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                  <text>8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Friday, Dec. 24, 1976

SOUTHERN HIGH (liRLS BASKETBALL TEAM_:Front, 1-r, Jean Ritchhart, Lisa
Allen, Jayc Ord, Cheryl Roseber,.Y and Pam Brauer; hack row, Amy Souder, Shelly Ward,
Brenda Lawrence, Carla Tealord and Coach Connee Williams. -Gary Sisk picture.

to eat turkeys

NOTICE!
WE WILL CLOSE
AT 6 P.M.
CHRISTMAS EVE
And Resume
Normal Hours
At Noon ·
Sunday, Dec . 26
(Open Noon Til5
p.m. J

Dutton's
Drug Co.
MI'DDLE PORT, 0.

United Press inttruaU011al immediately, and Sorenson
Ted Sorenson, named by bec•arne Kennedy's chief
· .Jimmy Carter to. head the lieutenant and alter ego
Central lntelligen&lt;'C Agency, throughout the Senate years
is no stranger to the and in the While House.
government limelight.
After Kennedy was ·assasHe was a close adviser and sina ted, Sorenson stayed
speechwriter !tr President · Wltil Jan . IS, 1964, when he
John F. Kennedy and resigned to write a, book.
wherever the Kennedy "Kennedy" became a best·
family went in the golden seJJer · ana was serialized
years, Ted Sorenson was widely in · magazines and
somewhere
in
the newspapers.
background.
Sorenson joined the New
Sorenson, 48, did much ol Yock law firm of Paul, Weiss,
lhe histocical research when Rilkind , Wharton and
then-Sen. John F. Kennedy Garrison, and has stayed
wrote "Profiles in Courage." there
since
he
left
He often helped Kennedy the government.
presidential candidate write
Sorenson burns his bridges
speeches and positioo papers. behind him. On July 14, 1001,
And he became President he went back to McCook,
Kennedy's right hand man in Neb., to substitute for
the White HoUBe. The ~&gt;foot- Kennedy at a , dinner in
tall, scholarly adviser and Norris' honor. He attacked
writer was ooe or the group of schools like the ones he
inside decision-makers atiended back home, and,
during the Cuban missile · Nebraska ltsell, he said, was
crisis In 1962.
"old, outmoded: a place to
Sor ens on
r a n leave or a place to die,"
WlSuccesslully lor Robert F.
Kennedy's Senate seat in
1970. He lost In the New York
Democratic primary.
LO'M'ERY WINNERS
Sorenson said he "worked
This week's wiDnlng Oblo
on" the television address
Lotttl')l numbero:
made by Sen. Edward M.
PotO'Gold
Kennedy, !).Mass., alter a
Three-digit
number
yowtg girl was killed when
185
(
one·eight-flve).
the senator's car went off a
Three-dlglt number bridge on Chappaqulddick
674
(six-seven-lour) ,
ls.land.
·
'
Five-digit
number Theodore Chaikin Sorenson
32925
(
three-tw
..nloe-twcr
was born May 8, 1928, in
Lincoln, Neb., lhe son o! C. A. live).
Double Play
Sorenson, one of the liberal
Three-digit number
Republicans who supported
Sen. George Norris, R-Neb. · J70 (eight-seven-zero).
Five-digit number He went to the University of
02018
(zercrtwcrzero-oneNebraska , linatty graduating
elght).
Phi Beta Kappa. He stayed In
Six-digit number get a law degree.
Sen. Paul H. Douglas, 1). %97%44 (two-nine-seven.
lll ., recommended Sorenson tw..four-lour).
Winning color - red.
to Kennedy, The two men
liked
each
other :;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::;:;::

. PLAINS, Ga . t UPI J - The job of
·t'amily sour,es said she wants to he in wiileranging talks on policy and New
selecting a Cabinet behind him, President- ··top health" for her son 1s inauguration. York 's finsnces.
·
elect Jimmy Carter settled down today to "The family will take Christmas to her,"
Ce:4rter signect offal his nl'Ws conference
a Cl,'!iet Yuletide celebration with his sources said.
annoW&gt;Cing lhe rest of his appointments
family.
·
Christmas Day at the Carter's will be 11tursdoy wilh an expression or hope "lhat
.. The ~tr~~cb . or the Carter lwnily. devoted to the traditional exrhange of gills we t•an enter the New Year with a
MiBB Ullian will be missing from the and holiday feasting .
eommitment to being closer together, to
Plains hom~, however. Carter's 'IS-year
Next week , the President-elect will sharing our problems and our
old mother 18 recuperating from arthritic gather his Cabinet and New York's top 'opportWJilies ...."
discomfort in an Aniericus, Ga ., hospital, executive officers, Gov. Hugh Carey and
Carter penciled in the last name r... his
where she will have to stay through Mayor Abrsham Beame at St. Simons, an Cabinet when he selected Washington
Christmas.
Island off the south roast of Georgia, lor attorney Hnd former Johnson White House

0

9

greetings fpr a holiday well
. seasoned with every bright wish ..
Thanks for sharing • ' t t&lt; 'lie.

~teamboat ln17.
••

stopped last Thursday, when
lhe first caseS ol lhe rare
paralysis- including seven
la~lities-were reported.
The CDC said .the number
of Guillain-Barre cases
jumped !rom 172 last
Tuesday to 223 today . Of the
223cases reported In date,llO
of lhe victims had received
swine flu shots, 100 had not.
and it could not be
determined whether the other
13 had been innoculated.
There was no increase in
deaths al)'loog the paralysis
victims. Of the seven who

have died, six had received •
swine flu shots, the .CDC said. ~

FLOWERS
We Wire Flowers
Everywhere

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop
'Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Ph. 992-57,1

Ph. 992·2039 ·

20%

BEST CHRISTMAS - Residents of tha Meigs Cowtty In!irmary was
guaranteed one of the "best Christmases yet" Friday when despite a late
response, gilts for lhe 15 resident.s of the inlirmary were high under their tree.
,Ws. Mildred JacobS, who lhrough her decorating and cooking makes the season
. \lfight for infirmary residents, is preparing the g1fts. Mrs. Jambs is aided by her
staff and the public in the Christmas project.

Located on Rt. 7 below Mid!lleport.
Open 9-6 Tues. thru Sat ., Sunday 1·6.

tntittt
MIDDLEPORJ.POMEROY

,

DDT

IIRRI
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0

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CLOSED DECEMBER 25TH &amp; 26TH

Middleport

I

Best wishes to you
and to those you love
in this special season of joy.

~atronage!

FURNITURE

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; ' " " '

Thanks For Your

" Reul Old·Fashioned Hom" Conkin~"

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Killsl8Ye8r-Old Girl

••

... BAKER

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From AH of Us, . •

RIO GRANDE - What happens when
principles of management used in industry
are applied to the finances of a college ?
Hopefully, more efficient use or funds in a
lime when the cost of' college education
rontinues to skyrocket.
At teas!; that's the goal set by J. David
Thomas, Rio Grande College's new
director til finance. Thomas brings to Rio
Grande nine years of e"perience as both a
business manager and a teacher.
Prior to joining the College stall last fall , ·
he tau'ght accounting and finance at
Defiance Cottege. Thomas also served as
purchasing analyst, financial manager
and manager of marketing accounting for
such companies as RCA, National Cash
Register and Mead Corporation.
Thomas says he hopes that combination
of business and academic experience will
. help him s.olve financial problems of a nonprofit college.
He was attracted to Rio Grande
because or the unique blending of a 100
, year old private college and a relatively
new community college. !lio Graode
Community College utilize::; the resources
of Rio Grande College so that neither
buildings or staff need to be duplicated in
order to provide educational opportunity
for the area .
There are three goals Thomas hopes to
achieve f!S finance director: "First, I want
a reassessment and reevaluation of what
the college and community college can do
for students and how we can best·manage
this union of two schools."

PRICE 25 CENTS

· SANTA AND AIDES - Starting to load one of UIC trucks with gilts dono ted hv
area residents.
·
·

J. DAVID THOMAS
His second goat is to set up a
management by objectives system to
adequately monitor the school's goats and
objectives as they relate to the total
financial program.
Finally, Thom.as plans to provide
enough relevant information to faculty and
starr to help them assess their programs
und become more ~rrtcient.
"Historically small private school•
have not subscribed to theories of

.
ned
.
By
P
·
o
'
·II.
ce~:~~~~e~~~e~~r:i~nn~~~~~t;~~;lc~~~~~~
Purs
Car
.

share the many blessings (}( Christmas.

Off .

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 26. 1976

.

l!lmu
Here's hoping that all our friencl.~,
whose confidence we trea.1ure, will

~

Wit h t:etli fano , Carlt-r ulso named
runner Jo'ord Def!!nse Secretury James
St'11lcsin~l!r us a White House assistant
··for coordination of all energy efforts,''
and Theodore Sorenson, a former speech
writer and adviser to President John
Kennedy, to be di(ector of the CIA.
Carter has noted he still has many
important appointments to make at the

finance chief

Paralysis cases jump this week

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Arrllla
Donahue, Pomeroy; Joseph
Quivey, Pomeroy; Ella
Payne, Vinton; Paul Dodson,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Mark
Hood, Janet Van Vranken,
Judith Bailey, James Smith.

Hand crafted coo coo clocks from
Germany
Hand crafted leather items
Handblown glass from Blincoe &amp;
Pilgrim
Picks &amp; Heshi Jewelry
Manv
Hurricane Lamps
novelty
Oil Paintings on Canvas
items .
Decorative Oolls
Something •
Lawn Decorations
for
Tilfinay Lamps
Spanish &amp; Mexican Imports

Wc lfart~.

.week or the strict CO&lt;!e of ethics he has
mandated foc anyone serving In his
administration. At the same time , Carter
was expected to disclose plans lor
divesting his OWTl inter..ts in Ute family's
peanut business.
On St. Simons there witt be a thorough
review of the economy - including tl1e
New York picture - and recommendations to Carter on whether to seek a tax cut
next year to stimulate U1c econmn)',

'

MRS. VICKIE FINK, WHO recenUy took over the operation of Beverly's Beautv Salon ,.
at 200 Paimer St., In Middleport, gave \he eight women of the Meigs County Infirmary a
"lift" for lhe holiday weekend. Mrs. Fink visited the in6rmary and gave each of the women
a shampoo and set to round out what was a great Christmas at the infirmary. Mrs. Fink Is
pictured working on Betty Wills.

in collision

The Odds &amp;Ends Shop

Cabinet level and otl!ers, as he described
of ~·:.•cute · importance" such as FBI
director.
The President-elect has indicated he
betioves it within his power to replace FBI
Dir&lt;.&gt;clor &lt;.1arence Ketley , even though the
tenure lor that postion is now set at tO
years. Carter aides believe Ketley will go.
Carter mel with Treasury Se.&lt;.Tetorydesignate Michael Blumenthal Thursday
but there were no details on !hei r talk; .
He also was movi~ lnwc.rU release next

day

College gains

damaged

NOW YOU KNOW
An edition .ol the King
James Bible published in
London In 1631 erroneously
printed one of the Ten
Commandments as "Thou
Shalt Commit Adultery" and
became known thereafter as
the "Wicked Bible."

advi,..r ·Joseph Catilano to head the
O.•pHrtment o! Health . f.dticallon 'and

tmes·

V
_O_L._ll-.,N""'O-.4 . , - 8 - - - - - --"7
GA:-:LLlPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

Cars badly

aga inst
you
for
r elief
dem., nded in thls complaint
LA RRY E . SPENCER
Clerk of Coun s
Comm on PINts Court
Meigs Coun.l y , Oflio
(ll) 29 ,16 112) 3. 10, 17, 1-4
31 , fll 7, 8tc

Christ~nas

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unba

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suggestion.
Pro!. Margarete Reiss ol
the Psychological Institute ol
lhe University ol Muenster
wan is big eaters to sit at the
dinner table with two photos
bel ore them . One is a
"before" photo showing the
person heloce weight was put
By WII,LJAM COTTERELL
•
on. The other an "alter"
ATLANTA (UP!) - The
or calories next w each dish photo showing the person
C~nt.er 10.. DiSease Control
on menus. Few are doing it. with the added !at in the
said today the number ol ·
One exception is the canteen nude.
Gullain-Barre
paralysis
serving the Justice Ministry
She reported she used this
cases this week jumped to 223
and Technology Ministry.
melhod on 229 women and 61
~ with almost half the
Almost everyOne in per cent took off weight ilver
·
v
ictims
having
been
Germany has a Ia !·lighting a period or months ,
Vaccinated in the stalled
Television, too, is getting in
swine flu program.
lhe act . One ol the nation's
A CDC spokesman said no
'-EGAL NOTICE
lhree television channels is
decision has been made on a
TO .
GENE
EDWARD starting in January a sixRO SE . whose tasl known
proposal by Dr. Theodore
actdress Is Athens . Grrf'ct lind monlh weekly llerles called
Cooper,
the federal governWh05e E!ICo!ICt llddro' SS Is "Eat Properly."
'
ment's top physician, to
unknown :
One of ·the reasons that
TO : MAR GA RET JO ANN
resume immunization lor
WALKER , whose last known Germans do not eat properly
Hong
Kong flu and other non~ddress Is "ent , Onlo . and
whose ll!SI known address Is is that youn~ women stick to
swine llu aibnent.s among the
unk noWn :
the same latty recipes their
elderly and chronically ill.
TO ' THE
SURV IVING grandmother
or great- Three runs by
S.POU SE
OF
WAYNE
The U.S. Public Health
GRIMM . de c eased . whose grandmothers use, according
Service
' advisory committee
name and
addren are to the German Nutrition
on
immWlizalion
practices,
unknown :
Institute. It estimated 70 per Middleport E-R
To : J&amp;mes Grimm whose
headed by CDC direcU&gt;r Dr.
last known llddress Is .SSJO Old cent of women used old
David Sencer, will meet
Three tuns were answered
Dixit Hlghwlly , Forest Pllrk. recipes that call foc bacon !at
Wednesday tn decide whether
GA . 30050.
Thursday night and early
You ere hereby not ified that in string beans and .huge
to resume other llu
Friday morning by the
v-ou
have
b ee n
nam ed amounts of lard in stews.
vaccinations during the
defendants in a le9al action
Many young · women still · Middleport Emergency
en HIIed Roberta C. O'Br ien vs
suspension
of the swine flu
Two cars were heavily program .
Gene Edw&amp;rd Rose. et al. This cite the old German saying; Squad.
ac !ion ha S been esslgned Case "The best dish doesn 'I taste
At 6:33 p.m. Thursday the damaged, one person was
Swine flu shots were
No . 16,19• In the Common
squad was called to ad- injured and a driver was
Pl eas Coun ol Meigs Coun 1v. good without butter."
The antilat campaign has minister oxygen to Lewis cited to court'as the result ol
Ohio .
The oblect of the comp laint tough going as the experience
Lee, N. Second Ave. At 12:22 an accident .on Mill St.,
is 10 parllfion real esl!ltt'
or
an
American
who
took
off
a.m.
Friday, the squad was Middleport, at 12:22 a.m.
silu&amp;ted in Rutland Town5hip ,
Me igs county , Oh io described weight shows.
called to Mill St., the scene of Friday.
as follows :
,
He was approached at a • an accident. Charles Neal, 34,
Middleport police said · a
Beginn ing in the crntcr of·
by an another Hartford, W. Va., who had car driven by Laura M.
Big Ludlng Creek at the party
Mrlhwest cornt'r or E . H. American who said, "You
received a laceration or the · Thomas,' Route I, Middleport,
GrieVes lend . lately bou~hl bv
head in the accident was pulled !rom an alley into a
th e said McHetrle in Secllon look fine, been dieting?"
34 , To~n 6. · Rllnge 14 , Ohio
He was approached later taken to Veterans Memorial westbound car driven by
Compan'l' 's Purchase : lhence
north 6~ 1 ~· deg . eut 21 rods to by a German, who said, Hospital. At I :40 a.m . Friday, Charles Neal, 34, Hartford,
the west side ol ' the road ; "Heavens, you been sick? n
the squad was called for W. Va. Neal who received a
thence east 50 rods : lhcnu
Pearl Sigman, ISO Main St. head laceration was taken to
north 14 deg . east 15 1 : rods :
thence north 5 rods 13 links ;
She
was taken to Veterans Veterans Memorial Hospital
thence sovlh 1S 1 .• deg . wes t 14
Memorial.
Hospital.
by the Middleport Emer·
SINGERS SPLIT
roa s 9 links : thence west 101
rods 18tinks lo the cenler road
gency Squad.
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
leading from Bradley M ill to
Mrs. 'l'nomas was cited to
Singers Robert Goulet and
qrass run : Thence south 101
dcg . east 1.1 rods 10 th e center Carol
rourt
on a charge of !ailing to
Lawrence were
ON HONOR LIST
ot iebdlng crtck ; thence down
yield
the right of way.
said creek to the place bf divorced Thursday, ending 13
CHESTEII Katrina
oeginnlng , containing about 4.8 years of marriage over Miss &amp;ley Matheny, student at
acres , more or tes ~ . ElC.ce~:J!Inq Lawrence's objections.
Washington
Technical
about oi acres ott of !he norlh
A Superior Court com· College, Marietta, has been
side belongin!l lo Eliv• Nelson
heirs.
·
missioo granted the divorce named to the President's Ust
You are required to answer
th e co,..,plainl wllh in ?8 days petition by Goulet, 44, with a perfect 4.0 average for
after the last publicelion ot denying a request by Miss
the Fall Quarter as an·
thi s notice . whlctt will be
published once each Week tor Lawrence, 43, for a con·
nounced today by Deborah K.
six consecutive weeks . The tinuance in hopes or saving
Mise! , 'Registrar. Mrs.
la st publlcallon will be made the marriage.
on Jan . 1. 1977 and lhe 28
Matheny is enrolled in he
Division ol community General Studies program at'
Clays for answer will star t on
Lhat da le.
property
and custody of their the college. She is the
In case of vour failure to
answer or ot"erwise respon d sons Christopher, 12, and
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
as reQuired bY the 011 10 Rul es Michael 10, was left lor a
Andrew Batey ol the Chester
ot Civil Pr oa dure ivdQmen r
by deta,u l! will be rend ered future trial.
area, Meigs County.

Germans advised
By JOSEPH 8. FLEMING
BONN , West Germany
1UP! ) - Overweight West
Germans - an estimated half
of the country - are being
urged to eat tu1 ~ey this
Christmas in stead ol the
traditional goose.
If they ignore Ibis advice oi
Bonn 's Coosurner Society and
stick to grandmother's fatty
recipes, !hey are being told
that one way to light weight
problems is to climb 20 flights
of stairs daily.
That seems like a strenuous
antidote that not too many
people will adopt even if they
could lind lhill many stairs in
o country where an eightstory building is considered a
wolkenkratzer -skyscraper.
But UHl recommendation it has been tested by
voiWJteers at the Bayer plant
headquarters tn Leverkusen
- along with the ·suggested
holiday fowl shows that
Germans are beginning to
take their we ight problem
very seriously.
The government is too. It
ca lculates that sicknesses
and disabilities related w
overcat.ing cost health
insurance schemes $6.8
bittion yearly.
The West German Health
Ministry, which says that
more !han &gt;O per cent or the
men consume 500 ca lories too
many each day and 50 per
cent or the women 400 too
many , has appealed to
restaurant.s to list the number

Carter family plans a quiet

Sorenson an old
government hand

M,-mber FDIC .

POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va . - The Christmas season
got orr to a tragic start when
an 18 year-old Point Pleasant
girl was ~tiled as a result of a
two-car collision at the intersection ol Jackson Ave.
a~d 22nd St., at about 12:30
a.m. today, according to '
Poi.:t Pleasant Police
Pa.trobnan John Sallaz.
Pronounced dead at
Pleasant Valley Hospital was
Dreama L. Smith; 3401
Howard Ave.
She was taken there by the
Ravenswood Rescue quad
which had left Pleasant Valley
Hospital, about the time the
wreck occurred,
after
delivering a patient there.
Meanwhile, police have
arrested Worthy Leach Jr., 27,
2218 N. Main St., Point
PleaSant, On a Charge of
negligent homicide. He is
scheduled to he arraigned
tOday before Justice of the
Peace John "Andy" Wilson.
DEATH CAR - This demolished 1977 Ford Mustang II was driven by Dreama 1..
; 'Leach was also Injured in
Smith, 18, 3401 Howard Ave. Point Pleasant, when it was struck by another car early this
tit• accident and taken to morning at the intersection
of 22nd St.. and Jackson Ave.
.
Pleasant Valley Hospital by
the Point Pleasant Rescue
Squad. He was .treated and
Also assisting in the . in· occurrence tn Mason County wher-e funeral arrangements
f,eleased.
lmmedialely
vtstlgatlon and traffic control this yenr, ae&lt;:ording 'to figures will be announced later:
following his release, police
was M.ason County Sherif! s complied by the West Virginia
Both the 1977 Ford driven by
State Police.
t.hok him into custody.
Deputy Detner Roush Ill.
the victim and Leach's 1007
The body was taken to the Pontiac were demolished.
; While the incident remains
This . mornin g's trallic
Crow
Hussell Funeral Home
tinder investigation, Mason fatality was lh~ fifth such
~ounty Sheriff's Deputy
~!chard E. Dyer, who aided
LILLIAN BETTER
J!atrolman Salaaz, noted the .
AMERICUS, 'Ga. iUPI) - Jimmy
accident was a result ol a
Carter's mother "Miss Lillian" is feeling
HUMAN ERROR
H,igh-speed chase between
much better after sullering arthritic paln
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia !UP)) - An
in
the hlp, but will have to spend Christmas
$alaaz and Leach.
investigatory commission today blamed
In lhe hospital.
; Salau was appare'ntly
an atr tralllc controller for history's worst
torced into power pole and
inflight collision on Sept. I 0 cha rglng he
CHOPPER PRESENT
~ach reportedly &lt;."Ontinued on
forgot he gave permission to a jetliner to
WASfUNGTON !UPI) - The Pen·
at a high rate of speed and
climb to the spot where it smashed into
lagon had cheering holiday news lor
another jet. :
struck lhe Smith car In the ·
Sikorsky Alrcrall Division Thursday: a
_.\l!tersection.
The commission said the controller
military helicopter contract that could realized his error oniy "40 seconds he fore
· Units !rom the ?oint
reach more than 1:} billion. The Army
impact and by then it was too late. AU 176
Pleasant Volunteer Fire
annourwrd it had rohoscn Sikorsky over·
persons abnard the twn planes
killed.
Department responded to the
Hoeing Vertol for ronstruction or the
$cene to prevent a fire from
1JT'J'A}; t !t lilt)' 'l'&lt;t(·t ical Tran:;pnrt /\ in:mft
Sy.llt&lt;'m
. ~curring.

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these pr~nctples can, only help Rio Grande
College do a better job ol serving students.
Thomas received his B. S. degree In
business administration from Indiana
University in 1969, and a Masters In
finance from Arizona State University in
1970.
•.

Planning group will

meet in local bank ,
f OMEROY - · The Meigs County
RegiOnal Planning tommission wlll meet
at 3:15 p.m. Monday in the agricultural
service center meeting room or the Farmers Bank Building.
The group wlll consider clearinghouse
revie&gt;li items and Will hold reports on the
commu~tty development block grant, plat
maps antl the Ohio River Main Stem study,
The omcers and budget commission wlll
meet at 2:4S p.m. prior to the regular
meeting Monday to review several items
of business.
·

Generosity brings
residents of GSI

a merry Christmas
GALLIPOLIS - AU resident• of
Galttpolls State Institute will have "
Merry Christmas ·becau5e of the
~enerusity of area resident~~: who have
t'ontrlhuted to the Christmas Stocking
Fund.
Trucks delivered the wrapped gilts
Wednesday and Thursday ••·
companied by "Mr. and Mrs. Santa
Claus.''
Everyone In the GSI Volunteer
Association, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Unger,
and Evelyo MOrrow, co-ch~lrmen,
extend thanks to everyone for making
this possible.

Gas . wells

brought in
PSYCHIATRIC AIDES, "Mr. and
GALLIPOLIS - Three gas producing· Mrs." Santa Clauo, helped distribute
welts have been rompleted In Oallta &amp;Jits It! GS! reoldents. ·
· ·
County, according to the current scout
report ol the Ohio Oil and Gas Association.
A welt producing 100,000 cubic feet of
gas a day was drllled by the Alihe\rs 011,
Inc., on the Mabel Hayes lease tn Addison
Twp.
Another Addison Twp well by W. J .
Lydic, Inc., on the James Haskins tease
produced 90,000 cubic feet or gas.
In Cheshire Twp., Cameron and
Kincaid reported a well with 100,000 cub\ a
feet of gas and live barrels of oil on the
WASHINGTON ( Ul'll - A member of
James Baird-Frank Brooks land .
the presidential Inaugural parade com·
mlttee says that unless a sponsor can be
found, West Virginia will not be
represented by a float tn . the .Jan. 20
festivities .
According to Wllllam Hudson, both Gov.
Arch Moore and Gov .-etect · Jay
Rockefeller have told htm they don't ··~·
~
believe public funds should be used for an 'I
inaugural parade float.
However , HudsOn said, both Moore and
Rockefeller pledged to look lor a donor
among the ranks of private Industry. But
so far, none has been found even though
rosts Involved would be lax.&lt;Jeductlble.
But Hudson added lhe f.\nsly lnstltue of
Whee(lng, W. Va. wlll be sending a marching hand to participate In the parade.

Sponsor needed

for West Virginia's
float on Jan. 20th

Janet Byers directing
HMC.Nursing School
GALLIPOLIS-Janet M. Byers, R.N.,
has assumed the position of permanent
full-time Director of the Holzer Medical
Center School ol Nursing, effective last
Dec. 6.
In early September of this year Mrs .
Byers joined the starr, serving as
Associate Director ol the School. She
completed her master's degree from Ohio
State University In August by serving as
sn instructor: in (b,. Holzer School or
Nursing this past.suitlmer, working with
the student nurses In the clinical areas of
the hospital to complete her teaching
practtcum.
. Mrs. Byers holds a bachelor's degtee
from St. Johns College of Cleveland,
graduating magns cum laude. She served
as an instructor for Sharon General
Hospital's School or Nursing In her
hOmetown ol Sharon, Pa. !rom 1972 until
1915.
She was Miss Hope ol Mercer Cotlnty,
Pennsylvania lor lhe American Cancer
Society in 197• and 1st Runnerup In the
Contiliued .on page A-2

,

FUKUDA ELECTED
TOKYO (UP!) - Takco Fukuda, a 71year-o)d conservative bureaucrat and
financial wizard, was elected Japan's 13th
postwar prime minister Saturday by
ra•or-thtn margins In both houses of the
, parJtament, a bare majority of 256 votes in
· teh Sll-seal tower house, alter Prime
Minister Takeo Miki olficla Jty tendered his
resignation. The largely ceremonial upper
house, which has 246 members, Immediately confirmed him by 125 votes.
JANET BYERS, R.N.

.

•

New ·;~heriff to name his staff, by next week
Montgomery expressed his ~p­ the business or running our sheriff's
. I :A\.1 .il'tll.lS - Gatlin County sheriflpreciation
that the court action filed d~partmenl and instltttng my Ideas lor the
clt•l'l,Jallles M. Mont~om c ry . Patriot Star
Rt.. r:altipotis. said F1 i1\ay he will name against him from taking office is over and citizens or this county. I want to pubttcly
·
hi!-i ~laff members next w,eek prior to that he was declared qua lilted.
thank all those '!'ho have stood behind
Montgomery said "I want to go about me."
tukln~ orftce the weekend o( Jan . I and 2.

.

�A-2- The Sunday Tunes-Sentmel, Sunday. I),.,.. 2ij, 1971;

•

world~

Christmas celebrated round the
By WILLIAM J. HOLSTEIN
United Press International
People around the world celebrated
the Chri&gt;tmas holiday in a festive mood
desp1te economic uncertainty, warnmgs of
violence and, m some cases, government
attempts to discourage religion.
In Bethlehem, the brrthplace or Jesus,
thousands of prlgnms attend ed a Mrdnlght
Mass at St. Cathenne's Church. adjoini ng
the !ourth-eentury Basilrca or the Nativity
A ~rlver star m the Basilica marks the spot
where J rsus was born nearly 2,000 years
ago
Italy ce lebrated Chnstmas rn the

usual way - wrth two papal Masses, cribs
in churches and a strike, this time the railroads. But shopping Ia down and the atmosphere is less che!!ml! than In previous
years because of tlie&gt; nation 's economic
woes.
·"''"
Pope Paul VI's Yrile program Included
a Christmas Eve midnight Mass in St.
Peter's Cathedral televised live to more
than 30 countri es and a morning Mass on
Chri stmas day
Even nations that live under harsh
governments are not Immune from the
holiday sprnt The South Korean government hfted its midnr~ht to 4 a.m rurf•w

for the first lime srnce a 1973 nulltary
t oup.

all people can talk about" whether we'll
still be m Rhodesia next year.'
Yugoslavs managed to ce leb rate
Christmas desprte the government's attempt to drscourage the practice by
replacrng it wrth a tw!Hlay holiday for the
New Year.
Swedrsh families started feasting
early Friday on dark raisin bread dipped
In ham cooking juices, pate, meatballs,
sausages, red cabbage, stout beer and
lemonade. Geiman, Dutch, French and
Britrsh f•m1lres also g• thered for
1

In ArJtentana, the m1l1lary J!ovcrnment
warned rit 1zens to beware.• of bombs

disguised as Chrrstmas grfts and
distributed by "snbverslve criminals who
have no le!!ling of Chrrstran peace and ma y
use the holiday to spread chaos."
In Rhod('sla . Ci tizens have be en
warned against a predicted upsurge in
black guernlla activity over the holiday.
"It's a turke) and guns Christmas for
Rhodesia," sard Jack Jocelyn , a white
storekeeper near Salisbury. "We strll go to
the usual round of Ch ristmas nartif~s but

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

1
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be
1 less than 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by
I the editor) and must be signed with tbe signee's ad1 dress. Names may be withh eld upon pubUcaUoa.
: Howev.r, on request, names will be dfscl01ed. Lellen
1 should he In good taste, addressing taaues, nol per·
1 sunalltles.
I
I
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Christma~,

--f C ·
,

what is itY

Dear Sir:
Just exactly what is Chrrstmas'! What do you think about
rt ? Is rt a tune, to grve presents; to do good (to and lor other
people), to love someone, to contact old friends, or to go to
church'
Does any of these ideas fit your defrnitron of Chrrstmas'
You may have some other Ideas about rt SUch as an office
party, or a prlvale party, a few drinks, some girls cUrtv JOkes
atimetojusthavefun!Nomatterwhatanyonesays? ·
'
Maybe your op1nron IS a commercral attitude. Christmas
specrals mrght help your sales quota . In a business it might sell
your services, in private it might sell your frrendshlp,
Then on the other hand maybe It's none or these . Could it
be that you just don 't hke ChriStmas' Is it too much bother for
you. Would youhke to do away wrth rt' After all is rt Important
to have Christmas'
I would hke to lell you my opuuon of Christmas, and what
rt means to a Chrrslran. You see, I know because rt is my older
brother's brrthday 1You might say, what do you mean I mean
Jes'!' Christ is my older brother, my Lord, my king, my
Saviour, and my God. I am a Chrrstran, a born again , washed
Ill the blood, Bible believing Christran.
If you would like to know what Chrrstmas really IS, get
saved. It IS the only wa) to know what Christmas is all about
No doubt some of vou are disagreeing wrth me, (but why do
you thrnk ChriSt came mto lhe world '). Do you know what it is
like to fee l the spirit of ChriStmas all year long'! Do you know
what rs rs hke to go to church rn the spring and feel the Lord's
hand upon you' Or maybe to be drrvrng along (on a summer
rug hi ) and feel hke the Lord was srttmg rrgbt beSide you. Even
rn the fall to walk through the woods and feel hke the Lord was
callrng your name
Wbydon't yougrve your hfe to Jesus' You know rt can 't be
too long trll his return . Chrrstmas IS not JUSt a time to celebrate
his birth but hrs death too Wrthout his death there would be no
hope. How can we celebrate wrthoot givmg our life to hun ' Don Saxon, 454 Jerry St, Gallipolis.

Web of Marriage

Janet Byers

k

Editorial comment,
• •
opznzon, features
~-. --..-....----....._--~ .·~
•
America's nomads move up in class

I

"Everyone who deserves a raise, take one step forward ."

traditional Christmas feasts.
~
But traditional Yuletide traiJI)in~s ••
rncreasingly have grven way to modem •
times. One of every five Austrians, lor •
example, took advantage or the holiday to •
go skiing , according to travel bureau •
estrmates
For some people,
religious .
celebrations played a minor role. In Asia , :·
where only a small percentage of the
\ population rs Chnstran, Moslems and '
Buddhrsts jojned in the festive air by
- jamming nigfu clubs and cabarets.

Another rdea that Amerrcans have about
themselves has succumbed to scientific
scrutmy. Thrs 1s the notion that the
rootlessness of people in modern socrety rs
to blame for much of today's unrest and
suctal rlls
The American population rs not movmg
any more than rt used to In fact it could pr&lt;&gt;bably solve many of rts problems if 1! were
more willing to accept movmg as a solutiOn,
arg11e University or California sociologists
Claude FIScher and Ann Stueve. After
rev1ewmg mcmy studtes and reports on movIng patterns, they suggest rt is only a
lustorrcal myth that most of our ancestors
lived and died rn a srngle plac-e, amid relatruns and neighbors.
Research mto pansh records, tax
regrsters and census data indicates that the
trend - If there rs any lung-tenn trend over
the last two centuries -has erther been no
·rncrease rn mobility or a decrease, they
report m the socral science magazine New
Socrety.
Although about 40 to 60 per cent of an
average Amer1can town's populatiOn leaves

Julin F . Kennedy onee sard that failure IS
an orphan, but success has a thousand
fathers
We can't recall any presrdenilal electron
whrch ehcrted more expressrons or paternal
pnde than the one JUSt past.
Fur rnstance, the Natrona! Educatron
Assocratron tells us that the VIctory of Junmy Carter rs proof that "teacher power" IS
now a pohtrcal factor to be reckoned w1th.
The organization had endorsed the Car'terMondale trcket, the. first such endorsement
in rts hrstory.
On the other hand, any number of commentators have pomted out - wrth qurte
compelling statistics - that Carter carried
the South, and hence the nalron. by vrrtue .

~

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WewtJt(l,

Spark of Christmas needed
throughout the long year

~

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By Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND - !.ike all
other seasons sometimes
we're just not ready • for
Christmas and we wish for a
few more days. Seems only
yesterday 'twa s ThanksgiVIng
And a very nrce one I had.
Drnner at the Haywa1d
Bissell's with three of my
girls and famrhes, Cas,
Juanita and Fanme C&amp;rol and
famrles
It's nice for elderly folk,

~

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-'

'-

!

g

I!
M

a
M

-

!ll~IJ!t • l h 1l h t 11•\l •i hl ll•l •IIIII ,d "

alone, to be like one or a big
family agam, for a day.
There's nothmg I've done to
deserve it, but am very
thankful for their consrderation .
Wonder how many will
really remember why we
have Chrrstma s - and
giVe gifts
many
who cannot afford gifts
m the usual way grve of
themselves. And this IS the
best kind really lor the giver
and recerver.
If we could only keep a tiny
spark oi this season 'within
our lives, what a blessing It
would be. But as pressures of
hfe come we get loo busy and
remember only ourselves.
The Magic of Christmas
" I am come into the world,
that whosoever believeth in
me should not abide m darkness." John 12:46.
Some believe that for our
survival and enJoyment most
of us have five senses srght, sound, smell, taste and
touch. Some also seem to
have another sense, of inturtron . We have a choice as
to holt we develop &amp;nd use
these girts according to our
understanding of our
st•wardshlp.
!'liristmas, like love in any
oth&lt;·r way, Is magic to us, a
story that never seems
outdated or old, but always
new And we seem to love the
messu~e m whatever fonn it

1ht' M~ ul r... ,.,:- jlliiJU :.o tnllt ~: ! c Ut

L'omes to us

Sunday Times-Senllnel

. ..
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Plibh~te~ cvct)' Suut111y by I he

Olto Vt~:!ley Pull llslnng C11
GALLJP()J .IS

HQpe

' .
,_.
' .

DA.ILVTRIB UNE

~very day

at:~ Thnd Ave, &lt;•ll lhpoh s, Oluu

''""
uupt

PnLIJ I.~htd

of" 'lhe holidays Is

..

.......
...
.'.......

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filled

~.

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1

~~i~fpleosures
ll...'l:O '

, ,.,,

Ihat 'JMKe ~· hnppiesll

"'
Arl&lt;l ·~nr !hunks lo your ~olidny joys.

t.'VI.' I)

W~tkiJcly CVCIIIIIM

S&lt;lt mday &amp;: ~ oud C l ijs~;
Pcutl at Ualii iM.IIi¥, Otuu
45G.'II
TilE IMIL V St.NTIN EI.
Ill Coutl St , Pomt! loy 0 1~76~
Pul!hshf:.'d C\l!l} l'o~k da}' CVCIIillll
n t'tpl S:llut Jay F;ntercd as second
ti&lt;lss lllai iULg nmtM .tl 1\JmcJoy,
Ohio Pt ~o;t Offtcc
8} carr1cr ili1 tly 1111tl .::iwtdlly 7St
perwcck Mol()lruulc$3 :l:»pc1 mun·
Pu.~l.&lt;lge

a spedaf day for you,

~

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Ml\ll

SUBSCHIP'I IONIM fES
l'ht G11 lhpu lt~ na11y TriLm tc lu

O!nu and Wc'&lt;l Vtr~llllil one ycilr

fl'200

~ I XIllOt ltl ls$1150

tit~ $700

tl trcc umn·

F.ln11hcu! $2600 ]M!r

}car, she IILUtllhs $13 SO, t!nt'i! IHIIIIlhs $7 50, n'wlUJ ruute U ~~ 1111111-

•hl/

.
r' • ...'.--.
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.. of the uverwhelrmng percentage of blacks
who voted for hrm The Southern whrte vote
was much, much closer.
The National Rrght to Work Committee •
says it's clear that the vote m the right-t&lt;&gt;• work states IS what put Carter over the top and they expect something for that, Jrmmy
Meanwhile, orgamzed labor IS cungratulatmg rtself that Its efforts helped put
its choice in tbe Wbrte House -and they are
not unexpectant, either
Even a homosexual magazrne called .
"Blueboy" rs clarming-that the gay vote 11as :
an 1mportantfactor 1n electmg Mr. Carter. •·
We haven't reached 1000 yet, but we're
countmg

Spiders provrded the decor
fo r an ex trava gant doub le Speaking out 011 pornography
weddrng m Loursrana m 1870 Dear Srr
Contrnued fr om page A-1
Planter Cha rles Dur~nd had
I would hke to speak out against the widespread use of
h1 s wor kme n release sp1ders
State of Pennsy lvanra " Mrss Hope"
pornography
.
1n th e three· mlle avenue or
competition. Presently she is servmg as
As a Chrrstran mother of four children I can no longer keep
t ree~ •lea dmg to h1s manor
co-ehainnan of the 1976-77 Mrss Hope
Aller the sprders had •pun srlent It seems !hat the thmgs thai should shock us don'l We
Program Committee for Galha County.
t h ~rr go ss a me r a r c h es have seen so much nudity and Immorality that we seem to
The new Director of the School of
bet wee n the t rees th e grow hardened and try to look over thrngs
Nursrng rs marrred_to Dr. Robm Ray
But my famrly and I were on the way to Columbus on Rl .
Workmen U5ed bellows lo bioi\
Byers, a June graduate of Ohro State
s1l ver and gold dust mto the 33. At the Athen• Dr ive-ln where the screen faces the freeway
Unrverslty's School of Dentistry flr
Cloudy tonrght, lows near I
webs beneath wh1ch Durand 's was an immoral act being 'shown on the screen, for all to see
Byers IS 111 practice rn hiS hometown of
two daught ers wed th err who passed by I never thought to see anythmg so mdecenl I 30. Mixture of ram, sleet and
ZELDA RIDENOUR
Jackson, Ohio. The Byers live rn Thunnan.
sweethea rts
snow likely S&amp;turday,
have smce asked mysel£ over and over, "What have I done."
POMEROY - Mrs Zelda
possrbly becommg heavy. R1denovr, former ly of the
Surely there are others that asked the same thing
he s.ter: area of Merg s
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·s.~~~~~~~-·-~-~··l~l~l-j!ll[~: ~~~
I feel I have failed my Lord , my chrldren and others by Highs near 40. Probability of eCounty
, dted Thursday at the
being srlenl so long. If any one knows who I can wrrte to or talk precrpltatron near zero per ~ lv ers l de
/
Hospital
1n
to, to try to stop this, please let us know. - Mrs. Glen R. cent today, 20 per cent to Columbus
Funera l services w1ll be 1
night , 70 per cent Saturday.
Bissell.

,.. - ~

BOB'S CB RADIO EQUIPMENT
.,

•

~ ('&lt;II
$l.!l~l S!Xllllllll lh$1( ~Q , tiU (' tiiiiJII
l h~ $i till I• ls!•lr ht•lt' SO!ti !XI ~ ~ ~
m nhlli ~ $11 ~~ till• '! lltutt llis • i .~1
I I~ IJ IIII• d 1'1 1':-i.' l1 11o I IIII • !loti 1 ~
l ' :&lt;tiU ~ I \, 1\ I UIIllt•d l•r lh~ II~ • 1&lt;&lt;1
JHi hltr Hl l .,l l nl o~ ll lu " ~ h ~ ~~· · 1~ ~
' ik

]},ul\• Sl:nl lllci,

III II'

•r

Part of its magic is that It
touches the hearts of the nonbeliever and the scoffer. The
' sprrit or giving abounds at
this time of year. Some who
have never experienced
sharing open their purses to
the poor and unfortunate.
Goodwrll seems to abide to
some degree In every person.
There rs an aura or magic.
"May we keep the spirit of
Christmas ever ahve in our
hearts and mnds so that our
eyes may be open to 'the
needy, the lonely, the
disconsolate, the sick, the
disabled.
Let us resolve to keep
Christmas, to give, to share,
to serve as mstruments of
God's love And may the
Christmas message stay
alive in our hearts that our
lives may be praise for the
gift of Jesus." - Liona
Hands .
And may we share the
magic of Christmas; and
pray for a blessing on this
nation, our outgoing admrnlstratron, &amp;nd the Incoming one ; th&amp;t If we can't
help, we Will at leasl not seek
to hinder In any way a work
so Important to us all.

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

:

Area Deaths

p m Monday at the Ewmg
Fuenral Home wher e fn ends
may ca ll from 7 to 9 Fr ida y
eo.;enlng, all day Sunday and
unfit ftm e of services Man
da y . T here w1ll be no
Saturday v ts ttaftofl t

MRS . LAURA BOWEN
POMEROY - Mrs. Laura
Stark Bowen , 85, Columbus,
formerly of Pomeroy, died
Thursda y at Gra nt Hosp1tal
in Columbus
She wa s preceded In dea th
by her hus band , Ha rr y , In
1940. Surviving are three

Mrs. Edith Wille,
Chapel Hrll. N C. ; Mrs Hazel

~h 1 ldren ,

I Kehrer , Bucyrus, and Harry ,
Wauk eegon , Ill
Gr aves tde se r vlces wtll be
held at 11 30 a m Monday at
Beech Grove cemetery with
the Rev W H Perrtn of.

fi cta1ing

DAYTON F. WILL
POMEROY - Dayton F
W11l , 84, 5720 1Jih Sl. East,

Bradenton , F ta , dted Thursday at a hospilal th ere Mr
Will was a former resident of
Nleigs County .
He was preceded tn death
by one son , Ca lvin. and a

daughter. Ruth

He Is survived by his Wife,
Emma , t wo grandchildren,

Dr. M1llon Lamber t, Cinctnna t i, and Mrs . Sam
McKinn ey, Sarasota, Fla
Funeral servrces will be held

Monday In Flor ida

RITA MAE CASSIDY

Mae Casstdy, 67, a resident of
Rt 4, London , formerly of
Vinton , died at 11 45 p m
T hursday night In the
Madt son County Hospital
S.he was born In Nel sonville
March 6, 1909, daughter of the

late

Jo se ph

and

:-.

I
I :

the McCoy Moore Funera l
Home at Vm ton wt th burial
lollowlng tn Vinton Memortal
Park Vtsitation wd l be held
at the funera l hom e from 2 4
and 7 9 p m . Sunday

MASON, W Va -

Mary

Cathertne Smlth ' Amos.
Edible Licenses
She married Charles
Auto license plates rn the Cassidy
m 1937, who survives
United Stales have been made along with two sisters, Mrs
of metal. wood, lea ther and Blanche M1ght of Springfield,
ceram1cs Tags made of a soy~ Ohto, Mrs Della Gray of
bean compou nd were trred Fiortda , and a brolher , Fred
durrng Worla War II but aban- Amos of Columbus
Funeral services will be
doned because cows ate them held
at 11 a m Monday from

..

MISs

Frances E Nease, 88, of
North v tlle, Ohto, former ly of
Mason . died Thursday tn the •
Mapt e Vtew Nurstng Home; ..
8orn 0 ec 20, 1889, she was •
the daughter of th e late Lewts
and Martha Loo.;e Nease
Surv tvmg are one s1ster

Mrs. Eft;e Rothgeb, Mentor.

0 , one brother , John Nease,

Negaunee,
Mich ,
an ~
several nteces and nephews '
Funera l ser v tces will be
he ld Monday at I p m at the
Fog lesong Funeral Home '
wtth Reo.; Robert /1/\cmng_.
off tc tafmg Burta l will foll ow ;,\,.
1n the Broad Run Cemetery
Frtends may call at the
funera l home after 3 p m on ·

Sunday

GLADYS E. KARR

COLUMBUS
Mrss
Gladys E Karr , 85, of 309
Va , Col umbus, a
nat1ve of Syracuse;, dted
Wednesday at R 1o.;er slde
Hosp1tal, Columbus
She was the daughter of the
late Char l es Nathan and
Emma Jane Radford Karr .
She was a retired employe of
the Colum bus State Hospital
She is survived by one
niece, Dr Carolyn M Ka rr,
pne newphew, Walter E.
Karr , and one s1sfer In -law,
Mrs Grace Karr, all of
Huntington and severa l
Martha

cousins.

"

Se r v tces wil l be heid '
Monday at 3 p m at Ewing

Chapel w1th the Rev Wald

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs R1ta

'

THIS is the way it was
By Frank Hill
GALLIPOLIS - The first state
repreoentatlve from GaUia County to the
Legislature was J. P. R. Bureau in 1808.
Bureau was one. of the original French
settlers who operated a store in the bulldrng
still standmg at the comer of First Ave and
State Street.
In 1853 a man by the name of Thompson
operJted a shoe fal1ory m this same
building. The first owner o( the comer lot
was Jean M. Hammer, another of the
original French settlers.
Across the street on First Ave. where
Dr. Brandeberry's home now stands, Robert
Warth operated a general store In a frame
building. At one time Warth was the brggest
businessman in town. He owned five houses
and H building lots. Warth lost his fortune In
a flatboat adventure when his partner
swindled him out or $60,0110.
Arter the Civil War John Dufour, a
French stonemason, erected the large brrck
hotel here called the Dufour House - also
later years it was known as the Rrverview
Hotel
For those who may be rnterested:
I am very proud that the Gallia County
Historrcal Society has asked lor a copy of
each of these artrcles published this past
year to place in one of the capsules to be
buried at the park front Dec. 31.
On June 8, 1869 a great tragedy struck
the Benjamin Sibley family of Ohio
Township. Three of their children and four
other youngsters drowned m the Ohro River
when a rowboat capsized.
Harry Frank came to Gallipolis from
France in the 1860s. He started out here as a
peddler with a pack on his back I.ater he
1

bougbt out a bakery which was in the
buildrng now occupied by the Wiseman
Insurance Agency He operated a general
store here as well as the bakery. He later
owned the store now known as HaskrnsTanner, then known as Harry Frank's Sons
Clothiers. Frank died Sept. IS, 1900, a
weaHhy man.
For eight months' use or the Baptist
Church on Third Ave. during the Civil War
the U.S. Government paid the church $175.
The Presbyterian Church was paid $40 for
rts. use at the same trme. Each church had
asked $1500.
On June 18, 1863, Gen. John Hunt
Morgan burned the Jackson County (Ohio)
courthouse and the B.&amp;O. Depot there. One
man was killed that day by Morgan's men.
In 1910 a newly esta blished Bank in
Bidwell closed alter only erght months
operation. All accounts were paid in full
The Libby Hotel burlding was erected
about 11166 by James Vanden, a carriage
maker, as a carrrage shop. Vanden died m
1912 at the age of 97.
'
The answer to last week's questiOn :
The Fanners and MercHants Bank was
located on the comer of Second Ave and
Locust st. m the buildmg now occupied by
Ohio Bell Telephone. It was operated by the
Howard Brothers

c.

Ra dford offtclahng . Bunaf
Wttl be in Beech Grove
Cemetery Fnends may ca'll

al fhe Woodyard East Chapel.

2300 E Ltvtngston Ave .,
Columbus, Sunda y from 21o' 4

and 7 to 9, and at Ewing '
Chapel from noon until 3 p m.
on Monday
,

Standing Still
.
The year Jesus was born
250 million people hved ·o~
earth Therr annual rncome·
(current dollars ) was about
$200 a yea r By 1776. world
populatron had Jumped to 750
m1lhon bu t real 1ncome

remarned 'at about $200 per
person. The Conference Board
notes

By BERNARD BRENNER
• UPI FARM EDITOR
WASHING'I'ON 1UPI! Farmers who supplied the
food for Friday's Chnstmas
dinners are getting less for it
11\an they received a year
, ago,
an
Agriculture
Department report indicates.
At the same time, however, •
food rndustry middlemen are
getting a little more.
A regular department
report on food pnce spreads,
released JUSt before the
Christmas holiday, had data
for November which are a
few weeks out or date as far
as Frrday's festive dinners
are concerned But the gaps
between 1976 and 197~ price
levels shown in November
were considered likely to
carry over to data for this
month .
The report said a typical
consumer ntarket basket of
farm-produced foods cost

retarl shoppers 2.7 per l'l'nt
less m November than a year
earher.
All of thai decline, records
showed, can be attributed to
lower farm pnces. Officials
said the !ann value of foods
in the_market basket was 99
per cent lower than a year
ago
Only part or that farm
value drop was passed on to
conswners, however. Part of
it was swallowed up by a 2.:1percent mcrease 10 the mrddiem an's margin , whrch
represents
costs
of
processing, transporti ng,
wholesaling and retarhng
food
The report estim ated
farmers got -33 cents out of
every dollar spent for farmproduced Amerrcan foods rn
supermarkets last month .
This wus up slighUy from the
37.6-eent estimate for
October, but rt remained well
below the 41-eent level of a

r-------------------------r :~~e o:~~e:~~~:.J~t~
I
I Dateline

1

I
I'
I

G8 ll'Ill

u b
BY .uo
art Wilson Jr.

I

in two mishaps

The Bible's Christmas Message

No one was injured or cited
m two traffrc mishaps rnvestigated Thursday by the
Galli&amp;-Mergs Post State
Highway Patrol.
The first occurred at 10:30
a.m. on CR 50, one mile west
of Rl. 790 where trucks driven
by Larry R. Wbrlt , :\4, Porn!
Pleasant, and Robert C.
Mitchell, 20, Cheshire, ran off
the roadway to avoid a
collisron . There was hght
damage.
Asecond acerdent occurred
at 4 : 5~ p.m. on Macedonra
Rd. where vehicles driven by
PhillipP. Queen, 18, Northup,
and Mack E. Layne, 'tl ,
Gallipolis, collided at a
hillcrest. There was mrnor
damage.

BLESSED ARE YOU AMONG WOMEN
The commoo theme linking Jewish and Christian faith IS
found in the story of Mary's visit to Elizabeth, tbe mother of
John the Baptist Two words stand out: Promrse and
Fulfillment. The God of lsr&amp;eland the Father of Jesus Chrtst is
a God who keeps his promiSes. That rs the mea rung of the word
covenant or testament. Both tbe promised land of Moses and
the promised Messiah of the Gospels were not given in ways
which most people expected, but to those wrth faith , hke Mary
and Elizabeth , the evidence of new life stirrmg within them
was sufficrent assurance that God's full plan of salvatron would
ultimately be accomplished. The song attrrbuted to Mary ,
called the Magnificat, celebrates this theme : " ... his mercy
sure from generation to generation . .flrm m His promise to
our forefathers
"
TO YOU IS BORN A SA VIOUR
&lt;(Gospel" means good news," and that is what God 's
messenger brought to the terror.,.,tricken shepherds in the
frelds. When teleVISion &amp;nnounces a news bulletin we react
wrth fear People say that "no news IS good news," and lear
that bad news will always overtake the hope that good news
awakens. A beautiful old English carol addressed to the mfant
Chnst-child remmds us of this.
"
and she gave birth to a son, her frrst-born." Luke 2:6
"And when thou art big and art a man, full woe's in store for
thee. For cruel men thy death wiD plan, and nail thee on a
tree ." Yet the shepherds dared to hope n Uie news of a saviour
lying on a·bed of hay. "Come, we must go and see !" And they
came lo that place where weremet "the hopes and fears of all
Ule years.''
THE JOURNEY OF'fHE WISE MEN
" ... they saw the child with Mary, his mother, and bowed
to the ground in homage to him . .. " Matthew 2 II
Whether they were kings or astrologers, the three from the
east who came seeking the Messiah proved to be wrse men In
many ways, Frrst, they didn 't sit at home but were willing to
undertake' a hard journey, a pilgrimage of faith, not knowmg
preciSely where it would lead them. Secondly, they observed
the Signs and listened to the opinions of others; like Jesus In the
Temple, they were not too proud to ask questions. They sensed
the difference between outward profession and inward
Intention as dreams warned them of trusting Herod. Finally, In
!herr joy at finding the place, their satrsfaction came not from
the treasures they could give , but from God's gilt of Love
'.
which they humbly received, bowing to the ground

GALLIA COUNTY
DISTRICT LWRARY
New Books Rele&amp;sed
FICTION
A Ship is Dying, by Brran
CalliSon;
Tell
Me
Everything , by Marie
TOP MEN on the Carter transition team, Jack
Brenneri Twmkle, Twinkle,
Watson, left, and Hamilton Jordan are directing
Little Spy, by Len Derghton ;
Washington preparations for January debut of the new
Lovers and Tyrants, by
administration . Watson, an Atlanta lawyer, oversees
Francme
Gray ; Sombrero
cabmet appointments, recruitment for other major posts,
Fallour
,
by
Richard
government reorganization, congressional llwson and
Brautrgan.
budget analysis. Jordan , the Carter campaign director, IS
NON-FICTION
.
assembling the new White House staff
Remember Laughter; the
hfe of Noel Coward, by Cole
Lesley; Big Book of Magic,
by Patrick Page ; The Rrght
and the Power, by Leon
J&amp;worski; Between Acts, by
Robert Mer.ill; From Mary
Noble to Mary Hartman, by
Madeleine Edmondson; The
Two of Us, by Tony Martin;
The Bluebird of Happiness,
by Alan Levy; Blood and
Money,
by Thomas ThompPOMEROY - "What happened to you ?"
son;
Girt
Plants, by Jack
That's the question I've been fielding from friends, coKramer; L1fe 1s Victorious,
workers and family this holiday season.
You see, through the years I've b~come known as one of by Diane K. Pike ; Lucy and
those "deck the halls with boughs of holly" kind of people. Not Ricky and Fred and Ethel ;
only did I deck the halls but everything else in sight including the story of "!Love Lucy" by
the exterror of the house. I moved right along with the spirit of Andrews; Doctor and Child,
the season. You might even say I spread joy to the maximum. by T. Berry Brazelton;
However, this year I haven't been able to get with rt. The Talking With Child, by James
halls are wrthotit holly and the front of our home IS without any D. White; Wail Coverings and
light except from a nearby street lamp. On the front door is a Decoration, by Abel Banov.
tacky swag Which I ran across m the basement and hurriedly
hooked in place.
Charlene and Jayne arrrving home from a shopping
expedition, viewed the miserable swag m sheer astonrshment.
"You mean, that's it ?.'' Uley asked.
'That's it," 1 answered. "However, anyone who'd like
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio something more elaborate, can be my guest."
Robbins
&amp;: Myers, Inc. this
No one took up the challenge so I was right, "The swag IS
week
allllounced
that sales
it."
and
earnings
for
the first
I could blame my lack of enthusiasm on the swine flu
quarter
ended
Nov.
30 set a
Immunizations. Bemg a believer m preventrve medicrne, I ran
new
record
as
they
rose
- not walked - to get my flu shot. Now,l'm sweating out one
sharply
abead
of
the
first
more week to hopefully get past the four week "safe" periOd
quarter results of l&amp;st year.
reloted to the creeping paralysis.
The results also were
On the other hand, I could say that my resentment over
coffee prices has led to my passive attitude. The wholesale slightly ahead of lhe high
prices have just jumped again and personally, I think it's time sales and profit levels
we stage a coffee drinkers strike. If buyers let it sit on.the established In the final two
shelves, the price will come down . Surely, some great leader fiscal 1976 quarters. For the
will appear' to spur us mto a protest actron. Come on, now, first three months, sales rose
to ~.652,373 from $17,191,449
there have been protests for lesser causes.
'
Then, I could just admlt. that my holiday energy ha.s for the lirst quarter last year,
disappeared, in !'ruth, because I'm just plam tired. It's been and net Income advanced to
quite a year what with the blcentelllllal observances at every $1,234,S36, equal to $1.09 a
share, from $631,074, or 56
angle and frankly, I feel older than the nation.
Hawever, my lack of physical energy, you c&amp;n be sure, in cents a share. Fiscal 1976
no way dims my most sincere wish that each of you "Beat of figures are from continuing
the Bend" readers has a fabulous holiday weekend. Let's just operations.
Fred G. Wall, president,
say that I truly appfeciate you. Do have a merry, merry
sard that the "unusually lnrge
Christmas!
gain In earnings from last
year's first quarter largely
represents the dramatic
recovery of our Electric
experaence
m
the
areas
of
The Meigs Local School
Motor
Group, beginning last
District is accepting ap- school finance, accOunting,
plications for the poslton of payroll preparallon, local
Clerk-Treasurer of the government work , etc. Salary Charles
1..
Dowler,
Distflct, • full-time 12 month is commensurate with ex- Superintendent of Mergs
position with two weeks' perience and quahfrcatrons. Local School District, South
Letters of application and Thrrd Avenue, Middleport,
vacation )t is preferred that
applicants have previous resumes should be sept to C:lhlo, 45760.

yellf earlier.
The llllTCase from October
to November in the farm
share or the food dotlar,
wlpmg out part of the loss
suffered in earlier months,
was caused by two factors·
mrddlemen ' s mar gins
declined 1.3 per cent durin~
the month and returns to
fa rmers for market basket
foods rose 0.2 per cent.
H1gher farm prices for beef
cattle, eggs and orlseeds
more than offset new declines
for milk, poultry, wheat ,
lett uce and frwts , officials
swd.
The report notl'&lt;i retarl
!read prrces, whrch have
varred little durmg the past
year, remarned at 35 3 cents
per one1mund loaf of wh ite
!read. Thrs was the same as a
year earlrer even though the
farm price of wheal 111 thut
period has plunged from $3 58
a bushel to $2.46 a bushel.
Agriculture econom rsls

. make
1 bread

f'h11rge.~ 11re

expected i11 c11se

(

A very merry Christmas and a Happy 1
New Year to all
I

No one injured

Nu

Food producers are still
·making less money today

Something to think about: Who was the burlder or the system or I
waterworks for the city that was on I
Gallipolis Island'
I

--·

Taking some credit

Weather

'

every 10 years, this frgure has remamed :
roughly .the same for more than 150 years.
What has changed is the type of person who
has been movmg.
Previously, movers were most often ..
poorer people who were "pushed" from ..
their homes by economic failure, socral ·
unrest and other diffrcultres.
Today, however, movers are more likely to be wealthier people who have been ',' pull- :
ed" from their homes by opportumtres for
economiC advancement, better housing and
more pleasant surroundmgs.
Dramatrc accounts of the problems of .
"nomadic) ' executives and their families ·
have mrsled us, say these researchers For
the most part, moving does not have ill ef- :
feels. Instead, it IS usually a positive, freely
chosen change m people's hves.
••
In worse straits than movers, they say;
are people whO should and would move b'1i,.
cannot- for example, unemploted people II);
economically depressed commumtles, ..
elderly homeowners in deterioralm!j nerghborhuods or overgrown famrhes 111 .
cramped quarters
:::

A.,'!-The Sunday Tunes-sentmel,Sunday, Dec. 26,1976

a one-pound loaf of
in November was 35
percent below ayearearher,
but the potential saving for
consumers was eliminated by
a 6.6-percent Increase rn
middlemen's margrns.
The November report on
spreads between farm and
retail prrces showed retail
bee f prices began an
expected clunb back from
their fall lows, but st)ll
remained mtlre than 10 per
cent be low a year earlier
Records showed both farm
cattle
prices
and
middl emen's spr ea ds In
November were below yearago lev els.
Retail pork prrces fell 7 per
cent last month as both farm
re turn s and middlemen's
spreads declmed. The report
showed November pork
prrces 24 6 per cent below the
high levels of a year earlier.

SEA MAN TOBIN
MIDDLEPORT
Seama n Thomas Ray
Tobin Is home on leave
following his gradu&amp;llon
from ba•lc training at the
Grc&amp; t Lake•
Novul
Training Base, Grea t
Luke•, Ill., on Nov. 26.
Alter his leave, he wtll so b&gt;
New London, Conn., w~ere
he wt" enter training for
the nuclear Polaris antiW&amp;r subm&amp;rlne. Tobin Is
the son of Beu Hendricks,
Middleport, and the late
Robert R. Tobia, Sr.

Apparently no charge3 will
be flied In the the!t of a Robyn
CB radio and tapes taken
Thursday night from the
trunk of a car owned by
Elizabeth Gall Bennett, Rt. I,
Thunnan.
According to the Gallla
County Sheriff's Deportment,
deputies were called to the
Skylhre L~~n.es Bowling Alley
at I :41 am. where the theft
was reported
Fifteen minutes later ,
Deputy Rocky Hill recovered
the ''!olen Items, but the
Bermett woman refu sml to
press chArges
Spt·t'dy ~no ll s
Curious bi ologis ts ha ve
wuj'.tht to detcrmm e the speed
of snaals r:~pcrunents with
garden sn,uls h.tv(' measured

sluggards crawltnf,\

n lon~

nl

00036 m1 1es por hour u nd

speedsters, raclllg al

0!113

miles an hour.

COLO\'
·
I J,.,,,,,
p

•

TONIGHTTHRU
TUESDAY, JAN. 4
Show Begins at 8 p. m .

Chltly Start
President Ulysses S Gra nt
en du re d
16 -deg re c
temperatures and 40-rnile·an·
~ou r wmd s

at his Inaugural m
1863 West Pulnl cadets fell

senseless from lhc cold und
guests at the nr augurul bull
danced In heavy coa ts us the
chumpugnc fr oze solid

MEIGS THEATHE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

WATCH FOR
OPFNING DATE

~-··
"··.
• ,\ &gt;: i

~ ·
In COlOr
rii1
-- •

0

. ...

',

,::::-- '

CARTOON

11

+++

ACCORDING to Gallipolis Postmaster Rrehard (Dick)
Bane, Charles (Kip) Knuckles just completed his 50th
Christmas rush season as an employee of the Gallipolis Post
Office. Knuckles, "last or the oldtuners," began his postal
service career in 1927 as a temporary employee. Five years
later,he became a regular. Knuckles, who will turn 70 in April,
is currently a rural motor route carrier.

+++

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Dally
Tribune and weekly Gallia Times .. . Rotary Club to
distnbute 315 holiday food baskets to Gallla County
families .. , Joe Clark named president of Gallla Coonty
Agricultural Society ... C. Leon Saunders appointed third
vice president of Gallipolis Uons Club, filling vacancy created
by the resignation of Dr. Len Bean .. . J. Howard Neal, li8,
druggist and banker, claimed by death.

Super Savings I

Fabric &amp; Notions
Clearance

fashion-Rilht

Quilts

Cotton •nil l.lend print• •nil tlocka. 100%
polyHtor fill, mochlno w..... ~ry, U" wide.

If's 0 lpntosttC '(BOHmd savtngS OtJ·

Plocll1

,

Prlnt1

..,. "-" ytl.

.. , _n.ft yd.

portunlty l You con sew up o whole new
wardrobe
and SAVE
when you
shop Jo-An n's spectacular cleoron te sa le.
Choose from a select group of tabr lcs f~r
sportswear, dresses , kids wear , m~n '
wear decorating . Stock up on the not tons
you 'll need for your sewing and croft pro
1ects . too.

Robbins-Myers earnings up

1

Full..time clerk's job available

January, when subfractional
motor
business
from
segments of our business
machine markets began to
strengthen. This Industry had
been depressed m all ol1975." •
In addition, he said, the
company's
other two
operating groups contributed
modest Increases to the gains
for the quarter. The company
also benefitted from a substantial reduction In Interest
costs due to lower lmanclng
requirements In recent
months . .
He pointed out, however,
that the steadily Increasing
volume of ~coming orders
that had enabled Improved
prolltablllty durtng the past
nine months began to decline
in the flrll quarter, and the
trend has been contlnulhg.
"Consequently, the second
quarter earnings are expected to be lower than for
the fir~ quarter, but ahead of
the restated 69 cents a share
earned in last year's second
quarter/' he said.
Wall added thai the
downturn is primarily a
· reDectlon of the prolonged
slowdown ,In industrial
capital expenditures, which

are an tmport~nt source of
business for the company's
Material Handlin g and
Moyno Pump Divisions .
Reduced funding lor w&amp;ste
treatment projects by
government agencies 8Iso
has had an Impact on pump
pperatlons.
"Motor Division volume
appears to have stabutzed at
a sallsfal1ory level, while
Hunter Division wlll soon be
moving Into its seasona I
peak;'' he sa1d. 11 We
presently are optimistic that
!lie second quarter will be our
lowest earnings period for the
year, provided the economy
strengthens as anticipated
during the second half of our
, fiscal year.''
1
Robbins &amp; Myers serves
specifiC segments of growth
m&amp;rkets with Industrial &amp;nd
consumer products, Including
Moyno progressing cavity
pumps ; Hunter portable
elt!rtrlc fans, ventilating
equipment, installed electric
healing equipment ; Ro~ln!
&amp; Myers electric motors; and
overhead material handling
systems. The company's
common stock is traded OTC;
NASDAQ symbol; ROBN.

SIJPER ·

Crepe Stitch Double Knits

VALUE!

Machi ne wo1h, dry, 59-60'' wide .... •1.H yll,

GREAT
SAVINGS!

1oo·;. pol~eller d o uble knits fo r dresus and tops

~~:.~:.~~!,!!~.~~~chi no wosh,

wide .... n."yd.

d1y, 45"

'

•I"
YAID

Draperies, Slip Covers and Upholstering Materials

Silver. Bridge Shopping Plaza-Route 7, GalfipofiS, Ohio
Putn'om Village
Shopplnv Center
Hurri"1n•. Vi Va.

zane Plata
Chillicothe, Ohto
Start• Mondoy. ~losod Sundoy

258 Grand Central Mall .

Parkersburg, W. Va .
Sa t~

NIRICS

lll-61h Ave.
Huntington. W. VI .

�A-2- The Sunday Tunes-Sentmel, Sunday. I),.,.. 2ij, 1971;

•

world~

Christmas celebrated round the
By WILLIAM J. HOLSTEIN
United Press International
People around the world celebrated
the Chri&gt;tmas holiday in a festive mood
desp1te economic uncertainty, warnmgs of
violence and, m some cases, government
attempts to discourage religion.
In Bethlehem, the brrthplace or Jesus,
thousands of prlgnms attend ed a Mrdnlght
Mass at St. Cathenne's Church. adjoini ng
the !ourth-eentury Basilrca or the Nativity
A ~rlver star m the Basilica marks the spot
where J rsus was born nearly 2,000 years
ago
Italy ce lebrated Chnstmas rn the

usual way - wrth two papal Masses, cribs
in churches and a strike, this time the railroads. But shopping Ia down and the atmosphere is less che!!ml! than In previous
years because of tlie&gt; nation 's economic
woes.
·"''"
Pope Paul VI's Yrile program Included
a Christmas Eve midnight Mass in St.
Peter's Cathedral televised live to more
than 30 countri es and a morning Mass on
Chri stmas day
Even nations that live under harsh
governments are not Immune from the
holiday sprnt The South Korean government hfted its midnr~ht to 4 a.m rurf•w

for the first lime srnce a 1973 nulltary
t oup.

all people can talk about" whether we'll
still be m Rhodesia next year.'
Yugoslavs managed to ce leb rate
Christmas desprte the government's attempt to drscourage the practice by
replacrng it wrth a tw!Hlay holiday for the
New Year.
Swedrsh families started feasting
early Friday on dark raisin bread dipped
In ham cooking juices, pate, meatballs,
sausages, red cabbage, stout beer and
lemonade. Geiman, Dutch, French and
Britrsh f•m1lres also g• thered for
1

In ArJtentana, the m1l1lary J!ovcrnment
warned rit 1zens to beware.• of bombs

disguised as Chrrstmas grfts and
distributed by "snbverslve criminals who
have no le!!ling of Chrrstran peace and ma y
use the holiday to spread chaos."
In Rhod('sla . Ci tizens have be en
warned against a predicted upsurge in
black guernlla activity over the holiday.
"It's a turke) and guns Christmas for
Rhodesia," sard Jack Jocelyn , a white
storekeeper near Salisbury. "We strll go to
the usual round of Ch ristmas nartif~s but

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

1
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be
1 less than 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by
I the editor) and must be signed with tbe signee's ad1 dress. Names may be withh eld upon pubUcaUoa.
: Howev.r, on request, names will be dfscl01ed. Lellen
1 should he In good taste, addressing taaues, nol per·
1 sunalltles.
I
I
I

I
I
I

Christma~,

--f C ·
,

what is itY

Dear Sir:
Just exactly what is Chrrstmas'! What do you think about
rt ? Is rt a tune, to grve presents; to do good (to and lor other
people), to love someone, to contact old friends, or to go to
church'
Does any of these ideas fit your defrnitron of Chrrstmas'
You may have some other Ideas about rt SUch as an office
party, or a prlvale party, a few drinks, some girls cUrtv JOkes
atimetojusthavefun!Nomatterwhatanyonesays? ·
'
Maybe your op1nron IS a commercral attitude. Christmas
specrals mrght help your sales quota . In a business it might sell
your services, in private it might sell your frrendshlp,
Then on the other hand maybe It's none or these . Could it
be that you just don 't hke ChriStmas' Is it too much bother for
you. Would youhke to do away wrth rt' After all is rt Important
to have Christmas'
I would hke to lell you my opuuon of Christmas, and what
rt means to a Chrrslran. You see, I know because rt is my older
brother's brrthday 1You might say, what do you mean I mean
Jes'!' Christ is my older brother, my Lord, my king, my
Saviour, and my God. I am a Chrrstran, a born again , washed
Ill the blood, Bible believing Christran.
If you would like to know what Chrrstmas really IS, get
saved. It IS the only wa) to know what Christmas is all about
No doubt some of vou are disagreeing wrth me, (but why do
you thrnk ChriSt came mto lhe world '). Do you know what it is
like to fee l the spirit of ChriStmas all year long'! Do you know
what rs rs hke to go to church rn the spring and feel the Lord's
hand upon you' Or maybe to be drrvrng along (on a summer
rug hi ) and feel hke the Lord was srttmg rrgbt beSide you. Even
rn the fall to walk through the woods and feel hke the Lord was
callrng your name
Wbydon't yougrve your hfe to Jesus' You know rt can 't be
too long trll his return . Chrrstmas IS not JUSt a time to celebrate
his birth but hrs death too Wrthout his death there would be no
hope. How can we celebrate wrthoot givmg our life to hun ' Don Saxon, 454 Jerry St, Gallipolis.

Web of Marriage

Janet Byers

k

Editorial comment,
• •
opznzon, features
~-. --..-....----....._--~ .·~
•
America's nomads move up in class

I

"Everyone who deserves a raise, take one step forward ."

traditional Christmas feasts.
~
But traditional Yuletide traiJI)in~s ••
rncreasingly have grven way to modem •
times. One of every five Austrians, lor •
example, took advantage or the holiday to •
go skiing , according to travel bureau •
estrmates
For some people,
religious .
celebrations played a minor role. In Asia , :·
where only a small percentage of the
\ population rs Chnstran, Moslems and '
Buddhrsts jojned in the festive air by
- jamming nigfu clubs and cabarets.

Another rdea that Amerrcans have about
themselves has succumbed to scientific
scrutmy. Thrs 1s the notion that the
rootlessness of people in modern socrety rs
to blame for much of today's unrest and
suctal rlls
The American population rs not movmg
any more than rt used to In fact it could pr&lt;&gt;bably solve many of rts problems if 1! were
more willing to accept movmg as a solutiOn,
arg11e University or California sociologists
Claude FIScher and Ann Stueve. After
rev1ewmg mcmy studtes and reports on movIng patterns, they suggest rt is only a
lustorrcal myth that most of our ancestors
lived and died rn a srngle plac-e, amid relatruns and neighbors.
Research mto pansh records, tax
regrsters and census data indicates that the
trend - If there rs any lung-tenn trend over
the last two centuries -has erther been no
·rncrease rn mobility or a decrease, they
report m the socral science magazine New
Socrety.
Although about 40 to 60 per cent of an
average Amer1can town's populatiOn leaves

Julin F . Kennedy onee sard that failure IS
an orphan, but success has a thousand
fathers
We can't recall any presrdenilal electron
whrch ehcrted more expressrons or paternal
pnde than the one JUSt past.
Fur rnstance, the Natrona! Educatron
Assocratron tells us that the VIctory of Junmy Carter rs proof that "teacher power" IS
now a pohtrcal factor to be reckoned w1th.
The organization had endorsed the Car'terMondale trcket, the. first such endorsement
in rts hrstory.
On the other hand, any number of commentators have pomted out - wrth qurte
compelling statistics - that Carter carried
the South, and hence the nalron. by vrrtue .

~

~

~

WewtJt(l,

Spark of Christmas needed
throughout the long year

~

~
~
~

By Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND - !.ike all
other seasons sometimes
we're just not ready • for
Christmas and we wish for a
few more days. Seems only
yesterday 'twa s ThanksgiVIng
And a very nrce one I had.
Drnner at the Haywa1d
Bissell's with three of my
girls and famrhes, Cas,
Juanita and Fanme C&amp;rol and
famrles
It's nice for elderly folk,

~

-

..
..--..
-'

'-

!

g

I!
M

a
M

-

!ll~IJ!t • l h 1l h t 11•\l •i hl ll•l •IIIII ,d "

alone, to be like one or a big
family agam, for a day.
There's nothmg I've done to
deserve it, but am very
thankful for their consrderation .
Wonder how many will
really remember why we
have Chrrstma s - and
giVe gifts
many
who cannot afford gifts
m the usual way grve of
themselves. And this IS the
best kind really lor the giver
and recerver.
If we could only keep a tiny
spark oi this season 'within
our lives, what a blessing It
would be. But as pressures of
hfe come we get loo busy and
remember only ourselves.
The Magic of Christmas
" I am come into the world,
that whosoever believeth in
me should not abide m darkness." John 12:46.
Some believe that for our
survival and enJoyment most
of us have five senses srght, sound, smell, taste and
touch. Some also seem to
have another sense, of inturtron . We have a choice as
to holt we develop &amp;nd use
these girts according to our
understanding of our
st•wardshlp.
!'liristmas, like love in any
oth&lt;·r way, Is magic to us, a
story that never seems
outdated or old, but always
new And we seem to love the
messu~e m whatever fonn it

1ht' M~ ul r... ,.,:- jlliiJU :.o tnllt ~: ! c Ut

L'omes to us

Sunday Times-Senllnel

. ..
.. '
..

Plibh~te~ cvct)' Suut111y by I he

Olto Vt~:!ley Pull llslnng C11
GALLJP()J .IS

HQpe

' .
,_.
' .

DA.ILVTRIB UNE

~very day

at:~ Thnd Ave, &lt;•ll lhpoh s, Oluu

''""
uupt

PnLIJ I.~htd

of" 'lhe holidays Is

..

.......
...
.'.......

.

'

filled

~.

-•·~~

1

~~i~fpleosures
ll...'l:O '

, ,.,,

Ihat 'JMKe ~· hnppiesll

"'
Arl&lt;l ·~nr !hunks lo your ~olidny joys.

t.'VI.' I)

W~tkiJcly CVCIIIIIM

S&lt;lt mday &amp;: ~ oud C l ijs~;
Pcutl at Ualii iM.IIi¥, Otuu
45G.'II
TilE IMIL V St.NTIN EI.
Ill Coutl St , Pomt! loy 0 1~76~
Pul!hshf:.'d C\l!l} l'o~k da}' CVCIIillll
n t'tpl S:llut Jay F;ntercd as second
ti&lt;lss lllai iULg nmtM .tl 1\JmcJoy,
Ohio Pt ~o;t Offtcc
8} carr1cr ili1 tly 1111tl .::iwtdlly 7St
perwcck Mol()lruulc$3 :l:»pc1 mun·
Pu.~l.&lt;lge

a spedaf day for you,

~

.

"'

Ml\ll

SUBSCHIP'I IONIM fES
l'ht G11 lhpu lt~ na11y TriLm tc lu

O!nu and Wc'&lt;l Vtr~llllil one ycilr

fl'200

~ I XIllOt ltl ls$1150

tit~ $700

tl trcc umn·

F.ln11hcu! $2600 ]M!r

}car, she IILUtllhs $13 SO, t!nt'i! IHIIIIlhs $7 50, n'wlUJ ruute U ~~ 1111111-

•hl/

.
r' • ...'.--.
~

.. of the uverwhelrmng percentage of blacks
who voted for hrm The Southern whrte vote
was much, much closer.
The National Rrght to Work Committee •
says it's clear that the vote m the right-t&lt;&gt;• work states IS what put Carter over the top and they expect something for that, Jrmmy
Meanwhile, orgamzed labor IS cungratulatmg rtself that Its efforts helped put
its choice in tbe Wbrte House -and they are
not unexpectant, either
Even a homosexual magazrne called .
"Blueboy" rs clarming-that the gay vote 11as :
an 1mportantfactor 1n electmg Mr. Carter. •·
We haven't reached 1000 yet, but we're
countmg

Spiders provrded the decor
fo r an ex trava gant doub le Speaking out 011 pornography
weddrng m Loursrana m 1870 Dear Srr
Contrnued fr om page A-1
Planter Cha rles Dur~nd had
I would hke to speak out against the widespread use of
h1 s wor kme n release sp1ders
State of Pennsy lvanra " Mrss Hope"
pornography
.
1n th e three· mlle avenue or
competition. Presently she is servmg as
As a Chrrstran mother of four children I can no longer keep
t ree~ •lea dmg to h1s manor
co-ehainnan of the 1976-77 Mrss Hope
Aller the sprders had •pun srlent It seems !hat the thmgs thai should shock us don'l We
Program Committee for Galha County.
t h ~rr go ss a me r a r c h es have seen so much nudity and Immorality that we seem to
The new Director of the School of
bet wee n the t rees th e grow hardened and try to look over thrngs
Nursrng rs marrred_to Dr. Robm Ray
But my famrly and I were on the way to Columbus on Rl .
Workmen U5ed bellows lo bioi\
Byers, a June graduate of Ohro State
s1l ver and gold dust mto the 33. At the Athen• Dr ive-ln where the screen faces the freeway
Unrverslty's School of Dentistry flr
Cloudy tonrght, lows near I
webs beneath wh1ch Durand 's was an immoral act being 'shown on the screen, for all to see
Byers IS 111 practice rn hiS hometown of
two daught ers wed th err who passed by I never thought to see anythmg so mdecenl I 30. Mixture of ram, sleet and
ZELDA RIDENOUR
Jackson, Ohio. The Byers live rn Thunnan.
sweethea rts
snow likely S&amp;turday,
have smce asked mysel£ over and over, "What have I done."
POMEROY - Mrs Zelda
possrbly becommg heavy. R1denovr, former ly of the
Surely there are others that asked the same thing
he s.ter: area of Merg s
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·s.~~~~~~~-·-~-~··l~l~l-j!ll[~: ~~~
I feel I have failed my Lord , my chrldren and others by Highs near 40. Probability of eCounty
, dted Thursday at the
being srlenl so long. If any one knows who I can wrrte to or talk precrpltatron near zero per ~ lv ers l de
/
Hospital
1n
to, to try to stop this, please let us know. - Mrs. Glen R. cent today, 20 per cent to Columbus
Funera l services w1ll be 1
night , 70 per cent Saturday.
Bissell.

,.. - ~

BOB'S CB RADIO EQUIPMENT
.,

•

~ ('&lt;II
$l.!l~l S!Xllllllll lh$1( ~Q , tiU (' tiiiiJII
l h~ $i till I• ls!•lr ht•lt' SO!ti !XI ~ ~ ~
m nhlli ~ $11 ~~ till• '! lltutt llis • i .~1
I I~ IJ IIII• d 1'1 1':-i.' l1 11o I IIII • !loti 1 ~
l ' :&lt;tiU ~ I \, 1\ I UIIllt•d l•r lh~ II~ • 1&lt;&lt;1
JHi hltr Hl l .,l l nl o~ ll lu " ~ h ~ ~~· · 1~ ~
' ik

]},ul\• Sl:nl lllci,

III II'

•r

Part of its magic is that It
touches the hearts of the nonbeliever and the scoffer. The
' sprrit or giving abounds at
this time of year. Some who
have never experienced
sharing open their purses to
the poor and unfortunate.
Goodwrll seems to abide to
some degree In every person.
There rs an aura or magic.
"May we keep the spirit of
Christmas ever ahve in our
hearts and mnds so that our
eyes may be open to 'the
needy, the lonely, the
disconsolate, the sick, the
disabled.
Let us resolve to keep
Christmas, to give, to share,
to serve as mstruments of
God's love And may the
Christmas message stay
alive in our hearts that our
lives may be praise for the
gift of Jesus." - Liona
Hands .
And may we share the
magic of Christmas; and
pray for a blessing on this
nation, our outgoing admrnlstratron, &amp;nd the Incoming one ; th&amp;t If we can't
help, we Will at leasl not seek
to hinder In any way a work
so Important to us all.

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

:

Area Deaths

p m Monday at the Ewmg
Fuenral Home wher e fn ends
may ca ll from 7 to 9 Fr ida y
eo.;enlng, all day Sunday and
unfit ftm e of services Man
da y . T here w1ll be no
Saturday v ts ttaftofl t

MRS . LAURA BOWEN
POMEROY - Mrs. Laura
Stark Bowen , 85, Columbus,
formerly of Pomeroy, died
Thursda y at Gra nt Hosp1tal
in Columbus
She wa s preceded In dea th
by her hus band , Ha rr y , In
1940. Surviving are three

Mrs. Edith Wille,
Chapel Hrll. N C. ; Mrs Hazel

~h 1 ldren ,

I Kehrer , Bucyrus, and Harry ,
Wauk eegon , Ill
Gr aves tde se r vlces wtll be
held at 11 30 a m Monday at
Beech Grove cemetery with
the Rev W H Perrtn of.

fi cta1ing

DAYTON F. WILL
POMEROY - Dayton F
W11l , 84, 5720 1Jih Sl. East,

Bradenton , F ta , dted Thursday at a hospilal th ere Mr
Will was a former resident of
Nleigs County .
He was preceded tn death
by one son , Ca lvin. and a

daughter. Ruth

He Is survived by his Wife,
Emma , t wo grandchildren,

Dr. M1llon Lamber t, Cinctnna t i, and Mrs . Sam
McKinn ey, Sarasota, Fla
Funeral servrces will be held

Monday In Flor ida

RITA MAE CASSIDY

Mae Casstdy, 67, a resident of
Rt 4, London , formerly of
Vinton , died at 11 45 p m
T hursday night In the
Madt son County Hospital
S.he was born In Nel sonville
March 6, 1909, daughter of the

late

Jo se ph

and

:-.

I
I :

the McCoy Moore Funera l
Home at Vm ton wt th burial
lollowlng tn Vinton Memortal
Park Vtsitation wd l be held
at the funera l hom e from 2 4
and 7 9 p m . Sunday

MASON, W Va -

Mary

Cathertne Smlth ' Amos.
Edible Licenses
She married Charles
Auto license plates rn the Cassidy
m 1937, who survives
United Stales have been made along with two sisters, Mrs
of metal. wood, lea ther and Blanche M1ght of Springfield,
ceram1cs Tags made of a soy~ Ohto, Mrs Della Gray of
bean compou nd were trred Fiortda , and a brolher , Fred
durrng Worla War II but aban- Amos of Columbus
Funeral services will be
doned because cows ate them held
at 11 a m Monday from

..

MISs

Frances E Nease, 88, of
North v tlle, Ohto, former ly of
Mason . died Thursday tn the •
Mapt e Vtew Nurstng Home; ..
8orn 0 ec 20, 1889, she was •
the daughter of th e late Lewts
and Martha Loo.;e Nease
Surv tvmg are one s1ster

Mrs. Eft;e Rothgeb, Mentor.

0 , one brother , John Nease,

Negaunee,
Mich ,
an ~
several nteces and nephews '
Funera l ser v tces will be
he ld Monday at I p m at the
Fog lesong Funeral Home '
wtth Reo.; Robert /1/\cmng_.
off tc tafmg Burta l will foll ow ;,\,.
1n the Broad Run Cemetery
Frtends may call at the
funera l home after 3 p m on ·

Sunday

GLADYS E. KARR

COLUMBUS
Mrss
Gladys E Karr , 85, of 309
Va , Col umbus, a
nat1ve of Syracuse;, dted
Wednesday at R 1o.;er slde
Hosp1tal, Columbus
She was the daughter of the
late Char l es Nathan and
Emma Jane Radford Karr .
She was a retired employe of
the Colum bus State Hospital
She is survived by one
niece, Dr Carolyn M Ka rr,
pne newphew, Walter E.
Karr , and one s1sfer In -law,
Mrs Grace Karr, all of
Huntington and severa l
Martha

cousins.

"

Se r v tces wil l be heid '
Monday at 3 p m at Ewing

Chapel w1th the Rev Wald

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs R1ta

'

THIS is the way it was
By Frank Hill
GALLIPOLIS - The first state
repreoentatlve from GaUia County to the
Legislature was J. P. R. Bureau in 1808.
Bureau was one. of the original French
settlers who operated a store in the bulldrng
still standmg at the comer of First Ave and
State Street.
In 1853 a man by the name of Thompson
operJted a shoe fal1ory m this same
building. The first owner o( the comer lot
was Jean M. Hammer, another of the
original French settlers.
Across the street on First Ave. where
Dr. Brandeberry's home now stands, Robert
Warth operated a general store In a frame
building. At one time Warth was the brggest
businessman in town. He owned five houses
and H building lots. Warth lost his fortune In
a flatboat adventure when his partner
swindled him out or $60,0110.
Arter the Civil War John Dufour, a
French stonemason, erected the large brrck
hotel here called the Dufour House - also
later years it was known as the Rrverview
Hotel
For those who may be rnterested:
I am very proud that the Gallia County
Historrcal Society has asked lor a copy of
each of these artrcles published this past
year to place in one of the capsules to be
buried at the park front Dec. 31.
On June 8, 1869 a great tragedy struck
the Benjamin Sibley family of Ohio
Township. Three of their children and four
other youngsters drowned m the Ohro River
when a rowboat capsized.
Harry Frank came to Gallipolis from
France in the 1860s. He started out here as a
peddler with a pack on his back I.ater he
1

bougbt out a bakery which was in the
buildrng now occupied by the Wiseman
Insurance Agency He operated a general
store here as well as the bakery. He later
owned the store now known as HaskrnsTanner, then known as Harry Frank's Sons
Clothiers. Frank died Sept. IS, 1900, a
weaHhy man.
For eight months' use or the Baptist
Church on Third Ave. during the Civil War
the U.S. Government paid the church $175.
The Presbyterian Church was paid $40 for
rts. use at the same trme. Each church had
asked $1500.
On June 18, 1863, Gen. John Hunt
Morgan burned the Jackson County (Ohio)
courthouse and the B.&amp;O. Depot there. One
man was killed that day by Morgan's men.
In 1910 a newly esta blished Bank in
Bidwell closed alter only erght months
operation. All accounts were paid in full
The Libby Hotel burlding was erected
about 11166 by James Vanden, a carriage
maker, as a carrrage shop. Vanden died m
1912 at the age of 97.
'
The answer to last week's questiOn :
The Fanners and MercHants Bank was
located on the comer of Second Ave and
Locust st. m the buildmg now occupied by
Ohio Bell Telephone. It was operated by the
Howard Brothers

c.

Ra dford offtclahng . Bunaf
Wttl be in Beech Grove
Cemetery Fnends may ca'll

al fhe Woodyard East Chapel.

2300 E Ltvtngston Ave .,
Columbus, Sunda y from 21o' 4

and 7 to 9, and at Ewing '
Chapel from noon until 3 p m.
on Monday
,

Standing Still
.
The year Jesus was born
250 million people hved ·o~
earth Therr annual rncome·
(current dollars ) was about
$200 a yea r By 1776. world
populatron had Jumped to 750
m1lhon bu t real 1ncome

remarned 'at about $200 per
person. The Conference Board
notes

By BERNARD BRENNER
• UPI FARM EDITOR
WASHING'I'ON 1UPI! Farmers who supplied the
food for Friday's Chnstmas
dinners are getting less for it
11\an they received a year
, ago,
an
Agriculture
Department report indicates.
At the same time, however, •
food rndustry middlemen are
getting a little more.
A regular department
report on food pnce spreads,
released JUSt before the
Christmas holiday, had data
for November which are a
few weeks out or date as far
as Frrday's festive dinners
are concerned But the gaps
between 1976 and 197~ price
levels shown in November
were considered likely to
carry over to data for this
month .
The report said a typical
consumer ntarket basket of
farm-produced foods cost

retarl shoppers 2.7 per l'l'nt
less m November than a year
earher.
All of thai decline, records
showed, can be attributed to
lower farm pnces. Officials
said the !ann value of foods
in the_market basket was 99
per cent lower than a year
ago
Only part or that farm
value drop was passed on to
conswners, however. Part of
it was swallowed up by a 2.:1percent mcrease 10 the mrddiem an's margin , whrch
represents
costs
of
processing, transporti ng,
wholesaling and retarhng
food
The report estim ated
farmers got -33 cents out of
every dollar spent for farmproduced Amerrcan foods rn
supermarkets last month .
This wus up slighUy from the
37.6-eent estimate for
October, but rt remained well
below the 41-eent level of a

r-------------------------r :~~e o:~~e:~~~:.J~t~
I
I Dateline

1

I
I'
I

G8 ll'Ill

u b
BY .uo
art Wilson Jr.

I

in two mishaps

The Bible's Christmas Message

No one was injured or cited
m two traffrc mishaps rnvestigated Thursday by the
Galli&amp;-Mergs Post State
Highway Patrol.
The first occurred at 10:30
a.m. on CR 50, one mile west
of Rl. 790 where trucks driven
by Larry R. Wbrlt , :\4, Porn!
Pleasant, and Robert C.
Mitchell, 20, Cheshire, ran off
the roadway to avoid a
collisron . There was hght
damage.
Asecond acerdent occurred
at 4 : 5~ p.m. on Macedonra
Rd. where vehicles driven by
PhillipP. Queen, 18, Northup,
and Mack E. Layne, 'tl ,
Gallipolis, collided at a
hillcrest. There was mrnor
damage.

