreign
holldaymakers, derailed
today during a heavy !hun·
derstonn and plunged Into
swirling floodwaters In East
African big game country.
· The official Kenya · news
agency aald at least 12 per·
sons were feared dead and
many more Injured, but
witnesses said scores of other
passengers were trapped in
one coach submerged in mud
and water and the toll could
be much higher.
COFCTOMEET
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce will meet at noon
Tueaday at Uoe Meigs Inn to
complete plans for the
holiday promotional
program.

~I

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