BLESSED ARE YOU AMONG WOMEN
The commoo theme linking Jewish and Christian faith IS
found in the story of Mary's visit to Elizabeth, tbe mother of
John the Baptist Two words stand out: Promrse and
Fulfillment. The God of lsr&amp;eland the Father of Jesus Chrtst is
a God who keeps his promiSes. That rs the mea rung of the word
covenant or testament. Both tbe promised land of Moses and
the promised Messiah of the Gospels were not given in ways
which most people expected, but to those wrth faith , hke Mary
and Elizabeth , the evidence of new life stirrmg within them
was sufficrent assurance that God's full plan of salvatron would
ultimately be accomplished. The song attrrbuted to Mary ,
called the Magnificat, celebrates this theme : " ... his mercy
sure from generation to generation . .flrm m His promise to
our forefathers
"
TO YOU IS BORN A SA VIOUR
&lt;(Gospel" means good news," and that is what God 's
messenger brought to the terror.,.,tricken shepherds in the
frelds. When teleVISion &amp;nnounces a news bulletin we react
wrth fear People say that "no news IS good news," and lear
that bad news will always overtake the hope that good news
awakens. A beautiful old English carol addressed to the mfant
Chnst-child remmds us of this.
"
and she gave birth to a son, her frrst-born." Luke 2:6
"And when thou art big and art a man, full woe's in store for
thee. For cruel men thy death wiD plan, and nail thee on a
tree ." Yet the shepherds dared to hope n Uie news of a saviour
lying on a·bed of hay. "Come, we must go and see !" And they
came lo that place where weremet "the hopes and fears of all
Ule years.''
THE JOURNEY OF'fHE WISE MEN
" ... they saw the child with Mary, his mother, and bowed
to the ground in homage to him . .. " Matthew 2 II
Whether they were kings or astrologers, the three from the
east who came seeking the Messiah proved to be wrse men In
many ways, Frrst, they didn 't sit at home but were willing to
undertake' a hard journey, a pilgrimage of faith, not knowmg
preciSely where it would lead them. Secondly, they observed
the Signs and listened to the opinions of others; like Jesus In the
Temple, they were not too proud to ask questions. They sensed
the difference between outward profession and inward
Intention as dreams warned them of trusting Herod. Finally, In
!herr joy at finding the place, their satrsfaction came not from
the treasures they could give , but from God's gilt of Love
'.
which they humbly received, bowing to the ground

GALLIA COUNTY
DISTRICT LWRARY
New Books Rele&amp;sed
FICTION
A Ship is Dying, by Brran
CalliSon;
Tell
Me
Everything , by Marie
TOP MEN on the Carter transition team, Jack
Brenneri Twmkle, Twinkle,
Watson, left, and Hamilton Jordan are directing
Little Spy, by Len Derghton ;
Washington preparations for January debut of the new
Lovers and Tyrants, by
administration . Watson, an Atlanta lawyer, oversees
Francme
Gray ; Sombrero
cabmet appointments, recruitment for other major posts,
Fallour
,
by
Richard
government reorganization, congressional llwson and
Brautrgan.
budget analysis. Jordan , the Carter campaign director, IS
NON-FICTION
.
assembling the new White House staff
Remember Laughter; the
hfe of Noel Coward, by Cole
Lesley; Big Book of Magic,
by Patrick Page ; The Rrght
and the Power, by Leon
J&amp;worski; Between Acts, by
Robert Mer.ill; From Mary
Noble to Mary Hartman, by
Madeleine Edmondson; The
Two of Us, by Tony Martin;
The Bluebird of Happiness,
by Alan Levy; Blood and
Money,
by Thomas ThompPOMEROY - "What happened to you ?"
son;
Girt
Plants, by Jack
That's the question I've been fielding from friends, coKramer; L1fe 1s Victorious,
workers and family this holiday season.
You see, through the years I've b~come known as one of by Diane K. Pike ; Lucy and
those "deck the halls with boughs of holly" kind of people. Not Ricky and Fred and Ethel ;
only did I deck the halls but everything else in sight including the story of "!Love Lucy" by
the exterror of the house. I moved right along with the spirit of Andrews; Doctor and Child,
the season. You might even say I spread joy to the maximum. by T. Berry Brazelton;
However, this year I haven't been able to get with rt. The Talking With Child, by James
halls are wrthotit holly and the front of our home IS without any D. White; Wail Coverings and
light except from a nearby street lamp. On the front door is a Decoration, by Abel Banov.
tacky swag Which I ran across m the basement and hurriedly
hooked in place.
Charlene and Jayne arrrving home from a shopping
expedition, viewed the miserable swag m sheer astonrshment.
"You mean, that's it ?.'' Uley asked.
'That's it," 1 answered. "However, anyone who'd like
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio something more elaborate, can be my guest."
Robbins
&amp;: Myers, Inc. this
No one took up the challenge so I was right, "The swag IS
week
allllounced
that sales
it."
and
earnings
for
the first
I could blame my lack of enthusiasm on the swine flu
quarter
ended
Nov.
30 set a
Immunizations. Bemg a believer m preventrve medicrne, I ran
new
record
as
they
rose
- not walked - to get my flu shot. Now,l'm sweating out one
sharply
abead
of
the
first
more week to hopefully get past the four week "safe" periOd
quarter results of l&amp;st year.
reloted to the creeping paralysis.
The results also were
On the other hand, I could say that my resentment over
coffee prices has led to my passive attitude. The wholesale slightly ahead of lhe high
prices have just jumped again and personally, I think it's time sales and profit levels
we stage a coffee drinkers strike. If buyers let it sit on.the established In the final two
shelves, the price will come down . Surely, some great leader fiscal 1976 quarters. For the
will appear' to spur us mto a protest actron. Come on, now, first three months, sales rose
to ~.652,373 from $17,191,449
there have been protests for lesser causes.
'
Then, I could just admlt. that my holiday energy ha.s for the lirst quarter last year,
disappeared, in !'ruth, because I'm just plam tired. It's been and net Income advanced to
quite a year what with the blcentelllllal observances at every $1,234,S36, equal to $1.09 a
share, from $631,074, or 56
angle and frankly, I feel older than the nation.
Hawever, my lack of physical energy, you c&amp;n be sure, in cents a share. Fiscal 1976
no way dims my most sincere wish that each of you "Beat of figures are from continuing
the Bend" readers has a fabulous holiday weekend. Let's just operations.
Fred G. Wall, president,
say that I truly appfeciate you. Do have a merry, merry
sard that the "unusually lnrge
Christmas!
gain In earnings from last
year's first quarter largely
represents the dramatic
recovery of our Electric
experaence
m
the
areas
of
The Meigs Local School
Motor
Group, beginning last
District is accepting ap- school finance, accOunting,
plications for the poslton of payroll preparallon, local
Clerk-Treasurer of the government work , etc. Salary Charles
1..
Dowler,
Distflct, • full-time 12 month is commensurate with ex- Superintendent of Mergs
position with two weeks' perience and quahfrcatrons. Local School District, South
Letters of application and Thrrd Avenue, Middleport,
vacation )t is preferred that
applicants have previous resumes should be sept to C:lhlo, 45760.

yellf earlier.
The llllTCase from October
to November in the farm
share or the food dotlar,
wlpmg out part of the loss
suffered in earlier months,
was caused by two factors·
mrddlemen ' s mar gins
declined 1.3 per cent durin~
the month and returns to
fa rmers for market basket
foods rose 0.2 per cent.
H1gher farm prices for beef
cattle, eggs and orlseeds
more than offset new declines
for milk, poultry, wheat ,
lett uce and frwts , officials
swd.
The report notl'&lt;i retarl
!read prrces, whrch have
varred little durmg the past
year, remarned at 35 3 cents
per one1mund loaf of wh ite
!read. Thrs was the same as a
year earlrer even though the
farm price of wheal 111 thut
period has plunged from $3 58
a bushel to $2.46 a bushel.
Agriculture econom rsls

. make
1 bread

f'h11rge.~ 11re

expected i11 c11se

(

A very merry Christmas and a Happy 1
New Year to all
I

No one injured

Nu

Food producers are still
·making less money today

Something to think about: Who was the burlder or the system or I
waterworks for the city that was on I
Gallipolis Island'
I

--·

Taking some credit

Weather

'

every 10 years, this frgure has remamed :
roughly .the same for more than 150 years.
What has changed is the type of person who
has been movmg.
Previously, movers were most often ..
poorer people who were "pushed" from ..
their homes by economic failure, socral ·
unrest and other diffrcultres.
Today, however, movers are more likely to be wealthier people who have been ',' pull- :
ed" from their homes by opportumtres for
economiC advancement, better housing and
more pleasant surroundmgs.
Dramatrc accounts of the problems of .
"nomadic) ' executives and their families ·
have mrsled us, say these researchers For
the most part, moving does not have ill ef- :
feels. Instead, it IS usually a positive, freely
chosen change m people's hves.
••
In worse straits than movers, they say;
are people whO should and would move b'1i,.
cannot- for example, unemploted people II);
economically depressed commumtles, ..
elderly homeowners in deterioralm!j nerghborhuods or overgrown famrhes 111 .
cramped quarters
:::

A.,'!-The Sunday Tunes-sentmel,Sunday, Dec. 26,1976

a one-pound loaf of
in November was 35
percent below ayearearher,
but the potential saving for
consumers was eliminated by
a 6.6-percent Increase rn
middlemen's margrns.
The November report on
spreads between farm and
retail prrces showed retail
bee f prices began an
expected clunb back from
their fall lows, but st)ll
remained mtlre than 10 per
cent be low a year earlier
Records showed both farm
cattle
prices
and
middl emen's spr ea ds In
November were below yearago lev els.
Retail pork prrces fell 7 per
cent last month as both farm
re turn s and middlemen's
spreads declmed. The report
showed November pork
prrces 24 6 per cent below the
high levels of a year earlier.

SEA MAN TOBIN
MIDDLEPORT
Seama n Thomas Ray
Tobin Is home on leave
following his gradu&amp;llon
from ba•lc training at the
Grc&amp; t Lake•
Novul
Training Base, Grea t
Luke•, Ill., on Nov. 26.
Alter his leave, he wtll so b&gt;
New London, Conn., w~ere
he wt" enter training for
the nuclear Polaris antiW&amp;r subm&amp;rlne. Tobin Is
the son of Beu Hendricks,
Middleport, and the late
Robert R. Tobia, Sr.

Apparently no charge3 will
be flied In the the!t of a Robyn
CB radio and tapes taken
Thursday night from the
trunk of a car owned by
Elizabeth Gall Bennett, Rt. I,
Thunnan.
According to the Gallla
County Sheriff's Deportment,
deputies were called to the
Skylhre L~~n.es Bowling Alley
at I :41 am. where the theft
was reported
Fifteen minutes later ,
Deputy Rocky Hill recovered
the ''!olen Items, but the
Bermett woman refu sml to
press chArges
Spt·t'dy ~no ll s
Curious bi ologis ts ha ve
wuj'.tht to detcrmm e the speed
of snaals r:~pcrunents with
garden sn,uls h.tv(' measured

sluggards crawltnf,\

n lon~

nl

00036 m1 1es por hour u nd

speedsters, raclllg al

0!113

miles an hour.

COLO\'
·
I J,.,,,,,
p

•

TONIGHTTHRU
TUESDAY, JAN. 4
Show Begins at 8 p. m .

Chltly Start
President Ulysses S Gra nt
en du re d
16 -deg re c
temperatures and 40-rnile·an·
~ou r wmd s

at his Inaugural m
1863 West Pulnl cadets fell

senseless from lhc cold und
guests at the nr augurul bull
danced In heavy coa ts us the
chumpugnc fr oze solid

MEIGS THEATHE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

WATCH FOR
OPFNING DATE

~-··
"··.
• ,\ &gt;: i

~ ·
In COlOr
rii1
-- •

0

. ...

',

,::::-- '

CARTOON

11

+++

ACCORDING to Gallipolis Postmaster Rrehard (Dick)
Bane, Charles (Kip) Knuckles just completed his 50th
Christmas rush season as an employee of the Gallipolis Post
Office. Knuckles, "last or the oldtuners," began his postal
service career in 1927 as a temporary employee. Five years
later,he became a regular. Knuckles, who will turn 70 in April,
is currently a rural motor route carrier.

+++

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Dally
Tribune and weekly Gallia Times .. . Rotary Club to
distnbute 315 holiday food baskets to Gallla County
families .. , Joe Clark named president of Gallla Coonty
Agricultural Society ... C. Leon Saunders appointed third
vice president of Gallipolis Uons Club, filling vacancy created
by the resignation of Dr. Len Bean .. . J. Howard Neal, li8,
druggist and banker, claimed by death.

Super Savings I

Fabric &amp; Notions
Clearance

fashion-Rilht

Quilts

Cotton •nil l.lend print• •nil tlocka. 100%
polyHtor fill, mochlno w..... ~ry, U" wide.

If's 0 lpntosttC '(BOHmd savtngS OtJ·

Plocll1

,

Prlnt1

..,. "-" ytl.

.. , _n.ft yd.

portunlty l You con sew up o whole new
wardrobe
and SAVE
when you
shop Jo-An n's spectacular cleoron te sa le.
Choose from a select group of tabr lcs f~r
sportswear, dresses , kids wear , m~n '
wear decorating . Stock up on the not tons
you 'll need for your sewing and croft pro
1ects . too.

Robbins-Myers earnings up

1

Full..time clerk's job available

January, when subfractional
motor
business
from
segments of our business
machine markets began to
strengthen. This Industry had
been depressed m all ol1975." •
In addition, he said, the
company's
other two
operating groups contributed
modest Increases to the gains
for the quarter. The company
also benefitted from a substantial reduction In Interest
costs due to lower lmanclng
requirements In recent
months . .
He pointed out, however,
that the steadily Increasing
volume of ~coming orders
that had enabled Improved
prolltablllty durtng the past
nine months began to decline
in the flrll quarter, and the
trend has been contlnulhg.
"Consequently, the second
quarter earnings are expected to be lower than for
the fir~ quarter, but ahead of
the restated 69 cents a share
earned in last year's second
quarter/' he said.
Wall added thai the
downturn is primarily a
· reDectlon of the prolonged
slowdown ,In industrial
capital expenditures, which

are an tmport~nt source of
business for the company's
Material Handlin g and
Moyno Pump Divisions .
Reduced funding lor w&amp;ste
treatment projects by
government agencies 8Iso
has had an Impact on pump
pperatlons.
"Motor Division volume
appears to have stabutzed at
a sallsfal1ory level, while
Hunter Division wlll soon be
moving Into its seasona I
peak;'' he sa1d. 11 We
presently are optimistic that
!lie second quarter will be our
lowest earnings period for the
year, provided the economy
strengthens as anticipated
during the second half of our
, fiscal year.''
1
Robbins &amp; Myers serves
specifiC segments of growth
m&amp;rkets with Industrial &amp;nd
consumer products, Including
Moyno progressing cavity
pumps ; Hunter portable
elt!rtrlc fans, ventilating
equipment, installed electric
healing equipment ; Ro~ln!
&amp; Myers electric motors; and
overhead material handling
systems. The company's
common stock is traded OTC;
NASDAQ symbol; ROBN.

SIJPER ·

Crepe Stitch Double Knits

VALUE!

Machi ne wo1h, dry, 59-60'' wide .... •1.H yll,

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Draperies, Slip Covers and Upholstering Materials

Silver. Bridge Shopping Plaza-Route 7, GalfipofiS, Ohio
Putn'om Village
Shopplnv Center
Hurri"1n•. Vi Va.

zane Plata
Chillicothe, Ohto
Start• Mondoy. ~losod Sundoy

258 Grand Central Mall .

Parkersburg, W. Va .
Sa t~

NIRICS

lll-61h Ave.
Huntington. W. VI .

�•

A-6-&gt; TheSWldayTimes-Sentinel,Swrday, O.c. 26, 19&lt;~

Proposals in ARC project
package cost $3,841,500

A-4 '!'he SWlday Tillles-&amp;ntinel, Sw1Jay, O.c. 26, 1!176

·DR. LAMB ·

Dropped kidney
•

•

zs quzte common
most often Involves the right
kldriey. It occ urs less
frequently in men.
The ki&lt;jney moves around a
lot more than you might imagine. It is wrchored to the
diaphra~m and that is par1iy
responsible for the nunnal
mobility of the kidney. It may
drop as much as one and a
half vertebral spaces in normal people when sllinding.
II it drops more it is properly called nephroptosis. And in

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I have
a condition called right renal

nephr opt osis, ur·o pped
kidney. I was refu.sed full
cuvt!r;;~ge

wtder my medical

insurance becau.se of this
condition. What can I expect
to go wrong medically with a
condition such as this] Is a
person subject to infection of
the urinary tract with this
condition I Should a person
with this condition exercise
or just l&gt;e content with walking I I have never l&gt;een ill
with this condition: it was
discovered accident,.lly by
the physician with an X ray.
DEAR READER- You are
not as unusunl as you think
regardless of what the in·
surance company ruled. One
out ol every five adult women
has a dropped kidney, and it

most t:ascs it

campaign contributions from

employers, a violation of the
lmion's constitution .
"I fil ed a lawsuit today to
stop Ed Sadlowski fro m
buying the presidency of the
Steel worker s union withmoney of employers /'
McBride said at a news
conference after the suit was
filed .
"That to me sounds like.the
babblings of a drowning
man :: Sadlowski said when
asked about the charges. "!
completely and emphatically
deny the charges he's been

numerous

corporations ;

Robert Zevln, an investment
counselor; and Howard
Samuels of New York, vice
president of the Mobil
0\amical Corporation.
Miller said an eyewitness
saw "Howard Samuels kick
In $500" at one of Sadlowski's
lund-rais~ cocktail parties.
" I just completely and
totally deny that," Sadlowski
saitl . ur never met Howard

Samuels in my life."
When asked if he had
received any . contributions
from Samuels, Sadlowski .
said, "No, I can, say that I
have." ...,
I

not cause

help in this regard. I am sending you The Health Letter
nwnb&lt;Jr 3-7, Girth · Control:
Avoiding the Big Middle, to
give you more inforrnalion on
ex:erdse. Others who want
this information can send 50
cents with a long, stamP.ed,
self-addressed envelope for
it. J u.st send your letter to me
in care of this newspaper, P.
0, Box 1551, Radio City Station, New York, NY 10019.
Walking does nut use the abdominal mu.scles much and
you will need uther exercises
to develop and maintain good
abdominal tone.
There are some people with
a dropped kidney. who have
pt·oblems. The kidney may
drop so much that it kinks the
ureter and blood vesseis to
the kidney. This can prevent
proper circulation to the
kidney and affect its
drainage. This may cause
severe pain, with nausea and
a severe drop in blood '
pressure. The condition is
relieved by lying down. The
kidney floats back to normal
position and the difficulty
caused by kinking goes away.
A few patienis also have
tran sitory high blood
pressure related to the dropped kidney. The key to
evaluating symptoms related
to a dropped kidney is noting
if they occur while standing
and if they disappear When .
lying flat.
Rarely a person will need
to have the kidney tacked into a more pennanent position
by surgery. This is not
ju.stlfied in anyone without
symptoms and only in rare
individuals with symptOilll
important enough to require
surgical intervention. I would
expect your condition wiU
have little effect upon your
health, but a good program to
mainlliin good ,abdominal
tone and good posture would
be a wise course for you lo
follow.

Nurses giving
]Joyle morphine

j

•

95

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made-by -us STA-77A Out stand ing fea tures
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The re 's only one place you can, f1n d 11 .•.
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CAT. NO .

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GAGE

REG.

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16
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1
•.

POMEROY - Wednesday
night at Meigs, Parkersbqrg
Catholic girls defeated the
Meigs varsity girls by a score
of 61-53.
Leading scorer for Meigs
was Pam Vaughn with 28 and
Parker sbur~'s top scorer was
Mary Ostroski with 27.
Leading rebo under for
Meigs was Beth Vaughn with
6. Meigs shot 32 per cent from
the fl oor and 66 per cent fro m
the free throw line while
Park ersburg Catholic shot 47
and 61, respectively.
Meigs - Beth Vaughn, 4;
Glenda Brown, 6; Tracy
Burdette, 13 and Mary Boggs,
2.
Parkersburg Caiholic ~
'Les Wolf, 6; Sue Miller and
Mary Eaton, II each.
Meigs is now 1·3. The next
game will be at Jackson Jan.
6 at 6 p.m.
Mary Ostroski of Parkersburg Catholi c completely
domina ted the boards.
By quarters :
Meigs
9 10 17 17-53
Park.
14 10 19 18--111

THOMAS
BERT
LA)\'CE, President.,lect
Carter's choice lo bf

Reg. 199.9S

director pf the Office of
Mnnagcment and Budget,
dllfers with his new boss
on economic prlorHies for
the new administration.
Lance Is urging an
Immediate sizable tax cut
to spur the economy, while
the new President says he
hasn 't made up his mind
yet.

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' ~~~:~9,~;
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'.2.415
::~R~~.

40-1982

1

.

"''

NELSONVILLE - A total
of 45,528 birds were spotted in
the filth annual Christmas
bird count held Dec. 19 In the
Logan area. Included In the
total were 84 species.
A Hock of 17,000 starlings

ilea:

79.50

were seen holding uo traffic
on Route 33 by the participants. "This occurred for
only a few seconds, though,"
William E. Perine s.aid ,
Perine, an instructor in the
recreation and wildlife

215·48G

COT 33%

SAVE10%

BATTERY·'
POWERED
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FLUORESCENT
LANTERN

MICR.ONTA "
2·SCALE
UTTERV
'fESTER •

&gt;~. us
'

39.95

'

'

.·'' Key tossing inc~dent
.

causes .lofty problem

95

22.030

'·

'

"

..

almost as much energy in the form of fertilizer, often
produced from natural gas, as he does In fuel to power hi s
ma chinery, according to the Federal Energy
Administration .

Bird count showed 64 species

SAVE 5 10

SURFACE MOUNT

Reg:$4··g ·

' ~ Big 8 " wOofer .tnd 3 "

STUDY IN HISTORIC CONTRAST, a practitioner of
man's oldest economic activity, agriculture, works an
aUalfa field near a symbol of modem technology, a
fertilizer plant. Today, the average U. S. farmer uses

:~s59~~

• Com,;ct Size/

REALISTIC
WALNUT VENEER
FLOOR SPEAKER

J,

Halley . A granddaughter, Jerri Linn wa.s
also reared in their home.

Parkersburg
gals topple
Meigs, 61-53

Lor a in Ad mi r a l K itHJ 79
M edi n a ~7
'
M iddiPtown 110 [l ay Fa lr m(ln t
E 6~
.
M idd l e town
r r nw ic k H6
~ p r lnq Cath '7 1
NCWilrk 5R ltppP r A rl in lJIOn

SJ

Oranq e •IJ Chaq r in fnll s .11
P ainesv i l l e
Ht~rvpy
RJ
M il d iso n 7?

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Although It's not .a weighty
problem, In a sense it's a lofty
one .
Three weeks ago; the Rev.
Gray110n Atha happened to be
jingling the six keys on his
keyring inside his Grace
United Methodist 0\urch.
As a passing Urought, he
wondered how high he could
wss hiS keys.
He found -out.
About 35 .feel, .w a stained
glass window edge Inside the
church's dome, where they '
landed. And lodged.
And lor the last three
weeks, the keys have defied
rescue .
A ·ladder would seem the '
IoglcalllO!utlon, but scraping
new paint didn't seem worth
it and anyway, there might he
some risk ·of injury because
the ladder would have to be
put in a precarious position.
A casting rod was
suggested. '

Aparishioner , handy wun a
rod, tried and got within a
couple of inches, but failed.
Even a slingshot was
· suggested and the minister
observed, "If they got Goliath
with that, they ought to he
able to get a set of keys." But
a slingshot could cause
damage too .
.
Some churchgoers . figure
that when the organ is
playing full blast and the
choir is singing, the keys will
tumble down . But they
haven 'I yet.
Three of the keys are to the
church, two to Atha's car and
Ute other to his house. Even
lhough the reverend has replacements for all of them, he
still would like w solve the
key puzzle.
He's even tried "praying
the keys down ."
"When I did that the Lord
said, 'Get off your duff and
figure a way to get them
down ."'

technology at Hockin g
Techni cal College, was
coordinator for the bird count
which is part of a nationwide
tally heink conducted for the
National Audubon &amp;oclely.
Perine added that a total of
40,174 starlings were seen
during· the day long count.
"It's a figure that hears
watching in the future," he
added. "It could Indicate a
build-up in the starling
population."
The particpants. also of&gt;.
served 38 red-tailed hawks.
"It isn't uncommon to see the
'bird in this area, but that
number of them is unusual,"
Perine said.
Oiher 'results included the

James Page, projecl engineer for the
county-wide rural house numbering project,
announces a public meeting will be held on
Monday evening. December 27 at 8: 00p .m.
in the courtroom of the courthouse in
Pom.eroy.
The purpose of lhe meeting wi II be to
explain how Meigs County will be house
numbered . Persons will be encouraged to
ask questions and make comments.
The meeting is a public meefing, open to
any interested person .
James A. Page, PE
Project Engin ee r
Fleming, Page ,
Stolt e, Inc.

\

'

QUART~R liz CENTER CUT

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$
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CHICKEN 115 oz. '
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Thu rs d il y 's Ohio High .
Sc ho ol Bn skciiJ a l t R es ults
Unit ed Pres !&gt; lnt cr n.11io nill
/luru r a 103 West ' Gc auga 95
Rarbcrron IOOCan ton Tilnkcn

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
res 1-1-77

"

P. cllv uc fJ1 Norwalk '&gt;9
Re rca 60 N or111 Dlm "s tf'd 59
C cn tc rtHrrrt
57
Ma r io n

Cntho l ic \'1

Ci r1 Wal n ut
Hi ll s 6 5 Cin
Wf's tc r n H i ll s 60
Clc LUthera n E 7,') U niv
Sc hool 65
Clc St l qn a1i us 11 P ar ma Sfl
tl a yton Co l Wh ile 89 Da y
Du nbar 78
Da y ton Roth RJ Day Je ff er son
73
Grovr C ity 67 Mil r ic rt a 63
H ami l! on ACid in 59 Ci n Roqc r

SUPER

Y~LU

SALTINES
1-LB.
QO
PKG •

3/$1

Bv con sa

Keni son 59 Tw in sburg 58
Lan c a s ter JB Ziln c svi'lh; ,16
Libe rt y U n ion 8 &lt;t Cana l
Winc h este r 78

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good
At Powell's
'res 1-1-77

THE INN PLACE

Monday Night Special

ELF

DOG FOOD

$299

25 LBS. ·

W!C

Limit I Per Custorller
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 1-1-77

PUBLIC MEETING saiEDULED

''

•

sighting of 47 kestrel s, four
ruby crested kinglets, lour
.'"l Wamp sparrows and one
each of th e Am erican
widgeon, common merganser
and hermit thrush .
The results will be included
this summer in the National
Audubon Society publication,
"American Birds."
Twenty-five area residents
took part in the bird COWll,
and they were divided into 10
parties ~ " To gether
they
covered 731 miles - 32 on loot
and 699 by car. The number of
participants was the highest
since the count was started
five years ago. They ranged
in age from 10 to 66.

' Yz END CUT

R td(!f'WOod 77 Rr lc t ~CPO rt 63
~idnc y L(' h rnun 7'i Newto n f. I
&lt;;o ton R7 Char don 57 ,
&lt;; ummil Co un try Dily 11
Rcthc l Ta to 77

.,'

Reg.

A TANOV CORPORATION COitl &lt;NY

IVAN FIFE

'

Rea: a·

I

EAST GALLIPOLIS Thursday's high, 36. Low this
morning, 4. Today's reading
at 9 a.m . ....: 10.
·
CITY WATERWORKS Thursday's high, 38. Low this
morning, 10. Today's reading
at 9:30 a. m. -- 18.

...'

'

Reg.

RECORDER ., .
HEAD
.. ' '
DEMAGNETIZER

.

Scorers for Meigs were

Dorothy Chapman, 6; Terry
Wilson, 2; Sonia Ash , 6. For
Parkersburg, scorers were
Mary Croke, 6 and Kathy
Cooney, 4. Meigs· is 3-2.
By quarters:
Meigs
6 6 4 8- 24
Park.
4 0 6 15- 25

'

~ADIO

CUT 25%

ILV

when Pa rkersburg's press
caused several costly turnovers for Meigs.

''

Rf!ALISTIC "
AM-FM CLOCk

CUT 5 30 50 '

SIZE

MOUNt

THE GOOD EARTH, California style, is a major reason for America's
superproductivity in foodstuffs. Aerial photo shows mechanized harvesting of tomatoes, In
which California leads the nation. Some areas produ&lt;;e three crOJlll per year. (Federal
Energy Administration photo)

'
'

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ARCHER ELECTRONIC SOLDER

·;J'k,!~
ll
•'·

CLO.SED
CHRISTMAS DAY

.t

REALISTIC
HEADPHONES

Reg.1495

TWit( .
TRUCl&lt;ER
MIRROR
MOUNT

AM-FM STEREO
RECORD/PLA'I' '
a: TRACK
SYSTEM

.

5 10

24.95

CB ANTENNAS

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s&amp;o·

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8

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• Requ;res No Tools ! Euy!
•

ARCftE~'

Prices Effective
Thfu Jan.
1
.
'

· 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY - Wednesday
night at Meigs, Parkersburg
Catholic girls reserve beat
the Meig~ girls reserves 2524.
Tonia Ash was the
leading scorer for Meigs 'l'ilh
10 and for Park ersbu rg,
Laura Tennant with 15 was
the lop scorer.
Lead in g rebounder for
Meigs was Dorothy Chapman
with 13. Both Meigs and
Parkersburg Catholic shot 20
per cent from the floor.
Meigs reserves led until the
final two minutes of the game

"'

GALLIPOLIS - Ivan Fife, Eureka,
veteran law enforcement officer of Gallia
County, has announced his retirement.
A deputy sheriff, Fife served 15 years
under four administrations. He first
worked In 1931 under the late Elmer
Hatfield. After 24 yeafli of service with the
U.S. Corps of Engineers al the Gallipolis
Locks and Dam, Fife returned as a deputy
sheriff under Oscar Baird in 1960. He
served under Baird, worked for Denver
Walker for three and one-hall years, and
was on the staff of James Saunders and the
current sheriff Oscar Baird .
He was Baird's chief deputy .
Fife aiso served as a merchant police
in G~Uipolis for two years and worked two
yeafli as a night watchman at th e Gallia
County Highway Garage.
·
Fife received. the coveted Jim Mills
Award In 19i2 and was honored by the Ohio
General Assembly for that selection .
He and his wife , Dexter, are the
parents of four children, Lewis Gene and
Dale Fife and Karen Miller and Sharon

Store Hqurs
BA.M.-10 P, M,
Mon.-Sa t .
10 A.M.- i o P.M.
Sunday

Meigs gal reserves defeated

under 4 sheriffs

• Re11hstic AM-FM St.r•.o Rfi; •ive r .l
• Two MC -1000 Spf~Sbr Srst•msl
LAB-14

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695
"' "
TO '·•
'~
1
95 ~- \' :tiil

SAVE

$299

Prices slashed to lo.,_est le vels
tn 16 years' All 23 chann el CB ·
radios in stock reduced to
make room .for new 1977 models.
\
'
t '
Mobiles. base/mobiles. phone
types, TheJ?ne.Hander 'M. SSB .
all cut so low it S-T;A-G-G -E-R-8 .
the imagination! Al.l models
not avai lable at every sto re.
HURRY while supply lasts'

Perform s sq uare root. s 1gn chang e .
.perce nt and more ' Fully addres sable
3-key memo ry e nabl es two cal c ul atio ns
at once . Large easy-to· read · D1911ron ·:
dtsp lay

County, $659,1100 : and the McDermott
Bridge replacement pro ject in Scioto
County, $196,000.
The 15 ARC projects in the block grant
request inc lude: Wilkesv ille se wer
project, Vinton County, ARC cost $115,1100 ;
Waverly water storage and distr ibution
(Pike ), $140,000 ; Portsmouth wat er
storage and dist ribution (Scioto). $2110,1100;
·Wellston water supply main (Jackson)
$154,5011; OVRDC district child develop:
ment planning, $58,300; New Richmond
waterworks improv ements fClermontl
$300,000 ; New -Richmond waterwork s .
improv ement s rCi erkmont ) $300,000 ;
Hillsboro sewer project overrun
(Highl and ) $270,000 ; Mercy Hospital
primary care addition, Phase !I (Scioto I
$300 ,0110; Rio Grand e water storage
system (Gallia ) $33 ,1100 ; Joint Vocational
School overrun (Lawrence) $300,1100; Pike
County family health center (Pik e)
$121 ,600; River side Park Recr eation
(Scioto) $300,1100; Strip mine reclamation
(Jackson) $57,000; Shawnee State College
associate nursin g degree program
· (Scioto.) $226,800; Coalton-Wellston water
supply (Jackson ) $67,2110.

of Eureka served

SAVE UP T0--'-100

65·616 .

PORTSMOUTH - The Ohio Valley
Regional Development COmmission has
submitted 18 propoaals to tire Appalachian
Regional Commission for projects with
ARC costs of $3,841,500.
Clark Alexander, OVRDC Chairma n,
said applications must be submitted prior
to May I, 1977, adding that the 18 projects
have been included in Ohio's ARC project
package for 1917.
In addition , .Alexander said 13 continuation projects In the fields of health,
administration and services with a total of
$835,506 are included in the ARC project
package. ·
I
Jerry Anderson, manager of the
Appalachian program lor the Ohio Depart··
men!' of Economic and Community
Development advised OVRDC that the
1977 ARC block grant allocation for Ohio totaled $6.5 million, with $4.3 millon
proposed for new projects within the 28
county Appalachian region.
Also in the ARC submission from
OVRDC are three access road projects
including the Old Stone Road in Ross·
County with an ARC request for $342,800; .
the Highland Bend Jlrid~e in Scioto

Lawman·Ivan Fife

Separate Items
Price ... 439.80

CB BLOCK

9 FUNCTION CALCULATOR

-

....

5140-

31 ·2074

as painkiller
PITTSBURGH 1UP! I Former United Mine Workers
President W. A. "Tony "
Boyle, serving three life
sentences fer the murder of ·
wlion rival Joseph Yablonski
and his family, receives shots .
of addicting synthetic
morphine from prison nurses,
according w the Pittsburgh
Press.
The Press said today that
the 74-year-old Boyle is
addicted to injections of
Talwln, a potent painkiller,
which he receives every lour
hours for chest pains
ascribed to· a heart ailment'.
Boyle, the newspaper said,
is accorded special privileges
that make him one of Western
Penitentiary's "most
pampered prisoners."
Boyle receives extra and ·
extended visiting rlghL'! and
has a six..,r-eeven bed ward
mostly to himself, according
to the Press, which said Boyle
has not seen the inside of a
· cell since he checked into the
prison last April .
Boyle was loWld gUilty of
lhlrd-dcgree murder in
ordering the Shotgun killing
of Yablonskl and Yablonski's
· wife ~n&lt;l dll,ughl&lt;·r.

1

!

Reg. 259.95

various leg lift ex(:) ruises may

·candidate for president of the
United Steel Workers of
America , describes as
"garbage" the charges by his
opponent, Lloyd McBride,
that he has accepted
campaign contributions from
employers. ·
McBride filed a civil suit in
Cook County Circuit Court
Thur.sday c hargin g
Sadlowski with accepting

.-

SENSATIONAL SAVINGS
AND POWER! REALISTIC ~~
AM-FM STEREO RECEIVER

A dropped kidney is more
likely to be folind in a peflion
with a long, thin torso and it
rnay l&gt;e associated with poor
abdominal tone and a tendency for all of the organs to sag
when the individual is standing. In this regard I would
SIJY you might l&gt;enefit fn•n
an exercise progr·am that
strengthen your abdominal
muscles.
Sit-ups with the knees l&gt;enl,
abdominal tensing and

Ed
mav e ri c k

of this garbage."
The suit seeks an Injunction
_prohibiting Sadlowski from
obt aining campaign
c ontributions froro.
employers', using the miimiy
obtained from employers · in
the campaign and spending
an equal amount o! money in
the future than 1\'hat has
already been spent of
employers' funds.
Among those listed in the
suit as "employers, agents of
employers and lawyers for
employers" who contributed
· "thousands of dollars" to
finance Sadlowski ' s
campaign were: Stewart
, Molt of New York, General
Motors heir; Sarah Pillsoory
of California, of the giant
Pillsbury Flour Company;
Arnold . Hlat of Massachwetts,
president
of
Stride-Rile corporation.
Also, Bernard Solomon of
Massachusetts , vice
president of Stop and Shop
Companies, Inc.; Fred Fruth
of California, a corporation
lawyer; Robert L. Nessen, a
Boston, Mass., lawyer in 8
large . firm representing

SAVE $10

program.

CHICAGO (UP! ) -

concern steel workers instead

,:
'·

mal healthy individuals. In
fact , one of the men llelected
for the astronaut program
had the same condition, It
didn't keep him out of the

garbage

McBride's attorney , Bruce
/1. Miller, said the plaintiffs
had only one eyewitness to
testify that an employer gave
money to Sadlowski. The
other employers cited in the
suit were known to have
attended Sadlowski's fund·
raising ei&gt;cktail parties, and
it was asswned they paid to
get in, he added.
"I state McBride is a very
pathological liar," Sadlowski
said. "And it's time McBride
talked about problems that

,.

aminalion in otherwise nor-

labeled-

making.

After
Christ.m

any symptoms. it is usually
found with an X-ray ex-

Charges

SH dlo ws ki ,

tlot:..'S

;

P0 WE _LL'S

Visit Our Salad Bar
Lobs ler Dainties
French Fries
Coffee, Tea or Milk

$2~5 '
Plus

tax

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

LOOK FOR OUR

MYSTERY
. SPECIAL SUNDAY &amp; MONDA

f

Pomeroy, 0.

PIZZA SHACK Phone 9'12 -6304

(

.,

•

•

•

�•

A-6-&gt; TheSWldayTimes-Sentinel,Swrday, O.c. 26, 19&lt;~

Proposals in ARC project
package cost $3,841,500

A-4 '!'he SWlday Tillles-&amp;ntinel, Sw1Jay, O.c. 26, 1!176

·DR. LAMB ·

Dropped kidney
•

•

zs quzte common
most often Involves the right
kldriey. It occ urs less
frequently in men.
The ki&lt;jney moves around a
lot more than you might imagine. It is wrchored to the
diaphra~m and that is par1iy
responsible for the nunnal
mobility of the kidney. It may
drop as much as one and a
half vertebral spaces in normal people when sllinding.
II it drops more it is properly called nephroptosis. And in

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I have
a condition called right renal

nephr opt osis, ur·o pped
kidney. I was refu.sed full
cuvt!r;;~ge

wtder my medical

insurance becau.se of this
condition. What can I expect
to go wrong medically with a
condition such as this] Is a
person subject to infection of
the urinary tract with this
condition I Should a person
with this condition exercise
or just l&gt;e content with walking I I have never l&gt;een ill
with this condition: it was
discovered accident,.lly by
the physician with an X ray.
DEAR READER- You are
not as unusunl as you think
regardless of what the in·
surance company ruled. One
out ol every five adult women
has a dropped kidney, and it

most t:ascs it

campaign contributions from

employers, a violation of the
lmion's constitution .
"I fil ed a lawsuit today to
stop Ed Sadlowski fro m
buying the presidency of the
Steel worker s union withmoney of employers /'
McBride said at a news
conference after the suit was
filed .
"That to me sounds like.the
babblings of a drowning
man :: Sadlowski said when
asked about the charges. "!
completely and emphatically
deny the charges he's been

numerous

corporations ;

Robert Zevln, an investment
counselor; and Howard
Samuels of New York, vice
president of the Mobil
0\amical Corporation.
Miller said an eyewitness
saw "Howard Samuels kick
In $500" at one of Sadlowski's
lund-rais~ cocktail parties.
" I just completely and
totally deny that," Sadlowski
saitl . ur never met Howard

Samuels in my life."
When asked if he had
received any . contributions
from Samuels, Sadlowski .
said, "No, I can, say that I
have." ...,
I

not cause

help in this regard. I am sending you The Health Letter
nwnb&lt;Jr 3-7, Girth · Control:
Avoiding the Big Middle, to
give you more inforrnalion on
ex:erdse. Others who want
this information can send 50
cents with a long, stamP.ed,
self-addressed envelope for
it. J u.st send your letter to me
in care of this newspaper, P.
0, Box 1551, Radio City Station, New York, NY 10019.
Walking does nut use the abdominal mu.scles much and
you will need uther exercises
to develop and maintain good
abdominal tone.
There are some people with
a dropped kidney. who have
pt·oblems. The kidney may
drop so much that it kinks the
ureter and blood vesseis to
the kidney. This can prevent
proper circulation to the
kidney and affect its
drainage. This may cause
severe pain, with nausea and
a severe drop in blood '
pressure. The condition is
relieved by lying down. The
kidney floats back to normal
position and the difficulty
caused by kinking goes away.
A few patienis also have
tran sitory high blood
pressure related to the dropped kidney. The key to
evaluating symptoms related
to a dropped kidney is noting
if they occur while standing
and if they disappear When .
lying flat.
Rarely a person will need
to have the kidney tacked into a more pennanent position
by surgery. This is not
ju.stlfied in anyone without
symptoms and only in rare
individuals with symptOilll
important enough to require
surgical intervention. I would
expect your condition wiU
have little effect upon your
health, but a good program to
mainlliin good ,abdominal
tone and good posture would
be a wise course for you lo
follow.

Nurses giving
]Joyle morphine

j

•

95

COMPLETE STA -77A
STEREO SYSTEM

38% sla shed oil regu la r pnce ol our
made-by -us STA-77A Out stand ing fea tures
1nc lud e FM mulm g. mag net1c phon o mpu t.
tape mo M or. Perfec t Loudness " 18 walls
per chan ne l m1 n RM S " 8 ohms 20-20.000 Hz
, 0 8 ~. THP! Gen u1ne wa ln ut veneer case!
The re 's only one place you can, f1n d 11 .•.
Radio S hack .
·.·.

Reg.'·1 495

24.95

''"

'""I •"•' '·" '

., :

.... :

CHARGE IT

.,.

'

,. :- ,.,

' ;'

,.

. '.

1·-·· ,. ,1

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SCIENCE
FAIR ~

20, 1N-1
LAB KIT

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PORTABLES"
AM RADIOS
Reg. ~ .95 TO 12.95

1-,.

All Models
Not Available AI All Stores.

• Sele BBtrttry·Pow•r•d Circuits !

GIANT SHACK"•
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Buy toys now ana "SAVE '
fo r b irthdays , spec ial
occas1ons . nex t Chri stma s '
Huge ass ortme nt ol sensible
toys reduced as inu ch a s
one-hall off· re gular price I
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CAT. NO .

64.001
64.002
64.004
64.005
64.006
84.007

GAGE

REG.

SALE

0.59 oz.
1.51 oz.
4.21 oz.

16
16
16
18

.69 .
1.19
2.89

20

2.49
3.39

,59
. 99
2.49
2.29
1.99
2 .99

2.84

oz.

1.84 oz.
112 lb.

t6

2.69

,

:~sv19!~

3995
1
•.

POMEROY - Wednesday
night at Meigs, Parkersbqrg
Catholic girls defeated the
Meigs varsity girls by a score
of 61-53.
Leading scorer for Meigs
was Pam Vaughn with 28 and
Parker sbur~'s top scorer was
Mary Ostroski with 27.
Leading rebo under for
Meigs was Beth Vaughn with
6. Meigs shot 32 per cent from
the fl oor and 66 per cent fro m
the free throw line while
Park ersburg Catholic shot 47
and 61, respectively.
Meigs - Beth Vaughn, 4;
Glenda Brown, 6; Tracy
Burdette, 13 and Mary Boggs,
2.
Parkersburg Caiholic ~
'Les Wolf, 6; Sue Miller and
Mary Eaton, II each.
Meigs is now 1·3. The next
game will be at Jackson Jan.
6 at 6 p.m.
Mary Ostroski of Parkersburg Catholi c completely
domina ted the boards.
By quarters :
Meigs
9 10 17 17-53
Park.
14 10 19 18--111

THOMAS
BERT
LA)\'CE, President.,lect
Carter's choice lo bf

Reg. 199.9S

director pf the Office of
Mnnagcment and Budget,
dllfers with his new boss
on economic prlorHies for
the new administration.
Lance Is urging an
Immediate sizable tax cut
to spur the economy, while
the new President says he
hasn 't made up his mind
yet.

• Deluxe Realistic
Modulsire ® BA!
• Two M11tched Spe11ker

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.14,921

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sy.:· ,AUTO SPEAKERS

1195

ELECTRONIC
Rt!ll. 1~.95 , ·,
AU-1'0 ALARM ':.
.. PAIR 12· 1~~4 .
. PAll~&lt;. ' SYSJEM
.
FLUSH ~OUNT ·~ . ' ·.:;
~34 · 95 . ~

' ~~~:~9,~;
'
'.2.415
::~R~~.

40-1982

1

.

"''

NELSONVILLE - A total
of 45,528 birds were spotted in
the filth annual Christmas
bird count held Dec. 19 In the
Logan area. Included In the
total were 84 species.
A Hock of 17,000 starlings

ilea:

79.50

were seen holding uo traffic
on Route 33 by the participants. "This occurred for
only a few seconds, though,"
William E. Perine s.aid ,
Perine, an instructor in the
recreation and wildlife

215·48G

COT 33%

SAVE10%

BATTERY·'
POWERED
'
FLUORESCENT
LANTERN

MICR.ONTA "
2·SCALE
UTTERV
'fESTER •

&gt;~. us
'

39.95

'

'

.·'' Key tossing inc~dent
.

causes .lofty problem

95

22.030

'·

'

"

..

almost as much energy in the form of fertilizer, often
produced from natural gas, as he does In fuel to power hi s
ma chinery, according to the Federal Energy
Administration .

Bird count showed 64 species

SAVE 5 10

SURFACE MOUNT

Reg:$4··g ·

' ~ Big 8 " wOofer .tnd 3 "

STUDY IN HISTORIC CONTRAST, a practitioner of
man's oldest economic activity, agriculture, works an
aUalfa field near a symbol of modem technology, a
fertilizer plant. Today, the average U. S. farmer uses

:~s59~~

• Com,;ct Size/

REALISTIC
WALNUT VENEER
FLOOR SPEAKER

J,

Halley . A granddaughter, Jerri Linn wa.s
also reared in their home.

Parkersburg
gals topple
Meigs, 61-53

Lor a in Ad mi r a l K itHJ 79
M edi n a ~7
'
M iddiPtown 110 [l ay Fa lr m(ln t
E 6~
.
M idd l e town
r r nw ic k H6
~ p r lnq Cath '7 1
NCWilrk 5R ltppP r A rl in lJIOn

SJ

Oranq e •IJ Chaq r in fnll s .11
P ainesv i l l e
Ht~rvpy
RJ
M il d iso n 7?

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Although It's not .a weighty
problem, In a sense it's a lofty
one .
Three weeks ago; the Rev.
Gray110n Atha happened to be
jingling the six keys on his
keyring inside his Grace
United Methodist 0\urch.
As a passing Urought, he
wondered how high he could
wss hiS keys.
He found -out.
About 35 .feel, .w a stained
glass window edge Inside the
church's dome, where they '
landed. And lodged.
And lor the last three
weeks, the keys have defied
rescue .
A ·ladder would seem the '
IoglcalllO!utlon, but scraping
new paint didn't seem worth
it and anyway, there might he
some risk ·of injury because
the ladder would have to be
put in a precarious position.
A casting rod was
suggested. '

Aparishioner , handy wun a
rod, tried and got within a
couple of inches, but failed.
Even a slingshot was
· suggested and the minister
observed, "If they got Goliath
with that, they ought to he
able to get a set of keys." But
a slingshot could cause
damage too .
.
Some churchgoers . figure
that when the organ is
playing full blast and the
choir is singing, the keys will
tumble down . But they
haven 'I yet.
Three of the keys are to the
church, two to Atha's car and
Ute other to his house. Even
lhough the reverend has replacements for all of them, he
still would like w solve the
key puzzle.
He's even tried "praying
the keys down ."
"When I did that the Lord
said, 'Get off your duff and
figure a way to get them
down ."'

technology at Hockin g
Techni cal College, was
coordinator for the bird count
which is part of a nationwide
tally heink conducted for the
National Audubon &amp;oclely.
Perine added that a total of
40,174 starlings were seen
during· the day long count.
"It's a figure that hears
watching in the future," he
added. "It could Indicate a
build-up in the starling
population."
The particpants. also of&gt;.
served 38 red-tailed hawks.
"It isn't uncommon to see the
'bird in this area, but that
number of them is unusual,"
Perine said.
Oiher 'results included the

James Page, projecl engineer for the
county-wide rural house numbering project,
announces a public meeting will be held on
Monday evening. December 27 at 8: 00p .m.
in the courtroom of the courthouse in
Pom.eroy.
The purpose of lhe meeting wi II be to
explain how Meigs County will be house
numbered . Persons will be encouraged to
ask questions and make comments.
The meeting is a public meefing, open to
any interested person .
James A. Page, PE
Project Engin ee r
Fleming, Page ,
Stolt e, Inc.

\

'

QUART~R liz CENTER CUT

PORK LOIN •• :~·

COllEGE I

.

.
$
I
.
4 1

CHICKEN 115 oz. '
·
CANS
BROTH ........

•

FRIED
32 ~z. $169

Thu rs d il y 's Ohio High .
Sc ho ol Bn skciiJ a l t R es ults
Unit ed Pres !&gt; lnt cr n.11io nill
/luru r a 103 West ' Gc auga 95
Rarbcrron IOOCan ton Tilnkcn

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
res 1-1-77

"

P. cllv uc fJ1 Norwalk '&gt;9
Re rca 60 N or111 Dlm "s tf'd 59
C cn tc rtHrrrt
57
Ma r io n

Cntho l ic \'1

Ci r1 Wal n ut
Hi ll s 6 5 Cin
Wf's tc r n H i ll s 60
Clc LUthera n E 7,') U niv
Sc hool 65
Clc St l qn a1i us 11 P ar ma Sfl
tl a yton Co l Wh ile 89 Da y
Du nbar 78
Da y ton Roth RJ Day Je ff er son
73
Grovr C ity 67 Mil r ic rt a 63
H ami l! on ACid in 59 Ci n Roqc r

SUPER

Y~LU

SALTINES
1-LB.
QO
PKG •

3/$1

Bv con sa

Keni son 59 Tw in sburg 58
Lan c a s ter JB Ziln c svi'lh; ,16
Libe rt y U n ion 8 &lt;t Cana l
Winc h este r 78

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good
At Powell's
'res 1-1-77

THE INN PLACE

Monday Night Special

ELF

DOG FOOD

$299

25 LBS. ·

W!C

Limit I Per Custorller
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 1-1-77

PUBLIC MEETING saiEDULED

''

•

sighting of 47 kestrel s, four
ruby crested kinglets, lour
.'"l Wamp sparrows and one
each of th e Am erican
widgeon, common merganser
and hermit thrush .
The results will be included
this summer in the National
Audubon Society publication,
"American Birds."
Twenty-five area residents
took part in the bird COWll,
and they were divided into 10
parties ~ " To gether
they
covered 731 miles - 32 on loot
and 699 by car. The number of
participants was the highest
since the count was started
five years ago. They ranged
in age from 10 to 66.

' Yz END CUT

R td(!f'WOod 77 Rr lc t ~CPO rt 63
~idnc y L(' h rnun 7'i Newto n f. I
&lt;;o ton R7 Char don 57 ,
&lt;; ummil Co un try Dily 11
Rcthc l Ta to 77

.,'

Reg.

A TANOV CORPORATION COitl &lt;NY

IVAN FIFE

'

Rea: a·

I

EAST GALLIPOLIS Thursday's high, 36. Low this
morning, 4. Today's reading
at 9 a.m . ....: 10.
·
CITY WATERWORKS Thursday's high, 38. Low this
morning, 10. Today's reading
at 9:30 a. m. -- 18.

...'

'

Reg.

RECORDER ., .
HEAD
.. ' '
DEMAGNETIZER

.

Scorers for Meigs were

Dorothy Chapman, 6; Terry
Wilson, 2; Sonia Ash , 6. For
Parkersburg, scorers were
Mary Croke, 6 and Kathy
Cooney, 4. Meigs· is 3-2.
By quarters:
Meigs
6 6 4 8- 24
Park.
4 0 6 15- 25

'

~ADIO

CUT 25%

ILV

when Pa rkersburg's press
caused several costly turnovers for Meigs.

''

Rf!ALISTIC "
AM-FM CLOCk

CUT 5 30 50 '

SIZE

MOUNt

THE GOOD EARTH, California style, is a major reason for America's
superproductivity in foodstuffs. Aerial photo shows mechanized harvesting of tomatoes, In
which California leads the nation. Some areas produ&lt;;e three crOJlll per year. (Federal
Energy Administration photo)

'
'

SAVE UP TO 20%
ARCHER ELECTRONIC SOLDER

·;J'k,!~
ll
•'·

CLO.SED
CHRISTMAS DAY

.t

REALISTIC
HEADPHONES

Reg.1495

TWit( .
TRUCl&lt;ER
MIRROR
MOUNT

AM-FM STEREO
RECORD/PLA'I' '
a: TRACK
SYSTEM

.

5 10

24.95

CB ANTENNAS

SAVE
s&amp;o·

30%50%
8

• 20 Differt~nl Electron;c Proj•cts!
• Requ;res No Tools ! Euy!
•

ARCftE~'

Prices Effective
Thfu Jan.
1
.
'

· 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY - Wednesday
night at Meigs, Parkersburg
Catholic girls reserve beat
the Meig~ girls reserves 2524.
Tonia Ash was the
leading scorer for Meigs 'l'ilh
10 and for Park ersbu rg,
Laura Tennant with 15 was
the lop scorer.
Lead in g rebounder for
Meigs was Dorothy Chapman
with 13. Both Meigs and
Parkersburg Catholic shot 20
per cent from the floor.
Meigs reserves led until the
final two minutes of the game

"'

GALLIPOLIS - Ivan Fife, Eureka,
veteran law enforcement officer of Gallia
County, has announced his retirement.
A deputy sheriff, Fife served 15 years
under four administrations. He first
worked In 1931 under the late Elmer
Hatfield. After 24 yeafli of service with the
U.S. Corps of Engineers al the Gallipolis
Locks and Dam, Fife returned as a deputy
sheriff under Oscar Baird in 1960. He
served under Baird, worked for Denver
Walker for three and one-hall years, and
was on the staff of James Saunders and the
current sheriff Oscar Baird .
He was Baird's chief deputy .
Fife aiso served as a merchant police
in G~Uipolis for two years and worked two
yeafli as a night watchman at th e Gallia
County Highway Garage.
·
Fife received. the coveted Jim Mills
Award In 19i2 and was honored by the Ohio
General Assembly for that selection .
He and his wife , Dexter, are the
parents of four children, Lewis Gene and
Dale Fife and Karen Miller and Sharon

Store Hqurs
BA.M.-10 P, M,
Mon.-Sa t .
10 A.M.- i o P.M.
Sunday

Meigs gal reserves defeated

under 4 sheriffs

• Re11hstic AM-FM St.r•.o Rfi; •ive r .l
• Two MC -1000 Spf~Sbr Srst•msl
LAB-14

SAVE UP TO SAVE UP TO

695
"' "
TO '·•
'~
1
95 ~- \' :tiil

SAVE

$299

Prices slashed to lo.,_est le vels
tn 16 years' All 23 chann el CB ·
radios in stock reduced to
make room .for new 1977 models.
\
'
t '
Mobiles. base/mobiles. phone
types, TheJ?ne.Hander 'M. SSB .
all cut so low it S-T;A-G-G -E-R-8 .
the imagination! Al.l models
not avai lable at every sto re.
HURRY while supply lasts'

Perform s sq uare root. s 1gn chang e .
.perce nt and more ' Fully addres sable
3-key memo ry e nabl es two cal c ul atio ns
at once . Large easy-to· read · D1911ron ·:
dtsp lay

County, $659,1100 : and the McDermott
Bridge replacement pro ject in Scioto
County, $196,000.
The 15 ARC projects in the block grant
request inc lude: Wilkesv ille se wer
project, Vinton County, ARC cost $115,1100 ;
Waverly water storage and distr ibution
(Pike ), $140,000 ; Portsmouth wat er
storage and dist ribution (Scioto). $2110,1100;
·Wellston water supply main (Jackson)
$154,5011; OVRDC district child develop:
ment planning, $58,300; New Richmond
waterworks improv ements fClermontl
$300,000 ; New -Richmond waterwork s .
improv ement s rCi erkmont ) $300,000 ;
Hillsboro sewer project overrun
(Highl and ) $270,000 ; Mercy Hospital
primary care addition, Phase !I (Scioto I
$300 ,0110; Rio Grand e water storage
system (Gallia ) $33 ,1100 ; Joint Vocational
School overrun (Lawrence) $300,1100; Pike
County family health center (Pik e)
$121 ,600; River side Park Recr eation
(Scioto) $300,1100; Strip mine reclamation
(Jackson) $57,000; Shawnee State College
associate nursin g degree program
· (Scioto.) $226,800; Coalton-Wellston water
supply (Jackson ) $67,2110.

of Eureka served

SAVE UP T0--'-100

65·616 .

PORTSMOUTH - The Ohio Valley
Regional Development COmmission has
submitted 18 propoaals to tire Appalachian
Regional Commission for projects with
ARC costs of $3,841,500.
Clark Alexander, OVRDC Chairma n,
said applications must be submitted prior
to May I, 1977, adding that the 18 projects
have been included in Ohio's ARC project
package for 1917.
In addition , .Alexander said 13 continuation projects In the fields of health,
administration and services with a total of
$835,506 are included in the ARC project
package. ·
I
Jerry Anderson, manager of the
Appalachian program lor the Ohio Depart··
men!' of Economic and Community
Development advised OVRDC that the
1977 ARC block grant allocation for Ohio totaled $6.5 million, with $4.3 millon
proposed for new projects within the 28
county Appalachian region.
Also in the ARC submission from
OVRDC are three access road projects
including the Old Stone Road in Ross·
County with an ARC request for $342,800; .
the Highland Bend Jlrid~e in Scioto

Lawman·Ivan Fife

Separate Items
Price ... 439.80

CB BLOCK

9 FUNCTION CALCULATOR

-

....

5140-

31 ·2074

as painkiller
PITTSBURGH 1UP! I Former United Mine Workers
President W. A. "Tony "
Boyle, serving three life
sentences fer the murder of ·
wlion rival Joseph Yablonski
and his family, receives shots .
of addicting synthetic
morphine from prison nurses,
according w the Pittsburgh
Press.
The Press said today that
the 74-year-old Boyle is
addicted to injections of
Talwln, a potent painkiller,
which he receives every lour
hours for chest pains
ascribed to· a heart ailment'.
Boyle, the newspaper said,
is accorded special privileges
that make him one of Western
Penitentiary's "most
pampered prisoners."
Boyle receives extra and ·
extended visiting rlghL'! and
has a six..,r-eeven bed ward
mostly to himself, according
to the Press, which said Boyle
has not seen the inside of a
· cell since he checked into the
prison last April .
Boyle was loWld gUilty of
lhlrd-dcgree murder in
ordering the Shotgun killing
of Yablonskl and Yablonski's
· wife ~n&lt;l dll,ughl&lt;·r.

1

!

Reg. 259.95

various leg lift ex(:) ruises may

·candidate for president of the
United Steel Workers of
America , describes as
"garbage" the charges by his
opponent, Lloyd McBride,
that he has accepted
campaign contributions from
employers. ·
McBride filed a civil suit in
Cook County Circuit Court
Thur.sday c hargin g
Sadlowski with accepting

.-

SENSATIONAL SAVINGS
AND POWER! REALISTIC ~~
AM-FM STEREO RECEIVER

A dropped kidney is more
likely to be folind in a peflion
with a long, thin torso and it
rnay l&gt;e associated with poor
abdominal tone and a tendency for all of the organs to sag
when the individual is standing. In this regard I would
SIJY you might l&gt;enefit fn•n
an exercise progr·am that
strengthen your abdominal
muscles.
Sit-ups with the knees l&gt;enl,
abdominal tensing and

Ed
mav e ri c k

of this garbage."
The suit seeks an Injunction
_prohibiting Sadlowski from
obt aining campaign
c ontributions froro.
employers', using the miimiy
obtained from employers · in
the campaign and spending
an equal amount o! money in
the future than 1\'hat has
already been spent of
employers' funds.
Among those listed in the
suit as "employers, agents of
employers and lawyers for
employers" who contributed
· "thousands of dollars" to
finance Sadlowski ' s
campaign were: Stewart
, Molt of New York, General
Motors heir; Sarah Pillsoory
of California, of the giant
Pillsbury Flour Company;
Arnold . Hlat of Massachwetts,
president
of
Stride-Rile corporation.
Also, Bernard Solomon of
Massachusetts , vice
president of Stop and Shop
Companies, Inc.; Fred Fruth
of California, a corporation
lawyer; Robert L. Nessen, a
Boston, Mass., lawyer in 8
large . firm representing

SAVE $10

program.

CHICAGO (UP! ) -

concern steel workers instead

,:
'·

mal healthy individuals. In
fact , one of the men llelected
for the astronaut program
had the same condition, It
didn't keep him out of the

garbage

McBride's attorney , Bruce
/1. Miller, said the plaintiffs
had only one eyewitness to
testify that an employer gave
money to Sadlowski. The
other employers cited in the
suit were known to have
attended Sadlowski's fund·
raising ei&gt;cktail parties, and
it was asswned they paid to
get in, he added.
"I state McBride is a very
pathological liar," Sadlowski
said. "And it's time McBride
talked about problems that

,.

aminalion in otherwise nor-

labeled-

making.

After
Christ.m

any symptoms. it is usually
found with an X-ray ex-

Charges

SH dlo ws ki ,

tlot:..'S

;

P0 WE _LL'S

Visit Our Salad Bar
Lobs ler Dainties
French Fries
Coffee, Tea or Milk

$2~5 '
Plus

tax

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

LOOK FOR OUR

MYSTERY
. SPECIAL SUNDAY &amp; MONDA

f

Pomeroy, 0.

PIZZA SHACK Phone 9'12 -6304

(

.,

•

•

•

�A-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sw1day, Dec. 26, 1976

Unique overnight inland· st~amboats
begin spring season on March fifth

Big River."

For spring cruising,
America 's only ove rnight
steamboats return to the days
of magnificent mansion s
furnished with the finery of
Europe, beautiful plantation
ga rdens filled with the scent
of magnolias, azaleas and
camellias, and a mighty river
that is still the lifeblood of the
South,
Beginning March 5, seven
night cruises on the luxurious
new MiBSissippi Queen compl ete with swimming
r)ool, sauna, movie theater,
elevators and beauty salon depart New Orleans every
Saturday at 9 p.m..for round
-trip cruises to Natchez. Port
stops are St. FrancisvHie,
Louisiana, for a visit to
Rosedown Plantation .and
Garde n a ; Natchez ,
Mississippi, for Pilgrimage
and a tour of ihe town's
bea utiful ante-bellum
mansions, inclUding historic

Stanton Hall ; ·and Baton
Rouge for a walk through the
workers' cabins, blacksmith
shop, sugar house and one
room schoolhouse of the L.SU
Rural Ufe Museum.
The
Delta
Queen
inaugurates 1977 on February
4 with a two ni ght weekend
cruise round trip from New
Orleans to Houmas House
Plantation.
She then embarks on a

"

"

series of eleven night round

trip cruises from New
Orleans to Memphis whi ch
can also be booked as six
ni ghts ·New Orleans to
Memphis· or five nights
Memphis to New Oreieans.
The six night cruises
feature port calls at Oak
Ailey Plantation for a tour of
the Greek Revival mansion
set right on the West Bank of
the Mississippi ; Vicksburg
for a tour of the city's Civil
War battlefield, the Court·
house Museum which houses

'

the South's large•! collection
of Civil War artifacts, and
Cedar Grove, a man sion
where J effcrson Davis
frequently st~yed; and
Memphis for a visit to Beale
Street where W. C. Handy
Invented the blues and the
Botanical Gardens where ali
the flowers and shrubs· of
Spring will be in full bloom.
The ·five night cruises

.

II 's Christmas Eve, a time
for giving, but authorities say
oome people still persist in
stealing and destroying.
In Petersburg, Va ., vandals
broke into a school Thursday
and destroyed Chrisbnas
gifts, toys and food that had
been colle.cted for poor
families and the elderly .
A path of crushed gifts and
splattered food was found at
the Christmas Clearinghouse,
which had planned to give the
items to hundreds of

persons.

"I don't know what to tell
the people," said Virginia
Snooks, Clearinghouse
direcror . "I guess they will
have to go horn~ and tell their
children Santa Claus had his
pack stolen."

The problem was mitigated
somewhat when word of the
incident spread through tbe
tqwn and many residents
responded by bringing in new
gifts.
"This makes our tragedy a
little more bearable," Mrs .

Snooks said.
In Boston Thursday, a
school teacher said she was
robbed of Christmas gifts she
bought for children in her
class.

Margaret Inness, 32, said a
teen-ager armed with a lmile
robbed her in front of the
Winthrop Elementary School.
::be said he took the gifts, her
handbag containing $20 and
her car keys .
A 1 s o in Massach~setls,
bureaucratic thoughtlessness
· may mean fewer gifts for
some children.
State
Welfare
Commissioner Alexander
::barp said some of the money
donated to buy Christmas
toys for children II) foster
homes had been used by a
former state official last
spring to finance a trip to a
convention in Hawaii.
Tlie commissioner said the
lrlp by former assistant Wei·
fare Comm.issioner Beth
Warren to a foster parents
convention caused a $1,000
shortage in the fund .
As a result, he said, in the
.futilre checks drawn from the
money donated by the Malt
Beverages Association will
be made out to the stores
where toys are bought rather
than to Welfare Department
officia~ and the checks wiU
be coWllersigned by someone
outside the department 's
social services division.

Neighbors helping out
wife of Gihnore victi.nt
SALT LAKE CITY (UP! )
- While Gary Gilmore
contemplates spending
Christmas alone in his Death
Row prison cell, the pregnant
wife of one of his victims will
receive gifts and financial
help . from her Mormon ·
neighbors.
Gilmore, locked in isolation
as he awaits his Jan. 17 dale
with the firing squad, may
not be allowed visitors on
Christmas . The 36-year.Oid
killer is serving 15 days in
. Solitary confinement
following a melee with
guards a week ago.
Prison rules usually forbid
visits by anyone but
attorneys, but officials said
the rules can be bent.
Meantime, the families of

•

the two yoWlg men Gilmore
has admitted killing durnig
hOldups last summer were
each preparing for the
holidays minus a loved one.
Dean Christensen, s
Mormon bishop in Provo,
Utah, said the families from
his church group were
donating money and gifts to
Mrs. Debbie Bushnell, widow
·of the man Gilmore was
convicted of kllling - Bennie
BuslmeU.
·· "Her "finances are very
low," the chW"ctunan sa id.
"Ali she has is a little .
industri al compensation
which she will recei ve for a

few more months. When that
fWl S out, we don't know
which way she will turn .':

•.

setting

up

monitoring

Oceanography, a special oil·
response.team was preparing
URi's $4 million research
vessel Endeavor for a
tracking trip into the Atlantic
next Tuesday .
"In previous spills, nobody
has ever been able to say
where all the oil has gone. W
e
hope to find that out this

remained of tbe bow was
gradUBUy filling with water.
The Coast Guard Thuroday
opened aU hatches on the bow
to expedite the slnking "so
·!he .will not be a hazard to
navigation," ·. a spokesman
said.
..
A Coast Guard spokesman
said observers on a• flight
over the slick saw about 3,000
seagulls of which "only about
125 were covered with oU."
"They also · flew over
Muskeget and Tuckernut
Isi;lnds west of Nantucket
and they didn't see any of the
seals which are usuaUy there.

1

l

systems to keep tabs on the
damage.
A 2fl-knot ooutheriy wind
pushed the oil slick from the time," said university
wrecked tanker Argo Mer· researcher Robert. Sexton.
chant - now more than 100
Not much was left today of
miles long ·- across the the 64()-foot Argo Merchant.
!IOUtllern edge of Georges The severed stern wa s
.. Bank. "It's like a fat hungry pointin( skyward at an awk·
sna ke," a Coast Guard ward angle and · what
spokesman said.
Icy waters have coagulated
th~ oil, forming tarlike
chunks , that have been '
snooped up by scientists
crisscrossing the slick in
research vessels. Navy
divers Thursday brought
sediment samples up from
the ocean floor near the
remains of the shattered
tanker.
Massachusetts officials
reported Thursday none of
the 7.6 million gallons of oil
from the -taf!.ker had yet
reached the floor of the
10,000'square-mlle fishing
gro~d, ohe of the most
important in the world.
If it does, experts fear it
may take years for the
·fishing grounds_to recover.
But even if it does not, or it
reaches the floor in tiny
amounts, scientists admit it
would be difficult to pinpoint
the extent of environmental
damage' in open seas.
The U. S. Environmental
Protection Agency 's Marine
and
Water
Quality
Laboratory has been named
''W.;:
to coordinate a II environmental impact studies
relating to the spill from the
Liberian-reglstered tanker,
which broke up Monday 27
miles off Nantucket Island
after running aground" on a
Aboard both the MisSISSlppl activities.
a c commodatio ns and shoal last week.
Queen and the Delta Queen,
Fares
aboard
the passage , ali meals and
" We are setting up a
passengers enjoy graciqus Mississippi Queen begin at snacks and entertainment. situation room with chart
"EXTRA CRISPY" Kentucky Fried Chicken Now
Available .. . Crisp On The OUtside - Moist 8nd
Old South dining, dancing and $504 per person . Fa res
Further information and boards so we can track
Tender On The Inside .
dixieland, professional floor aboard the Delta Queen begin brochures can be obtained things. By Monday we should
Now A\lailable At :
shows, kite flying out over the at $150 per person for the two from a travel agent or .The have a full blown com·
paddlewheel, play-it-yourself night cruises, 1285 for five Della Queen Steamboat Co., munications center," said
ca lliope concerts , and a nights,$342forsixnights, and pept. ZQ, 511 Main Street, Dr.· Jan C. Prager, chief of
passel of other ramstugenous $627 for eleven nights. Cruise Cincinnati , Ohio 45202. technical assistance.
Ph. 992 ·l431
0.
_ river jargon for exciting - fares include steamboat Telephone (513) 621·1445.
At the University of Rhode
, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•ls•llllanllld~'s~G•ra•d•ua•te-S•ch•o•ol•o•f------~-----------.,

'

Circle •
observes
holiday

Special decorations
foatured at Holzer

Preparing diabetic menu
nutrition ·series topic
. NELSONVILLE ~ During
the holiday season, wlth its
traditional goodies, the
family cook may have more
problems
than
usual
preparing menus for th~
diabetic.
Meal planning, always
difficult when there's a
diabetic in the family, wiD be
ooe of the topics cov~red in a
diabetes infonnatton series to
begin Jan. 19 at Hocking
Technical College.
The live part series, to be
held from 6:30 to 8;30 p. m.
Wednesdays through Feb. 23
in Hocking Tech's lecture
hall, Is free and open to
diabetics and members of.
their families. On the sixth
evening, to conclude the
series, participants will have
a potluck dinner, which will
prov;d,· further cooking
ideas.

fires, elegant gatherings and formal dinner
parties. It's your time to glow! See our
collection of the season's most dazzling
looks, all priced to give you plenty of
holiday spending money.

I

REGULAR PRICES

$16 TO $58

00

SALE. PRICES

S}l29 S4Q59

Savings of 30%
This sale of holiday ready to
wear
begins . Monday,
December 27 at 9:30a.m. Visit
Elberfelds Ready To Wear
Department on the Second
Floor, select an outfit or two
for your holiday parties and
really save . .

' '

Facts about diabetes will
be diBcusaed In tbe opening
session . Rosamond An·
derson, nutrition instructor at
Hocking Tech, will conduct
the Jan . 26 program on "Diet
and Diabetes," and on Feb. 2,
she wiD cover meal planning.
Suzanne Croci, Instructor
of nursing at the college, wili
lead the final two sessions.
Her Feb. 9 topic will be
"Taking Care of Yourself,"
and on Feb. 16, she will
disCuss "Rules of Health."

Because enrollment ls
limited to 30 people, It is
necessary to register in
advance . Additional in·
formation or registration
fonns may be obtained by
·writing to Hocking Technical
College, Nelsonville, Ohio,
4S764, or by phoning tbe
Health Careers Department
at 753-3591 Ext. 265.

Class exchanges gifts

ELBERFELDS 'IN. POMEROY

o

,,

I

gavlj d~votions using ' 'Aren' t

You Glad He Came" as her
mc'&lt;litation with scripture
from John 3, 16. The dedica.
lion prayer for the !ov.e girt _
offering was giv.en bjl Mrs.
Gwinnie While. Mrs. Wl'I'UCr
1-ead a pt!n sketch 01i the Mal·
locks mlssionaty family.
For the program each
member read a Chl'islmlis
article. Mrs. Sarli h !)awn
Owen had the story fl·om St.
Luke , Mrs . Whil e a
Christmas mcdii.Hlion , Mrs.

Carol Ann Bamitz

.

00

MIDDL EPOHT
Chri!;lmas project work was
reviewc'&lt;i at the 'l'ueway •
night m.,.ling of the Electa
Circle of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionai'Y Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
L11Urch held at the home of
'Mrs. Alwilda Werner.
Mrs. Bmtice Baker and
_.._.~.,._..-_.._.._.._....,.~_.j Mrs. Janice Gib9s...IDJl.pur·
chase gifts. for the residents
at th~ Meigs County lnfinna ry, and members were
l'emindc'&lt;i to take thoir old
Christmas canis to the next
mcoeting for another Spt!dal
project. Mrs. Beulah While

•

· It's the season of snowflakes and crackling

'

Projects
reviewed

-

POMEROY - An old
fashioned Christmas was
enjoyed by the Friendly
. , : , Circle of the Trinity Chureh ·
· i
Tuesday evening with Miss
!'
Mary Virginia Reibel
planning the affair as a final
tribute ·to the bicentennial
year.
For the program she read a
touching tribute to the
PLANS TO WED - AruioWJcement Is made of the
matriarch of a local family
engagement and forthcoming marriage of Carol Ann
who inspired and guided a
Barnitz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gary A. Barnitz, Rt. I,
large family in the
Belpre, to Jerome H. Harman, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs:
preparation and tradition of
Jerome H. Harman, Sr., 1201 Putnam Howe Drive,
their annual Christmas
Belpre. Miss Barnitz, a senior at Warren High School, Is
celebration. She noted that at
employed by Drs. Lofty, Hill and Ritchie, optometrists,
the center was always the
Belpre. She is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hayman
·true mearung of Christmas.
Barnitz, Lincoln His., Pomeroy, and Mrs. D. H. Robeson,
Mrs. Kenneth Harris used
Middleport. Grealof:randparents are Mrs. w. 0. Barnltz,
"A New Way to Sey Merry
Pomeroy and Mrs. Dean Brinker, Racine, Mr. Harman, a
Christmas" as the devotional
1974 graduate of Bo!pre High School, is employed by the
topic which was followed by a
Keebler Company and is CtD'rently attending the St. .
Chrisimas
prayer by Mrs.
. Clairsville branch·of Ohio University. The wedding will be,
Pearl
Mora.
an event of JWJe II, at 2::lO p.m., in the Porterfield Baptist
Reports were given on
Church, Little Hocking, with tbe pastor. Henry Lancaster
completed
projects and notes
officiating. The custom of open church will be observed.
.from
out-of-town
members
.
'
were read. Program books
for the new year prepared by
Mrs. Leonard Jewell were
distributed. The contest in
charge of Miss· Mary E.
Chapman was won by Mrs.
Eiza Gilmo1'e, Jr. who also
received the door prize."Agift
· exchange was held around a
lighted tree. Mrs. David
Russell gave ea'"ch member
GALUPOUS-' Two areas · that has been in use an inspirational calendar
of Holzer Medical Center lluroughout December. The from her florist shop.
enjoyed by both hospital staff wooden wreath with five
An assortment of sandmembers and the public have candies was designed and wiches, salad, homemade
been decorated lor Christmas constructed by Don Merry, a candies and coffee were
by various groups and In· member of Hope . United served. Mrs. Belva Sloan and
diVlduals.
,Methodist
Church
in Eri~ RuBSe!l we~e guests .. ...
The hospital chapel has Wellston. - '
'
' ·
An old fashioned basket of
been decorated with white
The French 500 Room, In handcrafted fruit, holly ~nd
poinsettias,
door use throughout the week for tapers decorated the refresh·
arrangements and swags on numerous holiday gatherings tnent ta·bte. Napkin rings and
each of the pews, courtesy of including the
patient · Williamsburg replicas of
the
Regional
Nurses Chflstmas Eve party, was . Christmas tree ornaments
Association, a e roup _of decorated with holiday , made .by Miss Reibel were
nurses. from the area.
trlnunlngs by the operating given as favors . Miss Erma
Elias Sisson of Vinton grew room staff at Holzer. A piano Smith ·assisted Miss Reibel
and donated red poinsettias was placed in the room for with the serving.
for the chapel. . ·
Chrisbnas use by Ward's
Also decorating the chapel Keyboard, GaUipolls.
is a special advent wreath

,,,

Pantsuits • long .Skirts • Velvet Blazers
. Dressy 'Blouses .

I

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

Sarah Carsey Charlene Hoeflich j
446-2342
992-2156 !
.

feHive tididiiY [)~
'

...

Woman's World

_,_.....,__._....,... _ _......;,_.._......::._.._.._..
_
.

ELBERFELD$ IN' POMEROY

..

-

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Pomeroy-Middleport

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE

~:~~~:zt~~~s ~~to~e~:uh~::

Not all have
Yule spiFit
.

NANTUCKET, Ma ss.
tUPI) - Officials and
·scientists, helpless to contain
the ecological ravages of the
Atlantic Coast's worst oil
spill, concentrated today on

•

CINCINNATI - From
February through April, the
fabled Delta Queen and the
elegant new Mississi ppi
"Queen steam out of New
Orleans on llesureiy antebellum South Cruises Up ·the
legendary Mississippi, "The

-,-------·----- ·

. B-1- The Sunday Tlmes-Sentinel, SWJday, ~- 26, 1976

MASON, W. Va. - The
Sunday School Class of Betty
Pauley's had a gift exchange
and Christmas party recently
at the horne of Mrs. Dixie
McCaulley this week. There
were ·15 present. They also
went caroling. Hot chocolate,
cookies and donuts were
served following the caroling.
Sunday school attendance
oo Dec. It wu 61.
Glfla were prosented to
Ivan Cardwell, wife and son,
by the Sunday School.
A Cristmas program was
given by the chlidr~n snd
teenagers Wednesday
evening, Dec. Z2.
Sunday school and- a
message IJ! by Ivan Cardwell;
The Plalas, Ohio eaeh Sunday
morning at 9:4S. Evening
services SWJday and Wed-

nesday, 7:30, lire also bY Ivan
Cardwell.
Meetings are in the United
Steel Workers Uhion Hall on
Railroad St., between Horton
and Pomeroy Streets . .
Everyooe is invited.

We rn er, tt rea din g,
''Christmas Time,' ' Mr:;.
..: Louise 0€tvis, j( C hr islmt:~s

Is," Mrs. Bernice Bnkt!r,
"Once Upon a Sta1· ~' illc'&lt;i
Night," Mrs. Gwinnie White,
"'The Christmas Song," Mrs. ·
Pearl Hof fm a n, " The
Christmas Glicsl ,"

Mrs.

lsqbei!c Winebrenner, "In
Readiness for Chl"istn1as",
Mrs. Owen, "One Way Out of
Gift Giving."
Members were sealetl at
tabies"for a buffet of salads,
desse1"1!; and coffee served by
Mrs. Wt!l'ller. The dccora·
lions were cxtunsive for the
occasion. Mrs. While will

Mr. and Mrs. Alan D. .Evans

Rhonda fo Miller
weds in November

GALLIPOLIS - 1'he First white ribbon.
Presbyterlun Ch urch in
Mrs. Evans was attlrcli In a
Gallipolis was the setting for long champa~n e boucle knit
the Nov . 6 wedding of Rhonda sweater dress fenturlng 11
Jo Miller lind Alan Dean cowl neck, long sleeves nnd
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mrs. Marilyn
Schoenborn of Hamilton, is annoWlcing the engagement of
Evans. The Revs. Frank and self belt. She wore n corsn~e
her daughter, Marilyn SUzanne Mize, to Or. Mark Alan
Tura Hayes officiated the of pink cnrnations nnd pink
6:30 p.m . double ring and white satin ribbon.
Walker of Toledo. Dr. Walker is the son of Dr. and Mrs.
hoot the Janm.try meeting .
lsom C. Walker, Jr., of Gallipolis. Miss Mize, a cum laude
ceremony .
· A reception was held im·
gradUBte of Kenyon College, will _graduate from ·the
1be bride Is the daughter of mediately foli o wln~ the
University of Cincinnati College of Medicine in JWle, 1977.
ce remony In the church
:::::;::::::::::::::~ ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Mrs. Karen Miller, I&lt;Jwcr
An August wedding is planned,
River Rd ., Galiipolis, and fellowship room . 1'hc four tier
SUNOA Y DEADLINE
Donald Miller, Crown City, wedding cake wus baked by
The deadline for we~dlng
and the groom's parents are Mrs. Denver Walker. In I&gt;IUte
and engagement notices
Mrs. Peggy B. Evans, 5 Vine of the traditional bride and
and soeiely aews· Items for
Sl, Galli[loils, and Merrill L. groom the cake was topped
the SUIIday Times-8cntlncl
Evans, Gallipolis,
with a small 1&gt;ewter bowl of
Is 12 lioon on the 'l'huflday
Oqjanlst Mrs. Merlyn flowers with the hrlde ond
CHESHIRE - The Gaiiia Kiddie Shop, Gallipolis, Jack preceding publication.
RoBS, and Soloist John ~~cker b'l"OOm's names and wedding
Meigs Community Action &amp; Jill's, Bob Evans Drive Inn, Information may be turned . provided the music. Selec- date engraved on it.
Agency Head St.art . Child Clark's. Jewelry, Newberry In or mailed to the office of
tions Included "Spt!ak Softly
Ser-ving at the reception
Development Program would Sporting Goods, Tawney's tbe Gallipolis Dally
Love," &lt;~We've Only Just were Mrs. Fern Evans, Mrs.
Begun" and j' A Time for Us."
like to thank the following Jewelers, Gaillpolis Elks Tribune or Pomeroy Dally
Sentinel. Eagagemenl and . Solos included "Today ," "I Jack Knight and Mrs. IJm y
contributors who helped Club.
Kingery. ·
weddlag
forms
are
Love·Thee" and "They Were
make the Head ~tart
Be~ , . F~anku~,. Slifflers,
Registerin g guests w11 a
upon request.
Children's Christmus parties Middleport, Spencers available
You." "The Lord's Prayer" Vicki Uoyd, Gallipolis, ond
.
in Gallia and Meigs CoWltles Markei, Fabric Center, ·::: : : : ::::::::::·:~ :::::: :: :::: ::::: :::::;:: : :: ;:;:;::: :: ::::::::::;:;:;:;:; was sung during the programs were passed out by
ceremony. The recesslona I Karen Snyder, Ga!Upolis.
such a success :
Kiddie Shop, Middleport,
was the ~ 'Wedding March."
Krogers, Mark Johnson , Duttons . Drug Store, Big
A graduate of Gulliu
BaiTs, ,Pony Keg, Murphy's Jim's Market, Middleport
The chur~h was decorated · Academy lllgh School, Mrs.
with two tllbralich candelabra Evans was employed at the
Ohio Valley Bank, 1st Book store, Dudley's Florist,
National .Bank, Jo Ann Middleport, Village Pharand two ~ending baskets of Western Panc[!k c House,
Fabrics, Moore's, Shake ' macy, Fabric Shop, ShamMIDDLEPORT - The powder pink ca rnatlons and Inc., before her rnari'iage.
Shoppe, -Heiner's, N.K .M. my's Carry Out, Gateway holiday party of the ''Forever Yours" red roses
Mr. Evans, also u grudu•te
Originals, Valley Bell, Dock Market, R.C. Bottling Co., Homebuilders Class · of the with pink and white satin of Gallia Academy Is emInn, Carl's Shoe Store, Jones Harold Brown, D.D.S., Keith Middleport Church of Christ ribbon . The family pews were ployed by Carter &amp; Eva ns,
Boys, Revco, Brunicardi's, Riggs, D.D.S.
was held Tuesday night at the decorated with pink satin Transportation, Inc.
bows.
Dudley's, Gallipolis, Tope's,
Gilbert's Garage, Cheshire, church.
Following a wedding trip to
Given in marriage by her · Florida, the couple resides at
P.J.'s.
Ingels Furniture, Rawlings
Clay Tuttle had tbe opening
Country Fare, Paul Davies Coats Funeral Home, Eagles prayer, and Denver Rice uncle, Dale Fife, the bride 5 Vine Street, Gllllip&lt;\lls.
Jtwelers, Stiffler's , l..ooge, Pomeroy, Odds 'n presented devotions using a wore a gown of sheer
Out-of·town guets Included
GaUipolis, Flowerland, A. &amp; Ends Gift Shop, Betsy Ross, reading on the Jewish holiday organza. Ruffles edged the Mr. and Mrs. Dan Evans •ud
P. , Wendy's, Long John 7-up Bottling Co., Shuler's and slides on ihe life of Christ long fitted sleeves at the wrist daughter, Janie, Columbus;
Sliver's, Burger Chef, Allison MBrket, Sewing . Center, and the 400 years between lire and a wider ruffle flowed at Mrs. Phyllfs Walker, Plains·
MINERSVILLE - Christ· Electric, Amy's Style Center, Citizens National Bank, Bahr old and the new test.ament. the hemline of the skirt and boro, N. J .; Gary Burrows,
mas readings were given by Empire Furniture, ABC Clothiers.
Mrs.
Kathlyn
Members exchanged gifts. chapel train. The neckline, and
the members at the Wed·
bodice,
sleeves
and
skirt
Bemesderfer,
Pt.
Pleasant
,
Attending were Mr. and
nesday meetng of the United
were
accented
with
Alencon
W.
Va
.
Mrs. Denver Rice, Mrs.
Methodist Women of the
Dorothy Roach , Mr. and Mrs. lace Dowers and seed pearls.
'
Minersville Church.
Raymond Cole, Mr. and Mrs. Her la~dged finger tip veil
Mrs. Doris Grueser
WIUtam Grueser, Mr. and of illusion fell from a Juliet
presided at the meeting
KINGS n:n~ o
Mrs. Herman Kincaid, Mr. cap of matching lace. She
which opened with gro~p
and Mrs. Bud Wilson, Mr. and carried . a bouquet of . POMEROY - M1·. and
singing of "0 Come All Ye
Mrs. Clay Tuttle and Mr. and "Forever Yours" red roses, Mr.s. I!Jdward F. King, were
Faithful" and prayer by Mrs.
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart, the pink carnations, baby's guests Sunday at a dinner
Stella Grueser. Mrs. Ruby
Rev . and Mrs. George Glaze, breath, greenery and ribbon pa11y honoring them on their
Grueser read Luke 2, verses
Trey and Clinton. Refresh- streamers of pink satin. Her 50th wedding annivcrsm·y .
12 to 25. Readings were
ATHENS - The.beginning Cucumbers, tomatoes and ments were served by Mrs. only jewelry was a pearl The dinner was given by their
"Christmas for Children" of winter doesn't mean the string beans ripen.. Coffee Rice, Mrs. Grueser and Mrs. necklace belonging to her g1·anddaughter, Diana Kin
and the "Trimming the Tree" end of the gardening season . grows and even mushrooms Tuttle.
mother.
. at her home in Rucine . Gl • .
by Mrs. June Sayre; Crockett's Victory Garden tip their caps this winter on
Jerri J:'lle, Grafton, Wis., and a double bell cuke " ' •'
"Legends of Christmas" by marches on - through the Crockett's Victory Garden .
sister of the bride, served as prescntc'&lt;i to the honored co ,
Mrs. Mary Russell; "Christ- cold winter and on into spring
As spring approaches, Jim
maid of honor. She wore a ple. Attending were Mr. m· I
mas Past," Mrs. Helen with morr- valuable in· shows you how to start
long bUrgundy crepe dress, Mrs. King, Kenny King, .M1
Maag; "What Is Christmas?" fonnatlon for both the indoor seedlings inside for later ·
with eibow•length bell and Mrs. Jeff M'·"""' anc
by Mrs. Ullie Starcher; "The and outdoor gardener every transplanting to your wann
sleeves, and an empire Diuna King.
Bread of Ufe" by Mrs. Stella SWlday at 7 p.m. on WOUB weather
waistline. She carried a long-.
garden
and
Grueser; "Christmas Is for TV:IJJ and WOUC TV 44.
demonstrates bow to shapt!
stemmed red ro se with
Memories" by "Mrs. Mildred
Now your house plants as up your soil for a glorious
greenery and pink satin
DINNER GIVEN
Phillips; "Christmas Tide" well as yqur outdoor plants harvest all summer.
ribbon.
POMEROY
- Mr. and
POMEROY - Mrs. Virgie
by Mrs. Ruby Grueser; and can reap t~ benefits of Jim
Other attendants were Mrs. Mrs. Karl Grueser and son ,
Crockett's Victory Garden
"The Miracle" by Mrs. Doris Crockett's
wealth
of is produced for PBS by Klein observed her 52nd bir· Jodie Davis, Gallipolis, sister l..arTy, hosted a family dinner
thday on Swtday with a larni· of the groom; Gale Jones, Rio
Grueser.
knowledge . He 'll demon · WGBH Boston.
ly party. She was horn on Grande; Mrs. Regina party Sunday .In a pre·
A report was given on strate techniques to take your
[)ec. l9, 1924.
. (Robinette ) Burrows, Christmas celebration. Atflowers sent to shut-in existin_g garden through the
Visiting with her on her bir· Gallipolis, and Tabalba Fife, tending were Mr. and Mrs.
members. A gift was winter sea!IOn and e~plaln th~
thday were Charles H. Klein, Plainsboro, New Jersey, Patrick Quinn and son, Pat,
presentedtotheminister.and care and . repair of a
OFFICES NOTED
Sr., Katie Klein, Tonuny served as junior attendant. Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
gifts wer~also ~ntto a needy staggeringly wide range of
POMEROY - The Meigs Klein, Kenny Klein, Paul They aU had matching gowns Jack McDoWell, Columbus;
family and a family with Ill· house plants. Holiday
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grueser
ness. In lieu of a gift ex· poinsettias, African violets, Col!lltY Unit of the American Klein, Connie Klein, Myrtle of powder pink. They also and Kimberly, Caldwell;
change members contributed gardenias and orchids bloom. Canc~r Society now has of- Mae Klein, Donnie Klein, carried long-stemmed red Mrs. Welby Wshiey, Mrs.
flees In tbe basement of the Tanuny Klein, Edna Klein, roses with greenery and pink
to the UMW treasury for
Debbie
Reltmire
and
former
Meigs County Henry Klein, Trean~ Klein, satin ribbon.
project work. On Monday
Belinda
.
Gifts
were
exDavid
J..
Klein
,
Gene
'children's home building. The
evening the members went to
Flower girl was Donna changed.
phone number at the new Klein,Sr., Aunda Klein, Beth Mills of Crown City. She
Crow's Steal house for a .
office is 992-7531. The mailing Michelle Klein, Charles H. earned a basket of pink rose
hOliday dinner.
FIRST CHILD BORN
LETART FALLS - Mr. address of tbe unit is P. 0 . Klein, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Den- petals.
VISIT ENDED
nis Boyd, Dennis Boyd, Jr.,
and Mrs. J.ewis Pickett of Box 692, Pomeroy.
Jay Evans, Gallipolis,
SYRACUSE - Mr. and
Joey Boyd, Jennie .Boyd, Bill brother of tbe groom, served Mrs, Herbert Parker of here
l,etart aref announclng the
Klein, and GeneKiein, Jr.
birth of their first child, a
as beat man. Ushers were and son Robert of Marietta
John Davis, brother·in-law of have returned from a visit
gifts. Mrs . .Koacll """given a daughter, tracy Michelle,
the groorp, and Scott Miiier, with their son and family, Mr.
gift from the ieachers since Dec.l3 at the Pleasant Valley
brother- of the bride, both of and Mrs. Howard K. Parker
she is primary superln· Hospital. The ·Infant weighed CAPTAIN TRANSFERRED
!lAC/NE ,_ Captain And
Galllpolis. Ring bearer was and ,.n'of Morgan City, La. ·
tendent. A gilt .was also five pounds 1 one ounc,e.
. DAUGHTER BORN
presented to Mrs. Glaze .
Grandparents are Mr. and ·~trs . Ed. Brown and son have
POMEROY - Gene and Clinton Davis, nephew of the
movcrl
to.
Columbus.
Capt.
Mrs.
Charles
Michael
and
Refreshments were served
Charlotte Wolfe, Lincoln Hill, groom, Galllpolls.
Mrs. Miller· chose a long
ASK TOWED
· to those named and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Max Pickett. Brown was tcansferred to the Pomeroy, are announcing the
A marriage license was
Thelma Boyer. Mrs, Jennifer Great-~1·andparenL• are Mr. Air Force Base, Columbus. birth of a daughter, Julee polyester knit turquoise V·
Sheets. Miss Frances Roush, and Mrs. Russell Findley, Mr~. Brown and son have Gale Marie, Dec. 16 at the neck gown with front gathers issued to John Patter!IOn
Mr~. M•ry Hysell, _
Mrs. Nora Mrs. Marie Michael. Mrs. been at the home of her Holzer Medical Center. Julee at the waist and long bell And erson , 25, Athens ,
Rice and Mr! . Sharon Nrl!i Pickett and Mrs. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin weighed eight pounds. nine sleeves. She wore a corsage Georgia, and Rebecca Wright
Wilcoxen for several weeks. ounces.
of turquoise carn~tions and Card, 22, Pomeroy.
HnssPtl WHrrr'll
stew"rt.

..

Marilyn Suzanne Mize

Contributors ·thanked

Party he/4

R~adings

presented

Program to provide.
plant information

Virgie·Klein

has birthckzy

Yule patty held recently
MIDDLEPORT ~ Mrs.
Betty McKinley hosted a
Chris~mas party for the
teacher• of the Primary
. Department of the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ
Sunday School recently.
Games were played with
prizes goin« to Mrs. Becky
Glaze, Mrs. Dorothy Roach
and Mr~. Debbie Gerlach.
Those attending exchanged
I

I

'
1,~

·'

�A-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sw1day, Dec. 26, 1976

Unique overnight inland· st~amboats
begin spring season on March fifth

Big River."

For spring cruising,
America 's only ove rnight
steamboats return to the days
of magnificent mansion s
furnished with the finery of
Europe, beautiful plantation
ga rdens filled with the scent
of magnolias, azaleas and
camellias, and a mighty river
that is still the lifeblood of the
South,
Beginning March 5, seven
night cruises on the luxurious
new MiBSissippi Queen compl ete with swimming
r)ool, sauna, movie theater,
elevators and beauty salon depart New Orleans every
Saturday at 9 p.m..for round
-trip cruises to Natchez. Port
stops are St. FrancisvHie,
Louisiana, for a visit to
Rosedown Plantation .and
Garde n a ; Natchez ,
Mississippi, for Pilgrimage
and a tour of ihe town's
bea utiful ante-bellum
mansions, inclUding historic

Stanton Hall ; ·and Baton
Rouge for a walk through the
workers' cabins, blacksmith
shop, sugar house and one
room schoolhouse of the L.SU
Rural Ufe Museum.
The
Delta
Queen
inaugurates 1977 on February
4 with a two ni ght weekend
cruise round trip from New
Orleans to Houmas House
Plantation.
She then embarks on a

"

"

series of eleven night round

trip cruises from New
Orleans to Memphis whi ch
can also be booked as six
ni ghts ·New Orleans to
Memphis· or five nights
Memphis to New Oreieans.
The six night cruises
feature port calls at Oak
Ailey Plantation for a tour of
the Greek Revival mansion
set right on the West Bank of
the Mississippi ; Vicksburg
for a tour of the city's Civil
War battlefield, the Court·
house Museum which houses

'

the South's large•! collection
of Civil War artifacts, and
Cedar Grove, a man sion
where J effcrson Davis
frequently st~yed; and
Memphis for a visit to Beale
Street where W. C. Handy
Invented the blues and the
Botanical Gardens where ali
the flowers and shrubs· of
Spring will be in full bloom.
The ·five night cruises

.

II 's Christmas Eve, a time
for giving, but authorities say
oome people still persist in
stealing and destroying.
In Petersburg, Va ., vandals
broke into a school Thursday
and destroyed Chrisbnas
gifts, toys and food that had
been colle.cted for poor
families and the elderly .
A path of crushed gifts and
splattered food was found at
the Christmas Clearinghouse,
which had planned to give the
items to hundreds of

persons.

"I don't know what to tell
the people," said Virginia
Snooks, Clearinghouse
direcror . "I guess they will
have to go horn~ and tell their
children Santa Claus had his
pack stolen."

The problem was mitigated
somewhat when word of the
incident spread through tbe
tqwn and many residents
responded by bringing in new
gifts.
"This makes our tragedy a
little more bearable," Mrs .

Snooks said.
In Boston Thursday, a
school teacher said she was
robbed of Christmas gifts she
bought for children in her
class.

Margaret Inness, 32, said a
teen-ager armed with a lmile
robbed her in front of the
Winthrop Elementary School.
::be said he took the gifts, her
handbag containing $20 and
her car keys .
A 1 s o in Massach~setls,
bureaucratic thoughtlessness
· may mean fewer gifts for
some children.
State
Welfare
Commissioner Alexander
::barp said some of the money
donated to buy Christmas
toys for children II) foster
homes had been used by a
former state official last
spring to finance a trip to a
convention in Hawaii.
Tlie commissioner said the
lrlp by former assistant Wei·
fare Comm.issioner Beth
Warren to a foster parents
convention caused a $1,000
shortage in the fund .
As a result, he said, in the
.futilre checks drawn from the
money donated by the Malt
Beverages Association will
be made out to the stores
where toys are bought rather
than to Welfare Department
officia~ and the checks wiU
be coWllersigned by someone
outside the department 's
social services division.

Neighbors helping out
wife of Gihnore victi.nt
SALT LAKE CITY (UP! )
- While Gary Gilmore
contemplates spending
Christmas alone in his Death
Row prison cell, the pregnant
wife of one of his victims will
receive gifts and financial
help . from her Mormon ·
neighbors.
Gilmore, locked in isolation
as he awaits his Jan. 17 dale
with the firing squad, may
not be allowed visitors on
Christmas . The 36-year.Oid
killer is serving 15 days in
. Solitary confinement
following a melee with
guards a week ago.
Prison rules usually forbid
visits by anyone but
attorneys, but officials said
the rules can be bent.
Meantime, the families of

•

the two yoWlg men Gilmore
has admitted killing durnig
hOldups last summer were
each preparing for the
holidays minus a loved one.
Dean Christensen, s
Mormon bishop in Provo,
Utah, said the families from
his church group were
donating money and gifts to
Mrs. Debbie Bushnell, widow
·of the man Gilmore was
convicted of kllling - Bennie
BuslmeU.
·· "Her "finances are very
low," the chW"ctunan sa id.
"Ali she has is a little .
industri al compensation
which she will recei ve for a

few more months. When that
fWl S out, we don't know
which way she will turn .':

•.

setting

up

monitoring

Oceanography, a special oil·
response.team was preparing
URi's $4 million research
vessel Endeavor for a
tracking trip into the Atlantic
next Tuesday .
"In previous spills, nobody
has ever been able to say
where all the oil has gone. W
e
hope to find that out this

remained of tbe bow was
gradUBUy filling with water.
The Coast Guard Thuroday
opened aU hatches on the bow
to expedite the slnking "so
·!he .will not be a hazard to
navigation," ·. a spokesman
said.
..
A Coast Guard spokesman
said observers on a• flight
over the slick saw about 3,000
seagulls of which "only about
125 were covered with oU."
"They also · flew over
Muskeget and Tuckernut
Isi;lnds west of Nantucket
and they didn't see any of the
seals which are usuaUy there.

1

l

systems to keep tabs on the
damage.
A 2fl-knot ooutheriy wind
pushed the oil slick from the time," said university
wrecked tanker Argo Mer· researcher Robert. Sexton.
chant - now more than 100
Not much was left today of
miles long ·- across the the 64()-foot Argo Merchant.
!IOUtllern edge of Georges The severed stern wa s
.. Bank. "It's like a fat hungry pointin( skyward at an awk·
sna ke," a Coast Guard ward angle and · what
spokesman said.
Icy waters have coagulated
th~ oil, forming tarlike
chunks , that have been '
snooped up by scientists
crisscrossing the slick in
research vessels. Navy
divers Thursday brought
sediment samples up from
the ocean floor near the
remains of the shattered
tanker.
Massachusetts officials
reported Thursday none of
the 7.6 million gallons of oil
from the -taf!.ker had yet
reached the floor of the
10,000'square-mlle fishing
gro~d, ohe of the most
important in the world.
If it does, experts fear it
may take years for the
·fishing grounds_to recover.
But even if it does not, or it
reaches the floor in tiny
amounts, scientists admit it
would be difficult to pinpoint
the extent of environmental
damage' in open seas.
The U. S. Environmental
Protection Agency 's Marine
and
Water
Quality
Laboratory has been named
''W.;:
to coordinate a II environmental impact studies
relating to the spill from the
Liberian-reglstered tanker,
which broke up Monday 27
miles off Nantucket Island
after running aground" on a
Aboard both the MisSISSlppl activities.
a c commodatio ns and shoal last week.
Queen and the Delta Queen,
Fares
aboard
the passage , ali meals and
" We are setting up a
passengers enjoy graciqus Mississippi Queen begin at snacks and entertainment. situation room with chart
"EXTRA CRISPY" Kentucky Fried Chicken Now
Available .. . Crisp On The OUtside - Moist 8nd
Old South dining, dancing and $504 per person . Fa res
Further information and boards so we can track
Tender On The Inside .
dixieland, professional floor aboard the Delta Queen begin brochures can be obtained things. By Monday we should
Now A\lailable At :
shows, kite flying out over the at $150 per person for the two from a travel agent or .The have a full blown com·
paddlewheel, play-it-yourself night cruises, 1285 for five Della Queen Steamboat Co., munications center," said
ca lliope concerts , and a nights,$342forsixnights, and pept. ZQ, 511 Main Street, Dr.· Jan C. Prager, chief of
passel of other ramstugenous $627 for eleven nights. Cruise Cincinnati , Ohio 45202. technical assistance.
Ph. 992 ·l431
0.
_ river jargon for exciting - fares include steamboat Telephone (513) 621·1445.
At the University of Rhode
, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•ls•llllanllld~'s~G•ra•d•ua•te-S•ch•o•ol•o•f------~-----------.,

'

Circle •
observes
holiday

Special decorations
foatured at Holzer

Preparing diabetic menu
nutrition ·series topic
. NELSONVILLE ~ During
the holiday season, wlth its
traditional goodies, the
family cook may have more
problems
than
usual
preparing menus for th~
diabetic.
Meal planning, always
difficult when there's a
diabetic in the family, wiD be
ooe of the topics cov~red in a
diabetes infonnatton series to
begin Jan. 19 at Hocking
Technical College.
The live part series, to be
held from 6:30 to 8;30 p. m.
Wednesdays through Feb. 23
in Hocking Tech's lecture
hall, Is free and open to
diabetics and members of.
their families. On the sixth
evening, to conclude the
series, participants will have
a potluck dinner, which will
prov;d,· further cooking
ideas.

fires, elegant gatherings and formal dinner
parties. It's your time to glow! See our
collection of the season's most dazzling
looks, all priced to give you plenty of
holiday spending money.

I

REGULAR PRICES

$16 TO $58

00

SALE. PRICES

S}l29 S4Q59

Savings of 30%
This sale of holiday ready to
wear
begins . Monday,
December 27 at 9:30a.m. Visit
Elberfelds Ready To Wear
Department on the Second
Floor, select an outfit or two
for your holiday parties and
really save . .

' '

Facts about diabetes will
be diBcusaed In tbe opening
session . Rosamond An·
derson, nutrition instructor at
Hocking Tech, will conduct
the Jan . 26 program on "Diet
and Diabetes," and on Feb. 2,
she wiD cover meal planning.
Suzanne Croci, Instructor
of nursing at the college, wili
lead the final two sessions.
Her Feb. 9 topic will be
"Taking Care of Yourself,"
and on Feb. 16, she will
disCuss "Rules of Health."

Because enrollment ls
limited to 30 people, It is
necessary to register in
advance . Additional in·
formation or registration
fonns may be obtained by
·writing to Hocking Technical
College, Nelsonville, Ohio,
4S764, or by phoning tbe
Health Careers Department
at 753-3591 Ext. 265.

Class exchanges gifts

ELBERFELDS 'IN. POMEROY

o

,,

I

gavlj d~votions using ' 'Aren' t

You Glad He Came" as her
mc'&lt;litation with scripture
from John 3, 16. The dedica.
lion prayer for the !ov.e girt _
offering was giv.en bjl Mrs.
Gwinnie While. Mrs. Wl'I'UCr
1-ead a pt!n sketch 01i the Mal·
locks mlssionaty family.
For the program each
member read a Chl'islmlis
article. Mrs. Sarli h !)awn
Owen had the story fl·om St.
Luke , Mrs . Whil e a
Christmas mcdii.Hlion , Mrs.

Carol Ann Bamitz

.

00

MIDDL EPOHT
Chri!;lmas project work was
reviewc'&lt;i at the 'l'ueway •
night m.,.ling of the Electa
Circle of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionai'Y Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
L11Urch held at the home of
'Mrs. Alwilda Werner.
Mrs. Bmtice Baker and
_.._.~.,._..-_.._.._.._....,.~_.j Mrs. Janice Gib9s...IDJl.pur·
chase gifts. for the residents
at th~ Meigs County lnfinna ry, and members were
l'emindc'&lt;i to take thoir old
Christmas canis to the next
mcoeting for another Spt!dal
project. Mrs. Beulah While

•

· It's the season of snowflakes and crackling

'

Projects
reviewed

-

POMEROY - An old
fashioned Christmas was
enjoyed by the Friendly
. , : , Circle of the Trinity Chureh ·
· i
Tuesday evening with Miss
!'
Mary Virginia Reibel
planning the affair as a final
tribute ·to the bicentennial
year.
For the program she read a
touching tribute to the
PLANS TO WED - AruioWJcement Is made of the
matriarch of a local family
engagement and forthcoming marriage of Carol Ann
who inspired and guided a
Barnitz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gary A. Barnitz, Rt. I,
large family in the
Belpre, to Jerome H. Harman, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs:
preparation and tradition of
Jerome H. Harman, Sr., 1201 Putnam Howe Drive,
their annual Christmas
Belpre. Miss Barnitz, a senior at Warren High School, Is
celebration. She noted that at
employed by Drs. Lofty, Hill and Ritchie, optometrists,
the center was always the
Belpre. She is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hayman
·true mearung of Christmas.
Barnitz, Lincoln His., Pomeroy, and Mrs. D. H. Robeson,
Mrs. Kenneth Harris used
Middleport. Grealof:randparents are Mrs. w. 0. Barnltz,
"A New Way to Sey Merry
Pomeroy and Mrs. Dean Brinker, Racine, Mr. Harman, a
Christmas" as the devotional
1974 graduate of Bo!pre High School, is employed by the
topic which was followed by a
Keebler Company and is CtD'rently attending the St. .
Chrisimas
prayer by Mrs.
. Clairsville branch·of Ohio University. The wedding will be,
Pearl
Mora.
an event of JWJe II, at 2::lO p.m., in the Porterfield Baptist
Reports were given on
Church, Little Hocking, with tbe pastor. Henry Lancaster
completed
projects and notes
officiating. The custom of open church will be observed.
.from
out-of-town
members
.
'
were read. Program books
for the new year prepared by
Mrs. Leonard Jewell were
distributed. The contest in
charge of Miss· Mary E.
Chapman was won by Mrs.
Eiza Gilmo1'e, Jr. who also
received the door prize."Agift
· exchange was held around a
lighted tree. Mrs. David
Russell gave ea'"ch member
GALUPOUS-' Two areas · that has been in use an inspirational calendar
of Holzer Medical Center lluroughout December. The from her florist shop.
enjoyed by both hospital staff wooden wreath with five
An assortment of sandmembers and the public have candies was designed and wiches, salad, homemade
been decorated lor Christmas constructed by Don Merry, a candies and coffee were
by various groups and In· member of Hope . United served. Mrs. Belva Sloan and
diVlduals.
,Methodist
Church
in Eri~ RuBSe!l we~e guests .. ...
The hospital chapel has Wellston. - '
'
' ·
An old fashioned basket of
been decorated with white
The French 500 Room, In handcrafted fruit, holly ~nd
poinsettias,
door use throughout the week for tapers decorated the refresh·
arrangements and swags on numerous holiday gatherings tnent ta·bte. Napkin rings and
each of the pews, courtesy of including the
patient · Williamsburg replicas of
the
Regional
Nurses Chflstmas Eve party, was . Christmas tree ornaments
Association, a e roup _of decorated with holiday , made .by Miss Reibel were
nurses. from the area.
trlnunlngs by the operating given as favors . Miss Erma
Elias Sisson of Vinton grew room staff at Holzer. A piano Smith ·assisted Miss Reibel
and donated red poinsettias was placed in the room for with the serving.
for the chapel. . ·
Chrisbnas use by Ward's
Also decorating the chapel Keyboard, GaUipolls.
is a special advent wreath

,,,

Pantsuits • long .Skirts • Velvet Blazers
. Dressy 'Blouses .

I

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

Sarah Carsey Charlene Hoeflich j
446-2342
992-2156 !
.

feHive tididiiY [)~
'

...

Woman's World

_,_.....,__._....,... _ _......;,_.._......::._.._.._..
_
.

ELBERFELD$ IN' POMEROY

..

-

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Pomeroy-Middleport

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE

~:~~~:zt~~~s ~~to~e~:uh~::

Not all have
Yule spiFit
.

NANTUCKET, Ma ss.
tUPI) - Officials and
·scientists, helpless to contain
the ecological ravages of the
Atlantic Coast's worst oil
spill, concentrated today on

•

CINCINNATI - From
February through April, the
fabled Delta Queen and the
elegant new Mississi ppi
"Queen steam out of New
Orleans on llesureiy antebellum South Cruises Up ·the
legendary Mississippi, "The

-,-------·----- ·

. B-1- The Sunday Tlmes-Sentinel, SWJday, ~- 26, 1976

MASON, W. Va. - The
Sunday School Class of Betty
Pauley's had a gift exchange
and Christmas party recently
at the horne of Mrs. Dixie
McCaulley this week. There
were ·15 present. They also
went caroling. Hot chocolate,
cookies and donuts were
served following the caroling.
Sunday school attendance
oo Dec. It wu 61.
Glfla were prosented to
Ivan Cardwell, wife and son,
by the Sunday School.
A Cristmas program was
given by the chlidr~n snd
teenagers Wednesday
evening, Dec. Z2.
Sunday school and- a
message IJ! by Ivan Cardwell;
The Plalas, Ohio eaeh Sunday
morning at 9:4S. Evening
services SWJday and Wed-

nesday, 7:30, lire also bY Ivan
Cardwell.
Meetings are in the United
Steel Workers Uhion Hall on
Railroad St., between Horton
and Pomeroy Streets . .
Everyooe is invited.

We rn er, tt rea din g,
''Christmas Time,' ' Mr:;.
..: Louise 0€tvis, j( C hr islmt:~s

Is," Mrs. Bernice Bnkt!r,
"Once Upon a Sta1· ~' illc'&lt;i
Night," Mrs. Gwinnie White,
"'The Christmas Song," Mrs. ·
Pearl Hof fm a n, " The
Christmas Glicsl ,"

Mrs.

lsqbei!c Winebrenner, "In
Readiness for Chl"istn1as",
Mrs. Owen, "One Way Out of
Gift Giving."
Members were sealetl at
tabies"for a buffet of salads,
desse1"1!; and coffee served by
Mrs. Wt!l'ller. The dccora·
lions were cxtunsive for the
occasion. Mrs. While will

Mr. and Mrs. Alan D. .Evans

Rhonda fo Miller
weds in November

GALLIPOLIS - 1'he First white ribbon.
Presbyterlun Ch urch in
Mrs. Evans was attlrcli In a
Gallipolis was the setting for long champa~n e boucle knit
the Nov . 6 wedding of Rhonda sweater dress fenturlng 11
Jo Miller lind Alan Dean cowl neck, long sleeves nnd
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mrs. Marilyn
Schoenborn of Hamilton, is annoWlcing the engagement of
Evans. The Revs. Frank and self belt. She wore n corsn~e
her daughter, Marilyn SUzanne Mize, to Or. Mark Alan
Tura Hayes officiated the of pink cnrnations nnd pink
6:30 p.m . double ring and white satin ribbon.
Walker of Toledo. Dr. Walker is the son of Dr. and Mrs.
hoot the Janm.try meeting .
lsom C. Walker, Jr., of Gallipolis. Miss Mize, a cum laude
ceremony .
· A reception was held im·
gradUBte of Kenyon College, will _graduate from ·the
1be bride Is the daughter of mediately foli o wln~ the
University of Cincinnati College of Medicine in JWle, 1977.
ce remony In the church
:::::;::::::::::::::~ ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Mrs. Karen Miller, I&lt;Jwcr
An August wedding is planned,
River Rd ., Galiipolis, and fellowship room . 1'hc four tier
SUNOA Y DEADLINE
Donald Miller, Crown City, wedding cake wus baked by
The deadline for we~dlng
and the groom's parents are Mrs. Denver Walker. In I&gt;IUte
and engagement notices
Mrs. Peggy B. Evans, 5 Vine of the traditional bride and
and soeiely aews· Items for
Sl, Galli[loils, and Merrill L. groom the cake was topped
the SUIIday Times-8cntlncl
Evans, Gallipolis,
with a small 1&gt;ewter bowl of
Is 12 lioon on the 'l'huflday
Oqjanlst Mrs. Merlyn flowers with the hrlde ond
CHESHIRE - The Gaiiia Kiddie Shop, Gallipolis, Jack preceding publication.
RoBS, and Soloist John ~~cker b'l"OOm's names and wedding
Meigs Community Action &amp; Jill's, Bob Evans Drive Inn, Information may be turned . provided the music. Selec- date engraved on it.
Agency Head St.art . Child Clark's. Jewelry, Newberry In or mailed to the office of
tions Included "Spt!ak Softly
Ser-ving at the reception
Development Program would Sporting Goods, Tawney's tbe Gallipolis Dally
Love," &lt;~We've Only Just were Mrs. Fern Evans, Mrs.
Begun" and j' A Time for Us."
like to thank the following Jewelers, Gaillpolis Elks Tribune or Pomeroy Dally
Sentinel. Eagagemenl and . Solos included "Today ," "I Jack Knight and Mrs. IJm y
contributors who helped Club.
Kingery. ·
weddlag
forms
are
Love·Thee" and "They Were
make the Head ~tart
Be~ , . F~anku~,. Slifflers,
Registerin g guests w11 a
upon request.
Children's Christmus parties Middleport, Spencers available
You." "The Lord's Prayer" Vicki Uoyd, Gallipolis, ond
.
in Gallia and Meigs CoWltles Markei, Fabric Center, ·::: : : : ::::::::::·:~ :::::: :: :::: ::::: :::::;:: : :: ;:;:;::: :: ::::::::::;:;:;:;:; was sung during the programs were passed out by
ceremony. The recesslona I Karen Snyder, Ga!Upolis.
such a success :
Kiddie Shop, Middleport,
was the ~ 'Wedding March."
Krogers, Mark Johnson , Duttons . Drug Store, Big
A graduate of Gulliu
BaiTs, ,Pony Keg, Murphy's Jim's Market, Middleport
The chur~h was decorated · Academy lllgh School, Mrs.
with two tllbralich candelabra Evans was employed at the
Ohio Valley Bank, 1st Book store, Dudley's Florist,
National .Bank, Jo Ann Middleport, Village Pharand two ~ending baskets of Western Panc[!k c House,
Fabrics, Moore's, Shake ' macy, Fabric Shop, ShamMIDDLEPORT - The powder pink ca rnatlons and Inc., before her rnari'iage.
Shoppe, -Heiner's, N.K .M. my's Carry Out, Gateway holiday party of the ''Forever Yours" red roses
Mr. Evans, also u grudu•te
Originals, Valley Bell, Dock Market, R.C. Bottling Co., Homebuilders Class · of the with pink and white satin of Gallia Academy Is emInn, Carl's Shoe Store, Jones Harold Brown, D.D.S., Keith Middleport Church of Christ ribbon . The family pews were ployed by Carter &amp; Eva ns,
Boys, Revco, Brunicardi's, Riggs, D.D.S.
was held Tuesday night at the decorated with pink satin Transportation, Inc.
bows.
Dudley's, Gallipolis, Tope's,
Gilbert's Garage, Cheshire, church.
Following a wedding trip to
Given in marriage by her · Florida, the couple resides at
P.J.'s.
Ingels Furniture, Rawlings
Clay Tuttle had tbe opening
Country Fare, Paul Davies Coats Funeral Home, Eagles prayer, and Denver Rice uncle, Dale Fife, the bride 5 Vine Street, Gllllip&lt;\lls.
Jtwelers, Stiffler's , l..ooge, Pomeroy, Odds 'n presented devotions using a wore a gown of sheer
Out-of·town guets Included
GaUipolis, Flowerland, A. &amp; Ends Gift Shop, Betsy Ross, reading on the Jewish holiday organza. Ruffles edged the Mr. and Mrs. Dan Evans •ud
P. , Wendy's, Long John 7-up Bottling Co., Shuler's and slides on ihe life of Christ long fitted sleeves at the wrist daughter, Janie, Columbus;
Sliver's, Burger Chef, Allison MBrket, Sewing . Center, and the 400 years between lire and a wider ruffle flowed at Mrs. Phyllfs Walker, Plains·
MINERSVILLE - Christ· Electric, Amy's Style Center, Citizens National Bank, Bahr old and the new test.ament. the hemline of the skirt and boro, N. J .; Gary Burrows,
mas readings were given by Empire Furniture, ABC Clothiers.
Mrs.
Kathlyn
Members exchanged gifts. chapel train. The neckline, and
the members at the Wed·
bodice,
sleeves
and
skirt
Bemesderfer,
Pt.
Pleasant
,
Attending were Mr. and
nesday meetng of the United
were
accented
with
Alencon
W.
Va
.
Mrs. Denver Rice, Mrs.
Methodist Women of the
Dorothy Roach , Mr. and Mrs. lace Dowers and seed pearls.
'
Minersville Church.
Raymond Cole, Mr. and Mrs. Her la~dged finger tip veil
Mrs. Doris Grueser
WIUtam Grueser, Mr. and of illusion fell from a Juliet
presided at the meeting
KINGS n:n~ o
Mrs. Herman Kincaid, Mr. cap of matching lace. She
which opened with gro~p
and Mrs. Bud Wilson, Mr. and carried . a bouquet of . POMEROY - M1·. and
singing of "0 Come All Ye
Mrs. Clay Tuttle and Mr. and "Forever Yours" red roses, Mr.s. I!Jdward F. King, were
Faithful" and prayer by Mrs.
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart, the pink carnations, baby's guests Sunday at a dinner
Stella Grueser. Mrs. Ruby
Rev . and Mrs. George Glaze, breath, greenery and ribbon pa11y honoring them on their
Grueser read Luke 2, verses
Trey and Clinton. Refresh- streamers of pink satin. Her 50th wedding annivcrsm·y .
12 to 25. Readings were
ATHENS - The.beginning Cucumbers, tomatoes and ments were served by Mrs. only jewelry was a pearl The dinner was given by their
"Christmas for Children" of winter doesn't mean the string beans ripen.. Coffee Rice, Mrs. Grueser and Mrs. necklace belonging to her g1·anddaughter, Diana Kin
and the "Trimming the Tree" end of the gardening season . grows and even mushrooms Tuttle.
mother.
. at her home in Rucine . Gl • .
by Mrs. June Sayre; Crockett's Victory Garden tip their caps this winter on
Jerri J:'lle, Grafton, Wis., and a double bell cuke " ' •'
"Legends of Christmas" by marches on - through the Crockett's Victory Garden .
sister of the bride, served as prescntc'&lt;i to the honored co ,
Mrs. Mary Russell; "Christ- cold winter and on into spring
As spring approaches, Jim
maid of honor. She wore a ple. Attending were Mr. m· I
mas Past," Mrs. Helen with morr- valuable in· shows you how to start
long bUrgundy crepe dress, Mrs. King, Kenny King, .M1
Maag; "What Is Christmas?" fonnatlon for both the indoor seedlings inside for later ·
with eibow•length bell and Mrs. Jeff M'·"""' anc
by Mrs. Ullie Starcher; "The and outdoor gardener every transplanting to your wann
sleeves, and an empire Diuna King.
Bread of Ufe" by Mrs. Stella SWlday at 7 p.m. on WOUB weather
waistline. She carried a long-.
garden
and
Grueser; "Christmas Is for TV:IJJ and WOUC TV 44.
demonstrates bow to shapt!
stemmed red ro se with
Memories" by "Mrs. Mildred
Now your house plants as up your soil for a glorious
greenery and pink satin
DINNER GIVEN
Phillips; "Christmas Tide" well as yqur outdoor plants harvest all summer.
ribbon.
POMEROY
- Mr. and
POMEROY - Mrs. Virgie
by Mrs. Ruby Grueser; and can reap t~ benefits of Jim
Other attendants were Mrs. Mrs. Karl Grueser and son ,
Crockett's Victory Garden
"The Miracle" by Mrs. Doris Crockett's
wealth
of is produced for PBS by Klein observed her 52nd bir· Jodie Davis, Gallipolis, sister l..arTy, hosted a family dinner
thday on Swtday with a larni· of the groom; Gale Jones, Rio
Grueser.
knowledge . He 'll demon · WGBH Boston.
ly party. She was horn on Grande; Mrs. Regina party Sunday .In a pre·
A report was given on strate techniques to take your
[)ec. l9, 1924.
. (Robinette ) Burrows, Christmas celebration. Atflowers sent to shut-in existin_g garden through the
Visiting with her on her bir· Gallipolis, and Tabalba Fife, tending were Mr. and Mrs.
members. A gift was winter sea!IOn and e~plaln th~
thday were Charles H. Klein, Plainsboro, New Jersey, Patrick Quinn and son, Pat,
presentedtotheminister.and care and . repair of a
OFFICES NOTED
Sr., Katie Klein, Tonuny served as junior attendant. Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
gifts wer~also ~ntto a needy staggeringly wide range of
POMEROY - The Meigs Klein, Kenny Klein, Paul They aU had matching gowns Jack McDoWell, Columbus;
family and a family with Ill· house plants. Holiday
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grueser
ness. In lieu of a gift ex· poinsettias, African violets, Col!lltY Unit of the American Klein, Connie Klein, Myrtle of powder pink. They also and Kimberly, Caldwell;
change members contributed gardenias and orchids bloom. Canc~r Society now has of- Mae Klein, Donnie Klein, carried long-stemmed red Mrs. Welby Wshiey, Mrs.
flees In tbe basement of the Tanuny Klein, Edna Klein, roses with greenery and pink
to the UMW treasury for
Debbie
Reltmire
and
former
Meigs County Henry Klein, Trean~ Klein, satin ribbon.
project work. On Monday
Belinda
.
Gifts
were
exDavid
J..
Klein
,
Gene
'children's home building. The
evening the members went to
Flower girl was Donna changed.
phone number at the new Klein,Sr., Aunda Klein, Beth Mills of Crown City. She
Crow's Steal house for a .
office is 992-7531. The mailing Michelle Klein, Charles H. earned a basket of pink rose
hOliday dinner.
FIRST CHILD BORN
LETART FALLS - Mr. address of tbe unit is P. 0 . Klein, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Den- petals.
VISIT ENDED
nis Boyd, Dennis Boyd, Jr.,
and Mrs. J.ewis Pickett of Box 692, Pomeroy.
Jay Evans, Gallipolis,
SYRACUSE - Mr. and
Joey Boyd, Jennie .Boyd, Bill brother of tbe groom, served Mrs, Herbert Parker of here
l,etart aref announclng the
Klein, and GeneKiein, Jr.
birth of their first child, a
as beat man. Ushers were and son Robert of Marietta
John Davis, brother·in-law of have returned from a visit
gifts. Mrs . .Koacll """given a daughter, tracy Michelle,
the groorp, and Scott Miiier, with their son and family, Mr.
gift from the ieachers since Dec.l3 at the Pleasant Valley
brother- of the bride, both of and Mrs. Howard K. Parker
she is primary superln· Hospital. The ·Infant weighed CAPTAIN TRANSFERRED
!lAC/NE ,_ Captain And
Galllpolis. Ring bearer was and ,.n'of Morgan City, La. ·
tendent. A gilt .was also five pounds 1 one ounc,e.
. DAUGHTER BORN
presented to Mrs. Glaze .
Grandparents are Mr. and ·~trs . Ed. Brown and son have
POMEROY - Gene and Clinton Davis, nephew of the
movcrl
to.
Columbus.
Capt.
Mrs.
Charles
Michael
and
Refreshments were served
Charlotte Wolfe, Lincoln Hill, groom, Galllpolls.
Mrs. Miller· chose a long
ASK TOWED
· to those named and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Max Pickett. Brown was tcansferred to the Pomeroy, are announcing the
A marriage license was
Thelma Boyer. Mrs, Jennifer Great-~1·andparenL• are Mr. Air Force Base, Columbus. birth of a daughter, Julee polyester knit turquoise V·
Sheets. Miss Frances Roush, and Mrs. Russell Findley, Mr~. Brown and son have Gale Marie, Dec. 16 at the neck gown with front gathers issued to John Patter!IOn
Mr~. M•ry Hysell, _
Mrs. Nora Mrs. Marie Michael. Mrs. been at the home of her Holzer Medical Center. Julee at the waist and long bell And erson , 25, Athens ,
Rice and Mr! . Sharon Nrl!i Pickett and Mrs. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin weighed eight pounds. nine sleeves. She wore a corsage Georgia, and Rebecca Wright
Wilcoxen for several weeks. ounces.
of turquoise carn~tions and Card, 22, Pomeroy.
HnssPtl WHrrr'll
stew"rt.

..

Marilyn Suzanne Mize

Contributors ·thanked

Party he/4

R~adings

presented

Program to provide.
plant information

Virgie·Klein

has birthckzy

Yule patty held recently
MIDDLEPORT ~ Mrs.
Betty McKinley hosted a
Chris~mas party for the
teacher• of the Primary
. Department of the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ
Sunday School recently.
Games were played with
prizes goin« to Mrs. Becky
Glaze, Mrs. Dorothy Roach
and Mr~. Debbie Gerlach.
Those attending exchanged
I

I

'
1,~

·'

�B-2-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinei,Sunday, Dec. 26,1976

Twelfth night 'plus two '
party sIa ted at R~verby

.....•-

Carrie Grueser
•
entertains club.
•

~

4

Comer

•

By Charlene
Hoeflilh

POMEROY - As a special creative writing project, 'the
eighth graders of Mrs. Gay Perrin's English class at Meigs
Junior High School, wrote about tloeir wishes or prayer for lhe
world's people at O!ristmas. If your faith in the younger
generation has been somewhat shaken, perhaps sharing the
words of tloese boys and girls will help restore it.
Excerpts from several " if I could I would wish for tloe world !l)ree tloings. Peace
on earth w0uld come first, tl)en love radiating from lhe hearts
of all people, spreading love and joy wherever they go, and
finally that all tloe himgry woold he fed , tloe tloirsly given drink,
and all needs satisfied."
"I wish to people everywhere tloal there would he no
poverty or unemployment, oo welfare for tloe lazy bums in the
world , but for people tloat can't work since they . are
handicapped in ooe way or another."
"Maybe tlois year will be different from others. Maybe for
one day people will forget their neighbors' color, race and
nationality and really have a true O!ris!mas.''
'" ... Everyone woyld believe in and love God. I think that
maybe this would take care ol all the problems. P1:0ple have to
love each otloer to love God."
",1wish that everyone would he friends to everyone. There
are aq many people nowadays so crabby ID oioe amitloer and so
selfish that tloey forget what Christrna.s is really all about Jesus Christ."
.
" .. , For an almost endless supply of a noni&gt;olluting energy
s0urce. 11
".,. 1ltat everybody in tloe world could be beller of all ill·
nesses, tloat tloere would be no more sickness and no more
suffering."
"Let the world be in peace, let the people who have
nothing, have something, let tloe people who are under a strlct
rule , be free for tloe day ."
"To find a cure for every disease on earth, especially for
tloe mentally disabled and mentally retarded thal we cbuld find
someway to makke them normal again and to make their
minds right again.''
"I would wish tloa! tloey would get more of God in the
schools."
·
"I wish at O!ristmas that everyone would love one another
ding marches for the as God loves us. Also that people would appreciate others and
processional and recessional learn ID forgive and forget. "
alqng with "The Wedding
J
Song / ' "Today," "Prelude on
A MERRY CHRISTMAS TO YOU!
11
Brother James Alr," 0ne in
And to Elsie Hines, Merri Christine Ault, Jan Van
the splrlt," and "If We Only Vranken, Janel Horky , and Eloise Hayes, a "Happy
Have Love . ~~
Birthday/'
·
During the ceremony as the
To Mr. and Mrs. David Ohlinger, congratulations on your
bride and groom kneeled and J.!th wedding anniversary, ID Joe and Martha Struble, best
the wedding guests prayed wishes on your 26th anniversary (or is itthe 27tlo ), and lo Mr
the "Lord's Prayer," the .and Mrs. Theodore Saunders, here's wishing you another !iO
organist played.
years of happiness.
Using separate candles, the
couple then lighted a single
ca ndle representing· their
union.
daughter
Sherri,
son
For her daughter's wed- . Wlnter began Tuesday with Christopher; Mrs. jackie
ding, Mrs. Fultz wore a green temperature two above zero. Howard and Andy, daughter,
polyester gown with fitted
Mr. ·Dewy Keels attended Dian attended the Christmas
bodice, lopped with a long the funeral of Mr. Burnard program at Rio Grand e
sleeved matching jacket with Howell at Unlon Church at Monday evening at the grade
ostrich feathers at the cull. Black Ford, 0., Thursday at school.
She wore matching ac· one o'clock who has been slcttK Mr. Jess McDaniel from
cessories and a yellow lor many years. Rev . Walson Berlin, Ohio visited his Aunt
rosebud corsage.
preached the funeral a long Mrs. Daisy Ross Monday
Mrs. Mason was in a pale lriend and neighbor to a nice
New Hope Sunday School
blue gown witlo long Sleeves crowd·
.
had their Christmas program
and an empire waist and also
Nora McDanoel from right after Sunday School.
had • corsage of yellow Berhn,Oino VISited her A~n! They had a nice tree with
roseb~ds and baby's breath.
Daisy Ross Friday.
presents on for all. The
A reception honoring the
Mrs. Olga. Chapman fro~ children were treated with
couple was held in lhe church California voslted a cotistn cand~ and oranges. Every
social room . .The table, Mrs. Ada Keels lamily one enjoyed the occassion.
covered with whlte lace Saturday she was ·ac- But. received word from Rev.
featured vases of orange and companied with her daughter Cuffie that he would not be
yellow mums, haby's breatlo Hortense, and daughter, and able to fill his appointment
.and greenery around orange husband from Col~mbus Sunday because his wife was
tapers at either end of the Oh1o. They were callong on sick. We all regretted it very
table. Centering the table was Mrs . Daisy Ross, and much .
a lour tiered cake trimmed daughter Mrs. Edna Cooper
Mrs. Audrey K. Pryor and
with orange flowers and and ~usba nd · Robert and son Mark from Cincinnati,
topped with a traditional other relatives and fnends. Ohio visited her mother, Mrs.
miniature bride and groom Olga was raised and attended Ada Keels and family Sun·
encirc led by orange silk school at Rio Grande before day.
flowers .. Greenery marrying and leaving this
Mr. John Gamble and
surrounded the ca~e. Orange part ollhe country. She. was daughter, Barba Brislon
sherbet punch was served. hit by a car last January and brought. her mother Mrs.
Presiding at the table were broke her arm, was unable to Alice Gamble home from the
Mrs. John Brown and Mrs. vlsotuslastyear.Wehopeshe Holzer Hospital Saturday.
William Fultz, both aunts of will make .many more tnps She is feeling fine.
the bride; Mlss Cheryl hack to Ohoo for many more
Mrs. Barba Brislon and
Mason, sister of the groom,
years. - .
.
daughter, Betty from Akron,
and Miss Jodene Klrgls. Miss
Mrs. Barba Bnslon and Ohio who spent the past week
Debbie Brown, cousin of the da~ghter Becky !rom Akron, with her parents, Mr. and
brlde, registered the guests. Obio came down to see ahoul ' Mrs. John Gamble returned
For a wedding trip to he'r-mother, Mrs. Allee to their home in Akron
Detroit and Frankenmutlo, Gamble who was a patient in Tuesday.
'
Mich. the hrlde changed Into the Holzer Hospital lor a few
De a con Robert Cooper,
a cranberry and grey plaid
days.
local, visited the sick at
slack suit with matching vest,
M~. and Mrs. Jim Howard, Holzer Hospital, Mr. Thurtopped with a cranberry ·
man Borden who is very sick
velveteen jacket.
Monday.
The couple resides at 3972 Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton,
The farmers are busy
'HIIiman Road, E. Columbus. Mts.
Arthur
Slusher, preparing their tobacco for
A 1971 graduate of Meigs Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
High School and a 1975 George Shiveler, Jr. and market this week when the
graduate of Ohio Stale daughter, Jayne , Clncinnall; weather Is suitable.
University with a B.S. degree T. Lyston Fultz, Xenia; Mr.
In home economics and a and Mrs. Franklin Ri!er and
major in family and child Millsa, Pomeroy; David
development, she Is assistant Swisher and Sandy Curtis,
director ol the Samuel Day Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Care Center II. Mr. Mason Is William Swisher, Mid·
a 1971 graduate of Marion dleport ; Mrs. Harold Jones,
Franklin High School, Minersville; Mr. .and Mrs.
Columbus and assistant Chester Hammond and Amy,
coordinator ol shipping at the Delawarei Emerson · L.
Coca Cola Syrup Plant In Mason, Millersport; Mr. and
Columbus.
·
Mrs. Ralph Burk, Sciolovllle;
Out-of-town guests at the Mr. and Mrs. Harold
wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Vogelsong, Portsmouth; ·
Charles Clark, Clarksburg; Isabelle Trapasso, Plaln
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence City; Miss Sue Reed, Ml!Rin
·Wills, Chillicothe; Mr. and Town, Pa. and Robert Titus,
Mrs. Ste~e Leltzy, Bucyrus; Pomeroy.

Mr. and Mrs. Michael W Mason

Anita Marie Fultz
is October bride
MIDDLEPORT - Miss
Anita Marie Fultz and
Michae l William Ma son.
exchanged wedding vows in a
double ring ceremony at the
Redeemer United Brethren
Church ln Columbus at 5:30
p.m. on Oct. 16.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Fultz,
Middlepprt,
and " th e
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. William B. MaSon,
Columbus.
Th e wedding was · performed by the Rev. Clarence
Kopp of Columbus and the
Rev , Harold Voglesong ,
Portsmouth, uncle of the
bride. Vases, of burnt orange
and yellow chrysanthemums
with · greenery were on the
alta r and the co~union
table. The two seven-branch
candelabra were trinuned
with grecn eq• anti white
bows. Whit '::' bu ws also
marked tJ1e famdy pews.
Given in marriage by her
father the bride was attired In
a formal gown of ivory
marcain jersey trimmed with
alencon and venise lace. rt
~ was fa shioned with an
empire waist with lace
motifs, a cameo collar, Sheer
yoke a nd long cardinal
sleeves also trimmed with
lace. The A-line skirt trim·
. med witlo lace at the hemline
terminat~ in a chapel train.
Her veil of silk illusion was
elbow length and fell from a
prolile cap of Veni,se lace.
The bride carried a bouquet
of white mums, pink baby
rosebuds and baby's breatlo,
backed with ivory lace and
tied wlth lace streamers.
The bride 's attendants
Included Mrs. Ralph Burk,
matron of honor, a cousin of
'•• the bride ol Sciotoville. She
wore a gown ol clay' ]'ersey
styled witlo cameo collar,
empire waist, long fitted
sleeves, and a soft A-line
skirt. The bodice and cuffs
were accented with three
horizontal stripes of clay,
perslnunon and melon .
The other attendants were
Mrs.
Sharon
Wills,
Chillicothe, Mrs. Rlcha'rd
Dennis, sister of the groom,
Columbus, and Mrs, Randy
Hammond , Columbus. They
wore gowns of persimmon
jersey styled with cameo
collars, empire waists, long
filled sleeves, and A·line
skirts with the bodice and·
culls being accented with
three horizontal Slrlpes of
persimmon, misty peach and
melon.
Miss Velvet 1Swisher,
cousm of the bride, Middleport, . was a junior
bridesmaid. She was In a full
length melon dress of
polyester with open slit
sleeves and a V neckline.
Flower girl Miss Paula
Swisher of Middleport, also a
cousin of tloe bride, wore a
gown of peach with an empire
waist and lace accents at the
neck, yoke and cuffs.
All of the attendants
carried wicker baskets of
dried foliage In green, brown
and qrange witlo matching
ribbons.
'
Jerry MaSon served u best
· man for his brOther, and the
ushers were Bob Dulin,
Columbus; Earl Rinhart,
Columbus and Jobn Marcus
Fultz, Middleport, brother of
the brtde.
Music was provided by
Mrs. Barbara Sams who
played the traditional wed-

•

NewHope

Will vou·ever finish

. moving In?

. You mlaht nollhlnk so when lhellvlne room's otlll
jammed wllh pack inc crates. But you will-and 1can help
As your WELCOME WACON Hoslelll can save you limo ·.
and monty In

•

And bllahlon up your fomily with my basket of allis.
Take a brtak and call me.

.

fttf,

ft,Off)

11g111n. l-'11
t'hrillt.llltfll.
lflllg It
·l1ring r~oo
go11d fort.rrne
1111d lu.,e.

POMEI\OY - Mrs. Carie
·Grueser hosted the holiday
party of the Wildwood
Gar&lt;ten Club Wednesday
night followinn a dinner at
the Meigs IM.
1\lrs. Dorothy Smith presid-.

ed at the meeting with
Mrs.Oor!s Grueser giving
devotions lor Mrs. Diane
Bartels. MrS. Grueser Wled
Luke 2, a meditation entitled
"Keeping Christmas" and
the Lord'sPrayer, Cards will
be sent to Mrs.,Teresa Fisher
and Mrs. Grace Flal)er, both
ill and In Cincinnati. A letter
from the Athens ·Mental
Heallh Center lor gifts w8ll
Marietta Burger and read by Mrs. Dorothy Smith,
daughters of Columbus president. Mrs. Marcia Arvisited her mother Mrs. nold reported on the therapy
Marie Hively and brother program at the Gallipolis
Marlin and attended the state Institute in November.
turkey supper at Harrls ll was noted ·that several
Grange Saturdsy night and members won ribbons at the
Harris Chur~h Sunday Christmas flower show, with
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon and Mrs.
morning.
Mrs. MIHord Gilbert aod Ada Holter winning blue
children, Karen, Blondene ooes. Mrs. Dorothy Smith
and Mickey h.ave been also won a blue ribbon for her
visiting her parents, Mr. and telephone plant . · ArMrs, Cecil Morris, for a few r.mgements were made for
the COI)lllliltee to prepare
days.
Chuck and Fran Denney, . fruit baskets for the sick and
Johnnie Denney and friend shutins.
A gilt exchange was held
Verna Kay Weddington, had
dinner with Mr. and Mrs. and a gilt was presented to
Mrs. prepare the Green
John E. Denney Sunday.
The Harrisburg Grange Thumb Notes in January.
Mrs. Grueser and Mrs. Ar·
had a turkey supper
nold
served cookies, punch
December II and was en·
and
homemade
candies durjoyed by the community at
ing
a
social
hour.
the end they had a small
auction to pay for turkeys.
This Is a yearly event. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Camden
are proud grandparents of
tloeir first . gtandchUd. Her
name is Amanda Arl'ena
RICHARDS HOME
Camden, daughter of Mr. and
MIDDLEPORT ~ Arnold
Mrs. Larry W. Camden.
Richards was returned home
The Harris Church gave a Thursday from the Holzer
nice donation .to the Medical Center where he has
Emergency Squad, Sunday, been confined' for the past IO
33 out for church.
'days.

.

ENGAGED ~

Mr. and Mrs. George W. Kinder, Jr.,
Gallipolis, are announcing the engagement of tloeir
daughter, Debbie, to Craig Ellis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Ellis, also of Gallipolis. The bri~Ject is a 1975 graduate
of Gallia Academy presently employed at Nationwide
Insurance Company in Columbus. Her fiance, a 1974
graduate of Gallia Academy, is now a junior at Rio
Grande College. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Offering taken at party

to Bethlehem" was given by
Mrs. Ethel Lowery and Mrs.
~rtha Anderson. Mrs. Jean
Moore and Mrs. Mildred
Bailey presented ceramic
angels to each of the
members. As the gift exchange look place, Mrs.
Helen Sauer read "What is
Christmas." The Horky
home was attractively
decorated for the holidays.
Mrs, Gladys Cummings was
a guest. A thank you nolo was
read from Mrs. Ruth
Woodegard, and Mrs. Dwight
Zavilz sent her regards to tbe ·
group. Favors of miniature
green birds in a nut shell
were given by Mrs. Horky: A
dessert course was served by
the hostesses.

MIDDLEPORT - The
least coin a nd thank offerings
were taken at the annua l
Christmas party of the Group
11, Middlepo.r! First . United
Presbyterian Church held at
the home of Mrs. Bel,y
Horky with Mrs. Virginia
Buchanan as co-hostess.
A meditation , " Christ
Reconciled My Differences",
was read by Mrs. Kathryn
Miller as the least coin offering was take.n. Mrs. Dwight
Wallace had devotions using
the "Voices of Bethlehem" • ,
'·The Repentant Inn Keeper"
and "The Slave Girl,
Tamara."
A playlet entitled ''A Trip
SUNOA¥ GUESTS
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Jones of MI. Vernon
were guests Sunday of Mr.
apd Mrs. Martln Wilcoxen.

•
•

•..

,.•
••

HAVE CALLERs
·RACINE - Emerson and
Melvin Weaver of Franklin
called on Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Johnson and Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Adams Sunday.
VISITORS COME

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Weaver of Middletown
visited Mr . and Mrs. Junior
Johnson and family.

•'

Mr. and Mrs. J E. Glusencamp
•
•

.,

-.
.
.
_,

.,
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•
1

$44!
Vinyl Garage Oxford
'with padded collar
and cushioned

BROWN

insoldes.

MEN'S LEATHER 8" BOOT

3

88

REG.

REG.

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1

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BUTTERNUt'
COLOR
SIZES
TO 12

Couple celebrates

Remember little newsmakers?

&amp;'~~~

I

MOBILE HOMES INC•

BANKING HOURS
EACH WEEK

NEW

'6.99

$11

milJistration!&gt; ill'l:l fasd 11aling

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK

LEATHER 6" BOOT

The working man's favtde

" Hello, Nancy " and sll gi ve

CBS the edge in cn1 llll'otlt
nt!l work t: UI.IIPCtitiun.
Dickerson':; memoirs o£
t'OVeo·lng the lust foUl' nd-

57

· GREAT FOR WORK
OR CASUAL WEAR.
DURABLE SCUFF
RESISTANT UPPERS,
OIL RESISTANT
CREPE SOLES

month was read. by Mrs .
Marie Domigan, Mrs, Floyd
Stout pre$ented a program on
Chri s tma s
legends .
Following the gift exchange
ga mes were played with
prizes provided by the
hostesses. Card remem·
brances were sent to mem·
hers unable to attend.

Dickerson 's. Fmm a swarm

of shoving , shouting
reporters, lw'd consistently
pi«=k her out , ~rcet her with,

MODULAR HOME

....

MEN'S SIZES
6;} TO 12

SALE PRICES GOOD Tlt~U
DECEMBER 2911t

had devot ions
gtvtng
readings on the tru~ meaning
of" Christmas.
Christmas gill wrapping s .
were judged by Mrs. Jimmy
Caldwell , Mrs . Frederick
Goebel and Mrs . Doris
Koenig, with a prize being
awarded to Mrs. Ha rold
Massar. ThE' verse of the

After Lyndon · John son
decided lo run for vi ce president, he also refused ull inter·
view requests ·• c&gt;:. l'Cj)l

She started al We 111 1!151 as
H rcScltrchcr ('~ Only men
L"oUlll bcL'Omt~ writers"). In
1961 , a fter wriUnK whut n...
lllHiiiS 0 1\C uf the best por•
to·uit.&gt; ever written ol Judy
Garlcwd rreprinled in her·
book ) she bt.'Came Life's fh·st
female stall writer und, lhrc'C
years htter, she Vecamu its
first femule oolumnlst. .
She left Life ufter 18 ycurs
to become editor of McCulls.
the (irs! womun editor of the
world's largest woman 's
orU1g11zine in :;o yeurs. "II was
an uncomfortable p&lt;&gt;Slllon for
me, but it di(b1 't lnst long . I
was cXpt'\:lc'&lt;l to talk an&lt;l net
like a lady cdiiOI'. I didn'lund
1
I got fired."
~"'rom thCrc she went 1o
Newsweek where she producl'tl cunsunu natc conUllcnUirics on Watcrgute,lhc SI.A,
Opcruliou Bu byli ft itntl
Opcrution Hmnm;mnlng - all
subJeCts I hut hud . been wo·it·
ten to dcuth, but brought
alive with Almwndt~r's rure
wit, inslghl, und intelligence.
AlcJWrldcr's st)'lc is to get
emotionally involved wil h
her subj ect. In "Arrlvuls und
DcpMrturcs,'' JW.rt reprinted
articles nnd JNirl memoirs,
Richard Rovorc show~ u
sty le us different us puS&gt;;lblc
from AlcKander's, but toquul·
ly compelling. His prose Is us
undcrslHtcd und clogunt us
the . New Yorker '- the

lll'Cause she was ulways
"Among Those Presc1.1l ;' '
&lt;Ji ways I'CIXllting from in~ idc
Washington social and
political cio·etcs. When she
reports !hut L.B.J . felt in·
fcrior to the Kenncdys, she
By RICK VAN SANT
big day .
pel guinea pig or make bucks up heo· sUt!emcnl by
United Press lnteroaUooal
She got married .
anima l sounds, Reinert r~alling Johnson pleading
wilh her during the l9GO cam·
Sure, 1976 was a big year
In tloe nude.
PORTLAND - Mr. and the ceremony.
swallowed a goldfish.
Mr. Gluesencamp is a for giant newsmakcrs .like
Now that 's talent you won't paign, I; Nuney, you know the
Mrs. J . E. (Bud) Gluesen·
Since Linda is a nigh!cl~b
' Kenncdys. Will you tell them
camp of 5770 Roche Drive, Project supervisor for the Jimmy Carter, Jackie stripper, she figured il was see in Atlantic City .
mt~gaz in e· he hu :1 been
what " good job I'm dOing'! ..
U.S.
·
Army
Corps
of
. Onassis and Henry Kissinger. appropriate altire for the
Columbus, formerly of
writing
for since 1944.
Engineers
at
Alum
Creek
But what about Otis Toad• Newport, Ky . wedding.
Portland, ·celebrated their
Or
at
least
will
you
tell
them
Lake
in
Ga
lena.
Mrs.
vine, Linda Brig ell and Greg
'Her groom took his vows in
silver wedding anniversary
how hurd I'm to·ying''"
tloe aiiDgelher too. And oot to
at a reception Dec. 4 in the Gluesencamp is employed in Reinert'
The fa ct !hal the t&gt;owcrful
the
French
Market
at
Voudon'tremembertloem?
·
ruin
the
party,
the
home of her brother-in-law
confided
in Dickerson makes
Columbus.
'
Toadvine,
BrigeU
and
bridesmaid,
flower
girl
and
W
ell,
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. L.
her
book
difficult
to put down
Guests
attending
the
Reinert
aren't
likely
to
forget
best
man
also
paraded
in
the
BUY YOURS NOW I
M. Pratt ol Newark .
but
also
tt·oubling
lu
read.
1976
~
because
it
was
the
buff
in
front
of
a
huge,
fullyreception
werd
Mr.
and
Mrs.
The event was hosted by
eMARLETIE •WHITMAN
Danc ing with L.B.J . at a
the couple's sons·in·law and Lawrenceji1tfesencamp, Sr., year they got involved in clothed audience.
11
While
House
bull
or
chatting
1was a little embarrassed
Mrs.
Paul :;orne wacky events.
30 Year$ Financing Avilllable
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Portland ,
with Ki ssin ger at ·a
Let's start with Otis Toad· at first, " gushed tloe blushing
Daniel (Jackie) Obertin of Lawrence, Mrs. Phylli s
Also: Complete Line o,l Oui!llty
GcorlJetown dinner party arc
Zoarville and Mr. and Mrs. Ritchie, Joyce Ritchie, of vine:an 18-year old freshman bride, "but it was beautiful. I
Sectional Homes &amp; Mobile Hom•s
certainly not itleal po·cpai'Uat
Clermont
College
in
recommend
it
for
other
cou·
Garry (Barbara) Martin of Racine; Mr. and Mrs. James
tiur"JH fol' investfgalive or
1
pies."
R. Lawrence, Syracuse; Mrs. Batavia, Ohio.
Newark.
even
hard news reporting.
April
23
was
Toad
vine's
big
Af!¢r
the
ceremony,
the
John
Tillis,
Tammy
Fitch,
The former Alberta Fitch,
But
her memoirs show that
day
.
He
decided
to
try
to
nude
bride
and
groom
Reedsville
;
Debra
Fitch,
&lt;laughter of Mr. and Mrs.
t.he
Dickerson
fl)nnula fur
crack
tloe
world's
hardboiled
chatted
for
several
minutes
John
M~rgon,
·Za
nesviUe;
Raymond L. Fitch or Long
egg
eating
record
:
44
eggs
in
with
guests
and
reporters
success
indudeli
more thari
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
Burri,
Boll~m. and Mr. Giuesen30
minutes.
covering
tloe
uncovering.
But
c
h~rtn
and
carefully
Bolivar;
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
ca mp , son of Lawrence
cultivated
contacts,
Mixed in
A
crowd
of
300
students
and
tloey
also
had
to
share
the
William
Tope
and
Sarah,
Glueilencamp, Sr. of Portland .
IDwnspeople
gathered
in
the
attention
with
bridesmaid
wert!
boundless
energy
and
Bowerston;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
and the late Albina Ward
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
capacity
for
workworking
school
cafeteria
ID
watch
Morganna
Roberts,
who
wore
Russell Grant, Sunbury; Mr.
Gluesenc~mp, were married
Phone
446·9340
Gallipolis. Ohio
Toadvine,
who
had
been
in
only
her
4!).23-39
statistics.
on
Christmas
and
Tha
nksgivDec. 8, 1951, at Racine. Rev . and Mrs. Jim Stephens, Mr,
"training
"
a
week
for
the
A
few
·weeks
after
tloat
in~.
sandwiching
in
her
mar·
Thomas Clelland officiated at · and Mrs. Joe Geer , Colum·
eggatloon.
strange wedding, came an
riag~ and the birth of hcl'
bus.
"I
ate
a
whole
lot
all
week
unusual
beautY,
pageant
in
Mr. and Mrs . Richard .
Buck Wallace
of Lan·
Wills, Keith and DeAnna, to stretch my stomach and Cincinnati.
caster,
formerly
of - . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - -...- - - - - - - - - - - - .
tloen
I
quit
eating
yesterday
The
·
17
'
co
ntestants
Mrs. Willard Price, Marilyn
Gallipolis, celebrated his
Price and Keely , Mr. and to .get good and hungry," parading in front of a jamlourtli birthday' with his
packed crowd seemed
Mrs. Jerry Pratt, Briall and Toad\ine explBined .
grandparents, Mr. and
Then he started gulping unusually tense.
Michelle, Mr , and Mrs. Tom
, Mrs. Dwlgbt Wallace and
Armstrong, Mr. and Mrs. eggs, trying to get his name · Asked to say something to
daughter , • Nancy, ol
Vernon Ridenbaugh, Mr. and in lhe Guinness Book of.World . the audience, one contestant
Middleport, and Mr. and
admitted, "I'm nervous as
Mrs . Douglas Price . and Records.
Mrs. Gall Buck and son,
"I was really confident hell."
Autumn, alto! Newark; Mr.
Jon, Pomeroy, on Dec. 11.
The contestants were all
and Mrs. Carmel Oiler and starting out ," said Otis. "I
Also present for the
put away 10 eggs in tloe first men participating in a "role
Sammy, Utica.; Mr. and Mr-s .
observance were his
fivt! minutes.
reversal" experiment. Greg
Marc Guthrie and Jason, Mr.
parents, Mr. and Mrs • .
"But then," he grimaced, Reinert took it seriously and
and Mrs. Edwin Pri ce,
Bruce
Wallace and his
"I hit a rotten egg around No . went all out to win .
Harold Price and Harold 14 or 15. It made me a little
sister,
Natalie
Dawn.
He marched out ih the
Price II of Heatlo.
sick and I couldn't. get tloem swimsuit competition clad in
HOLIDAY HOURS
down too fast after tloat."
a Door-ienghtlo robe. The
COLUMBUS - Director
Alas, Toadvine could mostl'y female audience
stomach no more than 26 shr ieked when he tossed it off Clifford E. Reich of the Ohio
eggs.
to reveal a tiny swimsuit Department of Liquor
Control announced today that
"I feel kind of stuffed, but made entirely of flowers.
tlo.ere's no pain in my stoBut · Reinert . really all Slate liquor stores wlll be
mach," the 6-fool, 176i&gt;ound , convinced the judges he was open-from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on
PARTY HELD- Chris·
Toadvlne
reported after the . their man in the talent Friday, Dec. 31, 1976, in order
)Ina
Dawn
Oren·
to provide service lo the
ordeal.
"But
I . am a little competition.
POMEROY
Senior
pea,
daughter
of
ANNOUNCES
lightloeaded."
While
other
contestan
ts
publiC during the holiday
Citize ns Center activities
Norma Drennen, Gal:Feb. 5 was Linda Brigel~ 's were content to sing to their rush.
llpolls1 celebrated her loca ted at the Pomeroy
lint birthday Dec. 18 at the Junior High School is open 9
a.m..-1 p.m. Monday thro~gh
~ome ol ber grandparents,
r-tr. and Mrs. Lester Friday.
TlliRD AVENUE
Monday, Dec . 27 /f'aylor, Galllpolls. A
BRANCH
~aggedy, Ann cake, Ice
Cards and Games, 12:3()..3
!Cream and pop were served
p.m.
Tuesday , Dec . 28 !o her gralidparents and
~rs. Winifred Thompson,
Physical Fitness, 10:45 a.m.;
:Northup, Sharon, Jam~s Chorus, I2 :I5·2 p.m.
&lt;1nd Tanya Sue Shafler of
Wednesday, Dec. 29 itecta and Christina's
Social Security Represen·
. MONDAY-FRIDAY 8 AM.fi PM
~mnts~ Nancy and July
lative, 9:30 a.m..t2:30 p.m.;
!,Drennen ol Gallipolis. Gills
Games, 12:30-2 p.m.
:were given to CbrlsUria ~Y
Thursday , Dec. 30 SATURDAY 8 AM-3 PM
;the guests and lier lamlly.
DECEMBER 26 THRU JANUARY 1ST
..
Physical Fitness, 10 :45 a.m.;
Sing-a-Long, 12 :30 p.m.
••
Friday, Dec. 31 - New
•
Year's Eve, Center Closed.
••
New Year's I&lt;ve Party at
Senior Citizens Center, 8:30
p.m.-12:30 a.r.1.
·
••
Senior Citizens Nutrition
Program, 11:30 a.m.-12:30
THE STAFF AND EMPLOYEES O.F THE FIRST
'·•
p.m. Monday through Friday
NATIONAL BANK HOPE THAT THIS EXTENSION OF
'except Friday, December 31,
!•
tHE THIRD AVENUE . BRANCH HOURS WILL BE
·: .
closed.
'·
'
BENEFICIAL TO YOU AND THAT YOU WILL HAVE
: LETART, W. Va. _ John
Menu for December 27
.., .
.
through December 31, 1976:
OCCASION
TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE
.. urtos Smothson, son of Mr.
Monday - Braised liver in
LONGER BANKING HOURS.
)nd Mrs, F. ~ · Smithson oniQn gravy, au gratin
No Subt.
~elebrated his first blrlhday . potatoes , bul!ered green
December 2• at th~ home beans, applesauce . bread,
his parents, Rl. I, Letart. buller, milk .
No Coupons · No Limil
• Refreshments of oce cream
Tuesday _ Salisbury steak
)nd cake. were served. The with gravy' buttered diced
:rake was 'baked and potatoes, buttered peas,
'decorated by his aunt, bread pudding with raisins,
~ernita ¥eado':'s.
bread, butler, milk.
MAIN BANK · SECOND AVE.
• Those altendmg were Mr.
Wednesday - Chicken pol
)nd Mts. Ro~hard Broad· pie, flufly rice, buttered
tater, Melissa and Leslee, spinach, peach shortcake
TlliRD AVE. BRANCH - THIRD AVE.
• r. and Mrs. Don Meadows with lopping , bread, butler,
omd Lori, Mrs. · Helen milk.
'0PO~U.
:Smltlulon and Allan, Mr. an'd
Thursday _ Bee! stew,
PUt.Ol.
.· UUU
VINTON BRANCH • VINTON
:f&gt;{rs. Harry Staats and Mrs. pineapple slice on lettuce
:J.illian Smith .
. . '
;, Se dl
d
d .11 purp 1e pl ums, bi SCU its,
2nd &amp; Olive
,GallifiOlis, II
n ng car s an go s butter, mUk.
I
;.ere M(. and Mrs. James
Friday .,.. Center Closed.
"Yuur Full Service People Tu Pci;Jple Bank"
§lrannon and family, Mr. and , Coffee, teo and buttermilk
lfdrs. Albert Johnson and served
dally.
Pl e ;~se
MEMBER FDIC
flch, and Mr. and Mrs. remem be r to re~ister for
:~~ames Staats and Jommy.
lunch .

25th anniversary

"

1'UPPERS PLAINS - The
Rose Garden Club Christmas
party was held recently at the
Wilmar Cafeteria in Parkersburg with Mrs, Robert Dorst
and Mrs. Glen Stout, cohostesses.
The dinner blessing was
given by Mrs . Carl Barnhill
and Mrs . Frederick Goebel

rcporti11g.
So Nam:y Dickcr'Sun was a

bald head look even baltlt!r. ''

Gardeners meet at Wilmar

.

sons lk!twccn deirdliucs and
inau~urat biJtls, tuiling 18huur..Uayli dutin~ convcntivns, aml spending jl:t rgc
chunks u£ her li£e in ail1lhJIICS
cmd motels. She was away
from home so frcoquenlly !hut
whcu she cltllcd home to Uilk
'to her son and "he ·vus told
his Monuny w11nted to lulk to
him, he ran tv the lt·~ ~ vision
instead of go in~ lo tile .
phone.''
Judg-in g fr om her·
pedestrian prose, Nuney
Dickerson '!&gt;erforms much
better in fro nt or a camer~;~
than a lypcwritt!l'. Shana
Aluantler, ~mlhor of "Talking Woman ," turns out to be
the quintessential ·' wl'iling
woman' ' - an ab.~olutcly
superb stylist.
In rcprinli; of hco· Life uu&lt;l
Newsweek eolumns, strung
toge th er
by
s hort
nulobiogr• phicul l'cfl cclioits,
Alex~ndcr writes bi·illiunll v
about subjccli; •s diverse .:,
Putty Hearst, Bella Abzng ,
Me:tstcrs and Johnson (" The
Ma and Pu Ke!llc of
gynecology"), the Watergate
hea rirtgs (''educational TV or
the highest order, Sesame St.
for grownups") , H prcguunt
clcplw.n t, and GcurHl'
Walluce.
She also writes brilliunlly,
bui nut extensively enough,
about heo~eU. If Dickerson is
~~ television pioneer, Alexantler is ll magazine pioneer.

lu lht.' httl' 19a&lt;ls, there
\Htsn't c\•t·n a t ukt~n woman
doing st•_ri qus kll·v i;;tou

Twelfth Night Plu s Tw o first , when i11 HlfMJ she W&lt;iS .
Party on the eighth nf made a CBS network t.:ur·
respondc11t, e~flcr· landing a .
January .
newsbr'caking
interview wiU1
The Galleries at . Riverby
.
Speaker
of
the
Honse Siim
reopen on Tuesda y, Jan . 4,
Rayburn
"
man who
1977 al 10 a.m. to visitors. The
January exhibit will be a religiously rd uset! req uests
student show arranged by fm· ·rv interviews l&gt;ccausc
•·the bright lights made his
Sarah Moshier .

•

,.:;
:
••

.

MEN'S UTILITY OXFORDS

Leather.U_ppers.
Reinforced stitching.

•

..

YEAR END SALE

ME~'S

•

Newsomes
entertain
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Newsome entertained recently .with a
· covered dish dinner and
Christmas party at their ,
home at Five Points.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Bailey, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Hysell, Jan
·Judge, Austin Newsome, Mr.
and Mrs. Benny Spears, Mr. ·
and Mrs. Randy Cross and
daughter, Jennifer, Mr. and
Mrs. Dian Knapp, Mr .. and
Mrs. Frank Mills and Mr. and
Mrs. D. C. Allen.

PlanninJ.! tht- Pvent nr&lt;'
GALLIPOLIS
'rhe
French Art Colony 1s plan· c'arnh·n and I}OJl Hippensteel
ning 11 special Twelfth Night andliess Grace . The party iS
"Plus Two" Pa rty for for members only. Everyone
Saturday evening, January 8. who t'Omes must bring. some
1977 at Riverby lor their " Christmas
Leftovers,"
members, at 8 o'clock.
including r·a kes. candi es,
Twelfth Night, or F.piphany cookies and other Christmas
is alway s 12 day's after goOdies. Members will be
Q!.rislmas. That would be on called .by the' Committee.
Janna ry
6,
but the
Casual dress will be the
celebration by the French Art proper attire lor the evening.
Colony is "adding two" so Surprise e ntertainment is
that January 8, l977 is the big heinl! nhmnrfl . Thf' cost will
eve ni~~ at Rivrrby.

•

·Kerr News

Debbie Kinder

Ry (farnl rt·lsl'nlhul
be $2 per person .
The bt•cautiful {'hri ~tar ws
lil;l'orathm s_, intludin t-: thf&gt;
pine cone tree Will slill bt• on
display to be part of the

GREAT FOR WORK
OR SPORTS
BUTTERNUT
. SIZES TO 12

~(o/m.~p!L

TERESA BIHL

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY

DINNER BOX

'
first birthday

3 PIECES CHICKEN

=is cekbrated

.

•MASHED POTATOES
&amp;GRAVY
•SLAW

.

:r:n

., ••

~ROLL

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!

....

...

I

HOURS

- --

'

'J

lo

'

�B-2-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinei,Sunday, Dec. 26,1976

Twelfth night 'plus two '
party sIa ted at R~verby

.....•-

Carrie Grueser
•
entertains club.
•

~

4

Comer

•

By Charlene
Hoeflilh

POMEROY - As a special creative writing project, 'the
eighth graders of Mrs. Gay Perrin's English class at Meigs
Junior High School, wrote about tloeir wishes or prayer for lhe
world's people at O!ristmas. If your faith in the younger
generation has been somewhat shaken, perhaps sharing the
words of tloese boys and girls will help restore it.
Excerpts from several " if I could I would wish for tloe world !l)ree tloings. Peace
on earth w0uld come first, tl)en love radiating from lhe hearts
of all people, spreading love and joy wherever they go, and
finally that all tloe himgry woold he fed , tloe tloirsly given drink,
and all needs satisfied."
"I wish to people everywhere tloal there would he no
poverty or unemployment, oo welfare for tloe lazy bums in the
world , but for people tloat can't work since they . are
handicapped in ooe way or another."
"Maybe tlois year will be different from others. Maybe for
one day people will forget their neighbors' color, race and
nationality and really have a true O!ris!mas.''
'" ... Everyone woyld believe in and love God. I think that
maybe this would take care ol all the problems. P1:0ple have to
love each otloer to love God."
",1wish that everyone would he friends to everyone. There
are aq many people nowadays so crabby ID oioe amitloer and so
selfish that tloey forget what Christrna.s is really all about Jesus Christ."
.
" .. , For an almost endless supply of a noni&gt;olluting energy
s0urce. 11
".,. 1ltat everybody in tloe world could be beller of all ill·
nesses, tloat tloere would be no more sickness and no more
suffering."
"Let the world be in peace, let the people who have
nothing, have something, let tloe people who are under a strlct
rule , be free for tloe day ."
"To find a cure for every disease on earth, especially for
tloe mentally disabled and mentally retarded thal we cbuld find
someway to makke them normal again and to make their
minds right again.''
"I would wish tloa! tloey would get more of God in the
schools."
·
"I wish at O!ristmas that everyone would love one another
ding marches for the as God loves us. Also that people would appreciate others and
processional and recessional learn ID forgive and forget. "
alqng with "The Wedding
J
Song / ' "Today," "Prelude on
A MERRY CHRISTMAS TO YOU!
11
Brother James Alr," 0ne in
And to Elsie Hines, Merri Christine Ault, Jan Van
the splrlt," and "If We Only Vranken, Janel Horky , and Eloise Hayes, a "Happy
Have Love . ~~
Birthday/'
·
During the ceremony as the
To Mr. and Mrs. David Ohlinger, congratulations on your
bride and groom kneeled and J.!th wedding anniversary, ID Joe and Martha Struble, best
the wedding guests prayed wishes on your 26th anniversary (or is itthe 27tlo ), and lo Mr
the "Lord's Prayer," the .and Mrs. Theodore Saunders, here's wishing you another !iO
organist played.
years of happiness.
Using separate candles, the
couple then lighted a single
ca ndle representing· their
union.
daughter
Sherri,
son
For her daughter's wed- . Wlnter began Tuesday with Christopher; Mrs. jackie
ding, Mrs. Fultz wore a green temperature two above zero. Howard and Andy, daughter,
polyester gown with fitted
Mr. ·Dewy Keels attended Dian attended the Christmas
bodice, lopped with a long the funeral of Mr. Burnard program at Rio Grand e
sleeved matching jacket with Howell at Unlon Church at Monday evening at the grade
ostrich feathers at the cull. Black Ford, 0., Thursday at school.
She wore matching ac· one o'clock who has been slcttK Mr. Jess McDaniel from
cessories and a yellow lor many years. Rev . Walson Berlin, Ohio visited his Aunt
rosebud corsage.
preached the funeral a long Mrs. Daisy Ross Monday
Mrs. Mason was in a pale lriend and neighbor to a nice
New Hope Sunday School
blue gown witlo long Sleeves crowd·
.
had their Christmas program
and an empire waist and also
Nora McDanoel from right after Sunday School.
had • corsage of yellow Berhn,Oino VISited her A~n! They had a nice tree with
roseb~ds and baby's breath.
Daisy Ross Friday.
presents on for all. The
A reception honoring the
Mrs. Olga. Chapman fro~ children were treated with
couple was held in lhe church California voslted a cotistn cand~ and oranges. Every
social room . .The table, Mrs. Ada Keels lamily one enjoyed the occassion.
covered with whlte lace Saturday she was ·ac- But. received word from Rev.
featured vases of orange and companied with her daughter Cuffie that he would not be
yellow mums, haby's breatlo Hortense, and daughter, and able to fill his appointment
.and greenery around orange husband from Col~mbus Sunday because his wife was
tapers at either end of the Oh1o. They were callong on sick. We all regretted it very
table. Centering the table was Mrs . Daisy Ross, and much .
a lour tiered cake trimmed daughter Mrs. Edna Cooper
Mrs. Audrey K. Pryor and
with orange flowers and and ~usba nd · Robert and son Mark from Cincinnati,
topped with a traditional other relatives and fnends. Ohio visited her mother, Mrs.
miniature bride and groom Olga was raised and attended Ada Keels and family Sun·
encirc led by orange silk school at Rio Grande before day.
flowers .. Greenery marrying and leaving this
Mr. John Gamble and
surrounded the ca~e. Orange part ollhe country. She. was daughter, Barba Brislon
sherbet punch was served. hit by a car last January and brought. her mother Mrs.
Presiding at the table were broke her arm, was unable to Alice Gamble home from the
Mrs. John Brown and Mrs. vlsotuslastyear.Wehopeshe Holzer Hospital Saturday.
William Fultz, both aunts of will make .many more tnps She is feeling fine.
the bride; Mlss Cheryl hack to Ohoo for many more
Mrs. Barba Brislon and
Mason, sister of the groom,
years. - .
.
daughter, Betty from Akron,
and Miss Jodene Klrgls. Miss
Mrs. Barba Bnslon and Ohio who spent the past week
Debbie Brown, cousin of the da~ghter Becky !rom Akron, with her parents, Mr. and
brlde, registered the guests. Obio came down to see ahoul ' Mrs. John Gamble returned
For a wedding trip to he'r-mother, Mrs. Allee to their home in Akron
Detroit and Frankenmutlo, Gamble who was a patient in Tuesday.
'
Mich. the hrlde changed Into the Holzer Hospital lor a few
De a con Robert Cooper,
a cranberry and grey plaid
days.
local, visited the sick at
slack suit with matching vest,
M~. and Mrs. Jim Howard, Holzer Hospital, Mr. Thurtopped with a cranberry ·
man Borden who is very sick
velveteen jacket.
Monday.
The couple resides at 3972 Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton,
The farmers are busy
'HIIiman Road, E. Columbus. Mts.
Arthur
Slusher, preparing their tobacco for
A 1971 graduate of Meigs Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
High School and a 1975 George Shiveler, Jr. and market this week when the
graduate of Ohio Stale daughter, Jayne , Clncinnall; weather Is suitable.
University with a B.S. degree T. Lyston Fultz, Xenia; Mr.
In home economics and a and Mrs. Franklin Ri!er and
major in family and child Millsa, Pomeroy; David
development, she Is assistant Swisher and Sandy Curtis,
director ol the Samuel Day Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Care Center II. Mr. Mason Is William Swisher, Mid·
a 1971 graduate of Marion dleport ; Mrs. Harold Jones,
Franklin High School, Minersville; Mr. .and Mrs.
Columbus and assistant Chester Hammond and Amy,
coordinator ol shipping at the Delawarei Emerson · L.
Coca Cola Syrup Plant In Mason, Millersport; Mr. and
Columbus.
·
Mrs. Ralph Burk, Sciolovllle;
Out-of-town guests at the Mr. and Mrs. Harold
wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Vogelsong, Portsmouth; ·
Charles Clark, Clarksburg; Isabelle Trapasso, Plaln
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence City; Miss Sue Reed, Ml!Rin
·Wills, Chillicothe; Mr. and Town, Pa. and Robert Titus,
Mrs. Ste~e Leltzy, Bucyrus; Pomeroy.

Mr. and Mrs. Michael W Mason

Anita Marie Fultz
is October bride
MIDDLEPORT - Miss
Anita Marie Fultz and
Michae l William Ma son.
exchanged wedding vows in a
double ring ceremony at the
Redeemer United Brethren
Church ln Columbus at 5:30
p.m. on Oct. 16.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Fultz,
Middlepprt,
and " th e
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. William B. MaSon,
Columbus.
Th e wedding was · performed by the Rev. Clarence
Kopp of Columbus and the
Rev , Harold Voglesong ,
Portsmouth, uncle of the
bride. Vases, of burnt orange
and yellow chrysanthemums
with · greenery were on the
alta r and the co~union
table. The two seven-branch
candelabra were trinuned
with grecn eq• anti white
bows. Whit '::' bu ws also
marked tJ1e famdy pews.
Given in marriage by her
father the bride was attired In
a formal gown of ivory
marcain jersey trimmed with
alencon and venise lace. rt
~ was fa shioned with an
empire waist with lace
motifs, a cameo collar, Sheer
yoke a nd long cardinal
sleeves also trimmed with
lace. The A-line skirt trim·
. med witlo lace at the hemline
terminat~ in a chapel train.
Her veil of silk illusion was
elbow length and fell from a
prolile cap of Veni,se lace.
The bride carried a bouquet
of white mums, pink baby
rosebuds and baby's breatlo,
backed with ivory lace and
tied wlth lace streamers.
The bride 's attendants
Included Mrs. Ralph Burk,
matron of honor, a cousin of
'•• the bride ol Sciotoville. She
wore a gown ol clay' ]'ersey
styled witlo cameo collar,
empire waist, long fitted
sleeves, and a soft A-line
skirt. The bodice and cuffs
were accented with three
horizontal stripes of clay,
perslnunon and melon .
The other attendants were
Mrs.
Sharon
Wills,
Chillicothe, Mrs. Rlcha'rd
Dennis, sister of the groom,
Columbus, and Mrs, Randy
Hammond , Columbus. They
wore gowns of persimmon
jersey styled with cameo
collars, empire waists, long
filled sleeves, and A·line
skirts with the bodice and·
culls being accented with
three horizontal Slrlpes of
persimmon, misty peach and
melon.
Miss Velvet 1Swisher,
cousm of the bride, Middleport, . was a junior
bridesmaid. She was In a full
length melon dress of
polyester with open slit
sleeves and a V neckline.
Flower girl Miss Paula
Swisher of Middleport, also a
cousin of tloe bride, wore a
gown of peach with an empire
waist and lace accents at the
neck, yoke and cuffs.
All of the attendants
carried wicker baskets of
dried foliage In green, brown
and qrange witlo matching
ribbons.
'
Jerry MaSon served u best
· man for his brOther, and the
ushers were Bob Dulin,
Columbus; Earl Rinhart,
Columbus and Jobn Marcus
Fultz, Middleport, brother of
the brtde.
Music was provided by
Mrs. Barbara Sams who
played the traditional wed-

•

NewHope

Will vou·ever finish

. moving In?

. You mlaht nollhlnk so when lhellvlne room's otlll
jammed wllh pack inc crates. But you will-and 1can help
As your WELCOME WACON Hoslelll can save you limo ·.
and monty In

•

And bllahlon up your fomily with my basket of allis.
Take a brtak and call me.

.

fttf,

ft,Off)

11g111n. l-'11
t'hrillt.llltfll.
lflllg It
·l1ring r~oo
go11d fort.rrne
1111d lu.,e.

POMEI\OY - Mrs. Carie
·Grueser hosted the holiday
party of the Wildwood
Gar&lt;ten Club Wednesday
night followinn a dinner at
the Meigs IM.
1\lrs. Dorothy Smith presid-.

ed at the meeting with
Mrs.Oor!s Grueser giving
devotions lor Mrs. Diane
Bartels. MrS. Grueser Wled
Luke 2, a meditation entitled
"Keeping Christmas" and
the Lord'sPrayer, Cards will
be sent to Mrs.,Teresa Fisher
and Mrs. Grace Flal)er, both
ill and In Cincinnati. A letter
from the Athens ·Mental
Heallh Center lor gifts w8ll
Marietta Burger and read by Mrs. Dorothy Smith,
daughters of Columbus president. Mrs. Marcia Arvisited her mother Mrs. nold reported on the therapy
Marie Hively and brother program at the Gallipolis
Marlin and attended the state Institute in November.
turkey supper at Harrls ll was noted ·that several
Grange Saturdsy night and members won ribbons at the
Harris Chur~h Sunday Christmas flower show, with
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon and Mrs.
morning.
Mrs. MIHord Gilbert aod Ada Holter winning blue
children, Karen, Blondene ooes. Mrs. Dorothy Smith
and Mickey h.ave been also won a blue ribbon for her
visiting her parents, Mr. and telephone plant . · ArMrs, Cecil Morris, for a few r.mgements were made for
the COI)lllliltee to prepare
days.
Chuck and Fran Denney, . fruit baskets for the sick and
Johnnie Denney and friend shutins.
A gilt exchange was held
Verna Kay Weddington, had
dinner with Mr. and Mrs. and a gilt was presented to
Mrs. prepare the Green
John E. Denney Sunday.
The Harrisburg Grange Thumb Notes in January.
Mrs. Grueser and Mrs. Ar·
had a turkey supper
nold
served cookies, punch
December II and was en·
and
homemade
candies durjoyed by the community at
ing
a
social
hour.
the end they had a small
auction to pay for turkeys.
This Is a yearly event. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Camden
are proud grandparents of
tloeir first . gtandchUd. Her
name is Amanda Arl'ena
RICHARDS HOME
Camden, daughter of Mr. and
MIDDLEPORT ~ Arnold
Mrs. Larry W. Camden.
Richards was returned home
The Harris Church gave a Thursday from the Holzer
nice donation .to the Medical Center where he has
Emergency Squad, Sunday, been confined' for the past IO
33 out for church.
'days.

.

ENGAGED ~

Mr. and Mrs. George W. Kinder, Jr.,
Gallipolis, are announcing the engagement of tloeir
daughter, Debbie, to Craig Ellis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Ellis, also of Gallipolis. The bri~Ject is a 1975 graduate
of Gallia Academy presently employed at Nationwide
Insurance Company in Columbus. Her fiance, a 1974
graduate of Gallia Academy, is now a junior at Rio
Grande College. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Offering taken at party

to Bethlehem" was given by
Mrs. Ethel Lowery and Mrs.
~rtha Anderson. Mrs. Jean
Moore and Mrs. Mildred
Bailey presented ceramic
angels to each of the
members. As the gift exchange look place, Mrs.
Helen Sauer read "What is
Christmas." The Horky
home was attractively
decorated for the holidays.
Mrs, Gladys Cummings was
a guest. A thank you nolo was
read from Mrs. Ruth
Woodegard, and Mrs. Dwight
Zavilz sent her regards to tbe ·
group. Favors of miniature
green birds in a nut shell
were given by Mrs. Horky: A
dessert course was served by
the hostesses.

MIDDLEPORT - The
least coin a nd thank offerings
were taken at the annua l
Christmas party of the Group
11, Middlepo.r! First . United
Presbyterian Church held at
the home of Mrs. Bel,y
Horky with Mrs. Virginia
Buchanan as co-hostess.
A meditation , " Christ
Reconciled My Differences",
was read by Mrs. Kathryn
Miller as the least coin offering was take.n. Mrs. Dwight
Wallace had devotions using
the "Voices of Bethlehem" • ,
'·The Repentant Inn Keeper"
and "The Slave Girl,
Tamara."
A playlet entitled ''A Trip
SUNOA¥ GUESTS
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Jones of MI. Vernon
were guests Sunday of Mr.
apd Mrs. Martln Wilcoxen.

•
•

•..

,.•
••

HAVE CALLERs
·RACINE - Emerson and
Melvin Weaver of Franklin
called on Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Johnson and Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Adams Sunday.
VISITORS COME

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Weaver of Middletown
visited Mr . and Mrs. Junior
Johnson and family.

•'

Mr. and Mrs. J E. Glusencamp
•
•

.,

-.
.
.
_,

.,
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•
1

$44!
Vinyl Garage Oxford
'with padded collar
and cushioned

BROWN

insoldes.

MEN'S LEATHER 8" BOOT

3

88

REG.

REG.

19.99

1

17.99

1

BUTTERNUt'
COLOR
SIZES
TO 12

Couple celebrates

Remember little newsmakers?

&amp;'~~~

I

MOBILE HOMES INC•

BANKING HOURS
EACH WEEK

NEW

'6.99

$11

milJistration!&gt; ill'l:l fasd 11aling

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK

LEATHER 6" BOOT

The working man's favtde

" Hello, Nancy " and sll gi ve

CBS the edge in cn1 llll'otlt
nt!l work t: UI.IIPCtitiun.
Dickerson':; memoirs o£
t'OVeo·lng the lust foUl' nd-

57

· GREAT FOR WORK
OR CASUAL WEAR.
DURABLE SCUFF
RESISTANT UPPERS,
OIL RESISTANT
CREPE SOLES

month was read. by Mrs .
Marie Domigan, Mrs, Floyd
Stout pre$ented a program on
Chri s tma s
legends .
Following the gift exchange
ga mes were played with
prizes provided by the
hostesses. Card remem·
brances were sent to mem·
hers unable to attend.

Dickerson 's. Fmm a swarm

of shoving , shouting
reporters, lw'd consistently
pi«=k her out , ~rcet her with,

MODULAR HOME

....

MEN'S SIZES
6;} TO 12

SALE PRICES GOOD Tlt~U
DECEMBER 2911t

had devot ions
gtvtng
readings on the tru~ meaning
of" Christmas.
Christmas gill wrapping s .
were judged by Mrs. Jimmy
Caldwell , Mrs . Frederick
Goebel and Mrs . Doris
Koenig, with a prize being
awarded to Mrs. Ha rold
Massar. ThE' verse of the

After Lyndon · John son
decided lo run for vi ce president, he also refused ull inter·
view requests ·• c&gt;:. l'Cj)l

She started al We 111 1!151 as
H rcScltrchcr ('~ Only men
L"oUlll bcL'Omt~ writers"). In
1961 , a fter wriUnK whut n...
lllHiiiS 0 1\C uf the best por•
to·uit.&gt; ever written ol Judy
Garlcwd rreprinled in her·
book ) she bt.'Came Life's fh·st
female stall writer und, lhrc'C
years htter, she Vecamu its
first femule oolumnlst. .
She left Life ufter 18 ycurs
to become editor of McCulls.
the (irs! womun editor of the
world's largest woman 's
orU1g11zine in :;o yeurs. "II was
an uncomfortable p&lt;&gt;Slllon for
me, but it di(b1 't lnst long . I
was cXpt'\:lc'&lt;l to talk an&lt;l net
like a lady cdiiOI'. I didn'lund
1
I got fired."
~"'rom thCrc she went 1o
Newsweek where she producl'tl cunsunu natc conUllcnUirics on Watcrgute,lhc SI.A,
Opcruliou Bu byli ft itntl
Opcrution Hmnm;mnlng - all
subJeCts I hut hud . been wo·it·
ten to dcuth, but brought
alive with Almwndt~r's rure
wit, inslghl, und intelligence.
AlcJWrldcr's st)'lc is to get
emotionally involved wil h
her subj ect. In "Arrlvuls und
DcpMrturcs,'' JW.rt reprinted
articles nnd JNirl memoirs,
Richard Rovorc show~ u
sty le us different us puS&gt;;lblc
from AlcKander's, but toquul·
ly compelling. His prose Is us
undcrslHtcd und clogunt us
the . New Yorker '- the

lll'Cause she was ulways
"Among Those Presc1.1l ;' '
&lt;Ji ways I'CIXllting from in~ idc
Washington social and
political cio·etcs. When she
reports !hut L.B.J . felt in·
fcrior to the Kenncdys, she
By RICK VAN SANT
big day .
pel guinea pig or make bucks up heo· sUt!emcnl by
United Press lnteroaUooal
She got married .
anima l sounds, Reinert r~alling Johnson pleading
wilh her during the l9GO cam·
Sure, 1976 was a big year
In tloe nude.
PORTLAND - Mr. and the ceremony.
swallowed a goldfish.
Mr. Gluesencamp is a for giant newsmakcrs .like
Now that 's talent you won't paign, I; Nuney, you know the
Mrs. J . E. (Bud) Gluesen·
Since Linda is a nigh!cl~b
' Kenncdys. Will you tell them
camp of 5770 Roche Drive, Project supervisor for the Jimmy Carter, Jackie stripper, she figured il was see in Atlantic City .
mt~gaz in e· he hu :1 been
what " good job I'm dOing'! ..
U.S.
·
Army
Corps
of
. Onassis and Henry Kissinger. appropriate altire for the
Columbus, formerly of
writing
for since 1944.
Engineers
at
Alum
Creek
But what about Otis Toad• Newport, Ky . wedding.
Portland, ·celebrated their
Or
at
least
will
you
tell
them
Lake
in
Ga
lena.
Mrs.
vine, Linda Brig ell and Greg
'Her groom took his vows in
silver wedding anniversary
how hurd I'm to·ying''"
tloe aiiDgelher too. And oot to
at a reception Dec. 4 in the Gluesencamp is employed in Reinert'
The fa ct !hal the t&gt;owcrful
the
French
Market
at
Voudon'tremembertloem?
·
ruin
the
party,
the
home of her brother-in-law
confided
in Dickerson makes
Columbus.
'
Toadvine,
BrigeU
and
bridesmaid,
flower
girl
and
W
ell,
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. L.
her
book
difficult
to put down
Guests
attending
the
Reinert
aren't
likely
to
forget
best
man
also
paraded
in
the
BUY YOURS NOW I
M. Pratt ol Newark .
but
also
tt·oubling
lu
read.
1976
~
because
it
was
the
buff
in
front
of
a
huge,
fullyreception
werd
Mr.
and
Mrs.
The event was hosted by
eMARLETIE •WHITMAN
Danc ing with L.B.J . at a
the couple's sons·in·law and Lawrenceji1tfesencamp, Sr., year they got involved in clothed audience.
11
While
House
bull
or
chatting
1was a little embarrassed
Mrs.
Paul :;orne wacky events.
30 Year$ Financing Avilllable
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Portland ,
with Ki ssin ger at ·a
Let's start with Otis Toad· at first, " gushed tloe blushing
Daniel (Jackie) Obertin of Lawrence, Mrs. Phylli s
Also: Complete Line o,l Oui!llty
GcorlJetown dinner party arc
Zoarville and Mr. and Mrs. Ritchie, Joyce Ritchie, of vine:an 18-year old freshman bride, "but it was beautiful. I
Sectional Homes &amp; Mobile Hom•s
certainly not itleal po·cpai'Uat
Clermont
College
in
recommend
it
for
other
cou·
Garry (Barbara) Martin of Racine; Mr. and Mrs. James
tiur"JH fol' investfgalive or
1
pies."
R. Lawrence, Syracuse; Mrs. Batavia, Ohio.
Newark.
even
hard news reporting.
April
23
was
Toad
vine's
big
Af!¢r
the
ceremony,
the
John
Tillis,
Tammy
Fitch,
The former Alberta Fitch,
But
her memoirs show that
day
.
He
decided
to
try
to
nude
bride
and
groom
Reedsville
;
Debra
Fitch,
&lt;laughter of Mr. and Mrs.
t.he
Dickerson
fl)nnula fur
crack
tloe
world's
hardboiled
chatted
for
several
minutes
John
M~rgon,
·Za
nesviUe;
Raymond L. Fitch or Long
egg
eating
record
:
44
eggs
in
with
guests
and
reporters
success
indudeli
more thari
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
Burri,
Boll~m. and Mr. Giuesen30
minutes.
covering
tloe
uncovering.
But
c
h~rtn
and
carefully
Bolivar;
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
ca mp , son of Lawrence
cultivated
contacts,
Mixed in
A
crowd
of
300
students
and
tloey
also
had
to
share
the
William
Tope
and
Sarah,
Glueilencamp, Sr. of Portland .
IDwnspeople
gathered
in
the
attention
with
bridesmaid
wert!
boundless
energy
and
Bowerston;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
and the late Albina Ward
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
capacity
for
workworking
school
cafeteria
ID
watch
Morganna
Roberts,
who
wore
Russell Grant, Sunbury; Mr.
Gluesenc~mp, were married
Phone
446·9340
Gallipolis. Ohio
Toadvine,
who
had
been
in
only
her
4!).23-39
statistics.
on
Christmas
and
Tha
nksgivDec. 8, 1951, at Racine. Rev . and Mrs. Jim Stephens, Mr,
"training
"
a
week
for
the
A
few
·weeks
after
tloat
in~.
sandwiching
in
her
mar·
Thomas Clelland officiated at · and Mrs. Joe Geer , Colum·
eggatloon.
strange wedding, came an
riag~ and the birth of hcl'
bus.
"I
ate
a
whole
lot
all
week
unusual
beautY,
pageant
in
Mr. and Mrs . Richard .
Buck Wallace
of Lan·
Wills, Keith and DeAnna, to stretch my stomach and Cincinnati.
caster,
formerly
of - . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - -...- - - - - - - - - - - - .
tloen
I
quit
eating
yesterday
The
·
17
'
co
ntestants
Mrs. Willard Price, Marilyn
Gallipolis, celebrated his
Price and Keely , Mr. and to .get good and hungry," parading in front of a jamlourtli birthday' with his
packed crowd seemed
Mrs. Jerry Pratt, Briall and Toad\ine explBined .
grandparents, Mr. and
Then he started gulping unusually tense.
Michelle, Mr , and Mrs. Tom
, Mrs. Dwlgbt Wallace and
Armstrong, Mr. and Mrs. eggs, trying to get his name · Asked to say something to
daughter , • Nancy, ol
Vernon Ridenbaugh, Mr. and in lhe Guinness Book of.World . the audience, one contestant
Middleport, and Mr. and
admitted, "I'm nervous as
Mrs . Douglas Price . and Records.
Mrs. Gall Buck and son,
"I was really confident hell."
Autumn, alto! Newark; Mr.
Jon, Pomeroy, on Dec. 11.
The contestants were all
and Mrs. Carmel Oiler and starting out ," said Otis. "I
Also present for the
put away 10 eggs in tloe first men participating in a "role
Sammy, Utica.; Mr. and Mr-s .
observance were his
fivt! minutes.
reversal" experiment. Greg
Marc Guthrie and Jason, Mr.
parents, Mr. and Mrs • .
"But then," he grimaced, Reinert took it seriously and
and Mrs. Edwin Pri ce,
Bruce
Wallace and his
"I hit a rotten egg around No . went all out to win .
Harold Price and Harold 14 or 15. It made me a little
sister,
Natalie
Dawn.
He marched out ih the
Price II of Heatlo.
sick and I couldn't. get tloem swimsuit competition clad in
HOLIDAY HOURS
down too fast after tloat."
a Door-ienghtlo robe. The
COLUMBUS - Director
Alas, Toadvine could mostl'y female audience
stomach no more than 26 shr ieked when he tossed it off Clifford E. Reich of the Ohio
eggs.
to reveal a tiny swimsuit Department of Liquor
Control announced today that
"I feel kind of stuffed, but made entirely of flowers.
tlo.ere's no pain in my stoBut · Reinert . really all Slate liquor stores wlll be
mach," the 6-fool, 176i&gt;ound , convinced the judges he was open-from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on
PARTY HELD- Chris·
Toadvlne
reported after the . their man in the talent Friday, Dec. 31, 1976, in order
)Ina
Dawn
Oren·
to provide service lo the
ordeal.
"But
I . am a little competition.
POMEROY
Senior
pea,
daughter
of
ANNOUNCES
lightloeaded."
While
other
contestan
ts
publiC during the holiday
Citize ns Center activities
Norma Drennen, Gal:Feb. 5 was Linda Brigel~ 's were content to sing to their rush.
llpolls1 celebrated her loca ted at the Pomeroy
lint birthday Dec. 18 at the Junior High School is open 9
a.m..-1 p.m. Monday thro~gh
~ome ol ber grandparents,
r-tr. and Mrs. Lester Friday.
TlliRD AVENUE
Monday, Dec . 27 /f'aylor, Galllpolls. A
BRANCH
~aggedy, Ann cake, Ice
Cards and Games, 12:3()..3
!Cream and pop were served
p.m.
Tuesday , Dec . 28 !o her gralidparents and
~rs. Winifred Thompson,
Physical Fitness, 10:45 a.m.;
:Northup, Sharon, Jam~s Chorus, I2 :I5·2 p.m.
&lt;1nd Tanya Sue Shafler of
Wednesday, Dec. 29 itecta and Christina's
Social Security Represen·
. MONDAY-FRIDAY 8 AM.fi PM
~mnts~ Nancy and July
lative, 9:30 a.m..t2:30 p.m.;
!,Drennen ol Gallipolis. Gills
Games, 12:30-2 p.m.
:were given to CbrlsUria ~Y
Thursday , Dec. 30 SATURDAY 8 AM-3 PM
;the guests and lier lamlly.
DECEMBER 26 THRU JANUARY 1ST
..
Physical Fitness, 10 :45 a.m.;
Sing-a-Long, 12 :30 p.m.
••
Friday, Dec. 31 - New
•
Year's Eve, Center Closed.
••
New Year's I&lt;ve Party at
Senior Citizens Center, 8:30
p.m.-12:30 a.r.1.
·
••
Senior Citizens Nutrition
Program, 11:30 a.m.-12:30
THE STAFF AND EMPLOYEES O.F THE FIRST
'·•
p.m. Monday through Friday
NATIONAL BANK HOPE THAT THIS EXTENSION OF
'except Friday, December 31,
!•
tHE THIRD AVENUE . BRANCH HOURS WILL BE
·: .
closed.
'·
'
BENEFICIAL TO YOU AND THAT YOU WILL HAVE
: LETART, W. Va. _ John
Menu for December 27
.., .
.
through December 31, 1976:
OCCASION
TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE
.. urtos Smothson, son of Mr.
Monday - Braised liver in
LONGER BANKING HOURS.
)nd Mrs, F. ~ · Smithson oniQn gravy, au gratin
No Subt.
~elebrated his first blrlhday . potatoes , bul!ered green
December 2• at th~ home beans, applesauce . bread,
his parents, Rl. I, Letart. buller, milk .
No Coupons · No Limil
• Refreshments of oce cream
Tuesday _ Salisbury steak
)nd cake. were served. The with gravy' buttered diced
:rake was 'baked and potatoes, buttered peas,
'decorated by his aunt, bread pudding with raisins,
~ernita ¥eado':'s.
bread, butler, milk.
MAIN BANK · SECOND AVE.
• Those altendmg were Mr.
Wednesday - Chicken pol
)nd Mts. Ro~hard Broad· pie, flufly rice, buttered
tater, Melissa and Leslee, spinach, peach shortcake
TlliRD AVE. BRANCH - THIRD AVE.
• r. and Mrs. Don Meadows with lopping , bread, butler,
omd Lori, Mrs. · Helen milk.
'0PO~U.
:Smltlulon and Allan, Mr. an'd
Thursday _ Bee! stew,
PUt.Ol.
.· UUU
VINTON BRANCH • VINTON
:f&gt;{rs. Harry Staats and Mrs. pineapple slice on lettuce
:J.illian Smith .
. . '
;, Se dl
d
d .11 purp 1e pl ums, bi SCU its,
2nd &amp; Olive
,GallifiOlis, II
n ng car s an go s butter, mUk.
I
;.ere M(. and Mrs. James
Friday .,.. Center Closed.
"Yuur Full Service People Tu Pci;Jple Bank"
§lrannon and family, Mr. and , Coffee, teo and buttermilk
lfdrs. Albert Johnson and served
dally.
Pl e ;~se
MEMBER FDIC
flch, and Mr. and Mrs. remem be r to re~ister for
:~~ames Staats and Jommy.
lunch .

25th anniversary

"

1'UPPERS PLAINS - The
Rose Garden Club Christmas
party was held recently at the
Wilmar Cafeteria in Parkersburg with Mrs, Robert Dorst
and Mrs. Glen Stout, cohostesses.
The dinner blessing was
given by Mrs . Carl Barnhill
and Mrs . Frederick Goebel

rcporti11g.
So Nam:y Dickcr'Sun was a

bald head look even baltlt!r. ''

Gardeners meet at Wilmar

.

sons lk!twccn deirdliucs and
inau~urat biJtls, tuiling 18huur..Uayli dutin~ convcntivns, aml spending jl:t rgc
chunks u£ her li£e in ail1lhJIICS
cmd motels. She was away
from home so frcoquenlly !hut
whcu she cltllcd home to Uilk
'to her son and "he ·vus told
his Monuny w11nted to lulk to
him, he ran tv the lt·~ ~ vision
instead of go in~ lo tile .
phone.''
Judg-in g fr om her·
pedestrian prose, Nuney
Dickerson '!&gt;erforms much
better in fro nt or a camer~;~
than a lypcwritt!l'. Shana
Aluantler, ~mlhor of "Talking Woman ," turns out to be
the quintessential ·' wl'iling
woman' ' - an ab.~olutcly
superb stylist.
In rcprinli; of hco· Life uu&lt;l
Newsweek eolumns, strung
toge th er
by
s hort
nulobiogr• phicul l'cfl cclioits,
Alex~ndcr writes bi·illiunll v
about subjccli; •s diverse .:,
Putty Hearst, Bella Abzng ,
Me:tstcrs and Johnson (" The
Ma and Pu Ke!llc of
gynecology"), the Watergate
hea rirtgs (''educational TV or
the highest order, Sesame St.
for grownups") , H prcguunt
clcplw.n t, and GcurHl'
Walluce.
She also writes brilliunlly,
bui nut extensively enough,
about heo~eU. If Dickerson is
~~ television pioneer, Alexantler is ll magazine pioneer.

lu lht.' httl' 19a&lt;ls, there
\Htsn't c\•t·n a t ukt~n woman
doing st•_ri qus kll·v i;;tou

Twelfth Night Plu s Tw o first , when i11 HlfMJ she W&lt;iS .
Party on the eighth nf made a CBS network t.:ur·
respondc11t, e~flcr· landing a .
January .
newsbr'caking
interview wiU1
The Galleries at . Riverby
.
Speaker
of
the
Honse Siim
reopen on Tuesda y, Jan . 4,
Rayburn
"
man who
1977 al 10 a.m. to visitors. The
January exhibit will be a religiously rd uset! req uests
student show arranged by fm· ·rv interviews l&gt;ccausc
•·the bright lights made his
Sarah Moshier .

•

,.:;
:
••

.

MEN'S UTILITY OXFORDS

Leather.U_ppers.
Reinforced stitching.

•

..

YEAR END SALE

ME~'S

•

Newsomes
entertain
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Newsome entertained recently .with a
· covered dish dinner and
Christmas party at their ,
home at Five Points.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Bailey, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Hysell, Jan
·Judge, Austin Newsome, Mr.
and Mrs. Benny Spears, Mr. ·
and Mrs. Randy Cross and
daughter, Jennifer, Mr. and
Mrs. Dian Knapp, Mr .. and
Mrs. Frank Mills and Mr. and
Mrs. D. C. Allen.

PlanninJ.! tht- Pvent nr&lt;'
GALLIPOLIS
'rhe
French Art Colony 1s plan· c'arnh·n and I}OJl Hippensteel
ning 11 special Twelfth Night andliess Grace . The party iS
"Plus Two" Pa rty for for members only. Everyone
Saturday evening, January 8. who t'Omes must bring. some
1977 at Riverby lor their " Christmas
Leftovers,"
members, at 8 o'clock.
including r·a kes. candi es,
Twelfth Night, or F.piphany cookies and other Christmas
is alway s 12 day's after goOdies. Members will be
Q!.rislmas. That would be on called .by the' Committee.
Janna ry
6,
but the
Casual dress will be the
celebration by the French Art proper attire lor the evening.
Colony is "adding two" so Surprise e ntertainment is
that January 8, l977 is the big heinl! nhmnrfl . Thf' cost will
eve ni~~ at Rivrrby.

•

·Kerr News

Debbie Kinder

Ry (farnl rt·lsl'nlhul
be $2 per person .
The bt•cautiful {'hri ~tar ws
lil;l'orathm s_, intludin t-: thf&gt;
pine cone tree Will slill bt• on
display to be part of the

GREAT FOR WORK
OR SPORTS
BUTTERNUT
. SIZES TO 12

~(o/m.~p!L

TERESA BIHL

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY

DINNER BOX

'
first birthday

3 PIECES CHICKEN

=is cekbrated

.

•MASHED POTATOES
&amp;GRAVY
•SLAW

.

:r:n

., ••

~ROLL

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!

....

...

I

HOURS

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B-4-- The Sunday Ttmes-&amp;ntmel, Sunday, Dec 26, 1976

25 years of drama reviewed
Ry JOAN HANAUER
UPI Televu;lon Wr1Lcr

Nf.W YOHK 1UP II
ll1nstmas E\le marked i he
25t h a nmv ersa ry uf the

televtston premtere of the
Hallmark Hall of r'ame 's
produ,1 ton of the Gta n-Carlo
Menol!t npera ' Amah! and
the Ntght Vtstrors "
Pi'ime-hme opera seem.')

ummagtnable today when
most televt$10n is conceived
wtlh the tdea of attracting the
largest posstble audience and theref(re the highest
posstble fees from sponsors
mterested m reaching the
most people"
Sponsors mterested 10
unage·butlding vta quabty
shows, even tf they can afford
the astronomical costs of
smgle sponsorsh tp , have
difftcully ftndmg tbem Even

THE MAGIC OF CHHISTMAS was seen tn the faces of the ktndergarten chtldren ol
Washtnglon Elementary durmg Santa's recent vtstt there

Santa pays visit to school
The spectal magtc of the
GALLIPOLIS - Joll y
Santa Claus patd a surpnse Chrtstmas season showed on
Vl Slt to each Chnstmas party each chtld's face whtle sttttng
fur
th e
W.ashtn gton on Santa's knee The children
Elem entary ktndergartcn told of thetr Christmas wtshes
classes taught by Mrs P and assured Santa they had
Huber and Mrs B Can· been very good chtldren thts
past year Each one promtSl!ll ,
terbury

• o/•

'

OLE SAINT NICK patd a VISit to Washtngwn
Elementary School's kinder gat ten classes recently Whtle
he was there Kelly Jo Chapman wid Santa ~ha t she'd like
m her stocking on Chrtstmas mormng

15 years ago, adverllsmg

Santa they "ould try very,
very hard to be "extra" good
unttl Chnstmas
Sa nta answered many of

the chtldren's quest ton s
concernmg hiS workshop, the
North Pole and the remdeer,
espectally Rudolph

GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Cttlzens Center, located at 220
Jackson Ptke m the County
Hom e Butldtng, ts open
Monday through Frtday from
9 a m to 3 p m The schedule
for thts week ts as follows
M@day, Dec 27 Phystcal Fttness, 11 30 a m
Tuesda y, Dec 28 Qutltmg and Visttmg, 9 am 3 p m • Blood Pressure
Check, 1 30-2·30 p m
Wednesday, Dec 29 Ph)slcal Fttness, 11 30 a m .
Ca rd Games, 1-3 p m
Thursday, Dec 30 - Btrlhday Party, 1 30 p m
Fnday, Dec 31 - Closed
The Semors' Co-op and the
Craft Shop are open each day
for sales at 12 30-1 30 p m
The

Semor

Nutrition

Program serves the followmg
menus for thts week·
Monday - Bra1sed hver ,

parsley potatoes, creamed
tomatoes, biscuits, bufter,
cmnamon applesauce, m1lk

Tuesday - Cabbage rolls,
buttered dtced potatoes,
buttered peas, co rnbr~ad ,
butter, bread puddmg wtth
ra1sms , m1lk

OLGA ROBINSON enjoyed stttmg on Santa's lap
when he vtstted llie kmdergarten classes at Washmgton
Elementary reeentiy

agenctes
for
gtant
corporations such as U S
Steel and 3M had Ill struggle
w ltnd shows lliat would
prov1de

a

vehicle

for

mst tlutional, as opposed to
product, adverttsmg
Today the usual outlet for
suc h spendmg ts pubhc
telev1s1on , where the ml
co mpanaes
and oth er
sponsors ca n underwnte

pro granu ng wt thout a
network breathmg down thetr
neck, worrym g about Ntelsen
ratmgs, leads m and leads
out
Weekly smgle sponsorshtp
drama has become a thmg of
the past, but one company

has stuck to the commercial
networks, hopmg to boost
bo\h unage and sales wtth
quality drama - Hallmark 's
Hall of Fame serte s of
drama s

contmues , st11l

offermg drama but now wtth
less
emphasts
on
Shakespci!re and the clasSICS

The Hall of Fame began as
a weekly program of halfhour and hour-long dramas,
bUt smce the end of the 195354 teleVlston season has been
reduced to f1ve or stx, shows a

year on NBC - always NBC
The dramas have ranged
from the Aprtl 26, 1953
productiOn of ''Hamlet,'' w1th
Maunce Evans, to tins year's

Dec 12 Peter Pan" sta rrmg
Danny Kaye
That

~=

~~
»
~:

&lt;

" Ham le t ,"

mctdentally, was televtston 's
first two..tlow- drama and 1ts

h rst full production of
Shakespeare
The
policy
that
subordm a ted num bers to

quality - as opposed to the
soap and cereal school of TV
sponsorslup - was ongmated

Wednesday - Chtcken pot
pie mashed potatoes, buttered sptnach, bread, butter
peaches, mtlk
Thursday - Baked fiSh,

by Joyce C Hall, found er and
board chmrman Of Hallmark
Cards, when he satd, Good
taste ts good busmess I'd
rather make etght millton
good unpresstons than 28

soup beans, cole slaw With

mllhon bad ones '' He also

ga mtsh, cornbread, butter ,
purple plums, mtlk
Frtday - Closed
Choice of beverage served
wtth each meal

agamst all the conventional
te lev1s1 on
adver tiSing
WISdOm
' Here's why I don't worrv

made a statement that goes

Winter racing season opens Tuesday

Generation Rap

.tl~,ul the raun~:-; I've never Hall s;ud there were O&lt;J plan~
Uy Heh·n and Sue Hottel
figured out why people lor arrmg 1t agam m th e near :·.~:.
believe folks arc huy mg tbe future - but perhaps oome
product "'' well as watchm~ Olnslrn&lt;~s r.vc
Only Good News for Cbrlltlilu Day
tht• show They can be
Readers All
wtltr lu ng autl • s ltll no l
Agalll, our Otrlstmas tradition!
"
buytng ~ ·
01 this day, we prlllt mly upbeat letters- no problems, no
Hall 's son, Donald J Hall,
troubles - It's ~mg but the good for our readers on Chriat'•
who now runs the family
birthday Read on .
busmess, 1s a hltle less
+++
nonchalant about the raungs,
Rap
but rematns convmced thal
When God was hand111g out parents, he gave me the best 1
his father was nght about the
Here's
my deflnltlon of a mother:
need for quabty as well as
A
mother
ts someone who looks past the uglineu of ller
quantity
newborn
and
sees
only dreams for the future.
jRattngs
are ' a
She
ts
someone
who puts up with the trrttations of small
L'O nsJderalaon when we 't.lectde
children,
knowing
she
must scold, but always understand.
what prope rty wselect," Hall
ATHENS - The beauty,
She
watches
you
grow
older and more independent with a
satd durmg an mterVllw magtc and charm of the
Jot
of
anxtety
and
a
lot
more
fatth. She's someone who listens 1o
· We have w be mterested, ageless fatry tale Cinderella
your
problems
and
feelings
and
shows you that she's Interested
consodermg the dollars are captu red tn a ballet whtch
by
telling
you
some
of
hers
mvolved ''
airs Sunday, Dec. 26 at 1 p m.
Amother IS someone who makes you feel better when you
It's not like the good old on Channel WOUB TV 20 and
make
a rrustake because she can remember when she made a
days, when a two-hour prune WOUC TV 44 over PBS
sunilar
one
tune "Hamlet" cost $50,000,
Followtng the tradtltOnal
She's
so much fwt that you wonder if your boyflend is
mcludm g air time and story , the ballet by Russian
coming
over
to see you or her.
productton costs
composer Sergey Prokoftev
She
doeSll't
forbtd you to rtde around on your boyfclend's
Hall
smthngly
but opens wtth the herome ltvmg
stubbornly sktr ted what in the shadow of her two motorcycle but goes out and tr1es ot herself - but H you forget
sponsorshtp costs today, mean stepsisters Whtle they the helmet, watch out•
Amother is someone who reads up on drugs and discUBSes
although he mdtcated lliat prepare to atlend the ball 111
Hallmark's long arrange· Prmce Charmmg' s honor, them wtth you, then tells you that you're mature enough 1o
ment wtth NBC proftted both she ts bamshed to the ktlchen make the right decision (and you do)_
She knows what you're thinking and feeling because she
corporaltons He dtd allow to cook and clean
reme!llbers
when she went through that stage.
lliat dramattc producttons After her stepSi sters leave,
A
mother
is one who has only the htgbest morals and
deftm tely not those sponsored Ctnderella ts vtstled by her
standards
because
she knows that you are patternmg your life
by his ftrm - had cost as latry godmother She transafter
her
much as $1 mtlhon or $1 5 ports Cmderella to the Land
She haa the sens~ to see you are mature 1 wttl1 a rrund and
rmlhon
of Her Heart's Destre, where
Ratmgs and money are not the young gtrlts dressed m a conSCience of your own, but still can't resist gtvmg that bit Of
llie only constderations - beautiful gown and magtc advice, becaulle she loves you.
Anyway, that's MY Mom 1 - DAUGHTER
there 's the matter of sbppers to wear to the ball
tdenttftcation Hall 's theory ts
lliat quality entertamment Cmderella IS warned that she Dear Helen and Sue·
It's time someone stood up for -m-laws, so I'll start with
becomes tdenttfted m the rrwst return home by mtd\oJewcr mmd wtth a quality mght or her gown wtll turn my slster-tn-law. I wouldn't trade her for anyone m the world
mto rags and her coach, a
She never yells, even of you do something really terrible
product
She always has time to listen to a kid atsler's problems, no
"We get a htgh degree of pumpkm
At the ball, Prmce Char- matter bow ttred she is wtth her own kids
tdenttftcatton wtth our
mmg,
an tn-esponStble young
She lo~es entertammg her husband's family, and shows
product We even get letters
man
,
ts bored wtth th e she truly enjoys them She knows when I'm down, Without me
from viewers who say they
wtll never buy any cards stepsisters and the rest of the tellmg her, and she can say JUSt the right things to make me
except ours Ktds m guests He remams unhappy okay agam. She understands teenagers even though she ha1111't
pa rticular send us tho se unttl a lovely and mystertous been one for 12 years.
Prmcess arnves After one
letters "
If everyone had a sister4n·law like mme, they'd sure be
look,
he dectdes that she ts lucky! - BJJ
For stnctly commerctal
,
reasdhs, "Hall of Fame" the gtrl he wants to marry,
shows tend to go oo durmg the but before he can propose, Dear Helen and Sue
Chrtstma s season and m the Ctnderella hurrtes away as
My grandmother has ltved wtth us for four years, and we
Valentme's Day-Easter-Mo- the clock stnkes mtdntght all agree these have been the best years for our family. She
ther's Day season, although The followmg day, Prmce takes the load off Mom butneverm an officious way. Sbe'sjust
Charmtng searches for there when we need her
the timmg 1sn 't exact
They
are
The type of matertal vanes Cmderella
Many lllnes I can talk things out wtth Grandma where they
greatly, although tn the early reumted, and return to the would only become btg hassles with my parents - until sl\e
years of the senes there was Land of Thetr Hearts' Destre sets my thinking stratght. She's got time to listen, and she
a
concentration
on to dance happily ever after doesn't lecture. She doesn't take stdes, but somehow after
Shakespeare and the clasSICs,
Cmderella ~ as produced by talking wtth her , I can see everyone'sstde more clearly
while today 's Hall of Fame the
South
Carolina
In foretgn countroes I've read they "venerate" the older
div1des Its attention between Educaltonal Televtston generatton, and look up to them because of their wisdom. Too
such young-and-old lam· Network for nattonal trans- often m the U S. they see them as laughable or to be tgnored
tly fare as "Beauty and the mtsston by the Public whenever possible
Beast" and strtctly adult Broad cas ting Servtce
Maybe my family all gets along so great because we all
producttons such as "The Dtrector S1dney Palmer treat one another as humans. - K T
Disappearance of Aunee " The ballet was performed by
Hall made the pomt lliat the
Columbta
(S outh
some pt oducttons may be Carohna ) Ctty Ballet
''adult," but llie ftrm stays

Cinderella
ballet to
air Sunckiy

aY. a} from "mature audtence

only" themes that might
offend Halhnark customers
mclude a htgh percentage of
women, wtth the persons m
thetr 21ls the best card buyers
of any age group
Is there a hope that
Hallmark wtll repeat that
hrst
Chmtmas
Eve
productton , "Amah! and the
Ntght Vtsttors'" Certamly tt
won 't be on next year and

•

Outdoors USA:

New finance director
of college announced
BYCARRICKLEAYriT
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) All they really wanted for
Chrlstuias at the California
Department of Fish and

Game was more~ money

Unless they get a bundle
pretty soon, says DFG
Dorector E. c. Fullerton, the
department wlll be euttmg
back programs and personnel
by the beginning of fiscal
1977-78.
Fullerton dtdn 't really
expect to ftnd a package of
extra money under the yule
tree ' this
Christmas
However, in a wide·rangmg
Interview published m the
department 's btmonthly
11
magazine,
0utdoor
Califoritia," he disclosed that
a special task Ioree from the
state department of finance Is
at work "to ~et us out of this

Golf '76:

advances on the women's

'
'

To many, however, money
1s the biggest item, and if

Bennett, son of Mr and Mrs

that's the ease, the btg names
were Jack Nicklaus - agsm
-and Judy Rankin Nicklaus
did not have one Of hiS
vtntage years but he won the
btggest money event, the
$100,000rop priZe ill the World
Sertes of G&lt;llf, took down
another $60,000 for wmrung
the Tournament Players
Championship, $40,000 m the
Australian Open, and for the
eighth time was the top
mooey wimer on the PGA
tour wtth official earnmgs of
$2G6,438. r
Rankin became the ftrst
woman professtonal to wm
$100,000 in a year, passtng
that barrter m July By
year's end, Donna Capono
Young and JoAnne Carner
joined her but neither was
close to Rankin's $150,734
total , Judy won stx

Donald L Bennett of Rt 1,
Heedsvllle, has enlisted mthe
U S Atr Force's Delayed
EnliStment Program A 1977
graduate of Eastern High ,
Dec 28th rough Jan 3, 1977 - Gallertes at Rtverby closed
School, he ts scheduled for
enlistment mthe Regular Atr for llie Christmas hohdays.
Exlubtt for the month of January· Student show arranged
Force on Jan ~4 Upon
by Sarah Moshter.
~raduatton from the Atr
Gallery hours as of Jan 4, 1977 - Saturdays and Sundays,
Force 's sb::wweek baste
I
unttl
5 p m , Tuesdioys and Thursdays, 10 am ~I 3 p m,
training course, he wtll
Rtverby.
rece1ve terhn;cal trammg as
Jan 8 - The After Twelfth Ntght Party, Htverby Detatls
a fuel spectaltst
later, Bess Grace and Carolyn Htppensteel, chatrWomen

JACKIE HUTC}IINSON was one of several children
who sat on Santa's lap at Washington Elementary
recently
•'

They'll Do It Every T1me
I DON'T WANAA GO
10 SQ.IOOI.! I DOI.fr
~EEL f:JOOO.'!

toumwnents.

81

81rd , COOkie Munster

&amp;

Other " Sesam e

Str ~ f'f'

Characters

Child re n 12 &amp; Untlu

Hall Pnc.e
Wed , Jan 5
8 oo p m
Thur s , Jan 6 - 8 00
Q rn
Sat
Jan . !11 r'J
p rn Sun
J;tn 9- 6 DO

ALL SEATS RE-SERVED
U .OO - IS 00 - $4 00
Ch ec k To HO LID AY O N ICE
1
To M e mor..i'll Futld Hou ~(!. Slh A~ c &amp;
St ree t Huntmqton Wes t V1rq1n 1a 25703

.l--&lt;J-- -

Plea se
e n c: la se tor prompr and sa le
s t a mped
self ctellv ery of
r
addressed enve lope l•ck e ts
v0 u

ORDER llCKETS BY MAIL

...._ -

-

-

~

-

Morn 0

Mat

lsi Chorce

_ Mal

lJ

Evg

[l

2nd Chorce
or Aifull T!Citeh - - "

or Chrld

' ·~ keh

_

s --

ol S __

0

Evg []
Morn 0

per l•cl!el ..

pe r l •c kel ·

s --S -~--

Total Amou nl ol Chttk o• lr.lonfy Ord1r S -- -

PlEASE PRINT

NAME ~-------------------

ADDRESS - - - -- - - -- - - CHY _ _ _ _ STATE

ZIP

Children's Oxford
Stzes ey, -4
Regularly $6 97

J90

Tremendous savings! '
Men's Athletic Shoes
Asstd Styles Values to $12 97

490to890

..

Oxfords. Reg $8 97 ... $5'.90
*Use Yo • Mas1erCharg' or BankAmencard
Open Week Days
9 l1l 9

...."
""

Sunday t lil6

'103 Upper Rtver Rd
Acron from Stiver Bridge Pl*za

.__------~Itt toknaw us; you11ikc us.~~ -~~oo.~ .

~

The LPGA played for a
record $2 4 million m 1976,
double the '75 purse total, and
should pass $3 million In 1977.
The men, who seem to have
no linut to their prtzes, cut up
an astounding $9,157,522 this
year Next year? More
But it's tbe women 's tour
that has more room for
growth, and It achteved
something of a coup one week
In September when the LPGA
for the first time was playing
for more money than the
men . The LPGA also
emphasized its drtve for
stature when It revived and
promoted the first llliXed
lournament In a decade. The
women attracted so many of
the leading men players as
their partners that the PGA
lour decided it was too good
ro pau up, and announced It
would nm tis own mixed
lournament m 111'77

· The hst of European tm·
ports schedu led to compete In
tlw 78-day meetmg Is topped
by J 0 . Tohm, England's
ehampton 2-year-old of 1976

It ts the ftrst time tn
memory that a champoon
Eurupenn 2 )'ear-old has been

an-ivals
Kmg Pelhnore ftgures to be
a treat in the 250,000 Santa
Anita Handtcap Mar. 6, but
he 'II be challenged by recent
European tmport Bruni, an
Irish- br ed 4-year-o ld
reported purchused for I
mollton late this yea r.
Owned by Daniel Schwartz
and trained b~ Evon Jackson,
Bruni recently fml·~ed filth
m the Prix De I. Arc [)e
Ti om phe - cor odered
Europe's race or the yea r and also wo s Sl)cond In the
Kmg George V1 and Queen
E liz a beth
Diamond
Slakes and In 1975 won the
English St Leger
Also scheduled to compete

brought tu the Umted States
for tts l·vear-old campatgn
Dunng the past year, such
horses as Dahlta (the world 's
J 0 Tobtn, an Amertcan all -ltme mo ney-wi nning
bred sent by owner George mare ), Km g Pe lhnore
Pope Jr to face m England (Winner Of three Stakes and
thts year, won aU three races $330,000 at Santa Amta 's Oak
m that country and was Tree Meetmg alone), and
beaten only when he was Mtss T~sh lba (Vamty hanshtpped to France for the dteap winner and champton
'Grand Crtterium, loSing by dtstaffer of the Hollywood
four lengths
Park Meetmg) have shuwn
The son of Never Bend was remarkable success after
tramed tn England by famed betng brough t here from
cond1honer Noel Murless, Europe
who has smce rettred, and
The confuswn li es 1n
wtll be handled at Santa Amta d1stmgu1sh1ng between the
by John Adams
recent and old European here are Ashmore, winner or

the Grand Prix DeOeavllle,
and Maitland, also a stakea
winner m France this year.

Both are owned by Art Daniel
Wlld ensteln and Henry
Moreno

Tra iner Tom Pratt has
more tmported bor11es than
the dumesttc breed for tho
Santa Anita meet. Among the
foreign horses are Comeram.
who was 1n the mone)' In the
Irish 2,000 Guineas and will
be eligtblc trere for the
$100,000 Charles H. Slrub
Stakes Feb 6 and other rich
races for 4-year-olds In 1971
Pratt also has Red Regent,
a stakes winner In England
and Gcnnuny In 197! , and
returns Miss Toshiba to the
races after n lengthy layoff

Bob Ferguson, near death a year

honored

ago, now counselor with Ohio YC

third time

year's top shot
By mAMIU.ER
UPI, Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP! ) - It
wasn't exactly a one-m-.amillton shot, but who's going
to argue? The're were more
than a mlllton shots struck on
the pro golf tour in 1976, and
the one that won the US
Open for Jerry Pate was tn a
class by Itself
There are few moments m
sport when one swing, one
shot, one play, produces the
dramatic results that Pate
got on a shot out of the rough
lo withih two feet of the cup
on the fmal hole to clinch his
vtctory Bobby ThiHIIpson 's
homenm and Gene Sarazen's
double eagle are familiar
remmders of this, and as the
years turn Pate's Open mte
history, he will jom the group
of legends.
For now, the rtchlytalented, 23-year-old Pate
will just have ro be secure m
the knowledge that no ftrst
year golf professtonal ever
had a better year than he dtd
And that in a year which saw
the emergence of other new
stars, the comebacks of some
old ones, and spectacular

J.:t•t s Ius £11 st stnr1 m 111 ,1 r ly lR
months

Simpson

Jerry Pate hits

side of the game, Pate was
the standout

BENNETT ENLISTS
COLUMBUS - Robert R

AHCADIA, CALIF !UP£1
- Lately, tt seems as tf
Europe is becomtn~ more
and more the tratntng ground
for thoroughbred horses, who
are then sent on to the Umted
States, and particularly
Califorma , to seek their fame
and fortune under the golden
sun
At least tl appears that way
' )
from looktng a\ tlle stable
roster for Santa Amta's
winter which opens Tuesday
for a run unttl 'Aprtl 10
The meet kicks off with the
$4li,OOO Palos Verdes Handtcap Stardust Mel, a 5-yearold geldmg who was voted
escalates as the cost of II vmg horse of the meetmg m 1975,
dead end we're m."
wtll try to become the ftrst
Budget recommendations escalates," he sa1d. "Our horse ever to wm the SIX
from the task force are ex- problem ts that we are furlong classic tw1r.e when he
pected to be before the state operatmg on a ftxed Income
-legislature early m the New In an era of rapidly mflabng
Year and tl could mean a costs
"Our fmancial dtfftculltes
revoluttonary program to
at thiS ltme revolve around
finance the department.
After operating withm Its inflatton which has eaten
own budget for more than a away at our tncome to the
century, the DFG ftrst dipped place where we no longer can
mto the state general fund support cun-ent programs at
three years ago for extra present levels "
lnflalton grows at an anasststance Now, Fullerton
nual
rate of a bout six per cent
disclosed, it IS possible that
In
Cahfornia
w~ile the
the department wtll comNEW YORK !UP!) department
's
mcolne,
tted
pletely revamp tis ftnanctal
Naltonal
Football Lea gue
prtmarily
to
fixed
hunting
base and draw nearly all Its
rushing
leader,
0 J Stmpson
and
f1shmg
bcense
fees,
IS
operational money from the
general fund rather than rtsmg only one per cent an- of Buffalo was one of SIX
players named today to the
work prtmarily from license nually.
Bestdes, It's no longer just Professtonal Football Wnters
and permtt fees.
"I think we have ro find a a matler of takmg care of just of America All-Pro team for
source of mcome which wtll tbe interests of hunters and the third consecuttve year
Also selected All-P ro for
provide revenue that anglers The department
cun-ently has stewardship for the thtrd straight year was
more than 700 spectes owned Mmnesota offenstve tackle
by Cabforma's 21 mtllion Ron Vary, M1ami Center J1m
residents Less than 60 Langer, Los
An geles
species are utlltzed by the defenstve
end
Jack
hunter and fisherman.
Youngblood , Ptttsburgh
Understandably, the linebacker Ja ck Ham ,
fmanclal crunch comes at a Washtngton Safety Ken
time when nongame and Houston and Oakland punter
strictly envtronmental-type Ray Guy
projects are taking the DFG's
The squad, chosen by a vote
resources
away from of 350 sportswrtters • hu
tradttlonal duttes
cover NFL throughout the
The
number
of
wlldhfe
season,
was spht evenly
Some women even had a
areas
under
DFG
jurtSdtctton
between
the National and
part m shapmg events on the
has
grown
from
17
to
23
In
tbe
Amer1can
Conferences
men's tour
Stmpson, who rushed for
Ben Crenshaw ended two last few years as Fullerton
years of struggle, settlmg battles to slow the loss of 1,503 yards, was jomed m the
down largely as the result of wtldllfe habitat In the natton's backlteld by Chtca go's
second·year runnong back
his marrtage a year ago He most populous state.
"And that doesn't count all Waiter Payton and Baltimore
won three tournaments, was
second ro Ntcklaus on the the ecologtcal reserves we've Quarterback Bert Jones Also
.every other selected on the offenstve were
money ltst ($257,759), and taken on
finally began to approach the week, 1t seems, we get so w1de receivers Chff Branch
greatness predtcied for him • many acres of marsh of Oakland and Drew
And Ray Floyd, who also dedtcated to us m mtttgatton Pearson of Dallas, tackle Dan
credtted marnage for hts new for some project or other
Dterdoff of St Louts, guards
"We just can't keep up wtth Joe Delamtelleure of Bulfalo
matunty, won tbe Masters by
eight strokes wtlli a record- II unless we have addttlonal and John Hannah of New
tymg score or 271, 17 under funds"
England , ttght end Dave
par.
But would a change tn Casper of St Louts and pla ce
Don January brought hope major revenue source alter ktcker Jtm Bakken of St
ro the gertatrlc set, returmng DFG's role as protector of Louts.
ro lull-tllne competitton at animals and ftsh harvested
Other defenstve selec\tons
age 46 and wmnmg the by sportsmen •
were end Tommy Hart or San
Tournament of Champoons,
"Say that we went com- Franctsco, tackles Wally
very nearly Slleaking off wtth pletely to the general fund Chambers of Chtcago and
the PGA Champtonhtp, and tomorrow," Fullerton sald, Jerry Sherk of Cleveland,
earmng $163,622.
"there would have to be a ltnehackers Jack Lambert of
But it was Pate, less than spectal accounting wtthm the Ptttsburgh and Hobert
half January's age, who hit general fund to Indicate the Braztle of Houston, corthe shot-of-the.year He mcome from huntmg and nerbacks Monte Jackson of
crunched a flve-tron, 190 fiShtng bcenses and taxes. Los Angeles and Roger
yards out of the rough, over a That money could be spent Wehrli of St Louts and Safety
lake to wtthm two feet of tbe only on wildhfe So, regar- Chff Harrts of Dallas
cup, and tt enabled him to dless of the fund and what you
The overall MVP will be
birdte the 72nd hole and wm call It, I would say, the hunter selected In Los Angeles Jan 6
the U S open by two stcokes and the ftsherman would and honored wtth a trophy
at Duluth, Ga.
have no more mput and no presented by the sponsormg
His later admtsstonthat the less input than they have now Schtck Corporatton.
shot was not as difftcull as tl and thetr monies still would
appeared did nothmg to be protected.
dtmJmsh
1ts
stature,
"BUt by going to the
espectally constdermg the general fund we could get out
pressure of the situation It of the special fund box we're
was ftttmg enough that a In and compete wtth other
young southerner (Pate, the departments in the state" for
1974 U.S Amateur champion, avatlable montes.
IS from Pensacola, Fla., and
attended the University of
Alabama) wm the ftrst Open
ever contested 111 the deep Open Gary Player suffered
CLEVEI.AND (UPI) South, and before the through a second stratght
Quarterback Brtan Stpe and
summer was out Pate sl)Qwed winless year m the U.S.
A record 24 players won defensive back Thorn Darden
tl was no fluke by addmg the
Canadian Open - shooting a $100,000 on the PGA rour, a wtll be honored Jan 19 by the
fmal round 63 to gun down dozen lor the forst tune, and Cleveland Touchdown Club
Ntcklaus - and Japanese four players - Miller, Hale as the Cleveland Browns' 1976
Masters tttles. The latter, Irwin, Dave Htll and Miller offens1ve and defensive
worth $65,000, was the world's Barber - reached $1 million players of tbe year, tt was
second btggest purse m 1976 mcareer earmngs. New faces announced Friday
Hts offtctal earnmgs on the makmg tt btg, bestdes Pate,
The awards will be given at
mcluded Mark Hayes, a tbe club's 29th annual awatds
US wur were $153,102
Johnny Mtller won the wmner of two rournaments dmner where they will j01n
Brlltsh Open wtlli a last-day and $151,699, rookoe Bob Helsman trophy winner Tony
66, remmtsceni of his clostng Gtlder, who won at Phoenix m Dorsett of Ptttsburgh,
63 that brought him the U S. just his second start on the unammously chosen as the
Open title m '73, and Dave tour , and rookte George Collegiate Player of the Year
Stpe, who began the season
Stockton won his second PGA Burns, wholle $66,000 would
Champtonshlp after have been good enough for as the backup to Mike Phtpps,
Nicklaus, January and rookt~f-the-year in almost came on aner Phipps' firstCharles Coody all blew the any other year
game InJUry to lead the team
The , long ball-htl\mg to a ~ record whtch was Its
lead wtth double-bogeys
Carner won ber second U S best since J972
during the !mal round.
Open
Hubert Green,
ltke Women's
The ftrst quarterback to
Crenshaw, was a three-tune championship, blowmg a wm the honor smce 1968,
wimer on tbe tour. Green louro6troke lead and then when Btll Nelsen was cited.
won his three wurnaments tn rallymg oo the firuil two holes Stpe set club records wtth 26
of a playoff to defeat completed passes In one
succession m the spring.
And tf furllier proof were defending champ Sandra game, fewest mterceptlons
needed that the old order Pabner. Betty Burfeind\ won (0), 12 consecutive comchangeth, constder the pltght the LPGA ChampiOnship plebons, and an 82 I per cent
of Arnold Pahner Winless m Sally Ltttle, wtnless m ftve completion mark tn one
this country since early 1973, years as a PfO, holed a shot game
Palmer stmk to \be depths from a bunker to birdie the
thts year. He ranked 115th on ftnal hole and wtn the new Simpson of
Southern
the money list wtth $17,017, 1 Ladies Masters by a stroke. California won the mdlvtdual
won , three title. lllll Sander, who had
and was able to compete in Young
the PGA Champtonship, the tournaments m a row dropped out of Brigham
one major title he never has mcluding tbe LPGA record Young, won the U S.
won, only through a spectal $35,000 top pme in the Amateur Dick Slderowf
lllVitatlon. Next year, for Jusl Carlton
became the third American
Oklahoma State broke to win the Brittsh Amaleur
the second tune smee be
became established m tbe Wake rorest's two-year hold tWIL'C Donna Horton vr the
the NCAA team Umverstty of FlvrtdH wonlh1•
'50's, Pabner will have ro on
qualtfy w play m tbe Y S champtuhshop and Scott U S Women's Amateur

Sipe and

SPRINGFIELD, OHIO
(UPI) - Alittle more than a
year ago, former Ohto State
Untverstty all·Amerlcan
fullback Bob Ferguson has
struggling merely wsurvtve
Ferguson, a nat1ve of Troy ,

Ohto, was strtcken by a
cerebal hemorrhage on Oct
28, 1975, and was m crii)cal
condttion for nearly a month
tn Howard Unt versity
Hospttal m Washmgron, D C
On Dec 19, 1975, OSU
Coach Woody Hayes, former
OSU teammates and frtends
gave a fund ratsmg banquet
for Ferguson and ratsed
$10,000 ro help hun start hts
bfe over agam

~'erguson "l enJOY working
wtth kids I have even had a
couple of kids go to college.
Some are gettmg JObs and
hVlng mdependently It ts
mce bemg able to see them

help," slad Ferguson . "l can
relate to problems at home
and In the community. Some

like to host tilt
EAST RUTHERFORD, N

Sports Authonty has become
the second btdder for the
recentl y d1s cont1nu ed

College All-8tar game amid
sugges tions of posstble

changes m the game's for·
problems, rangmg from mat

actual crtmtnal acts to
Aspokesman for the Sports
truancy.
Authonty satd Frtday that
" I truly ltke tt ," sa td Chatrman So nny Werblin
contacted National Football

Gorn1an retires
after 25 years
service in NL

expcriem.'Cs I have had m hfe

New Jersey would

Ferguson last march was J (UP£ ) - Th e New .Jersey

gtven a job as counselor wtth
the Ohto Youth Commtsston
The youngsters who
Fer@son ts ln contact wtth
have been commttted by the
courts ro the state for various

return to a home setting
"l would hnaglne my own

Lengue Commissioner Peter

Rozelle about sponsormg the
game In New Jersey's Gtants
stadium
The game t radttt on all y
matches a squad of college
football all-stars aga mst the
NFL Super Bowl champtons
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - and had been sponsored for 43
Tom Gorman annowtced hts years by the Chicago
retirement Thursday after a Tnbune, whtch Tuesday e1ted
25-year career as a national mcre~;~sed expenses and
league umptre
uncertamty over its abtltty to
NL prestdent Charles S. recru1t personnel as reasons
Feeney satd Gorman, 57, for WJthdrawin~ tis backmg
would contmue Ill work m of the game
baseball and for tbe national
The brainchtld of former
league His duties wtll mclude Trtbane Sports Edttor Arch
spectal asstgnments and Ward, the game, played
speakmg engagements
annually m Chtcago, has
Gorman, who once pttched ra1sed mQre than 4 million for
for the New York Giants, needy causes.
began his umptring career m
In recent years, the game
1947 in the New England has been opposed by many
!•ague and JOined the NL NFL owners, who object to
staff In 1951 He ts a veteran their htgh draft choices
Of five world series, two rmssmg the ftrst three weeks
league championships and of pre-season trammg and
four all-star games
nsklng posSible tn1urv. In

adaltion , 2tl of the 54 players
who partu:: \pntcd 1n ln st
year's game were unsigned

Among the a lterna ttves
proprnled by \he New Jersey
Sports Authority ore a
rematch between the Super
Bowl finali sts or a game

between two college all·star
squads The coll egiate

players have nut beaten the ,

NFL representa\tv e since
wtth many scores bemg

196~,

one·slded

"To put tt m a bastcally
poslttve
pl ane,"
the
spokesman sa1d , "We would

be mterested In revtvmg the
game In any conceivable
type , shape or form"
Any change In the gome's
format · would need to be
sanctioned by the NFL
owners and Rozelle

Viking gals top
North Gallia five
WILLOW WOOD - The
Symmes Valley girls basket·
ball learn defeated North
Gallla 52·30 Wednesday
evening
Marilyn Saunders had 12
points and Connie Shepherd
10 for the winn ers.
Htta Payne led the losers
Wt\h 12
The Viking gals led 9-li, 23·
12, and 37-19 at the quartermarks

-..•
•

•
•

a

of the problems I have Ita
myself I have met and dealt
wtUt this type "
Pu t Co mer and Ellen
Hagerman, two of Ferguson'i
assoclutes at the Bethesdu.
group home here, attribute
his SUCL'CSS to hiS tougl);
upprooch to the youngsters. •
"We kid him about belnl!;
the big, bad youth eounselor~
"said Mrs Comer. ''The)'.;
respect him because he I•
auUtoriiatlve They wouldn't'
respect him If he wasn't alt
law and order

..

He played football and the
fact that he is big and storn~.
helps a lot," she said. "HIS,
background ln part hM
helped prepare him a lot•
because you have to learn,
disctplme
:
"I like Bob Ferguson an&lt;!,
respect Bob Feq;uson," sold
Miss Hagerman . "He gives of.
himself which Is sQ,
Important He's tough and at
the beginning they resen&amp;
him I just tell them 'If yoti:
can't make it with Bob yo
aren 't gomg to muke I
outsi_\ie '
"He has U! keep that role ui:
be successful," she said"
"Theyt don't hassle hint, 1'11:
tell you t)tat "
Not only has Ferguson's
professtonal life enjoyed a,
l'Omeback, hut his persona •
ltfc as well. Since tbe first o._
last year, Ferguson ~s seerC
h1s wife and children llC ,
Columbus every weekend:;
The Fergusons recentll" '
purchased a home hi
Columbus and his wife Dlanll.
and four children will Itt;:
moving In this week
"Within the next fe W:
months I hope to get
transfer to Columbus and wll
be working !here and livinll:
there" said Ferguson. "A.
transfer to Columbus would;
gtve me a chanl'C to be .
reunited with my famUy .•t
Ferguson hBB three boys;
Robert Jr , 14, Rodney, 12 and:
Rodney 11 and a daughter,:
Hobin II.
•
I

;

•

••
•
•

••

All you got to do is ask

•

Darden to

•

:I

be honored

.

,,

.,•

•

When the receivers fall
By Murray Oldennan
The tipoff
It cost Franklin Mteuli ahnost a quarter of a ITUllion dollars
NOT ro buy the San FranciSCO 49ers- that's how much he'll
have to pay In legal fees for the tortuous and frwUess negotialtons over the past few months What really blew him down
was the NFL's InsiStence that he get rid of h1s Golden State
Warriors even before he had a deal for the 49ers
Q On a kickOff, the ball travels !Oyards tn the air. A player
from the kickmg team catches it before tt htts the ground or an
opposmg player Who gets the ball• -Gary Seekins, Anaheim,
Cab f.
The ktcking team. If tn the judgment of the referee the ball
traveled 10 yards, it ts a free ball. However, of the receivmg
team didn't touch tt, the ball may not be advanced. The more
likely occurrence, unless tbe receivers fall completely asleep,
is for a ball to rtcochet off a receover.
~· What has happened to the Pete Rozelle-Carrol!
Rosenbloom feud? Rosenbloom sounded like allsweelness and
light on a halltune teleVISion mterview? - T.R., Oakland,
Calif.
The reference is to tho revolt by tbe Raii'IS' owner agatnsl the
NFL rule of Commissioner Rozelle. It reached a pomt of
vebemence where the other owners stepped In, threatened
Hosenbloom wtth ceusure for his public critiCISm and fined
him a thousand bockS each on two counts. Ca!lllht m the middle
was Rams' general
ger Don Kloste111l8n, who works for
Rosenbloom and IS a I gtime friend of Rozelle. He arranged a
NewYorkmeetin tween the two, at which. the hatchet was
ootens1bly burt But Rozelle Isn't entirely free of critics yet.
Lut kmg out tberen Oakland ts AI Davis, who still has reservaltvns about the conduct of pro football.
Q When Don DrysdBie set the major league record for consa·uttve shurout mnlngs, how was he ranked at the end of the
yeat in the National League and maJor league ERA ratmgs?
Also, how many shutout games dtd he hurl that year? -Steve
Estrada, Brea, Calif.
Drysdale pttched 58 stratght scorele511 inmngs from May 14
io June 4, 1968, includtng a record stx consecutive shutouts
lromcally, he was only 14-12 for the season, wtth an earned run

asleep ~

••
average of 2 15 that was sixth In the league and 12th In the rna!

jors. He had eight shurouts for the season. Don is now a a~
cessful broadcaster.
Q. Why didn't Walter Payton, the sensational running back
for the Chicago Bears, go to a btg university instead of Jackson
Slate• Didn't the big schools want hlln• -G.C., Rockford, Ill.
Young Walter, who nearly became the yoqest NFL
rushing leader ever, didn't play football until the lith grade In
Columbia, Miss. He came along fast, though, and was SUJIPOII'
ed to go to Kansas State, then in a heavy recrulllng splurge.
But when he went to Jackson, Miss., by bus to catch a plane for
Kansas, he sropped off at Jackson State to vlait his brother Ed,
playing football there The coach persuaded him to stay.
Q. I'd ~ke to know what you base your statement on, that
Bear Bryant should stop coaching. This season at Alabama
consists of 8 wins, 3 losses and a trip ro a bowl game. How
many teams are there that could call this unsuccessful]- Jay
Langley, San Ramon, Calif
••
My statement wasn't based on Alabama's success, pro or
con. Bear Bryant has been one of the most phenomCitllly ltiC'
cessful CoaChes Ul hlsJory and a tremendOUB force (n colltge
football I just feel that as he gets older he is a little removed
for the active role of coachmg
,
Q. Could you please tell me on punts bow much yardage the I
punter gets credJt for when the line of scrlnunage Is the 50 and
he kicks inro tho end zone (the baD comes out 1o the ~I? H.K., Springfield, ll!o.
I've answered this before. He gets credit lor 50 yards In )u.
average, but the team pwttlllg average reflects only a 30-yard
boot. Wtth the procllvfty for eo!!in corner kicks the last couPle
Of years (since the field goal rule ' change), I feel that puntage
yardage statistics are meaningless
Parting shotI always thought that low cut shoes In football werit a
modem mventlon Then I uw a picture of Bill Olmanski of the
Chicago Bears nppmg Off that 611-yard nm which set in motion
the 7~ rout of the Washington Redllkins for the NFL title 'l;!le
year was 1940 The Skins chasmg B1ll all wore high tope•
O.mattski was in low cpts

�•
B-4-- The Sunday Ttmes-&amp;ntmel, Sunday, Dec 26, 1976

25 years of drama reviewed
Ry JOAN HANAUER
UPI Televu;lon Wr1Lcr

Nf.W YOHK 1UP II
ll1nstmas E\le marked i he
25t h a nmv ersa ry uf the

televtston premtere of the
Hallmark Hall of r'ame 's
produ,1 ton of the Gta n-Carlo
Menol!t npera ' Amah! and
the Ntght Vtstrors "
Pi'ime-hme opera seem.')

ummagtnable today when
most televt$10n is conceived
wtlh the tdea of attracting the
largest posstble audience and theref(re the highest
posstble fees from sponsors
mterested m reaching the
most people"
Sponsors mterested 10
unage·butlding vta quabty
shows, even tf they can afford
the astronomical costs of
smgle sponsorsh tp , have
difftcully ftndmg tbem Even

THE MAGIC OF CHHISTMAS was seen tn the faces of the ktndergarten chtldren ol
Washtnglon Elementary durmg Santa's recent vtstt there

Santa pays visit to school
The spectal magtc of the
GALLIPOLIS - Joll y
Santa Claus patd a surpnse Chrtstmas season showed on
Vl Slt to each Chnstmas party each chtld's face whtle sttttng
fur
th e
W.ashtn gton on Santa's knee The children
Elem entary ktndergartcn told of thetr Christmas wtshes
classes taught by Mrs P and assured Santa they had
Huber and Mrs B Can· been very good chtldren thts
past year Each one promtSl!ll ,
terbury

• o/•

'

OLE SAINT NICK patd a VISit to Washtngwn
Elementary School's kinder gat ten classes recently Whtle
he was there Kelly Jo Chapman wid Santa ~ha t she'd like
m her stocking on Chrtstmas mormng

15 years ago, adverllsmg

Santa they "ould try very,
very hard to be "extra" good
unttl Chnstmas
Sa nta answered many of

the chtldren's quest ton s
concernmg hiS workshop, the
North Pole and the remdeer,
espectally Rudolph

GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Cttlzens Center, located at 220
Jackson Ptke m the County
Hom e Butldtng, ts open
Monday through Frtday from
9 a m to 3 p m The schedule
for thts week ts as follows
M@day, Dec 27 Phystcal Fttness, 11 30 a m
Tuesda y, Dec 28 Qutltmg and Visttmg, 9 am 3 p m • Blood Pressure
Check, 1 30-2·30 p m
Wednesday, Dec 29 Ph)slcal Fttness, 11 30 a m .
Ca rd Games, 1-3 p m
Thursday, Dec 30 - Btrlhday Party, 1 30 p m
Fnday, Dec 31 - Closed
The Semors' Co-op and the
Craft Shop are open each day
for sales at 12 30-1 30 p m
The

Semor

Nutrition

Program serves the followmg
menus for thts week·
Monday - Bra1sed hver ,

parsley potatoes, creamed
tomatoes, biscuits, bufter,
cmnamon applesauce, m1lk

Tuesday - Cabbage rolls,
buttered dtced potatoes,
buttered peas, co rnbr~ad ,
butter, bread puddmg wtth
ra1sms , m1lk

OLGA ROBINSON enjoyed stttmg on Santa's lap
when he vtstted llie kmdergarten classes at Washmgton
Elementary reeentiy

agenctes
for
gtant
corporations such as U S
Steel and 3M had Ill struggle
w ltnd shows lliat would
prov1de

a

vehicle

for

mst tlutional, as opposed to
product, adverttsmg
Today the usual outlet for
suc h spendmg ts pubhc
telev1s1on , where the ml
co mpanaes
and oth er
sponsors ca n underwnte

pro granu ng wt thout a
network breathmg down thetr
neck, worrym g about Ntelsen
ratmgs, leads m and leads
out
Weekly smgle sponsorshtp
drama has become a thmg of
the past, but one company

has stuck to the commercial
networks, hopmg to boost
bo\h unage and sales wtth
quality drama - Hallmark 's
Hall of Fame serte s of
drama s

contmues , st11l

offermg drama but now wtth
less
emphasts
on
Shakespci!re and the clasSICS

The Hall of Fame began as
a weekly program of halfhour and hour-long dramas,
bUt smce the end of the 195354 teleVlston season has been
reduced to f1ve or stx, shows a

year on NBC - always NBC
The dramas have ranged
from the Aprtl 26, 1953
productiOn of ''Hamlet,'' w1th
Maunce Evans, to tins year's

Dec 12 Peter Pan" sta rrmg
Danny Kaye
That

~=

~~
»
~:

&lt;

" Ham le t ,"

mctdentally, was televtston 's
first two..tlow- drama and 1ts

h rst full production of
Shakespeare
The
policy
that
subordm a ted num bers to

quality - as opposed to the
soap and cereal school of TV
sponsorslup - was ongmated

Wednesday - Chtcken pot
pie mashed potatoes, buttered sptnach, bread, butter
peaches, mtlk
Thursday - Baked fiSh,

by Joyce C Hall, found er and
board chmrman Of Hallmark
Cards, when he satd, Good
taste ts good busmess I'd
rather make etght millton
good unpresstons than 28

soup beans, cole slaw With

mllhon bad ones '' He also

ga mtsh, cornbread, butter ,
purple plums, mtlk
Frtday - Closed
Choice of beverage served
wtth each meal

agamst all the conventional
te lev1s1 on
adver tiSing
WISdOm
' Here's why I don't worrv

made a statement that goes

Winter racing season opens Tuesday

Generation Rap

.tl~,ul the raun~:-; I've never Hall s;ud there were O&lt;J plan~
Uy Heh·n and Sue Hottel
figured out why people lor arrmg 1t agam m th e near :·.~:.
believe folks arc huy mg tbe future - but perhaps oome
product "'' well as watchm~ Olnslrn&lt;~s r.vc
Only Good News for Cbrlltlilu Day
tht• show They can be
Readers All
wtltr lu ng autl • s ltll no l
Agalll, our Otrlstmas tradition!
"
buytng ~ ·
01 this day, we prlllt mly upbeat letters- no problems, no
Hall 's son, Donald J Hall,
troubles - It's ~mg but the good for our readers on Chriat'•
who now runs the family
birthday Read on .
busmess, 1s a hltle less
+++
nonchalant about the raungs,
Rap
but rematns convmced thal
When God was hand111g out parents, he gave me the best 1
his father was nght about the
Here's
my deflnltlon of a mother:
need for quabty as well as
A
mother
ts someone who looks past the uglineu of ller
quantity
newborn
and
sees
only dreams for the future.
jRattngs
are ' a
She
ts
someone
who puts up with the trrttations of small
L'O nsJderalaon when we 't.lectde
children,
knowing
she
must scold, but always understand.
what prope rty wselect," Hall
ATHENS - The beauty,
She
watches
you
grow
older and more independent with a
satd durmg an mterVllw magtc and charm of the
Jot
of
anxtety
and
a
lot
more
fatth. She's someone who listens 1o
· We have w be mterested, ageless fatry tale Cinderella
your
problems
and
feelings
and
shows you that she's Interested
consodermg the dollars are captu red tn a ballet whtch
by
telling
you
some
of
hers
mvolved ''
airs Sunday, Dec. 26 at 1 p m.
Amother IS someone who makes you feel better when you
It's not like the good old on Channel WOUB TV 20 and
make
a rrustake because she can remember when she made a
days, when a two-hour prune WOUC TV 44 over PBS
sunilar
one
tune "Hamlet" cost $50,000,
Followtng the tradtltOnal
She's
so much fwt that you wonder if your boyflend is
mcludm g air time and story , the ballet by Russian
coming
over
to see you or her.
productton costs
composer Sergey Prokoftev
She
doeSll't
forbtd you to rtde around on your boyfclend's
Hall
smthngly
but opens wtth the herome ltvmg
stubbornly sktr ted what in the shadow of her two motorcycle but goes out and tr1es ot herself - but H you forget
sponsorshtp costs today, mean stepsisters Whtle they the helmet, watch out•
Amother is someone who reads up on drugs and discUBSes
although he mdtcated lliat prepare to atlend the ball 111
Hallmark's long arrange· Prmce Charmmg' s honor, them wtth you, then tells you that you're mature enough 1o
ment wtth NBC proftted both she ts bamshed to the ktlchen make the right decision (and you do)_
She knows what you're thinking and feeling because she
corporaltons He dtd allow to cook and clean
reme!llbers
when she went through that stage.
lliat dramattc producttons After her stepSi sters leave,
A
mother
is one who has only the htgbest morals and
deftm tely not those sponsored Ctnderella ts vtstled by her
standards
because
she knows that you are patternmg your life
by his ftrm - had cost as latry godmother She transafter
her
much as $1 mtlhon or $1 5 ports Cmderella to the Land
She haa the sens~ to see you are mature 1 wttl1 a rrund and
rmlhon
of Her Heart's Destre, where
Ratmgs and money are not the young gtrlts dressed m a conSCience of your own, but still can't resist gtvmg that bit Of
llie only constderations - beautiful gown and magtc advice, becaulle she loves you.
Anyway, that's MY Mom 1 - DAUGHTER
there 's the matter of sbppers to wear to the ball
tdenttftcation Hall 's theory ts
lliat quality entertamment Cmderella IS warned that she Dear Helen and Sue·
It's time someone stood up for -m-laws, so I'll start with
becomes tdenttfted m the rrwst return home by mtd\oJewcr mmd wtth a quality mght or her gown wtll turn my slster-tn-law. I wouldn't trade her for anyone m the world
mto rags and her coach, a
She never yells, even of you do something really terrible
product
She always has time to listen to a kid atsler's problems, no
"We get a htgh degree of pumpkm
At the ball, Prmce Char- matter bow ttred she is wtth her own kids
tdenttftcatton wtth our
mmg,
an tn-esponStble young
She lo~es entertammg her husband's family, and shows
product We even get letters
man
,
ts bored wtth th e she truly enjoys them She knows when I'm down, Without me
from viewers who say they
wtll never buy any cards stepsisters and the rest of the tellmg her, and she can say JUSt the right things to make me
except ours Ktds m guests He remams unhappy okay agam. She understands teenagers even though she ha1111't
pa rticular send us tho se unttl a lovely and mystertous been one for 12 years.
Prmcess arnves After one
letters "
If everyone had a sister4n·law like mme, they'd sure be
look,
he dectdes that she ts lucky! - BJJ
For stnctly commerctal
,
reasdhs, "Hall of Fame" the gtrl he wants to marry,
shows tend to go oo durmg the but before he can propose, Dear Helen and Sue
Chrtstma s season and m the Ctnderella hurrtes away as
My grandmother has ltved wtth us for four years, and we
Valentme's Day-Easter-Mo- the clock stnkes mtdntght all agree these have been the best years for our family. She
ther's Day season, although The followmg day, Prmce takes the load off Mom butneverm an officious way. Sbe'sjust
Charmtng searches for there when we need her
the timmg 1sn 't exact
They
are
The type of matertal vanes Cmderella
Many lllnes I can talk things out wtth Grandma where they
greatly, although tn the early reumted, and return to the would only become btg hassles with my parents - until sl\e
years of the senes there was Land of Thetr Hearts' Destre sets my thinking stratght. She's got time to listen, and she
a
concentration
on to dance happily ever after doesn't lecture. She doesn't take stdes, but somehow after
Shakespeare and the clasSICs,
Cmderella ~ as produced by talking wtth her , I can see everyone'sstde more clearly
while today 's Hall of Fame the
South
Carolina
In foretgn countroes I've read they "venerate" the older
div1des Its attention between Educaltonal Televtston generatton, and look up to them because of their wisdom. Too
such young-and-old lam· Network for nattonal trans- often m the U S. they see them as laughable or to be tgnored
tly fare as "Beauty and the mtsston by the Public whenever possible
Beast" and strtctly adult Broad cas ting Servtce
Maybe my family all gets along so great because we all
producttons such as "The Dtrector S1dney Palmer treat one another as humans. - K T
Disappearance of Aunee " The ballet was performed by
Hall made the pomt lliat the
Columbta
(S outh
some pt oducttons may be Carohna ) Ctty Ballet
''adult," but llie ftrm stays

Cinderella
ballet to
air Sunckiy

aY. a} from "mature audtence

only" themes that might
offend Halhnark customers
mclude a htgh percentage of
women, wtth the persons m
thetr 21ls the best card buyers
of any age group
Is there a hope that
Hallmark wtll repeat that
hrst
Chmtmas
Eve
productton , "Amah! and the
Ntght Vtsttors'" Certamly tt
won 't be on next year and

•

Outdoors USA:

New finance director
of college announced
BYCARRICKLEAYriT
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) All they really wanted for
Chrlstuias at the California
Department of Fish and

Game was more~ money

Unless they get a bundle
pretty soon, says DFG
Dorector E. c. Fullerton, the
department wlll be euttmg
back programs and personnel
by the beginning of fiscal
1977-78.
Fullerton dtdn 't really
expect to ftnd a package of
extra money under the yule
tree ' this
Christmas
However, in a wide·rangmg
Interview published m the
department 's btmonthly
11
magazine,
0utdoor
Califoritia," he disclosed that
a special task Ioree from the
state department of finance Is
at work "to ~et us out of this

Golf '76:

advances on the women's

'
'

To many, however, money
1s the biggest item, and if

Bennett, son of Mr and Mrs

that's the ease, the btg names
were Jack Nicklaus - agsm
-and Judy Rankin Nicklaus
did not have one Of hiS
vtntage years but he won the
btggest money event, the
$100,000rop priZe ill the World
Sertes of G&lt;llf, took down
another $60,000 for wmrung
the Tournament Players
Championship, $40,000 m the
Australian Open, and for the
eighth time was the top
mooey wimer on the PGA
tour wtth official earnmgs of
$2G6,438. r
Rankin became the ftrst
woman professtonal to wm
$100,000 in a year, passtng
that barrter m July By
year's end, Donna Capono
Young and JoAnne Carner
joined her but neither was
close to Rankin's $150,734
total , Judy won stx

Donald L Bennett of Rt 1,
Heedsvllle, has enlisted mthe
U S Atr Force's Delayed
EnliStment Program A 1977
graduate of Eastern High ,
Dec 28th rough Jan 3, 1977 - Gallertes at Rtverby closed
School, he ts scheduled for
enlistment mthe Regular Atr for llie Christmas hohdays.
Exlubtt for the month of January· Student show arranged
Force on Jan ~4 Upon
by Sarah Moshter.
~raduatton from the Atr
Gallery hours as of Jan 4, 1977 - Saturdays and Sundays,
Force 's sb::wweek baste
I
unttl
5 p m , Tuesdioys and Thursdays, 10 am ~I 3 p m,
training course, he wtll
Rtverby.
rece1ve terhn;cal trammg as
Jan 8 - The After Twelfth Ntght Party, Htverby Detatls
a fuel spectaltst
later, Bess Grace and Carolyn Htppensteel, chatrWomen

JACKIE HUTC}IINSON was one of several children
who sat on Santa's lap at Washington Elementary
recently
•'

They'll Do It Every T1me
I DON'T WANAA GO
10 SQ.IOOI.! I DOI.fr
~EEL f:JOOO.'!

toumwnents.

81

81rd , COOkie Munster

&amp;

Other " Sesam e

Str ~ f'f'

Characters

Child re n 12 &amp; Untlu

Hall Pnc.e
Wed , Jan 5
8 oo p m
Thur s , Jan 6 - 8 00
Q rn
Sat
Jan . !11 r'J
p rn Sun
J;tn 9- 6 DO

ALL SEATS RE-SERVED
U .OO - IS 00 - $4 00
Ch ec k To HO LID AY O N ICE
1
To M e mor..i'll Futld Hou ~(!. Slh A~ c &amp;
St ree t Huntmqton Wes t V1rq1n 1a 25703

.l--&lt;J-- -

Plea se
e n c: la se tor prompr and sa le
s t a mped
self ctellv ery of
r
addressed enve lope l•ck e ts
v0 u

ORDER llCKETS BY MAIL

...._ -

-

-

~

-

Morn 0

Mat

lsi Chorce

_ Mal

lJ

Evg

[l

2nd Chorce
or Aifull T!Citeh - - "

or Chrld

' ·~ keh

_

s --

ol S __

0

Evg []
Morn 0

per l•cl!el ..

pe r l •c kel ·

s --S -~--

Total Amou nl ol Chttk o• lr.lonfy Ord1r S -- -

PlEASE PRINT

NAME ~-------------------

ADDRESS - - - -- - - -- - - CHY _ _ _ _ STATE

ZIP

Children's Oxford
Stzes ey, -4
Regularly $6 97

J90

Tremendous savings! '
Men's Athletic Shoes
Asstd Styles Values to $12 97

490to890

..

Oxfords. Reg $8 97 ... $5'.90
*Use Yo • Mas1erCharg' or BankAmencard
Open Week Days
9 l1l 9

...."
""

Sunday t lil6

'103 Upper Rtver Rd
Acron from Stiver Bridge Pl*za

.__------~Itt toknaw us; you11ikc us.~~ -~~oo.~ .

~

The LPGA played for a
record $2 4 million m 1976,
double the '75 purse total, and
should pass $3 million In 1977.
The men, who seem to have
no linut to their prtzes, cut up
an astounding $9,157,522 this
year Next year? More
But it's tbe women 's tour
that has more room for
growth, and It achteved
something of a coup one week
In September when the LPGA
for the first time was playing
for more money than the
men . The LPGA also
emphasized its drtve for
stature when It revived and
promoted the first llliXed
lournament In a decade. The
women attracted so many of
the leading men players as
their partners that the PGA
lour decided it was too good
ro pau up, and announced It
would nm tis own mixed
lournament m 111'77

· The hst of European tm·
ports schedu led to compete In
tlw 78-day meetmg Is topped
by J 0 . Tohm, England's
ehampton 2-year-old of 1976

It ts the ftrst time tn
memory that a champoon
Eurupenn 2 )'ear-old has been

an-ivals
Kmg Pelhnore ftgures to be
a treat in the 250,000 Santa
Anita Handtcap Mar. 6, but
he 'II be challenged by recent
European tmport Bruni, an
Irish- br ed 4-year-o ld
reported purchused for I
mollton late this yea r.
Owned by Daniel Schwartz
and trained b~ Evon Jackson,
Bruni recently fml·~ed filth
m the Prix De I. Arc [)e
Ti om phe - cor odered
Europe's race or the yea r and also wo s Sl)cond In the
Kmg George V1 and Queen
E liz a beth
Diamond
Slakes and In 1975 won the
English St Leger
Also scheduled to compete

brought tu the Umted States
for tts l·vear-old campatgn
Dunng the past year, such
horses as Dahlta (the world 's
J 0 Tobtn, an Amertcan all -ltme mo ney-wi nning
bred sent by owner George mare ), Km g Pe lhnore
Pope Jr to face m England (Winner Of three Stakes and
thts year, won aU three races $330,000 at Santa Amta 's Oak
m that country and was Tree Meetmg alone), and
beaten only when he was Mtss T~sh lba (Vamty hanshtpped to France for the dteap winner and champton
'Grand Crtterium, loSing by dtstaffer of the Hollywood
four lengths
Park Meetmg) have shuwn
The son of Never Bend was remarkable success after
tramed tn England by famed betng brough t here from
cond1honer Noel Murless, Europe
who has smce rettred, and
The confuswn li es 1n
wtll be handled at Santa Amta d1stmgu1sh1ng between the
by John Adams
recent and old European here are Ashmore, winner or

the Grand Prix DeOeavllle,
and Maitland, also a stakea
winner m France this year.

Both are owned by Art Daniel
Wlld ensteln and Henry
Moreno

Tra iner Tom Pratt has
more tmported bor11es than
the dumesttc breed for tho
Santa Anita meet. Among the
foreign horses are Comeram.
who was 1n the mone)' In the
Irish 2,000 Guineas and will
be eligtblc trere for the
$100,000 Charles H. Slrub
Stakes Feb 6 and other rich
races for 4-year-olds In 1971
Pratt also has Red Regent,
a stakes winner In England
and Gcnnuny In 197! , and
returns Miss Toshiba to the
races after n lengthy layoff

Bob Ferguson, near death a year

honored

ago, now counselor with Ohio YC

third time

year's top shot
By mAMIU.ER
UPI, Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP! ) - It
wasn't exactly a one-m-.amillton shot, but who's going
to argue? The're were more
than a mlllton shots struck on
the pro golf tour in 1976, and
the one that won the US
Open for Jerry Pate was tn a
class by Itself
There are few moments m
sport when one swing, one
shot, one play, produces the
dramatic results that Pate
got on a shot out of the rough
lo withih two feet of the cup
on the fmal hole to clinch his
vtctory Bobby ThiHIIpson 's
homenm and Gene Sarazen's
double eagle are familiar
remmders of this, and as the
years turn Pate's Open mte
history, he will jom the group
of legends.
For now, the rtchlytalented, 23-year-old Pate
will just have ro be secure m
the knowledge that no ftrst
year golf professtonal ever
had a better year than he dtd
And that in a year which saw
the emergence of other new
stars, the comebacks of some
old ones, and spectacular

J.:t•t s Ius £11 st stnr1 m 111 ,1 r ly lR
months

Simpson

Jerry Pate hits

side of the game, Pate was
the standout

BENNETT ENLISTS
COLUMBUS - Robert R

AHCADIA, CALIF !UP£1
- Lately, tt seems as tf
Europe is becomtn~ more
and more the tratntng ground
for thoroughbred horses, who
are then sent on to the Umted
States, and particularly
Califorma , to seek their fame
and fortune under the golden
sun
At least tl appears that way
' )
from looktng a\ tlle stable
roster for Santa Amta's
winter which opens Tuesday
for a run unttl 'Aprtl 10
The meet kicks off with the
$4li,OOO Palos Verdes Handtcap Stardust Mel, a 5-yearold geldmg who was voted
escalates as the cost of II vmg horse of the meetmg m 1975,
dead end we're m."
wtll try to become the ftrst
Budget recommendations escalates," he sa1d. "Our horse ever to wm the SIX
from the task force are ex- problem ts that we are furlong classic tw1r.e when he
pected to be before the state operatmg on a ftxed Income
-legislature early m the New In an era of rapidly mflabng
Year and tl could mean a costs
"Our fmancial dtfftculltes
revoluttonary program to
at thiS ltme revolve around
finance the department.
After operating withm Its inflatton which has eaten
own budget for more than a away at our tncome to the
century, the DFG ftrst dipped place where we no longer can
mto the state general fund support cun-ent programs at
three years ago for extra present levels "
lnflalton grows at an anasststance Now, Fullerton
nual
rate of a bout six per cent
disclosed, it IS possible that
In
Cahfornia
w~ile the
the department wtll comNEW YORK !UP!) department
's
mcolne,
tted
pletely revamp tis ftnanctal
Naltonal
Football Lea gue
prtmarily
to
fixed
hunting
base and draw nearly all Its
rushing
leader,
0 J Stmpson
and
f1shmg
bcense
fees,
IS
operational money from the
general fund rather than rtsmg only one per cent an- of Buffalo was one of SIX
players named today to the
work prtmarily from license nually.
Bestdes, It's no longer just Professtonal Football Wnters
and permtt fees.
"I think we have ro find a a matler of takmg care of just of America All-Pro team for
source of mcome which wtll tbe interests of hunters and the third consecuttve year
Also selected All-P ro for
provide revenue that anglers The department
cun-ently has stewardship for the thtrd straight year was
more than 700 spectes owned Mmnesota offenstve tackle
by Cabforma's 21 mtllion Ron Vary, M1ami Center J1m
residents Less than 60 Langer, Los
An geles
species are utlltzed by the defenstve
end
Jack
hunter and fisherman.
Youngblood , Ptttsburgh
Understandably, the linebacker Ja ck Ham ,
fmanclal crunch comes at a Washtngton Safety Ken
time when nongame and Houston and Oakland punter
strictly envtronmental-type Ray Guy
projects are taking the DFG's
The squad, chosen by a vote
resources
away from of 350 sportswrtters • hu
tradttlonal duttes
cover NFL throughout the
The
number
of
wlldhfe
season,
was spht evenly
Some women even had a
areas
under
DFG
jurtSdtctton
between
the National and
part m shapmg events on the
has
grown
from
17
to
23
In
tbe
Amer1can
Conferences
men's tour
Stmpson, who rushed for
Ben Crenshaw ended two last few years as Fullerton
years of struggle, settlmg battles to slow the loss of 1,503 yards, was jomed m the
down largely as the result of wtldllfe habitat In the natton's backlteld by Chtca go's
second·year runnong back
his marrtage a year ago He most populous state.
"And that doesn't count all Waiter Payton and Baltimore
won three tournaments, was
second ro Ntcklaus on the the ecologtcal reserves we've Quarterback Bert Jones Also
.every other selected on the offenstve were
money ltst ($257,759), and taken on
finally began to approach the week, 1t seems, we get so w1de receivers Chff Branch
greatness predtcied for him • many acres of marsh of Oakland and Drew
And Ray Floyd, who also dedtcated to us m mtttgatton Pearson of Dallas, tackle Dan
credtted marnage for hts new for some project or other
Dterdoff of St Louts, guards
"We just can't keep up wtth Joe Delamtelleure of Bulfalo
matunty, won tbe Masters by
eight strokes wtlli a record- II unless we have addttlonal and John Hannah of New
tymg score or 271, 17 under funds"
England , ttght end Dave
par.
But would a change tn Casper of St Louts and pla ce
Don January brought hope major revenue source alter ktcker Jtm Bakken of St
ro the gertatrlc set, returmng DFG's role as protector of Louts.
ro lull-tllne competitton at animals and ftsh harvested
Other defenstve selec\tons
age 46 and wmnmg the by sportsmen •
were end Tommy Hart or San
Tournament of Champoons,
"Say that we went com- Franctsco, tackles Wally
very nearly Slleaking off wtth pletely to the general fund Chambers of Chtcago and
the PGA Champtonhtp, and tomorrow," Fullerton sald, Jerry Sherk of Cleveland,
earmng $163,622.
"there would have to be a ltnehackers Jack Lambert of
But it was Pate, less than spectal accounting wtthm the Ptttsburgh and Hobert
half January's age, who hit general fund to Indicate the Braztle of Houston, corthe shot-of-the.year He mcome from huntmg and nerbacks Monte Jackson of
crunched a flve-tron, 190 fiShtng bcenses and taxes. Los Angeles and Roger
yards out of the rough, over a That money could be spent Wehrli of St Louts and Safety
lake to wtthm two feet of tbe only on wildhfe So, regar- Chff Harrts of Dallas
cup, and tt enabled him to dless of the fund and what you
The overall MVP will be
birdte the 72nd hole and wm call It, I would say, the hunter selected In Los Angeles Jan 6
the U S open by two stcokes and the ftsherman would and honored wtth a trophy
at Duluth, Ga.
have no more mput and no presented by the sponsormg
His later admtsstonthat the less input than they have now Schtck Corporatton.
shot was not as difftcull as tl and thetr monies still would
appeared did nothmg to be protected.
dtmJmsh
1ts
stature,
"BUt by going to the
espectally constdermg the general fund we could get out
pressure of the situation It of the special fund box we're
was ftttmg enough that a In and compete wtth other
young southerner (Pate, the departments in the state" for
1974 U.S Amateur champion, avatlable montes.
IS from Pensacola, Fla., and
attended the University of
Alabama) wm the ftrst Open
ever contested 111 the deep Open Gary Player suffered
CLEVEI.AND (UPI) South, and before the through a second stratght
Quarterback Brtan Stpe and
summer was out Pate sl)Qwed winless year m the U.S.
A record 24 players won defensive back Thorn Darden
tl was no fluke by addmg the
Canadian Open - shooting a $100,000 on the PGA rour, a wtll be honored Jan 19 by the
fmal round 63 to gun down dozen lor the forst tune, and Cleveland Touchdown Club
Ntcklaus - and Japanese four players - Miller, Hale as the Cleveland Browns' 1976
Masters tttles. The latter, Irwin, Dave Htll and Miller offens1ve and defensive
worth $65,000, was the world's Barber - reached $1 million players of tbe year, tt was
second btggest purse m 1976 mcareer earmngs. New faces announced Friday
Hts offtctal earnmgs on the makmg tt btg, bestdes Pate,
The awards will be given at
mcluded Mark Hayes, a tbe club's 29th annual awatds
US wur were $153,102
Johnny Mtller won the wmner of two rournaments dmner where they will j01n
Brlltsh Open wtlli a last-day and $151,699, rookoe Bob Helsman trophy winner Tony
66, remmtsceni of his clostng Gtlder, who won at Phoenix m Dorsett of Ptttsburgh,
63 that brought him the U S. just his second start on the unammously chosen as the
Open title m '73, and Dave tour , and rookte George Collegiate Player of the Year
Stpe, who began the season
Stockton won his second PGA Burns, wholle $66,000 would
Champtonshlp after have been good enough for as the backup to Mike Phtpps,
Nicklaus, January and rookt~f-the-year in almost came on aner Phipps' firstCharles Coody all blew the any other year
game InJUry to lead the team
The , long ball-htl\mg to a ~ record whtch was Its
lead wtth double-bogeys
Carner won ber second U S best since J972
during the !mal round.
Open
Hubert Green,
ltke Women's
The ftrst quarterback to
Crenshaw, was a three-tune championship, blowmg a wm the honor smce 1968,
wimer on tbe tour. Green louro6troke lead and then when Btll Nelsen was cited.
won his three wurnaments tn rallymg oo the firuil two holes Stpe set club records wtth 26
of a playoff to defeat completed passes In one
succession m the spring.
And tf furllier proof were defending champ Sandra game, fewest mterceptlons
needed that the old order Pabner. Betty Burfeind\ won (0), 12 consecutive comchangeth, constder the pltght the LPGA ChampiOnship plebons, and an 82 I per cent
of Arnold Pahner Winless m Sally Ltttle, wtnless m ftve completion mark tn one
this country since early 1973, years as a PfO, holed a shot game
Palmer stmk to \be depths from a bunker to birdie the
thts year. He ranked 115th on ftnal hole and wtn the new Simpson of
Southern
the money list wtth $17,017, 1 Ladies Masters by a stroke. California won the mdlvtdual
won , three title. lllll Sander, who had
and was able to compete in Young
the PGA Champtonship, the tournaments m a row dropped out of Brigham
one major title he never has mcluding tbe LPGA record Young, won the U S.
won, only through a spectal $35,000 top pme in the Amateur Dick Slderowf
lllVitatlon. Next year, for Jusl Carlton
became the third American
Oklahoma State broke to win the Brittsh Amaleur
the second tune smee be
became established m tbe Wake rorest's two-year hold tWIL'C Donna Horton vr the
the NCAA team Umverstty of FlvrtdH wonlh1•
'50's, Pabner will have ro on
qualtfy w play m tbe Y S champtuhshop and Scott U S Women's Amateur

Sipe and

SPRINGFIELD, OHIO
(UPI) - Alittle more than a
year ago, former Ohto State
Untverstty all·Amerlcan
fullback Bob Ferguson has
struggling merely wsurvtve
Ferguson, a nat1ve of Troy ,

Ohto, was strtcken by a
cerebal hemorrhage on Oct
28, 1975, and was m crii)cal
condttion for nearly a month
tn Howard Unt versity
Hospttal m Washmgron, D C
On Dec 19, 1975, OSU
Coach Woody Hayes, former
OSU teammates and frtends
gave a fund ratsmg banquet
for Ferguson and ratsed
$10,000 ro help hun start hts
bfe over agam

~'erguson "l enJOY working
wtth kids I have even had a
couple of kids go to college.
Some are gettmg JObs and
hVlng mdependently It ts
mce bemg able to see them

help," slad Ferguson . "l can
relate to problems at home
and In the community. Some

like to host tilt
EAST RUTHERFORD, N

Sports Authonty has become
the second btdder for the
recentl y d1s cont1nu ed

College All-8tar game amid
sugges tions of posstble

changes m the game's for·
problems, rangmg from mat

actual crtmtnal acts to
Aspokesman for the Sports
truancy.
Authonty satd Frtday that
" I truly ltke tt ," sa td Chatrman So nny Werblin
contacted National Football

Gorn1an retires
after 25 years
service in NL

expcriem.'Cs I have had m hfe

New Jersey would

Ferguson last march was J (UP£ ) - Th e New .Jersey

gtven a job as counselor wtth
the Ohto Youth Commtsston
The youngsters who
Fer@son ts ln contact wtth
have been commttted by the
courts ro the state for various

return to a home setting
"l would hnaglne my own

Lengue Commissioner Peter

Rozelle about sponsormg the
game In New Jersey's Gtants
stadium
The game t radttt on all y
matches a squad of college
football all-stars aga mst the
NFL Super Bowl champtons
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - and had been sponsored for 43
Tom Gorman annowtced hts years by the Chicago
retirement Thursday after a Tnbune, whtch Tuesday e1ted
25-year career as a national mcre~;~sed expenses and
league umptre
uncertamty over its abtltty to
NL prestdent Charles S. recru1t personnel as reasons
Feeney satd Gorman, 57, for WJthdrawin~ tis backmg
would contmue Ill work m of the game
baseball and for tbe national
The brainchtld of former
league His duties wtll mclude Trtbane Sports Edttor Arch
spectal asstgnments and Ward, the game, played
speakmg engagements
annually m Chtcago, has
Gorman, who once pttched ra1sed mQre than 4 million for
for the New York Giants, needy causes.
began his umptring career m
In recent years, the game
1947 in the New England has been opposed by many
!•ague and JOined the NL NFL owners, who object to
staff In 1951 He ts a veteran their htgh draft choices
Of five world series, two rmssmg the ftrst three weeks
league championships and of pre-season trammg and
four all-star games
nsklng posSible tn1urv. In

adaltion , 2tl of the 54 players
who partu:: \pntcd 1n ln st
year's game were unsigned

Among the a lterna ttves
proprnled by \he New Jersey
Sports Authority ore a
rematch between the Super
Bowl finali sts or a game

between two college all·star
squads The coll egiate

players have nut beaten the ,

NFL representa\tv e since
wtth many scores bemg

196~,

one·slded

"To put tt m a bastcally
poslttve
pl ane,"
the
spokesman sa1d , "We would

be mterested In revtvmg the
game In any conceivable
type , shape or form"
Any change In the gome's
format · would need to be
sanctioned by the NFL
owners and Rozelle

Viking gals top
North Gallia five
WILLOW WOOD - The
Symmes Valley girls basket·
ball learn defeated North
Gallla 52·30 Wednesday
evening
Marilyn Saunders had 12
points and Connie Shepherd
10 for the winn ers.
Htta Payne led the losers
Wt\h 12
The Viking gals led 9-li, 23·
12, and 37-19 at the quartermarks

-..•
•

•
•

a

of the problems I have Ita
myself I have met and dealt
wtUt this type "
Pu t Co mer and Ellen
Hagerman, two of Ferguson'i
assoclutes at the Bethesdu.
group home here, attribute
his SUCL'CSS to hiS tougl);
upprooch to the youngsters. •
"We kid him about belnl!;
the big, bad youth eounselor~
"said Mrs Comer. ''The)'.;
respect him because he I•
auUtoriiatlve They wouldn't'
respect him If he wasn't alt
law and order

..

He played football and the
fact that he is big and storn~.
helps a lot," she said. "HIS,
background ln part hM
helped prepare him a lot•
because you have to learn,
disctplme
:
"I like Bob Ferguson an&lt;!,
respect Bob Feq;uson," sold
Miss Hagerman . "He gives of.
himself which Is sQ,
Important He's tough and at
the beginning they resen&amp;
him I just tell them 'If yoti:
can't make it with Bob yo
aren 't gomg to muke I
outsi_\ie '
"He has U! keep that role ui:
be successful," she said"
"Theyt don't hassle hint, 1'11:
tell you t)tat "
Not only has Ferguson's
professtonal life enjoyed a,
l'Omeback, hut his persona •
ltfc as well. Since tbe first o._
last year, Ferguson ~s seerC
h1s wife and children llC ,
Columbus every weekend:;
The Fergusons recentll" '
purchased a home hi
Columbus and his wife Dlanll.
and four children will Itt;:
moving In this week
"Within the next fe W:
months I hope to get
transfer to Columbus and wll
be working !here and livinll:
there" said Ferguson. "A.
transfer to Columbus would;
gtve me a chanl'C to be .
reunited with my famUy .•t
Ferguson hBB three boys;
Robert Jr , 14, Rodney, 12 and:
Rodney 11 and a daughter,:
Hobin II.
•
I

;

•

••
•
•

••

All you got to do is ask

•

Darden to

•

:I

be honored

.

,,

.,•

•

When the receivers fall
By Murray Oldennan
The tipoff
It cost Franklin Mteuli ahnost a quarter of a ITUllion dollars
NOT ro buy the San FranciSCO 49ers- that's how much he'll
have to pay In legal fees for the tortuous and frwUess negotialtons over the past few months What really blew him down
was the NFL's InsiStence that he get rid of h1s Golden State
Warriors even before he had a deal for the 49ers
Q On a kickOff, the ball travels !Oyards tn the air. A player
from the kickmg team catches it before tt htts the ground or an
opposmg player Who gets the ball• -Gary Seekins, Anaheim,
Cab f.
The ktcking team. If tn the judgment of the referee the ball
traveled 10 yards, it ts a free ball. However, of the receivmg
team didn't touch tt, the ball may not be advanced. The more
likely occurrence, unless tbe receivers fall completely asleep,
is for a ball to rtcochet off a receover.
~· What has happened to the Pete Rozelle-Carrol!
Rosenbloom feud? Rosenbloom sounded like allsweelness and
light on a halltune teleVISion mterview? - T.R., Oakland,
Calif.
The reference is to tho revolt by tbe Raii'IS' owner agatnsl the
NFL rule of Commissioner Rozelle. It reached a pomt of
vebemence where the other owners stepped In, threatened
Hosenbloom wtth ceusure for his public critiCISm and fined
him a thousand bockS each on two counts. Ca!lllht m the middle
was Rams' general
ger Don Kloste111l8n, who works for
Rosenbloom and IS a I gtime friend of Rozelle. He arranged a
NewYorkmeetin tween the two, at which. the hatchet was
ootens1bly burt But Rozelle Isn't entirely free of critics yet.
Lut kmg out tberen Oakland ts AI Davis, who still has reservaltvns about the conduct of pro football.
Q When Don DrysdBie set the major league record for consa·uttve shurout mnlngs, how was he ranked at the end of the
yeat in the National League and maJor league ERA ratmgs?
Also, how many shutout games dtd he hurl that year? -Steve
Estrada, Brea, Calif.
Drysdale pttched 58 stratght scorele511 inmngs from May 14
io June 4, 1968, includtng a record stx consecutive shutouts
lromcally, he was only 14-12 for the season, wtth an earned run

asleep ~

••
average of 2 15 that was sixth In the league and 12th In the rna!

jors. He had eight shurouts for the season. Don is now a a~
cessful broadcaster.
Q. Why didn't Walter Payton, the sensational running back
for the Chicago Bears, go to a btg university instead of Jackson
Slate• Didn't the big schools want hlln• -G.C., Rockford, Ill.
Young Walter, who nearly became the yoqest NFL
rushing leader ever, didn't play football until the lith grade In
Columbia, Miss. He came along fast, though, and was SUJIPOII'
ed to go to Kansas State, then in a heavy recrulllng splurge.
But when he went to Jackson, Miss., by bus to catch a plane for
Kansas, he sropped off at Jackson State to vlait his brother Ed,
playing football there The coach persuaded him to stay.
Q. I'd ~ke to know what you base your statement on, that
Bear Bryant should stop coaching. This season at Alabama
consists of 8 wins, 3 losses and a trip ro a bowl game. How
many teams are there that could call this unsuccessful]- Jay
Langley, San Ramon, Calif
••
My statement wasn't based on Alabama's success, pro or
con. Bear Bryant has been one of the most phenomCitllly ltiC'
cessful CoaChes Ul hlsJory and a tremendOUB force (n colltge
football I just feel that as he gets older he is a little removed
for the active role of coachmg
,
Q. Could you please tell me on punts bow much yardage the I
punter gets credJt for when the line of scrlnunage Is the 50 and
he kicks inro tho end zone (the baD comes out 1o the ~I? H.K., Springfield, ll!o.
I've answered this before. He gets credit lor 50 yards In )u.
average, but the team pwttlllg average reflects only a 30-yard
boot. Wtth the procllvfty for eo!!in corner kicks the last couPle
Of years (since the field goal rule ' change), I feel that puntage
yardage statistics are meaningless
Parting shotI always thought that low cut shoes In football werit a
modem mventlon Then I uw a picture of Bill Olmanski of the
Chicago Bears nppmg Off that 611-yard nm which set in motion
the 7~ rout of the Washington Redllkins for the NFL title 'l;!le
year was 1940 The Skins chasmg B1ll all wore high tope•
O.mattski was in low cpts

�B-6-The Sunday Tunes-sentinel, Sunday. Dec. 26, 1976

B-7- ThtSunday TitTte&amp;&amp;ntinel, Swtday,IJe&lt;:. 26. 1~76

1Montana stops Long Beach, 71_-15

SI:'nort rD arade

ill

\il

I

l:::*.
""
&gt;·~
/·~

.-::::.
i!l~

By MILTON. RICHMAN
UPI Sporll Editor

%$
··

wasn't in ooseball,
NEW YORK (up! ) _ If Jeff Burrou•hs
o
you might see him in the magazine ads, the ones showing you.
SOme rugged' Outdoor he-man type fly-easling in a mounts in ·
stream or taking time out from roljllding up &lt;'3 ltle to light up a
cigarette.
Jeff Burroughs ts a !me young man, clean-eut, wellintentiooed and sulftctently talented so that he recetved $88,000
for slgplng with the Washmgton Senators seven years ago and
considerably more than that for playing right field this year
for the Texas Rangers.
The big, 25-year-&lt;Jld Long Beach, Caltf., long-ooller has one
btg ·drawback. He sometltnes gets a little foggy, ralher

United PresslnternaUuoal ,
Long Beadt Stale receivL&lt;I
'
word ThurSday mght lh&lt;
NCAA was hftino
' tis athletic
probatton effective Jan 5,
then went out and celebrated
by losing to Montana, 77-75.
for lhetr fourth lo:;s in 104
games at the l.ong Reach
Arena.
The end or. the probatton
mean,• l.ong Reach Sla te

footbHII and oosketball teams
will IIIII he barred from
lc lev,.wn """earances or
••
"'•Slseason
competition
arter
r
.Jan 5
'
.
I

moment. Now our teams are
ready and anxious to meet
any und all eomers."
lie was proved wrong less
than ·a few hours later.
M•
d K k R
•·ho~a~nasc~r':,'d w';th
scronds lefl in the game In lift
the Grinhes over the 49ers
M.R. Rtchardson, a 6-5
forward, scor ed 28 ,potnts an d
6-10 Lee Johnson addcd 24 In
lead Mon tana to its stxth
vieWy in eight games.
Long Beach State got 12
points apiece from Richard
Johnson, Donnie Martin and
hi~hly touted freshman

pre.Thse~t isp~~:i ~:.'. , ho,::~

f9

"
Beach Slate President
Stephen Horn said alter th&lt;
NCAA ' s a n noun ceme n l
"'!'hey tlhe 49ers' athletes!
have watted patienUy lor lhts

Sobers has 28

~-

)

He'll get hts meal money. begtn talktng to someone, lay the
money down on a table, and then walk away absent-mtndedly.
Or he'll p~t hi• paycheck tn his suitcase and forget all about it ,
which he has done .
MaybeJeffllurroughs docsthtn gS itkethtsbecausehe hasso
much on his mind and he's too preoccupicd Whatever the
reason , he couldn 'tltgure out that six-player deal of two weeks
oock where lhe Rangers wrapped him up tn a nice fancy ribbon
and sent him to the Atlanta Braves lor Ken Henderson, Carl
Morton, Roger Moret, Dave May and Adrian Devine plus
$250,000 in cash.
·
Burroughs announced tt wasn't a deal al all because there
was a no-trade clause in hts contract
"The deal's off," he said .
, For some reason, he was convmced he had the final word to
decide whether a trade stood or not. Why does he thtnk Char he
Finley has Bowie Kuhn in Federal Court in Chtcago now·1
Ftnley says even the commisstoner of basebaUhas no right to
knock out a deal. If Burroughs, not even a 10-and.S man, chose
ootiD report lo·Atlanta, that was one thtng, but ca lhng off the
whole deal was something entirely out of his hands. He got a
little confused there.
Then there was the matter of his contract wtth the Rangers.
More confusion·, all on Burroughs' part.
He explained the reason he didn't really have to go to Alla~ta
was because of thai no~rade clause tn hts contract.
There is no such clause tn Burroughs' contract
While all this back-Md-forth was gomg on, Ted Turner, the
Braves' one-&lt;Jf-a-kind owner, was gelling a bit overheated
himself.
If Burroughs was so dea d set agamst comtng to Atlanta, let
him go fly-easting or rounding up cattle somewhere. Turner
didn't want him any more and Texas coultl keep htm I can' I
blame the Braves' owner for thai. He grew even hotter when
he discovercd Burroughs and Rangers' owner Brad Corbett
had hopped over to Las Vegas tn a jet last Tuesda)' night before
Burroughs was scheduled to show up m Atlanta for a
WedneSday press conference, whtch he never dtd.
Bu.roughs had a great year for the Rangers in 1974 when he
ran away with th e American League 's MVP award after
finlsi1ing with 116 runs batted m, 25 homers an d a .301 batting
average . Buthenose-&lt;iived,to 226in1975andtluspastyearhe
suddenly become a defensive hitter.
The Rangers felt Burr~ughs was spmnlng his wheels in
Arlinglnn SJ,adtum, where the wmd whipping in irom left held
unquestionably cut down on his home-run productton. Burroughs never professed any unusual passion for pl ~y tng in
Arlington but now, after being traded to the Braves, suddenly
he feU head over heels tn love with Texas agatn He dtdn't want
wleaye for money
Ah, money .
Burroughs brtdled when tl was suggested 111 prtnl that was
w!Wt he essenttally was after m kicking up such a fuss over
going ID Atlanta.
"Whoever would report something ltke that really has no
tdea what- they're ' doing," satd the outfielder "I did not
arrange thts iradething. I'm th e mnocent party. People wnte
things that are completely erroneous."
Oh, sure. ·
All I know ts it certamly dtdn 'ltake Burroughs' lawyer long
at aU In get into the picture. And I'm sure alll\e talked to Ted
Turner , about was the weather tn Atlanta Apparently
everYthing is okay now. Burroughs is commg to Atlanta the
first week in January. What do you unagme was responstble
for such an overntght mtracie'
Money ' Now.why would you ever say a thing like that '

.In SUil
un s
·

Flye..

'

107 92
.

•

M oore

J

•

,

•
WID

By CHRIS SCHERr
UPI Sports Writer
Excuse Ernie DiGregono tf
he " Bah, humbugs" hts
Christmas gift from Phoemx '
Rtcky Sobers.
1
Ever stnce corning into the
National Basketooll 1\ssocta- ·
lion, DtGregono has' been
trymg to tgnore the mckname
" Ernte NoD," a reference to
his reputed defensive short·
'comings. But Sobers may
have st uck Ute Buffalo guard
with
that
so briquet
permanently Thursday nigltl
Sobers, known prunartly as
a defenstve spedaltst, scored
a career-htgh 28 pomts to lead
the Suns to a 107-92 vtctory
over the Braves.
•
Even Inure damaging to
DtGregono was what Sobers
had to say afler Ute game
"I tn ed to be more
olfenstve nunded agamst
htm ," Sobers sa id of
DiGregorto. "I feel I can take
him one-on-&lt;Jne because of
my hetght advani&lt;Ige and
because he has the reputation
or not be,ing a good delenst ve •
player.! Uunk he really ts t)le
weak ltnk m Buffalo 's
defense"
The SwlS' vtctory ended a
four-game losing streak
DtGregono also had a
tough mghtoffensively as he
scored only II points
The Suns' guards scored 69
pmnts as Paul Westphal
scored 22 and reserves Ron
Lee and DICk Van Arsdale
had 11 and B, respectively
John Shumate was htgh for
Buffalo Wtlh 26 potnts.
In other games Thursday
night, indiana edged the New
York Nets. 96-94; San Anlomo
beat Washtngton , 118·116 ;
Cht cago defeated Atlant a.

101 -95; Mtlwaukee topped
Golden State, 107-92, and
Denver routed Seattle, 123-95.
l'acers 96, Net• 9~:
Btlly Kmght scored a threepoint play wtth 28 seconds
remaming to cap .a 1~int
lndtana comeback tn the ftnal
two mtnules lor a vtctory
over the Nets Kntght ftntshed
wtth 32. John Wtlliamson lcd
New York Wtth 28 pomts.
Spurs 118, Bullels 116:
Larry Kenon scored, 26
potnts to lead San Antonio to
vtclory as Washtngton 's
Iilvm Hayes missed a last·
second tap, which would have
tied the game. Hay es had 32,
potntsand 15 rebounds to lead
the Bullets.
Bulls 101, Hawks 95:
Mtckey Johnson scored 26
potnts to lead Chtcago to tls
etg)ith vtclory in the last 10
games. Artis Giltnore had 23
potntslortheBulls, \\htleLou
Hudson scored 22 to lead
Atlanta, which lost its fourth
stratghl.
Bucks .107, Warriors 92:
Bobby Dandridge scored 22
potnts and Mtlwaukee scored
Ute game's nnal etght points
to record tts third stratghl
vtclnry . Gus Wtlltams led the
Golden Stale sconng wtth 26
points
Nuggets 123, SuperSonics
95 .
,
Davtd Thompson scored a
season-htgh 38 pomts and
Jlobby Jones added 20 by
extendmg hts strmg of
consecuttve held goals to a
teamrecord 17 over a twogame pertod to lead Denver
to an easy vtctory. Torn
Burleson scored 17 potnts to
lead Seattle, whtch lost tls
fifth straight game

Quebec places
~three on East
'dream team'

K C gals lo~e two before resigns

HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI)
- The Quebec Nordiques
placed three players Thurs·
day on the East Diviston
tea m that will play its
Western counterpart in the
World Hockey Association·
NORMAL, Ill. tUPI) - All-Star Game here Jan 16.
Walter A. nWally" Moore,· Quebec's Real Cloutier.
named head football coach at Serge Bernier and Marc
llllnois Stale Universtty Wed- Tardtf have been selected as
nesday. restgned today the forward ltne by sports
because
of
•jpersonal
writers from the 12 WHA
problems."
cities. Filltng out the team
Stunned ISU offtcials sa td are delenseman Ron Plufnb
Moore walked tnto the office
of Athlettc Director Warren of Ctnctnnall, Pat Stapleton
Indtanapolts
and
Schmakel thts mormng and of
goa!tlnder
Louts
Levaoseur
lt&gt;Id hun he could not accept
the posttion because of of the Minnesota Ftghllng
"ex tr e me
personal Saints.
problems" re~ultinf from his , Sec ond team selections
proposed move from Indiana include center Rtch Leduc of
Umversily, where he was Cmcmnalt, left wing Hugh
asststant athlettc director. Han·is of Indianapolis, right
Roger Cushman , ISU wing Mark Napier of Blr·
sports tnformation director, mmgham, defenseman Rick
said Moore told Schmakel he I.ey of the New England
thoughl .he had the blessiltgs Whalers and J . C. Tremblay
or everyone, mcluding hts of Quebec and goaltende'r
family, but he found out that John Garrett of Btnningham.
East Coach Jacques Demers
was not so
"Everyone here has been of Indianapolis will round out
so good in offering hltn this his squad to 20 men next
opportunity, but he decided at week .
thts lime to wive the personal
problems I and) he was not
going w accept the' job ., "
Cushman quoted Moore as
saytr!g.
Moore had been an

• •

defeating Southwestern position
CHESHIRE - The Kyger Kyger Creek were trunmed
Creek girls oosketball team 23·22. T Smith led all scorers
lost two of three contests last with 13 Les Tay lor and I.tz
Nibert both had 6 points to
' week .
Th·ursday, the Eastern gtrls lea d the Kyger Creek girls as
rolled to a 61-36 victory over Tammy Wtlltarnson added 4
with Kim Bickers, Nancy
the Kyger Creek gals.
Eastern took an early 13-9 Foster and Ruth Saxton each
first quarter, lead and led 27· scoring 2.
The Kyge r Creek gals
17 at halftime. The .Eastern
returned
to the winning ctrcle
girls continued to dominate
again
Wednesday
as they
the j!ame as they outscored
played
host
to
Southwestern
Kyger Creek 20-7 in the thtrd
period and 14-12 tn the ftnal and easily took a 74-13 vtc·
tory.
quarter.
Kyger Creek took control or
Vickie Epple Jed all scoring
with 32 points while Jane the game durmg the first
Ambrose tossed in 12 for period of play Vickt Stroud
Eastern. Mary. Rollins had 24 took sconng honors Wtlh 24
points. Mary Rollins added
for the Kyger Creek gals.
In the junior high tilt, the 23, Gloria Amos scored 12,
Eastern girls were also Judy Darst tossed in 8, Carla
victortous H-12. R. Riebel., Tucker had 4 and Debbie
scored 10 points for Eastern Metzner 3 for the Kyger
Ruth Saxton had 6, I.es Creek team. Kathy Kiser was
TJylor added 4~nd Liz Nibert htgh for Southwestern with 5.
The Kyger Creek junior
• scored 2 for .Kyger Creek
h1gh
team tasted victory for
, Monday the Kyger Creek.
gals played host to Southern the first time thts season as
and again were deleated.57· they defeated Southwestern

39.
The Kyger Creek girls
played gOod defense durmg
!he first half ~nd led. 26-24 at
halftime. Southern came
back in the second hall,
outscoring the Kyger Creek
gals \1-11 in the lhtrd quarter
and 16-5 d¥ring the ~!mal ,
• period.
•
Southern placed three
players in double figures as
Jean Rltchhart was high with
20 followed by Brenda
Lawrence wtth 19 and Carol
Roseberry added 16. Mary
Rollins had 20 points in a
losing cause for the Kyger
Creek gals while Gloria Amos
scored 9, Vicki Stroud 6 and
Judy Darst 4.
The· junior htgh girls' from

33-16.

Ruth Saxton was high
scorer wtth 12 points, Tammy
Williamson scored 10, Les
Taylor added 9, and Pebbles
Clark had 2 for Kyger Creek.
L. Edwards was top scorer
for Southwestern with 10
points and C. Gibson had 6.

(O IIf~ ql• B.Hk t:HM II R es ult ~

By Untied Press lnterMtlftonAI
Tourn clmCnfS
Carolin c1 Clauic
IF mill Round!
I ChMtlptOU\hrp)
lllahrtma 67 ~o rMoltnrt A?
fCo n ~ n l,1 1r o n )
GIIOHWIOWn li () H t1rvi1r d

PCHI'

•n

R1dCr ffJ

f.l ~ t

N Y P oly ~ ~
1

u' flfl

1r,t

Ru l ~l' ro; ~I h it II

Snulh
M &gt;rl l p) p,'J

11 1, )(1 /f'

10

assistan t 'o .\.ra Parseghian
a: ~nt re Dame 1ur !li•!P vears
before uav oir:r: to lnOiull&lt;.~

after the 1974 season.
He was line coach under
I.ee Corso before moving to
the associate's po~it ion and
began hts coachmg career in
high schools at Maria Stein,
Ohto, Manon, Ohio, and Sl.
Jo~ph's Htgh School m South
Bend, Ind ., where his sevenyear record was 46.15-5.
More than 80 "pplicants
hl\d sought the ISU job lo
~ueeeed

(:rrry Hml , whoRe

resign&lt;~ltlm

' dftt'li V4' &lt;Jt

seuson

w;Js Hnnuuntl&gt;d
thr end uf the pa!-it

College
results
Mrdwe~ t

Dr i'lkf' ~0 Il li nois St 67
Fla f..&amp;M 10 1 Morehouse 84
Howard 99 Lemoyne Owen Ill
Jdckson ~ ~ 9·1 ~outhc rn 110
MlnnL'So ta 67 K an sas s t 60
Wrs FdU Clrl' }] N Mrch ~3 '
)( ;wr cr 0 fl6 Ru tt er ~0 ot

South west

/lrk ,ln~a s HI Tu iSI'I h6
Qk l,l Cil y M. T(')I&lt;'!S t-\
W es t
I ullflrton 7 ot I re l rvrnt;&gt; ~~
Hnwillo Hito 'in Pac Or r&gt; 77
Hywrd '-.1 /9 (cJI Po l; ' •1.0 Ito

Mon ),ln tt

n

l onq f1(' ;H h o:. r , ,,

Nr v l~ • · n o i r fa r Poly r&gt;om f •
Nr IH drjf• /oO ' iln l) rt'(I(J I J ~ /
On ·q rtn 1.' \ r,ln rlll rnrr !H
'
f.t ilf il tr lfl (j f rp f rHiol (I)
' ran tw .r r I 'I I M.rr v'
l lfl •

11

·

'J tl • ~. Moll \t •,
HI

lll r~ tr H{ './, o lw r ' l

.. .t·,t ' ·"t

• r ,o l l lo

Michael Wiley .as the 4!1ers'
record dropped In &amp;-3.
Alaooma also had good
reason to celebrate as the
lourth..-anked Crimson Tide
won the Carolina Classic with
a 67.Q2 victory over South
carolina.
F res h man Rober1 Sco It
came off the bench and
score d 1•• o1 hts' 14 points in
the second hall to lead
Alabama to its eighth victory
without a loss this season .
Guard T.R. · Dunn, an
strong defenstve player, was
named the tournament's
Most Valuable Player, after

I

~

~

By .JACK SAUNDERS
UPJ Sports Writer
Mter a stow start, tne
Phila&lt;Jelphia Flyers finally
have overtaken the New York
Islanders lor ltrst place in the
Patnck . Division of the
Nattonal Hockey League, and
the prune mover in the past
two games is a player not
well known for knowing
where the goal is
Don Sale ski, best-known for
having the same nickname as
Mark "The Bird" Ftdrych
iSaleskthadhtS "btrd" ftrsll ,
scored more than 15 goals '
on!) once tn his ftve-year
National Hockey League
career- last season, with 21.
So far thts season he has
seven,
mcludtng
two
Thursday rught - one the
wmner - tn a 5-2 tnwnph
over the Washington Capitals
thai gave Phtladelphia a two. potnl Patrick Division lead
over the Islanders.
Wilhthescoretiedl-1in the
second period Thursday
mght, Saleski scored at 10.47
on a feed from linemate Oresl
Kindrachuk, then took a
Larry Goodenough pass to up
the margin to 3-1 on what was
l\Jprovothewlnninggoalless
than eight minutes later.
Torn Bladon and Andre
Dupont added thtrd-penod
gOJ!ls for Philadelphia, while

scoring 15 points in the
ylctory over the Gamecocks.
Jackie GiUoon scored 18
points lor Soulh Carolina .
Georgetown won third
pia in th t
t lth
a ~0 rom~ :~':v'U: as
Derrick Jackson and Ed
Hopkin seach 9COr ed I•• po in ts
for the Hoyas.
Ro y HamUI.on sank 1our
free throws and Jltn Spillane
and WUbur Ollnde added two
apiece in the final 58 seconds
to give eighth..-anked UCLA a
W-65 victory over William &amp;
Mary.
Brad Holland led the UCLA

0 n top

Ron Lalonde provided the
Caps '
final
score.
Philadelphia's Mel Bridgman
and Washln~ton 's Garnet
Bailey traded first-period
tallies. • '
The win also stretched
Phtladelphia's unbeaten
streak to 17 games.
The second period was
tnarred bf a fight In which
lwo players;'Paul Holmgren
of Philadelphia and Gordy
Lane of Washington, were
eJected.
Elsewhere tn the NHL, the
New York Rangers !ted
Boston, 3-3, Detroit lopped
Ptttsburgh, 5·2, ·. Buffalo
dumped Toronto, 4-2, and St.
!.ouis took Vancouver by the
same score.
In the World Hockey
Assoctation, Houston edged
Cinctnnatl, 6-5, tn overtime,
Calgary nipped Minnesota, 21, and New England
outscored San Diego, 5-3.
Raogers 3, Bruins 3:
Steve Vickers' lith goal
from live feet out With each
learn short one man with 7:20
to play lifted New York into
the tie. Rookte Don Murdoch
scored the first two New York
goals, while Earl Anderson,
Terry O'Reilly and John
Bucyk scored lor Boston.
Red Wings 5, Penguins 2:
Jun Nahr~ang and Rick

take yule break
MIAMI t UP! 1- Both Ohio
Stale and Colorado planned
pra ~ttce• today before
breaktng ~or 1tristmas in
thetr maxuntt'Tt two-It our-aday schedule&gt; destgned to get
each team physically and
mentally ready for the New
Year's night clash at the
Orange Bowl.
.
Colorado coach Btll
Mallory concentrated on
passmg Thursday, trymg_kl
balance out hts runmng
attack tn the f~;" of the Ohio
State, whtch • ~ompare to
~ebraska and whtch we fe~!
ts the best tn our conference.
He alsq worked of defense
against the Buckeyes•
quarterbacks, Rod Gerald
and Jtm Pacenta.
Gerald and Pacenta, as it
turned out Thursday, were
the only bright spots tn coach
Woody Hayes ' two-ho~r
mormng workout. He sa~d

scoring with II points and "
Hamilton added 10. Mall
Courage led Wilham &amp; Mary
18 poin'·
Wt'th
'"'· Deane ·~red
Utah's Greg
~·
"
the SlX points in overtime to
lllp Weber Slate, J18.111. Deane
an dJeI!Judk'ms had20po'•ts
"'
each lor the Utes and Jeff ·•
Jonas added 19 although his
string of oonsecutt·ve free
throws ended at 42, a school
record . Bruce Collins of
Weber State scored a game·
high 28 points.
Minnesota edged Kansas
State, SUO, on guard Ray ··
Williams' layup in the final
minute. Mike Thom'""'n led
theMtnnesotascoringwtth 16
Greg Ballard scored 15 •.
points and Rob Closs nine w "
lead Oregon wa 42-38 victory ..
over Grambling.
In other major games,
RutgersedgedPtttsburgh, 81·
77; Memphts State routed
TCU, 116-72 ; Drake beat
Ollnois State, 8Q.67; Arkansas
defeated Tulsa, 61.Q6;
Oklahoma City edged Texas,
86-65; Stanford beat St.
Mary's,
87-75,
and
Washington defeated SeattlePacific, 63-43.

B 9'2

1\ULVERINE®
6" WELT V«&gt;RK BOOT

Natt. NE LA

FJELD GOAL PERCENTAGE

G FG FGA PCT
5 34 48 708

'krcer, Georgia

ROtne, Clemson

8 61

Grundberg, Lafayette
Griffin, W FOf'est
Win•too. Kan St

95

10.5

6 40 57

702

6 49 72
7 36 53

.679

681

FREE THROW PERCENTAGE
GFTFTA PCT
Brown, Wake Forest
6 29 29 t.OOO
Jonl5, Utah
8 21 21 I 000

Stuckey. Tew. Arl

5

Hultberg , LSU
Kelley, Morehead St

6 23 24 .958
5 2t 21 .955
6 21 22 95 ~

Kelly, Vermont

REBOUNDS

13 13 t.OOO

GNOAVG

Mo5tev, Seton Hall
Rollins, Clemson

6110

8 124
6 90
5 IS
8 112
s 112

Cummings, Tulane
Macklin, LSU

Bird. tnd St

Jones, Nev-Reno
TEAM OFFENSE
1. Nev. las Vegas
2. Clemson

18 3

ts.s

15.0

15.0
140
14.0

G PTS AVG

8 ll60 107 5
8 835 104.4

3. Houston
4. Seton Hall

a

790 988

"

'iAA

6 589 982

S. Cincinnati

TEAM DEFENSE

07, 7

G PTS AVG
1. Princeton

6 318 53.0

• Oregon
4. Virginia
5. Toledo

7
6
4
9

2. Navy

,40 55.0

337

553

227
518

508
57.6

AVERAGE SCORING MARGIN
OFF DEF MAR
104 4 65 0 39.4
97 7 64.8 32 9

Clem5011

914 618

29 6

SHOE STORE
Ga IIi polis, Ohio

''
•

''

95 .0 66 4 28.6
94 4 66.0

28.4

Finley offered ace
$1.5 million deal

0

••
"

•

0

0

Redskins

0 0

0

wtdergo

•

•.

•

,.

•
•

•
•

~:~~~~::; 7;8~t~o~·.7~1~
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H
tg
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home? Fami~ increased? Want better
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ou ld you l'k
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~

surgery

mhillg you
and· those
you hold
most dear

all the
old fashion,ed
joys of
Christmas!
Hearty t/Ja11ks.

Whatever the reason, your old mobile home is worth
mor~ on trade at Kingsbury. We will .also accept as
tradms, travel trailers and motor vehiCles.' .I&gt; •
Kingsbury handles only the best double wide and
modular homes by Skyline and Fuqua Corp. of Ohio. . ,.
V,:atch for the arrival of our totally new Skyline double
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r,u .•

•

BillH quarterback will wulergo surgery

minutes to beat the Steelers; In wtnning their ftnal nine
31-28, in tho re..:ular ~eason games - to gain a wild rard
opener thts year. but Madden berth in th&lt;• AFC playolfs said he has noticed subtle the defense gave up only two
changes in the defensive touchdowns and a total of 28
potnts whtle recording ftve
ali~runent.
"They're red-doggmg a shutouts.
UWe more than they used to
" You can see they've
and they're mixing up their intprovcd a ton," Madden
delonse a lot more.'' he satd. added. "So it's not going to be
"They'll use three linemen eaSy "
and ftve defensive backs,
Madden's
comments
three linemen and lour moved away from the datly
linebackers , and four erchange of threats a.nd
linemen and ltve defensive counter·threats in••· lvi ng the
backs.
players.
"All that mixing can make
The "I'll do this to htm tf he
tt rough lor the offensive does that to me" war of words
team.11
wus the direct· resull .o£ the
Pittsburgh's furious finish teams first meeting In that
alter a 1-4 stsrt definitely game, Oakland defenstve
shows a lightening trend on ba ck George Atkinson
sidelined Steelers wtde
defense ..
In losing the lout games, receiver Lynn Swann with a
thr ~fPf\lt'rQ ,.l,.lrl ...rl95 noints. blow to the head.

UKCHAI\Il PARK. N. Y. (UPI) - Buffalo Bills quarterbark Gury Morang! ~·Ill
uudergu surgery lll'll month for relief of "an Impingement" - or plncm-7 Itt hl• right
shnulder.
A Bltls &lt;pokesman said Thursday the condition first became apparent late fn th&lt; 1976
seaS&lt;Ill, ·'but Marangl was treated and played In every game."
The surgery will he performed by Dr. Joseph D. Godfrey. lhe Ritts • physlrlau ,
The spokesman said doctors upected "a short convalesceuC&lt; aud Marun11l should .bf.·
throwing within a month alter surgery."
"Wedoo't anUcipt1te any problems for next season," th&lt; spokesman sald.
The three-year veteran had been the Bills' backup quarterback until •l•rtr. Joe
Ferguson suffered fractures In his lower back in the Oct. !l game agalllSl New England.
Marangltook over after Ferguson was hurt a"d went the dlstanrt• Itt lhe remaltthll:
seven games . He had the lowest passing perce .. tage In the leagur nmotl)( s tartltt~:
qunrterbucks and the BUls never won a game while h' ND5lht• starter.

Burroughs says trade
to Atlanta is 'off'

DALLAS (UP[) - Former
American League MVP Jeff
Burroughs Friday satd his
trade from Texas to Atlanta
was off. Rangers' owner Brad
Corbett and Braves' owner
Ted Turner said the deal
stood. But It all meant the
same thmg
Burroughs, In a telephone
in terview from his Long
Beach, Calif., home, satd the
multi-year contrnct he signed
game. They've got a pretty with Texas last sprmg contained a no-trade clause. Or,
· good passing game "
at
least it should have .
The Penn State coach
Burroughs
also satd he never
acknowledged he was a little
saw
an
"official"
copy of the
intimidated by the stze of the
contract.
Irish linemen and noted, "We
Cortllk,
however.
don't have any dorntnant
reiteratell:liere
was
no sueh
people on the line of scrimclause;
!laid
the
deal
wtth
mage. I'm worried we might
Atlanta
wus
final
;
but
ad·
. not be able to get the footooll
mttted
he
planned
to
try
to
back."
reacqutre
the
man
he
But , Devine said that
defensive end Wilhe Fry Is dtsposed of less than lour
235 pounda - "Not big for a weeks earlier
Everyone agreed Turner,
defensive end" - and
who
is temporarily stuck with
(Outland Trophy wtnner)
a
player
who has no destre to
Ross Browner, at the other
put
on
a
Braves'
umfonn, had
defensive end slot, "ts not
taken
his
lumps
muJ:h bigger than that."
"He (Turner ) has been
He added the rest of Notre
through
a Jot of problems he
Dame's linemen are "just
didn't
really
need to go
normal size" and the
defensive secondary ts made through," Burroughs satd.
up of "four people who dtd not "It's never rea lly been his
play those positions at the fault or anythtng Atlanta is
fine . ! only hear the brightest
beginning of the season."
Paterno called Browner of things about It But that's
and Fry "great pass rushers. not the point."
The point, according to
Alot of Dan's ktds do a lot of
Burroughs,
was he never
good things with their hands.
wanted
to
leave
Texas and
All their people rush exhad
the
elusive
no-trade
tremely well. We have not
clause
to
support
his
case.
played anybody who rushes
"Basically,
as
far
as
I'm
so well."
concerned,
I
never
wanted
to
Devine said sophomore
fullback Jerome Heavens,
who sat out most of the
season because of torn
cartilage, "possibly could
play a httle btl on Monday."
He called Heavens "The kind
of fuUoock who can get two
yards or 60."
Penn State "had a terrib!e
begmning" this year, losing
live of Its players because of
injuries, Paterno said. "After
we got a little stabilized, we
stsyed healthy," he said,
"although there sttll are
some problems on defense."
Both said the fact that the
Gator Jlowl had mvlted the
other team was what finally
persuaded them to come to
Jacksonville.
Devine was asked what
prospects there were of Notre
Dame moving up In the
rankings In view of UCLA's
loss to · Alabama tn the
Uberty Bowl.
"The winner could make a
significant jump .... but a
more significant jump would
be from sixth to second than
from 13th to 12th." The Irish
were ranked 13th by UP!. He
said be hadn't thought about
dropping in the final
rankings.

Coaches agree defense
will be key in battle

JACKSONVIJ.I.E, Fla.
I UP!) - Both Notre Dame
Coach Dan Devine and Penn
Slate mentor Joe Paterno
concurred Friday that
defense could be the key to
their Gator Bowl conKuhn called off the sales in frontation Monday night
CHICAGO
(UPI)
Oakland A's owner Charles " the best interests of
Appearing at a joint press
0. Finley Friday said he basebaU."
conference marked ' by
Questioned by hts lawyer. mutual oonter and nattery,
offered slugger Reggie
Jackson $1.5 million to stgn a Neil Papiano, as to what his the two coaches touched on
live-year contract but he understanding of how trades topics ranging from the
refused and was later traded should be made, Finley benefits of not belonging to a
replied :
to the Baltimore Orioles.
conference to what the game
"It was a very simple means in terms of national
Testifying in his $3.5
million suit against basebaU understandmg, thattf I cared ranking.
conuntssloner Bowie Kuhn, to buy a baU player or trade a
At the end. thev blew out a
Fhtley cited Jackson's case ooll player, that that was my
as one of the reasons why he perogatlve. And in the same
decided to sell some of his respect, tf I cared to sell a
ball player, that also was my
star players.
FIIiley said he tried to sign perogat1ve."
Asked what he thought the
Don Baylor, Joe Rudi, Rollie
Fingers, Bert Campanem, 'best interest of baseball'
Gene Tenace and Jackson provision in the rules meant,
belore and during the 1976 be said, "At the time I came
season when their options into basebaU and today, it has
were running out but they aU been my understanding that
TEMPE. Ariz. iUPII - II
refused. He said he offered the best Interest of basebaU Oklahoma should happen to
them each at least a three provision (was) that the fall vlelim to underdog
year contract at $90,000 a -Commissioner would make Wyoming in Saturday's
sure there was no gambling Fiesta Bowl, the Sooners
year.
"I offered Reggie Jackson going on , that there was could blame it on a lack of
$1.5 miUion for a five year nothing immoral going on " . practice time.
In his 17 years in baseball,
contract," he said
But they won't.
Fhtley said be finally sold Finley said, he had never
"It certahtly won't be a
Fingers and Rudi to the heard of a commissioner crutch for us.'' said Sooner
Boston Red Sox for S1 million disapproving of a sale.
Coach Barry Swllzer in e&amp;·
U. S. District Court Judge plalnlng how semester uams
each and pitcher Vida Blue to
the New York Yankees for Frank J , McGarr reces:~ed cut into the Oklahoma
$1.5 million just before the after 45 minutes ioday and practice sessions.
trading deadline last June 15 scheduled the next session lor
While Wyoming arrived
because he could not trade 2 p. m. Jan . 3 when Ftnley here Dec. 16, the Sooners
them and other clubs "knew was expected to be could not leave for Ari!Aina
questioned by Kuhn's at· until Tuesday night. To
they had me in a comer."
Fhtley !Ued his suit alter torneys.
complicate matters further,
their charter ntght was
delayed
and the Sooners did
0
b
•
0
not
land
until the wee hours
0
0 0
0

985-3308

OAKLAND tUP!\ •· Joha
Madden Frtday sidestepped
the furious war of words
surrounding this weekend 's
American Conlerenre
Championship game and
talked about the Pittsburgh
Steelers' defense.
"That's a tough question to
answer," the Oakland
Raiders coach said when
asked If he thought Pitts·
burgh's "steel curtain"
defense was the best-ever In
the
National Football
League.
"I had elghl of them play
for me In the Pro Bowl last
year, which Is really
wmething. But I'll tell you
this, they're good - awfuUy
good."
The Raiders stonned from
bthind In the ftnal ftvt

smgle candle and cui a joint
birthday cake provided by
the Gator Bowl Association .
Paterno turned 50 on Tuesday
while Devine celebrated his
52nd birthday Thursday.
"Joe and his staff never
give you anything. I think
buth dclcnso• will play well.''
Devine said. "It should IJe
tough to move the ball. It
probably will be a lowscoring game .. or things
could break loose."
Paterno agreed and added,
"We've got to play good
defense and not let them have
the big play in a passing

has no excuses

CARL'S

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

Madden praises :tough
~efense of Pittsb_,u rgh

Oklah0 ma squad

• Pebble texlured cowhide
leather
• wtH construclion
• Cushion insole and sleel
shank arch support
• 011 resistant neoprene sole
and heel

''

m 1a o

J•

6 59 50 168 18 0
6 65 31 162 17.0

Michigan
5. Old DOminican

•

J1 216 18.3

8 •s

4.

You tan 11~1 care olav~ 01.11
door •oodcunlng rt:~b Clean up
ato1m damage cui down d81cl or

Chester

The Flashes, now 3-4, have
lost their last three games.
In Thursday night's contest, the two teams were tted
at 42-all at halftime but Santa
Clara outScored the Flashes
18..1 In the,openJng minutes of
the second half and stayed in
front the rest of the way.
KSU pulled to within two .
~ints of the Broncos, 71~9.
wtth 2:221eft In the game, but
then the wtnners · again
wtdened the gap on a field
goal and two free throws by
Steve McGee and ran out the
clock.
Freshman forward Kurt
Rambis scored 25 points for
the visitors, center Carl
PietTe 16 and McGee 10
' The F'lashes were paced by
Cort.'ze Brown's 22 points and
· .Ja m"s Collins and Burrell
. Met :Me's 14 each.
In the only other game
.Thursday ni~ ht , Xavte r
tripped Rutler 66-60 In
overt nne at Indlanapolls

G FT FT PTS AVG
6 97 54 148 41.J

Williams. Pori St
Birdsonq Houston
Bird, Indiana St
McConathy, La Tech

1.

HOMELITE"Chaln

.'

~~'::::i~a:/a- 71 decision to

SCORING

PLAYER-SCHOOL

2. Cincinnati
3 Auburn

prefer

Flashes drop fourth

The Kent State Golden
Flashes continued their
downhill skid Thursday night,

8y United Press lnterni!ttiona I

Week-end Woodsmen

they passed well but on the
whole, "It was not a good
practice. The running backs
did pot have a good day."
One day, however, does not
break a team like Ohio State,
which Mallory describes as
"a typtcal, physical, big and
talented Woody Hayes
· team "
Mallory pushed his team on
various defenses to be used
against either of the opposing
quarterbacks. "We have to
think Gerald is healthy and
that we'll see both of them.
Each of them does something
different 1\lld we have to be
able to handle either one "
Mallory said. '
'
Mallory said his Buffaloes
were "fresher" this year than
last. "I think they're much
sharper and we have enough
lime to get ready down here
lor Ohio State."

cage statistics

NCAA BASKETBALL STATISTICS

~

Wilson scured open net goals
in the fintil minute of. play,
Nahrgang's coming from 160
feet. Bill Lochead paced
Detroit with a pair of goals
and Walt McKechnie added
another before Pittsburgh
Coach Ken Schinkel pulled
goalie Denis Herron twice to
fllVe the Penguins an extra
forward advantage in the
final minute.
Sabres 4, Leafs Z:
Rene Robert scored his lOth
goal on a ?»-foot shot wtth
4:46 to play and Craig
Ramsay added an insurance
goal mto an empty net in the
final mmute to raUy Buffalo
from a 2-0 deficit to Its
seventh straight victory. The
Leafs got their two goals
from Bob Neely and Dave
Williams 33 seconds apart in
the first period. Rick Marlin
scored for Buffalo.
Blues 4, Canucks 2:
Bob Gassoff 8cored with
three seconds left in the
second period IQ break a 2-2
tie. Jerry Butler scored an
lnaurance goal in th~ third
period.
WHA:
Rich Preston's second goal
of the game 1:04 Into
overtltnegavetheAerostheir
victory over the Stingers ...
The Whalers' ,Larry Pleau
scored on a 3t).foot shot with
7:07goneinthefinalperlodto
hand the Mariners their first
Joss in 14 home games this
season ... and Rick Sentes
and John Milrzuk scl!'ed firstperiod goals as the Cowboys
won their third game in four
stsrts.

Ohl•O, ColoradO

N~

Wednesday, forcmg Switzer
to call off one of the day's two
scheduled practices.
"I'm very disappointed we
haven't had what we would
lllt:e to consider the proper
preparation lor a bowl
game, 11 Switzer said. uwe
practiced Monday and
Tuesday when we found
about an hour In the momlg
that we didn't have but about
15 no·s~ows lor practice
because of eums.
~We'd lllt:e to have more
thne for preparation, but that
won't be any\hing that is a
deciding factor in the ball
game," be added.
Wyoming's Fred Akers,
whO led the Cowboyslo an 8-3
mark and a share of the
Western AUtletic Conference
title after a 2-9 mark In 1975,
had no complaints about his
team's preparations.
"We have been able to work
out and work out effectively,"
he said.
The game ltgures to be
decided on the ground as both
teams operate out of the
wlshbooe, although Switzer
points out that Wyoming
passes more than most wish·
bone teams.
Wymtln8's offense is led by
Robbie Wright, described by
Akers as the "blggesl little
fullback in the nation."
Wright, a 5-loot·IO, 183-pound
senior, ruahed lor 718 yards
and four touchdowns.
Quarterliack Marc Cousins,
who has alternated playing
time with Don Clayton, Is
secood in ruoblng with 523
yards while running back
Latrall Jones has 507 yards.
Oklahoma, 8-Z-1 for the
season and Tri-Champlon of
the Big Eight Conference,
features three players with
800-plus yards rushiJlg Kenny King with 791, Horace
Ivory with 741 and Quarterback Thomas Loll with

WASIUNGTON (UPI) Safety Jake Scott and wide
receiver Roy Jefferson underwent apparently sue·
cesaful surgery Friday, the
Washington Redsklns annoWJCed .
A spokesman for the
National Football J.eague
Club said ScoU was operated
on lor recurrence of slippage
in his left shoulder at Doctors
Memorial Hospital In
Atlanta. The surgeon was Dr.
Fred Allman.
Jefferson was operated on
by Dr. Stan Levine at Sibley
Hospital here for torn
ligaments in his left thumb.
The spokesman said he
assitmed the operations were
successful because !be
doctors did not notify the 630.
A look at Loll's passing
team otherwise.
statistics
shows
why
Wyoming can just about
forget about delendtng
WHA Standingi
against an aerial attack.
8y Un•ted Pren lnternahom•l
Since
taking over the quar·
Ent
W L T Ph GF GA terback job In the fifth game
Qucb€'c
20 1.5 1 ott 153 ll~
lnd1anapts 11 11 1 38 lOR llfl of the season, Loll has thrown
Crnc rnnali 11 14 'J J6 U9 118 only 12 J)lisses and completed
MrnncSOio! • 14 I') .t 37 103 107
Nrw EnQind u 17 .t J~ 116 125 just two. In fact, ht has more
Interceptions, three, than
nirmnqhm I? 7S 1 75 176 151
Wesl
completions.
W l T Pt• GF GA
The sixth annual Fiesta
~an Oi~qo
21 l:l 1 ol4 117 lU
Houston
11 l:l ot JS 11R H)ol Bowl,
to be telecast
Winn.pcq
18 U I l1 145 105
EdfllDnlon lit 70 I '\ t 9A 176 nallonally by CBS at 3 p m.
Cftlq.uy
D 17 1 1~ 9·1 911
1F.ST!, apparently will be
Phor.nlx
1) 70 ? 1~ 1M l~'i
playe&lt;1 before a less-than·
ThUUdi1V ' !I Af'!t.ultl
Nt~ fnQII\nd ~ o.,an O l ~O 1
t'Bpartty bouie for the first
HnU'ilnrt It CinCIRnftlt S, Ol
ttmc due · to a conflict with
(rllqo"lry 'J Fdmnnton 1
Christmas and th~ fttllllrt of
I Only 111mw., M hNhrhori •
Arizntul State or Arazonh to
Frid&lt;'v 's c;""'"'
I Nrr •r&lt;'tnol"'i .,, h• rlull• d I
reau•l• ;w bow I ~a me as U11•
Saturd•y's G.1m11~
( Nf. l/;itll~''i \C IU'dtll r•(l l
WAI ' champion.

'

leave Texas," he sal~, "I dtd
actually have a IIO ·trude
clause The reason I signed a
contract last spring was I
ltked the area and wunten to
stay there and make 11 ltttle
btl or a life for myse lf other
than !Htsebull.
"When I wus tl'adcd it was

kind of tl Shock 1Jern11Sf' I
tho u~ht I had a no·trnde
contract There seemed to be
confll!:iton Hll'lOn):( the pllrtics
thuttaadcd mc. lt louk quiluu

whtle to sort out. llnslcully ,
the trade luis been vohh•d

Ami, thut 's about ns fur ns I
go" .

Cl.. ptlewn,' lhu pao pl •
wltQ balia1111 ''' til • All

lEATHER bou t tl n tllh co
l eulluu W1111t

Gu od~eu •

Swll&lt;ll Pr ul leulh tr rn1ol••
8m uyurd · Po uf ooiU&lt;I Ieu ll• e• upJ•• •1
N o•r · S~td "on tllctr~1119 cork 1oln

A iure lu 111

A1 (h tvppor!•••Y \teftl 5horrk•
th e oriO n who wont• h11 mona-

YPiutt lor

_,_.~

,

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

t

worth

_

CLOSED

FOR INVENTORY
THURSDAY
&amp; FRIDAY
J
DECEMBER 30 &amp; 31

CARTER &amp;EVANS, INC.

"YOUR S&amp;T STORE"
OLIVE STREET
GAlliPOUS, 0.

Whatever is beautiful,
Whateve~ is meaningful,
Whatever brings you joy and·happiness,
That's what we wish for you!
'

Our profound thanks at Chr.istmas

SPRING VALLEY HARDWARE
VALLEY PlAZA
•

�B-6-The Sunday Tunes-sentinel, Sunday. Dec. 26, 1976

B-7- ThtSunday TitTte&amp;&amp;ntinel, Swtday,IJe&lt;:. 26. 1~76

1Montana stops Long Beach, 71_-15

SI:'nort rD arade

ill

\il

I

l:::*.
""
&gt;·~
/·~

.-::::.
i!l~

By MILTON. RICHMAN
UPI Sporll Editor

%$
··

wasn't in ooseball,
NEW YORK (up! ) _ If Jeff Burrou•hs
o
you might see him in the magazine ads, the ones showing you.
SOme rugged' Outdoor he-man type fly-easling in a mounts in ·
stream or taking time out from roljllding up &lt;'3 ltle to light up a
cigarette.
Jeff Burroughs ts a !me young man, clean-eut, wellintentiooed and sulftctently talented so that he recetved $88,000
for slgplng with the Washmgton Senators seven years ago and
considerably more than that for playing right field this year
for the Texas Rangers.
The big, 25-year-&lt;Jld Long Beach, Caltf., long-ooller has one
btg ·drawback. He sometltnes gets a little foggy, ralher

United PresslnternaUuoal ,
Long Beadt Stale receivL&lt;I
'
word ThurSday mght lh&lt;
NCAA was hftino
' tis athletic
probatton effective Jan 5,
then went out and celebrated
by losing to Montana, 77-75.
for lhetr fourth lo:;s in 104
games at the l.ong Reach
Arena.
The end or. the probatton
mean,• l.ong Reach Sla te

footbHII and oosketball teams
will IIIII he barred from
lc lev,.wn """earances or
••
"'•Slseason
competition
arter
r
.Jan 5
'
.
I

moment. Now our teams are
ready and anxious to meet
any und all eomers."
lie was proved wrong less
than ·a few hours later.
M•
d K k R
•·ho~a~nasc~r':,'d w';th
scronds lefl in the game In lift
the Grinhes over the 49ers
M.R. Rtchardson, a 6-5
forward, scor ed 28 ,potnts an d
6-10 Lee Johnson addcd 24 In
lead Mon tana to its stxth
vieWy in eight games.
Long Beach State got 12
points apiece from Richard
Johnson, Donnie Martin and
hi~hly touted freshman

pre.Thse~t isp~~:i ~:.'. , ho,::~

f9

"
Beach Slate President
Stephen Horn said alter th&lt;
NCAA ' s a n noun ceme n l
"'!'hey tlhe 49ers' athletes!
have watted patienUy lor lhts

Sobers has 28

~-

)

He'll get hts meal money. begtn talktng to someone, lay the
money down on a table, and then walk away absent-mtndedly.
Or he'll p~t hi• paycheck tn his suitcase and forget all about it ,
which he has done .
MaybeJeffllurroughs docsthtn gS itkethtsbecausehe hasso
much on his mind and he's too preoccupicd Whatever the
reason , he couldn 'tltgure out that six-player deal of two weeks
oock where lhe Rangers wrapped him up tn a nice fancy ribbon
and sent him to the Atlanta Braves lor Ken Henderson, Carl
Morton, Roger Moret, Dave May and Adrian Devine plus
$250,000 in cash.
·
Burroughs announced tt wasn't a deal al all because there
was a no-trade clause in hts contract
"The deal's off," he said .
, For some reason, he was convmced he had the final word to
decide whether a trade stood or not. Why does he thtnk Char he
Finley has Bowie Kuhn in Federal Court in Chtcago now·1
Ftnley says even the commisstoner of basebaUhas no right to
knock out a deal. If Burroughs, not even a 10-and.S man, chose
ootiD report lo·Atlanta, that was one thtng, but ca lhng off the
whole deal was something entirely out of his hands. He got a
little confused there.
Then there was the matter of his contract wtth the Rangers.
More confusion·, all on Burroughs' part.
He explained the reason he didn't really have to go to Alla~ta
was because of thai no~rade clause tn hts contract.
There is no such clause tn Burroughs' contract
While all this back-Md-forth was gomg on, Ted Turner, the
Braves' one-&lt;Jf-a-kind owner, was gelling a bit overheated
himself.
If Burroughs was so dea d set agamst comtng to Atlanta, let
him go fly-easting or rounding up cattle somewhere. Turner
didn't want him any more and Texas coultl keep htm I can' I
blame the Braves' owner for thai. He grew even hotter when
he discovercd Burroughs and Rangers' owner Brad Corbett
had hopped over to Las Vegas tn a jet last Tuesda)' night before
Burroughs was scheduled to show up m Atlanta for a
WedneSday press conference, whtch he never dtd.
Bu.roughs had a great year for the Rangers in 1974 when he
ran away with th e American League 's MVP award after
finlsi1ing with 116 runs batted m, 25 homers an d a .301 batting
average . Buthenose-&lt;iived,to 226in1975andtluspastyearhe
suddenly become a defensive hitter.
The Rangers felt Burr~ughs was spmnlng his wheels in
Arlinglnn SJ,adtum, where the wmd whipping in irom left held
unquestionably cut down on his home-run productton. Burroughs never professed any unusual passion for pl ~y tng in
Arlington but now, after being traded to the Braves, suddenly
he feU head over heels tn love with Texas agatn He dtdn't want
wleaye for money
Ah, money .
Burroughs brtdled when tl was suggested 111 prtnl that was
w!Wt he essenttally was after m kicking up such a fuss over
going ID Atlanta.
"Whoever would report something ltke that really has no
tdea what- they're ' doing," satd the outfielder "I did not
arrange thts iradething. I'm th e mnocent party. People wnte
things that are completely erroneous."
Oh, sure. ·
All I know ts it certamly dtdn 'ltake Burroughs' lawyer long
at aU In get into the picture. And I'm sure alll\e talked to Ted
Turner , about was the weather tn Atlanta Apparently
everYthing is okay now. Burroughs is commg to Atlanta the
first week in January. What do you unagme was responstble
for such an overntght mtracie'
Money ' Now.why would you ever say a thing like that '

.In SUil
un s
·

Flye..

'

107 92
.

•

M oore

J

•

,

•
WID

By CHRIS SCHERr
UPI Sports Writer
Excuse Ernie DiGregono tf
he " Bah, humbugs" hts
Christmas gift from Phoemx '
Rtcky Sobers.
1
Ever stnce corning into the
National Basketooll 1\ssocta- ·
lion, DtGregono has' been
trymg to tgnore the mckname
" Ernte NoD," a reference to
his reputed defensive short·
'comings. But Sobers may
have st uck Ute Buffalo guard
with
that
so briquet
permanently Thursday nigltl
Sobers, known prunartly as
a defenstve spedaltst, scored
a career-htgh 28 pomts to lead
the Suns to a 107-92 vtctory
over the Braves.
•
Even Inure damaging to
DtGregono was what Sobers
had to say afler Ute game
"I tn ed to be more
olfenstve nunded agamst
htm ," Sobers sa id of
DiGregorto. "I feel I can take
him one-on-&lt;Jne because of
my hetght advani&lt;Ige and
because he has the reputation
or not be,ing a good delenst ve •
player.! Uunk he really ts t)le
weak ltnk m Buffalo 's
defense"
The SwlS' vtctory ended a
four-game losing streak
DtGregono also had a
tough mghtoffensively as he
scored only II points
The Suns' guards scored 69
pmnts as Paul Westphal
scored 22 and reserves Ron
Lee and DICk Van Arsdale
had 11 and B, respectively
John Shumate was htgh for
Buffalo Wtlh 26 potnts.
In other games Thursday
night, indiana edged the New
York Nets. 96-94; San Anlomo
beat Washtngton , 118·116 ;
Cht cago defeated Atlant a.

101 -95; Mtlwaukee topped
Golden State, 107-92, and
Denver routed Seattle, 123-95.
l'acers 96, Net• 9~:
Btlly Kmght scored a threepoint play wtth 28 seconds
remaming to cap .a 1~int
lndtana comeback tn the ftnal
two mtnules lor a vtctory
over the Nets Kntght ftntshed
wtth 32. John Wtlliamson lcd
New York Wtth 28 pomts.
Spurs 118, Bullels 116:
Larry Kenon scored, 26
potnts to lead San Antonio to
vtclory as Washtngton 's
Iilvm Hayes missed a last·
second tap, which would have
tied the game. Hay es had 32,
potntsand 15 rebounds to lead
the Bullets.
Bulls 101, Hawks 95:
Mtckey Johnson scored 26
potnts to lead Chtcago to tls
etg)ith vtclory in the last 10
games. Artis Giltnore had 23
potntslortheBulls, \\htleLou
Hudson scored 22 to lead
Atlanta, which lost its fourth
stratghl.
Bucks .107, Warriors 92:
Bobby Dandridge scored 22
potnts and Mtlwaukee scored
Ute game's nnal etght points
to record tts third stratghl
vtclnry . Gus Wtlltams led the
Golden Stale sconng wtth 26
points
Nuggets 123, SuperSonics
95 .
,
Davtd Thompson scored a
season-htgh 38 pomts and
Jlobby Jones added 20 by
extendmg hts strmg of
consecuttve held goals to a
teamrecord 17 over a twogame pertod to lead Denver
to an easy vtctory. Torn
Burleson scored 17 potnts to
lead Seattle, whtch lost tls
fifth straight game

Quebec places
~three on East
'dream team'

K C gals lo~e two before resigns

HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI)
- The Quebec Nordiques
placed three players Thurs·
day on the East Diviston
tea m that will play its
Western counterpart in the
World Hockey Association·
NORMAL, Ill. tUPI) - All-Star Game here Jan 16.
Walter A. nWally" Moore,· Quebec's Real Cloutier.
named head football coach at Serge Bernier and Marc
llllnois Stale Universtty Wed- Tardtf have been selected as
nesday. restgned today the forward ltne by sports
because
of
•jpersonal
writers from the 12 WHA
problems."
cities. Filltng out the team
Stunned ISU offtcials sa td are delenseman Ron Plufnb
Moore walked tnto the office
of Athlettc Director Warren of Ctnctnnall, Pat Stapleton
Indtanapolts
and
Schmakel thts mormng and of
goa!tlnder
Louts
Levaoseur
lt&gt;Id hun he could not accept
the posttion because of of the Minnesota Ftghllng
"ex tr e me
personal Saints.
problems" re~ultinf from his , Sec ond team selections
proposed move from Indiana include center Rtch Leduc of
Umversily, where he was Cmcmnalt, left wing Hugh
asststant athlettc director. Han·is of Indianapolis, right
Roger Cushman , ISU wing Mark Napier of Blr·
sports tnformation director, mmgham, defenseman Rick
said Moore told Schmakel he I.ey of the New England
thoughl .he had the blessiltgs Whalers and J . C. Tremblay
or everyone, mcluding hts of Quebec and goaltende'r
family, but he found out that John Garrett of Btnningham.
East Coach Jacques Demers
was not so
"Everyone here has been of Indianapolis will round out
so good in offering hltn this his squad to 20 men next
opportunity, but he decided at week .
thts lime to wive the personal
problems I and) he was not
going w accept the' job ., "
Cushman quoted Moore as
saytr!g.
Moore had been an

• •

defeating Southwestern position
CHESHIRE - The Kyger Kyger Creek were trunmed
Creek girls oosketball team 23·22. T Smith led all scorers
lost two of three contests last with 13 Les Tay lor and I.tz
Nibert both had 6 points to
' week .
Th·ursday, the Eastern gtrls lea d the Kyger Creek girls as
rolled to a 61-36 victory over Tammy Wtlltarnson added 4
with Kim Bickers, Nancy
the Kyger Creek gals.
Eastern took an early 13-9 Foster and Ruth Saxton each
first quarter, lead and led 27· scoring 2.
The Kyge r Creek gals
17 at halftime. The .Eastern
returned
to the winning ctrcle
girls continued to dominate
again
Wednesday
as they
the j!ame as they outscored
played
host
to
Southwestern
Kyger Creek 20-7 in the thtrd
period and 14-12 tn the ftnal and easily took a 74-13 vtc·
tory.
quarter.
Kyger Creek took control or
Vickie Epple Jed all scoring
with 32 points while Jane the game durmg the first
Ambrose tossed in 12 for period of play Vickt Stroud
Eastern. Mary. Rollins had 24 took sconng honors Wtlh 24
points. Mary Rollins added
for the Kyger Creek gals.
In the junior high tilt, the 23, Gloria Amos scored 12,
Eastern girls were also Judy Darst tossed in 8, Carla
victortous H-12. R. Riebel., Tucker had 4 and Debbie
scored 10 points for Eastern Metzner 3 for the Kyger
Ruth Saxton had 6, I.es Creek team. Kathy Kiser was
TJylor added 4~nd Liz Nibert htgh for Southwestern with 5.
The Kyger Creek junior
• scored 2 for .Kyger Creek
h1gh
team tasted victory for
, Monday the Kyger Creek.
gals played host to Southern the first time thts season as
and again were deleated.57· they defeated Southwestern

39.
The Kyger Creek girls
played gOod defense durmg
!he first half ~nd led. 26-24 at
halftime. Southern came
back in the second hall,
outscoring the Kyger Creek
gals \1-11 in the lhtrd quarter
and 16-5 d¥ring the ~!mal ,
• period.
•
Southern placed three
players in double figures as
Jean Rltchhart was high with
20 followed by Brenda
Lawrence wtth 19 and Carol
Roseberry added 16. Mary
Rollins had 20 points in a
losing cause for the Kyger
Creek gals while Gloria Amos
scored 9, Vicki Stroud 6 and
Judy Darst 4.
The· junior htgh girls' from

33-16.

Ruth Saxton was high
scorer wtth 12 points, Tammy
Williamson scored 10, Les
Taylor added 9, and Pebbles
Clark had 2 for Kyger Creek.
L. Edwards was top scorer
for Southwestern with 10
points and C. Gibson had 6.

(O IIf~ ql• B.Hk t:HM II R es ult ~

By Untied Press lnterMtlftonAI
Tourn clmCnfS
Carolin c1 Clauic
IF mill Round!
I ChMtlptOU\hrp)
lllahrtma 67 ~o rMoltnrt A?
fCo n ~ n l,1 1r o n )
GIIOHWIOWn li () H t1rvi1r d

PCHI'

•n

R1dCr ffJ

f.l ~ t

N Y P oly ~ ~
1

u' flfl

1r,t

Ru l ~l' ro; ~I h it II

Snulh
M &gt;rl l p) p,'J

11 1, )(1 /f'

10

assistan t 'o .\.ra Parseghian
a: ~nt re Dame 1ur !li•!P vears
before uav oir:r: to lnOiull&lt;.~

after the 1974 season.
He was line coach under
I.ee Corso before moving to
the associate's po~it ion and
began hts coachmg career in
high schools at Maria Stein,
Ohto, Manon, Ohio, and Sl.
Jo~ph's Htgh School m South
Bend, Ind ., where his sevenyear record was 46.15-5.
More than 80 "pplicants
hl\d sought the ISU job lo
~ueeeed

(:rrry Hml , whoRe

resign&lt;~ltlm

' dftt'li V4' &lt;Jt

seuson

w;Js Hnnuuntl&gt;d
thr end uf the pa!-it

College
results
Mrdwe~ t

Dr i'lkf' ~0 Il li nois St 67
Fla f..&amp;M 10 1 Morehouse 84
Howard 99 Lemoyne Owen Ill
Jdckson ~ ~ 9·1 ~outhc rn 110
MlnnL'So ta 67 K an sas s t 60
Wrs FdU Clrl' }] N Mrch ~3 '
)( ;wr cr 0 fl6 Ru tt er ~0 ot

South west

/lrk ,ln~a s HI Tu iSI'I h6
Qk l,l Cil y M. T(')I&lt;'!S t-\
W es t
I ullflrton 7 ot I re l rvrnt;&gt; ~~
Hnwillo Hito 'in Pac Or r&gt; 77
Hywrd '-.1 /9 (cJI Po l; ' •1.0 Ito

Mon ),ln tt

n

l onq f1(' ;H h o:. r , ,,

Nr v l~ • · n o i r fa r Poly r&gt;om f •
Nr IH drjf• /oO ' iln l) rt'(I(J I J ~ /
On ·q rtn 1.' \ r,ln rlll rnrr !H
'
f.t ilf il tr lfl (j f rp f rHiol (I)
' ran tw .r r I 'I I M.rr v'
l lfl •

11

·

'J tl • ~. Moll \t •,
HI

lll r~ tr H{ './, o lw r ' l

.. .t·,t ' ·"t

• r ,o l l lo

Michael Wiley .as the 4!1ers'
record dropped In &amp;-3.
Alaooma also had good
reason to celebrate as the
lourth..-anked Crimson Tide
won the Carolina Classic with
a 67.Q2 victory over South
carolina.
F res h man Rober1 Sco It
came off the bench and
score d 1•• o1 hts' 14 points in
the second hall to lead
Alabama to its eighth victory
without a loss this season .
Guard T.R. · Dunn, an
strong defenstve player, was
named the tournament's
Most Valuable Player, after

I

~

~

By .JACK SAUNDERS
UPJ Sports Writer
Mter a stow start, tne
Phila&lt;Jelphia Flyers finally
have overtaken the New York
Islanders lor ltrst place in the
Patnck . Division of the
Nattonal Hockey League, and
the prune mover in the past
two games is a player not
well known for knowing
where the goal is
Don Sale ski, best-known for
having the same nickname as
Mark "The Bird" Ftdrych
iSaleskthadhtS "btrd" ftrsll ,
scored more than 15 goals '
on!) once tn his ftve-year
National Hockey League
career- last season, with 21.
So far thts season he has
seven,
mcludtng
two
Thursday rught - one the
wmner - tn a 5-2 tnwnph
over the Washington Capitals
thai gave Phtladelphia a two. potnl Patrick Division lead
over the Islanders.
Wilhthescoretiedl-1in the
second period Thursday
mght, Saleski scored at 10.47
on a feed from linemate Oresl
Kindrachuk, then took a
Larry Goodenough pass to up
the margin to 3-1 on what was
l\Jprovothewlnninggoalless
than eight minutes later.
Torn Bladon and Andre
Dupont added thtrd-penod
gOJ!ls for Philadelphia, while

scoring 15 points in the
ylctory over the Gamecocks.
Jackie GiUoon scored 18
points lor Soulh Carolina .
Georgetown won third
pia in th t
t lth
a ~0 rom~ :~':v'U: as
Derrick Jackson and Ed
Hopkin seach 9COr ed I•• po in ts
for the Hoyas.
Ro y HamUI.on sank 1our
free throws and Jltn Spillane
and WUbur Ollnde added two
apiece in the final 58 seconds
to give eighth..-anked UCLA a
W-65 victory over William &amp;
Mary.
Brad Holland led the UCLA

0 n top

Ron Lalonde provided the
Caps '
final
score.
Philadelphia's Mel Bridgman
and Washln~ton 's Garnet
Bailey traded first-period
tallies. • '
The win also stretched
Phtladelphia's unbeaten
streak to 17 games.
The second period was
tnarred bf a fight In which
lwo players;'Paul Holmgren
of Philadelphia and Gordy
Lane of Washington, were
eJected.
Elsewhere tn the NHL, the
New York Rangers !ted
Boston, 3-3, Detroit lopped
Ptttsburgh, 5·2, ·. Buffalo
dumped Toronto, 4-2, and St.
!.ouis took Vancouver by the
same score.
In the World Hockey
Assoctation, Houston edged
Cinctnnatl, 6-5, tn overtime,
Calgary nipped Minnesota, 21, and New England
outscored San Diego, 5-3.
Raogers 3, Bruins 3:
Steve Vickers' lith goal
from live feet out With each
learn short one man with 7:20
to play lifted New York into
the tie. Rookte Don Murdoch
scored the first two New York
goals, while Earl Anderson,
Terry O'Reilly and John
Bucyk scored lor Boston.
Red Wings 5, Penguins 2:
Jun Nahr~ang and Rick

take yule break
MIAMI t UP! 1- Both Ohio
Stale and Colorado planned
pra ~ttce• today before
breaktng ~or 1tristmas in
thetr maxuntt'Tt two-It our-aday schedule&gt; destgned to get
each team physically and
mentally ready for the New
Year's night clash at the
Orange Bowl.
.
Colorado coach Btll
Mallory concentrated on
passmg Thursday, trymg_kl
balance out hts runmng
attack tn the f~;" of the Ohio
State, whtch • ~ompare to
~ebraska and whtch we fe~!
ts the best tn our conference.
He alsq worked of defense
against the Buckeyes•
quarterbacks, Rod Gerald
and Jtm Pacenta.
Gerald and Pacenta, as it
turned out Thursday, were
the only bright spots tn coach
Woody Hayes ' two-ho~r
mormng workout. He sa~d

scoring with II points and "
Hamilton added 10. Mall
Courage led Wilham &amp; Mary
18 poin'·
Wt'th
'"'· Deane ·~red
Utah's Greg
~·
"
the SlX points in overtime to
lllp Weber Slate, J18.111. Deane
an dJeI!Judk'ms had20po'•ts
"'
each lor the Utes and Jeff ·•
Jonas added 19 although his
string of oonsecutt·ve free
throws ended at 42, a school
record . Bruce Collins of
Weber State scored a game·
high 28 points.
Minnesota edged Kansas
State, SUO, on guard Ray ··
Williams' layup in the final
minute. Mike Thom'""'n led
theMtnnesotascoringwtth 16
Greg Ballard scored 15 •.
points and Rob Closs nine w "
lead Oregon wa 42-38 victory ..
over Grambling.
In other major games,
RutgersedgedPtttsburgh, 81·
77; Memphts State routed
TCU, 116-72 ; Drake beat
Ollnois State, 8Q.67; Arkansas
defeated Tulsa, 61.Q6;
Oklahoma City edged Texas,
86-65; Stanford beat St.
Mary's,
87-75,
and
Washington defeated SeattlePacific, 63-43.

B 9'2

1\ULVERINE®
6" WELT V«&gt;RK BOOT

Natt. NE LA

FJELD GOAL PERCENTAGE

G FG FGA PCT
5 34 48 708

'krcer, Georgia

ROtne, Clemson

8 61

Grundberg, Lafayette
Griffin, W FOf'est
Win•too. Kan St

95

10.5

6 40 57

702

6 49 72
7 36 53

.679

681

FREE THROW PERCENTAGE
GFTFTA PCT
Brown, Wake Forest
6 29 29 t.OOO
Jonl5, Utah
8 21 21 I 000

Stuckey. Tew. Arl

5

Hultberg , LSU
Kelley, Morehead St

6 23 24 .958
5 2t 21 .955
6 21 22 95 ~

Kelly, Vermont

REBOUNDS

13 13 t.OOO

GNOAVG

Mo5tev, Seton Hall
Rollins, Clemson

6110

8 124
6 90
5 IS
8 112
s 112

Cummings, Tulane
Macklin, LSU

Bird. tnd St

Jones, Nev-Reno
TEAM OFFENSE
1. Nev. las Vegas
2. Clemson

18 3

ts.s

15.0

15.0
140
14.0

G PTS AVG

8 ll60 107 5
8 835 104.4

3. Houston
4. Seton Hall

a

790 988

"

'iAA

6 589 982

S. Cincinnati

TEAM DEFENSE

07, 7

G PTS AVG
1. Princeton

6 318 53.0

• Oregon
4. Virginia
5. Toledo

7
6
4
9

2. Navy

,40 55.0

337

553

227
518

508
57.6

AVERAGE SCORING MARGIN
OFF DEF MAR
104 4 65 0 39.4
97 7 64.8 32 9

Clem5011

914 618

29 6

SHOE STORE
Ga IIi polis, Ohio

''
•

''

95 .0 66 4 28.6
94 4 66.0

28.4

Finley offered ace
$1.5 million deal

0

••
"

•

0

0

Redskins

0 0

0

wtdergo

•

•.

•

,.

•
•

•
•

~:~~~~::; 7;8~t~o~·.7~1~
...:::::::::::::::::::::::::~
H
tg
' b'l
io

ave you ou rown your mo I e
home? Fami~ increased? Want better
•
11 Need.
constructiOn!
so.meth'mg a· little
•
to heat?• w
easler
ou ld you l'k
I e new
furn1'ture' &amp; appll"ances?•
.

'•
,,

;

..•

•

~

surgery

mhillg you
and· those
you hold
most dear

all the
old fashion,ed
joys of
Christmas!
Hearty t/Ja11ks.

Whatever the reason, your old mobile home is worth
mor~ on trade at Kingsbury. We will .also accept as
tradms, travel trailers and motor vehiCles.' .I&gt; •
Kingsbury handles only the best double wide and
modular homes by Skyline and Fuqua Corp. of Ohio. . ,.
V,:atch for the arrival of our totally new Skyline double
w1de.

·KINGSBURY -HOME
SALES AND SERVICE ·"
' 1

Pomeroy

~

992-7034

Hrs.: 9 to 6 Mon .•Sat. Closed Sunday
Or Call For Appointment

Ohio

The Sbff
And Manaaement

Of

na Lumber
And
Supply Company
312 6TH Stlllt 675-1160 Point Pleasant

r,u .•

•

BillH quarterback will wulergo surgery

minutes to beat the Steelers; In wtnning their ftnal nine
31-28, in tho re..:ular ~eason games - to gain a wild rard
opener thts year. but Madden berth in th&lt;• AFC playolfs said he has noticed subtle the defense gave up only two
changes in the defensive touchdowns and a total of 28
potnts whtle recording ftve
ali~runent.
"They're red-doggmg a shutouts.
UWe more than they used to
" You can see they've
and they're mixing up their intprovcd a ton," Madden
delonse a lot more.'' he satd. added. "So it's not going to be
"They'll use three linemen eaSy "
and ftve defensive backs,
Madden's
comments
three linemen and lour moved away from the datly
linebackers , and four erchange of threats a.nd
linemen and ltve defensive counter·threats in••· lvi ng the
backs.
players.
"All that mixing can make
The "I'll do this to htm tf he
tt rough lor the offensive does that to me" war of words
team.11
wus the direct· resull .o£ the
Pittsburgh's furious finish teams first meeting In that
alter a 1-4 stsrt definitely game, Oakland defenstve
shows a lightening trend on ba ck George Atkinson
sidelined Steelers wtde
defense ..
In losing the lout games, receiver Lynn Swann with a
thr ~fPf\lt'rQ ,.l,.lrl ...rl95 noints. blow to the head.

UKCHAI\Il PARK. N. Y. (UPI) - Buffalo Bills quarterbark Gury Morang! ~·Ill
uudergu surgery lll'll month for relief of "an Impingement" - or plncm-7 Itt hl• right
shnulder.
A Bltls &lt;pokesman said Thursday the condition first became apparent late fn th&lt; 1976
seaS&lt;Ill, ·'but Marangl was treated and played In every game."
The surgery will he performed by Dr. Joseph D. Godfrey. lhe Ritts • physlrlau ,
The spokesman said doctors upected "a short convalesceuC&lt; aud Marun11l should .bf.·
throwing within a month alter surgery."
"Wedoo't anUcipt1te any problems for next season," th&lt; spokesman sald.
The three-year veteran had been the Bills' backup quarterback until •l•rtr. Joe
Ferguson suffered fractures In his lower back in the Oct. !l game agalllSl New England.
Marangltook over after Ferguson was hurt a"d went the dlstanrt• Itt lhe remaltthll:
seven games . He had the lowest passing perce .. tage In the leagur nmotl)( s tartltt~:
qunrterbucks and the BUls never won a game while h' ND5lht• starter.

Burroughs says trade
to Atlanta is 'off'

DALLAS (UP[) - Former
American League MVP Jeff
Burroughs Friday satd his
trade from Texas to Atlanta
was off. Rangers' owner Brad
Corbett and Braves' owner
Ted Turner said the deal
stood. But It all meant the
same thmg
Burroughs, In a telephone
in terview from his Long
Beach, Calif., home, satd the
multi-year contrnct he signed
game. They've got a pretty with Texas last sprmg contained a no-trade clause. Or,
· good passing game "
at
least it should have .
The Penn State coach
Burroughs
also satd he never
acknowledged he was a little
saw
an
"official"
copy of the
intimidated by the stze of the
contract.
Irish linemen and noted, "We
Cortllk,
however.
don't have any dorntnant
reiteratell:liere
was
no sueh
people on the line of scrimclause;
!laid
the
deal
wtth
mage. I'm worried we might
Atlanta
wus
final
;
but
ad·
. not be able to get the footooll
mttted
he
planned
to
try
to
back."
reacqutre
the
man
he
But , Devine said that
defensive end Wilhe Fry Is dtsposed of less than lour
235 pounda - "Not big for a weeks earlier
Everyone agreed Turner,
defensive end" - and
who
is temporarily stuck with
(Outland Trophy wtnner)
a
player
who has no destre to
Ross Browner, at the other
put
on
a
Braves'
umfonn, had
defensive end slot, "ts not
taken
his
lumps
muJ:h bigger than that."
"He (Turner ) has been
He added the rest of Notre
through
a Jot of problems he
Dame's linemen are "just
didn't
really
need to go
normal size" and the
defensive secondary ts made through," Burroughs satd.
up of "four people who dtd not "It's never rea lly been his
play those positions at the fault or anythtng Atlanta is
fine . ! only hear the brightest
beginning of the season."
Paterno called Browner of things about It But that's
and Fry "great pass rushers. not the point."
The point, according to
Alot of Dan's ktds do a lot of
Burroughs,
was he never
good things with their hands.
wanted
to
leave
Texas and
All their people rush exhad
the
elusive
no-trade
tremely well. We have not
clause
to
support
his
case.
played anybody who rushes
"Basically,
as
far
as
I'm
so well."
concerned,
I
never
wanted
to
Devine said sophomore
fullback Jerome Heavens,
who sat out most of the
season because of torn
cartilage, "possibly could
play a httle btl on Monday."
He called Heavens "The kind
of fuUoock who can get two
yards or 60."
Penn State "had a terrib!e
begmning" this year, losing
live of Its players because of
injuries, Paterno said. "After
we got a little stabilized, we
stsyed healthy," he said,
"although there sttll are
some problems on defense."
Both said the fact that the
Gator Jlowl had mvlted the
other team was what finally
persuaded them to come to
Jacksonville.
Devine was asked what
prospects there were of Notre
Dame moving up In the
rankings In view of UCLA's
loss to · Alabama tn the
Uberty Bowl.
"The winner could make a
significant jump .... but a
more significant jump would
be from sixth to second than
from 13th to 12th." The Irish
were ranked 13th by UP!. He
said be hadn't thought about
dropping in the final
rankings.

Coaches agree defense
will be key in battle

JACKSONVIJ.I.E, Fla.
I UP!) - Both Notre Dame
Coach Dan Devine and Penn
Slate mentor Joe Paterno
concurred Friday that
defense could be the key to
their Gator Bowl conKuhn called off the sales in frontation Monday night
CHICAGO
(UPI)
Oakland A's owner Charles " the best interests of
Appearing at a joint press
0. Finley Friday said he basebaU."
conference marked ' by
Questioned by hts lawyer. mutual oonter and nattery,
offered slugger Reggie
Jackson $1.5 million to stgn a Neil Papiano, as to what his the two coaches touched on
live-year contract but he understanding of how trades topics ranging from the
refused and was later traded should be made, Finley benefits of not belonging to a
replied :
to the Baltimore Orioles.
conference to what the game
"It was a very simple means in terms of national
Testifying in his $3.5
million suit against basebaU understandmg, thattf I cared ranking.
conuntssloner Bowie Kuhn, to buy a baU player or trade a
At the end. thev blew out a
Fhtley cited Jackson's case ooll player, that that was my
as one of the reasons why he perogatlve. And in the same
decided to sell some of his respect, tf I cared to sell a
ball player, that also was my
star players.
FIIiley said he tried to sign perogat1ve."
Asked what he thought the
Don Baylor, Joe Rudi, Rollie
Fingers, Bert Campanem, 'best interest of baseball'
Gene Tenace and Jackson provision in the rules meant,
belore and during the 1976 be said, "At the time I came
season when their options into basebaU and today, it has
were running out but they aU been my understanding that
TEMPE. Ariz. iUPII - II
refused. He said he offered the best Interest of basebaU Oklahoma should happen to
them each at least a three provision (was) that the fall vlelim to underdog
year contract at $90,000 a -Commissioner would make Wyoming in Saturday's
sure there was no gambling Fiesta Bowl, the Sooners
year.
"I offered Reggie Jackson going on , that there was could blame it on a lack of
$1.5 miUion for a five year nothing immoral going on " . practice time.
In his 17 years in baseball,
contract," he said
But they won't.
Fhtley said be finally sold Finley said, he had never
"It certahtly won't be a
Fingers and Rudi to the heard of a commissioner crutch for us.'' said Sooner
Boston Red Sox for S1 million disapproving of a sale.
Coach Barry Swllzer in e&amp;·
U. S. District Court Judge plalnlng how semester uams
each and pitcher Vida Blue to
the New York Yankees for Frank J , McGarr reces:~ed cut into the Oklahoma
$1.5 million just before the after 45 minutes ioday and practice sessions.
trading deadline last June 15 scheduled the next session lor
While Wyoming arrived
because he could not trade 2 p. m. Jan . 3 when Ftnley here Dec. 16, the Sooners
them and other clubs "knew was expected to be could not leave for Ari!Aina
questioned by Kuhn's at· until Tuesday night. To
they had me in a comer."
Fhtley !Ued his suit alter torneys.
complicate matters further,
their charter ntght was
delayed
and the Sooners did
0
b
•
0
not
land
until the wee hours
0
0 0
0

985-3308

OAKLAND tUP!\ •· Joha
Madden Frtday sidestepped
the furious war of words
surrounding this weekend 's
American Conlerenre
Championship game and
talked about the Pittsburgh
Steelers' defense.
"That's a tough question to
answer," the Oakland
Raiders coach said when
asked If he thought Pitts·
burgh's "steel curtain"
defense was the best-ever In
the
National Football
League.
"I had elghl of them play
for me In the Pro Bowl last
year, which Is really
wmething. But I'll tell you
this, they're good - awfuUy
good."
The Raiders stonned from
bthind In the ftnal ftvt

smgle candle and cui a joint
birthday cake provided by
the Gator Bowl Association .
Paterno turned 50 on Tuesday
while Devine celebrated his
52nd birthday Thursday.
"Joe and his staff never
give you anything. I think
buth dclcnso• will play well.''
Devine said. "It should IJe
tough to move the ball. It
probably will be a lowscoring game .. or things
could break loose."
Paterno agreed and added,
"We've got to play good
defense and not let them have
the big play in a passing

has no excuses

CARL'S

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

Madden praises :tough
~efense of Pittsb_,u rgh

Oklah0 ma squad

• Pebble texlured cowhide
leather
• wtH construclion
• Cushion insole and sleel
shank arch support
• 011 resistant neoprene sole
and heel

''

m 1a o

J•

6 59 50 168 18 0
6 65 31 162 17.0

Michigan
5. Old DOminican

•

J1 216 18.3

8 •s

4.

You tan 11~1 care olav~ 01.11
door •oodcunlng rt:~b Clean up
ato1m damage cui down d81cl or

Chester

The Flashes, now 3-4, have
lost their last three games.
In Thursday night's contest, the two teams were tted
at 42-all at halftime but Santa
Clara outScored the Flashes
18..1 In the,openJng minutes of
the second half and stayed in
front the rest of the way.
KSU pulled to within two .
~ints of the Broncos, 71~9.
wtth 2:221eft In the game, but
then the wtnners · again
wtdened the gap on a field
goal and two free throws by
Steve McGee and ran out the
clock.
Freshman forward Kurt
Rambis scored 25 points for
the visitors, center Carl
PietTe 16 and McGee 10
' The F'lashes were paced by
Cort.'ze Brown's 22 points and
· .Ja m"s Collins and Burrell
. Met :Me's 14 each.
In the only other game
.Thursday ni~ ht , Xavte r
tripped Rutler 66-60 In
overt nne at Indlanapolls

G FT FT PTS AVG
6 97 54 148 41.J

Williams. Pori St
Birdsonq Houston
Bird, Indiana St
McConathy, La Tech

1.

HOMELITE"Chaln

.'

~~'::::i~a:/a- 71 decision to

SCORING

PLAYER-SCHOOL

2. Cincinnati
3 Auburn

prefer

Flashes drop fourth

The Kent State Golden
Flashes continued their
downhill skid Thursday night,

8y United Press lnterni!ttiona I

Week-end Woodsmen

they passed well but on the
whole, "It was not a good
practice. The running backs
did pot have a good day."
One day, however, does not
break a team like Ohio State,
which Mallory describes as
"a typtcal, physical, big and
talented Woody Hayes
· team "
Mallory pushed his team on
various defenses to be used
against either of the opposing
quarterbacks. "We have to
think Gerald is healthy and
that we'll see both of them.
Each of them does something
different 1\lld we have to be
able to handle either one "
Mallory said. '
'
Mallory said his Buffaloes
were "fresher" this year than
last. "I think they're much
sharper and we have enough
lime to get ready down here
lor Ohio State."

cage statistics

NCAA BASKETBALL STATISTICS

~

Wilson scured open net goals
in the fintil minute of. play,
Nahrgang's coming from 160
feet. Bill Lochead paced
Detroit with a pair of goals
and Walt McKechnie added
another before Pittsburgh
Coach Ken Schinkel pulled
goalie Denis Herron twice to
fllVe the Penguins an extra
forward advantage in the
final minute.
Sabres 4, Leafs Z:
Rene Robert scored his lOth
goal on a ?»-foot shot wtth
4:46 to play and Craig
Ramsay added an insurance
goal mto an empty net in the
final mmute to raUy Buffalo
from a 2-0 deficit to Its
seventh straight victory. The
Leafs got their two goals
from Bob Neely and Dave
Williams 33 seconds apart in
the first period. Rick Marlin
scored for Buffalo.
Blues 4, Canucks 2:
Bob Gassoff 8cored with
three seconds left in the
second period IQ break a 2-2
tie. Jerry Butler scored an
lnaurance goal in th~ third
period.
WHA:
Rich Preston's second goal
of the game 1:04 Into
overtltnegavetheAerostheir
victory over the Stingers ...
The Whalers' ,Larry Pleau
scored on a 3t).foot shot with
7:07goneinthefinalperlodto
hand the Mariners their first
Joss in 14 home games this
season ... and Rick Sentes
and John Milrzuk scl!'ed firstperiod goals as the Cowboys
won their third game in four
stsrts.

Ohl•O, ColoradO

N~

Wednesday, forcmg Switzer
to call off one of the day's two
scheduled practices.
"I'm very disappointed we
haven't had what we would
lllt:e to consider the proper
preparation lor a bowl
game, 11 Switzer said. uwe
practiced Monday and
Tuesday when we found
about an hour In the momlg
that we didn't have but about
15 no·s~ows lor practice
because of eums.
~We'd lllt:e to have more
thne for preparation, but that
won't be any\hing that is a
deciding factor in the ball
game," be added.
Wyoming's Fred Akers,
whO led the Cowboyslo an 8-3
mark and a share of the
Western AUtletic Conference
title after a 2-9 mark In 1975,
had no complaints about his
team's preparations.
"We have been able to work
out and work out effectively,"
he said.
The game ltgures to be
decided on the ground as both
teams operate out of the
wlshbooe, although Switzer
points out that Wyoming
passes more than most wish·
bone teams.
Wymtln8's offense is led by
Robbie Wright, described by
Akers as the "blggesl little
fullback in the nation."
Wright, a 5-loot·IO, 183-pound
senior, ruahed lor 718 yards
and four touchdowns.
Quarterliack Marc Cousins,
who has alternated playing
time with Don Clayton, Is
secood in ruoblng with 523
yards while running back
Latrall Jones has 507 yards.
Oklahoma, 8-Z-1 for the
season and Tri-Champlon of
the Big Eight Conference,
features three players with
800-plus yards rushiJlg Kenny King with 791, Horace
Ivory with 741 and Quarterback Thomas Loll with

WASIUNGTON (UPI) Safety Jake Scott and wide
receiver Roy Jefferson underwent apparently sue·
cesaful surgery Friday, the
Washington Redsklns annoWJCed .
A spokesman for the
National Football J.eague
Club said ScoU was operated
on lor recurrence of slippage
in his left shoulder at Doctors
Memorial Hospital In
Atlanta. The surgeon was Dr.
Fred Allman.
Jefferson was operated on
by Dr. Stan Levine at Sibley
Hospital here for torn
ligaments in his left thumb.
The spokesman said he
assitmed the operations were
successful because !be
doctors did not notify the 630.
A look at Loll's passing
team otherwise.
statistics
shows
why
Wyoming can just about
forget about delendtng
WHA Standingi
against an aerial attack.
8y Un•ted Pren lnternahom•l
Since
taking over the quar·
Ent
W L T Ph GF GA terback job In the fifth game
Qucb€'c
20 1.5 1 ott 153 ll~
lnd1anapts 11 11 1 38 lOR llfl of the season, Loll has thrown
Crnc rnnali 11 14 'J J6 U9 118 only 12 J)lisses and completed
MrnncSOio! • 14 I') .t 37 103 107
Nrw EnQind u 17 .t J~ 116 125 just two. In fact, ht has more
Interceptions, three, than
nirmnqhm I? 7S 1 75 176 151
Wesl
completions.
W l T Pt• GF GA
The sixth annual Fiesta
~an Oi~qo
21 l:l 1 ol4 117 lU
Houston
11 l:l ot JS 11R H)ol Bowl,
to be telecast
Winn.pcq
18 U I l1 145 105
EdfllDnlon lit 70 I '\ t 9A 176 nallonally by CBS at 3 p m.
Cftlq.uy
D 17 1 1~ 9·1 911
1F.ST!, apparently will be
Phor.nlx
1) 70 ? 1~ 1M l~'i
playe&lt;1 before a less-than·
ThUUdi1V ' !I Af'!t.ultl
Nt~ fnQII\nd ~ o.,an O l ~O 1
t'Bpartty bouie for the first
HnU'ilnrt It CinCIRnftlt S, Ol
ttmc due · to a conflict with
(rllqo"lry 'J Fdmnnton 1
Christmas and th~ fttllllrt of
I Only 111mw., M hNhrhori •
Arizntul State or Arazonh to
Frid&lt;'v 's c;""'"'
I Nrr •r&lt;'tnol"'i .,, h• rlull• d I
reau•l• ;w bow I ~a me as U11•
Saturd•y's G.1m11~
( Nf. l/;itll~''i \C IU'dtll r•(l l
WAI ' champion.

'

leave Texas," he sal~, "I dtd
actually have a IIO ·trude
clause The reason I signed a
contract last spring was I
ltked the area and wunten to
stay there and make 11 ltttle
btl or a life for myse lf other
than !Htsebull.
"When I wus tl'adcd it was

kind of tl Shock 1Jern11Sf' I
tho u~ht I had a no·trnde
contract There seemed to be
confll!:iton Hll'lOn):( the pllrtics
thuttaadcd mc. lt louk quiluu

whtle to sort out. llnslcully ,
the trade luis been vohh•d

Ami, thut 's about ns fur ns I
go" .

Cl.. ptlewn,' lhu pao pl •
wltQ balia1111 ''' til • All

lEATHER bou t tl n tllh co
l eulluu W1111t

Gu od~eu •

Swll&lt;ll Pr ul leulh tr rn1ol••
8m uyurd · Po uf ooiU&lt;I Ieu ll• e• upJ•• •1
N o•r · S~td "on tllctr~1119 cork 1oln

A iure lu 111

A1 (h tvppor!•••Y \teftl 5horrk•
th e oriO n who wont• h11 mona-

YPiutt lor

_,_.~

,

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

t

worth

_

CLOSED

FOR INVENTORY
THURSDAY
&amp; FRIDAY
J
DECEMBER 30 &amp; 31

CARTER &amp;EVANS, INC.

"YOUR S&amp;T STORE"
OLIVE STREET
GAlliPOUS, 0.

Whatever is beautiful,
Whateve~ is meaningful,
Whatever brings you joy and·happiness,
That's what we wish for you!
'

Our profound thanks at Chr.istmas

SPRING VALLEY HARDWARE
VALLEY PlAZA
•

�B,\-

Agricultur~

County agents
corner

und

'

By JOHN C. RICE
F.ll. Agent, Agriculture

By Bryson R. CBud&gt; Carter
1:,. lli:o l'nnntv Exttnsion 1\J(ent

POMEROY - Raising a three in prison for one year
and less than the cost of
GALIJPOUS - This th!' sixth of a series ul ao·til'les
a family or society. according fourteen on probation for one addressing the question, "Should you form a fann
to Duane Plymale, area year In your county.
.partnerslup'!" Todoy's article involves a test that you can take
Extension agent , loc.ated in
An ounce of prevention is to evaiW:ttc your &lt;'hanl 't• s f or :-, UI 't '('~c.- in ~ partnership. Test
Jackson .
worth a pound of cure.' The Yourself.. ..
.
To raise a child to age !8 preventive work of 4-H in
WOULD YOU BE AGOOD PARTNER'!
costs approximately $30,00jl. Meigs County to reduc e
Test for MenIf this child is placed in a juvenile delinquency can be
Are you willing \Q give up some independence for the
child care', rece iv ing unit demonstrated
by
the benefits of a joint venture''
(children's home ) the annual following statistics .
Do you understand that good working relalionshi!&gt;l do~'t
cost is approximately $7,000 a Remember that "the idle just happen - are you willing wbe open and above board ":'th
year, If the child is psychotic, mind is the devil 's your concerns and plans as they pert~iJ, to the partnership .
·
be can be kept in a private workshop".
Can you willingly be a partner in management as well as
There were 390 4-H'ers labor and t.aketlmeto manage as a team '!
clinic or hospital for $17,000
.
Are you willing to pul your partnership agreement lfl
per year. If the child Is a throughout Meigs County last
juvenile delinquent, he can be year who demonstrated and writing'!
·
Can you talk over a problem or a mistake made by a cokept at various child care uhiblted 850 4-H· projects.
institutions at an average Through spending time on worker without getting angry or upset?
Are you willing to insist on accurate and complete records
daily rate of $32.40 per day or these projects, ranging from
with
books open at all times wpartners involved?
·
child care to taking care of a
$11,826 per year.
pocket
pet,
these
members
Test
for
Their
Wives.
The most wholesome and
More partnerships fail because of human relationshipS
most inexpensive plate to were Involved in learning
keep a child is in his home, new skills, gaining respon- than over business arrangements. The wife and children are a
sibility, and h~lplng others. pari of this relationship. Are you willing to go along with your
school, and community.
.
.
"The answer is so simple it Seventy-one older 4-H husband on his partnership arrangement'
Do you feel that this farm partnership busmess
constantly eludes us." County members ca lled junior
funds given to support one 4- leaders were busy serving arrangement has definite advantages to all famohes mvolved
H agent for one year in Meigs younger 4-H members, rather than favoring one family ?
Are you willing to refrain from complaining that the other
County is money well worth helping 4-H advisors and
c&lt;&gt;uplei
s) has a better house, or better furniture, etc. ?
,
spend ing. Money spent to serving the community.
Can
you
be
discreet
around
your
children
so
they
aren
t
Seventy volunteer leaders
support one 4-H agent is less
"carrying
stories"
between
the
homes?
.
than the cost of two in a called 4-H advisors because ,
Can you curb your desires to pressure your. husband mto
children 's home for one year, they advise and work with making more of the farm decisions, asking for b1gger share of
less than the cost of two in a youth, were working with the profi!J;, or less work or ~hores, etc?
.
&lt;ietcntion home or juvenile these members in 30 4-H
113 you strive wget along m II,J• partner~htp, would you be
(!elinquent institution for one clubs throughout the county. observed as being kind and conSiderate; discreet about what
if you are concerned about you say ; and a person '!'hO controls her anger '
yea r, less than the cost of
reducing juvenile
Rating Scale
,
.
.. delirlquency In your comlf answer is a firm yes, give yoursel[ 5 poinls; yes, bul
1!&lt;11!&lt;1&lt;'!&lt;11••.,.~ munity and involving youth in barely, 4; possibly, 3; l&lt;n'tlikely , 2, and a firm no, I.
.
n 4-H activities and projects,
Chances for Success :26-30, You're a fine partner; .21·25,
ill call your county Extension you should make it, !6-20, barely possible, and o-15, thmk of
g office loca ted in the basement another setup.
.
.
.
g of the County Home Building,
Next week we wiD discuss additional essentials for success
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy. in farm partnerships. On behaU of the Gallia County
~ Phone 992-3895.
Cooperative Extension Service I extend to you our WIShes lor a
Happy Holiday season!
·

ls

ehild is a large investment for

M

'

g.

I
I
I

~

g.

LAWFORD SUES
LOS ANGELES (UPI)

~'
~

Actor Peter Lawford sued
2Clth Century-Fox, producer
ill Aaron Spelling and actress
I
! Carol Lynley for $2.5 million
~ :
! Friday, charging he may be
g~···. ·
1 permanently crippled by a
n ... .:· ·
.
.
· leg cut because Miss Lynley
lR .' Ur WISh IS t h at .! threw a real wine glass at
I you be blessed I him in a movie scene instead
g ·
·
of a safer tnck glass.
I w1th the sweet " The cut " required 22

l

n

.

iA stitches and

nine day's

: peace oJ the ~ hospitalization, resulting in
lA CJ : ·L
St , J prolonged limping which
I 11 IS mas 0 1.) ' g aggravated a herniated
! Warm thanks. n disc,"Lawford's lawyer said.
1

w

··

~

He sa1d

Q

doctor warned "a

J. D. NQRlH B permanent . disability seems
PRODUCE ·CO• 1ll could
to be developing," wh1ch
damage Lawford's

~

a11

ill

~L .

JJI career.

Vine Street

Gallipolis, 0

CHARGES DROPPED
CINCINNATI (UPII - All
remaining charges against
former Cincinnati Police
Chief Carl Goodin have been
dropped . Eight charges of
bribery, extortion and
soliciting bribes were
dismissed Thursday by
Hamilton County Common
Pleas Court Judge Gilbert
Bettman oli the recommendation of Hamilton
County Prosecutor Simon
Leis.
SHUTTLE VACATIONER
WASHINGTON CUPi t Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger will fly lo
Acapulco, Mexico, Christmas
day for a week's visit with
friends, a spokesman announced .

'""== *f.-:~'f$;:$.BI[ . . ICCIIU!II

·
.
r-------------------------ill b l d
I
I

The followmg businesses w·

I

e c ose

at

noon .on Friday, December 24th, and at noon on
Friday, December 31st, in order for their employees
to enjoy the holidays with their families:

I

CENTRAL SOYA OF OHIO, INC.
GALLIA ROLLER MILLS
POMEROY LANDMARK
SOUTHERN STATES, PT. PLEASANT

. ER'R Y CHRISTMAS &amp; HAPPY NE.W YEAR!
I M

I

.

'

several e~ternal and internal
warda which increased my confidence, so It has done a lot for me
personaUy as welL
The column began as an
educational tool, to inform you of
what goes on Inside a large conservalion organ~lion like lbe U. S.
Forest Service. Aside from. a few
stories about hunting and fishing
trips , yes even one on noodlln' for
snapping turtles, I've tried to keep
you informed on conservation
practices and Issues.
How well I've succeeded, I'll
never know but it is still encouraging
to meet a complete stranger who
compliments me on the column,
usually mentioning a certain column
he-she particularly enjoyed.
I'd like to thank the editors who
have offered encouragement and
support over the years and
corrected my grammar and punctuatlon. Thank you Art Ferguson,
Ironton Tribune; thank you
Elizabeth Jones,· Jackson Journal
Herald; tliank you, Chet Tannehill,
Sunday Tililes.Sentlnel, and thank
you, Jim Kegley , Scioto Voice.
Thanks also to Rav Schoener,

ByT. Allao Wolter
;::::;:
Dtslrlcl Ra~~ger
{{;
IRONTON - After five and a
:;:;:;; half years as Ranger on the Wayne,
~;;:::~ it's time to say farewell. Not an easy
,:;:::;: task . I have accepted a transfer to
:;;::::; the Superior National Forest .In
',\:;; Minnesota. My job there will be that
:(:;:;: of Public Information Officer.
;t;~
This column, which began five
::;:;::; years ago, has been Uke a good
[;f[: friend to me. There have been only a
:;:::;:; ·few times that I wished It were gone,
tm; that I didn't have !he responsibility,
:j;::;; parllcularly as a deadllne apj:';': proached and I didn't have a column
;:::;:: worth publishing - sometimes not
·;:;:;:; even an Idea of what to write.
g:: But mostly, like a good friend, it
:;:::;; has been something I was proud of
::::;:: and something I could confide in.
;:;:;:;Most of all il gave me the op!,;:;:;: portunity to say what I wanted to
:::;::;: say
;::;:::
.The column has brought me in
:;:;;;:: contact with many fine people I
:;:;:;:; would not have otherwise met.
Because of the colwnn, I was able to
;::;:::; join the Outdoor Writers of Ohio and
;:;;:;:: the Outdoor Writers Association of
::;;:;;: Amer~ With the column came

a

l:t;

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE•RIO GRANDE.COMMUNITY COLLEGE

::::::::

Paul Kihlmlre, Dan Kincaid, Blli;f~
Gustin, Rick Hann, John Chlldel'll,;%
Kent Annentrout, Russ MaUow, &amp;b;f:j
Yost Line Ruhinen and Bob;;;~;:(
Ball~ntyne, ail Forest Servlc~;i;;;
employees who have contrlbuled;}'(
guest articles to the colwnn. A;;:;;:~
special lhanks to Gen Wisenbergerml
who has laboriously deciphered and:;:::::;
typed 260 handwritten colwnns.
r;;;;
This column will serve one last;:::;:::
purpose. It gives me a chance to say1;[;[;;
goodbye and good luck to Utera~y :;:;;;;.
hundreds of friends and pcquam-;g:'
lances whom I will not. get~~ see:;::;:;:
befo~e I leave. Your fnendahlp ls;;;'f
cheriShed. As a fnend I ask you to ;;:;:;!
make the new Ranger, Ron ;:;:;:;
Abraham, feel as welcome as youg~; .
did me.
.
::;:;:;:.
I've saved my special ultra ;':';:;
thanksforyou,thereader.Youhave;;:;:;::
enriched my life and to you I;:;;:;;:
dedicate this closing:
:;:;:;::
May you always camp
)i}
Wherethewaterrunssweet,
;:;:::;:
W1th plenty of shade and grass, :::::::
Where well trod !.ralls of friendship;;:~:;;
meet,
.
:;:;:~
As the kind years gently pass. :;:;:;;·
.....

THE RIGHT TIME • AN INVITATION TO LEARN • THE RIGHT PLACE
WINTER QUARTER SCHEDULE _OF CLASSES

MORNING

xPrinclp les of Accounting II
BIOLOG Y.
KGenera 1 Biology
Lab
xMorpho logy Lower Plants
Lab
X11nimal Physiology .
Lab I Cl
BUSINE SS EDUCATION
x'Technic al Stenography
CHEMIS TRY
~Organic Chemistry Theory II
xOrganic Chemistry Lab II
Physical Chemistry II
ECONOM ICS
Manager ial Economics
EDUCAT ION
xSocial Science Methods Elem . ( Cl
KMalh Me!hods Elementary
lndividu al Instruction
Short han d &amp; Typing Meth . Sec.
ELECTR ONICS
xEleclro nics Lab
xTV &amp; Radio Principles

lr~~~~~r:~=~~~:~:~~~:~~~;~:~:~:~:~:~~~~~:~;~:~:~:~:~:~:~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~:~=~=~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:::~:~t!::~t:~:~~~;~~~~~~:~~t~t~~~r~~~t~~~~lt~~f~~~~~ttttttt~~;~~~~~;~;~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t~:::::~:~:~:::tt~;:;~~~~~;t~~}t~t~~:trt:~:~:~=~=~:~:~:~:;:

Conservation is this
POMEROY - Boyd Ruth,
Meigs County District
Conservationist, as~s at this Christmas season, What does
conservation niean to you?
And he SaYS conservation :
Soil and wa"ter Conservation
is done by people like you for
people like you. It affects

Trip to

everyone everywhere.
We aD- have a strong interest

in

conservation

whether we fann, own a
·small lot in the suburbs, or
live in an apartment. We aU
appreciate parks and
recreation areas. We all like
to eat, and most of us ~tat
well. We enjoy scenic highways thai aUow us to move
swiltly across the country.
We enjoy a standard of living
second to none. We know now

Conservation means dlf- .
ferenl things to di[ferent
doi~g. Conservation is action . people. Conservatipn can
Conservation is using our ·mean soH, water, grass,
resources to the l&gt;cst ad' trees, or wildlife. It can mean
vantage for the most people abundant crops, clean
over the longest period of streams, artd good hunting.
others View conservation as
time.
attractive
parks
and
Ohio land users are in·
vesting abnost $25 million In recreation areas, or-reducing
· soil and water conservation erosion on construction sites.
work every year. They know Conservation may have
that resource conservation many meanings~ but one
increases food production. It thing 'is certain ...
Conservation means a lot to
also increases the value and
everyone .
aesthetics of the land.
For assistance on your land
Conservation can mean
using the land to its fulleSt but contact: U. S. Soil Conwithin the limits of Its servation Service, Boyd
District
Con· pot~ntial, or in some areas, it Ruth,
servationist,
·
Box
432,
Can mean leaving the Jand in
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769.
1ts .naturai state.
environmental articles .
Conservation is knowing and

that our resources are limited
and our way of life depends
on resource conservation.
:::::::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:::::::
The conservation effort is
more than buying only
Weigh·in time
recycled paper. It's more
than avoiding contamination
is Jan. l, '77
of the out of doors with waste
· material. It 's more tharl
POMEROY - All 4-H
sitting back and agreeBy JOHN A. CALLCO'IT
and .vo--ag members are
GENEVA, Switzerland ing with . ha stily written
reminded that weigh-In for
Swiss en- agreeing with hastily written:
1977 steers w.tll he held on !UPO
New \'ear's Day, Jao. 1, at vironmentalist Franz WebRoyal Oak Farm at Five er has been so successful
Points, starting at 9 a.m. in his campaign wput a baby
seal toy under every
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
aod concluding at 12 noon.
Christmas
tree
that
he
can
Sunday
through Tuesday, a
·Steers must be dehorned,
.not meet the demand.
' chance of snow Sunday, fair
castrated and weaned at
Weber's plan is to make Monday and a chance of snow
this llme. If anyone has any
enough
money to charter two again Tuesday. Highs will be
questions concerning this.
jetliners
in February and fly in the·20s or low 30s and lows
please call the County
reporters,
photographers and wiU be In the teens or low 20s.
Extension Office at 99:1television crew~ .to canada'
38S5.
.
The trip
and · ac- ·
::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;::::::::::::::
commodations will be free
and Weber will ask just one
The manager of your local Federal Land
leave from New York imd the
favor in return.
Bank Association is there to help you . He
"All the news media should second one from Paris.
"We'll fly to the best knows the local agricultural situation. He '·s
promise w do is to describe
airport
nearest the scene and familiar with Ule money market. He's
the annual slaughter of baby
~
moot seals
then
go
on in small ships with
off the Canadian
a
hotel
ship
for the press," he agribusiness man who talks your IIan!~Uc:tge.J
POMEROY - There will Atlantic Coast where every said:
.·
Give him a call tod
be an organizational meeting winter the pack ice turns red
Meanwhile, chain stores .
228 Upper River Road
and election of officers for the with blll\ld," he said.
and marketplace standa are
Weber's
campalgn-"a
P.O.
Box 207, Gallipolis
Shepherds 4-H Club on
selling out the baby seal toys
Phone 446-0203 ,
Tuesday evening, Dec. 28 at baby seal under every as soon as they come in.
7:30 p.m. at the County Christmas tree"-began in
4
Clyde B. Walker. Mgr.
'We even have people
November in Switzerland. He
J;:xtension Office.
getting them straight from
Any boy or girl between the had a toy factory produce the the factory," Weber said. ·
•
ages of 9 and 19 as of January little seals covered with
artificial
fur
and
large
chain
1, who would like to take
sell them at $12 each.
either a sheep breeding or stores
"
It's
been a crazy
market lamb 4-H project is
success.'' Weber said. ''So far
invited to attend.
we've sold 20,000 in
Switzerland alone and the
factory · can't meet the
demand.
"That means we've sold
1240,000 so far.
"We will need about
$400,000 to charter the
CONGRESSWOMAN ILL
aircraft to go to Canada In
GLENDALE. Calli. IUPII February and I know we will
- Rep. Shirley Pettls. R- easily collect that much even
Callf., was under treatment though half of the proceeds go
at Glendale Adventist back to the factory."·
Medical Center today for an
Weber, who has a
intestinal ulcer.
foundation In Montreux on
A spokesman said she Lake Geneva dedicated to
entered the hospital Monday conservation of natural
and was expected to be resources, goes to Gennany,
released in time lor the Italy and then the United
convening of Congress in states in January.
January.
"l know that everywhere
the campaign will catch on
bul particularly in the United
States where everyone is
extremely environment ,,
, minded," be said.
.··, :"' : '
,.
Weber said an average of
{' .
' i \ • • ' •, ·: .~ • .
••
150,000 baby seals are slaugh• .. '
: .:
.1" • '
.;
tered each winter by
•
"'· . ·~·-·:: . :.
Canadians and Norwegians
••
'· ;'. ~-!- 'lt. :J.~- !
~
and Danes.
~.
~ ._
Canadian officials 1aid
123,000 were kJJled last winter
and the tnaximUJI'l&lt;quota this
Two models only in stock at 1975
18.5 H. P.
coming winter is I 10,000. .
Floatation Tires
"Only by having the news
prices. Not '77 or even '76 but 1975! A
Dual Brakes
media go to the scene itseU
savings of over $1,000. on a tractor
.and having them reporl
Water Coiled
and mower.
exacUy what they saw and
4 Cylinder
felt can the killing be
Engine
stopped," Weber said.
Mows a 60"
"The baby seals are killed
Swath. ·
In the cruelest and most
INTERNATIONAlliARViSTER
horrible way- lor $6.40 a

Canada
• d

promise

I

ENGLIS H
xAdvanced Composition ( Cl
xAdvanc ed Composition
xAdvanced Composition ( Cl
xAdvan ced Composition ( Cl
xAdvanced Composition ( Cl
xCrealiv e Writing
xModer n Poetry
Creative Writing for Public.
America n Literature
Directed Studies
(Bib le as Literature)
Directed· Studies
(Gr ammar Review)
FINE A RTS
. xFine Arts (C)
HEALT H AND PHYSICAL
EDUCA TION
xFound allons of Physical Act .
~Found ations of Phys ical Act. (C)
xlnterm ediale Swimming
.xBadmi nton
xVolley ball (Cl
xVolley ball
xAppar atus ( Cl
·-xBowlin g -',..'
.· -xWater Safety Instructor
x lntram ural Programs (C)
xHislor y-Ptiilosophy of PE (C)
Kineslo logy
Coach in g Basketball
Physiol ogy of Exercise
Curricu Ium in Health Education
HISTOR y
xThe Ancienl World( Cl
xAmeri can History II (C)
Am eric an Cultural History II
xAmeri can History II
. MATHE MATICS '
xTechn.leal Math I ( Cl
'xTechn leal Math II
. xAnaly sis II

... have a banker who
understands farming!

Shepherds 4-H
cu
l b 'll

I

WE'VE ·. MOV·ED

.

..

..

• •' • ,

"THAT IS OUR FARM SUPPLY &amp; OFFICE"
WE'VE MOVED TO THE
MARCHI BUILDING
"OLD A.C.S " BLDG.

skin."
"I am hoping that by
arranging the icip the
governments of Canada and
Norway will be forced wstop
the slaughter," be said.
Weber said his plan is w
haw one chartered Jetliner

•. I ' ' :

,..,~,.

1

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AFTERNOON

/ICCOUN TfNG

Jf'

II

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_.&lt;\
--

--------------------------

f'~·

. MORNINGS • AFTERNOONS • EVENINGS

•

I

SUGAR RUN FLOUR MILL

I

:.:.:.:

'·

C.l-TheSunday Tifnes.Sentil)el,Sunday, Dec. 26, 1976

iY:~Wt:;::Nati::i~7tl
our commmtity

The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Dee. 26, 1976

9: 10-10:10

MTWThF

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ART---------------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - X Basic P holography
1: 00-5: 00
(2)
M
X Basic Ceram ics-lnlermediate
1:00-5: 00
(2 )
Th
Advance d Photography
1:00-5: 00
(2)
T
B IOLOG y
( 4)
X Fundam enlals of Biology (C)
12: 40· 1:40
MWF
Lab I Cl
12: 40-2: 40
Th
( 4)
X Verlebr ale Zoology
4: 10-5: 10
WF
Lab
3:00-5: 00
MTh
X Animal Physiology Lab
1:50-3: 50
T
(2)
Lab Tee hniques
TBA
Researc h
11
·3)
TBA
BUSINE 55 ADMINISTRATION
4: 10-5: 10
( 4)
X Princip les of Marketing
MTWTh
12:
40-1;
40
( 4)
corporate Finance II
MTWTh
BUSINE SS EDUCATION
(3)
4: 10-5: 50
XOffice Procedures
TTh
(2)
TBA
X Office Praclicum
HE MISTRY
X Pri'ncip les of Chemistry II
12 ; 40-1:40
( 5)
MTWF
Lab
12: 40-4:00
Th
X Genera I; Chemistry II
4: 10-5: 10
( 5)
MWThF
Lab
1: 50-5: 10
T
Advance d Inorganic Chemistry
(3)
TBA
E CO NOM ICS
XMacrae conomics (C)
MTWTh
12:40-1: 40
( 4)
E DUCA TION
XField E xperience Community
TBA
(1)
XFiel.d E xperience Agency
TBA
(2)
X Refere nee &amp; Bibliography
3:00-4:00
MTWThF
( 5)
XPre-Sch ool Child
4: 10-5: 10
MTWThF
( 5)

c

F ie ld E xp: September Exper .
F ield Ex p: Teacher Aid .
Accounl lng in Classroom (C)
Reading Math Elementary
Reading Lab K-12
ommun ications Method Second
Math Method Secondary
p hys Ed Method Elementary
social Science Method Second .
Natural Science Method Second.
ducati onal Media Praclicum
E
(2)
10:20-11 ; 20 MWF
Intern Teaching Elementary
Intern Teaching Secondary
Intern Teaching
Music
( 5)
.10: 20-ll; 20 MIWThF
ELECT RONICS
XElectro nics Applications Ill
Lab
8: 00-9; 00
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(1) ENGLIS H
9: 10-10:1 0
TTh
(I) XCompo sit ion
11:30-12:30 MW
(1) X Ad van ced Composition
10:20-11:20 MW
(1) X Ad van ced Composition (C)
11:30-12: 30 TTh '
(I) XTechni cal &amp; Report Writing I Cl
10:20-12:20 F
(I)
X Repor ling &amp; Editing
11; 30-12:30 MW
tI )
Lab
9:20-11 : 10
Th
(I)
XBrili~h Li-terature
10: 20-11 : 20 MWF
( 3)
X History of Language
8:00-9:00
TTh
(2)
X Traged y, Comedy, Satire
9: 10-10: 10
MWF
( 3)
Hum ani ties Information
11:30-12:30 . TThF
(3)
hakesp eare· II
s
9: 10-10: 10
MWF
( 3)
HEALT H AND PHYSICAL
8:00-9:00
MTWTh
(4)
EDUCA TION
10: 20-JJ : 20 MTWTh
( 4)
XFound ations of Physical Act .
XDiving
(3) XModer n Dance ( Cl
11; 30-12:30 MWF
(3) XBadmi nton
9:10-10:10
MWF
( 4) XBeg inn ing Ice Skating
10:20-11:20 MTWTh
(
3) XSelf De tense for Women
8: {!Q-9: 00
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xSnow Skiing ( Cl
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9: 10-10:10
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(4) xFie ld Exper. Public Playground
11; 30-12:30 MTThF
(4) xField Exper. Recreation Center
10:20-11:20 MTWThF
( 5) Leaders hip
~USIC
PE for Exception Child
xMuslc Literature
9: 10-10:10
(3)
MWF
'
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:J&lt;Funda menials of Music I Cl
10: 20-11; 20
( 4)
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Directed Studies
·· X Band Lab Praclicum
11; 30-12:30
( 1)
TTh
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xFuncl ianal Plano
11 : 30-12:30
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xModer n Civilization
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xNon-Wes l history (Mid· Eastl
( 5)
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xHislor y1 &amp; Lit. of New Test. (C)
9: 10-10: 10
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Individ ua l Studies
( 5)
8: ci().9; 00
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xGerier a l Physics II
EMATICS
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PUBLI C ADMINISTRATION AND
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GOVER NMENT
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8:00-9:00
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xColleg e Geometry
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( I l TECHN OLOGY
11:30-12:30
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8:00-9:00
xGener al Psychology I Cl
(4) xMedic al Techno logy Seminar II
8: 00-9! 00
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xGener a l Psychology
(4) xC linica I Practicum
11:30-12: 30 MTWTh
Educat ion Psychology
( 4) MUSIC
10:00 12:00 TTh
Abnorm al Psychology
xOrgan
SOCIA L SCIENCE
xPiano Lab Practicum
11:30-12: 30 MTF
(3) xChoru s Lab Praclicum
xPrinc lple$ of Geography
( 1-4) xVoice Lab Practicum
lndivid ual Studies
TBA
SPEEC H
( 5) . xCiass Piano Lab I
xFund. of Oral Comm unicallons ( Cl 10:20-11:20 MTWThF
Music for Elementary Teacher
(5)
11 ; 30-12: 30 MTWThF
"X Fund. of Oral Comm unicalions
(5) PSYCH OLOGY
9: 10-10: 10
xFund. of Oral Communications
MTWTh
( 5) xComp arative Theories
11 : 30-12: 30 MTWThF
xPrinc !pies of Discussion ( Cl
(3) xHuma n Growth &amp; Development
10: 20-11 : 20 MTTh
Public Address Civil War ·
Psycho logy lests &amp; Measure
SOCIAL SCIENCE
'
s of Man ( Cl
xSystem
'
xlntrod ucllon to Anthropology
SOCIA L WORK
xField Observation
Social Casework
Numbe r of credit hours for each t:hurse shown above in parenthf!Ses. Asterisk (x)
lndlca1es courses offered throug • Rio Grande Community CoJiege. (C) after
Midi P racticum
·~ course name indicates class Is closed .
Group Sui&gt;ervi sion
SOCIO LOGY
Timeo f Registration : ~day , Januart 3, 9:00a.m. to noon ; 1:00 p.m. to 4:00
p.m.j it : 00to9: 00 p.m . In Comm u~lty Ha I on Rio Graride Campus .
xlntrod uclion to Sociology (C)
xMinor ily Groups
Fees: For courses mark with aSterisk (xl. multiply the number in parentheses
(credit hours) by S13 for residents ol Jackson, Gall Ia, Meigs and Vinton Counties.
Macro Sociology
For al 1other courses, mu ltiply credit hours by $52 .50. All fees are payable,at 1lme
Field E xperlence
of reg istratlon .
SPEEC H
Requlr efnents: Any resident of Jackson, Gallia , Meigs or Vinton Counties ~lth a
xFund. of Oral Communlcatlohs
high sc hoOt diploma or i1s equivalent mar, register for up to 11 cred_lt hours w!fhout
xLab i n Communications
apptyt ng for admission to the calle?e , T ere Is only a need to reg1ster January.J.
Full t lme students must a~pl y or admission by 'cbn tact i n~ the Office of
xClral Interpretation
Admlsslons and Records at . io Grande College-Community Co lege .
xSelect ed Topics ·
(Psychology, of Speech)
ande
College-Community
College
admits
students
of
any
race
,
color
and
Rio Gr
nation al or ethnic origin .
Contem porary Rhetoric
-Select ed Topics
For fu rther information call 614·1•5-5353.
THE AT ER
xLab Drama
~
xTheat er History M ad le Period
xStagecraft
( 3)
( 3)
( 3)
( 3)
(3)
(3)
( 3)
( 3)
( 3)

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EVENING

REGISTRATION INFORMATION

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7: 00-9: 00
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x lntro ductory Auditing
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9: 10-11 : 10 TTh
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xFund amentals of Design ( Cl
9: 10-11 : 10 TTh
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xCurr'1culum Development
6:00-8: 00
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xPr inclples of Business Manage
9: 10-ll : 10 MW
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xReal Estate Law
6: 00·9: 00
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x Real Estate Finance
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xBusi ness Law II
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7: 00-9: 00
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xlntr oductlon to Education I Cl
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6:30-9:00
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6: 00-7: 00
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7:00-9: 00
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xKar ate ( Cl
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xSex Ed Seminar
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xKar ate
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xlntr'o to Phi losophy
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(4'
(51

COURSES OFFERED IN AREA COMMUNITIES

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Mid dleport

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Metgs Jr. High 10 1

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�B,\-

Agricultur~

County agents
corner

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'

By JOHN C. RICE
F.ll. Agent, Agriculture

By Bryson R. CBud&gt; Carter
1:,. lli:o l'nnntv Exttnsion 1\J(ent

POMEROY - Raising a three in prison for one year
and less than the cost of
GALIJPOUS - This th!' sixth of a series ul ao·til'les
a family or society. according fourteen on probation for one addressing the question, "Should you form a fann
to Duane Plymale, area year In your county.
.partnerslup'!" Todoy's article involves a test that you can take
Extension agent , loc.ated in
An ounce of prevention is to evaiW:ttc your &lt;'hanl 't• s f or :-, UI 't '('~c.- in ~ partnership. Test
Jackson .
worth a pound of cure.' The Yourself.. ..
.
To raise a child to age !8 preventive work of 4-H in
WOULD YOU BE AGOOD PARTNER'!
costs approximately $30,00jl. Meigs County to reduc e
Test for MenIf this child is placed in a juvenile delinquency can be
Are you willing \Q give up some independence for the
child care', rece iv ing unit demonstrated
by
the benefits of a joint venture''
(children's home ) the annual following statistics .
Do you understand that good working relalionshi!&gt;l do~'t
cost is approximately $7,000 a Remember that "the idle just happen - are you willing wbe open and above board ":'th
year, If the child is psychotic, mind is the devil 's your concerns and plans as they pert~iJ, to the partnership .
·
be can be kept in a private workshop".
Can you willingly be a partner in management as well as
There were 390 4-H'ers labor and t.aketlmeto manage as a team '!
clinic or hospital for $17,000
.
Are you willing to pul your partnership agreement lfl
per year. If the child Is a throughout Meigs County last
juvenile delinquent, he can be year who demonstrated and writing'!
·
Can you talk over a problem or a mistake made by a cokept at various child care uhiblted 850 4-H· projects.
institutions at an average Through spending time on worker without getting angry or upset?
Are you willing to insist on accurate and complete records
daily rate of $32.40 per day or these projects, ranging from
with
books open at all times wpartners involved?
·
child care to taking care of a
$11,826 per year.
pocket
pet,
these
members
Test
for
Their
Wives.
The most wholesome and
More partnerships fail because of human relationshipS
most inexpensive plate to were Involved in learning
keep a child is in his home, new skills, gaining respon- than over business arrangements. The wife and children are a
sibility, and h~lplng others. pari of this relationship. Are you willing to go along with your
school, and community.
.
.
"The answer is so simple it Seventy-one older 4-H husband on his partnership arrangement'
Do you feel that this farm partnership busmess
constantly eludes us." County members ca lled junior
funds given to support one 4- leaders were busy serving arrangement has definite advantages to all famohes mvolved
H agent for one year in Meigs younger 4-H members, rather than favoring one family ?
Are you willing to refrain from complaining that the other
County is money well worth helping 4-H advisors and
c&lt;&gt;uplei
s) has a better house, or better furniture, etc. ?
,
spend ing. Money spent to serving the community.
Can
you
be
discreet
around
your
children
so
they
aren
t
Seventy volunteer leaders
support one 4-H agent is less
"carrying
stories"
between
the
homes?
.
than the cost of two in a called 4-H advisors because ,
Can you curb your desires to pressure your. husband mto
children 's home for one year, they advise and work with making more of the farm decisions, asking for b1gger share of
less than the cost of two in a youth, were working with the profi!J;, or less work or ~hores, etc?
.
&lt;ietcntion home or juvenile these members in 30 4-H
113 you strive wget along m II,J• partner~htp, would you be
(!elinquent institution for one clubs throughout the county. observed as being kind and conSiderate; discreet about what
if you are concerned about you say ; and a person '!'hO controls her anger '
yea r, less than the cost of
reducing juvenile
Rating Scale
,
.
.. delirlquency In your comlf answer is a firm yes, give yoursel[ 5 poinls; yes, bul
1!&lt;11!&lt;1&lt;'!&lt;11••.,.~ munity and involving youth in barely, 4; possibly, 3; l&lt;n'tlikely , 2, and a firm no, I.
.
n 4-H activities and projects,
Chances for Success :26-30, You're a fine partner; .21·25,
ill call your county Extension you should make it, !6-20, barely possible, and o-15, thmk of
g office loca ted in the basement another setup.
.
.
.
g of the County Home Building,
Next week we wiD discuss additional essentials for success
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy. in farm partnerships. On behaU of the Gallia County
~ Phone 992-3895.
Cooperative Extension Service I extend to you our WIShes lor a
Happy Holiday season!
·

ls

ehild is a large investment for

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LAWFORD SUES
LOS ANGELES (UPI)

~'
~

Actor Peter Lawford sued
2Clth Century-Fox, producer
ill Aaron Spelling and actress
I
! Carol Lynley for $2.5 million
~ :
! Friday, charging he may be
g~···. ·
1 permanently crippled by a
n ... .:· ·
.
.
· leg cut because Miss Lynley
lR .' Ur WISh IS t h at .! threw a real wine glass at
I you be blessed I him in a movie scene instead
g ·
·
of a safer tnck glass.
I w1th the sweet " The cut " required 22

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n

.

iA stitches and

nine day's

: peace oJ the ~ hospitalization, resulting in
lA CJ : ·L
St , J prolonged limping which
I 11 IS mas 0 1.) ' g aggravated a herniated
! Warm thanks. n disc,"Lawford's lawyer said.
1

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He sa1d

Q

doctor warned "a

J. D. NQRlH B permanent . disability seems
PRODUCE ·CO• 1ll could
to be developing," wh1ch
damage Lawford's

~

a11

ill

~L .

JJI career.

Vine Street

Gallipolis, 0

CHARGES DROPPED
CINCINNATI (UPII - All
remaining charges against
former Cincinnati Police
Chief Carl Goodin have been
dropped . Eight charges of
bribery, extortion and
soliciting bribes were
dismissed Thursday by
Hamilton County Common
Pleas Court Judge Gilbert
Bettman oli the recommendation of Hamilton
County Prosecutor Simon
Leis.
SHUTTLE VACATIONER
WASHINGTON CUPi t Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger will fly lo
Acapulco, Mexico, Christmas
day for a week's visit with
friends, a spokesman announced .

'""== *f.-:~'f$;:$.BI[ . . ICCIIU!II

·
.
r-------------------------ill b l d
I
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The followmg businesses w·

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e c ose

at

noon .on Friday, December 24th, and at noon on
Friday, December 31st, in order for their employees
to enjoy the holidays with their families:

I

CENTRAL SOYA OF OHIO, INC.
GALLIA ROLLER MILLS
POMEROY LANDMARK
SOUTHERN STATES, PT. PLEASANT

. ER'R Y CHRISTMAS &amp; HAPPY NE.W YEAR!
I M

I

.

'

several e~ternal and internal
warda which increased my confidence, so It has done a lot for me
personaUy as welL
The column began as an
educational tool, to inform you of
what goes on Inside a large conservalion organ~lion like lbe U. S.
Forest Service. Aside from. a few
stories about hunting and fishing
trips , yes even one on noodlln' for
snapping turtles, I've tried to keep
you informed on conservation
practices and Issues.
How well I've succeeded, I'll
never know but it is still encouraging
to meet a complete stranger who
compliments me on the column,
usually mentioning a certain column
he-she particularly enjoyed.
I'd like to thank the editors who
have offered encouragement and
support over the years and
corrected my grammar and punctuatlon. Thank you Art Ferguson,
Ironton Tribune; thank you
Elizabeth Jones,· Jackson Journal
Herald; tliank you, Chet Tannehill,
Sunday Tililes.Sentlnel, and thank
you, Jim Kegley , Scioto Voice.
Thanks also to Rav Schoener,

ByT. Allao Wolter
;::::;:
Dtslrlcl Ra~~ger
{{;
IRONTON - After five and a
:;:;:;; half years as Ranger on the Wayne,
~;;:::~ it's time to say farewell. Not an easy
,:;:::;: task . I have accepted a transfer to
:;;::::; the Superior National Forest .In
',\:;; Minnesota. My job there will be that
:(:;:;: of Public Information Officer.
;t;~
This column, which began five
::;:;::; years ago, has been Uke a good
[;f[: friend to me. There have been only a
:;:::;:; ·few times that I wished It were gone,
tm; that I didn't have !he responsibility,
:j;::;; parllcularly as a deadllne apj:';': proached and I didn't have a column
;:::;:: worth publishing - sometimes not
·;:;:;:; even an Idea of what to write.
g:: But mostly, like a good friend, it
:;:::;; has been something I was proud of
::::;:: and something I could confide in.
;:;:;:;Most of all il gave me the op!,;:;:;: portunity to say what I wanted to
:::;::;: say
;::;:::
.The column has brought me in
:;:;;;:: contact with many fine people I
:;:;:;:; would not have otherwise met.
Because of the colwnn, I was able to
;::;:::; join the Outdoor Writers of Ohio and
;:;;:;:: the Outdoor Writers Association of
::;;:;;: Amer~ With the column came

a

l:t;

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE•RIO GRANDE.COMMUNITY COLLEGE

::::::::

Paul Kihlmlre, Dan Kincaid, Blli;f~
Gustin, Rick Hann, John Chlldel'll,;%
Kent Annentrout, Russ MaUow, &amp;b;f:j
Yost Line Ruhinen and Bob;;;~;:(
Ball~ntyne, ail Forest Servlc~;i;;;
employees who have contrlbuled;}'(
guest articles to the colwnn. A;;:;;:~
special lhanks to Gen Wisenbergerml
who has laboriously deciphered and:;:::::;
typed 260 handwritten colwnns.
r;;;;
This column will serve one last;:::;:::
purpose. It gives me a chance to say1;[;[;;
goodbye and good luck to Utera~y :;:;;;;.
hundreds of friends and pcquam-;g:'
lances whom I will not. get~~ see:;::;:;:
befo~e I leave. Your fnendahlp ls;;;'f
cheriShed. As a fnend I ask you to ;;:;:;!
make the new Ranger, Ron ;:;:;:;
Abraham, feel as welcome as youg~; .
did me.
.
::;:;:;:.
I've saved my special ultra ;':';:;
thanksforyou,thereader.Youhave;;:;:;::
enriched my life and to you I;:;;:;;:
dedicate this closing:
:;:;:;::
May you always camp
)i}
Wherethewaterrunssweet,
;:;:::;:
W1th plenty of shade and grass, :::::::
Where well trod !.ralls of friendship;;:~:;;
meet,
.
:;:;:~
As the kind years gently pass. :;:;:;;·
.....

THE RIGHT TIME • AN INVITATION TO LEARN • THE RIGHT PLACE
WINTER QUARTER SCHEDULE _OF CLASSES

MORNING

xPrinclp les of Accounting II
BIOLOG Y.
KGenera 1 Biology
Lab
xMorpho logy Lower Plants
Lab
X11nimal Physiology .
Lab I Cl
BUSINE SS EDUCATION
x'Technic al Stenography
CHEMIS TRY
~Organic Chemistry Theory II
xOrganic Chemistry Lab II
Physical Chemistry II
ECONOM ICS
Manager ial Economics
EDUCAT ION
xSocial Science Methods Elem . ( Cl
KMalh Me!hods Elementary
lndividu al Instruction
Short han d &amp; Typing Meth . Sec.
ELECTR ONICS
xEleclro nics Lab
xTV &amp; Radio Principles

lr~~~~~r:~=~~~:~:~~~:~~~;~:~:~:~:~:~~~~~:~;~:~:~:~:~:~:~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~:~=~=~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:::~:~t!::~t:~:~~~;~~~~~~:~~t~t~~~r~~~t~~~~lt~~f~~~~~ttttttt~~;~~~~~;~;~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t~:::::~:~:~:::tt~;:;~~~~~;t~~}t~t~~:trt:~:~:~=~=~:~:~:~:;:

Conservation is this
POMEROY - Boyd Ruth,
Meigs County District
Conservationist, as~s at this Christmas season, What does
conservation niean to you?
And he SaYS conservation :
Soil and wa"ter Conservation
is done by people like you for
people like you. It affects

Trip to

everyone everywhere.
We aD- have a strong interest

in

conservation

whether we fann, own a
·small lot in the suburbs, or
live in an apartment. We aU
appreciate parks and
recreation areas. We all like
to eat, and most of us ~tat
well. We enjoy scenic highways thai aUow us to move
swiltly across the country.
We enjoy a standard of living
second to none. We know now

Conservation means dlf- .
ferenl things to di[ferent
doi~g. Conservation is action . people. Conservatipn can
Conservation is using our ·mean soH, water, grass,
resources to the l&gt;cst ad' trees, or wildlife. It can mean
vantage for the most people abundant crops, clean
over the longest period of streams, artd good hunting.
others View conservation as
time.
attractive
parks
and
Ohio land users are in·
vesting abnost $25 million In recreation areas, or-reducing
· soil and water conservation erosion on construction sites.
work every year. They know Conservation may have
that resource conservation many meanings~ but one
increases food production. It thing 'is certain ...
Conservation means a lot to
also increases the value and
everyone .
aesthetics of the land.
For assistance on your land
Conservation can mean
using the land to its fulleSt but contact: U. S. Soil Conwithin the limits of Its servation Service, Boyd
District
Con· pot~ntial, or in some areas, it Ruth,
servationist,
·
Box
432,
Can mean leaving the Jand in
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769.
1ts .naturai state.
environmental articles .
Conservation is knowing and

that our resources are limited
and our way of life depends
on resource conservation.
:::::::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:::::::
The conservation effort is
more than buying only
Weigh·in time
recycled paper. It's more
than avoiding contamination
is Jan. l, '77
of the out of doors with waste
· material. It 's more tharl
POMEROY - All 4-H
sitting back and agreeBy JOHN A. CALLCO'IT
and .vo--ag members are
GENEVA, Switzerland ing with . ha stily written
reminded that weigh-In for
Swiss en- agreeing with hastily written:
1977 steers w.tll he held on !UPO
New \'ear's Day, Jao. 1, at vironmentalist Franz WebRoyal Oak Farm at Five er has been so successful
Points, starting at 9 a.m. in his campaign wput a baby
seal toy under every
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
aod concluding at 12 noon.
Christmas
tree
that
he
can
Sunday
through Tuesday, a
·Steers must be dehorned,
.not meet the demand.
' chance of snow Sunday, fair
castrated and weaned at
Weber's plan is to make Monday and a chance of snow
this llme. If anyone has any
enough
money to charter two again Tuesday. Highs will be
questions concerning this.
jetliners
in February and fly in the·20s or low 30s and lows
please call the County
reporters,
photographers and wiU be In the teens or low 20s.
Extension Office at 99:1television crew~ .to canada'
38S5.
.
The trip
and · ac- ·
::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;::::::::::::::
commodations will be free
and Weber will ask just one
The manager of your local Federal Land
leave from New York imd the
favor in return.
Bank Association is there to help you . He
"All the news media should second one from Paris.
"We'll fly to the best knows the local agricultural situation. He '·s
promise w do is to describe
airport
nearest the scene and familiar with Ule money market. He's
the annual slaughter of baby
~
moot seals
then
go
on in small ships with
off the Canadian
a
hotel
ship
for the press," he agribusiness man who talks your IIan!~Uc:tge.J
POMEROY - There will Atlantic Coast where every said:
.·
Give him a call tod
be an organizational meeting winter the pack ice turns red
Meanwhile, chain stores .
228 Upper River Road
and election of officers for the with blll\ld," he said.
and marketplace standa are
Weber's
campalgn-"a
P.O.
Box 207, Gallipolis
Shepherds 4-H Club on
selling out the baby seal toys
Phone 446-0203 ,
Tuesday evening, Dec. 28 at baby seal under every as soon as they come in.
7:30 p.m. at the County Christmas tree"-began in
4
Clyde B. Walker. Mgr.
'We even have people
November in Switzerland. He
J;:xtension Office.
getting them straight from
Any boy or girl between the had a toy factory produce the the factory," Weber said. ·
•
ages of 9 and 19 as of January little seals covered with
artificial
fur
and
large
chain
1, who would like to take
sell them at $12 each.
either a sheep breeding or stores
"
It's
been a crazy
market lamb 4-H project is
success.'' Weber said. ''So far
invited to attend.
we've sold 20,000 in
Switzerland alone and the
factory · can't meet the
demand.
"That means we've sold
1240,000 so far.
"We will need about
$400,000 to charter the
CONGRESSWOMAN ILL
aircraft to go to Canada In
GLENDALE. Calli. IUPII February and I know we will
- Rep. Shirley Pettls. R- easily collect that much even
Callf., was under treatment though half of the proceeds go
at Glendale Adventist back to the factory."·
Medical Center today for an
Weber, who has a
intestinal ulcer.
foundation In Montreux on
A spokesman said she Lake Geneva dedicated to
entered the hospital Monday conservation of natural
and was expected to be resources, goes to Gennany,
released in time lor the Italy and then the United
convening of Congress in states in January.
January.
"l know that everywhere
the campaign will catch on
bul particularly in the United
States where everyone is
extremely environment ,,
, minded," be said.
.··, :"' : '
,.
Weber said an average of
{' .
' i \ • • ' •, ·: .~ • .
••
150,000 baby seals are slaugh• .. '
: .:
.1" • '
.;
tered each winter by
•
"'· . ·~·-·:: . :.
Canadians and Norwegians
••
'· ;'. ~-!- 'lt. :J.~- !
~
and Danes.
~.
~ ._
Canadian officials 1aid
123,000 were kJJled last winter
and the tnaximUJI'l&lt;quota this
Two models only in stock at 1975
18.5 H. P.
coming winter is I 10,000. .
Floatation Tires
"Only by having the news
prices. Not '77 or even '76 but 1975! A
Dual Brakes
media go to the scene itseU
savings of over $1,000. on a tractor
.and having them reporl
Water Coiled
and mower.
exacUy what they saw and
4 Cylinder
felt can the killing be
Engine
stopped," Weber said.
Mows a 60"
"The baby seals are killed
Swath. ·
In the cruelest and most
INTERNATIONAlliARViSTER
horrible way- lor $6.40 a

Canada
• d

promise

I

ENGLIS H
xAdvanced Composition ( Cl
xAdvanc ed Composition
xAdvanced Composition ( Cl
xAdvan ced Composition ( Cl
xAdvanced Composition ( Cl
xCrealiv e Writing
xModer n Poetry
Creative Writing for Public.
America n Literature
Directed Studies
(Bib le as Literature)
Directed· Studies
(Gr ammar Review)
FINE A RTS
. xFine Arts (C)
HEALT H AND PHYSICAL
EDUCA TION
xFound allons of Physical Act .
~Found ations of Phys ical Act. (C)
xlnterm ediale Swimming
.xBadmi nton
xVolley ball (Cl
xVolley ball
xAppar atus ( Cl
·-xBowlin g -',..'
.· -xWater Safety Instructor
x lntram ural Programs (C)
xHislor y-Ptiilosophy of PE (C)
Kineslo logy
Coach in g Basketball
Physiol ogy of Exercise
Curricu Ium in Health Education
HISTOR y
xThe Ancienl World( Cl
xAmeri can History II (C)
Am eric an Cultural History II
xAmeri can History II
. MATHE MATICS '
xTechn.leal Math I ( Cl
'xTechn leal Math II
. xAnaly sis II

... have a banker who
understands farming!

Shepherds 4-H
cu
l b 'll

I

WE'VE ·. MOV·ED

.

..

..

• •' • ,

"THAT IS OUR FARM SUPPLY &amp; OFFICE"
WE'VE MOVED TO THE
MARCHI BUILDING
"OLD A.C.S " BLDG.

skin."
"I am hoping that by
arranging the icip the
governments of Canada and
Norway will be forced wstop
the slaughter," be said.
Weber said his plan is w
haw one chartered Jetliner

•. I ' ' :

,..,~,.

1

'

..

AFTERNOON

/ICCOUN TfNG

Jf'

II

.,____
_.&lt;\
--

--------------------------

f'~·

. MORNINGS • AFTERNOONS • EVENINGS

•

I

SUGAR RUN FLOUR MILL

I

:.:.:.:

'·

C.l-TheSunday Tifnes.Sentil)el,Sunday, Dec. 26, 1976

iY:~Wt:;::Nati::i~7tl
our commmtity

The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Dee. 26, 1976

9: 10-10:10

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ART---------------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - X Basic P holography
1: 00-5: 00
(2)
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X Basic Ceram ics-lnlermediate
1:00-5: 00
(2 )
Th
Advance d Photography
1:00-5: 00
(2)
T
B IOLOG y
( 4)
X Fundam enlals of Biology (C)
12: 40· 1:40
MWF
Lab I Cl
12: 40-2: 40
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( 4)
X Verlebr ale Zoology
4: 10-5: 10
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Lab
3:00-5: 00
MTh
X Animal Physiology Lab
1:50-3: 50
T
(2)
Lab Tee hniques
TBA
Researc h
11
·3)
TBA
BUSINE 55 ADMINISTRATION
4: 10-5: 10
( 4)
X Princip les of Marketing
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corporate Finance II
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BUSINE SS EDUCATION
(3)
4: 10-5: 50
XOffice Procedures
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HE MISTRY
X Pri'ncip les of Chemistry II
12 ; 40-1:40
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Lab
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Advance d Inorganic Chemistry
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E CO NOM ICS
XMacrae conomics (C)
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E DUCA TION
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3:00-4:00
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F ie ld E xp: September Exper .
F ield Ex p: Teacher Aid .
Accounl lng in Classroom (C)
Reading Math Elementary
Reading Lab K-12
ommun ications Method Second
Math Method Secondary
p hys Ed Method Elementary
social Science Method Second .
Natural Science Method Second.
ducati onal Media Praclicum
E
(2)
10:20-11 ; 20 MWF
Intern Teaching Elementary
Intern Teaching Secondary
Intern Teaching
Music
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ELECT RONICS
XElectro nics Applications Ill
Lab
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9: 10-10:1 0
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11:30-12:30 MW
(1) X Ad van ced Composition
10:20-11:20 MW
(1) X Ad van ced Composition (C)
11:30-12: 30 TTh '
(I) XTechni cal &amp; Report Writing I Cl
10:20-12:20 F
(I)
X Repor ling &amp; Editing
11; 30-12:30 MW
tI )
Lab
9:20-11 : 10
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(I)
XBrili~h Li-terature
10: 20-11 : 20 MWF
( 3)
X History of Language
8:00-9:00
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X Traged y, Comedy, Satire
9: 10-10: 10
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Hum ani ties Information
11:30-12:30 . TThF
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hakesp eare· II
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9: 10-10: 10
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HEALT H AND PHYSICAL
8:00-9:00
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EDUCA TION
10: 20-JJ : 20 MTWTh
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XFound ations of Physical Act .
XDiving
(3) XModer n Dance ( Cl
11; 30-12:30 MWF
(3) XBadmi nton
9:10-10:10
MWF
( 4) XBeg inn ing Ice Skating
10:20-11:20 MTWTh
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3) XSelf De tense for Women
8: {!Q-9: 00
MWF
xSnow Skiing ( Cl
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(4) xFie ld Exper. Public Playground
11; 30-12:30 MTThF
(4) xField Exper. Recreation Center
10:20-11:20 MTWThF
( 5) Leaders hip
~USIC
PE for Exception Child
xMuslc Literature
9: 10-10:10
(3)
MWF
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Intern Community Recreation
:J&lt;Funda menials of Music I Cl
10: 20-11; 20
( 4)
MTThF
Directed Studies
·· X Band Lab Praclicum
11; 30-12:30
( 1)
TTh
HIS TOR y
xFuncl ianal Plano
11 : 30-12:30
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MWF
xModer n Civilization
"PHILO SOPHY AND RELIGION
xNon-Wes l history (Mid· Eastl
( 5)
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9: 10-10: 10
Problem 5 Sem inar
PHYSI
Individ ua l Studies
( 5)
8: ci().9; 00
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xGerier a l Physics II
EMATICS
MATH
PUBLI C ADMINISTRATION AND
xMath for Elementary Ed. II
GOVER NMENT
(4) xCalcu Ius I
MTWTh ·
8:00-9:00
xAmer ican Po litical Behavior
xColleg e Geometry
MTWTh
( 4) Special Topics
Contem porary Presidency
9: 10-10: 10
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PSYCH OLOGY
AL
LABORATORY
MED
IC
(I )
xFresh men Orientation Psychology 10:20-11:20 w
( I l TECHN OLOGY
11:30-12:30
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xFresh men Orientation Psychology
(4 ) xMedic al Techno logy Orientation
MTWTh
8:00-9:00
xGener al Psychology I Cl
(4) xMedic al Techno logy Seminar II
8: 00-9! 00
MTWTh
xGener a l Psychology
(4) xC linica I Practicum
11:30-12: 30 MTWTh
Educat ion Psychology
( 4) MUSIC
10:00 12:00 TTh
Abnorm al Psychology
xOrgan
SOCIA L SCIENCE
xPiano Lab Practicum
11:30-12: 30 MTF
(3) xChoru s Lab Praclicum
xPrinc lple$ of Geography
( 1-4) xVoice Lab Practicum
lndivid ual Studies
TBA
SPEEC H
( 5) . xCiass Piano Lab I
xFund. of Oral Comm unicallons ( Cl 10:20-11:20 MTWThF
Music for Elementary Teacher
(5)
11 ; 30-12: 30 MTWThF
"X Fund. of Oral Comm unicalions
(5) PSYCH OLOGY
9: 10-10: 10
xFund. of Oral Communications
MTWTh
( 5) xComp arative Theories
11 : 30-12: 30 MTWThF
xPrinc !pies of Discussion ( Cl
(3) xHuma n Growth &amp; Development
10: 20-11 : 20 MTTh
Public Address Civil War ·
Psycho logy lests &amp; Measure
SOCIAL SCIENCE
'
s of Man ( Cl
xSystem
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xlntrod ucllon to Anthropology
SOCIA L WORK
xField Observation
Social Casework
Numbe r of credit hours for each t:hurse shown above in parenthf!Ses. Asterisk (x)
lndlca1es courses offered throug • Rio Grande Community CoJiege. (C) after
Midi P racticum
·~ course name indicates class Is closed .
Group Sui&gt;ervi sion
SOCIO LOGY
Timeo f Registration : ~day , Januart 3, 9:00a.m. to noon ; 1:00 p.m. to 4:00
p.m.j it : 00to9: 00 p.m . In Comm u~lty Ha I on Rio Graride Campus .
xlntrod uclion to Sociology (C)
xMinor ily Groups
Fees: For courses mark with aSterisk (xl. multiply the number in parentheses
(credit hours) by S13 for residents ol Jackson, Gall Ia, Meigs and Vinton Counties.
Macro Sociology
For al 1other courses, mu ltiply credit hours by $52 .50. All fees are payable,at 1lme
Field E xperlence
of reg istratlon .
SPEEC H
Requlr efnents: Any resident of Jackson, Gallia , Meigs or Vinton Counties ~lth a
xFund. of Oral Communlcatlohs
high sc hoOt diploma or i1s equivalent mar, register for up to 11 cred_lt hours w!fhout
xLab i n Communications
apptyt ng for admission to the calle?e , T ere Is only a need to reg1ster January.J.
Full t lme students must a~pl y or admission by 'cbn tact i n~ the Office of
xClral Interpretation
Admlsslons and Records at . io Grande College-Community Co lege .
xSelect ed Topics ·
(Psychology, of Speech)
ande
College-Community
College
admits
students
of
any
race
,
color
and
Rio Gr
nation al or ethnic origin .
Contem porary Rhetoric
-Select ed Topics
For fu rther information call 614·1•5-5353.
THE AT ER
xLab Drama
~
xTheat er History M ad le Period
xStagecraft
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REGISTRATION INFORMATION

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7: 00-9: 00
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x lntro ductory Auditing
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C------------------------------

(4'
(51

COURSES OFFERED IN AREA COMMUNITIES

'

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Course

Jat kson

Chair Caning

Me Arthur

Chair Can ing

Mid dleport

Mel gs

v

Mines

Rio ·Grande

T

Hours
7:00-9:00

Location
pm

Library

(I )

VInton Co.

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6:30-8:30 pm

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6: 30-8:'30 om

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6:30-8:30 om

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Principles

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6:30·9:30 .

Understanding
Your Insurance

M

7:00-9:00

Meigs Jr . High J3l
Metgs Jr. High 10 1

Technical
Math it

Th

TBA

Administrative

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Business

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.Elements of
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T

Dried F lower
Arrang ing

T

1:30-9: oo om

Community Bldg. 11 1
Vin ton Co .

Community Bld9. 14)
( II

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Building 141

Rlo Grande
Campus (0 )

(3)
(1)

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(2)

Not e: Understanding Your Insurance and Dried Flower Arrangir')g are continuing
edu cation courses and carry no college credit . Both courses are open to the general
pub IIc.

(3)

·,

�C-2- 1Tbe Sunday. Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 26, 1976

~
-J1:

tHE CLOSER YOU LOOK,
THE BETTER WE LOOK

I

NOW OccoptnlQ p•ono ~ t u (l..-.uh
b i!SJIIHltrt. mt~r med•oto~ od

vcmcwd ' tudenh

C: ol l

MERRY

&lt;I'll·

]170

LIKE SANTA SAYS:

Pl:RSON s BODY S~op 20 Rotl• ood
remmd c u ~tom ers tilut De&lt;. Jl
·~ the lo•l day to tolo.e ad
va ntage of the pornt JObi all
ovtt m I co lor SI OO , 2 tone

Front End Special

poJMmtnt
N01f~, Ptoll s

JANUARY 31, 1977

Includes : Checking Ball Joints
&amp; Tie Rods.
ALL
WORK
DONE
BY
HOWARD WELL, FRONT END
SPECIALIST.
REG. 114.00 NOW $}095

..

Meat Mlo.t
( ~leoaonlon Meat Prouuing,
h'l&lt; ) Cuitorn ~ l oughten r1 g . cmd
procDnlng Reta il who le!lole
No oppolnmen t necessor'll Call
{61 4) 593-8655 , hours 9 00 t•ll
(r OO 1 Pomeroy Rood At he"s

~and
~~.:;

t'ound

Smith Nelson Motors

'

LQit~-(N Pomero'll area, 10 ~ ear
•~White Scotl!e dog answers
FroJt•e

femal e l o11 hound, ln• liols
Em or y Gordon
Che 1hire Oh•o It lound , co li P
D ~rooluns (61 4) 4&lt;4b-282b

S5 00 IIWARO for th e return ol
the red while and blue billf old
last from Sw1she r &amp; Lohse Phar
rhdty v n Dec 4 Need medicare
cord badly Please droJ3 off ot
the Dody Sentmel o fh c t~ d
TeUnd Iva Cremeans

from

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
1976 AMC HORNET . . .. ........ . }3895
Sp'trtabout, 6 cy l , autom ati c, power steeri ng. delu&gt;&lt;e
equ1pment. whitewal l hres, l uggage rack , dc1rk green
fin1 sh, less thq n 9. 000 m iles, showroorv cleilr"'

CO RP

Estate Wagon , local I owner car . whrte rad1a l t1res. air

1
1975 CHEVY El CAMINQ ......... 3995
Class1c:, JSO. V 8, automa t1 c, power st eer ing and
brak es, r all y w hee ls, rad 10, b la ck and ve r y at! rae t 1ve

1

1974 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO 3995
Locall owner car , green f m1 sh . green v m y l r oot , rad l:t l
v-w t1 res . a1r cond , V-8, wt th a~ tomat lc P steenng &amp;
urak es

DATSUN ....................... 11995

21 0 7 door , loca l car . 4 speed tr ans .• 44.200 mil es, good
f1r es. dark green f1msh . r f! al ec onomy .

HT ....·... S2995

Loc al 1 owner car , blk v1ny l roof. green interior,
w hite-wall tir es, a1r , au tomat ic , pow er stt:en ng &amp;
bra ke

1975 CHEV. 2 TON
292 Engine, 15,000 lb., 2 speed R ax le, lOa" cab to a)(le,
clean c ab, like new 825x 20 t ires.

'4500
1974

Chevrolet lf2 Ton

1
3495

Ch eyene, w h1t e and green flnt sh . c hr om e bu m pe r and
m o lding s, r ear step bumper , V-a automat ic, powe r
steeri ng an d brak es, r a di o, r ea l c lea n

1971 Chevrolet lh Ton·

11995

1 owner , good tires, c ustom cab, 8' F leets1 de.

New Chevy Van Conversions
New Chevy Mini Homes
Chevy Short Sporty Pickup
Chevy Sport Van
TERRAPIN ''The Swingin' Turtle"
/

Hurry In For A Good DEAL :
Greetings
To

·~

··

l w B'

v a.

p

au to

1976 Ford Pinto • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • •• • • • 12695
4 cyl , 4 speed AM F M st ereo

Save Now on a 1976 Pinto, Mustang, or Maverick.
•
See: Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp
or Darrel Dodrill
For a good dea I on a new or used vehicle

992-2196
Middleport
.: W
:.lt.il&lt;l&lt;l-!1011 ~'~'• ....... r... illllilllllollll iiiiii\OitlollllloiiiiiMB!IIr&lt;ol1101111011!&lt;0(!&lt;0(g;,(~s::&lt;B;tB~:;,J

ci51NS CURRENCY , token s old
p oc~e t wat ches a nd cha111S
s•l ver and gold We need 19M
and old er srlver ca ms Buy se ll
or !rode Co li Roger Wam51~y
CASH' II lor jUnk ca rs FryE- s
Truc k and Aut o 24 HOUR
WRECKER SERVI CEt Phone

74] 2081

WANT ED OLD upnght p•onos 111
any condthon W1 ll pay $10
..,.JECh F ~rst f loo r only Wn te gtv
~J,.~•rac tton s to W•ll en P•ano
- .~ . lok 188 Sardis Oh •o

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)

price for C olt two-d oor coupe, exdudtng
destinatio n cha rg es, taxes, o.nd title

'

SLIDE PH0JEC 10 R and screen
Ph on8 ,.q92 2272

DODGE INC.
Corner of Third &amp; Court
Galli
0.

-

Docige

,.. ...........
.............
,~

l't•t• for Sale

Cadillac
for you.
NOW IN STOCK

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) One woth

1-1977

whom you te closely assoc• ated
has h1s affai rs 1n a mess 'because
he lack s your talent for organization You could qu1ckly shape
th ings up

Sedan Deville
&amp;

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sopl. 22) Your

Gran
· d SIam Cheers Scrooge
----===----ccc-,
NORTH

25

• A

WEST

¥ A Q J 10 9 8 7
• A9 7
"'K 3 EAST

• J 98 7 4 3 2
., 65 2

Q4
"'J
t

• Q 10 6 ~
• 3
• J 10 ~ 3

"'Q 10 9 7

o1o

K

• K4

3 AND &lt;4 RM

fu r n1shed ond un
lwrm sh.d op tf. Phone 992

• K 862
o1o A 8 6 54 2

Pa~

l

2•
34

Pass
Pass
Pass

5 N T. Pass
7 N. T Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

only have twelve tricks What

SAQITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0oc.

+

3"'

3N T

4N. TPass 5 •
6 "'
Pass

•

See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete
Burris, Lloyd Mclaughlin or Marvin
Keebaugh.
\

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

•

"You'll Like Our Quality Way
Of Doing Business"
992 .5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until6:0~ Til S p.m. Sat,

21) 01 all the sun signs, you have
the least tendency to v1ew hie
pesstmistlcally Despite ~his, you
may feel sorry for yourself today
Oon't

will produce a thirteenth tnck
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22..Jon. 11)
for you anyway ."
So Scrooge took dummy's So me gos sip about a member of
group is U k~ ly to come to
ace of spades and ran off the your
you today You will be admtred
seven hearts tricks His five

North-South vulnerable
ww North Easl South
Pass

d~s appeared
My smgl eton kmg
of Spades faces your ace. We

·
an un h app_y expe~lence
."
Tiny Ttm satd cheertly.
'' Play out your cards . Maybe
the ghost of Chnstmas past

•

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Dism iss all tho ughts of material
wealth from your mind today
Look for the other nches l1fe has
to offer you - friends, mus1c a nd
books

happy e~pre~sion

Both Fully Equipped

'ftli~rut

because you ntp it in ~ he bud .

~

discards were three clubs and
two diamonds Meanwhile AOUA!IIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. tl)
F.ast wasn't enjoying Christ- Nothmg troub les you today. You
deal with life on realistic
mas at all He had to come can
terms Even though you know
down to five cards, also, and others back you . your first
was squeezed out of h1s choice Is to guard your Own nest.
protection m either clubs or
d~amonds Scrooge had his PISCES (Fob. 20-M•rch 20) You
confuse athens today. Your o bthirteenth tnck .
jectives appear fuzzy Later on,

\.!;11

'
•
•

•

ID'it

~ THATSCIWIBLEOWORD GAME
~~ •
by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

'

UniCiauble theM lour JumiMs,
one letter to each aquara, to fonn

fouronllnarywoola.

~~~~

I I .I J

-~ I I I·

RILIXjj

•

roo

,

'

Cciupe DeVilles

when they realize your intent,
ONE BEDRO OM Apt s at VILLAGE
Openmg lead - 7 •
you gain their wh o le~ hearted
MANOR rn M•ddlepor t for $10&lt;4
monthly plus elec or $130 1n 8y Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
A Mame ·reader wants to support
"Your Chevy Dealer"
eluding alec l OWER RATES lo r "
knoW' the origin of the ex·
992-2126
Pomeroy
SENIOR CITIZENS Conven 1en 1
God bless us each and
pression : "When m doubt,
to
shopping
on
Th
ird
and
M
dl
!Veryone,"
said
Tmy
Tim
I
Open Even~-11,.-..
Sts m M•ddte part Brand new ·an count seven heart tflcks lead trumps."
It origmaLed way back m
~
high quali ty opar1ments See 1lus SIX tricks for ~e aces and
1Q62 FORD VAN , 6 c~ l 3 speed·~ •..:.tfije mol'jo ger at Apt 28 or cal l tinrs in the other 'suitS In
Whist and is lhe worst bridge
hou se ve hicl e trtle
fully ~2 7721 An Equal Hous" 'Y Jonor of Christmas l'lllet you
Auto :ialco
Doc. 2t, 117t
cliche. In general a far better
carpe ted wt lh shog carpet
Opportun 1ty
ex
pression
would
be
"When
s
tdc
~
and
roof
covered
al
so
'
,lay
the
hand
partner
so
a
Socral
contacts
should prove es·
1969 Novo , ex tra &lt;Jharp , new
· TRAI LUI FOR rent , ad ults onl~ 1
ht
t
not in doubt, lead trumps "
pec;lally valuable for you this
Am Fm on.d to pe player .n
Ph one 992 3181
ery merry se~~n o rump o
pomt bu cket seot ~ 01r sh o c k ~
you have
questton corh ing year, particularly the In·
fr ont se para te tape playe r and
ro~ and yours ,
mags Phone 949-2480
.!~p eokon tn rear , buill 11 1 bed 2 BEDROOM !rodtJ r rea l mte
Old Sci ooge, stttmg South. for tho experts? Wnte "Ask lluentfat people you'll be rubb1ng
1969 CADillAC SeQ'on DcvtH o
and lcebo&gt;: Pme $1000 Ca ll
Pho•Ht 992J314 adult~ only.
teamed happily . How nice tt the Jacobys " care of thJS shoulders With
lour door whr!e !&gt;ld.-.wall ltnh
Rob~!
'
,
f
Jtuck
992
5847
or
was
to be able to spend a newspaper The Jacobys will
(Ate you a Capricorn? Bernice'
power steering powc1 b• ake ~
9'12 JfiJJ fat fur thet mlorrna
'llerry Chnstmas with the answer indiVIdual questtons Osol has wrlllen a apecltJf Astra~
po wl"r ~~ Of ) o m 8. lm rod •o
t1011
r- •r nore conlrol, E)l'c eiJcnl ro n
ontc lo URent
: ratchit family and how nice it stamped. self-addressed Graph Letter lor you. For your
copy 1end 50 cents and a long
o, l,on l ocal ow11e r Ph o ne
1973 CH~ VY truck )I; t ~ lm der
;.
•
1 ld b
t
ff
h
~ tCJn dord good tne s~ S21 00 LA:IttGl EN(LO~W truck or von to ~ w~u
e to op It 0 Wit a envelopes ere ·onclosod. Tho sell-addrtued, stamped
992 21113 Sl 444 44
Phone9fl~ 4745
~·ovc to G eo rgia al ter .... hrJStmas puddtn g grand mosr_ mterestmg quest1ons enveloP. to Astro-Graph, P 0 .
• ' CJ\rl , t,na~ Wdl pny co~lr Ynu ,Jam
•
, w11f be used m thiS column Box 489, Radio City Station. Now
ONt 11./biJ 7 doo• Cu t l o s~ m e ..
1971 VEGA $!000
, prr H' o• VI(' d11 v~ Pho11c West led a spade and as old and wtlf recetve copies ol York, NY 10019 Be sure to ask
{~ li o n!
~ on drt Hw
f'/1011 1?
949 2307.
'lf/1 357'J o• '.f&lt;l'J Wl ~
icrooge looked at dummy h1 s JACOBY MODERN )
for Capflcorn Volume 1 )
~92 )786

w

•

2-1977

can subord inate your Interes ts to
those of others today Lady Luck
will stay by your s•de Th mk of
yourself last

AT BRIDGE

WIN

Phone 992·3420

FURNISHED two bedroom opt
adu l ts onl~ No pats M td
dleport Phone ~2 - 387&lt;4

don' t h ave to rely o n anyone's
luck o ther than you r own today
Compa,mon s wouiCI be w1se tf
they put thtm chips on you

LIBRA (SIIlt. 2.'·0ct. 23) If you

PLEASURE HORSES and ' pames
a lso well buy horses and
pomes Phone (614 ) b98 3290

en iiule$ north of Pomeroy
•.:- Qt iOts w•th concrete po hos ,
51dew911ts runners and all
streetPorkmg Phone 992 -7&lt;479

all-new

mate may be uncertain about a
d ifficult decision today Let him
or her know you'r' -supporlive ,
n o matter wh at th e nutcome •s

t~l f 9112156

. { iTRVMob&gt;le Home Po&lt;k Rt

GEMIN I (May 21·Juno 20) You

There's someone who may try to
bu il d up you r ego today to
enhance their own end s They're
not malicious th ey're ju st !ookmg for an easy way out.

CARROLL NORRIS

IF YOU hove o serv •ce to a ft er
w ant to buy or se ll so me thmg
R"~ loolo.mg lor wo rk
or
~te~er
you H ge t re sult s
.fMU.or w1 lh o Sen t1n el Want Ad

Terra In

Thafs the

CANCER (Juno 21·July 22)

Yard&amp;le

RISING STA R KENNEL boarding
Indoor ond outdoo r C.room•ng
ell breed~ comple te san1tary
fac1l1t les Chesh.re Phone (6U J

in Luxury

anythtng th at sm acks of commer c tall sm w1t h fnends today
You can have fun w1th lhem , but
you 'll com e out on the short end
bustnesswtse

NOW BUYING Scrap Pomeroy
FIQme &amp; Aut o Recyclmg htgh
pnces po•d
au to bod1e s
moton s&lt;rcp 1ron me tals
batte r1es open B !ill 4 30 Mo11
doy thru Satur day Old l 3 Jus t
above lo•rgrounds , Pome roy
Oh10 Will al so p•ckup car s
Phone qq2 b337

_.

a new dimens1on

Don' t let hunches prevail over
common se nse today partiCul arly where money Is concern ed Follow the rules You
won t go wrong

TAURUS (Apoii20·Moy 20) Sk1rl

HIG HES T PRICES PAID lor O ld Fu r
n11ure 1 An t1qu es co llect•bl es ol
all typ es
We buy e n t ~re
household s or smgl e pieces rn
any condc!IOf\ App ro •sol and
Aucl• on ser.. •ce ova•l oble Ca ll
co ll ect
Athe, s
592 47 43
'i 92-4929 everungs

RuthRoem

In~roducin0

Bernrce Bede Oaol
For Sunday, Dec. 26, 1976

' 1976 man ufacturer's suggested retail

For Rent

POMEROY MOTOR CO

AstroGrapt:l

Colt.
The little Dodge that
comes with a lot
of standC:.rd features
and runs on leaded
reqular gas.

'

ONE fEMALE all wh1 te German
Shepherd puppy fu ll blooded.
B week, old Soe Rkho&lt;d
~kay , (II fton W Va Phone
(~)77ll - ~962 or773 5775
~ iij'"UPPI ES . shor t ha•r hell b•rd
dO'g 10 wee ks o ld N• ca l or 0

'

DAN THOMPSON.FORD

Pomeroy Fores t Pro
duct s T1:1 p pr 1ce for ston dmg
1t1W11mber Call Kent Hor1 by
1.146 ~570

•-~...

'
•

TIMlER

742 2331

"

Open Eventngs T1I6 .00
Except Thur s. and Sat
Closed Sunday

SOUTH 101

All."

s

. Wanicd to Uuy

367·0292

\

ton ,

r. ·• ~

chHd

"Season's

Ill

matur e md1v1 du
area
Regard es s
f?llrlence , wflte C. I Pat e
,, l'ti . T e~~:os Rehnery Corp
teto•l711 Fori Wor!h Te&gt;:os

1975 FORD TORINO 4 DR . .... . s2895

condlf iOnlng , V -8, a utom atic , power st eer ing find
br akes, r ad 1o, dark r ed fm1 sh , blk v 1n y l Interi or

1973 Ford Custom • • •• •• • •• • • • • • • • • • 12695

Roger Riebel
985-4100
Ray Riggs
located On St . Rt . 7
Chester, 0.
ome roy lo!!!!!!liillfilflllliioio-aioiiiioio---~-------"'
o f e•

CASH pa 1d f or all makes and
modeh of m obtle home.s
Phoneoreoca de614 .423 9 53 1

1975 CHEVELLE .. .... .... ... ... . .... s4295

Deluxe, 111 ton , L W B , V 8, aut o , P S

PLENTY ol MONEY plus cosh
bonum , '""9•~•n 10

Grn fmlsh , good t1res, V a, automat 1c, P steenng ,
rad 1o, fa ctor y a ir

Loc al car, clean v m y l 1 nt er~o r . green l 1n1sh, good t11r es ,
rad10, 351 V-8 automati c, P 5 and brake s

1973 Chevy Custom ••• • •• • •. •••• ••... 2695
1

o ff e r~

OlD l urRiture 1ce bo~~:es bra ss
beds wa ll telephone !:. and
pa t Is or complee house h old~
Wr tl e M 0 M1ll er Rt 4
Pomer oy Oh1o Co li 992 77t:IJ

1976 CHEVEUE. MALIBU CPE. s3395

7495

M etall tc blu e fmi sh, w hite v in y l top with blue
leather inteno r fu ll power . ra dia l tires, tilt whee l.
contro l AM FM stereo ta e 1 owner

V 6, t~~utomat 1c.

SOMEONE TO do housework
p01 Ittme Phone 91n ~36
TEX-'\S ~EFINERY

1

Lincoln Coupe

974 Ford Mustang II •• ••• • • • • • • • • •• • 12395

Help Wanted

CAR OR TRUCK

1973 1CAPRICE 4 DR.

1975

0 W T

SELECT YOUR NEXT

1974

A REAL BEAUTY

lOST

"Your Friendly De~ler"
500 E. Main
992·2174
Pomeroy. 0.

The Baby Suppliers
By John Moody and
George Frank
United_ Press lnternaUooal
Like any o\her business,
lhe baby market in lhe United
Stales depends on supply and
demand.
The demand is heavy. The
supply is short. There are few
healthy, white babies
available through licensed
adoption agencies.
The shortage Wll'l created
by widespread acceptance of
birth control and abortions,
plus changing attitudes
toward lhe "single parent."
Wtlh heallhy infants in
short
supply through
agencies, coupll!s Wishing to
adopt increasingly are
"buying" children from the
black market.
Lilian Sykes, supervisor of
adoption services at The
Children's Aid Society m New
York , said agencies .. are
mainly concerned now with
placing children who have

HAUL I

CARS

Call 991 -2349
~ or e 3 p m o or q92 2650
alter 3 p m Reword

.

HAUL I

USED

TtiERE w•ll bi' no gun shoo t Dec
2Stft br Jan 3 at tho Ra ci ne F•re
D•P! B•.u ldmg tn Bo shon

tO ~

Call Now For An Appointment

HAUL I

FROM
RIGGS

Oh

~·

market, like any other
business in U. S., depends
on $Upply and demand.

Customs, Rangers, Ranger X l T's and
Econoline Vans in a wide variety of
colors. Prices of trucks we have in stock
range from $4600 . and up . Start the New
Year out right with a new FORD
PICKUP.

S12S wilhOI.It body work Sto p
h\ oor phone 985 ·4 174 lor op

OFFER GOOD THROUGH

~ Baby

YES, WE HAVE 12 NEW TRUCKS IN
STOCK .:. FlOOs. Fl50s. F250s.

Sl., M•dctl•porl would l• kP to

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

C.J.,.-The Sl!"dBY Tunes-Sentinel. SwTday, Dec. 26, 1976

FORD HAULI HAULI HAULI

a

IANNAAB

01

..

II

I0

·'
;

..

'•
Now ..,..,. the circled lottoro )!&gt;
1o1m the ourprlae •n-. u lUll·
geated by the 1110ve conoon. ..

,,
''

d

'.
,.

0

•

Wlrlcfs largest

A
........

~

.

decision because

time is

runnmg out and the couple
has to know ."'
The woman was a school
teacher and had to know
wbelher to sign a contract for
the coming year. She felt she
could not teach and care for a
baby too.
Cathy complained to a
specialist on adoptions with
Sacramento County, and lhe
doctor was told to stop
making the calls.
But the family already had
hired an attorney to asstst
w1lh the adoption The lawyer
sent Cathy a letter to open
negotiation ~.

---

WANT ADS
I NFORMATION
DEADLINES
P M
D ay
Befor t

Business Services

Publ icat ion
correc
Can ce lla tions ,
•ons a ccepted f trs t day of
pub I lcl'l l• on

AEGULATIONS
lh(!

Pub le sher

reserv(!~

_hf' r •ght to e dit or r eje ct

dny ads
te, t •orHI I
w dl no! be
more !Iran
"' sertton

deem ed
ab
The pv b l1 $hcr
respo nSible tor
on e Incorrec t
'

POLY-F~

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Protec t

your

I

UPHOLS,!J_!Y .

investment

FABRit'
,
"11te nexl day he called
plus add to the value ot
For
sofa
.
cnJtr CUshions,
and said be had someooe m
your home. Trust those
mal1re$ses, padding. tdoaf
RATES
mind. I was almost ready 10
necessary fi X· II, room
for c1mper~. Variety of
F er Want Ad Service
addition and r emodeling
have !he b~by at this polnt, so
sites .
~ Cl' nt~ per word on&lt;'
job s to your fnendl y,
Velvets , nylon
pr i nts,
mser 110n
I went to Elmhurst General
A,.\ tntmu m Charge 1o 1 00
netghbor h oo d , qualified
her culons, vi nyl solids. enc.l
Hospital and because I said I
11 cen1 s pe r word !tHN
• lanc;;y prints . accessories.
builder .
didn't have no money and it 's • on sec ut tvc 1M Sert10ns
26 ccn •s p er wor d ~~ k
DIRECT FABRIC SALES
a city hospilB l, !hey didn 't r onsecut
AL TROMM CONST.
111e mserllons
328 Main Street
charge me anything.
15 Per Cent Discoun t on
Pt Pleasant
"
We
Care
t'
PNM
..
t
HU
pa1d
ads
and
ads
paid
"So I had the baby, walked w i thin 10 days
Ph. 671·3469
ta.m
.
..
s,
m
Free Est .
Work Guar .
out of the hospilBl wilh it,
9:30.S :OO Dally
henlntt "HUI
CARD OF THANK S
Rutland 12 9 l mo 741-2328
Tlll8:000 Friday•
. of10a 1 nw
&amp; OBITUAR Y
gave it to lhe lawyer and be
$2
00
f
or
SO
w
ord
took &lt;Iacross the street to Ibis min imum
couple waiting in a car."
E a ch additional wOrd 1
PROFESSIONAL
FREE ESTIM TES
Marcia regrets giving up ce nts BLIND ADS
Blown
PHOTOGRAPHY
that child so easily. "Tbe
Addi tio nal 25c Charg e
Insulation
Sertltes
per
Adver
t
ise
ment
la;vyer only gave me '$100
Aer ia l '
CARPET SHOP
OF FICE HOURS
Finlntm&amp; An1l1ble
after that, and even though I
Commercial
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m
Racine , Ohio
Blown mlo ~bh &amp;. .\!11U
didn 'I Jet him know how much Da ll y, 8 30 am to 1:1 no
Schools
STORM
Noon Sal urday
I wanted, I had expected
ASSORTED RUBBER
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
f'h one to day 992 21~6
Weddings
more than thaP'
IIPIACI.MINT
BACK
CARPETING
At the lime of the
WIN flOWS
KEN GROVER
NOTICE S
mterviews, Marcia thought
ALUMINUM
ATTN · II
'6.95
ALL HOUSEWIVE S
SIOING-SOfFITT
PHOTOGRAPHY
wa sn 't. The next day, the she was pregnant .
Square Yard Installed
A ll Y ard Sa les, R um mage.
GUTIERS
AWNINGS
" H 1 am," she said, "I'm
lawyer gave me $400. The
Porc h and Basement Porc h
David PJrsons 1 Own er
(114)985·4tSl
medical costs were over gonna try to sell it. But this and Baseme n t Sales , et(
Chester,
Ohio
LARRl,
..
~}~~DER
949 2Bt4
nwsl be pa•d •n ad\lan ce
10 17· 1 mo (Pdl
$2,000 so I had gotten about time, I'm gonna demand at
Ge t you rs •n ettr l y by
11
4-1
mo
.
Ph 991 39'.1 3 I· I0 I ""
$2,800 altogether Now , I leas! $70 a week for the time sto pp 1ng by our off ic e ,a t
lh
('
Da
l
ly
Senlin
el.
111
don't know bow much the l~m pregnant, and $1,000 after
Court !.&gt; t or wre1i n~ Box
people gave that lawyer for lhe baby's born. 1 know how 129 Pom er oy Oh•o 45169
7·1
h our
Dependable
EXPERIENCED
finding them a baby, but I much a bah)' IS wocth these w llh yo ur n~ rn t tl an c c
Furnac e SQ rvl cc.
days.
I
could
just
let
the
word
know damn welltt was more
Oil or Gns Burn er s
Radiator
out !hat I'm willing to sell a
than $400."
TR
A year later, Marcia was baby and I'd have people IJutsinl·ss Oppurtnnilie!5
Service
ANY PITCH
pregnant again: "The same beating my door down. After MO ~ Il ~ HO ME PARK FOR SALE BY
ANY SIZE
people got the second kid , bul all, the lawyer Is making
OWNER JACKSON O HI O 4!&gt;
Ohio
1t wa s handled by another more money than !hat out of
UNII S 41 MORE UNII ~ UNDER
this ''
CO N ~ I IWC TI ON
9 COM
Truss Rafter Co.
lawyer, " sa1d Marcia.
f' LEII O WAI ER, S EW~~ IN l OR
Marcia subsequently con·
"This time, the lawyer only
Located
in lang sville
I I MORE MOBILE HOME PARK
gave me $200. I was gonna firmed her pregnancy, but
Box 28· A
INCLUDES 19 MOBIL!: H OM~~ J
SMITH NELSON
.841•1165
complam, but he sa1d not to because of ber age (35 ), she
Af'AR IM EN l S I SEVI: N ROOM
RutlAnd, Oh io 4577~
Ph
(6141
74'1
-'140?
decided
not
nsk
giving
birth
FRAMl
HOME
All
REN1
ED
0
1
mention getting any money.
MOTORS, INC.
PICKENS HOWE.
W e Deli ver
riCE
ANU
DO UIHI: WIUI:
He said !hey could put me m and had an ahortwn .
I? 1'1 d mos
Portland , 0 .
Ph.
!ll·Zl74
l"omtrDJ
OW NERS RESIDENCE
WA SH
Marc1a says she doesn't
Jail 1f 1 men\toned gettmg
HOUSE
SHOP
S1ORA GI:
know how much lhe lawyers
money "
~ HED S AND SUPPLY 1 R A I LI:.~
IJusitw ss St·n irms
AP PROX IMATELY 13 A C IU ~
Asked by UPI about the made off the three babies she
NOTICE
f!RON
riNG
ON
EAS
1
MA
IN
She doesn't
UfiADFOfiD
Au(; 11t) ntt•l•
Co•n
payment, the attorney sa1d it did sell
FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR
AND CA RR ST Sl Al E R1 93 6
CAH
I'I:Nl
ER
!l
ommg
~~) , l111q
pl
alo
So1vtrc
Ph
o
no
949
?&lt;167
"I'm
YOUR HOM E In pots ft nd
was " merely a loan " Marc1a parti cular ly ca re
bLOCKS FROM DOWN I O WN 1
pou c ll n(;l Phone 99'1 n59
~
ot 949 2000 Rot hI I), Ohio C• lit
ha ngi ng bas k et s from 75c
lookmg out for myself. The
has no! paid 11 back.
tll OCKS FROM APPALA'(-.,N
l:l•od fo1d
fa ss 00 Also. l ay away
LlOZER work 011d we ldm g (011
HI G HWAY · ATOMI C I'L ANI
New York permits priva te rest of the world can go to
POINSETTIA S n o w tor
lad
Jo••• e~ flor ~o n ~
Rt
I
lLWOOD
BOWER
S
REPAI
R
(WH ICH IS BEING DOUB LW IN
CHRISTMAS . 60 00 10
adoptions outside license d hell ."
H
aC
II\ €' 0 11 Co t rne-1 Rood
Swuopu rs loos turs irOII!lo oil
choose fr om
PERF=ECT
SIZI: ) MUSI BE SE EN l 0 I:!E AI'
Including the children ?
agencies but prohibi ts
~ moll opp l • an co~ lown •r1 ow01
F OR GIFTS In r ed , wh l!. ~
PRE CI AlED MUST SE LL t:JUE 10
MOBILI:. 1-tonw ~ epa u
Elec
"Including them I don't
and p i nk SJ 00 to \6 00 '10
11l!IC 1 to Stolu Highway Gorogu
remuneration to the natural
POOR HEALTH AND Ol HER
plurnb1119 ond hea ling Phone
pe t o ft on 10 or mor e.
on Roulo 7 Phon e (bl4 ) 985
RI:.A SONS. IF
INl ERE SI ED
9q~ SE:ISU
mother beyond expenses such want to get too close to a baby
3~75
CA
LL
Af~EA
CO
O
l
:
_
(614
)
as doctor and hospital bills. emotionally, especially if I'm
~UC lfi O N IC I V
CUNlC Ne w
286 2832 FOR APPOINIMI:N1
Six yea rs ago, Marcta gonna sell it. You know when
I V ~h o p El ec 1ron•c I V rlu)l( REMO DELI NG Pl um b t;19 , hoo tmg
OR Sl OP BY OFFICE Al 455
oncl olllypr&gt;' o l gcn orol 1ep01 f
)c• v•cc t.oll, SS QS Co lo• B &amp; W
became pregnant agam. She a baby bolds his arms out to CARR Sl or 730 E MAIN ) 1
Work gu oeon tood '20 year s ox
Oll
tC'IHia
l~ Y !I ICIH~ ~ t eiP. O!&lt;o
etc
O HI O
went to anolher lawyer and you and feeds from you, you J A CKSON
Phone 991-5776
pf'r lflnce Pho n o ?92 1409
57'l
South
!hud
M•ddl••po1
l
Syl'"iiiCU\e, Ohlo
45640 OWNER _.WIL L CARRY 6U
can get attached to him."
offered to sell lhe baby "
Piron e- 992 C&gt;306 Cor r y 111 ond S~ W IN C. MACHINE Ropou \ , §Or·

The lawyer, who is now
retired, said ''II would be
stupid to give it to an agency,
that he knew some people
who would take 11 and would
also pay me some mooey for ·
it. 1could use the money , so I
said okay .
"I went to Pelham Bay
General Hospital and my
costs were paid, I think he
told the people who were
taking lhe baby how much it
was am) they paid it . I saw
the people who took the baby
lhe day I left the hospital.
He's an attorney for New
Yark City. They seemed ltke
nice people. The next week I
went into court and lhe judge
asked me if !here was any
objection to the adoption. I
~igned a thing saying there

"The letter said if I want or
need anythmg , they (the
couple) are willing Ill g1ve 11
to me ,n she said.
special problems, mental,
"The lawyer gave me the
lll!ysical - those children impression that the couple
who have been badly scarred did not want to meet .me.
by life. And !hey are not the They dtdn't want to know me.
children adoptive parents I wanted to meet them." ·
seek.
~,
Because of her reluctance,
~~w e know that most
the couple agreed to pay for
women who become pregnant· another attorney to represent
and decide to·have the child Calhy. Behevmg the lawyer
but not to raise it are taking would
represent
her
!heir healthy white babies to interests, Cathy went to hun
lhe black market, not to for personal and legal advice
agencies like ours."
Instead, Cathy said, she
They often decide, she said, was exposed t o more
"they may as well make a pressure, subjected to
proftt by selling it lhrough a ridicule and made to feel
lawyer. It's a sad thing , but even more of a pawn between
it's true. The one who loses lhe parties fighting for her
most is the child because the unborn child.
lawyers who deal in the
"My attorney was really
market don't care about the belligerent," she said. "He
welfare of the baby."
said all there ts to 11 is to go to
An estunated 5,000 couples the hospital and have t~e
each year secure a healthy
baby and sign the release
baby through private
form , and that's it."
aources , The suppliers
The attorney w•rned her
&amp;enerally are unwed teen· agaiiTSt changmg her mind,
'agers. Lawiers, doctors and
saying he had seen adoptiVe
clergymen are the usual go. parents ha ve " nervous
breakdow ns" when they
betweens.
Marcia and Cathy both expected a child but lost tt at
aupplied the baby market.
the last minute .
Marcia, 35, a former New
Calhy agam asked to see
York City hooker, no longer the prospective parents. Her
aells her body. She sells her attoriley smd lhe request was
babies. In the last 12 pars, " ridi c ulous and stupid,"
Ca thy recalled. "The
"lhe's sold lhree .
Calhy IS 19, a college attorney said the lhought was
student. A bright, beautiful a waste of tune and I could
blonde with blue eyes, Cathy always turn aroWTd and find
comes from a nuddle-dass the parents later if I knew
California backgroWld. Her what they looked like "
boyfriend is "goodlooking
To add to her confusiOn, a
and brilliant." They had a 24-year -old woman with
child out of wedlock
whom Cathy once worked
Everybody wanted Cathy's also wanted lhe baby. T)!e
baby. Twice she was offered woman sa id she was gettmg
"anything she wants 11
married to a 53-year-&lt;&gt;ld man
In one of several and feared he would not be •
Interviews, she despairmgly able to sire children.
complained that no one
A week before she entered
seemed to care about her.
the hospital, Cathy rece1ved a
"All they want is my third offer .
"I got a call from a lady I
baby," she said.
Durmg her fourth month of didn 't even know. She is the
pregnancy, Cathy went to a sister-in-law of anotber lady I
clinic near Sacramento, once worked w1th. She told
Calif. "I asked Ute doctor if me she knows this couple that
he would check me to see if I can't have their own children .
was going to have a baby for She satd they really want to
sure ,•• she said. ''He dtdn 't
adopt my baby.
"This couple had gone out
want anything to do with me.
He told me to go see a and hired an attorney to look
into the possibiltty of
gynecologist. 1'
adopting
my child, and !hey
But when she mentioned to
a nurse she nught put the hadn't even consulted me."
baby up for adoption, the
Dlthy was told tbe fam1ly
had money and would do
doctor's attitude changed.
"When lhe doctoc found out anytlung to get the ch1ld. The
I was debating adoption, he couple delivered a two-page
immediately wanted to see resume to Cathy's home .
Ten days later, Cathy
me m his office. The doctpr
wanted to talk. He explained entered Sutter Memonal
bow he had adopted two Hospital m Sacramento
children and now had lhese where she gave birth to a
''beautiful" gtrl The child
friends who wanted to
was
turned over to tbe first
adopt."
"The doctor told me he couple.
Cathy succumbed to the
wanted some background on
me so he could tell his pressure.
friends," she said. "Bull had
Marcia, a street-tough New
thiS feeting that I should know
SOI"ething about the couple Yorker, has sold three of her
wbo wanLed my child. II babies
"I sold them for the money,
shouldn't be their decision; it
and because I didn't want to
should be mine."
The physician would not take care of them," she said
m one of a series of
provide information about
the c-ouple, but rather interviews. "I'm probably
increased lhe pressure on not the kind of person people
Calhy to tum her baby over to lhink of when they think of a
mother ."
!hem.
"The first baby I decided to
"He began calling me. He
put up for adoption was 12
years ago. I'd been married
' and
divorjled once and I was
C. K. SNOWDEN
living wilh Bobby, a drug
'• 24 Stoll SlrHI
addict, and I was keeping him
G•tllpolls, Ohio
·supplied.
I'd had two other
Pflono -4290
children before that, by my
first husband, bu~ lhe courts
took one away and the other
one, my father 's business
partner's family took .
"This lime, I went lo a
"'"' ,.,.. Lille • good neighbor, lawyer
in Brooklyn. I told
Scale F11mt is there.
SWFa'llllilw~
him I was pregnant and I said
I wanted to put up th~ haby
ltDMt Otlict ~ MIIMI~
for
adoption."
P1161

car 10surer.

'

called me early m the
morning and he called me
late at night. He called at
least once a day for about two
or lhree weeks.
"The doctor kept telling
me, 'You got to come to a

Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

RACINE

Southeastern

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

I'
1:
R
L' E N 1
OV H&lt;! A 100 YEAR PERIOD ol ~

Pi:IKE NT

How reporters
LAFF- A- DAY

got their stor.y
NEW YORK (UPI) - Two
UP! reporters spent nearly
three months Investigating
the illicit trade in infant
babies .
John Moody of the New
York bureau and George
Frank of the Sacramento
bureau traveled through
several stales, interviewing
attorneys, social workers,
doctors, prosecutors, state
and federal officials,
biological mothers and
adoptive parents.
What they discovered was a
growing shortage of healthy
infants available for adoption
lhrough traditional agencies.
As a result, anxious couples
are turning to private
sources, mostly attorneys,
for infants td adopt,
sometimes paymg as much
as $15,000 for a baby .
They also discovered the

pnvate adoption business
nourishes with little or no
regulation because of lhe lack
of effective federal laws and
lhe diverstly of the adoption
laws of the 50 states
As a result of activities
uncovered by Moody and
' Frank, some officials are
demand i ng tighter
regulations over private'
adoptiOns
and stiller
penaltt1es for black mal'kel
operators.
Prior to becomin g a
member of the Sacramento
Staff, Frank worked for UP!
in Botse, Idaho , San
Francisco and Carson City,
Nev . He Is a journalism
graduate of the University of
Nevada.
Moody, 23, joined UP! in
New Yock In 197S after four
years
in
broadcast
journaliSm at Ithaca, N.Y. He
attended Cornell University.

adoptive par~rits
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A
brother team
arranged tbe adoption of a
dozen Califorma babies wilh
Idaho couples during the last
two years and charged
between $2,500 and $4,1100 for
each.
The brothers, Kenneth
W•ight, a Los Angeles obstet·
rician, and Roger Wright, an
Idaho Falls, Idaho, attorney,
said their usole intention "
W&lt;IS to find good homes for
un'wanted infants.

';If you're working on a

story and looking for
something In the way of black
market babies. you'll
probably have to go
elsewhere," Dr. Wright told
UPI. "You are welcome to
investigate all you wish."
The Idaho couples, all
members of !he Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints (Mormon ), paid
be tween $2,500 and $4,000 for
each child, said sources
familiar
with
!he
transactions.
How much an adoptioo

monP.y

~l
ll·i1::--~

EXC AVA rlN G
BA C KH'b ~ ~
DOZ ER, TRENCHER LOWBOY ,
DUMP 1HUCKS Bil l PUlliN S
PHO NE 9'n / 478, DAY OR
NiGH1
CHRI STMAS
Mo c h 111 e~

od1u s l e cl

~~~~~~~~~~~~

~

"Forget
your
,I
want you to lose 50 pounds."

SPE CIA L
',qwu1g
cl eaned od od ond
$5 '18

', ev•nn g

v•co, oil mak os 9q2 228_.. Th o
Fu b11 C Sh o p
Po m e 1o y
Au lhoriled Sin gm So los onU
Set &gt;J rce We shoe po n Scl11~o r ~
EXCA VA fiNG do t O! Ieod a• and
bockh ac work dump tru&lt;lo. s
ond lo boy ~ lo • h k o w1 ll lioul
fi ll dirt to sol i llm osto1w and
grovel Cnll Bob o • Roger Joh
f er ~
day phone 992 7089
nlght ph one 997 -35'/5 o r 997

5132

SEPTIC Sys t om~ mstnlfed by
l•censed
mstallo r
Shep01d
Controcto1s Pho11e 74? 2409

For Sal e

SffJl iC TA NK S ch1011 0d. Modc ! n
Son ilo hon, qq2 .395 4 01 qq'},

COAl lun es lona, a11d colc1um
chl on de on d colc 1um brmc lo1
du!&gt;l control ond special nH•i119
soli for far cners M om Sir ee l
Pamer oy Oh•o or phone 9C/2
3891

2426

NEW 3 bedroom houso . 2 bo tl1•
cdl olac. 1 oC! e M lddl epo1t .,
close to RutluuP Pho n\) 9~ '1
74 ll l

SMALL l a(m lor ~ o i £J 10•n dawn
ow11 01' flt~ anccd Mom ac Co un·
ty, W Va Phono (304 ) "17'1
COUN I RY lnr ml ond w ith seclud ..
od woods , walor ond good uv :
cl)ss .., Monr oe Co unly , W Vu . ..

~ : o~r (~~7~rj7;-~~~2~~04 )

772 :

Cotnm orCia l propecly appt o ~~: 17
acre !I lovel land loco tod ot ~
Tup pu r s Pl on1s on Oh•o RoutQ '
l Phone (614) 667 6304
..

3 bod• ocuns 1 b n lh~ largo llv
1119 room denit •g roo m ond k tt
che11 lullt' rm po ro d , Phono
992 312 9, or Q9? 5434
,

23 46

ro ~ rn hou se both ~
put tly ( Olpc led
two ou l bulldiiiQS, dug basu nront ""..
OIIO oih u d l!ll obiO
llll ntti O! nght s locatod near Llcuwi ll o ~:
Radw co d l or qu• ck ~o l o ,
$13 500 Phone 74'1-2760

sq ac ros 6

1971 HO NDA Cl-450
17 000 II
I...
f " I
rn lics SISSy bar crash bo rs
en ~ statt• or ..:t8 c
pull bock hondlo bar~ new t1re HOMI:SITES lor !tOio , I ocr o and
011d se al s Scram bler s•de
up M•ddl opor t rHlO I Rut !oml
p•pes Sb50 Co ii949 -24BO
Call 992 74tJI
POTA10ES end pvmpkm s C W
Pr oll •tt Portland Oh10 Phone
843-225.4

NO. T94 - Mlddl eporf . 2
stor y f ram e h om e with fou r
bedr oom s, full ba se m ent , 2
car
garage,
som e
carpeting . l arge living
room a nd dining room , new
roo l , lu ll y Insulated Pri ced

ISO

-. 200 lOT /01 SCII O Ill
Syrocuw Phone 992-37 14

28 ACRE FARM rea r Bn;nlbu•y
Schoo l Sno Woller Mil ler ot 326
Sucth Sll cel, Ppinl Pi oosonl ,
W Vo '25550

TEAFORD
Virgo! B Sr., Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 457'9

Phone 992-3325

at $25.000
We have severa l busi ness
1roperties for sale Ca ll f or
urther Inform ation

Merry Christmas &amp;
Happy New Year
104 W. Main
Pom eroy
992·2291
Aller Houn Call
992-7T33
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Mlnoger

RUTLAND - 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, 9 rooms In all.
Kit c hen ha s stove and
r efriger a tor , 1 car garage

with storage S35.000.
EASTERN S.D. - Modern
3 bedrooms,

2 cerami c

baths. ni ce kllchen, fu ll
basem en t

ond

2

ca r

garage $34,000
MIDDLEPORT

~

bedrooms, nice bath, eat-In
kitchen . gas furnace and

level lot Only $23,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS - l'h

acres

of level land and an
ol d 4 bedroom ho use on Rt.
7 with T.P. water , and 1ft

balh. Olly $12,000.
CORN£R LOT - 2 bafh
home, 4 bedrooms , nat. gas
heat
and
garage
In

Middleport Just $11,000.
BUSINESS - And 4

apartments (rented) and
all
equ tpment
recreation
cent er

Is

your houu

f

1

Will do roo t ing construc!ton,
plumbu1g and fr eo t1n9 No tab
loo Io rge 01 tao ~ rno ll Pho1 10

742

Real totatc lor Sale

3102oo (30&lt; )7713217

l XCAVATI NG do1 cr backhoe
ond d•td10 1 Ch w l o~ R Hot
l tcl d
Bock !too Sc • ~·cc
Rutl and. Oh• o Pho n t:o 7•12 200!1

Center M•ddlcport Oh1 o
GA S AND ELEC Applt ance ~c •
VI C(.' WO I k Pho11a 992 57'}6

provides auth on ties with
InformatiOn on bab ies COAL for so le, Open 6 dov' per
released from California
wee k 011d eventngs For furlher
hospitals to persons other
lnfa rmot1 an call (614) 367 ·7338
!han their natural parents. API'LES, FITZPATRICK OR CHARD,
"We• goofed," a hoapital
Sl ATE ROUl E 689
PHONE
WIL KESVILLE (61 ' 1661 3785
spokesman said, explaining
!hat the forms were atlBched FUllER 8rush Produ t ts l ot 5ale
Phor1e q92-341 0
to lhe babies' records and
acctdentally filed away CAM PER SbOO. Also horse
tra der $45{1 Phone (614 ) MB·
ratber than sent to the stale.
3290
Roger Wright, a ranking
official in lhe Idaho Falls PEAR CE SI MPSON C B base !ttOtton. Phone 247 2684 alter 5
stake of the Mormon Church,
p
m
said in a telephone interview
, CIDER, Romes
Gol
lhe adoptions cost somewhat APPLES
Dell etous, W1n e~ ap F•tzpa!rick
Jess than $3,000.
Orcha rd, Slate Route b89
He said the cost of the
Wilke sv il le
Phone
(6 1&lt;4 )
61,9 376S
should cost is a matter of interstate adoptioos included
dispute between public social hospital, physician and FENC E POSTS , $1 00 Also,
hr ewood thr ee l o ur th tor1
workers and attorneys who medical expenses and leg~l
p1 cku p loads deH11ered $25
handle adoptions.
fees.
wl lhm 25 m1l e~
Ph one
Lenore Campbell, director
"I am not interesLed in any
965·"97'
of lhe Los Angeles County publicity," he said.
CORN FED beof Phone 985 35~9
Department of Adoptions,
Where does Roger Wright
EAR cor1l 52 00 bu shel
said f!,500 should be find babies available for GOOD
Pho"e 7.&lt;12·2359.
sufficien( to cover the legal - adoption1
CHE VY hnpolo corwe r!ible
and medical costs of an
"I get contacted by one or I 964
283 cu m P.ng1ne, !l tandord
average ndoption.
more phystcians in CaUfornla
trorumess ton Al so 23 channel
Most of the babies placed in and they say they've got a
M1dlond C.B radio with om-fm ,
c b a ntenna Co11 992 6 133 or
Idaho homes were born in baby," he said.
see ol 873 So uth Second Ave ,
Hollywood Presbyterian
HIS brother. KeMeth, said
M iddle port Oh•o 45700
Medical Center a Los
"The reason we had so
Angeles hospital. '
many (unwanted babies) is FIREWOOD for so le Phone
742 2131
The adoptive parents because I saw a lot of patients
HEAVY
GAUGE I Beams and H
traveled from Idaho to Los who were submitting lo
Beams for so le, e1g h1 q x 10 ln -.
Angeles, where !hey took therapeutic abortions and
en . Ph one 992 -7034
custody of · the mfants at some of them were beyond SC HOOL SEW ING ma ~ hm~s
Hollywood 'Presbyterian.
the stage of ellglbtllly for
Slr1gers 1n wa lnu t consoletle,
Calllornia
Health therapeutic abortions .
$46 Phone 992-5146
Depariment officials began Therefore, I saw !hem when NEW AM FM Stereo radio . B tr ack
reviewing !he adoptions tloe average gyllf(:olOgiSt nod
tope cornbmol •an $129 ,?5 or
terms Phone 9q2 39b5
involvmg the Wrights when obslelrtclan wouldn't see
UP! discovered L~at some thelll "
hospital recocds had not been
"Fur sure, there is nothmg ::i&lt;:ni&lt;-c• ()[[ererl
· filed wllh the department, as illegal about1t," he said. "I Wd dv odc,l 1obs, roolmg, pair•
the law requires .
am not interested in anythin_g
t11•Y au tt er wOrk. Phone 9Q1
Ml'l
After several inquiries, tbe illegal. "
missing forms were found at
He said his fee for Will 00 babv snll!lg 11 1 my homft,
1-'hOIIP lf:I'J '}/,jfJ
the hospilBl. The paperwork dellvermg a baby Is $1,250.

Brothers help
docto r~awyer

~ o ~o

HOWE RY AND MARliN E•
co voll n g
~c p t1 c
sy s t e m ~
do1er • bor khoe dump l ' ullo.
lun as t o n ~:~
grove l
blocktop
pa ~ mg HI 143 Pho ne I (6 1&lt;1 I
b9U 73 31

too

small or

too large? Let u1 sell it and·
furn ish you with what you
nc ' d Cit II now Hi1PPY New

Y( u from all of

us here, lo
illl of you there Meigs
County ' s oldest full time
real estate offtce

HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
192-2259of

for
at

Racine.
PAGEVILLE - 7 room
house with 3 bedrooms, an&lt;J
bafh Fronf porch and
garden for only $7.500.
HARRISONVILLE - New
3 bedroom home . Brick
ve neer , 2 baths, furnace
heat. dining and
gara~~ · $32,500

2 cer

IF YOU WANT tT SOLD
AT A PRDHT , TRY THE
PROF tSSIDNALS. ,

�C-2- 1Tbe Sunday. Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 26, 1976

~
-J1:

tHE CLOSER YOU LOOK,
THE BETTER WE LOOK

I

NOW OccoptnlQ p•ono ~ t u (l..-.uh
b i!SJIIHltrt. mt~r med•oto~ od

vcmcwd ' tudenh

C: ol l

MERRY

&lt;I'll·

]170

LIKE SANTA SAYS:

Pl:RSON s BODY S~op 20 Rotl• ood
remmd c u ~tom ers tilut De&lt;. Jl
·~ the lo•l day to tolo.e ad
va ntage of the pornt JObi all
ovtt m I co lor SI OO , 2 tone

Front End Special

poJMmtnt
N01f~, Ptoll s

JANUARY 31, 1977

Includes : Checking Ball Joints
&amp; Tie Rods.
ALL
WORK
DONE
BY
HOWARD WELL, FRONT END
SPECIALIST.
REG. 114.00 NOW $}095

..

Meat Mlo.t
( ~leoaonlon Meat Prouuing,
h'l&lt; ) Cuitorn ~ l oughten r1 g . cmd
procDnlng Reta il who le!lole
No oppolnmen t necessor'll Call
{61 4) 593-8655 , hours 9 00 t•ll
(r OO 1 Pomeroy Rood At he"s

~and
~~.:;

t'ound

Smith Nelson Motors

'

LQit~-(N Pomero'll area, 10 ~ ear
•~White Scotl!e dog answers
FroJt•e

femal e l o11 hound, ln• liols
Em or y Gordon
Che 1hire Oh•o It lound , co li P
D ~rooluns (61 4) 4&lt;4b-282b

S5 00 IIWARO for th e return ol
the red while and blue billf old
last from Sw1she r &amp; Lohse Phar
rhdty v n Dec 4 Need medicare
cord badly Please droJ3 off ot
the Dody Sentmel o fh c t~ d
TeUnd Iva Cremeans

from

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
1976 AMC HORNET . . .. ........ . }3895
Sp'trtabout, 6 cy l , autom ati c, power steeri ng. delu&gt;&lt;e
equ1pment. whitewal l hres, l uggage rack , dc1rk green
fin1 sh, less thq n 9. 000 m iles, showroorv cleilr"'

CO RP

Estate Wagon , local I owner car . whrte rad1a l t1res. air

1
1975 CHEVY El CAMINQ ......... 3995
Class1c:, JSO. V 8, automa t1 c, power st eer ing and
brak es, r all y w hee ls, rad 10, b la ck and ve r y at! rae t 1ve

1

1974 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO 3995
Locall owner car , green f m1 sh . green v m y l r oot , rad l:t l
v-w t1 res . a1r cond , V-8, wt th a~ tomat lc P steenng &amp;
urak es

DATSUN ....................... 11995

21 0 7 door , loca l car . 4 speed tr ans .• 44.200 mil es, good
f1r es. dark green f1msh . r f! al ec onomy .

HT ....·... S2995

Loc al 1 owner car , blk v1ny l roof. green interior,
w hite-wall tir es, a1r , au tomat ic , pow er stt:en ng &amp;
bra ke

1975 CHEV. 2 TON
292 Engine, 15,000 lb., 2 speed R ax le, lOa" cab to a)(le,
clean c ab, like new 825x 20 t ires.

'4500
1974

Chevrolet lf2 Ton

1
3495

Ch eyene, w h1t e and green flnt sh . c hr om e bu m pe r and
m o lding s, r ear step bumper , V-a automat ic, powe r
steeri ng an d brak es, r a di o, r ea l c lea n

1971 Chevrolet lh Ton·

11995

1 owner , good tires, c ustom cab, 8' F leets1 de.

New Chevy Van Conversions
New Chevy Mini Homes
Chevy Short Sporty Pickup
Chevy Sport Van
TERRAPIN ''The Swingin' Turtle"
/

Hurry In For A Good DEAL :
Greetings
To

·~

··

l w B'

v a.

p

au to

1976 Ford Pinto • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • •• • • • 12695
4 cyl , 4 speed AM F M st ereo

Save Now on a 1976 Pinto, Mustang, or Maverick.
•
See: Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp
or Darrel Dodrill
For a good dea I on a new or used vehicle

992-2196
Middleport
.: W
:.lt.il&lt;l&lt;l-!1011 ~'~'• ....... r... illllilllllollll iiiiii\OitlollllloiiiiiMB!IIr&lt;ol1101111011!&lt;0(!&lt;0(g;,(~s::&lt;B;tB~:;,J

ci51NS CURRENCY , token s old
p oc~e t wat ches a nd cha111S
s•l ver and gold We need 19M
and old er srlver ca ms Buy se ll
or !rode Co li Roger Wam51~y
CASH' II lor jUnk ca rs FryE- s
Truc k and Aut o 24 HOUR
WRECKER SERVI CEt Phone

74] 2081

WANT ED OLD upnght p•onos 111
any condthon W1 ll pay $10
..,.JECh F ~rst f loo r only Wn te gtv
~J,.~•rac tton s to W•ll en P•ano
- .~ . lok 188 Sardis Oh •o

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)

price for C olt two-d oor coupe, exdudtng
destinatio n cha rg es, taxes, o.nd title

'

SLIDE PH0JEC 10 R and screen
Ph on8 ,.q92 2272

DODGE INC.
Corner of Third &amp; Court
Galli
0.

-

Docige

,.. ...........
.............
,~

l't•t• for Sale

Cadillac
for you.
NOW IN STOCK

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) One woth

1-1977

whom you te closely assoc• ated
has h1s affai rs 1n a mess 'because
he lack s your talent for organization You could qu1ckly shape
th ings up

Sedan Deville
&amp;

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sopl. 22) Your

Gran
· d SIam Cheers Scrooge
----===----ccc-,
NORTH

25

• A

WEST

¥ A Q J 10 9 8 7
• A9 7
"'K 3 EAST

• J 98 7 4 3 2
., 65 2

Q4
"'J
t

• Q 10 6 ~
• 3
• J 10 ~ 3

"'Q 10 9 7

o1o

K

• K4

3 AND &lt;4 RM

fu r n1shed ond un
lwrm sh.d op tf. Phone 992

• K 862
o1o A 8 6 54 2

Pa~

l

2•
34

Pass
Pass
Pass

5 N T. Pass
7 N. T Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

only have twelve tricks What

SAQITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0oc.

+

3"'

3N T

4N. TPass 5 •
6 "'
Pass

•

See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete
Burris, Lloyd Mclaughlin or Marvin
Keebaugh.
\

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

•

"You'll Like Our Quality Way
Of Doing Business"
992 .5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until6:0~ Til S p.m. Sat,

21) 01 all the sun signs, you have
the least tendency to v1ew hie
pesstmistlcally Despite ~his, you
may feel sorry for yourself today
Oon't

will produce a thirteenth tnck
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22..Jon. 11)
for you anyway ."
So Scrooge took dummy's So me gos sip about a member of
group is U k~ ly to come to
ace of spades and ran off the your
you today You will be admtred
seven hearts tricks His five

North-South vulnerable
ww North Easl South
Pass

d~s appeared
My smgl eton kmg
of Spades faces your ace. We

·
an un h app_y expe~lence
."
Tiny Ttm satd cheertly.
'' Play out your cards . Maybe
the ghost of Chnstmas past

•

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Dism iss all tho ughts of material
wealth from your mind today
Look for the other nches l1fe has
to offer you - friends, mus1c a nd
books

happy e~pre~sion

Both Fully Equipped

'ftli~rut

because you ntp it in ~ he bud .

~

discards were three clubs and
two diamonds Meanwhile AOUA!IIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. tl)
F.ast wasn't enjoying Christ- Nothmg troub les you today. You
deal with life on realistic
mas at all He had to come can
terms Even though you know
down to five cards, also, and others back you . your first
was squeezed out of h1s choice Is to guard your Own nest.
protection m either clubs or
d~amonds Scrooge had his PISCES (Fob. 20-M•rch 20) You
confuse athens today. Your o bthirteenth tnck .
jectives appear fuzzy Later on,

\.!;11

'
•
•

•

ID'it

~ THATSCIWIBLEOWORD GAME
~~ •
by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

'

UniCiauble theM lour JumiMs,
one letter to each aquara, to fonn

fouronllnarywoola.

~~~~

I I .I J

-~ I I I·

RILIXjj

•

roo

,

'

Cciupe DeVilles

when they realize your intent,
ONE BEDRO OM Apt s at VILLAGE
Openmg lead - 7 •
you gain their wh o le~ hearted
MANOR rn M•ddlepor t for $10&lt;4
monthly plus elec or $130 1n 8y Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
A Mame ·reader wants to support
"Your Chevy Dealer"
eluding alec l OWER RATES lo r "
knoW' the origin of the ex·
992-2126
Pomeroy
SENIOR CITIZENS Conven 1en 1
God bless us each and
pression : "When m doubt,
to
shopping
on
Th
ird
and
M
dl
!Veryone,"
said
Tmy
Tim
I
Open Even~-11,.-..
Sts m M•ddte part Brand new ·an count seven heart tflcks lead trumps."
It origmaLed way back m
~
high quali ty opar1ments See 1lus SIX tricks for ~e aces and
1Q62 FORD VAN , 6 c~ l 3 speed·~ •..:.tfije mol'jo ger at Apt 28 or cal l tinrs in the other 'suitS In
Whist and is lhe worst bridge
hou se ve hicl e trtle
fully ~2 7721 An Equal Hous" 'Y Jonor of Christmas l'lllet you
Auto :ialco
Doc. 2t, 117t
cliche. In general a far better
carpe ted wt lh shog carpet
Opportun 1ty
ex
pression
would
be
"When
s
tdc
~
and
roof
covered
al
so
'
,lay
the
hand
partner
so
a
Socral
contacts
should prove es·
1969 Novo , ex tra &lt;Jharp , new
· TRAI LUI FOR rent , ad ults onl~ 1
ht
t
not in doubt, lead trumps "
pec;lally valuable for you this
Am Fm on.d to pe player .n
Ph one 992 3181
ery merry se~~n o rump o
pomt bu cket seot ~ 01r sh o c k ~
you have
questton corh ing year, particularly the In·
fr ont se para te tape playe r and
ro~ and yours ,
mags Phone 949-2480
.!~p eokon tn rear , buill 11 1 bed 2 BEDROOM !rodtJ r rea l mte
Old Sci ooge, stttmg South. for tho experts? Wnte "Ask lluentfat people you'll be rubb1ng
1969 CADillAC SeQ'on DcvtH o
and lcebo&gt;: Pme $1000 Ca ll
Pho•Ht 992J314 adult~ only.
teamed happily . How nice tt the Jacobys " care of thJS shoulders With
lour door whr!e !&gt;ld.-.wall ltnh
Rob~!
'
,
f
Jtuck
992
5847
or
was
to be able to spend a newspaper The Jacobys will
(Ate you a Capricorn? Bernice'
power steering powc1 b• ake ~
9'12 JfiJJ fat fur thet mlorrna
'llerry Chnstmas with the answer indiVIdual questtons Osol has wrlllen a apecltJf Astra~
po wl"r ~~ Of ) o m 8. lm rod •o
t1011
r- •r nore conlrol, E)l'c eiJcnl ro n
ontc lo URent
: ratchit family and how nice it stamped. self-addressed Graph Letter lor you. For your
copy 1end 50 cents and a long
o, l,on l ocal ow11e r Ph o ne
1973 CH~ VY truck )I; t ~ lm der
;.
•
1 ld b
t
ff
h
~ tCJn dord good tne s~ S21 00 LA:IttGl EN(LO~W truck or von to ~ w~u
e to op It 0 Wit a envelopes ere ·onclosod. Tho sell-addrtued, stamped
992 21113 Sl 444 44
Phone9fl~ 4745
~·ovc to G eo rgia al ter .... hrJStmas puddtn g grand mosr_ mterestmg quest1ons enveloP. to Astro-Graph, P 0 .
• ' CJ\rl , t,na~ Wdl pny co~lr Ynu ,Jam
•
, w11f be used m thiS column Box 489, Radio City Station. Now
ONt 11./biJ 7 doo• Cu t l o s~ m e ..
1971 VEGA $!000
, prr H' o• VI(' d11 v~ Pho11c West led a spade and as old and wtlf recetve copies ol York, NY 10019 Be sure to ask
{~ li o n!
~ on drt Hw
f'/1011 1?
949 2307.
'lf/1 357'J o• '.f&lt;l'J Wl ~
icrooge looked at dummy h1 s JACOBY MODERN )
for Capflcorn Volume 1 )
~92 )786

w

•

2-1977

can subord inate your Interes ts to
those of others today Lady Luck
will stay by your s•de Th mk of
yourself last

AT BRIDGE

WIN

Phone 992·3420

FURNISHED two bedroom opt
adu l ts onl~ No pats M td
dleport Phone ~2 - 387&lt;4

don' t h ave to rely o n anyone's
luck o ther than you r own today
Compa,mon s wouiCI be w1se tf
they put thtm chips on you

LIBRA (SIIlt. 2.'·0ct. 23) If you

PLEASURE HORSES and ' pames
a lso well buy horses and
pomes Phone (614 ) b98 3290

en iiule$ north of Pomeroy
•.:- Qt iOts w•th concrete po hos ,
51dew911ts runners and all
streetPorkmg Phone 992 -7&lt;479

all-new

mate may be uncertain about a
d ifficult decision today Let him
or her know you'r' -supporlive ,
n o matter wh at th e nutcome •s

t~l f 9112156

. { iTRVMob&gt;le Home Po&lt;k Rt

GEMIN I (May 21·Juno 20) You

There's someone who may try to
bu il d up you r ego today to
enhance their own end s They're
not malicious th ey're ju st !ookmg for an easy way out.

CARROLL NORRIS

IF YOU hove o serv •ce to a ft er
w ant to buy or se ll so me thmg
R"~ loolo.mg lor wo rk
or
~te~er
you H ge t re sult s
.fMU.or w1 lh o Sen t1n el Want Ad

Terra In

Thafs the

CANCER (Juno 21·July 22)

Yard&amp;le

RISING STA R KENNEL boarding
Indoor ond outdoo r C.room•ng
ell breed~ comple te san1tary
fac1l1t les Chesh.re Phone (6U J

in Luxury

anythtng th at sm acks of commer c tall sm w1t h fnends today
You can have fun w1th lhem , but
you 'll com e out on the short end
bustnesswtse

NOW BUYING Scrap Pomeroy
FIQme &amp; Aut o Recyclmg htgh
pnces po•d
au to bod1e s
moton s&lt;rcp 1ron me tals
batte r1es open B !ill 4 30 Mo11
doy thru Satur day Old l 3 Jus t
above lo•rgrounds , Pome roy
Oh10 Will al so p•ckup car s
Phone qq2 b337

_.

a new dimens1on

Don' t let hunches prevail over
common se nse today partiCul arly where money Is concern ed Follow the rules You
won t go wrong

TAURUS (Apoii20·Moy 20) Sk1rl

HIG HES T PRICES PAID lor O ld Fu r
n11ure 1 An t1qu es co llect•bl es ol
all typ es
We buy e n t ~re
household s or smgl e pieces rn
any condc!IOf\ App ro •sol and
Aucl• on ser.. •ce ova•l oble Ca ll
co ll ect
Athe, s
592 47 43
'i 92-4929 everungs

RuthRoem

In~roducin0

Bernrce Bede Oaol
For Sunday, Dec. 26, 1976

' 1976 man ufacturer's suggested retail

For Rent

POMEROY MOTOR CO

AstroGrapt:l

Colt.
The little Dodge that
comes with a lot
of standC:.rd features
and runs on leaded
reqular gas.

'

ONE fEMALE all wh1 te German
Shepherd puppy fu ll blooded.
B week, old Soe Rkho&lt;d
~kay , (II fton W Va Phone
(~)77ll - ~962 or773 5775
~ iij'"UPPI ES . shor t ha•r hell b•rd
dO'g 10 wee ks o ld N• ca l or 0

'

DAN THOMPSON.FORD

Pomeroy Fores t Pro
duct s T1:1 p pr 1ce for ston dmg
1t1W11mber Call Kent Hor1 by
1.146 ~570

•-~...

'
•

TIMlER

742 2331

"

Open Eventngs T1I6 .00
Except Thur s. and Sat
Closed Sunday

SOUTH 101

All."

s

. Wanicd to Uuy

367·0292

\

ton ,

r. ·• ~

chHd

"Season's

Ill

matur e md1v1 du
area
Regard es s
f?llrlence , wflte C. I Pat e
,, l'ti . T e~~:os Rehnery Corp
teto•l711 Fori Wor!h Te&gt;:os

1975 FORD TORINO 4 DR . .... . s2895

condlf iOnlng , V -8, a utom atic , power st eer ing find
br akes, r ad 1o, dark r ed fm1 sh , blk v 1n y l Interi or

1973 Ford Custom • • •• •• • •• • • • • • • • • • 12695

Roger Riebel
985-4100
Ray Riggs
located On St . Rt . 7
Chester, 0.
ome roy lo!!!!!!liillfilflllliioio-aioiiiioio---~-------"'
o f e•

CASH pa 1d f or all makes and
modeh of m obtle home.s
Phoneoreoca de614 .423 9 53 1

1975 CHEVELLE .. .... .... ... ... . .... s4295

Deluxe, 111 ton , L W B , V 8, aut o , P S

PLENTY ol MONEY plus cosh
bonum , '""9•~•n 10

Grn fmlsh , good t1res, V a, automat 1c, P steenng ,
rad 1o, fa ctor y a ir

Loc al car, clean v m y l 1 nt er~o r . green l 1n1sh, good t11r es ,
rad10, 351 V-8 automati c, P 5 and brake s

1973 Chevy Custom ••• • •• • •. •••• ••... 2695
1

o ff e r~

OlD l urRiture 1ce bo~~:es bra ss
beds wa ll telephone !:. and
pa t Is or complee house h old~
Wr tl e M 0 M1ll er Rt 4
Pomer oy Oh1o Co li 992 77t:IJ

1976 CHEVEUE. MALIBU CPE. s3395

7495

M etall tc blu e fmi sh, w hite v in y l top with blue
leather inteno r fu ll power . ra dia l tires, tilt whee l.
contro l AM FM stereo ta e 1 owner

V 6, t~~utomat 1c.

SOMEONE TO do housework
p01 Ittme Phone 91n ~36
TEX-'\S ~EFINERY

1

Lincoln Coupe

974 Ford Mustang II •• ••• • • • • • • • • •• • 12395

Help Wanted

CAR OR TRUCK

1973 1CAPRICE 4 DR.

1975

0 W T

SELECT YOUR NEXT

1974

A REAL BEAUTY

lOST

"Your Friendly De~ler"
500 E. Main
992·2174
Pomeroy. 0.

The Baby Suppliers
By John Moody and
George Frank
United_ Press lnternaUooal
Like any o\her business,
lhe baby market in lhe United
Stales depends on supply and
demand.
The demand is heavy. The
supply is short. There are few
healthy, white babies
available through licensed
adoption agencies.
The shortage Wll'l created
by widespread acceptance of
birth control and abortions,
plus changing attitudes
toward lhe "single parent."
Wtlh heallhy infants in
short
supply through
agencies, coupll!s Wishing to
adopt increasingly are
"buying" children from the
black market.
Lilian Sykes, supervisor of
adoption services at The
Children's Aid Society m New
York , said agencies .. are
mainly concerned now with
placing children who have

HAUL I

CARS

Call 991 -2349
~ or e 3 p m o or q92 2650
alter 3 p m Reword

.

HAUL I

USED

TtiERE w•ll bi' no gun shoo t Dec
2Stft br Jan 3 at tho Ra ci ne F•re
D•P! B•.u ldmg tn Bo shon

tO ~

Call Now For An Appointment

HAUL I

FROM
RIGGS

Oh

~·

market, like any other
business in U. S., depends
on $Upply and demand.

Customs, Rangers, Ranger X l T's and
Econoline Vans in a wide variety of
colors. Prices of trucks we have in stock
range from $4600 . and up . Start the New
Year out right with a new FORD
PICKUP.

S12S wilhOI.It body work Sto p
h\ oor phone 985 ·4 174 lor op

OFFER GOOD THROUGH

~ Baby

YES, WE HAVE 12 NEW TRUCKS IN
STOCK .:. FlOOs. Fl50s. F250s.

Sl., M•dctl•porl would l• kP to

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

C.J.,.-The Sl!"dBY Tunes-Sentinel. SwTday, Dec. 26, 1976

FORD HAULI HAULI HAULI

a

IANNAAB

01

..

II

I0

·'
;

..

'•
Now ..,..,. the circled lottoro )!&gt;
1o1m the ourprlae •n-. u lUll·
geated by the 1110ve conoon. ..

,,
''

d

'.
,.

0

•

Wlrlcfs largest

A
........

~

.

decision because

time is

runnmg out and the couple
has to know ."'
The woman was a school
teacher and had to know
wbelher to sign a contract for
the coming year. She felt she
could not teach and care for a
baby too.
Cathy complained to a
specialist on adoptions with
Sacramento County, and lhe
doctor was told to stop
making the calls.
But the family already had
hired an attorney to asstst
w1lh the adoption The lawyer
sent Cathy a letter to open
negotiation ~.

---

WANT ADS
I NFORMATION
DEADLINES
P M
D ay
Befor t

Business Services

Publ icat ion
correc
Can ce lla tions ,
•ons a ccepted f trs t day of
pub I lcl'l l• on

AEGULATIONS
lh(!

Pub le sher

reserv(!~

_hf' r •ght to e dit or r eje ct

dny ads
te, t •orHI I
w dl no! be
more !Iran
"' sertton

deem ed
ab
The pv b l1 $hcr
respo nSible tor
on e Incorrec t
'

POLY-F~

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Protec t

your

I

UPHOLS,!J_!Y .

investment

FABRit'
,
"11te nexl day he called
plus add to the value ot
For
sofa
.
cnJtr CUshions,
and said be had someooe m
your home. Trust those
mal1re$ses, padding. tdoaf
RATES
mind. I was almost ready 10
necessary fi X· II, room
for c1mper~. Variety of
F er Want Ad Service
addition and r emodeling
have !he b~by at this polnt, so
sites .
~ Cl' nt~ per word on&lt;'
job s to your fnendl y,
Velvets , nylon
pr i nts,
mser 110n
I went to Elmhurst General
A,.\ tntmu m Charge 1o 1 00
netghbor h oo d , qualified
her culons, vi nyl solids. enc.l
Hospital and because I said I
11 cen1 s pe r word !tHN
• lanc;;y prints . accessories.
builder .
didn't have no money and it 's • on sec ut tvc 1M Sert10ns
26 ccn •s p er wor d ~~ k
DIRECT FABRIC SALES
a city hospilB l, !hey didn 't r onsecut
AL TROMM CONST.
111e mserllons
328 Main Street
charge me anything.
15 Per Cent Discoun t on
Pt Pleasant
"
We
Care
t'
PNM
..
t
HU
pa1d
ads
and
ads
paid
"So I had the baby, walked w i thin 10 days
Ph. 671·3469
ta.m
.
..
s,
m
Free Est .
Work Guar .
out of the hospilBl wilh it,
9:30.S :OO Dally
henlntt "HUI
CARD OF THANK S
Rutland 12 9 l mo 741-2328
Tlll8:000 Friday•
. of10a 1 nw
&amp; OBITUAR Y
gave it to lhe lawyer and be
$2
00
f
or
SO
w
ord
took &lt;Iacross the street to Ibis min imum
couple waiting in a car."
E a ch additional wOrd 1
PROFESSIONAL
FREE ESTIM TES
Marcia regrets giving up ce nts BLIND ADS
Blown
PHOTOGRAPHY
that child so easily. "Tbe
Addi tio nal 25c Charg e
Insulation
Sertltes
per
Adver
t
ise
ment
la;vyer only gave me '$100
Aer ia l '
CARPET SHOP
OF FICE HOURS
Finlntm&amp; An1l1ble
after that, and even though I
Commercial
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m
Racine , Ohio
Blown mlo ~bh &amp;. .\!11U
didn 'I Jet him know how much Da ll y, 8 30 am to 1:1 no
Schools
STORM
Noon Sal urday
I wanted, I had expected
ASSORTED RUBBER
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
f'h one to day 992 21~6
Weddings
more than thaP'
IIPIACI.MINT
BACK
CARPETING
At the lime of the
WIN flOWS
KEN GROVER
NOTICE S
mterviews, Marcia thought
ALUMINUM
ATTN · II
'6.95
ALL HOUSEWIVE S
SIOING-SOfFITT
PHOTOGRAPHY
wa sn 't. The next day, the she was pregnant .
Square Yard Installed
A ll Y ard Sa les, R um mage.
GUTIERS
AWNINGS
" H 1 am," she said, "I'm
lawyer gave me $400. The
Porc h and Basement Porc h
David PJrsons 1 Own er
(114)985·4tSl
medical costs were over gonna try to sell it. But this and Baseme n t Sales , et(
Chester,
Ohio
LARRl,
..
~}~~DER
949 2Bt4
nwsl be pa•d •n ad\lan ce
10 17· 1 mo (Pdl
$2,000 so I had gotten about time, I'm gonna demand at
Ge t you rs •n ettr l y by
11
4-1
mo
.
Ph 991 39'.1 3 I· I0 I ""
$2,800 altogether Now , I leas! $70 a week for the time sto pp 1ng by our off ic e ,a t
lh
('
Da
l
ly
Senlin
el.
111
don't know bow much the l~m pregnant, and $1,000 after
Court !.&gt; t or wre1i n~ Box
people gave that lawyer for lhe baby's born. 1 know how 129 Pom er oy Oh•o 45169
7·1
h our
Dependable
EXPERIENCED
finding them a baby, but I much a bah)' IS wocth these w llh yo ur n~ rn t tl an c c
Furnac e SQ rvl cc.
days.
I
could
just
let
the
word
know damn welltt was more
Oil or Gns Burn er s
Radiator
out !hat I'm willing to sell a
than $400."
TR
A year later, Marcia was baby and I'd have people IJutsinl·ss Oppurtnnilie!5
Service
ANY PITCH
pregnant again: "The same beating my door down. After MO ~ Il ~ HO ME PARK FOR SALE BY
ANY SIZE
people got the second kid , bul all, the lawyer Is making
OWNER JACKSON O HI O 4!&gt;
Ohio
1t wa s handled by another more money than !hat out of
UNII S 41 MORE UNII ~ UNDER
this ''
CO N ~ I IWC TI ON
9 COM
Truss Rafter Co.
lawyer, " sa1d Marcia.
f' LEII O WAI ER, S EW~~ IN l OR
Marcia subsequently con·
"This time, the lawyer only
Located
in lang sville
I I MORE MOBILE HOME PARK
gave me $200. I was gonna firmed her pregnancy, but
Box 28· A
INCLUDES 19 MOBIL!: H OM~~ J
SMITH NELSON
.841•1165
complam, but he sa1d not to because of ber age (35 ), she
Af'AR IM EN l S I SEVI: N ROOM
RutlAnd, Oh io 4577~
Ph
(6141
74'1
-'140?
decided
not
nsk
giving
birth
FRAMl
HOME
All
REN1
ED
0
1
mention getting any money.
MOTORS, INC.
PICKENS HOWE.
W e Deli ver
riCE
ANU
DO UIHI: WIUI:
He said !hey could put me m and had an ahortwn .
I? 1'1 d mos
Portland , 0 .
Ph.
!ll·Zl74
l"omtrDJ
OW NERS RESIDENCE
WA SH
Marc1a says she doesn't
Jail 1f 1 men\toned gettmg
HOUSE
SHOP
S1ORA GI:
know how much lhe lawyers
money "
~ HED S AND SUPPLY 1 R A I LI:.~
IJusitw ss St·n irms
AP PROX IMATELY 13 A C IU ~
Asked by UPI about the made off the three babies she
NOTICE
f!RON
riNG
ON
EAS
1
MA
IN
She doesn't
UfiADFOfiD
Au(; 11t) ntt•l•
Co•n
payment, the attorney sa1d it did sell
FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR
AND CA RR ST Sl Al E R1 93 6
CAH
I'I:Nl
ER
!l
ommg
~~) , l111q
pl
alo
So1vtrc
Ph
o
no
949
?&lt;167
"I'm
YOUR HOM E In pots ft nd
was " merely a loan " Marc1a parti cular ly ca re
bLOCKS FROM DOWN I O WN 1
pou c ll n(;l Phone 99'1 n59
~
ot 949 2000 Rot hI I), Ohio C• lit
ha ngi ng bas k et s from 75c
lookmg out for myself. The
has no! paid 11 back.
tll OCKS FROM APPALA'(-.,N
l:l•od fo1d
fa ss 00 Also. l ay away
LlOZER work 011d we ldm g (011
HI G HWAY · ATOMI C I'L ANI
New York permits priva te rest of the world can go to
POINSETTIA S n o w tor
lad
Jo••• e~ flor ~o n ~
Rt
I
lLWOOD
BOWER
S
REPAI
R
(WH ICH IS BEING DOUB LW IN
CHRISTMAS . 60 00 10
adoptions outside license d hell ."
H
aC
II\ €' 0 11 Co t rne-1 Rood
Swuopu rs loos turs irOII!lo oil
choose fr om
PERF=ECT
SIZI: ) MUSI BE SE EN l 0 I:!E AI'
Including the children ?
agencies but prohibi ts
~ moll opp l • an co~ lown •r1 ow01
F OR GIFTS In r ed , wh l!. ~
PRE CI AlED MUST SE LL t:JUE 10
MOBILI:. 1-tonw ~ epa u
Elec
"Including them I don't
and p i nk SJ 00 to \6 00 '10
11l!IC 1 to Stolu Highway Gorogu
remuneration to the natural
POOR HEALTH AND Ol HER
plurnb1119 ond hea ling Phone
pe t o ft on 10 or mor e.
on Roulo 7 Phon e (bl4 ) 985
RI:.A SONS. IF
INl ERE SI ED
9q~ SE:ISU
mother beyond expenses such want to get too close to a baby
3~75
CA
LL
Af~EA
CO
O
l
:
_
(614
)
as doctor and hospital bills. emotionally, especially if I'm
~UC lfi O N IC I V
CUNlC Ne w
286 2832 FOR APPOINIMI:N1
Six yea rs ago, Marcta gonna sell it. You know when
I V ~h o p El ec 1ron•c I V rlu)l( REMO DELI NG Pl um b t;19 , hoo tmg
OR Sl OP BY OFFICE Al 455
oncl olllypr&gt;' o l gcn orol 1ep01 f
)c• v•cc t.oll, SS QS Co lo• B &amp; W
became pregnant agam. She a baby bolds his arms out to CARR Sl or 730 E MAIN ) 1
Work gu oeon tood '20 year s ox
Oll
tC'IHia
l~ Y !I ICIH~ ~ t eiP. O!&lt;o
etc
O HI O
went to anolher lawyer and you and feeds from you, you J A CKSON
Phone 991-5776
pf'r lflnce Pho n o ?92 1409
57'l
South
!hud
M•ddl••po1
l
Syl'"iiiCU\e, Ohlo
45640 OWNER _.WIL L CARRY 6U
can get attached to him."
offered to sell lhe baby "
Piron e- 992 C&gt;306 Cor r y 111 ond S~ W IN C. MACHINE Ropou \ , §Or·

The lawyer, who is now
retired, said ''II would be
stupid to give it to an agency,
that he knew some people
who would take 11 and would
also pay me some mooey for ·
it. 1could use the money , so I
said okay .
"I went to Pelham Bay
General Hospital and my
costs were paid, I think he
told the people who were
taking lhe baby how much it
was am) they paid it . I saw
the people who took the baby
lhe day I left the hospital.
He's an attorney for New
Yark City. They seemed ltke
nice people. The next week I
went into court and lhe judge
asked me if !here was any
objection to the adoption. I
~igned a thing saying there

"The letter said if I want or
need anythmg , they (the
couple) are willing Ill g1ve 11
to me ,n she said.
special problems, mental,
"The lawyer gave me the
lll!ysical - those children impression that the couple
who have been badly scarred did not want to meet .me.
by life. And !hey are not the They dtdn't want to know me.
children adoptive parents I wanted to meet them." ·
seek.
~,
Because of her reluctance,
~~w e know that most
the couple agreed to pay for
women who become pregnant· another attorney to represent
and decide to·have the child Calhy. Behevmg the lawyer
but not to raise it are taking would
represent
her
!heir healthy white babies to interests, Cathy went to hun
lhe black market, not to for personal and legal advice
agencies like ours."
Instead, Cathy said, she
They often decide, she said, was exposed t o more
"they may as well make a pressure, subjected to
proftt by selling it lhrough a ridicule and made to feel
lawyer. It's a sad thing , but even more of a pawn between
it's true. The one who loses lhe parties fighting for her
most is the child because the unborn child.
lawyers who deal in the
"My attorney was really
market don't care about the belligerent," she said. "He
welfare of the baby."
said all there ts to 11 is to go to
An estunated 5,000 couples the hospital and have t~e
each year secure a healthy
baby and sign the release
baby through private
form , and that's it."
aources , The suppliers
The attorney w•rned her
&amp;enerally are unwed teen· agaiiTSt changmg her mind,
'agers. Lawiers, doctors and
saying he had seen adoptiVe
clergymen are the usual go. parents ha ve " nervous
breakdow ns" when they
betweens.
Marcia and Cathy both expected a child but lost tt at
aupplied the baby market.
the last minute .
Marcia, 35, a former New
Calhy agam asked to see
York City hooker, no longer the prospective parents. Her
aells her body. She sells her attoriley smd lhe request was
babies. In the last 12 pars, " ridi c ulous and stupid,"
Ca thy recalled. "The
"lhe's sold lhree .
Calhy IS 19, a college attorney said the lhought was
student. A bright, beautiful a waste of tune and I could
blonde with blue eyes, Cathy always turn aroWTd and find
comes from a nuddle-dass the parents later if I knew
California backgroWld. Her what they looked like "
boyfriend is "goodlooking
To add to her confusiOn, a
and brilliant." They had a 24-year -old woman with
child out of wedlock
whom Cathy once worked
Everybody wanted Cathy's also wanted lhe baby. T)!e
baby. Twice she was offered woman sa id she was gettmg
"anything she wants 11
married to a 53-year-&lt;&gt;ld man
In one of several and feared he would not be •
Interviews, she despairmgly able to sire children.
complained that no one
A week before she entered
seemed to care about her.
the hospital, Cathy rece1ved a
"All they want is my third offer .
"I got a call from a lady I
baby," she said.
Durmg her fourth month of didn 't even know. She is the
pregnancy, Cathy went to a sister-in-law of anotber lady I
clinic near Sacramento, once worked w1th. She told
Calif. "I asked Ute doctor if me she knows this couple that
he would check me to see if I can't have their own children .
was going to have a baby for She satd they really want to
sure ,•• she said. ''He dtdn 't
adopt my baby.
"This couple had gone out
want anything to do with me.
He told me to go see a and hired an attorney to look
into the possibiltty of
gynecologist. 1'
adopting
my child, and !hey
But when she mentioned to
a nurse she nught put the hadn't even consulted me."
baby up for adoption, the
Dlthy was told tbe fam1ly
had money and would do
doctor's attitude changed.
"When lhe doctoc found out anytlung to get the ch1ld. The
I was debating adoption, he couple delivered a two-page
immediately wanted to see resume to Cathy's home .
Ten days later, Cathy
me m his office. The doctpr
wanted to talk. He explained entered Sutter Memonal
bow he had adopted two Hospital m Sacramento
children and now had lhese where she gave birth to a
''beautiful" gtrl The child
friends who wanted to
was
turned over to tbe first
adopt."
"The doctor told me he couple.
Cathy succumbed to the
wanted some background on
me so he could tell his pressure.
friends," she said. "Bull had
Marcia, a street-tough New
thiS feeting that I should know
SOI"ething about the couple Yorker, has sold three of her
wbo wanLed my child. II babies
"I sold them for the money,
shouldn't be their decision; it
and because I didn't want to
should be mine."
The physician would not take care of them," she said
m one of a series of
provide information about
the c-ouple, but rather interviews. "I'm probably
increased lhe pressure on not the kind of person people
Calhy to tum her baby over to lhink of when they think of a
mother ."
!hem.
"The first baby I decided to
"He began calling me. He
put up for adoption was 12
years ago. I'd been married
' and
divorjled once and I was
C. K. SNOWDEN
living wilh Bobby, a drug
'• 24 Stoll SlrHI
addict, and I was keeping him
G•tllpolls, Ohio
·supplied.
I'd had two other
Pflono -4290
children before that, by my
first husband, bu~ lhe courts
took one away and the other
one, my father 's business
partner's family took .
"This lime, I went lo a
"'"' ,.,.. Lille • good neighbor, lawyer
in Brooklyn. I told
Scale F11mt is there.
SWFa'llllilw~
him I was pregnant and I said
I wanted to put up th~ haby
ltDMt Otlict ~ MIIMI~
for
adoption."
P1161

car 10surer.

'

called me early m the
morning and he called me
late at night. He called at
least once a day for about two
or lhree weeks.
"The doctor kept telling
me, 'You got to come to a

Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

RACINE

Southeastern

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

I'
1:
R
L' E N 1
OV H&lt;! A 100 YEAR PERIOD ol ~

Pi:IKE NT

How reporters
LAFF- A- DAY

got their stor.y
NEW YORK (UPI) - Two
UP! reporters spent nearly
three months Investigating
the illicit trade in infant
babies .
John Moody of the New
York bureau and George
Frank of the Sacramento
bureau traveled through
several stales, interviewing
attorneys, social workers,
doctors, prosecutors, state
and federal officials,
biological mothers and
adoptive parents.
What they discovered was a
growing shortage of healthy
infants available for adoption
lhrough traditional agencies.
As a result, anxious couples
are turning to private
sources, mostly attorneys,
for infants td adopt,
sometimes paymg as much
as $15,000 for a baby .
They also discovered the

pnvate adoption business
nourishes with little or no
regulation because of lhe lack
of effective federal laws and
lhe diverstly of the adoption
laws of the 50 states
As a result of activities
uncovered by Moody and
' Frank, some officials are
demand i ng tighter
regulations over private'
adoptiOns
and stiller
penaltt1es for black mal'kel
operators.
Prior to becomin g a
member of the Sacramento
Staff, Frank worked for UP!
in Botse, Idaho , San
Francisco and Carson City,
Nev . He Is a journalism
graduate of the University of
Nevada.
Moody, 23, joined UP! in
New Yock In 197S after four
years
in
broadcast
journaliSm at Ithaca, N.Y. He
attended Cornell University.

adoptive par~rits
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A
brother team
arranged tbe adoption of a
dozen Califorma babies wilh
Idaho couples during the last
two years and charged
between $2,500 and $4,1100 for
each.
The brothers, Kenneth
W•ight, a Los Angeles obstet·
rician, and Roger Wright, an
Idaho Falls, Idaho, attorney,
said their usole intention "
W&lt;IS to find good homes for
un'wanted infants.

';If you're working on a

story and looking for
something In the way of black
market babies. you'll
probably have to go
elsewhere," Dr. Wright told
UPI. "You are welcome to
investigate all you wish."
The Idaho couples, all
members of !he Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints (Mormon ), paid
be tween $2,500 and $4,000 for
each child, said sources
familiar
with
!he
transactions.
How much an adoptioo

monP.y

~l
ll·i1::--~

EXC AVA rlN G
BA C KH'b ~ ~
DOZ ER, TRENCHER LOWBOY ,
DUMP 1HUCKS Bil l PUlliN S
PHO NE 9'n / 478, DAY OR
NiGH1
CHRI STMAS
Mo c h 111 e~

od1u s l e cl

~~~~~~~~~~~~

~

"Forget
your
,I
want you to lose 50 pounds."

SPE CIA L
',qwu1g
cl eaned od od ond
$5 '18

', ev•nn g

v•co, oil mak os 9q2 228_.. Th o
Fu b11 C Sh o p
Po m e 1o y
Au lhoriled Sin gm So los onU
Set &gt;J rce We shoe po n Scl11~o r ~
EXCA VA fiNG do t O! Ieod a• and
bockh ac work dump tru&lt;lo. s
ond lo boy ~ lo • h k o w1 ll lioul
fi ll dirt to sol i llm osto1w and
grovel Cnll Bob o • Roger Joh
f er ~
day phone 992 7089
nlght ph one 997 -35'/5 o r 997

5132

SEPTIC Sys t om~ mstnlfed by
l•censed
mstallo r
Shep01d
Controcto1s Pho11e 74? 2409

For Sal e

SffJl iC TA NK S ch1011 0d. Modc ! n
Son ilo hon, qq2 .395 4 01 qq'},

COAl lun es lona, a11d colc1um
chl on de on d colc 1um brmc lo1
du!&gt;l control ond special nH•i119
soli for far cners M om Sir ee l
Pamer oy Oh•o or phone 9C/2
3891

2426

NEW 3 bedroom houso . 2 bo tl1•
cdl olac. 1 oC! e M lddl epo1t .,
close to RutluuP Pho n\) 9~ '1
74 ll l

SMALL l a(m lor ~ o i £J 10•n dawn
ow11 01' flt~ anccd Mom ac Co un·
ty, W Va Phono (304 ) "17'1
COUN I RY lnr ml ond w ith seclud ..
od woods , walor ond good uv :
cl)ss .., Monr oe Co unly , W Vu . ..

~ : o~r (~~7~rj7;-~~~2~~04 )

772 :

Cotnm orCia l propecly appt o ~~: 17
acre !I lovel land loco tod ot ~
Tup pu r s Pl on1s on Oh•o RoutQ '
l Phone (614) 667 6304
..

3 bod• ocuns 1 b n lh~ largo llv
1119 room denit •g roo m ond k tt
che11 lullt' rm po ro d , Phono
992 312 9, or Q9? 5434
,

23 46

ro ~ rn hou se both ~
put tly ( Olpc led
two ou l bulldiiiQS, dug basu nront ""..
OIIO oih u d l!ll obiO
llll ntti O! nght s locatod near Llcuwi ll o ~:
Radw co d l or qu• ck ~o l o ,
$13 500 Phone 74'1-2760

sq ac ros 6

1971 HO NDA Cl-450
17 000 II
I...
f " I
rn lics SISSy bar crash bo rs
en ~ statt• or ..:t8 c
pull bock hondlo bar~ new t1re HOMI:SITES lor !tOio , I ocr o and
011d se al s Scram bler s•de
up M•ddl opor t rHlO I Rut !oml
p•pes Sb50 Co ii949 -24BO
Call 992 74tJI
POTA10ES end pvmpkm s C W
Pr oll •tt Portland Oh10 Phone
843-225.4

NO. T94 - Mlddl eporf . 2
stor y f ram e h om e with fou r
bedr oom s, full ba se m ent , 2
car
garage,
som e
carpeting . l arge living
room a nd dining room , new
roo l , lu ll y Insulated Pri ced

ISO

-. 200 lOT /01 SCII O Ill
Syrocuw Phone 992-37 14

28 ACRE FARM rea r Bn;nlbu•y
Schoo l Sno Woller Mil ler ot 326
Sucth Sll cel, Ppinl Pi oosonl ,
W Vo '25550

TEAFORD
Virgo! B Sr., Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 457'9

Phone 992-3325

at $25.000
We have severa l busi ness
1roperties for sale Ca ll f or
urther Inform ation

Merry Christmas &amp;
Happy New Year
104 W. Main
Pom eroy
992·2291
Aller Houn Call
992-7T33
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Mlnoger

RUTLAND - 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, 9 rooms In all.
Kit c hen ha s stove and
r efriger a tor , 1 car garage

with storage S35.000.
EASTERN S.D. - Modern
3 bedrooms,

2 cerami c

baths. ni ce kllchen, fu ll
basem en t

ond

2

ca r

garage $34,000
MIDDLEPORT

~

bedrooms, nice bath, eat-In
kitchen . gas furnace and

level lot Only $23,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS - l'h

acres

of level land and an
ol d 4 bedroom ho use on Rt.
7 with T.P. water , and 1ft

balh. Olly $12,000.
CORN£R LOT - 2 bafh
home, 4 bedrooms , nat. gas
heat
and
garage
In

Middleport Just $11,000.
BUSINESS - And 4

apartments (rented) and
all
equ tpment
recreation
cent er

Is

your houu

f

1

Will do roo t ing construc!ton,
plumbu1g and fr eo t1n9 No tab
loo Io rge 01 tao ~ rno ll Pho1 10

742

Real totatc lor Sale

3102oo (30&lt; )7713217

l XCAVATI NG do1 cr backhoe
ond d•td10 1 Ch w l o~ R Hot
l tcl d
Bock !too Sc • ~·cc
Rutl and. Oh• o Pho n t:o 7•12 200!1

Center M•ddlcport Oh1 o
GA S AND ELEC Applt ance ~c •
VI C(.' WO I k Pho11a 992 57'}6

provides auth on ties with
InformatiOn on bab ies COAL for so le, Open 6 dov' per
released from California
wee k 011d eventngs For furlher
hospitals to persons other
lnfa rmot1 an call (614) 367 ·7338
!han their natural parents. API'LES, FITZPATRICK OR CHARD,
"We• goofed," a hoapital
Sl ATE ROUl E 689
PHONE
WIL KESVILLE (61 ' 1661 3785
spokesman said, explaining
!hat the forms were atlBched FUllER 8rush Produ t ts l ot 5ale
Phor1e q92-341 0
to lhe babies' records and
acctdentally filed away CAM PER SbOO. Also horse
tra der $45{1 Phone (614 ) MB·
ratber than sent to the stale.
3290
Roger Wright, a ranking
official in lhe Idaho Falls PEAR CE SI MPSON C B base !ttOtton. Phone 247 2684 alter 5
stake of the Mormon Church,
p
m
said in a telephone interview
, CIDER, Romes
Gol
lhe adoptions cost somewhat APPLES
Dell etous, W1n e~ ap F•tzpa!rick
Jess than $3,000.
Orcha rd, Slate Route b89
He said the cost of the
Wilke sv il le
Phone
(6 1&lt;4 )
61,9 376S
should cost is a matter of interstate adoptioos included
dispute between public social hospital, physician and FENC E POSTS , $1 00 Also,
hr ewood thr ee l o ur th tor1
workers and attorneys who medical expenses and leg~l
p1 cku p loads deH11ered $25
handle adoptions.
fees.
wl lhm 25 m1l e~
Ph one
Lenore Campbell, director
"I am not interesLed in any
965·"97'
of lhe Los Angeles County publicity," he said.
CORN FED beof Phone 985 35~9
Department of Adoptions,
Where does Roger Wright
EAR cor1l 52 00 bu shel
said f!,500 should be find babies available for GOOD
Pho"e 7.&lt;12·2359.
sufficien( to cover the legal - adoption1
CHE VY hnpolo corwe r!ible
and medical costs of an
"I get contacted by one or I 964
283 cu m P.ng1ne, !l tandord
average ndoption.
more phystcians in CaUfornla
trorumess ton Al so 23 channel
Most of the babies placed in and they say they've got a
M1dlond C.B radio with om-fm ,
c b a ntenna Co11 992 6 133 or
Idaho homes were born in baby," he said.
see ol 873 So uth Second Ave ,
Hollywood Presbyterian
HIS brother. KeMeth, said
M iddle port Oh•o 45700
Medical Center a Los
"The reason we had so
Angeles hospital. '
many (unwanted babies) is FIREWOOD for so le Phone
742 2131
The adoptive parents because I saw a lot of patients
HEAVY
GAUGE I Beams and H
traveled from Idaho to Los who were submitting lo
Beams for so le, e1g h1 q x 10 ln -.
Angeles, where !hey took therapeutic abortions and
en . Ph one 992 -7034
custody of · the mfants at some of them were beyond SC HOOL SEW ING ma ~ hm~s
Hollywood 'Presbyterian.
the stage of ellglbtllly for
Slr1gers 1n wa lnu t consoletle,
Calllornia
Health therapeutic abortions .
$46 Phone 992-5146
Depariment officials began Therefore, I saw !hem when NEW AM FM Stereo radio . B tr ack
reviewing !he adoptions tloe average gyllf(:olOgiSt nod
tope cornbmol •an $129 ,?5 or
terms Phone 9q2 39b5
involvmg the Wrights when obslelrtclan wouldn't see
UP! discovered L~at some thelll "
hospital recocds had not been
"Fur sure, there is nothmg ::i&lt;:ni&lt;-c• ()[[ererl
· filed wllh the department, as illegal about1t," he said. "I Wd dv odc,l 1obs, roolmg, pair•
the law requires .
am not interested in anythin_g
t11•Y au tt er wOrk. Phone 9Q1
Ml'l
After several inquiries, tbe illegal. "
missing forms were found at
He said his fee for Will 00 babv snll!lg 11 1 my homft,
1-'hOIIP lf:I'J '}/,jfJ
the hospilBl. The paperwork dellvermg a baby Is $1,250.

Brothers help
docto r~awyer

~ o ~o

HOWE RY AND MARliN E•
co voll n g
~c p t1 c
sy s t e m ~
do1er • bor khoe dump l ' ullo.
lun as t o n ~:~
grove l
blocktop
pa ~ mg HI 143 Pho ne I (6 1&lt;1 I
b9U 73 31

too

small or

too large? Let u1 sell it and·
furn ish you with what you
nc ' d Cit II now Hi1PPY New

Y( u from all of

us here, lo
illl of you there Meigs
County ' s oldest full time
real estate offtce

HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
192-2259of

for
at

Racine.
PAGEVILLE - 7 room
house with 3 bedrooms, an&lt;J
bafh Fronf porch and
garden for only $7.500.
HARRISONVILLE - New
3 bedroom home . Brick
ve neer , 2 baths, furnace
heat. dining and
gara~~ · $32,500

2 cer

IF YOU WANT tT SOLD
AT A PRDHT , TRY THE
PROF tSSIDNALS. ,

�C6--The.§undayTimes-Senlinel SWidav Dec ?111976

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinal Classifieds

C-4-TI!eSundayTimes-Sentlnel,Sunday Dec 26 1976

For Best Results Use Sunday Times~Sentinel Plassifieds

1\dvtrllsomenls MUST 8 E

planet one ct.y In advane:t

Noti.-n

Wanted

30c a lme
1st lnseltion

WANTED

I will pay 1100 or more for
certa1n old L1onel &amp;
Amer~can Flyer tra1ns I

21 cents a ltne
3 InsertiOnS

~Nrh

buy any pteces

accessones

Call

or

for

mtormation 446 1122

19 cents a ltne
for 6 msertions

"Good Neighbor"
for II Yn RM tiiCI ........

C K Snowdtn
24 Stitt Street
GalhpOIII Oh10
Phone 4U UfO

MUST BE PAID
IN ADVANCE

- Yard Sales

11&amp;.!1

- Help Wanted

- In Memory
-Card of Thanks
- Lost and Found

....

~II'H

,

BEG N your spr ng clean ng by
hov ng you carpets cleonvd by
best method known RemoYe
ol the d rt Make vour corpet
look new oga n For free
est mote call 379 2682

I

f

MPA .. &gt;I'

dref nl$hed County Rd 8 off
35 Center ... lie V I age 2-45
9479

firs t day tf appe01rs and

lOW wee,k ly and m o nthl~ roles at
l bby Ho el ~~6 1 7~3

Peto for Salt'

report errors In time for

l GHT housekvep ng oom Pork

read

the next Insertion Paper Is
responsible for only one

I&lt; &amp; P l&lt;enne s 388

SLEEPING rooms lor rent Gall a
Hotel

Incorrect 1nserhon

PHONE 446·2342

51~

OFF CE space dow town
cond AYe ~~6 0008

Se

TAA LEA fat one m le f om HMC
Phone ~46 3805

Call

H~U

C K Snowden
24 State Street
Galhpohs Ohto
Phone 446 4290

r~l

A

..

tRAILER SPACE Iorge lot on At35
n&amp;or shopp ng o eo $50 ma
Phone4461909
BRADBURY FURN APT S Adult,
only no pe s dep req 729
~nd A ve Ph -i46 0957
NEW MOBILE HOME n Gall pol s
I o 2 odu s only Ph 446 03JB
FURN APT All ut I I es po d
oduhs ani~ Ph ~~6 9523

827~

R

mlle east of Par e

554

BOARDING Wes
cle l Ken el5
town 446 4824

v Pupp es

Cr
2 m les from

CENTENARY Woods Ken nel Pet
groom ng foe I I es Hove your
pe g oom•d undee 1an ta rv
cond All b eeds accepted.
~46 0231
RISING STAR KENNEL Boord ng
ndoor outdoo uns G oom
mg ol broeds Chesh e Ph
367 0292
BRIARPATCH Kenne ls Boo d ng
AKC Gordon Se te s beaut lui
ed and white Eng I shCocker
female black and wh te mole
4.. 6 419 1

3 BR HOME 20 18 Eastern Ave
$150 pus sec dep ~46 0008

ORAGONWYNO Co t ery Kennel
AKC ChowChow pupp as
2 BEDROOM 1RA LEA
ut ltes
mogn f cen t c nnomons Onv
po d n c ty no ch ld en no
CFA Flame P:o nr 5 omese
pets Ph ~~ 6 0693
female cot spay ed Phone ~46

TRA LER ON HILL TOP OR Small
co ll675 4886

KEEP

your carpets beaut ful
despite conston too ste eps of
a bu sy lam ly Get Slu e lustre
Rent electr c shompooer S
Cen tral Supply Co

\IOIJ.[)'J
Heallhinsurance
ro

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APARTMENTS

P• IU ..... 1011!'1.•11fl iii!MiriiiCe Clf

C K Snowden
14
Street
Ohto

1 Bedroom unfurntshed
Immediate occupancy

Ph 446 1599

W

I

EMORY

HILLCREST KENNEL

SC HOOL SEWING mach ne
S nger n Wol ut con1ole buf
tonho es bl nd t.ems sews on
kn ls$-i6
cosh or ter ms
~-46 471b

Auto Sal.,
NEWGMC
Tr uck Headquarters

I

19?0VW

1974
1973
197-4

1 Doleful
Harbor
10 Sing ng

e

vo ce

14 Brtel
19 Refunded
21 Three banded
armadillo
22 Stlakespearean
k ng
23 Br mless caps
24 Became
ctlecked n
development
26 No1eworthv
28 Altar screen
29 Small dog
30 Anc~enl Greek
I;.. ltv
32 B bllcal weed s
33 Pomt at hamme
34 Girls name
~5 P eces out
37 Mans name
39 Latr
40 Church serv ce
41 Reward
42 Lampreys
44 Empower
4e Datum
4 7 Scotttsh caps
48 Pulver zed roc k
50 Wlthou slumber
52 Deca ys
53 Frequency
modulalton
(abbr)
55 Remunerated
57 Mans n ckname
58 Close
59 Depress on
60 Note of scale
62 Turn around
tra ck
64 Developed
66 News gather ng
organ zatlon

hntt I
68 Pad notice

carr iage

64 Wooden support

curreM:y
135 t.4ounta•ns of
EurQpe
137 Employs
139 Mohammedan
commander
t•o Wolfhound
141 Rugged moun
ta ln crest
1 43 Face ol watch
1 45 Make lace
1 46 Nat \18 of
Catlonla
148 Schoolbooks

86 Trustworlhtness

I 50 Comb lorm

75Stad
77 Quarrel

7 Bllahan seaport
80 Excuse (cOllOQ )
8 1 Fuss

82 Herm I
87 Getting up

devil

152 Footba 1team
89 Beverage
92 Perla n1ng to the 1 53 C ayey earlh
cheek
95 Mans name
98 Allee! on
99Names

1 54 Girls name
156 More vap1d
1 57 Stye of automo
ble
1 58 Old pronoun
1 59 Peruse
160 Vanety of coru n
dum

101 Frull (pi)

103 Heraldry
grafted
1 04 Devoured

t 05 Rockf ish

106 Near
I 07 Parent leo oq

I

108 Wlte of Geralnt

DOWN

IIOOblan
1 11 Note ot scale
1 12 Artie le of Jewe rv
1 I 3 Barracuda

115 Sun god
117 Server
119 Steamsn

p

labbr I
t 20 Snorl hit
12 1 Bar enness
1 24 Trade

126 Tear
I 27 Imila ted
128 Onnk of the

gods
130 Skodded
132 Saucy
133 English baby

COUNTRY
EVeRYTHING
appo ntment ID

yr oto brick lac a ted
7 ml from HMC
beauty s situa ted on
ac;res of lend In th e
sc;hool dlst w lh '" m I
frontage
on
Raccoon
Creek
Other
SP._tC al
fea tures are ~ BR s 3 1
baU'IS family rm w1th WB
fi r ep la ce formal d nlng
rm
formal en tran ce
laundry
rm
larg e
screened n pat o and 2 car
4i~lrege Over SIOO 000

z

i=
0
I

z

•5
z

~

a
,..

ll&lt;al t:olall for Salt

dr
972 t T Chev p c: kup
1973 , T Che"' PU
1975 three fourth TChev PU

SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS INC
I JJPneSt
.446 2532
69 FORD P clcu p one hall T -4 "6

3? 2

~

lit

iQ
I

BEEF CATTLE COUN
TRY - 300 acres mo st y
cle-an roll ng pasture lllnd
fQ nced &amp; cro ss fer\ced 3
ba rns tob base old hom e
S2~0 per acr e
BEST
BUY
IN
GALLIPOLIS
If you
wa nt o I ve near' do wn
town be he f rs to see th s
love l y remodeled 2 story
Th sa re C! t ve 3 B R hom e
featu res new v nyl s d ng
modern kitchen erge L R
d n ng rm fam ly rm
l&amp;u ri dr y WW carpe part
baser1 ent &amp; garage Won 1
be on th e marke long at

&lt;

73 MACH 1 MUSTANG 70 0 ds Ill
Cutless Sup erne 69 Newport
eft
Chrys le Ph 388 8850

r:

0

1 Arrange m folds
2 Repr.mand
3 Eplc poems
4 Sw sa river
5 Ceremony
6 Parent (colloq I
7 Harvest god

class
&amp;Intent
9 Foot lever

1o Foreign

11 Meadows
12 Hindu cy mbals
13 Conjunct on
14 Gull like Hlfd
15 Belore
16 Buys back

18 Anclent char

,.z
-t

ot

20 Erase (prtn1 ng )

23 tnaects
25 Ell

27 Crawls
28 Rema1nde?
31 Olls~r ng lei I

33 Mocasstns
36 Strike
38 Transact on
~0 Spar

41 Man s n ckname
43 Project ng tooth
45 Bes~atler
46 Quarre ed w th
47 Pll"h
49 Elll emely tern
ble
51 Cap Ia ofT bet
52 Venerate
53 Pennant
54 Mascut ne
56 Rende ring tn
sa ne
59 That whiCh d1S
courage a
60 Accompl shment
61 Poker stake
63 Thoughtful
65 Port of stloe
6 7 Greek le11er
69 A cant nent
labbr I
70 Mor11fy ng
72Th cket
7 4 Pr eltx twtce
76 Note of sc ale
77 Fac ta I ex pres
ston
79 Heavyweight
champ on
83 Oulctl town
85 Engrossed
Sf ':avern

87 Winglike

91 Chem1ca1 com
pound
92 Parent (colloq I
93 VISIQOth ktng
94 Chine,. diS
tance meuure
96 The aweetsop

97 DepoaoiS
I 00 Symbol lor ten
talum

102 T Ue or respect
lpl)
I 05 Pool ollrull
1 09 Jackdaws
t 1 2 Stunted person

1t3Stalk
1, 4 Shaded
116 Aleutian stand
11 8 Rlver in Korea

120 Chast sed
I 2 t Bridge

0
z

measure
gold con
land

t 29 Foray
1 31 Trader

t 32 Welks wllh

I!

il

Q

TAVERN
Ope rated by 4£
sa m e tam ty tor ~o yrs 11111111
Good equlpm enl excellen t lit
loc al on term s and ncome
t gures ava fab l e to Yt
qua fed buyer Ca
for fll
appo nt me n t
~
Goo(l 2
BR hOm.e
s pa rt a ly
rem ode led w th a n ce
kitch en and b&amp;lh l&amp;un drV
'rril gas furnace co ncrete
d r ve ana new sewage
system Barga n pr ce d at
S11 000

I

AT
LAST
DREAM HOME

~
••

BRAND NEW all electr ic
fully ca rreted 3 BR r&amp;nc fl
beaut fw moder n Kitchen
wl1fl range car por t n.ce
level lot good loc&amp;tJon for
anyOne work ng at mines

~

YOUR

I

$26 500

tbi:AL FOR HORSIES and
t s lUSt outside the- elty .I
BR 2 ba th s 2s tory home 3
ca r garag e 6 22 acres
fenced SJO 000

C
C

1ft

Vt

m

,.

r-"

0

SELL MORE -

For Sale

LIStiNGS Ni;!DI;D

Vacant Land
32 Aerts
Just off R:o• te 160 on
Tt'lompso~P Beau t tul
bu ldtng
h wooded
areas
,!Sur home
he re and
away trorn t
~Itt Pr ced wen below fa ir
market value at SIO 000

OTHER COUNSELORS
GALLIPDLIS
Denver K Htgt1y

u•

CRDWN Cltv

odo:~

Joe Crans
256 1456
Naltone( Advertislllt with
Gallery of Homu

LIMESTONE FOR ORIVEWAYS

11506ALESolhoy cd iiJ H Ndo

245 58 4
CHAIN l NK AND WOOD FENCES
NOW at REDUCED Pr ces
SAVE Roy Houck Fence Center
I no 2237 or I 35J ..668

CARL WINTERS PH 245 5115
All TYPES of bv ldtng mater ols
block br ck sew er p pes w n
dows
I nlels etc
Claude
W nters R o G onde 0 Phone
245 5121 ofterS

FIREWOOO Ph 446 49Q'I
DECEMBER

S~LE

SAVE UP TO 30

Perc ent store w de NEW 3 PC

~OTS

REFRIGERATORS
wosh•rs
dryer ranges Gene ~ogg5
1294 EasernAYe Ph 446 7398

For furthe

AVE PH 446 9523

446

9930 Even ngt.

MAROUHTE
DIAGNOSTIC

388

APPLIAFfCE SERVICE goo ond
AU'rOMO) IVE
eleclrlc Ph 99:1 5726
Oscilloscope

$2?5 Ph ••6 •sBs
BEDROOM SUITE rechn
ng rho r new wood bu n 9
sto11e 367 7329

P19C.t

EAR CORN AND FREEZER FEEF

pi 388 9991
AlUM STORM WINOOWS S VW
t es and wheels 2 mud o d
5 \O W P
h 245 5535

Flrowoed MOSTLY tlkkory 525
per ttck 24S 5535

ALLEN S GENERAL

IUILD A HOME A long
R t 7 Crown Cltv we have
2 lots wt1h a total of 91
frontage Buy both for only

S5 000

Audrey Canaday

clearl~f Ph •&lt;~&gt; 0051

CONTRAC

*

TORS remodeling houta
r
ng,.) house plumbing Ft••
eshmoles 446 2910
SANDY AND BEAVER INSURANCE
CO has oHered se v ce~ fo r
F re
su once coverage m
Gol110 County lor almost o cen
tu y Forms ho C!&gt; and per
wno p vpe y cove OQt!'t ore
ovotloble to meet ndl..uduot
needt Contocf T F lurlftar1
your netghbor pnd ogfnf

LARG£

BUSINESS Price r educed
on 2 bay bus ness bulldtng
and land located on Rt
160 In Ewlnglon Buy now
for s 15 000 00

'REALTOR

2783

Ear Am sofa &amp; cho
wood I m KOTALfCTandscop ng residenhol
$275 modern sofo cho r
&amp; Commerc ol thrubs trees
lolo'eteot $27-!1 solo b&amp;d w th
rock gardens oil in5tolled &amp;
matchi ng choir $150 Recliners
guaranteed Ph 245 9131 "-'6
$100 dn~ up Tables Coffee
3100
~
end HeJCogon mople or p ne
•
ARE
YOU
COOL
MAN'
Thtri
you
$50eoth magazine
rrack s
need thQ lf1sulohng eJCpert• ol
mo~i &amp;S28" bookcase $20
LAWRENCE HEATING AND
8o!ilon Rocker 155 maple
ELECTIUC TO g ..... you a fr"
roble 4 cho r s $175 d net e
est more on blown n Insula
table and SIX cha rs S89 dmelle
t on Coli 675 3099
tab e ond four cho rs $55 Bunk
beds complete $150 mottreu
CALL ABLE BUILDERS
and bo)( spr ngs $50 eo queen
For new homes and emodel ng
s ze $130 set maple 6 gun
of any kmd Spec ol pr cas on
cob net $155 chest of drawer
storm w ndows and doors No
$50
jOb too small frH estln'fotes
USED
Roof ng - we•kvnds coli col
Telev1s ons color' &amp; black wh te
lect Columbus Oh 614 263
consol~s &amp; portables washers
2669 Ph 675 6392 Owner
dryets rohg., reftl~ ators
Fred lohrmer
glass door cabinet
uhl ty
dozer
cob net wardrobe d nette set SM1TH EXCAVATING
backhoe trencher dump truck
bedroom suttes beds chests
work done of reosonoblv rate5
dr&amp;ssers
tobl•
lamps
Ph ••6 3981 John Sm thJr
chain
other Items
coli
~- 0322 do~ or even ng 3 ml BACKHO~ dozer""" dllcher ~
out Buta ... tlle Parler Rd off Rt
dumr, truck Concrete "t~Ork
100
Half eld Bockho• Ser RUtlond "FRESH cor load ol W Vo Chunks 0 Ph 742 2008 or 4-46 2786
quolltr, ~oaf lowosh Put a BORDERS GARAGE DOOR SER
spark e In your f replace dur ng
VICE Commer cal and r•s den
the hoi days Sk dmo e Foster
I ol spec ol1ilig m opefators
CooiCo 446 2?83
l ocol256 6472
HAY Ph 4.. 6 1058
COUGHENOUR WATER DELIVERY
446 3902or446 4262onyllmtt
GOOO USEO FURNITURE
Alt'aCodo elec onge gas space INSULATION BLOWN tn s de wall
heole
60 000 BTU clesk
and othu Free ••• matts Ph
675 &lt;!96
,
magot ne rack gas r ange Co
bn&amp;Snyderfurn 4461 17 1
DOZER WORK o:covot ng

Ph

at

RON CANADAY

LAYNE S NEW &amp; USEO FURNITURE "--~
Oft-"
NEW
~•••~
.. ~

FIREWOOD

ROOM

THE

3 BEDROOM CARPETE'Ii
HOME located In H3rrlson
Twp Macedonia Rd F A
turn ace modern k tchel"'
rural water end cisterns ll
peaceful hame In 1 rural
setting Price S21 000

WE NEEO LISTINOSI

mformahon coli

Gall poh s Block Co Ph

FOM

reasonable pr ce 4
home on 2 A acres
1
sthoots 5 m es from town
on blacktop road UO 500

TRESSS l WIN SIZEINTER SPRING
367 ?338
$4S NEW 3 PG ENO TABLE SETS
LIGHT
we ghl ch1mney blocks
$39 95 U HAUL RICES NEW
AND USED FURNITURE 854 2nd

OF

New LtstmQ 40 Acr es w th
3 bed roo m hom e 3 out
bu l d ngs
200 tobacco
base s tueted on county
road
appro)( ma et y 4
miles f om R o Grande
near Cora M II Ca ll tor
mor e .nforma tlon

FAMILY we have a 9 room
.-bedroom 2 story tlome In
• Bidwell only 20 minu tes
from -coal mines storm
wlnctows ana doors F A
fuel oil furnace
nice
garden area can be yours
within 30 davs for only
S22 000 Call for an ap
oalntment

KEMPER HOLLOW - 7
miles fr om c ly 3 BR
frame ranch on lg lot
f)nlsh this yourself and
seve Ul 000

USED APPLIANCES

Th re e bedroom
r an ch
sty l e home locat ed
n
Mead ow
Look
5 0
s tuated on 100 x 150
m
proved lot Gall po l s C ty
water
Cen r e t sewer
co lecl on sys tem
Cedar
s d ng
Bea ut fully
d ec orated
On y
f ve
m nules from do wntown
Galllpol s Shown by ap
potntmen only $45 000 00

f iVE BEDROOM car
peted hOme oca te d 4 rp es
from downtown Gall pol s
Two w b f replaces two
bal,tls w showers beau t ful
wooded J acre lot heated
and cooed w h heat
p-!JmP
Gall polls C ty
Sc hool D strict Call for
more ntormat on

COMMERCIAL SITE or
suitable for re s den t aJ 38
acres ~00 frontage an R 1
7 400 Ohto R tver fr.on tage
4 water taps $25 ooo

FOR SALE

ngs

•

New L stmg
Remade ed
home adta cen l to Rt 7 on
Eastern Aven u e Make
excellent rent a
Pr ced
Reasonable SIO 500 00
NEW LISTING 12 2 acre
farm
10 m inu tes from
Galt pol s Larg e com
for tabl e farm hom e J to 4
bedrooms tg tam 1Y r oom
1 v ng room modern k
chen 2 f r eplace s cen tr a
a r cond on ng
2 car
garage ca ttl e barn Job
base olh er outbu ld ngs
welt and spring w a.ler
rutll wa er ava fable Bu y
now for onl y 559 000 00

2 Bedroom hom e s tua ted
on 21, acres In Bdwe l l
F ull bah w shOwer new ly
nstal ed for ced a r furnace
anq hot wat er t an k Her es
a '~cod buy for on ly
$14 000...00

REDUCED! Rental m
ves tment
1 tully fur
n shed a r cond tre llers on
19 ot Georges Creek Rd
Now pr ced at Sll 000

For~

MUSf sell I ke new 2 pc Spon sh
CH MNEY Blocks W Vo &amp; Oh o
I v ng oom su te exc cond
l ump Cool Golhpol s Block
4~6 3712
Co 446 2783
FIREWOOD Coli 388 9930 e11en

3

w

ATTENTION MINERS J
BR home In good cond I!
Porter on 1 ao:;re Rural
water fuel o heal Nor1h
Gellla Sc tlools S28 000

Ill

t 42 Mans name

971f2 Acre Itt 1 Farm
WLi h n'rln not'lft and coal
se.ms lust 20 min from
Gallipolis 8 f~~""rts riVe r
bottom b~lc~?m~ end
garage (:It&gt;
.. metal
bern to'"
:ifn 1 800
lb tobac
net fenced
Pasture 0 Y. S65
11
take S20 000 to SJO
hbme
In trede If locatton 1 good
Lergt assumable loan on
balance

VINTON VILLAGE N ce J
BR hom e w lh lg barn 3l 4
acres l eve
to rolling
nearly all fen ce d Wll k tng
d stance o elem schoo
bank &amp; grocery $18 000

Ill

t 38 Novel
1 40 Danish meuure
1 41 Danish Island

t 55 Arlocle

m ooo

Z

SETS S.t9 95 NEW SEALY MAT

90 Jumped

th1s sturdy 2 sto ry br ~ k
yourself &amp; liv e n a fine
home et very low cos t 4
BR: 2 b{lths ne arly new
1
forced atr gas
lot Walking dis tance
dow ntow n
Gal ipo

A

Ntlr the corner Qf t hird
lndVi(te Streets This 111 2
story 3 btdroom hom~t tha t
has
been
remodeled
recentlv Just thlr)k of the
ease In getting tq the
ahopp ng district schoo~s
c,-.urc~es etc 9fftrfd to
you at a very reasol'lebJe
Pr 1ce of s~t ooo

FULLY
FURNISHE
mob e bom e on 6 ac-re
Paho outbuildings fuel o t
furnoce heat ~11 000

,.
&lt;
-

men

len

COULD
BE
A
SHOW PLACE Modern ze

z

BAR BUSINESS &amp; 'HOTEL
Be your ov: n boss w 11'1
h s one~ m a Tel m e n
ves tm ent l ocated on a
cbr.ner lot n Mtctd eporl
Ca I for mor e nlormat on

In town

i

tillable
story farm
rd S40 000

FIFTH AVE
~ IB 000
barga n pr ced 6 rm and~
bath s ucco fea tur es 2 Br s ift
up and 1 down arge back ...
porch and almo st new stee -

oa age

A

ott~e r

136 Burma tr bes

1 51 Loud noise
1 53 Mountatn (abbr)

SEROUS
FARM? L ei
1hiS 75
tOtHIC CO
pas1Ur e

BEOROOM SUITE 51:2' 9S NEW
2 PC LIVING ROOM SUITE COAL - open 6 days o wetk and
$149 9S NEW 5 PC DINETTE
e~o"en ngs Del y on Saturdays

88 Repetthon
89 Mans n1ckMme

S11 000

EOGEOFTOWN ~

133 Plot
I 34 Babylonoan
obocle ol clead

147 Girl s nam~
148 Cheer
149 MuSic as wnt

n ce 1974 M dway dou~le
wide 3 BR modern kitchen
wj fh range oven hood &amp;
refrig er ator
carpeted
l0x20 adjj ton at ached 6
ml es trom c ty 3 from
Holzer Hasp 1 i!ICre lot

0

measured steps

t 44 Terdy

PRICED TO SELL I Yory

1

llal lei

~

125 Old Span sh
t 26 Feasl
I 27 laland ofllre

_.

-

1 22 Miss ves

I 2 3 Dlslence

Good sol d 6 rm al"'d bat~
hOme features formal
d n ng rm taroe LR •nd
k tchen 3 BR s o I fur
nace well or e~ty waler
new a urn num sl d ng and

NEW LISTING Neat w e
ca pe ed
3
n su ated
bedroom home located S
m les no r th of hospital on
Rt 160 Buy his hom e for
S17 000 Al so rental tra fer
avatlab e ac ro ss ! rom
pr ope rt y tor S9 600 Ca 1 for
more Infor m at on

Ar.

I yr ol d
brick r anch offer s 2 140 sq
t of modern liv ng Don 1
wa t to see th s 3 Br and 2
ba th home The k !chen Is
comp lete Wtfh dtShwluher
m 500
d1 sp microwave oven an d
CHEAPIE
Per fect for rang e
Other
spec al
weekend s 15 acres of lilnd fea ures lire the large
about
cleared and
formal d n ng r m quality
wood!. w h fran ege on ca rpet hea t pu mp 1 se s
L ltle Raccoo n Creek pus pat 0 doors 12x57 pa 0 and
an old 2 s ory han e 2 car garage w h elec r c
5 I 900
door opener

II
I

1 7 Heating dev•ces

offers room to spare for
your g row ng
tam ly
Where else can vo u get a
full basement family rm
with gas f r epla ce large
kitchen anct d n ng area for
on v S25 500

$26 000

C

excellen t opportuntty fori
some business m nded
person fM s Iaroe corner
to t w lh a modern br ck
bu ld ng is a good pla ce to:.
st art Can be bought w thO
or w thout equ pmtnt Cell&lt;
lor appo tn! men t

THREE bedroom
c ar
peted hom e
oc a ted on
Sanders H Add I on on l y
fi"Ve m nutes from down
town Ga II polls S tua ted on
a 90 xSS mproved lot new
F A natura gas furnace
Ga l l tpol s C ty water
sho wn by appo ntm ent
Pri ce $23 000

PIZZA IUSINEI$ -

~~

JUST THE RIGHT SIZE

&lt;

outbuildings A~proxlmalely 400 lb
Pri ce Sll 000

NEW - 3 bedroom ca r
peted ranch style br ck
home 2 car garage lots of
concrete
m med l ate
possess on Price
Low

Realtor Associate
446 3636

Any Hour

40 s

Merrill Carter 1
Assoctate
THREE (3) FULL TIME

SALESPERSONS

Gallia County's Fastest

TO

Real Estate Agency

tobacco base
Tell Your Santa Claus You Want Thts
For Christmas
The owner ot this quality butlt J bedroom spl I h~ 11el ha~
bought a tr.rm and Is ve ry an&gt;Ciovs to se ll hi s p csCt 1
home Includes a la rge li vi ng and dining rb01 Fu ly
equl ped k tc hen with lot s of cabl 1ets 1 bAth s n ce
l amlly room plu s garage all o 1 a t~rg e lot n Kygor Ck
d slr lcl

LAND ou atng or mobile
home lot s n Eureka area
Buy as many as ll acres tor
only
$5 J OO 00 Has rura
wa ter and w~l1
LAND 30 acres ot 1e11 et to
rolf ng ground on both s des
of Stale Rt
160 nei!Jr
Parler Rura l water fr on t s
on ~ loyd Clark Rd and Rl

160
LAND
56 acres f enced
w th 20 acres of I mber
r-lose to Nort h Ga a H gh
S("hoo l
loca t ed
on
Th P)m pson Rd tots of ro ad
fron t age
Buy
for
Sl5 000 00

LAND 20 acres Located n
Mo rgan TV" p
oc at ed w th
road fron ta ge on Ro w es
vtlle Rd Spring wal e
ava t ab l e
Buy f a
$1700000
LAND
SO x 96 t al
ocated on L dd y Hollow
Buy for $4 000 00
DWELLING and 26 X 32
blo ck bu d ng s tuated on
40 ,.; 132 lol n Ga pot s
nr; l u d n g co nt ents
of
dwell ng
Buy
tor

120 000 00
NOW t S20 ooo oo wil l buy a
modern
one f oa r
3
bedroom all el ec r c home
n Ga ll po ls c t y schOol
d str ct S tuat ed on 120 ,.;
75 tot Carp eted excep for
k. tchen and bath
new
cond t on rural water
cen rei sewage co llect on
blacktop str ee t s
Ca ll f or
mor e n forma l on Ca n be
v A and F H A f nanced
THREE
BEDR00/111
ca rpet ed a eleclr c hOme
s lua ed on 120x7 5 lot
fr ont ng on Tw p b acktop
Rd County water &amp; se wer
Price $22 soo oo
NEW LISTING 167 acres
of t li ab l e l&amp;nd
p lu s
com for a be 5 be..droom
farm house ba r n oa f ng
shed mach nery shed s lo
m k ho use severa other
outbu ld ng s s tua ed n
H nt ng on Tw p
near
Ty coon L ak e Thi s s e
r o ng to lev el far m f)(
ce ll ent for cro ps and
pa s ure Good fence easy
access
surr ou nded b~
countY. road syslem An
exce ll en t purchas e for
c ther he f u ure farm er or
the nves tor Ca t to r mor e
nfor rna t on

BEOROOr-1

Realtor
COUNTRY MANOR WITH AN ARTISTIC SETTING
One of Gall a Count y s best 3200 sq ft over all
8 acres of land n ce pond House
3 or 4 bedrOQms J fu ll baths 2
lt v lng room 16 l&lt;l9

HOUSE AND 11 AVAILABLE BLDG LOTS

Have you been lookmg f or a hom e w ith a country
setting' Stop looking here tt s A nice home w th 3
bedrooms bath shower moder n kttchen w tlh but II In
cab nets doubles nk. ltving room fuel oil for ced a 1r
fur na ce new steel siding recentl y nsta lled c ty
wa t er also has a small barn outbutld ngs and cellar
Ap pro x '1 acr es Lool&lt;. th s over

wtfh massi"Ve

Sl&lt;&gt;n&lt;dio·e~&gt;la o:e . K tlchen 1s beyond words You wt ll have

to bel eve - n ce pantry bay w m dow look ng oul
va lley Heat pump for heattng and cooling 2e ~~:8
deckmg r unntng l ength of house 2 ca r garage and
many more fea tures T ht s good fam ly IS leav ng
county Ca t oday for appomtmenl
SMA LL FARM
LIVIN G
Today s cho ce
ap
prox mat et y 75 acres of
pas tur e and fa m ng land
N ce
1
oom s
fu
baseme n
3 bedrooms
good ba n
two o h er
outs de bu ld ngs
ences
a r
p en t y wa er for
ca l e
sma
tobacco
acr eage w e ar c r ead y o

NI CE COMFORTABLE
8 ROOM HOM E
Br d 3 or 4 bedrooms w h
c l ose t s
fu
wa k n
ba seme nt Bu t n bac k
porch
n c ~ large fr an
po r ch C ilrp~ ng
odcrn
k Ch en c y wa te
ac r e
of good gard e and Lo s of
sh r ubbc y Beau lui han e
a a ow pr cc

se

INCO ME
IN VESTMENT
~ ap s ~ ooms each ap
7
be-droom 5o k chen l bu I n
cabnes
sove
r e r gera o
d n ny oom
plu s ba h a d u
y r oom
Has a ~ood rent a ncomc
could pay o th e bu d nn
w h n a f ew year s A
r e a vely new ap hon e
Do you need a good nco e
pr oper y""l Don wa to see
h

LOOK THIS OV ER

SPRING VALLEY
SU BOIVI SION
va can t lots - n ce
bu d ng l os w th
ut
es 11 e e
Lo
0 8 by 17 2 Beller
vm no w

s ze
all
s ze
ge l

.l BEDROOM

s

JU ST COMPLETED
Ou e ne ghborhood Th s
home s w e con stru cted on
a n ce levc- o 140 &gt;&lt; 160
F arne c on s ru e on w l h
br ck
fran
ma se r
bed oom w h ba h N ce
bu II n k. !chen lab e op
etec c ran ge an d wall
ov en Tl e house s fu ll y
ca rpet ed and has a tached
garage T h s one you w t
Ik e
med um
p r ce d
Owner w
he p 1 nan ce
qual fed buy er Ca ll novo

BRIC K HOM E
Th s s an ce hom e on ?net
A11 e
n Gal po t s
Bed ooms basc-n en
7
wood burn ng
1 c-p aces
nat gas F A h r n.=tcc Th s
home cou d be used as a
lwo ap t re ntal bu d nq
C ose o bu sn ess sec on
Lo ok h s O"Ve
COMMERCIAL
BUILDING &amp; SIT E
Sta e H ghway 7 North
Maso y Bu t d ng w th
br ck fr an
bu d ng
ke
Approx s ze 30 x24 7
Leve o fr onts 175
on Sta e H ghwav 7 Ca I

180 ACRES P L US
Va cant
A wood and
wond er and
some
pasture and t liable land
less thai'! $160 ocr a G(e

now

CHURC H OR
BUSINES S
BU L DIN G
Appr ox 1850 sq
o e
room 5 r ee l e11e l w th 5
a d
r oo m s p us ba I
s oraq e oon n basl t n
Loc:a ed on t yhw ay JS
Wus
(O fi\ N
0
5 lC:
70 &gt;&lt; 120
Na u a
' "s
turn ace a r co nd oned
C v wa ter bock b td nq
Won
as
lo q a 5!\ le
nr Cf' H as lo s of uses Cllll
PRICED
TO SE l l
Ar e you ook ng tor a good 3
bedr oom house? Clos e to
town., O"Ve I acre of gcod
land If you d vc ru cks
Ia s of space to par k Room
to k eep you r fa11or te pe ts
horses or call fe? Th ese ar e
a fe w !h ng s you ma y
~ ons der Th ere are ma ny
'fn or e for onlv $ B 000

MASSIE
REALTY

CONCRETE
WORK
pottos
s. dewolks
basement
etc
Lou s Cox -446 3398

32 State Street
Ph 446 1998

"'

FOft the besf n architte1urat
des.gn and bu ldmg of new
homes
small comij'l•rc:lal
bO ld ngs Opt or r•mod•l ng
w th state approval of pions
B•ll Wolk&amp;r 4~6 2146 or 4..._

A A Nibert, Broker
Mini Farm - 11 acres 2
sm out buildings Electr c
and water are there
11 yr old 3 br brick ran
ch er electric heat b\.t It In
kltctlen nice family room
s m lies from town

8652
SEPriC Tonks Cleaneil
1:

Plonl~

Sept c Tonk Servtce Ph 4A~
1972or675 2647
STUCCO- plat ter ng ond plosfer
repa r Textured ce ling 1w1rl
float or brush des gn 32 yr ex
p Wor~ by the hour o by the
jOb
256 1182
A ll work

guocanleed
SOBS
CS
Rodlo
Equip
&amp;veryth ng n Two Woy Rodto
Antennas and occet Georges
CrHI&lt; Rd~ Galllpollo ._.6 4517

Vacent land - app 3 a 2
good build ng s tes

Plc-..r• lube Specloliits

HARTWELL ELECTI!ONICS
TV Repatr
2'5 5365

PASOUAL"Ein~t;t"mg
51

Ga!Upoll1 Ph

446 11192

103 Cedar
2716 or

•«&gt;

Building loh - Ga llpol ls
area very nice lots for
those who w1nt to build
ttlelr own home we also
have other bu ld lno lot s
close to Gallipolis See us
for details
Burlding lots Vinton
are~ :1 vNy large lots

f4ew J br brick ran cher
t " rm din r m k !chen
t~nd ut 1 Jy rm
Well n
suleted copper plumb on a
large one tlatf a lot Close
to hospital This home hu
~een built witt! care
F¥m - 39a w th 2story 8
rm frame home barn and
several other outbullctlngs
HIS frontage on two roads
several acres t lia ble
remamder n clear pa sture
l.and

IF YOU AE

PLANNING

TO SELL CALL \JS

WE

HAVE

LIST

OF

'

50A CRES 00 PER ACRE
T h s s a good H 1 Far 1
Lot s of poss b l t es
85
ac r es of pa s urc 40 acr es
or Tl O c t llab c so n e
nbcr L nc- fenc es ar e
good 10 ro oms re mOd ~ cd
7 story t ou sc 3 w e bu It
barn s 2 she ds nd o t e
ou hu d ngs
Ca
to
appo ntmen
~l50

129 000 Buys Th is Well Ke~t Hom e
F ine 2 bedroom home bu1 1t r igh t 17 years ag o a 1d h&lt;ts
had excellent care slnce Includes a very n ce ki tchen
larro e bath ca r pet ed livi ng room Storage bulld t lg and
c1 p rfect flat lot ln
Cr eek School di stri ct

S ROOMS

2ACRES
Th s s a 11er y at rac t &gt;Je 3
bed r oom ho me bu t n
nc udes ga bag e
k !ch en
d sp osa countertop stove
wa ll ove n r elr genllor
w I ce makt
F nlshed
ba sement Bea u ful large
tr ees n ba ckg round The
com to r of c ty I l e th e
beauty and c-n loymen ot
country I vlng a IM s close
10 Gall po l s on State H gh

One of

A beaut iful home with an lnsp ri ng view of the Oh io
Valley - Includes 3 bed;;ftt, (\large living room w th
w b f ireplace br and ne ~~ kitchen famil y r oom
and den or office Hes l
newly car peted and 1$ In
gr ea t condition Loca ted n town and prlcert well under
560 000 Only one ol 1s k nd•

way

Branch BUD McGHEEManager
Th s s a money maker for
the r ght bu ye r Located at
IB Porlsmouth Rd Call
Oday for de l a Is

FOR SALE
New bnck home just completed 3 Brs 2 baths large
ltvtng room family room ftreplace ntce large kttctlen
dtshwasher d1sposat double oven Tappan range 2 car
garage wtth electrtc operator carpet throughout
central atr heat pump located on old Rt 35 wtthtn 2
mtles of HMC on Krtstl Drtve Pnced rtQtlt to sell w1ll
take trade tn lnqutre at Corbin &amp; Snyder Furnttufe

IT FOR YOU
Call wood Insurance &amp;
Real Estete446 1066
Evenings A ussell wood
446 U18
Ken Morgan U6 0971

446 1111 446 2513 after 5

Real Eotale for Sale
VA FHA 30 yr I no ne ng Ireland
Mo tgoge 77 E Stole At hens

592 3051
WANT TO OWN BUT NEED

HELP IN FINANCING'
N ce 2
bedroom iorm home
wh ch has been comple tely
emodeled recenlly lo ge be n
n good cond ton all ths st
1ng on oppr ox motely 17 oc es
neor town Mob e home ental
spot on p oper ty Good no.Jes
ment r ental opporlun tv r al
4~ 6 1049 otte 6 p m
BEST BUT IN GALLIA COU NT Y 1
leYel house 4 beuroom 2
bath s
l R
fo no I d n ng
room bu h n k1tchen rec
oom doub e cor garage J 7
port c:olly wooded acres mony
othe r e as Pr ce $46 000 IH
7.42 2A;,4

Mobile Humes for Sale

~tobil&lt;

USED MOBILE HOMES
CALl576 2711

Ph 446 0 75

TO ECONOM ZE on iuel u de p n
you mob le home and anchor
fo sole v Fosler Mob le Hone
Sery ce 4~ 6 2783 o Elmer Sk d
more 446 3"79

CARTER S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor Fou th&amp;Pn e
Phone 446 3888 o 446 4~ 777

STANDARD
Plumb ng Heat ng
215 Thtrd A"'e .446 37R7

GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMBING - Heal ng
At
Cond l ion g 300 Fourth A"'e

Ph ..6 16~ '
MBtNG
..) I~ HNG
Route bOo Everg een
Pho ne 446 2735

2 BEOROOM TOTAL ElECTRIC
MOBILE HOME
AT
Creek Ph 745 501 1

Quo

3 BR TRA IL ER on Ker Ho r sbu rg

Rd call 446 2565

END OF YEAR
CLEARAN CE SALE
USED MOBIL EHOME S
TRISTAHM H
Bonk F none ng
Gall po l s Oh
1220 Eoste n A&gt;~e
Gall pols Oh o
1971 Buddy 12 x:60 w th I p ou

Wanted toDu
1

b
196a PM( 12x60 2 8

BondS MOBIL EH OM~S
PI Pleasa nt W Vo

GENERAL Con t oc to s Do ol
mo sonory carpen e &amp; plumb
ng Ins all an d epa r a
dr Yew oys Ph 446 9587
PER SON 5 Body Shop of 26
Ro !rood St M ddl epor t s of
fe 9 on e"' ended spec ol
point fOb fh ough Dec 3 one
col or$ 00 2colo s$125

AULT MOBILE HOMES SERVICE

new

Bu stne ss n&gt;J estment or buy
for tu ure sale and pr of 1
E !h er way vou w II be u
ah ea d
Th s pr opert y s
loca ed at 742 Th r d Ave

On e of the- best buys on
today s ma rkc-1 Lots ot
1 v ng area n th s 2 story
older ho m e w th tots of
ca rpel throu g ho u t th e
house J BR tam v room
lg k tchen on e fo urth acr e
fl a lo Price d lo se
Ca t
now \22 000

129 000 Buys This Well Kepi Home
Fine 2 bedroom home buill right 17 years ago and ha s
tlad excellent car e sine ~ Includes

If vou want out~ de of he
cl l y and s I wa nt c ty
schOols th s m gt1t be your
ne)( th ome t so nRt 14 1 5
m es out Tw o Brs could
be
3
full
dv d ed
basem en Pl us rnare w lh
2 9 acr es of land Ca now
Thre e BR br ck r anc h w th
cen r al a r natur a gas
hea ? ca r a ached garage
w h ex ra storage space
p lu s a m etal bu tl d ng
au s de a on a wei land
sc aped one- th rd ac r e ot
Top of gr ou nd pool Ca 1

DOUBLE WIDE AND lOT 3 n le
from HMC ow 1e w I h0l1
I no ce Ph d46 1502

locat ed n the fa st est
grow ng area of Ga l Ita Co
on U S J5 near HMC Sold
hardwood floor s 11ery n ce
k chen 3 lar ge Brs ful
d v ded basemen t with
hea ed
garage
Only
$71 500

We have prospects fook l ng
n the R 35 area 1 you er e
h n k ng ot se ll ng an d
wa t ng tor spr ng
We ha ve severa l pote nttal
bu.,.ers look ng for hOus ng
n th e area of R:t 35
All of
shown
onty

our hstl ng s are
by appointment

LIST WITH VS REALTY TODAY We devote full lime
to selltng your property
business

Real estate Is our only

Wanted lo Duy
JUNK outo ond sc op metol Ph
!.C

nice kitchen

a perfect flat IQf in Kvgc r Creek Schoo l district
New listing
i ~:,:J:~n ~~1 oo K ng for 6 10od 3
ho c w h argc 7
w tl be sa sf cd
one
Crow C tv
hon c ha htl s hiH
(ar c

l

0

Pr cc Reduced
N!J flr l y new :J hcdroo m
ho me
n Kycc r Cr eek
Set oo d st
oc a cd o
s h~dy o on a qu c t co un r v
$h fOu oo Buys Th s
We I Care d For
81 l: evel
You be he tudge You c an I
buy mar e hou se for th(.
money 3 bedrooms n ce
k tchen furnished fam il y
room p us garege tt s ,.,
ba r gain why not be IS to
fo ol&lt;.
- Extra Specia l BuyBr ck and stone ran ch
forma e-n trance &amp; din ng
or 5 bed rooms t amll
room w B fir ep l ace 7
baths In town Pr i ced

S39 500
Don I Miss Se e ng
Th s Dut ch Colonti'll
Lovely w e bu 11 homo on
covn ry ane iu s 5 m e!&gt;
from
downtown
bed r oom~
2 1
ba hs
fam y room n ice K chen
fu I
base ment
on
L
bea ut ful 3 i!Jcre es ate
One Block from Park
Th s s ., solid older 1 '
story 3 bedroom hOmE'
bahs
f repece
n cr
kit chen S31 900 00 You I
ltk e I I you want n town
Va ca t on th e Year Around
Very n ce well bu 11 2
bedro om f u ll
ca r
Mme wth

One YOU VC
ted For
Lar yc Bl Level w th 3 or 4
bed r oom s l ar tj c t am ty
roo m 2ca r qara ge I a t tot
c ~t c e ll en t (o cat on
n city
SC hOO d Sir Itt SJ9 900 l,)u ys
lh s bc- 1'1 l y
30 Acre- Farn
Nca r R o Gra de 1 C Y
Scho o 0 !i r t t
nood
rollng land l'lll~ r aga old
t n c 2 st ory home w h
scvt:: r&amp;l out bu ild ngs
Pr ccd under \ JO000
Land &amp; Bultd ng
Lot s
1 Any s ze o you w sh ut
R o Gr ande Star a $4 000
No mob ile homes
0
CIIY
2 Bu ldlng
wa !lr sew er ... Cl'Jn C st r e-e t
nqa hospi tal
J 160 ac ol tre es s reams
hills S. excel len t unl lng
4 16 Ac
no bu d ngs
lar ge stream
2 ac bot
Th ~

w~

I om

Rfo G,.. ~ c
LO l:l CclU I ~ft\
cou nlry
ot nc ttr ~ mo b 111
hOTC 5 S7
u
WE NEED LI STINGS
W n cr sa es h1wc been
unbei !Jio' ea tJ e an d we have
e on9 1 st ol quo f ed
buyer s We can
sa sl y
Catt us be for e you I st

n

Today s Best Buy
Brand new d bedroo m !.P It
I lo'C I w lh 7 fv I M hs
f&lt;~bu ous k c t en
large
1 v ng anct d n ng nrc a ful y
carpeted w th ccn r aJ a
and garll ge Unl n s hed
ta m ly roGm M d for ties
buy s h s t An l'ISI c home
Call Us Bel orc
You Buy
We hav e ma y ol hH
pr oper es to cho ose fr om
w e al so ha ve 11 c necessary
1 na nc nq
'we nee d Listings Cal t
W1s etpan A9ency 446
Gatlla Co 1 Largn t
hta1t hies Agency
...
Office 446 l64J
Ike Wisem an 446 J796
E N Wtsem.in 446 4500

428 2nd AVE. GAlliPOLIS. OHIO

388 8176
OU) FURNITURE AND n
qu es PI 24S 5050

a very

large bath carpeled living room Slor age bui lding and

0

One of th e ar eas fin est
homes AI br ck L shaped
w th t u basemen t cen ra
a r nat ural gas heal 3
l arge B R s
FR
w lh
f rep la ce "-...fo~~ a.l d n ng
r oom eat ~e n Wtlh
d shwashcr and disposa l
lots ol cab ne s laundry
room on m a n fl oo r w th
tot s of s torag e space 7 car
atta ched garage Ca for
an appolltm ent r ghl now

PHONE 446-0552-ANYTIME

Skirt ng anchor ng and pol o~
3608 oi e- 4

co 114~ 6

DOUBLE WIDE MOBILE HOME o1
bd 2 bath s k d
rm I v
room refr g stove nderp
ng 2 outbu ldln gs go de-1
space 1 3 orres good oc o o
on St Rt 325 2 niles f om
Me 9!. m ne mus sol molt' g
Pnc ed S16 000 Ph 388 8254

L eG r ande Dr J BR s full
ba semen! large L R w i th
ca r pet ea t n k che n
att ached garage al on a
flat lot C y SC hOO S Ca ll

look ng for a good n
ves men t? J8 N c I Ave has
lots of v ng spa ce tor very
I 1 e money

now

1969 CHAMP ION 12)1;60 2 Br

Plumbmg and Healing

Homes lor Renl

2 BR MH $100 3 BR MH 1125

1961!ElCONA 12x60 3B

r

buy

J

IF YOU DON T SEE Ttl-to
PROPERTY YOU WANT
IN THIS AD CALL WE
MAY BE ABLE TO FIND

~

On e Of Th e Areas Most Beautiful
It s a year old but looks and Is better than new 3 large
bedroom s tormi\ 1 1)1 ing tantastlc l lrepic'l ce In lhe
family roo n 7 ba th s ex tra n ice carpe ting ptus 7 cl'l r
ga age You al so ha ve th e use of .:t pool and c ub hOu!ie
to pnva tc par t es or gn fher lngs Is a heck of A good

VS REALTY

PROSPECTIVE BUYERS
ANO WERE ANXIOUS
TO SERVE YOU

OlW r

76 Ac r e Fa
modern s x:
oorr ho TIC good bar n
ne w co l shed ut II y b dg
L ne fences a woven w r ~
42 acre-s B G pas tur e 10
7'J acres
ucre s wooded
m£&gt; adow
and
t 1 l'lb e
p en y ol Qcus tre es 200
b oba cco ba s~ Tl s far 11
s n the Ga pol s Sc t oo
D str c t Cat now
ACREAGE
BUILDINGS TE S
65 Acres ce aled n Gr een
&amp;
P er r y Twp
Sn a ft
an ount of 1 m bcr 50 A
lable 2 barn s 40 ,., 30 and
40 "'24 t f yo u ar e took ng
l or valuab le and lor '
ves tm en t her e 1 s Ca l
oday

COT

TAGE n c ty on Spr uce
Natural gas fu e
Stree
cl y wate r an d sewer
W lh n
easy
walk ng
d sta nce to store s N ce
arrangem en t tor s ng e
per son or co uple Pr ced
S11 00000

A

4MILESOF
GALLIPOLIS ROUTE 141
3 bedr oo m home w th
cab ne s all bu
n
n
k chen and modern bath
Slor m door s whi te pr ime
sl d ng
Fue l o
heal
copper
p u mb ng
Ga pd s school d si r ct
long Only
Won 1 l as
$19 50000

On Rt
60 near Vinton
Th s 2 story fr ame 1s
s t u &lt;~ ed on 6 ac re s of lana
dea f or ral s ng yo ur own
beef P cc-d n he ow
$10 s
I ce1llng
ture de5tgns
repo r Yl nyl wa ll paper ng new
bath s new k tchens Anything
n remodel ng or epo~

Ph Home 379-2184

LAND
Bu d ng Jot n
Porter Ca ll today for more
"'*Orll)al on

TWO

WISEMAN AGENCY

LARGEST REAL ESTATE AGENCY

Bonnte Stutes

Large farm house with 5 or 6 bedrooms Gas well on
property furn ishes low c ost hea ting Well water W red
tor 110 &amp; 220 volts Large tobacco and other

Z

Ileal E• lall for Salt

GALLIA OOUNTY'S

Price Low o10 s
NEW LISING 86 acre farm slluated In Addison Twp

NEW LISTING 10 mil '
out Jl acres level land)t
lots of r d frontage n lcf~
comfortable 6 rm and baHz
co l ege w!lh new roqf olw
furnace and co unt y water

120 000

THE

Jssoctate
Ph. Home 446 2885

NEW - 3 bedroom carpete d ran ch style brick home
2 car gar"9e lots of concrete Immediate possess on

4 SEDROO~S I" TOWN N ce Corp for t able 111, story NEW
LISTING
S15 000
home on Evans Heights THURMAN

Look ng for somethmg nat
roo sme ll to. I ve n &amp; notloo
large to manta n ? See thi s
lov ely ra nch sty le home
tea tur ng 3 bdrms
1
baths
d n lng
family
combo garage Enloy the
econom v of gas heat &amp; the
comfort of central atr A 1
for onl y U2 900
VACANT
LAND
IN
HA~R SON TWP
11 5
acr es ro I ng and mostly
wooded
l ob
base 8.
m nera
r gt1 s ncluded

AI&lt;C DOBERMANS qual y pup
Irom Chomp on blood I ne
Ill
stock pup usuall y ovo loble 68 CHEV mpo a moto recently
Olo'erhoul ed 4 Dr
Sedan
reds or b)ocks stud se v ce Ph
446 ~65~
$650 Also 68 Ply 2 Or HT ~
body ruff but uns ex:cellent ~
READY FOR CHRISTMAS Oobe
$1?5 Ph 245 5535
man P n ~her pups Chomp on
blood I ne AKC Reg 8 ock and 73 OLO S 88 PO PS a c:ond good
I res 2 dr Ph 446 2827
us olso Reg Austral on Blue
Healer Ph U6 9Cl91

1 34 Unit ol S amese

snow
10 Un t ol
Japanese cur
r ency
71 F sl't sauce
73 Greek
myltlologtcal
underworld

446-3636

T GMCP ckup
r T Che"' PU
r T GMC P ck up
197~ , T Che"' PU 4 WO
97S t T Chev PU
Ill
Pnl Che"' Impala
973 ' Chev P ckup
974 IT GMC PU
0
975 Fo d Mus ang II
1975 three fourth T GMC PU ~ w
r

SUNDAY Doc 26 1971J
eg Field ol granular

0

NEW LISTING 3 bedroom ra nch style home wllhon
walking distance of schools Located on VInton Court
Priced for quick sale S18 000

I

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
ACROSS

UV2 Locust St,
Ga llipolls. Ohi(l

CHESHIRE- Oh o If found call P •
0 Brook ns Ph 4.46-2826
Hi

384&lt;
AI&lt;C REG GERMAN SHEPHERD
PUPS 6 wks old Dec 15
moles SHO Fem al e $65
614 388 9081 aft er~ pm

GORDON

446 4905

BOAROING &amp; AKC PUPPIES

(en trol Hotel

LOST FEMALE FOX HOUNO 8

RUSSEU WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066

CANADAY
REALTY

31:

musl3?9 2173

r---------------~
FORLEASE
T !
3,000 sq It Spring Valley Plaza Can be Z
completed '" 30 days ~

THU~MAN HOUSE ant ques Fur
n 'tre sir pp ng
repo r on

SLEEPING Rooms week ly o es
Park Central Hote l

their advertisement the

•

~

RatEotate

SWEEPER and s•w ng mach ne LOST IN VICINITY of Codmus '
Oh a lhrve beogl• dogs 1
•po r po Is and suppl "' P ck
up and del very DaY s Vacuum
mole 2 females (on• of tt.. 1ft
Cleaner , m le up George•
femole1 onl~ 1 months old) Col 411:
Creek Rd Ph 446 0294
or block ton ond wh te r•word fll
call coll•ct hrt Miller , .
PASQUALE Electr col Ser ... ce
I 532 9761 or H B M ller (Cod r"
~~~~ 2716 day or mght

WILL THE PERSON WHO HAD THE
flo Terriers pups advert a
wh le bock please co ll4~6 9392

Please Read Your Adl

1

, ...

Real t:8lak for Soo.le

K... r t:olnl&lt; fur Sal.-

Lott aod Fowad

DEAD Stock removed No charge
Co112A5 55U

For Rent

shoukt

K.al t:olate for Sal&lt;

~

WANT AD RATES

Advertisers

Real t:stal• for Sal.-

Rm.£iitate for Mlc

FOR SALE

on!

HOME WITH FEW ACRES o 1 le nd tampmg Jo:qu.ipmenl
co 1troc1 o s n lor deal W th
S Lo t (.o tcv
15m les of Go 1pol s S200 per C nc;m I
Start at I Soles Rt 62 N ol
u th ptJ y o 1h ca h4. 1!
o Ploo5o
lo cod
446 :.1426

Hdp Want&lt;..!
LAOV TO LI VE n w th rehred
2 br I o le
Ph
man

379 25?3

New house tn Porter Brook
Sub
Brtck
fron1
3
bedrooms 11f2 baths large
fam1ly room ex large lot
u nrce carpl!:hng 44' 1304

or 446 3832

FOR SALE
New hou se on Debbte
Dnve
a II
bntk
J
bedrooms
1'11 baths
central atr range dtsposa1
and electric garage door

opener Ph 441 1304 or 446

~3=83~2~------------~ ·

'

�C6--The.§undayTimes-Senlinel SWidav Dec ?111976

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinal Classifieds

C-4-TI!eSundayTimes-Sentlnel,Sunday Dec 26 1976

For Best Results Use Sunday Times~Sentinel Plassifieds

1\dvtrllsomenls MUST 8 E

planet one ct.y In advane:t

Noti.-n

Wanted

30c a lme
1st lnseltion

WANTED

I will pay 1100 or more for
certa1n old L1onel &amp;
Amer~can Flyer tra1ns I

21 cents a ltne
3 InsertiOnS

~Nrh

buy any pteces

accessones

Call

or

for

mtormation 446 1122

19 cents a ltne
for 6 msertions

"Good Neighbor"
for II Yn RM tiiCI ........

C K Snowdtn
24 Stitt Street
GalhpOIII Oh10
Phone 4U UfO

MUST BE PAID
IN ADVANCE

- Yard Sales

11&amp;.!1

- Help Wanted

- In Memory
-Card of Thanks
- Lost and Found

....

~II'H

,

BEG N your spr ng clean ng by
hov ng you carpets cleonvd by
best method known RemoYe
ol the d rt Make vour corpet
look new oga n For free
est mote call 379 2682

I

f

MPA .. &gt;I'

dref nl$hed County Rd 8 off
35 Center ... lie V I age 2-45
9479

firs t day tf appe01rs and

lOW wee,k ly and m o nthl~ roles at
l bby Ho el ~~6 1 7~3

Peto for Salt'

report errors In time for

l GHT housekvep ng oom Pork

read

the next Insertion Paper Is
responsible for only one

I&lt; &amp; P l&lt;enne s 388

SLEEPING rooms lor rent Gall a
Hotel

Incorrect 1nserhon

PHONE 446·2342

51~

OFF CE space dow town
cond AYe ~~6 0008

Se

TAA LEA fat one m le f om HMC
Phone ~46 3805

Call

H~U

C K Snowden
24 State Street
Galhpohs Ohto
Phone 446 4290

r~l

A

..

tRAILER SPACE Iorge lot on At35
n&amp;or shopp ng o eo $50 ma
Phone4461909
BRADBURY FURN APT S Adult,
only no pe s dep req 729
~nd A ve Ph -i46 0957
NEW MOBILE HOME n Gall pol s
I o 2 odu s only Ph 446 03JB
FURN APT All ut I I es po d
oduhs ani~ Ph ~~6 9523

827~

R

mlle east of Par e

554

BOARDING Wes
cle l Ken el5
town 446 4824

v Pupp es

Cr
2 m les from

CENTENARY Woods Ken nel Pet
groom ng foe I I es Hove your
pe g oom•d undee 1an ta rv
cond All b eeds accepted.
~46 0231
RISING STAR KENNEL Boord ng
ndoor outdoo uns G oom
mg ol broeds Chesh e Ph
367 0292
BRIARPATCH Kenne ls Boo d ng
AKC Gordon Se te s beaut lui
ed and white Eng I shCocker
female black and wh te mole
4.. 6 419 1

3 BR HOME 20 18 Eastern Ave
$150 pus sec dep ~46 0008

ORAGONWYNO Co t ery Kennel
AKC ChowChow pupp as
2 BEDROOM 1RA LEA
ut ltes
mogn f cen t c nnomons Onv
po d n c ty no ch ld en no
CFA Flame P:o nr 5 omese
pets Ph ~~ 6 0693
female cot spay ed Phone ~46

TRA LER ON HILL TOP OR Small
co ll675 4886

KEEP

your carpets beaut ful
despite conston too ste eps of
a bu sy lam ly Get Slu e lustre
Rent electr c shompooer S
Cen tral Supply Co

\IOIJ.[)'J
Heallhinsurance
ro

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APARTMENTS

P• IU ..... 1011!'1.•11fl iii!MiriiiCe Clf

C K Snowden
14
Street
Ohto

1 Bedroom unfurntshed
Immediate occupancy

Ph 446 1599

W

I

EMORY

HILLCREST KENNEL

SC HOOL SEWING mach ne
S nger n Wol ut con1ole buf
tonho es bl nd t.ems sews on
kn ls$-i6
cosh or ter ms
~-46 471b

Auto Sal.,
NEWGMC
Tr uck Headquarters

I

19?0VW

1974
1973
197-4

1 Doleful
Harbor
10 Sing ng

e

vo ce

14 Brtel
19 Refunded
21 Three banded
armadillo
22 Stlakespearean
k ng
23 Br mless caps
24 Became
ctlecked n
development
26 No1eworthv
28 Altar screen
29 Small dog
30 Anc~enl Greek
I;.. ltv
32 B bllcal weed s
33 Pomt at hamme
34 Girls name
~5 P eces out
37 Mans name
39 Latr
40 Church serv ce
41 Reward
42 Lampreys
44 Empower
4e Datum
4 7 Scotttsh caps
48 Pulver zed roc k
50 Wlthou slumber
52 Deca ys
53 Frequency
modulalton
(abbr)
55 Remunerated
57 Mans n ckname
58 Close
59 Depress on
60 Note of scale
62 Turn around
tra ck
64 Developed
66 News gather ng
organ zatlon

hntt I
68 Pad notice

carr iage

64 Wooden support

curreM:y
135 t.4ounta•ns of
EurQpe
137 Employs
139 Mohammedan
commander
t•o Wolfhound
141 Rugged moun
ta ln crest
1 43 Face ol watch
1 45 Make lace
1 46 Nat \18 of
Catlonla
148 Schoolbooks

86 Trustworlhtness

I 50 Comb lorm

75Stad
77 Quarrel

7 Bllahan seaport
80 Excuse (cOllOQ )
8 1 Fuss

82 Herm I
87 Getting up

devil

152 Footba 1team
89 Beverage
92 Perla n1ng to the 1 53 C ayey earlh
cheek
95 Mans name
98 Allee! on
99Names

1 54 Girls name
156 More vap1d
1 57 Stye of automo
ble
1 58 Old pronoun
1 59 Peruse
160 Vanety of coru n
dum

101 Frull (pi)

103 Heraldry
grafted
1 04 Devoured

t 05 Rockf ish

106 Near
I 07 Parent leo oq

I

108 Wlte of Geralnt

DOWN

IIOOblan
1 11 Note ot scale
1 12 Artie le of Jewe rv
1 I 3 Barracuda

115 Sun god
117 Server
119 Steamsn

p

labbr I
t 20 Snorl hit
12 1 Bar enness
1 24 Trade

126 Tear
I 27 Imila ted
128 Onnk of the

gods
130 Skodded
132 Saucy
133 English baby

COUNTRY
EVeRYTHING
appo ntment ID

yr oto brick lac a ted
7 ml from HMC
beauty s situa ted on
ac;res of lend In th e
sc;hool dlst w lh '" m I
frontage
on
Raccoon
Creek
Other
SP._tC al
fea tures are ~ BR s 3 1
baU'IS family rm w1th WB
fi r ep la ce formal d nlng
rm
formal en tran ce
laundry
rm
larg e
screened n pat o and 2 car
4i~lrege Over SIOO 000

z

i=
0
I

z

•5
z

~

a
,..

ll&lt;al t:olall for Salt

dr
972 t T Chev p c: kup
1973 , T Che"' PU
1975 three fourth TChev PU

SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS INC
I JJPneSt
.446 2532
69 FORD P clcu p one hall T -4 "6

3? 2

~

lit

iQ
I

BEEF CATTLE COUN
TRY - 300 acres mo st y
cle-an roll ng pasture lllnd
fQ nced &amp; cro ss fer\ced 3
ba rns tob base old hom e
S2~0 per acr e
BEST
BUY
IN
GALLIPOLIS
If you
wa nt o I ve near' do wn
town be he f rs to see th s
love l y remodeled 2 story
Th sa re C! t ve 3 B R hom e
featu res new v nyl s d ng
modern kitchen erge L R
d n ng rm fam ly rm
l&amp;u ri dr y WW carpe part
baser1 ent &amp; garage Won 1
be on th e marke long at

&lt;

73 MACH 1 MUSTANG 70 0 ds Ill
Cutless Sup erne 69 Newport
eft
Chrys le Ph 388 8850

r:

0

1 Arrange m folds
2 Repr.mand
3 Eplc poems
4 Sw sa river
5 Ceremony
6 Parent (colloq I
7 Harvest god

class
&amp;Intent
9 Foot lever

1o Foreign

11 Meadows
12 Hindu cy mbals
13 Conjunct on
14 Gull like Hlfd
15 Belore
16 Buys back

18 Anclent char

,.z
-t

ot

20 Erase (prtn1 ng )

23 tnaects
25 Ell

27 Crawls
28 Rema1nde?
31 Olls~r ng lei I

33 Mocasstns
36 Strike
38 Transact on
~0 Spar

41 Man s n ckname
43 Project ng tooth
45 Bes~atler
46 Quarre ed w th
47 Pll"h
49 Elll emely tern
ble
51 Cap Ia ofT bet
52 Venerate
53 Pennant
54 Mascut ne
56 Rende ring tn
sa ne
59 That whiCh d1S
courage a
60 Accompl shment
61 Poker stake
63 Thoughtful
65 Port of stloe
6 7 Greek le11er
69 A cant nent
labbr I
70 Mor11fy ng
72Th cket
7 4 Pr eltx twtce
76 Note of sc ale
77 Fac ta I ex pres
ston
79 Heavyweight
champ on
83 Oulctl town
85 Engrossed
Sf ':avern

87 Winglike

91 Chem1ca1 com
pound
92 Parent (colloq I
93 VISIQOth ktng
94 Chine,. diS
tance meuure
96 The aweetsop

97 DepoaoiS
I 00 Symbol lor ten
talum

102 T Ue or respect
lpl)
I 05 Pool ollrull
1 09 Jackdaws
t 1 2 Stunted person

1t3Stalk
1, 4 Shaded
116 Aleutian stand
11 8 Rlver in Korea

120 Chast sed
I 2 t Bridge

0
z

measure
gold con
land

t 29 Foray
1 31 Trader

t 32 Welks wllh

I!

il

Q

TAVERN
Ope rated by 4£
sa m e tam ty tor ~o yrs 11111111
Good equlpm enl excellen t lit
loc al on term s and ncome
t gures ava fab l e to Yt
qua fed buyer Ca
for fll
appo nt me n t
~
Goo(l 2
BR hOm.e
s pa rt a ly
rem ode led w th a n ce
kitch en and b&amp;lh l&amp;un drV
'rril gas furnace co ncrete
d r ve ana new sewage
system Barga n pr ce d at
S11 000

I

AT
LAST
DREAM HOME

~
••

BRAND NEW all electr ic
fully ca rreted 3 BR r&amp;nc fl
beaut fw moder n Kitchen
wl1fl range car por t n.ce
level lot good loc&amp;tJon for
anyOne work ng at mines

~

YOUR

I

$26 500

tbi:AL FOR HORSIES and
t s lUSt outside the- elty .I
BR 2 ba th s 2s tory home 3
ca r garag e 6 22 acres
fenced SJO 000

C
C

1ft

Vt

m

,.

r-"

0

SELL MORE -

For Sale

LIStiNGS Ni;!DI;D

Vacant Land
32 Aerts
Just off R:o• te 160 on
Tt'lompso~P Beau t tul
bu ldtng
h wooded
areas
,!Sur home
he re and
away trorn t
~Itt Pr ced wen below fa ir
market value at SIO 000

OTHER COUNSELORS
GALLIPDLIS
Denver K Htgt1y

u•

CRDWN Cltv

odo:~

Joe Crans
256 1456
Naltone( Advertislllt with
Gallery of Homu

LIMESTONE FOR ORIVEWAYS

11506ALESolhoy cd iiJ H Ndo

245 58 4
CHAIN l NK AND WOOD FENCES
NOW at REDUCED Pr ces
SAVE Roy Houck Fence Center
I no 2237 or I 35J ..668

CARL WINTERS PH 245 5115
All TYPES of bv ldtng mater ols
block br ck sew er p pes w n
dows
I nlels etc
Claude
W nters R o G onde 0 Phone
245 5121 ofterS

FIREWOOO Ph 446 49Q'I
DECEMBER

S~LE

SAVE UP TO 30

Perc ent store w de NEW 3 PC

~OTS

REFRIGERATORS
wosh•rs
dryer ranges Gene ~ogg5
1294 EasernAYe Ph 446 7398

For furthe

AVE PH 446 9523

446

9930 Even ngt.

MAROUHTE
DIAGNOSTIC

388

APPLIAFfCE SERVICE goo ond
AU'rOMO) IVE
eleclrlc Ph 99:1 5726
Oscilloscope

$2?5 Ph ••6 •sBs
BEDROOM SUITE rechn
ng rho r new wood bu n 9
sto11e 367 7329

P19C.t

EAR CORN AND FREEZER FEEF

pi 388 9991
AlUM STORM WINOOWS S VW
t es and wheels 2 mud o d
5 \O W P
h 245 5535

Flrowoed MOSTLY tlkkory 525
per ttck 24S 5535

ALLEN S GENERAL

IUILD A HOME A long
R t 7 Crown Cltv we have
2 lots wt1h a total of 91
frontage Buy both for only

S5 000

Audrey Canaday

clearl~f Ph •&lt;~&gt; 0051

CONTRAC

*

TORS remodeling houta
r
ng,.) house plumbing Ft••
eshmoles 446 2910
SANDY AND BEAVER INSURANCE
CO has oHered se v ce~ fo r
F re
su once coverage m
Gol110 County lor almost o cen
tu y Forms ho C!&gt; and per
wno p vpe y cove OQt!'t ore
ovotloble to meet ndl..uduot
needt Contocf T F lurlftar1
your netghbor pnd ogfnf

LARG£

BUSINESS Price r educed
on 2 bay bus ness bulldtng
and land located on Rt
160 In Ewlnglon Buy now
for s 15 000 00

'REALTOR

2783

Ear Am sofa &amp; cho
wood I m KOTALfCTandscop ng residenhol
$275 modern sofo cho r
&amp; Commerc ol thrubs trees
lolo'eteot $27-!1 solo b&amp;d w th
rock gardens oil in5tolled &amp;
matchi ng choir $150 Recliners
guaranteed Ph 245 9131 "-'6
$100 dn~ up Tables Coffee
3100
~
end HeJCogon mople or p ne
•
ARE
YOU
COOL
MAN'
Thtri
you
$50eoth magazine
rrack s
need thQ lf1sulohng eJCpert• ol
mo~i &amp;S28" bookcase $20
LAWRENCE HEATING AND
8o!ilon Rocker 155 maple
ELECTIUC TO g ..... you a fr"
roble 4 cho r s $175 d net e
est more on blown n Insula
table and SIX cha rs S89 dmelle
t on Coli 675 3099
tab e ond four cho rs $55 Bunk
beds complete $150 mottreu
CALL ABLE BUILDERS
and bo)( spr ngs $50 eo queen
For new homes and emodel ng
s ze $130 set maple 6 gun
of any kmd Spec ol pr cas on
cob net $155 chest of drawer
storm w ndows and doors No
$50
jOb too small frH estln'fotes
USED
Roof ng - we•kvnds coli col
Telev1s ons color' &amp; black wh te
lect Columbus Oh 614 263
consol~s &amp; portables washers
2669 Ph 675 6392 Owner
dryets rohg., reftl~ ators
Fred lohrmer
glass door cabinet
uhl ty
dozer
cob net wardrobe d nette set SM1TH EXCAVATING
backhoe trencher dump truck
bedroom suttes beds chests
work done of reosonoblv rate5
dr&amp;ssers
tobl•
lamps
Ph ••6 3981 John Sm thJr
chain
other Items
coli
~- 0322 do~ or even ng 3 ml BACKHO~ dozer""" dllcher ~
out Buta ... tlle Parler Rd off Rt
dumr, truck Concrete "t~Ork
100
Half eld Bockho• Ser RUtlond "FRESH cor load ol W Vo Chunks 0 Ph 742 2008 or 4-46 2786
quolltr, ~oaf lowosh Put a BORDERS GARAGE DOOR SER
spark e In your f replace dur ng
VICE Commer cal and r•s den
the hoi days Sk dmo e Foster
I ol spec ol1ilig m opefators
CooiCo 446 2?83
l ocol256 6472
HAY Ph 4.. 6 1058
COUGHENOUR WATER DELIVERY
446 3902or446 4262onyllmtt
GOOO USEO FURNITURE
Alt'aCodo elec onge gas space INSULATION BLOWN tn s de wall
heole
60 000 BTU clesk
and othu Free ••• matts Ph
675 &lt;!96
,
magot ne rack gas r ange Co
bn&amp;Snyderfurn 4461 17 1
DOZER WORK o:covot ng

Ph

at

RON CANADAY

LAYNE S NEW &amp; USEO FURNITURE "--~
Oft-"
NEW
~•••~
.. ~

FIREWOOD

ROOM

THE

3 BEDROOM CARPETE'Ii
HOME located In H3rrlson
Twp Macedonia Rd F A
turn ace modern k tchel"'
rural water end cisterns ll
peaceful hame In 1 rural
setting Price S21 000

WE NEEO LISTINOSI

mformahon coli

Gall poh s Block Co Ph

FOM

reasonable pr ce 4
home on 2 A acres
1
sthoots 5 m es from town
on blacktop road UO 500

TRESSS l WIN SIZEINTER SPRING
367 ?338
$4S NEW 3 PG ENO TABLE SETS
LIGHT
we ghl ch1mney blocks
$39 95 U HAUL RICES NEW
AND USED FURNITURE 854 2nd

OF

New LtstmQ 40 Acr es w th
3 bed roo m hom e 3 out
bu l d ngs
200 tobacco
base s tueted on county
road
appro)( ma et y 4
miles f om R o Grande
near Cora M II Ca ll tor
mor e .nforma tlon

FAMILY we have a 9 room
.-bedroom 2 story tlome In
• Bidwell only 20 minu tes
from -coal mines storm
wlnctows ana doors F A
fuel oil furnace
nice
garden area can be yours
within 30 davs for only
S22 000 Call for an ap
oalntment

KEMPER HOLLOW - 7
miles fr om c ly 3 BR
frame ranch on lg lot
f)nlsh this yourself and
seve Ul 000

USED APPLIANCES

Th re e bedroom
r an ch
sty l e home locat ed
n
Mead ow
Look
5 0
s tuated on 100 x 150
m
proved lot Gall po l s C ty
water
Cen r e t sewer
co lecl on sys tem
Cedar
s d ng
Bea ut fully
d ec orated
On y
f ve
m nules from do wntown
Galllpol s Shown by ap
potntmen only $45 000 00

f iVE BEDROOM car
peted hOme oca te d 4 rp es
from downtown Gall pol s
Two w b f replaces two
bal,tls w showers beau t ful
wooded J acre lot heated
and cooed w h heat
p-!JmP
Gall polls C ty
Sc hool D strict Call for
more ntormat on

COMMERCIAL SITE or
suitable for re s den t aJ 38
acres ~00 frontage an R 1
7 400 Ohto R tver fr.on tage
4 water taps $25 ooo

FOR SALE

ngs

•

New L stmg
Remade ed
home adta cen l to Rt 7 on
Eastern Aven u e Make
excellent rent a
Pr ced
Reasonable SIO 500 00
NEW LISTING 12 2 acre
farm
10 m inu tes from
Galt pol s Larg e com
for tabl e farm hom e J to 4
bedrooms tg tam 1Y r oom
1 v ng room modern k
chen 2 f r eplace s cen tr a
a r cond on ng
2 car
garage ca ttl e barn Job
base olh er outbu ld ngs
welt and spring w a.ler
rutll wa er ava fable Bu y
now for onl y 559 000 00

2 Bedroom hom e s tua ted
on 21, acres In Bdwe l l
F ull bah w shOwer new ly
nstal ed for ced a r furnace
anq hot wat er t an k Her es
a '~cod buy for on ly
$14 000...00

REDUCED! Rental m
ves tment
1 tully fur
n shed a r cond tre llers on
19 ot Georges Creek Rd
Now pr ced at Sll 000

For~

MUSf sell I ke new 2 pc Spon sh
CH MNEY Blocks W Vo &amp; Oh o
I v ng oom su te exc cond
l ump Cool Golhpol s Block
4~6 3712
Co 446 2783
FIREWOOD Coli 388 9930 e11en

3

w

ATTENTION MINERS J
BR home In good cond I!
Porter on 1 ao:;re Rural
water fuel o heal Nor1h
Gellla Sc tlools S28 000

Ill

t 42 Mans name

971f2 Acre Itt 1 Farm
WLi h n'rln not'lft and coal
se.ms lust 20 min from
Gallipolis 8 f~~""rts riVe r
bottom b~lc~?m~ end
garage (:It&gt;
.. metal
bern to'"
:ifn 1 800
lb tobac
net fenced
Pasture 0 Y. S65
11
take S20 000 to SJO
hbme
In trede If locatton 1 good
Lergt assumable loan on
balance

VINTON VILLAGE N ce J
BR hom e w lh lg barn 3l 4
acres l eve
to rolling
nearly all fen ce d Wll k tng
d stance o elem schoo
bank &amp; grocery $18 000

Ill

t 38 Novel
1 40 Danish meuure
1 41 Danish Island

t 55 Arlocle

m ooo

Z

SETS S.t9 95 NEW SEALY MAT

90 Jumped

th1s sturdy 2 sto ry br ~ k
yourself &amp; liv e n a fine
home et very low cos t 4
BR: 2 b{lths ne arly new
1
forced atr gas
lot Walking dis tance
dow ntow n
Gal ipo

A

Ntlr the corner Qf t hird
lndVi(te Streets This 111 2
story 3 btdroom hom~t tha t
has
been
remodeled
recentlv Just thlr)k of the
ease In getting tq the
ahopp ng district schoo~s
c,-.urc~es etc 9fftrfd to
you at a very reasol'lebJe
Pr 1ce of s~t ooo

FULLY
FURNISHE
mob e bom e on 6 ac-re
Paho outbuildings fuel o t
furnoce heat ~11 000

,.
&lt;
-

men

len

COULD
BE
A
SHOW PLACE Modern ze

z

BAR BUSINESS &amp; 'HOTEL
Be your ov: n boss w 11'1
h s one~ m a Tel m e n
ves tm ent l ocated on a
cbr.ner lot n Mtctd eporl
Ca I for mor e nlormat on

In town

i

tillable
story farm
rd S40 000

FIFTH AVE
~ IB 000
barga n pr ced 6 rm and~
bath s ucco fea tur es 2 Br s ift
up and 1 down arge back ...
porch and almo st new stee -

oa age

A

ott~e r

136 Burma tr bes

1 51 Loud noise
1 53 Mountatn (abbr)

SEROUS
FARM? L ei
1hiS 75
tOtHIC CO
pas1Ur e

BEOROOM SUITE 51:2' 9S NEW
2 PC LIVING ROOM SUITE COAL - open 6 days o wetk and
$149 9S NEW 5 PC DINETTE
e~o"en ngs Del y on Saturdays

88 Repetthon
89 Mans n1ckMme

S11 000

EOGEOFTOWN ~

133 Plot
I 34 Babylonoan
obocle ol clead

147 Girl s nam~
148 Cheer
149 MuSic as wnt

n ce 1974 M dway dou~le
wide 3 BR modern kitchen
wj fh range oven hood &amp;
refrig er ator
carpeted
l0x20 adjj ton at ached 6
ml es trom c ty 3 from
Holzer Hasp 1 i!ICre lot

0

measured steps

t 44 Terdy

PRICED TO SELL I Yory

1

llal lei

~

125 Old Span sh
t 26 Feasl
I 27 laland ofllre

_.

-

1 22 Miss ves

I 2 3 Dlslence

Good sol d 6 rm al"'d bat~
hOme features formal
d n ng rm taroe LR •nd
k tchen 3 BR s o I fur
nace well or e~ty waler
new a urn num sl d ng and

NEW LISTING Neat w e
ca pe ed
3
n su ated
bedroom home located S
m les no r th of hospital on
Rt 160 Buy his hom e for
S17 000 Al so rental tra fer
avatlab e ac ro ss ! rom
pr ope rt y tor S9 600 Ca 1 for
more Infor m at on

Ar.

I yr ol d
brick r anch offer s 2 140 sq
t of modern liv ng Don 1
wa t to see th s 3 Br and 2
ba th home The k !chen Is
comp lete Wtfh dtShwluher
m 500
d1 sp microwave oven an d
CHEAPIE
Per fect for rang e
Other
spec al
weekend s 15 acres of lilnd fea ures lire the large
about
cleared and
formal d n ng r m quality
wood!. w h fran ege on ca rpet hea t pu mp 1 se s
L ltle Raccoo n Creek pus pat 0 doors 12x57 pa 0 and
an old 2 s ory han e 2 car garage w h elec r c
5 I 900
door opener

II
I

1 7 Heating dev•ces

offers room to spare for
your g row ng
tam ly
Where else can vo u get a
full basement family rm
with gas f r epla ce large
kitchen anct d n ng area for
on v S25 500

$26 000

C

excellen t opportuntty fori
some business m nded
person fM s Iaroe corner
to t w lh a modern br ck
bu ld ng is a good pla ce to:.
st art Can be bought w thO
or w thout equ pmtnt Cell&lt;
lor appo tn! men t

THREE bedroom
c ar
peted hom e
oc a ted on
Sanders H Add I on on l y
fi"Ve m nutes from down
town Ga II polls S tua ted on
a 90 xSS mproved lot new
F A natura gas furnace
Ga l l tpol s C ty water
sho wn by appo ntm ent
Pri ce $23 000

PIZZA IUSINEI$ -

~~

JUST THE RIGHT SIZE

&lt;

outbuildings A~proxlmalely 400 lb
Pri ce Sll 000

NEW - 3 bedroom ca r
peted ranch style br ck
home 2 car garage lots of
concrete
m med l ate
possess on Price
Low

Realtor Associate
446 3636

Any Hour

40 s

Merrill Carter 1
Assoctate
THREE (3) FULL TIME

SALESPERSONS

Gallia County's Fastest

TO

Real Estate Agency

tobacco base
Tell Your Santa Claus You Want Thts
For Christmas
The owner ot this quality butlt J bedroom spl I h~ 11el ha~
bought a tr.rm and Is ve ry an&gt;Ciovs to se ll hi s p csCt 1
home Includes a la rge li vi ng and dining rb01 Fu ly
equl ped k tc hen with lot s of cabl 1ets 1 bAth s n ce
l amlly room plu s garage all o 1 a t~rg e lot n Kygor Ck
d slr lcl

LAND ou atng or mobile
home lot s n Eureka area
Buy as many as ll acres tor
only
$5 J OO 00 Has rura
wa ter and w~l1
LAND 30 acres ot 1e11 et to
rolf ng ground on both s des
of Stale Rt
160 nei!Jr
Parler Rura l water fr on t s
on ~ loyd Clark Rd and Rl

160
LAND
56 acres f enced
w th 20 acres of I mber
r-lose to Nort h Ga a H gh
S("hoo l
loca t ed
on
Th P)m pson Rd tots of ro ad
fron t age
Buy
for
Sl5 000 00

LAND 20 acres Located n
Mo rgan TV" p
oc at ed w th
road fron ta ge on Ro w es
vtlle Rd Spring wal e
ava t ab l e
Buy f a
$1700000
LAND
SO x 96 t al
ocated on L dd y Hollow
Buy for $4 000 00
DWELLING and 26 X 32
blo ck bu d ng s tuated on
40 ,.; 132 lol n Ga pot s
nr; l u d n g co nt ents
of
dwell ng
Buy
tor

120 000 00
NOW t S20 ooo oo wil l buy a
modern
one f oa r
3
bedroom all el ec r c home
n Ga ll po ls c t y schOol
d str ct S tuat ed on 120 ,.;
75 tot Carp eted excep for
k. tchen and bath
new
cond t on rural water
cen rei sewage co llect on
blacktop str ee t s
Ca ll f or
mor e n forma l on Ca n be
v A and F H A f nanced
THREE
BEDR00/111
ca rpet ed a eleclr c hOme
s lua ed on 120x7 5 lot
fr ont ng on Tw p b acktop
Rd County water &amp; se wer
Price $22 soo oo
NEW LISTING 167 acres
of t li ab l e l&amp;nd
p lu s
com for a be 5 be..droom
farm house ba r n oa f ng
shed mach nery shed s lo
m k ho use severa other
outbu ld ng s s tua ed n
H nt ng on Tw p
near
Ty coon L ak e Thi s s e
r o ng to lev el far m f)(
ce ll ent for cro ps and
pa s ure Good fence easy
access
surr ou nded b~
countY. road syslem An
exce ll en t purchas e for
c ther he f u ure farm er or
the nves tor Ca t to r mor e
nfor rna t on

BEOROOr-1

Realtor
COUNTRY MANOR WITH AN ARTISTIC SETTING
One of Gall a Count y s best 3200 sq ft over all
8 acres of land n ce pond House
3 or 4 bedrOQms J fu ll baths 2
lt v lng room 16 l&lt;l9

HOUSE AND 11 AVAILABLE BLDG LOTS

Have you been lookmg f or a hom e w ith a country
setting' Stop looking here tt s A nice home w th 3
bedrooms bath shower moder n kttchen w tlh but II In
cab nets doubles nk. ltving room fuel oil for ced a 1r
fur na ce new steel siding recentl y nsta lled c ty
wa t er also has a small barn outbutld ngs and cellar
Ap pro x '1 acr es Lool&lt;. th s over

wtfh massi"Ve

Sl&lt;&gt;n&lt;dio·e~&gt;la o:e . K tlchen 1s beyond words You wt ll have

to bel eve - n ce pantry bay w m dow look ng oul
va lley Heat pump for heattng and cooling 2e ~~:8
deckmg r unntng l ength of house 2 ca r garage and
many more fea tures T ht s good fam ly IS leav ng
county Ca t oday for appomtmenl
SMA LL FARM
LIVIN G
Today s cho ce
ap
prox mat et y 75 acres of
pas tur e and fa m ng land
N ce
1
oom s
fu
baseme n
3 bedrooms
good ba n
two o h er
outs de bu ld ngs
ences
a r
p en t y wa er for
ca l e
sma
tobacco
acr eage w e ar c r ead y o

NI CE COMFORTABLE
8 ROOM HOM E
Br d 3 or 4 bedrooms w h
c l ose t s
fu
wa k n
ba seme nt Bu t n bac k
porch
n c ~ large fr an
po r ch C ilrp~ ng
odcrn
k Ch en c y wa te
ac r e
of good gard e and Lo s of
sh r ubbc y Beau lui han e
a a ow pr cc

se

INCO ME
IN VESTMENT
~ ap s ~ ooms each ap
7
be-droom 5o k chen l bu I n
cabnes
sove
r e r gera o
d n ny oom
plu s ba h a d u
y r oom
Has a ~ood rent a ncomc
could pay o th e bu d nn
w h n a f ew year s A
r e a vely new ap hon e
Do you need a good nco e
pr oper y""l Don wa to see
h

LOOK THIS OV ER

SPRING VALLEY
SU BOIVI SION
va can t lots - n ce
bu d ng l os w th
ut
es 11 e e
Lo
0 8 by 17 2 Beller
vm no w

s ze
all
s ze
ge l

.l BEDROOM

s

JU ST COMPLETED
Ou e ne ghborhood Th s
home s w e con stru cted on
a n ce levc- o 140 &gt;&lt; 160
F arne c on s ru e on w l h
br ck
fran
ma se r
bed oom w h ba h N ce
bu II n k. !chen lab e op
etec c ran ge an d wall
ov en Tl e house s fu ll y
ca rpet ed and has a tached
garage T h s one you w t
Ik e
med um
p r ce d
Owner w
he p 1 nan ce
qual fed buy er Ca ll novo

BRIC K HOM E
Th s s an ce hom e on ?net
A11 e
n Gal po t s
Bed ooms basc-n en
7
wood burn ng
1 c-p aces
nat gas F A h r n.=tcc Th s
home cou d be used as a
lwo ap t re ntal bu d nq
C ose o bu sn ess sec on
Lo ok h s O"Ve
COMMERCIAL
BUILDING &amp; SIT E
Sta e H ghway 7 North
Maso y Bu t d ng w th
br ck fr an
bu d ng
ke
Approx s ze 30 x24 7
Leve o fr onts 175
on Sta e H ghwav 7 Ca I

180 ACRES P L US
Va cant
A wood and
wond er and
some
pasture and t liable land
less thai'! $160 ocr a G(e

now

CHURC H OR
BUSINES S
BU L DIN G
Appr ox 1850 sq
o e
room 5 r ee l e11e l w th 5
a d
r oo m s p us ba I
s oraq e oon n basl t n
Loc:a ed on t yhw ay JS
Wus
(O fi\ N
0
5 lC:
70 &gt;&lt; 120
Na u a
' "s
turn ace a r co nd oned
C v wa ter bock b td nq
Won
as
lo q a 5!\ le
nr Cf' H as lo s of uses Cllll
PRICED
TO SE l l
Ar e you ook ng tor a good 3
bedr oom house? Clos e to
town., O"Ve I acre of gcod
land If you d vc ru cks
Ia s of space to par k Room
to k eep you r fa11or te pe ts
horses or call fe? Th ese ar e
a fe w !h ng s you ma y
~ ons der Th ere are ma ny
'fn or e for onlv $ B 000

MASSIE
REALTY

CONCRETE
WORK
pottos
s. dewolks
basement
etc
Lou s Cox -446 3398

32 State Street
Ph 446 1998

"'

FOft the besf n architte1urat
des.gn and bu ldmg of new
homes
small comij'l•rc:lal
bO ld ngs Opt or r•mod•l ng
w th state approval of pions
B•ll Wolk&amp;r 4~6 2146 or 4..._

A A Nibert, Broker
Mini Farm - 11 acres 2
sm out buildings Electr c
and water are there
11 yr old 3 br brick ran
ch er electric heat b\.t It In
kltctlen nice family room
s m lies from town

8652
SEPriC Tonks Cleaneil
1:

Plonl~

Sept c Tonk Servtce Ph 4A~
1972or675 2647
STUCCO- plat ter ng ond plosfer
repa r Textured ce ling 1w1rl
float or brush des gn 32 yr ex
p Wor~ by the hour o by the
jOb
256 1182
A ll work

guocanleed
SOBS
CS
Rodlo
Equip
&amp;veryth ng n Two Woy Rodto
Antennas and occet Georges
CrHI&lt; Rd~ Galllpollo ._.6 4517

Vacent land - app 3 a 2
good build ng s tes

Plc-..r• lube Specloliits

HARTWELL ELECTI!ONICS
TV Repatr
2'5 5365

PASOUAL"Ein~t;t"mg
51

Ga!Upoll1 Ph

446 11192

103 Cedar
2716 or

•«&gt;

Building loh - Ga llpol ls
area very nice lots for
those who w1nt to build
ttlelr own home we also
have other bu ld lno lot s
close to Gallipolis See us
for details
Burlding lots Vinton
are~ :1 vNy large lots

f4ew J br brick ran cher
t " rm din r m k !chen
t~nd ut 1 Jy rm
Well n
suleted copper plumb on a
large one tlatf a lot Close
to hospital This home hu
~een built witt! care
F¥m - 39a w th 2story 8
rm frame home barn and
several other outbullctlngs
HIS frontage on two roads
several acres t lia ble
remamder n clear pa sture
l.and

IF YOU AE

PLANNING

TO SELL CALL \JS

WE

HAVE

LIST

OF

'

50A CRES 00 PER ACRE
T h s s a good H 1 Far 1
Lot s of poss b l t es
85
ac r es of pa s urc 40 acr es
or Tl O c t llab c so n e
nbcr L nc- fenc es ar e
good 10 ro oms re mOd ~ cd
7 story t ou sc 3 w e bu It
barn s 2 she ds nd o t e
ou hu d ngs
Ca
to
appo ntmen
~l50

129 000 Buys Th is Well Ke~t Hom e
F ine 2 bedroom home bu1 1t r igh t 17 years ag o a 1d h&lt;ts
had excellent care slnce Includes a very n ce ki tchen
larro e bath ca r pet ed livi ng room Storage bulld t lg and
c1 p rfect flat lot ln
Cr eek School di stri ct

S ROOMS

2ACRES
Th s s a 11er y at rac t &gt;Je 3
bed r oom ho me bu t n
nc udes ga bag e
k !ch en
d sp osa countertop stove
wa ll ove n r elr genllor
w I ce makt
F nlshed
ba sement Bea u ful large
tr ees n ba ckg round The
com to r of c ty I l e th e
beauty and c-n loymen ot
country I vlng a IM s close
10 Gall po l s on State H gh

One of

A beaut iful home with an lnsp ri ng view of the Oh io
Valley - Includes 3 bed;;ftt, (\large living room w th
w b f ireplace br and ne ~~ kitchen famil y r oom
and den or office Hes l
newly car peted and 1$ In
gr ea t condition Loca ted n town and prlcert well under
560 000 Only one ol 1s k nd•

way

Branch BUD McGHEEManager
Th s s a money maker for
the r ght bu ye r Located at
IB Porlsmouth Rd Call
Oday for de l a Is

FOR SALE
New bnck home just completed 3 Brs 2 baths large
ltvtng room family room ftreplace ntce large kttctlen
dtshwasher d1sposat double oven Tappan range 2 car
garage wtth electrtc operator carpet throughout
central atr heat pump located on old Rt 35 wtthtn 2
mtles of HMC on Krtstl Drtve Pnced rtQtlt to sell w1ll
take trade tn lnqutre at Corbin &amp; Snyder Furnttufe

IT FOR YOU
Call wood Insurance &amp;
Real Estete446 1066
Evenings A ussell wood
446 U18
Ken Morgan U6 0971

446 1111 446 2513 after 5

Real Eotale for Sale
VA FHA 30 yr I no ne ng Ireland
Mo tgoge 77 E Stole At hens

592 3051
WANT TO OWN BUT NEED

HELP IN FINANCING'
N ce 2
bedroom iorm home
wh ch has been comple tely
emodeled recenlly lo ge be n
n good cond ton all ths st
1ng on oppr ox motely 17 oc es
neor town Mob e home ental
spot on p oper ty Good no.Jes
ment r ental opporlun tv r al
4~ 6 1049 otte 6 p m
BEST BUT IN GALLIA COU NT Y 1
leYel house 4 beuroom 2
bath s
l R
fo no I d n ng
room bu h n k1tchen rec
oom doub e cor garage J 7
port c:olly wooded acres mony
othe r e as Pr ce $46 000 IH
7.42 2A;,4

Mobile Humes for Sale

~tobil&lt;

USED MOBILE HOMES
CALl576 2711

Ph 446 0 75

TO ECONOM ZE on iuel u de p n
you mob le home and anchor
fo sole v Fosler Mob le Hone
Sery ce 4~ 6 2783 o Elmer Sk d
more 446 3"79

CARTER S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor Fou th&amp;Pn e
Phone 446 3888 o 446 4~ 777

STANDARD
Plumb ng Heat ng
215 Thtrd A"'e .446 37R7

GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMBING - Heal ng
At
Cond l ion g 300 Fourth A"'e

Ph ..6 16~ '
MBtNG
..) I~ HNG
Route bOo Everg een
Pho ne 446 2735

2 BEOROOM TOTAL ElECTRIC
MOBILE HOME
AT
Creek Ph 745 501 1

Quo

3 BR TRA IL ER on Ker Ho r sbu rg

Rd call 446 2565

END OF YEAR
CLEARAN CE SALE
USED MOBIL EHOME S
TRISTAHM H
Bonk F none ng
Gall po l s Oh
1220 Eoste n A&gt;~e
Gall pols Oh o
1971 Buddy 12 x:60 w th I p ou

Wanted toDu
1

b
196a PM( 12x60 2 8

BondS MOBIL EH OM~S
PI Pleasa nt W Vo

GENERAL Con t oc to s Do ol
mo sonory carpen e &amp; plumb
ng Ins all an d epa r a
dr Yew oys Ph 446 9587
PER SON 5 Body Shop of 26
Ro !rood St M ddl epor t s of
fe 9 on e"' ended spec ol
point fOb fh ough Dec 3 one
col or$ 00 2colo s$125

AULT MOBILE HOMES SERVICE

new

Bu stne ss n&gt;J estment or buy
for tu ure sale and pr of 1
E !h er way vou w II be u
ah ea d
Th s pr opert y s
loca ed at 742 Th r d Ave

On e of the- best buys on
today s ma rkc-1 Lots ot
1 v ng area n th s 2 story
older ho m e w th tots of
ca rpel throu g ho u t th e
house J BR tam v room
lg k tchen on e fo urth acr e
fl a lo Price d lo se
Ca t
now \22 000

129 000 Buys This Well Kepi Home
Fine 2 bedroom home buill right 17 years ago and ha s
tlad excellent car e sine ~ Includes

If vou want out~ de of he
cl l y and s I wa nt c ty
schOols th s m gt1t be your
ne)( th ome t so nRt 14 1 5
m es out Tw o Brs could
be
3
full
dv d ed
basem en Pl us rnare w lh
2 9 acr es of land Ca now
Thre e BR br ck r anc h w th
cen r al a r natur a gas
hea ? ca r a ached garage
w h ex ra storage space
p lu s a m etal bu tl d ng
au s de a on a wei land
sc aped one- th rd ac r e ot
Top of gr ou nd pool Ca 1

DOUBLE WIDE AND lOT 3 n le
from HMC ow 1e w I h0l1
I no ce Ph d46 1502

locat ed n the fa st est
grow ng area of Ga l Ita Co
on U S J5 near HMC Sold
hardwood floor s 11ery n ce
k chen 3 lar ge Brs ful
d v ded basemen t with
hea ed
garage
Only
$71 500

We have prospects fook l ng
n the R 35 area 1 you er e
h n k ng ot se ll ng an d
wa t ng tor spr ng
We ha ve severa l pote nttal
bu.,.ers look ng for hOus ng
n th e area of R:t 35
All of
shown
onty

our hstl ng s are
by appointment

LIST WITH VS REALTY TODAY We devote full lime
to selltng your property
business

Real estate Is our only

Wanted lo Duy
JUNK outo ond sc op metol Ph
!.C

nice kitchen

a perfect flat IQf in Kvgc r Creek Schoo l district
New listing
i ~:,:J:~n ~~1 oo K ng for 6 10od 3
ho c w h argc 7
w tl be sa sf cd
one
Crow C tv
hon c ha htl s hiH
(ar c

l

0

Pr cc Reduced
N!J flr l y new :J hcdroo m
ho me
n Kycc r Cr eek
Set oo d st
oc a cd o
s h~dy o on a qu c t co un r v
$h fOu oo Buys Th s
We I Care d For
81 l: evel
You be he tudge You c an I
buy mar e hou se for th(.
money 3 bedrooms n ce
k tchen furnished fam il y
room p us garege tt s ,.,
ba r gain why not be IS to
fo ol&lt;.
- Extra Specia l BuyBr ck and stone ran ch
forma e-n trance &amp; din ng
or 5 bed rooms t amll
room w B fir ep l ace 7
baths In town Pr i ced

S39 500
Don I Miss Se e ng
Th s Dut ch Colonti'll
Lovely w e bu 11 homo on
covn ry ane iu s 5 m e!&gt;
from
downtown
bed r oom~
2 1
ba hs
fam y room n ice K chen
fu I
base ment
on
L
bea ut ful 3 i!Jcre es ate
One Block from Park
Th s s ., solid older 1 '
story 3 bedroom hOmE'
bahs
f repece
n cr
kit chen S31 900 00 You I
ltk e I I you want n town
Va ca t on th e Year Around
Very n ce well bu 11 2
bedro om f u ll
ca r
Mme wth

One YOU VC
ted For
Lar yc Bl Level w th 3 or 4
bed r oom s l ar tj c t am ty
roo m 2ca r qara ge I a t tot
c ~t c e ll en t (o cat on
n city
SC hOO d Sir Itt SJ9 900 l,)u ys
lh s bc- 1'1 l y
30 Acre- Farn
Nca r R o Gra de 1 C Y
Scho o 0 !i r t t
nood
rollng land l'lll~ r aga old
t n c 2 st ory home w h
scvt:: r&amp;l out bu ild ngs
Pr ccd under \ JO000
Land &amp; Bultd ng
Lot s
1 Any s ze o you w sh ut
R o Gr ande Star a $4 000
No mob ile homes
0
CIIY
2 Bu ldlng
wa !lr sew er ... Cl'Jn C st r e-e t
nqa hospi tal
J 160 ac ol tre es s reams
hills S. excel len t unl lng
4 16 Ac
no bu d ngs
lar ge stream
2 ac bot
Th ~

w~

I om

Rfo G,.. ~ c
LO l:l CclU I ~ft\
cou nlry
ot nc ttr ~ mo b 111
hOTC 5 S7
u
WE NEED LI STINGS
W n cr sa es h1wc been
unbei !Jio' ea tJ e an d we have
e on9 1 st ol quo f ed
buyer s We can
sa sl y
Catt us be for e you I st

n

Today s Best Buy
Brand new d bedroo m !.P It
I lo'C I w lh 7 fv I M hs
f&lt;~bu ous k c t en
large
1 v ng anct d n ng nrc a ful y
carpeted w th ccn r aJ a
and garll ge Unl n s hed
ta m ly roGm M d for ties
buy s h s t An l'ISI c home
Call Us Bel orc
You Buy
We hav e ma y ol hH
pr oper es to cho ose fr om
w e al so ha ve 11 c necessary
1 na nc nq
'we nee d Listings Cal t
W1s etpan A9ency 446
Gatlla Co 1 Largn t
hta1t hies Agency
...
Office 446 l64J
Ike Wisem an 446 J796
E N Wtsem.in 446 4500

428 2nd AVE. GAlliPOLIS. OHIO

388 8176
OU) FURNITURE AND n
qu es PI 24S 5050

a very

large bath carpeled living room Slor age bui lding and

0

One of th e ar eas fin est
homes AI br ck L shaped
w th t u basemen t cen ra
a r nat ural gas heal 3
l arge B R s
FR
w lh
f rep la ce "-...fo~~ a.l d n ng
r oom eat ~e n Wtlh
d shwashcr and disposa l
lots ol cab ne s laundry
room on m a n fl oo r w th
tot s of s torag e space 7 car
atta ched garage Ca for
an appolltm ent r ghl now

PHONE 446-0552-ANYTIME

Skirt ng anchor ng and pol o~
3608 oi e- 4

co 114~ 6

DOUBLE WIDE MOBILE HOME o1
bd 2 bath s k d
rm I v
room refr g stove nderp
ng 2 outbu ldln gs go de-1
space 1 3 orres good oc o o
on St Rt 325 2 niles f om
Me 9!. m ne mus sol molt' g
Pnc ed S16 000 Ph 388 8254

L eG r ande Dr J BR s full
ba semen! large L R w i th
ca r pet ea t n k che n
att ached garage al on a
flat lot C y SC hOO S Ca ll

look ng for a good n
ves men t? J8 N c I Ave has
lots of v ng spa ce tor very
I 1 e money

now

1969 CHAMP ION 12)1;60 2 Br

Plumbmg and Healing

Homes lor Renl

2 BR MH $100 3 BR MH 1125

1961!ElCONA 12x60 3B

r

buy

J

IF YOU DON T SEE Ttl-to
PROPERTY YOU WANT
IN THIS AD CALL WE
MAY BE ABLE TO FIND

~

On e Of Th e Areas Most Beautiful
It s a year old but looks and Is better than new 3 large
bedroom s tormi\ 1 1)1 ing tantastlc l lrepic'l ce In lhe
family roo n 7 ba th s ex tra n ice carpe ting ptus 7 cl'l r
ga age You al so ha ve th e use of .:t pool and c ub hOu!ie
to pnva tc par t es or gn fher lngs Is a heck of A good

VS REALTY

PROSPECTIVE BUYERS
ANO WERE ANXIOUS
TO SERVE YOU

OlW r

76 Ac r e Fa
modern s x:
oorr ho TIC good bar n
ne w co l shed ut II y b dg
L ne fences a woven w r ~
42 acre-s B G pas tur e 10
7'J acres
ucre s wooded
m£&gt; adow
and
t 1 l'lb e
p en y ol Qcus tre es 200
b oba cco ba s~ Tl s far 11
s n the Ga pol s Sc t oo
D str c t Cat now
ACREAGE
BUILDINGS TE S
65 Acres ce aled n Gr een
&amp;
P er r y Twp
Sn a ft
an ount of 1 m bcr 50 A
lable 2 barn s 40 ,., 30 and
40 "'24 t f yo u ar e took ng
l or valuab le and lor '
ves tm en t her e 1 s Ca l
oday

COT

TAGE n c ty on Spr uce
Natural gas fu e
Stree
cl y wate r an d sewer
W lh n
easy
walk ng
d sta nce to store s N ce
arrangem en t tor s ng e
per son or co uple Pr ced
S11 00000

A

4MILESOF
GALLIPOLIS ROUTE 141
3 bedr oo m home w th
cab ne s all bu
n
n
k chen and modern bath
Slor m door s whi te pr ime
sl d ng
Fue l o
heal
copper
p u mb ng
Ga pd s school d si r ct
long Only
Won 1 l as
$19 50000

On Rt
60 near Vinton
Th s 2 story fr ame 1s
s t u &lt;~ ed on 6 ac re s of lana
dea f or ral s ng yo ur own
beef P cc-d n he ow
$10 s
I ce1llng
ture de5tgns
repo r Yl nyl wa ll paper ng new
bath s new k tchens Anything
n remodel ng or epo~

Ph Home 379-2184

LAND
Bu d ng Jot n
Porter Ca ll today for more
"'*Orll)al on

TWO

WISEMAN AGENCY

LARGEST REAL ESTATE AGENCY

Bonnte Stutes

Large farm house with 5 or 6 bedrooms Gas well on
property furn ishes low c ost hea ting Well water W red
tor 110 &amp; 220 volts Large tobacco and other

Z

Ileal E• lall for Salt

GALLIA OOUNTY'S

Price Low o10 s
NEW LISING 86 acre farm slluated In Addison Twp

NEW LISTING 10 mil '
out Jl acres level land)t
lots of r d frontage n lcf~
comfortable 6 rm and baHz
co l ege w!lh new roqf olw
furnace and co unt y water

120 000

THE

Jssoctate
Ph. Home 446 2885

NEW - 3 bedroom carpete d ran ch style brick home
2 car gar"9e lots of concrete Immediate possess on

4 SEDROO~S I" TOWN N ce Corp for t able 111, story NEW
LISTING
S15 000
home on Evans Heights THURMAN

Look ng for somethmg nat
roo sme ll to. I ve n &amp; notloo
large to manta n ? See thi s
lov ely ra nch sty le home
tea tur ng 3 bdrms
1
baths
d n lng
family
combo garage Enloy the
econom v of gas heat &amp; the
comfort of central atr A 1
for onl y U2 900
VACANT
LAND
IN
HA~R SON TWP
11 5
acr es ro I ng and mostly
wooded
l ob
base 8.
m nera
r gt1 s ncluded

AI&lt;C DOBERMANS qual y pup
Irom Chomp on blood I ne
Ill
stock pup usuall y ovo loble 68 CHEV mpo a moto recently
Olo'erhoul ed 4 Dr
Sedan
reds or b)ocks stud se v ce Ph
446 ~65~
$650 Also 68 Ply 2 Or HT ~
body ruff but uns ex:cellent ~
READY FOR CHRISTMAS Oobe
$1?5 Ph 245 5535
man P n ~her pups Chomp on
blood I ne AKC Reg 8 ock and 73 OLO S 88 PO PS a c:ond good
I res 2 dr Ph 446 2827
us olso Reg Austral on Blue
Healer Ph U6 9Cl91

1 34 Unit ol S amese

snow
10 Un t ol
Japanese cur
r ency
71 F sl't sauce
73 Greek
myltlologtcal
underworld

446-3636

T GMCP ckup
r T Che"' PU
r T GMC P ck up
197~ , T Che"' PU 4 WO
97S t T Chev PU
Ill
Pnl Che"' Impala
973 ' Chev P ckup
974 IT GMC PU
0
975 Fo d Mus ang II
1975 three fourth T GMC PU ~ w
r

SUNDAY Doc 26 1971J
eg Field ol granular

0

NEW LISTING 3 bedroom ra nch style home wllhon
walking distance of schools Located on VInton Court
Priced for quick sale S18 000

I

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
ACROSS

UV2 Locust St,
Ga llipolls. Ohi(l

CHESHIRE- Oh o If found call P •
0 Brook ns Ph 4.46-2826
Hi

384&lt;
AI&lt;C REG GERMAN SHEPHERD
PUPS 6 wks old Dec 15
moles SHO Fem al e $65
614 388 9081 aft er~ pm

GORDON

446 4905

BOAROING &amp; AKC PUPPIES

(en trol Hotel

LOST FEMALE FOX HOUNO 8

RUSSEU WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066

CANADAY
REALTY

31:

musl3?9 2173

r---------------~
FORLEASE
T !
3,000 sq It Spring Valley Plaza Can be Z
completed '" 30 days ~

THU~MAN HOUSE ant ques Fur
n 'tre sir pp ng
repo r on

SLEEPING Rooms week ly o es
Park Central Hote l

their advertisement the

•

~

RatEotate

SWEEPER and s•w ng mach ne LOST IN VICINITY of Codmus '
Oh a lhrve beogl• dogs 1
•po r po Is and suppl "' P ck
up and del very DaY s Vacuum
mole 2 females (on• of tt.. 1ft
Cleaner , m le up George•
femole1 onl~ 1 months old) Col 411:
Creek Rd Ph 446 0294
or block ton ond wh te r•word fll
call coll•ct hrt Miller , .
PASQUALE Electr col Ser ... ce
I 532 9761 or H B M ller (Cod r"
~~~~ 2716 day or mght

WILL THE PERSON WHO HAD THE
flo Terriers pups advert a
wh le bock please co ll4~6 9392

Please Read Your Adl

1

, ...

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~3=83~2~------------~ ·

'

�~

The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. Del'. 26. 1976

12 ; IG-Ironside 13

12 :55--ABC New5 6.

Television Log

MONDAY, DECE MBER 27, 1976

SUNDAY, DECE MB ER 26, lt16
6:QI).....VIewpoinl 8; This Is the Life iO.
6:lo-Jerry Falwell4; Talking Hands 8; Public Pol ley

6:()()--Suntl!!e Semester 10.

6:15-Farm Report 13.
6:2()-Not For Women Only 13.

Forums 10; Newsmaker '76 13.

6: 3o--Columbus Today 4i News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;

7:QI).....Chr lstopherCioseup 3; Thinking In Black 8; Rev .

Ounce of Prevention 10.

Cleophus Rob1r.son 13.

6: 45--Mornlng Report 3.

7:3()-Thls Is the Life 3; Your Health 4; Bullwlnkle 6;
•

6:5o-Good Morning . West Vlr,ginla 13.

Jerry Falwell 8: It Is Written 10; Amazi ng Gr ace

7:0().....Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning, America 6,13: CBS
News 8: Chuck While Reports 10.
7:05-Bugs Bun11y &amp; Friends 10.
7:31)-School les 10.
7:45-Sesame St. 33.
8:0()-Lassle 6: Capl. Kangaroo 8.10.
8:3()-Big Valley 6.
9:0()-A.M. 3: Phil Donahue 4,13.15; Lucy Show 8: Mike

7: ss-e lack Cameo 4.
8:oo--M ormon Choir 3; Day of D iscovery -4 : Tennessee
Tuxedo 6; Church Service JO; Sesame St. 20.
4;

Day of

Discovery 8; James Rpblson Presents 10; Rex

Humbord 13; Open Bible 15 .
9;0()-Gospel Si nging Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 4; Ora l
Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6; Rev . Leonard Repass

8: A Better Way 15; Mister Rogers 20.

9:30..:.Wh at Does the Bible Plainly Say B; Mov ie "The
Best Years of Our Lives" 10: Jim Frank li n 1i;
Insight 15: Sesame St. 20.
IO :DO-Huml!lr'l Dimension 3; Church Service 4: Leroy

Jenkins 6; Chr istia n Center 8; Jimmy SwaggarllJ.;
Faith lor Today 15.
·
10:3()-Big ·Blue Mar ble 3; Christmas Child 4; Rex
Humbl!lrd B; J immy Swaggart 6;

Blue Ridge

Quar le113; This Is The Life 15; Zoom 20.
Niven's Wor ld 3: South by Nor th west 4;
Hot Fudge 6; Rv. Henry Mahan 13: Rebop20.
11 :31).....TV Chapel 3: Animals. Anima ls. Animals 6:
11 :0()-0av ld

Douglas 10 . .
9:Jo--Cross-Wits 3; One Life to Live 6; Good Oav 8.

10:0()-Sanfor d &amp; Son 3,4.. 15; Price Is Right 8,10; Mike
Douglas 13.
·
10: 15-General Hospital 6.
10: 3()-Hollywood Squares 3.4. 15.
_ 11:0()-Wheel of Fortune 3,15: Weekday 4: Edge of
Night 6; Doubl e Dare 8.10; Morni ng with O.J. 13;
Elec. Co. 20.
11 :31)-Siumpers 3,4.15; Happy Day• 6,13: Love of Life
8, 10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 55- Take Ker r 8; Ms. Flxll 10.
12·oo- News 3,6,8,.10; Don Ho 13; Bob Bra un 4; 50

Grand Siam 15.

FocuSon Col umbus 4; Face the Nat io1.8;Testlmony

1'2 :30--Gong Show 3,15; R ya n' s Hope 6, 13; Search fo r
Tomorrow 8, 10.

Time 13; Once Upon a Classic 20.
12 :0G-Meet the Press 34,4, 15; IssUes &amp;1 Answer s 6;
Rev. Robert Schuler 8; Evange liSti c Outreach 13;

12 :5s-- NBC News 3, 15.
1:0()-Somerset 3: Al l My Children 6.13: Con centrat ion
'8; You ng &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15.
I :3()-0ays of Our Lives 3, 4,15. Family Feud 6. 13; As

Soundstage 20.
12:30- To Be Announced 3,4,8, 10, 15; Direc ti ons· 6;
Lower Lighthouse 13.
~
I :00-Splrl t of Vict ory A; Communique 6; Movie '' The
Comi c" 9 ; Issues &amp; Answer ~ l J; Ci ndere lla 20,·

Jimmy Carter

Light 8,10.
J·oo-Another World 3,4,15: All In The Family 8,10:
Gefjlng On 20; National Geographi c 33 . .
3:15-General Hospital 13.
3:31)-Ma• B. Nimble 6: Match Ga me 8,1 0; Lilla• Yoga
1!. You 20.

formance at Wol1 Trap 20; Once Upon a Classic 33 .

2:31)-0avld Niven' s World 6; Darlington Youth Band
13; Rebop 33.
3.oo-Movie ''South of St. Lou is" 6; M ovie " The
Et ernal Sea'' 9: 1976 World Final s of Dr ag Racing
13; Bac h at Du n5 Scatls 20; Visions 33.
4 00-To Be Announced 3,.4,8, 10, i5; Movie ,; Journey

4:0Q-M is ler Car toon 3; Marcus Welby, M .D. 4:

Somersel 15; Howdy Doody 6: Mickey Mouse Club
8 ; Sesame St. 20,33; Mo vie "For Me 1!. My Gal " 10;

to .the Center of the Earth" 13.

O i ri~h IJ.
4:·30-M y Three Sons 3; E mergency On~ 6; Partridg e
Famlly 8;· F ll nt stones 15 .
S:OD-Big Val ley J; Mer v Gr iffin 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mi ster Roger s '2 0,:13 ,· Star Tr ek 15.
5:3()- News 6: Fami ly Aff ai r 8; Elec . Co. 20,33: Adam -

4:3t)-.!.Oalice In Ameri ca 20 Getting On 33.

5:01)-Movle "No Sad Songs lor Me" 4; Witness lo
Yesterday 6: The Wa yII Wa5 33.
5:31)-Space : 1999 6; I the Shadow of the Gene ral 20:
Con sumer Sur vival Kit 33.

6:0()-0ayll me 9; Sesame St. 20; Wall Street Week 33.

12 13.
6:0()- News 3.4.6.8.10, 13. 15: Zoom 20,33.
6:31)- NB CNews 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6:
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; To Be

6:3G-News 6; Wor ld Press 3:1; Newsmaker '76 13.

7:0()-World of Disney 3,4,15; ABC News Special 6, 13;
60 M lnufes 8, 10; Crockett 's VIctory Garden 20;
Paths In th e Wilderness 33,

Announced :13 .
7:QO-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tel l the T ruth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; News 10; To Tell the
~ Tr u th 13; M y' Three Sons 15i The Way It Was 20;;
Know Your Sc hool s 33 .

7:31)-Evenlng ai Symphony 20,33.
8:00-McC ioud 3,4, 15; Six M illion Dollar Man 6,1 3;

Sonny 1!. Cher 8.10.
6, 13; Kojak

7·3()-Tha t Good Ole Nashville 3; Bobby Vinlpn 4:

9:31)-Big Event 3,4,15.
10 :00-Delvecchio 8, 10; Great Perfor mances 20,33 .
11:0G-News 3_,4,6,8,10,15.
11 :15-CB.S News 8,10; M.u5 ic Hall Amer ica 15.
11 :25-Peter Mar shall 6 ; News 13 .
11 :3()-Siar Tre~ 3; Movi e . "S ilent Night, Lon ely
Night" 4; Mo vie " Nevada Smith " 8; Face the
Nation 10; News 20; Janak l 33.

11 :45--e'hang jng

Ti me• 13.
i2:0o-Hawal l Five-0 10.

Muppet Sho w 6; Gong Show 8: MacNeil -Lehrer

20,33: Pr ice Is Right 10;

Candid Camera i3;

Fr iends of M an 15..

9:30-GE Theater 8,10; Renascence 33i Am er icana 20 .

SIDE GLANCES

by Gill Fox

12:0()-News6,13: Movie "The Shiralee" 10; Jana kl 33.
12: 31)-FB I 6; Ironside 13.
1:00-- Tomorrow 3, 4.
I :3()-News 13.

Da n Thompson Ford
Bowling League
12·2-76

No. 10
No. 7
No. 4
No. 12
No. 2
No. I
No.5

84
80
78
7&lt;1
73
72
71

44
48
60
54

No.3

55
56
57
70 56
68 60
62 66

No; 9

60 68

No. 16
No. 13
No. a
rjlo. 11

54
54
46
38

No. 6
No. 14

l

J. Bowles was high for Team
No. 4 wi th 468 pins.
Team No. 2 took 6 points
from Tea m No. I. J. Mi nk
was high fo r Tea m No . 2 With
537 pins, and J. Clatworthy
was high for Team No. 1 wi th
523 pins .
Tea m No. 12 took 8 points
fr om Team No. 11. D. Holley

was high for Tea m No.

16.

1~

with 569 pins, and M. Walters

was high for Team No. 11

569 pins.
8 . Jcnles 508, M . Roush,
512, J. Dee!, 504, J . Fer guson,
513, H. Brow ning. 525. J.
Cl a twor th y ,
523 ,
M.

Irom Team

No . 4. M.

Houdashell. 502. J. Mink. 204.

Houd as hel l was hig h fo r
Tea m No. 3 with 502 pi ns, and

F. Fleshman, 201.---R. Johnstan. 549 ·210.

inaugural ceremonies.
rna.
Carter attended Bible class
"I'm proud to have a
at Plains Baptist Church president who has expressed
Sunday and then motored a himself on his dependence on
couple of blocks to atwnd prayer,'' Cannon told the
services at Plains Methodist .congregation.
Church whe re William
" l remember one thing that
CaMon, the Methodist bishop he 1Carter) said in the
of Atlanta , officiated.
campaign - when the
Carter has chosen Cannon newspaper people hounded
fo r one of the prayers in the him all the time, " related

CaMon.
He said Carter had stated
that one could viola!~! the law ,
"yes, if It.'s a bad law or a
wicked Jaw, but If he violates
it in consclent'e, he must he
willing to pay the price."
The blshop also said the
Vietnam war was a
"mlstake,l'm sure·- it's the
one war we lost.''

ChinCSC reminded of Mao's 83rd birthday
also was ma rked by
dissemination of a speech
made by Mao 20 years ago
and printed In full for the first
time in the People 's Daily .
In the speech, Mao argued
against the execution of
~~counter • revolutionary" officials.
This was co nsidered
significant because of lhe
hearing it could have on the
fate of his widow, Chiang
Ch ing.
She and three other radical
leaders - Cha ng Chun-&lt;hi•n

Wang Hung-wen and Yao
Wenyuan- were arrested a
month afrer Mao died last
September and branded as
"counter-revolqti ~naries" .

Although he did not oppose
capital punishment, Mao said
exec,ulion someti mes does
more harm than good . .
He said one execuUon may
tiigger others and some
people "may be· wrongly

executed.

11

But,

more

important, it breeds distrllSt
inside the party.
"We must adhere to the.

policy started In YeMan of
'killing none and arresting
few'.'' Mao said in th e
spel!Ch, delivered on April 2:i,
1956, to the party's politbw-o.
The
People's Ddil y
published three poems in
praise of Mao. Two were
written by Marshal Chu Teh,
the fonner C\lmmand.er-tnchief of the Chtnese army,
· who died last July. The other
was written by Kuo Mo-jo,
president of the Chinese
Academy of Sciences.

WINNER - Santa holds. the winning ticket or the TV
awa rded by Pomeroy merchants 1!1 the Gold,~tar.Cive­
Awuy sponsored by ille Pomeroy Chamber or Conuueree.
Mrs. Garol Ball , Rt. 2, Racine, was lucky winner. The
drawing was held Friday at I p.m." No purclvtscs were
nccessury to purtlclpate.
·

Large plate glass windows in three Middleport business VOL XXVII NO. 177
POM EROY-MIOOLEPORT, OHIO
PRICE FI FTEEN CENTS
MONDAY, DECEMB ER 27, 1976
establislunents were'broken over the weekend, Police Chief J . _ _ _.:.....- - -- - -- -- - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - J. Cremeans reported.
.
Windows were broken out at the Motor Parts Co., on
:::·:·:·::: ':: :::· : ::·:·: ·:·:- :·:·:·:::· :·:·: ::::::::·::: ·:~~: - :·:·: ·:·: ·:·:·
Walnut St., at Werner 's Radio and Television Store on North
POOPEDSANTA
Second and at Jack's Dairy Bar on Race St. Chief Cremeans
RICHMOND,
Va. (UPI )
said reeks were rllrown to break out two of the windows and a
A
department
store
bucket was thrown through the dairy bar window. Two of the
Santa
who
hoisted
more
windows were broken early Monday morning and one on
than 15,000 children onto
"Saturday.
.
his lap this year has been
Chief Cremeans said the said the adults at the home
ho s pit a li z ed lor
matter is under Investigation wlll be charged with conexhaustion.
but that two jlersons already trtbutl~g to the delinquency
Alter two decades of
Dixie Baldwin, 64, llorse Racine, who is in Holzer . playing Santa at a downhave been apprehended. He of minors.
said one is a juvenile.
Chief Cremeans said young Cave Road, is lodged in Meigs Medical Center in only fair · toWn department store, the
Chief Cremeans said also people are now removing County jail charged in the condition.
Cooper sus pended the
WASHINGTON (UP! ) mentt.-d cases of swine flu ,
According to the Sheriff's 1916 holiday crush was too
that two 13-year-old girls lights from the outside shooting of John Eynon, Rt. I,
swine
flu program 12 ch1ys
The
government
's
top
much
for
Arthur
G:
flood
,
Including
one
that
was
Dept. the shooting occurred
were removed from a home decorations of Middleport .,.,.,.,:,.,,,.,.,,,,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:::::::,:,:,:,:,::::::::::::::::::::.
ago
after
dozens of persons
medical
official
said
today
reported
over
the
weekend
in
,
54.
He
spent
Chrtsbnas
In
at the Baldwin home on
on North Third Ave. and residents. The chief promised
the
nation
is
enwring
the
flu
who
received
the shots
lllinois,
he
said.
Richmond
Memorial
Christmas Eve al apEXTENDED OUTLOOK
being returned to their a "crackdown " on the ofdeveloped
a
sometimes
Hospital.
season,
and
there
.
is
a
"There
is
a
chance"
the
Wedn es day through proximately II : 30 p.m. The
parents in West Virginia. He fenders .
"chance" the suspend ed program will be reswned, he paralyzing condition know as
Friday, chance of snow, Racine ER squad removed :·:·:·:-:-:-: ~.,.,.,. ,.,.,.,.,,,.,.,.,,,.,., .;. ;-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:· swine flu immunization said in an Interview on NBC- Gultlaln-Barre syndrome.
mixed with rain south. Eynon Jo Veterans Memorial
According w Cooper, 383
TV's Today show . Cooper
program will be resumed .
Highs in . the upper teens Hospital from where he was .
Dr . Theodore Cooper, announced the suspenslon cases of Glllaln-Barre have
aod· 20s Wednesday and · . later transferred to Holzer
assistant secretary lor health Dec, 16. ·
nowbet..'ll reporll'll in 43 stales
·
from the 30. north to lOs Medical Center.
in the Deparbnent of Health,
Cooper said he hoped at the since Oct. I. He said 202 ol
The Baldwin woman is
south Thursday and
Education and Welfare, said very least the meeUng . will th ose persons had bee u
Friday , Lows 5 · to 15 charged with feloniou s
.
.
an advisory panel composed serve to better Inform the vaccinated for swine flu end
. By United Pres8lnrernational
' Wednesday and In the teens assault, a felony of the second
of government scientists imd public "a bout what the risks Jtl6 persons had not received
NEW YORK - JIMMY CARTER'S "IMPRESSIVE rise W. and low 20s Thursday ·and degre e. Sh e will app ear
other experts will consider of possibl e . spread of shots.
before Meigs County Court
·: power" makes him the Man of the · Year for 1976, Tirne
Friday.
It was unknown If 16 had
partial resumption of the flu Influenza and Its cost Is
Judge Rob ert E. Buck
: Magazine says. The publication sa.id ~ President-&lt;!lect is a
program at a Wednesday relative to the cost of .!ailing received the shots und thrt'e
Tuesday. However, sentence
"natural choice" for the yearly dOSlgnation because his rtse to
vaccine, particul arly In other persons had been vacmeeling in Atlanta.
will not be imposed,
the presidency was "one of the most astonlshing in Jhe history
The experts will "discuss people who are hlgb risk." cinated only against the Hong
authorities indicated, regardof the Republic."
·
.
.
If the prog ram Is resumed, Kong flu , Cooper snld. The
the relative risks that we
Jess of her plea.
The magazine said Carter was ptcked "because of hiS
have to consider," said he said he does "not expect tra ditional Hong Kong
' " impresaive rise to power, because of the new p~se he marks
Officials declined to say
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Cooper, because the nation is people to turn out in droves" immunization program was
how many times Eynon was
in American life and because of the great antietpations that
"entering the seasora where to get the shots . "! would not also suspended Dec. 18.
shot. However, five bullets Pr esid ent-&lt;!le ct Jimmy flu-like
... SW'rOWld him.',' Time said Carrer told a ream of !Is
Cooper said 13 persons had
are be suprised If there Is a great
diseases
correspondents that he liopes to meet next year with Sovtet
were fired from the gun, Carter will find the 9oth increasing.
dea l o! skepticism, " he died from Gillain-Barre synCongress eager to work with
leader Leonid Brezhnev in what could "lay the groundwork for
according to Sheriff's Dept.
drome, 10 of whom were
There are now four docu- added .
him but zealously ·possessive
much more drastic reductions in common nuclear
vaccinared against swine flu.
of its own powers as a coequal
capabilities.''
branch of govermnent. The
new Congress, which takes
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
"' · VAIL COW.- PRESIDENT FORD SAYS his greatest
office
at noon Jan. 4, will he
.. achievem~t in office was to restore ille people's trust in Ohio Surpeme Court today set
overwhelmingly
Ocmocra tic
, government and one of his biggest disappointments was Feb. 26; 1977 as the execution
and,
for
the
first
time
in eight
date for three convicted
failure to turn the economy around.
·
years,
not
at
war
with a
·
In an interview with ABC-TV, Ford also said he expects killers holding unanimously
Republican president.
that
Ohio's
death
penalty
President"llect Jimmy Carter wiU run into difficulty trying to
But in recent ye~rs
· · meet his promises to solve the nation's economic probleins. "! violates neither state nor
Congress
has begun seriously
A bogus check for $289.46
wh en
pis tolRIO GRANDE - Charges suffered
·illink he is going to find you can't turn a switch and federal constitutions.
to
reassert
its
role
in
whipped,
was
Terry
\1141•'
1
1,
20,
stolen
from the S&amp;Q Body
pending
In
a
shoottng
are
Scheduled to die In the
- automatically increase employment and decrease
domestic
and
foreign
policy
Shop
at
Columbus was cashed
Rt.
I,
Thunnan.
Incident
early
Christmas
' tinemployment," Ford said. "He can't by the waving of a wand electric chair at the Southern
and
is
highly
unlikely
to
last
week
at the Ohio Valley
Acc
ord
ing
to
the
inmorning
at
the
Redman
Inn
Ohio Correctional Facility
~ :. eliminat~ a deficit even over a period of time ." .
COLUMBUS· (UPI ) - Vic- knuckle down even to a located on U. S. 35, south of vestigation , the shootin g Bank 's Ri o Grande Branch.
were John Harris and Jerome
tims of violent crime in Ohio Democratic chief executive. Rio Grande.
The c~ec k had the name of
followed a ftst fight that
CIDCAGO - WHEN ALL IS SAID AND DONE , Chicago Royster, Colwnbus, both con- can seek rein1bw-sement for
Many
major
domestic
proRichard
Turner, Rt. I, Oob
·
Gallla
County
sheriff's
hegan
at
1:30
a.m.
Saturday
.
stlll works the way It always has · - with secret deals victed of the May , 1914 losses of up to $50,000 starting grams have been waiting
The
central
suspect,
still
at
deputies
said
Dwight
Rees,
Hill.
A
similar
check "'"'
slaying
of
Mrs.
Jeannetre
' . hammered out in smoke filled rooms. Democratic party
Tuesday.
until the Democrats took over 19, Rio Grande, and Drema large, also !Ired Into the pasyd,by Clifford Ada ms, 19,
Nichols
of
Columbus,
and
leaders !iaid the struggle to succeed Jhe lare Mayor Richard J.
The Court of Claims and the the White Hou se . But Marcum, 22, Gathpolis, were windshield of the Marcum Lou isa , Ky., who WIL.,.
.. Dailey ended Sunday night with a united party supporting Robert P . LyUe, convicted of stare atlornl'Y general wUI
Congress could find the treated and relco"'d at the car.
charged In Municipal Cou rt,
the murder of Walla ce
Alderman Edward liilandic for acUng mayor .
decide
claim
validity,
but
money
is
not
there
to
carry
Felonious assault charges then bound over to the gromt
Holzer Medical Center for
· There was more than th~ usual ann twisting - and some Archibald of Greene County. while they will recommend
them
out,
especially
if
the
minor gunshot wounds of are expected to be flied as a jury for passi ng a forged
In all three cases, the high
outright brawling - as the clty'a political powerhouses
whether
an
applicant
should
economy-continues
to
sag
and
cheek. Adams' v •mpanio11,
their right legs. Rees was result of the shoolout.
jockeyed for position folio~ Daley's death. ~ces satd t.he court uph eld jud ge me~ts he paid, rejections may he
if
Carter
pursues
his
goal
of
a
19-yea r old Mona Kay
In
other
weekend
activity,
shot in the right ~nkle area .
- latest deal worked out folloWing inarathon negotiations at Ctty issued by Appellate Courts. appealed to a three-member
balanced
budget
by
1980.
Maynard , of Marion, was not
deputi
es
inv
estigated
th
e
Admitted to the Holzer
' Hall and at the law office of Alderman Edward Burke, divides
commission.
A
good
indicalor
of.
the
bound
over and both were
death
of
Ernest
Campbell,
53,
Medical
Center
with
a
•: Daley's power among factions of the regular Democratic
Avictim or survivr· ".aMot financial sque..e facing Con- fractured jaw, allegedl y Rt. l, Crown City, whose body released last Wednesday to
HELMS COMES HOME
organization .
collect twice under t. . 'le W
was found in his trailer home Marion authorities to face
TEHRAN , Iran - Former crime - compensation pro- gress is that there is less talk
on Lou Southers Rd." Death similar charges there.
WASHINGTON - ATTORNEY GENERAL EDWARD CIA director Richard Helms gram, but need wlll not be now than in previous ye.:rs
Deputies say the pair Is Inwas attributed to natural
LEVI says he would rather see the death penalty abolished today left Tehran quietly for a factor in determining ahout a federally fmanced
na tional health insurance
volved In a check passing
causes,
than to see every execution become a "flamboyant, macabre" retirement in Wa shington eli gibilit y. In surance
program, Jon'g Sought by
ring over a four state area.
spetacle. Levi said in a television interview Sunday (NBC-TV's after nearly four years as U. payments- will he deducted
!Jemocratic
liberals.
Meet the Press) he favors the d1'8th penalty as a "necessary S. ambassador to Iran and from total losses.
Compounding the problem
more than 30 years of governdeterrent" in some situations.
The Pomeroy Emergency Home saved on
Court of Claims Clerk and making It more difficult
But he said he was "certainly not in favor of a death ment service. Known for the Charles Crowley's staff to divert money from defense Squad was buay with. caDs
" penalty in the United States if we're going to have a "low key" performance of his consists, so far , of an to domestic needs Is that the over the holiday weekend :
Owl HoUow road
flamboyant, macabre spectacle ... every time an execution is duties, Helms' departure was attorney and thr ee o.ther country Is moving into a
Lighl snow this aflernoon
At 10 :13 p.m. Friday,
'"scheduled.''
typical. A few embassy of- clerical workers. He plans to period when Congress muat Jamea PhUiips, 18 Cave St.,
TUPPERS PLAINS - The and tonight. Lows near 20.
.'
''That !Deans; then, that the Unired States as a conununity ficials and the Iranian foreign take on another person next decide whether w go ahead was taken to Holzer Medical
Orange Township Fire Chan ce of snow flurries
•· does not really accept the death penalty or that It accepts it In ministry protocol officer
month
to
process with a new generation of Center ; Salw-day at 3:30 Department saved the home Tuesday. Highs near 3o.
~ its worst features , in which case I'm certainly opposed to it," were the onl~.o nes to bid him applicatioos.
weapons - planes, ships, . p.m., Mrs. Jo Ann Weyers- of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Chance of snow 50 per cent
•. Levi said.
farewell .
tanks,
missiles and others. miller to Veterans Memorial Haggart on Owl Hollow Road , this aflernoon and tonight, 30
Assistant Ohio Attorney
An
Indication ol the Hospital from her home on Orange Tow'nshlp , about 6 per cent Tuesday.
General Sreven Ball has hired
OVERNIGHT TRAVELERS ADVISORIES · WERE in
NOW YOU KNOW
a claims manager and three relations between Congress Spring Ave.; at 8:41 p.m. a.m. Christmas morning.
· eff~ in southern and eastern Ohio Sunday. Several bursts of
In 1793, a girl In Tourcolng, investi gators a nd plans · and Carter could come soon Saturday, Ralph Foster from
Firemen said the fir e
snow aided by temperaJures that fell to below freeting , France, was born with only to add another inveStigator after the inauguration .
his Eagle Ridge home to started around a flue In one
• causert poor driving conditions in many locations.
Carter and many leading Veterans Memorial Hospital; room of the house and was
one eye - In the center of her and a lawyer next mooill to
Early Sunday nigbt, the NaUonal Weather Service forehead and lived , otherwise
members of Congress agree at 10 :44 p.m. Saturday to confined to that room .
evaluate
claims.
reported 4 Inches of snow at Mansfield and 3 inches ·on the nonnal , to the age of 15 .
CORRECIION
StolP Treasurer Gertrude the eco nomy ne eds a Welsh!Qwn HUI for Wilbur Damages to the room were
• ground at Youngstown and Findlay. Every reJ.lOrUng site in the
In an accident on Route
Donahey has rece ived . stimulus . The problem Js Ellis who was taken IQ Holzer S.t at $1 ,5011. Twelve firemen
• stare had at least some snow. Akron-Canton Arrport was closed
124 at the intersection it
a
mutually Medical Center.
$596,493 from various courts finding
answered the call,
.• for several hoW's and the Ohio Higbway Patrol handled a rash .
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
was reported erroneously
acceptable
approach.
At
1:36
a.m.
Sunday
the
to finance the program. The
, of minor aCclde~ts. No malor mishaps or inluries, however, · The
Middl e p o rt money comes from a $3
A second early Indicator . squad took John Fisher,
I
that William B. Rife, 42,
were reported. The service jndicted snow all acroils the stare Emergency Squad was called addition to most traffic fines will come Feb. 1, the date by Hebron,
TRUSTEES TO MEET
to
Veteran s ·
Middleport , struck a
by tonight or Tuesday.
'
CHESTER
- The Chester
to Route 1, Rutland , at 12:18 since Oct. 1.
which Carter has to decide Memorial Hospital , after he
vehicle operated by Ernest
p.m. Sunday for Alma Beller
R. Will, Hemlock Grove. It
Ball and Crowley estimate whether to give the "go-ahead became ill at the home of his Township trustees will !lleel
~
CINCINNATI - MAGERA , AN UPLAND gorillB , who was taken to Veterans first -year ad ministrative for production of the Bl mother-in4aw, Mrs. Loretta Thursday , Dec. 30, at 7:30
should have read that Rife
presen:ed Cincinnati Zoo officials with a special Christmas Memorial Hospital where she costs al approximately bomher. There is a sizeable Beegle ,
Sprlng Ave., p.m. ai the town house Fred
was struck in the rear by a
was
admitted
.
TutUe, clerk , reported .
(Continued on page 2)
(Continued on page 2)
car drivr n by Will.
Pomeroy.
$500,000.

woman held m
••

II

Swine flu shots
may be resumed

E Ynon
. shooting

..

R. · D. Holley had high series wl lh

Barrows was hig h for Team
No. 15 with ll 14 pins, and H.
Brown ing (Sub) was high for
Team No. 16 wi th 525 pins.
Team No. 3 loo k 6 points

trary, the AUanta banker asswnes the presidency said he did not expect foreign policy, government
President Ford to submit a reorganization and the
two-year balanced budget overall direction of his
before leaving the White . domestic programs also will
House. He also said he hoped he high on the agenda,
to get a look at Ford's 1~79
Carter set aside time early
fiscal year budget before it is Tuesday to meet" with New
sillimitted to Congress Jan, York's Gov . Hugh Carey and
Mayor Abraham Beame on
17.
Shortly afrer arriving on St. New York city's fiscal dilemSimons, Carter was to meet
with his chief economic advisers , Including Lance,
Treas ury
Secre tar yHONG KONG (UP!) d e si g n ate
Mic h ae l
China
paid tribule to the late
Blumenthal and Charles
Communist
party Chairman
Schultze, chairrnan-tc&gt;-be of
Mao
Tse-tung
Sunday, comthe Council of Economi c
memora
ling
the
83rd
Advisers.
anniversary
of
his
birth.
Vice President-&lt;)lect Walwr
The party newspaper, PeoMondale will sit iit on thto
ple's
Daily, and all other
sessions.
newspa
pers in Peking
In the evening, Carter will
published
a large photograph
host an informal "get
of
M
ao
on
theii fron t pages
acquainted" dinner for aU of
nd
devoted
three inside
a
his appoinrees.
pages
to
material
praising
While the Cabinet swnmit
him,
Peking
Radio
reported
was to focua primarily on the
sagging econo!Jiy - Carrer's · in a broadcast today .
The birthday anniversarv
main problem when he

Windows broken
in businesses

wt th 422 pin s.
74
Tea m No. 7 took 6 points
74 from Team No. 8. J. Robit:
82 , wa5 high for Team No. 7 wi th
90 418 pins, and C. Wink ler was
No. 15
36 92 high for Tea m No. 8 with 467
Team No. .14 took 4 points pins ;
from Tea m No. 13. G . Sk inner
Tea m No. 5 look 6 points
was high fer Team N.c . 14 fr dm ! ea m No. 6. R. Johnston
wi th 483 pins, and W. Al lie was.h 1gh fer Tea m No . 5 with
was high fer Team No. 13 549 pins, and S. Tawney was
wi th 449 pins.
high for Tea m No , 6 w i th 45.5
Team No. 10 look 8 points pi ns .
from Team No . 9. B. Jenks
0 . F itzsimmons had hi gh
was high for Team No . 10 gal"[le tor the ladles wi_th 205
wi th 508 pins, and J. Deel was pins. and D. Fitzsimmons had
high for Team No. 9 with 504 high seri es wilh•5J4 pins.
pins.
J. Fer guson had high game
Team No. 15 took 6 points f6r-1 he men with 212 pins, a nd

fro m Team No

8:01)-L illle House on the Prair ie 3.4.15: Captain &amp;
Tehnll le 6,13; . Rhoda 8,10; Pi ccadil ly Circus 20.33.
·8:31).....$128,000 Question 8: Phyllis 10.
9:0()-Movle "Camelot" 3.4,15: Gator Bowl 6, 13;
Maude 8, 10.

Lillian Carter

10:3()-Arm Dig

2:30-Doct ors 3, A, l 5; One Ute to Live 13; Gui ding

2:QI).....Polnl of View 6: Next Generation 13: In Per-

Walter Mondale

11 :0()-News 3.4.6,8,10, 15.
ll :3G-Johnn y Car son 3,4,1 5; M ovfe " A Brand New
Li fe' ' 8i Mary Hartman 10; AB C News 33. ·
·

2:0().....$20.000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.

Infinity Factory 33.

Rosa.lynn Carler

l O;OG-Rtva ls of Sher iQCk Holmes 9; News 20.

The World Tur ns 8,10.

1:3G-Aware 6: Town Topics 13; Zoom 33.

9:GO-Movl e " Diamonds Are Forever ''
8, 10; Masterp iece Theatr e, 20.33.

PLAINS, Ga. (UPil Presiden t-elect J immy
Ca rter summoned his
Cabinet and other top.Jevel
pppointeea to an island resort
today amid reports a $15
billion tax cut is being
considered to prime the
economy.
Carter .arranged to fly to St.
Simons Island Qff Georgia's
coast for a thre e~ay
conference, arriving in the
early afternoon. He planned
to stay at Musgrove
Plantation, a I ,000-acre
estate owned by a Reynolds
Tobacco Co. heir .
Budget D~or&lt;leaignare
Thomas Lance flew in as an
advance party to St. Simons
Sunday after attending
worship services with Carter
in Plains. ·
Questioned by reporters,
Lance said he feels there has
to be •'some sort of tax cut,"
adding that a $15 billion slash
"is the figure I hear the
most.''
Despite reports to the con-

6: 55--Good MornlnQ . Tri Sta te 13.

Bible Class 13.

8:31)-Qral Roberts 3; Yours for the Asking

Carter &amp; Co. may pump $15 billion
into sluggish economy with tax cut

Llii'S PIOPLII Carter &amp; Co.

1: oo-Peyton Place 4.

1:10 - ABC News 13 ..

"Thank goodness! No more Bicentennial toys during our
lifetime! "

cOnfYreSS
,e.._

·-

eager _to

begin

Court fixes

death day for

three in Ohio

Violence
• •
VICtimS
get help

2370 '1997

1

1971 FORD TORIItP

1900

4 Dr ., automatic, rough , r uns good.

'400

1973 BUICK ELECTRA 4 DR. HT

1968 CHEV. IMPALA

'670

'450

4 Dr .. ru ns good. work car .

1973 OLDS 98 4 DR HT

13295

I ~·n11a

On e owner , super sha r p, worth lot more.

1974 BUICK CENTURY 4 DR
WAS
1973 FORD STA. WAG.

1

Gran Tor ino, auto., P.S. Loan value SlSOO. One
owner ,

2300

IS

'1

1974 MUSTANG GHIA II
V-6, ai r , vi nyl top, had it ove r 30 days. Whol e&amp;a le.

1974 PLY. FURY Ill 2 DR HT .

1

On e owner . 51.000 miles. Worth mor e.

1974 AMC HORNET

'1890

Ai r , vinyl top, new t ires . Sharp!

55,000 miles, collection lfem .

1972 PLY. DUSTER

1790

1

I

1680

Auto., P.S., Ebony black, mag wheel s.

1971 OLD$ 98 2 DR HT
. Air, 60,000 milu, vinyl top, clean. ·

1880

2560 '1997

tl r~. local school teacher's trade .

UNDER $4000
WAS

'

1'24111UI 1975 MONTE CARLO

2560

1

IS

1975 AMX PACER X

4725

unit was busy

1973 PONTIAC 2 DR HT
Gran

Pr ix

trade, · rad ials.

1973 OLDS 2 DR HT

•'

1975 DODGE CORONET

1

2 Or. Hdtp ., custom, air, 3100 mi les. This Is no
misprint . L ike new.

4495

2560

1

Ventura, Hatchback, au to ., P.S., V-8, 35,000
miles. Nice.

1971 CHEV. MALIBU

2650

1

$2650

2 Or. Hdlp .. air. red, bla ck vinyl lop, 26.000

175

miles. Ni ce.

Weather

4280

1

Air, AM· FM , 7,000 mi les. Showroom cond .

134IJO

PomeroyE-R

1

Landau, ai r , sunroof, AM -FM.Tape. New Prem
tires .

Air. 4 speed, 27,000 ,mile·s, mag· wheels.

'Gr anville, new
,.Average mile5 .
1

Ai r , radial

1

Lo w mi les, tape, mag wheels, sharp.

1974 PONTIAC 2 DR
1

1973 CHEV. CAPRICE 4 DR.

.

1973 BUICK REGAL 2 DR HT
1973 CAMERO LT

1972 Y.OLKS CONV.

2980

1

Hal chbeck, 18,000 miles. auto .. P.S. Nice.

PLY. FURY Ill

l•'!:t~~oa

Gr.ln Tor ino, air , 39,000 m iles. Expe ct th e bes t .

'2990 1•24190 I

Former Ply . Ser v. Rep. trade . Had t he best of
ca re.

1925

1973 YOLKS TUDOR

3280

1

A1r , nice fa m ll~ car. We had It 10ver 30 days,
whol esale.

UNDER $1500

1~72

2470 '1997

1

Lim1ted, loaded , expect th e best.

Two .wounded ·in shootout
at Inn near Rio Grande

IJ690 °32601

"'

'

1974 MGB-GT
• speed. 24,000 miles. Expect !he best.

4350

1

•

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